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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-03-24 - Orange Coast PilotCoast 'Saoeers' May Be Pieees Of Red Satellites DAILY PILOT * * * 10' * *. * THURSDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 24, 1977 VOi. 70, HO Ill, 4 SECTIONS,~ PAGES Hitchhiker? A,. Wirwt>Nlo A Ml of people think motorcycles are death machines, says F.d Nievaard, a m otorcycle safety instructor in Ed- monds, Wash., so Nievaard says he 's trying to get death off the motorcycle. To illustrate his point, he rode with hi s "friend" around his neighborhood. Boor-old Baby Doctor Charged In Strangulation Westminster police charged Dr. William Baxter Waddill or Ao'aheim Wednesday in the strangulation death or a one- hour·old infant at Westmin'lter Community llosp1tal March 2 Police Department ad- ministrative aide Earl Graham alleged that Dr Waddill, 43. at tempted to perform a saline abortion on the 71,;-month old fetus at the hospital. Graham asserted a hve baby girl was delivered and taken to tr:::ci~o:s• Weather Chance of showers and possible thundershowers tonight and Friday with chance of m ea surable rainfall 40 percent. Lows tonight 46 to 52. Highs Fri- day in upper 50s. INSIDE TOD.4 't' Most of southern Orang~ CountJI could get bJ1 wUhout water /or only a couple da111 1/ pipeline• Wtre severed by a notural difoltrr. The perilotu ltate of water iupplie1 in thaa /a.tt -growbtQ region ii detailed on P<Jflf AlO. llltlex ., . .., .. ~;: • ,-4 •• (t-4 ... .. ..., ,,. M,11 the nursery for life.sustaining care. The infant died about one hour after birth, he added. Police said they filed murder charges after a three-week in· vestigation into the case m which hospital personnel were ques· tioned The District Attorney's Office obtained ::i warrant carrying $50,000 bail for Dr. Waddill on Wednesday night. Deputy District Attorney Bob Chatterton said that Waddill had agreed to s urr ender to face ar- raignment today in West Orange County Municipal Court. Orange County Coroner 's Of- fice Chief Investigator Jim Beisner said the infant died due to "asphyxia ti on ca used by manual strangulation.'· Wes tmins ter Community Hos pital Administrator Richard LeGrand indicated Waddill is not a bospitaJ employe but ·'he had medical staff privileges since 1971." Waddill, a gynecologist and ob- <See DOCTOR, Page A%) Newport Burglary Nets Jail Sentence A man accused by Newport Beach Poltce la1t Dec. 1& of being in possession of equipment and appliances stolen from boats moored at Harbor Area marinas has been sentenced to eo days ln Oran1eCounty Jail. Superior Court Judge James H. Wal!worth ordered the Jail term and lhreo yean probation tor Norman Kenneth Catton, 25, ol Gard4nl Grove, after the def en· dant admitted receivtna stc>Jen ~&>tl"1· Minimum Pay Hike Sought WASHINGTON (AP) -The Carter administration recom- mended today that the minimum wage be increased 20 cents an hour as of July 1. 50 cents s hort of the proposal by the A FL-CIO. The Administration also pro- posed that the minimum wage be tied m the future to a set percen· tage of average manufactunng wages. Labor Secretary Ray Marshall told a House Labor Standards subcommittee tbat the Carter ad- ministration proposes incr easing the $2.30 an hour minimum wage to $2.50 an hour. The Administration also pro· posed that beginning in July 1978 a nd each year thereafter the minimum wage be set at 50 per- cent of the average straight· time. hourly wages of manufac- turing workers. This proposal is known as indexing. The AFL-CJO recommended a S2·an-hour minimum wage im- mediately upon en~tment of the bill with indexing beginning Janu ary 1978 at 60 percent of the average manufacturing worker's wage. La bor lobbyists in the crowded hearing room appeared shocked by the Marshall proposals and one lobbyist for the garment workers remarked that "labor might have backed the wrong candidate." a reference to labor's s upport of President Carter. The AFL-CIO spokesman said that when s ubcommittee chairman John Dent left the White House after a meeting with Carter on Wednesday, he had the impression Carter agreed to an indexing level of 55 percent of the (See WAGE, Page AZ , Even Hippos WoulJn't Help SACRAMENTO (AP) -One te1lslator recommended import- ing hlpJ>Opolamuses to solve the • problem, but It wouldn't work. sald another, because the peaky Hydrllla pt ant lJn 't worth eat1n1. But somethina must be done, Assemblyman Eu1ene Chapple declared Wednesday. becall!e ot the aquatic plant that baa West· ed Lake Elli• near Maryavllle. Chappie's bill la almed at eradicaUna the plant before it 1aln1 more of a foothold ln Callfomla waters, and a 19-0 vote sent it to tho Auembly floor. ' . - 20-eent e Requested for Minimum Wage I Along Canae a Spider Pat Hansen, 14, of Mount Vernon, Wash .. says this six- inch-long Mexican tarantula is "really very nice." The spider, caJled Fran, dines on live crickets and. he adds. doesn't even try to bite him anymore. Were Coast UFOs Russian Satellites? By ARTRUR R. VINSEL Ol IM 0.lly ~11•1 St•fl Chances are no one will ever solve the mystery of what the two objects seen rocketing through the sky Tuesday. really were, but two theories were offered today. A spoke.man tor the North American Air Defense Command <NORAD> at Colorado Springs, Colo .• said a computer check at the Space Defense Center at Cheyenno Mountain oUcred one early today. He aald two fraiiments of $ov let aat ellltes r e entered the urth't1 atrnOlphere about 3 a .m . <EST) but over the AUanttc Ocean. f ''Tb«e it always a cb~ce of a -• ... \, 'skip'," explained NORAD In· formational Services Officer Lt Gordon Brady. He explained the sk1p designs. tlon is precisely what it sounds like, the physical effect of skip· plng a flat pebble across a water surface such as a stream or Pond. The plecea of debris of Soviet Cosmoe 86'7 and Cosmoa 898 could have struck earth's dense al· mosphere, then rebounded off \t • re·enterln1 tt aaain on tho Pacific Ocean side of the globe. However, lhe time elements In volved al'e a little off, Lt. Brody noted, since tbe objectJ were seen Tuesday In Caltrornla between 3:15 and S :SO a .m. <SeeUPOI, Pase.A!) Pair Get $930, Escape Two holdup men, one armed with a Luger pistol , kicked in the Laguna Beach motel room door Wednesday, held a vacationing Illinois family at gunpoint while they ransacked the room, and escaped with $930 cash. None of the family, who were preparing for bed when the rob· bery happened, was harmed, police said. The gunmen fled the motel by scrambling over a rear balcony. Police said one of the men ripped out the telephone wires in the Vacation Village motel room, 647 South Coast Highway, to pre- vent the family from calling for help. Police said Harold Hooe. 44, and his wife Jane, 42, were in bed when a knock came at the door. Their 15-year·old daughter part- ly opened the door, then it was kicked wide by one of the men outside. The robber with the gun went to the foot of the Hooe bed, police were told, pointed the gun at the couple and said. "Give me y~ money and don't-around." Hooe told the men there was money in his wallet and in his wife's purse. The suspects were described as dressed in old clothes, gloves and gray stocking caps. Police did not know as yet why that particular room or family bad been the target of the robbery. Uranium Missing PHILADELPHIA (AP> -A western Pennsylvania nuclear facility must account for missing uranium in its scheduled April in· ventory or it will be ordered clos ed, says the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. An un- disclosed amount of enriched uranium 235 was not accounted for in the February inventory fl>r the Babcock & Wilcox Co. 's plant in Apollo, a suburb of Pillsburgb. SNOW CAUSES TROOP SHIFT WATERTOWN, N.Y. (AP> - Wbleh bu the more pttf~t weather -Alaska or the Watertown area of upstate New York? F.or the military, the bliuard of '77's more than six feet or ti now profttted the ans.,ver . So, the Anny and Alt Force de- cided to shift the 19'18 winter tralnina for 20,000 troops frorn Alaska to Camp Drum, says Gov. HugbCareJ. • :Prender of India ·NEW DELHI. lndla CAP) - )lforarjl Deaai, &1-yu.r-oldlader of Lbe SUCCet.SfW fi&bt lo lbc aovern ment of Indira Qandhi, was sworn In today as lndla 's fourth prime minister and immediately signaled a possible· end to this country's s pecial hnks w1tb the Soviet Union. At a news conference after tak· ing the oath of office, Desai said lbe 1971 Indian-Soviet friendship :2nd Case Of Wrong ID Found WASHING TON CAP > -The Pentagon reported a second case of mistake n identity today among the remains of 12 men handed over by the Vietnamese government as U.S. war c asuallies. Identificallon experts have dis· covered that remains listed by the Vietnamese as Air Force Capt. Lawrence II. Golberg of Cloquet. Minn.. actually were those of Lt. Patrick E . Wynne of Satellite Beach, Fla. Wynne was a crewman on an r·'4C Phantom jet flown by Golberg when the plane was shot down Aug. 8, 1966. Both Golberg .rnd Wynne were carried a::. miss· rng m action. Wynne's status was changed May 28. 1974, to pre- sumed dead. J\l the !>ame time, the Pen· lagon said 1t has been de- termined that the remains iden- tified bv the Vietnamese as Air £-'orce MaJ. Curtis E Eaton of Wakefield. R I.. arC' not those of l:: a ton but "J ppe a r to be those of a Vietnamc~l' " President Carter disclosed Wcdnesd,\y that one of the 12 caskeL'> brought back from llano1 by his special commission con- tained the remains of a Viet- namese man. rather than of an J\mencan Carter did not iden- tify the Amencan involved Eaton was pilot of an F105 fighter-bomber when s hot down '\ug 4. 1966 lit' has b1..·l·n earned . 1s missing 1n aclton The Prntagon said that the re- mains of th(' other 10 handed over hy the Vietnamese have been confirmed as originally 1den- t1fied. They were: Air Force MaJ Elwyn R Capl- rng of Detroit. 1\ir Force MaJ. .James H. Mt'tz of Poplar Bluff, Mo ; Air Force Capl. Samuel E. Waters Jr .. of Mocksville-. N.C ; Air Force Lt. Stephen W lhamond of Roslyn Heights. "4 Y . J\ir ~·on·t· Lt Bruce C Ducat of Bt'lhe~da . Md Navy Lt Wilham M Roark of neulvue, Neb., Navy Lt Cmdr. Thomas Kolstad of Parkville, Minn.; Navy Lt (J.g > Wilham 0 Klenert. of Bellmore. N Y . Lt. Cmdr Hoy H. Bowltng of San Rernardmo and Nav\ Lt \mdr Guy D John~on nf Seattle, Wash DO CTOR. • • '>letrician, has medical offices in Huntington Beach and Westminster Contacted toda\. Dr Waddill "aid he had an office full of pa· t1cnts and d<'clmC'd to comment on the charges against him The gynrcolog1st said his at- torney, Matt Kunltch, would con- tact him before his court ap- pearance. Kurilich could not be reached for comment today OAANGE COAST DAILY PILOT fhf' Or•~ (0~\t 0•1ly PliM, M,,.w'hkn 1\fftn\ tu"f'dl~Nf'lit'\ Prll'\\ 1\0VOH~f>Y l""0.-~ CN\t PvfthVt•r'I? Comp"nt "'-o.t'<llfttfldot1i'lon'\ 4'4' owfJll,Nt-d Mo1•11t.-, tt'lrOUQf\ F-no., tor '""'' ,_....., N•woo•t "'·tc h, Huntl"'010f" --~"' J. nvn , •• ,, V•ll•• h Vlf\f' 54'dOl• .... 1;• VtH4"\f .,.,. l-""""'8-tKt\ \owff'\(M'\1 A\Oft91•~telj hOft i\ ~"""'" \•htt'G.t'f\ "'4t ~-4•' '""' orffli<._.t OUtM•\1\1~ 01~1 •\ llil \)0 ..... ~ a.y \o-.e•. Co\t• -...~ C•lito'""•.,.,. "-"-P."10.nt •nd P\;bl1~, , .. ,. c ....... V1( ~ Pf•\h't,r.t •"Cf Gfo,....et Mit~et-' , .. ~··••Mt Ed<tOt 'fMnw\A M"'"-"•fl'lf lril4'"•9•fWJ fd•IOt Ctrwrl•' M lMt ••tMN ....... "''ht•nt ~"•O+""Q(dthw'\ Omc .. f O"'I• M• u ))0 W~\t A•t 'itr.-•t \. .tQuin• l•if'f" 11" G..,.,_v" \tr•• "'•"'l~l'l-Qtl)t\ h•r" 111tt .. fit'"., ..,._..n•"' .....,,,,ltb•cti Vell•y UNI l • ft•t ltoM •1\.tfl\01• .. ,_, .... .., T~efte(714)~ ClHNfled Aftef11el119 .U.M11 ~i.-· lloUtt-O!'ICt ,.,. .. ,10 ,.,,.,..,.~c .. - 415-06'° ,.....,._°'-~~" ... &40-12:10 c ............ '"' °'-c ... ,, -·-( ..... CM""lf ho ,,..'."'!\ \lo'"•' ""''''"~ H hH'·•• m•Htr II' .d,~Hft\•f'ft•~h ... ,tlflt tf"I•' ·~ ;::~~:::l'\~1tPIOt.1t \(t I ••I ,_fl'n•\'lf\ &f \•<ond ttAH Ofl\f4Qll CHh't et C.\tA Me,41 (t lft•rf'•A 'uhunpt1e., bv t•'''" t1 \0 ::~!!!r ..... -a :::·~~~,.'4 ,,..ft,,... """'·', tNat.Y "m.Wlt not com• ln wu of our fricrwbb.ip with all1 otbel' slate ... We woo•t ha•• aa.y special relatlonl witb any coun- try." Desai, a veteran of the Indian independence movement and a former leader or Mrs. Gandhi's Congress party, said bis govern- ment. would adopt a forel&n policy of "proper nonalign- ment.'' In reference to his govern· APWl .... lo INDIA'S NEW LEADER Morarjl Desai, 81 Fro m Page A l WAGE •.. manufacturing wages. The labor spokesman said Carter's top economic adviser Charles · Schult.ze "is the guy who s hot it down." M arshaJI said the Administra· tion 's proposal would eliminate the wage differential between employes who have been covered in stages by the minimum wage act. He said the J\dmtnislral1on "carefully reviewed" the pro· posals by organued labor which closely parallel those recom· mended by Dent. He said the Carter administration "believes that m light of current economic conditions. a somewhat different approach is warranted al this lime." Under the admi01stral1on pro posal based on its economic pre- dictions. the minimum wage would be $2.50 on July 1, $2.73 on July of 1978 and $2.92 on July, 1979 The AFL-CIO had testified earh er that the minimum wage would have to be $2.65 right now lo ('Over the inflation that has re- duced the value or the dollar .,ince the last series of staggered increases m the minimum \\-a~e b<'gan CdM Freeway Section Open To Motorists J\ secllon of the new Corona del i\l a r Free w a y o p en e d to motorists Wednesda-y night, after CaJTrans road crews put the final touches on the $30 million route. Stanley L Dick. resident C'ngineer for CalTrans District 7, said motorists traveling north on Newport Boulevard can now take the new 1.1 mile freeway section \\-htch links up with the north· bound lanes or the San Diego Freeway. Conversely . south bound motorists on the San Diego f'rceway can now transfer onto Route 73 and get off a mile down the road onto the Newport Freeway southbound. The freeway segment. part of the s ix-mile long uncompleted Corona del Mar route. was to have opened last Friday follow ing dedication ceremonies, but rains the previous week delayed some painting work on the new route. metrt.'a rutwe mac tear pohcy. tbe uw prime uld~ "We do DOt beUev9 a&omic weapons Ill alt.·· "We don't know whether it ls necessary to have nuclear U · plosions for peaceful purposes. ll it is not necessary. it should never be done." be added. Claiming •·peaceful purposes." India set off a nuclear explosion in 1914 that disturbed many Western nations. It is building a reprocessing plant capable of extracting plut.oruum. a nuclear bomb material, from spent reactor fuel. Asked if at age 81 he was fit to bear the heavy burdens of lead· ing the world's second most populous nation, Desai quipped: "My age is better than yours. Ac- cording to the English calendar I'm only 19." Desai was a Leap Year baby, born Feb. 29, 1896. He added he would quit the prime ministership "the day I feel I am not physicallv fit. I'll vacate immediately, even tomor- row. l 'm not going to stay a mo- ment longer than I'm needed. But what does age matter? It's the spirit that matters." His 59-year-old predecessor was not present for the three. minute ceremony in the ornate Ashoka Hall of the presidential palace. But Mrs. Gandhi was one of the first to send congratula· tions to the long-time foe who led his new Janata party to a stun- ning election triu mph over her and the Congress party last weekend. A cornerstone of India's foreign policy during Mrs. Gan· dhi's rule was what she often described as the country 's special relations with the Soviet Union. in view of the two coun- tries' geographic proximity <:ind close economic ties. When the lndo-Soviet treaty was signed, many Western coun- tries objected to one particular clause that bound India not to enter into any obligation with any other country that is · ·incom- patible" with the Indo·Sov1el treaty. Some Western govern- ments felt this clause in effect gave Russia a veto over India's relations with other countries. Having lost her seat in Parlia- ment in the election. Mrs. Gandhi became a private citizen. However. her successor as the Congress leader in Parliament, Y.B. Chavan, said she would con- tinue to take a leading part in the party . F rom. Page A l UFOs ... CPSTI. "We received information from our weather people two weeks ago that we are in the midst of a major meteor shower which Is due to end about April 20th ... he added. Despite the fact fn e Hunt· ington Beach policemen. airline personnel. California Highway Patrol officers and others who saw the two objects, deny they were meteorites, this would lend support to another theory Griffith Observatory Dtr~tor Dr. Edward Krupp cautiously sugges;s 1~ was a meteor shower, or partiai shower. or perhaps a rare doubie meteor. ·'Th at was no meteor!" deciared Huntington Beac h Police Officer Dan McKerran after the eerie sightings. Many who saw the UFOs· described them as traveling al the same speed and not on a downward, arc-like trajectory. They seemed to fly straight, unswervingly, over the earth's surface and maintained a steady formation flight, the witnesses agreed. Nothing was detected on radar screens at the time. "Well, it's a real Heinz 57 Varieties mix of ideas," con- ceded NORAD's Lt. Brady Chairman Named WASHINGTON (APl Pres1 dent Carter has chosen Eleanor Holfnes Norton of New York to chair the embattl ed Equal Employment Opportunity Com- ml~sion. labor sources said to day. LeSs is ~More Water Cut A.ids Beer Sales SAN DIEGO (AP> -Conserving water is helping San Diego restaurants ring up sales of beer and wine, operators say. In recent weeks, a growina number have served drinking water only on request. "It used to be a person who W83 n Utt le bit thirsty used to tak~ another sip of water," snid Timothy nurke, n restaurant owner. "Now he start& thinking in terms of another beer.·' All over S11n Diego, a survey shows that wine and beer drinking is up as waler consumption as a result of the west's drought conditions goes down. Busy Little Bees A crocus appears along a road near Barns table. Mass .. on winter-weary Cape Cod and provides temptation for a pair of bees. Pie Throw-er Gets Watergate's Hunt NEW YORK CAP) -Yippic party pie-thrower Aron Kay has claimed E . Howard Hunt as his latest victim. , Kay nailed Hunt in the head Wednesday evening with a coconut cream pie in the corndor of the RCA Building. Hunt, con- victed in the Watergate con- spiracy, was on his way to NBC- T r ail D er aile d VANDENBERG AIR FORCE DASE (AP> Freight rail service between Los Angeles and San Francisco should be restored sometime today when workers complete repairs of damage caused by the derailment of 16 railroad cars Wednesd ay, authorities report. TV's ''Tomorrow" proirani. When asked about the incident by "Tomorrow" host Tom Snyder, Hunt said1 "I was sur- prised and a litUe disappointed. J' thought that the level of political debate in America had advanced considerably beyond that since the time I was put away.•· Hunt was released from prison Feb. 23 after serving 32 months or an eight-year sentence. Stamp s Stole n MADERA (AP> -BurgJars broke into the Madera County Welfare Department C)ffice Wed· nesday and stole $37 ,000 in negO'tiable food stamps, authorities report. SONY'S BIG ONE rlPrr' th1· bqgest Tr:n.tron colcr TV yr•l-21 lmemum:l dtoqon.;illvl AnrJ it ho; , (: l r''U - T1111111011 f'lus l rin tron hn• olwoy> iY"• 11 ~. wn for o l"""'lt l>C.;U"< bur T 11r1 •ron flus 1ntrod 1 • ~ 1 '.J J" P.v• n 1•!'.'fl'• ·1 J1<C' J'f' S ,ny r•n1']1ne<>• I • '" j o ,, JV t 1n:P.n;ify '"" • 1,,,-tmn I i>Qms whKh point" th" pier JrP A;~o. tn•• ~1J1fo, i:: of rhe rub<' i• dor}r!r tn r-,,., ih•en c.tJntrrJ~t Whitf'f wh1tr· .. Drn~P.r dorh More subrlP in bf'IWl'P.f\'i. KV-2101 Approves Rezoning A zone ch.an&e opcsiln1 the door tor 75 new homes aea.ttaect Oftr JU billy 8Cl'lll near O'N U Pstt woa tho mi.animous approval ol Ontnp Couaty supervisors Wed- nesday. In uanting the chan1e ol ~ from agricultural to residential the Board ol Supervisors reject· ed a planninl commission ,.. commendation. · Commissioners aald the aro was not ready for developmeqt because of inadequate road ~­ cess. fire safety and sew9'" facilities. The new homes. proposed by the Coto de Caza Development Corporation, will be southeast ol the park and reached via Live Oak Canyon Road. Murray Storm, an assistant director of the county Environ· mental Management Agency, said Wednesday the road is sub- standard and already has a high rate of accidents But spokesmen for tbe de- veloper contended lbe limit of 75 homes would not add to traffic p roblems. In addition, they said, an ex- tension of Alicia Parkway will provide alternate access at about the time or shortly after the new homes are built. But Supervisor Ralph Diedrich won support from renow board mem bers lo ask county staff members to see il fees could be assessed the developer to help build that road. And he said this would be a good time to see if similar pro- visions could be imposed on other d evelopments when they in- crease congestion in new areas. In addition to the 762 acres re- zoned Wednesday, the Coto de Caza area includes another 400 acres that were r ezoned earlier for development. As part or Wednesday's action provisions were included in part of the area for a future 250-room hotel or motel facility. Com,. \~•c the bi')1e\t l>nqhtest, •horpt'?~I Tnn1lron ever Yo J'll bel+Pve 11 Tr.n1l1c;p fki,. 'h's O Sony" 21" screen measured diagonally KV-l941P 19" '<1ePn r1N1sured d1ocionolly SPOIL YOURSELF )urE'. It ~ o Sooy · Bui 1i \ o nr>w I q" (meosur~ d1oqonol'y) 1l'mot1• co• rrol f, 11,troo Plus col0< TV The •r1plc.func• on 1cm01I' Cl)nlrol (ommonder 1s totally e·eclron1c (Tlfj totdlv 11u"' lu~t rovc:h o bullon fo, channel sol~tron, v0lumP 1equlo1ion and on/off And the Tnn1tron Plu~ p1ct1;re 1s even better than befOl'e Thanks to Sony s enq1n~ets who developed a bundle of rmprovements to mo~e Tnnitron Plus the biqhtest. lhorpest. crispest Sony eve1. Come see 11 You deserve it. "It's a Sony " . -BOTH MODELS IN STOCK - 275 East 17th St. Costa Mesa ..................... J O.-.W ... efC...lr. Phon~ 642·8882 Store Hours Daily 9-6 Sot 9-5 30 S..tllttbH..._ • I VOL 70, NO. 83, 4 SECTIONS, so PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAL;I FORNIA . c~ TEN CENTS ! Whg Are They in , 1tleSa Water Poll~· Teachers Compare Salaries By MICHAEL PASKEVICH OUM D•lly Piiot Sufi Newport-Mesa teacher leaders believe salaries and district ex- penditures in nearby Garden Grove should have a bearing on current deadlocked contract negotiations. but school ad- ministrators say the com- parisons don't 01ean a thing. Teacher leader Bill Grgurich claims the district's salary offer (nine percent over two years) would leave teachers $4 ,268 short of maintaining the standard of living they had JO year::; ago He adds that the district offer would mean teachers m Garden Grove, which he calls ''the financial pits of the county," would be better paid. Superintendent John Nicoll believes such comparisons are "misleading,·• because student enrollment in Garden Grove is nearly twice that of the NewPort· Mesa district. "The cost per pupil of teachers' salaries is higher m the Newport-Mesa Unified School District than it is in other Orange 'County unified school districts," "17t. Nicoll states. "Class size as well as high average placement on the teachers· salary schedule probably are the reasons for this high rating." District figur<"s show that $744.27 1s spent on teacher salaries for each of the distnct's 25,970 students That's 23 percent higher than Garden Grove " $603.33. The county average 1s $639.41. Nicoll figur<'s 85 perc·cnt of the Newport-Mesa district's ex pen ditures go to salary <including non-teaching district cm ployes) and salary related items. Newport-Mesa Educullon t\s sociallon leadNs have said th1• district 1s spending too muc·h 10 administer data proccsstn~ und queslionablt: research programs. leading to higher clasc; s11t's <See TEACHERS, Pagl" A2> \ crune Symposiurn Slated for Mesa A crime pre\ t>nt1on -.ym posium sponsored h't 1 h1• Orangt' County Criminal Ju..,t1n · Council and 15 Orange County pol11·1• agencies will bl' h£•l1I l'nd~I\ 111 Costa Me.,a The publl<' 1' 111\ 1tt-ci t11 Jlll•nrl the program schc•1lull'ci from !l :111 a.m. to 5 pm in th1• s.inta \n,1 Room of th<' South <'m"t Plata Hotel. Registrntion fees hav<• been set at SW and will cover luncheon costs. l''or reservations call 834-7131. \\e:1ah.-.r Chance of sho'4n.., .incl possible thund<'r..,ho\Hr-. tonight and Frid:iy with chance of mea:-.urahll' rainfall 40 percent Low.., tonight 46 to 52. Jh ghs F'n· day in upper sos. INSIDE TOD" Y Most of southern Orange CountJI could get by without wotn for only c couple da11• if ~UM• ~• •swred by .a Mturol dUalttr. Tf!,e perilous sfcte of wat~ 1uppliea in thi1 faat-grotdng re{/i<m is detailed Oil Page AJO Index AtY-.. !'l'l<e A14 A""'-•~ •> .... ~-11 ~VIH .. I L.M 9ew e1t M°"wll,_t .. Callf ... Me Al, U N•tleMI Nowo A4,IJ OMtlll.. c..u Of't,.,.~ 410 ~let C:S ....... e1 • Cf'Mt.... AU ,,1vl• ...,..,. at 0..111 .... '"9 All '-'<It CH a.itwt11 ..._ •• lteo M4"11MI .. • ....vt-.. I T•l .. ltl• .. l"l(Mjil(t ... , TIMelwt M·7 ..._.. It Wuttw M ~I-M • .,.. ....... ~.U By STEVE M1TCRELL Of Die Dilolly ~lot Staff What do Costa Mesa Mayor Norma Hertzog. actor John Wayne, former governor Ronald Reagan and Assemblyman Den· nis Mangers have in common? They're all the subject of a question in a telephone survey being conducted for the Costa Mesa County Water District. The question, one of many put to about 400 Costa Mesa water users. asks whose opinion would 1nfluence the water user the moat. Then tbe pollster lists the above mentioned quartet. "My, what prestigious com- pally," laughed Mayor Hertzog when informed about the ques· lion on the water district's sur- vey. Water dJslrict officials said the poll is being conducted lo "better determine the needs aod desires of water users and the future ef- fectiveness of the district's waler conservation proeram.'' But another question, alle1edly asking bow effective lhe water user thinks City Manager Fred Sorsabal is, has Costa Meaa's top official upset. "What does that have to do with water conservation?" the angry city manager asked. Ed Schnabel, the district's general manager, said the poll is bemg taken to ''discover what the attitudu of the community are in regards to water conserva- tion and the possible consolida- tion of the district into the city (as a city department.)" The city council will be holding public hearings next month con· cerning the possibility of dissoJv. ing the water district, forming in- stead a water department within the city. Any consohdation move would <See POLL, Page A?) WAYNI! ltl!AOAN Carter Outlines MOscow Talks WASlllNGTON IAP) Declaring that the American people should be told what is go ing on in foreign policy, Pres1 dent Carter outlined an agenda for negotiations in Moscow today and said 1l will include an effort to eliminate nuclear testmg of all kinds. Carter also said that Secretary of State Cyrus B Vance will bl' urging Sov1el leaders to JOm the United Slates m effort::; to end outside mterference in Africa, lest it lead to conflict there. Carter described al a national· ly broadcast White House news conference the topics Vance will '-be discussing in Moscow talks next week. He said the descr1p tion was not so detailed as to 1m pede negotiations. The President said hi.., ad mmistration will follow a Policv of disclosing foreign poltcy con s1derations because of its need to "derive strength directly from the people" He said the Administration has spent weeks in detailed !>ludy of the agenda for the Vance mis· s1on, and it's important for lhl' American people to know what 1::; onit. Carter said he wants it known that "when I do speak, J don't Russ Ties to End? Desai Takes Reim As India Premier Along Come a Spider Pat Hansen, 14, of Mount Vernon. Wash., says this six- mch·long Mexican tarantula is "really very nice." The !:ip1dcr. called Fran. dines on live crickets and. he adds, doesn't t'\en try to bite him anymore Minimum Pay Hike Of 20 Cepts Urged WASHI:-.:GTON CAPI -The Carter admm1strat1on recom mended today that the minimum ~age be increased 20 cenLc; an hour as of July l, SO cents short of the proposal by the AFL-CIO The Adm1rustrat10n also pro- posed that the minimum wage be t 1 ed m the future to a set percen · 1age of a .. eraf?e manufaclunng waj?es Labor Secretary Rav Marshall t11ld J llou."e Labor · Standards !-Uhcomm1ttee that the Carter ad m1nistrat1on proposes mcrt'asmg tht> $2.30 an hour minimum wai:ic to S2 SO an hour White flouse after a meeting with C'art<:'r on Wednesday. he had the 1mprec;s1on Carter agreed to an mdexinJ: level of 55 percent of the manufacturing wages The labor ..,pokesman said Carter's top economic adviser Charles Schult7<' s the guy who shot it down Man.hall said the Admimslra- t1on 's proposal would ehmmate th<' "'age ci1ff Prenl1al bet\\een cmploy<'s who have bel'n covered m st;1ges t,y the mm1mJm "'age act. Ht' said the Adm1n1:-.tration "carefully reviewed" the pro· posals by organized labor which closely parallel those recom· mended by Dent. NEW DELHI. India <AP) Morarji Desai, 81-year-old leader of the successful fight lo unseat th c government of I nd1ra Gandhi, was sworn In today as India's fourth prime m1mster and immediately signaled a possible end to this country's special links with the Soviet Union. At a news conference after tak· ing the oath of office, Desai said the 1971 Indian Soviet friendship treaty "must not come in the way of our friendship with any other state. . We won't have any special relations with any coun· try." Desai, a veteran of the Indian independence movement and a former leader of Mrs Gandhi's Congress party, said his govern· ment would adopt a foreign policy of "proper nonalign· ment." In reference to his govern ment's future nuclear Polley, the new prime minister said, "We do not believe in atomic weapQns at all " "We don't know whether 1t 1s necessary to have nuclear ex - plos1ons for peaceful purposes. If 1t 1s not necessary. 1t should n<'ver be done." he added. Claim 1n~ "peaceful purposes." India set off a nuclear explosion in 1974 that disturbed m any Western nations. ft 1s building a reprocessing plant capable of extracting plutonium, A~WlrltPMto INDIA'S NEW LEADER Morarjl Desai, 81 a nuclear bomb material. from spent reactor fuel. Ask<.'<! 1( at age Bl he was fit to bear the heavy burdens of lead· ing the world's second most pnpulous nation. Dcs<J1 quipped "My ase is better than yours Ac cording to tbe English calendar l 'm only 19." Desai was a Leap Year baby, born Feb. 29, 1896. The Admm1strallon also pro- posed that beginning in July 1978 and each year thereafter the minimum wage be set at 50 per- cent of the average straight· time, hourly wages of manufac· luring workers. This proposal is known as indexing. The AFL-CIO recommended a S2-an-hour minimum wage 1m · mediately upon enactment of the bill with indexing beginnin~ January 1978 al 60 percent of the average manufacturing worker·-. wage UFOs Russ Craft Bits? Labor lobbyists in the crowded hearing room appeared shocked by the Marshall proposals and one lobbyist for the garment workers remarked that "labor might have backed the wrong candidate." a reference lo labor's support of President Carter. The AFL-CIO spokesman said that when subcommittee chairman John Dent left the Uranitim Missing PHILADELPHIA CAP> A western Pennsylvania nuclear facility must account for missing uranium in itR 11cheduled April m ventory or it will be ordered closed, says the Nuclear Regulatory Cornmlssion. An Un· disclosed amount or enriched uranium 235 wu not account.od for in tho Fcbru•ry tnnntoey for the Babcoclc & WUco& CO.'• plant. 1n Apollo, a 1uburb of Piltabuflh. By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Ol Ille O.•IY f'tlot St•ll Chances are no one will ever solve the mystery of what the two obJects seen rocketing through the sky Tuesday, really were. but two theories were offered today. A spokesman for the North American Air Defense Command <NORAD> at Colorado Springs, Colo., said a computer check at the Space Defense Center at Cheyenne Mountain offered one early toda·y He said two fragments of Sov iet satellites re-entered the earth's atmosphere about 3 a .m . <EST> but over the Atlantic Less is More Water Cut Aida Beer Sides SAN DIEGO CAP) -Conserving water is helping San Diego restaurants ring up sales of beer and wine, operators say . In recent weeks, a growing number have served drinking water only on reqM.est. "It used to be a person who was a little bit Ullr$ty used to t~ another sip of water," said Timothy Burke a restaurant owner. "Now he atnrt.s thlnldne in terrM of another beer ... All over San Diet(). a survey shows tha wine and beer c:J#nkin& ts up1as water consumption a! a result of the t •• drougbt eODdi&lciss 1oea dowo. Ocean. ·'There is always a chance of a 'skip'." exrlained NORAD In· formationa Services Officer Lt Gordon Brady. He explained the skip designa- tion is precisely what iL sounds like. the physical e ffect of skip- pinf a flat pebble across a water sur(ace such as a stream or pond. The pieces of debris o! Soviet Cosmos 867 and Cosmos 898 could have struck ea.rth 's dense at· mosphere, then rebounded oil it, re-enterlns it again on the Pacific Ocean side of the globe. However, the time clements in· volved are a liUlo off, Lt. Bra<\,Y noted, since t.he objects were seen Tuesday In Calirornia between 3 :15 and 3:30 a .m. <PST >. "We received Information from our we•ther people two weeks a,o th.at we are In the midst ol a major meteor ahow~r which 11 due to end about April 20th," ht added. Deaplw tho faci fl\'e Hunt- lncton leac:h polic~men, alrllno Ol'Oi. Jtge Al) speak with a hollow voice," but with the support of Contress and the nation. He said that should be dear, for example, in his ex- pression of concern about human rights in other nations. Soviet Leader Leonid I . Brezhnev has complained of what he called U.S. interference m Russian internal affairs in the human rights statements and gestures of the new admmistra· lion. But Carter said he has seen nothing to indicate that dif- ferences on that point would in· trude on negotiations over nuclear arms control. Physician Charged in Baby Death_ Dr. William Baxter Waddill was arraigned in West Orange County Jurucial District Court to- day on murder charges in the strangulation death of a one- hour-old infant The District Attorney's Office alleges the baby died March 2 after Dr. Waddill attempted a sahne abortion on the seven and one-half month old fetus Wes tminst<:'r police charge that the Jive baby girl was de· livered at Westminster Com- munity Hosipital and taken to the nursery for hfe·sustaining care Death that came one hour later was attributed to manual strangulation, investigators al- lege. The mother has not been identified. Municipal Judge Ragnar R. Engebretsen set bail for Dr. Waddill, 43, at $25,000. The physi- cian was to report to Orange County Jail for booking. He said he would make bail. Dr. Waddill owns a home in the Huntington Harbour section of Huntington Beach and practices medicine m Huntington Beach. Westmmsler and Anaheim. Westminster police brought a murder charge against the physician Wednesday when hospital staff members allegedly told them he killed the infant after attempting the abortion. Orange County Coroner's Of- fice Chief Investigator Jim Beisner said the infant died due to "asphyxiation caused by manual strangulation.'• Defense attorney Matt Kurilich said Waddill's medical staff privileges have been re- instated at the hospital. • Hospital officials had reported- ly suspended the gynecologist's privileges when the murder in- vestigation began March 8 Mesa Lions &dutedon 50thYear Members ol the lJons Club in· Costa Mesa have been serving their community for 50 years. Today's Daily Pilot includes a special magazine section re- counUn& the flrst haJf-century or this publlc-splrited organbation which hu spawned o. number of other Lions Clubs along the Or ante Coast. A Frid~ banquet at the South Cooat Plue Hotel wlU officially mark the annlverHI')'. You can Jotn In the run by tum· Jna to the Llona Club aot.h )'ear 1peclal edition lnatdo tod1y1s Dally Pilot. - 2n Mixup on ~-___:_...lilU~WG:TON. CU) -TM Peot.aaaa ~rud • attOnd cue. of m(1lakeo ident ity today om~ the rtm•lna of 12 mm handod over by tho Vaeln.ameso 1overnment aa U .S. war c•sualtJa. Id.entificaUon experts have dis· covered that remajns listed by the Vietnamese a:s Air Force Capt. Lawrence H. Golberg of Cloquet, Minn., actutally were those of Lt. Patrick E. Wynne of Satellite Beach, Fla. WyMe was a crewman on an F4C Phantom jet flown by Golberg when the plane was shot ~own Aug. 8, 1966. Both Golberg -itnd Wynne were carried as miss· ing in action. Wynne's status was changed May 28, 1974, to pre- sumeddead AL~ um. ~ llMI Pft>. t.1on said It. ti&1 been de· tamlned th.at tho ,..matu Iden· tlfted by the Vietnamese u Air Force ~. Cuna E. ~ ol Wakefte1d, R.I., ar. not tholle f4 Eat.on but "appear to be lboee of a Vietnamese." President Carter disclost'd Wednesday that one of the 12 caskets brought back from Hanoi by his special commission con- tained the remains of a Viet namese man, rather than of an American. Carter did not iden- tify the American involved. Eawn was pilot of an FlOS fighter-bomber when shot down Aug. 4, 1966. He has been carried as missing in action. The Pentagon said that the re· mains of the other 10 handed over Delay Could Halt Upper Bay Bridge By JOANNE REYNOLDS ()! ... D•llY PllolSlafl Architect Bill Ficker predicted today that a delay now could in· definitely stalemate construction of a new Coast Highway bridge over upper Newport Bay. Ficker, leader of the city coun- Mesa Grants Yacht Firm Rehearing A Costa Mesa yacht salesman will get another chance lo sell his plans for expansion lo coun- r ilmen April 18, but the man's al· torney was warned that this 1s the last time. Robert L Humphreys, at· torney for Spoiler Yachts Presi- dent Dale Anderson. a5ked thl' council this wec•k lo reconsider its denial of vanances to parking requirements and othe r con siderations al the business. 1550 · Newport Blvd Coun c ilman Dom Rar1ll moved lo rehear the zone excep- tion appeal, adding, "This man 1s operating on a thin line with lh1s council." Councilman Ed McFarland agreed. saying. ··Spoil er Yachts has had several chances in the past. If there 1s no cooperalton this time, I y. 111 not go for this again " The council will hrar the firm 'c; requests for 1onc exceptions, d1• n1cd hv the• pJnc·I lo<,t Ff"bruun . .it its Aµnl us mtcting cil-appointed Bridge Action Team (BAT), made his predic- tion during a morning meeting held to update community leaders on the bridge's pro- g ress. He said planning for the bridge already is about two months behind the schedule that calls ['lr completion of the six-lane facili •. rn late 1979. Ficker said the bridgP has re ceived the approval of the state Fish and Game Commission and that CalTrans officials are now seeking a Coast Guard permit certifying the bridge is not an im pa1rment lo navigation. A critical matter of timing, he said, 1s the pending Coast Guard decision on whether to hold a public hearing before granting a permit for construction. ··we really need your support now.·' Ficker told the 20 representatives of homeowner groups. environmental organi za t1ons and business and poliucal leaders who gathered at Promon Lory Point He asked them to write to the Coast Guard expressing support for the bridge, a request that drew opposition from one member of the audience Dr. Edwin Amyes, a resident of Dover Shores. north of the bridge, protested plans to build a bridge 20 feet off the water at mean high tide. Dr. Amyes. :s Newport Beach neurosurgeon, said h~ would file a protest with the Coast Guard because the brid1'?e will not be tall enou1'?h to allow s ail boats to pass underneath 1t Bed, Radio Among Missing City Goods Anybody seen the c1 ly 's generator-operated radio set" How about the hr<' department's bed? These 1t<'m s Jr<· among hun· dreds outhnrd in a s cven-pai:e report to the Costa Mesa City Council as berng m 1ssing. sa Iv aged or d1spos1•d of The cit) ·s finance depJrtment came up with the $54,000 worth of equipment the city no longer has. m its first physical inventory of fixed assets since Costa Mesa was incorporated an 1953. The $54,115 63 total s ounds ltke a lot to you considering that th<' inventory of lost <•qu1pment spans 24 years. physicaJ inventory of all their fixed assets several months ago, and his report lo the council was a re11ult of that project. Those missing items will be taken from the computerized fixed assets system and wntten orf. Oman said Several items listed as missing were purehased by the city as long ago as 1954, ineluding several police sirens , costtnl! about $113 back then. Other items include seven fire hoses datin~ from 1955 to 1958, four 196.1 gas masks. a worn out "rescue breathinsC film. a 1001 record player': and a 1955 p1rkup truck. hsted as .. Junked ·· by t~ Vlt'tn confirmed u orl11D.U, Iden· Ul!ed.1be1 ... : Alt Y~ M-.j . ElWJD R. C.pl· Ina ol Delroft; Air .Poree M aj. Jam• H. Mea ·01 Poplar Bluff. Mo.: Air Fon:e Capt. Samutl E . Waters Jr., of Mocksville, N.C.; Air Force Lt. Stephen W. Diamond of Roslyn Heights, N.Y.; Air Force Lt. Bruce C. Ducat of Bethesda, Md. Navy U . William M. Roark or Beulvtie, Neb.; Navy Lt. Cmdr. Thomas Kolstad of Parkville. Mino.; Navy Lt. (j.g.) William 8. Klenert, of Bellmore, N.Y.: Lt. Cmdr. Roy H. Bowling of San' Bernardino; and Navy Lt. Cmdr. Guy D. Johnson of Seattle, Wash. fi'rOffl Page A J TEACHERS which lowers teacher effectivc•- ness. NM EA President G rgurich asked district trustees Tuesday why Garden Grove s pe nds $85 per student to administer pro grams while it cos ts the local dis· trict $105 per student, 24 percent higher than Garden Grove. Once again, Nicoll questions the rationale behind the com- parison because there are 52,627 students in Garden Grove and 25,970 m Newport-Mesa According lo district figure~. total administrative costs for 1975-76 were $2,345.144 compared with Garden Grove's $.1,078,134. Nicoll said t eacher leaders ··should compare apples to ap· pies," because "if we doubled our enrollment we wouldn't dou· ble admm.istrative costs ." Teacher and district negotiators have been at an im- passe since March 9 following a breakdown in contract negotia- tions over teacher pay, binding . arbitration and teacher transfer policies A state mediator is scheduled to arrive Wednesday to reopen negotiations between district and teacher bargaining chiefs. CdM Freeway Section Opens To Motorist,s A section o( the new Corona dC'I M a r Freeway ope ned t o motorists Wednesday night. <Jfter CalTrans road crews put the final touches on the $30 million route. S t anley L . Dick, r esident engineer for CalTrans District 7. said motorists traveling north on Newport Boulevard can now take the new 1.1 mile freeway section wbich links up with the north- bound lanes of the San Diego Freeway. Conversel y, southbo und motorists on the San Diego Freeway can now transfer onto Route 73 and get oH a mile down the road onto the .Newport Freeway southbound. The freeway segment, part of the six·mile long uncompleted Corona del Mar route, was lo have opened last Friday follow- ing dedication ceremonies. but rains the previous week delayed c;om<' painting work on the new route "If you don 'l ~o to thc dentist for five years, you 're going to get more cavilies," quipped F111anee Director Robert Oman "It's the same thing here. Secrecy Denied When you don't catalogue your losses for a number or years, the total ls going to be grealer." Oman said his department ftent out requests for reports on ORANGE COAST c DAILY PILOT ~..:.:i:.~:!..~:·r, :.-::.;:: :::~== Cn.nl PvttttVw'O C6'Mo•nw '--'•'~" t~ •ttt ~·•'M"d Mt-11\d•v tf'lrouo .. ~' 0.• I~ (,.\l• 11¥w ,_.woo,.. R-.w" Htlftt1~°"' ..... ,., fOUl'I t•1n V•tl•'t ""'"• \ltt'l*•h.,., Va •• ,."_, t ,.o-,,.•R~'1<" \ou1"'c .... 1 4""'l' .. '~'-.ct' ll'C)f\ t\ OW>tl\Md \•twro"'' Md ~" ,,.. ~;:~oe~~~:'~"t.~1'1:~~.::.,_no W.\I ~' .... ,. ...... r rn 10.nl •net Putii1~t JM-II (.wioy V1t,. PT l'\t6tl\t AM Oll!Mr•t ..-,,.,.,._,..f' l••tt1U KMttl& ,.11 .. '-··~ M•~MilnQ lll!IW °"'""·"-llletlfffl" .... Auhlefll Mefl•tl"' fdllon Cot II MIH OHie. M11n,..f:::::'. :•6.i~wo .• ,.,. Ofllc11 ht.,.. ..... ~ 11-.01•-vro\l-i Hll"tt""t11 .. ••• tttP•·.,~-lr••"4 ~lfM<kV•ll•t l\l'lllAl>.,llt .. •' '4n DI ... ,,,..._ •• C/,osed Irvine Meet Backed By HILARY KA YE Olt ... Oally ~lletSUll Trvine Assistant City Attorney Roger Grable and four city coun- cil members denied today lhat the council violated the Ralph M. Brown anti-secrecy law when they met behind closed doors for 10 minutesTue11day. "There's no violation of the Brown Act until the group takes an action," Grable asserted. Tbe Ralph M. Brown Act is de· signed to prevent public a1enci~ from holding secret meetin1s. "We would have been in trou- ble if we held an executive seaaion at the end of the meeting to discuss the mayor select.Ion but we didn't,'' Grable added. The private meeting wu held durinc a 45-minute recHs called after a deadlocked vote for mayor. The council had unsuccessfully tried to choose a new mayor for two meetlnas. The council finally voted 3 lo 2 at the end of Tuesday's se11ion to table the question, thereby leavin• cur· rent Mayor David Silla In office Sllla today c.lled the Dally Pilot's position that the private meetlni ma)' be a vlolaUoo of the Brown Act•• a d!eap 1bot." "l'mappalled t.hatyou•ro mak- ine a tem.pest out or a teapot," sa)d SUls, adding that be viewed the situation to be Uke someone "overparlting for ti ve minutes." The council members say they did not violate the Brown Act because they did not take action in the closed session. • However, individual council members 11aid the ftoup "yelled at each olher" about why cert31n p~ple weren't voting for certain other people and yelled at Coun cilman Bill Vardoulis to make up his mind and Cinally vote. The section of the Brown Act ·tabeled "Purpose ol tho Act,,. states: ·'The purpose of the Act can be brierty at.ated. ll ia to tnaure that the deUbcratlons aa wen as the actions or local agencle~ are performed at meetings open to the public and as to which the public has been given adequate notice. ll la to prevent govern· ment Crom beini conducted 1n secret." S1ll5 dftlled that the heated dls- custlon tn tho closed room eon- 11tltuted "dtllberation11" about the mayor1e!ecUon. One council member, G•bridle Pryor, 01114 the Dally Piiot to take lbe quut.tcn to c:oul't. \ 'IONIGBI' C011T"A lttiA COUMY WATER DtST&Jcr -& u.lar bo•rd meetln1, lt'71PlaCt!Olta,5 p.m. OCC LECTURE -"The Future ls.J'' Fino Arts~ 11&. 7:30p.m . · "TWO GENTLEMEN OF VERONA" -South Coast Repertory Theater, Tuesday. Sunday through Aprll 23, 8 p.m. OCC JAZZ FESTIVAL -OCC Auditorium, March 24, 25 and 26, 8:30 p.m. $4. Also Saturday, 3:30. FRIDAY, MARCH ZS . OCC DRAMA -"Caucasian Chalk Circle " Fine Arts Hall 119, March 25. 27. April 1 and 3, 8 p.m . Free. "LlN" -Irvine Community Theater, Fridays and Saturdays through April 9, Newport Harbor Baptist Church, Cliff Drive and El Modena Avenue, Newport Beach. 8 p.m . "YOU Cl\N'T TAKE IT WITH YOU" -Cos ta Mesa Civic Playhouse, Fairgrounds, Fridays and Saturdays through April 2, 8:30 p .m . SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA VEHICLE FAIR -Easter Seals benefit. OranJi:e County Fair- grounds, March 25, 26 and 27, Friday. 8-10 p.m. Saturday, 1·4, 8-10 p.m. Sunday, 8 a.m . to8 p.m . FRIDAY NIGHT FILMS - "Zandy's Bride," OCC Forum, 7:15p.m. OCC PLANETARIUM - "Odyssey of the Rings." 7 :30 and 9p.m. Front Page A I UFOs ••• personnel. California Highway Patrol officers and others who saw lhe two objects, deny they were meteorites, this would lend support to another theory. Grilfith Observatory Director Dr. Edward Krupp cautiously suggests lt was a meteor shower, or partial shower, or perhaps a rare double meteor. Ln• Carter Boost Staff Salaries WASHINGTON (AP> -'Pral· dent Cuter b llvma bia stalf pay ra.ina ol up to 2S percent which will Increase 1aJartes tor tap aides to $56,000. Tbe ratsa will eoet S.00,000 a year, but Carter's spok~man says tb~y save the taxpayers money. "Tbe President felt it was im- portant for the White House to set. an example in holding down in- creases," press secretary Jody Powell said Wednesday. He said the raises are substan· tially less than the maximum authorized by law. But a White House breakdown shows the increases are only $1,500 below the legal maximum for the highest s taff levels. At the lowest staff levels, the raises average $5,000 below the max- imum. T he inc r eases are retroactive to Feb. 27. The pay increases go to 48 Auto Victim Still Critical In Hospital A young Canadian man re- mained in critical condition to· day at Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach, three days after be was struck by a car while walking in a traffic lane on a dark stretch of West Coast Highway. Newport Beach police trefhc investigator Steve Van Hom to day s aid John Mondoux or Calgary, Alberta, is listed as the primary cause of the Monday evening accident. Van Hom said the 20·year-old visitor apparently was in the roadway about 8 p.m. Monday and an approaching driver was unable to swerve in time to avoid Mondoux. Police said no citations are pending. memberl of the White Home 1t•ff rand antpart.ol an overa1J in· ereue a1rud.v 11vea to atbel- go•enun i •mploJ•. at the lowest staft ln.ts. Wblt.e Rouse P•11oes from an •"1'&1'• S91,000 to $42,SOO. Among those at the lop level, where tbe salary coe• from $44,600 to $56,000, are Powell, enern adviser James R. Schles· in~er national security adviser Zblanlew Brzezinski aocl aix other Carter assistants. F,....P,..eAI POLL ••• require approval or volus withla the w at.er d.istricL Schnabel said the questions were devised by Decision Mak· ing ln!ormation (DMI), the San· ta Ana firm conductina the poll. "They say there's a reason fot the questions, and they've got a good reputation,'' Schnabel said. ·'They're the pros, not me.'• The fiyn was hired by the waterdt§trict's Sacramento con· s ultant, Charles Hobbs, who said he went over the questions witb the pollsters before they began dialing the phone. .. None of the questions make a hell or a lot of sen se by them selves ," Hobbs said. He said the individual ques- tions are not important, but it is the results of the entire poll that will determine the concerns of the dis trict's water users. "'We have a real problem male· ing ourselves heard," Hobbs said about the district. "We're just trying to see if the water district" is getting through to the people." DMI offieials today refused to outline the list of questions asked by their pollsters, saying the client must see the results of the poll first. "Then, if the client wants lo re- lease the questions along with the results. we'll do so.'' the DMI s pokesman said. SONY'S BIG ONE Here's the bqqesl Tnnilron color lV yel-21'" (meo•11cd diagonally). And it has a big plus- Tr,n.tron Pt1.1s. Trin1tron has always been known for o ')'"at p d1.Ke but Trt!lltron Plus introduces you lo on eJen qreot~ p d 1.Ke. Sony enqineets found o way to 1r1ten~1fy t~ ell>(tron b"oms which "pr:1int" the pidU<0 • Also, the surface of the tube is dor~er to hPiqhten r ontrm t Wh•tP< wh1tP o,.,, er d"lf~ M01e ~ubt:'? '"b"IWPen· r OITIP S"f" rhn b;qq.osf, bf;qhtr>•,I, sharpest Tr~riitrM rve• Y'l1J0ll hr•l11>v1~ 11 Tnn1tror'I Ptu 'It's o Sony." vv 2101 ::>I" scrtcn mcn<11red d1orioriolly SPOIL YOURSELF Sure, "It's o Sony" But ir's o new 19" (measured d iagonally} remote control Trinitron Plus color TV. The triple-function remot" control Commond!lf is totoly electroroc end tordly q1uet. Just touch a button for channel •election. vo 11me rl'gulott011 ord on/off. KV l?dlP And 1he Tr,rutrnn Piu\ p1c1ure 1s even better than bef0<e Thanh to Sony !> Pn<Jinews wtio developed a bundle of 1mptov,,ml'nl\ to mokt' Trin1tron Plus th,. bf1qhtest \horpe\I, cu1pest Sony Av"' Come sP.e ''·You d .. s,.,ve 1t, '"It' n Sony." 19" •crel"n r'l"<l\llr,..d ci1ogonolly ' t · -BOTH MODELS IN STOCK - l 'ull 1·,,..,,.,.,, Mur ruu ti••' 1•1u., flur 1•,.r,ouul 0111· '''"r l•unrun••••• Ou 1~1 ·1•1·~1 ,.rocl111·1 M1• ·"'••II! 275 East 17th St. Costa Mesa ................... _._ J o .......... c.+1 Jr. Phone 642·8882 Store Hours Dally 9-6 Sat 9-5 30 """-' ... "..-.. FORMER PRESIDENT NIXON, INTERVIEWER DAVID FROST EMERGE FROM TAPING SESSION Programs to Be Broadcast on Four Evenings In May to U.S., 10 Foreign Countries Nixon Taping Begins ENPresident, David Frost Talk in Niguel By JAY SllARBUTT AP Ttt11vl\1on Wrt1tr British talk ~how host David Frost's interview subjects range from Tiny Tim to the J\rchb1shoµ of Canlerbun and now to former Pres1°clent R1ehard M Nixon "I've always said I thought Mr Nixon WdS ready to speak. and that is how I thmk he etrrl\·ed lo day reetd) 10 sp.,ak. ' said Frost \\'t•dm·-.d•n art N 1 aping the first of 12 exclusive in terviews with Nixon, covering his life. his almost JO-year career etnd the Watergate scandal which ended1t. Frost was cautious when <.1sked what general area of QUel>l1onmg was involved m l'\1xon's first sub stant1ve interv1e"' smee leaving the White House · 'Well. we don't "'anl lo go mto that too much. but among them was the resignation .. he said. deC'linmg ";th a gentlt• laugh to Murder Charges Hulbert Requests To Def end Himself By TOM BARLEY Of u..., 0111• P•lol Sl•ll Judge• William S l.t>e "'<J' asked Wl'dnesday to allo"' defrn dant Ken R1char·d Hulberl to dt· tend ham'>l'lf m h1i. upcomini.: Orange Count\ Superior Court Restaurant Chain Denies Crime Links A recent J\ssor1ated Pn·s-. story in the Daily Pilot detaahng allegations ltnk1n1< Robert Goldwater . brother of Republi ca n Sen Barry Goldwater. with organized cnme figure Herbert Applegate noted the two m en were business partner s in the fl obo Joe's restaurant cham. Bruce DcMcrs. president of ~olony Foods. Inc . pointed out Monday that the r estaurant chain is now owned by his firm In a statement DeMers said. "None of the pnnl'1pals involved in the ownership of Hobo Joe's prior to April, 1971. <when 1t was purchased by Colony f''oods I ha!. at any time owned any interest in Colony Foods and that Colony Foods. Inc has had no conne<' don or mvol vemenl of any nature or kind with organized crime or with any of the political figures or other individuals implicated in the . . . articles " trial on char~es of murdn rape. robbery and as~ault Hulbert's rcquec,t C'Jme a.'> no surpni.e to court obsen er!. who ~1gns of dissent between thl· ,....._~on man and Deput> P Defender Walter Zech tlunng a recent sanity heanng The hearing ended with the 1ury ruling that llulbert. 24 "a' 'ane J udgc Lee refused to rule 1 m mediately on Hulbert s request fits ruling was expected to come after he ~rants or denies a de fense motion for suppression of evidence the prosecution plans to use m Hublert 's trial. Zech told Judge Lee during ch~ c-uss1on of Hulbert 's plan lo de fend himself that Hulbert will not allow him to file a plea or not guilty by reason of insanity in ad· dition to the not guilty plea. That fact in itself, Zech said. 1s sufficient proof of Hulbert's in· sanity. Hulbert. speaking for the first lime since he appear ed in a courtroom, told Judge Lee Wed· nesday he had no objection to Zech handling the motion now under way but wished to defend h1 mself in his trial Judge Lee told Hulbert he will have to wait for a ruling on the request and t hat Zech will represent him until that ruling 1s delivered. Hulbert's trial is scheduled for April 18. A hearing Into the de· fense motion for a change of venue is scheduled for April 4 say whether Nixon refused to answer any questions. That'll be 10 the programs, he said. "We thought the first day was a very good omen." said Frost in a phon{' interview from his Beverly Hills hotel ··obviously it's early yet. but the great thing was that the con- versation \\-as r<'laxed. informal .md personal." he added The talks arc to b~ edited to four 90 minute µrograms to be :-.hown on the evenings of May 4. 12. 19 and 25. "'1th same·day broadcast in Jl l~ast JO foreign countnes F'rol-ol met with :'li1xon at a pr1vat<.> home in Monarch Bay, in Laguna Niguel, a few miles north of Nixon's beachfront estate in San Clemente, 75 miles south of here. The site was shift. ed because electronic activttv at a Coast Guard unit near the Nix o n estate interfered walh v 1d eotape recordings Tight security surrounded the taping to avoid leaks. which could rei.sen the 1mpaet and ral- IO$?'> ol l'ach show Only a handful of Frc».t JSSoc1ates ar c working on lhl' progrdms Acc-ord1ng 111 Svnd1ca-.1 .Services. the New York compan~ -.elhng the programs at least 118 Am enc an TV ... 1.1twns "111 air thl'm m Ma} Each inten 1e"" "'111 be beamed to stations on a spe<·1al network '>Cl up for each broadcast Only the stations signed up to air the -;hows can broadl'ast them, f''rost officials say Leonard Koch, a Synd1cast ex ecut1ve. says he expects good rat mgs, with pr0Ject1ons calling for between 15 7 million and 17.8 million homes tuned to each broadcast In contrast. viewers in an estimated 40 4 million homes saw Nixon's resignation speech when it was televised on Aug. 9, 1974. by CBS, NBC and ABC, accord- ing to Nielsen ratings estimates None of the Frost shows will app ear on the three major networks. wh.tch dechned to pay for rights to interview Nixon, cit· mg policies against buying "hard news" stories. Nixon's agent. Irving Lazar. reportedly sought $1 million Neither Frost nor his Paradine Productions. Inc .. will say what Nixon is b e ing paid. but published reports pul the fee at $600,000 Program on Energy Marine Gets Jail Set for Lido Isle In M R bb Lido lsJe will be tne scene of ace 0 ery the live telecast of KNBC's "Saturday" show this Saturday. Energy conser vation will be examined during the 3 pm tcllecast Local rcaidtntl und busi- nessmen. lncludln( J .R. Fluor, President of the fo'luor Corp., are to appear on the show and dl•· cuss why Oranae County i& becomina a center for eneray con!~•Uon Lochn0Jo1y. A Camp Pendleton Marine who admitted that he sprayed Mace into the ey~ of a San Clemente 1111 station attendant durlnR an aborted robbery has been sen tenced to nine months In Oran1te County Jail. Superior Court Judge J amu It Wala worth ordered the jaU term and thl"t'e years probation for Forest Gllley, 21, who was arrest cd on armed robbery charges last Feb.4 Gilley Oed from the service stn t1on on south El Camino Real but his speeding cor wH "potted by two JuvenHea who told Police they saw the auto enter Camp Pendlewn. Gtueywaaarr-estedon thf'bue no m m•lbe uc-·rn~~~Lll • " be Hld. "I don't M9d tetJ JOU that. You Uve In one ol ~ l'OOlt deMrt parta ol t •• • And lbe stale contaln1 Z2 mlUlon Naidentl wbo not only have watered their way to a com· rortable environment but who also have built UP a SlO bllllon -- y of At tbo time. wG"Dld there it no way to P?edtct~ for nl'xt year, and it.ate ottlcials are a~ ready for another dry year ao they won't be left un.. prepar«I. Shremli"G: Site Sought OC J111-y Continues . ' Probe of Diedrich A Grand Jury probe into Orange County Supervisor Ralph Diedrich's campaign fund- raising activities continued Wed· nesd ay as the jury zeroed m on a county search for a metal shred· ding site. Methods used by Diedrich to raise campaign funds for various 1976 political candidates have been the center piece in what is now a 10-week Grand Jury in· vestigat1on mto Orange County political practices. Wednesday the Jury took a behmd closed doors look at the metal shredding s ite seetrch al legedly ordered by D1edr1ch The site was needed by s alvage company operator Georgt· Adams, who contributed SS,250 to county supervisor Philip An thony's successful campaign la!>l fall Diedrich, an Anthony sup porter. has denied sohc1ting An thony funds from Adams. The salvage company operator was represented in his dealings with the county by lobbyist Frank Michelena, another An· thony fundraiser. But the Grand Jury obviously wanted to know who ordered a county worker to spend 44 hours seeking a suitable site for the noisy and cumbersome metal shredding operation. Included among the witnesses who testified were Ron Gonzell. a county trainee who reportedly spent 44 hours seeking a 1.;u1table local1on for what Adams hoped would be a maJor metal salvag ing operation Other w1tncs~e"' who tci.t1f1ed Wednesday included Don Poer. manager of the county's sohu waste management operation, and George Cormack, an officwl in the county's general services agency. So far, in its investigation the jury has que.stioned more than JO witnesses as it continues to probe methods of raising funds for politacai candidates. Nol at issue is money the Fullerton supervisor raised dur- ing 1976 to help finance his own uncontested re-election to a second four· year term. Witnesses who have appeared before the jury include Diedrich and his fellow s upervisors, Thomas Riley and Anthony. Laek of Evidenee Charges Dismissed In Coastal Murder Murder charges filed against a Nevada man who was accused at one time of killing a man whose body was found on the Ortega J lighway have been dismissed m Santa Ana municipal court. Judge Robert Ri ckles threw out the charges against Kenneth Gene White, 41, of Reno, Nev , Quake in Poland PRAGUE. Czechoslovakia < A P ) ·-A n e a rt h q u a k e o t moderate intensity struck thl' Silesia region of southern Poland today. the Prague Seismological Institute reported. The epicenter of the quake, wh1l'h West German se1smolog1sts measured at 4 5 on the Richter scale. was near the city Qf Jawor. about 200 miles southwest of Warsaw when Deputy District Attorney Robert Chatterton agreed that hi s office ha d insufficient evidence against the defendant White. extradited from Nevada lasl January, was accused by s heriff's investigators of involve· ment m the killing of Richard Lynn Shepherd, 36, of Long Beach. The body of Shepherd, 36, of Long Beach, was found Sept. 30 tn thick brush near the bottom of a 65-foot embankment. He had been shot in the head. Arresllng officers said White was known to be an associate of Shepherd's and was known to be in the Vicinity of the crime scene at the time Shepherd's was one of lhref bodies found in the area wilhm a three-month period. All three k1l hngs remain unsolved. Special Saving on Leather We are also offering generous savings on other leather chairs and sofas. Select from 30 pieces now on dis- play. Choose from excellent leather color selection. Leather CHAIR lllustraled OTTOMAN Illustrated 84inch Leather SOFA Illustrated Luxurious sofa cov- ered in leather a un- ique look and teer of luxury '499 '159 Your F•vorlte 0../gner Wilt S. H•ppy to Assist You dJ PROFESSIONAL INTErtlOR OESiGNCRS Opo" Mon .. Thur\ & Fr.. ~Vt$. 22 IS HARBOR BLVD COSTA MES.\, CALIF. - .,. AH. IAGVNA: Talk aloal tbo coast t.bele daya au11eata tllat lbe Laguna Beach CU.y CouDcll may be go.log back to the draw· mg boards on lta new binto law. They may have trouble riebt here in Art Colony city. AB you are certa.inly awu-e, bingo, that game played with beans on little numbered boards so you can win the Bil Prize, became legal in California at the last election. Legalized bingo, however. is a local option. Each city and coun- ty must pass its own bingo law. Laguna Beach thus adopted a modest piece of legislation to aJ. low local churches and people of good charity to hold the games. Up to now, only the Boys Club and the Canyon Club in Laguna hold legal bingo gatherings one night a week for modes t fund · raising efforts. BUT JUST THE other day, it was divulged in this sterling journal that a religous organiza- tion known as the Temple of Inspired Living will soon be mov- ing into Laguna Beach. You may not have heard much about the Temple of Inspired Liv- ing. It is also known as TOIL. And according to the church BAM WAR called Katqa when Za!n wu the Coo10. 'Polit~al Clout, Homosexual Takes 'Rights' Post Today NEW YORK CAP> -Gay rights activist Robert Livingston says his appointment to New York City's Commission on Human Rights. reflectathenatJooalpoliticalcloutbomosexualshave. The best example of that progress, be says, is a White House meeting scheduled for Saturday between presidential adviser Midge Constanza and 14 gay rights activists. The meeting, organized by the National Gay Task Force, is the second of its kind in the last seven weeks. LIVINGSTON TAKES over has po6t on the 15-member panel to- day. "' ''I think that my appointment is· not an isolated act," Livingston said during a telephone interview Wednesday. "I think that there is movement in the right direction across the country.'' He added: ••1 think it is timely recognition of the fact that homosexuals have votes and are a substantial minority in the city " . prime minister, one Frank Winston of Los Angeles, these people of faith work very hard at their rebgion. A apokesman for Mayor Abraham D . Beame denied that Livingston's appointment was politically motivated Beame, a uv1NoSTON Democrat, is ex~ted to seek a second term, I A basic tenet of the church, Winston explamed, 1s playing bingo. The congregation of TOIL doesn't simply gather on Sunday to practice their religious tenet, hke those of us who only think of faith one day a week. They really toil atit. Thus, in order to practice the faith, Winston and his TOIL followers have applied to the Laguna Beach City Council for a permit to play bingo 24 hours every week. SATURDAYS ARE very large with the TOIL people. They would be gathering in the sanctuary to practice bingo from 6 p.m. to midnight. Few churches can equal this kind of a prayer session. On Sunday, the house is ap- pareoUy dark. They rest on the ~eveoth day. Prime Minister Winston bas made 1tquite clear that his 1s not a "bingo church" for gambling purposes or bad things like that. But tus people are taking a gam- in~ chance, financially, that the faith will grow in the Art Colony They are in the process of gs1n mg a 10-year l<'as£• on t he old Firs t C hr1 s t1an C hurc h s anctuary at the cornt•r nf Legion .ind (;lenncyrc strcl'ts It JUst -.old recently for $213,000 Wh<'n you kase a san<:tuary of this financial proportion, you know you have faith 10 growth. All of this. however . has come .1<, disquieting news to the Laguna Bc;ich City Counc il CLF.ARLY, TOIL 'S binJ:o per mit a pphcat1on !-.u ggests thl·re may bf' loopholes a nd gaps 1n the Laguna bingo C'Ontrol law wh1C'h may be about a!> ""1de as !he Grand Canvon Certainly, TOIL " rel1g1ous faith c.mnot be impugned Hui what 1f some other fast operator" :.:ot t•vil notions. and wantPd tro moH into Laguna with .1 full· .scale gambling operation·• Laguna might havl' to change its na me lo Little Reno. and some gay activists regarded the appointment as an attempt lo dampen the rights issue before this year's campaign. The 4!>-year-0ld avowed homosexual, the son of fashion designer Mollie Pam.is, was a theatrical producer in London and once pro- duced the Joey Bishop Show on ABC-TV He also pubLished MORE, a journalism review LIVINGSTON SAID be didn't intend to hear only cases involving homosexual rights. But he said would fight for a bill to protect the civil rights of homosexuals in New York City, where there arc an estimat- ed 500,000-800-000 gay men and women There are such statutes In 39 municipalities, Livingston said. in- cluding San Francisco, Washington, Minneapolis and Charlotte, N .<;. An ordinance banning discrimination in housing and employment 1s now under fire in Miami. Livingston says homosexuals can be found in every phase of life in New York. "Homosexuals are like everybody else. They are not confined to any one profession . . . I would expect that there are ho~o~~xual police omcers and homosexual firemen and homosexual poLit1c1ans. JUSt as there are homosexual voters." he said. Promoter Named In Arizona Probe By The Associated Press Published act'ounts of an investigative series on Arizona say that promoter Ned Warren Sr. succeeded by involving local politi c1 ans in advantageous l<.1 nd deals and g1 vmi:: payoffs and other favors to public officials responsible for poli cing the state's real est ate laws The allegations are contained m published accounts of the 12th installment and a sideba r of the copyright series by Investigative Heporters and Editors. Inc. . The stories appeared in today's Indianapolis Star. THE PUBLISHED accounts contained repetitions of some al· legations in earLier installments, linking U.S. Sen Barry Goldwater and former Arizona Republican chairman_,,fiarry Rosenzweig lO Warren land deals. as well as some previously published informa- tion on former state Real Estate Comm1ss1on J . Fred Talley, now dead. The accounts or the mam JRE story detailed Warren's dealings with a number of Repubbcan and Democratic politicians in Anzona. They also said Warren was connected with Nathan Voloshen. ''the master influence peddler who gained notoriety in the 1960s for operating out of the omce of the speaker of the U .S House of Representatives.·· THE STORIES m pnnt sa1d Voloshen was hsted as a reference \\hen Warren applied for an Anzona real estate sales man's license 1n 1961. The apphcat1on was rc1ected because Warren was on federal probation at the time Warren, 63, moved to An.mna m 1961 after serving prison terms m the East for bankruptcy fr Jud , conspiracy j nd runninit a con- fidence game. U.S. Gets Rain, Snow Travelers Alerted to High Winds .. ,.,. ..... "ce. 1'1bu'llJlll'rQUit ~ 30 C)I l\nctit>,."'~ ,, I) l\tlenld ,.. 1\ f'101 ...... ,., ,\ fto<t""" •t Jl 17 Arollflll'n,v1111~ Jc ., OS Out1 .. 1n l<I " 01 CrucitQO " ,. ( '"""'' .. 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N11rl~r,, C,.lltorrH.J H •t wortt M A ()4)l'td w•t-er.d tor ,_,.,., "410"'' ft will bf-fM \tu.,\ Snow "'""'" tn l llOtll.,.1 •SH0«to<tlota111., '""' movntol1n\ In ,,,. dl'..,'1 ,.,.. • w •nd\ lllAI h"Yt \Wf'OI th" 4"M ·~ f>A'' two dAV'\ ,.,,,. • •r""(lfld In dlm1nl\h q1vlnQ way to '"(h'Wfl'f\ T"" h1Qll ltme»raturf' W...;'l••day tn tlown1own Lo\ Anqat" ••• 61. a rt•oo of ''""°'' 1$ O<tqrees lrom TUH · lllV Coa•tal lt'eatlwr VM la111t cl1>11dl""\\ •nd quit,. <"Ill r •l<tav Cl\4ncf' of thOw*f\ ~nd P<>\\I !tit ltwndtrih0-•1 l<>nlQlll al'ld Fri rt•v Windy M tlrnH lllQIM In 1"-UOOflf ~·, ln<l l&wloO'\ Cetll<ll IH!l-llu,., w111 •81\Qa b•twn11 •• •nil SI. 111i.11e1 t•m N1'8lllrts Wiii fal\\lt l)a-1\ ~ •"II ,, T"" w.t .... t""""'t81U-. Wiii ... ,_ S-., /tlocne. Tide• Tl4UIUOAY '-'O'ldt• s 010 m 1 n \!oc...O l'loth II· l' e m f 1 ,.tOAY ftr\!IOW IQ)•m 10 ltlrtlllftft 1 »e m H t.t...i1ew ,.,.,"' n ...,.._,.~,. "' .... ,. .. "' ~,,_ ... "'··-· , .... "'- ,,.. .... ., -dleA:c:--•• ~ d,balU..••- rel)Cll't•U. "'"· la , U to Dllolo and Kl , t.be .... eclllbot KaPllQIA. UI mil• northeala. al Dllolo ad u mil• wm Of Kolwal, th• eopp.r-lala1 cents oft.bepnwlnce. A mtnt.m•ey 10UNe .. Id l'1ldAo cca'8etl ~ m~ and odJ9' fcnlper'I iD tbe OC• caplecl .... apparatty were aal• IDll ........ &neted well. Ml1&ntmw ~ID the area reportedly IDelmle two American United JlttbodlJta at Sandoa and ei&ht at-. In Kapaqa. IN WASlllNGroN, Secretary of State Cyrua Va nee said Nlceria baa qreect to try to mediate the coafllct. He told re- porters "it may be unnecessary" for the United States to act on Mobutu'• request for ammuni· tion for rifles, machine auns and mortars. The Unli.d St.at.ea has already sent Mobutu about $2 million worth al spare parts, medicines and other "non· lethal" supplies. A Zaire government spokesman said Mobutu bad sent emissaries to Nigeria, Gabon and "several" other countries to seek political support. Grieves for Son President Kenneth Kaunda of Zambia called on the Zairean president and the Katangana to get toeet.her and resolve their dispute. He said the invaders would not be able to take over the central government. Virgil McCormick of Haysville, Kansas, sits grieving for his son. Mike, 19, who was one of two men buried under tons of soybeans Tuesday in a grain elevator near Wichita. An unidentified worker waits with McCormick. The bodies were later recovered after a day-long rescue eUort. Sympathy But No Cash Court Denies Body Amputee $5 Million Claim WASHJNGTON CAP) -Allen Aaron Jackson enlisted m the Army to be trained as an automobilft m echanic. Instead, at 21, his body was cut in half by a tank. Jackson's lawyers could not sue for negligence; the supreme Court has said it knows of no law that permits a soldier to recover damages on that ground. The lawyers chose the unusual claim that. there was breach of the enlistment contract and asked $5 million damages. A federal court on Wednesday said it "deeply sympathizes" with Jackson. but it can't order the· government to pay damages to hjm. Jack.son had sued for breach or contract, claim· ing he was promised two things by a recruiter : he would get mechanic's training; he would not be as- signed to dangerous duty. .. THE COURT deeply sympathizes with the olaintiff for the severe in.iurv he receiYed while serving our country in the United States Army,"• THE ARMY SAYS there was no such promise, at least not in wnting. And even if there had been, the recruiter had no authority to make it and therefore it's not binding. said the judges. "However, the court is without jurisdiction, authority or power to nant him any relief. It may be that he could get help from Congress .•. " ''He can sit up in a bucket which holds him rigid," says his father, Raymond, a Chicago bus driver. "When he dresses up in the prosthetic it will look like he's whole, but actually he's half. When he sits up he'll look like a whole man, that's about il." Jn May 1974. four months after he enlisted, Jackson took part in maneuvers at Ft. Riley, Kan. A tank ran over him. The lower half of bis body, navel on down, had to be amputated. f CASHIN ON SPRING CLEANING Save With a Daily Pilot 10% Discount Sale Ad 1 Oo/o DISCOUNT ... 5 LINES OR MORE FOR 3 DA VS Sprlng'a an Ideal time to dean out clutter. Now, with a Dally Piiot March Sale claaalfled ad, spring's a greattlme to clean up, too. Convert your clutter to cash by placing a classffled ad of five llne1 or more for three days, and, save 10 percent on the cost of the ad. Complete details of this special savings plan appear in today's claa1ffled section. If you have items to sell In the following categories you'll wanttotake advantage of a March Sale ad: Antiques Garage Sales Office Equipment Appliances Household Goods Pianos & Organs Bicycles Jewelry Sewing Machines Cameras Machinery Sporting Goods Furniture Musical Instruments Swaps Use Cash, BankAmerlcard or Master Charge Remember -10% Discount -Act Now! M•ll your •d or pt•c• dlrectty •t any Delly Piiot office. DAILY PILOT . • f 'llPU a MMT-. Defendants Get Cluuch Term __ ,jE· Fft CAP> -Tb• •ouldllbto ... the US. Goochrin brou1 t Uut ,..,,-=~-1l8te Commt11•00 on ConstmrtJon re•rmen ~ to u.. Pl'9IL ~ •nl'\'lj IACRAM ENTO CAP> - Propc!NtU al L.Mtrll•. H ... \net of •prtcot kernel•, 11ro •t•ln UJ',Sn1 lh•' at bo lecalbed in C1Utomh1. Judkial Performance ·•here h d at. with~ ttir le ad Io f, .. J ha v • 4fM40I bH ~1\11' lnv UIAUna lep&rllUOO al CbW'Cb ilrul abaoJute y notblftl to ;,~~-: ..• ~ .. ~. • mumclpal cowt J~• aute. keep lo the dark.·· 7 ~ h•re who hu aent~ced --------------------~~~=~~!!!:!!~~ ddt'ndant1 to attend Tbey ar1ued tor 4 1:.i hours ~rOl'e the ~note Health Com· mll&ee Wt!'dnesday that abundant Laetrile would at least give a ps ycholo11col boost lo cancer victim.a. THE PROPONENTS were s up· porllne three bills by Sen. William Campbell CR·Hacienda Heights>. to legalize the sub- stance for use under a doctor's care. A vole 1s scheduled for next week. Last year Campbell tntroduced similar bills that never made 1l past their first hearing LEGALIZE D LAETKJLt; I'> strongly opposed b> :,late and federal medical associations, the U.S. Food and Drug Adm1n1:.tra- tion, American Cancer Society, Committee Against Health, Inc , Community Cancer Control of Los Angeles. und others church orll.13 Blble aludy c lalft. The com mission notified Judge Huah Goodwin Wednesday that the investteation stems from allegations that he has fa iled to adhere to the doctrine of separation of church and !