HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-03-09 - Orange Coast Pilot.)
J
' Gunman at Large
Court to Order
Coal Miners
Baek to Work? .
THURSDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 9, 1978
VOL 11. HO. 61. 4 SECTIONS, J6 l'AGES
Keeping Ber Cool
A young girl s hower s in a stream close to h er family
hut on Qurma's main trunk road north of Rangoon.
She's a Tamil Indian living on Kipling's legendary Road
lo Mandalay.
Carter AskS. Miners
Ordered to Work
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
Carter admlnbtratlof\ asked a
federal judge today lo order
striking coal miners back to
work, saying the 94-day coaJ
strike would "imperial the na·
..
Newp~rt
Resident
Arrested
A self-employed Newport
Beach builder was arrested io-
day on manslaughter charges in
the hit-and-run death of a young
worn an Wednesday in Newport
Beach.
Sus pect Steven J ay Lan-
drigan, 26, of 445 Catalina Drive,
was booked into Newport Beach
City Jail, according to police
Sgt. Ken Thompson. Bail was set
at $2,500.
Killed instantly in the 12:20
a.m . accident Wednesday was
Doreen You, 18, who was stand·
ing on a curb on the Arches
overpass on Coast Highway
when a white pickuP' truck·
swerved over the curb and bit
her, Thompson said. The truck
sped away without stopping.
Thoblpson said a description
of the truck provided by wit·
nesses was circulated to various
auto repair and parts shops with
a note that there was probably
damage to the front end and a
broken bead.light.
He said a parts dealer led
police to the vehicle. Landrigan
turned himseU in at about 8:30
a.m. today, Thompson said.
The cause or the accident is
s till unde r investigation.
Thompson said.
An Orange County Coroner's
deputy said today that Miss You
had apparently llved ln Newport
(See ARREST. Pace AZ)
Two Trapped
In Sob 300
I •
Feet Down
.
2 Men Trapped
I
On 8eean Floor
In Submarine
a
It Didn't Pay
Victinm Broke-Gun Too
. CLEVELAND <AP) -.\. would-be burglar paid
has fare to board a Cleveland bus, took out his .32·
caliber revolver, and ordered the passengers to turn
over a ll their money.
But every one of the riders --and even the
driver -said they were broke.
The gunman, appare ntly angry at finding a bus
full of indigents, fired a shot at the back of the bus
then hit a passenger on the head with t he gun. ·
True to his luck, the gun fell apart. the cylinde1·
fell out and clattered along the bus floor.
The man ran o ff, and Police said they were
sear c hing for him . The passenger who was conked
was not seriously hurt.
Gonman_at Large .
CM Hotel Guest
Slain by Captor
By MICHAEL PASKEVICH Of ... Delly~ ... ,.... •
A South Coast Plaza hotel
guest was sh« and killed early
today aft.er he refused the com-
mands of an unldentlfied gun.
man to join the gunman and two
hostages on an elevator ride
from the. lobby of tbe Costa
Mesa Hotelr police said. The .nam of the victim of the
2 : 46 a.m. shoQting is being
withheld pending notification of
family members. Police would
only say that the dead man was
. from out ot state.
The l\UlJl\all f'led .immediately
after the shooting and is still be·
ing soupt by police. 1
A second male pest and a
hotel employee who were being
held hostage by the gunman
managed to escape ~Y closing
the doors of the elevator as the
cunman fired ae.eral times at
hll vtctim. 9 According to Costa Mesa
Pollet Lt. Geor1e Lorton, the
fatal 1nddent be1an jn the
--.,,,uml'1Dr.ldtdla -.rn at the
hotel,• Adon Blvd. The aunman approached the room ••rvlce employee and •
SOUGHT FOR MURDER
Police Sketch of Gunman
!orcedlllm to follow him into the
lobby or the hotel where (he two
guests were seated.
Lt. Lorton said police are un·
certain as to the 1unman's
motf ve, bii &lfevc a robbery
may have been planned.
The gunman ordtred tbe two
1Ue1ta to aet lnto tbe elevator.
but the vletim re(ua~d and
beflan to walk away. Three to
five shots were 'fired from a •man caliber handgu.n, tritb at
least one ~let strlklna tbe hotel pest , police aald.
The hotel employee and, 1eeond guest were in tho
alevator al the Ume.
T!le victlm WN pronounced
dead on arrival at. Mercy
GeMrtl RoiPltal in SUta Ana.
(S.UU.Et; .. Al>
irl
E s cort
S e rvice
'Co.ver '
•\ man Jnd :hrec \\Omen who
police allege used .l Costa Mes<i
escort service as d cover ior
prostitution activ1lic!> were Jailed
Wednesday night by Orange
County Sheriff's officers
lnvesll~ators said the arrest!>
took place al the H) alt House in
Laguna Hills wt.ere at least 14
ma le patrons gathered lo meet
four women who were lo be paid
a tota l of S I ,800 for their
services
Investigators said the arresb
were the climax of a prostitution
probe that began when un
dercover officers checked into
the services actually provided
hy Kats Enterprises, 230 17th
St.. Costa Mesa.
Sam Charles Wright, :12, of 2l:J
17th St., and Kathleen Eileen Hill,
22. of 17402 Waal Circle, both of
Huntington Beach, werejailedon
pimping charges.
Offi cers identified Wright and
Hill as th<.. couple who handled
nc~otialions between the bevy of
male clients and the alleged
prostitutes assigned.to meet them
at the Laguna Hills location.
Also Jailed in the vice roundup
were Kathryn Jean Jluberty . .24.
(See PATRONS, Page AZ)
Coast
k,..
Weath er
Chance of measureable
rain 50 percent tonight, 20
percent by Friday after-
noon. Little cooler days.
Lows tonight m low sos.
llighs Friday in low to
mid-60s
INSIB&T8D~ l"
Sterling Hollowoy moy
hove OM of the most famous
volc4& in... th1t. world. Tile
South Laguna resident has
bt'en the voice of seuerol
tflf!U·loved Duney characters,
including the Cheslure Col
See Feotunng, CJ
0 Q I
c,t.f • M
Ate ., .,"' .,
C4 cw M
~
-
•
.... ~ .. ,,,,... ..
ltlanaing the Blockade
Southt•rn Ari1ona farmers eat lum:h at
Son111ta. ·\n1. . un their "av to the border
1·1t.'· of .'\og~tlt•-. tor tt hlol·k;1ge of the road
that carries Mexican produce trucks into
the L'nitcd S tates. J\ bout 100 farmers and
:.!5 tractors participated in the action.
Stonn Slams
North State
Hy Tlw ,\-,..,ol'ia lt'd Press
,\ :-torm dn·nch1·rl the
S.111 F1.int·1st·o Bay area
:ind :-t•nt \\-al1:r brimming
"' t•1 tlw hank-. of r es·
tr\011 ... 111 Northern
c.11 1101 n1J
Ra1nfoll totals f!r the
:.! I hour 11t•rtod 1·ndtr g al 4
• 1 Ill .,h11\1.t·d lh1l..la1 d had
3 111 11u·ht"'· Sun F1 anc1!>1.·o
.\1qw11 :! 01. llownt<>1An
S,111 I-' 1 <tllt'l-.l'CI 1 ;,(). l k ta h
1 I 5 . Ht' d H I u t f 1 2 2.
Sa1·ram1.•nto 71 of an inch
arid Marin C1,·11.· Center
71
:-,t.11t• Houtt: 1 <tlonJ.( lhe
1·11;...,t \\ ,1-. hlod,cd hy
.,Jtd <.·., and "'•1..,houts
hd '' t•1·11 llt•ar,t C'asl lc ;.ind
< 'a1 11H"I
KILLED ...
. 1Jl·:;tnpt1ons from th1• umn
1urt•d gu1· ... 1 ancl th<· ho t l'I
cmplo)t'<.' h;H<.' lt·d to a com
pos1t1· dra\\ing nl J sus pect
dcscnbl•d as a \~h tlt• male tn hts
early 20s \\1th blond to light
brown h air ancl hrn" n C\'t•s The
s uspect is appro\lmdtcl)' hve
feet c1~ht mdws tall C1nd weighs
bet'' een 135 and 150 pounds, ac-
cording low 1tm·,st•s
hnnate Back
.After Escape
• TRACY lt\l'l An atte mpt to
'.l'H <IP" thl' Dcut•I Vocational
I n s t 1 l u t t' e n d c d w 1 t h a ~uµerf1r1<1l J?Ull!:ihot wound and
:n •taµturl' within four hours. for
. ., eon\ l('l<.'d murdtrc.:r serving
hfr. offtctals Sa\.
l'nson spokl'~man Chrc Recd
-:-\..iict \\'cdn1·sclav that Lorenz V.
1\arlH·. '><'nt<.:nct.•d from Los
1~nge)(•., {'ount). rut through lwo
bJr'> of his cell \\ 1ndo1A and was
cltm bin~ ovt•r a fence al 2:05
4l m \\ht•n tower guards fired
~IX shots
Ile siml l\arltc was s potted in
a car shortly before dawn on
Stale Route 120 near Manteca.
about Sl•ven miles from the
prison The inmate fled on foot
to a nt'arhr n•slaurant, where he
surrend('rcd w1thoul resistance,
Rt'cd said.
Arms Plea Readied
W A S JI I N G T 0 N ( A P } --ts r a e Ii l>c.fenst' Minister Ezer
We i zman today carries to
,Conuress hi!I app<'al fo r support
Qf lsraC'l'S lon~·range arms re·
quests totalin~ a reported $13.5
billion
OAAHQl COAST s
DAILY PILOT
'""" ')'~ C1Ji1nt o.-11y ~tot wUhwtwtf\•+<orn
btl'llltO f~ ,....,, Pfh~ I\ Dtltlifi""4d bV thf 0t ..,,.. c.o.,, P\IOAl\hl.,.(ll)~p .. ,.., ~·t•l'O•t..,....4..-..
9'101 \f\.-4 Mof\1'10 '"''"""" lrf'•0.f t., Co''' .._.,,\ NtllltfW'tl ft• •H" H\11\tl,,,,t_. S.Mlt J..~
ta11t \I.tilt. ltv1n"' \•ddl•b.w\. Y•llty •net l •~•"•"' \lwltlil (~.-i .. 1 A \l,,...r."4t10MIM t
lt<jft " °''°''"" ., '"''"d•'I' ....... t;t~.,, ,,..
tw11W1rt•I pvh4 "'"'0 Of,_,f'I, 1, "' JN .,, I•• '''"' ,4',,.,,,,. •• '"''''0'"'"'~""
hl0et1H W-
lttP\14""' t• 1 Pub11~
'"' • c.,, .. , 'J1f• Pt•\HMf'lt arw:t c;.,.,..,,-4 M.trwtQI'"' , ............. .. f dtt ..
~•AM"'911ttw ~·•ti"'I t<li•O'
Olrl9HI. ~ .. , lllrM ... I'. "911 A "l•I•"' Mtf\e9l"'1 ldilO'\ •
Therapy Y.iolation
Charge Dismissed
Charges of illegally practicing
psychology without a license
against a Huntington Beach m an
"ere dropped Tuesday in West
Ora nge County Judicial District.
James K. Mccann. a UC Ex-
len!:iion bu!:itnl'Ss seminar direc-·
Lor, was charged last October
with four counts of violating the
State Business and Professions
Code in his now-defunct Hunt-
ington Beach hypnosis center.
17522 Beach Blvd. He w<is not ar·
rested.
Deputy District Attorney Mike
Nunn asked the charges against
McCann be dropped because the
prosecutor received ··as-
s urances" from t he accused
hypnolist thal the alleged \'iola·
lions would not recur.
M cCann closed his hypnosis
practice late last October. He
declined to comment on the dis·
m b~al of charges by Municipal
Outside Bank
JudJ?e Kenneth Smith.
Nunn said a female un -
dcrcov<'r ci~ent from the State
Medical Quality Assurance
noard r ece ived "hypnosis
therapy" from Mccann during
four Oclober visits to the hyp-
notist 's officl!.
llypnosts therapy can only be
u ~e d by a licensed hyp-
n<>lherapist or in the presence
of a physician. according to the
Slate Business and Professions
Code.
M cCann was granted a busi-
nes!( license last year by the
llunlington Reach City Council
to practice hypnosis.
But slate officials charged·
that ,he went beyond practicing
simple hypnosis as permitted b)I!
the city.
"Usually, a ll we try to do in
these cases is to get the violator
to slop the practice," Nunn said .
Looter Abandom
Live Ammunition
NEWBURY PARK CAP) -A
looler who took 80 live .20-mm
s he ll casings from the wreckage
of an Air Force jet apparently
abandoned them outside a bank
early today after a uthorities
warned t h e s h ells were
dangerous.
Air Force Maj . H a r ry
Childress said the shells were
found outside a Security Pacific
Bank -branch in Newbury Park early today.
Childress iss ued the warning
Wednesdav that the 80 shells
still had the powder and del·
onator ca~s in them although
the hullet heads had been broken
off in last week's fatal crash of
an F' · 105G training fighter.
If they had exploded, said
Childress, "It certainly would
have been lethal lo anvone close
GwArrested
In Boat Tiff
SAUSALITO (AP) -A brief
rhubarb at Waldo Point, scene or
repeated protests by houseboat
owners who oppose construction
of a new marina, ende d with one
a r rest, deputies said.
Marin County sheriff's of.
ficials said the confrontation oc-
curred Wednesday when de -
velopers tried vainly to free a
floating piledriver which was
blocked in the harbor and has
halted construction for three
months.
As they have in the paat,
houseboat owners swarmed out
in a Oot.illa of s mall boats and
have blocked the path or the
piledriver.
by. We're just glad to gel them
back."
He said Ventura County
she riCC's deputies received an
anonymous tip that the shells
were nt the bank.
Jn the cr ash the pilot was
killed but his copilot parachuted
to safety.
Teen Arrested
In Huntington
On Death Rap
A 16-year-old Long Beach
youth was arrested at the Hunt-
ington Beach City Pier Wednes-
day in connection with the un-
solved Jan. 15 death of a 47 -year·
old Hollywood man.
Los Angeles police officers
from the Hollywood Divis ion
said the boy admitted being
present when Ronald Wayne
Waters died suddenly in his apart-
m ent. Poll~e Sgt-. Ptlul Osteen said
the death had homosexual over·
tones.
The youth, whose name was
not released due to his age, is
oow lodged in Los Angeles Coun-
ty Juvenile Hall.
Osteen said lhe youth told a
"far-out stoty" on details of
Waters' death. Osteen declined
to release all lhe details.
Determlnallon of Waters' ac-
tual cause of death is will be re-
leased when a toXlcology test is
completed, according t o Los
Angeles County Coroner of-
ficials.
F.,.._ Pflflf! AJ
~
----~ CAtl• Mii .... ;JJO W..•I""' ,,,,... PATRONS. •
Beach for aome time but didn't
have a flxe d .address. Her
i»arenta. Wbo.1denW1e4.lbe..body live in Balclwtb Park.
l .. ~"<1 .. Mh ll~Ot-••\trtt•
, Huntl~!0<' .. 0~~1 lltllltolltll_.._
-......... V•tf9yrHlllt I.A'°"'"-j •I &.11 O•tto .,, .. _
fel•phon• (7141142-4311 CIHtlll•d Ad¥•rt1MngMl.M11
~ktMI<-V•llo~Ofl ... e M1-A10 ,,...,, .... ,.,,,_ .. ...... ,,__ ... °'-~'~ .. ~12IO -
I •
and Catherine Sue FerSUJOn1 19,
both of whom were bookoa on
pros titution charg •· Their
home addresses were not lm·
mt~lalely a~ailable, omcera aald all four arretts
were made the moment Ulat 1WDJ
ol money cba.n,ed b.nda lJ\ a
toam attheH;attRouH.
lnvesUgaton Hid t!M method
or aellinl "" al&eaedlY used bY the defMtdaiQ wu via .._.,bat
Funeral 11Tan1ements .,. bo·
Jn1 handled by Roy c. Ad·
diem an and Son Funeral Home
ln El Moote.
Origin Questioned
Did Fiction Germinate Clone Book?
By The Associated Press
David M. Rorvik. author of a
forthcoming book that allegedly
chronicle s the creation of a
human being by cloning, once
said he was writing a por410-
graphic, science fiction thriller
called "The Clone." the Great
Falls (Mont.) Tribt.tne said to·
day.
The Tribune said that Rorvik,
who was born in Circle, Mont..
on Nov. 1, 1943 and went to
s chool in the state, was in-
te rviewed by the news paper 1n
May 1970. He diS'cussed his
career as a free-lance writer
and talked about the nov~I he
planned to write.
"Rorv1k says he finds f1ct1on
writing more d1ffltult than non·
fiCL1on, !Jut is dt.•term1ned to
complete his novel, 'The Clone,'
and perhaps get it made intola
movie." the 1970 Tribfme story
said. " 'Thl' Clone' 1s a porno·
graphic science f1ct10n thriller
b ased on current m e di ca l
possibility. he said," accordmg
to the eight year old rep(lrl.
Rorvik's new book, "In His
Image : The Cloning of a Man,"
is being publishl•d by J B Lip-
pincott Co. It dc'scn bl•s the al
leged creation of a boy. now 14
months old, hy cloning. the
process of dupltcating l1v1ng
things from an individual cell.
Cloning has been used in creating
plants and a fro~ but has never
been attempted" 1th humans
Lippincott has said Rorvik as-
sured th<'m lhe ~tor) was true .
but that the pubhshml! company
did not know whether 1t was in·
deed fact
Rorvik has been unavailable
for comment s ince news of his
book broke. A statement issue d
by Lippincott on Wednesday
quoted him as saying the boy,
offspring of a wealthy. uniden-
tified man. 1s "alive, healthy and
loved today "
Information ahout Rorvik also
has been sketchy. He 1s a 1966
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11 ·• scr een measured
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graduate of the Journalism
school al the Umversity of ~on·
tana and received a mailer's
d egree from the Columbia
University School of Journalism
in 1967.
The same year he received a
Pulitzer Traveling Fellowship
and, according to Lippipcott,
us~Ji it to study r acis m and
C1"'rtheid in white-dominated
/ co~tries in Africa. Lippincott
said that in 1975 Rorvik won an
Aliqia Patter son Foundation
Fellowship to in.estigate the
poli~ics of cancer research.
Rorvik became embroiled in
controversy during hts senior
year at the University of Mon-
tan a, the Tribune said ,
because o f his ed1tor1als
µubl1 s hc d i n th e s tudent
newspaper, the Ka1m1n Parents
threatened to remove their
childr en from the university
because of alleged sex.flavored
a nd s ubversi ve material
publis hed in the newspaper
•
AP Wire-lo
'CLONING' AUTH R
David Rorvik
Fro•Pa~AI
COAL ORDER .•.
t'nforcement officers in the
slates concerned will provide
adequate and effective protec·
lion for those miners returning
to work. We are a nation com-
mitted to law."
Under lhe Taft-Hartley Act.
Robinson has the power to order
the miners back to work for 80
da) s and to direct both sides to
resume good-faith bargaining.
Failure to comply could r-esult
in fines« prison for contempt or
court.
Leaders of the 160,000 striking
miners and government officials
expect widespread defiance of a
back-to-work order.
Carter directed Bell to seek
the order after he received an
ll·page report on the strike from
a board of inquiry that the presi·
dent cr eated under the Taft·
Hartley Act.
Sony
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Costa Mesa .._ .................
I hin W• ef C.... Jlr.
Pho.,e 642-8882
Store Hours Daily 9-6 Sat. 9-5·30 •
Ser*t ........ ,,,... .......
The board's rl'port delivered
. to the White House earlier today
s aid the s trike had "rl'ached
a larming proportions " The
three member board s aid,
"A I ready thousands of workers
in other industries hC1ve been
latd off or placed on reduced
work schedul<'s a nd this can
µnlv accelerate
"ll 1s imperative, 1n the na-
tional interest. that the parties
find a basis for rescJution of the
strike as expeditiously as possi-
ble."
Amon,:r thl' 1,450 defendants
named in the suit w<.'re the Unit-.
ed M inc Workers of America
and its affiliated locals, and the
Bituminous Coal Operators As-
sociation and the mining com-
p a rt i cs the orga n izahon
represents.
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'
' orange C•ast Today's Clo~iog
N.Y. Stocks
• ' EDITION
VOL 71, NO. 68, _.SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A THURSDAY, MARCH 9, 1978 C TEN:CENTS
_Carter Expects Miners to Obey LaW
WASJilNGTON (AP> -Presi-
dent Carter said this afternoon
he expects coal miners and
operators alike to obey th~ law,
and told Attorney General Grif-
fin Bell to take personal com-
mand of federal law enforce·
m e nt to back a n anticipated
back-lo-work order.
