HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-03-16 - Orange Coast Pilot_,
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'Father's Fists' Crime Ogure
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Invokes 11.fth Ca11se of Boy, 13, ..
Killing 'Girl, 3 In JFK Probe
VOL. 7~. HO 1S 4 SECTIONS, U PAGES
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TOMMY ALBRECHT HUGS MOTHER AFTER .viRDtCT
Murder Charge Reduced to Man9lautfrter
father's Cruelty
'Caused Slayi11g'
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla.
(AP) -Psychiatrists say 13·
Y~•r-old Tommy Albrecht.
learned about. violence through
his father 's t hreats and
thrashings. Now Tommy races
fi.ve years in stale custody for
' lteating a 3-year-old girl to death.
Juvenile Court Judge John
MUler ordered Tommy turned
over lo the Division of -Youth
Services on Tuesday after deny-
illl an insanity plea and fmdi.Dg lalm gulltyofmanslaugbter.
(father's) answer to every-
thing," the boy's mother, Jean.
Albrecht. told the court. "He was
·always throwing things -a ham·
mer or a rocking chair -at Tom·
my, ifnotTommyhimself."
She said that as Tommy grew
older, be began to imitate his
father, displaying a violent
temper and beating his s1ster.
••Tommy's reaction to dis-
cipline was similar to his father's
violence,.. Jira. Albrecht
(5-e 1'E!Il\ hie AZ>
Seen to
Continue
"I couldn't have done it
without Cocijo,'' a modest Bill
Payne said today.
The former Orange Coast.
College art instructor's clay gods
may have done the trick Tues·
day, since tonents of rainfall fell
on Southern California today.
Payne placed his Zapolec In·
dlan gods an a pasture at Orange
Coast College Tuesday and sure
STEADY RAIN HITS
NORTHERN AREA. AS
enough, the rain began to r all this
morning.
The 63-year-old professor said
three weeks ago that 1t would
ram today, and the fact that it did
brings to 13 the number of SUC·
ceasful rains brought on by the
palm-sized clay figunnes. That's
out of 14 tries, be says. .
Meanwhile, forecasters at the
Los An1eles Weather Service
said the rains should continue
through tonJght, decreasing to a
40 percent" chance or continued
showen on Thursday.
The rain moving through
Southern California is expected
to drop between three·quarters of
an 1ncb to an inch or the wet stuff
before letUng up sometime
Thursday.
Forecaster Patricia Rowe said
skies wW be fair Friday with con·
t1nued cool weather through Sun·
day.
She saJd the weather front that
hovered over Washington state
and Oregon earlier this week,
"just up and moved down here,
bringing all this lovely rain."
But Payne, who retired from
OCC in 19'7,, said be can't. take
full credit for the ra.lnfall.
.. It WU the~ of Cocijo," JJe
said solemaJy. ••1 am only tbe in"
jumediary.\•
• (See MIN, h&eAZ)
..
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Agnew Agrees . ~oul Play
CIWers Carter\ Capdidness
NEW YORK <AP) -Spiro 1'. Agnew, who as vice
president was the outspoken mouthpiece of the Nixon
administration, says he has great respect for Presi-
dent Carter because "he says what he believes."
Agnew, 58. appeared today on the NBC·TV
''Tomorrow" program.
"I don't care how many people around him say,
'Don't say anythinJ: about this, you're going_ to get in-
to trouble.' I think he's gomg to say what he thinks
and I think this 1s needed very much now," Agnew
said. .
"In too many administrations, including the ad·
ministration l was in, the cagey president, when he
had something to say. or a position to take, the word
was let's float it through here, so it doesn't come from
him," said Agnew.
If the message was tried out successfully by a
cabinet member or even the vice president, he con·
tinued, the president would come out in favor Of the
statement.
"Carter is saying it in the beginning. I think that
deserves the applause of the American people,"
Agnew said.
Agnew is on a fivc·city promotional tour for the
paperback release or his novel, which deals with a fic-
tional administration.
Inv okes Fifth
Crime Figure Mum
On Killi11g of JFK
WASJUNGTON (AP) -A re-
puted crime figure invoked the
Fifth Amendment to all ques·
lions today u the House commit·
tee on assnslnations asked
whether he knew in advance that
President. John F . Kennedy was
going to be murdered.
lo refusing to answer qu~
tions, Santos Tra!ficante, once a
reputed gambling kingpin in
Cuba, oited his consUtuti6nal
JiOtagtinstself·lncrbninatioo. lie aleo refused to answer
w hether he had known Jact
Bub~.1 tbe man who killed Lee
Suspecte~
By Police
By WILUAM SCHREJBER
• Oft ... O•llY lfllol Slltfl
The search for a missing Lake
Forest mother or rour. who police
investigators bet ieve has tnet
with foul play, was shifted today
from a rueged area near
Pasadena's Rose Bowl to wind-
in& Angeles Crest. Hi ghway lead-
ine to Mt. Wilson.
ft.a che) Sparling, 36, of 24311
Lakeview Lane, was last seen
about 3:50 p.m. Monday as she
left. the Pasadena office of her
psychiatrist. Dr. Alan Karme.
Early Tuesday morning, Los
Angeles police arrested a 17-
year-old boy with a long record of
robbery and drug use in connec-
tion with the woman's
mysterious djsappearance.
John McAlisler, a Pasadena
police spokesman, said the youth
was driving Mrs. Sparling's
bronze, 1972 Corvette, which was
involved. in a minor traffic acci·
dent in \he Granada Hills com-
m unity of the San Fernando
Valley.
"We've got a lot more on him
to indicate be might have been in
face to face contact with Mrs.
Sparling.'' McAUster said.
Delectives searching the boy's
residence, a vacant South
Pasadena house, discovered a
jacket with Mrs. Sparling's
(t;ee MISSING, Page AZ>
Co ast
Offtdals ~aid Tommy could be ~pt ln state lnstituUoni unUl he
reachesl&.
".rhe boy was charged with·
~ond~egree murder for bitting
a6d kicking Staci Chu bin to d1itb
~t. 26 after be spent 20 b rs
b~}>y sittin1 the cblld. he j~ge reduced the charge to
mplaqhter.
Lag11Da Man Cr11slled
Alitneases at Tommy's three-d*T trial painted a picture of a
~used and hosWe boy who
l.uned th9 uae of his fists from
btatlnp .admllli.te"ed by his
f .aber, Lan7 Albrecht.
:J)ne psychiatrist called him
.,_.palalve, expio.lve and de-
tafhed,'' with uncontrollable.
.\iolent Jmpulses. •
••BeaUne Tommy was h1a ·~ . -
By ANNE@QPEB
CM .. o.lty"IMSl .. f
A Laguna Beach man was
crushed to death at a conatruc-
ti on slte Tuesday when a
140,000-pound earth scraper
backed owr blm.
J amea Ketanedy • 6'10C18S
St., a SQll technician, was ..wk·
in& at :m1• Camino Ca)>iatrano,
Capiltrano.. Beach, when death
came. .
Kennedy bad com,,lalned·
earlier tn. the day of not feeling '
wen. ~ coroner·~ d _p11tr. aal4 asa :
autopsy would be performed to-·
day to determine •bether some
health problem may haveeaused
the victim to collupe behind tb.e
machinery.
.. God, 1 hoPe. I Deftr have
another da1 lib' today, .. Jon
Barnw~ 30, 1a1d 'l'Hsday at the
ac d tJ:a acdckot. B.nrwell
Barnwell said. "There was no
doubt cl hi.I condition. I couldn't
look ._ain. We called the police
ri&Jltaway_
1'l've beard of thin11 tlke this
happenire to other people, but I
never~ lt could happen to me ...
owns ~ and waa dri•· ~ Vl\elll trld ta in th eart:r
la• tt w eat l fellow Worker Jta•• Gt deftlopme:nt. 'l'be fint
waved to h1m to look behind tbe of 60 foar·untt eoAdomlAlum1 hu
hut• tnctor. been framed and .Ls cWTently be-
"I Jooktd and bit (J_(enqedy>· . tor roottd; Jt ts on. 1.ba blu1tl
WU mamPl Oil the &l'OUDd,'" aoathdJ>anaPolJrt.
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\
I r
Italian _Hij~cker •
• n Mn~•· other
a .BcaUbn'
rouad Jn lbc
ZURICH. Swiuerland CAP) -
An Italian hijacker WU OVa'•
powered by Swiss police and ar-
rested today ut the end ol an
8,SOO-m1le pirate fhghl in a
Spanish airliner around Europe
and West Africa It was the
second-longest hijacking in dis·
tance on record and the longest
by a lone hijacker,
Police said the hijacker, Lu-
ciano Porcari, managed to grab
his Winclft!ster rifle and fire one
shot, slightly woupd1ng one or the
three policemen who seized him
inside the plane. No one else was
fi'ro111 P~ A I
RAIN ...
Payne said the ram gods sup
posedly break droughts, "and.
when they do their JOb, they
begin a eycle we hope will con·
tinue."
"Cocijo has broken the
drought." _
Orange Co411ty FloOd Control
District spoltttsman Emmett
Franklin said the current storm
will help narrow the gap between
average_ seasonal rainfall figures m the county.
He said a GB ycur average of
rainfall in Orange Count:. shows
about 10.40 111ches of nun by
Ma rch 16.
··tr you don 't count today's
ram, we've had 7,51 il)clres to
March 16," he sajd
Last season 'a rainfall ~s ooly
5 21 inches by this date. Tfie la~t
measurable ra1ntall in the county
was on Feb. 25.
"By tht' t'nd of \larch, \\e
should h<1ve about 11 inche!> to be
average , .. Franklin said ·That
means we're about three and a
half incbes short right now "
But. he said. the cur rl'nl storm
should allev1,1tl' rnm1· of that
shortage.
"Jt sure won't hurt 1 ... any," ht'
said.
' From POfle A I
TEEN •.• . . ... ~ '
leslitled. "On('e he ran ove r lhe
neighbor's kitten with his tricy-
cle because he was mad at the lit
tie girl next door · ·
Tommy's mother divorced his
father in 1972 Albrecht has re-
fused to d1scui.s <Hn details of his
famtl) life ·
Althoug h Tommy ri•tcived
t r eatment at <i J>S:>l'htiitrll
t•enter .1dm1111o;1rJ1tir-, 11 ht
clement.tr\ ho• I pl.11 1 ol him in
.i s pcc1JI llJs. f111 1·rr111t11111.1ll'
d1sturlX'd childrrn .1flt•1 11•p••:i1 •.I
inc idents Y. Ith da~sm.1tc•,
But r t' l or d s 1 11 d 11·.., l" h P
seemed lo he J!l'lllll~ I 1111 I.1st
year H~ main1.11n1 rl .1 ..,nl11J n .
.i ver agt! 1n t h1· sl'' cnth p .u• ·
Mn;. Alb r t·<·h l ,.: a vt• h1 m
pt!rm1ssio11 to sll r .. r lht· l'Wtl
Chub1n ~1rb J~t·d .i ;ind Ii, ''hill•
her fr1e111I. Judy Chulm1 "'1•11! 1>111
for the eveninJ!
The next morn111i.: lomm\ ''us
confronted tn Mr::i Chuh1n's
estranged hus·h.111d Su' 1· ""ho
was angered IJ1•1·Juw h·· didn't
hke boy:. h.1hv1,1lttr1 • for h t<,
da ughter.., l'"\<h1,1t1hts .s aid
On e do< t111· l>.11tl "'' rnr1dent
hetwe<.>n tht• l\\11 ln1•i.:1·n·d .i sud
den rt'<1ct10111111111 Tom m'
Arter Chubm lt•(t \\tlh lht' r.
) ear-old. lht' I.Jo-. s 11d ht' k 1t·ked
Staci in the Mo m.al h, ~··nchng her
back wards O\.er J p1N'l' of
furniture I le k1ckt'd ht·r <1gain
and hit her i:tt h•;i:;t once before
carrying hl·r to bed The child
dted a few hour' l.t.tcr
Reception First
U NITED NATIONS. N Y
<AP ) Representatives of lhe
Palestine Liberation Organlzo·
lion and two Communi11l ~overn·
ments not rec<>1nized by the
United Stale!! have been invited
to a dlplomntk reception in
honor of President Carter, u U N.
s pokesman said Tuesday
6 .. ANO• COAST
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hw1. thepollce !laid
"Holy Mother of God, il'a
Ual1bed." •ia1d Porcari'a
estr~ged wife in Turtn. ftaly,
when"Slae heard it wu over
The wife, Isabella Zavoli, re-
fused to surrender the couple's
>year-old daugh\er to Porcan,
Texaco Act
'Violation'
WASHINGTON (AP) -
Texaco, Inc., diverted 172
million cubic fee t of
natural gas daily from
federal lands it leases and
u ~e d 1t f o r it s o wn
p urposes, apparently a
violation of the law, col um·
nist Jack Anderson and
The Washington Post re·
ported today.
The oil company took the
gas from the lands it leases
off the Louisiana coast to
its refinery ln Port Arthur,
Texas. The action was
taken without approval of
the Federal Power C~m
m ission. they said.
ln a t elegram to the
F PC, Texaco conceded 1t
has taken 580 billion cubic
feet of gas since 1964, ac-
cord ing to the two ac-
counts.
F,.....PapAl
JFK •.•
Ohio!, told Traffl cante that was
not good enough and that the
committee might recommend to
the House that he be cited for
contempt of Congress.
T r afficante s till refus ed to
answer any q\.lesllons.
S;irague asked if t\e had any
ad vance information that Ken-
ned y wa~ ~oing to be assassinat-
t•d Nov. 22, 1963. or that he had
ad vised.other people of that fact.
Trafficantc refu sed to answer
··Did you e\ er discuss \\ ilh any
individual plans to assassinate
President Kennedy prtor to'111s
assassination?" Sprague ques·
t1oned
Trafficante ~ave the same re-
fusal to rep!~
Sprague also asked him 1f he
present!~ ha1o immunity from the
l ' S government 'with regards
tn any attempt to assassinate any
\\oriel le;idl'r
SpraJ!ue then asked Traf-
f1, .1ntt• 1f h<' h HI t•\ rr ml'l \\Ith
< l \ r •1ir1•-,1•11t.1l1\ t•s to d1stu::.::.
.,, ·'' •n.1t1on 111 \\111lrl l1•,1der~.
Ill ludin1• c· .. ,, r<•
H"P Chri-.inphcr Dodd ID
Conn >. askl'<I Traff1cante 1( his
11' has b<:<'ll threatened 10 any ".1' ~In{'(' th•• <'Olllfl111 lt•e suh
1111·naed tum or 1f any federal
u~1·ncy has tried to keep him
from testifying
I rafficanlL' rcfusl·d to am;Y.er
;di thoseqm c;tinns
* * *
ODe of hll dell1ands dudQC U.
'4 V..·bou.r hl.lackln•. Police uJd Pwcarl, a •yur-
• old auto mecha.nk was ~
held In Jnvesti.at ive custody
pending a decillion on whether be.
should be tried in Swit:aerla.nct.
Spain is expected to Sttk his ex-
tradition.
The three pqlicerfieo entered
the plane posilag as members ot a
fresh flight crew that wu to fly
the Ibenan Airlines Boeing 1'Z7 to
Moscow. They subdued the bi·
Jacker within moments.
The 13 ~~er-hostages still
aboard the plane and the seven
exhausted crew members who
had manned the aircraft since
Monday afternoon were released
unharmed.
Also aboard was Porcari's 3.
ye•r-old daughter by an African
mistress. The child was picked
up in the Ivory Coast.
"He didn't.threaten us badly, ..
S\id Maria Terea Lioret Castell.
o.rel.of lhe freed hosQiges. ".{le
behaved like a ·getrtlerqan. He
even tried to cabl) down my
cllllldren,"
rorcari released ·seven otber
passengers in Turin, Italy, and
nine in Zurich Tuesday.
The hijacker brought the plane
to Zurich from Warsaw where he
had ai\eed to free alJ hostages in
exchange Cor the new crew to fly
him to Moscow. After three hours
of negotiations, the.Spanish am-
ba&sador to Poland, Jes us
Millarudo, said:
"We can't unde rstand the
man's mind. He must be crazy. It
has nothing to do . with polillcs.
fie just thinks he's solving his
personal proble ms "
Porcari's mother. in Turin,
blamed the hijacking on the
Italian gove rnm e nt, whose
policies she said forced her son to
go to Africa to find work without
assistance.
"He wa!I an hones L boy and
would have never hurt anyone
bec ause he has a good heart."
s aid Margherita Porcari. ''He
wanted 11 family of his own like
ever yone else and he had a right
to,"
A Turin newspaper, La Stam-
pa. said Porcan viewed the hi·
Jacking as "the Cina] chapter" of
a book he was writing about his
life Ugo Moretti, a newsman and
author. said Porcari asked him
six months ago for assistance in
writmg about his eventful life,
which he said included the blow-
in g up of a bridge linking
RhodeMa to Malawi In exchange
for $15.000 from black African
guerrillas.
The longest hijack was an
R.800-mile night in April 1976 by
three fo'illpino gunmen demand-
ing mdependence for Moslem
a reas an the southern Philip-
pin es. They hijacked a Philip-
pines Airlines jet lo Libya by way
of Thailand and Pakistan.
Eeiden~e Gathered
Ray Says 'Set Up'
In King's Slayi:rlg
W \Slll~<;1o"li •AP1 James
E.1rl H J\ 1·1111ll•ndf'd rn .rn in
t1•n a•-.-. IJruacl!'ast nJl1on<1llY
that he had been ~ent to haw a
tire hxed when Dr Martin
Luther KinJ? Jr .,.. as as'la1'smal-
ed and that he was set up to take
the blame.
Ray, convicted of killing Kine.
said Tuesday naghl that "in-
vt'stigations by people represent·
ing me" a re producing cvidcnct'
he thinks will clear him in a new
court proceeding.
But Ray shed no new light on
who killed King if he dltl not, or
why. He said, as he has before,
that his only contact with the
murder was through 4 Lalin
named Raoul. He said he thought
Raoul was conducting a gun-
running operation.
Ray made tbe comments on
the CBS-TV proaram "Wh o's
Who." in Im first television 111-
terview since the assassination
April 4, 1968, in Memphis. The in-
terview took place •l Brushy
Mountain Slate Prison in Petro.,
Tenn. ~
Newsman Dan Rather told him
many view~ra ob\iousb' would
think he wa:t-jwst making up a
story to get bim~el.( out of prison,
Ray replied He had always
thought peQple would not believe
anyt.b.ing he said in a newa In·
lerview.
Giving new detail!\ nbout hill
story about Raoul and a con·
apiracy, Ray said ht! dellvel'fd 1
rme to Raoul shortly bflfote the
ussassinallon in what h~ thought
wu part or the aun running
operaUoo. ~ said Raoul th~
nnt him to have a Ure fixed.
He said t.tie attendants at
Sjtvlce 1tat.lcm t<>ld him-they
were too b\asy to fix the tire
because ol the hour. King was as·
sassihated shortly before 6 p.m.,
the traffic rush·hour period.
Ray said in the Interview he
was certain be waa not in the
rooming house from which the ri-
fl e was fired at King after 5;30
p .Q1 .
Ray said Raoul had been
directing him in gun-running ac-
tivities for a year. He said there
was nothing to distinguish Raoul
except that he had auburn hair,
nol(black hair Uke most Latin
people he knew.
But Ray said he and Raoul had
never cliscussed killing King and
he did not know why King was
killed.
He said he believes the most
plausible theoi-y is the one that
Kang was killed. to halt his civil
rights activities.
.Ray pleaded tuilty to killing
King but tried lo recant that plea
three days later and his effort&
sinoe then to get a new trial have
bffn turned down all the ~ay to
the U .S Supreme Court.
White Man's
Teepee Knifed
ALPINE, Calif. (AP) -A band
or Indians left Neil Ritter•s store-
bo u g b t teepee In shreds,
autho:rtl:tet said.
Ritter 22, complained to San
Pteao County i.herltr's deputies
that ht' hurd nol1ea out.aide the
canva.s homa in whlcb be lived
peacefully at a campsite aince
December.
"They u.ld t.bey dldn't like
white folks Uvin.a in teepeea,"
Ritter said. ,,
Al' Wirt'"" SHE WAS THE 'REASON FOR AIRBORNE DRAMA
Hljaof(e;•e Daugtiter, 3, :r.akctn from Pjane '•
Consultant's Claim
Irvine Co.. Worth ·
Over $315 Million?
By TOM BARLEY dramatically,'' Alk'lnson said.
oitNo.11, 1111eu1.11 .. This lawsuit and its impact on
A consultant hired by Irvin<' the market place have made the
heiress Joa n Irvin e S mith lrvineCompany thesubject ofin-
testified Tuesday 1n Or ange ternational comment and
County Superior Co~rt that the speculation ...
Irvine. Company ~~ 1t stands to-Atkinson told attorney Howard
day as worth somewhere Friedman. representing Mrs.
between $315 million and $350 • . Smith that it would not surprise million." him to see the Irvine Company The estimate came from in· valued at about $443 million or
vestment expert A. Sheridan $52.29 a share if it continues to
Atkinson who stressed that the make ill current progress and at-
figure was a "very conservative tract bidders.
assessment that did not take into
account recent rapid improve-
ments in the fortunes of the
Irvine Company.''
Atkinson testified that if the
company continu~s to record
profit! on the record making $17
million margin set in the last fis·
cal year then he would be much
more inclined to set the com-
pany 's worth at somewhere '
between $390 million and $435
million.
"Earni n gs hav e rise n
The Irvine Company was about
to be sold for $200 million or $24 a
share two years ago when Mrs.
Smith steppecl in to protest the
sale to the Mobil Oil Corporation
as being far below the net worth
of the company founded by her
graQdfather. .
Mobil. then about to acquire
the company, has since stepped
up its bid in the face or intensive
competition to $281.9 minion
which represents $33.50 a share.
<NEWPORT:
But the police spokuman said
the boy told oftleers the woman
bad left her car in the lot with tbe • enctno ~ and bfr Jewelf)'
OD t.be RaL He eaid h& just gotj.n
and drove away and denies ~
knowledie or the woma~s
whereabouts, McAlister noted.,.
Accord.int to· MeAlis~r. ~e
boy bas. bee~ "p~yine mitfd
games with us and ts very strett wise.••
The youth reportedly suggest-
ed several locations in Pasadena
Where be would have displ)sed G[
a body. "Jf I were doing it."
Scates or pollc~r officers from
several law enforcement a~
cies, aided by helicopters cll\d
bloodhounds, Tuesday combed
three ru~ged spots arouftd
Paaa.dena ' Rose 'Bowl, includag
ArroyoSec:o. \
"We s~nt ~I d-.r out lh.t/e
after her husband identified tl)e
personal e.trects and jewelry 'fe
found at the house wMre the boy
was staying,•' Mc Alister said.
"Just because we didn't find
anythln' doesn't mean there;s
no*lling out there," he said. "You
could hide something out there
and not bay• i\ f~d for .a
mUUon years. They U9ed lo film
Tarzan movjes in ..that ar ea
because it. was so much like the
AfricanJuogles "
Today, because of the rain. the
search usinl doga was l\lspeod.i
because the scents had been
washed away. McAlister said."at
least two doien" calls had been
received from people .,.. ho said
they had seen Mrs. Sparling or
her car Monday afternoon. ·
••A couple of things would
make her stand out," McAlistu
said. "She is quite attractive and
she was driving that Corvette. It
has a pretty distinctive license
plate."
Mrs. Sparling's personalized
auto license reads WUV YOU. A
mirliature version of that plate.
attached to the woman's key
ring, also was found wilh the ar·
rested youth's po~ses sions,
McAlister alleced.
the police official said one
caller offered a clear descripliqn
of the car and the woman. which
he reportedly saw on Angeles
·ere.at Highway at about 4 p.m.
Monday.
"We are checking that out
right now," McAlister said.
fashion that works hard!
UTAllLISHED 1m
t
I
Newport ~ is fashion furniture. aftuned to the young at
heart. St1apes and designs that are a working. sloring
integr.tl part of life! But Newport also 1s brilliant Drexel
technology, uniting the depth and grain of pecan with
t1Jrdboard in a relined graphic art~ process.
lnhancmg 1t all with a 15-step finish of honey-toned
beauty And surviving fNery test of family hving ...
beau11fully! The lime to ·see this Drexel If furrir1ure
Drex5b
" ' . . '•
'AOl'l!C3IO"AL. INTERIOR OHION Wl'tHOUT 09llGATION
• CC>i"FOA,l\kf PAAKll'f<l • CONVIN1£HT FIHANCINO
1514 N RTH MAIN• ANT.A ANA•541.,.S91
T'uHd•Y W.onttoay 'Tnu,.d1y 1no Sa1111d1y. 9.~ to S 30 The Store of Famous rt am es Mond•• 1110•• ""d•t t 3010 9
" •
..
if'.
•
.
VOL. 70, NO. 7). A SECTIONS, 4 P.AGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA N/C
County Solon~ .. Favor De&th ·Penalty
..... Wlre&enlc:el
Etiht ol the ni.De memben of
Ora111e County'• delegation an
the atate LesisJature say they
will vote for a capital punish·
ment bill slated for action late
this month.
The ninth, Assembtyman Den·
nis Mangers <D·Huolington
Beach), says b1,.1-.imdecided on
the bill (SB Imr introduced by
~tate Senator George Deukme-
jian <R-Long Beach).
The delecaUon's stand an the
death penalty was elicited in an
Associated Press survey of
leeislatora. It revealed that·
capital punishment backers ap.
parently are ooe vote away from
having enough support in the
Sen a le to approve lbe bill.
But it's a different story in the
•. Assembly wber~ anti-capital
punishment sentiment 1s
stronger and there are still a
number of uncomm1tteed
TOMMY ALBRECHT HUGS MOTHER AFTER VERDICT
Murder Charge Reduced to Manslaughter
Father's Cruelty
; 'Caused Slaying' ,
1 ~
FORT LAUDERDALE, l"la.
(AP) Psych1atnsts say 13-
y ear· old Tom my Albrecht
learned about violence through
hi s father 's threats and
thrashings. Now Tommy faces
five years in state custody for
beating a 3-year-old girl to death
Juvenile Court Judge John
Miller ordered Tommy turned
over to the Oivi'>aon of Youth
Services on Tuesday after deny·
ing an msanaty plea and fmdmg
him gwlty of manslaughter
Officials said Tommy could be
kept in state inslltutaons unttl he
reaches 18.
The boy was charged with
second-degree murder for hitting
and kicking Staci Chu bin to death
Oct. 26 after he spent 20 hours
baby sitting the child. The
judge reduced the charge to
manslaughter.
Witnesses at Tommy's three·
day trial painted a picture of a
Co ast
We ather
Chance of rain near 80
percent tonight and 40 per·
.cent 'fhundq. Wlndy at·
times. Lows tooltbt 45 to
50. Highs Tburaday 50s to Jow60L .
INSIDE TODA 'Y
The horror of ~rotool in o
dork water·JUl«d mm. aha/t
with the ~. of two dead fmnda boa ~ft Ronald A~
with. ni{lhtmore1, ewn wh.n
M'•. ~. He tcU. ma 1to111
onP.ageA9. l••e•
confused and hostile boy who
learned the use of has fists from
beatings administered by has
father, Larry Albrtthl.
One psycruatrisl called ham
"1mpuls1ve, explosive and dt>·
tached,' with uncontrollabl('
violent impulses
··eealmJ? Tommy was has
<father's> answer to every
thin&." the boy's mother, Jean
Albrecht, told the court "He was
always throwing thmgs -a ham-
mer or a rocking chair -at Tom·
my, if not Tommy himself."
Viejo Man's
Suggestion
Wms $1,500
Mission Viejo resident David
Holbert was given $1,500 Tues·
day for a suggestion expected to
save Orange County government
$21,567 a year.
Holbert. an appraiser in the
county assessor's office, won the
top prize i.n suggestion compell-
tion aimed at encouraging coon·
ty employes to propose ways to
save money jn iovernment
1 peratioos.
Supervisor Ralph Clark noted
Holbert's sugsestion was the
. second Goe ever to win the top
$1,500 award.
''It's an idea which 1bows ln-
gen u ity, intelligence and
creative thinking," the
supervisor said.
Holbert found that appra.Dlers
were measuring and sketching
ruJdential units separately when
they were compilinl records for
large bouaiQa developments.
But since most developments
contain only three to five models.
Clark explained, Holbert pro-
posed u:stna a master lilt for each
tract JDd makint separate r~ •
cords a:ily for variatiooa.
A.I a result. Clark said, much
p•perwork and appraiser time
wu ellml.nated, l'esoltin& In a
ltnanclal nvinp.
lawmaken. There tbe mqic
number ia six votes away.
The outcome ii even less cer·
tain when lecislatora are asked
how they will vote on an attempt
to override Gov. Edmund
Brown's promised veto.
Several members in both
nouses who say they will vole foe
the death penalty don't want to
commit themselves now on a
veto ovemde.
They include Orange County
Republican Jobn Bri••• who
says be ii t.b.inkin• ol volinc
acainst an override to help in·
sure there will be a death penalty
initiaUve on the ballot wben
Brown. a Democrat, comes up
for re-election next year.
"I think that if we are going to
serve the people of California
maybe we should not override.
Maybe we should bang it around
Jerry's neck and let blm run on
it,'' said the Senator from
Fullerton.
According to the AP survey.
Oranee County Sen•ton Paul
Carpenter <D-Garden Grove>.
Dennis Carpenter <R·Newport
Beach>. and Briggs all favor the
Deukmejian bill whlcb would al·
low use of capital punishment for
treason and lS' categories of
murder, including multiple
murder, murder of a peace of.
ficer, torture murder and
murder committed durini a rob·
bery.
Jn the Assembly, the county's
dele1atioo linin1 up aaain behind
the bill i.nchades Assemblymen
Ron Cordova CD·EI Toro),
Richard Robinson <D·Santa
Ana). Chet Wray (D-Garden
Grove), William Dannemeyer
< R ·Fullerton), and Bruce
?'ieatande (R-Orange).
Only Mangers is listed as un·
<See PENALTY, Page AZ)
Schools Normal ~gain
Both Sides Issue Pay Parley Threats
By MICHAEL PASKEVICH
OI U. O•llY Piiot Sutt
High school students in the
Newport -Mesa school district
were back on a normal class
schedule today following a
teacher-imposed minimum day
which led many stude nts to
declare their own holiday Tues·
day.
Tuesday's action by teachers,
who are stlll without a contract
for this year, was designed as a
show of solidarity during cur·
r-ently stalled negotiations
between teachers and district of·
flcials
El Toro
Woman
Sought
By WILLIAM SCHREIBER
Ol llM 0.tly Pllet Sl•lf
·The search for a missing Lake
Forest mother of four, who police
anvestigators believe has met
with foul play, was shirted today
from a rugged area near
Pas adena's Rose Bowl to wind-
ing Angeles Crest Highway lead-
mg to Ml Wilson
Rachel Sparling, 36, of 24311
Lakeview Lane, was last seen
about 3:50 p.m Monday as she
left lbe Pasadena office of her
psychiatrist, Dr. Alan Karme.
Early Tuesday morning, Los
Angeles pol.ice arrested a 17·
year-old boy with a long record or
robbery and drug use jn connec·
t1on with the woman 's
mysterious disappearance.
John McAlister, a Pasadena
police spokesman. said the youth
was driving 'Mrs. Sparling's
bronze, 1972 Corvette. which was
involved in a mtnor traffic acci·
dent an the Granada Hills com·
mun1ty of the San Fernando
Valley
"We've got a lot more on him
to mdacate he maghl have been in
race to race contact with Mrs.
Sparling," Mc Alister said
Detectives searching the boy's
residence, a vacant South
Pasadena house, discovered a
Jackel with Mrs. Sparling's
rings, a watch that was a gift
from her husband, several other
personal effects and a .2S caliber
pistol with a round in the
chamber.
McAlister said the youth ad·
milted owning the gun and taking
Mrs. Sparling's auto from the
parking lot in front of the doctor's
office. The boy's rather reported·
ly works dlredly across the
street from the medical office
building.
But the police spokesman said
the boy told officers the woman
had left her car in the lot with the
engine running and her jewelry
on the seat. He said he just got in
a nd drove away and denies any
knowledge of the woman's
whereabouta. McAJister noted.
(See MISSING. Pace AZ)
·suCCESSFUL
.DEYELOPMENT
"I just didn't have time for it
anymore, so I sold my equpment
with a Daily Pilot claulfied ad. I
couldn't belleve the response I.. ·
· That's the testimony of an·
Irvine man who placed this
cl assifledad · I
35mm Minolta SRT 101
w /Hmm l~rn. 75/260 zoom vMlar Jen1, tripod.:
Xlnt. R70. xior-iccut
If you have a bobbJ~aa dce1.
have time few anymor., or neell
ca1h toe a new one you ~an·t af.
ford, call 142·56'1'8. . . •
'
• .
District officials today dis·
tributed a letter to all teachers
today saying they face loss or
pay. disciplinary action or dis·
missal if they stage another
minimum day.
A district spokesman said of·
ficials also are looking into the
legal aspects of a teacher-
dec lared minimum day•to
establish if teachers are
personally liable for any injuries
a student might suffer because of
lack ofsupervislon.
The minimum day plan had its
biggest impact on high schools in
* * *
Newport Beach and Costa Mesa.
Most elementary and middle
schools already were operating
on shortened schedules because
of parent/teacher conferences.
Today was an official district
holiday. for all kinderi:arten
through eighth graders for the
same reason.
ln the one-day action which
teachers say might occur agaan
students were given only half the
normal instruction time. thus
completing the regular day
before lunch.
Although teachers supporting
* * * Teacher Contract
What They're
Arguing About
Newport-Mesa salary requests alofli with their calls for
bindlnl arbitration and more voice in teacher transfer
policies apparently are the major stumbling blocks prevent-
ing a contract settlement between district and teacher
negotiators.
Following is a breakdown on what teachers currently
make, what they are requesting and what the district has of· fered up to this point.
Current wages are based on district figures and do not
include fringe benefits such as health and dental care and a
$5,000 Ufe insurance policy. These benefits cost the district
Sl ,001 per teacher.
Also, since the district operates a uniform salary ,
schedule, figures listed apply to teachers no matter at what
level -elementary, middle, or high school -they teach.
A first.year district teacher with a bachelor's degree
and 30 units of graduate work (now required for a California
teaching credential) receives $10,446, spread out over 10-
one·month pay periods.
A teacher with six years experience, a bachelor's
degree plus 45 graduate units, currently receives $14,081 per
year.
A teacher with 12 years in the district (the top step on
the pay scale) and a master's degree is paid $19,066 an·
nu ally.
The district is currently offering teachers a four per·
(See SALARY, Page At>
Consultant's Claim
Irvine Co .. Worth
Over $315 Million?
By TOM BAB LEY make its current progress and at-
ou 11e Delly f'lloU4ett tract bidders.
A consultant hired by Irvine
heiress Joan Irvine Smith
testified Tuesday in Orange
County Superior Court that the·
· Irvine Company as it stands to-
day is worth "somewhere
between $31S million and $350
million."
The estimate came from in·
vestment expert A. Sheridan
Atkinsm who str~ed that the
'figure was a "very conservative
a.ssessment that did not take 1nto
account recent rapid Improve-
ment.a In the fortunes of the
Irvine Company."
Atldnloo testified that U the
companr continues to record
profits on the record matina '17
mUllon margin set in the lut fls.
cal year then be would be much
more inclined to set the eom·
pany•s wor th at 1omewhere
between $390 mUJlon and $435
million.
•'Earnings bav e risen
d ramaUcally." Atklnson said.
· "Thla lawsuit and ill Impact on
the marbt place an made the
Irvine CompaQ1 the subject of In·
ternat1onal eomment and
•peculation... •
The Irvine Company was about
to be sold tor $200 million or $24 a
share two years ago when Mrs.
Smith stepped in to protest the
sale to the Mobil Oil Corporation.
the show of strength_ ·plan re·
maaned on campus, many stu·
dents left school early.
A mediator from the state
Educaltonal Employment Rela·
lions Board 1s due to arrive
March 30 to sort out the de·
adlocked bargaining sessions.
Leaders of the Newp<>rt-Mesa
Education Association, the or·
ganizat1on representing
teachers, said they may call for
a nother muumum day when the
mediator arrives to show they
are senottS about lheir contract
demands.
Clay Gods
Bring· Rain
For Payne
"I couldn't have done it •
without Cocijo," a modest Bm-
Payne Hid today.
T he former Orange Coast
College art instructor's clay gods
may have done lhe trick Tues-
day. since torrents of rainfall fell
on Southern California today.
Payne placed his Zapotec In·
dian gods in a pasture at Orange
Coast College Tuesday aod sure
enough, the rain began to fall this
morning.
The 63-year-old professor said
three weeks a~o that it wou{d
STEADY RAIN HITS
NORTHERN AREA, AS
rai.n today, and the fact thatitdid
brings to 13 the number o( SUC·
cessfuJ rains brought on by the
palm-sized clay figurines. That's
out of 14 lries, he says.
Meanwhile, forecasters at the
Los Angeles Weather Service
s aid the rams should continue
through tonight, decreasing to a
40 percent chance of continued
showers on Thursday.
The ram moving through
Southern Califorru a is expected
to drop between three-quarters of
an inch to an inch of the wet stuff
before lettrng up sometime
Thursday. _..
Forecaster Patricia Rowe said
skies will be fair Friday with con.
tinued cool weather through Sun·
day.
She said the weather front that
hovered over Washington state
and Oregon earlier this week,
''just up and· moved down here.
bringing all this lovely rain."
But Payne, who retired from
OCC in 1974, said he can't take
full credit for the ralnfall.
''It was the work of Cocijo, ''he
said solemnly. "I am only the in·
term ediary. ·'
• A~ told att.orriey Howard Friedman. repreaentiilf Kri.
SmJtb that lt Would not aurprbe
bUQ to eee UM '1fvlDe Companr ' •
val'*l It about MU mllllon or
. $52.2t ~ share lf It continua to
Dllfr""' ...... ., PeMdl .. .,..,...
RAINMAKER PAYNE D£UOHT1 IN WATER FROM ABOVE
COC...-Alt THChec' ~ .... With Ntual · ,.,.-
lo McA .
"Playlaa 111.D111-..,..,.
Tbe ) repon.clly 1\1 l ·
t"d annal ••Uom !JI Pu..._•
where he would have dllPoMd ol
•body, ··u1 were 1 tt."
Scocw ot PDUce om~ tr-om
several law enforcemeot acen·
c:iu, aided by heUcopten Md
bloodbouncb, Tuesday combed
three ru11•d 1pota around
Pasadena'• R.o.e Bowl, tncludlQc Arroyo Seeo.
"We •Pl'nt all day out there
after her hWJband idenWled the
personaJ effects and jewelry we
found at the house where the boy 1 was slaying,'· Mc Alister said. 1 "Just because we dtdn't nnd
anything doesn't mean there's
nothing out there," he said. "You
could hide something out there
and not have it round ror •
million yean. They used to fiJm
Tarzan movies in that area
because it was so much hke the
African jungles.''
Today, because of the rain, the
search using dogs was suspended
because the scents had been
washed away MCAiister said "at
least two dozen" calls had been
received from people who said
. they bad seen Mrs. Sparling or
her car Monday afternoon.
"A couple of things would
make her stand out," Mc Alister
• said "She is quite attractive and
' she was driving that Corvette. It
' has a pretty distinctive license
plate."
Mrs. Sparling's personalized
auto license reads WUV YOU. A
miniature version of that plate,
alt ached to the woman's key
ring, also was found with the ar-
rested youth's possessio ns.
McAlister alleged.
The pohce offi cial said one
call er offered a clear description •
of the car and the woman, which
he reportl'<ily saw on Angeles
Crest Highway al about 4 p.m.
Monday
"We are checking lhat out
right now," McAli~ter said
"That·~ really rug~cd country up
there If l \.\ere a c rook, I wouW
want to dump som<.•thing up there
for sun•"
Thl' youth pol1t'l' have> arrested
has no rCl'orc! o' vmlt.>nl erimP.
though* McAli ~tcr ~J1d he ap·
pears to have a ··..,hort man's
com pk•:-." that make" him ··pret
ty pushy :rnd agr:rcs ... 1ve "
TONIGHT
"ONE FLEW OVER T llE
Cl'CKOO'S NEST" OCC
Drama. Auditorium, March
16-19. 8 pm f'ree
OCC LECTtrRF. "Av1al.Jon
Safety for l'tloh," Fine Arts
Rldg 119, 7.:lOp m
.. TWO GENTLEMEN OF
VERONA " ·South Coast
Repertory Theater, Tuesday·
Sunday through April 23, 8 p. m.
THURSDAY, MARCH 17
CHART Regular mei!ting,
Dr Al Painter, Chairman Costa
Mesa Water Committee,
speaker. Glendale Federal Sav
ings, Harbor & Wilson, 7 30 a.m
LIBRARY STORY HOUR -
Costa Mesa Library, 10 30 a m
ORANGE COUNTY FAIR
BOARD Regular meeting, 88
Fair Dnve. 7 p m
OCC LECTU RE -"The
Futurc Is , " Fine Arts Bldg
ll9, 7 30 pm
Mesa Rec Classes
set for Sign ups
Signups for sprin1 classes,
s ponsored by the Costa Mesa de-
partment of leisure services. will
be held March 21 at the
Downtown Community Center.
Classes ranging from yoga to
belly dancing,· children's ballet
and dog obedience are belng of·
fered_ For information on class
ofrerin1s. call t.be department at
556·5300_
0..ANOI! COMT c
DAILY PILOT
•"'"11t ...
...... ft ..... --. Jec:••.c...., v ... ~,.,,.o.-.. -....
,,_~ .. .., ,,_._ .. --.. Ma ......... ..
"'*-"·~ ........ ... ............ .,,.""""~ ,. ~·
.,. ..... .,.....
MISSING MOTHER
Rachel Sparling
•
Cotta ••• plaanht1 com. mluioncn an rtt m
lo•w dmsltlel ae about 100 &cu
on the clty'1 west side They are
parcel• known H "old Co.ta
Mesa lot.a," because ol their al&e
-80by300feet.
Tbe ~ u commbaJcnen aee It, la tbat high deGally apart.
ment construction on the long,
narrow lol3 is nearly imposslbJe.
Two weeks ago, the panel re--
com mended a city council·
unpoeed freeze be placed on the
area, wb.ich is bordered by
Hamilton and 19th Streets on the
north and sduth, and Pomona
and Placentia Avenues oo the
east and west. Also targeted for
the four-month freeze would be a
Swiss Police Nab
Italian Hijacker
ZURICH, Switzerland CAP) -
An Italian hijacker was over-
powered by Swiss ~lice and ar-
rested today at the end of an
8,500-mile pirate fli&ht in a
Spanish airliner around Europe
and West Africa. It was the
second-longest hijacking In dis-
tance on record and the longest
by a lone hi1acker.
Police saicl. the hijacker, Lu-
ciano Porcari, manage<'. to grab
his '!'inchester rifle and fire one
shot, slightly wounding one of the
three policemen who seized tum
mside the plane. No one else was
hurt, the police said .
.. Holy Mother of God, it's
fini s hed," said Porcan's
estranged wife in Turin, Italy,
when she heard it was over
The wife. Isabella Zavoli, re-
fused to surrender the couple'c;
5-year·old daughter to Porcari,
one of hi-; demands during the
44' 2 -hour hijackmg
Police said Porcan, a 36·year
old auto nlC'chanic, was bcmg
held JO 1mcstigativc custodv
pending a decision on whether he
should be tried in Switzerland.
Spain is expected to seek his ex-
tr adlijon. Tli~ three policemen entered
the plane posing as members or a
fresh flight crew that was to fly
-the Iberian Airlines Boeing 727 to
Moscow. They subdued the hi·
1ackerwithin moments.
The 13 passenger-hostages still
aboard the plane and the seven
exhausted crew members who
had manned the aircraft since
Monday afternoon were released unharmed. _ ,.
Also aboard was Porcari's 3.
year-old daughter by an African
mistress. The child was picked
up in the Ivory Coast.
"He didn't threaten us badly,"
said Mana Teresa Llorei Castell,
one of the freed hostages. "He
behaved like a gentleman. He
even tried lo calm down my
children."
Porcari released seven other
passengers in Turin, Italy, and
nine in Zurich Tuesday
Internal Police
Probe Nears End
A Laguna Bea ch police de-
partmental internal affairs 1n
vt>sl1gat1on of an incident in
\.\hich a Costa Mesa resident al -
leied ao off.duty Art Colony of
ficer brand1:o;hed a gun at him
"ill ronclude this "ce>k. Pohre
Mesa Police
Seek Trio in
Purse Snatch
Costa Mesa police are seeking
tnree men who rode off on a
three·wheeit."() motorcycle Mon-
day evenm& after laking a puri;c
contairung $162 from a shopper.
Mana L Castanacia, who lives
in ar, apartment at 2190 College
Ave , lold police a man weanng
denim Jacket and trousers ap-
proached her as she left the K
Mart store al 2200 Harbor Bl vd
atabout7p m
She said the man, an adult
Caucasian standing about rive
feet six mchcs tall and we1ghin,:?
150 pounds, grabbed lhe purse
and leaped into the back of the
three·whttl cycle
She said the other t~o suspecLc;
on the motorcycle were alc;o
wearing denim trousers and one
had a motorcycle helmet on his
head.
Chief Jon Sparks said today.
That will be before narcotics
detective Craig Kmg, 29, enters a
plea during a scheduled arraign-
ment in Harbor District
mun1c1pal court on a misde·
m eanor charge of brandishing a
"eapon
Kmg was to havt: been ar-
ra1gnt.'<1 Monday Rut he failed to
appear and the court issued a
bench warrant for his arrest
when no explanation came from
King's Laguna Beach attorney,
Thomas Reilly.
Reilly appeared in court Tues-
day and won a continuance of the
arraignment until late this
month. No plea was entered.
The warrant was canceled.
Earlier Tuesday Reilly refused
to comment to the press. "I can't
tell you anything," he sald. "I ex·
peel to know more Friday. J don't
want to be bolhered between now
and Friday."
he1Uy did not return telephone
calls placed to his office today.
King was mterv1ewed by Costa
Mesa police Feb. 26 who were
called lo the K111g·s Inn Bar and
Grill, 720 Randolph St., answer-
mg a call about a man wilh a gun.
The officer was not arrested
Chief Sparks said today the in-
ternal affairs investigation does
not depend upon any court ac-
tion "We only deaJ with the
facts"' Sparks said.
F,....P-.AJ
SALARY REQUESTS. • •
.cent raise for this year (retroactive to July 1, 1976) ind an
additional five percent for next year, bringin& the two-year
off er to nine percent.
Teachers want a retroactive seven percent raise for this
year with an additional six percent hike for next year, for a
total of 13 percent.
The breakdown
Current Salary DtaUtctOffer <rro> TeacberlleqaHt (13%)
$10,«6 Sll,386.14 $11,803.98
$14,081 $U,343.29 $15,911.5.3
$19,066 $20, 781.94 $21,544.58
At present, the median income for Newport-Mesa's
1,200-plus teachers I• $17 ,210.
Some teacben have expressed anger over a 12 percent
raise awarded lut year lo district Superintendent Jom
Nicoll. \ Hll C\llT'lllt salary la $43,154 per year, but aasi.atant
.aupednt.eadeat Kevin Wheeler noted that Dr. Nicoli's raise wu bla flnt In tJ\rff yean .
Teache' requ•tt 101' blndinJ arbitratloQ may well end
uP •• tbetey illu. ln current negotiationa. Under~ arbitration, an Independent arbitra~ ~ld bav. the llDal HY ln any grievances IUed by eltber ta&oben or the dlltrict after a contract se&tlement. ldt.rtct nefotiaton ara holding out •tor advisory
arbltratt)in ln whicb the 1choot board would llave tho final aay ori atievanc:ea.
In either cue an arbltrator would be called lo, but un·
der advbory arbWhUon, tho arbitrator'• decl1lon b taken
u • recommeddadl'n and ii not blndln1.
A.nothtt POlnt ot contention iJI teacher requests for ~
voice in teacfier tran!en between·~· Teacberl elaJm U.. dll&rict'a oa mum teacbera
'COQJd betnm.terred at th• d"1d. traton.
Diltrict officlalt claJm thla power la nec_.uy to
balu~ out teachlnl Nttlcnmeoi. •bJch will be ef:f .ct.d b1
decttnlqenrollm t and futurelCbooldmW*.
(
amalJ area CID lfap Sltett north er ~ a I.art•. wider kK, t
o1 8t:matd su-... u.. ctl) ~ .. w, ap.
Coed) lllembcn will study prove a bi.... d t~," •x·
that recommeodation at ~r pl&IJMd Douc Clull, cbiel ad·
mMt.1.n1 Mclnd.a)' evenins. vanc-e planner f'K the clty
Pl&J111lni commluionen thb Ke said the plan1 called lot COin·
week recommended a ionaq at 90lldadon, wortcea very well on ·
R2 -or medium d«mlt~ de· loo.a, nan-ow Joli alcn1 Vlctoria
vdopmenl -be imposed on the St.reetluly•ar. m~ority of the Jots tn the at.udy Clark said there are currenUy
area. 640 residential units in the lwo
The parcels, curreoUy zoned areas. wtth a population ot about
RJ and R4 for heavy residential 1,088. Be aaid current &oning
development, oiler limlled nex. would allow. a total or 1.~ units
ibility tn apartment design, ac-with a proJected population of
cording lo the city's planntng-~ 1,935. partment. A rezone of t!'e area would re
But department o((icial5 say duce the maximum number of
lowerlng the density on the are~ legal unil3 rrom .1.138 to 701, and
will not necessarily mean higher perhaps ~ore w1th approved lot
density developments C&rulot be consolidations.· •
created. Clark said the area was zoned
"If the owner of one of the for the highest density about five
typical lots wants to combine his ye.ars a~o. "and what. lh~ com-
lot with a neighbor's, thereby m1ss1on ts recommending 1s that
the area be reverted back to a
lower density.''
o.lly .. llM St• .......
Blf'tladall Gtrl ...
Pat Nix.OD turned 65 today.
It was unknown how the
former first lady and her
family would celebrate the
occasion. Mrs. Nixon was
born in Ely, Nev., in 1912.
Mesa Golfing
Pro Guilty 1
Of Booking
Costa Mesa Golf and Country
Club pro Deray Simon has been
sentenced to four weekends in
O~pge County Jail and fined
Sl,000 after pleading guilty to
bookmaking offenses involvmg
college football games.
Crime Figure Mum
On Killing of JFK
Superior Court Judge James
H. Walsworth ordered the jail
term and the fine for Simon, 38,
after it was alleged that he had
made as much as between $350
and $400 a week distributing foot-
ball cards.
Investigators said they were
led to Simon of 18847 Lister Lane,
Huntington Beach, by Juveniles
and golf club employes who sold
football cards under his dlrec.
lion.
A report s ubmitted to Judge
Walsworth by the probation of·
ricer notes that Simon won the
California Open 1n 1970 and the
Ontario Open and Prince
Edward Opt'n in 1972.
Mesa High Stages
'Uom in Winter'
An independent student pro-
duction of "The Lion In Winter"
will be presented Thursday
through Saturday, 8 p.m., at
Costa Mesa High School L.Yceum.
Tickets are '1.50 in advance, $2
at the door. Advance tickets are
available at the fine arts office at
Costa Mesa fUgh .
WASHlNGTON (AP) -A re-
puted crime figure invoked lhe
Fifth Amendment to all ques·
lions today as the House commit·
tee on assassinations asked
whether he knew in advance that
President John F . Kennedy was
going lo be murdered.
In refusing lo aMwer qu~·
tionS, Santos Trafficante, once a
reputed gambling kingpin in
Cuba, cited bis constitutional
right against.self-incrimination.
He also refused to answer
wbetber he had known Jack
Ruby, the man· who kllled Lee
Harvey Oswald, or whether
Ruby once visited Trafficante
when he was in prison in Cuba.
The Warren Commission said
Oswald was the lone assassin or
Kennedy.
In addit ion, he refused to
answer wbelher he was, in fact,
involved in CIA assassination
plots against Cuban Prime
Minister Fidel Castro, as report·
ed by the Senate intelligence
committee, or whether a ny
federaJ agency attempted to keep
him from testifying before the
House committee on aasassina~
tions.
Trafficante is the sole'sdtvtvor
of a 1antJand trio secretly' enlist·
ed by tlfe CIA in 1960 ln fuWe ef-
fott.s to k.ilfCastro.
According to published re·
ports', the FBI had Information
that Trafficante had told people
in advance that Kennedy would
be assassinated, but the FBI dis-
missed the remark as brag-
&adocio.
Trafficante refused to answer
all questions put to him by chief coun~l -Riehard A. Sprague and
a committee member, citing the
First, Fourth, Fifth and Foor·
teenth Amendments of the
Constitution.
· But Chairman Louis Stokes CD·
Ohio), told Tralficante that was
not good enough and that the
~ommittee might recommend to
the House that be be cited for
contempt of Congress.
Trafficante s~ill 1efused to
answer any questions. •
Sprague asked if he· had any
advance information that Ke~·
nedy was going to be assasslna\.-
ed Nov. 22, 1963, or that he h~
advised other people of that fact ..
Fro.P~AJ .
PENALTY. J • committed of all Orange County
legislators. ,
The AP survey showed a to~
or 24 senators in favor of lbe
Deakmejlan bill and two who
said they would probably end up
voting for it.
GNEWPORT:
•
HTAILISKIO 1m
fashion that works hard!
Newport'~ 1~ fashion furniture, afluned to the young at
heart. St1aoes and desrqns that are a working. storing
integral narl ol hie• But Newport also IS briUiJnt Drexel
technology. uniting the depth and grain of pecan w1U1
hardboard 1n a relined graphic arts process
Enhancing it all wHh a 15-step finish of honey-tonecl
beauty. And surviving every test of family hving ...
beautifully! The time to see this Drexel , furniture
DrexSb
PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR OUIGN WITHOVf OBLIOATION
•COMFORTABLE PARKING • CONVINllNT l'INANCINQ
1514 NORTH MAIN• SANTA ANA• 541..-3Q1
T11 .. oey, Wtd11etd1v. Th\ll'ICl1y and Stllltday IUO 10 5.30
Monday 121ot• f:1lo1yt.30tot
l l
Pilot J
Logbook_
His $1. 98 Drearn
Glows in Store
By ARTHUR R . Vl~SEL
Ot l 11t D•llY ll'tlot St .. f
Nice things happen in supermarkets besides getting a
good deal on two cans of tomato sauce. or a de.oted tin of
tuna in the dam aged ~oods bin for only half the pnce.
SOMETIM ES, INCURABLE people·watchers like
myself not.ace this and it makes up for the uanks who hold
up the checkout line quarrC!lling about an advertised s pecial
or furious because the bonl.is china you get with coupons is
out of stock
They were a group of four or rive, the kids maybe JO to
20, and a rather pretty motht.>r with spatkling dark eyes
and a smile thJt says her Ii f e 1s good. all thing.s considered.
She was in J wheelchair that looked rather permanent
One could look a t their fa<'es and
<'lothing and almos t em·ision the inside
of their home. probably rented, even 1m
agine the kind or stereo albums in their
record <'a&e, by matching ages and
musical st} les
Each member of the family seemed
to have an appomted shopping duty.
I PUSHED ON WITH MY cart and
encountered them again near the meat
v1HHL counter The wheelchair mom studied
the economical cuts at nose level ~th the refrigerated case,
planning the week's modest menus.
Suddenly the hltle kid about 10 rushed up with the most
wondrous. brown rubber. pebble· grained football known to
m ankind
"Mom Mom . Look. 'This is the greatest football
in the world," hl' proc·laimcd in a voice edging from
boyhood soprano on toward whate\•er tone adolescence will
ultimately takt· 1l
· I could throw 1t a milt" C'un 1H• gt'l 1t ., ..
TllE SJN(.;LE UTTl.t: egg ~haped weapon or gridiron
"'arfare that launches SIClO,OOO·a-year careers for the pro
superstars cosl onl) Sl .98 or !>Omethmg hke that.
lie pretended to hurl 1l .io yards for a touchdown. cradl
mg the hall In his right hand and slapping the fresh. un
marred rubber 1m1tat100 pigskin into his left
.. Be qu1t't' vl't O\'er here You 4ow we can't afford 1t,'
the mother hissed. lrylag not to attract attention as the boy
bounced back. a1 mmg ror imaginary downfield receivers
beyond the catfish. veal cutlets and thrifty ground round
But her dark, luminous eyes held asecretshme.
MA \'BE THE I.ADY IN THE wheelchair env1s1oned sit
t1ni.: on the <;1dc•hne!> some frosty October night. screaming
+ •
. .
1Jon,
111w.u .. 111191~ tru.t• ror a
on~ t1tt
Lad to U. c 1 at 11.511 an
acra w about a.s milllon ror the mUrepwcet.
At UM •~ Ume, the 14>5
AU.0. Water 'Dtstrit"t la nelCJlial·
in& fOf' aaot.her 525 acres of ranch
property Oatland at a higher
price ot $2, 7:i0.
The waler district would
sprlnkle the nauand with treated
waalewater. allowing it to soak
Coastal
Pennits
Ignored
After listening to predictions of
bureaucratic snarls and growing
government costs, Orange Coun-
ty supervisors rejected a c hance
lo get mto the coastal perm it issu-
ing business Tuesday.
Murray Storm, an assistant
director of the county E nvirQn·
menta l Ma nagement A~ency.
said tbe county could t ake over
the permit business from the
South Coast Regional Coaslal
Commission
But, he noted. major develop
ments still would have to J!O
before the coasta l comm1ss1on
Permits for smaller pro1ects
would require hearings before
both supervisors and planning
com missioners.
All county ·le' el dec1s1ons
could be a ppealed lo the coastal
com mission and the count}
would need 10 to 12 new employes
lo handle the cumbersome pro-
cess
Storm said county officials had
discussed the permit quesllon
with several c1t1es, who also
could take over the procedure for
their own Joe.al projects.
"We find no one in favor of
local government taking over the
permit issuing process." Storm
contmut'd. "and when we find out
what is involved. we are not sur
prised ··
Storm sauJ lhe counlv would
continue dc\•clopmg a · t1:1ast<1I
plan One<' that plan 1s dt·
v e Io p ed. h l' <' x p I a 1 n e d . l h l'
coC1s tal comm1 !>sio n will nu
longer ha\ e 1urisd1ction and
pe rmits \\11l not be necess<1ry
Storm said extensive planning
work alread)' w~ completed for
the l .000 acres along the Irvine
Coast between Newport Beach
and Laguna Beach.
And he suj?~ested that segment
of the plan be implemented £irst
"1t1i' oth<'r segment!> of the plan
develoJM'(i IJtf'r
b4dt u1w~1ruu1.d.
l•)' aaid TMfda) be belie'
• jotDL water d1atract·c l)'
purt'h tor .all th land m
be n~ou t~ Yflth lb• propen)'
ownen at a to-r tataJ J>ric«. J Jn rupon11.-to Scbmtt '11
hltlclams. Riley :1 Id h• en·
vi11oned leaving t~e land ai.
wlldemtss until south county
population increases to the point
thatapark1sneeded.
Diedrich told Rlley he dldn 't
disputt the l and's price, but
•
t . ..,. ,.,. IO_.em dmc..
One at lboM w a •
t «!htcm by lh• 1tat• Wat•r
Rlaun:8 C.antroa Boa.rd at l c
Lemporartly UmaUnc waw r1'
lo lhe aoutb .. at county, Tiie
•econd waa a detla1on by
supervt.ors lul year to expand a
realdentlal buHdlnc ban over
part ol the property lo proteet
homebuyers from El Toro
'Marine Corps Air Station Jet.
·noise.
Fronting the Cold
ny of Huntington Beach said today's rain
was the first meas urable precipitation to
faJl on the Or~nge Coast '.'11nce Feb. 25
Even these sea gulls appeared chilly in
the face of cool winds that blew m today's
storm. Weathe r watcher J . Sherman Den-
Juvenile Justice
Violation Denied
A fellow Orange Counly
Superior Court Judg(' upheld
Juvenile court Judvc Raymond
Vin cent·~ "loC'k ·em up·· pohcy
Tuesda). pavmg thl· way for
what M'cm~ u·rtain to be an
eH•ntual ruling h~ thl' apµcllall'
c·ourt on a contro\ crsu1I Juvcnilt•
Justice issue \
.. Judge Waller Sm1lh d~n1ed
Deputy Pubhl' Defender Michael
Ward's argument lhat Judge
.Vincent's handling of runawa}
offenders violate!> lho i.tate's con
trovers111J new Juvenile JUSt1ce
law
Judge Smith said he was well
aware of the law's provis1om. but
he does not bt'heve that legis
lators seriously expected Juvenile
JUVENILE JUSTICE
lrn°'"19~7··
authorities to take no action
ag ainst youngs ters facin g
cha rges who escape from
facilities.
The issue stem s from the
passage J a n. 1 of the new
Juv enile justi~e refo.rm law
which appears to prohibit the
confining or "status off~nd.ers':
in lock up facilities with those
youngsters accused of commit·
ting crimes
Tie-ins Seen
In Murders
Of 7 Men
LOS ANGF.LES <AP~
S1m1larities among murders or
seven young males whose bod1e:.
were l eft n ('ar Southern
California highways has led to a
Joint investigation hy homicide
dete<'tives in four t·ount1es 1
The Los Ange les Countt Sheriff's department ~<11d a
seven v1<'lim!> had been shot in th
head and were nude Three bodies
were io plastic bugs
Six of the s hootiogb occurred in
the last seven months. and thret
of those victims have not yet beeh
identified
·A s heriff's s pokesman said
Tuesday that no motive for tht•
s layings has been unc-overed for the sbm. !>trong hi gh school quarterback passing for the
"'innmg touchdO\\n Or maybe it isn't extravagant to en-
' 1:.1on Nc\I. YcJr's Oa} m Pa~adena's Rose BowP
I ran into thom again at the checkstand. And there be
"' ....... clutt•hmg that marvelous Sl.98 football. a bargain the
Wheelchair Mom reallied was jus t loo good to refuse
His eyes s honc with Pat Haden. Kenny Stabler. Roger
Staubach. Johnny l nila~. Joe Namath. clnd Fran Tarkent~n
dreams as hi!> older brothers and sisters gathered up_ their
hC1gs of groceries
Accounts Detail
Land, Stock Deals
So-called status offenders are
juveniles held for such things as
truancy, curfew violations and
oth er offe nses t hat adults
wouldn't be held accountable for.
But the new law did not include
the old law's provision that al-
lowed juvenile courts lo place
status offenders in a lock up
faci lity if they ran away from the
unlocked facility.
The latest body, as yet uniden-
tified. was found March 7 along
Interstate 10 near Banning in
Riverside County Bodies of th<'
other victims were found m Los
Angeles. Orange and San Diego
counties.
The first vic-llm was Albert
Rivera, 21. of Los Angeles whose
body was found April 1:J, 1975.
alon g Ortega lfi~hway . Two un
identified victims were found in
August, 1976, and October, 1976. m
the same area, east of San Juan
Capistrano
ONE f'OUl.D SEE THE KJD'S dreams faintly reflectf.'<1
111 the <'Yl's of his cheelcha1r·bound mom as she sat 1n lint'
looking up at htm She caught m y eye and smiled shyly So
what'' Maybe ht' wouldn 'l be a Joe !'tamath some day, but he
1s this night.
I cout<Sn't ne1p Jooluna down at my own purchases and
"'ondenn~ who Jeot tbto market's real 5pecial of the week.,
HEW Action Blasted
W ASIUNGTON ! AP 1 The nuendo ·
Uy The Associated Press
romplicated land and stock de-
als mvolv ing former Anzona
Republica n chuirman llarry
Rosen zweig are dct a tied in
published account~ of the latP~t
of articles by a group of in-
vestigative reporters
The latest story did not include
any allegations of 1llegaht)' in the
intricate deals. but stressed the
presence sometimes on thl'
periphery of convicted extor
t ionist and land promoter Nl'd
Warren Sr
The published aceounts ap-
The series already has drawn
criticism from U .S. Sen. Barr~
Goldwater < R-Anz l. and his
brother Rober t. ml•nltoned in
earlier install ments.
Rosenzweig has not been
c1vailable fo r (Omment. lhs
secretar). Joyce M arguhes.
telephoned the AP in Phoenix on
Tuesday and s aid "M r
Rosenzweig s legal counsel ha!>
advised him to make no s tate
ment unlit the articles about h1m
have been completed Al that
time thl' m<•ller will he con
s1dered and you \\Ill be advised
of h1:. dec1s1on ·
Judge Vincent reacted sharply
last January to a high runaway
rate from Santa Ana's McMillan
School immediately after the
new law went into effect.
He made status offenders who
ran away from the facility 1m·
mediately eligible for lock ,up
confinement m juvenile hall.
Ward's petition Tuesday in
.1 udge Smith's court was the
third such challenge to be reject-
ed since Judge Vincent's polic)-
wenl tnto effect.
The ottter unidentified victim
was found last October alon~
California 80 east of El Cajon The
body of Timothy Ingham, 16, of
M e r ced wa s found near
California 79 in Borrego Springs
last September And the body of
Nicholas Hernandez J1mine1. 28.
or Guatemala \\aS found J an. 24,
1977, near Lerutox Roulevard in
Los Angeles under a San Diegn
Freeway ovcrpass.
f{overnmenl IS Checking £or mlS·
takes on Its list of doctors and
medical clinks receiving mort>
than $100.000 in Medicare pay-
m e nls for 197~. a lut the
American Medical Asaoe1at1on
says s hould never have been
made public.
He offered assistance to the
Department of Health. Educa
t.Jon and Welfa re in trnc~in~
down cases of possible wron~o· mg by doctors. The depar ent.
m makine the list public. ade
no allegations of wrongdo by
physicians.
pearing todC1y in the lndianapohs
Star and the Miami Herald ----
Dr. James H. Sammons. ex-
ecutive vice president of the
AMA. said Tuesday releasing the
names "serves only to badger a
la rge segment or the profession
and to establish guilt by in
The list, containing the names-
of 409 physicians. 1,752 groups
and SS laboratories. does contain
apparent errors. however. and
officials said they were go~ng
over their figure$
were the latest tn a copyrighted
ser i es by ln vestlgat1vc
Reporters a nd Editors, Inc.
Thirty-six JOUrnalists went
to the state after the murder of
reporter Don Bolles of the
Arizona Republic. The series, for
use over 23 days. was released to
participating news papers and
broadcast outlets beginning Sun
day.
* * * Westgate Loan Unpaid
. ~ Financier Smith Linked to Arizona Crime?
PHOENIX, Arlt. CAP I
Vallay National Bank or Antona
officials sajd Tuesday that a one-
year loan made to C. Arnholt
Smith's Westgate-California
Corp. in May lt73 has never been
repaid.
And officials said the finan·
t'fer's name may be spotlighted
a1ain in connection with a series
of Investigative articles on
,Arizona crime currently being
published.
The loan was secured by stock
In Air Cauromia, an intrastate
airline subsidiary or Westgate.
aaid Gilbert F. Bradley, board·
thalrman and chief financial of·
f tcer of Arizona's largest bank.
He said the stock repreunt.s 78
percent or Air Calltornia
ownership and Is worth ue> to $1&
million on the roarket
Accordln& to Bradley, the b~nk
haa ~ unable to collect on tht
Joan bttauae the a~k bu been
tied up in federal court proceed·
ings s ince Westgate filed for
bankruptcy in F~ruary 1974
Bradley alaQ told the aMual
meeting of VNI) stockholders.
Tuesday that "t.-e may be hear·
ing all over again about C.
Arnholt Smith."
He indicated the rtoancier's·
name may come up in a series of
reports by Investigative·
Reporters and Editors Inc. on
crime in Arhona. Several·
newspapers are in the first week
of publishing a 23-part series of
s tories compiled by the IRE ln a
slx-month lmvestigntJon spurred
by the Juno 1978 car· bomb alay-
lnl or Atilona Republic reJl()rter
Dou Bollea. ·
Bradley &aid be und•ntood the
IRE st.ori• report that he and
othu bank officerw decUned to be lntemewedby~ •• ,,,. t ll a ut 1y
1falae," beaatit
Bradley said that m one in
stance a bank altorney declined
to reveal confidential informa-
tion about its relations hip with &
customer.
U nder questi o ning by
stockholders, he declined to com·
ment on any .possible loans by the
bank to Gus preenbaum, a re·
puted organized crime figure
who allegedly ran a racing wire
here in the late 1940s and was
murdered.
· Greenbaum's namil bas been ·
.tied in the IRE stories to Sen.
Barry Goldwater (R-Arit. ). and
hl1 brother Robert, and Harry
Rostnuvelc. former Arlzona
Ropub~can chairman · .
· Bradley reiterated ear lier
statement.I t.bal the bank dealt
with Smith "<>n a business-like
bulw."
•'Re· wu a customer for 30
yean. ind a 1ood one," he aald.
Gem
Talk
/i11 ,I I ' //I \I/ 'II UI f,S
TI1E SAME FACES
we're 11ttll here
People who stop in our store often
rem ark that they keep seeing the
same faces over and over . And. they
seem to like that
Now, we're nol bragging about how
our faces look ... just that we're
always here . We've been here tor
over 30 years, and hope to stay a lot
longer. Why? Well, we've got. a nice
location downtown, away rrom the
high-rent shopping centers. Parking
is r ight out front. We're able to
continue to deal In high quality
without charatne a premium for
overhead expenses. We get along fine
with our neighbors, too. We're happy
to be involved. in efforts to improve
our town and make it an even better
place lo live. We think its pretty nic~
the ,..a,y it is, but just like our store,
we always want to make ll better.
So, atop by any lime you want to
chec~ on our face!!.
Th~" sUll here. And. they're aUll
amllins_.
Come In and see our large selection
of marqvise dl8monds 1n a
variety of settings In ell sizes
and price renses.
1823 N~T BLVO .. COSTA MESA
CONVENlENT TERMS S.nkAmartcard-Masttf' Cl'latoe
30 YEARS IN THE SAME LOCATION PHONE ~I
1
,r
~
\
I
,.
-
PLACARD TIME: Orange
County has for so many decades
c;arned the reputation or a non-
union bastion that when we
abrupUy face an orgamied labor
situation, we don't really know
how to handle it.
Thus the mass confusion came
only ye5terday when orgaruied
labor flexed its muscles io
Newport Beach and Costa Mesa.
It's a bit difficult to think ()f
Costa Mesa or Newport as union
towns.
But the action didn't come al
some plumber's shop or boat·
building works. It happened m
the schools. Currently, a teacher's or-
gan i ia lion known a s the
Newport-Mesa Educators As -
sociation ts in a s tandoff with the
school district over wage and
contract negotiations.
T HE EDUCATORS associa-
tion is, for all practical purposes,
the union in this drama.
So the teachers· group decided
to go for a sho~ or strength
yes terday. Dlstrictwide. the
educators association pushed for
its teachers to t each only a
minimum day with half-hour
periods. ignoring-\he sc·hool
bells
This would b l· It kc auto
workers on the assembly line ig-
noring the time clock.
1"nr the rest of the s<'hool day,
the teachers were supposed to
~tay on c;1mpus to counsel stu·
dents, and the hke.
Through all this, tt>ere was a
lot of confusion for students.
purenb. school c1dmin1strators
and e v e n th e t eac hers
thcmsel\es
Soml' ll'ttchcrs. lacking the
protection or tenun·. chose to ig
nore tht' minimum d.ty and
taught regular length <·lasses
Most went for the mm1mum dav.
Thus many hili(h SC'hool s tu
dents found full·lenglh classes
overlapping minimum dasse:.
Many just left school after lunch
ALL KINDS OF reports drifted
<>ul of the classrooms One m
structor at Costa Mci1a High
School reportedly forced h1s s tu
dents to s ign a paper pledgmg
they would stay in school all day
Another teacher ullegedly
threatened '•to sue" his students if they quotC'<f his views on the
union acl1v1ty outside of the
classroom Still another was
quoted by one of his students as
::..a y 1ng th e purpose or the
m1n1mum d J)' was to create
chaos und ronrus1on .ind :-.hake
upthe schoolhoard
Through 1l all the teachers
union insists that its ~tory isn't
J!l'lling told to thl· taxpa)'ing
pubhl· ,...._
Pt>rhaps th<'n, th1• teachers
ought to do some more {alkml!
now that they'\e captured our al
ll'ntion
The l<.•achl'r!>' unwn. 1t !!houltl
be noted. diet not t h.iradPnw
n• ... terda\ ·.,minimum :-.chool d<t\
acllon a:-.· a ~tnk<' .
THE PllRPOSF. of a slr1kt'. 11f
l'ourse. 1-. to d isrupt norm.ii
opera I ions. dl'<'r<'.1sl' or h.111 prn
ducth 1l~ of tht> ur1tJn11.1t1on h•·
1n.: i:;truc·k. n PJl1• l'htlo'>. "in
pubhc ... upport JIHI .,.,.m p,1lh\ ,11111
... c·a r(' th\• lwtr out or manajll'
mcnt
So tht• h•:H ht·r~ vroup • ... 1, ...
"hat hapJ><•m·cl ~t.'!>\f·rd.t) in th1·
'\nqw rl Mt•..,a l'n1C11•d c;t honl
1>1i.tr11•t \\3!>n•t a !>lnkt.•
I ~ucss they can t·all 1l
whatever Uiey wnnl
Fiagi,1,e Peace Threat,ened
BJ!JJ\tlT, Leh C.\P)
Kamal Jurnbl.U.. leader ot U.
lefUat a.lli&llce in IA'baaoa'• dvU
war, waa tilJ.ed In am~ ambush today, policer•
The 59.yur·Old Socialist.
leader, tarcet of aeveral ••· sasslnatioo attempta ln t.he put.
was kmed wblle ridlnc ln his car
in lht' mount ain town of
Baakllne, 21 m1lff aoutheut ot
Beirut. the '°'Ice aald.
TWOJVJDIA'IT AID were
a1ao killed in U.. ••buah.. • poliu 1pokeHn•o uld. A
rnaul.-e poUce hum rot Ute un· kiaowa ..... •lns wu wider way.
be added. Source• f rom Jumblall's
Pro1,reaalv• SotlaJUt partY said that at UM Ume or the usauina·
Uon, be was tourtnc the Choul re--
1lon. heart.land of the Moelem
Druua.et which J\ll!lblaU led. Th• ambush slit., .. near the
Mines Threatened
'Danger' in Zaire
~Cited by Vance
WASHINGTON CAr> -The fightine in Zaire poses "a dangerous
situation," particularly if il. should interfere with operations in the
African counll'}''s copper mines. Secretary otStateCyrua R. Vance told
Congress today.
The invading force, he said. js made up primarily of Katanga gen-
darmes who took refuge across
the border \Ii Anaola ~ler thelr
secessionist rnoven)ent was
crushed in the mid-1960&.
AT TIDS POI NT, Vance said,
U .S. inte!Hgence bas •'no hard in-
formation" that Cubans or any
"other foreign groups 'are engaged
in the invasion in the Southern
province of Shaba. formerly
known as Kalanga.
Orfictals of Zaire said today
that the invaders were S.000
mercenary troops led by "guer-
r 111 a and subversive war
specialists from across the J\tlan·
tic · ·
The comment was a clear re-
f erence to Cuban forces in·
strumental tn es tablishing a
Marxist regime in Angola
UNDER BRIEF questioning by
the House International Relations
Committee. Vance said. "If
something should happen to thl'
copper mines it would be a very
serious blow to Zaire.··
Reportin~ on the U.S. airlift of
military and medical supplies, he
pluceo the value at almost $2
million. This doubled the figure of
"about $1 million" reported Tues·
day by Frederick Z. Brown. a
State Department spokesman.
Vance promis ed to keep
Co ngress "closely mformed as
the s1tuat1on develops." The com-
mittee appeared to accept his ex-
planat.ion and put no dlfftcult
questJOns to him.
BELGI UM IS SENDING
weapom to its lormer colony, but
no American weapons will be
shipped, according to U.S. of-
ficials. ·
The first of two DC8 transports
flew from Dover Air Force Base
in Delaware Tuesday nighlcarry-
ing 35 tons or medical supplies,
food ratioruJ and other equipment.
The second shipment. Thurs-
day or Friday, wlJI include spare
parts for American C130
transports provided to the gov-
ernment of President Mobutu
Sese Seko over the last several
years, as well as radio batteries
and others pare parts.
VANCE SA.JD THE fighting is
concentrated along the routes to
Zaire's copper mines. which are
the country's principal resource.
He assured the committee
mem hen; that no thought is being
iiven by the admlnistration to in-
cluding U.S. troops in any African
peace-keeping force. either in
Zaire or elsewhere on the conli·
nent.
"One hears rumors." Vance
said, about posgible Cuban or
other foreign assistance to the in-
vaders. But he told Rep. Dante
Fascell CD-Fla.). "you can't ex-
clude the possibility that they're
being financed by external
forces."
However. Vanre said. "at this
point we have no hard informa·
tion that there are others than the
Katanga gendarm~" involved in
the incursion.
Scoutmaster Jailed
For Sex With Kids
BLOL'i\"TVlLLE, Tenn. <AP) -The scoutm~ster of a Boy Scout
troop has been found guilty of committing hOmosexual acts with six
boy s during an overnight campout last summer.
The verdict was returned against Jacob M. Bethany, 36, or
Kingsport. Tuesday after a two-day trial in which the six youths
testified that Bethany performed
'a nous sex acts with them. The
1\t>fense rested its case without
calling a single witness.
THE Jt:RY OF 11 men and one
.... oman deliberated only 45
minutes before returning the
't>rd ict o n s ix c harges or
performing acts against nature.
I\cthan). a "'at er works
1 niplo:-f'. "'c1s sentenced to 30 to
15 )ears m pnson by Cnmlllal
Court Judge Edgar Calhoun.
The sentence represents con-
M?C\ltive terms of 10 to 15 years
on three of the six charges and
roncurrent terms of the same
length on the other three counts.
CALHOUN GAVE Bethany's
court-appointed attorney 30 days
to me an appeal. The judge
raised Bethany's bond from
SlS,000 to $40,000.
The six boys, ages 9 to 14,
testified they allowed Bethany to
ha\'e sexual relations with them
during an outing July 30 al War-
r! or Path State Park near
Kingsport. Testimony in the trial
indicated no force was involved.
Cbrlaliu •tll•I• ot Deir t:a
I.a.mar, ~town of Ju.mblatt's
PGllUeal att.beMmy. tb• former
tbrtsUan prealdent. of Lebanon.
CamlU• Chamoun.
J tJ MBLA T T . WA S A
m illionaire la..ncllord eapou.sani a
leftlal reform program, a poet
and a mystic with a masterly
command of power politics. He won the 1972 Lenin Peace Priie.
Leu than a year aio during the
civil war, J umblatt•s SS.year-old
sister, Linda Al ·Alrash. was
killed by a band of men who burst
into ber apartment in a Chnsllan
area of Beirut. Christian
Phalange mlhtiamen later de-
livered her body to Moslem
forces.
The assassination or Jumblatt
could threaten an already fragile
peace established last November
when Syria's military interven-
tion ended the 19-month clvtl
war.
IN IDS DUAL ROLE as feudal
leader of the tough Druie moun·
taln warriors and head or the
Lebanese Socialists, Jumblatt
became the over-all leader of the
a lliance of leftist Lebanese
Moslems and Palestinian guer
rillas battling right-wing Chris
ti ans.
Jumblatt , a prominent
political figure since the coun·
try's first civil war 1n 1958,
escaped an assasstnation at-
tempt in December. He was not
at home when a ear laden with
explosives was blown up outside
bis downtown mansion. .
Jumblatt bad been set on using
· his coalition or forces to wrest
basic social. economic and
political reforms from the Chris-
ti an power structure that
dominated Lebanon before the
civil war.
HE SEEMED ANYTHING but
a powerful warlord. His necktie
was seldom stral~ht or his hair in
place. He walked with a stoop
His voice was cronky. almost
sickly weak, but It masked an
agile, steel·trap mind.
Between pol1tu·s and wars. he
practiced ybga and went to India
to visit his guru He wrote books
on the medicinal virtues of plants
and translated a number of Hin·
du works.
Jumbl att wa s born In
Mukhtara. a village in the moun-
tain country of the Druze sect
southeast or Beirut. The Druzes
are an offshoot of Islam. but their
religious practices and traditions
are largely secret.
Knife Wielder Held
Robert Bagley, about 23, is escorted from a downtown
Philadelphia building after holding three worn~ social
workers at kn if epoint for four hours. He repor dly was
dissatisfied with help he received at the office after be-
ing evicted from his boarding house. No one wa hurt.
ERA Nixed 22.12 ·
By Missouri Senate
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP> As supporters dressed in 1900·era
costumes stood sorrowful vigil, the Equal Rights Amendment was re-
jected on a 22-12 vote by the Missouri state Senate.
The rejection was two votes wider than the defeat two year~ ago.
"I TJUNK THEY'VE had their
day. 1 don't thmk any other states
will ratify ERA th.ts year," said
Ann McGraw, Missouri
chairman of the "Stop-ERA"
movement.
The "Show M.e" stale joined
Nevada, North Carolina and
Virginia in dereatin~ the ERA
this year. It was approved in In-
diana, which became the 35th
state to ratify.
By Mar<'h 29. 1979, 38 states
must have ratified the proposed
27th Amendment. which would
bar discrimination on the basis of
~c x. for it lo become part of the
Constitution.
"I DON'T THINK the blow in
Missouri is a severe blow." said
Douglas Ru s hing , state
chairman of Common Cause,
which endorses the amendment:
"Our analysis ... earlier in
the year showed Missouri was
nf>t a high probability state."
Rushing sajd. ·'North Carolina's
rejection hurt more than Mis-
soun 's."
The Missouri vote came alter
several attempts by boUr propo-
nents and opponents to avoid the
Issue.
Toun Girds
For Carter
CLINTON, Mass. CAP)
This small mill town is
prepared with peanut cor-
sages and "Welcome Jim-
my" signs for the biggest
event in most residents•
memories: a visit by the
President.
Jimmy Carter comes to
Clinton tonig h t to
participate in a special
town meeting, the first in
his series or "meet.the-
people" stops around the
country.
"You can feet the excite-
ment," said Earl Wilson,
tbwn clerk.
·CASH Q~
IN ON ?
SPRING
CLEANING
Save With a
Daily Pilot
March Sale Ad
East Gets .Showers· Too ·100/o DISCOUNT .. ;5 LINES OR
MORE FOR 3 DAYS
Record Higlu Set in Great Lake. Area
Tewepn-at11r~•
H I. I'<•
f\lbuQUf"l'Qu.J ., 17
AnrnoreQ9 411 )II 1'
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lllrU·fwrlht ot 111 Inch llY m lo
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Spring'• an Ideal time to clean out clutter. Now,'V11th •Dally Piiot
March S•I• claa1lfled ad, spring'•• greattlmeto cle•n up, too.
Convert your clutter to c .. h by placing a classlfled ad of five
ltnes or more for three days, and, save 1 O per cent on the cost of
the ad.
Complete det•ll• of thl• speclal aav1ng• plan a ppe•r In today'•
claa1Hled section. If you have ttema to sell In the tollowlng
c•tegorlea you 'II w•nt to take advantage Qf • March Sale ad:
Antiques Garage Sales Office Equipment
,.., Appliances Household Goods \ Pianos & Organs
Blcyctes Jewelry Sewing Machines
Cameras Machinery Sporting Goods
Furniture Musical Instruments 5waps
' Use Caah~ BankAmerieard or M~eterCharge
Remember -10% Discount .-Act No"'!
Mall J'OOl' ad or plaee cliredJy al any D-ally Pilot o~
DAILY PILOT ..
.
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. . . . '" . • . .
..
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N£1mln ~-A '7-79U'Olcl El CtJon den· tilt 11111 two~ pilots far~ Airlines ~ ._. Jdlleil in a mld.alr eollsbJ d two light
" planfs.lutbaritl•Ald. ~--------• Or~ Dale o. Buck ....
{ Sla•e ·] waller wu prepar-·
&1 las to land bJs single· \io--------' eqine MOODe',f aboutfour mtles IOUth of Needles
Airport wben the collision OCCU?Tedat7:19a.m. Tuaaay.
Taalcer Deada S..U Fifed
"" LOS ANGELES (AP> -A $10.6 million l
wrongful death suit has been filed "by four Italian re.
latives of a crewman killed in the Dec. 17 Los .., Ila. D •
Angeles Harbor explosion of the tUker Sansinena. rr O.,_,, le S
ln the suit filed Tuesday in U.S. District Court ~
here, the family of Emanuele Orgioli claimed that A giraffe that was in nded as a gilt to .Ba~racu_da Tanker Corp., owne: of the vessel, a~d the children-of Mexic City died Tuesday
Union 011 Corp., its charter~r._dutnot keep the ~hip in a truck in Mexico. The 16·foot giraffe,
safe and. sea~orthy. OrJtoli was one of eight shown at the San Diego Zoo before start.
•
(s oo rr o • •--•' Tn*all1....... Sf 'ed ...............
Q aad &.be 10Wll ,._ la t.ellm. -NII II tordbb'. toprof .. local ~ tr:rto pema.de bim to brut..., &om tbldlllrda.