>late. A CONFIDENTIAL l etter from execu- t ive Director Jack E Frankel indicated Goodwin's pohe1es "m ay constitute conduct pre· Jud1c1al to the ad· ministration of Justice that bnngs the jud1c1al office mto dJsreputc." What does ~ Delphi design? I [\ I~' ' ~ :1 l'1 I I 1 \ \ \ ' I ~/ 1 / , I I I : I i I I ·1, I j \ I \ .11 . :11 I I I I I l I \I . \I ~ 1 / ·I ., • Some of the opponents argued at a s eparate hearing last week that Laetrile yields no proven medical benefit, its legalization would divert canc<•r v1t•t1ms from proven med1c<.1l treat ments, it involvrd "quatkery." and cancer pat1enh arc e:.pcc1al- ly s usceptible to cxplo1t:.it1on of false hopes No Strings Please Since his appointment to the bench in February 1976, Goodwin has made headlines several times by sentencing defe n - d ants to attend church or visit his noon-hour, Bible study class. He has also made going to church a part of parole or proba- tion. David Saxon, president of the University of California, li~tcns after telling a state Assembly Ways and Means ~ub­ t:ommittee hearing UC wants $31 million more than the S700 million proposed by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr .. but \\ 1lhout any strings attached. UC's minorities policy came in for sharp criticism. llE HAS procl<.11mcd from the speaker's plat form many times that he Ferrari Out Her 2nd Will Filed LOS ANGELES CAP > -A second will of a Be\•erly !hits wom an whose earlier will 3sked that she h<' buried m her Ferrari sports car has hcen filed 111 probate court. The new will for Sandra Ilene West was filed this wt.•l•k hy attorneys for San Antonio lawyer Fred Sc,cman and mukc·s no mention of buri:.il in the car. The dorument names See m an the sole benef1r1ary of the multim11lion-dollar estate. TllE BODY OF Mr<. West. who died at home March 10. remaim, embalmed at a San Antonio funeral home pending the resolution of the dispute over the wills. Seeman's lawyers said Wednesday the will they filed 1s the most rN·cnt document. Seeman was described dS a <:lose fnend of Mrs. Wc!>t'!>, who'>e e:.tal1.• hds been esttmdted al $2 5 million to SS m1lhon. The Ji \Car old v.om;1n w ;i-. the"' 1dow of Texas oilman 11.e We.,t IN THE FIRST v.111. f1lc•d m probate court last wet•k. Mrs. West's hrother·m ·law, Sol West Ill of C'omfort. Tex, v.a-> named the main b{'nt'f1t·1 ary. The !>t1pulat1on of that v.111 \\as that West would receive the mone) uni~ Jftl'r he made cert uin that hi s sister-in-law h..id been buncd "1n my l<1cc nightgown and m mv Ferran with the scabl;rnted comforl.1bly " State Reinstates Remedial Class LONG BE'\Cll CAP The -.tatr 101legi> <md university tru!>.l<'l'" ha vf! d1•c1ded that many fre!>hmen ·need .. Unndwad Engll' .. h ·<•fl er all The trnslC'cc; \ ott-cl \\'c·dne:-.d.n to remstale the remedial English tnur ... l' ac; a "refju1rement for fre!>h mcn th1:. fall .... ho l·.mnot p.1s:. a new Engbs h Placement Exammat10n Jkmcd1al En~llsh ".1 ph.1s1•d out sc•\ era I years ago bec.1u:.c off1r1JI ... b<'llt'' I'd 1t v. as below the scope of colll'ge:. and Ullt\ rr-.1l1t·s A spokes mun in the truste<'" nffirr said 50 to 60 percent of each year ., f n•-.hman l l,..,s do not have basic writing skill!> ;ind \\ill prob,1hl _,. ha\ c to tJkc the course The trustCl'S decicl<•d tn pJ~· for thl' test and the course from mcn'a:.l•d sludenl fC'C's, unless the legislature g1\e!> lh<'m more money The Finery *SPRING* The Finery Sinco 1972 SALE March 24 thru 26th 50o/o OFF MEN'S AND WOMEN'S SPORTSWEAR SWEATERS • JEANS JACKETS 250/o OFF ON'~LL WATCHES 2981 •·AIRVIE\l' RU .• COSTA MESA 979.9073 • 979.9550 TVO! , wad . Th11~ ~t fO·JO to 19 Thllf3dfly 10 30 to 6 C/Os&d S11" llrtd Mom You can't knock these doors Screen doors let in breeze. So you cool your home naturally, and save on air conditioning. No rivets or screws show, because all doors are roll-formed and pressure-fit. Available in 30", 32" or 36" x 80". Small extra charge for special order sizes. A. SKYLARK SCREEN DOOR Fiberglass wire. mill l1n1sh With standard k1ckplato, 3" pushbar Model #71 ·A2 Reg 16.99 10.88 B. MUST ANG SCREEN DOOR r t11"rql.i' ·. wire. mill finish. Plus dlst1nct1ve grill. Standard kickplale, 3" pushbar Model #71 · E. Reg. 19.99 14.88 C. MUSTANG SCREEN DOOR Full expanded molal grill ltht rgtw ~ wire, m1ll llnish High 10" kick· plate. Mode! !: 121 · S. Reg. 23 99 17.88 D. COMET SCREEN DOOR Decorative expanded me1al grill Beaulllul silver painted finish for protection. 1 t• C' .' wire Model #122-T Reg 27 99 20.88 E. COMET SCREEN DOOR Black Florentine grill, black pushbutton loc~lng latch. Dark bronze l1nlsh wllh charcoal grey color screen. Model #122-FB. Reg. 28 99 22.88 Cf ean up on energy savings An old, dirty hlter means your heater is working longer and less elf1c1enlly. Chanqe 11 now for energy and money savings. Measure old filter tor size Price covers all filter sizes excepl 2s· x 25· and cuHo-f1t f,11,.rs FURNACE FILTERS Reg 59c each 43c each Keep comfort In Your house wlll 11ay cooler In aummer. warmer in winter with proper Insulation. Bring attic lnsula· 1lon up 10 6 Inches and save up to S 100 on fuel bills each year It's easy lo lristall It yourself OWENS-CORNING UNF ... CED ATTIC INSULATION, e·x1s x32'rolls,R·19 covert 40 sq fl Reg.10.99 7.88 6" x 23" x 32' rolla, R· 19 covers 61.33 sq ft Reg. 16.49 12.88 Naval action Call out 1hese fleet operators to gel rid of rusl or oxld1zod alum1· num Naval Jelly removes 4 7 t•mes lls we1ghl Jn rust Aluminum Jelly brings II I I I I I ' ' , . . , Don't be bugged Fhes driv1nq you buggy? Replace old screens In doors and windows and solve that creepy problem. It's easy to do yourself. All necessary moldinlJ and back the sparkle 10 old aluminum f: I YOUR CHOICE -\ NAVAL OR 1 ALUMINUM . -~-... 1 brads available. ALUMINUM SCREENING, Reg. 18c sq. ft . 12c sq. ft. FIBERGLASS SCREENING. Reg 12c sq. It. JELLY. Reg. 1.99 1.28 9c sq. ft. A comfortable way to save fuel Place this over windows et home or on your car. II bounces sun rays back outside. So you save on air conditioning. and cut gas consumption Insulates against cold as well Assorted finishes REFLECTO SHIELD PRIV ... CY FILM, Model #200-1 4, 20• x 1(}"' Reg 1699 . 12.88 Model #200· 15. 28 .. x 5' Reg. 11 .99 8.88 Model #200-16, 36 .. x 6'8". Reg. 19.99 14.88 Model #200-27, 48" x 6'8". ReQ. 26.99 19.88 Ward & Harrington Garden Grove Fullerton Coeta Mesa Orengo 8•1• prfc .. good Thurad•y through Sundey. 1707 Garden Grove Blvd. 53M~67t or 893·8&23 Open Mon thru Fri 9 to 9 Sat & Sun 9 to 6 301 So State College 870·0050 Open Mon thru Fri 9 to 9 Sat. & Sun. 9 to 6 1275 Bristol 556·1500 Open Mon thru Fri. 9 to 9 Sat. & Sun. 9 to e 324 West Katella 532·2506 Open 9 to 6 every day ·. • and ., ..... _..,, ~ Comity mn_VMll,_ haft ~ Clft a polU redlstrtctltta plan that equallua popul tlm wlth1n the fi YO SUpervisorlal dbtrlcta. It ls lnterestina to note that the plan ac- cepted by the supervilors b not too far re- moved from what political consultant William Butcher proposed last December. Paper Blitz But dropped from the secret Butcher plan were its most obnoxious I eatures, a strange division of Newport Beach between two districts and the stringing 'of the 3rd District from La Habra in the northwest to the Ortega Highway in the southeast. Paper pollution bl tho topic ol the day in Sacramento. Sen. David A. Roberti has in· troduced new legislation to try to stem the blitz d. state government forD.13. And the Commi.saioo on Federal Paperwork recent- ly chose Sacramento as one of 16 cities sampled in its investigation d. government red tape. Chief impact of the new political boun- dary scheme will be felt in the Saddle- back Valley. Since the average small businessman In California now must spend about $4,000 a year on government paperwork, it's no sur- prise to learn that the federal government, now generates about one million different forms and California prints up 200,000. There, Supervisor Ralph Diedrich will be the man to see on matters affecting El Toro, Mission Viejo and the unincorporated area adjoining Irvine. Since the fall of 1974, Supervisor Thomas Riley has, in effect, been local gov- ernment to persons living in those unin· corporated areas. In both temperament and style, Diedrich is far removed from Riley. That is not to say that Diedrich can't and won't meet the needs of his new constituents. The cost, of course, is staggering. The federal commission, created in 1975, claims it already has saved $1 billion a year ill cut- ting back the mountain of federal paperwork. But in the past year, Diedrich has shown a penchant for wanting to dictate more than conciliate, for wanting to talk more than listen. And to top it off, his cam- paign fund raising activities on behalf of others is now a grand jury cl~d hanging over his head. '"· California set up its own Forms Management Center in 1975, but it's in trouble for lack of funds and staff. A single professional staffer is going down in the sea of forms that must be checked out for duplication and n~d. Roberti is trying to obtain more funds and staff for the center, along with legisla- tion that would require the state's Legislative Analyst to prepare a "paperwork impact analysis" on all pro- posed bills, just as a cost analysis now is 'prepared. Diedrich, without questio~ is talented m the affairs of governmenl' and, if he chooses, can be an outstanding represen- tative of Saddle back Valley residents. Right now, however, there's a question of whether it will be Ralph Diedrich the political power player, or Ralph Diedrich the Given the habit of lawmakers to pop new bills in the hopper with little or no thought of the paperwork they may be im- posing on the citizenry, this sounds like a good idea. National Park Crime Bill Seeks More Autlwrity for Rangers Legislation extending powers of arrest of federal law enforce· ment officers has been proposed by Assemblyman Bill McVit- tie. Under present law the federal agents may make arrests only in cases involving specific federal crimes. Thus, even though present at a hold-up or murder, such agents have no more authority than a pnvale citizen. In support of his measure McVittie bas said "it would allow federal of- ficers to make arrests 1n California for offenses when local peace of- ficers are not readil y available.'' W hatevcr prompted McVittie to seek what is in effect an enlarge· ment of the total law enforce· ment capability within the state, his bill may directly answer the problems of the national park rangers. These are described in the cur- i-ent California Western Law Review by James F. Walts, one of its editors. According to him, visitors to national parks have increased dramatically since WW II and, in many instances, the annual im- pact "exceeds by many times the total population" of a state. "Un- fortunately," he reports, "the crime rate throughout the Na- tional Park System has, in recenL years, been increasing many times the visitatio11 rate.'' WA'ITS CITED figures show· ( EARL WATERS ) ing a total of 29,530 major crimes committed in national parka in the six year period through 1974. These included homicide, rape. robbery, assault burglary, grand larceny and auto theft. Addi- tionally, in 1974 alone, 13,426 lesser offenses were reported. These involved narcotics , forgery, fraud, embezzlement and vandallsm. He suggests the rise in crime Ill the parks may be partially due to easy accessibility and that also those who prey upon the public find "easy marks" in summer vacation spots. ··Narcotic vendors and users have reportedly discovered a supposed sanctuary." Whatever the reasons for the increased criminal activity, Watts says it is greatest ''in the rural national parks where rangers are m06t likely to be the only law enforce- ment officers in the vicinity." But, as Watts notes, the park rangers are empowered to en- force only federal Jaws and park rules. He expl!llns the limita- tions and risks involved in malt- ing citizen arrests in other cases. The difficulties in calling upon state and local officers are out· lined. ln most cases they are not staffed to handle the burden created by thou.sands or out of state park visitors. And, general- ly, they are not based near enough to the parks to provide ef- fective enforcement. AN ALTERNATIVE, that of deputizing rangers by local sheriffs, Watts explains is not the answer. In many instances local laws bar their deputization and the problem of liability for their actions or injuries is another fac· tor. It also stands in the way of deputization by United States Marshals. "The major problem which contributed significantly to the failure of state deputization pro- grams was anticipated long ago and led to rejection of the federal deputization plan," Watts states. Although be proposes several alternatives requiring Congressional action to meet the specific problems of the park rangers, McVittie•s bill, being broader and including all federal law officials, would seem to re- medy the ranger troubles as well as those of others operating within California. Admittedly it can't help rangeraoutside of the state but it might spark similar measures in the other states or serve to awaken Congress to the needs outlined by Watts. Yoilng Takes Bard line on Afriea O·utSpoken Ambassador WASHINGTON -While Assis- tant Secretary of State William E . Schaufele sat silently for more than two hours, UN Ambassador Andrew Young delivered a tough warning last week to South African Ambassador R. F. Botha which could result in a break in diplomatic relations between the U.S. and South Africa -raising ominous possibilities for the con· tinent. Specifically, Young told Botha that black Africa now demands im- mediate in- dependence be granted by South Africa to Namibia <Southwes t Africa). This remarkable emergence of the U.S. Ambassador to the Unit- ed Nations as spokesman for black Africa to white·ruled South Africa is another blow to drastically worsened relations bet ween Was hington and Pretoria. Some diplomats here beheve that if Young's hard hne against South Africa truly represents President Carter 's own position <as Young repeatedly claims>. a break m diplomatic relations will be unavoidable. An isolated· South Afnca, out of touch with Washington, does not bode well for prevention of trag ic race war. The 6:30 to 8:45 session in Schaufele's office was attended by Schaufele, Young and Botha, plus aides. Based on their response lo our questions, what took place at the meeting follows. YOUNG repeatedly claimed President Carter's full support for everything he told Botha. Backed by his top UN aide, Am· bassador Don McHenry, he warned South Africa that time was short. Young said that leftist President Julius Nyerere of Tanzania, leader of black Africa's "front·line'• presidents, informed him during his recent African tour: -That the problem of Rhodesia was being solved by military means which, despite ups and downs, could have only one outcome: total victory for black nationalists and the end of any vestiage of white influence. -That South Africa itself, where a minority white popula· ( EV ANS-NOV AK ) lion rules with apartheid (the elaborate system of racial separation), was of no im· mediate interest to black Africa and could wait for a while. -That Namibia, an intema· tional tenitory illegally ruled by South Africa, must be given im· mediate independence as or· dered by the UN. -That South African whites are "enemies" to be "destroyed" eventually -the most incen- diary of Nyerere's pronounce· ments as relayed by the American envoy. Young's lecture was delivered to Botha in temperate, polite tones. There was not a single in· tervention by Scbaufele, the of- ficial presumably in charge of the administration's African policy. This clearly dominant role being played by Young and his UN mission in defining U.S. African policy promises severe problems between Washington and Pretoria, perhaps a break in relations. YOUNG SEEMED oblivious to the fact that South Africa and the U.S. reached an understanding on Namibia last year during the Ford administration that was never publicly revealed. While regarded by Henry Kissinger as a possible basis for settlement. South Africa has beard no word on the plan from Carter ad· m ioistration. On the contrary. Young expressed surprise that it existed. Dear Gloomy Gus It is interesting that sac- charin is being banned now that our government is warming up to CUba which depends largely on sugar exports for its livelihood. H.G. Gloof!IY Gitt<-•"" ar• tllllmln.cl by ,. • .,.,.. at>cl M "41( MCHUrlfy Nlle<l I ... ,,, .... of llt• ... '" ...... '. S.nd -pet ,...,,. i.G1_., Gus. Dally Pilet. Nor did Young show interest in South Africa's offer three weeks ago to act as a guarantor ror Rhodesia to turn political power over to majority blacks exclud- ing Soviet-armed, CUban-trained guerrilla factions. The South African oiler bas disappeared from sight since being made to both the U.S. and Britain. Judging from Youn~'s blunt talk, there ls foreboding over what the U.S. may have in store for South Africa at the UN Security Council sessions later this mooth, with Young in the chair as council president. THE U.S. position for that session is not yet formulated, but it is ta.ken for granted here that the Carter administration is at a critical turning point which will harden this nation's South African policy beyond anything in the past. With Young playing the major role in defining the new policy, that much is inevita· ble. One of Young's top aides told us events in South Africa have been "marching backwards" since last fall's killings of blacks in the Johannesburg township of Soweto. The Security Council, Young's aide said, will have to take up the Soweto tragedy, new press censorship, the rising number or so-called "suicides" by black militants -as strongly implytng that the U.S. for the first time may play a leading role in targeting South Africa for punishment. In addition, the U.S. may back UN resolutions calling for a moratorium on new inTeSt- m ents in South Africa and a man- datory embargo on arms sbip. men ts. If Mr. Carter takes this bard line, the prospect of a U.S.·South African break would b e enhanced, leading to a new, tougher and totally independent South Africa acting beyond restraint from Washington. If so, any hope for gradual solution of southern Africa's race problems will fade, replaced by the horrors of unavoidable racial wars. Quotes Do We Really Need Paid Volunteers? "It seems that every time I open my mouth, I put my foot in it. Well, I've got a big mouth and I intend to keep opening lt." - Andrew Yoang, U .S. Am- bassador to the United Nations. "If we're golne to utilize women in the services as the re- cent trend baa been. . .then I think very serious consideration must be 81ven to their being in any future involuntary service." -Gen. Beraanl W. Ro,era, U.S. Army Chief" Staff. W ASRINGTON -The Presi- dent bu appointed Sam Brown lo be the head of all the govern- m en l' a voluntary pro· grams .•. Peace Corps, Vista, etc. Sam ought to know bow to handle volunteers. As a principal orajanizer and leader or the anti· war movement, be worked with enough or them. They ought to remember him wt.th love and respect. lor Sam compels ad- miration for his character us much as for bis con- siderable political talents. But although Sam, who re· 11tn1 the state treaaurenhip of Colorado, ia perfect for the job. there ii 8 further question or Whether tb~ job ou.iht to be abolished. What Justification, what function can there be ln aovcmment employea desl111at· ed u voluntoen? How do w• flt tbe noUon ot • paid volunteer Into our mental acbeme or thin&•? Aa far u the Peace Corps 1oe1 ...;.. ~ wttb all d crence to Mil LIUlan bolllnl bypodermlc Diedl• tn daikllt Ind.la -Lbe e6bonctlon nmalna in mill)' I minds that its main function is espionage, a · •unior auxiliary CIA. ~ ----- The domestic peace corps, Vis· ta, is worthless or worse. The kindest thing you can say about it is that it is an altruistic fraud whereby cheap labor can be used without coming into conflict with the government employe unions. In the '60s Vista Vols were accused of mixing in with radical politic."! to the exa!iperation or a few big city mayors. but fads change and now no one complains of them about anything. -The government's paid volWl- tMr programs are engineered to support other governmental ac· tivities like social work or health care. By and large these are also the insUtutions in our society which are already recelvlng more mooey and other kinda of 8upport than they have been able to demonstrate they can effec· lively use. In tact, the lrony ia that ln many cases the sovcm- ment procrams are useless and lt ti tho prtvato, truly Yolunte« •elf·heJp efforts wbJcb set the Job done lmdar u lt Jets done. THE FUST nample which 1prin1s to mlnd ts Alcobollca AnODJ"IDOUI with tta bundtedt Of tbqusmdl al mem._... U h ~ alcoholic pro&ramt ( VON HOFFMAN ') were to disappear tomorrow we'd lose little but the amount we pay to support them with our tax- es. If AA were to disappear we'd lose the best treatment we have for this disease. The importance of aeU-help groups in health care la inestima· ble. "Literally from the top of your be.cl to your toe, there's a 1rou-p fOf' almo.'lt every organ of the body. These groups are spreading, incidentally, at a tlme when more money is probably being provided for rehabWtatlon servkes than ever before lo hla· tory," writes L"eol\_ard D. Borman, Director of tbe Selt- Help Institute at Northw11tern Ualvemty. "Needlesa to say,· then •roup1 don't seem to benefit from rebabtutation aervlces. We could mentloo the mutectomy 1roup1, the 'Make Today Count' l1'0UJ> for people sutferinl from termln-1 cancer. Mendeclllearu ls srowln1 at two to three hundred member& a month, for ~·· that have had heart IUl'fel')'.' Wh)'; WfMDIO DWl1 proleMOn .. and IO much ta IDCIMT ID into it•tna ":' pihlic proJta1DI tar every imaginable need, do volun· tary self-help groups continue to proliferate in order to cover the same ground? Borman sugg~ts that, "The forms by which services are provided are simply inadequate. When members of Parents Anonymous want to beat their kids, what do they do at two o'clock in the morning? What agency do they call? They feel full of rage. Will they get an ap- pointment in two weeks?•• SVEN IMPllOVING the ac ceaibWty to the Rervlce by ~lay . inc open around the clock won·l work. As Borman points out, moat of the time the pro· festlonals really don't have any services to offer They have credentials. but the only persons who seem to be able to help are l*>Ple who have been tbrouah the same pain, the same pro- blem. The credentlal which counts Is experience. By no means are nll s~ll·h p froUPI concerned with health. Food·buY1J\I clubs contJnut to be one of the f uteat irowln.J ti· help actJvlUea. In tl>at conneetloa Ralph Nad r bu campalsnod for yeara to set aom• leatsJaUon that would permit f ood·buYlnl l"WPI and «Mr fonm ot coopvatl.-to barrow enaqh money to ex· pl.lld tbelt operaUam untJl thQ . ... . {1 could achieve a rough parity with producers and sellers. One ot the reasons we have to resort to such clumsy and un- satislactory regulatory instru- ments as the Consumer Product Safety Council and the Food and Drug Administration is that there is no market place balance of power that would enable or- ganized buyers to enforce health and safety standards by use of their massed economic power. FROM TIME to time fovem· ment officials remember that there is the huge volume of self- help activity going on in our country. But they see it primari· ly a1 something to capture and use to buttress their own ralllng and ineffectual efforts. Even prtvate groups with low opinions of government programs seldom see the possibilities that acll·beb> organisations contain and press for government reform rather than solutions outside the eov· ernment sphere. Government policy should bo to ereate an ambiance that holps Hlt·belp tnstud of tl>e pr ent one, wblch ll either host.lie or tx· ploitative. Tbll li a lallu order and a tou1her Job than Sam Brown bad when be helped to 'top the war, but the Ide• Of pald 'IOlan· · tffn ls ruUr too ~a.lnly a con· tradtc:\1ocL . ( ••A people without reliable news is, sooner or later. a people without the basis of freedom." llarold J. La.tld BritWI iodolUt and phJl.osoplurr ORANG& COAST DAILY PILOT Robm N Wf'M, Publ&Sht1 Thomo1 Ketu1I. Editor Barbaro Kreiblcfl. E:dllonol Pogt f;d1tor The editorial page of the Dally Pilot seeks to inform and stimulate readers by presenlln11 on t.hls page diverse comment11ry en topics or Interest by syndtcllt ~ columnlats and cartoor\lsl!I, by provldlna a forum tor readeri;' \•1ews and by present1n11 this newspapl•r's op1n1ons and icku~ oo eurrcnt topi<', Th.-1'<1il<>riul ()pinion\ of ttu• O:ul)· Pilot oppor only 1n lht• C'dllf'rlll l r tilumn Ill thf' top of lht' 1iu1tt• Opimon..-. l''< pttu l'd b~ tht• c<>lumru ts end cartOMlsts and lt\t.er writers art th~lr ov.n and no endoraemtnt ot their vlt'w1 by the Dally P\lot ahould be lnfured~ Thursday, March24, 1817 .. ... •I ' ...,, ~ ;-., • i t THEY'RE PART OF THE Bronx Senior 1 Citizens Robbery Unit, a prototype police group that investigates crimes against people over 60 who are attacked Jn buildinp. There are similar units in other parts of the city. They use the taxi because it's unobtrusive. It looks like a lot of other taxis in the Bronx. Many old . people are embarrassed to be pinpointed as crime victims by the presence or a police car. Some fear reprisaJ . Keegan and Gaffney cruise the Grand Con- course, a stately canyon of buildings that has become a combat zone for old people and young muggers. "SEE THAT PARK?" GAFFNEY asks. ''In . nice weather, the old people come out and sun ' themselves. You can see the kids watching them, ~ circling at a distance, picking out their quarry. r I. ~ A INDIVIDUAL A'M'BNTION IS THE key to their approach. After an attack, old people are especialiy distrau&bt. It takes patience to draw out their story. Perhaps they will have a cup ol tea, look at a family album or listen lo stories about Ufe in gentler days. Their unassigned duties include contactina re- latives, stopping mail delivery, freenng bank ac· counts and taking victims to and from court. "Most are so amazed anyone takes an in· terest," Keegan says. "We still get Christmas cards from people we've visited." THEY ENTER THE HOSPITAL room of 79· year-old Sarah (she doesn't want her real name used> whose spine was broken by three burglars she surpnsed in her apartment. She had just re- turned from buying birthday cards for her grandchildren. Gaffney and Keegan take her fingerprints to compare with those they lifted in the apartment. Lying there large, pale and fragile. she tells them she had two rolls of pennies in her little bank. APWl,..pt,olo Growing· Of Pot Backed ELDERL YTARGET OF ASSUL TS, ROBBERIES Group Le est Able to Recoup From Their Losses Classified Ads sell big items. small items or any item. 642 5678 I .1 CALIFORNIA I I ! I FIRST BANK MEMBER f"DIL new drive-up ba·nking For your convenience we have added three drive-up windows at out Westcliff Office. Celebrate spring and this new service by receiving a colorful complimentary carnation at our drive-up windows. W F. Matranga. Vice Presld~nt/Monoger Westcliff Orfice 1501 Wi!stC'llCf Drive Newport Beach. California 9266<> 714 I 642-3111 LOBBY BANKING Monday thru Thursday 10:00 am -5:00 pm Fridoy, 10.00 am -7:30 pm • DRIVE-UP BANKING Monday thru Thursday 8:30 am -5:00 pm Friday. 8:30 am -7:30 pm We dcm't U.. aslltb 1oa er to live. PH bea ln that aputmlllt • yan. t I ua't back now. Bu& wbere can I CO'I ''WbeD JOU .... oid. nobody.. JOU .•• Tber•'• DOUUn1 much to uy. They thmk they've pt pod prtnta ol the attKbn. ' .. We tbtnk w'll aet aomecme." 1-.y1 Gaffney. Wltb a small bunt or flre1 Sarah says: .. ThJY abould do to them wbat they dla to me.•• She alnl!I back. ONTBE WAY OlJT, THEY shake their heads. Gatfbey mentions b1I own mother. He wants her to move out cf her neighborhood, but, like many old people, she's very lndepedent. Jewels by Josephs i. ..chino for dlM'IOnd• 8"d gemstones from Pf'Vlle IMlviduell and ..cat-. careful examination and Mluation by our ••S*tl. HIQNst prices peld. Call ~ 1o.9 dally, Saturday 1o-e. Sunday ctoeed. ask for Mr. Joeec>h. (See ELDERLY, Pa1e At) Great Fashion Values In All Departments Super Savings On Vested Suits Reg. 155.00 A9g.175.00 129.90 149.90 '"Versatile ...... :rrlo Suits Mf.111.00 ~ Twc Plfe• 11111 w1t11 extra pair ol COl\tntat etackt. Te1mmied polyester In navy, bfown o; cttnel. This SPa-:.or ·s most admired lash,on L 19~ 1 or dark torie" n pol1est• r or po1~t ·,!1•r/wct0l o;ol•d ~·· pas and pla10:;. Stra1gl\1 f ap or hdC• 1nri flap poci.e:s. Tailored Leleura Suits "• 111.00018.00 79.to Choose ,,.om 1eYtr1I ab'les- many with matctung ela~lci,ed wplatbano .slacks from Amenca's mo•t fl11'110us mal<Or. iewels by ioseph Cotton Knit Shirts With Contrast Collars Reg.16.50 11.90 Exc1t1ng nr.w version of today's No I sport !.h•rt A-:.•or1 .. .i body •tr r r>s w1lh knilfl'd or v,ovcn 113• Pl'rf••cl w,111 IC!Jf1" and ,,11ca~1.11 ~· " Save On Short Sleeve Dress Shirts ~g.15.00 9.90 Ci"t ready for summer Mt11 lho'>e cool, easy c;ire Dacron polyl'S· IN Md cotton $h1ns As•.ortmr>nl or /, solids and patterns Three Piece Wardrober At Very Special Savings Reg. tl.00 48.IO Two ma,yelous lookS at one low price Tiie pan1w1t. "W r tho t · pocket blaz•r wnh ti.sue , t:>eek f*'lt SW!lch lo the A·l1nit 1k1rt fOf a lrnl'I, MW oullook Crt>an\ parchment. peac:ti, l'l'!lnt, beiQo, powder btue 8· 18. - { I I ,, ,, '• I .. .,.. ill laM lnud orden t.bat t.be • Taacan town'• •.ooo • pi1eoD1 be cau1bt. e ......... and cremated ~ becaUM ot an epidemic : ol •almoaella.la, the clty : ball announced. : The announcement • said the provincial veterinarian investigat- ed the sudden death of dozens of piceons and concluded that there was an epidemic of the bac- terial infection, which , can cause serious gastrolntesUnal upset, kidney trouble and other ailments in humans. The mayor's order said there was no way to cure the birds, and the only solution was to eliminate them. Siena for decades has been split into pro and anti-pigeon factions. Jr . ..,. wMl a.. ..W • televWoa t.menlew last year, be doeaott uow Monaco'• Princes• Carollne and can't "make revela· tJona» about ber penonal Ute. Scarpa. the IOU of a wealthy ln- dutriallst, acreed ln court Tuesday with a atatement submitted by bis at· tomeya that he is ''in no position to mate revelations about the intimate life of the r.rtnces1 nor place in doubt. berbmcr.' PUBUC DJBTaIBUTION of the statement within 10 days, attorneys said, is a condition for dropping a criminal action filed by the princess and her parents, Prince Rainier and Princess Grace.-against the man known locally as "Chiquinbo." Scar~a mentioned Princess Caroline s name in a television in· terview last year while ·discussing women be allegedly knew. When the interviewer, society columnist lbrain Sued commented, "But the princess is a virgin," Scarpa declared: "That's what you think." ed' A a.a MILLION SUIT for "moral dama1•'' filed by the royal family a1ainat Scarpa ts pendin1. The 20-year-old princes• wu not present for the bearing. Scarpa did not say bow the civil ault would be handled. He told nportera that in the criminal case, be present- ed "clarifications" which "do not humiliate me nor do they imply any retraction." ( IE.\RL WATERS ) COVERS SACRAMENTO In the DAILY PILOT ad1e lhaeli--.... NATIONWIDE 11& SAVINGS ON HI-fl, RADIOS, CALCULATORS, TAPE/RADIO SYSTEMS AND TURNTABLES! -~ t~· ·..::_;_"7 --..... -. S $ 6 0 FAMOUS GERMAN ave AUTO TURNTABLE Save$100 REALISTIC ~ RECORDER + RADIO SYSTEM BARGAIN! • 11-Tr•ck R.cordtr/P/1yer •Two SpH/ttr Systems Reg. 29995 • AM-FM Sit~ RtctlYtr • J·S,,-d Auto-Ch1n9tr Enroy even more savings by recording your own 8-track cartridges from any source Come n today' 199~.~ Reg. w/o Tape 19995 139~.2 Cut 48% Reallsttc-Miracord-46 with $34.95-value Realistic-by-Shu rt~ cartridge, maaaive 12" platter. cuefpause, pitch control, plus walnut veneer base and a 30% discount! Reg. 3715 DIGITAL ;ca.ocK RADIO •1r' OPPI 198 8 Wake to mualc and/or 2' hr. alarm. Snooze Bar for a few extra winks. Slttp 12.1eo2 Switch Itta you drift off to mu1ic. I Saves10 AM·FM STEREO RADIO SYSTEM Reg. 79'' -·. I I ' • . , • • • • • f. I '; J R11ll1tlc ''Modulette" compact 3-plece 4M·FM Stereo with big hP.fl aoundl tnput1 for changer and tape player. Phone jack. Tone control. Only at Radio Shack' . . . . .. Saves20 -··-. '. . ADD T1tE IOY Of CAii FM STDIO! ::a· 49~.~ • ,lfl .,,..,. OCftM "°"" • llldlltf lal. & Tone Colltrole • "" 'llftl"' .,....,. Ot IU1 ' "°"' I.II Slashed 75% h i : ~ ; . l·tl· 1 •• , .,. lllf .• Reg. 25e 100 ... 100J . Saves10 RADIO IHACIC MEMORY CALCULATOR ----ves10 ..._..... ... ULTU·l&.IM CALCULATGR AIQ. 2911 ••aa ·~ t••a11•• ..... , 1 ••••• ,':'11 19~.!? ~ •Ulrft'1UO~ --Oltplrf ... ____ .., • Auto-Coneffnt, %. Squire ltoof Key ' ' IMl2 1 IMU •CWDI AC ~R,CAMYCUI! . 1Save s10 • ••••• II ••I " .111•1· g .• ••1 ·••u· IUM·MIMORY CAl.CUU10R Rti. 3411 • ® ¥Bf Point 'n Shoot camera outfit. Only36.95 The Vlvltar 600 Point 'n Shoot pocket camera gives you . great black-and-white or color prints, or brilliant color slides. Built-in electronic flash makes plc1tJre taking easier, more fun. With 11 O cartridge and batteries. Only59.95 The Vlvitar 604 pocket camera has the same great features as the Vlvitar 600, plus a close·up lens for even more fun and versatillty. Built-in electronic flash captures indoor shots in an amazing 1/1000 second. With 110 cartridge, batteries . UH your JCPenney Time Payment Plan. Penney AACADIA·SANTA ANITA CANOOA PARK CARSON CULVER CITY 'FOX HILLt• DO FULLERTON OLENOALE 'OALL!ltlA' HAWTHORNE PLAZA HUNTINGTON BEACH LAGUNA . -. LAK!WOOD MONTCt:AIR N!WPORT BEACH NOATHRIDQE ORANGE 'THE UENTe Hilts RIVERSIDE SAN BERNARDINO VENTURA WEST COVINA WHITTU,,... . ' ,. 11 tlllUICISf~ UNIT• • 11 l~n. ~TC.U' ... 4 8UILOIHGS Of PVRCHASAIU fTlMS, SfttVICE ANO TIUCKS IOATS The King of Customizers -George Barris and his vehicles Super Van & Electra Car AU. TIOS, "-US • AllilP\..l P'MI: PAIHUNG. • CARHIVAL Wint ACIULT AHO CHILa.tl!N RIDl'S • P'Rt:IE "CNIC AREA ANO MUCH MORt: UVE ENTERTAINMENT -f·W.v·1 •10 ~ ... SAM'1.ES: 80 OOHAL.OSOH, HAaD TIMES, E\JLOGY, 8'0CET, ~I. 1 • 'P "'· I . IO p.1n, INFAWAal.ES, HGASOS . SOUNO BY MARTY RA8£ Sun 8 .. m. • 8 P"" ~_.IYUl'llON//JAI 6HO'#TlM!: Olrt«IOIOI: T .i.. "'V Frt<!w~y 10 the Ncwpori h~'*'•Y lh<n South tn lh< Bcu h c111n When IM Frcew•y Jlop•, you ••• lh"•· FOLLOW THE SIGNS FOR EASY PARKING.. Fndav eom.·110m. .-----------------------::IYPll~E&·h~~iiM~ i COUPON DISCOUNT . V-fwOn1v: Aclultt-S1W. J ~'iv~~~f... I 1HI$ COUPON IS GOOD FOR A ~E-Aclult•-S-llS 15oe TICKET DISCOUNT T•Cl<ITS AVAIL>.:::T7 13 1JO NIDA y. MARCH 15. 1917 •n••-• "-iom eo.p. I p ~.:'"~~,~:'oROUHos. I SATURDAY • MAlCH 16, 1977 0 RCA 19" ( diagona WITH REMOTE Chait v.le remote ~ color & rint, cnonnel & rime of day appear °' \Cf~ 62995 MAYTAG HEAVY DUTY WASHER GAS DRYER ..,11 .fobri c waiher with pormonent-pMS eye.le. fornily-lize rub. l W01S i.w.is aid 3 wal• *"PL This 9IJI ~la 261 .,... coporily cOfnpor.d to prevlovt Moytog models. Feat"• low ........,. heat ~ Mulkyde & jl9Mal111• pw cycle. SAVE s30oo ON PAIR . 'IDT ft TWAT ..ba1,...... ~ ..,...,.. tor•at...~oldpeo. plea~ . • '"I'-..... .sd1eted to Giii peopie. Not ... ... ._.... 9tanl • .Just old peap&e.. •• ~ hep.a, '"TbeJ•re bopblt to bit a pot ol IQM." Ami. 187 UM copa, mmt .. NIDGHelw. Tber ro to tOUrt. -~on tbe wnm. ••out anc14' ltq-. Tbe tat rumbles past blocb of rubble and •utted tenements, bloeka ol boulint developments. "Looll. It's no wonder," says Gaffbey, poinUna to one biih rile. TllAT ONE BUILDING DOUSED elaht kids wbo committed crimes against old people wbo lat.er died ol lnjwies. They bead toward another hospital, another old lady, Lottie. "I'd really like to get the euy who did this one," Keegan says. Lottie, who also is afraid lo have her real name ln print. bas no family, just a cousin in New Jersey. They're vi.siting her to say that her mall will be held at the post office -and to give her a little company. SHE'S 88, A TINY, OUTRAGED mass of bruises. Her nose is broken, her eyes are blackened, her neck is purple, her hands are wounded. She was pushed into her apartment when she opened the door. Shew as beaten with her own walk· ing cane. She was tied to a steam pipe. "He kept beating me and asking, 'Where is the money? Where is the money?' I told him I didn't have any, just the $5 in my pockets. But be thought there was more," she said. Lottie feels the bumps on her head and points to her nose. "Oh, why did he have lo break my nose? Now I'll look like a prize fighter. I don't care how old I am, I don't want to have a broken nose. ''I hope you get him." Nert: What's being done. (diagonal) Color Trak Another of the ColorTroh and this one comes wirh o Swivel Bose for MAYTAG POWER MODULE DISHWASHER ReYOUicroy poww module with mduai... MiaoMeth th. ~ woshinQ oction elirnincns pre-rineinQ. • SAVE '20 NOW ICOM M2S yo r lifeline. SAUS a SBYICI 2ov .... s..1.ecm11o11 Des hagtun's Mmine Bectronics 355 (Old) .............. Newport ..... 642-5316 '575" ..,..,,. .... __ ....... ..... f I . 's' .. Ylllllt! . ............. ., v.....,.... ... II The 35mm buy of the year: Vivitar® System 35. Everything you need to take sharp. cnsp. beautiful pictures. The Vivitar 250 SLR camera has accurate through-the-lens metering plus a sharp, fast Vivitar 50rnrn f / 1.8 lens. Outfit includes 135rnrn telephoto lens, 2X tele·converter, automatic electronic flash plus a specially made Enduro case. Use your JCPenney Time Payment Plan. The VIV'ltar 182 lfflra compact o;:r~tw1)0wered automatic • lo tllilh. Auto operation from a tQ 17 feet. .. 89.99 The Vivitar 283 auto/thyristor electronic flash fits most 35mm cameras. 90 · tilting flash head. Automatic flash from 3 to 43 feet, at all bounce angles. Operates off- camera. Choice of 4 f-stops for accurate depth of field. 14.99 Vlvltar 102 glcf'es up to 400 flashes per set of batteries. Fast 4·second recycle time, oolor-eorreoted lens • JC Penney 4DXIJ , ARCADIA·SANTA ANITA' CANOOA PARK CARSOM CULV!R CrTV 'FOX HILLS' DOWNEY FULLERTON Oll!NDALE 'GALLERIA' HAWTHORN!! PLAZA HUNTINGTON ll!ACH LAGUNA HILLS LAKEWOOD MONTCLAIR NIWPORT 88.ACH NORTHRIDQ! OMNQE 'THI CITY' PUENTI! HILLS AIVl!RSID& SAN BERNARDINO VENTURA WUT COVtNA WHITTWOOO - ' ....... lfawaldil--Mmlh• ........... -Will Or a..tJ, ol U.. nskm maid pt b7 for a cou -• ti da1I • &tond wt tMtreommuDltla. And. ICCGl'd.LDa to Carl Kymla. •4 al m.1DaCer ol tbt llouhon· Nl1uel Water Dlatrtet, tbllt lJ a ·•1enarous estimate," consldet- tn1 tbe dally demand for water in the county soutb of Irvine is somet.bina like 23 mWJoo callona. Water dlatrict officials have var)'ina opinions about the cur- rent state water situation and its effect.a on local projects -like Lake Mlsaioo Viejo, for example. T H E LAKE WAS built primarily for recreational use. But, in an effort lo prevent punitive action by state officials, Mission Viejo Company officials have declared their 1.2-billion gallon basin represents a signift· cant supply of stored emergency water. And if there is one thing most of the water officials agree on, it is that the current waler storage picture in the south county is, in general, dismal by comparison to the northern and central county. Those areas can rely on the vast water supplies stored in a. natural underground basin that is estimated to hold anywhere from 487 billion gallons of water to a quantity 10 times that amount. ACCORDING TO Stan Sprague, assistant manager of the Municipal W.ater District of Orange County, that is some c omfort but no absolute guarantee or constant water sup· plies in the event or an emergency. Apart from a few small bastn· type reservoirs, virtually all ex· isting south county waler storage is in tanks and other containers that hold a few million gallons each. "To say we have a day or two stored down here would be very KTJILA Cl' acnes ''· Nllkteata from tb• Sed· dJeb.ck V.U., to Dana , takiq in mc:.t ol tbe acreap lhat wu once part ot tb old Moult.an Ranch. Moulton Nltuel presently bu a stora1e capacity of 31..5 mllllon gallona in tabk-type reservoln. Tbou&b this may .IOUDd like a lot. Kymla said, it 1a "vef'J inade- quate." Moulton N'igueJ's stored water barel)r meets sucb operational needs as regulating water pressure during hours of peak use and providing water for emergency firefighting. No so- called "terminal storage" re- servoirs are operated by the dis- trict. THE SAME IS true of Moulton Niguel's immediate neighbors the Santa Margarita and Laguna Beach County Water Districts. Both rely for storage on a scat- tering or tanks that meet minimum operating needs but nothing more. William Knitz, general manager of the Santa Margarita Water District , believes Lake Mission Viejo (which Santa Margarita serves) would be a re· al asset in terms or emergency storage for the south county. Company officials have in· dicated that the lake could pro- vide minimal water supplies to 110,000 south county residents for 60 days in the event of disaster Knitz said he has the portable pumps and chlorinators on hand to make the emergency system operational within 24 hours. WITHOUT THE lake, Knitz agreed with Kymla's assessment of the south county's storage capabilities. "They are minimal," he said. The Laguna Beach district cur· rently maintains about 20 million gallons of storage in tank re- servoirs and uses about three Deatlu Elsewhere NAPLES. Fla. (AP>- Paul Gregory Benedum, 77. a founder or the Fellowship of Christian Athletes. died Wednes ,ffarrlage Ll~en•e• LAS VEGAS M:\r, •Of* " ,.,. .. ".,.' l,, ..... e1 ,...,, .. •nc•~ M.lr<lt4 OLSON CLARll: Ert< Oo,...I H •nd 0 .. t>ra lM" t• l'lntn of Hunt•ttQl t'I" 8•i1Ch MarcltS MC INTOSH WILLIAM'> M••• ~aUhftw ?• llnd VtrQ1r11a Marv 1) bOlhOl~ld ..... \11 '>AWYERS.WOODWORTH LAM•• John, ll, •..O Sfllr1t>y A 11 bOlh nt Lo,AlamllO'I NORDMEYER CLEMONS Rob"'t i\lan, J'I, -I-Hill\. and Fr~n<O\ Heath•r 1S Slln Clemenlt ROSAN 80WERS HMold L 'I .tr>d Sharron Di-79, "'"" 01 Hun1 1nq1on Beach COX-SCOTTI T~rry Hot><ort 7• Wutmln\ltr, and VPron1" Loi\. 18. S.tnteAM PEARSON BALDWIN Wdll., Ecfw•rd 0 ""°L1rcl• A<Hllt H Doi'> of Fovn1a1n \l.tll~v 8ARAJi\S NACE 'i MArr 7~ We\tmln\ler and r~orQl.tnt\,.. ~ .. n.i 16. G•rden C.rovf' COFFEY MC CUNT IC• J•rnm"· Le• H .->d J""" Elln~lh ,. ""'" ... ~«"• BROOl(S.MOLLISON ,.,.., 11;.,,,. 1'I Ar>d I 1~ LH' 1ll Dot~ nt N•wno•• BP•th day in the hospital here. WASHINGTON (AP > Martin L. Friedman, 58. founder of the Na- tional Democratic Club 1n Washington and special ass1stantlo Pres1. dent Harrv Truman. died Wednesd~~ NORTH PLATTE, Neb <AP> MaJ. Gen. Butler 8 . Millonberger, 79, former commander of the US Army's National Guard Bureau and com· m ander of Nebraska's 134th infantry Regiment during World War 11 , died Wednesday. Death Noti~~• l!LLIS ME l:Ull TT HAYDEN ELLIS Q•\• ,,..,,, ,,. f:oun1•1n V11ttt .. v. CN\~d .. .,.,y M.,,. ... h n Surv1~d by '#II~ l+/Mrv ,,,, 1 kirlmot\ H cUu,aqhf,.,. 01~ L ftt01f'W:r v ">• • • w"ttm.an o4 s.An Jo"• b'"'""' W,..,,,.. Wfltlm . .,. ,,t c;,." J~\• ,,,., O~f'\f'\" (11,,M s,_,,, J,..,n<t"'40 41nd •Jnt'lta- W•lt•r ~tll'-"1 t)f H -,wthof'n-M1t ""'" • ..,,.,,.,..,._,, rt1 ,.,. f-.,.,, aw-,,, •• ,, Ct\ur<'" Bl! SAID THAT, in the event ol an emercency, a loss of pumping power could render the stored supplies useless for the higher elevations of the city and the lack of water pr~ure would reduce what seems to be seven days' supply to only a few . One south county district that IS in good Shape in terms Of storage is the El Toro Water Dis- trict, which serves the Leisure World area. It owns one of the very few basin·type reservoirs in the en- t1 re region, a 28-acre storage facility bounded by Alicia Parkway, Calle Alcala and Via Cuervo in Mission Viejo. BOB SCOTI', chief operator of the district's treatment plant, said the reservoir's 220 million gallons could supply customers for about 30 days in the event of an emergency. ·'But if we had to help out some or our neighbors. that could be cut to 15 days or even less," he said, "depending on the extent of the emergency.'' The El Toro District bas several distinct adva{IJages over neighboring districts. ll provides its supplies entirely by gravity flow. with little or no pumpi,ng, and is at the very end of one ma· jor pipeline from the Colorado River aqueduct. SCOTT SAID the Santiago Aqueduct, which comes off the Colorado line out in Santa Ana Canyon, runs through Santiago <See WATER, PageA13) BELL HURST SIOM• Lln<CI'" 11 .tnO MArv Lt>vt'' U r.ntf'li ct <...-" Cl,.m,.ntfl' o• S:ftOf'\tA ""~ .... •fuifnnu\Of Un·~ nt l n~o 8•-..n tnt mtie,. of ttwiio f:QUf"fa1n VAt1•1 "'°" rt,,, °" th,. Bo~ro ,,, 0,,.,,, ,,,.,, ~ .--,, ....... , ..,, V•llr-y Ch•m""'' ,. (l)N\rn-or(,.. mHnbf-r ot ,""" eu~, r11.1t\ Hu,,, "'1'>~ &t~n b•<•nt-n"••I "m"'''' .... ,.., Ftt~I'\·~·" 'IAtl•y ~ frAf Ourlllf Carpel r-·· a,edlct11¥ An11ual S,nng Sale Handsome accent pieces In black, brushed gold . or verdlgreen wrought Iron The circul.ar el•gere, 74" 1•11 Our e>.clu~1ve 1n1erpretat1on ol .in .iuthcn11c Curopr.m dl'lOr w11h ~Id\\ 'helve~ lor your ob1eh d·.irt The rope twisted pyr.lmid, 74" t.lll A graceful ~howotf p11•ce ''Ith glas~ shelve\ 1ha1 m.>kc .i bNu111ul se1t1ns lor your lavorite plane~ Jnd ru11m The winding sl.iircue, 82" 1.111 A s1ri~1ng \howc a~e for an indoor g.>rdrn from 11s delicate 1w1shng cop 10 1he elegant pedestal base. The grill work bollcer's r.ick, 71" ~II A marvelou' dccoralor accent with four dPrp 24" wide shelve~ to C"Om- plemenl any c1ecor. =_.,~. YOUR CHOICE ~ fiiiiJ 110-c.oir-COME~ TO RI FURNITURl SHOP 1 DAYS A WEEK • MIEKOAYS 10 UNTii. I • SATUROAY to tnfT1L. t • IUHOAY 12:30 utfTL t AHAJiEJll • 1172 W. Uncolft • 17&-1231 HUNT1NOTOH 8«ACtt • 11Q1 llMch INvCI. • 115-:zsn COSTA MESA• 3115 N. Herbof 8l¥d. • 541-17'1 U. HABRA• 1120 W. Whltller • M"417111 Ftlll.IRTON • 3105 YortMI Undl Bhtcl. • 5~11 SANTA ANA/TUSTIN • 1703 a. 17'1h llt. • 14M201 ~~1tnM1-• ........ --~~ HELD OVER -LAST 3 DAYS ~rclll CHAV ARRIA·DAVI OSOH ,.ot>o.r l•mH ll encl Ellt•.,.'" ,.,,.. 1- bOt" of Hunll""11on 8'>.Kh • •1v~v.,. '°"" '"'-C·IY ot ~01JnlA1tt iJ •llf''f V I -.1...,., ft\ur'{,(i.111 1 •PM y ,.,,,, .. i:.,.11 ... •tAM D•'d•y Brot.,.u r-n ,,..... lnh·• 'l"l•nt p,.,. ft( V1•w ~•'"nr•.tl P",,. ~,, .. ,..~,, R111M'h In on1llordtnoftrS20IWf 25%Hwfl 11 llrna ol onter or ln11all1llon a!Mlyour~ emit -ONE YU.A lln'EREIT fR£E CREDIT •.. SAME AS WH t I>. To The H"9f lletl DRM WeHonht~OwS. u.tn Sotwday, 3/26/77 Just 1 '9wof thecarpetsln our huge~ .,. llstecl In tNa ed ••• StMct from over 50 lw11ntou1 ttylH end over 500 tsnpelng colorll ANO ••• durlft9 ttlle llmnect ....... wlll provide norm1I ln1tall1tlon ebaoo ; ' i i l I I • . : I i . SWEEHEY-G,.10\.EY 11,,,mv R ll, """ Stworyl• Aftft JI) ""'"el c.,.,1. Mt"• r "ERCI HOTHUS "I SMn'H'S MOlrTU41tY 627 Main SI Huntington Beach 536-8539 ---PIRPAMILY COLONIAL PUMHAL HOMI 7801 Balsa Ave Westminster 8~3525 -PACIPIC YllW MIMOILU,AH Cemetery Mortull'Y Chaoe1 3500 Pac1f1c Vrew Drrve Newport caJlfOfntl 844-2700 - "°"«COU41CI MOITUAlllS L1gun1 BHch 49-4-9415 Lagun1 Hllls 768-0933 Sin Juan Capistrano 495-1778 --- IALTZ-lll•HOM fiUMllAL HOMI Corona del Mar 8 73-9450 Costa Meaa 848-2424 -tal.noADWAT MOITUAIY t 10 Broadway Cotti Mesa 842-9160 -Swnt TUTHtU LAMI WH1CU# CHAPIL 427 E 17th St Costa M..a • MM888 8-lfl Ana Ch1pel S 11 N Broldwey S1nt1Ana • 547-..131 • "--..... "~v ot '~'' '"""''' '"""'~'-h doft.t tinn\ M Fnunt un \/dll"Y S.-w~ Club .,.._.O 'tln .. ,.t Av,_ O•r,.ir:t~o "" (l1IC1-'lf H1a,hf'r\ ~tU,\fY' IM11 8~""" Rtvt'I H J.,li"l'ltnn S-"rto. lt-tl 1111 BROWN D" CAI T S BROWN """clenl ol Hollywood Cl oa'""° w.tWtl'f MclfCf'f 71 1917 Survl""d l)V'wll• M.uy Brown, dAUQhll'r' Mr\ Joyu l{oOf .. Of Br110lllvr1 NY Mr\ El•••l>eth Jone• Of Enrlnlld• Ca M" Cl~~ l(eM!IO"f of OlymoM Wa\h , Mr\, Fri!<! GooCI flf Coron• '"" Mar Cit brOlher Roy Brown of Chico C.. 1 I or..,,d<lllldr•n, 2 9real·Q•endchlld"" Gr•votld• wrvlcH Frodev. MMch 2S. 1•11. 2 OOPM •I Poclllc View Me"'o'l"t Perlt. Newt>«! BH<h. Ce Pecrftc View M"'1ur<1rvdirector\ Hl!NOl!RSOH JOHN 0 HENDERSON rl>Sldenl of Costa Meu. c.. ""'"" 1JW•v ~re" 19111, "" 8"1o....O l'lv•bancl of filoh• HtndPr_, ot Co\I• ~ ..,.,0 llltkllled l•llMtr Of JoM 0 Ht>ndor\Oft H!!W00'1 ' ... ell -s.n .... H""°"''°" ot Co<ote Met• Gr"""f•tl'IP• o• 0 ... 11 HPndtrwn lind Varw\'41 MPtKlrr .. on Mr "*" c1er-. '"" .. "'""""'"°' '"" u"'""""t of Iowa H• w•• lhP "''0•"9'1' ltw Ktm&M'lr lftWrltft(t" Co f:i1rruly ,.qut''' Iha! •-wt\Nnq m•v l<>•lfr.bofl• to tftie H•M• Fund'" h" rN!l'TM)~ FOSTER 1'4'HNY • l'OSTEll ,.,.aenl of CO\ta M,.,,. (A °''~ •way M11rct\ H , t01 Sun11vtd b• hu•Dand l'Prdlne..O daUllM-Shirl•v l"o'1•r nl C1>'1• M•$ot C.. '°"' WMren 0 l'o'1tr O' WtlWWlllt. CA , l(•ntwlh V F0\11" OI l.eltowooel, (t , Gof'Clo'I B Fos .. r OI El Stl>f .. M. C. , •ISttn 8191¥11t OI Saft Olt90, ca , "*'1• Slroth<nll ot l.•9un• Beech Q ., 1 Qtendclllldr"". 4 O•Hl-O•-cllllelftl'I S.r•ICU Set • Merell t6. 11 OOAM, Peclflc View Cllepel, ll\ltt11'1tt1t PAClflc Vlew Me"'orlal Per It, Pee 111, View MOr11Hry dlntetor\. PUBUC NOTICE "ICTITIOUI e USI NHS NAM•ITATIMUfT TM fo4'"1ft9 Ptf-It dolllf ~\f fllH .. l • £VANS SCO" TURNl!lt ASSOC . MIO-C NtwpOr'I C'Mlllf' Or !How,Otl ... ell, CA~ w1111..., 0 Wrlolll IH\ C••rll11• l •tV"I "-llCll CA.,U1 Tflll ....,..,,..., I\ CM0utl"" by ..., '" ctf"'""' w 0 Wt'lfM '"" ,, .. "'""" """ fllt'I ""''" .... ("'lltv Cffi111 "' 0.-r.w,.ly ,,. ~M<llU "n ,.,,. .. ll'llllll\Md Or-CIMl\I °'"'' •1111 IMH1tll,t4 )1-"CHlll.tfn IOJ)lf EXAlllPlf· Alllltlllt II l'llRMu MOO Down l"IJlll&Ot 11 lime ol On11r or lntt1t111ion !!!! 1300 A.PR. Rall ' fllllllCI C111rv11~ Tatll ol h~mtntl S;?OO · 12 IQUll Plfllllll~ of S25 tad! l lutely FAEE when you purcha• C:lrpet I nd paddlngC last days All 38 stores celebrate the opening of Mervyn's new stores in Fresno, Bakersfield or Capitola. These are only a few of the over one hundred items now on sale in our stores .. Price• effective through Sunday, March 27th Schiaparelli® Supp-hose® Women's panty hose with 5.95 PR. VALUES '.Haist-to-toe support; re-2 PR. 5 95 inforced panty; sheer • legs. Sizes P-A-MT·T-R. 3.19 PR. save 1.01 on handbags Fabric or vinyl carry-alls. Multiple compartments, inside and outside pock- ets. Color choice. REG.$8 6.99 gold-filled jewelry Necklaces, wrist brace- lets, ankle bracelets and pierced earrings. 20% off Costume Jewelry Dept. Reg. •3 to•& SALE 2.40 TO M women's uniform smocks Easy-care. Sizes S-M-l. REG. $9 White uniform pants, 6 99 reg . $12 .......... 9.99 • Lingerie Department women's short sleeve dusters Stripes, prints, solids. REG. $8 Full figure 1lze1. 6 99 reg. $9 ........... 7.99 • Loungewear Dept. Sizff S-M-L; 10..18 women's sleepwear sale Waltz gowns and baby REG. $6 dolls in 100% nylontricot. 4 99 Feminine trims. Soft • paatala, in sizes S-M·L boys' dress and sport socks Absorbent cotton/nylon REG. 89¢ PR. tube socka In sizes 8-11 . 3 1 95 Also Ortonct acrylic terry. PR· • in.sizes 6/8 ~-9/11 . 8~ PR. boys' swimwear sale Volleyball styles; also boxer and lastex styles . Sizes 4-7. reg. 2.99 ......... 2.49 REG. 3.79 3.29 Slzea 8-18; S-M ·L men's famous maker flares Beat-selling polyester doubleknlt flares from a Tex11 manufacturer. Walat aizn 30 to 40. REG. •14 10.99 men's acrylic warm-up suits Zip.front top; stitch REG. 24.99 creaH pant; both stripe-19 99 trimmed. Comfort-styled In triple-knit ecryllc. • wicker coordinates for bath Benoh or round hemp- -. WU111 beeketa, floor ttandaend2·tllrlhelva. reg. $6-$20 .. 4.97·17.17 REG.•11 15.97 Uptight hemper CHARGErTI i3•#1JW:L1' r7ii -.. _. I ............ -~ special purchase! colorful print sport shirts 3.99 Long sleeve styles in a great collection of prints. Choose from slightly tapered to Euro- pean-fit in 100% cotton or polyester/cotton blends. All with adjustable cuffs ... many with chest pockets or fused collars. Not all styles in all stores. Sizes S·M·L-XL. save 2.01 on Orlon® knit sweater coats Open-front. patch pocket style with long sleeves. Light- weight. yet warm. Orton® acrylic knit is machine wash- able for easy-care. Choice of white or beige. Sizes S-M-L Coat Oepertment REG. •16 13.99 save 1.01 on tank tops Square. U or V- neck stytes In aolld, striped or space- dyed 100% cotton ... some with con- trast binding. Col· ors include white, red, navy and more. Sizes S·M-L. AEO .... 2.99 \ buy 3 and save on print front tees Choose crew or tape neck with ahort sleeves. Machine washable cotton or polyester I cotton with a variety of print fronts ... beers, uni· versltiel, more. Sizes S·M·L-XL. REG. 3.99 EA. 3FoR•10 3.49EA. I Sturdy canvat lhoee with eure·footed non·1kld aolet. Men's and women'• Jn navy or 1 whha, chlld'1 In navy of\ty. Shot Department Mervyn's boys' guaranteed* Dura-Jeans REG. 7.49 6.49 SizesS-12 Little boys' sizes 4-7, reg. 5.99 ................. 4.99 We've made them as rugged as the boy who weara them. Poly- ester/ cotton/ nylon fabric with Fiveta and bar tacks at points of stress, double-needle stitched seams and double knees. Ma- chine wash, dry. Solids. Regular and slim cut. •1f th••• l••nt ever rip, or teer. or w"r out. Ju1t return them and we will replace tham with• new pair. 1.02 off Qiana~ dress shirts Full placket front and long point banded col- lar. Button barrel cuff on long sleeves In , 32" -34" lengths. i \ Hemmed short sleeves. ' Sizes14~to16~. 1 Long Sleeve REG.11.99 /, 10.97 M0.'11 10.sa Savel.01on1•1ct1on of liClft figure -···IM In hlgh-lmpeot eolldl and ltripM. All of eesy-car. 100% poly· ester knit with exdtJng trima •.. eome with belw ind coffll"I. Many atytn in lizea 6 to 13; some stytee in alze 3. Dress Department boys' knit and sport shirt sale All short sleeved . Knits with crew or tape neck in colorful stripes or solids with contrast trim. Sport shirts in solids, plaids or prints. Polyester/ cotton. Sizes 8-18. REG. 4.60-4.99 3.97 Short Sleeve. reg . 10.99 9.97 1/3 off bean bag chairs Heavy-du·ty, wipe-clean vinyl filled with polystyrene pellets for shape-con- forming comfort. Double-stitched and double zippered. Color choice. children's leather caaual Slzea 8%-3 Sl1n 3% .. ORIO. 13,89 ORIO. 115.19 11e97 13.97 Brown, eof1 leather uppen ot1 comfortable. cuahlonea ~ •. Shoe Department Small Size Large Size REG. 14.99 REG. 26.99 17.97 16" round hassock. reg. 5.99 ....... 4.97 1 /3 off washable quilted bedspreads Choose from many colors and patterne in machine waahable polyester I cotton and polyester I rayon blends. ::c;."~~== 19. 9 7 FuU, reg. 36.99 •.. 23.17 Queen. reg . 44.89 . 29.17 King, reg. ~.99 .. 32.97 . ........... -.. ...... Shop Monday through Friday 9:30·9:30 .•• S1turdly 9:30--8 •.. Sunday 1()..8 I • • I I' TDU'JTLEM&NT MIGBTBAVB palHd un~ noticed It Coandlmm KenDl!tb Prt-bad not ques- tioaed a ca.-check written to Johd Sobieski wben it 1bowed up MU'Cb 2 CD a Ult ol city paymenta for cound1 approval. Bis query launched an investi1ation by the prest, wbich turned up that Sobieski 15 the father of Miss Samota 's attorney. A second fl.500 payment to Miss Samota wu also uncovered. City officials said tbe payments were camouflaaed to avoid publlciUn, the settlement. Pmdin& 15 a second aeWement, mooltored by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission <EEOC), a federal aiency created by the same law Mocalia claims justifies the city's reluctance to re- veal terms of the original settlement. LAST JUNE, MISS SAMOTA. 21, filed a claim of sex discrimination against the city of San Juan with the EEOC. The woman, who was hired under a federal '"make-work" program, claimed a man do- ing the same job was being paid a higher salary. The Feb. 28 setUement negotiated between the city and Mi!a Samota does not necessarily preclude an EEOC investigation of city employment prac- tices, said Lorenzo Traylor, director of the Los Angeles EEOC office. One way to avoid such an investigation would be for the city to sign a pre·determination settle- ment. Mocalis said he received such a settlement and intends to sign it. HE SAID THE PRE-DETERMINATION set· tlement stipulates that the city may not reveal any details of the agreement. He said the Samota mat- ter bas been covered from the beginning by sections 706(a) and 709Ce) of the Equal Employment Op- portunity Act (Title VU>. which be said prohibits the city from making any public statements. Section 706(a) states, "The commission is em- powered to prevent any person from engaging in any unlawful employment practice as set forth in section 703 and 704 of this title." ,WALLPAPER ALL JN-STOCK! -n --~ tawf\11 ,.. •1 om t1111111oJ1• ., a. cam~ UUI--'° •• C m)' ._. ........ J lDlonnaUoo obtalnd b7 tbe coaiamJAa.• ....... to tta authortt7 UllMr tlda MCUaa prb to u.. •-..tthltinn al .,. Pl'QHlldiQI ..., t.ldl uu. .. vol~audl lnforma&n." - Kocalla aald be baa DGt actul1)' MID the law to wh.kb be ref erred. H• 1&!4 be Interpreted an Aq. I reference to the two aeetkJm al the law by the EEOC'• Loftmo Traylor to mean that the clty muat · remain mute on any matt.er tnYol'rinl Miu Samota. He uid be took thla requirement to cover ex- penditure al public f\lnds involved in the first, and possibly a second, financial settlement with the former employe. .. PUT THE MONKEY ON BEa (MISS Samota'a) back for a chan&e," be said. "All you have to do is get her to agree to a release and you can bave all the details. The city councilmen have alreU}r been polled, and they have agreed to a re- lease.•• Miss Samota's attorney, Lada Marx, bas been unavailable for comment since the Feb. 28 aettle- ment with the city. Executive Offices: 7812 Edinger Ave., Huntington Beach. CA 92647 ---·--Southern Calffornfa Rsg/onal Offices: 4140 Long Beach Blvd., Long Beach, CA 90807 , 8955 Valley View St .. Buena Park, CA 90620 ~ 20715 S. Avalon BIVd., Carson. CA 90746 l!!.I 1001 E. Imperial Hwy., La Habra, CA 90631 £QUAL 1095 Irvine Blvd., Tustin, CA 92680 Hous111c 235 N. Citrus Ave .• W"t COYlna, CA 91793 lUIOCA CHOOSE FROM OUR NEW COl.UCTION DI PRINTS, SOLIJS & FLOCKS! MANY Pill.PASTED & TRIMMED FOii EASY /JO./T.YOURSEU DKORAT/llG! 40-500/o SAVINGS .. ~11dtAST/ED15B ~2m95i5~10 .t~ISBJ9~·us :~ f il11 D/I :£ s11/ D/R Jt q s11/ o;R • EASY PRE·MOUHTED SHEETS! • Uf'ETillE SHINY GLAZED FlNISH! • WON1 STAIN, SCRATCH OR BURN! • CAREfRED JUST sroNGE ClEANf • FOR WALL. FlOORS,COUNtERrOPS! • IDEAL FOR KITCHEN OR BATH! 5o;;59?.m ·11·~ ·sc 0 EA. GENUINE OAK PARQUET • PIE.flN&sHO SHINE! • CHOICl Of TONES! 5',S~d/1"' 32~ 12' VINYL ROORING fiii..Q'i·i.i·I ,_249 • •1t.T4" CUSIUOle PIDI • SHnft CLOSS fntmtl SQ. n>. CORK WALL TU ,. • ftl11l(D ..,.. tONBt 9¥ ==~1~~ ~: COSTA .MESA 2221 Harbor II. lHew Wll1ont Ph. 645· I 126 lllterior-Ext.mw FLAT PAINT • USE llS1DE 01 oun • FADE HS&STAllTI • WMITE ANO COLORS! RtG. P.H 59!1 I o SOUD VINYL : ~£XmlBlE. SIMPLE TO CUT & fill " RN WON'T SHOW WEAR! ~= CAAE HIGH SLOSS flNISHf 0~290:?. Al 1$101111/ity Cr,ito/ a,.. MIRROR TILE • cur & m WITH UTTI.E mom • ADDS SPAIKLING DEP'llfl • LUXURY ACCENT TO ANY ROOMf 04§9~ UK on lmllll .,.., M •.M.: SAT. l:JG.J:Jo p.M.; SUM. I~ , .... • l.Alllt..1-= ...... ~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ART 1-«JHDAY. Alftl S.12.S> P.M. .aN>AY, AprtS •7:30, INSPECTION: ,ftlm ,..... Men:ft n to Slbdly. Apt• 2 1-a .-.u. anc1 two holnSI .... ~..._ · ABSENTEE BIDS: .MIU wt Phone bkll «ieept9d -per Condltiona ol 8*. ~~rwqulred. TERMS:~~ Charge One of the finest selections of merchandise offered In recent years: Highlights Include the following: A magnificent collection of clocks, including a rare le'Neled Lyre three piece set, a Malachite cased clock, a Sevres 3 piece enameled set. a Grand Sonnenie C&rriage Clock. a gold eore· Bronze set. several fine American clocks signed FINE OIL MMOTHERHOOD"' BY Howard. Ansonia. caldwell & Co. WIWAM MORGAN, N.A. Fifty mote. Two grand pianos. both antioue. one an Austnan burt walnut case, the other a magnificent fully restored Bosendorfer oonoert grand. SeYeral music boxes lncfUdlng I 2 upright coin O()efBted. Olis and Lithos Include a 31 ptece collection of NOl'man Rockwell Uthos lnclUd1ng the Hucl<efberl'y Finn set. Barberahop Quartet. Spring Flowers, etc. Many magnificent Olis by William Motgan, Richard Petersen. Robert Wood. etc. Several 19th C. K.P.M. plaques including a 16x22 M~m Quality work. A collection of Important • 18th-19th C. miniatures on Ivory. much more. AntiQue and Contemporary jewelry. pocket watches. Objects O.Art.1ncludrng fine Viennese Enamels. Jeweled Boxes. French Cameo Glass. cabinet pieces, inciUding many Galle· pieces. other art glass signed Legras. R. Lallgue. Steuben. fine crystal signed Livvy. Hawks. Oark. A tremendous selection of fine • furniture. all periods. French. American, English. including several sets of • fine chairs. a Partners Desk. V1ctonan Parlor set. many Vitrines. Fine • Oriental furniture. desk. Breakfront. Screens. Cabinet -over 100 pieces. Fine Bronzes inclUde fully authenticated subjects signed Kauba, Mena. : Oelagneere. Lamps signed Tiffany. Handel. many period leaded Shades. Large collection of antlQue firearms. Armor. Cannon. Axes. Swords. A fine 1974 customized Cadillac Limousine. Fine Orientalia. lv.ry, stone carvings. Screens. Netsukes. Snuff bottles. Jade. A mammoth collectlon of fine porcelains lnchJdlng several large Sevre Ums. 4 pair of Dorothy Doughty Birds. Hummel figunnes. Roval Vienna. Wedgwood (Butterlly luster) Meissen. Dresden. R.S. Prussia. several sets of dinnerware. servtng plates. dozens of figurines. many museum quality pieces. Including a pair of early 19th C. Meissen Ewers. A good selection of Mettlaoh Stelns, punch bowls. plaQues. miscellaneous items including 2 Antique slot machines. barometers. autographs. bne>-e·brac. over 1000 items to be sold in four FAST sessions !- FULLY AUTHENTICATED BRONZES MINT CONDITION •74 CUSTOM4ZED CADILLAC LIMOUSINE COLLECTORS -DECORATORS -DEALERS VISIT OUR WHOLESALE-RETAIL SHOWROOM HOURS: 1-5 P.M. Mon. Through Sat. (Except Audion Days) ... ~tM, -llillw'I'){~ l " NOTilr.E• We are always Interested In pUrchase or consignments · I ~ \;it • of Quality merchal')dlse of all types. • EMPIRE GAIJ,ERIES, LTD. 7122 N. Main Street, Santa Ana, ~alif. 92701 (714) 547-7384 or (800) 854-3144 . ., ..... ...,.c ........ (Oftt ml~• on the 8int• Ana ff''"'L;.14 rnlnutft frocn Newport BMCh • 29 mlnut .. from downtown Lot~ ting for NO.~ wogested ) r 1/ GENERO GARCIA SWINGS GIANT TIRE INTO PLACE Eight-foot Toy Wiii Entertain lrvtne'a Children cal r-r 8l1UEOl'TB:a PADIS BEING Onaced bJ ~from • 1'7' dt7 part baad. Tbat bcllMl wW brtna tu wmaa rw part ecm-atnu:1im. • ·ne I.nine Unlfled School Dtttrlct aJso la •ntat:1n1 b.J donallna the land (or lht aquaUc center. wblcb will be...._. by resldeota and atudents at adjacent Irvine Hl&b School. The aquatic center will cootaln a SO.meter olymplc-sb:e com- petition pool. a dlvtna and water polo pool and a aeneral reoreatlon pool. THE COUNTY IS CHIPPING IN WITH the branch library and fire staUon. whlch ls nearly completed at the eutern edae of the park. Phase one ls under construction, includine the aquatic center, the youth center at the rear of the site and an unusual play area filled with modern "-1~ toys.•• Phase one la apieted to be completed by late summer. with the rest of the constructlcm to follow soon after. Other faclliti• lnslde the park site will Include 12 U.bted tennis courts, lighted handball eourta, athletic fields, picnic fieas and bik· inl and hi.k:ina tralla. Heritage Park bas been planned with the design team. Kammeyer. Lynch and Partners, conaultlnc Inine resi· d ent.a nearly every step of the way. For example, the aquatic center was designed after meet- ings with local swimming groups, which said they wanted pools for recreational, instruc- tional and competitive purposes. At the present, designers are meeting with residents interest- ed in 8IU and crafts to find out what facilities should be included in the arts and crafts center to be built in pbaae 2 Far &ui9fBoo SAN ftAMClSCO (AP) -n.Cll ... 'llla Allroetlt'> UoD ol1'wlwr1 fll al1ab baa u1alled Oakland Sf.booll ..... Buth Lene fOt" .,_ arda> NIDoYlAI an aeclalm•d but con·· trover1lal book from acboolUtnry abelves. Tbe 11190ciatloo adopted a reaolbtkln at its annual conference deoouncinl tbe move a an "arbitrary ac- tion." The superintendent, acl· ing on a complaint from a parent, ordered "Daddy Was a Number Runner" by Louise Meriwether r e- movedfrom the schools. The book was a critically. praised account of a young girl growing up in Harlem in the UG>s but it contains several explicit sexu al passa1e.s. Ad ances In State ACBAMZNTO (AP) Tru.llmmab coald l*J'dll ... new ~ esWlcatel, andel' a bW Mat to tbe Aae:mb!J floar. Auemb\)'man WllUe Bl"OW'D. D-San Fraoc1aco, 1aJd persom wbo bave bad sex chan1e opera- tl on s are freed ••trom peycbolog,lcal burdens ... "Clearly lbe next atep ls to seal the first birth certificate and live t hem new ones.•• be said. because a male who undergoes the operation should not have to live with a masculi.De name. On Wednesday the Assembly Ways and Means Committee approved the measure. J.2.7. ' Ntllu! Pipe Craeked SAN FRANCISCO CAP) Testing bas uncovered a cracked weld ln a 16-inch pipe feeding non-rad.loactlve water from con- densers to the steam generator of the nuclear power plant Pacific Gas & Electric Co. is building at Diablo Canyon. ( State ) The utility said Wednesday the crack was reported to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and other welds are being tested to "verify the integrity of the full steam generator piping system.'• PG&E said it also plans replacement of some electrical control cable. Gfrl'• Body Found REDLANDS (AP) -Police said they had no leads in the murder of a 15-year -old girl whose partially clothed body was found in an orange grove. The body of Paula Hernander. 15. was discovered W ednesda.y by searchers in the grove alon' the route she normally walked home from school, Capt. Edward Olmos said. Her parents reported her mis- ing Tuesday evening. Olmos saicl it was possible she had been sex- ually assaulted. Sltfp J..ea1'e• LA LOS ANGELES (AP> -The Queen Elizabeth II, the world's largest sea-going passenger liner, is on its way to Mexico after a 12·hour stop at the harbor here. The 963-foot British vessel left San Pedro harbor Wednesday · night, with Acapulco the next stop on its round-the.world voyage. The 90·day trip ends April 6 at New York. EMPTY WOODEN SPOOLS ARE BOL T£D TOGETHER FOR NEW 'GIANT TOY' Irvine's Youth Will Enjoy Group of Unique. Blgger-than-llfe Toya WORKER STEVE BLAGG HAMMERS AWAY AT SLIDE New Toy Wiii Tower 50 Feet High at Heritage Park The 66,000·ton ship has 861 passenger rooms, four s wim· ming pools, three restaurants, four nightclubs and a casino. ; PUBLIC NOTICE P UBLIC NOTICE !"--NOTICI! TOClll OITOllS IT A TIMaNTOI' A•ANOONME NT • SUPalUO. CO\Hlll'Otl TH• M US•Of' FtCTlllOUS :i STATIOl'CALll'OllNIA~lt •USINHSNAMI • THIECOUNTYOl'OllAHOll MAC.I( CLAltK. IM unft•~lq~ed : No A·tott• twreb't i:\M-., l'Nt Ott Oectmtwr ll .. E'1aleo1ELLAJANE ROGERS aka 10•. ht·~·~ 11$. of MACK '* LLA J ROGERS. Of'Ce .. .,..<I CLAllK COMPANY••• flcU11ou• bu•I I" NOTICE IS HEREBY C.IVEN 10 ltw ,..Un-.-certifi.•t._.f - :rl'dllO!'\ ol '""' abnvo n<m.,f <!f><Nlt>nt I Tiie 11-1 '"""""'of l!w Pfln<l.,.1 ~at •II Pe•'>Qn> "~"'"Q <l•lm\ .. qalMt ola<• of Ml~••-·• w l<I nam• wa' •• Mild OKMtinl tir• rM111lr•d 11) Ill• UM<I I\ ""' Moll" St-I, H1Jnlln9lon Jl>em, w•lh 1.,.. ""C"""' y VOU<he••. '" B•acll, Calllof'nlit tlMI. ~• olflc" of,,.. ct•rk <>I I.,. •bo~ •n 1 TM llcHltov\ ~lneu ,....,. \!al• ••d court or to pr~s•nlltwm. with'"" men I relllll"9 to "'"' t1<llOous ,...,,,. cnurv vouthe••. to the 110,,..,si~ btlnq •b•ndo1ted h I •u 1119<1 on ... MC HIPW-1 Cenltr Orlvt, Suite 1 US AU91HI 21 lt14 In the «>fflo ol Ow ••"'ll0"111ffcll C•llfornl•91MO wh•cll Coul\IV Citric of Or••111• C.o un1y 1) lht Dl•ce of "'"'""" ot II,. un Ctlilornl• FllS.. ... , llOn..S by"" I,.. l 1!rSIQ"9<! In all metier< SM•l•ln•"o 10 clivlOU•I· MmMY Ma<• c.1 .. n: ............ •• Hl•I• of w 1d dect<Mnt, w1th1n tour IMrtlOM<I -. --I• 1216 M~ln !11t>nllt\ .ii. u..e fir\! DUbllUllon ot thl\ Slrttl, Hu••Clnvton It.ch ~lllC)f'nl• Z,Ollu .,,._ • D•lt<I F•bru4rvn.1t11 l l,,. 1111\1,,.,1 Cor.duclecl _, s.Od • L~Y'P,,,. P•r1'f1" f1rtttl0U' bu\INH Nme -·~ <O"CIU( .. 0 : :;:·;~·~.=,~1;:..:.nl by ;~::"':.:..~",:IDltJT ellt<h•t •u11wrn. lllEMlll. "'-<OON•Lo. O.etm-11 i-1t.1>E I. llOSIEHWALO Mee• Ct .. -~ l',.fHsl91W11~ .. left l'JH .. ... Nt--1 c.m ... Orlw Siil!• un Pub!"~ O'M>O" Co.t\I 0• ,.,, P•IOI iow-1 llff<ll, C..,hlOf'"la llMt Mer<llJ, I0.11, 24 1111 ll•rMY>l«EllCUlrtl llOt 17 Hl1U~ll • Publt\""<J or .. n'l" {O~\I o.111v Pllol PUBLIC NOTICE ~•rch l 10.11.1• 1911 H0 11 ---------- l'ICTITlOUS IUSINIESS • NAMISTATIMINT • PUBLIC NOTICE The lotl-4"9 ~"""' '' 00<no bu" .. ·----------nHI •• • FICTITIOUSIUSINISS JOHN 0 LE'<EY S BOAT ANO PUBLIC NOTICE su ... ••Oll OOUllTOflTH• S'fAnOl'CALll'OltNIA 1'011 TMI COUNTY Ol'OllAHOE .... ,..,.., HOTIC'E OF H8AltlNO 01' PETITION FOtl l'llO&ATa 01' WILL AND FOlt LITTf.llS T•STAMI"· TAltV E qa1~ of W ILL IAM JOHN CLELAND O!.'<N-.ed. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lllal ARBUTUS M CLELAND fl•\ filed "'°'•In a ""UIN>tt lo• ProtMle of Wiil •nd fM i\SU<llftC• of L•ll•" T"l-ltla<y 10 th@ IJO'llllon•r refer~• to •llltll I\ m6d• I« ""1.,.• PoJrtlcul•"· ..,If 1 ... 1 ,.,. time end pl«• of tturln11 the-• ... , bftft Ml IOI' Aprfl S 1'11 at 10:00 a '" In IN courtroom ot 0.Ptr1'!1•nt No l of Mid court . .i 100 Civic Cettl ... Orlv• W..I, In Ille C.lly et S.nl• Alll C•ltk>m•• oatH -"" n. ttn WILLIAM£ MJOHN, co..nty Cltt11 HAllltYSCY. HODGH&ltOOOH A~~"'u• 1a1 c ... 1wv "'" 1 .. 1. ~1e 11• lA\ A,... .... tallfenol• -.1 A~ler:..._,I_ Pubtl.,.,.., <>'-Coa" 0•11'1' Pilot Ma<ell It. 11. 24. ltll 1°'"'"11 PUBLIC NOTICE lllCTITIOU$ IUSIHISI NAMI STATIMINf Tll• 1011-•"9 per.oft 11 OOlnt b•IS• Manager Appointed Joseph Galante has been named business manager for South Coast Community Hospital, South Laguna. He was corporate director of patient services for the Samaritan Health Services in Phoenix, AZ. He also served eight years as business· manager for a New Jersey medical center and as assistant. treasurer of a New Jersey bank. Tide Pools Tour Slated • NAME STATf.MliNT YACHT INSURANCE L TO. SOS lOlll •T11e 1o11owi..., SM•'°"" do•"Q ""'1 s1ree1,....._.,1a .. ac1> C.4•rtu ,..u ~~1 FESTIVAL OF ""T' The Marine Studies .. nu John a. .. v O'Lnev 1u42 Put1110 RE s T 4UllANT 1e1 TIVOLI Tf:ll• Institute in Dana Point • COOLMH SPECI ALTIES )OU Clrt lt.Hun4ll'Qlon8 .. cr1,C.At14"6 RACE. •SO ~un• c;."yoo Road, ... i)} conduct tt"depoOI CnterprlM, Colla ~ ... C•lltor"I• Tiii• bl.l\l,,••u I• tOl'ldUCttd llv •" In· l.•QUr'll INc:ll. C.lllonll• tttSI w tm lvldull Jw"' M. '°""'-· .,0 14111<rttl, toura or the rocky • Leri a.,o. nos &rnera1d ••y. JOM&.o·u11v L•9""• .. Kl\Otll..,...•mt• h -"-S ... 9u11e BMch, C.lllONll026SI Tflll Stat-I w•s filed with the Tlllt MINll fa COlldCICtttl.., 1111 In· S Or'"""1e at 2 p.m. ltur• • Tiiis bulltwls Is <onfU<l9d llY Ml In· Collfltv Cltt11 of Ort1•9t County on dlvlCNal. day, ~priJ 2 and 1: 30. •vlouat. flttlrueryU, 1"n ,,_.._tine • L•rt~ ,..,,,,. Tiii• u.t_. "'., fl!M w\111 tt1t p .m. ay, April 3. •T1111 ••114-... flltd w1111 n. f'llblllNd~CMito•11v P1i.t. CDu111Y O«ll"' OtMte c:-tv" .Retervations and tu~~\~~~ Of~'""' c...m1.," 11n.u,11enc1Aot111.ttn 1054-71 M¥<111,1t'1. • ~ turtber information m ay • ~.., 1-----------1 PW!..,.. 0r-. ~· °"'' ~11 ... be obtained by calling t~',~.r.~,<;;-'t o.u., :i~O:, PUBLIC NOTICE Merdito,17.,..a,,,.,., .. o.n .f93-98Sl> between 9 a.m. • . . • PUBUC NOTICE ---------•and 2 p .m. Mondays PVBUC NOTICE through Fridays . Free Forum Set Tuesday Bu2' Bought • LOS ANGELES CAP> -llderly ctUuna of the city now have a $53,000 bua of their own. The f ederll Ai'•• ~ency on AllDI )n>Yldecl lhrte· fourtlll el tM ftm4I and th• cltr tbl rest. -· Picketing Bill Killed Def eat Setback for Organized Labor WASHINGTON CAP) -A bill that would have strengthened the hand of striking construction un- ions is dead not 011ly for this year but for the foreseeable future, a dejected sponsor s ays. In a stinging defeat tor or· ganized labor and the House Democratic leadership, the com- mon situs picketing bill went down to a surprise defeat Wed· nesday night on a 217·205 vote. Although it directly affected only the building trades, the vote was the lint test or organized labor·s s trength in the new and heavily Democratic Congress. Boy Found Slain BIRMINGHAM, Mich. (AP) - More than 200 dectectives today searched for a well.educated "trusted individual" who smothered an abducted boy only a few hows before his body was found in a roadside ditch. Discovery of the body of 11· year-old Timothy King of Birm· lngbam, who was abducted from a neighborhood drugstore March 16, marked the seventh child ab- duction·murder victim io the last 14 months in OakJ and County. Unkup Protnted LONDON <A Pl An un· precedented alliance with the Liberal party saved Prime Minister James Callaghan's Labor government from defeat on a no-confidence motion, but the Labor party•s len wlng re· belled todl)' against the liokup. Some 80 Jeft·wing Lagorites si1ned a letter t.o Callaghan declarlos they would not be bound by h1I aareement to give the mlddle-of·the-road Llberalft a voice lo ehaplng 1overnment poUcy d\lrlnl the fo~r months re- maining tn the current aeaalon of Parliament. ~OcuSar11 W ASHINOTON CAP l Despite PrHident Carter's ob- jections to 30 fodtral water pro- J e c U. Corucrus ·aeema d•· ltrmlned to bavt tbe tlnal HY on the diAputed dam, r ervolr, lr· rlcatlon ed flood control pro- poull. Concreulonal IOUl'C predict. ( INSHORT J W asbington to t.estify about the killing of civil rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King Jr . However, Stokes said commit· tee investigators will interview Ray again. ed most, if not all, of the projects will wend their way back into the rederal budget. one way or the Mon""• Ties Sounht other. -u -w WASHINGTON CAP> -New Ray Probe 'End•' talks between the United States WASHINGTON CAP> and Vietnam will focus atllrston Chairman Loujs Stokes said establishing an economic rela· Wednesday his House Committee· .tlonshlp, probably starting with on Assassinations currently does an end to the American trade em· not plan to call convicted bargo, State Department of· murderer James Earl Ray to ficialssay. From A 10 SOUTH COUNTY WATER ••• Canyon and ends at the El Toro district reaervoir. That means whatever supplies are not taken from the Santia10 Aqueduct by other users wiJ'ld up in the d.istrlct's storage basin. Apart from several other small basuu1 maintained ln the Lake Forest area and in the City of San Clemente, there Is only one other significant water storage area in the entire south county. IT IS AN underground basin that lies beneath the city of San Juan Capistrano around the con· nuence of San Juan and Trabuco Creeks. It ls this basin that the Milslon Viejo Company has pro- posed tappin1 t.o flll ita lake and then rechar1lng with hither· If •de water for domestic uae. The Municipal Water District's Spraiue said the San Juan Basin, whtch bu an estlmattd capacity of about 2.8 blllion gallons. con· talns water or such ht1h aal.t con- tent that it ls presently unu.seable for all but a few a1rtcultura1 pUl"J)Oftel. But Spraaue said the b11ln could be o valuable 11tora1e re- source for the south county ti It could bu re-charged with good water. ''TREV WILL have to INtill some kind Ot bani r to prevent lnt.rUaf<lft ot aalt attr from th o<:eaa and mike 1ome otber &ecb.ldcal ~however. The barrier Sprague spoke of would probably consist of high· pressure water injecUons into the ground to create a zone beyond · which the salt water couldn't move. The company's efforts t.o re- novate the basin have the full en· dorsement of the agency that ad· ministers its supplies, the San Juan Basin Authority . What other projects are down the road to meet the south cou.n· ty•s emergency storaee needs? K YMLA OF THE Moulton Niguel District said his agency is pondering the posslbillty of build· ing a reservoir with a capacity of between 650 mlWoa t.o 1.3 bUllon aaUon.a. A similar project la beinl con- sidered b7 Sant& Martartta of· flclals and the Lapna Beach db-• trict ii 1tudyin1 the posalbWty of . Jolnln1 with other water a1enc1'3 • ln a reservoir project. ! Spraaue said Lake Mtsslon .. VteJo was never planned a.a a re-: aervolr baca03e of health depart-~ m nt rtlltrietion• on body contact recreaUon. For that rcuon, ibt • value lri compu.tlns day.to-day • 1toT1C capablllty ln the south coun'1 Ulht. B\lt MunlclpJl offtclal dld uy tta vl.lu u an emerato(Y 1toi;a1• f aclllty ii 1raatly enhanced by the lack ti f acWUea in the commun.IUea around it. "Got.a problem? Then write to P.al Dunn. P.at will " cut red tape, getting the. answers. and. act1on you need to aolve inequities in government. and buainesa. Mail • your que&tions to P.at Dunn, At Your Service, Orange Coaat Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1500, Costa Me1a, CA 92626. A8 many letters.as possible will be.anawered, , but ~ Jnquirfe1 or letters not inclt.1ding tM • reader's fuJl name. addreas. and busineu hours' phone number cannot be coruidered. TllU column appears dai· ly ezcept Saturdays. " I '1 kOaeck Baeb' Appreciated '.l>EAR PAT: I had a very pleasant experience in· volving a refund for merchandise returned to Ward and Harrington in Capistrano Beach. I purchased a ·new door knob on March 6, and found after I'd gotten ·home that it was not the type l needed. I wasn't able . to return to the store for a week, but my cash refund \¥as granted cheerfully upon presentation of my -sales slip. That in itself was a pleasant surprise, but then I received a letter from W & H asking if I were satisfied with the merchandise and service, plus ask· ing my recommendations for improvement and ad· ditional remarks. Now , that's the way to treat a customer! P.B., San Clemente It's great to hear from a happy consumer! Michael Hynes, regional director of retail sales for this division of National Building Centers, reports that the Ward & Harrington "check back" program for customers who have received refunds bas been In effect for almost three years. Approximately ZO let· ters per day are mailed on a random selecttoa basis. Hynes added that the response rate ls excellent. Girl Seout Am Bonoraf»~ DEAR PAT: I have three daughters who are Girl Scouts. I've often wondered where the money comes from to pay for the spot advertisements one sees on television for the Girl Scout program. Are sustaining membership monies tapped for this pro· motion? A.L., Newport Beach. The Girl Scout Council of Orange County re· ports that all radio and TV spots are a public service donation from the media. Frat Men Volunteer Michael Mattingley of E merald Bay and 15 Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity brothers from USC will distribute American Cancer Socie- ty neighbor·lO·neigbbor kits Sunday in Laguna Beach. The young men, who are donating their time to the Orange County unit of the American Cancer Society as a com- munity service, will be assisted by employes of Louise Turner Really. ""'""°' Spires is celet>fating tile first anniversary of ti.a open- ing of Hs Costa Mesa and Irvine To fmd & solve your emotional Pfoblems . . . to gain confldence & control of your hfe . the DEVa · DPMEHl CENTER grves 1ndiv1dual & Qfoup guidance ... Bioleedbaclt ... progressive reiaxabon aud10- 1JOQfammed learnlllQ. ....... -. ............. CALL TODAY FOR FREErn~~':1231 llOO.IMIT cma 16052 8acll Blvd Hunli~ lleaeh, CA 92647 dinners I II Restaurant!; wrth n j;mfast•C trPat fl,, Yl'll TWO DtNNf'RS I OR THE PRICE OF ONE' If nur way of suytnQ tt1.1nk • I ·r 1'1•111g 01i• • CUSlomef -----------~ Tiit only rtqulrtments .,, that you llfmg th11 coupon wtth you ind both mull 111u11 bt tllt 11m1. The Two For One 0111111 god at Splru Restauunts I In Cotti Mtu and lrvlnt only and lncludu Top Siflom Sttak. Fish and Ch1p1 I If AMII IMI. TIMI Two Ftr Ont otttr 1nd1 M11ch 31. t977. Two Fet Ont Dlltlllr l,.clala mM1t bt con111111ff on lht prtmlu1 1M 1rt 1tfVtd lf1111 2 , ••• ",., ..... All tlMf """" """' .. " ,...lllaf Pflc••· I TOP .. SIEAHro'~•3.75 1 A Mt M/Z ll. ... (pr•C8lbll ........ ) -.WINI-~........... I ....................... rtl ... WW. I BM! IHPI )WO FOR •2.251 i ... ,, .... , .... ~=t:e::.~·111111• I :1 llOMI BE& TWO FOR 12J5 I 'U...., ..... , ... Nt!J.., ... .,..,...................... J . ....,~,,,..,"''"lllltt"· , I· ·---------... !. SPIRES a real grabber fiextbte tool retrlevee object• ttom hafel to reach plaon. Plcka up ttllnga your ting.,. oa11t tMch. Reg. 1.89 11• . . -... ~'--; .... -..... . . . . . . ... ·.. . . , ~ . . . . . . . . . . • ·.r/ ..... ~ • • • ~. ·: . -. . . • • -• • #' - n · d more space? the answer is in this big cabinet . . . . . .. Fret no more about where to put things. Thia 4 shelf cabinet with slldlng doors can hold plenty. Ready to assemble and finish top grade partlcleboard. A great Idea for your home or garage. #UC643216. Reg. 19.95 .:.:-··.·,· .. ~·----. .. .. -.. . .. .. . . . . . . .. ... . . . . . . ' . .. .:::·/..:.:·_: :' -:' .: : : ; : : ·. : : : ·. ~ ·. : ; ... .................... ~···,~· ·~ .... :·· .·: .: ..... : : : J. • ' It •• : : : : • •.,. .... •• •• ··.-.. ·.·::·· ... ::::··-.. ·.· .. ~·.·.·· ... ._·,:-:::····.:·····~ ..... sturdy "astlc trash stishers Heavyweight, leakproof plastic bags that can flt In 32 gallon trash cans. Perfect size for collecting lawn debris. Package of 25. 249 no shock treatment here Wrap and protect wiring like the pros do. 3/4" wide x 60 ft. roll of flame retarl:tant, weather resistant tape. Reg. 69« 39° ·house' of a different color Have a new house w~thout moving. SprNd on a coat of Glidden Spred Houae Paint GoH on euy •nd dtlM fut. Reg. 12. 79 911 •'· ""'-.~ fi] ,. ., .. ., . "" . .. . . .. . .. ~ ..... .......... ~ . . . . .. . . ..... · ... ... .......... :·· ......... . ...... handy organizer for your hang-ups . . . . Bring order to your kitchen. garage or hobby room. 2 ft. x 4 ft. x 118 In. sheets of ready to flnlah pegboard. Reg. 89' age cllckless switch or double plug-In Smooth working, reliable, noiseless llgh1 switch With Ivory toggle, #1421. or ivory ootored duplex receptacle wlttt ground. 95~,h . . . . . ... . . . hang It up ... with tlle big hook Screw ttlla hook Into a wood w.11 and you've got something strong to hang things up on. Vinyl coated steel. Reg. 65'. 49° 'llghtscape your home Highlight your landscaping and provide security with thla Malibu low energy 5 llgtlt set with timer. #LV2005T. Reg. 119.95 5888 big blue, the paint tray 9 Inch tray 18 • c::ontalner for your paint, plua It l'laa a bruah well. Get organized before you etart • proJ.at. Reg.99' 79° • . I I ' IN BEil FACETIOUS com· mentary, the multi winner of the coveted Oscar for fashion de· signs said, "This is not a fashion show. It is a very serious de· monstration . . a lesson. . a Elizabeth Taylor's first party dress has an 18-inch waistline. Daily Pilot Photos By E.Lee Payne I JOU I' • p MIN Head uld tb1t t:*atwattC~~~ ed rnCllt ii a ''rich, b1Msome husband." Sire au11estec1 that her au- dience take some hlnta &om the •movies uwhicb knew bow t.o do anytb.ln1." Most of the costumes sbowo were designed by Mias Head and represented the movies in the '30s and '409. How~ver, not all the costumes were seen on screen as some of the scenes they were- made (or were cut. Still, they remain some or the designer.s's favorites and she felt they were representative of her subject of "bow to get your man." MISS HEAD SAID that this probably will be the last showing t .. tM .,. --old ndwara.IOoll.w~ toama ms. :« ..:-:.~,,,.,==- v a:rllt.Jr; tlJll ttPt ,,.. t •• u you walk a.ec ... "1'* an\ walk 8QY «her way.'' Tbey were tavlab lA cSa•p and decorations; f minlnt and yet provocative. Al each model appeared in a costume, tho desllner comment- ed about who wore the aown and aave a aynopail of the movie, which, of coune, ended with the woman catching her man and liv- ing happily ever after. Some at ber sugcestions were: -Wear sometliing dUferent. For instance, back in the '205 when girls bated tbetrparents for making them wear proper fashions and thetr hair in ~m­ padours, the .. It Girl," Clara Bow, changed all that and became one Of the greatest stars Seductive attire (left) is suggested for the 'happy homemaker. ' Dorothy Lamour gown would cost $80, 000 to make today. Gold bullion decorates costume. Crime Scene Pro bed. ' By DENNIS McLELLAN 0t•Delly,.l19tlleff Nearly everyone has beard of the power ol organized crime ln the East where "on-the-take'' cops and Judaes overlook 1ambl· ln1, prostitution,· narcotics and Po~ography. ut oraanlzed crtme In sunny O n1e County? Yes, but In a dl(fertnl form. says Robert W. Ferauaon, PhD, who is teaching a UCI extenalon claH on the subject. In Oranp County: there haa been no .cceptanc• of «1amzld crime's il~ acUVltles Llly the public and law enforcement of. ncl1ll, which 11 nttetaary for It"" t.o thrive,·~ Ferguson. ''They have tried," notes Fer1U10n. "But our population doesn't tolerate it. And I'd go so far as to aay people in the system are lnCOJ'f'Uptlble (for bribes and payoffs)." Therefore, he HY•. or1anized. crlme baa lnflltrated tbla county by lnveat1n1 money made elsewhere into "lefltlmate" bulineua, bulldln11 and.land. Sh1tterin1 the myth that all or· 1anlzed crlm~ w "oo the street,'' la Just one ol the tnJ1conceptlon1 that Fersuaon hopes to dtapet tn Th• .llhtory or Orsanlzcd Crime lnAmenca. It m for 10 Tuesday• from 1 10 p.rn. &ft room tel, Sodll SCJtD Lab Qll lb• UCl camjNI. ., -or ....... .... ,,...;a;.,.... ... ...,d= ...... _,.... -.. - - .. .. CIMnd .. Unaf! p.n to ~ta. att• fJI "1-mu..t.. • JQ1e4 by Cary Gr -ur, Doratb)' Lamour ID oae of tbt 'Told tbowl" where she wu marooned on an lsland with Bini ere.by and Bob Hope. In lovt wttb both and 1lavtnc re- ce1ved propoeals from each one. 1be was in a quandry because, by American custom, it wu un- thinkable to accept both. A• ruler ol the island, abe de. cided t.o bave the best of both world.a and declared it lee al for a woman t.o have two husband!. -Or, when Ava Gardner as a model who was very poor because abe supported so many relatives, decided to "borrow" a gown t.o attend a charity ball. Of course, the plot was repeat- ed. Across the room was a wealthy, handsome bachelor, played by Frank Sinatra~ who fell madly in love with her, mar- ried her and not only bought her that gown but the whole collee· lion. A point Miss Head made was that "each of these women did their homework. They knew ex- actly what to wear lo accomplish their feat/' She likened it to the soldier "who ah\tays goes into battle Y!ith the right uniform.'' Miss Head also discussed the "correct time" to wear diamonds and passed on advice from her friend, Zsa Zsa. "WHEN A SOLDIER is adroit and brave enough to win a medal, he wears it any time. "So tell the girls to get all the diamonds they can and not worry about when to wear them.·· Turning serious, Miss Head said, "I( I were elected presi- dent, I would pass a law that everybody would know how to sew." She showed a few ensembles from her Vogue pattern line, and asked everyone to purchase the patterns because proceeds go to her favorite chariliei:.. Also in the collcct1on were some of her dei;1gns com · missioned by celebrities for personal use. Included was Elizabeth Taylor's first party dress. which the designer described as pretty and romantic. She lamented, "I wish all young girls looked like that at a party today.•· The strapless frock featured a voluminous skirt with an 18-inch waistline. ''Once you catch your man. what will you wear?" Miss Head answered the question with her finale of wedding go" ns, which she believes is still the best attire for such a ceremony. A favorite of Edith Hea d is this California heritage gown designed for Merle Oberof!. BEA ANDERSON, Editor Thursday March 24. 1977 Bl ··~ Award-winning designer Edith Head says that by wearing the right clothes, women can get what they want, which is usually 'a rich, handsome husband.' (The class started March 22, but there ia late regiatration. Further details are available by callln1 extenslon information, 833-5514). Toplca to be covered tnclude narcotic trafftc, gambllna, The Slctltan Mafia, patterns of authority and recruitment ablOl\f families, types of ac- Uvltles and oraanlsed crtme in Oran1e County. A former patrolman, in· veat111\0r, er1eant and vice ot, ficer for tbe CUy of Oran1e. FtrlUIOft ll the director or the AdmtnlatraUon ol Justice Pto- 61'•m at Saddltt>ack Colle1e. He denn• or1anlttd crime u a IC'OUP ~ ~Pl• wbo have a • monopoly over licit and illicit services in a particular geo-. graphkal area. It uses organiia- tlonal and management prin- ciples supported by ~orrupUon and gangster technique~. Members of these organlza. lions do not flt the stereotype of the Hollywood gangster. Like a business. it has a hlet'arcby from the buslness- sulted admlnlstraton and sub- administrators on top, down t.o the "workers" on the street. Although organized crime bu come t.o 6e known collectively aa the Mafia or the Cos1 N<>1tra, Fer1uson.111ys, there ls not Just one cultural group involved. ~arlld C ll'OUP8 IUCh U . ... bJacks, Mexicans, Italians and SlciUans are Involved in Ol'- gani1ed crime. There waa such a thing as ''The Malla" dating back to 1400 Italy and Stelly, but it now ls difficult to attae!h a name to what on~ was the Mana, he says. Durlna one meetCng Ferauson will describe the Sicilian Mafia') rela\lonabtp to Am4!rican crime. He ••Y• or1 nltcd crime la esUmat.d to have be1un in the United st.tts With narcotic traf- fic ln New Or>ean1 In 1890. Fer~ has 1everal suest •P••ken 1cbeduled tor tbe class \nctudin1 represenuUves from the district auorney'1 aft\oe 4 and law ct m offtc rt. ) T • un M Fara la .,IYD I ALI: P.•· ,.....,, J 'p ... l tM .. •w~~~llUl1~ ~ater • A CKarcb ll·AJll'il 1tJ: ll iOYU. 'r™"ty aad mooey -tMM oi.df.Wla:al ta1U bullD-Yoa mlJ OWOi badtJ to Invest ln own*-~ '81i TACSU8 (April »-Jilq JO): What J'OU aeek 1t Hallable, but C09tl·money. Diltance aboukS aJao be ccmldered. Make clell' that you no Ion&• Intend to carry burden tbat belonp to'°" meoneelle. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Make new ala.rt ln n9i:=on. Be independent in tbouabt, ac-Uon. t orielliallty -create, lmprlnt )'OW' ownaty . CANCEll (June 21..July 22>: Follow tbrooth oa hunch; Intuitive intellect 15 sharply honed. For needed Information, check backstqe, behind the· scenes. Subtle hint.a come your way. LEO (July 23-Aue. 22): Social life ac- celerates -routine changes. You rmd that more persons are drawn to you and pay meaningful • compUments. Horizons expand. Highlight humor. VlllGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22): Path is cleared for you -progress is highlighted. Stones, ob- stacles are eliminated, You get chance to speak, act, to create, to display unique abilities. ~IJl.J aD •llbt· montb vllll· It lUHI bebll\d • ... • stan4. $2..U wonb ~ f enlllser, • S:Ut WaterinJ CID, $1.50 trowel, ... SI volume of "Root." (an antboloay of a Bott.on Ferntbattracecl It.a ancestry back to the Garden of Eden) and a carpet full of shredded brown leaves. Okay! Okay! So I was ln over my bead. Don't you think I knew that? I guess I got a little over- confident W'ith the suc- cess of my dleffenbachia and figured I could han- dle it. It wasn't that people didn't try to warn me about Boston ferns. Mayva pushed me into a chair cme att.emoon and ''I paid t.MICb for it.''J&Udtadly. I b..S never Mm a f\&Jl. crown maa liH mouth- to·mouth re11uscltation to aleafbefon. lA,UNA IEACH SCHOOL OF All LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 22): Involvement is keynoted -creaUve juices flow. You receive message which could ultimately result in slgnlfi. cant benefits. Long distance call may be high on agenda. !~?,ft~~~~:~~; S~~IN~ "~ARTf R 'we.re 1967, '68. '69~ "11. '73 ~ and '74 " • A11rll 4 thru June 4 SOORPIO (Oct. 23·Nov. 21): DomeaUc ad· justment could be featured. Accent on arrange- menta affecting finances. Partner, mate. 1bould be consulted-indiplomatic way. SAGITl'ARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Lie low - play waiting game. Do less talking, more listen- ing for subtle hints, valuable information. Plant seeds for future. Accent on legal rights, restric- tions. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Your natural talents, abilities are more evident-and bring you 'realer degree of recognition. So- meone from your past makes reappearance. • AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Create, ~originate rather than duplicate -means get. : 1our own, style, methods, policiea across in meaningful manner. Emphasis on affection, im· pulsive responses, attraction to member of op- posite sex. PISC~ (Feb. 19·March 20); Be finished with the old -try new concepts. One you imitat- ed will encourage you to develop style of your ·own. Check leases, rental policies. If March 25th ls your birthday you are sensitive. independent and have an abundance of pride. Regular Ticket Price 'v Choose from a large selection women's, 1uniors, masses sportswear! I~ M.F.O. ...IC111111 FICl1IY llYUT Newport, Inc. 1804 NEWPORT BLVD.COSTA MESA (Corner ot Harbor) • 645 1804 M-4'rt ta"' ·9 pm -Sat •• "' ... p "' """ .._.. .,. ... o.ity Pilot Plleto" Patrtcll 0.-11 Scholarship winners include Mike Bagetta, Catherine Jean and Julie Watson. Artists Honored Ten scholarships ;rnd 48 honorable mentions have been awarded to outstanding student artists 'by the Laguna Beach School of Art in the third annual countywide Children's Art Festival. Laguna Beach Museum of Art, located at Pacific Coast ffigbway and Cliff Drive. The show is open from noon to 4 :30 p.m. through Saturday, March26. Seholarship winners are from various county high schools. Chaired by Mrs. Harry Lawrence of the school 's support group, Designing Women, the outreach program was titled Color It Orange. They are: Thomas Atcheson, Costa Mesa; Mike Bagetta, Laura Gallean and Catherine Jean, Edison ; Jim Lee, Westminster; John Hanneman, Huntington Beach; Michael Tobias, Fountain Valley ; Julie Watson and Mark Rollo. Laguna Beach and Bryan Van Sell, San Clemente. · Students from 6 to 18 years Crom public and private schools in Orange County ent<.'red works in any media. including oils. watercolor, ceramics. crafts, pen and pencil drawings. Scholarships are ror any quarter during the coming year. or the 1,100 entries. 431 were selected for s howing at the Calendars Cap Coast HUNTINGTON B~ACH WOMAN 'S CL~ R~ervations are ~Mll" •ccepted for a club-sponsored tour to Lake Tahoe May 22-25. Lodging for three nights, several meals. transportation. tours to Reno, Virginia City and Carson City are included in the price. Further in· formation 1s available by calling Irene Edwards. tour director, 536·2642 Also, Nancy Kryder. OCC biology instructor and Lamaze trainer; and Betty Inman , OCC counselor. Separation. Transition and Closure will open lhe sessions. The April 11 t opic 1s The Legal Aspec:Lc; of Divorce. and the April 18 lecture will deal with Sangl e Mothers and Part·t1me Fathers. IRVINE JUNIOR EBELLS: The Frances Allen fund for rape vic- tims has been originated by a $500 contribution from the group. It will be used to defray the cost of medical treatment at UCI Medical Center for rape victims who are un· able to pay Frances Allen 1s a chn1cal social worker and coo rdinator of the Further information is available by calling the Woman 's Center, 556·55$7. C 0 N T R 0 L EMOTIONS : Di s- coveries Unlimited, a program for women, will discuss how to control your emotions instead of letting them control you on Wednesday, March 30, at Golden West College. The presentation by Bob Pomeroy, "marry- ing chaplain" on the Queen Mary and director of Los Alamitos Com· munity Counseling Service, will be in the community center from 9 a.m. to noon. No registration is necessary, and the morning programs are free. Rape Protocol Program CYCLES SALUTED: at UCI Medical Center. "The Santiago Library The fund will be ad-System, a cooperative of ministered by the South nine pubUc libraries in Orange County Women Orange County, is salut- A g a 1 n s t R a P e ing bicycles and cycling CSOCWAR) at the dif1crc· durin& March and April. tion of Ms. Allen. Contributions may be made by contacting Jrvme Junior chairman Barbara Reynoldff through SOC WAR , "WbBt bap.,ened to '70 Painting • Btalnnlng. Ad- and '72?" I asked. v1nc1d. Draw Ina • Baalc, "I didn't have time for AD&R Waten:otar: C.-and ::~~!_~e years. I had raise funds Oallrt Printmaking; Jewel· .. Are you saying they ry: culpturt; En1m1llng: f I b Ctr111lcs: Photography; Art ~~:nd?'~ot of fiddling OI' your C U 1 History: Children'& Art. ''I'm saying you're lay-organization EVENING CLASSES In life ing yourself open for an If ..-. non profit Drawing: Painting: Drawing alienation of affection ,~ and Composition: Ceramics; suit." club or orgoniiation PhotDgr1phy. But I didn't listen. Last needs to raise funds call R.U.ly Noll4imimi,..terr June, I plopped down $23 u.~ c w 1 h I l h f Or ODe Of the most '"""""l'OO enter flt Of p Oflt Of ~rot Nrt beautiful Boston Fems I 89'1-2533 ond we (714) 4'4-1520 had ever seen in my life. will send you OU' 2222 l.a1Ju.a Ca.yo. ltd. Never bad I paid that Chaity Foir detoils LotHa ,.ac• t26SJ much for a plant before. ·==========..!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~~ The investment did - strange things to me. While on book tour. I called home every night. As I told the operator, "I want to call person-to- fern." My son answered, "Hi, Mom . whereareyou?" "My plane is leaving. How's the Boston Fern?·' "We're fine and so's thefem. Wemi.ssyou." "Don't waste your time on me," I said angrily. "Mist the fem. If you miss a day misting, I 'll know you missed.'· Peering Around B A R 8 A R A MARSHALL of Newport Beach, a freshman at California Hospital School of Nursing in Los Angeles, has completed the first six months of scholastic, patient.care requirements. Some 500 persons wit- nessed the traditional candlelight "capping" which dates back almost to the beginning of formal education for nurses a century ago. A RECEPTION honor· ing auxiliary members of the Assessment and Treatment Services Center of Coastal Orange County was held in the home of chancellor and Mrs. Daniel G. Aldrich, Jr. The reception, hosted by the board of direct.ors, abo honored the many contributors who support the juvenile diversion program at the cen(er. ABRACADABRA'S SUPER CLOSE-OUT SALE STARTS FRIDAY Our build.in~ ha8 been 8old and we must vacate by Euler. Now is the time to outfit your children, grandchildren, nieces and nephew8 at low, low prices. Save 20% to 75% on boy8 and girls clothing, si2e8 0 to 6x. Prict's 8lashed on toys and accesseries too. All 11alt"8 final. Fixture8 al110 for 11ale. Hours: 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. (Closed Sunday11) 224 Marine A' e., Balboa bland 4 I R 4 C A 0 4 I • 4 4 I • 4 C A 0 A I R 4 I • 4 C 4 n 4 A 44:::::::~;;:0~,..~~~~~~,,.~ 4 I II 4 A I II A II .. ... 831·9110. The salute la part of the system's focus group program. Free Informs· lion packets are availa- ble and related displays and tie-in pro1rams such aa lectures and lilms are ____ .....:.... ____ ~:=:===:=:::=========:::::::=~ 'SrJiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiirii!iiii!i~iiii~~m BOOKLET: The Lung I Association has de- v e I oped a 32 ·page booklet titled Un - derstanding Tax Reform. ' ( AUCTION RARE COIN AUCTION • Friday, Marth 25 • 8 p.m. REGULAR AUCTION •Sunday, March 27 • l p.m. M11nlficeftt cut afus & CfYSt•I -European • Amencan -l.amc>s -Ofiental carpets. some ant!Que, all 1n good condition -Porcelains, vases -fine 011 pa1nt1og' -Watercolors -Jewelry -The "Sasha Bfastolt" colledion -Necklaces -R1n1s -Pend1nts -Sculptures 1n 24K Gold on marble & onyx bases - Numbeftd -With certificates -Plus hundred$ of other items for our inventory of over $1.500.000 -All at baraarn prlQes COME & SEE THE FUN & EXCITEMENT OF AN AUCTION IN TffE Rn.AXED l COMFORTABLE ATMOSPH£R£ or ONE Of ORANOl COUNTY'S LOVWHT GAU!Jtl£$. No dwp for lldm6atlon -.....,. .elcome. HOURS Inspection & private sales Dail~ 9-6 p.m.: Tuffday & Thurtdey 9·10 p.m.; Sunday 11 a.m. TERMS Use your BankAmericard - Master Cherae -C~k -Cash y ""'' ''"""' Ltd. 1232 No. Tustin Ave. aran~. CaUfomla 92667 (714) 833-2357 • lOCATIOff • Ool liM"' ,&,. fU>I _., Ill Mloll.• A~ & I ......... u • .......,.,.., ·"*'"' .. """ ~"' - ~~i ~) \ ~ } ~.p Wfllllm H. Y.Uand l..bnNd ~·'°'*' ...,., • ~ WMWl .&ooc ,.-..-··--el~ .... It describes changes in Income. estate and gift tax provisions and is available at no cost from the Lung Association of· fi ce, 1717 N. Broadway, Santa Ana. 83S·LUNG. The other series topics are What Now? -Com· munlcation Skills, Sex· uality Handling Your Sexual Feelings, and Pulling It Together. sponaored. Event.I lnclude bike safety intpection cllnlcs Saturday, March 26, at Newport, Orange; Placentia, Mesa-Verde, Fountain Valley and University Park libraries. A travel forum featur- ing Four Across America, the story of a family's bike ride from coast to coast. wil~ be presented at the Hunt ington Beach Library, April 16; and on April 22 at the San Clemente branch. PREVIEW FREE TO THE RRST 25 CALI.IRS- 'MONTH FREE WITH A 3 MONTH MIMIEttSHIP s7 600 FOR AU. 4 MOMTHS! NO CONTRACTS! NOTHING 10 llGN -NO OILIOATION -CALL NOW ROBERTA PRIEST 963-6693 AFU:/N~~~Y.J ' - ( F DEA A N· c trom AA pu t , • lbybe lt w n :•ave a WU , IOIMntni 1olDa th J r urr am :W~~~:;i':':::;::: don, t. remarw. uro tr-ai1.e11in out.rap. Illy bmband conll.nu• to drink, but by the 1race ol God l no longer punf.ab m)'Mlf became of it. 1 now tollow a procram ot ·•one day at a Ume," and lt ls belplna me beceme a complete person qain. - RECOVERING ALCOHOL AND VRILJTY By Lawrence K . Altman, N.Y. Times Proloneed drinking of alcohol, which alters male sexual behavior, accomplishes these changes by stimulating the liver to drastically step up its destruction of the male sex hormone, according to results of a scientific study. Toxic effects or the alcohol lead the liver to produce up to five times the amount of the liver enzyme that normally breaks Pu • I DEAR ANN LANDERS: Your recent ad· vice to the ll·year·old girl with the space between her two front teeth was very good. However, I think you were wrong to say, "Ask your mother t.o take you to the den· JCPenney to. I' HS an be 1 p Keep up the ~ work a.ad alp DM -A P'ATHUWHOCAJlt!S .. D£A& l'ATBB&: TltHlla rar &~t t'Om 114pellr.'t, Dad. I dnenen. P .. U.crew.l'Uea&a._..le,..-. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am aolnc to bt an unwed mot.her lo about alx months a.od neett to know how to deal with nosy re· latives and friends. 1 feel it is best not to keep the baby and already have made plans t.o go to a home for unwed mothers in another part ol the state. This is a small, gossipy town. What should 1 say when I return and am questioned about where 1 have been? REPUTATION AT STAKE ( OIUIA~ COlJSl~S) EXPANDS YOUR WORLD in the DAILY PILOT ·--·l-,__,_,... eun ... , ,.," ........ .,, ........ tt._ ,... __ ... /\ ....... l~-- l••fltf "' ... ...,.,.., P'lit ........ u_ .... "'""· 0."'9 ta1i. lwill -~, ...... ,,, .............. 1 ..... Mlltl .... , ........ ,_ ......... ,, ........ llJflt .. l••l llZt IOl4-pl• m•ny -'""' """'••••-ill• ~1"4lll•m• " '""'' ""' "'"' tor lllt 4-n-.u.1 n>t1orrt11r•N1-llulw& 1 .. itod 1 H m~· \l•twrhll'•f' 8HJI: ~IDt'f1l"8N c .... Ill•--•• m 1n1p m rl•oly T-• n.un 1111u11 m 'l. t'°'*" pnor l•• .\urU.•1 R-.t'.uurtt ~1~tl"\f 1~4lton Yf'Uilftd Aurluwt '••llt:rMM I Lld . 1m N T...ua A•• . °"-• . r•llf !l..""'7 1Tlt1 W.~ JU>I ""Y'ft al 11•1•11• ..... -block .... "' :-;.,.pen I ... , ....... )' • STOREWIDE STARTS FRIDAY, MAR. 25th, IO A.M. BE HERE EARLY FOR BEST SELECTION.SORRY, NO MAIL OR PHONE ORDERS! Women's Fashions °'ig. Mow 40 only LIS I 001 nylon T \hirt Dross . . . . . . . .. 11 .00 DRESS CLEARANCE Junior & Mo\\es S.zes StrC'el l1·nr11h & Jump,uot Oroq 18 00-74 00 5.50 SAVE 50°/o-75°/o 36 only Ms\CS Short Sets 1SOO 11.88 25 only Mw's Plo:d Pon•s 3 qq 1.88 '40 on 'I , s srr P'! Knot Top. 'H.l).1000 5.88 20 on'y I s •:<l<J'' ,.,.,,. J ., n----';h1rt· 1000 5.88 I 5 only LP.w:i•h"" '' rn JPrm. 1800 6.88 I) 00 9.88 SPORTSWEAR CLEARANCE SA VE 50°/o-60°/o Womt>n1s Linqt>rit> & Foundations org Mow )2 only Bros DoublP •nit yr on r. J 12A & 328 on y white ')00 2.88 19 only Bro, Foncv lor,. 32A & 32( oolf wti.•P H only Peny Pants IOO't nv ':>l'l- 4 50 2.81 small only ptn• & blun 300 1.18 so only PQl'lty Hov• s ... om P\\ mesh, ·~nrorced to" hort & 17-1 l >nfy, coif Pe bt>on Spec'° l /99< 174 only Pnnly Hm e BudgPt pr1c.ed. PeonlCYrPd toP '·mJU & "v'''fllf' 0-.v Gou <.un• ')n 145 only Ponty Ho\e RP.onforcf'd t~ qolo. suntCJ'l, nvq. & lonq only Spec1nl 44• 28 only Lonq Robe I OO't nylon floral print. 11'\PCl . . . . . 16.00 7 .88 26 only Baby Doll I 001 nylon floral pnnt, med . 900 4.11 17 only Shorty Pa1omm Rowor pnnt, looq ~leave Szes 7 9 I I 8.00 4.11 I I only Nuj1t Gowns Sl,.e11e & sleeveless broken sue~. I OO't nylon pastel colo.-\ 16 00 I 1.81 6 only long G>wns F-1orol print, 1001 nylon. brolten sizes . . . I 0.00 4.11 Womt>n's Acct>ssorit"s O'lg. Mow '459 only Jewelry Asst Chain~ & Eomngs .• 200.300 99• 2 I only Hand Boqs Vinyl by Berne 1800 12.99 I 0 only Knot Hots, cre(ln 2.50 99• I 3 only Mcie Up Mirror\ 6.50 Two ~ W1th stood 900 I I only Cosmetic Coses, plastic . 500 .J.50 ,, Shot"s orig. 284 only pr Women's Sandals Mou0<ne coveted heel 9 qq 58 only pr. Men's Casual Shoes ... 12. 99 I 25 only pr. Bo~' Dress Shoes .... 8.99· I 2. qq Girls'. orig. SO only T-Shirts (7-14) ..•. . 4 00-4 so liJ only Tops (4-6•) . 4 29.500 liJ oMy sis Shirts (4-6x} 100 '40 only sis Shirts (7 14) . 5.SO JO only Pants (7 14) . 8.00.8 50 75 only PCl"tS (~) 600 Infants'. or;g 2 only 4-d-owP< MoplP Ch!" Is I 00 00 '4 only Evenflq N11sP< Set I 0 9<? I 00 only overnicji1 disposable diaper• I I 5 Mt>n's Clothinq or•q. 82 only Denim Jeans. IOO't collon 7 98 4-1 only ~lonnel Short,, IOO't rotton large & extra lorqe 7 9R 39 only Sport Short\, .olid col()( & ,tnpes SO '50 blend fXJIY c.onon, med 0nlv 8 00 35 only Sport Shorts, solid col0< 50150 med11Jm only 7 00 '45 only D-ess Slo<h asst styles. solic colors I OOi poly, bro en SIZf'S 11 (X)..17 00 liJ only Dress Sloch Solids & pll"Jlds 1001 pdy broken sites 1300.24 00 '40 only Seofa~ Jeons 100'.t colton novy denm. 29 36 waist 17.00 33 only Cosuol Pools. Fashionable elOll'•<" waist, pdy/conoo, brkn sizes 16 00 86 only Dress Shirts Asst. styles & color, & blends, brolten WPS 5.00. I I 00 I 52 only Dress Shirt\ Outstond1nq quality. better d-ess shirts I JOO White & osst stripes, poly/cotton 1onq sleeve, broken sizes . I 5 00 I 05 only Gaves. Leather & knit ton, brown-& c,ay.. . ...... 3.99-5.99 Boys' orig. I 00 only· f\-&-school Sic i Pojano lsize B only) . . . . . . . • . . . . 4.SO 30 only short sleeve Shirts . • 6 SO I 00 only rib mt Socks (blue only) 36 only 0$St Bo~' Jeons .. • . ea. 69' 6.~.50 36 only Short sleeve Shirts . . . . . '4 00-6.00 Fine Jt"welry orig. 6 only Gents 1......ied Worches . . . . 19.88 I only Gents fashion chss 6 functlOfl LE.D . 99 95 q only Gents 6 function L.E.O. Watch .. 79.95 3 onty Gents 6 function LE.D. Watch 59 95 I only Gents Lltrooix LE.D. Watch .... 26..88 I I Mow 7.99 7.88 3.99 Mow 3.44 3.88 1.99 3.88 6.88 4.88 Mow 39.88 4.88 99• How 4.88 5.88 3.99 2.99 4.99- 6.99 9.99 12.88 12.88 3.99 10.88 1.99 Now 1.18 4.11 49• 3.99 2.50 Mow 14.11 10.00 69.18 49.11 19.11 Cameras orig 2 only Bell ond Howell Double Feature Cartridge Mo111e Pro1ectcx\ ........ 95 00 )0 only Photo Chomo1; . . . . ... 3 45 I 00 only Len~ Cleaning Papers ...... eo. )()o Hardwart" 40 only Goss Mirr°' Tiles lomiled selection . . . ...... . .138a Now Mow 7.88 44• 40 only Sockets. assorted sizes . I 5"9· I I q 6 only fud Site home security s~lem Portable. solld state . . . . . ... 'm.99 239.88 Sporlinq Goods oriq Now W only Men's T ennos Shorts. ossortoo colors sizes s.m.1 .• 1 8 qq 3 on y T oblP T P.<lnos Table\ 1• 0 lop OS I\ 74 95 4 only T oblP. T enn1s r oblPs 1'• •• top 0\ 1S 29 99 39 9</ 4() only P'S Ladies r ennos Dres\e<.. Lomoted style\ & size\ Des1gier Labels .... 13.99-40.00 Toy Dept. TOY CLEARANCE Lorge A\s()(tmem of Toys, Pre· School & School Aqo Oig 4 qq 21 qq SAVE 40°/o Home Furnishinqs 80 only Du~t Ruffles. all size' 6 only Bun~ Bedspreads . . ... ong 11 .00.16.00 .1099 WHITE GOODS Sheets. Coses, T won. Full Queen, Kong Fitted & Rot Some Complete Se1s Asst Oig. 2.99-12qq S.88 15.00 7.50 6.88 Now 9.11 6.99 SA VE I 5°/o-40°/o . 2 only 2 pc. Tank Set .600 Home Enterlainmt"nt I only AM/FM record/Ploy 8 track record . . . 259.95 I only 0,00 8 trod player . . . . . . 69 95 r only 1cr· 100"£ scltd state b /w TV .. 14'i.95 2 only Aoor Modal S~ers .. ea. #R.95 2 only NM-M Steteo Console ... IW.95 2 bnly '4 chamel Rodio/Phono/S. T . 249.95 NEWPORT BEACH 1.99 MOw 166.00 29.00 129.95 3t.OO 1&5.00 ....... 0 Housewares oog Mow 100 only Boxe\ Connonq ud, 7 44c & Rinq-, . . q. 18 only.Cm~ Wide Mouth Ooort Conning Jor'. . . .... 3 69 100 only Boxes Mason Joi Lid~ •...... 1.% I 00 only Freezer Boxes . . . . . . . . . . . . I 99 100 only Freeze< Bogs . . . . . . . ...... 39' I 00 only Boll Conning Boo~ . . • . ... I .00 I 0 only 12 qt. Pressure Connet ...... 3'4.99 100 only Asst. Applionca Covers 2 79 3 only "Notixe's Bounty" 45 pc Ironstone . . . 68.00 48.88 3 only "Son FronCtSCO ' 70 ~ c Flotwoe ..•.... SOOO 42.88 Fumiturt" onq How I only Loveseot )59.00 244.00 I only Chor m 00 199 .Ob . I only Ottoman 7900 St.OD I only Codc1ol Tobl11 qq_oo 77.00 · I only Ccx:ktol Tobu' I I q 95 99 .00 I only End Tobu~ ..•... 119.95 89.00 I only Ccx:k1cil Tobie ............. 9900 77.00· I only Pillow-Choir (pronll ....... 174.00 124.00 1 ~ I only Swivel Roder. greon . I 59.00 119.00~ I only Sofa. brown & beige stripe 379.00 249.00:- 1 only Love Seat. bm & be1qe stripe 319 00 229.oo:! ·~ I only full/queen French ~ Pro Headboard 89 00 50.00 .; I only Oub Cho.r : .. w/woodeo orm• I 79 00 129 .00 ~ I only love Seat • 'i= brown/Ml plo.d , . . . . . . 269 00 166.00 $ I only Sofa. gold . . . 2'49.00 199 .00 ~ 1 only Chor vinyl, damaged . • . . . 229.00 66.0c(: I only Sofo. vtnyl '429.00 266.0cJ 14 only Better Lom~ . . . . Special 4 7 .00 I only Dmette Table, domoged . . . 79 00 39 .00 I only Diriette Table. domoqed ...... 59.00 19 .00 I only Otninq Chor, domoqed ...... 52.00 19.00 I only c:Minq Choir. damaged ...... 79.00 22.00 Auto Centt"r orig. I 5 onty Jock StCl'lds . . . . . . ... • . . . . . . 3.49 5 only Geose Guns • . . • • . . • . . . . . 8. 49 23 only Splash Guords . . . . . . ...... 2 qq SS only Floor mots. fron1 & rear . . . . 2.99 4 only Ca Jach . . . . . . ...... I 2.98 Gardt>n Shop -" Mo*°~ 2.11:1 4.8• 1 1.81 ~ 1.81 ~ 6.88' ~ r-------------------------------...... : . POTTERY Gloied. red day. mJ!tl-colored Asst. Sizes Orig. 1,49-12.95 SAVE 50°/o . -• • . 1~ 1• 1• . A • __ __,..i.I ::1 •••• ... . . • . -. . .. . . -. .. . . . . . . St.art Your Swnmer Vegetable Garden Tomatoes • Lettuce Peppers • .Broccoli Many More Buy The Pony Pak lllllTit SPECIAL 11.M Thru Mu 29 Ree.89c I Flori.at SpPrial f MARGUERITE DAISIES Cheerful, freshly-cut daisies . Florist wrap. ma BUNCH Thurs. ·Sun. Mar. 24 · 27 Loi ... . , •• ,_ ..... J'J&I ... -.= •. L"CC-'''&..tM:-:Ule---......... .... ....... ,_.,. -tb-tll .. .. .. .,, 10UIMlf. MO'ftNG BILLS can be b1&ber than atldpated. aaaerted • mov· lna ~ executive. But be stated.• It'• tlme for tbe movtnc and 1torqe lndustr1 to level with ita customers. to protect them from unrealistic expectations. and, at the amne time, alert them to the mutual obll1ations of both cuatomer and mover." Examples of these extra char1es are when the moving van must park more than 75 feet from the door or when an elev at« must be used. These charges and other com- mon coosumer complaints are listed in a new booklet offered by The Bekins Co., entitled "How to Get Ready for Delivery." THE BOOKLET also de'1s with such questions as bow must the bill be paid, who puts the beds Tbe PaJ aJlo .. ..... pared ...... ~bookleta ,.,.. ple plmnlA& to moH to ....n, two *-mljor u. S. dtim. Tbey are called "Surviytq in <name ol clt.y >: What you need to know when you let there.•• Dl1euased in tbe booklet AN weather, bouslDC in every price ran1e; location of medical racll1Uea, school systems and local 1overnment offices; tax,s, public transit and employmtnt opportunities. CITIES INCLUDED so far are New Orleans, Chicago, Los Angeles, Miami, Kansas City, Hous ton, Atlanta, Boston, Dallas, Denver , New York, Ph i lade lphi a, S e attl e , Washington, D.C. and Phoenix. The booklets are available free from the Consumer Information Department, The Bekins Co., 1335 S. Figueroa St. Los Angeles, 90015 or local offices. i CJae Ckirsl Qandaer Outdoor hangin~ basket and container watering sr;tem. *\ ~ .. 4 plant kit fa V\tJrkshop CJ' wrai '.tx.J Want to RernEnber ;~~·- • Drip irrigatio n for the Home Garden . 30PIECESET lltpli! Dramatics Explored OIOOSC from our selection of 8 scenic and color blckafounds. Select additional portraits and save up to ~ oompared to 197$ prices. Sec our new large Decorator Portrait. No obligation to buy additional portraits. Satisf actlon always. A professional 8x10 color portrait for SAVE WATER•TIME MONEY • Specials Limited to Supply OD Hand PHONE 546-5525 Drama as a Learning Medium will be the topic for a four-day workshop sponsored by Southwest Performing Arts Resources Center and Fairview State Hospital. 2640 Harbor Blvd., .Costa -Metiat DArLY 9-5:30 SllN. <>-5 It is planned for 9 a.m . to 3 p .m . Moqday- Tbursday, March 28-31, at th e Fairview Auditorium. ""'2• ,_,,IMr,,.,,,.""11. Flot or Gloss OM of our firttat long·losnng eMenar M1M poinrs C01Jt>,, eosl/y In one COOi O,ons up with soap 11rtd water Colorfast SALE PRICE 11'! pnce S9 99 ,.,, """,,,,, f. tlalk 11.TtlOlll HHll l1llti01 #lu Wt1ll p.i1t. Couers m one coot Washable Scrubboble Rolls. brush£s or sprays on easily Cleons up w11h soap and water tltl#lt ,,.. tl•ult H~ 161111 lH•1/ 1/d W.11 ,,,,.,.,,, SAL£ PRICE SALE PRICE ,,,,, ,,,, reg. price $14 97 reg. pnce $12 97 lff" ,,.,..,_,,.. 111'°' Ttl• 1111111 SALE PRICE '1!~eS35Q FIM qtJ<Jhtv nvlon bns1/e\ Jor quocA. w~ rot't'rogt' around dcon" u•1ndoU'~ n1<1ultllnq ,,,,,..,,,,,,,,,.,....,,,. ~,,.,.,~.,---"' ~' ,,,.,. ,,,, lttlfl, /Mlilll., ... Htll,... AMAtmM ................ ttl.7150 I &IJ.lb.I& HIU.S Ill 2110 ..,,..,""""' •••······•···•······•··· . 941 So Euchd Avenue 25252 Mcintyre Street. &11tt 9 w ...... ,_ COSTA MISA .............. 557.a7H WIWOOD ...................... ·21J.t2M616 3161 HarbOr Blvd 5924 South StrHt AIWITOH .•.....•........ SZMIH ........... ff1 ~11r1 """" . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ," . 2t2 N. Harbor Blvd 887 So T11*fin A~ . HUNT1MtTOM llACH ••.... ltl-2577 IAMTA AMA • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 546-9770 15801 Gofden W')lt Street Hse ~Bt1ttol ~AT T*' ,_., i AJl TO 6 P.N. IA1'9AY f A.M. TO I PJl. Clot9 Dorothy Heathcote, a teacher in the field of drama for youth, will present the progra m . She uses drama lo ex- pand horizons and to educate. An instructor Crom England, Ms. Heathcote haa worked with various levels of disabilities. The workshop is ap- proprlate for teachers, parents, c linicians, volunteers and students involved in developing e ffective m e ans of teaching, and of learning the needs, or those not able to communicate clearly. More information is available from J o Ann Karl, 545-93311 ext. 310. 88¢ Dal1y: I OAM • 8PM Sm: I OAM • SPM 2200 Hcrbor IQUleYarcL Costa Mesa One sitting per subject-SI per subject for additional su~ jccts, groups, or individuals in the same family. PRESflGE . by Congoleum MORE COLORS MORE PATl'ERNS in no-wax cuShioned vinyl llQC>rs Six dramatic new designs inspired by cultures that have helped shape the heritage of America • High-Gloss Beauty • No-Wax, Shiny Vinyl for Easy Care • Cushioned for Comfort Warmth, Qulttt REG. S13.9S '\ I ,r# ,, Wnfdff ftCllO 5~121 -T-.W""-. "'4..W.IM: "'°"""'' .. ' DAN SJ< INS are not just for Dancing sportswear lcalMMrl.._. 67~1904 .._, ... W.IN ._,,,., The T-Shirt at its softest -easiest -newest by Calvin Klein Many Colors P.S. We're also using 'loo Calvin's new rope belt Westcllff Plaza Newporter Inn #10 Town & Country: Orange Opening April 1 t HANDWOVEN INDIA MADRAS These shirts are lndlviduallstic in color and pattern and oftentimes are entirely the whim of the lndlvldual weaver. ,.., r () l'"'/r, 1044 IRVINE AVE•54&8585 NEWPORT BJSACH, CALIP'. OPEN.THURSDAY EVENINGS Y2 OFF BRUSHED NYLON Long & short gowns ~~aiamas BRAS & ETC'S, TOO Three Days March 24, 25. 26 MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY STERLING SILVER & GOLD FILLED ANKLETS They're more POl)ufar thar1 ever. These are from our colltc:tlon. Each ls beautifully craned and hung on a d•llcate Chain. Toi): Any name up to 7 letters •........••• H .50 Center: Twin Hearts ...................... $7.&0 Bottom: Plaque. suitable for engraving •... 17.50 Also available In 14K .............. from 115.00 CHARLES H. BARR p,. , . .. , . . ': •, '· '· ·'· :· '1' 1' i: . '· ·'· '• '• ·'· -·· T • "1"1YIYal ..... w 1m... cnamn1nth .~'lllv. Ille OUlllillC J'rtAlaY lbl al llm'-rq 1LIMQA!i•1 ldy "Lu•" at1 tile lntDe ~~· ... loc:at.lon lDNewpwtB . ns ] .. fltaline Uile "January lttb .. courtroom . drama. TV DAILY LOG The lnine Muon be1an lut fall at a 11&. earmarked (or cleatructloo. tbe Youth Services A11octatlon bullclln1 in Costa Mesa. After ataain• two produc- tlo.na there, ICT beaan searcbina for another theater ln which to complete Its slate -and found the former Newport Harbor Bap- tist Church on Cliff Drive at El Modena Avenue. . "Luv" is a three-character satirical comedy set on a bridge in New York City involving three diss atisfied people who s huffle their marital situations, only to become even more dissatisfied. The Irvine cast consists of Beth Titus, Mike Frym and director Tom Titus, who stepped into the production as a late replace· m ent. Final performancH for "B•ltlmore .. wlll be 1lHn tont.irt tbrou&h Saturda1 at t:IO and Sunday at 5:30. ••Janumy 18th" wiada up wltb four perrormances toni•bt throa&h Sunday at 8:30. Reservations for both shows are avail•ble at 892·77ll. Also cl0&ing this weekend is "Caucasian Chalk Circle" at Orange Coast College, under the direction of William Purkiss. Two final performances are set for Friday and Sunday eveningl at 8 o'clock in OCC 's Fine Arts Hall 119, Admission is free. .1 ( THURSDAY ·,.I •VBNINQ 8:00 D D CIJ <1QJ (@ (])) News D ~ 00 (12tl CIJ m News O ~SWTrek (J) Gomer l'yle O Gu~e '8 1'11trid&• flm1l1 m Adam·l2 fl!) lltctrlc Com~ny 0) Onmatic Series Cf) Uttle Rnul1 -6:30-0 Dinah! Cunis include lddy Arnold, Phil H1r115 llm Srallord Wayne Chochran and CC R1dm (J) A11c1J Criff1th ® Men CnH1n Show m Family Affiir (<llJ (Il) Cti11s111oh mzoom ((b) () ) BmttMd m Town h lk 7:00 DD .2V'6 mmNews 0 I.JUI Club Cl) My Three Sons (J) To Ttll tht Truth 0 Conuntr1tt0n m I love l..uq G> The FBI ~WyCr1fftth fl) Madleilll.ehrer Report (!BJ(()) The Par1rldce hmrly Cf) McHalt's Nny -7:30-11 Andy Ben Vereen gu•sb D loYe Ameriu n Style ,Cf) The Odd Couple u The Gone Show le) ~ndld ~meri D The .io.er's Wild (19l (23l l 6 1 Match wr11e '8 (Ji t J ) 811dy Bunch ((fl) ll.,) The W'~burn Brothers Ci«i Hocan's Heroes f.D ~nnel 21 To111cht m ~ice Is Rlcht m "F" Tnl09 8:00 ·o ( 1ll 3 ) e The lhltons John Boy sins up controvrrsy 1n Jtlfetson Couoty and puts hrs family 111 ph~1tal danger whrn he dec1dn to e•pl0te and w11le about Am""'" books being bu1ned 1n German1 CiJ 231 ft 10 €0 futHht Joumey ·An Att ol lovt 'V1nan fall m love and marries a be1utilul ahen -.oman. unaware ot the dudly fare that btlafl~ newlywed men of htr rilCt l!I M-C "The wtt1nc Cun" (adv) ll Guy Stockwell Pa111c~ Wayne (J) ~I: C (2hr) "P1l111 Sp11np Wtet1nd" (com) 6J lroy 0M4hu• Connie Sl•ven~ U ( 2fl I 9 ) 3f Welcomt llack Kotter (R) · !\adie llawlun) Day De Sl>•le Ba1ba11110 \ r•putahon lor mn culine cha1111 h~ llnd~ h1msrH w1lhout a dille 101 lhr b1& 111149,) boy danre O Mom: (2h1) "Hud" (dta) 6J P1ul Newn1an. Melvyn Oou&lo Paine•• Nut '8 b cqua Cotmu u la&oo11 ot Lost Ships Cou\l,au •nd thr C1lypso err• e1pl0tt lruk la,oon 1n tht South Pac1ltc, 1 lo1m't ·•~"'''' 11u 101 thr Jaii.inrs• lltrt du .. nc World War II Hor• O•r• 50 1unkrn ships rtma1n m11.culou51y 1ntacl ptOltcled by lht troJll(al W11m Coial and olhtr ~""' hit tint l11nsformed the a1ea rnto a ailorlul ind sf11k1n11y buut1ful ~u cirdtn Cl) hrry lblOll !Ml Mo.,c: <c (Zllr) "CtH~,. ~rlie" (com) '64-lony Cu111s Otbbtt Reynolds Pill Boollt flt Muterpttet Tllt1tre m llltlonal Su•rlpboll TV THI -8:30- D ((2JI Ce ) !HJ ~t'a HIPP* In& Ote's penpal, fudy, tseaPU from prison and amves ill the Thomas· home 10 acctpt oee·s off et to slay 1s a house euut 9:00 f) (l!Zl ()l) ({) H1w11I flwt-0 A11 old friend of Steve McGarretl's asks him to loo~ mto Ille dlsappurance of htr rodto star bn>lhtr McGarrelt YISllS lhe rodeo troupe lrom which Brhy van1$11td but tin turn nolhin1 , from the shancely uncommuniulM ~boys there 11 QJJ m <r111 m 1111c·, tut Seller: The fl»llN11n u clll111e In tht tllrilhna 11110 hour conclusion Dl¥id Spauld1nc. Leshe H1wlevrood and uyptoeraphtl, Bobby &lla1d diStovtr the rtal nature ol tht11 ll\IUIOl1 and rrsk even frttter penonaf dlnaer by try1nc to J•I Utt IYfOltope plans from the German 1nr profiteer R~l11tm1n11 without &tviftl up the 1nd11Strial d11monds 1n udlante CJ) MIM: CC) (21Nl "The ,_.ill tJlet" (dra) '64-Anftt 8111trolt, hter F'mch, JamtS Mason. • (IB ())) lanttr Miller t;aplatn ~mey M1Utr 1ml the detec lives of th• 12th Precinct must search tllear consciences and we11h the moral and etfucal t onsequences ol a New )'Olk Crty pollce walll out. m Men Gritfm s.. m The Vlraiftil11 m CMlisltioll "Prote~ and Com munication" Kennell\ Clark explore~ the development of the written word as lypilied by Erasmus, Monta11ne and Shlkespeare -9:30- 0 Now Every Thursday! * "THREE'S COMrANY" D (Q.fJ CJ) ) 9 T111te'1 COlll· pany "And Mother Ma~e.s Foor" Jack I 11pper Is mo~1nc 1n to share the apartment with Janel and Cl111ssy. when Ch11ssy's mother decides to ~1s1t 10:00 O 1111 ~) ()) ll1111aby Jones The apl)lrent su1c1de of a youn& colleee 111structor, at first thoueht to Six performances of "Luv" will be presented, Fridays and Saturdays at 8:30 through April 9, at the ne w ICT location. Reservations are being taken during the day at 646·3178 and evenings at 557 · 7297. IT'S CLOSING weekend at Golden West College for two pro- du c ti on s ··T h e Hot L Baltimore" in the main theater and "Night or January 16th" in the Actors Playbox. Robin Huber is d~ecting "Baltimore" while TWO PROFESSIONAL pro- ductions on stage along the Orange Coast are South Coast Repertory's "Two Gentlemen ol Verona" and the r e turn of "Norman, Is That You?" at Sebastian's Wes t Dinner Playhouse. Both shows are being staged nightly. except Monday. Ronald Boussom, Richard Doyle, Anni Long, Elizabeth O'Toole and John-David Keller are featured in "Verona" at SCR 's Costa Mesa theater, 1827 Newport Blvd .. Daniel Sullivan is d irecting and curtain times are 8 p.m . nightly and Sunday at both 3 and 8. Reservations 646-1363. b~ the result of ha1assment by t.wo --------- dissident students. suuests some· thin& m01e sinister when the Pol1te mme lab reports lhat the dead man •as masqueradin& 1n another s 1denhty O ONews D Now Emy Thursday! * "WESTSIDE MEDICAL" U ( 29 Il .a.ti Westside Medi· cal lhe Wdch of Four We1t'' The lhrte doctors lace a personal and p1ofrss1on.il c11s1s when a patient ol Or Janet Collrell begins to pracllce la1rh hulmg 1n lhe hospital ~ Petula Clar\ '" Concert ID Microbes 1 Men (R) -10:30-m m WNe.s 11:00 DU J l (31J Nein CiJ Ill) lJ) 11.Ql Im News O Love American Style & Slncfes Match Up O Ironside m Muy Hart1111n, Mu y Hartman m The Honeymooners n 1 r3 ) The bndt Slio'll 2Ao Best of Croucho f,DWoman '29 I ) lAIWt Al!leriun Style -11:30-0 ( 11' (1_,) '.] cas Lite lllo¥tt. re; -....n: Tllenpy ill O.,Ulllte;" "Tht Oudl"f Drum" (dra) 1 Lloyd Bndees Janet Leigh D }J t 10 m JoMny Cmon 6 The P'Tl Cl~ D ( 20 e ) 39 ThurscbJ llitfll $peclal Alan l',1ng's Pleasures of Rol!lf m 11ews m S(t. llil~o •.2l The 700 Club f.D ClllnMI 21 T onecl!t 12:00 0 "" If 6'wcM G M0tft: "City of Fur" ld•al 6~ Jerry Moore, Paul Ma.well, Man~ Mell '8 Cm:s-Wits G> Mow11: lCJ "C11a1wal Story" ladv) ·~•-Anne B~der, Slewe Coe.hr an -12:30- 0 M-llitM Show: "lt1111 Anlun4 t111 Wtrfj ," "Softs an4 Lenn," ··~" m """': "The ltoodl11111 Sa111r Cdr1J •6-W1lhi1m PO#eM 6.l "°""" 1 :00 11 11 .t 10 TllllOlrow 2:00 ....... DMilftdurt: "Slid* C....•" "Tiii "'"1 Is Mii A Flew(' -2:30-m M-llf&'lt sa..: "1tuN11 0.11," "!Jrrt Fre. A Straitttf" -3:05- f.J MoN: "f'lyche 'S9" (dra) ·~­ Cun Jur&e"'-Patric11 Hui MMCM 21 .... ftr ,our~. 110 tllt uy'a l!Mia. 9:30 U "TlttUe ind tf11 llu Of1•1n" (C0111) '6S-Setn Pierre Talbot, Jan Bouise JO:GO 18 ~ "DMtt City" (wn) '39-fnol f11""~ lkuce !'.abot IUI • .,....,,. (com) '311-111· lhar1n1 lfe&>bur11. ~ry Gr111t, le.v A~res. boris llC>WI 1:00 D "Soft ff DrtaiQn (mys) ·o -lon Chaney Jr., Louise Alb11tto11 CCJ ... '•1Kl•""4- .,,.. (lllllS} ·~-V-rr11n11 M1yo, Gene Nelso11. frank Lcweroy. Z:IO G a:J "[l1ph11t Walk" (dri) $4-Petei r1wi .. £hzabttll faytor, Ow Andre1111 J:Ol 61 CC) "lllt4eaty lblao" (COlll) '66-Dtrk 8oc11d1, l erenet St1m11. Monica Vrtt1 :1:• • CJ:) .. .,, .. ,.,.. Conti. (co'") '6J-Def>•i• Re7nolds, Barry Nilson DAILY PILOT income tax: no work, no worry, nomatfi, nocharQe. This year spare yourself the drudgery of mastenng the new tax forms. frll1ng in the correct spaces and checking to make sure of your deductions. Join the thousands who let a specialist prepare therr personal Federal and Calif orn1a tax returns without charge All you need to do is deposit $5,000 in a Los Angeles Federal Savings Passbook or $10.000 in a higher rate Investment Cert1f1cate If your savings are now tn a commercial bank or another 1nst1tut1on. Los Angeles Federal Savings will make your tax appointment now and handle the details of transfer. Make your appointment early. The sooner you file. the faster your refund can be mailed. Plus: higher interest than paid by any commercial bank. Plus interest day in to day out. Plus the security of savings insured by a Federal Agency. Plus extra hours. Plus free services with a m1rnmum deposit: safe deposit box checking account at a commercial bank. docu- ment duplication. Travelers Checks and more. It takes only one minute and one signature to start your savings account All Interest Compounded Daily Annual Yield Annual Rate 8.06% $1000 for 6 to 10 years 73/4% 6.72% $1000 for 1 to 2 years 6 Y2 % 5.39% Paid day-in to day-out 5Y4 % Fot3•111 '119 ll r ...... I .. , ly Wof~O .... a. Ire.IT\ I'"'" l\CC'Ounll Sub1•~I 10 sub111n1111 1n1111 ••I reo .ti n LOS ANGELES FEDERAL SAVINGS Newport Beach 3201 Newport Blvd. -across from City Hall • 675-4500 OPIH M MON.· TMUR&. • ... PIU. Head Ofhe.. Lot Angelo ,edtttl Saving• and Loan Asaoclation One W1t1hlrt, Loi Angeles 900 J 7 •Other offices throughout tht area COIDll1NnY TREAT£& pro- ductlaaa caatlnutna aton1 the coutare: -''The Fantuticks;" Sondra Evaaa' produc:tioftof New York's lon1est·nmninC musical, at the Westminster Comm unity Theater, 7272 Maple St., Weatmtmt.er. Perfonnances Fri- day and Saturday at 8:30; re- aervatkms 893-8626. -"You Can't Take It With You.'' a revival of the Pulitzer Prize-winning comedy, at the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse on the Orange County Fairgrounds. Pati Tambellini directs the large-ca s t show with performances Fridays and Saturdays at 8:30. Reservations 556-5459. -"The Girl in the Freudian Slip," a reprise or an earlier show at the San Clemente Com- m unity Theater, 202 Avenida Cabrlllo, San Clemente. Tony Brandt directs the comedy, which goes on stage Thursdays through Saturdays. Reservations 492·0465. 'Islands in th Stream" ----- ~ edwards '9 HUNTINGTON Buch atM8111 Hu1111ngton Beach 847-9608 ~:~! ... n.Al'all imir~!.. "'GI COLOR THIATU 11 --... F>a:TOF>a COLOR Ill "THE l...C:Al!DllL! SJUWI. COLOR IPGI C~N••Y ... Hf IA.GU HAS LAHOID" l T..._ MICHl.M CAIMI "ti ..... ,...CIHT \OUITIO•r l f .. S.H ·lt119 "n4E HEXT MAHH J MM_•UnoN COMl ... H IOH '•U. 1'41 NUHlttn"\ ...... nu•-UO-OIMOHM•W '"TWIUGHTS U.ST~MIHG" I lfl.1ll0 "'THI HUT MAH" '10.1000 Ill u mt 111• SO. COAST PLAZA J4lt•tt1llSI !t46111i rM!Pllll. 11ROCKY11 7:10 .. 9:45 SAT/SUM-1:30.1:40 5:415..t:OO. I 0: 15 CINEMALAND 1ms. bW ,..,.~"" "CARWASH .. ,, ... ,.,,. UT~--1 1'4M:I0.7:H "NORMAN IS THAT YOU7" H O '4Tfi->M:ll-'141 CINEMALAND Ill S. M•NI • AulH• 'I) 16'1 "" '"'"" 11KINGIOHG11 --•YS-CPG) .. ,,,_,...,I'-.,,. "WllDElHESS FAMll Y" ~IS SAT~ .... 7~S b1'--~CK LEMMON LEE CRANT · BRENDA VACCARO ·JOSEPH COTUN · OLIVIA de HAVILLAND DARREN rtGAVIN ·CHRISTOPHER LEE · GEORGE KENNEDY JAMES STEWART as MP Stevens k1m,,1 lf MltlUI SUlll l llfll mtlll M111 ~ I l 1 QI~ Id IWllS Ulm! Misc •1 JIU CU.S lmtd ,, Jllll JiMISOI ""'"' ~ llllUM Ill! hml1U hdn11 ~UllU "'' l!tt1tl fis1~ lllul1 ~ lltill 11111m lllrll~llilo!l l-l'fn11t411~-~~Mitr, rPGTPAAflllALGUIOiM«simsro~ ll ifilUi 1¢1SW htnUIP,..i11g119 t....!' ~ ••» '" •·~ r rtll w11i•l<A" OPENING ----. - <::JiZ:l> BU r ~II f' A >1 K UHIV~ 1"4 Llntelft A-w W. tf KllCltt '""" ,.... • 121-4070 . .. "NOW PLAYING!" {A) .:, OINI ...-a• Ml nAYllllCMI :· ~Iii• .. ".:=. L SUYll~~UICl"t • " .. \!J. •.• ••-""2400 --NT0M Of TMl •AUDtSlcPO HTU $fUIU ... PAHMI STllW AGAINtPOI . P\UI flOM NOON Till TMIH !POI IO OIUt NOMlfolAl!OfjSl IOCKY I~) IOttT. NO .. uu • MOllOI .... , • _. '°"°" <NliR i:4.!i;, ) FUN WITH D~~ & JA~ W VIGAS I.ADY l1'01 ' . "' (Mtll SHA-e UISllNA UtNU • ~ SJ~o l ~l~;:~Lt•I .. , ....... .. ... , .... .... 527-2223 l ............ ·-U1-Ul1 FROM Fash ion Island Newport Beach 'Father' To Return; • C)N ABC, 'fllE DEBUTS were uz11bt 11 Enou&h," which posted a 21.t raUna bs 1eth place: .. Three's Company," a lt.5. 1A 2ltb place, and "Weataide Medical," •an 11.~. lo 32nd place. .. Westside Medical" had a 3' abare of the audlesice, four comfortable points above survival. CBS didn't do so well, however. Its debut pro- gram, "Loves Me, Loves Me Not," ended up in "8th place with a 16.3 rJting. And a pilot. "African Queen," occupied 59th place with a 13.1 ratine that represents 9.3 million households. The natiooal averages 1ave ABC a 20.3 rating, representing 14.5 million homes. CBS, now assured of second place for the season, had a 19.5, or 13.9 million, and NBC had 16.6, or 11.8 million. LOS ANGELES (AP) -Does Father still Know Best? The answer may be found on a forthcoming NBC special that will bring back the Anderson fami- ly beaded by Robert Young and Jane Wyatt. Col um bla Pictures r-------------------...., Television is producing the 90·minute ''The· Father Knows Best Reu- nion," which will feature a 35-year wedding an- niversary of the An- dersons. Their children, played by Elinor Donabue...r.. Bill)" Gray and Lauren \.napan, will re- turn forthe event . "Father Knows Best" ran for nine seasons starting in 1954. The reu- nion marks the first time the cast has performed· together since the series went off the air. "THE FuNN1EST NEW COMEDY OF THE YEAR." -Vernon Scott, UNITED PRESS PllUL NEWMAN ~ SLAP SHDT I.,• ... "• .... •• ' .. , ~ • '• ~ ' • ••• ~EDWARDS . • 1 q:J r.l!Wl'ORT WHMA Richard Chamberlain Gemma Craven (G} ~;;;Crosbie Edith E~ .,,. .... ~ •'"°""""°"'"' Christ°l!J:?r Gable Micha!U!_ordem Margaret Lockwood Kenneth More lin full Stereophonic Sound ! EDWARDS , HARSOR ot AOAMS, COSTA MfSA. PHONE 546·3f0 ON tlAllOI ILVD. • 0111 Mill SOUTH OF SAN DIEGO FWY .. ' "SLAP SHOT" IRJ 11NETWORK11 11• "SHAMPOO .. IRJ 11MOHAM D11 MESSENGER OF GOD" IPGJ SIL VER STREAK" IPGI "PHANTOM OF THE PARADISE" ''tCIMG KONG .. IPGt -rwlLIGHT'S LAST GUAMIMG" llJ "SLAP SHO llJ -,WO MIMUTE WARHIMG• CINEMA CENTER tM.Moe•TADAM\.COIT• ..... (R) •-• t7Ml41 --•• ~ "THJEVES" ,., • .,.,..,....___..,... MAALOTtfOMAS CHARLES GRODIN UNNELVISION" Pt.US "ROBIN (PO) AND MARIAN" A,. ...... IA raANCl fAP) -TIMI u 0cmun11.- adae4 w.d ft1I of stst.bla April 11 OD wbett.r tQ moM n•tural c•• from nortbero to Southern Calltomla. ' ly Ph' • Ne .... uefl The c•. from Pacific Gu and Electric and the Sacramento Municipal UWity Dbtrict., 111ould be eubanged for fuel oil from Southern California Edison, Sao Diego Gas and Electric and lbe Los Angeles Department of Water and Power. ~I c ....... , ............ ....-c, ... "'""' ....... .,...,.,,. •• ,....,...... "3.24 ~ Vernon Weaver, S4, a Little Rock in- surance executive. has been nominated by President Carter to head the Small Business Administra· ti on. The PUC said the fuel "And that area 1s known as the 'Bermuda Triangle' ..... o i 1 wou 1 d rep 1 ace---------------------hydroelectric power in the drought-stricken north. 103-123* INTEREST steady, steady, steady. For the last 16 years, through booms and recessions, individual investors, as well as trust and profit sharing plans, have earned I 0 % or more o n their money, most of the lime more. Often as much as 12%• on short term (3 to 6 years) trust deeds on choice residential properties, with large equity and high security. The title is insured and recorded in your 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 10% or more. No one. We take care of all the paperwork. details and payment collections at no cost to you. If 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 failed to do so. If you want s table high interest. and if you have SS,000 or more that you would like to invest. please call or write A. A. Ajax Co. for our complete brochure on trust deed investments. •When a loan is prepaid before maturity, you receive up to a six m onth interest bonus on 80% of the loan balance. This may increase the yield up to 12%. (714) 772-6230 Ask for Bob Mayes or Barbara Frenkel 505 No. Euclid Ave. Anaheim, CA 92803 (714) 837-3744 Ask for Sandy Ross Taj Mahal Professional Bldg. Laguna Hills. CA 92653 \\orlq,Jqt• brol\1·" t Jll• ""' '" < .. 111urn1.1 "''""'"'' onl~ OCCEvent Women Topic Of Seminar "Women in Management" is the title of a seminar April 2 at Orange Coast College. The registration fee is $15 and includes a luncheon. Checks, made payable to Orange Coast College, should be sent to Business/Management Development Center. OCC. 2701 Fairview Rd .. Costa Mesa, 92626. , REGISTRATION AT THE DOOR is $20. The seminar, which runs from 9 a .m. to 4 p.m .. will be conducted in occ·s campus restaurant "The Captain's Table." · SEMINAR LECTURER IS THEODORA Wells, a communication and management consultant who heads her own firm, Wells Associates in Beverly Hills. Ms. Wells speaks on "non·defensive com· munication" concepts, and McGraw.:'"Hill is publishing her first book on the subject this year. The seminar is designed to benefit women who wish to prepare themselves for management posi· tions. WHEN OHE l'\.US ONE DOES MOT EQUAL TWO lyTBU MAMT. .. ,.._,, . l n malhcmat1cs . the addition or one and one will alwav<; equal two Bu~ 1n phJrm,wv this 1'\ not truf' .111 lhl' time Everv mNl1t"m1• ha., 1h own pJrt1rular uo;e hut ., n m r l 1 m ,. c; t w o merl1rinc.., workinl? in comh1nat1nn will produce a th1rr1 d1rt1•n•11t n·..,ult Ther!' art• m.mv ... urh mt>lf1r1nr' .1rtcl w1• .ire famil1.1r \\Ith .111 lhl'1r PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS BUSINESS No\ME STATEMENT Th~ fOllOwtnQ Of'r\On'i are do1nq bU\in4t\\ "' CLIMATE CONTROL IS62 Po11rkw,.v Loop Unll "C' Tu\ Ion, CA W""""' Lou•• SO<'ros. S6Sl Odkl•v Terrac,. '"''"" CA "111S JamH HOWMd 8.tumqa-1""'· 611 Soulll Wl'\ll>a~n Core•• AMM•m CA .,""' Tht\ bu\•""''' 1\ conduttM by cl C)enerat CMrtN'f"'Jof\•O W1ll1ttm L Si:>ef"O'\ Tiiis •la1emen1 "'" h•M w 1111 '"" Cou'ltY (t•r~ Qt O,anq.~ Counly 01'\ MM<h 18 1971 1'7 llSO Pubhc.~ Or..tnQP Co-t"' D-l•'v Plfot M••<ll 24 )l •nd Ao"' I U 1911 '12117 PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITlOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The lollow•nq O<'•sons Me do•nq bu\I ~\'~' L&O ENTERPRISES 7•01 V•nl« Wily C~t~Mt•a.Cah•orn1aq1611 Oav•d L,... Wl>•I• 2•01 Ven1f'r War t...O\t~ Mf'Y C.ahfe>rn1a 91b11 ,------------------------- . r u n t' t 1 11 n \ w h r n a ph\,lt'i.111 ~,,, .. , vn11 two pn•,,rnpt1011-. m tn•allng a 1·nnrl1t1nn, th i'i 1·omhuwrl re-.ult rould he. what ht> ; ...... tnvm~ ror Alw avc; have every prec;cr1pt1nn :vou :ire g1vl'n rilled without delav and lakf' ao; directed L•"Y LteWl\11• 2401 V•nl•f W~v. Cos1 a M••a. Cal1l0<nia 97677 I I I I I I ! <1m int1•11 .. ,1,·d 1n 1111\l <Jf'f'(J mve'>tmf'nls. IJl1.,1'>1· "' ·nd 1111 11H ir• 111lu1 rndt1on I '" l"' I I I I L I ... I .. I p l)P • 14~ ________________________ J ) L '1. HOYU DAILY PILOT INFORMS In the YO U OR YO U R DOCTOR CAN PHON F. US when vnu nr<'d a dellve>rv We will dt>hq~r prnmpllv without c•\tr~1 c harJi?t \ .:1eat man\ peoplf' rf>fv ''° u., for their health ncNt... Wf' welcome rcf!Ul''il'i for dellvl•rv "'rv11·e and rhargc account' PARK UDO PHAR..U.CY n•.....-•.-,.,._ Del•wy ......,.. ..... '41-lllO ~i~~~~~!~:~~~i~f!.:) 1 JEWfLRY CHINA CRYSTAL : : Plus hundrNls or otht l 111 '/ll'.0 o( furrnl\lrt!, ubJi->ts d'url, E'I< I I Mt·rchand1se c-onsiqnt .. .J lrom Llltl oi fxswn, h111kruplc1~. co1Jrt ~rdNW I I ~..ile,, b.mks, ~t-: I NEWPORT GALLERIES. LTD. 2542 W. Coast Hwy. Newport Beach. Calltornla 92663 T"t\ bu~mft\~ h tOf'lduct,.d by .. l1m1t ed P•rtMHVtto, O•v10 Ltt w1111r Th" SIAt•Ml'nt "'"' Ille<! with ""' Cou1>tv ''•"" of Or11nqr COunly on M•rc h 1, 1'11 F7Ho42 Pul>ll\h@d °'""<r Coast Dally PllOI, M.,ch 10 II 24, ll 1917 t?O·ll PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTI TIOUS IUSINESS NAME STATEMENT Tll• IOllOWlnq Ollr\Ot" ar" CSO.l'lq busl M1'\ln INTEAMEOtCO !SOI W"•lcloll 0-Su11• :no. N-rl Be.ch CA '11~ JAmM a.,,~, N1wn 1lSO Sher lllq!Oft IU07 N"•llO't 8•.o<h. CA 9U60 Ao.,.rl Roqpr\ 100 Via LIOo NDrd NewPOrl 8'>a<:h CA 91660 Th1\ C>o\1""""\' 1\ conductfl'd by " qeneriltt OAr1Mr\h•D J6m,• Nt~n TMs ... IHnenl ..... Iii"(! Wiii\ , .... Counlv Cltt1< of O<itn~ County on F•b 1• 1•11 "7U74 Pubh•lw>O Or•r>Oe Co.tsl Oa•lv Piiot M•rcn l 10 11 74 1'77 PUBlJC NOTICE FICTITIOUS IUSINl!SS HI.MIC STl.TIMENT 716-H Th• lollOWiflQ ~'°" IS Ooinq bu\1- '""'.!s, H e c u s T 0 0 I A H Ml.tl'HENANCE SERVICE. 77262 Prlnclp!', Ml\\lon V1tlo, C&ntornla '167S Larry Gl>fWO Mall~,on. 27161 Pron· clpe, Ml\sk>nVl!'jO, C•l1lo•nla •761S Tiiis t>us!Mn rs (OOOUCled by "" In· dlvidull t..1trry~ M1ttMon TM\ S1'91e"""'t wa• Ill@<! Wllh !ht Cou"tY Cler-01 Ou"9f' Counlv on M••cl17. 1m "*4 PUbll\...ci Or-(OHi Dally Ptlol MUCll 10 If 24 JI, 1'71 •S.-71 PUBLIC NOTICE I Mow-cl for convenien<'P. of snlP lo ~: (714) 645-2200 1----~-saa---- <. ·1un<1 by !.1moqes Wrogewood. Hosenthal and otpers, hnn Euror>Nn and .Am(•nc.'"dfl cul rrystnl dnd art qlass, porcelain fnfonnes . bronzes, lint1 fum1tut~. chandPhers cmd OnC' or the idrqesl chspJays of hne Jewelry In the southland Everytlunq from 20 carat didmond sobtaires to gold rwck dld1ns. FREE ADMISSIO.N TERMS1 &nk.Amorloard, MM!er Charge, Personal Chock, Terms ADDITIONAL INSPECTlON HOUR81 Mon , Tue&. & Fri I 0 a.m. to 5 p m , 5.it. I ~ noon lo 5 p m • Sun. 2 p.m to '> p.m. AUCTIONEER: Ari l."v1m' OR SEIJ. ON CONSIGNMENT. WE BUY FOR CASH _) '---1?.~~~~:~r:~-~~~~~~~~ rrr1cr1TIOUi IUSINESS N4MI STl.Tl!MENT Tiie lol-11'9 ,,...'°"'•rt dolnq bu•• ntUH rrrovA SQUARE COMPANY 23641 SI,,,.., ll•v LitQUN Nlquel CA .,.17 ,__,d " l(o111>n. nes Alm or '"" World 0r1 ..... Ru11nl"q SP•lnQ\. CA '1>1:1 Mtc111~1 E lflo\tn, SIS South l(lnqil•y 0.1,,,., LO\ A"Otlt\, CA '0005 Mtt lt W•u•rm~. 3500 ~Ymovr "*• "llrlftl"' ~lnQ,, CA .,Jll lmm•tt aarry Welu, i1111 HUt'M_., wn •• .,,.,,,,,., S!>rl"O•. CA •lJI~"''"' Wtt'41rmen, sJOO S.ymovr ,_oad, ltUMlnqSr>fl!IQ'),CA92J81 Car.It "'""· ,,, Sol/111 l(l"091ty Orl¥t, ~ ""9tlf-. CA 'GOO\ Tl!lt llo\nf,,..\ It <OfldUCted by an 111'1· lr.cO'flOf•ltd .,_l•llOll 11111er tllan • ptf1N14'\lllll "-•d• 1Co11lln Tiii~ tl.t-t •et 111..t wUll I~ Ctv"tY Cl.,, ol Or1tn11'1 C:.Vt1ty oti rrrtt1tut ry •. 1'11 1'7'6M llMlll\Md Or.,. Co.tit 0•11'1' l'llot Ml""' ... ,. "'' , .... ,, Cell 142-1171. Put • few word• lO work tor t • ~ lla.Ja bu oamed to lueaied ,,..... Lea.mlq. foundu of l-•tq .......... u pruldent and cilet uecutiveoftleerolthe Newport Buch corporatlcm. Leamins will conti.Due aa chairman al the board and devote more tlme to new product development. f'ruk McOaklaie will remain as vice presi- dent ol enOneertng and will work in new product development. a.ip11 Sommel'fektt bas been promot- ed rrom productJon manager to vice president or production, responsible for manufacturing, purchasing and test engineering. Hayes bas been associated with Leaming ln- dualries for many years and previously headed his own electronics business in New York. * Barbara Gllculr, Irvine, has joined Burton, Panom and Company, Washington, D.C., as re- gional sales manager. A former clinical research coordinator with Allergan Pharmaceuticals, she will be responsible for sales in the Orange County, Long Beach, South Bay and San Gabriel Valley a reas. * Donald D. Snyder, El Toro. has been named a vice president al United CallfornJa Bank. He is the bank's supervisor or c redit analysis and has been an assistant vice president since 1972. He joined UCB in 1969 as a management trainee and has since held various s upervisory positions in credit and the California Banking Group, becoming an assistant cashier in 1971. * Davld R. Copley has been named treasurer of Fluor Corp., Irvine, with responsibility for cor- porate finance, project financing, and cash and banking activities. Formerly manager of project financing, he is a graduate of the U.S. Naval Academy and Harvard Business School. Prior to joining Fluor, he was as· sociated with Kuhn Loeb & Co. * Lou Ellen Moore has been advanced to officer • 1-S. .... eotod• 4d Mar, has been pf'dl moa.t to traneb manager of Dd Amo-TOl'T~ offte• ol lm...-taJ Sa•lall ud Leu ~Ulal She Jotnod tbe usoclatJon ln 1tn, and bu been ' teller and ehld teller at~ MeH offic•. • Hunlincton ~uh rttidarts C.J. Sbarpe arid Rlclluanl W. Ll.ngaae have been promoted al~ trJ•lde We lanraacec.mpuy. 1 Sharpe was named execuUve vice praident ol Countrywide, a aubsidiary of Occidental Lif4 lnaurance Company of California, and Llngane wu named vice president, agencies. Sharpe retains ~ position as executive vice president. of Transamerica Life Insurance & Annuity Comp&JU't an Occidental affiliate. * Pe&tt R. McKemle, San Clemente, has joined Wagenseller & Durst, Inc. His office is in Laguna Beach. * Larry Perfet&o, Mission Viejo, has been ap~ pointed assistant manager for loans at the .Missic>ll Viejo Bank of America. With BofA since 1969, beast sumes the post after completing the bank'& management credit training program. He had pre~ viously served as an operations officer. i: He succeeds Keven Mccann, now at the Newport Center branch. ~ * ·' Doa W. Gllmour, Newport Beach, has been· named general manager of the Irvine office ~ AsbwW·Bu.rke & Company. He is former sales representative with the firm's Anaheim office. • Marttn Berger, Newport Beach, president or Occidental Research Corp., has been elected vice president for research and development of Occlden-' taJ Petroleum Corp. He will continue to serve as president of Oc- cidental Research Corp., the position he assumed when he joined Occidental April 2, 1976. * W. Channlni Lefebvre has been appointed pre-position and appointed auditor and assistant cashier at Irvine National Bank. One of the original employes when the bank opened in 1973, she has ser ved in a lmost every operational capacity. most recently as assistant to the cashier sident of Rinker Company, a N~wport Beach division of W.R. Grace Land Corp. Barry S. Rinker,. . current president, becom es chairman of the firm founded by him in 1960. * 1'1artlyn M . Iorio, promotion director for the Former executive vice president of the com- pany. he joined the firm in 1962 after working at Shell Oil Company as a district engineer. I Ovt•r l'h~ Counlt"r r NASO Listinq' NEW YORK tAPI Cro\\ (n 71\· 7•1 l ltAo\r 511 34"" ll'· P•lllb<m 21~ 12>.. ~r•wb Cl ,. 21• ,, :ht,:~7:.i"'i!'t'' Cullr Ftd .. , 7 1Ca,.s11 DI 1c>:a,. ?Qt, Poedml A s \Hl Su~r El s·~ S'• fJps and Downs O•nly M cp.,. •OV.. IC~lvar 1'> l't Pln~rt11 30"4 311"1 TIME 0C S\lo .. ,, K>l'M I Securton g::: ?Ji" 4•, 4 ... IC'm•n A 17 11v. Pion H18 '°'• 21\lo TamD .. lA17 JS11, °"at"'' A\Sft. over ,... 8''• ~:~ii,: 1'. 1 ... Pf\t1t~n 1''• ]I/ .. Te<:h Pub 18''t 19v1 NEW YORI( (I.Pl -Tile followlng llst . !hp countf'r R~no, Oavl Inc , •• ' 7~ '• '"' Pos\IS (p .. ,, 2 Tt~um P SI 60 ln\urance & I nchat Otcor In 7'. , ... l(•Y••m ] ... "'·\ ~~:f PNC 2 ... 3 hMAlll lS 21 sllows 111& C>wr • lhe . Co<Jnl~ r1AI StO<•l 0.-IC II> °'II )1"9 ,,~. K•ttr Tr 10-. 11 11\(o 11\lo Tllny Co II 11 ''> \loc•\ and warranls tl\!lt have gone ""* • AEL Ind 3'• 4' • O•lhl 011 , ... 1\. l(tlly Sv<: ,,, .. 18 P Be!>MI 17 17\oo ToscoCp JV.. .. Ille mosl •t>d oown th• mos! based on AFA PrS s1' "'" 0.-Lul C H\'o ,.,,, ICtufl E•\ 13• .. 141/ .. PvtO CAP 1 ,,,_. Tr•n•o 0 17114 1l 1X"•ctn1 of c,,.nqe rtt;iardl""S of YOlutne AIO Ill< 11'> t011 ()l'I C•nT " IS l(ft', .. F"1b 1S't 16' • 0u•I IMS , .... 1"> Trico PO lb 31 IO< W@d,.\d.ty AVM Co .... 2· .. °"' ,,.,9, ]7 34 IC•y Cusl' 41, S''"• ~:rar1 ~r ?\lo 3''< Trtln OC \'!) s·. No \tcurlh"' lr4d1nq ~low U are incl· Add1~n W , .. , ... Otw•v fl I ,., lt•y\ lnl 10', ?1''· 14'lo ISl'o Tymst\r II llloi. UOtO Ntt anc:I !X'r<t•r"-cnan~' ar• Ille Adv R~ )'' ,,. 01am C•y 111 • Ht K•nq '"' J·~ • AO<"m 119 124 Tnon F tS"• t• d1ff.,.en<t bf'l't~f"f"I f~ prPv,ou~ CfO'llnQ A lbf'rf\ ~ ''-Ou n Cru '° ' 11 ' l(nAo Voq ·~· J 1t.'') Raymnd 1S"· ''''• Un McCll • 10 bid or1ce and tOCM-t 's l•)I bid pr1cei A •1(0 In( 11)\\ H'Pt 00<Ulf'I s • s·. LAn< .. In ,.~. 20'') At<Oll Eq 8 .._ 8~ ~~~ln 1J I),, A IHQ P" l"l, 11 Dollar Ci •• ,.,., l.. lnd A•\ ... "• Road Ea 1s·~ 36'. , .. \.\ "'• Allyll l!llK I>. •• • Oorc" Ci 10'' 10\lo L""" C<> 16"> ,,,., Rob<" M n•-, n·~ UVa 8•\ ,. ' 19 Am E •D l11 • )8a.. Oo•I• 0 8 19 1•;~ L•n Oco\t 19 .. "'l. Aos~•o" J"' .. , UoP•n P 7fl' • 71 u .. s ""' Finl I) u-. Ou""" 0 6'• 1 • LOii Elm 4'1. S''> Aou\e 4\, s V~llev C\ 11 "') N•mr L"'' °'?,, Pel Am Furf'\ 1'"• ,~ ~t~~~ln. ''"· ,.,. Mad•"' Ci IS't 16"' Pu\ SI°" ,,. ) tS VbnD Atr 11 .. .. I ~nlrv M 1 Uo 200 Am C•t"'l .~. 10'. .... s·. M~I P lly 1 16 .... Sad lie' , .. , .. , VAiiee S .. ... 2 Mln<wl L 7'\ . ~ VD IS~ A Mtcro .... 10 • Econ L•b J.tl-,, 7S • Mal1or1 ll', 34''> Seen Oat '"' ,.._ Vf'l(ro •• .... l e-~1 -7 . ... U11 U I Am Tl'ltv 1\'. 71>' • E•P<t\ fl 11 I U'e M l)1A\\I\ ~·· I~ Scr•pps H )\ 37 Vfllnt r(>f' 4J 44 • L•s~r L• 7 . '• Up "J Am Wfllld 101,;, '"· EtO,., ~ •• • 1 • Manor C s .... .... s. .. Dell ,,. )•·· VaN 8nk 1111>. '~"· s Cont Into ~ ~ ., Uo 11 I Amtr Dv 1 I• Ell'< Nu<I ... s• M aui LP I) 11'"'> ~"•ca F 1•. 3"' Wad\ Pu ~ l • 6 WJum In 1') '• Uo 111 Anad11.-..... s El~ Mod , ... '"' Mc Corm 11'. \!) ~vtnUp ,..,.,~ .. W\01 Ne; IS IS > 7 NO•d "" 10, • I Up 10 s Anlleu\ B JOl,. 211. ~~r;,':"c 74"> 2S\• MtOu•V ,...., IS''> Sllaw Cp 11 ~ W•bl> At IC)>, II ) 9 Pt)Wf""\ n . . I ' Uo 10' Anl•CP S' • S\\ s• • • MPa\ur 11" ... 13'4 Snap Tis 11'. ,.. •• WrcoOvl ••• . ., 'I Mar-Pd ,., . '• Vo 130 Ard M•v , . 7') Equiv 011 20 71 M~dtrn , .. ., "'" SohdSI Sc 1') "', W•tl)M W I • 8 10 Un~' I 2•. . . . 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Oii 1J.J C41mpt 0\ 7:i.,. l ' • 11'• 18"-N•~l'n A 71''4 1'"• • All,,0•1 1 ~. 011 11.1 C•nr•O H 2'11 3' .. Cvrod" ,... l'. Nifoi\n 8 11•;, """ NEW YORI( IAPI -Mo~t ecttv• ov,.r ~ No11n Cf' a -1 OH 11 1 C•o S'°"I 4 ... °"" Har~r A 10• .. 10 ... NoC•r Ci\ ''" 11 ,,.,.. (0"'11"' '~C:,~. 'ugf~ltd •• ~~ NASO h Va" Oy~ 7 .. Ofl 11, 1 Ctnln Air ,.,, ,,, H•rlf NC 13\. u~. NoEOr u'l 31'. 31 Name Chq 1 o.-Con\ ... . ., ()ti 10 5 Cao TK 3 "" Ht,.rf'd F IS IS"' NW N•tl;. ..... ... 0.-BHr 72'1,800) I 16) J f6 4 llllUI In<-11, '· ()ff 100 C.•r• Cr> ,,, . ' HolObm 1"9 I\.• NW PuSv ,., • 1q'Wtli PnrtOC ISll.600 17' 1 '7'· .. • Pl\t11tn ,, . -.. 011 100 Ct,.Vt PS U'> IS1 .. HOt>Y\lr 11 ... 171 , ~~:~ '~ ,,. •• lb .• Ran-Orq '. 1'3 100 3 .. , ... .. ',, 10 Mar-IV ,.,, '• Olf '' Chm L•d 111• u 1• Hor11 At\ ''> I ll' J .:M'. W•xm tn 101 llOO ,,,, l • . .. II Nu".lr Ex J\, ... Ofl 91 Cl•~sa UI 11'• ,, Hud\ P40 ". lO'• Ohio F~rr 1& • 1)1. 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Ofl Com Cl• ll'• UV. leSou VI 76 1t>"• P• Enl.., lit'• ''"' Tola! In~ 7 St' n T"mD'PI 6 ., 011 1j Coml Sh lO ll JamWPr \ 1 6 PnrlOG ll"t 17 ... N•w h191>s lO 7l W•lkr C 1 '• Off 7. Com,., P" 31'. )714 ~r.~''P'o, 17 ,, .... P•p\I BW ,,, .. l'l'• New IOW'> 9 ?4 Mor Flo lOW. '• 011 , .. COii P•D 30') 311'> ... " . Ptl••n H 1)1"'J 14' • Total sale\ ' 0111 10!I )S Gtn "U! 6'• v. Off q Craw Co 11>4 "'' JO\lvr. M ,..., is·~ Pf'trf'>ltt """ ...... MUTUAL FUNDS NEW YORK CAPl C•lllln Bullattc· Farm 8u 8 12 NL Imp CAP I lS 8 91 MUst1<11UWl1 Cl! PllQrlm Orp· SoGen In 10.«l 1ij. ' Tl'I I If I 11 11 k 11 87 I 01 l'tde led Fund Imp 0111 7 .18 7.IS Fre1td ~ 06 8 81 Pll Fs 11 7t 13 46 Sw lnvs 7 9S I, 1all~J,0\:1~11~ c~n~" 7 S3 : 73 .,;•Ldr 9 sa \.07 lndusirv '"'· ... lndfP 1 17 7 84 Pllq Fd 8 11 8 SS Swln Gt 478 S lhf N•tlon.1 Anoe•· Ol~ld 1 09 l Jjl EmPlr 19 91.,,. Int lnvsl II 7l t S4 Ma\\ 10 S6 11 S4 Mta C 3 0 l 6l Sowr In 11 "6 1 ' •Hon of s.tcurlll~ Mont II h 1616,1l rrrour ( 17 81/ , Inv Guhl ~ 14 NL MHS FIMnct M~IJ •n • 21 'l>'1 SPttctr• F 4 60 Ot~ler\ Inc . .,e N•lW S t6610'9 T•Fre 11'13 NL In" lndlC 1 S1 NL MIT 10&211 45 Pin• 5t 1108 NLSlat1t BOndGr· i '"" prl<tS al ..tllcl'I NV VII 1111 U.lS Fidelity Group. l"v 8~ 10 10 IO,t9 MIG 8 0 9 ct Plonef'r Fund Com F •.30 4. thf'U securlttt CC l'11nCI 9 S• to l7 Bond 8.19.,... l1>v Co.,,.sel MIO 1• SI> 1S 70 Fund 1' 00 n lO Olv Fd 4,tl S. could IWYfl "" CG lncm 8 41 '1• C.P•I 8 l'I •.17 C1pm 9 2'I 9 °' MFO 11 16 12.7' II 1S)1 16 73 p""ll F 3 8' 4,s \010 (Nel HWl C..p Pres 1 00 NL Conlld 10 110 NL Caplt 'i 6 07 6 SI MCO 13 19 14 11 Plen Inv 11 AS 17 H SI Frm GI S «I tfl.. v•lut l O< bouohl Ctnty Sh 10 Ml 11 0 0Ally I 1 00 NL lnve\I°"' Group MFB 1S 70 16 93 PllOrlh II 06 11 O' SFrm S. •.O NC. l••lut plil\ \AlH Ch•I Inv 10 17 11 11 Ostny 9 ll , . 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ICl,. NL H•ttit • s. » W•"" n ., Na "' --" !' H•'1 011\ ,.., HI. ':f: 11 M NL AIM • U 10 10 l•Q•I • u 't Wtllto\ UD lf1i .:::,.'~1 : !: =\,t i::i\ Jf .~ !:!ttl UY , t p, Ht. LeAfflrr;.t 10 U4 0~~"""' '\1 ~ 1rn ~:~ J~, 11 1 =:~,I Jr, H l 11111 U2" II<-lt .. 014ttl ... \11 ... , lllf• ~,, ... ,..,.,rnM '' t 'lt AllONI 1A11'14Vwt" >C1 •~ l fr ~, ~ NI. 9Cc~ l:: i :: It~ tt: MHJ\ MteM ft ; 11 ,..., lhf' ft • 4t IMtf!I ; 19-11 Wttt• 0 •n ) . ... , ., ,.., ,. 41 Nt. ''t 0,... , LlltNtM ftro ite11n $111 °' NL 111\lt\t ,, IJ Wtlf'I ... '~ .... • 0 :· NI. """" 'li to' """" IO 4t It .. hflfl Mii ., NL 54.rreO HI. ..... Ot1 1 IS E ~i ;:;'" 7t 11 ,. ..c-> • ~11<-• » 10 tt f'ftll• 1 H , .. ""'"' o 1trs NL w•:i '"' ut • ;4 ,1% ~lf'ITt o1.••a " nlthl04 t41 uni ,ltllOt ,.....C.I a tl lJlll\Y ••NL L.-Ne ... , • ., lltttd UI ,. 40 ,,., 1111 t .. • , 0.... ... ,, ~ -,d .. II It r&~ 11 u NL lttl ... c ........ I --. ' R~eS a11TL'YIAIWJD ftb ii OW trecH«kmaJ llUrt flU. Qldna bQ:f. u.,...... la-'*'ll_ .. _,to lntt.uq • ..0 • apewd .. ....,..... ~ID 0. .Geld fll halmnlll fumllunt. Sbuweas sbou.&d rftlew thmr Ute at.Jr. wt Deeda: wbere and bow the1 Uve, Ibo q Md mamher of people ia tbe family,· the amount ot home entert.aitl1Da they do. tbe apacn in wbtcb the furniWre will be placed. tho colors already 1D the room. CITY DWELLERS Money's Worth should consider the .'-...11~-..-----~ amount c:4 dirt that comes through the wlodows, Tents, air conditioner pockets. The Stratford Company c:4 CbJcag~ manufacturer or upholstered furniture, suggests that lightcolored and delicate fabrics be treated to repell dirt. For a room that bas a lot c:4 traffic or is uaed by ~ children, steer clear or natural colors and buy a fabric that bas a tight weave and cleans wet\. such as tbe manmade olef'ms. Construction ot upholstered furniture should be a prime comideratioo. According to Stratfoni: -11IE FRAME SHOULD BE CONS'l'll11CJ'ED ~ hardwood, wood kiln-dried u oppoeed to air-d.riN.!. -Joint.a should be dowelled and there should be no squeak in the frame. Test th1a by sitttq down and pushing yourself back quickly. Alao test the seat to make sure yoa reel no springs. Cushions should not fall toward tbe centet. sink at the arms, or collapse under lep. . -Check for proper padding by lltting the seat eusbions and feeling t.be deck on which they are set. Run your hands over the arms, especially the edaes, to determine if they are properly padded. -SfAND BACK, VIEW THE FURNITURE carefully, make sure seat covers fit the cornen properly. They ahould lay plumb where they meet the couch's back. -Cushions should have a slight crown and are not un- iformly flat. Welts should be sewn into stress points. -Contemporary pi~es should be on casters. Tradi· tionaJ styles should have set.in legs and skirts that fall naturally. Feel beneath the couch for cambric covering. The interior should not be exposed. -LABELS SHOULD 1ELL CONTENT AND wear ability and give cleaning initructions. -Arm caps should be included on a good couch, at no extra charge. To take the mystery out of fabric selection, another in· dustry leader, Kroehler Manufacturing Company, Naperville, Ill .• suggests learning how it will wear and bow it wlll clean. Bekins Buys Company The Bekins Company's Building Services Group bas a~ quired the guard division of American ~ot~tion In-dustries, Inc., Anaheim. · This newly acquired company will operate under the name Bekins Protection Services Company and is part of a planned expansion program in the building ~ezvices field. Terms of the acquisition were not disclosed. Rally Fades; Stocks Post Another Loss NEW YORK CAP) -The stock market failed in a weak a fternoon rally attempt today and recorded its sixth ·straight Joss. Trading was moderate. A small flurry of buying showed up at mid-anemoon among traders apparenlly hoping that President Carter's news conference would provide the catalyst for a rally. Carter told reporters he would unveil his anti·inflation program within the next couple of weeks. But bis·comments evidently weren't enough to spark any sustained buying interest, and stock prices began fall-ing sharply toward the close. The Dow Jones average of 30 stocks Jost 6.65 points t.o 935.67. N•w Yor11 (AP) Final Oow-J-s•""'~ UOCKS <>oi-n H1q11 low Clow C/IQ JO Ind 9'1 07 '"' <18 '31 9J •JS 67-6 6S 20 Trn m 18 11'1.8' 211 06 7U 13-0 •• 15 Ull IOSW 1M .00 105 00 10UO -0 U • 65 511< 309 16 310 SS 306 SJ 307 ... 