Carter told a nationally
televised a nd broadcast news
confe r en ce tha t he firmly
believes a federal court order
under the Tafl-HarUey Act will
be observed.
"I have absolutely no plans to
seek congressional action to
authorize seizure of the coal
mines," he said.
Carter spoke as government
lawyers prepared their arg14.
ments for a Taft -Hartley injunc·
tion. He said he also has asked
Sec r etar y of Labor Ra y
Marshall to enlist the labor ex·
perts wbo studied the strike
s ituation to go into the coal
fields and urge the miners to re·
POWER CAN'T HELP
END COAL STRIKE-86
turn to their jobs.
While the 94-day coa l strike
to pped his news conference
agenda, Carter also announced
what appears to oc a partial
resolution of the conOict between
Ethiopia andSomalia.
He s aid that Somalia 1s
withdrawing troops from the
Ogaden region of Ethiopia, •and
called upon Cuba and the Soviet
Union to withdraw their forces
a nd a dvisers from the area.
The president said he hopes a
Somali withdrawal from the dis·
puled desert region "will result
in an immediate halt to the
bloods he d 1n the Horn of
Africa."
·'The United St a tes looh
forward to the withdrawal of all
fo reign fortes at an early date."
Carter said.
Carter began his news con
ference With a statement on the
coal strike, noting that the ad·
ministration has gone to court
for a strike-ending injunction.
and adding:
"The welfare of our nation re
quires this diffi cult :;tep and J
expect that all parties will obey
the law."
He said the government will
use its resources to ease the
ener gy and economic problems
caused by the walkout.
"This is a time for cooling off
and we will do everything in our
power to ensure that it does not
become a l ime of confronta
lion ." Carter said. "The la ....
must be enforced.·'
1 Mesa Hotel Guest Shot. to Death
\
..
'Call Girl Ring'
6 From Coast
Face Sex Raps
One man and five women were
jailed Wednesday on prostitution
charges after police alleged the
suspects used a Costa Mesa dat·
ing service to cover a call girl
ring.
Poli ce assert that two Hunt·
1ngton Beach policewomen in·
filtrated the operation by posing
as call girls.
The arrests came at a Laguna
Hills hotel where vice officers
allege the fi ve women and man
were offered $1,800 for "conven-
tion services."
Oran&e County Sheriff's of·
ficers said the arrests were
made possible through the com-
bined efforts of Huntington
Jle1lcb~ Newport Beach and
<:arden Grove police.
Vice officers said more than 14
male patrons had gathered at I
t h e Laguna Hills hote l to
purchase the services allegedly
to be provided out of Kats En·
terprises or 230 17th St., Costa
Mesa.
Sam Charles Wright. 32, of 21;1
17th St. and Kathleen Eileen
Hill, 22, of 17402 Waal Circle.
both of Huntington Beach, were
arrested on charges.of pimping.
Investigators a lleged that
Wright and Miss Hill were the
One Arrested
I In Boat Tiff
SA USALITO (AP) -A brief
rhubarb at Waldo Point, s cene of
repeated protests by houseboat
owners who oppose construction
or ·a new marina, ended with one
arrest, deputies s aid.
Marin County s heriff's of·
fi cials said the confrontation oc-
curred Wednesday when de-
velopers tried vainly to free a
floating piledriver which was
blocked in the harbor and has
halted construction for three
months.
As they have in the past.
houseboat owners swarmed out
\ in a flotilla of small boats and
~ have blocked the path of the
~ piledriver.
f
f
Coast
Weather
Rain returned t.oday and
there'• a 20 peTcent
r
couple who handled negotiations
between the group of male clients
and the call girls assigned to meet.
them at the Laguna Hills hotel.
Offi cers said the arrests were
made at the moment money ex·
changed hands in the hotel
room .
Als o jailed on prostitution
cha rges wer e Kathryn Je an
Hube rty, 24, Ca therine Sue
Fer guson, 19, Carla Meredith.
28. and Sandra Baker. 26, all of
Huntington Beach.
Investigators said the method
of selling se¥ allegedly used by
the defendants was via what bas
become known to vice in·
vesllgators as "the convention
approach."
2Trapped
In Sub 300
Feet DOUJn
LERWICK, Shetland Islands
(AP) -A two-man submarine
engaged in North Sea oil opera·
lions snagged in a wire about 80
miles east or here and was
trapped on the seabed nearly 300
feet down today, operators s aid.
The P. and 0 . Steam Naviga-
tion Company, which is operat·
ing the submarine named the PC
9 for the American Conoco oil
concern, said It became trapped
at mid-day.
"The two men aboard have
enough oxygen and food to last
ei g ht days ," a company
spokesman said. "They are sit·
ting calmly on the bottom. wail-
ing to be rescued."
The two were believed to be
British, but the company said it
will not release their names
"unlit we are sure their next-of.
kin are notified."
The sub had been working on a
wellhead in the Murchison field,
the company said.
He said the mother ship, Sub
Sea 2. is standing by while a
stleond mot.her ship, the Sub Sea
1, is steaming to the scene with
a rescue submersible from Mon-
trose on t}\e Scottish east coast.
"The Sub Sea 1 ehould arrive
on the scene Friday and· start
reseue Qt>eraUons immediately
wltb t.be m~ submersible it
is carrytne, the Menn aid 3," the
spokesman aaid.
Bong Tough, Datsun
Onlookers mar vel at position assumed by
Datsun sport s car that got hung up thi!>
m orning at Da ts un agen cy on Harbor
Boulevard in Costa Mesa. Police said the
auto became impaled on steel poles at the
edge of the Datsun lot after slipping from
the back of a tow truck that JUSl happe ned
to be passing tbc agency at lht' time. Inc1·
dent occurred about 8:30 a.m. No one wa!-1
inj ured, but the tow truck driver was em
barrassed, police said.
Hippo Foils 'em Again
Bubbles Sidesteps Snare; Trap Still Untested
By PHILIP ROSMARIN
Of tlw O.lly ~llee SIMI
.. She came out on the wrong
side of the pond {a trap awaits
on the other side) and slipped
back Into the waler,'' explained
Jane Culjis, Lion Country
Safari's marketing director, in
recounting the latest overnight
failure to capture Bubbles. the
wild animal park's runaway
hippo.
"I guess she wasn't hungry
and was bored by the situation."
A bored hippopotamus has an
imposing yawn.
Less imposing are the yawns
of exh austed Lion Country
rangers who have now spent 17
night-long vigils waiting for
Bubbles to give herself up.
Their latest ruse to get her, a
pole, net and pulley affair meant
to snare Bubbles in netUoe so
she can be Lranquillzed. still
awaits testing.
Nobody knows if it will work.
It 's the first time the rangers
have ever had to catch a hippo
in the wild -the wild being a
small pond off Laguna Canyon
Road n e ar La guna Beach,
several miles from Lion Coun·
try.
Laguna Canyon Road will be
closed from 8 o'clock tonight as
Lion Country Safari officials
mull the wisdom of draining
Bubbles' watery temporary
home.
Solon Probe Due
WASHINGTON (AP) -
California Attorney Ge neral
Evelle J. Younger said Wednes·
day he will launch a state in·
vestigation or possible corrup-
tion in the California legislature
because federal authorities
won 'l· tum over any information
from their inquiry.
CalTrans has approved the
road closure. whi ch may con·
tinue in effect until 8 a.m. Fri
day. f ·
The draining of the pond had
not received final approval as of
early afternoon today, however.
Asked if the chance of rain
might postpone plans for drain·
ing the pond tonight, Safari
representative Jane Culjis just
laughed.
"If we can't catch a hippo, we
can't stop the rain," she said.
Today Lion Country officials
seriously considered accepting
the offer of a ma{l who claims to
be the nephew or Frank Buck,
the legendary lion tamer. Only.
Dr. Alan C. Buck purports to be
a hippo tamer who has caught
100 such beasts in his day.
Buck's Isn't tbe only offer ·
from self-styled professionals.
t '
· cbairce for Friday aftf!r·
n0on. Uttle cooler days.
Lows toni~t in low sos.
HiJha Friday tn low to
mid..OOS. Huntingion Man ·.Freed
Said Mrs. Culjis , "It's
absolutely phe nomenal, the
nuO)ber of people who claim to
do nothing buL capture hip·
popotamuses for a living. And
they're all right in the area." .
Sbe said at least 35 people
clpJm the profession.
"There can't be that many
professional hippo catchers In
Soutbem California." Mrs. Cul·
jis said. "There can't be." ~Oiargea of Therapy Violation Dropped
Amon1 hundredS or 1uues-
tion1 fot' capturlng Bubbles, Lion eo.-t.ry Safari's •ayfaring
hippopotatnu1, was this lat.eat
one today:
l'Ul htr•DODd wjth p&UIM' of Pan.. a taller advilea Lal it Mt. n.a, .... ck)' :juat pull out u.o
" ......... JQU'Ye -JtuMMI.. aUltaW for mountina • .
Gunman
Manages
Escape
By MICHAEL PASKEVJCH
OftM0.llYPli.t5Utf .
A South Coast Plaza hotel
guest was shot and killed early
today after he refused the com-
m ands of an unidentified gun.
m a n to join the gunman and two
hostages on an elevator ride
from the lobby of the Costa
Mesa Hotel. poli ce s aid
The name of the victim oC the
2.46 a m. shooting is betug
w1l hheltl pending notification of
family members. Police would
only say that the dead man wa!>
from out of slate
The gunman fled immediately
after the shooting and is still be
ing sought by police.
A second male guest and a
hotel employee who were being
he ld hostage by the gunman
m anaged to escape by closin)
lhe doors of the elevator as~Ul<!
gunman fired several times at
his victim.
Costa Mesa police said tod;iy
they are seeking two occupants
of a n orange 1976 Porsche that
was seen leavin g the hotel park
ing lot a bout two m inutes after
the shooting.
Police are not h nktnJ! the car
oi:cupants to the i.tlootmg but
are seeking info rmation that
could be crucial to the murder
(•a s e, inv es t1~a l or Ge rr'.'
Thompson said
According to Cost a Mesa'
Police Lt. George Lorton, the
fatal incide nt began in the
ground floor kitchen area of the
hotel, 666 Anton Blvd.
The gunman approached th1·
r oom service e mployee and
forced him to follow him into the
lobby of the hotel where the t wo
guests were seated .
Lt. Lorton said police are un
ce rtain as to the gunman·~
motive, but believe a robbery
may have been planned.
The gunman ordered the two
guests to get into the elevator,
but the victim r e fused and
began to walk away. Three t~
five shots were fired from a
small caliber handgun, with at
Jeast one bullet striking the hotN
guest, police said.
The hote l employe e and
s econd gues t we r e in the
elevator at the lime. '
The victim was pronounced
dea d on arrival a t Mercy
General Hospital in Santa Ana
Descriptions from the unin·
jured guest and the hotel
employee have led to a com·
posite drawine or a suspect
described as a while m~le in his
early 20s with blond to light
brown hair and brown eyes. Tbe
s us pect is approximately five
feet eight inc)\.es tall and weighs
between 135 and 150 pounds. ac·
cordingtowttnesses.1
. ~-... ~
• • • A2 DAIL V PtlOT c Thursday. March 9 1978
Bit-run .
:N ewpo~. Mari;
\ I
.. Held in··ne·atll .
A self-employed Newport
~eech builder was arrested to-
day orr manslau~hler charges an
the hit-and-run death of a young
woman Wednesday in Newport
·.Beach.
. Sus pect Steven Jay Lan-
drigan, 26. of 445 Catalina Drive.
· was booked into Newport Beuch
City Jail, according to police
Sgt. Ken Thompson. Bail was set
.it $2.500
Killed instantly in the 12:20
a .m. accident Wednesday was
Doreen You, 18, who was stand-
ing on a c:urb on the Arches
-..()~erpass on Coas t Highway
'iwh en a whale pickup truck
swerved over the curb and hit
her. Thompson said. The truck
sped away without stopping.
Thompson said a description
or the truck provided by wit-
nesses was circulated to various
... ,uto r epair and parts shops with
;:-111note that there was probably
• damage to the front end and a
'•"broken headlight.
'• He said a parts dealer led
poJice to the vehicle. Landrigan
StonnSlams
North State
By The Associated Press
A storm drenched the
San Francisco Bay area
and senl water brimming
O\ er the banks of res-
er v o i r :-. 1n North e rn
Cahforma.
Rainfall totals for the
24 -hour period ending at 4
.a.m. showed Oakland had
• .J.40 inches. San Francisco
Airport 2.01. downtown
San Francisco 1.50, Ukiah
• 1.45, Red Bluff 1.22,
Sacramento .74 of an inch
and M aran Civic Center
72
Stale Houll' 1 along the
coa st wa1'! hl oc k£>d by
s lides and wa s h o ut s
bet ween llcarsl Castle and
Carmel
Alpine Inn
Ordered: Cut
fMusic Noise
Tne 26-year old Alpine Inn in
Sllverado Canvon won't be
c:losC'd down. (lrange County
supervisor!. decided Wednesday.
Rather than revoke Lhe inn's
operating permit. supervisors
ordered that weekend rock
· music which irked some inn
neighbors s hould be quieted
down after midnight.
Supervisor Ralph Diedrich
suggested that if additional
soundproofing can be installed
by inn operators during the next
90 days. the midnight music
: curfew might be lifted.
Some inn neighbors had com-
: pt a in ed a bout la t e night
·amplified rock music on
weekends as well as noisy
motorcycles and the behavior of·
·some inn patrons.
Others v1ewed the inn as an as·
• set in the rustic. winding can·
yon and said its operators had
tried to be good neighbors.
Diedrich said Wednesday he
v iewed the rock music noise as
the chief issue
According to supervisors' or-
der, music still can be played at
. the inn after midnight. But the
. amplifiers must be turned off at
'the witching hour
;Town Recaptured
NAIROBI . Kenya (AP>
• Ethiopian forces, s weeping
• s outh through the Ogaden
pl~teau, reported retaking their
s~nd town in four days In their counteroffensive to quell the
Som all revolt in eastern Ethiopia.
' I
I
O"ANOE COAST c
DAILY PILOT
lllMorlN W .... .......... , .... p...,.,..,_
'" •• c. ... ,•I•~,...,, eftd c;.,.411 ......_.
'
turned himself in at about 8:30
a.m. today, Thompson said.
The cause of the accident is
still under investigation,
Tliomp~n said. I
An Orange County Coroner's
deputy said today that Miss You
had apparently lived in Newport
Beach for some time but didn't
h ave a fixed addr ess. Her
parents, who identified U1e bod,y.
live in Baldwin Park.
Funeral arrangements are be·
ing handled by Roy C. Ad·
diem an and Son Funeral Home
in El Monte.
Blanket
Firings
Shelved
By JACKI E HYMAN
Ol llM .. lly Piiot Sl•fl
Coast Community College D1l>·
trict trustees said Wednesday
they won't send out blanket dis-
missal notices in anticipation of
the passage of the Jarvis-Gann
tax initiative, 'Vhich would re-
duce district prpperty tax r ev-
enues byabout$14mi1Lion.
Some school districts across
the s tate have sent out the
notices. conditional on the in·
1tiative's passage, because state
law provides that teachers must
be notified by March 15 if they
are to be dismissed for the next
school year. (Related stories
PageA3.)
District spokesman Richard
Simon said trustees unanimous-
ly votei:t not to send the notices
but instead to issue inform ation
to all empl oyees about possible
effects on programs and person·
nel if the initiative passes.
Simon said trustees discussed
the possibility of trying to con·
tinue operating with fuJI staff in
the 1978-79 year a nd making cuts
for t he followinj! year if
necessary.
He said the colleges -Golden
West. Orange Coast and.
Coastline-would be operated
until funds ran out, at which
time they wouJd all be closed
and an emergency funding ap·
plication be made to the state.
Simon said trustees cited the
errect on employee morale in
deciding not to issue a croSl>·
the· board dismissal notices.
' Keeping Her Cool
A young girl showers in a stream close to her familv
hut on Burma's main trunk road north of Ra ngoon.
She's a Tamil Indian living on Kipling's legendary Road
lo Mandalay.
County Sets Rates
On Ambulmwe_Ride
Residents of unincorporated
Orange County communities in
need or ambulance service can ·
expect to pay at least $60 a call.
That is the base r ate set by
county supervisors for the 15
a m bu lance firms operating in
unincorporated county areas.
Firms also are to charge $3
per mile of travel, $10 extra for
calls between 7 p.m. and 7 a.m.
and $12.50 !or each 15 minutes of
waiting tir11e. ,.,,
In addition .. they ean collect
$10 for use of oxygen, up to $20
for m edical supplies used on a
trip and $10 for emergency runs.
Mik e Williams, county
emergency medical ser vices'
director, said according to new
county ambulance regulations
all firms in the unincoprorated•
area must charge the rates set
by supervisors
He s aid the rates are about the
sam e as those already charged
by the ambulance companies.
Rates will be reviewed again
in six months by the countv's
Emergency Medical Care Com-
mitt~e. he said, and later will be .
subject to review and possible
change annually.
Did Fiction Plan
Spark Clone Book?
By The Associated Preu
David M. Rorvik, author of a
forthcoming book that allegedly
chronicles the creation of a
human being by cloning, once
s aid be was wrttine a porno-
graphic, science fiction thriller
called "The Clone." the Great
Falls <Mont.) Tribune said to-
day.
The Tribune said that Rorvik,
who was born in Circle, Mont.,
on Nov. 1, 1943 and went to
school in the state, was in
terviewed by the newspaper \n
May 1970. He discussed his
career as a free-lance writer
and talked about the novel he planned to wrile.
.. Rorvik says he finds fiction
writing more difficult than non-
fiction, but is determined to
complete his novel, 'The Clone.'
and perhaps get it made into a
movie," the 1970 Tribune story
said. " 'The Clone' is a porno·
graphlc science fiction thriller
based on current medleal
possibility, he said," according
to the eight-year-Old report.
Rorvik's new book, "In His
Image: 1be Cloning of a Man,"
is being published by J .B. Up-·
pincott Co. It descrjbes the al-
leged creation of.a boy, now 14
months old, by donlng, the
process of duplicating Jiving
things from an individual cell.
Cloning has been used ln creaUng
plants and a frog but bas n•ver
been attempted with bumans .
Lippino:>tt has said Rorv(k as-
sured them the story waa true,
but that the publJJhln.t company
did not know whether it wu In· deedlact.
Rorvik bu beeo unantta'W'e
for comm~. 11Dce news of It.ls ~k "''*•· 1' ........... ; ~pPfncon on Wednelllay
quoted him • aayi~ the ~.
offapring of a wtalthy, u11J.deft,.
tilled man. ls."ative, healthJ and
lovedtoday." • 1nrormaUOft abollt Bor.UC aJ.tO
bu .,_, aket(by. He t• a 1918
sraduale ot tbe jouraallam
ach09l et tbe UalftflltJ Of Mon·
tana and recelTed • milter'• d•trH from tbe Columbia Uol•~ 8eboo1 of JoarUlllm
la 1117.
TM .... ~Mn.lil ... a
Pulitzer Traveling Fellowship
and, according to Lippincott,
used it to study racism and
apartheid in white-dominated
countries in Africa. Lippincott
said that in 1975 Rorvik won an
Alicia Patterson Foundation
Fellowship to investigate Lhe
politics of cancer research.
Rorvik became em broiled in
controversy during his senior
year at the University of Mon-
ta n a. the T r ibune said.
because or his editori a ls
publis hed in (he student
newspaper, the Kaimin. Parents
threatened to r emove their
children from the university
because or a lleged sex-flavored
a nd s ubve r sive material·
published in the newspaper.
Sony Trinitr<11 Color TV
with r emote control. 21"·
19"· 17" & 15" diagonal
And • au in stock-all with
O\.D" one year warTanty. ....
/I
KV-8000 Sony Trinltron .
Sony's newest AC·DC .
Take anywhere portable. 8
inch diagonal. ........
,-.
TV-115Sony Black 6\Vhlte.
II" scteen measured
clag,:>nally.
'Speak No Ill'
-~-~public(l~s
Unveil Code
.-
I
I Orange Counly Republican
1 candidates, many or them facing
I
stiH primary competition. have
been asked by their party's
1 county central committee to
I sign its so-called llth command·
• ment : Thou shall not speak ill of
any other Republican.
A code of ethics has been sent
by the Orange Count y
Republican Central Committee's
Ethics Committee to all GOP can-
didates.
Candidates are asked to sign a
statement that Lhey will conduct
their campaigns ethically, not
attack the integrity, ability or
sincerity of other Republican
candidates and support whoever
wins their party's nomination.
A list of candidates signing the
pledge will be made public.
Candidates ignoring the code
of ethics may lose the central
committee's support In the
gener al election in November.
Grievances will be heard by the
ethics committee.