Paw Ooorjlan, Q ~le IM 8ft ,_
peopJe,un.tt .. ~==:·tt Twenty.fin ecmen-a ..,..,_ ll'lllt-
ed to other parenta of Jlocm ID non-.
Calitornla and hundreds naUmwlde. bat Wa 19 ODO
of the few Umes the Judi• U. called the ioanc
churela. members into court ad aUawecl &Mir
lawyer to present their aide.
JN AN OPENING statementlutweet, Mlchaet
Trauscht, an attorney for the parents, told the court
he would prove that ''these yocma people are the
victims of artful designing pe:nons and that, in the
Unification Church, they are expo.ed to food and
=sleep deprivation, ilolat.ion and !tar and cull& tac-tics.''
But Ralph Baker, another lawyer for the
children. said be will prove that Traaacbt and his
Freedom of Thought FoundaUon, profesaional
deprogrammers iD Tucaon. Ads., are '1be real
brainwasbers." • •
A PSYCHOLOGIST and psychiatrist Who U•
amined the five young adulta testified that all
showed symptoms of thought control slml.lar to
B•The •---lated Press brainwash victims, including memory loss and ' ~ .. lrozen" emotions. · . ·Rain. Lots of it. Steady all day and all night. . Gary Scharff, now 8 F)'eedom of Thought or.
Northern ·California residents, contending with ficial who was deprogrammed away from the water rationing and assorted problems of a drought Unification Church, outlined the church's 1Ddoce
that is now two years old, got soaked and loved trination procedures:
every minutef'it. welcomed, it hardly "First, they physically and socially lsolatepeo-
1 t w 0 n t c 0 me made a dent in low pie by placing them in a rural environment which ~nywbere close to b~~ak· Northern California re-they are not free to leave because there is no
mg the W:ought, offlci~ls servoirs where more transportation out," be testl.Oed Tuesday.
say, but it was 8 relief water 1$ needed notin in-•iiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii" from the. dry da:ys. chesbu\infeeL ~ However, it lS endmg
and no new major BEAT THE SELLOUT .QET11Cl<ETSNOW1
storms are in sight. persons killed 10 the explosion. ing his-journey last Friday, died of aspira·
lion (car sickness) according to the zoo BY DAWN, nearly two
veterinarian accompanying Wally on the inches had been dumped
• LOS ANGELES (AP> -The former U.S. 2,60().mile trip. He would have been the on Marin County, one of
Smoking
Ban Seen
davTs cup
APRIL 15, 16, 17 Senate Watergate tnvesUgatcSr llyS Los Angeles first giraffe in Mexico City. . the hardest hit by the County Assessor Philip Watson bas undervalued -.:;..:..:;..;;.;;..:~:.;:.:..:;...;::;.:..:...;..;...~.:......:--=...:_ _____ ~drought. The cities of " UHITED STATES VS SOUTH AFalC4 ·
somecommercialpropertyandglventubreaksto "Kentfield and Santa
campaign contributors. Cops 'Cop .l"L.:..l' Rosa reported 1.87 and In Stores c#"f!HJ'KJ~~~~~ Carmine Bellino, hired last fall by the Los U U 1.63 inches, respectively.
Angeles County Board of Supeni.sora to study the San Francisco bad 1.16 LOS ANGELES (AP): -~~~2i~-~!!_14.L~:!2.! .. asseasor's operat.icms, released his findings to the inches and Oakland 1ot
boardTuesd11tna102-pagerepcn. On n 0 .1 Penalty 1.07. The readings were
-Cigarette smokers 1 T1CDTOM>!llPOllM AU.llATal!UUWO
will have to do without in 90XNAT1:a..11ng 4orelncfvd•.113d..,.otCOfr.,........,., C 1 running about the same grocery stores and I ~l'PIRlnll.-Sapec1&1-'0n-~
supermarkets. if a I -No.otslldlum11oxs..ttottl01*Pll'IO'll-Bream ProlJl"fl llf ed£.Cal
: SACRAMENTO (AP) -GoV.Edmund Erown
'Jr. says if there's suspicion of scandal or proflte!r·
ing iJl any health organization. he's cutUng off its
,Medi-Cal contracts.
"lt's a very sorrywaytohavetoseehealthpro-
:grams go, butglven the mixture of the profit motive
land health care dollars, there's no other
alternative," Brown said at an informal news cor:i·
,ferenceTuesday. • ~ UI~ tor Deatla
l v AN NUYS (AP) -A JJ.year-old Van Nays
youUi convicted or murder iD Cbe stabbing deaths ot
,hiJ grandparents bas been sentenced to llf e in
:JJrilon.
Robert Lee Hawkins ncei'V'e4 the sentence 1from Van Nuys Superior CQirt. Judge Charles M. Hughes.
WASIDNGTON (AP> -A Los Angeles COD•
gresawoman says the opposition of that city's police
chief to decriminalizing marijuana use is" a case of the cops copping out." •
In addition to Rep. Yvonne Burke's criticism of
Chief F.dward Davis' position there was a sharp ex·
change Tuesday at a special House narcotics com·
mittee hearing between Sen. Jacob K. Javits (R·
N.Y.), and Rep. Robin L. Beard <R·Tenn.). They
accused each other of unfair and offensive state· men ts.
JAvrrs, Mrs. Durke and Rep. Edward I. Koch
<D·N Y.>. testified in favor of legislation which
would repeal federal criminal penalties for
possession of up to one ounce ol marijuana, enough
io make about 20 cigarettes.
In his testimony Monday Chief Davis de·
nounced decrimina!Uation proposals, saying they would encourage marijuana use.
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big DOLLAR EAYS sale! You save from $1.00
to $2.00 per nQ, PLUS, you'll receive a FREE water
box with the p.Jrchase of any pre-pasted vlnyt. And
as always, this is first
qµality merchandise. We
never sell seconds or
imperfects at Wallpapers
To Go, the wallpaper
supermarkets l
/~togq
confidence. Except for sale Items,
are returnable ~r entianges Of
COSTA MESA
2300 HARBOR BL~.
HARBOR CENTER
. (714) 646·5058
,,
I
..
in the Sacrament• Valley •. second City Council vote ; (Mlt1'ttlump~•'800> •
on the smoking_ ban 1 -No.ota-.ieoxa..t.ottoo,.P«aa-k" •t . t 1 ext <Minim"'" ""'cnu.. "400) -ma t:S l 10 0 aw n ' MAIC£CHECKSORMO.PORIOIC81ATSl'AYAIC.I THE NATI 0 NA L week. : "TOCHtLDRENSHOSMALFOUNDAr10N. Weather Service said a By a 12·3 vote, the · flt1u1v101un
low pressure area orr the council tentatively ap· I ......_~ tlll'Jig 1 .,.,,., ••111111 eo&aour north coast b~bt the proved a ban Tuesday 1 011nc111and•G•nso1deyorS30fw3-<1ey-*.
much·needed rain as rar that would prohibit · ==.::a~~:000'0::':,f.4!:!;r:.!:'.scuiocrr
south as Monterey. It smoking in any food _:s-c:1-v-1ee-o~.oo·a----
was heading southward.., marketing establish· -W8YMt•r;.,oA~C::,, __ _
today but wa~ expe~ted ment, except for food MAl<ECMfc1<so11Mo.,01111e:a111VE011AT&
to 1 eave hn g e rt n g and drink serving areas, PAYABLETOTEHNrswo11Lo showers in the northern restrooms offices and • 1ndlv1dua1de11y11eke1aw111nof1> .. va11ableundAp111Mm •
half of the state into the other nonp~btic areas. : ForhltS..1eMa11thl10rc1WfonnTodlywt111)'0Ul'ctllc*ot.._,~. afte~oon. The city already has 1 NC!!ft------,P---.. -prtne)~------:--
Partly cloudy skies banned s moking in l ~--------------were expected by Tb~rs-theaters ass em b I y ------awe ----211---day and continuing 1010 rooms wh~e public busi~ ! cny
the weekend with a ness is being condw;ted, , SIQn•lllre Mallto:de.iacujl,~SeJd'ITtMllClul!i.
grallualwannlngtrend. health facilities and 0-16 P.o.eoayo10.~...,c..neeo Although the rain was elevatorls.
,,
J
•
l
I ;
i
.. ~~uu.wl fer camract lmprov m IO wttboul pa a ppartT
Tho resulta ol 11 ·a um day" lff art
b"'_ Jhe New.&>0r~lle1a Educ.atJon A• oclaUon
<NMEA) seem·to ••t_= are that they don't need the public than ln their stepped-up
demaodl now before the local acbool board.
Maybe they m.Se a P01nt. as thetr NMEA chief
fnslsta, but tbe chief result of tho programmed slow·
down in the eyes of the stuclcDta and parents was one
ol disruption and confusion.
Tb.ls resuij. was most evident at the Newport.
Mesa Unified School Diltrict's four high school cain·
puses. There the divided-day scb~ule succeeded. in
creating enough disruption to send most students
wandering out on their own. <The elementary schools
and t.wo of the middle schools were on hall·day
schedules for parent conferences.)
What do you suppose students did with ad·
rninistrators and principals declaring "school as
usual" and many teachers declaring the shortened
• school day ended? They either wandered around in
confusion or walked off the campus, of course.
It was, for all practical purposes, a lost day in the
• school year.
Perhaps, as NMEA President Bill Grgurich in-
• sists. the effort showed teacher solidarity that uJ.
timateJy will serve as a weapon in negotiating with
• the school board.
But the disruption at the high school campuses
yesterday surely will be viewed by many -if not
• most district residents as irresponsible.
1'hc teacher action sent hundreds of students out
into the community at midday without SuPervision,
without permissiQn of their parents and, indeed,
without even the knowledge of their parents.
This hardly is the way lo foster community un-
derstanding of teacher goals and professional objec-
. tives.
•
Tbe NMEA L5 th teacher bare
barl Wllh board al of the NMln'llnlll'L
esa UnJOed School Dhtrtct. The five district
trustees are Jected by the Votm"I ol Calta Jlaa and
Newpart Beach.
FoUowtn1 that chain ot n~ot.iaUon au11lorlty, it
would seem to us th t the teachers do need that public
support and public trust. And to lab\ ultimate com-
munity acceptance of their increased contract de.-
mands, they need to act more prudentl.y, reasonably
and professionally than they did yesterday.
Student Health
Does it make sense for a community college dis-..
trict limping under a $2 million budget deficit to plan
a million-dollar student health center?
It may nQt to many taxpayers, but Coast Coln·
munity College District officials say their proposal to
construct such a center and operate it can be qone
without additional direct tax burdens on residents of
the district.
the elaborate center, say the officials, would be
built with $1 million in f ed.eral Cunds and operated,
they insist, with the current $S per student health fee
each semester.
This fee is supposed to generate more than a
quarter of a mtlHon dollars annually for programs in
the 12,000-square-foot facility. Those programs in-..
elude physical therapy, psychiatric help, a team of 17
part.time doctors and a large nursing, x-ray and ..
clerical staff.
The federal fWlds, of course. aren't really free -
and we would remind Coast administrators and board
members that they will be challenged by taxpayers -
and the Dai.Jy Pilot -to operate the facility within the
no-additional-tax formula tpey have set up .
Enoagla Spent on Studies . Hypocrisy
Hides the
True Decay
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
OC Airport Location Still ·Best ...
[sYDNEY HARRIS)
Our public indignation and con-
troversy about "sexuality" and
"immorality" in paperbacks and
magazines and commerciul dis-
plays somehow reminds me of an
ironic incident described by
Baudelaire lD h1s Intimate
Journals.
One day the French poet asked a prostitute who Jived in his
street to ac-
company him
to the Louvre.
She had never
been there
before, but as
soon as they
walked m, she
b e g a n
blus hing and
covering her
face with her
hunds. (Recall, this was back in
1850 )
.. As we stood before lhe im·
mortal statues and pictures,"
Baudelaire recorded, "she kept
plucking me by the sleeve and
askin~ how they could exhibit
such indecencies in public."
f DON'T mean to comp:m~ the
~t>x -ridden porno "art" of the
chC'apie ma~azin•·~ with the
maslerpiect>s m th<• l,ouvre. nor
the indignant dubwoman lo a
Parisian trollop bul the basic
attitude seems to me to be much
the same: not precisely
hypocritical, but extremely self·
dt'cephve.
For there 1s not. and has nevec
been. any real evidence \hat
J1ternture, even of the lowest or·
der, has ever "corrupted"
morals. No one ever became bad,
or worse, from reading or look·
ing al salacious obJecu.
The causes of lmmorality-
howsoever we define it-exist in
J1fe, not in urt, o r in ifs
How many 11oci.denU.-and
maybe a death or two
before they fix the traffic
lights at Fairview and Fair
Drive? They're terrible
since Fairview wa s
widened.
J.O.
GIOMIY Gv• ~...," llH svo-Nlled O'I' r~U"41denot Hcnn,,1r-.llKI '"" "•P•• ol th ,....,.~,.., ~O '°"' pet -nt•G•oo...,yGin, D••ly P!IOt.
' meretricious counterfeits. When
a society is breaking down
ethically, it tends to gravitate
toward sensational and decadent
art forms; but the forms do not
create the br'eakdown-they
merely renectit.
TO BE SHOCKED at the pic-
tures and statues, but nt the
same time complacently to ac·
cept her own behavior. was
c haracteristic or the French tart.
1t made her feel.more respects·
ble to have something she could
look down upon as "indecent".
by comparison, it seemed to
elevate. her own dubious stan·
darcts ol morality.
We U'e'going through an era of
decay-which, ln my histoncal
perspective, began before most
or us ~ bom, with the start of
World War I m 1914-a decay m
eth1e11, in government. in 50C1al
and personal relationships, m a
sense Qt community, of tradition
and of authOnty.
So that our penodic outbursts
o( ciric indigoation at porno-
graphy are as foo&h as they are
futile; and they actually, I
belJ~ve, prevent us Crom exttmm·
inf the ethical roots or our social
ordtt by (otUling undue attcn·
tion on a few rotted branches.
giving us a false sense of
rifbteousness Vihen we lop them
of!, and permitting us to ignore
the deeper decay.
To th1.• Ewtor ·
Over the-past le w years, have
been numerous events concern·
mK Orange County Airport jusll·
fymg a letter to the editor . but
your editorial of Tuesday, March
8 ... Short Jl auling,'I was the
s traw fi\'l ally triggering my
response. (The editorial con·
cerned an agreement whereby
Hughes Airwest could fly from
Or ange County Ajrport lo Denver
with a setdown in Salt Lake City.)
The premise behind this
editorial, frankly, is •pure non·
sense. Given a staled number of
Oights and aircraft types, the dis·
tance those aircraft ny when
they leave Oran~e County has
absolutely no bearing on environ·
mental factors or noise levels.
You have jumped on lhe same
ty pe of "super environmen·
taltst" scare tactics that tell us
repair of a deteriorated water
hne 1s "growth inducing."
I lhmk it is long past time that
we started to hear from those
many unheard-from thousands
who believe Orange County
Airport is as well located as
possible, does not provide ade-
quate passenger service and is a
vital part or Orange County life.
tfavmg lo drive lo Los Angeles
Airport because Air Cal flights
-.ire full is not exactly in the spirit
or energy conservation.
TllE SUMS of money spent
by thr Board or Supervisors on
stud1eo:-and reports of one kind or
another regarding the airport
have reach ed the point or
lud1crou'lness As one whose pro·
fess1on. 1s planning, J have lo
say and not entirely facetious-
ly -that a Sunday dnve m the car
could determine that. with tht·
exct'pl1on of El Toro MCA~
Manne Corps Air Station. there
1s not another practical location
in Orange County for an ade·
quate airport facility. I, for one.
w\ll work to defeat any
supervisor who authorizes
another dollar of taxpayers'
money to be spent on more paper
Wage Hikes Hit Teen Jobs
The next unemployment fi,ure
will reflect cold·wealher layOfts.
DiJcountinc that extraordiaary
month, the jobless rate is the
!eaat it's been in eight months,
and the number or American
workers working -88.6 million
--is an all·time record high. And the statistics are .. worse
than the facts" when ygu realize
that it is un·
em~loyment
a m on .:
teeoacers -
18.1 percent
-which dis·
tort.a \be pie·
ture.
Teenaioun· employment
is always
more than for otben. -
Moat every f aet.fooct
reatauran.t would I& to ~
more youngaton but can t
because the lecal mhtlmlma wace J.s the aamo f0l'1hem •fer
UI.. .. "
Employers an~ to pat
the most unskWoll Wd'Mn O~'
an b~ -so a lot ol employers who~ Wee lD~ help can't.
A.f(ordlt..
( PAUL HARVEY)
And now Congress is con·
templating raising th•~
minimum wage to $3 an hour.
Some labor leaders, opposing
any differential for younger
workers, fear that older worken
would be displaced if there were
a pay differential.
CERTAINLY, says Rep • .John
Deat <D-Pa.), "We don't want to
encourage a substitution of
teenagers for breodwtonen ...
Yet the JJ.\OSt ncent Labor
Depadml!Dt 1tud1ofthis1~t reaebed the me.eapable COD•
elution that •• tbe federal
ntilulrouDl wa1e aoes ug, the nu1Aber.ol temato unemployed
aoes~,
Ill Dade Olunty, Fla., teenqe
wsenuitoyment exceeds 50 per·
ctaL 'Moll of tNee arc blacb ar c;ban ~ ~ percmtd
UtolO tptttviewed there a-.y they
are SoddDI tOt wor~ more than
h1l( would wHllngty work for less
tban the$2.30 minimum weie.
14oat ovcr1 hotel ud
restaurant in the area says it
could afford more busboys and
bellhops and car parkers and
~uch if it could pay each less.
LET ME ADD that there are
reportedly many employers in
Dade County and elsewhere who
an hiring teenagers -for less
than the legal minimum -pay-
io' them in cash, circumventing
the law.
Federal officials s~ that en-
forcement is difficult and will
become increasingly more dll·
ficuU. if the base wage is raised
higher.
Ona restaurateur tn a bl1e1t
district of aouth Miaml says ()ftly
10 pcrccmt of the local teen-senJ
are employed. He said he could
hire more U he could pay lees.
ALSO, he uys many Jre
"worthless" becau.ae, be pro-
tests, .. schools are 9roducin1
eleventh araders wbo hn't ma.k•
change for a dollar bllt."
He laJl lbey ••d team mote
wortrln1 tor h.im than fOlftl to
school, but h can't atrord.. \0 bf1oa
trlioaa. •
So, he bu to turn t.bem away
and. too freQutnU,y, b says. the.v
rel\lrn wtth • IW'. .. . -~
( MAll,-BOX )
Letten from readers are welcome.
The right to condense· letters to' fit
space OT eliminate hbeL u reserved.
teeters of 300 words or Ins will ~
given preference. All lettera miut zn.
elude .signature and mailmg oddren
but names may be withheld on re-
quest 1/ sufficient reason ts apparent.
Poetry wilt not ~ publt&hed.
exercises for the round file.
I cannot heJp but think there
are more peoPle sympathetic to,
dependent on, or frequent users
of the present airport than those
seriously disturbed by it. Let's
hear from them.
My office is located two blocks
from the runway and l am sub·
ject to jet noise eight lo nine
hours a day.
WALTERJ. RICHARDSON
FAlA
Carter S..,ltt!la
To the Editor:
Last spring, Jimmy Carter, a
presidential candidate, wrote to
the Democratic Platform Com·
mittee that "exotic" weapons
which serve no real function do
not contribute lo the defense of
this country. The B·l is an exam·
pie of a proposed system which
should not be funded and would
be w asleful of taxpayers· dollars.
Does President Cat"ter say the
same thing today? Why 1s he so
undecided? He seems to be ready
to take the first step to put five
B-ls in next year's budget. We
deserve an explanation. How
does he reconcile his campaign
statements and his present ac•
lions?
CECILIA SCIOCCHETrl
AIA P•rpese
To the F.ditqr:
ln regard to Glenn Whit.e's arti-
cle on March 9 on the Athletes ltt
Action, how could be have fdt ••·
plaited?
The whol'9 purpose oC the AJA
is to be witnessing for Christ.
They play for one reason and ono •
reason only-for the Lord.
It was not just billed us 3
., _.
W.•. w.rw .. •
..
basketball game. either. People
are aware-of whal they stand for.
If they are not. they may choose
to listen or leave. bul they are not
being forced. He could have left
his seat if he wanted to or maybe
he should have paid close atten-
tion to what they were saying and
could have learned something
too.
MlKEHULME
Chrbtian Athlete•
To the Editor:
After reading your spprts page
of March 9, I have come to the
conclusion that your s ports
writer Mr. Glenn Whjte, must
either be totally obfivious to ·
what's going on m Orange Coun.
ty basketball -or he is anti-
Christ.
Any Orange County sports
writer {or reader) worth his salt
knows that tbe kids who play on
the Tustin based "Athletes in Ac·
Lion" basketball team (and some
have turned down rich pro-
fessional offers) do so, for the
privilege of "Playing for
Christ" -and the opportunity
during halftime at their games of
telllng those in attendance, who
care to stay and listen to them.
how Jesus Christ has come into
their lives and what that has done
for them personally. This fact
has been writte°' up by sports
.writers many, many times. as
the team does tb1s at every game
they play.
MR. WHITE wrote in his col-
umn that he "believes prayer. re·
ligion, belief and disbelief is lo
me a matter of deep personal
nature and should not be tossed
about'' -but this did not stop
him from using your pages to
crucif' the kids on the '•Athletes
in Acti~n"team . ·
Wbil~ l have not had the
p~eas~ of seeing an ••Athletes
in Actlon" basketball game
personiy, my sons have, and they re rt that most of those tn
ati,tend ce seemed to enjoy llate~ the young Christian. players t halftime~ And if but
one-pen present-was helped by
what b , 1'eard ' -then I say •'T.b~be to God,"
DbNAU> M. PE'tERSEN • Jn hia w>tite WOfh col11~n of
March 9~• EdUor Glenn White
ezprenect;f~e with program·
ming UIOt turrt(d llealfttme ac(ioihes
at a baltball gome over to an
Athlete• Action pr«ientohon.
-F.dator
A~
To the Edit~:
I think I b~ve found out today
the rt~ Cornot having found a
1ood n~ adlool (or pre-school) fn~ U14 Newport Beach
area for tbe pa!\ 11¥ yean.
Today, I aaw~want ad ror an ezperien~ed a d /or ~ertlCied
te1cher for a P~ .. ~I '2.SO en hour.
My neighbothoocrcle1tn1na girl is
paid $S &fl hour. • ~.B.WII.SON
V•lld~
To the Editor. \I w~ sincerely a~ta )'O\lr
htlerest in our ac~ro1ram
•nd that• photopal)b a.s sent
to taQ a pletg Ot P*r
RabblfBJrthday P1rty.
W6 were dluppolo;.that
children's pictur~ (t that
d1y) with tf\e pap1er-mac rab-
\
l>it which was inade by the
children was not in the paper. We
felt that the whole tdfa of our
honoring Peter 1\abbit w~ mis-
understood and the educational
value was lost on your reader.
We did it so that children be
Jwarc of children's literature
and authors who write fot"
thildren.
The business man, Mr. Rab-
bitt, received all the publiclt.Y
a~d the.children and PTA, cijd all
the work. We le.It lbatwas u:nfair
to them. ·
BE'ITY L. KRATZLFl
Principal-VictoriaScbool'
61 BUI Cost•
To the Editor:
Notmg your editorial, .. Thrills
and frills," March 9. The ap·
proval of the three courses of-
fered (1) Hang Gliding, (2) Com-
municating with Plants and (3)
Slop Smoking is to just continue
the attendance record for the
juniof college district, which bas sh~y dropped since the ex-
pirali n of most of the ex-Gl's
benef .
Ho manyoftheGiswhohave
s igne up in the past. attended
classe ,1;eceived fabulous pay-
ments nl'c now working in any
partic ar field other than what
they e in before they started
back t school? We owe our ex·
men a lot, but not to the
extent ey sit home and take
these ri · culoos courses on TV or
even in ttendance and get what
they do.
I beli
should
has cost
the "Gl
leges ar
because
''pass"
(1) thee
(2) the
benefits.
e a Cull investigation
done to show what it
e taxpayers to date for
ucation Bill ... Tbecol·
just as much at fault
is to their benefit to
ryooe in any class so
Ument stays up and
l still ietalna his
Them ·ty ofGh taklna act.
vantaie o eir ritbts did.so, not
lo pr on to a be• poai.
lion, but :reap the 1-.otastfc aJ...
lowancee free) due them. I
challeng (anybody to prove
otherwise. ,
, I am rrled to a ndred
11ervicem with •uch strong
principles at he never ac~
ane cent education benefits
because b aw so man1 that did
itjuatfort moneyUaelf (which
was aubst ial.>-
J!:THEL D. WOOt>
-
• l
~ ·-. •"llON.-. o• N1111..SY, N.J .. eameto ~ . W.,,_bcn Jan. D at the ~otthe panmll ol·
• 11--Jur-ald Debol'ab Sue J<.UDe. wbo bad been mJ.u.
IDs for lb monthl. . .
· Fourdaya later. Jlicbard Lee Dodloo led police ' to Min Kline's body in a trash dump -Just when
tbe 119ychic bad said it would be. • .
~ and Jlonalcl Henninger have been
ebarpd with kidnapina. rapine and murderint.
JlluKline. 1'1 WU SO. _:itep·
tit al you lll(Ouldn 't
believe .it.•• said IWbert
Cox. a Pulitzer Prize.
winning reporter at the
W ayaesboro Jlecord
Herald. "It didn't take
too long for her to
chadee that. There's
just po way she could've
known some of those
thines."
'-nother reporter •.
Mar~ Lancer of \he
Chambersburg Public
Opinion. said, •·we have
some ministers who
think she's the work of
. the devil. but others thought she was the answer to j their prayer!!."
l MS. ALLISON SAID RANDOLPH Hearst
) sought her help after his daughter Patricia was kid-
l naped and on the run with other fugitives, possibly
, hiding out in PeMsylvania. But it was months later,
r while she was in the state on another case in July ~ 187.t, that Ms. Allison contacted stale police and the > FBI. l "I told them Patty Hearst is here in Penn-
sylvanla," she said months before the Hearst.
hideout was found near Scranton.
Local police would only say that Ms. Alllson.
,
IN'l'<fED TO PERFORM
AT T~.c WHITE HOUSE. APRIL•f9th
E·SPLENDOR AZTECA
SEE THEM MARCH 20th/CAROUSEL CT
. loath (oast ?lua
Robinson ~s Newport, Newport Fashion Island, 644-2800 . . ( \
4 I
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COVNI I OJ'l"ICIA.LI MID tbe1 l.tcr will r•
t'Otllftiend anotMr •.s milllcn worth at rtfflf pro.
Jtctl, inchad.lni cbannel work fanber dowutnam
and nplacementof tbe Ad A~~ .
And while part Of ~ wen .... ..., be
replaced by a UA Army Ccspt ot En.,..... flood
A clinic tor pi..,,;: Otanp eoairty A.uoda~ CGlrtl'OI li'fOJecl Oft Ute rl•tr. CCIGlll7 olftdall Mid
live tennis umpare:J ls tJon of'fennls UrDplres they belieTe the aovenmaW m., repay &hem at
scbedoled Thurs day Participants wtU iet Jtutfortbe.Adams.Avenu.brt.S,epto~
frorlf 1 to 10 p.m. at the tips on umpirjnf and -. --R FIVE -nJECl'S ed RacqM a.I> ~ Jtvine. caD.iog lifteS ,z6s an op-· • D Z. v. n «. ~ _.. approv
It is · IPO*Of'td by the portanjty for'Pfadlce on Tuesd$Y include: .
AREAL IRISH
BllOUHAHA
the tennis court. tn add.i--Wldenlog the V1ctot1a Street brld1e between
G S lion participants can Costa Mesa and Hunttnet~ ~acb from two to four .,-·"' ... ~ r&llt et take' the U.S. Tennill A5· lanes at a total CotL of $1134..000 Jaelod.lnl bridie ap-_, -. ":' _ .:::-"I wlah you'd do your thinking some place else. It
always stuUes me when I come in.'' . sociatlon examtnatton· proaches. " · • ---4241 Mca Hngale Wfl'f .. , v Be h for eertifie.tioa • Hne -Spend.Inf $C55,000 .to '9.\prove ~ T.albert Ji. ..., .:~• ·~It ~ nooct ~trol channel betwem Ell1a an4 Talbert N~wport leadl 1714) T79·500v F th R d VA O ~ .. '199 R..ecruet Club of Avenues in Fountain Valley. or e ecor ".-..!--• lrif• .. foeaud at 5 -WIDENINGTH.EBAU&Streetfioodcon-THURSDAY. MARCH17 -~ ......... ~ ........ ~·~ .... ~rviCe8 ~w.,. · trolclwmelbriQelnCo&LaMeaafrom3Sto1ooreet ST. PADDY•s DAY • ~ --.... .., . A., t'otllrty resJdent at a cost ol $300,000. -~
Db•Of utfon•· Of narriGfle The ONnge County wll<1 ii Jftteretted in -Widening the Paularino Avenue flood control 10 A M 'TIL ?
('SPEAR. ~r99ry and Loon Henry
t.t.M PLEY. L.aur• Len ""d Jolin D•n
8rlce .no AIWI Lovl .. ; DULANEY,
~•,.dra LeUc1a ano GIPn Aus11n.
!.A\IOAD, Gordoll Cralo •nd Ca1olyn
O•itnt".
Health Department has .,.,dlftilll • Ille umpire channel brid1e lD Costa Mesa from 48 to 80 feet at a • • •
won permission to seek a at vattou. t.nnis tourn.a-' coet of$130,0CIO. BAGPIPERS DIXIELAND $45,000 federal ~rant to ment! dttoapout (he· -Spendin1 $10,000 to begin planning a S200~000 •
plan an emerge n cy county is welcome at the storrn drain proJecL '°alleviate mud and ~a.lnage GREEN BEER
f'· OSBORN, Joan Ell .. n and IC•n 111 LH; LEWIS Avo J •nd (Ow•rd
• ACHILLE. GIM L dnd S..1v4lor•
• ANDERSON, Sharon .... a·J.mt\
,. : WIDDISON, Th•rt" L. 1no
"lcnard E. TAOUTEN. Oarl•t1• J,
•nd Weyne M , UNOEllWOOO.
MC LEU.AN Su<an .,.,, Mlcl\H I;
GREENE Vf<1oria Elaln• •nd Doran'
lidwara : ~1kES, <Marie 01-•nd
llo1><1rt' t<•tlll. GONZALEZ C.harlollt
A and Ma<IO; 801.t!Y, Keith Oav•o
ano ~raldllle ChetYI. OAME Lo"
AM •nd J-Marlon Jr; MAY.
Rooart H. Jr • and ICetlllHn E
JOHNSON, ....... Doti• .... Jo.eon
H SHANNON, Wllllam Ma•ll" •nd
(MOI Ann SCROY, Glenda C •nd
Frt11'\k
m e di ca 1 s er vi c es clinic, accordtn1 to Bob problems along Camino Capistrano south of Avery · IRISH SPIRITS • FAVORS
sy~m. ~~~~P~~eM~~P~a~r~k~W~$Y~~~~~·~~~~J~u~a~niC:a~p:b:tr~~~~u~e~•~·~·~~~~====~==~~~~~;;~~~~~ County s upervisors the Orange County As-' " ·
were told the funds will sociatiion ot Tt!l\Qis Um-· '
be used to address ccvn . pires. There .will. be a $1
munications, transpprta-charge for tbose'who are,
tion, medical fa<;fliti es. not already members of Fn,s.-a nd w.,,,,, Fr•nCI\
RPENTE R !.h,·rlddn l ,1r'f1 Jnhn
Jr
l'llH"-rylf
disaster plannjag and the associaliOlf. ·
medical training within ( · )
the county. ART HOPPE
County health Qfficials '---------
plan to seek another $1.2
m !llton over the next
SATIRIZES
DAILY PILOT
Call 642•5171.
Put • few word• · to worlt tor ou.
INVITED TO PERFORM
AT THE WHITE HOUSE, APRIL 29th.
ESPLENDOR AZTECA
SEE THEM MARCH 20th/CAROUSEL CT.
loath Coast ?lua
MARIN. Rtnali,. And Mttrtf1 f
1.tlNC.OLN, P•ul• Suo and Donald
Cluene HE:RAEAA Ro•• M °"" Jo<~ I ; GILBEllT, Judy l,yM d l'lll A me\ David, llRUOE. Clla•lolla M •a Gut A.; KENNEDY, Tlmolnv
Y•nct nt '"" P....,.1. Joy, O"YEN l>O R T Joa nne a nd Wall ••
~ALICEA, C.rmtt1 Anita and R•nnv
I.Jn; OTTESON Oon~ld G eno W•l'I·
.. J , LEMOH,JHnE.andRonR
8110WI( RO(ltrt E end Sandra J '
WELLS, O..riu E •nd Rl'IOnd• J
?ETTLE Plll•y L" and !'rank 0
PINICST()foj, "-99YL •"<1 A-rt M
GUADAN, Manuel and Mtrl-
8ARNA, ,..ter -Frle.S. CkUZ.
ld..,ard M. and Marvle; SARTIN,
u onard Doyle and Ke111er1ne A ,
IJ)NG, Caro• Anti and o..-1e1 Jouo11,
fAON, Sharon end Edw•rd
WESTLl.l>ID, Rutll -Oefmo~·
SIQUEIROS,'-IC .. and John A
WAI.SH s ...... Anne and Aobert
Jo ... olt, THOMAS., ..... " .. Let lU\d•
Donald E.; Glt.8EAT, G.try IAe -
Flort"t• ""-; GRIMES. e .. ~r·.
Ju,.. -Vl'11'1 Aay; PE~, C•Ol l.,
•"d ltoy L. STANTON, O.Or99 R.
.,,dTltH LCIUIW •
HAIUUHOTOM, Mary Nency and
Aohrt Frtdarlc; STltllETZE~ ..
Pa-la J. -Oof!ald P.;10ANCY,
Oaf't'I 0 . -OolWl'C ; HOltN, l.~.
four years to implement In the
and expand emergency ~--============:::::::::::;.:.--~----------------------..:...----------~~------------------~ .Service programs, a re-
'port to supervisors said.
Cler•nca ...,~ M¥1e; REU$tt, UC1 Pl • • .:atllerl,.. AM -Mk ,,_1 All_,; ans •
"'"'HEU"°· Aav,_ CoelllO -'rancln1 IW.,; PIATT, Amy -r••· ""° Donal• Jay, DAVIES • .>ot1n Cte-. AOUIHO, J•me• R. end Kathy s .
(;OOPEA, Ja ... I L. end C.U'(On P ,'
••VERA. G•lbtrl and Marina M :
ltAMllU:z. Flo~nclo •no c11ar10111 !Jev. MEEHAN. 01lberl D •ntl
$111r1n J . A rwooo. °"""• M ''"" Thero" W Jr ; EDW .. ROS, N•n<Y
l,Orl'nt •nd Jolin Davia• M4CK Jullt
"•cl'ltl .no JoM Wo,.., 811 A ROSO Arm•,,o•nd Ene<llnct H
..,•nl •nd Pwvo'f ~; COUTVIUElt, ~ IJ
Emllt J, 11'14 a..-. A .. ADKINS, n~ouse Klr"I,.. A -Cllllcwd l. ; MASO'N,,'...
N •no J -Oontll• w. · •
C.HAAl.l!"S,' "· Am.Inoa Joy and •
AOO.rt Oen191 llRENEMAN, Jonn Ap ·1 16
Atllly end lnfrley -"~ ARD. M11ty n McCalfrey •"d T llom ... Lt•;
HOILITZEL, Ill Jene I .'""' Jam ..
J . WALS~. Jam .. IC@vln end Mar'(belh, JOHNioN. Robert w and UC Irvine will hold its
s111r••v M • roe1v. Gar"'"" Ltnd• annual open house from BENNETT J•me. Anthony and T8TE1t, Geor9t L. •nd Oon\ R
Judv Lou"e OE BARONCElLI, 8tl· COAN I ll, Jlerf-4 T -Rum" I T noon to 4 p. m . ApJil 16. f'Y•ndEdmundFran~• PIPER,G•I• ST•ACH JoM ~ .,,., A'r••"·· Ac'tivitiesforthedaywill
" •no Robe•! E MI LLIGAN .. ~HEPPARO p., .. ,, • ....,J.f. intlude a meda"eval fa1'r (11'.,lollt M and N1lll W . MORANO •
Marg.rel eno Geor91, KRAUS. (Ill in Campus Park, tours of •rd 0 -J•,,.t L 8AANOffN ~l·il'--ylS Orlsllnl F -cn.,1., v MEE. HUTCHINtDN Petrlet• A •'WI' C8ftlpUS faCiJitieS,
...,,nl• Florene•-"' J.irn•\Wllll•m 1t•n11r1" J v •ESELMEY l!R • classroom demons tra-TA Elltet»tn A ...., R.,,,.l<I R MOR ~ . ·~::-,:~:..: ~ :: H~~:·~.., llOW AIKt L •NI NO<m"" H-••d ti 0 0 s. inf 0 rm a ti 0 n
"'•EOUET, , .. ,._ A -Lino• WAU IN~ (ynlltl• --RO<M•• sessions for prospective Iii • KEE!HAN. °"""" L -Ed..,••ct y MORTON o.ty• <All el'ICI 0 .. 10 d d al • ) .' SCHNEllLIN Jant<e L end 8 t•ll'I• THATCHEA -ro-rot -SlU eots aD Umnl get-
Al .. rlln A • BASSETT. De111n•• E • ..., JO<ll'I E Gilli.AS O.t>or•ll Ann .,,., totelhers. . I> Wlll .. m C-..... HAAOEMAH ~rY r."~,T·= t-7.!'l~~ ... s ":'~;:';' Tolld end jf)m•\ s RO&lltNS Visitors may take free
'l>orot,,.,J -AIChe ... A MOODY ll lC htrd H ·~· ...... (1 . E bll$tou.rsoflhecampus,
&.ow•ll N -lryl c; . L•ND "''"'"' OCEGUEOA Mol!Jm " •"" """''0 v;•it the art <UaJle e w -l(al-0. COOfNUI G••• II HOLGUIN (;Iott• -d JoMJPft.... .,. • ~-ry. s e
..,d JoH"1Mrw, "''NALL. R-• M '"' ... 111 r .o .. •u "· -,,..,.. classic foreign films, ar:,<;.~~"...,t.nw Jr .,.0 .,,1
1 ~~\~~~~N~E~ "sf.:'. J?0"'.~0 ' tour. the nuclear reactor
WTHEALANO Jo<ol 1. ... -"""9 , c•u •ot .. •••" ~ .. owu• P•tr•n• or view any of the other
A.....-MuRR .. v. ""<1<1• A "'" o.""" A •n<1 t;,or""" o M<C.llEAo v Con· free exhibits presented R CONTI 8•rtMra •l'ICI 'Mm..-1 1 n•t P ..... 00<-•ld 0 Jr. CLAlllt b
MORROW £\hr llPl>t• •ntf JoM ~uw,, Ju.,.,. •t>d Otof9" Myroe Y m 0 r e l h a n l 0
J BALLESTERO~ )et(IUO ll ..... M (LAllt( l..C•no.t A -Tl ...... iK R . academic and student.
ljl&nu1I Ila.;! CROU~E Mir .... 1 T 811ANOT Ytv•• Ir----"" s• 'ca departme t .. d Kelny l MC CLUStt f:V I~"" ~ ~rVJ ~ n 8 . Parking on the campus
1 Deatlut Elsewhere
RULEVILLE1 Miss CAP) -Fannie Lou
Ramer, 59, a bla ck
woman who led c1v11 rlabta marches in Mis
slsslppi in the 1960s, died
Monday f ollowrn&
hosp1talizat1on for
diabetes, br~ast cancer
a nd heart problems.
CORONADO <AP>
Funeral services are
planned Thursday for re-
tired Rear Adm. J OHph
• 1s free.
UCI students will stage
1 Wayzgoose, the annual
spring festival, in Cam-
pus Park from 10 a.m. to
4 p.m. Entertainment for
tbt entire family will be
centered on a medieval
theme with mime acts.
Ju11lers, maalcians.
music IJ"OUP' and pup-
peteers.
S. Lillard, 72. a Navy ,.._'Jlll';;;;mi;.-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-.;-1
en11n eer \\ho served
Nouvaw aboard battleships ;nd TuoN~Y .. NNOuvEN , ..... ••0• commanded Lancfln., <"Olla ~w. C.lllO<n•• p,. _.., ...... •
,_,,. u m1 H• i. •u•v••..t"",. Ship Tank Group 9 1n
wlfaAMH'Jvl'tflof.._...-~ ''°"'°"' World War II. Lillard ,,,.,. N-end~ N9 ,.en; IWO
Neptune Society·
CU ..... TIOH IURIAL ATHA
646-7431 ·-~_....., ..... _ ,,,., __ C_,....-. I
CM• .., ,,.. ,._.. I
JltlWt. • C.M. ....... r1 a11olll••• 1.an No.ion """ o ... ., died m a hospital Mon·
NfUY•"· motw Diem Tho vn .,.,,,,to• day.
--. Mid on :1!"""'"'"'' ,...r<n •~ 11 -~========~J •t;eo Noori .. ""<"'' v •• ., Cl\a""' -.......,,,----..... ----
P11e111< Vl9WMotl\laryd1,.c1~n
SMnM TVn&L UNI
Wiile .... CHAf'&
427 E. 17th St
'· Co.ataMesa • 846--4888 ~ Santa Ana Ctlapel
IU8 N. Broedway
Santa Ana• M7-4131
PfllCI •OTHIH swnn MOllTVAIY
827 Main St.
Huntington Beach M&-e53Q
,_MMLT
COt.OMAI. PUteAL
NOMI 7801 Bolsa Ave.
Westminster
893-3525
Ul.Tl• .. OM
N•ALHOMI eoron. del Mar 87~9450
Costa Mela M&-2424
la.LllOADWAT
MOINAIY
110 ero.c1wa1
Costa Mesa
&42·9150 A
tor le PrlCeOI
I I I mf'f,
COSTA MESA ltJl .... IM .
...
• l DINNERS FOR
I "11 ~~· fOf bl>IOQ OUT
IAVINE ....,... •••Oltftfwy
·~
.~
Most of the el~ctricity we generate is needed by factories !.arms anp offices-so people can make a
living. The ~eatest demand for this electricity is dur·
ing the day. You need electricity to run appliances in
your home, too. And the greatest demand for this
electricity is also during the day.
Here's the problem; Because of the ~owing
demand for electridcy during the 'day, we 11 have to
build more power plants. Ari<! building power ptants
today is more expen ive. That drives up the cost of
electricity to everybody •. Nowthere'sSOJilethln~we all can do to help: Spread tbe~se of t!lectricl more evenly around the ~~Edi!Oll i• Wbtiint: th large industrial cuQ-
torneB to-help them fin"ll W?Y& to shift some of their
./ I '
.. .>
t
.. •
• 1 •
electric use to the evening hours. But most ~pie
prefer to work during the day, so there's only~o much
111dust:ey can do without drastic rescheduling of work
shifts.
It's afternoon use of electricity that's the biggest
problem. So you can help by doing some of your C:laily
routine at night or in the morning. Perhaps you can
wash and dry your clothes at night. Use your dish-
washer at night. Iron in the evening. Bake in the ,
moming. sC-E It means changing our routine
a bit But if we do use ef ectricity ·
wisely, it will help to hold down
the cost in the future. Southern Cal/fornltl Edlsoo
Remember t.o conserve
energy and water. . ..
, ,.
\
/
\
,
'9J 80NALD ADLSY
Aa'l*leL&8 UHD&a ' 'Pl.._..._ ~-k ... .._ .... ,._""
TOWZR CITY, Pa. (AP) -l.
try to blank it all out. But
IOmetldnl like that you never
w1,. eompletely from your mind.
Onr and over agam, I feel it.
happenlnc • . • cbolune for air,
1upins for breath under cold,
dirty, smelly mine water •••
trapped with two dead buddi~ ln : t a black coal mine. ...
1 KEEP RJl!A .. NG that terri-
ble IOUDd of water, nsing swil'Uy.
It came rolllnc straight at me.
crushing min e timbe r s,
'1t'e felt tllls
'terrflk gaula of air. ' ". ....... it .., ••'
eJalWng. Like the f ffi
oldeatlt.'
smashing into walls or coal, clos-
ing every posEible escape hole
with debris.
What happened Tuesday morn-
ing. March 1, a mile underaround
at Big Lick Mountain, still gives
me nightmares, Even when I'm
awake.
I CAN'T REALLY remember
too much about that winter day
before the water crashed in. Or
even 'Who I talked to, I guess it
was the shock of seeing that un-
ex peeled force or nature.
What bothers me though is
why, or bow, I alone was spared,
while nine other men died deep in
the earth. Later, I would wonder
if I had been spared only to die
alone days after my friends,
Anna Mae (my wife) woke me
at 4 a,m. JOce she always does
¥then I'm on the day shirt. I had
coffee. a couple of eggs and then
went outside to wait for m y ride
to the Kocher Coal Comparfy
mine,
THERE I CHANGED into
work clothes, hooked on a freshly
charged batter y to my he ad
lamp, and went into the tunJtef, I
was assigned to work with Ralph
Renninger and Donald Shofner,
Down in the mine, we drilled
test holes to check where there
might be water above us This is
always done for safety purposes
Most of the morning we kept
drilling.
Then we h1 l ro<'k, We stopped
drilling to fire some dynam1 tt'
near the ceiling of that deep coal
chute. We wanted to clear awa}
loose rock and coal so 1t couldn't
fall down on us,
WIBLE THE BLAST s moke
was clearing, 1 ate the l1U1ch that
my wife had packed -press ed
ham sandwichl's, three of them, I
think. There was also a pork chop
left from dinner the night befon•,
some cake and a fruit dessert I
had a thermos of ro!Cee. I r~ally
enjoyed it.
Then we climbed back up the
ladder t.o the top. I was on top.
Renninger a notch below, and
Shomer just below him
Looking down, m tbc yellow I .,
RELIVES THE TERROR
Miner Ronald Adley
glow of our lamps. I could see·
hammers and picks and shovels
piled on the-dusty floor about 80
feel below,
Above. the smoke from the
blast hadn't quite cleared. We de-
cided to give it a couple of more
seconds when -s uddenly -it
happened,
WE FELT TIOS terrific gush
of air . Wooooosh !
U was chilling. Like the feel of
death
ll came from somewhere down
be low us, Il went everywhere. I
thought it was top rock that broke
some place that made this air
t\nd then I saw t11e water , That
wa's something I h ad never seen
in my life.
It looked like a g reat big dam
that burst. Llke a gusher of water
forcing its way out of t he ground
For ce like I had never seen
WE WATCHED IT for a couple
of split seconds. not knowing
what to do -orwhat 1t would do
Then it started to come up
towards us. bringing up timber.
and boards. and a\f tbat kind of
stuff Coal. too.
The water r oar ed up, and
caught me m it. hilting with ter-
rific force It came so fast. So
fast •
I didn't know what h~ppened to
Ralph an~ Don .
WE DIDN'T REAR any warn-
in~ when the water came, I heard
no a larm bells. I heard no
sounds I heard no shouting from
other men. Nothing. E ven when
the a ir had come first l heard
nothing
The .._.•mt all the WQ up
to the roof of tbat abaft, more
than no feet. It covered every-
thins.
I was in it. I WU just floeting
behind the timber, fi&htin& t.he
preuure, holding my breath as
long as I possibly could,
searcbln& for an air pocket ..•
AJonc the top. In a crevice of the
coal. Someplace .. Anyplace.
I SAW SOME bubbles, and
crabbed some air, and then was
yanked deeper into the swirling
waler with the junk banging lnto
me. J was swinging my arms like
a windmill, and kicking, fighting
the drag from the heavy clothes
and tools on me. J was holding
my breath. And holding it. And
holding it · ·
I thought the end was there for
me, that lt was all over, But then
I heard in my mind my little boy
and my little girl saying to me,
'Daddy, hold your breath, bold it
as long as you can, like you used
lo show us in our swimming
pool.'
And I did. For the longest time.
I don'tknow bow long.
Then I felt the water going
down. and I found a little space at
the top, and I could breathe..
I FELT SO good inside, I was
so thankful to God.
As the water dropped, I found I
was stuck where I had grabbed at
some Umber, at the top of the
shaft, My light cord was caught
in thecoaJ.
I took my battery off my belt,
and I was looking around in the
blackness and I saw another light
shining below. lt was orf Ren·
ninger who was lying on the coal.\
He was dead.
So I took his light and I used
that to look around ~o see what
was going on, and where I was at.
I DIDN'T SEE Shofner but I
saw his light shining through the
rocks and timber down past Ren-
ninger, I actually didn't know he
was there. I just felt he was
there.
The whole thing happened
before noon and lasted about five
minutes. That's all!
There was coal falling all
around me and I wasn't getting
touched.
That was the part I didn't un-
derstand. It was llke standing in
the middle of a whole pile or coal
coming down. like I was in some
kind of tube. and the coal
couldn't hit me That's what it
fe lt like
I SAT DOWN to get my breath
for a minute or two, I didn't know
if there was going to be more
water coming out. Or what was
going to happen.
That's when I was praying to
God so bad to help me.
Nut: AloneinDarkM11.
Transplant: Last Hope
Interest Revived i~ Heart Surgery
EQITOR'S NOTE -lt'a still o clJoncv. la.!t-rt1orl
opn'Olfon, and the-re ore/"°" h~rt tro.ruplanta now than
dU1'iflii tMfr #tqdaJI in the latt 19601, But OM tMdical
cmtn bat greatly improved IM ~rate. and Ulere
art l'fgna of .new interest Ill this surgery .• <;tcond of.a.
"""·
87 RICHARD SALTUS Al"k'-keW ......
LOS ANGELES-WUliem Van Buuren has bad his 1econd heart for more than seven years a.rld
says, at 47, "I expect, to 10 oo for anotber 20'0r M
years."
At a time when most caf'diac 1urfeom 11tlll feel
the re!Ults ol heart tra nsplants doti't j ustify the
:costs. Van Buuren has this messaite tor those whose.
:hearts are dama..:ed beyond repair: "Take it any
'.time you can; it's your lo/I t hope,"
TRE ·WAVE ()y ENTHUSIASM F<lR heart
replacements that followed the first successful
•ransplant tn 111'1 faded. But lbere are signs that the
opetatioo may 100D make a comeback at ceriain
medical centers 1b tlaw country. where interesf re-
portedly is stirrtng anew because of the risine suc·
·ceas rate of Stanford
(~--------...)University surgeons . .' The U&"n'"lNE •teadil.1 improving sur-lf.l,.C;Vn.... vlval rates are largely
---------the reaultot a determined' -campaip by Stanford
docton ap1nst the body's rejection of a tr~lant-.
ed heart and against inf~ that kill ~any
transpladt patients. -
Nearly fO\fr out of five ents are surriving
the fint year after the o atioo at Stantord -the
only lnltltuUon tn.U,e try regularly perfonnlng
tramplanta. N~e an ago, when the program.
be1an, only 22 ent. or sliahtly more than one in
five, of the pall survived for a year or mQte.
OP 117 ,PAnE~ECEIVING new hearts al Stanlord,4S paUeot.s including Van Buuren. a.
buUdin1 estlmatar Ito Mlll Valley, still are .UvJJ;
lour bnel'urvived nve years or more.
· Worldw~ 10 patient.a are llvln1, of 321
trauplanta ormed.
'!J Udnt the hnprovJn' results are~
1ur1eons at other lDIUtutlou to U7 transplants
'\
again,'' said Dr. Jack Copeland, chief resident in
general surgery at Sta.alord.
In fact.. a few days after Copeland made the
statement in an interview, doctors at Columbia
Presbyterian MedJcaJ Center in New York placed a .
donor's heart iD the chest of a dytng patient. It was
the r1r1t heart tnmsplant in thedty since 1988. ..
. COPBIAND, WHO IS MOVING TO the
·1.fnlveralty of Arizona medical school, said
tramplant pt'Oliams may beatn by 1979 at Arizona
and within one to three years at Downstate lledlcal
Center in Brooklyn, N. Y. Surgeons ~m Harvard Medlc.i School, wblcb baa a well.funded research
.progMJD in animal transplant.a, are aeriouJ.y ~-
=sideri.J11 bUUtuttonsplanta, be aaid. ,
The 8tanlordlur,eon1, beaded by Dr: Norman
Shumway, believe t~at their operations are·
,justified by the extra years they can offer patients
who almost certainly would be dead 1ri~ a few
months.
' Van Buurea. who wu told in 1970 that Ile bad
three months to Uve, says ht bad no trouble roakfng
the deebion. He says be oow llVtll a "IOote or less
normal" life, while Patl'5lta he )mew who d~ded
against the transplant are dead.
nmu WA.SA ftAJUYOl':ftA~
for two er three years afterbt. ~= B~.
performed the lint builla 1-t a&meot ~
C•pe Town, South Africa, ba December DSt•
But lll08t ntaeom IOOD 1a.e~, Ulla o to .maintain the deUcate balance of the
' bocb'• natural njeeilon ~· foreld beart wttbout 1~ ·
; the patient 4efmaeleu aptUr lnfec1SGD. a~eetJan and Infection still cauu neaw all the deatbl from , heart trampldta, but at sa.n.
'ford IOIDe advanc• have~
made CG both fWlUta.
I 'n.er. ha~ been tlz CUM
• saeuMw&Y ; latel7 ID wblch a t•~~
trantplanted heart WU Nm I
by Stanford aurieons and reDlaeed wStb aaotbw-: ·d ving the patient hJJI third beart ol hla l11e. 'lbne Of·
(See~Am
' I • , .. ·-
GINGER_.
JAR
LAMP
MAMY
COLOllS
8 ROLL TISSUE
REDWOOD
STAIN
Latu
JflCO
I Gal.
~ -llto"'"'?1 $fAIN
' <j
,~t'.~
s1aa
, MEN·s
SHORT SLEEVE
SHIRTS
't"'\ • ' -~ ' '~\.~.~ '~\-
l Colors
lO"HlcJlts.,t
Full Swt•tl
2011
HI-RISE
BIKE
BEACH TOWELS
-~Ff: ,,.~~
Mon••1 2/$500 Prfnh
32"x60"'
.. ----··~ ........ ..........
12 .. J•
PLAHTER•s
DRY ROASTED
PEA HUTS
ROOM·SIZ
·RUG ~tl"J..i'~~~
l'/ul 1112
Tri TOM
Pattt'f"n
Whlt.~Lett
MEN1S
FLANNEL SHIRTS
Attradi••
P9ald
Pattt'f"n
TODDLERS' JACKET
Whlle
9uantiHes
Last
Doritos
CORN
CHIPS 48c ~-s400 loys & Glrll,
While 9"Rtlff•s
Lott!
250 d.
COLORIEX
PIClllC NAPKINS
BOYS -. FLANNEL SHIRTS
WHILE QUANTITIES LAST
BOYS BRUSHED
' ... 'ACKRS .
Jrown· • Blue, Broken Sizes
TRAC-BALL
Whamo
$
22M .HARBOR COSTA MiSA/CA
CB • t ·
S.fll9ftn, 1'licl1 .
mtw TV rntWte a pnjl al bock~
player who 1Jv in to the brut:ll demaocis
of h11 sport to Curth~r h1s career. (Story
Puge84.)
KCET 9·00 "An Only Child"
The story o( an Irish boy growing up ln
the period of the lrish·Britisb uprising of
1916 i~ presented on the Great
PcrformanC'es serie~
NIK fD 9 .00 "The Owl and •the
Pu!)syt"t " Georg~ Segal is a bookworm
u!1d Barbra Strct!)and a lady of easy
\'trtue in lht~ odd <:oupling mo\'ie from
1970
TV DAILY LOG
fwEDNBSDAYf
I
EVENING
6 :00
0 0 a 10 ( 17 3 ) Newt
D 1) e ( 29 e J ID News
U 2' Stat T re•
a Gomer f'rlt U Gt&its~e m Part11d1e flm :lr m Ma111.11 m ~ltdat 8111•1 loom
ll Mite 0ou(IH m little llisuls
-6:30-
0 D1n1h! Cuol '" ludt D~dn
Cannun '•hrd An&Pku Harr:tl
Nth.on and l\artn Gmsle
a Alldy Cnlhtll
10 Mtll Cntt:n Show m hl!Mly Altair
( 11 3 ) Gllnsmolt
( 29 e ) Dollny and Marie
7:00
D 0 23 6 CD ED News
O l:an Club
6 Mr Thrtt Sons
8 To Tell Ille Truth
0 Conce11tr1hon m 1 Lo" Luc, a> Tht FBI
2$ ~nch Gr1lf:111
ID MacNtil/Lthnir Reporl
l:D Mc:H11t's lllVJ
-7:30-
D ED Name Th11 lunt
0 Lon Amtriun Stylr
a The Odd Couple
O Match Game
8 $111,000 Question
O The lohr's W:ld
10 Wild World of A111m1b
m ( 29 e ) ""' lll11<h ( 17 3 ) ,., Gtts Hit Ceutll ry
23 6 Celeblity Swtt,ltalu
26 Hccan's Htr0t$
ED Ch.lnnfl 11 Ton:thl
Jt lms Ctull
ffi 'T ' Troop
8 :00
0 THE MIRACLE MONTHS
• Dramatic him-study
of concept1011 l birth
D ( 11 3 l & The M:raclt
Months 1' un1qu• and d1~mM1' '"'"
•'1M1Jn 11 'P't"ll dtdhnf w1lh rhr
•111 ~ ril humari rnrl • Ol•()11 ,:,.~~
loon and b:rlh •nd l1J<u~1nR on lhrf'
m11th.r\ wh11~r l)!Ohl•m ~''~" 1n
t11·1 "'" \,,,,d hv ne 1111 mu&tulou\ mtdocal ttrhnolo~v
D .l1I • J l!il Tiie l~• ' TI111n of Gtluly Ac111ns Gnuly Ad.ims ns~s
h1\ hit In ~ve lht lrvn ol 1n1m1ls
• mRhl '" in r1up11na vnkano
O Mowtt: C. (1hr) "Cllttll11ca"
1 dral 68 Rteh•rd lun
& ,..,.. (11\r) "The Key" lllm
~ W1ll1am tlr~dtn ~Ol>h•' I 01•n
0 ( at e ) lt The 1101<
Wonqn l.1111\t h•'IPI> tn P~''' •.C~
111 IOt~fr P•e11e l 11nanl I ll~p ~
,,,.,,,, 1"m1n.il •nd •t'<Vttr 111''11"'
.,, .sine ~'"""" 0 lltN: C (nt') "A Miii WM ea-" t••S) ·59 1 ,, rr•llC!I' ..i
~·r~atl ~" mn ludo 'llt11
10 Idly Gralldl Cf1111ch m Wild lllofld crf Alt""lls
m '9fry 1:UM11
fl) Kotun Vu:ety Hoclr
2f •1t10Nl6"'111h1< Am\l"Anl
M [Y'l~~I
fD llcrn I h• Cent l ~''""'' I h• la•.c:n.ihne dnd cMlffflff1111 Jlorv of
a•nrl~ tn11nrt11na research "h:ch
m:&hl '°'"' d1y lhd lo defect lrtt
habces OI &tnthotly PIO&llmlntd
peopl,.
fD taamplof!lltip WrMtll!lj.
Q) lletitMI Svll:lt'* IJ lnt
-1:30-..
m Cn111·WIU
9:00
0 THE DfADllEST
• SfASOfMMt dre~
of '" lloU., t1*o fJ (tll) CJJ} 0 1 lllt Dt1dhest
Suson A dramatic special st1rnn1
Morhael lllo11arty Wld Ko:n Con .. ay
~boul • piofl's.\oonal alMtlt when •
IJt'ISOnaltty and pont~ts art brw
'•hz,d by h:s hun1e1 tor ~uccus al
• "'' llCllt I tit pioar•m d11111111m
lllt 111CW11mty ol the pro 1lhltte.
n rttrs-tspte11lly Ille pr~ Oft
llltll' not on!p 10 lie wuyms but
crawd·plnstri-•d the public's ii~ ..... ,. "C4111\lli'' ~ '•lid O'lltal, ~,,_ Dutatit,
Wy Boyir and Wit• !il(C:nn 11So
slat. a i:tll Cl) m c;o S.1rh1
Sharkey IS the ob1ttt or COl'IS1det1bl!
~ulatron tn the INl'TICb u a
result Gt ~:s le11ctltf. pr:wete
COCNtlSat:on willl a w11 salesman
G (9 Cl)) lartttj Tony
fllls tn love •nd 1y IWIY witll tM
lluuhfw• wtft of • •DPICf
m Mtll Gnff:n Show a> Vir11nt1n
tti Amtr:a
ID G111t Ptrfon111Rces: Childhood
An Only Child by Frank 0 Connor
Although vouna Michael 0 Donovan
dn Irish boy l1vma tn the slumi. ol
(;(i1l has been b1oujihl up to bcltev~
111 lhe virtue~ ol lht ~nglt)ll ht) odeas
• hJnfe v.:lh lhe lush Brrflsh
ilb11>1n5 ot I~ 16
-9:30-
D '..aJ 0 10 m UC Wednts·
di) Movie C ('()) ''The Owl and
the 'ussyut" teem) 70-Gtor~t
~l~dl Barb1a Stretund Robert
Klem A hTn ibout'1wo-tuglriy 111
tll'!'pal1ble c:lv <lvoellers who lrarn to cet alone in ~rle ol lllemselves
10:00
D CIJ llews a Cetekit) lltfllf
0 (f2i l.f,) QI Cllamt's An1eb
A cafl t.,1 opetalt• -••th a burclary
eo•nii on the stdt-makes the mis
l~t ol robbtnll a v1C11m w•lh $Vnd1
calt conntttions
ffi lsntl T odlJ
26 Gclnsmt*e ID l'ltdlf Btut1 Sc.ene:s fcom A
Marrtace 1 he 411 or s~e~p:n~
llndt• lht Ru~ Marianne ;nd Jrhan
•' ••t•nue to rt1d1nla1n a facctde ul
Ml!rtor1 blt\S ollhoueh t~y d• ~
.,.,.,. <I 'umd~int' wionr belwf1 r
ihl'trl
-10:30-m m w fltws ,
1 1:00
0 D ED 39 News U (.2f 8 ) LO'tf Amer:un Stylt
a Slnala Match Up
0 23 § 10 ltews
0 honsfdt m JibrJ Hartm.tn, Mary Haroun m The Hllnef~
< 11 3 1 The blldl si.w
26 Int of Woudlo m 111 Ille ~~ " Ice lb~ on '
h ,, \I' ry bv jt,ce Caiot o~r·~ •
nun 11 nn~41a PanapnJ. ltath·~~
l.r•l111~ at "C.1lhol1c U~1vt151!) r
t.ttled b, lhr alltllll()llS ol ont ol
'~· ·Mlent. I P•ter lamper•l
-11:30-
D { 11 _l ) e CIS Utt Mtint.
C -Wand P111" (dW 66-JMntS
11ner [n lllJ11• Si:nl
D 23 6 10 Ill» .,_, Catt111
& lite I'll Club
0 ( 2t I ) Jt The Rotkiesl
Mywttty of !lie ..... m llew1 m Set. lilto
M flit 700 a• m "'"'' 1ttM.1"-tlll City L•lh
12:00
O llStcrf~ 11..,..: ~ ...... Snday"
(Ott) 71-MMl ltond
...... '1\t u." "'-" 11'"11 41 Ritt....,_," a> lllotnt "hlllt1er ,..... •tJI
·~ T-.ffn OrUtlo Rod Came1on
-12:JO-o Al lltpt SM.-"thdrl r ... M "W• .. f ..., .. """"' ...... -
fD Omic n..r ""'" Slit · 1 P' to <:b411.,
1:00 u 10 ,, • l...,, ..
2:00
CiJ Mntt 0.VMtlUl•rt. "lilly r.,.., .. "Tllt ....,_. ~-m Alt-ll:Pt S..: "lk AIC'!
S.lenc.t,""lkOMIMffOU._
-2:05-u lhtlt; "Cr-If '•I.Ma" (m~sl ~/ .. B11bln Stlflwytl
MUQt 17
8elol:i, tor Jiff' Clll*iMCe. Ml tlil dn'slM'llea.
9:30 • t'J .... .,.. """ .... H {mus) 'H -DtMrt Mor111,
Allfne Dahl.
10·00 HI ''huh heh•" (dn)
•O-Ronald Rua•n. Pat
0 E111en Gale P11e
II :00 0 "f 11Jrtiec fltlllt Dve!le"
\d1.1) '48-Pit O'Bcltn, ~
Hdma" M,i11a Oell
IZ:OO m "lady Frt111 Sl:upal"
(m~sl 48-0rsoa Welles. Ritt llmiorth. Evtsett Slot11t
I 00 8 (ti "Ftr tilt left tf
0." (dti) '60-R:clurcl Bue
h11t. Stu E""' (1:) ..................
(adv) 6) Donlld O'Cennor,
Noelle Ac11rn, Vrttarlfi de Sica
Z 00 • (CI "TJflflt " ..... ,& s. " HtlQtles" (llor) ''3-Gordon Scott. Massmtb Strato.
~ l1Gl ct) "Tiit Flltlltr r.ts ff
,,,... -~ (COii) '67-Stln laurel. ON¥er IQrdJ,
1:30 e ~ "Stt, 114 .. J (df1)
72-Cleftn otd, ~.,,
Buclltnan, V1cl01 C.mpos. P•t'f Ford
----- -----------
Off lor San Diego
Sterling and Heidi Santley of South Laguna
take to the trapeze on their Prindle·l6
catamaran in preparation for the South San
Diego Regatta March 26. Nearly a dozen
other Orange County Prindle sail~rs are also
expected to make the San Diego event which
"ill count in, the four·regatta i:;eries for high
points in Cali!ornfa
Ensennda Race
Emries Mailed
lnv1lat1ons and entry bla~ for the 30lh annual
Newport to Ensenada yacht race have been mailed
to ·~uthhtnd sailors 'With a btl of reqwred safety
equipment
The April 23 starling date wiU be the earliest in
the history of the colorful event known as lhe
world's largest internaltonal yacht race.
Until a few years ago the race always started
on the weekend nearest to Cinco de Mayo (May 5>.
It was changed lo a week before the. Mexican holi·
day becattse of the mixture of yachtsmen and land
tourists wh.o flocked to the Baja Cahforma resort,
often causing confltcts which kept the Mexican
authorities busy
ALSO TO t\ VOID T ll F. unruly crowds. the start
of the r<ice was ch.in~t.'d from Thursday to Satur·
da). putting the yachtsmen in Ensenada ahout the
time other \'ISilors were leaving for their homes in
the C .S
The r:'lt't.' 1s sponsored by the Newporl Oct·an
Sailing Asso<'1at1on. an organization s l'l up for the
specific purpost• of running the ra<"<' ln recent
~ears the event has drawn nearlv f.iOO boats for the
spectacular s laf'.l off the N cwporl ·J etly
NOSA president John l\obmson said all boats
will~ requ1n'd to have VHF marine radios aboard
thu; year lo improve rommun1C'at1ons during the
rare and to aid rn safel) The radios will be n•qu1red
to be equipped ""Jlh l'bannl'ls Ii. 16 and 68
THE RACE -IS OPEN to all sailing yachts
whose owners or charterers are members of vacht
clubs affiliated" 1th the Southern Cahforma 'a;acht·
mg Assoc1allon. Pac1f1c Coasl Yachting Assoe1a·
t10n . l"nttcd States Yacht Racing L'nion or rc·
cognized clubs of a foreign country
Yachts must be 29 feet or longer and have rat·
1ng certificates or the Jnternaltonal Offshore Rule.
Performance Handicap Racing Fleet. Midget
Ocean Racing Fleet o". thl' Ocean Racing
Catamaran Association
. .
•1 ALllON LOCKAaav ror •adl o1 to ,. Clml'r..._....,......., --n :.;._. Htftl)' Sprque Ill 01 pert to .. .u qaw., every
tbr Newpe>rt llubor ot.h r darint tb HriCS,
Yacht Club '" • former reauJUna in three series
winner 11989> of the Lona of five match races each e h y h Cl day fer a tot.al of 45 dur· eac · ac t ub'~ prt' 1n1 lhe three-day ~riod .
alli1ious Congressional The winner is the one Cup match racing i.erles Spraaue will be back tn who comes out of lhe
lhe 45·race batlle Thurs St>nes with the best won·
day when lhe llth edlhon loss record. A score of
pf the Congressional Cup moe u; a perfe<-t record.
eet.s under way off lhe Only a few skippers. in·
the Long Beach breakwater. ~~~!n~u~p:ra~:· n!':.:: "But, Grondma~ We don't watch 'As
but he will be up Mgamst With perfect scores. World Turns.' This is when we always some o f the most
form1d,ble compeltllQp -=======~z:-::--±'~-:--..:.w:..:a:.:•:.:c~h ... '.::.S:.::e:.s=o.:.:me.::_S::.:.:tre..:.:'.•:.:.t·:...''_" ____ _ in the history of lhe evenl. ·
including Dick Deaver.
last year's winner. and
five skippers and crews
who will be competing
later an the year for a btd.
to the Amen ca ·s Cup.
Deaver. a resident of
Newport Beach and
member of Balboa Yacht
Club wiU be rt-presenting
Los Angelei. Yacht Club
in lhis year's Cong Cup
THE FJVF. America's
Cup contenders who will
be !teen in action for the
three-day Congre:.s1onal
Cup_ honors are
Lowell North !'ian
Diego Yacht Club. skip ·
per of lhe new 12-meler
Enterprise which ts now
working out against
former Amenca'i. Cup
wmner lntrep1d of San
Diego
Ted Hood, New York
Yacht Club, skipper of
another new 12-meler In·
dependence. and the win·
ner of lhe 1974 America s
Cup defense lll 1974 In
1974 Hood was at the
helm of Courageous
TED TURNER of
Atlanta, Ga . Yacht Club
will ta kt· over th<· hcl m of
C o u r a g \' o u " 1 n
this ) cur's .\mt•ra·11 s
Cup Lrtab Jn l!r;.1 h<·
sailed Mar111l'r. :.i Bn1111r1
Chann• dt•s rl!nc•d !2
mt'ler that f :ntsht•rl a
poor t h 1 rd 111• h 1 n d
Cu u rai:c•o u s .111 d I 11
lrep1d
Closeftt wat<:ht•<.l 111 1h1.,
~ear " (.'l)nJ,!11•,.,10n:.il
Cup will he Pt•lh.• PH
tcrson of Swt•dc•n \\ho
\\ 111 s kipper the Swedish
challenger for the
Amenca s Cup This will
mark the first time Pet
terson. a former 01) m
p1c gold medaltsl. hai.
competed 1n the
Congressional Cup
.. .
The Corvette Front Line
At HOWARD Chevrolet
Noel Robins. another
fir s t timer tn lht
Congressional C111> who
will b1' sa1 l1np
Australta's l\mt•r1c·a'1>
Cup hopeful in tht• r..,......_.,....__........,..._,,,_..._,...._1""111111,,,_..._,..-..,....,..._,.....,,...... cha llcnger In ab aga inbl
L. ltl. Boyd
Executives
Dying Out?
Consider those male execultves bel.ween
thl' ages of 35 and 45 in lhts country. i"'lfteen fears ago. they numbered approximately 12.4
mllJion..11'6'1\ year! a~o there were about 11.6
million Today. the he:.irl counters add up only
about 11 m1lhon The big boys m the employ
meot game who deal with high.powered
personnel sn) lhe.> 're getting worned They
think we're rapidly running shy of lhe heavies.
the bwuness bralna, the movers and shakers.
Only circus animal act more dangerous
than the performance or the chimpanzees is
\bat {>f th,e µ-ained bears. Or so says an authority
who ought to know. ~act
that they do t -cts out·
side lhelr cag. ts w y.
An old la · in (\labama
roakes any . subject to .
arrest w h o prompts •
laughter in a C'hurch by '
wearing a raise mustache
therein
Jwit about hair of all the currenUy unmar·
ried women already have been marri~ at
leastonct
FATANDTHIN
Arsument continues over which ls the
more iacllne4 lo cause trouble, fat people or
thh\ peopl&. Cearl • there's no way to ~w.
But Wasbin&ton Irving in his ltnick~er
study oft New York wrote. '1\VhoevtJ' l\eari·of tal men beading a riot, or Mrdlng togelfafr ln
tutbulent mobs? No, no, ,tis your lilan, h un··
lflY men who are continually worryin& socie-
ty, ancl.etting U. whole conuiumlty by the eatt." . .
• lt was the tradltiQn for miuty yaars in·
Lhaq. the capital or 'J;'lbet, to auction t>ff the
job di dty mayor at the out.set or each new
·year. Highest bidder was permitted toaerve in
that office tor 23 days. And durlna that time,
be "fa& allowed to keep alt the money he aoukt
collect through extra taxes and funny fines.
Re.atcm that, 89 percent of the stolen cars ~ quickly recov,ered is moat are aban-
Addtar1noal to L.. N. D.-J "'0 n.._ 1~ COltoMuo,_ ~. r •. --.
Sweden, f:ng lan<I and
France.
OT H E R S IN thi s
year's Cong Cup will be
Shawn Durin . Long
Beach Yacht Club. Marc·
Hollerback. Yacht Hae
ing l 'nion or the Great
Lakes. and Ton.> Parker.
Naval Academy Saahng
Squadron
The Congressional Cup
will again b<' sailed 1n th<•
aging Cal 40 :.loop:.
\\hich tnaugurated the
sencs 13 yl'ars ago Only
t\\ tee has the Cong Cup
been sa1lNI for in other
classed of sloopi..
The LBYC series has
grown from a more or
less loeal event in 1964 to
one of the most pre·
s llglous match racing
events, second only to
the Amtric1.t's Oup itself,
in the world.
THE FORMAT .ealls
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* We're proud of their accomplishments
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AT 1.25 PAlll
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~»• , ... n. bad d ~ ... owwn of U.
'atlM.._DI ... ~ II •••ltGft• ~ ..... ...,)? tit ........ .,.
...... .llopl*l ,SvillL'' ...... " I
Aid. . .,... ....... &t •• ... pn a..
-~ 1•wt imtDt11el'..cnanOllta:ra.I ..cl FOUDdaU.,. wldd l.llllt "* wu bamld&om furtt.rlOlldUllfl ,N.., Yortltti:te..
Tbe Rat. toot the action der an audit abowed
the bmdattoa. which ls linked to tbe Bev. S..
•711U •-. used less tbaa '1 pereeat ol tbe SU tb.illlcD 11 raised in 1975 for charitable purpase1. • AUorneys for singer·soaiwrtter ac. o,laa and h1I Wife. Sud. met in court at Santa M.oalca to a.et-
tle preliminary maUen related to the couple's
di•orce, court officials said · However, all records
(
,.-------..] of the proceedings before
P.·ro,nr r Superior Court Com-
e,,,, c-~ missioner Jou Ales·
---.------aader were sealed by
court order last week,
Hid attorney Marvin Mltcbe•.,.., who· represents
Mn.Dylan.
He added that no further action in the case is
expected for several months.
On March 1, Mrs. Dylan, 34, was grant~ tem·
porarycustodyofthecouple'sfivecbildren. · • Soviet President Nikolai V. Podgomy will visit
Tanzania in late March at the invitation of Tanza-
nian President Julias Nyerere, the official news:
agency Tass announced. .
-Diplomatic sources in Moscow expect the trip
to begin March 21. Podgorny is expected to continue
on to Lusaka, Zambia. on March 26 and to Maputo,
Mozambique, March 29. ...... -
Austrian movie actor Helmut Berger has been
hospitalized after drinking a large quantity of li-
. quor and taking some medical
pills. police said in Rome.
Officers said physicians who
·examined. the actor told them
·the liquor and pills were
.responsible for Berger's agitat-
ed state after being brought to a
bo@ital by ambulance.
· Berger starred in several
films directed by the late Italian
director Lachlao VJ.scoaU, in-
c luding "The Damned,••
"Ludwig" and "Family Portrait."
• fte U.S. lma1At ~ ....,_. Ala ......... u. .... ••JLoabl ••
It gnanimo:.t ..,.... • ftlol--ID trt to '-''18 -.. ceP11ona1 ~ct. ..
t
Seen So
· Tbe reaolatloa wa1
•oomored by sen. ..... «&-.
(D-0bio>, who a.ald the blatodcal
DMd and its te1fl'Ylaica adepq..
don have .. tontribated to the
cause ol • better radal u,o.. deratandlnc tn tho UAlted states:•
· CalitcJmla bu bid open Musi~ laws far more
.than a dec8de, in the lotttt ot tile Unruh a.ad Bum·
lord lets ol &.be earl1 U91111, Mii t.beT'f• never been
,enforced.
TWltlOo\'I ~-• "lhllt119 UMI T=U-I.rt. ...,.,._,~ .. .._.. .......
-~ . Fonner Ambauador Walter B. A RID'~ •
clded to withdraw bla $40-mlllloo pledge to est b
and m~ a fine arll cent.er at the Metropolitan
Museum bl A.rt. museum officials said.
Museum director TMmu Dom., termed it "an irreparable loss ...
The 68-year-old publisher
and former U.S. ambassador to
Britain offered $20 million for
construction and another $20
million to maintain the center,
which would have been a
di vision of the Annen berg School
of Communications.
Establishment of the center
was opposed by some state and
city officials who argued that it
would have closed off a large
part of the museum tothe public.
~~ttMlt (II~
-i.c..IM.AllClnllM ........ _..., _...,., .,.t.lltA:·~~
Hellay lfW\ NI lotklll,Gllfll ... ,... tto. lnclu!M ~ -"""'.,... ~·-~ "HIAlr1CllN..._~ ...
o..Md ~ ...... 'W'!l.fiflllc.-
elist. l'lnl fll •UC IMfle 1-......
.l•ctu•• M•IH. "Ttw Hot.-;wlt;
"""• -.d ltMlfty -T-4t e •.nett ... flf .._ i..tur•." 1-10
•·'"·• ""'-1tt, Ptiyslut kleM:ft ei-. .. UCINIM~l"M:~..it. ii'. NOl>OW!t. UO.
"M111ic.t Comedy Workt1'oD -
F.-.. o.-tretlOft," Je-lllob-
1>1'"· l.M St•Ht>e<O Tl>eetr• ll'l•"tvte, Holl~. A UC IMM Ert9'\$I011e.-
mo<>$lret""'--of c~,.. to Vie pubfk, MOp.lft., ltm. 254, Hllf'llMhtes
Hell,UC1rvil'l9~
PltlDAY-SATUltDAY,
-rdltsMdM ••Afri~ Alll!nelfo, "-094•. Wikllfle MetM9tmlftt/' tan ptayw. Pf"09r•m
director, fl'llemellonAI Wil .. rneH
L••d•rsllio Foundet10111 Robut Cle1ves,91Mr• consut •nd member,
!loud ot Olreoor" i"t•rnello,.et * Wlldernen L•ildt,.,,hlo Found•tlOf\; The California Court of Appeal set aside a lower Pet ouinn, 10QloQlu1 con•ult•11t. A UC lrvlne E•ltn,lon Wtek·end court order holding embattled associate Supreme Hmtner, Fri., 1-10 P "'·· s.t. '
NOW '1'11B STATE DVAnllEN'I' of Bea!·
Er• wbe&ber motlnted bf eehoo& bm.lAa pro-ms er slmp&J kl aood intentioea. aays It is de-
laed to bealD a Mrioa eDloreement tftort.
Tbe clepart.$ent pro~es to luue strict
auldellne.I oU11--such practices u ••steertnf, ..
telling membe.rl of Cllle racial or ethnic ~ not to
"buy ln an area because no otben ol tbelr ,-roup eftr
'have.
; Also to be banned are tbe processing of some
!APPilcatiom to rent or buy bousm. faster tho
:Oth91'9 solely because of ra~ and refusal by a
jbroker to cooperate with lnother broker just ,*•Utle ot his dlent•a race, sex or national orifln.
THESE AND OTllER llESTIUCTIONS have
·been in the civil codes for years, but the real estate
!department couldn't enforce them until they were
!written into the state's busineea code in 1915.
. The new rules will be lfsued within two months,
jpromises David Fox, the iJepartment's new chier.
:who adds that they'll be enforced even IJlore heavily
:than coosumer protection rules are.
Co rt J ti M--... aJl M-1'-mb •.m.·t2 noon ..... l·S "'"'"Rm. 1'I. .. V1'olations by brokers U US C8 IUau ~ Sttlnll•u' H•ll, UC lrvlne c-pus. •r--~~=~-----· in contempt for refusing to sub-.... : \A0,111e1u11e,....,1t1"9. SOUTHERN will result in loss of
mit to questioning by the Com-P1ttoAY,SATU1to•Y•OUN1>AY, CALIFORNIA license. but apartment Mett11 as.» -11 mi ssion on Judicial ·-wr1t1rwatotvours.11·AWorti'11oo FOCUS rentals and other performance. •1111 Mlv 1<11 ...... M•11 $c11u•. ~ .. tran.sactions not involv· Lo\ Af\9el~ Tlmn columfll\t. A, will U Acting without his deposi-UC trvtne Eateolon wtOtfld ing brokers . sU be
lion, the commission had pro-..... or111MP. "''' 1-100 m .. S.t .tnd Sun, covered only by civil s anctions. In other words, the
.ceeded to rmd the 82-year-old ~~~~-r.;.,~~c~~i;..~~~ vtcttm can sue if he knows the law, but the state
justice senile and unable to Ftt·M4.w.111eludH-111.wa can'tact. • · ·
Perform duties and r ecom-u 10AY.SATV•D4v.,.ouMDAY. -JS.»-17 mended be be removed or re· "Palflng.. • ~ ,.._, "" o :
tired from office. cs'-'°'· Youtl\ s.nlc• ~-'· • UC lntlM; 1to9er llllC:h, P!l.O., pro. McComb's 67-year-old wife was named his con• oram "'ecter, 111tt111.i. or Grouo
tor F b 28 b Lo An 1 S rt Court. P1ycltoU1erapy, Loi Anotles. A UC serva e . ya s ge es upe or '"''"•Ext_..,,_ ........ """'"'""p··
Narrow as the real estate department's
jurisdiction is, its new rules are an admission that a
Brown administratioo statement of early 1976 that
'"There is no more housing discrimination in
California" was simply not tnae. • * Fri., 7·10P m .. S.t ef'ICI s.in., U m.·lt
noon, 1·' p.m .. Gold Room. Mes.
Court c-. UC lrvlfle umCN•. F": $jO,lncJ-parlli1t9.
A Beverly Hills physician convicted o( A new delay puts rinancier C. Arn.bolt Smith's
possession and distribution of cocaine has been trial on grand theft and other charges off until Sept.
fined more than $100,000 and placed on 12 years• 6. (Related story. A3.)
probation Smith, whose 18th birthday was Sunday, was in-
U .S. District Judge A. Andrew Hank said he" dieted by the San Diego County grand jury Dec. 16,
would have Jailed Dr. Aaron Lax -physician to a 1975. In pretrial arguments since then, 45 of the 64
number of Hollywood celebrities and rock stars -counts against him have been dismissed.
were it not for the 60-year-old doctor's age and poor Superior Court Judge Robert W. Conyers
health. agreed to the latest in a series of trial delays on a
Dr. Lax. was convicted primarily on the weight defense motion.
~ltlOAY41HSATUROAY,
-CllH,26;
~tU,"1 MAyU,14,
SONOAY.INyU
'FromtheOoen Sutotltt Oe-.er1,"
Do11eld A. Me<L.an, Pll.0., eui\lanl
\Uptrlnttndtnt. ~ood1ry fduca !Ion, 1"01-Unl!!W S<ltOOI 01>
tflct; Earl ae.,a1. l'tt.O .. Pf'of«Hor of
Biology, Calllornl• Stale Unl111r\1tv,
NortltrldQe. A UC Irvine EKI•"''°" 'thret-wukend envtronment•I
work\l'loo. Fri. 7·10 pm.; »t. •
1.m .·11 "°""• 1·3 p.M.; SUI\., May U.
SO IS THE INCLUSION IN GOV. Brown's pro-
posed 1977-78 budget of six new enforcement posi-
tions in the department to be devoted strictly to
policing the fair housing laws.
"The past at;ltistics are ·depressing," admits
Fox, whose department bns yet to lift a license
because of discriminatory practices. "But we ha-
ven't had the personnel that we think we need. Now
that they are in the budget, we think our new re-
gulations -which are more specific than the laws
will have some teeth."
-
Princess Anne will .
attend the springs
meeting of the Save?
tbe Chtld.ten Fund t
March 23 i.n strife .. ~:
to r n N or th e r n ~·
Ireland. ~·
--------~:
School
Novel
·B~nned
v ~!
·f ~ -.: -~ =~ .... ~ ' /'\, EMPORIUM. Pa.: ..
(AP) -The novel on·::
which the Academj't
Aw ard·winning movi~~ "Cbarly" was baaed h8$\1
been removed from th4;:
classroom by Ca.merOJJ~
County school direct.or&,
because of its references~
to sex. '
Under pressure from.,
parents and rfll•iou1J .
leaders, the board over.-1
ruled a teacher commitd
tee~endatlon an<f,"l •
ordeTed .. Flow~s fo~
Al,ernon° out of an llth•i·
grade classroom where.;,
it baa been studied for}'
:three years. ~
"'IT'S HARD TO tell :
what's going to come u11· .;
.next. It could be a.$·
'biology book or the-i•:
teaching of evolution," •:
said Principal Gordon,.: ••
Meredith. .;
The µovel by Dani.,l ::
Rhodesia Aid Bid Due
lltld trt1>; Rm. IOS, H-lt11\ Holl.