1 10 •nou• .............. 1.1s•.500 [,;~~ .::.:::::.: ::·::::: .. :: m:: 6S $tic •••••••.•••.••••••••••••• , 1.lS0.300 A•erican 1...eader• NEW YORIC CAP)-Sal•s .• o.m. once ~'::!~~'.~'T.oc~ ''Ex~~ .. ;o" .~~~": 1rad•n1J natlonollv •I me>re th&" "· Goldllelel Co. 111,soo l'h t ~ 5yntu <;orp,. 104 500 18 -"' Vtrnllron • • 107.'IOO av.+ \\ floYOllM . . • • • • 71,600 •s\9-1\ Gt It.ts Pet..... . 70,•00 6'4 + ~ G~ll E•P4ot"... • 54.300 1311\-~. A rtl Olt. •• • • 51.IOO 21~ 'Ill V Filter •• • ••• 51,600 0 1 >+ 11t Kaiser Ind. 47,900 Hiott-~ SCl S.?Opf. ..• ••• 37.'00 16'/J-V. lt'Jaat Storb Did WffAT STOC«S 010 NEW YORK IAPI WHAT AME.II 010 "'EW YOlllf IAPI Adv•n<,., Of!Cllr>P• U1><lla"9"11 total '''""' New Hn hi~ .... w 1•11 1-. Sy•bol• I() S.111 In full. DIVIDE.NOS: A-. •Mv.I unll\1 Mllllrwl• lci.t\tlllld; (al P'ut tlrtr<1; lbl declwte ~ oe1e1 111 '•' thl1 yHr, no, .. v11ter re~t le) ,,..,mtnt ... •«11mu11111c1 cllvl~tldl (ell kt la11 "tff ; (t) Cl\11 '" llo<lt 'Pt! In 1tf':1 Ill CHI\ :r ... 1*11 HrJ11n 1"4 fol~"ltDC~sn<l!dM~· M Deld!hl•~· 111:"1dlvl01MGonll1ttd1 ul .,., <•nt In It H id In itH; 01) Ot•Ctntln S1o<- ' oalt! 111 =· (qi In ball•tullfcf r·totwrsNo or ttOtOl(I utloft; (t i <•It• dlttrlllutlon. (~J ex<dl~ ; (wt) wNn IUutf; (WI) WM• ••1111 P-E'. ..... : TIW Pf'l~Of. •IOCltH• mulllllf• oi ..... ,,..,, •ml~lvt<111v ell"'~"' tilt ••\HI 12·-h .. '"'"Gt l1t11ra Into la,1 ,..It o<U. St~kslnTlle Spotlight ne w YORK (AP). SalK •• 0 m. orrc• And n•I Ct\il"99 al lhe fltt,...n most <Kl•ve N•w Yor~ '>1-Xlt E•<l••n<ie I•~. ~n";"lor";''.O:~'.~.~~ mor•~o1.~ '11ov.-• • e .. ,, I(~ • • • • •• • >ll 100 .. _,..,. Hon•yw<'ll • • • • .,... 6llO •• ,.__,,,,. Occ•Mn ~1 ••• , . •• 70,500 1S>\o-•• T• o.><o Inc , ..... , • 108,800 16"9-'• [unn . •••••• 101.800 4''\+ V. Delm., Pl l • . . • . . • • 197 ,600 ll>1o ~" S<hlumbrq 1'11,'00 sa•..-'• G1tll Ool l~.800 11 •••• NCR Coro ...... • 1~• 500 37'h ~ °" A'MC~ Inc •••• , , 1S9.700 21 ,. "° AmTT 1~6.100 63 ~ '•1 Am TT pl IS1 JOO 67~+ .... RCA 1s11100 11V.-1 Cnnl 011 . ISO •00 3S + "" M8,.,.. I ContlllAlly ) Pf(kW(k ln1 i ASA lhl · • comc-i Arn 01\Ull 6 A•il Ille 1 Unit Reflnq 8 lllPw•~ • Ptnn DI• 10 la 11 COtll 11 All)tny 11111 1) M""IOll U Vnll"'CI JiA :; s:~~"&, 16 ~1111-Uaii 11 Wlllttllllf II lunll ,._ It hno.t Inc; 10 ... ,, .. .; . . ... L Ad Worrier s usien to wum.m Clmrdllllc.::rv:=km ••aimt warryjq: ''WhellJ'Q&l v ., .. preaed by ,OU~ 't know what. a pJOd plan la to write down all tbe th.lnp tUt JOU can lh1nk of as pouible annoyance.. Once they're down on paper, you can deal with them. Th1a one doesn't fnatter ror atx montbs. I know lbe answer to this. Tb!s ls the only real difficulty tbat ii crytn1 for an answer. Then you deal with it. For you make it manaceable tbe mo- ment you break it up into precise and concrete issues. 1be only thin& that the human mind can't stand up qainst is mystery." How do you explain the fact that blind smokers of cigarettes tend to puff more rapid- ly than sighted smokers? Football is 26 times as dangerous as basketball and 130 times as dangerous as boxing, according to one statistical study. JC you put garltc in a slow dissolving capsule so that it won't actually touch your mouth, your throat or even your stomach when you swallow it, it still will be digested in your intes tinal tract, go through the bloodstre9m to your lungs, and give you noticeably strong breath. ROBERT FULTON It's widely known that steamboat inventor. Robert Fulton financed mos t of his projects with the money he earned by painting pie· turcs. Less well reported is the fact that the maJor passion of his career was the desire to perfect a techmque to shoot guns under water. Hts ''Nautilus" was not the first submarine ever conc<'1ved, true enough. But it fired torpedoes And that was his main interest. Fo untain Valley Wins Math Title Fount.11n \all«•)-I ltgh School "'on lht.• 21st an nual Oaange Coa s t Coll<'gC' high :-.C'hool 1n v1tational math ematic~ meet A total of 37 C'ounty high schools took part. FOUNTAIN VALLEY, under the d1rcct1on of l'Oach Keath llelmack , napped i''ooth11l llagh of "Jnta Ana for the cham p1onsh1p The student~ compdecl for pri7f''> donatt.•d b~ count\ hu,oln(''>'> r1rm ... and club'> \O,\'\I BENESCllA" of Bols a Grande fltgh in (; ardf'n Grov<' fants h<'d first an the 1nclav1dua~ c:omp<'lation lie had hc·en ... ceonrl last ;ear Andrcw C a rvt•r of l•'oolhill v. ,i s st•rond . Amy Ltn of Fountain Valley th1rc1 . K<'n .Jones of Sunny I ltlls fourth and Greg JordJn of Footh11l fifth. II u n t 1 n g t o n B t' a c h High f1n1sht•cl third 1r. tt·am standings .i ncl Cost .. \Jtosa llt gh fourth FOL!\TAl"l \'ALl.E\' If• 1m mt•mb• r <., wen· K1 11-.oni.: 'a 1 K1 "ung \ 1 A m \ I. 111 .1 n !I M 1 I. 1 • McC«1rth-. T h e r o n t 1•., I w a s s ponsored by OC T 1n l'On Junction with lht' Orange County Mathematics A~ sn . the C'al1forn1a M athematar-. Council. and the Orangl' Countv l ndu str)' Education ('ounc1l Laguna Sale Set Satur d ay The Laguna Beach M useul'l) of Art will hold an original graphics salr Saturday from 10 a m t<. 4 p m. in the Laguna Beach Mu!icum of Art store. 307 Ch ff Dr More than 600 print~ from the Roten Galleries collectaon, mosl priced under $100. will be ex hibited A representative from the galleries will be available to answer questions. P r ojects O K LOS ANGELES (AP) -The City Council has approved the creaUon of SO parka and recreation projects costing $20 S million. The parks wm be funded under the 1976 atat.e bond park Cund and the LeliJlalure'1 Urban Open Space and Recrea· tton Act • N ENTER TODAY Here's an opportunity for those 12-years-old and under to display creative and artistic talents using aayons, watercolors, or whatever they choose. Come into Western Federal soon and pick up a free entry card. Color the qg on the card. When the "masterpiece" b finished, bring it back to \\bitem Federal, enter it, and get a free coin bank! All entries must be in our office no later than Saturday, April 9th. CORONA DEL MAR 2744 East Co;1,t Highwdy ( 3 blocks S. of M.1cArthur) '12625 . (714) 6-H· 72;5 Mnn.-1-ri. II) AM·6 PM !'>.11un.l.1\ I~' Al\1·4 l'M Warning : The Surgeon General Has De term ined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health -·~- .. I The difference between a Mercedes-Benz lease and any other is the Mercedes-Benz. The car you lease does make quite a difference. After all, you don't drive the lease, you drive the car. And when you lease a Mercedes·Benz you drive some· thing special indeed. . Whichever Mercedes·Benz model you choose, you drive one of the world's most respected automo- biles. A car with legendary engi· neering, meticulous craftsmanship, outstanding performance and sa fety. Something else: you'll drive the car you lease for two, three or even four years. Most cars look out of date all too quickly. But when you lease a Mercedes·Benz, you drive a car with classic lines and timeless- ness that is never out of date. We have several leasing plans to offer you. One is certain to make it more convenient for you to drive a Mercedes·Benz than you might have thought possi· 0 ble. Call us today .for the surprising facts. Ask about our many convenient leasing plans. Mission Viejo Imports 831-17 40 21~:!~=~~~y. 495-1700 ' ' ~ Son Diego Fwy. or Avery, Mini~ Vie10 Guess which car dealer is . mad because 'he has the world's lousiest location? ' :Ii~ f • If you guessed Jim Parkinson, owner of Newport Datsun and Beach Imports, you ~- are ri ht. He has to sell DA TSU NS but no one knows where his locations are. OM 1976 DATSUN 610 ! -/ & 710 MODELS IM STOCK f MEW 197 6 DATSUM NEW 1976 DATSUM MEW 1976 DATSUH MEW 1976 DATSUN 610-C:OUPI 610.2 DOOlt 61M DOOtt 61MDOO« --'4Lt•001W071 --ttc•-jHl.a1001't••3t • ._, '4Lt1CMl1971) . .....,,_.,.-......... ............ 1oanM1~ 1c OVER 1c OVER 1c OVER I' OVER FACTOllY IMYOICl FACTO«Y IMYOICI FACTOllY IMYotel PACTOIY IMYOICE 1977D~ MEW 1977 DATSUH MEW 1977 DATSUM MIW 1tn DATSUM 12102 4 ·~ heat• w"'M4 C:O"fttf'1 lu1, 1210.2 DOOlt 620 SHCMrTam PICKUP Pit COWi :lory e<!U<PP9d fW\.821091'9" II ,__,,_.,~.1021) °""' ..-tlCZDI cz:s.1 I 'I -.... .._.., A Pulr Pectoty 111s + 1• a he: on aoorO'W'ld c:,ect.1 ............. S78 88 mo ., ~ C.•ft pnc~ S~7S 52889 53380 53579 Del pyml MOl9 7• ..,,.. 13 7) ... 578!! A SUH 1976 DATSUH 8210 1210 11:)17"1Ct) • a-a (09ll'KEl WAS UHi t1w 92579 NOWIS ~ ;. 't , This may· be the best time in years to buy . ·a beautiful MG Midget- MG MIDGET JUST REDUCED! NEW MIDID-5349~· .,..,,. _________ ~ "DON'T WAIT- LARGE SELECTION TO CHOOSE FRO BAUER MOTORS JAGUAR· MG· TRIUMPH BRITIBH IN 2925 HAUOR ILVD. L.aYLAND COSTA MESA 979-2500 BEACHIMPORTSSUPERSALEON · ALfA ROMEO ~'PEUGEOT • SAAB . ' . ~.,. For a hmited time wen "81l Ing 197 6 Peugeots at a close ... to origlfttl dealer cost. Model • 1 1 •• ,........ ..... ,.... 504 Sl Sedan s7 ,3 2 0 (S..02f0) 504 Station Wqon '7, 7 8 5 (Sd97) 504 Diesel Sedan 18,400 {Slr.2021) 504 Diesel Wacon '8,865 !Ss.6'02) \ '6,320 '1,000 '6,785 s I ,000 '7,400 s 1,000 '7,765 'l,100 0.. .... ••7&1ow-~ -s--................. ,.., • .i-, ~ ,,.-o1 '64tt• ........ S$Z95 • Aho ... -fo< '°"' -..,._, ..._ '-· ..,_ 9tGt. ,..,.._ ~ ffaftllM\MO" Of'ld PC>-wt'f ,...,.."9. .,,~w, priud ot so,n&.' now U,oU ' ftw• Mlikt WOft I 00 °" ._ ...... fl ... wt-.,.. ... ~)' '' fheM MOCMit tlf'lde,,_ $o oct l'IOW, •MoMffo<:Mfff"t ..... Md ttfOtt P 0 ( puce '"C!\ld•"Q deoiet Pf...,.,....,.. , ..... 1111o.--..-""'""''"'·--. g to Stydahar Dead; LA Rips Pacers BECKLEY, W.Va. Joe Stydahar, a ooe·time star tackle for the Chicago Bears and coach o( the Los Angeles Rams, died Wedpesday Dlgbt. He was 65. He was a star player at West Virginia University and went on to become a member or the pro football ball of Came 10 years ago. ~dahar starred for the Bears ~g the 1936·42 seasons and asam during 1945-40, and was an fU·pro tackle during the 1937 -40 #Usons, before joining the Rams IS assistant coach. ~ became head coach of the Rams in 1950, when the team lost t!Je•t'Jational Football Leag ue c.flJlrr>pionship game to Cleveland 3)-28 on Lou Groza's last-minute field goal. The next year St)idahar's Rams beat th e Browns 24·17 Cor the league tiUe But a disagreement with the R ams' front·office Jed to Stydahar leaving the club after that. He was an asi.1stant couch at Green Bay late in the 1952 $e&500 and an assistant with th<' Ct.foago <now St. Lou1 ~ 1 Cardinals during 1953·54 Laker•Wln INDIANAPOLIS • Kareem Abdul-Jabbar scored 26 points and Cauie Russell added 2S as the.Los Angeles Lakers held off a llti(lndiana rally to take a 105·97 ~al Basketball Association decfsion Wednesday night. Los Angeles led 78·72 going into the fourth quarter. but saw its lead cut to 86·84 with 7 39 re· maining. Baskets by Jabbar and Ea'rl Tatum, however, plus t\'oo free throwc; by Don Ford gu \'(' the Lakers a 92·86 lead with 5 4U re mainmg and they were never headed. LOS ANGELE\ 11011 Ru•••ll 1\ r "1 ~ l\h dul ·JAf)bM 1~ Cf'lllf"WlV ,0 Allpn 10. Ab! rr11•1t1v h KupPc.k '1 la1um 16. NiJ1oum.,nn 1 .JltitOlANA 1•7• t-t111m 1n q ln1"11• 11 Rl"I"'' ri 77'ttft0fdm'VW\ 10 Kn•')t\I ~fol fi, "'"'" J J-11n., 1 lo4'it."'1"'•'· 1' 1• 1H 11 '"' 11\doan" 1• 1l lS H ., Tot•I f'>Yh -LO\ AnQ,..lt\ 1• Ind· \f1A 1} TetMltoll '""'...,. tO<t<" L•on••d " IJ 1)1 Finley Will Seu CHICAGO Oakland A's basebaJl owner Charles 0 Finlev s aid late Wedncsdo:iy night he'll sell his team to his fello.,., major league owner'> "Wllh one st1pula- t1on · that they agn•t· to keep the club m Oakland for .tl ll•a!)t 10 years Such u !->ale. he added. would have to be "signed 1n blood ' Fullerton f' alb MINNEAPOLIS Louisiana S_tate. Miss issippi College, Kansas State. Tennessee, Southern Conn<'clicut and de feoding champion Delta State nptched first-round victories m the Association of lntercolleg1ate >\t/llctics for Woml•n tJ\IAWl basketbull tournamcnt Wcdne!)· day, Lpu1s1ana Statt• ddl'dLC'<I Western Was htnJ?ton 91 :;J, M1~ sissipp1 College oush·d Cal St.itc <FuUt•rtonl 97 ~I. Kani;,1~ St al•· bombed Utah iO 32, Tl·nne!>se1..· dereated M1ch1g.m Stat<· 7fl.f\2. Soµthcrn Conne<'l1cut toppPci ML5soun HO 64 ;ind Delta Stull· routed host Mmnesota R7 4J Brenda Martin'i. 17 pomts kd l\ullerton, which dropped to 19 J l(M.g Si ruggle11 SAN ANTONIO H1lltr Jean King, the s1x-t1mr Wimbledon singles champion. had a gn•Jt deal of trouble bra11nJ( un · heralded Carol B.uly 1n a M·cono r<iu~ match at the l\tcFarlm ~i!--Women's tennis tournament nesday. "Billie Jean 1s very lucky to b(' playing Thursday," Ktnj, said after her 6 4, 6·4 triumph King. lop.seeded despite ljlP,t having played l'Om pd1ll\ e tTCI Belted B~ Stanford sangles Since 185t October, lost the first three games in each set. She was scheduled to meet seventh-seeded Kate Latham in today's quarter.finals. A victory would set up a possible semifinal match against Dr. Renee Richards, the controversial transsexuaJ who started playing as a woman last year. The ftfth·seedcd Or. Richards breezed past Pat Medrado 6·2, 6·1 and will have to beat third· seeded Marcie Louie lo meet King. Angels Slapped SUN CITY, Ariz. -The Milwaukee Brewers and California Angels engaged in a home run barrage Wednesday, with the Brewers taking a 10·9 exhibition baseball victory, their fourth straight. The Brewers hit six homers, in· eluding two by Gorman Thomas, and lbe Angels had five. Trel"irao Withdraw• HILTON HEAD ISLAND, S.C -Lee Trevino, again forced off the lour by an ailing back that threatens his career, has withdrawn from the Masters. Trevino was not available for comment, but a spokesman for his office in El Paso said he had sent a telegram to the Masters last Friday withdrawing from the annual s pring Classic. scheduled in Augusta, Ga. Apnl 7-10. "lie did this follo"'ing doctor's orders." the spokesman said. Trcnno plans to compete m the Tournament of Champions in Carlsbad. CahL April 14-17, hts office said Gyttencut Booked BATON ROUGE. La /\ Louisiana State L'nh crs 1ly gym- nai.t, Ronald Scott Reznick, was booked with two counts of dis- tn butaon of hashish Wednesday night, police said Reznick. 21. 1s from Santa Monica. Police wouldn't release details on his arrest. l JOE NAMATH SAYS MOVE TO LA IS OK. ' t 49ers a Surprise Had the Potentiat.-Bubas RALEIGH, N.C. lAP) -Although he always had faith in the potential or the Sun Bell Conference, commissioner Vic Bubas • says the success of its star team North Carolina-Charlotte - exceeded his wildest dreams. "Things hai•e gone well for us. but to have a team that goes lo the NCAA Tournament final four m the first years is just something that goes beyond anyone's expectations." Bu bas said Wednesday night in a telephone interview. The 17th· ranked 4f;lers burst upon the national scene last season by finishing second in the National Invitation Tournament, losing to Kentucky by four points in the title game "That was the start of their rise. but I thmk they proved they played unus ually well against good compel1t1on,'' Bu bas said. Much ado was made about the 49ers coming so close to beating Kentucky. but Bubas noted that UNC-Charlotte's first.round vie tory was a 79.74 decision over San Francisco, which topped the polls through most of this season. Bubas said he was s urprised by the 49ers victory in the NCAA M 1deast Regional this year, but added he never doubted the team's potential Batiling for Put-k Gene Carr ( 121 of the LA Kings fights off Randy I Iott of the Chicago Black Hawks during National Hockey League action Wednesday nighl in Chicago. The Kings won, 3-1. to It's lJp to Jets, U To Complete Swap LOS ANGELES <AP> -Joe Namath, quarterback ol the New York Jeta for the past 12 years, is willing to be traded to the Los An1eles Ram11, his lawyer said today. It's now up to the Jets and the Rams to work out a deal for the gimpy.legged star who led the Jets to the National Foot.ball League's Super Bowl chim· pionship in 1969, attorney Jim Walsh said. Walsh said he hid met with the Rams four times during the past two weeks to determine if the Rams had a ·'sincere interest in Joe." "Based on bits of information 1 'd rather not disclose, l 'm con- vinced the Rams will do what is necessary to acquire Joe," Walsh said. Walsh said he didn't know when a deal might be concluded or what the terms might be. "Whatever deaJ they make is okay with me," Walsh said. "I don't care if the Rams give one player, two players or 20 players. Walsh had told the New York Times earlier that he would talk to the Jets today. Jets general manager Al Ward said he expected to begin talks with the Rams Monday when the NFL meeting opens in Phoenix, accordj.ng to the Times. Namath's contract is scheduled for renewal with the Jets April 1 and if a deal is nol completed by that date, New York would be in the position or not being able to get anything or value for Namath. The Times quoted Walsh as saying: "The Rams are asking Joe to ' t•k• a substantial cut. It's dif· ricult for me to make an argu. ment with them about how he'll draw ln Los Angeles, even though I know what he can do at the box office. But they're in the posit.Jon ol saying. 'Take it or leave lt. •They're a very powerful organization." The Rams announced a few days ago that any quarterback they hired would be paid $150,000 to $200,000. However. s ome in- siders felt Namath's salary wou Id be higher. "It used to hurt Joe to watch the Rams," Wals h told the Times. "and see how good they were and yet they were not able to go all the way. He used to tell me that if he were with them he m igbl be able to do it.'• The Rams have been in the ;>layofrs four straight years but have never been to a Super Bowl. The Jets have been on the decline ever since Namath led them to their Super Bowl upset. Besides Namath's Jets salary, he also has a solid base for com· mercial operations in New York He was involved ill advertising ventures and reportedly receives $250.000 annually from Faberge for promoting men's cosmetics. Walsh noted Namuth's off·lbe· fi eld businc~s opportunities when he told lhr T1m ci.. .. J oe hasn't sudde nly de- veloped a fond love for LA. A lot of people think there arc so many opportunities for him out here, that's why he'd come. But I'll tell you they haven't moved Madison Avenue to LA. When was the lai.t lime you saw a Rams quartei:back doing a com· merc1at?" Tarkanian's Views Investigation Won't Hurt Rebs ATLANTA CAP) -Jerry Tarkanian. coach of fifth·ranked Nevada-Las Vegas. would just as soon skip the subject or his basketball team's investigation by the National Collegiate Athletic Association. Asked Wednesday if he thought word of the investigation leaked out of NCAA headquarters in hopes of hampering the Rebels' bid for the national cham- pionship, Tarkanian said. "I've got a lot of thoughts on that but it ·s beat that I don't express any of them." And he didn't. Asked if it might affect his learn in the NCAA tournament. he replied, "l don't think so." lie seemed more concerned with No. 4 North Carolina, his opponent Saturday in the nightcap of the NCAA semifinals in Atlanta's Omni. "I've never seen a team that did so many things and did them well." Tarkanian said Wednes· day during a telephone news con ference mvolvmg the coaches of the four semifin al teams. He especially expressed con· cern about the Carolina "four corners" offense, a delay game often employed by Tar Heels coach Dean Smith late in a gamt• when his club is nurs ing a lead ··A lot of teams are running the four corners ... Tarkanian said ''It's not a matter of running it, 1t is how welJ you run it. It'll be new for us because we haven't seen anyone run it as well as Carolina. "It would be nice if we got ahead and didn't have lo worry about it." "We gel too' much attention on our four corners," Smith said. "We also believe in the fast break. But no one does it any bet· ter than Vegas. We think we are surely facing the toughest team in the West. It wilt be one of the toughest tests we have faced." The Tar Heels carry a 27-4 re- cord inlb the game. Las Vegas has the top mark of the final four. 28-2. Saturday's opener matches up start "lorth Carolina-Charlotte. 28-3. and ranked 17th. against No 7 Marquette, 23· 7 UNCC also will employ the fast break . although the well disciplined Sun Bell Conrei:ence champions also demonstrated considerable patience in rolling to victories over Syracuse and No. 1 Michigan in last week's Mid east Reg1onaJs Marquette . whi ch loses veteran coach Al McGuire to re- tirement after this tournament. 1s a dcfrn~1ve-minded club that lakes to control the tempo of a game M cGu1r e said he thought Charlotte's strong point was its ··underdo~ type or attitude -all for one and one for all. I think this is the greatest asset you have." lie said he was sure LJNCC had outstandin{{ players :rnd that hc- had r ead abou t Cedri c "Cornbread" Maxwell, who "just seems to be a charmin):.! young guy He seems to be the' type of guy that C<ln lead you to the national ch:1mp1onsh1p." Max well 1s Charlotte's 6·8 center, a silky smooth operator who 1s avera~mg more than 20 points per ~amc and also 1s used lo I akc the hall down court against an opponent's full·court ~rcss .. Max well does J ll phases of the game well. · said '19ers coach Lee Rose, who took his team to the finals of the National Invita· lion Tournament last year. but still d1dn t figure to be one of the finalt~Lc; in the NCAA event NCAA Cage Tickets Bring Dollar Harvest CHARLOTTE, N.C. CAP) - There were 14 classified ads in the local papers Wednesday offering NCAA tickets fnr a steep price. A survey of the potential sellers by one reporter turned up prices ranginit from $50 to $225 for each S28 ticket to the two days of tournament action in Atlanta lJC Irvine's Anlt'ater~ are pre patll'\8 for a doubleheader with 8\-fgham Younft University Saturday on their home territory after a two·game fling in Ntithem California that proved frlMe&s. The Ant.eaters dropped a 4·0 decision at Stanford Wednesday ~ich produced only four safelles. Doug Cttard ·~ double w .. s the only extra base hit for UC Irvine, that coming in the thtrd tnnlng. LS~ Gridder Guilty in 'Stabbing Roy Parkt>r. director of the athletic foundation at North Carohna·Charloltc. said he had heard of one seller offer mg tickets at $600 each. UNCC 1s one of four teams heading for Atlanta, and Parker said he had been deluged with requests for the 1.000 tickets alloted to the school. Those llckeLB "(tre quickly purchased Tuesde.y by students. facultyand1upporters. Wednesday'• loss puts the An teatersrecord at 11·10. UCIMMltl ........ ti lff'4•• ~ Wlftl•'' dll n. • .,., •• tnoi. tb U~IM """.,. .,,",.. •o n o I 0 I n I ti I 0 1 o o n • t I II WnPll!lqlOll rl Wfl•Yf*r1 tt M~rton < """" :lb ~'"""'' ... HeQ<t'I 0 , •... , J 0 0 0 1 n O 0 'n e o l 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 0 ~01 ,. 0. 0 , " . ....... 041 001 011 OIJl-4 I I BATON ROUGE (API -A state t'ourt jury bas convicted Louisiana State University foot ball player RuRsell Domingue. 22, of attempted manslaughter In the stabbing of another LSU StU· dent during a fight. The maximum penalty is 10 yura in prison. Sentencing wn.'I Postponed Domlnigue was char1ed with a ttempled aecond-dearee murder. But the Jury found him auJlly Wtd.nesday ru1ht ol the lesser charge, saying the state (ailed to prove an "intent to kill." Neither Domingue nor the vlt· tlm, Richard Connelly, disagreed over what actupJly happened the night LSU Ued Nebraska 6·6 In the openin1 game of the football 11ea~on lnatSeptt•mber. Where they dlCfered was on tho l111ue of intent A ttorneya. for both sJdell called wltnHHI who described the carnlvaJ.llkt atmoaphere atou:nd .the oU~ampua hanioull after the game. The witnesses said Domingue was crossin g the street when he klck<'d a dent in Connelly's sport& car, which waR stalled In a traffic jam, and that the two then fought. Thty also ronfirmed that Domlngut> pulled u knife. However, the pro.,.ecutlon CQn· ttnded that. Domingue pulled tht knlfe with murderous Intent, whne tho def~• ar11.&td that Connelly waa 1tabbed wtl.nten· Uonally when bo and Domlnl\I• fell to the ground In ~e scufne. The jury deliberated for three hours and twice called Dislrlct Court Judge Elmo Lear Into their meeting room to clarify polnta or law. Domingue. a llncbackef\ who blocked a Nebraska field g6al in preserving the lie for LSU, was suspended from the team when ht was booked ln Connelly's stab- blna. Ht did not play after that, b'fl retained hll footbill acholaribip. ' Several persons offered to donate up to ti.ooo to the athletic foundation In ex.change for tlcketa, he uld. The foundation turned down the offeu unless the peuon hod contact<'d UNCC before the team went to the NCAJ\ playoffA, rorkersaid I The classified ads carried• teleph<lf\e number• from ~orO> Carolina and Georsla, alUioulh both states have laws a1aft\.st tcalpln&Uck loalhleUc event.a. - ............. C'ordl • die 11..e c tiaaaJ tnS Md IWd ,..,.,.. to HllrlMrltllll • puo• ., . rov ol u.. record bolden competed ta lb• frotb-aopb dl•lalaa at tbe 111'1 aa-. wtsUe aftOtber Mt r.:orcS ta I.be JV dlvtalcm. But me. &eD Maraerwn ~ P'ouataln Valley, la defendlnt ebama and ·recorc1 bolder an the vanity level. Margerum woo the triple jump lut year with an effort of 43-6'4. .. • m I • atro11r1 amW1•ta to OW9 mellt NCCll"d. A1read.J .....-Mar1erum ll• trtp&. • p.t .. 1 .... en« 4 \.\ feet ~ w • d1~11K'9 lut.,... llarprum also tuma in COO· siatently Cood times in tbe sprint.a and burdles. In fact. his SU In tbe 100 and 14.3 ln tho 120 hip hurdles rank as tbe beat times amoog all Orange Coast area athletes this year. His triple • Cities ield t ~ ... -ro.. 111'1. • Tbme Ntlmrntn~ Cltlel lmtt-ckeal r--* year _.. c.,,. Jllll't cl Hu:au~:m Beaeh, Joe Yow• of Co.-ta lleA. Art Gourdlne tf El Taro, Alim Gersten of Unlwn&ty ud SteTe Daw1CJD of bast New pon Hsbor. Burt Kt bb record in the 440 lut year but hia atronceat event ia probably the b.llb jump where he '1 already iooe &.8 tbia seuoo. A 8·8 Jump Saturday would break Bruins Star ~Heads UCI D••IV Piiot Photo by IUclwrd l(off>ltr Spikefest Some of tbe better hurdlers in tbe nation, led by UCLA's James Owens, will compete in Sunday's Meet of Champions at UC Irvine. The meet begins at 11 with the 5,000-meter turn with the finals in the 110-meter high hurdles taking place at 12:50. Owens shapes up as the big favorite in the highs. A junior at UCLA. the former Sacramento prep star finished sixth in the Montreal Olympics, clocking 13.73. Owens, who also is a running back for UCLA. was second in the NCAA (Division I) meet last season and clocked 13.9 or better in 26 of his 28 outdoor hurdler races in 1976. His chief competition figures to come Crom Delario Robinson. George Carty. Ashland Whitlteld and Wes Williams. All are sub-14.0 hurdlers. Robinson is from Kansas, Car- ty is a former San Jose State hurdler and Whitfield and Williams are now competing for the Maccabi Union Track Club. NEWPORT HARBOR (WHITE JERSEYS), HUNTINGTON BEACH GO AT IT IN VOLLEYBALL. The 400 intermediate hurdles also features a good field led by USC's Tom Andrews. who has a best or 48.55 in the event Other intermediate hurdlers entered include former Occiden· tal College standout Gene Taylor. ex-UCLA star Lynnsey Guerrero: Maccabi's James King and USC freshman Charhe Wrute. Mesa .. El Tort) Win CdM Tops Diablos; Trojans Rally, 3-1 Cory AJder spun a two·h1tler to keep Corona del Mar lltgh atop the South Coast LeaJ:u<' baseball standings and Andy Muras hko smacked a two out three run homer IO the bottom or the seventh to propel I rv1ne·s University to victory to h1ghh~ht action Wednesday Alder got the cushion he needed in the third inning when Chris Raymond walked, stole second, advanced to third on a smgle by Jim Jones and was pl at ed on Mark Marlin's base hit and it paid off with a l O triumph against invading M1ss1on Vu.'JO. opposed lo El Toro·s spotless play in the field. Costa M~a. which saw a I o lea d evaporate whe n San Clemente scored twice in the top or the seventh, rallied on Mike Gordon's walk. a sacnr1ce bunt by Cliff Ting , Kirk Bauerme1ster 's rbt sin~le. Tom England's walk and Oavt' Mollica's rbi single down the left side El THOIJI 111 o.~ ""'' ab r " 1111 •b,."' rf)1 rr .... q rt1f 1 0 '0 (''00" l' I., G'""''"• 1b 1 o ~ n ._.,..n o 1 0 f'.'I I) L •V .. \'l"I rt ~ 0 0 0 Brown (' J n n n P1H .. ,.,. 11n c I I) I 8tott\k.t , 1 0 t t ti "'",.!tin c> l' 1 () Rom•ro .,,, 10011 T'>ibMt ( ) 0 0 0 W.tro, rtt\ 1 n 1 n M'>\l>•uql'I lb ) 0 0 0 M,olln .. ,,.,,, 1b 1 (} 1 (I ,.., . .,"""'• ,, l I I ' K1nr11•y If) 1 II l( .. y ..... l 0 1 ' R .. ,._.. tf 1 n n ' Slow Start No Handicap: HB Tops Tars llunt1ngton Beach High 's 01lc.'rs ra('l'd to thei r fourth st raight Sunset League \olle)ball victory Wednesday t•\ emni:. trouncing the ,·1sitmg 'Jew port Harbor Tars m four sets after their customarv slow start. Danny Moorhouse and Mike D'Alessandro were the catalysts in the Huntington Beach attack w1ln lhe1r solid hilling once the Oilers gained momentum in the second set · "'Ne made no adjustments after the first set we lost. it was only a matter of playing with more intensity, .. said' HB coach Rov Miller .:We seem to start s low every- l1me. ··adds Miller Another top event figures to be the mile relay, where ex-UCLA standout Benny Brown heads a contingent Crom Maccab1 Union TC. Brown was a gold m edalist in Montreal last summer. running his 400-meter relay leg in 44 6 Other members of the M accab1 relay foursome include Albert Shorts. Wardell Galbraith and James King. Two events wi1l be held Satur- day-the 10,000·meter run and the first five events or the de- cathlon. Both begin at 10 a m In the 10,000 m eters. UC Irvine freshman Eric Hulst will be the favorite. His top competition will come from Chuck· Smead of Athletes in Action. Hulst will also run in the 5,000-meler race Sunday. Sunday's admission 1s $3 for anyone seven years or age and over. ' •If Oalty Pllet St.ii ',bolo BRUCE HOBBS SHOWS WINNING FORM. ·' ,.J, I South Coast Loop ·' ,. Hobbs Bags Crow~ Rruce Hobbs of M1ss1on Vi<'Jo "on the South Coast League d1\' ing champ1onsh1p Wednesduy af lernoon. fi ghting off cold weather and htllng \\ md to do ti Jeff Phelps of SJn Clement<· captured second. Pat Flood or Dana lhlls was third and Bruce Pulgencio 6f Costa Met.a fourth. .. The wind was really bad and the divers had a tough time fi ght mg it.·· ~aid San Clemente coach Bill Hartman. South Coast League sw1mmini:: finals are scheduled loday at El Toro High School. Mission VieJo. a solid favorite to win the league crown, hai. re· ceived permission to l'ompete as a 4-A school in the CIF prellms and finals. while the rest or th<.> South Cousl Lea~ue ts designated 3·A * * * South Coast Leagut- Divlng Finab I Hobbs < M 1ss1on V1eJO) 262 80. 2 Ph<'lp5 <San Clemettte> 205 60. 3. Flood <Dana HiU6') ~93 .35, 4 J>ul genc10 <Costa \t C' s a ) l R 5 . 7 5 , 5 . L o r 1 n g Cl'01\'ers 1ty1 185.70; 6. Smith <San Clemente I 179 (i!i USC Grid Ace Resists Arrest CdM pitching has allowed rive hits in rolling to a 3 0 league re· cord and Cory's two-h1tt€'r was accented by six strikeouts and no walks. University's Tro1ans remams a game behind Corona df'I Mar thanks to Murashko·., 360 foot shot m the seventh to give Irvine a 3-1 triumph over v1s1t1ng Laguna Beach Jn1..t1\ E '"'", 0 ............ 1,11\ ~I 1 Total\ I• ' • ' Sort by 1Mi"9\ r l'I • 010 n1n o 1 1 i 1r,> OOfl 0 I c & '" ,.,,,....,.,_, G regJ! Svalstad and Brian Rofrr did the blocking and spik- ing and Scott Ford and Rich Hansen were getting the JOb done setting for Fountain Valle~ where the Barons laced rival F.dtson or flunlington Beach IO three sets Area Calendar LOS ANGELES --Gary Jeter, a star defensive tackl e ror''tbb lTn ivers1ty or Southern Califorttla football team. has been boOICcd for investigation of resisting ~r­ resl after being s topped fot speeding on the UCLA campwt The Artists had held a I O l<'ad after sconng m the fifth frame on Tony Clement's rb1 smgh• But Steve Titles openf'd up the seventh with a fre<' pass and after two out David Langmadc got life on an error to set lhmgs up for Murashko The other two loop conflicts saw El Toro drop host Dana Hills, 3-1, and Costa Mesa rallied for a 3-2 conquest against visiting San Clemente. El Toro took command in the second inning with two runs, with the key blow an rb1 single.' by Steve Key after an outfield error aided El Toro's cause, plat.mg the first marker El Toro padded the lead in the (i(th inning with the help or two more Dana Hills errors. Dana Hills was guilty or six miscues as JC Goll Results Soullt CNtt Conl.,eft<t Teur,,.y l•tSI""~ Hlll•CC. :M" 01-.0I Tum '1(0<11>9 1 Gr \\monl ~ 1 ~·~ ""A and f11llfr"lon •I~ • M• \ '" llntnnio "8l s C•• t1IOJ Sil 6 ~ O••Q<> M••• II~ 1 Or..,~ (t>."I 111 OCC Horlno ~rllt '>1•"\••t 91 W•v~ Croulo •nd T1rn "nriovor u llob Tttr..,11 .,,Cl Gord&n Gor~u" Jtlf R•V"lotd• 'Ill Ml\t_V .. io lO• ..... ~ ) 0 I I I I rt W \•.,,.-o'\ ~l'Wl()l'lff p q i,\ It ittt r I\ rt.t 1 0 0 ~ I 0 ()I) i o 1 n Jo" n l 0 ' 0 r .. ~ \On '' '\ O I n •• .,., p , 0 I) ~ t-4l"'·'' tb 1 001) no II "r 'l tl w. I\"'' 1 i "n "1·;q••u•\ ,... 1 non i ,,,. .. 'fl ............ ""' ._ A~1 I~ "44#• "' It> \W•-il ~ > o 0 ~ Q.1vm""'1 (f 2 n n ~ 1ono 0 I) 0 I l 0 0 > n 1 n I)() 0 c 10 1 .. t ((Jf) ,.,~, l1l > t\... \t"!i•rm.t'\ ( Jnt-, ,, ,, 1 ,,,, ... , \c.Of't by '""'"'~ , " . """''' . .,,, v, ... ,o to•o,,•~'~' OtW10Qnno7n ~ .... ci...,.m..ni •b r l'I rbl P.11•1J..,r r 4 f) D l't R .. ,.nolrf\ rl .t O 1 t'I Hnrv•tt'I lb 1 0 0 0 M"tt•nQ• dh Mc DOMIO 711 Fon .. \ttt If M fl>rr1U If Dunham. cl W1tlch '' MHCloW\, lb Morll""'· lb l no o 1 0 0 0 10011 t 0 0 0 ] I 0 0 1 0 1 II I 0 0 0 I I 0 O "(II 000 0 I • 0 IJJ Cot!4~ EnQIAnd \.\ LAFAt .. If Molllc4 lb Yb•rrt t: trollo ,., Gorelon, lb lln9. dh (rl!)O\ cl 8ut•m•lr 11> •Dr II rbl 1 no o • ~ 7 II • 0 1 II ' n no 7 I I n 1 I 0 n 1 n 1 n 1 II 0 n 1 I I I Total\ 11 1 J 0 To!~I\ '1\ ) , ' k•~· by.'"'.,.., , " • S~I\ (l•,.,,..nl~ ()II() 000 1 l J 1 Co\I•-010 OO!I 1 -l 7 • '-••11 ........ 111 UI Ut11 .. n11y •l>rltrbt .. , ·--·· H•u\tr 'lb J 0 I 0 Gtnlllt 'lb 3 o on Brnl,.,.rton C1 1000 Rtl\\ If 7000 Nun1\ '' J 0 0 0 Mull lb ) 0 0 0 Grt•n < J 0 0 () Tiii•' II) 1 0 0 (I B•con •b 1070 Mouq .... " or 0100 HOYh rt 1 I 0 0 Ev•~ cf 1 0 I 0 Htneltrton II 1000 0 OonMll P 1on11 Rlt1'141rOson. JI> 3 O 1 o L .. nom-c l I 1 n Cltmtnl!,dl'I 3 0 0 I M11ro1>~0 OI\ J I I l W••v.r P 0000 Sh•w \\ 0 0 0 0 ICelltt rl t 0 0 0 Total' le I 4 t Pott of\ I 0 0 0 Tot•I\ 1• ) • ) Sc• ... ..,'""""' r It L4Q11n• 8"~11 000 010 0 1 Vn•ve,.11ty 000 000 J-J And in the other Sunset League tiff. winless Marina or Hunt- ington Beach dropped a straighl- s el dec 1s 1on to \'ts1t1ng Westminster. Marina's bright spot was Eric Knight M eanwtule, in Century League action Costa Mesa's Estancia lltgh went ri ve sets before dispos· mg of visiting Canyon High or An aheim V•r~1h WP• fr'Tlln\t"' t1f f MAt1n11 1 C. R 1 '111 t' 1 ~ r nunl.hl'\V.tllitvf1,.f Ect1\oii 1-. • tS 11 t\ 1 Hunt1nqH'.ln R11.,rt\ d• • N1 wnnrt H.,,.t>or S I'> "n 1\q 1\1n E.''~"''"°"'(M•onts 10 11 ~ 9 s 111s. 15.s J11111or V•"lty W"\tm•MtMrt-.fMilr1nd 1~~ lb 1• rt>un1~1nV~ll•yri"I Edl\nnl\ in~!\ 1~17 Hunttnort>n 01".., h (j.-.f ,._.ftWMrt HArbor 16 18. 1\41115 E •tnnci• Cl!>I C.onyon 1' ~ H l Dodgers Nip Reds TAMPA A two-run first in- ning was all the Los Angeles Dodger'9'needed lo defeat the Cin- cinnati Reds 2.1 in an exhibition b aseball · game Wednesday behind the pitching of Doug Rau and Charlie Hough. A run-scoring double by Reg- gie Smith and a single by Rick Monday produced the Dodgers runs off losing pitcher Santo Alca1a. Borg Turns Baek Pattison's CARLSBAD, Calif. (AP) - Top·seeded Bjorn Borg turned back a strong challenge from An- drew Pattison. despite some Sloppy playing that left even Qorgbnhappy. "I 'm not aath1fied with my g,me. I'm too Inconsistent and l 'D\ not. holdlne my concentration durlna all the point.a ." Bore said after the match tn the •~ond­ round elimination• ot the $100,000 La Costa lnfer111llonal tennis clullc. "l have to be Htisfied with the outcome because I won, but I know I can play much better." So tar in the tournament. l l of the 16 seeded played have been sent to the sidelines, and touma· ment officials had Ceared Borg might join them when he trrtiled 4-2 in the second set. But Bora volleyed cri1ply and cashed In on two borderltne calls ln hl• favor to Win. r;artlll', ~Ytar-otd Brian Got· trrled, ranked tbltd, look an ee y 6 -4, 6-2 victory over By.,on Bertram, in contrast to a come- from-behind win by Clflh-seeded Stan Smith, who recovered from a rlrst.-set loss to defeat Sasht Menon H, 7-5, 6·2. In other matches, Ross Ca11e, se.-ded ninth, was defeated by Carlos Klrmayr 7-5, 6-3; 12th· seeded Mark Edmondson w11 ellmlnated by Trey Waltke, 6-0, &-2; 14th-ranked Ove Benatson waa knooked out or pl11 by Victor Amaya, 6-2, 'l·S; and Geof( ~ .. f'rldo fM.trcll HI Sw1mm1rtQ-S.Un\'lt Lf'Aqu~ t1n•t-. 11 LO.., ~ta ,,,.to\ H1on f') LA Harbor •I GQ•dr"' Wt.'' Coll roe 131 S~n 8ern•rC1li,o •n<I \ 111'11•!>.>c t Colleqo •t CNlll'Y IJ lOI. Or•l\9<' Coa'I Ct>ll"Q" .. , Ml s .. n Anlnruo(Ollf<Jt (3 301 UC lrv1,,..a1 N(AA 01v,-.1on I •I Ct•W-f•f1d Oht0 8a\ .. b4lt <~tA Mft\• •t Cor"""• ""'' Mir D.tnt11 H1lh 4l M1ut0n Vt•Jo S..n Ctf'lmPnt,. .ti Uqur"' Belch Un1ven•tv dit El Toro. C)I P.-ut tlt AA .. r~r 0•1 Hunl1~on V11Ury Chrt\t••" "'' M • .,.-n.Hf'IJI ~dlt •• "l H J Edi\on V1 t-1unt1nqton 9,.~~ h Al roon ta•n V&llf'V R~,.,.,~Uon '"'"' .. ' fS }tit Wf'\lm1n\l1tr v\ Fount•1n V~llfi'Y et FouniAln VAlll'y Rfllf"r""''*""" C"'"'"'r II ). S.nta Ana v,. E~tanet.t .,t T•W•niil.., Panr f7 lO' Gymn"''"'--~oonta•n v.11,.., £d1,nn. t-iunt 1n9ton 8flaCh, Mar1tta. C).,n Cl"m,.nt.-1'~ ~""' C.•l>r••I lnv•lallOMI 111. Gold<ln Wr\I COll"'l' "' Pas.,dttn• ,,, 1 Track -'>on D•"OO Cltv Coll•Q• '" ~·"fdltb.or~ Coll~. OrJ"Q" (O<t\I Coll~ Al Mt '>An An111n1n COllM• lboth al 11 f>!lnla Monlc11 al GolOl'n WM! Coll~•l?J f pnft15 Hunllnqtof\ B••tll II Ed"on Founl~•n Vallty at W"r.tmh,,, .... M1r11'1ol ~· Nfl'WOl')rt HMbor E•lenc I" di San111 "n&. Coron& 0.1 AM• •I C.o•t• M•\•. M••"on Vl•lo 41 DAnl Hiii\ fl Tnrn ill Univor\lly, l.aQuM 8•&<1'1 al S•n Cl•m<-nl• fnll 81 ]' ISi. Goldt<I Wt\! (Ollf'9<! di LO\ AnQ!'lr\ CC fl 301. Volleyball UnlY11~lly •t El Tnrn. D•n• Hill• M Minion Vl•lo s.tn Cl•m•nl• ., l.~QU"A e .. wh Co•ta Mesa et Coron.t do.I M•r £'Mn<•• Al Lit Outnt& '""',..,.at Mat~r 0.1 HunllnQton A"'•<"' •I EOl\on ~ounta1n V•ll•v 111 Wf'\lmtn,t1tr M,,,.,,, ~I N•woor1 H8rbo• 1•11 •t 81. Gl•ncl•I• •I Golrl<on W••I Coll-17 ~· Girl\ sw1mmlnq-T11\fln 11 SAn Cl•m•nl• IJ 1\1 G•'''Qvn\"4,flc\-E\tancl11'1t M·H•n;t n- Gorl\ \OlllMll Mesa '""'o""I .If 1",01.,...n W•\l Colloq• 11 """ ,...,nl\ <;<>Iden Wost <:411-Al GrO\<ll\IWll 111 Glrl~ trect <><.-. Co~nt Coll•'I" 84••"'••111 atMt San..,nton•n(Ql .. IJI ~-· ,,,_."" '" S•lm""no Sumet IA~ue oualll¥•"0 .i lo• Al•m•lix Hlon llO• m I. c.nturv L•~ fin•!••• Foot11111Hl;h 1nooo11. UC lrv•nt .i NC"A °'""1"" I t1'141m~llf0\ lft Cl• ... l.,.cl 11,.ll<tll~t H1r'bor "' Mtrln• 11 lllalr l"ltlO O;lO om I 8rl0f\...., VOUftQ Unlvtnlty ot Challenge Masters, ranked 16t,h, was upset by Erik Van Dnten6._., 5·7. 7·6. Local f avor1te Brian Teacher of San Dl'go, whO upset Mexico's top 9layer RJul l\amlrez Tues- d a 31 , w aa e I l m l n a te d b y Amt•rican Hank Pllater, 6..:1, 6-3 Fuurt.IHeeded Roscoe Tanner withdrew from a match with Americon Tim O ulllk1'on becaUM b.1J Jett ankle. Injured In • l•"\e Tu.1doy, l•lttd to rttpond w ttutm.U 0( I rvu>e ldouol..,..~d•r .JI noo"I (di Stal• o->m 1n9ue1 HHI· At SouUu•rn (~11tnrnt l (Oll"Ofl' fOOUbl•~,. •t nQOn) S<icklt•N~. Al Palof":'\..,,. f ll Cll•O<Nn JV a! Gotclf'n W•'I Coll-lnoot>I Vollfl>~~lf -Co~t& M ... <A "'' S"uth P.H4Mna tournpy S.nta 8a,.Mr-t itf NPwpnrt H-4rt)l)r t 11 T•n"l\.-UClrvlMat P,.p~rd1nf' f?ctnd 1) Tr•ck fdl\Oln N"WPf>rt H \fbt>,. HuntinQttH'I 8••<-h E'ttW\' •A Fl)Uf'lfd•n VAllrv rnr()r'tlll ,....., Mir Co\la #111l"'•• Un1-.1,.,.• ~tv 0~"" H t1' M 1,'\t?" v1 ... ,~ •• S-ttc., CthP\ '""*litllCYMI ..ti N-wr-')rt toi•rt>or Hiqh 11 a m t Un1vf'n1tv LA04Jn., n-~(h ~I £I Onr ldn tnv1t~ llOfUll G1tl\ ba~lff~tball M~tnr ON "'41 St Antt-.Qiny 101,r""y C."I\ !oOflthlll """'" IAnt I "' C.Ol<H<> Wf'\t tnoonl Girl' trAr~ A" ... <l"t (d•r-' lov1\,;-1oo"I .,1 N,.wPOrl Harbin" H1Qn 1 t • m S....iov (M•nll271 lrac.k UC lrv1nf'>mt•f"t nfrh4mn1on\ f11 tt m 1 Jeter, who hves near UCtl\, refused to show campus polij:'.e his driver's license and to)d 6f. ricers he would not allow himself 10 bt' arrested after b~ln, i.topped W<.'dnesday. police said .• A backup unit was called and police dragged Jeter froln h\s car. authoriti es said. .' ,Jeter. 22. was turned over lo West Lo.I\ An~t'les 01v1s1on po~ and rele;is<'d after posting ball. pohc-<' said. A court .ap- P<'arancc· was SC'l for next Wed, nc•sday . Hor~ets Edge GWC::· 3 Rustlers Sparkle in Loss ,1 Despite outstanding performances by three swim- mers, Golden West College dropped a 53-51 decision to Fullerton Wednesday afternoon in junior college dual meet action in the GWC pool. Keith Johnson of the Golden West Rustlers posted a season best or 49.4 in winning the 100 free and also placed second m the SO free. ~ Merrill Ril ey a nd John * * * NI..-!Al (Ill OeNell Wiit 400~..,rt111y-I l'ulltrtonl"SS6. 1.0001..-1. Mc<:An (F l IO:i. .•• 1 Golon~• IOI 10 n 1. > Cn>\' tG> to J& •. 100 frM -1 wtnoe• 101 1:4 .•; 2. 1.oskfll 11'1 I. st 0, J 0.Moft IGll HO. ~ fr"-t Cltfl•y IF I n 6; 2. Jo""'0" IOI tt 1, J llltll•rd• 101 n • 700 Incl ......... 1 T1y~ IP'I 7 O~ O; t lllllly (011 no l Koncll lF>O t• 1 Dlvl119 I <loio.!elft 16 1 IU ti t l'rlt• 101 IOS 7\.) CAnllOll (fl 100 0 100 fly t T,ylor fl'I 2 &) 0 J KtrK l'I !Fl 1 tl • 1 VlllO fGI t 11 1 tOOfrH I Jolwl>on 1(11 c. A, l Clalfty tf'I '° o S to!it..,Ot, IOI '° J 700 b80 1 CIMf•y ,,, J Ill, 7 Plt~o<' IGI , ". ) ~ .. ( .. It ,.0 ~fr .. I Riiey IGI •• n '· t OolontA IOI • s• ,, J M<C.n 1F1 $,OO A 100 bf-1-t llillll•r IF I J 74 t • t T1v1« '" t U c l Stuwt 1012 1H •OO lrH rtltY-1 Ooldtn Watt 10.Moll, Jol\neon, c;.len .... W-r I J t. I Golonka Wf'nt one·lwo in the~ free, both with their best efforts of the year. Riley won in 4'_~~ and Golonka hit 4 : 59. 7. Th est tr the third and sixth fastest tfm· ever by Golden West swimmatr This trio teamed with. DeMott to win the final race to pull within two J>O~\:i~ favored Fullerton. Mitch ~' ; tein and Greg Price rtnisbe<l two in diving for the Rustler~i 1,, • 11 r College Volleyball~ ~lttf'tlCllllWftla l"'•'"" .. '•te '•'1 I Vtlle')'fl\01111•-latl... I 1"1 UCLA USC ~Dptrelll!O UC Santi .. rlMrt C•t \tlll• (Liii Si n OIOQO Siii!• '-•Ynl• UC lr~lnt w.' ~~ 6 f I lh. • t ~,~ ' , ) ,, ~· 1 ~ 'drl ~ ~o r. .. •fl•• ... / ;{ ;.~ i S11nset W'•• t'• luu.i a1&1• 1wlmm1D1 pknbtp 11 decided ay att.rnoao (I) at a Alamltoa Hl1b ool. it wlll be the ........... b ot the Newport • bor Hi1h Sailors nst the lint place enllb ot the Fountain ey Barona that de· atheluue. 1 a1 Wednesday•a pre· ~. & litninarlel at the tam4' I' ;si~. Newport qualified 1•\27 places in the unity ::c~~mpiomhip competi· i~lf@rArea U. .cAU-IU~.iihu!Vllll1Mt.-.1J1.11la~wJt1A&ilt11..M .......... •-wbi;-.-41iDia..&.itM-...••-+--- Valley. (lt.50) aad tb• l o But tbl aan. posted C'1.4S). Aldrt b •• bat th• top mark tn n .. °' In I.be lOI buUer01 La the tltht event• with "·33· ..,Ike Xelly and 8111 Newport '• Mllle -Vellekamp bad the best Babaabolf accounting effort ot the day in the for two apiece and Rick 200 lndlvldual medley Aldrich 1ettin1 the and Jamie Bergeson other· topped the fteld in the 100 breast.stroke. JC Cagers In Tryouts BabasboU bad a 1 : 45.2,8 in the 200 tree and 4 :'2.SZ in the SOO. Kelly completed the domina· tion by Fountain Valley in the freestyle events When the two schools Dennis Smith of Sad· I t . ' • • • • .. _,. ' . T•llfl • 1 ............. r tt • """.,,.. --.... ' ' O.....Wllt .,._.,.. °""ltC-. m Ott.A......, O..,.CINll ... ac-.. ~ .... Wctllff,3111 1 t t t ~ ....... ~ , ' ' ' ........-.i. I 1 t J ,,_,,.,. I • t t .__.... ,, .. w.tt,M J t 1 I ..,._I' I \ t a ....,,..._,. I t t \ • ....,.,,Cf ' ' • • met in dual meet action, dleback College ts one of Fount.aiA Valley. came 15 players bidding for a out on top and w_all be. a berth 00 the atate JC sllsh~ favorite 10 AAU basketball team Friday 1 ~ala. lb at will be playing in the ' 111 • Edison s . Chargers national AAU tourna· LAM.,.., • ett .._, > • Tat• ts 1 6 1 ........... captured five or the mentMaichll·Apri13in OrH99CNll .. '" •-' '• IOUT'MC)QUT LllAOUa w L ·oa 1 \~r'-· Net Results ·ir:- se'(en frosh·~h ~ven~ Lake Worth, Fla. ....W:':.1m:::.._ to place 17 m Fnday s Tryouta will be held ...... !Inals and lead the way next week ~1~~,C:=--~~'!'. in that dlvis~on. Marina Others· bidding for ""° 1G1., MMet11 H .. t; MMM had H quabfy f<?r the spots 00 the team include 1G1 •• ....,w. ,~; ...,._ __ , .. toro11a ... Mar 11 •• Mi11loll Viejo t a 1 0-Httts 6 S S ScllCI.....,.. s t 6 CMtcMcsa S 6 • ~·, VAIUITY • ••Clcuowwtc l1Wtl 11~1~Mestl 11.·• SI ..... } ..-llrtls ISi def OMU W. def IMlk°' f"'"'-o. def Rustt M. def llo•I• .. 1: ~"''" ($1 -.. 2 ... , •••• •·2; ' Ocvh ISi -.. ,, .. J. •·O, •·O; L'klrwff <SI -M . 6-3. 6·2, 6~. l /ec111y.Rcck~SI tpllt wllll 4 tM»IM·T9QNCIA .. t,6-7: loslto LI• I fwerncr '"'· '°': Wlnltt't-INllory ISi I ""'°" .... M ; lost2-6, 4-4. I \ • l'llOSl4·SOf'H I ' Sl"ll• .14crwy ISi toil to Penton J-6, to Tim ToMllAI 1-6, dcf Wolle 6-2, del Gru.n• ' Incl •·1; Ell190tl ISi lost .... 2·•. w. won..O. VARSITY a1 T-l1Sl CUI 0.... 141111 Sl"I ... I T,..lo1Ello!.lloP9~1-6,dt1Wln. lefll~ller 6-1, def ~n .. 2, def 8tO. ' ~l:'"S. HU9f'H IE) WOl'I M, 6-2, •·2, 1 6-<>; 810Dd IEI IOll ~. won 6-2, 7°6, \ to\I l-6; Meis,,.,. IEI toll 1-6, •-6, W, • IM. .. _.... Dwtliles __ 1!.l~ktr-G. HUQ'Mt I El def $perk\• ~ .. 1. 7-6 .• SPiit wllh Orcns- l"91onM. 2-6; 0 '8'1.,._WNtllr.tf' tit H . >-6. lolt W. 2-4. JUNIOttVARllTY C.1t111MMl16I IUlt.OttM!ltc Slfltlct W-r CCI def INnln 6·t, lost to Mllchcll .. 7,dt1Llrdt'-3,dcf0111 .. 1; LHllY ICl -.. t, lost U , -M. .. I; O'Ntcl IC) -.. t. lost 0-6. _. 6-t ... 2; ~!"Mn CClloSl._.,U,1-6. wonw. Ocllllt6es Neal-Hiii (Cl def ean .... Caln 6·1, .. 3.def~llorv·W-._1,6-1;T11tktr· Hattlcld ICltost t~ .. 7.IOitM ,2._ VA•SITY U.-9Mctl , .. , cm Ulllftnltr S6tltlCI ThOrntcin CU def 1'.tl"'""81tf' ._t. def Putman .. 1. def Mc.,., M. kKt to Rabb .. 7; Burridge (L) los1 H , 4 ... -n 6-3. defcutqcj; lllidlcllCll CL) ICKt S·7, won .. 2, 6~. io.t t•; Rcssttf' (L) IO\t t-6, won ~2. IOll l-6, W. OMllfct Cetdcrwood-Cunerd (LI def Sulllv•n·Mllt•r •·•. 6-1; tPlll wltll Strobl·J-s '-7. 7·S: Camllblll·Malcr ILi "'llt .. 2, .... -M.t~. l'ROSH·SON U111vcnny !ti ISi LI ..... ec.c11 Sl"ll• Wcllccc ILi tost to OllWr 2-6. to Miiier ?-6; Rvuatl (LI !05t 0-6. H; M<lntyrc ILi lost to 14.trdy S-7, clef Oa.,•m., .. 1; V~ ILi 10$1 .... won .. L Del!M• oaw-~ IUI def l'rler· Mc0-ld6-);t0ltto PKk-Maut'0 .. 7; llordt~eo-i IU> IClllt ... ,64. J IHU Ollt V AltSt TY U111vcnny CHI !ti &..ielM llek• ........ finals and Huntington T Y r 0 0 e Br any a n ::::tt!'. w. w.; c... <G> Beach 11. (Cypress>. James Hynes Net_""":-::,-... o-..._ ~lll,trcc•ct <Cuesta), Steve Smith ""'"''"w. .. 2: ~-MMCI• 101 VAMITYOUALll'l•RS A ) M tt dlfHl991..C-t-4. .. 2.M;J11119-JOO fr-I aatwljf'IO!f CFI 1 UU; <Santa oa • a 51recllenCOl .. H1 ... HcrtM ..... 2. Montor••n tNl 1:• 90: 3. Pull IF> M ad er o s (Butte) • ..2 ... a. i:so.s1: •. Mallory IN> 1,SJ.2'; s T Y r o n e D a v i s o1•u•Y11111ttan1cs Pollavcnt IHI !:SJ.Jot; 6. Pkklord IEl VAllStTY 1:si.u ; 1. vo11..., tN> 1:u .t ; 1. (Palomar), Roy Josbma Ptt1.V•1tcYl2t4.llC1tU>etttaMCM t1~~~~~~1• vellck•mo IN> (San Jose), Willard Gov· vc11111119-t. cttc> c11111r '"" ·2:ouo; 2. "'"'•Id 1w1 2:os.n ; l. ain (Alameda), Dave ,,_,,c._ Cl') 1u; a. &cuuyc sp ... th 1e12:oe04: •· s1111er '"' Davis <Skyline), Pete '"J;!~~•rt-t.s.11..,.,.cir>tu; 2:0l.'3; S, l(ccfe IHI 2·0l.IO; •· i\n. b k ( S t .. F (•) 15.t • C.0111 delin (HI l :Ol.87; 1. Conway INI Ar 0 n c i c an a •. ·-rlCkMWI r : ... "' t:".01;1.an-cN12·ouo. Monica), Ken Jones '"~~~~1~. bt•m-t. Hot1m1" Cl'> ""~.~~·~;;:· J,~~., 3 IF~.!!~~;1~; (Santa Rosa). Lonnie 1u; 2. Y.tes CFl12.7; 3. H.i1to1111'1 u .u ; 4. ""'ts INl 2323; s. Tlllm•n Buckner (LA Valley), 10iioor ... rclH-t. 51011.,, Cl'> IHI 23.21: •. No<nur• IFI JJ.7S; 7. J b G. d er 2 " ~,... '"' 15.0 • ..,_ N•'""''">n.n :1.ravtor1H12u1. on 1sseo ann ts.• .. ,__. .... '°" :·-- 10011.,-1. Atdrlch CF> n .». 2 (Moorpark), Tom 11'113.4. U"lvcf'Slty S 6 6 ~~ 47 1 atT-0 1t 1t ~--.. Ul\lvcrtltyal C:.W-det Mv Sa" Ce-tc ct Dane Hlll1 IEIT-MMltllllllVlclo ~ ..... t....-8cKtt IUflleT &.aAOUa H11111111Qtoft lleQ F-1111\Ycttn Mcrlne W Lo• 1 0 ,,. .. _,...,,.,, Wettmlnstw l!dlson 6 1 4 ' , 4 1 • 0 1 T ... tlll'•Oamct Hllftll"Vton 8ffcl\ It Marl"a EdllOll ct Founlctft Volley Wt"'nlntttt' at N-rl Har- Pro Scores ' J 4 6 1 Sc>Mth <•>•.1';S.l'rorl•• IHI 541 '1; De Marcus (Sant a .. ~~iF~f."* 11'1 •U; z. •. W•ts-IEI •.61; S Tisdal• (Fl ,...,. JUHIOltVAlttlTY tcalMMl.._..ll,._latlc11 1:00.•: '· .._h 11'1t·o1n;1 Barbara) andAmosSaf· ..._v .. ..,1.._11 '*1.Jlc.uMcte Ka•u•t01Y101 ..... vcr11'"i." IC111~INl1:01.10,1.S1nctatrtl'I fold (San Joaquin v1u111~.M1Cl1111ICl7.2;1.eca1 New~ts.0ttro1ttt t :l171. ICH.t ;S.Sdwftct-ICIU. WHlllnat011ts,0cvc1 .. oo 100 frcc-1. Kelly IFl o 44; 2. Della). une ...... llan-l. Awrlll CCI l.J; z. LMA..,.,1os.1nc11.,.., Mt'ltri IHI 49 .,_, 3 Steven• IHI Meet"'° ICIU;S.llcadPl6.J, 8osl., 1Gl,Allonle'6 ...... : •. Hoc1oK ''"' s1 1s s "u"' 1N1 Prep GoH &•••"'* llcafft-4. Maclno <ci 1,: Go1c1c11S1.e1c121, Pt11•••11111a120 51.1•: •· Mallory IN) SJ 03. 1. 51-2. PtMtll')U; S. Wl1Zticr91t' IFl6.•. HoutlOll IOt. Ponf-104 CMI 52 O.;L Tcvtor IEI SI 21. r1oor -'-9, .... CCI 1.J,· l. Sa"Al'llOlllo122,0cnvt1'120 500 1...-t. 8-iflofl IFI 4·0 SJ; Caste flMll f17tl 12Ml LI ....... ICll r ..,...., .......,.._.,., "'"9119 2 . Mcnt9raln (NI • so U; 3 (AtCcslaMM.tGcllC:.WWI ltlt)Ewtng!Cl,.....,11'11.1. N-VorkRanl)t"S,Color-3 Vt"'911t:-INI 4·SI ti • Plc\lord (12 Helnl 0-ltlllt .. OC ... OalT-N-YOttlltl~I. T-tol,tlc !Ill S,01.6'; S. Pollawnt INl S·04 II; Costa Mn.t Kores: Poulson 41. Va11 IU119-'f. Mvll111 IOI 7.7; f. htton'-tlllroltO ' Pull (l'I s °' 22; 1 Andtll" IHI 8•ue• SS. Sor-541, Hutclllson SI. Norm.ii (0) 7.J; &. ClllW!lgllam Ca> 811ffcl0•.0cw4-2 Wclcott IUl def OtlmM 6-2. dtl Jaottcfl M. def Ft.thtf' ._,,def w111t M ; Pacl<er IUI loSI l-4. -1 ... •·l, .. 1: Malkin CUI loSt M. -6-1, •·>. .. 4; LtllnWI CUI loSt :t-6, -.. l.1·S. ...... S.Ol 7';1.ltowlend lNIS °'OS t<um•ll60,...,._1SJ. 7.•. Lo.AnQllcU.Oll<C901 lOObac•-1. l'l~a~ IWI 54117; 2 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Tlttmcn IHI 1:00 n . 3 Keel• oo ::anquets nquets honoring ge Coast area high 1 soccer and wrest!· . tn.&.. ~ea ms have been the ·~~ recently -here ~ the special award JYjnners: l!dh .. So<ttt' v ... 11, Mosl Yalu.bit C""' C••ler; C~' t •ln\: 8rad Web\ler •nd i.t•b l:ll)•hm · Mo\1 Yalu•bl• Otftndtr· ~tt.-. Hellmlr,, J""tor Y•rt•IV MO\t Valuabf,. Paul Kun c ... o t -lmS Mitt~ 01G1oval"ln1 M01• V4hH · bi• Otf-r · Olrt\ Blund• l'roMI Sc_, Cl>•M<KI Y•lwblt S<l)lt '>"•<'""' llnd '>•I Gomtr C•o1•1n ICtn J(~ster Min-Vit i• Scee er v.-.u., 1 MCKI V•fllollblt Artth Shor• Ml)\I t mp,ovtd Greq M<c.i.nn C<lOI• "' ""'IJV ~-·and Jonn Lo,,..ro Jli'lf~Y•r111Y JQ-,,,, Valuable Oe,,.. T"Omrx°" .,_,_..,, V•lltY Scccer v.-.11, MO\I Valu•bl• Oo<>Q S.tl><'. MO•I tmorov,.d Gre9 H•n•on .. C•pt••n Oou9 8...0. J""f«V•rtlly Mn\t Yatu..,bi. Tony Kim Mn•t IMorQ.,..d· Orlan Donnelly CtPla1n 0Avt LMson "'°'~ Sotlft MO\I V.tfUo\bl•· Brltn SJntltm~ .t"d Jim Ao~wfll; Mo•I lmp,o""d Jim W•fface. 0-Hllh Wl"ttltl ... Yertl1Y Mo\! Yalu.bl• Y•n M<~nn. MO\I ll'\\OtfcJtton.lt ltrrv MCClf"lt'I MO\' '"'P'OY•d Ale-8allo'1bY MQ\I Oeotutod Auch Arr~o•~ D&wM• Wllt•OCw$on CUI lost lo Cohen· Tu'""' U . :M; Wiii with H-••d· OevlCI'°" 4-6, 1·S: WlfffS·Baur IUI \Diii >·•.&·1. won6-3. 1-S. VAIUITY Ct,.ftl dtl -(24112) Minion Vltfo Si"91ct Fed69rtv !Cl del Lulen6-1. def P•I· ton .. 1, def Mltllr W. dtl Cetllna '-2: Otltt'btln ICI won f>.l, 7·S. •.O. •·1; Forl>H CCI IMI J-6, won •·2 ... 1. •.(); Grum CCllosts.7.wonM.6-1.6-3. -.. Satt1·T'llornH ICI def Twtntn9· Larwn M , .. 2. def How•Clarfl 6-0, 6-0. Curtev·Balclr~ ICI won ~2. 6-3. WOllM ... l . JUMIO" VARSITY c.rt11.t tel Mar IHI 121 Mlulell Vlett Sl ... lct Jolln\on <C> def ltotll 6-0. d•I Gttru111 • O. del Ott•no 6·0. def Radk•ll• • l . ~ !Cl -W . 6-2, .. l 6.0 Rvcn 1Ch•on6-1 lo1t .... ""°" .. o. • • Jo-ICl won W. dtlauft. elJ won .. ,.'-' o..toi .. A05 \ L•nll IC> def 8.its-Scll~tder • 0 I>) .,... 1(11\ .... -·.., 4.0 .•. ,. Hartfl·Par'111\ ICl -H ... 2 . ..on 7 S •·O l'R05M·SOPM C.t'tM _. _ 1111 Ill Mlulctl Vleje Sl .... ct Tu•kn•ll• ICI def lee 6 o. d•I V•rduqo&.O .,.. Tr•mme16-1 c;.rfltn tCt won 6-1 6-4. &.e Ma<Mllll•n tCl _ .. 3 ... 2.6 I U '"c" 1c1 ...,,,1 ... •• 0..-.ct W11,..,._~t.,_,r,,. ICI dtl AOM!n- baum R-M o.O 6-l, o.r Nu....,. M<Ali\ltr O.J. •-1: IMrn"tln·Wllson ICI tosl 2-6. H.won~1 ••• 1, JUNIOR VARSITY Oe ... Hllh (~) (f\'t) RI Ttf'C M""ct McCal)e IOI -IMflMrter 6·3. def C•ll•fl•n 64. def Davi• M , tost to Aarono ~7 JtnklM 10 1 "'°" 6·2 6 1, ._O .. 4 C.rltt' 101 won 6 1. 6.0, 6.0, .. 2. All•ln I 01 wonl>-4. •·?, 7-S. 6-1. °"'**' Paul tCroglu• 10 1 de l Jarrtll· Va•out" .. , 0.1 dPt Churcllwtfl· Potn.m,.,,.., 60 &.e l o..S.1-St..,.nt 10) ,pfol • l ).6 won '-3 t J 1·00.13; 4. Gonncn IHI 1 00 tl, S Hot1l~r IHI 1·01. ... 6. Vo4ttn INl 1:02.11; 7. Mane, (Fl 1 02 42 I i\ld•ld91(F)1 02 541. IOOb•H\t I S.r~\Oft (NI I 03 U 2. Wt\twell fi.t I OJ 'H> J, S•Slftr CF I 1.04 68: 4 Conway CNt 1·os s.i s Nomure !Fl I.OS 11. I> Grccr INI 1·0S.t7; 7 Mlncml IWI 1:0"70; I . Slnctalr IFl t •07 7• Total QWllfltr\: NewPOrt Herbor 27, FOU11taln V.tllt"f 20. Hunll1\9lon 811c11 7. Edt'Ort 6. We\lmlnsler J, Marina 1. l'ROSH·SOPl4 200 ffeC-1. McCrlMV IE:l t • S3 11, 7. SlllelcB (El 1 S4 S7, 3 Ho-H I El 1'57.6'; •. ~t-11 CHI I 541 OI; S. Steve_,. IHI 1 It 31, 6 Shcr9 (M l 2 01 . .0; 1 McGt..,., IMI 2 02 '3. I. HeVH IHI 2.92 •S 200 Ind medley I Uyett.twa !El 2·10.50; 2 . .._ ci.11 1• H , J Win lr•y 111111 ?· 16.ll; • St._..en IN I 1 16 U ; $ Metvln IEI 7 t• ... • Ochsner !El 7 It J2 1 Mc"9 (Ml t. lt.31;1VW1Ml1 1• 91 so lrce-1 Wetn•nberoer CM> 2• Jl; 2 IHrohottr tEI 74 U l Mcl{eaw,,., IHI 1S 04 • PHC'h•m•r IHI n .... s. Ta.tor IHI 7S 3' • M1yad• (W) 2S tl. 1 Ftftll!C IMI 2S.U,I PCi\lftlEIU l7 100 fty-1. SNt~ IU M 1'0; t Clllt IWl 54113 l. -111 IEI I 01 O 4 Lnmtn IHI ' 03 S• s JHI .. IMI I OJ••; t HCVH IH) I O• 11 1 w-.. IEI 1 04 ••• Owwo IN) I.OS 02. 100 ,,_, Uvtltewtt Cl!> n ». 2. Croritr (W) S3 SI. l W•l\-•(ler IMl SJ II 4 8ffvhott1 IEI s-1 91 S Mt,.._,. CNI 5'414, t M<;Ntrncy IHI SS ao; 1 Minatnl !WI SS.70; .. Sherg IMl5'4? 100 l>a0-1. M<Cr-y IEI I 02 9J: 2 WH'-tl IHI I ·OJ 11, l Wlnlr•y fMI 1·0ls.I; • S<ott IEl 1 ()3 '1'2; S Sl•0"'9ren !Ml I 04.71. 6 Mc"9 IM t t ·fl6 . .U; 7. Fethcn IEI t,07.4•, I . Somtdl IN 11:OI,1' IOOb<'-1-1 Mor-.ito !Ml t·oe "· 7 T•vtor CHI I OI ... 3 Em•rv IE I t II' "; 4 Ptnne, IHI I II' 11, S Mt".tml IWl I 10 :M I Thoma~ '"'I I 11 •1. , Morino (NI l. n ss. a Vtt IMI I I] $1. Totet Quaitn9"-Edl'°" 17, M•""• u . HuftltrtQlon 8cac:h "· Nh•llO•I i. t '1IDr t. Wt1.t mH>\I er ' JUl't•tr V•rut• M•:V11tua1Mt O•rll Or-• Mn\! lmQO\ttd Jtlf c~.t•ut•. MO\! lnsPiratk>Mt A'" !.wanM>n •• """'Sc .... Baseball Standings MO\I Votuablt 00\'9 VOCl"l\tno Most •~-Jt,., ~'-V Mo•• tnsptratton.t 8••11 Wtlllan" SH C-WrcstN"' Va"llY M~I--Oav•d Bvrd Mo•I ln,OltAl1.,.,.f Mor• McUtf\,,,llh Mo,, Otdtc •ltd Paul Sh•P••O. Coach'\ ,t.w.,o Ron Glew•. Cap. lain. Mar•~••rsmlth; Jun1wV1rslt'1 Ccotaln· O.NI Stcnphttt. MMI tm- oro••d Jo,.., Eow~rd•. ""°'' '"~"•· llon•I Cra19 P•f\f~y ,,., ... Sc ... Caot ••n· Charil• CA\\AdY • Mo-.t tmorov~d Pn11 Ru\\tCk M O\f '"'oirat1on4t ChMff• CA1'•dy SOUTH COAST LEAGUE W L oa c.,..,.,. del -, 0 E• Toro 1 I Ml\ .. 11)nV1fll>t') ) ' Un•..,.r\•'V l 1 (')\faM•w 1 Dan" Miii.. 1 ... .. ,,._,,.. 1 L•ouna O..t<I\ O J •-'l'•Scwct CltM 1 M·\\'°"Y .. ,oo Unl..,.r\lly J ~ 8ekh 1 Co,t tt ~'" J S-C~....nte 1 Et Toro J o .. nc Hiii• I .,,, .. .,.,a-. ('.o\ta -... at CCII\\ Dan• i.m, •I M1'5ion Vle10 Puts you In the center of 1Ctlon In a excltln1 70mm ••P•rlence that YOU will ntver forpt. 8rfn1 your own 0.-1m1111lnel Unl-Vtv al Et Toro Sano-"'• at Lc9UNI &eac11 SOllTM COASTCONl'l RaNCt W L oa Or..-qeCoc'1 ' • CM•tltM ' 2 Gron-l t Ml S... Mtonlo 1 1 Sen Ola90 Mcta 1 J Sant• AllC 7 J l'utltt'10ll 1 J ........,.a Seer• P'ullcnOll s. Grotsmont 1 T•Y"tO.-t Gron•-ot Or-C.0.•t Full Mon al Santa i\n• Ml. SAC'" S..n 01"90 McMI LOS ANGELES '') , 1 7 1 t SPORTS ARENA 8t aboard tht •~is, dune bugles, h11n1 &lldert, rle.ln11 carsJ roller coultt eno manr other rldu. "V MICftOWAW t~PllHINQ CUNICa COOKINQ ICHOO\. Aecelv. all the Lawn the lalHI lltl'tln; tlp1 trom ldt .. for cooklno th• upett1 11 r a Aeo Vtlllclt '( 2 a 8 I> m Mon. & '7:4S p.m Mon thrv Sat.: lhni Sat • 2 & 8 D m. Sun. J&lp.m tun. n.IAtU"I HUNT Find $1000.00 In hld"-n 1re11urt wlthWhllH -...1al Ottacton ADULTS ••.•.•• $UO lUICIOH 12-11 f2.DD ClllLORh .. 11 1.25 .. ... _ IT'S CLOCK S IOPPING SUPER SHOPPING TIME AJTOYOllA! TOYOTA:S BIGGEST SALES EVENT EVER IS GOING ON RIGHT NOW t) We're stopping the clock from Thursday noon to Saturday midnight' and staying open till all hours. " Because our goal is to break all sales records · and sell 24,000,Toyotas nationwide-that's one every 9 seconds. "And that means we'll be dealing like there's no tomorrow. •SotJlh""" Cotfom•o To-nto dealers a<e stoi:ipnq rh., (loc~ t!Yough Sur.d:iv .. '· e 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 -27models. Then if you can find a better built small car or truck than Toyota ... buy it. , . . . INSIDE WOODY AU.B4 1'JcilA.rw11>1 lle J./ICOl.F JIEUW<;/.TZ, ~IS, ffRHAPs /JE5i J()IOW)J RJRHIS EX/'tRIMOhs II/ 8£JIAV!Oli' /I/ W!./IOl 11£" ~T.HAT ~T;/ISAJ./ ACQUIR£t:> ~AIT." FUNKY WINKERBEAN TANK McNAMARA ' l ' . "f).J j).jlNK f LU<£ CA.U.ING M'r7ELF 1ffi6l£ tlfWf£Vlt.' AND JUMPI~ MOTDRcYCLE7 OVER l'f~ WHILE EVM~ J.m? I J. mJ'T MlJ<f; IT? 1nl.tdltrit!l NANCY CAN I BUY A PIZZA FOR MY LUNCH? TODAY'S CRDSSIDRD ~PUZZLE UNITED Feature Syndicate ACROSS t1um~n 1 Give as du<! 6 Torp0r IO W Indian island 1 4 Ktnd of rolP 15 Cons1s1tng ol speech 16 Indigo blJ1n9 4'.> lmprovt• 4 7 01'SO•taDlf• oeoph· Slang 48 Sed nympf\ 49 Use MecJIP and lhread 50 Grei'k source underqrouno I 7 Throw our 54 Browni'lh 1 8 Kind ol card natu,.1 20 Occupancy uphall tee 57 Join 2 I Gave IOOd to 58 Conrrot:ee1 22 Ktnd ol lur 59 Depleted W.One9day 5 Pu ute Solved 23 Sailor's 60 European sllOul ttlle Cnt1sltans hill 25 Live lonoer 61 Holy 12 Hap slemi 40 Womens then persons F1 1 J Awake name 27 Beam abbr 19 Musical 41 Came supporhn9 b2 Can symbol$ togethef a root Conservative 21 Atthe pnce 43 Ruwed JO Lile work bJ E ipert ol moun111n 31 The Ram 24 Male, nd\)es 32 Foot trouble DOWN lnlOfmll 44 H111dle 33 COfnmon 25 Rowed clumsily conlrachon 1 Mapl~ '6 Cerlatn 45 Wielder~ 36 Prepare genus vases 46 Licensed oneaelllor 2 scale u fad the< action Rales of 28 Sterile 4TLike1 fen 37 Unsooken oav 29 Altef 49 Ending with grHtlngs 3 Ltturg1cal kindergarten· pr1nk 1nd 38 St1y in one signolf 2 words spm soot 4 Said again 30 E~tend over 51 Othci1t 39 McMallOn 5 Speck 32 Stender pohcy and 6 Bird group apen boat 52 On the crest Sullivan 7 Mouthward 34 Europe1n ot 40 Took on e •. de mer marshal 53 $ilenlsf'I loo<! Seaaickness 35 Brthsh ar11St 41 ·····Carlo 9 PotllOuse wupon 55 Fi.ed mode 42 Pro<luce a specialty 37 Not 68 EQUal. garment 1 O Beef IOUfCe culttvated Prelt• 44 Living t t Certain 38 Went down· 57 All 50: Abbr. " : ... I i • l • A by Joe Mw lhen by Tom Bath* by Jeff Miller and Bill Hinds l UAVE 2~ ~Af<CJ ~ 50 fT~ £JTJ.I~ THl7 FORMAL fixx:Af/ON CR lREPHONE ~7. A/JD A PhP IN COM~rATtVE: Lntiam.f?[ &' CANI6£TA~ :! 1EtiCHING ? NO $."(. ~ ~ by Ernie Bushmiller GORDO "'" eco"-!' rr15 A • ~T~A.~0fC AFWt:> o t..11.~ITATIOtJ ~ ~AT1='el . • c: l .:)I<-imN'~~t"\J THf= T,.;AV.)..IL.~ ~ \ENL'=-(~ CE MIL..(). i _, ·,:.f JUDGE PARKER j DOOLEY'S WORLD DR. SMOCK YOU WON '"f" COME: IN TIL.L.. I "T"URN OFF "T"MS L..IGH'T'S ~ MOON MULLINS Tf4E BUTCHE~ Rf:McMBE~ED YOUR BIRTHD,AY. ......... ~ \'· \ . F=~:::::~pw--~7c;~-;z;.;;;;i llERE'S A COUPLE OF TWEKTtES ~-:-::-:----:---:-:--:-.1':3l';Jl"~ll!!P'""-:---~ TO TIDE YOU OVER FOR A FEW DAVS.1 GIVE ME A CALL IM A COUPLE Of MON~S! i I t 11 20 ~-+-I ...____;;.;._-___..:--..,· llf A~~"'..........__......____.___--' ·, A~n.tlAr , 111..L.. Ml A 61GN O~ ~~ING! by Roger lracffi.acl ANl7 HOW L.ONG MAVIS YOO eee....., A MLJSHROO"", MR. &A"T"fSS~ -coutom-You ARRANGE. FOR Mf;. · -ro DO If BY · • CORRESf'ONDENCE? •' "Well. I certainly don't think the news is ~o depressins:,...-J i DENNIS THE MENACE 'WAKf IN:. uP 1F WE SMalLO lANO CW ™E fl{XJJ . . 1 WlJtaJT WAITTA MIC)S IT. • .... .. I ,_.,.1MftlCI __ _. •"'tJ • ·-· • - I ~.-. \ • ----- r?sm "'*11'Wd 0'*'99 OIMI Delly Pllol MMc1114.Jt,end"-111, u , 1m 11~17 PUBUC NOTICE "7'4H Publlsi.ed <> ... Coest Dtlly PllOt. ~rel\ 2•. l t tnd,Aj)rll1. U.1917 114•·11 PUBU C NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PICTITIOUSeUSINISI NAMalTATaMENT Tl11 loltowlng otnon 11 doing l:Mnl ... net: REAi. ESTATt! INVl!STMENT PllOPl!RTIES. a416' Coeil Hlgllwey, Dana Polnt,CAt?619 Han>"9 E. Palin, U2St lrownl"Q lt tt. Tu\lln, CA t?l>IO Thi$ bul"-M I\ c~ltd b'I' an lrldl,,ldu31. H.E.Palln Tlllt 51 .. _, wn fMed wlllt ,,.. County Clltf'I! of Ore1191 COW!tl' en M.,cll IS, 1'71. ..,.. Publltlled O'anot C6.tjt Dell" Piiot, N'Mch u , at. end ~111, If, ttn 112417 PUBUC NOTICE To place your munge befonUle readln1 public. ct D=ot n.d.Ml·S6TI ----· ·-·-·-'-----· .._ 6 4 i • 5 6 7 8 D A I L '•C..ti.11.Rlll•. 1, ........... "' (842•11878] ....................... Ch11 Ill 1002 ....................... t4E'WPOIT IEACH LUXURY $104.500 Fanta1Uc 3 Br Family Home with lots or IWffS YllW OP THI CU199 1A1L Tbat'a tho Lllbt Footed Clapper Rail. of course. One of the thousands of birds that flock to the Back Bay and you can be one or the rew people with a panoramlc view of the Back Bay from this 3 bdrm, 1950 sq. ft.. Trina condominium. The original owners took meticulous care of this end unit located across from the pool. 1t•s on fee land and subject of estate sale. U ~l()UI: fi()M f:S REAL TORSto, 675-6000 2443 East Coast Highway. Corona del Mar also 1n Mesa Verctc, at !.>46·5990 I 002' G.,..,..ol 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• features.PrlmeNewport ................................ .. Heigbta location. Wood paneled Den with par· quet floors. Garden house, fenced parking roe that R.V. Super super clean. Don't miss this one. Call today 646-7171 Ol'fN 1119. "5 llJN ro Sf Nl(f' BIGAHD BEAUTIFUL Mesa Verde North's best bargain. Huge Master Bedroom suite is ln lhil 4 Br home. Numerous closets for the lar1e WESLEY N . TAYLOR CO. IlE/\LTOKS ~since 1H4H ..W EXCWSIVl-DOVB SHOOS White sandy beach & water view! Outstanding 2·sly. custom home by Valentine. Dramatic d bl. doo r courtyd. entry. 4 Spacious bdrms .. formal DR, paneled fam. rm. & 41h baths. $385,000 309 EVENING STAR OPEN FRI. 1·5 2111 San Joaquin Hllh Rood HEWPOln' CEHTEtl. M.I. 644-4910 c family. This home ls secluded wU.h charm and I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! J atmosphere, truly d1f. Y I (eteftt. Don't hesitate! cau now 546-2313 ?':'"' IU9 •II S fl.JN 10 If HICE' t•m111 1002 G.Mral 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• p I L 0 T c L A s Lal)UllCI Rmchette WITH VIEW Nearly 2 acres nestled among giant oaks only 2Y, miles to the surf with a remarkable custom built 3 bdrm + den + family rm home de· signed to maximize the pa n o r amic, hilly ranchland view. Also s car covered parking + room for campers, boats. etc. The corral can ac· commodate as many horses as you could ever want with room to s pare. OFFERING PRI CE $'l20,000. C•644-721 I "1n Nll1 Ll. O/\ILEY & l\55UCIA1 ES EAST SIDE BACK BAY HEATED POOL $86,900. Tree-lined cul-de-sac in prime Back Bay area. Secluded formal li ving r oom, whil e brick fireplace. Open planned famil y room . C h et kitchen with pantry. Hide-away master suite plus 2 decorator baths. Tropical garden p<1lio overlooks s p arklin/.! heated pool. Owner will help finance. Hurry, call 962·7788 )Q. KEY '0'2P.€A LTORS XI $52,900 HUHTIHGTOH BEACH Lowest price home in Hunt.mgton Beach. This cozy cottage is a greut starter home or invest ment prime Hunt. Reh. Costa Mesa 3 Bedroom location. Hurry il won't on an R2 lol! Call last. Ca II Collect <714) RED CARPET 8422535 • REALTORS 0Nt//.1?•11H ,,.,,.,"-'' ,v~:~;~s l~IUMlil This clean and neat 3 BR . i~ ----, __ ,_JJ home can be yours at VA' terms. Corner lot in the Halecrest.area of Costa Mesa, c lose to ever· ythlng. Call now and make an appointment. BYOWHER _ LAKE FOREST II REDUCED! Lakefronl + dock, 4Br, 3Ba, 111r 581.tl.l.5. Open Weekends IEACH RETREAT VIEW·S44.900 Steps to pounding surf and crystal sandl Back yard 1s bay area play ground. Winding wooden walkways to secluded en- try! Gourmet kitchen. Step-down conversation area +firepl ace! Sunshine breakfast patio. Pool-jacuzzi- volleyball. Garden living at its finest. 847 '6010 ONN Ill Q •II S ll)N IOltf N•(I • WAHTA REAL 8ARGAIH7 • 3 Bedroom with central air ronditioninic & beat. near new carpeting. ft':im1ly room w tflreplace. Good loca· t1on. FHA conventional or VA. Priced under !44,000 WESTSIDE REAL TY INC 848·2323 41R + Ffll 2 STORY s .... 2313 - I li if!I1\i HACH EST ATE $69,950 Back to Beach from th1~ secluded -4 Br. qu1l'l street with t owe n ni? pines leads to executive entry. Family 1me hv room, country kitchen plus sweeping master bdrm, pool siled l>iJck yard. Owner an'i:1ous Bought nt>w. mu:.l :.ell Try $6.990 total down Call for <!ppomlment 847-0010. EXECUTIVE HOME Formal 'entry to huge Living Room. Country Kitchen with Formal D1mni:: with view of Te r- race. Bwlt in wet bar plus Family Room. Winding stai rs to hideaway Mast.er Suite. Ca II 963~767 O' IN 111 9 • ti S It.JN lO Rf N.(( • [C IN!UI F: I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 · WATStVIEW "DUPLEX" Two blocks to beach, 3BR 2BA upper umt : 2BR 2BA lower. Quality c arpeting & drapei, lhruout , bltn. range/ovens. Dishwshrs, frplcs, huge Uv rm w/24' deck overlook'g the water. Steps t o bay beach & close to park. $1.e9,SOO. JACOBS REALTY 675-6670 HORSES HERE! oo thla 2.68 acre site with a Newport address! $210,000. Red Carpet Realtors 75'·1202 LUSH & GREEN Corner location. home with 4 bedrooms, 2 baths and loads or upgrades, Including patio with bulltin itas firep1t. Spacious plan with large bedrooms and gourmet double oven kitchen. Full price $78,900. CAI.I, 7Sl·3Ull C:SEL ECT T.'PROPERTIES MllTIUMCHE Her meuunrmeota are 4 Br, 2 bathe with over 1900 sq. n. She haa a masaive Family Room with an lmpruslve noor to cell· l~ st.one flreflare. Hflr price la tdoa for firs\ umera at $58,500, Call "42·2535 ()II( N Ill 0 • II ~ fl.llW tO ''NICI ' e:~ THE REAL ' ~ ESTAT[RS AMoMt•C.._ Three Bedroom $48,000 oPf.N ltl?• tl'I: J JN fOliffl I• NC'at·as-a-p1n wi t h brand-new plush carpet· mi.:. large plush enclosed back yard. Off<>rcd VA or rll \terms. CALL qwck· ly' 556-2660 C:::SELECT [8 .llllll I PROPERTIES UPPER IA Y RAH~~~nLE VIEW-DELIGHT Private courtyard entry Charming 3 Bedroom, 2 features double door en· bath, home with sweep· try to step down Living ing upper Newport Bay Room with volted beam view, luxu.r1ous Master ceilings. Floor to ceiling bedroom suite, soaring firepla ce. Country woodbeam cathcd<'ral Kllchen with formal Din· ceilings and much more. 111g. H~e Master Suite Only Sl lS,000. fee. with Family retreat. Call Coll 644-72 11 963-6767 da!i'ij'jjj GeMral 1002Ge•r .. 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• macnab /Irvine realty STIPS TO THI llACHI Vll!W HOME! $182.000f Custom char mer -3BR. 3 bath, 3-story, 5 yr. new home w/view from every room. 3rd BR could be bonus room w/fireplace, wet bar & huae sundeck. Mary Lou Marion 642·8235. CJ61) lo East .. Coe~ Meu t M2·ft3S '44-6200 A·P'ramt Duplex 3 9010o~rDrtw Hatbof'Vt.wC.ncer 8'droom.+ I Mthl each I I rvlne e& C.mpui Vallty Otrtitr ll£DCARPET 752·1 414 ·---754--1l02 ____ _J _______ m!!!~L_~ . . TW1N TOWMMOUSl5 91DANA~ mdt l · · ead1 bu 2 bdnm.. 1 \.ti -bCib baft • din· I.al rm., a Ill patio • decb wit.b view ol oeean. Prcpea1,y only 8 yn. old 8Dd In dnt eond.Jtloo t Full prtee Sll5.000 for both. NEW LISTING 4 Bdnm. townhouse; hiahlY desirable VIA VIEJO location. Near ~l & children's play area. Delightful s heltered patio. Only $59,000! 759-0811 450 NEWPORT CENHH DHIVr. "1!.J!J 081J Gwt'al I oozG11Mrol I 002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• NEVI BLUFFS CONDO BY OWNER -$126,000 Blooming Delores Model, 3 Br 2'h Ba, 2 colorful private patios. End unit, large breakfast area. 6'14-7901 OPEN HOUSE SAT & SUH 1-S 50 I Playo, Newport Beach Gftlffof .., . .,.~"-Cutr• oozy dolJ house, J stepa from aurl & sand. 3 Bdrrrus • a tis. tnuoo L.m0 Ill.I Builder's bome wllh those extra touches of qu llty! 3 B<lrms .• 2~ baths, 3 car garage. $260,000 WISTC~ Lake to entertain? This bomc ls ld~al. Pool & lanai, family rm., 3 bd.nm. $149,500 SOUTH LAGUNA Tablerock own your own apt. with breathtaking ocean view; clubhouse & pool facilities. 2 Bdrms. $147.500 • LIDO REALTY ll77 Via Udo. H.I. 67l-7300 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• PALM SPRINGS RESTAURANT Eslablished restaurant, in business 25 years; on main thoroughfare amidst motels & out of windy area. Buildings, business & equipment for $170,000. Discounted for cas h . $50,000 Wine cellar stock not included. Remodeled in 1964. Seating capacity: dining rm. -150; patio -100. !<~or further particulars, call 673-4400 DIYision of Harbor lnnshneftt Co. ACLIAMHOME AND TWO SETS What could be better? A sparkling 4 bdrm 2 story home with two private tennis courts .Just steps away. The ten- nis is great and the home is im· maculate, highly upgraded with air conditioning. solarium flooring, and it shows Like a model. The score is $104,000. and 40-Lovc. U~l()UI: li()MI:§ REALTORS': 6756000 2443 East Coast Highway, Corona del Mar Jlso in Mesa Verde . .it 546 5990 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• A 1TRACTIVE Linda Is le S BR, 4 lh ba., fam. rm. & formal dining; tge. tile patio & waterfront deck. $350,000 BAYFRONT, pier & float, lots $185,000 to $325,000, to build your own custom home. Several areas to choose from. BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR 341 Boy~ad .. Drive N B b7S· olbl I 002 G1Mral 1002 ···········~··········· ...................... . BRAND HEW MINI RANCH CAREFREE "SUCH A DEAL" MESA VERDE UACH-3 IR LIVING! ---------1---------•I Ts this 4 bdrm., 3 bath Imagine ownini: your .a.1:sUME $3~ 800 /\JI you do 1s enjoy the COSTA MESA Attn·. BUl"lderS Eastbluff Carmelita own new cstm home in -... beautiful living m this EASTSIDE model! This spacious l h" h ca rt o f Ml' l> a Tree lined approach. Tile luxurious condom1mum Extra clean J bdrm. & { ) 0 home affords both green-Verde's bei.l 1&rea. Ul· entryto buge2S'Livmg 1n Corona del Mar. family rm., pool home 9 R-5l TS bell & mt. views & 1s most quality in :~~;:' f~~tp~a~;.acL~~ngg Pnvacy. sccurlly and all Best EasL-.1de location Located s Points, Hunt· quite possibly the best workmanship & mtrls the amenities of the Brick frplc. Low ma1ol mgton Beach. Corner or deal in The Bluffs at thruout. Jaculz1 bathtub Country Kitchen & Din beautiful hfe 3 Br, fam1· yard . He duct• d Io Florida & Main 1.31 $118.000. Call today! w/sleam rm ::.auna. 'oun overlook ground!> I r Id' · $109000' r ken hv rm, dble frpk thi s d r a mat i c d e · Balboa Bay Prap. S 191 000 Select your own color:. ol Sepa r ate Win~ ro yroom. orma mmg m . . ,\l'restotal. ullpnce c. F. Colesworth~ massive Master Suite corator '!> dream. Call for • • t•rpt1nt( & µ:11nt lo mJtd1 childrc n 'i. quarter s, Realtors • REALTORS 640°00 0 1 d Take over VA loan. N appointment to ::.ee . * 675•7060 * 646.11tww.·PO<"S:8fit11. ~~ your personu t•t·nr. $138 500 l·nclud1·ng l0 nd fa Iii ~ ----Plans & xtra~ available new loan costs! $370/Mo. • 0 ··-.--------•! 673-8550 1 • --........,,...,..,====='I at our ofricc. Only pays all. Hurry! 963·7881 Ol'fNrtt•;.11 ,11J''''''' ,_,,, ~ $212.000.545·9491 liiiiill !elfi&IMI] ~;.!;~fr.r.~~~~r,~~~~~ANYT~~~l~M~E~ ~ - -----·-·-~ Bicycle distance to the YOUR OWN NEWPORT CUSTOM 3 BR POO I,.. ''THE WOODS" beach. 646-7711 RETREAT HEIGHTS HOME bit for entertain "' 1--1. \ 1 t t 3 Bedroom. 3•-, bath!>, Woodsy & Pn·vate at a ~ I moni: 'I!. inc l\t.' I . h ' . A mg! Lrg H&F pool sur ~ Wi'll'•-,, rt I:'c • h r , large poo wit 1acun1. Price You Can a rrord I ,. . ..ewpo ) ac I rou.ndedbywooddeckin ,· . ' : '.' I s MUSTSEE'S175,000 This Prore~· 1onally de ~-'u <'nee'> pac 1ou,, 1·' wJcovered lanai & bit = h l h Call 640 9900 cor ated 2 Bdrm Con· <'l'Ullvt' ome 1n t' • LAGUNA BEACH Charmin.: home on IJr~e lot. room lo adtl on. darl· mg JU:.l ai. 1i. American Home Sh1l'ld warranty to buyer I Bdrm . lrplc On Bluebird Canyon Rd $125.000 outdoor bar. Fam rm . dom1n1um home for f-:J,tbluff arc:i "II h stud10-worki.hop, d('S1ra 1-.--------• b 1 t , s 1 f f 1 v ble Back Bay loc. S89.500 "ecunty and cc1rerree liv· Mo•e--in-Abl• bcctroum" E'.\t:ept1onal adulh ~ho ltke lax" I PO!ti.i 1 1 i.• 1 l' Linda Brown, 645·296 Ullil Convenient to ever· Hr\RBOR VIEW ll11:hl\ pm .io.:y 10 th1i. lucdlion. Agt ylhing ; however, you upgr aded M ontn:o ~15!1 500 1-'or appoint· ---------t can~tayJthomcandcn-model for lhl' "" mt·ntc·all6i311550. JOY the pool and the cr1m1n at1ng buy1·r ""'•' •· ·1 1 TWO 4-PLEXES AT $85,000 EACH SS.000 down. assume ls recreation fac1 hue.. Custom dra!=k'" "'Jll t'o\ I ~ 1m~ ·H [j~ $74,950 ~~~~~& 1~:.:~.P~ .. ~~11\1 ~;1fin1tt rm. formal dmmt.! rm . ----··-··--WATERFRONT fireplace On d IO\ t·I~ & 2nd. owner will tal< 3rd. All 2 bedroom unit m Long Beach. Nol m multiple Broker in - quiries invited. Don't sit on this one!'! Call !'.<19-8f'55 COUNTRY FARMHOUSE HOMES REAL ESTATE landscaped (·ornl·r lot ---------631_ 1400 Offered at SIJli.OOU RAMILIMG IEACHESTAn S IR 0 POOL 644·1.!70 "'4t.i1t SHU.th ~ REALTORS MESAYIRDE ELEGANCE UNDER ~0,000. !\E:VERAl.'AVAILARLE NO DOWN V,\ ~l:.tl!ruf1c-ent 4 bd. 2' i 11 ... 1---------• 2 'trv eicecull\ c h1llc;1d1· BIG CANYON EnJOY the he.,t of in· door ·outdoor hvmg K1si. vour ~orneo; goodbye. Relaic 1n your private \ . ..\IJJEY HE .. \ I :1 ·, 1410Jambor,..Rd .-port !leech LOVE YOUR CHILDREN? A 1enl family home with plenty of room to roam :J Bcdrms. 2 bLith , fireplace. rormal dmmg or eat·m kitchen. Huge 24xl8 ramilv room wllh wet bar. Frint trees. fish pond. covered patio and much more! Just hi.led. ~l.900 Open House Fri- day betwn 10-2. 2lfi4 Meyer. Costa Me~a 546-4141 ~ COATS&WALLACE REAL ESTATE, INC. 673·3663 fi-i2·2253 Eves COSTA MESA l1 1deaway1 2 Story, 2 l>drm . Cape Serici.. adult condo N!'i.lled m EU<'alyptus trees. ~ tdbl. j!ara ge, rrpll-. encl patio S68.000 b"73·3663 6'12·4799 Eves • associated BAOKEAS-AEAl TORS 202~ W 8ol1Joo b71· 166 J RANCHO MESA BEAUTY 'I rt't.' hnt!d approach to lh1'o t.'"'ccut1~e ranch Localed walking di'-rormal en tr y to lance from South Coast dramat1<' living room. Plaz.a Large home on lot Formal dmmg is conve. t00xl40. Call for further nienlly wrved from huge home Totally upgr.idt•d 1n t'very aspect. la' J ~tone frplc. Roman tuh plush. plush c rpt1nl! thruout. 3 car garage Tlns one 1s a must on \our hst Pnred for 1m medrntesale at S197.500 pool and Jill'U/11 Sip a ---------hbatlon at ybur bar ru; Just listed I bdrms. 3 bath~. :.ngl :.try home H~e add on fmly rm Rt•modeled kitchen 3 yr-; old All nc"' Jpphanl'l's. abundant storJ~c Too many UPl!rds lo numerate Mu!>t sec to appreciate Hurry on this one 5-IS 9491 information. t ountry styled k1tchl'TI S,25 000 separate family room • • overlook:> sparkling pool 545 9491 Walker & lee Real Estate you grill those tender ~eal<s on your BBQ Call for appt &40·6 I 61 ~ li~l _ rail and terraC"es Ston e r1repl3CC' Hideaway wmi: for master suite & children s quarters · ANYTIME slyll' & grace designed •---------I on one le\'el. flurry ·1---------won 'tlasl 963 7881 LOOKING FOR COATS& WALLACE REAL ESTATE . INC. fll'fN r 101." ~ '''"' ro111 /., • · [ ~ I.I. IA YFRONT ? ;af1~~ !<:;::'~~~~ e -mMtt1J ~£ r.~~:£~.:0~;:~: bedrooms, heavy <1hake tial yacht. .. The r .. n roof. tiled entrance way MESA VERDE neighbors make up for ~ fireplace. Great loca· RepubHc: beaut. Spanish the fad that 1l needs a bit lion close to park. tennis st le!d home with lar"e ol personal "P1uaz". <'OUrts and all schools. Y .. $275 000 Jmt listed call 546-~ lot. 4 Bdrms._, 3 baths, , for full details. dming & family rms. & olfice. ()(C~red al SlZ7,500 --~~-· HERITAGE . • REALTORS 759-0226 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• CE 110111 ILllNS CD. - OVER.SQ YEARS Of SERVICE OPEN DAILY I ·5 2102 VISTA LAllDO In The Early Bluffs Rare "H Plan" 2 Story With 2 Large Bedrooms 2 Baths Extras Like Marble Vanities Mirrored Wardrobe In Master Suite Freshly Planted Patio. Adjacent Major Greenbelt & Only Steps To Pool. Reduced To Sl09,500. 