The committee is chaired by
Bill Hill of the 70th Assembly.
Other members include Central
Committee members Louise
Steel, 69th Assembly; Jim
Meehan, 73rd A ssem bly ;
William Dougherty, 70th As-
sembly; and Ruthe Iyo Plum-
mer, 74Lh Assembly.
Ethics committee members
also include Vera Manning,
Oran ge County Federation of
Republican Women; Bob Whit-
more, Orange County California
Republican Assembly; Larry
Gjrm Classes Slated ·
Classes in beginning and in·
termediate gymnastics are be·
ing offered to. children six and
older beginning March 21 at the
Orange Coast YMCA.
Classes are sch ed uled
Tuesdays and 1hursdays from
4: 15 to 6 p.m . For more informa-
tion call 642-9990.
(
HMK-tlt Stereo Compect
baa AM-PM, cuaet&e
pliu>er-recorder •~omatJc
record cban1• Phil two-
way s.iat-Bua .-.._
Griffith, Orange County Young
Republicans; Tim Haidinger,
Republican Associates; and
Juanita Firth and Charlotte
Mousel, Calltornia Federation of
Repl4blican Women.
Additional information is
available by calling 547-8006.
Supplies
Reach
Victims
Twelve tons of food and sup-
plies were airlifted Tuesday to
28 people, including a Newport
Beach couple, stranded by re-
cent storms in Teneja Valley, a
remote portion of soutbweStem
Riverside County .
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Peterson
of Newport Beach, are remain-
ing to care for animals on their
ran ch until a r oad is r e-
e s t a blished into the valley.
Peterson owns Peterson
Diversified in Costa Mesa.
A helicopter from Santa Ana
Air Base made three drops of
food, supplies and animal feed
into the valley.
A third Newport Beach resi-
dent, Tom Beckman, flew into
the area Tuesday to care for his
ran ~h. according to Keith
Cordrey, also of Newport Beach.
Cordrey helped organize the
airlift.
A private plane brought four
people out or the area Sunday,
Cordrey said, but other resi-
dents are remaining to care for
their animals.
Riverside County road crews
h ave estimated the repair or the
13 mile dirt road leading into the
valley could take one to three
weeks depending on the
weather, Cordrey added.
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SNCtAl
SAUPIJCI
Flym
Reported
Stricken
ATLANTA (AP) -HusUer
magazine owner Larry Flynt ls
paralyzed from the hips down as
a result of being shot and bas
Jess than a SO percent chance of
regaining movement, doctors at
Emory University Hospital said. today.
''There are no reflexes in the
lower extremities and there is a
loss of sensation from bis mid-
thighs down," said Dr. George
Tindall, the hospital's chief
neurosurgeon, who removed a
bullet and bone chips from
Flynt's back today.
Flynt, 34, and his local at-
torney, Gene Reeves Jr., were
shot Monday as they walked on a
street in suburban Law-
renceville where Flynt was being
tried on a charge of distributing
obscene literature.
Tindall said the damage oc-
curred to a mass or nerves near
the end of the spinal column
known in medical terms as the
"cauda equina."
Some nerves were broken or
damaged, while others were left
virtually intact, he said.
Regeneration is possible, the
surgeon added, but he said it
would take six months to a year
to know whether that will occur
in this case.
Earlier, a spokesman for
Flynt, Andrew Jaffe, had said
the bullet was about two inches
from Flynt 's spme and was "not a
problem."
Flynt was transterred
Wednesday from Button Gwin-.
nett Hospital to Emory under
heavy security. JaHe said the
publisher's family foll "better
equipment and better
specialists" were available at
Emory. He said Mrs. Flynt was
saying al the hospital with her
husband.
Flynt has been reported in
critical condition a lmost con·
tinuously since he and lawyer
Gene Reeves were shot Monday.
Reeves. 47, was reported in
satisfactory condition at Button
Gwin nett, and authorities said
Wednesday the lawyer's vital
signs were stable.
Old Fighter
Plane Found
Off Catalina
SAN DIEGO (AP} -An old
fighter plane has been found by
a two.man submarine crew off
Catalina Island.
"It is in remarkably good
shape," oceanographer Merle
Wilson told a news conference
Wednesday. If his firm is al-
lowed to salvage it, he sald the
plane will be donated to the
Aero-Space Museum in San
Diego which is being rebuilt
arter a fire. Wilson said the plane, believed
to be from World War II, was
found Tuesday by sonar equip-
ment or the submarine Nekton
Beta, owned and operated by his
General Oceanographies firm.
The plane was on the ocean
floor three miles off Catalina
Island in state-owned waters.
I
Thursday, March 9, 1978 I OAIL V 'ILOT ~3
Was Baby Alive?·:~:
Defense Witness Admits Possibility
A pathologist who is testifying
as a defens e witness told an
Orange County Superior-Court
jury Wednesday that a newborn
infant allegedly murdered by
Dr. William Baxter Waddill
"was probably alive" at the
t1me injuries to its neck were
nfilcted.
Dr. Susan B. Turkel offered
that opinion during a long day of
cross examination from Deputy
District Attorney Robert Chat·
terton.
And Chatterton made no
secret of the fact that be regards
the statement by the Los
Angeles County-USC Medical
Center pathologist as reinforce·
ment or the prosecution's belief
that Waddill strangled the baby to death. ·
Dr. Turkel earlier testified
that the baby allegedly
murdered on March 2, 1977, in
the Westmins ter Community
Hospital nursery may well have
succum~d to hypoxia, an ox -
ygen deficiency that claims the
Jives of many prematurely born
November Initiative
infants.
Usirtg slides to point out areas
of hemorrhage to lbe jury, she
stated t.bat injuries suffered by
criminal action were an unlikely
cause sin ce suc h p'by"s1ca1
pressure would havs left larter
areas of hemorrhage. ~ '
Waddill, 44, of Hunlingtbn
Harbour, is accused of stran-
gling the infant after be leanied
that the 31-week fetus bad sur·
vived an abortion induced when
injected a saline solution into the
un :-ved;lS-year·old mother.
Clark Supports Reforrri
Bello There, World
Sophia, a polar bear at the Denver Zoo, stands protec-
tively over ber cub during the youngster's first week in
the outside pen at the zoo. The unnamed cub was born
in December and is taking his first look at the outside
world.
By GABY GRANVILLE °' ... ,,..,, Pllet , ....
County Supervisor Ralph
Clark endorsed the TIN CUP
political campaign reform in·
iti;ltive today.
Clark cast the lone dissenting
Looted Shells
Prop. 13 Threatens Abandoned,
Few Teaching Jobs Recovered
NEWBURY PARK (AP> -A
looter who took 80 live .20·mm
shelJ casings from the wreckage
of an Air Force jet apparently
abandoned them outside a bank
early today after authorities
warned the shells were
dangerous.
SACRAMENTO CAP) -
Though the Jarvis property tax
initiative would cost California
public schools billions of dollars,
it appears relatively few dis·
tricts would lay orr teachers.
With some notable exceptions
like Los Angeles and San Diego,
many or the state's 1,047 school
districts apparently wm. not'
notify teachers by the March 15
state deadline that they face
possible layoffs next year.
That m eans most districts will
have to find other ways to cut
budgets if voters approve the
Jarvis measure, Proposition 13
on June 6, and if the state does
not immediately restore the lost
revenue.
Possible budget-slashing
methods include salary cuts,
half·day sessions, elimination or
programs such as band, sports
and counseling, and closing
schools once the money runs out.
"Most school districts are
adopting a wait·and·see at-
titude." says Gordon Winton,
spokesman for the Association
of California School Ad-
ministrators. "They say they'll
run the schools until they run out
of money." ·
William Fisher, superinten-
dent of the Orinda Union School
District in Contra Costa County,
said Wednesday that most of the
local school officials attending a
recent meeting "decided the
best thing to do is play Jt cool."
He said it could be illegal to
send layoff notices on the basis
of an initiative that hasn't been
voted on yet, and to increase
class size for financial reasons.
Winton's group has issued a
legal opinion saying such layoff
notices are invalid, although
some school district lawyers dis-
agree.
"The attitude of 'Henny Pen-
* * *
ny, the sky is falling' ·would
create all kinds of problems,"
Fisher added. "Probably
something will be done" by the
state to restore the money.
The J arvis initiative would cut
property taxes by 55 percent, or
$7 billion, by limiting them to
l.25 percent of market value, a
figure that would decline to one
percent gradually as bond debts
are paid off.
State school Superintendent
Wilson Riles has estimated the
measure would cost schools $2.5
billion, or 38 percent 01 their re-
PJenue. Some school groups have
made hlgherestimates.
Marine Faces
Court-martial
In 'Hazing'
The Marine Corps says a rifle
filled with blanks was fired at a
recruit acting as a make-believe
war pris oner in a Camp
Pendleton field exercise.
A general court·martial has
been ordered for Staff Sgt. Allen
Air Force Maj . Harry
Childress. said the shells were
found outside a Security Pacific
Bank 'branch in Newbury Park
early today. _
Childress issued the warning
Wednesday that the 80 shells
still had the powder and det·
onator .. ~.in them although
the b.dllet heads had been broken
orf ;n last week's fatal crash of
an -1-'-105G tr~ining fighter.
If they had exploded, said
Childress, "It certainly would
have been lethal to anyone close
by. We're just glad to get them
back."
He said Ventura County
sherirrs deputies received an
anonymous tip that the shells
were at the bank.
In the crash the pilot was
killed but his copilot parachuted
to safety.
G. Connor, 23, of Brooklyn,
N.Y., on six charges, including ··
two alleging that he fired the ri-
fle twice at the 17·year-old
Marine.
The recruit, Pvt. W.L. Taylor
or Boy4, Tex~. was taking part m a field ex~rcise Dec. 20, a
base s~kesman said. Although
no re'r:iort was made of the shoot··
ing, Taylor suffered a slight
powder bum.
Medical personnel who treated
Taylor reported the incident.
No date bas been set for Con-
nor's trial.
vole last week in a 4·1 Board of
Supervisors ballot that enacted
a county campaign reform
measure.
In endorsing the TIN CUP •
ballot measure today, Clark said
he will move to have the county
ordinance rescinded should the
county's voters approve the in·
itiative in November.
As things stand DOW' TIN CUP
(Time Is Now, Clean Up
Politics) workers are circulating
petitions seeking about 54,000
voter signatures needed to move
the initiative onto the ballot.
That drive has continued
despite enactment last week of
the county ordinance seeking to
regulate campaigns of those in
quest of county elected offices.
Clark criticized that ordinance
for, among other things, creal·
ing "a paper tiger" fair political
practices commission "band
pi eked" by the Board or
Supervisors.
The Anaheim supervisor also
characterized the county or·
dinance as "more illusion than
reform."
Simultaneously, Clark said he
is "not entirely satisfied with all
aspects of TIN CUP."
In contrast to the county or-
dinance, the TlN CUP initiative
seeks to control campaign ac-
tivities of county supervisors
rather than all elected county of-
ficials.
It sets the amount
supervisorial candidates can ac-
cept in any year from in CU vlduaJ
political donors to $500 rather
than the $1,000 per election
limitation in the county legisla·
lion.
TIN CUP also aims its reform
arrows at lobbyists and the
amount or influence and activft~
they can generate on the couuty
campaign Lront.
o.lly ~llet Staff Plf'-
8ACK$ 'TIN CUP' ,
County Supervisor Clark ·
-I
DAJIE LEARNS
ABOUT CRIME
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Dave
Lucchesi spent the mornin8 talk-
ing with Sheriff Duane Lowe
about crime, getting inform~on
he plarmed to use in bis ~
paign for election to the state
Assembly. !"'
Wh en he returned bQ'tn e ·
Wednesday, he discovered hi.~
house had been broken into ,1lnd
has bedroom ransacked. • ·
.Ja,..,U Pushes Plan
Rent Break E:q>ected
By JACICIE BYMAN °' .. Defir l'ltR la.H
Howard Jarvis said Wednes.
day in Anaheim that if the tax
relief initiative he authored
passes on June 6, he beli~ves
apartment owners will glve
. renters a break.
"I elqled to have before very
lone a .all.ct commitment of to
percent ot the apartment owners
in this at.ate that they wW cut
rent U 13 (the tnitiaUn's ballol
number) pa.sMI," JarvJa said at· a forum apooaored by OEEED a
buaioeaa-labor lobbying coall·
lion.
CEEED stands for Callfor-
niana for an Environment of ex· cellence, lull Employmeist and a
stron1 Economy throuab
planned Development.
JarvtJ Nfd at tM Inn at tbe
Park lunc:iblon that be upecta
the apartmMlt ownen to take
out lar1e newspaper ada U·
noundq &beh' IDt.ntlou.
He bllDlelf wort1 lot the Loa
=~Bw» ···~ been ~ .......... eftecta ........... tit -....-~, .... ~ ... ~ 11. 'lkl* ..,..&n at Oie CRiii>
lanc.laeoD were TreYor A.
CUI.lam• Jr., Pc'tiddtat of the
Launa Btadl Tax,.1er1 »
aoclatlo•;....:.fa•I Hammel, a Ne"°POl't' ,~dl PlanniDI OOID· mtaa--.r aDd dt7 aouadl eaa-
dldate; SliDIA Ana Clt1 ....... Brue. llDitaa, ... 1111117 . 4
Cabl9i ..... Ol~.O-. &r•1;;Jld!tal 8erwlcu Ad•
ii'IWndliL
.
IDS fl!NT REDUCTION
8111 lponw Jent•
He said competition would
bring the price down. Asked by
Cable why a rent-lowering pro-
vision wasn't written into the in·
itiative, Jarvis replied that the
bill would have then bad to pro-
vide that all prices be lowered,
since m06l businesses would re-
ceive tax relief. Jarvis denied charges tbat'he
baa been influenced by blg busl· nesa, sayb:tg some large busi-
nesses OJ>pose tbe initiative and
tbat be was flgbtlng for lower
taxes before be worked for the apartment usoclation.
.1 arvis also said be does not
believe schools would be affect·
ed by the sharp cuts in property
tu revenues because the state
ComUtution requires the state to
finance acboola.
Another of the tn1U1Uve'1 pro-
vl•ions ,,.. dlallenfed by Cable.
Under tbe meaaure, aaaeaed
valuatioaa could rise On11 two
percettt per year unleu a piece
of property wu sold, at Wbleh time t\ coiuld be reu1e1Md at marketftlue.
Cable pointed oui. t1••t
bomeowaera ebuae /rOl*'tY more frequently an would;
UmefON, •4 up wttb hllbtr ~·!"".,_•ft1Mtl1•ttii..• a' sac~
rupoudad thlt '1lis lllll woutd
merelJ treat all properUes eqaa117.
' He added that while IOIOe ~bllc emPJoyeet -'ll JoH Ultlr JObl, bit Gpecta to ... 380,000
MW jot. anilable ttatewlda.
"OM ol Ule t.llllnp 1 thlnt Ws ..... wUI dD ......... tbe .,.,._
...... -llall&1 boolil dills abte UI etv Men,"' Jlhia .....
·' -All
n.eu
So/GI
/ealll:N:
lwdttoood
/ram•, ..,,,,..,.
ltaltdlW
coU1JWin61
em1on1 /ul«I
amleGJM °"" . lined~
•
'.
7 ft. size
·~~~.S..LE $~9'~ .-__ PR!C.ED J J
~ /1. Lorie Sem ·~oo i. .. _
: I
H.J.GAl\l\ETT fURNffURE
•
.Open Mon.,
Tl1.11n. l fr~ Evti.
2211 HARBOR ILVD.
COSTA MESA, CALIF •
~.I
A4 DAIL y PILOT lhuraday. March 9. 1978.
~ ,~~' with'\~ Tom ~)Jf'C'~~'
Morphine
·;'Big Jess Off, Running
•. \ OFF &c JOGGING -SLOWLY: Word h~s reached our
"·.· region today that Jesse M. Unruh, former speaker of the
California Assembly, former Mr. Big of the Legislature .
. • · and former gubernatorial candidate, is once again on the election trail.
Alas, it must be reported that Jess hasn't exactly
roared away from the election starting gate in an
• enormous cloud of dust, scattering opponents in his wake.
This is somewhat melancholy, when you consider the
style of his charge off the line nearly
• • eight years agp when he challenged
Ronald Reagan for the governor's
chair.
A TAD SHORT OF Long Green in
the old war chest, Unruh proved back
then that he was a clever campaigner.
He staged a series of " media events."
Tbese well-orchestrated happenings
were calculated to sucker the television
people into rushing out with all their UIUIUH
lights and cameras and giving Unruh free air time. To a
large degree, Unruh's gimmick worked.
One of those ''media events" was staged on the
western blµffs overlooking Upper Newport Bay.
Democrat Unruh. it should be noted, wasn't the least
bit shy about waltzing right into Reagan Country in the ef.
fort to bamboozle the TV boys with his Boob Tube
Bandwagon.
So it was that Jess came down lo our coastal region to
decry the "giveaway'' in 'a complex Upper Newport Bay
tidelands exchange between the Irvine Company and
Orange County government.
HE STOOD UPON the cliff's edge and emoted while :~: television cameras groaned away. He even got into an
• argument with a couple of staunch Newport Beach citizens :i: who happened lo be passing by. Jt was great fun.
: ·: History, however, records that Unruh lost the gov-
ernor's race to Reagan and the Back Bay tidelands swap
never came lo pass.
But today, Unruh is back running again. This time
there are no frantic "media events" for the tube. No brass
RapidGaia
FOod Leads
Price Hikes
WASHINGTON (AP> -The prices manufacturers receive for their products rose by the largest amount in thre~ years last month
as food prices s howed unusually large gains, the Labor Department said today.
Consumer foods rose 2.9 percent in February, leading the Increase of 1.1 percent for all finished
goods .
These prices, charged at the
last stage of production, usually
show up at the consumer level
within a few months.
CONSUMER PRICES have
already begun to rise rapidly,
going up 0.8 percent in January,
about double the increase of last
year.
The 1.1 percent increase in
finished goods prices for
January was the largest since a
1.9 percent increase in No-
vember 1974. It followed rises of
0.6 percent in November, 0.5
percent in December and 0.6
percent in January.
Unlike the January report,
most of the increases were
among foods, some of them in
JFK X-ray
Supports
Findings?
short supply because of the
severe winter weather.
WHOLESALE PRICES turned
up sharply for pork, eggs and
dairy products in f ebruary after
declining in the previous month.
Beef and veal prices rose much
more than in J anuary. However.
prices declined for roasted cof.
fee. Prices rose less than in
January for fresh and dried
fruits and vegetables and proc-
essed poultry.
The 2.9 percent price increase
for consumer foods followed
rises of 1.1 percent in January
and 0.5 percent in December.
If food is removed. wholesale prices were up 0.4 percent,
about the same level as the last
half of 1977.
Prices declined for jewelry,
gasoline and home healing oil.
PRICES ROSE less in
February than in January for
automobiles. household
furniture and mobile homes.
However. prices ros e more
rapidly for beverages, soap and
synthetic detergents, footwear
and tobacco products.
The Labor Department's
finished goods price index is in-
tended to replace the wholesale
price index. to make the
monthly report coincide more
with consumer prices.
NATION I WORLD
Guard at Ready
A Virginia sfate trooper, wearing a riot helmet and car-
rying a stick. was among guards watching striking
miners move toward the union hall in Norton, Va. The
feared clash between them and non-union miners failed
to materialize.
'I. bands. No heavyweight hoopla.
\ Unruh is seeking re-election to his current post as
\ ' state treasurer. He didn't even call a press conference.
: •. Jess just shipped out a few mimeographed noti_ces. . .
· '~. { didn't even get one. It was somewhat disappombng
\ °'lo in that just one year ago I almost became Unruh's pen pal.
LANCASTER, Pa. <AP) -
Breaking a 15-year silence on
the assassination of President
Kennedy. the radiologist who
performed the autopsy X-rays
on Kennedy's body said he
agrees with the Warren Com-
mission that the fatal shots
came from the rear.
Some critics of the Warren
Commission report have sug-
gested bullets striking Kennedy
were fired from the front.
Red Bomb B~Il Assailed
~ l had written a piece about fabled senior citizen
l. Robert Simpson, who used to picket the capitol halls carry-~ 1ng X -rated placards. The suggestion was the old man had
even angered Unruh.
,
·~ ' ' f ., .
/' (
I I' r •
.. · ~ ,.
"
!" I'-··
J ESS PROTESTED In a letter, saying he supported
the late Mr. Simpson's picketing rights. I wrote that report
too.
Then exactly one year ago today, Jess wrote back
again. He said, "At the risk of us becoming pen pals, let
me thank you for your column on my relationship with the
late Mr. Simpson ... his (Simpson's) words were too pic-
turesque for a family newspaper. So they will have to re-
main my secret unless you come to Sacramento in which
case you may expose your eyes to his sulphurous spew-mgs."