UC lntlntce!'lllMK. Ftt No..C•edll,
S51; Credit, M6
SATU•OAY,11Mrd1?t
"U"d•'''•ndln9 YourstU ·•
How•rd WllSOl'I, P•Uldeflt, .a.d-
m1nhtr1tl¥e RMNrcll AnoclatH •
Fox bas assigned one of his chief aides to set up
a program of cooperation with existing private and
local government-funded fair housing councils.
Keyes tells or Charly, a •-
m entally retarded marv, •
who temporarily over-•:
comes his handicap··:
through medicine, tries::
to cope with adult life.::
then slips back into re·!:·
tardation. : -··we fmd it sexually· :
oriented," said the Rev,,•
·John Coppick, pastor ot::
t h e R i c b V a 11 e 1: :.
Wesleyan Church, who::"
·led the opposition. . :·
•
Vance w Seek $100 Million/or Power Smft
WASHJNGTON (AP) -Seeretary of State
Cyrus R. Vance will ask Congress to approve a $100
million special allocation to be used in part to sup.
port a peaceful transfer of power Crom Rhodesia's
while minority to its
black maJority. ,,.---------.
The request, to be ( /N SllORT J made today. is part of a
three-front effort by the
Carter administration to
bring financial, diplomatic and legal pressures to
bear t.oavert a black·wh1te war 1n southern Africa.
Congressional, admm1slrat1on and diplomatic
sources said Tuesday that the request for additional
funds was prompted by results of a still incomplete
review of l1 S. policy in Africa. The SlOO million
"special requirement" anocabon will be over and
above U.S. foreign aid for some of the countries.
Taz Pia" E•~alatn
WASIDNGTON (AP> -The tax cat and 5J)end·
ing program launched by President Ca.rtt?r lo Jog
the lagging econom y is snowballing through
Congress and ~eems certajn to emerge bigger than
it started.
The House voted a $23 3 billion appropriation
TRANSPLANTS. • •
these retra.n5plant1patients survived, two of them ror more than one year.
IF A TRANSPLANT RENAJSSANCE is under
way. it has not been felt. by the preatigioua
American Heart Assodatioo..
"I do not detect any resurgence of interest,"
satd Dr. Russell M. Nelson. chairman or the AHA's
Councll on Cardiova•cular Surgery. a group that
help• recommend where research money should be
spenL
Speaking in a telephone interview from a meet-
iog of thoracic (chest) sur1eons in San Franc&4co.
Nelson said, "The r eal interest is in repairin&
!leart.:•
n SAID THAT RECENT ''brilllant wcrk ta
savlrtthea.rts bu taken the beat off of tl'anlpla.nts ...
He referred specillcall)r to tbe rec.-deYeloped
COrootr)' bypau operaUon .mich an estimated
ss.ooo petients w1U undereo Ulla year to mwt.e
blood l1ow through bioctect CCJCOQar.Y ll'ted-.
Nevertheleu, Copeland told an A.BA science
writers forum in San AnUlalo, Te¥.,· recenUy that
there are more patient.a awaiting new harts tban
there are donors. The patients selected by Stanford
•re tboee whose hearts are so aev,rely damaaect
tbattheywilldie tnate-w months, butwboarenotao
near death that th~y have little chance of survlvtnc
the operation.
What kind of live$ do t.heaurvivors load?
, ••J'ADJ.Y NOaMAL,•• SA.JD Copeland:·~
•re somo llmltat.lons -h doll't want them to en~~· in coot.act aporta ••• they icnerally wear a
aurfeon'• mast when they are around a hospital
because ol. their vulnenbtu\7 to lnlec:tlom. and we
bave them I.eek atteQtiCJD ctuktl.1 foc l.1lY alp of ID-
fcdJoo. ••
I
' , ,
Tuesday to fund major elements of Carter's pro-
gram and substantial additions by Congress. The
bill reached lhe House floor containing $4 billion for
public works this year. twice the amount Carter
sought. Amendments backed by the Democratic
House leadership added $707 million to the total.
W ASlUNGTON (AP> -The Army, denying it
ever staged a simulated biological attack on the
Capitol, aays it did lest the While House ventilation .
system in 1962 to gau~e its vulnerability to germ or
chemical warfare.
But Army officials refused Tuesday in disclos-
ing the test to provide additional details. They said
White House officials wouldn't permit it. The Army
said the test Ht the While House was conducted in
1962 "at the request of the White House staff."
O.rome Stalld Stewgtltftted
WASmNGTON CAP> -President Carter goes
to the United Nations this w~k with a vote or con-
fidence m his Arncan policy after both houses or
Congress voted to reinstate a ban on U.S. imports of
chrome from Rhodesia
For Carter. a 62·22 Senate vote repealing the so-
c ailed Byrd amendment was an important step in,
his avowed effort to promote human rights in au
countries Senate approval of the administration-
·backed legislation was not unexpected.
Gridiron Piiot Get• laH TerM
BALTIMORE (A Pl -The man who crashed a
light plane int.o the stands at Memorial Stadium
minutes after a National Football League playoff
eame la.st D~mber was sentenced Tuesday to two
years in prison.
Judge Daniel Friedman impo«ed the term on
Donald N. Kroner, 33. or Essex. Md .. convicted last
month of reek leas flying and malicloua destruction.
Kroner pleaded wlth Friedman to release him, say·
ing it was "stupid to fly" last Dec. 19 and that he
had been upset by the Baltimore Colts' lopsided
40-14 1065 to the Pitts bur~ Steelers.
Odle C...., OrMr Alleged
NEW YORK CAP) -A former CIA official 1ays
former President Richard Nixoc «dered qeney of.
f1clals to take an7 action eeces11.ry, inclad.tnC a
milltaey coup, to prevent the election of Salvedor
Allende_ a Manlst.. as ermdent of Chile in 1970.
Tbe attempt failed. but not for lact ol try}Df,
UJS D.vid Atlee Phillips, • former CIA chief for
the wstern hemisphere. Phillips, wbo bu restped lrom tbeClA and runs a IJ"O'lPdedlcated.tolml>f'OV•
tn1 the public luia1e or past and present aJenlS,
claims the CIA had nothing to do 'lrith tbe coup
which ovc:Uat.w,Allende in 1973..
Inc. A UC lrvlM E1119'\llOfl -y'
wmtMr, t :JO a.m.-1.>0 Pm Gold THE COUNCILS. MOST AcnvE IN Southern ~':';;:·~'!.co;;"":;:,~~ Callfomia and the San Francisco Bay Area, have klft<1t.-11lfl9.tndc1~m~eri.11. long investigated individual complaints and re-
"Mow to Cre•t• 1 Wtnntno ( ed th to • t tto b f'I 'ts Prooout,"Jlt1.a.m..-wu1er,M..A, err em pnva e a .rne~, W 0 I e SUI •
.,.-n1omt.1Mrcurvc:...nm..,,1u110M. often without any compensation.
Inc. A UC Irvine E1'tt•t1ion -4.ty
wmh ..... JO. 1'1\.-4 JOo m. Rm IOl, Landlords and b ok s h ai'd m ore than "" ,1u1 Scl~c•s eod9 uc 1rv1ne r er ave P co~oin Fe•· uo. 1nciodes ctHs $100,000 to victims of discrimination in settlements
HIS DAUGHTER
brought the book home•
as assigned reading. Mr.',
Coppick said be read:!
"sever al pages" and bis
m•ttr••1\.1unctt-aa•k•"9· of such privately-handled cases m five years. 'Olnql'ly A..:•1>9 -T•cllo Ind
Boatie>eect/• O•w Ullm~. UUm•n •
s.11 .... -.,.., t.10C>-1•. Lehmen 11. -Fox acknowledges that his department, even ,,,,,,,..,..,.,., oo cl\AmP•on: M••• with new enforcement officers won't be able to deal
(.Audio, HAi>!H S.bOt cll.ttl'tlHon: Ric• · h h I f h ' h J wife read it all. '
"""· L• .. r c1.,u c111mo1on • uc wit t e vo ume o cases e expects t e new regu a-
,,,,,,... etrt ... ston --Gav 1>r09••"f'· • tions to generate. So be says the department will.
a.m.-4 o.m · lntercolltQl•tt Solllnci COOperale With the )""al groups allowing them to
"Four-letter words,
aren 't used'' sai d ~
Meredith. "The com-:
plaints centered around :-
a scene where Charly '•
tried to adjust to his sex· :
ua l desires, and that,:·
·wasn't even discussed in :
·the cla'ssroom." •
1r>cl R-1"'1 S...., tllOt W Co .. I H""".. "'-•
Nt•l>Mt Bekll '""' 10 t"" e111>0• investigate many cases before beginning the formal B•v Ctwl. Fte: Credit, SlS: ,..,.... h · th t t t ed . cno1t. m. 1~1t•<1n e>er~1no e11ro11 earmgs a s a e proc ures require.
m ent limited lo JO. •
SATUltOAY.~n:hH; APfil 1•1\f
SUNOAY ...... 11>
.. C•llloml• Oe!oert ii\ So<1'1911m•."
Rl~llerd 8a1.,, M s.. 8IOIOCJY IMtruc-
IO<, !.&"ta """ Coll-A UC trvlr111 E•t..,1ion w~k•t'ld c•mr>lno ll••d
trip. Orlentouonmtetll\Q, Sat., Marett
16 • • m.·12 noon. 1·' P.m : tle•d tr•1>.
Set Inds... .. Aprll 2 ...., J; Am ltt,
S«t11 Scl•nc• I.Ab, UC trvlM c..,..
pu\.Ftt \!O SATURDAY, M.an:ltl•; •••ii,,"· n. ae "Wff\"'°C> 111 l1tt-.. tve l'lloto·
11r-11>1tv:· ,._\ M.. GrlfTN'n. M .a.. p!IOtoqraQl'ltr. l<llhor trawl lecturer
A UC t~tne Elfle,.\lon f!Ye·WM~
wotlnhop,. • • m 12 "'°°"' 1 4 o.m.,
Rm 162, H!MN'lltl.., HAii, UC lrvlne
ClmPU\ l'M '64
SATUaDAY, INrtllH:
SATUltOAY. SUNDAY
-MONDAY, ..... 111',11 .... ,.
"Th• N•tu ... 1 History of Sa1111
C•t•lfna htMtd/• lru<I@' Belman,
P11 o .. r.w••Clt roo1o011t, 0.JMOrr
Mel\l of 9toloqy, UCLA, Horm•n H
Cole, M.A , e\\l\te11t prol~•or ol
81o4eoy, 0rAllCJ9 Co .. 1 Coll• A UC
Irvine Etrt..,11'1n -k•NI field trio,
Prt·trl1> "'"UflO, S.t .. Mor~ll 26, 10
e.m .-111\001, Rm. 1.0, Sletnlleu\ H•ll,
UC lrvll'l9 c~: lletd trip, s.t,
Svn. efld Mort, AIM'll tl, 11-II. Fe~
S 110, lrtetudlull tr811ttiort1tlo" Cl>Mt
from LOll9 9e•cll to Av•lon.,.., IMO,
bU• from Av•lot'I to IM Merl~ I.Ab
"'"' 9l•U bottom boAI to A11•lon>. oormitorv room eNI mHI\ at the
Marl11tlff,
SATUltOAY, MIM'dl H: A,,111', W; Mot, It, ti; J1111• 4
EVEN IF THE STATE HAS A SMALL role at
first -and it probably will -it will be a significant
departure from where there has been virtually no
government enforcement.
; ..
CLIFF ROBERTSON" :
was judged best aCtor or:
the year in 1968 for his :
.sympalhetic portrayal of :
And even with the new regulations, fair housing
laws alone will take decades to change the residen-
tial patterns at the root of today's school busing con-
ructs. Cbarly. ;.. .
Despite 'Ideal' QuaUfleations
Answering A.th Urged ~j
By JOYCB L. KENNEDY [ r ~ orERS . : J ::.ij.. t.: Dear Joyce: Sblce I mov~ I have ~. ~
been unable to flDd a lood job. The.
want Ml, for example, alway• seem.
to apec"y people wllh 1redel' or promise immediately a;allable. She '•:
fewer quallllcatlooa thab nal~. gave evidence of being competent ud : ~;
-P.R., Chicago, Ill. ner quiet personality mesbed with tus: i •'
During these acrtrmative action • ii
When you read help· wanted ads -days, being Ce male dldn 't hurt. , 1'
and yqu should do 10 regularly \o keep . Further, the controller r eal! zed f
up with the jotunarket -remember he'd have a tough time gettlri1 a CPA ~
that stated qualifications frequently whiz tor $15,000. The controller over-'~
are merely the "asking price." 11tated the requirements for the posi-$:
Most employers ask for tbe max-lion and backed down at hiring time, a ~
lmum. not· the minimum, require-common occurrence, say job tacti· .. ; m~nt.a. cians. :· ~:
IF TBE WOMAN RAD talc en the ad 4 i !
at face value. she would have lacked !:
,the confidence to apply and missed a
loodJob.
A lar1e point., however. is that
g enerally you ahouldn 't send a H ·
aume for a position for which -on
pa.,er-you're wtderqpallfled. •
(It happens that the female llCCOUll·
tant did lnttJaJly retpond with a ~er ·
-resume ao cleverly conatructed that •
l'ler "dtltciencles0 were not"ebvklus.. J:
but the outcome Cot her is an excep.. t
lion to the rule.) l:
NO MATrE.R BOW many jOb·.i
search book.I you ft ave to tc?ad to l•artl \
the techniques or accomplllblr>a 1~ :J
ttet into the employer'• olftce for a .t .'
1ace0to-face lntervlow. Few people (;,:
-a.re aca at raume writllur and tbe
.. underquallfied paper 1ou" ls Ukelj
to be screened out.fut. ..
.. •
4 DAYS WED. MARGI 16 thru SAi. MARGI 19
r
Recently we participated in the lquidation of a Mew YOrk gem cult~ which resulted in our
obtaining a hliCJ• shipment of unmounted and mo...tecl emeralds, rubies, sapphires cind
diamonds in all the popular colors and shapes • • • ~CIMJUiSe, pearshape, oval, hearfshape,
round and emerald cut,,.
Partial listidg -All Item$ Subiect to Prior Sale -Partial Listing
ASSORTED. DIAMOND
PACKAGES
Description Sale Price
Dlarronds in the rough
-the way Mother
Nature created them.
One natural coffee col-
Of'9d. one rose colored,
combined weight ol
13.30 carat• -for package $598.50
-3 fl,,. colored fancy
cut mtrQuise, .35 carats
total weight. 1T11ke a nice'
addition to an existing
p1eoe of 1ewelry -
tor package s 191 80
-3 brilliant r ound
diamonds, 2 small. 1
large. . 31 carats total
weight-
for package. s 103 85
-Make several nngs -
over 3 'h c arats of
various size round
bf'1lhant diamonds. un-
beatable pnoe -
for package.
-Ten round, brilliant
diamonds. assorted
si:zes totalhng .53 carats
Sl.012
for package. $225
Perled for St Patnck s
Day -• Green
diamonds . 13 carat total
weight.
tor package. US 75
-3 brilliant round
d1amond1 totalling Y.
avat-
-2 fine white. fancy
1111rau1se d1alT'O nds. 12
carat total weight. use
them 1n your 1ewelry re--
deS1gn1ng. -
-18 carat fancy cut
pear shape. lovely for
pendant
6 fancy merau1s~ape
-all 1verag1ng •2
• cara1s. total weJ9ht 2 48
carats; -for package.
-;iooc:I au1Uty 23 carat
round t>nll1ant dtalT'Ond.
perfed addition to your
free form ring
-37 carat. his v1s1ble
inclusions. good color
per1ect for pendant
-•1 an1t lmc>erfect
Unbelievable pnce -
-81 c aret. toond
bnlftant o f good color
Ind clarity
- 2 fancy pear shapes.
8')C)l'Oxln.tely 31 e1rat1
each.
-75 carat oval cut VVS
ctanty. good color
-. 79 carat round,
b'111tant trHted c.nery
oolot.
-.80 carat oval trffted
canary VVS2. clarity,
guper prtoe.
-.83 carat heart
shaped diamond -
would make gorgeous
pendent or ring. F1n-
t•tic Pftoe.
MON-FRI
10 a.m.-6 p.m.
·SATURDAY
S9900
S78 00
S108
S1722.00
$105.00
sesoo
s~oo
$36800
S355 00
$675,00
1318.00
$530.00
S5e3.00
No. 1
#1205
#1204
#1212
#ME/AO
#ME/AO
#ME/AO
No...
N-9201
N-9051
N-9267
N-9206
N·91•4
N-Q217
N-9251
N-9232
N-924 7
N-9257
N-Q2e9
ME/BP
ME/BP
..
Oescr1ption Sale Price
-slight cape 1 03 carat.
round bri'l1ant Why
wait? • $~7.00
-1 03 round. bnll1111it,
stnd ty flash diamond -
$175.00
-N ice 1.08 carat
round. br1Uian1. 11,050.00
-1 00 carat oval, good
color, $975.00
- 1 01 carat. natural
canary marquis shape.
unusual St, 150.00
-1. 19 carat. round
bnUlant WS clarity, of
fine color-18.100.00
-1 40 carat. Marquise
& fish shaped -S 1.600.00
-Fabulous 1 08 carat.
round. brilliant. VVS
ctanty, high color -s 6,600.00
- 2 10 carat. pe:ir shape
white and radiant -'2.520.00
FANCY UNUSUAL
LADIES RINGS
Oescnpllon Sale Price
Y 'G 1 laroe Garnet 10
diamonds S525.00
V G -1 large Opal and 6
Diamonds $895.00
Y/G 1 lq pear shape
EmerJld and 6
Diamonds
Y G 1 lg 1'ourmal1ne
and 10 diamonds
WI G · 1 Oval Sapphire
and 8 large diamonds. 7
SmJll diamonds
Y 10 ~ 1 Pear shape
Aaua t 2 diamonds
WIG • 1 Emt1rald Cul
Ruby and 28 diamonds
VIG -1 IQ Oval Ruby
and 2 larqP lrianqular
diamonds
W G 1 largo Ruby and
2 diamond~
W IG Emerald Cut
Emerald and 28
diamonds
v I G -Emerald Cut
Emerald and 6
diamonds.
VI G Free Form. Set with
2 05 cts. T W in line
white diamonds
VI G Free Form approx
1 ~ carats 1n brilltant fine
diamonds
S675 00
$480.00
$780 00
$645.00
$1660.00
S2~500
$685 00
$1660.00
S900.00
$1800.00
' All Items Listed Below Are Round Bnlllants
No
RJ23
RJ24
RJ22
RJ21
RJ20
RJt9
RJ18
RJ17
RJ16
R.J15
RJ14
RJ13
RJ1 2
RJ11
RJ10
RJ9
RJ8
RJ7
RJ6
RJ5
RJ4
RJ3
RJ2
RJ1
Diamond Weight
.94
1.04
1 10
1.10
1.12
1.13
1.16
1.21
1.28
1.32
1.34
1 36
1 38
1 44
1 49
1 63
1.69 ,,,,....
1 71
1 73
1 75
1 81
205
2 09
Z'65
Sale Price
$425 00
93600
74300
66000
99900
79Q.OO
739.00
991:1.00
691.00
999.00
99900
816.00
88000
899.00
83900
99900
1,28800
96200
1,100 00
1.247 00
1.18000
1.154 00
1,568 00
1.889 00
OUR MOST UNUSUAL
DIAMOND GUARANTEE
All diamonds purchased from Rac1t1 Jewelry Co.
mu'st appraise al least 40% more than you patd •
•Must be -'OO'a1,nd t>.,i Qr1d1.1J'" 90moloo•st tftt1oct1n9 ,et .. 1 rnotaco,.,,..,, value
PACKAGE OF DIAMONDS AND GEMS
You may select one, part, or all of these, and pay for only the
weight you select.
-FORMULA -If you select a 1/10 ct. (.10 carat* stone: Multiply
.10 x $350.00, which would equal $35.00, the price you would pay for
the gem or gems that you selected) .. *100 points = 1 carat
Package No.
49gg
4929
4910
1195
RJ54
RJ55
N-39
N-40
N-41
N·42
RJ56
RJ57
RJsa,.
RJ59'\
N·43
N·44
N-45
N-46
N-47
N-48
RJ60
RJ61
RJ62
RJ63
RJ64
RJ.49
N-50
N-51
N-52
N-53
Package Nd.
RJ25
RJ26
RJ27
RJ28
RJ29 \ .fl
RJ30
RJ31
RJ32
RJS3
RJ34
RJ35
RJ36
RJ37
RJ38
Shaoes
Rounds
Rounds
Rounds
Rounds
Rounds
Fancies
Oval
Oval
Oval
Oval
Total Weight
5.52 carats
4 52 carats
5 30 carats
9 98 carats
RUBIES
22 57
4 61
1 08
1 46
1 55
3 24
EMERALDS
Rounds 923
Rounds 8 28
Fancies 4.54
Souares 10 43
Emerald 1.51
Emerald 2 55
Emerald 1.84
Emerald 1.22
Emerald 2 63
Emerald 1.00
SAPPHIRES
Rounds 17.31
Rounds• 1 03
Rounds 2 35
Fancies 17 78
Fancies .1 82
Oval 97
Oval 2 29
Oval 4 55
Oval 2 44
GOLDEN SAPPHIRE
Oval 10 56
FANCY CUT DIAMONDS
Actual
Weight
.34
.37
.52
.53
.54
.55
.54
,6g
.76
.77
.78
.80
.84
.79
Shape
•PIS
PIS
PI S PIS
PIS
PIS PIS
Oval
Marquise PIS
Marquise
MarQuise PIS PIS
Color
White
White
White
White
While
White
canary
Cognac
canary
Cognac
Cognac
Canary
Canary
Blue Dia
Prtce per Carat
$428 00
33800 ....
67500
46000
s 100 00
20000
45000
67500
27000
1.800 00
8500
50.00
3000
5000
67500
67500
875.00
1,575.00
90000
540.00
50.00
3500
7500
5000
3000
7500
29500
3600
675 00
6800
Sal~
$180.00
1Q6.00
390 00
39000
399.00
399.00
272 00
347.00
38300
387.00
392.00
39900
•23.00
398.00
..
..
·"
•
• m ·
• • 0 es,
s
•
• • smce 1974 is
The best of any eriCan car tnaker.
I . • •
From responsive little fours to our
425-cubio-inch V-8s, General Motors
offers a greater variety of automobile
engines than anyone in the world ...
8 General Motors plants preducing
16 different basic engines.
Final EPA figures on '77 cars
and trucks using these engines indi-
cate that on a sales-weighted ·basis,
GM models show an estimated
average fuel-economy improvement .
of 6~ percent over just one year
ago. This brings GM's total improve-
ment since 197 4 to a dramatic 48
percent ... the best mileage improve-
ment of all domestic car
manufacturers.
Of course, the ri:ii1eage you get
on your '77 car or truck may vary,~
but our point is: GM is workilig ~
• 4f!f \ ' . ' " .. . , t • ... • : .. , • ~ •
• 1
hard to bring you more fuel-efficient
cars and trucks.
WHY SO MANY ENGINES?
First, because it gives us the flexi-
bility to meet customer wants. For
example, our highly popular V-6,
which is produced by our Buick
Division, is offered on 13 separate
Pontiac, Oldsmobile and Buick
models. Second, versatilicy. Within
our family of engines we have other
families. There are four 350-cubic-
inch V-8s, for instance,. which are
used in various GM models and
series so that we can give you this
size of engine when you want it.
These engines are produced at plants
operated by our Chevrol~Buick,
Oldsmobile and Pontiac divisi~
,
and by General Motors in ·canada.
We hope you'll discuss with your
dealer which one of these engines is
available in the car you select.
SPRING IS ON THE WAY
What better time to test drive the
GM car of your choice equipped
with one of the many great engines
available.
We think you'll find that, eve~
with all the emission cbntrol equip·
ment that helps make our 1977 cars
and trucks the cleanest in our his-
tory, they still offer the kind of per-
formance that makes you want to
get out of doors and drive.
GHEVROLET • PONTIAC
OLDSMOBILE • BUICK.
CADJLJ.,AC • GMC .
•
..
. .
•
·•
•
•
•
I I
I
l •
DICK ENRIGHT
Bonni es
Top Ducks
In.NIT
NEW YORK (AP> -Litt.°e
Greg Sanders scored 30 points
a nd put on ;i stunniog second·hnll
show JS $t. Bonaveoture held off
Oregon 76-73 Tuesday nigbt abd
advanced to the scmlfina~or the
40th National Invitational
Tournament.
The upset tnggl'red the Bon-
ni es into Thursday night's
semifinals against Villanova.
which earlier whipped
Massachusetts 81·71 as Keith and
Larry Herron teamed for 36
points.
Alabama and Houston, which
won quarter-final games MQnday
night. will meet in the other
semifinal of the basketball
tournament at Madison Square
C.arden.
Sanders. a southpaw-shooting
forward. scored 10 points in the
first half to ~ivc the underdog
Boonies a 31·26 lead over the
Ducks from the P~cific·A Con
ferencc.
lie really to"k char~c of lhmi;:s
at the start of the second half.
scoring eight points as St.
Bonaventure outscored Oregon
12·0 to take a 43·40 lead with five
minutes gone.
Greg Ballard, who led Oregon.
19·10, with 28 points ane1 14 re-
bounds. powered the Ducks back
into contention in the Jast two
minutes.
St. Bonaventure. which led by
as many as IS points. had its lead
trimmed to three with 10 seconds
left when Kevin Small sank the-
first of two free throws. lie mas·
sed the seconds, but the ball went
out of bounds oH a St Bonaven-
ture player, giving possession to
Oregon With eight secoods left.
The Ducks mbounded the ball
and got it to Ballard inside, but
their hi~h scorer \\as unable to
make the shot and the om -
nipresent Sanders grabbed the
final rebound at the buzzer.
Nevada School
On Hot Seat
KANSAS CITY -The inlrac-
t ions committee of the NCAA
met this past w~~kend amid in-
dications that representatives of
tht-Nevada-La.~ Vel(as basket-
ball program were present,
1'he Associated Pr~s le11rMd to·
day.
The infractions commttlee.
which rn1ew11 ~ases by the en
forcemcnt department and
estab1\she11 penalties. for vtola
tions of NCAA rejtulattons.
generally convenes about fa\e
times a year.
Nevada-Las V<•i;:as has been
rumored to be under NCAA in-
vesllgallon for <.tllegcd basket-
ball recruiting infractions ror
several months. The Rebels, No.
4 in the final AP poll. beat San
Francisco last week in the'"frrst
round of the NCAA basketball
tournament.
"The infractions committee
met Saturday and Sunday, and
that's all I can say," the NCAA
spokesman told the AP. The
NCAA. ruling body of collegiate
athletics. hew!! strictly to a no-
comment policy 1n regard to en-
torcejJlenl inquiries.
Beil it was lea rned that
Nevada·Laa Vegas coach. Jerry
Tarkanian and perhaps other
school oCficials were present al
the meeting here.
Standard policy in such cdes
ls for the infractions committee
-to make its recommendations to
• the NCAA Council, which next
meets here April 18-19-20 ••
t
Ana I Ra 1n 1 7> to
guid Gar a to O\.'e le
ctiam Pl ln•tx y
An auto ccident ended h.1a
playmc career before ~
·could nter th professional
ranks and from Gardena he
moved to Oregon w~re h~
was an a.ss&Stant in 1970 and
'71, then the head coach for
'72 and '73.
His Oregon teams as a head
AP Pllolo
THE DODGERS' STEVE YEAGER IS TAGGED OUT BY TEO SIMMONS TUESDAY.
Sports in Brief
Turner .Gets Stay,
Dodgers Rip
St. Louis 13-3
01t"Home Runs Key Tr~ PUlled · ST. PETERSBURG. Fla CAP>
-Rick Monday and Dave Lopes
drove home two runs apiece m
the fifth innan~. ha~hhghling a
six-run rally that earned the Los
Angeles Dodgers to a 13-3
triumph ov~r the St. Louis
Cardinals Tuesday m an exhibi·
lion baseball game
NEW YORK B~ball
commissioner Bowie Kuhn tern·
porarily lilted the suspension of
A t!wnta Braves owner Ted
Turner today at the suggestion of
U.S. District Judge Newell Eden-
field.
The judge suggested the sus
pension be lifted pending an
April 2S trial date, when an in-
JUDClion filed by the National
League club to protest Kuhn's ar-
tion will be considered.
Turner was suspended Jan. 25
following a protest by the San
Francisco Giant.s that he bad
tampered with free agent out-
ftelder Gary Matthews. Mat
thews s-.bsequently signed a
m ulti·million·dol1ar contract
w1lb the Braves.
A's,•11n De.I
The Pittsburgh Pirates traded
six players. includ.101 veteran
pitchers Doc Medich and Dave
Giusti, to the Oakland A's today
for third baseman Phil Gamer
and two other players.
The Pirates aJso gave the A 's
Rick LangfOl'd and Doug Baar.
two promising rliht.-handed
pitchers who spent moat of last.
season in tbe minors, rookie out
fielder Tony Armas and rookie
infielder Mitchell Page.
In addiUon to Garner, Pit·
ts burgb received veteran in·
fielder TomUl.7 Helms and rigbt-
handed pitcher Chris Batton.
rookie wbo swmt most of last
aeasoo la the minor leagues.
Sldft-llaeelUdeu
SACRAMENI'O -Sid ncer
Sheila McKinney retnaloed un-
conscious in aeribus condition
early today, the Sacramento
Medical Center reported..
McKinney, lS. bit some hay
J>ales saturd.-y ai about 50 miles
per bour wtlile practicing for the
World CUp downbtn race at.
Heaventy Vallet. Ne.. Sbe was
flown bel'e ad placlect lb the n~ intmll'M care unit.
and was removed from the
critical llst Mondar.
Her father. llipn McJt"1ae;r.
was a leading s teeplechase
Jockey in the 1930s. A brother.
Steve, reeoyered from a broken ,
back to establish a land speed re-
cord in 1974 at Cervma. Italy.
lloec-aDI~•
NEW YORK -Antonino Roc-
ca. world-famous barefoot
wrestler who claimed the .. secret
of lire" would enable him lo live
to 150, died Tuesday night of un-
determined causes at. Roosevelt
Hospital. He was 49.
A native of Italy whose adopted
country was Argentina. Rocca
was one of the biggest attractions
on the wrestling circuit for 25
years. He became ill while
wrestling in an exhibition match
in Puerto Rico two weeks ago
and retumed to New York.
\'an to Rrtirr
PHOEN1X -Phoenix Suns
forward Tom Van Arsdale an-
nounced Tuesday he would retire
from professional bas ketball al
the end of the season.
Prior lo the outburi:.t off right·
handers Steve Waterbury and
Steve Dunnin~. the Dodgers took
a l ·O lead in th~ second inning
against Cards starter John D' Ac ·
quis to. They expanded the
margin to 2 0 in the fourth on
Steve Garvcv·s solo home run orr
Mike Caldw~ll.
Lopes and Monday drove in
three runs apiece to head an 18-
hit Los Angeles attack against
D 'A cq u1 s to , Caldwell.
Waterbury, Dunning and rookie
John Urrea Ron Cey had three of
the hils
Burt Hooton pitched four
scoreless innings as the Dodgers'
starter. Rick Rhoden allowed all
three St. Louis runs during a bot-
tom of the fifth h1ghhghtcd by
Bake McBnde's two.run homer.
Cuellar Bombs Out
Angel,s Blow 3-1 Lead; Lose
SCOTI'SDALE. Ariz. <AP) -•
Jerry Morales singled in the win-
ning run and Bruce Sutter
worked two innings or near·
perfect relier Tuesday to lead tbe
Chicago Cubs to a come-from-
behind 4-3 exhibition baseball
victory over the California
Angels.
The victocy broke a four-game
losing stttak and came at the ex·
pense of Mike Cuellar, who was
ta11ed for three runs in the
seventh inning. Cuellar issued
three walb before ITan DeJesus
aingled ln one run. Another
scored on a sacrifice f1Y by M.lke
Adama before Morales drove in
tbewbmer.
Bobby Bonds led the Angels•
eight·hlt attack with a.double and
a homer. His homer came ore
starter Rirk Reuschel in the
third inning afltµ" Jerry Remy
and Mario Guerero had singled.
Losing pitcher was Cuellar,
who is battling to stay in the ma-
jor leagues at the age of 39.
Angels starter Gary Ross had
s tretched his s tring of con-
secutive scoreless ino'1tgs this
spring to 10 before yielding a run
in the filth inning. It cut the
Angels' advantage to 3·1.
Cuellar look over in the sixth
inning. Three walks helped the
Cubs score three runs tn the
seftDtb with Conner Dodger Ivan
DeJesua drivtna in one run and
Jerry Morales' single scorlna the
winning nm.
Threats No ~c~e .. foF Bad Piaf
". .
DENVER (AP) -The Los
· Anaeles Laker's Kareem Abdul·
'Jabbar says be doean'( ,dnnk
threats made on his life in con·
necUon with a Moslem siep lut
woek in WaahlnKton. D.C. hurt his play aaalnat the Denver Nua-
•et.t Tuesday ni1bt. . But Abdul·Jtbbar said the raet
he WU JI.St J)l&ID Ured did affect
·him utheLak ralosttot.heNu1-
&c.lal0!-85JANBA acLion.
rebound1. four below his average.
taken coa~ Jerry Wut •ar6ed. •'Jt'• 1lO\ an excuae bu ~we pl11ed three ilithts 1n a row.
They (the Nus<eell) aro much
quiclrel'. We didn't run much
ton.laht.''"
The Nu1geta held a U.40
hllftbne ectae. but Haled the win
wltb a thlrcl period ecoring out.
bunt. Ji tdch Dan Iu•t, Jlm
Prlce and David Tbomp11on each
ICO.t~ baskets.
Tbe lb:i)Oint Ourry put Denver
abe•d by 11 point• and the ·
Laken sot no doter than nine
POints for the reet of \be game.
\RI ANNIAI m>'""""""l tt, ll'cn 4. ,,_.,,. .t••r tt. OMINY 4, Al Ifft tt, T<fl""' 6, ...,_
6, Aller .. ~ 1._ ltMMe II, Y-2, W.,,_ J.• Te1a11., 1t-U ft.. •
O•MVSll O•n ....... 11, ,,.._ .. tetl t
1•, "''°' "· c:..c .. 11 t. M4;0al11 •. a11 .. 11, wi.ww l,Wli.e,lwU. Tot.hOtr·•lff.
UJA~ ff 16 'M .,.._.,_
0.11\'W ~ 70 11 ~.,
th
und
was tbO off, •• line coach
and bis ooe y"r with tho
~Hen waa io the aame capadt.>'. ~
Monte Clark, Ebr1gbt's
former teammate at USC and
the current bead coach of the
49ers, however. was abo an
offensive line coach and
Nightmarish Trip
...
Ordeal Told •
By Ct-urn's Wife
LOUISVILLE CAP) -Joyce
Crum would lil!e to forget last
weekend, to blot it out of her.
mind completely. I~ started off
badly and then things got worse.
The wife of Louisville baskel-
biill coach Dly C(um-;had planned to wa!& her l(usb!itd's
team battle UC in an OXning
round NCAA tournament ga,me ..
Saturday in Pqcatello, lclabo. But
a blizzard in the midweat pre-
vented that.
Mrs. Crum, who married the
Louisville coach only about a
month ago, joined two Lou.i$ville
couples and pilot Ron ,\pple lbr a
night that was supposed to take
the m to 14aho
"We slarteq out Tbursday
morning and w~ went to Spr-
ingfield, Mo., where Fred and
Bob had to attend a board
m eeting of their company," Mrs.
Crum said. "Then we flew to
Goodland, Kan. to refuel." She
referred to Bob Shaw and Fred
Rice, who took their wives on the
tr ip
"We were only about 21·'l hours
from Pocatello, but we landed in
a dust storm and Ron felt it was
too wmdy to fly over the Grand
Teton mountains. So we decided
to stay overnight and fly on over
there Friday m'ormng."
Then the dust storm turned into
a blizzard. .
"I never i;aw that much snow
before." said Mrs. Crum, a
pative~ Mtw • .,
·She fiid'ihe motel where she
and the others stayed became a
refuge for persons stranded by
the snow storm.
"Every one of the 78 rooms
was full and there were more
than a ho.ndred people sleeping
on the floor in the Jobt;>y and in the
halls.'' she said. "There was no
electricity. We did have hot
water thoug'll, and we had gas
heat although the blower waan't
working."
She &aid a farmer drove up
with a truckload of pigs, all of
whomnad frozen.
"A family from St. Louis just
sort of took over the restaurant.
and ran it," slle said. "And peo-
ple made candles from cooking
grease and tom-up towels. Peo-
ple made the best of the situa-
tion."'
But others made the worstoC it.
sheedded.
''Some of them broke into the
bar and a lot of them got dnmk, ..
she said. ''Some of them got pret-
ty wild and I was uneasy. But
finally some police came over
and settled them down. And they
had to pay for the damage they
had done." •
But as gamelime neared, M~.
Crum and the others became
nervous. They couldn't get lo
Pocatello by plane. Then thu)'
learned they couldn't watch the
contest on television.
·'The local TV station was
about four miles away. and we
tried to hire a guy o n a
snowmobile lo take us there,"
Mrs. Crum said. "But he was
hauling booze to the motel from a
liquor store and bootlegging it
and he wouldn't take us. Fred of-
fered him quite a bit of money to
do it too, but he just wouldn't do
it.
"We called the local radio sta-
tion and asked them to give us
the score. but they said they were
under emergency conditions and
wouldn't give us anythi'Yr:lbut the
Marquette-Cmcmnall S~P.''
That's when the LouisviUe
group became frantic.
"We just decided to try to call
people in the area and see if they
were watching the game." Mrs.
Crum said. '"First, Fred called
some other Rices and got some
infoi;mation. He didn't want to
keep bothering the same people,
so he just started calling people
et rS>Jl<fom. We heard UCLA was
ahead at the half, but it was close
39·36 and th·at made us !eel pretty
good.
"Then we heard that U of L
was ahead in the second halC, so
we were really fired up. But then
we did.fl 't hear anything else until
we got the final score. and that
was pretty depressing along with
everytb.ing else,'' she said.
Loulaville lost 87 -79.
··we had decided that if u of L
won, the whole thing would have
been worth it. But lo~ing, that re·
• ally did it."
• 0.C..•llJt
Bflly Paultz of the San An-
tonio Spurs., goes up for a
basket against the New
York ·Nets. The bast SpUrs
won Tuesday ntght, 118-108.
Paults scored 15.
UCI Braces
For Swimfest
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio-Gary
Fl1ueroa and Vangales Coskinas
lead a contingent of UC Irvine
•wlmmers bidding !or honors 1n
the NCAA <Division II) swim-
ming aild diving championships,
here.· niursday through Satur·
day.
Figueroa, who finished second
in both the 100 and 200
backstrokes in the '76 NCAA
meet. i9 entered in seven events <three relays).
Cosldnas, a freshman from
Greece, \fill swim in live events.
• Cblco State, the defending
cba'l'bpl.on, and Cal State
(Northrldte) are expected to bat-
tle for tba team title.
UCl'aentries;
• Mllte o-t-911 fr ... 400 .,...., ffil'f, 100f'CW,
100 frM, CIO fl"M ,....,, Mllte Ulldl~ tr•,
.oi:t ,,_,.., ,....,, ttO ""' IOO ,,_ re111y, 1GO ffw,
..00 frM fftey: Oery ll'l9~oe-W ""' 400 ml'dtrt ,.....,, M llM, 100 bKlt. IOO fr .. rtleY, 70D
ll)e(lt, •• ,.., ... .,, M9lt ~,, ....
l'Mdtevnlay.100Jle(k.IOOlreerel•Y, 100ff-.IOO
Nell, 4001rtt ,....,, OeoroeHtwl~frw,400"*'...,,.,..,, 1o&
lwHtt. 100 llf-1; lc;Olt 841Cttlf--lflll. mllf~ 400 f!>4HllWV rtiey, 100 lw .... t, 100 Ir .. , 200.,..._.. ~· l'lkllllf-400 Ind. OMd., 400f1'11dley,..._,, ~ brtHI, toO brNll; lttfl W•~ 1,.., SO"-· 200 frff, 100 tr .. ral•.'!:, 100 tr .. ; Vllft9lllh ca111.1_., 1ne1. meG., """l'Mlllev retay,co Ind.
~ ........... .., .... .,. "'"l(lf~ ""'· '""'· 400"""'" ..... .,. •ot Intl. ~d •• 100 fly, 70t lly: Wflltlt>~
V<lllY---tMchv rttay. 100 Mlbt, too
"""': -icnto.1-90 free. too, .... 100 tit. 9') ,,... ,.....,, ,..,_,any; Ml1t• t<t11.,....,,..,
.,, .... ,,.. ..... ,....,.. • .,, t001rte,400ft'9t'9-
••• ,. JtlfOrtltUl'-1tOM<lt.1'0Nclt. •
..... ,,._, .......... JOO llf-¥«\f -~· ~ ...... -,,.,,.., ,... • .,,*fly, tOlt _,...,., .,...,....,, 1oar.rw, •11v.•'""""·
,.., ; ~ lllKl---...... -'"'· '"" ""': ·~ LtteW-•rr ... 4DOMMley~,-
ftMffi1y,•1ty. •
M arln• ll~ti <Hu.at ncton
Bacb) pulled OM out ot bal
Tu.led.ly 1urvi•lq a
elaallea1e frgm Huoun1ton
S.adl and wlM ftJl 5 ... 10 mn
hulln ...
The pmo m ant a 1h r11t of
ftrn place b\ the Sunstt Leacue.
and with tht-victory M artna ~ 2·0
wbJle HunUncton BHch drops to
1-J.
The 1ame·wmning h1t came off
the bat or Marina's Steve Porath.
,. double to score Gary Spnnger ttom se<:ond base in the lop of tht!.
ninth
Edison High C fluntangton
Beach> also kept its record un-
blemished (2·0) with a convanc· :mg 9-6 '"" over Westminster an
"-Other Sun:.el League ba.'>t.'ball ac ........ . A.JVn .
·.·Edi s on ripped t wo
'Westminster pllchers for 11 h1ls
•nd scored all but one of its nine-
'.run output m the fi rst three an
ilings.
•, The first breakthrough came
~n Roger Hayes' two-run single. ~Im TMes, who had been aboard
~ a walk, capped the three·run
~urst by stealing home.
• · In the second Edison added
1<tur more runs, with Hayes and
;I'nnes Sflain delivering the key
tilows. Hayes had another two ~n single and Innes contributed a two-rb1 hat himself
: · Edison a dded' another run m
ibe third to lead 8-0 and was 1'c a rcely concerned when
:Westminster started scoring ~ilh short' rallies in the tturd.
,fourth and hfth anmngs.
Efh.,ltl .ti> r" rl>I
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VCLA Wins
.• LOS ANGELES -Freshman
V.an Winltsky won the featured
elngles match and came &ack to
help win thl' final doubles match u UCLA ·s powerful Tennis team
icored a narrow 5·4 victory Tues-
4ey over Texas in a dual tennis
tneet.
, : 'The s urprising Longhorns
\failed 4 2 after the singles
tnat('hes but captur~c1 the f1r'>t
'"'o doubles mat('he:-to knot the
•core with the final doublt·~
cnatch remaining
• However. Wm1tsky. of Miami.
"amed wtth Mike flarnngton to
score a 6 -4, 6·2 victory over Te'C
U' Brad Nab<!ra. and Steve Den-
ton.
Vanguards
Win, 3-1
-----~------
~
Blister F o s A.gain
-·
1-•tobe•b• a • andOraa.a• t ~leps. two ol lite JC
b•Hball t.eam• ln U1e •lat..
romped to euJ vlct.ona Tu.el·
day.
GWC'• Rmtleni raiHd '-'""r
·Soul.haft CalifomJa Conf eNn~e
rKord to 8-0 and thelt 1.euon
mark to 11·2 Wllh an cas Y 1.S,'4
blitz ol 00.t Los Anaeles City
Colle1e.
And OCC's PiratH, not to be
o u t done , bl a s t e d v 1 i. i t 1 n g
Fullertoo College, 13-0. The Buci.
are now 2-0 in South Coast Con
rereoce actioo and 10 2 for the
season.
In another J C tilt, invading
Saddleback fell to Southwestern,
3-1. in Mission Conrerence play.
Golden West and Orange Coast
again used the long ball to
highlight their attacks.
G WC's Vince Bienek blasted a
grand slam bomer in the second
inning and Ken Munger ripped a
two-run shot in the sixth.
Golden West now has scored 66
runs in the six conference games.
Rustlers pitcher Pede r White
ran his record for the season to
5-0, but his scoreless string was
stopped at 23 inllinel' when he is·
sued a run in the fourth frame
White pitched just five innings.
Meaowhile, al OCC, hard·
hitting Daryl Sconiers was again
the batting star for the Pirates.
He 'clubbed a 475.foot three·rwt
homer in the eighth inning that
took one bounce agamst the right
field fence That came with two
teammates aboard. Scomers also
had two singles
Other OCC stars included J oe
Ronquillo (two-run double in the
first), Rick Dostal Clnple and
two s ingles>, Glenn Robertson
(double and two singles l and
pitcher Ron Cooper.
Cooper. a freshman, tossed a
three-hitter, striking out eight
and walking none He threw JUSl
89 pitches, 64 of them strikes.
At a V'-'•· '•
G ud• toli1d &•t Jusl a.1x hl1t
The lane run tame in the foartb
tanln1 .ti.en Tim W&Jlch ttipled
and I.cared on a pvund out.
Ute Hell plt~bed well in dt-·
fe~l. #.llowtna Ju•t etahl hJta and
ilrUuna oot seven
1tw1-1t1 .........
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91..,t~. ti • I I 4
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~tancia, Monarchs
In Baseball Setbacks
Mater Dea pitching ace Nack
Harsh allowed JUSt four hits and
struck out Se\ en Tuesda) after ·
noon, but 1t wasn·t good enough to
Win
St Anthony (Lon~ Beach 1
par layed ils four hits mto four
runs and dumped Mater Dl'l 4· I
an the Angelus League contei.t
Estancia High !Costa Mesa1
had an even tougher lime m its
Ce ntury League gam e with
Foothill of Santa Ana Estancia
surrendered eight hits. com -
mitted four errors and lost 11·0
Mater De1 's defeat drops the
Monarchs to 0-3 in league. sur-
prising for a team that some ob-
servers said was among the best
prep baseball squads in Orange
County.
Harsh had two hits to go along
with his fin e pil ('h1n g
performance; one of them a
homer to left in the third inning
Estancia had a dismal day at
the plate in its gam e with
Foothill. Jim Campbell and
Jerry Begley were the only
Estancia players to hit safely.
each stroking tv.o si n gles
Foothill Jumped an frnnl 4-0 i.n the
first inning and ne ver J<><*ed
back I
FOOl!lllt 111)
fl,,,. ft
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P.t\a• \Ill t '4 0 0 t'I
W1nd.,•rn rt c. 1 0 0 0 B•i•<v" JO 2 0
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000 000 o-0 ••
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•• r fill f"bf MP•cham, u McGowaft, 7b • n 0 0 Abbott dll
(t'O•I lb • 0 , 0 L .... ,.,U\ ,., Or•1'>• c • O • ~ Scnu•n cl •••""'•O ' t ~ t M"r-•u•ev If M•n1n lt> t 11 1 o Tot•''
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Wings GM Fired
u ETROIT Th<> netroit Red Wan~'> of the "1;;it1onal Hockey
League rart>d general manager
A le>.. Del\ ccchw today and
replaced him with Ted Lindsa).
• 1 former Red ~1nJ!s great.
Baseball Standings
AHOILUSLEAGUE
W L
I ""''Y'l" ,. '
\t AMM"IY
t1'• flt4.hOf' A.rn..t
t, M.\t"r01111 0
fll'J Tue\lday't Sutt•• ... PAu• ~ 8"'100 Am" I
ID111\ X 1. ~fVlffl 1 \I Antho<iv • Mat-~ 0•1 t
T~11...CS .. 't Gamf'
I
' I
1
,I
1
7.
• M1tt111,.. rlftt v-. ""rv•tf' •t t • P•fmtt PMl<lll
,.rld•y't G•m" • 81,MO Am~I Al 51 4nln"'1v
GB• P1u' X at ~t Paul
SUNSET 1.E40U( w t. c;e
0 ,.,. •.. ,,.
l~Uftflt'lqff'W\ .. AC'f\
N~woor• t-t•rbof C'I
f:t'l11,..t111,, V1Btv n
W•'tf"f\ln't.,. 0 T-••'•So• ..
f ~·'O" • w""''"""''~',. MartM' H '"hnqton8e¥h4
lecLI• • Ot1'1'~
(I
I
'" , .
t
• N•wcw>rt M•rbOr v' ~Oul"llltllr\ V•lt,.y at T•Wlft-1• Par" 171
"Tlie _Better a. .. cpin°
CHINOOK
$659S
For tho best choice in Chinooks, .seleerfcom tho large inventory at
Marquis Motor1.
Come in r-.-... !!!liili ..... ;~~-....... todayt
. I
I
.. U. INW 0" W
I •• "l"'•Y' 1•11 1ti111 0•• meal
tmQOtlMl Uhn llba~I l>Ultl".J "
lo rcrn•1n ll~ ,.., .. ,, · ,.,.ion..,s
Only 11ou1 111110' .ond ~rm•
1r.ouk:I ~ .... d ., 111e the ~tr~•.
II you allow yo>u • ltnd or body
to move. you w111 never con
S1•tlntly •lrtkl lhl b•ll Wllh
your pulterfKt •quart lo the
1111111.
t t1nd in .. · I c,.n tl11n1na1t
body moveme.1t 11 I Itel "1n.
ward" whe1. : sot up <.V4H the
oall 1 like to le'-' th.it my elbows
and my knell~ are tlO!>t ·•n to·
ward an 1mag1nary all..$ that runs
up the center ot my body. This
leeltng tends to keep my w11&hl
centered during my !>'roke.
Whenever my pull1n& &oes
awry, the llr!>t thing I .. do is
check that I am · Quiel with
my body during my stroke. Asa
result, I otten save myself a
great deal of searching lor the
cau:.e of the problem
_n._.,..._
JCs,Preps
Net Results
Or.ou-S ftl 010r ..... C..tt 51 ... 1" Gold•be•CJ (GI d•I Vtelrt , ...... ) 01"tndtln IOI dtl Harris • •. 6 •. L. Nedeau 10) <»• Toolson 7 6, • 6. 6·1.
Woll re;) clef C..,.touto 63. l 6, •·1: Hllt"!Gl delC, N•cluu l 6, 7 S, 6·1
O...btn O••ndltln·Golchbtro JG) Cltl v1e1ra.Phlll1D\ 1 •· 6 1 Capelouto Morion IOI dof lolol\on Hiii 1 s • • H•r•h·Mnl (0) ""' L.t••<>-Ac .... ty f>-3 .••• 6-J
Saftu.-..ca 1t1111.-i .. nw .. 1
"""" Fie (SI dof t(u"'"'~ 6 .... t M•oi<I ISi clef 8'ft J.j •·1 Ryan 151 clet C•llne 1 s ,_. "'· Olal 1!>1 dot_._
1 5. 6·1 . lwrrt ISi del Viti~"'· .... Anno 1<:.l dof 0.trot11 •l S.7.•·l. o...... .. F••·Maold ISi dol 8rtt Ku~·. 1, 6-2. Ol•llwrr• fSl dtl C..llrw ~" 6-1. 1.s. R,..,.o .. 1n1 1~1 ese1 Ut\fet· "".......... -
S.addlelMKll <ti 191 l'alomu 51 ... IH l•••• f Pl dot ~e>eld•nq 6 I t] 6 J HOPS I Pl (IOI 41t>tri 6 A 6 4 PHI tPl o.t F ullor 6 1 6.0 C~•ml)orla1n •Pl def Finl~ 6 1 6 .... _, IPI Otl
Brown 6·2 l·S. 8unoaro• ! Pl°"' Po•t
• 3 6 1
Oo<lbtH
CPHJmt)erl••n ~"" f P, dtf So1ld
1n9Alt1er-1 b4 h4 Ll\l'ttr ... OJ>'\ tPI
dt-f Fulffr L•nd•Q bl 6-J A\Of'ir
~tns•~ i Pl ~f F•r'llf'y Brown 1 S. f) A
VARSITY Edhon 12••..,l IJ",) WHtmlnUtf Stn9IH
Mt Do,.ald l EI d~t S""rrn,, & 0 df"f
l(o\a1 6 1 t:Wt Walker r. I dt'f Vou"q
6 1 l.vnoll I el won 6 1 6 0 6.() 6 1 H••vtf •El -..... IO<I) 6 wm 6 I Faoth 1e1 WCWI 7-S, • I 10\I I 6, won• 1
Ooubt01
Pt'\1lt1p\ H"4'Tloton Et O"f ro,_,.,,,,
Dunlap O l 6 --' Clef ROU\\•'l H"rdtf'\Q
1 \ 6 J. Boofl SIUddo11 fE) •Ohl J 6.
I I .,onfl.) 6·2
ll11Mcle 171'11 (lt\o\) .... lllH
\l ... lft Nichol\ <El lost to s.e., , .. , to.t to Wl'le.ter ,_., Iott to Fiiiey ,_., 0.1 Starmen 6-l. !Mtvu !el IMI '"· ,_., 16,l·• VllHIEll0\11·•.wonO..,lost • 6, won M, Houk !El !OSI <l-4, 1·6, ,_., t.
o.u.i .. SltP"•Mon·Olllore tel lo•I to Flnley·ll0<r .. 3 ... ,_., del Smlti.. Hub ... •d l·S. W. Vllft-lle<k IEl lost 1 •,2·•.lPlltU.~.
Ntw-'ID¥tl l4Ytl -.i.V•tley
"""" Holland INldelSll ....... ?.dofH ...... ml .. 2. def Kll .. f>.2. def~ M;; l"IY"" IN) -.. t. 6·2, ._.,, .. 4;: Nltollftl IHI WDfl M,~14-6 ... 7.WOfl 60. OeWlkll IHl ....,._l,IOMM,-· f>.4,M .
0-W.. Sl9Wart·F•tl'KO IHl def _,.., • Clint .. 1. f>.1, Sjlllt Hemlfl..,·Pel~~
• 4, .... 11.,.._.Hf•Wt INl won .. 2. 1.s ... 1.1 ...
PROSM-~
""-1111 m """'~,, ... New_, 1a.v.1 nv.1 .,.., ... .,Yeo..,
\! ...... Plrouml.,, INI def Pertl•• 6-0. <1411
'""'""" f>.1, det E_._, dotf Foc1tter t I Bo'fl• (NI won ._O, •·l 6 l, •·t; Oowtr 1Nl won6-I •·2.•.0.6·1, Y.stu IN I won ..0. •·2, 6-1, 1·\
°"'*" J Grey.Nuno (NI dol Guyol·Not>le 6 0 6 O dotl lllc,..roson·G•rt>er 6·1. 6 • He,,.,r tck\Orl Shelton tN) won•·•., 6 i. so1116 l, 3-t.
M•rlM 041 ltl H ... t ... •<II
"""" Dov•t IMI dtl H•lnlt,,. 1·6. dtl Boo•n • 1, H•tl•y IMl won .. l. •·l: Clfllon IMI def Moctte 6·2. 0-11 Rt\nl<k._t; 1("°" OwonH.6·l.
0...btft ' Wrobtt T\ucl'lll• IMI dtl PM•t·Yff I \ Otl H•rD"r Hankin ..a. Ctlktn-' C1mmtr14ll !Ml won 6· 1, 6..0.
Athletics
~H-tt er-..c..m1111 •s1Lf ... ......... e11•Mco.o..11"•* la ..... ~, '" ., .......... . .,......., 10CC1 _. lt-'f re> •1
1 S: ••1" 1a1•---1ttt,H• Mllh 1e1 etf Oi ... M, ._t, t•S : ••~ll1..,1el9tf""'-H.t• M .........
Mt•••ws '19•11•"• tat ••' Mcoe .. •ll·0.$,,..1 ' 1, ~ •. •·1,
.,_..., .. ._ .... , __ ., . ,,,,.._
....... Oii • , ... ... ....... ,". c ...... ..,
0-..... ", • tttt ""'9r ....... .,., 0 ............
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OtaUaASICIETllAl.l VA HI TY ,,,_.,IM IMI IUI Wntml"""' E-•\On<IOI F (IJIS."0"' lltl\lo\ <•I F n Ol\d•U WHlon 1111 c ti ,. •rdlng
Br•zney l•) G fU(r. ')'di"'"'"' l••ln 11'1 C. 01 frl"'1<1 CdMS<0<Jngwo Null•• t 11 Mtrlrw,1 .. 1?.
C•r••• .. ~IOI IHI lq Buell Pa•"•' Ill F. (101 Roh" ot "'" Htnanx 10 F !It P•u•"M C.0.Q~llt0l C 121 W•U•I V•""•I 121 <:. 111Sourlo<• To-•en 161 O IOI H1nwood CdM s<Ol'lng SUl>t Wiiiiam• •. 1<1r~ 4.L•ounucorlnqsul:I\ e"<-\onl H•llll-; Uqun.t \a.16
C:O.Uo~ !Ml OOIEIToro Oi•tHI 171 F IOI Ball'\ o.,a.n (0 F 171 (Mrm Oane 1141 r IOIC•rttr F•Hm•n Ill <:. (41 Ch•"O••· 0Alltot>@r Ill <:. l]l l.•••r
(Oif4 "'9t'\• !i<:Ofl~ \VO\, "''O ! , K•-OV ll, Ev•n\ 4. Hal~ I EI Toro s.<orlno Wbl Ml>n•s I. Movla" 2
Wlllt~··~" Htltllnle C:.O.wMt .. ]ll 4
ll•t-le lMl 1171 a1-. .. .a J..ne\Ofl (ll F . IS) Sim\ HIOI• t II F (Ill Enqman
Zl~l..s"I 121 C •' Lu"• Thorn-151 <:. 111 Verfour -Oorll-141 G •11 8uU•rt Scoring Mitls: (.Vrlto 1 Hyno o ·M<N•-• Kahtlll I, 1.onqil•ld, U "l<.,.rcl\l. · H•ltll-: E•~ncla It ll
""· ..... OSI nu • .i .... Wrt'I 001 F l•l H•nton llrown 1141 " , .. T •VIO•
Bu...,,ws 113) C ''' ""•'•" Ooylt t 171 <:. IOI Holmtn C.ctf 161 <:. 101 Grah•m !Korlnq \Ub\' H"'1tlnoton O.•t• LOC:kheru. a.1.,.. l Htlltlrnt · Hl(I. 8eA<h. AO 17
51 . .1oMl'I! 1101 UOl Mat., Otl Htmmond 12•1 F (101 Graham G•t.,., 1101 F •ll C <:..to• Gomer 1101 C tll Uranl<ll Maoulr• ISi <:. •61 Wiimot To"""' 0 tJI K C.tQI' Hatlllme St ~"'h lO ti
~IUleft ..,, .... ,,., , .. , "'" Cleme .. 1. Rodftfn "I F !Ill l"lr\I C•rrol !ti F 1111 Oahl•trorn llDCM'rt tt I) C (Sl Moon.....,n Rfl!.ello "I <:. 111 Gttllo•n S.I"'°" "I <:. Ill Posl MV '1<0<l1>9Wbo\ E•lon IQ, c:;.oroes 2, Johnson 4 !><: Br av• Uribe I Halltlrnt MV, 2114
NtttC>ttVA1151TY
..... 9Mcll fnl 1111 ···-... ,,,.,.,, ttll flt 10 C.rroll V• rlanlAll i.l F fl 11 C.\tlllO JO•• Ill C Ill lom-•e• 111-non 1111 c; •o F....,t•~ llO"lw•ll llO> <:. 10 11•91•-S<orlftQ -Htt lleA<h-Wlnt., 6 I( rom 11 "O'lel l 8roo" •,
l e •n,•nCI I EC11\0" Rob•\01\ •. lowtnbn>Olt t Heltll-HI~ .. k l\, 11·11.
c .. 1.1-IMltUl lllTere
()nyt.., •• F c•1 P•q"~
Y•t ft 11 f-•01 Arr•vo
lPw•\ 1 t t G lO' M<CleUe4\ ""°"rwn m G u•J•cll\on ll•l>bll 01 <:. lOl Meet""
(O\IA W.. I \COtll'\9 YIM Cr•lq \.
Mt'rr'''EtTor~Otln.Q'\Ubs Mofr&\S.,
~1tff'"f •• H ti!!•""' (O\la '-WM 11 10
0••• Hiii\ l~l 1•1 U111 .. n1tv Ward ,., F <Sl Mtton
Ou~llPll•· l]t F IOI ThOma\ v... , , c (ll c •• ,,.,
~·· ant1no 171 <:. (41 Wat h Sturdivtftl 1111 G II) Uto<Hrll•llff Scor1no •um O•n• Hllls-+lus\l>Clt •. University-Th.aro 10, Young 2, Buy 1 Hotf11me O.n• Hill>, 'JO u MtterO.t fill 131151. Jcneith C.o•I Ill F (Ol M•nclnl Foil•• tfl F 1111 Clpri•n• Cootlelld 101 C IOI O'Com>IPll 8urnt1t II I <:. IOI HanHn O'Connor 111 <:. 111 Po,,.. MO \COrlf\Q tUf>\• 01o•r ?.
"'•\\(OCll. 2~ Z•nor• '· H1901n .t., Aood•<t9 H•llllme MO I~ 10
~-1.i .. Y•llW t4Jl 12'1 N-1 Konq 11) F 10 Parlle• M••9t•unl 10 F U2l ~••tr Htvlh n t Ul C l•l McG••ll ROlll'•I\ 91 C. Hocllt B•rt I I I (; Ol Wthl\l~l
FV \torlno \Vb· Armour 1 NtwDO<I St•"ton 2 Htlltornt FV ,]. ...
Miro,.. !U) (JOI WtttmlRsl•r COl\t>n 10 F Ill l.a"')IP S<n•ut.., 1161 I' ('1 Buc•l~y G•bl>'I 1~1 C' 1n0ne11c~
H•v•ta '1) (, ~St Murll A:o*'•" 1\t C. f1l Rodrh11.1t-1
Scor1n'a \,utn Go•Ot'l 4i. FeHY 1.
t1oHt4
Haith~ M1r1n" l• 13
Coron•de1"'4• 11011111 L•own•
1 Rowell ~ t& 1 f U, 'tot>Prtw>n ·
H•"•QAI"\ '11) r rt\ Con1tno
l(rf>n_. '111 ( f1)W,.,1hlr.,.,
Sn•nn •4• (, l)\We•n"' ./
8ur 1it 10\ r. l l Wfl'll+I>.
CdM \Corinq \Yb\ C.or .. «\ l. Cun
n•nQ~•m l. H•lllomt• COM n 6
S.n Cl•-• CJOl 1111 Mluk>fl Vlefo (81ft 1101 F 10) Hick\ F1t1lpka 1101 F 1101 Lu"in
"""us•cn •11 c Ill R~·~r C••ttr IOI <:. (01 C•I• Sm1lh UI G (01 Muro"y "sc0<l11C1 wb• Pltillos t. ffondcw
? H•ltllme SC. U ..
E'1M<l4j(ltl fill l'IMeoleM
(.1,11111,.,. '7' F (0~ F,.etto M•troll 111 " Cll th•ltlllet>
MC I' •rl-fl I C (ti RetMrt Carroto tJ C. !•) EtO<''~ Sulv 1111 G l'l Mollf't' EstMCI• (IV,111'1>1 Foetlllll 51 .... H S"Vd•r tEl Otf Wiii\ 11 6 l d•I
(P't•mbt!rl••n It 1 dirt Frptw.-u '1 dfllt
Ounk 6 1. TO'n'"• tE-to\l ~ ).\ 1 • ...,on 6 0 f> 1 Pt•st•n<•• t El •Ofl I•.
IO" I 6 16 1 t
Volleyball Report E\14'11<1•..corlftQ\Ub PHtdltyJ
H•ltl1nY' E~\tn(.la U·l.
WUvfr E •o•tJ 6 2 •. I t l 6
°"""'" Mc1Cn19M L•tor•k IEI IO\I to S.ll•n\ ~l'>Qe t 6 1 • •o>t to C~M
Co~•n MOO<lr.1 I 6 J 6 Thoml>\On B•••• IElloslO 6 I' •f>l•U l, I.
MEN"S Y0lLl!Y8Al\.
Goldtn W"I dtl LA Herbor IS·S.·
II I t• ••
... n ~nwrdl"° .,._, 0ft"99 CNsl·
I\ II IS 10 11 IS. II-•
VAltSITY M1\\1"'1 Vl•10 °"' CO\lt '-Wst IS-4. MeriM(JO\ltll1Yt lHunl a .. c~ U" t3 I\ •I• ti• s1,,.1.. , c ... ,on est• '''""" 11.1, n IS. 1s-u, t(nfor IMI dtl 80<n1rd 6 4 dtl IS' OV'IOn ~. Otl ArNn ._,, oel Ft-•IY La9u"" Mt 0...a Hiiis IS-\, IS-9, 6 O, Kotler \Ml won ._,, 6.J ... t.6-0. U • Tlllotso.. !Ml ...,., 7 6, lo\I 1 6 ~on S•n Cle,....nle""' Vnlvenlty 15·13, 7·•.lo•t ._ •. Cl"tw IMI 1~1 ••·won ••. U·9, IS B. won6·0. 1 ...
O...bl"
f\laJ>C1.t def M.tlt' 0.• 1!>-] IS 11 IS·U.
Mini"" Vlelo <IPI (~I• Mtsa lS •. H·!t. 1l IS, lH. 1M
JUHIOlt V•ltSITY
C01t '-"'s•dfof Mt\\lon V jf tn 7 I La9unt Be.ch dt'l O~no Holt\ I\ 14 16 ,. • ,,..,,,...,.,c...,von•\ 10 ~ 1\ 11 s $an Oemen4t Get Un1vtr>1IY IS 2.
ls-J. E\l.,dedef AMl"' Oel 1~ l I\ 0
Etl!m·SAIH fM I split W•nterow4'· Frtncl> 6 2 •·•· def C1m,,Wll Posco! 6 4 •·•; ~•lon·Olktmen IMI •P•ll • •.
3·6, \0111 .... S.7 ·Area Nines Divide·
·Baseball
,..05 ... 50 .... lfhe11 Ul-Ru<~tr lb •·1 7·0· S.ur•r\\.4 t 0.0 Scllaef•r1b ... l t O. (hU•cllw••d II,• 1 t O B•Mlbury rl, 11 I 1 Bl~r\ 11> l 0.1·1: WPlcl'I t 3.0.t·O, J~t ... .on rf. 3.0-0-0, O•t•erno o. 3 Q.0-0
M9W~ It-(ti -Ro4llM H. J41 o, R. Pelmer 2b, 3-1-t..O: Wa•d pr, 0 I Q.O· KtllaMr rl, •.0-0.0; Hub· b••d p 30 1.1. St•" cl.• 1.1 1; Sltrkman c,? l-1.0: S.lbv lb, J 1·1 O; AO$t to, ).().0.0; S. Palmer II, 2·M·J.
N,.woort Edlton
S<o,.. lty l1Wtl11t• , " . OOl 107 3-C f I
JOO 020 o-s 7 ' N•w110r1 124\'tl U""l fltounlaln Valley
Sh>!IM c. .. c•• fNt dtt Yoo•• 6 3 dtl Cao•n 6 0 del L•nlO" •·0 d•I Mc Brnl• 6 0, O•M-111 INI won 6·0 6 t 6 0. 6 4 • oo ... t-; INI won. 1, 6 ' 6 1 IO\I I O, . 81PIOI'• IN I won 1·6 6·l 6 4 IO\l I 6
Liberty Christian High a slugfest with Montclair "t". vaii.~~~·~":•n<h1,. lb,
(Huntington Beach) sur-Prep, 13·9. 4.J.?.o: L•Pl•Y ''· , Q.4.0; Mttelr c.
rendered four runs In the Li be r l y Ch r Is ti an :»-1 ,., R Smith<•, 1~0: Hotmn ,.,_ II J 0. t 0, Z•n9Qtr :JI>. 3-Q-0.0, Muto first Inning but staged a broke a 4-4 tie in the sixth 0 tb, 3 o o o Anntnd 11, o.o.o.o;
Oo<ltlln
Hootl l(uhn I N 'Otrt V O•t'\o l:ite comeback to beat inning when J on Logan c;.,.1n n. Jo.o.o, e-non "· 2"°401 . Ch . . t d In , B Smlf110.t.().().O,
P.1rh1•m 6 4 .. I, df·f ~( "*'•'' r Am enc an ri st 1 an connec e .,.,r a run· N••-' <•1 -Ro111~ 11>. 2.0-1-2:
(Pomona) 6-4 Tuesday scoring single, then later s1 .. km.,, c, J.1-1 o; Hub11.,cs "• Mc OQnouci~ 6 1 6 I, Domos•Y· Sw•dlund NI..,.,,, b 4 6 I 6 1 6 0 U d 3 0.0 O. Selby lb. t.0-1 t. Culver P". afternoon in the baseba came aroun to score o.o.oo, s1a" <•. J.Q.1.0· K•"-' ''·
league Opener. himself On an error. 200 O. H6•~tr ti. 1.0.l.O, Rtms ... lb. JUH!Oa VAllSITY
EdllOfl IUV,I 11\'tl WHtmlR\I ...
""''"
Also on Tuesday, Hunt-Huntington Valley ~:~:. !> P••,,.,., ll.Ho.o. smn11 P.
ington Valley Christian Christian looked like it Sc••~ 1 ... 1"" Cll•NY ((I dof OotArlh ..... lost to
~t•I • • ctP H1n1\ • l Sol • t 'fu'•"ow •EI won 1 6, • l 6 0, 6 1
..f1tnlnn E) won • 0. b) • 0 • t Mo<n.lson El w""' t '1.•C •-<>
(Newport Beach) found· was going lo win its "'" v.11,y 100 002 0_; ~ ~
itself on the short end of game, too. when the Con-N•woort no 100 a--4 ' a
Ooublft * * * querors exploded for five
• runs in the first inning.
The firework s were
" ..-i highlighted by Buck
8tftWl'll B•C1•10\ IEI $01'1 with Mou lM!m•ltK M<-Partl.,, .... ] • df'I Hooten NtQtrt• 1 5, 6 1, Krt mo· · U"'"1y01f'hll.., 161 ... ~ Basketball
OavlsfEl-~.7·S.won6 4.,.a., Eu\r/ 31>
l "'l•n It MorlfWI (11) 1101 H1111t lotc:!t 0••111 "
2 2
3 1 : ;. R eynolds' grand s lam
1 i: homer.
... , .. ~.,
l11vllltll.., To""'•"'"' °"",,.. fl fWI la T°'" .. V'l S<o,... 1 0 Slrttlff Me<COM•~Y,C Ptrll•r !Ml Otf Otclen 6·l. IO•I IO· Arnot 0 Soe"c•r S.1. dtf Htllme" 4·•. dtl P•rlou 7" Gontt l .. i.-t· Thom\l>On fMl IO\I 3·•· Herbtrl\'ln,rf 4-6, 0·6, J.6; Fur>t IMI I0\116. \·1, 1 '• Ortytr lb
WOfl 4·)1 Pl•tl (Ml (O\I a 6. 3·•. WO!\" HunlllnQ,tf
4 0
3 0 ~ ~· But Montclair Prep
o o, kept pecking away and VlllMOVttl. M•"•'hU.,.lli 1' St llorut•tniur~ ''• Oreoon ll
S....llhl•lt J 0 • 0
A 1
0 0 eventually outlas ted ~ ~ Huntington Valley Chm· Thwtday'• O•me1 .t.lah,...,.,A, ?S • v\ Hl\Uston, 21-7
VdlAnov~1 10 ft v,. St. 8ot'lih•tntu,..,.
776
, 1 41,WO'l .. I. DMIM• Tol•IS s s. tian, 13·9. 26 6
Scora11oYfn"1"ta OIOW-Pu<utt tMI lfet Jo11n~•-· Wooten M, 4 1, dof Fllum•n lohn\<ln
& •. 1_.; Wltl·f OY (Ml_ ._4, • 1, I S,
4 I.
Pro Scores
Natl-• aatAt•l""ll ,.,,.<l.atlo11 Phll•clPl"'11a Ill (lt .. ltn<I 101 Stn •nto"'o 11~ NY Net• toe ClllU,.O 101 8o\IOn.,_ t<onu•Cltv 101 W4t\lllr>qton" Otnver 101 Los Al>Qel~~~S P0<tl-t]t Ntw ~IPOft\ tO. Nitti-I Ht<Uy LHt,,. A 11.,,tt 7 Plt"""rqh l rl•vfl-\ WHhlnQ10<1 l Van<ovwrJ OetrOltl To,,,., to•. SI lOUI\ 1
r " lfhl'r1VCll<i\ll.., 000 402 0-. S
Allltrl(MIC/ltt\tl4111400 000 0 ..... .&
...... ..,, ..... Qlrt.tlH C'tl
ll•tt•~lefd. '1b
Betrde<t, p.lb · llloro c
lllrtMldt.lb steve,,.r. 3b Betit, rl l(ln9. di\ 8urbr1 It 8roW1'1, ta Wll•I-rl·P C•l .. ron,d ,., ...
·-,, " 7 I 0
' 1 , 0 ., ?
;) 7 1
0 0
I 0
• 0 0
0 ' 0 7 0 0
I 0 0 0 0 0 ,. • J Sc_.,. .......
~
MONDAY thru THURSDAY SPECIALS
(Fri., Sit & Sunday 'til G P.M.J-Exdudlnt HoHdlyr
dinners /nclud1 soup or salad, b1ktd potlto or rkl
RED SNAPPER ................... 2.96
MAHI MAHI ..................... 3..45
GRILLED SEA BASS •••••••••••••• 3.76
TOP SIRLOIN STEA.IC ••••••••••••• 3.96
NEW YORK STEAK ............... 4.50
LOBSTER TAIL •••••••••••••••••• 6.95
STEAK ANO LOBSTI:R ............ 8.45
LUNCHEON Ilsa UNtd d117y unti 'p.rl.
112?1 '•'•CM• KwJ • HenU..-.W.. • CJUf 112·1'21
ao11.c....ttwy ·C......~...,.11ut11.-oo
\
•. ~. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ ... .,.....
'"l
"" I o'
0
0 • 0
0
0
0
0 • 0
'
''Johnson & Son
has
outstanding
service and
a good
reput~tion ,, RICKAR~a~~~~i::
ANOTHER SATISIFIEO CUSTOMER '
JOHNSON a SON
I.At . I
2828 Harbor Blvd. • Costa Meaa • a.io-6630
COSTA MESA FULLERTON SANTAANA WESTMINSTERl
2946 BRISTOL ST. 1530 S. HARBOR BLVD.
Gauchos
SPECIAL VALUES FOR
TODAY THRU SUNDAY SO. OF SAN DIEGO FWY. PHONE: 870-0700
120 E. FIRST ST. AT CYPRESS
PHONE: 547-7477
15221 BEACH BLVD. .,
PHONE: 893-8544
PHONE: 549-1533 ·1
d
Vaqs Loaded
With Taknt
FRESNO-''They shoot as well as we do, or bet-
ter, they bave more size and they play probably the
best defense we've seen all season."
That's the way Saddleback CoOege basketball
coach Bill Mulligan sizes up Western State Con·
ference champion Santa Barbara CC. the Gauchos'
· first rOWld opponen~ Thursday ( 5 p. m. > in the state
JC basketball tournament, here
Santa Barbara's Vaqueros arc top-seeded in the
tourney, coming in with a 29.3 season mark.
"They should be top.seeded." says Mulligan.
"They won the toughest conference in the state and
the team that finished riflh an their league I Han·
cock) was the only team to beat Cypress (the No. 2
seed)."
Coach Ed DeLacy's Santa Barbara team has
five players hitting in twin figures
Tom OeMarcus (6·8>, the Vaqs' best shooter. is
hitting at a 16 4 clap, 6-2 guard Ben Howland has a
15.0 average. 6·5 forward Ed White is scoring 11.9 a
game. 6-7 center Robbie Robinson has an 11.3
average and reserve Dan Pagltotti <6-l> 1s sconng
10.0 per contest.
Two other top Santa Barbara stars are 6·0
guard Greg Henderson (8 3 PPJO and 6·5 Arnie Beck
(9.2).
Howard. Henderson. DeMarcus. Whale and
Robinson are the starters <md all but the latter are
sophomores.
DeLacy has a 159·19 record at Santa Barbara in
seven seasons and one(' was an assi5tant under
Mulligan at Long Reach Poly lligh.
The Vaqueros had t1 16-2 Western Stale Con-
ference mark and won their first 19 games of the
season.
Saddleback, which comes into the game with a
93.5 scoring average. has won 13 in a row and 18 of
the past 19.
Mulligan will start Dennis Smith 16·61. Buck
Day (6-6> l\l'ld Marty Zogg (6 5> m the front lane with
Tim Shaw (6·2) and Rich McElrath C5·11J at the
guards. The top players off the bench are Tim
Knight (6-6l and Robert Earl Rrown 16-2J
Smith as hitting at a 23 0 chp, Shaw 1s averagmg
18. land MrElntlh 1s scoring at a 13 4 clap ..
Krught has looked 1mprt'..,!>IH' in the past three
weeks and ha., ..,rored 48 pc11nh 1n the last three
games
Both teams hk<' tu run .rnd Run and both v.111
press. so it figures to b<' a h1gh-.... connR afra1r
If the Gaurhoc; win. the' 'II fan• the Raker,.f1eld
San FranctM'O v.1nn<'r Jt 9 t-~nda' night
Checking Banquets
CIF champion Bob
Chase was selected most
valuable Tuesday night
at F oun tain Valley
Hlgh's sports awards
banquet hononng tht.>
1977 wrestling teams
Special award win
ners
Vlh••f
MO\I V•lu.1DI• <; .. ,.., Ant\"~ .tn'1
Bob Ch•'-" Mo't '"°'°',..."'"" W"•mn.i.' t1alt Caolau" R«'n c .,,.,. Mo,1
...; lt'ttOif'at~I !>tfll'le 84'"1111
J ............. 11.
NIO\I V•l~t K•il"~_..,,, M")\t
tmo.-o"9'0 Cf'ttl\ 'tO\\ C•o••·" M•tt Ou"c•" Mo\t lr\\0°r411nni1t T """
.,.en11"'.n ....... '°"~
MO\t Vah»bt• ., .. n O•J"' .,, M '"' t"'pfoved lom N•pnl ( .. nt •t~ .Qi111:~ Metem Mo.I 11'1\f'tu •'1'°'"''
l(ev•" Amtr.al•lm~• '
* Rob Galey was o.,C'l1•1·t
ed most valuabll' ph1vt·r
on Newport llarhnr
Hlgh's varsity ba!\kl't
ball team Monday night
at a sports awards ban
quet.
Special award win·
ners:
HIW"°RTHUIOR HIGH r V•rtlh • M0\1 Veul .... b!• Rob G;ll•v MO\t ~morovtd Stfl'V~ Ttrnmol"I' Tri
,t•ol•I"'. Rolf S<hw•lbe Roi> G•'••
...... llO'I C••lo Hu\11• Aw•·~ M•·~
l •edt>vr,,. A"" L\'fl 0-•on•m•
:: ~O\f \/lltHbl•JV 8'•~ ''""'""*"" ~O"t lmCH'ov•d Rrttf"I M 1.,Avu I'\
... OIAll\ Oro<i P<IQUlt\ ':; ..__,
•. Mo\t V1tueble Onb St,,.., Mt.\t
""'DfOftd Ty Ewt>tf'I .. \ ('1tOI•*"
)uddvo.<lltl " ,.,..,.fftM
• ~Mt Y••u•b4• 8ruc• C•ldw"ll ~n\I l"'P'OWd K•••n o ....... ( •o
Jill" !.luorl c;.ddl\
* ". Edison CHuntinJ,tton
:Such) Higb's sports
•wards banquet honor·
~ the 1977 basketball
ams will be hel d
nlaht at the school
:iafeteria with the
j~atured speaker Stan
;Morrison or the Unlversi·
(yof Pacilic.
.: FutMtles gel under
"'ay at 7. Tickeli are $1
tacb ·. *
-~pcCIJI JIA.Hli \\In
OOIA, Htll\HIG"l\CHOOL
J 4 f;f\. I f M ' V ,. '
t-i•1n ~.,, 1 ,.. .. ., I 11 At"i
..,,.,,., M I .,\C1 f' J ... J t.Jft\.I
~I''°) If •t .. I '• ... f 1'V ..,_. p,._ ft'°""
I •rJ• ~.-,n4'1 iU•,
''J,.110~ vao~JT 'f M·''' "·''''• b'-. Oif\. J-H•r .,._,..,,, lrf'lr.#1 ... 1
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f • • \"""t""' I "'" FWf-\~¥A"t "'4 "'1' 11 4 ,,.,,1. Vn" N ,,_ ~,..,. , • .,
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'\Ill'' N l'flll'r" • ......,.,.( I "'4
* Ren Racon '4a~ tabbed
,,, l.al{una Rt'ach High s
most valuable playf.'r on
thl' \ilr<.11\ bao.,kethall
team for 197i at Monday
n1~ht ·~ sport:-. awards
h:inqu<'t for the cage
learns
Spec111l award win·
ners
LAGUNA l~ACH "41(#"4
Vu\lty
Mo't V•l!Jo'ttl• A1tn 8tlCt"tn MO\t
tmoroY•" l'llt C..omof Co"''~,.
A.w•rf't JOl'\n 0.wetld C.AOtA1n 8•1'\ ••<O<I JtMlwVanltv
Mo•I V1tuet>1e Jim 111c"""''°"
C•o•••n 0.Y'I Nl<t'!Of\ ~· Im
,,rnvflld tClo E"'91n CN<h' •wittrd
"-"'"' Lfl\11•
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Mo\t VAlu"°ot• l(Vf"'t Ford 'w\e'I
t morovialf K•r\ Fri•'I (~Q•••n tfllrf
''"''~ CM" ft\ •w•rd P•ttr a.,.,.,
"'~ Mt\'I V•h1•ble l(f'lovtrt H or i('
(""'" \ Aw•nl ~I ~•Y C•t>
'•'n A•<"•rd Ev•"' Mott '"'· 0'lhffl'd Alf'( ludwiQ
JV Baseball
HlW~lltT NARM>llt (t)-Sfol"ll
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k-tf•lllll• r II t
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Se hoblo Espanol
FIBERGLASS POLYESTER
WHITEWALL TIRES
1 111uc1•ss au a ovft 99 'r uu OF rOlYfSTU CORO
Sill L ICE . I D l•
WHIH TU&fltS~ ~~~•<
s1e.1J $22.49 I Sl 80
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£78.1-4 S24.89 52 26
$
1 _ns 14 I $25.:.a!.._ ~1 42
G781 4 I Si6.89 52.58
.1.7'-13 ,LU$ '1 73 f E.T G7815 $27.69
30 MONTH * .---~=~=-: :=--=-~-+--:-s3=-0....,.·3.,....9 ~"."""."":"_,
LIMITTD WARRANTY $32.
29
$
CORNELL "200" TIRE SALE
f 7B 14
F78 1 4
G78 14
<;;78 15
~i78 1 ~
H78 1 5 S27 69 $1 79
2 FIBERGLASS BELTS
OVIR 4 PLIES OP
POL YISTIR CORDI
1 S29 99 1 -SJ.09
TllUS VW' OYOT AS, MGS, Ol'flS,
'OR $ OATSUNS ANO MANY
~OTHER FOREIGN CARS
6000k 12rn Sl•1 $1529
TU If USS
ILACKWAlLS
560 x 15 600x 15 s171• S1899
1111170 f E T ll 71
TWIN 1w: Sl#Gtf S ..... ,,.. rutflC.U ft' U4t
~~1 ~.~ll-"""'.'"'"~-•1..-. ....... ,. ...... --It• I• t 111 a lU ~~~= ~~ . . .,. . ......
taluable player laurels Put • few word• 111 lllCI FREE TIRt MOUNTING Monday at Dana Hills to work for ou. 11rOlllM.&1tAOW.11n.S
Bt1b'1 aporta awards NO'RADl·IN RIQUUllD lt4Nllt TUii
banquet for the 1976 11 111:n~th:•~~~~~~~m.:A~U.;_:rtt::::;ca:_::rt~us~n~m=At:,:n~c:,::tt~t.!:TA1:_~~,..=·: ... : ... ~·::CAIS:.;":'wca::: i.111cttb1U teams L.
OPEN MON. THRU FRI. 8 A.M.·9 P.M./SAT. 8 A.M.-6 P.M./SUN. 9 A.M.-5 P.M.
•
1 ''
-..rxJIMU Y AIV1111Sa
VALVOLIN
llEA VY DUTY .