111 ~Dim 631-llOt 11\IHtl\l'-I \'II • 673~6'00. PETE BARRETT -REALTY- filcC?.~~J!.r~ WSH COHDO IY THI SU. Glamorous Nowport Crest plan 8. Two bedrooms. each with own bath, on top floor. Den & powder room on 1st floor plus formal din· ing room. step-down Uvine room with fireplace.& wet bar. $98,950. 4 COLDWIU 1.AHIM co. 644-1766 2111 t.AHJOAOU1"4 HIU.I lltO IN HI~ CINTI" Colle2e Park "CRElMPUFF' Just listed 1 Lovely ·1 bedrm. 2 bath home on lge corner lot. Fruit trees 1---------•I & flowers ~alore• Sprinklers; dble .:arai::c w{lots of cahineh &.500 Call now. Ruth Laurie, ACJf 646-080 S©~JUlA-~c!rS ., That Intriguing Word Gom• with o Chudle -----14 ... 4 ~1 CU.T • ,OlLAN O t-ro1199 le•1.,. of 11\e fo.Jr 1cro,..bled word• b• io.. 1o form fooJr ""'Ille -d• ---~ ,, TYGNER I 11 I I I I· HU~ F S I l I I 1~ I J l I· H Y L 1 L I t Thtr•'• a bfend new boolc 11 I I I •bout hht IWftnty m1llto11 i::>e0· pie 111 lhl• counlry whQ ,,. g., d1el& II'\ Ulltd "The --1~ CAEHIL I AM¥1C.f'lt " ) ,, I' I r I I O C~'•'• I~• c~uckla quo"'d lly 111.,., n '"-,...,,...,-di '°" ~-·-... p No below • ]> . KR CUSTOM l9WOOO YA •1UW Ch South ot Hwy. locaUcm: triliiil. ,....._ new Ir built wtth 'TLC" ~ ~ NO Dewa hJment tunl . Deeontor carpeta,_ ~', a:::=: lures & pen. tr. suite ancloael tu.OOOto"-'.000 hbra.ry Wlth lrplc., wet bar with WC ;fl~~,-: ~ro:' f'1,'c:4 rerrtg. + a delighttu.1 'riew! C<JUDtjy ndahbof1'oodl 10 Oranic kitcba & formal dini~OOO. ~ ~-clud~ Jand ! Special ea.dS Slll·.5800 day 1·5 ..... Weslhev• btlhn 102 ACACIA '~~ .... ~,~·~'~ ... ~ .. ~-~,..~~~1 lfrtll;lJ,r~ ~:;.:~;iJa. COWAN HEIGHTS view-horses too! Stnctly custom thruout on one acre. 3 Bedrm + view , s unroo m , 2\.2 Baths. formal dining rm, lge master swte w 1v1ew + sewing room & s mall office. We believe under pnced at $136,000 for fast i.ale. 10382 Mira Vista, Santa Ana. 400E.tr:A. FOR All C.Mf'illhCAS Steal It 3 BR Great starter home. Un l>elle vable low price. Sttuatt!d on a qwcl cul· de·sac. Offers many lux- ury features incldg: A/C, fplc, eat-an country kit Won't la~t at $64.500! Call 831-3100 LUllc Hcrbor View Hilla H0tne • • Prime location & condition. 3 bedroom & family room. Decorator drapes & papers. Landscaped with Jacuzzi. Spa off master bedroom. As king $165..QQP. By owner. Open House Sat/Sun. 1·5, 3430 Seabreeze Ln. " 644.4203 Costa Mna I 0 2 4 Fountain Valley 1~4 ····•·················• ...................... . Ho Haul• t-'ountain Park 2 al)I'. ~Br LI ..... tyl 1 end unit Twnhllle'. AdJ ..s •· . Mile Sq Park. ~.~o Gor geous condo, 1 Ill· firm. Prine only. M~-1 mll culate cond1t1on ! 2 or 5S4·3626 ... Bedrooms, 2 baths, separate dining area CONDO SPECIALl1IT, nearthecountry kitchen. H.B .. C.M., F. 'Vly Popular balcony model, Touchstone Re.,.lt.y. air conditioning + a full 963.~7 hne or rec rac1lit1es. --------- $5.S.500, cal1S40-1720. Huntington •ach 1.1~40 ........................ ,.~-c-TARIEU. S&S Resale Spec1aU.'ICS. 3. ---------4or5bdrmmodel&av.ail, UNITS~ some w /pools. 968-460e a!lfn liiiiil ! "#I ln CallfonUa" Pennington P~~ 2 Units, great Costa PERFECT family home. OWNER SACRIFll:t; 4 Mesa area. ~.950. 3Br 2ba, huge fncd yd bdrm, l~ baths, f1u:gc Red Carpet Realtors w Jcov'd patJo & mature party-sized llvme f~.m. 754·1202 tree:.. This prop. is loc. 1 covered patio, fishpood ' hse from the new 200 Only Sl)l.500. Jumporrit' acr!' Fa1rv1ew Regional Tarbell. Rltrs,. c:-all Park which will ha vc 962·5566 . 1022 ••••••••••••••••••••••• many rec'I. fac11 ·~ inc ----------BR.AND MEW nding trails. a lake for S Bdrm 4 BR + DEM boat·g & fish'g. etc. Close Landmaril Gi.t the ideal combination or to all schl&. Low dn A heck of a home~ f\l,11.v a new home in an pay mt w Jxlnt price or carpeted, even a &rookc est ab I 1 shed neig h 9ll.9SO. forfasl sale alarm. Concrete J>&tio. borhood, featuring all PatStomel 675'6775 sprrnklered grou,n'(ls . the latest kitchen ap-_*_*_U_N_l_T_ED_l_R_O_K_ER_S_ Separate family r-OQ,tr). J pointments. oversized For Sale By Owner baths. Heartwarmiog garage, large rooms, 3 4 B 2 B /\ v A fireplace. 3 Car gar1'ge. baths. Step down Wet. r. · a, ssm " 1 6 th ;;,. loan./ $280 /mo PTI on Y mon s ~"'w. bar.miruoceanview.All S36,500 down . Total ~.500.Call540..1730. walking distance t o s64 ,600 No brok e rs pnvate beach. please. 2193 National St. TAABA!l.I HOW OHL Y Comer lot. 642-5076 IUlliUI SI 59,500. Fff. -- Call 644-721 I Owner Mesa Verde 4br, "#I In Callfonilcr' 2ba Frplc, encl'd pallo.1.._ ________ _ fnc'd yrd, close to i.hop· 1• • i • . ping. i932 Redwood Ave, wow•. . • , CM 5406452 . 1 Me.a Verde llomc Jhr & OCEAN BREEZ£S Spyglasi.. \'ICW • poo • fam Mi nt cond S89 995 s12001mo lse option Owner 557.1392 · ' cool this 4 bedroom 6oW 1968or547-5162 highly upgrades! Cel By Ow ..... ER EXTRA Sharp 4 br, 2 ba, Clai.s1c. Wa lk to beitt "' Cam rm, Mesa Verde bC'achC's 111 under :i Spyglasi. 11111, $!59,000 5 Open Sal & Sun. 751 4333 minutes Only $75,950 .. Br 3 Ba, View. Harbor --• svhurry• View Hills, SJ.99.500 4 Bri---------•I 2 Ba. View. 6 10·2981 1QuahC1ed Buyers Only) VF.RY NICE Duplex So. of ltwy On cornt·r. 2 frplc:.. llrdwd floors. $155.000 by owner. (;73 6069 EASTSIDE LOT Perfect location for your new hom e. Quiet Eastside street. 74 ' F'ron· tuge. R·l lot. Heady to build on. Call 540..1151 ~HERITAGE • • REALTORS SPRING SPECIAL Cute 2 BR, 2 ha home, So. of hwy on c:omer lot. ~.soo e~~~~~~~ l'AttL MARTIN Great pool home ·With ftre rmg & lots of .. d~lt mg Only a mile fr.o.ln. the ocean. 4 Huge bedrnu;, formal dining, 'buRe famil y room, :i t<&r j!ar<Jgc Everything for fom1lyCun! Jusl$1W.OOO. IMAGINATION 11Rob~r1s Real t-:-.t.itc 644·7383 OCF.ANVI EW. pool. un· usual home w 13 & ram. rm, lanai. lot 150xl50 floe 11U8 Surry, Cameo lllghlands. Open Daily. Owner 6i5·R307 ... that's all you need to Rea If•.'.' -make this 4Ur & pool the !II pr1rle of th e lliW hlltWll••. nc1ghborhood T'rit·<'d Hunu~ lhdla like a fixer llPl'l'r al ~~~~~~~~~ ~.750 AGT 673 71illl Seclusion in the city • ..ZB\'" -Dano Point I 026 penthouse Condo, ·1Jy I 02 4 ••••••••••••• •••••• •• • • owner ~.000. 846---Costa Mesa • ••••• • ••• ••• • •••• • • • • • Btfl view home undcr ton Open l!nS Lanai Dr. 5Br. i.lruct1on, 4Ur, 2• ... Ba, xlnt country clb loc den. lort, rrplc nva1I M a n y x t r a s Mav SIJS,OQO Owner. 548 8614/5'10 201!\ &'4 1798. -MUST SELL, MOV.tN.Q 2 slory 2400 sq.ft. Im mac. Eves & v.'J[nds 968.!;<169 MESA VERDE F'lne 4·5 bdrm&. 2 .,tory 212 ba home. MUST SEE' THE HOMESELLERS 752-5353 BY Owner-3 br . H~ bo Huge lot. Move-in cond sss.ooo. 548·3988 art 5. Prtnc.Only. l lr--family.fplc $57,500 Now paint, lovely bnck rplr, hug(' burk ynrd SllK & FIND• ----~...- BEAUT 2 sty, 4 br.,.·2~ ba, upgraded thruout. Only $88.500. 968-T/UO Seller will neg. terms.. ORNAMENT A Tl ON A R E C H A B G U L I E P 0 N E G I H• Q U G Q G F S 0 E 8 A R A R S Y I 0 8~ C H U P U f E R B R 0 I N E R Y U H ~ r. E I L I 0 M N A T A R A 8 E S Q U ~ M R K £ L F B A P E H W C T R E E P 0 U T R N L M R M S Y S H H E 0 G U A t ~ ( 0 0 E 0 N 0 [ F E S T E l 0 N S N ~ .. I L Iii C C T I N T Y 0 U H P E I P A f • A P E S H U D T P W F R E A I R A C L L A C A E Y E A L 0 0 V E H N F N E ·A.,' M H A M M T R T H G I R N C l D G A ~· L C L A N G Y I S P A N K L £ L l E 1: A N A D F R E 0 W R 0 A M A V P E S ~ 0 Y.-A~ L N 1 H H A r E S T 0 0 H S T J. t '\ D E F R t W P S A N 0 G L r r• I ff L t'."l , L--------------------------~--· ~ lmlnictlont H1ck>t11 word• below •PPHf f01WMd, '-lit , \I werd, up, down or dltOOf\111\1. Find' ucfl eftd bOa It Ill ,. Ar1btsqut Festoon t n 1 l.Y ..... ~ "' Ch1nl tt Fretwork llctwot• .~ .. • u 0111ucen• Fr1nge P1n1ctt. ... ,. · £mbro1 d1ry Gu1lloche Spangle -'' ~ Tomorrow: S111nce -. ·-• ( .. Un[ ST F OLSON ow ... R ANX IOUS 111Jp&UQI 4 bdrm .. l W rma + du, dlnla toom, uaed brl c llnp1ace, .aed brJ<' dwlied paUo, sat.DSG, •·--~ "nr bell, RLTHS, ca11 --------- WU8$4. Lingo AIAI& WAMIW: a ..a.iRW W·u • LA a 0 E D 0 VER J..J.-4 8drin HOO:Mtl or _.., ..,.. TO llACM SHORES bome by 24 Coados. Cub lmmed! -l k ••az IV1 Mitt..__.. ft. oin/lllL sn.s.•. Open Re~lr• or lat• pay-'-*--*-..._•r-.AL....-daU1 WI Anttiu.a Way. ment• OK. laveator dl99....... ............ ....... S..T4N !BBUnlta 0 Coata es-._..,,._. ______ _ _, ............. ,.-., Tw ....... S.CI I 1076 am.-. .8J Appt. onty. Want bouse on Balboa•------------~--- PIPfl YOUR Rt••••• .. 11..r-. -~.. ...._ ........... !! .......... 16-Ull(J/\lt. . Wand, prim:. onJy. 3 Br 2 Ba, redec, lie fnC'd l.allelraot w/dock. IBr, · S & S 4 .. ..,.,... wt ••-w ·-_. CGSJ r--7 UNITS Pr ide of 648-1:565 yard Stove, relrlg, 28a, trple ... ts. Club Qutet,cul desac street,4 OWN ORANGES M.IJ ........... L • • .Sl45,000 OCIAMOUPUX 0 .. 1 1 1 chUd.ren o«. Rera. $19$. memberablp Incl. ~. family rm, din· 499-4551 USl.000 Bldr /Bk r w .. nn P• a ltoo. ....... Evs/WkndlS48·1295 *-ZS701U4410 ...... rm, f i replace, Jn "The Ran c h " J.AGUNA OANA LAGUNA M&-4414 Six I II. OM 2 II -38Jttram rm /din r~ ....................... Eastside 3 BR fam·rm Farnt•V...., JJ34 ~al wood c11binets, ho NIGUEL POINT BEACH S-.._ W /frplc, 0WRer. tta.e.JwwltlMid 1~ ba dh'l·;m frpl' ... -................ .. •1.soo. Tarb4!1l, Rltrs, me. Huee fenced back 495-1720 493·8812 497-2489 Caplds wo I 071 $345,000. 644-1554 •••uo•••••••••oon• bltm ~ri&. $350° + fee'. zStory 3 bedrm 2 ba ~-88M Yard w I c ustom ............ -......... Gantt.. 1 102 au;;Uan fam. only. No bonusnx.n.fple DW ~-..... --------•play~. Enjoy year· S.J .C., By Owner, 3Br, •Bo~go~prlnpduplex. ••••••••••••••••••••••• pet.s.503831or541-7145 t3115/mo.714:-._· •itti:f,°" 1042 roun amilyliving,with ~IHcJI 1041Mtwportleoch 1069 ram rm. Lovely, im· S29.~. G!>lltr. Jocom!stop here! Looking t •-.. ··••••••••••••••• orange, coral & mimosa ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• maculate! Beaut. frwt SlK yr. Carry sell. owe. move? We prob. have ex-2 Br~ ln court. Newly Attractive ZBr, !Ba, 2 car llwtt. Harbour 2br. 2~ba, ~~lc~~~r:1 ::~~ =~~ 5% OOWN-Btfl . exec ca NEWPORT CUSTOM trees &c foliage. Great Tues $264yr.833-8974 actlywhatyou're~ooking decor d. $280 /mo. No 111' twnbae, pool, W/W 1"woh me. Fully up. $78 500 nyoo 5Br Mansion, owor. nbrhood. $76.~. 496·7187 **orange c 0 mm . for. Serving all beach Pets. 548-6173 cpls, AC, wshrldryr, $350 ~ded incl'g mirrored ' . 6J8.366l 3 IR + POOL Tustin 1090 Cent.er, gr065 $25K. Ms. areas, & all. Orange Co. Mesa Verde 4br, 2 ba, mo. (2l3)433-Q6eve. ~.wet bar, Spanish COMMERCIAL Corner N $249,000 ....................... Vaugbt,Agt. 675-6900. C!" now for inlo. &I~ frplc. Spac .. upgraded ......... leodt 3240 ~rid litch, bltns. frplc, 2 Central Laguna ewport's finest custom 311 :nlSTit4 •COM11•1n Guide Xlnt local.Ion. $495. mo ...................... .. ~!'s.~~~~~aes~nc~ OONALDM.BIRD v.1tbtwostore5 ~~l~ ~a~~~ ~f:: $59.900-oftEH! 12 ph~~Eg~d~!s!:t~ in lc6oalsJand 3 106 Call833-3821or644-1200 Westminster/Springdale tauiis crt, J>OOl , Jacuzzi. Auouo••~. 1 .. 11.,. + 2 bwldable lots foyer Huge formal Liv· ~rgeous Plan "D" In Costa Mesa+ 3 br. fa ma-•••••••••••••••••••••••SUPER 4 Br, nr S. Cst 4 bednn, 2 bath, cpt.s; Suna, gas BBQ's & z ---·z"~~A~ORS mg Room! Famllyroom Laurelwood! Designer ly rm house w1rrplc, JULY RENTAL. $1900 Plaz.a,boatgate,immed drps, avail now . *1n' clubhse. By ownr ARIORLA.KE ho s t s: Ra Is e d entry.Upgradedlhruout. beam ceilings, pvt mo. On the Bayfront. 3 occy, $475. 752·1920 S375tmo.714 :963-4569 $75,900. 840..2881 eves & Lakefronl Covan.:ton. 3 494-8611 i:.lumpstone fa replace, Central air. 3 br, 1~ ba. 2 pahos. Income $10,231i Br, 2ba. Salisbury Real Jeanine, 835-0211Pg9783 Vacant. 4 BR, 1 ~ ba, wlmdsor641 7158 HR, 2 ba. $159,900 OC"'-" .... VIEW parquet floor. cathedral patios + J>OOl, park, 3 S/R 5450,000. Prin. onlv Est.ate. 67:MJ900 close to ocean $400. Ask 67 s;An · 1 & t b T d k o $425/mo. College Park J.2012 1957 Trailite mobile ce11ng we ar. lighted tennis crls , ra e o . wnt>r 1Agt Bai)o(IPftlinsula ll07 38R,2 ba+bonus/fam forKeith,988-1317,Bkr. 1044 Seel home; l2x42, with l2x22 Secluded Master wang-volleyball, cable TV, RV 642·9666 ••••••••••••••••••••••• rm.Clean&sharp.Avaal ••••••••••••••••••••••• oBelle•e cabana, wath 2 bdrms. walktn -marrored parking-The Works! 5 BR, exclusive Point 4/5m.Refs.req'd. •Hewleochtt... ---------•12 sty. 1''R, LR, DR, Ofc, Close to shopping & wardrobes. ~alls o~ Don't miss this exciting MOTEL area, on beach, ..ann/mo. Call Chuck Everett, Agt Get ready for summer lrdM Start H I 2"'2ba. 5·6br. Upgraded beach Sec today at g I ass over v 1 e w 36 Laurelwood Townhome. 44 Units with restaurant, _.,., 559-402!6 No fee. now! Walk lo beach from er ome. w/many, many xtras. liy $.!l 500. sparkling pool. Laundry OPEN HOUSE this Sat. cocktail lounge & 2 Br 1 year lease or summer here. Walk lo grade Cule 2 bedrm with ownr. PH: 552·0191 for ' room. Loads or storage. &Sun.Callnow752·1700 single famil y home. rate.673-4545673·3620. •2 br townhouse, Mesa school & high school. 4 ou&lom fireplace & oppt. ~-·. Callt.oprevaew. 752·1700 oPf.Nll19·11sivNroa1M(C• Walki.ng distance to the CoronadelMcr 3122 Verde. Patao, pool, $'l95. br. 3 ba, huge sundeck, t.astefully enclosed front :Q: fi~fic:B!P~ 1 •1•~111 ·'·11 ~1""''1'1 "'"'' I•-~ beach. $250,000 cash rn ....................... Childok.833·81n4 dblgar.SS.SOmo.614 20lh . · Woodbndge Condo, pre· ....,;q. t 'tT>,.,..""'Il~ [ ~ . .·. '.~:·_:,. . ' ·, itial Investment. Total St. 536·1718 1., ~ n ~ s c a p e d Bl(. den, 212 bas w /cust 499 2aoo __ .,_ ...... __ value $9,900,000. Contact XJnlloc. So. Hwy 349 Magnolia. 2br w /den, P..lltlo . '!ard as a m1umlocat1onnrlake.2 ' ~. ut/' ~ lt~~jlijtl . , SUPERCLEAN ma11terp1ece! Near com design. Brentwood up-. ---·-j St.oneyMayock AdUlts-nopets 2ba, Crplc, quiet tree Super3br,2ba,DW. m\O'Jlty park and pool grd 1971 s ft By Bay Owner. View home ___ • 2Br$46Smo.Cal1 Avis hned street. $375 mo. R/0 ,cpts,drps,$375 a!'<' !cnnJs court' Sound Avrul arteiei,~rowo;r~:;~ W/J>OOI. 3 ~R, 2 Ba , fum. '/•ACRE M A 'Y Q CK 833-3927da;675_3317 ev Rich <work) 547·8456. 114:963-4569 ruoe . Call Red Carpet mad·Aµral, 545.9215 rm, sep dm·rm & den. 816 CANYON Palios,andpool+3Br2 ~""~"""r10N (bome)673-l734 Reallors,833·3380. e s/ k d d $117,500. 497·1302 lor Bahome.AllforSll0,000. LAGUNABE.ACH lnlM 3144 ESd h II Brand new 3 bedrm ve w n s; a ys appt. CONDO (°714)494•2148 ••••••••••••••••••••••• · 1 e c arming we S..\6 6850, Mr. Beddome. 1\u1J k kept hse on quiet cul·dc· LANDING home, 1900 CALLUS FOR • •HOMES• $60,000.$70,000 • le Tustift & l"IM l)tE HOMESELLERS 752-5353 eroc • 4 BR, 2'h b_a. sac. 3br, 2ba, sunroom, sq.ft. wath fo rmal dining, COZY CHARMER Lu'ICurious Oakcres t $SOOMo. LeRatsor Cam.rm w /l ge brick owner wants 1 yr lse & 2Br 21,ba. Ee. bdrm has model with lus h gold Distress P--ri1'f! Really ~ frplc, l blk tol7thSl. ••.u :c: $5 0 i Id carpellng mirrored wet · -r--~ 5 per mo. oc g 011.11 bath & powder room bar, deck off hvang room We can find it for you. Hewpcwi S.ach 3 I 69,_mo_.67_3-_m __ 1 _____ 1 gardener. downstairs. Beaut'ly up-with fantastic view of Other R.al Estat. Beach area. Probates. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sharp 3 bedrm, 2 bath graded crpts, brick frplc. golf cour:.e. Security ••••••••••••••••••••••• bankruptcies. trustee S3000 /Mo. Beautifully 2 ~~!i~e~~~· house i n gr ea t private patio, lovely guard and underground Mobile Homes sales. forced sales. under furnished 3 bedroom 00 546-7945 neighborhood. Jmmed. greenbelt area, conve· B I" I parking. For Sale I I OO market values. We can the water Includes 19' poss. $400/mo. Roberts naent to frwys Call SAN· e le Ve f ••••••••••••••••••••••• JO!nt venture. Call World boat. 631 -1400 Agt. 5 BDRM 3 DA Realty 848-1688 ~~~:t The Heal !::state A Laguna charmer 2 blks I .Quail ~ for Sale. Mobile Home Wade Brokers. 673-4545. ON GOLF COURSE P'~ aale by owner, Univ from the ~ach·w ga.i:ebo m. Pl <olderHO'x4S'. Nr Hoag Condo. no steps, upper $750mo. 546·7945 PJt.lll twnhsc, 3 Br 2'2 640-9900 & 1acu.i::i1 for under p a~· Hospital. $9 100. Write 230UrutsSanDaegoCo.7x bay,2br,den,2ba,lrplc. Walk to the beach from Ba, sep din rm , rtt ~.000! 2 Bdrm , ulJI rDpertllPS r O Bol< 1455 Cosla gross, isr;. cash. Others Superb furn. Pvt patio. Mesa Verde, 4 br, 3 ba, 1 this lovely 3 br, 2 ba, OXFORD MODEL modcled katch, f.l:.1~ bltn\ i:aragc $89,500 i.oo ou· 11ls.21-~91w20PO•T lt'CH M~s~. 92626 • '"O.C. Agnt 640 2344 pool, putting g reen. year lease. Ideal for ex· cpts, drps, R /0, avail !luge bonus rm. h1!(hly Cl I • , ~ ~ Avail May 1 to Nov . 1. ec. family. $650 /mo. Nr n o w $ 3 S 5 / m o . upjTaded. Tl'rrar1c luc. OSe• n ~ Ac~for sale 1200 4 PLEX. S700. mo. Agt . 541·5032 sch ls. shops . country _7_1_4:_963_·4_569 _____ _ Walk to srhools , parks. Immaculate lath & BYO R ••••••••••••••••••••••• HUNTINGTON llEAClf . . cl ub . 545·9215, NEWBEACH HOUSE !ShO\)S. 2 pools, lttnn1i:. ---plaster 2 bdrm, fplt', , . , W~E 1 .... 1 ... 10 l Oceanfront, 2 Br ut1l pd, eves /wknds · days rts «l'7 700 f' t Woodbri~ rbo hd d n b & t t I RICI' D IH LOW yr new, .... ,.,.. annua no pets Avail tal end • ' Ultra lovely 3+2112, FP, c . *"" . rmc on Y -r A rlake w rs, ig >eaut1 ul . , INVESTORS! gross! 17110 llunungton June. saSo mo. 646-2510 546-6850, Mr. Beddome dbl l'(ar, walk to ever· 5Sj;0475evs/wknds Choiu Watttfront back yd, s hin!(lcs .~ MAHKl':T 8 DER St. Pnn ~n ~· MESA Verde on Europa. 3 yt.h' ·1 1T ALL ADDS UP New 2 level Exe<· Condo shakes too• $124,900 Sa~<~R ~~~~~~~~on 98 Ac ~kls..:b!iween Pac1f1c Sands Rily $145, Won't last act fast! br, 2 ba, $43.S mo. incl'ds. mo'.i~u~~ow. $450 ... End location on green Select carpet & move in Wes le II ff area . (1 100 0 c ea n s Ide /Vis ta . 968'0779 At beach uUJ pd. Furn. grdnr. Avl. 4tl. 546-0SSS bell; spacious, 2 frplcs . now. Reduced for qwck Dover Dr ) Walk to ever-Beautiful rolling hilhr. Fee. 645-4900 •..;;.---------aRedec. 2 br, nu cpts & laUndry rm , 4 b1,:: sale.673-262.4/54~~ ythan g, 2Br. 2Ba, fam Smal!rspring fed lake. ** Cons.nersGui~. Pleasant neighborhood, drps, R /0 . 2 Car gar. bdrms., family rm. & WOODBRIDGE·4Br 38a rm. formal dmang, brick S600u /per acre. Call NEW UNITS E·side 3 Br. cpts, gar. $325/mo. 714 :963-4569 ._.,._ I u . '1.:s==~-;;;==:~ rrplc. h<>avy ~hak" roor. C.Al:5880 LI---Unfumj-L-d Many xtras $375. 548·9536 c1~ ga ore. navers1 2,350 sq rt. """".500. Prin ' ~ ~ .,...,-4 u-u. $21 o 000 ~ -Vacant. 3 BR, 1~ ba, ty Park IOAataon .... 11 only c .<n ca'>:'" rem-'AI_ ... Atnc. kitchen. 6 u""nit• • ~ u """""°"" """' """ "' ~ $240 00 ••••••••••••••••••••••• o&BR + 2BA. lrg quiet cor, close to ocean. $375. Ask adds up to a buy ut ----new quality carpelang. s • O Geftet-al 3202 fenced yard. $385/mo. forKeith968-l317 Bkr. $111.SOO OCEA.HVIEW like new 1n51dc & out. 12Unih$480,000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Move in now. AGT b _ __, CULVERDALE 2 Bdrm. con1eml). homl' Age 20 yrs J>nce ID· Clltdothers!! THE BLUFFS v· I 540-05.ss 2 r \.VllUO. 1 ba, .,mm. PL.AH 41 on 2 LOTS! Ocean vat'W eludes ..all appliances. ~~~~~~~~~ Roy Mc;Ccrd~ , · aew · pool, carport. 16684 552·7000 If \.nu rl' lookin•' for an from lge. pat10 deck' SI lti ,000 Fa r m Cati R~ ISIO.... port S~~~~~~E~5.~i~w $220. 2br, garage, kids & Arbor Car. $300. Dys: " C o l y I 1 v . r m !>.'>2 01118 or 642 IH66 for FIVE ACRES oc-w•V"r new · peLs . Fee 893~71, ext 210. eves: TH E . . . ln\('!:>lmenl plu~ cum w hreplacc. ~ppt Ask for Scott Pnn SO.ofCOROMA CostaMesa548-7729 3 BR.2J,<,Ba.$850Mo MainRenlals 540-5370 897-4759 Mr Mohamed . ·· .. fortabll' lmni:. !ol'<' llm BIG CANYON . -----· -----vi LL ACF. ... · ~.500Fl'LLl'RICI-: only Excellent view. Full --------•I lovely 2 hdrm . 2 h;ith -__,... 3 BR, 212 Ba. $700 Mo. $195. lbr, l-'l utal. paid 3 BDRM. CLEAN Avail REALTOR5 homt', located near pool MISSIOHREALTY ~........,......-...-.-price $9.900. BKR. lndusp~ LAKE FOREST Kidsok Fee bltns. close to schl & & plJHtround. New on Phone 494-0 73 1 Bluffs l·Le•el___ ~~/~·~ 2100 3 BR, 2 Ba. $.575 Mam Rentals. 540 5370 shop. $375. mo. 968-3404 tht• m.nkcl & priced to F,nd unit Prime l'arly · ••••••••••••••••••••••• !oell at only 9)7,900 4 Br, 2 ba, nr. So Cst 2Br, 1Ba houses, like new, Laguna Hiquet 1052 area :! 81-t . 2 ba +huge ONE ACRE Plaza, cpts, bltns. frplc, $300·$275. Avail Apr. red hill~:.:. 552-7500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ram rm . Lake new • foryourmobllehome SA.LEORLEASE dshwhr, cov'd patio. Dbl l stfl5th. 2614 Florida. Custom home decorated $137,500 lAw lease Level. All utilities avail. 24,000 sq fl Industrial garage. 549.3262 Open Sunday. 848·0800 w 1sophis tacal aon yet HELEN 8. DOWD THREE lo choose from. B 1 d g -Com par e llvablc JBr, 2'iba. ram RE/\LTOl-t 644·0134 XJntterms. BKR. economy & nexibility-Best bet! $250. 2br, 2ba 2Br, 1\-'zba, adlt condo nr. HAMPTON GREENTREl':'S 1:1rge1ot 4 bedroom home w1lh a DEN and gorl(eous 16 by 40 POOL. Very private (714)677-5691 Lcaseot9.5•sqrtNNNor Plex.Kidsok. pool. Nu crpts/paiot. rm. wet bar, pror'ly VILLA.GE OF OR522-0530 purchase $250,000. Ex· Tenex898·9891Sm Fee Enclosed gar. l 'hMi. to D I• htf I ldscpd Sll9.500. HARBOR VIEW cellent Orange locatlon bch. $325 /mo-rent ($310. HlahlY upf.lraded neutra11----------ca(petin ~. Open and brl ght throughout ~.500. Cati for ilppt TURTLE ROCK S~per s harp !'Ian 4 townhou:.e Thi'> <I bedroom home ha'> self cleaning oven, trash compactor, lmled wan dows, no-wax kitchen and the grdunds have been professlonall) landstaped. Nt'ar pool and park area SI 14.500 c~ for appointment POOL AMO SP A Tt\la h111hly desar ablr (;RANA OJ\ l'XCCUll\'t' home an the RACQUET CLUB o rrers you I bedrooms, ramaly room anct dining room 10 11 moat comfortable set e ICJ U BOHDREA.LTY p AS Commercial Call l714)645·9555owncr. Bran~ new duplex, on lse). 842·9371, Larry, D bl. 8.'11 9111 . 11 E II Property 1600 lf523 C.olPUST\..:fRVJ"E Ea~ts1dc . 2 br. 2 ba. Agt. u In Modified Monaco. 4Br, ••••••••••es••••••••••• va paUo, landsraped. 2390 ---------- Townhome an Vall..ai:c 1 3 Lovcl) "lflll'I lfomc" 3 Br ~Ba. cozy den. xlnt cond. Commercial lot 63.125 Loh fOf' Sale 2200 OPEN DAILY Orange. 673-6039 3 BR, 13.'.i Ba, cov. patio. an. :! ba . b.ilcony otf . .!'II<!. fpk. ram rm. bltns, ., blk from Po<>I & 4 l9th & P • $40 ooO ••••••••••••••••••••••• 8A.M. T06 P.M. sml fam·rm, bltns, no ni.'>lr bdrm . nvnlookin" l~c )d $76.500 Ownr, acres of park. walking omona. • COST"' MES ... R3 CP East Costa Mesa brand pets. $100. 842-9501 a ft. grr<'nbelt Jl.ll'k µ.it 1~ A~ 4'M 1930 e"~"' chstance to !trhl. $164.500. cash. 499-3459 "' "' Homes for rent in best new 3 br home. Frplc, 4pm h r Open llouseSat1Sunl0..525 Unit MOTEL. On l Zoned f or 17 units areas,Nwpt,&CM.$250 pvt patio, dbl garage,----------a~ ounl•11n plu~. ju .. t Newport Beach I 069 llD5 r o r t C ar 1 o w Acre + 1 Acre Vacant. w /variance possible 18 to SllSO per mo. 640..2981 landscaped. $425. 2390 Vacant. 2 BR, 1 BA, walk <;t l'p~ to ad ult 111101 ••••••••••••••••••••••• units Lfas 2 Dplx 1 Plea~irnt II\ ma.: ,,1 tn .ti _640 1049 aft 6PM Grosses over Sll6,000. · ' · · R"'-~ "'LS Orange. 673·6039 to ocean, $300/mo. Ask ~F.A vu:w r a nor am ac Onl On house. S275.ooo Pnn only '""'"' for Keith, Bkr. 968·1317 fordahlt• $75.111111 I.II ---------Pno y This Please c_..-Fi-lol .... 0 FEE B Ba 1 ... Vu.~Br,p\tcomm,J\'c1tl Agt S212080orS28l627 ,.,,,_, ....... " 3 r l~ • poo, -75. soon 8332929.6441181 HarborHighlClltds 7 ·10p· · REALTORS 752· 3BR2BaCMS38S N1cearea.K1ds1petsOK. $250. 2br, garage, kids, -.523 C.olPtJ5 Dt·IRVIME OPF.N DAILY 8A M T06 P '1 THE ILUFfS Tnna Plan, ~l bdnn end umt Greenbelt frontage Early area Sl2S,OOO \GENT 640 5560 Don 'l miss this quality am· m. 3 BR 1 ba GG $395 Sml fee 645-4900 singles ok. Fee bwlt I bedrm home wath CoftdonthdumtJTowft• 2 Duplex lots. Southwes J BR 2 baFV$4SO ••CouumenGvi~ MamRentals,540-5370 spa rkling new ltoaesfor.-1700 S.A: Approved plan 38Rl"4baH84.25 . bathrooms. Beaulaful ••••••••••••••••••••••• avail. R. Blakely Rll 2 BR 1~ ba condo H B $210 2 Br beam ceilgs, $270. 3 Br T .H. Pool. Kids custom pool by Irvine CONDO SPECIALIST 556-4133 $275 nice area. call now! Sml ok. Fee Pools ~1Jny cu<1tom H.B .. C.M .. F . Vly. Ranches, Farms, 2 BRlbaAptHBS18S fee.645·4900 MaanRentals,540..5370 features lhruout. Local· Touch s tone Rlty, Grons 2700 CURTIS R.E.962·2459 ••ConsumenG.llde Singles, 3br. 2ba, Jg lot. ed in New port Harbor 963-0867 •• •• •••• •• ••• ••• ••• •••. -pets ok Now $350 High School U1!1l. Call EA.5T SIDE 3Br. 2Ba, $450 Tene~ 898·9891 s·m Fee HartHw-ViewHome 540-llSl Leisure World Towers. CoronadttMcr 3222 mo. Fncd yd, wlk to --------- Reaut1ful Cal1forn1a Vu.lux.liv.Meals,maid, AVOCADO ••••••••••••••••••••••• shops, N.B. schls, pets 4BrP~Ba,coveredpatio Ranchstylehome Large 10'/~dn.$35,000.496·1840 GROVE Cozy 2 br dplx, frpl, children OK. gar, 325 Fam Rm. fncd yd, gar: open beamed entry, big 2 l C $52 OO hrdwood nrs. So. of Hwy. Rochester 642 3693 good loc. $425. 897-0617 entertaining hvang room, Waterfron~Condo, Bristol .4 A -• 0. Adlts. no pets. $400. extra large ramaly room. ---------1 Cove, Carlsbad. 1440 sq. Mature trees. BeautHul 673-oosg 4Br. 2Ba, $400 mo Lg rncd Hunff~Ofl d1nin11: room & 4 big ft. 2 bdrm, 2 bath, swim building site In Bonsal yd, gar, pets children HarbOw 3242 bedrooms. H you h~d pool, sau na, jac uzzi, Just outside Fallbrook. Lar ge l·bdrm, fr pie .. OK. 899 Oak St. 642·3693 •••••••••••••••0 •••••• ting. $119.500. Call for a1,. logMrto hoch I 0411 poinlmenL ••••• •••••••••••••••••• thought of moving . I OO!o DOWN dock available. Fish, ski Owner very flexible o patio, garage. No pets. 3 Br. 3 ba townhouse. LARGE! LARGE! Ocffft•iew I.tr.at Above Aliso Canyon. One year new-2 Bdrms., 21,; baths & den. Honus hob· by r oom & a ttached R•rage. WalJc to beach. S89,950. NORIMS REAL TY * 494-8057 * Uus is at ! &tter hur y Beautirul 4 bedrm. 2~ & sail. $68,SOO. Broker. Clnanclng. Don't miss S425 Mo. 644·2212, 38r.2baCollegePnrk ~r~~~l~:11n~~L:loa~~: they don't la11t long an baths, 3 yrs new, Back 714(729-3208 this great investment op· 497·2292 StOO this area. 645·0303 ea L 3000 n Inc ._ 0 port u n i t y ! 0 n I y . ~1371or846-5456 eves. f=OREST E OLSON •'-< ........ ,0 .... •·~-c- Y area. ge sq. . ome ,.........., 20 0 ..,.,,OOO~all 752.1700 2 Bit, 1 ba .. single house E•ec lrl-level, 3 Br 3 Ba, home on Immaculately ••••••••••••••••••••••• -l t Dbl $450 M 3 BR D 2 b M V d A ~~~!.c~·c;:J,~~~I ~!ft: l•M"""jiii~ ~:lytse.' gar. o. S42S r , a esa er e ~~.' ~~~~~~Rc':r ;::: ings, (2) all bnc.-k fplcs.1---3•9•U•M•l•T•S--•I ' . Scenic Prop. 675·5726 R tfi2S. Aft 5, 5544442 extra lge cust. pool · ' 3 BR. den, frpl. Lovely oy Mc:Ccrdle lnlM 3244 w /Spa & fare pat. $185,000. Sant.a Ana.16()(),000 yard. So. of hwy. ~ Reaft« 1810 H•wport ••••••••••••••••••••••• Yet this MONTl!:Rl':V In t.be kANCH has over 3000 sq, ii-ot very comfort&· ble 'Hviog built about 4 b .. r ooms. a family roob'l, dining room and BIG master suite Also aft~ a 13 by 32 POOL a nl S ~ ~ · B E TTE n lf9una hoch I 048 LaCJma leach I 041 lflJ'R:RY.. Call for OP· ··~··••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Use low down & watch V Bachelor Utllts & 1 ... 'IJD FOR RE_., Month Agent644·4848 Costa ~a 548-7729 New 2 BR, San Mateo, on your money dble each 12 l ·Bdrm. units ~ "' 10th fairway. Rancho ye a r owner / A gt . llLL GRUMDY Costa Mesa. fertile land. l LG. Br. w /partial view bed b h 0 San Jo a q ul n $491. ' pdntment $124,900 ICIHSIHG TOH HERE IT IS11 A o;ha rp DJ:AN E home with 4 ~. family room. dlQJftl room and UP· gnliet galore. 2~ years NIW. IT COULD BE THB ONE I S1ll2,900. Call farln•ppointmenl. ~·1 I IAMCHllALTY ~ lll·JOOO We06ridft ~t &i \IPlflded 2 BR. I OoodO. near the lake. fll_~tsoo. Xlnt terma. AffUf AprU LS. 499-2109 «,..... 81 owner. ~ VJ 11 You'I find Che best homes In town behind our signs. If you're buying orselltng. giveuwcall n...•adlhyPIG.o ~ ....... 496-7222 831-0836 67:J..4545 REALTOR 67S.6161 95xfi0', nower or vegeta or ocean S250 mo. Sm. 3 room. 2 at . pen S4IH290 1----------·l·---------1 hie garden $200per mo . petok. 751-1555 beam. rireplace. extras Th -Co-1-------wtr 1ncl'd. 20.S7 Tustin 640-9091 e ony, 3 Br 2 &!, Ave 645.6496 Easy hvmg. $275 2 br, SJ95. Pool & tennis lncld. --stngles ok. 1''ee Nwpt Hghts 3 br duplex, By owner. 5Sl·J679 100 AC level farm land Main Rentals. 540-5370 patio. fncd yard, encl. S350. 3 br, 2 ba. Kids, peu, near main rds. Al/alfa 3 BR 2 Ba ta garage. W /0 hook·up, anilso« Fee fieJds & farm sites In 1 • •gar. C'r'P •YT· R.V. prkg. lmmed OC· M.aln Ren~ 540-"70 Hinkley Vly. Ideal for Y $41657·.,m.!~A ""t copy. $375.S49·9209 Del · fruit fann, bone ranch ,,..~ &eu UH 4 Br, 2 ba, cent or country living. $495 3br 2b ts South of LARGE 2 Br home. Cpls, AJC, frpl, cov pa\.lo. $315 P•r ac . by owner . h ' 8&1~0r ·. ~ stv. ref . Fenced yd. 4 J\r Un1v. Prk, 1 blk 838-2674. 9am-6'pm wy67. 3-2138 cac1a. . Adults. $225. M4·980IS from shop'1. ~ ~~---..:_ ___ , D'IO. Bth abort feue. 8444'1.5 EXECUTIVES 3 Br, Fam Rm, rpta, drpic, or S40-046'9 You don't have to be an CottaMeH 3224 elec RIO. 2381 Rutgenu·-------- eitecuUve to afford lhb •••••••••••••• ••••••••• Dr. 63$-6750 <714 > AcroM St.,,._ L4llt• . ~ beaut. braod·new 2700 New 3 Dr 2 Ba, nr S. Cat c.ondo Freoc:h Quarten. ~~:::~ A~~r.L:~~: 1 ~·tfth. bo1mt c11on8K2\R~ acrea !:! ~ .. z a.;..,. S4 o ~ ~!· 3br. 2'~ba avail. April 1. sunken llv.rm, frplc, ,1 "'' .. a . . ....,._1.1.-;eva_...._., $42S. mo. 556·1674 or J acur.zl & PRIV ATe (714)677·!1691 B"""*"" 3 b 3.. , 751·16U bch. UpJl'aded cpt, mtr. I OR52:Ml530 .:.Au&. r , .... am ____. · rm. frpl, frml din. rm. o.a Point 3226 "'"-"' cl<>Mt doon next to YA-#MA TEA.MS Nr. br h. $'150. 848-1035 ••••••••••••••••••••••• bed, beaut Uted entry. • Spectacular 38r 2ba Walk to marina le heh'• ~l SdS. or lae opt.km. bOma on lrt lftcd lot, OARAOE SALE ads 1n SparkUn• 2 aty, 3 Br, a\'I ( 7 14 > 8 4 0 · 112 2 0 r h\Ct llv rm, bi>lc, de the Da1Jy Pl.lot brina hap-t., cpt.a, drp8. frplc. R&c <2U)432.3Sl8l 1\lllpric.tM.M6.. BKR. PY renatt.a. To place your facWUa. Ls• tuS/mo ncboS. J . ~ Br2Ba San • (fl.4)8'TN117 drawlnl card, phone Cal'-Pat Fry, 413-Mn t-r Lula 1\tJ, 1olf en• • OR ec.seTIU.S.y. OuU &11·271.5. tduu.-. 5C7·'1044 ,. ~!!!!!!!!~~~~~ ult, I ·1 Ir, ...... "'" .. -.... ...... ; ....................... l6J lw • ..... &.lalU • ..,. .... Ptwll. -.MD Joan, Sondra o r Blr1tua -.1.111 • ....., ........ ll44 ••••••••••••••••••••••• P'clr8. t.cbdar Unlurn. l br .... ,f&Oa. llST S&IC110M tm S11perior WOODBRIDGE Newport Beach PINESAPTS 6._.M453 D&UXIOfflCU • l. 2 It 3 bdrm unlls. ----------t Comml Ii lnchtl IJ)9«S, IRVlNE BLUFFSCONOOS T .. IAY UAF Dulaud like early ._ 4000 200 to 2000 sq. n. As low 2 BR, 1 Ba ••• -.. SJS0/395 Leu. starun1 at $450 CciRchMi tlUMa California bun&alows ...................... .. 2BR,2Ba ..... '450/ Month.AgentMH133 Unfwwl~ ~r~r:S::· ~8.1:1t~. From S270 l 15Sleepinarm•'80-Sl06 mo. 3 2 BBRR.22\."aeaBa ......... $SJSJasmlne Creek, py.t ••••••••••••••••••••••• Coro.. .. M4r 3122 spaciousnewapu,Pool, Pine;\tooe.Ofchrs,9·5:30 All $SO. wk. Share kit /-• .. · · -• S400/600 o~• UXE Br u tr 1 A il 1 Dally. bath. Shown Mon·Sal 3 BR, 2~J ba. __ .. ~/$60 comm. Guarded Gate. pw 3 2 a o itt ••••••••••••••••••••••• pvtpallos. v1 4/ . SS2-0400 "only". Call aft lpm. ----------r 4 BR. 2 Ba. . .. $465/575 New 3 br, 2 b. a or ~ br • Tee L. Niguel, Cntry Clb ,_________ Adults, no pets. n..1 'd ac.11 """'• or 50' peuq. rt. 4 BR,2~2 Bll .... $49.S/725 ~ w/pooL Jacuua, ten· Comm pool, a:.:.oc duel> .... .,. 329Avocado, C.M. 2 Br, 2 ba Condo. Sohd oak ~eq · .........,.,... 4001 Blrch-N.B. If 523 CAMPUS Dl: IRVINE OPEN DAILY 8A.M. T06 P.M. UNIVERSITY PARK 2,3 and 4 bedroom homes near shopping, ::.chools, and freeways at:eess. From $425/mo. Call for information. RAHCH RIEA.LTY 551·2000 The Wallows, 3 Br 1 -1~ Ba, fplc, $450 mo. Univ. Pk. 3 Br 2 Ba, comm rec fac1l $430. 752·7847 TURTLIE ROCK nas . $725 mo. Call pd.Lse.499-2247 r6' 646-0883 lutchen $395moancludes ----------t Agt.54l·S032 644-4832. Condo •[I,,. l.c-r_cs_ water & assoc. dues. No ROOMS szs wk up with ---~-----1--------- Luxury ---·· 2br wtgar, S220. Cpt, pets. no cluldren. Refs kitchen. $37.50 wk up IXECUTIVE Housing for visiting ucr View,new2br,w/den 2Br,den.l'iBa.dmmg water pd. 2176 "E" req'd.552-1174 apt.s.SC8-97SS lkyfrowtOfflcH Professors/famalies. & art1um Pvt streets, area, pool, jacua1, $395 Placentia. Call bet l & S, Prime Location 3-week periods. June Tennis & comm pool, HB. Malloy Realtor:. COKONAUEL MAR 636-4120 By0wner·Brandnew38r Bdrm w /kitch. privgs 33ll8VlaLido,NwptBch 12th·Aug 12th. Call $800 m o 640-8557, 963·9771 2 Br Townhouse. frpk ---------!Condo in Woodbridge, Call 6 30 to 9:30pm Fum.orunf.~otl\..4KN\ 833-5191 833 ....,..., 64 80 8 p I So CLEAN 2 Br hse. no I j I ~~ ~or 4-l -----oo . tenrus. me ocean poo , acun . tennis wkdays, or Sal & Sun. Secr .. tanal serv avail. ---1 Beautiful Ea st bl urr & CatalrnJ views. Close ctuldren or pets. $225. 773 rourts & lake 675-9263 or 962-7520 " 250 C Newport Hgb 3 Br. comp Ocean \.Jew 2067 Vista to shopping & hne beach W Wilson. 642-8205 675.1m sq. t. redecorated, rent andds del Oro. 2 br. 2 ba. All 644.2611 ----------i --Room w/kitchen & bath. OceanorBayview grdnr . $530 mo. Open xtras . ,;25. 644 4201 or 11--------•1 KIDS ,..-ns Ok LocJwta hoch 3848 Nr 15th & Orange, C.M lst Month Free Nd am apl w /ba, In ex· change for Bkkpg, Typ- in g or PBX work . 837.3036 House, Sat & Sun, 333 548-4471 ------Eastside 2 Br hse. $345. 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $115. mo. Mature lady 675·5820wkdys only. PirateRd.548-7288 ~ l:lr dplx. $250, gar. NewLuitury duplex,2Br. please.Eves548·0431 . lbra('ton Balboa lsl,yrly 3Br, 2Ba, enclol>ed (2)3BR,2l:IADuplexes. 67S8258or646..s48 2Ba. view, f r plc, alt ••~Mdlx2rmsu1te, rental.Sanglefem.adult, NEWPORTllGllTS garages, sw1mm1 nj.! available. close to shops, bltns. 2 car gar. pvt Lge room, pvt bath. lite util pd, A/C, ample pkg, non smoker /drinker. 3br, lba. Hrdwd Urs. pools. patios. garde111ng bearh&park XlntCdM FoxhollowVlllag. walk lo bch, adults, no kit. privgs. Female. $1SS.mo lo mo.67~6900. 675-361'5 fNr0pl~:!.~.c.dAyrdva'il2c4a1r1.gaErl. s~rv1~e. bltns. 8126 locations. From $350 to 62lW.Wilson646·2010 pets, ref. Yrly lse SS25 Refs.$100/mo.546-2573 DAYORW£EK ----------.-~.... R1dgef1eld H B. $350 /mo S475. Ask for Mi:.st, NODEPOSITTOQUAL. mo 497 4114 Busi...., /Ive t / Modena St. $425 mo. :iotO "B'" So. Bradford 675.23110r 545.1067 •2brtownhomew/frpl · -GuestHona 4150 Exec.swterental ~-•" 1 5"Ul·S041forappt. Pl.$32S /mo.lM1lefrom1--~ --.,...__ •Ll{epalio&enc.garagc Part.furn,2 Br,$350,near••••••••••••••••••••••• 752-0234 ---------So. Cst Pia la, 564·342<J ----~---~ •Adulb, child 16 & over ~ach. Inquire, 445 Oak Need home Cor . elderly LARGE -----Large 3 Ur 2 Ba, service •Small petok St. mother. No medical pro· Airport Offices lklsNu OceonVuHom. Apcrtmentsf\lmlshed rm,µalw.$125 494-6848 blems. Costa Mesa, lblk toO.C.Airport.Dlx ~ 5005 3BR, fam rm, din rm, 2· ••••••••••••••••••••••• 644 2251 •WALK TO 17th St. shop· ---Hunt. 1leac h area . suites w /cpts. drps, ••••••••••••••••••••••• frplcs, bllns. wet bar, lal>oaPenlnsuta 3 7 07 3 11 •>LI f>I' .. w -::•95 pmgEastside2Br,$240. fUlloceanvlew,lllr,2607 536-5071 janitorial serv, i''M WtldinqMoch.Shop huge deck w /beaut ••••••••••••••••••••••• r ~•a, r t, .ie "" 5"'8·4971 • Solano Way, call cvs/ systm. All utal., ample ProfalabfeCorp. has to "1ew. 1675/mo. mu Aft Ii & wk nds · wknds 497 3495 Vacation Remols 4250 prkg. No lsc 1 cq'd. 2082 sell out. Price reduced JACOBS REAL TY sum i!1 er Cun ! S 1 3 5 640 w »i or 552 0.145 Npt Hts. Brand new 2br. •••••••• •••. •••••• •• ••• Ullht1espd Fee cpl, drps, d/w, fp, 245 LagunaHIHs 385 Cabin Bag Bear, sips 12. S.E. Bnstol.NB557·7010 ~:::i~ 675-6670 MainRentab,5405370 l.ar~c lhr, frplr pool , 16th Place. $295 /Mo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sepplayrmw/colTV& 2ndMOFREE askforSAMCRANE *THE BLUFFS• Costa Mesa --3724 ~;~uults, no pets EH.2·5722 3br, 2ba twnhse. Pvt poollable. Nr ski lift. Full service, and1v1dual H B.S.17160range,CM • •••••••••••••••••••••• Decorator's model on ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---Easts1de. New 2 bdrm . 2 ::tt~~~~ mo. Call 494-8611 Lag Bch. offices, month to month 645-4170 540-0608 4 and 5 bedroom homes best greenbelt. 3 Bdrms.. $40.00 W£EI< & UP Dupll'X So of llwy, 2 BR , 2 ba. condo. Frplc .• bltns. l '-har Cabin rent including: Recep· REST .. Ua .. ..- 1n Turtle Rock and Tur 2,2 baths. Highly UP· •Studao&IBRApb Ba. modern kllc.-hen, drapes, carpets. Large LocJwtaHICJWI 3852 Slps"J8.6313098 afl6PM lion serv, personahied1 A""'"' · walk lo park & bch. $t30 priv. ~undeck . Child O.K. ••••••••••••••••••••••• • · • phone coverage. mat Large, ultimate in fix· lie Rock Glenn. From graded! S63S/Lease. 334 •TV & Maid Serv Avail ~ d ... d S>45 /mo Call to see. V1sla True ha. Dnve by & •Phone Serv. Hld pool mo Agt 644 721l $32S Mo., yearly TENNIS & SEA Brand new 3 BR. 3 Ba, ispatc,,, undergroun tures & motir. $40,000. call for app't 640-0789 or 2376 New part Blvd. C!\t &15-8193 646·8723 Walk to the beach from Mount a in home in prkg, Jamtoral serv · All Yr. net now & just get· RANCH REALTY 548·1290 Agent. 548-9755 or645-3967 Open daily 603' i Jasmine Uus smashing 1&2 bdrm bea ull Cul June Lake utal. except phone. ling started. New fast 551-2000 -----2 BR. den. 21 2 ba, wet Upper 2Br.Newdecor.No aptcomplex,wllhtenms Loop.partlyfum.Avall. THE ESXUEITCEUTIVE growing area. E·Z opr. •---------1 $195. mo. 1 br. Malurt.> bar 1800 Sq fl Beaut peL'i S230 A\all 3128. 770 h 1 Check this! Turtle Rock. Lg 2 sty, 4br , $500 IM o 2 Br+ den adults, no pets. (}uit•l , t•arp & drps $525 Mo Shah mar Ph. 545-3190 court. club ouse. poo. May 15 to Oct. 15. $350. 640 5470 UBI 751-3741 2''lba. Bonus1fam rm, 3 secure. l'ondero'>a Scenic Prop 675·572fi -Jacuzi1. ~auna. sundeck p /mo. 646·7570 or ----:---:---~-::::--1----------'"""" o.,., 9731 home Walk lo bch. Pool 2 Br. $210. l Br, $195. encl & beautiful landscaping. l-M8·7261 * 1 MO F~REE R L'NT * rargar ....,.,.°"" &t Mobile Eslalt':., 19!11 h o "' loatS.SJC.-y ----ennas Rel>1dential area, duplex. i:ar. 136 E Bay St All elec. kite en IS· 30 1·2·3 Rm. dlx. offices No 1-· PLEASIE COME $5 7 5 I M o 4 Br+ den Newport, 646-8373 2 Br:! Ba, form:il d1mni:. 541 5331. t'VS. 646·2325 hwasher. self cleaning Rentals to Share 4 0 lease req. AdJ . Aarporter $160,000 last year LEASE ME! w/V1cw .,..;p;,,..-h~h 3769 patio. JvJll .111 s.tOO per oven. Adults only N ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hotel. LOW RATES. Oulstandmg fac11it1 el>, •:!llr +Den+ View Townhome $495 mo • 2 Br+ Oen Townhomc $.">25 mo. • 2 Br+ Den Townhome $.550 mo. • 4 Br home rn The Willows $395 mo. • 2 Exec ore sw tcs $378mo. All of the above are 1n frvine. Call today, 752 1700 .. , :-, ,, Q. ' ,, ~,, t, , ' [®lfi&IHI] $650/Mo. 3Br on wJter ••••••••••••••••. •• • ••• mn 752 71H I BAY MEADOWS ~t.o.. 1 br $275 2 Br $325. Law Office Space FULL SERV 833-3223 'til big yard, authonied for with dock for your boat Spar & ('heery 2 br fiPI Sea TetTace Apb Central Laguna. 494·7565 noon Johnson. OMC & others. S1400 1Mo. 4 Bdrm with • Encl gar. pool. J3Cl.lu1 23731 Man ner, Lag Nig AVOID INCOMPATIBLE ------VEaery little help required.' I« lonl & bo•l dock fo< l\~e 3824 Adults only. No ktd:. or (7141493 0501 Ofc, Cst. Hwy. at 3 Arch sy terms! large boat. Costa Mesa l>t'ts. l''r $250. bl, last+ Offict'hours9to6 ROOMMATES :! Bay a street front & UBI $750/Mo.AvailApnlthru •••••••••••••••••••••••sec. Ava i l April Is l House-Mote~8324134 oceanvu.499·4070 1---------- Aoaust. On water with AtJult E Side 1&2 br apts &Ill 0073 Newport Beoch 3869 Takes The Guesswork PiOllHt" Chickett " l::ncl gar. patro. pool -------• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Out Of Finding OFC SU lTE for rent, WOW! The best avail. boatdock BIG' Like new . no IH!l:> Nl::W 2 br. Iba. gar. 2 B 2 B I t .....i"TRIGHTPERSON ocean view, lg balcony, Org Co TopLoc .... 0000 $850 /Mo Winter. $1200 dswhshr 2025 Charle St. r. a ux . ap over· llU'\ UP6lair~ w /garage, ssoo · · · ~ · • Mo. in summer. Bayview 644 0!!711 5411 5763 eve, 635·4781 looking Newport Bay Sa•e $Sby Sharin9 mo. 536-8834 David Dahl + per yr net. E /Z opr. Wlth balcony & fireplace Priced right. Call for rental, 2 Br, frplc. • S29S Xtra IJ:c tnhsl• l't tlJy~ ~"75/mo ~ 1802 Straight guy or gal to more deta1ls. elegantly furnished. ba.)!arJl!l: Adulb 2100 ---------s hare 2Br. lBa. E.A.STC.M. UBI 751•3741 Boatsllpavailable 1':lden111J,frl61®1S OnlyS175 b:ichplex.stv& PARKHEWPORT furnished apt. an CM Retail or ofc. space. at ----------w ........ ~--" H refn.: Ktdsok Fee. 0 40'·50'. Rt'decor'd .. am VTillT"TJ"unr omes GREAT ~E,4.TION Sw·m AtJull :! l:k>droom, beam TenexS91!9S9lSm l--ee Bachelors, t or 2 wn Bdrm. furn. nee. pleprkg .• p\l baths 1770 Coll631·1400 minq ·~~ 2 h--'1h c••ib\ 1 .. 11111 .. ~ nnpd~ ,..,IU568 -----------Bedroom.,&Townhouses Ne;ir O.C.C. and shop· ........ ~, ,,_,,. ' "' ~ R r F r u950 SJ1?50/ OrangeAveL11646·4871 _ _ __ b.11.0 ,d\, n.qhtl;gh•Pd ,,.,,..,, y, w11..,0 n inti \pt c East...1de t r. r(' rig. rom....,. pang w. mo. + carport, sml back yd Specta('ular spa, total ulllrl1es Call 548·0136 837-4200 GIFT SHOP Big Canyon 2 BR.condo ~~urts Pro & f.'IO \hop 1"1 I BR.tph cJr~ K1d.,ok, $175 548--t291,6450527 recreation program, d Sh 1-·or lse 2 Br 2 bJ twnho;e $795 Mo annual lease "'" nq ronqe. party •oom no Pt'b GarJgc $200 ----social program. 8 pools, 8 f'em. rm ml wante . r in U~iv Park 111 <.:lol>e 10 Lido Realty 673 7300 FUN ACTIVITIES f 11 I 1om• 645 29711 New Twnhse 2 Br. fpl r. tenm~ courts At Fashron 2br, 2ba nr Ocr + exp AIRPORT LAGUNA BEACH Unique inventory of J(1fts. Downtown Mall location! Ample parkin,:i. freeway U81 837-4200 & airport VIMb1hty. 3200 ----------schls & park Cln & well , -&<ec•or hee Sunt:lov i,.,,,..h co,cred patio, deck. Island. Jambore.! & San 5460949bef. toam d led Wll d 3Br. 2 :.Ba. community BBO s '"Pl P">"'" •pc.11 GRAND OPENING d'>hw.,hr. altach gar, Joaqwn H1l l!.Road Sq. fl. w Jreceptaon of. BURGERS ttora • cons1 er pool. good loc. new drps. · '· • · 1m~s11-BnU mJturc adults, S325 l7 41 .... 1900 3 mo suhlet lo re-.pon d!>h w ~hr. s450 mo •o•Jrno..-•h&m..,,,, -'-' u 1111 ti421}1fil I 6 .... . party. or lon~er term lse 640 0633 BEAUT'HJL APARTME~HS W .. TERrftO...,T ofr'd by owner Avail - -S·nq!es, I & 2 br>droOtT>\ 1\P.\HTMENTS NFW EaslSide Dplx 3 br, A "' " I 1 77 Call 559 5734 or WF.STCLIFF, 3 bedrrn, F=U<n. & unf.;m Mcnt•I·. o~n DOWNTOWN C )of 21., ha, bltns, frpl, dbl NEW 2 br & 2 br +den 152-6810 I '• b a . $6 2 5 l mo dailv 10 ,,., 7 Roomm<>•t' I Bdrm $240 gar Patio. No pets. $395 luxury apts. +gardener Agent days servic" Qllol Nn IM~" •<!! :? lklrm. I' 1ba $275 673-ts;l!l. • Bwlt·ins MODIEL HOMIE Deerfield Park home, 1800 sq ft . 3 bedrm, 2 halh!>. Was a model. Soper homl' with all the decoralrnl( wallpapt>r ing, upl(raded l'tlrl>l'llnl(, de<'k1n)! l'lC On nt•at cul dt' sal" !>lret•t N<•\ 1•r h\'ed 1n $.">75 m11 lt·a-.e Agent ~M' 1141 WoodbndJ,:l' n1·w 4 Br. :!11 Ba. lndry rm. dm rm. lge fam rm, upi:raded $475 l~e 54-1·8300or1132 0092 S401153.evcs 548·5508 Beautiful parklike at --->-"------•TrashCompaelor ----qyired Scvrv. '1duh~ only "" nw'>phcrc. pool , spa . SPACIOUS •Wet Car 2+ FR. in Nwpl Shores. pets Just .l frw slCJh to l'Om New 2 br, 2 ba. cathedral • 1-'lrcplace l'i()(). 447 62nd St. Call Mr pit-It• shoppinR ce1l, patio overlook mg •Pnvale beat·h Rened 1 cl 752· 1800 or Oakwood WheekhJ1r dl's1J,:ned the bluffs 2226 Pacific • Plexlglass encl. patios f><i5l103 Ga.rde!n Apa.rtmc-nt• i\dulh, no pct~ Ave. CM Days 847-8:>41 •Smoke detectors Ocean \'u. exec twnhw. Nwpl Crest, 3 Br 21 ; Ba, fplc. wetbar. full rel rar1l l6SO 673-2332 IAYCREST H•wpon ~i./Hotitl KM lrvrrw •at I 1th• fi-15 1)55() H•wperi hedt/ $owffl 1700 lf!th SI 1()0\•f'r at lilt h 1 642 8170 161 E tllthSlrt'l't oreves5363638 •S11psavail.lotcnants 64G AAl6 or 642 085ii 919 Buys1de Dr. 673·8414 &-aut new 2br, 2ba in 4· ~5 Near new 2 br, 11 • bJ. pallo, J:ardcn, adlts, 011 jlt't~ 1>42 1603 plt-x. patio. laundry. Deluxe lownhome 1n hltns. $325 642 1603 Bluf(s. 2300 ~q. ft. 3 Br 3 Ba, $535. 640·5296; Beaut new Jbr, 2ba 540-7559 townhouse. f'rplc. encl --- gar lge yd. $400. 642 1603 119 Canyon East -2 br apt on golf course Straight fem, 19·25. lo share 2BR apt. $125 + ·~ ulll. Nr Harbor High, CM. 642·7387 art Spm f1ce. priv. office & rest room. $784 Per mo HARBOR REALTY 673-4400 $11,000 Mo. gross. $3,(}()(t mo net. Ma1or Bh·d. Priced to sell f'r cc stand 'g. Other goodies loo! Wanted rem. roommate.I•--------UBI 751-374 1 Nice 3 br apt on Balboa s H AR E or<' 5 pa c e . ---------- Blvd. 675-5035afl7pm. Photocopier, othe r s Bus1!"ess Sa.les Co. sells Nace 2 Br apt, to shr w /56 avail. Pvl. prkg. & other businesses m So Orani:e yr old male. to M/F, or amen1lie~. Lag. He h. Co. Restaurants. Bars. cpl.548·7819CM Call:494·1034 etc Buy or SPll Call 831·0670 (Abo Salesmen wanted). Attorney will share 3br. 3ba home w /respoos fem. All ammenitaes an· cl"g pool. 640·8895 or 675-<~l Female professional to share 2 BR apt. CdM SJ.SO. mo. 640-2973 OFFICE SPACE for lsc on major st Co!>la ---------- Mesa/Santa Ana area. Jewe4ry St~ from 1510 to 3520 sq fl Top drawer merchan- Conlacl: d1se. Presti ge area. Corporate Realty $7000 mo. net. Help run. Bud Olson or Richard Asleal! ~1l! Kenworthy UBI 751-3741 (714>558-1 701 Resp. remale roommate ---Ifft'" /Wine T a•em INDUSTRIAL LOC. Beaut. home m one ofl Newport Bearh"s hnest area~ J Bft , 2 ba , form din rm . frpl Lge cov- • --t.och 3249 ered p.il10 1nneri----------• ~::•••••••••••••••• rourtyard. greenhouse. STEPS TO •EACH NFW I &2hedrm apt~ S!5() to $310 per mo Pnv pallO'i & garages C>n\c b\ 2477 Elden or call Larry. 546 5880 2 Br apt. unfum Fplc. now avail. encl palao. cpts /drps, •Dbl Self-clean oven d wash. sky lite bath •Hkup for washr/Dryer Gas & wtr meld $325 mo •AlrCond1t1oned $l3S. l child OK. After Downtown La gun a 6·JOpm546-1739 Beach,-410sq.fl S225 an-----------1 cl ut1l Secy, xerox & Vegetarian Rmmate printing serv an bldg. Grossing, over $5000. p/mo. on ?i•-'l day week. Price includes 2 P ool Tables. Little food . low rent. Good terms. TIME, 751-1400 Spectacular 01 eanfron1 Cliff Or. :1 hr frpk $600 /mo I:! l:J lll7ti 272i fruit tr eel> gn lore & 2 BR 1 ba. yi Iv ~ 2 BR. l ba. prefer mature j?orgeous flowers & 2 RR. rum. wntr $2511 adult'>. no chaldern or I and H' a P JO It In c 1 2 BR, l ba Wntr $300 Pt'b 642 5848 gnniener. washer dryer, BA YFflOHT rern~ 'hit m Mppliances l"nf J BR, 2 ha $525 A horticulturist ·s df'· eves N End, 2 Br 2 Ba fncd yard. dOSl' lo bt•111•h & shops. Yrly i!>c IM 7079 light $765 Mo. Don ·1 wait ' This plac.-e won "t wait' !\cl now by phon· SJ75 2 br, oct•an 111ew Pet Ing Mr !lester. days ok. l''tt R33 97RI 644-4227 f:ves associated Br?OllERS -IH'.ALTORS lOl'> W 9olbr,o &71-l&&l Mam Rentals. !"l-10 5370 S l } .11 p 1 ----PY!t ass II . oo . view. --------- Emerald Bay, bnitht & $1200 mo. 644-1968 or $4.50. Beautifully furn rnr, sunny, ocean view, 2br. !>47-5162 den, 2Ba, tenn111. pool. To 2ba, den, deck, close to 3 8 2 B ( 1 1 ~'2 Nov. l 644-8118 or (213) pool, tennis, brh. 1650 r a. Pc, enr gar. 47~4 mo.494-4778 blk bay. & bch. SS50 mo.------- yrly. 540-0093 San C...,_nt• l 77 6 L.oguna Hlls 3 250 ---••••••••••••••• • •••• • • • ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Br condo. pvt adul.ts, ON THE BEACH ....,5 3 b 2 b • washer. dryer. refng, . ...,, /mo. r. a. 1\ /C • encl carport Ref's S400 Everything furnished I nr. Rossmoor. S52 9503 & rm S.Sl m v br, SJOO. 2 br $375. 955-2200 pe 0 e s. 492-1720or 492·3710 FROM $21 5 Mature adults only, no pet" Large 1&2 br apls. Dshwhr . .:as BBQ. S215 mo Gas pd 778 Scott Pl. 645 5611 or li42 5073 lml'T\a c. Extra lge bach, upJX!r, bltns. refrig, wtr pd. carport. Mesa del Mar area. $170. 540.6338 New 3 BR. 2 Ba. wood -2Br, w /W cpts, dl"Jl6, frplc, San Juan beam ceiling frplc range. Encl gar $3~. Capi ,___ 3778•----------, d ' · Ma tu re ad Its Nw pt lrnmwv •r cr p.lg, rps, air rnnrl , Hgts See ownr at 437 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ofOrongeCounty·s patio, lge frd yrd · grdnr Pnnceton Dr CM. 2br, Ibo COftdo most beou111UI oportmenf & wti; pd Will lease lo 499-2756 communlies A r810xlng cover my cos1 S3115 mo ~Br. 23• Ba. dining rm. on --.. -....wlltt Sfreoms, Nodogs._837 39'l7 Canal w :fac1l or pool & ~nt.. '""""'V Lacuna Village brand tennis! 1675 mo. 646-8-402 ........,.IMd wotetfols.ond mojesllc new-up•,.aded 2 BR C ••••••••••••••••••••••• !Tees. Featurtng pools, "' on· SI.SO. Al beach! Util pd ........... _1 •• _~ 3806 Jacuzzi souno blllords do. Beaut. balcony view. Refrle. better hurry ! -.--' ' ' pool, club house, tennis Sml ree. &&5-(900 •••••••• •• •••• ••• • ••• • • and excllng ctubhouse cts, air, <'hlldren OK. ••Cw•Hrl Gt.Id. BR. brand new, top WllhsociOIMOts. TennlS, $365.830-3748 1---------1 quality fe&tumi. No pets gym,ondvoleybolof -S......_ o r kids. Yrly USO. TheV111oge.MOf8of A steal at $350. 3 br home Caplitrano 3271 675-4857 twfYltllnO you'rt IOOklng Hu au xtras. • •••••••••••••••••••••• ·----------llu "" .... Tenex 898-9891 Sm Fee 1 1 d S J Yrly. bay view from deck. for. Furn reg OVOllUble, -n o an u a n 2 br n ewly redec Onton<J'fifoBGdroom &.ogu.Nl4Jlltl l2U C11plstrono·Churnin1 Garage space. Slv &. ••••••••••••••••••••••• UIJ!'tAlrt. downtt.olr11 con· rel rig, paUo 1811 n BQ, A<lul LMng. LA G U N A N I Ci U E L do m In I um . 1. a r I e 2 I a u n d r y h o o k u p . C>mces open 8:00 lo 6:00. Hlllalde. mini vh•w. Udrm., a bath•. t•rpet· l420/mo 675·2090 Now renllng~ C•llf ranch style 4 Ina. window coverlng:s, 84-drma, format dine, built-Ina. 2 car 11ara1e &lllGIDCIO P .. aula 3107 family. l•rd~n kitchen. p.11Uo. Call Me 21$3 Mon.· •••.e••••••••••••••••••• crackling fpk 14SO/mo. Thur1 . days : call 8AYFRONTlg2br,2ba ~ ~ Fri Sun even· balcon y. bltnt Reaul lnp •daya vie..-. '575/mo. Sfoc. bldJ. Never O<'cupted, oc .. n -fi52.5:125otl75 ll006 view, 2 Br, den. 2 Ba. lot ~Uni anyt.bln1 with a 13, Lquna Nll\lf'J ... 75 DaU1 PUot Cla11Llled Ad SlTS. UtU paid Stove • mo 430»1 or u1a> la • a1Jnple matter • ntfri1 '" 131·3.ol Just call "2·S6'78. Na.In Rental•. 540 mo -I • 751-1938 ber l :30 PM •Fireplace Dana Point 3826 •2CarGarw/autoopnr •Full Secunty needed, lo share spal'. 49(·7796or4_94_·_358_t __ _ beaut. dplx in CdM. For Rent office or shop. 640-0095 2.1.5x2S 5 sq rt. $.150. 1951 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 644 0509 l Br 1 Ba, clean. pallo.•----------r ~Ol)f~ storage, no pets S225 mo. •DELUXE• TI#' ll1nn Newport Blvd. Ste I. ln- 4350 qwreStc D 646 3311 586·5478 Eastblurr 3 br, 2 ba ••••••••••••••••••••••• HuntiftCjton leach 3840 Lease. Incl. spac. masler lusineHRentol 4450 LIQUOR STORES $20,000 month $29.000 month $42,000 month Broker 640-9019 ••••••••••••••••••••••• s uite, din rm & dbl garage. Auto door Wanted lmmed. private garage, Lag. Bch. area. Pref. So. Lag. Top dollar ........................ ---------- Lge l & 2 Br, 2 ba. sec opener avail. Pool & LAGUNA. IEACH apts. Adults only. no reerealion urea. Adults Small pets. A/C & Dshwshr. only. No pets. From $367 Doubl.GcrCICJe $60. COllllntl'Clol Store offered. 497·3864 WANTE D . C OUNTY LICENSE. 963-2620 ORANGE • l.IQUOR Ca II (213) Pool & Jacuzil. From up. Eve. 67~462 S220 mo. 19132 Magnolia, 865 Amigos Way or can be used as pro· ---------- 962-1800 ----"'-----"---• Office R...tal 4400 ressional office. Located GIFT GALLERY ----------Yearly. 3 BR .• l bath~ $475 ••••••••••••••••••••••• in older shopping com- llKE TO IE.A.CH Mo. Ocean side or Blvd. Unique offices for rent. plex. with r ustic al Newport Beach. Want • active partner or may be purchased. Mr. Smith 00am-4pm l 675-3080 Lge 4 br . 3 ba. frplc. Agent673-6210 Historic Cannery Village mosphere. $175 Mo .• util. dshwhr, att. garage, from S100-S600 per mo 6 paid by landlord encl. yd. No dogs. 1'103 WESTCLI FF Condo-month lease Util in~l MISSION REALTY Alabam~. 536-3465 or Supersharp2Br.2ba.all Also avai l.able. r re~ 98SS.Coast.Laguna WANTED. Exciting Busl· 536-1718 bltns. pool. S37S. Agl. standing building·Ample 494-0731 ~~5; ro~~:~:S~:iiJe~ 673·S4lO park ing-Storage-Lot 4DaUXEOFC'S West Coast. Up To Deluxe pool side xtra lgc 2br, 2ba. bltns dshwhr. Nr. bch. Adults. no pets $225/mo. 536-8362 WALKTOBEACH! space Just $800 per mo · $400 000 Cash Agl 2 br, 2' ba unit. Never (~sq rt). Perfect f.,r Conpa~ied~~~~~~.;:~ :!' s21-2o80 or 82.8·1627 laved In. Frplc & all retail shop w /display ar. l or 2 yr. lease. Lake _1_a_m_-_1_0pm_. -----xtra:s. $:J7S/mo 645·7573 &rea. Inquire at The Fsc Cl · l WI N 2 I 425 E 30th St Forei.l area. Kent Amb1t1ou"' Honest m s tans e come: u Agt ory • · • • Harkins E t ~ • 1 • br. 1...., ba studio. l2SO sq Newport Beach or call 714 581.9393 n erg e 1 c •. coup e rt. bltns. enc gar, frplc, l SCMlth LOCJYM 3116 673-4271 or675~181 needed Cor family onen- ml to ocean. ad Its, sm ••••••••••••••••••• •••• Ulted bus mess. UnUmll· pets, fee. $350/$375. Lee. quiet, luxurlou.a, H · Ofc---Store-lndstrl, CM "'-aRc~~elaL,960ST01qR.~t. All edpotenllal.673-m& 846-3714/846-7456 ec. 2 b r , 2 b• apl. $125. $185 & $255. -°" --------- Elevator to scenic prtv. M6-2130or 679-3709 n~w lm provement r;. illwttfl•ftf HunlinetonHarbour area, bch.Party&aam•room,Dana P oin t /San Crpt. cust. ll&hllnir. Opp1........, 5015 beaut. 2 Br. 2 Ba. luxury total security. Perfect Clemente. All kinds incl. rrplc, etc. Cash for Im ••••••••••••••••••••••• apt. Newly decorated. Uv1nl or wknd relreatror dental/med. f'tom $135. crovementa + rl exlble ''l nvH\or w /foresight Bllns incl d.ahwabr, pool the adventuroua adult. 49&-1840 eaae. 675-3080 00·4 > w a n t e d f or M o d • w /beaut. lnd.acpd court St1rtlnc at S51S /mo. Lute. 4 rm sulte w /bath. Deslsns. Write PO Box ~7sf'c!.'::!:·~ pet.a 499-2835 Ocean View, Newport Forced air . •m ple 14531'4pBeh." · Apa lwwh ,..,........ Center addra.s, tasteful-puk'a 436~ E. 11th St. MOMy to Loan 5025 Sl7S. 2 br, garage, pool. oru..fwNIMd 3900 ly d~ated ortlce. Lse CM. Wiil decorate. ••••••••••••••••••••••• kids ok. Fee ... •••••••••••••••••••• month to month $225 mo, t:l7$/mo. m 0140 0 Maln Rentals 540 mo TH .. •x clTINO a.c.ptSon Ar•• • con-I st, 2nd & ·w T. .'1 • .,. r. fer ence rm provided LOANS AVAILABLE ~ly or Slftgki PALM MISA APTS. 551-0480orMo-4082 ....._trial a...tal 4500 Credit not Important Nice la• 3br. 2 ~ ba. MINUTES TO NPT •••••••••••••••u•••••• 673~ Broker frplc, l&e pvt yard, encl RCH. To Place your For lease 1400 sq. f't. ot pra~. Nr. Broollhunl Bach. 1.a BR "Fat1t Result" flc•Jwarehouae + 40001•t1111M1.-,.t;111n111•1is." T,,..t .. HamUlon MT ·9088 rrotn S116 sq ft.. 1tor11e yard In DtMi IOlS Adulta, No Peta Servlct Directory Irvine. and. Complex ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• 3br. I 'ritba, 1ar, walk to 1bop'1 " Tranap 117& M'7.S or Me mau1et '1'711 D, £lU1. lMUlnaDr ad .••• call Now w/an.H. lcet lock au WA NTE:D: 2ad TD, (5Blb EaatolNewport 642·1671 pump " eecy ...-vtcea. •ooo. WUI pay llOl:nta. Blvd.) Id. IU Nalloaal 8-YICH Co, wdi MCured Odil pro- 541·8llO e.o-cso perty. ~Wlna. t ' f . ' • CAOiie .. It? ""•-11111 • • .... ;.e.e..eer............... -.. ... _ .. Anlltt• Ml'AI • J.&SILJA.&Vll • ., ,,., .... u " ,, ........ ~ ...... &uni"-· &.u Ii Addil't.a.dJ'f,llnN • c.._. &rt•· ·/tlfl..~k.a... CL8 .., ~&aid Pll•J91.Ut Tll ..... !JWtllL...._ flili..lme .... ICMllT U. Ouz u.M. C.IJ a.,~- I Com 'I/ h4 uLrh 'f...!~!!!!!!!!!!!.!.!~~J ux:uurYaun.DEU Wa bpto J....-. )lOVDCQ 6 RAULINO, No91m.TrmA.MW4Y IHtnd. Bob 1a...111• • ...;;;..;....;;.~----- _ ... __ 1W _______ ,W.OtNQ.rpeln .,.,. Cwt U• '8ocll 6 Q.ardwr. ltMNub&e H7tllt•1. urwlaue. 111 1:1elalD1~...U..W... .. DPlaT --------- •• ,..... -cleu•alaa llOO laickworll. All ph..., C:: rn.ML CaUa:QJ'U,lne.m.Dll co.pie, nterucH. , .. ,,....... ;:Int. Free --··--... -.. &1-.~.aUwwk ~e=.::i: 11 di! , 1 -.. .. ortualJ -·---.. ·---ta ~ ~~~;,;-;;;;;~·~· • S.b71ltUn1 mF bome 1w. a.t11arc. frut a.MS-l YAllD•LAWMCAJUt ..... ·----·-· ..._,_ ...... y_. c.a. Pa:lla1WWDI ~opa.. blltATESEAVJCE wkdJJ. Vt Oraaae a..aat..IU·ITlC -rr...Mk. Niw awaa. W_...JU:AU..Y CL~ •••----••••• Av...,.&1drl5lr7 P'7S O'i.ftaman lleuaft&blo AlrwPT'la.-.ta3 :i,?~1 Coate llen. C•••,Cusrtte Remodel•. AddllloH. Qui, fr ut. Klh HOUU? Call Gl;nabam Newport Bay Tax 2Strytm.lntr...snD Ill Gl·aJ ----------!••••••• .... ••-••••••• P.UOCvn6Decb. Any *'lllMI GlrLrr.ata..~ ~. ProleaMlaal Iii· Prii.1ndma'1'11 .. bor ORK GUAl\A.NTEED J will bebyaJt over Easter tyt"ll or eoastructlon. come Tax. Preparation Guar, lnlrd, treee&t. W ~ ··--•••••-•••••••• va~Uoa. Behr Garfield Phlru":~1~ Lie Jollft Mulllna & Son Expr Hawallaa aardener COUPLESCL£ANING in your home. Sy appt. Ted82'1·1900orSS2-0J34 ~~.!!·.:=. Elt. CERAllllC TILE. New or· uea.Kathy182·8214. 11 Bonded 0 t 11 S4M'f80aftl Yd cleanupt, prunin1. OeantnawtthCARE 'ISUT40 ..... remodel.Fr•t.amtjobs -----'------1 · ror ea ca trtmmlne.baul&46-4171 Darel"PaulaUl-0913 PETERSPAINTING ..... _.,,..,._.,.._,.,t"' 7M·Sl57 alt I pm or 7"8 5p•c1ALJZING In all '-'--Ext bM pa.inUna 10 yn w._.vnJV __ .. ~. QdJd care In my home. • •---. Expr 'd. Reas Rates. · CM N -· 11---------NearSo. Coast Plaza. am types remodellnt. 11 yra Comptet.e service. Mow, ST E A I& CL E A N ••••••••••••••••••••••• Free Eat. Call Gene exp. · ·· pl. arH. ,.. s.r.tc. 7Sl·8UM CONCRETESPECIAL in area. All work par. ed&!• vac, weed'&, CARPETS. also SHAM· lronine.Uahtbouaework. ssz~ am small, prices are ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------i On lk 1•-962-1314 Pn.u\ g & clnopa. Rea.a. POO. FLOORS & WIN· 12 SO an hour small. Ron646-W11 Removals, trlmmtng . C. ..... er vewaya, wa s, wa ... 952-4350 DOWS CLEANED TOO. ·64 ' INTERJOR/EXTR Paint t d ••••••••••••••••••••••• patios & planters. Con· a.ctric.. Call Dtrrc:H S3'7·1S08 S.7487 1ft .. E 'd htgb lit· Expert waUpaper banaer. pnmina. reo at. L1c· crete-Aa....,•1t sawtng & ....................... Gwr .. Serllces .. ,.. xpr qua Y Lo prices + dJ.s~nt on F\l1ly insured.142·2624 C o l I e g e S t u d e n l .,.... work. Super reaa rates. ..... ....... Ri k Carpenter Patio cvrs, removal. Area refs. ELECJ'RlCAL SERVICE ••••••••••••••••••••••• Xlnl bousec~anlng by ••••••••••••••••••••••• 67>3181 John peper. ou;·........ c: Oluck's Tree Svs. Palmi.. deck:., fences, shelves, 979-712.6.645-7839 CAI.1.S Sl.S hr, & SMALL HANDYMAN day· $28 .day. Own Prol~1onally blown m. Plaster JAepolr olives tnmmed, thmned. add ons. etc. Refs, Cree Child c_.. JOBS 842-8233 Apts & homes, reasnbJ transportation. S4l-4625 do-1t-yoursel! price?> Lie EXCLNT PAINTING ••••••••••••••••••••••• pruned . removed Call Robert 631·26!5 aft S pm. ...,.,,..18 bo d~.. · · lntr & Extr. Reas. ......, -att s est.673-~ ••••••••••••-••••••••• ELECTRICIAN.AJltype:. .._,., • n .:u.9639546 Freeest.548-2706FRED VERYNEATPATCH _.._.,, Set'vice calls & small Jobs l,1c'd daycare. wkdys. or work. Uc/Bonded, 10• Grodlng Mr~ ~ings Cleaning, MasoNy JOBS&TEXTURE Wllldow a..ing only Lie Conlr. All work Newborn lo S yrs. My srd. FreeestS40-2404 ••••••••••••••••••••••• pamhng & carpet co ••••••••••••••••••••••• PAINTING. Intr /Exlr Free E,,t. 893·1439 ••••••••••••••••••••••• guar 962-11314 home CM. Warm meals Skiploader. dump truck, "WE DO IT ALL" Fire~laces·Planters Reasonable, dependable. WlNDOWCLEANING Sia&·~l Roon hauJma tree work orad· 835-3561 Bri C p . Free est. Call Jay ~-ffl , • d •-----------1••••••••••••••••••••••• ... ·" c oncrete at10 &&S-'7965 People who need People c ... t. e c.en .. g ra....-s. Home carpentry• reas, re WOULDN'T YOU . mg, demo, etc. 751·3930 HOUSECLEANING done Block Walls BBQ Pits That' b l th Call M'7·228S Bruce Liable, 26 yrs exper. Call Linoleum, no wax, cov· . M R r E,,ts &48-0464 d uf s w a e 840-3238 art 4pm. rather be sailing? ing. & reoair sub noor. Trade your old stuff !or by mature woman, esa e s. · Trade your ol st r for DAILY PILOT Sffclasaification9060 Refs & lfc 498·2711 ~ new goodies with a Verde area, C.M. $S.OO new goodies w1lh a SERVICE DIRECTORY SELL idle items with <t Want Ads CaJI 642·5678 1t can be a reality! 661-0446 • Classified ad. 642·5678 Hr. 54.S-8517 Crystal. Want Ad Results 642-5678 Classified ad. 642·5678 is all about! Daily Pilot Classified Ad. ~s.Tnnt 0.-. Lost&Found 530 Personals 5350 H.tpWut•d 7100 HetpWanhd 7100 HelpWanted 7100 HflpWonted 7IOOH.tpWClllfed 7100 H.lpWanted 7100 5035 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••Found, Dachshund LOANS 81/.20/ female, brn ~/red collar ;t~ /O Vic. Magnolia & Adams, Also 2nd TD Loons H.B. 842·8540 or 962·3864 •SUZI'S* Outcall Massage 10AM·2AM 731·5448 A S S f S T A N T T o CANVASS Man wanted. PROD u c T 1 o N exper'd. Baxter & MANAGER. Sm. com-C1cero,Call642·7238 pany, manufacturi11g OP· CAR W"'SH HELP COUNTER HELP DOG GROOM ER, exper'd General Ok. Exper in AP, full or p /time. Caeser's AR. Payroll, some typ. Musl be fast & emc1ent & Grooming, Lag. Niguel. ing. Hrs vary. Please able to start by 11 AM . Call 831-0322 or 831-9733 call642·1~3 IMVEMTORY COHTROL 1-~a1rest Terms s ince 1949 Sattt.r Mtg. Co. 642·2171 545-061 I Found, white Cat. 1 blue · BEAUTIFUL GIRLS t'Ye. 1 grn eye. Female. have an ex c 1 t 1 n g Vi c. Newland & PaciClc .message about their Cst. H.B. (213)698·7727 Anaheim Studio. 535·5363 ior:, D1:.count tor::. Int on (Jackie) tical product desires girl "' 25·40. Technical orienta-F /time. over 18 t1on, some college SLocations helpful. Apply in person Metro Car Wash JO.JS hrs per week. Apply !or interview. ---------- in person or call Amy at Glti4. OFC CLERK Enthus self motivated in vo1cmg-order desk. Sal open. N.8. 642·3472 El Robertos after 2 PM. - - - - - -• In new car dealership. Junitor. dependable & 644·2000 DONT DO IT XJnt benefits. Paid group responsible individual 10.2 Wkd 16?:7 E Ed 29SOHarborBl.CM ys. · · ---------Couner, part time. Must Don't make a career or insur .• profit sharing, for Janitor work. No exp Job Hunting. Learn to vac pay. Call Jackie or necessary. Will train. SJ0,000. 2nd T .D. 3 Yr ---------LOOK TRIM! Take Algi· due date on oceanfront LOST: Male Terrier type ness diet plan and home in N.B. Call Ray, blk/tan, 20 lbs. (Spike). Aquavap "water pills ... &i>6392 2·24·77. Goldenwest & Fountain Valley Rexall McFadden. H .B. Drugs, across Crom inger Un it E. S.A. C"'rHIER ~ ~ have own car. Dcpenda· AutomotJve New Detail Shop needs F /lime. Growth Co. ble. 644·1557 5 Locations. Over 21 We Tram Metro Car Wash 2950Harbor Bl. C.M. Delivery . Morn newspaper auto. Route w/lhe Register, approx hrs 4-6am Costa Mesa- N w pt. area. Need mature, resp person for perm. s1luallon. Xlnt piume earmngi;. Call bef noon 540·3006. gettheJobyouwanl. Mr M;1lner. 54ti·l934, good pay, apply 1n Call Today A t I a .s C h r y s I e r person Del Taco. 1720 1-'ree Brochure Plym~th. 2929 Harbor Superior Ave., Co:.la Skill Seminars Bl, C.M. Me:.a. AftnouK.mtllh/ Reward . 846-3933 & MilesSq. Park. PenortflA'/ -892-~-~---- help. Top wages paid. Engine Steamers, eng patnters, buffers & poltshers, up· holstery shampooers, check out, p1ck·up & de· l714>75t·3002 Girl Friday, part time. __ J_A_M_IT_O_RJ_A_L __ ---- - -• secty /bkkpr. 9 To 3 Real Exper'd Male/fem. or Drapery work room needs estate omce. $3.25 Per cplii 4 hrs rught, 5 nights exper help. Ken Butcher hr. Eastbluff area. wk. Irvine/SA areal>. Lost & FoUnd found: Panther Bike, Emplo nt& •••n•••••••••••••u••• owner idenury by color. ,;ation Chairside Dental Assi:.t Exper, 4 days, no Saturdays. 546·9444 Annouftcl'ftlltnb 51 00 senal no .. date & loc lost. ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••• •••••••••• •• Co~t~cl H.B. Police dept. Schools & Drapery, 541·2080 640-0020 752.7292 3-6pm or wkndi. IJvery. Apply at Cleaning women wanted. SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS 536·5621 Instruction 7005 2059 Harbor Bl, CM $3.5o+ hr. Must have 645-lOJO own car. 968·8846 Deliverymen for early DRIVERS (Cross.Country J No special lie. req'd MacGregor Yacht Corp. 1631 Placentia. C.M Gtrl Friday, IJghl typing, some record keep'g & f1le'g. Mui.l have own ve hi cle Nr Hoag llo:..p1tal Salary open. 557.5333 JANITOR Electronic Manur. has i mmed. opening for sharp 1nd1v. to perform 1an1lor1al duties, dayi. only 7am·3:30pm. Some overtime rcq'd. ti Mo·~ previous expe r pre· ferred. Drivers lie a must for pickup & de· livery. Xlnt benefits 1n clud. medical & dental Lost. Cockapoo mutt, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------- female. blk w 1wht chest MEN WOMEN •AtrrOMOTIVE• Cleaning girl, l day week mom LA Times home de· V •BOOKKEEPER• livery route Adults only & paws It. Lido Isle. TRAIN FOR $4.00 hr. Mu:.l be · h d N 1 t \.entry Flash llJlly Mah<.'e NB "750t"° •ALSOPBX• ::!12 rsa ay. Ol>OICI ., "" 1 "'RTE ..... 01 ..... G versatile. 549.2410 II M "' " "' XJnt working l'Ond. co. -----mg, no 1·0 cl'lmg. U!>l ----------1 F1\MISlllNG LOST Sm <inl<fen Tht>re·-. a brand new Pomeranian vie book 11bout the twenty Cahlorn1a ::-it & Min rnllhon people in the ne~ota Ave. CM . Sal country who an• on diets. Rew a rd 55 7 ·6498 a fl It 's c· a 11 e d ·'The 3PM. F A M I S t-1 t N C LOST: Siamese cat Amencans w 1very long hair & face hke Persian, female Losf&Found 5300 962_·7_854 __ ~~~~ TWO WEEK CLASS benefits. sal open. Vern ••--------1 ha' l' l' l' on o c ar NATION·WIDE JOB Tnder Chevrolet, 215 So. CLERICAL We ~ l m I II B Jr'-' a . PLACEMENT Euclid, Anah. Ask for •TELEPHONE t>:l8·0l::!ti ASSISTANCE Maxme991·3100. GOOD JOB Delivfl'Y ~ewspa.,.r Exec Secretary GIRL FHIDAY Sharp girl, typing. alf ding machine. Will do billing, reception. hhng Learn Insurance. full lime in 1 girl omce. Ask OPPORTUNITIES COMPANY* Permanent part-time Job AMERICAN AVON dell\ermg early morning DISC T~DERS LA Times lo homes m IAR '""" p I lrvme1NH areas. Must GU.ARDS Instruments for Steve 752·9300 to V.P. Sales. Xlnt pos1 tion for seU motivated mature person who wants to work w /an out· standing exec. 3.4 Yrs secretarial exper. req'd. insur $'800· $1 ()()(). SCHQOL Are You A erSOnne be reliable & have depen. Co1ta MHa 102 E Baker Street 11ME.t7tbSl .. SA PeoplePenon? Needed ddble tran?>portat1on ~'~~~ Permanent Full&:Part· CotltaMesa 979.5300 834·1960 If so. you'll enjoy meet Salary $300 mo 546·0235 lime. Phone & lransp re· ••••••••••••••••••••••• i''OUN D · Tortoise on Schools Coast To Coast mg people wbLle selling q 'd Retired welcome Jarutonal. P /lime even· REWARD' SlOU Lost l-1oraSt .LagunaBch. ----world famous .AVON Immediately m ;uvi-:RY MAN f:arly ""'>·1''0\\.-\'>'>0(1,\I[~ Call546·0?:74.ofchrsl0·2. mgs,5daysweek.6PM Yellow1wh1le Lab pup· -l!N-4915 L.A COLLEGE OJ" Producll> Good earn t\M Times route Col>la "' " Clac.ed Wednesday llPM, Hntg Bch, Nwpt. py. Fem. 201b V1l' Fed· MASSAC E. Low co ... t mgs. i'lexible hrs. Call Mesa No collecting. mui.t P~ Agpcy ___ &lrvme.54().7811 co. C M Dys 837 :!270,FOUND Cocker mix. Day·Sve-5<1~ Clas!les in S40·704lorZemtb71359 EXPERIENCED ha,•e dependable car. 3723B1rchSt..N.B. GUARDS 1-:v· 751·4836 male w lie Pendelton Santa Aoa. 556·7171 1---------OHLY ~16 +'81 557-0045 Natwnwidc co Top pay ---624 brwn. vie Reubens ~ E I & b f c 11 1 Jr. Accomtti-f-'OlIND frn,h ~eller Re., tau rant. N . U Jobs"~• 7075 Babysitter Tues·Sal. Ap· Dental t\s:.1stant. i."<p1•r, lOO,.< mp oyer cne tls. a l H l ··~ 548-6477 1)46 5356 ••••••••••••••••••••••• pro~ 6 hrs da} Perma *Customer Rep x ray cert1ricatc. full or , ____ n.e.ta.1.ned----1 83J.4693 for appt ---1 Clerk Mature, exper Girl Fri· nenl Must ha\e refs. 1 part lime. Nwpl lkh. Hair Styh:.t. with follow· 6 Mo s c>cper Tern· FOUND hlk Co<"k.qioo Found. Germ ~hep mix day wants part lime ofr Child 642-7770afl3 *OperatOfS t;40-2970 Experienced Waitresses mg preferred. Morale porary, may becomt· \\ear·g flea <.'OllJr \I<" \1r Haroor \11.'w area, work, morn·gs ~ll534 Food & Cocktail. Ex· Boot.ters,&157788 perm. S500·S550. l\n Ch rt s l 1 n e Ur . H IS "I B 640·09?6 aft 2prn ---------•t years recent exp DENT AL /Assist penenced Hostesses. and phone calls 968nl 2-152 am or c.irly c'e LOST 1 mo femall' tmh ~p W~.d 7100 BANKING *Clerks <:hairl11dc Four handed Experienced Barten· Housekeeper. 9to5 ROGER'S GARDENS 0 Y M'tdll'rT\11cd 1'.I TWoro Rd ••••••••••••••••••••••• HOTETELLER dentistry. r-.:th1cal oHicc ders Apply Between Mature wom11n Mobile Ro230ad1SanC~oo:0qnuamdel:1~~~r t•OUN O l'urt•hrel'd an o c o earing Accepting appll<•ations lmper1al Bank has an nds mature ~oman in· 9 llam, 2·5pm. 2371 So home, hght hou~ckeep Aurmese t·at. \lair 1900 Orange Studded collar morning & lunch shifts 1mmed npemng in our terc'>tl·d in carel'r El Camino Real San mg. i.ome rooking. Must blk Nwpt Hl\ff CM To An:.wers lo Samantha Midnight to 7/\M. Apply ~~~~\a~::.;oteb~~~~:t ~~~~C:O~~ne~. ~,:ift~:~ Clem~t~-~--dnS~~~ryopen.675.3111 KENNELASSJSTANT 1dentiry ~18 H27tl Heward' Days 586-502-1 al Jack in the Box 1201 W 11 3848 C-.os Orin lhru Fr1. 962 2433 ~~......,.... High schl graduate, full , Eves 76X·3440 s . Cst llwy. La~una rncnl t•xpenence 1 -·,..-FEES PAID Housekeeper Mon·Frt. time.644 ·7262 J·OVND smnll tamt• PJr . -u-a~h work with honds. cashier 546-4741 N 8 $ 2 k 0 -----rot lnd1ana1JOll., & lkh r,.o<.t. female :Shep llui.\cy IX'~· t•hel·k:.. money orders. (Across From Dental Assis t P/ltmc. Accounting Clk 10$800 · '· 1 O w · wn ---d-d ht V ll)th • I •· Cha1rsldc. eves. some Secretan·es l0$96l transportation. Call Laun romatatle? ant lllvd. H B l'.111675 4820 mix. w 1 e 1c " ACCOUNTING rommerc1a "" ln~tall Oranae Co. Airport) 1 B 846 .,c•o MS·l828. Retired pref d lJJlbo;i, N.O 675 !1714 mc:nt loans & be lamilar Equal Oppor Employer Sats. l-· • • .,.,., RookkC<>p<>r to $900 Call 751 ·2093 Found Sml fc•m11l1· hlk OFFICE CLERk with on· line sy~tems. Dt•ntal Recepl. Peno ok G. Of<.'{fyp<> to S700 HOUSEKEEPER ----" 'brn ?>µoh Nr l' \L~IKGr.i.v m1:.ilcpoodlt', Apply in person . .\ft Contact Leshc Treece. Pllmewipassibh.•future Al:.oFce Jobs l.EGALSECRETARY C1 n cm.1 So C'oa .. 1 '11 nn \'II•~ & LJkl•. toam, .'\1rporter Inn <714 1 11350151 Minonly CLERICAL expansion of hr~. Ex· lrvmePersonnelAS(en<.'y Live·m, Ille hskpn~. lo 1-:xper, vaned pracllCl.', V1lla~e 7~1 21 l:l II H !!60 I~~ li·v.ard llotel, orposit1: 0 C applll·anl!> encouraged lo Lile typing. Jihng Some pc r . d a 11 phase..,. 488 E 17th Costa Mesa ~j~: :;~hdf~~~!~o~n<'d non smokcr, l>alary open Found Tiny hm1<l1• Ool! Penoftab 5350 ~~~c~~u~ ~lvd,1 J~v:n~ O aJ!~~I Opp Emplo'-r m r ok expeAr. hi elpNful Willl ~pec·1ally insurance pro·~~ -~2~0 Water act1vit1es Some 644·9450 ___ _ l'oml.'rJ01;111" 1n111t-r , ....................... LA1 J train PP Y ' ationa CC:.l>ing Sal open Career -..-..---.-.--...-athletics. lite c·h1ldcare. Lunch Counter 556:l401 11 •• ,, .110 1120:. l>nnkinl!rirnhlrm"' ACCOUNTIH~Pfe. Systems Corp .. -13til oppt> II B IW2-ti631 _ -------lite serretarial. ref:. t'\<''> l'Jll Alcohol llc-lphn1· Id I f I Beauty Opr Earn more-Birch St. N H <Near FfBERGLASS MGR 846·2289 Eves Food PreporatiOf'I ca position or co ege b 1 Le d QC.Airport i-: 0 I-:. I>enlal Assist Chairs1dc. · Experienced person 2.a hr, a day~ ~30 student ma.JOnng in a<.' Y ren m~ space a · ------ --NB E S 1 Needed with on·lme e:it· HSKPR BABYSIITER wanted to work al lunch Found Schn.1u11•r mali• \.IC Warner & 1-;dward,, llunl 0eMh H-17 .!~ f'OUNO lnc•k..r mi". rem. blk .!. \\ hl i.hort l<'J:S, \W W;ilnut Santa Ana, CM b4ti ::!Ol>J PREGNA!'liT" ld ring conf1df'11t1.il lOUnselmg & relerrill Abortion, .-dopt1on & kN!ptnf:' ,\PCARfo: Found. Clannt'l. owner *SHARON'S* 1dent1fy by rnlor. '<'rllll OllTC' A LL MASS AG F: no loc. & dall' loi.t Con 1!19 1224 tact H 8 Pohcc Dept SJG.5621 •KAREN'S * Found RM.:COON Vic UUTCALL MASSAGE 15th & llith St Co?>la fiPM 2i\M 838 1780 Mesa ~UI :lM:l t• 0 U N 0 • Do he r m n n Pinscher youn.: female, no 1dent1flcat1on. Vic AIORTION Counseling & Referral Preg. test·avail. wknds 24 !Ir llelphnt> 547 9495 Slater /Golden West, MASSAGE II B. 942·4o.1S FtGURE MODELS L 0 S T T c a C u P ESCORTS Chihuahua, tan in color. OUTCALI. ONLY wear'g red collar w 1bell in Bluerin Dr arra Su 631 ·38 I I afternoon 41)3 5121 LOST Shell ti.' <Toy Collie 1 EXOTIC GIRLS \ 1c No. II O Mt s call Massage" Modeling 846 3268 Pl.1-~ASE OutcallS42·3169 tS43·3250 Reward LINDA & VICkl l,()51' Germ Shep. malr. Outcall MastQC)it 1ri color. 6 yrs Vic Lag Few ttt. ,..._of It! Bch. Reward--' 645 3739 S<-rvmg all Ora nae Co LOST· M ule. adult , 549-2743 Siamese. Ans to Sam G E Baycrest. NB 833·2!574 , RELAXIN MASSAC Bob James· eves:~-5306 l.,ic. Masseur FOUND. Sm Golden cl Outcalls 9.9494.5111 doa. maJe, blk flea col DRINKING l ar, w /plnk ribbon. creates problems. tt _548_·_9405 _______ 1 dM11n't aolvf them. I( 1-~ound : Orantt Cat, you nud http, cull male, lite gr~en eyH CARF:MnntJr Ho:spltnl In Bushard & BrookbW'.,.t, Ora.nge. W-9582 --- HD 96H78S FOR LADllS FOUND · Blue Parakeet, WHO want to Uilk to a vie. Balboa Penin gu)' C11ll •ntllme 117lHt72 art 8PM 1821 8137 .... ----- FOUND. T"rler l>'P• ~··---dot. male. Vic Jeronimo 1~1~So. £1 Camino RuJ • alqo Rou~. £J Toro. San Clement• f'ully lie &»9581 t'or oppt 492·'729& tountin_g Grade & coun 1ng Cd M !!lalon t\:.k for CLERK-Warehouseman, open R~~ l~<'~las:,,~;~ penence: ability lo tram mother & l'hild live·in counter preparin~ l'll hnml' ~tudy studentr. Jim. 644 7321or 552·0943. mor:ns only. 5 Days wk. ad no 888. c .0 Daily a n d s u p e r v i s e p\t home, rm & board, sandwiches & s alads 4 Hro; per day 5 days wk Beauty· Part lime recept F 11hme".~um23m,er S2.t60 Pilot, PO Box 1560, Co:.ta employees. Applicant e:itchange for care of 1 Some gr1 II work 1n i 3 SO per hr Apply wanted for El Toro per r ..roo·H orapp :'t1esa.Cahf.92626. should have expenence ch.Jld & normal hskp" eluded. Uniform :"forth American Cor w 1th s ma 11 boat " Salon Ex per req 'ct c 0 c k t a 1 I . B e A . duties 557 5080aft6PM furnished. Medical & respondence School\ !07 1743 Profes"ional Cocktail Dental Penodont1st needs manufactunng. Include ----hospital bi:nehts. Appl> HOl B1rl h St, ~ B • as:.1st 2 days week dettuled resume and Hskpr /Cook /Childcare L' dbera Nut 't'on c. '" .. '73 •·1 11 I d k Wrulre<s. Grand open1n" In .. ri 1 .....,,.'" ·" r 0 in ra e Beauty Salon course ~special ~ End; w /possible future ex work h1Slory. Reply lo. L1ve·in. Enghsh speak· between the Carousel & Accts Pa~ Rec. Al·i·t HAIRCUTTEaS llJ Ill Exc1tin" & Prof1la· pans1on or hours Ex· Class1C1ed Ad #835, Daily mg, pvt rm. good health Bullocks. lower level m Clerk w -tint typing for Newport Reh salon blc. 1tlam;urot1s pro· panded duties oppor X· Pilot. PO Box 1560, Costa &refs. CdM 644 8772 the South Coast Plata skills Pos1t1on full of Operator leav1n1>:. fession. Learnin40hrs ray<.'ertreq'd Salol)t!n Mesa.Ca.92626 shopping center. Coi."'1 vanely in ple.1~11nt busy established cl1cntele. 1-'ree Joi> placement a~ II O 8426631 ------· lruipecllon Mesa office For phone in fo'ull time F11r np11t <.'all s1st Call (714) 751·9194 DENTAL Chu1rs1de as ter' 1ew. contact Eve 675-3461:1 So. Callf. Waitress. Inc s1sl. Exp. only apply for fi • I S RECEIVlll...IG LVN Sullson, 540·7640. Com BOAT 17922 Sky Park Bl. Ste C. Irv dentist. 41, day wk mancla eCY " munkation Components MANUFACTURING _ I_:.:_ine~a92714 Call htwn 91\M & 3PM With administra(1vc INSPECTOR ~~f~ =a Airway /\vi'. lleli Ml' welder, finish c 0 N s TR ll c TI 0 N 552·833!1 abil1l1es. Quiel con Charge Nurse --~ line carpenters. cabinet SUPERINTENDANT DENTAL ASSIST./ fidence & willingness to An immediate opening Needed for 3·11 at. Hunt ACCTS RECEIVABLE-: shop assemblers. cabinet Apts. Huntington Beach. RECEATJO .... IS lake initiative. Sh 80 min, exists for an experienced ington Valley Con,· CLERK shop mill men, fiberglass 536-4022 ....-" 60 mm typing. Xlnt OP· ReceivinR Jn:.pector Hospital, 8382 Newman Billing. filing & Ille typ touch up. fiberglass bon-Mon &Sat. Exper'd. Dr. por. w /equal oppor. familiar with machine Ave.HD 842·5551 ing, 30 hrs wk. Ask for ders. boat exper req'd. COOK & Counter Man Ap· Schumm. 962-0386 employer. Salary open. parts and electronic as· ---------- Mrs Edwards 556.0774 App I y at · Er 1 rs on ply 369 E 17th St. C M. Dental Assist. Chrside. ~'~~~ semblies including print· LVH'S /AJdn & Yachts Inc 1931 Deere <Across From Ralphs) F /lime. Al least 6 mos ed circuit boards and Kttc..._ Help AIDE. live in for active Ave. Sant.l Ana. exp. (l) Sat per mo. HB com p one n ls. W 111 Garfield Conv. Hosp . young handicapped S46·JS.40. perform incoming tn· 7781 Garfield Ave, Hn woman Rm tbrd /snl BOATYARD COOKS '''-lf.!()\\,\-.,'iOCl·\lr'> spectionandtestofcom· 847.9671 91J0.1479 SUPERIMTEHDEHT DENTAL ASSIST. P~ ACJHCy ponents, sub.assemblies --------~CMC• Driy.,-5 Custom boat bldr pre The Jolly Roge r Lab Trainee Non 3723B1rchSt,N R and assemblies accord LVM'S7·l _ .... "'tteftdants :.ently huHdlng ss· & 40' Restaurant is 3<.'ceptmg s moker. X ray he de 557-0045 mg to le!.l procedures. Medications & Trew· -A hoa ts req 's e"' per 'd applJcallons for Exper'd sire-d StartmK sal $\SO IOO'"'r Employer Requires knowled~e of ments. 3-ll Treatmeras TopWages.Ph~Z llSI Supenntendent Contact Cooks Xlnt fringe 6440611 Retamoo sheet metal, castings & Team Leader Mesa Rod Swift. The Willard benefits & hours. Apply and machine part 1n•pe" v H ,\ R T E X II O 1J U y · " ' erdc Conv. osp .. 