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1977-03-17 - Orange Coast Pilot
-~ r . - DAILY PILOT E~-Vietnam Air Chief * * * 10' * * * Dies at Mesa lloDae TtiURSOAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 17, 1977 VOL 1' NO It S SICTIOftS, U l'AGIS . ' • • • • I • I '$1 Million . Winds Smash County I DEAD AT 44 Tuong Van Nguyen 'Bomb Threa t \ False Alarm CLINTON, Mass. CAP> -The icaller was male and ht' s:ud, l>'The town hall is 1oiom~ to be ~ e v e I e d bi a b o m b 1 n 1 5 ~inules." At that time Wednr,sday night. J>resident Carter was answenng que6tions from the people or Clin· ton inside their town hall. <Relat-ed story, photos, A4) The call was a false alarm But police here have been on edge since Saturday night when a bomb tore through ti m anufar. luring plant in Marlboro, about IO miles away. Co ast Weath er Partly c loudy with chance of measurable rain 10 percent tonight and 20 percent Friday. Lows tonight in 40s. Highs Fri· day in upper 50I 8Dd lower 60s. I I NSIDE TODA y FrudroHorl .and /ury car- ri•d the Rolling SConu through a magnfflcmt cOftcert that mou be thdr lolt. accord· 'ng to cohunnflt Liu Roblmon. TM. age~H Jagger appeorroi. P.age 86. •••ex Ex-Viet Air Boss Succumbs ~ Tuong Van Nguyen. who com- manded an air d1v1s1on in South Vietnam. and 1s said to have been one of the most higly b.ighly de· corated South Vietnamese pilots. died Monday at his Costa Mesa home. Buddhist funeral rites were held Wednesday for the South Vietnamese colonel at Pacific View Memorial Park. Tuong, 44, was deputy com· mander of the Third Air Di vision at Bien Hoa Air Force Base dur- ing the Vietnam coDflict. A close friend, Larry Hull, of Costa Mesa. said the pilot was shot down six limes during his career, sev~ral limes over North V1etnam. The tlying colonel was one of the last to leave South Vietnam on April 29, 1975, fl ying a group of soldiers out to the aircraft car· ner Blue Ridge. Arter unloadin g hi s passengers. Tuong ditched his helicopter m the sea. He joined his family at Camp Pendleton and later settled in Costa Mesa where the former commander took two full-lime JObs as a machinist. "He was working six days a week," Hull said. 'Tm sure that had something to do with hi s heart attack." Hull said Tuong saved enough money from the two jobs lo buy a modest home on Placentia Avenue in Costa Mesa and, with Hull's help, was seeking a job as a pilot. "He got out or Vietnam with nothing," Hull said. "He came here with his family , a few belongings, and that's it." Another friend, Orrin DeForest, Los Angeles, said Tuong was awarded many medals for his years of comblt flight, including the U.S. Dist· inguished Flying Cross. "He pretty much ran the air show over there for the South Vietnamese," DeForest said. De Forest recently retired from the Central Intelltgence Aeency, after serving elgbt years in South <See VIET, P ase A?> Gone With the Wind O.lly l'llot Staff l"llete EDISON WORKERS UNTANGLE POWER LINES KNOCKED DOWN BY WIND This Was Scene This Morning at Commonwe•lth Avenue •nd Brookhurst Street In Fullerton Jury Probes Norton Aid By GARY GRANVILLE -Of .... .,..,, ...... 51•11 The Orange County Grand Jury's probe into political prac- tices in Orange County has swept out to include 1976 payments made to Republican State Senate candidate Loran Norton by lob· byist hank Michelena. Accoroing to Norton, roughly five Michelena checks totaling SJ,500 and made payable to Norton ally Gary Newmeyer were, in fact, paid to him. Norton, a former Santa Ana policeman and an ex-aide to county Supervisor Laurence Schmit.. Hid Micbelena's pay- ..... ments were for tiis services as a private investigator. They were not, according to the former Republican can- didate, in any way related to his unsuccessful 1976 state senate c ampaign against Democrat Paul Carpenter. In the Grand Jury's continuing i n vestigalion into county political practices Norton has already testified twice. He refused to discuss that testimony Wednesday but did acknowledge that the Michelena p_aymeots were brought up dw-· ing his secret interro1ation. Newmeyer, like Norton, is a former Santa Ana policeman and is now a private investigator. He was Norton's campaign manager through the June primary ~lion. But two weeks ago he said he dropped from the Norton scene when· he wasn't paid for pretrial invesUgative ser'Vices performed for Dr. Louis Cella. Like Norton, Newmeyer has made two ~ppearances before the Grand Jury intheprobe~ntering around the political machinations 'Of county supervisors Ralph Diedrich and Philip Anthony. <See PBOBE, ~.,.A.I) Coffee Over $4 a Pound NEW Y QRK CAP) WboleaaJe coffee prlee1 have shot over the $t barrier, but con- aumens will have aeveral weeks to find out bow much more per pound they'll bav• to pay ,io tho 1upermarkets. General Foods Corp., the na· tlon'• 1arseat coffee roaster, in· croued tho wboleaale price of around. coif" by so cent.a to .. .21 a pound Wodneldlf. The a~on ·101towed Mond.,'s SO-cent in· more \bao halt the eorroe eon· .... create to 14.18 a pound by "umed In tJ\e United State1, and • a·econd·laraest Fot1er Coffee their actions 1t(on1ty influence Company. the prices or otht!' brands. General Foods al10 raised How thele lncreuea •ill affect prlcea for Sanka 1nd Brim 1upermarkot prlce ,l~o·t ,Y•t 1round decalf einated coffee by 40 known, atnc it takes several cenu a pound. It left lnatant woekl for tbom to reach th re• prtctt at ~.45 for a 10-ounce jar, tall level. the aame price charced by Many •roc•n tradltJonally FoJ foe instant.. -• have told cottee at or below coat Gtneral Food.I and lo,tier HY. . <Sfie.COPFEE, Pase At) . . . ' , I 'Twister' Slashes Fullerton By GARY GRANVILLE Of Ole O~ly l'Uet Si.tt Freak tornado-like winds slashed through portions of Orange County Wednesday even- ing causing an estimated .$1 million worth or damage and-.in- JUries to at least three people. Hardest hit by the devastating syphon wind was a five-mile long. 200-yard wide stretch in Fullerton. There, what ooc policeman described as a twister swept through a bus iness cen ter, rushed through Orange County's largest food processing plant and then hurried through a residen- tial area before petering out near St. Jude's Hospital. Left in the wind's destructive wake were 80 damaged homes, 180 uprooted trees. four downed traffic signals, four crumpled light standards and 16 damaged cars, police said. They also reported eight busi- nesses wind-damaged and two buildings in the Hunt.Wesson food plant at 1800 W. Com- monwealth A vc . severely damaged. It was in the food plant that the three injuries were reported, all to plant workers. Two of the injured people were treated by paramedics; the third person reportedly was treated at Martin Luther Hospital in Anaheim and released. Weather officials balked at calling the freak winds tornados. But those caught up in the turmoil didn't. "It was like a gray funnel that,, seemed to move along almost in slow motion," one Fullerton policeman said. Those on the outskirts of the wind awat.h said it was accom· panied by thunder, lightning and hail. "'llfiere was this violent, freaky thunder and lightning that lasted for about 15 minutes. And the bail stones were huge," one resident on the wind's fringe said. A businessman two blocks from the so-called twister that hit Fullerton at 6:30 p.m. s aid, <See WINDS. Pace A2> YO tAPl-. I ri1h·Am•rlC'ana end their fl1en . • 1tron1. ~ brltkly up • 1ua0 falled F"tllh Avenu. Loday an the 21~ Sl. Pa&.ndl'aDay parade. famf'd ''P1tht nr 9lb" Re11ment. carry1n1 the Irish Tricolor &1on.pld Old Gloey aftd accompanied by Lhelr two Jrtsh Wo111aoud mu~ou , l t parade • u LradiUona.111 tnte d~}'Sol CMJ War, Pol ClfTU:Tr JCIH'Ph N who ••barn Oil a fa U 1 a10 la Coualy Waterford, Irelm:Jd, sot the marcih r way at nocn &harp wit.b a shrill bJut from his ll"Cell wbbUe. It Wal the lh.Lrd tJJ:i lo 10 years ln1'olvement Feared N eighhors See Home Looted By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Cf' llw Dally Piiot St.Ill Neigboors who feared involve· ment confessed watching for more than one hour Wednesday as a team of burglars methodically looted a Huntington Maine Hikes Drink Age AUGUSTA, Maine (AP> -Maine's legislature has voted to raise the legal drinking age from 18 to 20, reversing a trend toward lower drinking ages which the state joined Just a few years ago The Senat<.> approvt-d the measure 21 12 W<·d nesda" It had bl'cn passed ·by tht' I louse on Tuesday, and Go\: James B Longley has prom1~cd to allow it to become law even though he f:J\•ored an alternate bill The state's legul drink- ing age had been 21 until 1970. when it "'as lowered to 20 It Y.,1s drupJH.'d again to 18 in 1972 Marines Held In Rocket LauncherThef t SAN DIEGO <AP > Two Marines are accused of selling a rocket launcht•r and t·,plos1\E•s .stolen from Camp l'l•ndletnn An 1 l·count indictment\\ as re turned by a federal grand Jury Jgalnst Sgt Hobert II Bc1nning. 27, of M> rtle Point, Ore . and Sgt .Joseph L F1eldc;, 30. of Keatch1e, La. Tnveshgators said Wednesday that FBI agents bought the a~ t 1 tank m 1 s s tit' I au n ch e r so pounds of TNT, six pounds of plastic cxplos tH'"· fuc;es <1nd blasting caps The undcrc.o\'cr FBI men al- legedly paid $1 ,335 to the Man nee; who were later arre.stl'd ..it Camp Pendleton Tht•y have h<'cn Jaill'd in San Diego in lieu of S.50,000 ball each Family Fashion Featured In Pilot Today You can get a head s tart on planning }OUr family's :.pnn~ finery by re\ IC\\ mg the lips 1n li special Oa1ly Pilot magazine Family Fashions Your armcha11 fashion tour of the Orange Cou.,t bcl{ins "1th a reminder of fashions popular 4!()(1 years ago during the first <lelebrattons of the annual return of the swallows lo Mission SJn Juan Capistrano Then, Family Fashions offers timely tips on clothing for spring. helpful beauty tips and even sew- ing advice for the cost-conscious bride-lo-be Look for Family Fashions in today's Daily Pilot DAILY PILOT lMOr•"'9"' CN\t O•ity P1~ _.,._~'"'''r~ •~t ........... , ..,.,, "P\lb'•\l'Wielb\ft ... <>~ CN\t PuC>h"''"'O CO""O•l'l't ~' .91• '"Cl•' ~\ IW• CH.1bt1\hf'd Mo,w,., lf'lf'l'W9f\ ''•0.1 l:i. (O'\I• Nlf'"9 N+w~rt ft.fo•~lt HWf'tl~f'liil\ ..... "i fJ"°"" IA ti Y•lltf. lrv1ft• 'Si•ddl..,,.(lli V•ll•y •IWd ~S.eth \ovt"i( 14\t .,.~_., • .,."""-l"fli '"°"" " ~l)i1\Md ~•tu'd0'' ~ \undA"' The r.;:;.;o(;,;~~~:~1 .. ~::'o~~.~.>;.,..1~ ""''' &.., 11.-. .. "-p,, 1i;,nt t nd P\ibl1~,. 1•011 c ..... V1~ • Pf•,•O.nr •no,.,.,.,,.,""*"~.., T-.mn•er.o (cJ1tor Tl••-•A M.,,.,...,.. MAn•Ql'"-O E "''°' C•.,le< M l"' lll<M,_,. "•II Ant\tM1t M•n•oino l.dOon 0111ct• Goola,<Mu >JO Wot e.v~t,. .. 1 le•vM .. tt• llllM)._f,•\4• .. t .. =-i::c~:~:-._~!W~=.:· .. atM•Ot ... 1',_ .. T~I'• (?14)"'2-4.la1 c:t1Mlfltld Adv1nlt1ne M2-N11 ...,.., • .,..1 • v11,., -°"-. H1"'310 l'r~~n (lef'WMI 4tl-Ol)O ,,_ '""" o. ..... ce.;My ~ ..... 640-1120 r Beach family's bome, laking coin collections, cash, jewelry and camera equipm ent. Stunned investigators who r.n· tacted residents of the ~r:h· central city residential tract where Steve and Terry Worob Jive learned hours later they had· unwilling witnesses. Patrolman Brian Moore said more than one person told of see- ing the window -smashing burglars make multiple trips into the residence. hauling away the Worobs' possessions. A complete inventory of the loss suffered by the family, operators of a Huntington Beach camera and photography shop, was being prepared by the couple today. Police said based on what 1:. known to be missing at this point, their loss can be expected to be considerable. Investigators said des pite the fact the break-in reported by the Worobs' jumor high school-age son was seen in progress by neighbors they contacted later, no one called police. .. We have a hell of a time as it is catching the crooks and mak- ing the cases stick when we have the help of the public but this 1s incredible," one officer observed today. Authorities said the Worobs' son came home from school for lunch about 1.30 p.m . an<t dis· covered the looting, plus a shat- kred rear bedroom window. The burglary occurred only a few hours before Huntington Beach Police Chief Earle W Robitaille was scheduled to ad· dress the community's Neighborhood Watch organiza- tion. His address dealt with the role of the crime prevention program which has functioned for the pa~t three years in the city and the role it has played m reducing crime . Vigilant citizens belonging to Neighborhood Watch work m teams to keep an eye on their re- s ident 1 a I area and report anything suspicious that might indicate thieves or burglars operating there Chief Rob1ta11le said overall the Neighborhood Watch partici- pants have contr:buted to a re- duction in Hunttngton Beach's burglary rate. lnvesti~ators said they dis· covered in probing the Worobs' res1dent1al burglary Wednesday that one of the asserted witnesses' homes had also been recenUv burglarized · Frott1 Page Al VIET ... Vietnam, much of that time with Tuong. he said. "The man was a genuine hero." he said. Tuong is survived by ht~ widow, Ann Nguyen : two sons. Quan Nguyen and Hoang Nguyen : two daughters. Lan Nguyen and Oanh NguyM, and his mother, Diem Thi Vo North State Skies Clear By The Associated Press Fair skies dotted Northern California today but no rain was in sight. The Natio"ealher Service said there w few scattered snow flurries 1 Sierra. Temperatures continued cool throughout most of the northern half of the state. mostly in the mid SOs. To Britain? AP Wl,..pllolo Kingman B.rewster Jr., pre- sident of Yale UniversityJ is reported to be President Cartl'r's choice as the next U.S. ambassador to Britain. ~ Frott1 Page A J PROBE •.. In one of those appearances. Newmeycr's s tint behind closed door~ la~ted three and a half hours It was after that test1monv that Norton was called to appear before the JUry for the second ttml' The former Schmit aide insist- ed Wednesday that he answered the Grand Jury's questions to the best of his abilitv. and em- phasized Michelena"s payments to him through Newmeyer were not for campaign purposes. .. ll was a heavy investigation. a very heavy 1nvest1gatton that I don't feel free to talk about," Norton said. Michelena was not available for comment today. Meanwhile the jury continued its investigation Wednesday by hearing testimony from at least five witnesses. Newmeyer tn· eluded Other witnesses who answered a Grand Jury subpoena tn· eluded -Amanda Hertz, a business and social companton of former police informant Gene Conra~. who pumped roughly $53.000 mlo various county poltt1cal cam- paigns last year -Anaheim city councilman William Kott, who reportedly was loaned Sl0,000 for his city campaign in the spring of 1976 by Diedrich attorney Michael Rem- ington -Robert Langslet, a Los Angeles County developer who contributed SS.000 to Anthony's campaign. -John Johnston, who has been described as Langslet's "poltllcal adviser." Man Nabbed Demanding Nixon Visit A JO.year-old M assachuselts man who claimed he had tiny radio transmitters implanted in his teeth demanded to see former President Richard M. Nixon Wednesday and threatened to kill h lmsell if the ex-chi~f executive didn't have the devices removed. Secret Ser vice agents ap- prehended the man and then turned him over to the San Clemente Police who took him to the mental ward at UC Irvine Medical Center where he was kept in custody for qbservation. Police Lt. Al E~low said the man told officers the radio transmitters were put in his teeth seven years ago when he was in the Army because he had divulged se<:rets He also demanded an airplane to Cly lo New York and a meeting with Jackie Onassis. Joy Ride Ends Marine Recruits Steal Jeep SAN DIEGO (AP) -the Marine Corps says three recruits stole their driU flergeant's Jeep and stripped it during a joy ride to STanchard, Okla. A spokesman sald Pvt. Jerry D. Powell, 17, of Blanchard was fined S600 at n court. martial. The spe>kesman said Wednesday that Pvt. Wayne E. Smith, 25, Of Minot, S.D., is nwnltlng discharge and Pvt. George Broughton, 18, of Engle Point, Ore., ls be· inasoughl The Jeep has been returned to Sgt. Gary Woodward, ~. of Lot Angeles, nt the San Dieeo Marine llecnUt {>.epot. · But he didn't get hlJ three men back. I ......... _JIJ WIND DAMAGE ••• "Everything was okay ~ere. But two bl(l('ks away it looked hke ~ meone had set off a bomb.•· Police in three c1t1es. Buena Park. Anaheim and Fullerton. reported wind damage, chiefly broken windows and torn roofs Near the junction of the Riverside and Santa Ana Freeways, an 18-wheel tractor- trailer rig reportedly was over- turned by the freak winds. At St. Jude's Hospital near Bastanchury Road and Harbor Boulevard, a guard shack re- portedly was hfted rt-om its moorinl!:S just at the point where the so-called twister exhausted itself. But residents m otht•r areus of the county fell lh(• impact of the brief, freak .storm when widespread power failun•s <><> curred as a result of downed Ii res. Southern California Edison Company officials said 12,000 north county n •s idents were without power some part of Thursday night as at least seven power poles were downed by the Ful~rton wind - The power company offtc1als C4KIER GETS RICKOVER GIIT WASHINGTON <AP> Prest dent Carter has placed atop his Oval Office desk a bronze plaque on a wooden base that reads. "Oh God. Thy sea 1s so great and my boat is so small." It's the gift from his old Navy boss. Adm. Hyman Rickover. also reported that ralden~ 1n the western and southwestern portions of the county were without power momentarily while service adjustments were made. According to area manager Wilham Compton. some resi- dents in the hard-hit Fullerton area were still without power this morning. . Fullerton police said city dun up crews worked through the mght clearing debris and fallen trees from roadways. Today. pol ice were guarding the damaged business establish- ments to prevent looting or stores left windowless. doorless and roofless by the freak wind. In Fullerton, police said there were reports of a similar wind hitting the area once before. If so, that was in 1914. accord· ing to unconfirmed reports. Mrs. Nixon To Celebrate Pal Nixon. wife of former President Richard M. Nixon, planned a quiet family dinner at their San Clemente home tonight in observance of her 65th birth- day "A few familv friends" will at- tend. a spokesman said Mrs. Nix- on's birthday actually was Wed· nesday. ·'She 1s continuing to m ake good progress" from her stroke. the spokesman said. "Those who have seen her recently say she looks 15 years younger than her age." · ®QUALITY TELEVISION Tr .. sltlOflal Tiie ULTtMORf•H2l2ZIE The K114llLIY HZJIOW Vinyl-clad metal cabinet Simulated grained Walnut finish 100% Solid-Staie Chassis Power Sentry Voltage Regulatlng System. AFC. featuring Zenith's ' ELECTRONIC VIDEO GUARD TUNING SYSTEM One·knob VHF and UHF ChQn!Ull selechon. Fr....P-.e.41 COFF1EE ••• to attract customers to their stores. and ~ore may not pass nU the new price along to the shopper. In January, the Iastest month for which figures are available. the nationwide average retail price for roasted coffee was $2.55 according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. General Foods last raised the wholesale price of its top-selling Maxwell House ground coffee March 2, when the price went from $3.31 to $3. 71 per one-pound can. Coffee roasters blame the wholesale increases on the pnce of green coffee beans, up steadily since July 1975, when a frost destroyed many coffee trees in Brazil, the world's largest grower. .. Green beans from Brazil were quoted on the cash market this week at $3.20 a pound, compared with $1.10 a pound a year ago. It will take three to five years for the new coffee trees planted after the frost lo reach maturity1 so the mlernattonal market 1s ;;till dea.lmg with a U>w·suppl) situation Before the fro::.t. the na- t1onw1de aH·ra~l' retail prtCl' was $1.27 a pound. Pr1c~ also have been pushed upward because American de- mand for coffee did not decrease in the year following the frost. Man Hurt by Tree SAN DIEGO CAP) ~A fallini! tree ltmb inJured a 32· year nld college student as a storm swept the San Diego area Wednesday night. Lightning struck two buildings. No moving parts lo we;:,r out and no contact points to corrode In !he tuners Designed to be rhe most dependable. most sensitive tuning s~tem in Zen11h history. -Mow s53477 l·'ull l -'n r t 111·•1 Mnrrunli••' Pltt.<ti Our 1•1·r~ounl 0111• \ 1•111· f,;uu r uur ,.,.Ou l.n••-~I ,.ro d1u·1 H , •. 'ite •ll: 275 East 17th St • Costa Mese1 ....................... J 0... Wttt ;c;::;. •. Phone 642·8882 THISI ILICTAO .. IC NOFISSIOMALS SUVICI YOUl 19UIPMEHT l ·--""70, NO. 7 , 4 SECTlONS, 62 PAGES. • It COffee ·Priees S THUASOAY,MARCH17,19'7 N/C TEN~1 Over -$4. a Pound· NEW YORK (AP) Wholesale coliee prices have shot over the $4 barrier, but con- sumers will have several weeks to find out bow much more per pound they'll have lo pay in the supermarkets. General Foods Corp., the na· tioa's largest coffee roaster, in· ·creased the wholesale price of ground coffee by 50 cents to $4.21 a pound Wednesday. The action followed Monday's SO-cent in· crease to $4.18 a pound by second-largest Foleer Cofree Company., General Foods also raised prices for Sanka and Brim ground decaffeinated coffee by 40 cents a pound. It left irultant prices at S5.4S for a 10-ounce jar, the same price charged by Folger for instant. General Foods and Folger sell ar. more than ball tM ctlfee eoa· aumed 9.1 the United States, and their aetions atron&Jy influence the prtca ol other brands. How tl\ele loereua 9klll affect supermarket price iln 't yet known, aince it takes several weeks for them to reach· the re- tail level. Many grocers traditionally have sold coffee at or below cost to attract customers. to their stores, and therefore mav not paaa all the new price along ·to the shopper. In January, the lastest month tor which fieurea\are available, the nationwide avera1e retail price for roasted cofftA: was $2.S.S according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. General Foods Jast raised the wholesale price of its top-selling Maxwell House ground coffee March 2, when the price went from $3.31 to S3. 71 per one-pound can. Coffee r oasters blame the wholesale increases on the price of gretn coffee beans, up steadily since July 1975, when a frost destroyed many coffee trees in Brazil, the world's ·largest grower. Green beans from Brazil were quoted on the caah market this week at $3.20 a pound, compared with $1.10 a pound a year ago. • It will take three to five years for the new coffee trees pl~ alter the frost to reach maturity, so the international market ls still dealing with a low-supply situatloo. Before the frost, the na- tionwide averaee retail price was $.1.27 a pound. Prices also have been pushed upward because American de- mand for coffee did not decrease in the year following the frost. Lohhyi~t Checks to Norton ~old -.JA- I Private Service .. . Oelty..._,, .......... DOWNED UTILITY LINES MAKE FULLERTON STREET l~SSA8LI This Wea Scene Thia Morning Near CommonWMHh Avenue and lrookhunt Street Winds Twist C~uiity Three Injured; Damage Nears$! Millwn Freak tornado-like wands slashed through portions or ~range County Wednesday even- 1t•1c c.a~sirliJ ~n estimated $1 1million wo of damage and in· :.illries to.at least·three people. r-1 Hardest hit by the devastating Sfl>hon wind was a five-mile l•ng, 200-yard WJde stretch in Fullerton. There, what one policeman described as a twister swept through a business center, rushed throu~h Orange Countv'" largest food processing plant and then hurned through a rt's1den tial area before peterinJt out near St. Jude's Hospital Daily ~11-IMM PATH OF BIG BLOW Fullerton Hardest Htt Left in the wmd's destructive monwealth Ave. severely wake were 80 damaged homes, damaged. uprooted trees, four downed It was in the food plant that the t fie signals, four crumpled three infuries were reported, all . t standards and 16 damaged • to plant worken. , policesaid. · Two of the uuared people were ey also.reported eight busi· treated by paramedics; the third nesses wipd-clamaged and two person reportedly was treated at bulldines in ·the Hunt-Wesson Martin Lufber Hospital in f OGd,. plant a~· 1800 W. Com-Anaheim and released. Or::rJ , Coast Weather Partly cloudy w ath \ chance of measurable rain 10 percent tonight and 20 $250 Fem Stolen A 50-pound, 15·year-old stagbom fem was stolen from the backyard of a Laguna Beach home Wednesday, POiice said. Owner Alton E. Allen, former Sth District county superv1&0r, 253S Temple Hills Drive. valued the fem at $2:;0. W eatber officials balked at calling the freak Winds torn ados. . But those caught µp in the turmoil didn't. "It was.like a gray funnel that seemed to move aJong almost in slow motion," one Fullerton policeman said. Those on the outskirts of the wind swath said it was accom- panied by thunder, lightning and hail. "There was this violent, freaky thunder and lightning that lasted Cor about 15 minutes. And the hail stones were huge," one resident on the wmd's fringe said. A businessman two blocks from the so-called twister that hit Fullerton at 6:30 p.m . said, "Everything was okay here. But two blocks away it looked like so- meo~e bad set off a bomb." Police in three cities, Buena Park, Anaheim &Jad Fullerton. reported wind damage. chiefly broken windows and torn f'9Q{s. .. Near the junction of the Rlv-erslde and Santa Ana Freewa,yts. an J.8.wbeel tractor- traUer rig reportedly was over. tumed by the !teak winds. At St. ~ude's Hospital near Bastanchury Road and Harbor Boulevard, a guard shack re- portedly was lifted from its moori.np just at the point where the so-<:alled twister exbausted itseU. (See WINDS, Pa•e A2> Involved By GARY GRANVILLE Ol Ille o.ily ~ ... , 51•11 The Orange County Grand Jury's probe into political prac- tices in Orange County has swept out to include 1976 payments made tr> Republican Stale Senate candidate Lor.an Norton by lob· byist Frank Michelena. According to Norton, roughly five Michelena checks totaling $3,500 and made payable to Norton ally Gary Newmeyer were, in fact. paid to him. Norton, a former Santa Ana policeman and an ex-aide to county Supervisor Laurence Schmit, sajd Michelena's pay· ments were for his services as a private investieator. Tbey were not, accordinc to the former R~pubUcan can· didate, in any way related to his unsuccessful 1976 state senate campaign agains t Democrat Paul Carpenter. In the Grand Jury's continuing investigation into county political practices Norton has already testified twice He refused to discuss that testimony Wednesday but did acknowledge that the Michelena payments were brought up dur· ing his secret interrogation. Newmeyer, like Norton, is a former Santa Ana policeman and is now a private investigator. He was Norton's campaign manager through the June primary election. But two weeks ago he said he dropped from the Norton scene when he wasn 't paid for pretrial investigative services performed for Dr. Louis Cella. Like Norton, Newmeyer has <See PROBE, Page A2) F~ly Fashion Featured In Pilot Today You can get a head start on planning. your family's spring nnery by reviewing the tips in a special Daily Pilot magazine - i'amily Fashions. Your armchair fashion tour of the Orange Coast begins with a l"eminder of fasbloa.s popblar 200 years ago during the first celebrations o( the annual return of the swallows to Mission San Juan Capistrano. Then, Family Fashions offers timely Ups on clothing for spring, helpful beauty tips and even sew- ing advice for the cost-conscious bride-lo-be. Look for Family Fashions \n today's Daily Pilot. HE ISSUED CHECKS Lobbyist Michelena ~ Dally Piiot Staff Plloto TESTIFIES TWICE Ex..COp Norton Burglary Team Neighbors Watch Looting of Home By ARTHUR R. VINSEL DI I,,. D•llY Piiot S"ll Neighbors who feared involve. ment confessed watching for more than one hour Wednesday as a team of burglars methodicaUy looted a Huntington Beach family's home, taklng coin collections, cash, jewelry and camera equipment. Stunned investigators who COD· tactoo residents of the north· central city residential tract where Steve and Terry Worob live learned hours later they had unwilling witnesses. Patrolman Brian Moore said more than one person told of see- i n g the window-s mashing burglars make multiple trips into the residence, hauling away the Worobs' possessrons. A complete inventory of the loss suffered by the family, operators of a Huntington Beach camera and photography shop, was being prepared by the couple today. Police said based on what is known to be missing at this point, their loss can be expected to be considerable. · Investigators said despite the fact the break·in·reported by the. Worob6' junior bigh school-age son was seen in progress by neighbors they contacted later, no one called police. "We have a hell or a1time as it is catching the crooks and mak· ing the cases stick when we have the help of the public but this is incredible," one officer observed today. Authorities said the Worobs' son came home from school for lunch about i ·30 p.m . and dis- covered the looting, 'plus a shat· tered rear bedroom window. The burglary occurred only a few hours before Huntington Beach Police Chief Earle W. Robitaille was &cheduled to ad- dress the commu nity's Neighborhood Watch organiza-tion. His address dealt with the role or the crime prevention program which has functioned for the past three years in the city and the role it bas played in reducing crime. Vigilant citizens belonging to Neighborhood Watch work in teams to keep an eye on their re- s ide n ti al area and report anything suspicious that might indicate thieves or burglars operating there. Ex-Vietnam Commander Dies in Mesa Tuong Van Nguyen, who com. manded an air division in South Vietnam, and is said to have been one of the most highly decorated South Vietnamese pilots died Monday at his Costa Mesa home. Buddhist funeral rites were held Wednesday for the South Vietnamese colonel at Pacific View Memorial Park. • ~rcent Friday, Lows t tonight in 40s. lUghs Fri- \ day in upper-SOs and lower 60s. ·l ~ IN81DE1TOD~ 1l' C.ast's Irish Celehrate Tuong, 44, was deputy com· mander of the Tblrd1Air Division at Bien Hoa Air Force Base dur-in& the Vietnam coofllct. A cl°" friend. Larry Hull, ~ Cotta Kesa. said the pilot was shot down slx tlmes during bis eauer, MYVal Umes·over Nortll Vlttnam, ~ Frutrdon . and ""' CGJlo t rl•d th• R<>ilh•o Sl.ne• °'"""" 0 fDOOffl/kn COllC#t ,,.., . .,. bf,,... JOIC. accont.· f1J# .to columnfat Lt.a ~ Tlw.Qfllt. .. Mick JO!JottappeanonP,oo1 86. latlex BJ·MICBAEL PASKl!Vlal Olttlt ...,,.PlllUWf Jrlab and would·b• blah • deck.cl themMl\'•, oat ln the 1rffD today fM St. Patrick. a saint mCJl'e than a few Oranae Coa1t rtll.debta chose to bonor by downing • sreen beet at «Mir local Irish RUb. •1 lhn>' of the local •aloona :f ,·opened early ln antletpatfon ot .. crowda or celebrants who ... ,, . Tbe lb1rut eolonel was one ol the last ·to fee•• South Vietnam on .AprlJ.29, lt'7~. Oyin1 a group of sotdlen out to the aircraft car· rier Blue Rlqe. After unloading hts pauenren, ~ ditched his hell copter in tbesea. ff• Joined bla f atmily at Camp PendJetoo and later aetUed ln Costa Meaa where the former cOIJlmander took two !ull·time j(il)a .. i machlnbt. "He w• worldn1 llx dA11 a ' ·w~ 0 HUil uJd. "I'm lute.tat ·bad IOl!Mebfie to dO wtUl bia JIMrt attack. It I lllall aald. ,..... .... tct ..,,.. I .<Beenn.:Pa1 Al) .1 ~ J . - .. .' ' , , , .. .· ·. ·. HIC e - Homeciumsr Teatijfia on 1eia l>ett=mTJ Rink T told a JW7 W ., that D01M from Oranie COUDt;J Alrpon wu not ncn a minor factor to be C!QO. lldered wben be bouaht b.11 Sa&a Alla Heitbtl bome hi lMS. . Riaker teltlfled u bil Supertor Court lawsuit .,aimt the county tot under way that be checked the point with neighbors and pilot frienda before he bought the land · at 2342 Mesa Drive. ·AnnsRap laMt blwu...,. usared tbat all .. would ..... bur trom Lbe home be plllDIWl co built would be t.be drocto of a few private aircraft durlnc tbe weekmd, many of wbJcb woukl not even Cl'OA bU proJ*rty. Rinker u.ld he then developed hls three acres to the pOlot t.bat lt now bas a spadous home and gardens, lakes wild pheasants, due~ and exotic birds and many .famlb NCn&tJm f~llUlll .. a ...... -. ... dam.,. from UM ~ ror wb1t be c1aima la the DD6M aid poUudon tb.i b.ave diaturbed IU en•lroameat In reeeat 1••n siace \be eountJ allowed lwo airlioel co me Jet alftnft at t.be nearby COUllty airport. Grand Jury Figure Freed From Jail Judge Frank Domentcblnl in· terrupted Rinker'• testimony late Wednesday to make ar- rangements for the court, the lawyers and jury to be taken to- day on a 1wded tour of the Rinker acreaee and the Orange . County Airport. Normal court sessions were to resume in Santa Ana late today. · The trial of the Rinker lawsuit . is ~ing watched by Harbor Area . homeowners who have aued the county for more than $30 million i.n damaaes oo identical charges. They contend that property values in the residential areas fr· inglne the county airport have beef\ adversely affected by jet traffic. Police informer turned political patron Gene Conrad spent Wednesday popping in and out of Orange County Jail but by midnight was clearly out-on $5,000 bail. But to stay free, Conrad must fJppear in Superior Court Friday and convince Judge James Walsworth that lle didn't violate terms of his probation M ar~h 1. Thal ls when agents of the federal Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms Bureau seized two .38-caliber revolers Crom Conrad. Simultaneously. the agents * * * l'ro..P~AJ 'PROBE ••• picked up a shotgun and rifle from Conrad ally Loran Norton in Santa Ana. Norton PW"POrledly was hold- made two appearances before the \. Grand Jury in the probe centering around the polillcal machinations of county supervisors Ralph Diedrich and Phi hp Anthony. In one of those appearances, Newmeyer's s tint behind closed doors lasted three and a half hours. It was after that testimony that Norton was called to appear before the jury for the second time. The former Schmit aide insist- ed Wednesday that he answered the Grand Jury's questions to the best of his ability. and em- phasized Michelena's payments to him through Newmeyer were not for campaign purposes. "It wu a heavy investigation. a very heavy investigation that J don't feel free to talk about." Norton said. Michelena was not available for comment today Meanwhile the JUry continued 1ls mvest1gat1on Wednesda) by hearing lc~t1mony from at least five w1tnC!ISCS, Newmeyer tn· eluded. Other witnesses who answered a Grand Jury subpoena in- cluded: -Amanda Hertz, a business and social companion of former police Informant Gene Conrad, who pumped roughly $53,000 into various county polit1cal cam- paigns last year. -Anaheim city councilman William Kott, who reportedly was loaned $10,000 for his city campaign in the spnng or 1976 by Diednch attorney Michael Rem- ington. -Robert Langslf't, a Los Angeles County developer who contributed $.5,000 to Anthony's campaign -Jobn J ohnston, who has been de sc ribed as Langs l e t 's "political adviser." Reaction Mixed By The Associated Press President Carter's endorse- ment of a Palestinian homeland in the Middle East drew guarded approval today from Palestinian leaders while Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin said it was a troubling concept. 4 ... ,. OAANOE COAST DAILY PILOT •' ' s ing the two weapons for his friend and business associate. As a convicted felon, federal regulatiom prohibit the '2-year- old former police informer from possessing firearms. And under terms of probation set down in 1975 when Conrad pleaded guilty in Orange County to a felony charge he is ineligible to possess firearms. The bulky rags-lo-riches political benefactor insists that it is necessary for him to be armed because of his years as what he calls an undercover ageAt for the district attorney's office. But office officials say Conrad was a paid in.former rather than an undercover agent. Those were the issues at Slakf! Wednesday mornjng when Conrad replied to a warrant in the federal building and was im- mediately placed on a hold order by the county Probation Depart- ment. It was when he was being booked into jail that Conrad com- plained of chest pains. He was taken to the prison .ward of UCI Medical Center but insisted upon being returned to jail a few hours later. There he remained until 11 : 15 p. m . when a $.5,000 bond guaran- teeing his appearance in court was posted. Last fall, Conrad funneled more than $50,000 into political campaig:is in Orange County. Most of that amount went to Supervisor Philip Anthony's campaign under various guises. Since then, Conrad's political philanthropy has attracted the attention of the Orange County Grand Jury. And in Los Angeles County, a federal grand Jury is looking into the business opera· t10ns o{. the firm he heads, Pension Funds of America. CdM Freeway Debuts Friday At Bristol St. . Costa Mesa and CalTrans of- ficials will open portions of the Corona del Mar Freeway in a single ceremony Friday at 2 p.m. The ceremony will be held on the southbound lanes of the new freeway at Bristol Street with public access via the Bear Street on ramp. The freeway dedication, sponsored by the City of Costa Mesa, will include a speech by Congressman Robert E. Badham (R -Newport Beach ) and welcome by C05ta Mesa Mayor Dominic Raciti. CalTrans director Adriana Gianturco bas been invited to the ceremonies, as well as Robert J , Datel, director of District 7 or CalTrans. Several freeway lanes will be opened to traffic following lhe ceremonies. They include a six lane str~tch between the Newport Freeway and the San Diego Freeway. The second project dedicated Friday will be a three-level ln· terchange between the Newport Freeway and the Corona del Mar Freeway at Bristol Street. The improvement >to MacArthur Boulevard will also be dedicated Friday during the same ceremonies. The project is a realigned MacArthur betW9l1!n Jamboree Road and Bontla Canyon Road. Motorists are already using that roadway. • NB Planners To Consider Downzoning Newport Beach planning com- missioners will meet tonight to consider an amendment that would lead to property doWJUOD- in g in areas ~urrentty-~nder Coastal Commission control. Areas of older Corona del Mar, West Newport, the Newport· Balboa Peninsula and Newport Heights would be· changed from present R·2 zoning to R-1.5 if the amendment is adopted. Bill Foley of the city's planning department said the downzoning would not have a major impact since the areas concerned already are under R-1.5 zoning restrictions set by the coastal commission. He said the move would bring the city in compliance with the coastal commission's code cov .. ering urban exclusions. City planners will apply to have most or the city's developed residential areas excluded from the coastal commission permit process. The downzoning is one of the steps needed in order to qualify for the exclusions. Tonight's re1ular meeting of the plannil'lg commission begins at 7 p.m . in Council Chambers. Kite Festival Set Saturday In Costa Mesa A family kite festival. sponsored by the Costa Mesa de- partment of leisure service, ia planned for Saturday at the Estancia Adobe park, 1900 Adams Ave. Children at live city parks have been building kites this week in preparation for tbe kite flying day with their families. Kite categories in the competl· lion mclude largest kite, longest kite tail, most colorful kite, best designed kite and best all around kite. • Competitors will be grouped according to age for tbe competi- tion which begins at 10 a.m. Registration for the festival begms at9:30 a.m. For further information, con- tact Mike Putnam at 556-5481. ,.,,.._Page Al· WINDS ••• But residents in other areas of the county felt the impact of the brief, freak storm when. widespread power failures oc- curred as a result of downed lirea. Southern California Edison Company ofricials said 12,000 nottb county residents were wtthout power some part of' Thuraday night as at least seven power _poles were downed by the Fullerton wiD.d. Joy Ride Eads Marine Recmi~ Steal, Jeep ... ' DEADAT44 Tuong V•n Nguyen ....... Page Al VIET ••• money from the two jobs to buy a modest home on Placentia Avenue in Cocsta Mesa and, with Hull'• help, wu seeking a Job aa a pilot. ''He got out of Vietnam with nothing," Hull said. "He came here with his family, a few belongings, and that's it.·• A notber friend, 0 r ri n DeForest, Los Angeles, said Tuong was awarded many medals for his years of combat flight, including the U.S. Dist- ingulahed Flying Cross. · "He pretty much ran the air show over there for the South Vietnamese,•• DeForest said. DeForest recently retired from' · the Central Intelligence Agency. afttr serving eight years in South Vll\nam, much of that time with Tuong, be said. "The man was a genuine hero," be said,_ Tuong is survived by h·is widow, Ann Nguyen; two sons, Quan Nguyen and Hoang Nguyen; two daughters, Lan Nguyen and Oanh Nguyen, and his mother, Diem Thi Vo. •• Tbe acUve seattb fof' a Lde Porett housewife who my1t.erioualy CUaappear.d Mon- da1 in Pulldena was temporari- ly 1uapended today while police detectives follow up on dozens of telephone leads. Raebel Sparling, 36. of 24311 Lakeview Lane, dropped out of sight ..after a visit to her psychiatrist. Early the next morning, Los Angeles police officers arrested a 17-year-Qld boy who had been caueht drivmg Mrs. Sparling's 1972 bronze-colored Corvette with the personalized license plate WlN YOU . The youth allegedly had possession of the missing woman's rings, watch, purse, keys and other personal effects, plus a .25 caliber pistol. Police said the boy admitted stealing the car from the doctor's office parking lot and claims lbe Jewelry was on the seat. Detective Sgt. Ray Mc Ray said today that searches of rugged terrain around the Rose Bowl turned up no trace of Mrs. Sparl- in" A tip from two fishermen drew searchers to the mountain coun- try along winding Angeles Crest Highway Tuesday, but again, the trail was cold. Mc Ray said police probers are presently stumped by the case '0KL4HOMA' AT ESI'AN<JJA Estancia High School's music department is presenting Rodgers and Hammerstein's "Oklahoma" as its spring musical production tonight through Saturday, in the school'~ Forum. Tonight 's performance begins at 7:30 p.m. with other shows beginning at 8 p.m. Tic"ets are $2.50. .. QUALITY TELEVISION ... --.. -.. ~ and haYe red by tbe fact that they_.. unable toques. Uon the arrested youth, wbo ha bffn cbarled witb auto theft. robbery aoa poaeuloa of atol.en property. The police spokesman said steps are bei.ng taken to clear leeal obstacles prevenlini inter- rogaUonof the boy. f',.._PageAJ , IRISH ..• Waitresses said the crowd rolled mat about 10:30 a.m. and the green beer and Irish coffees have been flowing steadily since. More than 100 customers crowded the new pub where a lunch of corned beef and cabbage was planned. At nearby Harry's, the scene of some grand celebrations in years past, the crowd was limited to two pre-noon visitors. At Muldoon's Irish Pub in Newport Center, the faithful had to wait until 11 a.m. to begin their celebration and by noon more than 150 people, most dressed in green, had s pilled out of the small establishment and onto its courtyard where two extra bars bad been set up. They were treated to a St. Patrick's celebration that featured Live, non-Irish music and hot dogs. In spite of the green and white streamers and balloons 'hat fes- tooned Bobby McGee's, it was a normal lunch time crowd - perhaps even lighter than usual -that showed up today. And so it went, some Irish bars filled to overflowing and others having just an ordinary day. McDonald 's hamburger stands, however, were reported- ly doing record business in the sale of green-tinted shamrock shakes. 2 3" CONSOLE COLOR TV · Now $59977 T~ TMIALT1M01tf.HZJ221 r=_~ ra No moving parts to wear Handsome Transltlonal styled full base console. · out and no contact Casters Beau11lully 11.nish!:!d In simulated AnttQue 'ELECTRONIC points to corrode In the Oak with the look of fine distressing. AFC. VIDEO GUARD tUtiers. Designed to be the most dependable. ' IOOOfo SOLH>·STATE TUNING most sensitive tuning (l~~IOMA(OlOl n SYS--TEM ~sys-.-:-tem ln-=::::,Zenith history. on· swivel-base . consolette at the price of a table model! The KIMIB1.IY HZllOW V1ny1-<:Cld metal cabinet. Simulated grained Walnut flnlah. 1~ Solld-state Chuale. Power S.ntry Voltage Regulating System. AFC. featuring Zenith's ' ElfCTRONIC VIDEO GUARD TUNING SYSTEM One-lcnob VH¥ and UHF channel selection. Now 553477 1·,,11I11•·loru Hf1t•ruu1;,., 1•1,,, 011r ,.,.,.,.,,.,,, Oue• l •• ,,,. t •u,.r•1u11•1• Ou l .1·1·r111•1·od11c·1 H1• ·"••II: '275 Ea•t 17th St. Costa Mesa ............ ,'::- JhlnWW.. Jr. . Phone 642-8882 Store Hours Daily 9-6 Sat. ~:30 """" ................ '"' THISI ILICtlOHIC PIONSSIOMALS SlRYICI YOUR lqUl,MEHT' Brother Attacked BJ'l"M "-clatiel hnl Publ.Ww! accauntl of t'b.e ftfth inltallm ol a Hriff b7 a O'OUP of lnvaUaaUve roportera focus on Sen. Barry Goldwater's brother Robert and some of the operations of Goldmar, Inc., the company he heads. The stories appeared today m the lndi.inapolis Star. The published accounts as they appeared in the Star and some other papers included repetitions of reports in Monday's instaJl- ment saying Robert Goldwater associated with people linked to organized crime. Robert has described the series as "pop pycock'' and said: "None of my friends will pay any attention lo it. .. The accounts today dealt main- ly with Robert Goldwater's social relationships, detailing golf games and parties attended by a mix\Mfe of people from show business and other areas. Some of the guests were associated - directly or indirectly -with mob figures. In a reference to Goldmar, the accounts of the series said: ''There a r e indications Goldmar's financial fortunes were enhanced by business deal ings with Te;imstcr s-r elalcd comparues ... " Sure and Begorra D•llv Piiot Si.If l'lloto Goldwater, in a letter to IRE attorneys dated March 8, said · "There have never been any de· alings between Goldmar and the Teamsters ... " Nancy Freeman, 3, gets into the spirit of St. Patrick's Day with this king.size shamrock. She's the daughter o( Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Freeman of Fountain Valley. Among l,he alleged underworld fi gures Robert Goldwater was linked tQ m the story as it ap· peared in some participatmg newspaJ>('rs today were Moe B Dalitz, Gus Greenbaum, Wilhe Bioff and Clarence "Mike" Newman. All except Dalitz, described as an associate of un· de rwor ld fin ancier Meyer Lansky, are dead. Pendleton Trial ~ Halted for Review Robert Goldwater has said he knows these people, but has de· nted knowing about their links to organized crime. fi e said he knew B1ofC under the name Withe Neison. Of Dalitz, Robert Goldwater said Monday: "I've known Moe for a number of years. J met Moe through playing golf.'' He said he "would have no way of knowing " af descriptions of D3litz as a mobster are accurate. The· published accounts said that Robert Goldwater -an avid golf er -played an foursomes "not only with people like Dalitz and rus prote~i!, convicted stock s windler Allard Roen, but with Teamsters Preside nt Frank F1tzs1mmons and Lou · The Tailor"' R11sanove1. a Chicago mobster who operates a Savan nah, Ga , golf cl ub at which Goldwater and Oahtz hdVC been guests together " WASHINGTON CAP > -A military appeals court has or dered a halt to court martial pro· ceedings against nine black Marines accused in an assault against whlte soldiers al Camp Rooftop Steam Gives Hotfoot To HB Firemen Steam rising from soaked roof- tops due to sudden freak at· mo11pheri c conditioris fallowing the breakup of a storm front that passed through Huntington Beach Wednesday kept ftre de partment personnel hopping dur mg the noon hour. Repeated calls by citizens who spotted lht-steam and believed 1t to be smoke emanatmg from burning buildings accounted for five separate hre calls Si rens howled throughout the town as firemen raced to in Gl.rl, 2, Di·es "esttgate each individual s1tua lion to be (\bsolulely certain a structure was inde~d not smok· In A h •J ingbut Juststeamtng. utomo I e "Apparently the sun came out • really bright." said beleaguered FORT MYERS. f'la (A Pl -A Fire Department Di spatcher 2 year·old girl appa rently su!-Robert Thiery . .,., ho added the focatro when day care cent.er_ J>henomenon was sometbmg new workers left her ma locked car ml.-oc-1n his 14 yt-ars of experience 80-degrt•e weather whale they at· "We had a real cns1s there for tended a mov1t:, police said. a while." Thiery said. The <'hJlct. Rosaro Muniz, was "After the fir-;t one. we figured one of more than 70 migrant we must be Just getting rails children from a three county about steam," he added. ··but area brought to Fort Myers for a there is just nothing you can do special showin~ of the movte "In when you get a call but go and Search of Noah ·s Ark " ch erk 1t out." Amta Lopei. a teacher's aide The passing Pactric Ocean ram and dnver of the car. said she squall at one point Wednesday locked the car when she went to had a portion of Huntington help herd other ch1l~ren ID~ th,e Beach under heavy showers. theater. She told police she didn t while other residents basked in realize she had left one child sunshine admiring a brilliant behind, officers said. rainbow tt created ln the ea11t. A Real Halrg lss..e Pendleton last November. Stx of the seven whites were hosp1tahzcd m lhe attack, ap. parently motivated by heightened activity of the Ku Klux Klan at the military base. In a split decision. the judges agreed Wednesday to review al· legations by the bl acks that they are being denied an impartial trial at Camp Pendleton on con- spiracy and assault charges. Lawyers for the 12 blacks said Marine Col. M. A. J ohnson Jr .. the Marines' commanding of- ftcer , should not be permitted to supervise what is supposed to be an impartial proceeding. Jn petltlolU to-the three m Ultar;>' Judges, Ul~ det\!lUe lawyers said Johnson was play- ing the role oI both accuser-and impartial judge. smce he would eventually a pp rove or disap- prove the verdict or the courts martial Johnson also ordered that the men be charged. accord- ing to legal papers. On Nov. 13. 1976. Marines wielding knives, clubs and screwdrivers. attacked whites who were drinking beer in a Pendleton barracks. Some of. ficials at Pendleton believe lhe blacks mistakenly thought they were breaking into a meeting of the Klan. Subsequent searches of the ba rrac ks t u r n ed up Klan literature and membership lists of the white supremisl organiza- tion. None of those attacked were on the lists. The case has dra~n national attention because of the presence of the Klan on a military base. Holdup Success SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -A red·haired man in a lumberjack Jacket robbed his fourth San Francisco bank ln 10 weeks Tues- day. escaping with $1,500, police said. Emma Malagon , Miss San Juan· Capistrano, examines the beard of llrmer• m~or Tony Forster, Judged the elty•s. hairiest man in the annuaJ beard·irowm1. contest tn connection with the return of tho swallows on Saturday. Others in tbe ·ruD.Dlna were Tom Trulli (left); ·judged · tbtt prettiest, and Dick Hosinakl, the scto1.llllfest. . . t" ---. .... . . , I - m.au.. -~ a... HaywclrUa'• Wnl ... U.tbelDllltlll ......... Memorial~ TIM .. ,.ar.a&d mom atarwu admllted to tbe Newport Beech boepltal f« treatment of •bat• friad calll ''her problem'' - alcot.olllm. The mqnitude of ber problem was underlined by a legal docu- ment aslcin1 the court to appoint a auardian. or con.aervator, for tbeactreu. It offered medlcal·le1al evidence that the one-time "Love Goddess" is an alcoholic incapa· ble, at least temporarily, of con- ducting her own affairs and needs to be put under the control of the Public Guardian. Tbe petition was Fi.led Friday by the Orange County Counsel's office at the request of Miss Haywortb's hospltal psychiatrist, Dr. James Miner. The plight of the actress has re- ceived international attention m sometimes lurid news stories. Those stories have painted Miss Hayworth as lonely and destitute, something that could not be further from the truth, ac- cording to a friend of the star, Newport Beach artist Bill Gilpin. He says be 's lhe one who talked her into checking into the hospital wrule she was on an ex- tended visit to Newport Beach. "She won 't admit she's got a problem." Gilpin says. "Once she admits it, then th10gs can start happening.·' A regular visitor to the hospital has been the star's 27-year·old daughter, Yas min. the ooly cruld from her storybook marriage to the late Aly Khan, a playboy prince. Although Mass Hayworth has done Little acting in recent years -she has worked only oc- casionally since 1960 and her last picture was made in 1972 -she apparently is financially in-dependent. She owns a large home in the Beverly Hills movie colony and according to Gilpin, she travels extensively. The once fabled pinup girl and Hollywood "Love Goddess" shuns the pubhc eye and it was a rare occasion when she hosted a reception last month for Gilpin at a showing of his works at the Park Newport Apartments. Gilpin explained that public re- action to the fact she is no longer a 2Q-1ear-0ld starlet has been partially respor\&lble for her re· licence to appear m the glare or the limeli~ht. Hoag Hospital APWlre ..... lo RECOVERING AT HOAG Actress Rita Hayworth "At the recel>tion. a little kid came up to her with a poster made out or one of her pinup p1c· lures. He was so excited, he'd come all the way from San Diego to see her. "She was autographing ii when this slob came up and looks at the picture and says to her, 'ls that you?' and when she said ves. he Ba id 'Jeez,haveyouever aged.' "Well or course she has. We all have. Nobody looks like they're 20 when they're 58." In a recent interview. Miss Hayworth said aging didn't trou· ble her. ''Everybody gets older. . I think ther~ are ~me fans who would like me to look younger becaus~ lhey want to stay young ... .. t ol WGlllderf&d ,, M ol Uae Public G dJ '1 II.aft aN PAl>arl:aa a nt- port Gil the aeed fOf' a perm...at con•ttva&.or for her. It I.I to be de· Uvered dm1nl an Aprtl l beartq bef oN Oranr• Count)' Superior CourtJuqeCJaude M. Owens. Bill Monis, a apokeamaa for the Public Guardian explained that the con.servatorsbip process is used when "people are hospitalized or incapacit~ physically or mentalJy to a poiiit where a doctor feels they O\.llhl to be detained lo a structured set· ting for treatment." Morris said the request by the doctor is referred to a con- serv atorsbip investigator who determines if the request is "legally adequate." Once the public guardian bas been .appointed temporary con- servator, the investigator pce- pares a report to be given the court at the time of the bearing. ln Miss Hayworth's case this will be on April 1. The report generally covers the need of a permanent con· servalor and the selection or that person. "We always try to have a fami· ly member or associate appoint- ed," said Morris. "We don't want to be in charge of these people if we don't have to be." Morris ~led out that a con- se rvators hip involves responsibility ror the person. "It does not entail control over that person's assets unless the assets are in danger of being lost, stolen or destroyed," he added. Scorpion Mlliling Brings Sentence LONDON <AP> -A London gangster who m ailed a scorpion to his girlfriend's mother when she banned him from seeing her daughter was sent to prison to- day. Police produced the live scor- pion in a jar at the Old Bailey central criminal court for Judge Peter Mason to examine. Prosecuting attorney Colin Hart-Leverton said it was "very poisonous and possibly deadly." It was part of a vendetta pursued against Kate O'Dnscoll by 26·year-old James Eustace when she refused to let him meet her_ l8-year-0ld daughter AMe. Hart.Leverton said a mailman delivered a parcel containing the scorpion at Mrs. O'Driscoll 's London home. Mrs. O'Driscoll, to whom Eustace already had sent wreaths bearing "deepest sym· pathy" messages, suspected a bomb and called the police. An officer who opened the parcel found what he thought was a toy spider but then it started moving. It was a four·inch lone African yellow scorpion, the. most dangerous species, that _ Eustace had bought from a Lon- don animaJ dealer for $3.40, Hart- Leverton said. They managed to trap it without being stung. Available For Immediate Delivery _Acce:Uor'J Watt 1Jnil PRO~ESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS An attractive wall unit in the warm Informality of Rural . Oek. consisting of 3-80'' Pilasters, 2-74" shelves and 2-42" shelves specialty pri~ed ots399. Opt" Mon., lhurs. & Fri. ~ts. • t Green And Bear It IRJSll EYES DEPT.-Here we a re on St. Patnck 's Day, wbere you were supposed t.o be celebrating by The Wearin' of the Green. Everybody is supposed to act like a good lnshman. Some parties, however, being defiant types, will run around clad in orange today. Some peo- ple might be able to get away wtth that. Not me. Consider the plight of the person who isn't Irish, bas a name that sounds like it is, and tries showing up for work on St. Patrick's Day wearing a brown suit. You abruptly become the subject of all the office jokes that day. This is my plight. I have one of those Irish·sound1ng names. Peo- ple just assume your heritage harkens back to the old Emer ald Isle. Minedoesn't. But I've given up any thought of fighting it. SO NOW EACH year when St. Patrick's Day rolls around, I don my green socks and tie just like everybody else and try to look Irish. o When you examine it, you can't be too sure why it is we all go around celebrating St. Patrick's Day the way we do. St. Patrick, is, or course, the patron saint of Ireland, celebrat- ed in song and legend. He lived back there some time m the 5th Century and 1s credited with bringing Christianity to the Picts and Anglo·Saxons. He livl'd a pretty tough life. He was captured by Irish raiders when he was only 16 and spent s ome portion of his life in slave ry. Ile had a dream about returning from Britain to Ireland and indeed did so to carry out his successful missionary work. SO, TO CELEBRATE the work of this legendary man of the cloth, a lot of people went out to- day in crazy costumes and hats, ' lifted glasses in the various pubs in our area. and wheezed out verses of "When Irish Eyes Are Smihn'." As th.is 1s ~ing written. the fight reports have not yet come in. Virtually every year upon St. Pa trick's Day. the celebrants have become rowdy m the vicmi ly of two Irish pubs m Seal Beach Sometimes the cele brating Seal Beach throngs have become huge and :.pilled out into the streeL<;. Throngs always sprU out into the s treets 1n news s tories, you know. In this case, they also are ltkely spill what was in their glasses. SALOONS ALL along the Orange Coast . in fac t, were celebrating today with specials on Irish whiskey or Jr1sh cortee. With the price of coffee these days, you may find more whisky m 11\han coffee. That may become the new way to water a dnnk So tlus is the way we celebrate 1n honor of the man who, legend says, explained the Hol y Tnmty by usmg an Insh shamrock a nd dro ve the sn a kes fro m the Emerald Isle. St. Patnck scholars wtll tell you that these two legends are t ot ally uns ubs tantiated by the facts. Somebody's always trying to rum your run. Ma~ Wife Kill Son, Themselves LOUISVILLE. Ky. (AP) A retired so.year-old businessman and his wife, leaving notes that indicated "they did it out of love'· for two college.age daughters. were found shot to death along with their lS.year·old son in their suburban home, police said. Police ca!Jed it an apparent suicide pact but would not divulge the precise wording of the notes. The cryptic explana- tion aliout the daughters was the only one police offered Wednes- day. POLICE SAID THE dead were R. Adrian Berry, 50, his wife Jean, 47, and their son Emil The boy apparently was shot as he s lept, but police s aid they could not be sure who pulled the trigger in any of the deaths Autopsies were ordered. Police said they were trying to find the daughters, Lynne and Kathy, to notify them . They were believed en route back to Western Kentucky University in Bowling Green, Ky., after a vacation in Florida. Anchorage Police Chief Roy Myers said there were two notes, each signed by both the man and the woman . In paraphrasing them, he did not say how the couple thought their deaths might help the daughters. "THEY JUST DID IT out of love for two daughters {and) said that the reason they took the boy with them. they didn't want him., to be a burden on a nyone." Myers said. A brother of the woman. "ho asked not to be identified. said he had no idea what led to the slay ings. "It caught me totally by s urpris e ," he sa id . "I 'm s hocked." The family's four small pet dogs were also shot to death. Myers said. The body of the boy was on a bunk bed, a dog at h1i; side. THE LOUISVILLE Times said Berry retired a few years ago after selling a rock quarry. The ranch-style home is on a wooded Jot in Anchorage, an affluent sub- urb of LouisvHle. He said Berry had called pohcC' about 4 a.m. Tuesday, told them the door would be unlocke<1. but did not say what "as about to happen. The man "did not sound ag1tat ed ... Myers said. "He sound<!'d calm. like a normal pe rson. He gave his name and has address and said I'll be in the back room and my front door wall be un- locked. and he hung up That's alt. He did not indicate anyUung. He didn'tsay to come." .. c • Around Country Piomiaed .. .... ._. A YOtllC 80\' rucW 11P to ..... -~ U. a .. bandMddabedawQ IOW'a llillldGI : • .,,._ Umea. I - 4Pw1,...,._ .. QUESTIONS-Residents of Clinton, Mass .. greeted. President Carter with ques- tions. George Oberg, top, asked about a transportation bill. Spec. 4 Robert Curley asked a bout military spend- ing. Francis Boyce as ked a bout unemployment among \Lietnam vets. M80 oor oa pr 11 Fiii mtkmtl , but UM OM1 lb.It llood oat were about func!a to dne1op the downtown ...... the PQllJbllity of buUd1nc • feeder road from a nearby ltdera! hiibwa.y into town and whether Fort Devens, the st.ale's lar1e1t mUltary installation, m(tbt be elated. Carter, as President of all the people, couldn't be very specific about the foluy questions. "I'm not familiar with the Fort Devens question,,, be said. "I would not promise you tonight that I TtOUld ... keep it open." But be did invite the mostly middle-aged crowd that filled every wooden seal in the old, gray·brict city ball and its graceful balcony to send their questions and advice to him at the White House. "WRITE 'CUNTON' on the en- velope and circle it," the Presi- dent said, and his aides would br- ing the letters directly to him. He w~ whisked out a side door of the building after his question and answer session, telling re· porters that he thought the ex- ercise had been productive. "I really enjoyed being here." he said, adding that he planne<i similar sessions in other parts of the country, but couldn't say how frequently. ~ Belgium to 'Aid Zaire? Invasion Moves Easttoord, Americans Sa/ e By The Associated Press Belgium may send embattled Zaire up to 30 planeloads of infan- try weapons, ammunition and other military equipment, U.S. government sources say. !''ranee also m ay provide materiel help for Zaire against an invading force described as primarily former gendarmes driven into neighboring Angola after an abortive secession effort more than a decade ago, accord- ing to these sources. town of Tshikapa, in Kasai pro- vince northeast o( K apanga, Wednesday. Secretary of State Cyrus Vance, who called the Zaire situation dangerous, said Wed· nesday that U.S. intelligence has "no hard information" to show that Cubans or any other foreign elements are involved in the in· vasion of Zaire's mineral·rich southern province. than a U.S. Air Force transport to fly medicine, rations and similar supplies to Zaire this week after the Zaire government sent an ur~nt request for aid. A second planeload is due to leave for Zaire . probably n e xt weekend, Pentagon officials said. Vance said· U.S. aid to Zaire amounts to nearly $2 million. T he Carter administration is Prol'lnQal Nixed trying to keep emergency U.S. r .......... aid to Zaire on a low·key basis, ROANOKE v OTHER •nMINISTRATION . . a . CAP> -The " emphasizing its non-weapons p b · Cb h · th us officials said Wednesday they character. res ytenan urc m e .. believe the invaders are armed Southern has turned down a pro- w it h weapons supplied by THE ADMINISTRATION used posed new declaration of faith in him three time.cod.,." • l'rom town b.alJ. Clrter' rode'* ~ ioo.,..-,..old v~ home of Edward ''OU,_QDeT .. Tboml*lft. bJ1 wllo and e!Pt children, where the President and Tim Kraft, his aJqM>lDtment.a secretary, apent the nlpt. Neipbon ••wked -one even stood on the roof of bia front porch across the street to get a better look -as Thompson spread his hands and said, "Welcome, Mr, President." CARTER MOUNTED steps to the wrap-around porch ot the t}lree-storY, home and gave Mrs. Thompson 'a kiss on the cheelt.. Then he hugged her and waved to the neighbors. He strode across the red Orlen· tal rug in the living room and gr eeted each of Thompson's children individually. Two were missing because they stayed at the town hall after Cart er had left. Thompson poked a bit of fun at the President, saying: "Some long-winded guy kept them there." FJNAU)f"'; THE President set- tled on t~.lamily's green sofa with cheese and crackers spread before him and declared, "I feel at home." He slept in one of the family's five bedrooms chosen for max- imum security by the Secret Service. Like every room in the house, it had a green light in its window in honor of St. Patrick's Day. Hero Bird Saves Woman NEW YORK CAP) - Before a pet parakeet was kil l e d b y t e enagers ransacking a Bronx apart· ment. its dying screeches alerted its owner to danger, police say A 40-year-old woman, whose identity has been withheld, was returning from a shopping trip Wed· nesday when she heard the bird shriek. Afraid to enter her apart. ment, she called police, who surprised two l.5·year· old boys. The green and blue parakeet was found dead in a heap of feathers Cubans Or by the Soviets in-h . ed · · . DC 8 1 th contemporar y language after a_ tr civilian · p ane ra er e'ght f w k ·t d1r«Uy~~~theCubaM. :~============~~1~~y~e~~~~o~~o~r~oo~1~·====~~~~~~~~~~~~~ It was reported that the in· ::;j v aders are being supporte<1 by on the kitchen floor. rO'cket and artillery fire. indicat- mg the battle. rangmg m what once was known as Katanga, may be growing in intensity. The invasion force is advanc- ing eastward from the three towns they occupied when they c rossed the border , a U.S. Em- bassy spokes man said. "A PRELIMINARY t'eport s aid the situation is deteriorating slightly." the spokesman said Wednesday. "The activity has moved beyond the three towns held by the invaders. Kapanga, Kiswenge and Dilolo. and is mov- ing eastward from there.'' He said 26 W1Ves and children o f Ame ri c an cons truction workers were evacuated from Kolwez1. east of the invasion forces. Amencan missionaries still in the invaded area were unharmed a nd well at las t report, the em- bassy said. THE NATIONAL Front for Congo Liberation, an exile guer· rilla organization which claims the invaders are its forces. said in Brussels that they took the CASH Q!i!: IN ON ~ SPRING ~ CLEANING ~ Save With a Daily Pilot March Sale Ad - Rain Relieves Drought 10o/o DISCOUNT ... 5 LINES OR MOAE FOR 3 DA VS High Wind WanUngs Issued/or Texas T~pet"CltUr#• Hl'lf\ Lew ... c. AlbUQUPrOLM"' ~· .., Anct\orftOllt Atl'9nta 80f\~ Bo\ ton ., 1n \• H 3l ·~ ,, ,~ .Ot 01 01 8rown,v•t1~ 11 ~\ l!luft,.,o s• ,. CH Ch.>•l•\lon SC ~, SI ClllC•QO "" lS C1n<lnMO H 71 Cl~v~••nd SJ 17 0 •1-FI Wortll .. 60 O.nv~r 67 .ll) 0.Croll S6 ,~ Ouh.1111 ll ,. F•l•!Mn~\ 3S " HelM• •• , . Honotutu I\ 74 Hou\ton 11 6\ J•chonvlllf .. ~A K•n~Clty 60 •• LHVe .. , 6S 41 lltlleRou ~· •• Ml•ml llO 111 Mllw•u..., 50 ,~ Mo1$-Sl,Ploul .. ,, D911yP'tlefD•~ ........... ' Mo~ov httltV II ~· 11'> ""' h~l/9 .,.,.., ,,._ .,. ,. .)0 ""' '"'' ,..,,~. 