MOTOR OIL _._ , .......... _,llciotiont.
luy thll h1vh ll'°"• oll ot rep '°1' low, low prtee.
ONE OUAIT CANS
JO WDGllT IOW-41 •
49c55
GEMi/NE-SPORT GRIP
LACE-ON STEERING:
WHEEL COVERS
~pill~~ IN 6 ASSOITtD'
COlOIS_ 1 Mod.of ""'II" d..robio ....,, ••
t0I. looh It~• .........
}.l.L. tN DASH 8 TRACK STEREO
WtTHAM/F-• S 000 lb wo>ghl <aoo<••i por f>O"
• Mon;J&e, mou con 0t l1(1h1 ttvch
• ( c,,mpQ< I \IOI OQt'
EASY TO USE
HO
ASSEMBl Y
RlQUIRfO
15~
STEREO
RADIO
MOOEl •S.I
49~
}./.L. IN DASH CASSETTE STEREO
REAR
SPRING
LIFTERS
12 1411 VOlT
COW\nt ""' Oil OWIOlllt llT & llOjl
GIP 298 :.,
Sturdy hoo•y duty
""""' ... ,,h hiQI> pt•• •vr• rvbb.r ho .. ond ., ... bo ...
197
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• Ol IEAJ SIA TS
ASSOITtD COlOIS
WITHAM/FM·
STEREO
RADIO
MC>Ofl '604"
59~
BIG BRUTE-S 1A INCH
STEREO SPEAKERS
• !~~~!; •MM~~E~';:l 295'
• "'" !.tnp0n•lon • aloe~ poOd.d grol , ...
FAGORY REMAMIFACTURED
ALTERNATORS ms MOST AMl•KAN CHS
. ~
"THE FuNNtEST
NEW COMEDY
OF THE YEAR."
-Vernon Scott, UNITED PRESS
PAUL
NEWMANN
SLAP SHOT
~ EDWARDS \Ii' Ill W"DA T Clll(MA
,.. ........ ~ f • • .... '""' ._ -
HTtlNlUH
,.. P&NTMO smm AGA1N1N1
PlUI
'10M NOON T1U THiii fC'I
10 0KAa ~TIOMll
ROCKY (N I
soeo. "°•.usu
(Hi it S&U NOOH • (111,.....A IAHS ~ ,;ff,n ) THI Sf:J!Nll(•l
DOOS111
.... -..1 •Ml ClATIUllON
SltVll ITIUKcNt P\ut _______ AL~.ANO THI GYPSY 111
••OKAa~
llOCtcY '"' ""' Husni~,
totn "° ""'"'
·-
."" ........ BACK IN SPORTS
Actor Moftefty
good in a series. But wbo knows?"
Moriarty, who drew
rave reviews for b.ia act-
ing in "Find Your Way
Home .. on Broadway
several 'Years ago,
already has picked a
name, a somewhat im·
probable one, for his act-mg company; Potter 's
Field.
•
"I KNOW now what I ..
want to do with the next HESAIDthetroupebe
is.20 years of my life, has In mi nd woul d
and that's to build a feature wor k s b y
theater in New York," "known and unknown
said the actor, educated playwrights with known
at Dartmouth and the and unknown· actors,"
London Academ y of but tie doesn't think he'll
Music and Dramatic be able lo get it under
Arts. way for at least two
··I want to start a years.
theater company and 1 ''It's going to take that
want to be an actor-long to work up enough
manager. And if, in or-ideas so I can move in a
der to support me while l number of directions.
build my theater -butthal'smydream.I'm
which is only a dream not 1n a hurry abouttt:'' now -if I had to take a Moriarty, w ho says
series, I don't think I'd, he'd continue film and
tum it down. TV work even after he ·
"I don't particularly established bis acting
want to do one, because J troupe, was advised -
don't think I'd be very no doubt needlessly -
the odds agianst success
U.0..NlilDd'd."811aat.-.
"I c..-ll'l:A -..::a&L-"' JtT1· .......
'11Jtu1killl ilti:idy up ffW u., ......... u·1 lltowonoutar....ror
D1 Hartlor ...adeai to decJ.lDe to c up UIO
pa.lt.l'J>f • bmlved.
r ~ •a•H PS COST . an actult
memblnb.lp east. 111 and tbe scale drope to• tor
a at.uclent JMmbe:rabip.
And wbat they tel for th.tr membership cud la
worth a darned l.\a'ht more than what they a.re being
asked to ~· 1A Ulla membenhlp week that cto.es Saturday. ,
New members 1et a bonus tor joining tbat they
can lake ln lone before the 197'1-7heaaon 1ets under
way: Ford'• Comic Opera Tbeat.er doing "Die
Fledermaus" at Orange Coast College. April 3 and
lbe Strauss clusl~ will be euni in En1lisb.
AND THE R EGULAR SEASON is a beauty:
Shigemi Matsumoto, the gorgeous Japanese
soprano who sinp native folk songs accompanied
by the koto and any number of Western airs with a
piano accompanim~t.
-The Eastern Brass Quintet who can play
an~ from r enaissance to contemporSrY on
their trumpets, trombone, horn and tuba.
-Duo pianists Frances Veri and Michael
Jamanis, two of the best exponents of Gershwin in
the business and nothing Jess than brilliant at all
times. -
And there is one more concert .. that will be announced at a later date, HACCA organizers tell
me.
INVARIABLY, AFTER A COLUi-tN like this, I get demands for telephone numbers so here they
--tc-OOOW ••.UU AUOOl6 lllC-~
Singe r S tars of such a venture in New ~~~~Ji:~~~~~=~~=~:=~iia. .York are a bit large. ~
LOS ANGELES CAP >
-J ohn Davidson will
star in a 90-minul<' "light
adventure" movie aimed
for a future :.cries, "The
Quentin Method."
''I understand, but it's
my life, I feel , and the
best parts of my life have
always been Jong shots,"
he re~lied. "And when I
lake em (big chances /
always won."
THE FUNNIEST COMEDY
OFTHEY¥H!
I
•wA•lO TMO"U IN J"l[YfS fM(llGES
"" ... U (ll•NO ,,, .. AC111Essw .. o &,tCHlS l'~ ,,_.( SCR(lN W1TH H(JI $P•••I A._0lAl lN1 .. _......,... ............. ~.
CO·HIT AT CINEMA CENnR
fHl.Af1111. •l
"A MATTER
OF TIME"
™-""""' "CARRIE., (R)
MO,.:_ THUR
7:15-9:45
FRI 6:00-8:30·11 :00
SAT 1:00-3:30
8:0()..8:30-11 :00
SUN 2:00..4:35
7:15-9:45
DAILY
AT
2:00~:30
7:10-9:40
11NETWORK11 CRJ •
11SHAMP00° IRJ
IRJ
1 MOHAM AD•
MESSENGER OF GOD" lPGJ
11BANAMAS11
11SIL VER STREAt<" IPGJ
t1..an1~';!~ .... .a,_G~. ~:~aza . . . ..... ...... . ....
'1'HE HOUSE
BY THE WE" It.\,..,.,
lllM_'4._I JO-t:ll
"7% SOLUTION" ........ ,~ ....
"FAMll Y "-OT'
J:INoltl .....
' '
. ~ an: IafonnaUoe 11 al "5a'TI; 1111.or to and after
t.be eampaip w~ call Mars• Palm• at 541-4139 or Rolanna Patraui at• DC.
Theo tbere'a \be lovel,J :Martlya Kunde at
8M-W1 who b• always been a rountaln ol ln!orma-
lion and encourapment tothla writer.
But d!aeount the early rumor that Sb.lrle.y JC-up.
fermao will be 1ivtn1 us Verdi arias at tbe concert
to be announced. That pleuure ls to be denied us at leutforlbiayear. •
DNIE AND mDE .~,.,,.._
111EYAIN't
iiEoRGESEGAL (1
JANE FONDA r ·
"FUN WITH DICK&JANE"
MANN'S so. com PLAZA
Ct1l1M111
~t1•1111tl
~61111
MANN'S
SO. com PLAZA tuu M111
lAIU 1111el )4'1111
MANN'S
SO. COAST PLAZA
USS..11twtr
)4t ll11
MANN'S
CINEMAl.ANO
OVER THE
CUCKOO'S NEST" WUllOATl-1:JO
• 1~YIUM-J.:IM:lt 'SHAMPOO" CRJ t H UTIS~J.6 11-olO JO
latlP.IHlllC
""'"",.'
WIMHU GOLDIH GI.Oii AWAlD
"ROCKY" .._..,1-1,..to
SoAl~lt-•»4 ... :4....,...., .. ,,
"HOUSE IY THE LUE" IRI
, ... IOJtUt l~UI0-400
110-11..0 14M St a,1"1 Al•lll•• US-IMl
"SHADOWS IH AH EMf"TY ltOOM"
9:4t Mll.__Jil~4a.t;ll
MANN'S
CINEMAl.ANO
Ml4 $1.1111111
Al11lc1• m m1
MANN'S
CINEMAUNO
Mii h "'"" illh•• U!.IM1
"OHE R.EW OVER
THE CUCKOO'S HEST'
1 ... ' MrlAT/IUM-t·K-l:la.1 .. 11
"SHAMl"OO'" Il l
.. JO Ul/SU-l lt-4 OS
1111 '"'''"
"ICIMG KC>M4"
t 00 U.T/IUM-l·OO·l,ll>t:JO
"WILDERNESS FAMILY"
MS lAl/Sll-l 10·1:41
... -
. .
Intermission
Tom Titus
facilities are rather buic in nature. There are ex-
perts In the field, but they are usually to be found in
the professional theater or instructin1 at colleges.
In "The .Fant.a.sticks," diredor Soodra Evans
and lighting designer David Palmer have pooled
their artistic and technical talents into a truly "dif.
ferent" interpretation in both areas. It may not
always be on target, but it Is more an original than a copy.
MUCH OF "THE FANTASTICKS" ls played in a sort of dreamy half light, which serves u the
mood of the production as well. Occaalooally an ac-
tor is distractingly shaded, but the overall effect is
"THE l'ANTASTICICS" A rnuslc•lby TomJonH a11d Harvey $chm lot dlrocledbv~re Eva11~. ll911t-lno by OaVIO Palmer, ChOrMl)rac>l'ler Oarb<lr• K•ll•r. Pf'Oducer ROii Al~r•~"·
IKl'lnlc•I °'"'<10< Rtcll.trd Morr Ill, costume and ... 1-.1gn tly 8111 Woodburn,
orn•ot•rt FroC!Ay\ dncl Salurdavs al I .JO lhrOOQh Aprll •at t~ WHtmln•ter Commun11yl1>eat•r. 1212 Maple 51 . Wtelm11uter RtMrvatlMtlfl-1626.
THE CAST EIGallo .................... ..
Mall... • .................. .
Lu1\a • • •• ••••• • •••••
Hucktft>e-e ••• ,. •• • • .... • . • • •• . . •.•
8fl'llttmy • • ••••••• • ••••• •
M•nrv • . •••••••••••••••••••• Mortimer .....•••..••.•..•.
Thfl M ute
• l(pnt Jot'ln\On
• 81llt1 He\S.
!.Aundra Barratt
. qoorr1 !.die
•• Robt,.t Jdme~
C.huck St•11~n
JonnAutrv
. J D E lmoul•I
that or youthful fantasy removed from the harsh
light of reality.
Another unique interpretation is that of the ban-
dit.narrator El Gallo, played by Kent Johnson as a
benign fellow endowed with heart, warmth and an
ever-present ironic grin. Johnson's portrayal is a
departure from the El Gallos of the past, but consis-
tent with the mood or the production.
The young roman\1c leads are engagingly done
by Bille Hess and Saundra Barratt, the latter dis-
playing a beautiful voice even if not at full potential.
The innocent interplay between them is the core or
the show.
ROBERT SAX AND ROBERT James have
some nice comic moments as the two fathers who
unite their children by building a wall between ~h~m . Tht.•ir duct ''They Did It Cause We Said No"
1s one of the musical h1ghlrghts of the evening.
In any staging of "1',antaslicks," the show is
generally stolen by the seedy Shakespearean actor
and his laconic Indian stunt man, and the
Westminster version Is no exception. Chuck
Stanaert, who has shaved a good bit or his head for
the Aart. is excellent as the uncured ham, while
John Autry elicits some good physical humor from
the role of Mortimer -although he doesn't get the
chance to really "milk" his death scenes as his
character should.
Staged an the basic black and white of Bill
Woodburn's setting and costumes, "The Fan-
tasticks" 1s an offbeat, yet extremely valid. in-
terpretation or a show that thrives on the sort or
directorial ingenuity Miss Evans displays.
Performances continue Fndays and Saturdays
through Apnl 9 .lt the Westminster theater, 7272
Maple St , with an 8 30 curtain.
'Happy Days' Still
Top~ in Ratings
NEW YORK <A Pl -Time-tested standbvs led
!ht> prime-time tcl<.•v1~1on ratings last wc·ek, further
solidifying the network standmgs, according to the
latest A. C. Nielsen figures.
The national Nielsen averages made a\•ailable
Tuesday had "llappy Days" as the top-rated
television show for the week endlnjt March 13 .
In order, the week's top Io shows were:
, H~OY D~V\ i AOr W•lh • 11 • r .. ,.,., Qf' "J 1 '"'"...-f'WMIW""'t1 Lav••,_..\ S--·•loy "l\C l• •or n ,,.,. """' M'"'S'H '(A' 1S I .. 1~ 1
""11l1tM "ft•,.-,....Y ~,u_, AAt:. 1~ t 11 ""'HMllft •("'.tr-I·•·, A~f' ;. ARC
1•111 •rn1"'"" -.,,.,,,_,,,"Cl ""c-·o.wo..v.tt •T·-·c11\
,.,.,, :\t , .. ' nr" Sm•lllf\n w l4f o.,,.~.., -.ftc ,. ) '9t" ) f'ft•lt•,., , SIMO~ 4=~ ~~ltl~ Aft( 7.f 1. 11 I ,.,,,1tlt)f1 4tftd '"W.~ftif"FW 9-K'5 ""tt•r AOC.. 1J.
Al"l\Jnd•"'JOUt tPv-lort 1nw0 ,.,. • Swuct\ CB~ ••11...,.-•flWd e,,_., "'fftC h•d
<NllP\ R1rh Ma-11 p,,.,,,. M .. n AOC •·r ,,, ,. o• Cl'tuor"' o,, CBS Thur\CM>t noy1,. "lllU ... ,,.,,,,..nnlrH r ........ N8(, .... ,. ... ,, •IC lP••W•t\d•rwt :~tf l•~,~~n' ~~.ty Mtt'll•, '0..u·.c.y, 'HBC • Tonv A~o. • A8C,
"THE BEST ENTERTAINMENT
PICTURE OF 1977"
.. ,,,.... . ....... ~"'--~~
GrtNE WILDER JILL CLAYBURGH RICHARD PRY
.. _ .. _,.".·SILVER STREAK" .~.._....auo-~
.c~t.:.: ••. .:.,.....*..s ... PATRICK McGOOHAN. __
llAUL WILLIAMS
WILLIAM FINLEY
JESSICA HARPER
CINEMA VIEJO .
SJ>..FISWAYTOLAPAI
.MISSION YllJO IJ0.6!90
-...... . . . ·----~~=----· -------=--=-------=--=-=------. = -,
The Best
Entertainment
Picture
Of19n
It's Comedy!
It's Adventure!
It's Romance!
It's "SILVER STREAK"
MILES FROM
ANYWHERE ~J
SO PRIVATE ~
YOU CAN DO
ANYTHING YOU WANT ... ANYTHING!
BRENDA VACCARO '"
r, a-CV"' o ,. i: t ....
George C. Scott
A Fronklln J. Schattner Film
"Islands in the Stream"
"""~""""'
A Oort/Palevsky Production
David Hemmings Giibert Roland
and Claire Dloom
OoMdUpon h -()y )<'H "O<>v0•
Ernest Hemingway Denne Oort Petltclerc ............,°" I> t<.t•d.)f
P.tet Don and Mox Pol•vsky Franklin J. Sc:hoffner
11Jt!~.~ ~ -Jerry Gotdsmlth
STARTS
FRIDAY
MAR CK
18
~nil>'.~~
Cell 642-5678.
Put • few words
lo work tor ou.
"The House by the Lake" also starring DON STR9UD
co-s1arrtng RICHARD AYRES • KYLE EDWAROS ·DON GRAN8ERY
hecullve Proclvcers ANDRE LINK and JOHN OUNNfNO, Produced by !VAN REITMAN
Wrltte" aM 01 reeled by Wlt.L IAM FRUE T • Color PfU11t by MOVIELAB
A REITMAN/Dl.JNNING/LINI( FILM ----------..,
AN AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL '"~LEAS! R RUTllCHO ~ ... ~ .......................... ......
·12·2"1
•1122 m.111
1
,
,,
f''
11BOUND FOR OlQRY•
S'TAARINO DAVID CARRAOINE
CIN AWEST
WUTMhUlaAT•OU> .. WIST
WISTMIH.CIMTll "2-44tl I
Amcord, loe.'of
New~ Beat'h bu U·
DCM.mt11G tt acqut.t U1·
If artr hldmtria lne., •
?'febra1ka·ba1ed
maaufactw'W ot iram
alora•• and ~dllnl
equi~= . W T. Pu.coo IU,
cbalrman and chief ex·
ecutive officer of Am-
cord, said tbe facllity
will be operated by Am-
cor d's Pascoe Steel
Corp. subsidiary.
He aaid that Hy-
M ark's grain bins,
dryers, elevators and
support equipment are
manufactured under the
York name and are used
extensively throughout
the Midwest farm belt.
He noted that farm
building sales have
become one of Pucoe.
Steel's mos t rapid.
growth areas.
ltlagor Visits Japan
Acquired for an un-
disclosed amount or
cash, Hy-Mark will con-
tinue to manufacture
and distnbute products
from its manufacturing
facility in Henderson,
Neb.
Oxnard Mayor Tsujio Kato (left) inspects a liquefied natliral gas
installation of the Tokyo Gas Company near Yokohama, Japan,
with Oxnard councillor Donald H. Miller.
Chevy to Drop Vega?
Amcord, lnc , lists an
nual revenues of more
than $200 million.
ALLEMs
MARCH CLliRAHC!
T .. fiOCi' i V1H
LEASIHG SPICIAUSTS
LEA~ORIUY
4s4'. PICWPS & YAHS
DETROIT (AP) -General Motors
Corp. is considering dropping its sub-
compact Chevrolet Vega al the end of
this model year as part of a major re-
alignment of its small car line. a
publisbedreport said.
However. Ch evrole t General
Manager Robert D . Lund
acknowledged the firm would "con-
solidate the bottom end of our product
hne.
Quoting "inside sources," the
Detroit News said Tuesday that GM
would drop t.M Vega and perhaps its
sister car, the Pontiac. Astre, in 1978.
GM OFFICIALS REFUSED to
comment on the report. A company
spokesman gave lhe standa rd
response to questions about future
models: "We never discuss ourJuture
product plans."
'77 VOLV0242
"'BUT I AM NOT JN a position lo de-
fine right now just what we are going
to do for 1978," he added. "We still
have a lot oft.m's to sell and it would ··
be premature to announce any pro-·
duction changes at this time."
Lund said GM will add a four-door
mod.el to its Chevetle minicar line this
fail and is also looking at the possibili-
ty of a Cbevelte wagon. The Chevette
1s smaller than the Vega
:1-'ull~ Volvo equipped Includes 4 ~ & tmted glcus. OUR
RF.ST BUY' .'16 mQTllh npen end /ta$e. Cap cost -$6340 00;
fles1dual bal<J11Ct' S36SS IW Isl & la.rt months poymettt &
L1cem,. 111 acfoa11t·r. 011 opproa:l'd credu Wt> lt'CUt'oll moJcn
"Got a problem? Then wn te to Pal Dunn. Pat will
cut red tape. getting the amwers and action you need
to solve mequll1es in government and business Mail
your quesllOM to Pat Dunn. At Your Sennce. Orange
Coast Daily Ptlot, P 0 Boz 15'i0. Costa Mesa. CA
92626 As many letters as posstble will be a~red.
but phoned inqwnes or Lett~s not includmg the
reader's full name. address· and bustnt'ss twurs· phone
numbt-r canriol be constdered This cnlumnappears dm-
ly ezcepf Saturdays
s &modei, ·~~H~~'m" MARQUIS '.J23 p/u5tcu V11ho l o\nl.r
~l\01 .\l.1ri:ucr11<-l'I.."), \ll\,1011 ""'I" (71~1 )\ll .:?~RO
ORDER
YOURS
NOW • •
1000
BEAUTIFUL
STICK-ON
LABELS
STYLISH TYPE
ONOOOO
OUALITY WHITE
GUMMED PAPER
• PERSONALIZED
•EASY TO USE
• FOR YOU OR A FRIEND
r-~---~~-~-~-------, Fill In this~. dip Ind mell wfth t1.75 to: I
Pflot PMttna. Llbef Olv.L..... I
Polt Offiee Box 1 &eo • ~ W. 0.V St. I
ea.ta M..., C.llfomla 92e2e I
I
I I
I
I
I
I
I
• 01 Surw10 ..-vourllpciodo i
PILOT PRIN TING I
I
J L~-~-~----~---~--~---J
1
Take f'a~U lnio A~~ouni
DEAR PAT: Speaking for many Public Accoun-
tants in Cahrornia. I lake exception to your item
about the difference between Certified Public Ac-
countants and Public Accountants in tax preparation
quahficallons. You sh.ould have consulted the State •
Board of Accountancy, rather than the National
Society or Public Accountants.
California has the highest standards m the na-.
lion for licensed accountants and cannot be ade-
quately compared to other states. with the excepllon
or tllino1s and New York. Under Caliromia statutes
theCPA and the PA are treated equally. We both are
required to perform UAder the rules promulgated by
the &tale Board of Accountancy.
The CPA and the PA are required to complete 40
hours of continuin& education each year in order to
renew our licenses or permits to practice in this
state. The PA In California came into being by an act
of the legislature inl94S. Licensing or PAS was closed
in the early 1950s.
This means that most Public Accountants in
practice today are mature. experienced pracli-
llontrs. I also would like lo add that the Independent
practitioner in California, whether he b&a CPA or a
PA, engages in the whole field oC accounting
services, including tax preparation.
E .A .• Newport Beach
You are not the on.ly Public Accountant t.o take
exeepf;loa to that A VS Uem ! Maay otber PAs wrote to
pol9t out tbat thetr profeastoa la replated by th&
Board of Accountancy. Tbe IRS tu preparer ac·
curacy ,.rt also was claimed lO be inaccurate by
HnralodterPAI.
It waa not the lateatlon of this eolamn Co down·
irade Pllbllc Aceowataats, llCll"Co Indicate &bat CP Al
or tu preparers are more qnllfted ln the tax pre-
paraticm area. Marjorie Scbwank, npenlaor of die Board or
Attomdury, told A Y8 tba& Pl'ftku lleenalal re.
raJaUoaa req.ared PabUc Acacmtant appllcaata to
have at least two yeU'lt of klgJa tebool edacatlon and
be able to pro'ff won aperlace ID aecoantms. No
examlnatlcm wu reqllin!cl. Sllenld &bat after llceu· Ja& wu eUmlna&ed ID 1'Sf, DO .... public aceou·
tan.ta...,... admf.Ued to &bo procnm, DOT' are P.4.
lkeues m.ecl ta ~r 1taW. lllmored ta Callforala
at &Illa tt.e. SeJnr• added tlaat 1'9Mle ~ are
.,•ea ..-Wc••'«et'aU.lf&lrreJ decWe &ohke &.tao
C.rtUlecl Ptlbllc Accouiut namluU.. PAa are
Wieed • o.e Abjed at a U•~&lld are vea five ~·n Co pa11 &M •Ure aaa eo• to~
tUbll ta.CPA enm wbo an •two• more
mjeda at. Uiie Ud U'e required to pa.a Ute entlre
aam•~,.ean.
Or'• s.ell .............. .
DEAR PAT: My 197t car emits a \lery bad odor
from tbe exhaust plpe. U'a especially noticeable alter I tul'Q otr the Ignition and part the car In tM
1ara1e. Tb dealer claims the sm U lJ duo to tht utal1de «mTertcr on new ctn. ls this truet u ao,
how dD tb1a candttlon be corrected' ~C., Huntia1tqn Beacb J&~ a~bal1o ... maakea.taft..
ed ,, Aft. Tldi Odoc' II u ·~ .rtect0 .t &Ma1'1 . em•s.., ~Al 1_, u ,_an aila1mo-1ed ............ ,...,. ....... ~ •... ..,..
•mellls...U. '
WAIJ1Jl'fOTON (AP> -
limtUj ltodl
AU ...,.. t.bat Am.icau
m.ust blCit. , .. Lba dQ
••• ... out'' and
DO ....... CllD frw.l,y drift u..k
a,utc:l1GM11btJj•
"We look t.o UM olUn>ate ahamtic:J:l ~I.be Clll avppll• that
kHP the t.r&n1p.ortatloo nul·
Dini, .. Adams ukt T\Jeaday In AA
lnterYlew I.a wblcb be 4*t11.Ded
H"¥eral ideas b1a department b
couidstnJ.
THOSE INCLUDE desipinc
autoa with rreater fuel efficieo·
cy, building mass tran1lt
systems that attract people from
cars, designing cities around
mass transit, and developing
electrically powered C&rS\ which
Adams said could become the
"vehicle o( the future.'•
Adams said many of the ideas
will be incorporated into the
comprehensive energy plan
President Carter lnteiids to send
Congre.sa April 20.
He said a m~or goal of the ad·
ministration plan will be to
educate citizens to the fact that
their transportation habits wlll
have to be changed, that some·
day they will be "unable any
longer to use their automobiles·
as they do now."
"JN THE NEXT four to eight
years, we have to basically build
into the United States the idea of
the alternative systems that are
more energy-efficient, that will
be evolving into the system we
will have t.o use when oil and gas
-if they haven't yet run out
completely -will not be cheap
fuels that you can use under your
heating system boiler or you can
use with one person in one
automobile driving to work," the
secretary said.
Adams said educating people
to the change will be difficult
because people are wedded to
their cars and gasoline 1s plen-
tiful and relatively cheap
A .. Wl-.pllOte
Bank Dirtttor?
Shirley Temple Black, the
former child movie star
who served in government
posts under President Ford.
has been nominated for
election to the board of
directors of the Bank of
'California.
Bank Meeting Set
Citizens Bank of Costa MC$a
will bold its fifth annual
shareholders meeting on Thurs
day at 5:15 p.m . in the bank, 2970
Harbor Boulevard, Costa Mesa
0Yer 1'he Counlf•r
NASO UstilKJ'
NISW YOU arr. for ex.am·
pie, w tt around a mu.
tranalt 1yatem; Chlc•&o is
partially mau tran It with a
creat deal of auburban ttalfic,
while Loa Anaelea, which he
called "a terrible problem:• is
dominated by htghwaya and
automobiles.
Fall Rains
Cut Record
Grape Year -
SACRAMENTO CP> -
Wineries in California would
have crushed a record amount ot
grapes last year if it weren't for '
the unusually wet rail, a state
agriculture '>fficial says.
As it was, more than 2.2 million
tons of grapes were crushed for
wine in 1976, an increase of 1.9
percent from the year before, the
state Food and Agriculture
Department said.
MAX CAIN OF the depart-
m ent's agriculture statistics unit
said the unseasonable fall rain
probably cost California a record
year for wine grapes crushed.
"By all rights, if it had been a
normal year, it would hav~ been
a record," Cain said. "The rain
hurt production. especially in the
San Joaquin Valley."
THE RECORD CRUSH was
2.48 million tons in 1973.
Cain said it is too early to pre·
-diet the wine grape production
for 1977, but "I look for a decent
crop. There seems to be enough
w aler in the San Joaquin Valley "
llpw and Doact1•
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n ,., • •• •·' .. · ""-, ,...,, •• •11< t a • '" I..•-• » •v.+""""" ,.. ~ --+ ScUddtr ll :is 1 '" .... ' -·•-+.,,. Bartl 111.60 IS 1 :Ill t •to Cromp .«It 1l 11 .. SW .2/lltlO I,_.• ._ t..eno• I 9 '1 11111-14 °"1Ppf2JIO. 16 2.-.+ "' SNCOnl ts 7 \41 t7\4::·~ U Toi><. l.f017 1' 21~ .....
A Wnmch for Dart?
a, ml.1'01' llOllE<'fWm
A..._ com_pan7 ~ 1lW
1n•tt
D11rt lodutriet ~'Loi AaaeJa b.u ad it.a Raall dnal
opwlllJiaM. ~1 ~ US ranb Lbe bt•IDMf
\lPGD wbk:h lb• eompqy .. hJmided In~
I 8lJSIN ISHOT ASBNTIOJlft'ALAffAI•. but ttwo
tkPGNI ot Ra.all must bav. been som~ kind of wrench for
hlllo Dart. tb.e•yur-old tblrman of the company bnr-
lns hb nupe. For il repteAnta u,. end ol· a trail that 1oes
bacll ~years to b.b daya
U a football IUf at
Northwestern Universi-
ty alEvanJ\on, Ill.
Dart ~ n CBfDpu.5
romance tha.t resulted in
hJs marriage to Buth
Walgreen, daughter of
Money
Tree
drugst.c.e1nagnate Charles R . Walgreen. They were mar-
ried in 1929, the year Dart graduated. And in that same year
be joined the Ch.icag9-t>ased Walgreen drug chain. Dart
began at the bottom and1omehow worked his way to the top.
Thal he was an ableexecutiveisclearfrom the fact that he re-
mained as general m.nager of Walgreen af\er his marriage
ended in divorce in 1B39.
. IN lMl, THQUGH, JUSTIN DART MOVED ON. He left
Chicago and W-.lgreen for Boston and United Dru&. where
he took commend of what was then the largest retail drug
chain in the country.
Dart brought order and direction lo United Drug, then f
loosely organized holding company that included manufac-
turing, franchising and retailing through wholly owned
stores operating under various names; Rexall, Liggett, Owl
and Sontag were some of them .
Dart centralized operations uourtd the Rexall name.
He made Rexall a national advertiser. Then, in 1945, he
moved himself -and the company's headquarters ~to Los
Angeles. The corporate name was changed to Rexall Drug
in 1947.
DAJlT SAID AT THE TIME THAT THE move to
California would benefit the company by exposing it to new
merchandising trends. \Vhile it's true that California. has
been in the forefront or the development of super
drugstores, Dart, once enscooced in Los Angeles. proceeded
to build an entirely differ~t company.
Wheeling and dealing at a furious pace, he bought, sold
and merged companies. He entered chemicals, plaslics,
cosmetics, glass containers and resort development.
One of the key acquisitions, in 1958, was Tupperware,
which does 65 percent of t.Jie $300 million 'Plastic food con-
tainer business.
IN 1986, DART FORMED VANDA Cosmetics to do what
A 'tPn Products does, sell cosmetics door-to-door. In 1968, he
expanded that operation by acquiring another direct seller
of cosmetics, Beauty Counselors.
So the company that began life selling drug items on
Main Street is now selling more than a half a billion dollars
of merchandise a year direcUy to consumers in their homes.
Re.xall was dropped as a corporate name in 1969,
replaced by Dart Industries.
IN 1972. SO COMPANY-OWNED LIGGETT drugstores were sold.
In 1973, 12 company·owned Drug King stores in
Califomi a and Oregon were sold.
In 1976, all of Rexall 's Canadian operations were sold.
And in 1977, the last or the lot went. Rexall's manufac-
turing facilities in St. Louis, its franchise drug djvision and
its contract manufacturing operations were sold. They had
sales of $50 million last year.
Justin Datt heads a company that will do better than
$1.5 billion of business~ yur, none of it under the Rex all name. · ·
·Rally Contifllles
Imo a Third Day
NEW YORK <AP) -The stock market, anticipating
spring and renewed economic recovery, plodded steadily
higher today.
The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials gained 2.99
points to968.00 picking up again after a midday retreat.
Gainers held about a 4·2 lead over losers among New
York Stock Exchange-listed issues.
The blue chip barometer added more than 17 points
Monday and Tuesday.
"I've been very cautious about the market," advised
Alan C. Poole of Laidlaw-Coggeshall Inc .. ''but it looks like
we've seen the worst.''
Dow.lo11e11A v~ra9e11
N<w YOf'k(AP) Flrtal Oow·J~•YM'-\
!.TOCKS Open HI• Low Ctow ~
JO lnO ~HI 971 ~ 91>1 " .... 00+ 7 9' 20 Trn n1.:i. nt.lS 226 1' 718 38 + t 02 1S Utl IOI> fl 107 30 10.. OS 10612 t 0 38 6S Sit< 313 t1tt 316.07 312 •S 31',81 + t.10 tnou' 1,664 IOO Tr en 3'9.200 VIII\ . • ......... . 09 000 6\ Sii< 2,Sll,000
1lmerico11 Leader•
Stork• In Tiie
Spotlight
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VITAL IS WITH V7
HAIR TONIC
KePps h.11r neat
dll day without 1 2 g l!rP,J\e
1 01. •
..... SPONGES
~~s:,~E~~ocus" BINOCULARS
All ....-,.S.
Althin 7135
I r prrl< lr.J1el Jnd ill
•IJ 1360 27 .88
by COSMlTCO
Pr ·I , .ion 11 tnrm 111 ""' ChPd
w1lli oils tor prciblPm hair
Thru 111 oz.
TIJIES
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f'
ALBERTO
r1 HAIR CARE NEEDS
NON-AEROSOL
"V05" 79 Reeular or Unscented C
HAIRSPRAY 8 01. Cl
·i
11Alberto Balsam"
' ,~ SHAMPOO
:-1 ~_J_'.;;i Cleans & condit1ons ggc
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1
~1 w 1 I h n a I u r e s own iA\ .al balsam 15 oz. .~1 ~I ~=!!~~las 88c
\___, 8 oz.
~ ...
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BATTERIES
Power Celts
=~ "U" SIZE 1.19 m Of 2
"C .. Sill 1.29 m Of 2
1 1 J 1.39 0 .. SIZE -~-PAK Of 2
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VERY
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2'h oz.
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Complete ready
to USP
TWIN PACK
6 oz. EACH
KESSLER
WHISKEr.:l.1 0. 9 9
Ill CASE Of TTP05UPHICAL EHOR. MINIMUM FAIR
TUI( m:u ftl I["' mm.
RADIO & TV TUBES 10'% m ,.,c1
"IRONS TONE "
Choose from assorted beautiful patterns!
"GLEEM"
TOOTHPASTE .., ;,if
soz. 53c , ·I TUBE I'-::::>
POOB.
"ROLLING WRITER"
PENS
L1qu1d ink pen with
unique cushioned 5 gc ball tip ASS T
colors EA.
THERMOS "Family Size "
Vacuum Bottle
Holds hot or cotd all day.
night With
convenient bail
:~~~~~ 2 29 OT. SIZE •
''\ ,
~o:as~:~~~:. Smer. h · 10 88 "MATTU ;""-.· ~~:1:.1a1e. 'Soop' 01m r • S£T "HOT WHEELS'' ·i ·
All cars have low·frict1on f'
5. Pl·ece COMPLETER SETS "mag" wheels Made of tough & sturdy die cast 7 9 ff>/'
EONSISTS Of 1 CACH: metal. 119277 C 1 '"'. ••
• Cttllltf EA. •
• S11ar ' Conr • Platter
• Ve1etable lowl
~4.88m
I ~ • Omo __j ORTltO
I I ~~s:. ' BUG . GET~
...... Kills saails 7 C
& uars.
21/z lbs.
ORTHO S-lO·S
House Plant Food49 Balanced formula tor C ,_..........,
all house plants S oz.
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Her sunny personality make~ : -:._1
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FIRST QUALITY
~:x.;g" KNEE HI'S
100% Nylon-one ~Ile lils all
4 PAIR ggc It
ONLY ii
(PAK OF 2 PAIR) l,,
00.0 FIUD "INITIAL"
NECKLACES
Ill CIFT 1om.
9.95 U.
'1JIC. -i=l!lilr:ll!l!mgl •
·1 , JOHNSON'S m
rL'i!illiiili1~.:m..1!!!iU:ifilllllillj . ~ ~~ BABY POWDER
Purest protection
:.~
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A R11lstered P•ar•aclst Is oa . BABY LOTION ~-
dlty tt sem ~ 1 days a well. 1'
8 PllCU Nnll 19. tW.
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The versatile
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SHOP 1 DAYS A WEEK! 9:00 AM JC 9:30 P~ MON .<iftT .. ~.00 AM TO 7:00 PM SUN.
.. ~-~•...,_w...,,....a..__1t,ts.a"4.W1t..
~ .
I
\
PINK LIQUID
"Sweet· Heart"
DmRGOO
___ .. ,_,_
.,. AA . ._.,.._
To •et Utt JR t o t of I m ~ , '\Be raid
iO-lt. T'b«•..,.. r .. thin,.'' ' 4o. 1M ~lh It coeb, lt
does ruter. So tt ••vet tlmt and era. botb ln term• of tlertric
tJ and UW ol tht cook.
"ltfam111a areaayin1 It i• not dobll aAY 1ood, then it means
they are t17ln1 to mah it do
:everytb.ln1.
''Microwaves weren 'l desi11ned
for' that," contenct. Hillary Guild,.
a bome economist, formerly with
Southern California Edison Co.
and ~ in her own consulting
bwiioess in Whittier.
However, she adds, the addi·
tional power controls are helping
meet consumers' expectations.
AN ADVOCATE of
microwaves Cshe is the owner or
two}, Ms. Guild believes other
appliances should be considered
the auxiliaries to microwaves. .
She advises using the other·
equipment to expectite meal pre ..
paration. Use the microwave for
what it does best.
For instance, a food that cooks
or heats quickly conventionally·
might be done that way while the
microwave is utilized for the
longer cooking times, such as en·
trees or baked patatoes Cone hour
conventionally vs. 4 minutes
microwave). .,.
"Jf one o.r my children wants a
•
A penon ....,_to cook wilb her
'-"Y"· too -J like coavcn·
bonal cooldn8. "When you 1ee
somflhln,r bU.mln1 lt obvtoualy ii
overROked. •. md ll tt 'n1ol done,
1t requirea m«t cootln1 thne."
With microwave' eookinf. s he'
aaid, timinl doesn't have to be·
exact. Hit's not qulla dooe a cou-.
pie seconds more will do the job,
she said, and advised it is better
to set the time a litUe under what
cookbooks suggest.
"You ca:-t afford to be stand-
offish with the appliance," she
said. "Tbe nervous cook will be.
checking and turning food every
few minutes, which doesn't free
her to do other things."
Some ovens, Ms. Guild said;
cook so evenly that foods seldom
need turning anyway.
Ms. Guild recommends "using
all of your favorite conventional
recipes." She doubts that there
are any that won't work in the
microwave.
TO CONVERT cooking time,
she suggests finding a recipe in u
microwave cookbook that 1s
similar. "Be sure lo study ingre-
dients. If your favorite calls for
more liquid a little longer cook-
t .
bad~ and
lOm. ll'I
llli. Gu1'4 r
btlb poww wa...,v_
Db mllde produc:ll
ar\d Med 1mtler coottnc. Tbe quesUon of value al.lo en-
ters lnto the declaloa of how to
cook a certain food. For instance,
"dried beans that require slow
cooking over a long period ol
time, nuaht be better done in a
slow or pressure cooker. ''It's
just nice to know you can do it in
a micl'Owave.''
Each yea(' additional features
are added and sometimes
creates confwuon for the con-
sumer.
· Ms.. Guild's evaluation in-
cludes:
-Browner. Doesn't give the
same results as a broiler. You
don't have to have it.
-Power control. At least two
are necessary for good results.
Generally known as High and
Defrost. There is an infinite
number but "I foresee five basic
powers in the future.''
-Stirrer Ian. Most models
have them. Critical in distribut-
ing microwaves.
-Carousel. Moves food and
n ecessary lf there is QO sti.t(er
I
wuttd.
-... "J -...0.11.,rn
th 't ate
X2• thpan,"
-Cawtl)t Wav• cfttU
trom 'l.be top, so lbo hllher th•
C'avity tM l often Cooda nted to
~turned.
Consider types of foods to
be cooked. Parents or inlaata
would need one hi&h enough so a
baby bottle can stand inside.
-Interior. Acrylic recom·
mended. ~:as.ier to clean.
-Tem tue HUOr (com-
monly referred to as a meat
probe}. Eliminates guess work.
It automatically tunis off when
desired deuee is reached.
"I wouldn't be without one and
I wouldn't have one that didn't
buzz.
"A cook needs to know when
meat is done, otherwise without
some kind of warning system it
migbtovercook.''
-Cooka..oks. Indication or lhe
mttnufacturers' commitment to
good, ertjoyable cooking.
Ms. Guild advocates reading
cookbooks thoroughly --"like
you would a novel."
"By the lime you get through
with recipes, hints, menu plan-
ning and charts you shouldn't be
afraid to cook anything with the
microwave."
Start Your DaYWifh a Zap
Start your day the microwave
way with these speedy doings for
'breakfast.
lO·MINUTE
ORANGE BETTY
th cup butter or m argarine
3 cups soft bread cubes (!l
slices)
4 cups orange sections
>,2 cup packed brown s ugar
1 .. teaspoon salt
l teaspoon cinnamon
1 1 teaspoon nutmeg
1 :2 cup chopped walnuts
1 z cup raisins
14 cup orange juice Jn large skillet melt butkr, add
bread cubes and toast. starnng
frequently. until browned lightly.
Set aside. Jn larjlc bowl mix re·
maining mgredienLc;. Place hall
of bread cubes in l 1h quart bak-
ing dish, spoon orange m1xtur~
over, and top with remaining
bread cubes. Cover with waxed
paper. Bake an microwave oven
10 minutes. Serve warm with
yogurt. Yield· 6servings ..
7-MINUTF.
GRAPEFRUIT ELEGANCE
2 grapefruit
1 " cup sour cream. divided
1 o1 cup brown sugar. divided
Cut grapefruit in half Cut
around each section to IOOSo!n
from membrane Place halves an
2·quart baking dish Spread 2
tablespoons sour rrea m over
each half, <:OVl'rin~ surfaec
Sprinkle t•ach half w1lh brown
sugar. Cook in m1crowavl' oven 7
minutes. Sen<' warm. Yal·ld 4
servings.
BRAN Mun·1NS
1 cup wall'r
3 cups all bran cerc~<1l
1 :i cup butter
1' 2 cups sugar
2eggs
212 cups flour
2 leaspoons soda
2 cups buttermilk
Heat water to bolhn&? an l rup
measure. Place bran cereal m
covered storage container. Sttr
an waler until moistened. Add
butter and let stand until sof·
tened. Stir in sugar and eggs,
beat well. Blend in flout. soda
and buttermilk. Mix well. Spoon
into paper baiting cups, filling
half full.
Store remaining batter in
refrigerator for up to 6 weeks, us-
ing as needed. Microwave muf-
fins, uncovered until no doughy
spots remain: 6 muffins -2 min.
15 sec.; 4 muffins -2 min; 2 muf·
fins -1 min. 45 sec.
When batter is refrigerated,
add 15 secs: additional cooking
Wiser Ways
Waste Less
Welcome to another energy crunch.
Once agaJn the American consumer is being asked to bare
down the comforts of winter by turning down thermostats and
wearinglayersof clothmg And hopefully as we becomelessdepen·
dent on wasteful practices, we become more efficient within
ourselves.
Wise homt•makcr:-. nre adopting energy-saving cooking
habits, such as these suggested by several cookware and ap·
pliance manufacturers
• Remove all refrigerated foods for a nteal at one time. When
you've finished preparing your salad, cover it with a paper towel
and put it and leftover ingredients back in at the same lime. This·
wat, you'll have a crisp salad and less energy depletion from re-·
pealed opening and closing of the refrigerator door.
• Completely thaw frozen meats in the refrigerator before-
cooklng. Put thorn in the refrigerator the night before you want to
use them, and be sure to cook them within 24 hours • '
• Always operate refrigerators and freezers at
termperatures no colder than necessary. Ideally, a refrigerator
should be kept al 40 degrees F.; a freezer at zero.
. • Keep refrigerators and freezers full, but not over-stufted so
t.bat air can circulate. Keep frost build-up In freezer to a
minimum. ·
• Run the dishwasher with a full load and ellmlnate tM dry-"
fog cycle. The heat from the water used during the rinse cycle
will leave dishes nearly dry. Remaining dampness can be wiped
off with a towel after dishes have cooled down with tht dish·
washer open. . ·
· • Always use cold waler when operaUnt the garbaft dis-
J>(>sal.
•Repair leaky faucets immediately. tr the hot water la leak-
Jnf, you are paylng for heat and wasted water. One leak per
second can add up to a loss of MO 1allons of water pe:r )'tar.
• · • In cooking, use thermoetaUcally~t.rolled ·portable ap-
i>Uancet auch as alow-cooken and toaster-ovens whenever poat-
.J>le.
• Jn cooking_ on ~~.or.~~ r~e •. chOO!.~ J!~ or gt~~?-
" -.. ·-
tame.
PUFFY CALIFORNIA
OMELET
3 eggs, separated
•1:1 cup mayonnaise
2 tablespoons water .
2 tables poons butter or
marganne
1~ cup finely shredded Ched-
dar cheese
2 tablespoons"green chiles
\.• cup green chile sahia
Beat egg white6 at highest
speed of mixer until sort peaks
form . Add mayonnaise and
wator to egg yolk mixture over
beaten egg whales Fold together
.carefully by hand to make a nuf.
fy evenly mixed batter. Place
butter an 9·m. pie plate.
Microwave on HlGll for 1
minute then swirl butter over
bottom and sides of dish. Careful-
ly pour egg m1slure into pie
plates. Microwave on DEFROST
for 6 to 8 minutes, giving dish 12
turn after 3 minutes. until set but
still glossy on top. Sprinkle
omelet with cheese and ch1les.
Continue cooking ·~ to 1 m111ute
u~t.il cheese as sltghlly melled.
Quickly run spatula around sides
and bottom of dish. Fold 12 of the
omelet over the other half. Genl
ly slide onto serving plate Pour
salsa over omelet 2 servings .
ceramic cookware and use them for coolrin.tand servtna-fewer.
dishes lo wash that way.
• Use nat·boUom pans and with tigbt-fitUne Uds for surf ace·
-cooking. Choose utensils that fit I.he size or the surface ulllt. Jf unit
Is too big for the pan, beat ls wasted.
•Foods cu.t up into~mallOieceuook faster.
•Once lhgredlenta are Uierobled ln one P•Jl or t*>t, try not to
HCt cover to peek; instead coot by Ume.
• The 8ame bolds true when eook.lng in the oven. Heat is lost
when the door lJI opened. afld. more energy ls required for the tem ·
perature to come back up "here it waa.
• Plan met,11 around one-pOt dishes or oven meats. You car.
orten put an entire meal in the ov n at th.f Hin• Uroe and tcm·
perature. For aernple, a tnutloaf d · l atoes • pork •
chops with a nee ~et"ole; te.afood au arattn wltl\ a spfriach sou me. .
· • Wbm bakinf. •rraf'ce QVea rat'kl so tba ·•tJ•ul two items.
'(auoh two cookie ahcet.s> can be cookid .ill tline. n aanr-·yoar eM!'IY, too. It you bah two Ion 91 bread at OhO dme.
Freeze the other loaf for later; or &lva tt to a Irie~ wbo.
doesn't ha.v. the ene.ru to trab. ·
...
For micro .. cooks, regular ovens,
stoves and rotisspries can be
utilized as auxiliaries to
microwave s, wh ich c ut
conventional cooking times
to minutes.
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
BARBARA GIUS-BOWEN, Food Editor
Wednesday. March 16. 1977
Plug-ins
Kill Watts
Ct
A group of home appliance manufacturers has developed an
energy consumption sea~ showing portable appliances using less
than 2 percent of the estimated n<.ltional energy use total.
Energy use estimations were developed for 40 small ap-
pliances, believed by the Assn. of llome Appliance Manufac·
turers lo be encrgy-efflc1C'nl. The table gives average operating
wattages and hours of use per year an addition to estimates or use
by kilowatt hours per year.
The statistics. said a"socialion president Guenther
Baumgart, point out that the national energy problem is not
merely a solution of unplug~mg our electric clocks, which, in·
cidentally use 22 kilowatt hours annually.
The average household energy ball in Orange County iSt
estimated at$750 a year.
Product
Bab)' Food Warmer
Blender
Broile r
Can Opener
Clock
Blanket
Coffeemaker
Brew Cycle
Warm Cycle
Coffeemaker Urn
Brew Cycle
Warm Cycle
Corn Popper
.Curling Iron
Cooker·F.ryer I
Dutch Oven
Egg Cooker
F'ondue/Ch•fing Dish
Fry Pan
Griddle
llair Cfipper
Hair Dryer-set. Bon.
flair Dryer -Hard Bon
Hair Dryer-Hand Held
Hair Setter /Curler
Heating Pad ,
lc«Cream.Freete• •
lee Crusher
Jron
Juicer
"Kettle
Knlle
Kntre Sharpener
Ltthted illrror ·Massaaer-Hand-Held
Mtxer-Hand
Mixer -Stand
Roaster
ROtisserie
Shaver
Shaving Cream
Dispenser
Slow Cooker
Table Range
Table Clot.hes
Washer Tout.er
.Toaster.Oven
(Toasting>
<Oven)
·~oothbru,,h .w aff1e lron I
. Sandwich Grill
Wiriniill.Trax
..
Averaae
Operating
Watlate
165
300
1140
100
25
150
600
80
1200
100
575
40
1200
550
800
1200
1200
JO
400
900
600
3SO
60
130
100
llOO
90
1500
95
40
20
15
RO
150
~~
JS
60·
200
1100
95
1100
1.500
1500'
1.1·
1200 •
140
Est. Hours of
Use/Year
131
3
75
3
8760
2000
150
600.
9·
36
15 so·
35
23
25
135
50
33
75
50
42
39
104
5
5
104
7
50
8
4
108
17
13
10
72
52
30
6
883
l02
42
3S
25
140
8760
~.
~ I'
){WH/
Ye•r
22
0.9
85
0.3
22
150
138
90
48
15
11
4
9
l .6
23
13
9
100
46
0.3
30
45
25
14
3 0.7
0.5
60
0.6
75
0.8'
0.2.
2
0.3
1
2
60
73
0.5
04
139
112
4•
39
93
10
2$
'l
.,
I
Mrs. Martin Lockney
Pisces
Friends Won
-w Fa hion d
W••anw• lNHlltCJt DECORATING?
a-..,~ ..... ,.._ Tl9e
17141 631-0060
-a ~ofuu"' Yi ~ REUPHOLSTERY rl(i
flOM 1'1111 • 10 JHIS
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Cal for Frff Esfftnales * 645-0977 *
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MACARTHUR
Wigs
& BEAUTY SUPPLIES
Ill Mec.Aritllr S.--. ..... o.c. ..,_. lbelllltd StlfftltOlll Hotell
MMAri. t:JM:OO • Set. I 0:00.5:00
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SerYlc•
• W1c!e ,,..(f111ol
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'
THURSDAY, MARCii 17
By SYDNEY OMA RR
AR I ES (Marc h 21·
April 19>: Dreams could
be prophetic You find
way to overcome obsta-
cle. to enlarge horizons,
July 22>: Logjam to pro-schemes. Basic issues
gr ess IB removed. You aremoreimportantnow .--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
can be vers atile, eK· than in recent past.
pressive. Attend social SCORPIO (Oct. 23·
• to enlist <11d of inst.tu·
t1on. organization. Check
refen•nces.
TAl'RUS IApral 20
Ma y 20l lli ghl ight
crt•al1\1ty; s tres s
original approal'h to pro
blerns and pl'oph• Fot•us
on r o rn a 11 l' t' . d l' ~ 1 rt·.
friendship that becomes
1 a mraningrul rcl a·
-llonsh1p
GEMINI ! May 21-.Jun<'
20 >: Prcs t1gt' could ht' on
:· the lane. Trust hunch.
1 Share kno\l.lcdge. Means
i lea rn bv lC«1ch1ng r Professional superior
~ gi vcs \ ou t·hance to
~ make room for ) ourself
at top
-. '
C ANCt:R c June 21·
Wed 80 Years
"It JtCl.s better as we
get older." Ma tti <'
Clevenger say!'I of her KO
years of m arrlaJte to the
Rev. Leon JI. Clevenger .
"l like him. l think a
lot of him. We're just
common people l ike
· everybody else, but we
sure love one another.·•
she said o n the an-
. niversary or their
teenage marriage.
Mrs. Clevenger is 95;
her husband is 97 a nd
was ordained in 1911.
They are residents of Ex·
celsior Sprangs, Mo.
function. Open lines of Nov. 21): Imprint style,
communication. Take perfect techniques, re·
long-range view. ach understanding with
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): a "very special person."
You are involve d ; Message should become
nothing occurs i n crystal-clear Specifical-
lukcwarm fashion. Cycle ly. one c lose to you
indicates all or nothing. makes certain demnnds.
Halfway' measures wi11 SAGITTARIUS CNov.
not suffice. Oig de1-·p and 22 Der 2 1 >: Highlight
strike pay dirt building. security, re la·
VIRGO <Aug 23 Sept t1ons with oldt'r person
'22): Emphasis on de-who h:1s your best in·
c1sion based on r£>renl t t• re sts al heart .
change of pace. scent•ry. 0 r g a n 1 l t' . hr i n g
Ar cent legal mam•u\ t•r. pnonl1t-::. into focus.
cooperative effort. re-CAPRICORN CDcc.
newed vitality in conncc· 22.J Jn t9 i · Experiment.
taonwilhpartncr,mate. find "'·'~s of expressing
LIBRA tSept. 23-0rt. vour-.l•lf.. Rel atives.
22>. Play waiting game. clost• neighbors could
Better ofrer could be figur<' prominently.
forthcom11:ig -key 1s , Short trap m ight be on
quiet conl1~ence .. Stetr agend J ,..., result of
clear of 1nflat1onary telephone call or tele·
gram.
AQt:ARl t.:S CJan .
20-Feb. 18 > Emphasis
on payments. collec-
t 1ons. localing lost
articles, consolidating
r ecent a cq uis itions.
S tr~ss independence
minus arrogance. Im·
print individual touch.
Be a self-starter.
PISCES c Feb. 19·
March 20>: Lunar cycle
1s such that you win
friends. influ~nce peo·
pie. strike chord whlch
brings added reco1niUon
a nd popularity. Make
personal appearances.
If Mattb 17th I• your
birthday you arc a
natural executive, an or-
J.?•nazer, a person capa-
ble of overcoming ad·
vers1ty m order to reach
a goal. You are a
passionate person -
when you believe m a
cause, you are \\1llmJ: to
fig ht for It
TELL YOUR OLD MAM TO SHAPE UP
lfOI MIN ONLY ATI
MA YO IODY COMTIOL CEMTER c• TOIMy ,_ S,-cl .. ..._._, ~
3'61MKA,.._.lt•d.-1e1.111..,_,__75z..51H
NEWPORT llACH
f I
raise funds
for your club,
organization
Hurulr•d• ef
WALL-RfCLINfffS
Just Arrived •m and ~faced .,;
.... ,, .. , ....
.
• .. . • . .. • • ,
• • ......
If Y04ll non profit
dub °' organization
needs to raise Ws coll
~on Center
897-2533 and we
.... 1 Mind you CM'
. Chaity Foir details
• f
WHITES LA·X-90Y
MISSIOM VIEJO
i.ff A..,., P'lrwyl
21192 MCW'C)lleri .. Pky _ ..... ... .. ..... ...
495-5902 __ ._, ...
S"VE22% !
Nylon Trleot
. Codtolir Bra
Regular $1 .93 ea.
2 ·ror$3
Mach1n .. wo1hobl•. White
ortly. 3'2·36.A, 32-388, 34-40C.
So. Coast Plaza
a333 ldtto& St • "'°"•• 54o,;.i333
4 pretty ways to put
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Regular 5499 to s999
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Buena Park
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Choose from pants, skirh, long sleeve
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$t.99-Polyester Pont ..........•.. ft.99
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$7.99 Polyester Pongee Shirt .... :i.99
This Ad Effective Through
Saturday, March 19
Ute Sean Revolving Charge
STOllf HOUltS:
Orange
2100 N. Tustin Av•.
Mo"doy llwll Jndoy
10 AM le 9 '1~
Sohmloy
Phone: 637·2100
t JO AM to 9 ,M
Suftdoy
:12"-tteSPM
I •
J
DEAR ANN ; U... are NID9
qu .. ttcrui for lboM el wbo
worry that we may 1M •bultni
our cblldren:
1. Are you a troubled or
nervous parent who doan 't lmcnf
where to eet help allbou&h you
are aure you need it 1
2. When YQU are ready to blow
up is it you or y~ children who
•
ilf.,.._,..,
I UUJJa1, I ... ~.. _......_,
JI ,_ ._ JOlll'I ll u Ge
p.aNlll dMcribed la ti.. ......
W.DIMM .. la •
w ...... AaoaJ•-'IWl" toll-free a•mbera are; la
Callfornla: (IOO) Ill·'*· Outside Caltforala: (800)
4Jl·O'IS3. -WE LOY& OU&
CHILDREN
DU& LOVE: I u" ,.._.
lalenaadcm alMMI& &Ida ., .. ...
ora~IMJUt ... .. pleued eo ••pia. nut,_ , ...........
Course in lnvestin_g
ISPKU.UlllM
Menu $en$ible ... nDIAFUISS
CASIS
NAJOa MAMUfAClUlrDS
UN.lllM1U
By JUDITH O~ON °' "'° 0•11; l'•lol Sufi Remember lhe stock
markctcra:.h or 1929?
Betty Wuliger does
because 1t cflanged -hel"
lire
.. I saw my fathc•r lose
all his monC'y in the
c·rash." she s~1id "I
learned that money has
to be invested w1s(•ly."
Mrs. Wullgt•r , author
or the new book" Dollars·
and Sen$e," began a
Jirelong quest artt'r that
for security in her own
fmane1aJ life.
"My middle name is
safety," s he kids
The author, who 1s a
regular on the "A M.
Show," has done her
homework well enough
to allow ht'r husband to
retire at 50 and enJOY the
fruit s or tht'ir invest-
ments.
Mrs Wuligl'r said her
husband offered her <i
deal when they \\ere
married afler her col-
lege years. "I'll earn the
money ~nd you invest
1t," he said
.. My kt•v to ~ucct'ss 1s
that I was self t;rn~hl."
Mrs. Wuliger asserted. S. retirement bonds,
during \he final book re· treas ury and agency
view in the Pi Beta 'Phi securities and high-
Celebrity Series. quality municipal and
"I had to sort through corporate bonds.
all the language. All in-These all have a penal·
vesting is shopping. We ty for withdrawal, Mrs.
need to know what Wuliger pointed out
choices we have, what •·These should be saved
questions to ask and how for necessities in the
to compare them.·· future."
S he has broken the She described the
m ysteries of investing courses as "predictable"
down into a three-course inve'stments, asserting
"menu"' which begins that "maybe investing
with the first Course of doesn't have to be a
moneyforday-to-dayex-risky, complicated
penses. business."
These funds shQuld be Dessert is where many
kept m passbook savings an eager investor meets
accounts or in U.S. sav-his Waterloo. The author
lngs bonds and should likened 1t to eating
total two to lhree months sweets on an empty
income, Mrs. Wuliger stomach.
said. "(f you buy on an emp·
Sh e ad,. o c a t cs ty investing stomach 1t
searching for banks with will bring you grief," she
the best interest rates maintained.
and cheapest checking In this cate~ory arc
accounts. pointing out s tocks, options. com
that people will o(ten. moditles. warrants, real
shop judiclously to save. estate a n.d gold and
two cents in the grocery silver coins. Mo ney
store but lose mone)"'1n spent he re should be
the bank. "money )Ou are willing
The Main Course is to risk."
savings certificates, U. Mr s . Wuliger ·s
.
husband, Frank. accom· bought apartrnent units
panied her to the pro· in Cleveland.)
gram and talked about
what his wife's expertise
had done for him.
The most imJ>i)rlant
thing, he said, was that
he ha(j been able to retire
early to enjoy life. They
sold their mattress
''We are able lo live
comfortably without
tension," Wuliger added.
•· Jt 's a comfortable feel·
ing. There is never an
unpaid bill. We pay cash
lor everything."
manufacturing business Mrs. Wuliger wrapped
m Ohio and moved to up the program by advis-
Cal i fomia. ing the women in the au-
" We always put money dience to buy her book.
in our savings account· "It's $8.95 and that's t.ax·
rirsl," he s aid. "And we -deductible," she said.
laUt found real estate. "lt will help you produce
rewarding.'' (They additional income."
Betty Wuliger
can relax,
knowing her
money is safe.
I I
'TIMYWslM
COIOMAD&MAt
HAI. AE8ISOtER
HEARING AIDS
3409 L c-t Hwy.
.C:.-.. M.r-'75-.1133
For quality, selection, service, and
price -· see the Master Dealer.
Nabers Cadillac
2600 tt.rbot Blvd., Colt. Mell 540-9100
HAMS
°"So Good ••• It Wll
,._.. Y~ 'tll It's ~"·
ORDER YOUR EASTER
HONEY BAKED HAM ••• HOW!
Don't wait .•• Order Now •••
Pickup at your Convenience
..-.....ncent
MdtrC .....
::.·· • Ready to Serve with Hoob~rn Spice Glaze ··Spiral Sliced ~ From Top to Bottom • We Package and Ship from Coast to
Coast • Full Service Delicatessen • Imported Cheeses
ORANGE ,_ .. _
14ttl .... T9'tlltA•..,
014) 997-9960
. .
ANAHEIM _...,.c-.
1n11.--.1
lolM114.I
(714) 635·2461
CORONA DEL MAR
l11tLC-tHw,.
U14l. 673·9000
PALM SPllNGS 11111...,.111 ......... -.
IAMCHO MIRAGE
(1J4} 346-3894
Calendar: Seminars, Music lllj • -ARE YOU OVERWEIGHT?
WORKS HOP : Jo~n
F.nri~hl p;1-;t pn·s1tl<'nt
of th(' Ct·st.tlt lnst1lute
t h (' r .I fl I ' I r r II m
R1thmond, ''ill prt's\•nt ;:i
three• hour '"'ork,hnp at
lht> Soul h ('oa!'-l 1'1<11 a
llol<'I bt•g111mn~ at 7 30
pm Tm·sd.t\ M.irch22
lit• \\Ill dt•al
th<'nrt•l 11·;ill\ u ncl l''<
peril'ntt.tllv v.1th thl' 1..,
SU t• !'-0 r a\\ Hr(' n f' SS •
r<"spon,1hil11v and rom
mun1ral1on. and foc us un
t h I' I <, .., ll I' <, O f t h I'
rl'"pnn..,1hlt• ~.l'lf
Enrq,:hl .1 t·l1n1r<il
p~\ 1•holo~1.,I , lt,1.., \\11rkl'cl
v.1lh F11t1 1'1·rl ... :ind
be<•n 111 11111\1•!1 v.1th
S)nanon
L A S O 1, ,\ S
T 0 A ST :\1 J !'I T R E S S
C'LllB: Thl' group v.111
meet JI 7 :JO r m Wt·d
nt'sctay, MJrch 2:1 10 lht•
c o n rt' rt' n <' e r o o m u f
Mt'rntr) Saving~ ,ind
Loan. Huntington Be.ich
B HOA CORINTHIAN
YACHT CLUB: "That 's
E n t c• r t .1 1 n m e n l , · ' a
mus1ral revue tltr<'<'l<'d
by Tom Gleason. will b<'
staged al 9 p m Thur'
day. Friday and Satur
d ay. Mar<'h 2S·26.
Festivtll<'ll will b~gin
at fi JO pm . and·
co<'kluils and dinner will
follow al 8
BEN•:FIT BUFFET:
Th<' Thuri1day La<11u
Circle at Oakwood
Ap<1rtm<'nts. Nl'wport
Bt'ach. will host a benefit
_ ............ .
buffet FTiday, March 25,
1n the clubhouse.
Procee4s will be gl\·en to
Fa1rv1ew State Hospital
to refurbish a c11n1c
room
Professional Women 's
Club.
Mrs . Patricia Clark
was named Woman·of.
lhe-year for her work on
numerous club projects
production of "The Dar-ci. 968·6ll6. TRYING TO LOSE?
AND MOT HAVING AMY LUCK?
THE ULTIMATE WEIGHT LOSS PROGRAM
AS SEEH IH McCALL'S IEST DIETS
LECTURE SERIES:
I nv1tal1on to Actuahza-
t1on Rt•\ ond Wholeness -
From Re<'ommg to Being
will bt' the topiC' of Dr
f"harles Leviton four Fn-
dav <'venm~s at Orange
Coa~l College
ing Dardolases" <or NEWPORT BEACH
"Love Finds Cosmo C. HADASSAH : Steven
Cos mo") as a fine arts Gross. director of the
fund.raising event at 3 Hadassah Zionist Youth
r m Saturday, March Comm1ss1on. Wiil speak
26. at the South Coast on American Jewish
UNIVERSITY OF Repertory, Costa Mt'sa. Youth -A Case of Mi s·
S 0 U T H E R N More mrormat1on is taken Identity, at 11 a .m .
CALIFORNIA: Mem -avallabl<' from Mrs. Monday, March 28, at
hers of the Town and Frank Pearson. 545-5118, the Newport Beach
Gown Junior AU"<tllary or Mrs. Wilham Galluc· Versailles ClubhoUSl'.
The Naturslim Weight Loss Program is a 100% natural way to lose that extra fat
and those unsightly inches. II comes with a special lormuta lood lhat 1s eate"
twice a day in olace of any two meals ol yeur choice Veifi 1nex\mns1ve: only 38
cents '°' a nulahollal meal. Less than the cost of a doug nut an coffee· You'll
actually look forward 10 eating this wonderfully nutritious and great lasllng lood.
a r e p I an n 1 n g a --------------------sc hol a r s h1 p dinnt'r
Your third meat can be any food of ycur choice.
'MOST IMPORTANT. THE NATURSUM WEIGHT LOSS PROGRAM WORKS!
When properly followed, our customers lose an average ol one hall lb. to one lb.
Thl' 'era's v.111 begin al
7 JO p m March :?5 rn the
OCC S<·1ence llall There ,., no char ge
Ll'\ 11011 "ill d1~cu~s
rewriting 11fC' scripts.
nt•t•d ii rat 1f1l·;1t1on and
JHllllllj( lht• V.111 to good
use
ORASGF. COAST Y)f.
dance at 6:30 p.m . Satur -
day. March 26, ut the
BQnaventure Hote l, Los
An~eles.
Proc<'eds will be used
for scholarships for out
standing women s tu
dents at USC.
Jl'NIOR WOMF:N'S
CLUB: The Costa Mesa
i:roup is SJ>i)nsorin1: a
a day!
HaturSlm IS HOW A. V A.IUBLE A. T THE FOLLOWIHG LOC4 TIOHS: . .
MIS4 VUDE rHA•M.ACY TH! ~UILD DlUG
I 61 0 SDrl MICJU~ Coste Mn• H4twporl IHch
·C .. ISTIAMSEH'S PHAlMACY DEAN'S rHAlMACY HEWPOlT CEMnl rHAltMACY r•Hk c-t Hiqll"'f., 390 lest I 7tti Stred ~IHch C--.4ttMw Colla Mn•
Dlstributl'd By MA TVRSUM, DA YVIUE, COMM. 06241
('\: Anrv. lOU~e i\hr·f~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ lnj! OH('r('d l'nhllPd 1\d·
'en tun· .. 1n Attitudes ... / . _ ~ N Oes1~ned lo help part1c1-STATE FARM "V-' Sears e~IT --~Al--· pant" h<"com~ more FRANCIS-•VV•••
pos1llvt' in lheir attitudes A
toward hfe. 1l dl'als w ith ' '> ORR J E • •
such tOpl<'S as e£fective VjCtting
com mun1c at1on s. un-FINE STATIONERY ~ ll <"r'>tanchnJ? people. seH
man a ft e m t• n t and 11n1oi"; l\\1Tn1n'ls rt t
mollvallon INSURANCE Cr.ll'le '"'A"fll"<'V'll"H po rat f'urther informauon is ®
available fr om Ron HEW CltAME b k d
Mnrk11lle at th<' YMCA, FOR IN$URANCE CALL PAPBS ac OllQUn s· 642-9900 ~ DENNIS ROSENE · PHOTORIAMES-b""' •••
NEWPORT HARBOR <410WestCQIStl-fwy. md
BPW: John B Wat:t, vice NewPOrt Beact\ ALIUM$
president and manager 84~70 DISK
cror th~ Wcs tlands Bank. l.llla.,od....... ACCESSORIES
Santa Ana . has been S..Awmladiln.
named Boss-of-the-year ~'-"'--~ b y t h e 8 us in e s s a n d Ho11M Olflc.... llDO,....,,,_,. llflMlw
11111 tllll lllCHU IU-lttl
UUU lfl IU [fttllflll 141Cll&
MacDonald's Pure Maple Syrup
, ,.
U NIOUE, mouthwatering good~s from deep
wnad1an toresn. The txtrtordinary pure maple
flavor makes MacDonald's IS d1fftreqt from ordinary
syru~ as Wlladian ~con is from Ofdlnary bacon.
No additives, no preservatives •••
JUST NATURALLY GOOO ll
A NO don't save MacDonald's just for brul<fnt.
Turn lunch and dinner into real treats, too. Try
MacDonald's Pure Maple Syn1p as • th1cll &l•ie on
juicy hams and meats. Or edd a dPlightful !'lew flavor
to stuming vllgetablts, e'f)et1allv carrots, p;,r$OIPJ
and sweet po1a1oes.
It's equally dellc10U$ on let cream, custard and des-
mts .•• and '° meny other things. .
MecDonald'~ .... tistes as good as 1t 1s ••. naturally I
Cr11111y, 011e'-. Clllella
~~@ ~ :fr1 '
·pleasing prices; too!
8~10 col~ ·99~ photograph """".-.. .,..;
l99JN~~°¥AL 249 .uc;~ 299A~~~~g:~~LY
Now dlow roar f8"111k9 ,,_ ._. co&edlcle of No appointment oe~. A~itfonal portraits avail·
colorN, new nrbo•11 ... lMc:qaowcll -nr-able at reasonable price&. One offer per individual
..,,., fall. lprhas • .. _. ... aubject or group. Two offers per family.
l~~ J;P1cnJRWND"' HERE TillS WEFKOOl.YI
PhOtogr~• f.:l,.: Weetcdav.-10 A.M. until one hour Pff0t to •tort oJol'no SaturdlY -10 A.M.-5 P.M. Sunday
StOt9 os>tnlng until on.hour prior to ctoelng PIHOTOGAAPHl$A'9 LUNCH HOUR IN ALL STORES: 2-3 P.M.
·Av•llable et th• following S•ar• Stores through Sunday, Mar8h 20
Alh•ft'.lbr• El Monte Northrtdge Santa Fe Sprfnga
Bueu Perk-~ Otympc a Soto S•nta Monica Can~ P.t tfo~waod Orange South Coast Plata
Canon t"gleWOOd Paaadefta Tonance Ce~ LagUM.... ~ Valley
Co -WOOd Long~ PuenteHIU. WHtmlnater .Covina ' Pico
' •Jlf· lcln 1t1 •1 . W.tlJ:illOaJ t.-•••W•t 1 ~ tll•
1 ~aaaed 1ucll&riD iD ,,..,~
t.owl.
Amoa1 ot er lo•· nlorie~Wldtr
• t u d y a r • dlhrctrocbalona, made
FROM THE FREEZER
Lenten Meals Light
H ere a r e t hr ee
quickies from the freezer
fo r Le nte n season.
Frozen, boneless sole
Jillets, (or other white
'.fis h > sau ce u p w e ll
-Creole-style, in cheesey.
.. devi led " b ake o r
tomato-based chowde r.
BAKED FISH
.. CREOLE" -STYLE
1 cup rice, cooked
1 can (1 p ound)
tomatoes -
1 cup water
1 , cu p f i n e l y
chopped green pepper
• 2 tablespoons lemon
juice
· 1 envelope ( 1 1 ~
'o un ces) S loppy Joe
seasoning mix
' 1·1'2 to 2 pounds
frozen sole or nounder
fillets
Salt and pepper
Paprika, if desired
C om b in e ri ce.
tomatoes. water, er een
pepper. lemon Juice, and
contents of seasoning
mix envelope in shallow
c asserole. Season fish
w ith salt and pepper ;
roll up, pinwheel st yle, ·
and arrange on top of
rice mixture. Spri nkle .
w ith paprika . Bake at 400
d egrees F. for 20 to 25
m inutes, until fish fl akes
easily when pierced with
a fork. Makes 4 to 6 ser v·
in gs
DEVILED BAKED
FISH
'• cup chopped onion 1, cup chopped
green pepper
2 tablespoons but ter or margarine
I cup sort bread
crumbs
12 cup s hred ded
~eddar cheese
:. 1 .. cup mayonnaise
2 tablespoons pre·
~ared mustard
• l ·l '-, to 2 pounds
frozen fish fillets
~ Salt and pepper
• Cook green pepper and
onion i n bulte r 5
minutes Stir in bread
crumb!., ehcesl'. mayon
njiise, and mustard \r
range hsh m butlered
!.hallow baking dish .
!\Uson with sail and pep
~r . Spoon crumb max
hlre on top of rish. Bake
~t 350 deerees F for 20·30
itinutes, until fish n akes
easily when pierced wlth
•fork. Makes 4 to 8 serv·
logs.
2 10-ounce cans co.;-du~e heat immediately
densed tomato bisque or-ancl simmer ~fl minutes.
lomatosoup With fork, gently break
11 leaapqon s ugar fisb..int.o bite size pieces.
Place block of frozen Stirin soup and sugar.
fi s h fillets in 10 inch Cover and simmer
s k i 11 e t o r l a r g e over low heat 3-4 minutes
saucepan. Add water, until soup i s heated
bay leaf, onion, salt and t h o r o u g h l y a n d
mixed vegetables. Cov-vegetables are tender.
er, bring to boil, then re-Makes 4 serving.a.
Veggies Take
To Molasses
Natural. unsulphured molasses is a flavorful
sweetener and color enhancer when used in such
piquant vegetable dishes as Gingery Carrots.
Jlawaifan Beets and Dutch Red Ca bbage.
These vegetables are dynamite wilh ham or
pork. a hearty pot roa st. or cold for lunch
alongside a sandwich.
GINGERY CARROTS
6 large carrots
1 cup ginger ale
2 tsp. unsulphured molasses
1 clove garlic or dash of garlic powder
2 Tsbsp. butter or maf&a rine
Minced parsley
Salt and Pepper
Scrub carrots and sJtce into one-inch pieces.
Cook just until t ender-crisp in a covered
saucepan with ginger ale, molasses, garlic or
garlic powder, and butter. Sprinkle Wlth mmced
parsley and salt and pepper <prerefabl> white
pepper) before servina. Yield· 4-5 servings.
HAWAIIAN BEETS
WITH PINEAPPELE
2 cans (16-ounce) small whole beets
l can (20-ounce) pineapple chunks
1 tablespoon unsulphured molasses
l tabl~~stul.!h
1. 1 ted!tpoon salt
Dr ain beets and plneappl~ separately.
Measure pineapple juice to equal l cup (Ir less
than 1 cup. add beet juice to make that amount).
Combine pineapple juice. molasses. cornstarch,
and salt m saucepan. Cook over medlum heat un·
lll :.a~e thickens and turns clear.
Add beats and heat until beets are hot . J ust
~fore serving, add pineapple chunks a nd warm
for 2·3 minutes. Yield: 8 servings.
DUTCH RED CABBAGE
t medium head red cabbage
2 tablespoons chopped onion
2 cookin1t apples
2 uable5poonS 011 or bacon fat.
, cup vinegar
l cup water
3 tablespoons unsqlphured molasses
:l tablespoons sugar
h teupoons salt
Remove outer leaves from cabbaae and shred
1t fine (approidmately 2 quarts). Chop uopared
apples. Heat oU or fat in large pan; saute onion.
Toss cabbaie in fat-onion mixture, then add re-
m ainlna iDIJ'edienta. Cover pan and atHm on r .
low beat unUl cabbage is tender <about 30
minutes). Stir occasionally to prevent sticking.
~ P E E D Y S 0 L E Yield: 6-SHl'Vinp.
But doll't tuab off to
the 1upennarket, yet .
It'll be yean before tbey
1ettb.-e.
Consider Hae fat·
figbtin& poteotlal of tbe
Serendipity berry, 2,000
limes sweeter than sug-
ar . OrtbeKatemse fruit:
one~ ot tts es-
sence would nreeten
4,000 eupa ~coffee.
Both have been boa·
ins around the West.
African Juncles sweet.eo-
inl 19cal people's foods
for ceot.uties. Now
laboratory researchers
and martetin1 men in
Britain are ebectlog
their safety and their
commercial future.
Other scientists have
found ways of making
su1ar sweeter by tinker-
ing with its molecular
s tructure. The r esult:
the forerunner of a sugar
y ou could use by the
grain instead of. the
spoonful and avoid sac·
cbarin 's aftertaste.
Dr. Wilson Nicol,
general manager for de-
velopment of Britain's
giant Tate and L yle Ltd.
sugar company, said he
personally agrees with a
number of other British
scientists that America·
"was a bit buty" in ban-
nin& saccharin before an
Doff on
Sale.
PrelL
N MUDf9mftWD., MAI. H, n.9 nu., ua.n.1m
::t~
• MARKET BASKET HAS IEEll A .,,. PRICED LEADER SlllCI lllTIODUCl118
RED-X PRICES Ill 1914. WE I TEND 16 STAY THAT WAY. MARKET
BASKET DOES llOT lllTEllD YO BE UNDERSOLD 011 AllY EYEIYDA Y LOW PRICE.
NEW LOW -· ,~-
MILK PRICES
JEISEYMAID HOMMElllZED ·MILK
H U • • U~WNI
26
• CROWDER ~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~
1 1-pound package
froaen aole ftlleta
l "4 cupe water
, lbaylear
~\ Ullce onion
• "4 teupoon salt ,, 1 10.ounce peckage
frozen mixed ve1etat>les
'
·.
Ra,phs
Lowers
Milk Prices ·
up to 5c
a gallon
Ralphs Is determined
you won't pay a lower
everyday price on milk*
Ralphs • g:~~n 64 Vitamin D •
Homogenized 126 Milk gallon
Ralphs half 63 gal.• _ Low Fat
I· Milk .J24
r
•Ralphs 11 dtttrm1ned to nevtt llno-ullfly
M undttaold on milk '" lht Lot .....
Orangt Counly arta Tnll offer 119pl1e1 10
the everyd1y regular non~eat11cled prtc• ol
theM com.,.111or• Albettaone, Alph1 Beta.
F1110'1 Luc;ky, Mtrktl 811ket. S1lew1y or
Vons P"ot tdlttttiMd or ln·SIOft SpK1al1)
Appl1111 lo Erlra Rich, HOl'llOftlllHd
V1lam1n 0 Lowf1I and Nonfat fresh lfttlk
\..
,.
Top Sirloin
Steak
88
Any USDA Choice soc Boneless 31!;8,°'
Beef Roast OFF
Llmll o........., 0ne Coupon..., c""°"* with coupon
Coupon Ellcllft Mardi 17 llw Mlrdl 2S, 1tn .
·suPER COUPON
Round Bone
Roast
Any Slit Package
Ground
. Beef
USDA Choice Beet • Golde• Premium Meats Pantry Fiiiers Fresh Produce
rtll7:&:c;Roast ~~ .79 mlls~•st~~k ~~ 169 ~ H~~f!;iC;tchup 1 ~t~.z .• 39~M;~rinOraoges ~:~ .19
mil sh:teRib;'Ck ~:.r • 79 ill ~~t,' Roast ~:~ 1°9 ~ T~~··;:;;~olors ~~~1•1 • 79 ~p~;;;;ed Rose ~:~ .19
E c~t; Steak ~r 1 6~-t.;~;; Chops ~:~ 189 ~ c~~OCNii~;orted Layer 1 ~1~g~z .• 59 O v;l~cia Oranges ~:~ .19
E st:k·T~i~·~ r:r 149 D l1r~;;r Ch~k package) r:.r 119 ~ i=:r5;;age Bags 2:k~~· .4 7 Health & Beauty Aids
L] PPoorkrk Sh0Ru1
088
der t 7 9 ~ Armour St•Orade A '1ozen U Cori'te Creamer 16 oz. 119 ~ Barbaaol-Regular or Menthol r::~ • ~Hen Ttrtey . ~:~ .55 ~ Cremora 1ar ~Aero Shave Cream 1~a0nz .• 49 [ I PPoorkrk Shosultde•'ak per 12• D Sated Size per 249 ~ BC>fden's-Orange 32 oz. 159 ~Sate ~·y-Roll on. 79
- tb. COOked Shrimp 1b. ·~ Breakfast Drink 1ar ~Anti Persparant 2b~1~·.
Dell Foods .. FrNM Foods ~ ~:'c~~ 21oz. 35 ~ereck-Norma1,oryorOily 7oz 99
van dt Kamp 1 i ~ fU" pkg. • ~Golden Shampoo btl. •
D C
Ralheddarph•·Aged 1 Year-Extra Sharp 10 oz. 33 D Caned• Dry 28 oz. 32 0 Faat Coatlng~Uon ~:~ 198 Macaroni & Cheese pkg. • Gingerale bt1. • ~ Pepto BISmol' 1 ~1~.z. 131
L ~ Beef()( P11traml ~ r=utar or Pink 12 oz. 45 0 Party Mix 8'' oz 45 L ~Saft D1y-Solld ~ Leo's Chip Meats !:;: .45 ~ Jtno·a·Thiek Crust can • r£J Ralphs Pretzels p~g... IY_J Anti Perspirant. 1:t·i::·. 79
D Bordtn'1 &1tcea 31b. 411 Cheese Pizza 17oz. 1as 0 Ptanters 12oz. 99 Bafca,rv American Cheese pkg. pkg. ~ Cocktail Peanuts I can • • ,
0 'Leo'Llon'~s"1c• h1·p Beef s oz. 71 \Home "'N Leisure ~ 0••-.onte 30 oz. 57 ~Ralph•·Crac~td Wheat or ~ pkg. • U Roller writer-Black, Blu• °'Red 69 ~ f Nit qocktall can • ~B\Jttermdk Bread
D KH'!'...~loFrna~~ksoekl or 12 01. 1 '3 ~ Pentel Pens n uoldtn Cream •tr'• 17 oz. 3 '1 ~81lpht.-Dtllclou• ~"" ...... chub C'-M,rom-t"Squ.rt~Olth.1'r 0t. each • . ~Del Monte Corn can for ~Hot Cross Buns
D R1lp"9 Danl•h "S b .. ~ Oblof19 81111119 Oltll, 1 Qt. tOYtftd Catten>lt Dlth ~ Del Monte 17 oz. 36. ~Ralph•· With Sttamt Seed• • • vtn o per 205 or 32 oz Mt1wrtnf Cup 141 C ned Pe SWISS Cheese lb. Pyrex Bakeware Heh • an as can • Hamburger Buns '
Pricel Effectf'te March 17 thru March 23, 1977
Wt ......-V. the right to ftmft Of rtfuM uln to
comnwtcltl deatir4 « wholeellen.
Copy11gfll 1977 b~ i.e1ph1 Crocttr Company
All A19h11 At1tntd
WO SAN MIGtll, NEWPORT HllS
24oz. 59
1 loaf •
:~~· .85·
pkg. 49 ofl a
JIO f. 17th St., COSTA MESA lltM IRVUE, TUSTIN, NEWPORT & llVlHf 8&.VD. 9901 ADAMS avo., turnNGTON IEAOt 1$C11 S. ~. WESTMINSTER
2A1'7,ASEO Df VAl..EHCIA, l.AGUNA HIU.S 1726117th ST., TUSTIN
/
'
401 N. LOARA. ANNllM 69'2 WARNER, tUfTIHGTON 8lAOt STCll HOURS: 9-10 Daly, 9-9..,
I .. I ·,
__.__ --~~ -----=------=-----=~-=----= ~ ------=-------....__ -------
•• 'm
FOOD STAMPS
Mor e Money,
~
t
• .. Jher.t Wh ci~? .
' "' a1BaJANB., G
WASHINGTON CAP) -This
could be tbe tblrd straitbt )'ear of
wondertns what will happen to
food atamP1 fw the more than
five million families dependent
on the program for half their
aroceries
Agriculture Secretary Bob
Bergland told the Senate
Aar1culture Committee that "1t
is imperative that this Congress
act soon on food-stamp reform."
Later, he srud, ··congress 1s go-
ing to act ··
· But some administration and
congressional observers doubt
any changei will be made m the
program this year.
ALL OBSERVERS agree that
the cost of the program will ti11e.
an increase attributable to th.is
winter's economic bardsbips.
The House Agriculture Com-
m illee has begun hearings on the
food stamp and other maJor
Agriculture Department pro-
grams that expire Sept. 30. The
Senate Agriculture Committee
has scheduled 16 days of such
'hearings
A key House staff member and
others report growing sentiment
to simply extend the Jaw govern
ing the program for a year and
wait for the Carter administra-
tion's welfare-reform proposals.
