HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-05-03 - Orange Coast PilotQoiek·thinkiQg
.Meehanie SB:Ves
Pilot From ~ IJre
DAILY PILOT hio
* * * 10' * * *
TUESDAY AFTERNOON MAY 3, 1977
VOL. 10, NO. lU. J HCTIONS, M l'AOts
Laguna Vttti-, 84
---
aubman Pledges
To 'Top Mobil'
ID Irvine Bids
tate'--En
'
3 of use: .. -COn Men Take In First
;~.~-~~,.:-:.:·,
By AP Dispatches By pmup ROSMARIN .
OfllM D.ilY l'i,.. Si.ti
An 84-year-old South Lacuna
woman was cheated of her life's
, savings of $3,600 by two con-
lldence men who POSed ·as the manager and security chief of
, tile Banlc of America In Laauna
.Beach, police reported today.
Police sold they would not
l)lvulce the wom1n's name, by
qfreement with her.
1 Police aaid lbo ttoman tcild
tllJm th.ls story:
Last Frida)' ahe waa contacted
by telephone by a man who
• ~lalmed to be a banlc 1ecur1ty ol-
11 licer from San Die10. He told her
be au•pected Le1una Beach bank
-.mployes or embeuhn1 fclnds,
and asked her to help hlra trap
them.
She wu asked to wllhdraw her
$3,600 aavlnp and meet him at
the county branch library, 363
GlenneyreSt.
I Momentarily auspicious, she
·a1ked to speak to the bank 0man11er. Another man came on
the line and ldent1fled himself as Mr. Raymond." <John Raymond
.f• the real bank manager, police
11ald. >
1._ Satisfied. ahe asrced to help
, VJe "bank.'' The men told her to
ute a pre-arranced code number
AO that ahe would know she wu
d•ellna with tbe ri&ht mao at the
library. The transacUon took
place, with a man abe later
described as seeming "out of
breath.•• Sbe handed over an en·
velope containing 36 hundred
dollar bills, the lOlaJ from her
savings account.
The courier told her to go home
and wail for a telephone call.
The "security chief" called
apin. at 3 p,.m .. and told her to co to the bank. She wu unable to
make the appolntment.. ao her
caller told ber to try •lain Mon·
day.
Monday abe tried, and learned
(See BILKED, P1se A2)
Group Vmm
To Top Mobil
In.Irvine Bid
• What has five wheels, two legs, a rQtary
enrme and mows lawns for $2 an hour?
Shana Ellis, 14,, of Longview, Wash., does
j.._st that and uses the unicycle she's been
riding for two years as her locomotioll.
The Loe Angel• Rains picked
All-American defensive encl Bob
Brudzlnsld of Ohio today in a
long-delayed annual draft of col·
lege players by the NatloDal
Football Leagu~.
The team immediately an·
nounced tbat it planned to con--
vert him into a line back et' •
The draft also was hlgblighted
by the lelectlol'l of three USC
pJayers amona the flnt five
taken, back Ricky Bell, tackle
Marvin Powell and tJclde Cary
J eter.Earlleratoryon.Pq~BL
It was the firlt thoe Uda Jiad
happened llnce )fl~h.lilll $lite'•
Bubba Sm.ttb. Cliilt Jcmes and
Geor1e Webster were selected in
thefirat nve tou:nda in un: ·
The Rama bad tbe 23td plct 1n
tbedraft. ·•we chole blm in tMptqlrlth
our policy of plclrlng the highest
rated player available to us re-
1ardlea of position," said tbe
club"• viee-presf.4eJit ~ pninl mmaier DoolOoaunnJD, B""'"-61• 22, wb(> ~ 6-!=~~~ = g~ lege. • Bom Clft N4W Year.'• De.the Ram1r~ cbolc• threetmnsap.
pear'ed to tM Rote Bowl m bill
birthday. ~~the put 8eatOa
he wu o•~-~ m0tt;vah01ble onthoBuc~=·· act·-Scoutlnl Mid .......
food at the of diet abed-dlnl blocka md nadhfJ;" t.be
plat. ea ...._ 1oarJi'La ta
footbaU at osu and ...... Totbe~1e.._.
ClleeMllS;PqeU>-.
s T&ed!y, Mey S, 1177
··· 1'81niDg P.op~a~ ld~a
....... ..... ... ':"" % = Kent State MenfOrfiil, M0a1e Made " '
:UNT, Ohio (AP> -A Kent Stale
UnlvenJt.y 1tudent IJ'OUP Ufled students to-
day to beltll ullin1 f ou.r campus bulldlnp
after those who wer• killed duriq antiwar \P~11even7ean •to .
'1"fie WK>fficlal action by the May 4 Task
Force opened the annual observance in mem~of the four atudent.s who were killed
· d the lllne ho were liOUDCled when Na·
qonal Guard t:l'Oapl OPeOed tire on a ltudent
crowd ahortly after noon May 4, 19'70. The
U'oopt had been caU.ed.ill to break up violent
protest demonatratlons. •
• OJ'ftCIAt, MBllOatAL plans ealled fM ..,eeehel and a traditional ~elilht pr0or ~fop and vl,U on tM hllllldo wfiere the
ehoottnp occurred. The Tak Force also
• Wied a student strike for Wednesday and said
the adminiatration should shutdown classes.
Kent State administrators" have left that
• option to individual professors, telling them
they may handle ~lasses that clay a.a they wish
and suggesting that they avoid 1ivin1 tests or
arrange for makeup examinations if tests are
conducted.
The drive to re11ame buildings bad no sup-
port from Kent State admirustrators and
trustees but it drew the editorial backing of
t!te }l~tStater. the~pus newspaper. -.
"It'• a pretty popular Idea.'' 1&ld Barbara
Grubb, Its editor and a KentStateaenlor.
THE T~ FORCE calle(for Dl.Dlinl the
Art.Building after A.Jllaon Kreae, Pittaburab;
the 8ualoea-. Building ~tter WUUam
Schroeder. Loraln; the Music and Speeeh
Buildin& for Sandra Scheuer, Boardman; and
the Ii bran tor Jeffrey Miiler, Plainview, N. Y.
"Students are being told almpl,y to befin
calling these ~dings b>' these nadlea, • a
apokeaman for the Taak Force aa1d, "If it
eatehes on, that will serve our purposes."
Dr. Fay ~es. Kent State vi~ Pretldent -ror public afC..as and development, •aid tu\·
ivenity pollcy calla for namlo& bulldinJa
alterpenons liring or dead with special em·
pbuts OD dooon. •
. -..
An admlnlstratton spokesman said th~
malterTalsed by the Task Force hadn't been
brougbt up formally
A F):DERAL COURT JUr)# absolved
guardsmen, Gov. James A. Rhodes and othen
of liability~· an Auiust 1975 verdict on civil suita broot by the vlctinu or their families.
An appeal that decision is pending.
A year earlier, a federal judge dismissed
criminal charges brought against eight of the
guard.Sd\efi; ·saying the Justice Department
had failed to make its case.
..
E'"'9P-AJ Snits Flied
MOBIL •..
•grandfather. ·
~ Mobil was on the verge of talc·
.RAMS •••
The Cb.ica10 Bean bypuaod · the available quarterbackl · &od
stlected Ted Albrecht, a ~
pou.ad All·Amerlcao offensive ·
tackle hom the Unlventty of .
California, who played flve
apoita in hiab school and "1DI the
.401n4.e.
Otbei aelections in the ftnt
rowul were:
The Saa Dleg'o Charier•.
whose origlnll first-round pick
was traded to Dallas and then
wound up In Seattle, used a
cbolee ~ulNd frorn Dallas lo
name Bob Rush, a 2SS·pound
cen.._,rom Memphis State.
-The elght.b over-all choice
was owned by ClnciQDati in the
·BW Berpy deal and the Be111als
uaed it to take Wilaoo Whitley, a
• 281-pound defensive tackle from
the Univerait)l of Houston and
winner of the Lombardi Trophy
as the naUon 's No. 1 down
lineman.
-The Green Pay Packers
selected Mike Butler, a 26S·
pound defensive tackle from the
University of Kansaa.
-The No. 10 pick waa Kansas
City's and the Chiefs selected
Gary Green, a defensive back
from Baylor.
-The Howton Oilers picked
Mor~'TQlmS, a 260-pound .o!·
fensivetacklefrom Mi11out1 .
-Oklahoma State's Phillip
Dokes, a 260-pound tackle,
became the sixth defensive
lineman ln the first dozen selec·
lions when he was picked by lhe
Buffalo Bills.
-The Miami Dolphins went for
still another defenaive lineman, · ing over lhe Irvine Company for
$200 million, er $M a share, two
years ago when Mrs. Smith's
Orange County Superior Court
lawsuit halted the agreed sale
and paved the way for an eight
month trial of lhe iuue and lhe
continuing bidding battle.
Ripoffs Alleged
In A-,il'O ·Repairs • A. J ._ Duhe, ll baby·f1ced ~
pound tackle from Louisiana
State.
Mobil made what was seen as a
major concession to minority
• shareholders Monday when the
"company ruled that Irvine Com·
1 pany shareholders could takt the
,, earlier Mobil offer of $281.9
•million and apply it to an option
to buy that amount of Mobil stock
1 at any time during the next year.
·• The concession was im·
m ediately seen by close ob·
servers of the bidding battle as
an attempt to woo Mrs. Smith
away from her support of the
Taubman-Allen-Irvine group.
" It was learned today that Mrs.
Smith has no intention of discuss-
ing the Mobil offer and will con ,
tinue to support the Taubman or
ganization.
, She is one of 10 principals who
have placed their assets behind
tbe Taubman effort to take over
the Irvine Company.
Orange County Deputy 01stnct
Attd.rney Charles McFarland
said today that. lawsuits filed
against Sears automotive shops
and University Oldsmobile are
the first steps in halting what he
t~rmed widespread lllegal ac·
tlvities in the auti> repair bust·
ness in Orange County.
McFarland acknowledged that
allegations contained in the two
suits filed Monday in Orange
County Superior Court may be
widespread practices
But he added, "The law is quite
clear, there is no ambi,g uity
Nixon Seeks
Post Story
H ·everyone else 18 doing it' is
the defense, these suits might be
useful to serve notice that no
matter how widespread the prac-
tice is, it's still illegal," he said.
McFarland also said auto
fraud investigations are continu·
ing although he would not say if
further law suits were COD·
lemplated.
The allegations contained in
the suit against Sears claim that
customers were sold auto parts
and repair services when they .
were not rleeded.
The suit, based on a five-month
undercover investigation involv·
ing the District Attorney's office
and the s t ate Bureau of
Automotive Repairs, also claims
that parts were installed without
wrillen approval or the car
owners and that repairs were un·
derlaken without a written
R • estimate of cost. etr&CllOD The suit against University
WASHINGTON (AP) Oldsmobile, 2850 Harbor Blvd.,
Costa Mesa, claims tbat 1,n four P'oJ1Der President Nixon is seek· instances customers were
-The 14th pick belonged to
Seattle, one of four picks in the
first two rounds acquired from
Dallas in the Dorsett trade.
The Seabawks chose Steve
August. a 2'3·pound offensive
suard ltom the University of
Tulsa.
-The New England Patriots,
with one of the many picks ac-
quired from San Francisco in
la.st year's trade for quarterback
Jim Plunkett, grabbed Raymond
Clayborn, a speedy defensive
back from the University of
Texas.
-Robert Jackson, a 230-pound
All·AJ1lerican from Texas A&M,
became the first linebacker to be
drafted when taken by the
Cleveland Browns as the No. 17
pick.
-The Denver Broncos drafted
Steve Schindler, a 260-pound
COWBOYS' CHOICE
B9Ck Tony Doraett
guard from Boston College.
-The St. Louis Cardinals, US·
lng a choice obtained from
W astunaton ln a deal that sent
Dave Buu to the Redskins, went
for a quarterback, Missoun'!I
Steve Pisarkiewicz_ He was the
first quarterback to eo in the
draft.
-The Falcons bad a second
opening-round pick thanks to a
deal in which they sent John Zook
to St. Louis. They selected Wilson
Faumuina, a 275-pound defensive
tackle from San Jose State with
surotising agility.
PtCKEO BY GIANTS
USC'• Gary Jeter
The Pittsburgh Steelers,
selecting 21st, chose Robin Cole,
a 226-pound outside linebacker
from New MexJco. .
-Cincinnati completed Its
three first-round picks by taking
M 1ke Cobb, a 243-pound tight end
from Michigan State.
-New England, usini Its own
first-round pick, grabbed Stanley
Morsan. speedy wide receiver from Tennessee.
-The Baltimore Colts. pulled
somewhat of a surprise by taking
wide receiver Randy Burke of
Kentucky. They had been expect.
ed to pick a defensive back.
Candy· Caper·
4 Boys Captured in Bank
BECI<l..E~ W. Va. (AP}--The Candy Wrapper
Gang was caugnt in the act inside the Raleigh County
National Bank.
Police officer Chuck Alexander s aid he answered
an alarm and captured four boys ranging in age from 7to 13.
The 1oot, Alexander safd, included pencils and
candy from the teller.a' windows. He said the floor was
littered with candy wrappers.
The boys, who were released to their parents,
were supposed to be in Sunday school, said the officer,
but had slipped out a side door of the church.
The boys were charged with unlawful entry and
trespassing, Alexander said. But he added the gang
was just "mischievous more than anything ."
He also said bank secur ity was be ing in·
vestigated.
Court action has been ·
postponed by Judge James F.
Judge until one or other of the:
two contenders is successful in
bidding for the Irvine Company.
He will then be asked by the
foundation to approve the sale to' ·-1~ •• .,.... ... , .. ,~'" ., ~ -
IDI retraction of a Washington char&ed for repairs that were
Post story that the former chief never performed. E DE• I RI BEIUIJI ex.c~ve knew in f,anuary 1!'73 Representath>es of Sears and •Ila I IR I that • hmh money w~ bemg Univenity Olds today declined I
sought to purchue the sllence or comment on the cases peoding w-atere•~~ft~~ .. ~.~-t~<!ustac1iQn...__ -~,._.... _40 ' ~-v-.>.:.----.. -..,.,. .. ~,. .c_rn,
7
,-f ~ --~-:..~,.,.~-~ -~-"/!::·~ ...
".,..,.-" • ~ i;". ~ .... ~~ .... -..:.......--•.-... .,._KV ' 1 ~ ' ...
BILKED ••.
she'd been bilked.
"It's one or the oldest con
games in the world," Pollce SCt.
Bruce Bdggs said to4ay. ''The
old bank inspector'• uim. Jt'11 •
not an unuaual co" scam.~·
of these con artlatl en be ex·
tremel.Y convincln1.''
Brtg1s aald tb• woman described the man w o tock her
money ai the library a aboQt ~
years old\ of o:iedlum bellb' and
weiabt. with brown halt.
'She said he wore a dark busi·
ness suit and that he had a "bus1· ·
nesallke haircut.•'
He looked, ahe said, Just Uk'e o
banker.
Rain Dita North
ltTMA.IHClaiH Pre. A rew ahowera or apriUllil a.re
poaalble todty. aceordinl to t.be
Natl<>n•l Weatbel' Service.
Isolated tbunderahowera are
poulble in the extreme north
portion of the state and over the
Sierra Nev.1da mountalnl. north
of Lake Tahoe, tonltbt.
DAILY PILOT
a· Sent o~ ni9(' r, The suit a,ainst ;:,e • w c lflM I
Herbert ~-Miller· to . the alleges violations occurred at newspa~r s executive editor, auto shops operated by the de-8~~~.BJ:~:~ Monday, f!~:"~r;,=t~~~s::: NEWPORT BEACH DAY IN TIJUANA AND AT AGUA CALIENTE!
asked ~e paper to retract the ta Ana, Orange and Buena Park,.
story . by pu~i.ahlng a com· seeks a permanent ibjunctlon to
peruuwng hea~e article sta~· halt the alleged Weg-1 practices,,
mg tha~ the Special Prosecutor s plus 1 fine of $2,500 for each viola·
transcnpt of the Jan. 8, l973, con· llonofstatelaw. '
veraation between Richard Nix· McFarland said be bad no ex·
on and Charles Colson con~ act f1eures on the numbers of
no reference to hush money· violaUons involved but he noted !fr~. reached in Honolulu, that lnvHt.lgators took cars
Hawau, for a response to the let.-wblcb they knew to be tn perfect
icr. 1ald, '"The Post stands by lia running condition to Seara abops
story." more than 30 times over lbe five-
Tbe Poat on Sunday quoted month lnvesU1atlon period and
from a t:tanacript of a convena-discovered aile&ed violatlona "in
lion between Nixon and Colaoa, a about 80 percent to 90 percent of
Conner aide. the cases •'
The article &aid that durtoa the McFariand said those viola·
conversation, Nixon said, "God tlona primarily conaisted of re·
damn, bush money· uh, how are pair men selling the investiaators
we lolnl to (uninteWt!~le) bow parts not needed for the car.
do we get thia stuff · · · The Seara suit ukl the stores
Mlller'11eUer to Bradlee said be required to provide the Dla-
the tnnlcrlpt med by the Poet trtct Attorney's office with re-
for tbe article went .~ougb a cords of all invoices and
later duft, adding. The finaJ estimates for the n·ext six transcript contains no reference months.
whatever to hush money· The re· The investiaalion into the ac·
cords ol thtt,,apeeial prosecutor tivlties al Sears waa based on a
confirm this. . series of consum~r complaints to During the Watergate in· the auto repair bureau and the
vestiaauom, several drafts of DA 's fraud dlvialon, McFarland · transcripts of White House tapes sal<l
were nu~de by the White H~e, The case aia!Dat Univ .. lty
prosecutors, or con1res111onal Olds like 1 atmUar one fUed
committees, using different •s•tmt Erban's Body aod Paint
equipment to play the often bare-Shop of Santa Ana, did not Jn.
ly audible tapes. volve any undercover work, but
Collon also bas denied that wu baaed 00 a at.ate mechanic's
huah money wu dJ.scuased dW'· verlflcatlon of complaints
101 the taped conversation, a against the car agency'• aervice ra~:~;::;:e~~:= department.
trial.
Col. Jaek Brennan, an aide to Ntxo~1 said. .. We attprepared to
10to1.11e mat an tbis. toe-to-toe.··
He added, "We jast are
poetUve, we know, that phrase
does not appear lb th trabscrlpt ·
of the ~al J)l'Olecutor'a of·
flee." ·
TIM ~ article uld, ''N!Kon bum~ and no pnmoua t.t1* Iii!• eoo~cted. tb•t h• l•~ Of tM requeata for the ••JaUab JDCIMY" fn)m White House COuD.Ml ,Jab4 w. Dean m at •
M.rell 21, 1'13, meettn1 111 tbe ovaiom.oe.
t..;
••ne date be.came Nixon's
prlnd~ UM ol dtft.nae In rebut· un; ~tb&tbo was awanol tbe ,....,... Hrl1er
tbu Kltdt 21," tbe f'wt u-
.aerted.
CJriro Lo.ea
Old Oak Tree
CRICO (AP) -The
tboueand·year-old Hooker
Oat n.. believed to be
the tarseat ud eld•at
white oak ln North.
Arnertea,hufallen.
Parb otndU. aal4 U..
clt1 land.matk toPDlecl aun..
day. a vlctlm of ltt own w~ root rot and otbw Wl~ltl• OI qe.
Tbe tree. whlc'h bad beea •
damged by HsMDt111 1Q
lMa, w• 10 feet thick and
110 feet hflbt and lt1 brnthet naned aco 1-.; d~GflldafaN.14. ~
Discover the
New Tijuana
and Agua Caliente!
Aefllj _., ~· ---...-. ... ~-......-,..........,.,.._.,.
A Fun Dayl
A Day In lew Tijuana
In Old Mexico!
Saturday. May 7, It Newport Beach
Day In TIJuana and at Agua Ce·
•ente. Newpott Beech vttltt TIJuana
to ... th• new look of lte neighbor·
city; to •P9fld a fun day at the new
Agua Cellentt $16,000,000 enter-
tainment center! You'll be ahop·
ping, dining, watching the thor-
oughl>rtde run, •lghl· ... lng, a day
of goodWlll. a day filled with Inter·
national fellow1hlpl
All Day, A fun Dayl
Put your own group together, en-
joy a one-day vacation vltltlng your M19hbor tn Hew-Old ~lcol
Join Newport Beach'• Mayor and
other Council membera. Join lhe
Chamber of Commerce President
and many other Chamber Members.
All for 120.00
Round trip bus fare: 11 delicious
old world pr81)af'9d. and aerwd.
bnmch; refreshments. and more refreshments; reMN8d eeatlng
at Agua Caliente. discount• for
two fabuloul lhopplng aprMsl
And You're Invited!
Itinerary for
Newport Beach:
By PIDUP BOSllAalN
Of ..... ,.,ri ..... "
An M-year.ol4 South Lasuna
woman was cheated of her Ufe'a
aavinp of $3,800 by two con-
fldence men Wbo posed u the
manqer and •ecu.rlty chief of
ah• Bank of America 1n Lapna
Beach. poUce reported today.
Police aaid they would not
divul(e the woman's name, by
weement witb-ber.
Weapon
Report
1Jou1Jted
WASHINGTON CAP) -Pen·
tagon officials ue skeptical of a
report wbl ch says r e cent
technical break·throu1hs soon
may give the SovieLUnlo.o.J.be _
-.i,11ity to use energy beams to
destroy mlasile warheads.
The report, publlahed by Avia-
tion Week ar Space Technoloay
magazine . Monday, said that
such an ability could upset the
balance of power.
Senior U.S. defense officials
said they do not believe Russia
has achieved research break·
through& with high-energy parti·
cle beams capable of neutraliz. ""11 U.S. missiles.
"Baaed on all information now
available to the U.S. Jntelligence
C!om munity. this poss I bllity is
eonsldered remote," the · Pen·
teconsaid.
The weekly aerospace publica-
tlott said in an editorial and ac-
companying article that the sup·
J>OSed physics break·throughs
have been "largely verified" l1y
U.S. military inte lligence
monitoring Soviet tests and "ex·
tremely young physicists" work·
lna with retired M aj. Gen.
1 Geor1e Keegan Jr.
-Keegan, chief or Air Poree in·
tellisence unW last January, h
!or several years trled to con· .
vince U.S. officials and top hilh·
energy pbyalclata that the Sovleu
are developing charaed·partlcle
beam antimisalle weapons.
Ke eean san influe nti.al
.. ...,.... .... _-~~e :a~~~'~t
because of lhe idea that tr U.S.
scientists can't produce such
weapons, the Soviets can't
either.
Senior physicists knowledaea-
ble in military affalrs admit such
weapons are possible and that
the Soviets are work.in& on tbem.
But they say the technolon
doesn't exlat to make them prac-
tjcal.
"' Officlals allO HY a beam ....
timlsalle sy1tem would have pro-
\lema slmllar to thoae of a con-.
venllonal system usinl
interceptor ml11ilea. These ln·
tlude extremely hi&h coeta and
vulnerability of lon1·ran1e radar
fleeded to track warheads m'ld
IOrt out countermeuures.
The maaazine report, ex··
tenaively quollnlf unnamed
military sources, 1ald ~Soviets
were testin1 • new tyi>e of etrator run by tiny nuclear ex-
oslons that could supply the
rmoua power needed for a
IJeam sysu,m.
Other alens that beam weapons •r• neartn1 prototype tesUna,
U.e report. said, were myaterfoua
iyalct expertmenta beln1 con·
cted at a clant facility near ~lp&Jatlnsk, and a new t•t te at Azlir under direct control ~ the Soviet naUonal air defense
tprce.
Coast
Pollco Hid the woman told
them this .iotY:
Lut Friday ahe was contacted
by telepbo»e by a man who
flalmeil to be a bank security of.
fleer from San Diego. He told her
he ampected Laguna Beach bank
employ• ol ~beullng funds,
and asked her to help him trap
them.
Sbe was ulted to withdraw her
$.'J,800 savings and meet him at
the county branch library, 383
GlenneyreSt.
Momentarily ausplcloua, she
asked to speak to the bank
mana1er. Anolher man came on
the line and identified himself u
Mr. Raymond." (John Raymond
ia the real bank mana1er, police
aald.)
Sallafied, sl'te aereed-to help
the "bank." The men told her to
use a pre-arraneen code number
..
'
10 that abe would know IM WU
deallna with tho rt1bt man at the
library. The tran1actlon took
place. with a man 1he later
described u seemlA1 "«>&¢ of
breath." She b~ over an eb·
velope containing 36 hundred
dollar bllla. the toW from her
savlnp acc:ount.
The courier told her to go home
and wail for a telephone call.
The ••security cblef" called
acabr, at 3 p,m., and told her to
go to the bank. She wu unable to
m-..Ce the appotntqlent, so her
caller \old her to try again Mon·
day,
Monday she tried, and learned
1be'd been bitted.
"ll't one ot the oldest con
games in the world;" Police Set.
Bruce Bripil said today, ·~e
old bank Inspector's acam. It's
not an untUual con scam. Some
i . of these con artists cui be ex ..
trernelY coovlnclq. ''
Bri11s said the wqman
described the man who took bei'
money at the library at about 35
years old, of medium height and
welcbt, with brown halr.
She said he wore a dark btJSi..
ness suit and that be had a "bual·
nesallke haircut.''
He looked, abe aald, just.like a
banker.
Inspection Blamed
Delly,..._.., fWMCa 000-11
snmouc CARP Fl.OAT OVER DANNY AND HIS MOM
eo.t. ..... Famltr ObMfv•• Japan•" Tradition
Danny to Mark
'lJoy' s Festival'
81 STEVE Ml'l'CllEu.
Of .. Olilf\' ...........
Danny 11 the lucky one in the Kamikihara family this
week.
In Japanese tradition, the filth day of the fifth month is
set aside' to celebrate Tanao-no-Se.kku, or "the Boy's
P'eattvaJ." And alnce Danny wu born betwes two slat.en.
that lives h1m an exclusive oa Lhe festivities. to arinounce the celebration, Mr. and Mn. Taduhl
Kamlkibara atrun1 balloon-like flap resemblln$ fish on a
kmJ pale outalde their Colla Meta homt. Mn. Satoe Kamlklbara said the flab are carp. When the
wind .fllla the banners, the carp appear to awlm in the air
like flab tJgbUng lbelr way upi1tream. ,
Mn. Kainlklbara explained that the carp represent de.
termlnadoo in 1oun1 men, ln that the fish bu the power to
ll1ht it. Wl.J up pi.ft streams, and the atrencth to overcome
otittaclel. ~
.. 1t.'1afittlnaaampleforgroWtn1 boys,"aheu.ld.
But to ,._year.old Danny, the feaUval means a special
meal 1burada.r, with about 50 friends, nef&bbora ¥4 re-
(8ee DANNY'S FESTIVAL, Pale A2)
Beat• C•eated
-~nhappy Council
Grants Variance
'eoat.1'~a'(!ity Mana1er Fred
Sorsabal cited "sloppy inspec·
lion, .. as the reason for a
builder's request. for a 16-foot.
wide driveway on bis project In·
stead of the required 20·foot
width.
Council members were upset
because the request came alter
six apartments on the complex
were nearly completed.
•'How can someone cet 100 per·
cent of hla work done then find
out. he needs a variance from
For d Group
Vows Top
Irvine Bid
By TOM BARLEY
Of .. Del., ...... tctff
A spopsman for an East Cout
consortium that fell behind Mobil
Corp. ~ tn the btddlnt b8t·
tle for control of the Irvine Corn·
pany, pledged today that bis
group will top the new Mobil bid
of $307.1 million.
Col. John Gottlieb, represent·
ins Detroit developer Alfred
Taubman, said.his ll'OUP'a new
~ ....... ~w ... -Mll1M:J:&"'*"""""Wtlt-.--fir•
deadllneofnoon, May9.
"We will outbid Mobil," be
said. "But we don't want to say
by bow much until 1hortly before
the deadline.''
Directors of the James lrvtne
Foundation accepted the new
Mobil offer at a apecial meeUng
late Monday.
But they carefully left the.door
open for the consortium beaded
by Taubm~an Wall Street ftnan· cler Chari Allen and Henry
Ford II t,o ue a new bid.
And foundation directors made
it clear that the blddinl situation
will remain open until one Ot"
other ol the rival contenden faila
to top a counter offer with the de-
adline imposed by the fowlda-
tion.
The new MobU orrer means
that the corporation is offertni
$38.50 a share for the 8.4 mlllloo
1hareaoftbe Irvine Company.
. Thole ah&rel include the roun.
daUon'1 controllinl interest of
54.5 percent and Irvine heiress
Smith'• holdlnta of 22.4 percent
in the company founded by her
erandfatber.
Mobil wu OD the ver•e of tak·
inlf over the Irvine Company for
S:ZOO mUUon. or $24 a ahare, two
years 8'0 Wheli Mrl. Smlth'I
· Oran1e ~ Superior Court
law1u1t baited the aareed 1&Je
C8ee MOBIL. Paae A2)
us?" an angry Vice Mayor Jack
Hammett aaked.
"Seems to me we'd better re-
evaluate our inspection system,"
he said.
George Jenkins, the Irvine
paint contractor who owns the
parcel at 2521 Orange Ave., said
he didn't know about the width
requirement, saying be left it up
to bl.a builder.
And the builder, Gene
Palaferri of Irvine, told coun9ll
members he baa built other pro-
CO\YBOYS' CHOICE
B~ Tony Dorsett
jects in tbe city with the n~
driveways.
"Do you m ean other projects
have been approve'.d with the nar·
row driveways?" asked Coun·
cllman Ed McFarland.
Sorsabal quickly interjected.
saying that two building inspec·
tors Involved in the project have
been disciplined by the city, "and
this kJnd of thine shouldn't hap.
penaaain. "Most buildings in the city do <See UNHAPPY, Page .U>
PICKED BY GIANTS
USC'• Gery Jeter
Ohio State End
Rams' Draft P ick
BULLETIN
TAMPA <AP) -USC back
Bleky Bell. drafted today by &be
Tampa Bay Baccueen, ltped
a lh'•~· $1.24 mllllon COldrad wUb &Ile Natlo•al Football Leape team, Tbe Auodated
Preti leaned.
From AP Dlspatclaea
The Loi Anreles Rama picked
All-American defensive end Bob
Brudzlnski of Oblo State today in a long-delayed annual draft Of col-
le1e players by the National Foot-
ball League.
The· team· lmmedtately an·
nounced that it planned to con-
vert him into a linebacker.
The draft a1ao WU blchlllhted
by the .election of three USC
players among the first fi ve
taken, back Ricky Bell. tackle
Marvin ~ll and tackle Gary
Jeter. Earlieratory on Page Bl.
It was the first time this bad
happened tlnce Michigan State's
Bubba Smlth, Clint Jones and
Georce Webster were selected in
the flnt five rounds In 1967.
The Rams had the 23rd plck in
thedraft ..
"We chose him ln keeping with
oqr policy of picking the hiaheat
rated player available to us re-
gardless of position," said the
club'• vice-president and ieneral
mana,er Don Klosterman.
Brudzlnlkl, 22, who atands 6-
foot-4 and weighs 230 played
at.and-up def enalvo end ln col·
<See RAMS, Pa1e A2 >
.. • o..lty """ ..... ,,_. ·1ee ......... r.
·eosta Mesan Donald Hill
!5, has attained the rank of
.Eagle Scout in Troop 1439
tour years and 24 merit
badges after joining the Boy
Scout-s. The Costa Mesa
High School sophomore is
the son of Mr and Mrs.
Paul Hill.
F....,PageAJ
UNHAPPY. .
conform. but as of late, this has
not always been the case,"
Sorsabal sald.
., He said sometimes inspectors
" will approve the project and the
, builder will go ahead and m~
changes and get away with it.
Hammett said he couldn't see
telling the builder to tear down
garages infranginr on the
driveway at this stage of de-
velopment, addina the council
"is pretty much forced to ap·
prove this thing."
But Councilwoman Mary
Sm all wood disagreed.
"If we talce that line of reason·
ing, then we should say that If
police fail to capture criminals.
we should condone what the
criminal does."
A motion lo deny the variance.
thereby forcing Jenkins to tear
1' down his garages was approved
in a 3·2 vote, with Hammett and
Councilman Dom RaciU op·
poseq.
But after the vote, McFarland
asked If he could change bli vote.
"I just can1t see hanging this guy
out to dry," he said.
Sorsabal agreed, saying, "I'sn
sure Mr. Palaferri will build to
specifications in the future."
• The variance then was ap-
proved on a 3·2 vote with Mayor
Norma Hertzog and Mr1 .
Sm all wood opposed.
Coast College
Oran,e C.OU:Oty o.puty Dlitrlct
Attorney Charles McP'ar land . •
uid today that lawauitl filed
a•alnat Sean automotive shops ,
and Unlveratty Old.lmoblle ar•
the Ont ltePI in ha.ltint whit bo
tnmed widespread llle1al ac·
.tivltiet ln the auto repair buat-
ne11 ln Orange County.
McFarland aclmowled1ed that
alle1atlon1 contained ln the two
1ulta filed Monday ln Oranse
County Superior Court may be
widespread practices.
But he added, ''The law II quite
clear, there it no amblaulty.
lf 'everyone else is doin• it' ls
the defeoae. thae 1wt1 mlsbt be
useful to serve noUce that no
matter how widespread the prac-
tice ls, It's still illegal," be said.
McFarland also said auto
fraud investigations are continu-
ing although he would not aay lf
further law suits were con·
templaled.
The allegations contained in
the suit again.st Seara claim that
customers were sold auto parta
and repair s~eJ when they
were not needed.
The suit, based on a five-month
undercover investi-gallon involv-
in& the Di.strict Attorney's office
and t he state Bureau of
Automotive Repaln. also claims
that parta were lnstaUed without
written approval of the car
owners and that repairs were un·
dertaken without a written
estimate of cost.
The suit against University
Oldam(>bile, 2850 Harbor Blvd.,
Costa Mesa, claim.I that in four
instance& customers were
charged for repairs that were
never performed.
Representatives of Seara and
University Olds today declined
comment oo the cues pending
court action
The suit again.st Seara, which
alleges violations occurred at
auto shops operated by the de-
partm ent st.ore in Costa Mesa,
Laguna Hills, Westminster, San·
ta Ana, Or40ge and Buena Park,
seeks a perm~ent injunction to
halt the .Ileied Uleg*l pra<:llce11
plus a fineol S2,SOO for each viola·
lion of state law.
McFarland said he had no ex·
act figures on the numbers ot
violations involved but be noted
that investigators took cara
which they knew to be In perfect
running condition t.o Seara shops
more than 30 times over tbe ftve-
month investigation period and
discovered alle,ed violations "ln
.-ut eo percent t.o 90 percent of
tbecues" ·
McFarland said those viola·
tioru primarily consisted ot re-
pairnfen selling the investigators
parts not needed for the car.
.: ' Oh.ii-let :a~ ··-~i~M~eia
-
Coast Community College Ota· · '
trlct ortlclals have learned that Soogi·L• by
theirs is the third largest com '" m unlly cpllegc• district 1n the
United States.
Figures r e leased by the
American A1'&oclatlon of Com
munlty and Junior Colleges last
week place Coast third behind
Lo11 Angeles Community College
District, with nine campU!let and
135,099 students, and City College
of Chicago with nine campuses
and 98,819 students.
_The Coast Community (;olleae
District Is comprised o( thre. col·
leges and 62, l 10 students
Auction Slated
By Mesa Police
Coata Mesa police w1U be auc-
tioning otr everything rrom
skateboards to scales Saturday
mornlna behind the station at 99 Fair Drive.
Property ofClcer Richard
Bersch Hld between as and 40 bicycles will be on the block as
well as 1tcrco equipment, t~pe
decks, pottery and a moped
Tho auction will begin ·at 10 a .m.
•
ORANOa COMT c
DAILY PILOT
n.0r..,.. ~ o.ltp ~ ....... _ .. (-
............. ,. .... , ....... -..... Or_ ~~w...~~ •. s--......... .... ....... *"'" .......... l'f::;.;o c...... ="'i!:1:r."I~:!~== v~ ~·HIC:~C..•I ,....,....,...__ ......... , ............ ...,, ... ......,.. ""' frl••«llNI _,....,.. ..... , It 04 DI ... e.y
........ CMU-t.o4-•--., "-·-... _-~ ...
, ...... o.wr Vl<• __ ....., ... ___ -· .... ...... ,....,.__..
_....i11t•--... ..-....,.,. .... .... ,.~ M9-"" .....
HBCouncil
By ROBERT B ARKER Ol tlle Deity ,.i._. Staff
Huntington Beach City
Council members Monday
night threw their s upport
behind proposed legislation
that would bar some councll
deliberations from the public
The council voted 4 to 2 to back
AB 1265 by Assemblyman
Wiiliam Dannemeyer <R·
Fullerton) that would permit city
councils to conaider lhe apPOint· ment.. employment or d~mlual
of all officers and employes, in·
eluding boar(b, comml.uiona and
council vacancle1 in secret
sessions.
Counc en Rlchard Siebert
and Shenkman balked al
sup rting the proposed leglsla·
tlon
T d Bartlett, Al Coen, Norma
Gibti and HarrieU Wieder sup-
ported the measure without of·
fertna public comment.
City A.drnlnlatrator Bud Belllto
said the bW baa been widely re·
quested by local officials.
He said they feel that lnabWty
to conalder actions. particularly
appolotmenta, in secret 1eulona
bu a cbllllng effect on appllcanta
for public olfice.
Shenkman, wbo WU IUbstltut·
in& for the abMnt M11or Ron
Pat tinson, aald dl1cu11lon1
abould be conducted openly.
•
Mlf,.... ..... ,....,
TO LEAVE CITY JOB
Legal AdvlHr June
Attorney
For Mesa
To Resign
Costa Mesa City Attorney Roy
June revealed Monday that he in-
tends to retire from city service
Aug. 31.
The announcement caught
snany city officials, Including
members of bis own staff, by sur-
prise.
June said, "My reasons for this
decision are many, not the least
of which is a feeling that 15 years
of public service is enough."
The M-year-0ld attorney joined
the city attorney's office in 1962
under former city attorney
Donald Dungan as an assistant
prosecutor. He later became city
prosecutor, then assistant city at·
t.orney.
He was named city attorney in
1966 when Dungan was appointed
to the Harbor municipal court
bench.
"With both of my children now
adult~. and having completed
their college careers. my finan·
cial commitments bave been re·
duced," June said. "And this ap-
pears to be a good lime to return
to ruu time private practice."
June worked under a contrac·
tual afreement with the city
councl . receiving an annual
salary of $30,000.
, He also operated a private
practice part-time as a part of
that agreement.
Girl's Wrist .
Broken, But
Not Spirit
· A~)4.ar:oM llummgwn B'eacb
girl didn't let a broken wrist and
heavy cast stop her from
Clni1hln1 in a three-way lie for
second place among · 114 of
Orange County's best fourth
grade scribes.
Eunice Ruo, who attends Hope
View Elementary School tn Hunt·
ingt.on Beach, scored 209 pointa
out of a possible 2.40 in the coun-
ty wide Pen and Quill pen-
manahip contest Aprll 30.
Despite he handicap, caused
by a fall from a bicycle her
parents aave her for wlnnin1 a
previous handwriting contest,
Eunice also led her team to
second place among 21 other
fourth grade handwriting
aqua(b.
The Ocean View School Dia·
tract fourth grade handwriting
team scored a total or 795 points.
Brian Mallory. of Sprina View
School, David H0Wn1er, of Glen
View School, and Leah Wright, of
Lake View School competed on
Eunice'• t.eam.
A Fullerton fourth grade squad
flnl1hed in first place with 804
point.I.
HuoUnaton Beach allo bad the
top filth grade writer, Erin Ball,
10, who attend• Moffett Elemen·
tary School. Erin led all ih·
dlvldual contestant.I with 215
point.a.
A lll1on Whitaker, 9, from
Ble11ed Sacrament Parochial
School ln Hunttnaton Beach tied
with Eunice for ae<?ond place
amon1 fourth uacte wrlten.
St udenll were Judaed on their
letter formation, uniform apac·
lnl between letters and wonla,
conallteney in letter •be and
their potture while wrlU.ni.
and paffd tM way (Of' an eta.bl·
~month trial ot q&e lsaue ~ tbil • coatln b&ddJ.Dcbattle.
Mobil mact. what wu a j. • major canee11ion to minority
1harebolden Monday when the
comp&Qy ruled that Irvine Com·
pany abareholden could take the
earlier Mobll offer of $281.t
mllllon and apply It to an opUon
to buy that amount ol Mobll atoct
at any tJme durin( the next year.
The conoeulon waa Im·
mediately aoen by close ob·
servers of the biddlna battle as
an attempt to woo Mra. Smith
away from her support of the
Taubman-Allen-lrvlne 1roup.
It wu learned today that Mrs.
Smith bu no intenUon or dilcuas·
int the MobU offer and wW con-
tinue to 1upport ~Taubman or·
aanizaUoo.
Court action h a1 been
postponed by Judge James F.
Judie unW one or other of the two contenders la aucceufuJ ln
bidding for the Irvine Company.
He will then be asked by the
foundation to approve the sale t.o
the aucceuful bidder.
She la one of 10 principals who
have placed their uaeta be.bind
the Taubman effort to take over
the Irvine Company.
Two Men Rob
Schmitz' Son
John P. Schmitz, the 22-year·
old son ol former state Senator
and Congreaaman John G.
Schmitz ot Newport Beach. lost
his wallet and checkbook to two
armed men outside his
Washington D.C. apartment
Monday night.
Young Schmitz. a graduate
student at Georgetown Universi·
ty and an administrative assls·
tant to Rep. Goodloe Byron CD·
MD.), called his father today to
report the theft.
"I don't know what kind of a
weapon was uaed," the elder
Schmitz said, noting that bis son
wa.s IPl)arenUy uninjured ln the
incident.
400 in Drug Bu&t
SAN DIEGO (AP) Police
have arrested 400 persons in 'a
corner of Balboa Park in u total
of eight weekend roundups to
stop drug selling and prostitu-
tion.
Cost.a Mesa patrolman F.d
Esposito, 29, was graduated
last month at the top o( his
class at the Orange County
Sheriff's Academy. Three
years a&O the Anaheim resi-
dent was No. 1 in his class
in the West Orange County
Reserve Academy.
TONIGHT
"EQUUS" -South Coast
Repertory Theater. Tuesday·
Sunday through June 11, 8 p.m.
"BEHIND THE
HEADLINES" -Or. Giles T.
Brown lecturer, OCC Forum,
7:30p.m.
OCC LECTURE -"Cycle and
Sphere of Womanhood,"
Women's Center. 7:30p.m.
WEDNESDAY, M AY 4
OCC LECTURE -"Save Your
Teeth ... Preventive Dental
Care," Fine Arts 119, 7: 30 p.m.
Military Alerted
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia
<AP ) -Angolan and Cuban
military units on the border with
Zaire have been strengthened
and put on the alert f9r a{l •tlack
from Zaire. a Yuaoalav cor-
respondent in Luanda reports.
, ... P ... AJ
·RAMS •••
lege.
Hen are th• nm round MJ.tc. tiona 1n today•a National POolball
Lea1uecoUesedr<:
1, Tampa Bay, RJd:y Bdl, rb.
Southern Callfomia. 2, Dallu,
from Seat.Ue, Tony Dorsett, rb.
PiU.burp. 3, Cio<UnPaU from
Buffalo, EddJ• Edward., dt,
Miami, 1'11. 4, New York Jet.a,
arvbl Po•tll, ot, Southern
Oalllo'r!\la. '· New York Gluts. Gar y l e t er, dt, Sou t h ern
Callfoi1da;
e, Atlanta, Warren Bryant, ot
Kentucky. 7, New Orleans, Joe
Campbell, dt, Maryland. 8, Cln-
cln natl, from Phlladelphh,
WU.on WhlUey, dt. Houston. 9,
Green Bay, Mlke Butler, c5e,
Kanaaa. 10, Kanau City, G.,-y
Otoen, db, Baylor.
11, Roust.on, Morrla rl>wns, pl,
MlUourl. U, Buffalo, lrom
Detroit, Phillip Dokes dt
Oklahoma State. 13, Miamt.'A .. J '.
Dube, dt, Louisiana State. l4,
Seattle, from San Diego, throutn
Dallu, Steve August, 01, TulD.
15, Cbicqo, Teel Albreebt, 9l CaUfotnla.. & '
16, New Endand, from sen Fr~u1clsco, Raymond Clayborn,
db, Texas. 17, Cleveland, Robtrt
Jackson, lb, Texas A&M. 18,
Denver. Steve Schindler, o~.
Boato.n Colleae. 29, St. Louis,
from Washington, Steve
Piaarklewtcz, qb, Mi1&ourl. JO.
Atlanta, from St. Loula, Wllao.o -
Faun\utpa, dt, San Jose St ate.
21, Pltbburgh, Robin Cole, lb,
New Mexico. ;!2, Cincinnati, Mllce
Cobb, le, Michigan State. 23, Los
Angeles, Bob Brudrlnakl, lb.
Ohio State. 24, San Diego, from
Dallas, Bob Rush, c, Mempttis
State. 25, New England, Stanley
Morgan, wr, Tennessee. ~.
Baltimore, Randy Burke, wr.
Kentucky. 27. Minnesota, Tom·
my Krarher, qb, Rtce. 28, Green
Bay, from Oakland, Ezra
Johnson, de, Morris Brown. ·
In the second round, the Rams,
uslna a choice obtained through
Seattle, selected back Nolan
Cromwell oC Kansas.
Other second-round choices I\i·
eluded linebacker Dave Lewis of
USC by Tampa and 'wide re·
ceiver Wes Walker of Callforntu
by the New York Jets.
Later in the round, the Rams
also .Pklted running back·wide
receiver Billy Waddy of
Colorado.
iEla Dll DE DEllPDllT RIGHI __.:...: -WW ·-,, 191:,---..
. NEWPORT BEACH DAY IN TIJUAtfA AND. AT AGUA CALIENTE!
Discover the
New Tijuana
and Agua Callentet
,,,. -_,.,,., 10 N .... ,..,.,.,._ Ot_.AOOI• c.,._,, ''""""" .,. ,, .. 1 _ _. •.,..
_..,._. ... and ..-...i • .,. 6 C••"• C.-t"
._.,.., .... Of flj1111n1 1 ,.... -t~-••· P'~ .,,.,.,.......iov .. y11,,.,tcape<1-f•Ot '"°...,_.'
A Fun Dayl
A Day In New Tijuana
In Old Mexico!
Salurday. May 7.11 Newport BHch
Day In Tijuana and 11 Agua Ca·
llente Newport Beach vlalll Tlju1na
to see Iha new look of 111 neighbor·
city, to s~nd a fun day at the new
Agua Caliente S16,000.000 enter·
tainment center! You'll be 1tiop-
p1ng, dlnl1l9. watching the thor·
oughbred1 run. elghl·IHlng, a d1y
of goodwill, a dar. filled with Inter·
national lellowah pl
c
All Day, A Fun Dayl
Put your own group tog.ther. en•
joy a ona-d1y vac1tlon vlalllng your
neighbor In New-Old Mextcol
Join Newp()rt Beach'• Mayor and
other Council membera. Join the
Ch1mber of Commerce Pr" dal'\t
and m1ny other Ch1mbef Member&. ,,
All for S20.00
Round trip bue fare; a dellclou•
ofd Wot1d P"ePnd. and served.
brunch: retreltlment•. Md mote
refrnhmenta; retenled Mating
at Agua Cellente. diacounta for
two fabUloul "'°PPl'W IPl'fftf Mab,._.. now to be wlh r. nelglm.I
Raervld a,., Vlllt ...... Mey It 1177
----------------·----~ I REHIVATIOI COUPClll ~ w. ... • '°°"' • ~ elcW'I
I wltfl yo1K c~k mlde pe~a~ 10 ,,omotore y "1oducaort de ftubl~. to tM I
Chambtr Otfie., 1'10 JllT'lbot" "<I .. NewPOf18Mch, CA t2UO. EnelOMd 19 I I our chtell "' IN tmoum ot I • • . • • • • • • let • • .. • • ..... ,,_-. • 120 oo I I pet '*'°" k>f El DI• de Newport 8"ch I NllM I 1 ~ '9IOM I
• RIMEMl'EA: DIAOllN! II THUfllSO~Y. "tNI Othl I ----------------------! , Ot In~ c.11 ~-Otfloa MM~1 t
•
S_..ol.,. ••c-ct ... -.,. _. ,,_ r-. ..._ ol ... Aoll• C-lt "'116 C.-t-•
And You're lnvltecll
Itinerary for
Newport Beach~
lloatd t 00 AM !•""al a.Ma A ... II-e 10 1••n
•l-tlOtS.lloi.oct A••O'•l~htplllo°"!ln .... =-::~n:. :-~~=~:·::.==·~c::: ~:~::·.i:: :::.'"::. =·=:~':Zi 11""'°'""°""°°"'"-"'•-cH. At~q l'Ou•u,......t.,•••c.dlt••ll(d ... lie-1 l".,••
1 '""" ttf I"'• AQV4 Cal..,..t ,Aflt 6 C'tflt Cent~. with ff~wnta to ... H"""'-"'"' a..""'"'~"
••Ul'C;hl11Nltllt•llM0-•.,-•1t --
-"""' ..,,, ... .,..,,. ..... IO M<otl, '~"' 10 ---,.•-tolt-lfltli<llltu ... ..,. .............. TIGUtitlot ...... M•TrllfWt_,_ .. _ •• .,_ .. :"L:...-"' '-"""'"' .... :;::""r~.,. .:,:::.:.,~
... ...... ;9.,.... "'"'' ...... -·1 fftt .,,. ' c;t•~.,.. ................. ~~ ............. ~ ..... --...., ... --....... ~ n-...• ••-1000----oiglll· -.--~...-._ .. ._,.,,..__~_......,... ....
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Be a part of It •••
IEI Dia 4e Newport Beach!
Ackoowledgtd •nd endotUd by t"• M1yor'1 offic:• and the Cham-
ber of Commerce. II Cfi/lanfe
. .
• • t
'
STUCCO DtNOSAURI IN APPL.a VALUY NDD LOV1NO OWNIA
31 "'°"., Monsten P.t of Ranch PKkege For late
Dinosau••s Live On
Creator .lJ/fen Deal to Protect Them
BJ STELLA ZADER -...ClatMPNtt .....
APPLE VALLEY -Dl.nosaW'I for sale -
clteap.
Actually, Lonnie Coffman ia 1lvint away
hia 36 dinosaurs. But the atucco monatera are
roaming 17 acres of prlme ranch land, J.nd tbe
apread's for sale at market price.
COFFMAN'S ALSQ glvine away three
years' rent from a three-bedroom home on the
property in this quiet valley 100 miles east of
Los Angeles, and he's throwing in three years
or hie time to sweeten the deal.
Coffman is trying to make the unusual
sale because he doesn't want his beloved giant
pets to follow the real dinosaurs -into extinc-
tion.
The 63-year-old former nurseryman spent
eight or his 15 retirem ent years lovingly creat-
ing his creatures out of stucco, wire and rein·
forced ateel. But now, because he haa nearly
run out of money, Coffman is afraid his
dinosaurs face destruction unless he can as-
sure a permanent home for them.
SO HE WANTS someone to buy his pro-
perty at market price t--about $2,000 an acre
-and uae the land, plus dinosaurs, aa a park.
He said he wlll do the maintenance free for
three years or more.
Coffman knows most private parties
would not be interested In the deal, so he has
been trying to Interest local governments in
~
hil dlnosaur park. Currently, he's won the
aupport of a group oC acboolcblldren lo h1a el·
forta to convince San Buna.rdlno County of·
ficiala to adopt lhe dinosaurs.
"l'M BORROWING money from my
brother now," he said. "l may be ~reed to sell
the land to ~meone who doesn t waht the
dlnosaun. and then they mi1ht be destroyed."
Coffman hu put a Jot of sweat and love in·
to creaUng.hla giant peta, aome of whlcb are
100 feet Jong and aa high as a house. To build
the heads or the biggest ones, he used a 1938
tractor, put mortar In the skip loader, and
then hopped in to transfer the mortar to the
bead.
He says his. neighbors wondered about
him a bit at first, but adds they now have ac·
cepted his unusual hobby.
Why spend all that time building
dinosaClrs?
"WHEN I WAS YOUNG," he recalls, "we
didn't have dinosaur• but we had stories about
giants and dragons. J waa fascinated." So
when Coffman grew yp, be decided to turn his
dreams of giants Into.reality.
Only instead 'of dragons, he built
d1nosaura.
He still keeps buay building. His latest
project could be uaed aa a zoo for his
creatures.
It 'a a 440-foot Noah's Ark.
•
DOWNEY (AP) -A 22·year·
old man who held two bank of-
ticera hoet.aae surrendered today
· aft~r hla mother th"-~ed to
"do harm to henel1" and then
disappeared, pollce eald.
Albert Monroe Powers of
Downey was taken into custody,
but police l11ued a mlulng
persons report on bla mother,
Carol Davia, 40, after her family
reported ahe had vanllhed .
Powers wu booked for in·
vesUgailon or robbery and kid·
naping and held on $1,SOO ball,
police said.
He left his perch In a Iott above
the bank vault around 1 a.m.,
some 17 hours alter be entered
t.be·residential Ban1t of America ·
branch and seven boura after he
released his second hostage. No
one was hurt in the incident and
no shota were flred.
Police Sgt. Jim Mann said
Powers was not heard from for
several hours after he wu given
food and releaaed the second
hostage at about6 p.(Jl. Monday. ..
But when a woman who iden-
tified herself as his mother called
the police station and threatened
her own fife unleH he gave up,
"he said he was coming down un-
armed."
Police said Mrs. Davis bad not
been seen by her family since l
a.m., at about the time the call
was made to the police station.
MOTH!A OF SUSPECT
Mra. Davia Offera Pr•yer
HOSTAGe FRIED
Manager M•rth•I Atfton
minutes later. in March.
Police Capt. Jim Shea quoted a Powers was booked for In·
bank employe as saying that ~ vesUeaUon of kldnaplna, rob~ry
Powers had been having trouble and aaaault with a deadly
with the bank over a delinquent weapon, offlcera said. He was
loan on a pickup truck purchased held in $75,000 ball.
Man Pleads· Guilty Officers said Powers apparent·
ly was in the bank intending to
rob it at 8 a.m. Monday when
bank officers entered. A Huntington Beach man who Stack wu jailed· Jan. 1 alter
The ordeal began when the was booked on murder charges being ldenUfled u the man who
gunman tried to hold up tbe bank after a New Year's party in shot Brian Schnelder, 20, of '7821
when officials arrived to prepare which three men were shot Seine Drive, Huntiniton B .. cb,
for the day's business. The first pleaded guilty Monday to lesser ln the cheat with a .22 caliber rt·
two employ es t o enter. bank charges. f)e.
manager Marshall Alfson and Thomas Joseph Stack, 20, of Schnelder died ln the driveway
operations manager Richard 9593 Pettlwood Drive, pleaded of a home at 20641 Goshawk Lane
Torres, were taken hostage when g u i 1 t y t o c h a r g e s o r where an ariument erupted dW'-
the gunman discovered they did manalaughter and two counts of Ing a New Year'• Eve party.
not have the vault combination. assault with a deadly weapon Two other wounded men, iden-
WngBiues
·Purcluued
By County
Police surrounded the building rather than face trial in Orange Ufled as John A. "Junior" ()(,"I'D fJlaar...-• after being called by Roberta CountySuperlorCourt. Hunter, 21, and Bradley J . u-Huntoon, assistant operations Judge James H. Walsworth set Gllleapte, 21, both of Huntington
manager, who said she saw "an July 18 u the date he wW sen· Beach, werealaoshotbyStack.
LABusoperators ._a_rm_w_i_th_a_~_v_o_1v_e_r_1n_1t_''_M __ sh_e __ t_e_nc_e_&_a_~_to_w_h_d_~_u_1_d_~_1_0 __ s_o_th_m_~_h_•_v_e_1_1n_c_e_n_c_o_"_r_e_d ~prepared to enter the bank years to lite in state prison. from thelr wounds.
'Grabbing' Funds?
President Carter's grim warn Los Angeles area bus The Southern Calllornla As·
ing about the ruture of eneru operators are out to grab an un· soclatlon of Governments later
source• prompted Orange Coun fau ahare of federal operating this week wlll consider the re·
ty Transit District (OCTD ) dlrec· funds that should belone to the vised funding package.
tors Monday to approve purchas •Orange County Transit Dlstrict Clark aald the compromise
in& 10 longer buses able to carry <OCTD >. the OCTD board would freeze allootlons at their
·more passengers ·chairman c)larged Monday. 1976 Jevela and reduce OCTD's l'he new bwscs. arc able to '~ -;OM~ _ _. ....... ......_.. _ _._ ·• -_. · -· ~· J.
carry 101 scale,d and standing '-fellow dlr°lctor:: approv·al of The J\'1f propoiii._..w~
J)assengers. 30 percent more than what Clark called a compromise freeie allocaUons at the 1970
con v{'l\t1onal coach es. staff that would offer tbe Southern populaUon and density levela,
members said. Jn addition they California RapldTranslt District cuttlnt the OCTD and San
get 10 to 20 percent better <SCRTD) a $1 mUllon increase Bernardino County shares by
mileage than the standard over the next three years but not nearly ST million over the next
• coach'sS.2 miles per gallon. lhe S7 million hike proposed. three years.
Two weeks earlier directors re· At issue is a share of federal Clark aaid the compromise
jectedaproposaltopurchue the UrbanMaaTranaportatlonAd· also h supported by San
longer buses. And directors Al cnlnlatration funds, divided up in Bemardi»o transit otncials .
... llolllnden and William P'arrta the put among Orange, Los lie charged SCRTD overex·
voted against the purchase a,aln An1elea and San Bernardino tended its tranalt program re-
Monday sayin1 they weren't con· counties' transit operators on the 11ultln1 in a projected SU million
•vlnced oftbe ne<.'<1. ba•ls of populaUon and houaln& deficltfor the 1977·78llacal year.
Dlreetor Phil Anthony, who density. Aa a result, he claimed,
asked for the reconsideration, OCTD's share from 1977 SCRTD officials are trying to
said he believed both the energy throu1h 1980 would be $.13.11 solve thC!ir budtel problems at
savings and a predicted increase million but Loa An1ele1 area the expense of other tranait
in passenger loads made the operators have proposed the operators.
buses a wise buy OCTD share be reduced to S27 2
The buses art? built tn two set· million.
tlons and are hinted in the mid· The decreue. Clark con·
die to make them turn more tended, would destroy OCTD's
easily. sound financial plnnninit
OCTD will join wllh 10 other
tranait operators throuahout the "lJ .S. ln the purchase The buses
at $175,000 t'llrh are being built by
-Oeneral Motors and MAN of
West Germany and will not ar-
1ve for two y~nrs.
Director Robin Youn~. who
;Caat the lone vole favoring the
1purcha.t1e two weeks earlier, said
'-ht believed passenger loads
ould lncrenae by 40 to 60 percent
byl979.
Staff members contended the
1niaea couid be used alone hcavl· ty uaed routes currently requlr·
ni 1imultaneou1 operation of two coaches, t.bua savin& the cost r one driver.
It the lon1er buses were med
only dUl'iq peak travel periods,
•Y aaid, the operation would
ave $381,m yearly. ,,
Mother.to-be
~118 Singing·
LOS ANGELES <AP) -Opera
singer Nancy Older won't be
sweeptnc down any atalrcases,
but the 32·year·old pre1nant
woman wW be able to sing in the
chon&J.
The Puadena woman reached
a aetUemenL Monday wlt.h the
Ou1ld Opera Co. in her civil auil
in U.S. OOtrtctCourt. .
Her ~It claimed the opera
company fired her Aprtl 25 only because sbe wu alx montba pr•
pant. · •
Racial War
Manson Goal?
LOS ANGELES CAP) -A
former follower of Charles
Manson who was once drugged
with an LSD·laced hamburger
aays Manson was ob1e11ed wtth
the ldea of starting a race war.
T.estllylng at the murder re-
trial of onetime high school beau·
ty queen Leslie Van Houten,
Barbara Hoyt told jurora Mon·
day that the cult leader was ab-
normally attracted to a record
album by the Beatles 11ingi11r
1roup which containtd the words
''Helter Skelter.''
"He <Manaon) told ua the
Be•U• were prophesytn1 Helter
Skelter," the 25-year-old Mlt1
Hoyt eald. "Helter Skelter wu
about the war that waa corn in&.
·Coast Writers Honored
Sbn of FDR Among A.~ Recipienta
J
mooH and lta bablta ln the
Alaakan wtldomes1.
Ma"' Happy
darn~ .... ~_£ ........ ~ . .>q-_.·.-~.-.... ~ .... ~.~-·~7·•r~°"' -.. to you
fora
Worry-Free
Vacation
When vacatlonlnQ this year,
free yourself of worries by
taking advantage of our Free
Vacation Alda.
Your savings account at
Republic Federal Sa\lfngs
entltlea you to free travelers
checks, •free safe dtpo1lt box
($1 ,000 minimum balanc.),·
free telephone transfer and
tree direct depoelt of
government check.I.
All thtae benefits wnl
teassure you when out of town
-traveler• chicks protect
your cash-sate deposit
_,...,.,,_i,,,.,.
,.., ........... .,,....c....,
bo)Ctll protect your .valuables
-.'.telephOne tran9fet allows
you to tran1f er money from
aavlng1 to your checking
account-and for those
receMng eoclal Mcurlty and
other government checl<e, the dlreot 0epo1lt tO ~ur aavlnga
eocOW'lt allOWI you to e,m
high rnterest Immediately, with
no Wot'ry about lo•• or theft of .. your check. For detailed Information
elmpty Inquire at 1f1Y of our
twelve offices.