661 Products need~ in5lruc l'o E 0 E. 1714 l S'6·SS22 m person. 400 S Coast DENTAL A~s1stant lion standards Mu,t be Center St. C.M. 548·SSM Hwy. Laguna Oea<.'h San Clemente. Expr de General oHtce. part time c x per 1 enc e d w Ith tors. W\lf tram, comhine ---------• •---------1 Mrro. 493.2391 9 2 Expenenced. Hnrbor micrometers. calipers. MAID. lite.. cluning, 5 fun Into money <;all Pat BOOKKEEPER area. 642·3490 dial indicator!! and other days w~. 2 Hrs du>•. in '92·2937 Pub•·c Commuru'"allons COOK TRAINEE, clean DENTALASSISTANT I II d beauUru N t "e u .. l c e ml d d GENERALASSISTANT s m ar measuring e· ewpor r o firm needs auper sharp. cu ~ r er n .... ~ · l Yr exp n~. X ruy he d . . vices. Minimum 1 year's thou.sc. 546-9500. ASSEMBLERS F.xptrit'nced ip:Jii ... ~ . S4M7 .. I I <Acro11 Ftom 0nnt•Co Airport\ F.qual Oppor Employ.r '-...... IUltS ~ly 1ln:r. 1heGrc19r Yacht Corp • lUl Plac.nua. eo.ta Mesa C/tlme ll0·15 hrs wk> energeuc.CallS48·?......,. 536·7171 Must have good n vmg previous experience. -------- kk M t b "'TO ST ---record . Oversee Pl"as"contactourorfice. MAIDS ~o ,ftehped.lr · bl~ & COS M ... L 0 GI, • Dental Assistant. 1·2 yrs employee lunch room, "' " Seacliff Motel. ,. e .., an e ng He'd .. wanted by e11 exper. Modem ore. Hntg care for over S$000. IM s Coa payroll, account• re elusive salon to 1\ve Bch 898.4425 worth or plants. Gr~'Cln PCC l • st Hwy, 11 celvable & payable. pre· fodnls. Career opport --·--------thumb easenthal. Apply Laguna Beach. 49-1·489'2 tiare rlnenclel state· Exp or trainee. Call Dental AS11i1tant, start CPI. 190 Newport Center MAJDS WANTED l'IHtntll / under C .P .A'• 642-4912. lmmtd. Part Ume. Exp. N dn BUSl ...... ESS .....__ &uldance. Apply at Ste nee La~. Deb. 494.9737 Dr, · 8 . 2t1 oor " LIVfl QUixote Motel , 203, 17671 Irvine Blvd., CownerGirlloworkMon 1--------GENERALOFFJCE SYSTEMS 2100Newport81,C.M. Tustin Fri. 6;30am 12:30pm OISHWASHlllS tntereatlna & varied ,...AIDWANT .... D F. -p ('d /\pply In A Olvl!llon ol Pcrte<> '" "' .x,..... · rt• Food P r ep. Apply in responslhllltlts for rtaht l.idoShorC$ Mot~l pc r1on. Go Id" n Bo'¥ person. Muldoon'• lrtah penon. Mu~t llkt' to lYP<' Computer Corporatum Coll 1'73 MOO Donut ~hor. 17741 Beach Pub. 202 Newport Ctr Dr. ' me Good S$. Ct>m 17021 Von Karman ~ 81. U 8 U Dlks N or N 8. fortable a mall orrlce Sent.a Ana. <.AUfornlla MAIL DS'T. Talt>crt) ---Newport Beach/Coata A • Ute t.yploa req'd. Mu.s Dlalributor iolc,..•ttd In Mtaa area Ca l Mr. 0 Eq~al bt nexlble • w11Un1 to do Cowwt.r ~rl p/\.lme lnt'ome ot &i,000 K.a.M. MS 1140 Opportunity Employer a v.a1et.y ol dutlet. Apt1\,)t Moh\lnp ~·30 lo 10 30. per mo or more + ---,-------• NaUonaJ Systems Corl) ... El Toro Donut Shop ben erita M1ture . Sllltbin~rastwltbDaUy ;.;;rw'hll you want~ GlBirchSt,N.B.<Near M1·3WTD or 96()..3003 at 81%1 PUot Want Ada. Daily Pt tot Cla"alfitds O.C. Airport> E 0 E , . I • • .. ... 'iil.IW..-...,_TV ~ r•cw .... ........ ~;.;.;;:~~~ .................. -...... .......... -..--.. _.• •JC ~ _...,, .... a.... .. • . -•• .!~!!!~~!!_ __ C.:-::1 ""c • .,.::; ---------1 _,. •· • -- 11& ......... ..,.. !?Pkt• ......... EIPOHEI ....... . ...... . IDtl 'Ul•M~. ............. _,,, .... ,.,,,,,.,, • u:r -. '-"1-71 ......... --1.,1 ~··.t•••••~• "f• ....., .. ot .. •••• =deli~· ... •W,. ti ._, • lmmedtate ..,......,.a..,. .... Cor. ~ aJld OpH • AprJJ. ..... --1t"f-w1 ,.ar -·· ...... a-. .... :.ir.;;. COD•. lloap.. l .. W.MHUL .... ,,, .. ,~ =-=-=~ tm ...... ed..,._ 1141C..-•• 0r a ,C.flii67 "r-... ...,, .. .,aa.i..-!:~·•.,., 11.ru•u . 1 ue:r •HDistreu, 1~741 ..,., n.t. r. ..,. ~ 6 fAllria.. AlN •••.._ ~ Nfd. F\tU liCDe. (M:nlqft-om .. QP 1iaa wU1 tra. ff-r61 U111 .. piece 1o.l •ta !)'__...,.... UI•. Top Pl>' Ullmu aa.u.. OraateCo. AJf1*\ > 12 .u . b r . x l • t co ~ 11 h , .. ,_. C90'l n.t ~ T1lliln.a.C. mJ '1021lh ,N8ITJ.tl70 IQIMl()ppar~ benam•. Call hm·U Y•.....,.. o.ucn.s:a "ordlH IJ.a. (Spr. CAt•o.... ••ll·uperltnc:ed n ,_ aa1 a.. H.B. l*lller. C.ndidat• mm (W.tlBtacbf.So. have a aunim11111 ot one ol Gad\etd > na.r rfttn1 n~n~nc. EquJ Oppor Employer ln apedittni clCldrook ...., DOOll...56om ~-a...t.•1 AOENCYBLDUCORP lQadale/SlaW.) ..,.., .._.... ..... ~ Produetal>I" "MANCIAL SECRl!TAJ\Y, Slock Shoe Sa* persoo exper 1tr-v911IC* Aat.iqu.. oak tuna. maac Brol•Utt. N.._port Cll' xlnt eamlfto haalth ln' Join the team that o«en * .......,.,... Solid wood f~ szs. old l1elDa. ebain, waU:r SAllSCAllB Locat1on1 Pref exper. aurance pfa~ • paid opportunity. Euly Amer. fclael«m bed frame,. man7 d"· ~~~~~~~~~P •rta . and be u...a..a.a..-......,.-.,. lrnowfedreable in pro· ~·-• ducUon control and in· IA&una Beach Executive vemory control. We can io W'boletale supply bual· otrer the qualified c11n- n.a1 arflllated w •lb didate an excellent start d)'Damlc fast trowing ing salary with liberal fr. majot lnt.ernaUonal cor · ln&e beneflta. Please ap· porallon needs people ply lD person to; Leading ltnanclal or ::.=rE ;'1~·b~c':\t;: vacation. MtF. Adlen, C.llU1Today •AUC110M• rocker ps, O pleo fCNDt sum. .. All m1nt aantuUon deai"'3 to In· ......,ra·•-·. Call Sand", 333 £.11thSt. CK. •Start Tomorrow •RID4Y J:JO rM modular wall unlt, ct. co. Sat&n 10-s, 11571 t.wvlew individual whose -.... .. .__ 1 aiper'• p~pe-eoUd Walnut. Fountain Valley present occupation" ln· 6*14e0. STOCI ClBJC ~Q~ of fie e • c·~• ... wood 1250. very okS apool come are limited. Train· Semi retired pref'd . u.::'.!'.'':".!..1....1 type cbalr 120. amall Patio SU.. Rattan tolas, ing Jo capital needs SECIETARY P/time. Apply, GSH, O overload -_,_w D• misc. tablu 17 ea., chairs. tbb, bar stools, analysis. Salary + Accurate typist. good 1658Superior,C.M. •De•nWtk._* 30d0" hardwood drall-~El· TSal, ~!._Bonita oriented usoclates full or put-time. 4N·5273. MASSAGE TICH STANDARD comm. plan during in· w!fi&ures, vaned duties 557·0061 SS SAVI SSS 101 table $50, plan-...... oro.---.. itial 3 yrs. Commission for service dept of ST U D E N T S o r 37Z3 BlrchSt, N.B Food available 0t1 tbe ~.f•:r S30 8 Y ..... ul!bephonUn~ Dl.oette Mt. ting bed set, M EM 0 RI ES un1uruted. Prefer exper. aircraft dealer. O.C. moonlighters, hle de· ~mises. Items aubject nua ....,, .... "' "' dbl bed Ht lr TV baby Ca 11 Mr Z a cc he o Ai r port P re (er !Jvery work in lhe even lo presale. We honor ~ppotntment, any even· Items. ?!H~4 • With diploma for top INC (714)835-5330, ext 12. automotJveorFBOrelat· mg. Must know beach TYPIST BankAmerlcard & ing,'4&«182. ~:C,~~7~~~a. Applied Magnetics Corp Equal Opp Emplyr ed exper. Contact Mr. R area. C.Jl John, 4!M·J889. Needed full time. Muat Master Charge, CASH &Cold _ _::;.._v-el-v-et_co_uc_b __ f7_5_,MOV1NG Garage Sale! 2221SouthAnneSt. _.;...___;;._:___-"--'---I Coffeen for appt. Taite Charie persoo for be accurate w/recep· CASHIER'S CHECKS. matcb'e love aeai S3S Clothes, furn, toys, dune •MASSAGE Santa Ana, Ca 92704 SALES 540-M27201·ss1.on Beachcraft building maintenance. Uonlst backaround. San· N 0 CKPSE R .,.~.? N A L dbl bed complete S2S. buggy, foos baU, misc. TECH-FEM• Part time. Fabnc ex 18741 N.AlrportWay Mustbegoodatbldgre ta Ana /Tustin area. CHE PL~E!! 546-8222~vualt 6 · 9691 Calthneas, Hunt SS~Comm-Guar min. An Equal Opportunity penence nee. Call Mary , All pair, willing to work & Salary commensurate MASTEltS AUCTION · Bch. Brookhunt & Jn. 1"'\JU &P.T. work. Legit. Employer M /F &a&-4040 Santa na relia. S56-271.312-2pm w /ex pe ri en ce. Ca II 20751/i Mwpt It.cl Bro /bl k I go Id p I a Id dlanapolls, Sal /Sun lG-4 ELITE SPA 540.8195~~~~~~~~1 SECRETARY 544-S337btwn10·11 AM or COSTA MESA Mrculon sofa SJ.SO. 2 Blk RUMMAGE Sale! St. An· MATURE WOMAN UBLlC RELATIONS SALES Includes moderate 2·3PM (7141133.9625 vinyl chairs $50. & 5 $75. drew'sChurch,lSlh&St. p /ti me to welcome person needed for lo-TICKET ORDERS statisllcal typing for J£LEPHON£ Typist-Small Org. County (714J 64&-1616 All xlnlcond. 768-899 Andrew's Rd., NB, Thur. newcomers & contact ter1or design firm. F\Jllorpartlime.Hipaid N.B. CPA firm. Call audio mfgr needs ac· UsedH.seholdfurn(2)0ld 9:30-S,Fri.9:3().2 merchants. F1exible hrs. 534-2202 "1r commission. Work in 8.13-9887. INSTALLERS curate invoice typist & bedrm sets (1930's) in· Need car, lite typing. 1 ---------Laguna, 1 blk from bch. ---------general office. Heavy de· Blcycles 8020 clud. dresser & vanity M ARK EL FAM I LY v. 547·3095. •--------•! Call John 494-3889. MAINTAINERS tail & flling. 556·6175 ••••••••••••••••••••••• complete, $300 & $200. 220 GARAGE SALE. Sat 9·4, PURCHASING STELLA men's 10 •pd. Apeco Copy Mach .. near Sun 10.4. 2527 Bamboo St, Mature women wanted SALES SECRETARY SPLICERS Waitress FoodtCoc,ktalls. like new. Pd. $150, sell e $500 Loveseat like NB. Eastblulf. Ster eo. for housecleaning Apply aft 4pm. Sid s Blue $80 GJl-0885 ~e: $lo0. Call 6-46-4071 dinette set, ar~liances, service, car nee. P /lime. Buyer Trainee If Plus all craft categories Beet, J07 2lst Pl. N.8. . betwn 8a m · lOa m & ~~~i etc, al like new. -64S-__ 5 123 _______ 1 Electronic component Diversified position for with outside plant or cen· WAITRESS luildlng Materials 1025 6pm·9pm. You'nt loolclnq For 1nd1v. w /good skills ••••••••••••••••••••••• .._.:._...:._ ______ , M a t u r e e x P manu!. firm seeks lnd1v. A Profitable Career Respons1b1hty pnmarily lraJ office exper. High 5pm·9pm daily. Apply, 1500Used Bricks p A T I 0 S A L E Housekeeper, Tues & w/purchasing dept. ex-In Real Estate One of in marketing & sales s1 aJanes, good· benefi~, Tino 's. 30242 Crown Xlnt condition King Size Bed $80. Queen Thurs/ Frib/Sat l0. 1 5Pm Fri's 9am·5pm. lromng. per. Bluepnnt reading, Orange County's Oldest dept. Knowledge of all ong term ass1gnme~ . Valley Prkwy, Laguna 640--4817 aft 2. Waterbed $75. Barbells Collect a I e g ass• I I . g f o ex....--i·Ung, and former For Immediate Hire Ni'guel. furniture, household c ean n · care r ......., &Largest Swider/ ofc functions important. $25.TowBar.493·3345 children. 7,10.12 yrs $IS. buying exper. desirable Developers Is Looking Growing manuf. co. in Call... --C..nn Ir goods & odds & ends. 636 p/wlt. Own trans Refs ST•COSWITCH IHC FOR·YOU Santa Ana.moving to Waitresses. So. Lag, NB & Equipment 1030 2 Early American China Calle Vicente, San req. Lido Isl. 675·77~ 1139 Baker Costa Mesa CONSIDER: Irvine area this Sum· ChM. P ft &RFf/t. C 1 offee ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cabine~ Sl50 ea, 1 Jge Clemente. Ph 492-3160 549-3041 s op e~p. ! 5 Pease. SANKYO S40 SUPER Pecan China Cabinet MECHANIC Equal Oppor. Employer Stability of a large co + ~ft Personnel For Appl Char!Je s Chili Ofc. m 4> SOUN D M O V l E S200 (all lighted>. hvy NO JUNK! Auto. MacGregor Yacht outstanding c 0 mm 549-0351. c A M E R A . distressed Maple Hutch G e-r- Corp., 1631 Placentia schedule (up to 90% > + H Schaffer 546·3844 3848 Campus Dr 2MICROPHONES·LIKE $250. 3 Maple swivel WCIQe ~ Ave, Costa Mesa. •--------·1 1~%n~ra~~~~e e~va~~~ GRISWOLD CONTROLS 54M74 I 'r:n~~ R J;,~ • ti~Lti.fti! NEW ·S300. 4323 Win· chairs $2:iea, Ftn Valley, Baby crib, oaby clothes. RULESTATE 1.24E D Rd SA <Across From teraweel Wav, Irv . 847·5658 men's, women's, boy's .ft MECHANIC Front end & Need 2 hc'dREsalespeo. ment + tra1n1ng & · yer · · · Log Inn. Call 549·9446 , ---------i girl's cloth~. 12 string brakes. Min 3 yrs exp. management develop Equal Oppor Employer Orange Co. Airport) 9 llam SS2-050C eve. $75. 8' Swedish Model gw·tar, blon e gla .. s front pie Many referrals & O r d Equal Oppor. Employer .. Start S1200. 645·2380 walk-ms Broker pays all ment + ppor. or a · WAITRESS Docp 1040 couch, d k green. china cabinet, pool tbl, d T vetncement within c:om·f---------•r _______ ••• hardwood frame . cera mics, also some M:!~~~n~a~~i2:c d~~.~~e ~u':~~1:~.g.Ca~~ ~~i ft!~~eydii~s~~~J~. ~~~~ SECRETARY ---------.llj ~~~~:~ ~~~~ti·:.P~!~ ~:~~::··;:;~~·v•;r•·;:ps. _67_5-837 __ 4_a_n_s_P_M_. ___ misc.Sato..a.. io. 4 ble. MD-GP. Near lloag Lachenmyer for In· Mgr So Call!. Sales ore in TELEPHONE w 19th St. c M CohaFmApion l61ne.WAKkcs. Custom sofa, 6 mo. old ... , Hosp 5480822 or hnn~ tcrview anyumc 18 60 TOUCHSTONE NB. req's mature Xlnt cond. $120. Cull 16251 Hassauln resume 351 Hospital Rd. N~-;v6po39rt28~.lcv~e·sC6~f3:4577 Re-•ty person w 15 y,-.; mm ex-SAL[t' Wanted; Young man 18 20 <.213)596·6360. 645 . 9254 after 4 .30 Huntington lch Ste 118 N B "' ut per . ~ood typmJ: & gen 'I '1 yrs, asst 1n top Porsche & ' · · A Div of f'rednrks oCc sk11li. Send resume to BMW Repair Shop. Must AKC Miniature Couch. 2 end lbls, coffee Moving Sale: GE refg, Medical Recept for busy -------Development Corp. Sales Mgr., 1200 Quail St, Tired or your average run have Initiative & be will Schauzers tbl, breakfast set, & waJ. tbl & 6 ch rs, artist pediatncians ore. Exper REAL ESTATE ,/8582 Bea~ BlhS~~47 Ste 110, or rontact (714) ol thr mill phone Jobs? ing to learn. Call Bob at 3 males. 768-1567 chest of drawers. (714) canvaa & frms, mirror. only. 644-0970 S''llOOL NEEDS. "UI1tmgton ac . 752 5561 for interview. CALL US NOW!! 642·9225 AKC Registered Cocker 754-0930 Sherry or Pam. chest. 711 W. Balboa, NB ~ (714)963-0867, 549.9077 \IC~ATCI"' M t ·ell be(3/26 MEDICAL •Women 2S·S5 who like Member International ;r Y~I ~ Warehouse worker, Shi~· puppies. champ bark · us s P1' Marts M t A Work 6. hr s a da y pino •-Rece1·v·g Cler . ornd 8977670 art 4·30 b h bul ea wap ee. n· TRANSCRIBER to meet people. Real Estate Network • WIOll~ representing 8 nationally 0 ~JO°'. Start at mini· mum PM • · · Din'g t 1. 6 c airs & • tiques. SundaY-only 9-4. Work at home Top Pay •Work in public rela-1~~~~~~~~~ An Affirmative Action k od t t ,,.... ---------fel. Old & very nice. $250. 181 El Camino Real, I d I J. nown .Pr uc 0 . resi wage. Applv Jndustn· al "u"7694 ""-Un .u~ 1901 Must have 2 yrs rerent llons/personne eve 0 P· S DY Equal Oppor Employer dents in So. Cahf.. & Liaison Inc', 3194 .. 0 .. Female G er m an ....... Ho • ..... . hospital medical record ment. No .selling or SALE LA ---------i Arizona. We provide A•"""J'tLoopDr.CM Shephent,hasshots,xlnt lirl-. ............ -.............. 111111111111111 dept. Transcr1b1ng ex. hcensereqwred Full time. experienced pleasant surroundings &i _r..._,... ________ w /ch ildre n & good per Med.Type,i68H500 •Partorfullt1me saleslady wanted ror SECRETARY arelaxedatmosphere. MetchancNw walchdog.Allergyforces •Work 20 hrs a week Fashion Island Women's Assist to Ofc. Manager ••••••••••••••••••••••• sale. Has been spayed. •Eamto$1500month Apparel. Call Faith at 1n manur. corp. New Our pay stni:ct~~e 1s one Anttques 8005 Needs loving family. Office Manager. smdll constru ction ofc C.p15trano Bch E·qwr a must Bookkee111ni:. payroll. scheduling • PublJc Rel. Call for appl 496·4224 Bring In Resume to Tom f"ryan Homes IOAM to Noon wkdys Part lime per.,on to ass1.,t in Spanish lmm11ua11on mtery~ 957 1)40R PART TIME HELP(Evs 1Wknd s) needed at Tenm!> Club Apply in person al Mesa Verde Country Club Tt'n n1s Pro Shop. 30110 Clubhouse Rd Co~ta Mesa. PAYROLi. SR.PAYROLL CLERK •Work close to home 673-1970 modern plant in H B. of the best in ,.1e busl· ••••••••••••••••••••••• _P_leas __ e_c_al_l_S48-_7_800_. __ 1 CALL OPERATfON • ----. area needs dynamic ness.Wehaveaguaran· QUICK ~T \RT <7 1.\ 1 SALES. P lime We re person exper'd tn all teed base salary m add1 • 1 looking for 4 people to r Wonderland 528 lf>Sl JSk for Robin work Mon·Fri 5 9pm 1Jhases of o c work lion to a liberal bonus & Read Must have lransi> Pleaseappl> inperson romm1ss1on-You can't Of Antiques! AKC Poodles. 2 Blk-4 mos. l blk-1 yr. J sml rham pagne fem toys. 646-0142. Receptionist Clerk-Typist for tt'ie Daily Pilot The Class1fle<I Depart· ment or the Daily Pilot needs a mature person to be recept1on1st and work with counter r ustomers Mu.-.l U!>e IBM Selectric typewnter Some phone work Excellent com- pan}' bcneflli> 5 day week Salary com mens u r .i h• with ,. x per1ence For 1nten al'v. r.111 M2 4321 .cxt :rn; Jo;qual Oppo1 tun al y Emplo)er 847 7267 SchMU Corp. l<>sc! 5412 McFadden Ave SalespenOft Huntington Beach V'rtornins & Cosmeties 714 /898-6631 We need dependable. ___ _ responsible. sel f StCRETARY needeci. moti vated person lo must be proficient 1n work at leading, fa~t both shorthand, & typing growing health food skalll! Non smoker store cham m Southern Please send resume to California. Prior ex Ad No 867 Daily Pilot penence desirable but PO Box i560 ·Cost~ 2 Shirts available 8 30-2:30 & 3:30-9·30 hve days a week. Contact Renee Rossi 83U095 For PenoNI lnhnlew TIME-LIFE LIBRARIES. IMC. Equal ()ppof-&nploy•r H UGE warehou se 646 1526 crammed with over 500 German Shor lb• i r music boxes. n1ckelo· Pointer puppies. $75. deon pianos, circus or· Whelped Feb. 3, 1977 gans. wall c locks. 642-8938aft.6pm grandfather clocks, fascinating antiques. AKC Yorkshire Terrier Over SJ.000.000 Worth Puppies. Males. Call Amen can International after 6pm, 630·3014 ~allcnes: t802·T Ketter· fr'ffto You 8045 ~~~}7~~: • 0~~ I~~ rherl~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• not n~essary. No Salur Mesa. ca. 92626 day night or Sunday ---1 JOHATHAH•s Sat. 9 AM to4 PM. Visit! FREE Fill DIRT work. Un IC or m Se-cretary. Small motel & TELEPHONE SALES furrushe<I. Medical and R E. Ofc need full or part ADV. YELLOW TAG Approx. 5000 yds, El Toro area. 768·1251 hospital benefits. Apply time asst. Apt mcl. (op-Earn while you learn, ~:~~~~~~ Lindberg Nutrition, t1onal I . 642 1334 or S2 50-SJ.OO hr + comm on F\Jrniture. bet w n Carouse I & 642 6578 Prev. sales exp helpful. Crystal, Silver, Chma Bullocks. lower level 1n -83.5 9692 or 835-7296 the South Coast Plaza Se-cretanal. two positions HURRY lN TODAY! ~hopping renter Costa in busy R E. Office TELEP'HONE 422 31st St, Nwpt Bch Nd home for 3 yr male Cockapoo. Outside dog Gd w /children. 847 ~19. Mesa Apply at Vitamin Heavy d1ctaphone work. SOLICITORS In Cannery Village Counter good ltlcphonc skills· & P 'fl ME FROM HOME •-s •-d Fad-Jnsh Sett"r. 3 mos old Found. Vic. Jeronimo & Ridge Route. male ter- ner type dog. 830·9598 Salesperson. Mature w exper selling ore sup plies Apply, Marnner·s Stat1ooers, 225 Fore.;t tht ab1llt> lo work under E ~ .,.. -· ' ~ pressure arc essential. F 0 R UN 1 T D Showroom open to male Good W/children. Salary commensurate CEREBRAL PALSY. public Buy direct & Housebroken.962·21S8 w exper Call Judy, GUARANTEED WAGE save!642·27 12 ------1 Ave. Laguna Beach NO EXPER. 963·0107 or -------•Free k1tlen. male, tabby. 833 2900 995·-1819 Furniture Stripped and 3 mo. Has sbou. Call SECYr,ECEPT. Refinished by Experts Carol,644-1169 RECEPTIONIST SALES REPR ES F.N PRO PE TY MGMT. Telephone &Oddjobs, 752 5059. 675·2094eves. part time 10 mo. old, fem. German TATIVE. New York lmmed opening w/mgr. 675-1105 Oak WI h D C1810 Sh /B d C II" The Jolly Roger. lrw • a fast growm1i re!.taurant chrun, has an opemng for an exper'd payroll derk to work tu a 12 > penoll dept. hanlihng approx 1500 errrploytes Com puterized P R exper a must , w restaurant payroll exper a definite +. Xlnt working conds & beneht proj!ram w ·op in Professional office por. for advancement Downtown CO<ita Mesa Salary commensurate Hand write qualifies w/exper Apply m prrson t1ons indud1ng phone 8am·5pm, 17042 Gillette number & address. to Ave, lrvme P 0 Box 63. Costa Mesa. MarkeUng Communica es rsr, . ep or er o ie. lions firm needs ag re co Typmg, phones. 65x2lx71 Base 3 drwrs, 2 tmd. Nds loving hme gress1ve sales person sh a plus. but not req"d cupbrds. top: 3 5hlvs. 962·7063 Nr OC airport. only ex· TELLER $4600. Lv message Rita ---------w I car to I ea d u P p"d apply Phone wkdys. F /time position avail. Colberg ,213> 874 2200 Keeshond, male. Free to Newport ofr Exp. in 752-7121 Must have banking ex· good home. Good _______________ , 92627 ____ marketing, design. ad r Call Mrs. Todd at Flea Mart Swap Meet. An· w /children. 549·0112 vert1s1ng Call Clark Service Statio n Allen-pe · B k 1 Uques. Sunday only 9.4 _..... _____ Rccept iGeneral Ofc Ex. Harbourt. 9am Jpm dants, (2) Exper'd Ray Goldenstate an n 181 El Camino Real. GermanShorthair.lyear -----per, type m1n1mum wkdys.644-1700 Carey Chevron, 604 S. Downey, 10230 S. Para· Tustin 544 .1901 old to good home. PBX Answer Strt. 6Swpm Dependable. --Coast Hwy, Laguna mount. (213)923·9461 · ----536-7625 The largest answering Small mrg firm, Irvine. S ~ .A M S T R E S S . Beach F,qual Opp Employr m If APP' ••••• '.anc ••• '.'••••••••8••0•1•0• ~---u..-__ ---- 8 - 0 - 5 - 0 service in Orange Co. Good work'g rond & paid m1rumum l year exper -~ wants you. Work In one benefits. Tapmat1c sew1~g sails. '.t1ust be SERVICE CASHIER Tennit•lnspector FR 1 G J DA l R E ••••••••••··~·••••••••• of our 13 beautiful ores. Corp .Mrs W1tt979·6080 q~ahty consc1ou~s In · XJntbenefits. Paid group Licensed. Salary open. Refrigerator $75 Work· 1 hgre:..,~ ~1~.hh b~c~ Come to work p/llme to ---div1dual for Hang Glider insur .. profit sharing & Must ha ve cr ewman ingcond.646·4742 cchaailrr._.,(n.eeds 'rge"'ovaecr· suite your own lifestyle. R _. T--' t Sail Work. For appt. Call var pay Call Jackie or " Earn while you learn. K ....... Jt" 1 Susan Wiegand. 631-1842 Mr Milner, 546·1934. ::Pf·XPR'd TERMITE WESTINGHOUSE wht. 2S ing).SJS. OR $100 for So Attractive! Paid vacs, heallb Ins , Good phone pr~i1ence & A t 1 a s C h r y s I e r CR E w MAN Sa 18 F y cu Ct side by side ref rig. both! Also, 1 chrome & boo"'es. regular paf ln· ore s~11ls. To Join out. s.., Ttlndo Dept Plymouth. 2929 Harbor open Ca\I 646.8734 for Uke new $42S 642-0696 glass celling light-S40 tttaael, promotion. boll· sntnd f Optics firm in Salesperson needed Blvd.C.M appt. and 1 hall celllnf When coats COl'M off, look day overtime pay & Irvine Ind park. Cali Well groomed Must be Gas Dryer, xlntcond 1Jght·S20. Phone642·0138. your most 1tttael•'I! an this The Big Skirt' £ ~'Y ~'~0 ~~·II 1~ ~will lo •.r ... ~ !.tn .alion di parlie\1 • Whip 11P lh1 tlnwP1 pretry w1ap S~nl ol st11ps OI p11nt n pl1111 IJb11c. Appliqlll' bokl llov.ers ra11e1n 7Z37 llower p1llern d•~grdm d1rewons 10 l11sam 10 20 ancludtd many other beoeOts. Mr Sterne 556-8200 able to work . nex hrs Servic~d S~·JJ Allen/tidanl, TIRE. CHANGER·Mln 1 s:;o Call after 6 SAVE•. MARCH SALE. c11sp youne shap1ne N•Plltd al Various shifts are avail p /ti Gath S40.~ exper • r u or p me. yr Lire store exp t600+lo 642 5887 I' tht sides. it's smOQlh an lro111 & Include some wknds RE.5TAURANT PIZZA me. Y. • Apply Arco Stat1on. 17th lJlrt 645-2380 . REFRIGERATORS N'r* & ~e<I f~m, •PP s. •ndPr~nt~}°'pllt~11'e'~nry s9ul7~· Hall Allee Brooks For lnlo. on our o(c near hlri /ti d ext 34l &lrvlne C M. s · nusc. Wilson s Bargain "" <. Now ng P me ays. ' TOW TRUCK DRIVER WASHERS DRYERS Nook 12 Stores), 545 & Suts JOI; 12~ U't. 1611 Nee<Jl~rafl Oep1 105 youcall~l160 EOE Begin work Immediate-Service Sta. Help full or Exper'donly. G & W Recond1t1ons·Repros & 814 W. 19th, CM. 642·i930 18', Sitt U'~ (Mt 37) l.t~n 011lyPilot $1 25 IOI m~ ~llern Add 35' t~ pjlltro for Inst class airmail and handhn& Send to: ·~ ly Must be fast on reet & Secretary pftlme. Apply, 990 E. Towi.ng, lOOOirvine, NB Frgt Damage. Guar/Oel. &548-3262 l 118yJ1d$60 111ChfJ1>11c Box 163. Old Chelsea Sta. willing lo work 18 or Cbast Hwy, N.B. 29 Yrs in Orange Co Stlld SI?~ for t.Kll P,l!trn New York. NY 1001 t Print Penonal Manaoemtnt over Apply in per11on, R pti . t DUML•r•s *I BUY•* I Namt. Add re11, Zip, •·ency, considerln .. new 2 SPM. Tue Fri. Sgt ece oms Service Station Allen. TRAINEE CM * Add l~ IOI ttch palle111 Of Palllfn Num~r. ,.. .. Pepperorn's P1zu 2300 S. "'-onl o<c per•onaJlt". danl. ~xfer'd. Day & 1815CNAel WLJ!C!~77Bl80, Good used Furniture & 's'"I !'us a111N1I llandhn1 MORC than '"' btfofc• 2<Y' .!:n':i::m~~[ inpc~'r!~~~~ E . Bristol, Santa Ana XJnt typlna ic heav"y Eva Ful & p/tlme Ap ~ .....,. Apphances--OR I will 111" to. dull'!• plus 3 frtt prjnltd 111 TV fsfllma. 9:57.o.282 llets phones for induat'I real ply, Shell St.aUon, J7lh 4' ASSEMBLERS FORIEST DIAL 1ellorSELLfor You. &Ide NEW 191& NEEDll~ltAH ~~~~~~--1·--=--------1 ea.olc.-. lMne, NB. lmmecl. open.tnta avaU. OM MIW MA YTA•S MASTBS 4UCTIOM ~an Martin c:ATAlOO!J::t ~fl&. 7Sc. -sou.a.L on i.t '•bUt .,..mbt1. 6.~ .. 1616an••••• _0ope..,.. ~1 --11·" .-.,... "~ '~~~ c.-t .... mKh.-ton ..__ -• 8VRK.18APPLIANCES -_......, ,, •• 11 .. "'llot • -ta.... 1.00 lbecS.C,....., . RETAIL .__,.~ h.i;;.i".":::ir.,.: ,,...o-~,, ... --4 .... iii'W..1 , ... et..-::ll.~ 1.00 SlncM. l'IOIMd, rcUaf>le, CLERKS ' m.mJ .,.OO.bleJlllOPle.Xlntc0 54&4172 ... u. o ....... ,, Yorl&i NY 10011. Print Sew +""~1.:.f. -a~ gem .. ~ •. P.a. work. ~Y5TFO\tAS.'iOCIA~S SRARPOALtorpartUmt blmftta. Wt pa, IDON-for ap. mtcblni oott.. ......... HAS ... z e' ADnDdRESS. ZIP. •"""9ftlt '"'. ~.:.:-s1.00 t)pln1. Jlght bk1tp1. UTOTIM ,_.HI ... ....., wortlnflPl9aaJon.-No A.,,.,bJ>erloo ~.wortlll1ornot, well aft, tole tablel. NUMBE~ STYLE ntwwCNdtt8"11 .. -$1,00 :::tl!;:.!·~t.:::: ea. .. --... mi:r ... ~r·ir. .... p .. r .. rec1. an.• Prsdi,r,..., '-·,.._, ~::.:I:,.,..-..... .,;.==·~:: CA.GUO PotJUonaope1>2nd&3rd l~EmploJer p.m.:•net 2911M.Alrww.CM Port•bl• dlahwu~er1 cbaJ~ 1tq'w Qn al•.....,. fnlr S.. ... ftr l1111111tM1c,..hot _s1 .oe ___ ..____...__ __ 1 shil\s ln $8.n Clemento • R4talHd ~Cl.Ill (leblnd 6.o. Al"'°") barvelt itold. cooct c:ooo bdrsn' Ml. mat.t.nuee. .. ... ,......_ ""9ft 1utlllt =Elett --Jt.OO . ~=~L La1un• S.ach. Otber ~~~~~~~~ Shlpplnt • recel•IDJ l!'.qull()pporBmpla1er 1100. Pboae ..,_nsc aft f''" 4 wood cofi•• f:"'r.~-:::.:: = --:*iar:ll·: Study ~b for rl•ht :r:,uN!~:P::e~!~.~~ Hp. nee. Mlle. otl* R'AMIMtss10Ms-s:00pm. g~~~·L1L•~~'col. fJk""" '2"'-1 IU-50c --. warebouM daSIM. App\r ·~ I DlTI"~ -....--'-lllft ......... i.21 ..... ti It.._ fl -50t penon, UPtr nee Apply •t any of out ~ ,._, betwn JptD r u aw 01 man, ~_....,_ ~ tnftl i ..._ • lllA n 50t. Ptont 1twfnf. • troup atoNt. GelGltaNriib UNll' PABRlt.JAM.~ ' triilli~, for~ ~::~r::;~• hiDWwbfb.me. ..._ ,,_ = :-:' 1 11 ... llt'-,;::11,_. ':.:.1~'~ ~ J'!::!r. ~~ ~~ r:u,w:ge,.:ft• ~~ i :=,~~ To~ '-• lt.J C'U.ft ... A~ pgd ~ ~h.-,.._. ~ · !Ml" 11 .,, 11p -·;»c •O,.ltd,Sint.a An;. c.IJec:wm ~.r) , 131,ma, Sac. sao.-..... .... • I -. .;"' r Small plaid love seat, $40. After 6 or weekcndi.. 6JS.a684 West Coast Gas Kiln + .:lazes & all eqwp $1700. Potters whl $290. 644-9186 EARTHWORMS DURING MARCH - Cash in on Spring Cleaning And Save With a Daily Pilot $. ~ f\. ·~. ~7 MARCH SPECIAL I Applies In The Following Categories ANTIQUES APPLIANCES AUTOS BICYCLES BOATS CAM E RAS 10°/o DISCOUNT 5 LINES OR MORE 3 DAYS • USE CASH Bank Amerlcard OR Master Charge • 10% DISCOUNT • DO IT NOW! FURNITURE G ARAGE SA LES HOUSEHOLD GOODS JEWELRY MACHINERY M USICAL INSTRUMENTS M OTORCYCLES OFFI CE EQUIPMENT Pl ANOS & ORGANS SEWING MACHINES SPORT I NG GOODS SWAPS r-------------------------------------I I I I I (4 SHORT WORDS MAKE ONE LINE) 5 Lines, 3 Times = $9.00 I I I For additional lines, add $1 .49 per line. Make check or money order payable to DAILY PtLOT. I l :1-t-r Send or Bring to: CLASSIFIED AO ORDER DEPT. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT BOX 1560, 330 W. BAY ST. COSTA MESA, CALIF. 92626 1 I . -l Name----------------------------------- Add~H--------------------------------- Classlficatlon______ Start my Ad on this date---------0 BankAmericard ;: ______________ Exp. date _______ _ O Master Charge :;--------------Exp. date _______ _ f n •M C\4\I'"' tty: l'WJ't.-Of' PA~tt MAI fen ~low 0'1 "t'ftUf fl'nVfllOP• -----------------------------------FI R~- BUSINESS REPLY MAIL CLASS PERMIT NO. 13 COSTA MESA CALIFORNIA NO POSTAGE N ECESSARY IF MAILED IN THE UNITED STATES POSTAGE WILL BE PAID BY Or•nge Cbaat O•lly Piiot Box 1580 330 W. Bay St. Coata Meaa, CA 92826 Clanlfled Ad Order Dept. ••••••••• r.••t••••• .::i::::: ::~::::t ........ .,. ::::::::: :::::::i: ::::::::: ::::::::· ·:·,··:·i • 2 .. ! .. ::.&: ::: ::::::::: ::::::::: Boah, Marine Equipn-.nt 9030 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Compl e t e Chrys ler manifold::. for J lli c· u VS. Includes manifolds. riters, e lbows, end plate everything for twin cn~ancs with 430 hours. $225 total cost. Call Dale at 496-1821 495-1700 lO' l>devt•r lypt,• F,G dhl cab trawler. N(•w ' T I>l~el ~.900 Call Stan, bkr 675-3282 FOR RENT 1976 26 FT. GMC MOTORHOME Fully self contained. Weekly & daily rcntab. CALL TODAY! 979·2500 '69 Dodge D-100. Med camper. air, boot, Mags, x1nt cond. $2485 or 1s t resnbl cash ofr. Must sell. 492·5267. '74 Chevy ~Ton PU, dsc brks, stereo, s he ll w /boot, gd tires, immac. thru-out. $2949. 536-9910 AM, 960-4609 PM -----· WE BUY CLEAHCUS &'RUCKS CONNlll !'!!!~~. COSTA MESA 546-1200 '67 Datsun PU, r ebuill1--------- engine purrs like a kit· TOP DOLLAR ten. $1000. 831·0235 PAID '66 Chevy l ·ton step van. Windows all around, hydraulic door, 50,000 mi. on new 6 cyl engine. Good beater, tires, body. All service records, $2000. 645·3269, 646·7698 IMMEDIATELY FOR ALL FOREIGN CARS CALL OR COME IN TO SEE US ..-EWPORT IMPORTS 3100 W.CstHwy,NB 642-9405 '57 Dodge P /U truck. Newi--------- engine. Xlnt cond. $900. WE BUY 673·7581S after 4 •USED CARS & '74 Courier w /shell. Top cond. 548·9748, 2103 Con· tmenlal, C.M. ---- TRUCKS• Come in or Call FRH Appraisal Groth Ck'n'Old 18211 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach 847-6087 * 549-lll I TOP DOLLAR PAID FOR CLEAN IOll~SO~ & so~ • LINCOLN-MERCURY ·75 Maz.da PU & Shell. 111.000 ma, like new. S3800 make orr. eves 552 840.1 2626HARBOR BLVD. ~--~~~C_O_S_TA~M_E_SA~~ ~~~ ........... ~.!~.~~ ~ 25' OPEN ROAD. r~ully '76 Chet•lah Ska boat, VH. self-conl. Reserve now Jar1. jct. tandem trlr. for Easter. 644·8385 Call Oean 835·0211 page 148B. '76 Chevy Van 350 VS. auto. PS, HD~uspension. convert'd lo m1n1 -mtr home, unique naught1cal mahogany ant , 12 volt refr1g, duel battery + many xtras. Orig ownr. consider s m . P U an trade. $9,000. 548-8056, 545.0077 MEED YOUR USED CAR MOW TOP $PAID CALL GORDON COSTA MESA AMC-JEEP 2524 HARBOR BLVD COSTA MESA 1947 Lakt! Tahoe Classic, 19' Chmtrart Spccd!-iter, Ask mg $4500 675-3590 Classic '64 Chris Crart Super S port JH ', V-ll w /409 hrs Bristol cond. Bluebook S3900-orr. 6753080 00·4) ----Boats. Soil 9060 ...••...•..•........... TRITON In perf cond Many extras mrludmg 5 ::.ails, radio. auto pilot $16.000 Ph fi73 71173 '76 25' Overland. 440 Dodl{e eng, s ips 8, loaded. Generator. 2 roof airs, dash air, crse cont. 549-1023 AM /FM stereo tape, lge 71 Dodge VS, Window rerrig, aux gas lank, TV Van. P /S, A/C, new tires, antenna. roof rack, CB lo m1 , clean, SZ?SO or best radio, 12.000 mi. Asking off er. 492.3426 Sl5·000· 331-1344 '73 Dodge Va::n _200-. Ca-t-in-t-1, 1Autos-:--:--. =-,..,.--rt:-ed--:---- Auto Service.Parts FM tape, 4 spkrs, full ••••••••••••••••••••••• & Accessories 9400 pwr. Runs. xlnt S3800 GeMrat 970 I ••••••••••••••••••••••• firm. P P. 979 5170 dys. ••••••••••••••••••••••• VWENGINES USED · R EBUILT l>er Buggy Shop 530-6940 TIRES FOR SALE! One G -78-\4. Goodyear-4 ply Lake new. Two G 78·15. Glas belted. Good $7 each . Call anyt1me979-4192 ----- ----------Lotus '74 Europa twn ·73 Chevy Van shortbed, cam , 5 s pd, AM /FM auto. wide tires, 350 eng, stereo tape, 23M mi, $2000 640·7601 w,200. Pvt pty (714) -:;4 Ford Surfer Van, auto. O aft 7pm P /S, P /B. 8 trk, paneled Atta ROllWO 9705 & crpld. $4595. Pvt ply. ••••••••• •••• ••••••••• • 581 6671aft5 :30 1974 Alfa Spider • .,,500, lo 197 4 DODGE y AM mi, fuel inject, xlnt cond, SEA SPHAY 15' Calamaran. "Tunl'd •· ra<.'\Ory demo mtll w ,new sails Colori. av.ulabl(' $1595 w/trlr. Save $300 Ca II Ooui! 836 6890 Intake manifold & dii;t. '75 Buccaneer 21·. 9 9 H P. for Crusader eng. 327 OB. Vlff. ISO Genoa. San Phone644-6584 VB t t many xtras. 673·2891 aft S . au o ma 1c, pwr. steering· <57645X). On Audi 9707 sale this week ror ••••••••••••••••••••••• OML y $3695 '75 Audi lOOLS, 4 dr, hpd.' Diego, Hu~ I 279·0074 '6.c. VW 1500--E-n-g-in-c-. -5000- Ext 25. other 1 222·02o<J ·• MARQUIS VOLVO xlnt cond. 17.000 mi. 1 23' Coronado. 73 ::;lps 4. stove & ::.ink. tand<>m trlr. $5750. Like new. 71H26 3211! LIDO 14. Trlr, 2 S<'t:. sails, xtras $1500 544-8791 18' SLOOP Sips. 4, 3HP 0 /8. Boat cover:., :;hp, mak(' ofr ~-5628 SABOT Good Cond1l1on S2SO Call 640·4645 <'Ve~ 23' Islander '72 w ttrlr. hinged mast. retractable keel. rblt 6 hp Evinrude E'<trai; Xlnt $4951>, 536 7256 1 .T Lux sip Compl eqpt Full etc Atomic mbrl, SIP8 4 Nwpt 11hp. F.xr race /er, 494·56<n MISSION VIEJO Owner. Brown. $4200. 831-2880 495-1210 _67_s._9444 _____ _ mt, fae. reblt, $300/bst ofr. 646·8506 art 5 Mini-Motor Home tires. IMW 9712 Save $200. 8:00Xl6.5 '66 CHEV Paneled Van. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Michelin Steel Bltd Very 1tood cond. New Radials. Setor6. 559·0496 paint job. Gd tares. $1200. Dodire 318 engine & Ca l l eves/wknd s. transmission. comp top _<2l3>42l·_lO_l_7 _____ 1 end, for 440. 962 9985 '74 FORD 302 V8, auto, . 29000 m1, lots extras. Domestic Pickup Truck 957 026l for info CAMPER SHELL. $50. ----1 631-2250 ....................... 9520 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '57 Corvette. White, 58,000 ong mi. Xlnl cond. Pvt. SAVE $2000 '76 Dodge JOO Santana Cmpr. Van. 360 V8, auto, P IS, P /8. a ir, stereo AMIFM tape, CB, mags, cu.st. int. & exl., rt'r, st v. sink. soCabed, 7000 mi. $8000. 675·2563 ----·· Pty 830-4005or8300451 ;4 Dodge 8100. 6 cyl w/3 R--..£1-...11 spd. Bit for comfort, SADDLEBACK BMW COM! IM Ii SEE TH£ ALL MEW UOCSlMOW! SADOLBACK VAWY IMPOaTS •ll-2040 495-4949 CREVIER ~~---9SJO cstm lntr, bed, Icebox, $' u a •tOAOW•Y Vehtdff AM /FM <'DSBC!tle, Capt 's SAMfA AMA ----••••••••••••••••••••••• ch•lra. Forced lo sell. 16' Prindle, multi color 73 Winnebago Brue, $3900. Ph 545.9606 bel 835-3111 Nila, many xtras, $1595. 215.000 mJ, call aft 5PM noon ·'"' u1.11MATCO#WfO ~. Must sell 552·9263 6'6-0976 --· ------• •USID IMW'1* loah.Sll.-/ 4 Dri.Yn 9510 ~~~manV•n, '70.0CSAS/&7461.~ Docb ,0 70 •••••••••••••••• ••••• •• ~ '75530lA HKWT ••• •••• .... • •• • • •• ... • • Fonl Bron 4 he d '152«r2Auto10INLD F:WPORT CIIANN~L dirt Ur~~4xn1t:uf:1 '76 ~ Tt>o GMC Vim, air, ~===~~r.1 30' to 35~er boat. !Mljl/cln.$:1'7o0.MZ·mt ~iF~1~~r~":~n~: ~O.S.dllYf SUO rt mo "6-5845 or '10 Bronco, new Ur.a. cust. Int 042 042$ day• •69 ..... W •600 ' 111-GQOQ wh11, palpl. StalnlH only. -• N ~'ird2a · Slip for nM>lrt MS-MSl "n -Ford--V-an-,-i.-ww-thl-tia.e--.• =•~;::':/:° Lud•U·ll, lo NwJt '73 fl)R' f . 00 Camper. v.a, auto, nu Ura, palftt, ~nm ~ O :V Hthot. DHPtt•l• I WlndL Loed«I. 1'1lftd.ed. n:tll valve job. ~ lZJOCm) Cre'f'ler QD.T.m Oatl'°"51$3 taoo.MM2t8 &MW 31nS&ntaAa '-........... Ofml• ••=•as ... .,_ Ole 119LAY -·--··--·-•• ~!!!~!!:!~!._ ___ , .. _,. llr rr .. pg la #I U.S.A. ---.-·--"'• llODI ce D ,.._,r -. ..-. a. m· M .,__a CAaYll ft20 Qf $ 10' ttll ca ow.a.. '!!.-z·.~~c ... 1,0. A.UTllO:.sJ&Y. If« aoY • __ .....___ Ila«. ....... ...,..-. -·-t '•, -····-·-··.............. "'' "Ls_, a::-0.0. ._.'-ti Ml.15-IOTCI ·-·-······--·-·· --.. •• ··---·-· ,__ e;-:i..w:. T~ --•-lmmRUJa&el 'TO Oldl .a. 456Cl. llust d .. , ---.--,. ... ._ ..... ado. llJ.nlO ·-..... -v C m-.Xlru. JLtnt'7JFlreb lr,w.t1t Lo:i.d .... .MN.,. llir, xJm ClODil. •mJ OD&MSUlaAaaPwy. ,._ __ ~ ;;:;;.:;::;~~ ~~'::~-&:::: Clean. Mullt 1~11; ;..tnz~ \4:: ="CO:: -.mr-eva llA.J.pm ..... ,... WODll lal, Nd OMS at.r~. DU lop. •lot. lefl Co. llnl .. ll or tullli/Clfr...... at-UOl or 19'7·U70 &fL M t7~1 leat.h upholne:ry lood 'GI RR Coanl. What~ Sl~. Cln·P•. traufer luse. Daya, aoiai aelll ! "71 Olds DelLa IPll 70 IMW 2002 ............................... Jtmpt,lllJO. Pvt. w / b I k b i de . P w r ValtsW9fllt ~.akf41'1Um. II, 1troo1 car. S91S. ---------U-.JIU~main, "73 Fiat 124 Sport, S apd, PtJ. m•>_.IZIS 1eat1/wlndow1 HHO ............... •••••••• ._.. ~~ :0: ~~j taiMd.. XAS, Kciolt, One aiereo, mags, xlnt cond, 118 .,4 45Cl6L Ve r y 1 h u r p 1 ·• r 1,73 YW CAMPB ... ......,.. 9_5 PS JP 8 . al r eon d • 74 Olds Vista Crwser Sta· -.za O.U..PrP\,J,830-7027 PP.S22QO/olr 631·2923 ,_.._.. ('10PFE> _ .. lo •. --..-v All/FM atereo, lape •,.. __;_ _________ _ --.....,....,.. JIM RI CKMAN 4 :i~. a.tereo r... .,. •••-••••••••·---••• dedt lomi ~l..s721aft5 don Wp . Xlnt buy! aop . 19'11 Bavaria,4dr, loaded 'fB 850 Spyder. Radials, $14,200 751--0080 M01'0RS full camper equipm ent. AMC Matador 74• Cood • • • cood. 1 owner, 27,000 mJ, "73 FIREBIRD. Eapnl._ 1 62,0QO mi, ~-873-1331 map.L 3111 mpe, Must aell. Jleft'edea 11. 250 Sedan, (2J3)~2551 or local call 0 w n er d r i v • 0 · cond, AJl/PJI, Lo ml, lml)ala. 4 Dr sedan. ~eJi~;,:~~. ~ :=: .=,~·~'. 1 orMZ-eeee 9850. rn""'8'Tl8 air, pwr, AM/FJI, mint Carlo a car rion immacu~ate lhruout & su•.a'J3..5527 Batolr. ra ..... s··--..1, ti.It w .. --1, Days 997-1622, eves • ___.. DI · t'd ac/M\I\ <n•>752 78117 w /low mile.ge . .(251802). SS1-31M3 ..... un.rvua """"' f 76 IMW UOI Fial 12' Spider. New eog ~ r rnam · ..,.,..,., · MUST SHIU Md& 991 O deluxe int., stereo radio, 1_54H832 _______ _ '8pd,aunroof,air,PS,al frbrb. Very&oodsb.ape. ftrm.9'79-0000Mr. Yebra Subcwv 9762 STOYOTA ••••••••••••••••••••••• lt75CHIYY "20().6'4.-7230 '65 LeMans. Runs good, Joy_whls,AM·F'Mstr,P $1.750/bst.642·1858 MGI 9744 ••••••••••••••••••••••• M~~~~NVIEJO '6S Le Sabre, xlnt trans. MOM%AZ +Z. '680ldsCuUassF85,must has good tires & up· ~=u~~m:~i~em!~~h tto.da 9727 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MEWSUBARU 831•2180495-1210 gd tires, nds paint Automatic, radio ~ sell. $300/best offer. bolslery, $300/bst ofr. navy interior! In excep ••••••••••••••••••••••• 67 MGB-GT. S1625, * $284 7 * $500 /bst offr. Ca 11 heater. (980LWA). Thus .._7997 _64S-__ 163_1 _____ _ tional condition. ONLY Brand Mew '77 xlnt cond. Ser. 1!137384 ) '67 VW Ccnper 84'1·~/840-3739. weeJtOHLY $Z495 '66CUilass 442. A rare low '72 _Safari Wgn. 9pass, lo~ 19995 <602PHM > Crevier 494·7632 Good cond. 645'8100 '76 Skybawk, dlx htchbk, mi's car in superb cond., nu .• AM /FM stereo, PS BMW83S-317l (SA> HONDA Cars .73 MGB. \.p.~tWooo V6, auto trans, air & MARQUISTOYOTA loaded,400Cuin.350HP. &PB,goodcond. 12100 . • 74 IMW ZOOZ MAMY Good cond, must sell. [Gsu1AtU " MEW •USED many other "tras. $tSOO. MISSION VIEJO $895. 832•1490. Pvt. Pty. 551-0331 4spd, air, AM-FM ToChooseFrom! 642.9378 SlJ"l llMf,..9.'4-'-VW'S 963-129'7att 6PM lll·2180 4tS.l2IO piftto 9957 '75AtraHatchback,4spd, cassette, radials, pi UNIVERSITY n.-a 9746 5115 So. Strttt Ov..-125 64 Buick, new battery, '7l Impala .. •••••••••••••••••••-standard. Xlnt cond. Strl.pes and more -...-· good t ires, $450. Good v ood d d 24000mi $3000 or$1.SOO • · Oldsmobll-••••••••••••••••••••••• u111 1u.0H1 l7•••n1.1211 ..... STOCK eryg con . '73Pinto xlntcon . $1750. · · · · Or'g1'nal Black r1·n1·1·sh "' " trans. PIS. P /B.631·2177 E •U"-1789 • down & take over pay. 1 Honda c-. GMC 1970 Opel GT, Citron T t 9765 Hard to fl-~ ves,....,. 1 owner. 6•2·1675 or t 752•7096 or witb grey interior. Ex· -· Yellow, c lean, new oyo 0 mu 1.967 B ·ck LaSabre Xlnt 642-7178 men s .. t r e mely sharp and Trucks radial tires, xlnt cond. ••••••••••••••••••••••• __ ....._._ w • '71Caprice4dr.Newtop, 833-584.5 Irvine clean ! ONLY $5895 ""'-"ll bo Bl d 2 muu•b• Cond. N~w b r akes, tires&uphol.Xlntcond. '73 Pinto Wagon, xlnt . (912MBT> Crevier BMW cost:Mes~r r 5~0--9640 841H07 radial tires. S700. 646-6181 Call644-6330 cond, clean. $1900 or best '74 G. Pnx, _loaded incl ·835-3171SantaAna 700pe1Wagon, lowner, lo '7 7 V: ~BWITllAM '75 Buick ~y~awk s, V6, ~.russtm£U offer.831-0235 ~~~~~k~-~~941° mi, '76 BMW 5301 AM /FM JOCJUCll" 9730 mi: t)50 firm. Good con· 2 /J 17•000 mt, air, .AM /FM 19'lOCHEVY WAGON 1974 Ford Pinto station . . . stereo cassette, 4 spd, ••••••••••••••••••••••• dition. 84.2-0439 ~t...y.u;; stereo .• PS, PB, lilt whl, 4 Runs strong, below wagon. Auto. trans .. 76 Farebard. S_howroom mags, sun r oof. Great Ja~ 69 XKE, reblt eng, Peugeot 97 48 7600 Weatmlnater Blvd. spd. Like new 493·7784 whlse Blue Bk. ~50. radio, healer, air cond. rond. 11.000 mi. 350 VS, cond,64().9469 wa re wheels , auto,••••••••••••••••••••••• CORONAS WestmlnatM 193,7551 Cadillac 9915 751·5664 540-9362 Excell,ent cond. $2 ,500 x~tras. Days, 752.760l. Dohun 9720 AM /FM stereo, $3850. l975 PEUGEOT ....................... ~.D.:..1UIL.l..ca:..n.A Ph: 537.4893 <aft5pm> Eves&wknds5594808 213·944-8233 504GL SED....... HAVE JUST '7o vw Bug, J(reat cond, 66 Pont. LeMans. 2dr ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..... AM /FM radio. nu paint. 172 Impala, 2dr, air. 74Pinto,newlires, DR.VEA 2 Jags. '58 3 .4 Sdn. Sunroof,automatic,fact. ARRIVED sisoo ibstofr.752.5770 htr /pwr. gd cood. 15,ooomi,sharp. l-1.T., 1 owner. 68,000 restored in/out, $3500. '67 air cond. & AM IF M (!!) $1375/ofr. 968-7427 $2495. 559-0270 miles, runs grl, looks LITTLE... 4;0. unrestdor~d , stereoradio.(029NJY). 74 Dasher, s unroof, ~ L97•MonteCarloLandau '7i1 Pi to Wagon 2300 cc ~e1a;·~:;~sc~~~~~· SAVE A LOT !n~w~o~~di~~~ Clas:~ 295 NEW COLORS! ~~~.FM6,3l·l3696apc deck, -' ~ ·. ~~~~~.-l~i.~J:t A/Ckn A~d~M· •. 4-~di (714)6J6.l34S. . SHOP&COMPARE ,;500.96J-6156 ....... Ccldhl:: NEWINTERIORS! ~ ..,..,.,,., rac ' 4 ' ma. n Thundft'bin:I 9970 ••RWICKDATSUM J 9732 tfM.~ s•MELOWPRICE COfttiMtrhd 9930 cond.$2500.963·5923 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ensen 2600......., · • '70 VW Bug. Great cond, SanJ uanCapistrano ••••••••••••••••••••••• S.O ~ CHOICEOF2DR R & 11. beige color, Pvt Quality and Price ••••••••••••••••••••••• '75 Squire Wagon. lo mi, 74THUNDERBIRD 831·1375493·3375 '74 Jensen Heal ey, C.ta ~ 4 DR +WAGONS pty. $1.295.644-1059 Guaranlccd '73 Mark IV. Loaded. All 21,000 mi, radial tires. Low miles! AM /FM AM /FM, good cond, power. New tires. Low Bestoffer.631-0317 stereo radio, 60/40 pwr. NEWPORT DATSUN moving $5600. 642·1846 '67 Peugeot 404, New BUY OR LEASE '70Sqrb<.'k. Auto, air, FM, l <«1.,ing Specialists mileage, well main· seat, tilt wheel, etc. eve. ' radial tires, runs, needs good pnt & eng. $1.495 or Preferred Rate~ tained 2nd car. Pvt pty. '75 Pinto Runabout, PS. (8S3LGA \. . 9735 little work. $550 /ofr MARQUIS TOYOTA ofr 962-7498 $.5300.orbstofr.4994087 AM /FM radio, 8 trk $ 4895 SPECIALS KarmannGhto 675-6591 SS 0 , 0 I Jrgcst SL'kctH111 stereo,radials499·4158 ••••••••••• •••••••••••• MI I N VI EJ 'G4 VW New eng., gd. tire 111 New & U'L'd '69 Mark l ll. Blk on blk, __ ......:::c;...;......;;.... ___ -... ~;J~. ~09~~E>4 speed, •59 Ghia. Needs TLC. A Ponche 9750 831-2880 495-12 10 $550. 540·4300 days. ( .1dill.i<~ 111 leath intr. Recent trans '73 RUNABOUT 2000cc, 4 Nabers Cadillac MOW 52795 challenge lo restore. Gd ••••••••••••••••• 5 ••••:• 495·0150 eves _ _ _ Or ,tngc Cou1111 &drive shaft. 644-6330 ~!1:,~~; ~~f~· $1400. Z600 H.-. .,...._ 88SDOVESTREET buy!$300 csh.546·l478 '76 Porsche 911 ' air, ·74 VW Hubble Top, xlnt llrll'11Sund11 72·4dr, heaut. blue, -C.tDMew $40 9\0Q. snr'f, Koni, brn. P p . d p t & ded f II 1 Plymouth 9960 Near MacArthur '73 K-Ghia convt, r~blt, Sl4,200 10r a ssm lse con . rop;rne s ove C,idillJc loa . u pwr. owner, •••••••••••••••••••••••'l:'._'-...=-------.-&Jamboree'Roads FM Casst·tte. new tares. 675-9555. heater. Refrig. t\ir, sips Master Oc.lll'I $33(lU. PP. 6-14-l7W '68 Thunderbird Extrn UJ-1300 PP. Offer. 546-4253 4 $'>300. 499·4825 __ ..!ftOO 1 l.Hhni llhJ Continental •70. llas had '74 PLYMOUTH clean. White' has ever· Mcndo 9738 '7ml uPsortscsheel!ll 1.4.b~dt <'oon, dr .· ·oo VW Bus. Reblt eng, C..mta Mc).i 510 9100 TLC & full maintenance. station wagons. Four to ything. 52,900 mi. $1.250 .. TOP BUYER ~ THE MO 1 · ·d n~ t ff Xl d A. r II s choose from. Maintained 552-8032 eves or wknds. ••••••••• •••••••••••••• """9979 nft 6 or wknds )( nt IOSI e. u di 0 er. NaJbe nl con . IT, U pwr, See us first. & last! Top oNU" .. HA s SLE 54!1-1Ml8 I rs trk $1 ,675. 557 -3540 eves. by the Daily Pilot fleet • -:----dollar paid for imports. garage staff. PricecJ • 74 T·BIRIJ Mint co~d. COSTA MESA '74 9142-0Air. AM JFM Al-DEALER 'SA VW Bus, reblt. eng, Corvefftt 9932 right from $1,995 to full pwr + Ca c. air, loys. Mint Cond. Must BUY sync trans .• porthole. Cad1•JfaC ••••••••••••••••••••••• $2,395. See in Daily Pilot AM /FM stereo tp. V-t.p. miracle mazda DATSUN See!494·t 473 Classic.$825.675-6266 '74Corvette.Brn.AM/FM parking lot,330 WestBay Pwr. dr. loc~s &_much 2&l5Harbor Blvd. 50 --.1..-II cl. '70 914 Appear. Group. 5 OR d 1 b T-Top, Air, 37,000 mi. St., Costa Mesa, or call more.bNkew Mipcph. ti$4re7s"~ "'-ta Mesa 540-6410 21 H..---" pd AM FM d d LEASE '71 VW Bus, ua car • ... ,100aft6pm640·5667 642·4321 for more in disc r es. · ~. """' ,.._......_ M--645-5700 s · / · g · con · . .., · "c ...,100 ~· 493 7233 ""9R1I ...--$3200 Eve; 586·6869 .,.. racan., am . .,.. · Cad. 76, Seville, 18,000 mi, , . . formation. Ask for Rick · • '74Vz260Z • U blue, mags, air, lo ml, IMMAC. '74 Mazda RX4. Must sell $4395 Firm. AC, AM /FM, many 759 1080 aft. 8pm SlO.OOO. Loaded. Pvt Ply. Corvette 63 Spbt Window or Oscar in the fleet VeCJO 9974 '7591 l·S '67 \'W Class 11 Car. less 644·1452 Couphe. 3~0lHP, Fautllo .. garage. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Harry x tr a s . M u s t s e I I pd · 1 · Le at er 1p1 er. u Y . 55 • aar. eectric sun· motor Best offer. 74CoupedeVille, loaded, loaded. Mus t sel l. '&9 wagon.Suto.newtarcs, ·74 VEG~ 3 s pd. lo mi, :~!~~e~~~~ 5!f~~~r~ _5'!0 !t:l:V.I a~ ~-m___ one owner. Can be seen Phone: Mr. Wi l lis , cond. gd. $700 /bst ofr. new radials . Xlnt. con<l. 511§-55~ _ 752·1920 $2800/ofr. 645-5873 __ 75 Datsun 8210. AC, R /H, '72 RX2 Cpe. Reblt eng, AM tFM stereo. Michello air, 8 trk stereo, xlnt tires, still brand new $1350. 552-9130 factory alloys, CN-36 -1!'170\'WBus.steel belled btwn 5 & 7 PM. 539 642-4352. 642·5296beL3pm $1195.548·6731 radials, stereo cassette. 1971TOYOTA radl<lh-, nl'w reblt eng, ~-~ton St. C.M . 240Z, faster than 'Velte, Autos,M•w 9800Autos,N•w 9800 _$2950 __ , _495_·1_656 ____ ~s a.tu 97 40 all anodozed tnm, and COROLLA C OUPE Jilli 77. SI 100. 642·1085 see ad Class 9720 or ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• mo re ! B L A C K 0 N · El O d 46 000 . BLACK and MINT' A ·1 speed, rarl1<1. heater & 70 Bug, xlnt cond,AM /FM 73 ora o. , ma. 998-1594 1 vmy_ I lop 1873CBO l. This radio. ~unroor. SlOOOtbst My wife kept this in mmt . . '74 260Z, clean, air, stick. ••••••••••••••••••••••• S""ctacular car for the J d A ht a I top '75 Monza 2+2 4 spd Air ... ~ week ofr. Pvt Pty. 556-8339 con . w ' e ~ vny . . ' mai;s,8-trk s lereo,S4750. '68 250S. lmmac. compl discriminating huyer o...iLY SI 195 overcreambocly.Hurry! cond,lom11eage,$2700or 644-4779, 642·0322 c:ar history w 1receipts. Buy or lease t581NJ A) n MEW •77 RABBITS eau 644.2436 or 963-6702 reas ofr. 640-0028 11 AM /FM. AC. s.ssoo. Pvt c re v I e r n M w . MARQUIS TOY OT A I 0 01 Di __ _... ·74 . 2GOZ. ammac. ,\ pty. (714)848·8706 835-3171 1SA) MlSSIONVlEJ O * 10 5CUllRT* xtras. Xlnt mech. cond. 0 On Most Models New tires. $5000. or best Mercedes Benz 250SL. '71 914 XI n l con d . 8 31·2880 4!_5-121 offer.494-96118 New paint, top, tires AM /FM . AC. make offer .. 70 Toyota Cornna. xlnt 74 Coupe de Ville, loaded, CoulJor 9933 immac. $.5.500 or ofr. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 54 O· 3 6 66 d y s ; e vs. 'Ell Cougar 351 J.spd, fast, 556-4418 new pnt & tires. SPoiler. l , UtV THAT '75 280Z. A JC, auto, AM /FM . hl-(ht blue. lm- mac. 49-1·8038 01 1!14 -4442 George etc.675-3302, 673-3434 ~1. party~! I' ll48·!1706 cond. 4 Or Autu Nt>w '72 280 SE 4.5 Auto/ Air. 'i:J914 2 o mlr & transm t Had1al Beautiful Cond. Always XLNTSHAPt:: 36M Ml. tires $12011 h~t otr Maintained. 644-5530 $4950 642·1858 bi5·02ll -'74 Uasher, 4 spd, sunroof, Autos, M•w 9800 Autos, H•w 9100 Auto1, M•w 9100 Autos, N•w 9800 AM IFM. tape deck. new ... Lu v · 1 runs good, must sell bst '72 SDV, orig. owner. Full ofr. 586-8523 pwr. Loaded. XJnt cond.1--------- $2750. Days 537,5082, Ford Eves 6444234. ---------...................... . ••••••••••••••••••••••• paint. gd mech cond. ijimiliii!iWllMIMMl ... iiiiiiiiliiiliiliWliililllilllliltllMliill~Miliiiiilliliililllililililililil .. ____ .. S?795 63t·:l69ti '75 Cad El Dorado Conv. Loaded & immac. $9500. 714-675-911 I ·~PHIL LONG OVER OUR COST OH THE FOUOWIHG NEWTOYOTAs COROLLA SPORT COUPE ................ TE51512773 COROLLA 4 DOOR WAGON ............ TE38060933 COROLLA 4 DOOR WAGON ............ TE38061191 COROLLA 4 DOOR WAGON ............ TE38062576 CORONA SRS COUPE . , .......... , ..... RT115004817 HILUX PICKUP ............................ RN23036198 HILUX PICKUP ....... SOUTHERM ..... RN23032614 HILUX PICKUP ..... ORAMGE ..... RN 23039212 HILUX PICKUP . . . . . COUMTY'S ...... RN 23033549 HILUX PICKUP .... # 1 ...... RN23033549 HILUX PICKUP ... . . . ...... RN 28033375 TOYOTA HILUX PICKUP . 7 •• 7 7. DEALER ..... 7 ••• RN 28046901 HILUX PICKUP ............................ RN 28044682 LANDCRUISER HARDTOP ................ FJ40229494 LANDCRUISER WAGON .................. FJ55062982 .. l!lil VW -111, good cond, must sell . $2000. Call '76 El Dorado, full Power, .J!J'i 4Ml AM /FM tape. firemist ORD Last \ W Hug milde, \\hi \\<ht convert. w / ctwoa mats, xlnt 111 /out. Call aft 5, 64 \ 2721 'Ii.II Baja Bui!. 1600 eng, Goon rnnd $600 /ofr. 8-li ~:1711 Volvo 9772 .........••...••..•..•• '11 VOLVO Brand new with aU th• th• standard luxury itMtS that you would ttxped. (1088901. s515000 Plus Tax & License MARQUIS MOTORS MISSION VIEJO 831-2880 495-1210 ORANGE COUNTY VOLVO F:XCLUSIVEL Y VOL VO Largest Volvo Dealer in Orange County! BUYorLEASE DIRECT hlue, extended warranty Sll.700. 496-706.<) '73 Cpe de Ville. 23.000 mi. gm vn yl top, lac pd. $4900. 1496-1541 l975SEDAN DeVILLE Private Pa rty. !li.995. 642·8191 642 9324 '69 Cpe. Deville, full Pwr, cruise control. Clean. $1375. 846-0205. .. ••• '°'"' l-•" -s. .. °'"""° ,, .... , At h•eA\AoC...ttt 7M-SW '76GRAHADA 4dr, PStPB. AM /FM, silver $3850. Aft 6pm 494-4044 Must sell leav'g '75 El Dorado. fabulous for India cood. High mi's 45,000. -. --L-D--8---h-- low price $6600. Must sell 73 T r o u.g a.m · quick. Loaded w /xtras. Loaded, new radials, am· Burgundy color w /wht mac. $3,300. 494-6474 top. New tires/brks. Pvt '74 Maverick. Xlnt cond. pty. Call 544-9392 days or low mi .. PS. PB, AC. 493-5010 eves/wknds. Stereo. 642-1442 eveR ·67 Co1;1pe de Ville, xlnt '70 Maverick. 302 cu inch. cond. 11)/0ul. M1;1st see to Auto. Gd steel belted appreciate. Asking $1700. radials, tr lr hitch, air 556-7792 shocks, $950. 898-2830 (2) '76 f1twd Brgms. 1 '74 Gran Torino, 40,000 mi, ~lue. 1 blk, both loaded & new radial tires. Priced ammac cond. 963-6156 low wholesale blue book. '69 COUPE De Ville, all 6'73-l1S8 aft 6 PM pwr, lntip·lopcond., new Mcn-ftick 9947 pnt. $1850. 548 2687 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---· •74 ELDO COUPE ·10 6 Cyl auto, radio, . mags, xlnt cond. Super Mauve Flrem1st Lacquer buy! 1195. 545·5973 eves with wh.ite Cabriolet tol> . ...;,,;.::;.__,;._ _____ _ [!".j'f!-, To'::1M~$5). 9e 9q 5ut ppe d . ~;:~·:;;··~:·:!~; -.A:__ -_{A: -wagon. Thlly loaded, im· 2025 S. Manchester 73 CPE •VILLE maculate cond. 548-4755 Anaheim 750-2011 Sparkling Ermlno White •60 Comet 6 cyl auto with Black Cabnol-top, . 'AAA • • 1974 VOLVO 80140 pwr. aeat & cruise radio, 40.""" ml. 1750. 164 SIDAM control. (991MCE). 751·5'776 or M8·2887 Automatic, pwr. steer· ~c95 ...._. 9952 Inf, alr cond., AM /FM ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• stereo & Immaculate •ee Mu.atang. Runs xlnt, 25 thruout ! (062KTO>. '71 CPI CS.VILLE mPC. 8 spd aUck. FM 8 OHL Y $4995 Copper Flrcmlat wlth track stereo. Fast. clean MARQUIS VOLVO White top. mntchlnK ln· & durable. 289 hp ena. MlSSION VlEJO terlor, rull pow~r & ll350 Ph642·7_809 __ _ , 1 31·21104'1·1210 c r u I s • c 0 n t r 0 1 · '67 MualAng, P/I, p /b, new (3MOYR>. tirtt. ba\l & P•lnl. Reblt 1800 ES Sptwgn, A /C, enc. Must 11ell, leavln& awreo, lo ml. idnt cond. ---~U:,~--..... 1 area.675·2Sll, 83WIM\or5'7~ '7~ l64E. 38,000 ml. Aut~1 eir, leather, AMl •'M cus. t8,'50. 84.S-73N '71 Faatba c k 151 Cleveland C'n& • auto, poal•trk, air. $2S&O. 831·1.Dl Leek! BRAND NEW CHEVY LUV 1/2 TON Pickup! ~···-~ ·~~- ~ No. 215460/0183 with radio. E78-14B tires. heater/defroster, mirrors, etc. Nows99 ONLY DOWN AND s99 ONLY MONTH! That's right' On approved credit only $99 down and only S99 month for only forty-eight months, Total cash pnce including tax and license is only S3699 Total deferred price is onty $4851. APR 14.37 BIG STOCJC NEW CHEVY LUY PICXUPS PRICED TO SELLI Trade your old vehicle now, paid for or not! HOWARD Chevrolet oo .. md~Sh. MIWPOD llACH fMMrlrffhlt_.' t1wJ 833-0555 r MILITARY PERSONNEL WELCOME BANK FINANCING O.A.C. 5 YEAR· 50,000 MILE SERVICE POLICY AVAILABLE ON ~NEW CARS! SERVICE OPEN 6 DAYS A WEEK! CREDIT UNIONS WELCOME! EARLE IKE SAYS. • • -COsia -M8sa's Lions Mark 50th Anniversary First Meeting Held at OC Fairgrounds on March 8, 1927 By CHERYL ROMO Of llM D••lr ~lltl Sl•lf They called Costa Mesa the ••gateway to the harbor" anil they called themselves Lions and they said the fundamental principle or Lionism is service. It was March 8, 1927 when the group first got together. Their charter night was held al the Orange County Fairgrounds, Costa Mesa. They numbered 21 and proudly called themselves, much likf' the proud lion, ·'the most prom. 1ent CONRAD SCHEAFER Lions Club President Lions Have Tamer, Twister Meetings a re held on Tuesday nl1hts and there's a ··uon Tamer" and a "Tail Twister'' lo keep Lions in lint'. Jim Henwood is the current "Lion Tamer" and it's hla Job to act as the officia l g r eeter and great paraphernalia keeper. The keeper of the peace is Tom Cherry who cracks the whip as the "Tail Twbter." His Job is to collect fines rrom wild Lions. Current club president fs Conrad Scheafer and Dr. E. B. Eastwood is put president and director. First vice president and second vice presi· dent are Eric Johnson and Jack Scott respetli vely. T weed Stone Is secretary and Tom Rea ls treasurer. Bulletin editor is Brad Schwarz and zone chairman is Al Ogden. Current directors of the Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor LJons Club are J im Gallacher, Lou Yantorn, P aul Brecht and Vern MlJls. Next elections wlll take place in April and new officers will be seated IA.June. men in Costa Mesa." Their memb ers included ranchers, a reed and grain man, a poultry fancier, bankers, doctors, shopkeepers, an attorney, a dentist, a postmaster, a pastor, a barber, a realtor and a garage man. highest hill in Costa Mesa he could see everything in the city -and could give you the "lowdown" on anyone. The first president was Dr. C.G. Huston, the local dentist, who served the group so well he was twice re· elected. He was nicknamed the "genial molar fixer" and it was said that because bis office was localed In the highest building a nd on the Lion Roy Davis, another charter member, acted as manager and cashier of the Costa Mesa Bank. He was· described as "careful and methodical and his desk is as clean and slick as an oyster in a bottle of castor oil.'' Leonard Daughenbaugh, also of Costa Mesa Bank, was rumored to "trip as wicked a Black Bottom as '&.HllTY • Lions Oub Code of Ethics To show my faith in tho worthiness of my vocation by in· dustrious application to the end that 1 may merit a reputation for quality of service. To seek success and to demand all fair remuneration or profit as my just due, but to accept no profit or success at the price or my 09.'n self respect lost because of unfair advantage taken or because of questionable acts on my part. To remember that in building up my business it is not necessary to tear down another's; to be loyal to my clients or customers and true to myself. Whenever" a doubt arises as to the right or ethics of my position or action towards my fellow men, to resolve such doubt against myself. To bold friendship as an end and not a means. To hold that true friendship exists not on account or the service performed by one to another but that true friendship demands nothing but accepts service in the spirit in which it ls given. Always to bear in mind my obUcalions as a citizen to my nation, my state and my communJty, and to give to them my unswerving loyalty in word, act and deed. To give them freely of my time, labor and means. To aid my fellow men by giving my sympathy to those ln dis- tress, my aid to the weak, and m)' substance to the needy. To be careful with my criticisms and liberal wlth my praise; to build up and not destroy, Lions International Objects To create and foster a spirit of understanding among the peoples of the wor1d. To promote the principles of good government and good citliensbip. To take an active Interest ln the civic, cultural, social and moral welt are of the com munlly. To unite lhe clubs ln the bonds or friendship, good fellowship and mutual W>derstanding. To provide a forum for the open discussion or all matters of public interest; provided, however, that partisan politics and sec- tarian religion shall not bo debated by club members. To ,ncourage acrvlce·mlnded men lo serve their community without personal flnanc:lal reword, and to encourage efficiency and promote bitb ethical 1tandardl ln commerce, industry, professions , public worts and private endeavors. ,. .. .~ . the best of them." Ray Wallace, who ran the Hi-Way Garage, was a ''darn good mechanic." Charles W. TeWinkle, the club's second president, was a "Costa Mesa landmark'' and the local barber, Uoyd Braddy, was accused. of having "a pink and white com· plexion that is the envy of many a bathing girl." Another Lion, Dr. J . W. Wherry, was said to "shun politics like a (See FOUNDERS on page 2) -------------------------..·' LIONS &a learJ al 1n1ce CLUB March 24, 1977 1976 Leader Top Speaker Jtatry J. Asian, immediate past president of Lions International, will be the featured speaker at the Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor Lions Golden Anniversary celebration tomorrow evening al the South Coast Plaza Hotel. Asian is the fifth Californian ever elected to serve aa international pre· sidenl, of the world's largest service club. He is an independent fruit packer and co-owner or ''Three H Ranches" in Kingsburg, Central California. He has been cited on several occasions for his outstanding contribution to the International service effort of Llonism. HarryJ.Allan 2 DAIL V PILOT FOUNDERS <From Page I) crippled grasshopper in a den of turkeys" and George Fair, the local druggist. was a frustrated novelist and a "good looker." Rev. Lyman Bayard, pastor of the Costa Mesa Community Church, led members In their weekly song services and once in awhile forgot where he was and started playing a hymn. Charles E. Dunn, a farmer wtlO lived at 22nd and Orange in Costa Mesa, was called "an active young man who takes an abiding interest in the Mesa and is doing everything in his power to help make it grow." ~ "" Lion ism Mea·ns Service L1onism is synonymous with ~ervice to the community. For half a century the Costa Mesa· Newport Harbor Lions Club has not only donated nearly a half-million hours of labor, but they also built the Luke Davis Field and grandstand in Lions Park, constructed the interior of the Boys Club gymnasium and sent a planeload of food and clothing to the Navajo Indi~ns. Edgar Spaulding, another Mesa "old-timer," was predicting in 1927 that the center or Costa Mesa would be Fairview Ave. and 19th Street and was trying to talk other Lions into purchasing land there Celebrating 32 years of Llonism In 1959 are from left: second presl· dent Charles Te Winkle and f1rat prH ldent Dr. C. G. Huston Lions have purchased seeing-eye dogs for the blind, financed a de- hc ate heart operation for a needy man and sponsored the Orange Coast College crew tearn on a trip to Great Britain. Ross Hostetler owned Costa Mesa Lumber Co. and Alvm E. Block had a poultry business on Newport Blvd. Emil Greener was the local cabinet maker whose "stuff was so good that one does not know if it was turned out by thefoctory or Emil." Whopping Menu Ordered For Big Lions Fish Fry The group also supports both the Boys and Girls Clubs, the Y.W.C.A. and gives scholarships each year wortt. rnor e than $2,000. Members are active ln community eye care and conducted an eye test program for school children for many years. Take 4,500 pounds of fileted fish, add 5,000 volunteer hours, add a dash of fun , simmer, throw in a parade and a carnival. Serves thousands for a whole weekend. What ts It? Dr. Frank B. Morrill, another charter Lion, was described as tell· ing "as good a story as Dr. Wherry''· and another citizen who "has in· finite faith in the future of the harbor ll 's the Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor Lions Club Fish Fry and it's happeningJune3, 4 ands. This year the event marks its 31st anniversary of serving the comm uni· ty. Over the years'the Lions have . district.'' We 're ~1he COST A MESA NEWPORT HARBOR LIONS CLUB On the 50th· year of excellent Community Service COSTA MESA CHAMBER of COMMERCE o ver 1000 alrong deVe lop ing Community- Busines• & lndiutry given more than $500,000 in ca~h to worthy projects for the betterment of the community. The money Is raised during the once-a -year fish fry. Thts year's fish fry commences at 5 Friday, June 3 at Lions Park. The parade begins at 10:30 a.m. Satur day, June 4, starting at Harbor Center, Costa Mesa, and proceeding two miles down Harbor Blvd. to 19th Street and Anaheim . In addition. Lions have purchased braille typewriters for the blind, bought glasses for needy children and contribute annually to the City of Hope and the Southern California Eye Institute. In previous years, Lions planted t rces in downtown Costa Mesa and painted the ftrst parking lines on the city's streets. TO COSTA MESA NEWPORT HARBOR LIONS CLUB honoring their 50th anniversary of outstanding service to our community THE CITY of COSTA MESA .. Started in 1946 . Bob Skiles Credited With Mesa Fish Fry One evening back in the spring of '46, the boys were meeting in the back of the old Welcome Cafe and talking about how lo raise money. H oward Gerrish was presiding and trying to keep the meeting or- derly when Bob Skiles, a Lions Club member who also happened to be an old carnival man, suggested a fish (ry and carnival. After much debate, and what could be called some heat, the board approved the plan, with the pro- vision that proceeds Crom the fish fry would be used to build a baseball field in Costa Mesa Park. Well, the first event may have been called "amateurish." The booths were described as rather sorry looking and "makeshift." But since the first Fish Fry more than one-half million doll ars has b een raised for community ac· tivities. But during its 31 years many unusual and interesting acti vities have occurn•d. One year the Lions built a Jail and had two young ladies dressed in bathing su1L'> U!lhcr prominent Costa civic leaders before "Judge'' D. C. MacKenzie who would demand a "buck" or would send them lo the "pokie." ln 1947, the group sponsored a frog jumping contest and a "balloon ascension " The frogs didn't really enjoy jumping that day and the "balloon blast" made headlines in the papers AccordUlg to "old timers'' this is the story The club secured a large balloon, a man sized dummy and some gas from the blimp base When the hour came for the great launch, the balloon took off toward the Back Bay, bar{'(y clearing lelephOn<' and electne "1rts d" the historic trip began Two weeks passed and no word. Then the club received a letter, postmarked in Kar\sas, from an irate farmer with a sad and serious complaint. He said the balloon and dummy descended while he, his horses and his mowing machine were hard at work. T h e ho r ses became frightened, ran through a fence and damaged mower, horses and the farmer's pride. He wanted to know what the Lions Club was going to do about it. When the letter was read aloud at one of the meetings, the members were in a state of panic Should they offer a settlement or risk being sued? The club was not incorporated al the time -and not insured, which meant any or aJJ the mem bers could be sued. Lion Theo Robins gave President Les Miller a 30 minute lec- ture about what to do A reporter for the Long Beach Press-Telegram called Miller to say he had written a feature story about the mishap but wasn't sure whf'thcr lo print the story because "1l wus a long way to Kansas." Finally, the truth about the balloon trip was revealed Some boys had found the dummy and balloon near the Back Bay and had contacted Lion Bob Skiles (whose name and phone numbci' were al· tached to the dummy) He gave them five dollars lo remain silent and with the help of Lion charter member Lloyd Braddy wrote the let· tcr and sent it to relatives in Kansas who mailed the "farmer's protest" to the club. Soon after, the group became in corporated as the Costa Mesa Newport Harbor Lions Club THROWING THE SWITCH Howard Gerriah, flrat Fl•h Fry prealdent, 111een In 1946 throwing the ·•witch for new ballpark llght1 at Lions Park. Group also donated two po .... l'Met•t•'"'8·•"4'•~_.bullt,...F191t Ft' pt00e9de. Thinday. March 24, 1977 DAILY PILOT S Congratulations to the Lions on SO memorable years. 90-D.A.Y BONUS 1 YEAR C.D. 2 Y2 YEAR C.D. 4 YEARC.D. 6 YEARC.D. We believe in community interest (too). We pay high interest on savings but that's not where our interest stops. Like the Lions, we care about the community. We like to think of Mariners as more than a savings and loan. We're a neighbor that cares. And caring is what the Lions Club is a'l about, too. So, here's to another 50 success ful, helpful years! Ccr11rtea1t1 of Jcl'(l\it rtQ1111<» '"'"! .11111.11 '"'"• '' rc-11Jl11n 1r tM p1inc11>3l 1'" 1thllra"" '""" '" nl.lturit) • .. Mariners &vi8-QS Fi§] ~ and l.ANln AssoclatlOn -.:· .-;:.: Newport BHch (Main Olllcel 1S15 Westclffl Drive (714) 642-4000 Newport BNch (Bayside Cenlerl 1024 Bays•do Ori ve (714) 642-4000 leguna Betch (Corner of Fo1es1 Ave ) 310 Glonncyre SI roe( (714) 494 7506 ' 4 DAIL V PILOT . Thursday, March 24.1t77 FISHY JAIL . . .Presidents · Concern of Growth Past presidents of the Costa Mesa· ~ewport Harbor Lions Club have included mayors, judges doctors and businessmen who ha v~ watched the growth of the harbor city and have contributed to that growth. They include: Dr. C.G. Huston (1927-30), Charles TeWinkle (1930-31), Charles A. Dunn (1931·32) Everett Rea· (1932·33), Leroy Ar{. dcrson (1933-34 >, Henry Abrams (1934·35), Henry Foord ( 1935-36) Alvin L Pinkley (1936-37), NM'. Crawley (1937-38), H~rold Grauel (1938-39), Theo Robins (1939·40) Heinz Kaiser (1940·41), I • Les Steffensen 0941-421, DJ. Dodge (1942-43), Gregory Gorby (1943-44), Do1:1glas Ward (1944-45 ), Howard Gerrish (1945·46 ), Leslie Miller {1946·47), Bertren I. Smith (1947-48), Gus Beach (1948·49 ), Joe Carver (1949-50), Also Arlie Swartz ( 1959·51 > William E. Lord (1951-52>, Basil Peterson (1952-53), First "city Jail" at an early Fish Fry. Prominent citizens were carted off to the "pokey" and fined a "buck"\ D. C. McKenzie acted aa the first Judge and Olga Gravel was the honorary chief of pollce. Donald Dungan (1953-54), Ray Knapp and Walt Miller (1954-55) Bruce Martin (1955·56), Al Ogden {1956·57), Judd Sutherland (1957-58) Nate Reade (1958-59), Aubrey t'. THANK YOU COST A MESA-NEWPORT H ARBOR LIONS CLUB FOR 50 YEARS SERVICE Mag gour next 50 gears be as successful as the first ~ . llUEll \J!!Y-DTDRS •RITl•l-1 BC.:ICI\ • OPEL • J.IGL',1R • 7'RJU.\IJ1/I • .-JC'S'/'J.\' • .\W Buick-Opet: {7ll) 9i9·2500. British l.l·~l.1111\: (71-l) !li'.l li~t1 29!5 llABBOB BLVD., COSTA MESA . (See PRESIDENTS on page 9°) • Congratulations to the Costa Mesa- N ewport Harbor Lions Club! Celebrating their 50th Anniversary! Let Us Be Your Ba nke~llb CITIZENS BANK :: E OF COSTA MESA 1 111 r H11rbor ot Baktr • 1714) 9794200 • Member FDIC Benklng Hou11: Monday. Thursd.'Y - 9 10 5 , fndlly-9106 • Satunhiy-9to I HELPFUL HELPINGS Thureday, March 24, 1077 DAILY PILOT S Lions Club Saluted On Birth On May 19, 1927 the newly-formed Costa Mesa Uons were saluted with a apeclal edition of the Costa Mesa Herald, now the Daily Pilot. Local merchants Jolned together as well·wlshers and advertised 1n the section. Some of the ads were from the businesses of fellow !Jons ·auch as C. W. TeWinkle's Hardware. Store and George Gardner's Costa Mesa Feed Store where you could. buy "Just the kind of feed you want for your baby chicks.'' The Yost Broac,tway Theatre on Broadway at Fourth in Santa Ana featured .. vaudeville every day•• and movies like Clara Bow In "Rough House Rosie'' and Beba Daniels in "Senorita." Other items upcoming on the mar· quee were Vera Reynolds in 4'Tba Little Adventuress'', Jack Mulhall in "See You in J ail'', Leatrice Joy in "The Clinging Vine'' and Jetta Goudal in ''Fighting Love." Lion T. F . Ham's Produce Co. was featuring four cubes or Maid o' Clover Butter in a package and Platt Auto Service urged the group on with the call, "Hey! Lions Hey! Roarl Roar! Roar!" Thousands of hours spent by lions Club mem· bers and volunteers produce 9,000 fish dinners sold during the 18 hours meals are served during the Fish Fry weekend. Next fry is June 3, 4 and 5. Radio Den in Santa Ana was say. ing that the "Radiola is a proven success •.• we will be pleased to show you the best there is in radio re· ceiving sets and accessories." Congratulations Lions 5 0 REWARDING YEARS for OF COMMUNITY SERVICE EVERY MUSICAL INSTRCIMENT KNOWN TO THE HUMAN EAR ••• MUSIC "WE HAVE A STOCK FROM BACH TO ROCK" . COSTA 1'1ESA. eomer "-Poet & tt.tlor. 642~t or 646()271 FOUl'fTJll!'f VAU.EY. BrooldluniC • Ttllat. one blc. M. ol&D. ~· 96U733 from H.J.GARREIT ~ .. . H.J.GARRETT fURNITUR . . ,, PROFESSIONAL Open Mon. 2215 HARBOR BLVD. INTERIOR DESIGNERS Thurs. & Fri. Eves. COSTA MESA, CALIF.' 6 DAIL V PILOT ' Thursday, March 24. 19n FISH FRY PLANNERS OF 1951 Fish Fry Memories INVOLVED CITIZENS Lions Club Board of Directors from left facing Stevens, Walt Miiier, Bud Mears, Howard Ger- camera: Ken Hiii'-Les Miiier, Biii Lord, R. D. rlsh , Dr. Basll Peterson and Forrest Paul. Planning an early Fish Fry are from left: Charles TeWlnkle, first mayor of Costa Mesa, and Walt Miiier, former city coun- cilman. Flaherty, Joe Carver, Arlie Schwarz, Don BEST WISHES ON YOUR SOth ANNIVERSARY BOB . DOM.R.ACITl~PAST. PRHIOINTI TO THE COST A MESA-NEWPORT HARBOR LIONS CLUB ON YOUR SOth ANNIVERSARY! (We know how Important a 50th anniversary can be ••• we hod one ourselves ... six years ago •• .J KEEP UP YOUR FINE WORK! · . .Theodore ROBINS FORD 2060 HARBOR BLVD. 6 4 2 0 0 I 0 COSTA MESA • - ·- LEGION HALL ci 18TH STREET > 3rd & 4th FISH FRY -1948-49 ...J II) .... BASE-~ a: 0 w BALL w a.. > PARK a: ~ «( .... w X'. "' z a: ~ «( 1950 TO P,RESENT w a.. % 27 FISH FRY EVENTS «( z «( CENTER STREET D ~ LIBRARY B Mao shows past Fish Fry locations beginning with the first event along Newport Avenue to present location In Lions Park. FROG SERVERS The Alexander twins aupervlsed the frog jumping contest and acted as jailers for the second Fish Fry under the direction of Bob Skiles. The event was cancelled when the frogs refused to jump. HAPPY 50th ANNIVERSARY TO THE COSTA MESA LIONS . CLUB ' SOUTH COAST PLAZA SOUTH COAST PLAZA VILLAGE SOUTH COAST PLAZA HOTEL Thursday. March 24. 1977 DAILY PILOT 1 CONGRATULATIONS ... COST A MESA-NEWPORT HARBOR LIONS CLUB ON YOUR FIFTIETH "Our Reputation Is Your Guarantee" 2828 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 546-1200 . , ·- 8 DAILY PILOT Thursday, March 24, 1977 FISH FRY 1954 An unidentified Miss Mermaid of 1954 reigned over the Lions Club Flah Fry and la seen standing In front of a car donated by local Ford dealer Theodore Robins. ONYDUR5D™ We join your tnany • • supporters ID saymg THANK YOU for a haH century of invaluable service • • to our conunun1ty ~~, .CAL'S CAMERA STIMULATES young mlnd1 1770 NEWPORT BlVD. COSTA MESA 014) 646·9383 HOURS: MOH. THRU SAT. f ·5:30 A great place for kids. Saturdays DAILY PILOT lnlhf MesG-Harbor Lions Have Moved Around The Costa Mesa·Newport Harbor Lions today hold their Tuesday even· ing meetings in the Holiday Inn But the group's meeting places ha,·e not always been so decorous. The first meeting pl.ace was in the clubhouse of the ladies' Friday Af. lernoon club a nd the women took on the job of feeding the Lions on Tuesdays. In 1933, the group built their own clubhouse, just east of Pink's Drugstore, which is now the location of the Shamrock Tavern on Newport Blvd. The club's m embership had dropped but the group carried their own brownbag lunch and filled the 10 by 10-foot structure. The clubhouse was sold in 1937 for $200 and the service club moved its meetings to Heinz Kaise1 's Bayshore Restaurant at Dover and Coast High\\ ay (now the location of Wal Wright's lee Cream Parlor>. Later meetings were held al the site of the Welcome Cafe on Ne" port Dlvd. near Mesa Drive. Members complained about the food but it was here that the plans for the first rish fry were hatched. Other places Lions met were· Har rison 's Cafe at 17th Street and Orange (now gone), The Royal Fox at Harbor and Wilson (later became the Hudson House and is now gone), Hofbrau at 17th and Placentia, the Women's Cl ub at 18th and Anaheim, the American Legion Hall on 18th Street and the Mesa Verde Country Club. In recent years the group has met at the Hal ecrest Club on K1llybrookc, the Costa Mesa Golf and Country Club and the South Coast Plaza Hotel. Ate you loGling for a certain something you can't find? Then you need a Daily Plot dassified ad. tt' s the cpckest way to reach people al along the Orange Coast. Just cal 642-5678 and a friencly classified ad-visor_. ~ you creote on inexpensive, but effective, sales me5$CJ9e. Payment is eosy, too. Your cretit is good with us. You can chcirge your ad. Or. put it on your Moster Charge of BcdAmericc:rd.. 642-5678 DAILY PILOT We At COIT Would Ulce To Extend Our lest Wishes To The COSTA MESA LIONS CLUB On l'Mir Very SPECIAL SOTH ANNIVERSARY. Continued Success A11d Leadership In The Yean To Come!!! NOW OFFERING You THE BEST OF BOTH ••• DRAPERY & STEAM CLEANING CARPET GUARANTEED PERFECT••• IM WR ITIMG THAT YOUR DRAPERIES. IF CLEAMAILE. WILL IE RETURMID I M PERFECT COMDITIOM. CLEANING 20°/o OFF ~-: n With This Coupon ~+; -l\ & Mlnlftllft Order /:-,~? ~~ of $]5.00 . .,: ~ .... ~ Offer Expires 5/ 1 /77. P tf' • f: WITH T.. ~ c~:6'~1 ADDED / ~.~Y NOTECTIOH / '-\,.;..; OF: <.._ - ~cotchgard· ~ IUHD CARPET PROTECTOR QUALITY & Service You Can Expect From the "World's Largest" Esn~.:r:O.c1 540-1366•642-0270 ·,, ·. m jCDIT ~. ~orecr=-~c ..... 1702 HEWPOllT IL VD. At 17ffl St. COSTA MESA SeM119 an ot Oranoe eo.intv RADIO DISPATCH&> TIUCICS • Lions building a fence for Costa Mesa Park with first Fish Fry pro· ceed$ In 1946 PRESIDENTS (From Page 4) Oliger (1959-60), Delmar Mangels (1960-61), Donald K. Butts (1961-62), Dr. Marty Dales (1962·63), Rollo McClellan (1963-64), Carleton Mears (1964·65). Steve Per· rin ( 1965·66), Bradley Schwarz (1966-67), Jim Phillips (1967·68), Dr. Ron Craig (1968-69), Tilak Lall (1969· 70), Dominic Raciti (1970·71), Carl Henrikson (1971·72). Hank· l-Iornsveld (1972-73), Edward Maguire (1973-74), Louis Yantorn (1974·75), Dr. Elton Eastwood (1975·76> and Conrad Schearer, current president. Lions Ranks Prominent Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor Lions have boasted many prominent members of the community in their ranks. The first mayor oC Costa Mesa Charles Te Winkle and recent mayor Dom Raciti have both been Lions Club presidents. Other Costa Mesa mayors and Lions are Art Meyers and Alvin Pinkley. More than one half of all the city councilmen have also served as members of the service club. COSl'A MESA ANAHE.lM • AleN1E HU . .LS MAU. '!!!ur!day. March 2 .. , 1977 DAIL v·PU..OT g lions Keep Cheer During War, Depression Economic depressions are hard on everyone and the Lions Club had its share of hardships during World War U . Membership and attendance seriously dropped and the future or the club was in jeopardy. As 1943 dawned, the dwindling Lions were meeting at Heinz Kaiser 's Bays hore restaurant (Dover and Coast Hwy.) and were listening to Kaiser tell stories about his experiences in Germany. He usually concluded his tales with, "My Got, people in this coun· try don't know how lucky they are." When attendance dropped to only 12 or 13 at each meeting, members became alarmed enough to stop listening to Kaiser and to start dis· cussing how to save the club. Fortunately, attendance began to pick up. Later when Kaiser sold his cafe and became an Orange County supervisor, the group moved to the Welcome Cafe on Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. For the "older'' members, the Welcome Cafe has many memories: it was the place where the plans for the first Fish Fry were formulated and it was also the place where the members thought· the food was so bad, they tried to get the owner to join the club. · The club moved after one member compared a meal of short ribs to shoe leather. During their stay at the Welcome, Lions worked together to help the community, but during some of the· lighter moments they enjoyed themselves as well. Who could forget the time Sammy Sheridan presented Charley TeWinkle with a nicely wrapped package or horse manure with a note that said, "Sorry ·c harley, the horse got away?" Or the time Doug Ward stood up to announce an upcoming Harbor High football game and Joe Carver hit him in the eye with his water bouton· niere? Or the anonymous Uon who with dry-cells and a Model·T coil gave the hot seat to a hastily rising member? Or Bert Smith trying to cut bis de· corated birthday cake only to find it was a decorated metal cake pan? No one will ever forget the serious discussion about the Kansas farmer who threatened to sue the club because its hot-air balloon caU.Sed bis horses to run away with his mowing· m achine. Oh, for the good old days at the Welcome Cafe ••• 10 DAIL V PILOT LIONS FOLLIES Thursday, Man:h 24, 1977 Willing to do anything to raise money tor a good cause, Lions performed at Newport Harbor High School during the 40's. From left: pon Stevens, Ario Hayward, Ted Bolte, Bert Smith, Rollo McClellan, Ken Hale, Joe Carver, Gil Brown, Bud Mears and Ray Oanlger. GREETINGS: FELLOW LIONS FOR . • • 50 years of Achievements -through the years you have helped build a fine community. EUGENE 0 . BERGERON Batt,-~~ Funeral Home • 17•1 Superior Avenue • Costa Mesa. Calif. • Phone Me-2424 3520 E. Coast Hwy. • Corona del Mar, C811f. • Phone 673-9450 FROM: COSTA MESA NEWPORT HARBOR LIONS CLUB ON 50fh YOUR We recognize your community involvement in helping others -may it continue in the years to come. Since 1954 Stole lkenae Humb.r 21952l I I COST A MESA . NEWPORT HARBOR LIONS CLUB C ongra lulatio11s on 50 years of dedicated service HAPPY · 50th ANNIVERSARY TO COST A MESA-NEWPORT LIONS CLUB "3 STORES TO ui----"'11 SE RVE YOU 2300 HARBOR BLVD. AT WILSON from The Merchants at HARBOR CENTER THE OFFICIAL STAGING AREA FOR THE LIONS CLUB .ANNUAi.: BIG PARADE IN COSTA MESA JUNE 4th Thursday, Marcil 2'4, 1977 DAIL V PILOT 11 MISS MERMAID Marguerite Marsaudon, current Miss Mermaid and Miss Costa Mesa, Is seen with Lion Steve Perrtn, the club's pa st president and longtime beauty contest chairman. The next pageant will be conducted jointly with the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce and will be held May 5 at the South Coast Plaza Hotel. Our best wishes to the Lions Club on their 50th Anniversary. "SALES •SERVICE *LEASING . People are discovering that quality, selection, and excellent service don't have to cost more. Whether you purchase a new or pre-owned Cadillac, or decide to lease one, come in today and let one of our Matter Dealer specialists help you. ' ... -· - 12 DAIL V PILOT ........ ... ..... . Thursday, March 24. 1977 . .. , ,. ,._ t' ..... •• . . ··-· •.;I.,,,,, ...... t .... • • • ••••••• t • ' ~ ..._I •• II • .. ... .,,,,,ft> .. . ...... \t •• -"\''.'. •• • • .. ... edwanls cinemas SALUTES FIFTY YEARS OF COSTA MESA LIONS CLUB SERVICE • • • We're youngsters; We've only been in business forty-six years! Continuing in the tradition of presenting the finest in first ~ fihns, we off er this preview ·for your viewing pleasllfe: Edwards Lido, Bristol, Viejo " ... one of the world's , grHt love stories." : • -Ru Rttd, N.Y. Dally N~w1 . ,,- ' '. ·' ART CARNEY ~ -; ' LILY TOMLIN ""' APRIL 1st. l-Tif_tt '3fl. ml# Edwards -1n~0 ...-Cinema and .a.-®--Costa Mesa U9' ~ MARCH 25th. Edwards ·cinema West APRIL 1st. "DEMON SEED" Julie Christie Hunginton & Bunt. 'twin MARCH 30th. "ARNIE HALL'' Woody Allen "AIRPORT '77" James Stewart Lee Grant "BLACK SUNDAY" Robert Shaw Newport · A~RIL 1st. SHOWING SPRINGTIME "THE HERETIC" Exorcist II "THE CAR" James Brolln Linda Blair-Richard Burton ''ROLLERCOASTER'' George Segal-Richard Widmark ''NEW YORK/NEW YORK" Liza Minnelll-Robert Deniro "OTHER SIDE OF MIDNIGHT" Susan Saradon·John Beck 1 Walt Disney's "JUNGLE BOOK" Francis Ford Coppola's COMING CHRISTMASTI ME ''CLOSE ENCOUNTERS Of The TmRD KIND'' ''TELEFON'' ''APOCOLYPSE NOW" "HERE COMES MR. JORDAN" • L. 7'l, NO. 83, .. SECTIONS, 50 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, MARCH 241 19n I \ hy Radar Failed to Detect UFOs Radar specialists, intrigued by two intenseJy glowing objects tbat shot across Southland skies in lS seconds Tuesday, today of- fer differing opinions on why no scanner screens picked them up. Despite the fact numerous wit- Jlesses oo the ground spotted the streaking UFOs between 3: 15 a.m . and 3:30 a .m ., from Hunt- ington Beach to Sacramento, nothing registered on radar. * * * 1Theories Offered On UFOs By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Ot IM D•llY Pilot Stoll Chances are no one will ever solve the mystery of what the two objects seen rocketing through the sky Tuesday, really were, but two theories were offered today. A spokesman for the, North American Air Defense Command <NORAD> at Colorado Spnngs. Colo., said a computer check at the Space Defense Center at Cheyenne Mountam offered one early today. He said two fragments of Sov- iet satellites r e-entered the earth's atmo!:iphere ;.ibout 3 a.m. (E ST) but over the Atlantic Ocean. "There is always a chance of a 'skip'," explained NORAD In- formational Services Officer Lt. Gordon Brady. He explained the skip designa- tion is precisely what 1t sounds like, the physical efrect of skip- ping a flat pebble across a water surface such as a s tream or pond. The pieces of debris of Soviet Cosmos 867 and Cosmos 898 could ~ve struck earth's dense at- • mospbere, then rebounded orr at . 're-entering it again on the Pacific Ocean side of the glohc However, the lime element!> in vo1ved are a hllle orr. Lt. Bradv noted, smce th<' objects wen• seen Tues day in Caltforn1 a b etween 3 15 and 3.30 am. <PST). •·we r eceived information from our weather people two weeks ago t hat wc arc m the midst of a major meteor show<'r 1whicb is due to end about Apnl 20th," he added. Despite the fact five Hunt. ington Beach policemen, alrhne personnel. California H1ghwlly Patrol officers and other" who saw the two objects. deny the~ were meteorites, th1:; would lend support to another theory Griffith Observatory Director J)r. Edward Krupp cautiously suggests it was D meteor shower, or partiaJ s hower, or perhaps a rare double meteor. "That w as no meteor '·• declared Huntington Beach Police Officer Dan McKerran after the eerie si,::htmgs. Many who saw the UFOs· described them as traveling • the same speed and not on a downward, arc-like traJectorv They seemed to fly stra1J(h l. unswervmgly, over the earth's s urface and maintained a steady formation flight, the w1tncss£'s agreed. Nothing was detected on radar screens atthetime. "Well, it's a real Heinz 57 Varieties mix of ideas,'' con- ceded NORAD's Lt. Brady. Uranium Missing PHILADELPHrA (AP) A western Pennsylvania nuclear facility must account for missing uranium in its scheduled Apnl in- ventory or 1t will be ordered closed , says t h e Nuclear Regulatory Commission. An un djsclosed amount of e nriched uranium 235 was not accounted for in the February mvcnlory for the Babcock & Wilcox Co 's plant in Apollo, a s uburb of P1tl:;burgh. SNOW CAUSES . I 7ROOP SHIYI' WATERTOWN, N.V. CAP) - Wblch haa the morE> pcrfecl weather -Al aska or the W atett.own arta of upstate New York? For the mmtary. the blluard of •11•1 more than six feet or tl'IOW provided the answeT. So, tbeArmy and Air Force dc- clded to lhln the un• winter tninina ftx 20,000 troop.41 from Alaska to Camp Drum, 1171 Gov. llu&b Cari1. Many !actors would be in- volved in failure to detect the mysterious celestial visitors on radar, it was pretty well agreed. The nature of the ob1ects and the nature and sophis tication of . the radar equipment involved are the key elements. Richard Reed, veteran radar expert and manager of Hughes Aircraft Company's Radar Division in Fullerton, said the speed of the UFOs would be a de· finite factor, no matter their nature. One shaken Huntington Beach policeman piloting the depart- ment's helicopter when be saw the two silvery-white sky- streakers, patrolman Jim Lail said 10,000 miles per hour wouldn't be an off-base guess. "The radar might not even pick them up at all if they were traveling at a speed that great unless it had special devices," Reed suggested today. He said the size or the objects -their mass and density - would also be a factor in detec· tion by ground air defense and air traffic control instaJlalioas. "Generally, radar will pick up just about anything, .. Reed con· tinued, .. but radar is divided into what we call cross-sections and the samller an object ls, the harder it is to detect.'" · "Re-entering space vehicles usually show up on radar," Reed said. If two fragments of Soviet Cosmos space satellite compo- nent which struck earth's at- mosphere over the AUanllc Ocean and perhaps skipped and re-entered over the Pacific Coast were involved as the Air Force By BB Zoning Board s ucgest s, tha t could be tht: answer. Spokesmen a t the North American Air Defense Command Center (NORAD> in Colorado Springs, Colo., said today the pieces were not the vehicle or platform, but very small parts. StilJ another possible explana· lion which should enchant space buffs and science fiction fans is (See RADAR, Page .AZ> Bo Ille for Mentally Disturbed Rejected AP Wlreplloto A request to operate a board and care home for six mentally disturbed women in Huntington Beach was rejected Wednesday afternoon before a standmg room only crowd in city council cham- bers. 'Get Off My Cycle' A unanimous decision by the . city's board or zoning adjust- ments to turn down the center was greeted by sustained ap- plaus~ from residents opposed to the facility. A lot of people think motorcycles <1r e d eath machines says Ed Nievaard. a motorcycle safety instructor in Ed'. monds, Wash., so Nicvaard says he's tryrng to get death off the motorcycle. To illustrate his point, he rode with his "friend'' around his neighborhood. The request to operate the 24- hour home was made by Gloria Bray at a residence at 17591 F lintstone Lane near Slater A venue and Springdale Street. Minimum Pay Boost Of 20 Cents Urged Miss Bray has the option to ap- peal the decision in 10 days. She said Wednesday she didn't know if she would. Jim Palin, asaistant planning director who wa s acting chairman of the board of adjust- ments, outlined several reasons why he voted against the project. He said the Orange County Health Department is at fault tor not doing its homework m can· vassing the neighborhood in ad- vance. WASfUNGTON tAPJ The Carter administr a tion r ecom mended today that the minimum wage be mcreased 20 cents an hour as of JuJy 1. 50 cents short of thC' proposal by the AFL-CIO. The Adm1rustration also pro· posed that the minimum wage be tied in the future to a set percen· tage of average m anufactunng wages. Labor Secret ary Ray Marshall told a Hou!:ie Labor Standards subcommittee that the Carter ad- ministration proposes increasmg the $2 30 an hour minimum wage tn $2 50 an hour The Administration alc;o pro posed that beginning 1n July 1978 and each year thereafter the mm1mum wage be set at 50 per- cent of the average straight· time. hourly wages of manufar tunng workers. This proposal as known as mdexmg The AFl..rCIO recommended a S2·an-hour minimum wage am· Driver Dies In Fiery County Auto Crash c;atifomia Highway Patrol of- ficers are investigating a fiery auto crash that killed an uniden- tified driver early this morning in county territory between Fountain Valley and Santa Ana. Officers said the car. whose male driver was the only occu- pant. rolled over and burned. An autopsy is being performed to determine exactly how the vic- tim, listed as John Doe. died Identification efforts will be made through dental charts, a CHP spokesman said. Offi cers said the accident oc- c ur r ed on Harbor Boulevard north of Goodale A venue near the Santa Ana River crossing. Even Hippos Wouldn't llelp SACRAMENTO (AP) -One legislator recommended imPort· ina bipp()potamusea to 1101 ve the problem. but it wouldn't work, said another, becauie lhe pesky HydrU111 plant isn't worth eating But somethln« must be donf', As~emblyman Eugcme Chapple declared Wednesday, because ot the aquatlc p]ant. tbal bas Inf t· ed Lake E1lls near Marysville. Chapple'• bllt ls aimed al fadlcatinl the plant before 1t satn.1 more ol a f ootbold u1 • Clllf omla wat.ert.i mediately upon enactment of the bill Y.1th indexing beginning .January iins at 60 percent of the average manufacturing worker's wage Labor lobby1sL-; m the crowded hearing room appeared shocked by the Marshall proposals and one lobbyist for the garment workers remarked that "labor might have backed the wrong candidate," a reference to I a bor's s upport of President Carter. The AFL CIO spokesman said that when s ubcommittee chairman John Dent left the White House after a meeting with Carter on Wednesday, he had the 1mpress1on Carter agreed to an mdexmg level of 55 percent of the manufacturing wages The labor "pokesman said Carter 's top C'conomic adviser Charles Schultze "1~ the guy v. ho shot it down.· Marshall said the Administra- tion 's proposal would eli minate the wage d1fferent1al between em ployes who have been covered in stages by the.• mm1mum wage act. He said the Adm101strat1on "carefully reviewed" the pro- posals by organized labor which closely parallel those recom- mended by Dent. He said the Carter administration "believes that in light of current economic condition.CJ, a somewhat different approach is warranted at this time." Under the administration pro- posal based on its economic pre· dictions. the minimum wage would be $2.50 on July 1, $2.73 on July of 1978 and $2.92 on July, 1979. The AFL-CIO had testified earlier that the minimum wage would have to be $2.65 right now to cover the mnation thal bas re- duced the value of the dollar since the last series of staggered increases in the minimum wage began. "If an operation of this type 1s not acceptable to the neighborhood, we shouldn't force it on the neighborhood,·• he said He also said that the site, which would have been across the str eet from Hope View Elementary School, was not chosen properly and that the ap- plicant had not undergone proper training for care of patients A supporter of Miss Bray said, "Santa Ana and other cities arc full of mentally ill people from Huntington Beach. Thal city doesn't take care of its own." Dennis Carlson, coordinator for continuing care services for the Orange County Department of Mental Health, said there is a need for mental care homes in Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley and Westminster. He said that care m a home at. mosphere helps speed the re- covery of patients. Opponents said they amassed nearly 1,000 signatures against the facility They said they feared property values would fall. t hat the neighborhood was not a suitable place for such an operation and Power Line Project Fmished in Valley Completion of a $310,000 pro- ject to place power lines under· ground in a section or Fountain Valley was announced Wednes- day by Southern California Edison Company spokesman Jim Kervtedy. The six·month operation along Brookhurst Street between the Sa n Diego Freeway and Brookt\urst Street eliminates poles and wire from 3.200 feet of the busy thoroughfare. Less is More Water Cut Aida Beer &des SAN DIEGO (AP) -Coruiervina water is helping San Diego restaurants rin& up sales of beer and wfne. opcraton say. In recent weeks, a growing number have served drinking woter only on request. "It used to be a person who was a little bit thirsty used to take another sip of water," sa1d Timothy Burke. a restaurant owner. "Now he starts thlnklnl in terms of another beer.•• All over San Diego, a survey shows that win and be r drlnkiD.I iJ up as water consumption as a result of the t'a di'ouah Cdndi goes down. they were concerned for the safe- t y and welfare of both the children and patients T hey also objected to a com mercial venture beinl} placed in the midst of a residential neighborhood. Homeowners had apparently APWl ....... to INDIA'S NEW LEADER Morarjl Desai, 81 Desai Takes Charge, May End Russ· Tie NEW DELm. India (AP) - Morarji Desai. 81-year-old leader of the successful fight to unseat the government of Indira Gandhi, was sworn in today as India's fourth prime minister and immediately s ignaled a possible end to this country's special links with the Soviet Union. At a news conference after tak- ing the oath of office, Desai said the 1971 lndian·Soviet friendship treaty "must not come in the way of our friendship with any other state ... We won't have any special relations with any coun- try." Desai, a veteran of the Indian independence movement and a former leader of Mrs. Gandhi's Congress party, said his govern- ment would adopt a foreign policy of "proper nonalign- ment." In reference to his govern· ment's future nuclear policy, the new prime minister said, "We do not believe in atomic weapons at all." "We don't know whether it 1s necessary to have nuclear ex- plosions for peaceful purposes. If it is pol necessary. it s hould n•ver be done," he added. Claiming "peaceful purposes," India set off a nuclear explosioo in 1974 that disturbed many Western nations. It Js building a reprocea•ing plant capable of extracting plutonium, a nuclear bomb material, from spent reactor fuel. Asked tr at a1e 81 be was fit to baar the heavy burdens of lead- in 1 the world's seeond JDOSt populous nation, D at quipped: "My aae ls better than youn. Ac- cordlnJ to the EnaU•h calendar l 'm onlY 19.'' He added he would qUlt tho prime rn.in.iltenhlp "lbo di.)' l I• 1 I am oot pb.,yalcallv fit, I'll vacate lmmodlatelJ, even tc>mor· ro . I'm no& •otna to atay a mo. m t IQnleT than J 'm needa4. But what doe. qe matter! Jt'& tbo IJlirtt tba1 mat&era. •• t organized a campaign against th e proposed center las t weekend. Caty Council members said they w e re besi eged with telephone calls. City Councilwoman Norma (See HOME, Page A2) Physician Charged In Death Westminster police charged Dr. William Baxter Waddill of Anaheim Wednesday in the strangulation death of a one- hour-old infant at Westminster• Community Hospital March2. Police Department ad- ministrative aide Earl Graham alleged that Dr. Waddill, 43, at- tempted to perform a saline abortion on the 71 2-month old fetus at the hospital. Graham asserted a live baby girl was delivered and taken to the' nursery for life-sustaining care. The infant died about one houR after birth, he added. Police said they fil ed murder charges after a three-week in- vestigation into the case in which - hospital personnel were ques- tioned . The District Attorney's Office obtained a warrant carrying $.50,000 bail for Dr. Waddill on Wednesday night Deputy District Attorney Bob Chatterton said that Waddill had agreed to surrender lo face ar· raignment today in West Orange County Municipal Court. Orange County Coroner's Of- fice Chief lnvesl1gator Jim Beisner said the infant died due to "asphyxiation caused by manual strangulation " Wes tminster Community Hospital Administrator Richard LeGrand indicated Waddill is not a hospital employe but "he had medical staff privileges since 1971." WaddHI, a gynecologist and ob- stetrician, has medical offices in Huntington Beach a nd Westminster. Contacted today. Dr. Waddill (See DOCTOR, Page A2) Or:~:Cl2::st Weather Chance of showers and possible thunders howers tonight and Friday with c hance or m easurable rainfall 40 percent. Lows tonight 46 to 52. Highs Fri- day in upper 50s. INSIDE TODAY Mo11 of 11owhem Oronge Count11 could g•t by wtth<>ut water /or onllJ o couple "411& if pl~lfnt3 wtre 1evcrred 1>11 o natural dUo.cn. The J')ft'fl~ atote of water IMppliu tn thi$ faat·groiwing ~is dttolltd on Po0t AIO. hdex AIY-~ .\14 Allll\.allllln •> .,_ ~-tl ,,..,." .. 1 '-M l•'tlll 111 Mlll~lll'-ti c.a11r ... 111a "'· u M••'f,•' "-' A4. U ~•Ill• U 14 OH c-.tY o\1' C-k• Cl .... • 11'4 Crti.... AU Sytvlll'wtfr •t ~Ht<" All ~ 0>4 u.t.nai ,_. A.t ltttll 111.,.,..._ •• •llMft.tl-..., TMn1'"91 It """"""• ..... ,,..,.,, ..., ...,_... e!W..ltla+' M laWMl•IM .. Wwttt...... M II r .Approv ·Rezoning A roae chant~ o~n1 the door for 7' new boma acattued over 312 billy acrca near O'Neill Park won the unanimous approval of Oranae County aupervison Wed· nesday. Jn 1rantin1 the change ot tone from agricultural to residential the Board or Supervisors reject- ed a plannm1 commission re- com mendatioo. Comnussaoners said the area was not ready for development because of inadequate road BC· fess, fire safety and sewer Jae iii ties. ·: The new homes, proposed by the Coto de Caza Development Corporation, wall be southeast of the park and reached via Live Oak Canyon Road. Murray Storm, an assistant director or the county Environ- mental Management Agency, J1aid Wednesday the road is sub- standard and already has a high rate or accidents But spokesmen for the de- veloper contended the limit of 75 homes would not add to traffic problems. In addition, they said, an ex- tension of Alicia Parkway will provide alternate access at about the time or shortly after the new homes are built. But Supervisor Ralph Diedrich won support from fellow board members to ask county staff members to see if fees could be assessed the developer to help build that road And he said this would be a good lime to see if similar pro- visions could be imposed on other developments when they in- crease conge:.t1on in new areas. In addition to the 762 acres re· zoned Wednesday, the Coto de Cata area ancludes another 400 acres that were rezoned earlier for development As part of Wednesday's action provisions were included in part of the area for a future 250-room hotel or motel facility. But development rannot pro- ceed until sp<.•cific plans are ap. proved later by supervisors Life Quality Session Set In Huntington A quality of life conference featuring discussions between students from high schools m Huntington Beach and city of- ficials has been scheduled for April 15 About 75(1 students are expect ed to part1c1pate and g1 ve their '1e" s on how life in the cit) can bt' made b<'ller for young people .Job .... rC'crl'c1t1on. markets for ~ o u l h . l' 11 l t u r a 1 £• v t• n ls and amusement <1ct1v1t1cs are m < ludC'd in the area for d1scuss1on Representat1\'cs of the city. council and city departments will go to the classrooms in the next few weeks lo chscus" with stu 'lents their concerns and areas of most interest Mayor Harnett Wieder said the cotmcil and c1ty departments arc inrnlved 111 deciding policy for youth without ha\ mg the ad- .' antage of hearing from the ) oung people "If W<' are lo hilH' thl' quality of life in this commun1l\ \\e .,a, "e are seeking, then th~ \01ce or the young peopl<' mu:.t be heard for pohc1e:. to have any valid1l} · ,,he said Police Chief Earle Rob1ta11le ,., chairman of th~ event lie is a::. s1sted by representatives from all the srhools including mJm "ludenl~ Strauss Approved WASIONGTON CAPl Robert Strauss. former chairman of the Democratic party, has been ap- proved by the Senate Finance Com millec to be Pres ident Carter's special trade represen- tative. - O~ANQECOAIT Hr DAILY PILOT l .. 0-•-CN\I 0.llr ,.,,.. wll~-hl\r..,. bo,_dtto.N .. *'\ Pr~\\ l\pv_.,~ .. ,,_,o,~ CM-\t P\10'1'"'1\f Como•"' ~ ... f'd h""''' ,_,,.. ~;'';,c'.:~~~c!!''::,:~.,.:=:~";. ~::!• ta'"' Y•Ur y Irv•"-\•l'tl'f'f'bMtl Y•tlty ·~ l..-qia;N 9•etf\ \ovth(ff\t ~,,,....,....IWYl•foi ''°"' ., ovf>l•\f'Wl4' S•twrttan *"° ~ .... , tN , __ .1,..•o.• °""''''~·"' .,.,.., " ., na w.t.1 -., \t,. .. , c;o,t• M•\• (•l·fOuH•intl'\ ......... ·-Ptf\;0.ftt •l'MI ~·\Noi Jt011 (Wirt " , ,. p,.,.,,,.nt ·~CH"'-"~ ~'MO"' ,~.,,. ...... .. l•llH ,_,,. .... ..,...,.. ,..,,..,,,,. ld!ID' DIMf .... "-Ill( ..... , *" Anltl•ftl Moftttl11q ltl1Wt .. -... ....... Wttt o.._ C°""IY IOllM ttuntlnllton .. ICflOMw nur-.. ..._ ~l1t ... il••1U '0 lll•IW,.,... u..,.. ... 11(~~ .. '"' CMtt I.kw JJOW.\I llay~-"°'*''•..,.<" 11111 .. UIOI I.A""' -,,,..,o_,,_., Te~one m•)MMi:n CIHattlM Ad11ertltllfltto.Mn ,,_ Ntrlll O<•-c.,,..i, C.0-•h .. 6*1t20 If the Shoe Fits ••• .I can Fertitta modrls a pair of size 20 sneakers that once belonged to Bob Lamer of the Detroit Pistons at the "Shoes Through the Ages" exhibit in New York. f'rone Page Al RADAR FAILURE • • • the possibility of a radar- absorbing coating on the UFOs, whatever they were Reed said such compounds have been known and used in human technology for years "I don't know enough about what's going on that is classified and couldn't discuss it if I did, but it's been done in the open for a long time," said Reed. "One of them is called 'harp cloth·,'' he added A coaling or paint with a high carbon content could also absorb radar beams, failing to bounce them back to the radar mstalla- llon on the ground. Reed concluded that he knows of no confirmed radar tracking of any UFO since the 1950s, when the unearthly phenomena really began to manifest itself with much publicity. Coastal area radar mstalla lions are operated by the U S M arme Corps at El Toro MCAS and by the Federal Av1at1on Ad mm1strat1on A Manne Corps spokesman C'X plains the El Toro radar would never pick up a t.:FO bec.lU!-!C 1l 1s a s hort-range, prec1s1nn dev1re used only to guide in planes set ling down on the runway. The FAA. un the other hand. Front Pa9f9 A I HOME ... (;1bb" said before the meetmi! lhCJt she "as da:.trc:.sed by the out pounng of oppos1llon ··1 d like lo know that somewhere out there people real ly do care about their fellow creatures." she said · We still live m the dark ages ''here mental health is con cNned tr people understood. they wouldn 'l be so frightened " Mrs. Gibbs. chairman of the adnsory board of Metropolitan State Hospital in Norwalk. s~ud s he also is concerned because people seem to think that board and care homes may be necessary, ''but in someone else's neighborhood." CdM. Freeway Section Open To Mowrists A section of the new Corona del Mar Freeway ope n ed to motorists Wednesday mght, after Ca!Trans road crews put the final touches on the $30 million route. Stanley L . Dick. resident engineer for CaJTrans District 7, said motoriJlts traveling north on Newport Boulevard can now take the new 1.1 mile freeway 1eeUon which links up with the north· bound lanes of the San Die10 Freeway. Conversely, southbound motorltta on the San Dle10 Freeway can now tunster ont.o Route 73 and get oft a mtle down the road onto the Newport Freeway southbound. The freeway segment. part or the •~·mile long uncomplged Corona del Mar route, was to have oetned laat Fr1day follow· ln1 dedlcaUon ceremonlet{ but raln1 the previoua week de ayed IODH palnUnl work on lbe oew route. does monitor coastal air space for anything and everything. But an FAA official said Wednesday U FO detection includes many variable factors ·'Some small planes are even difficult or impossible to pick up," explains FAA Regional Headquarters Duty Officer Jim Keogh "Most of the aircraft we monitor, such as commercial airliners. arc equipped with transponders." These electronic devices literally answer radar beams by emitting a signal back in reply. Keogh also noted tracking an image would depend on whether the radar screen was aimed in its d1recl1on and Tuesday morning's UFOs streaked over Southern Cahforrua m about 15 seconds. This "ould account for a chance they literally sneaked behind the radar screen's back. "ll would also depend on what material an obJect is constructed of." the FAA official added .. Meta! of any kind can easily be detected. "But, if these are UFOs from another galaxy. and J 'm not say- ing at's an 1mpossib1lity, we don't know what kind of technologacal advances they might have over us .. HB Delaying Contract for Lights at GWC Huntington Beach City Council members have decided to look further before signing a contract to install lights at 12 tennis courts and eight handball courts at Golden West College. City officials said the agree- ment with the Coast Community College District appear11 to be one s ided in the district's favor The city and district would share the costs or the $143,000 prOJect, but the contract stipulates that the college dis· trict wlll have final authority on the courts. The city would have had use or the court! for half the available lime on weekends, nights and school holidays. Council members directed to the stalf to do more work on the contract to make 1t more equita- ble State Claims Wat er Waste SACRAMENTO <AP) -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. 's consumer department hu filed a complaint against a private Sierra foothill waler company, saying it wastes over 80 million 1allons or water a year. Richard Spohn, director of the Department or Consumer Af. fairs, uJd Wednesday that the al- l ea a lion waa filed a1alnst Jackaon Wat.tr Works. The waler betns wasted represents 40 percent or all the water ln the t)'ltem, wblch urvH tbe Jecklon area of Amador County bl the loothllll eut of Stockton, he ta.id. y e Mikups on Vietnam Victinu Told W A.6HINGTON CAP ) -rbe Peat.qDD nrported a attOOd caae of ml1tallen Identity toda)' 1monc the r malna of 12 men handed over by the Vieln&mese 1overnmenl as U .S. war cuualtJes. IdenU.ficaUon experta have dis- covered that remains Hated b.y the Vietnamese as Air Force Capt. Lawrence H . Golberg of Cloquet, Mlnn.. actually were those of Lt. Patrick E. Wynne of Satellite Beach, Fla. Wynne was a crewman on an F4C Phantom jet Clown by Golberg when the plane was shot down Aug. 8, 1966. Both Golberg and Wynne were carried as miss- ing in action. Wynne's status was changed May 28, 1974, lo pre- sumed dead. At the same time, the Pen- tagon said it has been de- termined that the remains iden- tified by the Vietnamese as Air Force Maj. Curtis E. Eaton of Wakefield, R.I., are not those of Eaton but "appear t.o be those of a Vtetnamese.'' President Carter disclosed Wednesday that one or the 12 caskets brought back from Hanoi by his special commission con- tained the remains of a Viet- namese man. rather than of an American. Carter did not iden- tify the American involved. Crime Symposium Slated for Mesa A crime prevention sym- posium sponsored by the Orange County CMminal Justice Council and 15 Orange County police agencies will be held Friday in Costa Mesa. The public is invited to attend the program scheduled from 9:30 a.m . to S p.m . m the Santa Ana Room of the South Coast Plaza Hotel. Registration fees have been set at $10 and will cover luncheon costs. For reservations call 834-7131. Eaton wa pilot ol an F'lOS OSbter·bomber when llbol doWtn Au.f. 4, ta. He bas been canted u m laalnc in llcl1oo. The Pmt.qon said that the re. m a1na ol the other 10 handed over by the Vtetaamese have been confirmed u Orilinally iden- tified. They were: Air Force Maj. Elwyn R. Capl· ing of Detroit; Air Force MaJ. James H. Metz of Poplar Bluff, Mo ; Air Force Ca1_>t. Samuel E. Watert Jr .• ot Mocbfllle, N.C.; A Ir Poree Lt. Stepbea W. Diamond of Rotl_7D HeJ11Ua. N. Y.; Air Patte L&. BNc• C. DucatolBethotda, Md. Nny U. WUUam M. Roark ol Beulvue, Neb.; Navy U . Cmdr. Thomu Kolstad ot Parkville, Minn.; Navy Lt. (j.g.) William B Klenert, of Bellmore, N.Y ; Lt. Cmdr. Roy H. Bowling of San Bernardino; and Navy Lt. Cmdr. Guy D. JobnsonolSeatUe, Wash. Services Friday Valley Civic Le ader D ies in Car Crash Funeral services for Fountain Valley civic leader Merritt Ellis will be held at 11 a.01. Friday at the Dilday Brothers Mortuary, 17911 Beach Boulevard, Hunt- ington Beach. Ellis, 47, died of a lacerated lung suffered in an auto accident early Tuesday morning while he was driving on the San Diego Freeway in Seal Beach, Orange County Coroner's Office orticlals said . A 12-year Fountain Valley resi- dent, Ellis.reportedly stopped in a lane on the freeway before a tractor-trailer rig rear-ended his sports car at 3:20 a .m . The re a son for Ellis• stop on the freeway is still under investiga. lion, California Highway Patrol spokesman Bill Moore aaid Wed· nesday. A member of the Fountain Valley Traffic Committee since 1974, Ellis, a certified public ac- countant, also served as Boys Club treasurer and was a past president of the youth group Ellis was a Fountain Valley Chamber of Commerce Board of Directors member and belonged to the city's Bicentennial Com· mittee. Ellis, of 17213 Santa Catherine St.. is survived by his widow, Mary H. Ellis, a Fountain Valley attorney: two children, Thomas. 19, and Diane. lS; his mother,. Biota Wellman of San Jose; a brother, Wesley Wellman, also of San Jose, and a sister, Donna .El· hs. of San Francisco. Family members have sug- gested memorial contributions to the Fountain Valley Boys Club. f'rone Page Al DOCTOR ~ • • said he had an omce full of pa· tients. and declined to comment on the charges against him. The gynecologist said his at- torney, Matt Kurilich, would con- tact him before his court ap· pearance Kurihch could not be reached for comment today. SONY'S BIG ONE H"re s the bgq<>st Trinotron COO< TV yet-21 ' (mPosured dooqono!ly) And 1t ho o b 1 plus- T1 n r1on Plu T1.n111on h".ls alway<. i:,,.,.n known f0t o qreot pcture but T unirron Plus int•OOU".PS you to on even great"' p•c•urP Sony <>n1J1nePr'> found o way 10 1ntPn ,.fy thP electron bPom whteh "pt:> n! · th<> pcture Also, the \urfoce of 1h,. tube is dOfl#>f •o hP1gh1en (OnlrQ\I Whtl'f wh1tP. 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Just touch o button fot chonnei •el~1on, voluml' •equfoloon and on/off And rhe Trtnirron Plus p<C1Utfll •S even bellet than before Thanh to Sony \ Mqtn"e<\ w+io developed o bundle of 1mprovf'mPnf\ II) moll' Trin.tron Plus the brrqhtest shclfpe,1 rr"pest Sony Pver Comes~ 1t You deserve 1t "Its a Sony ' -BOTH MODELS IN STOCK - 275 East 17th St. Costa Mesa 7 . , • I• I f OL 70, NO. 83, .C SECTIONS, 50 PAGES ·. • • ORANGE! <X>UNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, MAROt 2A, 1977 I • • TEN CENTS' < I Irvine Denies Secrecy Violation By IDLA&Y KAYE OllMO\tUyPlllltSt.H Irvine Assistant City Attorney R oger Grable and four city coon· cil members denied today that Gae council violated the Ralph M. Brown anti-secrecy Jaw when tbey met behind closed doors for 10 minutes Tuesday. .. There's no violation or the Brown Act until the group takes an action," Grable asserted. The Ralph M. Brown Act is de- signed to prevent public aeendes from holding secret meetinp. "We would have been in trou• ble if we held an executive session at the end of the meeting to discuss the mayor selection but we didn't," Grable added. The private meeting was held during a 45-minute recess called after a deadlocked vote !or mayor. The council had unsuccessfully tried to choose a new mayor for two meetlnp. The council finally voted 3 to 2 at the end of Tuesd.aYs session to table the questJco.. thereby leaving cur· rent Mayor David Sills in office. Sills today called the Daily Pilot's position that the private. meeting may be a violation of the Brown Act "a cheap shot." "I'm appalled that you're mak· ing a tempest out of a teapot, .. said Sills, adding that be viewed the situation to be like someone .. .. . .. overpuldng ror fi vemlnutn ... The council members say they did not violate the Brown Act because they did not take action in the closed session. However, individual council tnembers said lbe group "yelled at each other" about why certain people weren't voting for certain other people and yelled at Coun- cilman Bill Vardoulis to make up his mind and finally vote. The section of the prown Act ·labeled ••Purpose ot the Act."' states: · •'The purpose of the Act can be b riefiy st.ated. It is to insure that the deliberations as well as the actions of local agencies are performed at meetings open to the public and as to which the public bas been given adequate notice. It is to prevent govern· ment from being conducted in secret." Sills denied that the heated dis· eussioo ln the elosed room eoo- stituted "deliberaUoa.s" ai>out the mayor selection. One council mem ber, Gabrielle Pryor, urged the O.Uy Pilot to take the question to court. "lrudnuations In the newpaper aren't very productive and are unfair to the council,'• Mrs. Pryor claimed. "Uthe editors can prove we're <See SECRECY, Page AZ> Desai New India Prime Minister . Science Can Be Fun for Irvine Kids Vista Verde second and third graders spent Wednesday afternoon doing science experiments with hydra, a freshwater· polyp. It was part of a program with UC Irvine that brings grad students to the school to assist and sends elementary school children to UCI on field trips. Wednesday, grad student Nancy Wanek helped the. children in Ted Seymour's class. At right, Dora Morsey uses a magnifying glass to observe hydra eating brine s hrimp. At center, Julie Lambie feeds frine shrimp to the hydra and at right, Rasha Refaie watches the hydra 's reaction to light. The experiments will be seen by stu- dents at other Irvine schools Tuesday, when it will be broadcast on the school district's "interactive cable TV station.'' Co~tyOKs -NewHoDles In El Toro A zone change opening the door for 75 new homes scattered over 362 htJly acres near O'Neill Park won the unanimous :lpproval or Orange County supervisors Wed- nesday. In granting the change of zone from agricultural to residential the Board of Supervisors reject· ed a planning commission n•· com mendat1on. Commissioners said the area was not ready for dl'velopment because of inadequate road ac- cess. fire safctv and scwl'r facilities. · The new homes, proposed b'.t lhe Coto de Caza Dl'velopmcnt Corporation, will be <.r>Uthl'ast of the park and rl'ached \la Liv<' Oak Canyon Road Murray Storm. an assistant director of the county Environ- mental Management Agency, said Wednesday the road is sub- standard and already has a high rate of accidents. But spokesnrt!!f for the de· veJoper contended tht.' hm1t or 75 homes would not add to traffic problems In addition, they said. an ex tension of Alicia Parkway will provide alternak access at about the time or shortly after the new homes are built. <See REZONE, Page A.2) Coas t We athe r Less is More Water Cut Aids Beer Sc.des SAN DIEGO (AP) -Conservmg water is helping San Diego restaurants ring up sales of beer and wine, operators say. · In recent weeks, a growing number have served drinking water only on request. .. It used to be a person who was a little bit thirsty used to take another sip of water." said Timothy Burke, a restaurant owner. "Now he ~tarts thinking in terms of another beer.'• AU over San Diego, a s urvey s hows that wine and beer drinking is up as water consumption as a result of the west's drought conditions goes down. Delay Could Halt Upper Bay Bri d g e By JOANNE REYNOLDS Ol IN 0••11' ~Ho1 Sl•ff Architect Bill Ficker predicted today that a delay now could in- definitely stalemate construction of a new Coast Hjghway bndge over upper Newport Bay. Ficker. leader of the city coun ell-appointed Bridge Action Team (BAT >. made his pred1r tion during a morning meetin~ held to update commun1lv leaders on the bridge's pro· gress. He said planning for the bridge already is about two months behind the schedule that calls for completion of the six-Jane facility in late 1979. Ficker said the bridge has re· ceived the approval of the state Fish and Game Commission and that CalTrans officials are now seeking a Coast Guard permit certifying the bndge 1s not an 1m- pa1rment lo navigation. A cnt1cal matter of timing, he said, 1s the pending Coast Guard dec1s1on on whether to hold a pubhc hearing before granting a pt> rm 1t for cons truction. "We really need your support now." Ficker told the 20 representatives of homeowner groups, environmental organiza· lions and business and political leaders who gathered at Promon· tory PoUlt. He asked them to write to the Coast Guard expressing support for the bridge, a request that drew opposition from one member of the audience. Dr. Edwin Amyes, a resident or Dover Shores, nortt\ of the bridge, protested plans lo build a bridge 20 feet off the water at <Stt DELAY. Page A%) Carter Asks Minllnlllll Wage Boost WASHJNGTON CAP> The Carter administration recom- mended today that the minimum wage be increased 20 cents an hour as or July 1, 50 cents short of the proposal by the AFL-CIO. The Administration also pro· posed that the minimum wage be tied in the future to a set percen- tage of average manufactunng wages. Labor Secretary Ray Marshall told a House Labor Standards subcommittee that the Carter ad· mmistration proposes increasing the $2.30 an hour minimum wage to $2.50 an hour. The Administration also pro- posed that beginning in July 1978 and each year thereafter the minimum wage be set at 50 per- cent of the average straighl· tlme, hourly wages of manufac- turing workers. This proposal 1s known as indexing. The AFL-CIO recommended a S2-an-hour minimum wage im· mediately upon enactment of the bill with indexing beginning. January 1978 at 60 percent of the average manufacturing worker's wage. Labor lobbyists in the crowded hearing room appeared shocked by the Marshall proposals and one lobbyist for the ~arment workers remarked that "labor might have backed the wrong candidate." a reference to labor's support of President Carter. The AFL-CIO spokesman said that when subcommittee chairman John Dent left the (See WAGE. Page A2 . Royce Road Parking E yed Doctor Held • m Soviet Ties To End? NEW DELHI, India <AP) - Morarji Desai, 81-year-old leader of the successful fight to unseat the government of Indira Gandhi, was sworn in today as India's fourth prime minister and immediately signaled a possible end to this country's special links with the Soviet Union. At. a news conference after tak· mg the oath of office, Desai said the 1971 Indian.Soviet friendship treaty "must not come in the way of our friendship with any other state ... We won't have any special relations with any coun- try." Desai, a veteran of the Indian independence movement and a former leader of Mrs. Gandhi's Congress party, said his govern· ment would adopt a fore11n policy of "proper nonalign. ment." In reference to his govern- ment's future nuclear policy, the new prime minister said, "We do not believe in atomic weapons at all." "We don't know whether it is necessary lo have nuclear ex- plosions for peaceful purposes. rr it is not necessary. it should never be done," he added. Claiming "peaceful purposes.•• India set off a nuclear explosion in 1974 that disturbed many Western nations. IL is building a reprocessing plant capable of extracting plutonium, a nuclear bomb material. from spent reactor fuel. Asked if al age 81 he was fit to bear the heavy burdens of lead- ing the world's second most populous nation, Desai quipped: "My age is better than yours. Ac· cording to the English calendar I'm only 19." Desai was a Leap Year baby, born Feb. 29, 1896. He added he would quit the prime ministership "the day I feel I am not t>hvsicallv flt. I'll vacate immediately, even lomor· row. I'm not going to stay a mo- ment longer than I'm needed. But what does age matter? It's the <See INDIA, Page A2) IRVINE'S PARK 'SHAPING VP' Heritage Park, a 45-acre "showplace" to be built in Irvine, is fast taking shape. When completed, the park off Walnut Avenue will contain a youth center, historical center, aquatic center with three swim- ming pools, a fishing lagoon, a library and fire station in addi· lion to regular park facilities. Story, pictures, PageA13. Death Chance of showers and possible thundershowers tonight and Friday with chance of measurable rainfall 40 percent. Lows tonight 46 to 52. Highs Fri day in upper 50s. INSIDE T ODA V The Irvine City Council has asked city aides to look into solu· lions to the parking prohlem on Royce Road caused by wHkend ball games. Hour-old Inf am Said Strangl.ed in Westminster Most of southern Orange County could get bJ1 without t.OOtn for °"'JI a couple da11s # pip1Una 1DCrl MVerttf bJI . (1 not"ral dWltrr. Thi pmlow ltatt of Ulalcr lt.lpf'llfl in this /atl·91'0fd"'1 rtqion i.t detailed onP.og A10. ••••• ., •.. , .. M.lt Alt ., .. •• a .. ... .. ... , M -...u The council has asked city aides to come up with alternatives to parking alone Royce Road in Unlverslty Park d urlng baseball games at University Park Elementary School. Residents on Royce Road have eomplained to several council members that the slreel become~ congasted on both Saturdaya and Sundays when aames are beini' played. The council also asked Com· munlty Service~ Department ~raooncl to tell ball teams that a earldna lotis available oft Be«h TruBoad. Westminster police charged Dr. William Baxter Waddill of Anaheim Wednesday ln the at rangulaUon death of a one- bour-old infant al Westminster Community Hospital March 2. Police Department ad- ministrative aide Earl Graham allefed that Dr. Wnddill, 43, &t· tempt~ to perform a sallnt abortion on the 7't.a·month old fetu1 nt th<' hosplt.ol . Oraham •~:.erted a live baby girl wa.'t delivered and taken to the nursery tor llfe-sustaln1ng cart . The lnfanl died about ODO bout after blrtb. he added. • Pollce aald thq rued iliUidir charges after a three-week in· vestigation lnto the case tn which hospital personnel were ques- tioned. Tho Diltrict Attorney's Office obtained a warrant carryln« $50.000 ball fOT' Or. Waddill on W ednesda)\0}1ht. Deputy Dtatrict Attomey Rob Chatt~rton saJd that Waddill had agreed to aurtftlder lo face ar . ralanment today irt West Oran1e County Munic.lpal Court. Orana• County Coroner's Of· flee Chief lnve1t11ator Jim Beisner aald the l\f ant died due to .. aapb)'xlatlon caused by manualttranauJaUon." · We1tznl o1ter C.mmuntty • Hospital Administrator Richard LeGrand indicated Waddill is not a hospital employe but "he had medical staff prlvlleges since 1971." Waddill, a gynecologist and ob· stetrician, has medical offices In Huntington Beach and W estmlnster. Contacted today, Dr. Wt1ddil1 said he had an otfice full of pa- Uentl and dechned lo comment on the chars aaainst him Tho ~ cotoglst uid his at- torney, Mau Kurillch, would con- tact hlm befor~ his court ap· pearance. Km1Ucb could not be reached far com.meat t.oidaY • AP Wlr'ellflOto INDIA'S NEW LEADER Morarjl Desai, 81 'Saucers' Soviet Satellites? By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of IM Dilly Piiot SUlf · Chances are no one wilJ ever solve the mystery of what the two objects seen rocketing through the sky Tuesday, really were, but two theories were offered today. A spokesman for the North American Air Defense Command (NORAD> at Colorado Springs. Colo .. said a computer check at the Space Defense Center at Cheyenne Mountain offered one early today. He said two fragments of Sov- iet satellites re-entered the earth's atmosphere about 3 a.m. <EST> but over the Atlantic Ocean. "There is always a chance of a 'skip'," explained NORAD lo· formational Services Officer Lt. Gordon Brady. He explained the skip designa• tion is precisely what it sounds like, the physical effect of skip- ping a flat pebble across a water surface such as a stream or pond. The pieces of debris of Soviet Cosmos 867 and Cosmos 898 could have struck earth's dense at- mosphere, then rebounded off it, re-entering it again on the Pacific Ocean side o{ tbe globe. However, the lime elements in· volved are a little off, Lt. Brady noted, since the objects were seen Tuesday in California between 3;15 and 3:30 a.m. <PST>. ''We received information from our weather people two weeks ago that we are in the mid st or a major meteor shower which is due to end about April 20th,'' he added. North Gets UghtRain By The AuocJat.ecl Press Variable clouds with oc- ca11lonal rain.showers were expected to continue in Northern Calif ornla today in t h e w ake of Wed· nesday's storm which br ought aenerally light rain. Eureka topped the state with 1.08 incheoi or rRin, ' while Crescent City mcuured .87 and Fresno 41. Elsewhere, amounts were under a quftrter of on Inch. Coldtr 1ir wu erpected today as a low pressure area mond southward • throQ&h Callfon>la. .. Of Wrong ID Told WASHlNG1'0N <AP> -The P~nta1on N>poned s..cond case. of mistaken identity today among the remains or 12 men handed over by Lbe Vietnamese governm ent 1$ U .S . war casualties. Identification experts have dis- covered that remains listed by the Vietnamese as Air Force Capt. Lawrence H. Golbere of Cloquet, Minn .. actually were those of Lt. Patrick E. Wynne of Satellite Beach, Fla Wynne was a crewman on an ,F4C Phantom Jet flown by .(;olberg when the plane was shot =ctown Aug. 8, 1966. Both Golberg and Wynne were carried as miss- ing in action Wynne's status was changed May 28, 1974, to pre· sumeddead. At the same time, the Pen- tagon said 1t has been de- termined that the remains 1den- -t1fied by the Vietnamese as Air Force MaJ. Curtis E. Eaton of Wakefield, R.l • are not those of Eaton but "appear lo be those of a Vietnamese." President Carter disclosed Wednesday that one of the 12 caskets brought back from Hanoi by his special commission con- tained the remains of a Viet- namese man. rather than of an American. Carter did not iden- tify the American involved. Eaton was pilot of an FlOS fighter-bomber when shot dotrm Aug. 4, 1966. lie has been carried as m issmg in action. The Pentagon said that the re- m ams of the other 10 handed over by the Vietnamese have been ronf1rmed as ongmally iden· tilled. They were Air Force Mai. Elwvn R. Capl- mg of Detroit, Air Force MaJ. James H. Metz of Poplar Bluff, Mo : Air Force Capt. Samuel E. Waters Jr .. oC Mocksville, N.C · Air Force Lt. Steph en w: Diamond of Roslyn Heights, N. Y.; Air Force Lt Bruce C Ducat of Bethesda, Md. Navy Lt William M Roark or Beulvue, Neb .. Navy Lt Cmdr Thomas Kolstarl of Parkville. Minn . Navy Lt IJ g ) Williittn B Klenen. of Ht'llmor<'. NY Lt Cmdr Hoy II Bowling of San Bernardino. anrl NJn Lt C'mdr c;uy 0 .John~un of Seattle. Wash ULM Freeway Section Open To Motorists A section of the n<'w Coron..1 del Mar Frc<'WLJ)' opcn<'rl ti) motorists Wcdnt·sday n1~ht .1fter CalTr:in'i rn.1rt l'r""' ~ put the final toueh<.•s nn the S.10 m 1llion mutt· Stanley L Ot c k, rt:stdcnt t•ngineer for CalTrans District i . ~aid motorists traveling north on Newport Boulevard ran now take the new I I mile freeway section which links up with I he north bound lant•s of th<· San Diego Freewa) Conv<'rscly. so uthbound motorists on the Sun Diego Freeway can now transfer onto Houle r3 and g<'t off a null' down I he ro<1d onto the f\;cwpnrt Free\\ ay southbound The Creew.iy scgm"nl. rart of the· "" mile long uncompleted ('orona del Mar route, was lo ha\ e opened last FndJy follow 1n~ dedication ceremonies, hut rains lhe previous week delayed 'omc painllng work on the new I OU le• Of'f ers Studi~d MOSCOW (AP> The Soviet l'nion will cons1de1 seriously proposals lo he brought this weekend by Secretary of State Cyrus R Vance although U.S. statements on human rights in the Soviet Union will afrect talks between the two countries, the ~overnment n<'wspaper Izvestia says. OAAHOI! COAST DAILY PILOT '"'• Or•noir C'CMt\t O•llY Pilot .. , .. ~It (Olft "~'""""'-' p,,. .... ''PllfMWW>db'Y"-Or~o­(""''' rvbhV'l•l'\q Como-."; S.N''"""·'>t)I"' Alf ovtt•, '"''"d ,... .. ,..d•• '"'""'"' r n cM1 t0t to''• WW lf••P'>M ••Hft Hu"to''QI""' fWMfll '-llM-"' lilt' Vi lt•-, lty•n• \•,,Olt .... \ l/aHty •f'Wlt ~='~ ~~~~~~~~y~:t~·~ CM'""''"", ou1:>11¥\1 .. o o••""' " •• JJO """'' "•" "'""I (O\t,_ M •I (ll•IMn·•tJt)t "•MflN W ... .,,,,,'4,."t •"4 Pvtll•V-t Joel II c ... 1o, V"" p,,,u~f\I •nofJ c;.,.,..,,, ~"-~"' n•-•••""'' ~011 .. T-ta,M .......... Ma,...1,..1c111 .. c..NtM, "-111-P NIH """'•"1 Mane~t,. ,,. ....... omc .. (.Ml• MtJ,i Ull W°'l llat \lfWI l•t .... 1 .. t~. '1'4()1oMo~,.\lrMI .. 'C.t.."'r.:.~·~!~ •• !'W10"t~ :;-i~-:•d at \.--Olf'QoO,. '",.,,.. T~o11e (1t4)~~~t Ct111ttled Ad111ertlltftt '4~11 \.eididl• .. ," v ..... ,....,. °'''•" 6at-tato '•-'-<'·-O J.OUO ~'1'~ :!:!, <>:.~~. (~~,!!,:::~~·~ f..-:S ..,. .... , ., •••• ,,,_.""."'' ... ,, ,. Pfttf .. n oroft<•f .. tMwl , •• ,,_. ••'"°""'_....,_ .,. , ... ,....,....,...., '-<...., cl•n ,..,,.,. •••• •I c.tfl• Mn• (,ltltertitf• ,.,,,., ..... ,. ,. ,.,, •• ,. n \t =::~t-·;; :~:...::: -'"''· ...... , •. , c e Its Staff SalarieS WASHINOTON <AP> -Prest· dnit Cll'ter ts atvtna bia atalf pay raises ot up l.O 2' percent wbkb wllr increase salaries tor top aidu to 951,000. The raises will colt $MIO,OOO a year, bul Carter'!t spokesman says they uve the taxpayers money. l'rOJll Page A I SECRECY • • an v1olat1on, they can come after us. Let's go to court,'' s he said. Following the recess, Mrs. Pryor said the matter of select- ing a mayor would be continued to an execuli ve session at tbe end of the meeting since 1t was a personnel itP.m. City Attorney Jim Erickson agrt>f'd. Later, however, the council ruled the matter would be dis- cussed at the end of the public meeting, following an executive session on litigation. That decision came after As sistant City Atlormey Grable told the council it would be in violation, since the Brown Act was changed last year to exclude public officers Crom being con· sidered in private meetings. Mrs. Pryor said today her copy of the Brown Act is old and she dad not know it would be a viola lion. But Sills said he had a different understanding of what had hap pen ed. He said he 1s very familiar with the Brown Act and that he thought the item was being con tmued to the end of the public meeting, not the executive session. Councilwoman Mary Ann Gaido also derued that the coun- cil acted illegally. But she said she viewed the private session as being "improper." "I kept trying to open the door and Bill CVardouhsJ and J ohn (Burton l kept shutting it," she s aid. She called the meet1ni:? u "yell 1ng matrh " City Manager Bill Woollt:ll "tood outside near tht• <'los('d door and would not let reporters enter the room I le s aid there were only two council members 1n the room Woolletl was not available to day for comment. Attempts to re ach him m Sacramento were un :;uccessful. Councilman Vardoulis said he had no intention or choosm~ a mayor m the private c;ess1on and ~aid the ) ellmg match was pro bably a good thing "It ga\e p<'ople a c hance lo gt:l things off their chests. he ~aHJ f 'ro1n Pogf9 . I l WAGE ... White House after a meeting with l'arter on Wednesday, he had the 1mprt>sRion Carter agreed to an index mg Je\'el of 55 percent of the manufacturing wages. The labor ~pokesman said Carter's top econom ic adviser Charles Schult1e · is the guy who shot 1t down" Marshall said the Adm 1n1stra- t 1on 's propos al \\ould ehmmal<' tht> \I.age d1fferenllal hetween t mploH·s who ha\e been covered 1n Sl.!J:CS by the minimum "age .1ct HP said the Adm1ni'ltrat1on carefully reviewed" the pro- posal<> by organized l:ihor which r loi;elv parallel those rerom mt'nded by DPnl "The Praidmt felt it was 1m portant. ror the White Hou.ae to ael an ••ample in holdina down an- c: reuas:· preu eecretary Jody Powell said Wednesday. He Jaid the rals~ are aubstan. Ually less than tbe maximum authorized by law. But a Wlute House breakdown s hows the increases are only Sl,500 below the legal maximum for the highest staff levels. At the lo~est staff levels, the raises average $.5,000 below the max im um . The increases are retroactive to Feb. 27. The pay increases go to 48 members of the White House staff and are part or an overall in- crease already given to other government employes, al the lowest staff levels, White House pay g()('s Crom an average $36,000 Lo $42.500. Among those at the top level. where the salary goes from $44,600 to $.56,000. are Powell, energy adviser James R. Sehles· inger national security adviser Zbigniew Dr.cezinsk1 and six other Carter assistants. A White House statement said $105,000 was being saved at the lowest level by keeping the 'in· creases below t h e limit authorized. It said the total sav- ings in all salary levels was $145,000. Front Page A J DELAY ..• mean high tide. Dr. Amyes, a Newport Beach neurosurgeon, said he would file a protest with the Coast Guard because the bridge will not be tall enough to allow sailboats pass underneath it Ficker, a noted yachtsman, pointed out that the bridge height 1<> the one supported by the greatest number of people and is well over the 13·foot, sax inch hc1~hl of the existing bridge. Dorothy Doan. president of the DovC'r Shores Community As- soc i atton, told I he group that her :111 m<'mber organization was not n•pn•sPnlerl by Amyt•s and that tht• asi;oc1at1on would en- norsl• lhl· 20 foot llndgc to the Coast Guard Ficker estimated that the bridge construction could be de· la) cd bv as much as a year if lhe Coast Guard decides to hold a public hearing to determine whether there would be an ad- VC'rS<.' effect on navigation by construction of the new bridge. "If tlus gets kicked back and turns into a donnybrook split ting th<' community, 1l will be venrs before the bridge gels built .. Ficker said or Amyes' threatened oppns1tton to the height of the bridge "i\nd if iL f..ills apart, 1 won't 1.ikr on the responsibility of forming another team to go through the two.year process we've undertaken just to get this far ·· 1 don 't think there'll be anyone m the community willing to take 1t on under those r 1rcumstances and the bridge w111 be stalemated." Ficker said that, in addition to ~eek ing the Coast Guard permit, CalTrans offmals have filed for J coastal commission permit The plans shown al the meet· mg call for building the bndge <'urvmg to the north of the exist- 102 one The new bridJ?e "ill have ~1x lanes plus an extra lane for west bound traffic that will turn nght to head northbound on . Oover On\'e 'Deep' Debate Obscenity Opponents Meet MEMPIUS, Tenn. <AP) -The battle over obscenity 1s being waged with all the logic of street warfare, contends a prosecutor who won convictions in connec- t ion with the movie, "Deep Throat." Asst. U.S. Atty. Larry Parrish said Wednesday in a debale w1lh his courtroom foe. Roberl E Smith. of Atlanta. lh<1t those who "'ant to cloak obscenity in th<' First Amendment's protecti.,vc folds should be prepared to accipt lht> consequences Smith argued that there 1s no sc1entlfic basis for res tr amt or ob scenlty because it might be harmful or cause improper behavior. The Parmh·Smith debate at Memphis State University Law School wu a prelude to another courtroom appearance for the two "Deep Throat" opponent.a Friday. Judge Harry W. Wellrord of U.S. District Court will hear ar1u ments on whether the 1976 con vi<' ti on of Smith's t'llent, "Deep Throat" star Harry Rtc.>m:.. and 10 other tndlvlduals should 11tand In llihl of 8 rttent tJ S Supreme Courtdeelston Pnrri.sb told about 300 law 1tu· dent~ that he found more con· fusion on both aides ot the obscen1· ly l.ssue than an_y ln which he bLti hecn involved. ·'The t hing has been d e- ~enerated into almost an emo- t 1onal struggle with the same amount of logic you find in street gang warfare,'· Parnsh said. "If someone is a First Amend- ment absolutist, fine ... That po'l1t1on basically 1s. that th<' C'onst1lut1on allows for no rl'stramt on communicution period." Parrish said "But let's apply 1t across the board. ,ind all lhe 18 or 20 frdcral statut<.•.; that restrain commumcalwn 1n one fashion or another, all the hbel and slander laws . false advertising would go out "Be sure you're ready to ride that principle all the way out," Parrish said As far as the consenting adult theory, Parrish said that position s hould olso be earned out to Its logical end. "That mt'ans that dueling now becomc!'l another fovortte sp0rt, <'M kflRhlinf(, dogflf(hts "u1<'ide, you could ju11l go on and nn '' Sm 1th and the government pro. secutor were In sharp dtsagree mtnt oveT" whether pornOi"IPhY has bttn proven to be h rmful Both cited portions of the Pru1dcnt ·~ Comml11lon on Obscmily to back Lbelr potltioos. 6et Off /tly Cycl~ A lot of people think motorcycles are death machines, says F.d Nievaard, a motorcycle safety instructor in Ed- monds, Wash., so Nievaard says he's trying to get death off the motorcycle. To illustrate his point, he rode with his "friend" around his neighborhood. Pie Thrower Gets Watergate's Hunt NEW YORK (AP) -Yippie party pie-thrower Aron Kay has claimed E. Howard Hunt as his latest victim. Kay nailed Hunt in the head Wednesday evening with a coconut cream pie in the corridor of the RCA Building. Hunt, con- victed in the Watergate con· spiracy, was on his way lo NBC- Trail Derailed VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE CAP> -Freight rail ser vice between Los Angeles and San Francisco should be restored sometime today when workers complete repairs or damage caused by the derailment of 16 rai lroad car s Wednesday. authorities report. TV's "Tomorrow" program. When asked about tbe incident by "Tomorrow" host Tom Snyder, Hunt said , ''I was sur- prised and a little disappointed. I thought that the level or political debate in America had advanced considerably beyond that since the time I wasJ>ut away.'' Hunt was released from prison Feb. 23 after serving 32 months of an eight-year sentence. Strauss Approved WASHINGTON CA P ) -Robert Strauss, former chairman or the Democratic party, has been ap· proved by the Senate Finance Committee to be President Carter 's special trade represen- tative. SONY'S BIG ONE H .. ,, ... s the biqqAst T ,;n,tron co "' rJ yPt-21 . •n•· l U'"-'1 rl oci-nQ'ly) AnJ 11 h J '1 b. :i r\,;- T ''"•run Plus Tr.n.1ron hos alway\ bi>•·n • n0wn for a Qr<'OI fl<C1ure but Trirutron Plus 1ntrorJ ..... ,.., ynu ''>'Jn ,,.,, • ., qrrolet pc1ure Sony enqnePr\ found a wriy to 1nlens1fy the electron beams which "p:J•nl " thi> piclU'P Al\o, the ~tSfoce o f the tub'l 1~ dortei to he1cf1t1>n rontrmt Whitf"f' wh1tf'!~ Darker dorl Ma,. subil,. •n bPIWP'!n\ ~v 2101 pt rat H •1-..r11111.u ••• ftOl ~ ... - I mtnute ln Lbe onud.e Al a Hall al lbe pnm.-U&I pa!Ke. But Mn. Q ol l.ba Ont LO toQ&I' u t.o tb9 &ans·Ume toe• led' hi• now J :ta party to a lbm- nlnl election tnwnpb over her and lb• Conareu party lut weekend. A corneratooe of India's foretsn policy da.rtq lln. Gm· dhi's rule was what abe often described as the country'a special relatioas wll.b the Soviet Union, In view ol the two coun- tries' geographic proxJmlty Qd cloee economic tJes. When the lndo-Soviet treaty was signed, many West*n COQD- tries objected to one pft\icul1lf" clause that bound India not to enter into any obligation with any other country tbat is • 'incom· patible" with the Indo·Soviet treaty. Some Western govern- ments felt this elause in effect gave Russia a veto over India's rel a lions with other countries. Having lost her seal in Parlia- ment in the election, Mrs. Gandhi became a private citizen. However, her successor as the Congress l eader in Parliament. Y.B. Chavan, said she would coa- tinue to lake a leading part in tbe party. E'rma Page Al REZONE •••. But Supervisor Ralph Diedrieh won support Crom fellow boaid members to ask county staff members to see if fees could be assessed the developer to help build that road. And he said this would be a good time to see if similar pro- visions could be Imposed on other developments when they in· crease congestion in new areas. In addition to the 762 acres re- zoned Wednesday, the Coto de Caza area includes another 400 acres that were rezoned earlier for development. As part of Wednesday's action provisions were included in part of the area for a future 250·room hotel or motel facility. r ome S"e the b1qqest, brrqhtf'SI, •.horpest frin1tro'l ''-'Pr Y :iu'll b<•l1ev,. 11 Tr•n•t•on Plu~. 'It\ '1 Sonv 11" SCfl"l'n r11ro ,,,...d d c•qonolly • v ., l I~· IQ" q ,,,,.11 ,.,,.osured d1oqonolly SPOIL YOURSELF Sure, "It's o Sony" But it's on~ 19" (measured diaqooolly) rPmolc (Ontrol l rm11ron Plus colOf TV. Thi-' tuplP func.1ton rc>mnl•• control Commander is to1olly i:>lrctro,., crd 101dly 1 ,,,,, Ju\t touch a button for chnnnl"I sel"CllOO, volumi> reqJl.:ition ond on off An i 1hP T 1in1tt<ln Plu\ ~>Krure 1\ ~""" bf.11er •hon ~<>for .. Thon\ to C:, mv 'lnqn"f>'\ whc> ievrlo~d.., bvndle of 1mptOv""'"' t 10 mo~1> T • n tron Plu •hP nr1qht»~t. \ho•~ "~' "' J "~' Son.,. ,.,,,., (om4' '~ 11 Ycu r.JM•''"'' •' h l X>nv -BOTH MODELS IN STOCK - 275 East 17th St • Costa Mesa .... ...,...1,.. ... _ 10...w ... .tc....1r. Phone 642-8882 Store Hours Dal1y ~ Sat 9-5 30 s.n ...... " .... At'M u.c. "" - ' I • • OL 7~. NO. 13, ~ SECTIONS, SO PAGES ORANGE COUNTY CALIFO NIA THURSDAY, MARCH IA, "17 TEN CENTS 1 Were Os Bits of R11ss Spaceship? By ARTHVR R. VINSEL Of"'90.ilyPlletSlalt Chances are no one will ever solve the mystery or what the two objects seen rocketing through the sky Tuesday, really were, but two theories were offered today. A spokesman for the North American Air Defense Command <NORAD> at Colorado Springs, Colo., said a computer check at the Space Defense Center at Cheyenne Mountain offered one early today. Spring Plowing He s · two fragments of Sov· iet s llites re-entered the earth's atmosphere about 3 a.m. <EST> but over the Atlantic Ocean. "There is always a chance of a 'skip'," explained NORAD In- formational Services Officer Lt. Gordon Brady. He explained the skip designa- tion is precisely what it sounds like, the physical effect of skip- ping a flat pebble across a water surface such as a stream or pond. The pieces of debns of Soviet Cosmoa 867 and Cosmos 898 could haye struck earth's dense at- mosphere, then rebounded off it. re-entering it again on the Pacific Ocean side of the globe. However, the time elements in- volved are a little off, Lt. Brady noted, since the objects were seen Tuesday in California between 3:15 and 3:30 a.m. <PST). Oally PllOI Slaff Photo ..... This scene that looks somewhat rem1ms- 1 cent of spring rites in the Midwest was ac- -tually near Laguna Hills Leisure World. plowing the earth to prepare it for plant- ing was taken fro m a spot beside El Torq Road. The area still abounds with wildlife, including deer . · Photograph of tractor and disc harrow I Death Doctor Held • m Hour-old Infant Said Strangled in Westminster Westminster pol1 c<' charged br. William Baxter Waddill of t\naheim Wednesday in the 1>trangulation death of a one· hour·old infant at Westminster Community Hospital March 2 Police Department act ministrat1 ve aide E<irl Graham alleged that Dr. Wadd11l, 43. al tempted to perform a ~alinc abortion on the 71 i·month old fetus at the hospital. Graham asserted a hve baby girl was delivered and taken lo the nursery for hfc sustaining care. The infant died about one hour after birth. he added Police said they filed murder charges after a ·three week m vestigation mto th<' casc tn which hospital personnel were ques· tioned. Drugs Disappear LOS ANGELES <AP > The slate attorney gcncral 's orrice 1s investigating charges that SO pounds of confiscated drugs dis· appeared from a San Luis Obispo llheriff's oHicc storage area. ac· cording to the Herald Examiner. Orange Coa~• l =-- Weather Chance of showers and possible thundershowers tonight and Friday with c h a nce of measurabll' r ainfall 40 percent Lows tonight 46 to 52 HiJ?hs Fri day in upper 50s INSIDE TODAY Moat of southern Orange County could get bJ1 without tDCJln for onJM o couple do111 if pfpelina wm-e •~ bsl , o .aturol dl.IMter. The pmlous not• of toain aupplh!a in tltu /Git·~ region ta detailed on Page A10. latlex ., ... , .. "4,U Alt ., .. .. C!-4 .... .. .. , M MU The District Attorney's Office obtamed a warrant carrymg $50,000 bail for Dr. Waddill on Wednesday night. Deputy District Attorney Bob Chatterton said that Waddill had agreed to surrender to face ar- raignment today in West Orange County Municipal Court. Orange County Coroner's Of- fice Chief Invesli.gator Jim Beisner said the infant died due to "asphyxiation caus ed by manual strangulation · · Westmins ter Comm unity Hos pital Administrator Richard LeGrand md1cated Waddill is not a hospital employe but "he had medical staff privileges since 1971." Waddill, a gynecologist and ob- said he had an office full of pa· tients and declined to comment on the charges against him The gynecologist said his at- torney, Matt Kurilicb, would con- tact him before his court ap- pearance. Kunlich could not bc rea<'hed for comment today. F11neral Scheduled For Ex-ranch Boss Funeral services will be held in San Juan Capistrano Friday for refrred ranch manager and volunteer firem an Howard Lat· timer. who died Monday at San Clemente General Hospital. He was64. Visitation until 9 o'clock tonight is at Lesneski Mortuary Chapel, 640 S. El Camino Real, San Clemente. Funeral services will be at 11 a.m . Friday at the Capistrano Valley Baptist Church, 32032 Del Obispo St. in San Juan. Rev. William Davenport, pastor. will officiate. Interment will follow at Fairhaven Memorial Pa rk in Santa Ana. Mr. Lattimore. a charter member of the San Juan volun- teer fire d epartme nt, was honored recently for 40 years with the department. Frank Guerrero. currently a San Juan volunteer. said Mr. Cat Burglar Wasn't Feline A Laguna lteach office worker was awakened this mornJng by what she thought was her cat brushing again1t her lea. It wasn'ttbe cat. The Cypress Drive woman told poJlcethat when she ut up a man bolted from her room and out the unlocked back door tbrouah whlchhe~entered.1 Police aaJd the bur1t 1' ltote SZO ftom th woman•• pune. Lattimer, who died of a self. inflicted gunshot wound. was despondent over the death a year ago of his wife, after her long _ battle with leukemia. "He was a very friendly person, who really made a con· tribution to humanity ." said Guerrero. "He went out of his way to help people. He would do his darndest to help someone in trouble." In addition to his work with the fire department, Mr. Lattimer was formerly an instructor with the Junior National Rifle As· sociatioo of San Juan, a scout master and a member of the San Juan Rotary Club. Born in Cut Bank, Mont .. he had lived 49 years in San Juan. when? he managed several small ranches before his retirement. He is survived by two sons. Jerry Lattimer of San Juan and Gene LatUmer of Selma, Ore .. by a daughter, Katen Brooks of Grant's Pass, Ore. ; a brother, two slaters and two gundchlldren. WHY SECRECY IN S4.MUI'A CASE? What'ft behind the veH of secrecy surroupdina the settle- ment between the city or San Juan Caplatrono and lta Conner omploye, Gall Samota" The clty't attempt to k~ the $S~OOO 1ttUemHIDl from the puoUc and the °"' wb)I, are ttJat;\ on Paae A!INda/. "We received informattoo from our weather people two weeks ago that we are 1n tbe midst ol a major meteor shower which is due to end about April 20th ... be added. Despite the fact five Hunt. ington Beach policemen, airline personnel, California Highway Patrol offi cers and others who saw the two ob1ects, deny they were meteorites, this would lend support to another theory. Grift'lth Obeen'ator'y Director Dr. Edward Krupp cauUowily sqcests lt WU a Qleteor Shower, or partial shower, or perhaps a rare double meteor. the same speed and not on a downward, arc·like trajectory. They seemed to fly straight, unswervin&ly. over the earth's surface and maintained a steady formation night. the witnesses .. That was no meteor!••.,. agreed. declared Huntington Beach Police Officer Dan McKerran Nothing was detected on radar alter the eerie sightings. screens at the time. "Well, it's a real Heinz 57 Many who saw the UFOs Varieties mix or ideas," con- described them as traveling at ceded NORAD's Lt. Brady. Desai New Boss India May Sever Soviet Ties NEW DELHI. India CAP) - Morarji Desai, 81-year-old leader of the successful fi ght to unseal the governm e nt of Indira Gandhi, was sworn in today as Ind ta 's fourth prime minister and immediately signaled a possible end to this country's special lmks with the Soviet Union. At a news conference after tak- ing the oath of office. Desai said the 1971 Indian Soviet friendship Holdup Men Get $930 In Laguna Two holdup men, one armed with a Luger pistol. kicked in the Laguna Beach motel room door Wednesday, held a vacationing Illinois family at gunpoint while they ransacked the room, and escaped with S930 cash. None of the family, who were preparing for bed when the rob- bery happened. was harmed, police said. The gunmen fled the motel by scrambling over a rear balcony Police s aid one of the men npped out the telephone wires in the Vacation Village motel room, 647 South Coast Highway, to pre· vent the family from calling for help. Police said Harold Hooe, 44. and his wife .Jane, 42, were in bed when a knock came at the door Their 15-year-old daughter part ly opened the door, then it was kicked wide by one of the men outside. The robber with the gun went to the foot of the Hooe bed, police were told, pointed the gun at the couple and said. "Give me your money and don't --around." Hooe told the men there was money m his wallet and 10 his wife's purse The suspects were described as dressed in old clothes, gloves and gray stocking caps Police did not know as yet why that particular room or family had been the target of the robbery. Laguna Ma"' 'Rassling' Great, Dies Howard Canlonwine. who re· tired to Laguna Beach in the 1950s after a 35-year career in wrestling during which he won the reputation as a "Beau Brum- mel" of the game, is dead at age 76. Mr. Cantonwine was one of the better-known competitors in the heyday of the sport, when wrestl- ing was called "rassling." He scrapped with the likes of Man Mountain Dean C "317 pounds of dirty looks">, "Stone Hatchet" George Zaharias and Ed •'Strangler" Lewis • He was the first man ever to beat the Masked Marvel, and be was the manager for Gorgeous George. Mr. Cantonwine. who was celebrated in the sports paees of newspapers during a career of more than 6,000 matches around the world, died la1t Friday at Veterans Hospital, arter an ex· tended illness. Known early In his career u "The Iowa Thunderbolt," Mr . Cantonwine was photographed frequently with cC?lcbrlUea, who included World War 1 htro sat . York and Charle A. Llndber1h He tater acqulred tbe nickname "Han1man" for hJa tecbnJque of chokln1 t\is oppo. (See 'RASSLER,' Pace Al) treaty •·must not come in the way of our friendship with any other state. . . We won't have any special relations with any coun- try." Desai, a veteran of the Indian independence movement and a former leader of Mrs. Gandhi's Congress party, said his govern- ment would adopt a foreign policy of "proper nonalign- ment." In reference to his govern- ment's future nuclear policy, the new prime minister said, "We do not believe in atomic weapons at all." "We don't know whether it is necessary to have nuclear ex- plosions for peaceful purposes. If it is not necessary, it should never be done," he added. Claiming "p eace ful purposes," India set off a nuclear explosion in 1974 that disturbed. <See INDIA, Page A2) 'Get Off Iffy Cycle' AP Wl.-.Oholo A lot of people think motorcycles are death machines, says Ed Nievaard, a motorcycle safety instructor in Ed· monds, Wash., so Nievaard says he's trying to get death off the motorcycle. To illustrate his point. he rode with his "friend" around his neighborhood. Minimum Pay Hike Of 20 Cents WASffiNGTON CAP> -The Carter administration recom- mended today that the minimum wage be increased 20 cents an hour as of July 1. 50 cents short of the proposal by the AFL-CIO The Administration also pro posed that the minimum wage be tied in the future to a set percen- tage of average manufacturing wages. Labor Secretary Ray Marshall told a House Labor Standards subcommittee that the Carter ad- ministration proposes incr easing the $2.30 an hour minimum wage to $2.50 an hour. The Administration also pro- posed that beginning in July 1978 and each year thereafter the minimum wage be set at 50 per- cent of the average straight- time, hourly wages of manufac- turing workers. Trus proposal is known as indexing. The AFL-CIO recommended a $2-an-hour minimum wage im- mediately upon enactment of the bill with indexing beginning January 1978 at 60 percent of the average manufacturing worker's wage. Labor lobbyists in the crowded hearing room appeared shocked by the Marshall proposal• and one lobbyist for the garment workers remarked that "labor miaht have backed tbe wrone candidate." a rererence to labor's support of ·President Carter. The AFL-CIO spokesman said that when subcommittee chairman John Dent left the White House alter a meeting with Carter on Wednesday, he had the impr Ion Carter agreed to an indexlna level of~ percent of the manufacturing waaes. The labor spokesman saJd Carter'• top economic ad•lser Cbarlea ' Schultze "1s the guy who shot it down." Marshall said the Administra- tion's proposal would eliminate the wage differential between employes who have been covered m stages by lhe minimum wage act He s aid the Administration "carefully reviewed" the pro- posals by organized labor which. closely parallel those recom- m ended by Dent. He said the Carter administration ''believes that in light of current economic conditions, a somewhat different approach is warranted at this time." The AFL·CIO bad testified earlier that lbe minimum wage would have to be $2.65 right now to cover the inflation that has re- duced the value of the dollar since the last series of staggered increases in the minimum wage began Costly Art '£00/t Halted AMSTERDAM, The Netherlands (AP) -Two teenagers tried to smuggle a self- portralt by Vincent Van Gogh valued at about $400,000 out of the Stedelijk Museum under a coat but were caught by 1uards, pollcesaid today. The boys were not identified One of them told police he want- td one of the Dutch master's worka to bane ta his bedroom. The 17 by 15·fncb painting w1s recovered undamaaed and the youthi were charted. with theft, poUcenJd. _. , - ove Rezoning A cbqe opcnin1 the door '°" 15 new homa acattend Oftf' lG2 hilly acres near O'N 111 Park •on the unan!me>Ul upproval or Oranie Counly Jupervlsors Wed· nesday. In iranUn• the chance of z.one from agricultural to reaidenUal the Board ot Supervisors reject· ed a planning commission rl'· com mendatlon. Commbsioners said the areu was not ready for development because of inadequate road ac· cess, fire safety and sewer /acilities. • The new homes, proposed by 'the Coto de Caza Development Corporatlon, will be southeast of the park and reached via Live Oak Canyon Road. Murray Storm, an assistant director of the county Environ mental Management Agency, said Wednesday the road is sub· standard and already has a high rate of accidents. But spokesmen for the de veloper contended the limit of 75 bomes would not add to traffic problems. ln addition. they said, an ex tension of Alicia Parkway will provide alternate access at about the time or shortly aft<·r the new homes are built. But Supervisor Ralph Diedrich won support from fellow board members to ask county staff memb(!rs to see if fees could be assessed the developer to help bu1 Id that road . And he said this would be a good time to see if similar pro· visions could be imposed on other developments when they in· crease congestion m new areas. In addH1on to the 762 acres re- zoned Wednesday, the Coto de Caza area in cludes another 400 acres that were rezoned earlier for development. As part of Wednesday's action provisions were included in part of the area for a future 250·room hotel or motel facility. But development cannot pro· ceed until specific plans are ap- proved later by supervisors. F rom Page A J INDIA ... many Western nations. It is building a reprocessing plant capable of extracting plutonium. a nuclear bomb material, from s pent reactor fuel Asked if at age 81 he was fit to bear the heavy burdens of lead- ing the world's second most populous nation, Desai quipped: "My age is better than yours. Ac- cording to the English calendar I'm only 19." Desai was a Leap Year baby, born Feb 29. 