But it's doubtful any changes
proposed by the administration
could be enacted into law before
the summer of 1978.
The secretary has cancelled
Ford-administration regulations
that would have cut benefits to
some 2.6 million families and in·
creased them for about two
million families. The regula
lions, which had been blocked by
court action, would bave fun·
damentally changed tbe pro·
gram ·s standards without con-
gressional action.
T HE CLAMOR for reform then
evaporated as the economy im-
proved and the nvmbers or
families receiving food stamp
bene fits declined. Almost a
million families have quit receiv·
ing food stamps since April 1975.
when 6.31 million received the
benefits, the largest number m
the history of the program.
About 17.2 million persons to-
day receive food s tamps, Marly
eight mHl.Jon less than 25 m11L10n
ELEGANT, EA S Y
tbe J'ord admla11lratloo oan
predJct.ed.
Tbe coet to tupayeta bi tile
laa\ flSCal yeu-·~ SS.3 billion
for beMftta and $tOO million for
administration -about baU the
total Agriculture Department
budget.
Because food prices haven't
risen enough lo tngger In-
creases, the monthly allotments
ror families haven 'l changed in
more than a year and aren't ex·
pected to change this year.
The Congressional Budget Of-
fice estimated this year's costs at
$5.S billion, plus $300 million for
slate and local admlnistration.
But the estimate was made
before the severe wlnter disrupt-
ed tbe economy. ll also was
based on an unemployment rate
averaging 6.4 percent. compared
to the 1976 average of 7. 7 percent.
FAMIUES RECEIVING food
stamps and concerned taxpayers
will have a better Idea by this
May whether Congress is going
to make substantive changes in
the program thjs year. May is the
deadline for committee action on
any changes. Congressional and
USDA experts estimate it will
take two years after enactment
for any revised progr<lm to b'?
fully felt at the nei~hborhood
level.
The average fam1lv receiving
stamps, various studies have
found, contains three persons
and has a gross monthly income
of $298. In almost two-thirds of
the cases, the family is headed
by a woman. Only 3.9 percent of
the households are headed by stu-
dents.
About 9 percent of the families
have incomes at least 25 percent
above the poverty line. For a
family of three, the poverty line
1s $479 a monlh.
Only 6 percent of those getting
stamps were 65 years or older.
The stamps are sold to eligible
families for cash and ure re-
decrnable for food at grocery
stores for an amount greater
than their purchase price For
example, a stamp cost1n~ a reci-
pient 48 cents might purchase Sl
worth of food.
The average deductJon 1s $93 a
month, but 17 percent of the food
s tamp recipients have none,
USDA studJes found.
Salmon Takes to Pie
By CECILY BROWNSTONE
A-••lff P_1,_E•ttw
One of the best ways we knCJw
to stretch a small can of salmon
is to use 1t In a pie that m akes a
lovely main dish for lunch or s up
per. ~
l''or s upp1.•r. ) ou might hkc lo
accompany it with a steamed
~rel'n vegetable and crisp cole
slaw
Ont' raution be sure lo folio...,
our directions and let the p1t!
''Mt .. bdorc cutting so you C'.in
remoH' .... edges neatly. Aner "'<'
took tht• PH' out of the oven. "l'
put 1t on a counter nl'ar the
ranJ:e. <'Vt•n after a half hour
wait. 1t was hot enough to be l'n
JOyablt•
SALMON PIE
M ~1q.~arine Pastry
7.1, ounct• san salmon
1\1 al k
:J l.1hle~pnons butter ur
Food
Costs Cut
WASffiNGTON CAP) -New
government figures show that
Americans spent a little less of
th&lr paychecks to eat and smoke
last year than they did the year
before
Food spending. i n~luding
meals eaten out as well as at
home. was about $198 7 billion or
16.8 percent of the e~tlmated dis-
posable income of Americans. In
1975. the food bill was $190. l
bllllon, 17.1 percent or their lotaJ
take· home pay.
The figures were published ln
two rep(>rt.s by the Agriculture
l)epartment. ·
Spending on cigaretlert and
other tobacco last year was near-
ly $16.5 billion, equal to 1.39 per-~nt o( disposable income. In
1975, Americans spent alighUy
ltsa than $1.S.7 billion on toba~o.
1.44 percent or thelr take-home
pay.
Officials said that both food
and tobacco expenditures pro-
~ bly will rise again in 1971
because of expected higher
prices and some increase in food
and tobacco consumptlob.
Lookln1 at lut year's food
apending, the USDA said tbat
about 1150 billlon or lbrH·f'burt.hs
of the «it.al was spent on food to
eat at home and nearly $50 billion-
at restaurants al\(I ot.htr outside.
atablishmenta. \
I
marganne
per
1 , cup finely diced celery
1 • cup l mely diced grc·en pep·
1 green onion. thtnly shced
3 tablt-spoons rtour
" .. teaspoon salt
J_. teaspoon dried dill
2 tablespoons medium or dr)
sherry
1'2 cup grated cheddar cheese
4 hard-cooked egg'I, cubed
Dash cayenne
Make ~P and r nll out tht•
Margarine Pastry acC'ordmg tn
the dirttllons below
Drain salm()fl, r<''>crving h
quid; add enough milk to the h·
quid to mak(' 11 2 cups. Break
~almon into chunk.., ln a J •,,,
quart saucepan melt the butter.
add tht> cek>ry. grN·n p<•ppt•r and
green onion and cook ~t·ntly until
tf'nder; stir in the flour. s alt and
dill Gradually <;l1r tn thP milk
0\'Cr moderately low heat, '>llr
ring constantlv. C'ook until
thickened Orf heat ~t1r tn the
s herry and cheese. then the eggs
and salmon.
Pour into the pastry lined 9·
inch pie plate; trim dough ·~
Inch beyond the rim of the pie
plate. Cover with the top pastry.
F'old and roll top edge under
lower edge, pre:o.slng on nm to
seal: Dute.
Covet edge with a 2-to 3-inch
!ltrip of foil to prevent excessive
browning. With a fork, prick
pastry top in about a dozen
places. Bake in""'e., preheated
425-degree oven lor 30 minutes.
Remove the foil band Let stand
20 to ~ minutes so filling sets;
otherwise it will be too runny
when the pie 1$ sliced.
Mt\llGARINE fASTRY
lo a medium mixing bowl stir
toeelher 2 cups flour and li4 teas·
poon salL With a pastry blender,
cut in % cup margarine until
parUcles are fine. Sprinkle about
3 tablespoons of cold water over
the mixture and a.s you do ao, t06S
well with a fork to blend. ..
With your bands, flrll))y press
together into a ball; work wtt.b
your hands, if necessary. to have
It hold together. Dl•ide in.half.
Tum out the larger portjon on·
to a · prepared pastry cloth and
flatten slightly; with a stoeklnet·
covered rolling pln. roll out to a
12-lnch round. Fit loosely into a
9-lncb pie plate. Roll out the re-
mai.nlnc portion to an ll·inch
round; ti necess..ry. trim lbe
ed1e; after the mun, bu been
added' to the pastry-lined pie
plal*. pse tb1s portion for the'tOp
cnnt. Serves 6.
•
•
ID.NS
TOMATO
-~tfil··1·oc
-nw.-11
~,
BEEF CHUCKB~DE • • f BAR ~ EASTERN WHOLE
PORK LOINS CHUCJ(·
STEAKS 69~. ~~=R ·~~
FRESH GROUND FARMER JOHH l~. 59~. WIENERS89! -BEEF
SHORT RIBS 49~.
WISCONSIN MONTEREY
IOl'S BLEU CHEESE
DRESSING
BARM
BONED 'N ROLLED
HAM WI..:.~~-'' 79c IC-~ r ,,,.c_
-'""---·/l
JACK
'CHEESE
1.39LI AMY
SIZE
CHUNK 2.39~
98~. I.AR M IULK SLICED
BOLOGNA
HOR.MB. SMOKED KAHMS IAVARIAH
COCA-TAB or 80Z.99c BETTY CROCKER 49c
ell.A · auca :r. . . r:::r!~~VORS
AMERICAN BEAUTY 4 s1 SPRINGFIELD IMITATION •• c NOODLES ~ .MAYONNAISE
8 0%. PKG. . . FULL 9UART
Dniiib1 s119 DiTEiGENTSHINz.9c
GIANT SIZE BOX GIANT SIZE •
DELMONTE 45 c SPRINGFIELD GRADE A A
10MA10 JU1c1 . aunER . LI.
46 0%. CAM
KERMS WHOLE PEELED
TOMATOES
2'12 CAM
KERNS STRAWBERRY
PRESERVES
· 11 oz: JAR
DEL MONTE ZUCCHINI .SGl"IB
PIMATA REAL
IORHLLA 41/J oz.
TUii
CAM
CH•S AL1.FLAVOIS
c
c
• ulfa 1n Pork
W f APt -
~ we U'Mel ol 1uUa dru &re ...... qp1 dea&l,..c.a ot tM aadiml.. pork. .
llamt IDd potk cbop9, IOf·
era -eqier ta .. , cumumen hne •call for al .
The ApieulblN Dep~
wblcb moattcn c cal 19idoe
level.I In pork_ and ~ meat.
•aJd that la tbe lilt tJaree mOlllb9
of ltTa IOIDe 52 cu" of exceulve
1ulta wen detected amons 571
ho1 earcuaes tested al packina
plant.I.
AccardJnc to federal regula-
tions, the maximum for aulfa in
pork is one-tenth of one part per
million. The 52 violations ex-
ceeded that amount, with 10 or
them havine more than three
part& per mllllon, a spokesman
said.
Despite the excuaive sulfa -
used by farmers for many years
to stimulate the growth of bogs
and to guard agalnst disease
USDA and Food and Drug Ad·
ministration officials have said
repeatedly that the levels are
Drum . Roll
tr rD I
The ol alJond I.a meat~~ Pood l Pfu Adm w~ t.u USDA
ia reapooatbl• for lupectJni.
meat for 111 .. al trac.e.
Althouch experll ba•e
dec:ttned to speculate at what
Jen.la sulfa in pork ml•bl be
harmful, the rule of thumb
fo,mula auaesta It would have
to rise to at least 200 parta per
million. ·
The USDA and at.ate health
authorities have been workin1
with ho1 producer 1roup1 to
educate farmers about the pro-
blem and have been encouragine
them to withdraw druca trotn
animals in plenty of time before
marketing so that sulfa can be
eliminated naturally.
Sulfas in bogs concentrate
most heavily in the kidneys and
livers, the USDA spokesman
said.
Magnified
Blender
Dress
Easy
Salad dresaings made at bome
can be real money savera. Ideal
whirred in a blender to a
whipped, smooth -consistency
dreaalngs can feature a variety of
flavors ; and choosin& an oil for a
base is an import.ant parf. ol mak-
ing them comethrouah.
Olive oil is poputply used in
the Mediterranean countries;
partly because much of the
world's supplies are imported
from Spain and partly because
it's totally natural and delicate in
flavor. ·
Like the oil, this salad dressing
is-a natural :
VEGETABLE DRESSING
1 carrot, cut in pieces
1 onion, quartered
1 stalk celery, cut in pieces .
l ~up parsley sprigs
l clove garlic
l t.upoon salt
1 teaspoon dry mustard
IA teaspoon pepper
2 tablespoons vinegar
.l.ell------l cup Spanish olive oil
Place all ingredients except
olive oil ln an electric blender.
Cover. Turn blender on and then
off rapidly until vegetables are
pureed. Tum to high speed and
gradually add olive oil. Chill
several hours or overnight before
servine. Makes 2 cups .
Production has been ste,ped-up at Sherwin William ·~
plant in Cincinnati w here drums full of saccharin a re
being t r a n sported fo r distri bution n a tionwide
l\t a r k<.•ts around the.• <'<>untry have reported heavy runs
on t he a r t1 fidal sweete n er a nd svn t h eticallv·
sweetened product!> since the FDA proposed to effect a
ban on the m this sum mer
Only t!M D•lly Pilot rHlly tella
ycy wtlat'a new In your loc•I
community •.. .wry d~
"Bran cereals will
never taste. this good!"
L
Hot~ dellcloua waffles for breakfast! Good-ta1tln1
and aood tor you, too. Because they're loaded
with bun, a natural fooo fiber. And many
Americans may not be cettin& enouah fiber In
thelrdleb.
..
New Bran Waffle• from Downyftake. A mar·
veloua way to aave your famlly food fiber
and • delicious not breakfaat, all at the
same time.
. . .
• nceapal1
newmlkpnce.
-lo tecei.'t yov• fret holf 9q_Mon ,.,.lk coypon, •fl'nd f-o ptoof o f purtho•" ,,.olt from ony ] paUogit• gf Hydro• $ondw1c;h Coo"'''• ll 01 0' '9 or.
plul one proof of P'-"<ho•• •••• frOM N.,,,, 0111~ t.hocolo•• rto1ror. '1 lb. t1JI, to: .. ,.f' M1Mt ou.,, , 0 lo,. 886. YO\lf'l9 .Am1H•<o. MtM•.o•o l)J99
&.<~ yovr "'°"''' oddreu o"d t•P c.dt. U"'lt1 Ort• '''Ul'ld per fom~y .Altow 4 to 6 ....... ,i., lot tlel•••') Offer •O•d wht'" proh1b1led, to••d or '"''"<led
by low 011 •• UP""' ,.,... 30, 1977 Th Nul14 CoMpony, Inc . 100 lioo ... n9dol• Rood w~ ... "o•nt. N y 1000,
ON A ·RICHER·
TASTING CUP
OF COFFEE.
~~---~~--~-----~~-~~--------~---~~--------
I /)
l
...
-I
" CRA&MOIR
..:SODA POP i
• 4:~,I~
I
r ~
-----=-----~----==-----~ ~ -----------
CGnl&E ~·
CHEESE *
, luceml 59c
... ~ ..... ,. Pill
carton
SALADOIL ~
WESSON•
,~, ... '°'~·79
"
1 24-oz • c--Bottle
DEL MONTE CANNED FOOD BUYS!
MONTEREY JACK
CHEESE .
• Golden Com 17-U. er... styteer_..._.
• Earty Garden Peas
T.., AaU..C 17«.
• Green Beans Whole • 11-oz.
• Green Beans
S.Uoned or llaltln • 16-o;.
• Peas And Carrots
, lletldeel • 16-oz.
' • Zucchini Squash
Italian• 16·oz.
fruit Cocktail
. 11endld fndts 11-oz.39c Can
• Cut Green Beans
16-ounce Can
• French Green Beans
· 16-ounce can
• Green leans
ff'tlldl S1ytl If....,..,. •-oz.
• SllCld Carrots
I Y..ez.Cln
• Cream Style Com
•v.·oL can
• Whole Kernel Com
l~•-.Z. CM
•Green Peas
Tdhcltr And SWHI • 81/i·OZ.
• Peas And Carrots
II end • I 1/r·OZ. Can
JELL·WELL ~ fliCARONI & CHEESE
Fruit FlavorsGELATIN . · . DINNER
L -~~ 3 6·!1 : ~4:i1Y<·•~l·4 I , ·~ a Pkgs , ~ .-, Ji9!. • tor
or longhorn s 15 a ·Style . M
Cheddar •
Safeway Random
• lb. Weights
• Leaf Spinach
15-ounce Can
I
I t
'
l I
l I I I
\\" In Our Dairy Case .....
\, .tiarga "AA" Eggs----Swiss Cheese
~ ~ 69" ·~ ~:.y $2 19 '.'.. ~ 1-Dozen ., ' Random ~ Carton • Weights. lb.
~Swiss Cheese r~~~11 1~z ~29 eAmeri canCheeseft~:~399
0Soft Margarin e c(lj(lo-OQil ~ 44c @Cream Ch eese l , 1 1~ 49c
8. 't 8 8-c: s100 p t t s I d luCtrllP 14 Ol 55· ISCUI s ~~~ W119~~ ~ns 0 a 0 a a .,,..UOfll Canon ~
LETTUCE
Large Size
Heads, For
Salads or
Sandwiches. each~~
Avocados c.,::a
Oranges:'
G f I • '"' 6 lndl j Ruby rape ru t r..i.1om11 ... ~ ..... lb. 19-Clnerana Plants WrlPP'd "' Pct 124' , Orie~ Apricots MsWi1.......... ~ W APG Potting'SoU ....... ~ .. ;J.qt. Stzt 98•
Red Potatoes 0 ~:~ 1
............... llh 25* Mira cf e GrOPi.nt food ........ ,, e.oz. sia 89'
Prtciel OflctlwMlt. 11· n. 1111 ... * ..... ""°"'Clllllla). ......
WIACCUT USOA
FOOD STAMP
COUPONS
U.S.D.A.
Choice .
Beef.
Blade
Cut
lb. lb.
FOLDING ALUMINUM
WEB
. 1-1~~!.!!~.d
ASSORTED
PORK CHOPS
Includes
Center and
End Cuts.
Approximately
1/4,Pork
loin. lb.
Young Turkeys , corned Beet ~
utlWIJ• Mcety99c Fried Chicken
=·:~::m 55c. Hus or T ol'llS. lb. .. =:.-lb. ~ frozen. 2·1b. Franks. large 1 ·lb. Manor House $199 Safeway Beef 99
Hut 'N Strve ..-.g. Dinner Size Pkg •
•
Slk:id Moats s.a. 41 c Flshsticlcs C::. 4~
......,, ..... _,._.:,...""' c:a,tlla'1a.ow1«."" ir
1!idftd steau c Zippe BurrHos c USDICMb~ClllD .... -"-89 lfat FtaYor ... 1o..i.,.,.39
~~'!°!.~ ...... 990 !!!!~~!!.~~.~111
SLICED
BACON
Wiison's
Com
"'"' c flit 8raild ~--~-~ .. ~~~~--'1"~:~-8:~:111 1-lb.
c
Turbot Fiiiets f ~a• Sausage ,.. •2·0Legc · Pkg.
Cl'lllllMf....-&llfrlltd a. 'I S-.ayWbOlt MOf ....... ---------J
·-~ , .................. s. ...... C.-....f(aCllfll .... J. ........... w.c. -~
.... ..,..... ................ • WMl.c:...t.........,_~.._. • 14w....t•~"-SllA ....... • S.-AM......,tt\a,_ .... ~
• Jllll,.~C...MM • JMfS.. ..... s.t.MI
• 1111.~w.s.a...
•A4-tt...,...." 11 .... •14417C..•.•w..._..._ -· '
•
Dded fh&tta bouaht at
lbe nor. or praerved
yoarHlf lut fall lend 1 themaelva to th1J sweet-
tart pie.
You can also make
fruit stews/soups from
: dehydrated apples,
apricots, peaches and
prunes. Vary the ingre-
dients and seasonings to
take you and your family
out of winter doldrums.
This pie is also tasty
with 3~ cup or raisins
mixed in; or, for a super
dessert that doubles as a
breakfast pastry, sub·
stitute drie d , pilled
prunes for the apples and
add ~-. t easpoon
powdered cloves.
APPLECOT PIE
8 ounces Dehydrated
Apples
4 Ounces Dried Ap-
pricots
3 12cupswater
•,2 cup broWll sugar
Yo& cup granulated
s ugar
2 tablespoons flour
1 teaspoon cinnamon
I
..
12 teaspoon nutmeg
1 • teaspoon salt
.Pastry for 9-incb
double.crust ~
1 lablesl>OQn lemon
juice
2 tabl e spoon s
m argarine or butter
Place apples and
apricots in saucepan
with water . Bring lo
boil; reduce heat and
simmer , uncovered, 15
minutes. Combine sugar,
nour, cinnamoo, nutmeg
and salt.
Line 9-inch pie plate
with pastry. Fill with ap-
ple a pricot mixture.
Sprinkle with l emon
juice : dot with
margarine. Cover with
top crust. Slash lo allow
steam to escape Seal
and flute. Bake al 425'
F .• 30 to 35 minutes or un-
til brown. Makes t 9-inch
pie (6-8 servings).
Roll Break Fast
1£ you're tired o' the
·same old breakfast -
coffee, egg and toast, a
bowl of granola, or
whatever -and if you
are one of the 92 percent
of all Americans who
like peanut buUer. you
might like this breakfast
;Toll, made with peanut
butter and g ranola
crunchy confections.
It's as easy to make as
opening the packaged in-
gredients. and a boon to
the homemaker wilh no
time to start fr om
scratch. It's ready to eat
in 20 minutes · with a
c up of coffee. or
whatever you're drink-
ing nowadays. or tote it
to work to enjoy with a
piece of fruit later.
PEANUT BUTTER
AND
GRANOLA
BREAKFAST ROLL
1 package (10-ouncc>
buttermilk biscuits •
melted butter
l teaspoon sugar
3 crumlHcd cin
11amon-raisin granola
bars
1 i teaspoon c 1n
namon
1 teaspoon grated
orange peel
~. cup confcct1oncrs
s ugar
· 1 tablespoon orange
juice
1 teaspoon grated
•
orange peel
l tablespoon butter.
softened
1 ~ teaspoon vanilla
t'xtract
Separate buttermilk
b1scu1ts. Arrange
biscuits in 2 rows. slight-
ly overlappin g them.
Roll to a 9"x 12-inc h rec
tangle. Brush with melt
ed putter and sprinkle
over 1 teas poon sugar.
Rest"rve 2 tablespoons
crumbled bar m ixture
Combine remaining bar
mixture with cinnamon
and orange peel.
S prinkle over doueb.
Roll up jelly roll Cashion
from long side. Brush
with melted butter. Bake
in a ~egree oven 18-20
minutes or until browned
and baked through. Com -
bine confectioners sug-
ar. orange juice, orange
peel. butter and vanill a;
beat until s mooth .
Spread over warm cof-
feecake: sprinkle with
reserved crumbles.
...
•
I
For ~st. Pat's
For SL P '1 Da1 -ooe elesanUJ navond.
eu1-do et»ek• dWa eel c.. bam. cabbqe and
spud blike .ut•a f&Uicker to UMJDbla thu it
looks :
CBJC&EN V Al.JIAU.A
4 thin allces baked barn, cut in half
4 whole chicken breuts, split and boned
l can (lC).~ ounce) coodenaed cream of
mushroom soup
1 cup <Bounce) sour cream
""2 cup Irish Mead
1 cup ( ~ pound) sliced fresh mushrooms
In 6 inch x 10 incb baking dlah, arranae slices
of ham. On each ham slice place a chicken
breast. akin side up. Mix remainine i.ncredienta
tocetber ind pour over all, cov~ chicken
completely. Bake jn a pHheaied ~oven
1,,, bOW"9. Serve over bed ol wild rice, if desired.
Makes4~servings. • ,_
DAMA.NU
COLCANNON BAKE
1 ham slice, about l If.a pounds
Whole Cloves .
3 tablespoons butter ,
4 cups coarse!) chopped cabbage
11-2 cups water
1 teaspoon salt
1h cup milk
l envelope (5 servings) instant mashed
potato granules
Pierce ham slice with 4 or 5 cloves; place on
bake-and-serve pan.
Melt 2 tablespoons butter iri medium-size
saucepan. Add cabbage, cover, and cook 5
minutes, stirring occasionally. Add water, salt,
and milk; bring to a boil. Remove from heat.
Gradually'(dd contents of potato envelope, s tir-
ring briskly with fork. Spoon around edge of ham.
slice; dot with remaining 1 tablespoon butler.
Bake at 400 degrees F. for 20 minutes, until hot.
Servess-6.
ACTUAL
SIZE
,-, ...... , ..
New 8 o.Z.. way to UNdo it!
AVAILABLE _IN R~GULAR & SUGAR FREE.
(•• ' c ... ,..,,,.
___ _.
OM pound of coffH.
When you open a
·new checking
account of t2!50 or more.
wh1rechlcklngoccountsoreFREE N)r.-ir · ·: · <>-r ·~ r"•'""'
•
rr11
QnepoundOf
Yuban coftee
•-
™'""' ..... .. .._.
-~ _......_.... ................. ~.cmo .. -. ,,..t! .......... ref~
I
Bring ho_ e
·skies
dsave
l
1
I
l i
I
~
j
l
t
i
j
..
'
G ro
aow
PAT. A ..,KP.aw
CU8K \
I. Pkll ,. p ........ pnd'lnblJ cw.. Alme.~.
more fat mllllves )'OQ
can assemble the better.
But Uda ii only a ~rlD·
ning. To a.sure a fat
future, you must
2. Be batt.le-W ' c S
of breut-fed. SJ'l"'ll'W
formula are so m9Cll
more efficient.· What'•
more, Mom caa •~e
what's left and urce yeu
• to finish.
3. Be the first baby m ..
your block to sw1tda to <
solid food. If Mom re-
sisl3, count on the •Cia& · ·
of ol~er a u nts •r
grandpa.rents ... •r
• other relatives wb•
equate "JWl.ior DhsMn ..
with pr'eCOcit).'· and pre-•
sidential pouibilities.
4. Once you reach the
table, it's important to
take charge. Pick out
one or two edibles and
resist all else (bread,
chocolate pudding and
trench fries are good. >
You'll know _,·ou'rc an
charge wh e n Mo m
serv:es your favorites
ewery night. For real
sty le, pattern your
behavior after that or
"Morris the Cat ··
/
Boneless Round
Steak 5 Accompany your
moth e r l o th<.·
supermarket and play a
loud and active role in
h~r dtt'lsions. Select the
proper (Junk> fo od s :;!~.-~~~im[i
yourself. rrom the s helf (S# .,. _ ~-
·er ~h e r jlt~opl~':i -·· ~~~ ba s ket~ T o as~urc • · -
purch as<.'. 1n s 1s t ·~ -· fiii
packa~es be op<.'n on th<.' ti.; -•
Crepes
Say
Aloha
Flavor
Added
. ,
T-Bone
Steak
BONDED BEEF LOIN ........ .
LA MlllADA
at: A
. ....... ., . -
LB 188
Jn 1eoeral, all 'spice by
a pice, but these, like
other special diets, need
medical 1ypervlslon;
and such decltions will
be mlde by the doctor. LA MlllAOA ... ~"NO CINTlll
• (
Gui
(CEN. CUT L.B. 1 101
LADY LEE POINTS
Large End .
!!~0 ~J~.~~ .. . LB.118 .·
Fresh Oysters
...... -........ .4-• ....... I' •U "WI 131
King Crab Arm & Claw
FAOltH-, ,. ll! 199
Ocean Perch Fillet
'llOZlll. l H .
l6
-t .
\
Or Poulet
C1ddren ~a.IN Is 1 1tead ol tM thym . >
coa..mmc. variation of Cbkkm Espanol la 1
th• elalic Coq au Vin. variation ol the Spanish
(Carrot• ha ve been Arroz c o n Poll o .
added and tarragon la Artichoke hearts and pa -
used as tbe seuoning in-m iento-sturted olives
Curry
Sou per
An easy d inner for
gues t s o r fam ily:
Cbkken CWTy Soup, a
spinach, bacon and hard-
boiled egg salad tossed
in bot bacon dressing, as-
sorted warm breads or
sesame crackers.
CHICKEN CURRY
SOUP
14 cup butter o r margarine
3 medium carrots,
thinly s liced
Mn
ta a llowl m.b I C11P ~ Oour, ~ and I , ftDe11
MMOD • coat e D e~
-.-IMotit. lln&e.ra oil bi a I UD (11 OUAc•>
lar1• frJ pan over tnm•tn. chopped
I brolln·fryer medJum beat. Add 1\11 0,.. lon:l craln
eb1ckeo, cat la pa.rta chicken aad brown an all rice w eu.poll aldel. Add muahrooma, Zw cupa clllcken
1 can (f ounces) onions, carrota. wlne. brot.b
mu1hrooma,dralned broth, 1arlle, tomato 1 p acka1e (IO
2 CUP9 tro&en small pule, ba)' leaf and tar-ounc•> ftoMn peu
whlteonions. tha-ed r~1on. eo.er and aim-, l pack•I• ( 10
2 cupe baby carrots, mer 45 minutes or until • ounc•> troun artichoke
cut-up chicken il.,,tender. Makes burta
l "'2 cup red wine 4 aervtncr. ~ teaspoon cround
.... ,.,,., aad fl •Y t
--·· l cora OU I ..... fr7 PM°"" med ium beat. Ad•
cMe1tm • b..-. •an lid•; f#DI!"• tram pu. Place am. md 1arUc
lD lty pa ad cook UDlU
aoft. SUr la tomat.oel,
rice, cblcteo brotb,
peaa, artichoke beau,
aalfrm, ~ leaf, oUves
and aalt. Return chicken
to pan. Simmer, cov-
ued. 35 to 40 minutes.
Makes: 4to6servings.
'h cup thi,nly sliced
celery
If.I c up c h opped
medium-fin e onion deli. .JUMBO RIB
ROAST h c up cho p ped
m edium-fine pared ap-
ple
4 teaspoons curry
powder
3 tablespoons flour
If.I teaspoon salt
Two 13~-ounce cans
chicken broth
I cup diced cooked
chicken
1 cup light cream
In a large saucepan in
the hot butter gently
cook the carrots, celery
and onion until sort but
not brown about 10
minutes. Add apple and
cur ry powder and stir
c on stantly for a few
minutes. Star in flour and
s alt. Gradually stir in
chicken broth.
Stirring constantly.
bring to boiling; cover
and simme r a bo ut 20
minutes. Stir in chicken
and cr eam and heal
through. Makes 6 serv-
ings.
Toddy
Irish
Treat yourself after
dinner with tNa delicious
coffee stretcher instead or dessert. for an added
das h or eleiance,
sprinkle the peaked
whippea crum with
chocolate 1havioes or
grated orance rind.
IRISH COFFEE
Cream: rich . as an
Irish brogue
Coffee: strong as a
friendly band
Sugar: sw~t as the
tongue of a rogue
Whiskey: smooth as
the wit of tbe land
Heat a s t e mmed
whiskey goblet. Pour in
one shot of JriJh whiskey
-the only whiskey with
the smooth Lute and full
body to IP a ke th i s
behrage Ht.isfactorily.
Add tTro coffee-spoonfuls
of•P1ar. rm goblet with strong
eoff 11 to within one inch ot •b brim. Stir to
dillolve sugar. Top off to
the brim with whipped
c.-.am, alipUy aerated, so that it no1t1 on cott~.
D o n ot stir after
addfnl cream -as the
true navor ls obtained by
drlnk1q the bot coffee
a ud I r Jtb whiskey
througb tbe coolness or
Uae cream). From "250 rne Recipe1:• Dublin:
Ji!oat Salno ~.19Sf.
Calories Low .
A oeord ln1 to t h e
American Splce Trade
"Aaodatloa • teaspoon. tut of the blpest calorl1
aptee -'PGPPJ seed -In
a ~ ..nnt four t.o
alx c«d:rlbatea oal.Y two or tbrM calorlea per Hf'Ylnl.
. ~
BEEF • SMALL ENO 11.38 LB.
LARGE ENO
· WIEllERS C STA~BROS.
1-LB. PKG.
LB .··~ ··~ -
~ ~ lftF•CH\ICIC 79 C IClf •llOUNO•l~l_IS s 1 •• l(CF•LOIN•Sll.U $189
p 7 ·•0•••0AST LI. TIP SOAK ........ LI HllORHOUSI .••
$1 0 9 IUf • CllUCll • -LUS • 1 n lftf • CMllC1C • -(lll$ • 13• IEV 'LOIN . • 1 •s 1
ll SHOULDI• .. AST u ........... STU• ll T•O• SOAK .. ll
$109 IHf •llOUMll•-U~S • 1 •• lllV•IOOll• • 11• ecO•~CIOO $I 59 0 TIP •OAST LI HUND SOAK •• • •• SnAK ..... LI $1 ~· tttJ •llOUHll•-• 11• W!l'•I OtolUI$ • 12• -·LAllO!(NO (\ s i 1•
EA $ •UMP •OAST LI •OUND SOAK' . II ••• STIAK ..... lB I 1 '' UU •IONt(US •13. l lU • 1 •• '"'•llADl<UT• 69C
LI sT1w MIAT L• cuausoAK ... L• CHUCK snaK .. LI $22' U10ACMOIC%•-..AIOmf•l'IUK .. 17• 1tP•Cl'UCK •~f 75c IUf•LO<H •Slf&K•-f.llSS • , ••
------------------··---TW ....... ~~IA AW •OAST LI TOP •••LOI• ... LI
fll(Sfo
WESTERN OYSTERS ~:>..'
flllSM l'llOllN • CLLAll ~lllh0$
TROUT :.!~1
FlltlH fllOZU.
DOVEi SOLE FILLET .
(I tTAo•tav ... uv1Youao1aY1 ---· .. -·-· ..... -....... --~..--~lfte-............. ,...-.-............ ,... ..... _ .. _____ ,.__,...., __
,.. ~ ,. PASSOYIR Challenge· SPICIALS
HOM-f'AT 54 c 'MA~ s3• MILK .............. \~.QAL. MATZO ............ .a I LO~AT 93c ~AiTZ ggc MILK ............. \; OAL. MATZO MEAl ...• u.
...
HOMOQEMZEO 64 c MILK .............. \\~ iOiiHJ ... · .... ~&le ... ...
"J
FUNKY WIH~ERBEAM
OUE~TION ~. S
GOOD. BUT TME
WING LIGt1TS
MAl<E ME. l.DOt<
SKINNY.
WHO WA5 11-IE CV\AN u.k>
OISC.OVERED lfiE NO~
~E~
',/
. .
by Tom Batiuk
by Jeff Millec-and Bill Hinds
HAHCY
UNITED Feature Syndicate
ACROSS 4 T ln1dtqual1 49 CarQO 1 Later•I pert v1111t
!> High ca1ds 51 camH
CJ Law i1nd 54 un1~1•11ty
order '>8 Egypl
1' St b•lls 1oun11ty
1 5 E tnd•an RO R1m1rk1Dlt
VIP gtrl
16 M1u1tl' !>I Acl t099tner
t 1 Houaew1l1 s 6J tncltned 10
concern Sufli.
18 Get 1n one 5 64 Coo>0u5 good 1)5 Once m()fc
greets D•1I
20 Y1chhng 66 Pieced a
11 Man $ golf t>IU
nickname 6 7 0•1mond
22 Sub"''' lo• t11turts
payrtltnl 88 Rtmlt4"
23 Cuts Sult•, undtc1dt<I
25 Ftttd lo• t;q Thrall
T 1t I f ~ l.llT S ( A e •" 1 • ' c A SI I ' AO Ac; £
Mil "u T 0111 I v ,t , £ s
If 11 I 11 N PIC NO f q E R S
I ' Ii . " ''"-~ T f a N
itl•lS P AN "
~ M ltltl''' f' n-p I
MO ' • I If A T I'• It I
I ,,. lo( • A f f
• " A Nil
" ~ i ' N Y I l ... ~
A' T I T It I F :A. "r
!l 1 00 ~ I • f M T It s
Ir T r t ~l!O~ g :n:iH
I~ * ir1nl~ LL~ i .! It l
Rum•n·an '°"ea
Ct!y Al>b
t l P~n •I S••lh sense
s1111te• Abl><
t 3 P1tcne• •6 tnoones11n ltlltng
11 Bring up•
cnttd
20Coy
DOWN 10 H1v1n<;1 DfOVtnc"'
1n1erest •n •8 Kind or
JO Art not
0 111
.14 W111nng
place
3& Pot11r'a
WMtl
38 Sptro T
, Cerbonl tt<I aper•. etc hmestone
btYlllQtl 2• Comll'erC1al 49 PtHIQt5
2 OptllltnQ 2 esllbltshmen\ 50 01ne at
word• 26 f ours lorth !'!Om• 2
3 Prol1ne<1 28 Mo¥ed words • 0,.,..1 whole 11p1dty 52 Feminine
pOHHllOns JO H1sto11oal name
5 U d 1 epoch 53 Kind ol npro UC tvo '.)t Rl.lbber leether 6 Armol J9 Pentagon s th4t HI oroducls 2 54 St1111tbfealltr
conctrn 'l words lnloim1I
words 1 Noi h 32 ·• · •og 55 Lens
42 Arct.C. IOf Wtbster \ 33 8 trd's cry 1btrt1t>0n
torte '1 l4 Wtnllr 56 Sl'lo<t pl1n1
43 &:re Sllr 8 ;.~'!~t ~ prtetp trips u 1t lol10w1 1,118 35 Walk with fl 7 Shield
··or1n11mps'' 9 Htad~ long steps border Her
•5 MamH 1o Emerald 1,18 37 Small drum 59 Rem0111 46 • 1 1 w .38 Walking I01c1bly
voy1Qt' •O lndoe1ttd 111 62 Sleep t>r1e11y
,
~,CGl~~GOltJG 10 'jf).'( tN W!E
WM ~RV (.0%U.
m<t~
by Ernie Bushmiller
JUDGE PARKER
l -HA<:> DN1;·.J
'iJl'il-4 t-1i:R
A nv.' Mt1-JL>I E.::>1 Poe•:
~ ~D
ME? E!iACf'
'-<'.X
CX:XXiAIL..S 'iONl.Z,~if
........... ·-\
MY DAO Fl~llY
FOUNDA~KER
WHO REPAIRS SHOES Lo<im-... WHJL£ V0U WAIT
-T~EN 14E rOuND
OUT Hf. HAD TO WAIT
SOM~ER£ ELSE.. .•
DR. SMOCK
YOUR NE:W , c::>ocroR rs
\.._He Re. CH lf::F
I. , ·'"'''"".
O H.,. 140W
N~W IS
1"H 1S o....i e ?
by Totn It. Ryan ·.e
' •\ t.i.1~ttD
by GeorcJe Lemont
L----+---J~
.,, l..:J'"""l"At4.A.,,.
-.. t~-..a•4 .. ~,,,,,.. ......
'"""""""~---"'•~i;:A&.. '"'""'""
TME GIRLS
.. ,, lhcrc any t.lc~1gner al all who d~sn't think women over 150
pound' are noneimtcnl'!"
DENNIS THE MENACE
~
--
t
Glorietta J Sc Tomatoes
Peeled, red ripe! No. 303 can
Cup 'o Noodles 49c
Soup mix -choice of 3 navors! 2'h oz
Punchuwu •••••. 49c
Red, Grape, Berry, Lo cal Red! 46 oz
' Muffin Mix • • • • • 19c
Jiffy Com bread .•• 8'h ounce pkg
Premium 59 c
Crackers
Nabisco Snowflakes ... 1 lb box
Reads Salads •• 49c
German Potato, Three Bean! No 300 can
Macaroni .. QllS( ••• 21c
Kraft's easy.fix dinner! 7 1 1 oz pkg
Tomato Sauce . l&c
Hunt's -Rich and thick! 8 oz can
GOLDEN 25c CORN
Sprinl(field Cream Style or Whole'.
No :m:i
MayonnaisesAJJ(U ~98c
D1~uade cholesterol concerns! 24 oz
Horseradishsm • 29c
Zesty MorehouAe! 4 ounce Jar
Apple Sauce ••• 25c
Springfield for value! No 303 can
Cocktail Peanuts89c
Planter's -fun eating! 12 ounce can
Scott 4nt Towels ..,,.
;\~sorted colors or decorated! big roll
PalmolivelQle ••• 51°9
D111h deterl(ent -Quart (20c off label)
Cat Food,.. •.•.• 2oc
Choice of varieties -fl 1 • ounre can
Cat Foodunurmm 59c
Seafood, Fi<1h nr Liver Drv .!'.! ounre
Bold DETmm •••••• s 129
I :innt s1le 4H 01 pk!( ! tnc oft label I
Gold Medal 69C FLOUR
For sure resulu! 5 lb. bag
..
Legs & Thighs .
79~
1-resh! Grade "A" .•. hand cut from
plump ten de{ kinc·si4ed fry inc
rh1ckeu! .
Fryer . Wings ••• 59t
Hand cut! Fresb trade "A" chickena
Chic~en Livers • s1 •t
Freshnest raakee iOr finer havor! J
fryer lrnallis "W. ....... 11!
II.ind cut from Fresh t;rade "A" trvers ... Tai-ty whilo meat -bO delicinus (with rib cage)
7 Bone Roast •• 89\ 0 Bone Roast • • 99~
Chuck cut U.S.D.A. Choice beef Chuck cut U.S.D.A. Choice beef
~~::: -79~ . =~~s1:-S1 6!
Center cul! u.s.n A. Choice beef I Rolled shoulder clod-M:hoice chuck
Ground Beef,~· s1 1t
Lean! Does not exceed 22"..P flit content
BEEF
CUBES
For kabobs -loin cut -Choice beef
TiJp Sirloin WHOLE ••• 12 to 16 LB. ,, an
U.S.D.A. Choice • • • • • • • • • • • 1. IJ i11t
1\m I amt> '"' ri~ht f "r ht•o•I l''-PPI 1;1 I Iv" lwn 1 lw qn.d 11' 1 • El H.m. 11.,·..,' f .01 n • 111 l -.; U \. ( 'hrnu h1·1 I ICEITtll eoT .StUK ... $2.4, lb.)
Sliced Bacon ... s1°!
El Rancho's own "ranch !'I) le"
Beef Rib69C BONES ~
Meaty! Choice! Bake or harbecue!
SausagePmCSmw • s 1st
Fresh -pork, veal and seasonings!
WE FEATURE
GENUINE MILK-FED
·vEAL
,•
Thr rral thing, for navor and value!
-.
Chili Qf ind:S~ .... 99i
Does not exceed 30% fat content
.
Top Sirloin $249
STEAK ...
Loin cut choice beef(flrshlt , •• tit •)
...
Corned leef:i~~ .. ~llll
Sure 1114 ~a. 11111 the 17th is Sl '•ttJ't dlf -and what better way to celebrate• tholcf ... whole w p9int baff!
Fresh 39 Spinach ~ C
All green garden goodness! buncil
Fresh Solid Cabbage ...... 25.~
It belong~ on th!' menu ... and at today' a prier, i;huulcln 't 1 he ljUality lir El Rancho's~
Choose Freshness!
RUBY
RED!
.,,,,,
'
Valencia
Oranges 6$1 lbs
Swltflt, juicy • from Tnaa orcbarda
•
From Idaho? Net wt. a oa ..a
Ocean Perch 111m s141
Fresh m-... na~ heked 1"1 ·
Fillet af Sole •. s241
~! ........... EllPeh tole.
'I .
Rushed from Hawaiian waters
Turbot Fillets •• s12t
From GNenland'a icy cold seas!
Sand Dabs ••••• 52~!
Large aizel fm fl)'inc or broiling
Halibut Steak
-s32!
Center cut from Northern fiah
Oysters wna ......... 51 ''·
Serve them fried I 8 ounce jar
Oysters · wmm ......... '1 2~
Serve a atew -eoonl 8 ounce jar
~ -----------------Salmon Steak l s.3s!
Center cut! from Extra Fancy
Columbia ruver Silver salmon! ·
L iquor Dep 't.
R£.DUCED 83¢
VODKA 56''
BoUled for El Rancho! 1.76 litert
Cutty Sarkuw uo s 1799
Great acotch reduced! Half.gallon
Gordon's Gin ••• sg••
Now save 1.00 on the half.gallon
7 Crown ••• · •••• s59•
Seqram'• blend. Save 1.00 quart ·
W• ds s511 1n or ....... .
Save 90c on Canadian! Quart bottle
Bourdeaux $299 Wine ,...
B & 0 Poutet Latour! Red, white
Frozen Food Price1 in effect
Thunday March 17 through
Wrdne1day M arch 23
Deli catessen
<Jprn dnily 9 to 9 Sunday IO to 7
No sale1 to dealtrt1 Cheddar llWYORK •••••••• ~ 1 '~
Springfield capt ure11 the navor of Florid& aumhine in J 2 ounce cnn He~'s a connoiseur's chee11e, from Ever-Freahl Full flavor, firm texture! by the piece .
Orange Juice ...... 49c
Pound Cake •••• 79c
Stouffer'• for a fine dessert! 11 ~! o~
Chicken Pie • • • • 35c
Van de Kamp goodneeal 7 Va oz pk1
Buitoni
Ravioli
.
Cboole Meat or Cheeeel 16 oz
WaffleslUTTllm4 • • • 49c
DowneyOakt> -package of JO treats!
Pancake Batter 59c
Aunt J~iaia-Choice. of 3 kinda! 16 oi
CJijcken 69 Dimers · c
Swasiaon'• comes • wayal 10% oz · •
Americansmu ••• 5191
Kraft's -in ibe 24 ounce family pack
Smoked Meats • 35c
Sprin11field sliced -five varietJ-1 8 oi
KOSHER $149
FRANKS
Hebtow .National -Knocke, toot
12 o:a backa~ .
Party Dips • • • • • 43c
Pen• Quill 8 os (AltCllO •••• 410)
Cheddar-••• s111
Sharp or Port Win• •pnadable 10 oa
AR C/\OIA PASADENA SOUTH· PASADENA HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH f ASTBI IJH 'HVINl
, • , • · • •"''"•l''", • .". ,,1,,, .. so tt•.,, t I q 1~1ot1• 1•vt lf11nt1M\Jf0fl ,\' "'", uttl 1\,111, '"I•• ,'/// ~·wpor Blvd , ) ' I 1 '' 1' ' '
1 • • , , ·h. I f 1 ~, ., .. ,.,.,, ,.,.,. ~lltJutfu ,t\I ,,,,,.,., t1 ,,,.,.,, ,_.,,., n.1 lht• Pmu 9,111.1 f t'.th 11 '' 1 • l' • • • '
LIS~ ................... $1J9 DICEI. •••••••••••••••••••••• ., •• 89c
Antil'tpdo ttuit rt11ly WQrb -20 oa (i&t ol1) • Antacid l.lbltta Its Miiin pacliqe ot 30
UMUDE • # ••••••••••••••••••••• 23C flW FREEDOM .......... : ••• $1.U SIEETd1" llQCID •••••• : •••• llc .
MlnuL Maid ftoun ccnctntratt -6 oe ten Ma.l ·r>Ada for comfort ••• pacbp cl 30,. Uw llOtllted dtcerpae .,. 32 OWMll bUe
IEI GAY •••••••••••••••••••••• lie COllR:E:CTCll. •••••• ,. •••••••••• $1.29
0.1-Un.. ~ c. Orfcina1 -1 ~ OS tube Mild la&atJw -.. 1 to tabl pq ot 30
TlQllTO ._. .............. lie
V&11 de K&mJ>'• fiCllD laYori•I M~ •
AJAX DETtmT •...•••••••• Sl.21 UE • ••••••••••••••••••• SLU
The P.nl ~ (1.ncludt1.15t ca ldll) ~'·-~Id--~ -J4aa
\ \ •
• ~ .
; I
" ;
, .
...
i t
..
• •
NEW~l -977
II&
SELECTION .
PINTO 2 DR. SEDAN '77 PINTOS .
4 speed man"al transmission. front
disc brakes. rack al')d p1n1on steenng
all vinyl buci<et seats. electric rear'
window delroster wsw steel-belted
radial ply tires. wheel covers. 2 3
Iller 2V engine. deluxe bumper
group. 11nted gl~mplete. front
license plate bracket Stock #0188
Sertal#105Q25
NEW 1977
MUSTANG 11
2 DR. HARDTOP
t.AR4H m.ECnOH OP
97 6-1977 TRUCKS IN STOCK
'76 FIOO 117
CUSTOM Fl.Alf "'C:KU, V AH W•t~ 129•9 RV co~ver~" 1>•c•a9.. CONVERSIONS
53779
2 3 Liter engine. 4 speed. tinted
glass. front disc brakes. rack & pinion ·
steering. bucket seats. carpeting.
tach & amp & temp gauges. lull
wheel covers Stk #203 Ser.
:t 130651.
~~~g:·.~~~"'1·~~~ .. ~::;::;. PICKUP
cru.....,-ma1ic 1 •Od on~.,.,.1 ••• .., •·•• COHVEllSIONS
;?.~:· ~:.'7.':,.1~~~· _:~~~.~.~"~~ 4 WHL DRIVES
redio Stoel< 117365"' 1eeo211 Demo COMPLETE TRUCK
$ 6379 SERVICE FACILITIES
1974 FORD
"1MTO RUHAIOUT
4 cyl., auto trans . factory air. radio ..
heater. whitewall tires. tinted glass,
wheel covers. vinyl mtenor. luggage
rack Save On Gas On This.
(285NKK)
V-8. 4 speed, radio. heater. tinted
glass. 4 wheel drive. Tacoma wheels
& tires 1228701()
1974TOYOTA
LO.llD,.U.
4 cyl . 4 speed. radio. heater.
(1C24372)
.
1976 FORD PINTO
WAGOMMl'G
4 cyl . 4 speed. factory air radio.
heater. whitewall tires. ltnled glass
wheel covers. dlx tnm. 11,000 IT'ii
r221NOAJ
53499
1969 PLYMOUTH
~Ym2DLH.T.
V-8, auto trans factOf'Y air power
steering. radio. heater whitewall
tires. viny1 roof llnted glass wheel
covers Good Transportation
(YBW470)
1974 FORD
CTY. SID. STA.. Wd.
V-8 auto trans factOfY air oower
tteenng. power d1~ brak~ radio.
heater. whltewall hres. tinted glass.
wheel covers. luggage rack
(730JZRl
.-.....-.-~ ·---
1974 FORD
THUNDHllRD H.T.
V-8. auto trans factory air. power
steering, power disc brakes, oower
windows, POWer seats. AM·FM radio,
heater, whitewall tires. tinted gl~.
wheel covers. Landau top Drive it
you II buy tt (727UINl.
1974 FORD
IUTI 2 Da.. H.T.
V-8. auto. trans , factory air. power
steering, power disc brakes. racho.
heater. wtutewall tires. vinyl root
tinted glass. wheel covers. Looks
Like New. (002L TT)
53599
CASH
OR
TRADE DOWN.
ON ANY NEW OR USED CAR
IN OUR HUGE INVENfORY
(On Approved Credit)
IOOLS
4 cyl . auto trans • factory ah
cond1tlonmq. AM-FM radio, heate1
tinted oiass wheel covers sunroo1
(130LIGI
1974 FORD
MUST.A.HG H.T.
4 cyt .. 4 speed. power steering,
power disc brakes. radio, heater,
tinted glass. wheel oovers. (2150~T)
GRANADA ~
4 DR. SEDAM
WI LEASE ALL MAKE
CARS AHO TRUCKS
FORD• GM
•CHRYSLER
ON DISPlAY FOR
IMMEDIATE DEUVfRY
~CHECK
OUR C:OM"'1111VE U TIS
AU. LUSE a.DYS
Uf'!DITID FOR EARLIEST
l'OSSilU DBJYBY
I 974"PONTIAC
GR.AHO PRIX 2 Da.. H.T.
V-8. auto. trans. factory alr, POWer
steering, power disc brakes. power
windows. power seats. AM-FM radio,
heater, whitewall tires. LandJl~ 1~
sun root, ralJye whee(s. Lob~ \N'°
over before you buy. ~20MTQ~
1976 CHEVROLET
ac•MIHO
V-8. auto. trans., lactory air. power
steering, power brakes, AM-FM
radio, tape, heater, whitewall tires,
tinted glass, whee I covers. ~7353-4)
55595.
AN
s$AVINGS!· HfW I tn :V. TOM CUSTOM
ll!fJBCOHYBSIOM 1sfiJ9.·-
·~sttir. . PWc:e Sll,21Ulf
351 ·V8. pwr. steer and brakes.
auto trans.. sup. cool pkg. cust
paint. sun roof. table. barrel chair.
sink. cabinets, color cord cot. al)d
drapes plus deluxe overhead
console with AM-FM stere(J!
loaded with luxutyf
(#E24HH0437,41l Stk. #0322
Stt Ow c.inf-Yo1t Oltd Truclt
Dfspley -~.,. ..SOYlllCJI 01t iv"l'
Ultltl • /
ROADRUHHH
V-8. auto. trans . factory air, PO'll ...
steering, power brakes. ra
heat91, wtutewall tires, ltrited ~-· Landau top. sunroof, 18.000.
(028H0Kl
. ~
1973 FORD PINTO ·
WAGON
1_ cyl , 4 speed. radio. heate
w hitewall tires. vinyl interior
(525GRVl
1969 CHEV.
CI 0 LQNG HO P.U.
V-8. auto trans .. heater. (1128496
•
t
Ttu.t "Beal lb• Dollar
Squeeae," the clut •W
meet Tuesday after·
!)00ft4. beltnnil\I Marcb Ja, ltom noon unW 3 p.m.
lD room 102 of the OCC
AppJtOd Science Build· lD ••• ,
P~ may regiater
lD OCC'a Adm.iuloot and
Records Building. or tn
tbe ~lparoom al tbe first meepng.
L4ICture topics will ln·
elu~e : "Mind over
Money." "Balancin1
Your Budget," "Buy
Now -Pay Later?,"
"Dollars and
Decisions," "Consumers
in Crisis." and
"ll.nagern.ent In the
Marketplace."
.• ~)!'formation about ~~~t class. phone
lijsabled
Travel
Outlined
Bob Anderson. a
Laguna Beach travef
agent. wUJ discuss travel
opportunities for the
balapped Friday at a m g of the California
As ation of Physical· ly aandlcapped
<C ).
..aa.e. meeting will be
h~d at 7:30 p.m. at the
Marco Forster Junior
High School, 25601
Camino del Avion, San
Juan Capfatrano.
ll'he uaoclatlon la an
orcaaiutioo involved lo
betptoa to Increase
SM'bllc awarenesa of the
l\•ed1 of handlcappe7a ~rsons . .. .
Additional inlormatioo max.118 obtained by call·
lng:£jeova ~inert, pre·
aidf!D. 496-2836.
PUBUC NOTICE
11 ~ 'ftmuc NOTICE
... ' ..
PUBUC NOTICE
''a•nOUtwtt ... a& NUU ITATaM81l~
Tiie tollowlnQ--. ~· ~ bll'OI•
llM\H'
Ge°"° .t."IO 'ION'\ oe111¥.t.H
Ct.Ill llePAlll -M ........... 81..cl
H"'ll«tBH<tl.C4
lllon L-.....-11c1t. PU S... JM
qul11Hllltlld,eo--delAMr C4
Heftt1 AM -rick Jf•t Se* JOe
Qui" Hlllt 11111.. eor-c1e1 Mer. CA
Tiii\ ltll\I,, .. \ I\ CO'l ... Cl•d llV
Hu~INl>dlftdWli. ~
Aon l Y'W' He<r I< k
Tl\lt •i.t-WM f lied wltfl , ...
C-ty Cleft. of 0r9'1Qe County ooo
M&rc~ n 1'17'
1'1111f
P\11111.._, ()-~toe• Delly Piiot
Merell it. n m endAprll & 1w' _,,
PUBUC N011CE
PlJBUC NOTICE
........ ... ,~ . .,. ...... . . u Oll.Olt ......... . ...... "° ... 'lf,.&10 IJ.M,tml .......
,/'
anoac ............... ~·--= ~ DAILY PILOT --111 Slct. bJ side llud.lo epta.
I 9 Tl,......... lO ........ 3 bdrm l ... bMla eKtt unit. Both •pb maadl .. ...,. bave ume vfew. lhtr
CLASSIFIED
INDEX
,, .... , •• cal ~-------111 a.a.. kitchen 6 ll• rtlll Qllltain. 2 bdrm1 1down • CAMYOM-U•.SM Former Broedmoor model on cul-de-
sac st. Wonderful ramUy home w/4
bdrms. fam rm. formal DR and 3
baths. Great storage, alr-<.'GOd.itionina.
automatic sprnkJ.n & inviting patios.
L'e .living rm w/cathedral ceiling. 2
Fireplaces. Lge sunny kitchen &
breakfast rm. Best buy ln Big Cyn.
642-5171
-.:SfllSAU --==-&:::-.:-
0...-~~=-~: ='£ -t:,.,_c.iu--·-· ~ .,...._ ....
IOI.ESTATE
-= .... -----------... -1-'t .... -= I ..
--lwlak IA ,._ ... _ l:IOO
l!la .... ~ IJ.'A>
--1 • 1400 c.-...,. CfypO , 1.100 ~==-~ "'='' . ~: ~ .. t"'"'•lt .· 1l!llO -............. • • llllO ...._~ -~~· = M•k ff.,. Trlt Ptk• noo 11-··-.llh«I -Or-Co "'91> ~ Olll ol C:..-r ..... . WI t'..':...~.:::(J...... = .....i-it........ ....
llMILIUU11--ROOllS
=~ .... = _ ....... 1.111 Ult
~-·''"" -~ .... Uni -,_,.,.. Jlo()I ,_, . ., llm
0..-••f'oro :WO =~ 5 ApU """ .. t.ol .. -..,. -·-.. -=c:: :~ hr•-~b Ull ,.,..._ ........ ,, l1'iO ·-·--..., GM-!Or a.. °"' Olllft_.. ----._""' R-..1 4lOO r=: ...... .o = ..... ~Ofllal• -IUSnlEU. INVEST· •
MOIT, FINANCE ::::::= ~ :===~' ~ W_,........ Y11lo ..... , .. .....,. ...
"""--.Tl> • !Om
MMOUllCCMOOS, msotms &
LOST.& FOUND
SBYICCS -
Miii ...
°'IOI) -~ ------... --""' ,.,,,, -... , .. ~ .... .... ......
'"'4 .... ..... •• -----·-----
•I• -... ..... -.,.., .... ,. --
--.,.
~ .. , --= = ----= i ... -WI ..
I' U1tr 'tMollcr.
All real .. te 9dvert1Md
in this newspaper ls 1ub-iect to the Federal Fair
Hoo1tn1 Act of 1988
which makes It llletal to
adverllae "any pre·
ference, llmltallon, or
discrlrrunaUon based on
in eecb. Ownet' will ftftt
one unit back frm buY•r
at -mo ror yrs. Call Now, only SU7 .ooo .
~M9L
~
Walker 1; lee
Rtal (stal e
race, color-, rellgioa, sex. --=;;..===;..;._;;;;__, 21115-Ja s ' ... ...
.. ~~ ..... ~10 or oaOoaaJ onrin. or an un.eollon to make any
s~b preference. limJta·
"°'1. or diacnmination."
11i1a newspaper will not
knowingly accept any
MHAVERDE
Republic. beaut. Spanlah styled home with large ~~~ii/~,~,;•-•.. 1002181a1ull. 1002
olfice. Offered at SlZ7 ,500 ••••••••-••-•••••• -••••••••••--•-••
advertising for real 759·0226
estate which Is lo viola· - -
Uon ol the law. r CCMft AllCCIATD1
...... ---for-Sale ____ ,\: tJIHllHt-:::..J
••••••••••••••••••••••• Gener.. 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••
BLUFFS END UNIT
4Br. 2Yt8a, W·Plan. sun·
'hy locaUon. pvt yard.
new cpt.s. frpk, nea
pool. park & schls.
$99,SOO. Owner. 64()..8790
WHY PAY MottE?
... FOR BEST IN THE
BLUFFS; thls 4 BR., 3
ba. CarmelJta is right on
the greeol>elt, with view
ol the upper Back Bay.
Don't t.arcy, because this
ooe is pnced to move
now! $118,000
A TrRACTIVE Linda lale s BR. ·~ ba., fam. rm. & formal dining; lge.
We patio & waterfront deck. $350,000
BAYFRONT, pier & float, lots
$185,000 to $325,000~ to build your own
custom home. Several areas to choose
rrom.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
3-l l Buy,.u .. D1 "'' ·~ B o7'J 016 1
ILWFS YIEW OF 1HI
CLAPPER IWL
That's the Light Footed Clapper Rail.
of course. One of tbe thousands of
blnb that Oock to the Back Bay and
you can be one of the rew people with
a panoramic view of the Back Bay
rrom this 3 bdrm. 1950 sq rt, Trina
condominium. The original owners
took metieulous care of t.h1s end unit
located across from the pool. It's on
fee land and subject of estate sale.
lJ~l()Uf: t1()Mt:S
REAL TORS'. 675-6000
2443 East Coast Highway, Corona del Mar
also in Mesa Verde. di 546 5990
G1•1 al I 002 G ... ral I 002 ..............................................
GOLF COURSE
VIEW ,
c;:::; SELECT
I PROPERTIES
., ..
; • t•
Ge•ral I 002 Ge•r.. 1 qo,
·················~·················· .. ····•3•• 0 tl4' )~
• \" \"'t(j.I
DOVER SHORES
A beautiful & practical home provi~!S..i'°'
a daily inspiration for the entUJ'\.. J
family ... especially when it is located
TRADE older 8.000 sq.rt. c. F. Coleswerthv
Ind. bldgs .. 28.ooo ft. lot. REALTORS 640-0010
8601 Edison. H.B. for lnd. JG.I_.... ft»02 G 1111 d' I 002
bldg. In Costa Mesa. Ph: B I G C A N Y 0 N ••••••••••••-•••••• •••••••-••-••••••••••
Just llsted·nlcely de·
cerated home ln Up lop
condlllon on the aol ooune. 4 Br 2"'2 baths.
Family Room plus "Fox·
mat Dining Price Is
$115.000 Including land
Appt. only to see. Call m.ssso
THE
in DOVER SHORE'S wtth a panoramic-rt•
view of bay. ocean & Fashion lslaal\
AU roorm are spacious. incl. 4 bdnm.,
family nn. & rormal dining rm ... ev .. ~ ~
the garage is large -a 3 car. Prictl'J 646-6122 TOWNHOUSE. 18 Ca· &.o,..a RCIKWte C:USSIAID
HOUlS
Adwrt!Mn m11y pl•N.O
Ltie1r ads bv t~lephont'
800am\oS 30 p m
Monday lhru f'rtd•Y 8 to noon S.turdey
('(filA MF.SA Of'flC E
330W Koy
642-SG?ll
l!UNTINGTON IH :ACH
17117~ l\t>ac.'h Rlvd
$40-IZ!O
LAGUNA BEACH
ll•GlenM)'r# Laau.na BHcll .... ._
AADDL£8ACK 252IO I.a Paa Road
La11un• Hilla Ml "'110
NORTH COUNTY dial (rft> $40-1220
CUSWflO
DU.DUMES
Olradllne ror ropy • 1t1lb
•• ~ 30 p m the day t.forfo publlC'al lotl. fl'.·
tt"Pt for~·• "4on· dev t:d111on1 wh•n
dNdllrw ta Saturday. lZ
noon •
CUSSJAID
llGUUnOtieS
!o:RRORS Advt'rtlun
should c.'httk llMrir ad1
cta.iv &r rt'pOrt t>rron
lmmt>dlAlt>I Y T HE
OAJ L.V Pll.()T 9'5Umt-s
IJ1Jhllll v for lht> llr•l 1n rorrwt 1..-nion onl v
<"ANn :tJ.ATIONS
Whi•n k1lhn11 "" ac1 tw
all,.. lO ma k• a rof('()f'd nl l ht' Ki l.I, "1l'114 IH H
111w n """ hv .. our •d lak...-aa nrttlpl of vour
C'llnt'Plllllon TIHl lull
~ mll9l ht' Pf'"""" lt'd bv tlw-a<lvt>f11M r in
~-ol a dlsput•
c·ANf'fl.L.A TIOl\I O H
t'OHR ~l'T IO l\I O f'
NfW Ar> IH'.t'O H F:
Hl'HNl"IC
rwo .f(Of'I ·~ m11dto '" In II 1ir ('(lnft't • iww ltd
lN\ hu bn11 ordt'Tl'd.
Ill• w unnot 11:11.r•n ~ ... ctf\ WI until IM ad
hr• ·~•r•d IA lh~
peOtW
OIMP: ,_ IJNP' Afl!i' nww ad& .,. •lnnlv
nut. in edve"" bv m111I
Of Ill 111\Y fWW of oo r of
llc'W NO pftc)ne °"°"" l>•edl1n• J p m P'r;d8~. {'oalJI M"e ol htt • tl MOii et all
hr'1wtl °'""'"
THIC DAILY J'ILOT _,,.. ti•• rt•ht 10 ..... ,,. . .-d11 f'9M0r 04"
r•f111• •llv adv•r ~ a..d IO c-han••
Ila ratw 6 f9lNlaoona
...... pnnl'notlff
CUSSIAID
M*l .... ADOUH
P o &. ueo. a.t.z: ...
( LAfWOL r111r1
I C'1°i1l Ii
I BUDOll I I' I I I
I MIRLES
nyon Island Or. otr F«d
Road. 3BR. 3BA. formal
d1n rm, den wtwet bar.
Calhedraj cell. ln Uv rm
for gracious. spacious
bvlng. Inc's use oC pe>oJ.
jacuui & tennis cowu
$158,400. OP EN DAlL Y.
COLI OF NEWPORT
REALTORS
675-5511
WATER VIEW
''DUPLEX ..
Two blocks to beach,
3BR· 2BA upper unit:
2BR 2BA lower. Quality
c arpellng & drapes
thru o ul , bltn .
range/ovens. Olshwshrs,
frplcs, buge IJv rm w/24
deck ove rlook ·g the
water. Steps to bay
beach & close to park. sim.soo.
JACOIS RE.AL TY
675-6670
COMPAREDTO-
lrvme. thts IS a buy!
Beauuful l~ Ml n con-
do. Spanish style. 3
bdcms .. 2i.., ba • pool,
jacuui. tennis cts. put·
tmg green. clubhouse. 5'.SOO . IHI 833-9781 Hester-Brown ·-UAl!OI S
4~~a~~me
WITHVIEW
Nearly 2 acres nestled
amoog giant oaks only 2~ mJJn to the IWf with
a remukable cu.swm
bul 11 3 bdrm + den +
family rm home de·
signed to maximize the
panoramic, h illy
rancttland view. Also 5
car covered parking +
room for campers, boats.
etc. The corral can ac·
commodale as m any
horses as you could ever
want with room to spare.
OFFER I NO PR lC E
$220.000.
Cal 644-7211
/Jn NIG(L
r.AIU 'r &
ASSl:JCIATES
MESA VERDE
COUNTRY CLUI
Pnme Country Club area
of Mesa Verde. Qwel
tree lined cul·de ·s ac
leads to I-story spacious
3 bedroom home Large
master s wle plus 2 twln-
sazed bedrooms. FamaJy
room boasts massive
s tone fireplace .
breakfast bar and over·
looh tropical garden
paUo. F\Jll pnce $100.000
tO't Down CA LL
962,7788
SELL Idle Items with a
Daily Ptlot Classified Ad.
lR + IACH.
Close to ocean'. good summer /Winter rental. 3
BR. front house, fur11 .. rudy lor rent.al. sun .soo
lllclud in8 la.nd ! ""''"" t4 0 •II\ l l.f.J rQK# PH: I [.~UMI
RENTS
are low and so ls the
pnce ! Two homes on an
R2 lot. only $99.950' Red
Carpel Realtors. 7~
$325,000
fiut llMt 75-9.·08 I 0t,.
Guo! WNIN BU,.
LA~MAIEACH
Charming home on large
lot; room to add on. Dari·
Ing just as is. Amencan
Home Shield warranty toi---------·l·--------•I
buyer. l·Bdrm .• frpk. On r lf'fSIDE NEW LISTIMG I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Bluebird Canyon Rd. tM Back Bay beauty. 31..: ,. r.
SlZ.000 2 UNITS $87 500 Bdrms. & family, PoOI GeMral 1002 673-3663 642·~ Eves. , Wllh wood decking; mce-••••••••••••••••••••••• • >1 ti.
n.....1 I 2 bed ly landscaped; private 'I( I t>
associated
BPO• £RS IHllL TORS
2t1]' ..,_ 8olt-c .. J o..' ,.,. I
naiect ncome ( rm s tudio & works hop. STEPS TO OLE! ·•I nf ., house ~ t bedrm apt +
lge dble gar. & huge $89.SOO! THE BEACH This Spanish beaut~ workshop> And future 8alM>a lay Prop. steal your heart a'<l(I)'.
space to build on lot Realtors This 3 bdrm & fmly rm Se noras will lover• th
60x140 For info call. • 675-7060 * 1mmac home has It all! gracious charm SeflOC''
U:DSAILS ~-E.lJ-~FnfORJM ~~~~~~~~~1 ;~I=:~ ~Ere~~ ~~~Jit~:1~1Jr,~.
l .... THE SU .... SET 4•.===. • ..... lnYHtor's Dr.Gift in the fmly rm w/bl\r & lams. & spa. HUJ;ll.., " " -Perfect opporturuly for ocean view or an either oC won't be here marutil
CATALINATOO! ~~~~~~~~~ the smart home buyer. tbe2secludedplantfilled $79.950.~9491.
An OCEANFRONT col· Super 3 bedrm buy m patios. Enjoy the charm ~
Walker t~ lee
Real lstatt •
lage just for you. ·'Old popular community with of its rlUSed bnck frplc an
Newport quality .. hom MESA VERDE great location. Spacious the laving rm & then re·
on SO ft of OCEAN 3 Bedroom . 2 ba th. & upgraded thruo ut. ure1nt.o 1uU!p-dwnmstr
FRONT. An ldylll Ottplace . 2 patios. new CENTRAL AIR, too! sUJt.e. All that & more
oceanfront home you can caJl)et. fresh paint, ow. UNBEATABLE at only This c harmer won't ---
er\)Oy with your friends water softener. Im. 166.SOO Take advantage last-Call now! 643-7711.
It's what Newport Beac mediate possessio n. andcall.831·3100. Walker&Lee
memories are made of. $73,000. Real E,,tate
$275,000 Roy McCanh
Redtor 1810 Mewport
LOOK1MGFOR Costa~548-7729
l.L IAYFROMT?
FO~EST E
OLSON
'""'(. ''t '•"•H#'I.
$42,950
Yes. it's sUll possible to
get a 3 bd residence for
under 150.000! Conve · We'll share this 2+ unit
with you and there'
even a pier ror you
"substantial yacht''. Th
fun neighbors make u
for lhe fact. lhat it n
• ._..._..._........,,,.._..._....,....-1•---------I nlenl location for shop ping & community pool & •
4 BN' QN[SI. jacuzzi available too! " ./ 4 & A FAMILY,,
a Utlle Piua~.
$275,000
NEW HOMES
On cul-de-sac In Costa
Mesa. 3 Bedrooms. 3
baths, and fa mily roon:
al 187.SOO
ID Better check thls o ut Vacant & ready to ~e
Bedrooms. that Is! TODAY! 646·7711. into Great yd for ·m~
Hurry lo see l hi s Walker & Lee ctuldren & close to ai!hls
beautifully landscaped Real Dtate & parks . new otr•UR
MESA VERDE home. -• -market & priced t.o sell
Close lo stores. shops. The Cutest draw ln the fast al S71.SOO.
Large du~lng room with
atnum Th11 beautiful
home has been occupied
for only 2 months f'an· t.astlc VteW of mount.tins Don't drop the ball! Get a
& nlt.e hgbta Room for job wttb a low coal Da.aly
poof P ilot Cla111fled Ad. PhoneM2-~8
~~1li~1l11tt~!t .
Ml.tmA 1:-\l.A "l • 673-6900.
And 3 bedroom. 3 bath 1t
only $8S,SOO Both haw
shake roof11, fireplaces
and an! quality bwlt.
PETE BARRETT
-REALTY-
642-5200
banks & pos t office. West . .a Daily Pilot D. J . foHftstra. IJ.tC.
Brand new roof. Extenor Classlfleji Ad._~·5678. 546-0116 S4!_·~.1~
completely repainted.
cemeotdnve&aspecial G1111r.. 1002Ge•ral JOOZ
pnce o( 171.900. Owner ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••--•• . $-
COATS & WALLACE
REAL ESTATE . INC.
....... Aw.
HARBOR VIEW. Highly
upgraded Mont1:10
model f o r tho d I•·
crl mlnat1ng buyer
CUst.om drapes, wall
erlngs & c arpets . 4
Bedrooms. laJ"R• ramlly
nn. formal dining rm,
fireplace. On a lovely
landuaped comer lot
Offered al $136.000.
SUK &RNlt '?ME RAINS
R I M S I T 5 E R 0 F II I A R G 0 E N
H A R C L 0 W II D C 0 H S R N I
II l E l £ C I A A R K I T A R 0
S R T M B A R R 0 C L l 0 l A C
YEATRll IMEKARTllIT
R A V I Y A E H W R N W A M H M
A V 11 Z R A C A I A 0 A 0 A C 1
II A 1 F S II II L 0 1 S T C K l 0
A B S 0 I II A 0 0 II L 0 II E 0 T
B II R E D 1 A V T 1 U L B E R I R U S
C 1 T I l R E M A R A C A II E A 0 0 A
R A I II B A R R E L 0 R I 0 L R T R S
0 R M R E T S N I A R U D l C E A 1 A
l A 0 W II A IR P 0 rftJ I I A a·y HT
1M£8 A ECKWRAI N BANCEMI
-.s . ..,_ ._ 0t ~" F~ Md ** It 1n: ..
Ra1nblnd Rafn Cloud Ra1n Forest ~
Ratn Blrnl Ratn Coat Ratnmeker "'
Rainbow Rafn Dance Rafnstonn ~
Rafn Ctleclt Ratndrop Ra1nwater
Tmo""'*:. Engfneen
$4000.
OFF
Last week '11 price! 3
Bedroom home on an R2
lot In Eastllldc Cotta
Mesa. $76,000! Red
C.rpet Realt.on. 754-1202
An You A Vet?
You need no money
down, c hoose from
man~ RSM
will finaMe too.
546-4141
~
COATS& WALLACE
REAL ESTATE. INC.
IOOZ c, .. ,.. 1002 ..............................................
UDO YAWi sun splashed privacy on tbe inside
of Lido Isle. 3 Bedrooms, oew •i>·
pUances & paint. Mova-In coodltlon. ,158,500 •
A C0UMaL 141C11 CO.
644•1766
~II., macnab / lrvtne ?-realtg
suraa IAYROMT
Dover Shores 48R (3+den) bom.8,
w/beautilul master suite w/view.t"
formal dining; gourmet kitchen~
impressive rosewood & teak familt'
room w/wet bar & refrlg. LovelY,'
pool, jacuzzi & lush green planten:
surrounded by patio for com pl
entertaining. 60' ree lot; ~· dock
pier. $450,000. Vee Stinson 842·823L.
(852) ""
642-1235 644-6200
«11 Oooter Ori... HMbot View c.nte;r ~··
lrvlne at C.fnJ"ll Valley Center 712·1414
1002 Ga•r.a i,1»02 ..............................................
t~CUll. UP IY THI FIQ tit.At ut. cpts, D.A., lae llv rm, 4 bdrm.
F /P w /log. l>rof. landscaped.
GaMral 10021•11Bll IOOJ ................................................
fndt bearlng trees, lge cov'd
" "Ratio. 2 A/C units: Many extras •.
,,l(,(jarden area. This is a buyer's de-"!!!!!!!!
light!! I'
• USTOll 3 BR POOL
ROME bit ror eot.ertal.o-• I.nil Li'I HILF pool IW'·
roUndecfby wood dectillg
w/$and ww 11 btln
~ bar. Fam rm., w·,•
,.,'SUIPllSI PACUCM S64.f00
'01>en the door & feast your eyes! This' ~,~'1f9vely 4 br. t'H bath home bas been given the V.l.P. treatment. Freshly
.... painted, brand new crpt & drps
.ll1throughout. Lots or extras. $imply
bring your toothbrush & move in!
~"'
_ _aMAMr TMHSE OMLY S6S,900
_,,.f>graded 3 br, 2~ bath. over 1560 sq.
••fft: Paneled & wallpapered. Clean & '1~8.dy to move ln. Patio, mirrored 1 ~ /w doors, 2 pools + jacuzzi, tennis
cts, lush landscaping. Don't miss out
At {,h this lovely home near schools,
·:.~9pping & frwys. __ , ...... ' 18055 MC1911°'a St,
FomtalnY*f
~ 963-8311
A\Women's~
, :s .11r"'-i-1tr~-.... "
I
IRYIMI ltudJo.wurbbop. desira-
• e.dl'oom plus ramity, b1e Back Bay 1oc. tl9.500.
up1raded • 'Colon1 • • Lbwhl Brown. 14S-ZM3
lllome. Pu:ieMd 1arage, 1_t.-_. -------l'O¥er'fld patio. A II UST SEE' c. 640-9900 ~.~~ ••• !~.!~
.-' \I.I.I<) I ;1., \I. I \
1.aT() I 1unbOft"'f' J.1,1 N•·-...p.)•t II.,• "'I
College Part
IRVINE
'llDWOCO
Choi H". JOc~; brand
new le built wt.th "-rLC" a. architec-
tural genlm-~at.or carpets, fix.
tlll'e$ a. ~pen. M.str. suite tndudes
library with frptc .• wet bar with blt·ln
rerrtg. + a dellgbttul .tew1 Coemtry
kitchen & formal din1og. $183,000 ln·
chtdes land! Special showillp each
d2'V l·S
. I02AC~ fiBQ~~=·
~.1IJ..1~r 1; l 1~1~
Rr..11 f•,'.1't:
CULVHDALE
BealltifuJ Culverdale uni· que one of a kind 4
bedroom home with
fam.lly room and dining
room. On a comer lot
close to park and pool.
call for appt.
't5?3 CAMPU5Dl:IRVWE
OPEN DAILY
8A.M. T06P.M.
WOODBRIDGE. $54,:iOO
2Br. 28a. Twnhse
Owner ~1-llM
a..,....•odt 1048
RAHCH REALTY -~;::·~;;;;;;··
___ s_s_1-_2_00_0 ___ , z Bdrm .• z bath" den
SUJORD CIRCLE
A beautiful adult OC· cupled much sought
after California homes
plan 103. Has a formal
dining room and lots of privacy. QIU to see
r c d h ii I .... : ..
-, " ; . i' :. (j (I
luxury condo w/2
fireplace5. I year new &
spacious. Mlrcowave.
trash compactor & wet
bar Walk to the beach.
$89,950.
MORIMS REAL TY * 494-8057 *
CAPtSTRAMO
HORSIE COUNTRY
Rural atmosphere. Love·
ty one acre hlllalde
home. Views of the
valley. Lola or trees. A
newer custom 3 BR
home. tarae pool.
S215.000
3 Monarch Bay Piasa
Laguna Niguel
496-7222 . 131-0136
' % 9r, l'OU'UJq\'e It! Oathewater,~c 495-1720 8&a.a, ,.UO. am.I f•. 9 Br bee. • P.. 4 Br 2 Ba home ·a 38r,2'"8a,pool1liedlot ...,...,. • ~aded. P'n~d 7erd, lf523WM~l1Mtft din rm 6 mitr 11'1
Cenced rear yd, lrull DANA SOUTH LAGUNA 24 •c ... -,.... le, c~/clrp9. Near OP-DAILY •"'"'lclibllleu""~& trees .. 25221 Ad&lant PO'""" L~UNt B"'•l'l'U ...-I" •--uCA ""'" """ • .,. uu .,.._... • ::':.,.,t'".. ' .... .,.. _,, 8 A.M. T06 P .M. t.enllis pnv. ~. 831·98060wner/Aet (93.88\2 49'1·~ ~ l 11ti1 pd. PoQI, Nfrig, __,.
LOVELY 3Br. 2ba, new 211\UnJt.s·ooat.alieH, more. Olll DOW! Sml SUper3 br %b& DW RancboS.J .3Br2BaSan Yr}y J 8t & den~Ba
Cam rm. aervlce porch, Newport .. och 1069 Othlrt..t &.fate am.ooo. Appt. ID our olc se4900 RIO. CIMA~ $3TS ~ Rey. eoll crse 6 home. Fplc, ~ 12bl
pool &jacuui. Room for ........... -..................... :: .... -.. ••• ooly.~U03AI/.. Spadout.C Br 2 Ba, COIQ) •~CHJ uusW. 114:~ lake vu. $625.S4'7·'10« gar. walk to bch~ &
boet et camper. One-of· ...._,Vl.wtto.P Mobae..._s 2 COVINGTON Four· furn. FPlc, wslu/ dn'r, ALK to occ 2 br, kids OcunVuZU.UthSt New 3Br,2Ba.~cargar •. ~niv. teonis.SC7Smo. rlf a-kindl~~L·TY Beautiful Califo ... nla For S. 1100 plexea, in Huntinstoa D/W, ! cat 1ar,,No pet.a. ot..;:ut.1.1 pd. $!60 4 Br 2Y.t Ba r~· cttp ~. teDJUS, jacu:ni, pool -
"'"" Ranchstylebome.Larue •••••••••"'••••••••••••• Beach.Owner.848·1230 $750 mo. Avau Apr l· --·SnlFee ~_. ... 6 _•1 1 .. • ... _ .. ~.Avallnow.7~'784'1 UOO'/Mo. 2tir.fden 8319'11 '? JunelS 644-9582 ~ ~l_.,,..a..... "'.,.,... home. Walk t.Obcli ~oot • open ~a.med. ~try. big WANTED TO RENT : 7 UMt-TS Pride o . FAMIL°YHOMI ~ $49$mo.llU-OIS2 TurtleR-OCk. Lg2aty, 4br, &tennis. ..J ~:~.~~ ..... !~~~ =~~~~;~~:~ri: ~::: ~;~~ EA:~~·_L~Tci OwHralli,, l•llto• S .::: .. :,:~~~~v.:/~~~ i., 4 br, 2 ba, frpl, frig, 2~ba. Bonus/fun rm, 3 ~75/mo. 48r, den, view
3br, l V.ba twnbse. Cpts, dining room·& 4 big PARK ANO LIVE IN Sb I II. OM 2 H 1 year lease or summer wsbr/dryr, dbl gar, $.SSO. Wallt to the beach from car gar. $.SS0.833-9'73l $16SO/Mo. 38r on 3~er
attached gar. patio, xlnt bedrooms. Jf you had TRAILER. 1962-26 ' w /frplc, Own•r. rat.e.6'13-4MS613·3620. 64%-6882,645-4533 this lovely 3 br, 2 ba, New Woodbridge 4Br. withdockforyour~t.
area.Ownr, 768-8696 tthish?Ul!hl. ofBemovmgh up. AlRSTREAM. PREF. $345,000.644-1554 ,.~_ ..... _ ~1•2 l Br 2 ba or So Cst cpts, drpg, R/O, avail Laurelwood Plan, nr pk, Sl.400/Mo.48rhome:t'1th is it' tter urry near LAG UN A ---~ • • • • . now S 3 5 5 I mo. $5..Wmo. (7t.4)848·2S2l lge yd & boat doc~ for Hewporthoch 1069 they don't last long in CANYON. CALL: {714) MEWPORTIEACH ••••••••••••••••••••••• Plau. cpts, blt.ns, rrplc, 714:963-~ . Janieboa~ ··~
••••••••••••••••••••••• thisarea.645·0303 646-6382 DUPUXts. SUPERCLEAN =·Dbl. garage. lmmac 3_Br 2 Ba cul de Deluxe4Br,2Ba,cent ~r $750/Mo.AvailAprfUtiru
NEWPORT CUSTOM '") 3 Bdrm 2 ,._..._ unu~ x.lntloc. So. Hwy ..tv d. bltn" N cond, lrplc, cov patio. August. On watec;.~ith . Bayside Village, N.B. 2 ,. • ..... u, ·~· Adults ts sac, c....,. rps, s. r. S375. boat dock •
3 IR+ POOL Br. pvt bch, dock. pools. C)ose Slto2 ~ch & shop· 2BrS48Sm~~lAvis ~~~~:i:r~:·~~~ Central Pk. $t25.847-4525 Beaut. 3 BR. 2 Ba. frplc, W•rf t~
$249,000 $23,500. Aat.64S·0882 pmg. 4 • -·-da/615·331 .. ev ~5365 642 216.. a....1.,,. 2 br nu cpts •· '"'gradedcrpt. $375. '~ 1
Newport's finest custom ... cw.r-.... • · · · " or neu ... ~. ' .. 4 BR Univ. Prk, l blk Call6Jl-14~J!