IANTA AMA 11th St. WM\ Of Newport Fr..wey (714) 641-$218
ANAHlf• 202 An"'tlm Plau, 500 N. Euclld 8t. (71 ') 95W2f0
LAGUNA NIQUIL ~ C~n V1H1Y Partcway (71') ~0$<0NG \
WllTMINITM 194 WMtmlntttr Mlll/Solae ~ 8'" Diogo FWy. (714) ~7 .
...
NO GEll.8 DEPT. -Apparent-
ly ~ Shaken and Movers ol
CaJTrans. the outllt that aovems
our hJghways, are coin• to cet
back fnto the Diamond Lane
bUJlnen aaain. Thia time it'• ln
our reeioa.
Dilp t.cbes out of our <?eatral
county have lndlcated that a pro-
iram II under way to aet up the ill.famoua clla.mondl to mark OD· tampa to th• Santa Ana Freeway.
Diamonds flnt ~came ·large
In the freeway bulinesa back Jul
year when the CalTrana brus
decl4ed to create a apeclal com·
muter lane on the Santa Monica
Free•ay. ThJ.a rOadway Is reputed by the.
expeiU to be the moat traveled
slab ~ aapbalt anywhere Jn the
unlvene.
Nl~spotfor an experiment.
Anyway, CalTrana pluneed
ahead and set up thlJI special lane
and banned all vehicles from it
except for those transporting
commute.rs in carpool fashion.
THE COMMUTER lane was
desienated by palntine large
diamonds on the pavement.
TORONTO (AP) -Marijuana
smokers wbo think a Jolnt pm.
them lo doeer touch wlth Other
people's feelln,. are victb:nl ot
the weed'• cUstortJn1 powers. a study tndlcates.
ln a test of warmth, empathy
and 1enulneneH1 the 1toaed
peracm utmed .. phonier·• thm
those who did not smoke mari-
juana, a reaearch team rePorted
Monday.
A FEW PEOPLE, bowever,
became more communtcaUve,
althou1h the p1ychlatrt1h couldn'taaywhy.
Tbe research team headed by
Dr. Davids. Janowski of UC San
Dleco ii among the tint, be said,
to .explore interpersonal eftecta
of marijuana. Other studiet bay~
teated what happens to intellec-~
tual powers and mood under the
drug's infiuence, but not tta
alteration of friend.sblp or mar-
riage, for lnatance.
••0ne of the reasons we cbole
marijuana," Janowski told a
aeaaion of the American
Paycb.latrlc AasoclaUon 's 130th
annual meeting, "ii that some
therapists told us their patients
would say, 'Gee, Doc, why don't
you get high with us and 1~ what
it's like. You would be so much
warmer and more ~mpathetic and communicative'.'
ezperlmentally under federal
IQldeilnel. . Tb• prohlbtt.lotl aaainat ad· m~·marijuua to female
•xperlmenlal 1ubjeda involvet a
.fear that aucb upertmtntal 1ub-
1tance1 may eauae blrth detects.
Jt items trosn tho early lil&OI,
when many wormetl who had
ba•n elven tbe tranqQ!lizer-
TbaUdomlde pve birth to de.
formed cblldren.
Eacl\ couple held a 25-minut.e
interview, with the woman talk·. mi about• dlfflcult time in her
life and the man attempttn1 to be
helpful. Later, the male
"therapist " smoked a cigarette,
which fnbalfthe ca.sea waa mari·
Juana and in the o&her half an in·
acUve aubltitute, and a second
2S-minute 1ntervtew ,,.,., held.
DdrdState
After each talk, both partners
fUled out QUt1tio1111alrt1 dO•
•lined to measure lra.lta aucb aa
1enuhWM11, warmth, qp~.
accep&uce of the Other pel'IOb.
ID ..addition, a third penon
w atc;ihod videotapes of th•
se11lom and rated tho tberapllt·
1moker uamc • paycbotoalcal
yardatlck tailed the Rukln Em-pathy Scale.
The result.I showed that the
troubled partners felt the men
were more concerned. warm and
empathetic when the clsarettes
they bad smoked were not mart·
juana.
.. THE TREMPlSTS aeemed
more phony under the marijuana
condition," said Janowski.
Florida Legalizes
Use of Laetrile
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) -Florida bas become the third state to.
le&allze the drug Laetrile, barmed as worthless by a federal aaency
but touted by ~orne as a cancer remedy.
The Florida Senate voted 36-3 Monday for a bill to allow doctors to
administer Laetrile when requested by a patient.
Unless you had departed this JANOWSKI MATCHED 20
globe ror the experimental male mental health workers, all THE MEASURE cleared the Florida's action follows a vote
period last year, you recall the occasional mart,iuana uaers, with Florlda House laat week 00 a by the Indiana legislature last
disastrous result. 20 females who would play the ll0-9 vote .. It now goes to Gov. Saturday to override the veto of
When the Santa Monica role of troubled partners. Only Reubln Askew, who has said he Gov. Otis R. Bowen and approve
Freeway's diamond lane went in· males can be given marijuana will sign it. a measure allowing the manUfac·
to operation, commuters carry. ture, sale and use of Laetrile.
Coat4appers Gtellt9
Testimony by actress Carol Channing, left, has led to
the conviction of two men accused of stealing her $30,000 •
· eggshell colored mink coat last December. She was •
served with a bench warrant to testify in the pair's non-
jury trial. With court reporter Bee Dunlap, she displays
the coat, recovered when the pair tried to sell it.
JL Pig Plea Nixed··
Simet Lips Baitle V mood 'I
in1 leas than car pool capacity
went absolutely bananas. 'Fear Spreadln.6' Alaska had earlier paased a VIRGINJA BEACH, Va. (AP> -The Vir&inia Supreme Court ha.tf.
Commuters tried everything 8 measure decriminalizln& lts use. refused to hear an appeal from Drewry LitUe over an order that he get
from carrying dummies in the THE PROPOSED Florida law rid of hi.s perfumed pl.a. Sweet Lips.·
front seal to hiring students for 1 • h ~ ke D f is patterned after the Alaska But LiUJe said Monday he's not through with his lee al baUle. riders in the effort to beat the ns or rs e y measure. Jt allows doctors to Last summer, a eeneral district court ruled that pigs are out ot
diamond lane. It a11n ednded intha • i prescribe the drug but does not place in Little's pa.rt of town and
mass protest ra Y own e enter into how it can be obtained. fined him $25. Little has raised "TIDS IS NO joke. Thll isn'l
diamond Jane with a judge finally ke c u Shipment of the drug _derived the 400-pound pig from a baby as anything pert a 1n1 n g to
putting the knock on the whole r~ -ne .. al Sin· a· from the pits of apricots. peaches a pet at his combination home. publicity ...
experiment. '-7-e • ~ and bitter almonds _ across restaurant and marina. A circuit Thouaands of people tl1rV'.e" Now, apparently, CalTrans is state lines is baMed by the U.S. court jury heard his appeal and stopped by Little's Anchor ID.I) coming to Orange County with atClrmed the conviction, but since the c&11e received attention
diamond on-ramps for the Santa BELFAST, Northern Ireland CAP) -Workers poured into Northern Food and Drug Administration. lowered the fine to $10. last summer, the 55-year-old
Ana Freeway. Ireland's factories, shops and offices today in defiance or a general The legislature acted after restaurateur said. ,,
News dispatches Indicate that strike called by militant Protestants in an attempt to force the British cancer victims who claimed m:~!t. ~i!~!tn!'J~~ ab::c:ned HE SAID HE had to buy the
on metered ramps those with army to open an offensive against the Irish RepubJlcan Army. . their Uvcs had been saved by use 1 ed Li t1 Li h 1 younger and smaller Little Lips
traffic signals a diamond on· The Belfast Telegraph estimated at midmonµng that~ to 90 per· of the drug demonstrated In fro!1..!' fieg ~~:'ed tb~;h t.C:~J:. Lit· as a "backup pig" to take on
ramp lane will be provided. cent of Belfast's workers were on · J of the state capitol and crowdl:U ''These pip are scrubbed television talk shows that have
THIS WILL ALLOW car thejob,andtheturnoutwasnear· ( • ·. commlUeet'oomslnbothcham-threetimesaweek.They'reall invltedhim."SweetLipaw8.8l\'t Jy 100 percent in Londonderry, /N SHORT hers testiCying to the curative f ed in d th d • b uncontrollable, but he got too bi'g poolera to avoid the ramp's red which has a large Roman powersofLaetrUe. enc an ey on t ark. togetonaplane,"Llttlesaid.
and green signal and swing Catholic population. But it said Medicial experts, including They're just as clean as 90 per· "What thla la about is 'what i~
direcUy onto the freeway to go about 60 percent of the workers diaslpatinl the last tracei rc· the man)' from the American ceot of the people I know/' LltUe justice.?' ,. he aald. "What dld I
play in traffic. heeded the strike call in some North Sea oU spill trom Bra 0 rig Cancer Society, are stroagly op-said M<nday. risk mv llfe for in World war 11?
All of this proves that !~~ mostly Protestant areas. as the weather "ontlnu ... ,. to posed to legalization. They say "I've got a call in to the gov-People out there shooting aoct CalTrans people have dlamouu• Strikers and their supporters "00.u. .. a~-today in" the "'l•~anup Laetrile is worthle,1 as a cancer ernor. Frorn the governor I'll go d()o(nw and th thr ln on their brains. They slmply shared the streeu or Belfast with ~pe~uo';;'. "' cure. all thew&Y,tothe (U.S.) Supreme ~~:pig.•• ey ow me Jall
can't shake the diamond notion. sttenathened police forces on the , Courtitlhavetp. Theys~~rM~d ~ck D~eue looko~ fur dtempls to in· The cle~up ships bad two ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ of the highest magnitude. . ttmldate workers . Although days of near calm after the well I ,
Look, let'• assume for a minute there was no interference with waa capped Saturday to pump
that the special car pool on-ramp the stream or motorists and most of tbethicker portions oftbe 14 11
IS a tood and needed idea. Grant· pedestrians going to work, spill off the seas around the e -:-:.._*' --AllLthawJ>JX....~ll Jd'!\i Ml!lDU>-~ ..... "'~tA-'~:'L'! is Eko k ~mplex of ri.g~en .• -, .. ~~::--0.......,_..to'.J•~ 'M't"·if)~~"t • {/M ~ ... YJ)~~,._~~8'C -· .... ~ Heii · So you •et up the special 00• ed Ciaran McKeown, an ofnclal 6"rt-a ng 1l • r'm&i ' -...
ramp lanes. Would you then orthe Peace People campaign. minutely thin layer of "blue OU mark them with dlamondJs, to re-shine," which a spokesman for
mind everybody or the Santa PbllJips said "will disappear
Monka Freeway disaster? tt'ell•re •W IAl••efl quickly under natural sea ac·
tion." WOULD YOU LAUNCB • new WASHINGTON CAP> -Presl·
ship and name it tho Titanic or dent Carter. is drawing praiae •••le 7rf;p /!lei.
Andrea J)oria? How about drill· from two key congressional
ing an offshore oil well and call· Democrats for hll first move
ing the platform Bravo 14? toward welfare reform, an lllue
Youaren'lgoinctodothat.No that one Cabinet member way. equata wlth the complex search
To avoid tho lntamoua forpeacelntheMlddleEaat.
diamond. you mlaht mark the Carter Uated hi• objectives for
new commuter Inna with sreal welfare chanee Monday, aaytna
red balls patnted on the pave· the nation's present system
ment. You'd call it tho Red Ball should be thrown ouL But be aa1d
Expreu Lane. Or ove it 1reeD be needs more tlme to ccnault
· linea and cal ll the Green Streak with leader• of all 50 atatea
Lane. AnyUune llke that. But no before 1ubmUUn1 formal
diamondl, ever aeain. Je1illath•e proposab.
The trouble wltb tb11e·
CalTrans people is that every
lime they aet some new not.100: they lff diamonda awimmtna OSLO, Norway CAP) ~ Fit·
before tbelr eyes. teen-foot waves were repo~
WASHINGToN <AP) -Vice
President. Walter F. Mondale will
lend U.S. IUPPort to Brit.lib ef.
forts to smooth tr~ltlon to a
black majority government in
Rhodesia when he meets later
thla month with South African
Prime M.lnllter John Vorster.
Mondale will not take any new
American initiatives to Vienna,
wbere he is to meet with the
South African leader, ad-
mini1tration sources report.
Plans for Mondale!a trip, which
will include aiop. 1n Yueoalavia,
London, Spain and Portugal,
were expected to be officially an-
nounced today.
MuCh of U.S. Gets Rain
Albv<I~ Al'l'ltrtl ..
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~_,
o.1-"I.~ Oetww DttMli.-. • OM...it
H.itM
HOMlll" ......
11141'.,.ilt .ie(llt'vll ..
...... City w.v.-1.lttllllltlt
UUIWllll
More Showen, S":'rnu E~ Today
MIUl"Clllo IO U " ,. 11 St ,. .. .. ., " . 74 tl .. , ., ,,
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This Mother's Day send Mom a greeting all the world can share on
Sunday, May 8th.
Express your love in a Daily Pilot 'Mot11er's Day' Greeting: . ' It's easy. Wrice your message to fie one of our three convenient sizes
and bring ic to any Daily Pilot office prior to, noon May 6. Or, you rpay
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• lines drawn within the d0tted llne will appear In JOOf
comptcrrd Mother'• Day ad.
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... ~The author, Sen. Jerry SPllth (D·Sarat,oc1),
.__ aitldlm from tu reform.,.., local aovern-mtnt, the Weetern Center on Law ud Poverty, and' th• legt,t1Uvo anoly1t'1 offlee.
SAN DIEGO <AP) -'lbe U.S. tuna fleet will
aall Wedneld1y wblle enviruunentalltta, the in·
dustty ad Coqrea work out a compromise on bow
man1 porpo.\lel can die In • tuna cakh. an industry
offlclal says.
'State )
Au1uat Felando,
ieneral manaier of the
_ American Tuna Boat As· ._..__ _____ _,, sociation. sent a teleiram
to Sen. Alan Cranst.cm <D·
CalU.),announcingtheresumptionofsaillnf.
Cranston, wno ia working with a coahtton or 14
lromnental groups and the tuna industry on the
compromise, urged the slllinl because "for the
fleet to stay in port now would be to simply prolong
ne~lesaly the economic agony of San Diego and
other communities."
SIX .. ,,. Bau L•• ..
LOS ANGELES <AP) -The federal Securities
and Exchange Commission contends the Bank or
California illegally loaned millions or dollars to
stock speculators who put up no collateral. ·
~g61rl
Marrisa Chavez, 14, who managed to
escape from a submerged auto in which
her mother and three sisters died Sunday
is comforted by a friend during recovery
of the bodies from Sacramento River near
Courtland. The tragedy occurred when
their car skidded on a rain·slick levee
road an~ plunged into the river.
Tanker Tern1inal
Report Approved
SACRAMENTO (AP) -State Sen. Georee
Deu.kmejian'1 death penalty bill hu bt'olcen out of
the Assembly Committee on Criminal Justice.
ll went to t.M noor Mondi)' wheo an annou.need
opponent ol capital punishment unexpectedly voted
in favor of it, sayina if lt were killed, there would
•tW :eh pro-capital pw\llhmeftt volet on the noor to some kind of death s>eQalty u a noor
ame .
THE VOTE WAS 5-4 in the nine-member com·
mlttee. Tbe Senate baa already passed it.
A majority of the members of the committee
oppose capital punishment In general. '
The committee is still holding two other
versJoos of death penalty leci.slation for conaidera·
tioo later. They are ·blU1 by Bill McVlWe, (D·
Upland), and committee chairman Kenneth Mad·
dy, (R·Fre.soo).
THE BILL by Deukmejlan, a Loni Beach
Republican, was watered down somewhat,
however, by a liberal committee member, Howard
Berman. (IJ..Beverly Hills >.
I>euluncrjian wu also told by two members,
Maddy and Bruce Nestande, <R·Orange), that the
"proportionality review" provisions in bis bill
might not meet objections of the U.S. and state
supreme couru.
THE COURTS have ruled that death sentences
should be reviewed to determine If the punishment
in each case b proportional.to the crime, not ex-cessive. •
The bill imposes death for a number of different
types of homicide, including murder for hire,
torture and trainwrecking causing death, and per·
jury causing the wrongful execution of an innocent
person.
Prayer Raises
Assembly Tiff
SACRAMENTO (AP) -It Pllaht seem that&r::~ • ing would be one of the few noncontroversial _
to happen on the AJsembly floor.
Not so.
On Monday, a Jewish leaislat.or aald the A.-:
sembly's chaplain ---------should make ru. public
prayers less Chrbtian or
lose his job.
about Lt." Roeentbal said .
in an interview. addlnl
that a num~ ol non·
Jewish leplatora have
told him~ aaree.
Assembly Speaker.Leo
McCarthy, who ls a
Roman Catholic, said the
request for non ·
denominational prayers BARRAM. a Baptiat
seemed reasonable. He paator, f&S named to the
d. ted the h.u.a · b job by the Aase~~· tree c ._111n e Rules Committee last told of the request. m 0 nth, re P 1 a c 1 ll g
ASSEMBLYMAN longtime A11embly
Herschel Rosenthal (D· chaplain Leo McAlliat.er.
Los Angeles). raised the who retired. The job
issue when he revealed pays $393 a month.
BERMAN'S· AMENDMENT would require he was upset with the He said in an interview
The bank, without admitting or denying the
charges, bu promleed not to do it again.
Both a civil suit and the bank's agreement to a
permanent injunction were filed Mooclay in U.S.
District Court here.
proof that killing by means of explosives be done Rev. Rlchard Barr am 's he would not be able to
"wilHully, deliberately and with premeditation" . "daily referrals to Jesus alter his conylctlons and
LONG BEACH CAP)-which is scheduled to before the death penalty could apply. Christ." leave all mention of
Despite warnings from consider the final report Otherwise, slaying by explosives would draw "I'm not the only one Jesua Cbriat out of bis
Loa Angeles officials May 10. only life without parole. who feels uncomfortable prayers.
that the document is·~~-~-----~~~------------------------------------------------------------~~-~~
~ Areta W.Cer Btu•
SAN FRANCISCO CAP)-San Franciscam be·
ing told to fiaht the drought by cutting water use 25
percent hav~ been given an additional reason to
conserve water -a '3 percent increase in water
rates.
' The new rates, approved by the Board of
Superviaon Monday. will to into effect July 1 and
include stiff penalties for residents who don't abide
by the city's strict water raUoning program.
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W'...,.11 CH•fler Kiiied
YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK CAP> -An
Oaklancl woman, Suztl01'e Carnes, 31, was killed
wben'abe fell whlle climbing a ridge here, the Na· ti~nal Park Service reported.
Mrs. carnes was leading a climb with her
husband wben 1he slipped and tumbled to the base
of ..Lower Brother mountain.
"fatally inadequate,"
the Loog Beach Harbor
Commissioners have •P·
proved the rmal environ·
mental impact report on
the proposed Sobio oil
tanker terminal.
The 3-2 vole Monday
came after Jan Chatten.
Brown, environmental
director for the Loa
Angeles clty attorney's
office, asked unsuc·
cessfully for a two-week
qelay t.o respond to what
she says are problems in
the report.
HE& REQUEST was
endorsed by Long Beach
Deputy City Atty. Les
Still.
She said the report
does not dlaeuss possible
exp1naloii of the pro-
posed tennloal or deal
with .. the pollution
potential If Alaskan oa LOS ANGELES CAP) -Ronald T. Binns. 28, of displaces cleaner, low·
Lee ~geles has been booked for investi1ation of sulphur oil in area re· . . abduction aod rape in the attacb of 40 women this fineries."
YfJU:· policuald. Sbe aald Los Anaeles · He wu arrested Mondav and accused of. ·n ni I waylaying the women outside their homes forcing wt 8 an except on to . • the Long. Beach report
• A.M>Q'lC distance..q.Q.Lra t'l>f.~· ,. ~ ... "'-~~.:::.: ~-.-,~~ ~ :w~-. ~ ~ ~ .t:.~ •• m~'~ .
,. DAVIS BROWN
otb.e£'§
~ "'Y~le
~ GIFT DIRECT FROM GENERAL ELECTRIC
UNITED STATES SAVINGS BOND with the
f.»urchase of this GE Quality-Built major
appliance from April 2 through June 3, 1977
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For more than !our million Callfornians
ln the north, water rationing ls the order of the day.
· And anyone who thinks their droucht is
not really Southern Callfo~a'e and Orange
County'1 buaineo had better UllDk asaill ..
nll :very week th& i;o. Angeles City C.unc~ ..ct,()ft a mfllKtatory wai.r ra·
tioning plan drawn up by a special commit· tee. .
In step-by-step fashion. the pr6posed or-
din a nee would first ask consumers to cut
consumption at least 10 percent below 1976
levels. Failure to comply would result in.a warning.
Next would come the installation of
restrictors to cut the flow of water to non·
complying households, with an installation •
fee of $25.
The final step would give the city
authorization to shut off water to consumers
who do not reduce their water usage.
And, from the out.set. the use of water to
hose down driveways or sprinkle laws so
that water flows ov«r into gutters would be
prohibited. .
This is tough talk, but something
similar could very well come to Orange
County.
Supplies of water from the north are
completely shut off. And even maximum
pumping efforts to bring in Colorado River
supplies have not achieved the goal of in·
creasing reservoir storage by 1,000 acre·
feet a day. On the contrary it's dropping 400
acre-feet a day.
And since there's little or no prospect of
measurable rain in the coming months
that's no jok~.
The Metropolitan Water District
e:1lr ea<1Y has advised the 27 Los Angeles and
Orange County agencies it supplies that sur·
charges will be imposed for till usage above
90 pcr('ent of 1976 Jc\'cls.
But realists recognize that charging
more for water probably would do little to
encourpge conservation.
No one likes the idea or.rationing, But as
MWD general manager John Lauten says
bluntly, "If we don't see any evidence of re·
al conservation in a month or two, 1 don't
see that we would have any '<emative but
to go to mandatory rationing.••
Water bill.a reachlnat many Orange
County households this month are stamPed
with the words, "CoMerve Water to Pre·
vent Rationing."
It's not Just a cetchy alogan. It's for
real.
Legal Maneuver
Orange County Supervisor Laurence
Schmit continues to lead bis fellow
supervisors in a time-and money-wasUna
grandstand play that finds th.e county shak-
ing its fist at the military.
Supervisors last week agreed to take
legal action to force either the California
National Guard or the Department of
Defense to .Prepare an Environmental Im·
pact Statement (EIS) on the Guard'&IM!h<i·
ing takeover of Los Alamitos Naval Air Sta·
tion.
Schmit said preparation of an EIS is. im-
portant to communities with undeveloped
land around the base, so the board told
County Counsel 'J\drian Kuyper to off er as-
sistance to cities which also miibt like to
file legal action.
Guard leaders have repeatedly assured
the cities and county that there will be few if
any changes in operations at the base that
would invalidate an EIS on Naval operation
there made just five years ago.
Schmit's comment that Orange County
is "hot an occupied land" was tasteless at
best. The Guard seems to have eone out of
its way to reassure its new neighbors that
the base will not add to the area's environ-
mental problems.
There are some, o( course, who would
like the base totaUy closed to open up more
·land for commercial or residential develop-
ment.
The Guard should be permitted to meet
its May 21 date for transtertt>LosAlamitos.
There is no reason to assume ~ presence
of the National Guard on the .base will be
any more of a burden to development than
was the Naval Air Station.
Will Second Term Dear
Gloomy
Gus Elude Jerry Brown?
( EARL WATERS )
~
Can't under'Jtand Why all
the pollticlan,J ar.e IQ
worked up about the ~•t of. •
more county judae~,. lt . takes two or three tull ume
plu1 the 1rajtl Jury to
keep track of them and
•
'Bureaucratic Meas,
The EPA: A.Paper rige
W ASlilNGTON -The cap·
taina of induatry complain that
the Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) t. a bureaucratic
monster wrecking their busi-
neases and devouring thelr pro-
fits. But. a careful examination
reveals that the beleaguered
agency often la merely a paper
tiger.
While public fervor to protect
the nation's resources baa cooled, the air
is becoming
dirtier. the
river• more
foul. Even tM
water we
drink. baa
been con·
taminated
wltb cancer·
cau1ln1 1ub·
1tancee.
Haruaed EPA officials are ttylnl to atlck thelr fln1ers ln the
dike, "but new leakl keep sprout·
. int before they can plug the old
ones. Dallleroua new chamlcals
are tbreatentn1 tl\tt publl c
healtb, often because of ~e agen·
CY'• ownnealllence. .
(JACK ANDERSON J
tetrachloride. EPA had mls·
takenly urged citizens to
stockpile poisoned water.
There are some 253 other or·
1alllc chemicals ln the nation's
drinkln1 water, but UttJe action
has been taken against even
those that probably cause
cancer. "The presence of some
organic compounds in dnnkmg
water may be increasing the risk
of cancer." warns an internal
congreulonal staff report.
Indeed, the agency's clean
water program also ts "a
bureaucratic mess," one EPA ln·
aider confided to ua. EPA is un·
der court order to set limlta on 65
toxic chemicals that factories
dump Into the nation's
waterways,
"We're taking only one or two
samples because we can't meet
the court deadlines," said one of·
ficial. "The industries will sue
and the regulations will be
thrown out in court.''
For example EPA was not ,. even aware that FMO Corp. and EPA ALSO has failed to act
• ether compi.nlet ~•re dumplna forcefully against poisonous
" rat leut 10 tons of ~arbon gasoline vapor which escapes ' _..,.....,.d ,_ ... ,,,,.., "'' from 111 J*mps while cars are ,etra""""" e .u1W ~• VJUO .iuver; belng filled. Under strong pre·
whlcb provtdM drtaldn1 water aaure from the oil companies, the for aJIDOlt 2 Qlllll,n people in the b ked ff CllloinnaU at••· Carbon •&ency ac 0 from strict
poorly done, however. lhat of·
Cicials feared ll would embarrua
the aeency ii it leaked out.
The EPA omcial who conduct·
ed the study didn't even ;, .that a lederal health Heney IC la~led bertz~nt a canter-ca I
An lntemal staff report. wbic
EPA suppressed, charees tbatlh6
study used data ''in an inco~
tent '••hion" and Ji,nor evidence that benzeneia lethal.
"It wasn't a quality job," one
EPA olfic1al told us.
')"\
MEANWHILE, EPA hatrt
permitted 2.3 milliqn cans anc!i.
trucks to remain on the road even
lhou1h they don't meet federti&,t
pollution standards. A GeDU..tt
Accounting Office repoY')f
crltlciz~ the agency for failiac"o1
to inapect soot·spewlng cars.
EPA's assembly·Une ln11pectiona
of cars are shoddy and some ne~1;
vehicles were later found iit.1
cause four limes the air pollulka allowed by law.
EPA also has virtually lgnored11
alarming evidence on three cantt •
cer-causlng pesticides con\mc..n
ly used on cotton and soybean
crop1. Exposure to the J><!&ticldea ~
by "inhalaµon, ingestion aq4 .
skin contact poses maj9~
carcinoeenic hazards" to the l
general publi~, warns a grJve
memo t.o EPA from Dr. Samyfi Epa~ein, a le•dlni canc~fi!
spec1all.at.
Will Jerry Brown revert
California to limiting Its eov.
ernors to one term? Prtor to Earl
Warren's electioll io Ji second
term in l!MO the state had re· gularly been retlrln1 It.a eov·
ernors after one term 1lnce 1914
when Hiram Johnson achieved
the distinction or being the first
governor in the state's history to
win a second four.year term.
many directions. Olson was the
first Democratic California gov·
ernor in the 20th ctntury and wu
the last one-term governor. Even
though his stormy term was
marked by a serious recall effort
Olson never received the
c riticisms from so many
divergent groups and individuals
lhelr friends. 1tandard1 on the deadly J .E.T. tetrachloride 11 a hl1bly toxic hydrocarbonJ which threaten Footnote: Reps. Andre-Wt .
0 ....,,,0 .,,c..,.m.,.tsere.-..•o, cbemicaltbatcausescancer. the health 'or inilllons or Maguire, D·.N.J., and ThOlllllllJ'l
John Bigler was twice elected
but that was way back when the
ter.m for gov·
-:"f i' ·•.c.ANllGI~ -• ...,,.,,.,, ~ ,. . ... y y .
William h'wln ,
!llled out the
final year or
itomual~o
Pacheco's
term and was
then elected
to n t.erm of
Ilia own ln
1876. ~
Frank F . Merriam. who
finished the unexpired term of
Jimmy Rolph when the latter
died In office, was elected lo a
term or his own an 1934 Wan-en
not only 1erved out two full terms
but became the flrat to wan a
third .term Whf"n he reel1ncd
from that lo become Chld
J u1tlce he waa succeeded by
Goodwin J , Kntfhl who
thereafter also won a full tenn
for himself. After Warren
achieved re·elecUon the second •
term hu becomt &lmoet laken for
granted.
But Jerry Brown, aa yet unna-
nounced If not undecided about a
second torm, may find It. M)'Olld
roach. For, not 1lnce Culbert I,.;
Olton hH any •overnor been
lambasted pubHcly from so
~~;;;;~~-
the fire of Republicans. Thla was
echoed In the newspaper
editorial columns. Unfortunately
for Olson some or the crlticlsms
were valid. He angered some
seements or business and in·
dustry. He was accused by the
senior cillzens of breaking a pledge.
He had brou1ht immediate re-
action at the start or his term by
his grand.stand pardoning o( con·
v 1 c ted Prepared neu Day
bomber Tom Mooney. His
seizure shortly lhereafr..r ol the
Pacific States Buildln1 and Loan
injured hlJ lma1e with bualnesa.
But Brown, whole arronnce
tow arda legislators and everyone
else dwarfs that of 01.aon, LI the
firat since Olson lo have conatltu·
tlonal officers and letlalatora In
both parties speakln1 out public·
ly •1atnat him. Thl1ll1omethln1
those who m111t run for office
atudloualy avoid when they feel a soye:rnor hu the ovenvhelmln1 aupport of the put>Uc and the
pteu. NOM ln either party dared
criticize Warren, Knl1ht or
Ruf an and few were criUcal or
Pal :arown. Obviously. they now
.....,..,..,." .. '"'" .. "",_.1.c1.. Americans who fill their cars at Luken, D·Oh10. have been urain&it ~";::'0~,:c::.':;i,~.:W "' &.AST ftEK. EPA warned self·Rrvlce pumps and those the agency to crack dRwn ,OTl
Ohio 1'9ldenta to atockpUe water who work in or near gas stations dangerous substances. You vet1 ..., ~ : . ~ "• • c.._, .. __ ~ b'~!~• the de~. chemical · cit~d a lot or c,ses that bav11-. .~ :-~-~~"-· ~ .......... -----·--~-~....,..._.....,._,,_~· ........ _~--~
ense\hat Jerey-B~ ti ~Oli)t.·'fbe next day, the age0-"1'-"f'uli!1Meatenecm-sue the agefl--""'c~ ·o~~ -
ping badly in the popularity c:y revtnecUtaelf and apolopzed cy, but agreed to wait unlil Kraltowitz and Howle Kurtz. He
which had been presumed when becaUHthewaterwoundClncin· EPAfinilhedastudyo!benzene, uld the new administratotn
he toolc omce. naU already bad b•en con-a auapected cancer-causer in the Douglas CosUe, will be "a verym
roa aaow1'r has clearly
alienated the f armera, bualneu
and industry and la now drawfne
voctreroua complaints from
labor. Cauibt In the middle on
his envlronmewal and con.serva·
lion stand.I, he has now anaered
even those groups by hla recent
turnabouta aimed at paotrytna
labor and industry.
Further. although he has pos~
as a friend or the mlnotltlea,
leantn1 backwards to place them
and women in hllh poaitiona, he
Is now drawinl fire from the
mlnorlllea.
Brown 1110 hll been de-
nounced by tho 1tate teachers
and atai. ernploye oraanlutloa1.
Thia la particularly slantflcant
a Ince they, alodg with labor,
were Brown's moat powtrful or·
1anlied 11.tppOrten in the 197'
election. Ho hu alao dlttnchant·
ed many of the Democratic party
reculan who were active in hJa
tlrst campaign.
tam&nated by tbe carbon guollne vapor. The study was so tough manager" in these areas.
Even tho Queen of England
waa an auto mechanic -when
1uch wartime service was essen·
t.tal.
In the United Sta tea "Rosie tho )Uveter" took
tbo place of
aome dntt.d men -when
1hehlldto.
Bu moat
women -
MOST women
-when that
, crla11 waa
puud pre-
ferred other
"lea11Quculloe" employmbt.
PresenUy our vocaUoaaUaln
schoolt are r.cawrtd to n\~e
avallable to gltl1 courses ln
plumbbli and auto mechanics
and electrical repair -but few
at•enmUinl·
A P.trrnaylvanla State Unlvmlty study produces the
recommendation that hlgh school
admlnlltrators should "more ac·
tlvely encourage" girls to take
such courses.
Now, wait a minute.
This IOUnds as though, in the
name ot "equal rights," wo are
trjln& 1o force females into un-
tracUllonal a1'd uncomfortable
OCCU,.tl<IDI.
la that what lt means to be .. Ubera~11?
. • 111
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•l'•rU
."1'T • ' The Department or Agrlcultur161d'
dutifully provides informaudn"
for rural women on such subjects as sewing. cooki ng .gnd
household chorea. But tlJWl1
NACWEP says that is dti'r1
graceful -that these women""
ahoul.d and must be shown that
they are capable ol more "h\i~'"'
portant" thing•. •r.-....
One or the reasons rve stued
on the sidelines of the Et\A
amendment squabble 1s that l
think it should be left tG~fl ·
d1vldufll states now. And a).,,
though my wife favors ERA, I
am yet unconvinced that it won't
cost women more than they ceaJJ' l ly wanttopay. · ,¢11·
• •10
PSYCHOLOGIST Dr. Joycio.lr
The Perfect Site for a · Dam
Drothers once said that W"-'.,
liberation is forced upon women
-when they feel ''forced" out .Oi-t
the houscwlfo role, even thoset«>
who prefer thnt role -then thdlll "'
freedom to chooae la lnhlblted,
( ARTROPPE )
Boodle said the eo1lneers who
dctl&Md the mammoth mt1nollLh had to overcon:ae numer6us
tecboolotleal problems-the
prim ur one belnl how to cope
with fl.uh fioods.
t
WIBLE NO meuurable raln
hu fallen on tKe trea for 43
yeara. UU. eventualltt could not
bt Janored. To m"' th• threat, the Jn1enlou1 en•ln•er1 de· velo~ a MW "•rched dam con·
cept ' with th• entlto dam r•tlna
on a 1erlea of arch11-thtir
purpa.e beln1 to allow trlY ac·
cumulated water to pus •wtnli
throu•h the dam an4 not back up bthlnd It and Uieretiy creat•
dan1erou1 ptenur11 on tbt
wuot.u.rt tt.MU.
"What will our wondtrrul tT.S. 8utuu:fil Daws,:• aak:edJIOodl
~rMmnr , ·~tnkOftt lltt"
Aa ortpnall)* eoneelvcd by
,
Bureau. the dam would have
apanned PUrple Canyon on tile
Wildt River ln the other ond ot
Boo..dl•'• dlatrlct-tloodlnf
eadowlark Valley and the
farms or 68 lndlan tamilles who
had never botbered to vote anyway.
Envlronmentaliat.a (or .. thoso
damned daisy pluckera," u Boo-
dle referred to them when ad-•
dr1111n1 labor uniona) im-
mediately 1warmed 1n protelt.
• TIUJ'r M.ID Ute future LU• Irma T. Boodle, as it wu named
on maptof tho project, would ln-
undat.t two Indian moundl1 18
rare 1pedmen1 of the Froolsh.
Lousewort and tho h•Wltl ot the
Moumtni ONbe.
• Th*Y alio noted lit pantnl that
tho dam altt 111 astride the
omlnou.ly qul••ln1 Gods Faw~
-hlcl:i l>zObably nplatned whj eo many eavltcl\menLal Imp.ct ,..
portera bad been loat in
land•Ud•. •
·'l'ldt kind af U!lJinlJnhuiatm
labor lead ra <or ''hard·bHdeid
hard ha , " 11 .BOOdl• elllod . . -.
them when 1peakin1 to envtron-
mtotallatl). They ,.1d "those
dunn dally ptuckera'' were
• 'takln' th bread out or the
mouths" of thelr wive• and
children and Jobi were ''a
helluva lot more important than
any lousy Louaeworta."
With puatona mount1n1 . and
Boodle ln hldlns, tho only coo·
celvable aolutJ.oD wu conceived
by a Junior clerk in the Bureau,
Hermsn J. Swopea. After 1tud1· tna the ~all, protuta and proJtctJon.s, ht 11ld only two
word11 "Move lt1"
' .
Then they are. ln fact, · less.-
U berated. 1 :
' ....
I I
MIAMI (AP) -Stnc~ooet
Rod McKum bu SoiDtd tbl crow· mr D-.cle ~ty bom0te~aa1
rltbll coolroverty, etiUcli.iO&
1ln••r A.nit.a Bryant u "a .k1.nd ot
Ginny Orancuetd •Pteadtoc
bt1otry thro4.lahoUt tbe·land'' and
announclnl a 1ertet ot benefit
COllC•rtl around the a late.
"I would ask those who may
lllt.n to AnJJa Bryant1 'When are
~pie loins to1topta1eln1 It upon
tbtmMl.\'es to be pollctmenT' "
lllcKuen •ald Monclay. "I am not
Interested In Ma. Bry~s
peJ'llCJftal Ute and I am convtncect
that there are more constructive
tllln&s tor her to do than to lnlr·
tnae on the privacy of individual
American citizens."
MISS BRYANT. spokeswoman
for Florida's citrus industry,
formed a aroup called Save Our
Children that gathered enough
slanat.ures in a petition campaign
to force the Dade County Com-
mi11lon to call a tpecial June 7
election ()ft the homosexual rights
law It pa11ed tbls year. The
meaaure prohibits discrimiDa·
Uon aga.iNt homosexuals in hous-
ing and employment.
McKuen. whose songs include
"Love's Beell Good to Me,''
"SeasonsintheSun" and "Jean."
said at a news conference that he
has canceled several ap-
Jeati~g i;>;raws
I
25-year Term
NEWYORK <AP)-AsascoreofelderlyBronx
realdenta watched, Ronald Timmons, 19, was sen·
l4ncedtoupt.o25 years in prisontorsavaaely beating
a.Q,12-year-oldwomanforthe$2inberpune.
1· Timmons, no stran&er to courtrooms, was dt·
noenced u a predator and sadist by prosecutor
Albert Annwuiata, who displayed a 14-inch kitchen
luUfe heaald Timmons held to the throatot Adelaide
FJemming durin1 the assault Oct. 28.
"HE IS A PREDATOR IN the dirtlest sense of
tht word -In preying on the helpless," Annunziata
told Bronx Criminal Court Judge Joseph Sullivan.
''Heltaaad1st.in the true sense of the word.''
During the attack, Mrs. Fleming cried out for
water but Timmons only "stuck hLs band down her
thft>at, knocking her dentures from her mouth," An·
nmzlatasaid.
· In sentenctna him Monday to the maximum 8~-to-25 years in prlion, SuJUvan called Timmons a
"nUcrocoam of all that is wrong with the criminal
JmUceayatem." •
, ' KE NOTED TIMMONS' LONG record as a
youthful offender who was rejeded by bis mQt.her
and put out on the street.a at11e 10to(end for hlrbself.
He supported himself u "a teen-a1e predator
atalk.lna out elderly victima ... and be must ~
puniahed and taucbt thal-cl'ime doesn't pay and be
hU to pay hilduea," thejudgesaid.
Timmons pleaded guilty dunng jury selection
March 17 to assaulting and .robbing Mn. Flemin1.
r:A:!~~i:~~~~o~~~
' POUCE, CALLED BY NEIGHBOllS or Mrs.
Fleming, caught Timmons and Shannon in the apart·
ment. . ·
David HarrlA. 80, one or the elderly observers
present durln1 each of Timmon•' court •P·
pearancea, said Monday, "We are satisfied with the
Hntence. Our presence helped the court realise
there ls a victim ln the case." Mn. Flem.in' wat not
preaenL
Tlmmona had jumped ~ baU after hia arrest,
b'4 was seized laat November by FBI aceftta in
Balt.imore.
• HIS IAWYEll, MARTIN ooriaN SAID Tim· ~· arrest drew widespread publiclty dwiftl a
ruh or attack• on the elderly and heh.cl • ·n.c1 out or 1heerterrorofbl1 Ille.•·
Tlmmona had been accUMd ol takln& part tn the mqnlni murder of ati-year~kl man In 11'74, but the
CHe was dlaml11ed without trtal for lack of
evJdence. Golkin said Timmom "was wroqt\illy
btfndeduakaller. ·•
.cWoman Foils A.tku!k
_, .. ST. PAUL, MiM. CAP) -Quick thlnltlnt by a 1~.-ar-old woman thwarted an uaault, the
woman told police a man srabbed her al 1be stood
on a atreet comer and put. a knife to her throat. The
at&aeker taid he w o.a 1oin1 t6 take her to tome nic.,
qldiltplace.
u The victim suggested her apartment and the o
1a1Nnt aireed. However. when they reached her
apartment the man found the woman'• buaband wau.lni for him.
Tbe uaallant ned and 11 still beln1 •w&ht.
"W~ TBE SPECTER of
Chalrpenon Bt')'ant aatride a
11llopm1 wbJ~ hone as a kind of
G1uy Oranceaeed spread1nc
bl1otry tb.roQghout the land ii cer-
tainly theatrical enough, the
woman ii danaeroua," McKuen
tald.
"If she continut1 to mount her
crus•de, I intend to call upon
every comedian friend I know to
have so many joket go forth about
her throufhoul the land that she
will be a aughina stock such as
this country baa never seen
before," he added.
He cited a Miami Macazlne m:-
terview ln which Miss Bryant was
quoted as attributing a droughtln
California to the fact that several
cities tbeTe had passed homosex·
ual rights laws.
McKUEN, ASKED IF be was a
homosexual. said, "I've been at·
tracted to men and I've been at-
tracted to women. I have a 16-
year-old son. Youpulalabelon."
McKuen added, "This is not an
!11ue cf.sexuality, it lt an issue ol
bwnanrigbts.''
S.V. Our Children spokesman
Ml.kt Tbompeoq called McKuen's
comments •·an by1terica1 out-
bunt" and an "attack on Judaism aod ~tianity ...
.. WHAT MR. McKUEN and
his fellow perverts do lnprivacyls
their b.-iness, ·~ Thompson said.
"What their fellow bom~uala
would ~o In our children'• clusrodrnsiaour business."
He called McK\,\en an "out-of-
town carpetbasger."
Mckueo denied be was a
••carpetb1gger'' and said he bad
made frequent visits to the state
the past 15 ye~ .nd provided CQl·
leae scholarships ln staieschooll.
Alcoholism
Topic of Film
Continuing a aeries or lilms on
alcoholism. "Guidelines with
Father Martin" will be shown at
7:30 t o night in the
auditorium of South Coast Com-
munity Hospital at 31872 Coast
Highway, South Laguna.
"Chalk Talk" will be shown al
7:30 p.m. May 12.
..
SAN DIEGO <AP> -
Bulletproof vesta are be· nc bo\llht for San Dieao
police.
The 750 vests ordered
for $61,436 are only !or men.
City Manacer HuJ.h
McKinley said available
women'• veats fall lo
meet standards.
Salurd•Y•
lnlh•
DAILY PILOT
.. call u1 flnt, ta~
Ar~ NetlOnol Harne lmprovelfl~t Loon.·~~ ..... _,
.md>go d1redly lo your
So don't fight the
u~le any longer.
Vbit the bronch
mandgcr or loan
officer ot the Flr5t , controctOfl Consider rho.!
po slblhtacs. A new
family room Central
air conditioning A
s1.t1mmlng pool A
bu1h·ln kitchen A1·
m(l)I dny hum.: 1m
Nctllondl br11nch near·
)( You. We11 glw ~ou ~...,nrrJMJ some room to
pro~ement or rcd~oratang o..s you can think of'
an be yours 14ilh .i low co-.r Home lmJ)fO\:em4'nt
Lo.m from the first Natlorwl 8.lnk ol Orange Coun1y.
MAINOFACE
· breathe!
I Fust
National
Bank==-,...,,,,__,....,.._ .... ,...
...,...., ol FD LC.
At the Plaza in downtown Or~nge
COSTA MESA: Mesa Verde & Adams
IRVINE: University Dr. & Michelson Dr.
LAGUNA HILLS: Alicia Parkway & San Otego Freeway
Mothers Day
Sunday, May 8
"T" for tea. Or coffee.
Or cocktails by the pool.
Our Tee-shirt knits can go a long way toward
covering Sum mer's social circuits ... yet they're
sot t enough to work ·as morn ing robes! Super ideas
for Mother's Day, aren't they! The polo by
Ralph Lauren, lemon, pink or light blue cotton knit,
P,S,M, $36 Scoopneck by Huk-a-poo, yellow.
red or blue polyester/cotton, P,S,M,L, $17
Contemporary Sleepwear
..
. -..;~~-·. "'"~ :."IJ ...... ..,.. ., .... ~, .. l_.,.t«r
.\-,. t -,; t .,, ..... '4 -. --------.•
l -· t 81 O.C. HUSTINGS
• C.C.S~man Robert Badham CR-Newport
Beach> ~ the United Stat.es will have to budeet
_.Abere than $121 blllloa for defense to k"P up wltb !" ~ lJM bulldtq>ol c:ommuntstlorees in eat.em Swope.
Badbam reeenUy completed a td-day tour of I
l NATO facWUa u a member of the Rouse Armed Services committee.
·• AITER VIEWING the "European •theater''
firat-band, Badbam said the pending $123 billion de-
fense budget Is juat 1oing to keep the U. S. from 10&-
fng more around lo the a.rma race with the Ruaaians and their Warsaw Pact allles.
If the exiatlna deficiencl• are to be corrected, lt'a goJng to coat more, he 1Q.,ld.
Some of the deliclencl• cilted by Badham fn.
::=cunNIE .. By Phll lnterlondi
"I'm nol :.urc>, hut I lhink 11 ·,one of those 'consumer
watchdog!>' I "' !ward aboul ..
. For the Record
Bird ..
l'OUNTAINYAlll'f
COMMUNIT'f H051'1 TAl
AP<ll Q , 1'11
Mr •11<1 Mr\ °"""" 81\hop 1~217 Yf•''°" Clr<t• WPo..lmtn,14•r qlrl ......... "" M,. .. rtd Mr't FrJn• L•Aon,. 8101
'514ttt Av,·nuf• :: O ~•un•1nQfc>n
6t.it(h "''' Mr '"''1 Mr\ r lid Nort1hnlm qq I
8roo1ii. .. Av• • W,. '"""'''' b?v Mr ;irit' Mr., Oltm\ Hlrli't ti 1'11 A, "
Apt s: 12 Lttf)Uf'M a.-,,,., tx1v
April IS. 1.,7
Mr .. rw:i Mr\ J'>flt'I H 1rr1 Q" t.t tfl/
Shlrtev !.t W•• tm1n""'' o•,.
A11<ll l1 1'11
Mr •f'ld Mn Rnnrtld M•lt .,,, n tt.1n1
""•ltlfr LA,._ ... UnfinQlf')f"I 8fl f'" f)oy
A11<llll 1'17
'"' •na Mr\ M" i..~1 OOdd 0 2' -,.\t r•~ n A..,,,. W.•\•m1"'" r bOv
AP<il It ltll
-.Ar ~t\O ""'' Jo=,,..,., i.. ~••ti'•"'"' 14011 Aldotql•-n ff TM., llO•
M,. ¥'1'1 Mr· M't""""''' MW1'1 tli).tt ~tiJnl" 'f H·Jnf•ntJtO" ft,. .. ~ h •1111
....... 11, "" Mr ... .,,, ¥'' J W \f'J"I••~ I 1 )1 0 ""
l. ~t f.oun••·n V Jl\f"' Mf'
SMITH nm-.1. &.AMI
WISTCUPP CHANl.
4~7 E. 17th St
Costa Mesa• ~~888
Sanla Ana Chapel
518 N Broadw11v
Santa Ana • 547·41 31
P11RCIHOTHIH
SMmfS' MOaTVAlY 627 Main St
Huntington Beach
536-6539 ... , ... ,
COlOMAL f'UMllAL
..0...
7801 Sofsa Ave.
W.rnlnater
893-3525
PAClfllC 9-.w
t•IO.SALPAU
c.mtftll'Y MOftU&ly
~I
3500 P9clflc View Df1Ytt
Newi>ort.
c.t1f0ml•
644-2700
• MJCOIMtCI
MOllTUAmS
Ug\.NBeldl
49+4M1&
~,.,.
San Juan c.piatrano
... 177&
,
l
• ...... u. 1'77
Mr ·~ M'' H•rotd 8,.ownl..-1)712
M ftOilOtWSL. Wf'~lMt"l\h;r.91rt
..... llH,1'11
Mr •"'1 Mf\. Sl..,lon Sc!'l\lllt 7171
N~ .. m•r St :: 0. H11n11no1on lk'd< l'I
DOy
M,. ,,nd M,, Jv<.,. vardtman. IS112
Hunft-r L.•ni-. WtJ-.tMl,,\fM', bO'f
Mr d"(! Mr\ Wllllim Blume. 1761/
Duratno, Ml\\IOn \/lvfo. qlrt
AprH 16, 1'77
Mr •nd Mro\ p..,1 Mau\I Jr . 16000
VPttt Vorbe :: 111) H un11n91on Ii••<" !>Oy Mr <ot"d Mr-. Ptttnc .. 0'8,.1en UJJ1
lrftou•,,.... Ld""" Huf'\f1~on B dCf\
qHI
...... 11, 1'17
Mr .,,., Mr< Ar..,. }o""'°". hlt
M< I" •oo.., AvP ., WHtnil'OK!er l><>Y
I ......
elude a tact of alrbome attack deteCt.tcio devleet,
and caatinued UH of the .. obeolete" B-SZ bombers.
BE SAID NATO forces have only 3,000 tank.a in·
the EuropeQ theater where the Warnw Pact oa·
Uooahlve'5,000. • ••0vtta11 I would aay our fottt le.el ta fair, the
equlplllalt II excellent and the morale ii iooc:t. But
evety mWta.ry commander we talked to ii nervous
about the Wanaw Pact build &q>.
County Press Chili
,Slates June Bazaar
Antiques, bandJcrats
and plants from
throughout Orange
County will be on display
and offered for sale June
E~zkr
Sentenced
Toa Year
Event Set
''Hats off to GoodwiJl
Jndu.stries of America"
ia the theme of the or-
1anizat1on 'a annual open
house week May 8
lhroueh 14 in Santa Ana.
Thtt weet-1001 event
will include guided tours
of the Orange County
center facilities and anti·
que diaplaya.
The Goodwill
28 during the Oran1e
County Press Club's all-
day open air baiaar.
The 9 a.m. to • p.01. bazaar will be at Santa
Ana College, 17th and
Bristol Streets, Santa
Ana. Exhibitor spaces
are limited and reserva-
tions at $7.50 per space
can be made by callin~
633-4885 evenings or
weekend.a.
Reha.bilitation Center, ;::i;i:;~~~:=J:::::'.:!!i located .at Fifth q,¢
Fairview atreeta, will t>e -.-...""""'~
opeir .a-"~ l)Ub11c from
12:30to2:30p.m.
' .
-..,. __ ,__ __ -... ~-....
r. -
GENERAL ELECTRIC
QSD 1070 BUILT·IN
POTSCRUBBER n•
DISHWASHER
•S:pu1hbutton cyclH: high ttm0tlltuf9 Power
Scrub9, high temperature nonnaJ IOll, 1'9gutar
temperature normal 1011, llOht 1011, ohlne and
cry1tal, plu• tlnN and hold
•NewPefmaTut• lntenorwtnnotohl~orack,
PHIOtMlt
•Power 8aver natural dty oPtlOn
·~front color paMll 11) Whit' Harvat,
Almond, Avocado and CoffM
MOM ...... .: l:JN:JO
SAT.: t:00-1:0.0
..
r
~ . D OJT (AP) -Jt hat~ five mOnth8 .me.
2t eb1ldren 1n the Ont and ffCODd aradet al Burt
Qfal...-,&chool watched tn terror .. a man en~ • ~r.94 tbolr du.room ood lbot and killed tbelr t.e cber.
And lt hu taken the combined effort.a of their now teactter, Emma lean Tlllman, a IOC1al worker
and psychiatrl.lts to be1ln heallne the 1eara ten on ~~hildren by that day lut November.
• FO& WBEU Anga BnTY McCuter wu'
a'°t to death, the children complained of •tomacb
afflea or hurt flngtn -JnY excuse to caJI their
Ntents and eo home.
• Mn. McCaster's e1tran1ed husband, Al Lewus,
a '1t.ltrUt.lonacbar1eofO\urder. _
"'Eacll day abot1t lunch Ume -when the shooting
urred -the children tH!came nervous and upset.
'l.'Wo litll clunt con1tantly to each other. They sWl
t taiether. I
1 ~'·..LOUD NOISES FBl(UITENED THE children.
11tey'were afraid of beln1 touched. They were afraid
o( black men, all or whom some youngsters thought
l kedllketbeklller.
· School official• brou1ht 1n aocial worker Edith
X:.U.b to meet with the c~ three times in the week
.atler the slaying. The school set up a series of moo· tbb' meetings for parents with a local psycbiatriat.
The parents of nearly all the children ln the clan
attended the meetings with the psycbiabist, both to
ctlm their fears and thoseoftheircbildren.
Joan Little, ac-
quitted o! murder
but serving seven to
10 years for breaking
and entering, bas
begun training as
dental assistant in
Raleigh, N.C. office
of Dr. David Lane.
She is in prison
work-release pro·
gram.
"{j:redit, War, Caves:
Booklets Available
. '
N .. roads tn Lacuna Nil'* Md a new wet.el' rat. tb'Uctute will• be toPICI at a meetlq ot the
La1una Nl•uel Com-"u.atty Aaaoclatloo at
1:30 p.m. Monday at the
Nl1uel Hilla Junia, Hilb
School, 28070 Paseo
E1cuda, Lapna Niluel.
R .G. Munsell, aasis·
tant director or the coun·
ty '• Environmental
Management Atency,
will talk about plua for
area roads.
Carl Kymla, general
man ager or the Moulton
Niguel Water Diatrlct,
will speak oo water rates.
A11oclaUon officers
will be installed lnclud-
inl Gloria IJ.nkey, named
winner in an. at-large
dlrectonbip following a
recount.
Ag Work
Receives
Honors
Student. from three
WASlilNGTON (AP) How does a
bank deokte whether to give you
credit? What's in your credit file? How
can you cancel a credit agreement?
The answers to these and similar
questions are contained In a new book,
"Give Yourself Credit," prepared by
the House subcommittee on consumer
._tfairs.
Orange Cout area high
( J schools were honored in CONSUMER Anaheimforagricultural proeranu in the Future -------------~:~~e~mo~' s!:=~~~~
THE BOOK COVERS federal laws
.,feeling credit and includea • ques·
~on-and-answer section on consumer
froblems. It shows how to cancel
credit agreements and otrers sample
letters for use in various
circumstances, such as challengine
someUung in your credit me. AJso in·
ded are a glossary of credit terms
d a directory of fe<leral agenices to
ntact Cor assistance.
The book is free. Write lo the
oosumer Affalrs Subcommittee,
ous~nncx 1, Room 212, ashin ,D.C.,20515 • • *
CJVJL WAR HANDBOOKS -The
ational Park Service has Issued a
wries of handboou on Civil War bal·
fields.
The books can be purcbued from
th& Superintendent of Documents,
~.S. Government Prantl!'~ Office,
ashlngton, D.C., 20402. Minimum or-
ris $1 and use thes~mber mor·
ring. Available arc
Geological Survey ..hu a new leaflet
describing the nature. origin and
features of caves.
Copies of the 19-page illustrated
bookie~ "Geology of Caves" are
available for 45 cents each from the
U.S. Geological Survey's Branch of
Distribution, 1200 S. Eads St., Ari·
initon, Va.,2220'l. * • •
FOOD ALERT -The Agriculture
Department has issued its May report
on anUclpated food supplies.
Beef and pork. milk and dairy pro·
ducts, fresh non-citrus fruits, fresh
potatoes,· peanuts, rice, wheat, com
and dry beans ~1 are on the plenWul
list and may be cheaper than normal.
Items listed as only in adequate sup·
ply are: chicken, turkeys, citrus fruits,
canned non-citrus fruits and processed
vegetables.
OFF-ROAD RULES -The Army la
considering rules governing the use of
ltf iMtaUatiONt by off.road fecrea-
Ubnal vehicles.
The proposed regulations would
serve as a guide to individual base
commanders. Among other things the
rules would allow imposition of a fee -''Fl Sumter.·· 6S cents. stock no for using the area, set speed and trail 024-~163·8.. area limits and suggest situations in
by Security Pacific Bank.
Students honored from
Mission Viejo High
School are Kristine
Ayres, st.eve Sorenson,
Tracy Wright, Hugh
Smith, Sheri Clark,
Suun Berry and Lisa
Cady.
Student. from Costa
Mesa High School are
Cindy Kl.og, Kim Fick,
Tina Boucher and Jill
Raab.
Students from
W eat~r High School
are Kim Carr, Kathleen
Morey, Michelle Solo, Ed
Vllla, Victor Betten-
court, Marianne. Fero,
Karen Jnglott and Verna
Morey.
Atwmeys
Requested
The Legal Aid Society
of Orange County is
seeking attorneys to han-
d le general civil and
•
'I
-Stuloh, 70 cents, stock no which the vehicles can be prohibited. ·-9~-~~6~ -~ ~ •. 'rl'n ~"'~ · ·' .. ~.~-\#~4t .;-' ~-... ~~i~..,..,--·~.it~n ~OMME1'n'S ON TJW•~eo ~~-6~~-~l"t ~~, • ${artfiil'"'W'.\arY. 1a ·
$1,.l.OS per month wit))
merit increases at sti
Dfonth intervals. Ex-
perienced attorneys or
those awaiting Bar re-
sults should send re-
sumes to the Society at
1932 W. 17th St., Santa
Ana.
424-~180-8. · . . ntles'Will bl' consfdered and should be -Richmond Battlefields, 70 aent. by May 28, to: HQDA· DAEN· fen~. stock no. 02~;005·00182·4. FEB·N, Washington, D.C., 20014. .
-Gettysburg. 80 cents, stock no. Further details on the proposals can 024-~001116-4. .. be obtained from Robert B. McGough,
-Manassas <Bull Run >. 70 cents, Cb,et Building Jn<1 Grounds Division,
stock no. 024-005-00227 ·8. Facilities En1lneering Directorate, • • * Office, Chief of Engineers.
1 SPELUNKERS NOTE The U.S. Waahingtoo,D.C.,20314.
POLYGANO
POTS
Low, round clay pota
filled wtth 1.aeonal coior
!Ind pereMlallt. 8eaud•
ful on ground, with
matching pedeatal or
wrought.tron tll11'19U
MARIGOLD
BASK£TS
Roger•• famous color
beskm an men hand-
tome than ewr wtth yd.
low "N~" matigoldt
e1 marigold and •euttu·
fly" begonia combln•·
doMI
~~~~e111ae~~~
MOTHER'S
DAY
~
Remember Mothtr with
t0mdl.ln1 dllferaat from
Roger'1 -f:vUIJ gtft from
our great selectlon ls a
lutlog mem<>tYI c~
from otdtkls, ~.
color bMkets or othtt
Indoor ftowertng p11anta-
a bouqun of fresh-cut
lowerl-our cxdutNir
pado fUmHure. andqua
and boutique gifts.
Mother' a Day comes
Juat onoe a ,,..ar1
MOTHER'S DAY
BOUQUETS
Roger's Garde"rls' &orltt
ehop offers • delightful
1&1eetton of lrceh-cut
llowcn. ChOOH a bou·
~ for Motha'a D~ or
anvdeyt
MOTHER'S DAY
BASKETS
Our very own. Cl'c•ttve
ma1terpf•cH -wtcker
beeketa llled with mari-
to Id 1 and be9onlH,
llme lfld othtt cowtd
comblnlldone. •
NOMAD
8fOiiim .Jocdln .-lo/boae .......
thiit unlolde to ftt 1n a~ Far
_.y ecionae. eombt arid .-ntV _.,Nomad at Rott/II
San Joaqwn ttllt• Ra at MacArthur 8Nd:, NIWPOfl BMcb, (714) ~
Qpn DaOy 9am to 6p«ri Alto In M!.uon Vle)o. (714} lt1·1811
• ' .
Jaye:ees 'Fab Exec ·.
C\JINER CITY (AP> -A 11-year-
old exft\ltlve from Pacific PaJJJldes
bat been elected pretldent ol the
CallfornlaJayc ....
Michael L. Deveeo. a put preddeat
of the Santa Moalca J~. wa
elected at a convention or the Intern•·
Uonal aervtce club attended by an
eaUmated3,0001tatewlde members.
OEVE80, A NATIVE of ~falo,
N.V., has worked for NCR Corp. in
Century City for 12 yeara, mOlt recent-
lY u an accountmaaa~cr. &bol.da a
b\lllneadeireetrom UCLA.
" .
The conv Uoo boaored live out·
•land.inc )'OUnJi;: Qf the year at a. baoquet, lnclu Charlie Tuna. 33, a
Loe An&eki area Joet.1. • • THE OTBEa 110Noasa were
Steve Ballretetl, 2f, tbt )'oun1nl moor ln Albar.Qbra 'I Jlt1tor1:
Richard A. Jemen. 2S one of U1e
youo1fllt 1chool board m~mbett tn the
.1tate; Lee Grtaaom.. M, exeeuUvt vice
• pre1ldent and Hnetal ma.naaer of U\e
San Dte10 Chamber of ~meree:
. .and Gary E. Sttmpu, a mtmberolthe.