1 pm -~COOy•lllO<l.,.0,. .. 114. 11;t1u•llov e...i SoM1v 11 'VII'• cto ""' ,.,._... VOtlf t"l>V hv ~ •"' Cflt -· 10 ..... ,.., ..io.r(.., ... , .. df:t_,.., 20 lO Ccdllornla !lutt••ed. soora<1ic •h<lw.,s ar• lorec•sC n a fotlow·uo Co Ille ,_.,., wind ano tllUNleolonm !Ml ,..,,. bro1191't 1111"'9<;19 ...., 1n1unes H _, at ~IY·-molshr,. lo Sout,..rn Calltorn•• 4n 1·'1'9•r -otct Gl•ndatt tlOy was crlllcally ,,.,,,,.., wl!tn stfilcl< l>y llQhlnlno Wtdnesd•v n1011t. Tl•tr• .... ,. rt-1• ol • numcier of other miner l11Jurl"· motll'I' c•uMCI tty •1~1..sd90rls. The HMlanal WMU.W Sarvtu said !tit '''"· wind and U._rst_, ..,.,. ""-'•slow "'°"'1no cold''°"' lll•t mo'Wed across Soutllern Cttllonlla~y. I'-~ Mid • ...-er MCOft• duy front wtt IMllld11111 owr:3 ~.Citic Mid COUid ~II Sout CtllfOm• 1111• Frldll'f, 1»rlnol119 mor '''" •nd -1tlly .--., _,,.,to• "'9wwtltM. C...ial Weadwr Pertly <loud\l et tltNt th""'ltl Fri-d••· C'*'«ol ...... ~ Llollt verl•ll4• wind• 111011t ,,,. momlno "°"'" 141~ l'rkl,ty 111 tM _, '°'Mld ... IO't Cont"4 •-•lul'n wlll """ bttwHn O .,.., "· 1111eno ,,.,.. oer•curtt """ '""91 111'-" 411 tl\O ''· Tiit •tttlf ~e1urt Wiii lie,._ . , Sp ring's an Ideal time to clean out clutter. Now, with a Dally Pilot March Sale classlfled ad, aprlng's a great time to cle•n up, too. Convert your clutter to cash bt placing e claaaifled ad of five lln ea or more for three days, end, save 1 O per cent on the coat of thead.· Complete details of this apecJ•I saving• plan appear In today's claatffled section. If you-have Items to sell In the following categorleayou'll wanttotakeadvantage of• March Sale ad: Antiques Garage Sales Office Equipment Appliances Household Goods Pianos & Organs Bicycles Jewelry Sewing Machines Cameras Machinery Sporting Goods Furniture Musical Instruments Swaps Uee Cash, BankAmericard or Master Charge / Remember -10% Discount -Act Now! Mall 10ar ad °" place dUeCaly at an1 Dally Pilot ofllt't'. l•tllflQlt•ll • .. Te ......... E --e • 1ege Pay Offer l rreretised Vowed N~er W Return W 'Ce111pool' of Prison SACRAJlmn'O (AP) -Gov Edmuad BrowD Jr. ii rablnl hl sala.,-olfer tp te u.DlvenllY and ~ pl'Ofeuon, but aho propoel.na no lncnsaaea at all for slate employes maklnt $50,000 or more. Brown said Wednesday he would tpclude a 5 percent pay raise for the 17,000 faculty mem· bers on the 19 campuses in bis $15.2 billion bud.eel request for fiscal 1m.1s. He had earlier of· fered only 2.2 percent But the president of the Uruted Professors of California, Art Bierman. said, "I think that half ( ___ s_t_a_t_e __ J a loaf is better than a single slice We asked 10 percent to start catching up with our 20 percent actual loss since 1969, including two years when we got no raises Now we might be able to keep up with the price of coffee." Ho•lng Needs Told OAKLAND CAP) -Residents of low income black and Chicano neighborhoods in east and west Oakland got their chance to tell Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. in person where they need help, and they made it clear it is in obtain· ing better housing. The governor made a four-hour tour of the areas Wednesday with the Committee lor ~n All Oakland Organization as ht5 host. The committee 1s u new coalition of about 35 com mumty organizations. Conmetion Upheld LOS ANGELES CAP> A three·judge appeals court has up- held the lewd conduct conv1ct1on of Maurice Weiner, former chief deputy to Mayorr Tom Bradley. The appeals court said there were some irregularities in Weiner's jury trial m mumc1pal court a year ago but it ruled lhal they were not strong enough to overturn his conviction on misde· meanor charges. The c harges against Weiner were based on al- legations that he had made sex ual advances to a male un dercover vice officer. Probe Taeties Bit SACRAMENTO CAP> The California "Little Hoover "Com mission" says nothing has been done about year.old complaints of runaway l'Os ts cJOd mis management of the $2 6-blllion Medi-Cal program In a sometimes-heated heanng Wednesday. top officials nf Gov Edmund Brown Jr 's Health Department conceded thev ha ven 't kept closto enough tabs on costs and fraud But they denied mismanagement. 1'tU-lat PIOfl Denied LOS ANGELES (AP> A yacht owner from Beverly Hills says he never sought wec1al treatment to keep the vesi.cl off Los Angeles County tax rolli.. 111._ his testimony Wednesday before a county Board of Supervisors hedrJOli!. Arthur Kaplan acknowledged he 1s sole owner of the Portland. Ore based corporation that owns tht· yacht. but denied 1t wus created lo avoid plea:.ure hoat laxes m Los Angeles SOUTH SAN P'RANClSCO CAP) -Aformttconvlet, a bot.cblll robbery au.em pt vowtq Dft'er to Atum to the "ceupool" of priaon, 1bot bimulf fa&ally in tbe chest..,.. ly ~Y .ner holcUns a middle- as ed couple boata1e for 14 boura. Micbad Guile, 31, of San Fran· clsco, who aerved a term in San Quent.in Prilon for a robbewy con· viction, predicted his own death just hours earlier in a telephone interview with The Auociated Press. "I'm going to die,'' he said in a weary voice. "I don't want to go bact to prison for the rest d my life. I fully expect to die here." POLICE CJDEF Jim Datnnan said Guile had spent 2'.-.a hours with San Mateo County Sherifrs Sgt. Bill Sweeney and San Francisco attorney Doron Weln· berg. ~ "He told them, 'I don't want to go back to that cesspool'," said Datzman, referring to the pnson where Guile was released last May. According to the police chief. the negotiations took place by telephone with Sweeney and Weinberg in an apartment one floor below. When Guile agreed to tum himself in, be asked the men to wait a few minutes before coming upstairs. SHORTLY THEREAFTER, Datzman said Guile walked into the kitchen and shot himself once with a .9 mm automatic handeun. The woman hostage, Paufme Gomez, 61, ran out bf the apartment and told police Guile had shot himself. He died an hour later at a local hospital. The drama had started shortly after noon Wednesday when Guile and two other men were s-topped by police as suspects in a pharmacy robbery attempt at nearby Brisbane. Guile fled into the stucco building and comman- deered the apartment, taking Mrs. G<>mez, Tony Jojola, 54. and Youths Held In Riverside Terror Sp ree RIVERSIDE <AP> -Four youths were booked for 1n vestigation of armed robbery. burglary, kidnap, rape and at tempted murder after an at lorney and his family were ter- rorized and gunfire was ex c hanged with police . investigators said. One of the youths accused of breaking into the home of the law}'er was shot m the head by poli ce during the gun battle. which ended when the youths' car crashed into a stone waJI. Marvin G~n, 18, was reported m stable o d1tion at Riverside General Hos ital. Besides the wounded Green. police booked Gerald Jones. 18. Tracy Jackson. 16. and Roome Gene Watson, 16, all of San Bernardino. The lawyer's wife and their daughter were sexually assault- ed m the attack late Tuesday and were treated and released from the hospital. police said. During the attack, the attorney 4'a1d, the four gur}mcn also tied him up, put him m a closet and ransacked the house Empty Idea? Defense of Moonies Due SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A specialist in law and psychiatry has told the judge in the "Moonie trial" that the idea of "coercive persuasion" is meaningless unless drugs hypnosis or physical force were used. ' "Advertising, public schools, church and family -all of them use inducements," Dr. Harold Kaufman of Washington testified Wednesday. ''But to call them coer- cion is speculative. Coercion Is physical coercion. To go beyond that is misuse of language." KAUFMAN WAS called by attorneys for five young members of the Rev. Sun Myung Moon's Unification Church. Th.elr parents are asking Superior Court Judge s. Lee Vavuns to grant them temporary conservatorships over their children so they can remove them from the church's influence. Kaufman is expected t.o testify today that based on his examination of the five church members, be thinb they are capable of acting and th lo king of their own free wills. A PSYCHOLOGIST and psychiatrist hired by the parents botb testified earlier that al1 five young adults ex· hiblted symptoms similar to brainwash viclitu including memory Joss and a lim_ited range of emotions. • TesUmony in the week·long hearing bu centered on techniques of "brainwashing" or "coercive pensuuion" that Moon.le leaders allegedly use to recruit new memben and keep them in the church. Attorneys for the rive young church members have charged, ln tum, that the parent.a want to turn their children over to deprogrammers who will "brainwash" them away from the church. AN ATl'ORNEY for the parents is Wayne lloward of the Freedom of Tbou1ht FoundaUo, a Tucson, Arb., deprogramming organization. After hearing several boun Qf tesUrnon.y TutsdlY lftd Wednesday by a calm, composed Barbara tJnduwood1 at2:5 the oldest of tho church m1mberl, .tudce Vavu.rt. turaed down a preJlminary motion by her :atton'ley to dea, her parents' request for a conacrvatonhip. Ym'U wtt.b Gal . 0 t&man Nici • ""'°" thlll Jo-~ Md ~ .v e11 m t1w 1b0ulder du:rinl • brlef nc e of 1unfire boura earlle1" and needed Dl8lical anenu.oo ••a ploy to se&. a doctor lnalde the apartment as another hoat .. ae. There wu no Injury. Mrs. Gomez and Jojola were given medical examinations at a local hospital and were "shaken" but ln good condition, Datzman said. They refused to be in- terviewed. Dunrut the altemoon gunfire exchange, shortly after the siege began, police said an officer was struck by a bullet but was wear- ing a bullet-proof vest at the time and was unarmed. RIFLE·TOTING officers sur· rounded the bwlding and sealed off the area a block in all direc- tions. The site was next to the h eavily traveled Bayshore Freeway. G utle hart indicated from the beginning' that he wanted no harm to come to the infant, who was staymg at the apartment he commandeered. MAN DIES IN HOSPITAL AFTER SHOOTING SELF IN CHEST Mlchael Guile Administered Aid After Long Siege Ends Hours later, after negotiating with police, a window was opened and the baby, wrapped in a blanket, was lowered by Guile to an officer. Guile quickly shut the window and drew the cur- tains. an 18-month-old infant. Jose Jim in~. captive THE BABY WAS released un- harmed about mne hours later The other two suspects were quickly apprehended They were 1dentif1ed by police as Guile's half-brother. Bob Gal berth, 22, of Grants Pass. Ore. and Larry Crawford. 26, of Oakland, who of- ficers said Ul>Cd the alias or Larry Jackson. Galberth later wa:. admitted to a San Mateo hospital for treat ment of a nareup of a chrome spleen ailment Oet James Cooper said the ailment was un· related to Gal berth's arrest Guile's parole officer. Lynne Atkinson, described the gunman as "stable" when he was re- leased from prison. She said he work-e<f al lne San Francisco County Rehabilitation Center. Throughout the siege, she said, he repeatedly expressed concern for hts half-brother's well-being and agreed to release the infant m exchange for a telephone con- GUILE HAD TOLD reporters he fea'red the police would try "their sharpshooter tricks" and that he and his hostages were "crawhn~ around on the floors and stuff." Asked what else he was doing during the tense wait. Guile replied. "Answering the phones and drmking beer." 20.8 GI. n. REFRIGERAT•· !,~~~,~~h~ :""~~~~Et ~s3;r~~-- hm 2 ,, n [ Jsy t• "Jy\ or od::f outoml')hC Ice Im mo~'3r now rw lotP< ot optional ertra cost. Power sovN 'witch. od1u\toblP split gloss sholve~ A~tro Door dairy storage and od1ustobl~ mea t ~eeper. GE WASHER DRYER PAIR n.. h.1 '?r•'.>"''f I=-,,..Fo Wo·I-< f,.'.Jlo,~\ M-. Wih 1 , • .., P ... m p,.,,. cy•ln S ,.,, I, --o< & r>n P. ''"""P-p " • ... 011> •On ~"11 "' .. ~ d,,..,..,, f,..,-• ,Jtl' P~-J ,.rt P,o 4 / • i'V ,....·.,..,on AUTOMATIC CHEF MICROWAVE ~ p q •IXY•'ll.I\ C<>PO·iry, !>·ry•ln w:> I>, ,,.,,.,,.,,,,,..., or,dud n l f'OW<'r Automatic sensor to~e~ gue.swO'k '"Ub 8•1•1"'" •ofo food .J, Pn1er l l~vl'l w 1 ,honq 0 ... 10,, out of coa~.ng . I 3 Cl1 ft capacity. 6Q.m1n. timef. -. .. -~ 'i Still Lut w k lb• Oran1e County Board of 'SiUJP111~.,n11.:SC1vrsr.= a ~potnt ~>' tu re· L -'Tb8 Jlopolal W the work of a apeclaJ ~man,., formed by the~ to study the atyroclletin1 Pl opm, tu problem. What the commttteie came up with and what the Board ol Supervisors endoned was a reform pro- gram that lncluded the best of' all worlc:ts.J Homeowner exemptions would oe raised fl"Qm $1,750 to $5,000. Business inventory tax would be eliminated. Local governments would. be limited in spending increases. And the state would have to pay all costs for new programs it mandates. · 1bere's nothing wrong with any of those pro· posals. All or them are desirable. But, unfortunately, there's nothing new or dilrerent about them. Since assessed value rose dramatically last year, similar suggestions have come from every cor· ner of the state. When summed up, they resemble shifting the tax load more than true tax reform. So far, last year's ringing campaign promises of property tax reform still add up to just that -last year's ca"1paign promises. Dangerous Games Even though the Army's 20-year experiment in germ warfare is reported to have been called off in 1969. it's still a little unnerving to think that those diligent researchers were tossing real and simulated bacteria around in the air for all those years. Bacterial agents used in the simulated attacks on civilian targets were "thought to be safe at the time," Army witnesses told Senate investigators. And the open-air te~ts of disease·causing material were undertaken only after the degree of risk was "determined to be acceptable." As things turned out, some of the so-called "safe" organisims produced undesirable side ef- fects-like putting a number of San Francisco area • Why So Quiet? Citizens along the Orange Coast have been quick to criticize just about every move made by the South Coast Regiopal Zone Conservation Commission in re· cent years. But they seem strangely shy about responding to the commission's request for comment on coastal guidelines that soon will become law. The guidelines will affect all building, road con· struction and open space preservation along the coast. They are scheduled for adoption by the state coastal comtnission May 1. Despite all the earlier complaining, hearings ex- pressly called to receive public comment on the guidelines have been sparsely attended. The sessions have drawn from three to about 20 persons, mostly spokesmen for cities or environmental groups. The next-to-last public hearing will be at 9 a.m. Monday, March 21. in Huntington Beach Civic Center and the final session will be in Torrance City Hall the following Monday evening. Copies of the guidelines are available at.Jthe hearings. The \ime to examine them is now. It will be too late to complain after the state commission votes . them into law. Success ls Hard Dear Gloo1ny Gus Multi-naillion Dollar Favor To Handle , (SYDNEY HARRIS ) A friend of mine who has been extraordinarily successful in the past year, after many decades of struggle and sporadic recogni- tion. remarked to me the other day that it reminded him of the waY, we used to walk up teeter-tot~rs when we were kids. ' ou remember.'' he said. ··we d start at the ground end and walk up to the middle-then, a t t h e fulcrum, the other end would swing d ow n and sltde us to the bottom. O~e we hit that certain point. the contrap- tion would totally revene itself." This is why success seems to come so "suddenly" to many persons in the public eye. The arduous climb upward is not seen : only the downward rush of recognition and fortune as the teeter-totter makes its pre· cipitous reversal. An "overnight success"-espec1ally in the creative or performing arts generally takes about 20 )'ears or hard work. MY FRIEND, for instance. had to scrabble for money all during that period. Then, when the ball fell mto the right pocket. money began tumbling in from all sources, faster than he could count it. in a chain-reaction. Jus t as bad luck seems to en- courage more bad luck. so does good luck <even when it is un· earned> seem to generate more On those' (infrequent) days when it's raining, would it be too much trouble for the trash pickup men to place the empty barrel upside down so it isn't filled with water when I return from work? S.S. Gloomy Gitt commenh •r• wbmtned l>Y "•~den •nd do t'Ol n•c•,,•rlly rtft«t the ¥le#\ of lhe ~•iP•s>e• S.nd YOU< pel Pffve lo Gloomy Gws, O•lty Piiot. good luck. The gods may be fickle. but they are also persis- tent. When we are neediest, fortune eludes us; but when 1t rains. it pours---gold as well as water. s howering down blessings beyond all sense. It is such em- barrassments ol riches, after Ion~ years of frustration, that ac count for the manic behavior of the newly rich. Unaccustomed to such largesse. after years of drought, unstable personalities begin to spend their new.found wealth as though there were no end to it. The end. alas. is too ofteo bankruptcy within a few years. even though millions have been earned. THE AVERAGE person finds it difficult to understand how this can happen. but almost any of us are more capable or such folly than we imagine. Consider how many average citizens have come into large fortunes over- night perhaps m a lottery-and how many of them are reduced to their previous state a year or two later It seems inconceivable, but 1t happens again and again. In many ways, it is harder to handle success than to adapt oneself to medi9Crity; it is cer- tainly far harder to maintain suc- cess than to achieve it. Oil fudustry 'Giveaway' Toi~ ~ ' W ASH1NGTON -On his final day as Gerald Ford's interior secretary. Thomas Kleppe trie<,l to do a multi-million-dollar favor for his friends al the oil com- panies. The likeable, loquacious Kleppe, who enjoyed a cozy rela- ~ACK ANDERSON) Kleppe bill deeper than an oil well. But the Interior Depart- ment is still planning to release valuable eeological information to the public. This technical data, compiled at enormous cost to the taxpayers. will help the industry pinpoint the most likely oil and gas reserves. The general public ha s "absolutely no use" for this in· formation, Murphy 's memo tionship with the oil ty- coons, wanted lo give away the rights to a federal oil and gas bonanza. On January 19, he sent a bill to Congress that would al- -charges. "The only possible beneficiary of this mullt·million- dollar information 'giveaway' will be the oil indus try.'· low the companies to explore and develop the oil and natural gas at Naval Petroleum Reserve Four on Alaska's North Slope. No one is sure just how much 011 and gas is hidden under the giant ··Pet Four" lands, but it is clearly an energy g,old mine. The Navy's conservative estimate is that at least 15 billion barrels of oil and 80trillion cubic reel of gas will be found there. Interior officials argue that the information s hould be public because the taxpayers paid for it Meanwhile, in a private leller to Interior Secretary Cecil Andrus, Rep. John Moss, 0 .-Cal., urges that Pet Four not be leased to the oil industry until its renl worth is uncovered. Murphy told us the oil, gas and coal reserves "could be worth a trillion dollars." Footnote: Kleppe told our as- sociate Gary Cohn that his ac· lions were "in the public in- terest." Energy exploration should be done by private in- dustry, not the government, he said. Charges that he tried to give Big Oil a windfall "are as fallacious as a $9 bill," he said. JAMAICAN SPYING: The em- battled left-wing government of Jamaica bas sent agents into the United States to spy on promi- nent Jamaicans who are stashing their money in American banks. The official Jamaican spying allegedly was ordered by the police act1vit1es of South Korea. Iran. Chile or the Soviet Union, it is clearly on the rise. Manley has forbidden his countrymen from taking more than $50 off the island and Jamaican travelers are searched as they leave. Now the prime minister is trying to seize the assets of Jamaicans abroad. WORRIED Jamaican refugees and potential exiles have fun - neled an estimated $300 million into U.S. banks. Some Jamaicans have set up trust funds in the names of Americans to conceal their foreign accounts. Ca r ibbean island's prime One knowledgable American minister, Michael Manley, who is banker told us that at least 10 trying to shore up his shaky Jamaicans complained to him economy. The once pe~cerul isle _ ihat they were being followed to has been rac~~ by v1olenc«: a~ u .S. banks by agents of their gov- M anley has Jailed his pol.'ti.cal ernment. Other Jamaicans, opponents. an~ mot?r-rtding whose names we are protecting thugs support tng him ha~e because they fear for their lives, beaten and murdered ha s confirmed to us that they have enemies. been trailed. Some Jamaicans While the Jamaican snooping have been followed by tax in- in the United States may not be vestigators, and there was even as widespread as the secret an attempt to kidnap one exile. Yet K.leppe's bill would have leased Pet Four to the oil giants at bargain rates before its true value was determined, a windfall worth millions or dollars. As the nation's small business chief, Kleppe. on bis last day in office, threw a similar bonanza to eight oil refiners. Terrorism vs. Tourism In a confidential memo, the Navy's Pet Four projec t manager, Ric hard Murphy, sounded the alarm. "By turning over this country's largest unex- plored on·shore. . .area to the oil and gas mdustry. the United States will forever surrender its control" over Pet Four, be warned. THE DEMOCRATIC Coneress, of 'Course, buried the In island bopping the Carib- bean since Joni before Castro visitors have discovered two kinds of natives. Jamaica is a fairly typical ex- ample -an .island of 2 million about the aiie or ConnecUcut. For generations Jamaicans have been divided in their at- titudes toward wealthy out- siders. Some responded with happy anticipation of sharing the wealth .... Others reacted with envy, re- ( PAUL HARVEY J sentment. anger -the surly cab· driver, the waiter who spat in the soup. Fifteen year s ago from Jamaica I wrote of the emergence or the "Rasla," the growing number of Red·led. gan· ja·smoking, wild-haired haters. They drove the British out. Now they are driving Americans out. tourists in Jamaica last year than in the preceding year. Jamaica -when this orgy is over -will get tough with itself. When Manley has let the restive ventilate their wrath, he will im- itate the disciplinary devices of his buddy, Castro. and enforce order. Printed Word Still Beats TJI Because now the resenters - the "haters" -have the~ own prime minister. Prime Minister Manley re- gularly broadcasts lo the people his hate-the-rich rhetoric -de- noun ci n g what he talls "capitalist imper~alist foreigners," deoouncing e1en the home.grown Jamaican wealthy . THE BAHAMAS went through a similar ferment a few years ago when an all-black govern- ment took power there for the first time in 300 years. Theo, alter a while of sell-assertion, they began to re-realize their need for tourism -and managed to restore order. Only thing ls that visitors to the Bahamas are now subject to another kind of rip-off ; grotes· quely inflated prices -$2.60 for a Coke! To a large extent the images of public officials are formed in the : minds ot the public by the news • coverage or them. And despite the claims or the "boob tube news shows" the newspapers ex- ert a greater lnfiuence ln the formation ol these images than . tbe minions of TV. ' ll is probably true that most people get their first Inklings of lhe day to day :event• from •the headline reportlna of TV ne.a.. But ·the fiuby col· 9r preHnta· ~ions can never 1ub· ·,utute, let a.tone equate, with the d•· tailed reportinl prqvided by the press toccther with \be inslah\ in· to the news it offers with ln depth articles and ed.lt.orlal commen- taries. And It i1 the tenacious in· •cat.11atlta1 of the "ink ata.tned Tireltbel/' DOl lbe TV lbowmcn, ttbicb uaccwtn a.ad boldl tlP to ••1llpt the actloa ol poUUc:IW knd bureaucrat. thfteby k°'Pbl8 4.llhCDMtl Ud chScue17 lD tOY· ~rnmemat• mlDJmum. . Boc1111e.tele9laloa 1t.aUom are, ( EARL WATERS ) licensed by the FCC there is a tendency for them to be less critical and more cautious in "re- porting." This often results in a sheeplike coverage of public figures. The image of these of- ficials as presented by TV may not always be flat.terln1 or adulating but most of their stories are presented dellcatel31 enou&h so they do not harm but Newspapers of!er a much broader selection of views through more extensive report- / ing. Beyond that they give their readers a variety of opinions in syndicated columns authored by writers of note whose outlooks dltfel' considerably. And most newspapers will publish their featured columnists' offerings Teliglously even though a column may voice a viewpoint diametrically opposite tbe newapaper•a own editorial peel· t!on . rather benefit tboae in offlce by AN OUl'STANDING example building name JdentificaUon. of bow widely coh.unnisb may dl.aa~ b to be 1oen ill two ,.. EVEN IF that were riot so lt re-cent columna dealln1 with Gov· malna that a TV newt story la OO· ernor Jerry Brown. Rowland ly 1een m.omentarlly ancl onco Evan.a and Robert Novak, who alred ii C: forever. New1paper JolnllY pt"Oduce a WuhJngton col· 1tories me a matter ot re-umn 'bUt frequently attay into tho cord to be quoted, reread and r6-blnterland1, lff Brown at a circulated by read<1rs to lhosa "most f uctnaUn1 youna poll ti· who missed it tha lint lime clan" who ••teem• impelled around . Tho y p r o vi d • a toward pro-bualnetl b1 the ab.eer cumulative report on tho conduct loalc at hit own phiJoeo~." orthOHlnofOce. Tbe:r find .. Jlrown'• q\&let mew. ln TV tho oplnJon1 ex1>resnd, to warmi).11 1tate'1 chJt\y "-'· whether tlMy a,. direct or by ln· n cUmate !Ddkatea hla t>.Utl nueado throuah the clever l'Olce that. Jobs a.re •ttteratect1n1mad· lnOectlom of tbOM readW. the ·11 bYJll'iY CiPttal. ti • non, are n.arro.ty llmlttd tO ~ .ApSNum11 mtbUtild, t.bn r. "ancbonnen" ot the net,.-crb ported tbat "Wcr found·~btm· • n d th~ l o c at 1 ta t { o o • ,: '· cbarac:terlatlclllJ auberi.Dt and irreverent, thJnktng on his feel as few politicians can" and con- cluded that "his governorship is marked by a genuine effort, transcending rhetoric, to reduce and rationalize the role or gov- ~rnme.ol." BUT THE highly articulate and acerbic San Francisco Chronicte columnist Charles McCabe refers to him as "the ap- palling JerTY Brown." Describing what be Unn1 "the anUcs or the Boy S.ocrates" he says Brown's vlail r.o San Francisco's abetto "wu tho kind of elaborately stafed psuedo event that even a Ho lywood flack mltbt ba ubamedot." "Tbe mystery ot it,.. writes McCabe. "ls bow the 1overnor's popularity cont.lnuu. Every day In -.irnoat every •&Y, tbe guy bllled hhn.aelf as the furu of lowered expectations 1~ds re-veal~ .. a cynlcal poll~ ot the old eat acbool." . • From •uch dlvcrsent view:. point.a readers can "~h the ·Judp:lmta and rUcb r own conclu:tJC1111 •• Unllk• telulaiDDt tb prtldjd Wclid .. rutellb ami rH4 aao r•f•r back and Nfrelb dMitJ' m4morta u to pre. clle\y Wba1 wu WrltteO. To the preconditioned rtbel it sounds like an invitaUon to steal and to rape and to kUl. JAMAICA'S climate is as near perfecl. as Hawaii's-and some bandier. So more than 7,000 Americans have vacation homes there. But now those beautiful homes overlooking Montego Bay are locked and bolted and f enc.ed and guarded by largedoC•· When Lady Sar•b Spencer· Cburchlll was as11ulted and robbed in her fashionable wtoter home reeenUy the exodua was accelerated. Now the "For Sala" slgna are everywhere. In the past elebt •19ek1 the number ol. British subject.I ap- plylnf for perml.stfon to leave Jam.ica bas SQOre than doubled. It 'a not ao much "anU1")lu." violence as It I• "anti rt ch ... It ii not exclusively outaidera who are ,lerrorlud and beaten •ad rob~; it'1 &n1bod1 ~ llva well. ~ native J9ma.lean1 wbo cu lllOtd to set out are do- Ui110. • Tb•n were U,000 fewer With Mexico in ferment and visitors there Increasingly en- dangered, I'm watching severaJ indicators indicate that Americans are about to re- discover America. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Robm N. Wttd, ~ Tllomol KttVU. tdztor .. Barbaro f{reil>rch. Edltonat P~• Editoir Tiie editorial page of the Daily Piiot 11eeks to Inform a nd • allmulate readers by presenting oo this page dlverae commentary on topic• of Interest by syndical· ed columni1ll Md cartoonists, by • providing a forum Cor readers' vlows and by prH~nllna this 1 newapeper's <minions and Ideas on cuttcnt topic.'11. The l'dltorlal oplnl~ 0( the nelly Pilot appear only tn th.-t'Clltorial rolumn at Ute top of lhe P•llt-Opln1ons cx- pruaed by tho totumnlllt.I and c;.artoonls~ and letter \r.'r1tfrt •rt t~r own and no endone.me:nt of thelr \i.w• by ,the Dally Pilot 11\ould be lnrel'nCI. Thursday, March17. l.977 \ ... -l&&aA Pl.ANT bAd bem called b*'9 tbe reafClllal board recat1y became o1.-...He1Mdbt -U.~wuba '"procwwwotcammtaa '' DAlllOl:S MID 80AD BAD recdted DO HeN&d tH.M odon were Wl\I. the board complabsta about odon rectcdt7. •ouJd bel1D Oeld tat.. 0D0a. A 8llSLL THAT V&H .a MW• plut "You rmi tell lta 1 aewap plant then, but the "Odon _,.. llLDct of a cllMeult lh1q lo trace, operat« delcrtbed u ''naus atiq. •· amell la moni one of chlortoe. DOt aewaae," he they'ri a trlD.iltory lh101, ••Del ant)' Hld. T1M smell la obvious. said. Where lt ct>mes from la not. He aald ll odon were detected in tile Coast AND, D ARED FOB aESIDENTS of the The mo1t likely aupect la the South Eut Hl1bway area it wu "more likely. the one across area lo Ulbt by keeptna a 101 of lbe times of odors Reciooal Reclalf'atlon (SERRA) sewage treat· the way (the SJ:RRA plant>, they're ao much big-and wind direction. ment plant locatid a couplf hundred yards up Del 1er than we are." "I personally react to odors because I would Obis~ from Paclfic Cout Highway. i..din Delaney, supervising engineer for the bate to UYe next to a sew a1e treatment plant that E1tKUIM Ottlt:N: 7112 Ml"19t AN., Huntington 8ndt, CA 12147 South«n C..111otnl• "-fllon-1 0"10N: · •1<40 Long ISeaeh Blvd., Long ISeach CA 90807 . 8955 Valley Vie~ St .. Buena Pa~1 CA 90820 fa)· 20715 S. Avaloff Blvd .. Car9ol\, lA 80148 • 1001 E. lmperlal Hwy., La Habr.a, CA 80831 ttllAL 1095 lrvlne Blvd .. Tu1lln, CA 92980 "°°'"" 235 N. Citrus Ave., w .. 1 Covina. CA 91793 u~ Tbe nine m1•11on 1allons a day treatment plant San Dteeo Reitonal Water Quality Control .Board, ameUed," Delaney said. is OpeFJled b1 the city of San Juan Caplsttano and ~::'.~~~~~=-=-=:..:=~~==-==:__~==::..~==~=~----------~~::;::=:===::==~====;.:=:=:=:~~ treats wastes from Lacuna Niguel, Dana Point Capistrano Beach and from Mission Viejo areas. ''THE SMELL DOESN'T COME from us," Don Langton, SERRA plant operator, said. ''I invite anybody lo corhe over/ and rind an odor, I can't,·· Langton added. Langton declined to say for the tecord where he thought the odor might be coming from. Joe Gonzales, official with the Dana Point Sanitary District, said, "I doo't think so" when asked if tht.district's sewage pump stations could be responsible. HE ALSO SAID HE DIDN'T think the septic • tank of a nearby motel-restaurant complex was the culprit. Gonzales called the odor nauseating and he said his ~trkt has had "numerous calls about the odor but they are all referred to the city of San Juan because they are the only ones with a treat· ment plant large enough to create'the odor." lo the nearby vicinity is the Capistrano Beach Reuni t e d AP Wirtpltelo Conductor Leonard Bernstein and bis wife, Felicia Montealegre. go over the score of a benefit concert at New York's Lincoln Center. Separated since last fall, the Berns- teins were reunited for the performance of Sir William Walton 's ''Facade " C& t o Stay Open WASlilNGTON CAP> The Federal Com- munications Commission is rejecting requests to designate more citizens band radio channels for specific purposes. The FCC said it would continue to reserve channel No. 9 for emergencies and assistance to motorists, but said the other 39 channels would re-main open for general use Although it has received numerous requests to alter its policy, the FCC said designating more channels for specific uses could cause additional overcrowding on the air for the nation's estimated 20 million CBers H eat er B an Weighed LOS ANGELES <AP> The City Council has again set an effective dale for an ordinance banning unvented healers in res1denhal buildings. The new date is Oct. 1. 1978. The issue has been before the council 10 one form or'Cl nother s ince 1966. A number of effecttve dates have been set, but none has yet been enforced. dinners tor the oriceOI I Sp11P<; 1~ Cl'll'l)ril( nq lh" f1r' t .;'1'1•V"'~ Jry ct llY' (l('rr '''fl of 1'~ C:ost.1 I.' 1 , n.1 11111r\I> II Re:l1111• r.t~ Wt!h la •~'lr. II• .11 t t Y"1 TW(l DtNN[R<; l'()q 1HF. PRICE OF O' .r ' t1 ur \\ y cl s..,~,og 'tn.ln~s· IOI be!flg our cust~r ~-----------., I Tiit 1111y rtqul1tnttnt1 111 11111 ytu b<1n9 th11 COllptft with you 1nd bllh I 1111111 tnutl h tlll HIN Tiie Twt for Ont tlltr Is Otod :rt Spires llHt111ruts I Ill Ctal• Mtu an• !Miit tllly 1nd lllcludtt ''' Sor~n SIHk. filh ••• ~1 I er llNsl .. ,. Tiie Twt Ftt OM tllt1 enos March JI, 1977 r .. fw Ont Diftw Sptti.11 1111111 bt ctnsu11114 en 1111 f"'tllllstt allil .,, ''"" it.. I mr· iitiiii'ii Eii~ sa.75 I I A lllt 1·"2 •z.. ...... (~ff ••'Pf) llOM •"' • .., ., ..... I cllolCI ,t l'Otl&O. wttt'*'· rtll IM llutttr. I -~IYllPS TWO FOR '2.251 I I ..,., ~'9:,,,,, ... ,, .... ," •• ,... I ,,,.,,, ,J11ttttwttrftr11uce. 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Folds flat for travel. Cl1lrol~ Klndqeu9 deluxe 3-wey h1lr1etter with 20 assorted size rollers. Places more moisture on the hair for longer-lasting se~. Built-In storage compartment. On-off switch, ready light. UH your JCPenney Charge Card. r t .. . • • ' I I • I • I • ' I • I t I I I I l . \ t " ~ ' I ' ~ I ' I • • , 'UIJ.l!RtON QLENDAL! 'OAW ltfA' • N6WftOAT aiAOH t NOATHllDOI! WEST COVINA WHittWOOO t .. THE ANNUAL RACE ALMOST died of disin· terest two years ago when the defending SDYC could g(•t only four challengers. Last year the Catarnarans-€-lash· At Bridge Regatta The 14th annual London Bridge Regatta at Lake Havasu City, Ari~. is still scheduled for April 22-23-24 featuring at least six classes of catamarans. The biggest contingent will be the P-Cats with more than 50 expected to make the long trek to the Colorado River resort, according to Owen Minney, head of Westport Marine, the Newport firm which manufactures the speedy cats. • · Th<' only catamaran class that will be missing from this year's London Bridge Regatta will be the Hobie Cats which will be holding their own regatta on Lake Havasu May 6-7·8. The Hobies alone will have more than 300 boats on the lake. In addition to the P-Cats at the London Bridge affair. there will be such other high-performance catamarans as the NACRA 5.2, 18-square meter, Sol Cat, Prindle Cat, Alpha Cat and others. The regatta is sponsored by the Lake Hava~u Yacht Club which 1s sending out mv1tations th•~ week for the b11:: wc(•kend Bushwacker Wins Sunset Club Race Bushwackcr, s;uled by Bob O'Brien, Hunt· mgton Harbour Yacht Club, was the Class A winner m Sunset Aquatic Yacht Club's PHRF Series. Class B winner was Carol K, sailed by Karl Kotz, Seal Beach Yacht Club, and the winner in the no spinnaker div1s1on was Bucky Beaver, Bob Lane. Seal Beach Yacht Club. Summary- CLASS A 1, Bushwacker: 2. Wind Wagon. Ron Kennedy, Sl BYC; J, Red Baron. Bill Hartge, HHYC CLASS B 1, Carol K. NO SPINNAKER l. Bucky Beaver, 2, Ricochet. Co /Faz:Y. Navy YC . J. Forget Me Not, John Dnskcr. I.SF. $1,000 Fine Paid SACRAMENTO <AP 1 A Los Altos nurslng home has paid a $1,000 fine after being cited by the state for taihng to provide emergency medical care for a patient who later died, off1c1als said Accordmg to the cittlt1on. staff members al the Los Altos Sanitarium waited 75 mmutes before ob- taining a physician for a patient in "physical dis-tress " ( I tNOIYIOU.-l CEDAR STRIPS covm S6JS 11,.,, -.. llUI WOllM WITHGRIU ~ KITCHtN IAIH OtWO~K AIEA "GREAT FOR WORK BENCH! MASONITE 1 % " SOLID CORE SLAB DOORS ~~~~~78'".. 59~! RUSTIC PINE .OAltDS l"a12"' 30:. :: ..... BIG 14" WHITE CEILING LIGHT VINYL COVERED SHEET.ROCK ,., x4'x8' S I 92 O"ILY 13S>iEET5 li. '2'x4x9 s21• ONLY 60 '>HEE IS li. t!z"x4'x10 s240 0Nl Y IM "i>iEF 1'"i li. 5/8"x4'x8' s2s• O"ll Y 36 S>iEE TS f4, 5/8' x4 x9 s2aa ONl Y 311S>iEET5 EA. ';;t:==:..J 5/8'.x4'x10' $4>20 :-ONLY 101 S>il!ETS ~ SAlEf J>laJS~ -~.... . . . lllGlt lllart •PKlalilt.I ml&trt •sr.. with t.bat ata:&ea•-• er Dr. 'fbeodoN o. Klumpp ct .. Yon, med)QI eomu.ttant to U.. Pres dcat'• Coundl oa Pb7alcal l'ltDea and porta. UEaaBE. TIDY MY, A IJEA&T tonic. Jt helpe to prevent heart attacb. It probably male• attacb leu Hvere tr they do occur. And caref\llly pracrtbed, graduated exettisea are one ol their antidotes a1alnat another attack. The American Heart Association says regular exer cise "is at least prudent" as a hope of avoiding heart attacks and making heart transplants or artificial bearts unnecessary for potentially millions of men and women. No one can actually prove that exercise is pro- tective. SOME DOCTORS, INCLUDING THOSE wbp don't exercise, say exercise is not necessary, or that it might even be harmful. True enough. Joggers sometimes fall dead. So do some tennis players. But so also do some golfers. wh06e exercise may be no more than a leisurely walk, if they don't bop aboard golf ca.rts. About half of aJ I h«:art ( ) attacks occur during &.a'DJCINE 'sleep. irPJ _ ''Hard work never ________ ___. h urt a healthy heart," said the late Dr. Paul Dudley White, the eminent heart specialist who championed bicycling and hik- ing and life-long exercise. lie died at age 87 from a stroke. AT AGE 88, EULA WEAVER OF SANTA Monica, keeps winning gold medals for running mile and half-mile races in Senior Olyrw>ics events. She has six so far. Seven years ago, she was crippled with con- gestive heart failure, anginal pa.ins, had galloping high blood pressure and severe arthritis. She followed an ultrastrict diet designed ST. • to~ her Anery-doUlnl di. atbl!l"Olll'..,..., IJs.ttlaJ. ty, 1be CCJUld waUc only 100 t before bealt patna hJt. Gradually lncreeint walkin1 exerclle wu Pft- srrlbed, then later ahe turned to JoUinl and run· nin1. PU11KIN SAYS HE TlllND THE vleorous ·exercise can be credited with 10 to 20 percent of her remarkable transformation. The major benefll, be says, came from the diet of 10 percent protein, 10 percent fat, and the rest carbohydrates, with salt restricted, and no cholesterol. Director of the Longevity Research Institute founded a year ago in Santa Barbara, he tells of other men and women wbo he reports have re- turned to health, some having avoided anticipated coronary bypass surgery. Pritikin bas some medical supporters as well as critics who be says will be answered soon when be publishes research results. CARDIOLOGISTS BLAME THE SOFT, inac· tive way of life for sabotaging Americans' hearts. We ride rather than walk a few blocks. We have power steering and power lawn mowers and elec- tric can openers. Machines perform our labors at work or at home. We watch rather than participate in sports. Less physical· activity means spending fewer calories, so too many Americans "bank" more calories as savings than they spend, with resulting bulges or outright obesity. Being overweight is not considered healthy for the heart or body in general. ., "Physical inactivity should be fought as much as crime in the streets, and as a disease as serious as cancer and tuberculosis," says nr. Zenonas Danielevicius in an editorial in the Journal of the American Medlcal Association. EXERCISE BURNS CALORIES. A REALLY brisk walk can withdraw five to six call>ries per PATRICK'S - I GRASS SHEAR 399 Coated bldClr for fast, clean cuts. comfortable cushion grip handle~. 19 ANVI L PRUNER 466 Upper cutting bladP coated to prevent sap butldup, Safety lock_ 22 DA Y SPECIALS WEED EATER@ CUPPIE TRIMMER 2911 Trims quickly. easily .ilong walks, driveway • ..lences. Specially treated fishing line cuts 8" path. 3)7 LOPPING SHEAR 7ss Sharp pol1sh1•tl steel fo, sn a ppinq large branch'i_s ec1s11y. WoOd handles. 122 266 HOSE NOZZLE ,\01us1 from line spray tu 1et \trt'ilm Brass ·STORE HOURS: Mon. thru Fri. 9.9 Sot. 9·6, S.. IM I AIL SPl:CIAUSTS WA&N AGAINST sudden ventures into strenuous exercise ca your own. Have a physician check your be art and 1eneraJ fitness and consult bow best to be&in. Recommended are exercises that involve the large muscles of the legs, to improve circulation and work for the heart. This means physical move- ment as lo brisk walking, jogemg. tennis, swim- ming, dancing, table tennis and the like. An~ of course it belpa ii the activity is Cun rather than Just dutiful. Isometric exer cises, opposing muscles against one another, or '(Veight lifting can build stronger "What do you gel out of all this? You spend hair the time with the seal or your panlS in the snow, and the other half with your nose In the ice." muscles, but don'l confer the same kind of benefit r;;;;:;:;;;;:::::====~----------- for the heart, the specialists say. ,., Money's SAVES your money Over-all, the majority opinion is that you help your heart by beinl physically active, at work or ,. Worth play or both. In the DAILY PILOT , f SAVE 13% ARCHER ® CB WALKIE· TALKIES Reg. 14.95 Pair 6().3020 Save. on the original. patented Archer Space Patrol®, ready to use on Ch. 14. Up to %-mile of talk power. Join in the fun! SAVE 40% SAVE CB TWIN TRUNKER ANTENNA! Reg. 29.95 71% "ALL EARS'' 10 ORIGINAL HITS WITH A CB THEME Rog. 3.49 99~ S0.6002 s1-eoo2 • No llol• tnountltto • M u1lo for £119ry T11t• • t11ohd by our 16 ., .. ,. Pop, ltod. Soul. COflntry of Cl K11ow-How • l•o/111/11•"1 •t R•dio Shick 7~~5 39~~ The Realiatlce CTR.JO makea cassette recording easy. All the features of S 89-$100 units: auto· record level, full auto-atop, con- denser mike, tape counter, cue/. review! AC cord, optional car adapter or b•tteries. \ t 0 ' ' • • . . , • . , ' I ' • MEW , SERVICE MINI TRUCK ,,_ __ rfi;~~;;;-; for PklmlMrs, aectriclan1. Lcaidscapers, Pool MaintaiMn, .tc. 11 an EconoMlcol Ntw CIM.y Lu•! ~~~$4968 /Check tties~ int«estilMJ features: • , '""° L f"' • H · l'~ 1··"~,,..... • '-) r 'Y'i • M'J" rl T l'l'.m "' • W• ·o $..""' T ·~ • 11 .. ..,.s...,,~ • M>:i:hln•e<..:ir • b•"' .Y decor p<g • Soec Rovol tft>1;'Y &xiv • . 21'271 1'1<'7 BUY OR LEASE NOW! · HOWARD· c•evrolet Do•• and 9'1ail Sts. NEWPORT IEACH (Near lrbtol and Jcnbol"I HEW CARS USED CARS 833-0555 833-0116 TV Opera Opposed Hot Lips By MIKE SILVERMAN NEW YORK <AP> - The Fonz and Hot Lips had unusual competiuon from a pair of Parisian lovers named Mimi and Rodolfo who sang out their bittersweet story in the first Jive telecast from the stage of the Metropolitan Opera House. ' Top on Tour B7 JAJID .. toN U ALB. N.Y. <AP, -N~ to d like The E..11-. and tbal 'a wby Ute Calllonlia rock band b.u become one oltbe t»u•t~cert at. tracticm in the United Sta.lei. The srou~. wbicb appeared here Tuaday nt1h1 on the eecmd stop of a lS·d•te tour, bu had a 1trln1 of bit reeotds make it in both the rock music market and on the country and easy listening charts. THAT BJlEADTB OF APPEAL wu obvious in concert here, as teen-age girls swooned to ballads Uke "Best of My Love" and "Lyin' Eyes," while older fans pounded the Nassau Coliseum floor for hard-rockers like "Already Gone" and "Life in lhe Fast Lane." . The newest member of the sax-year-old 1roup, Joe Walsh, suppli~ much of the blisterin& guitar sound on thote songs and on his old AM-radio hit, "Rocky Mount.a.in Way." Walsh, a veteran of the J ames Gang and his own Barnstorm, replaced Bernie Leadon, who quit the band last year. THE EAGLES WERE FORMED IN 1971 when guitarist Glenn Frey and drummer Don Henley quit their back-up positions to Lin.da Ronstadt lo form their own group. They remain the leaders of the group, augmented by Walsh, Randy Meisner on bass and Don Felder &n ·guitar. , Thefive-me'tnber band has been tagged as aloof and remote from their audience, and the 22 songs performed here did come out assembly-line fashion. But the Eagles have never been more popular. with fans quickly snapping up the 58,000 seats for the group's three New York dates, and the material from the new "Hotel California" album was re- ceived as enlhusiastically as earlier albums. rr. tm Chma by Limoges, Wedgewood, R06enthal d!ld others; line European .md American cut crystal and art glclss; porcelam hqunnes; broflU:jS; hne • furruture; chandeliers and one of the ldrgest dLSpldys of fme jewelry in the southland. Everythu¥;J from 20 carat cbamond sohlaires to gold neck chains • FREE ADMISSION. TERMS: &nkAmericard, Master Chdrge, Personal Check, Terms. .ADDmONAL INSPECTION HOURS: Mon., Tues. & Fri. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Sat. 12 noon to 5 p.m .• Sun. 2 p.m. lo 5 p.m. · AUCTIONEER: Art LeV100 The opera w as Giacomo Puccini's "La Boheme," shown n a -tionwide Tuesday night ------------------------------------------- by the Public Broadcast-1-- i n g Service. The performance was seen i by more people than the total number who had , watched the Mel's pre· vio u s 500-plus performances of the work. The nearly 3th-hour presentation was good entertainment - calculated both lo satisfy discriminating opera buffs and to make con· verts of viewers who got caught switching the dial l between "Happy Days" and "MASH." The key ingredient was belie-vability . Everyone on stage was involved in the drama - and it showed under the constant ca mera closedps that gave the home viewer a better vantage point than even a $30 box seat could buy. SOLID BRASS HOSE NOZZLE ~ .Spray a s tream !-,.../ that.' s full or light, I I . d . ' / / wi e or narrow ••• It s 'Ill//. 'rt adj us t alc> l e . :/ l .saves water because "'''' you can turn it off ' ,,, r 1 ,_ a t the nozzle ! ",, ,, ' .. BRENTANO'S .Sweep it off ... don 't hose it off. . . · HIBACHI ~~ special 288 A Mauv1llan, Inc. Company ) WERE 56.50 • 530 I I I ·1 St.ff b · tl .Hibachi a hambur ger ~.::::.......:..:-~ • 1 ri s cs t k __.-::'-. ,......._..._ -:--..;:~~..., 5 e P l / or as ea • ~, ......... -........ :.-..~--... ~ w e c can . , .. ~-....... -::.. -~......_ ..;--/ . Includes h dl / (Don t u se the stove.) '~"""-~--;:::;;--{l an c . ~ ,~-=--- 1 \/ 388 h .Hibachi on the patio '-.~ \. fl I\ -> ~-// . b . ~......._, \. I _, ..-·~ ~-__ .•. hi achi on the beach {-...:::::-~---o--'\.....: !//J!!iJJ/,''ifjliJ/jfiiTi!. -::;:::-;, ···hibachi at a p icnic _1 /_/ ____ ~fl/lff//!!}/§/(!fiffffi~'1.l'i ... hibachi evei;ywhe re. ~~:\ ~.L!!J.11{/ " • Choose the s i ze for you. ~---~') ~ ~j 495 ---lOxlO ~~. ~1\ 50 FOOT FLEXOGEN HOSE R ::::-----::./J)) . Finest hose .. ,~ 7ftS __ _ ~~--~===~~/ available.:. ( ~ lOxlS irl'.........-truly tops! r" . r f we s;y so, you can bel ievc us! ~ ',--:.,'-=\. I 2ftS _ ;;o;t~o~g6do 95 need? , -~ ~ -Triple \.--~ ~ WEED EATER ll'r-:::==-: -'I TRASH BAGS f • so ft. -999 : n~1 I f;~ I th~1~:id~~ \ \ ·~::ds :~:::y g:t:~ : I I l•U;f?.R /,~ 1, ••• fill up \ \ nylon line. _ ISftS l!J~\·Jl!J UJ.0 the bags . \\ .A super low price ••• 75 ft . ~ \___ _33 gals. \\ a super lawn tool. · 1 t f d -\ • Portable .•• move it is ~ o o wee s! \ _ around. • Kordi te heavy load \} \. s · 1 15 H.D bags I i1. pecia Reg . 3.49 c. , . '-r'.2288 ('-<.? I /~'0·:::: ...._ 32 GAL. ~ ~ TRASH CANS l I l I \ I l j l 1 ·Now 5 1,.5 4'~ 249 ll r1 ~11Pr1~ nrin 11 y~~~:fo~hl \ \ JI/ the one the wind l 1 1 I 11 II blew away! ·, 11 ///} 1 by Loma . TRAS H COMPACTOR BAGS ~'....::_-... 688 .Sizes to fit GLIDDEN '[l-~~~~ SPREAD SATIN I 1 ~~~ll~ most colors I I OOlj® l"'I 6 99 1 gallon ~~~ I -I SPECIAL PURCHASE OM CHEMISTRY EDUCATION HISTORY MATH ECONOMICS SOCIOLOGY GOVERNMENT MORE BRENTANO'S Soutll c ......... lJJJ s.... ........ c.... Mtttl Helnl .... 10.t W . ICM, S-. 12.I, ...._ ~7UI ( most compactors LIDS t 1 ... rec angu ar . We have 'em ... do you need 'em? and round. . Strong enough mo st to stand the squeeze. fi~~l lhRl\SH \1 io Bags 1;1~~~r~:~~-'I u[C' .=-1 ~1 279 f 1'.,!;s.' ll tlsJ.Fjl I~ .--1\ GLIDDEN ~ HOUSE PAINT .... colors l gallon ~9 CORONA DEL MAR, 3107 E.COAST HIGHWAY / 1 KILOMETER SOUTH OF MacARTHUR (about 8 blocks) I 673-2800 • ; Talca 01'*!r ; Marine Air Force Reservt:" $. Lt. Col.· Nicholas J . Adamo of Newport Beach has as· ~ sumed command of Head· • quarters and Mainte nance Squadron 46 at El Toro Marine Corps Ai r St ation Oran~e County z ., coout'Yiua11 on. mtt.s ror tow f •IO ha • cut 01' ill em 't natural .. and eledttc y • &llJDpticm • pert: t, t'OUO\y ol· flclab claim. AAd county au~rvutora arl' Ulttt\I atepe to l.ty Md HH a lll· Ue more. Tbe board accepted an e1&ht· point conservation pro1ram aimed al savine energy and waler. The proeram includes -TURNING UGHTS on in county offices as employes ar rive rather than earlier to save 10 percent on lighting costs. -Adjusting flush va lves or &n· s talling waler displacement bot· lies in toilets to cut water use. -Trying to cut b!ck on night custodial work to complete as .. much as possible during normal 'A-Orking hours. -llatial lb.al te, but not nceulve U1bUn1 i.t tn· st a Ii.ct. -IN9TALLINQ PLOW reatrtctora on the 323 1howers ln county correcUooal facilities to cut water and water heatinr costs. Replacing ea.s·fired pilot lights with eJectric ignitors to .save 3.$ million cubic feet of gas at a $5,000 annual costs County officials said the shower restri<(,ors may cost up to $9,000 to install and the electric 1gnltors may cost up to $45,000. Guaranteed Satisfaction A• ro OUAllFY A P•ICI! Or w• will r•lund your mon•y or ••cll•ng• your t1re• w11llm 10 d•Y• of purch•••· Ju•t r•turn your t1r•• tor •n •Jlch•ng• or r•f11nd. (Llm1tH1 ~,rr•nty} ORANGE COUNTY lo loul The 133,031 will provide operal- lnl tunda tor lb• center for four months, then county otricialt will evaluate it.a success and conaider renewing the contract. INVITED TO PERFORM AT THE WHITE HOUSE , APRIL 29th. ESPLENDOR AZTECA SEE THEM MAR CH 20th/CAROUSEL CT. $3.3 Million Road Jobs Set Seventeen Or ange Coast street·building pro jects carrying a SJ.2 million pricetag are among joint city.county construction projects planned to· day. 10 -The countywide program will cost $6.3 million and will be fin anced by the county's share of a seven-cent gasoline sales lax Orange Coast proJct·l~ and their amounts by CJ· ty include IRVJNE: Alton Avenut.' from Cul ver Drive to Jerfrey Road. $<!43~. ll<.inard Avenue from the railroad to Walnut AH>nuc, S13l ,OOO . Irvine Center Drive from Cul ver to J effrey, $494,000 ; J effre:y from Old Barran ca Road to the San Diego Freeway, $28,000, and Walnut fr om Culver 700 feet east. Sl8,000 NEWPORT Bt:ACll : Coa!\l I hghway from the Santa Ana River to 57th Sln•et, S265,000. San J uan Capis trano, work o n Del Obispo Street and Aguacatc Road, $73,000. HUNTINGTON BEACH: Center Dnve from Huntington Center to Beach Boulevard, $140,000; Lake and Main streets to Garfield Avenue, $266,000 ; Main and Gothard streets from Mansion Avenue to Ellis Avenue. $397,000. Also Saybrook Lane from Santa Barbara Lane to Edinger Avenue, $153,000; Slater Avenue from Goldenwest Street lo Newland Street, $250,000; Spr- ingdale Street from Rolsa Avenue to Glenwood Drive. $130.000 . Yorktown Avenue from Delaware Street to Beach. S66 ooo FOl'NTAIN \Al.l.E\': Slater Avenue from Eucli d Strel't to Ncwhopl' !'>treet, S00,000 COSTA MESA: ~upenor Avenue from West 17th Stn:ct tu tht• !\Outh t•1ty hm1ts. $330,000 SEAL 8EA(.'ll : Westminster Avenue from Seal Beach Boulevard to f\ol sa Chica Road, $165,000. Jn addition to the Sfl 3 m1lhon m street improve. ments the program will involve another $2.8 million for bridge projects Those include Sl m il lion to help pay for a new Adams Avenu<' bndgc over the Santa Ana River on tbe Huntin~ton Beat•h Costa Mes a bollndary and $550,000 for a new bnd~e on Wa rner Avenue in the Huntington Harbour area Park Study Funds Dwindle What earlier was ~om~ to be a $200,000 consul· tant•s study of Orange County's regional park system has been whittled lo a SlS0.000 study by county supervisors The chopping came alter county staff members said they would need to hire two employes at a cost of about $50,000 to assist the consultant dun ng the- 18-month study. Supervisors then agreed unanimously that the study should be trimmed by an equal amount. The board has not yet hi red a consultant. The purpose of the study is to assess park needs. It would involve advice from community rroups and a citizen survey. Nature Talks Set By History Group The Natural History Foundation of Orange County is s ponsoring three lectures at the Natllral History Museum in Santa Ana Heights. Interested persons are Invited to the free talks on "What is a Fossil," Saturday; "Archeology of Orange County,'' March 26 and "Geology of Orange County," April 2. Tbe lectures be1in al 11 a.m. followed by a IUided tour of the museum located in Ute Bayview School al 2S31 Orchard Dr. · Ocean Day Planned ,. "Ocean Industry Day" sponsored by Orange COa1t College's Marine Techno101y Society Satur- day will feature presenlatJona aboul the Job market in ocean-related industries. · ..COm9any representatives from ocean-oriented field• will m~e the presentaUoDS. Adml11Jon ii fru. The ptlbllc ls fnvlted to attend the aymposlum scheduled from 9 a.m. to l p.m. ln OCC's Fine ArU Hall, room 116. on the 6.00/13 ( A71/13) e.95/14 (C71/14) 6.50/13 ( 175/13) C78/14 (17S/14) 1988 21so 2388 E78/14 24ss ( 115114) F78/14 2419 ( 1t5/14) 078/14 2688 (205/14) BRACKETS I l INDICATE OTHER SIZES THAT MAY FIT BUT DOES NOT IMPLY COMPLETE INTERCHANGEABILITY l!Z£1J I llOl 1J I tsl 14 CTIH4 el.c•wall °"'' WIHYIWAlU Sl.00 llTIA H78 /14 2888 215114) 078/15 2688 (205/15) H78/15 2888 (215/15) • L78/15 3 5 88 (DS/15) e SIZE: L71/15 WHITEWALL ONLY .,..,, .. ". IU0to l30lh4 ll l •t EconomJI Tire Spet·ial! Tl.BEl..,ESS TIRES SUPER! LOW LOW PRICES O.\· • • • BE1.1·1;n tlT' ., ''' ti II '1LI 7.10/ 15 (G78/15) 1988 7.60/ 15 "'" r" (H78/15) , ... J' '" I ·'· ( UI"' Custom Retreads 56011312.&a 0 71114 16.11 1.0011J1l.ll H71/1417.&IJ J88 S.I0/1514.U GTl/15 16.11 f71/14 15.U H78115 17.11 1'71115 '71114 ls.II l78115 17.&I U Y-mAf'fO "OflllM. U CtM tU tt• 140t f~f' Gt"f'Ot l ook of Pf'riorMOn<• & DuttftCt•o"' RAISED WHITE LETTER TIRES 70 SERIES 60 SERIES "70113 '2:i"" .... , .... "70/12 -~- 070/14 ':10"" r1011• ':I:&"" F 70/ '4 G7011• ':J:I"" ':I:;,.,, A60/13 '2 8 1111 ~601 14 ':l:i"" G60/14 ':Ur" oso1 1~ ':Ur" L6011• ':HJ"" . FRONT DISC G~j 1!R3AKE4RE~'H ..._/" 1 tp PADS6 LAIOI --...~.,,.1'· I MOST t .S. 6 FOlllGI CHS COMPA•E & SAVI! ...-1 ••aa•• ,.. •••' •·•· un ' WtlllL IH• 101 .. ACIAGI .. 4 9 88 flOIT tlSC ft IW HI• •aG.5 9a UAU •ACKAGIS 91C1UD1a • 'll·AIClt UllHS 6/0I tlS< PAii • llHllt WIJll CfltlHU • Tiii All lllMI • 1•PA(I HOIT llHtlCI -=HM awn ••1i • llUlt Au u111 • '"" ~~~~~ ~·LJr:,A~~A:l•,r.0!".: .. '~" CAI oum UaT UAlll PACllAGll ................................... • lft IHt \...U 6/a HK·• 8IW CltAlt NAU • , ..... , .......... , ........ •lk .... . .... • .. ,.,. , ... , llat!MJ ~ •_,.Ill HIM IN PACIAU ... , .... 8 ... tH•f lllC ' llH HIM PIK... . . .... -·-·-----.... ..,... . STEEL * RADIALs IU;u·k" ulls "hit••\\ ...... "hilt•\\ ...... 155113 2988 AR78/ 13 33su GR70/1S 43uu ( 16$/1:1) (205/15) 16s113 32sa ER78/14 33su 4688 (8 78113) HR70/ 15 (185/14) (215/15) 11s113 34sn 4088 47s1: (C711U) FR71114 JR78115 1ss114 33ss (195/14} (225115) (878114) GR70114 43sn LR78/15 43ss 11s114 33ss (205114) (23$115) (C78114) 4688 , .. ,., ...... ~-· ... ~/14 165/15 34 88 ( 14) (155115) e11u c .. r11 '' llNO" •11 f'lrutit 1/t' 1tt1.1 ,,nv r r bul OOH HOI IMP!• C >M .. 111 IN11' MA~1.I 'Iii If SI Pf:H l..OH UJH PIU<·1·:.'t: FOREIGlV & SPORT ·r11u:., ... 88 1 I MOST I U.S. CAIS l MAAl'A C. ILOOMI 0,.. •AllT f.a>o..,, SAf. l 1>o.7 H ••• --• Pro/eaor'• Boob Publishsd _ Robert l'.eters of Huntlncton Beach, UCI Pto· t.A MAIRA G IDIH GlOVI HUNTINGTON llACH fealor ol Engllah and comparative literature, ii the .A 2000 WMttltr-.,. 14040 "-llllwlt 18455 l.adt ll•d. authoroftwonewbooksor poetry. "Tt\tPoet.ulce-. COSTA MES11t. ,_ .. _..._,...,., •·-r,~;;-sJo.~1~' Skater" baa been published by Manroot, San Fran· JOOI HAllOl ILVD. 111•0 "·"" lat Fl•• Por.tsl et!co, and .. OnJU,in'I Chalr: ~lected Poems" baJ 1,_,. .. ..__......_, FU OM oaAMCM (714) 141-1445 I been publllhedbyCro11ln1PressoCNtwYork. 11141 •17-1000 1,1121 ~~J 410...-._.•,,_ ,714, 71rl·16t2 ~ Peten,amembttrottheUCltaculty1lnee1-1;11 ""1~-..-...-, ttt4161,.:U11 ~ • la the author of mor. Ulan l2 boob of pot.tr; encl . :L:.~---------..L--~;.:~::;~..;;.;;-.&.;.;......;.,.,:1~11:,:4:.,:U~7.:;M;:.1;;:00.:....:.:.-A--..:..;.._ _ _..._ .......... ...._..., ______ llmll!" __ __. crtllcilm. . .. - .. .. f I ,, . • :· .n ......... coallldM. 1 bawt beeft la a pate, I si-. But Cor • re.... l Ud no rear. I daa't lmow bow to n · pla!Atlwlt. I Gtl GOD DIDN'T ft1T few In my head. But Ht luld ,ivm me 1treqtb I oenr knew I h-9. The silence wu broken by the thump or coal lumps ralllns. OlberwiH it waa quiet. Then I reJt some air comin1 in and I alarted out to find where It was comin1 from. Ladder Gangway !Main Passage! r . ,,. Conveyer Belt 4> 't * * * Miner Relives 29 Hours EDITORS NaTE: Ronald Adley. a 37-year-old coal mmer and father of two, had to claw hi.! way to safe· ty when a torrent of water tmeckM the Kocher Coal Co. mmf!. Nine other trapped miners died. In the second of three article•, Adley describes the lcmely 'J!J hours before he was discovered by rescuers. I DIDN'T LOOK AT MY WATCH, but two boun must have passed since the water gushed in. I thoueht of my kids and my wife -what they must be going through and how t.hey were taking it. It was really bothering me. As I was thinking of my family I started getting Pastor Guilty FRESNO (AP) -A pastor convicted of filing false statements on In· come tax returns has been sentenced to two years in fe<ft!ral prison Joseph L. Stobaugh was pastor of the Oneness Pentecostal Church tn Bakersfield . re, ........... '° aelal, ...... 1au.aett' I nvMD 4 PIKS ot A.Ml aad I started I dJd ...,. Rft n U. •tart. Tbee eomtlllm• ....., n. everytOmbmta. aooee....-ed. lwuakma. I wan"t ~a.red, I dklD'tf:rY. IJUll pr'l1'ed. 1 ltal1ed to ctor.e on aca.m but wote up cold. r lblnk it was about 9 o' elocll llt D.lpt. .... I started to tap, but still no anawer. So I tried to get some sleep. Thlt time when I wolte up I think it w11 morning. I started tappln1 again. What else could ldo! MY UGHT WAS COMPLETELY DEAD. I was in the dark. I kept doing pusbups to warm up, and to <See MINER PRAYS, P-.e Bl) INVITED TO PERFORM AT THE WHITE HOUSE. APRIL.29th. ESPLENDOR AZTECA SEE THEM MARCH 20th/CAROUSEL CT South Coast ?lua DIAGRAM OF KOCHER COAi:. COMPANY MINE IN TOWER CITY, PA. Where nonald Adley, Father of Two, Clawed Way to Safety ----- Death ~otice• Death Notice• PEDERSEN KIM8ALL OOROTHV 8 . PEDERSCN, r•\ldrnt o1 LaQUM Hiii• C•llforni,1 f'~\\td OA.VIO IC KIMBALL, r•,IMnt of .tWdY March 16 1q77 Survlv•d bf twor Nt wport Buch California Pasud hu\bdnd Or Harry' c; P•dtr\tn 01 away March 17 1911. Survived bV h" L •CJuM Hiiis c.a lllrU dauonttrs wlf• 11,onnlt Klmi>all ~rvlcts l)('ndlng Nancv S.nql~~nV.,;.l<ol PomoN , C•, Pac Ille View M•m orlat Par I< Ro-.an"" ~n(Jltton Kopf of TotNto. Mortuarv. Newp0rt8"Kh Ohio J•n•f Earl ol Palo• Vndn COIL I 1 E\lilf\ C.• \l\ltr JUntllP Alltn ol JAMES L COIL, N'S df>nt o L.aouna N1qvtl Cahh)t'nltt Pa\\.l!'d •W•YM•r<h •• 1q11 at ,..,. dQP ot '1 yUr\ !>urvlvtd b• his w ilt O•-Coil. children Jen- n1lt• Coll J•-• H Co••. and C.l1nton J Cool; rnolf'>er Aioce E Coil. trlrH brotf\ft'r\ ,...,u·y W Co••· Horacf' 0 (OH JoM M Co•I Fu¥,.df wrv1c"' t11tlll br Pwild O"I S.h.irCUy Marett 1• at • lO 4M •I TP\it Otv~"Y Prt\bytf't••n (hurt"' Alw-r\1~ Ca wit" trw Or F"rd"tc lvn Hud\on and Or-J ,m .. .., Rro«f'' ofhC•.tlttH~ lftttr,,..nl a1 Ol1v• Wood C•tn•lf'fV ~ -.;.,. ... df' (d """'ll' .n Gr.t,.-tm G~r<te-ri ot p,. ~v11111r M t"rtJ•Hf' Fh vtr \10'" ~i 7'41 .... Ill• ClarrmOf'lt C. '\tt: CJ'""°""tldrM SM wa\ a voluntt,.,. work,., for ll'W' V•U~v l'r••bvterlan HO\Oll~I and .,.,, Ot"SI °""'of PrO\ot<IOtS Gu•ld In V4n Huy\, C• ana wd\ '""'" p.a\t O' f"'•f:JJ't"'' of ROI.try AnM ~.,..,,. C.t ~,,.,,.,will bf> h~ld on Frtdav M~rch ti•• 1 JO PM a l P1c1f1c V·•w (f't•paol Oft10•l•no 1\ r •tn.tr John At)()tf'\ o .. ,,.,. I nft rm,•nt P.tcthc V••w ~rnor1-11 Ptt'tt N•w por1 8~1H.h 01,-<t .. O bv P.-r Ill' V'•""' Morl\Miry Don t•M'>"'I\ m•1 & m tfltt 10 t"'~ n•r1t1 Cl V')tlr ("<!Hf" 0 ' 10 f~ VAii ... p,, ,hv'•, .,.. HO\Otltt V•n r1uv r ' MAllRS ~YR0~-4F M4UR~ •1111io1 t1n'o'\•'\ J-'<f" ( •f>1 ,fr.fl') ( d h fr)f n1 t ._.,.I\ JI' ., • ../N'.I b'I f\,\ w it• <,.., .. .,, .. .;ft> M•H4r ftWr d.,uqhfr·r· Mr\ J•H1•th (l,.,•.- ,,j/'i"\ J(..trf!n Parthun M t\ L n(1,1 .. ,..,., • Mr"' M.arv Ain., \,•mt•ltll''\~• J r ,..,o .')n\M•c""''"tr. Mtt''"' T mntn,o M Arr Twttntv ntl'I,. '1' HH1''1•'1,.,.,, P0\1H'f nn Frid.oily M•''" 11 ,.., I lO PM ., 0 c,.,.,nor UQUn/I H.11, Modu•r; ChaP<"I Mel\\ of (hr! ''"" nurlAI on C,aturll•• M.1rc11 l• "' • 00 fl,M ~t St E<Sw•rd\ l":.1Jt,_,11, r ru.Hth Q,,,,. Po1n1 (~ tnf,.rmtnt AV,.n\10'\ r:f'lmfltrry (;I Toro VUNCa.NNON W ILLIAM H VUNCANNON ,_, dt"t ot L"quttA l>itlh C" Alt,orn1' SurvlVf"d bv h"wlf1 c11ra Vunc •",,°" 0.tWQhl,., Mr' \11tf)1r'ljlf M iu.-, '\0" Jowon Vvr\C.,nftQn '""'lr6"d(nlldr~ two qrf"at qr.\ndc.,.1h1rff'\ Furi•ritl c_,.rYl(f"i w lll be n-~ Tf\ut\(llt\' ~ ... r( l"I ti di \ 00 PM •t Tne lUll'W-r4'n (hur"" Ot Thf' Cr-O\\ LAqunit H 1 (" int .. , m""' Grr"f'n Htll\ Mt-more '' P••\ A• rtlnqfmf'nt\ bY 0 Connor \..•9"'"' Hilh Mrrtuo11ry KENNEDY JAM£SR Kf.NN£0f N \"•<l•• .. Y •I •q., 61 year\ 1n C•O•'litrainn ft•~,.. (i1tttorftla Lonq ••me ,.,., """' ot Laqun~ Be.ch C....llf0f't'l1ot He '' wr v•v .. tt by h1\w1tt Oofoll'IV K•~dv, '\Ot'I P~tr•t~ K'"""'"dV Mr t(f"lfW'(h ...,., .J '\Oii t""(nr•11c1an Gr•\l•\if'M \..,.V•t ""\ w ilt bf>f\!'ld1>nFr1davMo11rrhll.1I It OO•M at Pac1f1c Vt•w Mtmn,.,•• P•'• NPw l>Ort 8'-arn SM>ff..-L.•quM Oocro Deaths Elsewhere CARDIFF. Wale s <AP > -Lord Brayley, 60, the former John Desmond Brayley, died Wednesday. He was knighted m 1970 after ris· ing from humble Welsh origins to chairman or the CanrungTown Glass. LOS ANGELES <AP1 -Funeral services were held today for Dr Sol R. Baker. 66. a rad10Jog1st and past pr~ident of the Amencan Cancer Socie ty. He died Monday Mortu.rye11re<tor\ r:..--S_M_mt_TVO«.L __ LA_MI __ ~ '. Record WISlCUff CMAl'a " · · 427E 17thSt "(;' h · Costa Mesa* 646--4888 I r or _t e .1 Sant a Ana Chapel _ - 518 N Broadway Santa Ana• 547-4131 "HCt HOTHUS SMfTH'S MOlTUAIY 627 Main St Huntington Beach 536-6539 P!B fAMfLY COU>NIAL FUMeaAL HOME 7801 Bolsa Ave Westminster 893-3525 PACIFIC YllW ~ALP.AU Cemetery Mortuary Chapel 3500 Pacific View Drive • Newport. Cahfom1a 644-2700 McC~Q MOtl'fUAllH Laguna Beach 494·9'415 Laguna Hills 788-0933 San Juan Capistrano 4'95-1776 IAL.n.tll~YOM Rlta.ALHOMI Corona dol Mar 8 73-94' 50 Cotti Mes.I 64&-2424' ,, ,,.. .......... . at ltlarriap l'llad l'•llf'...,ry ll OWE NS Vall•Y J <Jn<I V•olA•• WOn• PET~RSON Brue• H and I Rei.cc• E HOU~E R loAarc•• L Md Otnn" L ~TEWART Jam~' R Mid K• .. n L VAN HOY V1r91nl.\ E••ul><lh an<1 Ja""'' Walt•r C.OOIC, , 9,. •• ,.,., M ¥> AM 00f"W)ld Franklin MULLIC.AN D•Lilln" Jo•n •nd Thom.-O.a•td BOOENH'\MER. Gr•llC>rv 8rten """ O•-DorOlhV ALGAZV Patrl<I• LH and Micha.I: GOE TCHEUS A-Sue -D•vl<I , PONT 10\JS, EU<ll!"9 M • .-Id Gwflt. dolvn L , KOL.Act, F•.,. A •nd Albert P ; >!UTCHINSON, Martin L ui lier t 11 •nd Shero11 Ann; WALTER Robert Allen ~ Evelyn Grau; JAFFE, Mal'le S/1¥on and Pflw l(..,ln, HAVWAllD, lt-'1 D . and Gr11tcll .. A.: llUSHLINO, l"•lrlcle end O•oroe Alb•rt: MITCHILl. Ceroll"\ It. encl Donald' I' : CHIUSTAL,Judy K.-,.and L~ Ltw•s. llOllER'T'i, Mero.-l't O. encl D•Vld G.; SHIVE. Jo A11n •nd Robert· Sltnltv; GUILD, Marian A. •n<I Chest•r P . M<CAMMENT, Elltebelll' M •nd 8111yGe,,., Pl!TEllSON, Nan. CV H •nt:I W111i.r l ; WISE. Cvnlhl• Mtrlt and JOHPfl Patrick ; HOWE, AIClllrd A •nd Dtbofall A.: NOLAND, P•ul lllchard and Tlnit.' Lool!e. SMITH, CAltlwrfr>t SMll•'lj en<I D0\141&~ Mlchawl WILLIAMS, O.r!Nlr• 8 •net illobert l , AIYNOLOS, J entl Su• anf ThOmA\ " JOHNSON, ~··•o w end Dl•I• l ... EVANS, Cheryl .nd llo11nle A • AICHAAOS. Pall l<I• •nd GeryW.:Dll~,10~1..,a9N Terry I", Sl\14TOS. J ..... M end . llavmoncl Jr ; RAVI., M•rt• o. •"4 .1•-t P.: UJNOI!, ._.. M.. lftd • lfkC. . LA ltUI, .,..._ -end tlleSW· Af11\11T; tl\IAIU)A, ~· Ann anid 1 ,. A...j • Teu•lll'Utl M.; LOWI!, Roma MCll' l!-~-'1'!11---.----"!"-I ~~'!: . . . Ou,lng c.,,., T OWft s S11tciac11l11 AMUll Spring ~,. oull orders owtt S200 wllll 25% down at time of order 01 lnstallallon and ~Ollr good t11dlf -ONE YEAll INlEREST FREE CREOIT SAME AS CASH l EXAM PU: Alll04lnt ol PllrdlHI S400 Oown '1ymtllt at time of O!dtr or lnstallatiofl ~ $300 A.P.R. Rate & FIUllCI C'-~ -0. Tltll ot Ptymtnta $3oi -. . 12 1qu1I p1ym111ll of $25 Heh SANTAANA 2tll s.. ...... ............ c...t .... ••·· ·-' llW217 WISTMINSTER tlHllMdtll.t. • ....,. c""" ... ...._ ltJ.714' WICICDAYI TIU t • l.\T. Tll.l It IUNOAY H<I • fMa llT'IMTU IN~ N01im 0..-W. ~ .... ...aa UIY C"lCMT TlMW • »tlUO OAY t.o.. "UT AC:Ofl, • MHICAlllaMCANI • MUTVI CMM01 LAST 3 DAYS! 1HURRY IN DURING OUR ANNUAL SPRING SALE . . TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR 1 YEAR FREE CREDIT OFFER -PLAN ON USING YOUR INCOME TAX REFUND! Just a few of Itta cwpett In our huge inventC)()' are ll1ted In thi1 ad ... S.ltc1 from over 50 luxurloua 1tyle1 and over 500 t.n1ptl1l9 col011I AND ... during thl• llmlt~ .. ie. we will provide normal ln1taU1tlon abao- lutely FREE when you purctiue cerpet arid paddlflill .. • &2.W@M!? ®@lfwn©@ DeQ10et • w .. r .. ~fl DEAR PAT: I ordered two leisure suits from Sple1eJ's in November 1976. Payment of $169.2'1 wu enclosed with the order. I never rtteived the items but did get a ~-72 refund cbeclt. I have repeatedly requested tl\at the remainin& portion of my pay. ment be refunded, but I never received it. I wanted the sulta for Chriatmaa. Now, I just want the real of my mODe)' back. J .P ., Huntington Beach Sp&ecel'a now baa refaaded tile rema1Jlbl1 $US.IS owed &o JOll. O&ber readers experiencing problems with Spiegel merdaaadi.se are adviaed to direct tllelr eomplainta to S. Cappa, Castomer Relations Manacer, Splepl, 1M1 W. 3Stb St., Chicago, IL ...... Wanted: ltlagazlnes t.o Stop DEAR PAT: For the past few months I have been receiving copies of McCall's magazine even though I never subscribed to it. I wrote to the publisher several times explautlng that I was not a subscriber and did not wish to receive any issues, but they're still coming. I also received a bill with a notation that I could continue my subscription for three years at a reduced rate. I don't want to pay for something I never ordered. M. M., Fountain Valley That's a switch! Magaalne complaints usually Involve DOD-delivery problems. Botb your com· plaint and another received by Lb1s col•mn cODcern· IDC an llDOl'derecl McCall's maca.dne subscription were forwarded to Magazine Actloo Llne <MAL), a division otPabllaber'a Clearlq House, 382 Channel Drive, Port Wublngton, NY 1105t. MAL contacted McCall's magazine, which agreed to stop !