3 BR-4 bath plus 3300 ••c----. DOLL HOUSE 3 8~2Ba &2Br-1Ba Delx 3 br, 2 ba, built for 82 2 1• Rt71o.4 ~f!!'-gar. from shop'g $450
sq.ft. Massive Del Pis0 ------t blk from beach. $93 l blktoocean$137.000 owner. split-level. W/D, :ute Eastside 1 br house. -mo. :............,.. Allshortle~e.6"4-8415 (ayer. Huge formal Liv· EAST BL.:UFF spece rent. Brick frpl. UnitedB~rs, Rltrs gar. No pets . &485 . Garage, pvt fncd yd. Spotless 2 Br, den, a'1a .
ing Room! Family room By owner-View home. encl'd fncd. palio & PaulSha,p1ro646-741' 675-2763 ~.mo.548,,6680 Brand new 3 bedrm Woodbridge~tates. Mon~co. incl. yan:l.Cfre.
ho sts : Raised 4Br, 3~. fam rm. owner garage & workshop. 1 of LANDING hi 1900 new 3 BR. FR, frpl, 1700 avail Mar. 15, 1;1:L
slumpstone fireplace, will finance, $165,000. a kind. SJ.3.000. 536-5818 •BorregoSpringsduplex.CostoMHG 3124MKSA VERDE·Redec sq.ft.withfor!:edining, sq. n. Lincoln mdl. 673-6510or640-5734 ,
parquet flooT, cathedral Appl 644-1427 early AM $29,500. ~)lBr. Income ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3Br. 2Ba, ram rm. frplc, Beaut. home_. Will rent or ~-,.._....._ !1;76
I· & .. --------S3K yr. Carry sell. OWC. PRIME Joe l br fully A~ t · .... ., .. mo owner wants 1 yr lse & lease w /opuon 547 6391 .-.. _.... .... ~ "'"' cei •ng w et .,ar_. Eastbluff. Condo, 3 Br 21 ... Acre-forte* 1200 TaxesS264yr.$33·8974 fum,onlySl..95 • ~!'.,,...7863 ...... cps.-~ · $575 per mo. incldg · · ••••••••••••••••••'t\.••• Seclud~ Master wing Ba, spilt level w /some •••••;;.••••••••••••••• . Teneit898-9891 Sm Fee .,.... gardener. ~~r 675-1997 eves. By Brand New 3 br, 2~'bli.
walkin ·mirror e view o( Back Bay 264UmtsOrangeCounty. COLLEGEPARK Sharp 3 bedrm, 2 bath · FP, rec facil, ocean
wardrobes. ~alls 0 ! Recently upgraded. l'l•A.CRES Spendable. Prin. only.,....ya11ey 3134 hou se In greatBright&AiryPoolhome. view.$395mo.963·7472
glass overview 36 $ll8,000_ 752.5162. foryourm~b1lehome ~2344,Agent ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beaut 3 _8r, 2ba, frplc:_, neighborhood. lmmed. 38r,l:Y.ba,frplc.Availa· ir_ •··-
sparkling pool. Laundry Ownr /Brkr or bwldmg s1_te Lott f S4lle i200 LAST Yr's. _price 3 br rormal dm rm, new cpts. poss. $400/mo. Roberts ble April 1st. $475/mo. ~=' ......__
room. Loads of storage. Level. All ut1lit1es OI 2ba kids&petsOkS33S' $426. -Ph 548·63.66 or Realty84S·l68S Ph?S2·'78n __,..s .. -1211
Calltopreview.752-1700 WESTCLIFF ava1lable.Fullprice ••••••••••••••••••••••• · · S F 546·560S Agt. ---•••••••••••••••••v..w•
'""'' '" 9 • ,, ~ •uN 10~11«1 $11.500. BKR. COSTA MESA. 13 CP TenexS98-9S9l m ee Willows 4 Br 2 Bu. xlnt Lovet y 2 b r , 1 1,, b a, [~I !I ~I~ =:1u~~e4 ;t~~J~c~z~f l714 >676-:m7 Zoned for l7 units tWwport le•h 3169 Halecrest 3Br, 2Ba. close area, nr schl, park, $395 spacious maslet:•.W
-
. ..~.· ta!; ; Lge lot & patio. $149,000. ORS22-2080 -w/variance possible 18 ....................... to OC Colleg~~-~ fwy. Hllnt~CMI 552-1J07evs/wknds frplc. bltns. yard {~.SS _!!!I! ..• !. . Open daily 1-5 or t:a units.' Has 2 Dplx. 1 World'sareatest view! ~0· 962 88 or ~ 3242 • --• h 3248 lndscpd. ·~bl.k to park.
642.4426. l53l Highlan IMVESTORS! house. S275,~!rin1~n1Jy Bay Island waterfront ••••••••••••••••••••••• ::;:-:;: ••• ~••••••••••• 496-ti018 ~· ·~ Dr O Bk Centwy ""one"' home for lease. Sli.p for Eastside $225, 1 Br, pet 3 Br 3 ba townhouse. -.-----BIG CANYON · Wr .!:·_ BUILDERS! REAl..TORS 162.5353 lge. boat: tennis cts .• 4 OK. Fee. Spa~kling new cond. SCpel.cftfac0ular3 Obcean,ero1~t W~bumm~ Frpk: 28~, CRES·-bt:'L_ween BR, 3 baths. $1200 Per MainRentats,540-5370 $470_ Call "Lila". 1 r. r, rp c 2Ba. ocn \U, nev~r? oc·
CONDO UDO ISLE Oceans1de 1V1sta . OutofCounty mo.,yearlylease 846-l37lor846-S456eves. $600/mo. (213)876·2'123 cup, S425 mo. ~13)
Beautirul rolling hill.s. Property 2550 RUMBOLD REALTY $220. 2 Br. gar, kids. pets eves 684·2145 •
Luxurious Oakcres t 3 Bdrms., 2'2 baths; Small spring (ed lake. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Investments 615--4822 OK.Fee, Exec tri·level, 3 Br 3 Ba,~ Ed • 8 B· / ·d Cod b b . ~ model with lush gold family rm. w1th stone S6000/per a ere. Ca 11 FOR SALE. 40 Acres. . Malo Rentals, 54().5370 fplc, lge Fam ftm. grdnr. . n • 2 r 2 a.' nc n o 3 r, l a, cpts, ., . •
carpet.ing. mirrored wet frplc .. Jcar garage A re-.>is-5880. Pine trees waler view $3000/Mo . Beaut1Cully 2v.i car gar, $62S. Avail yard, close Lo beach & dshwshr. gar. poof, I.I\
bar. deck off living room al beauty'. $260,000 l2 mi rrom Chic~ Calif furnished 3 bedroom on 2 BR. cpts. drps. bltns. no 4115. Aft 5. 5S4·*'Z shopis. Yrly lse. 49·1·7079 pets. $325. 493·<Y755 •·'•"'i
with fantaslic view of Sl6 000 Ph. 549 3755 · the water. lncludtt 19' dogs. -$285 . .YS150 clng. & L Gu NA N 1 G u EL R lee golf course. Sl'curity · · · boat.63H400Agt. sec.dep.S48-38788-.4PM ~ . . . . ' 2 B~ 2 Ba, ~am nr.· F'ORSALE·l60A Irvine 3244 H•l!s1de. m1n1 -v1ew. fncd back yard, $290 mo.-
guard and underground Wood d t l ~res. $145. ulil pd, furn. at DaftaPoiftt 3126 •,•••••••--••••••••••••• Calif. ranch style . 4 492.5771 • ?!. parking. e • _rou s .rea~. beach! Won't last. Sml ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bedrms. formal dine. -----~H -
1£ IQ .• ~· FIVE ACRES lake, cabin. Privacy: ree.645·4900 Dana Point. Exclusive T~kGlu family. garden kitchen, Westminster . 8
UGI Year round access._12 _mi ** C G I* Marina View. 1 rn i. New & ternfi~ on ~st crackling fplc. S450/m.o. •••••••••••••••••tfr, :• Plac• • OAK FLOORS SO.of CORONA. from Chico, Calif. -.sumers u Sha Tri-level Fr le s\reet location with 962-4508. 2Story,4bedrm,2) t Prap•rti•a &PORTHOLES Excellent view. Full $120,000.549·375.5 Condo, no steps. upper Li ·rp. r rm·4~ 2 sii.eable yard. Be the --:--nucpts,drps.fplc;
7S2·1920 pnce$9.900. BKR. E-. b 2b d 2 b r I ba' rNm. admrps /~pt ,.v'd first to Uve in this new· FanLasUc oceanv1ew. 2 $425/mo.714 :963·1 · i•oo oua1lSTNIWf'011TllACH Are just two of the 714677·56lH R~,.---rna. ay, r, en, a, rpc. ew .. •.. dhl d 3 B lb &d ·~Blk l --------features you'll love in Grons 2700 Superb. (urn. Pvt palio, patlo. lg {ncd back yd ness an e P ecorate. r, a en. 0 HouH Fu 'shed · --
Village of Harbor View lh1s Newport He1gbts -OR 552·0530 •••••••••••••••••••••••pool. putting green. Bllns. Avail 3 /15 ~ :!."'Din rm. $650/mo ~:./mo.494·12uor ~!:.cs ,._,
Phase 3. Sbr , 212 ba, charmer.OnlovelyAhi.o Apartments Avail May 1 to 'f'lov. 1. $795/mo.1·636-0974 WATERFRONT HOMES . ---•u•u•••••••••••~·.
-formal din.rm & ram.rm Ave., nr Ch ff Dr Just for s• 1300 AVOCADO $800. mo. Agt. 541·5032 e Toro 3212 631-1400 Charmmg, lower 3 Arch 2br near Hoag Hosp
Profess lnd s cpd . Usted'642·6368 ••••••••••:•••••••••••• Bayhome verylgclBR 1 ed •. 11!!..ROVE LI-..~--u.....a..-1 L-~ •••••••••••••••••• ••.• •• • • cmp oy gen ... '!. w/Jacuizi. flreplt & 2 Devin Red Estate Dana Poin\ eight apart· • .._.._. ..._...snwu Yrly lse. $450 mo. 4 Br 2 frpl, gar, P\'t bch &i. ten-dep.ref.548·3662 ·,
covered patios. Magn1f1 --ments $278.000 P.O. Box 2.43 A.C-$$2 000 ••••••••"•••••••••••••• Lake Forest. super ne,w Ba. FP. 4502 Wvngate. nls. Yrly $375. 499·2632 ----_ . H h,., \" H J b • . • 3Br 2ba. cathedral ce1l· ., •• rent panoramic view of aruyr 1ew omcs. r 2818, Capistrano Beach M~Lure L~ees. Beautiful Gener.a 3202 inge all. 2 car gar. SSl -2000or894·3484 • --Hins -3250 HORSE prop, S. 'S Irvine. AirPort & sur-2 ba. lrg palto. new :ip --b Id " It Bonsal • • •••••••••••• ... .....,...... Ana 3 br den 12 • rounding hills. Wlk'gd1:. pllan ces. Sl25 .000 Cemth~rylots/ · 111 in. s_ em -••• •• •••• . camel col. carpet. PLEASE COME 1
••••••••••••••••••••••• $450'. ' ' ·::, ·
tance from lighted tenms 644·6168 Cryph 1500 ;ust outside Fa4_lbrool<.. THE BLUFFS.View'. SS951mo. BKR. 644-6397 L11:.•ir11:. M"' ,"t MO. FREE RENT Tenex 898·9891 Sm~ Owner very Oextble on 3 BR. 2"'2 ba. $695 Mo. 1511W15 s;. 3 br. 2 ba. fam rm. frplc, court & pool. Sell 'lse op-•-C 076 ••••••••••••••••••••••• r· . D 't TERR . Fount-'-V-'•-3234 --------~ temente t inancmg on miss SEAVTEW .-View mn ...... y •2Br +Den+ View cpts. drps, fncd yd. Condominiums • .d t!on. ll89,900./make o!r. •••••••••••••••••••••••HARBOR REST MEM· tlusgrealinvestmenl op-3BR,2\.7 Ba.$8S()Mo ••••••••••••••••••••••• Townhome$495mo. S3G5/mo. Call Rusty. Unf\rnished :l.fl'S Shownbyap~S40-4~~ BEi\CILCll.\RMEH ~ll~~1 :i~f~~~1.1 4 portun11~>;; ~nly BIOCANYON Attractive 4Br. 388. + •2Br+Den 549.1862 •••••••••••••••••••••••
PROPERTYHOUSE $74,500 -S52.~~a 7 ·17 . 3BR.2~28a.S700M0. bltns, dshwshr. w/w Townhome$525mo. DELUXE 3 BrZBaoffl~t
PRESENTS JBR J u!>l 2 . bl ks to Commtrdal OPtt• ''19;yuN'.OJST LAKE FOREST drps, frpl, auto garopnr. •2Br +Den $375/mo. 3 br, 2 ba. A/C. Tee L. Niguel, Cnttx Clb
Brand new oceanfront beautiful "T " Stret>t P'r'OpM'fy 1600 [11&tlliJElilJ11 3BR,2Ba.$575 nrschls&shopping,Bay Town.home~mo. nr.Rossmoor.552·9503& Comm pool. assoc ~ues ~~~· 3 br & 2 br ~~~ ~~wr!1~~~~·~~~ ~::;;,::;;;;;·,:~~·;;~;2~~ 'Qtt JiQIJ\ ~.,i .. ~~~~~~~xt ~~~ :f=-::~::~:s L=Miguet 3252 Sppd.ue.8302b·9544 d~;2·b
Super Sea wind Condo. 2 New exclusive h~llng l9th & Pomona. $40,000 _ _ _ _ _ days. 842·3612 e $37. • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ac1ous . I' con o. a, BERTllAHE:"lllY cash 499-3459 ~----------Bmo. . encl patio, pool -l>riv, br,2 ba. on Only $71.500. REAL.TORS __ AXll!a UPPER 2Story, 3bedrm. 2 ba, All ~f the above are 1n BRAND new 2~r+ Oen burglar proo( safety
Charming Peninsula 3 br 215 Del Ma<, San Clem C0ttdoMit1ili•s/TOWR· '"" 5 bonus room. ~pie, DW. Jrvtne. Call today, Monarch Summit Condo. grills on windows.• blk
home on tstblk. Fee slm· 492.4121 houMsfor.-1700 Near new 4BR. 2~ltba. $395/mo. 714 .00J..4569 752-\700 . View. $495. !714)493·0.131 Crom Leisure Wo d.
pie. $1~.ooo ••••••••••••••••••••••• needs TL<:. Terms. BKR. Attr cti 2B 28a 2 car OPfN m 9• "HUN rotit MCro Ask for No 73, Mr Bab--831.1744 • •
AJI hot new llslings, .just CUST0~1 EXECUTIVE CONDO SPECIALIST 714/ 676-S717 a ve r, • 1··· -., , I cock. or (213)831-2401. wa1t1ng for the r1ght llOME ~•th nposed H 8 CM F VI ORS.22·2080 gar twnbse, pool, w/w ,. ·~1.llJJli!!ill 3Br. 2Ba, enclo
huyer CALL642·3850 b eams & trusi;es T .. h ·t · Rlt Y ~ 523 C\ f cpts,AC,wshr/dry~,$35C , ·~J1JjHJ!j Lovely 3· Br 2 Ba .~'!'le, garages, swim .---------i gourmf'lki\t•hen.su.nkl'~ ~$one y. SP'"' .... ISH If MPUsDt~RVltfE mo.(213)433..s266e e. .· .. "'=·-·····~ f~lc .,.bllns, yd. 1he pools, patios, gard
hvin° room & park hke --~" OPENDAILY .. ta... •-h 3240 Hills .$385.494·1930evs. service, bltns. $325· Hcrbor Hlcjld•ds
Don 't miss this quality
bulll 4 bedrm home with
s parkling n~w
balhroomi;. Beautiful
C'ustom po0l by lrvmt!
Pooli.. Many custom
features thruoul. Locut
t•d in NewPorl Harbor
lhgh School Dist Cull
540· 1151
~a. HERITAGE
. ,. REAUORS
"' HILLTOP EST A TE o p ua .. ..,.Oft ... oc For lse $350. 2br I 'hba, • ~. surround1nR'> l'an be hlcOIM Pro,.,ty 2000 8A.M. T 6 .M. ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• new TownhoU!le' Wood· Immaculate 3Br. 2ba on a mo. . . .\ -shown anvl1nw .\~kinit ••••••••••••••••••••••• Spectacular view to brid D 6A~.5565 secluded lot. Fireplc. air· 8126 R1dgcf1eld H.a;~,, SM~.ooo ocean. 21 Acre:; mature Homes for rent in best I Have Several 3 br homes 675-c.~~'a ays, .... or cond. $425/mo. Bond l5958 R.,o~.al Court P..V.\ 6UnitsE/SldeCM oranges and avocados. areas,Nwpt,"CM.$!50 & townhomes w /pool, ........., Realty.831·9411 3040 B So. Bradfot
A.MCHOIAGI
IHYUTMINTS
f714) 4'6-7711
NeiuWestc,iffi;hopptng TOPproductioninwarm to$1150permo.640·2981 tennis, etc. $4~5/$550. Pl.S.A.
Like new mtenors. Xlnl section, Valley Center. Joan or Jo, 846·l371 or MO WAITING Mission Vi•io 3267 1 mile from So. C.
1nve11tme.11t By appt Permanent sprinkler REMTHS 846-2597 1 BrCondo $275/tno ••••••••••••••••••••••• Plaza. 546-3429 1 only $205,000 system. Custom built Hses·Dplx·Aptsallareas Vacant. 3 BR. l~ ba, 2l,lrCondo $325 FOR LEASE Brand new r
secluded home w /tile LIFETIME SERVICE cl~ to ocean. $375. Allk ~=~~~~ ~ 3Br, wtfam rm, din rm, uucury C_ondc(
roof, outbuildings & pool. S851Rm rum N.B. Fee for Keith 961H.3l1 Bkr. 3 Br Condo $360 2Ba. cpts/drps, lndscpd, 2 Br, den, 1111 Ba. dini
Fam 1 I y or ch a rd , $150. lbrhouse, Cyl)ress 3 BrTownhme $400 $400 mo. 768·5313 area, pool. jacuzzi,. .
landscaped yard . Sl'10Studlo,u1UpdCM 2 Br condo, adult com· HB. Malloy Re•lto s
Lo vely 3br. 2 1"Z ba 1S2·l9'JO
1249,000. Terms . Sl002br,kld.s,petsGG plex,pool&recfacil.Nr 3BrHome t~ Rent ror Less 3Br, 2Ba. 963--9'171
Consider trade. (714) $230.lbrtrlplexN.B. Brookhurst It Adams. 38rGardenHm ..,25 tam rm, pat_io, frplc, t?tfl -n.-a..---1-...... ----.~-,-0 749-0260. $250.2br,lddsokCM $300mo.M'l-6403 2Br1'ownhme .,.. vu. very qwet, $375 mo. -r""XHvwn~ ~
S360.3brcoodoH.B. 3BrTownhme S425 (.213)821·2190 ••••••••••••••••••h •
$275.3brpooldplxC.M. Shall> 2Br, 2 car 1araee1 ZBrDenPaUoffm $4~ Balboa Pen, w. Ba)I A e,
~~ ..... !?!.! !!!~
Dllhwllhr, patio. Cas1tas 1<100 OUAll lt. N& .. ..,. ..
lliiiiiiiliiliiiiiiliillllliilliiiliiliit--t S.J.C. s:ns Agt 496-5167 4 U .•• N rt H h'· 2 -- --na"". ewpo g .... LAMD FOR REHT A 21-&UN
SALUTE
can't do this showplace
justice! Professionally
decorated in earth-tones,
this "Palermo" 4BR,
38A home la graced with
Van Luit. wall coverina
and a custom, solid oak
wall unit In th" fnmily
room. Sun-control win·
dows, wet bar, pictures·
que landsc1tplng
en hancelri:y 21 artistically p trees,
TWO firep ces and
formal dining room, all
blend into a magnificent
masterpiece! $169,000.
BtJl view home under con· Duplex~. All 2 Bdrm.
struction, 4Br. 21'1Ba. Iba. Closed garases,
den, loft. lrplc. avail blockwelJ fence, 1& yd.
May, Sl~.000. Owner, Sl75.000. 20% do. Agt
&44· 1791'. IJ4i6.4884 ------1
s.toA.no 1080 •4-PLEX•
•••••••••••••••••••••••Neat Lake Park .
All nunutes to beach. 1·4 BR
U 3 ba, 1·3 BR 2Yt ba, 2· l SprucH p! HR. Comer lot, attached
And waiting for your gural'e. fireplaces. cur~(ul inspection! Ct"n· $168.000. 1700 Alabama,
tral air. new drapes. Huntington Beach,
rreshl)' painted and 536-1118
wallpapered. S)>arklinl( -----
pool and patio a~a. hrc 20 UNJTS, 350 Avocado St.
ring too! 4 Bedrooms. 2 Costa Mesa. 1 duplex 12
baths. Separate dininl( cottages, 6 trailers. In•
area . $69 ,800, call come $32,280. Priced
540-1'120. $265,000. Will accept
~TMllU. ~ "#1 '-Ctlfdrftfa''
MOO QIUAIUt. MACM T.... I 090
tradfo. Pri.n. Only Please.
Agent/Owntt 642-9666
COSTA MESA
SEAVlEW·Pa11oramic •••••••••••••••••••••••
Vu. 4.Br, pvt eomm, avail l II-TUSTIN
soon. 833-2929. '44-1181 $$9, 900-onMI _________ , Goraeoua Plan "1)1' ffl.
OCEAN ·ouPLEX
Eacellenl cendlllon 3
bedtm. a bath wttb large
fireplace down Ol\d 2
bedrm with huie aun·
de& up. Onfl block from
beach on Balboa Peninsula. Fre1hly
fMklntl!d ota of apnc , See tbt ocean from sun.
dedl Hum'!
titlC...h
........ J):.3110
-
Costa Mesa, fertile land,
9Sx60'. flower or vegeta·
ble sarden. COO per mo .•
wtr. incl'd. 2057 Tustin
Ave. &45-tM96
SJ00.3br,kidsokC.M. cpts.L..!!lcd yd, $350 mo. 3Brl>enHome $440 Bargain. 2 Br condo alJr. 28 a. frpJ.._"C.
S325.2brbae,loadedHB llG-zrnoc'-.1208 38rFRHome S4SO w/alr. gar, $300. Call cpts/drps, gar, 675·«1J14
'375. 4br, loaded ~B 3 BrTownhome $450 830·5223 dys; 631 ·0363 afl 7PM
$C504br,Zst.v.iarHB FOR leue 3 br, l~ ba. 4Brllome 5450 evs.Owner/agt. -----· ------
•HOMIFIMDIRS ~ftT~leu. sa~ mo. ~~~8:eenHm == Hewportleoch 3269 AparfmtnhhmisJMt'
557..0122 4.Br FR, DR Hm $5.25 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••• •• ., --------13 Br. 2 ba, near bch. 4 BrTriLevel l5!iO THE ILUFFS lolloo lalond ~ 6
4Br1\trtlerk $56$ Lee. 3 BR. 2·sly. end un. •••••••••••••••••'-"' 38r, DR tt. Best early area. Bay YRLY 1 br, els. to ay.
Ticonderoga $600 View. Adult home. Va· lncl's wash/dryer,, gur.
4 Br T.R. Olen $625 ctnt, clean & inove•ln re· paUo w /BBQ & uUJ•. $.ll.?()
4 Br, Pool, Spa $700 ady. '825 Monlh per mo. 616-2099 ri
5 BrT.R. Olen t850 AGENT ~·5560 1a1boa PeRinsaala 3707
' •
r
... ··~·..... ·--~·· ... -&&llh .. -lilllllifl1°0 1-.,.....,,----~_;.;..;:~ .... 1 .. 11'11117141~
M..+JU~ , ...... ... 1 u.i. ,...., ..... I.Mt&..... ll10
m••t pr-ojet'ted ott ·-.... ·-·-• ... • ·---··-··--··7 -. um ,r. ~ i.: YelJowtw t.ab ~...-..m~ ""'*' bUIM to ballel1e. l'lllllr· r,m.. JOlb Vlt 01U AkOMI tW:plJM
.,...s.10 dya. Wllnd• 2 BR. newtydec. B&tns. It l BR.
1
._. Ba Stodlo DEUJXB 16 2 Br. pool. Can bt relot'aUd. rectco. C.111. Reward: Jebnacta.y-...0 ~ & alry $320. '44..a..a w,tpaUo. N.-fJ redec: rec rm. krfely l«tlU.. ......... •dlO bid<. Nr ()(: Airport ....,,.,.,..,129'$dowo. ~1 · 137·2210. &•: itautpnabaveunctt-
<M-..--.. ••-a. Days; S7S.3ZMEWIS. Nopeta.11S5mo.534·11ae mtl Aloma. o« Qewn ••un••---·~· Services Incl phon• U. 7Sl-J741 ~ Mal, ma ll'MD&P abOu& tMV • . ~ -F• -Valle)', from nu. WU&hnlt9e«lbart3 answerln& e~rerence CNn•ALLRY FO\lOd Ftm 8 m Anaheim St11dlo . ~~~•all now di C:..-
3124
2 .!";!:.'· t.';'.,:"" .:: .,....,. ••Bo. ..,. 'nfli•I 1 ::0,. •:;•;::~·~~.; Newport .. ,.. W•nt _. • Coll,. mix ,.._,
_________ , ...... \ • .;.;............. 64$.a7I ... .,.... .._. ll't pera.on. p,..f. t•m. calt't14~"40 adtve oar\IMlr or Jn•Y be IMIPPY Blonde color. v1c1---D-RINKING ____ _
---------tAdult ESkk 162 br apt.a •••-••••-•••••••••••• ~1950 ~-Mr. Smith. R'br•V1dGria.~. cre-1lea problems. It
!!llcl a•r. patio. PoOI: NR OOC Hice \Mach pad. 2 Br. 2 a. lwt. apt over. J>rol. llale Sffb empl Umque otncee ror rent. UM8'7WC9> POUND 2 mat. dop. 1 doesn't aolve them. If
Like new. no peU rncdyd. lddsok SlU looklDI Newport Bay remak to share cbarm· tmtonc cannery Vllla1e _._a......u ..._.. blackll:l beip. you need help . call M4-087I Tenex~ll881Sml'ee wttbbeltoQ16:firei>latt in& house in Newport from UOO.~per mo. 6 _,,.._._ ~ CARDl&DOf Hoapd.&l 1n Sl.IOZ 64Mi25l month le•e Ot1I ll'ICI. NrCamp Pendelton Oranae 133-9582
Sp9c. 3braptoruseat as2 2 BR. 2 ba. prefer reUnd Also •va1l1ble tree ~CN\ Sq fl -.... _...,...,. n..-b'.. "'all _ __;::..:......:.:;..:...:..:.=-----
br • den. Frptc. patio & adults. no chlldern or rAU MIWPOIT n.t' b Id _,., · ·• _. rent + rvv•,.,: """' ... e ...
pool Adults.
--.c. . ..,
0
-·.842·"'·-Ba-helors.
1
or
2
c.tDo.-. "• .,1DI Ul inl·Ample tax Frft standing b\da. 551 ·8231 to Identify FORLA.DllS _.... n ,_... ....,._ .. ~Expetases! pna1na·Storage Lot Needs live wire to pro-Jrvtnearea. WHO want lO tallr to a
pet.a 645-3.18l or83'7·9517 2br E-Skk. Nr new. Close ~:~~ Share abomeor apt ~~ ~-~t ~~~";gr ~~:~~dudes J P'ound: Husky Shepherd f~-6&all any ti me.
Mesa Verde 2 br UJl8l.ain. lo abop'a. Dsbw1hr. Spectacular spa. total tp&-Obru ~ retail sh~p w 1d11play Ull 137-4200 Puppy, fem. Tan collar ---------
New cpts. Rers $250. stove. frpk.•ear. laun· recrealloo program. ~~~~ area.JnqwreatTbeFac w/sllver studs. 982·71.M. C..Wt.alleodet-498-1936~5860 dry. Older child ok ~lal progra111.8Po0ls.8 w~b.NOIWCl tory. 425 E 30th St. Pony Rides Buslneu F V. 1e1$'5;,~ ElCamlno Real associated
•11C I £RS-llfl\I '(lliS
• • th lu't.Joy tJ • '11 l
Water /gas pd. 203 Ogle. tenrus courts. At Fashion Newport Beach or call Co-plet.e porues ta"'lt a. , -b'" .. ll bro f San C East.side new tnhousea. $325. 548·3281 eves & lsland. Jamboree & San For over Syn. 832-4134 6'13-427lore?~UU ~· bl r' .. al .. ~· .. • wn em lemente Fully lie. :!1rro:'~~&u~cJr· wknds. Joaquin Hills Road. Young career girl non· • :r1~1oe nng or s e. ~m~l~l>,·~!!~C~ __ F_or_a;..::pc.:.pt..:.;·_:GZ::..:..·1296.::::.:__
-----'----=-;..;..:...--....1Good locaUon. 2Br. 2ba. 1714)644-1900 smoker lo share 2Br. llllilltu R..tal 4450 3 12 N • -•SUZl"S•
BAYFRONT 2 br. 2 ba, ;i· Mar. 18. Pvt club. ••. req·d. 499.4147
Foxhollow Vtloge gar b I lo s fr p I c 2 Ba a pl f r p I c ••••••••••••••••••••••• *STOP* / · o . .-a.
494
'
2920
Outcall Massa1e
521W.Wllaoo646-2010 drpeicpts, patio. Adulu: 2 Br 2 Ba. ~eslcliff area. garage,ateJJa to bcb $175 LAGUNA 11!.ACH Do YoW' want to make LOST: Standard Poodle, 10AM·2AM 7!1·5448
NODEPOSITTOQUAL. ~pets. $2115 hnmed oc· Pool,nochildrenorpeta. mo. f573.31181. MOii. Tue. 5-11 money• black M. Ana. "Choe" Happy llfthday
•2br townhome w /frpl cup. ~or 5S'H341 $32Smo. ~1 Wed eve. C-rdal Ston I Do you. bave 8 car. 3 bn Any Info welcome. re-•l.ge~tlo & enc. gar. w"'--MT k ward M9-1992 •Adi.Ill.I, child 16 & over FROM SZ IS •' -"'""' Npt Deb. 2 straight prol or can be Wied as pm-p/W .13.980! --·--_;_----1 •Small petok Mature adulU only, IM> NEW 2 br & 2 br + dea men seek 3rd to share ressionat office. Located We i:uave 8 brand new LOST: Mex. Pauport pet& Large 162 br 1pta lwlury apta. very plush Oen Vu hae. In older soowtng com· vending mad~ine. Jt l2m. Atlanta & Ollv
IUHDHEW Dab~. pa BBQ. '21.S: •Bullt-1.u $245: + \.\util.&44--0'84 plex. wllh rustic at· One of a kind money Ave. HB Reward.
2 b r townhouses. mo. Gas pd. 178 Scott Pl. •Truh Compec:tor mosphere. $175 Mo .. l.lUI. maker. 536·7892 (714 >
*Mita*
<de or un I claaslfled lg
Happy Birthday
Betty!
lelahdly
from the cake stuffer live
BIG! garages, fenced patios. 66~1or94J.S01J •Wet Bar LawOfflc•S,OC• prudbylandlord We locale the machines air cood. $295/mo. •Fireplace Ceotra!Laguna.494·15&5 MIS.SIONREALTY for you and show you LOST : SbelUe. M. 9 yrs.
642-66l2or642-02.82 2 Br. util furn. children •Private beach 985S.Coast.Laguna howtooPeratethem. d k Sa b I e, v 1 c
---------1 welcome. No pets. Mgr •P1uJglasseocl.~uos Female to shue nlre 494-0731 No product. JWll collect Goldenwest/Warner
New studio. 2 bedmi. l~ Apt Ii. 1960 Wallace. •Smokedetec:tors home in Irvine. $110/ + lhemoney. H.B. 3fll. 835-8234 or aft bath, air cond .. prlv 642~ •Sl1psava1l tolenants "'utit.552~ NWPT.BcH!rrORE Let us help you make 6PM 847·7162
GREAT RECREA pallo. a ll bllns, quiet. 91!1Baya1de Dr.673-8414 2830AvooSt $275/mo yoorfuturesuccesstul. TION Swim Mgr 1919 Anaheim St Slll6.1 Br. encl gar. refrlg. Roommate, hae 2 blk1 Jerry Wynn ,213)4TJ.T70l For information call Mr. LOST: Sm. reddish brwn ~ \GllO\. 2 heohh clut». ~:HOO S280/mo. Adults.· 136 E. Bay St. 541·S331. 2 Br. 1i,., ba t.ownbouse bch., frpk. Fem pref'd Peed. 75.2·1.203 Olihuabua 3/13. v1c 17th Fallow -Idiot bi~. niq,t·l.qh•ed tenno· evs.646-232S style . .-.ults, no pet.a ~lordf.2635 STOR&OFFICE..SHOP St/llthPl.C M.64.2-8593 Bound -Rellsh -~ Pro & pro shop qolf S295. Xtra lge tnhse. l ~ B 1235 548·21682 F _10 • • Newport & Bay Cen!et PioMer Chkkett LOST FLOODS ...l..t..>...-"""""' """Y room ba, garage. Adults. 34 EAUT. new 4·plex. 2" J em ......., IO 20 s lo shr ~Newport Blvd. CM wow• --.. ~ II G<>ld Loop P1e~ed A hard luck iUY com 1::"::.."-'A._CT"'r'IVIT.....-IES. F
11
Elden #l3 646-8885 br, 3 br. 2 ba. spbt level, LOT OF CHARM. New ruce El Toro apt wtsame 646-1252."4·22211 Or Co ~"" ,U:::t .,_.anvoooa earn n g v 1r Ba I boa plains: "Into each life ..._, u time ' frpl, l.Ddry rm, enc. ~ar Condo, 2 br, 2 ba. Back use. Call ~2548 __ _;_,;...._;.;...;.._;,_;:..;;::.:__1 g. · .op LAil: ~. lsland. on lOU\....962 7993 some rain must fall, but I 8~· free Sul'day brul>ch. Adult 2 Bedroom. beam PaUo.2br.2ba,yd.Wlll cB!Yld area, dbl gar . ---R...._..._. .... 00 4DB.UXEOFC'S tn'::d~!'bt EC~Z11 °f;r· '-l boys ba•oball mitt. wFLOOasnOS·t .. expec t1n ~
vv s. trips. port•es. sport ('('1bngs, no pels $210 568 consider pet & cblldreo nl N!n OK. no pets. vn-~ .... Conf t 2S 11 " ~ "" ioe.nomem&moro' W Wilson.lnq.Apt.C. 642-1603 . $315/mo.~-MSZ· ••••••••••••••••••••••• .ledrm .. sea .. _~. a moredet.alb. • Vic Cecil Pl & l~th. on ---------OFC SUITE for rent. pane •am. w,...., m re Ull 751-1741 Orange CM Not1fyt---------
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS· Huge 2br, uUI pd. End. 0-PoW 3126 lfcJC-hst ocean view. lg. balcony. ar lot 2 yr. lease. Lake EmestStewart.MIJ.4138 HAPPY
BIRTHDAY
NITA
~les. I & 2 bedrooms paUo.366E.20thSt.C.M. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 br apt.-;:Rolf course upst.airs.w,garage. $500 Forest art-a . Kent Aower5&Plmts Fooi. & "'ftsn Model~ QPe(l 1275/mo.645-3936 DEUGlll'FUL lg. 2 br. 2 now avail. mo. SJ6.8834 David Dahl Harkins. MISSION VIEJO Lost. ma
1
e Gold~ o
doily 10 10 7 Roommo1e Ea d • ba.frpl,gas&wtrpd.No •DblSell-cleanoven 714·581·9393 Total price S7000. Work Retriever Vic. So ,~.°"°I N<> leow re· sts1 e. Freshly dee .• 2 duldrenorpel.s.493·7439 •lUu1pforWuhr1Dryer CORO ... "'DELM ... R RETA.IL STORE Ing partner split. in· Laguna Sleepless n1tes qu<fed ~ oduhs ody no BR. Adults only. no pets. •AlrCondiUoned ,..._ • veator want.soul now. w1out him. Please re pe~ Pool. Im med. occupao-2br, 2ba. «teck. ocean •Flr""'lace Private office in the Beach area, 960sq f't. All Ull 117•4200 tum. Reward 499·2151,
cy. $225Mo.64&-1947 vtew. S275 moot.h. (21.3) •2c;;;Garw/autoopnr Mutual Savings Bid~ Coew lmprovemvots . --------...:. (21.3>862·5204 Oakwood 790 l.39'l Ample parking, :ur· rpt, cust. hghtin~. IURGutS
RlOM
AU THE
"Q.ASSI GANG .. I BR. cpts, drp8. Kids ok, · •fUllSecurity conditioning. janitorial frplc. etc. Cash for Im· ~ LOST. Sml Brown Cat.
QardcnApa.rtments no pets. Garage. $200. SPACIOUS 2 br. or. 644-0509 service included. Over provemeoU; + flexible $11,000.&fo.gross.$3.000 red collar.fem Vi~ Hbr 645-2978 Marina. Appl's. cpts. •DILUX1t.... 440 sq. ft. Only $177 per lea:se.67S.J(MIC)C10-41 mo. net. Major Blvd Vu Hms. 640·0507.~~~~~~~~~ A...-S2 .u.. ...-Priced to sell. Free 640-1Z70Reward Ip·-__. r-i-11
ADULT 1&.2 Br Vacant. :;'J>'M" 15· 496--2 bef Eastbluff 3 br, 2 ba month. 673-4400 BALBOA INN :.tand'g. Other goodies --.-.-...... H 5~60 .. ...,.. ... 11/Horltl
8aO Irvine <al 17th I
~
Redecorated inside & Lease. Ind. spac master $250 mo Yrly lse Prime too! Lost· Male Siamese Cat ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·
out All uul pd. Call Sue, HIMtbq011leoch 3140 suite. d10 rm & dbl HARBOR ~celolon 67~740. UBI 751-1741 nr. CM. Hu skin roodl LO<'al resident seeks ap ~7777. •••••••••••••••••••••••garage. Auto door lion Reward. 54<Hl583. polntments as personal
Opener a 1 p I •-4llO Sq ft Balboa Island. •-..& oi:..t.~/"'-!)4()-036S aid d
Newport Hght
•. n-and Lge 1 & 2 Br. 2 ba sei: va1 oo "' _,,.... ~ ~· l'. r1 vc.>r. comp. ... o• r..,.reauon e Ad Its 114 A0 ate Ideal for couner et 673-llJA
new Twn
.. -e
1
•.
2
Br apts Adults only. 00 "" ar a. u " S160.000lastyeat L 0 · c. ., ,,., ... -•u No pets f' • .,..., specialty shop, law or 0 d ost old watch, 1n ---*M~SAGE* frplc. d1sh0washer & pets. AiC & Dshwshr "'YJ rom ....,, A Division of f1ce, acctg. etc Days utstao mi.: facilities. scribed El'Tlttt Cam'!>
drapes 245 16th Place. Pool & Jacuul. Prom up 86SA w llarbor ln\•estmeot Co. (2131289 9'307 . t!Vt!S big yard. aulhonied re~ Reward~-~. 1 Br. ut1l prl. 2 adulti. From $250. 642-5722 S220 mo. 19132 Magnolia. mitios ay <7l4 )Tn-3653 Johnson. OMC & others ---------no pel:. Lnl1I Jun I~ ~ 962·1800 Nu Npt Hjls 2 Br. 2"'1 Ba. ---'!Iii;. Very little help required Found Tan & Blk Temer. 6TJ..159S 21~~ F R r 60"PEASQFT Approx. 1400sqrt Rela1I Easyterms'. male. vie lllh St. HB e lttcETO-"'CH am m. pie, at.num 1617WESTCUFF·NB I I Ult 8117 .. 200 "-11536 3179
......... IMcll/5°'"'
1700 16th St
<Dover at 16th 1"
642 8170 OUTCALL M~SAG E
*&~-0034*
Bltns-adults·S295. •~ No pets End gar S39S space. in x nt ocat100 .a -'-"' • 2 Br. 2 Ba. 1~· from the m3-0512 or&3l·~ Lge 4 br. 3 ba. frpk, &44-8034 AGT.541·5032 Tusun & Palm. OranMc J---a...st--~oun--d-S'-.1-am---e--mix ..... -yo-al SoclalClllbs 5400
sand $350. t1I Juot· Ai.rt dshwhr. alt. l(aragc. . Good for liquor store etc ,.. .......... -, ... .. ..... " Nof~ 642·~ 2 BR, cpts. df"P8. bJtns. end. yd. No dof(s 1703 S.C...• 3176 1501 Wntclff Dr. Avail Apnl 1. Rent re Top drawer mercban· whl ma I e l' a·t V
1
c •••••••••••••••••••••••
Near shopping. Ideal for Alabama, 536·3-465 or....................... Ne= FinandalCLr ason.4118-3187 d11e . Prestige area ~ristol/81rch J /11. Boo Seddleback Singles Club. AfJ;.;;."!'......... middle age cpl. S2l5. No 536-1TI8 Duplex 2 BR. 2'it Ba. L..oL-Offk•Spoc~ S7000 mo. neL Help run. rue833-216ldya. 835-0489. 639·~18. Free _... chUdreoorpets ~16 • • frplc. all bltn kllch. ...._trialRtwtal 4500 Asleal!Seeit! Broch P.O. Box 1805.
••••••••••••••••••••••• ---Huntlnatoo Hrbr area stained &lass tbru-out, CallonSlt,Manager ....................... Ult 751•1741 Found Benotto Bike SA. ~ lab>o Pet!hnulo 3107 2br. bltns. szso mo. 2Br. pool, peUo rondo. very lge apt. $350. mo. <714 I 642·3111ext246 •MJSslON VIEJO• owner ldeoury by color,
••••••••••••••••••••••• lst&last.121 E. Bay. Nr b99dl. abops. achls No children please. X1nt location lo new In· ltali R _. serial no .. s11e. dale & •THEA.HS * Stepa to beach 2br. 2 ba. S49-3826al3-431-35418 lmmed occupancy. 1325 492·1516 Prime location in Hunt· dustrlal park. an Htc.lrusn loc. lost. Contact If B. If you·re single and Ured Ph 963-5.228 I o g t o n B e a c h o o Missioo Viejo area Police Dept, 536-5621 of the bar scenes. we can
sundeck, ocean vu. enc
1255
. Near new
2
br.
1
.,. ScMllhl.apla 3116 Brookhurst, 800 square 49.1-1'102eva4!r.M687. Netllng S2900 mo. S2500 show you a way to meet :" ... ~!'' c,f,':: ,~·~.'~: bo, patio, garden. adtts. 2 "' ..iutt .... w 1Potlo. ••••-••••••••••••••,.. r .... Sinai•. gmleo ''"" •HEWl'ORT IEACH • mn. and growing with Found, •mail rem. Dog. ""''"'• & ,.,.., .. ,nil• 6T3·3fil0nrfi
73 11~ nopeb. 642·leo3. fl40. All uUI pd. t«e. quiet. luxurious. ex· store or office. Good ex· boom. Owner moving to Trbe1ge. Vic. Hoover & people of all aaes fast. ""'' -~2914 ec. 2 br. 2 ba apt. poeure, assigned pArk· :BS0-7'700-11.500 Sq n. larger business. Terms. , ask.Westm.897·6833 wc·vc not the answer ...
NEW\ & 2 bedrm a...t• E'~ tor t Qi · ing. Call Mr. Plummer sprinklered. 12 Ft over· Tl ... E 7"1 1400 ,.., ' .,_. ..,va 0 see c pnv .,,,,., ,..,
67
head door•, toad log '" ' " · $50 REWARD· For Blk at Vi_deov_iew. 997·~
Pnvpallol&garagea. FromS2SO\o$400. total s~urity . Perfect dock. ROBERT NAT· UQUORSTORE Tom. strayed Nov. 6 El= nt& 3 Br 2 Ba. ull nl.'w. cpl!!.
drps & paint 1450 yrly
20S·33rd St c Aaicony 1
646-8781 or Ml) 3737
S250toS3lOpermo. NEW -l.U1J8DRMS bch. Party&gameroom, ........,, "
Dnve by 3417 Elden f!39.nl9 livlnaor wknd retreat ror DauXEOPFICIS TR~. Realtor 752-»tt GrossS26.000 Mo. wben ownr went for 1111r:· oymtatl caJI i... UL"'_... Co 1 & ·nd I 7 y gery. boarded 11.B. area eparc '°" or ~~~-Near Broollhurst & lhe adventurous •dull mm I .al spaces. Sto1099 4550 ear owner -retiring. or Vall/Newland. LI( ....................... .
COTTAG
"', .,..,,_
2
br Pvt Ha-'I•-. l&e '"br. 2, ... ba. ~~i at SSlS. mo 200 to 2000 eq. n. As low ••• .. ••••••••••••••••• F1al 1825. mo. rent. Busy Bl k T h Schooh & r. • ,,... nu""'' " ..., _."""""" as 35' sq. ft. Lag Niguel & S 11 bo t •. t 11 shoppmg center. 29% ac om. md legs. ._...__~--
HWT)' Sl75 Ulil vd Near
wn\L'r Fee Mam Rental, ~o s:J70
patk>. a•r • waah rm frplc. yard. enc. gareae --Mission VleJO areas me a • ra ers. ren Down. TIME. 751.1400 fmt toes. nose & chesl un~nvn 7005 \luldren OK. no pets _?S S-9088 iftf tw• ,_,...._d H d s 0 F tal apace. St 00 per foot wht. Blk spot on right ..................... ..
Wtr pd. S250 mo +lut Del"•e __.
1
... _ •tra
1
orU....., .. d JtOO C:1f-fa to · rwy Limit lenirth 22·. 181 Business Sales CO. sells side of nose Skin pro· MEN WOMEN
mo
•-"~p Avl 4110 For ..... _.. ..,. " ge l·l400 Monrovia Ave, CM. ....._, ____ a·n So. Oran"e ..... m. '·'"s hind quart"rs ._,., .... FOR
••••••••••••••••••••••• ,. ._ • · 2tJr 2ba bl•-• d b h ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..,....u"'~" e ""' UI\ "" I Ill.A " sppt tolft' 645-~0 · • .. ... • w r THEEXCmNG 50'persq.ft Meror call~-8627 Co Restaurants, Bars. & wl a lot. Call coiled 8ARTEl4DIHG
LG 2 br ...... ,_ Avl. 4/1 ~ ~ ~no peu p~INUTMIESISTAOAN"PTS. .cl()Al Bitth-N B Fenced 70x80' Lot. lo etc. Buy or se"'. Call eves. <21.3 I 661 2592 TWO WEEK CLASS ............, ,. gt. 541·5032 831-0870. <Also Salesmen . --NATION WTD
COf'Oftodel Mar 3122
rr£A;~-~ USO mo. No Pets. Cl\nst.I w-•~-.., BCH rent.Cotta .. esa. wantedl LOST~ Man a gold ID · EJOB ~ ans ~vme· ,,u2 SMALL Commerelal 846-5883 · bracelet. 1n1tlala R.B PLACEMENT
br. l"t ba 1W(bo. 12'0 aq Bach. llr.2 BR a.-om & ....__ Nn....T Rew rd Lo& VI ~!STANCE
2 Br dplx, new cpt.. ctrps. ft . bttm.. ~ 1ar frpk. 1 from Sli'>. .,...,..... cea storage 0& RSTORAGE _._, ~-OYtn a t c lloag GOOD tpk, nr puk, "'"· .... ml to ODN11. ;J ... •m Adullo, No P.., ~om SIS mo. "8·T><t 12'x>1', ... & SIO pe• moJ o..., ..... lfooth ' :"Le Call ,,..Tm ••k OPPORTU~~~IES
CORONA DEL MAR
2.. Br Townhouse. frplc Pool. temus. Some ocean
& Catalina views Close
J.O 1hoppln1 & floe beach.
$44-21111
mo No pets. chlld oil. pets. fee. t350tS315 t5Cl M ... Dr C.M. lleta.ldoor·ln-door Costa Mesa. Absentee .AMBICAH ~S844 M&-3714 / ... 1458 <s BlUEaatolNewport EXICUTIYI OPENSTORAGE owner can't handle. A·I 120 Reward for male Blvd.> 13'd0" foc'd, 990 mo. thnH>ut. Gold mine for Keethood. Call aft s IAlla.DBS
2 Br or t Br & Fam Rm. l Bill from beach. 2 8" l 546-981111 loyft'Ollt Offk.s 2140 Newport Blvd. CM owner-operator. Good &e-1821. _. · SCHOOL
fplc. ereen apaco. Be. sml 1>1tJo. ent>I . aar. -----~.:...;..---I Prime LocaUon ~ml 548-14 terms TIME. 75M400 1104 E 11th St.. SA
mature ad Its . $225. 1265. Aft5.M4-4MZ PllYllWIHG 3:98VlaUdo. NwptBc:b hnoMh 5150 834-1980 642-0481 2MO UMfT Furn. or uni. SJ.»S500 ......_ W.e.d ••••••••••••••••••••••• Schools Coast To Coast
,....,.,,...._,. SecretartalaervavaU. .. .................... .
Brand newt Br 1.,. Ba. ..._.Be_.. HOllSB 2501q. ft. Reaponalble Journalls 1 PREGNANT? L .A. COLL EC E o F
(2) 3BR. 2BA Duplexes rp1c. will consider Bmall UllD All OceanorBayY1e1'. seeks small l BdrrrN:ot· Caring confidential MASSAGE. Low cost
avallablr. close to shops, child. No .,.u.
1295
. 'Nan Con~porary 6 casual 675"'5820wkd,-. only. counseling & rererral Day·Eve·Sat Classes in
'beach&park XlntCdM. 9112·7'787:~ 11\ebeatolNG'#port's Abortion. adoption & S&nt.aAoa.556·1171
'loc:euons. From S350 to aood Ufe. uCdM dlx 2 rm a~t.. keeplng. $475 Ask (or Mlul, · DELUXE2BR.2BA •Beamedcelllnp uUI pd, AJC, ample pkg, APCARE 547·2563 Learn Tennl1! Oroovt!
61S.Z311orMS-1067 14-apt w/frpk. patio. •2pools&reccent.ers 815-Moo. Strokes! lndoon! 15602 ~ lndry •••lllty. en<l . •Plmhcrpta"d,..., •SHARON'S* P•od•«• L'"'· H.B "-a.rarge. All adult&. no •And to much more DAY Olt WEEK Olll'C"' , M .... 'SAG.,. CSpnngdalet McFadden 1
Zuo l Ba apt. S. or Hwy, petsl28$mo.84"1·2122 Furn.bachelor 1230 Exec.,uiterental ';taM' "' 894-626$ 1641ts. no peu S28S per Uofum. l br ~ ________ _. ----------1 Voice lewsons for teens & •KAREN'S * adult.a 84.2·8634 for appt mo. 642 ·59~3 wkdya , 1,...l#l>_Cl_Orange _ _;;;~-.;;;;=-;;;;;;;;i2br. 1'11ba condo. Cpl.,, HUUY FOi
.,J.3983 or 64:l·9399 __...__ .. ,_....._ drps. ranee. pool. l33S ....... ..,.._~ ev.1wknds. uM>J._......._... .. ,...... !IS3-2978or~ -• _ •• ...,....
3 BR: oceanv1ew. walk to ::::--~ NR Be.at. la lbr. all ap-~~:b
btb. lAe. for e mo.. or pliuce1 G80 MM41J lonaer al ssoo. Daya . .--oncsm.-Tenea•1'91.Sm Fee _.;;.. __
m.-.1055, uk for lllr ~~pqtJll,. TEN'NlSf&SEA Jtnk1ns eves & wknds. ---IJllalas. SUllOIER fuo. I br. kids Walk to tbe bea'Ctt r • nu.~-1229 ondm:91Q~ ok. wco'tlut=9$ um am.ub.ln& w bdrm
51 BR Waterfront Apt. :!!~~'!'*-"'B'l'ftuR.,. ~ .. : ,.. ~comtu'~ ~ ~ rQO.YTlylae. vr'"•"'"".,_,.._"' • • .,. • .awu, da. ~ • ...,...,
!'4. ~3282 <9am·5pm) ThtVIOl)l.MoflCI sbope. Wamtt' A Spr· a. ....... .!.~une.l•~•...i .. . -i1t11Q-·'--lntdale. 82tl Warn• • _._.... ...... ..
Ulrp 3 Br 2 Ba. service .,.......,,...., • ..,._,. Ave. $210. atr·'TUO or AU et.c. tM.cbeL Dia· rm. peUo, sw tor. f1l'l*n II adobla. _so-n.a ...... .,..... aetr deulnc M4m1 OnlOlldltllloBPoom oven. Adulw ocalr. N --~ ...... au.... Huntlnllon KubOw' are• peta. l br t:rn.. 2 Br t=.
SIAYllW ;;;_"";.: 9:00-..... """ beaot.1 Br. 2 Ba, tuxwy SeltT"'9U Apt1
z:ioSEAVIEWAVE --· · ""u;vv. apt, New&y deeorated. 23111 l(ai'\rier,1.A1Nl1
FftOMnDSSPAC. l DR Now "'1lllig. euna l~I ckhwahr. pool tn4~1 A 'PT W I V I E W 0 F1,__ __ ~;..._----M w /beaut. lndKpd rout\ Offict ~ itol
SPYGLASS HlLL. 1 yald. Adults. oo ptta. a..:.-..,;.;,,.
DLK. FROM OC8AN, -4000 ,<;PTS. DRPS, BLT~ ... •-••••••••••••••••• MNOE II OVl!iN + &nalea AOOMS m wk up with
MFRJO. ASTRO TUR klttben.
OALC. CARPORT a
LNDRY RM. GOO PER
MO. mar2 OR Mt-1220
'
I l
Olll'CALL MASSAO E Hftuietta CarU>r.
ePM·2AM 838·1780 Jobt W~ 707S
AIC)ITIC>t4 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Cow\MUna & Refernl Avail 3/14 prac. nurse
Prea.teat·avail.wknda 49Z·OUt. art. S·l4, 34Hru.tpllne~·i48$ 494·8541 X·129 unttl ---~-~:..:'"~·;;..;;;.~1 9:30PM ---------MAS SA C5 I Exec Secretary Mek!na ,... ... MODB.S temporary employment
""5' In )'o\lr ofc. $$.00 hr. ESCORTS ~
OUTCAU:C)HLY •-------
63' •~•I I C.P.A fteloc•ttna to area. .. deslrea per diem won.~
days per mo. PleaM NP· IX011C GIRLS !Y tu Frankel. 25352
M ... a• & MocteUn1 BenUey Lane. L_, Hilb. °"f'MlMZ-11•~.mo _-__.;.~--------
U.A I: VICKI FREELANCER wtll edit. ; OifCil ........ -· rawrU• 1our worll. ,.,. .... ,_ .... , =~r ...... (11• •
Sentq •11 OranseCo. •----....,...---:::-:::~-:--=::--:T-:-:l---===M»-~27~.U~-,:_-Buloe11 Writet f'tte· ~. Ex.pet. brochura.
aEl.AXINO MMSAGE direct mall. pubUdt1
Boblames· NI., sen. correap. tat A..A~l...JIN~lll cla... Rua. l'Tl·llSZ, "--~-._.., AlulOlm.lpatar...._
~~~ ..... ?!.~~ ~~~ ..... ?!~~ ~-~~ ..... ?!~~ ~~~ ..... ?:.~~ ~~~ ..... ?!~~ ~~~~ ..... ?!.~~ ~~~ ..... ?!~~ ~~.~~~ ..... !!~~ ~~~t:.~ ..... ?!!~
AC C 0 U N T I N G AUTOMOTIVE IOOKKHPER CLERK for small ex-Dental Assistant, exper. GUARDS Housekeeper/babysitter Mainten.an~ Man Want-1other's helper, Jive in
Supervl11or, Computer IOOKKEl!AER Full h g c b con 1 X·ray certificate, full or un!.ILS F •RGO needed for 2 school age ed, Hotel & Restaurant for new mother & 2 yr ()pr. exper. lmmedopen· u-c ar e or w.y · elusive mote · Accuracy .,......., "" girls Mon thru Fri. Hunt. exper. desirable. 499-2271 old. Lite housekeeping.
I f I d. 'd I h For new car dealership. structioo co. in C.M. & neatness important. ta:~oime, Nwpt Bch. GU"'RD SERVICES B h c II ft forappt vt TV H l Bch ng or o iva ua w o Mr. Milner, Atlas Reply,11tatingeducaUon. No previous exp nee. 5 ,_,__, "" ,. c area. a a er6pm. . p room, • un .
can grow with a pro· Chrysler Plymouth, exper. &salary require-Day wk lnclud. wknds . Guard openings in 963·2963 . MANAGEMENT area.Refs.9~H270. gressive company. Min ments to ad no. 825. c /o .i94-852l. Dental Xray Ofc, 3·4 days lrvme. Costa Mesa. San· . C U...... RE• 3·4 yrs ex per. pref'd. ~-19l-i Daily Pilot, PO Box 1.560, _ _ _ _ a week tracing stru<' ta Ana & Newport areas H~k.p~ /Co~k /~h1ldcare Laguna Beach Executive MEW .AC 0 "' S ..-
Computer Opr exper. re· Costa Mesa. Ca 92626 Cocktail Waitress. exper. lures from xrays, mounl Uniforms furnisht>d. Lt\C·m. English speak-in wholesale :.upply busi· Exper'd only. Must type
q'd. Type 6~+ wpm. · callbtwntO·JO& 12 noon. 1ng dental photos & Retirees. colle~e stu· mg. pvt rm. l!ood health ness aH1ltaled with 60 WPM. very accurat~
medical ms. background AYON S.tl!-1613 xray:., some general ofc dents welcoml' \'els br & ref!>. Cd M. 644-8772 dynamic fast grow1ni; Neat attract i vc ap.
helpful & underslandmg BUYER work. Will train, salan· ing D o 21•\ Car & IMMEDIATE ffi.'.ljor inlemalional ror· pearance. Phone for
of medical terminology Are Yeu A Co c k l o I l · B c .\ opl'n Apply Orange telephone requtrt-d 1532 UPF.::'lllNGS poration needs peoplt.> appt.
Call for appl. &i0.0140. reopa.P..rson? Experience m electromt 'f>rofe:.:.1onal Cocktail Coast Dental Xray Lab. W Commonwealth .. The Straw' Hat Piu.a in oncnted ~soc1atcs full SaddlebackSll\'lnCs
ai.k for Susan. If so. you'IJ enjoy meet· romponent.s, outside pro· Waitress Cr.rnd 'opcnmi: 125 8'-ker, Suit~ 200. F\Jllerton el Toro has Cull & pi lime or part-t1m~ 494 5273. Mrs. Jerue 759-0181
A Comp/Hskpr. II\-in Ing people wtme selltng cessang. raw m.ttenals. course special S99 Ends Co6ta~esa night po:.1t1on:. now MANAGER for new •·•11RSERYM"'.._. ~ world famous A VON blanket order & expedit· 4 1 Excttang & Prof1ta· ---.. l,·ast \\'e are a. fun fa mi· nu _,._..,..
SaRefl P~.~m9666. ba;,T,'9·806CdM Products. Good ,earn· ing. blc. &:lamouroub pro C!,~BNTOfAL AhS_SISdTA~Td G'"ARDS I> reslauranl w /great rheaeq!dlhCaf~.,~~~~Exper. Expel r'd, ()t.1m6e.DMal~re
s. ,...... • .,..... . ings. Fiexlble brs. C;dl ST ACOSWITCH IHC ''"~100 Learn m 40 hr:.. f~l ~es~rlte ~~lae;;Ji~ v pndt> in our productl> & ...., """' ma e. over 21. ays in-
Archlleetural drafhman s~70.tl or Zenith 7·1359· 1139 Baker Costa Meba f'rec Job placement ... ., Ad ~836. Daily Pilot. PO SECURITY ix.-ople. If )'OU enJOY peo. MANAGEMENT TRME eluding Sal/Sun. Work
designer. exper com· ---549·l04 I :.1.,l. Call 1714) 751·919-l pie & hav" "n OUL"o1ng y k I w plants & tree:.. $3 Hr & So Cahf Wa1tres11. lnl· Box 1560. Coi.la Mesa ~ u ... ou.ng man to wor n up Overtime. Ins. mercial. R.M. Thomas & BABYSITTER needed Equal Oppor Employer 179'l2 Sky Park Bl. Stec. Ca 92626 GUARDS ix·r.,onahly. we mighl growing tool rental busi· benefits. Advancement
Associates, 645 7474 immcd .. to care ror 1 yr lr,.ane Ca 92714 ---------ha\e ~ hdl you·re looking ness. Must be neal in •P· potential. Laeuna lhl16
Old. 6 days. approx 5 DENTALASSISTA~T Jom a proares1me, fast for. lNeed some 21 yr. pear. •-have ~ neat N I El Toro •RTISTS C t Cl H I ---O I "·· I '' B gro~·1n" co ~ new ap ol .. ·l. Apply Straw lltjt °' u.rsery. nc. · "' mos 645·7693, Costa arpe eaner e per Combo Custodian. field ra .,..rgery on Y .~. · -"' • ~· ""' u handwntlng. 6 a week 831).~ Be Part of Co Op Mesa (2). Neat & well man llmekecpingasi.istanl& 644·6161 proarhes to set•unly. 11 Pizza, in San Juan wtweekday orr. Pr~rer1---·------
films /actlng workshop -nered. Saddleback area. general paper work you'rl· tired or lhl' old Cap1:.trano. 32095 marned man for perm.i---------
forposslbleemployment Bahys1tter needed. CaJl492·036-l,S22-0932aft person needed for con DENTAL/Assist llml' guard compan1e::. Cam100Capistr11no. For responsible pos. 1-:xper NURSES
In comm c r c 1aJ:.1 Mature woman mr hme. 6. strucllon site. 498 2230 Cha1rs1de Expr'd. " lhe1r old 1deh or if more info. 496-00Sl. not req'd. Apply 1930 RH's $60.$66 Stoff
filmyTV. ~7-0282. 5 dys wk Mon·l''rl. Own Ch h Of c~ ( 11 ----Call S48·~ you'rl.' lookmJ: for u new E.O. E. M, F Newport Blvd. C.M. $60 Pnvate Duty transp. 751·9630 after 5. urc c .,..crelary · COOK & Fast Counter -----& morl' l'Xc111n~ career -------_________ , --""'"-------• person w/knowledge of Person Dishwasher & Dental Ass1:.t. p time. contact MANICUR ISTS. f/llmc LVN's $42 Stoff
Babysitter /Housekeeper, mlmeog~aph, 5 days wk, Waitress, cxper'd only Chairside. toves . some Industrial for busy balon. Richard S46 Private Duly
Assemblers
FACTORY
TRAINEES
All 3 Shifts. lmmed
Operungs. Male or fem
MO FEES
2 kids. wkdys Newport ~5. Call J94·8061. need apply, J69 E. 17th Sal:.. H 8. 846·3540 • URGENT Ouellelle Salon. 200 Al•s $34 Stoff
Hers. Mr. Hood 833.2900 CUANIHG LADY Sl,ta.Jpch.,Ms 1' (Across from Distributor interested In ~;_4fiSJSr·. ,o_,.., Newport Ctr Dr. N.B. , $3S Prtvate Duty
BAKER 5 N't k 6PM ' p time income or SIOOO --, .., ' NEED ServlngAllOrangeC"
"' d P l I es a w . • -+ ---• r"1r"1' MANUFACTURING WorokfinYgouhrouCrhso&1cdeays c..xpenence . ar or 2:JOAM. Bondable. N.B COOK Needed for C'onv per mo or more .J_.._
FTimc. 962-9546 aft 6 ore bldg 40 firs Steady hospital lOam 6 30pm benefits :\la tu re If ~ou meet these BlueieanJobs Mal-PractlcelnsReq'd
pm. work.644·0606 !-',time. l::xper·d onl). 639-6123· quahf1cat1oni. you \\Ill ENGINEERING GrouplnsuranceAvail.
BAKER Or . Bak er 's CLEA,'llING GAL needed Please apply in perbon. DOG GROOMER. exper'd ret'el\c· WOMEN-MEN WISTC:UFF
Helper. full time, exper 1 morning n ~eek S3 hr Btverg-,~tanor. 3-iO Vic full or p lime Caeser'i. Best pay bent.'(1Lo; TRAINEES Onansgue PCoER. cvo1.sseeORks 1n Hwws1617 w-Rteqhcl fftryDr • .. nece11sary. 548·3001 Nr Vista Center on w lona. · · Groommj?, Lag Niguel 8 Hr:. pd tra1nmg ...., ctTrc -frf'.S'S _________ , 19th, CM. Mn. Shaefft!r Cook-f'antry H.Cp Call 831-0322 or 831·9733 • t:Ro'nlformr sfum div. w/demonstrated Ste2l2,Newport8each g= mt· 642-7'"""' .. I . forinterv1ew. nus or'ltatt-cert Assemblers 631 06 10 752 91 18 '::. -·.~ Bank ....., Expl·r" ,\pp Y an -lnlim Ad,ancemcnl ab1ltty to i.uperv1se • • •
-EXPB IEHCED ---------i Pc r., o n . M u r 1 o " DONUT Shop. all night -WP~S Qua I S2 llO hr Inventory manufuctunng eoe1neer Ole Hrs Mon·Sat 9·S 4340Camplllt Dr. Ste 130
r\ewport Bch 549·8071
1(~ S. Grand \ve
Santa Ana 558·9021
ASSIMILY WOllKHS
Perm. pos. Must speak
Enelish. 631_·07_00_. ___ 1
.ASSIMILY
Fut growing skaleboard
manuf. Is looking for &s·
sembly workeri. Apply.
17932 Sky Park Cr. Ste
0. Irvine.
Associate Rep
I I OR OVER
NO EXPER. NIC.
PART· TIME CT..ERJCAL Rl~laur.inl. :ao1 I:. CM shift. no ex per. nee :\IJlure Personnel ing group involved in
TB.LU "~·Cd:\! Woman age 2.S·35. Appl> Preferred Packagers producllon of small pre -NURSES AIDES
""' I OHITED
CAUFOllMIA IAHK
2750 W. Coast Hwy
Newport leoch
17 1416l l·lZOO
An Equal Opportunity Employer
8 ,\RMAIO
Costa Mesa. Nllwport
area. for beer & wine
rute club Ask for Ed or
John, 646-9'l78
*TELEPHONE C 0 0 Ks _APP 1 Y 1 n in p.rson, !\Ir Donut. 135 SIS Sccunt> Collafers c 1 i. 1 on e I e ct r o . Pel">-00. :\IJ &rkt·rr.. 212 E l7lh St. C.!\f lndui.lnal S<·n ices mechanical components. & Orderlies. c x per.
COMPANY* i:: nihSl Co...la Mesa 1J20Campu::.. Ste 130 lnse:ctors Must be thoroughly Bayview Conv. Hospital. ,, :-,,\ \0. :-~· ·, Newport Bch !>49·8071 fa m1 I a r w /de s 1 gn. ~Thunn, CM 642·350S COOKS& ...._'-/ "'-" '-14US.GrandA"e Day. eek·!'Ytonth documentation . as ·
Personnel
Needed
Immediately
EXPHIEHC ED
OHLY
Santa Ana SS8·9021 Or Longer sembly hoes support. HURSES AIDES eo-ter Pet"SONMI "ENTHUSIAS M" Lie. No. c61n It's Your Decision production tooling func-7-3 & 11-7. Me11a Verde
P time & ,..,time. days & GETS IT! YOU DOM°T PAY tions. & prescious melal Conv. Hosp. 661 Center
ruitht'4 Apply '" person "Eager & Anxious" to ---WE PAY YOU! contacts. Req's recent _St_. C-Oe_t_a_M_es_a_. __ _ 2~mTue~Sal begin your career puts GUARDS CallOrComelnToday exper. w /plasllcs.
C A RL'S JR. you into one or many Cotta Mttsa IEL[~ Technical degree pref'd. 20925. E. Bnslol.SA great ·'job op · p 1 Full & Pa t Contact Penionncl
(Nr. Jamboree Bl\'d) portun.ities" thru Control ermanen · r 549 J 04 I Career Employment ll~c. Phone &lrani.r re • Cosmetic Clk for 11.U. A 556-SSOS q d Retired welcome· SERVICES EqualOpJ>OrEmployer
dru&!!tore p time. Exp gency, · Cull 546·02'i I. ofc hr:. 10 2. Bl l -144 1
NURSES .AIDES
lrORDHLIES
ALLSllJFTS
Exper. prer'd. Will tram
interested Individuals.
pre('d Over 24 6-17 2563 ---------1 Clost-d Wl'dne11day. 1---------
*CUStOmer Rep c~metologist ;;ntcdf;.: Factory 1fe1;-w_a_n_ted E-xpe-r'-d & J_a_n_i-to_r_. _d_e_p_e_n-da_b_i_e_&
conl<'mporary hair' •ASSEMBLERS• re~p pen1on to work responsible individual With diploma for top
MASSAGE TECH
Lido Convalescent Ctr
15SSSupenor A\'C
Newport Beach 646·77&t
OFftCEHELP *Operat ors studio L1i: Heh Cllll M. •LAIORIRS• days m 1-·a~l food Opera for Jllnitor work. No exp class LEGITIMATE spu
Ir you 'rt nl'W to Orange AAIUfAIDS Uay, ;'.iighl 4 year.. recent up w i I Ii d ms & t\ s1>oc MALE A FEMALE hon Apply, Ri~gcr, lti necessary. Will traa.n . Mr. Giarrusso, 752·9561 Gen'I ofc work. Answer
Co .. temporarll) d111con & Reh<"f Sh1fh Call for 1~-91~ \\Pd thru Sat for AllOr•u'ldeCo. Areas f"ash1on Island.NB good pay. apply an " ing phones, lite typmg llnumg your t•ducallon, appt 548.71111 *Cler""" lnll'r\'w ------person. Del Taco. 1720 •MASSA\.tE etc. Solory com·
recently discharged ---~ HELPMIJ(S HEMIMGWAYS Superior A\e., Costa TECH-PEM• mensura\e with exper
from tilt' litr\lct' or for Beauty AdH~~ 10 Nd'd COUPLE. amb1t1ous. " M~a SS'"l.Comm-Guarmln. 642-4800.
any reason s~klnK tem KosC'ot CosmellcsJ...!_11 willinc to learn t o 135-8176 RESTAURANT · -------fi\all&PT.work. Legit. ---------
porary or carttr employ aiil"..full or P t 962-:r.~ rmnace ft moll b~inc:.i. t50S E. 17th Street accepllng applicot1oni. Janitor 1>1llme nltes, N.B. ELITES PA 540-8195 Office Att~ndant p/l1me. 2 ment. consider this uni· · 567 0215 for Cooks Wailers & Dls· area. Bank cleaninf. 2 Eves Mldnl1bt to 8.
queoppor.Voucaneorn BEAUTY Operaton· 1 ---------·Su-lte•t•02-.S•a•h•la•A•n•a-•I hwasbe?'s. Apply a Hrs15minpernlte.SZ.60 MATURE WOMAN Wknds 3:30·mtdnlght.
Shampoo Gari r1turui; 2 3141 c....,_ on.. CuslomerServace Balboa l slandSlore, Hr.213/247-8718 p /llme to welcome BayvlewMuorN2-350S. s 1 '6 ru WEii< Asslsl.allu fltame; 1 At· 546-4141 Reupt to $1400 FACTORYTRAJNEE Marine Ave NB on o newcomers & contact
115t.a.nl for Coloriat: 4' 1 (ACnl5sFTom Useyourcommunication Small local mfg. needs beforeMon i1ar21st. Job Opportuni~y at rnerchanta.f1ex.lblehrs. OPPORTUNITY .
Hairstylist w/foUow. Ap· abUiUes & Join modern uaanees, lo work in ' Rancho San Joaqwn GoU Need car. lite typln1. Local burineQ man look· :ir~t ~ y~u; J:'uc; ply, Richard Ouellette ... ~()pee~ ~~~}er firm (Of' PR spot. Call plant.40Hrsp/wk,S-(:JO HosteulnHawa ll Course. 12.SO Hr. p /lirae. 547-3095. int to expand business.
Salon, 200 Newport Ctr """4 ..... Marsha Da\'11'. 833-2700. Mon· Fri. $2.60 p/hr to On a cruise boat 4t waler Goll priviL lncludect. Call Need a au o c I• t es. ~~;~~t!:u:x6~8t:!j~~ Dr.NB. Dennis & Dennis Person· start. Apply in person. skiine bus1iness. Perma· ~l-SS22. ~!\':;\~~!~~=~Yr!'; _P_tr_lm_e_b_as_i_s_tn_J..4_7_86 __
tralnin1. Tremendous BOAT CARPENTER, to1---------i nel Service or Irvine, 2082 Alternator Specialties ~l posit on. Transp t Legal secretary, 3 days elderly widow. Able to Parking attendant p/t
potential to reach work on 30' wood CLERICAL M1chelsonDr. lnc.746 W.17th8t.C.M. Hawaii provided. nls week. excellent skills, & drive. loc:al ref's. req'd. Newport Harbor Yacht
1 & KA11w S--.lus -----place to live provided. d 1 ... f d Cl b B lb auperv 1ory mana~ ullboal. ask for Chuck, ... , DB.IVUT MAN ~ Good w /public relations. exp. on mag. car •• oo or S~ ays. 494·4409 u . a oa Penio, ~~~~fa:11!1~~m~~~~us. ~-8000 Hea~cllet9 Coe early A.M. TIMES FHSP.AID CallBillRosend11hl,C.M. necesst1ry&47"604l .Mature women wanted -~-J._n_ao ______ _
For appointment only ~4191 home delivery route. ArchDraf\Pen lo$8hr (213l54T-tm LegalSecrttary for housecleaning Parking Co. needs ag-
call Boat Manufacturer Mu1l have economic11l ~P~eeg:[/Secy to:: H-OU,s'ECL 1': AN 1-1N-r.-, for Lag. Hills ofc. Must ~If;; car nee, P/Ume. ares s Ive, c x per
Sl9· 1 Ill P081tions t-'or . MUST Hnt E.,.,-. car. adullti only. 21~ hr '-"~r"lan'es to S96l P.:ngUi.h i.peaklni: women have probate exper. Call 1uperV'J1or in Orange AM PM M.w.n With.AT•,,_.. day. no <'o llectlns. ~.. 586-~10 •---------County-Mr. Catnn l21.3> 9 ·3 C Westminster/HD area. Also Fee Jobs over 21. P IT or fo'IT , · MECHANIC W.AMTID jl57·2420
G.t c:.....-1 otftPmtY As k for I-' r a n k lrvme Personnel A11ency must have own trunsp. LEGAL SECRETARY Ml.llt be certified. R.y ---------
ATIEHDAHTS Griftdtrs Brookhouse. 638·0126 488S17th Co8ta Meaa $.1.00 hr. 646-48Tl lntelli rent. Train u Carey Chevron, 604 S, Pule up, camera work. le
P\.all time le part time hr & loftden Cust. Reps ---&ute224 $42-1470 HOUSEICEEPER para-legal. Gen·1 skills, Gout Hwy .. Las Boh. ahrtlsUc clalentt for prinkt
I d I Xlnl pay & rrl n •e o· pat h Clk DELIVERY MAN-Early ~~ nolltigation 752 1211 I op,. oun er wor Y 1tten ants to n ., IS C S AM Times route, No. ---------• IJve·ln. Stay in our Dana · · Medical Back Otflff A"l, ~tome111. F\Jll·tlmc.
lroducc new Innovative be~~t~'if~~~tion • Clk C.M. No rollectlng, mu.t Front desk clerk. Apply in Point home from Mey Uquor Cletk. full & part exper. for busy OP, DHr parl·U me preferred.
health screenlni: pro Assign S have dependable car person, Surf & Sand 5Ul to May 30th. Care for Ume. Call before 6PM JbcHotp.548-G822 12· 5 PM . EXP ER.
gram. Must be well 17"22DerianAve, Irv S4&-4481 HoteJ,Lq. Sch. 2 earls 16/11 41 2 bo)'t s.18-5160tf9'1'ea .... tnn!AHOFS IENCEDONLY. 495-17$1
groomed 4r able to deal m4>~20 Repair Clks lS/12 while parents are ""'''"" M.V.
withe public. FICJtible Equal()pporEmployer r.-rvice Clks DeUvery·Momlng home GENERALOFFICE ln E~ sioo+ per wk Need• t rlendly en-•---------
hra • nexible_d_ays. Hrly ~ ,,. deliv. auto route w /the M al u re P e rs o n a. all living expenses M•CfflNISJ thllllutic people to work waees. Call ~nna for ---------Be1l1ter. Approlt bu w /pleuant phone Refs req'd. Call Joan or " lnOUTtrvlneloodeervlce PAYROLL
appt.833-UOO BOATS We are the prime sup-Uam dally. Cost. Mesa penonalilJ to handle all Olen Olsen 4ti.J72S o Pro1re11lve JnJecllon prosum. lllD·DAY SLP.AYIOLL
Automotive WILLARD IO.AT CO. plier of a tarae t.elei>bona & Newport areas. Xlnt l)llaaes ol bookkttpln,. 164·9179 "'°'41 mu.tns co. has r• lt'a-6 day WMk. Ideal Cl.Ill( New l.200Condor co.. Kelly Employeea are p/thnt ea-minis. Perm. l>utles aJso lncluch, l7P" locatM to M.B. & needa toe houle1"YeS, lnltttlt· The JoU R pr J
. Deta~~l~p needs 1Fount.atn Val~:: always~ n..-t for 1tuadon..U0.30GI tr11, liUnt • senera.1 Of· Housekeeper wanl4>d for Machlnl1l1 & £DM ~wort, lood pay. g 11• fut~: rata~·a:t
ToJ>wageapaJd. Enalne lmmed.()peftlnpP'or lblaaaaipcneta. DEMONSTRATORS for floe lkllll. OC Airport r«ired cpl. Ideal altua. ()pera*1.Mln5ynn. • not nee. Call chaln,hau.nope11ln1ror
Steam.ra, en1 pelnlert, Extaioc-Carpenter• I cS I l " aNa. Call Ma. Jobmon doo. Ref'a. S46-330t prr. XJnl waaes & over· eyerboll SSl.m:I an ap.r'd paf'r'Oll clerk
Wlmi fs pollsbtra. up. lftleriorC•rpenters PAIDV.ACATIONS ~.•M :S!t~·1o-a rorappt.548-41.23 Housekeeper. Refined time. Protlt aharlnc • 8'af, man aecltt to wortc In• Cl> person
bolatary abampooers, Touch-Up Y~~~:y and .Om• other days. Genotc FeePaid leldy to live-In. Pvt. rm; oth«=•c . mctivatedlndl¥.orcpllo dfpt. h.aodlln1 apptolt. ~~.~~~~~·uplcde· G~=r CIU)UO·TOOO or lttcept.to$700 ba.atnallaal."4.am 17141.,._.7,1 asab\. In bua. PIT, ~::f~r:·:~.;~.m~
2059lfarborRl,CM ErperitMePnferTed eattorom..rn"IWay (7}•>1SUTI Enthutlaat•~.peraon Ho\uekeaper for •1112 must. w/rotaurant
MS-1030 Equal <>ppor Employer IEL[~ D ENT A L A a a I 1 t . =~ ~=-c!~:! ))achelort, Ba1 home. 14. liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil ~I aper. a dennlle -Qlalrslde. F /llme. Al ff"e.i Jobi. C.ll Marton p/br. Two "' Da11/wk. MAJDSWAln'ED +· X1ntworttln1 eonds &
•AUTOWOTlVE• ' lente mot. exp. (l > Sal. MaM 1#-2700. Dcftl\i ft Mull be titp, reliable. . Doll Quixote Motel bene1tt pro,nm w /~ ·=~Ffx~R• BOOllE£PERS sa~v1cae ~rmo. \tB.~ ~-!.~~·_.',1!.!.'.no••o2n!! ~~a1fd. Re(s req. 2.lOONewportBl.C.M. ~-~re:!'!:~:~:.!'t~
X'.lnt worldn1 cond, <'O. ACCOUNTJNOCU;RKS l)J.t44 I Dtontat Mat, tu.IJ or• part ~vi ..... .,. ... ,,, _. w/_.,.,. • .uptyh,I peraon
beneftta, 1at open. Vt1m EmployenPayAllFete .,._.~u>oN"5'~-h Ume, a yu oxper. Mlchebm>Dt. Houeltupert live-in, MAJa.OEPT. l&m·Spm, l'TOQ om ti•
'fttdtr CMVT'Olet, 2lS So. L11R•l:ndllraAacoc1 --ewpoltuaac General prtctlce. X-ray, GUU.nuDAY 10~• E.111U1n • .xi>er, Sort •ncoralna mail, A~~
Eoclld, Ana.II. Aak for 40a0BlrchS\,St.tl.. ~10pp(W.£mploytr lnaur•nu rormt , 1 .sit omce.; Uta bOGk-rel•· Ja&ary op.a. varlout duUu. Typh1• --------
Muibetel-3100. Newport Beach awuo medJcaJ benefit.a. m•> tMpta1, aoOd typl•li M.WB:23, CM. bd$1f\ll, Ap~ Natioftal
Havuometh.ln110Uw•nl CalllorAnt/l'.lta~'IS Daa'l fl .. QP the alltpl ~ ' must be~. OoOd KOueke &Mt I; lovl11C ~l•tn• rt·· 4311
toMllf Cl.aaamed ada do "Lb:t' .It lo da11uttd. Haff you want .wtl:.•. · WblH llaby catttilcr, Uve ta. b St, N.B. ear O~C.
tt well -Call NOW, Haft IOllMtbiu.. llto~p1 SllllJ Lo abore "*ultsl to~t C1-ifltd a.S. do Gciodl ~ t.11 a&.-... C.ll aft •pm, AlJPGft. 0 E.
1Ga111. • Claatnid •clO --. IQ.3S1I. -ltwwu. ...._l WMIM a..tta to
I I \
• •
~.
or
call
l
... a..n.. Ull No ~ ~ ...... Qiill&HwJ,lA6 ....
wtU bad ~ ~· ...... ....,.. •U..:S•• -•I• tbe mO¥e co. ht =-· •"' 6 .au.II. ..._. _____ .. o.c. '*" a.u a.... b.ave nper: Ovtl' SWI a••'°°'---------t--------1 lbaa. m.mo. Deaa11 6 n. CllnlOn Sta&JcMa Tm OPP0&1'UM1TIU BACalr!Cf! a.taurut Exp food '* Denni• Personnel Edlqel'Ave.KB NOWl'OR.: Leadlq IUsr • db· coclMJl wa!traa. took ft Service ol trvlfte. Servtc. Sta. Attendant. Seel....... ldWM M9 dlic alteve
·-· mlftMr s11~l'! ~. boy. ~~~ OJ>-t. lllcbel9oa Dr. aper'd run or p/Unw. .. ft... a'OUDd awtmmh.11 ~ ~--ILW Gt""'·3Aool1 ~N~ S...T_.Dept AOPl.YAftoS&aUora. l .... Hi...p.. DentalAulltant.f111Jtl~ AKCM.ltliatun!1" SI~ trom llG Ind fett nu from UH
Plto1•D!_ Srea_!.~_.P1~o.'!':~. _n_-s. .. _11_001 __ ._ ... _-..... _· SalHperaon needed. 6lrVtne.C.ll. S..,...T,,..._ · ~hair side. e1tper Sc;bauz.en Oiuofa-lov•M:IO aeaaon • .,.. PrlC'e, ..,. ......., v.., ""•· uo,;n. Cllf'b w1hydrocolorlde Im · 3males. 768·1$4ST Wood Games.ta UIS Ouar.m.ed Installation
Jtianofap.G1&&ranteed 0 _. ... -nt WeU poomed. lluat be St'rvlce Station Atten· i:w-ionl Newpoft~a. ..... _.__. ..... r-Colll•. MOCHllOREATTHE 6terms.c.JI CAnatMlml mluk>ns ----~ to won fleic. bn. dant uper'd Day 8 . ~U ~~ ·~.. ..,,.. "' P\JllNlTUR!! wqee or ~m FAUBl'S P/Ume. Catby. ~rm. Eves'. P\lllapitime.A ~ ~ offlC:e • ~mo'• old. Paid SlOO. COMNtcTION Ul 3240 Collul
=teEC>.t ~~as::::!: ICICltEAM,il&.Oua ext34J PlY.SbeUSUUoio.17th overload Mw:' .. Sttuso.~adbomeonly m1Heu.&.L ._o.y. ____ ,ev__..• ____ _
bttW'Mft S:OO "8:30 p.m. Hta lmmed. Openln1s 1---------t kVIDe. Na ....................... _Mt-=1W7~==-·-=6p::;m:-;;;::::1.;lli;un:;.l.•Bl;;ad»~-.;MZ--.;l>44imil w· ...... ED ~. tn the areu ol Kitchen. -------$51.0061 W•u 1005 0 D 1 0 · "'"' Equal Opportunity Fountain Service & Di.s· ~-.....ST Sewt.t Maci. 0,,. .,23 n•-b St N B ••••••••••••••••••••••• real aue. ma e 1 mo s TOP CASH DOLi-A R
Employer hwasber. Apply in ~""'"' Experienced. lmmed.,.__"'-'•u.n;--··-·-· -I and old. A.KC w/shot& Ork SAVE! MARCH SALE. PA I 0 f'O R Y()U R person at 16301 Beach ProclllctiollTypht opentnp. Call~ •· Wonclerf brindle, loveable SlOO. New• Uled fllJl), appl'1, JEWELRY. WATCHES.