Pa10 Roblea CityCOUllcll. .
Prime-time service to the Bay Area's most convenient airport.
Convenient, same-day round trips <ilnd low fare.
Ry Air California and make it ea~ on yourself.
AIR8CALIFORNIA
We're easy to take.
Coll Easy Information In Orange County. (714) 752-1CXX>; Downey. (213) 924-3313; Laguna,
(714) 496-6CXX>; Los Angeles. (213) 627--5401; Son Clemente. (714) 496-6CXX>; Riverside/
Son Bernardino. (714) 825-6900. or your local travet agent.
COSTA MESA m:FICE
230 E. 17th St. 714/842-1860
DANA POINT OfFICE
2467t u Plaza 714/49&12g3
HUfmNGTOH BEACH OFFICES
17122 S.ach Blvd. 7141847·9e81
8899 Adams Ave. 71419e2·3377
tfMNE OFFICES
11g51 MacArthur Blvd 714/S<t9-9101
2001 Michelson Dr1vo 714/833-3111
LAGUMA HILLS Off1Cl
23511 PasoodeValencla714/~200
NEWPORT llEACM OFFICES
QIO Baysldtt Drive 7W/87S.5121
Loans for
Homeowners
CALIFORNIA
GOOD THINGS HAPPEN
IN . CALIFORNIA FIRST
California First Bank makes good things
happen for you. the homeowner. At Cali-
fornia First, the equity you've built-up In
your house makes you eligible for a locln
to pay for almost anything-like college
tuition, vacations, home improvements.
Borrow up to $15,000 at current bank rates.
It's easy to arrange at any of over 100 state-
wide offices of California First Bank. The
office near you probably has extended
hours and drive-up tellers to make banking
more convenient. And the staff there is
anxious to help you discover how good
things really do happen In California First.
M·Th 10AM-6PM -1 M-Th 8 30AM·&PM
F 10AM·6PM : ·..-.-. ~ F 8.30AM·6PM
M-Th gAM • 5PM
F QAM-6PM
M·Th 10AM·5PM :l'.11 M -Th830AM·5PM
F 10AM-7;30PM =., . e ; F 8 30AM-7:30PM
M-Th 10AM • 3Pr,.f
F 10AM-6PM
M·Th 10AM·5PM
f: 10AM·GPM
M-Th 10AM-6PM
F 10AM·6PM
M·Th 10AM·SPM
F tOAM • T.30PM
ii I
--.....
J'VBUC NO'l'ICS •
Bob Hope will bo tho to~ 1peaker at the
e(lbt.b amm.al commenctment exerdlel of Western
St.t. UDlver1lty Colleco of Law cl Oraaie CoUDty
on June4 at the Anaheim Coqva,tlon CentOr.
llcre than 450 penom will ncelv• prGteukln91
law cSecrees ud Hope w1l1 bo pr ... nted an
honorary Doctor of Law1 degnieflon:i WSU bJ Dean
Muell S. Boas.
... ~.
KEYNOIE SPEAIO!R
Coinedl1n HoP•
o.t• ~COU•TO,TH•
_.,AftOf'CAU"°"HIA PO•
1'MaCOUMTYOt'OHNo• PIJBLIC NO'DCE
'Yukky' Bemis AXed
~s Kids Test · Recipes
.. OT1cccwN~:i'.:"Of'NTIT1otet----=-==~--..,---I BLOOMINGTON, Ill. (AP) -"°" "~Ttl o" W'IU. ANO '"°" "'"" Thanks to Erin Mulliken and hls L•n•H o .. AOMINllTltATIQN MOTlC.TOClt•DtTO•S friends, America'• ICbool ehlldren l#IYN WILL ANN•IC•D AND su ... •10.coun~TM•
AUTNOltltATIOM TO AOMllllSTH ITATaOflCAUf'CHIWtAll'O• probably wca't have to eat IWeet and
""oa• '"" INDeNNO•• 40. TNHllMINTYOflOttMtO• aour ~bean salad for lunch. l"llUSTltATIONOflHTAT•tACT ............ --
• t!~eOfWILUAM 0 . KaNHeOV, In 1"9 Meltff' Of tlW E1t8te of ••J .. •t •-1.1.v,tt -as 1().year..Ald •ho --"WILLIAM DUHCAH MaltYLe HOl.Mes, AKA MEltYLE .... , ........ ,, -,,
KENNIOV. DecMMd. HOLMES BltAkeFlt!LO, DecieeMd. V-'-'s -.u ... -. J·"' .. ment. NOTIC8 IS Hl!RIBY OIYl!H tNI Nolle•,, .... "" 9'Wft to Creditors &dU& "-" ......
flOBl!ltT A. Kt!HNl!OY llH flled lla\ll119clal-... 1Mttlles.ic1~
.,.,.,,,..,.u11ontorProoeteOfWt11en11 1o 111e uld c1011M 1n 111e office o1111e Tbe t•ates of Erin and his
tor 11-o1 Lettws"' AcSm1n11tr• e1er11 oft .. :o":~::......-t. clusmates IJl)ean ·aomelhinl because tlMw~1'1w.119dto 1"'.-..1-,.....,.tov. tlletlfflaOf ix 11oner end eutllOrlr.tlon to ~Iner STUAltT IC~ 41t ""-they go to ICbool in ODe of I eGm•
,.,. e1t•• _..,. .... •~nt Ad· ,.., w1......,. e1...r, .. c1tv.,..... munltiea cboaen by the U .s. Depart-"''"'''••Oon C11 &!1llltft A<t. relerence ""9eln. CA tOGllA, In the County of Lft me~t -1 culture to •~tr--'...,. 'or to wlllch II med• tor further A"991es,'Wtlldllol1erolfk9l1tft11"'41ee ~ IAIOO ~..-&'
·te111<v1er-.enc1111ot111et1muftdp1ece of1M111,.,.oflhllllldet'.,.,_1,,11111Mt-a c belni developeclfor lcbool of ., .. ,1"9 the ...,. llu beeft wt for lers perUlnlnv to uld eltato. Mlt l h
,M•Y 11. 1'71, et 10:00 ··"'·· '" .... , •• 1m1 wtlh .... ,,., .. s.y ~-unc PJ'Oilaml. covrtrOMt ol OelNl11,,_t No. 3 ot ••Id 1t1u1t be 111..i «pr...,._, es atoresold
covrt,et100Clvlc <:ent.erOr1,...Wttt.ln wltlll11 four rnontlls •fltr tllo first TJIE RESULTS OF the testing will tne'1tvo1s.r.1eAt1e.C.llle>rnl•. oublketlono111111no11ce.
O•••dAPl"l•n.ttm. oete<1Ac>fi11.1m be reflected in an updated USDA
WIWAMt:.SUOttN, MARLEN£THATC•UUt -~-..a. to be released 1n • year or CountyCtertc E19Cutrflollllewlll ,...,..,....,._
.. LUNklTT&f'LUNUTT olteld-.....t IO. Schools that participate in the
411 OllwAw., P.O. a.x Mt STUUTICAl'UN JUDCJI ....._.;.-m•v \&le the tested re-Jt•tttl ..... llMctl. CA. nMI ....... ...-UW ....... IUU -J.i: sa._.,....,. · ,...,....,......._ dpea or tldDll: up dJah• of tbelrown.
A........,.fltri ~ LM ......... CAtllM
Publlllled Oronot eoes1 D•llv .. •lot· ,. ... ,.,.,. Oronot eo.st o.11y "'°" Tbe other communities taklna part
&or111',11,M11Meya,m1 ,101.n Aort112.1',»onc1Mey3,1m ,*'" in the ·testing proeram are
Mother's Day Brunch
Waynesbol'o, Va .• Tacoma, Wash.,
High Point. N.C., Davia County, Utah,
and the ~acent cities of Rochester
and..P«tamouth, N.a
A t.18DA SV.VEY 1bowed the stu-dents don't eat about as percent of
their veftUbles, and u independent
study in Qdcago thla year found tbe
waste ot ve1etables to be u hlih u 80 percent. ·
The USDA bas teated reclpea
before, but Just mala dish ltems, •aid
Olive M. Batcher, a food tedmoloebt
at \!le department's Consumer and
Food Economics Jnatttute ln
Beltaville, Md.
.. Now we're including four vegeta•
ble redpes. We're tryln& to mate
them more acceptable to the
children," ahe said, add.in& that
adults who had sampled the diahea .
'1.bink they're pretty eood ...
AT BLOOllINGTON'S Adlai E.
Stevenson Elementary School, stu-
dents were aamPllni a new custard
recipe. 'Ibey didn't lite it.
.. I'd throw up if I had to eat the rest
of it," said fourth-&rader Bob
Bradstreet.
'Lesuu Beach author
Leland CooltJ' will be Mat.ct as PNS14eot of tbe
LOt ~itel Center of
PEN. a world ..-.ocia-
Uon of writers, tn .c•remon(n May 13 marldq the sroup's first
D'*tinfultbed Body ol
WOl'ldAward to be given
to JeNalll}'Jl West.
Miu West has written
.. The Friendly
Penuulon," "Massacre
at Fall Creek" and "The
Woman Said Yes.'' She
hu been a frequent es·
aayiat and reviewer in
literary and critical
media.
Author of "The Art
<;:olony,'' "The Calllor-
n!ana" and .. The Retire-
ment Trap," Cooley is
past president of the
Friends of the UC Irvine
Library and former
director of the Friends of
the California Libraries.
STROLLING MARIACHIS
AND
SPECIAL ·CARNIT AS
N.E. 'Carnet-of Sunflor• • 8ear
sount COAST ~CE . 556--7990 ..
ORANGE COUNTY BALLROOM
MOTHER'S DAY CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH
P'ew ot t.boH who tasted the bean
salad at Bloomington's Waahingt.on
Elementary School liked iL
Nine-year-old Suzanne Roberta
thought the deviled carrot.a on her
plate were ''the pita."
.. The USDA used to have parents
sample the food, but the children have
obviously eot different tut.el," 1ald
Jacqueline Vail, food supervisor for
the Bloomington school system. ''11111
new proeram ia much.better ...
10:30 A.M.
to
2:30 P.M. Ollldren $4.SO
(under 12)
2400 W. Coast Highway
Newport Beach
Crepes, Omelettes, Quiche
A gleH of champagne Included
645-8977
uaow COME THESE green beans
are cold?" was the m06t common re-
action.
"Thia is terrible,'' said Becky
Stiles, a fourth-grader.
Some students disliked the salad so
much they forfeited their vote by re-
fusbig to eat at lerust half of it.
Recent stud.lea have shown erade
school thlldren waste about $600
mil.Uon worth of tbe food dlstrlbuted
under the$& billlon National School
Lunch Procram.
May Co South Ceast Plaza's
Prom Party Fashien ShQw
•
OF THE FOODS tested so far, beef
hash has been the overwl\elmtng
favorite, Mrs. Vail said. Attother
favorite bas been hamburiers made
partially from texturized vegetable
(soybean) protein.
She said a diab called Spanish cab-
bage was clearly unpopular.
"The smell alone made most of the
children not touch it,•• she said.
GRAND PORTAGE -SPECIAL MENU -6 P.M. -10 P.M.
BIG BAND SOUND -8:00 P.M. TILL 11 :00 P.M.
FOR RESERVATIONS CALL 752-8777, Ext. ll2
R T!!llc~~~~~~~!..~!!~l~L
r
• ..
,...,.,~-----6-)L..a..J,. ~ ---• • •• ·"~--'·-• ~· _....-:-A:-·-· ... ~-•---·l'"' ·J..~.....,<.. ........ ~8"f~.~-~. eiot~Lt:.;· .
(
..
accounts at Mutual savings can barrow
up to 90% of their savings account balance wrtn
an Interest charge of only 1% per year more
than the Interest their account Is earning.
EXAMPLE: You have a certificate with us for
s10.ooo earning at the rate Of 7%%. A need
arises-vacation. new car. emergency. what-
ever-tor you to have some cash.
You can borrow up to S9.000 from us
' at only 8%% r:>er year While
youraccountcontJnuesto
eamat7%%.
The advantage Is obVlous.
You can afford to put n your savings In• certif-
icate that pays con-
siderably higher In~
than a passbOOf< ....... ....,_Wh _____________ account Without having
at ii IS to concern yourself ' e abOut the required
II -1 e ks penalty should you need
•'U ii wor tundstromttieaccount 'WW • before It matures.
Where et •i Naturally, Mutual you I I • savlngsaccountsare
Insured to S40.000
. ,,
I
•
by an agency of the federal government.
Compare where you presently save. All savings
rnsttMlons are not the same. You Wiii find It
easy to open an account at Mutual savings since
we can arrange to tranSfer your tunds from
wnerever they are now 1~ can orvts~
any of our 16 SOuthem callfomta otrlces for
'further detalls .
Caplslr1lfto-san caem.itr:
570 <:amino de estreHa/493-~51 .. corona def Mir: 28157 East Coast Hlahway/675-5010
FoUntllJn V.a.y-: 17900 Maonolla ~963-8396
DOwntown santa A111: 631 North Maln/547--9741
"Optn SOtUl'Oays 10 AM to 2 PM
•
RICKY BELi;
No. 1 Draft Pick
Sweden
Smashes
Russians
(JJ VIENNA -Sweden's Ice
: h9ckey team, lacking a dozen or
( i~ best players, upset the mighty
f Russians 5·1 Monday night and j broutht the WorJd Cham·
I, ptonships to Jire.
Sweden and the Soviets will vie
(Qr the title in playoffs with
Czechoslovakia and Canada.
I Earlier Monday, the Czechs
overcame a gritty U.S. team 6·3
after tratling twice.
A l'razlft-to Ra••
The Los Angeles Rams ob·
lalned former UCLA defensive l lineman Cliff Frazier on a Condi·
' tional basis Monday from the
1 Phlladel~hia Eagles.
IC Frazier makes the team, Los
! Ange les will r e imburse
~iladelphia with a 19'78 National I Football League draft choice.
who Jed the UD1nnit1 of Pit·
Ubul'lh to the national chom·
plon.alilp!_ ~
In return for g1vtn1 up ltl first·
round pick, Seattle reeeived
Dallu' firlt-rouhd choice -No.
over-all -and Uir e 1~d·
round aeJectlona, givlns the
Seahawb flve ))lckl !ft the lil'lt ...
Bell walked into the packed
ballroom at the Hotel Roosevelt
seconds after b.19 name WM an·
TU!!id!y1Mg3,1917 DM.Y!'ltOT .J •
Th.en ~rodes Do:rsett .
nounced and etrode to the
mlcropbOOe dllpl~l.ill a Tampa
Bay JttaeY With a white No. G,
his un form number lo college.
"I waifed a r••r·•n<l·a·half for thia day;• Bel 1iid. "I've iotthe
abmtr. to play In the NFL.
The,.. a no qu Uon iJi my mind.
Tbll 11 &bo blHet challen&e of
my life and the bl&seat challenge
of the team'• Ille to establlah •
wlnnins trend.
"We can't:.do any worae than
we did lut year unleu they ex.
pand the acbedule to 11 eames.
Then we could io 0-UI ...
Bell refen'ed to Tampa Bay•a·
0-1( record la.st year in Ill lnlUal
$e&son of NFL play, the worst
mark 1n the 1-aiue '1 hlltol)'.
The ClnclnnaU BenfalJ ualne
• a pick acquind from Butfalo in
· the Sherman Whtte deal, went for
Eddie Edwarda, an All·
American defensl\'e tackle from.
the University ot Mlan)1. •
In rapid-fire succesalon, the
New York Jeta, who bad hoped to
get Dorsett, chose Marvin
Powell, an off~nsive tackle from
USC, and the New York Giants
selected Powell's Sou them Cal
teammate, defensive tackle
Gary Jeter.
That gave Southern Cal three
aelecUooa in tbe first five overall
pick!, but it wu well-known that
the Trojans bad more than a
doaen seniors who were highly
rated by the pro acouta.
Tho Af,.lanta Falcons, plcldnf
alxth, grabbed Warren Bryant:; a
lon1 and lean om:oalve· taoltle
from the University of KentUck)'.
The 8-foot-G, 2't-pound Bryant
was a starter since ~e fourth
game or his freshman year.
TheNew Orleana Satnta Hlcct-
ed Joe Campbell, adefenaly•end
from Maryland'• Atlantic C.Out
Conference champion•.
. ' RauWim4th ·
Infield Support ·
Saves LA, ·3~1
LOS ANGELES CAP) -Doug
Rau had just posted bis fourth
straleht victory, beating the New
York Mets 3-1, but it was the Los
Angeles Dodgers' infield he pre-
ferred to talk about later.
''They just get better and bet·
ter every year," Rau said after
burling the Dodgers to their ninth .
victory in their last 10 games,
keeping them Hlz games in front
of Cincinnati.
"We have some of the best
hands in baseball in our infield.
Yes, our infield is the best in the
National League, t,>etter than
Cincinnati's."
The Dodgers' infield played
flawlessly behind Rau, 4·0. But it
was their batting which made the
Dodger. Slate
All c;...,.,.., KA8C llMI
M•V ) N.-. Vork •I LO> An<Jel" 1 1$ p m
Mo •NewYork•t~A"9'!1•• 7 Hom
Mo SN.-.Vork•ILO.A"94!t.• 7 l>om
difference as Los Angeles ended
New York's ihree-game wm
streak.
Second baseman Dave Lopes
produced Los. Angeles' first run
with a scoring fly ball i~ the third
inning, tying the game al l·l
after the Mets' Mike Vail had
homered with no one on base in
the second.
It remained l ·l until the eighth
when Lopes doubled off losing
pitcher Jerry Koosman, 1·3.
Shortstop Bill Russell followed
with a single to right, scoring
Lopes to break the tie.
It was Russell's 33rd hit of the
young season, which is tops in the
National League. Russell later
scored an insurance run on an ~n·
field single by first baseman
Steve Garvey.
In the second ga.me of the four
game series tonight, Nino
Espinosa, 2·0, will oppose the
Dodgers' Burt Hooton, 2·1
Rau struck out six Mets, but
had to work out of trouble in five
of his eight innings. Jle was aided
in the fifth inning wbeo
leftfielder Dusty Baker threw out
Bud Harrelson al the plate.
Relief ace Charlie Hough took
over in the ninth and struck out
two more Mets, recording hi.a
seventh ~ave in his 14th ap·
pearance. Hough also has three
victories and a 1.55 earned run
average.
* * * HIWYOllK
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M•ll-1n1b
To''• tn
K1nom•n u
R•ndtell
V.J!I r1
Sl•rn\t
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l(~mill\O
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3 1 1 I
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Lope,1D
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sm1111rt ... ,,,,
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Guvey lb
Monday <I
BOet ll
H'>U\jllD
V~•qtrc
R•up
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TolelS
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A"<!<'ln LO& ~-w York ' Lo\ • ...,,..,H 1 t B-
M•111ltt Ln,,.\ HR V•1I !I I S-Koosm•n.
SI••~• St' L-.,
l(~m•n I~ 1 JI I
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MBP By R •u tM1111111~
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H II Ill 88 $0
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7 I 1 3 6
0 0 0 0 1 S.v• HOUQft (7)
ASU Denie s
Wro ngdoing
TE MPE Arizona State
University orficials admitted
Monday that prep football
New York Mets player Bud Harrelson (3)
bounces off Dodgers catcher Steve Yeager
Monday night. Harrelson, trymg to score
...........
from second on a hit to left field, was out
as Dusty Baker's throw to Yeager was on
target.
pl ayers being recruited were 1·-J .4 --.-
taken lo do' t.ra<:1's for eotertain· 1u.i,y· r.IU IV lUlCer ment but denied any impropriety
P adres' Ivie
•
·Suspend e d was involved.
Athletic director Fred Miller c • s • •de
said the outinc.s occurred twice omm .. ts u .. c .. last year but have been discon· SI . SI SI SAN DIEGO <AP) -Mike
tmued Ivie, who once quit rather than
HIROSHIMA, Japan Amie For Russell, his eighth inning
Robinson. U S. gold medalist at single marked his fourth game·
the Montreal Olympics. won the winning rb1 and left his batlmg "I think we can challenge the · INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -Sid His body was discovered by catch, was fined $400 and SUS·
long JtKOP with a leap or 25 rect. average .324.
7J · ch~,..;1~ Lb~ o .... ~~ -~·.t.:~i.Ail...a..!w... ~~Lift... . tn'f™ Ml\!~:;.-~~-· 't1iSW'\'fiM1'1"1itcl1 t'o, s~
JUdgmentofusmgthedogtrac s, Collips, who witnessed~nd r . twoJ~nits. Nosuicide.P,ote w~_,pe.ndw indefi 'tel . Monday
• ·~~~..,,.. ·--• "U~ ~-~·&kJ. ~~ . -~~·~ ·--~ ... , G-ii 'lnRfltfiiS't'Otfir.-i; 1 l r . .....,,~ meit arru 'ftlVde~l ·o 9 -~ 1 n an interview"' at tlie · lSitci base or t e San Diego-
··This \D'\iversily runs a clean and others at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway last year, Collins said Padres. He says he'll report !or
vigorous recruiting program." Speedway, once said the most his most elthausting broadcast tonight's game.
I In the 5,()()()..meter event, Garry Russell. who is batting behmd
Bjorklund of the United States Lopes in the lineup. "The only J was second with a 13:50.5, l<>elntf way they're going to stop Davy
by u touch to Japan's Hideak1 from stealing. is .to throw me
He said 80me Arizona State important part of his job was was during the crash-filled, de· Ivie changed from his uniform
student hosts mlgbl not hav~ "not coming unglued" in the fac'9 'ath-marred, r ain-delayed 1973 and left the ballpark shortly
Kita who had an identical time. fastballs, My JOb J.S to go to the A~other American runner right side, hit behind Davy. but used good judgment and taken of tragedy. race. which he described as the before the Padres met the
the prospective football players Colllns, despondent wlth a one he cared least to remember. Philadelphia Phtllles ln the
Into a bat', but that they weFe not P a inf u l and c rip pl l n g "It was the first time I've ever opener of a National League
told to do so. neuromuscular disease, was seen people happy the race was four-game series. But he
Marty Liquori, was fourtti in the. the ,'"BY we·.~e been goin1. 1 ha·
5,000-meter rnce, finishing m ven thadto.
14 : 13.8. Liquori alao waa fourth
in the 1.500-metcr ruce at the
Hyogomeet. .......... . .,,,.
EAST LANSING, Mu:h.
Relief pitcher Mike Marshall
says he's not sure he wanla a
chance to pluy with the Texn
Rangers.
"arshull, who wu au.apended
by the Atlanta Braves April Z4,
wQs sold to the American ~ ue
ba.ebaJI team for the $20.000
waiver price Monday. B\.lt
from his home here, M arah•U
aatd Monday he talked lO' the
Rangers last week and told them.
"I'm not Interested."
W.4CAd•lt•2
The Western Athletic Con·
ference will end it.a Fiesta Bowl
commitment thla year ond has
endorsed plans tor a major poat-
aeason college football bowl ln
San Diego be1inning In 1978,
WAC officlala said Monday.
Al the eame Ume, the con-
ference voted Monday lo add the
University of Hawaii and tho
tJnlverslt.y of Nevada-Laa Vegas
to the conference, ii the 1chools
<&Jl•tt certalo coruil\lona.
,. WAC fchool presidents also
voted to continue coruidertni the
appllcat.ion1 of Utah State
tJntverslty and New Meldco
State University for WAC mem·
b!rahlp .
..... Dia
AMITVVJLLE, N.Y. -Dan Ferris, secretuy-emerltul ol the
Amateur Athletic Unloe lDd •
major n1ure In the adminlllr•· don of amateur aporb lo
America for more than ball a
,Hntury, d1ed Monday at tho aa•
o( • errl.I, who Jolned the AAU 1ll
J901, llttended every Olympic
Ga mes at.rtlnl In 1912, moetb' u
in otflclal but. aometlm• ln the
caoaclt.y of a aewsmu and "1rice es the penonal repreaenlaUve Of
the prealdent of the Unite~
states. He eerve4 a1 HcretarY·.
lf'Hftl"el' ol Ute MU for m1117
yean and al.lo bold m~ polta ' on watloul MU 4Qc1 .OJ1mplc
coemltt•.
,.
UCI Hosts Trojans
Powerful University of Southern California invades UC
Jrvme Wednesday to battle the Anteaters ln a collegiate baseball
1•m• <2:30). ·
USC'a TroJans have a 35-18 record going into tonight's game
with Pepperdine. Coach Rod Dedeaux's SC nine clinched a tie for
the Pa.clfic-3 <Southern Division) title Saturday with M and 7-l
victories over California.
USC i.s 14·1 in Pac-8 play this season.
Center fielder Greg Ris paces the Trojans. Ria hit a pair of
home nn in the weekend series with Cal
UC Irvine, 26-22 on the season and still in the runnln1 for a
NCAA <Division 11) playoff berth, is aparked by Scott Thayer and
Ken Waslungton, both or whom are bitting over .300.
USC defeated Irvine, 3-2, earlier this season.
The Anteaters are fresh from a sweep of USIU of San Diego
Saturday. UCI also had a game today, batLUn1 host UC
Riverside.
found dead in his lndianapoljs over," he said. · telephoned Buzzle Bavasl, presi-
apartment Monday. He ap-"I fully expected the Goodyear dent of the Padres, lesa than an
parently committed suicide by blimp to bump into the broadcast hour after he learned of the sus·
hanging himself with a necktie, tower. I could see it happening. pension and left the park .
poUce said. He was 54. The whole race got to be such an "He wu very contrite and I
Collins, voice of the In· unreal scene -like a horrible think he realizes he was wrong,"
dianapolisSOO-mUeraceformore Hotlywood movie. We were on Bavasi said. "I'll meet with him
than a quarter or a century, the air 11 hours, and only two in the morning in my office, and
dubbed the Memorial Day were racing," be recalled. I'll determine then how long the
classic "the ereatestspectacle in "I can't tell you how difficult ·suspension will be. It miglit be
racing." A live worldwide au· that was physically and emo-tor just this one game."
dience of more than 100 million -ti on ally. I admire people who are I vie was orieinally draft·
more than for •SU' other sporting overcome with emotion over the ed by the Padres as a catcher lJl
event in the world -heard his loss of friends. But my job is not 1970 but refused to play that posi·
annual day-long broadcast.a over coming unglued.'' tlon. He has been used at first
Speedway network atatlons. In February 1975, Collins start-base and occasionally at third
Collins had returned to In· ed having muscle spasms and this season.
dianapolla 1~ weeks ago from pain in his thighs. He was being Ivie reportedly felt that chang·
the Mayo CliJllc in Rochester, treated for a muscle problem, ing poettions affectl his hilting.
.Minn. He bad been sulfertn1 but a series o{ subsequent tests When Padres manager John
from "Lou Gehrt1'1 Disease," found a disc in his neck was pre· McNamara told him to play
wblch affect.a the apinal column 11lng against his spine. Left unat· third, be refused.
and causes deterioration of the tended he could have been The 24-year-old Qeor1tan first.
nervous system. paralyzed within weeks. jumped the team ln 1972, and
fellow players aald he refused to
throw the ball back to the pitcher
from behind the plate. He Jater
married and return ed to
baaebaU, only to quit again 'when
bi• bride became homealok iJ\
Hawaii while Ivie was oway on
trips.
"I'm backing McNamara all
the way on this thine," Bavasl
Hid.
• J
l
..
• ~ ~ DAILY PfLOT Tu.c!!ri Mex J. 11"7
·sunset Coaches
,
ByDAVECVNMNGllAM place team, has beaten Laiw1,
cw1•o.11, .. 1._1ttf• thelr first place team." Last week the Dally Pilot quot-He adds, "My Fountain Valley
ed coachet who claimed, "The team Is bl third place ln our
South Coast la the toucheat Jeacue, but we split with tbelr
volle:1ball leaaue in tbe United aecond place team <Misslon Vie·
Statea, without a doubt,'' Jo> and nearl)' beat Laguna In the
Coaches from the nei1bbortn1 ~rangeCountyTournam'9nt." Sunset League have offered their Says Coon: "They probably
reply: "Hocwashl" have a little better caliber for the
That'• what Fountain Valley· full eight teams, because our
mentor BW Lovelace says, and lea1ue bu Marina (which ia other Suntet League coaches playing volleyball for the tlrst
seem toacree. -·Ume) and l'coupleof o~ber team.a "I don't see how they CQUld that are just gettin& their pro-po11ibly say that," responds grams at.a.rted."
.;"Newport Harbor coach Ron The Newport Harbor coach ~n. adda, "But if our top three teemt ~ Roy Klller, coach of the went bead·to-head with their top t: tea1ue-leadin1 Huntington three teams, the Sunset Le11ue f~acb team. aay1, "lt'a juat not would come out on top.•• f e. Our school.I have played · The comments that raised
\ me ol thein and we've won particular ire were made by Mis--
• nslatenUy." sion Viejo coach John Murio and
C • Lovelace reiterates, "I think El Toro coach Tom Read.
<:they're a little out of line. Murio was quoted, "Newport
C;tlewPort Harbor, our aecond· Harbor couldn't do anything in ~~: * * ~ * * * ~~~olleyball Power
}~
i: t· i:
t=
Oilers Exploiting
• ~) Balance to Win t;• ~= Every good volleyball team in
':the Orange Coast area seems to
\!be relying on one or two outstand·
ij mg players th.is seuon.
:, San Clemente has Tom Beard, ~Newport Harbor features Mark
:-stevcove, Corona del Mar leans ~on Chrls Allard and Laguna
•:Beach has KJp Engen and Jamie
Plummer. t But Huntington Beach, proud
t.owner of a 15·1 record, bas no in·
!·dividual stars. Coach Roy Miller ~:says teamwork is the key.
~ ''It's been a total team effort. ~The kids all work together," ex-
1:ptains Miller. "They're all win·
.:ners."
: . Whatever Miller's doing, he's
':doing it right. Over the past two
'Years Huntington Beach com· ~iled a streak of 22 straight
league victories until Fountain
Valley stunned the team last
Thursday.
But for all their successes, the
Oilers have still never won a CLF
title. Last season Uley had lhe
Crocials Tonight
misfortune of drawing San
Clemente in the opening playoff
match. San Clemente was the
eventual champion.
"Jack· Iverson. the San
Clemente coach, told me he
thought we were one of the
toughest teams he faced in the
playoffs," Miller says.
To avoid a pairing like that this
season, Miller is hoping for the
number one seed, which is usual·
ly rewarded with the softest
playoff schedule. A 17·1 season
record wouldn't hurt his chances.
"I don't know if winning the
rest of our games will make us
number one in the pairings, but
we're going to be going as hard
as we can tor as long as we can,"
Miller says ... We want to win it
all this year."
To do that, Miller proposes to
simply keep doing what has
worked so far.
"We run a relatively simple of·
fense, and our blocking is pro
bably our strongest asset Our
hlltine keeps us in games. bµt
our blocking Will! tor us,'· Miller
explaims.
One oC his best blockers is Mike
D' Al essandro, a 5·10 senior.
"He's a good jumper and a very
Second place teams in the intelligent player," Mitle!'S8.YJ.
Sunset and South Coast leagues Tom Pestolesi is another good
will get a crack at the leaders mid die blocker. At 6·2, bi s
tonight as volleyball races in the primary assest is quickness.
area wmd down to the final week. Miller says both are potential
>, Ne~n Ji!!.bQr r a lJllllt·--. .All:.CIF 5 andidat.£s. as '!?ll 84 S-j_ ~ ~.i.· ~-«\:a , -'---...... t\lh ~ ~ ......... ..,.e.
Sunset League and visits the . The others wbo l?rovide Hunt.
leader tonight at 7. Huntington is ington Beach with ltl reputatJon
12·1 the only loss coming against for team effort are Danny Glenn,
thir
0
d place Fountain Valley. Brett Nitzkowski, Kurt Sall)'a,
Newport Harbor Is 10·3. Bo~ Joiner, John Gleaves. Gree
In the South Coast Leaeue, un-Steinhaus and Rick Amy.
defeated Laeuna Beach playa
Morrall Retires
... ,.
our leasue and HunUnst.on Beach.
lan'l any beitu than MlssJon Vie-
jo. TbeN'• n.o doubt •r're the 1tron1ett leape in err• I
And Read aald, "Tbla Is the
tou1heat learue in Ule Un.lted
States, without a. dodt>t. YQU put El Toro lo the optn Orange Coun·
ty League and we'd be wln.nlng it.
We'd probabl)' do very w.ll int.be
SunaetLeape, too." ,
Sever.a SWllet League coa~hea
ventUNcl a auess that South
Coaat Leque coaches were mak·
lnl auch at.atementa u • publici-
ty pitch, hopln& to arouse tbe
•Ympaltly ol CIF and tbe,eby
71ain an extra playoff berth or
two. •
It wu pointed out that South
Coast Lea1ue coacbt1 didn't
volunteer their atatementa, but
that they were aoliclted by a re-
port.er.
Lovelace CO\IDlers, "U Miasion
Viejo was In the Sunael League it
would be in fourth place and El
Toro would be"lucky to get that"
high."
When &Jked which league real·
ly plays a better brand of
volleyball, Lovelace says, "I'll
tell you this much. More playera
from Fountain Valley are on
volleyball scholarships in college
now than from any other school
in Calllornia. I'll guarantee it ...
But which league is really
stronger? Larry James, co·
coach of La Quinta
(Westminster), leader oC the
Orange County League, otters
hls opinion.
"The South Coast League pro-
ba bly does have the strongest
league overall, but I think a few
people went too far and we were
an1ere4 by some or their stale·
men ts," he says.
The final answer will have to
wait for the CIF playoffs, which
begin May 13.
Volleyball
. ..
Dtlly l'llel Plltte,lly I.le Parne
TERRI GILREATH IS TAOOEO OUT TRYING'TO STEAL SECOND. BY CATHY OUANELU.
--
Golden West Shells
OCC in Softball, 7-2
D .. . om1n1c
Gets Job
Joe Dominic, for three
years a freshman coach
al Costa Mesa High, was
By HOWARD L. HANDY College at noon Thurs· An Orange Coa!>t vie· chosen Monday to lepd
oi ... o.,.,,,.u.uw• day following Orange tory could have given the the varsity basketball
Golden West College Coast's battle with West Pirates a share of the team next season.
wrapped up its third ValleyCollegeat.10. league championship Dominic replaces straight Coast League The eight·leam Junior with Golden West and Larry Sunderman, who
w.omen's S?ftball cham· College tournament and Fullerton. Ins t ead, resigned and has since
· pionship with a 7·2 vie-a similar one for four-Oran&e Coasl finished taken a job as head
tory over visiting Orange year colleges, will run third with Fullerton coach for Estancia High
Coast Colle.ge Monday simultaneously on the second. in Costa Mesa.
afternoon with a two·hit t w 0 a 0 1 den west "I'm happy, but qu1te
pitching performance by diamonds and at Greer °'...,.'::'"!> 11 '"' frankly 1 was surpns·ed P t V• KathyRosenbery. p 8 r k . ca 1 state wo11.11 , o ' o when I heard the new!!," owers 0 Ie Rosen1?ery gave u~ a (Sacramento) is No. 1 ~=,!~f.i.~ 3 ~ ~ ~ Domlnic told the Dally
leadoff smgle In the first seeded in the university """\tra.u ~ o o o Pllot. •·1 knew they had
INGLEWOOD -Laguna inningandanothertnthe division with the Herr•••.c l ' 0 o narrowedittothree and
Beach and Huntington Beach are fourth. Her own throw· University of Nevada , ~·.c,~'::';r! ~ ~ ~ ~ it could have been' any
seeded first and second in Wed· ing error and another (Reno) and UCLA also Burns, rl 1 o o o one of us."
nesday night's closing round of miscu~ gave Orange entered. ~:':i~b ~ ~ ~ ~ Dominic said he plans
the Inglewood Invitational Coast life in the fourth Golden West opened wav.1b t o o o no major changes in tbe
volleyball tournament. when the Pirates scored the scoring Monday with '0111' ~w!:t m2 2 0 program, opting instead
Games begin at 5:30 with two both runs to close the three first inning tallies. •• • " r111 to continue what Sun·
qualifying matchee arut the win· G WC lead to 3·2. Terri Gilreath singled to ~!:::.'.~·bd ~ ~ ~ ! derman bu started. pet,• will t'(le;t ~!13each and After that Rosenbery deep shortstop and Eva oav10.11 • ' • o "We both have pretty •
· .,...,._,~"'"' sett.he side down in or-Brown walked. Both ·~::_~•.c ~ ; ~ ~ much t be same 1••,.., ~..-.NJ ftllN to MMc"-'ttr der for the final three were thrown out at the G"-·"'" l ' 2 ' philosophies," Dominic ~=~~~:,.~.~~':!r..':,~;~~:.~~-fr~mea an~ h.ad one plate trying to score on =~:rv.o ~ : ~ ~ says. "We both like to
strikeout per mnm1. infield outs and Orange H•Mta.211 o ' o o run, presa and play a Huntincton Beacta . in the The victory moved the Coast appeared out or Nlcl'oola,a 2 o o o man·to·man defense.
semffinals. Tile champlonship GWC Rustlers into the trouble. E~~ .. ~ ,! ~ : And we both stress hard
cont.est wUlfollow au. Western AJAW regional But back-to· back tar•'°W•-. work."
Lagll!'a meets the winner of tournament at Go~den doubles by Sarah Strube o.at>9eeo.,1 000 100 0 ~ ~ ; Last season Dominic's
the Pa11Sadea·San Marcos match West begin n 1 n g (two rbi r and Shelly Go10e<1Wft1 JOO ou • 1 • 2, (~es~map ~~&Jn was~
while Huntington Beach draws Thursday with a 28·2·1~~CJ{-tGt.a-u.,. ~ ~ · .• ~·~· ano ~.-o .. ui JJut~r"'"'a~-..~-~--· ~~ ~-• · • Jea0 ue.
,. o trn 't~a ?h van ey· an a -se-ede8 ~t. -cotaen en~~gh to dmcb th~: JC Gotcmg Before comtng to
Westcliftter. West plays DeAnia tory and the top spot in Costa Mesa three years
Volleyball coaches throughout the final drcuit stand· Ge1tf'=::.f::CC:=:n1.cc ago Dominic was ac·
SoutbemCalifom.iaarewatcbing D . ) I 1_ ings. ~ ... c-tc.11•"""'11 Uvlties director at this seventh annual tournament ame 8D•8 A fourth tally was C'OUl-V ll-71; Telreull IMS; Coronadel Mar High. Aeynoldt .._.,: Scn1991 f4.8J; Oonkl with particular Interest because Distance runner Dave added in the fifth on eo-1111.thmantt·"·
director Gene Pop1to has lured Daniels or San Gorgonio singles by pinchhitler 1. o~~~;:.,. Afla 184; Bueball
nearly all the te•ms expected to High has signed a letter Cheri Ertel and Gilreath '· Mt. s.n M1.,.,10 1•1 •. Fut••r1°" ""°'".'°"" threaten tor the.CJF'litJe when of intent to attend UC and two more crossed ,.,:s.s0Meweo•:u:err1101111;1. Oc.111Y1N14111111-11oa1...,1'" pla~offa begin Ma,x 13. Irvine. the plate in the sixth with oranQe s!'::~~"rc!!:~-• oc:u" v1•w -Mamet. ct~: petlu in S l.i .. d \ HU"9tr .. , f>rf >-0-2-41; fltln/IOlll, 111-p
host to Mission Viejo, the surprh·
ing second place team in a circuit
that includes perennial powers
San Clemente and Corona del
Mar. ..._
MV trails La1una vy two
games and two are left on the
schedule, includlni toni&bt'1 COO·
teat which beglna at 7.
T e eom on 8 ur llY s Daniels has a best of shortatop Pam Knox get-0.-:::,"::::~::;i~~~~~; ;i.o.1-01 KnlGlhl, c Ht-41; "'ttllu9't.
MIAMI -Earl Morrall, often openinl round was •O touch that 4:11.9 in the mile (last tine two ln on a single to H-ero1'6: c.u111Y u•. summ••• ~D~ber~~'°~1=~17.;..'~~; called over the hill durtn1 bll such powers u Santa ?doJUca, La year). right. 1'1;e.,.,vit•: e .. ., ,.,:MtnQe• 114. w~n. c111 ,.1.1: ~. ,, i-o.o-o;
COSTA
MESA
AMC&
JEEP
LAIC.IST
JEEP
DIALll
THIJ~TIOF
CALIFOIMIA
40
21-year career as a National Quinta of Westminster, Taft '· R•o .. 0:;:;;.~ ... t: ... ,_ acu; 1tllhlMr1,2111-o-o.o; f'ape, 1110-0-0.0.
Football Leaiue quarterback, is (Woodland Hilla) and Corona del 2 c,,,,_~;4.ColdenWH1 Co11eGe RMICllOA•=~·~ .._.. 1 2 ~~~~~·~:it!~.tbe no-:.=~a~:!~hi:,~e it to Wed· Baseball Standings •:s.s•nwMoNu••:'-LAcci~i4.iiii~lflivi.w j ooi •-4, 0
M!!LO:.!!~ ~!'!':!::fs Er:~ ........ Hr ·~=t;-ffff "IFYOU'RE A
W L P .. '-. GD u ...... ' 1 0 '"' a.mi... : 2 1 0 '
Milwaukee
New Yon
Balllrnoft
B<>1ton
Toronto
Detroit
Cleveland
£aat B..t Valet1<11t 7 ' o '"' RafldltAl•mll" s ' o '"' HOMEDW•R W L Pd. GI .. , .. eanyen s 1 o J'll UtOulnt• a • o • 13 1 ...,,. Plttsbur .. "' 12 1 .632 1u 0or1c1o • • o '"' LosAm1gtt t ' 1 'v. I ; ....... Lo ... ... 8 6 9 """'""'SC-...,..tetfw 12 9 .571 1~ St. u:ll .w • 1 vateMIU,.....,tt ~teJfkU.LAOUlflle1 should find • 10 9 .528 2\.11 Mont.re-1 9 8 .529 3 ""'"eo1oft10,•10w•o .... ~.,.J.GtrlleftGfo,,.o JOU if lo 9 ."'-2'... N York 9 10 ~74 3 l rHJ,ulHtbt901t••-• ~Oetolt _.. YJI ew ·• 1soe~anr.a3,C...y0n2 11 1,,,. 1 ~ .. .,,.._ets..tl• 10 13 .435 4~ Chlcaeo e 9 .471 3 lo L---·• 8 13 .381 ,s.,... Philadelphia a 10 .444 3"4.z t k ea~ llUfTUW .
wd• ': :: 5.. =cu WEI l~ :~: ... a e, an Ange I to lunch at The Associcites!' Kansas City
Minnesota
Oakland
Chicaco
Texas
Aa1el8
Seattle
14 9 .609 Houaton 9 12 ,qg 8~
12 10 .ses l san Fructaco a 1Z .400 9 On l'tlunld8y, Mar 12, JOfOMAOIO(.A ~" 11 9 .550 .1~ Atlanta • :u .. 10 c ttf I A I
12 t .528 2 SanJ>leao t 18 .381> 10~ · • orn • nge • ~AOWUPTO .. 14 .~l 5 -..... • ..-. Man•-Norm D•nr .-
• -_.lt...,..t1J..An.ttlta t _.. $50 000 • t 11 .320 7 c1M111Nt1a..i.i..tet wtn •* • • luqoheon , ......,.,._.. a."=:t""'..._,0 81 the M.moa Hotef In Mllwtlllllee .. T~) \At a.NewYWll' o·-•..,.t. lettl...,..o OMy ..,.eo;:::.._ Newport c.nter. K•'"tt(lty:l,Chl~t M~C.~Hl .. Ollc ... C~U·O Otl•v.-~,~ _.ltt&IW'lll Clw•• Ml et AlfMltt I~. NtC,. Tfte ODHllDft .. tM flrat • Mllw~ CewtMI et T., .... ~ .. tf1tt .,..,, " HarbOr Alea •elute to S.altte <MlltC:.-.11 Ml el ..... CW.. 1-1),,. "'41 .... 1 Cewttell t.•) etlllfl Oltlil ~
1u .. 1~t·n11t~t1Mite•11.• t·!!~ .. .---..uitt\M~'*"'-the coe.tdy'• Amertcan C.lllornle 0-..t> et Ntw Yetll """' ._._ ... ,.,._._..., Le-....... ).11," Iott.fl ... ....,. a1upCSW.t41etK-OtfC ... ttlltNl,1t Mtolt ..... tlt9 .... t·I> M &Mt rr.itcleclt o.iv.-~ (MeM.,,..•t1.11
Wtf 11•1......... C>lllY.-~rttwa
Ml--ltetewl.,.. .._ ...... dlk.-M11W-..M~"'-·" Mt!ttlMletlM"'-' ... °"'""" a.iu-•• ................. 11'1 ........... 11 ........ :T 1 .. ul Olttr'lllit, fl It. Ulllt M CllldMlltl. fl
C..lllefnlt ..... ~" ~·----•19'! o... .• Qllugut~OIY.• N .. Y.t.11tut~11
cw.HOIMT'ILLA 1GE.~
Tel. 111•19'1
A.L. Hll. Mgr. •
TalTtl
1777H.11'ha Ttil.~t c.~.Mgr.
I
" '. ~ ..
• N•1'port harbor 1porttl1hln1 boat• have
lwltcbed to IW'face action for Hit wat~r fllbermen,
:-,;. reports Douc Turin at Davey'• Locker. Turin •*>'I
Ulete are 'ood num bera of bonito at Catallna laland • and t.b1I ls where lb• boats are beading dally.
DAILY "'-OT .,
Fishing ~
Report
04NA WltA•I' -.. •"ll't"" 11 NU,• IWIO M.,.,. ID 104• MU
UN ~llHIO •UM It, t..t0.-.... 1 -
a " '"''"" t Wl'-1•11 t llall!IUi. U r~(cOll JIJtafltO IM•t llt ... lto tl
'''" h u lfl'•r1• o•ce11I .:... u 1i.o1.,,, 1;1 .,.,,aew. 24 c.itca but.
t~te<'cOd 11,_-wtl.O"-llllut.
HAL HACH 61 ftnl JM
reel!'°' t <ow cod I llrtQ ''° U•tico 11... ,..,.., ,. ~· 1 .,., ••<uf• ..... llo<lllll, t ,..., """· ' h•ll-
1.DNO I ACM l .. 11"1111 ~) -2t
111111••• OS '°'" coot t• cow c..i 10.....,t'~I t U"1!1<tt , T.ll14fT.
••c11de. II llOlllto. 6 c aoco II•"· 1e •
•tM1d ll•u,•Mllblll, \I r•ll lltll.
ln add.it.ion to the bonebeadl, there la aho a lot or bll callco bus beinC cauaht. Bra moasback
)'ellowtail ar• workin1 the chum and oecaalonally
one la booked, but due to lack ol an&Un1 skills moat
.... • are broken oil before lbey are brouaht to gaff.
• Alona the coast half ·day and three-quuters·
day boat.I are pickin1 up a variety of surface fish
and then topping the day Qff with l()U'le deep water
IT DIDN'T QUfTE TURN OUT THAT WAY -A s1gn put up
by St. Joseph (Lakewood) High followers didn't prove·
prophetic Friday night as their team took a 'TT-60 drub-·
Dally l'llel .......... ,.
bing Crom Hunttnston Beach High in the CIF Class 4·A
girls t>asketball fmals. The sign was a take-Off on the
oame of the Huntington Beach coach. Joanne Kellogg.
OCIANSIOI -10 ••111ttrt. t
llonl lo, 'M callco llHt, JO rock lltll.
NIWl'OllT IArt'tl-41 •nt19"
JI barrat UCIA 71 bonito, '" IMln, 10
macll••ol IDl .. Y'• LMhrl Ht
tn9t•o n W•atuela, U blH, 10
«Kil COCI, 1 M hllUI, Smatl!t rtl • .roek flab. 11tere la no ball problem In the harbor aa
all boata are headint out lo the Cl.shins grounds with
•mple chovtes.
~ As for our bay, flahinl for small strippers, bay
ba" and halibut ls on the upawtnc. Some very nice
le1al alle halibut have been coming ool of the water
at the pavilion dock and from skiff aqlera working
the cbannela. Uve bail and lures have been most
productive. Aqlera are encouraged lo throw back
the small strippers <those under 16 lnches) allowing
the new fishery lo erow faster and perhaps allow us
to catch 10-t.o-25 pounders in the near future.
Vellelr1taU Blttft19
There are 1ooc1 reports of yeUowtaD bdD1
eaal)lt at tbe Cocoaado lalaada. Tbe llsla are J"llll·
Dhll CO ZS pounds and whea tbey c.ltar1e Cite boat
tlley are eaten. Loads durtac &be week are Upt bat
Oii weeketld reurvatlona wW be neceuary. ne
Searcher, Olle of tbe beat open party sportllsltera Oii
&be coast, wlJI beJID runntn1 out of Fllbermaa's
Landing la San Dieco this week. Tbe last 1bow1D1
yellowtaU In local waters was ID January when
tome nice catches were made by soatbland anglers.
The cbovles mlgbt be scarce this year for the
albacore bat currently lt looks llke we have plenty
of squid Cor the antlclpated good nan of yeUowtall
and white sea bass. For reservations at Fis·
llermea'1 Laadlng phone (1J4) m.e:stl.
Marfin Fblalng Good
Good reporu are coming from the resorts on
Baja California as the fishing season gets under
way. Punta Color ad a, Buena Vista and Cape are en·
joying good angling. "
·K.entueky Derlly
Seattle Sleiv
Ready to Run
LOUISVILLE, CAP) -Seattle Slew worked on
the Churchill Downs track in the early morning sun·
shine and from out of the West came Charley Sul·
ton.
It's Kentucky Derby we . a: •eek where the
expected and the unexpected are an entry.
Seattle Slew, who worked a mile in 1 :41 4.5 Sun·
day, is the 1976 2·year·old champion, unbeaten in
six races including two prestigious pre-Derby
stakes, the Flamingo and Wood Memorial, and Is
the solid fa~rite to win the Derby next Saturday.
Things have been easy for him, and it was a
matter of course that he would run in the Derby.
Charley Sutton did not race as a 2·year·old and
in three starts this year in California, he won twice
at six-furlongs and finished out of the money in a
one·mile race on the grass, a race in which he bolt·
ed on the tum.
His arrival here concerned almost no one, and
even his trip from California was not without mis·
hap. Charley Sutton was supposed to arrive SatUr·
day, but the door of the cargo plane couldn't be·
opened lo allow ham to board.
And the Derby status of the son of Spec o' Mo·
A IL s~~rr Ott B ,, tion· Whisky Doll was uncertain "We're here for u~ore n a,,a Tuesday's race and then we'll see " said co·
Accordlnl to reports from Wbltey at An1Jer's ~ owner F. B. Rohner. '
Center In Newpor1 Beath, commercial ftlhermen Charley Sutton ls entered in Tuesday's seven·
have hffn fishing a wad ol loagfias off the Baja furlong, $20,000.added Derby Trial Stakes.
coastline all year. These albles were probably Meanwhile, the popular pastime of guessing the
Jocked In due tG •change In water temperature and number of Derby starters continued. It looks as if
never made their normal nan ap the coast and back no fewer than 17 3·year·olds will go to the post for
oat to the breeding grounds la the Pacific. Whether the $125,000.added classic. At least the trainers and
or not tbi• will change our albacore fllhlng pattern owners of that many have said they will enter.
In the future ls• wait and see matter. ·True intentions come out Thursday when Derby
horses are entered for a fee of $4,000. It costs Ba.• f'f•ltl•fl Arreleratn another $3,500 to start.
Good to excellent bass fishing Is reported at all The front·line Derby candidates would seem to
Southern California lakes. Some of the best fresh be Seattle Slew, Hollywood Der'by winner Steve's
water angling is taking place at the San Diego city Friend, Blue Grass Stakes winner For the Moment
lakes where San Vjcente, Sutherland, El Capitan, and Run Dusty Run, who had a big year ln 1976 and
Lower Olay and newly reopened Lake Hodges are who was second in lhe Louisiana Derby. Calumet
rated as very good for bass angling. Purse and the Blue Grass after winning his first two
This writer fished opening day at Hodges, races as a 3·year-old.
which had been closed for almost 20 years. Fighting The probables also include the winners of the
the crowds reminded me of opening day at Crowley Divisions of the Florida Derby, Coined Sliver and
years ago, but it was worth at. We came out with run Ruthie's Native, who have been less thao im-
limils of nice bass. Look for all the lakes in the pressave in recent performances, and glboulee, a
southland to produce good bass fishing through May stakes winner from Canada who followed a second
as the largemouths are on their spawning beds and In the Flaminio and a wanning effort in the Calumet
hitting almost anything Purse with a rlintb-place finish In the Blue Grass.
-.. e, ~ .l. t1t: · ~ -• ...--;---~~.; ~d.Q&ber ~~PS l.f'~.9J~ ~v wln.,g ~:~ ~ ....• , .., ~.,. •''¥' ·-• ..\• • , ~ ..,.,.,.¥:'~~ 1" de. .. • lfl~~~.~ opj1\0\.e, I 1'°n ..... phlns Coaeh · Wind, Get the Axe. Sanhedrin, Aftiliate, Nostalgia,
· and Beb'sDusty. .
Post Filled
Don DeGroote, an as·
sistant for four years on
the Dana Hills High fool·
ball staH, has been
selected to guide the
Dolphins as head coach.
He succ eeds Bill
Cunerty, who resl&ned to
take a similar pot1t ut
Capistrano Valley High
Confarmataon or
DeGroote's appointment
was mode Monday night
at the school board meet
ing.
DeGroote, 31, has
served as offensive and
defehsave line coach with
Tony Leon for two years
and with Cunerty two
seasons, In addition to
head coachin!C dutlos
with the track team.
Team Tennis
" ......... c .. .,.,_,.
Wo..,en -ICl"ll t"IY I but Turftbull
!Cl, ~ J: KlnQ Wade !NYI bu t
TllMbUll Mlchtt IC I • l
M•n -llutt .. , (NY 111u t l rw9 IC>, 6-•; lorQ lllH-ICI ti.Al llwllett-
ltollt INYI.• 4
Mlt•d OoublH -Wadt Stoll• IN•I
l>etl Mlthtt·ll'"-tC t,' 7 A-9,M4atNtw Yoo
A product of Grant
llleh ln ttle San Fernan-
do Valley and
Wa s hington Slate
Univers ity, where he
played center ln football,
DeGroote began his
coachane career at Ca·
nyon (Saugus) High,
where be spent five
years u an a11l1tant
crid coach and four
y eara as head track
coach
··We'll be osin1 a veer
and an t otrense," says
DeGroote. "But I tend to
favor the I formation
because you can do more
with It in term. ot power
football.
"Defmslvley I like to
mix lhlnp up with an
odd and even front. I
don't like to sil in the
ume defense all the
way.
"We have a solid
nucleus of kids at Dana
HUia and l lhink wel'IJ be
capable of competing
well ln the South Coast
League."
Girls Softball
VA•SITY
Wttll'lllMtw m • "'"' van.,. '0UNTAIN VALLIY 141 -H-.1,
,_, )•24-t ; Wtlle<•, cl , • 1•1·0;
HellllOft, ,_. ).1-0.I; ... ,..,., p,
4-0-2.0; l'olltrd, "· '441; ..... rt •• c, ... M: ~. u, 2-M-t; c;1._.,
111, , ...... ; Havth'I. rl. 2 t I t ;
).llleftltow rl, 1~ •
WISTMIH1TE• Ill -.. 11'1, 2-. f.>M; ~1•111•. a, •t-1.0; hcri.t,
•• ).M·I; WllllM!t, "· >0+11 M<'• rtelt, C, ~I; Ctwlt!M .. ft, cl,
l ·l·l ·O; lllefrlown. rf, t ·t·0·1:
lrlU ... , 111, 2+t-t1 Qellutrl. '' .......
, . . . .._.. ,. ............ ..,.,..
VA•MTY
MUN'fl..,11* HAOt -a-~
lflOar, It .,..., 2 Sliva, • ..o.M; Mart .... r. rl .... ; ~. 2b
4-1·).t; LatllM9", cf 4-l+t; -.. ...
•• ,.. .. : " .. '"· , ........ l'INI. (
4-M4; L. """" 111>1-l·I, MIW~T MAaeott-~t. » 4-1 , .. ; 1'llilrt9, t 1 ..... ; .....,_., (
1+14; .......... 14: "-"· ,. ...., .. : K_,..,,,. >++t: Pv1m1. If J.+1 t; Utnejelwl, It >+1 .. ; ft l(MJ ...,, ...... ,.. ............ ~ .....
SC..tlrf ......
r II t
Hllftt.1<11 000 ill 1-S • I Npt "a,_ 100 000 0-t I t
JUNICM VAllllTY • NeW!Mfl HA/tiff I, Hltftll~IM ... c111. VHtlTY
IDllON ltl -hum, II J.O.t .. 1 Colllnt, rl ,...: lllf'ltll, • J.o+t;
"'"•· l >+l.O: Sliva, '>+6-0; M-wtl, 111 H+l1 Kai-, Ill ,.._,,
98el', Cf ~; ~ .. t-o+t; WIM,al.O.I ...
........... Ote11tf Mt ... tM 1-1 I I °"'"" """""" "' llrtt lllfti"I ·~ ' " • I~ • flM'I W -..... ) I ....... ¥A.MtTT ~ 111 tt1 11-f ft • 0..... H. f l!l'Ktt 1, NMOll VAltSln' ........... m~__, ., •
..
"He could have 1one a lot faster," 5aid jockey
Jean Cruguet after Seattle Slew, working as far as a ·
mile for the first time ever, cut out fractions of 2S
2-5. SO 2·5 and l : 16 2·5. Kls last quarter also was 2S 2·5 but his final eiahth was 12.
"It dependl on what he <trainer Billy Turner)
wanted," wu the reaction or SmUey Adams, who.
trains Run D\laty Run and Bob's Dusty. "It was a
nice even work. He's fit and I 1ue11 he wants to·
keep him fit."
"Perfect ... perfect," said Turner.
"He'll work lat.er on this week, Thursday or
Friday. Just depends how he 11 and how he acts in
the momtna. This horse will be nton Derby Oa)'.
"You have lo have racing luck," aald JCarea Taylor, Seattle Stew's owner, notin& that sheer
abiUty u not alway1 enough on the race track.
Turner concurs, bul he lefl no doubt 8!I to bow·
he feels about what kind of horse Seattle Slew ts.
"You can't buy the.se hones.'' he 1ald. "You
can't breed them. You can't ateal them. You just
look up one day and there it is."
Coast Area
Golf Report
MIN'leot." Votl•I; 5'1<oM-P1111 Hovt; Tlllrll-
lllVIN& COo\STCC LH LU 'l\vaert; l'ourlll-llfltY
lloerd ol ~ T~I Dtllch: l'lft11-Jta11 Btfl: Slxltt-
ll'ou•·m•11 tcr•mlllel-1. l(en Maro• 1141,.,_,; Se~ntll-Ell!lf woman, Ott1111 SHlb.rQ, Mar• WMd. l!IQll\11 '"'""McKtrlle.
~II. 8111 Wal!ler. 44~1 t . .191111 l'VMILI SOU4111 OC
Llllht, .. oei-. Jot 8uthltd, 11111 P,.tl .. 111'' Cuo· C..rOI Lott Cllfti.t•
Ha..id, •J! l. Jar,.., 6llU11t1all11lft. ~~ E rt-Anfltladl for l1't (IY-
JOllll T"le, ao1...-l"•rl,, l'renk olOf',hlp,
lrlO , '7; 4 • .Joa1 StOfnNUQll, L. l'lltl!I f<l"-11: Vice ftrttld t
Mc1Cl1tley, •• MA1ll-Ytr ••• J . ''lt!M-C.O'I t4ar'pef dtfHI.,, -taller, •rt.'I; s. Jim "ew111, H•I "•rtvtl Se<~'' l'llQltt-ltr'bf••
Lat••-· Ollrti. .. ,.Mllttr. ,. ... Stew•tl ...... " 99¥ ... IV H•l'H•;
Cola, '7~; • 111•1 lr"'9 Of..,., S..., l rte ,ur t•'' l'llQM-Dtt Dt• J:ltlr•.INll""-,ltft~:l'rtd McC leltend dtluled lobble
scwie.r. ~~ llotom~. Orrill M411COI-CollMlflloll WI--
Wrltltt,...,_Tlll_. Lor••i,..SNI
I.Mt ...... °"""'' t Jll'I lffwllt. COSTAMffAO( 1'1 'II~ 0... I t9 1 ... plf!I Art 1 ,_, T---1 I. P411 L..tctMr.
D•11tt1erty, Cl-• Miiiar, HtHlt """"" Wll ..... Alwl v ... Cl•eve, J'IM
Holltdn, 1111 Oll!ittt.t MMI e<Qlrate Ku""• 12' 1· 111\8 StlPI•. L11Ctlle *lftt: .... t-tltlf ICtll; Ito 1t-lolt PHdllt'' Gtli. Ntlll Jerry Wat~ lel"9. tJt; J MMIOft Von. P11y1111 ., • .,.,,
WOMIN"Se«.~ \and•• Nlcl'trt...,,,, IS>! 4, &:11 .. 11
I •vtliltl C..JT CC Wllteft 1Nr1..,. '1'19. Kn LWIWtlltr. (lut. ~ ... (M~\We 1l4
Fllftll •°"""' -1 Otnnl QleftMn, T tftd,. TWno-llf· A l'lftM-' '16; t 0.. 0.. Vti1llKt Ul. INttl-1. !lltl l'rtn_.t Ounl Mt.., Zfm· Oof't A-'\ •: t , lttte CA!llcert. mer..,a<I, JJ; 1 fllt!tllWll-, W.i,.
7'4 I ~lltlll-1, ltttt MtrlM V .. s, tr1n1 l'lltllt IOrot•l-t. aotlblt Me•left 0.,11"'9. as: 1. c;,,.1,,.