Sulphurous spewings?
Obviously Jesse Unruh hasn't lost his way with words.
ftommuter Shoved
/)nt~ Subway Tracks ,.
-~ NEW YORK (AP) -Waiting for her train during the after-
1'oon rush hour on the crowded Times Square subway platform, a
2'-year-old secretary accidentally stepped on another woman's "fOot.
• • ''I'm going to throw you in when the next train comes," police ~Y the woman told her. .
• • Apparently not believing her, the se~retary remained where ~e was. Authorities say that when the tram came out of the tunnel
Jito the station, the woman pushed the secretary onto the tracks. ...
. "I WAS AT THE OTHER end when I heard her scream," said ~ransit Authority Police Offiei!r Jack Maple, on duty Wednesday ~ the IRT Seventh A venue station. "She was running on the
1tacks. hysterically screaming for help .
• : "Then I saw a hand come out and she was pulled out," Maple
ent on. "The train just missed her by seconds."
·~ The secretary, whose name was withheld by police, bad been
.Slived from almost certain death by an unidentified person, who
t:;ached down and snatched her from the tracks.
•. Maple arrested Carolyn Spector, 29, or the Bronx, who was
qarged with attempted murder.
"
DR. JOHN H. Ebersole, now
chief of radiation therapy at
Lancaster General Hospital.
said his conclusions parallel
those of the Warren Com-
mission, which said the bullets
were fired from somewhere
behind the Kennedy motorcade.
Ebersole, formerly· assistant
chief of radiology at Bethesda
(Md.) Naval Hospital where the
autopsy was performed, said
Wednesday in an interview he
was breaking his silence
because he has been summoned
to meet Saturday with in·
vestigators from the House
Select Committee on Assassina-
tions at the National Archives
where the X-rays are stored.
He said if he was g_oing to dis·
cuss the case in Washington he
might as well discuss it in Lan-
caster.
''I WOULD SAY unequivocally
the bullet came from the side or
back," Ebersole said. "The
front or the body' except for a
very slight bruise above the
right eye on the forehead, was
absolutely intact. Tl was the
back or the head that was blown off.
"There is no way that I can see on the basis or the X-rays
t hat the bullet came from
anywhere in the 180 degree
angle to the front, assuming
Kennedy was facing forward. It
looked to me like an almost ·
right to left shot from the rear."
Ebersole said he has not been
told the reason for being called
to meet with congressional in·
vesligators, but believes $Orne
pencil marks on X-rays may be
puizling them.
Florida.Floods Threaten
...... l •
~ ' ~· Schools Cwae Early, Cavern Tour Canceled
~enaperatMre•
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Snow, lf"t end lrfft/no r•ln
persisted !ft "'9 ~Atltnllc si.tes
-Into ttw Olllo 'Velley. Tr•""' .o.
"'-'" _. uP *-of sll~ roMS.
A ff'Cllltat IYlt9ft ......... r•ln on
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MonteN.
9111 In Ille lt.CklH, krtlSS Ille Pl•lns eftd Greet L.Hff aftd Into
norvi."' ,...., enoi.... .. ... _. mos111 c•-·
E•rly rnornln9 l•"l,.ra111res
•round tlle nation r.,.cl from a
llei.w·nro In LMaina. Mkll. to 7~ lft K.., West, Ae..
co .. aaf Weadaer
111e,...S1111 a-of ..,.,.,., wltll 90 ~cent t'*'<e of _,_bl•
,.In lenltM. Mid I> ~tnl .., Fri-_, _,__
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U.S. Criticizes '<hw-sided Propaganda' Draft
GENEVA, Switzerland CAP>
-The Soviet Union presented
the Geneva disarmament con-
ference with a draft treaty today
to ban neutron bombs. The Unit-
ed States immediately de·
nounced the draCt as a "one·
sided propaganda exercise" try-
ing to divert attention from
serious arms control efforts.
Introducing the draft, co·
sponsored by seven communist
allies, Soviet delegate Viktor I.
Likhachev warned that develop-
ment of the neutron born b by the
United Stales would deal a
"great blow" to detente and
would "unavoidably trigger re-
taliatory measures" by the So-
viet Union.
. Jn what amounted to one of the
sharpest retorts in recent
sessions of the 35-nation Geneva
conference, U.S. chief delegate
Adrian S. Fisher virtually ac-
cused the Soviet Union or hypocrisy.
Bljacldng Falb
HONG KONG (AP> -A
crewman waving an ax and a
pair of scissors tried lo hijack a
Taiwanese jetliner to mainland
China today but a security guard
aboard the plane shot and killed
him, police said.
The pilot and co-pilot were in-
( IN SHORT J
jured by the crewman, identified
as flight engineer Shih Ming.
Cheng, 34, before he was s hot,
police sajd. The plane, a Boeing
737 carrying 101 persons from
Kaoshiung, Taiwan, to Hong
Kong. landed at Hong Kong and
the "situation was under con-
trol ," a government spokesman
said.
Ban E%JH!~ted
WASIDNGTON (AP) -The
federal government said today
that a controversial three-month
birth control shot widely used in
other countries is too dangerous
for contraceptive use in the
United States.
Wayne Pines, a spokesman for
t.tle Food and Drug Administra-
tion, said FDA Commissioner
Donald Kennedy has notified the
drug's manufacturer and plans
to announce his decision to
Congress today. The drug is
medroxyprogesterone, market-
ed by Upjohn Co. under the
brand name Depo Provera.
Guerrilla• to /ff eet
WASlilNGTON (AP) -Two
guerrilla leaders who have
vowed to lake over Rhodesia by
force a rc meeting with
Secretary of State Cyrus Vance
today as part of an Anglo·
American drive lo bring all
black elements into settlement.
Joshua Nkomo a nd Robert
Mugabe or the Patriotic Front
have dismissed the current plan
for black rule in Rhodesia as
"the biggest sellout in African history."
Guard Linked
To Pot Buys?
OKLAHOMA CITY CAP>
Federal authorities are in·
vestigating alleged use ol
Oklahoma Air National Guard
planes to import marijuana
from Mexico, reports the Daily
Oklahoman.
A Washington datelined story
in today's editions quotes an W\.
named o((icial as saying federal
indictments are expected in the
case withi'\the week .
Brig. Gen. Stanley Newman,
commander of the l37lh Tactical
· Airlift Wing, said Wednesday
night he was "dumbfounded" by
the report.
CALIFORNIA Thursday. March 9 1978 DAILY PILOT AS
(
Old G-ol>e to Rise Aga~
Theat,er Rebuilding Vowed by Directors
~:~ County deputies are
searching in a snowy California wilder-
ness some 150 miles northeast of San
Francisco for these five retarded men
who disappeared 12 days after they wer~
to have played in a basketball eame. They
are, from left. J ack Huett, Wilh am Ster-
ling, Jack Madruga, Ted Weiher and Gary
Mathias.
Coal Gas·ification Set
ROSEMEAD (AP) -Southern California tant Chancellor Donald M. Bowman who is ac· Edison and Texaco jointly announced Wednesday ieused of siphoning more than $lpo,OOO from the
that preliminary engineering is under wav for a 1.miversity's private endowmentfund.
$300 million coal gasification demonstration The 10-covnt felony complaint riled by the
project near Daggett. The project is designed to help attorney general's office Feb. 9 was disclosed
cleartheair. Wednesday. It charges that B~wman illegally
The project would use 1,000 tons of coal per claimed $28,200 in expenses between April 3, 1975.
day to demonstrate Texaco's new coal J!asirication and Oct. 11, 1976. He remains free on his own re-process by the mid·1980s at Edison cool walt:r cognizance.
generating station 12 miles east of Barstow, ---------
SAN DIEGO (AP) -The Old
Globe '!beater will rise again,
and the 29th annual Sao Dleeo
National Shakespeare Festival
will go on this summer as
planned, vow directors of the
theater wtlich was reduced to 'a
gutted shell by arsonists.
"We 'll be rebuilding the
theater. We will be doing that as
soon u we can," said Superior
Court Judge Charles W. Froelich
Jr .. president of the Old Globe's
board of director~. following a
crisis session Wednesday in the
wake of the dawn fire.
POLICE ARE seeking two
suspects in connection with the
second arson-caused blaze in
two weeks at a Balboa Park
landmark. Around the clock
police patrols were ordered for
the 1,400-acre P•rk near
downtown San Diego.
But police say the two sus-
pects hunted in connection with
the theater fire are nofthe same
ones who burne<1 down the Aero-
Space Museum and Aerospace
Hall of Fame Feb. 22, causlng
more than $4 million damage.
company spokesmen
( )
said. STA.TE Texaco and Edison
Krishna Challenge
say they believe the
'-----------project offers an
econom1ca11y and env1ronmet1tally teas 1ble
alternative for using coal as a source of electricity
generation.
Oaaln Purchased ?
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Carter Hawley Hale
Stores Inc. has announced plans to buy Wan-
namaker, a department ~tore group centered in
Philadelphia.
Judge Voids
Solicit La-w
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The city's 40-year-old
law restrictin2 soliciting lo city-apQroved charita-ble groups has been voided by a Superior Court
A 8E~RJTY guard said he
saw t •o young men running
from the Old Globe as the fire
broke out.
Art Robertson, a flre depart-
ment arson lnvestigalor, said no
motive for the fires has been
established.
"It could be anything from
getting their kicks to retaliation
against somebody or
something " he said, adding that
different descriptions have been
given of the two sets or suspects,
and the two fires were not set in
the same wliy.
I NV ESTIGATOltS believe
juveniles who set the Aero·Space
Museum ablaze were not trying
to burn it down. Robertson said
the 01d Globe fire was set
against doors in a hidden area a
little after 5 a.m. "They meant
to ~el the building in this one,"
he said.
The tudor-style, polygonal
playhouse built to resemble Lon·
don 's "Old Globe" theater was
engulfed in flames within
minutes. A fireman was over-
come by smoke and
hospitalized, but later rele
About 75 firefighters contr
the blaze within an hour,
venting the names from sp
ing lo a neighboring bulldln , ,_ . . '
"AN lNCOMPARABLft
treasure," has been Jost, sald-
Mayor Pete Wilson, and the cltY.
will offer a $5,000 reward for\
help ln finding and convictina:
the culprits. The city's major,
news papers, the San Die10-
Union and The Evening Tribune,
each put up $2,500. • '.
The playh04Me opened In
December, 1937 after being built
for the Pacific International Ex·
position . It s first.
Sh a k espearean play, "The
Twelfth Night," was performed
in 1949. "Henry IV" had been
sched uled for a May
performance.
E\'A~S A~D NOV i'K
COVER POLITICS
in the DAILY PILOT
HUT-SUT RALSTON
Fri. & Sot.
D~OHJAMES
&MARTIN
s-. 11ir-ih n.rs.
Under the agreement, 2 million shares of
Carter Hawley Hale common stock plus $12.6
miUion will be exchanged for all common stock of
the Wannamaker stores, Phillip M. Hawley, presl·
dent of Los Angeles-based chain, said Wednesday
judpafterrtwaschat~npd~the~s~ar•~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ligious organization.
Alta-Dena Fight• Ban
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Alta-Dena Dairy has
contended in ::i Superior Court suit that the state
Department of Health and its director, Jerome A.
Lackner, lack the authority lo halt sales of the
fi rm's raw milk products. ,
The dairy firm said in its suit filed Wednesday
that tests revealed no danger of salmonella bac-
teria in raw milk. In his order, Lackner claimed
salmonella bad been found in tests of cows and
milk in some Alt.a-Dena herds. The suit asks the
court to block enforcement of the slate's ban on
sales of the dairy's raw milk.
\\ \\
AP WI,..,_ ..
Supports 13
Republican
gubernatorial can-
didate Edward M.
Davis has come out
in support of
Proposition 13, the
Jarvis tax reform
Judge Jerry Pachl said the law was un-
constitutionally broad and vague and that it gave
the city's Social Services Department power to
"set whatever 'standards' it chooses."
THE LAW WA S CHALLENGED by the at·
torney for six Krishna devotees who were arrested
during the Christmas holidays on misdemeanor
charges of soliciting without a license
The six -Michell Florence Perlman. Sandra Dimock Leavitt, Christina t•owler, Patricia Mary
Demperlo, Kosaue J . Horthw1ck and Miran Briks
-... bad been scheduled to go on trial at the end of
thP. m onth.
"'There is n othing in the ordinance's
~erms .•. to prevent the department from simply
stating that the applicant has not, in fact, shown a
'need' for his solicitation," Pacbt ruled. Balldft tt'..,.decl ballot initiative,
c laiming Califor-
NORWALK CAP) -The manager of a liquor n i a n s are in a · ASSISTANT CITY Attorney Ward G. McCon-
s tore owned by former South Vietnamese premier "Boston tea party nell had argued that the solicitation permits and
Nguyen Cao Ky of Huntington Beach shot and mood." identity cards were issued automatically, there
wounded a holdup man who threatened him with a ---------was "really no discretion to be abused by the
broken beer bottle. · department." Authorities said Wednesday that Ben Corral, D~.v>r Cut
25, of Whittier, was hit in the right thigh by one of ...-_,~ He added, ''If the information card requlre-
four bullets fired at him by Khoa Nguyen, 42. ment is unconstitutional, then any fraud is pro-
eo..plalnt Fi~
LOS ANGELES CAP) -A grand theft com·
plaint has been filed a~ainst former UCLA Assis·
By BlouJn tected." 1
Breaker
Film Canceled
At Muse11m
SAN DIEGO CAP> -
An over1oaded circuit
breaker blew out as
138,000 volts surged into
it, cutting off power to
nearly 1.2 million San
Diego County residents
in the area's biggest
blackout in history, say
San Diego Gas and Elec·
tric Co. spokesmen.
:JrienJ/g
. Courleou,j in3on'.1
·:Jop
Quafil'J
Compelilive
P,.ice~f RIVERSIDE CAP> -After complaints that
the film "Birth of a Nation" was racist, the City
Council bas ordered that the first of two 1creenlngs
of the D. W. Griffith classic al the city museum be
canceled tonight.
"'All of us want to avoid tbe stink of
censorship.'' Rabbi Philip Posner, cb-1rlnan of the
city's Community Relations Commlsafa., said.
But on Tue.sday, Posner testified at ID hour·
Jong City Council beating that the film was viewed
by blacks as racist, offensive and demeanlnr.
BE ASKED THE COUNCIL to cancel both
showings of the film. He later •sreed to drop bis
objections to the second a~. planned for
April 20. ll an appropriate speaker was brou&bt in
to comment on the movie's racial content.
Ron Pldot, the museum's curator, said a fact
&beet commeotin1 on the movie's racism was to
bave been banded out at tonight's showing. But he
added that that fact was lost in the council debate.
Power was cul off for
one minute short of 4~
hours, compan y
spokesman Fred
Vaughn said Wednesday
night.
"For some reason,
138,000 volts were
switched into an oil·
insulated circ!ltit
breaker while it was still
electrically attached to
the ground," Vaughn
said.
The accident at
SDG&E's South Bay
plant in the suburb of
Chula Vista "acted like
a great big dead abort,"
be said.
Our Easter Gift to Yout .
·FREE! shirt or tie with any
suit or sport-coat 8' pant
purchase
Off er eodJ 3-20-78 ...
We specf.tlfu in 'l~ics af?(l men's 1alteratlons
a. custom-made clothing. -----
Service/
finest Quality
PRODUCE
Always Freshl
LOW
LOW
PRICES!
960-4322
ALONG WITH 0'9R -BEEF AND LAMB_.
USDA
PRIME PROVIMI VEAL. WE ARE PROUD
TO OFFER ZACKY FARMS, CORN·FED
POULTRY ••• CALIFORNIA FRESHNESS IS
ASSURED, SURPRISE AND TREAT YOURSELF TO
THE DIFFERENCE IN TASTE.
~W~E~~
Area Exclusive •1sw.....u....
LIEBFRAUMILCH
QUALITY RHINE WINE
•· s1••.:;. e
5 18~~ C:
9W
Faint,1yd F111e F6ods ~·
PROGRESSO SOUPS
MIX .or MATCH I 12 for 99c
20-0L
MINESTRONE SOUP
20-0L
LENTIL SOUP
191/>0L
ESCAROLE SOUP
2M>I.
SPLIT PEA ~QUP
20.0L .
MACARONI/BEAN SOUP-~--~
JO.OZ. ---_,
T9MATO PASTA SOUP
.......,~ M4111w-f'ltt ........... \ .............. '-........ -a.........,
DAILY PILOT Th recla , March9, 1978·
at. & Sun only JGPenney
Fashion Island store only
Indoor/Outdoor Plant Sale
Special!:
I 1.19
1 gallon blooming
AZALEAS
Dwarf Azaleas
4". pot, wrapped in foll,
makes a perfect gift. 1.89·
Australllan
~TREE FERN
5 gal. container
Special
8.49
Your old favorite, th~
Boston Fern
Special
5.99
looking better
than ever-full
and beautiful
in an 8" size
pot. Perfect
for hanging.
Special
9.99
5 gal. plants
Choose from euguina. newport,
camellias, ass't jaronica's ~and more.
2 gal. 3.99
5 gal. Shade Trees •••••••• 6.99 . .
25% off our entire stock
of garden pottery
planters and pots.
Beautify your yard and patio with lovely garden pottery. Every putdoor
pot and planter will be reduced 25°/o, so why not take advantage of these
fantastic savings and brighten up your outdoor areas at the same time?
Come summertime, you'll be glad you did ..
25 % off every
·~11~useplant
Now is the time to bring some
llfe Into your. home. Choose
'from an assortment of proven,
easy to grow, 1st quaUty
houseplants. Dltfenbachias,
~rotons, Spathiphyllum,
utton fern, Zebra,
Birds Nest, and. more • ... ...
Women's·
Qiana
Blouses
Misses sizes
prints and
solids
Orig. $14-$17
NOW //-1
'·
I .
Women's
.Sweaters
Assorted ·~tyl~s
Orig. $13-$23.
· YOUR 5 99 CHOICE • ..
Women's
Skirts
Peasant look
Assorted prin
1.99
Women's
Long
Brushed ac
nylon. Sizes
Special
Casual
Muscle sleeve
blousons in s1
solids and Joh
striped T-shirt
2.9
Women's
Sundr
8 styles
Moonlight Ma
Specials
Rolf's
Leather Wallet
Special
Can\las To
Special .....
Sunglasse
Selected styl
Prince Matcha
Cachet, Avianc
Windsong.
Hand.& Bo
or
Spray Mist
Special 2. 9 5
Men's & Wom
\ltnyl,:Ttlongs Slippers
:, · "'· . Broken styles an
Moonlight
Special
Buy
Men's .
2.88
I \
Orig. 5.99-12.99
Now
Youths and M
Basketbal
Broken sizes
Orlg.11.!Hr' •
'·
s.
..
'Owns
i tate and
s-m-1.
3~99
:Tops.
! , hooded
: ripes and
1 nny collar
. s.
'9
Women's Jeans
5 styles
Brushed denim,
saddleseat, swabby jean
pre washed.
<' f I ' J.~,., \.' ' r ' , . a .
:.?.:. ....... ~. I >' . .,..... '
Your
esses Choice
t dness Men's
Wallets
.. ~ 8.99 belts,
'~te
s
es
8.99
4.99
.t>elli 's
e and
·dy loti.on
I .
:Cologn
Your
Choice
·en's
Men's
Knit Shirt
short sleeve
Special
Buy 3.99
Men's & Women's
'
Bo cits.
Broken .sizes
Orig. 16.88-66.00
Now 8.44-33.00
Save 50% . .
Men's & Women's ,
-
Fle~ce Jackets
Assorted stripes
Junior sizes
The best looks on slopes.
FINAL
Sale 6 •88. Ski Wear Clearan~e~
t--------~~-1 In our Sporting Goods Department ---.;
Women's
Ski Jackets
Junior, Misses and
1/2 sizes.
13.·88
Women's
Hospital
Scrubbies .
Sale 1.99
'
Save 35% to 70%
Now6.88
Selected Ski Vests, Orig. 17.99
Now 10.88
Ski Sweaters and selected Vests.
Orig. 18.88 to 29.99
Now 14.88
Ski Jackets and selected Ski Vests.
Orig. 22.88 to 42.88
Bedding Yardage
Cassini Pillows
Orig. $7-$8
Now 4.90-2.88
Blankets
King and Queen
Orig. 8.99
Now 4 .. 99
Blankets
Twin or Full
Orig. 6.99 .
Now 4.99
Comforters
,, Special Buy
Twin 12.88. Full 15.88
Queen,t1(1ng 19.88
Dust Ruffles
Orig. 5.88-7.88
Now 3.88-5.88
Selected
Smocking -
Ori~. 2sc-49c
pen inch
Your
Choice
per
inch
COFFEE SHOP Housewares Childrens
Moonlight Special
Just 1.99
While waiting for
moonlight to begin
join us for dinner.