1896 He add('d he would quit th<> prime mm1ster-,h1p ''the day l kcl I am not nhvs1('allv fit I'll vacate immediately, l'vcn tomor row. I'm not go1n~ to slay a mo- ment lon~cr than I'm n<'cded Rut what docs age matter'' It's the sp1r1tthatmatters " ll1s 59 year-old predecessor wus not pre'>ent for the thrcl'· minute ccrc•monv 10 lhP ornatt• Ashoka llall ot the presidential pal<1ce But Mrs. <:Jndh1 "as one of the Carst to send congratula- ltons to the long.tJmP foe who led his new .Janata party to a stun nmg <'lecl1on triumph <>\ <'r hN .rnd thl' C'ong rc-'' p.1rly last weekend \ ( or n ('rs l n n c u f I n d 1 a c; foreign poht•y during Mrs Gan dhi 's rule was what she often described as the country 's special relations with the Soviet Union. in view of the two coun· tries' ~eograph1c proximity and close economic ties When the Indo·Sovlet treaty was signed, many Western coun- tries objected lo one particular clause that bound lndaa not lo enter into any obligation wilh any other country that 1s "incom- patible" with the lndo Soviet treaty ORANGE COAST L SC DAILY PILOT =:t.~~~."r.=.:.::.=:;.:; C...it ~l\111"9 C.mo•"w kMf*Hlt..,,,,,. •'• O\tlth\l"lit>d Mlfltf1•Y tP'llrOV"tf\ ,.rlcHy ,.,. 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'-"• "",..,. ~ ,..,. .,,,,, •• "' M4t"•t1nt(OllOI'\ Le1111ne 8 •1ch Otflc• n ... ,,j\"'"'' .. , .. , Ma111,,. • .,.,.., Po llo• ..... m1t 0Nlc11 ,. c;o.11Mou UOWttl .. •M'"' M\11111""8'1 e .. t ~. 1111UtK!! lov19~· ....,ftN«• v11"' mou .• .,., _ 1lk"Ol1to'r-r Tlleptlo111 (114)~1 Cl .. llflld Adv1rtlti"Ot424tn ~""' ... cf\ Alt ~nca: Ttltphone•..,..,... ,,...,"°"ca. ....... .... ouo < =------=--=-~-=" --=-=------- Pay Bid Rejected A~ request ror a l2 pn-- ceDt aalary lntteue and bimtlq arbttralioa out 11sca.I year bu been ttjec'led by the CaP1.ltn.no Unllled Sc.boo1 District &oard of t.naateea. No specific uJary offer will be made by trustees until May 2, after trustees have reviewed a preliminary budget, according lo a trustee statement released th1s week. --- - SAN OJ GO ( AJ> > -Coos rv San rest.AW' LI rtn1 up openaton say. Jn t w..u. a IJ'OWiAt number bave eel drl.nJtln& water only on rcqu t_ "lt wed to be a penon who wu a little blt tblnty u~ed to take another .sip ol water." sald Tl l'OClth1 Burke a restaurant owner. ·'Now be starts tblnkbtc in terr.Osol another beer.'' All over San Diego. a survey show• that wine and beer drinking is up as water consu mption u a result of the west's drought conditions goes down. Busy Little Bees "That's what we expected," said Tony Leon, president of Capistrano Unified Educ:ation Association. representing dis- trict teachers. "They start with zero and we start with 12 percent -that's the negotiating game." Leon called the trustees' postponement or a salary offer to permit them lo study the pre- )jminary budget "bunk." Carter Gives Pay Boosts to Staff WASHINGTON CAP) -Presi- dent Carter is giving his staff pay raises of up to 25 percent which will increase salaries for top aides to $56,000. The raises will cost $400,000 a year, but Carter's spokesman says they save the taxpayers money. other Carter assistants. A crocus appears along a road near Barnstable, Mass .• on winter-weary Cape Cod and provides temptation for a pair of bees. "Their business manager is too competent for that,'' he ~aid. .. They work wilh formulas that A White House statement said $105,000 was being saved at the lowest level by keeping the in- creases below the limit authorized. It said the total sav- ings in aJl salary levels wu $145,000. Missing Dog Turns Up in San Cle11Wnte San Clemente police were scratching their heads over a dog gone caper Wednesday. A seven·year-old St. Bernard valued at $360 was reported stolen from owner Linda F. Blon- din. The big dog was taken from a fenced area next to 130 Loma Lane sometime between 1 a.m and 6 a.m., according to the police report. At nearly S p.m. police got a call from Donna Kudloski. who hves on Avednia Cabnllo several blocks away from the scene of the theft. She reported a large St Bernard running loose. The dog turned out to be the .. stolen" animal. It and its owner were rewiited. Authorities didn't know if the dog escaped captors. or if it just escaped its pen. Owners Suing Over Faults In SC Units Occupants of an eight·unit San Clemente condominium complex demanded more than $2.S million in damages Wednesday from lhe company responsible for main- tenance of the structure at 515 Monterey Lane. The Orange County Superior Court lawsuit filed by the Citadel Condominium Owners· Associa· lion against Citadel Service Corp. accuses the defendants or u num berof structural faults It is alleged that water malfunc- tion in the area of the elevator t•ould le<1d lo the elcctrocut1on or a user, that wrought iron work has becomedilap1dated and rusty and that li~htmg fixtures in the build· mg aredefic1ent. Stamps Stolen MAD ERA <A Pl Burglars broke into the Madera County Welfare Department office Wed- nesday and stole $37,000 in ne~otiable food s tamps. JUthont1es report F ront Page A 1 tell them to the dollar how much money they will have available for teacher salaries.'' 'HASSLER' Leon said teacher contract • ~egotiaUons oCCicially open April nents by putting their hea 3:,Whatdo we do -sit and stare between the rope~. at each other until May 27," he Mr. Can.tonwine learned ~o said. "I would anticipate we wrestle while wilh the Army m would be deeply involved in World War I. ti u b M 2" At graveside services at El nego a ons Y ay · Toro Cemetery Monday, Mr. Capistrano teachers received Cantonwine was described as an an SA percent salary raise in Iowa man who loved corn on the December, retroactive to July 1. cob and barbecued ribs, an out-The current base schedule is doorsman who loved to work in $9,958, the maximum $21,779. the sun. Trustees have s~ld they agreed Besides his career in the ring, to the 0.4 percent 1ncre~se to ~r· he held interests in a Los Angeles ing Capistrano teachers salanes restaurant and night club, "Can-in line with those paid in other tonwine's Sport Palace," in a unlfleddistricts in the county .. roller rink and In a stock The proposed 12 percen~ hike brokerage firm. for next year would d1sto~t He appeared m motion pic- tures with Ahce Faye, Eddie Cantor, Bert Lahr, the Ritz Brothers and Alice Brady. In the sports pages. Mr. Can· ton wine was described as a burly bone bender, big and rough, a huge grappler wo was one of the best wrestlers in the world. Mr. Cantonwide was active in the family-o wned businesses, Margie Webb Originals or Laguna Beach and Margie II, a retail shop at 1920 South Coast Highway, in Laguna. He is survived by his wife of 46 years, Gertrude, of Laguna Beach; daughters Mrs. Robert Berry of New York City, Mrs. David Keelan and Mrs. Michael Nelson, both residents of Orange County; brothers Hugo and Irv- ing of Vancouver, Wash.; sisters Florence Cheyne of Ellensburg, Wash . and Tress Santers of Grundy Center, Iowa; and seven grandchildren. Art Asso ciation Meets a t School Capistrano's salary and benefit schedule compared to other dis- tricts, trustees said. An increase of that magnitude would force the district lo re· quest a significant property tax incr ease or impair the educa· tlonal program, they said. "The President felt it was im· portant for the White House to set an example in holding down in- creases," press secretary Jody Powell said Wednesday. He said the raises are substan· tially less than the maximum authorized by law. But a White House breakdown shows the increases are only $1,500 below the legal maximum for the highest stair levels. At the lowest stalf levels, the raises av..erage ~.ooo below the mkx- 1 mum. The increases are retroactive to Feb. 27. The pay increases go to 48 members of the White House staff and are part of an overall in· crease already given to other government employes. at the lowest staff levels, White House pay goes from an average $36,000 to-$42,500. Among those at the top level. where the salary goes from $44,600 to $56,000, are Powell. ~nergy adviser James R. Schles- inJ{er national security adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski and six The San Juan Capistrano Art Association will meel tonight at 7: 30 at the Marco Forster Junior High School, 25601 Camino del Avion. San Juan Capistrano. K athleen Bolinger, guest artist. will paint a stHl life pie· ture . AddiUonaJ Information can be obtained by caJJing Mary Cun. nlngham, publicity agent. 496·4821 or Carolyn Mueller, prc- ~1dent. 586-3742. SONY'S BIG ONE Her,,~ ll'le oiqqest T rn•ron color TV yer-21 rrnP :isua:'<"I cJiocpn 11ly And 11 f m o bi l plu\- Talent Show Set Tonig/it The Laguna Beach Exchanp Club talent contest will be held ,i 7: 30 tonight at the La gun• Moulton Community Playhous~ 606 Laguna Canyon Road. Aa- mission l.s free. · = About a dozen acts of singlnf and dancing youncstera aged 6 t.o 18 are scheduled. Trophies and savings bon<ia wUl be awarded to the top two entrants in each ~ three age categories. The wiMers also get a chance lo compete in a statewide talent show. Smoking Ban Set LOS ANGELES (AP> -An or· dinance that bans cigarette smoking In city supermar~ets and grocery stores goes into ef. . feet April 25. SC Recreation Plan Assist Bid Rejected T .;n,•ron Plu,. T rirt•ron ho> olwa~ be·'n ho.vn fy ~ qre JI p cturf' but Trin fr :m Plu\ introdi.x:es you to on even qec;:irer p:cture Son/ enq:nee<s found a woy lo orr.en~ th,. ,,1,.c;1ron b el)•T1' whoch . !'VJ nt' the pd.ire Abo. 1h" \Ull J"' ,f ,;,,. ·Ji• iJI•"• ro h,.. )h•en ronfrl)\T Whiter wr ''"•· O:Jr~l'I d:>rls. Mo•I' J;•" in-berweens. Come \I';) th,. b1qf".ll'ISI, br;qhtP\f, \horpP\f Tnn1tron ever You'll bf>lr13ve 11 Tr1n11ron Plu\. "Ii'< a Sony.· KV '21 01 By JACK CHAPPELL <X the 0.11v l'hol Sl•fl The San Clemente City Council has turned down an orrer by the Capistrano lTn1fi<'d School District for $4,600 to assist a city . recreation program al school facilities. The city'!I action means both the school district and lhe city wi ll offer separate recreation programs· in the city and 1t means duplicate overhead costs The Citv Council was miffed that the school district un· der a permisslve community de· velopment tax of 10 cents per $100 assessed value, raised an estimated $125.000, but was offer· ing only $4,600 to the city. ''I'd like to see where the other $120,000 is going,'' said Coun· cilman William Walker Monday Further, the council was an noyed by a city report showing that the schools were offering on ly as much as they offered last year when a similar proposal for district abandonment or lts own recreation program was made. Dr. Jerome Thornsley said the city report was in error. He said t he district offered $3,200 to the city last year. And, he said the funds ~lng offered to the city this year were twice a" m~h as the dl"trkt actually s pent for il'I programs at the elementary schools last yur Or. 1bomsley !lalct tht district became Involved in providing recreation proarama for Its stu· dents after school and dlArinR summer many years aco because the~ were no other pro- 1ram1 avail1ble. • The district spans a vast unin- corporated area and includes lhc cities of San Juan Capistrano and San Clemente. Since those days, special service districts have been formed io the county areas for parks and recreation purposes und the cities have initiated their own recreation programs. Dr. Thomslcy said the district wanted out of the recreation pro· gram business where possible because with separate programs being offered. administrative costs were duplicated and coordination was not as efficient. To get out, the district was wUl· Ing to fund some program costs. A formula of $2 per student was orialnated. although Dr. Thornsley said the figure was "a starting pomt" and that the dis· trict e>epected that negotiation could raise 1t. As for the rest of the funds generated by the community de· velopment tax, Dr. Thornsley uid much of the money was l'Spent on m aintenance and cuatodtal service for school facllllles used by community fCroups, for school /r ounds 1upervt1lon at noon an for pro- rat1n1 offacilltles replacement. JI~ noted the city or San Juan Caplatrano accepted the city's dl"trkt'11 offer lust year. San Juan wm r~eive $6,000 lhl!I yenr. "They'rt pleased und we're pleue<I. It's a beautiful arnn1e- ment," Dr. Thornsley old. Dr ThornsJt"y said the district would continue the ume pro- 1 ram aa lelt year ln San Clemente. >.:V-1941 P 19" ''""" ,.,, cuvr1tci ci1ogonollv 21" creen mrosvrc d d logonolly SPOIL YOURSELF Sure, "Its o Sony" Bur 11 ~ o new 19" !measured diagonally) remote conrrol Tronitron Plus '~°' TV. The triple.function remotl" conlrol Commaoder is totally electronic old 101olly q1uet Just touch a button fa channel seloo ion, volume reqvlohon ond on/off. And the Trinitron Plus picture i~ even bett6f •hon before. Thon~s to Sony's enqrneers who developed a bundle of 1mP'OVP1T1"nls lo mo~e T nnotron Pl\J\ me b11qhtest shorpe.,t, cr1 pPst Sony "v"" ( nme \Pe r You rj,.,,,,v,. 1 'IPs n Sonv 275 East J 7th St. Costa Mesa .. _ ......... .....,. .. 2D-.Whl 91f C...k Phone 642-8882 Store Hours Daily 9-6 Sat Q.5 3() ....... ...... H .... ~lile.l tl' _ .. -• 7 EDITION • , VOL 70, N0.13, 4 SECTtON9, SO PAGES · pRANG.E COU NTY, tALIFORNI A THURSDAY, MA RCH 2A, 1977 .. . . , fie TEN CENTS a Long Newport Bridge Delay Feared., BJ JOANNE aEYNOLDS Otltle ~ "9111 ... Architect Bill Ficker predicted today that a delay now could in- d efinitely stalemate construction of a new Coast Hi1bway brid&e over upper Newport Bay. Ficker, leader ot the city COUDo c il·appointed Bridge Action Team <BAT>, made his predic- tion during a morning meeting held to update communitv leaden on the bridge's pro- Teachers Compare Salaries By MICHAEL PASKEVJCH 011,_ Dally Pllol StaH Newport-Mesa teacher leaders believe salaries and district ex· penditures in nearby Garden Grove sbouJd have a bearing on current deadlocked contract negotiations, but school ad· .ministrators say the com- parisons don't mean a thing. Teacher leader Bill Grgurich claims the district's salary offer (nine percent over two years> would leave teachers $4 ,268 short of maintaining the standard of living they had 10 years ago. He adds that the district offer would mean teachers in Garden Grove, )Vbich he calls "the financial pits of the county," would be better paid. Superintendent John Nicoll believes such comparisons are ''misleading," because student e nrollment in Garden Grove is nearly twice that of the Newport· .Mesa district. "The cost per pupil of teachers' salaries is higher in the Newport-Mesa Unified School District than It is in other Oragge ~unty unified school district!," Dr. Nicoll states. "Class size as well as high average placement dn tbe teachers' salary schedule probably are the reasons for this high rating.·· District figures show that $744.27 is spent on teacher salaries for each of the distnct's 25,970 students. That's 23 percent higher than Garden Grove's $603.33. The county average is $639.41. Nicoll figures 85 percent of the Newport-Mesa district's expen· ditures go to salary (inclurung non-teaching district employes) and salary related items. Newport·Mesa Education As sociation leaders have said the district is spending too much to administer data processing and <See TEACHERS, Page i\2) Goffer , Str uck By Ball, Files Suit A Big Canyon Country Club golfer who claims he suffered serious inJuraes when he was struck by a golf ball whale play· ing the fifth hole a year a~o filed a lawsui t Wednes day for damages to be determined an trial court Named as defendants 1n the Orange County Superior Court action are the Newport Beach club and Larry Deane, the golfer allegedly responsible for the shot that hit plaintiff Virgil M. Johnson. Or:n~7:•s t Weathe r Chance of showers and possible thundershowers tonight and Friday with chance of measurable rainfall 40 perceiu. Lows tonight 46 lo 52. Highs Fri· day in upper 50s. INSIDE TODAY Mon of aouthnn Orange CounlJI could get bu without tOOtn for onlJI a couple daya if piJNlhln wer~ aewred by. a natural dUon.r. Th• pmlour •tot• of water IUJ'Plfe• in thi• Jaal·growlno region ia detallttl onP.ogcAJO. ladex ., .. , .. M,U Alt ., .. .. CH .... . .. ..., M M,U greu. He said planniq for the bridge already is about two months behind the schedul&that calb for completion of the six-lane facility in late 19'19. Ficker said the bridge tras re· ceind the approval of the state Fish and Game Commission and that CalTrans officials are now seeking a Coast Guard permit certifying the bridge is not an im· pairment to navigation. A critical matter or timing, be Hid, is the pending Coast Guard decision on whether to hold a public hearing before granting a permit for construction. .. We really need your support now,'' Ficker told the 20 representatives of homeowner groups, environmental organiza· tions and business and political leaders who gathered at Promon- tory Point. He asked them to write to the Coast Guard expresslng support for the bridee, a request that drew opposition from one member ol the audience. Dr. Edwin Amyes, a resident of Dover Shores, north of the bridge, protested plans to build a bridge 20 feet off the water at mean high tide. Dr. Amyes, a Newport Beach neurosw-geon, said he would file a protest with the Coast Guard because the bridge will not be taU enough to allow sailboats to pass underneath it. Ficker, a noted yachtsman, pointed out that the bridge height is the one supported by the greatest number of people and is wen over the 13-fool, six inch heigbtoftheex.isting bridge. Dorothy Doan, president of the Dover Shores Community As· sociation, told the group that her 311-member organization was not represented by Amyes and that the assoclatiori would eQlt dorse the 20-foot bridge to the Coast Guard. Ficker estimated that the bridge coostruction could be de- layed by as much as a year iftbe Coast Guard decides to bold a public bearing to determine whether there would be an ad· verse effect on navigation by construction of the new bridge. "If this gets kicked back and <See DELAY, P age A2) Carter Outlines Moscow Talks Along Came a Spide r Pat Hansen, 14. of Mount Vernon, Wash., says this six· inch-long Mexican tarantula is "really very nice." The spider, called Fran. dines on hve crickets :.ind, he adds, doesn't even try to bite him anymore Minimum Pay Hike Of 20 Cents Urge d WASHINGTON lAP> -The Carter adman1strat1on recom mended today that the m1n1mum wage be mcreased 20 cents an hour as of July 1. SO cents '>hort of the proposal by the A fo~L·CIO. The Adm1mstrahon also pro- posed that the minimum wage be tied in the future to a set percen tage of average manufactunng wages Labor Sccretarv Rav Mar<;hall told a House Labor ·Standards subcommittee that the Cartl"r ;H1 ministration proposes incrcasani:: the $2.30 311 hour minimum wage to $2.50 an hour. The Administration also pro- posed that beginning in July 1978 and each year thereafter the minimum wage be set at 50 per- cent of the average straight· time, hourly wages of manufac· luring workers. This proposal 1s known as indexing. The AFL-CIO recommended a $2·an-hour minimum wage im mediately upon enactment of the bill with indexing beginning January 1978 al 60 percent or the average manufacturing worker's wage Labor lobbyists in the crowded hearmg room appeared shocked by the Marshall proposals and one lobbyist for the garment workers remarked that "labor might have backed the wrong Newport Burglary Nets Jail Sentence candidate." a reference to labor's support of President Carter The AFL-CIO spokesman said that when s ubcommittee chairman John Dent left the White House after a meetmg with Carter on Wednesday, he had the 1mpress1on Carter agreed to an 1ndexinJ! level of 55 percent of the manufacturing wages The labor ..,pokesm<1n said Carter's tnp economic adv iser Charles Schult1t' "1s the guy who shot it down •· Marshall said the Administra· lion's proposal would eliminate the wage differential between employes who have been covered in stages by the minimum wage act. \ WASHINGTON (AP> - Declaring that the American people should be told what is go- ing on in foreign policy, Presi· dent Carter outlined an agenda for negotiations in Moscow today and said it will include an effort to eliminate nucleatlesting of all kinds. Carter also said that Secretary of State Cyrus B. Vance will be urging Soviet leaders lo join the United States in efforts to end outside interference in Africa, lest it lead to conflict there. Carter described al a national· ly broadcast White House news conference the topics Vance will be discussing in Moscow talks next week. He said the descrip· lion was not so detailed as to im· pede negotiations. The President said his ad· mmistrat1on will follow a policy of disclosing foreign policy con· siderations because of its need to "derive strength directly from the people " He said the Administration has spent weeks in detailed study of the agenda for the Vance mas· sion, and it's important for the American people to know what is onit. Carter said he wants it known that "when I do speak, I don't Russ Ties to End? Desai Takes Reins . As India Premier NEW DELHI, India CAP> - Morarji Desai. 81·year-old leader or the successful fight to unseat the government of Indira Gandhi, was sworn in today as India 's fourth prime minister ana immediately signaled a possible end lo this country's special hnks with the Soviet Union. At a news conference after tak· ing the oath of office. Desai saad the 1971 Indian.Soviet friendship treaty "must not come in the way of our friendship with any other state ... We won't have any special relations with any coun · try." Desai, a veteran of the Indian independence movement and a former leader of Mrs. Gandhi's Congress party, said his govern· menl would adopt a foreign policy of "proper nonalign- ment." In reference to his govern· ment's future nuclear policy, the new prime minister said. "We do not believe in atomic weapons at all." .. We don't know whether it is necessary to have nuclear ex· plosions for peaceful purposes If it is not necessary. it should never be done." he added. Claiming .. peaceful purposes." India set off a nuclear explosion in 1974 that disturbed many Western nations. lt is building a reprocessing plant capable of extracting plutonium, a nuclear bomb material, from APll!llrepi.elo INDIA'S NEW LEADER Morarji Desai, 81 spent reactor fuel. Asked 1f at age 81 he was fat to bear the heavy burdens of lead rng the world's second most populous nation. Desai quipped "My age is better than yours. Ac cording to the English calendar I'm only 19." Desai was a Leap Year baby, born Feb. 29, 1896. Ollllf ...... ~· 111 U• P•Y,.. A man accused by Newport Beach police last Dec. 16 of being in possession of eq~ipment and 1ppllance1 stolen from boats m oored at Harbor Area marinas has been sentenced to 60 days in Orange County Jail. Superior Court. Judge James H. Walsworth ordered tho jaH term and three years probaUon ror Norman Kenneth Catton, ~ • of Gatdeo Grove, after the def n· dan.t admitted reeelvlna stolen Ride Em Cowbog • Pl'OJ*f.Y • Doug Voling, a counselor at Lincoln Middle School, !ltruggles throu&h obstacle course durlnc a bicycle rodeo at the acbOOl In which students competed againSt f acuity membora. The rodeo, ataaed by the • Newport Beach Police Department. is part or tbo week-long bicycle safety program under way in city schools. Included is a safety' essay contest for middle school stu- dents with IO.speed bikes as pri.ies. s peak with a hollow voice," but with the support of Conlress and the nation. He said that should be clear, for example, in his ex• pression or concern about human .rights in other nations. Soviet Leader Leonid I . Brezhnev has complained of what he called U.S. interference an Russian internal affairs in the human rights s tatements and gestures of the new administra· tion. But Carter said he bas seen nothing to indicate that dif· ferences on that point would in· trude on negotiations ovel" nuclear arms control. Physician Charged in Baby Death ~ Dr. William Baxter Waddill was arraJgned in West Orange County Jurucial District Court to- day on murder charges in the strangulation death of a · one- hour-old infant. The Distncl Attorney's Office alleges the baby died March 2 after Dr. Waddill attempted a saline abortion on the seven and one-half month old fetus. Westminster police charge that the live baby girl was de· livered al Westminster Com· munity Hosipital and taken to the nursery for life.sustaining care. Death that came one hour later was attributed to manual s trangulation, investigators al- lege. The mother has not been identified. Municipal Judge Ragnar R. Engebretsen set bail for Dr. Waddill, 43, at $25,000. The physi- cian was to report to Orange County J ail for booking. He said he would make bail. Dr Waddall owns a home in the Huntington Harbour section of Huntmgton Beach and practices med1C1ne m Huntington Beach, We5tminster and Anaheim. p Westminster police brought a murder charge against the physician Wednesday when hospital staff members allegedly told them he killed the infant after attempting the abortion. Orange County Coroner's Of. fice Chief Investigator Jim Beisner said the infant died due to ·'asphyxiation caused by manual strangulation." . Defense attorney Matt Kurilich said Waddill's medical staff privileges have been re- instated at the hospital. Hospital officials had reported· ly suspended the gynecologist's privileges when the murder in· vestigat1on began March 8. Mesa Lions Sal,me d on 50th Year Members of the Lions Club in Costa Mesa have been serving their community for 50 years. Todar•s Daily Pilot includes a !lpecia magazine section re· counting the first half-century of thi!'l public-spirited or1anization which has spawned a numbtr of other Lions Ciuba along the Orange Cout. A Friday banquet at the South Coast Plu1 Hotel wilt offltlally mat;k tho annlv~raary. You can Join ln tile run by tum· ing to the Uons Club aoth year 1peclal edition lnslde today's Dail¥ Pilot. 2n e Mixups on J'i,e~ Yictinu 'l'ol,d WASJUNGTON <AP> -The Paa~ reported a •ecood cue. of mbtaken ldenlll)' today al210GC t.be rem.alas ot 12 men banded over by the Vletnameso govern moo&. 01 U.S. war cuualUes. ldent.ilica.tlon expertl have dU. <-OYered that remains JJsted by tho Vietnamese aa Air Force Capt. Lawrence H . Golberg of Cloquet, Minn., actually were those of Lt. Patrick E. Wynne or Satellite Beach, F1a. Wynne was a crewman on an F4C Phantom jet flown by Golberg when the plane was shot down Aug. 8, 1966. Both Golberg· and Wynne were carried as miss· log in action. Wynne's status was changed May 28, 1974, to pre- sumed dead. At die Ume, ta1on Hlct It bu beea de· tenniDed tlaat u.. ldeD-tlfted by the Vletoam .. a Air FOl'ff Maj. CUrtla E. Eaum of Walce(ldd. R.l., a.ro not tlJiaq of Eat<m but ''appear to be tboM ol a Vietnam.e." President Cartel' dlaetosed Wednesday that one of the 12· caskets brought back from Hanoi by bis special commission con· tained the remains of a Viet~ namese man. rather than of an American. Carter did not iden- tify the American involved. Eaton was pilot of an FlOS fighter-bomber when shot down Aug. 4, 1966. He has been carried as missing in action. The Pentagon said that the re- mains of the other 10 handed ove(' by the lul•e confirmed u ortalna.lly JdH. un ,,_,..,.: Air Foree u.i. ElW'fD R. Ca~· ln• al Detrott: Air Force M". James .H. lletz of Pot-;, Blult, Mo.; Air !"Otte Capt. Sa ue1 E. Waters Jr .. ot Mocbville, N.C.; Air Force Lt. Stephen W. Diamond ot Roslyn Heights, N. Y.; Air Force Lt. Bruce C. Ducat of Bethesda, Md. Navy U . William M. Roark or Boolvue, Neb.; Navy Lt. Cmdr. Thomas Kolstad of Parkville. Minn.: Navy Lt. (j.g.) William B. Klenert. of Bellmore. N.Y.; Lt. Cmdr. Roy H. Bowling of San' Bernardino; and Navy Lt. Cmdr. Guy D.John.sonofSeatUe, Wash. Were Coast UFOs Russian Satellites? Prmra Page Al TEACHERS questionable research programs. leading to higher class sizes which lowers teacher effective- ness. By ARTIIUR R . VINSEL Of lhe D~lly Pllol Stall Chances are no one will ever solve the mystery of what the two objects seen rocketing through the sky Tuesday, really were, but. two theories were offered today. A spokesman for the North American Air Defense Command <NORAD> at Colorado Springs. Colo .• said a computer check at CdM Freeuxiy Section Opens To Motorists A section of the new Corona del Mar Freeway opened to motorists Wednesday night. after CalTrans road crews put the final touches on the $30 million route. Stanley L. Dick. resident engineer for CalTrans District 7. said motorists traveling north on Newport Boulevard can now take the new 1.1 mile freeway sect1on which links up with the north· bound lanes or the San Diego Freeway. Conversely, southbound motorists on the San Diego Freeway can now transfer onto Route 73 and get off a mile down the road onto the Newport Freeway southbound. The freeway segment, part o( the six-mile long uncompleted Corona del Mar route, was to have opened last Friday follow· inj? ded1cat1on ceremonies, but rains the pre\ 1ous week delayed -;orne painlmg work on the new route. Cops Refuse Rape Report? REDWOOD CITY (AP> -City <>fficials have ordered an in- \'estigation into a 30-year·old ministry student's claim that two police officers refused to make out a report after !:>he r eported an ..ttlcmptcd rape. The woman, "'ho says she p1ckcs up hitchhikers in hopes of leading them lo Christ, said she was attacked by a younj? man who offered lo let her read the B1· ble to him as at his home. But later. when she tried to re- port the incident to police. she ~aid the officers told her "men will be men -and blamed me for letting it all happen." Jl<'I' chargl''\ against pol1Cl' were presented to the City Coun- cil. Smoking Ban Set LOS ANGELES (AP) -An or. dinance that bans cigarette smoking in city supermarket<; and grocery stores goes into e!· lect April 25. OAANO~COAST " DAILY PILOT =~~~;·r.=~=:;.= GN\I Pv1111.,.1,..c.o_.~, --... It-Mt OUbll\~ Mftl'Mf•Y tl\tCMIOf'I -rto.ty tor (o,te ,.,. ,..wpo4'1 _..,_(t\ H""ll"9ton S..tehf!Jeiuft te1" '/ell•'I ""'""" '•ddltbaf' V•Htr •nd l.Aov~9•-'flt \l)iuif\(N\t Atl"Ql41'• .. 0tYI"• t-nA h PV~l\iwod .._.,_,,d••' ..,..,, ~·~ ~ O" .,., 10•• ovhll\ftu''Q o••"' '' M '" ~'' """ \t1ttt (O'\l•M•u C•llfo,,_.etttlt ..... ,, .. -Pr•\•cftoftt end Pwtlit1W r J10 II Cwlty V•(fJ-,.t\•Of"'tlnclCie,..,-4~f ·-··11 .... 11 ~Ollor T_,,._,,..,. -.... ,,,. 11111• OHi••• \Mt lll<MHI" .... AnlMAftl MIM91"8 ~tin T•l.,ho"t (114)~1 CIHtlned Advtnllll"I .. 241.,. the Space Defense Center al Cheyenne Mountain offered one early today. He said two fragments of Sov· iet satellites re-entered the earth's atmosphere about 3 a.m. <EST> but over the Atlantic Ocean. "There is always a chance of a •skip'," explained NORAD Jn. formational Services Officer Lt. Gordon Brady. He explained the skip designa- tion is precisely what it sounds like. the physical effect of skip- ping a flat pebble across a water s urface such as a stream or pond. The pieces of debris of Soviet Cosmos 867 and Cosmos 898 could have struck earth's dense at· mospbere. then rebounded off it, re-entering it again on the Pacific Ocean side of the globe. However. the time elements in· .volved are a little off, Lt. Brady noted, since the objects were seen Tuesday in California between 3:1S and 3 :30 a.m. <PST). "We received information from our weather people two weeks ago that we are in the midst or a major meteor shower which is due to end about April 20th," he added. · Despite the fact five Hunt· ington Beach policemen, airline personnel, California Highway Pah~ol officers and others who s aw the two objects, deny they were meteorites, this would lend s upport to another theory. Griffith Observatory Director Dr. Edward Krupp cautiously suggests it was a meteor shower, or partial shower. or perhaps a rare double meteor. "That was no meteor!" declared Huntington Beach Police Officer Dan McKerran after the eerie sightings. Many who saw the UFOs described them as traveling at the same speed and not on a downward, arc-like trajectory. They seemed to fly straight, unswervingly, over the earth's surface and maintained a steady formation flight, the witnesses agreed. Nothing was detected on radar screens at the time. "Well, it's a real Heinz 57 Varieties mix of ideas," con· ceded NORAD's Lt. Brady NMEA President Grgurich asked district trustees Tuesday why Garden Grove spends $8S per student to administer pro- grams while it costs the local dis- trict $105 per student, 24 percent higher than Garden Grove. Once ·again, Nicoll questions the rationak! behind the com- parison because there are 52,627 students m Garden Grove and 25,970 in Newport-Mesa. According to district figures. total administrali ve costs for 1975·76 were $2,345,144 compared with Garden Grove's $.1,078,1.34. Nicoll said teacher leaders "should compare apples to ap- ples," because ''if we doubled our enrollment we wouldn't dou- ble administrative costs.'' Teacher and district negotiators have been at an im· passe since March 9 following a breakdown in contract negotia- . tions over teacher pay, binding arbitration and teacher transfer policies. A state mediator is scheduled to arrive Wednesday to reopen negotiations between district and teacher bargaining chiefs. Auto Victim Still Critical In Hospital A young Canadian man re- mained in critical condition to- day at Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach. three days after he was struck by a car while walking m a traffic lane on a dark stretch of West Coast Highway. Newport Beach police traffic investigator Steve Van Hom to- day said John Mondoux of Calgary. Alberta, is listed as the primary cause of the Monday evening accident. Van Hom said the 20-year-0ld visitor apparently was in the roadway about 8 p.m. Monday and an approaching driver was unable to swerve in time to avoid Mondoux Police said no citations arc pending SeCreey Denied Closed Door Meet Def ended ByfilLARYKAYE 00 -D•lly Pit .. $1111 Irvine Assistant City Attorney Roger Grable and four city coun· cil members denied today that the council violated the Ralph M. Brown anti-secrecy law when they met behind closed doors for 10 minutes Tuesday. "There's no violation of the Brown Act until the group takes an action," Grable asserted. The Ralph M . Brown Act is de· signed to prevent public agencies from holding secret meetings. "We would have been in trou- ble if we held a n executive seaslon at the end of the meeting to discuss the mayor selection but we didn't,•• Grable added. The private meeting was held during a '5-minute recess called after a deadlocked vote for mayor. The council had unsuccessfully tried to choose a new mayor for two meetings. The council finally voted 3 to 2 at the end ot Tuesday's session to table the questJon, thereby leaving cur· rent Mayor David SUb ln office. Silla today called the Dally Pilot's J)(MllUon that the private . meettna may be a violation oflhe Brown Act "a cheap shot.'· · 'Tm appalled that you're male· ing a tempest out or a teapot •.. said SUia, adding that h viewed the situation to be like someone "overparking fortivt" minutE"~." The councU members say lhey did not violate the Brown Act because they did not take acUon an the closed Se5$lon. However. Individual council rneaibera aakl the group "yelled at each other .. about why certain people weren't voting for certain other people and yelled at Coun- cilman Bill Vardoulis to make up his mind and finally vote. The section of the Brown Act labeled "Purpose df the Act," states : "The purpose of the Act can be briefly stated. It is to insure that the deliberations as well as the actions of local agencies are performed at meetings open to the public and as to which the public has been given adequate notice. It is to prevent govern· ment rt-om being conducted in secret.'• Sills denied that the heated dis· cussion in the closed room con- stituted "deliberations" about the mayor selection. One council member, Gabrielle Pryor, urged the Daily Pilot to take the question to court. "lnslnuatlons in the newpaper aren't very productive and are unfair to the Cm\ncil." Mrs. Pryor claimed. "If t.M edltors1can prove we're ln violation, they can come aner us. Let's goto court.'' she saif!. Following the receu. Mrs. Pryor srud the matter of select· Ins a mayor would bo continued to an executive session at the end or the meetlnR since it was a petsonnel item City Attorney Jim Erickson OfCrecd Later, however. the council ruled the matt.er would be dis, cuaaed at the end of tho public meeUna. followine an executive letlkln CG UU,atton.. , ...... aflM L .. And If ll falla aoart. I 1. take aa ru Wt1 of formlAC a.noUter team to 10 throuCb ta.. l•o-1ur we've~ Juat to & th1a far. "I don't think tbere'll be anyaae ID tbe communtt7 wUl1q to take U on under those carcormtances and the brldce will be stalemated." Ficker said that. in addition to4 seekina the Coul Guard permit. CalTram officials have filed for a coastal commlsaloo permit. The plans shown at the meet· ing call for building the bridge curvin& to the north ot the emt- ini one. The new bridae will have six lanes pJus an extra lane for westbound traffic that will turn right. to bead northbound on Dover Drive. He noted that BAT originally requested the through lane for Dover Drive to be started in the middle of the bridge, but Cal- Trans engineers extended it the length ol the span. A similar lane for eastbound traffic to tum southbound onto Bayside Drive will start on the eastern end of the bridge. Ficker said that lane also was extendtld by CalTrans. The architect said Cal'l'rans further altered the BAT proposal by giving the bridge a "more radical curve to the north" than had been proposed. The northward curve would serve two purposes: it reduces con· struction cost by avoiding an ex· isling sewage pumping facility and it leaves room south of the new bridge for a boat launching facility. He said there will be an access road running under the east end of the bridge to link the two pieces or property there. The eight·foot pedestrian walkways and bike trails on each side of the new bridge will have a similar undercrossing on the west end. He said funding for the $5.2 million bridge, including federal, state and county money is "on schedule." ' DIEGO <AP; -Camerving w ter belpln1 San Diego nst.auranta rina up aal of beer nd win , .. ope.ratonaay . In u, a ll"Owin& nwn have Hl"Vld drinklna waler only on req "lt used to be a person who wu a llttle bit Ud.nty used to take another sip o! water:• •aid Tlmotb.Y Burke, •restaurant owner ... Now he atarta thtnttns in i.enm of another beer.'• All over San Dlego, a survey shows that wine and beer drinking is up as water consumption as a result of the west's drought conditions goes down. Carter Gives Pay Boosts to Staff • . W ASIDNGTON (AP) -Presi· dent Carter is giving his staff pay raises or up to 25 percent which will increase salaries for top aides to $56,000. The raises will cost $400,000 a year, but Carter's spokesman says they save the taxpayers money. "The President felt it was im· portant for the White House to set an example in holding down in· creases," ·press secretary Jody PoweU said Wednesday. He said the raises are substan- tially less than the maximum authorized by law. But a White House breakdown shows the increases are only Crime Symposium Slated for Mesa A crime prevention sym· posium sponsored by the Orange County Criminal Justice Council and 15 Orange County police agencies will be held Friday in Costa Mesa. The public is invited to attend the program scheduled from 9:30 a .m. to 5 p.m. in the Santa Ana Room of the South Coast Plaza Hotel. Registration fees have been set at $10 and will cover luncheon costs. For reservations call 834-7131. $1,SOO below the legal maximum for the highest staff levels. At~ lowest staff levels, the rais4s average $5,000 below the mai- i mum. The increases are retroactive to Feb. 27. l The pay increases go to 48 members of the White House staff and are part or an overall i.o· crease already given to other government employes. at t}fe lowest staff levels, White llouse pay goes from an average $36,000 to $42,500. Among those at the top level. where the salacy goes froii- $44,600 to $56,000, are Powell, energy adviser Jjimes R. Schle&- mger national security advt.set Zbigniew Brzezinski and sf~ other Carter assistants. · • A White House statement saiA $105,000 was being saved at u,e lowest level by keeping the in- creases below the limit authorized. It said the total sav· ings in all salary levels was $145,000. Bus Plans Slated LOS ANGELES CAP> -A Superior Court hearing on the merits of the school board com· promise plan to integrate city schools continued today -on a gamble that an anti-busing group will lose an appeal to enter the case SONY'S BIG ONE Hcr,.,'s thP t>ig1est r,;n.rron colCY TV yet-21 ' (meos11ed cf.oqonolly). And 11 hos o bg plus- T ron1tron Plus. T nn iron hos olwoys been lcnown for o qreot pct11e bur Trin;tron Plus introduces you lo on even c,eot& pict11e. Sony engineers found o woy 10 intensify the electron beams which "point" the picture. Also. the ~foce of the tube is dorket to heighten controsl. Whilf'f whites. Darker dork.. More subtle 1n bPtweens. Come seA. thP biggest, biightest, ~horpesl Trimtron ~11P• You'll bclif'11e 11 Trm1tron P1u" 'It\ a Sony." KV-1941R 19'' ~reen measured diogonolly •:V-2101 ? I" •,cre..:n mcoo.vrcd rliol)onnlly SPOIL YOURSELF Sure. "It's o Sony.'' But it''> o nf!fW t<r' (measured dioqonolly) remote control T rin1tron Plus color TV. The 1riple-funct1on remote control Commondef is totally electronic ond loldly q1urt. Just touch o burton fOf chonnel selection. volumf" rf'qulotion and on/off. And thP. Tnnotron Plu~ picturP is even better than befcxe Thanh 10 Sonv\ enqinPe<S who developed o bundlP of 1mpiovPmP.nl\ to molte Tr:n,rron Plu> 1he bt1ght<?sl, -.hofpe~I. <:•o<pe\1 Sony ever. Come -.ee 11. Yo•J de\arve 1t.' II~ a Sony." -BOThi MODELS IN STOCK - 275·East 17th St. Costa Mesa ...... .....,.. ...... ... Jo_.. Weflt -4 Ceri• .k. Phone 642-8882 Store Hoors Deily 9-6 Sat 9-5.30 ~ .. ....._.Artesa..1tu ... , l t VOL 70, NO. 83, 4 SECTIONS, 50 PAG ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TEN CEN Were UFOs Bits of Russ Spaceship? 117 ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of tM O•llY ~I ... Slaff Chances are no one will ci?ver solve the mystery of what the two objects seen rocketing through the sky Tuesday, really were, but two theories were offered today. A spokesman for the North American Air Defense Command (NORAD) at Colorado Springs, €olo., said a computer check at tile Space Defense Center at (tbeyenne Mountain offered one eprly today. \ . He said two tra1ment1 of SoY· let satellltes re-entered the earth's atmOlpbere about 3 a .m. (EST) but over the AUantic Ocean. · "There is always a chance of a 'skip'," explained NORAD In· formatiooal Services Officer Lt. Gordon Brady. He explained the skip desiena· tion is precisely what it sounds like, the physical effect of skip. ping a flat pebble across a water surf ace 111eh a• atream or pond. The pieces of debris ol Soviet Cosmae 817 and Coemos 898 couJd haye atn&ck earth's dense at· mospbere. then rebounded off it, re-entering it again on the Pacific Ocean side of the globe. However, the time elements in· volved are a little off, Lt. Brady noted. since the objects were seen Tuesday in California between 3 :15 and 3:30 a.m. (PST). SVUSD Chief's Salary Boosted Desai New Pre~ier Of India NEW DELHI, India (AP> Morarji Desai, 81-year-old leader of the successful fight to unseat t he government of Indira Gandhi, was sworn in today as lndia's fourth prime minister and immediately signaled a possible end to this country's special links with the Soviet Union. At a news conference after tak- ing the oath of office, Desai said the 1971 Indian-Soviet friendship treaty "must not come an the way of our friendship with any other Mate .•• We won 't have any 5pecial relations with any coun- try." Desai, a veteran or the Indian i ndependence movement and a former leader of Mrs. Gandhi's Congress party, said his govem- men l would adopt a foreign policy of ''proper nonalign- ment." In reference to his govern- ment's future nuclear policy, the new prime minister said, "We do not believe in atomic weapons at all." ••we don't know whether it is necessary to have nuclear ex- plosions for peaceful purposes. If it• \is not necessary. it should oeter be done," ht' added. Claiming "peaceful purposes," India set off a nuclear explosion in 1974 that disturbed many Western nations. It 1s building a r eprocessing plant capable of extracting plutonium, a nuclear bomb material, from spent reactor fuel . Asked if al age 81 he was fit to bear the heavy burdens of lead- ing the world's second most populous nation, Desai quipped . u,My age is better than your:;. Ac· . <SeeJNDIA, Page A%) Water Issue Set For TV Discussion The impacts on Saddleback Valley growth of a recent state Water Resources Control Board denial of new water and sewage system permits for the region will be the topic of a panel discussion Friday at 7:30 p.m. on KOCE-TV. Channel50. Various elements of this con· troversy will be represented. Spokesmen for the water board, die County Environmental Coali· tfbn. the valley's regional water agency and the county build mg in- d us try comprise the panel. moderated by newsman .Jim Cooper. A~Wl ......... INDfA'S NEW LEADER Morarjl Desai, 81 County Okays Now Gets $40,280, Mileage By LAURIE KASPER OI the D•llY Pilot Sl•lf Saddleback Valley Unified School District Superintendent Richard Welte's salary has been boosted to $40,280, retroactive to July 1. District trustees unanimously agreed this morning to give the superintendent a retroactive six percent pay raise. The decision came a few minutes past mid· night, after meeting in a cJo.sed executive session. The superintendent's salary bas been $38,000 a· year since he was given the top ad- ministrator's job in June 1975. He also is paid $350 a month for mileage expense and automobile aJlowanee or another $4,200 an- nually. This amount remained unchanged by the trustees' ac· T R • tlon. OrO eZODIDg In the neighboring Capistrano ·Unified School District. trustees F 7 5 H ·were toJd last fall by the Orange. Or OmeS County counsel that retroactive · pay for their superintendent A zone change opening the door would not be legal. for 75 new homes scattered over • When contacted this morning, 362 hilly acres near O'Neill Park a representative of the county won the unanimous approval of counsel's office said he could see Orange County supervisors Wed-nothing illegal about the retroac· nesday. tive pay. However. since In granting the change of zone Capistrano trustees were given from agricultural to residential that opinion, he s aid be would the Board of Supervisors reject-check on the question. ed a planning commission re-SaddJeback trustees apparent· commendation. Jy were unaware of the opinion Commissioners said the area given their neighbors. was not ready for development When questioned, Trustee because of inadequate road ac-Carole Neustadt reacted with cess, fire safety and sewer s urprise. ··u we did it and if it's facilities. illegal, we didn't do it with any The new homes, proposed by forethought," she said. the Coto de Caza Development John Cooper, assistant to the Corporation, will be southeast of superintendent, said lawyers for the park and reached via Live other counties have ruled that Oak Canyon Road. retroactive pay cannot be given. Murray Storm, an assistant However, he said, Orange Coun- d1rector of the county Environ-ty's lawyers have said this can be mental Management Agency, done as long as it is being done said Wednesday the road is sub-within the same fi scal year. standard and already has a high He said Capistrano trustees rate of accidents. may have been considering a pay But spokesmen for the de· raise retroactive to another fis- veloper contended the limit of 75 cal year for their superintendent. homes would not add to traffic (See BOOST, Page AZ) problems. In addition, they said, an ex- tension of Alicia Parkway will Saddleback provide alternate access at about the time or shortly after the new homes are built. But Supervisor Ralph Diedrich won support from fellow board members to ask county staff members to see if fees could be assessed the developer to help build that road. And he said this would be a (See REZONE, Pace AZ> Workshop Tab $1,105 Less is More A weekend workshop for ad- m in is tr a tors, trustees and repreS«¥1tatives of employe as- sociations cost the Saddleback ValJey Unified School District about $1,105. District superintendent Richard Welte told trustees Wed- nesday that the cost for each of the 59 participant.a broke down to $18.74 per person. He said this was a ••very nominal fee" for 1uch a workshop. Water Cut Aids Beer Sales SAN DI EGO (AP) -Conserving water is helping San Diego restaurants ring up sales of beer and wine, operators say. In recent weeks, a growing number have served drinking water only on request. "It used to be a person who was a little bit thinly used to take another sip of water, .. said Timothy Burke, a restaurant owner. "Now be starts thinking in terms of another beer.'' • All over San Diego, a survey shows that wine and The dlstrict cosponsored the workshop at the Surr & Sand Hotel ln Laguna Beach this past weekend with the Saddleback Valley Administrators Associa· tton. 0 We received Information from our weather people two weeks ago that we are in the midst of a major meteor shower which is due to end about April 20th." be added. Despite the fact five Hunt· ington Beach policemen, airline personnel, California Highway Patrol officers and others who saw the two objects, deny they were meteor-ites, this would lend Spring Plowing IU:>port to another theory. Griffith Obsernto.ry Director Dr. Edward Krupp cauUoualy suggests it was a meteor st.owe. or partial shower, or perhaps a rare double meteor. "That was no meteor! .. declared Huntington Beach Police Officer Dan McKe.rran after the eerie sightings. Many who saw the UFOs described them as traveling at the eame speed and not on a downward, arc-like trajectory. They seemed to Oy straight. unswervingly. over the earth's surface and maintained a steady formation Olghl, the witnesses agreed. Nothing was detected on radar screens at the time. "Well, it's a real Heinz 57 Varieties mix of ideas," con· ceded NORAD's Lt. Brady. OAllY Piiot St.ti PhOto This scene that looks somewhat retrums- cent of spring rites in the Midwest was ac- tually near Laguna Hills Leisure World. Photograph of tractor and disc harrow plowing the earth to prepare it for plant- ing was taken from a spot beside El Toro Road. The area still abounds with wildlife. including deer . Doctor Held • m Death Hour-old Infant Said Strangled in Westminster Westminster police charged Dr. William Baxter Waddill or Anaheim Wednesday in the strangulation death of a ODC• hour-old infant at Westminster Community Hospital March 2. Police De partmen t a d· ministrative aide Earl Graham alleged that Dr. Waddill, 43, at- tempted to perform a saline abortion on the 7112-month old feh.\s at the hospital. Graham asserted a live baby· girl was delivered and taken to the nursery for life-sustaining care. · The infant died about one hour after birth, he added. · Police said they filed murder charges after a three-week in- vestigation into the case in which hospital personnel were ques· Minimum Pay Hike Of 20 Cents Urged WASIBNGTON (AP) -The Carter administration recom- mended today that the minimum wage be increased 20 cents an hour as of July 1, 50 cents short of the proposal by the AFL-C IO. The Administration also pro- posed that the minimum wage be tied in the future to a set percen- tage of average manufactunng wages. Labor Secretary Ray Marshall told a House Labor Standards subcommittee that the Carter ad- ministration proposes increasing the $2.30 an hour minimum wage · to $2.50 an hour. The Administration also pro· posed that beginning in July 1978 and each year thereafter the minimum wage be set at 50 per- cent of the average straight· time, hourly wages of manufac- turing workers. Th.is proposal is known as lndexing. The AFL-CIO recommended a $2-an-hour minimum wage im· mediately upon enactment of the bill with indexing beginning January 1978 at 60 percent of the aver age manufacturing worker's wage. Labor lobbyists in the crowded hearing room appeared shocked by the Marshall proposals and one lobbyist for the garment workers remarked that "labor might have backed the wrong candidate," o reference to labor's support. of President Carter. The AFL-CIO 11pokc1man said that when s ubcommittee ch.airman John Dent left the White House after a meetlna with Carter on Wednesday. ht had the impression Carter acreed to an lndexinf level or SS percent of tho spokesman said Carter's top economic adviser Charles Schultze "is the guy who shot it down." Marshall said the Admirustra- tion 's proposal would eliminate the wage differential between em ployes who have been covered in stages by the minimum wage act. He said the Administration ••c arefully reviewed" the pro· posals by organized labor which closely parallel those recom- mended by Dent. He said the Carter administration "believes that in light of current economic conditions, a somewhat different approach is warranted at this time." The AFL-CIO had testified (See WAGE, P age A2, State Claims Water Waste SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. 's consumer department has flied a complaint against a private Sierra foothill water company, saying it wastes over 60 million gallons of water a year. Richard Spohn, director of the Department of Consumer Al· fairs, said Wednesday that the al· l ecatlon waa filed against J ack11on Water Works. ti on ed. The District Attorney's Office .obtained a warrant carrying $50,000 bail for Dr. W)lddill on Wednesday night. Deputy District Attorney Bob Chatterton said that Waddill had· agreed to surrender to face ar- raignment today in West Orange :County Municipal Court. Orange County Coroner's Of. lice Chief Investigator Jim Beisner said the infant <lied due to "asphyxiation caused by manual strangulation.,. Westminster Community Hospital Administrator Richard LeGrand indicated Waddill is not a hospital employe but "he had medical staff privileges since 1971." W add.ill, a gynecologist and ob. stetrician, has medical offi ces in Huntingto n Beach and Westminster. Contacted today, Dr. Waddill said he had an office full or pa- tients and declined to comment on the charges against him. The gynecologist said his at- torney, Matt Kurilich, would con- tact him before his court ap- pearance. Co ast Weathe r Chance or showers and possible thundershowers tonight and Friday with chance o f measurable rainfall 40 percent. Lows tonight 46 to 52. Highs Fri- day in upper SOs. INSIDE TODAY Most of IOUthern Orange Count11 could aet by without watn for only a couple days if pipelinu i«re smJer~ by a natural dJao.at~. The perflOU$ ataCC! of water tuppliea in this /oat.growing Ngion i& dC!laUed on P.aae A.10. i.•ex ., .. , •• AA,11 AIO ., ... •• Cl-' ..... .. beer drinkhtg ls up as water consumption as a result of the west's drouaht conditions goea down. P1rttclpant.a attended meel- in11 on the budiiet. bond electJon and buUdln• pro1ram and merit pay tuk force report. They also heard a t.olk on commun1caUona and a di1cu11ion or conflict management . .. maoufactur1n1 wa1e1. The h1bor The water beln1 wasted represent. 40 pvcent of all the water in the aysttm. wbkh .aern• the Jackson area of Amador County tn the fNlfhlll• eut of Stoclrtoo. be said. ... 1 M Mll ' r WASHINGTON <API -p,...1. deat Carter 1t l.lw•n1 bla 1tall pay ralHI ~ up \0 25 percen\ wblch wlU increase aalariea lor top aides to SM,000. The ralHS will cott S.00,000 • yur, but Carter's apoknman uys they uve the taxpayers money North Gets Light Rain By The A.5.so<'lated Press Variable clouds with oc- casional ra1nshowers were expected to continue in Northern California today in the wake of Wed- nesday's s torm which brought generally hght rain. Eureka topped the state with 1.08 inches of rain, while C rescent Ci ty measured .87 and Fresno .41. Elsewhere. amounts were under a quarter of an inch. Colder air was expected today as a low pressure a rea moved southward through California. UlM. Freeway Section Open To Motorists A section of the new Corona del Mar Freeway opened to motorists Wednesday night, after CalTrans road crews put the final touches on the $30 million route. Stanley L. Dick, res ident engineer for CalTrans District 7 said motorists traveling north o~ Newport Boulevard can now take the new 1.1 mile freeway section which links up with the north- bound lanes of the San Di ego Freeway. Conversely, southbound motorists on the San Diego Freeway can now transfer onto Route 73 and get off a mile down the road onto th e Newport Freeway southbound. The freeway segm ent. part of lhe six-mile long uncompleted Corona del Mar route, was lo have opened las t Friday follow- ing dedication ceremonies. but rains the previous week delayed some painting work on the new route Phone Books Due in May Local telephone directories for the Mission V1eJo planned com- munity and the El Toro/Lake Forest area will be di stributed in May to area residents by the Mis sion VieJoJaycees. The directories. which will in elude emergency SE'r v1ce and government information <1'\ "ell as res1dent1al listings, will be free. Paid advertisements nf Sad- dleback Valley ml'rchar.ts also "111 he included Offers Studied MOSCOW <AP> The Soviet Union will consider seriously proposals to be brought this weekend by Secretary of Stale Cyrus R. Vance although U.S. statements on human rights m the Soviet Union will affect talks between the two countries. the governmcnl newspaper I zvcstia says. ORA NOE COAST ~II DAILY PILOT Tiw Or'•~ Co.tit 0.llf f'Hr•t wUft -"•<"-I\'"'"' ~'""'Hf>"'" p,.n, 1\ .,n•O\l'f'd tw tN> Or4t'\o--CN\t P\ltlfl\ftl~ C•mpeny ~•,."41110ft\•'" PVblh,.,.d Mo~4Y l~rouQft FrlcM• fOf' Co\t• ,_W N•w,aor1 hAt~ H!ln0"'0"-" ... .t<"PI ''°""' t••n Vellt Y trv1"•· Sadct•ttMt<' V•ll•Y •net l.t?'Uf\l&f>Mh Sovtft(l).nf 4t•~r~Of\r4tlefU '"°" '' C>vbflt.Nd \•tvrd•Y\ ..,., ~'' T'-0t1ntlo.tl 0-,,~l\l'lilf\9 O'•"' " et lJO Wl\t IMW' S.lrMt Colt• Mt\• Carnorft•• ~ ......... _ ~l\ld+l"ll •f'llO P\,bll""9f ,. ... c-. YK.e Prt\klt:r\• eft411 0t"9f•I ~ ................. l.dUM' ,.... .... ,"~ ......... M.tnequ'lo I0.19' Clwl•lff M l .. t 1111< ..... ~ Nell AtUtlent M.tt'leOl"Q Ed''°"' S•ddlebeclit Veller C>mce '001 Le l'e1 llN<I e1 \on or ... ''""' .. OfflCH to.I• Mou >JO Wol llay ",... """"""'°" lluch 11111 .. ..:11 ~u•owf'f l•0""•9•9(ftt tlMOlerwwyr1Mrwt T•l•phone (114)1Q.q11 Ct•Hlfled Advertlalnt 142-MTI ,,_.--Valloy-Olflu M1-tt10 ,,_~t·- """°''° ~1'~ :.;, 0:.:."?: •. c~,::.,":::,::.";$;~, MIT,., er ••••'tit•""•"'' ,..,,." ,.. • ., N .. 11<6fll<fd •llhAWI ••nl•I H ffl'IH .... ti ( .. f...-tOWMf. ~r.:, .. ~•:u,,::!~?:11::1•.;1, ~::::. ":;':4 ~"'''· &• M i ii •• M ,....,.,.... ,..u .•• ,, _ .... ._ .... _ .. ,, ••The PreaJdenl (ell ll WU lm• portaat lor UM Whit• Howe Lo Mt an example 1D hold1na down ln-creuea. •· pr aettetary Jody Powell said Wednesday. He sa.ld the raiffs are aublltan- U•lly less than the maximum authorized by law. But a White House breakdown shows tbe increases are only $1,500 below the legal maximum for the highest staff levels. At the lowest staff levels, the raises average $5,000 below the max- imum . The increases are retroactive to Feb. 27. The pay increases go to 48 m embers of the White House staff and are part or an overall m crease already given to olher government employes, at the lowest staff levels, White House pay goes from an average $36,000 to $42,500. Among those at the top level, where the s alary goes from $44,600 to $56,000, are Powell, energy adviser James R. Schles· inger national security adviser Zbigniew Brzezins ki and six other Carter assistants. · A White House statement said $105 ,000 was being saved at the lowest level by keeping the in· creases below the limil authorized. It said the total sav- ings in all salary levels was $145,000. f'rom Page Al INDIA ... cording to the English calendar I'm only 19." Desai was a Leap Year baby, born Feb. 29, 1896. He added he would quit the prime ministership "the day l feel I am not physicallv fit. I '11 vacate immediately, even tomor- row. I'm not going to stay a mo· ment longer than l 'm needed. But what does age matter? It's the spiritthat matters." His 59-year-old predecessor was not present for the three. minute ceremony in the ornate Ashoka Hall of the presidential palace. But Mrs. Gandhi was one of the first to send congratula tions to the long-time foe who led his new Janala party to a stun- ning election triumph over her and the Congress party last weekend. From Page ,,\ l Ri;zONE ... good time to see if similar pro- visions could be imposed on other developments when they in- crease congestion in new areas. In addition to the 762 acres re- zoned Wednesdav, the Coto de Caza area includes another 400 acres that were rezoned earlier for development. As part of Wednesday's artion provisions were included m part nf the area for a future 250-room hotel or motel facility. But dt>velopment cannot pro· cecd unlll specific plans are ap· proved later by supervisors. WAGE ... e:irli<'r that the minimum wage \\OUld ha\t' to be S2 65 right now to cover the inflation that has re- duc<'d the value nf the dollar sinct> the last "ttfl<''> of ~laggered increases m the m inimum wage began. ID W OTO CAP) -1'bt Ponta1on reported a ood uu. or mlttaken Identity lode)' amona tbe remalm of 12 men banded over by the Vietnamese aovernmen\ aa U.S. war caaualUes. ldentilicalion experts have dis· covered that remains hsted by the Vietnamese as Air Force Capt. Lawrence H. Golberg of Cloquet, Minn.. actually were those of Lt. Patrick E. Wynne of Satellite Beach, Fla. Wynne was a crewman on an F4C Phantom jet flown by Golberg when the plane was shot down Aug. 8, 1966. Both Golberg and Wynne were earned as miss- ing in action. Wynne's status was changed May 28, 1974, to pre- sumed dead. At the same time, the Pen- t a gon said it has been de- termined that the remains iden- tified by the Vietnamese as Air Force Maj. Curtis E . Eaton of Wakefield, R.I., are not those of Eaton bul "appear to be those of a Vietnamese." President Carter disclosed Wednesday that one or the 12 caskets brought back from Hanoi by his special commission con- tained the remains of a Viel·. namcsc man, rather than of an American. Carter did not iden- tify the American involved. Eaton was pilot of an Fl05 fighter-bomber when shot down Aug. 4, 1966. He has been carried as missing in action. f'rona Page Al BOOST •.. However, Jerome Thornsley, Capistrano's superintendent, said no other fiscal year was in- volved in consideration of his pay. Mrs. Neustadt said Welte's raise was the culmination of trustees' evaluation of the superintendent. She said they have been doing the evaluation for the last couple of months. She said trustees have judged that he is doing a good job. She also said the raise makes his salary competitive with the s uperintendents of other county school districts which have a similar enrollment. Six percent was the maximum amount allowed for other ad- ministrators under the district's new merit pay system . The average percentile raise for prin· c1pals and adm1mslralors this .) ear was 4.46 percent. In October. 1975, trustees of- fered the superintendent a 6.6 percent salary raise. At the time, the supen.ntcndent refused the raise saying that "the (spending> s piral has to stop somewhere and 1t should be with me." He reportedly has agreed to ac- cept this raise. Al the lime, however, he was given the automobile allowance. Welle's raise compares as foll ows lo other south county un· 1f1cd school distnct superinten- dents. Dr Robert Sanchis, Laguna Deach Unified, $36,040. <He also r ecei v('S $175 a monlh for milea~c.1 Dr Thornsley, Capistrano. $42,500 Stan Corey, Irvine Unified, S44,000 Dr John Nicoll, Newport. Mesa, $43,154. (He also has use of a car > Trustee-elect Mary Phillips s aid she concurs with the raise given the Saddleback s uperinten· dent 'Deep' Debate Obscenity Opponems Meet MEMPlfIS, Tenn. (AP) -The battle over obscenity is being waged with all the logic of s treet warfare. contends a prosecutor who won convictions in connec- tion with the movie, "Deep Throat." Asst. U.S. Atty. Larry Parrish said Wednesday in a debate with his courtroom foe, Robert E. Smith. of AUanta, that those who want to cloak obscenity in the First Amendment's protective folds should be prepared to accept the consequences. Smith argued that there is no scientific basis for restraint of ob- scenity because it might be harmful or cause improper behavior. The Parri5h-Smith df'bate at Memphis State University Law School was a prelude to another courtroom appearance for the two "Deep Throat" opponent.a i''riday. Judge Hltrry W. Wellford of U S. District Court will hear anfu· men ls on whether the 1976 convlc· lion of Smith's cllent, "Deep Throat" !ltstr Hnrry Reem1, and 10 other individuals should •land in light of a recent U.S. Supreme Courtdetision. Parmb told about 300 law stu· denu that he found more con- fusion on both aides or the obsceni- ty laeue ~on any in whlth he bas been involved. "The thing h as been de- generated into almost an emo- tional struggle with the same amount of logic you find in street gang warfare," Par rish said. ''If someone is a First Amend- ment absolutist, fine ... That position basically is, that the Constitution allows for no ·restraint oo communication - period," Parrish said. "But . let's apply it across the board, and all the 18 or 20 federal statutes that restrain communication In one fashion or another, all the libel and slander laws ... false advertising would go out. "Be sure you 're ready to ride that principle all the way out," Parrish said. As far as the con!lent.ing adult theory, Parrish said that position should also be carried out to it.s logical end. "That means that dueling now h«-comes another favorite sport, cockflghtine, dogllghta . • • suic'lde, you could just go on and on." Smith and the iOvernment pro- secutor were In sharp dlaaare~· ment over whether pornoarapbJ has been proven to be harmful. Both cited portions or the Pruldtnl'a Commluion on Obscenity to back their positions. -Get Off ltly Cyel~ A lot of people think motorcycles are death macpines says Ed Nievaard, a motorcycle sa!ety instructor in Ed: monds, Was h., so Nievaard says he's trying to get death of! the motorcycle. To illustrate his point, he rode with his "friend " around his neighborhood. -~ Pie Thrower Gets Watergate's Hunt NEW YORK CAP> -Yippie party pie-thrower Aron Kay has claimed E. Howard Hunt as his latest v1ct1m. Kay nailed llunl m the head Wednesday evening with a coconut cream pie in the corridor of the RCA Building. Hunt, COD· victed in the Watergate con- spiracy, was on his way to NBC- Trail D~railed VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BAS E (AP> Freight rail service between Los Angeles and San Francisco should be restored somellme today when workers complete repairs of damage t•auscd by the derailment of 16 railroad cars Wednesday, authorities report. TV's "Tomorrow" program. When asked about the mcidenl by "Tomorrow" host Tom Snyder, Hunt said, "I was sur- prised and a little disappointed. I thought that the level of political debate in America had adv&nced considerably beyond that since the time I was put away.'' Hu.nt was released Crom prison Feb. 23 after serving 32 months of an eight-year sentence. Strauss Approved WASlllNGTON <AP) -Robert Strauss, former chairman of the Democratic party, has been ap- proved by the Senate Finance Committee to be President Carter's special trade represen- tative. SONY'S BIG ONE Hr:ore"s th .. b:ri'J"S' Tr:nilron color rv yPt-21" [rn<''lSo.1'~ d 01onnlly) And ot hos o b 1 plus- Tr•n ,, ..., F,us Tr. ... •ro•l ho olwoy• bP."n ~riown for o re l' P•CU'O bu~ Tr'n.iron Plus 1n1roduc:es yo..i to 0!1 r ~·-n 1f"'"J'N picture. 5ony eng ,,,...,s fourid o way to "·em1fy thP el<>ttrC>ll bt1om\ which · pant" 1he picture Aiso. 1h" siJrlO<f~ of the lube 1s done< to he.ghten contrast Wh11er who•es. Oorker dorh More subtle on between• rv 2101 Pi y Rejected A t< req ror a n cent aalary lncreue and Dlltalllltl Ill"., traUon Da\ llsul 1 -ba beea R,Jected by Capjltraao U nlfled Scboo.l DlMrid board ~ Lrultea. No apec:lflc Hlary offer wiU be made by trustees unUl May 2, afte-r trustees have reviewed a preliminary budtet. accordlna to a truat.ee st.aiement released this week. ·'That's wbat we e:icpect.ed," said Tony Leon. pre•ident ol Capistrano Unified Educatioa A.ssociation, representing dis.- trld teachers. "They start witb zero and we start with 12 percent -tbal's lhe negotiating game." Leon called the trustees• postponement of a salary offer to permit them to study the pre- liminary budget "bunk." ·'Their business manager is too competent for that," he said. "They work with formulas that tell them to the dollar how much money they will have availabl& for teacher salaries." Leon said teacher contract negotiations officially open April 13. ·'What do we do -sit and stare at each other until May 27,'' he said. ''l would anticipate we would be deeply involved in negotiations by May 2." Capistrano teachers received an 8 4 percent salary raise in December. retroactive to July 1. The current base schedule is $9,958, the maximum $21, 779. Trustees have said they agreed to the 0.4 percent increase to br- ing Capistrano teachers' salaries m line with those paid in other unified dJstricts in the county. The proposed 12 percent hike for next year would distort Capistrano's salary and benefit scht;dule compared to other dis- tracts. trustees said. An increase of that magnitude would force the district to re· quest a significant property tax increase or impair the educa- tional program, they said. Come sre the bq')~St, b-i1htP\', ~hClfpest Tnnotron Pver You'll believP 1t Tnnitron Plus. "It's o Sony" 21" screen meo~urcd d1agonofly KV 1941R 19'' ''" n m"uwrL'd d1ogonolly SPOIL YOURSELF Sure, "It's o Sony." But it's o new 19'' (meosUl'ed diagonally) remote control Trinitron Plus color TV. The triple·funct1on remote control Commooder 1s totally electronic ood totally qiuet. Just touch o button for channel selection, volume regulation and on/off. ""d the T rinitron Plus ptdlKe is even bettflf than before. Thonb to Sony's enqineets who developed o bundle of improvf'ments to mo~e Tnnitron Plus the brightest, shorpe~I. crispest Sony evet1. Come see 11. You deserve it. 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';;;.r; " c~ '"t1~io J1 !.~: ~ crico ·:;:o J ' ""-.,, l>C••,. .. • J'•. 14 llOIC 1.• 1 n ~"" -*"'• 4 ~ ~ ... , .. ,. I ™• ,_. 11eim .1..~ H 11"" + " "' ... tfojtt ~ ri~·~·~ • Ul ti =• 14 J Gas Leases .. I WASHINGTON (AP> -Interior Secretary ~U D. Andrus Hked two otr1hor1 petroleum compant s Wed!"' neiday to e'l(plaln ~lu' they AA not produdAI natural 1aa fl'Om seven leaau. .. .- ' CITY DWELL Eas 1bould consider the MOney's Worth amount ol di.rt that comes through the windows, vents, air conditioner pockets. The Stratford Company of Chicago, manufacturer of upholstered furniture, suggests that ligbtcolored and delicate fabrics be treated to re pell dirt. For a room that bas a lot of traffic or la used by young children. steer clear of natural colors and buy a fabric that haa a bgbt weave and cleans well, such p the manmade olef"ms. Construction of upholstered furniture should be a prime consideration. According to Stratford: -THE FRAME SHOULD BE CONSTRUCTED or hardwood. wood kiln-dried as opposed to air-dried. -Joints should be dowelled and there should be no squeak in the frame. Test this by sitting down and pushing yourself back quickly. Also test the seat to make sure yw reel no springs. Cushions should not fall toward the center, sink at the arms, or collapse under legs. --Check for proper padding by lift.in& the seat cushions and feeling the deek on which they are set. Run your bands over the arms, especially the edges, to determine if they are properly padded. -STAND BACK, VIEW THE FURNITURE carefully, make sure seat covers fit the comers properly. They should lay plumb where they meet the couch's back. -Cushions should have a slight crown and are not un· iformly flat. Welts should be sewn into stress points. -Contemporary pieces should be on casters. Tradi- bonal styles should have set-in legs and skirts that fall naturally. Feel beneath the couch for cambric covering. The interior should not be exposed. -LABELS SHOULD T ELL CONTENT AND wearability and give cleaning instructions. -Arm caps should be included on a good couch, at no extra charge 'To take the mystery out of fabric selection, another in· dustry leader, Kroehler Manufacturing Company, Naperville, lU., suggests learning how it will wear and how it will clean. Power Outlook: More Demand SACRAMENTO <AP)) -The stale Energy Com- mission says the demand for electricity will double in Califorruaby 1995. But the rate of increase will be lower than in the 1960s and early 1970s THE CO MMISSION SAID IN ITS first electrical de·· mand rorecast. released Wednesday, that it expects elec- tricity use to grow at an average rate of 3.8 percent over the next 20 years, compared to 8 percent in the 1960s. This means only half as many new power plants will be needed toward the end of the century than were antic1putcu a few years ago, said Commission Chairman Richard MaulHn. MAtJLI.IN SAJD THAT T HE st:ite's resources would be strained to provide even the reduced number of plants. But he said some demand could be offset by using such things as agricultural wastes to run boilers and fuel cells to light of· fice bwldings. With Cream A~riculture Secretary Bob Bergland s ips coffee w1_th cr~am as he briefs newsmen in Washington on milk pnce supports. Bergland announced President Carter's decision to raise supports, which could boost the retail cost of butter and cheese in California. Dividend Declared The board ol dlrecton of Downoy Savings & Loan As· sociation declared a aeml·annual cash·divldend of 17 cents per shart, payable on April 20 to stockholders of record on April 4. Beldns Buys Company I Tb• Bekim Company'• Bulld.ln.a SeTvlcu Group has ac- quired the ruard clivitlon ot American Protection ln· dustrfea, tnc., Anallelm. Tbll n .. ly acqu.lr-ed compa!\)' wW operate under tbe name Bddm Protec:Uon Servica Company and ll part of a p lanned •panatoa proiram ln tho bulld.ina aervlce1 field. Term• ot th• acqul&IUon wwe not d.lKloted.