Sntlttl: t .._..., "'~"'• INtll-1 l"llmtr,P~. "'"'Colw\' t .ll-Slt19M. c l'lltflt-1, V!vl ... Ollonnley. *'"': 5ac'oftd l'llfl!t l~l-1. Mllftt t • .ff ... PMr~. '1"'t1 ), C.'4 "--
Sl0<~,r: 1 """' Bumett. IN•ll-1, •:• ............ 40''1 Mlf\' AMIMktt :t. LAii llldlllt. •AHCHOIAlt JOAOUI .. Ge
Tlllrd 1'1!4ht 10 ... u1 I , Nudlt Tiii Whlttl• 'hur11aM4jltll A
Wrlflll t .JoMwW•r'f (HetJ-l,./'1111 '119111-1. l(#tft'( l'trri, •1 t. Cl!e)
O'SUa t.lt•H41tletl'Wlftt, •lltfll \'tect••'"• M41•flllt
l'tllrtl\ l'lttltt IGl'fltl-11 Otr4'11'1y llrtOla...i.~.
Jt S"ttito11; t H1110 '''""• I ftlftM I, leltll5o<'elel1ll'(,alll • IHttl-1, Vl\ol111 \ltlltl"°' t. ltrnl<t Mta•lt ~ SJ; J. (tttl M. V. Ar• Htt<lltr, ,..i•lla, '9Qlmllll.J2.
"Htlt l'lltllt CO,.ul-1, .... ( 1'119"11 I Le!l~lllt'f1 •1t,Oll¥e Harott: t Mar<tllt ~ CNttl-1. W-ftt S.ll.Jll'lfJM:kt.011. U.
Cltrl,Vt,_, t ICeyWl-llJlll Lew Ntl fw tM Oay-L.tv Wiiiey,
csi.111 lll!tl'll 1oroo1-1. "'"' 11. WHll"""', t, Aftll OI-. INt\1-1.
'""""'.....,."''-~"' Jtllllllt flllfllt (O,.t\l-t. LH
1111 .. fl 2 J.Clllt T ....... IHtll ·t, lllltltf#llt~:t OIM .. 0-...,,11, • IA•TAAMACC
Cl "-"""-111!1; ~-ult £dft Cflfll ttmal, """"'"• ~!Ullf ~ "'IOI\ lilt _,n "4...n-.hlc"•
Volleyball
••
Sports
Calendar
--.-ay l"'-Y.,
Mater Dei, LC
BOmbard Foes '
SANTA MOtllCA
hallbUI UNCk-1
llVIN ADVANTAOU
OUI lllAOa Offal
Bas•ll•ll-l'ountaln v alley tt Edl•on Qana Hiii\ at Corona dtt M41r
U•lvenlt'I at CMla Me\<t M•nfoo>
Viti'> al Leguna &.a<h S... Cl~-1•
Al El Toro tall At J ISi H""HllQIOfl
B••< h v• Htwoort Harllo,. el
ToWtnkle P-(1) VS<; al UC INIM
11.lOI. Ctl Sr.le (1',,lttrton l al
Soul.,.•n c.tlllor11la Coll...,. Ill.
hMl\-<Alron.a del MU •I DI"•
H•ll\ CO'\ta Meta '' UftlVt rt•lv !I Toro at San Cleme'"• L•11""9 8 t Kll
at M,.,,.,. ll••fo Foontaln Valle, at
Wt\l<nlmler 1•11 al J· ISi. Soulh Co•"
Co-.lt re..u IO<Hney •I Ml S•" 411
lo"10Coll9Q19
\/otteybatl-t"''"'""od tour"f V
ltndl\ lqw••ltr ll"'"' •I S JO,
...,mlllnaf\&t •·JD, third plao •11 '.II),
tMmo•-lo1119'.
O•r•\ llV~ltl"-S~n Clement~ et U•lve,.ltv. Coron.a <Mt M~• al M•\\lon
Viejo. El Toro •I Co•la ~H l•lt at
S '.IOI Estan<lttlTu"ln 1•1. v I rl\ \Ollball-S-" Cl•m•nt• al M'"'"" V••lo C.ta llMH •• Et Toro, DaM Hill\ at Ulllve•sltv, Santa An• at
E\ta"c•• l•lt1tJ:UI
Gor•1 l•ec:k~ u-ortllmt al Ntwoorl'iarbelr 1)1
~d.t' IM•v SI e .. PIMitt-0..11.., coo~ at '>act
dl•b•t l< Collt 9e Ortl'IQ• Coa'I
Collev• "" Ml San AnlO<llO COll•O-/both at ?"JOI Sowlhern Cthlornl•
(~ll~p •t (..,i1()t1Mn fl O 'ft \ tt\1 • .,41
Cnrl\ft-'•1 l.tt)larly Q\t'~\t1•fll (l • 1 \'
UCITennis
MIN'S TINNtl
UC trv!M !ti 111 Cl Htrtlwi ...
"""" Olden-9 IUCH «Ml Witcher •·6,
M . 6-J; .-_ IUCI I clal Brook• 7 S.
1 \, Al9l (UCll def Alltft.LH '2,
6 O; "l•llOft IUCll def Br .,.ley • I,
M ; McN-• IUCll def PavllO 6·1
6· t • Whitfield IUCI I del G•ollM•n
6 '·. t o..1111 ..
Old~11ber9.Jol\n.on IUCI I dol
8rool<• Alfen-L" •·2. 1·6. 3 I clala111t;
At>Qtl McNefNH'a (UCll del Wlltl"'
S.ordl• 6-t, 7"; Brewt•v·Gfonman
ICSN I clal wtiltllllcl-NelM>n 4 6, 1 '·
M
Liberty Christian High
of Huntington Beach ex·
ploded for 17 runs Mon·
day and heal Inland
Christian 17·2 in San
Bernardino.
And Mater Dei High of
Santa Ana, in a non·
league contest, stopped.
Laguna Beach 7·1 Mon-day.
Liberty Ch ristian
shelled Inland pitchers
for 15 hit.I and the San
Bernardino school
matched that total by
commlttine 15 ert'ors.
Only 10 of Liberty
Christian's runs were
earned, but that would
have been plenty
because pitcher Ron
HerberU<>n was sharp.
He struck out six, seal·
tered six hits.
Jn view or
Herbertson's pitching,
the game was virtually
over in the first inning
when Liberty Christian
rallied for four runs.
By the time the sixth
inning 1tatted Liberty
Christian had built an 8·1
lead, but the Minutemen
were just getting
started.
In a wild sixth they
scored nine times, doing
il with seven hits, three
walks and nine errors.
U..,,y Olrlllla11 I 11 I
McC-..UOIWY c
L()98ft lb
Hun111...., <I
Oreyer, 'b
Parl<e•.Jb
Amdl,lf
Olt!'tl.n
ZIM9r-.rt
Haws. rl
HPrtlert"'1\, p
Total\
H r II rM • > 0 0
l ) ? 0
\ 1 , t ' ) ) , ' ) s 0 ? ,
4 I t t
J 0 0 0
0 I 0 0
• , t 0
1' II I~ 10
r ~ • Llto.rly Cll<l,tlan <IOO <I09 0 11 tS 1
lnlafld Q\ri,tlan 000 101 0 t • IS
Utllfl! .. 11Cllf11 all ... r " H•uur lb • 0 0 0
H<>Ull, rl 1 , 0 0
Hunl\. '' 3 0 , 0 IU<Oft,lb l 0 1 1
l4au1111t.3D 3 0 t t
Rkllar-111 , 0 0 0
G•ffft. c 2 0 • 0
1Crut19er If l 0 0 0 CMomM ,, 2 0 • 0 Weav@r o 1 0 0 0
Fl"uca" 7b 0 0 0 0
To1a1, ,. 1 ' ' ""''" 0.1111 n , " ....
Orarba c ) I I 1 Alllloll Cltl t 0 0 0
Alelto lb t 0 0 0
Croat 0 t 0 0 • ~., .,,., 1)11 0 0 0 0 8row11_Q 0 0 0 0 MHtll•m.u ' 0 0 I
All.,.,111> 0 0 0 • 0
Marl!" lb l 0 3 ,
GutttrrH ll> 1 0 0 0
McGo ..... 11> 7 Q 0 0 HOOCl.1" 0 0 0 0
HA<\lt.P t t 0
Lumarda 11> 0 0 0
LltllllU• rl t ll 0 Stu•rt rt 0 0 0
S<hulll t i t , 0
Gon1atn <t t 1 t
Maca uloy II ' I t t
S1to91,11 t 0 0 0
Tol•I\ n 1 0 7
kert tty '""'"'' r " • LaQuna ~acll 000 001 0 I \ 0
Mattr ~I "' 010 . I q 1
that yours may nOtl
1 COM,LITI OUNGI
COUN" COYHA•I
IMlttdlett Yt-._ ..
5-C ....... ,M ..... YltJt,
0.. ,_., • -" • ""' ~ ........ L.A. ...
2 MONTH TO MONTH
HNT~L IASIS
] NO DIPOSIT u9u1111
ON AftlOYID CUOIT
4 ONLY 117 10,.. MONTK
TOTAL COST , .......... ,....,
5 NIW COM,ACT UNIT
san n ~'• • .. , v11
6 YOICI MWAGI P.A•llS
AUO .AH AVAIL.AILI , 7 FULL Piii MAIHTINANCI
Oll,\NGE COUN7V
RAOIOlflE PHONE
SEllVICE IN(
t714J 135.3)05
WI IO. IAlfTA ,., IAMTA All.a ,,..,,. L-....... M•u• vi.1 ..
-P'olol, la• C-S.. ,_ C1.it1n,.., It T-<All Ill -..... nu
Whitewalls only 99<.
more than blacllwalls.·
J...~~~eady_fo;;,u.:m s~t~e
your nelghborhood~1ocon r1t11ler. He's dealing ru:>~
on whitewalls for yoor eumm« drivU.
ahead. Choose either the g11 ... be1ttd Attae
PaceMtter or lhe 4-ply pol~ter oord
Atlas Cushlonelre, two of lhe Tiger'• ~ popul.,. tires. Stop In todlyl
' Atlas Pacesetter ..
'\ 8uggnt9d value price.• s3349
plua U 2e Feel E• Ta• ror E7S.ll M,.1tu bleokwall
with tr.lde"n W"'lewtllt
only ll9C mort
,_ ·-, ..
137.41 U .42
39.41 2111
40.41 ua
41.49 210
UI
. • .
~ • •
• • i
•' ~
{
r
1
1 _____ ,J
0
ffJMICY WIMKERIEAN
ANO MER£ 15 ~ RE&tt.e'
·~ wnH (ff.) COUEGE 1}tqN5C/CIPT6 I .
.. .
,
I
by Tom latiulc
DEPOSIT FOUR
EXTRA PENNIES
NOW 5¢ BECAUSE
OF tNFLATlON
¥ ~1 ~~
a;;--
DOOLEY'S WORLD
~·J
DR.SMOCK
.. . ...... ~'""" . by Roger Bradfield
.. .
by GtGrCJt Lemont
°:M~ 141.!UA~J~i!J..i" /'~
THE "liLS '
..,,..
.. Frankly, the only reactJon I Sot wu from my huaband-he blew
up when I told him It wu $20 an ounce."
DENNIS THI MENACE
f
J
· Tonight's TV
Highligh~
NBC e 1:00 -Countri Muslc IDt Parade. Jlmmy Dea.a 11 the bolt and Tm-.
neaaeo Emle Ford special suest in at ...
studded Jl"Oliam.
KTLA .• 8:00 -Movie: "The
Plalmman" This western starring Gary
Cooper and Jean Arthur was filmed in
1938.
KCET .at 10:00 -"A Ucense for
Violence: The Tragedy of Battered
Wive.a','. Program hosted by Gloria
Steinem examines the cause and alow-to-develop awareness of wife-beating.
TV DAILY LOG
"'-
..._ __________________ _.. ____________ _,~
I TU•SDAY
I •viRliiG
e:oo DU CD OGI (rlll (})) Nen D @ Cl) ('2fl ([) m llews
DStlf Tlfl
(I) 5Mff Pyle
-~· m Pu1rid&e family
Ill Adat11·12 m Dectrk Comp1ny
tD Drl!Mtlc Stritl
9 Mille Deucln
-6:30-D Dln•h! Guests include Don
Meredllh, l<eMy Ro&rrs, l\ennt
!llnh1, Ro&n Miller Inn l uc Pontt
and Bob £ub1n~ <el Andy GnHrth
U§J lltn ~ Show m fatllfly Alla11
(iill (1)) Gutnl!IM1
fZ)loem
(iltl (I)) ._ltl!.d
Ci) Town Ta"
7:00
II U ID (J) fl> m llews G Ulrs Club
CJ) My Tltret Sons
CT To Tell Ille Truth
.. c.c.MrthOll m I Lo.e Lucy
11> Tilt Fil
fl) America/Imel ltwu.lt Hour m MKNtrl/Lthm lleport
( 2tl r 0 ) The r11111d&1 hmll,
QI) Clna-W1ts
-7:30-
D CindW Cimen
U Lo.t American Style
0 fm 12]) Cl) Im Hollywood
~"' CJ) TM Gona Slw
GTM~sWlld
• (CZI) CJ)) ltt4y lllMh
((ll) CJ)) "&llWlftt Oii lilt !load
ft) CM!llltl 21 Toa1"1t
Qt UmClllb
8:00
D (TlJ ~I • Wiie's Wllo .. ftl lJ 101 m C-nlry .. ""'
Hrt ,.,14, hmmy Oun " Cht l>(nl
'"d l1nneu1e (·nit f :><•J , \l>«•al
tu•SI 1n !tits \Ur studd•d prrwnta·
·.~r1U~~~:"' ~
... mu,1clbday hmmy Wyntll, Dcl4!n1
rarco r1edd1t f,nder. lht Nilly
Grtlly Dtrl &nd Mtl I 1lhs. Illy
Sttvens. the Da~rtd&• Boyi, Don
W1lhams. ta•ry G•ll1n. vr,l•I Gayle.
Jan llow11d. Cto11e Jonn and
Ronnie Milsap pe1I01m
ft Mowlt: (fhr) "Tiit l'laiM111111"
(•us) 'J6-G11v Coow . Jun Allhur.
Clt"les 81Ckto1d. lames (lhM>n Pot·
ler Hall. Victor V11con1. Anlhony
Quinn
ti) Mowl1: (C) (nr) "Th. hl11·
1111ht" (1c!¥) '56-Burl ldn<ntt1,
KAthlflnt Hepburn, W,M,11 Coiey,
Lloyd Btld1u. hrl Holliman, C.m
tron P1ud h()mme. W1lhet f 01d a <~ (f') a" Ham D•ra (Al
'ront1e lht Fath'!'' lh• 1 oil OI
FOii/it and llKhtt IS put 10 lh~
supreme tut whtn • p1etn1nt
wcman unn iwctly btcom•> • ~cu ..
&uni and the b1by dt<1in\ to 1111vt
prematurely
., ....... (t:) (llw) ~1 •• te'"4"
(<om) ~S-~1y Grtrt ln&lid
81111111n. Cwt Puhr, Pllylht C.•wt
m u.t '"'" WiW Cl> Al 11ltt Glttttrt L W dOCi busl·
NtS '"'" Ma tllO w111d1 up O'I Ille Wl'tnC tlld o4 bllC~lllttt, Glt11 rtlMI
h11 n11hlm11t ""'"' l1n1 d• rmnh,, llltn Ktepts • phone t1ll l1om I01n
Hamlyn lo do 11 1ca1n. Din ''"' CllllsliN lh11 ht m1uts then hmn
toaethtt. 111e11 ClwlSl•ft• HsltM ""lit Haney dtmlfldi ICllon: and l W ;r:;:n:,,:: ~:.~:·,,
MdtrlOll, Phllotopher" by Am~•
, 81tfct •11cl ''lite Jolly Cotne1" by
Hcn11 J1m11 *" lo lured 1 ht lomtt 11 • •IOl'Y ol cont1on1111on
btl .. tft 1 ceoiurtd Unio11 spy 1nd
the CtMlal of a baltttod Conltdtr·
tit ermy. Hanis Yulln 1nd Dou1tu
Wwtto11 abr. '1ht Jolly Cotntr" stars
• rr112 Wttvfl Ille! Sltomt Jtnt hi lbt
slOIY of 111 Amtrlcl11 npe1ri.tt wtlo
flod the CMt Wet tlld 1tt11mt to Mt-
the we.tllJ .. lost CDP .. •U...tt
-1:30-
• Cl)) Cl UttrlO 1114
I (R) ~e.ditlor Motbt11" Tti.
tlll bllelOICl"*'4l•11d4loPS •• ...,,,,. Mldlf-0 bltly-lllllCll
~=a. .,.,,, ..... • cw.. '-PICt DecailllltlfJ
8100 • ((U) (J)) (I) ..... ,.,. (R}
filllk llunili lllttatnlSlrc IOWl!d t
•114ed Mttltl KortM oflg ltro brM out to be • dodor traintd Ill
ll'e Jn1ltd Stales. 0 GREAT FUN FAMILY!
• I IS ENOUGtt.IUW a <MJ (11) QfJ [lah1 i. [ltouati
m Mtn '"'"" s. . m M~I Variety m u,ectKu!Jr '77
-9:30-0 (ITTJ CI)) {1-• Olle Day at A
Time (R) Part I. When Dn1d ts
ollered the opportunity of 1 hlelimt,
Ann must decide 11 she wants lo
sh.ie 1n hi$ IOOd lortune IOI !he rest
ol her hie
D <ll> [J) (J d\ m MIC T lltMlay
ll11ht Mowit: re> (Zhr) "Cod1 ll1111e:
0111110114 Hud" (d11) 77-Roy
Th1nnes. France Nu~en, Zulu, Ward
Costello, Don Kntihl. Ian MtSh1nt.
Crrc Bmden Rey lhinnes stars as an
Ammcan undercover 11ent who
races lo prevent rhe theh of 1 fOf·
mul• loi deadly 1011c cas
Q) Mod Sqwd
ID Tiie a.. ol Ernie Koms
10:00 0 ( 11J CJ ) t Kojak Rosie Gner
runts u S.l1lh1tl H,,ms, a bounty
hunttt pursu1n1 a desf)f11le man
who 1umped b.111 1n San r rant1sco
9Cllkws m ... •a a (jfl m> 01J ramify CR) "An
lndaneertd Sptcres" KMt and a
lamrly lriend recenlly d1voited are
drawn 10 each other •hen Doug
b•c~m,s tn~ros\td 1n his work
Vi1ll1.1m Windom auests
fD Woman Alive "A l 1"nse for V10
l•ncP fh• lrapedy of Batltred
W11~s" 1115 M;t1J11ne ed11or Glorta
Sltrn•m hosts lh1s program. which
1•1dm1no th• sllt11hcs, the causes
and lhe ~low to dtvelop aw,.eness of
v.1le butrn1 featured 1s ' film on
Crtn P1my, an En&hshwoman who
lounded a reluae for baltmd wrvu
and lhttr children in 1971 mu llen MHa
-10:30-m m m11ews
11:00
DUrt6" Jf)lllWI
G ila • IIllhws e (.HI r ) LM AIMtlcM Style
( l All n.1 '"'1tn D lr1111¥1 m Mary Hart1N1t, MllJ H.wtm11 . ...JP TIM ~r,emn . . n.)t: ... L&c~"~ ..
O>Dllilt•llrr9
-11:30-
D !rl'1J en (()ca llt9 ...-:
(CJ '"Celo•--' ~ "' Crinle" D '221 ll)110/ •..., C.. mne m aua e (<2f1 Ct l iffl T_.,, Mtwie tf
t1lt w..t · M•tl Helm" D ...... .,_ICU Style
mMetlOMWI
Q) Sct. IAt CD CiMN J.4
DATIIME llONS
II
,.,,.,..,..,.. >*'''U"•-•
•
11ROCKY'' 7sJO.ti•• ,,..
SAT/SUK-hJO.t:4t ••
l!4 s.a:oo-1 ti I I
CINE MALAND
1414S..lllllW ..... mN11
· .IOIBTIHAW
MUCIOUH
"IL.ACX SUMDA Y" 111 -.. .. ,~, ... -. ............ ,.
CINE MALAND
C•ll 642-5671.
Put a tew worda
to work tor ou.
lttf el 1111 Ot•t Tiit 0-11
• "IT'S AUYr
'W.ACI C*'STMAS .. IPG
"'GO FOi l'r lPGI
.. GOMllM
60SECOMDS ..
IOOPM6,.u,4M llJ(f>Mt.t •'AM
,.. Ollt• ~ ~ Cbtlt,r ..
9 00 & 11 ~SPM !Mb wl•
c. ..... Cll•,i+tt "-' .... ,. h lu wtll t~tPM ........, ..... ,. ..... -. ""'
tO SIPM Ate1'1>11Wt• •twt -at Yun 9 tOPM h tb -
Aet Tllll Wt• lacltr 1.#r """°' ... -1I10f'M 9•~ _j 10~1PM
Tehpr ... •C...TV
f.Gr Mon I.to °" C._.... %. C4lll 642-JZ60 .. ,_ ""..._. -°""
I ~· lt,\l,1',\ El.:a ' " •. l liif :;1
........................
~ ...
lf,Mltllilf _...., ................
~, ...
lWU.IWIL..IOl .. Clt
DAILY PtLOT •
2 ShowS1
~ Lose Big
lntermissiori
Tom Titus
I
F • ·I ypge ~·
·' LOS ANG~ <Af:>
••• ''Promises.
Promlaea,.. by Golden
West College, will open a
10-performance run May
11 on the campua, 15'744
GoldeD West SL, Hunt·
tnalon Beach. Stagings
will be at 8:30 p.m. May
11 throu&h 14 and May 19
throuab 21. There will be
a 5:30r.m. ahow May 15. Car Nelson, Anaheim,
lead1 the cast. Ralph
Lom~ardo, Costa Mesa,
also had a lead role.
*** A creative actors
workshop baa been
formed by the G..Jf'den
Grove Cultural Arts
division. Tbe program ls
open to any adult and will
be divided into two sec·
tiona.
A work.shop for novice
actors will be held Mon·
days from 7:30lo10 p.m.
May 16 through July 11.
An intermediate section
will be held at the same
hours oo Tuesdays June 7
through Aug. 2. Both sec·
lions will meet al West
Haven Park.
Registration is availa·
ble through May 1.3 at the
Recreation Division,
Garden Grove City Hall,
11391 Acadia Parkway. ••• The Sao Clemente
"'Vpro8ftoue_.
luaty entertal11m•nt:"
... ,,,_._ Ul(JCMtlO~
"IT'S AUVI" CPGJ
1111.ACK CHRISTMAS" (IJ
.. IOCICY"
''IUIMT OFNllMGS" CPGI
"SCLYll STUAJ<'" CNI
''TUMMIL VISION'"
"IL.ACK SUHDA Y" Cll
"CAllllE''
"SLAP SHOT" Ill
"LAST DIT AIL" Cl)
Community Tbeatre pro. -Two well-known~l ductlon of "A.tlenic aod -CBS' '"Tho W •
Old Lace'• wU1 6e pre· and the Bradford• f
sented at 8 :30 p .m. ABC's new ''Elabt •
Thursdays, Fridays and Enough"-areretumln8
Saturdays throueh May to TV next fall. But ••th
28 beclnn1ni Thursday. baa auffered a lou, omro
The comedy-wtll be pre-real·lltetragedy. "I 1
~r:~h at the2oc2abArmo Actresa Diana Hyla.:.:. ' ouae, ve wbopl•vedt.bemotheru:'ll Cabrillo, San Clemente. ...., The theater's show et1btlddlinABe•uerJ~
director, Tony Brandt, about a Sacramen~.
basputoutacallforaudl-Calif., new1papermi1
ttona for ••stop The and bl.a family, died llM
World. 1 Want To Ge\ March of cancer, l..;
Off.•• The audltlona wlll than two week.a after tbe
be held at 7:30 p.m. next series premiered. ' l
Monday and Tuesday at • San Clemente Hl&h Richard Toma1, the
School LitUeTbeatre 700 poetry-loving John·B~
E . Ave. Pico, San in CBS' ahow about ,
Clemente. The show will Waltons ol Vlrainia, le
openJune23. the aeries aft.er its tilth season lo do other P[ct
• • • jects. Hi.a contract WIU\
The cast bas been an· the program bad explr~
nounced for "See How 1
Th e y Ru· n' • at B VT LEE RICO'
We.tminsterCommunity whose Lorlmar Produ~
Theatre, 7272 Maple St.,; Uons makes both aerie-,
Westminster. The pro· says there wlll be !~
duction opens May 13 at changes in the b
8:30 p.m. and will run format ol each profr
Fridays and Saturdays despite the death o
throughJune4. Hyland, •t. and the e
• • • partureolThomas, 24 ..
"Hello Dolly" con· In the case of "Eight.if
tinuesitsrunasthelniUal Enough•" he s a i()f
production at the new there11 be no attempM.O
Sebastian .. s Dinner-put another actress •m
Pl a..-.A-MisaHyland'srole. aylJUUOtC evenings ex-Dick Van Patten, whP
cept Mondays at the played her husband, \till
GrandHotelinAnaheim. start next season ~
widower.
WXDf ALLEN
()#.£ KEA10'J
':ANNIE
HALl'a·
ITI IUIE .
CPO
0•12%*
IRERFSI ~·
Fos: the last 16 years, through booms and
recessions. Individual Investors. as well as
trust and profit sharing plans. have earned
10% or more on their money, most of the
'1 tlme more. Often as much as 12%• on short
term (3 to 6 yaars trust deeds on choice
resldenUal pro es, with large equity and
high security. he tJUe ls Insured and
recorded In your name.
In those 16 years, no one has ever
lost one cent'onjhelr Investment at
A. A. Ajax Co. No one has ever railed to earn
10% or more. No one.
We take care of all the paperwori<,
details and payment collectJons for 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 railed to do so.
If you want stable high Interest, and
lf you have $5,000 or more that you would
like to Invest, please call or write A. A. Ajax Co.
for our complete brochure on trust deed
investments.
11 •When a loan Is prcpa\cf before
'!' maturity, you receive up to a six month
Interest bonus on 80% or the loan balance.
This may Increase the yield up to 12%.
,,
NEW YORK <AP> -Exxon Corp.
be.ded F.ortune Ma1ulne'1 Uat of tbe
country'• ~ tareest industrial cor.
porat.ioos In 197$, u It did 1n 19'75, but
General Motortt Corp. narrowed the
Jlant oU company's fead, thanb to a
comeback in the auto market.
Ford Motor Company, another
beneficiary of that resurcence, over· toot Texaco Inc. for third place on the
Uat, published in the maculne'• May
ilsue. The corporations ate ranked on
the basis of annual sales.
IN COMPILING THE 1971 llal,
Fortune fO\md that combined sales for
the 500 corporations rose 12.2 percent
to $971.1 billion; that profits roee 30.4
percent to $49.4 billion. and that the
cut-off for inclualon in the list rose 10
percent to $327,884,000.
Exxoo retained its No. 1 rank for the
third straight year with aalea of $48.Cl3
billion, just topping the "7.18 blWoo·
of General Motors, which was behind
the oil company by $9 billion the pre·
viousyear.
But the nation's No. 1 automaker,
which had led the list every previoua
year since it was first published in
1955, was No. 1 in net income in 1976
with $2.9 billion, dropping Exxon,
with $2.64 billion, to second-place.
AND INTERNATIONAL "Business
Machines Corp., No. 8 on the list with
$18.3 billion in sales, was third in
terms of net Income with $2.398
billion.
•
lndmtrial corporatloDJ reported in-
creued •ales f()l' the year, ~e
said. Paper, fiber aDd wood ta ·
led the industry IJ'OUPI with a of
18.5 percent. while aerwpace bad the 1mallest gaiil, 8.3 percent.
The biaest 1etbaek In sales wu the
33. 7 percent decUne recon:led by
Amstar Con> •• the laraest U.S. maker
of •-.car and eorn syrup.
Proftta were up for fOO of the com·
panlet oa the llat, with motor ~cles
toppLnc the 7list ot industry groups
with AD increase ol 138.5 percent.
· TBE NAftON-8 TOP 20 lndustrial
coQJpanies in teruia ol bllllons of
sales, with 1976 and 1975 ranlciqs in
bracket.I:
Exxon 48,830,817 (1-1); General
Moton, C7.181,000 <2'·2); Ford Motor,
28,839,eoo (M); Texaco, 2115,W,SSl
(4-3) Mobil, 26,06%,5'10 (5-$); Standard
OU of Calltomla, 19,434,133 (6-6); Gulf
Oil, 16,451,000 (7-8): International
Business Machines, 18,304,333 (8-7);
General Electric, 15,69"1,300 (9-9);
Chrysler, 15,537,788 U0-10); Intema·
tlonal Telephone & Teleerapb,
11,764,106 (11-11); Standard OU of ln·
diana, 11,532,048 (12-12): Shell OU,
9,229,950 (13·14); U.S. Steel, 8,604,200
(14·13)~ Atlantic Richfield, 8,462,524
(15·15); E .I. duPonl de Nemours,
8,361,000 (16-17); Continental Oil,
7,957,620 (17-18); Western Electric,
6,930,9'2 (18-18); Procter & Gamble,
8,512, 728 (19-19); Tenneco, 8,389,236
(20·32).
Plaase One Begins
Grading is under way for the first phase of Corporate Plaza, the
newest addition to Newport Center. The 13 low-rise office buildings
that will comprise the initial phase of the project are slated for com-
pletion in about a year. The next 13 buildings will be t>uilt concur-
rently with construction of the Coast Highway Bridie over Upper
Newport Bay. The bridge is expected to be in construction in 1979.
Datsun Hikes Prices
DETROIT CAP) -Ni.aaan Motor
Corp. U.S.A. has joined the growing
list of Japanese auto importers that
have raiaed prices in the United
States due to a drop in the value of the
dollar against the yen.
Nissan, which distributes Datsun
cars and trucks, said it will raise
prices an average $86, or 2 percent a
vehicle, ranging from $30 on the base
8210 Hooey Bee to $190 on the 810 sedan
and station wagon.
NISSAN SAID THE price increues
take effect immediately QJl new fac·
tory shipments but do not apply to
vehicles already in d•ler 1tock.
Last week, Chrysler Corp. raised
prices on its Japanese imported
Plymouth Arrow and some Dodae
Colt models by an average t&S. or 1.9
percent. ·
(7J4) 772·6230
Ask for Bob lt\aycs or Barbara Frenkel
50!5 No. Euclid Ave.
Anaheim, CA 92803
(714) 837-3744
Ask for Sandy R.Pss
Suite 202
Taj Mahal Professional Bldg.
Laguna Hills, CA 92653
The big oil companies bad mixed
performances last year. Gulf OU dis-
placed IBM in the No. 7 slot with sales ot $16.45 billion, and Shell Oil Com-
Women's Feats Eyed
Maz.da Motors of America boolted
prices an average 2.5 percent, r.,.
ing from $50 on the flve-speod rotary.
engined truck to $150 on the RX4
wagon.
TOYOTA MOTOll Sales U.S.A.
raised its prices an a\tcrage $95, or 2.3
percent, two weeb ago.
Mortgag.brokers Offered to Cdhlom1a residents only. pany took over from U.S. Steel as No. Guinness plans a book or women·s
13 with sales of $9.23 billion. records to be published by Sterling
But Mobil Corp. settled for the same Publishing Comp~y of New York. i I No. 5 slot despite its acquisition of In addition to records publUhed in '· 1 am interested in trust deed investments. Montgomery Ward and Company. It the Guinness Book of World Records,
'1' Please .send me more informdtion. I matched Exxon's modest 8 percent the new book will include records set
I I gain in sales, Fortune uid. by women in the following categories:
·I I Sports and games, business, stunts
-------------.-.--------
medicine, art, music and entertain-
ment. travel and adventure, educa-
tion and law. religion. writing and
publishing, marriage and divorce,
motherhood, politics and the human body. 6
The book will be issued in early 1978
in hard covers, to be followed later in
paperback form.
Toyota and Datsun arc the top two
selling imporu in the country, outsell-
ing even American Motors Corp. The
Arrow and Colt, built by Mitsubishi
Motors Corp. and distributed by
Chrysler, are amona lbe top ten.·
American Honda Motor Company,
currently No. 3 in sales, la expected to
raise its prices about 2 percent this I Ndmt' I MORE THAN • perc~nt of the 500 and feats, adornments, science and
·~ ,~~~--~~~~~~~------...-----.......................................................................... .. ·~M I
month.
1 I I Adtlrt'u I
I I 'I City ~131~ Zip DP 53 I
L----------------------~
For ClauUied Ad ACTION Call a DaUy Pilot AD-VJSOR
~11142-5678. Put a few word• to work for you .
• •
. . . . .. ... .. .....
REAL ESTATE SALES MANAGER
We are loolong for top management personnel with two
years or more experlenc1t In residential real estate to
manage established office in Huntington Beach.
Excellent Compensation Call Howard Rockofl. Roberts
Realty. (213) 378-8527. collect
' I
Over The Counter
MASO UstincJs
MUTU FUNDS
t
llp• and DotmU
DOWNS LAllf Cho ) -.,., , .... -....
2 -... 4\Co -.... '"' -.... , .. _, ,.,., -... , .... -"" 2'h -14 2 .....,. ..
2-Vi -l4o , -141 , -141 1n. _, .---~ -.... IOYI -_.,
w. -" M -141
tOl6 --M -.... 11141 -... ,_ -" w. -~ m = ....
Pel, Off 14.3 Off 12.S Off 11.t Off 10.S
Off '·' Off u ~ ... • •• '·' 8:: tt Off 7.1 Off .. 1.1
;
Off ~1 u .. ,
I s
6.S u u ... ,
t.f '·'
•
NYSE COMPOSITE TRNNSACTIONS
llN " OAILYPK.DT V · • ....._Needed
Conflict Brews:· -
: I
Over Pensions~i . . ..
ay ·.ioilN CVNN'IPF : , ,., ....... ~, .
A conflict that involve1 tho fUt.ure of employo ponQ•(I
plans. women 'a riabta and the actuarial bbl• lJ ta C
shape, and tt•a golne to uto a Solomon to resolve tt. Strip~ of numerous emotlonal lt1ues ~bat surround t.,
the contllct ullea out of these fac:ta: Penalon plana are ofttn
baaed on the longevity of men. More women ar. onteriDf
the labor force. Women live longer than men. . •
THAT PRESENTS THE QVEBTION: Since women are
likely to receive moro pen.aion ~oelil!1 abouJd their co-..
tribution..or their company'• cootribuuoo, bo ralJedt <>I'
should a unisex rate be iMtituted? .
tJse of the latter plan, in which contributlon.a to pensloa
plans would be equal for men and women, mllht seem to bt
the answer, but it creates a problem: Costa would go up ...
benefits might have to be reduced.
Actuarially spealdng, there Ls no dlfficulty: Sine~
women live longer tbey s~d pay higher annuity or
pe1U1lon rates, But actuaries don't always call thuhotl. ~
While ln some arguments the women bave the las"{ word, on this issue they might not. Life
insurance companie.s, which participate 1 in lo me pension plans, ask reciprocity:
"SHOULDN'T WOMEN
therefore lose their existing h>wer
rates for life insurance, a rate that is
based on those very same actuarial
tables, a rate that is lower than that for
men because of their greater lifespan?"
The differing longevity of men and women is likely to create many changes WNNIPP
in life and work styles over coming centuries, but the W\le
is here and oow in regard to pensions. Financing problem5
could be brewing. .
"The number of females, relative to males, Increases
noUceably from one decennial census to the next," say•
Barnet Berin of William M. Mercer, a divialon of March'&
McLennan Inc., and the nation's largest employe benefit.8
concern.
IN111E 19IOCENSUS, THE ratio of males tofemaleset
ages 65 and over was 83 males for every 100 females. Just 1()
years later, it was 72 males for every 100 females. The dif.
ference is growing greater by the year.
While this would have sociological significance in a~y
event, it is especially important when assoclated with thp
other phenomenon, the Increase in the number of women1'a
the regular work force. -;
"Managers should be putting more money away rtcttt.
now,'' aays Berin. Otherwise, he contends, they mlabt finil
their pension plans in trouble sometime in the future. I
I IN IDS VIEW A UNISEX RATE doesn't supply the
answer to the pension payment iss11e. part1,v becau.se lt will
serve to raise the rates for all. More correct, he believes,
would be to recognize the differences. I
"If demonstrable and si~nificant differences iJI
statistics exist, one should recogruze It," he says. 1
Would this constitute discrimination against womeni>
Berln avoids the tentacles of that issue. But observes that
nobody seems to think it discriminatory that women now O ·
joy life insurance rates lower than for men.
MOST COMPANY PENSION PLANS today are noncqn-
tributory, meaning the employer assumes the bflt.
Therefore, the issue for employes might seem to be one of
principle only. But that lsn 't so.
A switch to a un(sex rate, or a rate that would treat men
and women equally, most likely would mean a decline in an·
Uclpated benefits for all. Better benefits for men might be
considered discriminatory toward women.
No amount of maneuvering or arguing is goin1 to dia-
guise the inevitable: Pension plans are destined to be more
costly, or in someways less beneficial.
And the longevity of women la the reason.
#t!l:k..~$/;,,nie~~~-. -~;J.
Rally Second Day
NEW YORK <AP> -The stock market followed up on
Monday's late rally wltb a broad advance today.
Gainers led losers by more than a 2·1 margin among
New York Stock Exchange·lltted laaues.
The Dow Jones average of 30 induatrlala was up 3. 7' at
934.19, after a2.97·polntrise Monday.
Analysts said some buying had been encoura1ed by the
steady performance of the market recenUy in the face of
signs that the Federal Reserve had begun to tighten credit a
bit. . .. . ·---· -· -
Dote.lone• A .,•r•f14!•
NH• Vor1<1API Piner C>ow.J°"" •"«ettt STOCCI
30 Ind j1t .:.~ m~ f~ + ?.3 10 T•11 t .11 HUO .61 227.10+ 1.1• IS Utl I .'4 110.si 1 .~ 110.tl+ 0.Sl
•s "'" a11.n • u1 310.SJ a•Ut• u•
Stacia In Tu
Spotlfglat
lndV"S •• ,.,,. •••••••••••••••••• l,tS1AOI
11..i ........................ m.aoo oue to rate traMmfssfon Ull" ........................ "J,fllO "s111 .......................... uoi..., today's lfstlng wlll not
--------. --appear In the Delly PUot. Anterican Leader•
I '
•
• " DAil. Y PILOT .,.._. -• _
· ·$64,00t!J @aeS-iion: SIWul:d Jf:e Have Children?
WASHINGTON CAP) -Jljjj. l>etwefll SlG,500 and t::?0.000 after MlddJe-fncome famlllea, be typical mlddle-tncome ;amlly . likely Will pay much mOl'e to "lott" ear.nlni1 can add an
l"I • dtlld, including educlttan CH Lo ma:tntiAin what (Jje eoy-added, ofien-1pend ao.s pereentot $53,805to1ilJe child to a1• 18. educate him in the futw-e. TM avera&• of $100,000 to the out-of· at • state-tNpport.ed aniventty, ernment defines u a moderatt their annual nconae on the fln:t· Or that amount, 32.3 percent Oakland Financial Group or pocketexpenses.
today cost.a a typical middle-standard of llvln&. A low-income born cblld and 14.7 percent on the would co for housln&. 24 3 per· Charlotteavllle, Va., recently
income fll.lnlly $64,000, a study family~ between ~o.~ and secood cblld. cent ror foOd, 16.1 percent for estimated the cost ot four years AS POil TJf lntan1lbl-
dJJclose.. '13,000 alter tuea. • The tint child ls more ex·& &rtaAport.a~ t.S perceo\ f{)£ at a .We university in the 1!lOOa
A low-income famlly can ralle A mtddle or low Income fa.nilJ.'r pensive beCauae parents D\BY clOthlni, s.a percent for medical would be '47,333.
a chUd a blt cheaper -only was defJned H containing a buy a Jll"iu house~ 'J'fieY. aleo expenaes, 1.5 i,;ercent for educa· Espenshade'• avera1e· flgurea
14,,000 oo the average, uid husband, wUe and up to five ~u~ nunery ~ulpment, toys, tlon. and u pe,rcenlfor all other do notincJudethe.$)0CUo lhefaml•
Tbomu J . Espenshade. H · cbJldren. f\U1dture IDd ·ctOtbes that are expeoaes. ly ll the mother has to give up
aociate professor of economics at· used by sue~ children. Added to that ii the $2,200 it work to 1tay with the child. He
Florida State University. THE OOST OF raiaine a chUd cott In m~ for the d.~livery of a. estimated a chJld ln a middle.
could ~ even more 1f the child i1 ESPENSRADE"S FINDINGS, child and tho •u1 the Offlce of income family coata an extra 'BOTR nGU&E HA VE men
•barply ln tho put few years.
Tbe middle.income etUmate 11
up 60 percent from the 1969
a.-era&e while the low·lncome
fil ure is uP 63 percf.'nt.
the first of the family . releued Monday, are contained EducaUon aay1 lt coat In lt75 to $42,841 ln "lo;t" earninis tr tfle
E1penahade 111id the eldest chlld in a report for th• Popwatlon tend a chUd to a state univtrslty mother 1ive1 up a halt-time Job
beneflt1 or r•i•ina a child..,
· Eepenlhud.c aatd bla study of
urban, mlddJe.claaa married
wh1t 1n Hawaii showed they
lltted tho adva.ntaaet of havinc .
cblldren In three catecorles:
bapplntta. love and compan·
lonahlp; personal Clevelopment
ol the parents; and child·rearing
satllfaction.
in a family tenda oo cost roughly Reference Bureau, Jne .. ot for fouryeara. to stay at home. The comparable
twice as much as the second Washington, D.C. loss for a low-income family is
As for disadvantages, 71 per-
cent cited restricllon11 on other
acUvlUes, S9 percent cited emo-
tional coats and 46 percent cited
financial costs.
child'. Tbe second and third chlld Using data from the Depart· EDUCATION COSTS, OF $32,IW,hesaid. .
in a lh.ree·child family are about ment or Agriculture aod 1m coune, are continuing to soar It the mother gives up a full·
A mlddle-lncome ftmlly needs equally expensive, he said. pricu, be found ll would cost a and thoee bavtnc a child ""'!" time JOb, the child's cost ln
'f.HE FAMILY CIRCUS.
' ByBilKeane ...................... ~ .. llillllllll!l .............. !111111 .. ~ ...................................... ..
Wh~• Tlaat Chip Rftate,.
DEAR PAT: What happened lo t he "efl.ip re--
bale" refund? I fi led my claim by•the deadline QUl
never heard another word, nor have 1 received any
refund
T.K., Costa Mesa
Due to court processes, the potato chip rebate
11tlll has not been distributed, according to Martln
Shapero, attorney for the plalntUf in the price (lxlng
case. Distribution, originally planned tor late spr-
ing 1976, will be delayed uatil tbe coa.rt decides the
method for determining refund amount.. This may
take up to 90 days. The $Z.27 mllUqn in rebate funds
paid by de(endants wW draw in&erett utU dlatribu-
tlon ls done.
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ighway
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DEAR PAT: I am thinking about studying to
become a barber. Are there any guidelines to follow
in choosing a barber college? Make Fidelity Federal your ONE-STOP SAVINGS CENTER. J .J ., Costa Mesa _
Barber college enrollment requlremeata and a N h J fl ~ f ... 1.. fr t eJ +j ,I .and _ ... L-~~~:r,:pproved, Oc~!:'!t!~es caa be o~ta11!_~.. ~ .. ~ • . ~~-~e e Se ca~ you ~ i M&.e ee. ~!4 a,~~~-~~~--.;:.::::=::.' . .::. 'Yf}~·,. ~~~-::.--~~ ;-111: • ----•"' .~~ nee-serVices avoda1'1e you*"ai~~~'!U@~~~al saver. .. ~·-
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ll\llbt aak ror names of 1radaatea ud contact th4!m
regarding the quaJUy or ta~c:tioa.
. SHeer S.•ree S,,•t ..... te4
DEAR PAT: Somehow or other several pieces
of my sterling silver were Jell behind during our
family's cross-country move to California. l\ty
salver pattern 111 22 years old. and I've almost ghen
up trying to Clnd replacement.a. Can you help'
A.J , Newport llcJch
Beverly An&tques. 882'7 Beverly Blvd.. Loa
An1eles, CA IOOC8, ,robably cu provide rf'plact-·
ment pieces. Tbb 1 .. re came. a lar1e aelectlom of
current, active and Inactive aterllDi 1Uver patwma
at dlKOant prices. You caa Of'der by maU or pboae
(213) %71·8$11. The Rr• req..U maUf'd ordtn iD·
elude a tracing of tb 1Uver ud blade descrtptlon
ror knlves. laclade &he •ntfaetver, patum name
aad year of purchase.
Bot Dogl /lfle.-..e•eeS,..,a
DEAR PAT: We recently built a new house and
installed. a large microwave oven. The children ·
thank nothin1 of tosaln6f one hot do1 at a tJme In the
oven for rut cooking. Is this a waste of ener1ty?
C.T .• Nt~Port Beach
Mar are& Debbie. coftlJlmft' representative
wJtb Soutbern Callforala Edlaoa'• aau service
departmen&, report• tbat •lcrowave bot do' cook·
la1 11 more economical lbasa boUlq. did a>otnt ·
out that you could aave eaeru by talkln1 yoar
chlldra lDLo "poup" cooklni of •ack feod rather
&baa oee·at·•·tfme use. Senral r eOol&td at oae
thne 11 tbe moat efncleat way to aae your
microwave. Hobble added that U1nlaatbl1 prl'·
heatlDJ for convenUoaal oven coolcla1 alto saves
enern.
Ben'• Fair 1t'•• te at•pet•
DEAR PAT: Each year when I attend the
Oran1e County Fair, I alwa)'I wish I had entered someofmyn~lework and baked &oods. It may be
too arty, but I'd Uko totindouthow I can arranee to enter.
C.G., Corona del Mar Pholte the Oruie Couty Falrpound's ~try
office •* 75l·SUT, and request yoar nam &o. be pu'
oa the 1m nulllnc Ust. A "premhun bOOlt" that ln-
chldttl ill .-Uy claa11rtcadOG1 trill be Hat to yoa.
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..
,•
Dy DENNlS llc:LELLAN
OI .. o.11, Pli.t k11N
Nance Jto walked over to the airoup of some two doieo softball
players. The yoµni women, in tee shirts and shona, bad just com-
pleted qveral laps around the Centennial Park field In Santa Ana.
'10K, let's do medium aprinta," Mlaa Jto told the women, who
qulckly lined up and began sprinting across the fleld.
The warm·u.P exercises were a prelude to a series of battia.. 'base running and 1trate1y session•.
By tfle end or the afternoon MlJs Ito, recently named
mana"er or the Santa Ana Llonett.es. would have a better idea or
who would make the team, which is a member of the year-old
Women's Professional Softball Association.
There would be a total or rive three·hour practices berore the
group would be whittled down to a J.S.member 'rOSter for the 1971
season.
Deciding who to cut is especially difficult becawie all are too
softball players, says Miss Ito who last year was assistant coach-
player for a San Diego team.
"There are a lot or good kids out," she commented, describ-
ing her job as manager as a "big challenge. I'm really excited
about it."
' I WIULE HER FIRST year as a manager will no doubt be
challenging, she definitely has the experience behind her. As one
Lionettes draftee said, "No one knows more about sortball than
Nance."
That's no idle remark. Lionettes owner Ed Goldstein is equal-
ly impressed. "The name Nance Ito is legend in women's
softball.·· .
As catcher for the former Orange Llonettes for 14 years, the
Westminster resident was on the National All Star team 13 times.
In addition to a string of other honors, she c.epresented the United
States in the World Championships in Osaka, Japan, in 1970.
"I have been rortunate enough to accomplish a lot and go a lot
of places," sa)>s the soft-spoken athletic Miss Ito, who, when not
playing ball, is a computer specialist.
As someone who is "actually off the farm," she grew up in a
family offive sisters and three brothers-all sports enthusiasts.
Her softball career began in Denver when she was 12 and she
joined an all.Japanese girl recreation team. ·
"I GU~ ONCE you get in the environment, and really love
the sport, it spurs you op ."
Thal feeling, no doubt, 1s shared by the young women who
tried out for the team Most are between 19 and 22. They are stu·
dents, housewives, or employed al vanous Jobs.
One player, already drafted, is pitcher Donna Lopiano, who
is Women's Athletic director at the University of Texas, Austin.
<She'll commute to the games, most of which are on the
weekend ).
..
• O•lly ,.lie. l'lloloby .. .trlcllO'DMMll f
Lionettes manager Nance Ito, center, shares some of her /
knowledge of softball, a game she has played since she was 12.
The seuon, which begins May 20 when tbe Llonetta play San
Jose an"lheSanta Ana Bowl, runs lhrou~b Aug.13, followed by play-oUs. (There currently are six teams 10 the LeaJue: Santa Ana,
Bakermeld, San Jose, Buffalo, St. Louis and ConnecUcut. >
Mias Ito says 1he1l be in uniform, "but we have enough
potential and eupet players" that she probably won't be playini
much.
She notes that ir there is enough ran intel'est in the pro league
her JOb may turn into a full-time position. .
Asked if she could imagine her life without softball in it, she
grinned: "I have a su~r job right now. I think I will try to stay in-
volved ... She turned to the women jogging around the field, saying she
fell the team could at least fmi.lh in the top three. "With IO much
talent. .. everybody lookareally super." BEA ANDERSON, Editor
T~.May3,1977 • C1
Keeping Track in · Stride
By MARCIA FORSBERG CM,,_ 0•11' ""°'SU.II UCLA track and field fans,
take heart. a
While the men's team w~
ing soundly defeated by USC at
Drake Stadium on Saturday, an
equally dramatic but different
kind or story was unfolding on the
track al UC Irvine •
Stadium, the Bruin women's TRACK FOR YOUNG women
team is "tenacious and com-al the high school level is "going
petitlve," said Mrs. Connolly. to improve and take off.
Sitting in the sunshine at a However, we won't be able to
preu conference at Parle. handle all the fantastic talent
Newport Apartments, the coach. coming from the high schools
and six team members nibbled because oflack or runds."
cheese and fresh grapes the day In the past, European coun-
beforethe meet at UCl. tries have dominated in track
• and field. "l honestly feel thalif I
"THE NATIONALS," she said, had the funds at UCLA . we could
Mrs. Connolly, in her second '
,year as coach al UCLA, was the
American record holder in the '
pentathlon for 10 years. She com., !.
peted in the Rome, Tokyo and-
Mex1c0City Olympics.
HER DEVOTION and love for
the sport eru.lly laps over lo the
women on the team. Most got
their start m JUnior high or high
school. There. before a respectable
cro~d of 300, t_he UCLA, wo~n~ _ , •,..V.j,.'l~~ • ... r,,.~~·~., daylights out of the other c'om-
p e li to rs at the Southern
California InterCollegiate Chall)·
pionship.
"will be important because peo-produce a team that would beat
• ~.~~ "-j.A~~th ,tJ.. ..11'..U. r.,...-,,•!tlt..h.4l ~llld ttie~~fiegei. tn!i m-e-tom~tliig~; ... '•1fh· d>nvtafoT .... '
The geographi~al identification, She added that while female as weJl u the reco&nition of collegiate runners are good, they
personality favorites, lend a don't reach their peak until th'eir
spirited appeal to the upcoming late 20s.
.JJ;f-~~ ~~~~~:.~~ ·"~~
who ran the 100 meters~~
treat, and by placing firth in lhe
finals was the top-placing
American: Kathy Weston, an
18-year·old freshman who ran
the 800 meters an Montreal; and
Karin Smith, who's best thrQw in ,
the javelin ls 203' 10".
O~Hy ,, __ •IW LH .. aylM
UCLA women's track coach Pat
Connolly (center) gives tips
to Olympians Kathy Weston
(left) and Evelyn Ashford.
COACHED BY Pat Connolly,
the strong UCLA women's team
ran away with eight first place
finishes for a definite moral vtc-
tor y over 11 other scoring
schools.
In contention for the National
Tnck and Field Championships
to be held Thursday through
Saturday, May 19·21, at Drake
meet.
She added that "the athletes
are really good now. Every one
or these girls will have a com-
petitor there, so every event wUl
be exciting."
Coach Connolly noted that
women, when running or jump·
Ing, are "beautiful art objects.
Track exemplifies thls more than
any othu sport."
A Recipe for Success
By JUDITH OLSON
Of Ille 0 .. 1, ,, ... Stetf
"Ir only people knew what an
adventure this Is llvlni in ~
America. This Is a trip."
When Amelia Seton says living
ln America 11 a trip, you believe
her. And you start thinking about
all the t.blnp you've taken for 1ranted.
Democracy ii only one ol the
topics Amelia Seton, the io pira-tl on behind two local
restaurant.. get.a excited about.
· Good fOOd, clothJng, the SOuth
Seas, 11lronauta, her family,•
ho~ to cook abalones, civic duty
and her lather -all brins a tor-
rent ot words from the Italian
beauty.
She Js out.spoken and nam-
boyant, bul that 11 part ot her
charm.
Mn. Seton opened her flnt
restaurant on Bii.boa I1land u
yean aio. taltlnl over what had
beeq a •mall 1n4 dirty eatabliah· merit.
She aald there were doubt.en
when abe fU'St started, buhbeaet
out to prove them wrona.
"People have taken me for a
nub olj atJI~" abe aald wtu. a
toH ol heed. "But I'm h re co
st_,, tn now. I m 10 aure of
myaelf UsJt~t'• 4Utcoat1n1."
Her aucceu came, •h• aald,
from ~nt wUhln my own
raqt. Tb.1111 what I f It my call
wu. J kritW pror alonalty."
Haa PATB •·l.N•LAW
bttteved ~ s.t.oa could bl 1uc.;
HHNI Md Olfettd to back her
(
financially. "People will love
your luagna," he told her.
People have not only JrOwn to
Jove her lasagna, seafood and
other 1ourmet di.shes, but Mrs.
Seton has woo the respect and al-
f ectioa of thousand• of people from various parts ot the world.
Her preparation for this role
beian lnt,.a Uny village in
Sou them Italy, 0where she was born in the Vi a Arbace to a
famlly of 11 children plus three
adopted SOl1S and dau1hters.
Her father w11 a purser for the
Cunard lines and her mother
dled early in her life. The 19208
and '30s were &Jorious years for
her father, she recalled.
"He was commissioned to buy
feathera for th• queen (of •
Encland) and perlabable food
and troplcal fruit tor the top
hotel.a ln E\Jrope aod beat luxury
•hlp1."
Hor father alto wu an ac·
compllaMd cook and would hQet
meeUnu of the areateat chef• of
the w0rldtn the spr:tftl.
'1'JIEY lNSPJBED each one
of us tn the food," Mn. 9eton
aald. Sht recalled· hld1n1 under tbe dlnlU room table to liltea co
the talk Ol the areat men.
She baa such fond mel!\ort11 ot
h r hom• that 1be had It.I hua• fireplace copied for on of bet
re1taurant1. Her n\lrrors and
palnµn,1 are hunf on th!.~ '° titlni the.re la like p~. vtatt to Mrs. 8Molt'1 llome.
World War Jt bml1ht ba.oc to
IWf but hej> father mana1ed to
get rood for bis family and
frlenda and epened hll home to
American and British soldiers.
Mrs. Seton remembers 1ett1ng
up la the nlpt and seeing rows of
tired men 1leepln1 ln the vUla.
They would depart u aUently as
they had come, refreshed and re-
ady a1ain for baWe. "I grew up
so fast," she aald with a sigh.
It was during the war that she
ealnecl from her father • 1reat appreclatlon for the nation of
America. "If anyone ever loved
thll OOWllr)' it was my father," •h• asaerted.
WOU.O WAR n chanced her
life in another way too. Her
buaband, Gret Seton, wu one of
~ AIMl'ican IOldlen wbo came to the villa. They knew each
otbeT MVfD mo.tbs before they
ml.rrted and Mn. SetoG WU Oil
her way to becomln1 an
American cltiien. • Before her marrlate, Mrs.·
Seton alao devtloj>ed her artlltic
talent at 1 couture bo~e tn
!tome, whero 1be deslped,
made and modeled all her own
cloUt•. They were not just ordlnary
tu1t• and dreasu but clothes •bltb reflected tier extravqut
taste. "I have my own •tYltt0
Mra. Setoo aaaerted. "1 love
f>'PIJ aDd Hawaiian clothes."
. Sh• atill detlpa and aewa Pd
while connlaclq from a Neent nib., .a.. wb.ti>ped up an outfit
for. her dau1bter, Het'1, lust \0 •
• ti lbe could aUU do It. • It wu like a Saint Laurent IYPIY dtt • "the aid pmudl•.
When the Setonl returned to
the U.S. t.hey lived in the Loe'
Angeles area in a place she
called "pill hill" because there
were a lot of doctors.
"THE WOMEN NEED ttie
support and facilities to continue
their training after they're out of
f chool, ao they can develop their
ull potenUal. Then they could
easily defeat foreign runners."
She believes that the key to
more interest in women's track
ls "for the media to get behind
women's athletics."
•
Mrs. Co nn olly and her'
husband, Hal , who was an Olym·
pic champion in 1956 in the ham-
mer throw and who held the
world record in that event for
nine years, live In Venice with
their childrell':'
L
I• ...
..
t C2 !!.\!LY PILOT•
'Math Proble~-:
I • ,
DE.Alt.ANN: I am•. my wtte u 13. We are both healt.by. We
.,have three lddl qld n!De, = '-'14 lii...111 wtte Nd her
tied t0inaanr. .. wm hne ac> more ehlJdNn.
She eomldera •ex a hlrdlhip~ •ot.l aa do wiO!ldns. BQilaiir
From Au,. 1. 1175. to ~ 31, u Oldri= lilpt» •:a '9U1e me,•• made love• Um•Clllly,. fit Oftt batl-04 ~
an IVff•I• of 5.295 tlmea a U a.1et11er. (Yoa i.e&rd ma~)
month. I c:on1lder tht1 not • Y .. 're la ant, Jtab; ud ua. oill)'
enouh. She th1nb lt II too much. dllfel"ellee belwea a rut aad a
Am 1 too demandtp1? 11 she cravearef,beldtmeuloau.
normal? Pltaae belpf -
FAITHJ'VL 11USBAND ••• SO DEAR ANN: I 'm a aenlor J' AR cltb:en. For the put 10 years r DEAa l'AITHPVL: If yo. have taken respOD.eibWt.¥ for~
were u Cood at romuce a yo. hou.ebold duties and th• c...-. or are at m.tb, yoa'd ll••• • ,,... two elderly parents. Botb have
ble•.1.et It 1alftce &o say, for a been very doll\loeerln1. Dad
Sagittarius:
Take Step
WEDNESDAY, MAY~
By SYDNEY OMA.BR
. ~RIES C~rc1r ~1-Aprll 19): Highlight
spmtual qualities, need .and ability to publish,
advertise, write and communicate. Education,
travel are on agend"-You bring you Into focus. You get a good look at)ou.
TAURUS (April 20-May 2Q): Involvement,
intensified relationship, contacts with young
persons are featured. Organize, bring priorilies
up front.
. ~EMINI (May 21-June 2Q): Lie low, pl ay
waiting game. Judgment, intuition could be
slightly off base. Know it and avoid direct con·
frontatlon Emphasis on cooperative effort.
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Make new start
-be independent, original, stick to beliefs, prin·
c·1ples. Accent work procedures, health, special
services. fulfilling resolution concerning diet.
nutrition .
LEO: (July 23-A ug. 22): Good moon aspect
now coincides with creativity, lo\•e, change.
Follow through on hunch. Intuitive intellect is
honed to razor sharpness.
VIRGO <Aug. 23·Sept. 22): Emphasis on
practicality, property, security, knowing why
you're here and what to do about il Diversify.
..
Pl ted away In Novem~ Of
ltT4. Mother, * J>erlOO ho mly t.hl.aib ol b'erseU. 11 ao tnvllld
wbo walkl with a walker. asa a
bedpan at II.I~ ud muat bav.
wbaUwtt • tlWsb of at onee. Slie tallil on th •ame aubject
for bOWI ud drives me out ot ftlY mlbd. I'm a nervoua wreck. find
it hard to bfta&be at tlm• and
U'f tor no reason at all.
I'm Ured of llvtnc and I )lave no
frl~bd.s. l( l dare eo to • Senior
Club tor a rew houn, when l 1et
home I am lectured tor hC>ura. l
have a brctber who d~n•t care
to abare anythint. He says. "I
have my own family problems.
Pleaae don't teU me your
Lt"oubles."
Make inquiries. Be fl exible. Experiment.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 22): Be aware of de·
tails. fine points. n·d tape, officialdoni. ·Short
trip. invol\'in~ close neighbor or relative. is like·
ly to bt' rcoturcct
SCORPIO !Oct 23-Nov. 21): Emphasis on
"hat you poy. rcceivl', basic values, defining of
lt'rms. What wus lost can be located, recovered.
Member of opposite sex plays prominent role.
Recreating carefree days are (from
left) Mrs. Joseph Beek, John Applegate,
Mrs. Thomas Doan and Lew Akerman.
NiQht Zoned for . Fun SAGITfARJUS <Nov. 22-Dcc. 211: You·r.:
capable now of laking steps leading lo greater
security. Bargains associated with home, com·
forts are available. You are reunited with loved Those carefree days of "Bal
one. Week" will be recreated for the ATSC provides an alternative
to the existing juvenile Justice
syst em for the police depart·
menu and youthful offenders and
their families.