Includes ...
Beverage, dessert and
entree 4 to choose from. .
Do lcirama
Specials
2/$1
Items lnchide:
serving tongs, liquid
detergent, party plcks,
clothespins and more.
Your
Choice
6.99
: •D.onut Bakery
Orig. 22.99
•Fry All
Orig. 17.99
•Donut Factory
Orig. 19.99
Boys ••
Plain Pockets
(23-30) orig. S&-S9 Now 5.99
Boys
Tops and Sweaters
As~orted styles Now 1 gg Ong. 2.50-8.00 •
Boys Tops
Assorted styles
Orig . 1 .25-1 .81
Boys .
Jeans and Slacks ·
Assorted styles
orig. 3.49 Now 1.99
Boys
Denim Jeans
Sizes 4-16
Special buy Now 2.99-3.99
•Hamilton Beach® .t ~, Blender ~~~!~es ,
~~ .. Orig. 24:gg -----ort~2.so -Noyt.~
Girls
Tops anti Pants
Assorted styles N 1 ftft Orig. 2.S0-.8.50 OW • ..,.
...
Closure s R eflect .
N eW Juvenile ,Laws
Orange Co\mty superVisors• decision to close two' ot
the cowity's six juvenile detenUon facilities on April 1 ta
not an indi~ of a drop lJ1 youthful offens~
•. Rather the board•s move to close David R. McMillan '
School in Santa Ana and Rancho Potrero in Trabuco
Canyon was an economic move reflecti.CN change in the
handling of youngsters committing min~fenses.
Starting last year, changes in state law required that
more youngsters be steered into treatment programs and
diverted from incarceration with major young offenders.
As a result the county's juvenile institutions have
been only about 60 percent full. It has been too costly to
operate all six facilities with s uch high vacancies.
County Administrative Officer Robert Thomas said
the two closings should save the county $125,500 by the
end of the fiscal year in June.
Besides, as he pointed out, both institutions could be
reopened later if needed.
The closures are justified as long as necessary
juvenile justice programs can be maintained at the other
institutions.
A Shortsight ed Bill
A bill prohibiting mandatory overtime was passe~by
the state Assembly last year, but seemed likely to de
into oblivion after a couple of Senate committee hearin s.
Now AB 1295, by Assemblyman Tom Bates.
D·Oakland, is back in the limelight. No fewer than 80
persons were on hand to s peak for and against the
measure when the Senate Industrial Relations Committee
picked it up~last week.
The bill would prohibit any business with 50 or more
employees from compelling any overtime work and it is
generating a full·scale labor vs. management
confrontation.
Labor s pokes men say no worker should have to risk
losing his job because he refuses to work overtime. They-
furthcr charge that some employers use overtime to ·
a vpid hiring additional help.
But state legislative analyst William Hamm warned
the committee that passage of the overtime ban could
increase labor costs and consumer prices and further
damage California's business climate.
As I lamm pointed out. the measure could force many
cm ployers to maintain a greater work fQ.tCe than
necessary for normal production in order to meet the
demands of periodic peak production, thus boosting total
lj bor costs. '·
And, in assembly line situations, the refusal of a
:--inglc \\Orkcr to put in overtime could shut down the
\\hole line.
This is one more example of a well meaning effort to
create additional jobs, with little consideration for the
overall effect on the economy.
If AB 1295 is passed by the Senate, California will be
the first state with such a law. And business, unwilling to
relinquish its essential "right to manage" wLll find still
another reason to steer clear of our borders.
Too Much Truth?
~ Truth in advertising is all very well-, but the latest
pMposal of the Federal Trade Commi~sion promises to
cqnfuse a lot of citizens who are just looking for ·
so.mething to help their runny noses, hacking coughs and
upset stomachs.
• The FTC is zeroing in on print and broadcast
~vertising for ?Ver-the-counter remedies for these and
other common ailments.
: The commission thinks admen should use proper
nrcdical terms like "antitussive," "antiflatulent,"
"J:hinitis" and "sinus itis" instead of just saying a given
rem.cdy Will e ase your cough, relieve gas pains, dry up
your nose or unclog your sinuses.
The drug manufacturers say they're afraid such
medical accuracy in advertising would only bewilder the
s4ffering citizen who's grown accustomed to more
down-U>-earth talk. , , ,
: To make the point, the industry conducted a tel~eue pqll of 1,000 persons and found that m.ost hfd
liOle or no ii:lea what ailments and remedies were being
ref erred to in the FTC-approved ad vocabulary.
• Definitions volunteered for the term "antiemetic"
irtcluded guesses that jt might be something to control
diarrhea Ol' to ease . COD$tipation, with only a handful
d~scribing the term correctly as a rem~dy for excessive
vomiting. •
Curbing the curative claims made for many patent
m edicines may be an admirable goal, but trying to
a.ccomplish it through ~ government·mandated
vocabulary could clearly lead to even more trouble. • OQinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Piiot.
Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment is invited. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O.
BQx 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phooe (714) 642·4321 .
Boyd/Kis~irlg
ByL.M.BOYD
·Kissing can loosen your
teeth. So .says the American
~ntJl Research Institute.
o.ir Love and War man is·
b4ffied by this report. He
~ls it's not in sync with his
r ommendations for tender·
s in physical romance. He
t1• ll eves anybody w ho lopseps teeth by kissin1 ls do· IN! lt. wrong.
)'low it's claimed tbe
largest c~ty in the. United
St at., s by far u not
J acksooville, Fla., nor
Juneau, Alaska. but
Honolulu, Hawaii. Most of
it's water, please note.
A mark of the individualist
among men, it's sald, is the
parting of the hair on the
right side of the head. By far
the most men part on the
left.
Anothet good way to quiet
down a 1quea~n1 floorboard
ls to aprlnkle it with talcum
-pow~r and then Jweep same
into the cracks.
Q. HWho lnvented belly
daacla&?" A. It developed -exactly
wh ere rou might auppose, ln
tht mldeut harems. n;. de·
alrou1 inmat.tl of same com·
p1Ud nltbtly with one
apothor thu1ly for t he
.~ •ttfttHu of Y.• aultanl. )(Oit (:I tbole ~
belpleu l\i'li ao ~l'plolc.d ln'
b1aont years actually
U.OU1bt it .,,. ~tty aU'ty.
lat• IMat acrubblnc th• .1Uliidl7 dawn ID th• river Wiit, • ...,..,, ju1 wew,
or m~ t.bl coau. ,
'
' .Jack Anderson . i y ~ .
, ,,° • • •.,.. • •: I \.
l
.'·Radiation Peril .. StU:~Jr ·~:ushed . .
WASHINGTON -Vie 'i*an
reportl04 a yUJ' •io tbafliie
1957 ••Bii Smoky'' atomlc bomb
teat bad 1eft tome lnyislble in·
jllries. The mllitary volunteers,
who survived the test seemingly
unscathed, are now in danger of
dying from leukemia. They are
victims of low-level radiation.
But nuclear tests aren't the
only source of this insidious
menace. We
have also re-
ported that
some nuclear
facilities
have been
bombarding
the public
with l ow
doses of
radiation for
years.
Unsuspecting workers and
neighbors may be in the same
danger as the survivors of Big
Smoky.
This disturbing subject was
discussed recently behind closed
White House doors. Defense
Secretary Harold Brown report.
ed to President Carter that the
"whole series of tests in the
1950s in Nevada are now getting
attention because of the alleged
after -effects."
Brown explained that be
personally had attended some of
the nuclear tests while director
/;;1 Waters
of the Uv~Pl'49 Laboratortes. He assured tbe prald~t that be
had always worn •· tadiaUon
badge a.od "at least one member
of eac\\ group lo an area" was supposed to have one.
THEN HEAi.TB, Education
and Welfare Secretary Joseph
Califano intenupted with his
own rePQrt. According to the
confidential minutes Califano ln·
formed the president that the
Center for Disease Control in
Atlanta ··1s concerned that the
incidence or leukemia in con-
nection with these tests may in·
dicate that more cancers result
from low levels or radiation than
previously thought."
The publicity over Big Smoky
has stimulated a flood of letters
and phone calls to the Pentagon
from servicemen who
participated in nuclear tests in
Nevada and the South Pacific.
Hundreds or them have reported
the y are suffering from
leukemia and other maladies.
This does not mean, of course,
that their diseases were caused
by radfation exposure. But the
Pentagon is busily pulling
together the names of 200,000 to
300,000 military personnel wtlo
arc believed to have participat·
ed in 190 atmospheric tests
between 1946 and 1962. A
spokesman promised to "fulfill
the eoveroment'•· nl'P."""'bO'ty to the peoplelnvolftd. •
In contrast, .tb ~ ltnercy
Department bat J9liaed t.fle
nuclear industry in Bushing UA
the disagreeable information
about the low·lev•l radlaUon
that emanates from peaceful
nuclear facilities.
University of Pittsburgh
Professor Thomas F. Mancuso
spent more than 12 years on an
epidemiological study of atomic
workers at the government's
Hanford, Wash .. plant.
His findings turned out to be
the opposite of What the Energy
Department had hoped. His
superiors had encouraged him to
debunk the research of another
scientist who found inexplicable
cancer increases among
Hanford workers. Instead,
Mancuso confirmed these find-
ings.
THE PROFESSOR was or·
dered to turn over his data to
scientists at the government-
controlled laboratories in Oak
Ridge, Tenn., and the gov-
e rnment-contracted Battelle
Pacific Northwest Labs in
Richland, Wash. None of these
scientists had ever conducted a
human epidemiological study.
At BatteUe, the study was as-
signed to Dr. Ethel Gilbert
whose preliminary analysis was
to obtuse that uaoclates com· plained they ••couldn't make
. bea41 « taill ol lt. n
AT OAK IUDGE, the gov·
ernment hired Dr. ,Edythalena
Tompkins to make an "objective
analysis" of the Mancuso data.
She has a reputation as a n
apologist for the nuclear ln·
duall'y. Her husband, Dr. Paul
Tomplclns, headed the Federal
Radiation Cowicil lo the 1960s
when it raised permissible
radiation dose levels for the
general population by 20 times.
Dr. F.dytbalena Tompkins told
our associate Howard
Rosenberg that she still believes
low levels of radiation not only
are harmless but, in fact,
.. .stimulate the bodY,'s natural
repair mechanis ms." This
should startle the doctors at ihe Disease Control Center.
The superiors wbo took the re-
search project out of Mancuso's
hands were Assistant Energy
Secretary Dr. James Overman
a nd pro j ect s upervisor Dr.
Sidney Marks. Now Marks •bas
resigned from the government
and turned up at the BatteUe
labs where he now supervises '
the analysis of the Mancuso
project. ·
EM BATTLED dissident
scientists and environmentalists
have raised such a hue and cry
that the Energy Department bas
been compelled to conduct a
grudging internal investigation.
A House Commer ce sub·
committee, alerted br our
stories, is also investigatmg. It
has accused Energy Department
officialsofa "coverup."
Despite Mancuso's alarming
findings, the industry-backed
National Council on Radiation
Protection is recommending
that permissible worker
radiation doses should be raised
five-fold. Goverllqlent officials
have recently quoted these rec-
om m endalions as evidence that
atomic workers are in no
danger.
The government is eager to
suppress evidence that radiation
exposure at low levels is an oc·
cupational hazard. For this
could cost the nuclear industry
millions in workman's com·
pensation.
Footnote: Reps. l>aul Rogers,
D-Fla .. and Tim Lee Carter,
R-Ky .. are considering steps to
prevent any tampering or mis·
use or the Mancuso data. The
Energy Department's internal
investigators haven't yet filed
their report.
Smoking Ban Showdown Due on Ballot
Sh aping up for a fin a I
showdown between smokers and
anti-smokers is an initiative
which would ban s moking
almost everywhere the public
attends. According lo Secretary
of State March Fong Eu,
sponsors have
collected
nearly twice
the number of
signatures re-
quired to
qualify the
measure for
the Nov -
ember ballot.
It ls the
culmination ot efforts which commenced at
the local levels and imposed the
bans in various cities and coun-
ties. Apparently tired of this
piec e m eal approach and
a ngered by rejections in many
areas, the anti-smokers league
now seeks to make the ban a
matter or state law'.
Ever since the anti-smokers
succeeded in getting the Surgeon
Art Hoppe
General warning or health
hazard on each package of
cigarettes, the war against
smokers has been raging. The
fact the warning Is !>ased upon
nebulous scientific studies ~
ing tobacco lo cancer did not de·
ter the decision lo require it. The
studies oowever were not con-
vincing epougb to persuade
Conll'ess lo cease farm sub·
sidles to tobacco growers.
AND DESPITE the warnings
against cigarette smoking now
having been a part of the scene
for more than a decade, the
record indicates cigarette sales
have been increasing annually.
Whether that means more
people are smoking today or
that those who smoke have in·
creased their consumption is
beside the point which is that a
significant percentage of the
population fiqd satisfaction in
puffing. :nus promises a Nov-
ember battle between the
s mokers and those who are
fanatic in their crusade against
tobacco.
But the crusaders concern
isn't the altruistic desll'e to pro-l
tect the users from their own·
self-destruction. Rather it is the
more selfish view that the
smokers in.fringe upon some
kind of .. inalienable right" to en·
Joy an atmosphere free from
contamination wherever they
choose to go. They pursue this
goal in an angry, bitter mood
which exudes hatred for the of·
fenders.
ONE LARGE segment of the
population which is perplexed
and hurt by this demonstration of
antipathy is the veterans,
especially those of WW II. Dur-
ing that era the attitude or the
public was that nothing was too
good for "our boys." People
willingly went without butter,
sugar and other goodies in the
belief the sacrifices were made
for "our boys overseas."
As part of "doing their bit"
the Rotary and other civic
groups purchased cigarettes by
the caseload for distribution to
the troops. It was "eveeythtng
for the boys" and cigarette&.
were the symbol. Even the gov·
ernment joined in, supplying
cigarettes as part of every K
ration. Nol only did such de·
monstrations serve to show
wholehearted endorsement of
smoking by the American
people, but American cigarettes
became the ultimate of barter,
· more important than money
wherever the GI went.
Today these same Gls, now
grown older and forgotten, are
being shamed and treated as un-
American because they continue
to smoke.
FEW USERS would contend
cigarette smoking is a desirable
habjt and most discourage the
young from doing it. On the
other hand many would argue
that it is no more harmful than
many other forms of self·
indulgence and all will defend
their right to smoke free from
the harassment of do-gooders.
What the initiative seems to
boil down lo then is nothing
more than a poll to determine
whether there are more users
than non-users.
.i\ge-old Rit~al Gives Mean~g to '~elationship'
. Kids, kids, kids! Nothing but
problems . My youngest
daughter, Griselda, dropped by
the other evening to pick up our
aurplua canned goods and an·
t1ounee sbe and Stanley were
"Into a whole new lifestyle."
I shuddered. ln the six years
they've been Jiving toaetber,
they•ve
gotten Into a
dozen whole
n • • llh· st1 l e1 , eacll more
obscure than t.be lut.
''Well, a1
IOPI a1 It
doesn't ln·
volve anl·
mats," l 1ald tolerantly. (°'1r
oldtJt daltlbter, Daver.qe, llM t~nt the put deeade In a MllM eommane ltDdybl1 ttae err.-
on bop ot thtlr a1troloateal
• ,
signs and I (rankly feel she's
been wasting herself.)
"No, Stanley and I plan to
seek a more meaningful re-
lationship through taking part in
an age.old ritual. All our friends
are doing it."
.. Ha:n Krtsbna, ..
••No," sald Griselda. ".Marrt-.e ...
1'J A RUA Git I The word nna a
distant bell in t.he du.sly attic of
my mlnd. Emellne, that was itl
Lone aco, our daughter,
Em ellne had once become
m arrted lor nveral months.
"Ob. not" I l&ld. "I'm not
1ctttna up before dawn to trud10
to the top of some ao..ay hlll.tdo
to drink whil* wine. eat !eta
cheeH and llateli to you and
&taal.,.ncttekbtd GlbrUI. 0
"Yoa don't nlettul. we •iM. ftld ~ .. ftdd· in,. YOU know, lnach~h.''
"Why in a church? You
hayen•t been inside a church in
y8tlrs."
· ,.It's the in tblng lo do. An
arternoon wedding's l>est. I'll
wear a Iona white saUn 1oi<n ..
••tn the afternoon? My
daughter, the bipple," ..... and
Stanley will wear a pal•blue
tuxedo, but he wants ht. uahera
to wear light-bell• tuxedos wtth
yellow ruffled shirta.,.
"l1SllE88t Well, if you dress
up like th~t in th middle ol tht
day, 1 C'JOH you could aell
Uclteta."
"My tell brid•mald.I 1'ill all
be wearina pale-Plot 10WM and
picture haw. Arid the church will
be filled with ton. ucl \OU and
t on1 Of be autJfql~eauttf\ll ao .... A IOPIMO.·wm be llna· lni, •o, .,......,.,. • •u tajre • Jl!llOtoP•pb• to take pictures •• .'' .
t
'
"I've sot it! ll's a publicity
stunt."
·•And afterwards we'll have
this intimate litUe supper Coe our
200 closest f riends wilh :
champagne, cases and cas~s :
of champasne and ·ciaoclDg to a
12-piece orchestra and .•. "
••it eound.s like a wonderful
p.arty, Griselda. I'm glad you
and Stanley have slruck it rich.
And 1 only hope you'll invite
me."
"In vite yout Goah, Dad,
you're the host." · • A •
I ASKED HEB b6w come I rot ~
to pay for her aAd Stanl«Y'I par.. l
t,y. She said It WU becauae l WU '
her fat.bet'. That mates aense.
Wbenevw th97 1et "Into a "bqte
new llfflldyte," Lt usually eo1ta.
mt a buOdte. art th.l.I one'• a
dilly.
l'b•• kid.sf Wbat'll thq tblnt olou t?
AT YOUR SERVICE I NATIONAL Thursday. Maren 9, 1978 DAILY PILOT A ft
Everything's Normal in Ridgefield Dy Bil Keane
By HUGH A. MULLIGAN A"a..ci.1cw....,••nt
RIDGEFIELD, Conn. -My old aunt used to
say you never really know who your neighbors are
until one day you read about them in the paper be·
ing appointed to the White House transportation
staff or taken oU In the patrol wagon for wile·
beating or graduating with high honors from weld·
ing school.
And, by George, she was right.
This town, for instance, is chock full of in-
teresting people, what you might call real charac-
ters just waiting to be discoxered by some
sharp-eyed reporter or a playwright in search of a
sequel to "Our Town." '
OVER ON LUDLOW HILL there's a man who
never in all his born days has seen a Oying saucer.
O.ld Ben Lovecr~rt has lived in these rocky, rolling
h!lls or Co~ect1cut for nigh onto half a century,
s10ce moving up lrom the Bronx, without
catching so much as a glimmer of an outer world
touchdown on his two-acre zoned spread there
behind the town dump.
.;tile other night h e
thought he saw an eer;e c~· J light reflecting from an 4--' ~IHptkal •.haped object ~ S\ew
in his driveway that
wasn't there when he took in the cat and turned off
the carriage lamps. He put on his new Christmas
cardigan, grabbed a flashlight from the hall closet
and made his way stealthily along the hedges
Seeee~ Light, Not But Bet
DEAR PAT: Breakfast food is fast becoming a
luxury food. In view of constantly rising cereal
prices, I'd like to find out which kind is lbe most
economical and nutritious.
H. W., San Clemente
Your best cereal values are whole graba pro-
ducts that you cook (oatmeal); touted, cracked or
rolled wheat and unrefined com meal. Neu best
are the milled enriched cereals that yoa cook, sacb
as farina, cream of rice and de«ermed com ~eal.
Most economical ready-to-eat cereals are those witb
the least amount of sugar and fat. Choose brands
made with whole grains and those with nutritious
added ingredients, such as soy, dry milk, wheat
germ, bran and raisins.
An average serving of cereal is one ounce.
Divrde the number of ounces in lbe package into
the cost of the entire package to determine .cost
per serving. Remember that cereals vary greatly
in density because of difrerences tn form (puffed,
naked, granules, etc.) and Ingredients (sugar and oil
add weight). Check the nutrient statement for a one·
ounce serving to compare nutrients, calorie& and
cost
Auto ln..,rance Reqtdred!
DEAR PAT: Does state law require a driver
to have car insurance? Jf it does, what would hap.
peo il an wlinsured driver had an accident?