Blvd. H.B. Tues thru Fri Forourbusyofflce. Ml.lit s•:;: I .a. •• 1-&-& Of ~t MMS»or5J9lO miscN_.... ~~~ ~~p~ ART OBJECTS. GOLD. ·---------. betwn l :301t4:30pm. Ap. have nice appearance.. Fig--.._.. TIAIHEIS • • uua.<2 ~J. ,,_ • SILVER SERVICE,
ii raESSMAH pbcantal&•overpref'd. Goodlyplng c60-75 wpm) Req redfor1m.Marine AUTOIMSUIAMCE HUGE war bousefnetoYou 8045 814W.l9th.Cll.M2· PINE FURN . .tc AN·
ttxper'd A. B. Dick. small M IF. E.O. E. & the ability lo deal Eledrooic M far. Good crammed wtth over ••••••••••••••••••••••• &S48-m2 TIQUES. 645-2200 ;':::J:.:..·::::O.:..:re:::a:..:t!:job:::.:.!.:.644-3233:..:...:=:::~-;.-.-.-_-.-.~-.~~~~-;--1 w/pe()ple. Thts ts a poel· benefits. Apply at . IATBS mu.le boxes. nlclteld·
,PYWS-,Aukt.t
Jhle, 1raphlc: arts
Jetpful. 117S·2133 or
1·1619
Uon w iOUr oo. in Fashion N e w po r l M a r I n e Oran,e Co. ~. haa open· deoft planoe. clrcus OI'· Black. adorable k ltlen. a.GANT WM14AGI TACiS
W 1"-,.. 1 I 11 1 k very af(ectlonate. Aft. 1 ,_,. RETAIL Lsland. Pleue call (or a EblineerinJ. 891 . 16UI .._ or w.l tra nees n g ans. w a c oc 1 . SPM ~ Looee plUow aofa • ov. • rtom your business card. confidential intervw., St. N.B.548·-2 Auto Insurance Ratin& arandfather c locks. , · · • teeat. inlaid 1'00d &a.m Send one canl for t1t1eh CLERKS Ted Bavly or Glenn--------Dept. ' . CuclnaUn1anUques. Free iii.ell female kitten tble wi.th UI" leaf, '*plus one ·spare. We
Olsen (7141M4-9l74. SHIPPIHG DIEPT. GOOD SALARY OverSl,000,000Worth 1 appt'Oit. 6 monlhs old. malchlng coffee tbJe, ,(elurn permanentll ~ Female. some abop H · CO. PAID HEALTH =ca~ lntet9atl(lrla Alter &pm. ,or WC!\-kends. seet & waU W\lt. ALL ~aled attractive tag
UTv1g1111 ---------per., but wtll train. S2.8S PLAN. BONUSES. VAC. G I lies, llm-T Kelter -.-... • WOOD King alie Bdrm strap, meetin& alrllne
• HALESTAn
DPf?ning for z he'd real
atale salespeople In an
C!(Clce with 21 years exp
and In the same location.
-Many referrals a nd
walk·ins. Broker pays all
pdvertlslng. Top com·
tnl sslon . Ca 11 8111
Lachenmyer for In
'tervlew nnyl1me. 18
Newport Blvd.CM
C...._.Marl&ets hr.Xlntcobeneflts.CaJI Wl'nlPAY. Ing !ij .. Irvine. Tel. , setw1matchln1armolre. 1.0. reqwrements. Pre-
Positions open 2nd & 3rd Secretary/Steno &am·l2noon~ CALL DAILY 75Hm. Open Wed Ulru Shep/Orea....,Dane. M. 3 Qn size Bdrm act. Queen vent loss & theft• P'or 8 shil\.slnSanClemente& Sincere film buffs. Hard 96J.0942 Sat.9AMto4PM.Vlalt! yrs, gd wtklds. nds lge .or King Bc>ll spring & pel'ldftalhedta&enclose
Laguna Beach. ~ther JAa.a.a.TH.a....a•s yrd. Benny. 548·2ll2. maltreas. Glau top wallpaper. rabrlc or areas have openin~a SkUled In dlctalion. tYP· work, low pay. but fun. "'""" """ 7AM-3PM Dlnette. High back cut "OV Clo" paper & we
also. No uper. req d . ing, composlUon or cor ~l ~~~j;.lnema. Truc:!k Driver & yard YELLOW TAG Free puppies. mixed velvet ctwr. Large de· will back & trim your
Apply at any of our r es Pond e n c e & · · malnleoance. chemical SUPER SALE breed. cute, 7 wks old corator lamps. Naua Oen tags. Or try two cards stores. lmowfed1eofgeneralof· SKIPPER·L. arge 50' toilet company. Apply 20'l-to~ofl fumitU('e.Oak &lass to;> backtoback.
2588Newport81vd. flee procedures. Ex· Yacht needs Glrl Crew 8-lOAM.&46-Z'TOO on Furniture. 1146-6SlS cotree lables. ALL In PRICES;
CostaMesa 642·7702 cellent opportunity 11nf <J>forperm Uveaboard .vnES-•R ClyataUiUver.Chtna 8Pupple11.•M.2F.Collut EXCELLENT CON· S2eaor3/~
sales dept. for se cn.ialng & run No Uea • ..-LllC. com-KORRYINTODAY! mlxed.CaUAIL.6pm. omoN.SM-4'7tlO .v5taassuoea. molivatedindlvldual. Write Clauifled a · IBM Electronic 4223lllSt.Nwptlkh &4f.?e97 6/9t.a,csS1.SOea. :·, '"\0'' ·~·", no.887 c/o Dally Pilot, fl0Rr$41-ll91 • lnCanneryVlllage **IBUY** lOormoreS1.40ea. '-' '-' ·'-' Contact Mrs. White PO Bo 1 ... 0 c t F ou nd -Can · t keep Sal T 1 I ded .,. 1 1 A x ~., • 01 a --t.d Fodor'/ Good U3ed Fumtture & es ax nc u
RuLESTAn ''Ric:-. & SHl ... E'' .. or nterv ew PPl Meaa.Ca8a836 9¥9tSTS --beautiful femaJe Boxer. Appllancea-OR I will NO CARO•
&e&-3928; eves673-4577
..,.. .._ " • 1 1.-1 Showroom o pen t Free lo ~ood home seUorSELLforYou Draw your own or send
Exp'd salespeople look RECEPTlONlST Paul Dosier Small Manuf. near o.c. Several posWom avail. pubhc. Buy d1recl a.1010 MASTaSAUC:TION name, address, pbon• ~ lng for higher Income. SISOO/Fee Nego. Can your Al11><>rt Deeds 1 male Immediately. Hours cl save! M2·2'712 we'll make ~e .card per Your oppartunlty Is al "Bubbly Personality.. .AHOCMln.Mc. perform machining locaUoo ol your cbolce. Med Ben)I type fem. '4M686&1Jl-9625 tag.Add~fach. •
Hentage Jom our soc charm tbe birds oul ol COSTA MESA operation lo our produc· Never A Fee. Interviews •WANTED• Young. a~IOllate. obe· Send check or money or· ~rut team Call Dave lhe trees? This S.A. co 556-7075 Uon machine shop. Some 9am·3pm. ORIENTAL RUGS dlent. hsebrkn ~-4413 Gca GiJi S. 8055 der to:
at!>otG-llSl needs 45 wpm typing. aen'I maclilne .t>op eit· Any kindorcondlUon. To good home su, mo ••••••••••••••••••••••• rtLOTPRIM11HG
rront oCc appearance. Equal Oppar. Employer per. deslrable, but not 8 • ! CASH PAID ! L a brad o r puppy . Children'11prtn1 clothln1 P.O Box 13&C>
11 RECEJVINGCLERK lmmed. opening. Xlnt nec.Shouldbe~leaat .. ~ Dayaft.46.'7847 Fe male. oil s hots. saleMarcbl7th10-S CosuaMesa,Ca.921626 benefits. Call Control---------; yrs old wlawn transp. ~ m Mer4,541H274 63Hl49 Tlc·Tocken :J'o un.pack & ticket Career Employment Seaet...,,/Recept Hrsawk.557·7283.' 'I' Beer drafter. holds "• Kea ~n sclothtng Heavy Agency. S56-8505. -.L 3 BUI Antique beating Sm Cocker mix male 1 n.rift Shop ol bee co d S200
lifting, 9:30·S:3o Mon ----------• ;,ap~r!S:~aloa~c~u~f. STOCICC&.ERK 4340CampusDr,Stel~ stoves.lbox,lPotBelly, yr old .. need~ lov1~i;? S40W.19thCM 673·S27~.C:ttatt~lAM · ... Fri. $3.00 hr Apply b RN'S Semi retired pre f'd . Newport Bch 549-Ql 1 coaUS7-4lll home ul\ •""9 ietler to Hubbub. Inc ing firm . Slat1st1cal I I GSH ......,......, AnUquea. rW"D, water ski, •184 H Al A e C M 11·7 Supervisor Position typist. 10 key. front desk p It me. App Y. ' _,., 1424 S. Grand Ave Antique Olde English , , books I Ftl & Sat ', ..... -. . rway v . . . open in April. Mesa personallly Bookkeep· 1658Super1or. C.M. Milla Ana 558·9021 China cabinet, marble l7 F1xer-11pper boat. free. A. Im sc. M V . ~ _._, Verde Conv. Hosp, Ing exper . h e lpful. top. btiv~l~d glau YoUhaulaway.548-4705 22662 luras. · ·
.., F p d Ml MM familiar wtpayroll tax S..petln....._. cabinet & mirror. 1225. "ecepl. ee ai -: retum.. Income tax re· Custom boat yard pre· TYPIST Dbl bed l20 1142.3945 Funtffure 8050
'· FrontOfc to $700 Jes turns & financial slate· senUy bulld'g ss· & 40· Needed full time. Musl • •••••••••••••••••.-••••• •GIGANTIC
•Vibrant lndlv. soughl fo AMBITIOUSOPPORT ments. Starting salary power boats. Contact be accurate w trecep· CALENDAR SHOWS Din.rm lbl. 6 chairs. UDO ISLE
PR s~t w tlnnovatlv 4 Women wntd 4 dys ':.r commeruiurate w /exper. Rod SWlft, The Willard Uonist background. San· PRFSENTS $400/olr Bm llhr love BOY SCOUT
f ~~). rro~O: J~.~~. to; i:~e'"wd~~fi'1.~. srso.~ ranae 833-0651 ~. ~~~· Employer ~~1:~a ~!~~leons!~:~e °"*.~DE seat. $500, orr. 83-1-3146 RUMMAGE SALi
Dennis " Dennis Person Rora r ~27·7s18 o r SECRETARY T.O K. ELE,._.RONICS w rexpel'lenc:e . Call _.. • ...,.... KiDgSl.ze Waterbed & lve· Sal4iSun, March ltl20
nel A1ency or Irvine. 828-3153. C"'"'"'.,....:;:E • ,..FG 544-5337 btwn 10-11 AM or Show~ ly wooden frame. S200. Dl2 Michelson Or ----· ----t girl sales office needs n.><>La, ,.. p 1-751 2:599 9:30AM l05pm. PM. SALIS sharp. reapoulble girl Operunp foc 2nd shift 2-3 M Shur 'an "\11 a fine tlme __ . -------• Treaswu & Junk from
'•MA'mESSES•
Single Sets $39.50
Fu II Size $4.UO
B&J Morlre" FoctOf'I
838 Eo\t Iv Sr. S.A
MT·S636 -------WATERBEDS
GRAND OPENING From sua..11 complete
Aqua Heaven 5S4·7S90 -
m10 Westmlntte~
.Jtecepllonlst Secretary
for conslrucllon co
:Reflned phone personah 1y Type 70 wpm, sh or
"'speedwriUna. flhn&. Ute
BEELINE Fashions has w /SH " some bookkeep Inspector Trainee. TYPIST/R-m lO brighten your Ure with •• s .a. I It • * all over 'the Newl)or tng knowledae. S700-OperatorTratnee -a thin&°' beauty .. or a AMI> ane. Woven Woods an attrartive oppor for lo start M2·7MO Apply in person. OCClDENTAL UF haa l\l!kYtreU\11'9! Mew S.~1 Lido lsleClubboUM
stybats lo sell our new 7,.,,..0 1 SL 1 tn an Immediate opening ill w.ct. ""°"",.. F .. uou ... FGS 101 Via LldoSoud & Mini Blinds
-*kpng Sal open Nr
0 C. Airport Contact
l!:lolse. 759.0013
hne. No Invest. Earn SECRIT.a.IY l v•• aim er rv e ooe of the nicest loca-. .-..,.,,,. ""' -· 1~~~~~~~~~~ -~---N I'-... "" 17 18-19 20 Modem Provincial Wooden Shutters & Pull Wanuvuo:: o co ~,rng Southe rn Ca h rorn la Tech·Electmics $13,500 Uoos in Newport Deb for • ~ Blinds. Up to 80"r olf r., 'M,,~1R~u~r S:,~:-,1~~ Sales omce requires Sal+ hp+ Auto a girl with a pleasant RGIRcrou ....--~ M~ Evl~il#ROO~an ~:.~~~~l~hn~a[:: •. tall 9 Am lO s P M call
828-3'53 Anaheim. mature person with St Famed o rga n1 ut1on phone manner & good C.....tlCMICMr Utedfurnffure kn1c-knack1. kitchen ~1
RECEPTIONIST Sales Clerk. P 1t1m\! ror
Telephone 1Typ1ng &lfl shop. Exper. re·
)'root ore appear In· q&.ared Call 548""438
Jernllna. vanety filled
10 yr s uper . (&ood seeks demonstrated lypng abilily 8:30 to 5 5th & Orange Sl. 1-10 -------mechanical skllls and abillUes ror cust service PM. S days. Please con· PM· SUN 12·6 PM ~ MODEL APARTMENTS shtf. lots more. $al/Sun ANTED TO RENT·
Call Cba •~ RI tact Carole Luplens al ESTATES Mar.19&209-3.1182Slh • PACE. AREA. LO'l'. customer contact. For poa, r~ ng OE Prk"g.Wlthad$17Sea. BANKRUPTCIES St.N 8.673-3158 WHATEVER T O interview C'Olllact Sales mzroo. Dennis & Oen· 644-seOG E .. · Ma naaer at (7l4) nlsPenonnelServlceol Antique desk. display Cash·BofAorFinance Hones PARK AND LIVE IN
752·5581 Irvine. zmz Mlcbelaon cues. Vaudeville, clttus RfPOSSESSIOM ••••••••••••••••••••••• TRAILER. 1982 -26· Dr. URGENT It Disney poslti r s . C8"a ARABIANSALE AIRSTREAM. PREF. jbb req's good phone SALESGIRL-Mature. full penonallly & good judg time ror Bakery. exper
r!!i•nl. Perm. pl lime _preferred S48.J03l
.8 .C710833-1901. SALES ··~
64().(1!83Glen 619E.4thSt.SantaAna Divorce settlement. NEAR LAGUNA
n.... ""Sund 11 c. CANYON. CALL: <7l4>
.. ..
SS$SSS$ -y-,....,.~
Hl&h Preallge Retail An AffirmaUve Action
m.EPHONE
INSTALLERS
MAINTAINERS
SPLICERS
For Ad Action S a I es I m me d I a t e Equal Oppor E mployer Mana,.rneot Potential. -___ ....._ ___ __..__._
Call a
Daily Pilot
AO.VISOR
642-5678
The Tannery West SECRETARY foe law etc
South Coast Ptau N.B. Exp not nee. Wiii
___ Ca_l_l 541-_ ~3__ train. Sb req'd. 644-S040.
SAUSLADY
Full ll~. experienced
saleslady wanted for
P'aaluon bland Women's
AppaR'I. Call Faith at
fD.1'70
Grand Ca1tyoft
National Parle Lotl99•
'R t-:SORT WORK
., ...... O,.•lrtp .... ..... ......,
M.wa "····· '°"'" s.!.:':I~
We en ~ ., hMq for ~ .,.....,,_.,
ll'C)W ~ .... "'}IO~ ~ -O'd a,...,
"""' ... ~ ol "' -.,..,._,., ,.... tot-~ .... be .. or>eol °"--~~ ... .... ~ it.... OI C6 ~ ~ ioa-:1 ,. OWIWd9 ....
Pan~
n..·, hod wen ...,,., ~ pey. Ya. tl'O\' _. o ~.
.,_ --crd woll be llOd .._., ..... ~ ...,..
"°""'4 boood and wrrfo-~ '-Upon --0 Olh~ ..,.._.be~-... 0~
co::a:lf:4f 10 .n O'd preoe:'t O ~of W) Upon ~ o/ "°" -mil11•• .,_ $50"~10 ~ -...o m~fio,,i.,....,..__.ol..,.~•-
._...., .. ~ tJ '°" .. Good~ ;. operl
,., ~ crd ,,.,,., ..-.d --~ ~ poollic:lila..,.,. ~ ~ 0 poky o1 ·~ "°"' ....... Ol'd tho~ IO~ ..................... -.:ii • °'~
Mclrl., __....a~ -~tu ... -IOWftt O'll ~ N.. ~ Md~., cw. .,
.... ~baol)'dllleG'OI.;~
· R.N.'s and l.V.N.'s
CAREER OPPORTUNmES
at
LOS ArAMITOS
GENBW HOSPITAL
• a 173 bed ... ""*'*~ ..
• 14 .... EA .... ~OftdutV
6~
• t 11' ' , ' f • • I ~
Fumllure Stripped and "'"""n ...... , ay . ., t.enna '9&-3804 or 721S·Sl ll46-G382
RefbUahed by Expert&. CallS47·5121 ev ---------
~505i. 1175-ac»I eves. WANT
COMPOST SHREDDER
646-SOTS
~-~ ~-~
...
~ . =--~~-=_...._--=--=---==----::.____------~-___.::_~'""-=~ -·-"'-= _ ______£______ -~~ -=
•
10%
DI_ UNT
DURING MARCH I
Cash in on Spring Cleaning
And Save With a Daily Pilot
MARCH SPECIAL
Applies
ANTIQUES
APPLIANCES
AUTOS
BICYCLES
BOATS
CAMERAS
' In The Following
FURNITURE
GARAGE SALES
HOUSEHOLD GOODS
JEWELRY
MACHINERY
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
~ ~
Categories
MOTORCYCLES
OFFICE EQUIPMENT
Pl ANOS & ORGANS
SEWING MACHINES
SPORTING GOODS
SWAPS
10% DISCOUNT ~-----~-------------------------------
5 LINES
OR MORE
3DAYS •
Master Charge •
I I
(4 SHORT WOADS MAKE ONE LINE)
5 Lines, 3 Times = $9.00
For •ddltl•n•I Un••· add S1 .49 per ane. Mtlk• check ot
money order P•Y•bl• to
DAILY PILOT. .
&end ot Bring to:
CLASSIFIED AD OADEA DEPT.
ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT
BOX 1180, 330 W. BAY IT •
COSTA MESA, CALIF. t292I
•10 Commudet Moto ~ clean. lo mllea1e.
xlra~. STOOO. Corne
GrQa It Ed1n1er, S.A
-~
Na 5th Wblr & Ford
Truck. Loaded. Xtra Bars•ln. lllnesa. Ownr.
l'IJ.9408 '
,, ltJi Whl Trlr. 33' lul
Hlfcont.. Traveler.
('714) 511.U.0 al\ 8 1'1mds.
~'CINNEl.l
CHEVROLET
2128BarbwBl•d. COS'tAMESA
U..-t200
•••••••••••••••••••••••
'74 Jensea Healey, ha·
mac, PB, AM /FM st.e~
& cassette, sbowrrn
cond, 6SOO ml Best oft.
PPH3HW7 ·
''#--
Mf\RQUIS
MOTORS
1e~l)JMJ\U1.ul~ •• P•Ylt
~o 'LI· ,, f,... • t. •
~·'''""" J!JJJ ~ P .'tioU .iv 1
72VWBUG
"' speed. radio.
heater. Sharp!
(141ELU) $]888
72 TOYOTA auCA 2 DR.
-4 speed, air cond1· $' 1488 taonlng, (141FEG)
'69VWBUG
R adio. heater.
IZSJ803) $688
Total Cash Prl08 Is only 13-488. PTus tax &
lie. 48 mo's. at 192 4G wrth S2W. es total
down. Totd deferred pnce la '4738.39
A.P.R. 12 75%. Stk. f53$8. On IPPrOVlll of
your good credit.
74VWBUG
4 speed. radio,
heater. See it
today. (499KP0)
75SOROCCO
Air conditioning.
AM/FM stereo
radio. (471MON)
72 MADA WAGON RX-3
Nice FarnalyCar! $988 (209GBV)
71 VWBUG
4 speed. radio.
heater. Nice car.
STk. #1094
71 CORVETTE T-TOP 3~0 V-8. auto. trans . .._. $~ 188 air cond., P. s!W,
o b(l(s. p. wind .•
AM-FM stereo radio (421 KJJ
S YI. 50,000 AYAH.AILI
OM ALL HEW & SB.ECTIO
USED CARS
'72 CHEVROLET IMPALA
::.n-:: = ::.,"'; ~= II<" vl•'fl ,.,., h~'IH tllH • .... Mii
171 CADILLAC ELDORADO '7 6 FORD ELITE
$199·~ 5
~~~~~~=5 2495 ~;:..,:o=-==:.= 54795 172~1 L-!00 t2'$PF8
'72 PONTIAC CATALINA '75 OLDSMOBILE CUTLA$S '74 PONTIAC FIREllRD
'71 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX '7 5 BUICK REGAL
'74 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL '75 CHEV. MONTE CARLO
~~-.::...~~-:.:-54795 ~~!~?:ar~s4495
'74 PONTIAC CATALINA •74 CHEV. MONTE CARLO
v-e •u•o ,...,. tciOtV .. , oow .. ~$ 2995 ~;:...·~~ = ':':;.,."'A:r,: ·S 3995 l~ff"nt AM t.tdt~ r1•"¥e '#hfft4 '"'•o '10•0 WI• Unfed OIHt
UUIH COfllrol 171 !>JEX L..-toci. !111.,. •-t. hh pwr -nteo(f!ll
'75 PONTIAC FIREBIRD
'75 PONTIAC FIREBIRD
'76 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX '73 CHEV. MONTE CARLO '76 PONTIAC TRAMS-AM
~-~~ ~=:" ~;-.. ·~·,7,, $ 6395 :7.?.::r~:;·::°'i'~: $ 3495 ._ ITWl\'"1,. 12'1U7Z8"t38172 91151 ....... _.. 169<..JTI . " ..
'76 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX •74 CHEV. MONTE CARLO " '76 POMT'iAC TRAMS-AM .· . 174 FORD SURFER VAN
$5395, v .. w.., ...... --.--s3z,5 J t.IMet V.a M~ "'"' '"''::>rv -.,.. ~M o•eo •-wow I ' D,.., t~ O":'..,~, • f'I., ..,.. , t&ft\M .... , Lal"Uv lep '•llre AM ,.-~,., •9')PNv -~11.bwc .... _jOtJIAI
~ ~
'76 PONT. GRAND PRIX SJ
~.: •. ~~ol:,,;,:1~~~= 56195 looe ,.,..,.. -· Cl\lf .. con•"" 1483PEZ) •
'76 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX
ll••MO _""_AM1 ..... Y·I •u!O ,,.,,, Iott°"' eir ~ $ 519· 5•
L•~Glu 100 ...... -· QI.....,.., ""'lt7tl'OVI
175 CHEVY. CAMARO ' .. ... .
~~or'.!'"-"= s3795 '.
'74 OLDS CUSTOM CRUISER '75 CHEV. CAMARO
'76 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX '74 PONTIAC LEMANS
~.-:.~~~~Mn~~°(.:~.::: $ 5195 ~!!:~._ll(;;l::::=-ooz $ 2795 I~ wl\Mlt """mllea 815NIWI "'nvlloo 0$2.ISO'
'75 CHEV. MOMT-E CARLO '73 PONTIAC FIREBIRD
*76 SANGER
JET BOAT &
•73 AMC GREMLIN
6 cvl 1u•<> I••~•. '"" ••d~n '$1995 l»IJ 'Ot
'73 DODGE DART
·~ --·-~· 51995
TANDEM ~XLE TRAILER •75 MERC. MONARCH GHIA
~!: i~~" cl! 6495 ~i:;~:d::::::::::::;f,i'. $ 419 5
'71 V.W. CONVERTIBLE
..
-
'
...... -=--~-= ---==--_ -----~ ---
..
BRAND NEW 1977 PLYMOUTH
VO~RE STATION WAGON
94.395
6 cylinder engine. auto1"'allc transmission. tinted '."'1ndsh1eld.
bumper guards front & rear, power st eering Ser.
#HL45-C7G-162640
BRAND NEW 1977 PLYMOUTH VOLARE
2 DOOR SEDAM
6 cyllnder engine. 3 speed transmission.· bumper guards front & rear. Ser
#HL29-C7B-251167.
BRAND NEW 1977 PLYMOUTH ·
GRAND FURY COUPE
PRE-SPRINI VALUES Olf OYERSTOC"ED 1 USED CARSI .
'73 CHEVY
HOYA COUPE v-a automet•c air cond111onlng p()W9( sleer1ng
radio heal" 1220GJR)
5 1895
'72 FORD 1150011
SEDAN
V-8 automatic power steenng rac110 heater
(&51Ml0l
5 1195
'76 PLYMOUTH
VOLARI WAGON
6 cylinder. automatic. power steenng. p0wer
brakes. radio. heater. whitewall !Ires. fugoag49
rack {014PHR)
53995
'70 CHEVY,
MONTE CARLO
-8 aulomei1c. ,arr cond pe>wer sreering power
bra~es radio heater wnuewall tires. vinyl roof
flit wneel f502BTGl • s1495
'73 FORD PINTO
. IUMAIOUT •
4 cylinder. automatic. air conditioning. ra<flo.
heater wtlltewall tires (l,.8544)
5 1595
'75 CHRYSLER
CORDOBA COUPE
V-S. automa11c. air cond power steering. power
brakes. power Wlndows. power seats AM-FM
1~~:~~··s4795·· '°""·'
'76 PLYMOUTH FURY
SEDAM
V-8. automatic air oond . power sleenng power
brakes. radio. heater. whitewall tires, vinyl roof
(333NQK)
$
17'6 SJJBARU
COUPE
4 cyUnder. 4 speed. air cond . radio. heater.
whitewall tires. vinyl roof, bucket seats (727921)
'70 F RD LTD
WAGON
V-8. automatic. air conditioning, pewer steering.
power brakes. radio. heater. whitewall tires.
(970BIV) 1
~995
r
I r
~7
~· ..,...Wlre&enkel . '11le .~ .. staaa GD the
••• EtC)rt ol tbe Dine mem~of deaUa peaa1*1 wu elicited in an
Otance County's delelatian in A.Hoeiatecl Prell survey of
'tbe state "Legi.alature say they 'Je11alaton. It revealed that
1HD vote tor a capital punish-capital punishment backers ap-
tnent bm slated for action late parently '91'e one vote away from
this month. having enouch supoort' in the
._. The ninth, Assemblyman Den-Senatetoapprovethebill.
1Us Man1ers CD· Huntington But tt'a a different story 1n the
.Beach), says he ia undecided on -Aaaembly where anti-capital
tbe bill (SB 155) introduced by 'punishment sentiment is
state Senator George Deukme-stronger and there are still a
jian(R-LoogBeach). number of uncommltteed
Gambler Takes Fifth
-
Jawmu.r.. Tber• tile macic
numwiam vtita •1'&1·
Tbe ~ it even leas cer--
taln when leslaJatora are uted
how tbey will vote on an a~pt
to override Gov. Edmund
Brown's prcmU.aed veto •
Several members in 'both
houses.who aay they will vote for
the death penalty don't want to
commit tbemselves now OD a
veto override.
They include Orange County
Witness Silent.
·In KProhe
WASHINGTON (AP) -A re-
puted crime figure invoked the
Fifth Amendment to all ques-
tions today as the House commit·
tee on assassinations asked
whether he knew in advance that
President John F. Kennedy was
going to be murdered.
In refusing to answer ques·
tions, Santos Trafficante, once a
reputed gambling kingpin in
Cuba, cited his constitutional
right against self-incrimination.
He also refused to answer
whether he had known Jack
Ruby, the man who killed Lee
Harvey Oswald, or whether
Ruby once visited Trafficante
Deadlo«!k Broken ~
HB PlannerS Okay
Towe~s for Senio:rs
Huntington Beach Planning
Commisioners broke,J two-week
I deadlock~~ -.-a plan ttia\ would aJiow cgnsuiic-
: tioa of two re$idential towen for
senior citlzenst
Rape Attempt
Fofled m1 HB .
Woman Fight.
A terrified woman, awakened
• by a hulking, would·be rapist,
foupt him off and frightened
him. into fleeing her Huntington
Beach home early today.
The attacker clamped bis Jiand
over the vicUm 's mouth ~ OI'•
dered her not to scream.
She shrieked anyway, she told
police.
The shaken vlcUm, who called
officers to her .Artyle Drive re.
sldence near ·the Huntington
Beach-Fountain Valley city
border, gave investigators a
r,athe~ good description of the
1 1uspect.
.She said her attacker was in
1 his early 20s and heavily built. a
(feacrlption closely litting tbft ot
a man involved in a simil~ •. of-
fense about tl'ie same hour two
momlngs ago ln the downtown wea.
The t!OCle amendment. which
would penn\~ consrtuction of .00
on.batll oom Uldta at Jhe Five
PQlQts Are~ was 'ppeoved 4·2
after c6mbUuiaoer RUlb "1n!ey
chugeclher vote.
It had stalled on a S.3 vote
March 1 despite repeated at-
tempts to break the iJl!passe.
Mrs. Finley sard today she
changed her vote .. in order to get
the matter before the city coun-
cil."
However, she said slle would
file a minority report explaining
-~ .. ~· \•elo::.e1U neu P-aelfica
HOlp
Alao voting ln favor m tJle de-
velopment Tbesday niabt were
JOleJ>b Boyle, Chuck Gibson and
Susie Newman.
Votin& aaamst it were Brian
Parkinson ud Prim Shea. Plan·'
nin1 Commission Chairman
Roger Slat.ee abstained because
he aaid his real estate company
. is sellin1 a small parcel of land in
the area. .
Tuesday night's decision came
alter Planning Director Edwird
Belich Clft'ered a compromise on
parkinc requirements which would allow one apace per tbree
ll'1Dcunita.
Mnt. Shea ~ qaimt the
E ltlclUon beeaoae •b• 1" orlctna1 propoeal of
IJ)aee fo ~ units WM aulfi. cienl.~toSeUcb.
Mn. Jl'ln>eJ •IMI ~she ba4
ltrohf feelhiO that the d~
m•t abb01d nve reeelved ~ ~ --.meat Ware Jtll
dallJ'lltion for btib rt• uae.
when he was in prison in Cuba.
The Warren Commission said ·
Oswald was the lone aaaauin of
Kennedy.
In addition. he refused to
answer whether he was~ in. tact,
. involved in CIA assassination
plots againsf Cuban Prime
Mini.iter Fidel Castro, as report.
ed by. the Senate intelligence
committee, or whether any
federal agency attempted to keep
him from testifying before the
House committee on ass~ina~ tions. . . ~ Trafficante is the sole 4urVlvor
of a gangland trio secretly enlist-
ed by the CIA in 1960 in futile ef·
fOIU to kill Castro.
Accoriting to published re--
))Orts, tbe FBI bad infonnlltion that 'l'ratficant. W told pepple
in ad•ance that Keanedy wOuld
be assassinated, but the FBI dis·
missed the .remark as brag-
gadodo.
Tndft~ ,_,.Md to ans'er .u· Cl= .-...0 blm by ebtef coun.sel~ard A. Sprague and
a committee member, citin~e First, Fourth, Fifth and ~
teentb ·Amendments o the
Constitution. ·
But Cbairm8n Louis Stokes (D-
Ohio), till Trafficante that was
not good tnou&h and that the oomm.ittee. ~t recommend to
the llMIN that be be cited !or coabfmJtf,lf CCJasreu. Trattl~ still refused to answer any qUestlons.
Sprque asked if he bad auy
advance information that Ken·
nedy was going to be ass~inat·
ed Nov. 22, 1963, or that he had
advised otb4!r people of that fact.
Trameante refused to answer.
A Did you ever discuss with any
lndi"idual plans to assassinate
(See .JFK, Page AZ)
SlJC£ESSFUL
'DD'ELOP•NT
111 just didn't have time for \t
..,mare, so hold my equpment
wilh al>ail;Y PUot classified ad. I
-couldn't believe the response I,.
That's the testimony of an
Irvine man wbo placed this
clUllftecla4: ,..
llepabllca.o John Brlgo wbo
s~a be la thlnkinc of vot.Log
acai.Dlt an override to belt i.Jl.
sure there will be a death penalty
taiUatiri on the ballot when •
Brown. a Democrat, comes IQ>
foir~ecti<lll next year.
"I tbiDk that if we are going to
serve the people of California
maybe we should nd\ oi'errlde.
Maybe we should hang it around
Jerry's neck and let him run on
it," aaid th~ Senator from
Jl'uUertaQ;
Acccrdlnf to tb.e AP aury.y.
Orange County Senaton Patal
Carpenter (D-Garden -Grove),
Dennis Carpenter <R·Newport
Beach), and Brigs all fav9f' the
Deuktqejian bill whtcb would al-
low ~of capital punishment for
treason and 15 categories of
murder, including multiple
murder, murder of a pea«:e of.
ficer, torture murder and
murder committed during a rob-
liuy. •
In tbe AIHmbb'. the coatrs
dele•atiioa lln1n• up aaaiD beldnd
the bill 1ncludel AIMmblJmm
Ron Cordo•a CD·El Toro),
llichard llobin•on <D-Santa
Ana>, Chol W(a.y {D-Garden
'Grove), William Dannemeyer
< R · Fullerton>, and · Bruce Nestande (R-Orange).
Only Mangers is listed 81 UD•
committed ol. all Orange County
A <See-PENALTY, Pa1eAZ)
Rainfall·
Seen to
CoiltiilU.e
''I couldn't have done it
without Cocijo," .a modest Bill
Payne said today.
The former Orange Coast
College art jnslructor's day gods
may have clone the trick Tues·
cf ay, since torrents of rainfall fell
on Southern C.alifomia today.
Payne placed his Zawtec In·
dian gom in a pasture at Qraqe
Coast College Tuesday and sum
SJ'EADY RAIN HITS
NORTHERN AREA, AS
enough, the rain began to fall this
morning.
The 63-yeal'-old professor Said
three weeks ago that ~ wo"'1d
ra.in Uldar, and the fact that it did
brings td 13 the numl1eT oJ. suc·
cessful rains brought on -by the
'palm·sbed clay figurines. That's
out of 14 tries.he ~ys.
· Meanwbile, forecasters at the
t.os AnJeles Wetther Service
iQl ·-~should ~til\1.le . · tlarouata -deereuin1 tO a
TOMMY ALBRECHT HUGS MOTHER AFTER VERDICT
Murder Charge Aeducect'to Manalaughter,
J;ather's C~lty
'Cause'd Slaying'
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla.
CAP) -Psychiatrists say !3·
yeer•old Tommy Albrecht
Jeamecl about violence through
his father's threats and
thrashings. Now Tommy faces
five years in state custody for.
beating a 3-year-oldglrl to «leaUJ.
Juvenile Court Judge John
Miller ordered Tommy turned
over to the Division of Youth
Services on Tuead8f after <!eDY• Ing an insanity plea and finding
him guilty of manslaughter.
0.fficlals said Tommy c:ould be
,kept J.n state institutions until he
reacbel18.
The boy was cbarc-ed with
second-desree murder for bitting
andktcldna Staci Cbubin to death oet. '~ after be spen~ 20 hours b•i>y •lttlng the chtld. The
jvdee' reduced 'the charee te
father, Larty Albrecbt.
One-~ycliiatrist called bim
1'impu1Bive, explosive aJtd de.
tached," with uncontrollable
violent impulses.
"Beating Tommy was bis
(father's) answer to every·
thing," the boy's mother, .Jean.
Albrecht, told the eourt. .. He was
·always throwing things -a ham·
mer or a rocking chair -at Tom.
D\Yr U not TOIMlJ bimaeU. ''
She said that as Tommy fM911
older, he. began to imitpte his
father, displQing e violent
temper and beathif bis slater.
· .fO percentt c ce of. contblded
show~ on Tllunday.
The nin mnlnf throuQ
SoUtbmia ~alitornia is expedi:l to~.,.,. .... tbree.(l\a.arterf 6t
ab hlt'h to an lQch of the wet stutt
b~fore Jetting ~P sometime Thursday.
Forecast.er Patricia Rowe said
skies will be fair Friday with con·
tinued cool weather through Sun.•
day.
She said the weather front that
;overed over W aahington state
and OreJon earlier this week. .. Just up and moved down here,
brlngin& all th1S lovely rain.!'
• .But Payne, -wbo retired from ·
OCC 111 1974, said he can't take
full crediUcrtherainfalL
"It was,tbe work of Cocijo. "be
sai4 solemnly. "I.am only tbelno
~ediaey." . ~yne slld the rain godS
posedly ~~ droughts, •1::t
when they do their job, they
begin a cycle we hope will con•
tinue." ·
Bank Bandi,u
BieyclUu
SAN DIE® (AP) -Three bank holdup m,en apparently
made a slick .rttaway on 10.
speed bicycles, police sa1cl. .
The three 1'0!'e ski masq and
carried a rifle and pistols into tbe
Security Pacific National Bank
on Co)leg. e .A•enue . .OUe lefPed
o,er a ~ and scooped up
e••hfrom tellers' drawers.
• The other bttldent also ln·
"1ved a heavily built, mwacular
man in bia *b' 2IOa who b..-e Into a de>Wntown area home and
sexually assaulted a female re-
laUve of a Huntington Beach
police officer.
She uid abe planned to file Ill
lier mfDartb' report to tbe etty
coundl queltiOall over parldnf.
Sll.e s.tdlbe a1IO belleYet there la a need far a paraat. that a
36mm Mlncllta. SRT 101
w /50mm lena, '75/260 mom~ lens, tiipoc1..
•Xl.nt.*'10.m.mx ·: • 1llaDSl8U1htu.
WitnesHI at Tomm1•s tbre6o
day trial painted a picture ol a
coiitused and bosWe boy who
learned the use of bis fiats from
.,_atlq) adm.iniatered by bis
"Tommy's rea~tion t~ dis·
cipline was similar to his father's
-'violence," Mrs. •lbrecbt
testified. "Onee ~ ran over the
neighbor's kl~ w!tti lfis bicy-ele bec:auae be wu1nad1lt.~))t·
tie clrl oat doOr. ••
Ton:unr• mother dl~Jfa
fatlt.et in 1972. Albrecht~ re-
fmed to diacUli any detallt e(his
Then ~ 1ran to thet.-. 'bttes,
pedaling Ott With b8fl of cash.
Ba.a~ ~ deellnecl to At The su'spect in today's
burelary and rape attempt which
occurred shortly after 3 a.m.
wore a mustache and a red pUdd woolen shirt, police said.
Despite his warning to remain
•lieut, the horrified \'lctim of today's assault atrugcletl,
acreamed and frightened her at-
tacker away.
<s.TOWEllS, Pace.Al)
. If'°" baYe a bollby 10u cloa't
have time f« u.)'tnore, or need
cash for a new one you can't af· ford, callf0.M'18.
famllYllfe. • · • "\
Althoulh Tommy re~elved
treatment at a po•cbi•lrll: • .eeliter, adminiatrato~ at hll
elementary sctioe>l )>laCecl him ln
a apeda1 clan for eDiotlciaallt
disturbed ddkkenafter~ inddmtawith~att..
howmudl.. '' '
t •
•
• ----·
For Toro 1mh·up1
• -rwOJ be at. Pmta'a ~ •
Ui• alCll"Q -... lliiiG NAoe Clllel Id Clbbar9tll elid ~
ilB Council
Asks oc
Run Park
8)' aoBERT BARKER
OflNOellyl'tle4'*-"
Huntington Beach City Council
m~tnbers have taken action to
get out from under Central Park,
which baa been labeled a white
elephant by one councilman.
Tbe city council voted un-
animously Monday to ask the
Orange County Soard of
Supervisors lo take over opera·
tion of the 270·acre park.
Tbe park has been p1aeued by
lack of aUendance and Coun·
cilman Ron Shenkman says the
• reason for thia ls a lack of availa·
ble activities.
Shenkman says that the people
tren 't getting what they paid far
when they financed a $6 mllllon
bond to buy the acreage. He
called it a white ele~hant.
It is the council's hope that the
county will take over the parll for
regional use and maintain i~ and
add facilities to it.
The ~ity would continue to pay
orr its bonded indebtedness.
Shenkman aaid he visualizes a
i-ecreatlon complex with
baseball and soccer fields,
basketball and tennis court&, a
skateboard park and lawn bowl·
inl for seniorcltlzena.
1 He said that develoJ>meot
toulCl OCCW' Oil tbf 100 acres of
undeveloped land ln the park. "Tb~e is room to have both
passive recreation and open
• space and development of
f•cWtl'•,'' be .. id Tuesd~. "Tbere'1 no need to destroy the
tranquillty but people who do not
want any changes are probably
not aware of the economics in
maintaining and developing the
park.
"I'm by no means in f(lvor of
creaUni a concrete jungle.
"But the people are paying rqr
some~ that they are not get·
t1n1tbefUll uaeof," be said.
Shenkman reported that ·
Supervisor Laurence Sebmit's.
office has demonat.rated an ac·
live in~Un the park.
He added that tb1J week'• •c·
tion by the city councll will pave
the way for the city and county to
dl1cusa a working relationsb.1p on
the park'• operatiOft.
Congre&8maD
To Speak in BB
Rep. Robert Badham (R ·
Newport Beach), will address
tbe Huntin,ion Beacb Rctary
Club Friday at noon at the Hunt-
ill1ton Beach Inn.
Hi.a 40th Conire9f!onal Dl.strld.
takes in about one·tbJrd of Hunt-
ington Beach, Fountain Valley, a
lar1e portJon ol Santa Ana and
area.a llOUth lncludlnc Oce~
and Camp Pendleton. ·
Drug Ring Broke'1
PORTLAND. Ore. (AP) -
Nine pm'IOna were Indicted n...
day ~ Pwtland .ln wbat a Jwtlce
Department official described u
a multimilllon dollar LSD
manufac operation.
DAI LY PILOT
Aqela police anw a 11·
JHf4d bo)' frith a IGoa recmd ol
nbbm7 -dnlc ... Jn Uoa wHb lit•. wo•••'• myltetous d&a.,,.anaca. Jolm llcAliatm'. a Pu,,,_•
police apokesman, said the youth
waa driving Mrs. Sparll111'a
bronze. 1&72 Corvette, wbicb wu
m•olved in a minor traffie ~
dent in the Granada Hills ccm· munit,y of the San Fernando
Valley.
"We've 1ot a lot more OP bil:n
to incl1cate be mi£bl have been ID
face to face contact with II.rs.
Sparlin1," McAllster aaid.
Detectives searching the boy's
residence. a vacant South
Pasadena house, discovered a
jacket with Mrs. SparUn1's
rings, a watch that was a gift
from her husband, several other
penoo.al effects and a .25 caliber
plgtol with a round in the
chamber.
McAlllt.er said the youth ad·
mltted owning the gun and ~aking
Mrs. Sparling's auto from the
park.log lot ln front of the doctor's
office. The boy's father r:eported·
ly works direct19 across the
street from the medical offlce
building.
But the police spokesman said
the boy told officers the woman
had left her car in the lot with the
engine running and her jewelry
on the seat. He said he just got. in
and drove away and denies any
knowledge of the woman's
whereabouts, McAlister noted.
I',.... Page Al
PEN_ALTY. •
legi&lators.
r ..... r,....11
JFK •••
Prealdeot Kennedy prior to his
asaaaainatloo ?" Spraiue que:s·
Uoned.
TraUicante save the same re-
fuaal to reply.
Sprague also asked him if be
presently bas immunity from the
U.S. government "with n!gards
to any attempt to assassinate any·
world leader."
'sprat\loe then asked Traf-
ficante lf be had ever met with
CIA representatives "to discuss
assassination of world ~aders,
includinr Castro."
Rep. Christopher Dodd <D·
Conn.), asked Trafficante if bis
life bas been threatened in any
way 11Dce the committee au.,_
poenaed him or 1f any federal
a1ency ba tried to keep him
from t.estifytnc.
Tr'"1canw-?efuaed to answer .
·all thOMqueat:lons.
,.,.... P.,,e AJ The AP survey showed a total
of 2-4 senators in favor of the
Deukmejian bUl and two who
said .Uy would probably end up TOWERS vot.1ni for it. V • • •
Twenty·sevetl votes, fl two· number of the one-bedroom units
thirds majority ln the 40-seat 'wm be des1enated for penom of
Senate, are needed to approve u row t.ncome.
override or pass the biU with U\ Sbe bu previously stated COD·
urgency clause that would put it t~· abotat dt•h1•1e problems,
into effett immediately. . that HWA&~· U. are already
O'Dly 21 v<Ms would be n~, ._.QIMlns to c$aclty alld that the
to appl'OYe tbe bW with an \µ'alb· toeo1ed d•v,slopment lies
cy clause thatwould put 1i..La&o.. .tUltin eoo feet of an earth«iuldce fe~t Immediately without the fadlt.
uraeney clause. lt-we>W4 'tbeo Boyle bad prevloualy voted
take effect Jm.1. a1ainlt the ,Plan alto because be
Nine eenaton sal4 \bey wU1 U.OUlbJ~ahouWbeonepark·
vote no op the bW, • loth 1ahl be ~ ~pece "" e•b 2~ "'1Ji.. He •u l•anJni tqwud a no v'* and went aloalt with the comproml.se
three eald they were aWl un· · Tuesday night.
dedded.
The ~ Senate seat was Jdt A l C h vacant after Anthony Beilenson 0 0 r88
<D-Los Angeles>. was elected to
Congress. Assemblyman Alan
Sieroty. a death penalty roe. won
the seal in a special election last
week and could officially move
over to the Senate aa early as
next week, aides·~·
That means he WOl,fld be there
in time to vote on t.He Deukme·
jian bill, which Deukmejian'1
staff says ls scheduled to be
taken up Marchal.
There is one vancacy in the
80-sea\ A$Sembly, where i\ takes
S4 votes to override a 1overnor's.
veto or paaa urgency clauae
le1l1latioo.
A Fullerton woman was killed
earlf today when the car she was
drivlrll overturned aa it rounded
a curved road, according to an
Oran1eCounty Coroner~s report.
Identified as the victim was
Catherine R. Eaaterllna ol 1103
E. SudeneRoad.
Miss Easterling reportedly
died ln a nearby hospital an hour
after the 3:10 a.m. accident at
Lemca IW1 Terrace and Malvern
Road.
Tipster Credited
In Drug Arrests
Surprised BunUn'aton Beach
narcotics deteetlvea credited an
u:~ou· tipster today for m poqible the capture of
two aua~an.11 dealers.
the result ol a routine followuP
tnve1ttaat1on reaultinc from a
telephone call to headquarters
Sunday n1'1!t about a possible
dru1 purehuein proarat. · · ·
l"c •• ~ ctb' a.a..
dl.mea 11.aTe app1o'Nd •.• ba low .. u..~·a~opmmt ~ lat Wan oa two _...
-~~-• ..., cotn• b'OID dty
seura1 f\Uld reMrV• aad the ef.
ty upecta to be compmaated ul·
tlmate11 by an lncreqe ln tax incremmtfundl that the project.a
are Upected to t:::'*be. A. total of ,000 wm '10
to'ward street lmpronment and
lnatallatioD of Qtillties at a 28-
acre NCl"eat1Ga complu ln the
vicinity ol Warner Avenue md Newbope street. .
I .am for the project include 70
Uahted tennis cOuris. 20 racquet·
ball courts, a 12-lane bowling al·
ley. a multi-purpose field house
with basketball and volleyball
gymnasiums, an indoor soccer
and track pavilion, karate,
ballet, boxing and wrestling
Pat Nixon turned 6S today.
It was unknown how t&e
former first lady and her
family would celebrate the
occasion. Mrs. Nixbn was
bom in Ely, Nev., in 1912.
studios. OiJ Slick Mayor Pro Tem Bernie
Svalstad cast the only vote
against th~$200.000 lo8Q. ~ WbaJ
"The projed bu merit to a voe e
degree, but we should reserve
part of the money for other pro-' Of S
jects in the area,'' he said. a tory
Approving the action were
Mayor Roger Stanton and
Marvin Adler, Al HoJlinden and
George Scott. ·
A second loan of siso,ooo.
which was approved unanimous-
ly, also will go for street im·
provement.s. for the development
of 12 industrial lots on property
east ol Euclid Street, north of
Slater Avenue and west of Mount
Hermann Street. •
Roast Set
For Bartlett
Tickets are still available for a
combination toast and roast of
veteran Huntington Beach City
Councilman and civic leader Ted
W. Bartlett.
Bartlett, 75, who still pumps
eaaoline in hi.a tiny old Texaco
serv\ce 1tati011 at .Main S~t
and Olive Avenue, will be feted
Ma1cb 24 at the Huntington
Beao.b Ion, formerly the
Sttera'-~Jcb In~.
The clinuer, priced at $9.SO per
person, ls aponaored by the
Oran1e County Lea1ue of Cities,
which in 1948 boasted coun-
. cilman and fQrmer Hun~
Bfach mayor Bartlett ai its'pre·
sident.
Reservations can be made by
calling 536-5553.
There was a "whale" of an oil
slick off the coast of Hunttn,rton
Beach Tuesday, but it wasn't
from oil operations and it wasn't
, all that big,~·
A !$.fool long dead California
gray whale was towed out to sea
before it could wash ashore on
the city beach and create "a ter·
rible mess."
Lifeguard Bill Richardson nld
the bloated carcass ooud w}\ale
oil while being towed J~ miles
out to sea by a Weguard rescue
boat. I
Richardson said the 35,000·
pound whale could have caused a
terrible mess and the s mell
would have been terrific ifc.it
came ashore.
"We would have had lo dig a
grave 40 feet lona and aix feet de·
ep and we couldn't do that
because we would have run into
the water table,''. he said.
Ri<:bardson dtd that it 11
hopecf the body of the mlgratlng
mammal would., break up and
sink.
It w~ sighted at 11 a,,.m. near
. oil platlonn Emmy. 1•1
, Richardson said this Ls '~
time of the year that eray whales
migrate from the north to Baja
California.
GNEWPORT:
tlv. c.pt..S.. D'Allllco ......
toaaj ....... to pre Nit tbe trlahfrualpallll outot u..; ,,
Celebnnt.a wbo Hem drawn to
two specific puba ln it..
downtown area -Claaet• _,
tbe lrllber -have la the ... dl'\
cade become laYGI~ la al
plwant .P*-.. .,. -·-11 L.Juat au c1ockwon. :sertga lncicleoU bne
out ol'tbe revelry <JD Mver.l
Patrick'• DA.J oecutoos. at
, twice beina d9cl.,...S all.out requirinl conaiderable pollc;,e
lnforcementa. {
Chief ctbbarelU p!'edfcttd ~ day there will be po real difftc
ty th1s St. Patrick's Day, jtlsl
municipal forces and ba
o"era' cooperaUon laat y~
prevent.edaerioul trouble. _,_l
"We're praylnc to
0
tbe ral.Q
gods," the clalet •xplained~ .. W e.'re Just 1olna to Jet the IriaW stand out there tbe raJD. . .it wa
C'4 keepitcomin1do1"1l. ?• ' -. "We've been in cont#lcl will
the bar owners and they hav•
agreed lo close up if things begia
to 1et too crowded,'' he added. ~ .
No one has ever been able tQ
pin down the real reaaoo why
Jrtsbmen and otlier ~gers-ol\
selected Seal Beach for their re-
velry more than a decade ago. :
Huntington Seeks.
Band Diftclor
Huntington Beach is lookint
for a direct.or for lta community
concert band following the re;.
signaUon of John Mason wbO or·
ganized th• IJ'OUP in 1973. •
Anyone intereJted in the band
'director position should contact.
librarian Walter Johnson at the
Huntinaton Beach Publi~
Library, 7111 Talbert Ave., or by
calllng 842-4481. · :
Reception :fir8i .
UNITED NATl9NS, N. Y~. C,,.P) -BepresentaUvu ol tho
Palestine Liberation Orianfzat
tJon and two CommunJat govemr
rq~ta npt reco1nl1M by the UnJ~ states have been invited
·to a dip1omalic reception in
honor of President Carter, a U.N,
spokesman said Tuesday.
J
fashion that wor~ bard!
NewportS Is fashion furniture, attuned to the young at
heart. Shapes a11d designs that are a woodng. storing
Integral part of life! But Newport also is brilliant Drexel
techno199y. uniting the depth and grain or pecan with
hardboard 1n a refined graphic arts process.
linhcJnnno 1t all with a 15-step finish of honey-toned
beauty Al'ld surviving £Nery test of family living .••
beau11fullyl The time to see this Drexel' furnitu.re
ls now!
I
.. .
=· ..
. ,
, Poll~ charled that the pair
had ln thel( IJPl•asion an array
ol blah Qualit.Y clrui• including
an excdc rorm Of inarUuana and
cocaine.
Street value or&be alleceCI con·
traband uow lk!bll lnal1sed. by
the police crime labOratory may
total about St.soc>, accordln& to
"We weot to~ Diane JAM'
addr ... and cOlltacted a 16-Je&f.
old youth seen J,eavm1," 1,.t.d a
department apokuman. "We
found he bad a small amount of
cocaine and a 4uantlt1 of mart· ·
Juana:"
·-i.
l loveatipla-1 who raided a north
city bomeSund.Q~t. • S\ISPedS Davlcl en GIDespte, ~' and Timotb Obert San· defer, 23, of 1..m .Dtane Lane, were~• the tetl4ence on
mulUple di'ug cbrces and re-
leased on $$,000 bail eacb pend·
ing court arralgnmtat.
TbeJ were booked for ln-
vestiptkib °' .t:":sicp cl l!Wl· Juana for 1 ~ poaaaioft of
cocaine for 1ale an4PQIHaloo or
eo-called nu.&-&tleb;•a potent
Aalan~f ... · .. Jt all llPP8M9 tow.,_., hllh-
crade ltUfr '' • detedlw aa1d of 1.be Ma.me. Hldd .i the .--.... ~.
tn.esU,aton uted the )IOUth
where be bad been moments
"befoTe. A vlalt to the home thared
by sandefer and Gillespie result-
ed tn d.tseovery ot the mdeDc• police~.
They said Sandefer is a com··
mercial signpaloter, while
Glllespie lilted htmaelf u eur-
tently unemplQyed.
ArraiiJUDent dates at wblch
ttine Gillespie and Sandefer wW
be f~ ad•ised by•j~•ct
the eb*rl• .,alut them and.
enter pleu wU1 be .et wtUda 10
days by olftclaJa .a Wiit ~e Cont1 .Juclldal t>tltlkt~
BB Bome 1LOotecl
. . " ---.
•
-TENQ;NTS
Gtlngster Muni on JFK Assassinat ion
WASlllNGTON ~AP) -A I'& puled crime ap;re 1nvc)tfd the
1'iflb AmeDdD)mt to all ques-
tlou (ocby u fbe B°"" toznmit· tee on assau1oatlona asked
whether be knew in advance that
President John F. Kennedy wa.s
&oine to be murdered. In refusinC to anawer ques-
tionS, Santos Trafficante, once a
reputed 1ambline kioepin in
Cub'. cited his conaUtutiooal
Countg.t o Bag2'
riibt llaiost self-incrtmfoation. He also refused to answer
whether he had known Jaek
Ruby, the inan who killed Lee
Harvey Oswald, or whether
Ruby once visited Tratncante
when be WU In prison in CUba.
The Warren Commission said
Oswald was the lone assassin of
Kepnedy.
lo addition, be refused to
answer whether be was, in fact,
Shaded area of map indicates location of Whiting Ranch
in the foothills above El Toro. Orange County
Supervisors are considering the purchase of Whiting
land for what some county officials say is a bargain
price. But questions about how big a bargain the buy
would be are being raised. For details, see story. Page
A3.
Irvine Ranch A rea
117 Water, Sewer Rate
~· Boost Under Study
Irvine Ranch Water Diltrict
dirttt.on will look at a ltudy
.Monday that sugeests moathly
rates be hilted for lrvtoe resi-
dent.a beginning J~el. ,
IRWD Finance Dlrector Merle
Lundberg said today the study
suggests rate increases for both
'.water and s ewer service.
However. he said he could not
provide exact figures for those·
,rate increases. ·
. According lo Lundberg, the
•Study belng prepared by the con-
•s ult Ing firm of Brown and
;Caldwell is not yet completed
and figures are not available yet.
Lundberg added that the water
LUDdberg said cplDeetioa fees
may be increased' for •ome
uaers. but be said it's dif'f1cult to
calculate becaose connection
fea are currently based on an
acrea&e figure and will be based
instead on density of dwelling un-.
its in tbe Mure.
Developers pay connection fee
costs and tben relay the expense
on to the homeowner in the price
of the clwellints.
Tbe Jlletbod of taxing·
homeowners for the water dis-
trict's bonded indebtedness will
also be cbanged, but Lundberg
said be doubts it will be a higher·
.expense.
lnst.eadoCwater and sewer tax·
(See RATES. Pa&e AZ>
involved In CIA ususlnatiCJ11
plets against' Cuban Prime
Minister P\del Castro, as report.-
ed by the Senate intelligence
committee, or whether any
federal agency attempted to keep
him from t.tifying Wore the
House committee on a.asassina~
tlons.
Tratncaote Is the sole survivor
or a g•neland trio aecreUy enlist..
ed by the CIA in 1980 in futile ef·
fortS to kill Cutro.
Accord.int to l>ublbbed re. pc)rta, the FBI bad iotormaUoo
that Trafftcante bad told people
in advance that Kenoedy would
be usasaina~, but the. FBl dis.-
missed the ~•mark as brag·
gadocio.
Trafncante refused to answer
all questions put to him by chief
cOUDHI Richard A. Spracue and
a committee member. cltinc the
Flnt, Fourth. Fifth ud Pou:r-
teenth Amendments of tbo
Comtitutioa. '
But Qlairman Louis Stokes <D-
Oblo>, told Trafficante that was
not &ood enough and that the
committee mitht recommend to
the House that he be cited for
contempt ot Q)Qgress.
Tralficante stlll refused to
answer any questions.
Sprague asked if be bad any . . '
adnnce lnfonnaUon thal Ken·
nedy was &Oinl to be aas1utnd·
eel Nov. 22, l9l3t or tbat be bad
advised other people of that fact.
Traflicante retuaed to answer.
••Did you ever diuuas with &ll)'
individual plans \to assassinate
President Kennedy prior to his assassination?" Sprague ques-
tioned. ·
Trafficante gave tbe same re-
<See JFK, Page AZ>
Tally Goofs Ad_n:iitted
Hurd, 'Gahm Stand as lrvi~ Winners
By ID.LARY KA YE
Ol-Dalty "''-'SUH The Orange County Registrar
admitted Tuesday that
arithmetica1 errors were made
for four of the 10 candidates in
the Irvine Unified School District
election last week.
Registrar Al Olson said the
winners -Frank Hurd and Fred
Gahm -remain the same, but
that errors change the standings
ror four other candidates.
Olson pointed out that there are
minor mistakes in any manually
operated election, but admitted
there were more in the Irvine
election than in any other he's
seen.
Texaco Act
'Violat ion'
WASHINGTON (AP) -
Texaco, Ine., diverted 172
mlllien cubic feet of
natural gas daily from
Cederal lands it leases and
used it for its own
purposes, apparently a
violation of the law, colum·
nist Jack Anderson and
The Washington Post re·
ported today.
The oil company took the
gas from the lands it leases
off the Louisiana coast to
its refinery in Port Arthur,
Texas. Tt)e action was
taken without approval or
the Federal Power Com-
mission. they said.
In a telegram to the
FPC. Texaco conceded it
has taken 580 billion cubic
reel or gas since 1964, ac-
cording lo the two ac·
counts.
.. Looking at these mistakes it
kind of makes you wonder if the
collection cent.er workers were
using an adding machine," said
Olson as he _Acanned the dis-
crepancies i>etween the early
and fmal returns.
Two of the addition errors were
substantial. Robert Q. Shupe re-
ceived only 592 votes instead of
the 747 votes reported earlier.
That dropped him into sixth
place instead or filth place.
And Robert Gray was the vic-
tim or a 100-vole error' with 829
fmal tally instead of the original
929 figure. That made ,him the
rourth·place finisht!r behind Ron
Lunceford instead of the nar-
rowly·beaten third place finisher
announced earlier.
The other two mistakes include
a nine vote error for Tom Wilson,
who moved into fifth place ahead
of Shupe and a two-vote error, in
Cathy Larkin's favor. Her ninth-
placef"tnish was unchanged.
According to Olson, the mis-
takes were made when collection
center workers tallied the sub-
totals. Individual precincts
tallied their own returns and then
brought them to the collecbon
center, where the subtotals were
added together.
"The problem is that election
night returns are unofficial, but
people don't believe that.," said
Toro Mother Missing
Olson, adding that people mis-
takenly take the election night
returns as "gospel."
A s~ar and ,more damaging mistak~ was discovered Jast
week in the Ocean View Elemen-
tary School Board race in Hunt-
ington Beach.
Jn that contest, it was dis·
covered last Flrdlly that a 300-
vote error had apparently been
made, also a case of subtotals be-
ing added incorrectly.
Incumbent Dr. Jean Bogen,
who had been declared the win-
ner, suddenly found berselttbree
votes behind challenger Dr.
Margaret Stark. Dr. Bogen bas
<See TALLY, Page A?>
Search Continues
By WILLIAM SCH&EIBEll Ot ... Dll., ...........
'the search for a mlUin& Lake
Foreet mother of four~ •ho police
invuti1aton beUeve bu met
with foul play, waa shirted today
from a rugged area near
Pasadena's Rose Bowl to wind-
ing Angeles Crest Highway lead-
ing to Mt. Wilson.
Raebel Sparling, 36, of 24311
Lakeview Lane. was last seen
about 3~ p.m. Monday as she
left the Pasadena office of her
psychiatrist, Dr. Alan Kanne.
Early Tuesday morning, Los
Angeles police arrested a 17·
year-old boy with a long record of
robbery and drug use in conne<:-
ti on with the woman 's
mysterious disappearance.
~ohn McAlister, a Pasadena
police spokesman, said the ,outh
was driving Mrs. Sparling's
bronze, Jm Corvette, which was
involved in a mibor traffic acci·
dent in the Granada Hills eotn·
munity of the San Fernando
Valley.
"We've got a lot more on him
·to indicate he might have been in
face to face contact with Mrs.
Sparling," McAllster sald.
Detectives searching the boy's
residence, a vacant South
Pasadena ).Guse, discovered a·
jacket with Mrs. Sparling's
rings, a watch that was a gift
from her husband, several other
·personal effects and a .25 caliber
pistol with a round in the
chamber.
. building.
But the police spokesman saift
the boy told officers the woman
had left her car in the lot with the
enelne nmninl and her iewelty
on the sea.t. He said he just got in
and drove away and denies any
knowledae of the woman's
whereabouts, McAlister noted.
According to· McAlisler, the
boy has been ''playing mind
games with us and is very street
wise." ,
The youth reportedly suggest.
ed several locations in Pasadena
where he would have disposed of
a body, "lfl were doing it."
district has a policy of not reJeas-
;,ing any documents or lnforma-
!tion before being received and studied by the water board.
Last September, t.be water dis·
:trict increaMd w9* and 5eWet"
1service rates an averaae of $2 per
family, per month.
: Lundberg said be believes the
recommended increase will be at
Company )Vorth Tftbbed·'
McAll.ster said the youth ad-
mitted owning the gun and taking
Mrs. Sparling's auto from the
parking Jot in front of the doctor's
office. The boy'$ father reported·
ly works din!ctly across the
street from the medical offic•
' Scores of police oUicers from
several Jaw enforcement agen·
cies, aided by helicopters and
bloodhounds, Tuesday combed
three rugged spots around
Pasadena's Rose Bowl, including
Arroyo Seco.
"We spent all day out there
arter her husband identified the
'personal effects and jewelry we
foun<t at the house where the boy
was staying," McAllst.er said.
1 ·1east . that much and possibly
more.
He said Inc r e a ses are
necessary because of escalation
costs, including the expense of
Imported water, cost or dehvery
·systems and reservoirs and the
'cost of the district's wastewater
recycling projects.
In the "4,000 consultants'
'study, the district's operations
and long-ran&e capltal improve-
ment programs were reviewed,
with an eye towards bow much
rates should be Increased to COY•
er the future costa, Lundbert
said.
. ,. . ~ \ ·?.
r tJ ' Coast
Wea t h er
Chance of rain near 80
percent tcn.igbt and 40 per·
.cent· Thursday. Windy at·
Uma. Lowe toGtabt 45 to
50. w.hs Thursday !SOI to
lowflOI. ·
' ~ . Estimate Between $315 and $350 Million
By TOM BARLEY
OI .. Deity ~Maff
A consultant hired by Irvine·
heiress Joan Irvine Smith,
testified Tuesday in Orange
County 5Qperio1" Court that the:
Irvine CC>mpany as it st&Dds t.o-
d a 1 ia wortb "some•here.
between $JlS million and $350
mllllon.0
The estimate came from in·
vestment expert A. Sheridan
At.ldnaon wbo stressed tbat the.
figure was a "v«Y con.setvativ~
asaesament tbat did not take into
account recent rapid improve-1
· ments ln the fortunes of th••
lrvine Company."
Atkinson testified that if the
company continues to record
profits on the record making $17
milllon m~ set in the last fis-
cal year ttien be would be much
more inclined to set the com·
pany's worth at somewhere
between $390 million and $435
million. ••Earnings baye risen
dramaticalll," AtJd.uon said.
"This lawsuit and its impact OD
the market place bave meda the
!"lne ComJ>8:DY tbe subject ol bv
Friend8: Aid
·Girl's Surgery
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -A:
teroatlonal comment and
speculation."
Atkinson told attorney Howard
Friedman, representing Mrs.·
Smith that it would not surprise.
him t.o see the Irvine Company
valued at about $443 million or ·
$52.29 a share if it continues to
make its current progress and al·
tr~t bidders.
The Irvine Company was about
to be sold for $200 million or $24 a
shar,e, two ye&n1 ago when Mrs.
Smith stepped in to protest the
1'1e to the Mobil Oll Corporation
as beine far below the net worth
of the company founded by her
grandfather.
Mobil, then about to acquire
the company, bas since stepped
up its bid in the face of intensive•
competition to $281.9 million
.which represents $33.50 a share(
Mobil is being opposed by an
East Coast consortium which has
the backing of Wall Street finan-
cier Charles Allen, Detroit
developer Alfred Taubm1n and
auto billionaire Henry F .>rd II,
among others.
Their bid is $302.S million and if
it is accepted by directors ol thtr
James Irvine Foundation the Inine Company wW become a
subsidiary known as Allen·
Jrvine-TaublJlan Inc. • ·
Foundation directors and
Irvine Company manaeement
are known to pre!er the Mobil bld
because the oil company has
pledaed to retain the current
Irvine management If the otter Is •
successful.
T'l«J Aliens Returned
Mason Park
Developme nt
Wins Appr o val
"Just because we didn't find
anything doesn't mean there's
nothing out there," be said ... You
·could hide something out there.
and not have it found for a
million years. They used to fl.IJn
Tarzan movies in that area
because it w&A so much like the
African jllllgles."
Today, because of the rain, the
search using dogs was suspended
because the scents had been
(See MISSING, Page A2>
'Most County
·Solons Back
. . •
'
Irish Up?
'T be SL Pallid'• Du -the marn and Seal Ba.ell PoUee
CbJef Ed Ci~ -Detec· tlve C.pt. Sam D'Am.lco Warned
today ti.;, ln&md' to PNY• tbe
hilb flwn 1cWq a.¢of U.ne..
CeJebranta wbo aeem ctran to
two specific pub1 in tbe
downtown aru -Clancy's and
tbe lri&ber -ba" in the past ct..
cade become lnvohed 1.n UD·
,,ieuw epboda enry M#cll
17, J\llt Uke cloctwart.
Serious inddenta hne ar1teo
out of the revelry on several St.
Patrick's Day occuloos, at Jeut
~c• being declared all-out riota req~ considerable police re-inforcements.
Chief Cibbarelll predicted to-
day there will be no real difficul -ty this St. Patrick's Day, just as
municipal forces and bar
owners' cooperation last year
prevented serious trouble.
"We're prayinc to the rain
tods," the chief explained.
"We're Just going to let the hiab
at,nd out there the rt.in. . .if we
can keep it coming down."
"We've been in contact with
the bar owners and they have
agreed to close up if things begin
to get too crowded," be added.
No one has ever been able to
pin down the real reason why
Irishmen and other hangers-on
selected Seal Beach for thelr re-
velry more than a decade ago.
Newport-Mesa
Schools Back
On Schedule
By MICHAEL PASKEVICll
OI Ille Dally ~llot Si.tt
High school students in the
Newport-Mesa school district
were back on a normal class
schedule today following a
teacher-imposed minimum day
which led many students to
declare their own holiday Tues-
day.
Tuesday's action by teachers,
who are still without a contract
for this year, was designed as a
show or solidarity during cur·
rently stalled negotiations
between teachers and district of·
ficials.
District officials distributed a
l•tter to te.achera today H)'inC
(bey face Joa of pay, disciplinary
' action or dismissal if they staee
another minimum day.
The minimum day plan bad it&
biggest impact on high school! in
Newport Beach and Costa Mesa.
Most elementary and middle
schools already were os)eratin1
on shortened schedules because
of parent-teacher conferences
and today wu an official district
holiday for all kindergarten
through elehth graders for the
same reason.
In the one·day action which
teachers say might occur again,
students were liven only half the
normal inltrucllon time, thus·
completing the reeular day
before lunch.
Alt.bough teacbert aup~ ·
the show of strenttb remdned on.
campus many atudeata left
school early.
Negotiatlom broke down lut
week over teacher requestl for
hl1ber pay, bind.lq arbitration
and a ireater voice ln teacher
transfers between 1chool1.
A mediator from the atate
Educational Employment Rela·
lions Board is due to arrtve
March 30 to aon out the de·
adlbcked barialninC letaloru.
Leaders ol the Newport-Mesa
Education Association, the or-
gan lzatlon re,,pre1enttn1
teachen. aald tbe.y mar call for
another mbllmum day when tbe'
mediator arrives to show they
are serlOUI about tJMJ.r contract demands.
DAILY PILOT
.. t ewlh't •••• ._. tt _...,....... C«Uo. •• • lDCldlll mu
p ..-StadQ.
~~ ...... ICl99 ao--.wuwww uladato•btebol .. _.
tt.t~ JnUna up 10m.U • Tbtalida1.
• former Oraai• Coast CoU-ie mt 1atrvc1.or•1 ctaT ~
m17 \aw dollie tM trick.,.._
da,. •inee torrw.ab ol ralnlall fell
on ScMdbemCall.fornJatod,Q• ·PAiiD4bed day fl(arinea.1'.t&'a
Payne plaeed bll Za'*-In-outaf14trt.., be..,a.
Foreeaa. Patrtda Bon aald
•kilil be fair PridQ wWt con-
UD..s ooal ....... tbroaab Sim.
~Mid the weatber frallt tbat
bovend over Waahlncton state
and Oretoo earlier thll week,
"Juat up and moved down here, brlDOnl all tbia 10Yely rain.''
dtan iods ID a J)alture at Onn,e Me-'d.le. fwecutelJ a tbe .
Cout Collete Tuaday and IU19 Los Anc•l• Weather Service
enoup, the rain bee an to fall this •aid the rains abouJd continue morntnc. • _ throueb tmlsht. decre&liAC to a
40 pereent chance of coallD'*1 Tbe a.year.o14 J>l"Ofeaor aald abo'ftnan11nanday.
lhree weeb aao that It would Tbe rain movlns t!lrouch BUt PQDe. who r.urect from
OCC tn 1114, said be can't take
full credit for the rain.fall.
AP ........
MISSING MOTHER
RKhel Sparing
:WSSING •••
Machine Crushes
LB Man ·to Death
"It was the wort ol Codjo," be
said IOlemnly. "I am only &he in·
t.ermedlary." Parne said the raia gods sup.
posedly break droucbts, "and,
wben they do their job, they
be1in a cycle we hope will con·
tinue." ..
Pat Nixon turned 6S today.\
It was unknown how thei
former first lady and her:
family would celebrate th~
occasion. Mrs. Nixon was1
By ANNE COOPER washed away. McAlister said "at 0t111eo.i1y~11 .. siatt
least two dozen" calls bad been A Laguna Beacb man was
received from people who said crushed to death at a construe·
they bad seen Mrs. Sparling oc lion site Tuesday when a
her car Monday afternoon. 140,000-pound earth scraper · ••A couple of things would backed over him.
·make her stand out," McAlister James Kennedy, 67of38S F1ora
said. "She is quite attractive and Sl., a soil technician was work·
she was driving that Corvette. It ing at 35174 Camino 'capistrano
has a pretty distinctive license · Capistrano Beach when death
plate." came. '
· Mrs. Sparling's personalized Kennedy had complained aut~ license rea,ds WUV YOU. A earlier in the day or not feeling
mimature version of that plate, well A coroner's deputy said an a~tached to the wo~an's key autOPsY would be performed to.
ring, also was found with the ar· day to determine whether some
rested youth's possessions, health problem may have caused McAli.ster alleged.
The police official said one
caller1>ffered a clear description or the car and the woman, which
Fro.PageAJ
he reportedly saw on Angeles PENALTY Crest Highway at about 4 p.m. • • Monday.
·•we are checking that out
right now," McAlister said.
"That's really rugged country up
there. If I were a crook, I would
want to dump something up there
for sure."
· The youth police have arrested
has no record of violent crime,
though McAlister said he ap-
pears to have a "short man's
complex" that makes him "pret-
ty pushy and aggressive." The
unidentified yoath is five-fool-
four and weighs 140 pounds.
According to McAlister. the
boy is "not talking to us
anymore" because be has o~
tained an attorney. He is ln
custody in Los Angeles Juvenile
Hall. . ·
"He's no dummy," the police
spokesman said. "He probably nows iii~ law better ~an every.
body ln this buildinc com·
bined." .
McAlister said there m~ be
other reasons for Mrs. Sparling's
disappearance, such as family
problems.
"There are a lot of things it
could be but we have to fear the
worst." be said. "We are pretty
certain she bas met with foul
play.'' ·
Mrs. Sparling's husband,
9lrel, is the owner of R. V.
Specialties, Inc .. in Santa Ana, a
small manufacturing firm.
,.,.... Pllfl'! Al
TALLY •••
requetted a recount.
Obas said that as long as the
manual countina system is used
"human errors wW creep in."
He said his offtce tries to make
certain that adding machines are
used by tbe election work en, but
said it looks like the workers at
the center where Irvine returns
were counted Lallied the votes by
hand.
There were 17 different coll~
Uon centers set up around the
·.:ounty election nllbt. each one
tallyincsubtotaa, Olson said.
When questioned about the
final returns Tuesday, 01900 at
flrst said be believed the only er-
rors were made tn Ocean View and Irvine. He aaid those nlis·
takea were dlsccwered wbm hi.a
office did the olftctal "canvass,"·
which Involves recbecktni all the
precinct totals met subtot.ala.
But when a.sked how the Tustin
Unified School District returns
ended up, Obon discovered that
errort were made in those re-
turns too, alt.bough they were
fewer and leas substantial.
Tustin returns were counted by
the same people who count~ the
Irvine returns.
"I'm going to have to see what
happened there -whether they
used an add.iJla machine or
what? .. OllCID aal4.
He aald the onl11lf eeuards be
can use for the next eltcUoo ii
DlHinl certaid acSd1DI IUcblDes are used aDd t!lat totala ate
added l'Wlei. lniDl .. ftaal Blmta ate: . Pr-* Bmd, 1.131.
Freel Gahm. 9M.
Roa Luaeeforcl, 819.
Bobtrt Gr-.y • 829.
Toni Wlllon.. no.
RobertSbupe. a2. ~. WalJ>e, 838.
Lou z.Jda, 8 .
Cat).Y_Lerkln. 22L s..,..saauna_ m.
T•• 1U1ht dt1cr•ranct•• ~·--early u4 flila returna tOr itJlie otbil' IJ.% CaiJ4l4at4lll ..
due to .._tee ballota addecl m
11.Dce eleCtion nl&b\. •
I \
how they will vote on an attempt
to override) Gov. Edmund
Brown's promised veto. ·
Several members in both
hou&es who say they will vote for
the death penalty don't want to
commit themselves now on a
veto override.
They include Orange County
Republican John Briggs who
says he is thinking of voting
against an override to help in-
sure there will be a death penalty
initiative on the ballot when
Brown, a Democrat, comes up
for re-election next year.
"I think that if we are going to
serve the people of California
maybe we should not override.
Maybe we should hang it around
Jerry's neck and let him run on
1l," said the Senator from
Fullertoo..
AccordJ.ng to the AP survey,
Oraoce County Senators Paul
Carpenter (D-Garden Grove),
Dennis Carpenter CR-Newport
Beach), and Briggs all favor the
Deukmejian bill which would al-
low use of capital punishment for
treason and U categories of
murder, inclu.ding multiple
murder, murder of a peace of.
fleer, torture murder and
murder committed during a rob-
bery.
ln the Assembly, the county's
dele1ation lining up again behind
the bUI includes Assemblymen
Ron Cordova (D-EI Toro).
Richard Robinson (D·Santa
Ana), Chet Wray CD-Garden
Grove>. William Dannemeyer
CR-Fullerton ), and Bruce
Neatande CR-Orao1e>.
Only Maqers is listed as mi.
commJUed of all Oranie County
legislators.
The AP survey showed a total
or 24 senators in favor of tbe
Deukmejfan blll and two who
said they would probably end up
· voting for It.
Twenty-seven votes, a two.
thirds m-.jority in the 40-seat
Senate, are needed to approve an
override or pass the bill with an
urgency clause that would put it into effect immedlately.
Only 2l'votes would be needed
to approve the bill with an ur1en-
cy clause that would put it into ef-
fect Immediately without the ur1ency clause. It would then
takeeffectJan.1.
Nlne senators 1ald they will
vote no on the blll, a lOtb aald be
waa leanlna toward a no vote and
three said they were still UD•
decided.
The 40th Senate seat wu left
vacant after Anthony Beilemon ·
CD-Los Angeles), was elected to
Coneress. Assemblyman Alan
Sieroty. a death penalty foe, woo
the seat in a special electioo last
·week and could officially move
oveT to the Senate as early as
next week, aides say.
SUCCESSFVL
:nJYEWPMENT
UJ jmt didn't ..... time fGr It
anymore. '° l IOld my equpmd wJtll e Dally PUOt cl ...... ad. I
couldn't believe UM Nlpomel ..
Tbat'• the tutJmoay of u
Jrvlne man who placed th11
cl111Uleded:
35mm MlftOlta~ SRT 101'
w 150rbm leaa. 75/HO
t00n:i vMtar 1 • tif pod...
• XlnL $210.JCOr•D:IClt •
UJOQba¥ a~~dai'I.
ba-te ti.me for~. Cll' me«
cUl fCr •new-. JOU call' lf.J . font, QJJ tGS1I. ..
the victim to collaspe behind the
machinery.
·'God, I hope I never have another day like today." Jon
Barnwell, 30, said Tuesday at the
scene ol the accident. Barnwell
owns the scraper hd was drlv-
in1 it when a fellow worker
waved to him to look behind the huge tractor.
"I looked, and he (Kennedy)
was crumpled on the ground,"
Barnwell said. "There was no
doubt of bis condition. I couldn't
look again. We called the police
right away.
"I've heard of things like this happening to other people, but I
never thought it could happen to
me."
The Vilelli tract is in the early
stages of development. The first
of SO four-unit condominiums has
been framed and is currently be·
ing rooted. It is on the bluffs
south of Dana Point.
Talk Planned
By Carpenter
State Sen DeMis Carpenter
(R-Newport Beach) will discuss
what he believes are the hottest
issues in Sacramento at a
breakfast meeting Friday
sponsored by the Newport
Harbor Area Chamber t>f Com-
merce.
Carpenter will speak at ~
7: 30 a\!11. Town Hall meeting at
the Ba1ooa Bay Club.
The meeting is opeft to the
Pl.I blic. .a..ervationa f« the $3
breakfast may be made throueh
the chamber office • telephone
644-8211.
• 'Cocijo bas broken the
drought." .
Orange County Flood Control
District spokesman Emmett
Franklln said the current storm
will help narrow the gap between
·average seasonal rain.fall figures
in the county. •
He said a 88-year tverage of
rainfall in Orange County shows
about 10.40 inches of rain by
March 16.
"If you don't count today's
rain, we've bad 7.51 inches to
March 16," he said.
Last season's rainfall was only
5.21 inches by this date. The last
measurable rainfall in the county
was on Feb. 25.
"By the end of March, we
should have about 11 inches to be
average," Franklin said. "That
means we're about three and a
half inches short right now."
But, be said, the current storm
should alleviate some of that
short.age.
"It sure won't hurt us any," he
said.
l'roatPageAJ
RATES •••
es being added into the city's
general fund tax rate, -as they
are now -a separate tax will be
assessed to pay for the district's
bonded Indebtedness, Lundberg said.
The IRWD directors will not
take action Monday, but will
simply receive the report. A dis·
cussion of the report's findings is
scheduled for the April 4 meet-.
in g, with a public heuing
scheduled for April 18. •
Lundberg said a decision pro·
bably would not be reached until April2S.
born in Ely, Nev., in 1912. '
F.-...P.,,eAJ )
f
JFK ••• \
fusal to reply. 1
. Sprague also asked him if !14
presently has immunity from~\
U.S. government "with regar~
to any attempt lo assassinate an)".
world leader.'' ~
Sprague then as'ked Trar' ficante if he had ever met wi~
CIA representatives "to discusa
assassination of world leaders.1
including Castro." / Rep. Christopher Dodd (D ...
Conn.), asked Trafficante if bis
life ha,, been threatened in an~
way since the committee sub-
poenaed him or U any federa.t'
agency bas tried to keep him
from testifying. "'
Trafficante refused to answer
au those questions.
Parole Board
Seeking Time
SACRAMENTO CAP) -A key
committee has approved legisla•
lion to gin the state parole board
more time to decide which
prisoners' sentences should be
extended.
But the state Adult Authority,
which acts u the parole board,
said Tuesday the extension from
90to180 days still isn't enough.
Affected would be inmates who
mltht be freed earlier than the-
current Jaw allows when
California's new fixed-term sen-
tencing law takes effect July 1.
'NEWPORT:
'
fashion that works hard!
Newpor~ rs fastiion furniture, attuned to the young at
heart Shapes and designs that are a workjng. storing
Integral part of life' But Newport also is brilliant Drexel
technology. uniting the depth and grain of pecan with
hardboa1d 1n a refined graphic erts process.
EnhcJnc1no tr i!li wilh a 15-step finish of honey-toned
beauty Anti surviving every test of family hving ••.
beaulllullyl The time 10 see this Drexel" furniture
lsnowl
flAOFlUIONAL INTERIOR OHION WrTMOUT OILIGATioN
• eot.IFOl'TAIU ,AAKINQ • CONVINllNT ''N~NCINCJ
151"4NORTH MAIN• SANTAANA•541~391
'""~· WedMedey, Thuradeyeno let11rc1W. 9 ~IOI:»
Wel'IOty 11 tol• ,ndeyttotot
•
,
. l
; . '
VOL 70, NO. 75, A SECTIONS,• PAGES ORANGE COUNTY CALJFORNlA
,.. o.lly ...... s.a.. "--
SCENE OF TRAGEDY IN CAPISTRANO BEAqH WHERE WORKER CRUSHED BY EARTH MOVER
SollTechnlclanJeme• Kennedy, 67, May~~J• Coll•p•ed Behind Mechlnerr Before Acddent
Death Law
Favo red by
OC Solo ns
From Wire Services
Eight of the nine members of
Orange County's delegation in
'the state Legislature say they
will vote for a capital punish-
ment bill slated for action late
this month.
The ninth, Assemblyman Den-
nis Mangers CD-Huntington
Beach), says he is undecided on
the bill <SB 155) introduced by
state Senator George Deukme-
jian (R·Looe Beach>.
The delegation's stand on the
-death penalty was elicited in an
Associated Presa survey of
"legislators. It revealed tbat
capital punishment backers a~
parenlly are one vcte away from
having enough support in the
Senate to approve the bill .
But it's a different story in the
Assembly where anti-capital
"punishment sentiment is
stronger and there are still a
number of uncommitteed
lawmakers. There the magic
number is six votes away.
The outcome is even less cer-
tain when legislators are asked
how they will vote on an attempt
to override Gov. Edmund
Brown's promised veto.
Several members in both
houses who sa.y they will vote for
the death penalty don't want to
commit themselvea now oo a
, veto override.
They include Oran1e County
1 Jlepublican John Brina who
says he is thinkint of voting
against an override to help in-
sure there will be a death penalty
lnitiative on the ballot wben (see PENALTY, Pa1e A2)
Yegg Robs Safe
A burglar took more than $400.
from a safe at Andree's Con-
tinental Restaurant, 146' South
Coast Highway, in Lacuna
Beach, owner,RJcbard Juras re-
ported to police Tuesday. Police
· said the thief apparently used a
key to come ln the back door and
knew the correct cdmblnation to open the safe.
Coast
lolJ Mishap P r o fJed
Machine Crushes . .
LB Man to Death
By ANNE COOPER
Of Ille O.lly ~llol Slaff
A Laguna Beach mlU' was
crushed to death at a construc-
tion s ite Tuesday when a
140,000-pound earth scraper
backed over him.
J atnes Kennedy, 67 of 385 Flora
St., a soil technician, was work-
ing at 35174 Camino Capistrano,
Capistrano Beach, when death
came.
Ke11Aedy bad complained
earlier in the day of not feeling
well. ~·s deputy said an au~ would be performed to-
~ to detamiDe wbetber aome
health ~lem may bave caused
the victim to collaape behind the
machinery.