CAPRICORN <Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Dream can Assessment and Treatment
be prophetic. You find answers, are capable of Services Cent e r's benefit.
obtJining privileged informaUon. The nu)tlber Nostalgia Ni~hl at the Balboa
"7" figures 10 lmport1tnt wa}'3. Fun Zone.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2Q·Feb. 18). Emphasis on The bill oC fdre. which mclud.es grlatmis a juvenilet
0
diversion pro-.. d dedicated "arrest the " .. at you want as cont rrusted to actual need. r1 es, games D1x1<'land music. problem -not the h.ld .. ,, II ave. basic material al hand. Outline qualifica· no-host bars and a Mexican dm • c 1 •
lions ner. 1s restricted to adults , Tickets. at $15 each, may be
PISCES cFcb 19 March 2Q): Conflict mav Fe~tivities "'JI be,em al 6 p.m purchased at the center, 1640
•
DEAR ANN' LANDERS: I
kDOW )'OU dOn't write a eooklnf column bUt people Mtm to • .., en sorts ol thinp on you, so here'• mypetgripe.
alowl.J lll &liil Mqe. • •
, I Jot &Im ~&e I°" lro• ay , ... ,trteiid DOrNy Codon ....
wrltea • Dwl1 eel ma for &lie
Cblt.•IO ·'l'hnu. · I have a tov.el.Y ll~bor who
brine• over huae boxes of
tomatoes that aren't ripe yet. l
hate to be uniraclou, b\lt what
can l do wlth Uiem? Thanka,
friend. -0\'ERLOADl!lD
DSAJl O.: Plaee Uae umtpe
toJQ ... la • pl ... k .,., wra. •
HfY rtpe apple. Paatla a few
bolts la &be b•C· A temperatue
of aboat 71 4eoeet 11 t>e.& ftr rt~ -or &M1'U rlpea more
Wha\'1 the story on pot. LSD, coc~lne, uppera an<l ®wnera,
1peed1 Can you handle lt if
you 're careful? Send for Ann
Landtta's new boo)cJetL"Stralght
Dope on Druga." r·or each
booklet ordered, aend a dollar
bW, plua a lon« 1elf·addrested,
stamped •nvefope (2' tents poata•~> to Ann Landen, P.O.
Box ll985, Cbicrago, JU. 80811.
Sarcasm Runs Out f
'Torch' Dropp-ed '
By EllMABOllBECK "That's pretty much
Ir there is anyone more what I'd expect from a
sanctimonious than a woman who orsanJze<,J a
person who jogs I don't car pool to the garbage
know who he is. cans."
They all act llk·e Thatdldit.
they've just run from The next morning, I
Garden City, L.I., to In· decided to join him. Let
nsbruck with a torch in me tell you I have never
their hand. • had more respect for rny
My husband hu been husband than I dld from
jogging for live years the moment I stepped ln·
now and I'm 1lck of it. to the streets.
Every morning, he com· A '71 Mustang with a
es into the kitchen after bumper sUcker reading
his run, a towel around ·'I FQUND G 0 D •'
the neck or his warm-up brushed by my body,
suit and grins, "Look at making an lnstant con·
these muscles. And I'm vert out of me.
not even breathing From out or nowhere.
heavily.·· a pack of dogs nipped at
"Don't give me that," my heels, forcing me to
I said. "You almost set a record for broad
sucked up the morning jump I didn't know ex·
paper in your nostrils." isled.
"You should try it, you There were crowds of
know," he said. "It firm a people everywhere -
up your muscles, gets milkmen, paperboys,
you going in the morn· joggers, mugger s, in ·
ings, and besides, it somniacs -all milling
gives you discipline:-,.._
"So does a war, but I
don't want to run in
one."
"I ran two miles this
morning. I low long did it
take me'!"
''An hour and a half.•·
"You're kiddi.na."
·'Let me put it this
way. Ir you were running
after a beautiful girl
from a centerfold, by the
time you caught her you
wouldn't remember why
you were chasing her."
Lose Water 8kJat with
OORINIL-Ha1ln's Wrt
isl· AT WIT'S
· END ... ~
around the streets. J ex·
peeled any moment to
see Ben Grauer with a
microphone Statldlne un-
der a blg, ailver ball.
Finally, 1 yelled to my
. husband, "I have to stop
a minute."
''Are you tired?" he
asked.
I force d a laugh.
"Tired! I just have to.tie
my shoestring. 1 keep
tripping over it."
"That's your tongue,"
he said.
"Of my shoe?"
"Of your mouth,'' he
said.
There's noUtlnc wrong
with jogging, I guess,
that a car po_ol couldn't
fix.
~\ ~~~~~Wj!~n ... <.Jlf~~ML:\llJ4 "'a hit . M n~ ..... _ '!;'!;..,i.ay M_tt. 12....,.~ lllf~~~~~:1l1 ~->->-..
• ~ ~~..., fk ... ,4-.,..·~~ '\ .. ' i:.1..-.c. ,·-<.~---... -.. r---,r should have been dismissed. Clarify goal. • / ·
Inquiries
Eviderit
NEW YORK (AP>
Publiclt> a b out
Rosalynn Ca rte r 's
operation for removol of
a benign tu111or probably
will lead to an 1ncrea.se
In requesll fol' breaJt H ·
•ml n a t 1 on s. the
American Cancer Sodt·
ty said.
"Judrtnc rrom the
put, then may be more
inqulriea about where
women tan have breut
examlnatlon.1," 1ald a
1poke1man at the
aoclelJ'• national head·
Weddings~
and Engagements
To avoid disappointment. prospective
brides are reminded to have lhe1r "cdd1ng
'\tori es "it h black and ~ hllc glO'l'I\
photo.crn1lh1> to the Daily Pilot Peoplt•
l,.•partment on~· \.\t•ek belort• lht• \\t'tldJn J!
l'1<'lure!> n•t't'l\t'CI aft.-r th.11 t1m1• "111
not ht.' U!>l'd
t-'or eneagement announcementa; 11 '"
1mper.1t1 ve that the story. a l!to accom
panied by a black and .Y..hite glotay p1C'
lure. bt subm 1lted t.1x wttk1 or mor<'
~fore the wedding dale, otherwl. e 1t "111
not be published.
To help fill requirements on ~h "ed·
dine and enaafem4Mt !!lories, form. are
avaJlabk! in aJ Dally Pilot orflces. Fur-
ther questions wlll be answered by People
Department staff members at 642-4321 quart.era here.
He Qfd thet'e wH a _,..--:--~""!'-------~-----
blg, but temporary, Sn.
crease in such ln•ulrles
following surgery ln J.97(
on former Firs t Lady
Betty Ford and 1\app)'
Rockefeller, wlfe of the
former' vlce preaident.
"Tber• waa,.., very
good aide tothtl'dpot\H
at that Ume tn that th~
were ln4tcallona that many more women were
•eelllnl OW' tree leaflet
Oil how to do breut self·
examlnatlona," he 11td. "~point we make.''
ht c:oaUnued, "l• that lt you detect a lump 10 to
YoW' doctor rtiht away because 8 out of 10 turn
out to be benJan."
Sucf\ wu tbe cue with Mra.ewr.
• •
..
Peering Around
ZONTA GIRLS for April have been named.
They are Janet Smith, Newport Harbor High
School; Cynthia Reynolds, Estancia; Amy Lynn
Vanagse, Corona del Mar, and Robin Alicia
Hubert, Costa Mesa.
Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. C. Warren
Hubert II, Mr. and Mrs. Michael Smith and the
Rev. and Mrs. David D. Reynolds, all of Costa
Mesa. and Mr. and Mrs. ~obert Vanaese,
Newport Beach.
JHRIFTY '''"' "'" !11 .... 1 "I llrt t \ lt1Wf ...
THE ANNUAL CRUSADE of the American
Cancer Society <ACS), Orange County unit, ls un·
det way and ACS neighbor-to-neighbor kits are
being distributed by volunteers under the direc·
t1on o{ city residential crusade chairmen. They
are trying to meet $161 ,000 oC an over-all 1oal of
$830,000.
( 8\'DNE\' UAftR18 )
KEEPS YOU ON YOUR
TOE& lnthe
A NEW SHIPMENT FROM ENGLAND WITH •••
~-<~ill~~
MOTHER'S DAY, 8UNQAY, MAY ldt
l\uSfitll 0~ if nteriors
.•. OFFERS, An express1on of Love with \bat one.of· a·klnd gift for your Special Ledy I
~"'1 ti BATTERSEA ENAMELS, 'Jltltd.crofttd m
London, Enoland. taah I* unfqUf fn de·
lign ~.a ti.Uc4'• cbmact1r.au iu
own. SOJ'nfthlng Moth1r .,l.U tr1Glltr•
through ih.t wan. tjmfUd HllCifon.
Also avalfable, authentic Toby mugs ·· Unusual soHC:t brass ·
Candlestf ck Holders • Lead. Glass
Paperweights • Ooorknockers • Tee Bells .
•
in Lorge & Half ·Sizes
SIZES
1•11ate24'h ,., ......... ............ .., ... ...,, ... .,, . ,,. ........... . ''" .. ,,,..., f.W0-4 .., ....... .,,. ....
,,... kltct. ..... ................
..... thlff• ••• ..............
fw•ulM• ...... ... ...,.
,,.... $12
---'
.. ,.
ftJJIUC NOTICE
J
•
nun ~ubll-d 0..""9t t.ff\t 0.llY Piiot, Apr It tt,i.,tftd'M.,i.10, 1'71
llli-71
Fro• AP Dllpe&ellle9
AC\ial ChJoqo Mayor Jlk ... el BOaMlo and .HeaUMJr JJ~caa apparently arc ena11ed to be mar-
ried, accotdln1 to a handwritten unowacement
from the brld•'• mother lb.at w11 aeat to th
Chlc.,o Sub·Tlntes.
Mlaa Morsan ia th• dauf}lter of Gr1••• J. Mori~ cbairmnn of t)nlted State. Qyp1um Co.
Bllandic, 54, had aald that be "wlll 1et anarrled
soma diu-, and I would Wet to marey Heather, b~
wb~n 1 don't Jc:oow." Aeked earlier 11 Mia Mor1an
had been 1hopptn1 for a weddiq drea, bo 11.ld:
"Check your IOUr'Cea." ..
· Anllm' llWu'1 on play "The Arcbbllbop'a
Celllna" ia a ~uddled and di.Ima! nuco about
fnedom of speech, 1a.y1 AJaoctat.ed Pren drama
crltioWllUa• Glote.r.
lo a wary move, the noted author labels the
piece wblcb b¥ Its world premlere at the Kennedy
MIU.alt
Center In WublDftOD ••a
dramatic meditation.• thereby
Implying departure from any
sort of trediUonal stagecraft.
Audiences, nevertbeleu.
at}U npect more from him than
the maze of melodramatic clap-
trap, amateurlab dlalo1ue
lapses and soap opera lechery
that a decent cut is forced to
contend wlth. Sincere purpo1e haa been badly served, Glover
commented • • S~er Biile Croeby celebrated a "very, very
low-key' 73rd olrtbda" according to h1a Brtlllh
buUer, Alu Flalaer.
Fisher aaid Crosby's aon Nallwllel treated bls
father to dinner at a Chinese restaurant near lheir
San Francllco Pentnsula home.
Birthday wishes came by telephone from
Croeby'• wife, Katllrya,
and dauehter. Mary ( J li'rancee, who are appear· PEOPLE ing together in a Dallas
product.io.!).Of:''1'be Lateat --------
Mrs. Adams."
Crosby ls recovering from a back mjury re·
celved March 3 when he Cell 20 reet from a st.a1e in
Pasadena, where he was tapin1 a beneflt
performance. • The Bellamy remily and its reUnue of faithful
servanta mixed wlth the American hQ! pollol as
"URtWrs ... DownsJ.air~" com· pleted it.a aaga on U.S. televblon
screens.
The cast of the popular
·British TV serial villled
television station WGBH for a
fund·raiaing telethon to benefit
public television as lhe Edwar·
dlan soap opera concluded its
run.
Among those taking part
MAHN were Jean Marsh, who original·
ed the series and played Rose, a maid, and Simon
Wllllaroa, who portrayed Capt. James Bellemy.
PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE
·-J
SHIMY&MIW
FOllJ t btdr,oom, 3 bath Townbom• 1n • new, 1ou1, plaaned eom-
m ualtJ. Luxurfpua
aDM!ftltltm wl* llrae tlubbOuM, pOOI, Jacuui and mucb, much more.
Full prtce f72MO. CALL ...,
CSELECT
T'PROPERTIES DAILY PILOT
r
CtWtMt• NOMI frOlt UASI
Popular Udo Isle 3 bdrm & den home.
Quiet toe. (Street to Strada). Lovely
patio, wet bar, formal dining. Lge.
master bdrm w /sundeck. $895 Mo. z111s...1 ....... ._..
Mnw-"°"-u-cana lll. '4Mt10
NSUa.. POINT 4 IDIM
Just lliltedt Just steps to the ocean from thl:s immaculate 4 Cor maybe 5)
bedrodm. 2 story with~ce porch,
famlb' room, dining rootn and the
Peninsula's most exotic 1arage. U
should C Jtl A Unique Home! Present-
ed at $189,500.
IJ,..,ivur: ti()Ml:s
REALTORS~ 8715.eooG
2443 East Coat Highwty, Corona del Mar
also in Mesa Verde, at 546·5990
GtMral 1002 IG••NI 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••••
BA YFROHT CONDO
OPIM DA&.Y l·S HI UDO PAU DR.
Live luxuriously on the BAY in this
brand new 2 bdrm. & den, with
gourmet kitchen & wet bar. Large
rooms. totaling 2550 sq. ft.; great
S4'curlty system, incl. the under·
ground dbl. garage. Lease w/option to
buy. $239,500
759-0811
Feul 11.-
Gteot Wutvut 1Uq.
·~\tlt~1h11q1
' .
'
HiliMthi'S. ••••••••••••••••••••••
....... ,.. .. ••••••••••••••••••••••
Apple Trn
1111 EStiti Co.
O...S:
START FllSH
................ ~J .............
l•llWi~lut,.~ CloM .. ec.-fir • ... ,a ,,,. .. s11,10o
EXPR'D SALESP!OPl.I
w ........... for ~ ="'" 7"' 4*111111.ao. ,.W.. C11 ._. .........
• I
GeMr.. IOOZGt•r.. . IOOJ •••••• J.e ..................................... .
BA YFRONT, pier & noat, lots $185,00Q
to $325,000, to build your own custom
home. Several m.:eas to choose from.
PR~TIGE waterfront homes with
pier & float from $385,000 up.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
l l I Bu y\o<h (Jr••• °'I fl b l'.J bl bl
1002 Gt•ral IOOZ ..............................................
120 Acres
OrmtgeComty
Near Silverado CanYon.
$1800. per acre. Own •
chllDk or Oran1e County
UDOISLI
IAYFROMT
Near new 4 bdrm. +
formal dlnlni rm. & up· 1taJn aallery. Frplc in
maat.er auit.e. Pier & 1Up ror S4 ft. boat. $$50,000
at a ffctlcU'U>llllY lo I•------.. price. Hurry, juat listed,
call~U51
-~.s-~ HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
--~~·~HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
~
Walk t:r J: I t:I!
lhrnl I :;l;ill!
•
ColoRlal Style
6 Bedrooms, 4h baths
with maa)' extra features plus a cute 2
bedroom, 2 bath cottaite
tn>e hoine. All on one lot.
Both for 1175,000.
loyMcCwcle
....... IJOMewport
Costa W...141.7729
~~THERCAil ~ ESTAT~~S_)
~
COATS & WALLACE
RFAL. ESTATE, INC .
~
Walkr.r 1; lee
lhrnl I !~tnt1i
m PALMER R·2 Cor.
Lot 80 X 120' -4 BR. • 3 BATH
MISAVBDI aer, 12148•, + rec 'tm /wet bar, cov'd
paUoe, ftont • rtar. Im· mac, '74,800. mi Iowa tll8.500 -m.s.u
.....
\\';1IJ..1:1 1; lei:
Hr.al ls!Rffl
~
Walkr.r t: I m~
Hr.1111 ~;f,ifr.
t
REALTY INC.
~
Walkm 1; lm!
H1:11I l :.f 11!1!
. .
l~[ 'f lfE -R[A I.
~ ESlAlt:RS
7 t
.. b ....
I
f
. ...,.. ..
A CONYUftN' 9HOf'f'INC AHO
llWIHO CUIOI JO* THE
QA&. OH TH[ CO
1
J
I
associated ,... '' .. ,.
CM.W... 3114 ...... __ .... 3140 ..............................................
ll•Z8.R1unf,clean: a Br,. pvt. paUo, child OK. c,_. toabo119. Nr peach Bl ll Warner.
6U-893t 7821 Sycamore '240.
sruNmNC ll• 1 •2 Br, 2 Cando 2 Br. 11-i ba 2 sty, &. fUden apt.I. Pool pool '325 /mo. Nr '205t'l255. now. 18th St. Warou /Gldnwe1t. Call aft J wltdya, anytime
EASTSIDE 11· Z br, cov, wkend1. S4S·2U5;
SCUMUTS
ANSWERS
Btauty-Teue-
Abou\ -Scenlc -ISBUSY Doctor answen pbofte: "V••·
RELAXINO MASSAGE
BobJatnff· Uc.Muaeur
Out.calls 9.9 494-5111
•SUZI'S* Oukall llasaaie
lOAM·ZAll 731-5448
SpfritMI leoder BANKING
1115 So. El Camino Real ARMY RESERVE llVIMI MATIOMAL
San Clemente. Jl\illy Uc. FREE TRAINING
,,_. LoYft''a .a.• ~ For appt, 492-'7298 u-•-17 IAHI( Spacious 2 at.ory • 2br • Dbl Ut •--• b ....,.. ...cu • women aces . Poeltlona o-n F«. ear. Victoria-Harbor e • -ry 2 rapt. Call BEAUTIFUL GIRLS Meded for musicians. ..-·
$325,BrokttM7-8SS3 9&0-41HlOAMto6Pll -'lila~ Mhalai-. have an exciting :c:!':e~lec":iasu[~l~d ... Fl~ld
paUo. ear, bltna. •· Mi-11114. 1---------&U.-5466 or M5-<M83
Ru .....
Cl 1 2 B Be clOH to tbe beach & ~._,.,..!J a.tab 4650 mesuJe about their 5$2.!113,°" C2U):ie4-4Zlt ,.__._~ ,.,._._~
ean 1e, r upper• ln yet close to rreeway1 too. ~'""v.. ....__ .. :r le-pup •P-Anaheim Studio.~ """' ....... ....., . 4-ple~ cpt.s, drps, l&e We accept children to 8 ~~· ••••••••••••••••••••••• r~ ... 833-3700. E.O. . ...
balcony, adlll, no pets. yn for our luxury 2 "3 U Nt QUE RETA I L prox. wks eold/Wbt, Rdlned, mature En&llab ARTISTS ' 66-7415 bdrm apll .From s:zso FROM S240to $33S STUDIOS FOR R~. K.lxbreed ?-.116' &eotlemao avall H Layout, production "'
NEW WESTSIDE B
FUU ameollia. BanburY 5 Beaut apt plans. avail. u.523 "· ..
81
.., "-·Jnvs.1£ ~ to $tOO mo. Util 1.ncl. LOST· Mal Dober escort t.o women a1ed drawlne ror technlca B,,~,!--_, Pro r eu I!~ a I ..
· 3 r, c
6761
Vi ln furn or Wl.furn. Bach, 1 ,. ~TV.;JA/ll Ml" lnq. at "The Factory" vie Garfie~ " BU:.-:'J 4CMSPb: Bob6'45-194e audio visual. Weekeo """" ... I Waitnas . .-ter " ~~~~cl &ar $17S. LAI~ ewpo l ~ih!. b~:m~; u2v ~~s~ WISTCUff AREA :.:t; ::Jt67~~~ H.B. May 1. Reward ., ~l.o~~~· Contac :fae;,~~~u:f.~!~~ . ,.;
New Westaide zBr, 2ba, 3 Br, 2 Ba, patio, 2 car dining areas, storage, iqEWPORT BEACH 673-4271 96MS38 ~=-~!:!~.~?.~! ~~ .. 40~nn':~r:; ~ .;(
bllns, encl gar, patio gar, bltns, Cplc, cpta Patio s• decks. 1400 Sq. Ct. two pvt. Lolt:Sm181kPoodlerem. . --------• ted'llU l286.Afl63l·3900 dJiil.$385.960--i068aft5 landscaped 1rouod.s, baths. $400 per mo . ..-Ssjbrtu t/ Goin I blind . Nr MM~cal writer w/so1l, ASSEMILSlS :;.111~:''sess~u.eapi~~ ::.~ -cov. prkg. Uaht.d tenrua, Ma-0300 ~ Slater/Gldn West. HB. amdea~a::;:ns~~t; & mem. .. tat .• coodjobop· ': ~
EAS1'SJDENr.new,2 br, 3 Br, 11pac, 1 mlle·fn>m volleyball , .2 sty ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mi-3807Reward. & • 1J TRAIHHS ptv. Call (71 .. , 1"'1·t• .......
1 ba bl'-ft frpl ........ mo bch. No pet.I. $360/mo. elubbouse, bllUarda, Furn ore. Bank or Costa -"---· ue Uving +wnt.ing 1 • " ..... ..,.. ; .. 1~' · ....... · CaU848-8536 1wimmill" pool, pina Mesa Pian, $95 mo. ~a.. SOOS Loll: Female Cocker +q arterl ln exchange So. Callf. (:oektall ·• u •.ruo • • ._..,.... ..... ,1 I: land.a d l ln Toucb·UP and atl,!fling 0 Wait Inc t'lm ak
Meaa Verde
2
Br
2
Ba, 2br, H'aba, w1hl" "dryr, =.!,>'~~pa, nm. 556-3900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~=l1:iC:u~b~'cf~~ ~-.nJ.jJ': m:OfnJI~ printed circuit boards. Parkr~c:~llle,C~ -, -
$245, cpta. drps, fplc. paUo & pool, crplll, drp1. Southwest Corner •1 MO FREE RENT• AM\\'.AY Dlstributor'1s Reward! 6".-l76S ~16 , Prefer 3-8 months ~x· 9271' "I
1
751·8462 P>O. 968.f.527 FAinger /Newland No lease req. Dlx. orca. helping profesa1onala k perience ln electronic as r.,,
8400 Edlnger H B Adj. AirPorter Hotel. otben to earn a 2nd inc. LOS'l': Toy Sliver Poodle, Sodal Cllbs 5400 sembly, aold4trb1g, and BEAUTICIAN .rn
NEW 3 Br 2\'a Ba, adults, HR.. THE llACH ( 714) 847.9soS · From 1-rm. to 2200 sq. fl. 10 Hrs wk. 673-222:3. Fem. JuruperoSerra Rd. •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• color code knowledge, W IF for Newporter Inn ~.,
Victoria• Maple, CM. 2 br, 2 ba apt.I. Frpl. enc. OPEN g.5 OAJLY LOWEST RATES, full JEWELRY STORE SJC. "Holly". Reward I Lonely? Social Intros 35 but will accept train 644-0661 or S40.aS82 546-6871 gar. 960-4614 l OAM to services. 1133·3223 T1I zt3.42S.2714 Yu exp. Meet pro· applicants. Please apply Be ut s 1 Sale.al d
~ 'I
---------• 6PM ROOIM 4000 noon SADOLEBACK feaalonals w /same in· at· a Y uppy • y.
Adult.a, onJy, no peta. 2 Br ••••••••••••••••••••••• VALLEY LOST: Fem. ShelUe Mix. t.erests. Ph Clara Laoe, · Sal, boous, beallb lnll.,
upper .. unr. $215. 311 Cool Oc•• ~ ROOMS ..c wk up with Corona del Mar, h1ree of· SHOPPING CENTER nr 17th It Maple, CM. Alls Anaheim Br 991-4250 PCC vac. Re&al Beauty Supp.
WUsoo. 631·2177 Large 2 br, xainled ln & kitchen ........ $37 .5<> wk up flee. $!00 . S12,000 + Inventory to "Cindy" ~S372 ly. 263 E. 17th St, C.M.
2Br Apl, $225 mo. In· =~~I~~ ,?:_·Ncr8~~ aJ)U.S48·9755 CRealonom1cs 675-6700 lncla~f.('M~usiness FOUND Beagle, male I:: l(:;r-;'l! BUSINESS Beauty.Hair Stylist want·
eludes stove & ref rig, No children under 12. ATTRACT. rm. •; m1. .M. 300 sq fl ore. 80Chq ft ''Z" REALTOR w /collu & 1.ash. Vic ,_.. ed for busy Laruna Hills adll.S 313 17th Pl. C.M. ..... 1ndstrl $125 & $265 ....... ~, CdM. Can't keep .••••••••••••••••••••••• SYSTEMS Salon.83'7·2160· ...,...1711 fn>m beach. $28 wk. Ref. · · ......,...,..~ 644•2264 · ~1111 Ir 642·2464 req'd. H.B. 960-3531 648-2130, 679·3'109 ----.&1~ 7005 Beauty Hair Cutters &
Lee 2 br, 2 ba on goU DOHUTSHOP _......_ DIVISION n-...1 t.o I -•-·•--2 br, 1 ~ ba, pvt patio, cou.rae. No children. f,!60. Room for rent, Ute kltch I no Ormtge , CM Low down to qualified FOUND BADlO "••••••••••••••••••••• i:;:r" new a:f~~ ~-per mo. 610 J oaM , m o . 8 4 6 . 9 o 6 2 ; pr iv & s. Fem a I e . 500 sq. ft. Bathrqom, + buyer. <71'>4MO-tl7S lrfEN WOMEN 17021 Von Karman Hwy In beaut. CdM. No
548·7638 (213)588-5612 Relerenoes.-.Sff.~73 rm w/sink, redec. Perf Great Beach City loca· eves6-?only TL+JMFOa SantaAna,Cahr. percentages, Oat wkly
Lovely lge new 2 br. 11; lniM 3844 Room for Rent, plus ~o: :,~:!rP:fc .st~i~: Uoo. DolnJ $7500. aros11 Pen•al• U 50 IARTIMDIMG rental. Contact Mr.
ba. drplJ, cpts, stov, ••••••••••••••••••••••• household privileges 541!-8996 .. with much bi&ger poten· ••••••••••o••••••••••• TWOWEEKCLASS ADEq\talOpportunlty M11nano days '73-2135; dshwhr, gar. Mature, Brand new 1 bedrm 494•5492 · Ual.Open7da.)'s. DrlnklnlPl'oblem? NATlON·WlDEJOB EmployerM/F evesS81.Q74.
adlts. _No petg. 1980 0 adulls.pool,jacuz.zi,ten: Professional Bldg o n Ull 817-4200 CallAlcohol Hel~ PLACEMENT ASSEMBLERS BEAUTY·Receiuionlst
Anaheuo Ave, 5'f5·3229 , nts. $315/mo . Agent S--r R .... als 4200 Talbert nr Ma~nolla, Ftn DOUGHNUTS 24brsada¥8JS.~ ~~1~~E &FINISH for Laauoa Hf1Ia 'aaloo.
646-31110 PEN s.o.6161 •••••••••••••• ••••••••• Vly. 300 & 460 sq fl. CARPENTERS Exp r"""'d. 837·211"'. --------1 End jt Ba · p k Nets $2,100. month PREGNANT? OPPORTUNJTil;S ~-. .,
2 Br J'l!z Ba Twnhsc brk ....... un • Y view, ar Mo/Moor lease.963-7062 C 1 fld 1 1 Neededtorsailboat com·•--'----'------1 r
1 1
. •dlts ..-wporthoch 3869 Newport.JBR,den,rully ----Cornerloc.&small ahop· ar nf con ent a AMEAICAM E r'd S llMDBYDEPT
Pc, ~r·J~ P~~~· ~Id • ••••••••••••••••••••••• furn apL 6/U thru 9/15. SUITE w /occtmv1cw. On ping center. xint area. coun11ellng 6: referral. IAltTEHDERS ~uYeobxrrund~-&:f:a Various duties. Mu;t be "
Anovepe. 97.9·16S8. ·, 646·70e2n7 P"'RK .... WPORT szsoo. . Mature couple or Pac. Cst. Hw y. L g super clean. Term s, Abortion, adoption " SCHOOL bl n bo ,.. " b I TIME7511400 keeping ASSEMBL~LEAOMAN a etoll heavy xes,S evs. Bachelors 1 o 2 tnngleonly.Welt.on&Co. acony, upstrs wtga r. . APCARE 1104E.17tbSl.,SA • day wk. Good benefits. ---------1 Bedrooms &T~ es Realtors675-QJOO. 536-8991 547·2563 834·1960 For light mfg operation, $3.00 hr. Apply NaUonal
lBr,utilpd,atove,cpts, From$249.SO Newport Wa terrrontOFFI CE -LAGUNA MONEYMAKER *SHARON'S* SchoolsCoaalToCoast mechanclaNIEabcilltty System& Cor p., 4361
.i-3113 W Bay Adi'· Spectacular spa total "E c o necessary. · · <>S a 81'rch St, "'.B. (N•ar ........ · · "'• • w/dock. 2 Br. 1 ba. B A H n a con · Swtmmlng PoolBusiness Mesa.979-8600 ,, "' nopets.S225mo.548·9Sl8 re~reatlon profram, $250/wk. 546.6299 or spicuous corner for a OUTCALLMASSAGE LM.~~s<liLEL, ~GowE coos~ ---:-:::-:::-::-:-:::---1~0~.C~.~Alrpo~~rt~)~E~.~O~.E~.:_-
O-PoMt 112' Lenn.ls courts. At Fashion Hwy.; IJ'OUDd nr., off· Day·Eve-Sat Classes in IKKPR,ISICllETAIY aocwl proaram. 8 pools, 8 557-0848 s1en, on North Coast ~ 000 499-1224 '-n ASSEMIL Y
••••••••••••••••••••••• Island, Jamboree• San V..tioll l..tafs 4 250 stre.et parkmg. $2l5. Act. N PE.'ii YEAR ,~ __ ..;.;, _ _;. __ J.::San=t.a:::An=:•:· :5M-='1:;;17:;;1=::; r;:~l=~o~ ~==b:; Some exper. req'd. Call
1&2 s tory duplexes Joaquin Hills Road. •-•••••••••••-••••••• 4941551 FULi price just 1119.800. workers. Doy & nlgbt•-548-_254!_______ .
tnplexes &fourplexes.1: 1714>644-ltoO Dana Point Marina. Owner will help finance ~ell Mnm shifts. Apply. 11932 Sky 4 2 bdrms & den, 114' & 2 Rooms. kitchen priv, ............ 4450 & train. Established &• ~ , ParkCr.,SteG,lrvine. BOATBUILDER -"
baths, fireplace, In the Beach Duplex \~ Blk to nice home. Exclus1 ve ••••••••••••••••••••••• clientele + inventory + house laundry hook·ups sand. 3Br, frpl, ~/mo ne1ghborbood RSO/mo leasehold. Call 962·7781, ~ L ff
enclosed yard.a, encl09ed yrty &4G-l044, 956-299"7 Pb63&-0874 . LAGUHs!.:~CH ask for Dick McKasson. a0U ove er
2 car garoces. Close to 2 Bedroom. 2 baths. Rent Lakeside Bass Lake KEY REALTORS.
schools. &h'>pp•na & carpets. drapes, bwltms, bome. ~ fl 1 13 C--rcW Stor. '---~ Th is 1Mtt.the r·~ Day Sl"OU
~~ • ; ~-.,1 • ' B~~ ~boa. ·~n~ omce. Located ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mom .1 l'_r<.:cting all the Wt>rl<l _.»1 i~~ Kw~ ..1,!.. ~~ sq • 1 pa • or ~an be Wied as pro· .,.~:;;;; 5020
Golden Lantern St & bay bea ~tb...-~\~ n 83Acl~~co, Dana Point. JACOIS UALTY . J:'ft.~t2·315S, eves Ple"~wltii rtt • .,. -o "'oo>.nop't'l,t. rQa!ttM!,tlo•n~l~.QIJt~~~.,.~"'":~::'~ ~-<; . """'· 675-6670 . 5311-1.516. mos.,."'re. $160 mo. utll. r 1 d"o o~ .i •
Lge lbr Garden apt nr -~ ._L._ paid by landlord Newport Mesa area. Express your l~Wc in a Daily
bch, $?35. mo. Incl utll. UDO 3 Br 2 Ba, $4l5 yr. --to _,. 4 300 MISSION REALTY write R.A. Bardis, 820 67S.1980or541-7268 lae. 514 Clubhouse ••••••••••••••••••••••• 98SS.Coa1t,Laguna WestBalboaBlvd.AptB. Piloc ~1 nchcr's Day ~rcc:rin.µ.
. 1134·l720or908-S161 House to share. 436 494--0711 Newport Beach, Ca.
BT l .l • Hamilt o n. C M . 4 011:.aUXE"~s 92661 I t 's easy. Write your oro .. Faola&tlc Wblte water lll7.50+ullllllea. a. ~· u-toa.o-5025 ••••••••••••••••••••••• View, Bear aandy beach, M2·2110l Corti. rm .• seat 25, all ~!••••••••••••••••• message ro fit rhe flowered
New 2 Br, 2 Ba In 4 plex, 4l town. 2 Br 2 Ba condo. pune.\ed, sm whle In re· 1 t ._.,. • ._...TD • L.. <l h h B · · air cond. Cpu, drp1, la• Uv rm, den/din rm, F rmmt wanted 1hr apt ar. lor2yr. lease. Lake • ·-•'"• • .s U\>r er S own ere . rang lC to
blt.na,encl1ar. 5116-8137 balcony, area Victor 'Non·smkr. Nxt OCC. 195 Forest area . Kent LOANSA~ILABLE any Daily Pilot office prior rn Kucoe. 00 Clllf Or. N. ... ,, UliUS'Mlll H.arktn1.. Credit not important
•••IAl#oaleect. 3140 ~!1uoa .. u!'11s105 mo. Meecl al111 • ite? 714-5111 -9:193 673-4883Broker noon May 6. Or, you may
••••••••••••••••••••••• ,......townr ,..... NWPT BCHSTORE MoRey W..tecl 5030 IUCE TOllACM OCEANFl\ONT 2Br lba Qoa·Ol~nslL«J.\(JTU> 21830AvooSl.S300tmo ••••••••••••••••••••••• mail a dipping of rhc border
Lee 4 br, 3 ba, frplc, nrly nu. w1br/dr}r, .Z AProresan'l Roomma~ JerryWynol2U>477·770l IARM14%TOl6o/• wirh your message an<l pay-
dshwhr, all. aaraae. pric'I •.Pr1· Yrly '500. no RefttTalCompanycan SAFE&SECURED encl. yd. No dop. 1703 peta.C..0-A.Wa&l. HELPVOUflNDTilAT 1200sq.l\.Pnmudailloc 2NOTRUST OEEDS menc ro Daily Pilot, 330 w.
Alabama, 536·3'65 or $350-MSO 2 "3 B block RIGHT ROOMMATE on Harbor Blvd, Cotila SHORTTERMS1·3VRS
$.15-1718 to bea~b.. Yrly.r.PatJo. __!U~SiDHtm ~~:~s.=·cntr GOL DEN STATE Bay St., Box 1560, Costa
•THIS IS IT• b&lcony,MZ·UI03 h'1I ' C2l3)866.17ll Mesa. CA 92626.
3Br, ~Ba. twn.hae apt 111• Ca 1 1 2 8 2 for ... 4150 Cmn1rr V..,. Mert99" Trwt $38 5 O e co rated· -. nyoo ove y. r ••••••• .. •••••••••••••• Two 1t.ore11 on Newport Deidi 5035 Ads come in three sizes: · • Ba, overlooklni tth •~_... Bl d ctl pt 1pacloua. built Ina, Ja Fairway Take over i.. EnclllM!Q 1lntle 1ara1e, v .• conne n1 a •••••••••••••••••••••••
tncloted paUo, 2 cur aar 1 mo n~t freti M0-&317: istoraaeoab'. SJO, CM. :Pv~able. Pl5 per mo " LOANS a~&. QI
nr ltunta Cntr, SD Fwy, MHMJ60 • ' 6'.S-7836 74 /0
1lf1 SUrk SL 2 bllul 110 Abo 2-dTD Lo.a Bdln&er, w lo Beach Attractive 3 br, 2 ba ....... 4400 . Blvd. Open Sat/Suo l·& lwhhse. Nr. HOil.i llCJ9p, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fairest Terma 1ince 194i
K&r.M.2·2014 Comp. renovated. Dbl. 60' PB 59 FT 5attter MkJ. Co. •
SZ2S per mo a Br 1 Ba atrium. Mat. •dha. onl)'. 1817W!'SI'CUf'P'·N8 642·2171 S"4S-061 I
pr, eouple. aml chUd: no pet.a. $400 mo. SCSs:llllD~ AGT. MJ.0032 Two roc>m olflce/retall NIVATI PAITY
1Ml pet OK. J36.3876 Vrly 2 Br. ulll pd, c.,_ t.o I SO I W tclff Dr store. 3103 Villa Way• WUl pay more for your
NEW·l,21t3BORMS beach,eocl 1ar. Weal for " • N.8. Cannery area loc. 2ndT.D.M2·3513 From $250 to
9400
quiet worldnt ad.It.a. Ne Newport f'lnanclal Ctr GOO/mo. Call 673-6597
G-t'f31J pell. S'ISO, lll fi la&t + LHlilgOfflceS,.C• UDOMOOllACH l"Jud $30,000 loan . Sl50 <;&J>. 67&.M04 art Call on Site lllamcer • ~eel by 2nd TD on DEWXE Condo, 2 br, 1 •~ 6Pll (11C)&U;311}ext246 Comm 1 bulldln1. AP· $115,000 bop\e w/SD,000 ba f I J prox M>O eq f\. Jd al for first. In Laiuna Jkb 'It /o-, ti>~: poo • Jacuul. Nr Hoat l:lolpltal, 2 Br 2 me locaUon lo Hunt. lawyer, corporate ofc, ettnvlew. <nc>7.5l•t.a1S
enc. ~uo. Mallo)' Rlty. Ba up1Utt1, blU••· lntton Beach on acC!Ountaot etc. AdJoin•
963-t'711 clsbwsbr, W /D ~ul), Brookhutst, 800 aqua,.. Home Savlft ·308/310 So
Lps Br, t ba, doaed ear. oiomo. Nopeta.tu.Tazt lee\. Slftlle.1ardtn type eai.11na.1 blk from pler.~,---" ... h /
3 bib btach, walk to S. ca.wt• ll7' ttoN Of office. Good H · ~1~w · C •II C2 U > L:t'f f:'-d
stortt/bUa. 1110. ll0-5131 ••••••••••••••••••••••• poaun. a11l1ned park· i---------------• • In,_ Call Kr. Plummer
Waler new. 2 bf' condO. Walk to bcb/lbop9. 2 Br. t8U'm Pool, tenAJa. wet bar, 1\.\betwt\hff.Adulllon·i---------r r p 1.c. U t 5 /in o . tr, no pets. S23$/mo. D&UXE OFACIS
(1)5».2DS 133-1193 ...
SS, S l 5 and 52 for th<: special
l hil<l 's size card. <You muse
be: unJcr 12 to qu.ilify for the
li ttlest ~rl·ctin~).
If you wanr help (omposin~
n suit1iblc ~rcctin~ or have •lOY
qu c.-s cio ns, call. 642-~678 . A
fricmUy Dni ly Pilot tid-viscr
will be ~lad to help you.
AnJ, if you like. you c.:an
char~c your Mother's Day uJ.
Your crcJic is ~ooc.J with us.
or you may use your Master
Char~c or BankAmctkaril.
*ASSEMBLERS*
Experienced
PC A.SSEM BLY SOLDERING
E/OASSEM LY
WILLARD
Increase lo production " new 40' line hu created Immediate openinp for
.A..~· _._...,_ :.~){ J'¥>3~x en person·
_._--------1 ASSEMIL Y WOIKHS
Perm pos. F /time.
Call 631-0700
ASST. MANAGO
Night.I for Del Taco, AP·
ply by inall to PO Box
438, Balboa l1land, Calif.
92662.
ATTBCTIOM
OPPORTUMITY
TVJMIMG
HHEffTS
bpet'. c.,......,..
TCMIClt-Up lo..,.
EnCJIM I.........._ ' . Bectrtdmn
$2.75 to ts.SO per hour
based on qualifications. \
Good Bene.lltl/4 Day
Work Week /()vertime
Equal Oppor Employer \I
11200 Condor Ave
Fomt•V.-.Y ' <San Diego Freeway 1
At Euclid Exit)
t7t.012' I
F /Ume poaitions (01' men I~~~~~~~~~ i ck "°men w /Initiative •I· ability to present \dea11 In, _____ .... __ _
expanding dlvi1lon of
progressive lnt'l co. No
exper. neceu. We wlll
train. Rapid advance·
menl poulble. &art Im·
mediately. Call between
9:30AM "2PM
Slt -1 183
Ally's Overload Serv.
Exp. letai aecy'a needed.
P/t&temp.642-0223 ...........
TUNEUP MASTERS
NEED MECHA~CS lN ORANGE COlfNTY. H ·
per " trained. Call W.3)813-SUO COLLECT tor lnUnlew In Oran1e ~~er.a. .
BOAT MFG. (
1
OAILY"LOT
~ ... ~ ·-.
Add lt ... Bulld lt ..• Dlaper lt..~Hammer it.-Carpet
it. .. Cement Jt ... Wlre lt..:Hoe lt. .• Ctean lt ... Mov,
lt ... Pre59 tt...Paint U ... Nall it ... Ptaster lt ••• Fbc It ••• SERVICE .
-'"'-----~ .ol. DIREa~DR¥'1iP.lumb -.. ~: . .!_.~atch 1t •• J:•Rf! ·~ .. t<emoaoro ••• :
1 ·~l!,1 "1·ROof Jt\ .. (an~ape It... 1th.Ht ... 1.rlm lt ... Se~lt.. •.
_ ... , ... Haul lt ... Add lt...P•ant lt. .. Alter lt .•. L@arnlt ...
"'8•.c••.,. c C., •• -9.l '/Cl.J.r/lti'··· • :: __ · -~ .. *·i• ~1 ir · ;~, ~ ;,;.~ • , ·· T-.. ~;r"""" -•r:: ... •.~!!.~'!' .. -.~ ....................... ....................... ....................... ....................... ....................... ....................... ....................... ....................... ... ... . . .
APPUA.NCEBEPAIR Vuter Craft1mu, an.. 1 etmrOllEL'EC'J'AJC Coaun'I Is Jh1ldent11J Hal&lln.j,movlfta.dqnup Fret Ett: Blffk•alu, HOOSt palnllna. JO yn a.model, add.. ~Uo, ~· Sl~letCalJ Specially fin.lab.,..~~~£.-=-~" •t. Coeun. rea, Lawn care, u.. work. Sfl\.tp.n.worlr.Beu, 1lump1tooe, brlck. up.CM'/Nptarea. I um pair. Frff •t. 8D-G!7
C.U(n056KZI medel.Laf, rep.Jn. W• JOU cnra tonu. "" .baiMat 6 ftllable aerv. Compl clean up Mitt faat.ftee•UU·4WJ . R..JComm. l\eu, Uc/· 1maU. J>Jleet aro amall. LubyUc.311233 • • ~ ... '205 mGDe)'.-la5 o~ IJc SSUOl. 741·'150 6 ~ ~llJer.PREEbaul· ~n~. Bob 750·935', .Roo...,.aft5PM ltoofWt .. . .............. _._ ... , c.,.ts.-nc. . " •nu 8 1 .. W.lcft lnt. cleanup, tree work t ._. ••lnt.r/2xtr . Avent•........ .. ...... .
Workinlf drawh11t & ••••••• ............. , •• 8 • D CoQtrete. Alt -....... liM:tric • .; .. !................. Cor uaabie Ji.rm. f'•n· CUSTOM IUILT room ftS. Good loeal Repa lna. AU
permltl. l!:apr'dlncttmCariletManwillla110UR J)baMltoncrelt,bJock• Uc •• 71•6 L ..11t L 974 SaveUme -S.veMoney cU/bl.d11 removed KASONRY ref•.~ etl. Alk tor t.Y1 t. Walt; hornet, remodtlt, addJ or mlu. Repair• ,: bttck *Oris. Jl\'ee tit.I. -• --BARBARA'S 1157·3005. S4a-1781 Bloc:k,8'tclt,Slump1tonc Brian. 642 UIM C& .fNO tlo~" landauploa. cl~ too1.9_uar wor Uc.·~~~ hrn•s•. -SHOPPING MOVJNO • HAULlNG, wallJ, Jltantel"I, npertly Exr.awt palnt.lna. Avail•· T.._.
fMS.-at .. seer .... ~p. Fr• SMALLCEMF.NT JOBS •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• SERVICE 540-1113 anytbtni. anywl\ere. U.\allecUu~. priced. bJe 'howl rree "t, ,.ea• ••••• •••••••••
est,f4S.3Me Walkwa.yt&Patloi THE&TRfPPEl\8 811)' Wrep·Dellver Callan)'Ume.493-2515 716J51S.ll808 ~ ratet.Ca11Bruce543·2045 CAN St;RVJCI:: ~~ ............ W•CU.Cupet Cleaners Clll 1'1~1'18'1 :':':11 ~"!~· t~':~ 23 yr old Studet lnter,.t· occ Student. Bis .... T , ...... ,....... Paint your hoUH tn 1 day /i,.~·Ft SERVJCB
St.amcleanouhampoo C•.ct• !Um/metal. Let ua \ake ed In ho\,llesl1Una tblt truck. Trash, b'M trlm, ....................... fOt SZ5. Rent our alrleta "' eateo-le33 Mother will bab)'tlt. my alaoupholatery.all work ;;;-.-;•••••••••••••••••• t.Mhra of work trom you a um mer. July·Sept. move. Bancly 78M.528, , .. YCMr C•tfe apr~•r.f· Anyone c•n 4o Tiit
home, W. l8UI St., .lnfint .CUM. kefa/MC, freeeat. SP!Cf ALIZINO 1n all at a prtce you cu.afford. R•fa .. 8~0·~0$1 Arda S0-3808 Avenp extr 1S~S395 lt. Labo'r /paint av all too. ••••••• •••••••••• to one year, lrom flpm. Rua BataM&-3716 tnel temodelll\J 11 yr1 -~. S42SZ SantA o... Tam·U .30pro. ,.. • • i.ei.., .... ewt, ..... rm Call67S.3658 CERA L"". New or S'lS per week. Call Jantt Jn area. All work 1uar. -· .. r• QU' _,. .... lf-fl45.l705 f!d ~ ll8ZG1' Ave,CaplatraooBch. HANDYMAN: Carpentry:-; ............ : ......... Prtcainclmatr'l/labor PAPER· PAINT remod . rr .. 1.1mlJ6b1 _.,... electrical plumblna • .. Ouar lnard ~eeut.. welcomeW·3'38af\5. Bab)'lltUna, '!'..>'.home all •••n•eo n•nun•nn .... ,... • ·Wan& a n!!ALLY CLEAN Ted~·Ol340r838-?Cla 20yrsel(pr,Save $..Work
tebool (3 P~) 4' evea. l!Dhance your parUe1. L.EEM.J~VJS ••••••••••••••••••••••• &n.zrl'lor64G-Wl HOUS!:T C11l GlnJb•m . par. Fr est, no wait. CERAMJC TILE aeuer,
calJM7·3354 weddln11, BBQ'• wltl\ A DR~~J'DkuJ'oS -Reliable Ellpr Ja~eae HANDYMAN·Homea • Glrl. Fteeal.l,&45-5113 PETERS PAINTING 6'2-1950 20 yrs exp. New Ot'
our aeJect men1.11. Any Phtfl2.D>O Lie 317B:ie G•rdeoer. Rea100~ Aplt, Couclentlou• HOUSECLEANING Expr'd. Reaa Rates. p Al NT l NG . XI 0 t Remodel 711·21'ST
C.,...teu occulon Qr j\.mt dinner , C1cea. Free est.. N.5· cral'lanuu1. Pb: 64.5..Q302 i.our Bualneu Call Free Est. Call Gene craftarnan. Knowled&ea· CERAMIC TILE Tub
•••••u•••••tn••U••n ~l~~:!J~:U::~v, G~WJ8~ ~1=· X'33i~ ke .. eri6eg Janice's Rasaedy Ann'• ~~· _ _ _ ble. n-ee eat. Bond/Uc. 1hower1, ldtchu::
(;arpentry. Small jobs. CABANA CATERING tioft.i N~elloi: plan.a Expr lbwauan aardentr ....................... at67S-6S53 ~~ 87. Mllill7 floors, patios6'.\.21Z9
Panellna. door hanalnc. 5'8-M21 s49.21700rm«>.l · Yd cl4anuJJ9, prunln1. SkipJoader. du.mp truck, ffoosecleanlni by rehable JN TE R J 0 R I f X TR ,._.... ~ -
Lac cootr. at. 548·2719 trimmin1. haul ~s hauling tree work arad· couple reCereuces Call Painllnc. E~ d bigb ••••••••••••••••••••••• f ,... Sertlce
Aft. 5 C.llulm Au.tic Speclalhlnc-'Bulldhs1 EXP EDT JAPAN ESE t.ni. de,;,o, etc. 751.3830 SQ..!ilUOJ' 1~126 q~!,!t~~orle311.lJ hnpez reas VERY NEAT PATCH ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... Ji.,...__ •-t r • Arch Dealan Plana for ., . .J"•~v·~ o _ JOBS•TEXTURE Removala, trlmrnla1. 'JI,._._-,... r ••••••••••••••••••••••• Adel. retldence apt. Xlnt Ge.rd e 0 er· Fr~ e Sld.ploader. dump truck. Good ot R-... ... 1~ -prunlna. free esL Lle'd Carpentry, plumblna,Economy Acou1tlc1. me.N.B.8"-1573 QUmatea.CaJl:982·08S8 haul.lnf,lr~Worll.1.rad· H I ~I XI FreeEIL 893-1439 f'\.tUylnaured.&U·zat ceramic tile 560-5560 Q\aal ce!~oewor re· Ina demo etc 75139~ ou1ec ean n1. nl EXCLNTPA.INTING -.-a.a-. apray· re • r-e .... t ...__._.c.. f\!U yard maintenance. ' • · · :r refs. Pleue call 113-7959 Intl' & Extr. Reas. rMCWM9 Q\uck '• Tree Svs Palma C 11 St d t • ' ... ... ' -" Bed1 cleanup n I Fr 2'7 FRED ••••••••••••••••••••••• · • · c0a r:: ! t er~ Ae./}L $38-UOO. ..••••••••••••••••••••• lawns'. apklra. s31.,f~ %10!:e~~ltbauf· con· HOUSECLEANING with eeett.$48· . 06 HOMESAVERS. Plumb· olives trimmed, tblnned,
PIWES. ReCa. Cree eat C-fttjCOMreh ELECTRICAL SERVICE btl7pm. mo.etc ~c/IM:.a~~e-a PERSONAL TOUCH. Knowles Palnttn1. 1n& ltHealln&. Free est. ~~:ti 5 removed
'l 613-.9al •••••••••••••••••• ... ••• CALLSS15br.~SMALL · JUUable.Ref153CJ.3718 Int /Ext, commercial S10hr.H.onest&reliable ---------
• JOBSSU-8233 Sellin( anyt.blng with a WOULDN'T YOU apts " reaidenUal. service. B or A, M1trcb1. LEE·s 24 yrs. exp Xlnt LOU'S HOME REP Al RS, Cement work of all IQnds. Dally Pitot Claaslfled Ad rather besailln1? ~ve aomft.hlq you want 83115-1120 8'7-0383or 751·3150. ref's Bo!A MastCh &
30 )'ti. exp. Carpnl 'y, R.eaa rat.es· Free eata SEU. Idle ltenu with a i. • 1lmple matter . . . See classlflcation 9080 to sell? Classified ada do Caati Call· Lee The Tree
' pan) 'r, paUo dra. SSl ·20.M 750-5485 750-6625 l>Jaily Pilot Clu1Uled A4. Juat call '42·5618. It can be .reality! lt well. 8'2·~9. Claa&llled Ada 6'2·56'78 Want M Help' 6'2·11671 8'75-57SO • ~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~E~~~~~~~
~~~ ...... ?!.~~ ~~~!!~.~ ..... ?!!~ ~!!~ ..... ?!!~ ~~~·~ ..... ?!!~ ~r.~~ ..... ?!!! ~~~~ ..... ?!~ ~~~ ..... ?!~~ ~.~~~ ..... !!!~ ~~~~~ ..... ?!~~
' IUSIOYS COOK DENTAL CHAfRSJOE LEGAL Mercoty Mechanic. Pref.
Apply In person. Mui· Exper'd Good Wacea ASSlSTANT·Exper'd GeneralOfflce HOSTjHOSTIS5 SECIETARY cerWied w/exp in out· PHONESALES RealFAtateSales
doon'g Irish Pub, 20~ MeeaVe~deC{>!lv Hoep. lood hrs & benefit•, no •IMVIMTOlY Need lndtvtduala FaahJonltlandLawtlrm brd1 "J.O.'s. Perm. $MONEY-$ WHY JOIN Newport Ctr Dr. N.B. 681 Center St: C.n.i'. S&tUtday1, 6'4·2119 or ClalC• w/pleuant appe.arance deaires Leaal 1ecrcLa(;)' poelUQ.n In Kona Ha1lflli
CARPET SALES peraona 648-558$. 83U3'11 Mtedtd lmmedJately & personalit_y to work with Civil hllaaUon exp. w/establilhed & ctowfog
d d 11 K N Experien e nee p/UmelncludtnjWknds. Call Janet dJr. X1nl worklng conds. Superb Homes nee e , ca • arer Cook. Exp'd. Apply ln Dental Aul. exper'd. 0 c · Clll 644·3319 840-1560 (714)55'1·9559. (& PRIDE} 673-5451or549·1884 person, Veh·et Turtle Happy, self motJvated, 645.-2043 9AM 'Ul NOON
c .. w• Cashlen Restaurant, 59 Fashion extra sharp &lrl wanted Equal Oppor Employer THE llVIMI co. UcettMd Inspector Realty?
• 644"'460 llland, N.B. ~~. ~~!:~:~rt~~~!d~ GENER AL HE L p. SSONewportBeCtr Or ~l ~~~':l~~lngSP~· ~~:iu!:r!~: t~ha::ij ~~~U~alL~~;::?:!J f~~ SmalllTofflce env!ron!· Cook ex-r For sm II Sal I l C II Newport acb - . ._ _ _. l •· b all about. We buve the mcm . oC comm11s1ons Car Wash Manaaer · "" · . a open. rv ne. a Ceramic Shop needs all Eq aJ o E l ~34 iuuuware. too s .. s op • On th j t I · F t DIMer hou.e FuU lame 752 7uc: u ppor mp oyer ul l d lri I '--t phon• sales group In e o ra ning. as Immediate employment · " ....,.,. a.round matw-e person, eq pment to n us a .,_ "' start schooling. We relm· avatlable for rull serv1c• or part ume.. 8"--02lO Dental R 'd f /time, early AM 1b1n. MAIDS account.I. Avg S280 per So. Calif. & when you Joln burse your license costa.
car wash manaaer. Muel Cook. f/lor p/tday or eve. wanted f~~:~b~tc\:!iai 7S2·11M HOTEL Full & p/tlme. Apply, wk. No exper. nee. Call our organization you can Choice of farm locations
be exper Ill all pM.se1 ol shift. Opport. Cor ad van· ofc. Ywit be brlpt, aell ~MT 015.,. CLUK Ben Brown'• Molel, 31108 751·9U.. average xlnt money per II\ Co&ta Mesa & Newport
• car wash manaaemenl cement. Apply X33 w. motivated & happy. Oc· ~&IMAL OFFICI "'"" " Coast Hwy, So. 4 1una. hr. We have a guaran· Beach. Call for an appt. Top salary+ bonus+ c ast H II ,...._.. 1 in Hunlullton Beach area IMIGHTAUDITOR lftd bue pay +comm. now! SUPERB HOM.,."
. 0 wy or ca cus . ......u ... alt et 1 re· D1ctaophc one, telephone, Experienced only. Sbln MAIDS WANTED + bonus. But, equally REALTYJNC u9.,, .. ,,....,. ~:~~~~!l~:W.~U In 6'2·84JSor 644.-0 q'd. Irvine. 1'2·7MI. some fl g u re wor It . flexible. Apply in person. Don'Qulxole Motel NURSES AIDES Import.antis the fact that • · ... .........,
COOK-GRILL DENTALASSISTANT Pleasant workln( cond, The Sandpiper Inn 4' 2100NewportBl.C.M. Exper'd. Bayview Conv. ~canbcproudofyour CASHIER Wanted for Del Taco Cbalnlde, 1-6m.o.exp. '800 mo. 1871lS Fiber Tennis Club. 2101 E. MAJOSWANTED Hospital, 2055 Thurln . You'll be workin11------•.--
F1t1me w /benefits for F tune deys. A~ply i~ Newport Bch. 644·9211 Glau Rd. H.B. Coast Hi1hway, Corona Top wa~ paid! The Inn Ave, C.M. 642·3505. tor & w/good & friendly RECEPTIONIST pos. w /retail nursery pe"'-.,c252 La az Rd Ml Mar. people while you sell a RI 'd L~'"""•"" • GEMIR.ALOfFICE atLa1una.2uN.Coasl NURSESAIDIS gre1tt product -The Pleg~ier el~er.hrf~ 1' agunaH1Us. DENTAL Typing & flllna. Mu st Hot.el-Restilurant Hwy .Lag. Bch. 7.3 Exper. pref'd. Mesa Beautiful Time/Life P1time.Jday1awk. an now ge epu.-OrthadoftffcAHt C•ler,llllper'd Book Series. Start ArtcrJune40hours. bul nol nee. Ph111se apply COOK, MATURE FUii or p/llme. Good '501 lake phone contacts. FUil " p/Ume. Over 21 MAlO wanted Harbor Inn ~erde ~c\i Hosp, 661 p /time. but f/lime avull. Jmmediuw Opentng
in person, Grcenhaven Exper'd . Bayview for ri&hl person. C.M. :o~!~~ !~l~k.cpsJo~~~~ Call Spm, 644·1700, ext Motel 1800 W Balboa, enter t, . . We will train enereeUc. MANPOWIR,INC. ~~ge~M 2123 Newport hManFor,ISal ranae S2.7S·S3 546·5170. lion. sick pay, ~roup pro· 5."l8, Francine. EOE. Nwpt Beach, 675·3463 MURSES AIDES articulate people who 645·2043
. . Cr. /l me. 350 W. Bay St D-"'l fit aharinl! & healtb lnsr. Ir OttOERUIE5 have a strong voice. Ora1i---------c ii.SHl•11 M 4142·""""' IA"I'"" Housekeepln° •-personal re1tdln"t t ul ed "" ~ · .....,.,, Apply 8:30·11, Mon.Fri. " "' M £NANCE 7·3. Will t .. aln ln'"'r ..... t-" ..... es req r · Gen'l front office. Older, care for elderly woman: AINJ • ""' ""0 ""' Ml-...&. ir......... ......_ •-t R-.... nt'~I t /Sec Buff a Io NI ck e I COOKS & COUNTER mature lady w/front & DardRend'• Phcsct Conlrol. 9 to lO:IO AM. Mon thru i.ndividunls. "c'~IF'V'f"lll· ....... 09--• ........ r~·-• { ouf. Re~taurant. Traveland, Help day & eve ahlft.s. back office exper. 696 an olp • M. Fri. $2.50 hr. Mu.st drive MECHANIC UdoConv.Center 9' 5 Exper d fron off ce,
Jrvine. 551·1881 Sylvia Apply In person. Del $-8ll9, 9:30toS:30. General Olflce 545-7880 JSSSSuperior Ave, NB TIME II If£ ~e:':a!~t~h~:U:~!·~~ ,, ext 2$, Taro, 171.h " Superior, CUSTOM-Call 646·7764 I u . CM DEHTALASSIST 8' HOUS ECLEANING, own Dlceon Eleclronlcs, a ccut1ves. ssso.ssoo.