P.S., Laguna Beach
It's a violation of state law to drive withoat be·
"'tng covered by some form or financial responslblli·
ty in the amount or $35,000 or more. For most peo-
ple, this means having a pabUc Uabillly insurance
policy in this amount, which will pay for injuries
negligently done to others (Vehicle Code 18021). If
xou get In an accident without luarance, you face
a long license suspension unless you can post a
bond to cover possible liability. You may have lo
do. this even before you are found by a court to
have been at fault or partly at fault.
If you are round to be at fault, yoa will either
have to pay off the Judgment against you or declare
bankruptcy before your license suspensions will be
cleared. In either case you will have to show that you
have complied with thefinanclalresponslbWty law.
Project Al ... at Plane Saletfl
DEAR PAT: Is there any private consumer
)lroup that aims to improve airline safety? I'm do·
ing a school report on aviation safety, and
although I've tried to find such a group, I haven't
had any luck.
L.E., Huntington Beach
. Aviation Consumer Action Project (134C Con-
necticut Ave. N.W., Washington, D.C. ZtO:ll) COB·
cerns 'Itself with airline safety and the ripta of
airline passengers. This group also monitors work·
lngs of &he Civil Aeronautics Board and Federal
A vlatlon Admlnlstratlon.
lloUIR9 Rider RolH•g Otlt
DEAR PAT: I ordered a "Rolling Ruler"
measuring device from Pat Harris Inc. or
Rutherford, N.J., on Dec. 7, 1977. So far, I've not
received it even though my check was cashed and
I've written them two letters. D.J., Costa Mesa
Tills firm'• euatomer eervlce department aaya
Plat ear41 aoWyln1 c111tomer1 of a dela1 In
pnee1-.erc1en for &Jal.I Item were malled seneral weeks.,.. 'l'be merdlaacllle aow ll avllable aador·
den, lndwlnSJOVI• are being ftlled.
Age~ c..n, •at Bet•
DEAR PAY: Wbom do I cart.act lf I cu't get
an exchange or refund, or if I thlnt I was a victim of
misrepresentation or was sold a ddedlve p~ct?
L. C., Costa Mesa
C..uct tMOrN•e c.a&7 OllkeGf C-.er
Affaln • na. a s..an aataa c..n Alt. u,.. .-co eoart, make An J09 lane u madl e.tace u
pollible to ...,,on you case, u yoe may fbul It Is
,_,.,....a.pied daat ef the~ lepreRlllatlft.
bordering the garage. He could hear chattering
and the sound of equipment being unloaded.
THERE IN THE MOONUGHT, ·llE saw five
tiny creatures no bigger than a breadbox with
enormous shiny eyes filing out of an aluminum
cylinder. They fled in panic the instant his beam
hit them.
"You know how racoons scamper after they've
tipped over a garbage can to get at a turkey
car cass," Ben drawled In his matter of fact way.
"l called the Air Force and they didn't want to
hear about it. They already had four peote on
hold with positive sightings."
Fascinating fellow, Ben. A real skeptic. •s
seen "Star Wars" twice and "Close Encounters of
the Third Kind" three times and doesn't believe a
word or either or them.
"We actually were looking at home movies at
the time." reminisced Myra Dork, mother of four
who moved up from the Bronx last winter. "Of
course, I couldn't tell the man Ural so I said'it was
one of them family situation co~edies."
MYRA SAYS THE POLLSl'ER asked if it was
"Soap" they were viewing.
"That's it, I told him, and he wanted to know if
we had any objectlons to the.strong language being.
used. Well, Uncle Dudley was visiting us that night _....,.__
and some of the language was pretty rough, seeing
as how he hates home movies, even the ones be
takes himself, so it titted right in with the man's
questton and I told him we were used to that kind
of language around here: I guess they think we're
a pretty wild bunch here in Ridgefield."
OVER ON LAGONWIFFLE ROAD, near the
new condominiums, there's a young fellow, name
of Nick Nevens, who hasn't put his name down for
Pan Am's first flight to the moonr-and says be
doesn't intend to, ever. Nick, who moved up from
And we are. There's a man over on Ap·
pleknocker Terrace who was at St. Andrew's in
Scotland when Jack Nicklaus drove the 18th green
in winning the British Open in 1970. Only Sedge
Walker -that's his name .•. moved up from the
Bronx three years ago -wasn't out at the Old
''We ARE in bed!"
Course that day to watch. WANTED
the Bronx a year ago, says he's not interested in SEDGE HATES GOLF. HE WAS in the read-DIAMONDS • GEMSTONES
that space Shuttle either. ing room of lbe university library studying up on Jewels by josephs Is searching lor diamonds and
Nick took the bus to Hartford last week to visit old Scottish kirk steeple construction and design, gemstones from private indlv1duaTs and estates. Careful
the Mark Twain house, and it broke down ·with a his hobby. examination and evaluation by our experts. Highest
vapor lock or a burnt·out transmission or Last year when Reggie Jackson hit those three Pt'ices paid. can 54()-9066 10-9 dally. Saturday 1C>-6.
something coming out of Waterbury, which be home runs in the last game of the World Series, Sunday closed. Ask toi Betty Grace or Frank VanderWall
says taupit him a lesson about inter-and out-Sedge came across some fascinating drawings of ·1ewels by ·1ose' ph er-galactictravel. e,arly Aberdeen and Dundee bell tower shafts in the Fifth Avenue Library.
"If God wanted man to go traipsing about on Great character Sedge Worth an interv1·ew
h b ck1 bis ' · · · South Coast Plaza • 3333 Bristol. Costa Mesa • 540-9066 the stars and planets.'' e c u ed· over root .. o~n~e~o~f;:_tb~es~e~d::a~y~s·~=-~-------=-------..J•••• beer, "he'd have created moonbeams with median -
stripsandrestareas." · NOBQDW
REAL PIDLOSOPHER, NICK, AND not a , J
word has ever been written about him. Up to now.
and crochet shop, lives a family, the Dorks, who · Down in the village, across from the knitting M IXES
actually were at home one night when one of those
~::;:::i .r.:i:e:,:~~::b:::~pbooed '° ~k which -C-::--o-=--C--K1---"A--l-L __ 5 _______ _.
Doll Co~mer~1als LIKE YOU
T?A~~T~~~!!~~~o~~ AND
A family
of popular
cocktail mixes
for home
entertainment
nationally marketed "Cher" doll will discontinue a
television commercial that shows children using --------------------
the toy in a dangerous way, the goftmment said. LA RIAZ. The commercial depicts a young girl seated on
a stool next to a water-filled bathroom sink. As she washes the doll's long black hair, the girl's mother _______ ...;...... ___________ _
enters and hands the child an electric hair dryer. COCl<l"AI L The mother then leaves and the girl dries the doll's
hair with tbe appliance.
The Federal Trade Commission said the com·
mercial is unfair or deceptive because it might in· M.IXES fluence children to use a small electrical appliance
near a sink filled with water. Severe electrical
shock rould result, the FTC said.
NO
PAYMENTS
TILL MAY.
USE YOUR
INCOME TAX
REFllll!
Dultrll Qirpee'l'own'• lpectaa&tl• ........ 8prtng '*··· Wtwlll pnwlde
,.......1n1t1Dtt1on~FRR_,..you purc:MM cerpetendpeddlng.
And ••• .._thle..,... llle,on .a ordlr'8overt2DO wfth 25%dowft •ttfme
of ordlrar fnllan.iloft. Md your good cndlt-ONE YEAR INTEREST
l'MaCMDIT ••• SAME AS CASH ••• WITH NO PAVM!N'Tf TIU. MAYI
EXAMPLE AmountotPurchase $400
Down Payment al time of Order OI ttlstaaation {!Qg
$300
A.P.R. Rate & Finance Charges +
Total of Payments $300
12 equal peymentS of $25 MCh
SAXONY PLUStl ANSO NYt.OM
A bMUllM,rww CUT A loo,
8'M.£
First payment
notduetirl
May!
j
..
)
)
pc
b.
q
AIODAILV Pl&.OT , Thursday. March'· 11'71 ORANGE COUNTY
Bio/ eedback. Harted in Building Es~eem
_.,~ ...........
NOT A CURE-ALL
Robert B. Macintyre
• By JACKIE BYMAN Oll .. DMl'lf"l•IUft
Students taught to relax their
muscles and increase the blood
flow to their bands by uaing
biofeedback have shown slgnifi.
cant increases in sell-esteem
and confidence, a Los Angeles
psychologist sald in Newport
Beach.
Robert B. Macintyre said
Tuesday that an experiment be
and sev.eral colleagues conduct·
ed showed that after oncy eight
hal!-hour sessions with college
students, "We got significant
cbaoges to higher self-esteem."
MuJNTYRE WAS speaking
on biofeedback at .. Focua on
Learning," a national con-
ference hosted by the Coast
Community College District at
the Marriott Hotel.
In biofeedback, a person's
tenslon level u re1lected ln mus.
cle tenaioo or poor clrculatJoo is
shown on equipment. As the
person cban&ea bia tension level,
he can 1et an lm mediate
changed reading on the monitor
and learn to. will!ulb' control
tension.
The surprising finding, Macln·
tyre said. ia that learning such
simple bodily control also af.
feet.a the way people thlnk.
.. WHAT I T11JNK la eolng on
is that blo!eedback helps us
restructure the way we look at
ounelves in interaction with the
world." be said.
He said he has also used
biofeedback with hyperactive
children. No change was noted
in academic performance, but
teachers said the children were
much calmer after biofeedback.
For .Juvenile Offenders
2 Institutions to Close
Orange County supervisors
have rejected a probation !or ad-
justing inmate loads between·
.f..{acilities and instead voted to·
.:'close two of the county's six
·juvenile institutions.
. The supervisors' move Tues-
day reflected a continuing drop
·off in the population at the coun-
: ty's juvenile Institutions.
· That dropoff is more reflective . or a change in the handling of
juvenile offenders than a decline
• m youthful offenses. ~ .
· SINCE ENACTMENT of new
. juvenile Jaws that became effec-
. tive Jan. l, urn, emphasis is on
: diverting minor juvenile offen·
• (lers into treatment programs and
steering them away from in·
carceration with major youthful
offenders. ·
·. As a result, county
. supervisors tightened their
• economy belts when they or·
• de red the two facilities closed.
Targeted for April 1 closure
are David R. McMillan School in
.Santa Ana and Rancho Potrero 10
TrabucoCanyon.
~Designer Hired
•. Willdan Associates has been
~ired by Orange County
.Supervisors to design a 237,000-
~-fquare-fool parking area for
· .... transient aircraft at Orange
. .County Airport.
Supervisors agreed to pay the
lirm $45,100. Pavini ia expected to cost $435,000.
,.
#
•
McMILLAN SERVED as a
30-bed facility for juveniles serv·
ing short·term but definite sen·
tences.
Rancho Potrero was a stop·
ping place for youngsters from
12 to 14 years old whom the
courts said should be held in an
institution.
A Probation Department re·
port asked that the two facilities
be kept open and a<Uuatments be
made at other instituUons, in·
eluding closing a 20-bed ward at
the Youth Guidance Center in
Orange.
County Administrative Officer
Robert 1bomas. however, told
s upe rvisors there would be
greater economy in closing
McMillan and Potrero.
Grove Resident, 19,
Faces Rape Charges
A man accused of breaking into three Fountaln Valley homes and
raping the women occupants has been ordered to face trial April 17
in Orange County Superior Court.
Judge Robert E. Rickles set the trial date and pretrial action
March 24 for Frank William Johnson, 19, of Garden Grove. Eleven
felony counts contained in a
gr and jury indictment include Lecture to Explore charges of rape, sex perversion
and burglary.
Johnson will be tried in Judge Universe 'Holes' Mason Fenton's courtroom. He
is held in the county jail, with
bail set at $250,000.
He was arrested Jan. 11 shortly
after be allegedly raped a 29·year-
old victim at knlfepoint while her
9-year-oldsleptnearby.
It is alleged that Johnson
raped three Fountain Valley
women during a three-month
period. All of the women lived
on the same block In that city.
Black boles in the universe
will be disc:ussed during a lee.
ture at Santa Alia College at 7:30
p. m. Friday.
Dr. William Kaufmann,
former director of Griffith Park
Observatory ln Los Angeles, wU1
discuss the causes of black boles
and their properties in Phillips
Hall. Admission is free and the
public was invited to attend.
Come 1n now ••• an4
make yam-choice trom
• fa!n:Llou ... ortment of
patWrm an4 colon I
Not. j\Jlt pr1nt.ed-On oolor •••
but~ bll&1c1 Color
tbU ,iowa from wmwi. tor
·~~ dimen&imv.1 em.at tbM
no ~patterna&n
a.obJ.evel l\'I rcn&r~
r10h ••• ree.lSlt4o ••• t.hanks
to the bull~ olt.houa&nds
olVV1oOlored «ranUl•.
And. the Armstl'O~
Mirabon41 -w.r wrtaoe
keeP& tr. sunny shine,
without W'UlDI or bUfDnl1
f&1' kmPr t.ban ~
v1I¢ floors.
as low•s
•195oo
P='~'=f 81..~::::"M::
..
MaeJNTYRE CAUTIONED
that sucb deep relaxation as that
achieved with biofeedback
decreues the need for medlca·
Uoos and that people usina in·
aulln should be cautious.
a way around that. Anything
with needles that click and lights
that fiash has an obvious place
In education."
"IF SOMEBODY JS going to
sit at a high-pressure job and
continue to pour alcohol and
tobacco and other poisons into
He joked that he became in·
terested in biofeedback after he
was turned down in a proposal to
experiment with meditation and
yoga in the schools.
BtJT BIOFEEDBACK ill his system, the biofeedback can
many cases lead people into help, but it can't aet rid of the"
further · self-exploration and problem," Maclntyr~aald.
learning, be aald. He also noted that it isn't yet
"You coutdn•t get Into the
public schools with anything
that smacked of Oriental
mysticism," Macintyre said.
"But I found that biofeedback is
"Suddenly other things begin known what rote the therapist
to look Uke they might be worth plays in administering blofeed-
deallng with, such u yoga and· back.
meditation," Macintyre said. "You don't put people into a
He cautioned that bio!eedback room with a piece of equipment
Js not a cure·all for lifestyle and get the results I'm talking
problems. • about.'' be said..
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NATIONAL-/ OBITUARIES
QUEENIE • By Phil lnterlondi
Big Rigs
Woman Seeks Damages
From AP Dispatches
A former saleswoman turned truck driver is
suing her employer for $2 million, claiming com-
pany brass vandalized two of her cars. booby·
trapped her equipment and fired her twice for no good reason.
"It's not easy to get a job in this industry
because there's a lot of prejudice against women.
Well, now that I've got it, I'm hanging onto it,"
said trucker Alma Howard, 33, who quit her job
behind a department store sales counter a few
years ago to get behind the wheel of the big rigs.
The suit against the East Texas Motor Freight
Co. was filed in Alameda County Superior Court. • The Duchess or Alba, Spain's most titled
woman and one or its richest and most fashionable
women, is going to marry the government's direc·
tor of music, Jesus Aguirre.
Sources at the· ( J duchess' Liria Palace PEOPLE said the wedding date is
-------~ March 16, and that tbe 52-year-o ld duchess
barred the press.
The blonde duchess is the mother of six. She
was widowed five years ago. An accomplished
flamenco dancer, student of Russian and patron of
tbe arts, she assumed the title ot uucbess ot Alba
Qn the death in 1953 of her father. a former am·
bassador to Britain. • Ted Turner, the free-wheeling Atlanta Braves
owner whose empire includes a TV station, said be
thinks most of television's top·rated shows are
"garbage."
Turner, speaking in Los Angeles as a panel
member at the annual convention of the National
Association of Television Pro-
gram Executives c NATPE>,
gave no examples of what he
considers bad programs.
But after saying quality
shows "would be really good
stuff, like Shakespeare," he
went on lo say:
''Most of the programs that
get the highest audiences in
TU•NH America are garbage. And
that's what we are in the habit
of giving people." • Saudi Arabian businessman Gh•itb Pbaraon
asked for a two-month delay in his purchase of
controlling interest or Bert
Lance's form,r bank.
A bank spokesman s ays the
delay is so the National Bank of
Georgia can get things settled
with federal investigators.
Lance headed the bank
before being appointed federal
budget director.
* UNG«
Prince Cbules of England, who says he wants ·
· to learn th~ samba, gets his
chance tonight when he attenw
a performam:e by the Beija
Flor samba school in Rio de
J aneiro.
Mayor Marcos Tamoio is
offering a dinner and reception
in the prince's honor, to be
followed by a performance by
experts from the school, which
won first prize in this year's
cwAuu carnival parade.
Upon his arrival Wednesday, Charles re..1
1>0rtedly said be is eager to learn the samba, the
best-known Ceatureorthe parade.
rACIFIC YllW
MlMOllAl rAH
Cemetery Mortuary
Chapel
3500 Pacific View Drive
Newport.
C81iforn1a
6«·2700
McCOIMICK
MOITUAlllS L11guna Beach
494·9415
Laguna Hiiis
788-0933
San Juan C.platrano
'495-1778
IA&.n.tH•HOM
fUMllAL HOMI
Corona det Mare 73·9'50 CO.ta M ... 848-2424
IBJ.MOAOWAY
MOltVAIY
'10 8 ro.ctway
eo.11 Mesa
CM2·8HSO
Death Not~n
• 'ThurMSay, March 9. 1978 O~fLYPllOT All
Hawaii Prays for Rain ·Fe rel
Former presi·
dent Gerald
Ford, who's
played in seven
pro-am golf
tournaments on
the PGA tour
this season, will
participate in
the 1978 Greater
Hartford Open
on July 26.
Pacific Stonns Bypass State; Drought Wonens
HONOLULU <AP) -Tourists
scowl when skies darken over
the Hawaiian paradise, but
some Hawaiians are hoping for
lots of clouds with very wet lln·
lngs.
Scattered areas or the i~lands
are in their second year of a
drought. The Pacific storms
which washed -and sometimes
inundated -parched California
this winter have largely
bypassed Hawaii.
RAINFALL FOR THE year at
Honolulu Airport was measured
at week's opening as just under 1,,_, inches, compared to a
normal rainfall for the period or
7',~ inches.
Light oecasional rain chased
sunbathers off beaches early in
the week but, despite the hopes
of ranchers and others dismayed
by the dry weather, the showers
did little to relieve tbe problem.
As climatologist Saul Price
put it: "These rains are helpful,
but by no means are they suffi·
( ECOWGY )
cient, They are 8 very I very long
way from endinglbe drought." .
SO FAR, THE drought has
meant only inconvenience in
Honolulu, the resort city on the
island of Oahu. But on the larger
island oC Hawaii, lt has caused
enough trouble for cattle
ranchers to seek -and get -
federal aid to buy feed to
replace depleted range grass.
Some ranchers say it. is the
worst drought in thFlr lifetime,
and Don Hansen, manager of a
300,000·acre ran<;b, said water ls
so scarce in some areas that cat·
tie have died after drinking
ocean water.
In HonoluJu, a voluntary con·
servation drive asked residents
to water lawns less, call off
benefit car washes and serve
water in restaurants: only when
patrons a.sk. Officials say the
measures cul water usage by 10
percent
ON OAJllJ, WIDCH hu 80 per·
cent of the state's 900,000 resi·
dents, orficia.ls expect more pro-
blems in summer and fall lf rain
does not replenish the under· A,.WI~ ground water table.
"H we don't have a wet .• ------------------;pring, we'll have tbe same re-l Cl.OTIHH & FUl'mlMtlS
!Ord low levels in our supply andt FOlt BIG ANO Ne'll baveto consider mandatory.
!Utbacks," said Edward Hirata,'. TALL nanagerofthe Honolulu Board of
Water Supply.
Mandatory cutbacks might M£N
catch by surprise t he mainland
wint.er refugees who have been
unaware of the drought. The cut·
backs would limit water in
swimming pools and decorative
fountains, as well as order less
lawn-watering and car-washing.
In the rancbland.s on the west
coast of the island of Hawaii,
ranchers have already been or·
dered to cut water use.
HONllnA?A
(114t 5t7·5M9
l7tll & llfSTOl. Wll
Call 642-5671.
Put a feJN words
towork for ou.
• EXPENSIVE HAND·
CRAFTED LOOK! ~. ' )r • GORGEOUS DESIGNS! SOLARSHINE NO-WAX TILE :·~ • HARD GLAZE FINISH • NO STRIPPING OR WAXING!
WONT SCRATCH! • BRILLIANT SHINEJ 9 l\~oJPt 98 "1e • SELF-STICK BACKSf o~ 7 ( · 1 ~ • RADIANT " s·xs· EA. COLORS! co•AAAetE ITEM ·····---~~~~p; ELSEWHEREATHc 12·112" • SO.FT.