>ending tbe bUls and magaalnes. •High Hope•' Hope• DEAR PAT: Thank you for your previous in- terest in High Hopes, Neurological Recovery, Inc. Due to current "growing pains" or our new non- profit service agency. we are in desperate need at this point of our development. High Hopes has ap· proximately 30 brain-impaired young adults re· questing its services. We are seeking the temporary donation or at least 1,000 square feet of office space to headquarter the program and provide a facility where we can work on resocialization and pre- .vocational programs. In addition, any donations o! office equipment, such as desks, cb.Urs, file cabinets and typewriters, would be appreciated. Because High Hopes is a non-profit agency, dona· tlons or any kind are tax deductible. E.H .. Newport Beach Readers who can lend a helping baad to Hlgb Hopes are urged to cont.cl this group by writing to Box 278?, Newport Beach, CA 92663, or by phoning SSZ-7537. Concert Voting Stalled MARYSVILLE <APl - A vote on a proposed Yuba County ordinance aimed at limillng or out lawing ro<'k concerts has been stalled for two weeks. The measure before the Board or Supervisors was sou ght by Yuba County Sheriff Jim Grant. Without specifically naming roek concerts, at would require that persons seeking permits for outdoor events in· volving 200 or more peo· pie mu st file non· rerundabl e ''i n - vestigative fees" of $125 and meet a long list or standards. Yuba County Supervisor Roy Lan- derman asked for the de· lay. aayins be was heal· tant to restrict reasona· ble business endeavors. Sentenced SAN DIEGO CAPl -A Los Angeles man who headed a San Diego in· vestment firm faces one to 10 years in prison after pleading guilty lo grand thef'l and securities law violations. Robert Jamea Ryan, 52, wu president of Ryan Group Weat, Ine. NO TAXES FOR'17:li.:M SACRAMENTO (AP) -Such non-profit pup u the Sierra Club and the American Lefton tn Caltrornla were uved from bavirte to pay cor· porate taxes jusl at they •ere coming due. Oov. Edmund Brown Jr. 1l1n•d uraency ••1l1latko heedt~ off lb• uaaam nta houn before tho deadline for tlllal al tbltu form1. \r Haw ta fly a kite safely. 1. Always use dry stnng, wood and paper in your kite. 2. Neveruse nwt:il \\ire <'f nwt:illic Mnni.: or ck11h . 3. DC1n 'c fly your kite in rhc rain. 4. Don't.cross 1treet.s or highways when kite flying. 5 .. Always fly your kite away from TV and radio antennas. I. Always fly your kit• fur from power lines! Don't try to retrieve kites cau9ht In power line~! AUCTION Friday, March 18 8 p.m. Sunday, March 20-1 p.m. Exquisite Oriental c:al'l)ets -Kirman -Sarouk -Tabriz. Kashan. Hanadan and many others Some antique. all 1n beautiful condition from a pnvate estate. This ts a must see '°' the coll«tor In addition -cut rtass. Cf'Y$tat, art atus, clocks, sterhna silver . est ate ,.wetry, 1otd chains. antiques, Orienaar a rt, brlssware. china. porcelains. vases. magnificent paintings. all at ~rg11n prices. from our lnYentory of hundreds of Items Yalu.cl at OYW $1,500,000.00 COME & SEE THE FUN & EXCITEllENT OF IN AUCTION IN TH£ Rn.AXED .. COlllFORTAIL£ AlllOSPHtR£ Of M Of ORANGE COUNTfS LOVWEST GAU.DUD. Ho dwp tor ldmluion -dUers w*°"1e. HOURS Inspection & pn11ate sales Daily 9·6 p.m., Tuesday & Thursday 9·10 pm , Sunday 11 a.m . TERMS Use your BankAmer1card - Master Charge -Check -Cash Y II/and S11/1ri11 Ltd. 1232 No. Tustin Ave. Orange, Callfomla 92667 (714) 633-2857 • lOCATlOfl •On luthn Ava, 1u\t .outr1 ol K•lottt A••. t. I llio<k W\I QI --1 l"Y • ~Oltll• ... ,. r"I '&: -· Wlnlam ff. Y 1U1nd Licensed Auctioneer Mtmbe< -Anl'<!Ue APPl••-s Auoc. & App<••-• Assoc al Arnenca We 1ecept for cons/pments for 1uction of wtlolt tstJtes or sinife Items - Sign up in all stores. Win a free dinner for two at the GORDA LIZ! It's the shedding season Who doesn't need more storage space? Especially for big, bulky gardening tools. The answer Is an e~lly· assembled, weather-proof steel shed. Discuss it with our storage specialists. Then see some of the qualtty, work-saving items you can put in that new shed of yours. All exterior dimensions are approximate. A. 10' x 5' GREENBRIAR STOR~GE SHED Culori1dl ( ,, · C<•lur \\ 'h riahlP r:>of F-oresl gr·~··n Coor~ h<tll• r: 15 1c .,., t111 .. 11 til<J 1111 dP~1gn FJ<ler1or d1mf"n 1r:no; 1 :'O" W >. 59''~" D x 73" H Modl'I ·CH 10 Hcg 119 9'J 88.88 10'x 10' GREENBRIAR STORAGE SHED Exterior d1mcns1onr: 11 CJ'.' W ' 115· D • 73V2" H Model ::GRIOIO ijeg. 169.99 1!9.88 8. ELECTRIC GRASWIP Rota1mg h1gh-<'pcrd '1yl 1n cord mows. cuts. trims gras!:. ann w•·•~Ca U L approveo Model =9300 Reg 29 qg 22.48 WHEELER GRAN PRIX ROT ARY MOWERS v r» d ' !I' 1 Id It iJY h 1'1d (' C <l •, fjr c;r., ", ::>'r s't n , r j n C. 3 H.P. MODEL ::ws-20. W 1h 1'1r1 m,inu.11 hc.1r;ht .id1us1m1'nls 20 cu111nr1 w1rHn Reg 7rj ')I') 74.88 D. 3Y2 H.P. MODEL l'I WDE-20. Five Sal t lilt ;id1ustmenro; 20" cultinq width 7" wheels. rear balfle. Reg 109 99 95.88 Make yo.ur own rock garden Patio picnicker Mal<e every mP:tl a p;cn1c withe redwood finish picnic tabto 70' x 28 'h • table with two benches have enough room for family and lriends. S1urdy construe It on tor years ol patio picnics All hardware Is galvanized to be rust resistant. Ready to assemble. Model #H600 CHUCKWAGON TABLE SET, Reg. 57 99 48.88 CAMPFIRE PICNIC TABLE SET, Model #H-900. Reg.89.99 5&88 Down the garden path Nice curv81 Protect your landscaping with a pa1h or s1eppinci stones Natural or red color 12" x 12· square blocl<s STEPPING STONEi. Reg 59c each 45ceach .. . Lawn and garden landscape trim with nicety scalloped edge makes your garden so neat and 1rim makes It easy to keep that way. 2 It long Natural or red SCALLOPED EDGING. STRAIGHT. Reg.49c 38c Patio, patio, where art thou ••• This (riendty folding patio chair is looklng for a lovely home. Sturdy lightweight construction end tredlllonat styling make this an attractive addition to the famny. Special non-tllt feature. 23'W. >C 32"H. Model #774. PATIO CHAIR. Reg. 6.49 4.88 PATIO CHAISE, 26"W. )( 74"L Model #3n. Rag.12.99 10.88 Ward & Hafrington Garden Grove Fullerton Coate Mesa Orenge Saf • prlc.1 good Thurad•y through Sund•y. 7707 Garden Grove Blvd. 30t So State College 1215 BrlJ.tol 324 Weit Katella 537·9571 or 893-8523 870·00!50 556-1500 532·2608 Open Mon thru Fri. 9 to 9 Open Mon. tttru Fri. 9 lo 9 Open Mon. thru Frt 9 to 9 Open 9 to 6 every day Set. & Sun. 9 to 6 Sat It Sun. 8 to 8 Sat. & Sun. 9 to e , Urged · tlP0'9 VB n N la Md ot Ula...,. ts JO 1 lJi • _....,. nUllUld 2.111 ••1Dbet1 •of U•• American AArollomieal Soc:icl1. poaltjyt> mvc••• to tb qHSU or whether the phenomenon merit- ed furtber lnqulry ranged from "certainly" to "probably" or "possibly.·· on • zm TOLD o1 Hein&. about 5 p.m. ooe dar in Florida. a UFO lbat .. b.ct a t>rlthl aluminum hue and the lamlllar (disc) sh•l"'·" When ap- proached, it faded from sight leavinc a thin cloud layer at. about 1.000 feel altitude, he said. The object had seemed "solid and sharply outlined, apparently reflect.in&." mQJ reparta al 1l1pwiup m•·m .o.. b that tblJ adOt be spwcrd. ar ••fbJ aaunn•• trom • be:re mtheunt ...... OYF1C1Ab-f1"W'P OF COSTA MEIA In lB a federally funded study beaded by the late Dr. Edward U. Condoa concluded there waa nothing real or significant in the phenomenon. The Air Force 1ub- sequenUy closed down its years- loog Project Blue Book, keeping records of UFO sjebtlngs. fFUCHSIAI Jewel-like blooms In the c;ummer shade garden. Hasket and uprlaht varlell&s; 4" Pot Reg •• 98 Al" .;1;..... SIXTY·TWO PERSONS s~d y bad seen or had made m· 1'eaelll119 . ment recordings of events Two astronomers reported events which seemed to involve electromagnetic effects, Stur- rock said. It NOW .87 Sale Ulru Mar. 2Z Former Solicitor couldn't i~entify but which 6 for 4.97 General Robert H. they thought might be related to · d the UFO phenomenon. • BO r k • W h O f 1 re The questionnaire was con- STUllllOCK WMSELF said, ''Condon's conclusions were ex- pressed cautiously but were clearly negative ... Subse- quent. • .study of the report brings to light serious discrepan. cies between Condon's assess. mentandtboseofb.isstaff." Ask for FREE planting &i care lnstructlons. W a tergate Special ducted by Prof. Peter A. Slur· P r ~ s e c u t o. r rock, an astrophysicist and . Archibald Cox, is member of Stanford University's " returning to Yale appliedphysicsdepartment. In one, the headlights of two automobiles went out simultaneously. In the other, an automobile engine stalled unex- pectedly when the driver ap- [Florist Special J WRA YING l\tANTISf ~ Law School to teach. None of those responding bad Freshly-cut. many colors ••• Mantls batcb as weatMr nnns. Tb9Y eat harmflll lnsects ••• aot veeetaUon. ~--~~~~~~~-ROSES ~Lin dh er gh Field 1Landing Fee Hiked : SAN DIEGO (AP> --Airlines are going to pay $395,000 more lo land at Lindbergh Field. Port commissioners approved an increase from 33.3 cents to 40.2 cents per 1,000 pounds. In five years, it will go to 49.2 cents. The landing fees produced $2.2 million in re· venue to the port district last year. IN SHELTERED SECLUSION In add1t1on to COMPLETE MORTUARY SERVICES. Fairhaven has Chapels. Mausoleum. Columbarium, Garden Crypts. Chapels. and a • Crematory. All this 1s located in a tranquil setting, hidden almost entirely from the casual view of passin9 traffic. But Fairhaven unfolds its inner beauty as· you proceed along its winding drives. lined with trees of rare variety. You are cordially invited to make a personal tour and enjoy the sylvan peace that Fairhaven offers. fairhoven f lemoriol pnrk MORTUARY -CEMETERY 714-633-1442 1702 E Fairhaven Ave •. Between Tun1n Ave, & Grand Ave. Santa Ana Thurs. -Sun •• we sic SERVICE DELI Bcr·B·Q BEEF RIBS "en yoa like • .,.. .. SAVE 40cS 1.29 lb. ,. Mid Cheddar a., ... ar Monterey Jack Cheese SA VE 21 " s I • 5 7 lb. Expires 3/22f17 ! MARKET BASKET WESTCUFF PLAZA 17ttt & lniM "BOUNCE" FABRIC \SOFTENER ~~sl.49 ..u.1.~ Place To Shop! 7 DAYS A WEEK .... , .. ....._tt20.,.._W.....,,._ ... - p TODDLER GOWN/PEIGNOIR by ~jREV Pink, Blue, YeUow 100% Nylon S 11 OO Matching Slippers s4so HUMPTY DUMPrY I 058 Irvine -Westdiff Pima ~ Newport IHch Select writing papers from our all new collections. Hallmark, Eaton. Red Farm and Lilac Hedges. Many new patterns in party papers. We do imprinting of writing papers. napkins and matches. PAPER UNLIMITED •• 1112 Irvine ...... Mewpotf Beoch. Ca. S4a.7921 FEATURING THE lNTERNATIONALL Y RENOWNED SEBRING METHOD TODAY'S GREAT LOOKS AT A FAIR PRICE AWTS. 646-9925 PLEASE 17th & lrvfne ~rt Beach x OPEN THURSDAY NITES 'TIL 9 IM:J DOZ. Take home armloads of floris t wrappe.I roses. Mar. 17 -'20 2 EGG (:ASES 2.49 Up to ~o eggs. Specials Limlted to Supply on Ha.od PHONE 546-5525 2640 Harbor Blvd., Costa Me~a DAIL y 9-a::4o Sl'N. «>-5 ZESTILlnK IS BdCK A TRADITIONAL EASnR SAUSAGE CUT AMYSIU WHILE SU,,L Y LASTS --4nlftolllJ d SHOE SERVICE . ·. l9gl011 .. R ... C.....fW SPIElY • TOPSIOIR DON'T THROW AWAY YOUR, COMFORTABLE 01.DTENNISSHOES , WE At::PAIA AND RESOLE ADIDAS -TRETOANS ~ & ALL OTHER MAJOR BRANDS M ~ IN NEWPORT llACH ~~ cu:.-.wr>.l! m· .c.._ ... .,....~.._.. ·s..c ... tv ..... w....,,.._ . ,...... , ...... '-"-,,...... .......... , •' ... , • • l ... ' BEA ANDERSON, Editor Thursday, March 17. 1977 Lynda Robboy offers help to client by phone. JFS maintains a 24-hour, seven-day . . answenng service I ' . "' so counseling is alway~ available. Dally Pllot Photo• by Richard Ko•"'•' 81 Counselors such as J. R. Mauro offer help on an extended basis at Jewish Family Service, Garden Grove. ... Nd;tural Vi·e·w Finder . ( Sees Great OutdOors By MARCIA FORSBERG OftM D••'' "11•1 St~ll Think about. the great outdoors and your brain probably runs full ·length motion pictures filmed 1n the Grand Canyon, the Jiigb Sierras or Yellow1tone. But the.re ate a couple or select· ed •hart subjects right. here ln Oran1e County if you lack the tJme and funds for a major aetaway. A saturday jaunt to the Tucker Wildlife and Bird Sanctuary yielcb an educaUonal and fun outing for the kids, and a leiaure- J1 Sunday drive to the San Bernardino National Forest pro· vtdes a rela>ctng way to escape the routine. '1T he great outdoors ls clcfser. than you think," said Richard Dyer, supetvlsing park ranger at Fountain Valley's Mile Square Re1torual Park. TO FAMIUAalZE resldenta with the vast and beauUful nature 1p0tt .tthln tho oounty, Dyer wUI preaent a free four.part lecture 1ertes begjnnlq at 7 p.m. Fri- da1. March 25, ln Math/Science l2ht Golden WC!lt Colle1e. The talkatlYe park ranger .... makes ll.5e of colored slides, tak· mg his audience on hikes along trails and drives through scenic areas "There's a whole world out there that we can visit and enJOY without spending a lot or money," he noted. - "It's not all covered with poison oak and full of snakes. either. People are thrilled t.o find out what we have in our wilder· ness areas," be added. DYER'S SIGHTSEEING "trips" will beetn with a survey of regional parks, focusing on the flora and fauna oieach area. Designed to famillarh:e ob· servers with what's natural In Orange County, the first lecture wlll Include .exploration Of the Santa Ana River trail, Cleveland National Forest. Slack Star Ca· nyon and the Tucker Wltdllfe and Bird Sanctuary. Each talk la based on a one.day ttlp by automoblle. "Juat. pile the family Into the car, and here's whatyou'lhee," asserted Dyer. The April 1 lecture will cover the Palomar Mountains ln San Dleao County. touching on the Pauma Valley, Pala Mission, Tourmaline country. Palomar Mountain State Park and the ob· servatory THE SAN BERNARDINO Na- tional Forest will be featured OD April 15, including the Tahquitz lookout trail, Black Mountain scenic areas and Mt. San Jacinto State Park. The final lecture on April 22 will be highlighted by a "tour" through the Anza·Borrego Desert in San Diego County. Dyer said that all are good pie· nic and picture·taklng areas. Children often are intrigued with gathering wildlife specimens, from flowers to insects. An expert on plani life, Oyer teaches an evening course on nattveplant.! at GWC. "I 00 OVT Into the mountains for abput 25 to 30 hours every montb And huni tor specimens or plant.. then document what's 1rowln1 where," he uid. ln addition to taktni pictures ol native 1hrubs and 1lowers, be ilso ~ollecta, presses and dries them. They are then mounted and ldent.illtd ln file folders. C8eeTBAILS, •••• a:u \ Jewish service: A Family Affair By JUDITH OLSON Ol IM 0•11, ""°'St.if \. Does a person have t~ be Jewish to beoeflt from Jewish Family Service? Not so, says J R. Mauro, in· terim director of the Garden Grove·based agency. "We're re- ally a nonsectarian service." ApproxJmately 60 percept of the caseload at any one tiine is Jewish, Mauro said, and the figure has gone as high as 80 per· cent. The problems the agency deals with usually are the ktnds of crises faced by most people but occasionally a project comes its way becau se of its cultural /religious identity One of the most recent of these was helping resettle Soviet Jews in severaJ Orange County c1lles. The families wished to remain anonymous but Mauro was able to tell whattbe1r exodus had been like. "When they applied for their exit visas the KGB began watching them. Some Jost their jobs. They literally b'ecam~ prisoners." While still in the SoYiet Union the families studied English for up to six months and learned as much as possible about the customs of their new country ONCE IN THE U S. they were met by sponsoring a~enc1es such as J ewi1'.h Family Service and given goods and finances lo meet all their needs. ..... As they become c ulturally aware we try to find JOb place m ent." Mauro said. ··one of our people is an engineer , another 1!> a printer." The Associates of J FS have loaned the immigrant families money to buy cars so they can become self-supporting as soon as possible. Jewish Family Ser vice 1s un usual in that it offers counseling on a long.term basis. Mauro not ed. The olfice a lso is open four For Jewish Fund evenings a week, whJ~b often proves to be the busiest. Ume. Its programs serve the entire family. There is a senior citizens social group, a sewing circle which makes quilts for a fund· raising auction. a volunteer Big Friends program similar to Big Brothers and emergency as- sistance. Family life education a nd "empty nest syndrome" pro· grams are offered when needed and the agency acts as a referral source for other services. ''WE VARY A little from other agencies in that we don't h<i ve a strictly social work approach." Mauro added. •·we have a multi· disciplined approach child de • velopment , psyc hology and counseling.•· Another benefit is that evening fees are the same as daytime prices and there 1s an around· the-clock, seven-day-per-week answering service Fees are on a sliding scale and average around $8. While the agency serves the county's Jewish population of around 75.000. which is average for an area such as Orange Coun. ty, staff members <who are not all Jewish) constantly arc asking themselves "What is J ewis h a bout Jewish Familv Serv1c<.'''" · "We've debated that for four years." said Roberta Cantor. president of the associates. "It's a way of life to a degre<.'. rt 's iust a ff'Pling that's very difficult to define." Because of its name. the agcn t·y has had some unusual re quests. One person wanted a re c1pe for matzo ball soup . Mauro said with a laugh. "FORTY TO 50 percent of our c lients come because of the name." he added "Others arc referred by private physicians, ntl)er agencies in the county. schools. Mental Health and the Probation Department. Women Unite Gerda Klein of Buffalo. an author and survivor of World War II labor camps, will speak on Jewish life when the Women's Division of the United Jewis h Welfare Fund of Orange County hosts a bruncheon al 10: 30 a.m . Tuesday. March 29. The Inn at the Park, Anaheim, will be the setting for the event, which is being given to raise funds for Jewish agencies in Orange County and the nation of Israel. "The Jewish people have never known security, and even now when there is a country 1n which every Jew 1s welcome. the strugj;(le merely to be allowed to exist goes on,·· said Polly Sloan, women's d1vi s1on presidenf. ''Thal ts why Orange County Jewish Women will unite to show their solidarity with one another and with the people from the Stene of Israel .. Entertainment will be provided by the All Singing. All Dane in~. ;..;o Talking perrormers of the South Coast Repertory Theat<.'r. m keeping with the bruncneon them e. Where There h Concern m the Heart. There Comes Music From the Soul According to Eleanor Burg, bruncheon chairman. a total of $683.559 was disbursed m 1976 to Jewish organizations m Orange County and the state of Israel. Thjs included a grant of $63,657 to J ewish Fa mily Service of Orange County, $494,712 to United Jewish Appeal, and $72,750 to the Jewish Fede ration Council of Orange County. "Ge nerally w1lhm a famlly ther e isn't just one problem. There are a multitude'" Mauro added. "We can generally meet. the needs o( a family. In fact, we in J FS are really a family." Mauro said religion usually isn't a factor in problems brought t.o the agency but it oc- casionally can be relevant. One example might be a child who is resentful of the fact that he bas to go lo Hebrew School twice a week while his friends a re out playm~. JFS was founded m November. 1963 when memberi. of the Anti· Defamation League Council met to talk about offering more social welfare servic('s for the J ewish l'Ommunity. Members of all the Jewish or ganizations and temples in the county were invited to an all-day workshop a few weeks later to discuss unmet needs of the com- munity and from this meeting came a recommendation to of- ficially form JFS. THE INITIAL responsibility was assumed by Judy Kraus. who fielded all emergency calls for the first three years. Today, a s taff of s i x counselors. other professionals and two St.'cretaries carry the load They art• backed by the a s sociate1'> . .in auxili ary group which raises funds for such pro- Jccts as furnishing and decorat· in~ offices, and a large board of directors composed of interested c1l1zcns. Thl' board, 1ron1cally, now h ::s a n entirely Jewish members h1µ. "Being Jewish is not a requfre· ment, though," Mauro stressed. Asked 1f he felt that the name of the agency was detrimental to its purpose of helping the com· munity at large, Mauro said he didn't think 1t was Mauro believes the agency will ~row in its service to both the Jewish and non-Jewish popula lion and he looks forward lo ex- panded programs in Juvenile diversion and ~erontology. "Orange County 1s going to continue to grow and JFS will have to grow proporl1onately ,' he asserted Meanwhile. pcoptc needin~ help continue to knock ac the agency's doors. A GUATAMALAN MAN, whose wife was killed in the re· cent earthquake, came to the U.S. with his children in hopes of finding a better li(e. lie had been fleeced out of 3' his money and the family hadn't eate n for aday and a half. Jewish Family Service gave them food and a little cash for immediate ex· penses. A mother whose children arc about to lt'ave home 1s wondering w hal to do with the rest or her life Adolcscenb who ha\'e many rhfflcull choices to make want to talk about them in small groups. A father must make a career c hange at mid life lie is frightened It doesn 't matt('r 1f they're Jewish or not. They need help and get1t. Ranger Richard Dyer says, 'The great outdoors is closer than you think. ' .. .. • ,Tia ve lbe Swedu~ .-landed 1n Newwrt . JJeacb '! Moto.rlhta dnvinr on Pactfic • • Coast Hllhway near · Promontory Point must be wondering why a Swedish nag is flyini trom one of UJe lower balconies. There's no parUcular , reason, says owner ,Dick Johnson. "I'm ~f Swedish descent find got the flag when ! was in Malmo last ear. I just thought at ould be fun to fly . " Many Scandma- ians have stopped J>y to say hello, he fdded. -~ ,. . • • ~ • '/ I ' C ck L gal Affairs Y.•~ II •1 IYDNn O•Aaa AaJZS (Muell 11· AprU It>: Separate fan· tuy from actuality -a dream can be inlti'elt· ln1, perh•PI propbftic- but It w• a dJ'eam a nd should not be aubltUuted for wbat is re-1. here and demandln& of your atten· tion. TAVBUS CApril 20· May 20>: Wish can "eome true" if you follow dictates of ex- perience and conscience. Member of opposite sex 1s involved. Accent on hunch. teaching, learn- ing process, building for future security. GEMINI {May 21-Juoe 20): Individu al with ' The EJtcltlng HJgn ener,, oun or BOBBI ' CLYDE UDOVIU.A•I llOI Vie 0,.,... '7MIOI 0,...hlly ti ..... 2 .... f .i CoOstal Events Spark Season "weight problem" seeks your COW\Sel. Give it, but also poke fun at ypur own foibles. Means avoid any hint of pompo~ity. Check legal affairs. especially partnership project. CANCER (June 21 · July 22>: Open lines of communication. Be re- NEW· GIVENCHY! F R EE TESTI NG: Hearing Screening tests of preschoolt•rs will be given free between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. Wcdnes-::= day, March 23, in the :•~ Ticktocker Thrift Shop, .:: 540 W 19th St . Costa :.. Mesa • ~. Sponsoring the tests 1s ·;;the National Charity • League of Newport .; Beach Appointments •:are to be made by calling ~.6-12-2275 =· ;» W 0 ~I E ~ '~ G l ' I L CJ : ~The guild of Our L:cid\ ~Queen of Angcll> Church •.:will present, tll\ annual :,.1unrheon fashion show at .•11 ·30 am Thur ~daL :·March 2-i. in thl' BalbOJ .·Bay Club. .: Tickets. at SlO, may he ;:t">urchascd by talling ..Mrs. Fred Gr<.1ham ut ''"551-1682. • UCI F RI ENDS OF . LIBRARY: A check for $5.500 wus presented for the use of furnishing the special collections room at the Library. The room has been a specific project of the support group. It houses ttie hbrary'-s ·accumula- tion of materials dealing with early days in California plus other documents and books. \'~t CA: The Hunt - ington Beach-Fountain \'alle} Kachinas of the Wmd Nation "ill stage Jn ~-ening of roller skat· mg from 6 lo 8:3-0 p.m. Thursday. March 24, al the Holiday Skating Center. Fountain Valley An admission fee of SI. 75 with free skate ren· tal "111 provide funds for the group':. project::.. M ore.• information is available from Mrs. Virg1ma Burgh. 962·6721, or thl' YMCA, 847-9622. CAU FORNIA PRESS for women is sponsoring WOMEN: The Orange the annual Women 's County group will hear a Employment Option::. panel discussion on What Conference '77 at 9 a.m . We're Looking for From Saturday, March 26, at Writers and Photo-the Los Angeles Conven- graphers at 7 p .m tionCenter. Thursday, March 24. at Focusing on the gro\4 · the South Coast Plaza t~g tmp&i"l<ll'K!e of:.. Hotel. women in business in Reservations may be today's labor market made with Mr::. Peggy the day-long conferencL· Cotton, 645·3391 will feature workshop::. w OMEN I N including llow to MANAGEMENT: The Negotiate a Job Offer. Orange Count) Chapter Re" ardl\ in Crl'al1\ (· will meet at 7 30 p m Sales and Movmg l 'p 10 Thursday, March 21, at Man-agement theNewportSh('raton More information ,., Dr. Shirley Cashoff. a.vallable from th1· professor or human ( areer Plann1~~ Center. behavioratlhC'l'n1vers1 , Inc .C213 12n -nf.33 ty of California, San REMARRIED, INC.: Diego, will !>peak on /\ potluck dinner at f; Body Language. p. m .. followed by :1 speech by attorney Karl CAREER PLANNING C. Frank, will be the pro· CENTERINC.: The non-g r am on Saturday profit Los ~ngeles-based March 26, at DeAnz~ career gwdance center Bay Village, Newport 'Good Times' Reversed ; '• By ERMA BOMB ECK • Parents. you occupied for awhile. Your home "orkshop 1s out of the ques- tion. Dad It's too big Take something small ltke ma) be ~our keyring to play with.' A1T WIT'S END Beach. ceptivc where language, More inform:.it1on 1:. education, travel, available from Virginia publishing arc con· Edwards, 673-5634 cerned. Correct basic EMB ROIDE R ER's mistakes means stop GUILD OF AMERICA: taking s1tuat1ons. people The Orange County for granted Chapter will present Art LEO (J\lly 23-Aug. 22 >: Through the--Eyt of tht tt lfCT'S'lstent, if yott-re- N eed le. the third annual 1ect the superficial, you showing or the \\.Orks or could cUg deep enough to 1tsmemb<>rs ~trike pa) d1rl. In · Great selection . of styles, colors, and sizes! W.atc&ff P'la a °"'f I 7tti a. ,,.. ... , .......,_. .. och The exh1b1t "Ill b~ on tens1faed relat1on::.h1p 1s d1spla" from 9 a m to 5 featured pm Friday .ind Satur HRGO !Aug 2J·Scpl ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::====~ dJr. !\larch 2S and 26. 221 ll1ghhghl change of -.;;----an~I from I Ioli Pm Sun p.1tt•, dtplom<ir)o . adjust ;:\ ~ ~--es~~ da\ and :'llondtt\. :'IL1rl'l1 mt.'nl when· home. fam1-4 r ~r:. ,,. of "'I · .. '.!7 ·and 28, .11 tlw ll11nt h a rt• eont•crn ed '' "' / ~ 'I $,. I . '\ :. .... , ,// [\ ' ington lh•;u·h l.1 Han . w ,~, , lluntmgtun Bt•:.id1 UBRA ISept 23-0cl. TALL CLUB:;\ dav of 22 >: PC'rfert techniques Are your 'Roots' In The Old eschew self-deception. outdoor activitt<'"· din See places, people in re-Sod? ner and dancing In llunt· r d . t B h I d a istic light. Avoi •direct WE ARE SPECIALISTS mg on ear tl\ P anne confrontations. for Saturdav. Man·h 19. SCORPIO (Oct. 23. (All California Tall IN IRISH TOURSI Clubs have been invited Nov. 21): Relationships • and all events are open are Intensified. Nothing to short friends of tall is tepid -it is hot or Book w1·th peopl,e>. cold, all or nothing . Festivities begin at 1 SAGITl'ARIVS <No·v. p.m . in Edison Park with 22·Dec. 21 ): Affairs may volleyball. softball. b1k· seem to be going in B rk ing. basketball and other circles. Tryine to pin u e activities. A dinner-people down to definite dance will begin at 6 statements may not be t~~t;ni~n:~~ ~~;~i~~~~~ ea~A PRICORN (Dec. Travel Recreation Room 22.Jan: 19>: New ex- "'" ~\ ,\ I CHIW REN'S HOME periences open up - SOCIETY: Mrs. Mason m e ans you a re Roe 1s the new president refreshed. stimulated by of the Newport Harbor concepts. methods not I.' 2727 E. Coast Hwy. 1~ Corona del Mar Auxiliary. previously considered . DO CALL US (7141 675-2760 • When you ('all your children lo ·go v1s1t your friends 'With )Ou ·do they hide under the car and re : fuse to come out" Do they make :excuses for not going like thl'~ •have to stay home .ind rotatP th1· ·tires on their tricycle" Do the~ ,eJ<ude all the enthu::.tasm of :.i .child invited to a fire dn II in ~December in the middle of "showers? : T hen these words are for you Suppoi.c JUSt suppose -the At the house, the introductions are brief. "This is Mom and Dad, but you'll forget their names ..inyway. Say hello. And would ) ou look at }Our parents. J swear they've grown a foot since we last saw them. How are things at work? And where did you get that pretty dress? I want you to meet my parents. Serving on her board · AQVA RIVS (Jan . are the Mmes. James L. 20-Feb. 18>: Accent on Putting everyth.ing off until Sun-Gray, vice president; making most of ac- day night. llow long have you Peter E. Kenn y and colades. chances, op· knownaboutthebricf?" Lloyd Ridgeway Jr., portunlties, "select secretaries; William W. h Int s. ' ' fa~~~:.st Friday." says their Wilcox, treasurer, and PISCES (Fe b . 19· My .. 111hrt9d to afl Alr·tl11•1, StMIMhlp1, Cer l.wfab .ct Hottf•. lmlNu 04' ,, .. ..,,. •• Ho c"-? for ~u. 0... ce« ...... :Situation was reversed and )<>u ,were being dragged along to VISlt :th eir friend s lt might go .something like thts • "Look, Mom. would you and :Oad stop dawdhnE: or we r(' ~Olnl! 'lo be late at Debbi<' and M 1ke ., )louse. And I'm telhnJ( you befort> :we go, 1 don't want you whining -around about \\hen .ire· "t' com ;ng home and running in and out .every two minutes to 'tell " And Tor trying out loud takt> )omeUung to do -some or your favorite toys • Mom. why don t )OU take your peedlepomt? That would keep Mom is 34 and Dad is 36. You ~hould have a lot m common. Now run along and get acquaint- ed. Maybe their Mom will show you her new microwave oven and their Dad his new power mower. Keep it down now.·' Later. as the children are real· ly having a good time, the four parents approach the children Kids. when are we going home? A 11 the parents are sleepy . Resides, Dad has to be In court early tomorrow and he has a brief to wnte tonight.'' The kids look at one another, "lsn 't that ju~t like a parent? Womens: ... , · • ~rtswear· • Jeans • Tenniswear . \' ~t.~ 68% OFF .: ~ \)'>-· ALL FALL STOCK· ~-HU&E SHIPMEMT OF SPRING FASHIONS JUST AlllYED M~F.Oe · 1119AClllU'S. FACJllUfM · : Newport, Inc. 1804 NEWPORT BLVD.COSTA MESA IComef Of Hartlor) ' 645 18ft.a ......, ........... .. • .,.. ............. """ Ntoft.•."" "A likely story. Don't they Do n a I d L . H a l l , Marth 20) :. Cycle high - drive you crazy? 1 swear you parliamentarian. str ess fl exlbi l_ill'.. can'ttakeparentsanywhereand ?ii;;;;;;;;;;:;-=--.;;;;;;;.._ ......... ------------:--:-=:=--=:-========::=:::=:::=:=:=:=:=::=:=:::::::::: hJlve a good time. What say we get together sometime soon without the A·D·U·L·T·S"" Jn the car on the way home. you hear the kids say, "I love Debbie and Mike. but thw parents are really spoiled brats. I hope )Ou two didn't drink a lot of liquids or you'll be up all night. And don't you dare fall asleep on the way home or we'll leave you in the car all night. Tell me. did you have a good time?" rLUMllHG Hl4TIHG AILCOND. ""-..... .. , __ , 5.,Vt(:e I"' Vout A'•a-C.11 ~·SSION VIEJO ?8912 C4"1"'0 C.P·•l•l"O ' .. ~ ·~ "" • ... r •• ,: 495-040 t COl>fAMES~ 1 ~211 Newoe>t1 Blvd -"42-1751 Block Potent or Bone Smooth WITH PURCHASE O~ 14K. GOLD OVER . STAINLESS SURGICAL STEEL STUDS AT $6.66 101 DISCOUNT ON YOUR NEXT 10 PAIR OF EARRINGS PURCHASED ,, f -~=--==--· -----=---=---------------------------=---=-=----------- --- I , H R • : 11117 I con:ament 4lll kttsf wom I.I b7bra mecbulc bu~band·1 arime· ltl.1ned f There were &imee •b«n I was .asbamedolmy husband'• banda, too, but u I 1rew ~der I de- veloped a dltferent outJoolt. Now I reali1e tho can we drive, our lo•ely home and nice clothes were maute possible by those wonderful hands. DEAR ANN LANDERS· My huaband la60 and bu been a beer drunk for years. I 1~yed with him, using the excuse, "U would be better for the children.•• Well, • m From 8 1 Peering Around Rite Dates Set . ./ -G_AY McDEVITT_ ... McDavitt-Andrews Newport Beach residents Gay McDevitt and Richard Slater Andrews will be married July 30 at St. Michael and All Angels Church. Her parents are 11.J. McDevitt and Mrs. Marie McDevitt, both of Newport Beach. She is a graduate of Corona del Mar High School and California State University, San Diego. She at- tended the University of New Zealand and is a member of Alpha Chi Omega ~ndrews, son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Andrews, is an alumna of Orange Coast College and the University of Southern California, where he affiliated with Kappa Alpha. ....... Coddington-Nerison Mr. and Mrs. Herbert D. Coddington of Hunt- ington Beach have announced the engagement of theiJ; daughter, "Bonnie Anne Coddinger, and Daniel Robert Neri son of Costa Mesa. An April 30 weddin~ is being planned in Christ Church by the Sea, Newport Beach. Miss Coddington 1s a graduate of Bryman School and now 1s a student at Golden West College, where her flance attended. He is a graduate of Monrovia ll1gh School and 1s the son of the Robert W Ncrisons of Monrovia * * * . . . Trails A naltve of California, his interest in the subJect began years ago "My grandfather was resident caretaker al Griffith Park. where I hiked and explored as a boy," he recalled. DYER'S f'ATHER, an or n a m en t a l horticulturist, s pent 27 NEWPORT JtdtBOR Laverys of Laguna High School PTA pre. Ni g u e I. S h e ·1 s a sente d Continuing freshman majoring jn Service Awards to Mrs. nursmg. Roger Blanchard and ----------Mrs. J ohn M. France during a luncheon. A Very Special P erson Award was also given to Mrs. George Howe. HOME from a South Seas cruise are Mr. and Mrs. J a n Rubini of Newport Beach. years at 20t~. Century NAMED to the dean's Fox studios, where he honor list at Mount St. ~rew P!:Wts (~ tru. ffi(}V· -M-a-ry~ eotl"(?~ te sets. T h e r es e L a v e r y , Dyer, a life l ong da ughterofthe HughT. naturaltst, ts working on ---------- a degree in horttculttlrc from Sadd l eback College He 1s also a de· voted rockhound and amateur photographer He and his wife of 27 years. Mane, have hve ~rown ch1 ldren and llvc in Laguna Niguel RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY WM.. y Oii w Gitt ttle .... 1922 Harbor ll•d. Costa Meta -541·0259 raise funds Sundresses Jeans. Blouses & Swimwear IALIOA ISLAHD 67$.0770 for your club, organization ------ 1r your non profit dub or organization needs to raise funds coll Huntington Center 897 -2533 ond we will send you our (JACK ANUEKSON) REVEALS in the DAILY PILOT Charity Fair detols >------------1 When you open a new checking account of $250 or more . . where checking accounts ore FREE No m1n1mum balo~e-no montr.1.,. fct> ' Davis-Marx Mr and Mrs. John E F. Davis of Costa Mesa h ave announced the engagement of their daughter, Laurie J Davis, and Steven Marx, son of Barbara Marx, also of Costa Mesa We'll replace your · Fosto~ia · The betrothed graduated from Estancia High School and are planning lo marry July 4 at the Laguna Beach Festiv(jl of Arts garden. ••• Keene-Esparza Mr. and Mrs . Thomas R. Keene of Elkhart, Jnd., have announced the engagement of their daughter, Na11cy I. Keene, Newport Beach, and Jon J, Esparza, Manhattan Beach. A July 23 wedding is planned at Our Lady Queen of the Angels Catholic Church in Newport Beach. . Miss Keene is a graduate of University of Ar izona. Her f1 ance, son of Mr. and Mrs Joe A Esparza. Wilmin gton, graduated from the University of Southern Califom1a Tbe World 's Greatest Put -On Powers Modeling Co will kl::k-olf It's 44·hour attempt to shatter the Guinness World Book record for the longest fashion show In history This marathon tor charity kicks off 1n the Huntington Center mall at 7 p.m. Fri . Mar 18 and continues unttl 3 or ? ? Sun. afternoon Also the H.B Ct\y Council will mo"-1 tot chanty at 3 p.m Sat. See the lun at Beech & Edinger at the San Otego Fwy NO tv1af LUMPS. BULGES O<BUMPS. BELLffiMA 1Le:I ·1 'c Ci "V1'r I Coiml 2435 EAST COAST l'//QmAY CORONA DEi. MAil CAlFORNIA 92625 TEUJIHOt.E (7'14) 673·7846 SENIOR CITIZENS. m · 10.w off Au .'8 Pare••••• Vt ON ALL PURCHASES BY llCOMING A ~'lMllR Of OUll SCNIOll CITIZENS SAVINGS PLAN AT NO COST TO YOU. RENTALS• ALL Pr•·P•ht IX Pro1ra•1 HHortil ii ·~ ...... •I If you've chipped a goblet or sherbet, or-broken sorf.e of your cherished Fostoria , take heart! This event wlll help you replace or fill in your set. And you can special orde~ most old'paiterns. Or, if you 're in dou~a! to your pattern, just bring in a sample frQm your collection·and.tlteet our Fostoria tabl~ lop advisor, M_s. Jewel White. Sht'fl be in se,lected stores to help vou identify your pattern We .show Just five'<Jf the most popular Fostoria patt.erns Please allow 00 to 00 w~eks for delivery. stasswa(e 126-mav co C'ome, meet Ms. Jewel White in the gl.uswale department of the followina M~y Co store: ...JJ-------M~~'..::c~h~18, South Coast Plaza 10 00 to6 00 ' • .. "' • ., \ .t_ -•--APwt,...t. ~rrrotat fickets brace ~ainst the cold as ey demonstrate g ains t the Palo erde Nuclear 1>ower Plant. 4.rtzona 's first, under aoostruction 4• miles w.est of Phoerti<'. t "RARE COIN .. : AUCTION : Yelland ;Auction Galleries ~· Ltd. • 1232 N. Tustin Ave. ; Orange, Callf. 92897 • (714) 633-2855 :FRI., MARCH 25, 8 P.M. : GOLO.SILVER-COPPEA .. ,, •• I HHI' "''' n1l11'.t 't•lt" .tntl ·•h·~ li•d (Qfe11n rountnrt • Currency 5',rpfrb uampin of mt"Cl1hc 1rt and pr'f-fHlU\ mfl.ls. Aulhtnlh: ic~ld (om ii.~~)' m1~ '~'t~t~; :.:~t. ~:;·,'1711:~< ... .,., l\)t.h vi , .. ,, t-r otnt l'l'f1 rruf't t \ trftT't<h r.,,,.,. l-Wm•n ~umt'r .. 1 tt11CP ff lr*"l2<'«i'11ftJ'lff"(" .. pfw.m.1n) mort'.nrc \IJ'tV~w•I &. f)f'lt> •' 1kmd1trm" A ·,...u,t """ l.ltin hlf lhw rl" nmlrt.lllt\I c~tHtor 4.. M\\f"\U-.( TMm\ \J.u~:~;;,•;~~ \mrfitlrd r. ~ • 10 .. t ... ,,.lfl 'j• m '"flir m l••U)' • '"""' t\ rt.un t111•p m :! llour' SJf1nr '" \lW'flM • Kr-,t·r \ .. 11"'• w.1,'"'lt-d t..n1t1n.n ) t'tlctnlt Au1 U< n r. •11.-ru•' Lt.it \Z..V "" Tu•11n \\.I nr;i"''"' C 4J;U !12f~l '71i t t..Ll 13.» Ju11o1 ~''"o' N t\.C•ll• •n\t OOi" ltl,~ tr '11\ff"'lll ••f :\ .. ~fVll I ,,. ....... ~ • LO :Moe bal 1uJt tued by • wom U.. '1 aewspQtr llDked roaunUc.U, to former Prftldiat nr &\STA llVLSD thlll lln. u .... • pu c ftpre """ • pa c offtdll aod lupstor Court Judea PhJUp M. LI dored the ••Y ''" tnal ot the case brou1bt by a Loa Anaele• reataurant owner. Marianna Liu. Saeta said she need not prove malict! by the publication to recover dama1es. an ''lbe need DOt sbo'# malleebut ma1, under Cal a bl•. ,..,,,,..,. actual damq ln· dudlnc out ol pocket loa1es, men· tal ancutah and loss of reputa· tion." Girl Scouts Set Display Booths THE SUIT CONCl:&NS an article in the Aug. 10 issue that said ahe met 1ecrelly with Nixon in hotel suites, bars and yachts. It also said Nbroo helped her come to America from Hoog Kong, and that she was being in· vesUgated by the FBI as a Com- munist spy during the alleged in- volvement with Nixon -two to three years before be became president. The judge said the Enquirer article was ''susceptible of de- fam •tory meaning as they cbar1e Mrs. Liu as a married woman with children of having an affair with another man, com- mittinc forgery and iJlegally en- tering the country.'' Girl Scouts frpm Saddleback Valley communities will put up display bc)olhs Saturday from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. at Laguna H11ls Mall. The girls will be working on badges and wiJl teach scouting techniques. For additional in formation, contact Linda Car- rick, Mall marketing director, 586-8282. ROBERT STEINBERG, at· torney for Mrs. Liu, said pre· viously that both Nixon and Mrs. Liu denied having any kind of re- Dana Dills 'Brains' Win ColUlly A cademic Decatldon Next Test A team of Dana Hills High School s tudents beat three other teams in an academic decathlon, win· ning a chance to compete in county finals March 25 in Anaheim. Winning the Anaheim finals would mean an ex- pense-paid trip to Las Vegas next month for the re- gional competition, said Patrick Levens, Dana Hills team coach. I THE DANA IDGH "BRAINS" BESTED Tustin High, ~. La Habra l:Jigh, 99·~. and Valencia High, 88-20, in the Kiwanis Bowl. Levens said this is the second year the Dana Hills team qualified for the county finals. Last year. the team lost to Anaheim High School. 85·84. in overtime. The coach said he started a week before school opened in September, going through transcripts, looking for students who might do well an a de cathlon. HE SELECTED ABOUT 100 students to check out further with other teaehers and counselors Of the 100, he interviewed about 30. Eleven made the Ktwarus Sowl team. Levens coaches a team for the county-sponsored decathlon as well as the Kiwanis Bowl team. He said the two contests make different demands on stu· dents. The Kiwanis Bowl is modeled on the television c.c>lJege bowl ~rogram and requires students to have quick recall. A student who traditionally gets good grades might not have auditory learning ability ahd rote memory, which translate into winning scores in the Ki w.anis-sponsored~enL PLAYING FOR DANA H1LL5 were team cap- tain Kane St. John, Reese Thompson. Vince Romero, Ken Fish. Lio,da Frankel, Steve Knudsen, Peter Pltsker, Ashley Sells, Ginny Clark, Risha Martinez and Penny Milne. .. Some people are crit1cal of this kind of com- petition," said Levens, "but I think the kids de· finitely come away from il better off. "You're not going to frighten these kids ever." he said. "The competition gives them a great deal of self-confidence at an age most kids don't have it. .. Tea111work Linda Blue, Doug Sulley and Jack Barnes, working as a team and with the assistance of their staff, arranged over $6,000,000 in loans on residential properties during 1976. From Seal Beach to San Clemente and from Saddleback Valley to the shoreline , property owners appreciate the friendly attention and efficiency of the Newport Equity Funds Loan Department. If you' r~ a property owner and need-capital , call Linda Blue, Doug Sulley or Ja~k Barnes for Information . The number is 644-8824. They work together to help you get the money you need! , Newport Equity 'Funds ,LV..~.o .... ii. Home Office 620 NEWPORT CENTER DRIVE •SUITE 211 • NEWPORT BEACH (92660) (714) 644-8824 MiSlion Viejo / Laguna Niguel f . ( M.\I LllOX . ) STIMULATES 25283 CABOT ROAD •SUITE 107 • L AGUNA HILLS (92653) (714) 830·5700 ~ . I ' I , ! ' lll11wln- Wllll11111 An11111/ Wolkweting lale./J_ ,II 7JOrr. A lc•~i.u•/ 111f'I!"111111111/m\\'flllJ: <JJ/io Cl1on<t (•"'"'"'"/.'ti</ 1,111m1' '""" /11(1/Tt•ml "'''"'""· I\ 1//i1ml\ /~'"' / 1\'l'\t/i111i: /11•11/ltllf//Hllkt/111/•" 1•11 fnlt•fl' \11vi"" \h{m, I~~ 1.,, I 111\£, fol,, '""' t'" k ·~ 1oiJ1uN.."f""l'<l'"" •mnlflhl.• \; 11t/>l\1hlr, \lfllllf•'",f fuf>nt /~1.J,Lrf ~Ill\/ lJI/\' J.11nl 1~ 11fll7cu1\'l1lll' I•••"'"'' 011 <tW "~'' I 1 J ,'lff .\okf'l"'dlMto~lf>/\}1111111:4•111/I !rrs: """ SV5N~J.J99 l'"'l.aJ.Tli111dvublrmlt. 'lllveSW. on i11~1toclt wllcowrlng, too. l•••l 1/1w11·11f11111111v~h1111,/ ,,;,,,, f/r,,11/1, ''"Jlf'I. I"'"'"" UIH/ lllrlfl' R.-111h llllt11!.• n~/11 "···-· \Ir. ·~''' "'"""' 1•1/\ 111 llllfk1•t'l1I/~ l•l •11>1.~ ll,(l/ m111/11hl. <1t 11f/ ,1,111·• Cllt'.-A ""' 11t1t 1ro11·.i ""' PcJ, l.u~•l 111 th.N.· "'"' ,,,, ~ ... "' ..,......,...,.,."'4.,..,,."""'fffi'' ,,,,,,. ' 11H,,.,.,.,.,,,., tH,..,,... . •t11oSllY~WM~IW AW"-Tllo1&t.,. \ • •AMAHEfM .•.••••••.•. • ..• ttl·7150 LAGUNA HIUS ••••.••..•••.••.......•• 511-2110 94i So. Euclid Avenue • 25262 Mcintyre Street. Soite B w ... w ... ~ ...... , COSTA MISA •••••••••••••• 517 .. 766 LAKIWOOD ...................... 21l·f2M 616 31fJ1 Harbor Blvd. 5924 South Street FUWATOM ................. U MIH 01.AMGI .............................. 997.J 111 212 N. Harbor Blvd 867 So Tustin Avenue HUMTIM•TOM 11.ACH •••••• ltl-2177 SANTA AMA ..................... : • • 546-9770 15891 Golden W'lSt Stfeet 1136 S. Bnstol MOMOAf neu AllOAf ....... TO' r.M. SATUIDAY' A.Mo TO', ...... CLOHO IUHDAY In the DAILY PILOT PRESTtGE ' by Congoleum MORE COLORS MORE PAT'rERNS in no-wax cushioned vinyl floors Six dramatic new designs inspired by cultures that have helped shape the heritage of America , e High-Gloss Beauty REG. S1US !!JJ.~~ Vinyl· Crii\QQ.l~.~t'J e No-Wax, Shinyl Vinyl for Easy Care • Cushioned for Comfort, Warmth, Quiet ~ PRICES GOOD ONLY UNTI L SAT. APRIL 2 . .. TV DAILY LOG THURSDAY EVENING e:oo tJ 1 a1 C10l ((111 C31) News u 1a31 tel m NeW$ U C2t1 Sur Trek ({) Gomer P,lt D (~tl (6)) 1391 rorem1n-Youn1 H11vywei1ht FlsM Cont'd from 5 JOPM George foreman vs Jimmy Youn& 10 1 classic ballle of conlmt 1ng boxme styles, live lrom Puerlo RICO. D Gunsmoh m hrttldp family Cl> Adlm·12 m Dectnc Compuy _Jp Little bsuls -6:30-tJ Otn1hl Cuesls include Wayne Aoaers. Pat Boone Roy Cf11 k •nd Bob Cnne. (£ ..., tntfrth ~ liltrY Gnlf1n Show m fa111ily Affair (\ll) Cf)) Cummob mi.om £)Town Talk 7:00 IJ fn1 Cl m £)News U Lt"s Club (J) My TlHH Sons CJ") To TtU Ute Truth O Conuntr1tton m I love Lucy al The FBI ~ Andy Griffith ED MKNttl/Lthrtr RtJ>Ort 0'l McHale's Navy -7:30-u Andy Roy Clark guesls. U l.OYe lmtrK1n Style l l> The Odd Couple (_fJ Wndkl CM!tra 0 The ~tr's W~d r1 Ol (lJ1 Tl Match G1me m Indy 8litlch ( 11' r l.) Tiit W~bllm l1othen ~ Koc111's Httoes ED Cllannel 21 Toru1ht m '"'' b 1111ht m "F" Treep 8 :00 0 THE ACHIEVEMENT! '* NEW·TH£ WALTONS tJ ( t7 J ) a The Wallons John Boy 1\ m"m'""d by lhe s1t1k 1n11 conl•UI b't.•eM New YO<k C1ly 1nd Wallon s Mounla1n •h,n th, 1mpaht11t w11le1 cou to lhe b11 ci ty 1n hopes ol hnd1n1 oul 11 h1~ l1nally compleled novel will bP published IJ (21) (Jl JQ' m NCAA IHtet · ban live covmge of Rea1onal vm1 linal game Teams not d~c1ded al press time U Movie: (2hr) "Wulhenn1 ..._ ......_, Heishls" (dra\ '19 1,.1,,nc, Ol1v1" Mtrle Obtron. D1v1d N1vrn D Qt1 Wtlco1111 lac• lolltr Aln()ld musl uphold the Sweithor hoflOI whtn ht vofunlem lo Jacr Killer Carv,111 1n lht 11nr O Mme C (1111) "C1n11011 t0< Cordoba" Udvl 10 Cto•c• P@p~rd, Giovanna Rall1 m Tonite Roald Amundson • Unlocks The Mysteries Of The Socittl Pole m J Tt1 Who Dmd R~ald Amund\l'n 8y 1911 th ,~,'°'th, u111m.1le 1oal 111 ••olor.ili~n lh, Soulh f'ol• h1~ ,.~Chtd •IS l1nal round A~a1nsl lht tm1bl• rnnd1hl)ll\ of Polar lravtl a No11>1 ~·an RtMld AmundYn w~s to prtlvt v1C1011ou\ HIS compehlor. Caplain Stoll, d1td 1n tht allempt Cl> fttrry ..,_ (3) llo¥ie: Ct) (lhr) ·~t A Wrt to Co" (com) 64 Shuley Maclaine, Paul Newman, Robert Mitchum, Dean M1rt1n f.Zl) Mast1r,ltct Tl!Ntre €fJ llllional Sllblcrlptltll ff THI -8:30- D AIC Mo.it Spedtl: (Cl (2h~r) "MarooHd" (dra) '69 -Gre101y Prck. Richard Crtnna. James r ran c1scus, Gtnt Hackman, David l1n ssen A US. manned space ship m1slirts du11n1 re enlry and 1ls mw bfcome~ m1100Aed 1n "l)acr &\ a desperate mcue plan 1s put inlo operation 111d the world 1nd the 1st1on1utt' wives watch and wail ( Si Ct 1) lewilcW t.tll Mo.it: rC1 (10) "llio Ira"" (wes) 'S9-19hn Wayne, D~n Marfin 9:00 fJ (<llJ (V) CJ) H1nll fift·O Mel Fentt CUtSts as Rachck, a Spy, and Pat Hrnsle 1s a lfVtrnment scientist Or. Crant Ormsbee 111 ton1111rs ep1Sode 1n wll1ch Stevt McGillttll 11applu with lhe mysttty of a sunken SGYlef subm111ne Cl) Mt¥M: CJ:') (211f) "Tiit '""',.'" bltt" (dr1) '64-Annt B1nt1oft, Peter Finch, James Mason, l1"1ne Cray, Cedrtt ~.,d..,ch, Roullnd .. ! Atkinson, Alan Webb. GJMtrYGnffillSM Cl) The VlrcJitla11 El!) C1v1U11tlon "The Hero as Artist" Kenneth Clark d1Scusses M1chelaneelo, Bramante, Raphael and olher dom1n1tin& f1&ures ol Renaissance Rome ( ,.l 1 t ) rutrlds• hmlly -9:30- ( 21 8 ) Brady lunch 10:00 U •t7 CJ))·(() Barnaby Jones Belty drops over for a birthday cele· btalton wllh a c1nhiend to dl$C0Yer ~he's been the Vlthm o/ a burglary, but tht 1111, mystertous y iefuses lo report the t1lme to lhe pohce. IJ IUl CI> !Im D IUC's 8t1t Stlltt: The llhl11t1111111 Etchln1e Gro1M1d ru!ts 19!...IM ctwtAnee o.L niih'ill1tudt croscoiie plans. needed f)y the Alltes, and i~dustnal diamonds. w1nled by the Na11s, are set 1n operaDlln by a U S lnlell11nce acent at the he•&hl of W011d War II. D 0 Nt111 ft Cunsmok1 €13 MKrtba & Men (II) ( 21 8 ) Tiit lnmd1ble lrud ltbchine -10:30-m al e>News 11:00 U D •t i l)t News 0 i>1 \J) !1~ m News U love lmeriun Style I 81 SJO<s Matdl Up O Ironside m Mary Hartman, M11y Hartman Cl) Tht Honeymooners ( t7J ! f)) The Ranch Show 12.t Best of Grvvcho fD Blithe Spirit The 1945 film m s1on of the Newt Coward comedy classic features Rea Hamson as a oovel1~t who finds married Ille to his Sl'tond wife (Constance Cummings) romphcaled by lhe appurance of his l••SI w1fr's &host (Kay Hammondj ( ttJ 1.1..)1.oh A.OU• St}lt -11:30- & ( 11 1,1 I CIS lite Mo.le: c "llofU: c., Ill A Cat•; WKM- clom" (d11) 74-Clint Walker u ,,3 J. 1ai m Jo111111J tanen e The nL ai* O ( 211 fJ') llt ThundJJ Nishi s,.cial Ort1d Hartman-Ca11blers W1nfl#•s and Losers m i.ews &> Srt. 111\o 2' Tiit 700 Qllb 12:00 e 1est " liroudlo 0 MO'fll: (t_l ""afky of Ille Wtstem Wottd" (com) '6.3-S1obh1n McKenna Cary Raymond GJ Ctoss·Wits Cl) Mo.1t: "A Vtry P'rivat1 Alflir" (dtal 62 Marcello Mastro11nn1 -12:30- • All·N11ht si-: "TllfH Cheers fot t!tt lr!Sll," "Ont Sudiy After- -:· "S111ndl C.,. Mystery" m Mow11 "D11patc~ Fro111 lltu· ten" tdocl tn Gtowth of Witt \tr "C' I< ""'''d " dr ntW'l lalh'.tinp m "°"''" 1 :00 IJ l.l 6 10 TOlllOrrow 2 :00 a """ DwMflutlllt ''lat11e of lht Comman6ts," "fltUI 1d rantuy" • -2:30-m M lltpt SMw: "C.rw of Ille lMRI Cor•,'' "lllt Blut M11rdff It SL Tnn1111s" -3:05- tJ Mcmt. c. "It Had to le You" (com1 4/ DAYTIME MOVIES ....... 1WCM 11 Below, for your~ m Ult day's l1'0'ries. 9:30 a "ltuie1" (com) '62- An~it D"k1nson, Maurice Chtv1her 10:00 'lf "Dtsptlllt JourfttJ'' (d1a) 42-Ronald R111an. Errol flynn Arthur Kennedy IZ:OO m "Thi Compluton" (adv). '44 Hedy L11man, P1ul Htnre1d 1:00 8 -S-ntt." (clrl) '40- laekte Cooper. Betty field, Q.tl (~ "Mertilla ... ,..,.,.. .. (dra) '62-Jelf Chandler, Ty Hardin. Will HulthNIS- 2.'CIO Cl (C) "Cf.cl Ill Ille WofM" (sci 11) '6~-Dana Andrews, Janette Scott, k1tl'Oll Moon! 3:00 (]~ CC'> "UrtN tf Ctlft(' (wes) '68-Wtyne M111ndu, Shm P1ekens. J:JO B (C) "l.w' (wes) '56- Gfenn ford. Ernest kr1n1nt, Rod Stel&tr, hhcit Farr, Valent frendl KOCE Television (50) . I I , . \ Whirlpool COOKED UP MICROWAVE OVENS TO SUIT YOUR ·TASTE •• AND WE'VE COOKED UP THIS INTRODUCTORY DEAL TO SUIT YOUR BUDGll '*-'-A FREE MICROWAVE COOKBOOK WITH PURCHASE OF MICROWAVE OVEN . . Micro Menus cookbook Included with every microwave oven. Whirlpool worked with Better Homes and Gardena Test Kitchen to de•elop and test all the recipes. Sale Prices Effective March 18-21 , 4 Days Only all you'll ever need In a microwave oven Meat Senior temperature probe automatically turns oven olf wt1en pr•aet temperature Is 1eacned bO min. digital Meallltner clock, eoltd state Meal Minder variable power control. #AEM7600 439°0 microwave oven cooking you control Meal Minder variable power control 1911 you ldJust cooking energy to lood1 being cooked. With 35 minute dual 1peed Meeltlmer clock. Luge , 1.41 cu. It. oven capacity. Model #REM7200 299°0 a great compact to cook meals fast To1hib1 microwave oven with on- off awltch, cooking 1t1rt 1w1tch, 20 minute timer and a lff-thru door. With cooking tray that can be u1ad 11 • cooking uten111 With o~n llght. #EA--658BT 199°0 cool, fast, clean and very economical Olgllat Mealtlmer clock for up to 60 min of cooking or delroltlng w1tnoui resetting. Solid atate Meal Minder variable poweT control, black glass see throug~ door. Model #AEM7400 339°0 an economical microwave oven With 28 minute dual-1peed Maalllmer clock. black glaa1 1ee· thru door. large 1.14 cu. ft. oven capacity, sealed In gla89 shell, end of cooking timer, remarkable low prlee. Model REM7000 249°0 ___ , , ' -DAYS. THUU. TH U SUM. 0 ... Y SALE s2ss ••CJ. $360 Pedestal Table 30" to 48" round Choice of base Butcher block construction (60.. special order al sale pnce) SALES320 .... $400. • Mea\ Block Table. Easterm M1ple Dovetailed. 30 x30", 10 thick. SALE s23s•0 Rec). $298 T reslle Table 24 x48 • 10 36 x72 (36 x46 .. special order at sare pncel SOLID OAK CHAIRS BENTWOOD ROCKERS BAR STOOLS 20°/o OFF .THE OLIVE BRANCH SOUTH COAST vtl.UCH IMe<~nt1fe 81<19 I 3150 S. Pl.AV. DtlYI, SANTA AHA 17t41557-4tU W._ Solo-ctl• .t ............. W!MMr, I Nlkllc•• C..... Al ......_.-~ L.-.. ORANGE COUNTY'S MOST COMPLETE APPAREL STORE FOR ENGLISH &WESTERNCLOTHING NDTA •MEN'S-LADIES AND CHILDRENS' . ENGLISH HUNT COATS $20 CONTINENTAL STYLE TO s37eo •LADIES' SIZES-ORIGINAL FOURWAY s29eo STRETCH BREECHES REG.44.95 NOW •MEN'S-LADIES AND CHILDREN'S NO. C 522 EQUl-STRETCH BREECHES NO. C 523 REG. 28.95 s1 4 9 Q NOW ,,,,,Marborough Porvair . $4090 English Hunt Boots _________ Now .,Men's Leather Dress Jackets 30 % -Long and Short Lengths____ OFF ,,,,,Nylon Jackets Lined ________ 20 %oFF ,,,,,Men's-Ladies' Leather' 30 0/ and Wool Lined Coats. ______ . /0 OFF . 30o/o TO MEN'S AND LADIES 50°/o 30o/o Full Line of Quality We.tern •nd English ~'ddle1 •nd Equipment. OFF OFF . . . .. .. . j ., ... ,, • \ HANOI, Vietnam (AP) -The U.S. presidential commission seekini ~ formation on Americans missing in Indochina met with Vietnamese of. ficials for four hours today but would give no information about the dis· cussion. ._,..., .. i::.:c. .. '~=~.__..~ ................ ,;. 9tC&9tfL lMil ............ , ....... ............. ...... ~Illa ....... c. J-" ~ ·~-,.. " ... '*'* ... _, ..... "1 L:. .. Wit ...... ..,.~.._,., •IUMOll ---~M._.IV ..... L.. KIUUIW, ...,_... 0 .M Cifwe G • a•MHln , '-•''"A • .,. lllV.nl If., IM"OOHICH ... ill~ AMI WW... L , -et11t11fN. 1111191 I.ff II, 4IM CM'9I -; ,.,. IYCIC ...... w .. ""-M4''/. De''"'' ~. A"4'*'Y J .... IC•tfll"" J 11oa1HSOH, J .... , ........ Kl• •nd LAul11 "-•· LU*. V1,..i111• .,. .. llllfeioi•. "°91.llTT. ,,_., l!lt•- lticl!M1t Al ... •VIL TMNt ic-1t1 E. -c;.o... .... AIWI; llOA04, 1Ce4fv.,.., AM - H.,.r, ~ .JOfil~S. Qrle C -CllM!es H ; Sl4A'W, ""'lricta J.. a..-Oni. a, SHllUOAM . .J6JU 1.nly •1141 All .... a EAUOltll!AU, Slllrlty M•• e11d Slepilen l"•trlck ~ M<IC MIGHT, O<tftna aM JouP'I, ltAMl llEZ, A119*I ..id A11~1in•. ST. ANTHONY, Canada CAP> ~':.~1t~~~=~~~~;:'!: "· Canadian and Norwegian bunters MA1tTIH .... r1en1. ....,J..:queu,,. C STllAIH. Al<hard Aooert •"" killed 12,414 more seal pups Wednes· Heien c••1r•. SPRINGSTON • PACED WITR alCBAID'S poulb&e jail sentence. the futu:re of t.be band aeema aravely in doubt. Wltb the added elemenla ol frustration and fury. the Stooa performed a mapificent two- bour Jbow ID 3SO ecstatic r.no contest W111Ders in the El Moc.am· boClub. For the band, the exper· ience must have been stranee. for "they haven't performed in a club since 1964, in Bristol, England. "We have a1reed with the Viet· namese to withhold any statement un· til 5 p.m. tomorrow when the talks have been concluded, at least for this phase." Leonard Woodcock, the leader of the group, said. day despite more efforts by anti· ~~~11~~"e Ei~,!:"'.!':bbo'e.?~~~.. ..1 WISH WE COULD make sealing forces and a threatened visit JOHN!>ON P.irkk "-...o E11o1.e o : do' • · l'k th· .. M' k by Brigit Bardot that didn 't ta.Ice place M<GltEE Mar9u•1t• •nd Leon money tn gigs I e IS, ic because she lingered too long over GELow w 1111.m J•me• ..... Prw~r Jagger said alter the exhilaral· lunch. ~·.,~:rt w~~~T~;~·e~s~ ing 9bow. Wednesday's t ake raised the ~~~·~~:l..:;~;::i GAA.ZtANO hBul l>etxt o_rehthehy welnl onstbage Botlftng Rel»o•ttd• number of pups killed to 24,344, by HENOA1x, Mlc11ae1 eo1e~ .... ,... t e ne nig t, e sa on a an· Canadian government count. The aov· Judy Lynn HELSON, l..on Victor end " Cll•rl""" Pllyllls, HOLLAND, JoM ~ @ WASHI NGTON (AP) Experts ernment h~s set a quota of 170,000 •111n .,. .. Jud1111 Jue • forecasting an econo('nic rebound seals this vear. auc1C1NGHAM, r11omas wv•" and Tops 1n Pops lat f 1 Su••n Elel,_.. SMITH. Steven 0 end • ~ rom weather-caused problems c 11r1,11. M..:LAREN. wauer R ano earlier in the year have new evidence Killer to Speak Pa1r1c1• J . BETTERTON earb••• f th . th d . . Lucfll• llfld Wlllaro L~•. G ... LINOO. or e1r _eory, a recor rncreast: in NASHV1LLE Tenn (AP) James M•ri1vn ..,,.,. and Mal\ue1 .., . quelte in the private area re· February in the numbet of housing '. · cAss1rv, suz•nnf o •nd G•orv, d f th b d d t t Earl Ray, convicted murderer of Dr. cosrEu.o. o.,..,, oeneand Frelo• serve or e an. an we s ar s. . Martin Luther King Jr., will submit to Ju" talked about ll),e Rolhng Stones The Commerce Department said I' . l' . t k b ORTEGA,'"''• P. and T11om .. , H . _ who performed for lO million We dnesday that hos· g t t ·pre 1mmaryques1onmg nex wee y ANOEFISON Judl1111...1noc41r1 11. 7 . I. bed . u 10 s ar s a lawyer from the House Assassina· GILBlAT, ~wn M1r1e •nd J•mH people on their last tour here -c 1m 29.2 percent in February, the t' s Co .tt h' 1 G11w1e ~uTcHE1t, Robert.., and doing 8 concert in a club biggest increase since1ecord k~ . g ion mm1 ee, is awver says. C•tl• M FARR1s. eart>ara J .,.., .. , . • • , . ... _ . "'c" ........ • . P1!1 The altomei Jack Kershaw sa}'.§ 11_,, 11 A Av He1.,. c11r1w11• •no ll s not exactly bke us gom m dug~-m-.-. Tr•~ ~nMntctton-m-Jie has new ev1~enci1Jiirwnraia t.ne ---=.~.;.~•e1t"e~.-anoaos.n"a cTUf>, --1re. s-aTcf. ''U>ol< S y ~howed . a record. drop Of 26.6 aSSallsinationS probe but he declinecl T"'°m.. ~OBEATS Walt•• E ano arOUOd . . I there S lawyers, percent 111 housing starts 1n J anuary. lo disclose it. ' P••m•• 1e v ... LENZUELA oarwyt bodyguards, 1'adJo coqtesl win· Leu no Eow..-o Payt ners. It's an artificial ~etup, re· a lly." Brown to Visit Carter Will Get to Sleep in White Home After All Gov Edmund Brown Jr. will get to sleep in the White House after aU. The 38-year·Old Democrat, a late entrant in the 1976 presidential primaries, said that President Carter invited h.im to visit the White House Monday and stay overnight. Brown said he accepted the invitation, which Includes some private meetings, but no formal din · ner * A spokesman for Billy Graham denies pubhshed reports that the famed evangelist wears disguises to slip unnot iced through crowds. But the spokesman concedes Graham does resort to a bat and dark glasses on occas1on. "I can naUy stale that I've never known Rev Graham to try to disguise himself." said T. W. Wilsoo, an aide who ac· companies the evangelist on most of his trips But Wil son said Graham GUHAM does occaC\1onally lower his profile with dark Fro•PflfleAJ2 ' MINER PRAYS. • • keep my senses. and to stop shaking. I knew the bodies of Ralph and another friend, Donald Shof- ner, were not far from me I knew if I would think ' about them l would start imagining crazy things. I blanked everythmg out of my mind. I didn 't have any fantasies 1 didn't see anything funn y sn the darkness' I had my head in pretty good shape. I didn't hallucinate. I kept Uunlune about my wife and children, my father and mother, my brothers and sisters. I kept seeing mysell laying on my lounge couch in my liv· mg room with my two kids in my atms watching television. MY ONLY HOPE WAS TO gel back to my family? I kept saying over and over. 'Please God, help me.' I didn't know what was in store for me. I knew I couldn't help myself. 1 felt like quittin~I felt like laying back and letting nature take its e. And I said, 'Oh, God, did you let e live just to die like this here? Or what?• I must have been dozing when I thoueht I heard some noise. But I wasn't sure. I listened again, and heard nothing. I grabbed the steel. And 1 started tapping. Hard. Very hard. J LJSrENED A SECOND, AND I beard some tappmg back. Tap. Tap. Tap. The miner's signal. You can't imagine how 1 felL I couldn't see a thing. Not even my hand in front of me. It was pitch black. But I felt thal I could see life again. We started tapping back and forth. I couldn't hear any other sounds but the tapping, and I made sure it wasn't an echo. We tapped different siioata. t sent out 5 t~ - dat, dat, clat-dat.-dat. Aod they'd send back a me11age a couple of taps aborter, or a lotlonaer. glasses and a hat when in crowded hotels, airports and restau_rants. • Rock 'n' roll star Bo DiddJey gave Rhode Island prison inmates a concert and then spertt. some unex· peeled time behind bars. ' Prison guards subjected Diddley to the normal Inspection when he en· tered the Adult Corre~-[ ) tional Institution at PEOPLE Cr anston and waved him through the gate. But ---------guards apparently neglected to stamp his hand. After the concert for 200 maximum security in· mates, guards at the exit gate refused to release the singer beeause he lacked the required stamp. Did· dley was rescued 15 minutes later by a public rela· lions officer * Looking well after a bout of nu which put him in bed last week, Pope Paul VJ spoke with a clear and firm voice to 5,000 persons du_r. mg his weekly general audience. But he walked more slowly than usual as he stepped to the stage, assisted, as in the1 past few years, by aides. The pontiff. who will be fM> in September, skipped last week 's general audience after being struck with fever and influenza , * Margaret Trudeau returned PO"'E PAUL to the public eye, doing one of the things she likes best -attending the ballet with her husband. PrilneMinister Pierre Trudeau. Since her return from a controversial trip lo Toronto and New York, Mrs. Trudeau had not been seen publicly. The Trudeaus were among a sell-out crowd al lhe National Arts Centre m Ottawa to-see persopal frit!nds Karen Kala and Frank Aupstyn perforq\ in a National Ballet of Canada production of Romeo and Juliet "' Mrs. Regina Fischer, mother of former American world chess champion Bobby Fischer, has been sentenced to one year's probation for'ob· structing the sidewalk a outside a British govern· menl office. Mrs. Fischer was arrested Feb. 20 while pro· testing a government deportation order against two Arnetican journalists. She was layine in a cot in front oft.be Horne Office. Mn. Fischer, 83, has lived in London for many years. • The wife of Prime Minister Yltsbak Rabin, who is campai~i"" for election on a pledge to fight cor· , ruption, Hid she closed her U.S. bank account and was sorry sbe broke the law. Leah Rabla told the slate television in an interview she now underMoo4c holding a forei~ bank accouot was Illegal ~d '1 can only add that I am aorry." Mrs. Rablo's remarks followed disclosure by Ute in- MtU.ttu•" dependent newspaper Huret& tb1t the maintained a savlo'ss account In Waablqt(Jn In contravenlioo.of Israel's foreisn cur- rency ~Uona. ; . I TRA.NJtgD GOD THAT SO•EllODY bad The Greek own.er of the bigeat l>rlvate collcc· finally beard me. and wN comin, to set me. tJon of <avante-iarde Soviet .rt announced be ll 1 wun•t tired. and I WNn't scared. Well, tumln, tho bulk of the palm:m., over to th• Soviet maybe l wu ti.red. I think I doted oll, and didn't state. bur nothfna tor a whUe. Geaqe D. c.ta.tia, a M·yeaM>ld emplo)'e ot Then -suddenly -a drill wu cutting towarda the Can'"'1an Embu 1y, aald th1t in return for bis mt. tilt the Mlniatr.Y of CUiture la lettin& bJm take 11-20 It wu like muslt> to my ears, ~ • SO·foot' • ~r~e:nt ol hla C?Ollectlon with bhn when he ntiru wall of coal . • • a wall to hard lt took nearly tlvo abroad 1n a tew montliil after '5 ytan u a resident d1y1 to break throuah to me. • ot M<*OW. ...L:-CGitaldi' collecUOn lncludel betW..n eoo and altAU.Y, n WA.I Fasauu• WllAT I felt. l 100 WGi'D w 4f lrtlita IUCb u QaPJ.l, ~ ...... ,, WU flnally 1ohl to ••t out of ~.r!~ce. 1 juat m-, ..... Ida and Popon, .. well u • lar•• couldn't wait. It wu a wonderful f lnald• o1 number of 14th century Ruwan Icons. Tbe "orb me. I knew then I woutd a my tam.Uy act.in. by Marc Cbatall alone cover an entt~ wall in COltakia' 1partmtnl~ TOMORROW; f'r•.wm at Late • • I BUT WHAT ABOUT the excite- ment of being able to see the Stones up close? "Oh. that's good," he agreed. "but those people who think we should do it all the time are living in the past " Wearing no makeup except (or. a thin line of kohl under his eyes, Mick looked great. And, with a white terrycloth robe over the green and white striped jumpsuit that served as his stage costume. Mick laughed about doing a show dressed in a "tropical outfit." "LAST NIGHT I WORE a T· shirt. leather pants and boots. just str~t clothes. But it was so hot onstage The good thing about special stage clothes is that they 're meant for the s tage," he said somewhat defensively. "Ir I go on in jeans or leather trousers, they 'II just spht. "It was fun onstage last night. but all these girls were grabbing at me. Once they started they didn't stop. It was great for a while, then it got quite difficult to sing." As for the band's future: "I dunno what's goin ' to happen," Mick said. "It's really been very heavy up here." IN THE DRESSING room was Margaret Trudeau, wife of the Canadian prime minister, who has been a constant member of the Stones' entourage. Mme. Trudeau, who ditched her security guards and checked into the room next door to Keith Richard in the .Harbour Castle Hilton Hotel, arrived at the club both nights with Jagger. AJ. terwards, she was observed wan· derlng around the hotel hallways Coast Liom To Celebrate 50th Year The' Costa Mesa.Newport Harbor Lions Club wlll celebrate its 50th blrthday March 25 al the South Coast Plaza Hotel. Ticket.a for an evenlng of din· ner and danctng are $11 per person. The deadline for reserva. tions is Friday. according to Les Miiler, coordinator of the event. The Lions dinner will incluM' a speech by immediate past presi· dent or Lions International, Harry J . Asian of Kingsburg, Calif. The local Lions Club, formed In 1927. is known as the "Fish Fry" chapter, Miller salcj. because of its successful summer fish rry, which has raised money for charitable groups fot 31 years in Costa Mesa. Social hour wlll begin at 7 p .m. March 25, followed by dinner at 8, proP'IM at 9 and dancln1 unUl la.m. Check.I sh9uld bo made out to the Uona CTub and forwarded lo Let Miller, 2751 DeSoto Avenue, CostaM a . For furl.be S49•218S. .Moratorium Urged SAN f'RANCl~C() (AP~ - Prealdent Carter wa1 ursed Tueadl)' b7 !our membcn of Conirea to a mOTalorium on cuttinf of redwood trea ne1r lledWood National Parle. TORONTO C0NC£RT Mkk JaQger Looked Gre.i FACES JAIL SENTENCE Guitarist Keith Richard dressed in a while bathrobe and hanging out with the band. "I've always been a Stones fan," she said simply, while her husband's comment. as reported in the Canadian press, was: "It's her private life and she's on rec· ord as saying she wants to lead it the way she' wants to. You wort 't get any official commeht from here." WATCIONG MRS. TRUDEAU pose for photos with Jagger. Keith Richard and Ron Wood. drummer Charlie Watts mut· tered, "I wouldn't want my wire associating with us." Bassist Bill Wy man said strajght·Caced. "She's helping to Improve English-Canadian rela· lions." Excite4 had been building up in u;?cl~b·for three hours Clhe audience had to sit through an opening act by Canadian band April Wine,> and when the Stones pme onstage after 11 p.m. with no fanfare, it seemed both natural and incredible to actual- ly see them there. "HONKY TONK" BEGAN what it was immediately clear would be a great set . As the Stones flashbw;:ked through their own history with numbers from the latest ''Black and Blue" LP, material performed on the 1975 tour, early Stones classics and vintage blues, it was impossible for any Stones fan -and that must include anyone who loves the eneJ'gy of rock and roll -lo remain calm. The joint -as Chuch Berry on· ce said -was roe kin•: the club w~s hot and sweaty, and 1t dlelled like sex. Fashion Island ALWAYS A STONES FAN? C•nad•'• Marpm Trude•u. The show beloneed to Keith J th~ musical empbuis was on the nasty rockers so closely iden· tified with the man considered to be THE rock and roll guitarist. But it was Impossible to keep one's eye off Jagger, who was givlJlgsomeperf.ormance. ONE OF JAGGER'S problerlls In arenas is that bis intelligence and the campy humor of his a~ do not come aoross from hun• dreds of feet away. With this show, the memory of Jagger a8 pranci ng ant in tbe 1975 behemoth stadium concerts was erased. It was a shame every Stones fan couldn 'l see this set. Mick _pulled out all the s~: ·eyebatlS rollfrii. -motillr leenng;- body posturing . . . and his ac. lions were instinctively scaled down to the size of the sl~ge he occupied. Mick is a professional attd he knew that the eventual, album would sound better if b worked up the cro~d. BUT HE CAN'T fool me . despite ll\s attempts to see "blase, he was having fun. And so. he was very sex~ wriggling his lower anatomy sug gesttvely, and revealing his sti nearly hairless chest glistenh'I with sweat. Mick sang so bar the blood rushed to his face an the veins stuck out in his neck. ' He unzipped his jumpsuit do · to his white bikini underwear. ff was outrageous. WHILE SOME GIRLS grab at Mick, others handed bits paper to Keith. Bill Wyman Ron Wood for autographs. obliged and Jagger even si the arms of one girl who now b the dilemma of deciding wheth lo ever wash again. The old Muddy Waters blu and early Stone5 numbers th did brought to mind somet.hin Mick told me in 1975 about "a& ing rockstars": ., "When I started out. l nev~· wanted to be a rock and roll star.