· CATERER needt )edlet, · · S41·70'7' ' CC>alESPOMOIMT transp, over 21 yrs. $3.50 leader in the Printed NUISIS LIBRARIES INC Newport Center. Reply
to work at parties, days Cook a, ex per Sau le', A-.11 t • be bl "" ...,.., -11 642 7430 Circuit Board l·nd"•Lr" LVN RN 11 f Classified Adll902, Daily
&eves. 846•8433 broiler ll pantry. Apply to~~-:.:i:;, let~n~ ~·.,..,.,-' . has an lmmtdlate ;;-pe;. Xlnt' oe;;!~. Ca01l r~1:s: Equal Opp Emplyr m/f Pilot, PO Box 1!60, Costa
Cl<C>i.iried bet II" 11, 2 Cr S, Bay Dinner Cook . exper . Type'-S+ wpm"bandle Hou1ekeeper. L1ve·ln, IJ\& ror :i 2nd Kluft Mam-Toomey,844!-T764 Mesa,Ca.926241
Marie Reslaurant, 2371 Broller&saute Applyln details Well utab'l flcha. Mature English tenance Mechani c. RECEPTIONJST·mature Newspaper So.ElCamlnoReaJ,San person, art 3 .lOPM . educat100•I firm Good speaking, must drive, Minimum 1 )'ear ex -NUISESAIDES Pl
Clemente. &ach Hou.se Inn. 6111 beoellta. A'to7 "'Jilonal Refsreq'd. NB644·5123 ,....nence wilh workln" 11·7. Exper.'d. 41 Be.is. astiCS W/tYPtnti, lite book.keep· Alllu ~ • "' Hollo L '' ...-• " In&. 9·1, S da.ys, 640·5780 uJ8rtiSIR( COOKS, So. La•. Cl\f, NB -::eh.PY w n Laa Systems orp., 4381 Housekeeper.Live.Jn. knowledge 01 machinery Good aal w1lncl'eases. I · • M forlntervlew
p time & f/\lme. Colfei! """ Birch St, NB. !Near Needed urgentl y, and old tools. Qualified Cou ntry Club Conv. Rj8Cti0R Olding 1----,------Sales shop e~p. ~el• please DISHWASHER oc Au·port >E.OE We$tcurr.Jchildren.u 1 cwndldatea ·are en · Hosp.,SA.549·3061. Rtct.TtoNIST ~.,..._·'>~f .o.aJJy Charlie 1 Chill otc. (714 > ns.neo Genera! Of rice & 8 yrs. Gd aal . Cel cpeo~!.ed to apply In 0FF1 c E c LE R K _ Supervisor · Jn rast paced Jet aircraft
' ·~Otl.._-_ d\UOt\11~ :.-\ ~ ~-·-~a _ IECEPTIOMl~T ..B31<(11.39 Spanish tptalt· Pleasant CdM office. , Jildi reruellng center. Req's
i, a 1 ea per 1001 r 0 r COOi( -~~ ~ ~...,,..._ _ :. "' in&(),f(. -... ..t.· ..... ,, i,.}i1..1.t.l.ilt a 't e.. ~~<\..~ . 11.IR[ altiractive, energetic
classllied "automoUve p /t Income up to JoveiY We'C: orcl Typli· •LNe~t'I ?lf :« d ~~ ~~pit('\ .~ -, ·fi'KfQD~t'f.~lk.
outside aalcs st arr Short Order part or SlOOO/mo or more + ~+wpm. F"ronl ore ap· ''child car~ Spal'\,lsh 673!"5872 • -·· · ~ !a~· " · · 11 .... l~ -·-Nc·w~paper claaslr1cd a~ I ilime. Bwfalo Nickel be n e f It•· Mature· pear. & good arooming speak.in& OK.'551·6382 ELECTRONICS Need people exper'd in ~.P w"!~o:n~~ f ~?g~~ verthnna expertenco re· Restaurant, Travelan~. 839-6123. ' req'd. Apply National OFFICEATTEHD h u 1 I ,.....
quired. AppUcant must Irvine. 5$1·1881 Sylvia Sy1tems Corp .. 4361 Housekeeeper. exper'd, l8522VonKarman Wknds 3:30·mldnight. P armaceu ca env ron· rcq'd. Call Laurie,
have iood cir and typin11 ext. 25. DRAFTSMAN· w /ex per Bln:h St. NB. <Near o.c. Enallsh a peaking. No Irvine, Ca 92714 Wed &ThU.1'11 midnight to ~~it t:r~f~f;~u':,,~ld~~ 546-4300. ,
akilla. Sal.ry " com· COOIC & WAITRISS ln Interior Dealgn for Airport) KO.E. cooking. Mon·Frl. Call (nearO.C. AJrport) 8. Bayview Manor 350 W. Need strong mechanical Receptionist typist for mlaalon. Good opportunl· established Interior ---AMor Eve.87$.0286. Bay St, C.M.642·~. abtUty. boat sales ofc. Aptitude
ty. Excellent compal\y lit Yn °"older, Full or De1l1n Shop. Some OEN. OFC. TypinR/llte EqualOpportunity We are also looking for for figures desirable. ben~fit.a. Poslllon1 muat P /Ume. Call tor appt. architectural knowledae ahrthd /phone. Varied Housekeeper, llve·ln, EmployerM/F molder trainees w/some Some exp. req'd. Salary
be filled Immediately. Pliu Factory RHt. helpful. Call Mr. McCar oU. duttta for mature In· wanted by Sr. Citizen. exper. in pla.stic lnJec· based on exp. Wknds,
ca.II Peraonnel Dept lft3.ll7i ty al 4.92 ... 131 for agrc· dJv1dual lntere1ted work· Muat drive. This la the MIJMTENAMCE PACKAGERS Uon molding who desire could work Into 3-<t da)'s.
for appointment ., C 0 UN TE R ff g LP lNCRlCKET lNTE ORS UlC for arow1na NB de· oppor. lo supplement P to Improve their molding Ph 67S·3282 Mon-Fri 842·4!21 COOKS fuJI "p/t. Cap'. C. SanClemente vet.op m t . co . your 1oc. aec. l213) 01. open Mon· Fri. NEEDEDIMMED. kno led 9-S 30 OrC91CJ1 COOlt lain Mlke'a P\ab f'ry, 115 DRIVER• HELPER, ex Bene a/vaca/1alarled. 51-6043, ('1108t5-8780. 12AM~~~NALDS All ab1fts. No expor. 11 ;ou·~=· thia peraon• __ :_. _____ _ D~ ... _... W l9lhSt.Cll. per.forlocaJNovln.&Co. C..lllS44Dl30 HouaekHper, mature tor •o.aaee hBI H B necus. Xlnt worldna please~ntact: IECEPTIONIST
r-ftlV'f bo N h l......., ac • · · c:onda&pay Call Nowt F .. I J I d RE I 380W. r)'St.rMl COUNTER Help. rem . ~flUMa G.Ofc S.Cretcry f~~~s. l&hl. m. Call for Interview . SchMU Pf•tlca v:t·~~n: ~rrm .. Mu:i
eo.u Mtta. . pl\. Day &r eve. Apply. ~S,...ta.. F /ti me. Be ner1t11 . <714)847-9100 ~Q~ ff, l714JHM'31 haveexper. TypincakUls
Equal<>Poortunlty SUx&urpn.•W.llth VallelC•lUomla Drivers Mature. Non amoker. HOpSEKEEPER. exper. MA.,..•GER O ice • nec.Applylnperaon,369
Ernp(oyer St.Cc.ta Mesa. Uc Goodd · l I d Ocean Air Condlllonln& mature, w/refa. New 1"1111~ 0 overload P"'me "'emnlet•orover. San Mlauel Dr, Ste 200, nv n rttor . &r Heallnl Co. Call I> b L B h. C ll ,.... r · • a CLEANING -lronin", Counter G l r l J' or J.1)'1'11orover. Nea.lln ap-Ul-0700 for Interview • y. aa. c a PET STORE 557.00tl Min wagetoatart. No ex· NewportBch. ;;i;.:..c:.r::.s~W Mar ~:~:.:'~ 11 ::~~t~c o'i..i.1 ~~.~ appt
494~188• Exper.req'd.6'2·SS22. •• m>Btrchst.N.B. f:1J'i::d,;0:c~~~~:~; RECEnlOMIST l~.142-4352 GllL RIDA Y IMSUliMCE -party rental equip. Apply Small law ore Airport
c&.EAMIMGPIRSON CUSTOOIAMJC._.. Noo amolter . Type 4$. AUfe&Dl.sablUt,yaats. ManutMaoaaer $26K+ ._.,'-At d Party World, 2025 area. N.B. Brifht, ac-
P1Urne. EYa. Approx. 3 P /lime Retiree pret • .-..... C Take phone ordeni, keep Exp. In mort1. lnt. •ales. Drafts Pers Arch $13K ·--... ffa t •• Newport Blvd, CM. curaletypl1t.W.t983 ~· ... -''"""' '--1..-•• .... •. 1 Lota of lud.s. Generoua = Pllime. mua~ be avalla· h.rs day aiOll·nl. Apply, Fountaln Valle)'. ~7·3&'13 TICHNICIAM ......,... • reco.us • earn advanc••· You •hould EltteSeeretary ble Sat, Sun Ii Mon. <>P·1•--------1Reflnllhtn1 Shop need1 a
• Penn ya• ver' ueo btwo IAM·lPlf, moo· itcdronlea ftrm has Im· le•al aec'y. $550 up. make 1500 weekly =cct.111 to portllnity Corf/llmeeum· Real Eatate In Meu flnlaher & other shop
Pl1C«ftUa.C.M. Fri. mediate openlna ln 148·1400. <comm).832-4812 Pereonnel~ency merwork.6"·5'04aftU Verde-Oldeatestab.ot· help+ pickup Ii de·
CLEANING WOMEN Dellv.ry M~. early LA maold. dept. Technical GllllNIDAY •£17th0otta i•rc AM. flee, new progrea.ave liver1.!M6-3N8.
Sl.50+ per hr, own car. Tlmea route, Coata or military service Enlhus. aelf motivated ~~li11~~1a!:,':iB ~lte~ --M2_: 47 PF.OPLEP£R80N marketlnf. Major maU· Reltaurant.a
NB/lvrana.1181-3Ma M•e, Huntlaatoo Bell tchoOI ~rafntnr or aper. lndlv. involctna. order • .. t. w ..... -.p--NewPorl Exec. need• Ina quarterly. Attractive COOK'S Aiiis,_ CLBIC.AL area. Muat haved4QaeD· ~d..LJn•ar10Ud1tate, duk, muat ty~e . Inf, E~. pref'd. •MASSAGE P /tlme aaaoclat• lo otllce decor. Excltln1 Man puf. Alr llpe
Woman wanted. Some dablecar.$4M411 !icro:a~~:e;.a 1 v e Beneflu. Sal open. B. ~:lt'k.Na.a::~i~ 80%~~~~:r~ln. wholeul• a up p ly. place to develop bual· kltcben. e AM toU. lle· ~ bulc math abllH". DELIVERYllANforearl1 ,._.ll f-1~•--nt M2·M'12 "'·JlLPT '"Le•• 673-2223. neet. UNIQUZ HOMES, qulrtrneista: RellabWty. , M LA11 Ho d -"' '""' INSURANCE Gr oup r u • •• wor ... '"'· 548·1990 , Jackie neat appe1ranee, d••lro · S:30o5.$1hr.Pht79-ll05 Cvai,., mU:-havt1:o:~ T&OMt /4LT411 .,ILPllDAY HuUh Cltim a Ex· IWT£SPA 5'0-ll&e PllSOMMIL Handleman toadvance.~
------.... 1 car, 2~ bn daJty, adult.I lAl!MelMO Matur. woman to run l a.rntMr, exper. it leut 1 MASSAGITICH SICRITARY !~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;; 1 Q.HICTYPtST only. No aoUcltlnl, no C71414f4-f401 11'1 olc. C.M. bHed ~.SIJl.t)'Optb.5'9-1767 PoalUonrequiraaeveratf-
• OrderControJDani, I 1 t t Equal()pporEmpioy. aportlna &ood• manw. (Jan> ,..,.. pertonncl ••ru"·· llALISTATI RETAIL
Sa) .. k wr cw 0 1•1 c HD • ' XJntoppor. 54e-4950. With diploma for top ............ •-et_ .... _,. llla. u ................ w/i,. ~-... • es .. ~..,,~1ar etJni ••· 1 Htm n •t•r/ unt· IHSUIAHCI clau Ll.:GmMATlhpa. ~--w;·.,ot--..::.uir ..... .,..__,., """'-•• CLERKS per .... 1,, .... ln aal• or· n 1toft Be ac b • r •a, OlllL P lllme • 1Ummer Mr Olarruaao. 753 &Sil ._,..'""""' .. •... ~ J'o1 nil known, expand·
der procaa'°' fr lnvolc· e.'IMUI work. Trainee in ftahln• llW..G CL•I( · · Should be lmowlecl1eable lo• Real E1tate corn· J.41. Cuttomet eonLact l'ador7 rod • lure mt1-Npt. F/Um• l·llpm . San MATURE WOMAN 1Drnoat pbu.ofpet10n· J>ll\1· Openlna a new of. UTOTIM re Q 'd. Ph a a a n t DIUvery r:4 Dall)' Pilot. •ASSIMll.BS• lkh. Call t7•7otl ai 9:30 Clemente Oen'l Hoap., p/llmt to welco ma nel. Poattlon report.a to nee In Coate Mc ... Moat ~l'lon111ty. Type ep Lari• ro1ite ln So1o1t1h •LAIAB-S• toU:JOAlf. es40uittnodeloemu ... , newcomera • contact the Mana1er ol Penoa· Juavt upertence. Salary C.....a-e•M_..
wpmalectttctnewt'lter. IAIUD• Beach. &all•b• MAL&mMALE <Estrella exlU (71') antrchan.t.1.,,exlble ht1. nets.rvtc:a. pb.11 +. AJI appUcallooa Poaitlomopeollt.znd•
t. Olllf'or•ppoittt.menl for" blab tc:bool or col· Oltla, part Ume, outaldt -.1122. Need car, Ut. typln1. coofldHllal. AppJy to ltd 1b1fl1 lo S•n ' 'l'ILOtlC[Al.TAJll le,. •lue!tnt. MUil ha•t AU OraQ&eCo. Arnt l&Ddwlch aalea. 10 am t.o 5C'l-8115. Pl..,.appl)': Ad. No. 8811, Dally PUot, Clemente • LalGH
' ~ IHch a depeodabl9 cat with ffRPMA JES 1 pen. Call M2· 1214 ~ JAMnOIS Mech. aptltudt dtatnd, Pt!'101UMJ Department ctatallled Ad vertbln~ Beach. Ot.ber art•~~·
r7 ''' 494.940 I ~ :=~::~ llM176 Otrl to dlatribut. nymt 1D llm " women, P tt•m• )'OUnl man t.o help with .,..._ l..U ., w. Ba1 st .. Coa ~~ !:° :r:i; Equal()ppor£mDloyv. Im mo. '4Uaa1. 1.50SE.11tJaSll.rttt Orance County. Sat Ot ::..N~ulct~t:: de.l.lvc.ry, atock • 1hop W ..... Dhflfd _MeN __ ,_~_u_r_.t_._,._. __ .. , ow-atone.
Ask torClrcW.t.bfluv· aattelm.SantaAu $lnAM.•.110Hr.10c ml, Ave.J.rvine.Jt0.71lC.._ work. Yreeway Auto 2511NewpartBJ.t. ~ii.n W"-Rlll'H ln&~uame•pbooe. car • luurance req, Suppl)', A•try .Plt•t· al 3512 MlcbHlton Dr. RoaU~tate c.o.taMesa _ ec.7'02
-•'"-"' tua -. MM.550. '' Janttan It Maida S.ota San Die o Frfrf,, M1'· Irvine (J'aq .Jamboree MANAGER ~Y:k~ ~~~ DMALASlllT. J FASHION Aoa /lrvloe a rH . Im· '*'VJeiO· Rd.Clftruop) -,
.42'1 llarUniaJ• La. ~':A.~cl.::S~ !.._.hopla,_~_!dbotobtlp HANDYMAN media&• op en\11 ........ ,~....... ~·.'i~c~~~::i RN or LYN
1 Ntwpocta.acti ·. MllQI 20U Wtltdlff Dr -uci _.._, • .. 1n Neededp/UrM.,\PPlt. P/UroenenlnCl. lAJO E. Ca111Ucnotrtq'dtoworlr haw rec:tnt realdenU•l pat--. 11·1. XJllt --. .... , ~ iuewjlllft 111t...ao.' Jocalaru. Wttkwltbt.M Glllll r'al\eat.aurant SL~tPJace,santa •• T .blebot omltt ln Pff8N£ SALES I ,........ ft....11.o--'''" •· .,.. .n -,_._ • ..,...~......_..-·~""•A ii.-..... ·bl d ii.•-......_.._, r••• •· 1omt com· s..-itweonv ..... p~ .. COCkti H Wa.ltru1. H· AU renll ......... _ • .., c.--r:.;r .._,.. ...,.."'... v "' ... __ , ' ' ""-lcal Lab. Call for l l ... '"~ • " ... _. -.._ .. .. o1. lrvlne •IOahJ S..Spm "uu P'"one B•l•• ""eople, merct a. expeutnu . 205$ Thutn An, C • ~-~~at ndtsiUal.11-ft~i•,._ ;;~· 'c:ii for tnttnw · • · •MHITOIS appt.•7lll.,, ' ~ •• or •em•ta ~ ..... •• 81la.r7, override aad flC.2$5
"t·tpll, ........,, ll'ttc _ -'••'".'. ·• -=ltd It ~ at HOST£SS, full Urn• o; 'W~• " tM:•i.il~ ...-. '' --.., _ t0mmlMIOn. C•ll tp·I----:.~---.. -~-
,,,_ ,~ , ea;.eou taa.LafUD.I partUrn..Da11.~ptyt,n Eiper.,malt. f•m or ~toctn•..,bloiod :Gf:.'to== ~":~ot lffl"••tary, ~.,::;::;,,~:~ ~rf• to elder· p~11A1/Mallt sua. <t.a Turnom C°'Y::UB::· "•l!J1f coupt•. M hn DJpt. • 1·1 to won 1a aJDkal Lab ZM> a.at n th atr et,1~~~~~~~··~ p'dllftf'd. Mt"5aa r. -111.W;lleb\ .... wrt.Sm _..,taceidt f..U Umt lMM·7Pll, aak lot Mn. .... MtrU•aale Ln: day wt. CAil Ml I ••• ~ la ff Pit"-c.u Suitt o, Coat• Me11,1· ' 'u&:bid'~l"DOID •tJotnt. ·~••ltt11t nucttd tor aow,-.sooo. • • Blach. •. ; m.1212 ' ,.....,.,._ ... nu ..._,1:00 1r1:10 p.m. NJ:EI)HtLPr RNP/Um,111uecm0tt.
Rtfl'*ld. .... 1111 .~£ , a... AU o1 •. ~ ...,_....._• -, ... _. -, , ••m ueip1oune11ao1 1·Pa1cb •a;r prerd.. ..... ·ray Uc H•! '· rvwrft •l 0.'dri:iPtM"-111 a.ti ClutUled •ds Hll t>lf KIN fo." LA 'l'lln• Clj.. Equal=unltJ' JltUtua.ltd.16ftcl Dli\aPt. ?Gt:
111.L Nii lnli •ll • ': Ullllorm, aJlowa.ce '6 APP!{ hl penoa.. lful· Job wWl • ~ DallJ tklftll tmall Sttm• or """' Penn,, p/t.hiie. Cm ~-.. QuinttledHC)l)tful ... '°""" ·, '"-·. " "> .,:z.:"*a .... n.e~ .,,...,....,..... t dOOn. lrUh Pub, -P iiot Claa•lfl•• Ad~ I01 •••• .Tl.lit. oa.ll 1115 lo PIO ptt mo. lntbaDAlLY PU.OT 9aU\biaotutwtUaDa17
·..: 1 , l!fewe-:tar»r.H.a. t ,,...IOa?I.,, ' ~, ,1 i. •n40 , • ,, rJ• ~. _ UELPWAM'l'WAD8 " JIUatWa.tAlt. _ r _.~ ..
• ... ' . '
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' ' .. tw.w.w 1100 w..... 1100·.w.w..... ,... WtiitW 7190 ... I ........ •r• IOIO 1\!p!lr.!tl!r?,1177 DAJLYN.OT a · ·~t.eT••••••••• .. •••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~;;.T•••••---...·--• "••••••••••••••••••••• -•••n•-.•"''"'' ................. -.. .. • .,. ti ·•011 . ~.........-.~~.....-....-.. AKCP«ldlePap.. Sl'OllnJl)EIALS v. .. lrJ t61i1••-1010 ...... ,._.,. • t040 · IN'$ ~critarfal w•~r• ~•1'1111'.t1111_• • ~•u..at . appl't, ........ , .. ,,,,,.,,,, ......................... •••••••••••••••••••• .. •
•. NI~ . "CaDl.lNW ~. 'I 11rpbi t1Ml1 liMi1 · '4' DOtl.JIOVSE Fumlabed: '
•• N.lilltnl.llMI 1M. Full 4 SECl£TAllfS • ··--·· w~ •-"""'-, b' NGCILW~ .. ~c•.>t ':MS le by 10'. Jta. Vtr/ pod SIOO or rtat orterl for •'Wood cJ.ltp. bulls, S3500 ~Jflme.Allo.CCURH'•· ....... ..... aaJ ·--1JA ·-11..M.J.TD> CGDd.Good~aHU. mcnlnf '40-ao:ta ••c '2\woocUilt>.buU, ·Blneflta ror f/Ume. Coo l'nlntll OFFICE Esperi~Pretured a. Ullftl1lleNdl SZS •~ . #!.-. Pvt PtJ. C1Hl 0 sa.ooo. 30' 1>e1 .. 1 iact lllN ,....., Cotta llLIU.ftft Oooc1P1116 u. l male, I i em, •ZllT PLANT8 trawltr f})'bt'., SZG.500.
·=••l Ho1pHaJ. 1£CraTIONJST·TYPISJ 9'perCo.Beoell&&. ID«m **I IUY** • LWHHOUS~PLAN'TS 30' $port b r cabln: U" 11 -' ..,.. .. Y• 1041 OoOd uttd Fu.n1.lturt a ......... 1 '*'* no ent. fljbr., •,aoo. 40 TWo to Foor Month Assignments Apply lJl Petton ........... ,.._......... APDll•Acu-OJl . J wlll -
2
I I 11• 1010 co Uve .. bo&td fi_ybr., -Also DallY·Wecldy 2241 W.c::..t~ b&eU-..~1'1Ut• • ..U•IEl.LforYou. • ..... ...., ............. Crib, nt1tt., bumper pMb, us,ooo. so• Dellol :!~~~··~:f!~r LI-'-NPOWER INC Me~IHdi a lliud, •...-a old. MAltalAUCTIOM NEWPORTBCHTENNIS =•Ir, play pen trawler~ llvt·aboard,
boutetl'I Hrvlce"'. CaU f"A • ' • 'het6Wedl•S ~ 64M6N a IJMUI CLUB. Limited Jhm· • SlZS.IM-OlM ••.000. Several ~ t.O IMM111 641·2043 berablpa. 8"-0QGO Sola. love Hat, d'°", bar cllooN from.
, Equul Opportuntty Employer CANO'S ~:r~fli.~/ Md 1f •rm Gs• 549 IOll It 1cca, car Ha\, e1tec ATLANTIC PACl~C SAll.MAKER Hai Potl· need9 cd ~ 145-l::•· ••••••••••••••••••••••• AMWA y NOOUC:TS chair, lamb f\11, m!ac. MAlmMI .~.8om•exper. ~~~~ e OPENil'(0Mon·Sat11·8 Ca1J615-6814 Cell~ COMPANY
.. $48~. ...., W•ted 7100...., Weithd 7100 sr ·FOOD PERSIAN Cat. tem., l 7r. c ....... ea.... 646·561
Sall Mam1tre11. Exper. ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• U ~eetoadultlw/oopets. Almo11l new. Brina In WOV•WOODS WANTED 14' Olaupar. ss bp
pref. ToP waae. Alk fQr s1c•1TAlY Steno1rapber. typlal, RESTAURANT aaa.aos aJUPM dun • ln 1tyle OQ con· a MIMI IUMDS TOP CASH DOLLAR Johnson. exlrH. Malut · ~ s.ll·fnll For NeWl)Ort Ctr1ml ofc Part tlroo. AvaU io worlc cu TE ff EA 1,. TH y 'I llpment. <You cet baU) Wooden thut.ten Is 1PYll PA 11> P 0 R Y 0 U R olttt over $32$. Call an.
SALES CLERK M t.. Od cltrttl'" pot• ua1' 1 lo 2 d•Y• week plua WEEK OLD KITrENS. 2052Npt 81., H bllndt. Up to 80~ orr re-JEWELRY, WATCHES, ~pm,142·5110. • UI .. n• • n ' )tam otnc. procedure 902171 r tail •• AM to 5PM caU ART OBJECTS, GOLD. _.::.. _________ _ ~t_ people It troplC11l must be sharp. M0-'10'» ol major tranacootlnen-Oara&e Sale Clean nee, tuel St L VER s En v ICE. •21' Bl!!RTRAM Tl
U you don't eiUoy SICllT ... •y ta1 motor commDD car· Waitresses, So. LaJ, NB• ..... IOIO eood bareainl1 Tue. Illa)' FINE FUJ\N. " AN. . ......•...•••. ~mu.
worldna, don't app1y. * -rler f« vacation fill·ln. CM. P/( fJ Fil. Coffee ....................... 3only.Officerum,coucbSlu4tnt 1eek1 place to TlQUES.&U-2200 SyrCLElHSIOOOdtl, ~l.311. Archltectur~l olc. Top Tranacon Linea Irv. 1hop exp. R~fa please. NAUG SOFA. Hllhb.ck " chair, hldubed. keeplmdoJ. WW•uJ>plY 139,000. BALES aklll• req d. Typln1 M9-IMa ' Charlie'• ctillJ Ofc. (714) dWra Nylocuofa 11 lov· lam P•. Im I me ft I •JI food and love. Wiii Them..-"'~-'--GENER At. A UT 0
.HU
..,
1
m In l mum n W'p m. 649-0351. ~l/ea.rthtoaea. Oime clothln1, comp CB ~ulp, pay fee It ucuury _. .... ,__.,._. LE~ING
" mature-, 1alary com· "'-"""_,a ll•t:··-'·"'v to llble collee table1 aofa mt.c )'ard equip. 1e 1kl 54M)lJI on tht ~Cout Since 1959 213-891-2007 PahJona nM<ta 5 lad lea mensurat.e w /uper. TELEPHONE SAL&S "_..... ..... _, b 1' ' boat motor " trlr Iota of DAI"' p1 • l'W' lnthiaareat.owearfJd.. •WIWamLPerelr• llve·ln wltb elderly ta e . Klnl or Qn xtru lncJd lo l>ki deal Used carpet. Good cood. •• • I.WI 20'Formula"'141.0 .,VHF.
monslute our newe1l A11oc..., $Mo NEY$ woman. Ute bswrt, 2bt Bedroom lft. wall ~t J{ousd)old lt.ema ealore .. IQ yd incld'1 paddlna. CLASSIFIED xtras. xlnl Harbor boal Une. Earn Sll·l40 per MacArthur Blvd at Ford COGdo Apt. "9'.-sT bookcaau w /matcbina Beat offer buy1 93Zi 11'79-61M.1 840-1128, 879·209&
4t\'e. plua wardrobe. Car CorooadeUhr coffee hblea, Herc. Hyaanl& Port Dr· Hnt1 ADS •pbonenec.Forlntervw 17141644-064!0 WOMAN over 40 yra; recllnet.Goodconciltlon. Bch 8 acb.ar,SS/2 Deak1. waler bed, '61 baraen 16'. '15 H
•ppl clll 541-%103. E 0 E M /F • {& PRIDE} combo front de.It elk • ~-4'760 y~ u d r • 1 • • r • ru l 1 c · Ttu Con W 11, find 11. Evlnrude~te tank, tilt · · · relief on pbooes. lledlcal J Bedroo win · bouMboJd llema. M5-'1Sl81 Trade It Witt! 0 wont Ad trlr .. Bet5a9, 9'18-0223
SAL.ES-E1tper'd, mature, or 'lnawer. serv. up. r. m Set. 2 t NNUAL RUMMAGE a.ft&pm . .&pl)C'Ox30hrs""' eek That'awbatworklngfor helpful.f1exhrs&aome beds+. Compl w/cur· SALE 5 M -----------• [•A2•5878 } lS' Fiberclau llabln& ~r w · Time/Lile Ubranea la wk nd1. Ref1 nee. In· llim6:1preada.~ : t . a ry•a Cham saw Stlhl OUAVE, . V-. _ boat. 15 hp wttraUer.
So. Cout Vllla1e. SECRETARY all about. We bave the Epl1cop1l Church, 428 Sl.25. I' rubber raft flO. tfl75. 837-&4.17 557-41963 tere1tin1 work w /a Dln'c ael, mahos. Park Ave., La1una 41&ZU9 OneCalServke
S
"USAllLS l'ob,I Bank of Calif. baa best phone •ales group ln future in busy N.B. ofc. D.Pb)'fe deslsn. tbl, 8 Beach. Included are~ An· fost Credit ""9f~d ~ • an lmmed. opening in So.Calil.~w~youjoiA C.ll betwn SPM "IPM, cbra 4 armed evea Uque1, church pews, S.,-~!U "111 • p/Ume. Exper'd. their Hunt. Bcb ofc. for 1 our oraanaauon you can M6-40'7l ~ · leaded talned 11 1 12· ....... i--1. " u....-•-...a loah. SaJI 9060 Colll Me MS-1804 avera1e xlnt money per 11 as1 w n· m.,._.any p .. "''· o __. ••••••••••••••••••••••• esa. · secytouslatthebranch hr. We have a iuaran· wortt,from your home. 2 Full size white French dows. Thur1day May 5. tol8"wide,lto2"lbick. IMtnlntnh 1013 , • ---------1 m11. PrevloUJ1 banking teedbasepay +comm+ Mlasrepsneedsomeone .__,,, __ 1_, .......... 9-5PM, Fri. May 6. SOcperft.548·S'13S ••••••••••••••••••••••• 73COLl4 D5L
. SALISGllL
, F /tlme for fabric ehop
Apply Jn Person .
C.AllOTT'S
FA.lllCS
-> 2l&10 E.. Ca.t Hwy. CdM
SALES Promotion !
Sharp, attractive, out.ao·
inf personality for well
ealabfu.hed furniture de·
coraUni: firm Guaran
teed. 642-3400
• Skleaperson, parl Ume.
Enthu11utlc, exper,
mature. for Ba I boa
Ialand Jr. Dress Shop.
exper pref'd. Xlnt .A .. A •· 8.-. nv .. """uu e&DQ9>' --... 9·1PM . Luxurious 6t5-'IM4 beneOts. Call Peraonnel bonua. But, equally Im· "' ~wcr Pnvne • .,. Excelleat eoftd. Alto full Twin maµress & boxspr· Conn Min-0.fdatlc elec f ( 13 9'1 portant Is. the fact that their appointments In size pink bedspread and lni frame used 1 mlh ~rgan, excellent condi· Columbl.J, J!i. Complete + ~aJ:i>p~/~~l~er youcanbeproudofyour c:aplstrano&SanClem. M"xae" pl.nit care cur·Jewfty 1070 $35 . 17z'i8 Joann tion,$600,P.P.532·1259 triutei & cover. $109S.
1 _________ ,Job. You11 be work.ins area . R .E. Lapp, lalna and c1nopy cover •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• ~ -catl54-0-'1843.
--------•for & w/&ood & friendly 633.7980. all for l'/5. 646-0818 or WA...,.TED BARJTONESAX . Secret.ary /Gal Friday people while )'OU sell a 54IM2'11 1""11 Hereulon couch, 1 year Xlnt Cond. • $375 ' Mystic sloop. plywood
Flexible Hours 1real product-The YA.ID MAM TOP CASH 001,.LAR old, f!SO. Finished wood 552·1511 cabm. sips s. Mk ofr. 14'
Goodabortband Beautiful Time/Life Youns man wlshlnf to Walnutrattandln'.gset. PA l D FOR Y 0 UR coffee table $50. Patio Amplifier Fender Deluxe Seascm sloop, main Jib,
Opp'l)'.Topi•l6(5..:i.? Book-series: S1-a~l establish hlmael ln Tbl,Jear,scbaln. JEWELRY. WATCHES, awnlntJ$25.-.16U ..x:everb 6 IJU> old ~ trlr$450.548·2'129
SECHTAIY ~':i1 b:J~e~!.-::~~: L~:h~~1~!1 ~:o~!e~~e "°°· rii:v~~a~?cL~. 1M1.3860.963-57m ' · 12· sailboat 2n'ails .
f'or Newport Ctr Law articulate people who bene.flclal. Apply, 1954Spcsbdaet,1dcood.Dbl FINE FURN & AN: Gfoel .. HMFrflll 6Pc.DrumSel(Rogen)3 w/dock dolly $250. 2J'
olc Good typlng skills. baveastron1voice.Oral Placentia,C.M. · bed, trad couch! 2 occ. TIQUES.MS-2200 6" Hansing Potted Cymbals•dophAt (Zild-l976 day crsr., olds·pwr C..11759-0431 readl.nltettr~ulred. cbn,nrnew,4 din.chn, Plants Sl.98. ALL jlan) $700. Ph 847·3860 ~JS. _ ... t ___ _ Wort& For TIM le t Mlrcll••M at.ereo co.n. Qn CUitom U• .. tod& 107 ORCANIC SUPPLIES 96J. ~ ' -SECRETARY 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• quilted Bdsprd. Eves •••••••••••••••••••••• available. 1000 WORMS 57 · Sabot. lk nu, F1bor1las1
InttteaUng poaLUoo for a CaO tlJ.8095 AnHCfll" 1005 SS1·5316 ltSS2-1486 Re1. Morean mare, brok $4, 3000 Worms SJ.O. Ovation classic al guitar ~1clcraft trlr Inc. $395 or
.,.·ell 1roomed, pleasant TIME/1.lf( ••••••••••••••••••••••• REDECORATING lo ride It drive, blk B'S RED WORM FARM, w/hardsheU case. Xlnt _b/ofr_. s_n_3-_u_23 ___ _
up er 'd sec retary . Wo derl d Chest of drawers $25, parade Morcan &eldln&. Inc. . . cond. $400.&t.2-8129 Pearson Triton. Very
Dulles include typln1 UBRARl~s INC n an redwood plcqic tbl W/2 Eng , Western ('114 17382 Gothard, HB. G bl;on lr6S de) l aood cond, many Jtt.ras.
60+ wrcm· order <leak L• Of AfttiqUeS! benches, $35, 2 lttahog 331H011 IM'f.5141 ~tar, $225; Pl:: ~a~~ 1714)673-7813
dutJesti ot our francbiae EqualOppEmplyrm/f HUGE wuehouae chrl S2S, l Mabol arm ... dt9•ry t071 amp, 2·15" speake rs . .------... -•
opera ona. Indlv. muat crammed wtlh over soo cbr $20, corner lfOUp, no ••••••••••••••••••••••• Obi bed szo. rocker $20, S $200. Leslie combo pre·
Sales be • self starter w /abill· TELEPHONE WORK mualc bou1, olcltelo· tbl $251 ottoman ~. •m dwr dreuer $15, ~lot.bu amp $70; 644-2766
ty t.o handle coofidenUal ' ... -TIMI deoo pllDOI, clrcu.s or· IOla w /elllhiom 92$. call ..... ._.Oii •ach hmpir.., md tbl w/leaf & PART TIME matters. Apply, National -·· a.ft$·30pm "5-'llS7 '""S' ....
675-0710 WANTED:
ERICKSON 35 or
ISLANDER 36. Pvt. par-
ty wants to purchase
directly from owner .
Send information to P.O
Box 2285, Newport Bcb,
9'.ltltiO.
Systems Corp .. 4361 -Call From Home gans, wall clocks . · • · lalllwnt R...talt 2 c:hr1 $15, 30" spool, Office .......... • &
Interviewers Birch St. N.8 . INr. oc ·-0NonSeJllln1 arandhther clocks. Twoendllbles sofa.lov· 761h(ARNERAVE,HB woodett,963-9066. .._,.___ 1011 ... ,_ eedW oe {asclnatmeantlques. t 21 's '·h· ......-..--* J11exJble hours ""...,rt) E.O. E. uaran 8• Ov S1 ooo ooo w rth esea • amps. pan.. • Ctill t4Z· 77 65 Newish & Nice carpeting •••••••••••••••••••••••
•Public rontact SECRETARY T,
60
•No Exper. Necesa. Ame::.'"can Jntern1~onal gd cood $250. 831"3342 For your convci:uence, 12d5 red. 13xl2 appl~ Work Tb la, 30x60",
•Close t.o home ype o{)ran~fi°9 C~tty Gallen es; 1802-T Ketler· Velvet couch gmtaold, our 1ummer hours will green. l8xl8 +Teal Blue. 401'84"-. 44x96". 4'x10'.
Offer charge accounts wpm, min. shorthand. , -4 Y ing St .. Irvine. Tel. $125orbfftofr. be Mon-Fri. 6:30to8 PM. 22x15 Beige & white Card files. plan files. 1m--------•
for a major retailer 4 hr~ ~~~~ J!~1°;7~.4~~wport 963~ or 995"4819 75-1-1777. Open Wed thru 545·5278 Sal 7 AM lo 5:30 PM. Sun t w e e d . l S x 2 2 drart'g tbls .. chairs & 23' CLIPPER. on Trailer day or eve, muke _ ___ Sat.9AMto4PM.Vlsll! 8AMto4:30PM. Black /white tweed slools, 11helvmg. 631-2570 w/cxtras. Mint cond.
$4 .. olf:se .oo /hr com . S.C...t.-y r ftlllM TEI.Lii Drop leaf tbl extends 8', 2 ....... , SelKtlOft of 67S..7396or67S..S2SO or831·2771 ~/bst. 545.7290 aft4.
mwACC,!_onD. EVELOPMENT For area ch.'un.-.h. Send .. r.t-Time uSHOP AT•• benches. 2 chairs, desk, HomtOWMr Ir 19" Portable TV UHF rets 1017 '7 La 07 xl l A ·• l Ch b Jonathan's kmf hdbrd & frame. Nu C _ _.__ ..... _ , . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 ser 111 Sl , o ·l SVC resume o. urc • Work 20 hours a week Lan e Cedar chest. U1111TU1101-• Works good, $35 . t d t k 1 shope, blue, trlr lncld.
714.SZJ.Sl6Sx530 General Deli very, mai n tai n ln& iiood CANNERYVILLAGE 645-3167 ~pmtlltA•afftible Vacuum w/parts (tank) u en sees Pace to S700firmS29·3828 Corona del Mar. Ca customer relations while 25Shopl to Ser ve You New&uaed equipment $1!5.646-1525 keep h.IA dog. Will supply 1---------
SALES PHCYrOSTUDIO 92625 bundllni deposats. 4223btSt,Nwpt8ch Furniture Stripped & rorrentalorsale. Trade your old stuff ror all food and love. W1l1 loah,SUpt/ ~eds personable a& 1---------1 withdrawals and other Duo. Ar l Kimbal I Refinished by E1tperts. .~ .. .,._ new 1oedies with a S48pa~Ol.36fee iC nece11ary. Docks 9070 e:rts•ive girl for phone SECRETARIES financial tran~act.1on1. Reproduclo1 Grand 7~50S9dys,67S-~ev. Sellidlellema ........... o aualfledacl. 642·5678 •••••••••••••••••••••••
sales It reception 1st Some bt}lt typmg is re· Pl Pl u t ll Ir O 1090 work. 962-7817 quired. and pre(tloua ayer ano .... ua H . rgant FRONT 'flE, to 26' pwr
TYPISTS teller expenence is pre· Reasonable. S54·4780 ••••••••••••••••••••••• boa\. quiet channel , $2.SO
ferred. Pluse contact Antique Oak Camode for ammond, Lowery, perft.~min.673-6408
CLERllS Mrs. JredaleMZ-4711. sale. 1225. Plcaae call Gulbransen Or1ans 4'
Pnce call 644·9200 mgton Harbour $l00 per " GUHl>ALI 631-:.25 . Y.el I Mo• Kawai Pianos. For Your :.i· boat slip for lae. Hunt-
KEYPUNCH OPRS flOBAL SAVtMG~ .,,.-.CH IO I 0 month. ~·3948
Z300 Har~ Blvd ••••••••••••••••••••••• saAMSTHSS KeaJlh • Dmtal lnsur. ' Costa Mesa. CA ' WILLARD'
Sales peri.on needed, We
are seeking a concerned
Uldn 1dual lO 1ell Enerl)'
& Conservation prod~U
m Newport ~ch 675 6730
6.per•d 1Hm1treu for MO FUS Equal Opportunity Washera. df}lers. Clean ~· I ~ •
11llma1cer. Producuon TOPPAYt!!11111• ---E·m·p\o~y·e·r--• ~~~a~~.~![; -ft.t70 • . c ~ .e_,.,.,~h·...rA'* ~f.?'k!fP. P•Yi;~t f; .• .-~•m-. · .~ -~--~-~ ·-2 ~~ ...:r . ;. __ ~~ --::_ "woiiis · · · Al,JL..~ ••c~ -"DiaYI' ,.,. f tl~'df,-,arl Will buy some refrt11 ll'v 'd Bo build -------••I lime. Ty pine req 'd. appl'a worldni or not' Plano, 6' antique srand. _,..,.pnc st era SICllT AaJIS 1505 E. 17th Street Mutual Savinfl " Loan alao~rap met.al 115-5251 Excel. conct. CARPENTERS
l o SI I OO Mo. ~lte 102, Senta All1t 2197 E. Cat. Hwy. CdM. . 491.3490 carpenters helper
Mr.Kull.&75-5010 Ranae Sl2S. D1&hwa1her. This Morhcr·s Day send Mom a 1•rccrint• To build 65' Custom Em oyenPayAllfeea~jjiii;iiiliij;;;ijiii~iilliiii~~ F.qualOpporEmployer 175. Copper. ad cond. r-I:' Smgrand4'8"old. MotorYacht Uz~einden.Aaency Call979-e94l all rhe world can share on Sunday, May 8. Sl29S. 50ay Weeks
4020 Birch St, Ste 104 SECRETARY Tll LI.I Call 673-7770 $t.OO to 15,:;o per hr. New~rtBeach 833-81llO lmmedlat.e
0
,_..1n" f-Mew~c.o.h l915Gafftn&Sattler30" Express your love 1n a Daily Pilot '7J Lowery Dix Splnet ~lBcOpnpoefirtsEmployer
Cal for Appt/Eatab '6.S ,..... • -aas ran1e •• burner, aold M h . D . 0r"aD·T.O. Never used, .......... rAe.u .... put-Ume In 1al• om~ P/Ume. Perm. T)'pln1 $140.181-U&Z OC er S ay 1-tr<:etin~. • ..., ........,. near OC Airport. t 2 req'd. Wiil consider ---------Music, record & aofortb. 1---------
SECRETAkY-Part-llme, Mon-Fri. MOa41f7 Mon traiAee. Call for appt. Kenmore wa1her or cas Ac.ls ((>m•· 1·0 rhr'"' 51.1,.s·. SH ... s 15 ·.tnJ s_> ,_Sl_.ooo_._MG_~_u_J ___ Limit 22• acroas Nwpt
3 days week. Stnte Farm Frlfor •POL Joen Martelle, •»SMl dryer SB5 ea. O'Keele " "" '"'" ...... -Island. Power or hlnsed
ex p er preferred ,~------~_.... MwuatSavtnpltLoan Merritt blta dlabwaher fnr rhc s1,ecial child's size card . CYt>u muse h•· 1091 rnaatonly.2l3-m3-l5lBl
M6-!l»3 Moo·~l t-5. --------.-570 Camino de Estrella like new 1125. Ouar " '"
Set-·y Ptr Appru.1obra SanClement.e delvr'd.IMl-M72t7M714 unJ<:r J 2 to qualify for rhc: lirrlcsr ~rccc inL•). SIClllTAIY wk. S /H prtf'd . Call ~Employer '°
.EXECUTIVE w 6ttl0, SO·'l'llOO FRIGJDAIR~mn1. t.op Fa.sh Isl n E. firm. Acct --------aJnee handyman type, fir. Xlnt. ond. OE
dept. Sti.t Acct type SICY J111C~ 1d wood workiDI • Wuber. 0 Dryer.
skills Type 70Wpm. sh Good MCJ 1kllls req'd to medm'l aptltvde nee. l40Gl'fltNO-lllO
90-100. Apply In puaon, work I.ii bua)' law ofc hrm career poeltlon for B San Mlilltl Dr, Ste Type l'Swpqi +, w/bk qualUled applJ cant Frlrdalr. nfri1erator,
D. NB llpn, " m«Sl~aJ exper MMa. betn'l..fAllfor ~!':.°e 1J1:h:a:::r r;,,;:i Call for appt ... •-ppt...,__ _______ w/chopplnl block &op.
TIAIMEIS CO.Ml-1811
For boat maauf. Ability Waaherfrsudryer, a:ioo
to work w twood. pref'd. both. Wbite.
Apply, llllll E. Ocddoa· 171-9382
tal,SanllAu. ----------·VIU ... ~ Noo-WorklnS Major Ap-·--.-~.,..., pllancet It Power Moton
Exper oulald• ulea wanted. Reaaonable. trave~! .. ~~.~t w /follow· M8-SMI Ina,~• top com· FrlsSdalre, Cold Put17,
miu. 3 freei-er at bottom, '125.
TUI CUMIBS MS-2UO -----------·· I& TRIMM&RS/Eaprd. 11cycJes IOZO
St•adb work. Call for ...... _,,. ...... , ...... ~ mT~~· Bu1·••ll·Trad•·Und SU.. C¥cJe la Co. a&• TYPIST Newport lll, CM ta.Tito
~r'd J>toductloo C. IOJI ' I« mandlertpU. .. .................... ..
~u.Jt.~ Dot nee. HlllALAYAHKITr'ZNI Good WOl'&IQ c:orKll • Seal Pt. 8lk HBr bmdlta. Appl1, NaUonal CFA,abota 11Mnt S~a Cor1> • .an Blreb .
N.8. (Near o.c. 0.-.. , ao•o .......................
·--=----------~
$is
lc's easy. Wrirc your ml-SSU~l; to fit the
horJcr shown here. Brin~ it t'> nny o~aily Pilot
office prior to noon Mny 6. Or, you moy mail
n clippin1t of the: border with your message and
paymertr tu D.iily Piloc •. tlO W . Bay St.~ Box
l ~60. Costa M<.-sa~ CA 92626.
-·
9010
_..,,,.
Zl'OPEN ROAD, fully Mlf-eoo,. Beaerve now
foc'Am!Jm'. '".aau
TBA VCO 17', '195 mo. inoCLE lae '7816 del
m iracle
rnazd a
r, • ._ ·-
\.~~·w~o
s. "*'1j~
""llfM,. .. ~
NllS.. Mr9et
IJIJI l""°HI 111•1 Ul-Ult
t9SS
'7l~SUIAaU 1SlO • Xlnt cond. Lo '71 Monte Carlo. Gold
I ... C , W Jbl.k lnl. Alr • eto. SS, *$2847* ml ea, A/f:., h•re~z ml. llalat'd every a. ..::=..::.:.:.;;,,.,..,.,;.,_ __ 1:-::-::--:---:--:::::---:-radials, '8300. Mua PU ml. Very etn. ss.~. 76 FOID WAGOH '71 j\unabout. 2000cc 4· ~r. (93731M> 831-2"1,WT..'4!· 642.o.ctafta ''C-tuf Scpil,.... :~ ~~~ ~~~t "s~':;;:
'fl,410total payment 1---------1~.-t' OENERAL WE BUY -
71'-.u~Jl&L.-•w$IS77 ~UMd '74 ·~ ton Slivered A'-"omahr, alr cond., tw&-220tl ~ .nc · · •;Te"•••H••••h•••••••• Ca S tal 50 000 radio. ~1&t r, f'()C)f rack ---------'76 'f Wlieel Drive Wogon a.,.,.. 9901 ml~sr~.~-I "wood 1raln applJque 'H Runabout. Auto,
~ Atll'OLEASrNG ::g:::ce 111C58 213..&98-2007 CU.AH ~ARS
lloCor Home Sto.raae In· A TRUCKS
4'oor, Corona, f\&ll rce· 1·137·9580 CO~NELL
~!~~~'!. ... !~!~ CHEVROLET 2B28 Harbor Blvd. =r. stron1 sprina COSTA MESA , tor 1to2000 Jbli. 54L 1200 ovable, lockable, ___ .,.
prtal top. Fenders & WE PAV TOP DOLLAR
eiverud Urea. M.5-0092 for f'OR. TOP USEb CARS
4lt&lla FOREIGN, DOMESTIC
or CLASSICS ~ 5'r'Ylce,P..t1 IC yoor car is extra clean & 4ccePorlff 940 see UI fil"ll.
• ;{;••••••••••••••••• •• BAUER BUJCJC
" VW EMGlNES !925 Harbor Blvd.
.. lJSED ·REBUILT Costa Mesa 97p·2SOO ~BUH)' Shop 530-tl940
SAVEGAS!I TOP
The $19.95 Tune·up. DOLLA"-
.Jacludea replacing plugs, p AID
Sfolnts, condeosor, on FOR CLEAN lnoet 4 cyl. cars.
I -WECOMETOYOU' -eau for appointment. )63-n49 -0pen 7 da19.
VW REPAIRS at
,,BACKYARD PRICES . ~-sr
'is.-66 Mustang parts, ~t everything,
549-8098
~!~.~ ........ . ~ 9510 ti! .................... .
TAKE Your choice! '73
Datsun 240Z, $4.250. '67
Chev. Camaro SS350
$1000. 673-0368
~·~
188J~ Ut ACH UL VU
HUl4TIN(,T0 N BEt.01
IM:I !181 540 0447
IMPORT CARS
ALL MODELS
WE
HEED
CLEAH
USED CARS
MOW
C/J>.U P UPY
540·S630
DRIVIA
LITILE.:..
SAVE A LOT
SHOP 4'00MPAREl
1/1>.lWICIC DATSUM
San Juan CapilLra.oo
131-1315 493-3375
NEWPORT DA f SUH
SPECIALS
B210 4 Door. 4 speed,
radio. c.262PKE)
HOW$2195
888DOVESTREET
Near MacArthur
& Jamboree Roads 83).1300
1975DATSUH
12104DOOR
4 speed, radio, beater,
tinted glass, recllnina
bucket seats & like
NEW! (21LNKB>. Tbls
celestial blue beauty is naw---
ONLY $2795
CO STA MES A
DATSUN
ZlMSHARBOR BLVD.
54M4 I 0 540-02 I 3
~ ... 9740 ......................
I.HM
·New-Uaed
OVER 100
MERCEDES
OH DISPLAY
HouH of lmoort1 AtmlORJZtD.
MERCEDES DEALER
68S2 M aocbeater,
Buena Park nJ:nScr
On the santa Ana Fwy.
Mony11tro5 Sharp .... ••••••••••••••••••• . lmmuu1lAJe tnruout ~-t.lllc brn, new 11teel -..~l\Vn-'73 Monte Carlo Landau. m90banlc•llY porfect! bltd ritdlal•. xlnt 11hape, \.... -uo PS, PB, air. A II /FU (800PQS). aeso. or oCr. 646-3213 or SIA ;;;;, •tereo, Jo ~L 768-1828 ONLY $49tS _111_1_.34..;..10_,,........ __ _ $~· ~~'\ "13Malibu.Sl,OOOmt.Alr. ~~~ISTOYOTA 9960 ~fllMfi.f.~ =~:; xlnl cood, sieoo. ll 1·2 ~N4~~t~ I 0 ~ ............. .
.... s.. StrMt '75 PLYMOUTH Custom uu11u .. e1•1 t11•1u1.1111 '72 MONTE Carlo. idnt 'ti0Falcorutatlonwa1on. Fury 8-pauenger wagon c:iond •• ~ pwr, AM/Flit, $3'15. only $1,995. Low bluu
v-top, oria. ownr. $1900. m.s111aft8. book on this -.eh1cle ia
Toyot. 499-1217 $3,100 I\ rood clean ear
••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------1'72 LTD Squire Wwgon. bul It has 71,000 mlles on
'75PACER, r
radl<> & heater, $3350.
759-0483
'63 Chevy Nova, wagon. ltlnt cond. Aulo tran11 It. See in Dally Pllol
Good trans. car. New Alr. PS. p /B, dlx rack, parkin& lot at 330 West
brakes. 548-4116. $290. new radlJla, tboclts & Bay Street, Costa Mesa,
1989 CHEV IMPALA. ball. 1 owner. llSSO. Call or call ~1 for more
Good condition. $950. 9.5 M·F, 5H·OS5! aft information. Ask for
Call 962-~ 6PM, 642-0727 Rick or Oscar in fleet
'7A6MP/FMACElR. p /SI, PS /B, 'trl Nova SS New 283 end Ford Granada '76. 2·Dr, garage. -a tteo, at, pee ' ""'' f I 6 i PIS lo interior. ('114> SSB-0460 or AT, PS. new alass, pot, ue econ •a r, ·au Ponffoc 9965
911().1414 radials 4.5,000 actual mi. trans, beaut ccrnd., 29.000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------1 ABeauty.$1850.644·6613 capamll~l4mlflleOs. $4200. '72 1''1reb1rd V8 350. Air, 6 cylinder aaa saver! ''14 ..... u-a pm. pwr, New tires (2),
AMC Detux.a Sportabout. l~?J Che.yW~ MaYerid& 9947 Ratley whls, orig ownr,
Top rack, reclining C .. c• Estate ••••••••••••••••••••••• very clean. Price under
68 Toyota Corona, aulo, teats, alr, power 1teer· 9 Paasenaer. Full power. •72 MAVERICK bluebook. S:Z,000. 751·2404
RA:H, 72M miles, sharp! Ing, power brakes, new air cond .. wood grain d d , 642-0433 tires, brakes. Rune sides -" roor rack 2 oor , auto, ra to, 75 LeMans Safari wgn.
great. 333 E. 18lh St., (.'iMJRE> · beat.er, PS, 39,000 mi, Grt cond. Roof rack, AC.
ota-!15 5 s_pd .PU. s~ll CM. --AMl..'g rI rifhr' ~ike --ftew. ~995 WILL rad -tirtt. Oubtandin~
• boot, radio, steel $2050 ""'" I ~•Y:t T~TRADE#608FNW buy SHOO . wkdya
radials PP saooo. 673-7376 M4'RQUIS TOYOTA ...._. 751·5533, aft o. 559.0353 •a 250S. XJnt. Must see lo or W-4611 1975 Pacer. 23,000 mi. MISSION VlEJO PIS P/B air AM /FM .1 .. ,. ~ '63 Pontrac Bonnev11lc, ap-eclate. Make Qfr. ·-Toyota Corona •dr, •t"reo' ta,:., Au'to, ,._,,_ 131·2110 495-1210 ~t\JJ-.; 1nn.. r• ""' .. o ... ,,.. ~·...,. ... ~J'' l'Clin~~ ~.c~!!d3.1r111ebll, Like nu, 2MSHARBORBLVD. _l48-8708 ________ , !~~c~.:. xln~.~~~! $HOO. control, dlK mt. $3,2 'tr7Cbevy.BelAlr. ~,. "'q{Y _,,,,,..,
540-6410 540.02 ll •'68 · ~E Cou~. xlnt ,,_._..i or.,..... . ...,.,, 489-~ Best Offer. CZ? II
COSTA MESA
DATSUN
cond, new paint, whla, ··~-L 9910 55&-U65 _,... -'Ill FJREBIRDXl400, colledC· ·72 Datsun 4dr Stn.Wan. buy $4750 S48.s487 -~ 751·5664 540-9362 tors ilt~m. nt. con · Fact air, maa whls, auto super ' · Vmwagea 9770 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '7S Monza Twn Cpe, 2300 New ptl., brks. & rdd.
trans, $1295. Aft 4pm, Private Party ••••••••••••••••••••••• '68 Buick Sports wa&on. 9 cc, 4Jnoor, xlnt, lo mi, MercW'y 9950 tires,;. 30000 por~.g. m1
1•1 494-5952 '74 MBZ280 Pass. Needs aome work 751-6892,645-7434 ••••••••••••••••••••••• lOA .. , lo 4 ••• ca ---------•Bankers executive cu, &\lres. Auto, R&H. Ask· 1972Montego PS PB blk M0·8038, art. 4PM &
TOPIUYElt low ml, baa everythln1. inJS300.645-49l6. ~ 9921 vtn top lo io mi's 'xmt wknda.CallS~·722A
See us first. & la.st! Top Sacrifice must aell 1 •. •••••••••••••••••••••• ~__. $1'100. 968·007i ...,_,._rb.,...... 9970 '75 Buick Electra Ltd. t11 N .. 4-dr A/C "VIJl,l, •-ni dollar paid for import.a. 871.al.34. ded 25 000 1 ewpo.... • •nu ••••••••••••••••• •••••. COSTA MESA Loa · · m · uphols., cJn . $695.te.t.g 9912 . • •CLEAN• $5,250.536-3868 8J3.8199ormsg.638·7394 .. " ................... 68 T·Blrd. 4dr, fpll pwr,
DATSUN '74 Choe brown 450 SE. SlYE SAVE SAVE '64 BUICK SKYLARK, Corlett. 9922 'G6 Must 289. Good cond. AC, SH00.8'1Hl8M
••••••••••••••••••••••• 2626HARBORILVD. 2845HarborBlvd. A/C, cruise, AM /~M PRICES reblt. eng., like new.••••••••••••••••••••••• Maas, needs work,· ---'63 Cad Wht hearse COSTA MESA Cost.a Mesa 540·6410 stereo, snrf, orig own, lo S750. '74 Corvette. Auto, all $700/betofr.557-4259 VeCJO 9974
1011 ~SOX & so~
• LINCOLN·MERCURY 9520
ml. (714 )556·0460 or GOILJG UP 768·»16 pwr, AM /FM, AC, 35.400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $i:!Ofor ofr. Runs good ---------••74 260Z. tmmac., all ex· 96().1414 " 1 b r Pv p 71 MJJSTAHG VEGA •76 Call960·2651. CAR OUTLET traa.Newtires.$4500 lOOVWProductsLefl '76Skyhawk.22mpg. m • st 0 r. t. Ly. Small V8, automatic,
C ... Lir.--c-s 494-9688Eves &wkends '69 MBZ. Diesel, Air, 4spd V6 r11<1\1\ (714)496-6283 le adlo hoater HATCHIACKGT MODEL A 1930 f' cJ s ll'HI ~ -At Old p • · · · _.,.,.,. s reo r • "' • .,. . or . Paid ir.--Or .... ot FM/AM ~reo caa. C/B. rlCeS 496·5821 CORVETTE 76 $149 mo. power steering & brakes. .DEMO. 5 speed tram ... w I n d o w c p e . II 5 r~, ~ ,.. '7 6 DATSUN B · 2 1 O. c.-rb __ .. A" 6 pm VW Su le t . a I r c 0 n d e t ~
.... .,.. wiiu. .. * permar • * 26 CLE ls $789 d 1 ne-N paint, new tires. xlnL · • .. • r estored. $3200. Ph 2145 11ARBORBLVD. Htchbk, 6000 ml, stereo. 645-7493 '68BukltElertca22S.Full mo. e e cond . 12295 WlTH (~/3532).
162-5630 (Harbor&Victoria> $3450, bst. Chris; days --------1 '66BugS.~8373 .. $777 pwr low ml Just had 0AC,8M,$3,874lotal TRADEll9300TR OHLY $3695
.fWheef DrivH 9550 COSTA MESA 752-8535,evesS31·3466 7J~4cvt '67 0uq 720AlN .... $877 valv°ejob &tu'ne up. Like G E~aka;:~\: Tft TO HOWARD Chenolet ·~•••••••••••••••••••• 642·0653 "76 Honeybee. carpeted, 220Sedan, d.rk am. arr. 'tfi BurJ Ya 970 .... $977 new. see to apprec. LEASING Dove &Quail St..
J8EP Cherokees 1975, AMto..lmportttd s teel belted radials, auto,FM.tll900.954& '72VWoir81q4 $1077 $1,000.flrm.968-9237 SlnceU159 213-896-2007 ~ Jf>lt: NEWPORT BEACH
• IUto, p/11, p /front di1c ••••••••••••••••••••••• SZ300, Xlnt cond 768-77411 Motor C~ '69 W~ XY0764 .. $1177 •49 Road master 4 dr, 11 Spd ~~,'°'--'""' ~ ... 2 hi rul 497 ~ D~ ' C«Yett. 4 ~~ '73 Ve0 a Hatchback, l ,......,, setaw s, c •• GeMzd 9701 -~• '7JR, .... 92)()NP tt.1277 radlo,hlr,autolrans,gd ~ t9.' "' •-• •-h -1111 """:1 •• * _ .. "'-""·"' ''019. 1 ~ ... t.ta~.w· ~v.1 • " owner.4spdslick,47.000 en .. "' ... muc more.••••••••••••••••••••••• ..,4pA•.c•--8211W17th 5'7·9250 71Wqn°"500 1ti377 .,,.....,..........,.,..,.." a..w... .. -G500 962-'4051 ' 1• ..-~ · • > GENE AL AUTO _.. _ -mi, Best offer over $1250. · · 1076 Lancia ~orp100 aar, S21'W> 546-8609 SL '67 Qi.a N7LVJ $1477 '65 Le Sabre. very depen LEASING 751·5664 540·9362 IM6-()t.35 art 6PM 'fl Land Cruiser 23,000 :.unroor. leather •eats. --73 ~s '70Gi.oConv 7481 $1677 dable, needs palal, $'500. SinceUl58 213-896-2007 ---------• •I. Tape, winch, xlnt PW, AM 1F)f cassette, 4 '76 tlO. 'tint. cond. f\ally 450 coupe rdslr. 13olh 847 :.lS4 840-3731 .._....__ Used ...., UHd _ ..... ..,,,,.,._torr mos old. $10.~ 688 """"" equip 17000 ml. moo. loJll, stueo, new e111. '72 &s 456GHP .... $2377 . . CORVETl'E11 --• .......... _. "" ......,.... SlO -u ...... , __ ,,_ .. _ ·7 a . -• 0230. $29n odill 9915 suss mo. 552.0557 af\5orwknds 581·1302 ,-.-...,....'"' ...... · 4U1A0tr • •• • C-ac 38moCLElae 111•11111111• .. ------ -MOtOR ·Freeway close, ull for ••••••••••••••••••••••• Opttobu.y. E&Odel AMC.JEEP . • Alfa lo.90 _ 9705 '71 Pickup ·xnit cond. 1 dlrectlom $6270total pmt + T&L ~ •. JUJ.~~ ·;;~·~.:·~ .. ~ O'tliner $1250.~~°' ~--~~~f~~1§:
,YJEEPlfBAtEJis -E;~G.ne~)ypain' '76 280 2:2 ~Pct:_~ ;_."° ~~ n
JN THE STATE Glulleua Sprint body and AM/FM casSette. silver'. mW17thSA, 547·9'll!O ~1959 zt3.889.2007
MUGllNVBCTORY ~~j~~~~a~~i ST700.5.W«M7 '74 240'0. New1'ebll eng, 75VETTERAREL82
V°Al.1Model1New7Used '" M Cl · hit /bl ~ 4 speed traMm1sslon '75Datsuftl210, AM /F stereo w /caas, assLC w e ac ..