CERAMIC TILE ~1
• PERMANENT GLAZE
NYLON SHAG
CARPET TILE FINISH WON'T MARI • • BRILLIANT COLORS! 2·x12· ~ •SUMPTUOUS PILE MAKES
1f11. 69 lfllt SEAMS DISAPPEAR! ., 'Jtf41# ·s 9 ~ ~ • SELf.STICK BACK SI so. sfTo.. • BOUNCY FOAM PAOOIN6t
41/.-141/t FT.
Westn*ister
15191 Beach
898-3388 Weil'.,_,,..,
Sun. 9 tH 5:30
Santa Ana
322 W. 17th
547-7781
Dalli M p.m. ~-: N:30 p.m. Sunday 1cM p.m.
......... _ _,,,, ---··-AlZ DAil. y PILOT 1"uttetq,Mllt0h .. ,dr. LQCAL I MUSIC )p------------~--~------~~--_;_ ______________ ~~------------------------------------------------------------;__--~
• 15tll Blrt•day
Welk Relates
Health .Secret
By BOB 1'HOMAS ~
SANTA MONICA (AP) -As often happened
•. ~ring his long career, Lawrence Welk. 'WOO't be
"1lc:ime for his birthday. He'll celebrate bis 7Gtb en·
-Q,rta ining the folks in Shreve_port, La.
• He has been warming up fer the big event on
weekends at the Lawrence Welk Country Olub at
Escondido. He entertains the guests with his ac·
cordion and then tells them, "I've been playing
·Happy Birthday' for other pe<>ple all these years;
bow about singing it for my 75th birthday, which
will be on March 11 ?"
THE MUSIC MAK ER talked about birthdays
and other things one morning in bis s uite at the
21-story Lawrence Welk building overlooking the
Pacific. He seemed relaxed and fit, and he ad·
m ilted surprise at reaching 75.
"I was very sick as a boy, and after 35 I had
severe health problems -spastic colon, gall
stones and other ailments," he remarked. "I re-
member once telling my wife, 'If the good Lord
!els me live to be 60, J'll be happy.'
··At one time in 1957, m y doctor advised me to giv~ up the band because of my health. That was
when 1 joined the Bel Air Country Club and started
taking beUer care or myself.
"MY WIFE HAS BEEN a great help. She is a
nurse, and she knows all about diets and how to
cOok foods. I don't eat out, al'\Q I take an hour's
nap every day; I'm able to go right to sleep. I play
golf, r swim every morning, and I have a driving
net at my home where I can practice. Mainly, I've
developed a knack of being not too anxious.
. "A few months ago, I gathered m y musical
family and told them they were going to put the
television shows together . I made a little speech:
they'd better learn how to do it in case something
happened to me. And if they didn't know bow to do
lt by now, we were all in trouble.
"SO I WENT AWAY and played in all the goU
tournaments -Andy Williams', the Bob Hope's,
the Bing Crosby, the L .A. Open. I always came
back on the day of the show and saw what my DCO-
ple had done. The ratings have been excellent, and
people have been telling me, 'I don't know what
you've been doing, but the show is better than
ever .· Maybe that tells me something."
The Welk enterprises continue to prosper.
They are directed from the ninth floor of bis build·
ing and include music pubUshing, records, real
estate enterprises. as well as the "Lawrence Welk
Show," whish is generally at the top of the syn-
dicated TV market. It appears on more than 250
stations
('
NEEO A LAWYER?
low L•g1I FH
*Divorce * Bankruptcy
•Criminal
• Wiiis-Probate
• Incorporation '* Accident-I njury * Eviction
• Collections
640-2507
¥1HR. COHSULTATION-$10
• AF'TER 27 YEARS on national television, it's
·\
1 hard to imagine Lawrence Welk as anything but a l 1 fabulous success story of a North Dakota farm boy
to music-making millionaire. But he admits to a
number of low pojnts in his career, tw.o in
particular.
• HERB • : FRIEDLASDf.R 11
• I~ l\IAKING · •
• GRf:AT DEALS •
'·
·'The first was in the 1930s, when my band
walked out on me in North Dakota. They didn't
t&ink I was a good enough musician to make the
big time, so they au left. For three days, t couldn't
sleep. My father was afraid I would come back to
the farm like the P(Odigal son, but ·I knew l
couldn't go home in defeat.
"l\T THAT TIME Billboard carried ads by
TT)usicians who needed work. I read about 1he two
Reed brothers in Dayton, Ohio: one played sax-
ophone. the other trombone. I called them in
Dayton and as.ked them to come to work for me.
That's how I got the ba ncf•tarted again."
THE SECOND LOW CAME IN 1t7l, when the
Welk show was still riding high in the ratings aftei
16 years on ABC. Welk was pulled off a golf cours t.o learn the news that the network bad ·cancele
the s how. He was in the middle of a dinner party a
few days later when a sponsor called with the
message: "We still have faith in you."
Welle instructed his manager, Sam Lutz, to of-
fer the show to the nation's TV stations. Four hun-
dred replied yes.
IN RECENT YEARS Welk baa limited his ap·
pearances. The band makes a 10.~ tour in the
South during March, another up North in June.
Three weeks at Lake Tahoe in the summer end the
year's tours. The rest of his performing time is de·
voted to the TV show.
Whjle he talks about "passlng along the show
to the kids," his associates doubt that he will quit.
One of his veterans told him: '-'H you ever lay
down the baton," that's the end."
: FREE :
! 50 C,\L.~ !
• 01-'G.\S ii
• "rt~t••"' .tit •t t11l11· "f ,.,.. 1 •r11wri "'•'• ii
~ orOll .C'llA~Cit:~ • .. " ...... .-.,ii.., . ....,,., • ..... ~ •••• , .... , .. ,t., « • ·e HONDA e «
• IJ7JI ..... llhll •
It 5JT 1n1 ""'•'""'"' -,,,,
.... * * * * * * * * * * ·: • MG-TRIUMPH •
• •JAGUAR e • • • ,.. FIAT·LANCIA «
• IJHt * 137$1 11 ... cUll\d, _..
~·l1JJ ,., .... a-,, ~111 "P ~ * * .. * * * * * * * *• ,. e TOYOTA e • • 1•1r. ..... c., ... 81... • Jt c;.,..,u.... m .s.1.e ii
•* * * * * * * * * * * ~ : l\IOTORllOl\I F. tr
•SALES & RENTALS tr
it-RESE RVE SOW :
• 537.7777 Ext. 500 ~
P****** ****~ • e LEASING e •
• All lll~•-f'enl'•" ri. .. -i. i' • ... "~'IA-.~ ""'-· it 537.7777 Ext. 600 • *' tr tr * * * * * * * * *""
Call 642-5678.
Puf a few words
to work for ou.
PropertY of a prominent Hollywood resldttnt
together with property of othQrs.
Property Includes fine cut fryatltl, porcet ein figurines, china •ts,
oriental ~gs. bronzes, oils, fumitvre, c~s. fur coats, etc. Atso,
many items of fine antique •1¥1 modem j1Wtfry lneluding lerge
dia. solitaires, oluner dia. rtngs, dia. f\ed<I~. at;Mf 11Yer1I Import·
ant dla. pins. Other mi~ll•neoua ii.ms Include gold thains,
watches, diamond SlUd nrrings, etc.
..
Divorce Price Tag High
By GABY GRANVILLE
Of ... o.111 """ .....
Roughly Z1 percent of the total
county government
budget bi Orange County goes to
help shore up financial chaos
caused by broken marriages, ac-
cording to a county study.
Translated to doJlars, the
study concludes county govern·
ment spent at least $123.8
milllon in 1916-77 rrovidJng some
form of f111ancia assistance to
broken homes.
savin' of the green
business, home-
mental health counseling availa-
ble to those who can't afford
private counseling.
THE COVNTY broken home
study points out that not all
broken fammes end up with
some members receiving public
assiatance of some kind.
But it also points out that
divorce is on the rise in Orange
County.
It notes. for example, there
were 8,718 county divorces in
1970.
By l!r16, the divorce figure bad
risen to 11,693.
''This rise is not simply due to
population growth.'' according
to the county study.
~ TO BACX'THAT conclusion, it
cites a 1970 divorce rate of 6.1
divorces for each 1,000 pofula-
tlon and a 1978 rate o 6.8
divorces for each 1.000 popula-
tion.
The study made no attempt to
trace the causes or the increas-
ing divorce rate.
Its purpose was to measure
the impact of broken homes on
the public pocketbook in Orange
County.
Not all the $123.8 million
broken marriage price tag in fis.
cal year 1976-77 was borne alone
by c,ounty i.xpayers.
OP THEl'l'OTM. amount. $39.S
million came from the county
general f\pld.
The remaining $84.3 mlllion
was sifted into the county
treasury from state and federal
sources, most of it from the
state.
Major direct cost items in·
cluded in the hefty annual $12S.8
million family support package
included:
-$56.1 million in Medi-Cal
services provided to broken
home family members who
otherwise wouldn't be able to af-
ford needed medical care.
-$40.3 MILLION in cash pay·
ments to families with depen·
dent children left without a
breadwinner or whose remain·
ing breadwinner lacks the earn·
ing power to provide family
necessities.
-$14.2 million in food stamps
to help broke n families stretch
their food buying dollars.
-$5.4 million it costs to ad·
.minister famUy aid programs.
j discounts on
office $11pplle1
one week only
Business Analyst calculator
• Texas Instruments quality
• pre-programmed. built-in, financial.
math and staustical functions
· 11near regression tor forecasting
trends. determining relationships of
data
• compound interest, annuities
• CosvSelltMargin keys
.-full function memory to store, recall.
anytime dunng computations •
• includes AC Adapter1Charger, bat·
1enes, carry case
reg. 34.95 SALE 24.99 save 28%
V-flle, 500 21:." x 4" cards for names.
addresses, Eldon brand. choice of
colors. reg. 8. 75 SALE 6.99
iioie punch, adjustaDle (Of 2 or 3 holes,
up to 10 sheets, with snap out chip tray.
reg. 8.95 SALE 6.99
pencil sharpener, vacuum hords In
place on any-£mooth. hard scriace.
reg. 8 00 SALE 5.99 SAVE 2.00
stor/drawer home file, strong yet light.
fiberboard and steel reinforced con·
strucuon. in black. with 2 big dra~~rs.
fronts colored brick red and antique
brass. reg. 11.95 SALE 9.59
coordinated design, color P~ . rman
memo caddy. 250 4" x 6'' sheets.
reg. 4.00. SALE 2.99
penc:ll caddy, 4-1/16" x 3",
reg. 3.00, SALE 2.19
flip card lnde•, 21/<1" x 4" cards
-250 cards. reg. 6.00 SALE 4.49
-125 cards, reg. 4.00 SALE 2.99
bulletin cube, organizer, caddy for memo paper, pencils, along With cork
finish and push pins for messages.
reg. 9.00 SALE 6.69
Cllp-t1'·Pen caddy. magn~tk: aper clip
holder combined with ball nt pen in
soci<et holdef, reg. 3. SALE 2.29
elec~rlc ell •hlt'p8ner, walnut trim on CVcolac,. body. 4" x 3,,,,. x m:•.
extra drawer for shavings. powet'M-
motor, automatic on-oft.
reg. 22.00 SALE 16.99
Pendaflex hangfng flle toles.ts, for
speedy, tla5Y fifing and retrieval with
• •metal hanger fods, 9~" x 11~H. 2s per
box, h or 1/5 tab.
reg.,8.40-8.16, SALE 4.99
Pendaf .. Jt drawer tramH, fit any
Slandard fMe drawer, adjustable heloht.
for convenient hanging files, .27)\"
loog. '81tft .a•. reg. 5.40, SALE 2.n save 44%
paper dlpe, white tfnntd wtre, bo>< or
100. ~· 33f I SALE 2 for 49'
pencllti 8eevtr brand, No. 2 or 2.5, \'lo2an, teg. 80' SAL.a 39'
pent, ~ -...... A,.,.,.flca's faVO(lte b!'and.
blue or1bkk. ri1edlum Point. reg. 2s•.
SALE 4 tor 41', save 51~~
1ddlng iMchh'9 i.pe, ttandard ew·
wfdlt roltl, reg ~9'.
SALE4fot ... ,~~
FULL SUSPEHSIOl-I
desk top calculator, Tl-5100
• big keys. easy operation
• 4 memory keys to store. add. subtract
• big 10 d191t green. fluorescent. easy·
to·read display
·floating or preset decimal. constant.
0 o key
• 1tem'coont key for inventory. averages
reg. 49.95 SALE 41.49
steel cabinet files
Hon brand qualfly. full suspension lets
you reach the back of the drawer easily,
with smooth nyron-rollers. thumb latch,
follower, In letter size, choice of gray,
black. or sand color.
2 drawer, 29" high. reg. 69.95,
SALE 54.95 SAVE 15.00
4 drawer. 52" high, reg. 92.95.
SALE7f.9$SAVE 11.00
4 drawer with IOCI<, reg. 109.95,
SALE 87.95 SAVE 22.00
memo or er pa a, ru , a s ee
• 8W' x 11" pads. canary yellow or white,
reg. 65• -soc SALE 2 for 49-. save
5~o-62°"' •aw• x 14" legal size. canary,
reg. 85• SALE 2 for 1.29
• 8112" x 11 " tablet. with cover, canary,
reg. 75' . SALE 2 tor 1.09
steno book, reg. 15•. SALE 2 for 1.09
bond paper, 16 lb .. 8V2 x 11, white or
canary, 500 sheet9 ream.
reg. 3.40-3.6Q, SALE 2.59
tndex carda, package of ~00, blank or
ruled, white
• 3 x 5, reg. 39', SALE 2 for 59-
• 4 x 6, reg. 70'. SALE 2 for 99«
scratch pads, white
,. 3 x 5. reg. 2 for 29', SALE 12 for 99«
save 42°o
• 4 JC c;, reg. 28•. SALE 2 for 39«
• 5 x 8, reg. 35•, SALE 2 for .ego
clHp env•lcrpes, 2S. heavy mantla.
gummed fl8PSi reinforced seams.
• 6Ya" x 91/z'', reg. 2.15, SALE~, $8V9 54o/o
• 9" )( 12" t reg, 3.0S, I
SALE 89', uve 67% = mending ,,,,., "Invisible", brand • w· )( 1298'', reg.1.30, SAU! w
• "'9'' x 12M' rtg. 1.70, SAU 1~
• W' x 258Z/, t9Q. 2.10, SAU! 1.$9
• ¥•" x 2592", reg. 2.95 &ALE 2.29
L ukl Paper brand oortectlon fluid,
ciy~ never flal<M. •(no-spill~ bOt·
wtlh ~ed brush, VI o.z.. Whitt,
s andatd or water bate, reg. 1.10
IALE tr.
8P.lrtt dUpflcftw fNld,.iOrrnut.tted tar
-----· ~ fld; comei.lri. i*ilttC 'giloriboda. rwt 4.16. &ALI UI
Phone-Mate 4000, answering machrne
·handsome, clean hnes desrgn cabinet
• FCC registered, plugs into ordinary
extension jack
• Call Monitor lets you hear who ·s calling
before you answer
• Announce Only control so you can give
message wrthout recording caller s
me5$age
• Audio Scan tor locating messages 1n
rewind
• adjust 1 to 5 rmgs
• adjust message length
• Message Received and Power On
fights
• Fast forward, Rewind. controls
• dual cassettes
• use as tape recorder. play music tapes
reg. 169.95 SALE 139.99
slmpllfled bookkeec>lng tor business:
families. record books to keep track ol
income and expenses m the most help-
ful ways. Specially set up books for
each. by lhe Ideal System
Merchants
Farm and Ranch
Grocers
Beauty and Barber Shop
Garage and Service Station
Service Station
Manufacturers
Truckers
,Contractors
~vern and Cate
Restaurant and Cate
Real Estate Doctors and Dentists reg. 12·95 each,
Apt. -Hotel -. Motel SALE 9 99 eec::h General Business · .
Business Service
Home Budget book.
reg 2.29 SALE1.79
Dome brand bookkeeping record
books, for businesses or most any kind,
srmpllfied, with deductions help, choose
Weef<ty br Montnly.
reg. 5.45, SALE 4.29
cheG_k/depoelt reglstera, Economik
brand, vaiytng numbers of oollll'lOS, Sizes. for recording expenses, income. A. 00.
E 20, F on!)'.
. 2.50-4.50 SALE 1.99--3.59
Charge on 'Asa, American Express.
or Mastercharge.
Sale prtoes epply to stock In store end
thru March 16
r
INSIDE: •Stocks
•Comics
•
ThunKiay. March 9, 1978
l'onner Area Golfer ·
Rising Star on Tour
By HOWARD L. HANDY
Oft• ~lly "''-' StMI W h~n t he Ladie s
Professional Golf Association
(LPGA) moves to Mes a
Verde Country Club in Costa
Mesa to start the 1979 season
next January, Susan O'Con-
nor could have an edge on
the others in the field.
But the pert blonde golfer
doesn't think it will be that
great an advantage despite
the fact she has played many
r~)Unds on the course.
"There are a few lhmgs 1
know about the course," she
says ... But it has so much
character and can change
from day to day. The wil')d
and the weather will enter in·
to it. When it is overcasi a]ld
hazy, the ball doesn't have as
m uch night.
"Maybe some people will
think l have an advantage
because I have played there
as much as I have. 1 a01
proud of the fact the LPG A 1s
going to play a major tourna·
ment there but I don't believe I
will have that much of an ad·
vantage.",
O'Connor lived an Newp<>rt
Beach for several years and
her father lives in Costa Mesa
and is a member at
M esa Verde where the
tournament will be held Jan.
8-14.
Sh e joined t he tour by
qualifying in lhe July, 1974
school and is beginning her
fourth year as a full-time
m ember of the tour. She is
playing this week in Los
Angeles at Rancho Park Golf
Course and will play in San
Diego next week
O'Connor started playing
golf at age 11.
"I played until r was 15
and won the San Diego Junior
c h ampio nsh ip four con·
secutive years from 1959 to
1962."
H as golf always been her
first love in sports?
"I used to high dive and
then I went to tennis,·' she
recalls. ''About a year before
I turned to golf, I lost my
first match in ten nis and
didn't like it very well .
"In golf it was different. r
finished second in my first
to ur n ament and won a
trophy. It didn't make any
differ ence that there were
SUSAN O'CONNOR
only three girls in my age
group. Nobody likes to lose
like l did in tennis.''
At 15 she decided there
w<'re other things in life
besides golf and quit the ~am e for nine years during
which lime she was ma rried.
Then she started playing •
again with her dad al Mesa
Verde, usually on Friday,
and both her father and her
husband encouraged her to
try to play professionally.
"I didn't pick up a golf
club for nine years, though,
and that hurt me," she says.
"The first two full years on
lour I didn 't like it and I
didn't really know wher e I
was. Last year I decided I
was going to do well or quit.
"l concentrated on it all
year long and I found I en-
JOyed it much more. I had a
much more relaxed attitude
and instead of thinking about
win, win, win, I started to
think about each shot and
• what I was going to do at that
,,,. time.
· · 1 think it is tougher for
me because of the years I
lost between 15 and 24 but I
a m getting back into the feel
of competition and my at-
titude is much better now.''
Does playing tournament
goH bother her before an
event gets under way? 1
"I h ave really bad ba d
dreams befor e a tourna·
ment," she admits. "Things
like trying to tee the ball up
in the mattress on the bed or
findln~ a tree in the way on
the first tee so you can't
bring the club back. I wake up
from these dream s very
frustrated.
''But once I get on the
course, I a m r eally keyed up
and want to play well."
There is no qualirying on
· Monday for the LPGA yet
but it might be only a m atter
or time until such a thing
comes about. But she isn't
wo rried.
"I feel I dm shoot par con-
sistently," she says. "M y
golJI is t.o shoot par or better
as often as I can. E ven par
would be good enough to
m ake the top 10."
Ho w does she feel about
the other members of the
tour and their willingness or
lack of same to help each
other?
"The girls, as compared to
the men in golf, are much
more friendly. That doesn't
mean they are good buddies
on the golf course.
"But I find very little petti·
ness on the tour. We aJl try to
help each other, even if we
aren't the best of friends.
"I will go to the dtiving
r a nge when JoAnne Carner, .Tunv Rankin or some of the
others are hitting balls and
watch them drive to see tft can pick something up,
"Personally, I don't lllce to
ask somebody else for help. 1
would rather watch another
player and they don't m ind
at all. I feel it is a compli-
m ent for another player t.o
watch you on the practice
tee."
When· she tumed things
a r ound in 1977, O'Connor
tripled her career eai'nings
witb almost $15,000 in prize
money and three top 10
finishes including her best-
ever. a fifth place in Col um·
bus.