~ l wasn't into singing teenag lyrics. l was singing songs wri. ten by 40·, 50·, 60-year·old m . . . so age, what does it mat ter?" JAGGER, SINGING THES songs without the aid of exag gerated makeup or flamboyan coctume, was ageless. And witlf the energy evidenced th weekend in Toronto -if tbe Roll Ing Stones are free to continue t perform -they have quite future indeed. I just hope that Eddie Kramet who engineered the recording this set. got it all down on tape. . NB ·Readies Permit For Neiman-Marco Building officials in Newport Beach said that they 'xpeet to issue a building permit for a Neiman·Marcus department store in Fashion lsland within three weeks. Reproentatives of the Texas· based store and the lrvihe Com· pany have announced that a 120,000.square foot store is to be built in ijle shopping center, but said,t.bey would announce the construction schedule later this year. The stbre is to be built in wbat ls now a parking area to the north of the Broadway Department sto!'e. Both stora are owned by Carter·Hawlef·Hale Stores, lnc. The site of the Neiman-Marcus store originally wu set aalde for a Joeepb Magnlrl store whet\ the center wu planned ten years aao. but that atore wu never built and the site has remained vacan~ I Bob Fowler, N•wport Beach. buJldint ~tor, said Neiman· Marcus aubmltt.Cld plans for a store two ,years aro. but later withdrew U\em. He .'pkt Ule plans were re1ub- mincidi arid hit dtpartlt\ent hu completed the plan cheek. Fowler said aome minor re- vialonJ were needed and the store's uchitect ln New York ti worktna oo thoae revisions. "I expect we could Issue the" a building permit in tbr~ weeks," he added. • Construction of a Neiman• Marcua will bring to six t · number of depaJ'lment stores ~ the center. In addition to the Broadway, center also has J.C. Penney's, Robinsons and Buffum&. A Bullock's 11 UDder con.stru lion on the west side of the m near Buffums and is expected open this summer, accordlnj Peter Inman, manager of re estate for the commerci• divisionort.belrVineCompany. Jaycees Plan - Flea Market The Mlaalon VleJ~Jaycees wi sponior • nea m.,-ket Mareb to help detr'Y expehffa lot- club '1 numerous communlt strvlce acttvttf u . The project will take pl frQm 8 a.m. to 3 p.Qi. at the Pl•• center locatea near tbo letMctlon of Li Pat Road M atru«ite P.,.kwa1. AddltiOllal Sntonnatlon can obtained by calllni ROd Coe proJ.ct to-chairman, 581·8073, Dave0rr581.fe00. '· llATIO Ill J:IM•"4~,,._.,. "7% SOLUTION'' 1:4'-~lt:Ot "FAMIL y Pior· J:MM:OO ...... l'G '"TWILIGoWT'S U.ST GLIAMIWG" • •.,_ ___ ii_i._1_:1_0 __ --1 °'" MllJMtr i :4 .......... s..dliy 1145 THUTREI GEH!WllOH 0 SILVER STREAJ(0 ll'G~ c;OLOR nee~T O.v••S...,,.., • \..Oil fl«fll • lttvln Ouffl• Cllrl\t..--.Oti.ty * ORANGE COAST COLLEGE is offerin• another drama production this weekend-Bertoldt Brecht'• "Caucasian Chalk Circle," which will be staged Frid_, and Saturday of this week and next in occ·s Fine Art.a Hall !le. OCC instructor William Purkiss ls directing the play, which is based on the bjblical parable of Solomon and the two women who claim the same child. Cast ~embers are Steven Scott, Carole Knickerbocker and Denlae Randol. Following its OCC run, "Caucasian Chalk Cir- cle" will be presented at theater parties in local homes. Curtain time is 8 p.m. with Sunday matinees carded for 4 p.m. Admission ia free. ·A 16-year Strip Show S.A FRWV CMANCHfSTfR l>C. .. FRWV IC TV DR F.lU ,.ltlrllltlSI W.1Jll lt1l PWl'tC 11RO~KY11 1t10Tt:41 l.AT/~t:JO.J:40 1:4M.-OO. I 0: I S CINEMALAND 1414 St ... .., lullt• W IMI "tlOUSE RY THE WE" lR) , ...... , ... "1iiiho~iN' AN'.,.. EMPrfioOM" . • THEA TIE II· __ _. Q~'·.,\ few years ago we saw Ann Corio's nostatilc tribute to burlesque. We were wondering ~•hat her ''fews today were on tbe spate of porno· flick! and books. -Y.C. and J .O., Portland. 'Glad You Askt}d hat' . by Marilyn Mtd Hy G ner t:•t$.t.T~ltl~l:4'-.. 11 CINE MALAND . edwards LIDO CINEMA ..... O«, .... , .... L90 NlwPotf MAC" 41 l.flU .,... ...... ~--.. . ~N;;~U. MOMl#r '"THREE -C-Aitatt-eR-o---s·· l~I COL.Oil 'THE ,,., VOYAGE OF"THE ENFORCER DAMNED PLUS MVROER ON JHE TWILIGHT~ ORIENT EXPRESS I.AST (PG) GLEAMING ( ..... ~~~~E}l!~ .• u .~ \ Mft4 ¥11otCftfT111 '1Ml41 CAR~IE WfHIEVU" MARLO THOMAS (R) CHARLES GRODIN WJ'HIEVES" PLUS "A MATTER "" MARLO THOMAS (PG) OFTlME" _. ,, .\ · On March 6, Ann Corio celebrates the 16th anni•,1ersarv of her record· · ., ·• breaking musicalulu, "Thls Was Byrlesque." "We had $16,000 to start with," she tells us, "and at last coWlt it has grossed over $18 million." Compare that to the Alexander Cohen-Jerry Lewis -rev1 v iIOr''11eTT zap(fpi)fn ,....wrucn - opened i n Baltimore, W asbington and Boston. ran . haltingly and folded after three weeks at a loss of something co1110 over a million without ever hitting Broadway. How did Miss Corio and her partner·husbaod, Michael P. Iannucci, pyramid their piggybank roll into the millions at the box office while the highly touted and financed revival of "Hellzapoppin" dropped dead? Tbe s uperstar of the strippers theorizes on this subject as she thinks back to leav· ing home before her 16th birthday. "I WAS TEACHING SUNDAY school and still in grade school," she reminisced. "I left home and joined a chorus but was so homesick, after two weeks, I called my mother to s1md me the fare back. When I got home it was the old story. I became rest- less again. And joined a chorus line in a burlesque theater closer lo our home in Connecticut. I always wanted to take dancing lessons. and thought that's what they did In burlesque In a way, they do -but it's not. the kind they teach you m school' "Jn two or three months I was taken out of the line to do a specialty," Ann smiled. "I never 1 thought anything about what I was doing since my little act was so tame compared to the others. And the stars Ln my eyes were blinding. It was hard for mother, being a typical rtalian mama who wanted me to marry a nice Italian boy, stay borne, raise kids and cook paste. "The first time she attended the show and saw ber little girl 'perform · she was a great sport about it, agreeing, though reluctantly, that this could be a stepping stone in show business. That 1s. after I con- vinced her it was strictly ·you look and don't touch!' "I NEVER GOT OUT OF burlesque because T was already typed and making good money and thus was able to do so much for the family. since my father had passed away and we were on our own. MISS CORIO, WHO OWNS and operates several theaters with her husband, reveals they've filmed a special for presentation on cable-TV. Called, naturally, "This Was Burlesque." In the early days, when the emphasis was on _.hwnoi:. she worked with .AbboLlucl..Costello • ..Ehil-~R.t'Nll..Ui!!~n SilverS', Joey Faye and Rags Ragland, to mention a y ,., ... :5"ADOWS • cluster of top bananas. She hopes the impact of the rH AH EHl'TY ROOM" special will be Impressive enough to be seen on 59ecia "" 12 · commercial television. "It's good, clean fun," s he 1..-u.,.s-.& H insists. "I slill consider ~yself a prude -if by c-.illllll6i..._.Millilil.iM today's standards a person who has respect for --------------------''---moral guidelines ts a prude. I was brought up in a loving, warm Italian family where the rule is still to respect your parents. believe in God and love our country. "Mother and dad were born in Italy. Today there is a plaque commemorating my parents on altars in a church in Italy. another in America. ''MANY YEARS AFTER MY father died I was able to take my mother back to Italy. It was there that J learned of the sacrifices my father made to come to America, and to see the home he was raised in -now a school. This was a gift willed to the village when my grandfather died. Also the small church in the village was his gift." We wondered if we could leaf through her scrapbooks -a history of burlesque that was, and is again. "No," she sighed, "I never kept a scrap· book. I was always too busy making new news to save the old." Send your que&t1oru to Hy Gardntt, "Glad You As~d That." oore of thu nt>Wspaper. P 0 Box 1560. Costa Mesa 92626 Manlyn and Hy Gardner wtll answc as ma11y ques- tions 118 they can in their column, but the volume of mail makes pttsonal replies impossible -,~ .. SC~ NOW "•IUIU ., llOOl l lfCOtO Sloet• LA MIRADA 4 • LAKEWOOD CENTER 4 : w&Ui.t• t.t.llOAlll ""ICI tt i6. ~°"' .... IATVllOA' (11 .. ,. ~14..,.) tl~t• l:te U MltJ(il ' 'lltltOU t llOllDn• UM M I ... CMHf WIYNI • Ml C\AYIUI~ <Niii .:--.::-:. I llLVll ~'!IAKtNI 1 IM-2AOO '"ANTOM Of THI 'AUOlSI t 'ITU IUUU P1N1t JANTlll mtm AGAIN1'°l PlUI flOM NOON nu TMIH 1PG1 IOOKU-AT~I ROCKY <NI IOIU. HO,.UU "The idea of 'This Was Burlesque' was my husband Mike's. People ask me why I think it is still so popular. Well, every year there is more demand for it. there Is a hunger for nostalgia now. It's the best antidote for all this sick pornography. ;~~~~~~~=~~~~==~!!!!~~!-, 'I agree with what Lawrence Welk said -that he'd like to live to see the day 'when children won't be asbamec to take their parents to the movies.' I hope but doubt that, day will ever come. There is too much permissiveness There is no discipline at home. Young people aren't tau&ht any morals. There ~ no home life. We had traditions. The youngest member of the family still says grace wbeo we all get together for dinner." .. "THE F\JNN1EST Nl!WCOMEDY OF THE YEAR." •\lemon Scot\ tlftllD PAtSS "" THE GOLDEN BEAR ...,.ti114Jf011 leach Pnsenh MA.ft. 21~HEAP TRICKS MAR. 22-0AN HICKS MAR. 23--TOMPALL & GLASER AND HIS OUTLAW BAND MAR.24-BILL Y C. FARLOW BAND MAR. 2S-27--JOHN KLEMMER 'MAR. 29-00UG KERSHAW HOUSI IMSTIUMBnS COUITISY OF COAST MUSIC DiHnlG • COCKT AIU· HO AGI UMrT 306 PACIRC COAST HWY. 536-9600 1 WINyta.t leach CAcroa tr.. Pier) ,.. ..,_ MWll • Ml CUYIUIOM SILYll llllAKt"t ~us ALIX AND THI GYPSY<•> .... ....,,.. • llll Cl.Anuaott Ill VII SftlAKC"t twt ~X 4f'fP THI OUIY 11 _____ .......__10·~ NATIONS . ,..,, ·--.. ""'"" 527·2223 f!UI Hu1nlcP01 M>lllf. i.o '"'" \ . , .. Government Hit For Gas Shortage LOS ANGELES (AP > Technology can tind ways to keep up with demand for new resources and avert shortages, as long ab gov e rnment doesn't ad short-sightedly. according to lhe pre:,1dent of Rand Corp. • 811 ceau" ~au 1t Ctlnroa.t ad 01 mobile de· alcta pUlrbed G II 1 to a conr lSUll. aceecl.iq I.tie ,.... v out early March record of 1D,2'T• Mt n 'Del. Cadlll• and OJ lllOll(Je Ht per!od recoirdl u GM takl were up 20 percent from 1211,9U a year a.co. At Ford Motor Company, sales of 67 ,S6'7 topped the 50,256 ol a year ago by more than 34 per- cent. "As a re190urce becomes scarce, pnce risei.. demand 1s reduc~. .. additional supplies are brought to market, reclaiming and recycling options begin to look attractive. and there may be technological in· novations to develop substitutes," Donald B. Rice said. CHRYSLER CORP. ALSO showed a modest improvement or 4 percent, with SllJes or 31,076 compared with 30,940 a year ago. American Motors Corp., however, reported s~s of S,948. down nearly 19 percent from last year's 7,325. THE RESEARCH INSTITUTE EXECUTJVt: said past pred1c· tions that vital resources would soon run out have proved false because new sources were found. "MARCH WILL BE a good s ales month," said Bennett Bidwell, Ford vice president of s ales "We are approaching the tradillonaf s pring selling season with most of the adverse effects of winter behind us.·' The fed~ral government, the "manager of the U.S econof!ly," was to blame in the gas shortage because of its pricing policies, he said. CHteK YOUR RRST AID IUT 9YTHlY ~UMT. ......... Prompt trc<1lmenl of c.•ut:. and hru1\C'> 111 c ... .,enl 1i.1I lo guard a11.a1n..,1 po.,~1h l e 'TTl fccnon~ f''rrr ttit' rt•a..,011 \our l.:1 m1lv 'he u Id h J \ t• .1 I u 11 v 1•qu1ppNI llr't .ud ktl in lhl! hOU'•!' anrl .tlw an I h•• <.'Jr Then• an• ma1w I\ p1•, of flr't aid l.1h Io l'h()ow lrom .ind our ph.trmJt'\ t' a r r 1 1· .1 v .1 r 1 '' rl 'l'k<'I Hiil Wt• 1·,1n hl'lp you p1c•k 0111 th~ nn1•.., mo..,t ~u11 Jhlto fur 'our net>d' w ... cbo 'ltll'k JI! lhl' 1ndl\1rlu.1I 111 m, lo n·plcn1,h .111 1' 111'' 111 f1r'1 :..1d k1h YOl" OH \"Ot H DOCTOH (',\~ l'llO'H: IJS Whl'll '011 tll't'tl ii 111•1! vi>rv Wt! \\ 111 ddt' •·r promplh wtlhnut 1•\ll',1 l'hJr~c .\ ~r1•111 m,10\ pt·nplt• rl'I\ nn "' f111 lh1·1r lw.rllh 1w1·1h W•· "'Pl1·nm1• rt•cp11·,i... l11r rl1•lt \ "r' 'l·r\·11•,. .111d • ll,1r~·· .1•·1·111mh , ... UDO l"HARMACY 351.._.. ....... "'-Defl•My .....,.... .. eclt 642-1 SIO 'American I Gramed I Fare Cut WASHINGTON <AP1 Passengers will be able to fly between New York and two California cities p~ h~atll~s coun\ea prices under a n f'w C'ivil Aeronautics Board <CAB> ruling American J\jrlines has , won permission to offer it~ ··super Saver" rares on fhght.~ between New York an~ Los Angeles anct Nev York anrl San Francisco. THE llOUND-tr1p fares will range bet ween $227 and $268.. 3S to 45 per cent below regular coach ticket prices The CAB ruling re quires passengers tu pur<."hase tickC'ts at least 30 da>s in advance and plan stays of between seven and 45 days to quahfy for the discount The new prices will re mam in effect for a year Tr ans World Airlines a nd United Airlines are seefon g similar fares for the same routes in ap. phcallons on file \\·1th lhe CA B. 103-123* INTEREST steady,~ steady. For the last 16 years. through booms and recessions. individual investors. as well as trust and profit sharing plans, have .amed 10% or more on their money. most of the time more. Often as much as 12%• on short term (3 to 6 years) trust deeds on choice res1den\1al properties. with large equity and high securit~ The title 1s insured and recorded In ft>ur name. In those 16 years. no one has ever lost one cent on their investment at A. A. Ajax Co. No one has ever failed to earn I 0% or more. No one. We take care of all the paperwork, details and payment collections at no cost lo you. tr you want your funds returned sooner, after two years we will make every effort to reassign your trust deed to another investor at no cost or loss to you. We have never railed lo do so. If you want stable high interest. and if you have $5,000 or more that you would like to invest, please call or write A. A. AjaJ( Co. for our complete brochure on trust deed investments. •When a loan is prepaid before maturity, you receive up to a six month interest bonus on 80% or the lo-.n balance. This may Increase the yield up to 12%. B.,Qxco. REAL ESTATE LOANS (714) 772-6230 AIJc ror Bob Ma1es or Barbara ~nkel 505 No. Euc.nd Ave. Anaheim, CA 92803 (714) 837-3744 Ask for Sandy R05s Taj Mehal Profe.99lon.I Bldg. Lagu11a Hills. CA 92653 ... ORDGE \1.M C.~VJ™~l!1 ~ ~ Opportunftt1 .Seminar Slated International growth opportumlies for United States 'companies is the subject of a one-day UC Irvine University Extensior.L~ioar clli:.ected by -Mlan-SilJOSS: international business executive and consultant. 9 : 30 a m to 4 ·Sop m Saturday at UCL The workshop 1:-des igned to give managers and l'ntrepreneurs curren•. information. guidelines and practical ideas on mternat1onal busmess and groY th opportunitacs. Pre·rC'g1s tration 1s recommended and will be on a space-available basts. The S50 fee includes clai.:. materials. lunch and parking 1''o!" registration and further information contact VCI Extension. Irvine 92717 or phone 8JJ 5414. Egg Coloring Conte•t Brgf n• Western Federnl Savings· Corono d('l Mar of- fice will begm its annual Eas ter egg coloring con- test Monday Last year more than 250 entnes were receivC'd in the office. "We had wall to wall eggs." said Ht Ida Terra nove. manager First pn1c is a S2S savings account. Fin' SIO savings accounts will bl' awarded to the second place winners, and 10 lhtrd place' winners will each rC'cc1ve a SS s<1vmgs account Everyone will bl' ~1ven a fr<'e gift for cnll'r1ng lhC' conteM The conle!'>t 1s l1m1ted to children 12 vcars old and undC'r Colonn~ l'ards \\1lh 1nslruction:. will bt.> J v a1 l;.1blt• al thl· Corona dc:>l Mar off1t'l'. 2744 E. Coai.t Highway, begmnmg Monday, March 21 Entne~ must be rt·turned no IJtl'r than Apnl 9 Bank Offf"r11 Organizrr '"Income Tax Organizer," Bank of America·s latest Consumer lnformalloo Report, outlines re- cord' taxpayers should keep during the year to avoid unnecessary work at tax lime a nd to insure 'enfl cation or claims later 1f necessary. The report suggests ways to organize pen;onal financial mform~on. giving step-by-step instruc· hons and fumi$Jling work-sheets for recording mon· thly data on income. adjustmenLc; to income and itemized deductJons Also included are explana- tions of commonly used tax terms as well as references to sources of tax help The report is available at Bank of America branches Bran("h Ottf("~ Appro.,f"d The Bank or Irvine has been granted ap,proval to open a bri,mch offi ce in the new community or Woodbndge The bank currently serves Ure city through its main oetace facihty at 14322 Culver Drive PlaJ'\S call for the opemng of the new Wood· bridge Village office at the corner of Barranca Parkway and Lake Road 1n Ma y Plan5 are subject to approvals .by c1v1c and community planning bodies. according to Aldrich .4•'°ord COtllpl~'tH A'"qllbitlon Amcord, Inc., Newport Beach, has announced completion of it~ acquisition of the Lucas CoaJ Com· pany of Grove City, P a The privately held coal mining company was acquired for approximately S6.S million in cash. The mine currently s upplies about 225,000 tons of coal annually to local utiUUes. Amcord plans to expand production In order to maiJ'ttaln service to present customers, as well as prov~ns sufficient coal for its company's Michigan and Pennsylvania cement plants. The acquisition is in keepinc with Amcord's plan to become sel!-sufficient in its energy needs by the end of 1978. Fir. Report• Nfte LN• Data Technology Col'p., Costa Mesa, tau re· ported ll third quarter net loss o< $4S.~t or 4 cent& a shar~. compared with net lncomt of 1135,000, or 11 cents a share, for the quarter ended Jan. 31, 1976. SalM for the quarter, ended Jan. 29, w~ $2,293,000. down from sales from contjnuing opet')· lions of $2,675,000 in the prior year's comparable quarter. For the nine months, s~ lrom colitlnu.ing operaUons ol $6,8'8,000 declined 12 percent from that or the nine months ended Jan. 31, 1976. while a net losa of $170,000, or 1' cents a share, compar..cf with net income of $403,000, or 33 cents a share. f9t'. tht prior year's comparable period. Noodle laaet 0-~ , ... Mortgegc brokers. Offc~ to C.lifom11 rc.sldents only. A noodle proc:eutnc plant thtt cap Qarb out r--------------.-----------, ·U,000 CUPf of Marucban noodle aoup .an hour ho 1 d 1 t t d d 1 t be1un ~.,m, thicken. beet and tof'k ftne>Nd I 4m rnteteate n rus ee nvea ments. I soup cups for the U.S. m•rketat.lt.a new !nine loca-l Pleose send me more Information. I 1 Uon. I Marucban, Inc., Js a dMslon. of Toyo SuJnn • ~ : Kaisha, Ltd .• o~ of Japan'• m~or pr6ducers 0£ 1 , 1 rroien ft1h Roducll, meat a'Dd poultiy. ffo.-n 1 •• 1 IOOds, iftatanf noodle aoup ~. food f1a'forlnis : >11one 1 and cann~ CooCla. Toyo F~ did ln exceu " 1 1 JlM.000,000 ln .. lie lut year. 1 Md1m 1 lta 45,000-aquaro-(oot I elllty at 1801 Deer• Ave. r 1 coat more tban P1oootooo to build. rm R. ~· 01r St~" ''" o"·""' _J HUanat vice i>r laent and aenerat m~r OI L------------------------Marucnan, aaJd tbal trnplOji are uaed prtrnarlti to mcnJtor' and lntpect vartou.1ta11 olprOducuon • •lac. bum.a.a be.ln don·~ adµaJl,Y bi.Ddle lM fbod I • ( APJ-1"9CD• c eum,..., .. ,. ........ vw '-olU..Ulll TrtlUr ..a.-__...-.. -.. ...... -....... d.mvau,.. ~tJaeJu:mbo a .... ••• -··· ~ • Midwest Promise Job bt>ll 1n the l n1ted Slates 1s c learly defined by Labor Department fi gures for Janua r y. detailed. this weekf Nebraska '~ unemployment rate was lowest at 3.8 percent, while California, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Michigan held the other end of the scale with rates topping 10 per cent Orange County's rate was 4.8 percent. Drought Continnes As Critical Threat By Tbt> Associated Press Despite i,omc recent sno\\ostorms, lhE! Western water s ituation 1s still critical and probably will m ean severe shortttges in some ureas this summer, the Agriculture Department says. . The depurtmcnt 's Soil Conservation Service said the snow pack tn most ofthe Western mountains is at "t}Je lowest level in decades" and that there is not much rhcinrl' of low s upplies of water recovery before s ummer The Midwestern drought that "SNOW SURVEYS made early this month by the conservation agen-ey show that the series or storms whic h began 1n late February in some' Western states is maktng up little or the winter long deficit." off1c1als :,aid. The situation is mo:.t <."rttrcal in Cahfom1u. they said. Streams m Color ado. Idaho. Nl!"ada, Oregon. L'tah and Washington also are expected lo haH record 1s costing farmers and ranchers millions_of dollars in lost crops andJivestoc!c m_!ty be_ne!r an end __ a fter 18 months BUT AGRICULTURAL ex- perts warn that the eHecb of the dry spell will not hkely disappear soon. A shortage of some crops and higher beef prices may be in store. even if much-need ed heavy i,p?"1ng rains come as forecast O,·er 1~hf' Counter NASO Ustinqs The ult.i for a ort to IDldJsq•rant• Jftl n>•Y "'°acb at bU.llcm dui1Qf lb i--. a Ht1Jor Lodrhe9cl e..cutlve ~d durln1 a far·raaaina dt.cusston ot the eompaay's Liou proiraro. BE 8AlD DesIGN concePts ror four new versions or the Tt:IStar wer' now being ctls · cussed with aenior airline of· fichrts. "A substantial market ro~ a n•>" short· to medium-ranee tr ~ b.u been identified ror the euly 1*9." said Richard W. Taylor, vice president and general mana7er of commerclaJ programs or Lockheed· CaUfomia, the division building the LlOll. ''Our estimate is that by 1986, the world's airlines will require more than 500 wlde·bodied transports designed to cai:ry ap. proximately 200 passengers over routes ranging from a few hun· dred miles to perhaps 2,700 nautical miJes." · NEW BUSINESS WORKSHOP SET How to lufd, produce, ietvice. distribute and merchandlse new businesses as well as expand cur- rent' businesses will be the theme of the Self-employmenl Advisory F~\HHHti~ -&f>'&UUOA al - workshop to be ~eld in the science hall auditorium of Orange Coast College from 9 a.m . toJ:JO p.m . Saturday. Reservations are required: the $1 S fee includes registration, materialg, parking. coffee and lunch. The Business/Manage. ment Center at Orange Coast Colle&e has further information at5S6-~. ' 1 J ' s ' ' • • •• 10 ~ II n '• u 1 16 " • ~ IJ • ,_. t6 "' 11 • '-Ii " 1• ·~ 10 )01 " ,,,. n 1 u• n .s " \ u U(H and Doums "'·-~. 'f:. W•'°' RE Btnl Ndl C•,ll•ln AITl_.,I Com.,,.m 0 101 Loo V-En W4trn In P•nellr<1 s11 ...... cr Ot.,,.. Ha ~~.:;:re Oet Ell'< Mia" L• ROO\ tn" Folomal TtME OC Arnlcor BOllm IM Part<l H BauTtn ConFlbr u,.s ~ (l\Q Pott J•\ • r~ • Up 281 ·~ • '• Up ,, ?'II • -. Up 11 I S • '4 VD 176 1" • "' 1)1) IS.I • • • 'J uo tJ l 1' • • '• Up 11 J t •. • '' Up 11 i ,, • '. t..-u ' 1' • • ', UIJ t1 ) ,... • ., v. "' ,._ • 1 Uo II I l ... • ... Uo llS ).... • .. Up II I S • • 1 Up 111 , • ·~ llll 11 r 1'1 + '~ VP 11 I 1' 1 ...-1\ Up 11 t 11'> • 111 Up 108 \' • + 't VP 10 ~ ,;~ : ,:: ~: ::i & • .t. Up lO J 1'• t • Up 10 O 1~• • 'I< Vo 10 0 OOWN~ L•~... :iw. o•r'~, l l I ... Off IS.? l' • ·~ OH ll.l b' I ' OU 11.l t'• .,, Ott 11.• f'l •,. Off 10.S II '" ()If to, 71, •• ·°'' 10.0 1' I '• Oft 9 f 1'• '• Off t.J '"· '• Off 11 ~!~ . :. gr. •1:1 ti.. '" Off IJ 1''li '• Oii U ,.. -• • Off !t.O ~I. :: Off ~7 10 ~ ~ 7~ ~\;, • ., Ofl ... I ''JO!f •7 Jt_. -~. Ott tl 1\1) "' Otf 6.l ~t :z 8:1 :J 1 '11 soo 16 ,.,., ~Oft u MUTUAL FUNDS I t TH£ •OU: COlllPLU OF Tim NEW TOYS includ~ up to abt games, ra1)CJRI from hockey to • versloO of solitaire. Competition is poaJble aolo, aaainst lb• ma.chine or with others. Al& skill improYea, the sames can be m<Ad~ mor., dlf.ficult. . The Fedfl"Bl Trade Commi.aaion (Fl'C) bat launched a pro~ to find out whether the eame&ll.ann TV plcture tubes. The FTC is uncertain whether U. tames leave tracings on the TV screen -vls\ble after the TV is turned off -after a certain amountol use. This phenomenon may not present a problem to consumers. Day-long use of the game may prod~ce af. ter-effects in a few Money's Worth weeks. Most people prob-, ably play the game fre· qtlfnlly at first and then put it aside. Thus it might be many mon"1,s .... if then -before outlines appear. A RELATED PROBLEM IS THE EMERGENCE of a second generation or more sophisticated v1deogames that will enable plaYet'S tq re-program the system ror a selection of new games that may or may not affect the TV picture tube. Game manufacturers!bellttle the fears and report no consumer complaints'. Kerry Crosson, New York products manager for Atari, makers of Pong, says bis firm has tested the games continually for op to 2,000 hours and "we find re- ports about the games burning off phosphorus on TV p1cture tubes are unfounded." Magnavox. which bas produced electronic games for four years, adds it has received no consumer complaints, but it has heard from dealers who've noticed imprints on showroom sets. It bas informed its dealers that M!lgnavox will assame"'the-co~of Tepairing-orrepladi\g atrYTV s-et1r the customer can show that the Magnavox game caused the defect. A ZENITH DEALER SAYS THAT COMPANY has mailed a memo to dealers explaining that its warranty is not valid for claims against tubes harmed by video games. RCA will not honor a picture tube warranty 1r the problem is due to extended use of a video game. It told its distributors in December to advise customers not to use the games for extended periods, to keep the brightness level of the games' bght low. and to turn off the game wben not in use It has included this information in its TY set instruction book. Whatever the problems. the devices appear to be here to stay One leading TV set maker 1s offering a 1977 model with a video game built in. Industry insiders also say 1t 's a matter of time before TV screens are used as learning tools loo. with consumers able to buy video cartridges pro- grammed with math puzzles, history quizzes, recipes, etc. l1Westors Awaiting Price· Index, Report NEW YORK (AP)-Tbestock market pulled back a bit today as traders awaited Friday '~ report on the February consumer-price index. .. · The Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stocks, up more than 25points in Civesessions, lost3.16to964.84. Losers held a 4·3 lead over gainers among New York Stock Exc hange-listed issues. • J Brokers noted some uncertainty about 'bow well the market w-0uld respond to the bad news expected In the gov· ernment ·s report Friday oa conaumer price trends for February. Dow.lo11e•A v~rage• New Yor1i(API FINI OOw.JanH•vtr•gtt STOCKS Ootn Hlgtl Low CIO!.e Cll!I )()Ind %1•1 •JOOI Ul71 "41A-J.1. 10 Trn 'n9 7l 131 06 77~.. 12' "• I.SI IS VII IOl ~I 107.6S !Ott JI 107 Jt. +-0 M U Sii< 314 11 116 S7 31116 31' ff+-O.lt IMU\ • • . ...... , I 615.900 Tran 4'",Gl Utlls . . • ••. . •• • S0',400 &S Slit U60CO lt'hat St .. ek• Did MEW YORK IAPI Aovano~ l)e(tlM\ Unctlenqt'd Tottl IHUl"I New 1'11 hlQI\• ...... 1977 ~ WMAT AMl!X DID HEW VORI( CAP! .tt11mbol• Stoebl11The Spodlghf NEW YORK (API· S.IH. 'p:m. Prl<P elld net <Nnol of the llfle"" moll .kllv~ N-Yorll Stock E1<Cllan<Je IU,_.. trecllnQ Ml~lly at more 111an SI Awrco In< • ..• Mn,300 11'> • '• ~l.~~il ·::·.:·:: ~~:= ;~ .. --,~~ ()('Iden Pet.. ....• 7",000 7'">+ t • !!ut l(odd • .•• 1n 100 7'2't 1 GoodV••• . . .. . . . m.ooo 21>. • •. SouttlCAI Ed • . . . . • 714,500 1] .. • '• Cl\.tmp $tlll.. . . , 20l,700 12"' Mor Nor............ llJ.700 7~ N(. Ind . . , • 117 000 17' / ._ Sperry Ar>d. • • , .. ,000 31.._ • '1t MGIC Inv • , 1M.. 100 16' > I'• Oen Mo!ON... •• • • IM.300 7J Gull O•L .. . . . . H6,100 30"" •• Cont 011 • . . ls.I .00 JS', • I llp11 and Down• Nl!W VOIUC: l"PI -T~ toll0wt11<1 '"' ~tlow• t~ Nrw York Stoel< E•<lldnQr stoch and w••ranl• that h~v• 9<1"41 vo ,.,. mO\t encl Oown th<o mou bas•d on Pf'<•"I of ~"99 r~roteu 01 vO!ume lor Tllur~y No ~ecurltfts t•ad•"9 bf-low U •r• In• 1 U<ltd. Ntl .ond percenlalll' t h&n9e\ Ar• thlt difl~rMce bt'tween ttwo pri·v1ous tlo"rtQ '11<1C• •nO ..,.,..,.., ~~m, w 1ce N-LHI O\g ~I I Hemlsp ~p v... + v.. Uo 1J J 1 W"" Uhtl ''-+ lll Up 10' l Lionel Corp 21-11 • ''• Uo 10 o • Oalc'locl 1 Hof 38'" + 3~> 111> 10 o S Wallillurr p4 .. + 4 UP 100 ' Cabotc;M F l + V• UP • I T l(ell ... Ind 10''1 + .._ Up t I I o.~ Ind ''"' + ""' UP •o • Balle Inc 19141 + 1''> l/r> 11 B 10 Revere Coo ,,.. + 1•11 Up I ~ 11 Peodlrs 6''1 + ••t UP I l U Ur1~M11 Ml" 3\Q + '• UP I J IJ ~ Int ~-+ ..., UP 1 8 U OllRM p4A 16' • + 1\< UP 7 1 I" World Alrw s.. + """ Up 7 1 ' NIMl"'S' 2l.._ + 11 ., UP 6 8 11 NorfltW!n Jl"• • ' Uti 6 • Ir: Ttl>ln Pecti ,,,_ + " VO ~ • e,,,,1, lhnP 6"11 + ""' uo • 1 20 Duq 2.10DI 1• + 11r) UP 'I DOWNS -· u't o.v l>ct, 8 -II/) Ofl 1511 12'6 -1VO Off I 4 .... -~ Off t l )" ,._Off t S "~ -'" 011 •• ISll. -1 Off t 2 1 -~ 011 S9 ~ _,,.. 81' H 1414 -~ , u ,,_ .. Off. u ,... -3t.t M SS t\\ -" &ff j.' tJ\.\ _ ," u 2h -ti. s 1 • .., oir '' •loo ·~ Oft •• 'h .... Off •• 1 " 011 '·' l l\ V.OOH 2'11 "' 011 •.s \ .. I ( "Grandma sure spends o lot of time tolkin' to the maintenance man. I think maybe he's her boy friend." L. ltl. Boyd Billionaires Dropped Out "How much money do those people get ror addressing envelopes in their homes?" So in- quires a client. Depends. Decent handwriting, 10 cents per envelope. Fancy scripting ca'lled callignaphy, as muc:h as $.1 per envelope. That's the report of the direct·mail experts. Don't know who's hlring1 though. The demand for calligraphists isn't that great. The op- -6.-ll1UOU0le..0Lcallinapby, .incidentally .. is caco- graphy, bad handwriting, The demand for cacographists isn't that great, either. Takes a salmon a little more than four months to travel 3,750 miles. Why 3,750 miles, school. s pecifically? Because that's how far some of them have been known to swim lo get back to the spawning creek. The only two known billionaires m the United States John 0 . MacArthur and Daniel K. Ludwig both dropped out of classes before high BEDA'ITIRE Q "What percentage of the wives m this country wear ni~htgowns to bed each night?·· A. Our Love and War man's figures on this matter no doubt are outdated. They are weeks old, and you know how things change But at last report, 71 percent wore nightgowns. 24 percent wore paJamas, and five percent wore nothing Q "What'sa'shppcrbath ., .. A That antique was a French-designed bathtub tn the shape of a h1gh·heeled shoe Had a spigot m the toe to dram 1t and a place m the heel to heat the water Old Ben Franklin brought one home Crom France and 1s said to have wtuled away many an hour reading in the thing Q "Why was Britain called 'Great Bri- tain'?" A To distmgu1sh 1t from France's smaller .Bnttany FIRST HAMBURGER It was in A.D. 780 that Italian physicians first prescribed chopped beef fried with onions as a cure for the common cold, but a good many years went by before that prescription came to be known as the hamburger. New Jersey law proh1b1ts only the slurp ing but not the sipping of soup The more its keeper fondles a laboratory rat. the bigger said rat ~rows. within reason Most brain surgery 1s performed with the patients wide awake First or the l ' S presidents to own a billiard table was John Qutncy Adams No turtle can hear the high note!> of a soprano \f 80'./(J I' 0 Box 1560 Votes to Decide Rights of Cays MIAMI (AP> -Led by singer and orange juice promoter Anita Bryant, opponents of a law proted- ing homosexuals' rights have forced a special elec- tion at which voters will decide the measure's fate. The Dade County Commission, which passed the ordinance in January, voted 6 to 3 to authori2e the June 7 election at an estimated cost of $400,000. THE COMMISSION ACTED AFfER a group called Save Our Children, Inc .. presented 64,000 signatures far more than the 10,000 needed -de- manding that the commission either repeal the or- dinance or call a referendum at which a simple ma- jority will uphold or reject 1t "By its action, the commission for better or wo..cse bas made Dade County a national battle- ground in the fight for civil rights of parents and tbelr children," Miss Bryant said. "Homosexual acts are not only illegal, they are imtnoral. "ANl> TBBOUGH THE POWEil OF the ballot box, 1 believe lhe parents and the straight-thinking normal majority will soundly reject the attempt1t.o le1ltimlze bomotexuals and tbelr recruitmeht plans for our children." Robert Brake, a commlaaloner rrom the Miami suburb of Coral Gables and a leader of Miss Bryant's group, critlctied the count1 commls2'IOI\ for not repealing the ordlJ'lance, which bans dis· - crimlnaUoo asalnst homosexuals in housing and employment tn the count)" of 1.5 million resictent.s. Ml BRYAN'I', A. DEVOUT Southern Baptist ond a nanner·UP In the 1959 Miss America contest, has said 1he'1 concerned that, Wlder the ordinance, homosexuala -lncludtn1 men weartna dresses - would ti. aDowed t.o teach ln public schools. She said that would provide unhulth1 "role modelt" tor hn· preaslonablc youn11ters The publicity retultin1 from her stand lnltlally coat her'a ch ce to host a proposed televillon talk sbow, but the 1pon1or later resumed contract e1otJat4onJ with her. BRING KERM A WEED FROM YOUR LAWN AND GET FREE! A FULL LITRE OF PEPSI! A Scotts Representative Wiii Identify the Weed and Give You A Full Litre Bottle ot Pepsll Got summer lawn problems? Brown spots? Yellowish grass? Insects or disease? Best thing we know Is to cut a small plug out of the affected area and bring 1t into our store. If It's a brown spot, we suggest taking your sample near the edge. where you'll get half brown grase and half green grass. Our Man from Scott will analyze It and tell you how to correct the situation. He'll tell you what to do -plus when and how to do It. You're not obligated In any way. of course, and there's no charge whatsoever for this service. But quite frankly, we feel you'll be pleasantly surprised how easy It may be to correct your lawn problems - and enjoy green grass all summer long. --en-er-Goad Sat;; March 19---10AM-to-2PM Only -·------~-~ limited To: • One litre bottle per family Scotts. • Turf Builder . .; ' ~-.. " ...... •• __ ... l!'n"'"""" ~--........ ..... best you can . use on· your lawn Tur1 Builder, It's America's favorite fertillzer tor developing thick green lawns: roV1dea uniform greening for e to 8 weeks and it's clean, llghtwelOht and easy to use. 2000 sq. ft. bag Reg. 5.95 431 4000 ~ ft. , ... lo.ts.. ............ 7 .88 ·<:§3> first aid for transplants Grow .. It's Scotts' fine produC1 tnat you anould use with every franaplantlng Job It's kind of like a "welcome to your new home" helper because It controls In· aeeta. dlaeaae and weeds. S~lal formulas for gar- den vegetables. shrubs and trees. 2\.\ lb. can. Reg. 1.115. takes guesswork out of bulb planting You cen't go too dMP or too ah18ow when you UM thi. k>OI to dig a hole IO plant I butb. E~ hole I• Un· lform and per1ectly thaped. Built for eay operation and yeera of uae. Aeg, U9 .11~ ' • First 300 customers • 2oc deposit fee for bottle crack down on unwanted weeds If weeds have been Invading you lawn, you'll be pleased wilt\ Scotts Tur1 Bullder Plus 2. It cleans out more than 3 dozen common lawn apollers el!lllly and surely. Doesn't bum. 2000 sq. tt. Reg. 7.95 5•• EI> you can play · on It It's a gra11 Med formula1ed to stand up to all kinda of 1ctlv1tlea. A peren- nlel that Includes Vk;;te and Wlndor Kentucky bluegrua. Ttlat'a Wfly It look• ao good. too. 28 oz. box. Reg. 5.95 reaches thirsty plants ~au" lt'I 75 fl long you can ·probably reectl eYfllY area of your yard Without changing ta11<:9ta. 5/8~ dlametef t'lytof\ reinforced gard9n hOM 'lt8y9 rl'l!lble In all .-etn.r. Braaa coupllnga. Reg. 13.116 a•• ' spread it on In Just the right dose Scon·a new lawn spreader with precision flow control 11 the way to • • get the beat poulble reS\J"'· It 1pre.d1 lawn produC1a evenly and accurately, .0 they do 'exactly what they're sup~~ to do. Reg. 29.95 2388 EI> stays together ~:::::::::======'-.I because ... ... It naa certain qualities to mall• II grow gr"n and thick and not leave bare tPOI• or other unanraC11~ things to look at. It's Family, and thrfv.a on sun or llght shade. 24 oz. box. Reg. 3.115 2'' Tlk• a no nonsense to getting rid of peata that are out to destroy your plant•: Fiii UP a 3 gallon Tru-Teat com- preulon spray tank with your lavorii. ln- MCtlclde and go out and 1pray tM llttle dev\11, With adfusteble nozzle and •X\enalOn tube. '8130TT. A-o. 19.95 1481 .. .... ll u--dlD"t.'' Om dm• tbwGld •• 1Ml week. wbea N•~•da-La1 Ve1a1 humWed Sm JTaDda.co m• ID a,..._.. qua.rt.•fl.Dal. Bartow u11 1eeoad-ranked UCLA, IM'tin& ita lltb national , , QDiey. ~•m .Lose Suit . . . Ne1a1papB,. Saya A.'• Ouner ia Kaput J CHICAGO (AP) -Oaklad A'a owner Charles sales were voided b)' ~ on the basis ~t they ~. moot to the besbnt:eratolbaaeball ... 0 . Finley baa lost his mult1milllon-4oUar suit against baseball commiasimer Bowie Kuhn, the Sun-Times said it learned early today. Judie Frank McGarr, who beard the case in U.S. Di.strict Court without a jury, will announce later today that Kuhn bad the authority to cancel Finley's $3.S-million sale of A's stars Vida Blue, Joe Rudi and Rollie Fingers, the newspaper said. The A'• owner arped that be bad no recourse but to sell the th1'ee star players because they were playing out their options and would have become free agents at the end of the season. The newspaper's report came Crom baseball writer Jerome Holtzman. Fingers and Rudi did play out their options and signed multimillion-dollar contracts with the.San Diego Padres and California Angels, respectively. Bl~~ was signed eventually by Finley and still is a meanberoftbe A's. . In the original sales, Blue was t.o have goae t() the New York Yartkees for $1 .$ million, and Rudi and Fingers were sold to the Boston Red Sox for $1 million each. Finley contended in his aui\ that Kuhn over- stepped his authority because~e player sales 4.id not vio\ate any of baseball's• existing laws. The U.S. Open -Tourney·--·~~nimM:o~~ May Move NEW YORK CAP> -The pre· stigious U.S. Open tennis tourna· ment may leave the famous Weat Side Tennis Club for a new borne nearby in 1978. The U.S. Tennis Association, which sponsors the Open, is con· sidering a move from the West Side T.C. in the Forest Hills sec- tion of Queens to Flushing Meadow Park a few miles away. The U.S. Open has traditional- ly been played at the West Side T.C. but the club's contract with the USTA eq>ires after this year's tournament. Martin Lang, New York City com missioner of the Department of Parks and Recreation, aai.d't:be Open could be held in LoWs Armstrong Stadium, located on the grounds of the 196C World's Fa\?' \n Fiusbing Meadow Park. "We have a facility that I believe with some honest invest· ment would have some poten- tial," Lang said. The UST A reportedly is pre- pared to invest as much as i6 mi Ilion to install all-weather courts. impcove the seating capacity and tum the site into a major tennis facility. • Should the switch be m•, the UST A would use the Flbsbing Meadow site for other teflnis events, as well. "We could hold Davis Cuo. Federation Cup and Wiptman Cup play there," a USTA spokesman said. Games Tonight lfHtlt ....... 1 Ale.I ...... -.~ IOol I 16 J Y\ K..ilUCky 2~1 Notr~ o.,,.. 774> .,, N«lllCMoltn• li-4 Wet1• ....... 1 111~,U!Jtfl Ut•h U 6 "' N....cla US lle<>at 2•-t UCl.A. I••, on I._ $1.ie 14·•. r-11 ,,.., .. .,,,\!Oft MIWHl•-......1 At Llidflttell, lty Norlll C¥OllN O>arlotte, 16-J, vs Svr~"'9 • ..,, ) M1clll91n. tS.3 Y\ O.troll, 7S-J ""~'" ..... ' AIC*lllMftolaClty Marquetle,11-7.~.IC""'41S$1.tte.ti.,. Wakt For.SI. 21·7. 'llS Soutllern lltlMls, 22-4. ' Hjirler Loses Pitching Arm LOUISVILLE CAP> -Right· hand er Georg e Hawley, a member of the University or · Louisville's baseball team, was lo have his pitching arm am- putated today at Duke University Medical Center in Durham, N.C. Hawley, who led Yavapai Juhior College of PrescoU, Ariz. to the naUonal junior college championship before transfer- rin& to LA>uisville last fall, was in- jured March 4, when be slipped while walking on campus and tried to catch himself with his right band. X-rays revealed that Hawley bad a broken wrist. Louisville coach Joe Zerilla said rrom C&JTOUtoo , Ga., where his team was playing. "We'll miss him as a player, but more so as a person. When we get back to Louisville Sunday, we want to help George make tbe adjust- ment and stay in school. "He's a great kid. He was the best pitcher I've recruited since I've been bead coach." Crack Sprinters _Vie Patrick Henry High School in San Diego County is rapidJy get- ting a reputation for producing great nmnen. • Last year it was Thom Hunt, the top prep miler in California. His di.stance jaunts even over· shadowed Laguna Beach's fabled Eric Hulst on occasion. Tbj.s year the spotlight is on David Russell, a aprinter who'll be one cl the favorites Saturday at the Southern Counties track and field invitational in Hunt- ington Beach. necessarily be looking at Russell's back, however. The en- try .lllt.. in the 100 includes nine sprlatm who have clocked 9.9 or better, and 24 others are two- tenths of a second away from breaking the 10-second barrier. The Oraage Coast area, however, is a little leeo Qn quali· ty sprinters. Only two of the 33 wbo will run the 100 Saturday are from 1ocal scboo11. ... ~ San Diego's Mike Champion throws to first to complete a double play as Willie Crawford slides in too late at second base. The Padres defeated San Francisco, 1-5, in Phoenix Wednesday. · Eaat Regional.· North Cruvlina,, Wildcats Picke4l COLLEGE PARK. Md. (AP) Smith has been allernatingA'rn -North Carolina and Kentucky LaGarde's spot -Rich Yon•or. were favored to win semifinal Jerf Wolf and Steve Kralcllip. games of the NCAA East Wolfis6-10,theothersare6-9. Regionals tonight despite in· North Carolina was given a juries which have hampered or boost, however, by the return of sidelined their tallest players. 6-6 Walter Davis, another 15-Fifth·ranked North Carolina, was a slight favorite over the point scorer who has had thtee 10th·ranked Fighting Irish from screws inserted into the fOi'ef. Notre Dame despite the ract 6-10 inger of his right hand attet~\t was fractured in the AU8.btic center Tommy La Gard~ .has Coaat Conference playoffs been benched by a knee lllJury • . , which required surgery. During a practice sessl()n at • ..M!L~ -8.!...m~J third· home ~..UIL..-'lN~o:&;.1rtbw...kill~IUL-~ ran ed Kentuclcy was rateo a-5Parkplug PhifFord jammed the solid choice over 20th-ranked little finger on his left band -Virginia Military, even though John Kuester, his running ~ 6·10 Mike Phillips has a severely at guard, ttlrned his ankle. sprained right wrist and 6·10 "At that point," Smith said Rick Robey is recovering from a Thursday as the Tar Heels heel bruise. worked out, "I was ready to call Tonight's winners will play in sick. But they should be in Saturday afternoon for the cham-good shape for Notre Dame." pionship in the Univers ity of Coach Digger Phelps of Notre Maryland's Cole Field House, Dame said he thought the game which is expected to be packed to would be a matchup or his team's its 14 500 capacity for both pro balanced scoring and rebounding gram~. against the consistent play IJf North Carolina's Tar Heels North Carolina and its hustling have won the East title four defense. times in fi ve tries under Coach The Irish have six players w#io Dean Smith, who is counting on have scored 200 or more poi.Ji~. "Yonwolfsin" to take up the headed by guard Duck Williams, slack in the absence or LaGarde, 6-9 Toby Knight and 6-9 Dave the team's best rebounder who Batton, and lead the nation in re. averaged 15points a game. bound difrerential. Marina l(lgh "Yonwolfsin" is the contrac-<Huntington Beach) product lion used by North Carolina Rich Branning is one of tbe followers for the three freshmen Irish 's starting guards. .. In CIF Finale Strategic Blunder .· ·Proved Too Costly Tandy GiJUs, wbose former Corona del Mar HJeh bashtball team annexed the CIF CJ ass AAA crown last week, saw the title game and says be bad no feeUn1 of remorse over leaving CdM fOT bis present job as befJI cage coacb at Orange Coast College. Rad be stayed at Corona be had a CIF cbamplouhlp ln tbe bag, what wftb Juk Tuz and Alex Black back ror another season. WHITE WASH GLENN WHITE Bat be took Ute OCC post and gave bis Corona del Mar sac- ceaaor a gift &o be savored-. re- ady made cbamplomhtp. Glllll aaw CdM defeat Ramona of Rlventde. 56-50, in I.be over- time duel which decided tbe CH' title. uu wu nice &o see tbe kids will," be says .... felt no regrd •boat not bavlng stayed on &o be the cbamploosblp coacb. I Ulce tbe chaUenae wbere I am.". aamona coach Paul Smith made a fatal strategy error in tllat 1ame. 1111 Rams beld a %7·18 lead wtth 5' 1ecc.da &o go in tbe ball. ADd Ramona bad I.be ball. If SmJtb woald have ordered Ills charges &o 10 for Ute Jut abot ef UM laall, lbe1 woald lean die floor lead-•• ,, u ... n.l:ne polatt. laaead. a.e auowea t111em .. na nd ID· Tbe1 were· off mark, Corona del Mar WUJl't, and the nlne·potnt lead mel&e<tto a four-point bulge by la· term Wion. So Corona del Mar was let off the llook. given new life and ~ momentum wblcb it sabseqaqt. ly carried to victory. FOR THE FUTURE-Corona del Mar High 's basketball team will not return to the San Dimas tournament next season due t9 Ii shortening of the number or play- ing days in the campaign. CdM got worthwhile compeq- tion at San Dimas this season, g9- ing against the best black te8.Q)5 around-Long Beach Pbly, Pasadena High and Verbum 't>ej or Los Angeles. By the way, CdM UJ g~ play arch-rival Newport H arter a one-year Jay!>ff q that competition. And, Cotoria del Mar is in a bot-ap~aring double beader next year~ which includes Moore Le&g\{e champion Long Beach Millikan~ . Orange County champion Foun- tain Valley and usually too~ Marina of Huntington Beach. · f • * * * ... Down San Diego way the1 h1tl a couple of major upsets in th{t section's high school basketba1J championship tourney.5 · : Helix knocked off highly Kea my in the semifinals. the finals Santan' su Helix. · Kearny ended its aeaaoo wffh a 28-2 record, the other lost ccbif! in.c at the hands of Hunildlbn Beach Hieb 1D the San DI~ tournament Jut December. Spectators will have to •atcb closely to eet a good look at Russell. He can zip throueh tbe 100 in 9.5 and the 22IO in 21.1. He'll finish most of bia wort for the day in about 30 aeconda. Opponents in thole races won't. Chris Corum of Newport Harbor is one, with a lifetime bfft ol 10.0. The other is Scott Ledbetter of host HunUnston Beach Hilb. with a top mark of 10.2. Both will be severely pressed to Jet Into the finals wtth aprln- tou llke Floyd Eddings of Oanea~mona) on ~e track. He'a cl t .8 in the 100 and 21.5 ln tbe 220. Detroit Challenges Michigan TV Sports Today 5 :30 p.m . (7> -BODNQ - Two outltandlq bouta lnclud.lnc tieavywet•ht <Jeor1 Foreman •1aln1t Jimmy Youn1. A110, junior U1htwet1bt champion. Alfredo J!!lcalera atalnat Rcnnl• McGarvey in live acUoa fl'om San Juan. Puerto Rico. 8 _p.m. (4) -NCAA BAtlllft.; 8u.L-Tbe UCLA BrUlU ~ ld8ho 8Lata Jn a 'Wat ~ trame ID.P.rovo. U&ah.-~- Tb• Oranae Coast area may fare a: U\tle bette in the middle sprints, bowever .• nm Walten of Eat•ncla (Colla Mesa) looks particularly •tron8 ln the 440 and 880. LEXINGTON (AP> -Both coachel •l'l'te that tbe eyes of an entire atJte will be turned toward Lexlnston tonllht wben 12th· ranked Detroit mfftl top.ranked Mlchtian In the NCAA Mideut Re1loul buketball toumament aemlflDall. HJ• UDMI, of .-.a and 1:se.1 mate bl.Iii • i.,clcal bet in the· Frie.ndl hav. ealled ~t imallac"°°18dlYJflo•i. · coach Dick Vlt•l• .from Up wlUa•·tbe bl& uhoola, .. ~ the count.rJ with ad· NewpOlt~Harboe u.· a •tr'OelC . Yin on bO-# h11 TitUt aho'uld IP: can~ for hoOOri tn tl• •· proac:h the 11me a1&1.ut U.. __ ... th · · powUfUl Wolverines MattDlcW bMaJ:Sl.a-at ·~"\l•slvnm · allklndaot leadaallll.uer.diAthe•vent. 1u1111Uou an4 1trate1Mi, .. \ Vit•le said Wednesday, a day of workout.a at Rupp Arena. "But the1 dkln't gfve me the one thJng that'• needed -a 7·foot tree to plu the center." Vitale lald the same, followtnc the otbot H11llfln1l betw"n Syracuse and North CaroUna· .Cbarloth, would be ''like Chuc:Jt Wepner t11bUn1 Muhammad l\U. ,, "We'N UDderdot f1'J'it.lirl the J.,... national 1chool. TIMJ hne-the mllllon-dollar aporta prop-a.ni.'' beuld. But Vltale, who went to work al Detrott tour' years ago, aald tbe Titans, too. "have developed a pretty 1ood basketball pro· 1ram." And aince the teams never mfft durlni the reiular season -and Mlcblga.n 1ar1 It ls booked up tbrouib 1880 -tbo 1ame "hu created quite a atorm in the state of Mlc!Utan," Vitale aald. uP.arUcularly In Detroit. 8aaketball fevu bu nm ram- pant bl tbt elt.y ... be 1.W. uwe bad aoocw eoo flDI four yem aao and now ••'re playln1 for .packed bouses ... •• V&Uer au ---Vlfjo Ul9.t .. I• tWr Jea1ue ...... ptoeulp mHU HJll ... wttb roallae • ... w llda7 WU. ln~aydlr ol I.be Oranp eo.. .,.... ooml.q t.hroutb in WID· nlnt fuhlon. o1 Bill Bab11hoff and Mike Kelly the one-two t ·ou: t .... ,,... IM> t:ou : a. Punch that h• ... led Fouo-· .,,...c• IMIN• e. -,. frw-t. ~ IMI 1l.I; 2 . • ta in Valley in Sunset KonrfrMS 111111 no; a. Heu <El 14 '· League swim action, ,:,17~"t;i:en~ <Ml; 2 "'~Mr each posted double winl, •• ,.,...,. G11De111 ,,., •2: 1 . ...,. Babasboff t.aJcinat the !iO 1Mlt:Ot.t;J.IMl*IMll:1U. • 1001,.._1, Konlrl-IMI 50.1; 2. free (22.5) and 100 fiy Su1....,.1M>n..1:> Hm cus.1. (59 7) Kell aw-pm· g to soo Ir--'· N-IMI 4:4.J.1, 7. • • Y ~ llernlcoat IM> 4·St.•; a. Hall IMl the 200 free (1:51.8) and s oe.o. loo breast (1:07.8). t00~-1.v. vasse11e 1¥1SU: 7. 0-tl (M) SS O; 3. .. ,,,., (Ml .All of the day's races 1:• ,_ JUNIOtl VAltslTY Edison_.,, bl•U. ..... v. .... -. ........ .........ltlllJSl~ 101 MMl•Y ,.,.,,_,, Marin• • • • • ~ere in yards. too 1>rus1-1. J. van1110 IMI Fountain Valley and ~~~ ::,! .~11 cei l;n .•: 1 "11 • Newport Harbor will be •oo ,, .. •tl•-1. Miss~ VIII• ' "·" .,.,._, v-.1N1 >:011; 200 l"CI medley-I , .. "_. INl 2 SJ 2·JS.•. j0--1 KlfM\ (IU U 0. 100 fly-1. 1--. (N) I 1• t. t•f'rM-1 VGuft9 INI JJ 6. MO Ir-I CMIM!n INI S 1' e. IOO llec1<-1 SCtlmldl INI 1·09 I 100-.st-I Hlqby INI l'U I. «10 frM reley-1. N•wPOrt Herllor CIF Class 3-A Bcukethall ftcnapfons ~varing of! in the :> ~;·v.,...1..,11~>Wfltl'AAIM"' ._' ague pre 1 i ma at 200 .... d11., r•l••-1. Fo11n1a111 ewport Harbor Wed· "~~"11;!'}._i Kelly 1F1 M• 1: 2. oesday afternoon and the M,,.,., 1F11 ,.,., s1mer 1F11,oo s. 'finals Friday with the 100 1no. medl•v-1. Flm••ld 1w1 •·04 as tweH dtl Mar l•I 1 .. 1 CMUI Mete 100 medl•v rtlay I Co>I• Me•• Corona del Mar High's Sea Kings captured the CIF 3-A level and the South Coast League basketball cham- pionships for 1977. From left Matt Osgood, Tom Neeson, Paul Akin, Doug Killian, Jack Tuz, Alex Black, Steve Esposito, Brent Fair, Mark Rains, Jim Hitchcock, Dave Koehler, coa~h Jack EQ-ion. Wl·nner taking all of the 2 '0 >: 7 °'' ~w> 2·11·•: 3· Men-del•Olln !Fl 2. 21.1. m rbles so fret-I. 8tll!Hhotf IFI n .s. 2. a . PulllF)l40;3.HodQK IFl24.0. 1 Newport Harbor re-01.1,,q-1. 11e111w11J._1: 2. oav1, m ained a victory behioo <F 1 m n, l Hotlmtn 1F111us, ••· II 'th 100 fly-I 8abe,l'IOll IFI n 7; l . Fountain Va ey WI a Crou\ller (WI 1:01.7; 3. Fukeshlmt ro\,lt at Huntington 1w11·0H B~"Ch's Marina, keyed . 1ool••e-1 PulllFl~.t;"l.Nomurt ..,.. IFlSS0:3MernlWl56.I. by victories from Jamie SCIO 1ree-1. M,,.,., 1F1 s:11.2: 1. Bergeson (2: 13.3 200 indO HOdoo (Fl 5111.2; l . Slstlw IF> s·tt •· and a win in the 100 100 1>.tck-1. F1m111d cw> S9.1: 2. b t ) d 2211.ntbe Or•(W)1•016;3 ..... _IF)1:01.7. reas • an a · 1001>run-1.,1t1ny II'> 1:01.1: 2 s. 50 free by Jeer Stevens. M•"•"'' 1wi 1:0t.o: j K, M1nam1 1w1 In other Sunset League ''!!o0,r .. , ... ,,_1. Founu.in vanev w ~!J are at Huntin~on t.JM.. ---)Jeach,c ross-town rival """""'"us> MlllflMI ~ Edison. led by Steve 200 medley r•lo-1. M•r'"' •• 1<_1uk. Norm Westwell, ·1 :C,°l;ff-l.Mont•••n<N1t:s10:1. t\eith Uyekawa and voqen 111N1 MS.l1, l. Mowerv INI Shawn Mccraney, dis-1 ~':·,,., .....s1..,-1. 11er91'°n 1N1 posed of Huntington 1 11 n 1 Hot><noer ,,., 2.14.SI. i B h d ·l th d ble CMwtv INl2 n l eac esp1 e e ou so lrH 1 stev•"' IN> 12 1 2 victories or Norm 8o9dan 1Mll401;3V#•WVIM )2).7. WestweJI in the 200 in· OlvlnQ -1. lUO<lltnco (Ml : no M<onOorttwrd .• -dlvidual medley and 100 10011v-1. K_.,, 1N11 ·030. 2 })feast. Klnq tMI 1·"' 6; '· 11uc11enon IN> 1 u •: MO tr .. -1 l(ouon l(MI 1 "O; 1001~-I Fr~• ICMI ,. n 1; Ill lree-1. !Yrt-I• ICMI 1' I; 100 lrH-1. Mewbro ICOMI l:to.l; SCIO tru-1. W•llrr ICMI •:n •; 100 b•Ck-1. H•rOy (CMI l:U.1; 100 brtH1-I. 8athaw ICM) l:lt I; 400 lrttrelly-1 (Mta ~~ 4: 27.7 l'llOSH·SOi-H Ulllytnlty-tly letf•ll. IEtfllOtl 1116,,..1 ln'M HUlll .... ell ?OOm.ottyrtl•v-1 H81:5'.t. 100 lrH-1 Rlddif IEI t.°' I. 2 8erql'IOIU IEI l.SanbOrn IEI. tOOlndO-IOclls,,.r IEI l.OS.0;2 G Wt\IW•ll (HI 3. T usln IE I • SO lree-1. Soul• IHI 26.4 'f V•utrlnt !Ell. P9rec IE I SO !ly-1 Fefl\MI ~) U >. t TtHI<> IE I 3.11\ddle IEI. tOt-1~ ~«-W.51.J; ,z 8tr;llOlll IEI , PoM IHI. so O.ck-t G Wutwrll IHI lO O;, F~n IE13 Sanbon! IEI so llrHSl -1 T Ttvlor IHI J2 s , Emrrv IEll P9ru1EI 2001rffrtl•v-1 EOl\onl·OO IEI T"-IMl l•l MIHielo Vlti<t 40Clmedleyral•v-I EITorol.521 100 trw-1 Ale""• •El 1 S. • 2 Sii••• IMl.l J •-n. .. mo fEI . 200 '"" me<L-1 e ....... s IMI 2'0" 2 2 Tulllt lEl.3 EbylMI SO lr .. -1 8•-11 IM) 23' 2 Juot>sltill;3 .i-slE> 100 lly-1 Mc!>c1nou9h I Ml S1 •• 'l Losses Aren't Fatal CdM Outlook Good/or Basketball By ROGER CARLSON Koehler has two years ou1w o.t11v "110151•11 left at Corona del Mar TJae Sea Kings of and up to fill the void In Corona del Mar High, the front line will be 6-8 Cl F 3-A basketball Jef( Burden from the champions tot 1971, lose junior varsity. Orange Cou_l!!r co· ··~ou.rlinl -players ortfie'·yeara-re-x--m-ove." says Errion. Black and Jack Toz to "We want to develop our graduation, along' with center. It's going to be a Paul Akin. the catalyst rebuilding year, but our at guard that combined · · · h to form the best trio in JUDlOr varsity won t e South Coast League 3-A circles for 1977. ch a mpionsh i p and we think we can be com- petitive. all gotten the super start with Orris." The bulk oC talent from the junior varsity figures to come from Burden and sophomores Kurt B.k4.c.km.an ~-Bi~ k.-- Starnes. Others that could work into the varsity are 6-2 freshman Shawn Ahern. guard Todd Pickett and two from the sophomore team. 6-1 Jim Sbolin and 6·1 Kevin Nagel. Mission Viejo complet-1':::·,,.._1 Myres 1N1 s12: , ed its devastation in Mowerv 1N15301·3 11Mwv1M1s.o. South Coast League dual SOO lrtt-1. Volltn (NI S·l9 17; l 8tuer IMI S 19 U, 3 Grier IN I no meets with a 100-point 11me lllclllt IEl. l 8'own IMI 100 lr-1 Choquotlubl'ICt IEI 52 0 l Sllvtr IMI · 3 Eby IMI 100 back-I 8arnr• IMI 1 00 1, 2 Cl'IOquenuanct IE I. 3 Robinson IM I 100 br&MI I Tutllr IEl l ·O't 6 1 McOonOUQl'I IMI; l Novotny IM) But in looking to future conquests, Sea Kings coach Jack Errion in- dicate$ thpt not every- l!~lll lhJog fl bleak with the loss ot tba! triQ .. .. Still," continues Er- rion, "• lot will depend on how quickly the talent develop5 and how quick- ly some of the kids mature to varsity al- titudes. Frank Ford has done a good job with the junior varsity and au or them ti~ve had the benefit of Paul Orris' presence on the freshman level. They've "Offensively we're go- ing to have to rely a little more on outside scor· ing," says Errion. "We should be quick with good team speed and we '11 stick with our same defense." margl·n over host El 1001>ack-1.Hol\lnqrr1N11:011;2 lvtr\Ol'I IHI 1.10.S. l. Tlllm.,., INI Toro, led by the power 1 1, • 400 ''" relty-1 M•"'°"' Vl•lo ~41 la 'tad, things appear bright with starters Steve Esposito (6-2) and 5-11 .M11rk Rairis return. caO:.d depth of Brian 100 bruu-1. 8•rQttOn IN) no .... llm~; 2 Conway IHI no time 3 ·tOodell, Jesse and Vic· Aowland (Nlnoll-. tor Vassallo, Paul Kon-400 frff re••v-I. NewP0'1 H•rbor f S I ' 01.1. trlmas, Jef co man, un1.,..r111r11tllPl&.A9WM-..C• "'"· ven.., ltll 14'1 W.stml1111•r 100 meOley relo-1 l'ountaln Vtlley 2:01.0. 200 tr-r: a.nn.tt (WI 7• 13 S 2 Bouwens !Fl; 3 Sp4-I IFI ._. ing for their senior year, 11 along with 5·10 David •1<,oelaJer, 6-0 Jim Errion is not predict- ing that Corona del Mar will put CIF crowns back-to-back. but adds: Jjm New and Charlie 200 meorev ret•v~" , .. ms dl~ Bay-all individual win· <111~•:::;...1. c:amobtn 1u12:ou:1 1'era. p s,_, cl> 2.0, 1; >. o. sno.1 •u Goodell qualified for ,. ~ Ind med.-t. A<lder .. 11 o.14 1lDOther CIF event-this , u o 1 Han•o" w> 2·11.2: J qme the 100 backstroke er~~n~;~".._11L1~,1:,.~.,, ""' tu; 2• lh 55.0. l1n~1.i1rr ILi ''·'· J. ~s l\JI The South Coast uo ~ I. b · 100 fly-I WOollo« fffT f·OI S· 1 ague pre.1ms eg1n 11,11.,, .. ,<• <l>, 03>. ,. All•v cu1 oesday afternoon al El '.OS s "th f aJ billed 100 frff-t 8r..,.. IUI WO; 1. oro Wl m s ~ .... CUI s..a, J. Lll'llMlter ILi l?h iirsday. ss o C d 1 M Lf" h ' SOO lrH-1 P ~ ILi S 31 O. l 0.. orona e ar .-•i s Sti<wllus 5'.s;J £~ 1u14 ,. •. sea Kings a)SO had lhe 100 t>KIH. ~WI IUl 1 00 S. 7 balanced look in ripping C•mt>1>t111w 1·as.1:>.-..,. .. e11 t00 ..... -1 ~1\11.07 S; l-rival Costa Mesa l>y 64 H!l(IMP 1u11:n s:i.~!L> 1: 10. points with Pa u I a1r"r .. ..,-1 Un'-'•'IY> ss, Semonsc n , Ward c:.r..1 .. Mtr1m1 111Jc..1a1MM Oberman, Russ Jenkins, to0 med!.., ,.,.,_1· CerOf'a dtl #AMl:47.'-Steve Wright, Dan Heck too ,,..._. Ooten !CM> 1 4' 1: t. and Alan Launer collect· "••<11• <ettM> •·se.•: 3• Ct>otMllll ICOMI 2·01.0. ing victories. 100 tndO-\. s • ..-. .. ,., lcdM> Bob Dolan had a pair 1·13 0: ,_.,,..,11er <CAIMI 2:tt.1; 1. Ntll9f' ICdM11·1:J.3. of wins for Costa Mesa, so,, ... ,. Overman rCdM> n •. 1. but there was little else s11v• <OIM)24.0; >. ~ rCdM> 24 s. 100 lnO. IMCll9Y-I Mlyade IWI •·'"·': 2. Brare IFI; l 9u•lt• (WI 501r-I -IFl 2& 2; 1. Mivad! tW); l Gerdlnlet I Fl SO fly-I. &ovwtM IF) 2• S. 2 Spel09I IFl;l.E*lstrln IFl 100 f,...-1 Muw IF) 1 00 4 Gardllll..-IF);, Ml"""'I IWI ~-It-I 81sl'IOplFI J2 l 1 Breit Cl'IU BrlQtlfCF1 ,. ~-1-1 Pom<hak IFI 35 I 2 Kowclll CWl;l.Oemc>wy IFI 100 ,,... retay-1 Fo..,,l•ln Vello I Sl' ~11'1 1 .. l N~ JOOm.tfltyr .. ay -1 M•rln• 1 S4 0 20t frw-1 Fulk INI ' S1 07 , Polltvenl INI l Wtl\Yf\be<~r IMl 100 lnC! -~~V I Wlnl•rv IM) I 03.•:2 Crrt INI l Y~ IMI SO lrM-1 ~\Ir~\ !NI 2S I. 1 S.Osh IMI l SI~"""' ·NI SI lly -1 J~\lrr IM) 7• 4. 2 Oe'lrle• IN).) Ow,,., INI • 100 lrH I Full\ INl 51 S 1 Wtl\Sfnbtr9't" IMI , Poolawnl INI SO be"-1 W1nlrtv IMI 1' I, 1 Me .. IMl;l Soulll (NI so 1>r1m-1 Morat><to !Ml 31 1 1 AlllSOn !Nl-!. v .. IMI 200lrttrt11v-1.Mulna1 41 I c-191 Mer IMI 11011 Cffta MeH 200 m.dl9Y relay 1. CoU• Mesa 2·01 , 200 ,,__,, Wllltrnor~ ICM! 2.00 'I 2. Cl'IKOI' !CMl 3 S.l\M ICOM). UNHERALDED SPARK PLUG -S e Esposito (00) was one of Corona deJ)tar High 's less celebrated basketball playeI"s. Yet he played a key support role th h~lp· ing the Sea Kings to the CIF 3·;A Utle. He'll be back as a senior next season. Pickens Dinner. Set Olvl"Cl-f. Allen ICMI 2. Slletllllcl for Mesa to throw at 1pA1 > W•lh 1tc1M1. C •o del M "r 100 •fY-•. JeMtns 1cc1M1 5'.J: 1. 0• na " · Launer ICd~I 1101.S; J. Wtlhr 100 ll'dl>-1 ern1r tcM> M• 3: '· A testimonial dinner long testimonial at .i.. Z..Ck•rv ICMI 3 8alOr'c199 (CdMl ~ so•••-•· P1c1tett 1C:M1 20, 1. for retiring Orange Football coach Dick • Jrvine's University 1cd111111 ou bad a half dozen winners 100 ,,... _, WrtQlll lo.Ml no llrnt: lltbbltllCMfJ 8uck ICOMI C t C 11 thl ti T k OC C' ,00 11,-1. a.tor~ 1cdMI 1 no: oas o ege a e c u c er. s new 2 11u111if• 1CM1 » c;1111wtm ccM> d i r e ct or Wend e 11 athletic d!n*t.or, will be 2 0-IC-IJ.SltwlC:OMI. tn turning Laguna Beach '°° ,,..._, 0ot ... tCM> s oo >; , llway with Bruce An· 1('"91 rGdM> s.10; >. Cl>omuu 100 ,_,_, WWtrno,. icMI s. 4• 2· Pickens will be held t h e · m a 1 t e r o f Ernie ICMIJ 8-111 ICMI 1001>ac~-1 P1c1tt11 1CM> 1·01 4. 1 Thursday nigh\, June 2 ceremonies. • denon the lone double u:~:1.!c~~1. H«t <CdM> s1 ~· 1. )\'jnner ta.king the 200 in-wr•tM ICOMI s1 •. 1 Nr1ur tCOM> c~1:,0~~~ =·~u.~~: 11 • at the Costa Mesa Coun-Price or admission is , ar.~emon ICOl\ll l s SPO<llOI• try Club. $10 and checks aiey be dividual medley m 2 14.0 1 ~~71>,.,..,_, i.a.-r 1Cc1M11 011· abd the JOO back in , s.-(CdMI I 100. J P•P"< 1cM1-uc11..., cM> A no-host cocktail hour sent to the OCC account-*''"r-1••-1 Co•IMeHl '2J "ll be . t 6 30 "th in· g offi-, ""01 F-"-·iew Wl g1J1 a : , Wl .. ~ ~· CUl'Y hll Cl-• IO I 1.,1 O.t Hllh . d h R d "~-M .......... ,IJO .....,..., r•1o 1 01n• H"''.......:d:..:.m:..:.::n.:.e.:..r...:a:..:t...:8.:......:an:.::..::...:;;.an.:..;__;_o.:..u:...r_-__ o_a.....:.'-~..;..;._1.a_es;.....;a~,..;~~..;;..;..;...· '"""°5 1CdM11I06 ..;.,,.,. · -frft notey-1 C«ona *' MM Shawn O'Gorman was no1•m• San Clemente's ace in .Uftfosing of Dana Hills, T .. "" 1•111•1 rsu..cill Ot orman clocking a ?OOm-oi..,,.,.r.v-t Tus""1 510 200 ,,_, Oonrwll IEI 1·SS 4 1 t 09.4 in the 200 in-01.1t1m2011:1.~11\dt1r12010 •.Cd al edJ d "9 4 700 1---1. 5Perl1"9 ff) 2·10•; l . YI u m ey an ., . M ....... CTI 2:2l.O; l. Carroll IEI lo tbe 100 backstroke. • nt 4 • \0 lrH-1. 01\lt IEI U .O; t. VAllSITY ·-·-I") ,,,, """'· .. "" •l0t1'1edlevr•l•v-1. Edltor1 t:SI t. :.e&f,.,.-1. l(lu• fl!) 1·11>0; 1, Sell>l I t:Sf.2;J.8tcltley(HIU1·M•. lll00-1. N. Wtl1-ll 111) 2:11 •: , U~k•w• (El 2:12 1; >. AllOtlln a .10 . ne-1. SpHlh IE) n' 2. lnev IE) 14.7,] Ollver (HI H •. Vll'IQ-1 Ma<.k !El Ill•; 2. Pl•I" Vt ,,3.Hamlln IE) 112.0 llY-1 Fra11or IHI l ·OO.•; 2. 1 U!I 1·01 •; l. Pickford IEI "·' frtt-1 Uvek•w• I El S3 t · 1. "Frtnklln ITI UO; 3 8•1dlno ll!l 2S o. OIYIW0-1. Milf'9M In 2. "°-II ll!l, . 100 tly-t. w.nt.ln IT1S6I;1, C.r IT> 1;ou.l N-1rr11·os.o. 100 fr-I. Oltla Ill Sl.1; 2. 0.W-11 IEI SU;J.OW\l IT>».1. JOO f~ 90tuttlc• ll!l S:olt.f; 7. BecUllVll , .. S:Sl.l; '· Gr._ ITl S. SI 9. 100 baclt-1. Norslrum IE) 1 :Ge.I;?. C•rr IT> Mll•:Jrlwf,....r (Tl 1111 l. 1911 bru•l-1 WU.\lloofl 1£) t· 11.0; 7 W@ll ITI 1:11.S; J. $9erllng ITI 1 1\ s 400ltffr.i..,-1,Tuttlt13 367 , 04 l 200 Ir..-1 Llovd 10 1 1 °' 1; 1 0.bbs I SI. l L•<l'l•..C~ I 01 100 Ind mttdlty-1 Hel'l\Oft IOI l 1' l 1 G<'tll ISi J ll~nteH IOI. SO frtt-1 llor\UCll 10) 24.2. 2 Wilton IOI 3 llors 101 100 lly-\. Rlelly 10) 1•04 o: 2 Oebbs 151; l. P9rlllnt ISi 100 lrM-1. Wooll.tl 10) 55.3; 1 llort IDl;l WI.,,,., 101 100 be<ll-1, Ooo<!I 10) I. IU; 2 11ow ($); 3 w.oll .. t IOI 100 bnttt-1. Soito IOI 1:12.1; 2 Li.yd 10);1Gl~ISl 4001,...reley-I O.neHllltJ:'4.), •"-Ill fOI l•I T'••ll• 700Mtdley rel•v-1. Tu,tln1· 12 I. '°'··-··I.a .... ,. (Tl 2:12.J; 2. W111 (T)1 Ml.lrplly IE!. · 1n:.!.t~';.=«~!~~r•': 2· • 1'0 fr~I ~\M l!I ti 0; 2 Smoot If) 1 H .. rl"' IE I 100 fly-I. l..ellellt IT> 1 '"O: 1 Taunl ITIJ. Tolltf\'ltl'I «Tl 100 ,,_, WAit rn SU; , H91'1· drlcks lfl3. lll\WI llEI -lot bec--1.1.fnoford ITI 1 16 9. 2 th t U t Taut'l'I ITl1.11ts"'-t.111ITI. Ou Wes e~ ~ 8 IOOW-1-1 Smoo11Tll?Of·2 •. .I. IA r -""',-, lntcloml(ll 3.Cftflnt ITI . 4001,...twlty-1. Tl•e« O' '· 'ddleback Swimmers dlebacJt ~ueae'1 ......, ''"''"''ui~ Pro Scores V all A-tw 1 400 >nedley , ... ~ •• ~ ass o ""' o 1:.,.1. __....._ ... ., hts, but it wasn't ... !;~ te:=:.. oe~~~.:l~~ · . t:-~ ~ enough as the e•1<1W1ar c,;;;'i17-... • ~=~.C:::..T.C:'" hos were dealt al 200 ........ = 1sw1 1!'<11.1. 2. r...ii.ne '°'· o.-" .....--n111tng ~~ loss by v~1110 ~ t S11t •· Vtlolltr111.. :::;.-=::~~~·:.~ta too western in Mlsllon ~ •~. "'"' ct.•1 '3.61 2. ~IJ't.NYKn1e111t1 rence 1wlrnmln1 M<1.~c..,ts.•J~ltlte11 ''"' ...._.. ....... tft. ~ at Mission VleJo's too lftd. ,_,.-1, z11ect1osk1 1s .... 1 ~11....,u.NYRlll'OI"'·' .. uerite Center Wed-'"°'·': '· ~"°"" cs.ci1 2:o7.i: J. Pll1'buf0111,s. l.Oul•• aallo capturt!(! the utterfly tn 2:01.1 fifth best tlme 1n the and later won the ack is a 11lulln1 ... Dick ls,cll t . 19.t. 911ffele6,Clew!Mld 1 OIVl"9~1. ~II !SwJ ••.IO; .i. "4tw Y9f111114.,...... t, CllklltOI KOYer (5'#) 6US, I, Mlwdy (Sell) Mdlltl'fflS,fl'lll!IHOl.t~ JI.'°. 1 • T0rtnto•.Oll«ac104, Ill tOo fly-I . Vtu•lll• (Seel! t·Ot .t:' ..... "•" 11w1 ,,04A: ,, "•" ,,., ""1"Tlia .......... 110\1. -....... '•k-• • ' .. fr-1 Ze'-"'-"I ISW' JU: 2 Atl•l)t•<IO•. ti• -'-'14 ,..,,..,... ' Hwti.t INl •• Mlafltt ~It Myer (Seel> SI•: I. Mcl.au9flllt1 (SWt ............. Oo ''· Molllrfff CNl, JU, Kat\tM Cll'( l.C11, 'O<'Ollta I Ah 100 INKll-1. VHMlto (Safi 2:12.A: Oal,.lt CA) •• l'tltllburVI\ INI 4, 11 cback could have i 1atc1,..., ""' t .09 •:a. ve1t11tr11. ""''"'' a~~ Ue. had l~ ""•~,!:.!i·~ 'M •·•11 • ~==-i:~:~~W' ttie final eyent~• Olil,,......~, ,. ... .,1 i. ftr.tOM11 11.LN•~>1.011c...-1•1• ~1.,..· 1ot·ti; ":~-.t . ..Jc$N>it.t•-'11. &~:~r~':::Tr;~'"14 l • CbolbJ t leadj.DC ~ ~~r,;J.M 1"11-'1 ~ ~ <tiitl t lei! o.._ 4;_ J,IM f'ral!C t 00 THE SPRING TRIO • Ha • mar.~nr w r • ,, .. ,.,.,._1. '"'"-''"' MlflMllllUCA11.a.tt1"'-... '"''o dt.qualltled on the tbltd l !U ,•-!SU•l•hO d i•· ... IOl"AIP.NNY.,,_IAl.•.10111-171h&lrvlneA~,Ht'wpofthKh,ullf.(71C)MS.0792 l••· 411ellfltdl ,. 1), lllflf•· • Hitchcock and 5-10 Matt Osgood. "We're surely going to work toward it." \ Shopping for contact lenses 1s often like finding your way in the dark - a game of chance. Not so at the Optical Market! AND YOUR SATISFACTION IS GUARANTEED! ·, ~~~~!w!ere-At the Optical Marke''" . tliftl 'Wet Lenses Elsewhere • Si75· $200. At the Optical SOit LedSes Elsewhere you'd pay up to $400. Bring your doctor's prescription. : FINANCING AVAILABLE! 1 ~ El TORO Slddtebaek VaJley .. Pfaza 23704 El Toro Rd. 188-3183 NEWPORT BEACH Newport Hiiis Center ~=etO~. - ----..... & ":. ...... "' . II • • ,.,,.. . . .. """*-ti • • ..... ..... ... c.... ,. ... .. ..... .. • ' • ff , • .. " ...... • • • M LAot•i.. ) • t I = • • ' , • ' ' • OttMM ' ' 0 t 1 ........ .......... (t.11) ...... :S"'* -lllM M tO .. .,.. U Or .... c....ar.. T .. It .. ·~ I Bled! ICdMI 2' SY 1' 2 2 Fr1-IHVCI 2S SIS 10 • l Perrine IC.C.11 Mewl JS SU 10 S 4 Tut IGDMI :JO 512 11 0 S CM rift IEI T0<ol H SOI 10 S Oeley ~ ........ Tl,,.mont ~Olllml Cral9 ar..iDurne Maswy 11••-Toi.r llrodlty 1'1n1ler rcos Or9ll1 N--Prl<t Krotlnl .. dl JarOIM • Becon (~I 2' 09 11' C•MP 7 Fo<d IFll\ Vall•vl ?II OS 16 1 Corbell 8 Polrlttr IVnll 11 01 16 1 Coo!M'r ' S<.11u11r (Molter 0.11 1' •• 16 I ~v~ 10 BarrlO\ (Fin V•1tevl 11 01 U 9 --::~, C.teftl •1-ClS-SI 090.n 81drk Tut ' '" H IP avq CilO\i<t• 7'I 1'3 n s~& " 7 B•uer\ lO 101 108 \I? 'IO L•rlmer 7'I 11) u 110 10, JO l'I 71 IQ\ 3 \ . .. .. . ..... ,. "' " • n.• ,. m., m tu It M • 216 11.J )4 flt SS UI 6.3 Z3 w 44 m S.7 u ., ,.. .. u I? 17 t0 W l.7 IJ " , ., 3. l t t I 21 2.1 1 I I 17 tA ) I t 4 U l t o t t.o •s-..Cll l?M) 1 .. " 2' 15' • 11133 n 1S II 32 2' ,, 16 1' 6S 21 ,. S3 " 2S 16 12 n l4 , u ., 10 1 s • ..... .. 1$.S ,., n.1 I.. 1.1 110 6.S lSl 7. ,., 6.1 M 3 3 7S l.4 ,. 2. It 2 7 10 2 0 ... ., tJ••M U ... o.c-1S • ., m 1.s ~ ,. .. 42 ,,. ,, S ~-II V 11 ti S •• 11!~ U it ID .. >t ICrvt-II IS 1• W >.t ll•rta b II It " 1.6 P'Kllt 1' 17 S It 2 0 .,_,.., ,, " • 311 2 • ~i.xe-r IJ 12 9 U 2 S s.. °""'9Mlt , .... ..... -~ " 162 .. d• ""' 2' 15' •1 119 U2 ,,,.nll Sla""8ftS ~. Hfffy Mlle hell l'«eHltr J-s » l)t IS M tU .... "' .. n .. »tH s.• UJO»" JI 20S316 ti., tt i4 t1 '° J6 3 •• ti 70 3 , s 1 2J s ' 2 6 t2 Uftlwnlty o•m s s 0 s 3 • l , I 1 ' 0 t 0 , IO 2 O Poirier 3 l.S Cirttn 2 1 0 • EY111\ott l 2·0 H•llord t tt II • 27 l\M u 27 ,. •2 ,, 104 .. " .. u ,, 7S 10 Alun E\l>O\•IO t'Mtlt•r Rtt'"' HtlChCl>O 11 71 78 /0 3 ) 70 7S I\ 4\ 3 1 lA 11 II \q 7 I Sclluttr Mattr Dtll ltf.tl ' '9 ft 16 Ut. 116 81<,JltY Kubu Ill •••. ..11 ... 438 1'.I H•l19an 412 16.2 Hook, 264 10.• Slot roll 166 6.6 MllclM!ll 162 6 1 l'uller IS• 6.6 22 21 2S 12 n • 16 • ,. 0 1 tst ts• 111 110 ., SJ l2 31 ll 12 10 a .... "7 • s 97 to 62 30 H 2.1 , ~ , 1 11 ,. ~." NPt-'ft')f'I 0\ql)()d 8ur11.-n Htrwn Mc Court Dav11. S<.hn>t!clllr Wltllamt Ci1rr1tv 6emtt-FI- 8 10 \ 1\ 3 I CiArtl• S S 1 11 1 4 Ciavt.,, 1 • • 11 1 1 Much•m •261'1"' 2S 9& 14 u .. 30 16 llO •2 ll 68 II n ,, ,, 1 0 I O Put>ody I I I S '>lo•I• EdltOI\ 111-141 ~:;;~.~ 9 f'I II IP ••t Htll ~~ :~ ~ ~~ :~ ; Croal " IOI JS ,.. 