LeaalnaAvallablc Also many extra Alra S235010fr. 493·3260 alt ltlntcond. mustseetoap· '73VW412 Quality and Price leather. Loaded w/every
C:O.taMfta 1300 parts Whl'n put 6PM prec. $8,000/bsL ofr. Lowmi,mustsell Gu<1ranteed option. Lo ml. New
AMC Jffp to&elher as 1.1 will be !( 834-0414 Call eves, 559-4743 Lc.1~in1t Spcciatim radials & vectors'. $8,000.
I 4524 HARBOR 8LVO. good loolun1. Aood run· '71 1200. AM /FM, new MG 9742 '72 Super Beetle. XI P1cfcrrcd Rate~ ~.Ori&. ownr.
(loata Meaa 849·8023 runir car or would de· tires. great run'g econ •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• shape. Radial tires, DodCJt 9935
re '60 Ford F250. ~~t~~e~:t;:,~~:;e,:~ car. S1450· Aft6, 546 ~ '74 MG Midaet. Racine $1800/bat orr. 493-8339 L~r'iS~~vS~cG~':P .. ••••••••••••••••••••• ---~!!'!!!i!~!P!!~--t-... llliiiiiPnlili!--I
a.mer hub8, 41pd trans, compleuon o( restoration '74 Pickup w /shell. Many ocanae. 23,000 ml, clNn eve. C.1cJilldc~ in '75 Colt w /denim top &
u1t cab, 292·V8 ot Uus claSl\ic ~rtone xtras. Best ofr over •nmsweU.$3,000/betof· ,75 vw Camper. Xlnt Or.inKcCoun1y natl Auto, air, Xlnt
Overload sprlna• " dea•&n. SlSOO. 6•5.5108 S24CJO Call 840-2l35 fer. Below blue book cond. AM /FM. 9300 ml, Open Sunday cond. $2,2115. 848·4671 mMe. ~. 982-0580 all.er 6 &c WHktnd•, or value Cor tbla popular Daye 975·2285, eves _fN_m_. ______ _
T.-kl 9560 leaH meuaec al 1974 DATSUH model.58M4t7
1_Ml_·_l442______ Cldill~c h••••••••••••••••••••• _8487MZ "'60% Opel 9146 '68 VW. Red. AM /FM Master De..ler ,_.., HJI ... 000 l' 6 2600 HMbor Blvd. •• •O>'· U'C , ..... m s ... 9707 • speed, r..Sio & beattr •••••••••••••••••••••.. IU!reo . cass plyr. Re bit Cos~ Mua S40.9 I 00 ~head• vaivea. FM ••••••••••••••••••••••• Excellent condition •• Opel Kadette. $800, ene. Gd shape. Leo, ~ it.er, also Ureta, '7" .. di p ~.. c.o wi•-· m"..:.a•a, ( ......... 33). COod deal, new valves. 586-8762. b°µCk atl. S2500 /0fr • nU OX ""!r •c.uD, IVW _, -.,_., l44--0868 ---------
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1971 POltD '*'o ... w....-' <fl' • .__, , .... Mei.•. ....... ..,.. ...... ·-·· JIJHiY
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VOL. 70, NO. 123, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES . ORANGE COUNTY, CAtlFORNIA TUESDAY, MAY 3, 1977 .
Eonfteil See
•
.
•By ROBERT BARKER
OUllt Dlltr ~l!Mf
Huntington Beach City
Council members Monday
night threw their support
behind proposed legislation
that would bar some council
deliberations from the public.
Huntington Backs Danne.meyer Measure
The council voted ' to 2 to back
AB 1265 by Assemblyman
William Dannemeyer (R-
Fullerton} that would pennltclt.y
counella to consider the appoint-
ment. employment or dismissal
or all ,officers and employes, in-
cludtnc board.II, commissions and
council vacancies in secret
sessions.
Councilmen Richard Siebert
and Ron Shenkman balked at
supporting the proposed legisla-
tion.
Ted Bartlett, Al Coen, Nonna
Gibbs and Harriett Wieder sup-
ported the measure without of-
fering public comment.
City Administrator Bud Belsito
said the bill bas been widely re-
quested by local officials.
He said they feel that inability
to consider actions, particularly
apPoiJlUnenll, In secret sessioD.s
has a chllllnl ectectoo applicants
for public office. ,
Shenk:man(wbo was substitut-
inl ror the at.ent Mayor Ron
Pattinson, said discuuions
abould be cooclucted openly.
''There ia DO need to go behind
closed door1J," he said.
Siebert tald the bill represents
a re1resaioo. .. It would mean go-
Int back to the old ways," he
said.
.. Gov,.-nm_ent should be as
open u'.possible and public dis-
cuuioa doesn't deter &ood can-
didates. ..
"It does have• detrlmental ef. rect. tt would indicate prospec-
tive candidates have something
they den 't want known," he said.
The City Council interviewed
candidates openly, when it re-
ortanlzed tl\e planning com·
mission.
One of those selected in the pro-
cess was Susie Newman who said
she regards public questioning aa
"extremely healthy."
"To hide behind closed doors
may indicate criminality. I see it
u a conspiracy not to get the best
and bri&htest candidates," she
said.
Dannemeyer sald today that
hiring and firini or full-time city
employes are done in executive
El Centro Shooting
=-'ftera"•
N.Y .. Stoeks
.
TEN CENT$
1eulon and that ~lth:en volu.n-
teera should have the aame
rltbts.
He said be thou1bt tt na un-
'ftir that the pros and cons an4
demerits of VQhmt~rs sbOUld be
aired publicly.
Dannemeyer said the bill mq
eauae a potential conflict
between those dealring an ope))
1overnment venUI proteetlon ol
the aeualtivities of thole ill piblic
Ure.
He said bis bill is scheduled for
hearmg May 17 bero,.. the At.·
sembly's Local Government
Committee.
2 -Poliee1nen ~Slain
3 Snspects Nabbed
lleat•ng the Gas fJruacla -Robert Beach or Grand Island, N.Y., sits
proudly with wire Elizabeth in three-
wheeled auto he built himself from
helicoptec. motorcycle and c.ar parts.
Beach says the 4S-ho sepo e-r ~e
engine breezes him along at 6S miles per
hour and gets 55 miles for each gallon of
gas. Detroit miJbt take note.
EL CENTRO (AP) ~ Two
police officers were shot to death
today and one of three persons in
custody was identified as the son
of a couple slain in San Die&o
hours earlier, authorities said.
The other two were arrested by
a force of 20 heavily armed police
and sheriff's d c;pulies wh6
stormed a motel on "hotel row"
in the west side or El Centro
shortly after daybreak, officers
said. Bullets were reportedly
found, but no resistance took
place.
Police in the two cities said this
happened:
An east San Diego motet
manaret' and hla wife were shot
to death about midniJht MondllY .ucttbeircar at.oten
About 3:30 a.m ., in answer to a
telephone comglaint about a
honking car horn. El Centro
police ofricer Arthur Kenneth
.Hennessy drove to a motel in that
• ctty.
f"'f • ~I ~ ......,.. we . . TT• Astn~~WJJ!lJuu>ar~ntly_lf'llilll~ .. ~ ~-· . -~Jl!I-~ ~ """-~-·~ ~ ..:f'" ... ~ ... ~ .........., ... :_ . _.,,.:~ . " _ ... .,;-~1...._ "'. ~,~Jr.a'd.altO' ..... ~'C° "" 'rHtsma.YmttnhtUct;'klOlft am
. about 2S reet rrom hls police
lload Rig Huntington Stores ~=e~r~::; ~:~~dA;:
~ -sbot in the chest and neck while
oyn• r still in his car. Vickers, 29, a Bandits using a slmllat tactic told police abe •as .approached member of the El Centro police
struck twice within 15 minutes in by a YOWll man who aske4 her to force f• 18 months, died an hour
Huntlniton Beach Monday nJ&ht, change a $S bill, then pulled a Jater In El Centro CommunUty
after 8 a .m., police said.
They were identified tentative-
ly as a man and woman ~th
whom the younger Woodhouse
s aid he. h.ad ~ lllina...in his
parents' San Diego motel, of-
COWBOYS' CHOICE
Ba~k Tony Dorsett
ficers said. All three were taken
in for questioning, said polJce.
The two slain officers were
married with children. Hen-
neaay, '2, had been an.El.Centro
policeman ror 11~ years.
PICKED BY GIANTS
usc•a Gary Jeter '
•
J he waa n dream machine -
,000 worth of brilht ye.llow
tem ptatlon with plenty of but·
tons, 1auaes, dlala nod levers -
~t sit.tlnf there waiUna to be
dtlven away.
robbinl a cJoU:Unc store and an handiun. Hospital.
ice cream parlor in stickups Sgt. Gene Caldwell sald he was
police believe to be related. She 1ave him $400 and the sus-unableto reach either ofricer by Ohio State End
Rams' Draft Pick
I .
But who, 'Huntlniton Beach
pt>llce 'were atilt ponderinlJ today.
would steal a road 1rader on
which to take a joyride•
Police finally round the bi• ril
ported mlt1tn1 by concrete
eoutractor Ralph Blea Monday
near a huge COQ1truct1on alt• at
McFadden Avenue and Got.hard
Street.
Jnvflltllatora aalct' it wu ap-
,arently lirld up sometime over
ttle weekend by vandals who
triiuhed a locked control panel
(nechanJam and rumbled alt in
March ot adventure. lneas told omcera the slte hu
been the tariet of other
m.1IJclou1 m11ch1er incidents.
wblch went unreported, beC!nuse
y were relatively minor.
He Hld when midnight
•araudert atart makln1 toys out Of $20,000 pieces of heavy equip-ment It ls tlmo to call the law and
wekacUon.
Inveat11atora promised to illlalDta1D heavy aurveUlance ln
nOrtb dty construction area
to J>HYent f\lrtber episodes.
The two armed J'Obberies oc-pect, about 28 with an ollYe com· radio so he ten the office and at
cur.red about rour miles apart. plexion and denim cl°"1iJll, bur-the motel took Roger Woodhouse,
one In the no?Ol city and one near rled out the door. 22, of San l>tego, into custody.
the beach, police noted. Shortly aftel'.ward, clerk .The bodies or Russell .and
Ancell Roxas, cashier at C & R Cheryl M001'i! wu on dut1 alone Loretta Wo8dhouse. victims of
Clothiers, lS039 Golden West SL. 1n tbe Sandpiper Ice Cteam .. numerous bullet wounds,••
NIXON-FROST
B4N REJECTED
LONDON (AP) -A LabQrite
member of Parliament, John
Lee, asked the BBC to cancel lta
showlnc of Davld Frost '1 in-
terview1 with former President
Nixon. 11.)'in1, "How objectiona-
ble it is that a man who bas
brought disarac. of a unique kind
upon hla country should be liven
publicity -presumably with a
lucrative fee into the bargain.
· • Anyooe in h1a situation with a
shred ot self ·respect would have
withdrawn Into insipilicant ob-.
scurity." said Lee in a letter Mon-
day to BBC Chairman Sir Michael
Swann. .
A •pokesman for the BBC said
it would Mt c~el its showina.
Parlor, Golden West Street and police said, were found in their
Mansion Avenue, when a y.oung San J>ieCo motel two boun aft.er
man entered. their soo waa taken into custody.
.. Can you dw:lc• a twenty?" Shortly after the El Centro
he utced. She opened the ca.lb re-shooting, a couple checked into
tlater and be nubed a chrome-. another motel three blocks away
plated revolver and announced and were arrested there shortly .
the holdup. '
The second bandit.. about 20 to
21, aliodadindeolmsandablue BB Troatees Set
Hawallan •hlrt. reached Imo the
Ull lor the $50 euh an4 pocketed • IJo«andary He•Pino it. ---,,
MIN MOOft aald he hurried out
wlth a wamln1 to stay lneide.
r
Badget Talk.e Set
The Fountain Valley City
Council wW · d.licuu next year's
budaet at a 8 o•ctock 1tudy
sesalon tmlCht ln the dt;r ball
library conference room. 10200
Slater Ave.
Huntlneton Beach City
(elementary) School District tr"'9teea wtll dlscuaa boundary
chances for school attendance
areutonlihtat.a 7~30p.m. meet·
inl in the Dwyer School Library,
185 l'lth St.
Truateel will bold an executive
aeuloo Wedneld.,-at 7:30 p.m.
at the DwJer Libn1'7 to d1lcuu
contract neaotlatiooa with DOD•
teacbiqemp&oyes.
By AP Dllpatcfu
The Ia Angeles Rama picked
All-American defensive end Bob
Brudzinsld of Ohio today in a
long-delayed annual draft ol col-
leao players by the National
Football Leaeue.
The team Immediately an·
nounced that lt planned to COD·
vert him Into a linebacker.
The draft also was h11bllahted
by the selection of three USC
player• among the first flve
taken, back Ricky Bell. tackle
Marvin Powell and tackle Gary
Jeter.EarllerstoryonPa1eB1.
It was the fint time thls had
happened stoce Micblian Stm11
Bubba Smith. Clint Jooea ad
Georae Weblter were selected in
tbe nnt ftve rouodl 1D 1967.
The Rams bad the 23rd ptct m
the draft. ••we cbole him ln keeptna wUh
our polio of ptetin• the bl8helt
rated p1-,yer avallable to UI ~
gardtess of pos1Uon:• said the
club's vice-president and 1eneral
manaaer Don Klosterman.
Bntc1ztmkl, 22, who standl 6-
f oot-4 and weighs 230. played
stand·up defensive end in col·
lege. Born on New Year•a Day, tho
Ra01•' top choice three tlmee ap-~ared In the Rote Bowl on bis
l)lrtbday. After the past lea80ll
he -.vaa suuned ~ me>Jt-valwable
on the Buckeyes' squad,
ScouUna reports said bo ·waa
good at tbe poln\. of attack, abed·
dlnl blockeil and react1a1 to the
play. He earned tour letters 1n
football at OSU and .,., AJ.l.Bl&
(See &AllS, .... AJ) ~
,
.,
•
.~ .......
MARY ANN VECCHIO KNEEJ.S NEAR DEAD KENT STATE STUDENT IN 1970 PHOTO
Renaming Bulldlnga Urged In Memory of Unlveratty'a Four Dead
Naming Popular Idea
Kent State Meinorial Move Made
KENT, Ohio <AP) -A Kent State Unlv~ity atudent group urged students to-
day tO begin calUne four campus buildings
art!'r those Who were killed during antiwar
.,ero~ts seven years ago.
The unorficlal action by the May 4 Task
Force open'd the annual observance in
memory of the four made w 'tre killed
and the nine who were when Na-
tional Guard troops openid fin .n a atudent
crowd shortly after noon lby •. 19'10. The
troops had been called in to bffu up violent
protest demomtrations.
·'It's a pretty popular idea,'' said Barbar a
Grubb, its editor and a Kent Sta~• senior.
TUE TASK FORCE called for naming the
Art Buildin& after Allison Krause, Pittsburgh;
the Buainess Building after William
Schroeder, Lorain; the Music and Speech
Building for Sandra Scheuer, Boardman; and
the ll6rary for Jeffrey Miller, Pl8'ovje,,, Y.
"Students are being told simply to beg}n
calling these buildings by U\ese names," a
spokesman for the Task Force said. "If ii
catches on, that will serve our purposes."
Dr. Fay Biles, Kent State vice president
for public affairs and developmen sal un· ·~ ·..t~;•f'-#--_ __,. . -'..i<
' afte~rus et ae..a \\1\et Speelal -em: • phpls on donors.
An adminastrallon spokesman said the
matter·raiaed by the Task Force hadn't been
brought up rorm ally.
A FEDERAL COURT jury absolved
guardsmen. Gov. Jomes A. Rhode~ and others
or Jiabality in an August 1975 verdict on clvll
suits brought by the victims or their families.
An appeal of that d~clsi~n is pending. , ·
A year earlier, a feder~ Judge di•milsecl
criminal charges brou1ht agalnat eight of the,
guardsmen, saying lbe JUAUce Department
bad fall make It• case.
UfeSaviags
SAUSALITO <AP> -~Medi· Cal inspect.Ion team -raat1q a p
check at a randomly aelected
Marin County doctor's office -
was met by more than 10 anm
pbyaiclam, lncludln1 one wear·
lilt a NUI helmet.
Tba. dootor-nul'I• team mm'
the new SuneUlance and UUll:ia·
tlon Review Office' of tbe state
Health Dtpartment went to the
Sau1allto ottl~ ot Dr. WlllJam
Rothman on Monday to check re-
cords of hil Medl·Cal pattenw u
part ot a p,oaram aimed at un-
covertds fraud ln the proarain.
°"1N08(1Qgf .. ,,.
DAILY PILOT
S. Laguna Widow
Taken ~y Con Men
81 PIOUP ROSMARIN °' ... Deity f'lttttwt
savlnp account.
The courter told ber to go bome
and wait for a telephone call.
The "1ecurity chief" called
aeain, at 3 p.m.:.1 and told her to
go to the bank. tsne wu unable to
make the appolntmen•, ao btt
caller t.old her to try aaatn Mon·
day.
Monday ahe trted, and learned
she'dbeeGbUked. ' •
"tt'a one or the oldest eon
1ame1 in ttie world," Pollce Sit.
Bruce Brias sald today. ''The
old bank inspector'• 1ctm. lt'a
not an LlnUSUal con 1cam. Some
of these con artlats ean be' eit·
tremely convinclne."
Brigg• aald the woman
deacrtbed the man wt» toot her'
money &$ the Ubrary u about 35
yean old. ot raedlum heltht ind
wei&ht, wfth bl'OWll balr.
She 11Jd be wore • dUk bull· neas ault I.Del that be bad a •1JU11. neaallke halrcut."
He looked, she said, Ju.t like a
banker.
I
SAN FBANCISCO (AP> -A
federal Judie today' awarded
former San francl•co Mayor
Joseph Altoto tU0,000 In
damaa• from the pubUahera Of
Look fDICallnt for an article 11· Jejing Alioto bad a "web of al·
llance wtth the-Malla.••
U.S. Diatrlc:t Court Judge WHllam Schwarzer denied
Alioto's claim for punitive
damaaea.
"Whtie there 11 abundant
e .v t den c e o I a c tu a I
malice ..• tbere is no substantial
evidence that defendant b,ad J
•atate of mind ari1in1 from
hatred or ill-will t.oward plalnWf'
u required by civil code," \be
judeeaaid.
Alioto asked for 1500,000
eeneral dama1ea and aubatanUal pu.nltivedamqea.
The decialon r•ulta from the
fourth trial of Alloto'a suit
against Cow lea Communications,
pubUabers of the now-defunct
Look ma1ulne. The non·JUl'Y
trial began March 21 and ended
April 7.
The article was published in
the July 23, 1969, issue. Three
previous trials ended with de·
adlocked juries and the third and
fourth tfiala dealt solely with the
iuue of inal.lce.
Attorney LAwrentte Alioto •. who
represented hia father, said, "I
am very pleased with the result..
Goast College
District 3rd
Cout Community Collete Dia·
trict offlclab have learned that
thein la the third laraest com-
munity colle1te district in the
United States.
Ftaurea released by the
American Association of Com-
munity and Junior Colleges last
week place Coast third behind
Loa An1teles Community College
Dist~ct, with nine campuses and
135,099 students, and City College
of Chicago with nine campuses
and 98,819 students.
The Coast Community College
District is comprised of three col·
Jeges and 62,110 students.
.~ .. .,,.....
AWARDED $350,000
Joseph Alioto
p,....pflfleAI
RAMS •••
Ten the past two seasons.
The Chi~ago Bean bypassed
the available quarterbacks and
selected Ted Albrecht, a 250-
pound All·American offensive
tackle Crom the University of
California, who played five
aporta in high school and runs the
401h4.8.
Other selections in the first
round were:
The San Diego Chargers,
whose original first-round pick
wu-1rade«t to -Dallas and then
wound up in Seattle,_ used a
choice acquired from uallas to
name Bob Rush, a 255-pound
center"from Memphis State.
-The eighth over-all choice
was owned by Cincinnati in the
Bill Beraey deal and the Dentals
used it to take Wilson Whitley, a
268-pound defensive tackle from
the University of Houston and
winner of the Lombardi Trophy
u tbe nation's No. l down
lineman.
-The Green Pay Packers
selected Mike Butler, a 265·
pound defensive t~ckle from the
University of Kansas.
-The No. 10 pick was Kansas
City's and the Chiefs selected
Gary Green, a defensive back
from Baylor.
-The Houston Oilers picked
Morris Towns, a 260·pound of.
tensive tackle from Missouri.
.
A Fountain Valley
motorcycUat and h1I teen-aaed
1tepdau_cbter are ho.pltaUaed
with major injuries today lftel-
thelr maehlne alammed tntO ~
ald• ot a ev at a Huntlblteia
Be•ob lntel'MCUOD Monday.
Donald E. Wllllam1. ~ and
Cheryl A. Weinber•er, 17, bot.bot
17584 Santa Maria St .. were listed
In 1uarded condition In Hunt-
i n at on Jntercommunlty
Hospital '1 lntenaive care unit.
Police Officer Dennis Smith
said Williama tOok the brunt ot
the Impact when his powerful
1989 Engliab motorcycle struck
the driver's aide of the car on
Beach Boulevard at Rubidoux
StreeL
He auttered bead, arm and lee
injuries, wbl1e Miss Weinberter
austalned head and arm Injuries.
Police said Williams wun't
wearilag a protective helmet. Of.
flcera couldn't say lt h1a step.
daughter wore a helmet or not.
Officer Smith issued a citation
to the car's driver Golden Wes~
College student Juhe•J . Kim, 21,
of 9190 Columblne Ave .• Fountain
Valley, following the 1:20 p.m.
crash. Miss Kim is charged with
failure to yield to oncomln1 traf·
fie while enterin1 a highway.
lnveatlgatora said ahe was
pullina ,out throuah ..a center
divider to make a left tum and
proceed north on Beach
Boulevard, apparently f a.Uln& to
see Williams unW it was too late.
-
Hnntington\Vom•n
Reports Gem Theft
A dlatresaed Huntin1ton Beach woman who loet $12,000 worth of
diamond jewelt'y, .numetous
stereo tapes and her Siamese cat
to a bur1lar waa inventorying it
all today. 1 ·
Barbara Jordan, of 81~1 Val~n
cla Lane, in the city's north.
central district, telephoned of-
ficers about 1 a.m. after she ar-
rived home and discovered the
intrusion.
lnvesUgators said it appears
the burslar may have entered the
home tJ\fOugh a rear bathroom
window.
NEWPORT BEACH DAY IN TIJUANA AND AT AGUA CALIENTE! I
Dlacover the
New Tijuana
and Agua ~allentel
-~~l'lfr.11
A Fun Day!
A Day lit NewTljuane
In Old Mexico!
S.tur(Sey, Mey 7, It lftwport.Beach
Day In Tijuana and at Agua Ca·
hnta. Newpon e.acti visits Tijuana
to ... the new look or 111 neighbor·
elty; to apend • run day 1t th• new
Agua O•llente IH9,000,000 90ter·
tllnment c1nt1rl You'll H ahoP·
ping, dining, watching the thor·
ougtlbf'tdttun, alght~ng, • d1y
of goodwm. a dlV titted with tnt•r·
nauonal f-11owshlpt •
All Day, A Fun Dayl
Put your own group t~tMr, •n-
Joy a ~•Y vacation v11lt1ng your
neighbor In New-Old Mtxleol
I
Join Newport Beach'• Mayor and
01h1r Council memblra. Join th•
Chamber of Oommerc• Pr ... dent
and many oth« Chamber Memb••·
All for 120.00
Round trip bus fare; a delicloua
old world prepared. and tervecl. brunch; refr9$hment1. and mof'e
refreshments: resenied seating at Agua Catlente. discount• tor
two fabulous shoopeno sprees•
B1 HILARY KAYE
Of ... Oelly "'"' 11.n
Dous Gfeller, Irvine Company
vice president, has a hot story to tell about Woodbrtdae Lake.
It goes back to early 1976, when
company olflclall were t.ryinl to
figure out how to fW the JOO.acre
Woodbridge Lake and heat the
adjolnlnc shallow awimmtnc
lagoon.
While they were drilllne into
the undergtound •prtn1 beneath
tbe lake, Southern-Calllom1a Gu
Company ofticlala aald gas
bookupa could not be used to heat
the water.
"We then began looklni Into
using solar energy instead,
althou,h it's not as eff~Uve,"
Hid Gfeller, head of the firm's
residential dlvlslon.
"Allot it sudden, about 900 feet
deep, we bit water and it was
•
a hotaprtn1.
"We dori't know how lone the
hot water wtll las~ but we do
know we sure don't need beaten
now," aa.ld Gfeller, addtna that
they beian comldertnf installing
chillers to cool the water and
keep the fl&h from dyiDc In the
Jake.
1t b.1rned out they devlHd a
circulaUon 1y1tem, alone with
addin& certain chemicals. that
flnt pumps the water lnto the
1a1ooa. where It'• cooled down to
about 70 decrees. •nd then into
tbe lake, where it roaches
"normal water temperature."
The lagoon, bordered by a san·
dy beach, is used for swimmtne
and the lake is used for boating
and some fishing by resident.a.
For those who have questions
about the lake ln relation to the
water shortage, Gfeller has re-
El Centro Slwoting
ady answers. But he say!I n()body
hu bothered to aak the company
about the water.
Accordln& to Gfeller. thf
Irvlne Company la 5tuaUy d()}oi a service by pumpi the water
out of the lrvJne· Un under-
1round reservoir.
The waler ln that reservoir 1s
of poor quality and ls not pumped
out by water dlstrlcts for drink·
(See Sl?RING, Pace.\%)
2 Polieeriien Slain,
3 Suspects N ahhed
EL CENTRO <AP) Two
police officers were shot to death
today and one of three persons in
custody wu identified as the son
of a couple slain ln San Diego
hours earlier, authorities said.
o.ily ............. .., I.ff .. _
THIS IS WHAT'S LEFT OF PLANE STUDENT ptLOT FLIPPED EARLY TODAY
At Orange County Airport, A Young Men'• Practice Waan't So Perfect
The other two were arrested by
a force of 20 heavily armed police
and sheriff's deputies who
stormed a motel on ''hotel row"
in the west side of El Centro
shortly alter daybreak, of(Jcers
said. Bullets were reportedly
found, but no resistance took
place.
Ford Group
Vows Top
lrVineBid
Death Cheated
Mechanre Savea Student Pilot
Police in the two cities said this
happened:
An east San Diego motel
manager and his wife were shot
to death about midnight Monday
and their car stolen.
About 3:30 a.m., in an•werto a
A young student pilot narrowly Ana man had been told by-Cronin telephone complaint about a
escaped death early today when to simply taxi the vintage honking car horn, El Centro
the aircraft he was taxiing along mach.ine down the runway and police officer Arthur Kenneth
the runway at Orange County get the feel of the controls. Hennesay drove to a mokl in that
By TOM BARLEY Airport Ripped over and burst in· Instead, they said, Stevena city·
_ .... o.uy .. itetst.tH · to flames. tried to take off, bungled the a~ A tla&Jebullet appuently ftred
A spokesman for an Eut Coast Otanfe Cowt rs of. tempt aDd flipped the machi.M fro= a .30·CAlibel":carbina1truck
consortium that fell behind Mobil ficers eaid 22·year-old RoMie over u one wing atruclt the Henneaay in the head, killlnc him
Corp. Monday in the biddin& bat· Craig Stevena' life undoubtedly runway. about 2S feet from hl1 police
tie for control of the lrvlne Com-was saved b H b Ai SherUf'a deputies at the county cruiser. Piny. Pled0 •4 today. tt..at hJ1 Y UI es rwest •'"' '' mechwc Re)'JlDld Artacbipe, 32,,, airport ald il ls not unusual for Another officer, John Alan
1roup will top the new MobU bid wbo a.aw the 2:1$ a .m . accident student ptlota to practice in the Vickers, then drove up and wu
ofS307.l million. alld ran to douse the names with early hours of the morning shot in the cheat and neck while
still in his car. Vickers, 29, a
member of the El Centro police
force for 18 months, died an hour
later in El Centro Communtity
Hospital.
set. Gene Caldwell said he was
unableto reach either officer by
radio so he left the office and at
the motel look Roeer Woodhouse.
22, of San Diego, into custody.
The bodies of Ruaaell and
Loretta Woodhouse, victims of
"numerous bullet wounds,"
police said, were foU1td ln their
San Diego motel two hours after
their son was taken into custody.
Shortly after the El Centro
shootine, a couple checked into
another motel three blocks aw<\)'
and were arrested there shortly
alter 8 a.m .• pellce said.
They were identified tentative-
ly aa a man and woman with
whom the younger Woodhouse
aald be had been livine in his
parents' San Diego mot.el, of-
ficers said. All three were taken
In (or questioning, said police.
The two slain officers were
married with children. Hen·
nesay, 42, had been an El Centro
policeman ror 111 2 years.
..C~l. John Gottlleb. repft!sent· a hand f1tt~tin1uis er. . because that is one Ume of day ~!.'.:4~~~tJ::~~J;('f.j~; .. ~!°'~11~·~"'--_,.._~tal~1~NllM!titlt\1~~~~:2=-'t :t-A---....----.r-T ~~--
L -tt -.,..._ • R1tf,-" e rte rom e ~16n''s~6Ut.isiafrporf~-:-·-""p''~-,-··~
. .
off er wlll be made be(ore the new 1948 Stinson aittraft owned by Cronin, a prosecutor at the &rent deadline of noon. May 9. D Di · •·we will outbid Mobil," he eputy strict Attorney John courtty'a juvenile court, was un· ays
Enrollment Cron.in and ta.ken to the holpltal avallable for comment 011 the in· taid. "But we don't want to say wlth a broken jaw and other in-cldent.
by how much until shortly before JUries. He was reported to be m Airport officials describe his the deadline." ood Direct.on of the James Irvine ~ condition at UCI Medical Stinson aircraft aa a total lost
Foundation accepted the new enter. and valued the vlnta1e mllchlne
JrfobU offer at a tptclal meettni Deputies said the youna Santa at SS0.000.
late Monday. ·
But they carelUUy Jett the door
open for tht con.sortJum headed
by Taubman, Wall trfft ftn
cler Charla Allen and Henry
Ford U to mak a new bld.
And foundaUon dir tora made
lt cleor that the b1dd1n1 altuaUoo
will remain open until one or
other of the rival contenders falls
to top a COWlter offer wlth UM de·
adline Imposed by the founda-Uo~ ·
The new Mobil ofter m
that the corporation ii ofterin&
SM.SO a ahar fo~ lb &.4 m1lUon
ah area ol the Irvine °'mpany.
Thote sharff include the foun-
datlon'• controlU.., lntere.t ot
54,5 percent and lrvlne heiress
Smith'• hold1n11 of 22., percent
In the company founded by her
1randfather.
Mobil was on the verse of tak·
·In• ovu the Irvine Company for aoo million, or $24 a •hare, t~
years qo when Mrs. Smith'a1 Oranee County Superior Court
lawauit halted the a1reed aaJe
apd paved tho way for an ellhl· month trtu or tbe luue and the coatlnWn& bJddln1 battle.
Mobil made what wq seen u a
• anaJor coacetllon to mlnoncy
abarebolden Monday when the
company ruled that Irvtne Com·
C8ee MOBIL. Pa&e AZ)
Mayor Alio'to Wins
$360,lJOO Damages
SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -A
federal Judi• today awarded
for mer san Franciaco Mayor
Joaepb Altoto $350,000 ln
damq.• from the pabUahera Ol
Look maaatoo for an article al-
le1ln1 AliOto hid a "web of al·
liaru:e With thi Nana. it
U .9. •District Court Judie WHUam Schwarnr de1Ued
Alloto•s cJahn tor punallve
d1mage1.
.. Whtie thert 11 abundant
•vldence of actual
maJlce .•. there ls no 1ubstanUal
evidence that di!et:adant bad a
'state of mind ari1ln1 from
hatred or ill·wtll toward plalntlff'
as requ1Hd by civil code," the
Jud1e1ald.
Alioto asked ror •soo,ooo
1eneral damaaes and aubttaoilal
punitive damaies.
The decillon results from the
fourth trial of Alioto'• suit
aiamatCowl• Communications,
publiahert of tho now-defunct.
Look mafastne. The non-Jury
trial becan March 21 and ended
AprUT.
The article w11 r.ublllhed In the July 23, 1980, asue. 1'hrff
previous tria.ll eodod with d&O
ad locked Jwiea and tbe third and
fourth irtai. dealt solely with the
i11ue ot malice.
Allon\ey Lawrence Alioto, who
repreaented his father, eald, "I
am very plet.ffd wlth the retulti.
The court hu re.to.red to t.h1a
plalntlff that Which the Ubel in
quQt.Jon toot away from him.
The C<iirt h11 done aubatantlal
<See A.UOTO, Pa&e .U)
VeteDtteM .. dtl9
Policy 'Shut'
An Irvine parent charged to·
day that the Irvine Un.lfled
School Di.strict ls not playing fair
with ita self.avowed open enroll·
mentpolicy,
Kathy Larkln, a realdent or
California Homes, complained
that her eighth tra4e son want.a
to attend University Hleh next
year instead of Irvine High, but
that if he does be cannot play on
school athletic teams for one
year.
"It's unfair. U they have open
enrollment they 1b0uld allow him
to participate at that school. He
wanta to 10 to Uni Hl&b because
it has 1elf-conta1ned
cluarooma," Mn. Larkin 1atd.
Di1triet administrator Jerry
Rayl aald be la aware of the pro-
blem and that he and a commit-
tee are "working on lt. ••
"We're tryln1 to find a way of
malntainin& the open eRrollment
without allowln• any one school
tq e.mphuize athletics," aaJd
Rayl, in chart• of secondary
educaUon ln the dlatrfct.
Rayl said it ilrt't • problem
now. but that ln the hlture ~in
1cboola could be known tor eer·
<SMPOUCY,PaaeA2)
COWBOYS' CHOICE
Back Tony Doraett . .
""~
PICKED BY GIANTS
USC'• Gary Jeter
Ohio State End
Rams' Draft Pick
Green Bay, Mike Butler, de,
Kansas. 10, Kana as City, Gil')'
Green, db, Baylor.
11, Houston, Morris Towns, ot,
Miuouri. 12. Buffalo, from
Detroit. Phillip Doket, dt,
Oklahoma State. 13, Miami, A. J.
Dube, dt, Louisiana Stat.e. ~
Seattle, from San Dlqo, throtign Dall~\ Steve Au1u1t, 01. Tulia .
15, Cruce10, Ted Albrecll&, ot,
California.
18, New En11land, from Sah
Francisco, Raymond Claybom,
db, Texas, 17, Cleveland, Robert
Jackson, lb, T~xa• A&M. 18,
Denver, Steve Schindler, 01,
Boston Colle&•·
•
OAtLVPILOT
MOBIL •••
pany lhareboldfra could tao tho
•atli r obll off tr of 12*1.• mtlUc. Md apply It to an option
to buy that amount ot Mobll stock
at any time durlns the next year.
Tbe conceulon waa im-
mediately seen by close ob·
servers of the biddln1 batUe u · an aU.mpt to woo Mr1. Smith
away from her support of the
Taubman-Allen·lrvlne 1roup.
1t wu learned today that Mn.
Sm Uh ha no tntentlon ot dJacua-
111 the Mobtl ofler and wlJI ton·
Unue to 1upport the Taubman OJ'·
aanlzatlon.
Court action has been »o•tpooed by Judae James F.
Judce until one or other of the
two ccmteoden la aucceaaful ln ~ddlal tor the Irvine Company.
·He wtll then be uked by the
•
• euodatton to approve the sale to
~e auccesaful bidder. HOT SPRING WATER FILLS LAGOON, FOREGROUND, AND WOODBRIDGE LAKI!, RUA
lrvlne Comp•ny Pumpa 80-degrH Spt1ng. 900 Feet Beneath Lake
p,....P.,.eAJ
CAMPUS .... w,....r,..AJ Salts Flied
Unless Watts swings over lo
Join the lour who favor 1Irvine
Center.-Jeffrey, a condemnation
vote probably would !ail.
Watts was attepdlng an ad-
mtnBtutor' s meeting in the
Tustin Unified School District,
where he ls a school principal,
and could not be reached for
comment today.
SPRING •••
inc nor by the Irvine Ranch for
irrigating crops. It's just too sal-
ty !or either pu.rpose. accomin&
to Gfeller and an Irvine Ranch
l>tJtrtctspok:esman. ~
But tbe other underground
water aourte in the area, the San·
ta Ana undergrounc;f reservoir.
contains good water and is
pumped regularly by several
water districts, according to
Gfeller.
Ripoffs Alleged
In Auto Repairs~
IC the condemnation vote fails,
would the Irvine Company be •
willing to take a capital gaJns
, loss and sell the site anyway?
, . '!We'll face that situation when
.. and if it comes," said Reese. "I
try not lo put myself In a position
of anticipating such things before
they happen.
"There is certainly no legal re·
aaon why the land couldn't be
sold without condemnation but it
is a good deal more complex than
that."
Reese said that, as rar as he Is
~concerned, management's
: original offer to the college for
. the Irvine Center-Jeffrey site is
still on the table. It would still
have to be approved by the com·
pan y 's board of directors
however
Bas1cally, at propoS('S sole of
the first 20 acres of the land ut
$45,000 an acre, with n five.year
option to buy up to 80 more acres
at the same, fixed price, unaf·
, fecled by Inflation.
l •
Bill to Battle
When the Santa Ana reservoir
level is.low and the Irvine-Tustin
level is high, there's a chance the
poor water may contaminate the
good.
"That's why it's good we're
pumping that water. Otherwise,
it would burt the good water."
says the vice president.
Gfeller says he's been ready to
tell that tale to irate citizens ask-
ing why water is "wasted" on the
Jake. But says he hasn't had
one phone call or Jetter or com·
plaint..
Charity Pka
Hit by Brown
Orange County Deputy District
Attorney Charles McFarland
said today that lawsuits filed
against Sears automotive shops
and University Oldsmobile are
the flnt steps in halting what he
termed wldespfead iUegaJ ac-
tlvltles in the auto repair busi·
ness in Orange County.
McFarland acknowledged that
allegaUons contained in the two
suits filed Monday In Orange
County Superior Court may be
widespread practices.
But he added, ·'The law ls quite
clear. there is no ambiguity.
If 'everyone el&e la doing it' is
the defense, these suits might be
useful to serve notice that no
matter how widespread the prac-
tice is, it's still illegal.'' he said.
McFarland also said auto
fraud investigations-are conttnu·
ang although he would not say if
further law sult11 wer e con-
templated.
The allegations contained m
the suit against Sears claim that
customers were sold auto parts
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Goy. and repair services when they
Edmund Brown Jr. says werenotneeded. ,
churches, charities and com· The suit, based on a five-month
munity groups should be undercover investigation involv·
cautious about asking forstate or ing the District Attorney's office
federal funds because 1overn-a nd the state Bureau or
ment controls may ulhmat~ly Automotive Repairs. also claims
destroy them. that parts were installed without Sentence Law
Dears Unit In a 45-minute discussion Mon-written approval of the car day wit.b about 30 diocesan direc-owners and that repairs were un· " totl ol the Catholic Charities of dertaken without a written SACRAMENTO (AP> The Callforuia. Brown disagreed with estimate of cost.
state'• fixed sentencine law. ap-somedir.ectorswhourgedthatthe The suit against University
proved last year by the atate should make more money Oldsmobile, 2850 Harbor Bl vd.,
Callforrua Legislature. would be availabletoprivate charities. Costa Mesa, claims that in four
scrapped under a bill that bas "lfyouwantthelifeolyourm-instances customers "'ere
cleared Its first committee. stitutioos to lncreum1ly depend · charged for repairs that were
The measure was sent to the on that (public funds), then I never performed.
• -~••....w..~awWil~NP Co~ ~_.a.h.iai....tltlUr~\.lozµr . ~«8n\ativeJ_o(~~-~<L ~~11Jftl'n~~-1~r-....,.."'~~ ... ~ .... __ ,._, _ .~:.:-"\. Qdd liberal·law enforcement aJ . ·
llance, both factions unhappy
with pendlnc changes in the sen· HB c • 1 s k te':{:"r~:wAssembly Criminal OUllCl ee s
Justice Committee hearlne Mon·
day, Assemblyman Bruce
Nestande (R·Orange), 1ponaor of
the bill, said hla proposal pro-
b ably won't become law H
another measure lenathenlng
terms in the new sentencin1 law
1s signed by Gov. Edmund Brown
Jr.
The sentencinai law 1ubaUtuted
a system of rtxed 1entences for
most crimes In place of the
state's old tndetermlnai. Hn•
tences, such as five years to llle.
Tt takes effect July I
Brown Cballenged
LOS ANGELES <AP) -PoUce
Chief Ed Davis, Inching cle>Mr to
becomin1 1 candidate for the
Republlcan gubernatorial
nomlnaUon, aaya the actions ot
Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. are
repeatedly 1oin1 unchaller\fed
by the Republican party • .,There
has been no 'truth squad' follow-
tnf the eovemor," Davia told
members of tho volunteer
Republican Alaoclatea.
OtlANOI C0ASY
DAILY PILOT
'Secret' Session$
By ROBERT BARKER Of ... holy~, ... SWH
Huntington Beach City
Council members Monday ·
night threw their support
behind proposed legislation
that would bar some council
dellbcrations from the public
Prem Pllfle AJ
AUOTO ...
Justice 1n thll case. All ls well
lhatmdsweJI."
Alioto wu mayor of San Fran·
cllco elcbt years and In 1974
made an unsuc cessful
iubematonal bld.
Marvin Whitmore. preaidentof
Cowtes C.OmmunlcaUon, a aid ln a 1tatement tbrouab hi• attome.y
that be wu "•tunned and sad-
dened by tb1a aclsio.a .••
"Ir '-'Pheld, it repr11enta a
fort.her erodin• of t.he protecUons
tranted by th& First Amend·
ment. We will certainty appeal,"
Whitmore a aid.
Alioto'• ortaina.1 suit waa for
SU.5 million damagu. Juda~ Schwaner concluelea
''that plalnUlf bal sustained the burd~ of proyms by clear and
convtncln• eVidence tbat defen·
dant pubUJMd I.be delamatorY
1tatement1 ~aed 1n the &rt{. ~•• 1'itb actUll 1DaUce, tbat II, wtth reekleH dureiard for
wbetber they wm tru or ~ and ii enltt.led to Jwtiment 1n tho aum olt:aD.000 Plus coats ...
Tbe 19 took article teporte.d
that AUoto attended' meellnp
wltla mea ldeOtifted by LOOk 11
Mafia leW«s a Vacavme•a Nut
Tree ~early tn 18".
Luc• Briston and RJchucf
CatllClli, co-authon of the arttcle
tltJM "Tbe Wib that Llnb SaQ
Francl1co•1 Mayor with the
Mafia," t.tifkld al earlier ttlalt
that thn beliftt to thb d&J tlw itOty'·{l_ tbia .U .. ed Nat TNe
meetma wblch ••told tbtm t.r a . etaaie IOUftt, 7omm,, IAe no. ..
The council voted 4 to 2 to back
AB 1265 by Assemblyman
William Dannemeyer <R -
Fullerton) that would permit city
counclll to consider the appoint·
ment, employment or dismissal
ol all officers and employes, in-
cludinl boards, commlsalona and
council vacancies in secret
sea1lons.
Councilmen Richard Siebert
and Ron Shenkman balked at
1upporttn1 the proposed leailla-
Uon.
Ted Bartlett. Al Coen, Norma
Glbba and Harriett Wieder sup·
ported the measure without of.
rerln1 public comment.
City Admlnlatrator Bud Belsito
uid the bill hu been widely re·
queated by local omctalJ.
He aald they teel that lnabUlty
to consider aationa, particularly
appointmenta, in aecret aesalou
hu a chllllnc ettecton applicants
lot public otftce.
Shenkman, Who wa1 1ub1Utut-
ln1 for the absent Mayor Ron
• Patttn1on, uld dl1cunlona
should be conducted openly.
"There ls no need t~ go behind
closed doors," he said.
Siebert said the bill represents
""a regression. "It would mean 10-
in1 bock to the old ways," he
said.
.. Government 1hould be u
open as pou,lble and public dla-
cuailon doean 't deter good can·
didatea.
..It doa have a detttoiental cf. · feet. It would indicate proepec.
live eandldata bue .Omtlhlni th~ doo't want known," be 1alcL
comment on the ca1es pending
court action.
The suit against Sears. which
alleges violations occurred al
auto shops operated by the de-
partment store in Costa Mesa,
Laguna Hilla, Weatmlnat.er, San·
ta Ana, Orange and Buena Park,·
seeks a permanent injunction to
halt the alleted Ulelal practlcM
plu.s a fine of sz.~ for each viola·
tionofatat4'law.
McFarland aald be had no ex·
act ftaures on the 11um hers of
violaUom involved but he noted
that investi1ators took cars
which they knew to be ln perfect
running condlUon to Seara abops
more than 30 times over the five.
month investigation period and
discovered alleged violation.a "ln
about m percent to 90 percent or
the cases."
McFarland said those viola·
tions primarily consisted of re-
pairmen selling the investigators
parts not needed for the car.
The Sears suil asks the stores
be required to provide the Dis·
tricl Attorney's office with re·
cords or all invoices and
estimates for the next six
months.
Discover the
New Tlluana
and Agua Callentel ------.-..
_.. .... .,.r ... ,.. .. ___ .,...
_ .. ..,. -... ~...,----.. °' ---· A Fun Dari
A Day In New TIJUlftl
In Old tpxtcol
Saturday. May 7. ii Newport Beach
Day In Tijuana and at Ague Ca-
liente'. Newi>ort BelCl'I vltll• Tijuana
10 aee the new look of 111 nefghbor-
clty; to spend a fun day at the new
Agua Call1nt1 SHJ.000,000 enter-
telnment center! You 'll bl atiop-
plng, dining, watching the thor-
oughbreds run, 1lght-eeel11g, I day
ol goodwill, • day flllect with lntar·
natlonal fellowanlpt
AH DIJ, A Fun Dart
Put your own group togtlhet, an. Joy a on...ctay vacation vltlttno y04Jr
n1lghbor In Hew-Old ~JUeot
Join Newport Beach't-Meyor and
ot~er Council mem~rs Join the
Ct'iam~r ol Commerce President
an·.1 many other Chambaf' Members.
• . ..
Life Sav.fugs
t .
8y PllIUP llOSMAIUN
Oftllto.ttf"llMMMf
An Mrfear.old South llatuna
woman wu cheated or ber Ute'• uv1ngs Of '3.800 by two con.
fldence men who posed as the
manaaer and eecurit)' chief of
tbt Bank of America ln Laauna
Beach, pollcereported todl)'. Poll~ aaid they would not
dtvulae the woman's name, by
agreement with her.
Police said the woman told
them thla 1tory:
Lut Friday she waa contacted
by telephone by a man who
claimed to ~ a bank security of-
ficer hom San Diego. He Wd her
be 1uspee?ted Laguna Beach bank
employes of embezzline funds,
and asked her to hdp him trap
them.
Sbe wu asked to .withdraw her
$3,800 Hvin&s and meet h1m at
the county branch Ubrarr, 363
GlenneyreSt.
Momentarily 1uapicloua, she
aaked to 1peak to tbe bank
manager. Another man came on
the Une and identttied himself as
Mr. RJlYD\Ol)d." (John Raymond
ls the real bank manager, police
said.)
Satis!ted, she agreed to help
the "bank ... Tbe1llen-1old her to
use a pre-arranged code number
so that 1he would know abe was
dealln& with the right man at the
library. The transaction took
place, wttb a lnan sbe later
described u teeming "out ol
breath.'' Sbe handed over an en·
velope contaioing 36 hundred
dollar bllls, t.Jfe total from ~er
11vlnp account.
The courier told her to go home
and waitlor a telephone call.
The "security chief" called
again. at 3 p.m .• and told her to
Body Discovered
LOS ANGELES CAP> -Police
Investigators were awaiting a
coroner 's report to learn the
cause of death of a man whose
body was found Monday near the
junction of the San Diego and
Santa Monica. Freeways. Police
estimated the unidentified man
had been dead a week to 10 days.
AH for S20.00
Round ttfp bus fere: a dtllcloua
old world prepared, and lef\ltd,
brunch; ,.frethmerats. and more
,.,, .. hmentt; ,...,\19d M'ltlng
at Aaua Clllente. dl9counte for
two fabulous lhopl)lng apreea!
j
10 to the bank. She was unable• to
make the appolntmen\, to ~er
caller told Mt to try qatn Mon·
day.
"1i>ndlY aho tried, and learned
she'd been bilked.
''lt'• one of tbe oldest con
games tn the world, .. Police Sgt.
Bruce Bri&P aald today. "The
old bank lnlpector's scam. It's
not an unusual con scam. Some
ol these con arUsta can be ~·
tremely convtnclng."
Britt• old the woman
described the man who took her
money at the llbrary as about 35
years old, of medlum..hellht aod
weight, with brown hair.
Sbe said he wore a dark b~.i
ness suit and that he had a "b~i
ne11like haircut."
He looked, aha aald, just like a bank,.
P,....P-AJ
POLICY •••
taln sports, or even for things like
debatlnf or drama, llftd could at-
tract atudents that way.
·•we don't want recruiting,
where the beat students in cer·
tain sports are eoUclted for that
school," said Rayl, explaining
why the policy is in effect.
Rayl said the policy barring
studenta from partlclpatlog for
one year at the new school was
formed in September ol last
year. lt'a flnt effect w9uld be felt next September.
"I'll be meeting with the com-
mittee soon to try to fiaure out a
way of solving the problem," he
said. Committee members ln·
elude athletic department
teachers and coaches. activiti~
personnel, and school ad·
mlnls trators. .
Rayl said he has spoken to
Mrs. Larktn about the problem
but says he planned lo revise the
policy even before she spoke to
him.
"It wus on my list of things to
do. I just hadn't gotten around w
It yet," Rayl explained.
"What we really want to
avoid is one school building~ a
dynasty In some sport," he
added.
By PHDJPROSMAIUN OUM OfllY .. llet ltett
An SC-year-old South Lll(UDa
woman was cheated of her life's
' aavinp of $3,600 by two con·
ftdenee men who posed as the
manaeer and security chief of
the BanJt of America in Lacuna
Beacb, police reported today.
Police said they woul~ not
dlvulge the woman's name, by
agre~ment with ber.
Police said the woman told
them this story:
I.alt~ abe wu contacted
by telephone by a man who
claimed to be a bank ·~:i of· ficer from San Diego. He her
be suspected Lquna Beach bank
employes of em~ funds,
and asked her to help him ttap
them.
She was asked to withdraw bu
$3,600 savings and meet him at
ihe CGUDty branch llbrVf. 3&l
GleaneyreSt. 1
Momentarily auspicious, she
aaked to speak to t.be bank
mana1er. Anotber man came on
tht line and identified bhnaell as
Mr. Raymond." (Jobn R•Jmond
IJ the real bank manager, police
aald.)
Satisfied, abe aereed to help
the .. bank." 1be men told ber to
use a p~arranged code number
. o.lty .................. ..,..
THIS IS WHAT'S LEfT OF PLANE STUDENT PILOT FLIPPED UALY TODAY
At Orange County Airport, A Young Man'.8 PrllCtlce Waen't So Perfect
Sycamore
Hearings
Scheduled
1 The Laguna Beach City Coun-~ make a decision on what
kiDd of development to permit in
tht $22-acre Sycamore Hllls at a
public hearlnc ached•led for
Wednesday's 8 p.m. meet1n1. .
A~· Nf.auel company bu
•fl'eed to PQ $2,000 in civll
Ptaaltlel as part of a aettlement
d a lawsWt m which the ftrm had·
biten accused of mtsleadJni ad· •ertlalng and unfair businela
ptacUces.
W)'ert tor Part Nla\iel COii·
puy ,Ltd. rwol• OrMt•
Couty SOperlo1' Court adloa
ll•da, after dllc~loh of the ta-
._. with Uie dlltrlct 1t&OtnOy'1
CODaumer fraud dlvl1loa and the 1tate•1 .Department of Rtal
:Eitate. The actloll wu filed an. both ..-a. tnvestlaatld ~mplalatl
Uaatc•alltat ~m~5•• l'ow .mi~~ mwq, were not •
delptte the nrm ·• RPtaeata· lioaatot.becontru:J.
Death Cheated
Mechanic Simes Student Pirot
Ohiti State End
ao that the would know she was
deallngwttb thenpt man at the
library. The tranaacUon took
place, wlth a man 1be later
described as seeming "out of
breath.!' She banded over an en-
velope containinl 36 hundred
dollar bills, the total fl'Om her
savinp account.
The courier told ber to eo home
and waitfor a telephone call.
'l"be "security chief" called
aaain, at 3 p.m .• and told htir to eo to the bank. She was unable to
make the ~tment, IO her
CJller told bet to tfY a&aln Jloo.
d1y.
Mondly she tried, and learned
she'd been bllked.
"It's one of the oldest con
games in the world," Police Sgt.
Bruce Brtua aaid today. "'lbe
old bank lnspecto/'a scam. It'•
not an unusual con scam. Some
· · · ·Ar tera .. a~--·""'il
N.Y.S~ks
. of these con artlst.s can be ex·
tremely convinclne." Brlac• said the woman
ducribed the man who took ber
money at the library as about 35
yean old\ of medlwn tielaht and
welCht. wath brown hair.
She said be wore a dark busi-
ness suit and that be bad a •'buai·
nessl.Ute haircut."
He looked, she said. just like a
banker.
El Centro Slwoting
2 POlieenie;n Slain,
3 ·Suspects Nabbed.
force for 18 months, died an hour
later in El Centro Communtity
Hospital.
Sgt. Gene Caldwell said he was
unableto reach either officer by
radio so be left the office and at
the motel took Roger Woodhouse,
.22. of San Diego, int.ocustody.
The bodies of Russell and
Loretta Woodhouse. victims of
"numerous bullet wounds,"
police said, were found in their
San.Diego.motel.two hours aft.er
their son was taken into custody.
Shortly after the El Centro
sbootlng, a couple checked into
another motel three blocks away
and were arrested there shortly
afters a.m., pollce said.
They were ldenWied tentative-
ly u a man and woman with
whom the younger Woodhouse
. said be had been livina in bis
parents' San Diego motel, of·
ficen said. All three were taken
in for questioning, said poUce.
The two slain officers were
m"8rTle4 with children. Hen-
nesay, 42, had been an El Centro
pollceman for 11 Jh years.
Panel Asks Probe
Of A:ecess Deeds
San Clemente police arrested
four South Coast residents Mon-
day on narcotics charges and
said they have seized 250 pounds
of marijuana.
Charged with conspiracy and
sales Ol narcotics were Dennis
Erde, 30, and Vincent Markell.
43, 218 Paseo Cristobal, San
Clemente; Jean Schnelzler, 30,
2442 Las Herm09a Ave., Laguna
Niguel: and Albert Velarde, 28, ot
24572 Harbor View Drive. Dana
Point.
Police said the arrests are part
of a continuing lnvesttgatlon car-
ried out in cooperation with state
narcotics afenta.
On Aprl 21, San Clemente
police arrested four area resi-
dents. three men and a woman,
on suspicion of conspiracy to sell coealne.
Lt. Raymond Hartman, San
Clemente chief of detectives.
aald th6 four were arrested Mon-
day after an attempted sale of
narcotl~ ID Lacuna Ntauel to a
state undercover aaent.
Weather
Patchj low clouds near ·
tbe coast tontabt. Lowa
tonl1bt In upper ~01 to
mJd-SOI. HJgM Wedneiday
mld.eoa to lower 708.
INSIDE TOD~ Y
8i.otd Upt tM Pig .Uflmd
G utbiJtlt ..,. tlwt V~
. SllprttM COUrt rt/uied 'o
hear oui.wr pmor,, Ultle't
dpptol. But LIUI•• ttith ··boc:~ Po':' :i..uu. """ *' tow, OOIDS to /fofd Oft. SN ~•M. .....
•
-LISC -
t r
'Damages
·•
I
BJWIWAJI ICllRBIBZ&
Of ... o.tty ""flaff termlDe wllat It will do If the con-
demnaUoa vote r.u..
, LMt week, trwltees voted to
ICJ'&P a alt. at Myford Road and
. as an inducement to ibandon
Myford·Bryan.
. . .
tr tho condemnallon vote falls,
would UMt Jrvtne Compaey be
w~ to take a capJt.al 111na JO.a l.nd ..Uthe lite anyway? SAN: FRANCISCO (AP)..:.. A
federal Jud•• today twuded
former San Franclaco M~
JoHpb Alioto tno,ooo ID' .. .demq• from the p.,ibllaben ol ~k mqalfM for an article al·
letini Alioto had a "web ol al·
liance with the Malla."
Saddlebick Collep'1 on·acain,
off·8'ain select.loo of a MCCIOd
campm site may !Mr off again
Moncqy U five vuatees fall to
vote lor CCIGdemnatloD of a parcel
CbOffD lllt week.
The Irvine Company, owner or
the land, la apparently holding
out for the condemnation action
on the 1lt.e at Jef.(tey Road and
Irvine Center Drive to protect lta
capital 1alns and for other, more
complex and undlaclosed H·
uon1.
. Bryan Avenue. It bad been elio•• by a depleted, five·
meD\ber board rnor to ·~· Much elecijon tba filled twO VI•
A rulln& by the OraJlle County
CowiJel'a o.fllce bu mad• It
clear that five of tho aevea
. trutees -a two-third• m.iortt.T
-mutt vote to condemn &llY pro.
pert.y.
The 1win1 vote t.n last week'•
actions was new Trustee WUUam Watts of Tustin, who voted to
scrap Myford·Bryan but then
voted against opening ne1oU•· tiona tor Irvine Cent.er-Jeffrey.
• "W•'U f ac• thal 1ltuatJoa wbtn arid U It comea.'' tald Ree1e. ••1
try DOtto put myaelt ln a poSitlon
of ~fueb thlnt1 beton
they happea.
U.S. District Court Judie
Wllllam Schwaner dented
AUoto•a clalm for punitive
~ama&ea.
"Wblle there' ii abundant
evtdence of actual
·¥Dall~ •• there la no subltanllal
ld«Dee that defendant bad a
tate of mind arlalDI from
tred or W.will toward plalnutr'
as required by clvU code," the
udgeuid.
..........
AWARDED $350,000
JoHphAloto
Richard Reese, company vlce
prnldent. Hid today tbe com-
pany wW wait until alter M~
nJ1ht'• board D)eetin& to de·
Pollee Tradlileas
cant eeata and replaced an In· cum~t.
lo another votej! last week,
t.ru1tee1 decided 'l·I to open
negotiallom with the Irvine Com·
pany on the lrvtne Center Drlve-
Jelfrey Road atte.
Adminlltration ottlclala stated
the hope lat week that tbe com·
pany would not require condem-
nation ot the parcel, which lt
originall1 ottered to the colle1e
Two U-U.,tees, Donna Betr1 and
Frank Greinke, are apparently
~ommitted to derailing any effort
to purcbue the site now under
conaideratiOCL
Unleu Watts 1wtng1 over to
join the four wbo favor 1rvlne
Center-Jeffrey, a condemnatloo
vote prc>bUly •ould fail.
"There la certalnly no teaal ,...
11on wh,y the lan4 couldn't be aold without condemnaUon but It
11 a 1ooc1 doll mor• complex than
that.''
Reese taid that, u far u be' is
concerned, mana1ement'1
ortainal oiler to the colleae for
the lntn. Centtr-Jeflrey aite la
still OG the table. It would •till
have to be approved by the eo•
pany•a board of director.a,
bow ever.
Alioto aaked fdr $500,000
general dama1es and substantial
punitive damages.
The dee1'ion result.a from the
fourth .UJal of AUoto's suit
against.Q:nvles Communicotiooa,
publlahul' of the no...-.dtJtunct
Look-JDllCUine. The non·Jury
trial began March 21 and ended
April7.
New Chief Tells Goals
W atta was attending an ad·
minlstrator's meeting in the
Tutt.in Unified School DJ.atrtct,
wbere be la a acbool prtnclpal,
and could not be reached for
comment today.
Buie ally, it proposet sale ot
the fint 20 acres or the land at
~1000 an acre, with a five-year .
upuon to ~Y up to 80 more ICl"fll·
at the aame, fixed price, unaf • f ected by lnflaUon.
The artlole was published in
the July 23, 1969, issue. Three
previous trials ended with de·
adlocked juries and the third and
fourth trials dealt solely with the .
bsue of malice.
· Attorney Lawrence Alioto, who
"'represented hls father, said, "I , am very pleas~ with the results.
The court bu restored to tbia
plaintiff that which the libel in
question took awrt from him.
The court bu done aubat.anUal
justice i.rL. tbia cue. All la well
that eodS well." \.
Alioto was mayor of San Fran·
cisco elgh~ years and in 1974
made an unsuccessful
gutH:matorial bld.
M arvln Whitmore, president of
Cowles Communication, said in a
statement through his attorney
that he was "stunned and sad·
dened by this decision.''
"IC upheld, it represents a
further eroding of the protections
granted by the First Amend-
ment. We will certainly appeal,"
Whitmore said.
Alloto's original suit was for
$12.5 million damages.
San Clemente's newly appoint·
e4 poltce cbief. Gary Brown,
aaya today's police ad -
ministrators must go beyond
traditional goals of protection of
life and property to meet com-
munity needs.
Good police officers should be
acquainted with the mores, tradi-
tl on s, politl~s and aoctal-
U.S., Vieu
Open~Ta/,ka
PARIS CAP) -The U.S.
and Vietnamese govern·
ments opened talks today
amid expectations of a
speedy agreement lo
establish diplomatic rela-
tions.
But Hanoi's official
newspaper indicated the
agreement might not be
concluded until the United
States agreed to give its re-
cent foe the help in re·
construction it bas been de·
manding.