·'God, I hope I never have
another day like today," Jon
Barnwell, 30, said Tuesday at the
scene of the accident. Barnwell
owns the scraper and was driv-
ing it when a fellow worker
waved to him to look behind the
huge tractor. --"I looked, and be (Kennedy)
was crumpled on the ground,"
Barnwell said. "There was no
doubt of bis condition. I couldn't
look again. We called the police
ri,btaway,
'I've heard of things like ibis
happening to other people, but I
never thought it could happen to
me."
The Vilelli tract is in the early
staaes ol development. The fitst
of 50 four-unit condominiums bas
been framed and is currently be-
ing roofed. It. is on the blurts
south ol Dana Point.
Duo Honored
Tmat,ees Bow Oui With Coke
Retiring Laguna Beach school
board tnJstees Jane Boyd and
Dr. NC111Pan Browne spent part
of their last board meeting Tues-
day r;::·naturedly "Swilling"
Colle a shot glass.
Earlier this month the board
was criticiud by a candidate for
last week's board election, Bruce
Hopping, for serving "addictive'•
refreshmeota of coffee and soda
pop during meetings.
M Tuesday's meeting beean,
Board President Michael Sagar,
who wao a second term, marc:bed
to the reftilerator in the back ol
the room and with a Oowhb pro.
duud the biUat bottte of Coca·
Cola &bat the eompaQ1 makes.
Mn. BoJd took U>e abot slaas S.,ar olfered, be filled lt, she
lifted it to blr lips, threw the
drink dowD bii!rt.broat and passed the bottle.
Roppna. altt(ng in the lroirt
apectaton' row, Jn)aned "I take
itall~l 0
Jn a mare ae:riC)us mood (but
not much more>. Sqar led a round ot ~ppreciatlon Offered
Browne for his 12 years of service
to he school district, and Mrs.
Boyd for her eight years on the
board.
"First," Sagar joked, "I'd like
to squelch the rumor that they
were asked not to run again."
He then commended the
trustees for .. outstanding jobs"
and present«! them plaques, .. in
grateful appreciation."
Dr. Robert Sancbis, superin-
tendent of schools, said their
lenathY service record "is just
fantastic. Tbe1've been very in·
strummtal ln 1uJding the dis-
trict, at least while l 've been
here. I'm deeply grateful."
lln. Boyd said. "I know I'm
1olnJ to mia it," and looked at
her fellow board members. "I'm
1otn1 to mils you all.'·
Browne said, "There's so
much I want to say, I won't sa.y anytbint.••
"Maybe you should wnte a
book," Trustee Harry Bitbell
said.
Browne replied. "tt•d be a
wont Mller."
San Clemente Picks
\ . . New Mayor Tonight
·a1 WILUAM SCHREIBEll
Ol .. DMtr..._Slaff
The search for a miuinl Lake
Forest.mother of four. who police
investigators believe baa met
with foul play, was shifted today
from a rugged area near
Pasadena's Rose Bowl to wind-
ing Anleles Crest Highway lead-
ing to Ml. Wilson.
ttacbel Sparline, 36, or 24311
Lakeview 4Jie, was last seen
about 3:50 p..m. Monday as she
left the Pasadena office of her
psychiatrist, Dr. Alan Karme.
Early Tuesday morning, Los
Angeles police arrested a 17-
year-old boy with a long record of
robbery and drug use in connec·
tion with the woman 's
mysteriou5 disappearance.
John McAlister, a Pasadena
police spokesman, said the ;routn
was driving Mrs. Sparhng's
bronze, 1972 Corvette, which was
involved in a minor traffic acci-
dent in the Granada Hills com-
.. munity of the San Fernando
Valley.
"We've got a lot more on him
to indicate Ire might have been in
face to-face contact with Mrs.
Sparling," Mc Alister said.
Detectives searching the boy's
residence, a vacant South
Pasadena house, discovered a
jacket with Mrs. Sparling's
rings. a watch that was a gift
from her husband, several other
personal effects and a .25 caliber
pistol with a round in the
chamber. .
McAllster said the youth ad-
mitted owning the gun and taking
Mrs. Sparling's auto from the
parking lot in front of the doctor's
office. The boy's father reported·
Pets Paraded
1Y works dlrecU;y across the
street from the medical olflce
buildinc.
But the police spokesman eaid
the boy told officers the wOll'lan
bad 1efther car in the lot with the
encine nmnlng and Ker jewelry
on the seat. He said be just got in/
and drove away and denies any
knowledge of the woman's
whereabouts, McAlister noted.
According to· McAlister, lhe
boy has been "playing mind
games with us and Is very street
wise."
The youth reportedly suggest·
ed several locations in· Pasadena
where be would have disposed ol
a body, "If 1 were doing it."
Scores ot police olfi~ers from
several law enforcement agen-
cies, aided by helicopters and
bloodhounds, Tuesday combed
three rugged s pots around
Pasadena's Rose Bowl, includine
Arroyo~o.
"We spent all day out there
after her husband identified the
personal effects and jewelry we
found at the house where the boy
was staying," McAllster said.
<See MISSJNG, Page A2)
Crime Figure Mum
On Killing of JFK
WASIDNGTON CAP) -A re-
puted crime figure invoked the
Fifth Amendment to all ques-
tions today aa the House commit-
tee on anassinations asked
whether be knew in advance that
President John F . Kennedy was
going to be murdered.
In refusing to answer ques-
tions, Santos Trafficante, once a
reputed gambling kingpin in
Cuba, cited bis constitutional
right again.st self-incrimination.
He also refused to answer
whether be had known Jack
Ruby, the man who killed I..ee
Harvey Oswald, or whether
Ruby once visited Trafficante
·when h~ was in prison'in Cuba.
The Warren Cemmiuion said
...
Oswald was the lone assassin ol
Kennedy.
In ... addition, he refused to
answer whether be was, in fact.
involved in CIA assassination
plots against Cuban Prime
Minister Fidel Castro, as report·
ed by the Senate intelligence
committee, or whether any
federal agency attempted to keep
him from testilying before the
·House committee on assassina~
lions. • .
Trafficante is the sole survivor
of a gangland trio secretly enlist·
ed by the CIA in 1960 in futile ef·
ferts to kill Castro.
According to published re·
ports. the FBI bad information
(See JFK, Page .U> ·
Jim Burns' hamsters CUddles and Liberty
tied for first in the Pretti.est division of
San Juan Ca~istrano•a annual fietta week
. pet parade. ~e Dee Gates holds one of
her two .Reese. They tied in :Most Unusual
with Simi Ysla's goat Ping below. Jeannie
Murphy bolds her bulldog Porky who must
be. getting better looking. Last year he
was rated ugliest but this year he didn't win. · -
o.u.,,. ... ,ttH,....
)llrtlada11 Gfrl
Lquna Beach Plannlnc Dlnc-
tor DouC Sdunlts will ask the Ct· •Y Councll tonl1bt to reply
"'t.banlcs, tM4 no lhanb .. to •
Coutal Commission offer ol tern·
porary k>cal building pdmjt CGO·
trol.
The commission bas 1iven
cities the option or tssu1n1 local permits in an interim period
before tbe Local Coutal .Pro-
gram is aldopted by the council
and certified by regional and
state coastal commissions.
Why the council should con·
sider turning down a chance at
local control become. clear in
Schmitz' explanation.
Jn adch&lcn. Schmits aaid.. the
city would ti.av. to. b1re m«e
aWf.
The Plannlnl Commlalm has
unantmoualy recommended
agalnat the option, aa1tn1
permit.a abould contiQue to be is-
au,ed by the Coastal Commlaaion~
Scbmltz aaid refus!Qi the op-
tion would benefit the city. and
developers u well. Under the ap-
peal procesa, be 1aid, any penoo
could appeal a locally wued
permit to the Coastal Com-
mission.
•
Shaded area of map indicates location of Whiting Ranch
in the foothills above El Toro. Orange County .
Supervisors are conaidering the purchase of Whiting
land for what some county officials say is a bargain
price. But questions about how big a bargain the buy
would be are being raised. For details, see story. Page,
AS.
,,...P-.eAJ
Reaume
Sclwdule · . .,~.d&aYmil __ ..., .... --....-·---
ltitll tchool aWd ta ID tho
Newport·M•a aekc>J diatrict
were back oa a normal c1us
1cbedule today followlu1 a
teacha-lmpoeed minlmum day
wblcb led 'many 1tudub to
declare tbelr own bollday T\Ma·
dll.)'. .
Tueaday'a action by teacberl,
wbo are 1W1 without a coatra(t
for th.is year, was desi1Ded as a
show ol aelidarity durint cuJ..
rently stalled netotiaUolfa
between teachers and dlttrict ol· •
flciala. .
District olficiala dlatrlbuted a
letter tQ teachers today saylnf
they face lGU of pay, dlsctpUnary.
actJon or dlamiaaal if they ataiy •
anotherelftlmum day. ·
~at Nixon turned 65 today.
U was unknown how the
4 former first lady and her
-family would celebrate the
occasion. Mrs. Nixon was
born in Ely, Nev., in 1912.
If the council were to a«ept
the commission offer, Scbmllz
warned, every building permit
issued by the city would require a
full public bearing.
"In essence, the applicant
could atilt be subjected to both
the citr and Coastal Com·
missions revlew and public
hearings." Schmitz said.
Other items on the 6 p.m. agen-
da of the council include: .PENALTY. •
Today's Rain
Makes 11 ~13
Tbe mlnhnum day plan bad ltS
blllest impact on hJgh acboola iA
• ·Newport Beach and Costa Meaa.
F,.._PageAJ
MISSING .••
"Just because we didn't find
anything doesn't mean there's
:nothing out there," he said. "You
could hide something out there
and not have it round for a
million years. They used to film
Tarzan movies in that area
because it was so much ljke the
African junj?les "
Today, because of the rain, the
search using dogs was suspended
because the scents had been
washed away. McAhster said "at
least two dozen " calls had been
received from people who said
they had seen Mrs. Sparling or
her car Monday afternoon.
"A couple of things would
make her stand out," McAlister
said. "She is quite attractive and
she was driving that Corvette. It
has a pretty distinctive license
plate."
Mrs. Sparling's personalized
auto license reads WUV YOU. A
miniature version of that plate,
attached to the woman's key
ring. also was found with the ar·
rested youth's possessions,
McAlister alleged.
The police official said one
caller offered a clear description
of the car and the woman, which
be reportedly saw on Angeles
Crest Highway at. about 4 p.m.
'Monday.
"We are checking that out
right now," McAlister said .
••That's really rugged country up
there. lf I were a crook, I would
want to dump something up there
Corsure.''
The youth police have arrested
has no record of violent cnme,
though McAlister said he ap·
pears to have a "short man's
complex" thal makes him "pret-
ty pushy and aggressive." The
unidentified youlh is five-foo~
four and weighs 140 pounds.
According to McAllster, the
boy is "not talking to us
anymore" because he bas ob-
tained an attorney. He is in
custody in Los Angeles Juvenile
Hall.
"He's no dummy," the police
spokesman said. "He probably
knows the law better than every-
body in this buildin1 com·
bined."
· McAlister said there may be
other reasons for Mrs. Sparling's
disappearance, such as family
problems.
·'There are a lot of thin&s It
could be but we have to fear the
worst," he said. "We are pretty
certain she has met with foul
play."
Mrs. Sparling's husband,
Darel, is the owner of R. V.
Specialties, Inc., in Santa Ana. a
small manuractunng r1rm
Carpeting Stolen
"ll would even include,"
Schmitz s aid, "those permits
now handled administratively by
staff."
Records show that would have
meant 33 extra public hearings in
January, 25 in February and one
a day for the first 10 days in
March.
Schmitz said the increased
workload would require either
extra meetings of the City Coun·
til or Board of Adjustment. or
creation of a new board to review
building permits.
Laguna Po~ce
Probe to End
By Next Week
A Laguna Beach police de·
partmentaJ internal affairs in-
vestigation of an incident in
which a Costa Mesa resident aJ.
leged an off-duty Art Colony of-
ficer brandished a gun at him
will conclude this week, Police
Chief Jon Sparks said today.
That will be before narcotics
detective Craig King, 29, enters a
plea during a scheduled arraign-
ment in Harbor Dis trict
municipal court on a misde·
meanor charge or brandishing a
weapon.
King was to have been ar-
raigned Monday. But be failed to
appear and the court issued a
bench warrant for his arrest
when no explanation came from
King's Laguna Beach attorney,
Thomas Reilly.
Reilly appeared in court Tues·
day and woo a continuance of the
arraignment until late this
month. No plea was entered. ·
The warrant was canceled.
Earlier Tuesday Reilly re!Used
to comment to the press. "I can't
tell you anyt.hi.Qg," be said. ••1 ex-
pect to know more Fridll)'. I don't
want to be bothered between now
and Friday." · ,.
Reilly did not return telephone
ca Us placed to his office today.
King was interviewed by Costa
Mesa police Feb. 26 wbo were
caJled to the King's Inn Bar and
Grill, 720 Raodolpb St.,. answer-
ing a call about a man with a gun.
The officer waa not arrested.
Chief Sparks sald today tbe in·
temal affairs investtiation does
not depend upon any court •c·
tion. "We only deal with the r acts"' Sparks aaid.
-Approval of an application to
the Local Agency Formation
Commission to annex 1.7 a~res of
county property in the Top ol the
World area, at the south end or
Alta LagWta Boulevard.
-Furnishing of a supplemen·
tal environmental impact report
for the Sycamore Hills develop·
ment plan, for 30-day public re·
view.
-AMexltlon of five acres at
Abalone Point.
-Solicitation or public input of
proposed uses for $176,200 in
1977 · 78 revenue sharing funds.
F,.._PageAJ
JFK: ••
that Ttafficante bad told people
in advance that Kennedy would
be assassinated, but the FBI dis-
missed the remark as brag-
gadocio.
Trafficante refused to answer
all questions put to him by chief
counsel Richard A. Sprague and
a committee member, citing the
First. Fourth, Fifth and Four-
teen th Amendments of the
Constitution.
But Chairman Louis Stokes (D·
Ohio), told Trafficante that was
not good enough and that the
committee might recommend to
the House that he be cited for contempt of Congress.
Tralficante still refused to
answer any questions.
SprMUe uked if be bad any
advance Information that Ken-
nedy wu going to be asaasainat· •
ed Nov. 22, 1963. or that be bad
advlaed other people of that fact.
Tralflcante refused to answer.
"Did you ever discuss with any
individual plans to assassinate
President Kennedy prior to his
assassination?" Sprague ques-
tioned.
Trafficante gave the same re-
fusal tor~ply .
Sprague also asked him lf be
presently hu immunity from the
U.S. government "with regards
to any attempt to assassinate any
world leader."
Sprague then asked Tra(.
ficant.e if' be bad ever met with
CIA representatives "to discuss
assaasination or world lealders,
including Castro.·•
Rep. Christopher Dodd (D·
Conn.), asked Tralflcant.e lf bis
life bu been threatened in any
way aince the committee sub-
poenaed him or if any federal
aceney bu tried to keep b1m
from telti.fytq.
Trafflcante refused to answer.
all thmequestlona.
Consultant's Claim
Carpeting valued at $1,100 wu
stolen from a Laguna Nliuel
home while the occupants were
away. Orange County sheriff's '
officers said the theft was report-
Irvine Co. Worth
Over $315 Million?
By TOM BARLE~ $52.28 a 1bare ii it continuea to
make Ill current prosress and at·
tract bidden.
ed by salesman Louis Thomas
Gabriel, 23871 Shady Tree Lane.
who learned of the lou when be
retumedbome.
DAILY PILOT
Of .. Dlffr .... 1111111
A ccmultant bired by I.rvine
belre11 Joan Irvine Smttb tea ti fled Tueaday In Orange Tbe lrvtne Company wu about
Count¥ ~ COWt that t.be to be IOld for S200 mtwon or SU a
Jrvlne Company as lt llandl to-share two years aco when Mrs.
day la worth "1omewbere Smith stepped lD to protest the
between $315 milliOQ and $350 • sale to the Mobil Oil Corporation
mUUoo." u belns fu below the net worth
Th• estimate came trom in-of the company fouruled by her
vt1tment expert A. Sbertdan Jrandlatber.
Atklmm who streiled that the Mobil, then about to acquire
'fl1ure wu a "very comerntive the co~, bu lince stepped
asaessme:at that did not take into· up Sta bkt in the f•ce of iDtenabe
account recent r•P14 improve-competition to SHl.9 mutton
men ta lD the I ortuMS of the wbJch nprmenbJ SD.50 a share.
Irvine Ocwnpany. '' Attlmoo WSdfted thet lf tbe llobO ll btlai OJ>PGMd by an ~._ • ~· record Eut Coat eoDIOl1ium wbteb baa compaay ~-.uu w the bWfnl olWall street ftun. ~~~ ':== ~~&! ctu Cbarl .. Allen~ Detroit
cal 1ear tblll be womd be ai1ds dneloDer A1tnCt Taubman and
more fadmect io Ht -. ccm-at&to WUcna1n HeDr'1 Ford ll,
.paQ•1 worth at aomewbere &mQQICltben. ... •
betwem $3llO mJltton ml tm Tbelrtlld s. •.s mlWOD mdlf ID~ Jt ll &~by directan ol tbe Barnln11 bave rlaea ·Jama lnlne FoundaUon Ue
dram.U"1Jy, .. At.tinjoQ 1ud. lrl\M ComPl!l1 wW become a
"Tblt laW1ult' and tta lmpect cm' a\ab1Jdta17 known u Allon·
the m.arbt place b.ave mede t.be • 0 lnlil•Taubman l.ne. · .... ' ln'ln• OompaoJ the vbJed. ~an.. ·.~terbatlonal comment aad
~ulldkn."
A~ told ..uor:~ Ro..rlid Frledmu. NP!eH lbs. smfUa tbit lt ..ould DOl 1ur'pdu.
him to see the 1.riine Company .
yaJUed at about '"3 million ar
~ou:ndatlon director• and
lnble Compa.nr muaaement ar. lmoWn tQ pl'efcr tbe llObll bid
beeaUM tbe oil COmJ)UF bu .
ptah to ritalD tM tul"l'mt 1rnn-. ~anmtlf tMoUer JI
IUCCellfU!. . . .
Brown, a Democrat, comes up
ror re-election next year.
"I think that if we are going to
serve the people or California
maybe we should not override.
Maybe we should hang it around
Jerry's neck and let him run on
it," aaid the Senator from
Fullerton.
According to the AP survey,
Orange County Senators Paul
Carpenter (D·Garden Grove),'
Dennis Carpenter <R·Newport
Beach), and Briggs all favor the
Deukmejian bill which would al-
low use of capital punishment for
treason and 15 categories of
murder, including multiple
murder, murder or a peace of·
ficer, torture mur<ler and
murder committed duri1tg a rob·
bery.
In the Assembly, the county's
delegation lining up again behind
the bill includes Assemblymen
Ron Cordova <D·EI Toro)
Richard Robinson ( 0-Sant~
Ana), Chet Wray <D-Garden
Grove>. William Dannemeyer
CR-Fullerton ), and Bruce
Nestande <R·Orange).
Only Mangers is Usted as un·
committed of all Orange County
legislators.
' The AP survey showed a total
of 24 senators in favor or the
Deukmejian bill and two who
said they would probably end up
voting for it.
Twenty-seven votes. a two-
jh,jrds majority in the 40-seat
Senate, are needed to approve an
override or pass the bill with an
urgency clause that would put it
into effect immediately.
For Clay God
•'I couldn't have done tt
without Cocijo," a modest Bill
Payne said today. ,
The Corqier Orange Coast
College art irultructOr's cllll)' gods
may have done the trick Tue5-
day, since torrents of r&in!an fell
on Southern California today.
Payne pJaced his Zapotec Jn-
dian gods in a pasture at Onutee
Coast College Tuesday and sure
STEADY RAIH HITS
NORTHERN AREA, AS
enough, the rain began to fall tbi8
morning.
The 63-year-old professor said
three weeks ago that it would
rain today, and the fact that it did
brings to 13 the number of suc-
cessful rains brought on by the
palm-sized clay figurines. That's
out of 14 tries, he says.
Meanwhile, forecasters at the
Los Angeles Weather Service
said the rains should continue
through tonight, decreasing to a
40 percent· chance or continued
showers on Thursday.
The rain moving through
Southern CalifomJa is expected
to drop between three-quarters or
an inch to an inch of the wet stuff
before letting up sometime Thursday.
Forecaster Patricia Rowe s~d
skies will be fair Friday with con-
tinued cool weather tbrou'b Sun-day.
She said the weather front that
hovered over Washington state
and Oregon earlier this week,
"just up and moved down here,
brin~ing all this lovP.ly rain."
Moat elementary and middle
scboola already were operatinf
on abortened scbedwes J>ecauso
or p~ent·teacher codferences
and tOday was an o((iclal district
holiday for all kindergarten
through eighth graders for the
same reason.
In the one-day action which
teachers say might occur again,
students were given only }\all the
.normal Instruction time. thus
completing the regular day
before lunch.
Although teachers supporting
the show or strength remained on
campus many students left
school early.
Negotiations broke down last
week over teacher requests for
higher pay, binding arbitratiol'I
and a greater voice in teacher
transfers between schools.
A mediator from the state
Educational Employment Rela-
tions Board is due to arrive
March 30 to sort out the de·
adlocked bargaining sessions.
Leaders of the Newport-Mesa
Education Association, the or:
ganization reprcsentinlt
teachers, said they may call fof.
another minimum day when the
mediator arrives to show they;
are serious about their contract
demands.
Jewels, Radio Gone
Jewelry and,..a portable radio
with a total vdlue of ·$515 wer~
stolen from a Dana l>oint apart·
ment by a burglar who enter~
vra the unopened window.
Orange County sheriff's officers
said waitress l>atricia Louise D\
Luccia, 22, was at work when the
intruder entered her apartmene
at 3409'l La Serena.
GNEWPORT:
fashion that works hard!
Newpori@ is fashion furniture. attuned to the young at
heart. Shapes and designs that are a working. storinQ
integral part of Hie! But Newport also is brilflant Drexel
technology, uniting the depth and grain or pecan with
hardboard in a relined graphic arls process.
Enhancing it all with a 15-step finish of honey-toned
beauty. And surviving every test of family l1v1nCJ ...
beauhfullyl The time to see this Drexel_. furniture
lsnowl
PROFESSIONAL IHTlRtO,_ 0£SION WITl4QUT 08LIOATION
• •COMFORT ~ILE. PAAIUNO • COHVINllNHIHAHCINQ
1514 NORTH MAIN• SANTA ANA•5'1...CS91
v~ .... --~----------~--------------~------·~ fu•o•r. w~.1tw•ct1F111dlt111NSly: t .30to1.ao
The Store of Famous Names Mendtr 1210•• '1'141.Yt:30tot •. r
. '
·'
••
•• .··1---·1 •• . ... , . .,,. .... . , .. , r •
l
..
EDITION
VOL 70, NO. 'h, .C SECTIONS, 4 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY1 CALI FORNI A WEDNESDAY, MARCH 16, 1'77 N/C TEN CENTS
·County Soloiis .Favor Deftth Penalty
From Wire Sen&e.s
Eliht cl the nlne members of
Oran1e County's dele1aUon in
the state Legislature say they
will vote for a capital punish-
ment bill slated for action late
this month.
The ninth, Assemblyman Den-
nis Mangers ( 0 -Hunlington
Beach), says ht_ ll'JUndec1ded on
the bill (SB ~f Ultt'~ced by
state Senator George Deukme·
jian <R-Long Beach).
The delegation's stand on the
death penalty was elicited in an
Associated Press survey of
Ieeislators. Il revealed Chat ·
capital punishment backers ap-
parently are one vote a~ay from
having enough support in the
Senate to approve the bill.
But il'1 a different story in the
. Assembly wbere anti-capital
punishment sentim e nt 1s
stronger and there are still a
number o r uncomm1tteed
lawmaker•. There the magic
number is six votes away.
The outcome is even less eel<
tain when leglslaton are asked
how they will vote on an attempt
to override Gov. Edmund
Brown's promised veto.
Several members in both
houses who say they will vote for
the death penalty don't want to
com m1t themselves now on a
veto override.
They include Orange County
Republican Jobn Brina who
says be is lhinldn& of voting
against an override lo help in·
sure there will be a death penalty
initiative on the ballot when
Brown, a Democrat, comes up
for re-election next year.
"I think that if we are going to
serve the people of California
maybe we should not override
Maybe we should hang tl around
Jerry's neck and let him run on
it," said the Senator from
Fullerton.
AccOl'ding to the AP survey,
Orange County Senators Paul
Carpenter CD-Garden Grove),
Dennis Carpen(er (R-Newport
Beach), and Briggs all favor the
Deukmejian bill which would .al-
low use of capital punishment for
treason and l!f categories of
murder, including multiple
murder, murder of a peace of-
ficer, torture murder and
murder committed during a rob-
bery.
In the Assembly .-be county's
dele1ation lining up again behind
the bill includes Assemblymen
Ron Cordova (D-El Toro),
Richard Ro~loson (D-Santa
Ana), Chet Wray (D-~en
Grove), William Daonemeyer
<R -Full~rton), and Bruce
f'/estande <R·Oranee>.
Only Mangers is listed as un•
(See PENALTY, Page AZ)
Schools No~al Again
Both Sides Issue Pay Parley Thr.eats
By MICHAEL PASKEVICH
Of 011 Dally '!lot Slall
High school students in the
Newport-Mesa school district
were back on a normal class
schedule today following a
teacher-imposed minimum day
which led many students to
declare their own holiday Tues-
day.
Tuesday's action by teachers,
who are sltll without a contract
for this year, was designed as a
show or solidarity dunng cur-
rently stalled negotiations
between teachers and district o(·
f1cials
El Toro
Woman
Sought
District offic1ab todav dis
tributed a letter to all teachers
today saying they face loss or
pay. disciplinary action or das-
m issal if they stage another
minimum day.
A district spokesman said or
ficials also are looking 1nlo the
legal aspects of a teacher-
declared minimum day to
establish 1f teachers are
personally liable for any inJunes
a student might suffei-becaust of
lack of supervjslon.
The minimum day plan had 1ti.
biggest impact on high schools in
* * *
Newport Beach and Costa Mesa.
Most elementary and middle
schools already were operating
on shortened schedules because
of parent/teacher conferences.
Today was an official district
holiday for all kindergarten
through eighth graders for the
same reason.
In the one-day action which
teachers say might occur again
students were given only half the
normal instruction time, thus
completrng the regular day
before lunch.
Although teachers supporting
* * *
Teache r Contra ct
What They're
Arguing About
the show of strength. plan re-
mained on campus, many stu-
dents left school early.
A mediator from the stale
Educational Employment Rela-
tions Board is due to arrive
March 30 to sort out the de·
adlocked bargaining sessions. (
Leaders of the Newport-Mesa
Education Association, the or-
g an i z a ti on representing
teachers. said they may call for
another mmimum day when the
mediator arrives to s how they
are serious about their contract
demands.
Clay Goth
Bring Rain
For Payne
,
t
By WILLIAM SCHREIBER
Ol ltle Dally ~Oot Slall
JJ'he search for a missing Lake
Forest mother of four, who police
investigators believe has met
with foul play, was shifted today
from a rugged area near
Pasadena's Rose Bowl to wind·
mg Angeles Crest Highway lead-
ing to Mt. Wilson.
Newport-Mesa salary requests along with their calls for
binding arbitration and more voice in teacher transfer
policies apparently are the major stumbling blocks prevent-
ing a contract settlement between district and teacher
negotiators.
"I couldn't have done it •
without Cocijo," a modest Bur
Payne said today.
TOMMY ALBRECHT HUGS MOTHER AFTER VERDICT
Murder Charge Reduced to Manslaughter Rachel Sparling, 36, of 24311
Lakeview Lane, was last seen
about 3:50 p.m . Monday as s he
left the Pasadena office of her
psychiatrist. Dr. Alan Karme. Father's Cruelty
'Cause d Slaying'
Early Tuesday morning, Los
Angeles police arrested a 17·
year.old boy with a long record of
robbery and drug use in connec-
tion with the woman's
mystenous disappearance.
FORT LAUDERDALE. 1-'la
CAP! P11ych111tris t.s say 13
year-old Tommy Albrecht
learned about violence lhrou~h
his father 's threats and
thrashin~s. Now Tommy face-.
five years in state cuatody for
beating a 3 year-old airl to death.
Juvenile Court Judee John
Miller ordered Tommy turned
over lo the D1v1s10n of Youth
Services on Tuesday after deny
ing an insanity plea and rinding
him guilty of manslaughter
Officials said Tommy could be
kept in state in~titullons until he
reaches 18
The boy was charged with
second·degree murder for hittin1t
and kicking Staci Chu bin to death
Oct. 26 after he spent 20 hours
baby sitting the child . The
judge reduced the charge to
manslaughter.
Witnesses at Tommy's three-
day trial painted a picture of a
Coast
Weather
Chance of rain..near 80
percent tonight and 40 per-
cent Thursday. Windy at·
times. Lows tonight 45 to
.50. Highs Thursday SOs to
Jow60s. • INSJDE T~DA Y
The hom1r of IUrvWol in. a
dark water-/illftl mJM 1b4/t
tDfth the bodie• of two dead JTNnd8 bol ltft Ronald Ad'6J/
with . mghtmarcs. f'Wft when he's.~. Ht ttlls hit !tory
onP.Qo.M.
confused and hostile boy who
learned the use of h1i. fists from
beatings adminis tered by his
father, Larry Albrecht.
One psychiatris t called him
' 1mpuls1ve, explosive and de-
tached." with uncontrollable
violent impulses.
"Beating Tommy was ha s
crather's I answer lo every
lhmg." the boy's mother, Jean
Albrtthl. told the court. "He was
always throwing things -a ham·
mer or a rocking chair -at Tom-
my, 1fnot Tommy himself.''
Viejo Man's
Suggestio n
WIDS $1,500
Mission Viejo resident David
Holbert was given $1,500 Tues-
day for a suggestion expected lo
save Orange County government
$21,567 a year.
Holbert, an appraiser in the
county assessor's QUice. won the
top prize in suggestion competi-
tion aimed at encouraging coun-
ty employes lo propose ways to
save money in government
operatiom.
Supervisor Ralph Clark noted
Holbert's suggestion was the
. second one ever to win the top
$1,500 award.
"It's an idea wbicb shows In·
genuity, intelllcence and
creative tbiokina." the
supervisor said.
Holbert found that appraisers
were measuring and sketching
residential units separately when
they were compiling records for
John McAlister, a Pasadena
police spokesman. said the youth
was driving Mrs. Sparling's
bronze. 1972 Corvette, which was
involved in a minor traffic acci-
dent m the Granada Hills com-
m unity of the San Fernando
Valley.
"We've got a lot more on him
to indicate he mi1ht have been in
face lo face contact with Mrs.
Sparling,·' Mc Alister said.
Detectives searching lhe boy's
residenc e, a vacant South
Pasadena house, discovered a
jacket with Mrs. Sparling's
rings, a watch that was a gift
from her husband, several other
personal effects and a .25 caliber
pistol with a round in the
chamber.
McAlister said the youth ad·
milted ownine the gun and taking
Mrs. Sparling's auto from the
parking Jot in front of the doctor's
office. 1be boy's father reported-
ly worts directly across the
street from the medical office
building.
But the police spokesman said
the boy told officers the woman
had left her car in the lot with the
engine running and her jewelry
on the seat. He said he just got in
and drove away and denies any
knowledge of the woman's
whereabouts, McAllster noted.
<See MISSING, Page A!)
·suc~FllL
.DEYEWPMENT
l•d~x • large housing development.8.
"I just dido 't have time for it
anymore, so I sold my equpment
with a Daily Pilot clusified ad. l
couldn't believe the response!" ·
· That'• tho les\lnaony of an
Irvine man wbo placed tbls
.claHlfied ad: CJ ... .... •• .. ~\~I
.,.,~
All ... ,
"" ....
,M I
M.fl
But since most development.I
contain only three to rive models. 35m m Minolta SRT 101
Clark explained, Holbert pro-w /50mm lens, 75/HO
POied usina a muter list fOf' each zoom vhi\ar lens, tripod.:
tract aod maldn1 separate ,... ·Xlot.'270.ux-xxxx .
cordaonlyforvariaUons. 11 ..,., have a hobby ....A ----·t As a result, Clark aaid, much 1-1-uuu
paperwork and apprlll r ti.me have U1D for anymore. or bllld
wu eUmina1ed, res\llUng In a CQh for a new one you can't ,;,i ..
financial tnlDp. , • ford, call &a-5818.
Following is a breakdown on what teachers currently
make, what they are requesting and what the district has of-fered up to this point
Current wages are based on district figures and do not
include fringe benefits such as health and dental care and a
$5,000 life insurance policy. These benefits cost the district
$1,001 per teacher.
Also, since the district operates a uniform salary ,
schedule, figures listed apply to teachers no matter at what
level -elementary, middle, or high school _._they teach.
A first-year district teacher with a bachelor's degree
and 30 units bf graduate work (now required for a California
teaching credential l receives $10,446, spread out over 10·
one-month pay pem>ds.
A teacher with six years experience, a bachelor's
degree plus 45 graduate units, currently receives $14,081 per
year.
A teacher with 12 years in the district (the top step on
the pay scale) and a master's degree is paid $19,066 an-
nually.
The district is currently offering teachers a four per-
<See SALARY, Page AZ)
Cons ultan t's Claim
Irvine Co. Worth
Over $315 Million?
8)' TOM BARLEY
Of t11e Delly ~llM ll•ff
A consultant hired by Jrvine
helreas Joan ll'vine Smith
testified Tuesday in Orange
County Superior Court that the·
Irvine Company as It stands to-
day is worth •'somewhere
between $315 million and $350
million."
The estimate came from in-
vestment expert A. Sheridan
Atkinson who stressed that the
figure was a "very conservative
assessment that did not lake into
account recent rapid improve-
ments in the fortunes of the
Irvine Compan""'
Atkinson testified th at if the
company continues to record
profits on the recOTd makina $17
million margin set in the last fllr·
cal year tbeD he would be much
more inclined to set the com-
pany's worth at somewhere
between $.190 million and Mas
million.
•'Earnings have risen
dramatically," Atkinson said.
· "Thia lawsuit and its impact on
the market pJaco have made the
1"1ne CompaQ,y the .ubjectol ln-
tern atton al coll'lment and
speculation." Atkimon told attorney Howard
Prtedman, ropresenUn.J Mn .
SmlLb tllat tt would not 1UJ1>rfao . m to aee ..,. kvine Company •
Tal118Cl al about 9'43 mllllon or
• ~ • Jbart lf. n eontlasa to
make its current progress and at-
tract bidders.
The Irvine Company was about
to be sold for $200 million or $24 a
share two years ago when Mrs.
Smith sUpped in to protest the
aale to the Mobil OU CorporaUon.
-
The former Orange Coast
College art instructor's clay gods
may have done the trick Tues-
day, since torrents of rainfall fell
on Southern California today.
Payne placed his Zapotec In·
dian gods in a pasture aL Orange
Coast College Tuesday and sure
enough, the rain began to fall this
morning.
The 83-year-old professor said
three weeks ago that it would
STEADY RAIN HITS
NORTHERN AREA, A5
rain today, and ihe fact that it did
brings to 13 the number of suc-
cessful rains brought on by the
·palm·slzed clay figurines. That's
out of 14 lries, he says.
Meanwhile, forecasters at the
Lo:1 Angeles Weather Service
said the rains should continue
through tonight, decreasing to a
40 percent· chance of continued
showers on Thursday.
The rain moving t'hrough
Southern California is expected
to drop between three-quarters of
an inch to an inch of the wet stuff
before letting up sometime
Thursday.
Forecaster Patricia Rowe said
skies will be fair Fridn with con-
tinued cool weather through Sun-
day.
She said the weather front that
hovered over Washington state
and Oregon earlier this weeJc.
"Just up and moved down here.
bringing all thla lovely rain."
But Payne, who reUred from
OCC in 1974, said he can't take
full credit for the rainfall.
''It was the work ot Cocijo, ••he
said solemnly. "I am only the in-
termediary."
W (APl -Ar.
put.ed atm• IAvotat me nrua ADJ-IJl-MllK 1.0 an
t I today U thl HOUH com:mil ~.. OA a.uaaaJoa&loaa asked
...._ t. lllM'# bl lllh-aoee that
President John F. J(~edy wa:a
,Vina to be murdered.
ln rell.ntn& to amwer (lues·
Uom, Santos Tr.ttleante. OQCe a
routed gambllDt kinaplA ln
Cuba, cited hi• conslllutlooal
right qatnst sell·incrtmmution.
He also refused to answer
whether he had known Jack
,Ruby, the man who killed Let
ilP 't>•,.tpf\otO
MISSl~l-MOTHER
Rache! S!°)arllng
MISSING ...
1Accordmg to McAltstcr, the
boy has been "playing rajnd
g~mcs with us and 1s very street
wise.
The· ~outh rt·portedly su~~est·
l'd St" crJI lot·.:itiuns in Pas~1dcna
\\here he ~voulcl h:civt• disposed of
J bouy, "If l wt-re clc>ing it."
Scor~ of police offi cers from
several l:rn cnf<Jre<·ment Jgen-
des. aided by ht>liC'oplcrs and
bloodhounds, Tuesday combed
three rugged spots around
Pasadena's Rose Ilowl, incluC.:ing
I\ r royo Seco
"We spent all day out there
after her hus band 1dentuied the
personal effects and Jewelry we
found at the house where the boy
was staying." McAhster said
"Just because we didn't find
ll•Ythm" doesn't mean there's
JM>thing out there," he said. ''You
could hide something out there
and not have it fo und for a
million years They used to film
Tarzan movies in that area
because it was so much like the
African jungles ...
Today, because of the rain, the
search using dogs was s uspended
bee au!>e the scents had been
washed away. McAlister said "at
least two dozen" calls had been
received from people who said
they had seen Mn. Sparlmg or
her car Monday afternoon.
·'A couple of things would
make her stand out." McAhsler
aaid. "She is quite attractive and
she was driving that Corvette. lt
has a pretty distinct&ve bcense
plate "
Mrs. Sparling's person ala zed
auto license reads WUV YOU A
miniature version of that plate,
attached lo the woman's key
ring, also was found with the at·
rested youth 's possusaons.
Mc Alister alleged.
The policr offl~l said one
caller offered a clear descnption
of the car and the woman, which
he reporll'dly saw on Angeles
\rest Highway at about 4 p.m.
Monday.
"We are chcckin" that out
right now." McAliste r aaid.
"That's really rugged country up
there. IC 1 were a crook, I would
want to dump somet.hin& up there
for aure."
The youlh police have arrested
has no record of violent crime,
tboueh McAllster nid be ap-
pears to have a "short man's
complex" that makes him "pret·
ty pushy and a11res1lve."
O~ANGlC014T "
DAILY PILOT
............. ,......,._..,._
viu-::.-= .. -..
n-...,...,. ~--
t1111ei ... (71~-.an C11n•1•.W•••••...,.
..
KGIDel!y.
In addition. he reruHd lo
1oaww whe\ber he w . U\ fact,
la9'0lved in CIA auaa1ln1uon
plot• a1a1nst Cuban Prime
Minlat« Fidel Caatro, u f"tOOJ't·
ed by the Senate lntelllrenc•
t'Omm lttee, o r whether uny
federal agency attempted to keep
him from testifying before the
Houae c:ommiUee on assusina-
.
Tl'lftl«-• Ga .... Wtbw ol1aM11•trte....ut ad ,.. • .. ,.
roru to kill Cutro.
Accordln• to publlabed re-
portl. the FBI b..S IA!orm&UGD
that Trafllcante had lold people
ln adv~ that Kennedy would
be uus.sinal.cd. b\lt the tat cUs-
mlHed I.he remark u br.,.
&•dodo.
Tratticante refused to ana~r
all quest.ions put to hJm by chief
counsel Richard A. Spnaue and
a committee member. clt.lna the
i
.........,mu Louta g1okm ti>-
), &Gld Tr flkani. U\al •U
not __. enoU&b and that lho
mitt.M ml&ht rcommend to
the tio.e t.bat be ~ dtcd (Of'
coo temp& al ConJrHa.
Tra!llcut• still refused to auw• Ul7 q lions. Soraaue alked tf he bad UJ
advance lnlormaUon that Ken·
oedy wu 1otn1 to be asussitlat·
ed Nov. Z2, 1913, or that he had
advised other people of that (act.
.... aUco!"
UOoed •
Trame 1ave UM! re-
tuul &o .-.pty.
Sprque also uked blm lt he
presently ha lmmun.ll)' rrom I.he
U.S. ~ "wilh rqanh
to any attempt to U""1nate 1Q7
world leadrr."
Swi,ss 4rrest Hijacker
Spra.auc then asked Traf.
ftcante ll he bad ever met with
CIA representatives "to discuss
aAusin1tlon of world Jeaders
lndudin1 Castro." '
Rep Christopher Dodd CD·
Conn.>. asked Traffic ante If his
life has been threatened in any
way sin~ the commitlee sub-
poenaed him or if any federal
agency has tried to keep h1m
Crom testifying.
o.ll't ,. ..... .,, ,_.
BtnW.96'rf
Piracy Flight Tops Record for Lone Man Pat Nixon turned 6S today.
It w a!I unknown how the
for mer first lady and hel'
family would celebrate the
occasion. Mrs. Nixon was
born in Ely. Nev., in 1912.
ZURICH, Switzerland (AP) -
An Jtali~1n h.jac:tt'r was over·
powued by ~:wi::s rolice and ar
rested t.cd;iy at tl.c end 1,I :.'"I
8.50;) mile i irate :.1:-'.t in a
Spanish ~j rhncr -· ~·i"'1 l'urope
and West Af. ica. ll ~.:is the
secor.d·loogest hijacking ui dis·
lance on record and the longe~t
by a lone hijacker
Police said the h1Jat'ker, Lu·
c1ano Porcan. managed to grab
his Winchester rin~ and fire one
shot sllghtly wounding one of the
three ix>licemen who stazcd him
inside the plane. No one else was
hurt, the police said
"Holy Mother of God, it's
finis hed ." s aid Porcari 's
estranged wife an Turin, Italy,
when she heard 1t \"CS over
The wife, J·· .. b'.1: · Z:..•oh, re·
fused t > " • ... • l'OUple'_,
5-yr " • -;,
<'".'• ,. : the
~ .. ,. . ·' ..
Le\,,; !. : • .,c · •' .. ,. ~ 3:; 'ear
old au:o m• ~h~n.t', was being
helci in : •• t'!.tigatave c us tody
pending a decis ion nr whetht>r he
!>houlc' bt' tr1t·c• ir Switzerland
Spa1r is exp~clet~ to seek has ex
trad1llon
The thrct· ~>0licc.>men entered
tht• pl are posin~ a:-mt.•m bcrs or a
fresh night ere~ that was to fly
th<' I bcnan /\1rhnes Boeing 727 to
Moscow. Thl'y subdued the ht
j:!ckcr withm moments.
Th£> 13 passenger hostaees still
aboard the plane and the seven
exhausted crew members who
had manned the aircraft s ince
Monday :i.flcrnoon were released
unharmed.
Also aboard was Porcari's 3·
yc;ir-old daughter by an African
mistrc~s. The child was picked
up 1'1 l 'lc h ory Coast.
"Ile d1ili1 't t.'treaten us badly,"
said M::u-ia Teresa Llc:-et Castell,
one cf the freed hostages. "He
behaved like a gentleman. He
even tried to calm down my
children."
Porcan released seven other
passengers in Turin, Italy, and
nine in Zurich Tuesday. ·
ThP h1jat'ker brought the plane
to Zurich from War saw where he
had agreed to free all hos tages in
exchang" for the new crew to fly
him to Moscow. After three hours
of negot1at1ons, the Spanish am·
bassador lo Poland, J esus
M1Jla .. udo, said ·
"WC' c.:i.n 't undc•rsta nd the
rr. .. ' •·1:-:ri l'c -· ' -::r.:iy It
h:!s ., ,~ J .Jes.
lie 1.:5 ...... :ig his
p:-· ! , tl:ms "
f>, "<·in s mothr :-, in Turin,
blamed tt'c h1Jacldng on the
Ila Ii an s.:ovcrnment. whose
pol•c1t>S :.he !>aid forced her son to
go to Africa to find work without
assistance.
· He wa~ a n honest bov and
would h;•vt• never hurt a"nyone
because he has a good heart,"
said Margherita Porcar1 "Ile
wanted a family of his own like
everyone t>lse and he had a right
to."
A Turin newspaper, La Stam·
pa, said Porcan viewed the hi·
jacking as "the final chapter" of
a book he was wntmg about his
life. Ugo Moret.ti, a newsman and
Newport Council
Ends Encroachment
Members of the Newport
Beach City Council have decided
to end the beach encroachments
on Buena Vista Boulevard and
Edgewater A venue by approving
a plan submitted by the city's
Parks. Beaches and Recreation
Commission
fent'es which posed a barrier to
public act'ess to ttte sand
The action taken Monday wall
allow most of the existing
landscaping to remain.
The plan wa.s developed after a
group of Balbo a Peninsula
homeowners petitioned t'oun
calmen to end the pnvate use of
the public beach by bayfront re·
l>tdents
However. the council action
specifically lists encroachments
to be removed, including fences,
a hedge and three large flower
pots
Much of the beat'h studied by
the comm\ss\on technically is a
street nght or-way fo'or years,
v. aterfront homeowners have
used the beach on the bay side ol
the sidewalk as their private pro·
pcrty, contending that dedication
or the propertr as a roadway
does not make 1t a pubhc beach.
L1nder the new policy, any
future installations on the beach
w1U require council approval In
the form of an encroachment
permit
f',....PageAJ
PENALTY. •
A lawswt on the !lubJect in 1960
ended with a ruling that ll.e city
does have prescnp\1ve n&hl.S to
the beach. At the tame, no aclion
"as taken to force homeowner..,
to remove the landscaping and
committed of all Orange County
legaalat.ors.
The AP survey s howed a totAJ
of 2'" setoai.ors in favor of the
Deukmej1an bill and two who
said they would probably end up
voling for .. ~.,
F,....P~AI
SALARY REQUESTS. • •
cent raise for this year (retroactive to July 1. llJ'fl) and an
1ddlUonaJ five percent ror next year, brin«inl the two-yeu oiler to nine percent.
Tuchers want a retroactive seven percent raiae for this
year with an additiooaJ six percent hike for next year. for a
·total ol 13pereent.
The breakdown ·
Cureot Salary Dtatnd otrer ("% > Teacllier lteqHst Ul'°)
$10,446 $11,386.14 SU,803.88
$14,081 $15,348.29 Sl.S,91U:S
$19,066 $20,781.94 $21,544.58
At present, the median incom~ for Newport.Mesa's
1,200-plus t.e.chers la $17 ,210.
Some teachers have expl'eSSed anger over a 12 percent
raise awarded last year to district Superintendent Join
Nicoll.
Hit cun-ent salary ia $&3.15' per year. but aulatant
superintendent Kevin Wheeler noted that Dr. Nicoll'• raise
wu bltftntin three years.
Teacher requesta tor blnding arbitration may weU eod
U1> u tbe key iuue ln current netot.laUons.
lJDder bindlg trbltratimi. an Independent arbltratot •WOQld brf'e tbe flDal HY in any frlevancea filed by eltber teftber1 •the dlstrtct after a cootnct aettlemeaL
• Dlltrlct neiotlatora are boldl.ft& out for edvitory
arbitration In which t.be school board wouJd have the final
·~on srtevances.
In eJtber case an arbitrator would be called tn, but un-
der advbory arbitration, tbe arbitrator'• docllJon I• taken
u a recommerfdadon and ts not bl.odlnc.
Another point of contentioo ls teacher requats for mOft
volce tn teacher tranlera between ecboola.
TM!Cben claim the dlatrict'a poslUon mau teacbers ~dbetramfernd at tb.ewbJmol edm.bdltra&Gn.
Dtltdct otnctall dalm t.bJa powet 11 D«a1ari to
balance out teadlln1 aulanmeota wbidl will be en~ by
dttlbdnalllrollment and M:ureacboo& eJonrta.
author, said Porcari as ked him
six months ago for assistance m
writing about his eventful llfe.
wtlit'h he said included the blow·
rng up of a bridge linking
Rhodesia to Mnlawi in exchange
for $15,000 from black African
gueni.Uas.
The longest hijack was an
8,800·mile flight m April 1!175 h'
three Filapmo gunmen de munci
In g independence for Mo!>lt•m
areas in the southern Philip
pines. They h1Jacked a Philip
pines Airlines Jet to Libya by way
of Thailand and Pakistan
NB Approves
Pier Stand
Re:nov~~}on
A $13,000 remcJeling project
on the Newport Pier's concession
stand has been approved by city
councilmen who said they are
anxious to ha\'e the stand operal·
in~ by th1ssumm£'r.
The proJed calls for ~in S8 000
refurbishing of the building's ex-
terior as well as the installation
of a new sewa~e tank and con
str ut'tion of n~" -.. at er and elec
tncal lir:~s on tbc p"cr.
Count'1lmen agreed to t~e pro
Ject Mora.Ii> ::rt er c .ty ~t aff mem-
be rs told t..~ n the c~·:t•::ss1ons on
the city's two ocean piers could
not be leased out until the stands
are upgraded.
The Newport Pier project will
be done first to see how effective
tbe remodel.mg 1~ an attracting
bidders.
The conces.s1ons on both the
Newport Pler und tht' Balboa
Pier have been closed sir.cc last
fall
Tra(ficante refused to answer
all those questions.
CdM Seniors UJiit
May Get U.S. Funds
Newport Beach City Manager
Robert Wynn has received in·
formal indication that the city
Will be getting $474,000 in federal
money to open the city's senior
citizen center in Corona del Mar.
Wynn said today the figure is
not definite and ls based on a con·
versation with a representative
from lhe Los Angeles office of the
Department of Housing and
Urban Development.
The center. to be located at
Fifth and Marguerite avenues,
has been in limbo for the past
month because federal officials
have not told city representatives
how much money to expect in the
last installment or the three· year
grant used to finance the center
Members of the Community
Development C1t12ens Advisory
Committee, formed by the city
council to design a proJect for the
HUD grant, have recommended
that the t'enter be opened Aug. 1.
That opening would displace a
private day school which has oc-
cupied the buildings on the site
on a yearly lease for the past two
years.
Last month, the owners of the
school asked for another year's
extension at the same time mem·
bers of the committee were try.
ing to get council • approva! or
plans for development ror the
center.
Councilmen said they were un.
able to act on either request
because they did not know how
much money would be available.
Wynn at that time estimated
that lhe center could be opened
wlth a minimum expenditure of
$174,000. Moat or that money
would be used to complete the
purchase o( the property and the
rest would be used for minor
modiflcatiOM ·of existing build·
lncs.
Wynn also s8ld there is some
question whether HUD would
permit the city to extend the
school's lease for an additional
year if the city could afford to
open the center as planned.
He said today he has asked for
a ruling on the school lease from
HUD, but. like written confirma·
tion of the amount In the grant,
he has received no formal reply.
Consultants Hired
For Airport Study
The firm of Valley Associates
has been hired by the City of
Newport Beach to review the En·
vironmental Impact Report re-
cently released for the Orange·
County Airport.
Tbe firm, working on a $10,000
contract, will concentrate on the
noise study and the public opin·
ion survey which are. included
in the ElR, city official~ said
GNEWPORT:
fashion that works hard!
NewpOft 1c, fac;h <in furniture. attuned to the young at
hedrt Sr•JJ1E:<; 1ncJ rlescrins thal 'lie a worl\1ng storing
Integral r.irl ol liff'I Bui Nt:twporl \'ll~o 15 br1ll1.1n1 01e.<PI
tecr.nology un11tng the depth anti grain ol pee 1n w11h
nardboard 1n a rel1r"ed graphic arts pro PS5
Enhancing 1t all with a 15-step f1n1sh ol honev·loned
beauty And sur• "'"9 evecy tes1 of lam1tv hv•rq
beaut1lully' The time to see this Drei<el lwn t Jre
Dr ex Sb.
PROFESSIONAL ™TERIOA DESIGN WltHOUT 08llGATION
• COMl'ORTAll.E PARKING • CONVINIENT FINANCINQ
1514 NORTH MAIN• SANTA ANA• 541-4391
Tv•~lJ, Wtdn•Oay, Tl'lurt<lay lfld S11ur01y. I 30 10 5.30 The Store of Famous Names ~ono1y 12101• "''<l•yUOtol .
Cllal'IOltt'' """"'""" '""tf ,_ Orent, ~I-~..._.... Ct,_~, t•tt, w.M\lfl, \llff•lll. 54""9ft c-WOOd"'-"• ~ (.,_, .,_.. .... ~·~I~ ... , .... ,~ C:~M"ll Ot-lcn • CMiltt1o'4 ft Wiil H OOltf le"lleYI ftA....,, ..
17
• • •
VOL 70, NO. 75, 4 SECTIONS, e PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDMESDAY, MARCH 16, 1m . TEN CENTS.
-Gangster Mum--QD
•
Assassination
WASHINGTON (AP) -A r.
puted crime n,ure invoked the
Filth Amendment to au qlMIS-
tions today as the House comr.nlt-
tee on assaa,inations asked
whether be knew in advance that
President John F. Kennedy was
going to be murdered.
In refusing to answer~ ques-
tions, Santos Tralflcante, once a
reputed gambling kingpin in
Cuba, cite<}-his constitutional
) \.
rlabt ualnst Rlf-incdmiDatJoa.
lJe abo r.tused to amwer
wlaMhcr be bad known Jack
Ruby, tbe man who killed Lee
Harvey Oswald, or whether
Ruby <mce viaited Tralficante
wbai be was In priaon in Cuba.
The Warren Commission 'said
Oswald was the lone assassin of
Kennedy.
In addition. be refus'etf to
anawer ~er be !V.l'l, in fact,
1nvol•ed in CIA assualn.atioa
plots a1alnst Cuban Primo
Minister Fidel Castro, u report.
ed by the Senate intellieence
committee, or whether any
federal aiency attempted to keep
him from tesWpng before the
House COIJllni~ on assusina·
lions. -
Trafficante is the sOle 1urviv91'
of a gangland trio secretly enlist-
ed by the CIA in 1960 in fuWe ef •
fort.I to kill Cutro.
Accordiq to published Te•
porta,..tbe FBI bad lnformatioa
that Tratrkant.e bad told people
in advance that Kennedy would
be usassinated. but the FBI dls.-
mlued the remark as brag-
gadocio.
'J'rafficante refused to answer
all questions put to him by chief
counsel Ricb.ud A. Spraaue and
a committee member. eiUng the
Pin~ l'\llurdl, P'lftb and Jl'bur.
teeatb Amendment• of tbe
Constltuttm.
But QJalrmao Louis Slota (D-
Obio), toJd Tl'afftcant.e that was
not good enough and that tbe
committee might rtt0mmend to
the House that be be cited for
contempt of COQgress.
Trafficante still refused to
answer any questions.
Sprque asked U be bad any
adnnee information that Kono
nedy Wiii calnc to be auustnat·
ed Nov. 22, 1983, or that be bad
advUedotber-peopleofthatfact.
Trattlcanterefuaed to answer.
"Did you ever discuss wltb any
individual plans to assassinate
President Kennedy prior to his
assassination?" Sprague ques-
tioned.
Trafficante gave the same re-
<See JR, Page AZl
·El ·Toro other unte
8Solons
Favor
Penalty
From Wire Services
Eight of the nine members of
Orange County's delegation in
the state Legislature say they
will· vote for a capital punish-
ment bill slated for action late
this month.
The ninth, Assemblyman Den·
nis Mangers ( D-Huntington
Beach). says he is undecided on
the bill (SB 155) introduced by
state Senator George Deukme· jian CR-Long Beach).
The delegation's stand on the
death penalty was elicited in an
Associated Preas survey or
'legislators. Il rnealed tbal
capital punishmenl baeken q.
....parenUy are one vote away trom
having enough support in the
Senate to approve the bill.
But it's a dirrerent story in the
Assembly where anti-capital
'punis hment sentiment is
stronger and there are still a
numbe r of uncommitteed
lawmakers. There the magic
number 1s six votes away.
The outcome is even less cer-
tain w)len legislators are asked ,(gee PENALTY• Page AZ)
.
·Truck Driver
Charged in
Crash Death
. A misdemeanor manslaughter
charge has been filed against the
1 driver of a pickup ~le wtuch
1 apparently went through a stop
' sign, causing a three-car col·
lision which resulted in the death
of a Laguna Hills woman la.st
week
William B. Hayden, 20, ot Loug
·.Beach Is scheduled to be ar-
raigned on the charge Tuesday.
March 29, in lhe South Orange
County Court.
Diana Rosser. 26. died about an
hour after the accident occurred
at Lake Forest Drive. a nd
Moulton Parkway on March 7.
Four others, including her two
young children, were injured In
the crash. They have since all
been released from Saddleback
Community Hospital.
Coast
Laguna Bills
Boy, 10, Held
On Arson Raps
A 10-year-old Laguna Hills boy
was taken into custody Tuesday
in connection with a Nov. 6 fire,
which resulted in $190,000
damage to two nearly completed
new homes on Grissom Road.
The boy has also been imphcat·
ed in numerous other Laguna
Hills fires, as well as a burglary
from an automobile, according to
Mike Burnett, an Orange County
Ray Claims
'Setup' in .
King Case
W ASmNGTON (AP) -James
Earl Ray contended in an in-
terview broadcast nationally
that be bad been sent to have a
tire fil'ed when Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr. was assassinat-
ed and tba1 be was set up to lake
the blame.
Ray, coovicted of killing King,
said Tuesday night that "in·
vestigations by people represent-
ing me" are producing evidence
be tbinlls will clear him in a new
court proceeding.
Fire Department spokesman.
He said the boy is being held in
Juvenile Hall, pending further in·
vesUgation. Because he is a
juvenile, his name was not re-
leased.
"It all came to a head when a
teacher at Lomarena Elemen-
tary School caught the boy start·
ing a fire there.'' said BurneU.
Fire investigators involved in
following through on the costly
November fire said they worked
on the assumption the fire was
set. They said witnesses reported
seeinc a group of y~ boys nm
from the scene just moments
before the wood-frame buildings
erupted in flames.
Thirty-five flremen fought to
limit the blaze to the two-story
structures, which were reported~
ly within three weeks of comple-
tion. Tbe'homes were burned to
their foundations.
They have since been rebuilt
and are currently at about the
same stage they were in Nov-
ember, 11,aid Richard Meredith of
the Meredith construclioo com-
pany.
County to Bug?
Shaded area of map indicates location of Whiting Ranch
in the foothills above El Toro. Orange County
Supervisors are considering the purchase of Whiting
lar_id for what some county officials say is a bargain
price. But questions about how big a bargain the buy
would be are being raised. For details. see story, Page
A3-
,1,500 !Hp
Viejo Man!s Suggestion Pays
.,
Mission Viejo resident David
Holbert was given $1 ,SOO Tues·
day for a suggestion expected to
sa\'"e Orange County government
$21,567 a year.
Holbert, an appraiier in the
county assessor's office, woo the
top prize in suegestion competi-
tion aimed at encouraging coun-·
ty employes to propose ways to
save money in government
operations.
But since most developments
contain only three to five models,
Clarie explained, Holbert pro-
posed using a master list for each
tract and making separate re·
cords only for variations.
As a result, Clark said, much
paperwodt and appraiser time
was eliminated, resulting in a
financial savings.
But Ray shed no new light on
who killed King if he did not. or
why. He said, as he bas before.
that his only contact with the
murder was throueh a Latin
named Raoul He said he thought
Raoul was conducting a gun-
running operation.
Laguna Man
Crushed by
Earth Mover
By ANNE COOPER
Supervisor Ralph Clark n<lCed
Holbert's suggestion was the
l. secOJld one ever to win tbe top
$1,SOO'btard.
Under terms or the county
Employe Suggestion Program.
staff members may receive cash
awards of 10 percent of the fU"St
year's savings generated by
their idea or a maximum or
$1..,500.
Only Holbert and Public
Defender James Merwin of
Irvine have received the top
$1,500 awards so far, Clark noted. Ra7 made the comments on
the CBS-TV program "Who's
Who," in bis first televtsioo in-
Lervlew since the assusinaUon
(8eeUY,Pa1eA.Z)
Whi.te Man's
Teepee .Knifed
ALPINE. Calif. (A~) -A banct'
of lncliaDs left Neil Ritter's stor&
bousbt teepee ill.;abreds,·
authorities said. !.
Ritter. 22, complained to San
Dieco County sberifra deputies
that be beard noises outside the
canvas home in which be lived
peacer.lly at. a campsite sin~
Dttember.
.. They safd they didn•t like
white follta lividg in teepees." .JMtter said.
OI -Oelty l'llet Stall
A Laguna Beach man was
crushed to death at a construe·
lion site Tuesday when a
140,000-pound earth scraper
backed over him.
J a mes Kennedy, 67 of 38S Flora
St .• a soil technician, was work·
ing at 35174 Camino Capistrano.
Capistrano Beach. when death
came.
Kennedy had complained
earlier in the day of not feeling
well. A eot'OC'ler's deputy said an
autopsy would be performed to-
day to determine whether some
health problem may have caused
the victim to coUaspe beblnd the
machinft'y.
"'God. I hope I never have
another day like today;• Jon
Barnwell. 30, faid Tuesday at the
scene .()( the ~ccident. Barnwell
owns the scraiper and was driv·
jng it when a fellow worker
waved to him to lo9k bebjnd the
huae tractor.
"It's an idea which shows in·
genuity. intelligence and
creative thinking,•• the
supervisor said.
Holbert found that appraisers
were measuring and sketching
residential units separately when
they were compiling records for
large bouslng developments.
Holbert, a county employe for
five years, is a Vietnam veteran
and craduate of Cal State Long
Beach. He and bis wire, Louise.
have two sons.
Irvine Co. Worth
...
Over $315 Million?
B7TOMMaLBY 0t11to.11,,....~
A comultant hired by ll'ViH
belress Joan Itvine Smith
testified Tuesda~n Oran1e
County Superior <liltrt that the
Jrvlne Company aa It stands t.o-
day is worUt~~aomewbere
between $316 Muon and $.150
mUllon." · ..
Raia God WimJ Again
~o Doet1 Hu S~ in 13 of i4Attemp1$
'palm-aiied etay figurines. Tbat'a
out of 14 tries. be says.
Meanwhile, forecasters at the Lot Angeles Weather Service
,,.
9JbDY RAIN ·ff.ITS
.NORTHERN AREA; AS
.,
Foul Play
Suspected
By Police
By WILLIAM SCHREIBER
Of U.. Daily .. li.t Stan
The search for a missing Lake
Forest mother or four. who police
investigators believe bas met
with foul play, was shifted today
from a rugged area near
Pasadena's Rose Bowl to wind-
ing Angeles Crest Highway lead-
ing to Mt. Wilson.
Rachel Sparling, 36, of 24311
Lakeview Lane, was last seen
about 3:50 p.m . Monday as she
left the Pasadena office of her
psychJatrist, Dr. Alan Karme.
Early Tuesday morning, Los
Angeles police arrested a 17·
year.pld boy with a long record of
robbery and drug use in connec·
tlon with the woman·~
mysterious disappearance.
John McAlister, a Pasadena
police spokesman, said the youth
Wat drtvlng Mrs. Sparling' ..
bronze, 1972 Corvette, which was
involved in a minor traffic acci-
dent in the Granada' Hills com-
munity of the San Fernando
Valley.
"_We've got a lot more on him
to indicate be might have been in
face to face contact with Mrs.
Sparling," McAlister said.
D~tectives searching the boy's
residence, a vac..ant S outh
Paudena house, discovered a
jacket with Mrs. Sp.arllog's
rincs. a watch that was a gift
from her husband, several other ~ersonal effects and a .25 caliber
pistol with a round in. the
chamber.
McAlister said the youth ad-
mitted owning the gun and talciog
Mrs. Sparling's auto from the
parking lot in front of the doctor's
office. The boy's father reported·
ly works directly across the
. street from the medical office
. building. ·
But the police spokesman said
the boy told officers the woman
had left her car in the lot with the
engine running and her jewelry
on the seat. He said he just got in
and drove away and denies any
knowledge of the· woman's
whereabouts, McAlister noted.
According to McAlister, the
boy has been "playing mind
James with us and is very street.
wise."
The yout,b reportedly suggest·
edaeveral focations in Pasadena
wbe1'e he would have dis_posed o£ a body, "Ifl were dolne it"
1 Scores of police officers from
several law entorceaient agen-
cies, aided by heUcopters and
bloodhounds, Tuesday combed cs.e MISSING, Pace Ai>
WASHINGTON (AP> -
ale t
,..,. ....., to lau. IM uou.. •Pllt••ed ~--ta eat tor
married ~· IDd take away 90Gl• bmeflll aow earmartmd
for llnllo people.
No 1111• IUJDI are lo.-ottwd ID
either cue. But aeUolJ COD•
templated by the commttt.ff
could mean a tax lncreue ol
bout S2S for 1.1 million •lnele
persons.
It'• all in the name-of Adudna t!Je "marria1• penalty." whtc&
often bas been accused of entic·
inc people to live to1etber
without benefit of marria1e. Ttae
debate is on the tax·cut bUt ap-
proved by the House this month as part of an effort to stimulate
the economy.
The "marriage penalty" arises
from the fact that current law al-
lows single people who do not
itemize deductions to take a
minimum standard deduction of.
$1,700, while the same allowance
for a couple filing a joint return is
$2,100. The maximum standard
deduction for singles is $2,400;
for couples filing jointly it la
$2.800.
' Thus, two single people who
formerly were allowed to deduct
a total of $3,400 could deduct only
$2,100 if they married and filed a
joint return, as most couples do.
That means the couple would·
have a trucable income of $1,300
higher than if he and her were
still single.
I',.._ Page Al
RAIN •••
when they do their job, they
begin a cycle we hope wall con-
tinue."
"Cocijo has broken the
drought."
Orange County Flood Control
District spokesman Emmett
Franklin said the current storm
will help narrow the gap between
average seasonal rainfall figures
in the county.
He said a 68-year average of
rainfall in Orange County shows
about 10.40 inches of rain by
March 16.
"If you don't count today's
rain, we've had 7.51 inches lo
March 16," he said.
Last season's rainfall was only
5.21 inches by this dale. The last
measurable rainfall in lhe county
was on Feb. 25.
"By the end of March, we
should have about 11 mches to be
average," Franklin said. "That
means we're about three and a
half inches short right now •·
But, he sa1d, the current storm
should alleviate some of that
shortage.
"It sure won't hurt us any," he
said.
Fro.Page Al
JFK •••
fusal to reply.
Sprague also asked him ii he
presently has immunity from the
U.S. government "with regards
to any attempt to assassinate any
world leader."
Sprague then asked Traf-,
hcante if he had ever met with
CIA representatives "to dlscuas
assassination of world leaden
including Castro " '
Rep. Christopher Dodd (0.
Conn.), asked Trafficante if has
life has been threatened an any
way since the committee sub-
poenaed him or lf any federal
agency has tried to keep tum
from tesWying.
Traffacante refused to answer
all those questions.
Ship Due Repairs
SOUTll PORTLAND. MaJne
<AP) -A damaged Liberian
tanker which bcaan leakln1 a
small amount of oil in port here
last weekend 'Yill be allowed to
depart fOf repairs as soon as her
cargo is unloaded, tbe Cout
Guard said Tuesday.
ORANGI OOAIT
DAILY PILOT
r.,.,.. ana man lllld
qua~U1 ror u. mutmum ltaD·
d.ut ~. tile ll
.... ( .. fortWOI lea
pared witb e.IDO for a le).
8oCb tbt lbdt ud s.n-. Md
th• caner admbllltralloa ....
pur to lft'M on U. Med to
1!m~ tu return. bJ &ppl'OY· tni one fiat standard dedu.ction
for ain1le1 aod another for
couples. ~ debate is over bow
much. 1 Pre1ident Carter recom·
mended a $2,200 st.ndard deduc-
tion for singles and $3,000 lor
couples. which would have
meant a $1,400 marriage penalty.
The Houle, seeking to prevent a
tax bike for some single persons,
voted $2,400 and $3,000, resultina
in a ~bike iD the current $1,300
penalty.
Sen. Russell B. Long,
chairman of the Senate Finance
Committee, told colleagues Tues-
day the House bill would tax
"people for doing somel.h4ne that
society wants them to do" -
marrying and raising a family.
S,en. Bob Packwood <R.-Ore.),
contended many women no
longer see their mission in life as
quitUDI work. marrying and
Jig's Up
On Revels,
Cops Say
'Twill be St. Patrick's Day on
the mom and Seal Beach Police
Chief Ed C1bbarelh and Dete<:-
t1ve Capt. Sam D'Amico warned
today they intend to prevent the
Irish from getting out of line. '
Celebrants who.seem drawn to
t w.o speciCi c pubs in the
downtown area -Clancy's and
the Irisher have in the past de-
cade become involved in un-f'r09I Pqe A J
RAY •••
• pleasant episodes every March
17, just like clockwork.
April 4, 1968, in Memphis. The in-
terview took place at Brushy
Mountain State Prison in Petros,
Tenn.
Ray will give preliminary de-
positions to the House committee
next week, his attorney saad to-
day.
Jack Kershaw, retained three
weeks ago as Ray's lawyer, said.
the session will be conducted by
the committee's deputy chief
counsel and two court reporters at
the prison, where Ray as serving a
99-yearsentence.
The attorney said he has new
evidence that will aid the probe,
but declined to reveal it.
Newsman Dan Rather told R~y
many viewers obviously would
think he was just making up a
story to get himself out or pnson.
Ray replied b e bad always
thought people would not believe
anything he said in a news in·
terview.
Giving new details about his·
story about Raoul and a con-
spiracy, Ray said he delivered a
rifle to Raoul shortly before the
assassination an what he thought
was part of the gun-runnrng
operation. He said Raoul then
sent him to have a tire fixed.
He said the attendants at a
service station told him they
were too busy to fix the tire
because of the hour Kfng was as-
sassinated shortly before 6 p.m .
the tl'affic rush· hour period.
Ray said in the inten•1ew be
was certain be was not in the
rooming house from which the ri-ne was fired at King after S:JO
p.m.
Ray said Raoul bad been
directing him in gun-running ac-
tivities for a year. He said there
was nothing to distinguish Raoul
except that be had auburn hair,
not black hair like most Lalin
people be knew.
But Ray said he and Raoul had
never discussed killin& King and
he did not know why King was
killed.
He said he believes the most
plausible theory is the one that
King was killed to halt his civil
rights activities.
Ray pleaded guilty to killing
Kini but tried to recant that plea
three days later and his efforts
since then to get a new tnal have
been turned down all the way to
the U.S. Supreme Court.
f'ro91P.,.eAJ " WORTH •.•
sale to the Mobil Oil Corporalion
as being far below the net worth
or tbe company founded by her
grandfather.
Mobil, then about to acquire
the company, bas since stepped
up Its bid in the face of Intensive
competition lo $281.9 mllllon
whtcb represents $33.50 a share.
M obit is being opposed by an
Easl Coast consortium which bas
the backing of Wall Street fman-
cler Cbarles Allen, Detroit
developer Allred Taubman and
auto billlooaire Henry Ford U,
amoncotbers.
Their bid is $302.S million and It
it is accepted by directors of the
James Irvine P'oundatJon the
Irvine CorrwJ.DY will become a sub1idiar~nown as Allen-
Jmne-Taubman Inc. ·
Foundation dlteeton and l"ine Company man~ement ate~ to .PJ'efer \he Mobil bid
f>eeause the Oit COl'l\P8ftY hp
pledted to retain the c~
" trilDe rnanaiement if tbe ofter ii
aucccat\al.
Offteen Rohbed
SAN t'RANCISCO'<AP) -ho
San Pranolaco poUce•omen ,...... robbed at 1unpotnt in an
apartm«rt eleY._ ))y baadlt&
•hot«>* their""""' coatalJW,\I .. rnOlvwa. pollc-e tillcaUoa. .rtno•~. .
Serious incidents have arisen
out of the revelry on several St.
Patrick's Day occasions, at least
twice being declared all·out riots
requinng considerable police re-
mforcements.
Chief Cibbarelh predicted to-
day there will be no real d1ff1cul-
ty this St. Patrick's Day. JUSt as
mun1c1pal forces and bar
owners' cooperation last year
prevented serious trouble.
"We're praymg to the rain
gods," the chief explained.
"We're just going to let the Insh
stand out there the rain. . .if we
can keep 1t com mg down.·•
·"We 've been m contact with
the bar owners and they have
agreed to close up if things begin
to get too crowded," he added.
No one has ever been able to
pin down the real reason why
Irishmen and other hangers-on
selected Sei:il Beach for their re-
velry more than a decade ago.
I'.-... Page Al
MISSING ...
three rugged spots around
Pasadena's Rose Bowl. including
ArroyoSeco ·
"We spent all day out there
after her husband 1dent1fied the
personal effects and Jewelry we
found at the house where the boy
was slaying," Mc Alister said.
"Just beeause we didn't find
anythtng doesn't mean there's
nothing out there." he said. "You
could rude something out there
cind not have 1t found for a
malhon years. They used to film
Tarzan movies in that area
because it was so much like the
African jungles."
Today, because of the rain, the
search using dogs was suspended
because the scents had been
washed away. McAlister said "at
least two dozen" calls bad been
received from people who said
they had seen Mrs. SparU11g or
her car Monday afternoon.
··A couple or things would
make her stand out," McAlisler
said "She lS quite attractive and
she was driving that Corvette. It
has a pretty distinctive license
plate."
Mrs. Sparling's personalized
auto license reads WUV YOU. A
m imature version or that plate,
attached to the woman's key
rmg, also was found with the ar-
rt'sted youth 's possessions,
McAlister alleged.
The police official said one
ca lier offered a clear description
of the car and the woman, which
he reportedly saw on Angeles
"'Crest Highway al about 4 p.m .
Monday.
"We are checking that out
right now," McAlister said.
"That's really rugged country up
there. If I were a crook, I would
want to dump something up there
for sure."
The youth police have arrested
has no record or violent crime.
though McAlister said be ap-
pears to have a "short man's
complex" that makes him "pret-
ty pushy and aggressive." The
unidentified youth ii five.foot-
four and wetahs 140 pounds.
Accordln1 to McAlllter, the
boy is "not talking to us
anymore" beeause be has ob-
tained an attorney. He is in
cw.itody ln Los An1eles .Juvenile
Hall.
"He's no dummy," the police
spokesman said. "He probably
knows the law better than every·
·body lo this building com-
bined."
· tacAllsts 1ald there mlU' be
other reAIODI for Mn. Sparling's
dJ11ppearance, such u family
problems.
"There are a tot of thlnp it
could be but w• ha~ to fur the
wont," he eald. "We are pMty
certain ahe bu met wit.ft foiil
play."
Mra. SparHn1'1 hueballd,
Darel, S. the OWJllC' of R. V .
Speclalt1el, Inc., In Sailta Au, a
.11nall m:amtfacwrt.DC flAil •.
•~ w1 .. ,.,...•
TOMMY ALBRECHT ~UGS MOTHER AFTER VERDICT
Murder Charge ~educed to Manslaughter
Father's Cruelty
'Caused Slaying'
FORT LAUDERDALE, f'la
<AP) -Psychiatrists say 13·
year -old Tommy Albrecht
learned about violence through
his f ather's threats and
thrashings. Now Tommy faces
five years in state custody for
beating a 3-year-old girl to death.
Juvenile Court Judge John
Miller ordered Tommy turned
over to the Division of Youth
Services on Tuesday after deny·
ing an insanity plea and finding
him guilty of manslaughter.
Officials said Tom my could be
kept in state institutions until he
reachesl8.
The boy was chaq~ed wath
second-degree murder for hitting
and kicking Staci Chubm to death
Oct. 26 after he spent 20 hours
baby sattang the child The
Judge reduced the charge to
rn anslaughter.
Witnesses at Tommy's three-
day trial painted a picture of a
confused and hostile boy who
learned the use of his fists from
beatings administered by his
father, Larry Albrecht.
One psychiatrist called him
"impulsive, explosive and de-
tached," with uncontrollable
violent impulses.
··Beating Tommy was his
c father's) answer lo every-
thing," the boy's mother. Jean
Albrecht, told the court. "He was
always throwing things -a ham-
mer or a rocking chair -at Tom-
my. 1f not Tommy himself."
She said that as Tommy grew
older, he began to imitate h1s
father. displaying a violent
temper and beating his sister.
GNEWPORT:
• •
.... ---·'ti ro a
•.U owtrridit.
R~can John Br~~
1111 be la thlaldna of • •
acatmt an override to Im·
tun tbere will be a dealb 1
lnltlat.tve on the baJlo& -Mn
Brown. a Demoua4 com• up lor r+tiec:tlon next year.
''I t..blnk that If we.,.. aoint to
aerve the people of Ca.llfonaia
maybe we should not override .•
Maybe we should bans it around
Jerry's neck and let him run Clft
it," said the Senator from ,
Fullerton. •
Accord.in& to the AP survey, 1
Orange County Senaton Paul •
Carpenter (D-Garden Grove), 1
Dennis Carpenter CR-Newport l
Beach). and Briggs all favor the •
Deukmejlan bill wblcb would aJ.
low use of capital punishment for f
treason and 15 cateeories of t
murder, including multlple
murder, murder of a peace of .•
flee r , torture murder and '
murder committed during a~ ·,
bery. ·
In the Assembly, the county's )
delegation lining up again behind
the bill includes Assemblymen ,
Ron Cordova (D-EI Toro),
Richard Robinson CD-Santa·
Ana), Chet Wray CD-Garden '
Grove), William Dannemeyer i <R -Fullert~n), and Bruce!
Nestande (R-Orange). ~
Only Mangers is listed as un· ~
committed of all Orange County)
legislators.
The AP survey showed a total ·
or 24 senators in favor or the
DeukmeJ1an bill and two who i
said they would probably end up
voting for at. i
Twenty-seven votes, a two-.
thirds majority in the 40-seaL;
Senate. are needed to approve al'l'.
override or pass the bill with an:
urgency clause that would put it.=
mto effect immediately. :
Only 21 votes would be neede<(
to approve the bill with an urgen·:
cy clause that would put it into ef·
feet immediately without th~
urgency clause. It would then
take effect Jan. 1.
Nine senators said they will.
vote no on the bill, a 10th said he
was leaning toward a no vote and:
three said they were still un:·
decided. • . .
The 40th Senate seat was left
vacant after Anthony Beilenson
CD-Los Angeles>. was elected to
Congress. Assemblymen Alart'
Sieroty. ~death penalty roe. WOJ1
the seat m a special election lasf
week and could officially mov~
over to the Senate as early u
next week, aides say,
fashion that -works hard!
EUAIL1s.4CD , .. l
1-IP\\I nrl , l..i t.1011 furrnlure. alluned to the young at
llC.'arl St .ip% ind des1qns that are a working. !'.lor1nq
in1eqr.11 p<1rt ot lile1 But Newporl also is brilliant Drc~··I
1cc.11nnlor,y unihnq lhe depth and gr::t1n of pecan w11•1
ti 1rc1tir11rd 1n a relined graphic ar1s proce',c;
f nh 1r1c • 1 ii 1.1 w11h ;:i 15-step f1~1sh of honey-lom:d
I 1C.il.·, r. · t • , 1r•. •111n1J every test of lam1ly hv1nq . • 1!!!"1i~l?.o~'"1
beal.11111 , iht: 11rne to ~ce lh1s Drexel~ furr111urc IFIJ ... iiiiiqi
i• now•
DrexSb
PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGN WITHOUT OILIGATIOM
•COMFORf'ABI.£ PARKING •CONVllNl!Nt FINANCINQ
1514 NORTH MAIN• SANTA ANA• 641-4391
• Tupday, Wedr\etday, Tll11iwd1y and Sllurday II 30 10 ~JO The Store of Famous Names Monoayl2toO•Fl1day0301oll
•
'l
•
•
Money
=Tree
IN lMl, THOiJGH, JUSTIN DART MOVED ON. He left Cfil~ago and Walgreen for Boston and United Drug, where
he took command of what was then the largest retail drug chain In the country.
Dart brought order and direcUon to United Drug, then u
loosely organized holding company that included manufac·
luring, franchising and retailing throulh wholly owned
stores operating under various names; Rexall, Liggett, Owl
and Sontag were some of them.
Dart centraliied operations around the Rexall name.
He made RexaU a national advertiser. Then, in 1945, he
moved himself and the company's headquarters -to Los
Angeles. The corporate name was chaneed to Rexall Drug
in 1947.
DART SAID AT THE TIME THAT THE move to
California would benefit th~ company by exposing it to new
merchandising trends. While it's true that CaJ.ifomit .has
been in lbe forefront or the development of super
drugstores, Dart, once ensconced in Los Angeles, proceeded
lo build an entirely differ~nt company.
Wbeeijng and dealing at a furious pace, he bought, sold
and merged companjes. He entered chemicals, plastics,
cosmetics. glus contaif\ers and resort development.
One of the key acquisitions. in 19S8, was Tupperware.
which does 65 percent of the $300 million plastic food con-
tainer business.
JN 1M6, DART FORMED VANDA Cosmetics to do what
Avon Products does, sell cosmetics door-to·door. Io 1968, he
expanded that operation by acquiring another direct seller
of cosmetics, Beauty Counselors.
So the company that began life selling drug items on
Maln Street is now selling more than a half a billion dollars
of merchandise a year,d.ireclly lo consumers an their homel>
Rexall was dropped as a corporate name in 1969,
replaced by Dart lndustrie.s.
IN 1972, SO COMPANY-OWNED LIGG ETT drugstore~
were sold.
In 1973. 12 company-owned Drug King s tores an
California and Oregon were sold.
Jn 1976, all or Rexall 's Canadian operations were sold
And in 1977, the last of the lot went. Rexall 's maaufac
luring facilities in St. Louis, its franchise drug division and
its contract manufacturing operations were sold. They had
sales or $.50 million last year.
Justin Dart heads a company that wi ll do better than
$1 .5 bUlion of business this year, none of it under the Rexall
name.
Mechanics Suffer
'Identity Crisis'
CfllCAGO <AP) -That familiar figure dresffd in cov·
eralls and carrying a monkey wrench the American auto
mechanic -is undergoing an identity crisis
Is there a nagging ping in your engine? Maybe a little
gob or grease will clear it up. But many consumeri; fear that
the guy down al the garage just won 't do the job right, that
they'll drive away, having paid a heny bill for a long list of
replacement parts. only lo hear that same depressing hllle
noise.
THAT'S THE STORY THE industry officials are tell
ing.
"The industry has a bigger and tougher image problem
Wltb legislators and with the consumers whose cars we keep
running than does any other industry in the country," says
Herbert Fuhrman, president of the National rnstitute for
Automotive Service Ex·
cellence <NIASEl.
( J A s urvey by the
IN HlrH rr:t ..,.D Motor and Equipment
b b~ Manufacturers Associa·
_ tion shows that 52 per· -------------cent of new car owners
do some of their own
maintenance and repairs and 19 percent Qf them do all the
work.
aEASONS RANGE FROM A DESIRE to save money to
the knowledge the job will be done right to just plain enjoy-
ment and convenience.
"Part of that is great," said John Weniet; MEMA
chairman. "It creates a good market. But it mearu;
somebody'• not there, the professional mechanic to say.
'Hey, you've got a problem coming up.'
"All these guys who never change their tbermoetal all
winter and end up on the highway in the s pring with their
hood.I up, there's a tremend°"8 cost rigbl there."
JllJTmE INS'l'ITtJTE ADMITS MANY motorists have
doubt.I about the kind of servit!e they get and has un·
dertahn a program that they say wiU solve the problem -
voluntary c~caUOn of mechanics.
To 1et certified, mechanics sn"'t bo tested in various
apeclaltiet. Juat as • doctor who &l)tti.allies in eyes, ears,
nose and throat would not attempt to...,mo\re a brain tunu>r.
10 a mechanic certified ori1y ror brakes hN 'IM> ~ineu put·
terln1 an>und with your ptston.5, the ln1tllute •&\Ytl· Of
courH, mechanic• can be cert.tiled tor several apecialties.
Nationwide, the lnst.Uute sayt, it has c~rtified 100.000
auto mecbanlct.
Firm to SeD Utilities
RoamoorCorp., Latuna Hills, <AME'l}hu announced
an aareeasent tn prtnclple foe-lhe sale o( two wholly owned
_pubUc uUlltles, Foragat Wat.er Company and ForaJ•~
S•nltadon. Int., to 'th• llwdcipal VtiltlJet Authority of
MmaroeTo'tVDlblp, • ..J., f°"PPfoxim•tel)' S:S mUllon.
• A1 B. Ceresa, p ldefl.t.•aldtennaottMaa"'ementcnll •
for cao.tAatbe traosaatlooonor about Juo.1.:u b anttclpat·
ed t.bit}illJA will finance tbf putthue wlt.b pn»eeeds lrorg * 1al1Qfblada. • · n.:.-.~.,n• • abaut Ull'l Naldtaual and mar Ulaa:~af.H:oirnm-.ttaJ •Dd lndoslttaJ euttomen. M'Qrlre)e
• T~p ll the tJt a LelJu1'e WOC'ld ad I.Lit coaununlty H-
" ~•klpld Mnial '/Ul'I IJO by Roamoor and .okt to aD u.nal-' n.U•ted~y. • ,,..-.