10 J Maul 1S U 18 I'll H ?03211" •• 1l7SH7'S6 19 ?l 28 74 3 I P1rr1"" U .... I lie" ~>-Wllfr IS n • So J 1 18 11 10 ~ 3' .... 10 48 3 . t. 3 t IS 2 S 20 31 t9 " 71 " 10 16 4 s J • Costa MeW (IS,.10) 112 s 0 u •• " 3.7 36 3. t2 2 • . " " ..... 2S 1'S •> S13 20 S • n Tiit Tr -m .,'° 1S 120 }I 2'1 II • 1S •• 41 Ito 1 2 U JS 3J tOJ • t 10 36 • 80 1.0 t6 1 II ,. u 3 1 • • 6 s 0 tUlerty Owhliaft c 0-4' Wlll•rd Ciulierru Orayu ~nl9"1' A•Y K•towskl Eusey ""~em Loq.tn Slier er Tl\Urm~ ' .. ft • e•t· 11 141 .. "° 15.7 " .. u n1 11' 10 '° 37 211 10 I 21 .. "' ,. I. 11 71 1' tlS t .J n ta • 62 s 1 10 11 lO .. • • _......> + JJ-•a 10 tl I 27 2 1 • 10 l 12 2• 4 2 2 • IS ·:=: ( .................. ~a. &4.1.Ma 111111-. ..... u,-a;-o~ ,._. aeaela) p•1 C rll a:;:--::i~ Crater wu ul otM .... .. ..... ... -•• , ... "' tU " la ............ _"'..._' ... -~r:: _ lAape ~ ............ drdm for im "•r """ T-.10et1tet1tl A ~lcoec:bel, ..__.., -... °""""'· ~' •· Co•.... of tll• -•r v .. --. ............... u.. _.. ., ... ..,.,. •: t. •••• ,,.... .... ..., .boeon ~ to • Newport ,,....,, ·--.... c ........ ~.. b ~ ..... .. ............ a1111e ,....,., .,, 1. .. ..,."" n.ar_. a.u • n.111_,o • Maran aft.er leadlns the 8er1eln Dey Towrne ... ont I A a-'IOft to. __.,Oft ofth8 ..... _, ........ M«o.MM.•;J. ~ ...,._. ttlel ..... OWi-. Vel ~.n. lH1U9 champlonabip. • "'~'· Yw• •""*"· 4t: t. --T-m .... <r'lkll. .. C f'lltM-1, OIMy ruM ,.. • ... ,,,.,~°"~''· Forwards-Cbri11 "'~~~v~~~;.~;';.~~.! Crater (Edison), Jeff .. ~_.,;>. u1o1 ....... On•· Ben bow (Newport all-, IC.rtl .......,.., ,w,,. ,.,,...._,. Harbor). C'-ott Bru.m- ..... tf .. Mllcfen-. u "'; 2 ""'" ~ .... ...,., ,..,..:11t1111t .. 11MNt,21.c me tt (Huntington "11o11t-t.M1eMHY•tt.& Beach); Halfbacks-•••ON vteJOcc B S i 1 SllM•~..,T-, .,.,...,. ruce verman <Gffn1-1.0r .. ._.... 11:t .Mll•· (Newport-Harbor), Brad Gir~ Gyinnasti•CS ~":=~G.->-t. o-tt• .. 111~ Webster (Edison>. Mo 101. , .... ~ Tudlosi-, n: i. u1111 Djajakaausma <Hunt-c:.r..•tr,n. ington Beach), Doug JUMi<>1tva"'1TY ... ~~".:0,'~,92.;:-'0.:.u~~ Piper <Westminster>; OlllUOYMNASTICS ,. _ _. 11u1 IM.•l c..t• MeU odd Ho to Tour"•"'•"': A r1dl. ,., t.WyMeyer, n . Fullbacu-Kris Dunn VAHITY V•ull11\9-I GlbH (NI •• , FllQlll-t. , .. , Gler'I• O.ltos. GIOfie 0 Flk/lt '°'°'sl-1. Mltell ~-(N r:i u--bo ) T\ni1 WeatMl•ater CUI. tl ft 7J 11 5<hmels.., IC) 1' 3 llltl KWO<k C.••lr, J7'J't; J. (lie) JUft41 Rlllflforlll, ·Oofteld, flllt. INell-1, "-""Robert'-ew "'&41 r , -r:ag UM"'"'tv cN1.H11Hc112 M1,.,,.sioru.Jt. n :2 • .A.,,.o....t1n,1s. Bee e (Fou nta i n v ... 1u"l>-•· P"11111K 1Wl ''·' 2. 81,,_1 Kwoc"-IN> 1 • 1 rne1 Vall... ) Herb Boeri Wan"°' IVI 1'.1,3 Obert <WI 161. Cirttl\bttrQ INI. Mnlno CCI 7 l 4 ._y t m u ........ .,.,._, Ph•ll•CK 1w1 n 1. Tlmmon\ <NI 1 o (Edison), Jack Osl nd 1 S•tki 1w1141, l or-u\".u cw 1 B•'•"'~ 11eam-1 Hitt 1c1 1 s·, ' G • (Marina); Goalkeep~r- 1•, Kwoc"-•Nll 1 , 81<"-•rt INI 11 Boys ymnast1ca e~11ncebNm-1 Ad•lg <VI •s 7 7 Ftoor .. ••<•w-1 ltiel Kwoc"-<NI. OJ John Benbow (Newport Obert tWl tSo. l AowbOttom IUl Htll IC> 1 e 3. ttlwl Jon•• INI, Harbor). "i.1oor •·~·m~ ~1 O~rt 1w1 1& 3. M~~:":o~o~~ l(wock !NI 31 ). l 80YSOYMNASTICS Pickilftnca 1s1 anc1Grec1t1 IEI • t, 1 Second Team 1 RowboltOnl cu1,. 1. l Bar1>uc11ec• Muino cc>tt 3 H11nu,... .... acll 127• 5" Oewtel Ermt IEl3 7S. Steve Helmich, Mike (WI IH '9.t .l .... to.7. HorltOl\l•I blrs-1. G•tdts IEI D D l All·round-1 Obfrt IWI ,. 6; 1 Longhorw-t Wuver 1H911.4$; 2. 6 ts: 1. Kumneu tEI S.2); 3. Glaser resser, e an Paulsen, Rowbottom 1u1 seo. 1 Adn9 1u1 c.r101 rHa11.7,3.Fl•hlve1Ha11.•.•. tsi u . Ken Moreen (Edison); S7 I C d •E l S!lcn CEI 1 S Per•llel .,.."'°"I. Cirodn IE) 7.S; 2. T D k Rl h d 0 oanaHillt(t1.llllS.JIE1~ntl• oe ven Floor ••ercl~-1 Wea•er !HBI KumHeka IEI u , 3. Aamlrez t!ll yrone an er, C ar vauttinq-1 Mu11~n 101s1 2 T•• us; 2 CirlnllHBl us; 3. c;111 IHBl 4.05 Lion es (Huntington betwttn Powl\ <El and wa1..,. 1E1 Orange Coast Co llege 16. • M~rd ce17.ss. Rt~1.MMz ts1 n :2.0 1•ser cs1 Beach)-, Kern Haug, I$ Pomrnc-1 Horw-1. Thornton CHBI S.SS; l . W--ISI SO. ·uneven i..r\-l 59,.e, cD> ''· 2 will host the Southern 8 ?. 2. Tie 11e1-w.,,.,.,.. IH&I and All·~t. Gr4Mlft CEI •i.os; 2. Dave z i mm er m an Ao\Oro•" <DH• > Mullen 1011° California Community Btrd rHais 1· 3 ~rd 1E1 s.o Giawr ts1:10.1. (Newport Harbor)·, Ben-••t•nc• beam t Ctark IEI 1 6. 2, C ll I t ll . t Hl9h w-1 W41•11er CHBI 6.2; l Powi, <!I 7.1;3 Hoi .. ~rn•" 101 i o o ege n erco eg1a e er1ue1 tHlll s 1, J Ma1a11011 cs1 so. "'"· V•ltrf ttM.UI ""ti~---n y Nguyen, G r eg F100< ••••ci-1 Clar• rEi • • 1 Athletic Council (SCC-• cas ... r !S>" Lon9 110ne-t. "•vbero II.I'·'· 2• Karman (M a r1· n a) ·, I COi r • 3 Tl ~tween Mulle'I P•ratlel b9f\-1. Br-I IH8111S; WaliOI\ CFll.6, 3 o. .. CFl I 0 ~; :: .. n .. -~e ,:,, 6 CIAC) .coed volleyba~I 2. wuver IHBI 1 t.S· 3 Thornton Floor Utrclw-l. Frybero Ill x a v i e r B r a v 0 Atl·•OUl\d-I 5c1<le1 101 1•' 2 ch a m p1ons hips A pri 1 <H81 • 1s, • Reeves IHBl se_ 1 M. 2. Anis 11.1 u: 1 Wat~ Cfl 1liY estmlnstu) 1 to,-2 3 ~1· IEI 11 • .,0 .,n Ru1As-1. P•W ccci It t: .l..ltYu\tU-..l.tS. -----Mui..., " ' ~ • _ ~ ""0415T~' o 3 -s>".;i'w CEI SS; 4. Side tlofw-1 Loleter II.I 7 O; 2. i ... ___ iilillliilitl8iiiiiii-liiliillii1iiii ~lmlJ"STC:O.lili\tu . All o( the top two· year ThorntonfH81S' VYH•w•IFIS IS. 3.C-IF)SO Vavlli"t>-1 Avre10 !NI ll s 1 Lov All round-I. Weaver IHlll 7.0. 2 H«I~·· lle<-l Wetson (Fl 1.7; IUI 12 O. J.~ln <Cl 11 6 C 0 11 e g e tea m S j n Foster tSI l M 1. Joflf\son CLI l.4S; 2. StrlPl•"'9 ILi &•,,-1 AYTn cN1 1• 0 2 "'-• Southern California will u1'°" '"'·"' m. .. , s..ic...._,, • 0 SPACE PLANNER. ~" V1lley IH II ' ,, It tp ••• 78 1" ol HS 1' 2 11 181 '1 '31 IS 9 Mlllor OY~••I Snow You~ Mulll9111 M1\lft0 81\\etl F•l-e 21 " " 52 2 • 21 10 2• 46 t.I • l 1 1l 21 ICI 14 Q, l Sh«1> (NI 10 2 . . h t LOl\9 Ho<v--1 Garrity I El 7.t; , P•ralleH»rs-1 Sl..-¥1 IFI 7 •s; H-Htfl01'V1ti..,Ow.<"'4I lltl•n<ei..n-1.Avre\CNllSJ 1 be Competing 10 t e WO• Gt•s.r (Sl n ,J-CSl13S 2 OurolFllt,J ... OILIJt , It ft • ••• Smith ICI 1u.1 Jes\<IO tNltU day tournament in the Floor uerclw-t Edwa•ch 1s1 RlnCJ\-1 AM'° ILi I JS, 2. PKk SPECIFIER OF FURNISHINGS FOR , COMMERCIAL Ford B•rr10\ Holme\ Wll•l"\O!I Sval\lld Carroll 80•0•0 l!tr.t .. h lit.y Rot tar He1oe Albin Mack Gr@enltodl 29 117 10 '14 I\ I 78 I" •> HI 11 S n .t0 l'I 11• • s 71Xl"ISJI 21 '" •• 10 J J I\ 1' 7'1 ~ ) I I\ ?O 9 •• 12 19 1• 10 ., , J " s 0 10 0 • ) ~ • "0 ' 0 7 1 10 Bu,t H-l,..Coft9HCll (IS.Ill 9 It II Ip " t\I ,. 188 16 1711 61 311 H '1 U '16 '~ ., J'/ 131 ?\ Ill I/ II• 76 SO JS tH Sim\ Col\trtra\ S•elnh4u, O'AltH<>ndro Ow•n Pt\tol~\I Sprow C•ooc<••ml M1tc11-11 P•<in•,..11• Jt>"n\Ot\ Tol0< .. , ,. ' "0 10 ~ y I , , s t s 1 )0 JI 1 , ,, .. JO 117 IS ?I I? 6\ •·t7tl ll ) l 1 ) 0 0 ' ' ?O I 0 4 I ? 4 1.0 Hein SluPI~ 8rOWf\ C••PO R•t11vf' Coo• Andrfl"'' Cio11., Ptl\iter O-Hllhl._10 ' It II 1S In SJ , .... , 1S % .. 1\ 11 Sl H 84 .. 16 .. ·" 17 16 30 " u 7 ] 1 ' .. ..,,, 2'17 11 I U3 10.S ,., .. 217 9. 214 • s ltO 6 I n 3 6· S7 3 3 1l 3 1 SI Toto 'l;·'lll Ip •••• 10 2 BDb C1'Mle\ 1S 118 151 !07 Mark Hiii 13 1 so S7 lS2 Mike Hiii 11 n s' '"' Rob Clllrl~ 13 44 41 1'1 Simpson 2\ 4'J 27 US Holm•\ 1l l3 S8 12• Pf'fr•1'1 11 It IS SJ Cieorg• tO • S 17 ICflly I 2 Mtrrvmen o 1 IC1t1p\i.1 1 0 IS l 7.t • 3 so Sl 2.3 I 7 • 0 1.0 I 0 Fr•Mr ,...,\on 15 21) l'I SIS 20 • Ft-•-.:tM-1 Avre\ 00 IS.6.? Q C t C ll I OS J Gr-!El •. I, 3. Woodrow ILll lS. J ICtllrt 1Fl6 IS Hll• .. ,.. ,., SmlthtCllS03Jff>UPINl 144 qinge. oas 0 ege tSIH Atl·round-10e .. IFU03;2.81<11 .. PROJECTS. AVAILAB\.E N .... l(lng Brown J.IC"\Ofl S-.vde• HM..,. Ci•u\I.., JS 133 st n• 12 • All·•OUl\0-1 •vrn INl61.•. gytnnas1um. ~ d•horu 1. Tie between 11.1 s.• 2st1• ~ 211 111 ~~-=-=.:.::~~-=--..:.:.:.._~~~~::_::::::::...~~~~~~~~~'.!.'..~:..:..:.....::...:..:.....:.:..:.:::.:::........:.:.:...::::..~~~~~~~~~...J•.._ ................. """' ...... .. 24 St 11 12' u 1714) 631 ..0060 tt 11 1 ?II 2 S " 10 1 11 , • 14 ' l 21 I S 4 1 o 2 OS Funny Car Drag Meet AtOCJR Area Calendar· Jim Liberman, Ed McCulloch, Rob Bruins, Jake Johnson and Dale P\Jlde are among the en- tries for the AA /fuel fun- n1 u.r competition at Orange County lnlema· tional Raceway Satur· day night (7) . '"MY !Mir<" Ill A•'"rtb-tlt JC. ''"'' ot•voth •t f''"'"" ~-·mmlf'Wl T , .. ,.,, At (()t"Of'Ua d"' Mttr F-0°1nt•1rt J•i ""' .ti F-()tlU'Hll both •t )~ ~·· M,..,,,,." •I '"""'<IM W•· t CoHflllQll" 1~ C-'u110, •I °"'°"'..,.. Co.t\1 COllfQI l lOI II( tr;i,,... " NC 4A It •t VOUll'\Q\tl')Wn ()t,10 8tt~"b~tt HUnf1nqtnf"I 8••<'"' V\ f'>unt_,,,, V•ll"Y 1t fnunM+n Vitll"V q,.,,.,.,,H)f\c,.nt~ t•t E\t4'"" ttt Et Ml')ttfln-t 11 t\1 Cnr""• ttll'l M•' ., li'lH"" 8"'A"" •l 1\) Et Tt>rn OJ\ (O'fit M.-'d At T•Wlntth• P•r" r1 t\l. Un1-v"'"'V di Oen11 ._.111, ll JS• Ml\· Gauchos To Play FRESNO Sad dleback College begins •4i quest for the state JC basketball champ1onsh1p here tonight, meetan~ talented Santa Barbara City College Saddleback's Gauchos come into the ~ame with a 25·8 season r<'cord, having won 13 an a row and 18 of the last 19. But Santa Barbara has been just as impr<'ss1ve, 1f not more. The Vaqueros are top-seeded with a 29.3 re- cord. Other first round games match Fullerton 05-11) against Alamed a (24-6), Cypress (27-l ) vs. San Joaquin De lta (20-10) and Bakersfield (27 -3) against City College of San Frl\ncisco (27-7). Volleyball 90YS YOC<,1.1 YUL L VAll,ITY Hlll\tlnqton 8Nc,., <Ml M•r1n1 U J, IS·ll, IW Edl'IOtl dttf Wtslmln'tor 12· IS, IS-10, IS-•. '6·14 N9w,,...t Harbnr dot l'ountaln Valley ,.,s 7-IS IS-13. IS' IS 12 l .......... T ..... _ 1"91ewood oet Coll• "''"• 12 "· II .. II.) Corona def Mar Mf Cno•.......,.11-1, .... Coron<1 dll Mar Oel HeNard IS-t, IS-U Tou•Mtnenl MVP-Cllrl1 Allerd. (CdMI -:fllNICM Vollltll TY HUl\lll191on 9"cll ... , M•rl111 u •. ,,.,, ldlton def Wtttmlntter u 1', 1~10, I Mt. Newport H1,11or det l'ou11t1l1t, v,u.v. IMS.1S-t.1H JC Golf .,..,,., v .. 1o Ill s... Oeme<te 13 ISi, ~ou01e,... Vt•" St•I• 11 'Souther" C.<1lllotn11 CoOeqir r2 lCU Civmne\llC\-l'ou.,111" V•ll•Y. ECl•\Ort HunllnQ!OI\ llea<1'. Marin.\, \.In Cl•,_,,.t -oor1 H•rbO< al El R.-.chO tm11•1W..t •IP"') Ml S... Aroton10 CollelJf' al Gotcle" Wnl Coll-<JI T rec -S1dOl•l>H-C0He9e •I P_.,,rn4r <;.trr110< •t ()o..,~ Co•<I CoU•q• <bol" 414 ll, C.ol-Wr•I Coll•q• al Colleqe Of .... ee ... ,, 12 :JO) T•rtnt\ Matl'W af Ed!iM. "-lain V•lley el Huntll\gton Beach. Wt\tm1n\te' •t NewPort H•rbO,. l l9"n• BM<" 14 C..Of\I del Mar. CMI. M~ at El Toro. Oel\I Hiii• •• Unlvar\1ty. S.. 0-t• et Ml\S- Vleto 1•11 11 J ISi. S...1• Mon!<• at Got,,." W.-.1 Cbll• 121, UC '"''"" MIO Oki-$tl4e II S.. Ot- ~l•te Voll••l>illl-El Toro Ill Coste M•u. l)n••-••11" .. 0-H11'1 CM-def MM 11 L.-9elch M IHiOn V•f'IO ·'' S.." Cl-nl•. E•tan<•1 .. '''""• M•""• 414 Edi~ ~tllrt Vall.., .i l4untt1191on -h WMJmlMlet at H ... ...,,, Ha"""' tell el II, Ciol~ W•'1 Con-.i Sant• -.i<a City cou-11 JOI r,.,,, QV1"'\l\t4c\-S.n c~•· •. Tu\t•n IJI K-11•.C-iM 131 ""'' tl'IWllt-Oranqie C6MC ceoeoe At t; ro·HMll'M ttt Gtr1' \Wtm..,1n•-AIAW at p,,, ... td4111ft(_f .... Ii·••< ~•O -<Joi..., W..t ••Ml San An•nn•o Col•-•2 Jiil. p~,_. and ...,., O•-CC al Or-C.0.\1 Cotl'1J8 )I Gtf'I~ ""''lbtU-uttf\ St.t1_.., GolttM\ W•'1 (Oll"91 !~..,._,•I I) s.t-y IMl<'Cll 1'1 B•<t•fbltl-JC \lete tinel\ 11 F'rnno Olv•roq-Edi«!fl H1911 lnltllatlonel flrt•I\ ".lOll ml Gates open at l1 with qualifying all afternoon and the ftrst elimination race for the 16 finalists set for 7. All women will be admitted free of cbaraetothe special Fox ,Ni.ght program that will also fnQlude street rods, wheelatander cars and two rock bands perform- ing on the stri_, after the final race. Mike Dunn, the 20- year·old son of former world champion Jim Dunn 0( La Mirada, will make his debut ln funny car competitioo. • Bruins, a surprise win- ner in the 32-car pro· fessional dracater as- soc'8tion championships at it'remont Raceway in Northern Cali!ornJa last year when he defeated Don Garlits, will be driv- ing the Green Elephant from SeatUe. Between 25 and 30 fun- ny cars are expected for. the program. Tickets for men sell for SS.95 with children admitted for $2.95. European Soccer UEFAOap Eanpeu Quarter·flaal1 Wednn· CUPOPCIL\JllPIO.NS day . ~·flllal1 Athletic of Bilbao. Dynamo Kiev (Soviet <Spain> 2, Bar.celona; Union) 2, Bavaria (Spain) 2, tie. Bilbao ad-• Munich (West Germany) vances on basis of 4-3 . 0 edge ln total goals in two-. Dynamo Dresden game series. <East Germany> 3, FC Juventus of Turin (Ila-. Zuerlcb (Switzerland) 2. ly > 1, Magdeburc <Eutt FC .zuertcb advances on Germany) o , basis 0( more away goals R W D Mo I en be et in two-game aeries after <Belgi411l) 2. Fe1enoord • tie ln both points and· (The Netberlands) 1 I goals. • ASK Athens (Greece> j B o r u a s l ~ 7, Queens Park Rangenl Muencbengladbao I <Britain) s. OT . <West Germany) 1, FCI Bru1• (BeJatwn> O E•ropeaClall."J:'en Liverpool (Britain) 3,1 Qaa.net• EUenne (France) 1 I Hambur1er SV (West Germany) 4. M) TK· NH Da--ra t · Budape1t (HUJllary 1 .. ......,.'l .. e . M'' ScS~thampton (8ri.tain). MlltlV~l~ ...... ;Me.-• 2, Anderlecht <Belfi um). im ... ov.•1 M•11• Dllr•ar c .. ..,,,., 1. Anderlecbt advances CM•°""" Ml 1t11'1 .. wt: c:-11'1 on buis of 3·2 edC• lb · ~;.-:;1~~ o-i .. .-•u.rtu..ii total COals in tWO-l•me· . JUMtO.Valftt'fY Hflff, • • M•U VM--:•c~i,:~ A.tletlco de Madrid =··~ s111nn., .. M "n' (spa l n ) 2. Le •• k r K11trlct11 c.Mll't .Awar4l1 Miii• s p a rt a k · S o f l a· ..... "· ~ J (Bu'··""a> O ,._,.t v11ua111ei '••• H11rn &a&'A "''.:.-.. .,.... ,,,..,.__,.,..... ...... (;I NaDOll (Italy) 2. ~· 1.ini ...,. ~: CMdl't •w_..:! Wroclaw (Poland) O QwtetyMllw. • IT'S CLOCK S IOPPING SUPER SHOPPING TIME AT TOYOTA! TOYOTAS BIGGEST SALES EVENT EVER IS GOING ON RIGl-IT NOW e We're stopping the clock from Thursday noon to Saturday mtdntght·and staying open till all hours. e Because our goal is to break all sales records · and sell 24,000 Toyotas nationwide-that's one f!Nery 9 seconds. e And that means we'll be dealing like there's no tomorrQIN. •Sou•hl!'TI Cot.fomoo T ~o deo'"'\ ore llOJ'lPl"'l IM cloc~ !hrou,h Sundov eJ So come on in for super shopping at any participating Toyota dealer: We'll have a big selection of Corollas. Coronas, Celicas and tough Toyota trucks -2.7 models. ihen if you can find a better built small car or truck than Toyota ... buy it. \ .. l ·17 by Tom latiulr ~ SPANISH RIC£? 9EAH I WHEN c.,t)(J EAT 1TL1b.J~~~f NANCY YOUR GO INSIDE RE PORT CARP~ AND BURY IS AWf:UL ---YOURSELF YOU'VE ~ 'N YOU~ GOT TO I / BOOKS ST U ~Y I ~ - MORE ~ i...---'. TODAY'S CIDSSIDID PVZiLE UNITED Feature Syndicate ACROSS nallve maid 11 1 1 n ! A •C' F lE A r 56 More 0 IN IF I It A R • 10 II I Revolting bothersome r 11 1s r 111• i: 1.1 11 • r r 5 M11inform 59 Horned A 5 E A o it H c E It 9 located in a animal clly 62 filch •• odlllndular 64 v1veous IHH rn1nerel 15 Go wild over comPOund I 6 Comparative 65 lrrit1Ung IO dllkneu lhe IYH 17 0r8'Nd e7 Concurt tQaln anew 19 C.nery'a 70 Give 111ru11 relatlve 10 20 Hindu 1oc1al 7 1 long group narra1tve 2N.11(ew1M not 72 Suffix w1111 words drug 23 BGlle;: Prefix stem and 9 Naval 43 Prolubet1nce 24 lnl~tes gins 1n1ign11 46 Treveue 27 Fltti 73 c O. Goro .. 1 O Elec:lrical regularly ct~lng and Juha control 48 FHea. gnefs ~ Ward I I Obstructions tic 20 Flalllboylrlt 14 01 an1ge 12 Peuage 51 Equ11tbf1um Jf Flxiltlon 75 Malarnule s I J H111111ian organ 35 In -\IOI' of tow stall bird SJ S1><tnkles 37 Cttpl 18 Allor-55 Gym11as1ic 39 -du Jour DOWN coated device ~hu steel 57 --·--110us •OHra 1 Slulfed 22 Ump Conhdenhatly T•l11111n1 Cookery 25 Putry item 58 O.moltahed: bOOtl 2 lndltn, for 26 Olecolor Var •2 OOCllft one 28 Police off 59 Deep flesh Orfflt 3 Nol JO Fregrent W01Jnd Mytholoor cla111lied 11qu1<1 60 -··· Rios: O Troltty 4 Written 32 Not une Jamaica •5 Ntirly SPHCh 33 Musi•I or ruorl petpt~ular symbol Mlklla 61 In a ra111\ 41 Colonltl • 5 Before Sal 34 Hall Prefix 63 Endute "~"to 6 Pr~l 1 ' 35 Fleet 66 ·-·Plaines fnelana , boat 36 Eight Prallx 111 ' 49 Bifd 7 Heeling 38 Consume 88 Turktsll 50 Walk like• apparatus avidly 2 general ellild 8 Enticed words • 69 ·-- 52 Mo'1 uncivil unwi.tely 2 41 Soothing 1mmo111ac S4E.lnd. Stf C T ~·r1 ,1 ll ~ A I H 't Alf T -•u:.IN " H 1 OINl.I 11£ flt"' £ v ·--··~ [1'-• w oi 111 c Po• I " ~ I U 1 If 'J IL U l ~ 0 U l ' IU \ I I ~ ~ 11 ' I 11 .L rr f ~ N T [ \ u ... l 5 ~ ~~ -~~ .... ( JUDGE PARKER by Ernie Bushmiller MACHO PICHU? i AAT MOlJN'fA.1/J- OlJ~ AC'fOI< WMO W.1:1NtJM-ttE5 t.~r<'IONE IN ALL. I-It~? MOVlE:e,1 ~11 I MOON MULLINS i;: ~ F,ANTA~TJC. IT1S #J '4MA'ZIN<it1.; L.IKENESS ! LIFEl.lf(E Po~T~,AIT, ALTHotJ~t4 J 'THINK MR. P.oOPl!f. • You H.AVEi Hf~ EYES A LIT 11.~ CROSSEP. ® THE GIRLS I DENNIS THE MENACE I '~ _,> __ I · I ~l .......... a.-Cl..t Oafly ~ ~\ l llllerdtl .... , .. "" "'------------------------... l P\JJIUC NOTICE \ •·" ··Look ... '" this way. Ml. Helfrick-the "'n .. 1bhuns. the ' .•• birds are s•nsins. the bees ere hummlq. Inflation Lij • ..,: : ~rallin1 and the flowtra ue blooml .. Pour out of nw ! Isn't bed " ! 'J ·: OCC to Offer Five-day Trip } .J . : ! • • I A five-day scuba dl•tng t.rtp to Sduthen..:.-1~ Califomla11 Chanael blands will be part of a re---~ glon&J fteld study cl~ offered al Orange Coast , : College this spring. . ' The two-unit course is scbedulded during -; Easter vacaUon. April 4-8. and will include two campus meetings March 25 and April 1. The classea will run from 6:30to9:31>p.111. Fee for the trip is $249 and covers course relat, ed expenses, including berthing and meals aboard : the shlp. Enrollment is limited to 22 and persons In· -: terested can register In OCC's admisalons office. For more information call 556-S'l72. FICTI nous IVSll••SS NAME STATUIU!HT Tl>(> IOl'-'"O °",,.,., I• OOl"O 1><111 IW\\H ~ 0 ILfll.T llf .tLBJU. Tl 0Jt -(es. 11371 Sen L11I\ 11 J. Foun1e1n Awards Slated "1.A ~ -'• .. _,_, ___ _ V•";!~~. mn San LuA..o. FounlAlinV&ll.., e>.<nl'Oll '"'' bul1"H\ I•• ~onduct.cl by en In. dlvld\oll KerM~ '"'' ,,_._, we• flied wllll t~ County Cltr• of O••-COU<>ly .,.. Fe!>r.,.ry 14 1'11 ~"11 P11bll"'9d (>-c-f o.11'° Piiot. ~rcll J. IO 11 U. ttn PUBLIC NOTICE nu "CTITIOUS I USINtUS NAMI: STATEMENT TM lolloWlllQ oenMI •r•dD•nQ ~$0 n•d•' MONEVPOWt!"· 1110 Fort>tt~ 110.0. L~ NIQUttl, c:..111orn11•»n Penny-• Publ~loft. rnc: .. • C•lllorn•• COf'l>or&lion. 1110 AoMI. Laoune NIQUIOI, (lllfomte •lf.11 O< ..0 Ne wPOrl <:.entw Orhto, !.ulle 1400, N--1 Beect\, CA~ Thi\ blnlne" I\ 'pt'C'U<led b'f • COf• pof'lllOn """''-' Publi<ellons. In<. "''' "....,,.... -· filed wllll ""' '°""" er .. " of Or•not courrtv 011 .._ry,, 1917 ~''" Publllhed <>11191 CDlt•t 011lly Pllo(. Fet> H-MMCl\l. 10 11 1911 PVBUC NOTICE --4l..-! ' \ ';,:~ : Applies.lions ar~,~H I auilabJe through ApriliN, 1 for five $1,000 colle'e r. ~ 1 scholarships awarded"·~ , annually by-the lrvhae ~ Company to high school..,.... : seniors pursuing \U'banll I and environmental'• I studies. , Students graduating I · rrom Corona del Mai. University and Irvine high schools and the. SELF school in Irvine ' are eligible. Applications obtained counselors at the schools. can b& .A~I r r 0 m· each or 1 I I J ForGWC Fourteen short.term classes ranging rrom advertising design to backpacking and native birds will begin at..,T Golden West College!- on Monday. A listing of class times, as well as addi· tional s hort.term classes beginning April 16 and May 9, ls avalla· ble ln a schedule in the administration build· ing Most classes run four or six weeks. Persons interested in registering sbould come . , to the admisBions office · in the administration buildin&. 2 Honored .. :~ . . , By League·~.".~: Janet Hllfo~d of,•1' Newport BccacH antf ·· (£ Mary Irvin df Mbslort'=> ~; Viejo were honored by •. , the Torana Art Leagu40 '~· ::: for entries ln the group'•·' annual Craftsman Show.· J Mf!I. Wlford won tM "'~ ' 1 $50 third place award for;~ ber sUtcbery hanging , · u and Mrs. Irvin received .... rt an honorable mention for ·, rug weaving at the·• •' awards presentation I'\,:, Santa Ana. ,1 • • PUBUC NOTICE ' ',·:· .;~ ..... \( ..... ,, . .. 11 .. tt •1 '" ' • _,,• e I I: n: "' ti•"'·' ,,,,;, .. .-.p'• 111 ;:1,;i:; tlOCJ ... 1t 'H ,.,. ;ii• t ,. ,. . . "' .... v PVllUC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS 8USINISS NAM• ITATllllMI NT T ... foOowl~ pend!\ I\ dolnq l>li•I· ,..,, ., . 1'$YCHOl.OOICAL MOTIVlill°" ~AHAOEMENT, 17'°? Fernpolnl, H1111tlftQlon8"(!1.CAt3'U OCO¥ I!'"'""""-· 1"°7 Fer"° POlftt.HUl'llMQtOftll .. cll CAm H '"'' ~flt\\ ,, ,OftCNC,.., by ~ '"' dlvld11•I • R..,lf ,,...._ Tiiis ,..,......,. WM fitted """" llw C-IY Oet1I Of Oraft99 Count., Clll Matell 14. "" • "11" Plll>ll..., Or-. C:0.'1 O.llv Pll01, Mvcll 0 .M.31MC1Apt117 t9n 101~" PUBLIC NOTICE PtJBUC NOT1CE , PtJBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTl~E l'ICT1TIOU. ausu.au NAM• n AT•MIMT ()w9'I J<K• _..,. wt11 a..11 ... lrvlrw CA '2H• n 11• ~· '' CAlflOudecl by ~ "' divid11•f °'""Jeck He ... .., Tll\1 '194_.-""" llled wltll IM County Cl-of Or-County 0# ,._w,~2' "" "18UC NOTICE 1'111 U"9 _.lt(CIHWT ANO...._,TM l'f ........ OftTMa UMUAA. ITATCIMlift 'feAalltOCOOICSMM .. 1,"" .. U~AMll"ICMUtre ,...., •AllCll~.ut'f •M.MA11tm1n, • ... M'9tll.Tl ...... llMI ffttl=...tl ...................................... 11'.nA.• '"•"I '"-......... .... . . , ............................ uon,61• ~==~· ............................................ '·*·°'° Ot'Oll ,,,.,..r..,.,,.,.ldt41t1Mtr1$ .............. ,, ••.. , •••.••. , •• • •• ~ ... """' ~ llllflft .......................................... •1~4' UNIMltMll ~I ......................... , ........... ll. .... ttll 09lft "·-~~.!''"" ........... " ................ ' .......... .,, .... IM~~~~ ..................................... M.a.t ~~""...._ ............... , ...................... ., ••••••• .Jt)Alt.,GOO < ~-"' •• , ........... r ............... (.:t.Jlt,.tt :re-~ 1 . """'"·~ ...................... ,,, .. . (wt... .i:°'.:: =... ..::::.:z--·= ............ ·--.... DIKffllllef 11. """ --.... 1t!MMCI c:.. """' ........... Cal ......... ,_,_.. .. ,_ ...,w.~. vic.,.,... ... •• ...., ....... tfQf'Y ~Cir ... c.ut o.llf l'lt«. ~ 14 IS. 17.1&,,,, , 2 • ·S ' 7 8 Wt tt•• Ai-.-.... -~ ln dlis mwlfel>S b Abo Jed.· co ....... al P&lr tlovt1•s Act of ltll ~ ....._ ,, Wet•J to adnttiae "•n1 pre· fereece. HlditaUoo. or disettmlMUoo based Oft ~=•~<>~.; .... ,.. 1002 • 1002 lntelllion to make any ••••-••••••-•••-•••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• sucb pnfetenee. limb· CUSTOll 3 BR POOL B I G C A N y O N Uen.ordiacrlmlnaUon." HOME bit for entertain· TOWNHOUSE, 18 CA· ECOMOM'f MlteED? Llke new 4 bdrm .. 2 bath toWD.bOme; lovfly patio. SboW"S like a model. Price $59.900 759-0811 Rut .. ~ w .. ea. Belt.~ las! I.rs Hl:F pool aur· ayao lal&Dd Dr. off Ford TNs 'DeWlpaper WW not ~:r wood decldn1 rt.o.d. 3BR. JBA, fetmal knowtn1ly accept any w lanai fr bltn din rm. den wtwf!t bar. advertblDI for real cUdoor ba.f. Fam rm.. C.t.bednl cell. in llv fin --wtdcb ii lo viol•· ltudio'"""O'bbol), dellra· ror aucioul. spacious D ..,_of tbelaw tile Baca Ba7 loc, •-*· livin&. Inc's use or p00I, ........... ~ IJnda 8roWD, 8'5·2981 ~ fl tebOis courta. ....................... Af · 400. OPEN DAILY . GaMutll IOOJ COU~IWPORT 450 NEWPORT CENTER ORfV6 J.&9-08• I A · llt!!ALTORS ............. •••••••••• $23,500 675-SSI I Lovely2bednn +den; 21--------Ga•rtl 1002 1002 N 0 batb. 3'X4T Mobile home 3 n ...................................... ·-···· I nr clubbQuae. pool & rec. UNCH STYLE r.cll. In adult park with Private court:yard entry llACMllTllAT beach a c cess . A a l . reaturea doUOie door en· VllW·S4~. 900 DUl'LIX L WJORK 1•648-4380--·-----·l~~~~:i:,~!:1~ !!:f8~~~~~~~ ~~~:h:::o~~~~'.t~,J~ 1---------1 ceilings 1'1oor to ceiling yard ti bAy area ptay dupla Id excttUeat CM TWO J DL£XES fireplace . Country ground. Wlndlng wooden area. 2 Bedrma each. ....,-Kltchen with tl:lrmal Din· walkways to secluded en· encloeed garagea, renced Y · Ing. Huge Mast.er SUite try! Gour met kitchen yanl. lll0.000. A · in Baell Bay AJ $85,000 EACH • wtth PamUy retreat. Call SteP-do,..n conversation PETE BARRETT MedolWI only $12.6,000. ~87 a re a + r 1 r e pf a c e ! for two 3 ~m Utlits 95,000 doWn. assume lsl Suns b In e b reak r as \ -REAIJ'Y with F(rplaces! Call Red & 2nd, owner wUJ take patio. Pool·J.t cuu 1· - p I L 0 T c L A -s s 1· F I - E D Ca,,,et lteahors. 754-1202 3rd. Alli bedroom untta volleyball. Garden livlog '4%·SZll lD Loa& Be.ch. Not ID at i1a r&.n•t. 847 ~10 ' •ulUple-Brok-et~illf~~§~~~~~ N r1t 9 •ff PUN T08'NJC • q\Srlei lnvtted. Docft sit -on Utl• one!! ! Ca lll•--•••-•-• ~ MESA VBDE . _ . ·~ -· La ... JO -.::H-:.:iv IHt ;a..KL rr"l~,.!l~ S ·-MIWPHl'-tlACM-·--... ·wxua• St04,SOO P'antutic 3 Br ·PamUy 3 8-droon)\,2 bath .j!::~~~~!IM~ [ ~$] ~~?§~~!~ i--·OO--Sl·OE•-.- $'13·000· 2 Ul1S $87,500 Ne&flly 2 acres nesUed BtDODi giant oaks onJy 2~ miles lo the surf wl1H a remarkable custom built 3 bdrm + den + family rm home de· signed lo maximile the p a nor a m ic. h il ly rancbJand vtew Also 1 . car coverecl parking + room/orcampers, boats. etc. The corral can ac-commodate as many bones as you could ever want with room lo spant. OFFERJNG PRICE Home wl\b 1ota of features. Prlme•Newport HftghJ.a location. Wood pabeled DJtti wlth par· Quet floo". Ga(d•o house. renud parking '$220.000. BACK BAY HIATEOPOOL $86~900. Tree-lined cul-de-sac In prime Back Bay area. Secluded formal living room . while brlclt Cdl 644-72 J. I 1 ftreplace. Open planned ramify r ooi:n . C hef Jdtcbep with pantry. lllde-away master suiW plua 2 decorator baths. Tropical garden patio overlooks 111>arltlin1 rJn 'lW,r L i1>1!l LY :>. l\SSLlC 11\ I LS ,, a&oo sa. n. heated pool. Owner wUl help fl.Dance. Hurry. call 9S2·771i8 ~Mc~ fftitor 1810 ..a-~= Perfect Uu:om.e '2 bed~ ~.... house + t bedrm apt ... CostoMHoS48· 29 Jae dbU1 aar. • h\AC• worksbop>. And hit•" space "lO but1d on lot ESTATEF0tt4 OOXMO. Forinfotall. fqr that R.. V ..SUper auper c:i.a~ DoJft mtaa lhia one. cau toda)tt&-1111 ~N '" o." \ IUH lblt lflcf• ESTATERS ~OMWn.z ~cH 1~400~u~r--1.1~ .. ~All~I .. ~·' C.ll. . MW 1======-Go~~~~~7~0!w d@t , . MIHllAHCH ~-THE RF.Al . ----· wond ol elegabce. Ex· ~--= IEACH-3 IR qw•ite c:tecor \a ~tetuuy AS~ Pa.eoo blended wUli pt~ical 4IR + II# '1ne llned approach. Tile livi ng. Hage Living z STOIY entry to huge 2$' LlvU>a Room. Formal Dlnln1 EXIC Rootn with crackUns Room . Qerdtn 'vie• UTIVIHOMI brick OrwpJa~. !tarae Vacant. apacloua. two- 1tory omce bulldln' Neat Crwy 31 iut a apacea -moril anti. Convenient comer loca· don w t1>us st.op. Suitable for many uses. Zoned ___ ...:..;._ KI t c h e n . M a•• i v e Formal entry to huge Country Kitcbeo fs Dine separate FamUy Room Uvtng Room.. Country o~erlook arouada . wtth crackling nreplace l{jtche n with Formal Separate wtna ror and commanding view.or Dining with'~ ot Tet;· maasive Maa&.el' Sutt. Ir ground& 2 maJeatlc race. B'1Jt' ln wet bar childr•n·s 4uarters. ma ate r s ult es . ~ pl.u1 l\amll,y ;floorn · Take bver VA loan. No separate Bath )l.oom for WJadto1 alas rs l o newloaaC'J)Sta! $.110/Mo. _ every Bedroom. Take hideaway Muter Suite. .,.,. aJl, Hurry! SIQ.1881 ~~1:-:i?li: ~~"-"'~···" •.. · ~.,;iii11·~ C Z. Needs paint & clean· COMPillD TO .. up but pnced to sell. lrvlDe. lhia 11 a buy! ~Westminster. 0 .G Beautiful 1550 aq . rt con do. Spanish sty le. 3 bdrrns .. 2...., ba.. pool. jacuui. tennis cts .. put· tlna green. ~lubhouse. IM,500 ' 'I IHI 333-97Hl I ~st.:·,--Ct own ' ~IAITO~S • ~-THI: RI:AL ' ~~ ESTATERS O'IN l~9·•1)1~10"'N~I ' l~---·••E 11'-lllffl HEWPORTHTS DUPLEX --• I - R2 · ., DCIPT'l()fUU y SHARPWITM . 1---,,---""T----1 Side by elde aludio apta. .,. _______ i---------1 10 mos~. 3 bdrm 1 :Y• ...,_View Ho.itt bath each 'unit. Both apta BUY AS~ILOAN Smart Spu1Sb ltylt lD Mesa Nottb WUI t.ad you Into thit 4 Br home. Tilts ls re_. to move Into with no wort reqqtred and you abould see the landscaping. Call now for det&lls on fananclng and )'9ur appolmment! ~:313 A muat .ee-up1raded have aame "Jew. Mttr carpets, wall coverings bdrms. ldtchen & Uv rm11 & dfapea. all color UIJ8taln. 2 bdrms down coordina~ ! New pa)nt in each. OWner will rent lnalde and out. $ Bedrm. one unit back frm bU,Yer lie rarniJY room with wet at S$O() mo tor yrs. CaU bar Formal dining. 2 Now. only SUT ,000. fireplate1. Lte covered 5'5-4M81. f peUo. 8 Car aar. VIEW. Somenet model. Priced k> aell NOW! $1619,950. 164-72'10 ~ Walker t: ler. Real •st~fe MISAV~E Raout>Uc: beaut. Spanish styled borne with large lot. 4 Bdtma.. 3 baUaa, d1ninl & ramily nm. • offtce. Offered at SJ.21 .* 2 Homes In :1 pa rj(-Uke setlln1 ! Grut C.01ta Mesa aru ! S89.95C).;. Red Carpet Reallors, 754-1202 r 9• 11 l'Oet NICI' IAYCRIST HOMI Wl1'H POOL BeautlfW custom home with 4 BR, 2~ BA .• priced to move. Home la ln excellent condition & bas estra sharp landscaping. Call for an app't .. Reduced to $139,900 • COLDWIU. ...... co. 644-1766 \ f , I ~ -----~~. ~~d -==-------~----=~ ------------------------------- Dl*'-etf...._ ... t I 1002•••r .. 1002 .............................................. NEW BlUFFS CllO BY OWNER -$126,800 I Blooming Delores Model. 3 Br2..., Ba. 2 colorful private patios. End unit. large breakfast area. 644-7901 OPEN HOUSE SAT & SUN 1-5 50 I Playa, Newport leach I 1002Gt•rd 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ATTRACTIVE Linda Isle S BR, 4..., ba .• fam. r m. & formal din.mg· lge. tile patio & waterfront deck. $350:000 BAYFRONT. pier & float. lots $185,000 to $325,000, to ~d your own custom home. Several areas to choose from. BI L l G R U .N D V, RE A l T 0 R 3-ll &ur.d· o,,:, .. f, ·a .. · 67) 6161 I Forty-Love so far! For a Ue breaker try the price: only $110.000! You're the winner! U~IVUI: t1()MH REAL TORS<l, 875-6UOO 1 2443 East Coest Highway. Corona del ~ also 1n Me1a Verde. at'546 5990 G1•ral I 1002 G1•r .. 1002 ..•...•••...........•.• ···~··················· JHIY PfHSAU. · . . . has joined the sales staff of Select Properties. Jerry has lived in the ff arbor Area most or hi s life having graduated from Corona del Mar High, Orange Coast College and Cal State Fullerton. Prior to entering real estate he was a bank loan officer and headed his own property manage ment firm . Jerry's knowledge and experien~ are key il\gredients of his siiccess. For - truly professional servicing of all your real estate needs CALL JERRY at 556-2660 . c:;::: SELECT I PROPERTIES Ge•ral 1002 G1Mral 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• LIDO ISLE Luxurious family Ii vi ng LOADED G ~ irl cstm built home on wrw 1002 G1Mrel 1002 Lido's widest s treet with extras ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,..._ ________ 1 w /easy access to 3 car 2 UNITS Eastside, CM l Bedrm owner's unit In front. 1 Bedrm rental off alley. Current Income 1625 for both. Bring check book 1• garage! 4 bd, 3, bath.s l001'1NG FOR 8.1. IA YFROMT? ram rm & xtra hobby rm. Steps to water & beach. 646-mt. Walker&Lee Real Estate We'll shaTe this 2+ unitk with you and there ·s even a pier for your "substantial yacht". Tbe •--------- fwi neighbors make up VILLAGE for the fact that it needs _ WALK a UtUe pbzu. . $275.000 Speclous 3 bdrm. 2 ba 3 Bedroom. 2 bath. forced·alr heal, builtins. lush carpeting, drapes, int e rtom . a ·r - condit.Jooed and the Ust goes on and on. Full price $49,500. with an as- su ma b I e FHA loan. CALL S56·2660 ~3 ~ali!1hur1t w/2 btn pat.Jo area & big ---------• -ANYTIME NEWUS11NG Newport HelcJhlt 3 Bedroom, 3 bathli, sun· ny patio, with pool and jacuzil. Must see. Robert Bissell. Assoc. RJtr. 640.9900 \ \LI.I·:' . I\'" \I .T' t4!Q .,,1n,l)..,, .. ,.1~.: '""""•'"""' .~,., '' Want Ad Results 642 :5878 l FUROM I' I I I r f ' 11.\IJIOt\ ISi.A~ ll • 6M·6900 • WHY PAY MC>aE? FOR BEST IN THE BLUFFS, Uus 4 BR .. 3 ba. C.rmellta 1s rtght on the greenbe~. with view al the ll(>per Back Bar Don't tarry. because this one lS priced to move now! $118,000 C. F. ColesworthY UM.TORS 640.00fO 11.UFfS END UNIT 4Br. 2~8e. W·Plao, sun· ny loc:aUon. pvt yard. new cpts. rrpk. near pool. park & schls •• ~ Owner 64-0-8'71!0 I ROYYl 1 I Ii I I ~ • promtne111 pollllct•n • • _ • I know gee' '""'"II· he do41Sn't ,.----------. u.. bort; he iuat promises fl'le l; M Y R L A W 1-• -1 1 hr-.,..--., .... , ..... ,--.-, -, -I O C""'t)i.,. Ille chutki. ~ .__ --Ao. __.._ --"·-...l---".1........-1. by foll"'9 t<\ ... ""--ii ...,,ds "°" de-t<lloc> '"'''' "911 No. 3 i..io.. dbl garage. Ideal lou· tJoo tn proximity lo So Coast Plaui 646-7711 Walker&Lee Real Estate llll.+ IACH. Close to ocean. good sUftlmerJwlnter rental J BR. froot hOuse, furn .. ~for reot.al. SIO'l.500 Including land! LAGUNA IEACH Charming home on large lol . room lo add on. Dari ing just as is. American Home Shield warranty to buyer. l·Bdrm , frplc On Bluebird Canyon Rd. \ \ 1.1.E' HL \I.I \ t•IO J..i"'IOfJ.'"" ~d ··u:'"'l'\J'' b"•.1ch $1.25,lm ·---------1 673-3663 M2·~3 Eves.•• associated 81!0•E11~ "'fALTOI!> £ l ~' 111\. II r ""r , \ • "• llwfttor'1 Dnant Perfect opportunity for the amart home buyer. Super 3 bedrm buy in popular community with great location. Spacious &r upgraded thruoul. CENTRAi.. AIR. too! UNBEATABLE al only -~ Take advanta& and call 831·3100. FO~EST E OLSON . .. . . SPYGWS HILLS 5 bedroom, 3 bath home wllh courtyud entry leading to bcauhful atnum. Has a pool sized lol wtth 3 patl08 & view ol mountalna & nigh\ light.a . Presented at $2SO.OOO. 546-4141 a:+J .· COATS & WALLACE REAL ESTATE. INC. 1002 __ ._"-----~ __ _,,!_. A HOMI FOi AU UUOMS Fabu.lou.sly decorated! Move into this beautlfuJ New Bedford 48R 3 batb home tn SpyalasS'. Bring the' family & you'll~. it'• the place tor you! "269.600 CUnt Moses 8'2·8235. (ff53) Sf'YeUSS CHADe Ete1ance and eharm \1 Jusl the beglnnlna al thl~ rtnc quellty homt'. Profes"onalty l-ndacaped, man)' wp(rad a, best~ 1022 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9UAKAAl S OPEN HOUSf MAL TY 17~0<9~.CoelaU.U 645-9161 Walker & Lee Real Estate Buyen Equity MESA VERDE In Brand New 4br. 2~ Fine 4-5 bdnns, 2 story ba, separate din. area, 2,,.., ba home. MUST located 0(( Victoria St .• SEE! C.M. nus home IS under THE HOMESEU.ERS construct ion ~ new 752-5353 lie) EnOUCJh For Your Brood! Spacious floor plan. great ne111hi>orhood' Covered patio. 3 or 4 bedrooms. convertible famJ.Jy room. 3 Baths for convenience. Formal dining, custom booth. While brick nreplace. Owner anxious. $93.000, call 540-1720 •• ,. "f I .. CClfiforMa" USI IYTllSO 4 Bidnn C'Of"Mr kit bome wKlt 'I HI' p , •al aad &railer•~. A real clteam horn. tn a rtne Ml&bborl\(x)d ror only SlOl.500 CONOOSPECIAUST HB. Cid. F. V ly To u c b alone RI t y , 9S3-098'l RANCH REALTY 551-2000 T...tlerock Glen New 4 Br 2 Ba. Fam Rm. Owner $145,000. Prine. only. 644·5621. By appt CALLUS FOR •HOMES• $60,000.$70,000 In Tustt. & l"llle THE HOMESB.LEAS 752-5353 ownrs can select cpt.s &1--------- colors or his choice UNITS CON DOM 1N1 u M -WoodbridgtArboriab $6.000. buys eqmty 1n MARINER 'S COVE. New 28r, 2ba unit or escrow lo purchase UNITS Spadous 2 BEDROOM. 2 lake Avwl Apnl. Call brand new hme. Total Ask any Whelan Real BATH condo. close lo l2lJ~. ext 82. Pnn pnce S79,950 Wknda Estate Io vestment tenruscourt & clubllouse. _onl__;;..Y ______ _ 646·7810; 979 1570 M·S Specialist about our pool & Jacuzzi ~veral OXFORD MODEl BRAND MEW 7_52_-0M0 __ &_752_1_07_2 ___ 1 trade, a house for a four· blocks rrom beach I d h $68,950. For sale by owner. Univ 4 IR + Def 3 Bil By Owner. Neat as a P ex. an wale your RON WILLIAMS Pk IJI twnhse, 3 Br 217 the Ideal eombtnaUon of pin Freedom home. money &row fast CALL Ba. sep din rm. re · a new home In 80 $56 .950. For appl NOW REALTY modeledlotch.gasbltns. establlahed aelgh · _&48-_722B __ H_urry __ , ____ 1 540.3666 939Gt._.,,. Huge bonus rm. highly borhood. featuring all For SaM By OWMr 494-a519 upgraded. Ternflc loc. the latest kitchen ap· Walk to schools. parks. polnlments. oversized l,.ovely 3br, 2'-'!ba condo. LA CUESTA shops, 2 p0ols, tennis Dbl gar, encl patio. crt.s S87 700 Pri 1 garage, large rooma, 3 SS8,5oo. 556•8674 or Popular El Dorado with · • · nc on Y· baths. step down wel· 75l-16l5 ------== upstairs super BONUS 5.'>1-0475evs/wk.nds bar, minloceao view. All OPEN DAILY lO-SPM room. Jacuzzi, 3Bdrm. 3 CULVERDALE walking distance t o ll83CoUe A ba. fam rm. Upgrd'd private beach. ge ve Dana Point I 026 lbruout. SllS.000. 9692 Beautiful Culverdale uni· HOW ONL y GOIN NO WHERE ••••••••••••••••••••••• Melinda Cr. 963-~ q ue one of a kind 4 ---------• bedroom home with SIS ,500. FM. BUT UP!! Btn view home under con· •SSUME 7,,,.010 ramtly room and dining •644-721 I Cutetwoonlot. Eastside sttucLion, 4Br, 21.<aBa. ~ .., .. ,4 room On a comer lol location! Just listed at den, loft. frplc, avall By OWNER. JBr. 2ba. cloee to park and pool. $78,500. 642-63M May. $135.000. Owner. pool w /spa, like new .,.Call for appl. De•in Rfft Estat~ 644-1798 Walk t.o library & b1 schl. $84.500. Prin only I Eves/wknds 847-6846 ~ $58,900 3 Bedroom + family room, 2 baths P V. stone hreplace. Shake roof. Priced C.Oaell fast• WEST SIOE REAL TY INC 8Jf:l.2J;>J • sssssssssssss ~ oc Starter Home Older Downtown HWlt h\&lon Beach home on wide 'ot. Anpthel' unit can be-bul~ on this pro perty 1851X>. Down pay m~ geta yw In. ICtM R09WS Realty 148-8300 SS$SSSSSSSSSS OWNER 'S PRIDE RANCH REA.I.TY 551 -%000 SEAFORD CIRCLE A beautiful adult oc· cup1ed much sought alter California bom~ plan 103. Has a formal dining room and lots ot pnvacy. Call to see RAMCH REAL TY 551-2000 RecenUy redecorated in· ~ Pk T side, large couptry mv errace kitchen with ttatlng'area C 2br. i ba, cent 3 bedrtn1. l~ baths. Uv' AC. many u~grades . lq room lireplace. Cloee 171.500 5081 Cumamon to schools, park area, _SS2_-04_18 _____ _ pretty~ lol. 171,!)()(), Out.standing Plan 48 In Tarbell, RL TRS, 8'2-S8$4 Cl!Jverdale. 4J&e bdrms, • ..__ 1 •L-incl ·1 a rnaater bdrm _.... -al.lte w /frplc Cusl df'PI 4ModlfHotiw thruout. wet bar ln 0Rat floor plan, slate fam rm. Conred pattoa enlr)' lo 1unken llvlna + ~ny xt.ru. 915.000. room. pl 1.11 h carpet.a, _Prt___.y,._Ocll1~.._· 6.U_·"44__;, __ _ Mirrored vanity. stu\Jteo bath. Atrl um area,_3 IT AU. ADOS UP • bdrm1 + den, : hall . Eod location on areen· : bath•. Lare~ patio, bel~ spacious, 2 frplca., • brlltlsnt pool area. laundry rtn .. • blR : Oc>rtoous' '84.00Q . bdrms .. family rm & • Tarbell RLTRS 982 '* ~loaela 1aJore. Un1ven1· ' '__:._ li Pu\ locatlon ... all OWNEIJSACRJFt~E. At· aod up to t.t buy at lr•ellvo ranch ho~e. $112.~ Ccvel'$t ench»ed ~Uo fnat treet 1alort. Oodlca ' • of SIAPfUoa, new tltctl n 552·7000 . Ule.· t Sedreom.s, ;un.k o ram ly room. formal l'H£ .. - dln1nc. Zoned R·2 VIL'~""E $55,000. tall RLTR, IJ'&.I • • ID-3* REALTORS. MOft YIC'RMllA llf CH _.., ................... _ ........ --. ...... 1 .... ., • a W I _. _., h S 'm ...._ ftrw l t I T.. flli 1,t111a.. C., ,... .... ..,... .. ai1 .•..... ·•••uoo fft-4511 alftliir·"'Y- r. I It • ·o:==~ . Mln.ar • I. ,,, .... 'Tad pd. •II ~~ 6 t ........ ¥19W ,,, lnA!M, .......... Ii • ft ., .111111. .... • .................... -' .......... ,... .... U-. I elr. -......... , . Mai &lfMOUll ~: =·:---=.:.~ INt&ouJ •Br. lam,. ~860() P11!9"1 k• e, V~ . TtY tnl. •ti . *8led nt WI.rd ~li'Wl9tlt. Brud new octanh'ont lbQJ lo ~.,. 111\.Jr•u 1900.000. J • dlstwe '5nOl.,..ft......__ dU"Plex. J br • 2 br. fflllltta~ &each. 7Sl-TT wtlllia ttld. to It ''"'-.:"'-. .. 1119.• Wti' ' t IOtl ............ Oardeaen •l*tal Jtw. 1-tm mo. Niii OPEN DAILY aaperse.wtnd CGodo. 2 ·--·!!._._..... ....l O .... dbl sar, &tie. teal bh&-2...., 111-am ' llA.M.TOllP.11. tr Jba onOeJy fTt.500. .fltC ••-••••• ............... tpla. arpa. $390. ..... - l..AOUNA DANA LAGUNA a\armin1PenlnautUbr ................... •ad Avalon. S.tllk&o UH or ..... ..._ ...... 3240 RancbOS.J .38rZ8aSan NIGUEL POINT BEACH bomeon lltblk. Fe.aim· ....... 5 Mrm ... ·---··········· aH•l·Sl'Tt ··-···-··-.. ••••••• Luis Rey. iOJf c ..... -.am 49:MBLZ 477.zcae p&e. SlOB.000 wttbTad' habloo.ed 24 ..... , ' J JI0-7 New 3 Br 2 Ba. nr s. Cst Wmmuuter/Sprinadal• lake vu. azs W 'J'Ot' ------------------1 All bot MW llstinp. Just Wm E th ........ ._ .... •••••••• P I 1 1 a S 4 S 0 m o 4 bfdrm. 2 beth. c:pta. 3Br 2Ba 2 car pr Univ lnW 1044 Lcll)IMIMdl 1041 waltlo~ lor tbe r11bt Cu.tom~ ~'(!'~~ llACHaBtrALS 213""'31-Tlu. evsS&4-042'i drp1 . ava11 now: 11t: t~ • J~unl. pool ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• buyer. ALL&C-38SO ttle bat ha. HulJe lot 2 BR Unit.a · ec.u M. .. a WI.NTD-SUllMtR $37$/mo 714 ~ M30 Avail now 7SZ-71W7 THIWll.LOWS I0.6'7AUH V1LLAGIOF w/trailer access Huice t&'tS.000.Appt.lnourofc YEAllLY £.Sl<k>lrs 2 br.Zba.fncd Vacant. 4 BR. 1~ ba. T•tllfockCM.. We bave a 3 bedroom LAGUMAllACHt.I HA.llOIYllW and beautiful Hurry ' only.MS-1103Aat. 5 Br. 4 Ba Oceanfront ~~:J:ta::J~s mo cJoN to ocean 5400. ~ New & terrific on best Plan 103 with a Den and Near Greenbelt PHASE ll 171•500· 2 COVINGTON Four-Yearty Sl200 mo. · for K&h.1168-t31l. Bkr strel'l location w 1th tarnlly room for only Ocean &sCanyon Vlew1 M.odUied Monaco. 4Br. g1Jl6f:t~i~· .DfiiB plexes. 111 Huntington BEAUT s hr. 3 ba. ram •Mew •odl Hoen. .sizeable yard Be the 1114.7~ $160.000, Tenns , 3Ba. ~Y den. xlnl cond. · -·-·71-il~ Beach. <>wner. 848-1230 rm. frpl, tnnl din. rm. Get ready ror suminer nnt to live in this new also "Z" REALTOR _.,.. blk from pool & 40 · Nr. bcb. rr.io. &4&-l03S now' Walk to beaeh ll'Om neu and help decorate. 3 A 4 bedroom plan 105 49t-86ll acres ,of park. walklng 7 UNITS Pride of , Br 2 Ba. dbl gar. rp. her~. Walk to grade Br & Din rm. $!!.50/mo wtth ronnal dining room. ---------1 dislance to schl. 1164.500. othM' Real Estate Ownership, Balboa. b&lnS. C\al de sac, 1425, school & high achool. 4 lae. Near new fUgh school. 3BR. 2"" bath5. spacious Open Howse Sal/Sun 10·5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Six I la. o.. 2 II 51:c1oua 4 Br 2 Ba. comp Ava114/1 557-1848 br 3 ba huge sundeck WATERFRONT HOMES partiandCALLpoolTs.HE fl,.l~pllnac'e !°.opaonmeledwdl~n~ !_.8,.35049Poftr6lPMCurlow . MoblleHomH w /frplc, Owtfer. um. Fpk. wshr/ dryr. . D C dbigar ~mo.81420lti 831 -1400 .... "' .....,..1 a Fors.le 1100 $34S OOO 64._1554 D/W. 2 car gar No pets PRIME EA.STSI E .M. St 5.16-17l.8 O PROFESSIONALS ing room. both opening ••••••••••••••••••••••• • • 17:50 mo Avail Apr l CONDO. 2Br. 2ba. dbl · Yrly lse. $4.50 mo 4 r l onto broad deck with JuneU.644·9582 gar. Inc's wshr/dryr/-s er Exec. 2 Ba.. Up· Ba. FP. 4502 Wyngate RANCH RE.ALTY 511-2000 spectacular 180 deg. un· tbWHlghlCllMh WANTED TO RENT: refrlg .Brand-spanlun' graded. Fncd yard . ~J-2000or894-3'84 obstructedv1ewof~ean Don't niW this quohty SPACE. AREA. LOT . lncomeProD 5 BR. exclusive Point new Yrly . he al rrptc. crpt;drps. NearTurtleRock '"2sty.4br & wooded hillside over· built • bedrm home with WHAT EV E R -T 0 1 "F area. on beach. S800tmo M251mo. Call ror appt.. bch. school. shops. $450. 2 ... ba 8onus""6/fam rm 3 looking Bluebird Ca-s park I 1 n g new PARK AND LIVE IN 2 Homes on one ot or I year lease or summer Maryort>oo ~155 .,... .... u. 833 3 • nyon. Big kitchen with bathrooms Be a utl fu I TRAILER l 962 26 · investment and rental in rate 673-4545 673·3620 COL! OF NEWPORT car gar _..,., ·97 l builtins. Nearly .... acre custom pool by Irvine AIRSTREAM. PREF come. $19K Down. shows .,....., R SuperJbr 2b3 OW lot on secluded dead-end Pools. Many custom n e a r L A G U N A excellent return. Call. for Corona del Mar 3122 R~TO S R 0 ,; d · ...,.,S PLEASE COME street near town . features tbruouL Local-CANYON. CALL· <714) morelnformaUon. • ••••••••••••••••••••••• 67J.5Sll ,' :,~~·~.,.., LEASEME! Land s caped r or ed ln Newport Harbor 646-6382 645·3474 Ol'lx 3 hr. 2 ba. built for . • 2 Br+ Den +View minimum maintenance. High School Oisl. Call 6. .. -for aale 1200 Bl owner. sput·level. W ID. 3 Br. downtown. no pels. Orean Vu 213-llth St. New Townhome $495 mo. .--·-----·1 Provision ror extra Ull\1"'1 --._.,.... I gar No pets $48S. Call 7~1·3013 after &PM . 4 Br. 21,'i Ba. fplc. din •2 Br,. Den "9V" .., ••••••••••••••••••••••• I I • I • 2763 $34().. Avail 4/1 b b'i. .. h •WOODBRIDGE rooms. SIO,SOO. By 675-· area. wet ar. 1 ... ..,c Townhomc ~25 mo. P.LACE • owner. Principals only. INVESTORS! Co.ta Mfta l 124 fl96 3 br. fncd. yard. Child ~~ $495 mo. U61Hl6S2 • 2 Br + Den Green b r I a r m o d e I 494-3140 •••-••••••••••••• ..... & ~OK. 103S W. Wilson. Townhome S5SO mo. I bl 75 1105 BUILDERS! PRIME l"". l br, fully OPEN' WaJk to the beach from • 4 Br home in The avala 8 now. 6 · Private Party wants 98 ACRES-between ._ Wlll~S39S mo. orm-OZllexl f163V. borne m Laguna. must Oceans Ide /VI s la . NEWPORT IEACH furn.only $195 1225. 2 Br. you'll love it' UUs lovely ~ br, 2 ba. •2 Ex~. ofc. suit.es ~~~~~~~~~I have panoramic view To SEAVJEW-Panoram1c Beaullful rolling hills DUPLEXES Tenex898-9891Sm Ftt Beams. paUo. sml ree. cpll. drps, R/O, avail $37llmo. WOCDIRIDGI-1200.000 Prine only. Vu. 4111', pvt comm. avail Small s_pnn8 fed lake 12> 3 Bdrm. 2 bath unit.\ ~malllUn dam b.r:. &c.5-4000 n o w S 3 5 S I m o . AJI or the above are in · 540=19'6 · ---· soon~a33-Z929.&44 ll8t i60001p er acre. l:all \...'10se~·rrea~ & s~-1ocatton~y~ .. en ••~-..raGtlhlt l1A 96l..4S68 - --rvlne C"all loiJay. AllORLA.KE EAST BLUFF 546-5880. ping. u42.ooo Tenex898-9891 Sm Fee lmmae 3 Br 2 Ba cut de 752-poo Spectactltarlak••t.w By owner-View home. $195, util pd. ~I. refr1g. sac cpts drps bltns Nr ~··~u·tt\•u><•u~11"1' "~lenwood" 4Br. 3Ba. B ~B r 3Br-2Ba&2Br-Ula FountairiValwy 3134 +more. Call now! Sml Ce~tralPk.MZ 847-~ [9 . \ I t mm ed occupancy. ~w~e: wiii fi:anrc':: 1b1JctooceanS137.000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• fee 00-4900 ,,1Ul•lf·1ll Sl88.~. 6'4·031S SJ6S.OOO. Appt. 644·l427 United Bkra. Rltra LAST Yr's price, 3 br. ••CoMunMn Gtlick Redec:. 2 br. nu cpts &·tj@Hj'i; WOODBRIDGE ........ c"" Pau1Sbaplro6'1&-7414 21>a,k1ds&petsOK~ drpe, RIO. 2 Car gar ~:·~;;~;~~~~~-~· ...,. """ leauttful lklffS 91;. ACRES . Tenex 896-9891 Sm Fee WALK to OCC 2 br. kids $325/mo 714 963-4569 2Br. 2Ba, Twnhse 4 •Borrego Spnngs duplex. -ok. some util pd S260 For lse $350. 2br, 1 \.'.Iba. Owner 551·1184 • L · 3 BR. 21;; Ba. Twnhse, for your mobile home "29.500. 12>18r Income Huntington leoch 3140 Tenex 898-9891 Sm Fee new TownhOU!>e, Wood -Sh~rl• a formal dm-rm. patio. or buildUlg SllC S3K yr Carry sell owe. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Brand new 3 bedrm bndge Days. 644-M65 or ---------11bls3bdrm.homehaslt sundeck.•atrlum. was Level. All u t ilities Taxe11S264yr 833-8974 Bythebeach.lbr.allulll. FAMILYHOME LANDJNC home. 1$1()0 f75-S448 CULVHOALE all' Big stained aJass model. Walk lO schools. available Full pr1c~ 1 ,, 4 b 2 b rrpl frti ft Ith r 1 dln1n ---------., a..,._ I Pvt l t LohforSde 2200 a c.gar+morl'$300 L"('ihr r. da . . . sq .. w orma g, uow•1T1 .... G 2 IR.-2 BATHS wmdow. random plank ... ...,,..,. poo s ree $11.500. BKR T 898 9891 Stn"' ws /dryr bl gar $S50 owner waot.a l yr i.e & "" "' "" firs. fire Pit. Superb $113.900.A"'.64-0-2861 (714)676·5717 ••••••••••••••••••••••• enex ->·ee · · LovelyPlan411ocatedon "'' 6426882.~533 S575 per mo lncldg lBrCondo S27S/mo q1.11el cul-de-sac street. A andscapmg. Sl59.500 F.astbluff Condo. 3 Br 2,1'.1 ___ O_R_522·~ COSTA MESA R3 CP Newport hoc:h 3169 gardener 2 Br Condo $325 welldeslgnedhomewith So.Laauna Ba. split level w/some FIVEACRES Zoned for 17 unlls ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 Br. 2 ba. nr. So. Csl Sharp 3 bedrm, 2 bath 2BrCondo $325 ah&bt&alryk1tchen,2 .. cottage:waJl(tobeacb view of Ba ck Bay . w/vanance possible 18 World'sgreatestview' Plaza.cpts,bltns,rrplc, house 10 grt<al 2BrHomt• $3!Ml spacious bdrms. and hoom Ous 1947 2 bdrm l Recently upgraded. SO.ofCOROHA units. Has 2 Dplx. l Bay Island waterfront dswhr. Dbl garage. neighborhood. Jmmtd. 3Brtondo S360 locatednearpool&play· ba homl': wood dec'k. 5118,000 752 Sl62. Ext-ellent vww. Full hou.se.$275.000Pnnonly homeforlease.Slipfor S.19·3282. poss. $400/mo. Roberta JBrTownhme S400 e rounds. New on the gas BBQ: good invest· Qwnr/Brkr pnce $9.000. BKR. Century Flnanclal lge. boat: tennis cts .. 4 Santa Ana Hts 2 BR rrptc Realty 848_1688 3 Br Home $415 markot and unbelievably ment or starter home 7014R/677·5Wl· REAL TORS 752.5353 BR. 3 baths $1200 Pl'r ~ar. yrd, chlldren & pe~ 3 Br Garden Hm S425 prfced at $67,900 WESTCLIFF 552·0530 mo . yearly lease OK $365 642.2164 or 2 Br Townhme S425 ~.000 OutofC~ RUMBOLOREALTY . IHaveSeveralJbrhomes 3BrTownhme $425 Beautiful 4 Bdrm. 3 Ba ~fits Property 2550 Investments 675-4822 673-0782 & townhomes w /pool. 2 Br Den Patio Hm $425 red hill ·~···· · 55 2-7500 ~ . ..,~.':)' ~~ • j:'f I ~ ' .. , .. pool home with jacuzzi forsde 1300 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MESA VERDE -Redec tennis. etc. $42S/S550. JBrDen Home $W0 Lee lot & patio 1149.ooo ••••••••••••••••••••••• FOR SALE 40 Acres $3000 Mo. Beautifully 3Br. 2Ba, fam rm. rrplc. Joan or Jo. 846-1371 or 3Br FR Home S450 Open daily 1 5 or call Dana Point eight apart Pine trees. water, view furrushed 3 bedroom Of! nu drpe, cpt.s. $435 mo &462597 38rTownhome S450 64.2·44216. 1531 Highland ments $278.000. P 0 Box 12 mi rrom Chico Callr Lhc water Includes 19 545-7863 4 Br Home $450 Dr Owner Bkr 2818. Capistrano Beach $36.000 Ph. 549.3755 boat 631 1400 Agt. NEW BEACH HOUSF: 4 Br Garden Hm $450 Del.ICJL.&.L..I --------1•-------•l..___._llL.__.., COLLEGE PARK Ultra lovely 3+2'-'a. FP. 38rHome $490 llTTU _ _.. rTvr"J 1350 t~RSALE·l60At:res $145. ulll pd, rurn. al dbl gar. walk to ever· 4Br FR. DR Hm S525 Dublin l.oglna Mlgllel I 052 UDO ISLE ••••••••••••••••••• •••• Wooded trout stream beach' Won't last. Sml Beaut 3 Br. 2ba, frplc. • .... ,.. ail ... 50 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 k · b p 1 ' ree. MS-4900 formal din rm. new cpts. ,, ..... ,g. Av now. ~ 4 Br TnLevel 5550 ho VIII 3 3 Bdrms .. 2Ya baths, I inaMilUOft a e, ca in. r vacy. ,. ______ ,.~·•..._ $42.~. Ph 548.6366 or mo.Call546-0270 48rTurtlerk $565 Town roe ln age l. 3 Br. 2~ Ba. pool sized lot family rm with stone Walk h d Year round access 12 mi ** ~ _._ " 38 DR BDRM .. 2 ba., master fenced rear yd, fruit frplc .. 3car~ara(te.Are· Wbit.e~~te~"v~ceon~~n1~ from ChH~o. (;allf 546-S605Agt. Vacant. 3 BR. l~• ba. Tf~ondero~u bdrm. has balcony over· trees. 25221 Adalanto al beauty! S'l60.000 No San Diego Co 9M.OOO. Sl.20.000. 549.3755 Condo. no steps. upper HaJecrest 38r 2Ba close close to ocean. $375. Ask 4 BrT R. Glen ~~n:a:~~~~~-~r~s~ S3J·9606~Agt_ Hurry -or you'll be Ranches F«m5 ~~~~~r·r~~:2p~·~~:~. to oc Colle~e. & fwy. rorKelth968·1317Bkr 4Br.Pool.Spu S600 $625 fl()() $850 JUll steps to adult pool LOVELY 3Br. 2ba. new sorryPO,INT RR.t..LTY Groves ' 2700 pool. putting green S375 mo. 962·7788 or z Br condo. adult com-5BrT R. Glen fordable S7S.OOO L.H. pool & Jacu1J.1. Room for Call 496-5600 m> mo. Agt. 541·5032 East.side S22S. 11 Br. pet Brookburst & Adams Pleasant Uvine at an ar-ram rm. service porch. 5'"' ••••••••••••••••••••••• Avatl May l lo Nov. l 839-88113 ~ _ _ plex. pool & rec racll. Nr I '523 C\MPU5Jla·I~ OPEN DAILY 8A M.T06P M L.....-INclt I 041 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ac.c.m.wRf'frfft 2 Bdrm.. 2 bath & den luxury condo w 2 nreplocea. 1 year new & spacious. Mircowavl'. truh compactor & wet bar. Walk to the beach 118.llCIO. NORINS REALTY •494-1057 • CAUUS-ror all the latest multiple l11tln11 available In La1un1 Beach area Alto, we have. Ocean view building site. Exclusive area. Aliso U.ach, leu than 300 easy stepe to the sand. $80.000 Large, well designed 2 bdrm. condominium Close to shopping & i.,.ch. with 8 peek or the QFUn: would you believe *"2,5()01 Ocean view; 1957Traillte i.noblle home. 12Jl:4.2 ~ith lh22 cabana, w ith 2 bdttnl. Cloee to shopping & beach. See today al Gl.500. a.aALDIAY tlLLTOP UnlQue top of Emeukf Ba) location wltb fu.a.lcular railway •P· proech. FantaaUc view. pool. 5 S.drooma. 4 ti.tM, den. LoMr noor e~c•llent autal lte. -· boat or camper. One-or-AVOCADO OK. Fee. S300mo 847~ a-lui'~i:'L TY OAK FlOOIS ~,;;:r Lots I I 500 GROVE HouMt Unfw"Aithtcl Mam Rentals. S40-S370 Sharp 2Br. 2 car go rage. 83MM11 & POmtoUS ;.::~·~~·~·;;~·;·;.;~·~· 2.43 A.C-$52,000. ;.;;;;;••••••••••;2oi ~-~!r. gar. kids. pets ~~cd yd, ~ mo. • ~~· Ml Mc.Vl..1.. 1067 Are Just lwo of the · Mature trees. Beautiful ••••••••••••••••••••••• · · --•• ~ •••••• :i;:•••••••••• features you'll love In ORJAL PARK CM <• butldingsiteinBonsal-11lEBLUFFS·Vlew! MalnRentals.540-537o FOR lease 3 br. 1"'1 ba. RANCHREA.LTY 3br. l""ba twnhse. Cpt.s, attached gar. patio, xlol area.Ownr.7~ this Newport Heights lots> Pvt P~Y l ·5JIJ-«>595 _ JUSl outside Fallbrook 3 BR. 21-'z ba. $Q)5 Mo. 2 BR. cpts, drps. bltns. no Very clean. $350 mo. 551-2000 charmer On lovely AUso eo.m.rcial Owner very fle1uble on SEAVlEWTERR..-VleW dogs. $285. + SlSOclng. & ..:963--=..:..:11:.:.7:.l ______ ll--------- Ave . nr C11rr ·Dr. Just Property 1600 rlnanci11g. Don't miss 3 BR. 21-b Ba. S8So Mo sec. dep. 548-3878 8·4PM 2 BL.KS to beach 1 br all lBr. 2ba. den. :? car l'(ar· hated! 6'2·6368 ••••••••••••••••••• •••• ttus great investment op· BlO CANYON UI pd A/C only S300 auto opner. bl-level. 1 Br Me.,.t ....._ I 069 Ort-"9 lteGI Esta+. Commercial lot. 63 125. 1' 0 rt u n 1 t Y ' 0 n 1 Y 3 BR. 2Y, Ba. $700 Mo. u Tene~ 898-9891 Sm Fee & ba upstn o/look ·i;t hv -·••••••• ••••••••••••• Harbor View Homes 3 or !9th & Pomona. $40.000 $52.~aU 752·1700 LAKE FOREST 2 BR apt .• no children. rm. Tan crptg upstn & MEWPOITCUSTOM 2 ba. lrg pat.lo. new ap. cash. 4~3459 '' 3BR.2Ba. $S75 no pets. $195 D!~": +~a~~y~4~r ~~I·~~~;. g~~~ 3 la + POOL P Ii •n cu $125 · 000 Cot1d0fftittlffl1 /Town-.a J.r. 2 ba Colle1e Park Tenex 898-98111 Sm Fee TV avail Pool. jacuz. $249,000 ~188 ho.ff for .. 1700 llOO teonl.s. rec & health rm\ Newport·a finest cu.,,lom S-c:Jewlt• I076 ••••••••••••••••••••••• :? br condo, I ba. comm. blk Nr 405 & Umv Dr. 3 BR-4 bath plus 3300 ....................... CONOOSPEClALlST __...._......_.~~ • 8 Br. 2 ba Mesa Verde pool. carport 16684 Adult comm $395/mo. sq ft Massi~ Del Piso BEACH CHARM ER H.B.. C M . F' VI y FIXER UP' .. ER ~ Arbor Cir S300 Dys · 1st & last. I yr lse, start royer H11t1e formal L1 V· ..,. "'1n To u c h stone RI t v • Roy McCcrdle 893-M71. ext 210. eve.: Al!.._15 Ph 559-01~ mo Room• Family room •••• .,,.... _.,,,...,... Near new 48.R. 2"2ba. II OH port 8974750 . h 7>llt~ Ral•ed 3BR JUSl .. 2 .~lks l o_~_· -needsTLC.Terms.BKR Rtdtor I ew ~--=-=-~-:-:---11--------- slumpetone hreplace. l>eautlful T Street I IN A MIUIOH 714/ 676·5717 Costa M..a 38r. 288. lg yd, dog run. Professionally decorat- parquel rtoor cathedral beach. New kltchen. ll'R WaJll out on the sund OR 522·2CMIO paUo w lfirepit. garag" ed. air cond . brand new cell & · b romerlot.roomforRV d · ,523CA'4"'5Dt~flM"E dr. frnl & back. near 3 Br Woodbrldl(c <: 1 n g wet a r New exclusive hslmit. While water vu con ° In OPEN DAIL y Nr Westcliff, lBr studio ocean. S38S mo. 963-1882 Seduded Master wtn1-BERTHA HENRY No. San Diego Co SPANISH 8A.M. T06 P.M guest hse. New crpt. 3 BDRu. CLEAN Avail Twnhse. White sand ::r'j;.~~~:' 1w~1I: eo~ REALTOR8c :1i~~~, or you HIUTOfl ~STATE drps. panel. $11J5Jmo. bltns ~l~e to schl & :::i~~gh~r~ii~8~kg~ glus overview 36' ZUDelMar.San lem. POINT REALTY Spectacular view to Homes for rent in beat 548·9536 shop '$375 mo 968-'404 trallil. jacuzzi. no mam· sparkling pool. Lawldry 4ll'2-4Ul CaU 491-:llOO ocean 21 Acres mature ~~wpt..r mo& ~298• 1 Near WestcUfr. 3Br. new •---=-B-R-'---Ba---- 13 --• teoance. $475. 644-6593 room. Loads or storage OCEAN DUPLIX oranges and avocados. w ... ...., pe ·....,. carpeUng. X·nice. gar. .3 • 2 , 1ar. UJ. Calltopreview.752-1700 1158 OOO Bldr /Bkr IKoftlt,..operfy 2000 TO~producUonlnwftrm R~S $3M/mo.S48·9536 mo. 675-~ or 836-0211 011,.1~9·"\'"''o"'""''' 646-44. •••••••••••••••••••••••section. Valley Center U-.tlOl'l ext.l63Y ........ Sew Woodbridge 4Br. I. I 14 *.._.LU• Permanent &prinkler Hses-()plx-ApUallareaa J 8r2 Ba. redec. lge fncd BEACH HOME WITH Laurelwood Plan, nr pk. ·1Jillflli THE VIEW II spec Near Lake Park • system Custom built LIFE1'1MESERVICE yard. Stove. rerrlg. SPARKLING POOL 3 s.w>mo. (71418411·2521 611 ) ~~.':."'~,:•~el~; minutes to beach H BR ~.u:u~~ul~I~:.; ~? :5sJ.~t!;. ~~~·&,:::. ~~!~~nt ~~~ $395. BR. '4m. kit .. OW. ~r. Deluxe 4 Br. 2 Ba. cent air BIG CANYON CONDO tt.•YJewHw e.autlha1 Callforn11 R.ancb st1t• bom.. Lara• open beamed COlrJ, bit ant«\alnlna tMna room. ntt• lat'lt tamllY room, dtnlna room " 4 bla bedroom1. U you baCI thnuabt of movln1 up. Ulla 1a It I Btt&.cr b\U'l"Y &bef docs't 1 .. t loaa in U1ia area. 4K5-0103 r·t11 ·r •,y I OLSON maculate. Owner want.a 3 ba, 1·3 BR 2~ ba. 2·1 Fam 11 Y o r c hard . S170Studlo. util pd CM No wax Ora. New ruat cond, rrplc. C!>V patio. ,._,_,_ OOO ea. Comer lot, attached I d d rd .-.962br kids ....... 00 NEW 3 Br :? Ba. fplc. r.lle cpt. $385/mo. No $375. aoolfer.,, .... Jn1Sll3, · fl I An scape ya . ., ' • .-.. bl'-· 2 b Bk I 962A..,... o...a 1. 38R ?Ba f,.,..lc garage, rep acea. s24 n ooo T m s --.lbrtrlplexN.B. .. .... rar~ar.nrs OP· ees. r rownr .._,.,., """'u . .~ .. ,, . $168.000 1703 Alabama. Consider tradee r (714; eo. 2br. kids~ CM P)rlR. Nwpt Bch schools. <home> or 962 5511 upgraded crpt $315 AMCHOIAGI INYISTMIMTS Huntington Beach. 149-0260 S260 3brrondoH B no pets. $475. 642·2164. 4 BR Umv Prk, I blk 538-1718 . S275 Sb pooldpl~CM 751-7547 Vacant & spotless. 3Br. rrorn1hop'a $450 C714f 496-7711 ~UNITS. 350 Avocado St ===========1 Coat.a Mesa \duplex 12 • 6.uD FOR 111!.ti..1'9 ....,,,.· ., .. r ki ... "" C M l •• I' 3 • s t '-' P s to AJl short lea1e 644-8415 laAl""'I Cl"'llt ..,.,., ...,r, """" Loxury 2br. 18 stow frpl. Weatm1nbter Mall & Costa Meaa. fertlle lnnd. '325. 2br hse. loaded HB rncd yd for K&P $D> schls $370 mo 963·8377. Woodbrid11e F.stales. ....................... cottaaes. 8 trailers lo· come ~.280 Priced $2&5.000. WI II accept trade. Prin. Only Please. Alen1/()wrwr-64.2 !HMM! 9Sldi0'. flower or vegeta *375 4br, loaded KB Tenex 888-9801 Sm Fee 96i-28tl Agt new 3 BR. FR, Crpl, 1700 blegarden.$200permo. ~4br.2at1.earHB sq. rt Lincoln md l wtr. mcl'd. 2057 Tualin •HOMIFIMDERS Prime loc. 4br. Zba. Ill sns. 2 Br. gar. kids. pets Buut. home. Will rent or Ave. G4S-6496 557-01J2 rncd lot only S39S. OK f\!e lease w /option. 547-6391 Tenex 888-9891 Sm Fee Mall\ Rentals. 540-5370 days. 675-1997 eves. By FARMLAND 1C11boa lllaltd 3206 o... Polftt 3226 0n1y S2l8 2br. kids ok. Owner .. COSTA MESA Rich, fiat. So. Callr. over ••••••••••••••••••••••• plex ·"'-eulll pd Bri ht •· § Pool h ' de d I ••••••• •• •••••• ••• •• •• • • """' , , 8 .. ome. ~n te;ar~1! v:s;.:;: 2BR 28A luxury upper Otn••Polnt Exclualve Tenex898·9891 Sm F'ee 3.Br. t~ ba, rplc Ava1la · FOURPLEX a 8 • Duplex SSSO;mo yrly • a11 vi' l ble April lat $47$/mo . rrops. 40 Acres. $8116 per Llt!le Island yrly·2BR marina ew. 1 m . on a bud&etf 3br1...2ba, la .Ptl 752 T9C1 . All Just repainted. new ac~. JJl.nesa rottes aale. 2BAM50 Sharp Trt·level. Ftplc. fhcdydfotK.6P~l9 ---·-.. c-----c-..a Upl carpet.I and dra~. Will Owner531·'78116 DONTYLER&ASSOC Uv rm. fam rm. 4 bn. Tenex89H891 Sm Fee Willows• lBr 2 Ba. xlnt ...,.._ o ld•r xc anfe "Aal •7 .. ..,_. bl. New dzi19/cpt, cvd r •"'hl p•rk -" And walUna tor, your Prr:ate p:uo. ex r~ SWIS$CHALIT nc ton .. __, Uo. II fncd back cl tW1!9on are3, n e;s ~knd.. _.. cttttul ''~Ion Cen· large lmlta Great lnvett J Yrs. old 3BR, 2-story ln ..... P11mMl1 J207 t9i \a a AV a' I I/ ( S · ,...._ 1242 55'2 t.307 / ~~~h~~1pn,i:t:Ja:~ ment~tJaJ. $120,000. tbe wooda on•~ acres ........ •••••••••• .. ••• 1795/mo t.a-0874 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Uruvenlty Park w•llpapered. Speriiltn• 15i-1 All uUUU~. One acre P\m time. 2br. frpl, IUda •Toro JJJ2 a Br. I b1 townhouse. Sbr. 2ba. Pn11cton MGI pooi and petlo atea ffti • fenced for animall. out· ok. plex, gar, a:uo. • .. •••••••••••••••••••• Spartlln1 new cond. Ideal locaUon nr ad\llt ttna too! 4 &drooma 2 bulldlnp •ad ftwt U"ees. Tenex888-ll801Sm ll'ff Lak ro t llYf tdO Call "Lll1 '. ~ol. S45u. By ownr. baths. Separate dlnlnl( PIO'I~ XJnt~~~~~1 Coro.adtfM• lZ22 sS: 2ba~a~~!J ~eU• Mi.imorNO·~evn. -om area. $69 ,iOO. call ...OOOUAI\~... 11.cM 0R522-MM ....................... lnjfl, Alt. ! car gaf, Exec U'l·level. s Br 3 ea. a..,..1eoc1t 1241 640-1720. ----6 ~ Cosy 2 br dplx, frpl, camel col L'a~t ~.lit Fam Rm.1rd4r ....................... . 3' UNITS lHI .... btdwood nn. SO ot Hw~. •tmo 8KR ~~ 2~ c:ar rr· '525. Av•il ;pectaoular Oceanfront "·-•a Ana .ihl\.ooo bch•ae 2100 ,\dlt1, .. no ptt• $400 . 1111 ••· y...._ 3 ... 4 4/U. Alt .ss.-..u CUit Dr ! br. trplt O>OUll -....................... ,,,_ • rai · ---:1 -seoo1mo <21S>l78 nn 27 Bach411or unrta & FOR TR.ADE Btaul .,_. ••••••••••o••••••••••• .,.,.. 12•4 •vet • · 12 1 Bdrm. units In Mbl!on Viejo, Lnf for V• ~you warn IOD811>P!TS OK. 4 Br ...................... . lfU.•IU~DY baa tn lt B. or rnin toNltTC~ ada a.. tpk1 wall pipe Brand new Woodbndc• N. t:Dd.1~-~ % Ba, h>cd llALTOI Ua.;41,1 Valle1 C.ll '7Mlll70 HO \t wear -CaU NOW, ~ rOed Jd tllO ~. lbr, 2ba. Nr 1ard, c_. to beuh ft Pll IOWrl. _.., ' pa.ril mo m-. Yrty J.M. *·10'79 ........... , -~---· _:::!:;::::;.;;.;::;...;,;.;;;.. ___ _, t~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~JI ~···-· •11 .......... 4 rv ---·-·--YSOW-Zllr l -• • 1U~.·.•.ll ~ •• -:-.· ! DJQ a&AR CA ,.,, IUO decll, paUo. ... •• IBr ,._..._, Welll .... I. l•ooul, .... l!Ve , ....... In lllUION ......__ bldO. Hr. OC ........ r Bid .. B•1ln .... -..:larm.c7 c.e...... VIEJO. GollO..U.loQ. &erv1u1 lael pbooe ~ ·tan• ,.r. USO/mo Call ..._ JIM Uon. vln Award ......... SMN 4100 a.mwertn1 t0efHHC• =al»e ria1 few u.I -..UevMJWltndl._ C .. I ........ _ 3178 ntn1 ANDALUSIA ... •-••• .. ••·-·-u rm. •teretary 1erv.L..:.:;;..:..lfl..;;.O;.._ ____ _ ----Model Cpts. drps. W\Ureotroomor....,..a aeroa*-For11JORllllo ·-·•••••••••••••••••• BIG' d1hw1hr. blto1. trub Br a a.. Nwpt TH, w / 1 callT14-G:UMO •STOP* ......... ovely 2br. l \tba. , nnptrc ·. aeutott' 1aor ':!~nt~ peuoll, prer. Fem.1i..w.ue oft\ces for rt'Ot. Do YoW' wan& to cnab •• .. -•-•••••••••••••• apaclou~ ma~\•r ale. oaUoe N SO.JJIC!IO ~·--..v• ~MO. P'REE RENT h'plc. bltns. yud r.ncd & Adult 2 Bedroom, beam Ctr membenhip ln· Klstcwit' CH'*'1 VU1a1: o;-~· have• cu. 3 hn lndacpd. "'iblk to ~rk. atUJ.no. no pets. 1210 581 cld. Cblldreo OK. ~ Qlt o...,. from 11~80 per lPO. ,.... ss.•• ,, 3br,2t..ramrm,frplc, GMI018 W.Wi&oo.lnq.Apt.C. pu mo Brokers Lht.g ... l .... I m1mtll leue. Utll. lnct. ere i\.w ;;brand MW ~?~!imd:pta.'1n~du1~dy: Woodburnln1 Frplc. 2Br. G1u:•r _,..., .... TION. Swim.. Huse 2.br, uti1 Dd. &net. welcome Call owner. Sbarea i:tneor apt. Alao •v,!~~!1~~~ .. !!ea! veodJ.namactune. ,,.,.,... r\U' O\D..l\U\ -H--..E 20thSt CM m.-1orl3l·2.Z8l aft6 ?\...~,__.TL-···-llaodinl uw-...-. n.u•P One of a kind money ~ieea 2Ba, ocn vu. never OC· ~ ~. 2 hedth club&. _..... . ..,.. · • · · ~ .. u .LJUu um..uov1a1 parklaa·Storaae Lot ba C cup, $425 mo. <213 ) b;lrlOl'ds. nqw~ed 10,.,,..., o;;;;;===;...._-;...._.....;,-.I lm!mO. 84$-3838 H9wport IHdl 38H Uk . ~ Q.)qPd>M ll*e Just '80() per mo maker. $375/mO. 3 br. 2 . A/ . 684-21~ ., ~-\, a._ & nro ·'--. -" lM>ot()rongeCounlfs ....................... ~ <!JOO~ ft) Perled rof. We IOCJIW the maduoes or. Roumoor. 552-9.503 & • w ... , n u ...-.. ......, 'P' n'IOlfbeaunMoportmenr l SR. cpta, drpa. Kids ok. 2 Bl', 2 Ba Ju. apt over a>~~ ·be) · di la for you and show you ~230() 3br,lba,cpta,drps, '*"'inq raqe.pcrty room comnuillas.Afllamg DO pet.a. Garage. S200 looklna Newport Bay ForoverSyrs.832..4134 ~:111!_.~~~~i'. howtooperatet.bem. dahw.hr. gar. pool, no f UN ACTIVITIES· Full-time ::,,:-MS-2178 W11bbaJcony&fireplace ·-. E 30 th St No product. Just roUect More ror less. l1e 3 br. • ........ •""""""' ~---,___ c.--L-. L.....--h ,.. ... , __ .,..,. c.om.1.,... YO\lnl career girl non-tory. 425 · · t.bemoney Kids, pell ok. S320. pe....,. -· .._,..,,o1o.1 OIFG'CTOf, '""' --~ Qrlln{; ' , and majeslc Zlf"-n.w DeW. ,,_.. '"""' s moker to share 2 Br. Newport Beach or call Let U$ .,elp you make Tenex 898-9891 Sm Fee 2 Br 2 Ba. Fam Rm. lge 880's. !Tips. portie~ \porl teee.. c.ni...-.."""""" 81tna·aduh.a-~. 'ARI< NIWl'ORT 2 Ba . apt. r r p I~ . 6'13471 or6'75-8.lft your fu\Utt !\UCcesaful. a-..... 3252 !~~,.!31ck yard.$290mo. ~~&A~tTMENTS: ~-~~ ~12or'31·3652 Bat'hel o ra , 1 or 2 prage.st.ep&t.obcb Sl75..._......._. 4450 ForlntonnaUoncallMr. -.....-._ '"' __..,,,......,,...,.........,_ Bedroonls&Townbouses mo. 673-3981, Mon. Tue.••••••••••••••••••••••• Peed. 7$2-1203 ....................... Sinql•s. 1 & 2 b.ctooms """ __ "' ......,.,.,.._ 2 BR. cpts. drps. bltns. From $349 50 Wed eve • a••cH BRAND new 2Br +Oen _. 3290 Fu-n. & ~~.·Mod.I• open wlh todcJI 81181'1fS. Tennis. Near shopplng. Ideal for 5,....ctacular spa. total h 1 b ( LA.CiUM"' -USTA.URA.NT Mooan:hSummlt Condo. ••••••••••••••••••··~··doily 10 to 7 Roommate gym.and~Of middle age cpl. S215. No recreation progra m Npt Be . 2 stra gt pro s..11 Larae ult.Jmate In fix. View. "95. (714)493-0331 Br. lg. yd. xlnt family WIMc• ~ No leole r• The Vlloge. MON of children or pets. 64S-0816 social program. 8 pools.8 ~ ~~h 3~n t~;h:S~e Co•:wrcld Stor. t~ ' & mollf. 140.000. ~k.foorr (N2? .. 7>833·1~or'b· ~II ::.!37et590aKfte~8P:.0· ~ed «;awy, a:l.«1 atty, no everyttllng yoo're looklng 2b bltns $250 0 tennis courts. At Fashion · J • or can be uaed as pro· Yr. net oow & Ju.st gel· "'"" .., ..... .....,.. ,...,.. ..... F·--.··e '"'"""'llot>le. r. ' · mBa. Island. Jamboree & San 1245; + ..., util. 644-0484 ressional otnce. Located Una started. New Cast ,....... • 1ut "''""" "''"" l.St & last. 121 E. y. ,_ R d • E z Lovely 3 Br 2 Ba hme. W"hNMt... 3298 One ond ltYo Bedroom 549-3826/213-43l-8561l Joaquin Hilm oo . Low Office Spoce In older shopping com· growini area. · opr fplc. bltns. yd "The ••••••••••••••••••••••• Oakwood (714)644·1900 Central Laguna. 494 .7r.as pl ex. with rustic at· UIChecl k this~ 751 • 37 ... , Hills". $38S. 494·19JOevs. ZStory,4 bedrm. 2 balh, Garden Apartments AdUILMng. moephere. Sl7S Mo., uUl. ,. pts drps (pie ow on1cesopen 9:0010 600. Dana ftoiftt 3126 2 Br 2 Ba. Westcllff ureu Roommate. hse 2 blks paid b~andJord lffr IWl-Td.-Iipmaculate 3FBr. 2ba o~ a n~Jriio 714.963.,4500 · '4..,...19oeh/Mcwitl Now renatng. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pool. no children or pets. bch .. CrpJ.c. Fem pref'd. Ml ION REALTY 1 ... "'.... .,. _ §ecluded lot. ireplc,a1r· · · 880lrvlne<atl7thl 2 Bdrm. 2ba. Tennis. S325mo.646·5681 494--07llor499-2635 ~S:Coast,Laguna Groul5200 Month conC:l. $425/mo. Bond 41. 4 Br, n«.>wly painted, 645-0SSO washer/dryer. S325 to w•T£BFRO....., b 494-0731 Costa Mesa. Absentee Realty,831·1Mll __ great neighborhood. 5202 $340. Agent496-5980 "' ...., "'' Fem only in 20's to s r1------owner can't handle. A·I ModelHomA Berke l e y. $450 /m o . Me_._ .. ,._..... 2b 2b d k NEW2br&2 br +den ruceEIToroaptw/same. NWPTBCHSTORE thru-0ut. Gold mine ror "' 847-8420aft 7pm • -r-· _ _..... r. a , ec • ocean luxury apts. ~ Call588-2S48. 2J630AvonSI. S275/mo owner·oper ator Good Large Lease 1700 16th St view.' $275 month. <213 I • Bulll·ins Jerry Wynn <213 )477-7701 terms. TIME. 751-1400 4M·9721 HousftFund1Mdcw CDoverat l6thl 700-1392 •Tra.shCompactor 1 Shr 2 Br apt CM. w;mld·1~~:.....;.:~.;.._;----i;.:..:.:.::::....::..:.::::..=;~:...:...:=--Vlefo 3267 Unfwniatwd llOO 642·8170 •WetBar dJe aged M/F. 548·7819 STORE-OFFICE-SHOP PioftffrChickett ~·~·••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••··~~~·--.·· --------.. ~A~l~ l-tv'•c;t~· •Rttplace -9-:3oail48~~~ ·lllGWPOrt4c ltelt~ab~ hi~-..,,.•-~t avatt.----FOR L··wE Brand new oRSE prop. s. ·santa 2 Br. z Ba, 15' from the a na. PP s .. bef •Privatebeoch t · eva. ug 2052Newport v . Org.Co.TopLoc. $40.000 3Br. wJfam rm. drn rm. Ana. 3 br. den, ~ ac, sand. $350. lll June. Agt. dJ'llS7PM. S2U . ._9482 •Plex.iglauencl patios Fem. Z'l-+ share lrg Ilse 646-1252,844·2228 + per yr net. E/Z opr. 28a C""•/drnc lndsc...1 .'450 No ree.642-3850 •Smokedetectora Own br + ba. CdM •oa11v10FC'S Priced ri ght. ~all for ,...nn'mo"~ti&SJ'i3 yu, Tenex 898-9891 Sm Fee 1255. Near new 2 br. H4 I ........ •oclt 3140 •SliPI avail t.ot.enanta S200+utiUtles &40-1241 .. u.v• more details. _,,,, OCEA.HFttOMT ba. ~Uo. garden. adlt.a. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9li Bayside Dr. 873-8414 c.onr. rm .. seat 25• au Ull 751·3741 Rent for Less 3Br, 2811, ...._,_-I..&......... 3 ... 25 Avail 3/2lto 6/11, 77. Dix ..:.no:.::...:...peta....:.::.