"The talks won't drag
on," said one diplomatic
source.
economic coaditiona of city resi-
dent.a, said Brown, 37, Cl\l"NOUy
head of the South Paaadena police department.
"Our goab should Include
positive community feedback
and a determination whether
community expectations are be-ing met." beaald.
Brown, who takes on hls new
responsibilities May 23, said hia
philosophy or law enforceJDent is
Capo Store Hit
In Break'1n, Theft
Property valued by the victims
at more than $2,000 bas been
stolen from a San Juan
Capistrano store by intruders
whose method of entry is un·
known.
Orange County sheriff's of·
ficers said .the theft of a
television set, jewelry, clothing
and a radio was reported by anti-
que dealer Claudia Hill Hirsch,
who operates Passport Imports
at 31661 Los Rios.
Mrs. HUI, who lives at 30
Harbor Island, Newport Beach,
was away from the premises at
the time.
Repair S~q~
Sean, Univenity OIJ. Accmed IJy_ Coum.y
Orange County Deputy Distrid.. The suit against University be required to provide the Dia·
Attorn,y Charles McFarland' OldsmobiJe, 2850 Harbor Blvd., trict Attorney'• office with re-
said toda)" that lawautts filed Cotta Mesa, 'claims that in four cord• of all ln.-oices, and .-4J(~. .autom~·~ ·-·m.~~~JW.ore·~.~"°?'-~~ ~~~-:, ~ • ... '.-... -•"-"~-:-...---~~ ~~ .... u : ~'iff\;/~4' '--'
t t 1ps in haltin& what he never performed. The investi1atioo tnto the ac· termed widespread illqal ac-Repcesentativea of Sean and tivitles at ~an was based an a
tlvities in the auto repair bmi· · University Olds today declined series oC ccJnsumer complaints to
ness tn Orange County. comment on the cases pendina the auto repair bureau and the
McFarland acknowled1ed that court action. DA'• lraud divlaion, McFarland allegations contained in the two The au.it against Sean, wh1ch said.
auita rued Monday lo Or&ftlt 1Ue1mi violations occurred at The cue aealnst University
C?unty Superior Court may be auto shops operated by the de-Olds, like a similar one flied
widespread practices. partment store ln Costa Mesa against Erban's Bpdy and Paint
But he added, "Tbe law ls quite Laguna Hills, Westminster, San: Shop of Santa Ana, did not in·
cle.ar, there la no ambl,Wty. ta Ana, Oranee and Buena Park, . volve any UDdercover work, but
If everyone else it doin1 lt' la aeekl a ~rmanent Injunction to wu based oo a st.ate mechanic's
the defense, theae aults ml&bt be ball the alle1ed illegal practJces verltlcatlon of complaints
useful to serve n<>tice t ao plua a ftne oC sz,soo for each viola· acatmt the car a1ency'a service matt.er how widespftad theprac-llonolstatelaw. department.
lice la, 1t '11UU Ulepl." be aald. Mc Farland said he bad DO ex·
McFarland alao utcr' auto act fisurea on U.. numbers of
fraud invesU1atlons a.H ccmt.lnu-vtolationa involved but he noted
Ins althou&h be would not tay lf that inveat11atorJ took cars ,.....,P,,.eAJ
further law sulls were con· which they knew to be ln perfect
templated. ~ condltlon to Sears shops MOBIL The allegations contained in more than 30 times over tbe five· . • • •
the ault against Sears claim that mo.nth tnvaUaallon perfpd and
cuetomen were aold auto part.a dlac.overed allefed violations "ln will remain open unW one Ol"
other of the rival contendera falls
to top a counter offer with the de-
adline lmpoaed by the tounda·.
lion.
and repair services when they • about IO percent to 90 percent of
were not needed. the cues."
The amt, baaed on a fJve·mooth McFarland Hid thoee vtola-
undefe:Over inveaU1auon involv-Uon• ,.-tmartly cooslsted ol re·
Ing the District Attorney'a Clftlce pairmen selltn1 the i.nveaU,aton The new Mobil offer means
that the corporation la Offering .
$38.50 a Iba.re lor the 8.4 mllUon
sbaresolthe Irvine Company.
and the atate Bureau of partanotneededfortbeca.r.
AutomoUve Repaln, a1ao claim.a The Sean sdlt asks the stores
,,,_P-AJ
that parts were lmlalled without
written approval of the car
owners and that repairs were un-
dertaken without a written
estim1t.oleo1t. RAMS • • •
Thoee aha.res Include the foun·
datlon'a CODtrolllnl interest of
54.5 pereent ud Irvine belreu •
Smith'• holdlnp of 22.4 S*'cent
lo the company founded by ber
OftANOI COMT
DAILY PILOT
srandf ather. · dlna blocken and reactlna to the Mobil wu on the ver1e ol tu·
pl&¥. He earned four letten ln ins over the Irvine Company for
football at OSU,_l!\d wu All·Bll $200 mllHOQ, or '24 a abate. two
Tentbeputtwoseuona. year• ~o when Mn. Smith's
The Cb.lca10 Bean bypassed OrNll• County SUpe.rlor Court
the available quarterbacks and lawsuit halted the asreed aale
selected Ted Albrecht, a 250-and paved the way for an etiht·
pound All·Amerfcan off enatn month trial of the Issue nd the
tackle from the Univeratty of ' conUnu.ln,lbiddJ.nibattle.
California, who pla)'ed five Mobil~ewbatwuseenua
sport.a in h1Ch schoQl and Nil the m aJor concenlon to mlilorit1
40 ln 4.8. abare!M>lderi MOOdl1. · Wbe:i the
Here are the llnt round aelec· comp~ rU.led that lriiD Com·
tlona lo t.odQ'• NaUooal Foottiatl pany lliarebolden could take the
LeaiwacoUe11dratt: • earUer Mobil offer of $281.t
1, Tam.pa s..y, &10, Bill. rb, mUUcin Ud applj tt to an oPtloll
Southern c.n.tc>mia::.:..P• DallM, tobQJthatamountofllobU1toct. lron:i Seattle. ~ t>Onett.:rb. at 11\YUm•du.rtn.stb•nmyear. Pttaabm1b. 3 anctn.DaU.'.'tiodi , Th• conce11lon waa lm· ,
Buffalo, Eddle £d•ard1, dt, medt•tel1 1een by close ob-
Mlaml, Fla. 4, New York let., aerven cl the blddln1 battle u
Ill anta Po••ll, ot, Soulhern m attempt. to woo Mn. Smltb
C8Ufomla. 5, New .Yort Olanta, ... ., from her IUpport ot tbe
Gair leter, dt, Southern Taubm1P-Allen·tnlnesroup. OUifamtL • It ... htamed today that Mn. e, Atlanta. W~ 81')'ant. Ol. Smllh ha:I no Intention°" diiCUA·
Kentudi;)'. 7, New Oi'leans, Joo In' tM Mobil offer and will coo-CamPbelJ, de, Jflll')'land. Ii an-Unae to~ the Taubma or·
cinaatl, from Pbll1delpbta. 1ant.UUcn. •
Wli.or, WbllleJ. dt, ffOU1toa. 1. She Ii me 0( 10 ~lpala wbo
Green Bay, Jllke• Bftle.r, de, baYe ~ tbelr 'UHtl bebiftd
ltanu1. lO, Xanau Cft1, Garr lb• ~ .. a.an eftort to tile over
• Oreen, db, Baytor. the lmneOOIDpaft1 •
...,...... \ '
).
derived from a compilation of
techniques, tempered by l'Jyean
of experience in the field. The
new police chief bolds a master's
degree from the University of
Southern California and was
police chief in Chowchilla four
years IH:fore goin1 to South
Pasad~ in Au1U1t. •
As police chief, Brown was in·
volved l.n the aucce11ful in· veat~ton of the widely
publl lddnaJ>inl of a buaload
of Chowchilla acbool children,
who dUI their way out of an un. dergrounct cavern where the kid·
napen bid burled them with the bus driver.
•'The lddn.aplq incident had
an Impact on all of ua who were
involved," Brown a aid.
"Hollywood acript writers
couldn't have thought up
something more bizarre.''
Brown said a police chief should maintain a lower profile
than his department and set an
example of absolute integrity
and professional ethics.
"Faced with the decline of
respect for law and the rights of
others, we must maintain a
vigilant stand," he said. "We
must also assure, however, that
humanistic values and individual
constitutional righta are pre-
served."
HB Council Seeks
'Secret' Sessions
By ROBERT BAaKER m•DlltrPlllUUef
Huntington. Beach City ·
Council members Monday
night threw their s_upport
behind proposed. legislation
that would bar some council
deliberations from the public.
The council voted 4 to 2 to back
AB 12U by Assemblyman
William Dannemeyer (R· Fullerton7 that would permit city
councils to consfder the appoint·
ment, employment or dlsmbsal ot all officers and employes, in·
eluding.boards, commissions and
council vacancies in secret
sessions.
Councilmen "Richard Siebert
and Ron Shenkman balked at
supporting the proposed lepla-
tion.
Ted Bartlett, Al Coen, Norma
Gibbs and Harriett Wieder sup-
ported the measure without of-
fering public comment.
City Administrator Bud Belsito
\
aald the bill bu been wldel,y re-
quested by loeal offielab. •
He 1aid they feel that lnabWly
to conakler act.lam, partlcularlY
appolntinmta, 1n secret •esalc:!Pa haa a cb1lliDI effect on appllcaip
for l)UbUc offtee. •
Sbenkinan, who wu 1ublUWt.-
lnf-for the abeeat Mayor a.,
Pattlnaon, uid cUacuutoaa
1bould be conducted openly. • ,
.. There ls DO need to eo beb.u,d
closed doors," be said. ·
Siebert said the bill represen~
a re1reuion. "It would mean 10-
ine back to the old ways," Ke aaid.
"Government should be as·
open as poalble and public dis-
cussion doesn't deter good can-
didates. ..
"It does have a detrimentai ef·
feet, it would indicate pros~ . tive candidates have SOD\
they don't want known," bes ,
illa Dll n Dlllllll BEllH!.
·: .,.~· ·. --. ~-,~)•-..,t·~~~-a;:f:t -.. -.-~ ·. . -...._,...--., ""' .... ..., ~-"""" .__ ..... ..:. a-....... ~
NEWPORT BEACH DAY IN TIJUANA AND AT AGUA CALIENTE!
Dlacover the
New Tijuana
and Agua Callentel
AelW """ If ,..,.. • -...--..... -::::c:-___,......_. .........
A Fun Dayl .
A Day In New Tl)Ulftl
In Old Mexico!
Saturday. May 7, la Newport Beach
Oay In Tijuana and at Agua Ca·
llente. Newport Beech vl9lta 'r~uana
to ... th• new look of Its neighbor·
city: to apend a fun day at the new
Agua Callente 1181000.000 enter·
talnmant ceotert You'll b• thop-
plng, dltllng, watchl"9 the thor·
oughbmi run, tlght...e.lng, a day
or goodWtn. • day tined with lnt•r·
natlon•I ftllOwthlpl
111· Dar. A fun iayl
Put your own grvup together, .,,.
Joy• one-day vecatlon vlaltlng your
ne4Qhbor In New-Old ~Jdcot
Join Newport Beech'• M~r and
other Council members. Join the
Chamber of Comm•ree Pr..ictent
and many otner Cl\amber Membef'I
...... ~ ........... 119<11 ............ -........... -f ................. ~-,,...,,.,.--PIM~
All for 120.00
Round trip bue fife: a deQcloul ~Id world prepared. and aerved,
brunch; t9frethments. and more
refresh"*11S; reteNed Meting
at AQua Cellent•. dllCOUnta for
two flbuklot lhopplng toreell
And You're lnvHedf
ltlnera~ for
Newport Beach:
••
..... ..,....,...
ASSEMBLYMAN CORDOVA ENTlRTAINS N£WPORT OtRL SCOUTS
Seouts Hit Tr.ail
The 17 &lrll of Newport Beach 'a Girl Scout
,.'Troop 1004 aold a record number or cookies
this year, 10 with the proceeds, troop leader
Dottie Nell arranged a one-day excursion to
Sacramento.
Some of the girls recorded their im·
presaions oTUie trip.
Kendra Cole tiked flying. ''All the
stewardesses were very nice to us and others
were very aurprued to see a troop of Gtrl
Scouts going to Sacramento."
The first stop ln the capital city was the
state Capitol buildlng. "We received a tour by
a eulde named Cindy. She was pretty. It was
intereaUn-.," notedKaty Huston. /
"We were going to get to talk t.d"'tbe
senator estate Sen. Dennis Carpen{er ~R
Newport Beach), but he. was busy so we tallied
to an aide from bls o(f!ce," Kat1'a account
added.
While in Saeramento, the 11rls toured the
old Governor's Mansion, Sutter's Fort, an ln-
dtan museum and a railroad inwseurn, with
side trips to a candy store and an ice cream
parlor.
The girls also met their A5sembfyrnan,
Democrat Ron Cordova. who shared a few
I.ughs with them in the park, at the Capitol.
''He was very nice and we all got his auto-
graph and a picture of him with our Girl
Scout Troop," Kendra noted.
The day ended with a quick shopping trip
to Old Town before the tuebt back home.
''I think that it wu a veil' interesting trip,
and I am glad that we have such a Jood leader
to arrange such interestin& thins• for us,"
wrote Tyra Wolfsberg. '
By TOM BARLEY
OC • D.U. f'l ... St.ff A apokeaman for an East Coast
consortium that fell behind Mobil
Corp. Monday in the bidding bat-
tle for cmtrol of the Irvine Com·
pany, pledged today that hi• arc>UJ> will top the new Mobil bid
of l30'7.1 million·.
Col. John GotUieb, represent·
ing Detroit developer Alfred
Taubman, said his group's new
offer wW bo made before th• new
deadline of noon, May 9.
"We -will outbi& Mobil." be
said. "~ut we don't want to say
by how much until shortly beJore
the deadline."
.NB Eyes
Coastal
Control
Dir~rs of the James Irvine
Foundation accepted the new
Mobil offer at a special meetinl
late MOl'day.
But they carefully left the door
open for the consortium beaded
by Taub~an. Wall Street finan.
cler Charles Allen and Henry
Ford II to make a new bid.
And foundation directors made
it clear that the bidding situation
will remain open until one Ol'
other of the rival contenders Calla
to top a counter offer wlt.h the de-
adline Imposed by the founda-
tion.
The new Mobil ofter means
COWBOYS' CHOICI!
Back Tony Doraett
BULLETIN
TAMPA <AP) -USC back
Ricky Bell, dr.ned Ftlday by Ch
Tampa Bay Bacc~neera, .......
a five-year, fl.M mllUoa coatraet
wUb the National Foo&ball
Learue team, The Assodated
Presa learned.
,,. •
that the corpot'&tJon ia oflerlnJ
$36.50 a share for the 8.4 mllllon
shares of the Irvine Company.
Those shares include the foun-
dation's controllini interest ol
54.5 percent and Irvine belresl
Smith's holdings of 22., pereel't
in the company founded by her
grandfatber. .
Mobil was 011 the verfe of tak-
ing over the Irvine Company for
$200 million, or $24 a share. two
years aao when Mrs. Smith's
Oranie County Superior Court
lawsuit halted the aereed 1ale
and paved the way for An eiaht· <See MOBU,. Pas• .U>
our policy of pickini the hiaheat
rated player available to us re-
aardl~s of position." said the
(See RAMS, Pa'e A2)
Restaurants'
Loss: 8 4,800
Newport Beach detectlvet said
today the late from the Monday
morning -holdup at the Ancient
Mariner restaurant wu more
than tt,IOO.
The robbery occurred ln the
parking lot of the reataurant at
2601 W. Coast Highway u a
restaurant employe ten for the
bank to depo1it the weekend's re-
ceipts.
The victim told J>Ollee ahe had
two bap of receipts, one LrQm
the Ancient M.arlner and one
ltom tho neJahborlne Ru1t¥
Pelle.an, when •he was ·~ proacnea by a mata wbo wu ca(-
ryln• a J>rown paper baa. • •She laJd be drew a blue •t.dl
revolver out of tho baf, de.
m anded the mone~ and then nect on loot.
'
RAMS •••
club'• v ce-preald nt and ttner
mana!tt n Klon«man. , Brudmkl. 22. wbo alandl ..
foot-4 and wellht 230 played
st'1td·up deteoalve end ln col·
le1e.
Here are the first round selec-
tions in today'• NatfOnal Football
i..asue collect draft: 1, Tampa Bay, Rldcy Bell~ rb.
Southern California. 2, D111lu, ·
from Seattle, Tony Dorsett, rb,
Plttlburgh. 3, Cinclnnatl, from
Buffalo, Eddie Edwards, dt,
Miami, Fla. 4, New York Jets,
Marvin Powell, ot, Soutbern
Calitomla. 5,' New York Giants,
OtrJ Je&er, dt, Southern
Calltornia.
6, AUanta, Warren Bryant, ot,
!entutk)I. 7, New Orleans, Joe
Campbell, de. Maryland. 8, Cin-
C!innatl, from Philadelphia,
WllJon WbtUey, dt, Houston. 9,
.Green Bay, Mike Butler, de,
Kansas. 10, Kanan City, Gary ...
• Greea, db, Baylor.
11, Houlton, Morris Towns. ot,
Missouri. 12, Buffalo, from
Detroit, Phillip Dokes, dt,
Oklahoma State. 13, Miami, A. J .
Duhe, dt, Louillana State. l•, ~ Of G T•rll Seattle, from San Dle10. throuah • ~
Dallu .. <$eve Auguat, oi. Tulia.
15, Chicuo. Ted Albree~&, ot,
California.
lS, New England, from San
FranclJco, Raymond Clayborn,
db, Texas. 17, Cleveland, Robert
Jackson, lb, Texas A&M. 18,
Denver, Steve Schindler, og,
Boston College. 19, St. Louis,
from W11ablngton, Steve
This speed limit sign is no joke on the
short extension of Bristol Street recently
opened to connect Jamboree Road to
MacArthur Boulevard near border of
Irvine and Newport Beach. The curve in
the road is unbanked and nearly 90
degrees. There are several sets of skld
marks on the pa\ting, but NewPort Beach
police say they've received no accident re-
ports from that location -yet.
p,...,p-AJ HB Council Seeks , PisarkJewicz, qb, Missouri. 20,
Atlanta, from St, Louis, WU.OD MOBIL "
1 Faumulnay dt, San Jose State. ' • • • , 21, Pittsburgh, Robin Cole, lb,
New Mexico. 22, Cincinnati, Mike
Cobb, te, Michigan State. 23, Los
Angeles, Bob BrudziD1kl, lb,
Ohio state. 24, San Diego, from
Dallas, Bob Raab, c, Memphia
State. 25, New Enaland; Stanley
Morian. wr, Tennesaee. 26,
Baltimore, Randy Burke, wr,
month trial of the issue and the ·continuing biddine batUe.
Mobil made wbal was seen as a
major concession to minority
shareholders. Monday when the
company ruled that Irvine Com-pany aba.rebolden could take the
earlier Mobil offer of $281.9
mUlioa and apply it to an option
to buy tbat amount of Mobil stock
at any time during the next year.
'Secret' Sessions
• Kentucky. 27, Minnesota, Tom-
my Kramer, qb, Rice. 28, Green
Bay. from Oakland. Ezra
Jobnaon, de, Morris Brown.
IQ.the second round, the Rams,
using a choice obtained through
Seattle, selected back Nolan
Cromwell of Kansas.
Other second-round choices In·
eluded linebacker Dave Lewis of
USC by Tampa and wide re-
ceiver Wes Walker of Cullfomla
by the New York Jets.
Later in the round, the Rams
also picked running back-wide
~receiver Billy Waddy of
Colorado.
The Chicaeo Bears bypassed
the avallable quarterbacks and
selected Ted Albrecht, a 250·
pound All·Amerlcan oftenaive
tackle from the University of
California.
The concession was im-
mediately seen by close ob·
servers of the bidding battle aa
a.n attempt to woo Mrs. Smith
away from her support or the
Taubman-Allen-Irvine group.
It was learned today that Mrs.
Smith bas no intention of discuss-
ing the Mobil offer and will con·
linue to support the Taubman or·
ganizatlon.
' Court ac tioJl has been
postponed by Judge James F.
Judge until one or other of the
two contenders is successful in
bidding for the Irvine Company
He will then be asked by the
tou.ndalion to approve the sale lo
the successful bidder.
Police troup Suits Filed
By ROBEltT BARKER
OftlleDellYPi ... lllltf
Huntington Beach City
Council members Monday
night threw their s upport
behind proposed legislation
that would bar some council
deliberations from the public.
The council voted 4 to 2 to back
AB 1265 by Assemblyman
William Dannemey.er {R·
Fullerton> that would permit city
councils to consider the appoint-
ment, employment or dismissal
of all officers and employes, in·
eluding boards. commissions and
council vacancies in secret
sessions.
Councilmen Richard Siebert
and Ron Shenkman balked al
supporting the proposed legisla-
tion. Ted Bartlett. Al Coen, Norma
Gibbs and Harriett Wieder sup·
ported the measure without of-
fering public comruent.
City Admlnlstrator Bud Belsito
said the bill has been widely re·
quested by local officials.
~~~~~.~.#~ .·Rt]liijj----~ ... ~.-~'ti.0~··--~ .... ~.:._,, .. _.-.-'"""--rt: 3"" ./:I.ti -----~---To Tiw Fllllda · ·
·Members of the Newport -·
Beach Police Employe's Aa· I .4 t R •
soc1auon have contributed s1 .021 n /t.U O enairs
lo cancer and heart fund&, ac· r
cording to an announcement Orance County Deputy District
from auociation Presid~nt Steve Attorney Charles McFarland
Van Hom. ~ said todajr that lawsuits filed
Van Horn said the money will a1alnat Seanr automotive shops
go lo memorial funds o! the and University Oldamoblle are
American Heart Association and the first 1teps In halUna what he
American Cancer Soei•ty termed w1despread tUe1a1 ac·
established ln the memory t)f UviUes ln lbe auto repair busl·
Howard Rogers, the cit1'1 nesa inOrqeCounty.
former mayor; Bull J1&1atd, a McFarland acknowled1ect that
former police employe, Karen alle1aU0nt contained in the two
Hall, wlle of a police employe; 1ult. flled Monday ln Oran1e
Helen Noel, a former police County ~rior Court may be
employe, and Laura Lacio.. the widespread practices.
former city clerk. But he added, ''The law is quite
He sold the money w11 donawct clear, there t. no ambliu.lty
by 95 of the 150 membenr of his U 'everyCl\e elle is do1n1 it' la
auoclatlon In lleu of their the defense, these aulu mi1ht be
participation In the cltywlde uaeful to urve notice lbat no
United Way campalan. mailer bow wldeapread the pUc·
The Unltcd Way campalp Uce ls, it'uWJllleaat." be 1aJd.
amon1 tho city'• 500 other lcfarland also said auto
employee Jut fall ended wtth a fraud inveatl•aUona are conUnu·
total of tte,888 pledacd to tho lnl althouih he would not say if
cbartt.y tor um. further law ault1 were con-
The larseat dollar amount templJted.
pledaed ln tho United Way cam-Tbe allegatlont contained in
p1J1n wu $.1,811 from 10$ fire de· tb• 1utt a1ainat Sean claim that
partmftlt empJoyea. cuatomen were sold auto parts
The fall camp1l1n 1110 In. and repai.r services when they
eluded "Pled&tl totallln1 tl,899 werenotneeded.
runninc condition to Seara shops
more than 30 times over the five·
month investlaatlon period and
discovered alleged vlolatlons "in
about 80 percent to 90 percent of
thecua."
McFarland said those viola·
lions primarily consisted ol re-
pairmen selllna the Investigators
parta not needed for the car.
The Sean suit .asks the stores
be required to provide the Dta-
trict Attorney's office with re·
cords of all Invoices and
estimates for the next six
months.
The invesU1ation into the ac·
tlvitta at Sean wu bued on a
series ol consumer complainta to
the auto repair bureau and the
DA '1 traud dlvt.lon, Me Farland
said.
The cue asalnlt Univenlty
Olds, Uke a 1im1lar one flied
a1atn.i Erban's Body and Paint
Shop of Santa Ana, dld not ln·
volve U\Y undercover work, but
was based on a 1t1te me(!hanJc's
verlflcatlon of complaints
•1alnat the car a1enoy'1 service
department. from '2poU~o employ~•· The 1uit. baaed on 1 tlve-month
undercover lnveatl11Uon lnvolV· rt'\.._o Men Rob " DAILY PILOT
in1 the Olstrict Attomfly'1 office .I. w1
and the state Bureau of
Automotive RepaJn, also claims
that ptrta wer• tnstauec1 without Sclnnitz' Son written approval of the car
ownera Md tbat repaln were u.n·
dertallen without a written
..UmateOl COit.
Tb• tult •••ln1t Unlveralty OlclimobUe. 2l$O Harbor Blvd.,
CtRa -..-. claJma that in four
la1taDtH euatomer1 were cit~ 'J.OI NP8ll1i that were never: performld.h -' ·
·~·-Of st&r1 and tJnt•nt:J Old8 today dltllMd
comJIMIK oa the CINI pend1q
court llCtMm..
TW ~~sun, Wldcb ~--ou oceurnd at *I bJ tM ct.,:
ID Cotta M•a. 'ti~;:,:·----·~
l • ·=~· ... :::.,'f'..,..:..-=: '"'9 .... la•~
-
.atdbl .... ••·
-"" ......... Of m.o&Ytiil but tie lliclltd
tliat n•HUl•ton took oal'I
dell tlMj kMW. "'" ~
He said they feel that inability
to consider e(!Liona, particularly
appolntmentl, ln 1e<:ret 1esslOP1
has a chlllln1 ef(ecton appUcanta
for public office.
Shenkman, who was substitut-
ing for the absent Mayor Ron
Pattinson, said discussions
should be conducted openly.
·'There is no need to go behind
closed doors," he said.
Siebert said the-but-repre&enta
a regression. ''It would mean go-
ing back to the old ways," he
said.
"Government should be as
open as possible. and public di.s·
cussion doesn't deter good can·
did ates.
"It does have a detrimental ef·
feet, il would lndlcate prospec·
live candidates have aomethine
they don't want known,'• he said.
Dlacover the
New Tijuana
and Agua Callentel
--·~·--~-· ,,_.,.,_,.._...,,_.,.._ ----. A Fun Diyf
A Day In New Tijuana
In Old Mexico!
Satutday, May 7, la Newport BHch
Day In TIJuana and at Agua C1-
H1nt1. Newport Beteh vlslta Tlju1na
to'" th• new loOlc of lta n4"Qhb0r· city; to apend a tun d1y at lht new
Agua Callent. S1t,OOO.OOO tnltr·
talnmtnt centtrl You'll b• ahop-
plng, dining, watehlng th• thor·
oughbred• n.1n, llght• ... lng, a day
of goodwill, a day filled with lnter-
natlonal ftllowthlpl
All Day, A Fan DaJI
Put your owl'I group tOOttl\tr, en-
joy a on•day vacation vf11t1no y~r
ntlOhbOr In NIW-Old Mtxleol
JOfn'NtwPoft BHeh'• Mayor and
Ot1\9' Cbuncft rnetn'*8. Join the
Chlfftber of Comrnetce P.Neldtnt .rid many ct'* Cl'larnbef M.mbtf'I
By PIDUP ROSMARIN °' .. D.tlty ,. .. ,Uff
An M-year-old SOulb Laauna
woman wu cheated of her fife's
savlnp of $3,800 by two con·
fldenco men who po1ed u the
rnana1er and security cblef of
With Cast, .
~ She's Neat
In Clutches
• •
the Bank ot Am nca ln Lanna
Beach, Poticerep:orted today.
Polle• aiild they would not ~vutse the womtn'• .,am•, by
•1reemmt with her. .
Polle. Hid th• woman told them thil story: •
Lut Friday abe wu contacled
by telephone by a man \fho
claimed to be 1 bank aecurtt.y of.
fleer from Su Dteio. Ho told her
be suspected Latam• Beach bank
employee ol embe11l.lnc tunds,
and liked Ker to help b1ID tlap them. a
Sbe WM uked to withdraw ber
$3,eoo aavtna and meet him at
the county:,l>rancb Ubracy, 381
GJumeyreSt.
Momentarily suspicious, she
asked to speak to the bank A ~year-old Huntincton Beach man11 .... .a ..... u.
1lrl didn't let a broken wmt and the Une-Ucs ~U'tie:~ti:~:
heayy cast atop her from Mr.~." (John Raymond
flnt.lllnC 1n a thrff.way tie for lJ the real bank manaaer police
aecond place amo~ 114 ol did ) '
Oranp County's best fourth ~ SaUatled, ahe aereed to help;
1radeleftbes. the "bank.'' The men told her to Eunice Ruo, who attends Hope use a pre-UTaJ)ted code number
View Elementary School In Hunt· so that she would know she wu
ington Beach, scored 209 point.a dealtna with the right man ~t the
out of a possible 240 In the coun-Jlbraty. The tranaaction took
tywide Pen and Quill pen-place, with a man she later
mansbipcontestApril30. described as aeemlnc "out of
Despite he haodlcap, caused • breath " She banded over an en-
by a fall frem a bieycl~ her velope' containing 36 hundred
parenis·eave her .r~r wiruune a dollar bills. the total from her
previous handwriting contest, savinc• account. Eunice also led her team to
second place among 28 other
fourth grade handwriting
squads.
The Ocean View School Dll·
trict fourth IJ'&de handwritina
team scored a total of 795 point.a.
Brian Mallory, of Spring View
School, David Hollinger, ot Glen
View School, and Leah Wrlght, of
Lake View School competed on
Eunice's team.
A Fullerton fourth grade squad
finlJhed in first place with 804
points.
Huntington Beach also had the
top fifth grade writer, Erin Ball,
10. who attends Moffett Elemen·
tary School . Erin led all in-
di vldual contestants with 215
po in ls.
Allison Whitake r , 9. from Blessed Sacrament Parochial
School in Huntington Beach tied
with Eunice for second place
am'?ng fourth ~rade writers.
AH for S20.00
Round ltlp bus fare; a dellClout
old WOftd ,,,_,.,9d, and Mrvtd,
brunch; refrtthmenta, and more
ref,..,...menta: reserwd seating
at Agua c.Jlente, dlecoul'lt1 for
two fabuloua ahopc)lng .,,,. ... ,
Coast Colleg~
District 3rd
Codl Community Collete D~trict officials have learned that.
theirs is the third lareest com-
munity college district in tbe
United States.
~ru rele-aired by ~
American Association of Com·
munlt.y and J4nlor Colleges last
week place C'oast third behind
Los Angeles Community College
District, with nine campuses and
136,099 students, and City College
of Chicago with nine campuses
and 98,819 students.
The CoasL Community College
District L!I comprised or three col-
leges and 62,110 students.
And YOlf re Invited!
Itinerary for
Newport Beach:
' -WbUe Saddleback Valley
1Jnltled School Dlatrlct ottlctala
and teachers continued prepar-
tn1 for a poaslble teacher'•
atrtke, repreaentaUvea of both
tides were due to return to tM
11e10UatJ.n1 table W. ~"'°°"' Teachers are ex.pecbt'CI to vote
Wednesday on the •trike ques·
tlon. Gaerally, teachers and di.s-
trict official.I aaree tbat the re·
aulla of that vote will be de·
termtned lar1ely by what
happens tn the last-minute
neaotlaUons.
Leaders of the Saddleback
Valley Ed11c1tors Aaaociatlon
(SV!!Al, repreaenUng teachers,
and attorneys from the law firm
of Giti.on, Dunn and Crutcher,
representina trustees, meet for
about seven hours Mondav.
"Without 1olng into specifics,
neither side relt it WU
wort.bwhlle to stop," aald Mate
DuBoll, SVEA oesotlator.
Altbou1h no aareementa for
tpeclllc progeu were made, he
Hid, marv. thln•s were cleared
up Ind notb1DI WU cloeed oll.
"Every oqe Of tbete sessions bu been critical," aald John•
Cooper, assistant to the 1uperln·
ten4ent. He Hid the tnformation
be bu iS that ''tb.i.Dp are pro-
gresatna at the table." •
.,..,, ,. ......... .., "'" ,..., ..
THIS IS WHAT'S LEFT OF PLANE STUDENT PILOT FLIPPED EARLY TODAY
At Orange Couf1!Y Airport, A Young Man'• Prettlce w .. n't So Pert~
2CoriMen
Swindle
S. I .ag11nan
Death Cheated
Mechanic Savea Student Piwt
A young student pilot narrowly Ana man had been told by-Cronin
escaped death early today when to simply taxi the vintage
the aircraft be was taxiing along machine down the runway and
th.e runway at Orange County get the feel or the controls.
j By PJDUP BOSlllARIN Airport flipped over and bu.rat in· instead. tlley Hid, Stevens
cw .. o.11,,.....sc.., toflames. tried to take off, bungled the a~
Orange County Sheriff's of· tempt and filpped the machine An M·year·old South Laauna Cicers said 22-year·old Ronnie over as one wing struck the
woman wu cheated of her llle'a Crail Stevens' We undoubtedly runway.
1avtnaa ol $3,800 by two con· wu saved by Huehes Airwf.St SherUrs deputies at the county
fldence men who P<>'ed u the mechanic Reynold Artacbipe, 32, airport said It is not unusual for
mana1er and security chief of who saw the 2:1S a.m. accident student pUot.s to practice in the
the Bank or America in Laguna • and ran to douse the names with early hours or the morning
Beach, police reported today. a hltnd nreextiniutshu. because that is 6ne time of day
Police said they. would· not Stevens, still strapped iJI bis when traffic Is light at the na·
vw e 'fe._wpEl~ s J1a~e, by seat, was extricated from the lion's second busiest airport.
to Vote on··
,DuBoll nld e lelt 1ood abOut
Moode)''• baraalnlna aeaalon. "U
lt k~ 1olng like tfila, that'll be
nJce,' "' aald. He indJt1ted that the problem now mlaht be lack ot
enoulh time to reacb an qree.
ment before the teacben' meetJ-
ing. Durinl that meetin1, DuBota said, SVEA leaders have acreed
.. we'll either recommend a Ml
contract to vote on or we'll uk
them toatrike."
He said the leaderah1p'1 iaosi·
Uon can be modified by what the membership wants to do •.. U we
aet neither of tho$e, then we'll 10
wltb the now " be explained.
Neither DuBois nor 1Cooper
would diacuss exacUy what hu
been dllcussed at these sessions.
Cooper likened the closed talb to
a cake balcina -if you keep pull·
tne it out to check It, it'll col·
El Centro Slwoting
'A.f ternooa
.N.Y.Stoeks
TE!N CENTS
Strjke
lapse.
However, a new salary otter
from trustees was revealed ln the
district's latest newsletter.
which was mailed to residents
lutweek.
Cooper explained that trustees
now are o«ertna a three-year
contract which would be effec·
live from July 1 of this year to
June 30, 1980.
(See STRIKE, Page A%)
2 Policemen Slain,
3 Suspects N abhed
EL CENTRO (AP> -Two
police officers were shot to death
today and one of three persons In
custody was identified as the aon
of a couple slain in San Diego
hours earlier, authorities said.
The other two were arrested by
a force oOO heavily armed police
and. sheri!!'s deputies who
storD)ed a motel on "hotel row"
in pie west side or El Centro
shortly after daybreak, officers
said Bullets were reportedly
found. but oo \'eaistance took
place
Police in the two cities said thls
happened
An east Sao Diego motel
manager and bis \¥ife were shot
to death about midnight Monday
and their car stolen
About3·30a.m ., in answertoa
telephone complaint about a
honking car horn, El Centro
police officer Arthur Kenneth
Hennesay drove to a motel In that
city.
A siqle bullet apparenUy fired
from a .30-callber carbine struck
Hellllesay in the bead, killinl him
about 2S feet from bl1 police
cruiser.
Another officer, John Alan
Funeral Set
Vickers, then ~e up and was
shot in the chest and neck while
still in his car. Vickers, 29, a
member of the El Centro police
force for 18 months, died an hour
later in El Centro Communtity
Hospital.
Sgt. Gene Caldwell said he was
unableto reach either officer by
radio so he left lbe office and at
the motel took Roger Woodhouse,
22,ofSanDiego,intocustody.
The bodies. ot .Runell and
Loretta Woodhouse, victims of
''numerous bullet wounds."
·police said, were found in their
San Diego motel two hours after
their son was taken into custody
Shortly after the El Centro
shooting, a couple checked into
· another motel tbre~ blocks away
and were arrested there shortly
arter 8 a .m., police said.
They were identified tentative·
ly as a man and woman with
whom the younger Woodhouse
said he had been living in bis
parents' San Diego motel, of-
ficers said. All three were taken
in for queatlonlng, aaid police.
The two slain officen were
married with children. Hen-
nesay. 42, had been an El Centro
policeman for 11 'h years.
•
4 ~.,,,.... ~.... • cosecutor at the
Police 1ald ..... tti1 woman.,.tdfCf" .. Deput/liifulet "*'corney ·)'~~-~~~~;i5iiiQ-~n~~~
them tht.satory: Cronin and taken to the hospital available Cor co ment
Last Friday she was contacted with a broken jaw and other in· c1dent.
by telep}lone by a man who jl.lriea. He was reported to be ln Airport officials describe his
claimed to be a bank security of. good condition at UCI Medical Stinson aircraft u a total loss
fleer from San Die10. He told her Center. and valued the vintage maebine
he su1pect.ed La~a Beach bank Deputies.aal<t the youn« Santa at $50,000. 'M employes of embeizlln1 funds,
and aaked her to help him trap
them.
She wu asked to withdraw her
'3,600 11vtn11 and mu' him al
the county branch Ubrary, XI
Glenneyre St.
Momentarily 1uspiclous. ahe
uked to apeak to tbo bank
mana.1er. Another man came on
the line and Identified him
Mr. Raymond." (John Raymond
lJ the real bank man••e.r. police
Hid.)
atbOed, atHa arreed to help
th• "bank." The men told Mr to
UH a pre.arran1ed code number
to that ahe would know abe was
deallna with the rtaht man at t.be
Ubrary. The tranucUon loolr
place, with a man ahe later
deacrtbed a1 seemln• "out or
breath." She handed over an en-
velope contalnln1 36 hundred
dollar blU1, the total from her
1 Hvtnp account.
The courier told her to 10 home
and WJit for a telephone call.
r The "security chlel" called
a11ln, at 3 p.Jtt.band told her lo
•o to th bank. S e was unable to
maJce t.he apPolntment, 10 her
aller told her to try a1aln Mon·
day.
<See BILKED. Pare Al)
Mayor Alioto Wins
$350,000 Damages
SAN FRANCTSCO <AP} -A
federal ~e today awarded
former Francisco Mayor
Joseph AHoto $350,000 In
damaae1 from the publisben or
Look maiazine for an article al·
le1Ln1 Alioto bad. a "web ot al·
ll111ce with the Malia."
U .s. District Court Judce
Wi11iam Schwaner denied
Alioto'• claim for punitive
damaaea.
"While there is abundant
evidence or actual
malice ... there ll no substantlal
evidence that deteDdant had a
'state or mind ar1sin1 from
hatred or ill·will toward plaintiff'
as required by civil code." the
Judge said.
Alioto asked for $500,000
1eneral dama1u and substantial
punitive damaaes.
The 4iecislon results from the
fourth trial or Alioto'a auit
atalnst Cowles Communications,
publilhera of the now·defunct
Look ma1azine. The non·Jury
trial be1an March 21 and ended
AprU7.
The article wu publllhed in
<See ALIOl'O, Pate AJ)
Saddleback Campos
_Site Off -Again?
Funeral services will be held
weanesday for John DeHaas, director of Saddleback Valley
Unified School District's Adult
Education Community Choir,
Sunshine Unlimited.
Mr. DeHaaa died Thursday
night after suffering an apparent
heart attack while directing the
choir in a performance at the
Villa Valencia retirement home.
Hewu66.
"He excuaed himself and sat
down and died,'' accordlnt to
Putor Don Roberta of the Christ
Presbyterian Church in Hunt·
ington Beach.
"He died doine somethinf he
liked to do," Pu tor Roberta said.
Mr. DeHaas worked for 11
years at Huntinrton Beach Hiah
School before hla reUrement in
1978. He started worlt u a custo-
dian cleanJ.nt cluaroom• and ad·
vanced to the poslt1on of medJa
sources technician.
He wu chosen by senlo• at the
school u their commencement
apeaker last June.
He alao wu a Dutch realstance
flahter who fou1ht the Nul1 in
World Warn.
Mr. DeHaN wN a resident of
Garden Grove at tho tlme of bil
death. He is survived by his
widow. Kathy, and '°"i Hana. Servlca will be he d 1t RA>le
Hilla Mortuary in Whittier at
11:30 a.m. Wednesday.
COWBOYS' CHOICE
B~k Tony Dorsett
PICKED BY GIANTS
USC'• Gary Jeter
Ohio State End
Rams' Draft Pick
pound All-American offensive
tackle from the University of
Call!ornla, who played five
sports in hiah school and runa the
40 ln4.8.
Here are the Clnt round selec-
tlona in today'• National Football
Leasue colle1e draft:
1, Tampa Bay, Ricky Ben, rb.
Southern California. 2, Dallas,
from Seatuo, Tony Dorsett, rb,
Pittsburgh. S, Cincinnati, lrom
Buffalo, Eddie Edwards, dt.
(See RAMS, Pase A2)
Coast
Weather
DAlL v Pll.O'T SB
Retract
So~t
By·Nixpn
WASHINGTON <AP>··r
Former President Nixon la Seel·
!ng retraction ot a WaJhlnatoo
Poat story that the former chief
..e~cuUve knew in Janu.ary 1973 ~t "hush money" wu betn1 ~ouebt to purchaae the 1llence of
Watergate burglars.
Nixon sought the retraction in a letter sent by bis lawyer,
.Jhrbert C. Miller, to tbe
( iiewspaper'a executive edttor,
'llenjamln C. Bradlee.
The letler, delivered Monday,
tlaked the paper to retract the
tory "by publ.llhina a com·
en1&tlni headline article stat·
g that the Special Prosecutor's
'"'\rancript of the Jan. 8, 1973, con-
-venation between Richard Nlx·
on and Cbarlea Colaon contained no reference to hush money."
. -., \
Cool Pool Bradlee, reachetl In Honolulu,
Hawaii, ror a response to the let-
ter, said. "The Post stands by its
story("
The Post on Sunday quoted
from a 1ranscript of a converu-
lion between Nixon and Colson, a
rormer aide.
A new div\flg pool is being constructed at
the Marguerite Recreation Center in Mis-
sion Viejo, which is world·renowned for its
champion team, The Nadadores. With the
help of diving coach, Dr: Sam.my Lee, and
Olympic diving medalist Greg Louganis,
this special facility will be the training
ground for new champions. It is due for
completion by mjd-summer.
The article said that during the
conversation, Nixon said, "God
damn, hush money, uh, how are
we going to (unintelligible) how
do we get this sturr . . . "
Miller's letter lo Bradlee said '.tb.~ transcript used by the Poet
for the article went through a
1ater draft, adding, ''The final
transcript contains no reference
_,Suits Hit ~epair Shops
Sean, University Oklil Acew1ed by County
whatever lo hush money. The re-Orange County Deputy District
cords of the special prosecutor Attorney Charles Mc Farland
confirm W1." · d tod h. la · fled OurintJ the Watergate In· sai ay t.)at w11uu 1
against Sears automotive shops vestigations, several drafu of and University Oldsmobile are transcripts of White House tapes th r· · h 1 · b b were made by the While House, e irst steps m a ling w at e termed widespread illegal ac-~prosecutors, or congressional tlvilies in the auto repair busi-··~om m iltees, using different nessinOrangeCounty.
i q\.lipment to play the often bare-McFarland acknowledged that
'J audible tapes. JI · lain d · th t Colson also has denied that a egaUons con e in e wo suits ltled Mon<tay in Orange /\U$h money was discussed dur-c t Su i c t be 1ng the ta~d conversation. a oun Y per or our may widespread practices. transcript of which was prepared But he added, "The law is quite
tor use at the Watergate cove~up clear. there is no ambiauity.
trial. Ir 'everyone else is doing it' ls Col. Jack Brennan, an aide lo the defense, these suits might be
,Nixon, said, "We arc prepared to useful to serve notice that no
. go to the mat on this, toe-lo-toe." matter how widespread the prac-
H e added , "We just arc ticei!,il'sstillillegal,"hesaid.
positive, we know, that phrase McFarland also said auto
''ddcs not appear in the transcript fraud investigations are conUnu-
Qf the special prosecutor's or. ing although he would not say if
fice." further law suits were con-The Post article said. "Nixon templated.
hu maintained, and no previous The allegations contained in
tapes have contradicted, that h~ t.he auit against Sears claim that
learned ot the requests ror the customers were sold auto parts
"hush money" from White House nd repair services when they
counsel John W. Dean III at a werenotneeded.
The suit against University
Oldsmobile, 2850 Harbor Blvd ..
Costa Mesa, claims that in four
instances customers were
charged for repain; that were
never performed.
Representatives of Sears and
University Olds today declined
comment on the cases pending
court action.
The suit against Sears, which
alleges violations occurred at
auto shops operated by the de-
partment store ln Costa Mesa,
Laguna Hills, Westmins~r. San-
ta Ana, Orange and Buena Park.
seeks a permanent injunction to
hall the alleged illegal practices
plus a fine of $2,500 for each viola-
tion of stule law.
McFarland said he had no ex-
act figures on the numbers of
violations involved but he noted
·that investigators took cars
which they knew to be in perfect
running condition to Sears shops
more than 30 times over the five-
month investigation period and
discovered alleged violations "in
about~ percent to 90 percent of the cases."
Uons primarily consisted of re-
pairmen selllni the investigators
parta not needed for the car.
The Sears suit asks the stores
be required to provide the Dis-
trict Attorney's oCCice with re-
cords of all Invoices and
estimates for tbe next slx
months.
The lnvestieaUon into the ac-
tivities at Sears was based on a
series of consumer complaints to
the auto repair bureau and the
DA 's fraud division, McFarland
said.
The case against University
Olds, like a similar one fliled.
against Erban's Body and Paint
Shop or Santa Ana, did not In-
volve any undercover work, but
was based on a state mechanic's
verirication of complaints
against the c1tr agency's service
department.
• BY TOM BAB.LEY ...... ! ...... ~
A 1pok~man ror Eaat Coast
con1ortlum that fell behind Mobil
Corp. Monday in th' l>iddina bat-
Ue for control ol lhe Irvine Corn·
pany, pledged today that his
aroup wiU top the new MobU bid
of $307.l million.
Col. John Gottlieb, represent-
ing Detroit developer Allred
Taubman, s•ld his 1roup's new
offer will be made before the n.w
deadline ot noon, May 9.
.. We will outbid Mobil," he
said. "But we don't want to say
by bow much until sbortly before
the deadline."
Directors ol the James Irvine
Foundation accepted the new
Mobil offer at a special meeting
late Monday.
But they carefulJy left the door
open for the consortium headed
by Taubman. Wall Street Clnan-
cier Charles Allen and Henry
Ford n to make a new bid.
And foundation directors made
it clear that the bidding situation
will remain open until . one or
other of the rival conteoders fails
M> \op a counter offer yrtth the de-
adline Imposed by the founda·
tlon.
P~P.,,eAJ
RAMS •••
Miami, Fla. 4, New York Jets,
Marvla PoweJJ, ot, Southern
California. ~. New York Giants.
Gary Jeter, dt, Southern
Callfornia.
6, Atlanta, Warren Bryant, ot,
Kentucky. 7, New Orleans, Joe
Campbell, de, Maryland. a. Cin-
cinnati, from Philadel_phia.
Wilson Whitley, dt, Houston. 9,
Green Bay, Mike Butler, de.
Kansas. 10, Kansas City. Gary
Green. db, Baylor.
In the second round, the Rams.
using a choice obtained through
Seattle, selected ~ck Nolan
Cromwell of Kansas.
Other second-round choices in·
eluded lint>backer Dave Lewis of
USC by Tampa and wi.de re-
ceiver Wes Walker of CalfrornJa
by the New York Jets.
Tbe n.ow Mobil offer means
that th eorporaUon 11 orteribg
$38.50 a &hare for the l .f million
1bara otUle Irvine Company.
Those aharw lnchadt the toun-
daUon•a oontrolllne lnlett1t or
54.5 percent and Irvine heiress
SmlUl"s holdln111 ot 22.f perc~t
in the company tounded by l\er
1ra.odla~.
Mobil waa on the verge of tak·
in1 over the lrvlne Company for
*200 milllon, or $24 a abar-e, two
years qo when Mra. Smith'•
Orange County Superior Cowt
suit halted the agreed sale
paved the way for an tiabt·
,th lrlal ol the i11ue and the tJnuini biddlni batUe.
obil made what waa affn a a
major concession to minority
share.holders Monday when the
company ruled that Irvine Com·
paoy shareholders could take tbe
earlier Mobil offer or $281.9
mllllon and apply It to an optien
to buy that amount or Mobil stook
at any time during the next yest.
The conceulon was Im-
mediately seen by close ob-
servers or the blddine batUe ls
an attenlpt to woo Mrs. Smith
away from her support of the
# Taubm8J)·Allen·lrvlne group.
ft was learnt<f today that Mrs.
· Smith bas no tnteoUon of discus,·
Ing the Mobil offer and will con-
tinue to support the Taubman Ot·
1anil:ation.
i
......P.,,eAJ ~
STRIKE ••.
He said that offer includes etv-
in' teachers an additional pay
rain so thelr total salary in·
crease for the current year would
be five percent. It also would pro·
vide a five percent pay raise for
the 1977-78 fiscal year and the
ability to discuss other raises fn
rem aming years of the contract·s
life.
While these contract dis -
cussions are going on, however,
the SVEA reportedly is trying to
build support for a strike. Aho,
district udministrators are mak-
ing plans to keep the scbools open
if a strike docs occur
McFarland said those viola-
,,....r,..AJ
March 21, 1973, meeting ln t.ha The .Wt. based on a five-month
Oval Office. undercover investication lovolv-•
"The date became Nixon's int the District Attorney's office prlncipalUneordefenseinrebut-and the state Bureau of
ting charges that he was aware ol Automotive Repairs, also claims iEla Dll DE DEIDPllll BERIJI!
the Watergate cover-up earlier that parts were installed without
ll'utn March 21. ·• the Post as-written approval or the car
serted,. 0~-~~!I r ~~~ :.:..t~..;,1~~ ............. ,_.,1-\ ... ' ~~~ ... ·.#iii t ..... '"'-· .~
-.... ~1-~ • ...._.. ~~ ·"--e1Umat.e.olcost.
CAMPUS. • • . · -JJIALLJ971 !,~;-it~~·--beJtv~t'tlt~·heto•n -~· ~::''~:iPI.~~-i~i~~ ;~v IN-ituANA iiiJ1f :Ou~ ·i~i;f ,fr·it~~
BILKED •••
Monday 1he tried, and teamed
she'd been bilked.
"It's ono or lhe oldest con
games In the world," Police Srt.
Bruce Briggs said today. "The
old bank Inspector'• 1caml. Jt't
not an unusual con scam. ~me
of these con artists can be ex·
lremely convincing."
Briggs said the woman
described the man who toot ber
money at the library u about 35
years old, ol medium beiaht and
weight. with brown hair.
She said He wore a dark bull·
neaa 1ult and that he had a "busl·
neasllke haircut."
He looked. 1he aaid, just Uke a
banker.
Military Alerted
BELGRADE, Yu101lavia
<AP> -An1olan and Cuban
mllltll')' un.tta on lhe border with
Zair e have been strencthened
and put on the alort for an attack
from Zaire, a Yu101lav cior·
re1pondent in Luanda reports.
Of'A..01 COAIT
DAILY PILOT
,,.._P.,,e A J
AU OTO •••
the July 23, 1969, issue. Three
previous lrlals ended with de-
adlocked juries and the tbjrd and
rourth lrlal1 dealt solely wllh the
issue ol malice
Allor-MY Lawrence Alioto, who
repraented his father, said, "l
am very pleased with the results
The cou.rt has restored to tlua
plaintin thal which t.he libel in
quettloa took away from blm.
The court hu done subatanUaJ
justice ln this cue. All ii well
thatendawell ..
Alioto wu mayor or San Fran-
cisco ei1bt yean and tn 1974
made an unsu cce11 tul
rubematorial bid.
Marvin Whitmore, president or
Cowle1 Communication, said 1n a
statement throulb hia attorney
that he was "atunncd and ead·
dened by II"' decl1lon."
voted against opening negotia-
tions for Irvine Center·J effrey.
Two trustees, Donna Berry and
Frank Greinke, are apparently
committed to derailing any effort
to purchase the site now under
consideration.
Unless Watts swings over·to
Join the four who favor Irvine
Center.Jeffrey, a condemnation
vote probably would fail
Walts waa attending an ad·
m inistralor's meeting in the
TusUn Unilled School Dlslrlct,
where he is a school principal,
and could not be reached for
comment today
II the condemnation vote falls,
would the Irvine Company be
wlllinc to take a capital gains
1011 and aeU the site anyway?
"We'll face that aituatlon when
and lf it cornea," sald Reese. "I
try not to put myaelt in a posltion
of anUcipaUne such tblnga before
they happen.
"There ls certainly no legal re·
ason why the land couldn't be
sold without condemnation but it
is a &ood deal more complex lhan
that."
HB CoUncil Seeks
,'Secret'SessWns
Hid the bW baa been wldely re-
qu11ted by local officials.
He Wd &bey feel that iublllt.J
M> consider adiom, particularly
appolntmeirtl, in sec:ret HUlons
baa a chilllnl effect on applicant& tor public otnce.
Shenkman, who wu aublt.ltut-
lnl for. the ablent Mayor Roil
Pattln1on, Hid dl1cut1lon1
should be conducted e>penly • 1 •~here ls DO Deed to JO behind '
cloa&cldoon," beeald.
Siebert Mid tbo bill N.Praeota
a telftltlon.i "U would mean 10-tn1 'bldt to the old waya," he Hid.
Dlscov~r the
New Tijuana
and Agua Callentel
__ ,,,T....,_•_"-d~••· -""""'""'_t ___ ....... _dl -....-"
A Fun DaJI
l Day In New Tijuana
In Old Mexico!
Saturday, May 7, 11 Newport BHch
Day In Tljuan1 and at Agua Ca·
llarite Newport BHch vltlts Tlfuana
to'" th• new look or tts neighbor·
city; to 1pend a ru,, day at th• new
Ague CaH•!lte 116,000,000 enter-
tainment centarl You'll ba shop·
ping. dining, watching the lhor·
oughbreds ru!I. 1tght-lfflng. a day
of goodwill, a d1y lllled with lnt•r·
n1tional fallow1hlpl
All Day, A Furt ·aayl
Put your own group together. en-
joy a one-d1y vacation vllltlng your
nalghbOr In New·Old MaJClcot
Join Newport 8Mch'1 M1yor and
other Council members. Join the
Ch1m1>1o· of Commerce Prnldent
end many olh• Cl\amber Membere.
All for 120.00
Round l\1p but fare; a dellclout
old world prepared, and served,
brunch; refreshments. 1nd mont
ntfreshments; ~ Mating
at Agua Cellente. dlscoom. for
two fabulous stiOPPlng apreesl
Maire pllnl now to• wlh JCU' ne..,_11 ...... .,...., ............. ., s, 1177
-------~-------------~ I llEIEllf ATDI CCIVPD91 A«vm tt11e pof'liOn • eoon • ~. ti10nO
I wttll ~ cheek mllde pmyable to PromotOf• ' PradUctOfa de Putil•clOed, to the I
Cllambef omc.. 1'70 -'-mbor" Rel..~ 8"ch. CA ezaeo. EnclOffd 11 I I our oh«llt In t"9 einount of I .. , . . , . '°' . . . reM1ntloM • 120 00 I I Ptf ~ lof EA Dllt cit tMwpon ... .
Name • I I ~ "'°"" I • 11tEMIM8l,.: MAOUNI ta ntUAS01.v, MAY ethl I ----------------------Fot lnfofmatlorl c.11 bmtmw Ottrc. al &<t•a111
._.... ...... ~•111 l'llM ............. ~· ... ~c ....... Mt&Ctt111~ .. .
And You're lnvttedl
Itinerary for
Newport Beach:
t
lilttlf( •• .t.tl!'_C_P,! 1 ·· All~~ U ~"'*:ti. 14 '•' .. utl'll '"' • .IO Ave O l
A°"'OCllllrt • • W • .t.vctCoff , . JS 47'• • , .. ...... i.1111 ,. u • 11 .... '"' .t.v• llC 40 • ,.. 11 -..,,
"" lllC to 1 360 ,. > ... All!ltlM 1 . 1 J'I +7
AVOf\P'CI 216 4l7 .. >\ + ... -----!l•llCl!W t ,W 10 ns. "'"' • 1 a.<llt .40 s 4J 1 .; • ... ~'" .» • n It'll. i . "''" "''' .... u •h4 .. .. • "' 8Jlld 1H .IO 6 6 n•.-. ~ hi~ IO• t 17'11 + "" 9tl I 17 12'1 ll"t· ·I'~ ••• • ,,,. ' 70 ,..,_ '" ~!.fl!•• IO • 1!0 n•'f-1 •:,r,: .•n 11 n .• •• 8 i'1.. .JOI~ ~ :r=.: :-: 1:3" ,,, . ' 11 •• "
•• ,,,~ 1 • 10 " ' • ' l kOfl Y 2 J1 6 S )\' I • 14 .... ,, . ..u lO ""'·· ·~•m .IOIO l'T t4' 1-• 8ellllTt 1 I \I .. • • • ·~ tlO It ,. ... '• 15 I t .. 14 44 i<~
,.. 24 ••• 111 ... -'• -Go. 1 ' 11 ... e!~"f .ls: ~ ~"':. ~ I. I • 1M >1'\-1' n •i MU , .. 1' + 0 ,
'f lO , ... j ~ rl~.: 1~
Cit ."41e • s .. . ·~"' ·11! ~ ·n~: :: . i; 10 "-~. " n ,.. \-'• 1\io • I~
I -\\ ,, ...... t;:t! ~ 20'•• .. s•i11• ,, .. ~-....
BrJORH CUNND'I'. ,. .,..._.....,.. • ii i
A coaruet that lnvolvet the futUre of employ• penak*l
pJ1n1, women'• n1ht.a and uw actuanal tabla ll tak1ni ah•s>tt &nd It'• 1oln1 to take a Solomon to raOlve It.
Strlpped of oumm>\ll emoUOilal lt1un that turround n.
lb• conlUCt u1HI out ot tbeae faci.: Penaloo plana are otten
b11id on the Jqncevlty of inen. More women are enterl"1'
thoJabortorce. Women llveJonaerthanmen. '
' THAT PBESBNTs THE QUESTION: Slnco women aslc likely to receive more pension beodlts, should their coa-
trlbuUoa •• or tbelr company's coaiaibuUon, be ra1iedf O.r
1hould a unisex rato be lnaUtuttd7 ·
UM ol the latter plan, ln whlcb contdbut.IOna to penalob
P.l•m would be equal tor men aod women, mltht 1eern to be
the answer, but It creJta a problem: Coat.a would ao up and benefits might have to be reduced.
Actuarially 1peaklo2, there is no dlfllculty: Since
womm live Jon1er they should p3y hJ1her annuity or
penJioo rates. But. actuaries don't ahvaya call tb1 abot.a.
While ln some ar1uments the women have the la.st
word, on this Issue they mleht not. Ll!o
insurance companies, which participate
in aome pension plans, aak reciprocity:
"SHOULDN'T WOMEN
therefore lose their exlsttns lower
rat.et for life insurance, a rate that ls
based on those very aame actuarial
tables, a rate that It lower than that tor
men because of thelr greater life a pan?"
The differing loncevity of IJlen and woQ1en ii likely to create many cbanget cuH•m•" .
in Ute and work atyles over coming centuries, but the ilsue
ls here and oow ln re1ard to pensions. Financing problems
could be brewlog.
"The number of females, relative to males, lncreas~
noticeably from one decennla\ cena~ to the next," says
Barnet Belin of William M.' Mer~. a dlv111on of March &
McLennan Inc., and the naUon'1 lar1est employe benefits
concern.
INTBE lNICENSUS, THEraUoofmalestofemales at
aget 65 and over was 83 males for every 100 females. Just 10
yean la~, It was 72 males for every 100 females. The dif-
ference is growing greater by the year.
While thia would have sociolo1lcal 1igntricanee In any
event, it is especially important when associated with tta
other phenomenon, the increase in the number of women ~
the replar work force. !
"Manaiera should be puttin1 more money away rtglt
now." says Berlo. Otherw{se, he contends, they mleht fint
their pension plans in trouble sometime ln the future. •
I IN IDS VIEW A UNISEX RATE doesn't supply th~
answer to the penalon payment lssue, partly because lt wil
serve to ralae the rates for all. More correct, he believe~.
would be to recognize the differences. I
"It demonstrable and slgnlflcant dlflerenccs in
statistics exist, one should recognize It.'' he says. _l
Would this conslltute dlscrimloaUon against womew
Berln avoids the tentacles of that inue. But observes lha~
nobody seems to thlnk lt &ilscrimtnatory that women now 811(
joy Uf e insurance rates lower than for men. I'
MOST COMPANY PENSION PLANS today are noncon·
tributory, meaning the employer assumea the bllL
Therefore, the issue tor employes mltbl 1eem to be one of
princJple only. But that lsn 't so.
A switch to11 unisex rate, or a rate tltat would treat men
and women equally, most likely would mean 1 decline ln an-
ticipated benefits for all Better benefit.a for men might be
considered discriminatory toward women.
No amount of maneuve~ or arautng is goln& to dll·
guise the ine\titabl~ Pension pf ans are de1Uned to be more
costly, or in some ways te·ss beneficial,
And tW longevlty of women ls the reason.