·....;e42_·_Ui03_. ___ 1 & Br 2 ba .....:..::::...::.::.:..;:..;..;..._...;._ ___ , Gcraqn paneled, am. wl\se m r• ra rm patio ,rplc "'fl --.... _ .. 4Br. 2Ba. 2 cac gar, sun "'EW l &2 bedrm apts. Lge 1 2 • sec The Bluffs, ZJOOaq rt. lux. Lvlt...t 4350 ar. 1 or 2 yr. leaae. Lake ln-s Sales Co sells m . . • "' ,, apts. Adults only. n l 3 B 3 98 "'"< .._. F t ea Kunt ""' vu, very qulel, $375 mo •••••••••••••••••••••• deck, W/D, dshwehr, l250t.o1310permo. ts. A/IC & Dlbwshr W'Y ap · r · _,... ••••••••••••••••••••••• o res ar · v businesses In So Orange 1213> 821-2790 D!:LUXE 3 Br 2 Ba off lst famUy only· $450 mo Priv patios & garages. ~ool & Jacuul. From 640-S296. 540-7558 SJS Enclosed single for ~j4.581_9393 Co. Restaurants. Bars. TeeL.Niguel,CntryClb. 2910 W. Oceanfront Dnveby2477Elden ~mo.l9l32Magnolla,2 Br. l\lla ba townhouse storage or car only . etc Buy or sell. Call Bar~ain. 2 Br condo Comm pool. assoc dues 774·1973,$3.S-6017 or collLarry.~5880 962.1800 style. Adults. no pets Mesa Vt:rdu are a RETA.ILSTORE &1l·QB70. !Also Salesmen. w/a 1r. gar, $300 Call pd Lse.S:M).9544 6_._~ 83l29ll> wantedl 330.5223 dys. 631·0363 -~!·-nn> LG 2 br studjo. Avl. 411 lllCETOIEA.CH S23S.S48·2682 · " Beacharea,960sq.rt.All11-------- evs.Owner /agt Spacious 2.br condo. 2ba, UftfwftltlMd $260 mo No Pets . Lge 4 br. 3 ba. frplc, tt..C-HEatt OfficeRtntal 4400 new Improvements BURGERS encl patio. pool pn v. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 998-0659 ..., -·1 Crf,t cu st II ghtlng. S1 000 M $3 000 ......... •--1. 32.1.9 dshwhr. att. garage. 2 br apt. on golr course ••••••••••••••••••••••• · · r 1 l. . o. gross. . · ..-wpori _... v twr~lar proof safet y lcdboo Penwuu&a 3807 2 Br dplx. new cpts, drps, ..-S"" FT frp c, etc. Cash or m· mo. net. MaJOr Blvd. ••••••••••••••••••••••• grills on windows . 1 blk ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cplc, nr park. reC's. $285 encl. yd. No dogs. 1703 now ava il 60" '"'"" .,... provements + flexible Priced to sel 1. Free Waterfront-Dock, 4 HR, 2 from Leisure World . 3 Br 2 Ba. all new. cpts. mo. No pets, child ok. Alabama. 536·3465 or •Dbl SeU·clean oven 1617 WESTCLIFF·NB lease. 675·3080 00..41 stand'g. Other goodies Ba, frplc , new crpts. 8.111744 drps •. paint. 5450 yrly . .,.c co.. 536·1718 •HkupforWashr/Oryer AGT.541·5032 d b $700 644 9932 a< .....,....,..... •AlrConditioned BALBOA INN too! or~iJ.s!::· . . . 3Br, 2811 . e nclosed 205·J3rd s.t. IBalconyl All Utils pd.lg .lbr.bltns. Huntington Hrbr a rea •Fireplace DaUXEOFFICES S2SOmo. Yrlylse. Prim( Ult 751·3741 -------~-•garages . s w1mm1ng 646-878lor646-3'73'1 rertig, $190. Adlts, no 2NBr • .___pooh1, phatJo conhdlo. •2 Car 0arw/autoopnr Comml & lndsU spaces. spacelnlnn.67W740. M"'""'uCURESH..u. BLUFFS CONDOS pools, patios, gardening Hurry $175. Ulil pd. Near pets. 2013 Charle St. r ..,.,ac · s ops. sc s. •FUll Secur1ty 200 to 2000 sq. n . As low """' vr Leases starting at $450 service, bltns. S325·$3:i0 water. Fee. 548·15171646-0112 lmmed occupancy· $325. 544.0509 aslS< sq. ft. Lag Niguel & 490 Sq. rt. Balboa Island. Sc u Ip tu red n a 1 Is . Month Agent644 1133 mo o-,_ ., .. " c""o Ph963-~ Mtsston VleJo areas. J 14 Agate. Ideal for pedicures. eyelas hes ._ . . -8l26 Rlt1j?efif'ldH.B. Mainnenta..,, . ....,..,....,, 2 BR. H2 Da, Studio. •DB.UXE• Handy to S.D. Frwy. specialty shop. law oC· Fully equipped. Newport . The Bluf'rs·Townhouse. 1$9511 Royal Court F. V. Coronad91 Mar 3822 w/pat10. Newly redec. 2 Br adult apt, wlpaUo, EastbluH 3 br. 2 ba. call. 831·1400 Hee. acctg, etc, Days Beach. Full price S15.000. ~ 3Br. 2'h ba, Back bey »tO "B" So. Bradford••••••••••••••••••••••• Nopet.s.S23.5mo.534-7834 S240.All~~i4 Lease.lncl.spac.mast.er (213>289·9307. eves Broker646·2Al4 4.-- _ v iew. $600/mo Ph Pl S.A. 2 BR.cpts.drps Kids ok. s uite, din rm & dbl SOtpersq.rt. C714 >772·36S3 J ...... ~5..__ ~ 644·5226 I mtle rro m So. Cs l no pets. Oarage. $225 NEW -l.2&3BDR!llS garaee Auto d oor 400J B.irch-N.B. .... ........ , ~ Plaza. 540-3429 ~ " 645-2978 From $25-0to $400. opener avail Pool & Agt. 541·50.12 Approx. 1400sqft. Retail Top drawer merchan- • 839-9739 recreaUon area. Adults space. ln xlnt locatJon. dist>. Prestige &1rea. $500 /Mo . 2 Br +d o n LunryCondo '(I., ,,~res BR.2 Ba.mootuUls.pd only.Nopet.s f"rom$367 SMALL Co mme r cial Tusun&Pa.lm.Orange $7000.mo.net..Helprun. home. Walk t.o bch. Pool 2 er, den, l '., Ba. dining ~ Mo to Mo Adults only Near Brook hurs t & up. Shops, offices & storage Good for liquor store ete A steal: See 1t: &tennis. area. pool, jacum. $39!> S250. 622 Hamilton HaJniltoo, lge3br,2~ba. 86$AmlRosWay From $75 mo. 548·724E AvaJJ April l. Rent re-UBI 7Sf.J741 ~75tmo.4Br.den, view 118 Malloy Re altors CORONA DELMAR MS-0314 frpk, yard, enc. garage , __ ....;...._......;.;..___..;;.. C.M. ~asoo~~·~498-~'¥1~87~---~--------- IB50/Mo. 3Br on water 963.m 1 2 Br Townhouse. rrplc NR OCC Huie bachpid~ S385 846-9088 LIVE Near The Beach! EXECUTIVE lndllltrial Rftthlf 4500 lmntnnt wttSlA!, ~/ .... ok.r4oBr yrohourmboe awt1th ~ .... -u;,;:; 3600 Pool. te~nls Some ~ean Cncd yd, kids ok Sl85 Deluxe pool side xtn lge Casa ct.I Sol lcr1,rfroftt Offices ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ... SO IS ...,., .-. .................. & Catalina views Close Tenex 898-989t Sm Fee h Beautiful Adult l\pL~ MISSION Yl~'JO ~vy lge yd & boat dock for ••••••••••••••••••••••• to shopplng & flne beach 2br, 2ba, bltns dsbw r Gas Heat 4r Coc*1ng Pd Prime Location • '""' • ••••••••••••••••••••••• large boat Balboa Pen, w. Bay Avl', 64-4·2'ill 2 BR. 2 ba, preCer retired Nr. bdi. Adults. no pets. Fro. $235 3388Vla Lido, Nwpt Bch Xlnt location ltt oew ln· Sl" 000 NEEDED 1 M . ......,. 111.10. Avail April Lhru 3 B r. 2 B a. r r p l c . adults. no cha Idem or $22Simo. ~ 21,..1 b-.,.'"h"-t, H fUm. or unr. SlSO·SSOO dustnal park. M .. ED for PRIME R E •• .,.,,,,.i 675 4644 6425848 "" ~ ...... Secretarialservavail. 49J.1702evs493-7681. · · · August. On water with cpt.s drps, gar, · .......--. ----,.._, pel.s. · OuisUans Welcome: Nu 2 96~665l Inv. $24,000 RETURNED boa ... _k aft7PM ·•.n ... .n ... -_. b-Es .. ~ N Cl ba .... ,_ ,_,. ---------250sq.Ct. • .... ~RTl•"'CH• within s i x months . t....,.; • -• C2> 3BR. 2BA Duplexes. r · 1\K'. r new. ose br. I ~ stw.u. ~sq "-Bay lew ..,..,..,,,.v """ Waterfro..t HotMs ..... t&nt1 FurwsMd available, close to shops, to s hop g. Dshwshr. ft, bltu. enc gar. frplc, I Nu Npt Hgts 2 Br. 2~ Ba. 67:~or kd v 1 · ~7700_11.500 Sq rt. Secured. QUALIFIED Call631·1400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• beach&porlc.Xlnt CdM stove. frplc, gar, laun· mt t.o ocean. adlt.s, am Fam Rm, fplc, atrium. w ysony. sprinklered. 12 Ft over· PRINCIPALS ONLY. ~~~~~~~--l lalloaltland 3706 locations From $350 to dry. Older child ok pets, fee. $350/$375. No pets. Encl gar $395. DA.YOR WESC head doors. loading Mr. Knapp. 64()..8292 to· -:: ••••••••••••••••••••••• $475 Ask for M1Ss1 Water/gas pd. 203 Ogle. 846-3714/846-7456 ...;644;__-6034~-------1 Exec.suiterenW dock ROBERT NAT· _da.....:..y_. ------- LITTLE ISLAND 67S.ZlllorS4S-1067 ' S325. 548·3281 e ves & Redecorated 2 Br. bath, SanCletntnt. 3176 752-0234 TRESS, Realtor. 752-5041 MoMytoLoan 5025 Subenor 2 Br, sundeck. wknds patio. l mi t o bch. ....................... Stet.,. 4550 ...................... . Sootless 2 Dr. den, 2 Ba. Monaco. tncl. yard care. avail Mar. IS. Agt m-6510 or 640-5734 THllLUFfS Lge. 3 BR. 2·sty. end un it. Beat early area. Say View. Adult home Va cant. clean & mov«.>·Jn rt• ady. '825 r,tonth AGENT 640-~ Sl50 & Sl 75 at Beach t 11 ii pd. Refrlg + more Sml r ee. 84S.4900 * •COMUIMt 1 GuJ• Big Cyn Twnhse 2 br, 2"'1 ba. den, DR, Crpl, bltns, _balcony 1595. 640 8146 l;'l Blk to Bay. adults. no -location 2Br. 2ba $245/mo Duplex 2 BR. 2"" Ba. Airport Offices ••••••••••••••••••••••• Id, z..ct & JrdT.D.'i pets. $375 yrly, a vail.3BR,oceanvlew,walkto ~ar , bltns. frplc , C.all00~12aft6PM. frplc , all bltn kltch. tb.lk t.oO.C.·Airport.Dlxsmallboat&trailers.ren· LOANSAVAlLABLE April 1.6734394 bch. Lie. for 6 mos or drps/cptg, polio. Adults, ---------t stained glass thru-out. suites ~/cpts. drps, tat space. Sl .OO per foot. Credltnotimportant --3707 longer at S500. Days . no peta. $295 1mmed OC· 1 Blk h'om beach. 2 Br 1 very lge apt. $350. mo. janitorial serv FM 67 ... o .... B-.. lalloaP1•M11o 714~105$, aak for Mr cup c.Ao...,,..,,.0rc.,.7.4347 n -1111 i l N hlld I · Limit length 22'. 18111 ...,.,.... '""er .....,......... ..., DOl.S palo,enc,gar. o c r en Pease . a""'tm All utll ample CM., __ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jenkins eves & wknds . ~u • " Monrovia Ave ~ T SBr. 2Ba. 1IP1 8, avail 714·!162-1229 FttOM $21 S $!65. Aft:>. s.54-4442 _4_92_·-15-16------t prkg. No lae req'd. 21m M or call~· ~s. tieSt f..aster Week & summer Mature adults only, no DELUXE 2BR. 2BA South LOCJUfta 388 S.E. Brtstol, NB S57·7tl0 Deidi 5035 423 E Balbo.i Blvd <213 l 2 BR. newly dee Bltn!.:}! pets l.arge 1&2 bl' aplll. Lg, apt w /frpl~. patio, •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• 2Ad MO FRH ~~!.~~ ... !~.~! ••••••••••••••••••••••• lrl'7-MM & airy. S320 544 . ......, 0.hwhr. gas BBQ S215 lndry faclUty, encl. Lge, quiet. lu1ur1ous, ex· rvt lndi d I LOANS a11. OI I>a~:6'7S·32S5Eves. mo Gas pd 778Scott Pl gararge. All atulta, no er . 2 br. 2 ba"\apt fUll se ce, vi ua Responsible Journalist 72 /o Beeb pad Sl ~ Utll pd M.S-54ll or &42-5073 ....,., °" -r1 olrtces, month to month seeks smaJI t Bdrm cot· • ...,_ 2_.... TD • __ ... ,... Large 3 Br 2 Ba, service -peta....., mo . .,..,._ Elevator to scenic P v rent including : Rec. ep· tage or house part rum -'"' nu ..._.. r ~~ ...... bch. P•rty & game room, ti rsonalized Fairest Terms slnce 1949 MaanRentals.544>S3'70 rm.patio . .-.. DELUXEneverlivedm2 NRBeacb,lgJbr.allap. total secur1ty. Perfect on serv. pe ln Laguna Be:ich or ScatttlrMfCJ.Co. _&44·2251 ___ Br. p11t10, deck. (pie. pllaMeS Sl«> Uvtnaorwknd retreat fo phone coverage. mall Newport Beach S200 per f P11rt furn bach Sl75 In dahwshr S325 642-0461 Tenex888-9881Sm Fee •"'e adventu ..... •• adult. dispatch. underground lno. Qwet location a 642-2171 54S.061 clud uul Qwet workrntt SIA.VIEW · u.• ,.,..,. prkg, jarutoral serv. All must. Send lntormaUon men1woman 673-8717 2530SEAVlEWAVE 2 Br, uW furn, children SUMMER run. 2 br. kids Starting at ss 151mo. uUl.exceptphone. to Ad No. 866. Dally PRIYA.TEPA.ltTY -----FROM THIS SPAC. l BR welcome No pets. Mgr. ok, woa't tut Jong Sl~ _.-._2835 ______ --i THE EXECUTIVE Pilot. PO Box iseo, Cosla Will pay more tor your CostaMna 3724 APT W t VIEW OF Apt6. lHOWallace, Tenex888-9881SmFee •-t•-"'-IP!....-.1 . ...._.... SUITE M"""callf93628 2ndT.D.642...l573 SeaVlew,new2br.w ·dt'n ....................... S PYGLASS HILL. l 642-8447 ...pea .... "'""-640-:>470 ..::.:.~=.:..:·::=;.:.:.....:=.:::::... __ _. ________ _ & artium. Pvt streets. • .. 0.00 \AIEEA# & u• BLK. FROM OCEAN . ...:_-------•2 BR. 2 ba adults, ell. to oru.fwnlthed 3tOO ---=--~---SPACE . AREA, LOT, ll0,000 2nd TD on local T I & 1 ~ ..... -... .... B I ...Jng aho w'a-...r IL Spr-••••••••••••••••••••••• MO FREE RENT ri Sell enn s comm poo · •StudJo & 1 BR Apts CPTS, DR PS. BLTN n .... 1 r. enc gar. •v• • P9 •""" .. •I • WHAT EV ER -T 0 P me property. or S800 mo 840 B557. •1V&MaidServAvail RANGE & OVEN + 136 E. Bay St. 541-5331, lngda'ae. 8222 Warner 'nlEEXClTINO 1·2-3Rm.dlx.o!ficesNo PARK AND LIVE IN tradeforbulldablelaod. 8SS-3S22or644-8018 •Phone Serv,Htdpool REFRJG.ASTROTURF evs.646-~ Ave, $270. 8f7·7UO or rA.LMMESA.A.PTS. leaaereq.AdJ.Airporter TRAlLER. 1982-u• 642·07S8 Btl1 4Br. ram rm Condo, 2376 Newport Blvd. CM BALC. CARPORT & ...:B;.;.EA.:..:....:UT..;.:..;new~-4-_-pl-e_x_2_&_3 1 642-7743 MlNUTESTONPT Hotel. LOW RATES, AIRSTREAM. PR.Eli'. o.c ,,.,, .....,7 LNDRY RM S300 PER ' ' BCH. FULL SERV 833-3223 'UI N E A R L A C U N A wllt t.o bc:b, tennb. pool. 548·97 .... or ......,.....,.. MO 67., "....., ·0 R cA"'l220 br. 3 br, 2 ba. apllt level, Huntin"'on Harbour area. h ..... RR ( l i ....-.-.,,...,. l ,..,._ e-~ Bae , 1...,. · noon CANYON. CALL: <714> rec IC' ava I /\pr l $195 mo 1 br. Mat~re AFT6 CPrpt:_ ... ._2 b'r r2mb,aenycd .. gPaert beaut. 2 Br, 2 ~luxury from $195. ~ BIO mo. SUpcrtor Rily adults, no pets. Qwet, a tu• • • apt. Newly deeorated. Adu.It.a No Pet.a <Xe. C.at. Hwy. at 3 Atth1....::.;;:....:~-------4 &n·l304,S46·0'78l sec ure . Pondur osa OCEANVlEW Res. area, &chlldok.642-UIOS Bltns incl dabwahr, pool llielMesaDr. Bay a street front & Need 28r wtth room for1...;.;...;__ ______ _ Jumlne C reek , p vt Mobile Es ta tu. 1991 dpllt, 2 br. 2 ba, frpl, THllAYUAF wtt>eaut. lndac:pd court <5BlJtaEa•tofNewport oceanvu.499-4070 my2well·behaved,clean ewffh/ <'omm. Guarded Ga te. Newport, 646-8373 bltnl. lse. $WI. 538-88&1 yard. Adults, no peu. ' Blvd.> OFC SUITE for rent, dogs. CM area. 751-1253 f'enotrfllt/ New 3 br. 2 ba or 2 br & KIDS & .-a ok, l br. run 2 BR, 1 blk from bc:h & 2Be~rmutlfut. ~t.ep!ct~~ :~ 846-1755or8*3944 546-SIMO ocean view, lg. balcony, Professional n. Lost A '°"5ld d !pool Jacu zl tr n ~· Best d l! S165 Slnalea u1111taln w/garage. s:soc> anted· unf··-'·bed 2Br ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~n w • 7 • • rrpt,some utHpd$180 shope,$300permo. apls, Pool, pvt paUos. ea · NIVllWIMG 0 Id Dahl · '"'"" •~t&--.. 5300 n 1s . HOO mo Ca ll Tenell898-9891SmFee 494-3324~ Ava.u 411 OK.Fee. " .... DU .... IT mo.538-8834 av house or duplex. patio, -..-- 544-4822 d J ta Main Relrtals. 540-53'10 """ " adul•• .-. &46-e824 ••••••• •• •••••••••••••• . -ll~Mo Utils pd.Studio,3Br28a.Cplc,v1ew.S4~ A uta.nope ' USTC.M. · -....--Lost: YeUowtwhlte Lab Sharp 3Br. 2Bn. Lite yard ideal ror l'pcn . no pet.i. mo. Aft 6 & wknd1 329A= C.M. $175. 2 Br. gar. kids OK tbe Beacb ffOUS8 Retall or ot~. space al -t--. ~ t/. puppy. Fem. 201b. Vic Nr golf course ~mo 642·9344 640-9448orM2-0MS Fee. Cont.emporary lrcaaual ~ ». Redecor'd .• am· -, ... vn ., Fedco. C.M. Reward! All&.S48-0290 -1 .--:--2 Brrurn&unf. 1,,.--£a"'-"~-~•24 1Br & ram rm or 2BNr, MainR.eotala,540-53'70 'nlebestofNewport's pleprkg.,pvt.batbs.1770 All•c• Dye · 837-2270, Ev : "' Ill, poo _., _._ -duJ $225 .--4 Ur 0rangeAve. lJJ666-4811 ••••••••••••••••••••••• HVH MOt'laro 2 bdrm. 2 mature adult.a, eood loc ••••••••••••••••••••••• matu~~u. . o DILUXl2D21A. '!'&am!deeilln • ....... ,_7';...1_438..;...;...; _____ _ Ba. den, grdnr. water~ AdultE·Sidel&Ubrapla peta Near beach, oew·J11. •2Po0ltlrrec~ntera ---------1 01PwlaJtr 5005 Found Fem CJ m o p&ld.SS50 ~R ......:...._ , 17 .. 4 ~cl 1ar. patao. pool. New 28r2Ba.bltns,p.r, wtrplc , eocl 1ar. •Pllllbc:tPll&dr•pu COIOMA.DB.MA.I ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sbepherd &'Collie mix -·s 2 B TH I ....... _ ,. Like new. no peta. no pets. $37S. 642·2164 OC' d1bw1br, lndry ~acll. •A.adaomuchmon Private offtce tn the COMl·f~Qa..1 puppy. Blonde color Vic: ..... · r. · poo • ••••••••••••••••••••••• fJ44.Gn8 w kkb ok. ldt&l for rm-M Mutual Savlncs Sida Ove-r :,.,. : lve 1 ...,._, Hrbt•Vlctorta.64&-SI08. linalea OK. Fee. Roommate need«!. trvltw 7Sl 7 ta S.100 mo. ~ F\lm. bat'belor .30 I kl I _., n _., M'a1nRenta.ls.640-S370 twnbu A S .A.P . No Eutslde n•w tnbouse.. 2 Br. no peta. Retn1 & ...:::=.:lP=..:M::_. _____ 1 Unf~~~YPOI Q55 ~ttTcJ::. J~~itori!i bua. llsUnp. P\tut calJ FOUND 2 male dop. I o.co•THltol.LUFfQdS *1 c<~}d>reorn.7 .. ~n!!..,. a•-.. ~rrom· "ll~~~~r. 2 ~~~dud«l. IZZ5 mo. Kldl<Jk. ••Ar . .om.ut.U llSnv-TllLICnOM service included. Over or stop by fell' free tnfo. blaclaabe.11e. -""._.., ,_. v -........ -.. "'° ,q. fl. 0o11 si11 per ~. ~~ .. ~~ 1~ !r!" ... · ~ ra r 1 en e on Pd.allx1ra1Sl80 ials rlor "' ·---w ""' t.l sntnbelt. 3 Bdrm a.. pm. · lloxtlolow V,.. ActUltl only. J 6 2 Bl' ar>tt. · r.u-.n Sm P'le 8t1ob you, ~O: Ont bike, call 2~ balbt. J111hly UP· ..... 1741 en W.WUaon646-ao10 Sl7Ul$210. au W. WU~ . ' ~ IJ 751-)74, "l·f2.JJ t o ldeallfy ltndedl tllSO/Leue. 334 ••••••••••••••••••• .. •• NODEPOSJ'fTOQUAL. St.831·2177 ....... · ll44 UNn'EDBUSlHESS 1 ..;..lrvt..;...;..nc..;.....area __ . ----Vllia'l'ruch1. Drive by & HEW 2 br 2~ ba lwru'7 •Zbrtownbomew('f'rpl ••••••••••• .. •••"• .. •• TENNUU1S~" NVJ:STMENTS callfor •pp't . 840--07BV or condo Ocean vu. walk lo •L&e_patio&enc. aar. 2br wt cad ... ~o .. ~lh WOODBJUDOS Walk to u. t.~ from iJs1i1 ... v.,.._Or & ?::::~.~~YT!~~ M-1290A1ent. boh, completely de · •Adulta,chlld JJlao\'er , Pi!ter l c.21tJ!i l .kl Pl:N!SAPTS t.bia amublq 1'1a bdl'Ql <acroea fJ(>~~LetJ _.Jtll\'et itud•. -.115$ 1 LAROE corator fW'ft. Dbl. 1ar. -small petok . ~a. 11 • h,!1,•0~ 11.\': :~ri Qt comll'-a. wtth '-lnta A Division or U8su1ti.t08i~ M1~-,r::.....;.v.:... ------ A-... V Monw llleOmo. w..----I f£• ohabbouao, poot, Horboc' Investment Co v....-... ,_ .~ ..... IL It...__ #em. -~• • llA.NO MIW '.Mp&ea 1 ea. crp4 d.r"PI Callfotnl• .,.bu.u-0 ~'\•5 um, aauna, au.nd9ck 1t. IH& • U'JV"'l'P ,, auR, fam rot. dtn rm, 2 11115. Utlt pd. Readr la 2 ~r townhouea , nopeta.SUOmo. • F'ru In h 1 · beal.lllful land1t'apiaa. ~MCTUalM. Oorm. Shep. w/lloppJ frplca, bltnf>. wet bar, nltJna Pee. 1artJ1S, fenctd petk>s, 611·0496 · Plnela.e. Oto hre. N :IO All eleo. kitchen DI•· PalftlAid llfm MI'S; Am. to "Seka" Sat. bul• deck w1bea1&t. MalnRem&la,5*5370 alt cond. S2951mo ~. bw••tltt, atll d11oln1 FarCl ... ifltdAd 1 UnJqlllpj.tC'tofOQWP" l/U;.No 1 i.. 1 .4tt-ztao vW..11'71Sfmo .._. 37" '42.-Uor.0'°2a S&ar~llnM ctun lbr -.oeoo _ oven. Adult& only. No ACrlON meal Pr.oJ.Cled net .. - JA.COl,7• s ... •61A70J.TY •••••• ...... , .......... Nft atudlo, 2 beelrm, \\t ~~i,~~n vt.W, ............ >141 &*a-I brD'fS.28r"25. Cllla S180.000 lhil Yf, Pfeseat F'ouod Beno1to ~Ure ----------•~tobchlbr,tba.Y bath, air ~od., prt ....................... J::tJ=.t!rtlt =~ ~~r':r:r:: =-~~~~~~ LIDOISL~2Br lBa fnt'd aniund-.Whlt.tonl) }ltUo. ll11 bltu, qUlet. ILTJ&tll l~6'wntoc:d Oo17,faDk)o\SlJl5.UUlpd. <1.l4>4.8M501 ~ ~w/.!Kd.owo. aoc. lci-L CQcQct K1B.\ ~.r:~·Rtrt1. =~wa~·· ~0: ~~~1: 1'°':'.:J.1smN ~R.ntali,54NIJO <>mcebouftt1o• -7Sta74t PollCWJ>cllt,US.•• .. I • Qu-pel Man will lay yours or mine. Repairs & cleanina too! Guar work al btager savings. Fr est 6'5·3646 ---------•Remodels, Additions. You don"t need a gun to . Carpet·Vinyl-Drape.s Patio Cvrs & Decks. Any '"draw rast" when you OCC Students. 81g 4•T Sales·ln.stall-Repain types or construction. place an ad in the Oiuly truck. Move, tree tnm Gd~ke154S-ltl7 ~ohn Mulhns & Son Pilot Want Ads' Call now or? Cheap li45·7979, Excellenl buys & service ~_.780 an 6... 00·5678. 549·3666 8Ul'1Cwltom UpbOlatciry ff• Eat. P\clnlp " de· IJflll'Y. 2S &o ~ off au ta.bric. ri&bbcr 6 aup. pU4t$. 1.87$ Harbor BL 8"-~10, ~05. Wm Geo. Csyka1ld • Lost&Fomcl 5300 Lost&Fowtd 5300 Schools& Help Wanted 7100 HetpW•ted 1100 HelpW..ted 7100 H.apWonted 7100 ..... w~ 1io HetpW..t.ct 7100 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • IMfruc tiott 10 0 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••••••••••••••• •.•.. • • • • •••••••••••••••• ._.... • • •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••··~··••••••••• Babysitter wanted. ~xp Carpet Cleaner Helper GENERAL OFFICE House it• c per Io r Janitor, dependable & • , woman wtrefs to baby.sit 1,2). Neat & , well man C bachelors, .Bay t19me $4 respqnsibl~ 1nd1vidual L A , COLLE G I'. O F lyr old child 3 morn g11 nered. Saddleback area. REOIT M a l u r e P e r s 0 n plhr. 1'lollO h Days/wk. rpr janitor work No exp ~ AS~AG5E . L1ow co!.t wk Will puy n~~hr Call 492·036<1. 522.0932 aft ~~r~~a~!~~l~h\?:~0:~ Must btl exp rellable, necessary Wiii train S:~ta A~a.~~~1a.fi:les '" 6"5-629'7 G. CHECKER duties. grl'el cust .. typ. middle·ued .. Refs rcq. good pay· apply i~ ---BAK~H Must /lave bank or 1ng. filing, gen'I ofc 675·7578 pet'60n: Del Taco, 1720 ~ Voice lessons for teens & Experienced. Part or CHAIRSIDE ASST. 30-40 finance co. exper. Oo skills, Pfficient & in HousektH!p~r. live-in, Superior A\•e. Costa adults 842-8634forappt. FT1mc 962·9S4t> ~rt Ii hrs week. some exper credilcheduna.employ· dependent workt-r . some Enahsb, exper, _M_es_a_. __ Hennetta Carter __ pm preferred. Prosthodo.nuc m-t v•-fication. loan f 1l1me Call 833-0003 ask •-GP v ff -'•' ...... ref's, ,salary open. JANITOR-Person~. time JobsWanted, 7075BAKER Or Baker'fi Phone:64~~~ceo ice. ratinJs. Immediate forSteUaorDiane. 54.S-JSzi.fM. lorlight/"anrlorworkata. Rewcrd to •yoni-ho•llMJ Info ato the wheteaboeds of fflis little ,Oocle-. plHM cal collect (7141 498-0924. ....................... Helper, full time. expcr -.......-Opening! GIRL FRIDA y · 1' rec facil ty. Call 642·9990 c.P.A. ReJocnt;"'g to area. necessary. 548-3031 Church Of c Secretary. U> .... Houseketper'/babys ttew: btwn8&4PM " "' .. _ led r for prominent shoe com· needed for ·2 scl>ool age · desires per diem work. S --person w /...,,ow ge 0 pany. Salary $500 /mo. girls Mon thru 1)-L Hunt. Janitor p/lime n1les. N.B. days per mo. Plea5e rep-Bank mimeogteph, 5 days w•., !o\JU ume. Call for appl.. Beh area. Call after 6pm. aua. Bank cleanmg. 2· ly lo Frankel. 25352 EXPERIENCED 9-5. Call 494-8061 963-6702 Apply s ·30 11 963-2963 • Hrs 15 mm ~r nite. $2.60 -' 9i!~~ley Lane, Lag Hills. PAltT-TIMl AM Hr .2131?47-8778 O Pet"SOMI 5350 __,,, CLERlCAL HsJcpr/Coolc/Childc:lre --------Lost&Found 51 0 1 -TEl~ER Call 54ft 4.-5 GIRL FRIDAY Uve·ln. En'1.lsh .speak: Job Opportunity at ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• FRf:ELANCER will edit, *TELEPHONE v-.. _. l girl office. lite book· ing. pvt rm, good heallh Rancho San JoaqUin Golf LOST : Mex. Passport Drinkingproblem? Hrewrite y"'ou r work. UNITED D f:qualOpporEmployer keeping, good typist, &re(s.CdM.644-8772 Course.$2.SOllr.p /time. 3'12/77 Atlanta & Olive Call Alcohol llelphne umane recs (714 l CALIFORNIA IAHK COMPAnY * must be organ11.ed. Good Gol!privil mcluded. Call Ave UB Reward Uhrsaday835·3830 963·4717 Dellvery-Mormnt: home oppty w C.M. Whlse Induatrial S.Sl-5522. ~ m4_> __ ~ Reliable wom~n w nurs-2750 W. Coast Hwy deuv auto route w lhe Sporting G~ Co. Call LAIORATORY LOST: Sm reddish brwn *SH A ROM'S* mg expef .. de!!.lres day H•wport IHch PefSOnnel Register. Approx hrs ~'4950 URGE~ Chihuahua 3, 13. vie J71h ~ POMt1on in' .home No 4·6am da1Jy. Costa Mesa NEED TECHNOLOGIST St 16th Pl c.~. 64.2·8593 OUTCALL MASSAGE wknds. 536-0538. Needed & Newport area:.. Xlnt GUARDS . Weekend Tet•hnolog1sls --499122i-1 17141631-3200 p lime el1rnmt{!\ Perm Sat&Sun. Separate I! Hr LOST Gold Loop Pierced Hefp Wanted 7100 edi i.1tuat1on, ~0·3006 SECURITY lluelemt Jobt AM & 6 Hr PM shifts. 1 + fs~;:~_n0~ 1~•hc ~~1~;a ~~~~~~~~,tE ···~~~;.;;;~;·~~~··· OpPort~~.~qE~ployer Imm "alely DEMONSTRATOKS ror GUARDS ~~!n~P ;:::C'C1~,;:~~~ 6PM-2AM 838·1780 ll06p1tal exper f;R tX· S:Y9l food. applaan1:c::. & WOM&t-MEN Gen 'I Hosp (7 1.i 1 Lost. mal1: Golden per helpful San BANKING ...,.., Rl~CED Jewelry. Jo'r1 & Sal 10-6 Join a progressive, fast TRAIMEES 496·1122, ext 261. Joy<'l' Retrievt•r V1r So. AIORTIO.... Cl G IO ONLY and some other d;iys growml! co w/new ap Hutchinson. 1 SI 1 n l'mente en'l llosp. OKKEEPER ,2131240 7000 or ,aguna el'p e!l6 nites Counsehna & Heferral (71-H496 1122 R l Jt Cl k proachcs to :.ccunly Ir w oul him Please re " -·--e urn ems er Cu R l714l768-5S73 you·rc tired of the old turn Reward 499-2751 Preg test avail wknd:. Arrh1leC'lural drafti.man-Bank ex per req 'd * stomer ep lame guard com panic:. 12131862.5204 24 Hr Helpline ~7 9495 de:.agner . ex per l'Om Contact Bob Creighton [) ENT A L As., 1 s 1 . w their old idea!. or ar . I R M Th 833-3700 *Ope ato s Cha1rs1de. F' \lml' ,,, LOST SmJ Brown Cal. MASSAGE merraa -· om as & Irvine National Bank r r least ti mo:.. exp ( l) SJ.l you rC' looking for a new red collur. fem. Vic. llbr FfGURE MODELS A..,socaates, 645 7474 _Equal Oppoi!,mployer 4 years recent exp. per mo. H.B. 846·35-IO ~o~~~e exciting curecr vu Hms. 6·10 -oso1. ESCORts ARTISTS BAR MAID *P.Jerks 640.1270 Reward II Dental Assist;mt. ex per. OUTCALLOHLY Bi> Part of Co Op Costa Mesa.1 Newport x ray certificall', full or Lost · Male Saame:.e Cat nr. CM Ha:. skin cond1 11on. Re\Vard 540.0583, ~0365 films actmg workshop area 'f'·or beer & wme parl tame. Nwµt Uch 631-3811 for l>OliS•ble employment rute club ASk for Ed or ~mq. 1 n com m ft r c 1., 1 s / John. 646 9<t7Jf. Lost. Golcl watch an scribed Ernest Camp Heward 645-0032. EXOTIC GIRLS film 1V 957-0282 BARMAIDS!'> Day, Ntght Dental Xray Ofr. 3·4 days Massage & Modeling -& Reuer ShU\s. Call for a week trac111i.: st rue If you me e 1 the s c Outcall 542 3!60 ,543 325-0 appt 541!·'7?8'1. tures from xrays, mount quahf1cations.you will Asse bl ing dental photos & receive LIHDA & VICKI m erS Beauty Opt' Earn more <Acrot$ f)"om "'rays.. 11omt-gl'ncral ofr Best pay 1>ener1ts Found Tan & Blk Terner. male. \IC 11th Sl. HB Call SJ6-3179 Oukall Moss-by renting Kp'ace. Lead Orange Co Airport) work Will tr:.11n. ~alar) -8 Hr" pd trammg -..,... FACTORY ing CdM saloo. As k for Equal Oppor Employer open. App I~ 0 rang t-Uniforms furn For"'-F.n of ft! TilAIHE!S Jim. 644 7321 or ~·0943 Coast Dental X ra} Lab. -Bonus for state cert ScrvmgallOrangeCo. All 3 Shifts. Im med Beauty-Oer .. ll you·re CLERK f 125 Baker. Suite 200. -Unhm.Advancemcnt Found Siamese mix. yng wht mule l"at Vic Bristol Birch J 11 Bon rue 833·2161 dy!. 549 2743 d or s mall ex · Costa Mesa -WPNSQual $2.80hr Openings. Male or fem tired or ofng hair & elusive motel. Accuracy Mature Personnel RELAXING MASSAGE MO f!!ES would lake to leQrn pro-& neatness Important. DENTAL ASSlSTANT· Prererred Bob James · fessional s'*' care ... we No previoU5 e-xp nee. S N.B. Ofc. cbairs1de. Send Lie. Moeiseur • are wtlllng .to train. P06i· Day wk includ. wknd.s full r-ume to Class1f1ed SIS Secunty --..,S'S t1 f "" lndustnal Services found. small fem Doo, Outcall.s9 9 l94 5111 ~HH }".t..<t. on op~ or young 494·8521. Ad 11836, Daily P1lol, PO 4320Campus, Ste 130 ,, --:.,.i woman. abo"~ a\•g Call Bo l"'""' c t M beige. Vic Hoover & Beautg1rlshaveanexcit ---"''J.1'J: 12-2.642-4912. C lerk Typist. Need x JQV, osa esa, NewportBch 549'8071 Trask, West~ !!?1·6833 mg message about tht-1r. iiiiiiiiiiii•-•iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil mature. independanl in· Ca . 92626 1424 S. Grand Ave $.50 REWARD-For Blk Tom, strayed Nov 6 when ownr went for sur gery. boarded H. arttt nr Va1l ,Newland Lg Black Tom. hand leas. rmt loei., nose & chest wht. Blk SPol on right side of nose. Skin pro blem. Urts hind q1ul{ters & tail a lot Call collect eves. <213 ) 661·2592 An a h e i m St u d I o 4340 Com pus Dr· St.e l30 dividual for construction DENTAL A "SI STANT Santa Ana '558·9021 Newport tlch 549-8071 Boat Manufacturer i-.u L N C6177 SJS-S3i3 14"'5 G di\ PosrtioosFor. ofc. Good typing & Oral Surgery only N.B.,._ __ •.c_o ____ _ '" ran ve general ofc skills. Only 644·6161 •· DRJNKING S.tntaAna 5589021 Molden exper need apply . ------ --- LOST Man's gold ID bracelet. initials R.8 Reward Lost Vic Hoag create!> problems 1ti---------.i G_. ~a S36·8832 .as~ for Mr. Dental Assistant. run time doesn 'l i.oh c l~m H -~.,-II!~ ---Grittdef 1 Dahl. c h a i r s Ide . e x per . you nerd hl•lp, call AS~·LYWORKERS &lo-~ w /hydrocoloride 1m CAREManor lle>:>p1tal in Petm pos. Must speak ~ • N t Orangt> 633·9582 Engll.IA. 631-0700 XI n t pay & fr 11) g e g;s:i·~;s. ewpor area. -------benefit.i; Apply at · FORU.DllS WHO want to tali.. to a guy Call anyti me 1·821·6137 ASSE.MIL Y C:C.stal Recreation D&rr AL /Assist Fast grw1ng skateboard l~ Denan Ave, Lr" Chau·side. Expr'd manuf 1s looiung for as (71~> 556-37iQ sernbly workers. Apply. ~ual Oppor Em1>1oyer 17932 Sky Park Cr. Ste. Spiritual R~od.r , G. Irvine. lmiiiiilmiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii GUARDS Costa Mesa Permanent. Full & Part- time Phone & transp re· q'd. Retired welcome Call 546-0274, ofc hrs 10·2. Closed Wednesday GUARDS WAMTED P ttime-lrvme area Age 21 & over. Mature men pref'd Uniforms <urn • Hosp. Call 556-7777 ask for Sue 1815 So. El Camino Real - San Clemente Puny lie Automotive. For appt 492 7296 New Detail Shop needs BOATS WILLARD IOAT CO. 11200 Condor Ave Fountain VaUey ---------1 No cash outlay. Car & ---help S20 Reward for male •S'""l'S• Top waae$ paid Engine Keeahond Call afl 5. v• St am t 642-3821 Out.call Massage e ers. eng pain ers, lOAM-2AM 731_5448 bl.((ers Ii polishers, up. FOUND small blk rem holtlt ery shampooers, Cocker mix Burke ,tr'IOMll Sttvlu1 5360 check out, pick-up• de· School area. Very Sweet ••••••••••••••••••••••• livery. Apply at 9fi8.-088S Local resident seeks ap. 30l58 Harbor 81, CM pointments all personal _ M!H030 Found .small blk Do& aide. driver, romp, •AUT0¥0TJVE• w/bm, ~ale. Vic. Slater courier, etc. 673·1134 •BOOK.KEEPER• Im med. Open).ngs Fpr Exterior Carpenters interior Carpenters Touch-Up Grinder Roller Experience Preferred t:qual Oppor Employer I IOOICKHPat t~;ingdale . H .B. •ALSO PBX• · *MASSAGE* Xlnt workiJii cond. co. benef\ts, sal open Vern Full charge. ~ lime. l---------A~an Car Plan. COQ· tact Rlch. Bond. 1$1-8910 FOUND. Bird, Ma~h 5th 642-3001 OUTCALL MASSAGE Tndtr Chevrolet. 215 So. IOOORPY. *638 ng3.4* Euclid, Anah, A.sk for "U MaxiM 991·3100. FouM: FUll charge for b\isy con• MALE KEESHOND Socid Clubt 5400 AUTOMOTIVE slructlon co. lo C.M. 892·6859 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IOOICkllP£a ~ply, statJn1 e4ucaUon, ----------1 TLR .:...sw·• -eiq>er. "s-.1.,.Yl'equire· -...,.---,.._,,..._ ____ _ Lost Be a co n B a Y * nw; "'" sa * For new ~ar dealersh1p. ment.s lo ad no, '2.5, c /o lf you 're sll)gle and tired M r . M 11 n er, A ti as Dally PUot, PO Bo ... • .,.,,., area, white hair fem call· r th b A......., o e arHenes,wecan Chrysler Plymouth, CoslaMesa,Cal262S gray patches & tail. Call show you a way lo meel 546-1934 ---------1 671J..S9Sf or 7S9-0928 attractive & ad.Ive slngle1----------1 people of all ages fast. l•--------i Lost! Jacket, bm suede loot, fleece linina. Harbor Bl. CM 548-- We've got the annrer ... at Weovtew. 99'1·5400 I phone nee Apply . Universal Protection Service, 1226 W. 5th St. Santa Ana. Interviews M·F 10 :30am-noon & ---------1 1:30-4:30pm. Assemblers Inventory Packagers Collaters lnsDecfors Day-\veek-Month Or Longer lt ·s Your Decision YOUDON'l..PAY WI PAY YOU! Call Or Come Jn Today !ELL~ se:.Rv1ces 833·1441 Legal secretary. 3 day:. week. excellent skills. & • exp. on mag card I necessary 847 ·6041 --I Le-C)Cll Secr•tary for Lag. Hills ofc Must . have probate exper. Call' • S&S-2510. LEGAL SECRET AltY Intelligent. Train as..1 para-legal. Gen'I skills, ' nolltigalion. 752 1211 ---- Liquor Clerk, full & part time. Call before 6P Al 536-5160 HB area MACHINIST 1·---... -----1 Progressive injection mold making co. has re· Inspection INSPECTOR TRAINEES located lo H.B. & needs Machinist-s & EU M ~ Operators, Min 5 yrs ex· per. XJnt wages & over lime. Profit sharing & other benelits. SdlMll Corp. f7 I 4>1fl-66J I lmmeeiate openings now ~~M~A~I~D~S~W~A~NT~E~D~~" exist in our manufactur-. f ·u r in ct" Don Quixote Motel mg ac~ ty or spe ion • 2lOONewport Bl. C.M trainees to inspect print- '' ed circwt boards andt---------· components. Requires MAINT&fAMCE ~ minimum 6 months ex MECH a ""'C perience w 1th pr1aled , "'':"" ,>• circuit boards, coo\¢· lst Shirt; Req • ex~r. ' nents,. ~ knowJed.le of mainta1rung & rcpalnng color codes and soldering Pll'Cd ... tloa m,chioery • hn' h J -~\}QIOWledc• <>f 10~ tee. _ 1ques. On·l e· o dustiiatelectrkity. trauung avall•ble. ~AMp<)-MFG. Pertee offers lhe follow-'1401 Clay St, H.B. Ing benefits: Company ~W. al Beach &c So. paid medical, dental. ofOarlleld) long-term disability and EquaJ,Oppor ~mployer life l•aurance: 91h~~~~~~~~~~ holidays per year. l Christmas week stwt 1be fut.est draw 111 lhe dotvn-pald 12 personal West. . .a Dally Pilot leave days' per year and Classified Ad. 642-5678. tnodern, carpeted air· I conditioned facilities. · ...,. THI PCC DAILY PILOT BU$1MESS .;~~i. SYSTEMS SllVICE 11oa1 Von Karman ~ta Ana, Callfornla DlllCTOIY For l\esult Service Call 642·5671 .... )22 Grantl Canyon National Park Locl9e1 ' R.N.' s and l. V.N.' s CAREER OPPORTUNITIES at ,.~ALAMITOS t;ENERAL HOSPIT Al • a 113 bed acute general hosottal • 24 ~EA with Ptrvllcttft °" ~ • • ~ptO'lad CE PfOVtder f~ RNS. LVNS •· contlnuout lnMMcie Ectuoetton • ~ .Qllltet for ttud•nt• from USC. CSUCA CSUt.8, OCC. CYPRESS J.C. • fulty llCCndlted bY JCAH, member of atA. UHA. HololtaJ c<>unclt or 8ottt'-" Ce11tqrn11 17111( ......... t I Loe Al•e "°" Cllf. tono IZIJI lt .. 1311C714t11'""400 I . 9Y~TEC An AmnnaUve Action Equal ()ppor Employer • h Bullocka cust. Couches, s· $4.S, 7' SSS. Square Tbl, SS. Parsons Tbl. $10. Wall Lamp, $20. HO Track & pwr pack. $6. 552· 7829 •GIGANTIC LIDO ISLI IOYSCOUT RUMMAGE SALi S.tl.Sun, Matth 19/%0 9;30AM toSpm. PM. TreNures & Junk from • all over tbe Newpo~ area. 1.Jdo l•le Clubhouse 701 Vla l.Jdo Soud .. . . __ .. .. f .. 1 1 .. 10% ·NT DURING MARCH f Cash in And Save on Spring Cleaning With a Daily Pilot MARCH SPECIAi, Applies ANTIQUES APPLIANCES AUTOS BICYCLES BOATS CAMERAS Bank.Americard OR Maeter Charge • DO Jir NOW! In The Following FURNITURE GARAGE SALES HOUSEHOLD GOODS JEWELRY MACHINERY MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS ~ '--- Categories MOTORCYCLES OFFICE EQUIPMENT Pt ANOS & ORGANS SEWING MACHINES SPORT I NG GOODS SWAPS --~ ------ 1974 DODGE VAN 318 Eneine. 311,000 miles. PIS. P/B. AM/J'lf Tape, CB, &.aper ~.High back aeat.s, New paint, F1ares and Mags. Sbarp Van! Call 642·9006 or S48-4987 GREG WE BUY Cl.UNCA"S A11UCkS CONND.l Cll£YIOLET u :&9Zl Harbor B&..S.. 008TAMISA 14'-1200 ,. I• TOP DOU.AR rAID FOR CL~ ~-; .. ~ 1q~ ·11•M•tll1V(; I t4 .... '•"I •• , tjf ACP• ,,.). ' '•4 1 ' ·~ I '.,s •l:1 lhl'ORT CARS ~MODB.S WI NEID CLIAM USEDC•RS HOW CA.UPA,,Y DO YOU mira cle m a zda ..._ 'I • ' • WANT TO BUY A 12 Qapn w/aJr & !ltereo. Call 61~·3047 wknds. Colla Mne 645.5700 eves. ,1-~--~~- 9716 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SM'73. Cleanest SM ln So. Cahf. gokf/aJI pwr /auto. Like new ap_,pearance & mechanically. S9800. Ong. ownr 752-l800 days, ~..45Q2 Eves/weknds Dohull 9720 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 197SMAZDA RX4WAGOH One owner·hnmaculate lhruoul • Automatic, radio & air cond <~NONI Check this pneeiu ONLY $2975 1974MA%DA RX4WAGOH 4 speed. radio & air cond Im maculale thruout' C873KXZ>. iO 914 Porsche. App grp AM /FM. 13400 Eves S86-68lll '71 Porsche 914. Gd cond. must sell , bst orr. ~-9979 all 6 or wltnds. '75 POISCHE 9 11 S 5tlpd. Air. Elec sunroor. Recaro seats. Turbo wbeel. Roes Alarm. 7" ractory alloys. CN .J6's Stereo Cas~ette. Anodized trim. and more. It's Blac k on Black. and MINT! A spt>ctacular Ca r f581NJA > Crevier 835.3171 1'76TOYOTA C090U.A WA90M HH low. low mllH Equlpp~d •llh automatlt. r•dlo. air rond. &t nnaahed w !Wood •r•in aµpl1qut• <Zl7P1JNI MOWS347S 1976TOYOTA COllOLLA F.quipped w automallt. radio & air cond. Low .low miles (617PDJ> ONLY $3375 1975TOYOTA COROLLA WA~H 4 speed. AM /FM. air cond .• wood grain appl.1 - q u e & low miles <230NDM>. HOW$3075 1975TOYOTA COltOLLA SEDAM '11 VOLVOs Buy or Lease •MIWCOLORJ •MIW MODll.S Huge savings on all re· maln1na new 7h & Demos in stotk. MAJtC'i>UtS VOLVO MISSION VIEJO lll-2810 495.1110 ORAHGICOU~ VOLVO EXCLUSIVELY VOLVO Largest Volvo Dealer Jn Orange County! BUVorLEASE DIRECT ~~ 2025 S. Manchester Anaheim 750-201.1 ':74 llarir IV. low 'a.IQllM_.le mil cond. J\&JJJ ..,... "' n 15 bklud meon rf. ht P'1. oaa.. .a. tta.rd to .. -····-•-•••••••• _111_·311_1A______ ftl>d. Xlnt CODd. Swt.,.f ()tJcllity .ind Price C,u.arante~d 0LL1\ln).! Spc<1.1ll\h P1d<'rrcu R.11n l .1r ;jC\I 5cf{'( I 1011 .. 1 Nl·w & Uwu (.1cJ1llJC\ 111 Or .11111,l' Cm1n1v 01w11 ~und,1y udill.ic Mdstcr Dedier 2600 H irbnr Blvu Cou.i Mn.1 s~u •J 1 oo C..••• t9l2 but'keb,, ~ &?llOO. --·•••••••••••••••• Ai.It f«Churk. SSl-8()80 '74Corvftte. Bm AM 1FM T·Too. Air. 37 .000 ml '730ktlCut.l ... Suprt'me rz .100 aft &pm 840-5667 12400 Xlnt cond On~ • owoer. ~,, 0$72 or tf14 Corvette 454 En1+ Ml-7678ask for Judy auto. rwty eqwp'd Im· 99§7 •••••••••••••••••••••• tntc "500. Lv ms1 al 960-2467 ---------'74 Pinto. xlnl cond, lo ~ Corvette. Wht w /blk mllea&t'. 12100 Jeather Int 4spd. all 968-2187 possfble ~lras 1ncl'd.•--------- ~6or~·20e2 ~~uirewagon. air, AM. eo.g.-99Jl re;"' ~8$1600/Besl of. . ............ ·········· ·---------'81 eo.i,ar. Full power. 'T3 Plnto. >.lnl cond S1750. air. fact Mags, dean, l ownt>r 642 167~ or SU~. 494·2130 642-7178 , _____________ _ 88 Cougar. H IH. air, '71 Pinto. runl> good. nds 62,000 m1. $895 842 6819 patnl & body work $650. dys. ~-7313 t'VS wknds. 499-1.atO. 499-4774 Dodge 9935 tm RUNABOUT. 4 spd, Nabers •••••••••'"••••••••••••• good cond. St ,4SO. '74 DODGE VAN ' iM)S-1438 540-5630 DRIVEA LITTLE •.• SAVE A LOT NOWS2275 1.973914 2 OL1lre. alrcond. ~/FM ca!'>s $4900 2 Or Deluxe Model 4 s peed. A M 1FM sll'rl·O w tape. vinyl ro<1f & lo" miles <SJJM MK 1 Cdlla• C Cust.om mtenor & palnt. ~,;;;;;;~;;----9-9-6-0-AM tFM 8·track. High rr '71 VOLVO WAGON G-:t back seats Mags.••••••••••••••••••••••• tond Uayll f2l31232·Z321. _ _ _ ___ Cu:Jtom body work '74 PLYMOUTH 1011\~0\ & SO\ • 'IN( 'JIN· '.1ERCUfl'I' SHOP&COMPARE BARWICK DATSUN San Juan Capistrano 131-1375 493-3375 · M l\R Q .UIS. MOTORS ~4537 496-9789 ONLY $2375 t>vcl> -t!M-2787 '7S El Dorado. 1.>eaut1ful 38.000 miles. Cor a gn:at s~tion wagons. Four to Xlot cond Load~d deal' Call c~ from . Matntamed 26a6HMIOR ILVO. .. )fSH011# '\Pf,Uhlltt P .. 1"11" \,,,o .... 1r1flw)' A~•·•rl•·' Ml~\ION Vlt JU dJl·J~oO 49!>-IJIC) Porsche 9l2. 1968. Cd rond. average pnce Pvt pty 67.3·5802 ·n l64E. 6 ryl . .auto. drk Cbense Fire Mist paint S48-4987 or~0006 by' the Dally l,'tlol fleet gm w it.an lcath. IS.000 wtwht vm roof L(>aded Ask for Greg garage sta(f. Priced C~TA MfjA WE NEID YOUR USEDCAlt. NEWPORf DATSUN '57 Porsche. reblt C'ng. many xtras. 1mmac. ~.000. 962-2289 1973 TOY OT A CORONA SEDAN nu. Fully eq\Jap. 168()(). w/lwcuries Pncedbelow 197400--EV"'.... right rrom Sl.995 to 644-M78or640-9282 .,_ ~ • ____ blue book for fast sale. 318 Ena•ne. 36,000 miles S:Z.396. See in Dally Pilot SPECIALS '72 Mazda Sta wagon Im 8210 4 Door. 4 speed, maccond. P.P ~~l~~ati1c.;, ~~~ u~ a ~1~ ·ss Pl800 w air. gd cond. S7000 Pvt ply Wkdys PIS. p/e: AM IFM Tape. parkmg lot, 330 West Bay lhruout• (2S4HSOI lo m1 1714 J 894· 1321 544-8392. aft ti & wknds CB. Super lntenor. High St. Costa Mesa, or call ext 103. 493·~10 ---back seal!. New ~amt. 642·4321 for more in· radio. COOlPKE> Sl.225 MB-0712 '73 914 2.0 Appr Grp. ONLY $1975 formation. Ask for Rick AM /FM tape. JSM. xlnt Volvo '68. Creal transp '76 F'leetwood Brm. All F\ares and Mags. harp or Oscar in the fleet NOW TOP SPAID. NOWSZ795 888 DOVE STREET Near MacArthur &Jamboree Roads 833·' 300 u---~ •-9740 concf. S5000. 642· lSSS car. s:iOO/blst ofr. 81~7g() Cad opUons. beaut <'ond. Van' Call 642·9006 or garage. ___. ._. 1971 TOYOTA or..,c.9648 must!'>ee. 963_6156 S48-4987GREG ~__..;:;._.._. __ ._._ ••••••••• .. ••••••••••••Rois Royce 9756 CELICA 0 "' C r-a '68 Plymouth l''ury 111 tn CALL GORDON COSTA MESA AMC-JEEP ~HARBOR BLVD COSTA MESA Lease ••••••••••••••••••••••• "75 Volvo 164E Copper. Cad-'74 Cpe ~ Vllle, It HAR.., Sf xlnt cond. S900. Or:' ........,w-U·-..1 •lDEAURINU.S.A. auto. AM 11''M tape. gm. whl cab lop. lthr. ~~· .. g~co~d7~~!'! ~4820 549-8023 1972 Datsun 1200 2 dr automatic. AM t FM radio. $350 and lake over payments Call 548· 7064 between noon and five .._ ~ 833·1845 eve. 7$2·5444 !llereo wtta~ & more. .....,....,...,Qf'v............, OVER I 00 ~ ROY days 22.00o m1. !6.1.'iO Pvt Pty Ford 9940 1970 DUSTER. out~land· Ml!JllCEDES CARVER 63t 1133 mg cond1t1on '950 !l;ft Autos, Used •••••• ••• •• •• • • • •• • •• •• 6444589 Ott DISPLAY ROUS-ROYCE ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·73 FLEET llrou g. '75 Granada 4dr. air. House f I rt '*'-"'llorH 990 I Loaded. rull pow~r. $3495 or o ffer ore POfltiac 9965 UTHOORmpo 1 \"----=~' e.•e1i ••••••••••••••••••••••• white. blk top. green ml 523.2033, Eve. 751·4303 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Need '73 or newer El A IZ~() 52 ooo miles $4450 pvt -------Fireh1rd '72. Formula 400, C.ammo Low ml , good ·y MERCEDES DEALER CLOSlOSUttOAYS • CalJ642·0795 • · · '76GranTonno. air.PS. loaded <'lean yellow pm cond. P.P. 646-4011 ~-TOPf tlli& IERt' Top 6862 Manchestl'r. Subaru ~~1~--- -P tB Sharp! $3.950 Pvt S2800 96J 235;i ' ' ---<X'eus irs. as Buen<1Park '7fl El Dorado. w 1or pt.y !>31·9589 - -.... -.,-....d dollarn."1dfor1m1>0rts 523-7250 ••••••••••••••••••••••• T..J,_., -9767 _._ • ..,..... '"" ,,.. n....,..., without c;ir phone. xlnt '7 M 11 A C ~.,..,,u. -'76 F1reb1rd E.'>pnl Im ••••••••••••••••••••••• COST.A MESA On the Santa Ana Fwy 80 Used & Mew •••••••••~••••••••••••• cond Best offrr 642·0402 4 usl · I -·"" mac AM FM K trk. air. Audi 9707 DATSUN ·oo GTii Rblt motor. nl•w --'70 Ranchero. A IC $!795 Io m 1 • ~ M us t <; c 11 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '74·450SL. Sl3.800 xlnt \.Sl-~lWOoo trans mission & l In·~ '73 Cpe DeVlllt· Many Blh lo m i. 675·7285 sseoo /of r . s 46.; 826. '75 Audi 1001.S. 4 dr. 4 spd. 2845 Harbor Blvd. cond 838·7445 aft 6PM or ~ S2000 Ph 631 3192 x l r as. x I nt r on d ~ xlnt l'Ofld. 16.000 ma. 1 Costa Mesa_ M0-6410 81J8.5SSI days S. tlJtSUIAIU' '\ s.1700tbst oCr 835 1100 72 Station Wagon. new -------· _ Ow B $4200 -11~1 "°""~ 1970 Spttfm• Radwls. Days valves. tires. looks & '76Flrebird &pril. while, ner. rown. Datsun ·72 gn;en Stn '63 MB 220. Wood Int. red /IMP. i.terro. nu top, xlnt SI 250 , - --run.'\ godlll S1495 642·2072 A 1c. p /S. p B. P •W. 67S.9"44 _ --Wl{n. Roofrack, special leather upholstery, gd 511SSo.~ firm 497.3195 * $499 & U * ·m COUPE DI? Ville. all Uneoln 9945 AM t FM stereo, Hallyc ;4 lOOLS Lo mi. 4 spd, whls $1650.499-4070 • cond.34mpg Sl800orbsl u1111u.0H1 i11 41u1.1111 --"~~c 9905 pwr. in lip-lop cond. ••••••••••••••••••••••• whls. 10.900 m1. lk new. AM t FM. xlnt cond •. 741,,260z• olr 499-3285 Toyota 9765 l970TnumphGT6+ ,_. $22.00 548-2687 ___ . , p P~ettmg&•\11lc ~ $3600. 496-822.8 U blue. maae.. air. lo ml. '68""" SE. rebll eng, full ••••••••••••••••••••••• S990 640-7062 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,.._ -9917 76 Mark IV Cont loaded over wholes a le hi uc -"""' --'7S M tad PS/PB · 4 ""9mllro w/xlras. vin top + sun Wkd 75? 7601 BMW 9712 MustseUMSOS.Harry power, a ir, & in1ect 'JJ -•L. 977 · 8 or ,air. ••••••••••••••••••••••• root Musl see toapprcc ays. ~ or ~ 920 Vu.uWOCJ"' 0 dr. vnyl lop, AM 1FM • S p B · r wknds 559-480R ••••••••••••••••••••••• 58&_1 __ 2_52~ 962AM 1F6M. ''ery cln ••••••••••••••••••••••• cass.xlntcond.963.1973 72 Camaro. P / •. I . Pvtowner.673·7825at.5 n "'OZ d 4 207 auto. 350. air. tap<:. '6.SLe Mans.Goodlran:.p "".1mmaccon.air --NEW•USED mags.631·2852.$2795 ·71 Mark Ill Fully $400 spd. new lir!'~· <'all oft s '7S.240D Mff'Ce•s TOYOTAs vw·s 197 4 AMC equipped. Vl•ry sharp l>i5-lfi31 SADDLEBACK ·BMW S3650 968 zs,6 .. _ •• 500 CheYrolet 9920 $3300. Ph 839·1068 _ _ _ - - - --a. -· HORNET ••••••••••••••••••••••• . --'W'L.-...t....-A..:rc1 9910 '67 Oa~un 510, xlnl cond Call838·l086 ...... or Lease 0¥et' 125 Mo•endc 9947 ,.._...._ I E --r Sportabout s tation '71 Monte Carlo. Xlnt ••••••••••••••••••••••• C t•an. new tircK ng '70 280 SL cge Auto IM STOCK wagons Three to choose r on d . 0 r i '' own r •. •••••••••••••••.••••••• ·on 4 DR. T·Bird 60K orl" COMllH&SH THI ALL HEW 6lOCSiNOW! lik<'oewm5 89'7·628.5 M . . *uEWCOLORS C • "' 7c "'la erl"k "Ir pwr "" ,... ---AM t F ra 10. n&w " Hcrdtofiftd rom Air conditioning. $17501ofr. 546·9222 or ., " v " · u • miles. full power. la~ ·m Datsun 5104-dr wagon. MlcheUns. both tops, xlnt •MEW MODELS ,_.. rooC rack. power steer· 497·~1 stecnng. brks, showrm deck. new urcs. SJ .000 Needs work cond Sll,500 Ph · ~ 1 · mg. econom1cal 258 CID ,..._,•-9925 cond$2700 Tl'l842·8272_ Call Tl•d · 644-!117~ or $JOO ~7004 8733301 HugeSavlngsonALLre-..-..au 6 cychnder l•ng1nl!s ._...,soc-r '7 M k S k R 11 6iSIS8.S maining new 76s & WI I..,.... Mainta1ne<I by the Daily ••••••••••••••••••••••• 0 avenc . lie . I • ' ---- '73Mercedes Benz 280SE Demos (h,¥r'/""·J·r Pilot fleet garage stacr. ·m T & C Wagon. 53,000 A1C.968Gd f,,°.,~drrS-0. ong V• 9974 • '74260-Z 4.5 Xlnt'cond. Midnight TbeBetterBargaln Priced right at $1,79~. m.i.body1eng.tlresgood. own ......., ••••••••••••••••••••••• SADDLSACK V A1LEY IMPORTS lll-2040 495.4949 4 spd, AJr. AM /FM. Alloy .l>lue. white leath all OP· MAICl)UIS TOY OT A 7900 Westmlnst9f Blvd. Sl.895 and Sl.995. See m $700 642-1tl71 Met-cwy 995«1 '71 Chevy Vt'J(a wa.ion. 1 wheels. new radials. lo 'lions. ~.000 mt Serv by MISSION VIEJO Westmlnit.r 893·7551 Daily Pilot parking lot. Comtt 9927 ••••••••••••••••••••••• O\o\11er. R&H. A/C Make CREVIER miles. u -t silver ~1th ~-ell~. 9503. Sl0.900 Cirm -831-2880 ... 9.,1210 YW B I d :m West Bay St Colta G ofrer 581 C•>'>C art 6pm ""' .. ,,...., .,..., .. .,. 1973 u.~. x nt con . M 11 642 4321 f ••••••••••••••••••••••• '70 rande. air. stereo. · '""" _ ~~:ei~~:f~:~Kt:f~ -:6aM12soses..i-Bii =~~~· $1200 Aftspm ~~}rrgJo:~~~r"in ~!: ·s:1~~~~~1~c~·~~~· ~~-.a~~~l~f .apprec ~~roATM~~~~~~~p ~~· $ ---Air window hfts, radio. .71 e·ug, New motor. fleet garage. $125 548-4~ .63 Merc. PS. PB. _ing! Bsltofr 642-9265 I ST "HOAOWAY Rot 9725 Mint cond 79,500 ml'<; trans. Ures & paint Bel· . ... • ..._ U d automatic. Clean. ..t.....£--U _ ... SAMTA AMA ••••••••••••••••••••••• '6500 C.116'&4·5291 terthan nu. $1600/bst ofr. 6S Rambler Claas1c 2 Dr. ~•· 1e • $32S 642.9731 ~. lwv 835·3171 73FIATl21SL .72 MB ~E .i~. 4~ ~MO Muslsee.645·9151 ~-';,~~·222.ong mi.••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• .. THI UlTIMAll 01llVINO MACHIH1! New Engine onl) ll.000 Sedan, .-.Jnl <'Ond. $6800. ..,..,, """°"""" *USED IMW'1• rrule5. New carpet & in· &44 ~ HASSLI '64 BAJA Dug. Iota or '76 H 4 d S '70.0CSA S/R 746LWB terior Fiare<I whffl!'> & -DIALER xtras 2 cng's ~ or ornet r. port- '7S5JOIA HKWT rl'.ir :.potler ~peoal mag MGI 9744 bestofr. 548·3976 ~~~21 ~~a~2lJ~~~'i!~~ '73Bavan11S1R!IOOLVY wht.'\'I!. Car'" ('XC'l•llcnt ••••••••••••••••••••••• IUY Gas Saver • 7l Super lk·~ aft6PM. '74 2002 4spd l8lLWB «>nd1l1011 l'Jll M:; iMl8 OR I ..., U>{\ G-··· .. ,. d ~; ~""" vvu .... on · Autos, New 910 ~~~~ or54ll..i~1tn-d ' • .· LIASE ---------•••••••••••••••••••••• ,,._,, 'i6 IJtS ~ dr. 5 ~pd. drk OR4MGE COUHTY'S hllJ(', cocoa mats. stereo NEW '77 RABllT ••mu OLDEST Under warranty.1mmac *I 00/o Discount• • Must sell' $3550. 968-6384 ~ ""''" fllll• eou..w•"o. 111<u • ''MOO>•AJ • 1' H\90 "'(\' Oft all moc:t.iS 71 Fiat fl5(l Gd m1 . 7 7 MG B s Free V~1s i6 rebltt•ngml' Syr 50.000 m1 ext warr __ BU I 1;1 S700 646-1201 with "T7 MG B purchase i3 Corolla 4 spd air low c SH .,._, r~ 1 _ Choose one of our 27 ml l ' ' ' A oa.aea-acrvJce·.....,-asing Fiat '76 124 Spyder A 1C. Le4M!/8uy plan1. · own~·3098 Row Ccrver,lllC. AM /FM st ca!os • lug. rk.. Pana Oepl Qpen Sat -----•--------- Rtllll ~ce . BMW rly whls S4J. 7142 • 7 6 MG 8 R d t '70 Toyota Corona 4dr. '68 vw Van. rebll eng. no TO 1.540Jamboree • oa s er. auto. oew mtr. trans. & m1J I · d k Newport Beach ~ 69 ~ Spyder. Eoglne AM1FMater .• Tapedeck. Radials. SlSOO'bst ofr. es. cean ins1 e, as · ---------• xlnt, nds aome lnlr work. Only 8300 ml •· Sharp & ...... "'"l Ing Sl.300. will take best YOU I 'TS Bavaria, 34,000 nil, llOO 494-5849 better than new m200 _v•_~ air. $49-0081aft6PM !'~.':1r~j~1.r·~;'~~~: '75124SportCoupe.Sspd. •2650.aft6pm. 72 ~ eoron:M~t~ '70 VW. reblt e ngine. 1S2.(12TT ' lvorywhile.immac.On iOMGB/GT Completely 8i:d_0 s{;;'A.skforCon· AM t FM stereo tape & N -ly 19.000 m1 . 4 spkr overhauled eng. new :-Ue ~$-8l2idys 67~25 7dSec9937k. Private Party. I 8W '76 5301 stereo. $4100 675 6497 clutch, ((d body S:Z700 · • _I·_______ FIAT TOOi 4 spd, s¥f\l1, air. PS, al AM'soreves IM&-7233,545 3M7 evs. l9lll Dug. 'Auto trans. Xlnt loy whls. AM·FM 11tr. Pl~ '71 I.a. Spyder .• 75 Eng. Opet 9746 "70 Corona Sedan. 4 Spd. cond. Clean in/out. Runs $800 sAll1~.tifandl~uch.h mo~h· Newbrks AM /FM very ••••••••••••••••••••••• id cond. Pvt ply great497·3195. ...... u u .. 1te wit • • '970/bst. Ph 968--0701 ------navy Interior! Excep· gd cond. Sl800 642·1858 '70 VW Pop top camper. uonal cood. Only S999S Hoftda 9727 Forei Aldl Westphalia Xlnl cond. 1602PHM\ Crevit>r ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4JI' • Many xU:as. Must sell $av1•ng$ ~3171 Brand N•w ,77 8 ·~ 675-3196. ___ _ HONDACars ~ ftYl90ll '74THIHG FlatMototCo. '762002 fspd. Factory Sunrf. 8lauPunkt Stereo. Pin stripes and mot'e! OnJy Ulm mJ. Thi.a beautiful car la llke new tbruoul. Only S769S (334l>CW > O-.vier'·83S-3l7l MANY TOU IUY 2'M. SLSOO. 631-0913 will 9'v• Toet.oow"'°"'! NIW '68 VW, automatic, good '400 CH,.,..001 cond. $775 Or offer. UNIVERSITY NEED $500 As&O'wAI MNIM2at\2PM. .._.a..c:'.'-oMc ASHTODAY '6595 ~~r~~~;o~:!: CASHBACK 712002 Trwb ::!re~~ a~ ~~ .., llO _..,,... radio. IUIOO. 96M818 ta pd, 8eb.r air, stereo •Harbor Blvd. • Bauer Moten "'111 atv. 19«AL mA1ll "12 VW Bus. lllnl run ·a unette -.nd more Costa Mesa 540-9840 1ou a check for $500 cond. 8 Trk FM 1t.ereo. Cbo«>lale brown with "7• Ch1c auto oew tires CASH! ~ ae1mloo: 175-180'7orW-71JSI fawn interior. OnJy has br ·M F ' choice of colon· Upeeda ~000 miles! FantutJc 0 · A / M cusette & a utomatlc1: air 12 Sqbk. reblt eng. aood condition! Onl1 $6895 ~~~f ~~~[)ya condltlonln1. All /FM bod)'/lntl run• grHt <1Z8NLC) Crevier • radio. radial W/lfw Ura ·-------· ll895.M22072 D-1111 JGgllCr 9730 are all available. 74 2002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• FOR c~• ... 11 Sqt>a:. ret>lt eng. w ~ '74 J A C U A R V 1 2 ~' c f Ad la.6" mJ. looks ~ runs aood. 4 1pd. AM /FM 1tereo Road.ster Raro Collee DITMLS. CALL or NtdOR SlG0.84$-13'4 ca.u~tt.. radlala. Pin t.or'a Car MUAt eac now UI TODAYlll 11'.at I Strtpeaandmiachmor~· $11 ,000 (HILQP) Ml Oriiinal Black finish w I l3H:3laor'7~ Dally Pilot sra1 interior Extremely 1--------- • b a r p • on I Y S 5 8 95 '58 Jaiuar S.4 Sein Compl BAUER flUMBT> C r evJ.r resc.oNd a. reblt. M1&.1t MOTORS AD-VISOR m.ain aee. M.000 MMUS 2tm HAR.BOit 8LV1>. Beet 1•-isoo around I Jatuar, ~ 4AI0.~.1!~· OOITA Ill&\ 642·5878 t,~:a=-1.r-~Sedan z.,.r-ll2Munrm. 9794100 '87 VW. Make ofr Not =~•II alter s. Want to b\q '73· "JS con· vtrt. wtU pay up to low blue.boolc+SIOO 813-1'7>1 Dick MlllN Flot wlll Match It °" any ftew 76 RAT lll In~ CHOOSE FROM ORANGE COUH'Tl'S LARGEST SWCTIOH MOO CAIN IWTI er DlfCOUIT M _, PW'11FIAT 121,ll/e DICK MILLER MOTORS F I I ·/A I T This is the 1st"'~e 'SiiOuld loOk ~a used car. .. · 1972 FOii> lt75FORD TCMllMO 4 Da. SIDAM PMIO RUMAIOUT va ·~ ... OOft<lo\q\"'9 ' -... _lie ---'tlW - -~1.-rTGI _... ,_vi-'"""' .... _ f9'Ml,..,., 51295 j 52375 lt740LDS 1971 CHEVY CUTUSS COWi 'la TOM rtCIUP ve ... -liMll ., -c.-.,""'°° -a....u•"" IUlt)oNllc *" ., Cl<J'l<l nl(I'() -----"""' rod ' • .., "°'° -·--"O f~I _,~..., s2475 ~ s2795 t'71FORD 1976 FORD ...n.u. COUN MAvatea COUfl "'~--~--• ""' WIOf'WllO, ""' -OOfld --•'•"°' !1!9'1 ..._, .. I ~ _....,... __ , __ 1101....0 ' I • ~ •2111 ~ 53188 " ..ii lf7'CMIYam ftnflOttD ComlceA Toa.oW~eOM 1111--.. ........ ____ "' •iltOolNfl& ~ -..... Olloo & --W'tl'tr ... ----... _, I I 000 ..... lllCHCllJ _......,. '•1l'VX1 '5199 .~ •1495 I I 1 I I i. I I - . . .. . -.- . . .. . 'f TOYOTA I • . . THIS IS THE BIGGEST . SALE OF EARLE •E SAYS; THE YEAR ••• DON(I MISS 111 DURING THIS GIGANTIC SALE FREE HUGE SELECTION ••• ALL MODELS ••• ALL COLORS!!! SAYE 5169000 ~ROM WINDOW STICKER ' FACTORY DEMO '76 MARK II +DOOR 54368 MX 13-026279 UNDER 8500 MILES FACTORY AIR·AUTOWA TIC· TA" DfCK.rc>WER STEERIMG-UDIAL TIRES . SERVICE OPEN 6DAYS A WEEK!! . ~BANK ·:~:F.fNANCIHG O.A.C. . 2 Y!AR or J4;000 MILE SERVICE POLICY AYAILAIUOM MOST USB> CUS -' .. ,,. ..... ...._. • • I •.....•. .. ' Linda Dunn dances In clothing her great11ranclmother may have •orn to the fiesta on Saint Joseph'• Day In San Juan Capistrano · San Juan Capistrano Mission Heritage Retold By CHERYL ROMO Of '"" O.t1ly l'tle4 Still! He wore a coarse, gray Fran- ciscan robe, belted al the waist with a knotted rope. Ills feel wer~eigbt· ed with heavy crude sandals and be wore a wide-brimmed bat to protect him from lhe California sun. tte worked hard tn Ulose early days more than two hundred yean ago. He bad come to lhis valley ol trees, water and grapevines with his friend and fellow Franciscan, Father Junipero Serra, to found a new church . . Mission San Juan Capistrano. Father Lasuen was a patient man -be had to be. For he alone had the task of teaching lhe Indians bow to build and to farm, he alone wu to educate these friendly people. Today, Father Martin, a Diocesan priest, ls lhe head or lhe historic mis· slon. He wears a black, semi-Jesuit cassock, and his garment, like Father Lasuen 's dat~s back more than two centuries. But unlike Father Lasuen his band! are smooth. He speaks with great pride '' the heritage or the mission. Father Martin walks among the bloominl summer roses as tame, white pigeons cluster about his feet. He stops near the fountain In the serene, old courtyard and reminisces about bis dozen years In San Juan. "Right there," he says. "Right there is where we will have the danc· ing on Saint Joseph's Day. There will be mariachi music and Indian and Mexican folk dancing in honor or the new lrlng and queen.·· He ls talking about the annual fesUval to be held Saturday and Sun· day to honor Saint Joseph and to herald ta.. return or the swallows. It's a l8Y fiesta wher e descendants of the first settlers and In'dians don traditicmal costumes. It's an opportunity for the children of the mission school to share their folltdancing, and for some, like eleht-year-old Fred Garcia and seven-year-old Matt BJ!lardes, il is a time to proudly wear the costumes of their grandparents and their parents before them. For Uoda Dunn, a ninth genera- tl on descendant of Don Jose Sepulveda and a former -.Siss San Juan Capistrano, it is but another op- porttinity to bring her and her family closer to this mission town. ·When the mariachis begin to play, when the old women proudly don their heirloom tortoise shell pinetas and mantillu and combs, when the miasloa bells begin to ring . . . then once qain, ~le will be remlnded of the Franciscans in their rough robes whose mottos was: ••to work la to pray ... . . . . . . . . , ' t t•-••l••...._t ..-..-••••• t I cp.4 #4¥¥4$0 «! *+'.ffit "'"; ' Coast MerchQnts Offer Fas.hic>rl· AdviC&· • f For centuries, Orange Coast families have beeo trying to f!J.ur.e . out what to wear a~spring ap- proaches. '.l'wo hundred years ago, the founding fatheruu the San Juan ~-Otrplatrarnr MlssfOn followed the rieorous tndltton,of church dress. Parishioners obeyed tcaditions of their own -but today the Orange Ooast ls one of lhe few places wtlcre it'adlfficulttobeunderdressed. To guide the whole family to a clean, simple look for California· style living, Orange Coast merchants offer ideas for your perusal in this issue of Orange Coun- ty Living. If ,YOU1re. interested in an .1asy- care hairstyle, tennis of ,bo&Ung togs, sundresses, material~ ~t.... bridal ensemble..-~~~t . f~a tuxedo, you'll find it her~.'Yoti~ also be guided to where you can purctiase the n"w khaki and madras clo91ing, spring jewelry, what footwear )s "in", what to wear to an ~egant evening party and how to enter your daughter in a beauty pagea11t. There are hints for making Easter basketa and a definition or the "Newport look." We'll even take you back 2.00 hWldred years for a tOOk at the fashion of lhe California mission days. Fo1'tilg Fashions ORANGE COUNT\' Ll\'JN(. r ~ ~\U~\1 [J)ULtID1J Thursday, l'tlarch 17, 1977 Carrying on a tredltlon of two hundred ye~ra are Unde Dunn, Father Martin, Fred Garcia and Mett Belarde• of th• San Juan Caplltral'tO Ml~n School. All wlll be part of Wffkend featlval In San .1u1n Qlplltrano. 2 DAILY PILOT Thursday, March 17, 1977 Steve Konfel of At EeM 8POfta • traditional, madraa-plak:t aport coat, button-down oxford ahlrt, a Tatbott madraa tie and dacron and cotton kettle-doth pent• WESTCUFF PLAZA 17th and Irvine BankAmericard Appropriate for Easter and all year long. .•. this beautiful fresh water PNtl In the shape of a cross with 14K yellow gold lacy frame (Actual size) S480.00 In photograph of Maureen Reagan (shown elsewhere In this section). Platinum. dia'Tlond a cultured pearl nng S2,8!50.00. White gold. diamond and cultured pearl bracelet S255.00. Unlfotm , strands of cultured peat19 from seo.oo. Fancy clasps from $40.00. Newport Beach 71'4-64~~3310 BankAIMricard .Khaki Fashi!>n King For Spring. We~r Herald ~urn of the khaki . • . cloth with colors "bordering on ice or put your money where the khaki ls cream sherbet shad.es-.!J-R'egimen- . . . khaki is king for Spring. tal stri1>e5 and cotton linit shirts will Or something lite that, S2'f the be btglorcasual wear. fashion experts at A\!:ase. E»hlon Blue oxford cloth is the male Island,~ j1e.aeh':" number one choice in shirts along The return fl. the soft. tan cloth the Oraqe Coast, with gingham but- will have 1lD impact In al.molt all ton-downs following with a clos~ ·areas df fashion: men's top.ol-tbe-aeeond. line sportswear, women'• man· The little man in the family will tailored ensembles and children'• w~ar a snialler-sized version or dress and casual garb. mens' fasllions -and he'll continue Al Mayman, At Ease's menswear to wear O.P. shirts and bike shorts, buyer says, "We are seetnc the re-Red Schooner and Surfline togs. turn of the strong, classic look in all Mayman says there is a slight categories. Madras sports c0ats can trend back to skirts for women this be wom with khaki jea111 or conven-spring but predicts man-tailored tionaltrousers.'' 1portscoats and blazers will He says three-piece summer au.ita dominate the fashion scene coupled are "in" as well as shirts in kettle with soft, khaki pants. " Emporium Has New Patio S'1op With latest fashions for the patio, Roger's Gardens is introducing anew patiosboplocatedin the Emporium. According to Catherine Blackbum, manager of the patio shop. Roger's now has two separate locations for its large selection of patio furniture and supplies. The other patio department is still locat- ed in The Gallery. Roger's carries the Tricomlort line which is used predominantly on the French Riviera and Tropttone, Cantin•, Bristol, Granvilla and Brown Jordan. "Roger's has the new and ex- tremely innovative Brown Jordan 'Nomad' folding chair with vinyl coated polyester mesh or polr· suede. intercbangable slings," said Ma. Blackbum. The sev~-acre retail nursery and botanical garden in Newport Beach Is open daily from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. and is located at 2301 San J oaquin Rills Road. h.tlt.on down ginghams 44 fashion Island, newport centef 644-5070 . -·i.-.-~ .. ,._ .... _.y.• ! . Sharon Younger, Patty Coffin and Irma Caprera •how easy-care hairstyles from the Hair Hunter _ Terry Comes ·of Age The rising popularity and wide style selection of terrycloth apparel is showcased at the House of Terry, South Coast Plaza, Costa Mesa. "For over ten years we have of· fered an alternative to the standard fabrics by exposing people to the handsome versatility and styling or terrycloth.'· said owner Bonnie Handler. ''Unfortunately. some people still think of terry only in terms of bathrobes or towels. But terry also comes in knits and velours which of· Daniel Webster: ·fer a high-fashion look for evening or casual wear." Men's fashions include casual wear s uits and Christian Dior coordinated shirts, pants and shorts. Women's wear ranges from hostess gowns to "coverups." House of Terry also has a wide selection of robes for men and women with his and her look-alikes. "Our new spring fashion line of- fers an excellent choice or jumpsuits, swimwear and, of course, gorgeous beach towels," said Ms. Handler. Thursday, March 17, 1971 Shorter Haircuts) Return Steve Blair, manager of Hair Hun· ters of Fashion Island , Newport Beach says there is a trend back to easy-care, short hair for both men and.women. Ulfhe lodlrrlght -now is -naruaJ. Men are going.back to collar-length or s horter styles and women are wearing their hair shorter and curlier to go with the new, feminine· f asbions for Spring," he said. ' "The most popular children's cut ls stW a abort, one-length bob." Each style done at Hair Hunters is individually created for the cuitomer and wine and hors d'oeuvres are served after 6 p.m . The salon ts open from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. seven days a week. For a limited time Hair Hunters ls offerina a "total package" which in· cludea manicure, facial, makeup and hairslyllng for just $60. Call for an appointment at 6«·21St. . . , . .ELEGANCE Jo ·Mercado models •n lrtah llnen knit from Dublin. The three piece ensemble le $250 at Grafton Street In South Coast Plaza, Costa Mesa. DAILY PILOT 3 "fashion(fash'an)n. Something in current style •• !' ... AND THAT WE ARE! Orange ~Television Upstairs Downs~irs Masterpiece Theater MacNeil-Lehrer Wall Street Week Consumer Survival Kit NOVA Film's Flying Ace $81,000 Game Pageant of the Masters Deep North, Deep South UCIForum Disneyland Community Cinco de Mayo Awards Orange County Sumnier Water Polo Championship Concert Spec!al• Tuesday: Phone Forum (Mar. 29) Wednesday: Starboard Thursday: F.Y.I. Friday: Voters' Pipeline .. '. -' • <4 DAILY PILOT * Thursday. March 17, 1977 ~ f FASmON ANNOUNCEMENT The New Spring Collection from New York ha6 been added to '*-'"~ Imported Fa1hion. /or today's woman. llQWntclff Dr., Hewport .._. .)ft':~~ 541-1007 0,... Dt11r ICM·~o-t~D?. Not 'Kookie' i ~ ~lid ValUe' Eyed ,. , At Reinert's in CM Are you interested in fashionable, wearable clothing without "kooki· ness ·'? Do you like to look good without looking like you're going to a costume.,,arty? Reinert's of downtown Costa Mesa offers merchandise that's neither · 'kookie" nor costumish. Operated by Peggy and Jack Reinert for more than '1:1 years, the store offers what the owners call "m erchandise representing solid value and high quality at fair, low prices." Reinert 's features sportswear and accessories for men and women, lingerie, table linens, bathroom ac· cessories and gift items for the home. ~ Formal Fashions The firm 1s centrally localed for the Harbor Arca and has easy aprk· ing and access from the Costa Mesa municipal parking lot al the west end of Magnolia Street, one-half block behind Newport Blvd. "Customers can park just outside our door," says Jack. "They don't have lo walk more than a few steps, instead o( a few hundred yards as they would in a shopping center." Both Reinerts are community- 0\indcd, both have served terms as director s of the Costa Mes a Chamber of Commerce and are pre· sently active members of the Costa Mesa Tomorrow and the Costa Mesa Businessman's Association. Peg is a pas t preside nt of the Newport Harbor Zonta Club. Darrell's DedricU Tux Shop of WeatcUff Plaza, Newport Beach makes It easy for you to look yow belt at formal occasions. Kim Bender of Darrell's 19 seen In a taffy colored St. Regis tux with matching vest • .. HEMPl/ll'I . #S4F11"1•w.ct Newport leodt 644-UJJ Also Alunlwo Seams .. to us evefYC)n0 would 1NOnt this stitched._ and loilored casuol! ti's mode of the softest lf'Ofher under the sun with a bright gold bar lo straddle the vamp l 1 ,o,, • tf'•trf• ta uPC)0419 w., • ., p.,. ... & Bio-' P.,·, ~, I ' ' - . -~ Cotton Returns "The new ultra-feminine fashions make a woman look more ljke a woman," says Al Zekaria, president of Southern California's Windsor Shops. According lo lhe Costa Mesa store manager, Pat Boggs, dresses and flo wer s are v.hat's h appening fashion-wise and skirt length is ••whatever looks best." ''Most women are wearing a graceful , to the knee lengt h. This Spring 90 percent of our line arc sun- d resses, with a summer j~1ckct for the m issy," she· says. She says l bere is a definite trend back to dressc!'. with half the women preferring c·uloltcs and the other half skirts. "There is mo1 <· c·otton being shown now J)<'Oplc an· lirinl!. of polyest er and linen 1~ \l'ry popular," says Ms Boggs. What do wonwn ha' e to look for v. ard to m color~ this spring? Bold, true shades sul·h as rt'<i, white and blue and a pale green described as "darker than mint." Windsor Shops ha\'e been serving Southern California for more than 39 years and are located in Costa Mesa a t the Har bor Shof ping Center, the Laguna Hills Mal , Burbank, Lan- caster and Palmdale. The s tores cater lo "mother , d a u g h ter , gra n dmother and granddaughter'' ·and carry m<>st of the major California sportswear lines, as well as many New York lines. The Costa Mesa shop is open Crom 10 a m . to9 p.m. Monday lb:roogb Fri- day, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sahtn:lays and noon to5p.m.Sundays. Western Town Lives in New Newport Store It's a lrild ol' western town inside a st.ore with a view of the Newport Pier. It bas ils own ja iJ, aalooa. bank, hotel and evett a pull~baiA toilet in the back room. It's &mdance and it b expected t.o be ready for a banrup 1rand opening this Saturday. The ne .. ·~tore is local· ed at 112 Mc Fadden Place, Newport Beach. "We're toinc to carry a lttD-Une of brand.name beachwear and ac~ cetsoriel lib sandals1 beacbchlir'I and •anclaaes," saiq owner 1WJ llovat. Featured names will be OP, Han, Ta and Bolt.. SUcty Fin1en, Che1UIQ.de-fer, L.A.P.D. aed Wings tvlD tf.Oct the raeb with both guys cd gals panta. Sundaoce will also provide leatber· cle~l«'Vices . . ~::.-: = ~:W-0ce~ Pacmc, air--rusbett surfboard • Talued at $300 and ether "linaways." • Another store wU1 be o~ tbe a&mt ~eod at fhe Balboa Pi• at 110 ••Street ln Balboa and the orliUW 'ttore, acrving the ~ f« .,_. lMt ctec.cse, Is at aot Mirlne -..\yf,, BalbDa !stud. I ' ---------------~--...... ----------=--........ ~ ........ ----- !hurtd!y. March 17. 1971 DAIL V PILOT 5 Huntington Center Fashions to Highlight Charity Fair The elahtll Annual Charity Fair sponsored by Huntington Ccnt~r will kick-off with the Longest f'<Ashion Show in Hi.story Friday night. The affair will begin in Huntini?ton Center Mall at 7 p.m . and part1<·i· pant.a are attempting to gain a pl are in the GuiJleas World Book of Records during the 44-hour fashion marathon. More than 100 non-profit, Orange Count) organizations benefil from the Jeari:Y Charity Fair and the Powen JlodeHng Compafl1 will pro- Ylde mocleJs weariag new fashions lol'~. Tbe mannequins will attempt lo shatter the present world record of 30 1lours estab1islled 11r·1'976 in San Bernardino. Saturday, al 3 p.m ., Huntington Beach City Council members will be Bristol Seda . on band in the mall t.o meet com- munltymembers. Participating thls year wUJ be Mayor Hamett Wieder, Norma Gibbs, Ron PaWl\,1on, Ted Bartlett, Al Coen, Ron Sbenkm an and Ricblird Siebert. Amoog the local sponsors of the Charity Falrve: DickWilsoo Ford. Executive Park Travel and Gatewa1 Holiday Tours, Huntington Center Merchants and the Daily Pilot. SPRING' PATIO FASHIONS Tbe 1977 line.t from Brown lorctan, Tropitone, Bristol and others hllVe arrived and are avallable for lmmedblte deb~. They're all ready for your seltttfon In a new, naturally beautiful, garden setting. One aduslvely Roger's" selec tion Is t.J,e beautiful Triconfort line, Imported &om France ••• lfou have to see It to realize how funetfonali, elegant It really ls! Roger's patio 1hop bu everything from beach chairs to bube411es-all the accessories you need to relax and enjoy those summer evenlnga. Cantina Seda Saa ~uln Hiiis Rd. at MacArthur Blvd., Newport Beach, (714) 640-5880 Open DaJly 9am to 6pm Also In Mission Viejo, (714) 887-7811 -.. I DAIL V PILOT * Thursday, Match 17, 1977 {I ~ 'II 1 .... l ,. ~ '() if )j I " ~ > ~ L ~·;.:,:.~~ ~ ~ ·] .. ~ .. I'\"'.. ~ ~ • ,,..., oC ....... ) rf•• 'll ......... ,.,.,,.. ·--...... ~U • ~ "60'~· ::Q:N~'Ml ~·~1(.l"lN~"~'''IOW-1\1• "'il'MIWl~~ •S~~ . .. ......... ".... . . Geppetto's Has Togs For Toddlers· Geppelto's -A Child's Fantasy will help you welcome spring with Easter baskets and clothing that will make your child shine. For girls infant through 6-X, there are crisp, bright dresses lroJP. Voungland, F-Olly-Elinden. LlW~ One and Cinderella .. Infant and toddler boys will look dapper in a Short all or suit from Good Lad, Billy-the-Kid, Donmoor or I. Castro. To help you delight your child on Easter morning, Geppetto's wlll help you make a plush Easter basket, including complimentary ribbon and cellophane. Bring your own basket, or choose from Geppet- to's baskets. --...--- ; ··~ "We'll even fill up a Tonka truck or a fireman's hat and you'll be sure to find something to fill your Easter basket from our collections or Snoopy, Madame Alexande r , Beatrix Potter or Steiff," said a store employe. Bunny Bright • Allison Merrill models a "Uttle Identical twins Jennifer and Jan Spurgeon Easter Bunnies with white patent leather shoes from The Shoe Hut, 2300 Harbor Blvd. (at Wiison) In Costa Mesa. One" dress by Johnston ($33) and Burke Hartfelder rs wearing a two-piece knit suit by "Uttle World" ($15.50). Easter baskets and clothes are from Geppet- to 'a In South Coast VIiiage Call 642-5678. Put a few words to work for you. THRU MONDAY ~ARCH 21 PELLOM 3 yds/S I OO UNIQUE SCISSORS Wis tltC9I '/J prlce f.., t.lS $ 4 lS Ectell BROADCLOTH PLAINS & PRINTS 99c yd · ......... 2.4' '• • HAWAIIAN PRINTS s 149 yd RtcJ 3.91 IMTERLOCK I 000/o POL YESTEI s 198 yd J.fM.tl TALON ZIPPERS l/2 PRICE ASSORTED FABRICS 2 9c,c1. ... t.f .. l .91 I COTTON • POL y PLAIDS s 149 yd .... 1. .. · DEMIMS It.EAL PATCH WORK s 1'9a • yd .... LINGUIE ELASTIC AMDTRIMS I oc yd T-SHIRT KNITS 98~c1. DHl!"f"~ 119-U .. UI GAUZE conoM&POLY 98c yd 1.,.z.49 DOUBLE "NITS s 149 y4 ... a.ti ,,. - . "' 'rhuraday. W.Ch 17, 1977 DAILY PILOT 1 Furrier Expects Sales Trend to Continue Michael Jacques, master furrier, At the January 1m auction in Len- of Fublon Island, Newport Beach ingrad. ranched, top.grade Russian says the fur industry bas just con-table tkim sold for j820 each. A coat eluded lta blnest year and the trend made from these pelts would cost ap- is expected to COlllinue tfirough t.m. proximately $70,000. Long-haired fun, fox_. ~adu-Be Aid Russian lynx was also up ble are verr much in ciemind, .rais-30 pelUdt and bundles are selling ing prices tohlitoric levelt. Jacques for '1,'100 each. Coats made of this ~:!.~~~e:.' hav~en 30 ~!:.._ -~ura. also ~e!I for_approx~~te-__ _ Bride Nancy Goodrich and brtdesmald Zahlda Ahmad examine fabric from Golden Needle New Department Bride Can Sew and Save It's a once in a lifetime gown ... sew it with the help of-e Golden Nee- dle. Golden Needle of South Coast Plaza, Costa Mesa is announcing the grand opening of their new bridal and special order department called Bride's World. Satins, chiffons. sheens and nock.a in hundreds or co lors and fabrics will MEN'S make the bride and her party radiate at the wedding. The fabric salon also bas laces, hats, crowns, bouquets -everything for the bridal entourage, including free consulta· tion. "We have fabrics from 99 cents to $199 a yard -everything from col· tons to cashmere and the exotic vicuna," says owner Saghir Aslam. _ ............ Hush Furrier Michael Jacquet of Newport 8Hch .JljiJllllll ... ~~l!~~!! ,..._ ... ....s COMFORT and VALUE_ -JAMAICA -White. Sand, Tan. REGENCY - Tan. Brown, White, Bone. VICTOR -Navy, Brown, .Grey, White, Bone. ·WILLARD -Tan, White, Bone. Black. STRATO -White, Tan. PRINCESS - White, Bone, Camel , Navy, Black. Brown. Saddle, Burgundy. CANDY -White, Bo~e. Bl~k. Red, Navy. BAY SHORE -White. Bone, Camel, Red, Navy, Black. VILLA -White, Bone. VISTA White, Bone. Camel, Red, Navy, Black. W01Mt111 Prices fro. '17 • '25 M•'s Prices from 'It • '30 WE HAVE THE LARGEST SELECTION OF HUSH PUPPIES YOU'LL EVER SEE!! COSTA MESA HOO HAllOI HdlOI CENTER _.THE~ SHDE HUT TUSTIN 114 1. 1st St. la LAltWIH $9UAll 546-6775 544-3734 I • 8 DAIL V PILOT Thur!day, March 17, 1977 L SUCCESS STORY Oraduatn of Dorothy Shreve'• Profeuk>nal School of Modellng and Charm, 3404 Via Lido, Sult• B, Newpcm Beach. Top row from left: Kathryn Huppert, Enen Craychee, Jan McKehhan, Cheryl Thiel. Center frwn left: Maggie Ford, Ua Alston. Bottom: Nancy Dt Palma, Randa Jack8on. All have been In training for teaa than a year and are working profeHlon•lly. Dorothy Shreve la a leadlng faahlon coordinator fot all buyer'• Showa fn Loa Angel••· YOV ABE INVITED TO BECOME AN ENTRANT IN THE WORLD'S FOREMOST CHILDREN'S EVENT • • • JOIN THE SOROalTY OF OVER 100,000 LITTLE GJ&LS WHO HAVE PARTICIPATED IN THE ·-World's 0...., £We, v'f1L Pageant }'or outalaa4Ja1 J'OUI l .. tea between else 11ea ol 1-t ·a '1·12. Prof esslonal School of Modeling & Charm 3404 Via Udo, Suite 8,., Newport Beacla ~1•ptu1'..r by !hf Calllornlo Dolltd ol EdYCaU. .Mrmbtt olkna Artcn Oullcl ----~ Gem Facts Available .from Store "There is an awful lot to the busl- ness of diamonds and gemstones that vou should not be expected to understand," says Orin Terry, presi· (lent of Professional Jewelers, Inc. · !fbe Huntingt$-Beacb flrm-ts de• dicated to educating the public abOut what to look for when purchasing jewelry. "I believe any store selllng a particular commodity should not on- ly stand behind their mercbancUse, but be expert enough to do their own appraising of that particular jewelry -or any jewelry," says Terry. .- -He-tt-a graltmlttrgt!Ym>logtst'as"lln! the other personnel at Professional Jewelers. Terry also lectures to groups on minrng, cuttmg and' evaluation of stones . Groups interested in hearing him speak should call 963 5625, or stop in at the firm 's location at 20902 Brookhurst Street, Suite 201, Hunt- ington Beach. - Shoes Loaf Backward The traditional look in footwear is coming on strong ... wing tips and loafers are back. And you'll find a large selection of them at Hemphill Shoes, 54 Fashion Island, Newport Beach. The family. owned store caters to all members of the family and has served Southern ·California for 43 years.· Orange Coast residents prefer casual wear for leisure says Brian HeJJtphill and women enjoy open.toe san'lfals. . "Actually, there are two looks right now -reall y casual or really dressy," he says. Hemphill 's carries the lines of Florsheim, Amalfi, Miramonte, Capezio, Joyce and Keds for ladies and Florsbeim, Bally, Evans, Sperry Topsiders and Keds Ossaga for men. Children's shoes include the likes of Slriderite, Keds and Striderite ·zips. The store carries special and hard tofind sizes. MILLION DOLLAR FUR COLLECTION .,v It's nice to have an expert on your side! IF YOU DON'T KNOW FIND THE EXACT FUR ALL THE ANSWERS ••• YOU'VE BEEN LOOKING FOR A~OUT FUR · · · Have an exclusive design at no" extra cost. It's nice to have an expert Choose Pelts, color. quality. and prire. YOUR on your side. We are fur FUR WILL BE CUSTOM DESIGNED right ~~~~E?S;.:'.:···· 1lh!Jere 1n ourMFasttlJonAlslandCfurQsalonU. e S ourselves on collecting the cream ol magnUiccnt skin• ror • . our custom~rs. Anc:t wt! • ·MASTER FURRIER SlNCE 1933 lnvlt~ your mspecl1on of ~ <!!Al:. All!l!l our latest collicllon. v-ra·'lvv It's among our most outstandlnat 141.'aahfon laland, NEWPOR,T CENTf:ft, N~rt 1Jtach f l \ . . . . Active Lady Perky Terry Cournoyer Is ,.ady for seUlng In White Stag jacket, 1hlrt end shorts, Treehorn tennis shoes and ••• bag from Th• Actlvlat, South Coast Plan, Co•t• Mesa TOTAi T•l•YISIOll WE'VE IOI n AU. IOll1lla TV W!H, • ,....._ ,_..... .t .. ,_.., DeMy ...... effen • _..., _., .. w.. ..... - -0....,. C•••ty' • ••• • ••c •ti •••I ....... -•OCI C'-1 H. TV ,._..,._ • ...,..,.....,,....,. E,,..., c..-.a-.1n TV Week S. .,..._ .. .._.. 6. I ... IO... ·-1 ---1 s-. ..... ~ a-I J .,..... .. 1Y WIB • S..., ....... hlf ,..., 4M1y tele•l•I-A1H ... -TY LOG. A1h9etltw, DeUy Piiot n.den MW recefn..,. ...t .......... .,., .. ., DAILY PILOT ~~ ~ ,-.:_. ~!t:r:.:.!,!.' • • • •' • lffff Day In Doily TV Log ThU!!day. March 11. 1971 DAIL V PILOT 9 * lind.sor * mandsor * lindsor * S..· -S s:: ... a * .... a ---= s: ·-a * j.. .o ·~ s: ·-a * j.. a -= s:: ... a .J< -s.. a --= s: ·-a .}( ;&.. a --= s:: ·-,a I 1< • · ·~ 1-·I . '-\ --cs ·s:: ·-a 1< ),. -5 s: ·-s ~ 1< t;. -5 c ·-a .Jc j.. ·..s s:: .... ' a * .... lUindsor~ TM Hll IOOf lo de.mbe IM MW /eMUa~ loolc/or •prinw tnd~or * *"' -S s:: ·-a * j,. -5· .s: ·-s * $.. ) -5 ~ LAGUNA tlUS MAU. HARBOR CBn'Bl S: ""' loguno H11 2300 Hortior at Wison • • . ~ Ph. 581-«I03 Cotto Mtsa • ~2622 a . . a :t-lindsor~ Ulil\bor.4 lin·dsor ·~ . 1 . ' - • I - • tO DA.IL Y PILOT * Lido Store To Move Tomorrow Thuncfax. ~ t7, 1m The Newport Beach shop with "beaut1rul c lothes for beautiful ~iris" c, movmg. The Garden-Beautiful Clothes is moving just across the way from its Lido Village location to the new Via Lido Ptaza ~formerly Ure toeation of Richard's Market) and will be open for business soon. Occupying the old flower shop, The Garden will feature a Country French decor and will be just adja- cent to the new Hughes Market. .. J "We will have an area foe sealing and will serve tea. We want our customers to take their time, relax and enjoy themselves," said owner Mary Blake. Sharon Allen appflea makeup tor customer Deborah Hutt Cosmetics Class Set The store will feature a unique concept three way mirrors in the dressing rooms for fall·fasb..ioa view- ing. The Garden features eYUJ· Uiing' from '1ennis top to formal wear" and even ba.s a selectlonoliDe lingerie. ''We think our clothing represents the 'Newport look' -a classic, well- coordinated look that's always in fasblon," said Ms. Blake. All formal wear is not created equal 4 ""., f .,'fd c "' bt:nq cut the best Fashion begins with beauty and beauty begins with healthy, radiant skin. Sbarm Allen's Serenity Skin Care Center, SO. No. N~.1>9rt Blvd. in Newport Beach, offers men and womm natural, European facials with DO harsh chemicals. "We believe in education. Eaeb person should learn to recognize bis or her own skin problems and know how to treat them. We overgrease our faces and buy laree sized C<lft· tainers -most of us don't realize , / S.~ ~ t+.e ,_.st ;nterp'!ll~ I ,1.-,. •• >l~""' -ord 1-nowWiq that ~'l ~ , I "'"'" Yd ... ta1ored WI"!! ~e 'fOJ """e I I • ·• "In e C()l'nlort oblo. • • I • .... ry '("'71 to come. darrell~ ,. ..................... -.... ,. ..... ·- lhal coomet1cs spoil," said Ms. AJ. len. She will be conducting a "Makeover" class beginning March 23 for Coastline iollege. Seminars will be conducted at Mariners Elementary School, 2100 Mariners Drive, Newport Beach on Wednesdays from 7 to 9:30 p.m. and there is no charge. For informatioll about the pro- gram, or about private consultation, contact Charon Allen at 642-4911. fire Ltlander• ~1thelook together The menswear atti- tude: a wonderful combination of checked blazer and vest and solid color &gore skirt in polyester doubleknit. The irresistible touch Is the bowed polyester shirt. All in green, navy sizes 8 to 18. Skirt Blazer Vest Shirt Sizes 8-18 1600 3000 1800 1800 Hoen aao to tJ:OO Dally At HMxir MttJ Newport Blvd. D~PARTMENT STOIU! 111• HIW'Olf IOUUVAID Full Range In Fabrics Available "If you want to lounge around your home in something comfortable, look good whether al work or at a formal dinner party -and you enjoy sewing -Home Fabrics has the latest in fashion for you," says Alicia Bhaumik of Home Fabrics in Newport 1Jeach. - The store located at 2121 Westcliff Dri ve has Spring linens by• Moygashell and 1m1tatt0n tmens and silkeltes. Home Fabrics also has a new bridal collection and this month is featuring all bridal fabrics, even special orders, at 20 percent off re· gular price. The store also has a home decorat· lng capacity and lakes custom or· d e rs for upholstery, slipcovers, pillows and bedspreads. Blooms Bring Easter Ideas "Easter in the Patio" is the theme of this year's Spring Flower Show spolllored by the Westcliff Plaza Merchanta Association. The show will be held Friday and Saturday, April 8 and 9 in the patio area of Weslcliff Plaza, Newport Beach. • Channel 50 KOCE Women Saluted When it comes to being in Cashion, the women at KOCE-TV are a natural element in the success of quality programming at Channel 50. The following ladies are being saluted by ltOCE for their contribu· tion o( personal style and skill: Sandy Sauser -Acting director of instructional television. Her depart· ment is responsible for all instruc· -lionalprQgrammieg4eli~redto tba -.. numerous school districts served by the station. Anne Murdoch -Assistant dlrec· tor ot programming whose responsibilities include scheduling of national and local programming. She is a native of New Zealand and is currenUy involved in studies relat. ing to evaluating the needs and con· cerns of the community. Linda Miller -Assistant director of development whose chores in· elude managing the monthly pro- gram guide, Forum Fifty, and directing underwriting for various LlndaGrHn programming aired by Channel 50. Arline RadHlo -Assistant pro· ducer on various programs as well as on-air talent for shows. She is also a researcher for numerous projects at the station. . Wendy Wetzel -Currently seg. menl producer for the weekly magazine public affairs program as well as on-air reporter . . J.ed ~ -. .JOO-i1J a staff- engineer and often works in master control, which is responsible for the playout schedule and delivering the finished product lo viewers. Linda Green -Operations assis· tant working in cost control and budgeting for the station. Pbyllls Tucker -Responsible for continuity of programming and con· trols all public service announce· ments during s tation breaks. Through her services, groups and or· ganizations can reach thousands of viewers with their message via Cbanne150. Sandy Sauser Thu!"!day1 March 17, 1977 * DAILY PILOT 11 GEMSTONES ARE IMTHE CUTIIMG You have probably heard that diamonds and gemstones all have more or less the same characteristics in cutting. This is true to some extent in that they normally call the largest diameter of the stone the girdle and everything above the girdle is known as the crown & everything below the girdle is known as the pavilion. From this point on these characteristics have no meaning unless certain angles, depths. and diameters, are adhered to which have been mathematically determined to get the maximum reflection of light back to the eye. Everything has to do with the cutting and if the cutter is selling by carat weight he is going to try harder to retain as much weight as possible. In turn when we evaluate the stone, we determine what it would have weighed had It been cut to ideal proportions. Why don't you drop in and let us show and explain the different steps of cutting to you. There is no cost or obligation and I'm sure you will learn something very interesting. "If you are not buying by a standard, you are paying too much.'' n•• PRbFESSaONAI.. .JEWELERS INC • ... J~WELtRS -GEMO\.-OGISTS -OESIGNE.RS -CUTTER~ 709oa 8foo~nt S1re1ut, Suii"u~,,~ J'" .. I-"''""'' ,.,. .I 'j it---• Hvnt1ng1on Beach, C•lilum1J • 926'16 "T"'.. ·" 17141 963 5625 • - ) .. ... '12 DAILY PILOT Thul'!d!y, March 17, 1971 Youngsters Compete In County Cc;>ntest The Little Miss Beauty and Talent Contest is undcrn ay in the Orange Coast area. · Lillie fem ale hopefuls m ay e<>m· pete in one of two divisions, either as a La Petite Clhree to s ix years old) ot an Our Lillie Miss (seven to 12 years). Entrants will model sports .and.party a\&Uits..a~.J...ittkMi£8 t'ontestants "ill compete in a talent contest. Dorothy Shrt•\'l'. owner o( Dorothy Shreve Profe:,s1onal School of Modeling and Charm in Newport Beach, is acting as the California Stale Director of the annual national pageant. She is enthus iastic about the positive aspects of the competition, "It has been proven that the ex· perience and exposure is b<'ncftcial. Recently 6,000 children were in· tervi ewed for the n e w Mouseketeers and Ci vc of those selected were former Our Little Miss contestants " . -'"Wfdners or the focal competition go on to state firwb in Palm Springs July 11 through 16 and nal1on._1 fin als are held in Baton Houge. I.a For information about the Little Miss Beauty and Talent Contest con· tact the local di1 cctor, Donna Willia ms at 751 70<17, or Dorothy Shreve :it675-SS80. Designer Cites 'Pizzazz' In Spring Collection The motto at SuKo's in Newport Beach is "Designs by KoKo charm today's woman." All the fashions at the 1803 WestcliU Drive location are de· siined by the 30-year-old designer with "pi.z:zazz." ''My clothes are designed Cor the woman who wants a simple elegance," said Koko. "My clot.hes are not just for lbe rich." She says she is optlmisUc about the. future. Orange County women realize bow much more leminine they feel wearing beautiful fashions, she said. Her salon features collec· lions or daytime casuals and dinner dresses. Chiffons, scarves and Clowers to compfement lhe ensembles.' · · · Many of KoKo's designs are done tn Imported French and Italian I abries and one of her trademarks is the use of rich colors. She sees white u the coloi tor this · summer • and has just introduced her New / York collection. · WE MUST SELL ALL OP OUI FALL STOCK.~ Y2 PRICE .ENTIRE s:roc1 IMTIU STOCI( OF ••• Woo&. SWDI. fUl,TS, vaoua -_. ....... e1 .... ,.. ot ~ .. ...,ec1 .. .r::-· ....... ....,._ YB.YETS, VELVll ... WYAAI IUT I TRUI: 'IJ IS AU YOU PA.Y OM TftOUSAlieS OF Y AIDS OF FASHION FAlllCS. Ull' af I,.... {J Mus r. •••a• I 2"' Off ALL_. Nmcs-n PA111Ca'S NT OML '· Ill~ 1ted'e ~ I SOUTH COAST Pl.A2A • 1333 $0. BRISTOL • .......... &.w .. r.;.e L------.!t~ll!.!i~~,!!!.L4.!J~!:.0..91~------ ieiifmal•c~ ~ a~tantu~~ ~f~ ~-. PLUSH EASTER BASKETS .. ~ -EASTER CANDY '"" .'\ ., Let us help you -~ 1. make up a fantastic ~ .... llll Easter Basket. --"""J-· Compllmentary cellophane & ribbon ,, 'TW~~., SOUTH COAS,T VILLAGE . . SANTAANA 549-·146-1 IAUAI DB. MUteO THE MMCAIDO OU. TOWH. SAN DIMO STATE PAii IANCHOIEDWtDO .. ... .... ""-~"" " · .. Cttta ..... Uon• caub Is 50 years ol~ this year. , You',.ltMtidto nfnthefun. . ' he .C~Nin AnnWm•rv celebrat1011 I• to be held 119'Ch af at tt.e Souttteoast Plaza Hotef wtth dinner at 8 p.m. Milll.di!M>clng from 9 to 1 o'clock. Ticketa are $11 each ~ "' ¥: be re .. rWd by ca .... 54~21.86. · Deadline for dinner reservation• t1 March '11. Many other chlO minded citizens a'te aaylog their thanka to..._ LIQ'!• Club In a tp~lal't>ally Pilot iiibiie · to be publlah_.OR .. arch 24. · · To add your flriA'• recognltlon.'ff 90 yel of Mrvlce to the Coeta Mila eommunlttt' )uat ..... 1. Deacllne for r•~lng adv.rti .. ng 1p • a vary 9Pedal I.loft• Club tribute edition la March11. Actress M•ureen Req•n we .... elegant jewelry •v•ll•bfe-at Charles H. B•rr Jewelers In NewportS..Ch Jewelry Goes Stylish Big, bold, beautiful gems sparkle, neckwear continues to make an im- pact oo fashion, and cultured pearls are big for spring. "The look is highly individualistic -that's where styles are this year -especially in jewelry," says Mary Barr, Certified Gemologist. Mrs. Barr is the owner or Charles H. Barr Jewelers, 1048 Irvine Ave., Westcliff Plaza, Newport Beach. The firm has a large selection of pre- cious gems end pearls. Gu nfle'i Sox long skirt, $28 jacker, $24 long sleeve blouse. $20 sho.t slcirt. $2B loce ruffle blouse. SI b Come wonder 'rhru- Mrs. Barr says big colored stones sucb as OO)'X, jade, nephrite, ivory, coral, amethyst, quartz and other stones are being bought in neckwear and also in rinCS and pins. She also notes there are four pnn- cipal kinds of pearls available'in the world today: salt water pearls, fresh water pearls, cultured pearls and simulated pearls. Most pearls sold in the U.S. are cultured pearls. is in a new spot- now at the new VIA LIDO PLAZA Opening Soon . /Jrt'//r/f/I ( /;,/k",J Via Lido Plaza 3433 Via Lido. Numt>er 13 •'"""'~to .... UQn~ M~\ wt·rco· •:b• 1 ,._ J • * DAIL V PILOT 13 -~iflEHRAWINGS ALL SUMME1l! Reqister Early 0 0 BOLT· HANG 10 • O.P. ·QUICK SILVER "3 BEACH LOCATIOMS11 11 Z McFocldew Place • at Newport Pier I I 0 Maia Slntt • at lcAoa Pier CO,.. April 11 304 MariH A •ew · °" lcAoa fstc.d OPEN I 0.6 DAILY INCL SUHDA YS FIRST TIME EVE Rf SPECIAL Loreol Herbal PERMS limited Time. Make your appointment today. Cell 6«-2161 •Open Daily 9 am to 7pm . ....... -.. -·-... ' ..... - 14 DAILY PILOT Thursday, Match 17, 19n Mature landscaping ahades parking and pathways of Weatcllff Plaza ·in Newport Beach adding to the shopping convenience which b•ckon1 Harbor Area ahoppert. As a mother of. a 2'-z ~ear old, I felt I needed something to pick up m:; life. Sometlung just for me. So I enrolled in Dorothy Shreve School of Modeling. It changed my entire lift>. I feel wonderful' Randa Jackson . . . Join the \\Onderful world of Cashion ..• lhe exciting, challenging, fast paced World I love! We've helped a lot of girls' drcnms come true. Professleoal Scbool of Modelini! & Charm JtM VIA UDO SUITE B. NEWPORT BEACH 175-5580 Approved by the California Boord of Education Member or Screen Actors Guild ' Thurdy, Merch 17, t871 STYLE & SAVINGS in TERRYCLOTH The House of Terry Is the home of high fashion terrycloth knits and velours. You must see to believe our -wide ass1:>rtment-ot-ter beachwear, jumpsuits, leisure and· evening wear for PRESENTING the whole family. THE LATEST IN We ·re the home Spring Fashion of savings too with this: SALi PllCID Linen Knits L()M(i HOSTESS aoWM IMPORTED FROM .. s191s IRELAND was~ Pri~ f~m 125.-240. QR.AFTON STREET •.. WE BORROW -OUR NAME FROM THE INI'ERNATIONALLY FAMOUS STREET OF BOUTIQUE SHOPS IN DUBLIN. • BankAmericard SOUTH COAST PL.Ali • Master Charge • Amex COSTA MESA -Lowtt' ~ -SHrt M of M• IDlrectty Ac.r.a Fr.. Weotwwthll Sou th Coast Plaza PHOME 54'-206' 549-5277 Dining and Dancing in Orange County Coming next in ORANGE COUNTY LIVING in the Daily Pilot April 5, 1977 DAILY PILOT 15 Over 90,000 homes. along the Orange Coast will read your advertisement in Orange County Living Deadline for advel'.'llslng space Is Friday, March 25 ' Call your frlel).dly restaurant editor, 642-4321 . . Norm Stanley (Ext. 267) DAILY PILOT ' • 4 - DIAMONDS and IEMS AT FAR BELOW NORMAL PRICING 4 DAYS~ WED., MARCH 16 Thru $AT., MARCH 19 Re cently we _p articipated in the liqulciation of a Mew York gem cuffer which resulted -In our obtaining a hucJe shipmenf of unr11ountecl and mounted emeralds, rubles, sapphires .and diamonds In all the popular colors and shapes • • • marquise, pearshape •. oval, heartshape, round cmd emerald cuts~ Partial listing -All Items Subfect .to Pt:ior Sale -Partial Listing , ASSORTED DIAMOND PACKAGES ., . 'r #12~8 ..:1 fancy pear st!apes, approxl~lely .31 Package No Sale Price 880.0Q 899.00 839.00 999.00 t 1173 • Diamonds In the rough • one natural coffee. colored, one rose colored. combined weight of 13.30 carats • per pkg. s 598. 50 t 1188 • 3 fine colored fancy cut marquise, .35 caral1 total weight, make a nice addition to an existing piece of jewelry· per pkg. $191.80 #1 18• -3 brilliant round diamonds. 2 small, 1 large. .31 carats total weight· per pkg. S103.85 # 1154 • Make several rings • over 3--~ carats of various size round l>l'lllland diamon<fs, unbeatable price· per pkg. s1,012 .. 11095 • Ten round, brilliant diamonds. assorted sizes. tot~llng .53 carats -per ~g. $225. 11090 • Perfect for St. Patrick's Day • • Green diamonds 13 carats total weight per pkg. S48.75 # 1038 -3 brilliant round diamonds~ totalling .25 carats per pkg. '99.00 t 1026 -2 fine white. fancy marquise diamonds .. 12 carats total weitht; use them in your Jewelry re-<lesigning. per pkg. $ 78.00 11227 -.18 carat fancy cut pear shape. lovely for pendant. per pkg. S 108. # 1216 -8-fancy marQuise shape -all averaging .42 carats. lotal weigh! 2.46 carats. per pkg. $1722.00 # 1220 • good quality .23 carat round brilliant' diamond. perfect addition to your free form ring. . per pkg. $105.00 11225 • .37 carat, has visible ln<:luslons. good color, perfect for pendant. per pkg. $85.Cl<I lt1226 • .'47 carat Imperfect. Unbellevable price • per pkg. S 9-4 00. cara s ......... per pkg. S355.00 RJt 2 • 11229 • .75 carat oval cut vvs·c1ar1tv. good color. ~~~~ per pkg. S675.00 RJ9 #4697 • .79 carat round,· brilliant treated canary .oolor. per pkg.'S316.00 11265 • .80 carat' oval treated canary WS2. clarity, super i:>rice. per pkg. 'l530.<?0 #4837 • .83 carat heart shaped diamond • would ·mal<e gorgeous pendant or ilng. Fantastic price • per pkg. $583.00 #1~05 • sllghtly cape 1.03 carat, round brilliant Why wait? per pkg. S947.00 PACKAGE OF DIAMONDS You may select one diamond. part of a package 0< all ar d pay f0< only the weight you select. FORMULA • If you select a 1110 ct. (.10 carat•) stone: Multiply.10 x $350.00, which would eQuaJ $35.00. the price you would pay for the gem or gems that you selected. •100 Points == 1 Carat Package Approx. Total Weight Price per Carat No. Slie 4899 1/5 carat 4929 1/ 4 carat RJ8 RJ7 RJ6 RJ5 R.U RJ3 RJ2 f\J1 Pag. No. Weight RJ25 .34 RJ28 .37 RJ27 .52 RJ28 .53 RJ29 .54 RJ30 .55 RJ31 .54 RJ32 .69 RJ33 .76 RJ34 .77 RJ35 .78 RJ36 .80 'RJ37 .84 RJ38 .79 Weight 1.38 1.44 1.49 1.63 1.69 1.71 1.73 1.75 1.81 2.05 2.09 2.65 1.268.00 962.oO 1.100.00 1,247.00 1.180.00 ' 1.15-4.00 1,568.00 1,889.~ FANCY CUT Sale Price Shape P/S . PIS PIS PIS PIS PIS P/S Oval Marquise P/S Marquise Marquise P/S PIS Color White White White White White While Canary Cognac Canary Cognac Cognac Canary Canary Blue s1eo.oo 195.00 390.00 390.00 399.00 399.00 272.00 347.00 383.00 387.00 392.00 399.00 423.00 398.00 4910 1/2 carat 1195 1/3carat 5.52 carats 4.52 carats 5.30 carats 9.98 carats $428.00 338.00 675.00 460.00 •Pear Shape #1204 • 1.00 round. brilliant, strictly flash diamond $175.00 #4967 -Nice 1.08 carat round. brilliant $1,050.00 Package No.• .Diamond Weight Sale Price #3262. 1.00 carat oval, gOOd color $975 00 RJ23 .94 S4:i5.00 # 1212 • 1.01 carat. natural canary marquise shape, RJ24 1.04 936.00 unusual. S 1.150 00 RJ22 1.10A. 743.oo #ME/AO · 1.19 carat, round brilliant. WS clarity, of RJ21 1.10 660.00 fin.ecolor $3,100.00 RJ20 1.12 999.00 All Items Listed Below Are Round Brilliants RJ19 1.13 799.00 #ME/AO • 1 40 carat. MarQuise fish shaped RJ18 1.16 739.00 $1.500.00 RJ17 1.21 998.00 #ME/AO -Fabulous 1.08 carat. round. b:illiant. WS RJ18 1.28 699.00 clarity, high COIO( $6,600.00 RJ15 1.32 999.00 11227 • .61 carat, round brilliant of good color and RJ14 1.34 999.00 #4968-2.10 carat. pear shape white and radiant .._clarity. per pkg. $366.00 .... .... RJ13 1.38 816.00' "-S2,520.00, MON-FRI 10 a.m.-6 p.m. SATURDAY 10 a.m.-5 p.m • ••• ..._ ________________________ _, 7 , I OL 70; NO. 76; 5 SECTIONS. 62 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA SDA'I", MARCH 17, ltn TEN CEN~, 11_ NeighfJors Bbich Looting of Horne· By ARTHUR R. VINSEL L Oflll9 D<llly ,.. .... , ... Nelahbors who feared lnvolve- ent confessed watching for pnore than one hour Wednesday tas a team of burglars tmethodically looted a Huntington ~each family's home, laking tcoin collections, cash, jewelry land camera equipment. ~ Stunned investigators who'con- ltactt!d residents of the north· central city residential tract where Steve and Terry Worob live learned hours later they bad unwilling witnesses. Patrolman Brian Moore said more than one person lold of see- ing the window-smashing burglars make multiple trips mto the residence, hauling away the Worobs'possessions. A complete inventory of the loss sutrered by the family, operators of a Hun\ington Beach camera and photography shop, was being prepared by the couple today. Pobce said based on what is known to be missing al this point, their loss can be expected to be considerable. Investigators said despite the fact the break-in rewrte9 by the Worobs' JWl1or high school-age son was seen in progress by neighbors they contacted later, no one called police. "We have a hell of a time as it 1s catching the crooks and mak- ing the cases stick when we have the help ol the public but this Is incredible.'' one officer observed today. Authorities said the Worobs' son came home from school for lunch about 1:30 p.m . and dis· covered the looting, plus a shat· tered rear bedroom window. The burglary oecurred only a few hours before Huntington Beach Police Chief Earle J'. Robitaille was scheduled to ad• dress the community's Neltbborbood Watch oreanba- tlon. His address dealt wlth the role of tbe crime prevention prognm which has functioned for the past three years in the city and the role it has played in reducing crime. Vigilant citizens belongmg to Neighborhood Watch work m teams to keep an eye on their re- sidential area and r eport anything suspicious that might indicate thieves or burglars operating there . ,, Chief Robitaille said overall the Neighborhood Watch partici- pants have contributed to a re: duchon in Huntington Beach's burglary rate. In vesti«ators said they dis· covered in probing the Worobs' residential burglary Wednesday that one of the asserted witnesses' homes had also been recently burglarized (Lobbyist Checks to Norton .Told -0.11-t l"fi.t Slaff ~- DOWNE!) UTILITY LINES MAl<E FULLERTON STREET IMPASSABLE Thle Was Scene This Morning Near Common¥1te11th Avenue and Brookhurst Street Wind~ Twist County Three Injured; Damage Nears $1 Million Freak tornado-like winds lashed through portions of range County Wednesday even- g causing . an estimated $1 illion wort.fl of demfl~e and·tn· ries to at least three people Hardest h1l by the devastatinE: yphon wind was a live-mile ng, 200 yard wide stretch m llerton. There, what one policeman escnbed as a twister swept hrough a business center, rushed through Orange County's largest food processing plant and then hurried through a res1den hat area before p<>tenng out near St. Jude's Hospital Left in the wind's destructive wake were SO damaged homes, 180 uprooted trees, four downed traffic signals, four <'rumpled light standards and 16 damaged cars, police said. They also reported eight busi nesses wind-damaged and two buildings in the Hunt-Wesson Coast Weather D•llyll'li..- pATH OF BIG BLOW Fullerton Hardest Hit food plant at 1800 W. Com monwealth Ave. severely damaged. It was in the food plant that the three injuries were reported, all to plant workers. Two of the injured people were treated by paramedics; the third person reportedly was treated at Martin Luther Hospital in Anaheim and released. Weather orficials balked al calling the Creak winds torn ados. But those caught up in the turmoil didn't. ··it was hke a gray funnel that seemed to move along almost in slow motion," one Fullerton policeman said. Those on the outskirts of the wind swath said it was accom- panied by thunder, lightning and hail. "There was this violent, freaky thunder and lightning that lasted for about 15 minutes. And the hail stones were huge," one resident on the wmd's fnnge said. A businessman two blocks from the so-called.twister that hit Fullerton at 6:30 p .m . said. "Everything was okay here. But two blocks away it looked like so· meone had set off a bomb." Police m three cities, Buena Park. Anaheim and Fullerton, reported wind damage, chiefly broken windows and torn roofs. Near the junction of the Riverside and Santa Ana Freeways, an 18-wheel tractor- trailer rig reportedly was over- turned by the freak winds. At St. Jude's Hospital near Bastanchury Road and Harbor Boulevard, a guard shack re- portedly was lifted from its moorings just at the point where the so-called twister exhausted itselC. But residents in other areas of the coWlty felt the impact of the brief, freak storm when widespread power failures OC· CSee WINDS, Page AZ> Private Service .. Rendered By GARY GltANVILLE Ol Ille D••IY Ptlol St•ll The Orange County Grand Jury's probe into political prac· tices in Orange County has swept out to include 1976 payments made to Republican State Senate candidate Loran Norton by lob· byist Frank Michelena. According to Norton, roughly fi ve Michelena checks totaling $3,500 and made payable to Norton ally Gary Newmeyer were, in fact. paid to him. Norton, a former Santa Ana policeman and an ex-aide to county Supervisor Laurence Schmit, said Michelena's pay ments were for his services as a private inv~st1gator. They were not, according to the former Republican can· didate, in any way related to his unsuccessful 1976 state senate campaign against Democrat Paul Carpenter. In the Grand Jury's conlmuing i n vestigation into county political practices Norton has already testihed twice. He refused to discuss that testimony Wednesday but did acknowledge that the Michelena payments were brought up dur mg his secret interrogation. Newmeyer, like N'orton, is a former Santa Ana policeman and is now a private investigator. He was Norton's campaign manager through the June primary election. But two weeks ago he said he dropped from the 'Norton scene when he wasn't paid for pretrial investigative services performed for Dr. Louis Cella. Like Norton, Newmeyer has made two appearances before the Grand Jury in the probe centering around the political machinations of county supervisors Ralph Diedrich and Philip Anthony. In one of those appearances. Newmeyer's stint behind closed doors lasted three and a half hours. It was alter that testimony that Norton was called to appear before the jury for the second time. The former Schmit aide insist- ed Wednesday that be answered the Grand Jury's questions to the best of his ability. and em· <See PROBE, Page A2) Tax Lectures Set A series of three lectures on the Tax Reform Act of 1976 and in- come tax preparation will be pre- sented by Golden West College on Fridays beginning March 18. Ad· mission to the lectures scheduled for 7 p.m. is free with registration at the door. HE ISSUED CHECKS lobbyist Michelena A.rms Rap O•llY Plfol Sl.tif ""°to TESTIFIES TWICE Ex-Cop Norton L Grand Jury Figure~ Freed Fro01 Jail Police info rmer turned It was when he was being political patron Gene Conrad booked into Jail that Conrad com- spent Wednesday popping m and • plained of chest pains out of Orange County Jail but by He was taken to the prison mi'dnight was clearly out-on ward of UCJ Medical Center but $5,000 bail. insisted upon being returned to But to stay free, Conrad must Jail a few hours later. appear in Superior Court Friday There he remain.ed until 11: 15 a nd convince Judge James p.m. when a $5,.bond guaran· Walsworth that he didn't violate teeing his ap~llnce in court terms of his probation March 1. was pofited. That is when agents of the Last fall, Conrad funneled federal Alcohol, Tobacco and more than $.50,000 Into political Firearms Bureau seized two campaigns in Orange County. .38-caliber revolers from Conrad. Most of that amount went to Simultaneously, the agents Supervisor Philip Anthony's picked up a shotgun and rifle campaign under various guises from Conrad ally Loran Norton Since then, Conrad's political in Santa Ana. philanthropy has aKracted the Norton purportedly was hold-attention of the Orange County ingthetwoweaponsforhisfnend Grand Jury. And in Los Angeles and business associate. County, a federal grand jury is As a convicted felon, federal looking into the business opera· regulations prohibit the 42-year-tions of the firm he heads. old former police informer from Pension Funds of America possessing firearms. And Wlder terms of probation set down in 1975 •when Conrad pleaded guilty in Orange County to a felony charge he is ineligible to possess firearms. The bulky r ags-lo-riches political benefactor insists that it is necessary for him to be armed because of his years as what he calls an undercover agent for the district attomey\s office. But office officials say Connd was a paid informer rather than an undercover agent. Those were the issues at stake Wednesday morning when Conrad repUed to a warrant in the federal building and was im· mediately placed on a hold order by the county Probation Depart· ment. 2Kids, Mom Slwt in Home SHERWOOD. Ore. CAP ) - Two children were shot to death and their mother seriously wounded Wednesday in what one police spokesman called "a domestic tragedy" in their home in this Portland suburb. The dead were identified as 3-~ar-old Adrian VanRijn and his 6·year-old sister, Jeanie. They died of gunshot wounds in the ehest, deputies said. Partly cloudy with chance of measurable rain 10 percent tonight and 20 percent Friday. Lows tonight in 40s. Highs Fri- day in upper 50s and lower 60s. INSIDE T9DA Y FrwtratiOn end fury car- ritd the Rolling Stonu thrOUQho maont/M:ent concert that mou bt th.fr lad, occord- t ng to cohunnht .Lile Robinaon. TM o~h111 Jagger appoari on f'OQt !8. City Braees for Irish Thief Takes ! Charity Can Index Seal Beach authorities said to- day the city survived a small tornado-type twister that. Mrirled in-durtq Wednesday'• atonn but only Ume will tell if a abamrock· green whirling dervish bits town today. Police Chief Ed Cibbar elll said Wednesday he and his men don't expect any major trouble from St. Patrick'• Day revelers who In previous yeatt have given the quaint downto~ area a repu&a· Uon. "We don't have any trnuble yot," a police dispatcher a lid early today, .. People baven'teot- t.en off work yet to 10 downtown and start tout.inf good old. St. Paddy." Several times in the past the March 17 revelry that bas surged from eidewalk to afdewalk oa M'1n street, amubin8 wlodows by tbe abeer bulk of humanlt,y , fiUed with good spirits and just plain old 100 proof splrita have required the long ar m and heavy hand of the law. The difficulty that hit Seal Beach the day· before St. Patrick'• Day lovolved a wblrlwlod that IWOOJhed through Harvard Laoe lo the clty'a Colteee Park West d 'T"•lapment. Public Work• Department ieneral fOfeman Al Lopez said tOday the atonn·•P•wne:cnwter cauled IOtDe dam.,. but lt was mostly confined to uprooted amalJ treet and ahnibber7. ----.-.-..1 ...... ------·---- A long-haired theft SUS· pect who wore a Navy blue or black pea coat is sought today on theft charges after stealing c h arity funds collected at a neighborhood m arket. Steve Garcia, of Villaee Liquorft, lGOiO Brookhurst St.. called police Wednea· day night to report theft or the canister us~ to con- t.ain small change for a medical reseatcb proJeet. He told lnvettl11wn the canister the man crabbed and ran away with con· talned only perhapa $10 but _it waa the ptfnclple of the pilferer lbat Infuriated him. I r HI~ ~""' Search The arllve Harcb ror • Lake Forest bouaewtre wbo myal.CnoUlly disappeared MOft- day \n Puld na wu tcmPofa.rl· )y 1m&>mded today while poll~ detecdve1 follow up on doJ.IDI ol telephone leads. Rachel Sparling, 36, or 2A311 Lakeview Lane, dropped out ot sight arter a visit to her psychiatrist. Early the next morning, Los Angeles police officers arrested a 17-year-old boy who bad been caught driving Mrs. Sparling's 1972 bronze-colored Corvette with the personahzed license plate WUV YOU. The youth allegedly had possession of the missing woman's rings, watch, purse. keys and other personal effects, plus a .25 caliber pistol. Police said the boy admitted stealing the car from the doctor's office parking lot and claims the jewelry was on the seat. Detective Sgt. Ray Mc Ray said today that searches or rugged terrain around the Rose Bowl turned up no trace of Mrs. Sparl- ing. A tip from two fishermen drew searchers to the mountain coun- try along winding Angeles Crest Highway Tuesday, but again, the trail was cold. Mc Ray said police probers are presently stumped by the case and have been hindered by the fact that they are unable toques- tion the arrested youth, who has .been charged with auto theft, robbery and possession of stolen. property. The police spokesman said steps are being taken to clear legal obstacles preventing in- vestigators from interrogatlng the boy. Meanwhile, McRay said, of. ricers are following up on dozens of leads gleaned from scores of telephone calls the department has received from people who claim to have seen the car Mon- day evening. The detective said foul play is ·•most likely" but that "many other possibilities" arc being ex- plored. He would not elaborate. Front Page Al PROBE ••• phas1zed Michelena's payments to him through Newmeyer were not for campaign purposes. "It was a heavy mvest1gat.Jvo. a very heavy invesll~at1on that don't feel free to talk about Norton said. Michelena wa!> not available for comment today Meanwtule the Jury continued its mvesttgation Wednesday by hearin~ testimony from at least five witnesses. Newmeyer in- cluded. Other witnesses who answered a Grand Jury subpoena in- cluded: -Amanda ltertz, a busmess and social companion of former police informant Gene Conrad, who pumped roughly S53,000 mto various county political cam· pa1gns last year -Anaheim city councilman Wilham Kott, who reportedly was loaned $10,000 for his city campaign m the spnng of 1976 by Diedrich attorney Michael Rem- ington. -Robert Langslet, a Los Angeles County developer who contributed $5,000 to Anthony's campaign. -John Johnston, who has been cl <' s 1· r 1 h c.• d a s L <1 n g s 1 l' t 's · political adviser." Press Barred UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP> The While House has barred photographers and re- porters from a United Nations re· ception for President Carter tonight, apparently to prevent him being caught with a representative of the Palestine Liberation Organization. OAANOE COAST H" DAILY PILOT ; 'TIW Or•not C&e\1 Delly ~uot 'llllllltt\ ""'*'~ '' cOffto- '"-'"° '""" "'"' """"''-""""°'-GNU -IPll ... C'Amu~v ~ ..... , ...... ,. CNbll\n•d 'HN•'f lhtOVO"' ,.,. • ., '°'" C..te Mo\O ""•-' a .. c:11. """"ft9!0oo l!Mtrt,_ lflft V1lley lrvl"t· SUdl-11 Vtii.y .... ~~=~,.,..~~~·.::r~..i;: pt'tMtNI ovbU ... ff'oO pf•flll 1, ., J::JO W1tt lay Sir Ml CA\ .. M«w, ~""''"''""" It ............ ll'rt•klit"I -,..,..._ JIO It Qortoy Vic~ Prttlot"l •1141 Ot-411Ml-,._.,IC_ (dll .. T-tA . .._...... ,,_.,... ........ Dl•f'IHM....... ltlt-1" Moll "' .. ''""' "'-M91"8 l'.•lon ltMwt--WhlO.-~, ...... H\lntlnaton 8e9dl omc. I 11/J ...... hllltv¥d INlll,,.AOdrH\ll"O _,_,,.,... OffklH W.-.. Kii, llM 0'-Jre~MI C!Mll""M' UIW.tl .. YM'°"' r..<MltW<' V•ll••· n•1 ._.,_. "-e11 ... 01_ ,,_, TetepfMIM (114)~ Cf11elfled Aft.,. .. ...,...71 ,..,.. _, .. Or....-C.U...,,c--tt ... M0-1210 =re.:.:.~:.~~:..~~= "'•lltr ., Hfl"IHM•rtU ""'"'" _, .. ~::.~~.IM•I ... Cltt '°'"''"'°" et Se<-rlut "ttap: Nlf al C..lt MtM <•'"••~••· 1u11u• , ..... w o,, ... u ;e _, ... ,, ., "''" ,, ,. _,,, .... ,. ...... .. --.u,,_1111,. DEAD AT 44 Tuong Van Nguyen Ex-Viet Air Boss Succumbs Tuong Van Nguyen. who com- manded an air division m South, Vietnam, and is said to have been one of the most highly decorated South Vietnamese pilots died Monday at his Costa Mesa home. Buddhist funeral riles were held Wednesday for the South Vietnamese colonel at Pacific View Memorial Park. Tuong, 44, was deputy com· mander of the Third Air Division at Bien Hoa Air Force Base dur- ing the Vietnam conflict A close friend, Larry Hull, of Costa Mesa, said the pilot was shot down six times dunog his career, several times over North Vietnam. The flying colonel was one of the last to leave South Vietnam on April 29, 1975, flying a group of soldiers out lo the .aircraft car- rier Blue Ridge. After unloading his passengers, Tuong ditched his helicopter in the sea. He joined his family al Camp Pendleton and later settled in Costa Mesa where the former commander took two full-time jobs as a machinist. "He was working six days a week," Hull said. ''I'm sure that had something to do with his heart attack." Hull said Tuong saved enough ' money from the two jobs to buy a modest home on Placentia Avenue in Costa Mesa and. w1tt; Hull's help, was seeking a JOb ~ a pilot. "He got out of Vietnam \\.Ith nothing," !lull said "He came here with his fam II r . a fr\~ belongings. and that ·s 1l · Another friend, Orrin DeForest. Los Angeles, said Tuong was awarded many medals for his years of combat fhght. including the U.S. Dist· mguished Flying Cross. "He pretty much ran the air show over there for the South Vietnamese,'' DeForest said. De Forest recently retired from the Central Intelligence Agency, after serving eight years in South Vietnam, much of that lime with Tuong, he said. "The man was a genuine hero," he said. Family Fashion Featured In Pilnt Today Yotl can get a head l'itart on planning your family's sprin1t finery by reviewing the tips in a special Daily Pilot magazine - Family Fashions. Your armchair fashion tour of the Orange Coast begins with a reminder of fashions popular 200 years ago during the first celebrations of the annual return of the swallows to Mission San Juan Capistrano. Then, Family Fashions offers timely tips on clothing for spnng, helpful beauty tips and even Sew· ing advice for the cost-conscious bride-~be. Look for Family Fashions in today's Daily Pilot. f New YORK (A P) - Wholesale coftee priee1 have •bot °"" tbo .. burier, but c:on-aumen will bn• HVeraJ ..U to find out how much more per powJ.d ~11 bave to Pia¥ in the •upermarkets. General Foods Corp., the na· tion's largest coffee roaster, &n· creased the wholesale price ol ground C2_ffee by SO cents to $C.2l a pound Wednesday. The action followed Monday's 50-cent in- crease to $4.18 a pound by second-lar gest Folger Coffee Company. General Foods also raised prices for Sanka and Brim ground decaffeinated coffee by 40 cents a pound. It left instant prices at $5.""5 for a 10-ounce jar, the same price charged by Folger for instant. General Foods and Folger sell more than half the coffee con- sumed in the United States, and their actions strongly influence the prices of other brands. How these increases will affect !>upermarket price 1sn 't yet known, since it takes several Wl•eks for them to reach the re· tail level. Many grocers traditionally have sold coffee at or below cost to utlrarl customers to their stores. and therefore may not pass all the new pnce along to the shopper. In January, the lastest month for wh1rh r1gures are available. the nallonwide average retail price for roasted coffee was $2.55 aC('Orcilng to the Bureau or Labor Statistics. General Foods last raised the wholesale pnce or its top.selling Maxwell House ground coffee March 2. when the price went from $3.31 to $.1.71 per one-pound can. Coffee roasters blame the wholesale increases on the price of green coffee beans, up steadily since July 1975, when a frost destroyed many coffee trees in Brazil, the world's largest grower. Green beans from Brazil were quoted on~ tcash market this week at $3. a pound, compared wlth $1.10 a unj_ a year ago. It will tak 'l~ to five years for the new coffee trees planted after the frost to reach matunty, so the international market is still dealing with a low-supply situation. Before the frost . the na- tionwide average '"retail price was Sl 27 a pound Prices also have been pushed upward because American de· mand for coffee did not decrease rn the year following the frost. Front Page A I WINDS .•. curred as a result of downed hres. Southern California Edison Company officials said 12,000 north county residents were without power some part of Thursday nJght as at least seven power poles were downed by the Fullerton wind. The power company officials also reported that residents in the western and southwestern portions of the county were without power m omentarily while service adjustments were made. According to area manager William Compton. some resi- oents m the hard-hit Fullerton Me<i were still without power this morn mg. Fullerton police said city clean up crews worked through the night cleanng debris and fallen trees from roadways. Today, police were guarding the damaged business establish· ments to prevent looting of stores left windowless. doorless and roofless by the freak wind. In Fullerton. police said there were reports of a similar wind hitting the area once before. If so. that was in 1914, accord· ing to unconfirmed reports. Draft Needed? WASHINGTON (AP> Defense Secretary Harold Brown said Wednesday while there is no need now to revive the military draft. it could become necessary in the 1980'a. Joy Ride Ends Marine Recruits Steal, Jeep SAN DIEGO (AP) -The Marine Corps says three recruits stole their drUl sergeant's Jeep and stripped it during a joy ride to Blanchard, Okla. A spokesman sal~ Pvt. Jerry D. Powell, 17, of Blanchard was fined $600 at a co\U't martial. The spokesman 18.ld Wednesday that Pvt. Wayne E. Smith, 25, of Minot, S.D., Is awaltinf dilcha.rae and Pvt. Georte Brou1hton, 18, of ~e Point, Ore., la be- ing SOQ8ht. • The Jeep baa been returned to Sat. Oary Woodward, 22, of Loi Angeles, at the San Dleao Marine Recruit Depot. · But he Cfldn 'l get hi$ three men back • HB KiDings Man Nabbed Demanding Nixon Visit A 30-year·old Massachusetts man who claimed he had tiny radio transmitters implanted in his teeth demanded lo sec former President Richard M. Nixon Wednesday and threatened to kiJI himself if the ex chief executive didn't have the devices removed Secret Service agents ap- prehended the man and then turned him over to the San Clemente Police who took him to the mental ward at UC Irvine Medical Center where he was kept in custody for observation. Police Lt. Al Enlow said the man told officers the radio transmitters were put in his teeth seven years ago when he was in the Army because he had diyulged secrets. He also demanded an airplane to fly to New York and a meeting with Jackie Onassis. Tll• ICIMletLIY HUIOW -~-·.:..:..:: . Vinyl-dad metll C.blnet. Simulated V(IUned Walnut finish. 1001' Solid-State Chassis Power Sentry Voltage Regulatlng System. AFC. An Or~• ty Superior Court JUl7 dellbet-at· 1.aft1r,-: W ay to find VI e Camp U ot Hun&.-ln«ton ~ach guilty or tint del'f"ee murder in the kllllnp of bis wife and her former husband. Deputy District Attorney Bryan Brown urged the jury to reject the defense argument that deep depression and drunken- ness precipitated by the estrangement of bis wife led Campbell, 48, to kill the couple. Brown argued that Campbell was a convicted felon several times over who had terrified Mrs. Campbell and her family with his displays of violence. "He went up those stairs with the intention of killing," Brown said. "And when he came down his wife and the man she pre- ferred to Campbell were dead.'• Campbell was arrested in Costa Mesa two days after Beverly Campbell, 39, and Vernon Edward Howell, 42, were shot to death in the home at 17847 Beard Lane. Dylan's Wife Kicked Out? SANTA MONICA CAP> Singer-songwriter Bob Dylan brou~hl another woman into his house and ordered his wife .to leave. his wife claims in docu- m en ls seeking divorce. Sarah Lowndes Dylan also con· tends Dylan struck and injured her. The divorce case. citing ir- reconcilable differences, is pend- ing in Superior Court. In her divorce petition filed March 1, Mrs. Dylan is seeking custody or the couple's five children, the domed house Dylan built in Malibu, a share of his music interests and a division of o.ther property. ~QUALITY TELEVISION The kllllnp..,.. Witneaed lay Mra. Campbell's dau1bter, I.Aurie Howdl, 10, who t.ti.fteet a1a.imt her st.epf athe.r dwi.aa tbe trlal. Deputy Public Defender Tom McDonald asked the jury to ac· cepl the conclusions of defense psychiatnst.s who testified that Campbell was of diminished mental capacity when he shot and killed the couple Nov. 4. Heavy dnnkinJ[ throul[hout the day and depression that de- epened as the days of separation wore on had left Campbell at the point that he was no longer capa- ble or thinking rationally, McDonald said. Fears Grow For Safety Of 2 Goats No trace has yet been found of two baby Nubian goals kidnaped from the Westminster High School agricultural farm Mon- day and fears for their survival are growing today. Agriculture Department chairman Charles Ramos said Wednesday in issuing an appeal for return of the little beasts that they cannot Live without essential care and that includes goal's milk, preferably from thei.r mother. Student Shelly Antonacci, 14072 Uxbridge St., was raising !he relatively rare Nubian goals with plans lo exhibit them at the OrangeCounty Fairthissummer. Anyone with any informauon about the missing kids may telephone Westminster High School at 893-1381 or the Westminster Police Department at 898·3311. Now 553477 I ull l 'nc ·1or~1 Hurrnttli••' ,.,,., flu1· f•t·r.,011ul Ot11• \ •·u•· t.unrn11lt•f• On I r·c·ru 1•ro1fuc•f H•• .-..t•ll! 275 East 17th St. Costa Mesa ....,.......,.,. $ .. 10...W•efC...lr. Phone 642-8882 Store Hours Daffy U Sat. 9-5:30 ...... ................ " THISI alCTIOMIC ..-ONS~LS . SHVICI YOUlt lqUIPMENT L .. VOL. 70, NO. 76, S SECTIONS, 62 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALlFORNIA THURSDAY, MARCH 17, 1977 TEN CENTS 1 . ariahle f acations t By IDLARV KAVE Oft• 0.llt f'li.t Si.It . A plan that would allow stu- dents at Irvine High and Venado Intermediate Schools to take vacations whenever they want lo is now being considered by Irvine school district offlcaals. If the plan 1s adopted by the school board. students could lake vacations al different times dur ing the. year and then set up in· dividualized instruction pro· grams to compensate for their llme away from campus, accord· ing to Jerry Rayl, director of secondary education. "It's really premature \o talk about it now, since we're &till stu- dying the idea," Rayl said Wed· nesday when asked if an alternative calendar 1s bemg studied. Rayl said he presented the plan to the district cabinet <highest· ranking administrators> Tues- day. They asked a lot of questions but didn't say whether or not they support the idea, he aald. The alternative calendar is still .in the infant stages of dis· cussion, but Irvine High officials have already decided to switch to a "quinmester" system, where the school year is broken up anto (ive nine-week sessions. Rayl srud the school already operates on a type or quinmester system. since progress reports are made every nine weeks. But beginning in the fall, there O•H• PHot !>tatt Pllolo DOWNED UTILITY LINES MAKE FULLERTON STREET IMPASSABLE __ -T.his W;Js Scene Tflls Morning Near Commonwealth Av.enue and Brookhurst Street I ... I Winds Twjst County Three Injured; Damage Nears 11 Million Freak tornado like winds s lashed throug h portions of Grange County Wednesday even ing causang an estimated SI million worth or damage and in- juries to at least three people. Hardest hat by the devastating 'tphon wind was a rs ve·mile ,J ng, 200-yard wide stretch sn • Hert.on. . ,. -·There, what one policetnan .deiScribed as a twister swept jthkough a bu&ines.s c.e.n.t.cr., l'rUShed through 0range County's brgest food processing plant and then hurried through a res1den· t.'81 area lx'fore petering out near St. Jude's Hospital. Left in the wind's destrudave wake were ~ <tamaged homes. 180 uprooted trees. four downed traffic s ignals, four crumpled :CAKTER GETS RICKOVER GIFT W ASH1 NGTON <AP 1 Pres1· dent Carter has placed atop his Oval Office desk a bronze plaque on a wooden base that reads. "Oh God, Thy sea 1s so great and my ltoat is so small." It's the girt from his old Navy boss, Adm. Hyman Rickover. Coast Weather P arlly cloudy with chance of measurable rain 10 percent tonight and 20 percent Friday. Lows tonight in 4es. Highs Fri- day in upper SOS and lower 60s. INSIDE TODAY Frustration .and /\Irv ccr· rfed the Rolhng Stones t~h~ tnllgrdf*nl ooncm that mew~ ther lad. occord. hag to coh1mni1t ·1.i1a Roblnton. Tl)ft .ageless Mick Jagger,appeoraonP.age 86. l•tlex I 0~11y PllOI -.Wp PATH OF BIG BLOW Funerton Hardest Hit light standards and 16 damaged cars, poli<.'e said. They also reported eight busi- nesses wtnd-damaged and two buildings in the Hunt·Wesson rood plant at 1800 W. Co m· monwealth Ave. se verely damaged. It was an the food plant that the three mjuries were reported. all to plant workers. Two of the in1ured people were treated by paramedics: the third person reportedly was treated al Martin Luther Hos pital an Anaheim and released. Weather officials balked at calling the freak winds tornados. C'Atunty Sait But th~ caught up in the turmoil didn't "It was like a gray funnel that seemed to move along almo~t m !\low motion.·· one Fullerton policeman said. Those on the outskirt!> of the wind ~wath '>aid 1t was accom- panied by thunder. lightning and hail "There was this violent. freaky thunder and lightning that lasted fw about 15 minutes. And the hail stones were huge.·· one resident on the wtnd·s fringe said A businessman two !:>locks from the so called twister that hit Fullerton at 6·Jo p .m . said. ··Everything was okay here. But two blocks away it looked like so· m eone had set off a born b · · Pohce an three c1 l1es. Buena Park. Anaheim and Fullerton, reported wind damage, <.'hiefly broken wtndows and torn roofs Near the 1unct1on of the Riverside and Santa Ana Freeways, an 18·wheel tractor- trailer ng reportedly was over- turned by the freak winds. At St Jude's Hospital near Bastanchury Road and Harbor Boulevard. a guard shack re· portedly was lifted from its moorsnis just at the p0int where <See WINDS, Page A2) , Noise Factor Nil, Claimant Testifies Developer Harry Rinker told a jury Wednesday that noise from Orange County Airport wa not even a minor factor to be con- sidered when he boagbt bis Santa Ana·Heights·home in 1965. Rinker testified as bis Superior Cou.-t lawsuit a&aiast the county eot under .,, • ., tbllt Jae cbected • the polat with MIObon and Pliot frlendl before h• l>O~ht the land at 23U Mtsa Drive. IJlnker eaid he ~as repeal'ed.ly auured that all he would ever hear from the home he planned to built would be the drone of a few private alrc.c.aft durtn.i the weekend, many of which would not even crou bJa property. Rinker said be then developed hit three acres to tbe point that it now hu a a~clous home and garctens, lun-wlld pheuanta, ducks &od exOtlc bird• and mlA)' · faml.l1 rene~ fullitJtt. • B.lnbf pvt!. 1fADtl $200,000 1n ! damages from the county for WMt be claims is the noise and pollution that have disturbed his en vironment in recent years since the county allowed two airlines to use jet al.rcrart at the nearby county airport. Judge Frank Domenlcbini ln· ten.e&pted Rinker'• ttatlmony late Wedtleactay to make ar- nitfeJUeDbt for tbe court, the lawyen and jury 10 be taken to- day on a guided tour of the • Rinker acreqe and the Orange County Airport. Norcnat court ea1lon1 were to re1ume In Santa Ana f t.te1oday. "l'he trial of the RtnkeT lawsuit la being watched bt. Harbor Area holtl4lownen who have sued the county for mo ... than a» DillHon in damac1111 on ldentlcal chartea. They contend that prol)Ut)t values in the raid ntlal areu ~ tnatq the couotY ilt'por,t bn• been. adveruly jff9Cte.d It tr • 1 • ID will ~ actual nme·week &eg· ments, instead of the regular 20-week semesters now in use. If the new plan is adopted, "students could take off a whole nine.week period, or perhaps take four weeks and go sk11ng m the wanter.'' Rayl explained To make up for that lime off, s tudents would work out an dt v1dualazed programs that would probably mclud~ attend ing the existing sul'Ttfn er pro gram and also and I\ 1duahzcd e • Schools? study. "We're stiJl studying it to see its educational value," said Rayl. "Some subjects, like foreign language and math, may be very hard to teach with Uus system." Rayl said the plan 1s not hke the year-round calendar in use at El Camino Real and Vista Verde Schools. At those campuses, all s tudents follow the same alternative calendar. attending school for 45 days and then hav ang a l!ktay intersession that can be used for vacation or extra classes. "What we 'r e cons idering would never work as a man- datory syst em. It would just be an option some students could taj(e aavantage of.·· he said. Rayl explained that al might be good for students whose younger brothers and sisters attend the vear-round schools sance it would ~nable whole families to vacation < eeVACATION, PageA21 Norton Funded? Jury Probes Lobbyist's Role By GARY GRANVILLE Ot ,.,. D•1ly P1lo1 St•tl The Orange County Grand Jury's probe into pohtscal prac tices m Orange County ha!> swept out to Uldude 1976 payments made to Republican State Scnatt• candidate Loran Norton b\ lob by1st Frank M1 cht'lcna · According to Norton. roughl) five M1c ht•ll'na <:hl'rk., totaling SJ,500 and made l'JY ablt• tu Norton .illy G;,1ry Nl·w meyer \\.ere. in fart. pa 1d to h1 m Norton. a former Santa Ana policeman and an ex a ide to county Supervisor Laurence Schmit. said M1chclena's pay ments were fo r h1., services as a prs v ate investigator They were not. ac<:ording lo lhe former Republican can · didatc. in any way related lo his Townhouse Project Approved Developer~ have won a pprn\. di from the Irvine Planning Com m1ss1on to hu1ld 276 townhou~e" and 342 ap<Jrt mt•nt!> in lhl' nc" Jeffrey Planned Community Thl' ne\\ dC\'l'lopmcnt he., In the v1cm1tv of lhl' Sant., An.i Freeway. just west or .Jdfrcv Road Thl' new community will includc both rt's1dcr11.:c!> and bus1· ncsses Ont' approval was given ln Broadmoor llomt''> to build 187 to v. nhomc!> u~lng <1 de~ign s1m1lar to the homes built 1n the Deerfield area. The new units have been crcs lgnated t'he Heritage Park To wnhomes. Another permit was given to the Irvine Company's Multi· Family D1 v1s1on to construct 89 townhomes m the moderate in come range Those units. which will be similar in design to the moderate income homes built an Wood- <See JEFFREY, Page A2 > ·CdM Freeway Debuts Friday At Bristol St. Costa Mesa and CalTrans of· ficials will open portions or the Corona del Mar Freeway in a single ceremony Friday at2p.m . The ceremony will be h.eld on the southbound lanes of the new freeway at Bristol Street with public access via the Bear Street on ramp. The freewa y dedication, sponso~ by the City of Costa Mesa. will incl\Jde a speech by Congressman Robert E . Badham (R -Newport Beach> and welcome by Costa Mesa Mayor Dominic Raciti. CalTrans director Adrian a Gianturco has been invited to the ceremonies, as well as Robert J . . Datel, director of District 1 o! CalTrans. . Several freeway Janes wlll bo o~ned to traffic following the ceremonies. They include a six lane stretch between the NewpOrt Freeway and the San Dlego Freew U . The second proje~t dedicated Friday will be a three·level In· terchan1e between the Newport Freeway end the Corona del Mar Freeway It Bttatol Street. Tho ltnprov•ment to MacArthur Boulevard wm alao be dedlcat6d Friday durin1 th tame ceremonl • Th• project la a rta11-ed MaoArth&lr between Jambore• Road and Bonlla Cao1on Road. lrfoto~t ar• .alrHclyusJn1thatl'Oadw•y. uns uccessful 1976 stale senat~ c ampaign against Democrat Paul Carpenter. In the <;rand Jury 's continuan~ investigation into county political· practices Norton has alreadv testified twice He refused to discuss that testimony Wednesday but did acknowledge that the Mi chelena payments were brought up dur sng his secret interrogation Newmeyer. like Norton. 1s a former Santa Ana policeman and as now a private investigator. He was Norton's campaign m a nager through the June primary election. But two weeks ago he said he dropped from the Norton scene "hen he wasn t paid for pretrial mvests gatsve services pcrfol'med for Dr. Louis Cella. Lake Norton. Newme~r has made two appearances before the (See PROBE. Page A2) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--'~~ Cc~ L ":?1---..:... ..J e.s;!.., ~~ Irish Step Out 120,000 March i·n New York NEW YORK CAP> -The Irish. lrish·Americans and their friends, 120,000 strong. stepped bris kly up a s'un·filled Fifth A venue t'oday in the 215th annual St. Patrick's Day parade The famed "Fighting 69lh" Regiment. carrying the Irish Tricolor alongside Old Glory and accompanied by their two Irish Wolfhound mascots, led the parade as it traditionally has since tht!<Jays of the Civil War. Police officer Joseph Nugent. who was born on a farm 45 years ago in County Waterford, Ireland. got the march under way at noon sharp with a shrill blast from his gree.n whist!~ ..... It was the third lime in 10 years that he started the giant de- monstration. He wore a green tic under his blue uniform jacket lo note the grand occasion. "It's a great honor for me, CSee PARADE, Page A2) Six-ycur-otd Shannon Sheldon, a lirst-grader at Vista Verde School in, Irvine. celebrated St. Patrick's Day to- day with her buddy, Mr. Leprechaun, who she made Ju t. for the occasion, • , I I •\ • ' I . t I • t . ' . ' . . ~ t . .. .. lo • ~ Proposed lrvlM Clt)' Councilman D1ll VaJ"doulb h" sent a · · m cmo to the City CouncU 1u11 .. un1 lhat apartment• and /or coo·, domin.iwn1 be built aJon••lde ia- dUJtt'J in the 1tlU·stalled Jrvtrw lnduatrial Complex Eut (llC·!:). That plan, plwi Vardoulis' idea that UM city buy the Irvine Com· pany, are both listed as new busi· nesa items on Tuesday's City Council agenda. Vardoulls says his plan regard· lng the llC·E would boost the elty 's offering of low and 'moderate income housmg and might also settle the housing lawsuit f11ed against the city and the Irvine Company by the Orange County Fair Housing Council and Weslev Marx The Irvine Company's $850 million UC·E project has been stalled for several years pending the outcome of the lawsuit. Plaintiffs in the suit contend the city and Irvine Comp8Jly are in violation of the city's general plan because not enough low and moderate income housing would be provided for workers in the proposed industrial complex. Both sides have been &eeking an out-of-court settlement, but so far, efforts have been unsuc· cessful The court date is Dec 13. VardouHs is suggesting that •·enclaves" be built inside the complex containing both re- sidences and industry The re· sidences would be high density either apartments, condos or both. Both the residences and in- dustries would pay dues to a master association that would pay for certain housing amenities and ongoing main tenance costs That would lowtr the cost of housing for the rentors and /or homeowners. Benefits for the industries would be three·fold according to Vardoulis, includin~ lower absenteeism because employes would live nearby, reduced cm ploye turnover and recrea- tional facilities for cmployes. Vardoulls says he realizes there are major problems with his plan, most notably that the in· dustnal complex near the marine base lies within the CNEL nois~ line and has,been ruled too noisy for residential uses. In his memo Vardoults told the C'Ounc1l that the J rvme Company "ould proceed with studying his plan only if they hear a "definite and 5enous" interest on the part of the City Council due to the ex pense involved 1n such a study ·'I feel we should weigh the ad- vantages anrl d1sadvanta1?es of :;uch a development and reach a consensus as to whether or not it's worth pursuing," Vardouhc; i.aid. Family F mhion Featiuedln Pilot Today You can get a head start on planning your family's spring finery by reviewing the tips in a special Daily Pilot magazine - Family Fashions. Your armchair fashion tour of the Orange Coast begins with a reminder of fashions popular 200 years ago during the first . celebrations bf the annual return Qf the swallows to Mission San Juan Capistrano. Then, Family Fashions offers timely tips on clothing for spring, helpful beauty tips and even sew- ing advtce for the cost-consctous bride-to-be. Look for Family Fashions in today's Daily Pilot. • ORANG! COAST DAILY PILOT ~==-~~:'~':.':i==~= Cal•l-illllfttC:-••Y ,._ ....... -... _,,,_. M9Moy ,..,....,, ,.,..._, I• C.0.1• .... ~ a..c~. 14111'41-.... ~,, tllft Ytlltf._ lntln•, ~HIM«~ Val .. y AM ~~=~s:,<;~n·~i='f:. c:::~~.:.!'.'L~:.:~,~.:.,., """' .. , ·-.. -Pro'*<\t -.....,,_ , .. ,.~ VI<• l'tHI••• ..... 0o-• ~ ~ .. ..... lldltot T-oA.M.....,.,._ "'-""'.,. l•itor OltftK14 IMt ·~,. ... " Auhltlll Me""I"' 1<119" Offle•• Ohta"'°"' IJO wuui.v "'"' = .. Kl\ 11 .. oi.-yrost-..1 ...... Oft .. 1(111 1111t ~h ...,..,,.,. tM<~ \lallt'tt tl1011A.,.J-••SMD1 ... .-,_.., Telephone ('tU)~ Cle..-..ctA~MWl?I ----· 'lflj .. y-Olll(• M1.t210 ''""""'ci.-. 4tt.OUO HE ISSUED CHECKS Lobbyfst Mlchelena Arms Rap O.lly ...... Sl-'f ,.._. TEsTIFIES TWICE Ex-Cop Norton Grand Jury Figure Freed From Jail Police informer turned political patron Gene Conrad spent Wednesday popping m and out of Orange County Jail but by midnight was clearly out on $5,000 bail. But to stay free, Conrad must appear in Superior Court Friday and convince Judge James Walsworth that he didrft violate terms of his probation March 1 That is when agents of the federal Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms Bureau seized two .38·caliber revolers from Conrad. Simultaneously, the agents picked up a shotgun and rifle from Conrad ally Loran Norton in Santa Ana Norton purportedly was hold· ing the two weapons for his fnend and business associate. As a convicted felon, federal regulations prohibit the 42·year· old former police informer from possessing firearms. And under terms of probation set down in 1975 when Conrad pleaded guilty in Orange County to a felony charge he is ineligible to possess firearms The bulky rags-to·riches political benefactor .insists that it is necessary for him to be armed because of his years as what he rails an undercove~ agent for the district attorney's office. But office officials say Conrad f'rmt1 Page A J WINDS. • • the so·called t"'1stcr ('xhausted itself But residents in other areas of the county felt the impact of the brief. freak storm when widespread power failures oc curred as a result of downed It res. Southern California Edison Company officials said 12,000 north county residents were without power some part of Thursday night as at least seven power poles were downed by the Fullerton wind. The po"'er company officials also reported that residents Jn the western and southwestern portions of the county were without po~er momentarily while service ad1ustments were made. According to area manager William Compton, some resi- dents in the hard-hit Fullerton area were still without power thjs mormng. Fullerton police said city clean up crews worked through the night clearing debris and fallen trees from roadways. Today. police were guarding the. damaged business establish· ments to prevent looting of stores left windowless, doorless and roofless by the freak wind. ln Fullerton, police said there were reports of a similar wlnd hitting the area once before. If so. that was in 1914, accord· ing lo unconfirmed reports. f'rOlll Page A J VACATION log ether . "I don't foresee many students wanting the option Some, like those in football or band wouldn't. want to lea.e campu~ except during the summer," Rayl added. Rayl said about a dozen teachers at Irvine High have been st.udytng various alternative calendar options and caune up with this plan as the moat feulble. "We plan to send communica· tlona to lrvlne HJgh parent.a soon to find out what they think about it,'' aald Rayl. He ~ said that 11 the pro- aram can be put into oparatlon without added expense it. wUI stand a better chance of btlna ap· proved. ''II only a few atudtnt. take ad· vanta.ie of Uao plan, it wouldn't coat any mori. If a lot of student. do It, il could run Into money," be Hid. was a paid informer rather than an undercover agent. Those were the issues at stake Wednesda y morning when Conrad replied to a warrant in the federal building and was im· mediately placed on a hold order by the county Probation Dep<Jrt· ment It was when he was being booked into jail that Conrad com· plained of chest pains. He was taken to the prison ward of UCI Medical Center but insisted upon being returned to Jail a few hours later. There he remained until 11 : 15 p.m when a $5,000 bond guaran- teeing his appearance in court was posted. Last fall, Conrad funneled more than $50,000 into political campaigns in Orange County. Most of that amount went to Supervisor Philip Anthony's campaign under various guises. Since tt~n. Conrad's political philanthropy has attracted the attention of the Orange County Grand Jury. And in Los Angeles County, a federal grand jury is looking into the business opera- tions of the firm he heads. Pension Funds or America. * * * Fre.PageAl PROBE .•• Grand Jury m the probe centering around the pohtlcal machinations of county supervisors Ralph Diedrich and Philip Anthony. In one of those appearances, Newmeyer's stint behind closed doors lasted three and a half hours. It was after that testimony that Norton was called to appear before the jury for the second time. The former Schmit aide insist· ed Wednesday that he answered the Grand Jury's questions to the best of his ability. and em· phasized Michelena's payments to him through Newmeyer were not for campaign purposes. "It was a heavy investigation, a very heavy investigation that I don't feel free to talk about," Norton said. Michelena was not available for comment today Meanwhile the jury continued its investigation Wednesday by hearin~ testimony from at least five witnesses, Newmeyer in- cluded. Other witnesses who answered a Grand Jury subpoena in· eluded : -Amanda Hertz, a business and social companion of former police informant Gene Conrad, who pumped roughly $53,000 into various county political cam- paigns last year. -Anab~lm city councilman WilJiam Kott. who reportedly was loaned Sl0,000 for his city campaign in the spring of 1976 by Diedrich attorney Michael Rem· ington. -Robert Laogslet, a Los Angeles County developer who conlribuled $S,000 to Anthony's campa.lgn. -Job.n Johnston, who has been described as Langslet's "political adviser " FroaePageAJ JEFFREY. • • bridge, will be on the same parcel u the Herita1e Park Townhomes .. The plannl commlsaion also approved plans by the Arnet Development Company to build 342 apartment.a. The company la plan~ to bulld 274 adult Wlit. 1urroundin1 an adult reereatJon area and 1 18-unlt latnUJ area grouped around a recreation area aimed atlamW ... Uni .. lbe approvalJ are ap- peal.a to th db' council, the proJeeta are~ to be under conattud.too by early aumrner, aceordll\I to clty oftlcim. . . TM adi•e Mattb few a l.Ue P'orelt hooaewlte wbo myatcnoaaly dluppeared Mon- da)' lD Pasadena wu ~porart lY~ toda, wbUe police c{4 Ya follow 'lP 00 dolcm ol telephone teada. Rachel Sparling. 36, of 24311 Lakevin.t Lane, dropped out of slgbt after a vl1lt. to her psychiatrist. Early the next morninii, Los Angeles police officers arrested a 17-year-old boy who had been caught driving Mrs. Sparling's 1972 bronze-colored Corvette with · the personalized license plate WUV YOU. The youth allegedly had possession of the m1ss1ng woman's rings, watch, purse, keys and other personal eCfects, plus a .25 caliber pistol. Police said the boy admitted steahng the car from the doctor's office parking lot and craims the jewelry was on the seat. Detective Sgt. Ray Mc Ray said today that searches of rug~ed terrain around the Rose howl turned up no trace of Mrs. Sparl· ing. A tip from two fishermen drew searchers to the mountain coun· try along winding Angeles Crest Highway Tue:>day. but again, the trail was cold. McRay said police probers are presently stumped by the ca~ and have been hindered by the fact that they are unable lo ques· lion the arrested youth, who has been charged with auto theft, robbery and possession of stolen property. The police spokesman said steps are being taken to clear legal obstacles pre.venting in· vestigators from interrogating the boy. Meanwhile. McRay said, of· ficers are «illowing up on dozens of leads gleaned from scores of telephone calls the department has received from people who claim to have seen the car Mon· day evening. ~-JI rec-th r drill '1 Jeep strtp it d:=joy rt to Blanchard, Otla. A I man u1d Pvt. Jltry D. Powell, 17, al Blan wu fined 9600 at a court martial. The spokesman said Wednesday that Pvt. Wayne E . Smith, 25, ol inot, S.D., ii await QI dJachart• and Pvt. George Broucbton, ~ ot Eagle Poln~ Ore.., la be- ln& SCJU&ht. The Jeep has been returned to S1t. Gary Woodward, 22, of Los Angeles, at the San Diea-o Marine Recruit Depot. But be didn't get bis three men back. FrowaP~AJ PARADE ..• born on a small farm, lo start the big parade,·· he said. The s1x·hour-long festival is the largest of many celebrations bemg held across America today in honor of St. Patrick. The music of Erin blared as 195 . bands from nine states and Ireland marched up Manhattan's queen of avenues and created a holiday atmosphere, broken only by an occasional banner bearing the barade's theme: "England Get ut oflreland." Serving also as a spontaneous tribute to the · contribution of Irish-Americans to the nation's heritage. the parade drew spec· tators four and five deep along Fifth Avenue's sidewalks. Marchers included the Ancient Order of Hibernians, lrish Republican Army veterans, the United Irish Counties Associa- tion and colleges, schools and academies. Young boys and girls from Belfast. Ireland, provided a touch of the old sod with their· Cathal Brugha All-Accordion Band. The parade route went from "'44th street, past St. Patrick's Cathedral to 86th street, dis- banding at Third Avenue. 3 QUALITY TELEVISION Safari Park Returns Land To Irvine Co. Lton Country Safari, which has been staving off financial col· lapse for more than a year, has taken another step to cut ex· penses at the drive-through wild animal park in Irvine. The park will tum hack 164 un· used acres of its original 480-acre leasehold to the Irvine Company to trim lease payment costs. That cutback. plus additional economy moves such as staff cuts and reductions in executive salaries, will yield an approx- imate savin"s of '35.000 a moolh. according to Lion Country Presi- dent Harry Shuster. The land being surrendered by Lion Country is on a slope above Laguna Canyon Road, plus about 2.S acres fronting on Mo1,1lton Parkway. Only about 250 acres have been developed by the amusement facility. Lease revisioqs were part of the arrangements being made late last year by Lion Country of· ficials in an effort to r~lve more than $8.9 million in debts owed by the park to its various creditors. Lion Country had begun resolv· ing its debts with banks that have made loans to the facility by pay. ing $500,000 in late January. That money was obtained from the sale or another facility owned by the company jn Florida. -,p--. . .=:....::,:..::_ - Tht IUMIUtL.H HZJIOW Vinyl-clad metal cabinet Simulated gralt'led Walnut finish 1~ Solid-State Chassis. Power Sentry Voltage Regulating System. AFC. featuring Zenith's '\ L.l!CTRONIC VIDEO GUARD TUNING SYSTEM One-knob VHF and UHF channel aetectlon. Mow SSM77 · 1·1111 I,,,.,,.,.~, Hurruuti''' ,.,,.,Our 1•1•r,ottt1I 0Uf' \ t•or (eunrt 11lf4••• Ou I ,.,.,.~, 1•1·1Hl11•·I M , •. 'ti1•1l: /275 East 17th St. Costa Mesa ..... ...... ,...._. 2 0.... w ... : t:.;. ..a;,, Phone 642-8882 \ 1HISI ILICROHIC NOASSIOMALS. S!RVICI YOUl lqUIPMIMT • 17 l l ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFO NIA THURSDAY, MARCH 17, 1tn Mi1lion-dollar Winds Twist County O.lly Piiot SIMI Photo DOWNED UTILITY LINES MAKE FULLERTON STREET IMPASSABLE This Waa Scene This Morning Near Commonwealth Avenue and Brookhurst Street Tricolor Leads March ,-' Botts Dots Cause No~es in Laguna By PHILIP ROSMARIN Of IN O•lly Pilot Sl•lf , 1 Botts .Dots, those raised discs >embedded in roadways and in· ·~nded lo alert metorista lo traf· ,ftc conditions, are driving Laguna Beach residents olut.ely dotty, Mayor Phyllis eney said Wednesday. "People are going crazy from ~~ noise of the dots," she swd. ••11ithink the dots are going to 'eau11esome a<?c1dents, frankly." Tt».e City Council is considering ''recommendations from the Plan- ning Commission and the Park- ing, Traffic and Cicculation Com· miltee to can every Bolts Dot 11l the city. A decision is expected at an April 6 public hearing. I The dots were installed about rnlne months aigo on hilly streets, &iSsertedly to warn drivers of sharp curves' below. Bumps broke out on Temple Hills Drive. Coast . Weather Partly cloudy with . chance c:t measurable rain t, 10 pueent tonight and 20 " percent Friday. Lowa I tonight in -405. Highs Fri· day in upper 50s and lower 60s. Park Avenue, Temple Terrace, Bluebird P.ark, Summit Drive and al the 1000 block of Skyline Drive. Some residents have since compared the outbreak of dots in the streets to measles -or the plague. The dots have been accused of setting up uncomfortable rumbl- rn g that vibrates through neighborhood homes and neighbor bones as cars and trucks bump across. They've been aecused of caus· ing tires and old people to shp on them when wet. And they've been accused by the Planning Commission of not doing what they were intended to do: stop skateboarding down the steep hills. Skateboarding'..' Planning Director Doug Schmitz told the council that was what former Public Works Dlre<:tor Stan Scholl bad 1n mind when the dots went in. It was the first time it bad been publicly mentioned. "Why didn't someone ever ad· mil that?" Mrs. Sw.eeney asked ttnd complained that Scholl "kind or unilaterally did it without ask- in~ anvbodv." Councilwoman Sally Belterue didn't want to wait for next month's bearing befor~ remov- ing the dots from Park Avenue, though the rest or the council vot- ed to wait and consider all dots at once. 0n Park, the Botts Dots are in the downhill traffic lane only. Drivers · reporteclly often swing into the oncoming traffic lane just to avoid them. AltbOugh no tratnc accidents have been directly attributable to the dots. Laeuna .Beach police traffic investlcator Carmen Pollutro teday·s~d1be•persooal ly•bu observed the Park Avenue (See BO'ITS,,p ... A2) 8250 Fern Stolen A SO-pound. 15-year-old •ttlahOfn fem was stolen from tho backyard or 8 Laeuna Beath home Wednesday, POiice said. OWner AJWD E. Allen, former 5th DUtrld count1 aupuvilor, ~ Teple Hills Drlv•, valued the fem:at Jl,51. • _ NEW YORK CAP) -The Irish,. Iris h -Americans and their friends, 120,000 strong. stepped briskly up a sun-filled Fifth · A venue today in the 215th annual St. Patrick's Day parade. The famed "Fighting 69th" Re1iment, carrying the Irish Trlcolor alongside Old Glory and accompartied by their two Irish Wolfhound mascots, led the parade as it traditionally has ii nee the days of the Civil War. Police officer Joseph Nugent, who was born on a farm 45 years ago in County Waterford, lrel.,..d, got the march under way at noon sharp with a shrill blut from his ereen whistle. It was the third time in 10 years that he started the giant de- monstration. He wore a green tie under his blue uniform jacket to note the grand occasion. .. It ·s a great honor for me, born on a s mall farm, to start the bag parade," he said. The six-hour-long festival is the largest of many celebrations being held across America today in honor of St. Patrick. The music of Erin blared as 195 bands from nine states and Ireland marched up Manhattan's queen of avenues and created a holiday atmosphere, broken only by an occasional banner bearing the parade's theme: "England Get Out of Ireland." Servmg also as a spontaneous tribute to the contribution of Irish-Americans to the nation's heritage, the parade drew spec- tators four and five deep along Fifth Avenue's sidewalks. Marchers included the Ancient Order or Hibernians, Irish Republican Army veterans, the United lnsh Counties Associa· <See PARADE, Page AZ) Laguna Cafe Safe Robbed A tblef who dialed the correct eembination to a sate w ednesday left Poor R.tchard's restaurant in Laguna Beach "a lot poorer,'" PoUce U. John Zelko said. The burglar forced a roof crawl hole entry and an attic door to get into the c losed restaurant. Zelko said about $700 was taken from a combination safe, which the burglar re. locked. An additienal SlSO was taken from an office cash re· gister. On Tuesday, a thief broke into Andree's Continen t al Restaurant. three blocks away at 1464 South Coast Highway, and robbed the safe, using the col'l"ect combination and re-locking it. The lou there wu ~00. ) EXPEKIS UCK N9SE TO 7R4CK A nauseattnc odor, J>ttineattnc the ana ~ween Del· Obispo Street and San Juan Creek in Dana Point, has expena baffled. San Juan treatment plant de· nles the smell comlna from there, and a nearby mote). reatAurant complex aays lt.a •tP- tfc tan.lit ta not Wt culprit.~ Pa5eA'I. • .-• > .. P'reak tornado· like winds slaabed through portions of Oranre County Wednesday even- lne causing an estimated $1 million worth of damage and in· juries to at least three people. Hardest hit by the devastating syphon wind was a five-mile long, 20(}.yard wide stretch m Fullertoo. There, what one policeman described as a twister swept throuah a business center. ruabed through Orange County's 1-argest food processing plant and then hurried through a residen· tial area before petering out near St. Jude's Hospital. Left in the wind's destructive wake were 80 damaged homes, 180 uprooted trees, four downed traffic signals, four crumpled Haht st.andarda and 18 damaeed cara, police said. They also reperted ei1ht busi- nesses wind-damaeed and two buildlngs in the Hunt-Wesson food plant at 1800 W. Com- monwealth Ave. severely damaaed. It was in the food plant that the three injuries were reported, all to plant workers. <See WINDS, Page AZ> Norton Funded? Jury Probes Lobbyist.'s Role By GARY GRANVILLE Of Ille Deily Ptlol Sl•tl The Orange Counly Grand Jury's probe into political prac- tices m Orange Co unty has swept out to include 1976 payments made to Republican State Senate candidate Loran Norton by lob· byist Frank Michelena. According to Norton, roughly five Michelena checks totaling $3,500 and made payable to Norton ally Gary Newmeyer were, infact,pa1d to him. Norton. a former Santa .Ana policeman and an ex-aide to county Supervisor Laurence Schmit, said Michelena•s pay. ments were for his services as a private investigator. They were not, according to the former Republican can· didate, in any way related to his unsuccessful 1976 state senate campaign against Democrat Paul Carpenter. In tht?'Grand Jury's continuing inves tigation into county political practices Norton has already testified twice. He refused to discuss that testimony Wednesday but did acknowledge that the Michelena payments were brought up dur· ing his secret interrogation. Newmeyer, like Norton, 1s a Texm Blast Injures 26 PORT ARTHUR, Tex. CAP) -A series of CX· plosions and a fire rapped through a unit of the Tex· aco refinery in this southeast Texas city to· day. injuring 26 people, of· ficials said. The injured were first taken to a local huspital, but spokesmen said some or the more seriously in· jured were being moved to . hospitals in Houston and Galveston. Cause of the explosions was under investigation. A reporter at the scene said the plant appeared to be heavily damaged, but Tex- aco officials said the extent of the damage was not known. former Santa Ana policeman and is now a private investigator He was Norton's campaign manager through the June primary election But two weeks ago he said h<· dropped lrom the Norton scent· when he wasn't paid for pretrial investigative services performed for Dr. Lows Cella. Like Norton. Newmeyer has made two appearances before the Grand Jury in the probe centenng around the political m achmatJOn~ of county supervisors Ralph Diedrich and Philip Anthony. In one of those appearances, Newmeyer's stint behind closed doors lasted three and a half hours. It was after that testimony that Norton was called to appear before the jury for the second time. The former Schmit aide insist- ed Wednesday that he answered the Grand Ju,.Y·s questions to the best of his ability. and em- phasized Michelena 's payments to him through Newmeyer were not for campaign purposes. "It was a heavy investigation. a very heavy mvesti~tion that I don't feel free to talk about," Norton said. Michelena was not available for comment today. Meanwhile the Jury continued its investigation Wednesday by hearing testimony from at least five witnesses, Newmeyer lD· eluded Other witnesses who answered a Gr and Jury subpoena in- cluded: -Amanda Hertz, a business and social companion of former police informant Gene Coniad, who pumped roughly $53,000 into various county political cam. paigns last year. <See PROBE, Page AZ) Single Vote Makes . Heckscher Mayor San Juan Capistrano city coun· cilmen elected attorney Yvon Heckscher mayor Wednesday by a single vote over John Sweeney, a college dean. High School administrator Kenneth Friess was unanimously elected mayor pro tern. The council split on the mayoral vote in the same 3·2 pat- tern which has been developing steadily over the past months, as Sweeney and Councilman Richard McDowell have con· sistently opposed the majority council suppo.rt of a con- troversial-program· to preserve farming in San J uan. The two-member minority has also backed certain proposals for commercial development in San Juan, which have been voted down by their three fellow coun- cilmen. Heckscher. a three-year veteran of City Council, follows Mayor Douglas Nash, who has also served three years as councilman. Friess was elected to the council a year ago. O.lly Piiot Sl&ff Pllllo ELECTED MAYOR Yvon Heckscher .. Woman Will Lead SC San Clemente Councilwoman Donna Wilkinson became the first woman mayor in the city's history Wednesday. Mayor Wilkinson was elected to the post by a unaJ!imous vote of council members present. Councilman Thomas O'Keefe was absent. William Walker was elected mayor pro tem and will chair meetings of the city council in Mrs. Willdnson's absence. "I love San Clemente. t have lived· here for 20 years and each year I have loved it more,•• Mrs. Wilkinson said upon taking the mayor's chair. "A good city doesn't just hap· pen, it depends on all of you," she said enumerating challenges to be faced in the upcoming year by the town. Mayor Wilkinson cited the im· minent development of the huge ranches in and around San Clemente, proposals for an in· dustrlal park, and the city's re- development plans for the pier area. "San Clemente can be one of the finest places along the coast, there is so much potential," she said. The new mayor also said she beli eved communication with citizens was very important. ·'I haven't ever not returned a telephone call, even the ones that haven 'l been pleasant," she said. Mrs. Wilkinson is tbe third woman to have served on tbe etty Council, however, none of her predeeessors served as mayor., City Clerk Max Berg said. · -. t . ' . . . ·. ·. .. .. .· ... .., __ PATH 0. BIG •LOW fuDertoftHtwdnt .. F,,_P-AJ WINDS ••. Two ot the injured people were treated by paramedics; the third ·person reportfdly was treated at Marlin Luther Hospital in Anaheim and released. · Weather orrtcials balked at calling the freak winds torn ados. But those caught up m the ' turmoil didn't. "It was It.Ice a gray runnel that seemed lo move along almost m s low motion." one Fullerton policeman said Those on the outskirts or the wind swath said 1t was accom· panied by thunder, lightning and hail. "There was this violent, freaky thunder and lightning that lasted for about 15 minutes. And the hail stones were huge," one resident on the wind's fringe said. 2 Farmers Eye San Juan Suit Over Rezoning I Attorney Tully Seymour, representing two San Juan Capistrano farmers. said Wed· nesday his clients will sue the ci· ty if the San Juan City Council _ adopts a proposed general plan amendment zoning 230 acres or farm land m the city for agn- business use. Seymour spoke at a regular Ci· ty Council meeting, where coun. cilmen later voted 3·2 to schedule a public hearing Apri I 6, at which time the council is expected lo adopt the amendment. City Attorney James Okazaki said he 1s fully aware of prevail ing leRal dec1s1ons in the area of municipal zonmi.: for open sp;.icc and related land use, including several cited by Seymour "We are not in a clear area," Okazaki said "Thi~ 1s an in novallve area of municipal law." In addition to a possible lawsuit on behalf or his clients, Seymour said any direct fman· c1al subsidy to farmers. such as subsidizing the cost of water. would make the city vulnerable to a taxpayers' suit. Councilmen cannot adopt the rezone amendment before the Apnl 6 meeting, because 30 days must elapse between receipt or the environmental impact report on the amendment and amend· ment adoption. The zoning of city land for the newly created agri-busmess land use is viewed by city officials as the second maJor step in develop. ing a strategy to preserve farm· ing as a business m San Juan. The first step was the Jan 19 adoption Of a building fee Or· dinance. Developers must pay $500 for each new home bullt '1\ San Juan and $1,000 for each acre developed for commercial or m· dustraal use. The fees are lo ac· cumulate m an agriculture pre·. servation fund. City Council has split 3 2 on e\ cry vote to develop 1 he farm preservation pro~ram Coun cilmen John s~<'l'ncy and Richard McDowell have con s1stenUy. opposed the r>ro~ram. saying city voters should be of· fered an opportunity to state simply whether they want to save farming in their cllv Newly elected mayor, Yvon Heckscher, and Councilmen Ken neth Friess and Douglas Nash have supported an aggressive farm preservation strategy. OR ANOE COAST wsc DAILY PILOT ...... ' I reed on Bail Police Informer turned polltkal patron Gene Conrad ll*tt Wednaday popptna m and out of Oran&• County J all but by mldn.llht wu clearly out-oo $5,0000aU. But lo stay tree. Conr ad must appear in Superior Court Friday and convince Judge James Walsworth that he didn't violate terms of his probation March 1. That is when agents or the federal Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms Burc:_au seized two .38·~aliber revoll!rs from Conrad. Simultaneously, the agents * * * Fro..PageAJ PROBE ... -Anaheim city councilman William Kott, who reportedly was loaned $10,000 for his city campaign in the spring of 1976 by Diedrich attorney Michael Rem· ington. -Robert Langslet, a Los Angeles County developer who contrib_uled SS,000 to Anthony's campaign. -John Johnston, who has been d escribed as Langslct's "political adviser." From Page Al PARADE ••• lion and colleges, schools and academies. Young boys and girls from Belfast. Ireland. provided a touch of the old sod with their Cath a! Brugha All·Accordion Band. The parade route went from 44th street, past St. Patnck's Cathedral to 86th street, dis· banding at Third Avenue~ picked up • sholfun and rtne from Conrad all1 Loran Norton lnS11'MAna .• Nort.oa purportedly WU bold· in• the two weapons for bls friaid und business auoeiate. As a convicted felon. federal regulations prohibit the 42·year· old former police informer from possessing firearms. And under terms of probation set down in 1975 when Conrad pleaded guilty in Orange Cow.nty to a felony charge he is ineligible to possess firearms. The bulky rags-to-r iches political benefactor insists that it is necessary for him to be armed because of his years as what he calls an undercover agent for the district attorney's office. But office officials say Conrad was a paid informer rather than an undercover agent. Those were the issues at slake Wednesdar morning when Conrad replied to a warrant in the federal building and was im· mediately placed on a hold order by the county Probation Depart· ment. It was when he was being booked into jail th a l Conrad com· plained of chest pains. lie was taken to the prison ward of UCI Medical Center bul insisted upon being returned to Jail a few hours later. There he remained until 11: 15 p. m when a SS.000 bond guaran· teeing his appearance in court was posted. Last fall, Conrad funneled more than SS0.000 into political campaigns in Orange County. Most of that amount went to Supervisor Philip Anthony's campaign under various guises. Since then, Conrad's political philanthropy has attracted the attention of the Orange County Grand Jury. And in Los Angeles County, a federal grand jury is looking into the business opera- tions of the firm he heads. Pension Funds of Amen ca. 'Ghetto' Claim Kills Dana Duplex Plea /\ Dana Point woman who claimed her neighborhood 1s be ing turned into a ghetto won at least a temporary victory before Orange County supervisors Wed· nesday. After JanE.' Kinsey. her husband, her son and county zon ing off1rials s poke against perm1tt1ng t~o duplexes alon~ Colegio Drive 10 the hills abovl' Dana Point Harbor, supervisors voted 3·2 to reJect the develop ment. At the same lime. the board agreed unanimously to ask coun. ly staff members to study traffic congestion in the whole area Board Chairman Tom Riley said in addition to the Kinseys, he had received letters or opposition from Dana Point Citizens for Ac· lion Family Fashion Featiuedln Pi/,ot Today You can get a head start on planning your family's spnng finery by reviewing the tips m a special Daily Pilot magazine Family Fashions. Your armchair fashion tour of the Orange Coast begins with a reminder of fashions popular 200 years ago during th e first celebrations or the annual return or the swallows to Mission San Juan Capistrano. Then, Family Fashions oHers timely tips on clothing for spring, helpful beauty tips and even sew· ing advice for the cost.conscious bride·to-be. Look for Family Fashions In today's Daily Pilot. FrotaPageAI BO'ITS ... phenomenon. "It's an unbelievable hnard," Pollastro said. And though no r eport• or skateboarders fiippln1 off the doll and piling into the bushes have reached bis deak, Pollutro said, "l'm1ureltbaa happened." Preas Barred UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP> -The White Houae bu ba.n-ed pboto1r•phera and re- Porten trom a United Nations rt· ceptloa for Preaideot Camr tonlaht. apparently to prevent blm betrr1 eau~ht with a represmtatlve ot the Palestine Utm'aUoo Or&anlaatlon. 'I But John Roberts, who sought permission to build the two dwellings, and five others hoping to build duplexes nearby. argued the area is well suited for the higher density development And Riley said 1t appears that those ov. nmg \ .icant lots favor duplex ckvf.'lopment while those already II\ mg m single.family homes do not He ~aid the reason is parking and circulation problems "that plague Dana Point." Supervisors Ralph Clark and Phil Anthony, however, voted in favor of Roberts' proposal, say. 1ng <'Ounty policy earlier oerm1tled other duplexes in the area, the zoning allowed duplexes and the property owner had a nghttobu1ld. Mrs. Kinsey said when her family moved to the hillside area near Selva Road andStreetofthe Golden Lantern 10 years ago, they had great hope for the com· munity But smce then, she claimed. a duplex had blocked their view of the harbor, congestion was grow. mg and the area was becoming a ghetto Her son, Chris. 18. added. "Dana Point is becoming literal ly a sardm<' can." Rut Roberts and his supporters said the area is well suited for duplexes. Anthony said he felt it was un- fair to "say in midstream'' a lan- downer cannot build duplexes when neighbors already have done so. "Any community has the right to guide its destiny." Anthony said, "but on the other side of things 1s the right of people who own property in the area." Mmne Hikes l)rinkAge AUGUSfA, Maine (AP) -Maine's legislature bas voted to raise the legal drinking age from 18 to 20 revenlng a trend toward lower drinldn1 ages which the atate Joined just a few yearaqo. The Senate approved the mtuure 21 ·12 Wed- nuday. It bad been paaaed by the Kouae on Tueadl)', and Gov. Jamea B. Loni!ey hu promlaed to allow lt to become Jaw even though he favored an alternate bill. The at.ate'• Je1al d.rtnk· lnJ aae bad been 21 u:nW 19'70, when It wu lowered to 20. Jt WU dropped Alain toltin~ SACJIAlllNTO CAP) -1be question ...._, two people ~ t.be ume MS lbouJd be permitted to m&rl')' 18 beinl lOUed by an Ore.nae CoaDty asnmbtym &o th• Calllomia Lesialature. Asaembl7mao Bruc.e Neatande. R-Orange, said Wed· neaday his blll would naUy forbid same-sex marriages by specify. lng that "marriage is a personal relationship arisinc out of a clvU contract between a man and a woman." Present law has no man· woman wordinc. It just says "per sons." But county clerks are withhold· ing marriage licenses from same-sex couples. They say granting licenses might be violating legislative intent. That's why the County Clerks As· socialion or California asked Nestande lo introduce the bill. Nest~de. asked 1r he would ob· ject lo legalized same-sex mar- riages, said, ·:1 would. To me, marriage means fam ily struc· ture. It's the foundation of western civilization ... " He said if same·&ex marriages were legal, his children would be taught about them in sex educa· tion class, "and that, I can 't ac· cept. It's not a family unit. Fami· ly implies procreativity. "What they do doesn't bother me. But I would be bothered by institutionalizing it," Nestande said. The bill goes before the As· sembly Jud1c1ary Committee next month. A Los Angeles couple -both f!!ales -have hired a lawyer to file a "class action for gays," de· mandmg equal protection of the law. Woman Freed Orange County firemen free Lila Magadaleno, 26, of San- ~a Ana Wednesday on the rain-slick San Diego Freeway in Sc;m Juan Capistrano. Two other people. including 9err1 Fuller, 18, of 240 Calle Alta. San Clemente. were in· JU red. The car in which the Santa Ana woman \,\as rid mg spun out and collided with one dnven by Kennl'th .'.\1 Ab· bott, 17. of 247 Via Socorro, San Clemente. Miss Ful~r was riding in Abbott's auto. Coins and Jewelry Stolen in Laguna Mikhail F. ltkin, 41 said in an interview published Wednesday that he and Larry L. Lawrence 27, "want a wedding for the usuai reasons. We love each other and we want to get marned." Gold coins and jewelry valued al $2,750 were stolen from an Emerald Bay home by a burglar who entered via an unlocked garage door, Orange County s heriff's officers said. Deputies said the theft was re· ported by real estate broker Louise Bonds Turner. of 178 Emerald Bay, who was away at work at the tame. · ~~~~~~--:-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ i;'QUALITY TELEVISION ·:..-·-·:._ - 2 3" CONSOLE COLOR TV Now s59977 T rt111w+i0flal Th ULTIMOll•HZJZH r&i7'iZ'f~:.,,!f /) Handsome Trans111onal styled lull base console · ~v vvJ No moving parls to we&r oul and no contact 001nts to corrode in the lunars Designed to be lhe most dependable. most sensitive tuning system 1n Zenith history. Oak w1lh the look of line distressing AFC. RONIC VIDEO GUARD Casters. Beauhlully finished In simulated Antique 'ELECT IOOOfo SOLID-STATE TUNING ~ll~llOMA<OllOl II . SYSTEM 23H swivel-base ~~~~ill OIA ..,()kA1., consolette at the price of a table model! TheKtMIBUY HZJIOW Vinyl-clad metal cabinet Simulated gralntd Walnut finish. 100% Solid-Stele Chassis Power Sentry Voltage Regulating System AFC. featuring Zenith'• '\ LECTRONIC VIDEO GUARD TUNING SYSTEM One-knob VHF and UHF channel selection. Now s53477 l 'ull l '11t·tor~1 H11rr•o1li••' Pl10 Our 1•,.r.,.unnl Out•\,.,,,. f,;.,,.,.,,,.,,.,. Ou 1:1·c•1·y Pruduc•f H•• .... c•ll! '275 East 17th St. Costa Mesa ........... ,= J h*'I ...... --.. . Phone 642-8882 Store Hours Datfy 9-6 Sat. 9-5 ·30 S4n ..... H..-. ..._ Slllce ltH THISI ll.ICTIOMIC PIOFISSIOMALS, SHVICE YOUl lqUIPMEMT . f-(1111ous Zenith quolity! Famous~~~ clepcndability!: .. - • l ), 17 • ' • t. L 70, NO. 76, 5 SECTIONS, 62 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TENCENT~ ACLU Urges Forced Hetinem.eiit Ban WASHINGTON <AP> -Could Miebelancelo.bave f-0und a good job in contemporary America alter be passed the age of 65? 1 How about Pope John XXIll or 'Pablo Casals? ' A House committee looking to mandatory retirement policies was urged by the American Civil Liberties Union today to ban forced retirement. ACLU spokesman Howard Eglit told the special committee on problems ot the .aging that the practice is "as invidious as dis- crimination on the.basis of race, national origin. sex or religion.'' Eglit. a proressor at Chicago- Kent College of Law, called man· datory retirement "scientifical· ly, morally and legally insup- portable.'' He said rorced retirement is a leading cause of the impoverish· ment of many elderly Americans. However, courts generally have been unsympathetic to claims that mandatory retire- ment is an illegal form of dis· criminallon, he said. "Unless Congress acts, it ap- pears that mandatory retirement will continue to bold sway," Eglit said. ''Older workers are not asking D•llV Pilot Staff Plloto DOWNED UTILITY LINES MAKE FULU:RTON STREET IMPASSABLE This Was Scene This Morning Near Commoriwealth Avenue and Brookhurst Street . ,Winds ·Twist County -Three Injured; Damage Nears $1 Million Freak tornado·like winds lashed through portions of r ange County Wtanesday even· g causing an estimated Sl illion worth of damage and in- ries to at least three people. 1 Hardest h1l by the devastating phon wind was a five-mile ng, 2()()-yard wide stretch in ullerton. There, what one policeman scribed as a twister swept lilrough a business center, shed through Orange County's argest food processing plant and en hurried through a residen- ial area before petering out near . Jude's Hospital. Left tn the wind's de5tructive ake were 80 damaged homes, 80 uprooted trees, four downed raffic signals, four crumpled li~~t-standards and 16 <Wlmaged ·cars, police said. They also reported eight bus1· nesses w111d damaged and two buildin~s in the Hunt Wesson food plant at 1800 W. Com- mon wealth Ave. severely damaged - It was in the food plant that the thJ'ee in1uries were reported, au to plant workers. • DMly.Pllot ~ PATH OF BIG BLOW Fullerton Hardest Htt Two of the injured people were treated by paramedics; the third person reportedly was treated at Ma-rtin LutMr Hospital in Anaheim and reJeased. Weather officialos balked al calling the freak winds tornados. But those caught up m the · turmoil dtdn 't. "It was like a gr ay funnel that seemed to move along almost in s low motion," one t'ullerton policeman said. Those on the outskirts of the wind swath said it was accom· panied by thunder, lightning and hail. · "There was this violent, freaky thunder and lightning that lasted for about 15 minutes. And the hail stones were huge," one resident on the wmd's fringe said. A businessman two blocks from the so-caUed twister that hit Fullerton al 6:30 p.m. said, "Everything was okay here. But two blocks away it looked like so- m eone had set off a born b. '' Police in three cities, Buena· Park, Anaheim and Fullerton, reported wind damage, chiefly broken windows and torn roofs. Near the junction of the Riverside and Santa Ana Freeways, an 18·wheel tractor· trailer ng reportedly was over- turned by the freak winds. At St. Jude's Hospital near Bastanchury Road and Harbor Boulevard, a guard shack re- portedly was hfted from its moorings just at the point where the so-called t"' 1ster exhausted itself. But residents in other·areas of <Sec WINDS, Page A2) Irish Step Out in NY 120,000 Parade Al.ong Fifth AvemM NEW YORK (AP) -The Irish. ITiSh·Am ericnns and their friends, 120,000 strong, stepped briskly up a sun-filled Fifth · Avenue today in the 215th annual St. Patrick's Day parade. The famed "Fighting 69th" Regiment, cerrying the Irish Tricolor alongside Old Glory and accompanied by their two Irish Wolfhound mascots, led the parade as it trad1t1onally has s!QCe thedaS'softhe Civil War. l>oliee offtcer·Josi?ph Nugent.. who was born on a farm 45 years ago Jn Cou~ty Waterford. Irellnd, got tbe march under ·way at. noon 1harp with a shrill blu&.from his 1recn whistle. It was the third time in 10 years that he started the giant de· monltraUon. He wore a green tie under his blue uniform jacket to bote the 'rand occasion. 0 lt:.a a ,reat honor for mo, bem Oil 1 small farm, to start the . bi.I parade." he aaid. 1'be 1lx·hour-Jon1 lestJval ta the larfllt ol many celebrations beln1 b d acrma America today l.n bonorof St. Patrick The mustc of Erin blared as 19:5 band• from nine atat.. 1 d. litiAidJDIJ'Ched.up Manh1ttu•a • • - queen of avenue& and created o holiday atmosphere, broken only by an occuiooal banner bearing the pe.radt?'a theme: .. Ena.land O.t Out of Ireland." Sening a1ao u a spontaneous · trtbute to the contribution of tritb.-Americtna to the nation's h rlta , the parade drew apec- ta10n lour and five df.W alooi Fifth Av~nu.'a t dewalu. · ~ lnel~ I.he And t. Order of HU>fl'alau. I.rl1~ . RepubUcan Army. veterans, the United lrlah Couiities Assoefa· tlon and coUer~. schools ud acadernl . Youn1 boys and girls trom llelfaat, Ireland, previded a touch of the old sod with their Cathal Bru1ba All-Accordion Band. The parade route went from 4'tb 1trert, put St. Patrick • Cathedril to 88tb street, ~. b~·~·· . for any gilt or even any special protection. All they are asking is to be treated as individuals, in· stead of some grotesque group of incompetents," he said. Committee Chairman Claude E. Pepper <D -Fla.) ha s sponsored legislation to ban mandatory retirement of federal employes. As the committee opened its hearings Wednesday, members were told to think about hillory's importet people and how old they were when they were in their Jn()lt prqductive ye an. ..History 1s fnU of the deeds or many great leaders who came to prominence long after they were 65 years old," John F. McClelland, president of the Na- tional Association or Retired Federal.Employes, told the com- mittee. .. Pope John XXUI became the bea.d of the Catholic Church at 77. Mlcbelangelo produced some of his greatest works in the year just prior to his death at 89, while Pablo Casals performed, con- ducted and taught until his death at 96," McClelland told the panel. "Yet, how would these people fare an today's job market? Could they find meaningful <See ELDERLY, Page A2) Norton Funded? Jury Probes Lobbyist's Role By GARY GRANVILLE Of tho D•ily Pilot Sl•fl The Orange County Grand Jury·s probe into political prac- tices in Orange County has swept out to include 1976 payments made to Repub~an State Senate candidate Loran Norton by lob- byist Frank Michelena. According to Norton, rou~hly five Michelena checks totaling $3,500 and m ade payable to Norton ally Gary Newmeyer were, in fact, paidtoh1m. Norton. a former Santa Ana policeman and an ex-aide to county Supervisor Laurence Schmit, said Michelena's pay- ments were for his services as a private investigator. They were not, according to the former Republican can- didate, in any way related to his unsuccessful 1976 state senate campaign against Democrat Paul Carpenter. In the Grand Jury's continuing investigation into county political practices Norton has already testified twice. He refused to discuss Lhat testimony W~dne11day but did acknowledge that the Michelena payments were brought up dur· ing his secret interrogation. Newmeyer. like Norton, is a former Santa Ana policeman and is now a private investigator. He was Norton's campaign man ager through the June pr1mary election. Safari Park Returns Land To Irvine Co. Lion Country Safari, which has been staving off financial col· lapse for more than a year, has taken another step to cut ex· penses at the drive-through wild apimal park in Irvine. The park will turn back 164 un- used acres of its original 480-acre leasehold to the Irvine Company to trim lease payment costs. That cutback, plus additional economy moves such as staff cuts and reductions in executive salaries, will yield an approx- imate saVin~s of $35.000 a month, according to Lion Country Presi· dent Harry Shuster. The land being surrendered by Lion Country is on a slope above Laguna Canyon Road, plus about 25 acres fronting on Moulton Parkway. Only about 250 acres have been developed by the amusement facility. Lease revisions were part of the arrangements being made late last year by Lion Country of- ficials in an effort to resolve more than $8.9 million in debts owed by the park to Its various (See SAFARI, Page A%) Texas Blast Injures 26 But two weeks ago he said he dropped from the Norton scene when he wasn't paid for pretrial investigative services performed for Dr. Louis Cella. Like Norton. Newmeyer has made two appearances before the Grand Jury in the probe centering aroundthepolitical machinatio~ of coanty supervisors Ralph Diedrich and Philip Anthony. Phone Leads ln one or those appearances. Newmcyer's stint behind closed doors lasted three and a half hours. lt was after that testimony that Norton was called to appear beCore the jury for the second lime. The former Schmit aide insist· ed Wednesday that he answered <See PROBE, Page A2) Cops Delay Hunt For Toro Mother The active search for a La~e Forest housewife who mysteriously disappeared Mon- day in Pasadena was temporari· ly s uspended today while police detectives follow up on dozens of telepllDneleads. Rachel Sparling, 36, or 24311 Lakeview Lane, dropped out or sigt.Jt a fter a vis it to her psychiatrist. Early t.be next morning, Los Angeles police officers arrested a 17-year-old boy wbo had been caught driving Mrs. Sparling's 1972 bronze-colored Corvette with the personalized license plate WUV YOU. The youth allegedly had possession of t h e missing woman's rings, watch, purse, keys and other personal effects, plus a .25 caliber pistol. Police said the boy admitted stealing the car from the doctor's office parking lot and c laims the jewelry was on the seat. Detective Sgt. Ray Mc Ray said today that searches of rugged terrain around the ~ose Bowl turned up no trace of Mrs. Sparl· ing. A tip from two fishermen drew searchers to the mountain coun- try along winding Angeles Crest Highway Tuesday, but again, the trail was cold. McRay said police probers are presently stumped by the case- and have been hindered by the fact that they are unable toques· tion the arrested youth, who has been charged with auto theft, robbery and possession of stolen property. The police spokesman· said steps are being taken to clear legal obstacles preventing in- vestigators from interrogating the boy. Meanwhile, McRay said, of· ficers are following up on dozens of leads gleaned from scores of telephone calls the department has received from people who claim to have seen the car Mon- day·evening. The detective said foul play is "most likely" but that "many other possibilities" are being ex- plored. He would not elaborate. School Builder's Pact Terminated By LAURIE KASPER Ollllt D•lly PllolSulf With little less than half of the w-0rk done, construction of the addition to Esperanza School - the Sadd.leback Valley Unified School District's facility for the trainable mentally retarded - has come to a standstill. District officials are terminat- ing their contract with the builder, Contracting Services, Inc. or Fullerton, because of "lack of progress'" on the pro- ject. Officials did not elaborate on the causes. About 47 percent of the j oh, which includes construction of a multipurpose room, several classrooms and a swimming pool, was done by the scheduled completion date o( March 1, ex- plained Robert Ferguson, the district's director of planning and development. Now, be said, there is a chance the work will be completed dur- ing the summer. But, he added, there also is a chance the un· nntshed addition and pool will sit there for awhile. The builder 's work was insured by a bond company. That firm, Ferguson said, has asked for rnore time to obtain appraisals or the work le(l to be dooe. )( the bond company doesn't make plans for th& tompleUon ot the Job, then ~ dastrlct can take it o~ and u;e. ~ company wm.,. Bable f6Jo,, a toats. ~he cUstil« h twmh\ ~ ly one oiOier contract 1n lhtlr bul1 baUdint proram ln the paat. Th job, E Toro WCI\ SCbool's p0ol, was compltltd ltllOolhl.r fJ1 Jbe bond comp~. Fercuson lal4. • • ~ . IWtable l!dldlO• .,. ..... ~ used at Esperanza until the building is completed. Because of the construction, the school •has given up some of its play area and moved its animals to other schools. The $36,000 pool originally was to be paid by community dona- tions. So, far. according to Prin· (See SCHOOL, Page A2) Coast Weather Partly cloudy with chance of measurable rain 10 percent tonight a nd 2(1 percent Friday. Lows tonight in 40s. Highs Fri- day in \.ll)per 50s and lower · 60s. INSIDE TODA 'Y FrMltratbt .and fury car· ricd th• Rolling Stonu through ii maonificent concert that mQy 1-thdr lolt~accord fng to columni1t Lisa Robfntor1. TM,age~u Mick Jagger. Clf1P'O'I• on P.OQe 86 . ... . .· Marriqg,e . Gets Eye SACRAMENTO <AP> -Tbe qaatJoo whether c-o people of the um. sex should be permitted to maJTY a. bcrin& tQ9sed by an Oran.a• County auemblyman to &.be Calltomia Leet.t.ture. Asumblyman Bruce N ... tllnde (R-Orange), said Wt..-d· nesday his bill would flatly forbid aame-sex marriages by specify. ing that "marriage is a personal relationship arising out or a civil .contract between a man and a woman." Present law h as no man- woman wording. It just says ''persons." But county clerks are withhold- ing marriage licenses from same-sex couples. They say granting licenses might be violating legislative intent That's why the County Clerks As sociation of California asked Nestande to introduce the bill. Nestande, asked if he would ob· ject to legalized same-sex mar- riages, said, "I would. To me, marriage means family struc- ture. It's the foundation of westemc1v1hlation ... " He said if same-sex marriages were legal, his children would be taught about them in sex educa- tion class, "and that, I can't ac cept. It's not a family unit. Fam1 · ly implies procreativity. •'What they do doesn't bother me. But I would be bothered by mstitut1onalizmg 1t,'' Nestande said. The bill goes before the As· sembly Jud1c1 ary Committee next month. A Los Angeles couple -both males -have hired a lawyer to file a "class action for gays," de· manding equal protection of the law. Mikhail 1" ltl..1n. 41, s::ud 1n an interview published Wednesday that he and Larry L Lawrence. 27, "want a wedding for the usual reasons. We love each other and we want to get married." Family Fashion Featured In Pilot Today You can get a head start on planning your family's s pring finery by reviewing th€' tips m a special Daily Pilot magazine - Family Fashions Your armchair fashion tour of the Orange Coast begins with a reminder of fashions popular 200 years ago dur1n~ the first celcbrat1ons of the annual return of the swallows to M1ss1on San Juan Capistrano Then, Family Fashions offers timely tips on cloth mg for spnng, helpful beauty tips ilnd even sew- ing advi ce for the cost·conscious bride·to·be. Look for 1''am1ly Fashions in today's Daily Pilot. Japan Hijack Try Thu:arted TQKYO (AP l Passengers overpowered two men who tned to h1Jack two Japanese domestic airliners six hourc; apart Loda) and one of the would be h1Jackers later killed tumself, pohce said. In the first attempt, ahortly after noon, a man w1 eldfog a knife tried to take over an All Nippon Airways -AN A -flight over Hokkaido, Japan '!\ northernmost main is land. Police did n<>t explain what the passengers did lo hlock the hi· jacking. They said the Boeing 727, which had been bound for Send111 , northern Honshu, landed at Hakodate. No injuries were re- ported among the 36 passengers and ~ven crew members. OAANOE COAST ~e DAILY PILOT l.._. Or~ (N\t OtllY POOi """' Wfttf~ ., com tfilNo.01,_Nt~ Prf'1.\ l\etutw•"""'°Ott"-OrMIO-' Cn.t'\I P\lb41"''"°' C9mO•f'l't ~ ... ..a1t._,.,.,. r>ubU\hl'd Moftd4y '"''°"Oft ""ct.If fOf Coo\lf M-1.a NilwPOfl lf'Kfrt H1.1ftl•,.tin ht<t1' '°°"""' tt•n. V•lltY. ""t" \•ddl•b«._ V•Hey •'WJ l.~VNS.Mft So "("U,t A .. "'Qlt"'9~1.0t t1on I\ 9'Jbf•\l'lltCI •twrfky\ MIG ~ ,..,. .,..,.,,..1p.1t pu&11\ft1r.Q ••A"-1 I\ .tl )JO Vrllttt l•t Slrf'f1 Gotta ..WW. Catlf"JtMe.,._ ·11-rtN- Ptn10tf'llll•nd Pvl'>l•\l'ltr JK-II C,..loy VI<• PtHlc,.f'lllt •!'Wt Ci«"""•I M.t~ "'-•••·-lfilM Tlle,,..,A M ......... """-'"' lot"" cur,., N Lff\ Ille.,....,. ,..II AHll!t<ll M.1"1011,. l!clllon lllddlebmck V1ftey omc. >SlOI I.A,_ .. II-•IS... Dl..-rr-•~ omc.1 C.0.1• MoM; JJOWnl Ir/~ HU11llllQI011,81tci. lftllltt<" IA-0.e<i. llt4C).._ twt Tet111hon• (?14)904tt1 Cl1111fled Ad¥~elntt42-111t ~-Vallt•'"-""Offl<• N1 .. J10 f•tllll#!Clt ....... ......, =:''!: ~ O:.~, ~tr':.*.!!''';,.= =·~.~;.·:r~·i:i:.w •. ~~~ ~ ~, .. ...,.,i ~ri-~~· .. :::m:.,:.·•wtt c~':r ~':. t"-.''"'·'; ., ...... "' .. _,,,y, ""lllllll' P"!""'"-.u._...,,, To Britain? .... 1,...1o Kingman Brewster Jr., pre- sident of Yale Unjversity, is reported to be President Carter's choice a~ the next U.S. ambassador to Britain. Fro..PageAJ WINDS .•. the county felt the impact of the brief, freak storm when widespread power failures oc- curred as a result of downed hres. Southern California Edison Company officials said 12,000 qorth county r esidents were without power some part of Thursday night as at least seven power poles were downed by the Fullerton wind. The power company officials also reported that residents in the western and southwestern portions of the county were without power m omentarily while service adjustments were made. According to area manager William Compton, some resi- dents in the hard·hil Fullerton a rea were still without power this morning. Fullerton police said city clean up crews worked through the night clearing debris and fallen trees from roadways. Today, police were guarding the damaged business establish· men ts to prevent looting of stores left windowless. doorless and roofless by the freak wind. In Fullerton, police said there were reports of a similar wind hilting the area once before. If so, that was in 1914, accord· ing to unconfirmed reports. Volleyball Signups Set The Saddleback Valley Unified School District's Recreation Department is now accepting re- gistration for its men 's and coed's volleyball leagues. The deadline for joining the league 1s Monday. The leagues will play Sunday evenings, from March 27 through May 22, in Mission Viejo High School. The entry fee for each team is SlO. Further information may be obtained by calhng the Recrea· lion Department al 768-0981 or 586-1234, extension SS. Basketball League Set Signups are now being accept· ed for the Saddleback Valley l'nified School Dastnct Recrea· lion Department's three-man basketball leagues. The leagues will be divided into four height and age divisions. Teams will play on Sundays, from March 27 through May 22, at El Toro High School. Team entries must bE1 sub· milted by Monday. The team en- try fee is $20, half of which is a re- fundable forfeit fee. Further in- formation may be obtained by calling the Recreation Depart- ment at 768-0981. Fro91PageAJ SCHOOL ••• cipal Ruby Edman, about $12,000 has been raised. District trustees, however, are expected to consider payin~ half of the pool's cost during their next ·meeting. The pool is expected to provide both physical and psychological therapy for the handicapped E speranza students. F,....Pflfltl!AJ ELDERLY. • employment ln, oUJ' aoelety. or "ould they simply caat uld• wilb the milllona Of otbert onr 8$?°beuked. Bnt1 pendina in Con1re11. would elhninate manda= re-tirement for federal em oyea and exUnd. pr ni pr ecllon a1aln1t 9' dl1crlmlnaUon to l>'raom ov•r 85 .... _ ~ ~ Pollet loformer turned polttica~atnJG Cme c.oarad apenl w~ popplna ID 9Dd out ol Oranp County J all bul by mldniO>t wu clearly out-on 85,000&all. But to stay tree, Conrad mU5t appear in Superior Court Friday and convince Judie James Walsworth that he dldn 't violate terms of his probation March 1. That is when agents of the federal Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms Bureau seized two .38-caliber revoters Crom Conrad. Simultaneously, tbe agents picked up a shotgun and rifle from Conrad ally Loran Norton in Santa Ana. Norton purportedly was bold· ing the two weapons ror his friend and business associate. I As a convicted felon, federal regulations prohibit the 42-year- old former police informer from possessing firearms. And under terms of probation set down in 1975 when Conrad pleaded guilty in Orange County to a felony charge he is ineligible to possess firearms. The bulky rags-to-riches political benefactor insists that it is necessary for him to be armed because or his years as what he calls an undercover agent for the district attorney's office. But office officials say Conrad was a paid informer rather than an undercover agent. Those were the issues at stake Wednesday morning when Conrad replied to a warrant in the federal building and was im· m ediately placed on a bold order by the county Probation Depart· m ent. · It was when he was being booked into jail that Conrad com· plained or chest pains. He was taken to the prison ward of UCI Medical Center but insisted upon being returned to jail a few hours later. There he remained until 11:15 p.m. when a $.5,000 bond guaran- teeing his apifearance in court was posted. Last fall, Conrad funneled more than $50,000 into political Marines Held In Rocket Launcher Theft SAN DIEGO (AP} -Two Marines are accused of selling a rocket launcher and explosives stolen from Camp Pendleton. An 11 count indictment was re· turned by a federal grand jury against Sgt. Robert H. Banning, 27, or Myrtle Point. Ore .. and Sgt. Joseph L. Fields, 30, of Keatchie, La Jnvest.tgators said Wednesday that Jo'Bl agents bought the ~n t 1 tank missile launcher, 50 pounds of TNT, SIX pounds or plastic explosives, fuses and blasting caps. The undercover FBI men al- legedly paid $1,335 to the Marines wbo were later arrested at Camp Pendleton. They have been jailed in San Diego in lieu or $50,000 ball each. Sen-anoBand Due on TV Serrano Intermediate School's advanced band will be seen on television Saturday during a show on the 12th annual Azalea Parade, which take took place in South Gate last weekend. The band took a fifth place trophy in competition with 11 other Southern California junior high schools in the parade. And, according to Pal Rainer, the school's music director, a com· parison of scores showed that they musucalty outperformed seven senior high schools. The band may be seen at 9:30 a . m. Saturday on channel 13. Children's Attire Sewing Class Set The San Juan Capistrano Recreation Department will con· duct adult sewing mini-lessons for children's clothing, sizes two to 12. The se!l~ions will begin Wed· nesday from 7 to 9 p,m . and will continue for the following tour Wednesdays, at Capistrano Elementary School, .Room 5, 31423 Camino Caplltrano. Addi· tlonal Wormattt)n may be ob- tained by catllnl( 493·1171. 8250 Fern Stolen A 50·pound. 15·)'earaold 1l11hom fem wu stoJen from thp b1ckY..-d ol a wruna Beach Mm• Wtdneacl'1, POiice 1aJd. Owner Alton E. Allen. forroer ~1i=r. =liJ~~ lb! f e.m aU11G. • • • campGJID In Orani County. lfoa cl that amOLLGt ...n to Supervllor Philip AAtbo11y'1 campalp under various l\li;ses. Since \ben, Coaract•a poUUcu.l phUant.broP1 bu llttracted the allenUon of ttie Orange County Grand Jury. And In Los Angeles County, a federal grand jury is lookine into the business opera- tions or the firm be heads, Pension Funds ol America. * * * F,....PageAJ PROBE ••• the Grand Jury's questions to the best of his ability. and em- phasized Mi chelena's payments to him through Newmeyer were not for campaign purposes. JJ7holesale Coffee Price Zooms Again "It was a heavy investigation, a very heavy investigation that I don't feel free to talk about," Norton said. Michelena was not available for comment today. Meanwhile the jury continued its investigation Wednesday by hearing testimony from at least five witnesses, Newmeyer in- cluded. Other witnesses who answered a Grand Jury subpoena in- cluded: -Amanda Hertz, a business and social companion of former police informant Gene Conrad, who pumped roughly $53,000 into various counly political cam· paigns lutyear. -Anaheim city councilman William Kott, who reportedly was loaned $10,000 for his city campaign in the spring of 1976 by Diedrich attorney Michael Rem- ington. -Robert Langslet, a Los Angeles County developer who contributed $.5,000 to Anthony's campaign. -John Job.oat.on, who has been described as Langslet's "political adviser." NEW YORK (AP> - Wholesale coffee prices have shot over the $4 barrier, but con- sumers will have several weeks to find out how much more per pound they'll have to pay in the supermarkets. .... General Foods Corp .. the na- tion's largest coffee roaster. in- creased the wholesale price of ground coffee by so cents to $4.21 a pound Wednesday. The action followed Monday's 50-cent in- crease to $4.18 a pound by second-largest Folger Coffee Company. General Foods also raised prices for Sanka and Brim ground decaffeinated coffee by 40 cents a pound. It left instant prices at $S.45 for a 10-ounce jar, the same price c harged by Folger for instant. General Foods and Folger sell more than half the coffee con- sumed in the United States, and their actions strongly influence the prices of other brands. How these increases will affect supermarket price isn't yet known, since it takes several weeks for them to reach the re- tail level. Many grocers traditionally have sold coffee at or below cost to attract customers to their stores. and therefore mav not (!:'QUALITY TELEVISION pass all the new pric4! along ·to the shopper. In January, the lutest month tor which figures are available the nationwide average retaii price for roasted coffee was $2.55 according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Fro..PageAJ SAFARI • • • creditors. Lion Country had befun resolv· ing it.I debts with banks tbal have made loans to the facility by pay. log $500,000 in late January. That money was obtained from the sale of another facility owned by the company in Florida. Another $200,000 must be paid by the end of April and the banks have been given a 10-year war- rant to acquire up to 10 percent of Lion Country stock al 25 cents per share. Other lease arrangements with .the Irvine Company provi~ for payment over tbe next five years of delinquent taxes and penalties, plus default~d lease payments. 2 3" CONSOLE COLOR TV Now s.59977 T raMltiOftal Handsome TraM111on,1I ~,:~::~,~:1::::::::1 F~ Casters Beautilully tm 1o;hP-d 1n <;1mula1ed Ant1oue 'ELECTRONIC No moving parts to wee.' out and no contact paints to corrode m lhe tuners. Oestgned to be the most dependable, most sens11tve tuning system in Zentth history. Oak w11h the look of ftnf' d1Wess1ng AFC VIDEO GUARD IOOOfo SOUD·STATE TUNING • SYSTEM ~ll~llllOMJ\(0 OIII ~~---~._ ~ ~"swivel-base consolette at the price of a table model! n.1n...auY HUIOW V1nyl·ciad metal cabin&t. Simulated gra1oed Walnut ltntSh 100% Solld·Stlte Chassis. Power Sentry Voltage Regulating SV$tem AFC. ·. featuring Zenith's ' ELECTRONIC YIO!O GUARD TUNING SYSTEM One·knob VHF and UHF channel seltctlon. Mow s53477 1:1111 I Uf'l"~I M nrrt1111 ;,., ,.,,,, Our 1•••r.'io11ul flut• \ ••t1r Gunr1111lf••• Ou l .•·•·r·u l'rodu1·1 H ••.'\••II! '275 East 17th St. Costa Mesa ..... ........ ,'?:: J~wtt1.i ~. Phone 642-8882 Store Hours D•ify 9-6 Sat. 9-5:30 ' . THISl IUCTilOHIC PIOFISSIOMALS SERVICI YOUlt f9'11rMfM1'' 1'• Prlcea OSITE TRANSACTIONS Winter Cost Reported . WASHINGTON <AP) A Federal Power Commission sts rt report estimated Wednesda y that houaeholders paid an extra $1.5 billion ln hl&her natural gas prices this Winter plus another $1 billion ror addl· Uonal aaa to '11ht lreaiin& tem· peratu.ttt. Reaidentl•I he•tln1 naUonwlde burned about 5 percent mort 1u lha.n In a normal wtnter. the report s&ld •n extra 191 bUUon cubic fetl, That cott households an avera1e ol Sil, tho aulhor laid. The tmp..cl or lho severe we11lher wa1 llU'ltr In astenf 1tatea whlle wutem at.tea actually used J au • lban aarmll. Game. May Damage TY BJ IYLTIA POST&a 21ect.roaJ~ video 1am rct.aillnl for 9IO to IJJO an.d rcpraenttna the peak '° tar ln push·buttoa compoUtJoo. are 1 wff'Oins t.be U.S. ~~sames conn.ct to antenna termlnala of TV eeu. making it possible for one lO four persons to play electronic versions of aamea rangln& from tennis to Uc·llc·toe. They were big sellcris during the past Christmas nuon and an estimated $250 million worth will be sold In 197'7. wtth about 20 firms merketin&i them. Sales are expected lO hit $750 mllhon by 1980. THE MORE COMPLEX OF THE NEW TOYS include up to six games, ranging from hockey lo a ven1lon of solitaire Competition is pos~jble solo, against the machine or with others. As skill improves, the games can be made more difficult. The Federal Trade Commission <FTC> has launched a probe to find out whether the games harm TV picture tubes. The F'TC is uncertain whether the games leave tracings on the TV screen -visLble after the TV is turned off -after a certain amount of use. This phenomenon may not ptesen l a problem to consumer~. Day.long use of the game may produc~ af. ter-effects in a few weeks. Most people prob- ably play the game fre- Money's Worth quently at first and then put it aside. Thus it might be many months -if then -before outlines appear. A RELATED PROBLEM IS THE EMERGENCE of a second generation of more sophislicated videogames that will enable players to re· program the system ror a selection of new games that may or may not affect the TV ptcture tube. Game manufacturers belittle the fears and report no consumer complaints. Kerry Crosson, New York product~ manager for Atari, makers of Pong, says his firm has tested the games continually for up to 2,000 hours and "we find re- ports about the games burning off phosphorus on TV picture tubes are unfounded." Ma,gnavox. which has produced electronic games for four years, adds it has received no consumer complaints, but it has heard from dealers who've noticed imprints on showroom sets. It has informed its dealers that Magnavox will assume the cost of repairing or replacing any TV set if the customer can show that the Magnavox game caused the defect. A ZENITH DEAf,ER SAYS TllAT C01'1PANV hat-. mailed a ml'mo lo dealers explaining that its warranty b not' alid for <.'lc.11ms against tubes harmed by video games. RCA will not honor a picture tube warranty 1f lhe problem 1s due to extended use of a video game. It told ·~ distributors in December to advise customers not to use the games for extended periods, to keep the brightness level of the games' light low, and to turn off the game when not in use. It has included this mformation 1n its TV set instruction book. Whatever the problems, the devices appear to be here lo stay. One lt'admg TV set maker is offering a 1977 model with a video game built in. Industry msiders also say it's a matter of time before TV screens are used as learn mg toob loo, with consumers able to buy video cartridges pro- grammed with math puzzles, history quizzes, recipes, etc Farm Value Hike Skips Calif omia WASHINGTON CAP> The value of farm land has gone up an average of 17 percent in the past year to $456 an acre as of Feb I , accordmg to the Argicullure Department. Cahfom1a farm land did not increase m value, accord· mg lo the report. THE AVERAGE LAND VALUE WAS $390 an acre a year ago accordmg lo revised figures released Tuesday. During the year "average percentage changes by state ranged from a high or 36 percent in Illinois to no in- crease m California, Nevada and New Jersey," the report said Officials said the changes were part of a periodic re- vision of stal1st1cs and also a result of undated information from the 1974 census of agriculture. THE NEW REPORT ALSO SHOWED that as of last Nov 1. the avera~e value of farmland was $430 an acre. Two months ago, the average for Nov. 1 was shown at $445 an acre. . Based on the revised information, the Corn Belt and the Lakes States of Michigan, Wisconsin and Minnesota had the largest increases dun ng the past year. In the Corn Belt, Ohio farm land averaged $1,131 an acre on Feb. 1 and $861 a year earlier: Indiana, $1,167 and $866; Illinois. $1,450 and $1.066; Iowa, $1,228 and $911 ; aod Missouri . S529 and $449. Michigan avera~ed $782 on Feb. 1 and $615 a year earlier· Wisconsin, $591 and $498; and Minnesota, $664 and $530 . .. During the past five years land value for the nation has increased an average of 109 percent, ranging from 36 percent In Nevada to 197 percent in Iowa." Bank Nears Com;pletion The final construction phase of Bank of America's new Dana Point office is nearing completion and the otric1al opening or the branch has been scheduled for May 2. The $291,000 structure on Pacific Coast highway be- tween Street or the Amber Lantern and Street of the Ruby Lantern will replace the existing six·year-old modular facility one block south. Containing 5,225 square feet. the new buildin1 wm be nearly twice as targe as the present Offjce. Services wtll In· elude safe deposlt boxes. an enclos~ m erchanlR' booth, drive-up teller units. indbor teller service and the bank•s "instant deposit" lobby unit. Tie to OPEC Opposed ACAPULCO, Mexico <AP> -A leading banker from Ecuador claims businessmen are against Ecuador's mem· bcrshlp in the Organization of Petroleum Exportlnai Coun · tries. "All it has brought us ls expeniJive rree·travel for our governm<'nt offlchl111. Our businessmen are against It," !'laid Nahlm A. l!'lala11, manaser of the Ecuadorian bank La FUantropica at an fntcrnotlonal banker's meeting here. Ecuador exports 220.800 barrels or crude oil a day and ls the second larfHl petroleum exporter tn UUn America. after Vcneiuela. Most of its pet.roleum soes to the United Stat~. ' . Sukut Reports Gain Sultut Con.slnlcUon, Jne., 8-nta Ana. bu rol)Orted that optratloas for the three m nth period ended Jan. 31, ~ull· ed In a net Jain of $17 ,814 on total revenues or ta,078_294. Thla comparu •Ith a nel •aln of tel,S25 01\ re~enu ol. $2,570,927 lot' tho three.month period ended Jan. 11. 1.97C. Based on 6vere1e abera outatandiDa durtn1 the periOd (W,as> tot's.m and MS,7IO tor 1979>, ~ uJta amount- ed to•arnln&lol15cenb ancuacenta AMlt't, ~Uvely,