Susan O'Connor is con-
sidered a rising star on the
.LPGA ~ Uld perbaps1 tf it
doesn't bappeA tb1a 3{ear. her
flrfl tournament victory will
eome at her ''bome course"
at Mesa Verde Country Club
-i n C o s ta Mesa next
January.
C'roll'ded ,£fonditioa
Cleveland's Mike Fidler (12) finds himself in tbe New York Rangers' cage after col·
liding with gOalle John Davidson (right>
Wednesday night. There was no score on
the pJay and the Rangers netted a 6-1 Na·
tional Hockey League victory.
tumed out to b6 the difference in
the ;ame.
Coe.ell Tandy Glllta• Plrates
mi11e4 their first ..... at-
tempt. bun ~ flelcf and fOW'
free 'throw trJ• -tatunc to etore a point foe-t.be flnt 5~
minutes. By lhat tlme the
F.alcoaa bad a 51·17 lead.
. .
DAILY PILOT
Kings'
Goring
Sparkles
TORONTO -Butch Goring
scored twice for a career·bigb M
goa ls to lead the Los Anceles
Kings to a methodical.Sol rout of
their National Hockey Leasue
hosts, the Toronto Maple Leafs.
Lo.s Angeles dominated the
fU'st period in the game Wednes-
day night, acorinJ three timea
on goals by Randy Manery,
Dave Taylor ~d GoriJJg.
After the !laple Leafs yanked
Gord McRae ln favor or Mike
Palmateer , the first time all
season Torpnto bas changed
goaUes during a game, Darryl ~ittler and tbe Kings' Marcel
Dio nne traded goals in the
second period.
Goring closed out the scoring
with a goal in the final stan%a.
A •thl A d .,a •ea
D A LL AS -M a rt i n.a
Navratilova and Tracy Austln,
tbe 15-year-old darling of
wome n's tennis, stormed to
second-round victories in a pro
tournament Wednesday n ight.
Navratilova made Lesley
Hunt her 31th straight victim
this year in a 6·0, 6·1 romp after
Austin toppecJ Helena Anliot, 7-5,
6-2.
Austin m~ Navratilova ill
the quarterfinals Friday.
Jn other mat~, Betty Stove ,
defeated Nancy Richey, 6·2. M,'
Pam Shriver. 15, defeated
Regina MarsikoYa, 6-0, T-6 and
Kerry Reid beat Virginia Ru.zlci,
2-6, 6-2, 6-3.
Borg Coll.ft••
GO.TEBORG, Sweden -Bjorn
Borg trounced Vitas GeJ'Ulaitis,
6·4, 1·6, 6-3 =th finali of the
$60,000 lnvitati al Scandina·
vian Cup W y to win bis
first tournament in Sweden
since 1974.
In a match for third, John
Lloyd beat Sandy Mayer, 7-6,
6-3:
FAltftlnk Qlllt•
BEJ\KELEY-Dlck Edwards
resigned Wednesday as the
U nlverslty of California'•
basketball eoach after a c:Uaap·
pointing 11·16 season.
The Bean hacl jqtt one "1.n:
:ning seasoa 1n m years under
Edwards, who came to Cal after
producing several outstanding
teams at the University or the
P.a.clfic.
Cage ~Ja l'lred
WICHITA, Kan. -Harry
Miller, who two years ago led
,Wichita State to a Missouri
Valley Cooference basketball u ,
lie and a trip to tbe NCAA
tournament, was fired as the
Shockers coach Wednesday.
flgllt Ert1pt.•
CASA GRANDE; Ariz.-Bill
Ma dlock and John Montefusco
got into a fistfight at the San
Francisco Giants' Ca sa Grande . spring training camp Tuesday
while Montefusco was being in·
tervlewed in the clubhouse ..
Witnesses said Madlock inter-
rupted the IJJtervtew. insisting
on · talking to Montefusco, who
See Briefs. Page B·Z
F&nging Female
SGu t h San Francisco High pitcher Robin Petrini,
possibly the firs~ girl to compete on a prep varsity.
shows her fastball as she warms up for a four-inning
stint Wednesday. She struck out one batter and pitched
two s coreless innings in an 8·2 loss.
Soviets Have Patent
<Jn Skating Croivm
• I
OTTAWA (AP > -The
Russians may or may not have
invented figure skating, bUt they
cert.aialy have the patent on win·
Ding world cbampjonsbips 1n the
pairs competition.
The incomparable Irina Rod-
nina won her 10th straight pairs
title at the World Figure Skating
championships Wednes day
night, teaming with h e r
husband, Aleksandr Zaitsev, for
the sixth straigh( year.
Before hooking up w ith
Zaitsev, Rodnina had won four
straight titles with Ale xei
Ulanov, who jilted Rodnina aft.er
the 19'72 Olympics and married
another skater.
The gold medal for Rodnlna
and Zait.sev gave the Russians
the last 14 world pairs titles. And
this one came very easily. The
heavy favorites picked up all
nine first-place votes for nine
ordinals and 147.26 points.
A very strong E ast German
couple, Manuela Mager and
Uwe Be we r s dorff, fiotshe d
second wit h 19 ordinals and
142.88 points. American cham-
pions Tai Ba bilonia of Mission
Hills and Randy Gardner of Los
Angeles finished third foT' the
second year in a row-:
"They're much better and
they get very high marks," '
Gardner said in ex.plaining the
constantly phenomenal success
of the gold medalists.
Gardner said he was slightly
d isappointed by the bronie
medal since the California cou-
ple ha d-been shooting for second
place. But a fourth place posi-
t ion after Tuesday's short pro-
graip bad practically doomed
· their bid fo"t silver .
The gold medal in the pairs
may have been a foregone oon-
clusion, but the top spot in the
individual events 1s very wide
open after Wednesday's fulJ day
of skating.
Bavasi Raps Padres
Going into today's short pro-
gram , Linda F r atianne of
Nortbridge, gunning for her
second straight world title, was
in third place behind European
champion Anett Poetzsch of
E a st Germany and Dagmar
Lurz of West Germany. Fra· San Diego Brings B Team
HOLTVILLE CAP) -When
the firat "Pl~ Jlall" to begin
the major league baseball ex·
hibltion se ason was sounded
Wednesday, most of the San
Diego Padres eouldn't bear It.
'J;'hey were •7 miles away in
Yuma p l aying a touring
Japanese team.
Except for a few top pltcbers,
the Padres squad wbiCh anived
to fa ce the California Aqels was composed of rookies and urn reserves. California won the
traditional Cactus League
opener5-2.
The makeup of Ute Padres' tianne's specialties. however.
tr 11-d "insult" are t~e skating segments and ave~g squa was an 'ot the compuls ory figure -to tbe tans wbO paid to attend "1l t.be g~ said Al)gels general tracing exercises.
mana~er Buzde Bavast, who Garden Grove's Lisa4Marie
dir«tied the Sao Diego front of-Allen. was 14th.
fice until the pest Winter. ...,a • .,....> ••TM ia no insult to the '· '''rq """''*and,. ...... z.im,_, Sovltt th le UnlClll, t onllft91S. \41 _. IMli/lls. 2. ,...la~ playen out thett, bpt e peop _. u.. .. _.,"·East GenMft'r. "· 1GAa. cam e to see Dave Winfield, :i. T•I ......... , Mission Hiib. c.t11 ....... "-"'
Gene Tenace, Rollle Fingers and ~::W.":i.. ~~;111~t!:1:. Geotge Hendrick .. Bavasl said. m.-. s. s.e1M a-_, tu.Ao ~
' "Outalcle of the pitchers, I • . !:!! ~~·:r~r.=
now the first names of only ""'°"• .-.. s.....*' ~ ~..,.,.,
th--of .i...J.-11-•'-er plnva-" •'• 1n .o.. I. S11s.nn• S<ltl•N .-AlldrK • ....,, WKU-UW ....,,....,, NIKhWIU, w.st ~1 Jt, Ul.J4.'t. SNryt aalclJ:bllc address aDDOUDcer Fr...u. Lftl~ Miu.,• M1c11M1e.u1ce111. _. -l ... ..i..., WO.loft, Mns., 13, IU .... 10. 0 811 ........... _. •· .-.. c.lor8de ~ COio.. Md ~--~ • .. Th1.sia a violaUonof the com-~.-.s.w ... ,es. m.... i---=-......., t-~Nltsstoner'& ruling t'bat the
team's manager should aCOODl·
paay the tea.~t Bavasi said.
but be adclKl wn. be will not M 4 COUEGE 'IJL1S
su.TED FOR 7J' . a formal protest with baseball
• commtaiofter Bo'trie Kuhn. IDRelld. Bava.al aal4 Uaat be
plau to alve the Padres some of
tMlr OWD medi~, by ltDdlfti aa Alllela •'B" team to play the
P.alr ea in scheduled sprln§ ...... Aid H.S •t tlle Paclrea
ttamlq i..e JD Yuma. • •11e•a eadded ro hts opinion.
'tiiil we dld llClt tat.nd to ali.,_t
tht Aliilll or arooae e1M1" aaid
Bob JfO..aae, wbo la•• IUC• ceeded Bavaal Pactr.1• Vlte
prftl ... and ..... -~· '"W• bad another same
... IUt • team tnm Japaa, the
Y akult Swallow1, bere ln
Y .. a ........ aa.ldWedDel· ~ ';i.iti.~Dtr.c.t by -~ ~·~. tbt hdNI •t tM SwalloWI a.a.
,
NCAA basketball ~tonal
playoff competition w1U le seen
Oft Cbannel 4 Sat\al'dQ and' Sun-da.Y with two games ._.._ day •
beitlg tele\lised at 11 and L On Saturday it Will be Ken-
tucky (2t·a> acalast Plorlda ·
State <Z.W> ln a Mlcteas( came ~
from KnoxvtlJo, Tenn.i. at 11 •
fallowed by UCLA (M-3) Qd K.auu (JM) tn a Wat b!llt
fto111 Eqene,_OA..
Su11dey'1 1ames i•cJude
Loul1vllle (D·t) ••~*' St. John'•· N4• York <21-t) aacl Roattoa (2$-TJ a1aiut. KoUe •
Dame UM), badl lD •tdftit r-.. ~al actiCln at Tulsa, OIO•.
• DAtLY PILOT BASEBALL /VOLLEYBALL I SWIMMING
Prep Baaebal.l Saddleback
Shocks Foe;
GW Beaten Sea Kings, MV
Riddle Rivals A pinch-bit double by Hu«h. Austin scored two runs ln tile
eifhth inning to give Saddleback
College an upset victory over
visiting San Bernardino in open-
ing Mission Conference baseball
act ion Wednesday afternoon,
3·1.
Delly Pli.t ,_.. ~ Palrkk 0'09nMH
Mission Vi~jo High toppled
Estancia, Corona del Mar won
over Tustin and Fountain Valley
fell to Long Beach Wilson in non·
league baseball action Wednts·
day.
Miss•on Viejo's Diablos scored
runs In bunches to defeat visit·
ing Estancia High (Costa Mesa)
8-2, with Phi l Caruso getting
four rbi and Jeff Newton having
a perfect day at the plate, 3-for-3.
Newton had a double and a pair of
singles.
Caruso's hits were both
singles but each got a pair of
runs across for the Oiablos.
Chris Reed had two hits and an
rbi, Ed McCarui had two and
s core d three runs and Pa ul
LaJoie had two safeties. ,
Caruso and Newton pitched
for the Diablos with the duo
striking out five batters and is-
suing four walks.
Corona del Mar scored seven
times in the fifth inning to post a
10·5 victory over visiting Tustin
High.
SLAMMING IT HOME -Mission Viejo
High 's Mike Brawley Cleft ) cuts loose with
a s pike toward Huntington Beach territory
as -David Cas~ Crighq and his Oilers
teammates a walt.
The .uprising ~as sparked by
base hits by Chris Johnston, Jim
HaU and J eff Cole along with
three walks, two hit batters and
a pair of errors.
Tustin made six errors as the
Sea Kings r an their season
MVRoDips
To Victory
·Over Oilers
Mission Viejo High's Diab1os
breezed to an unexpectedJy easy
three-set victory over visiting
Huntington Beach and Costa
Mesa Hig h's Mustangs ad·
vanced to the finals of the
Inglewood High varsity touma-
ment Wednesday night before
falling to highlight area Orange
Coast area volleyball action.
The Diablos cut Huntington
Beach down, 15·7, 15·5, 15·7, as
Mission Viejo put together an
excellent team effort, keyed by
the blocking of Mike Brawley
and Dan Chamitski and the de·
fense of Dave Ochoa in the back
row.
Also, Mission Viejo's team
passing showed improvement as
ijuntington Beach failed to come
up with the expected firepower.
Costa Mesa, meanwhile, had
Redondo on lbe ruri with a 15-12
victory in the first game of the
fi nals and in the decider the
Mustangs extended Redondo to
a 16-14 decision before falling.
All-tourney honors went to
Jim Pinkerton and Pete Ham·
borg, the latter was chosen the
tourney's most valuable player.
Also honored from Costa Mesa
was honorable mention choice
Marlon Liotta and Jerry Winant
as the coach of the tourney.
E s tancia 's (Cos ta Mesa)
High 's sweep over visiting Dana
Hills was keyed by the blocking
of J eff Gasper and Craig Keup,
while Sean Hamishige was the
leader in University (lrvtne)'
High's three-game sweep of host
Canyon (Anaheim) High.
Ocean View dropped a hastlly-
scheduled m at ch with Colton
High in four games. ·The match
was set up as a subsUtute for
one wlth Edison High (Hunt·
ingron Beach), which can~lled
because it had to travel to the
lngelwood Tournament for a
semifinal match. '
V..-.IC'f
Minion Vlelo *' HunllnglOfl .. Kit IS-7, lf.S,
IS-1.
Wesltftlntter dtl c.cii11~-V•ll•y 154, lj-14, 1-n. , .. ,4. -
E1lllft<la Clef °""8 Hiiis 1~ ls-t. U·1.
Unl,..olty def OWr,on tM , IM, IS.tO.
OcHfl vi.w def C.ol\ofl l~l~L 1U, IH, I~. ~ ... __,
MIWOI\ Vlelo dtf Hw!Uf1910ft .. lldll IM, I .. H. IH.
Estencl•lllf Oll'lot Hiiis 16-1" tS.ll. CollOft dllf OC-Vi.w tS.10, I'-"· IJ.10.
U11lwrtllY _. c.i.,_. 1H, 7-IS, tM.
t ....... VlfllWT-y lilllnlllMfl
Monti T9!'Y-dlf E•-. ll4, 11-4. Cot\a *'I Cllf Hoftll Torr-, l·U, I H ,. 11-t.
01 ........ ..... • ...__,at,_ AllitM IMS, IS·t, M-14. ....... c...,.
Or41119t CllMt Cilll• *f ""'· S... Afltefllo, 15'4, u-tt. ts.it.
CM!de" Witt dtf 'Nett LA IS-IJ, IS-1, U·\J, IJ.12.
BATTLE AT THE NET -Hunting ton
Be ach's Dave Motsinger {9) and Mission
Viejo's Mike Bra wley tangle a t the net in
a non-league volleyball game Wednesday
night at Mission Viejo Hi gh . Looking on is
J im Flynn (7 ) and David Case <right).
El Toro, CM Nines Fall
TritOns, Lagunans Wi.D
San Clemente opened play In
the Troy baseball tournament
Wednesdaywitha•·l vlct.oryover
Brea, but El Toro High fell to
Valencia (Placentia>. 1·0, in the
same affair.
In other action, Lacuna Beach
defeated Valley Christian <Cer-
ritos), 6-0, and Santa Ana top-
pled Costa Mesa, 6-2, in non-
league actioa.
San Clemente scoted two runs
in tbe f~ and sixth innlngs as
pitchera Dave Law and Steve
Wyche Umlted B~a t.o two bits. Law worked five ln.nlngs, strik·
inc out .~ but l11ulng seven
walks. Wyche finished the final
two frames, striklRg out four.
In the fourth, Law reached
base on an error and after Fred
Merrill walked, they pulled a
<lou b1e steal. Chris Russi ck
drove Law across and Merrill
scored on an error.
In the sixth, Frank Masonsong
doubled to bring two insurance
markers across. Jerr Huddleston pitched well for
El Toro but fell victim of an un-
earned run in the fifth innln1. He
had six strikeouts while allowing
fourh\ts . Steve Key bad two of tbe four
El Toro hits with David Brunner
and Bob Cratg• getting the
others.
on a wild pitch and scored on
two pasaed balls. Tom England
singled in the flfth and scored on
another single by Joe Seeley.
Laelllle ..... 16) .., ....
~UVM. 11» 4 I 2 2
LIPton, II 4 0 1 I
l<IHMIMcll, • 4 1 1 \
"l<llantMll, ... • 0 0 0 IC.enter, lb • 2 o o
JIMl»I, <f l 0 O O
G41ttnev, f1 l I O o
a.c ... p ' ' 0 0 Mller.,.c 1 0 01 .... , ••• 1 0 0 0
NkMls, " 1 O O O C411derwooot p ' 0 • 0 Telels JS 6 4 S
r II • Valley Clwl111an 000 000 ~ l o ~ .. «fl CIJO Ill ....... 4 0 .._AM W (l) C.W Ml&a ........ .., ...
Harrell, u ) o o o £11t!l•lld, u J 1 J o Hall, Jb ·c 2 2 o o ~. rt a o , o
A-ya, C-f> J 2 2 I Pl!<Urd, rt 1 0 0 0
'loyd, rt l O O o L.al'ace. If 1 o o o Panenon. ti 4 o 2 4 S..ley, ti> 4 o 1 1
SPORTS Bi.uEFs4h ••
Lquna Beach bad a makeup aame that was delayed by the .ncen taina antt .PQSted a vtc-
tor1 over viJlling "Valley ChM
ti an.
Sc/11111119, lb a 0 o 0 Tlftl. • l O o o ~-t. Jb I t 0 0 ~ C. J 1 0 0
Y41 ... l.CI at I 0 ..... ~.-J O••
"-"· 4ffl ' 0 • 0 llwmffltr,29 ' • 0 0 ~-,m .,.,......ct ~••e-
C~ from Pase B·l
resented the lntnasloQ.
Montefusco aU•gedly told
Madlock to abut UP or he'd bJt
blm with a bet and MadJoc1c
1wun1 at Mont.(Ufeo before
oth1ra brOte up the conlrGDta·
tloa. JloatefUICO bote a tindM
over hlf left. eye.
Kevin Kiessel.,.Cb had a solo
home run fqt the i..cuna, Beach A~ta int.be t1Xth lnning and
Alex Bacon pttehed "" for t.be victort. Bacon bacl lO'itrik~a
ln four lnn1ntl and relief pitcher
lan Cal~ llacl nve 1n the
f lllal Uu'ff, . tuuu Beac'b •cored three
times In tht aecond and had
alo1le marker• tn the fourth,
!11th and sixth frames, capped
by ltl ... lbadl"I bOrntt'. Jett 8attletfilld went t.be· dis-h nee fot' Co a ta M eaa,....
lfustull bot tlnd in U. f\nal
r,..me ..., the San\.a Ana Don1
IOONd .... of their' lit NU.
Cotta .... '8Clk tbt tarl1. Jud
lft UM birtb ... ~ Crttillt
w.-1af9C1D• ..... a~
va11caat1111, P o • o • s~1h..tfefd.p o o o o
Total1 >4 6 I ' Tttalt 24 2 4 I ac.. .........
~ " . ... -..... t -,,. o-i ••
-~14> . , . ., .
Wydlt,cf. 4. It 0tay,a • t I 0
0..1,., f'f • • • • l!ililffltl, If • 2 • 1
W.ltJt, .. .. • • ~1f9'1ct!o. ! • ' • DlichetM,C I 0. 0 .,...,,.,rf.Cf ., 0 t I '--·• a~• o c.rMfl.1111 .a o" o &.rwla. f1 0 0 0 0 T~t. • 4 4 1 ..... ., .....
record to 3-1. They play Garden
Grove in their next outing Friday.
Fountain Valley ran into an af·
lernoon of missed opportunities
in losing to host Long Beach
Wilson, 3-1.
The Barons had ,,the bases
'°aded three time; and could
score only one run. Nine walks
and five base hits along wilb the
Wils on miscues gave FV
numerous opportunities. But
three double plays erased scor-
ing threats.
Tlle lone FV run came in the
top of Vie first inning when
Kevin Romine wa.s safe on an
error and Mike Lung reached
base on another miscue. Mark
Roberts waiked to load the bases
with one a way and Stuart Miles
walked to force the run across.
Fountain Valley and Hunt-
ington Beach tangle in a night
game Friday (7) at Mlle Square
Park with the Garden Grove at
Corona del Mar outing set for 3 : 15. .....~
Mission Viejo opened South
Coast League play this after·
noon at home against University
(Irvine) while Estancia hosted
El t1odena. '
"-Ui• VM!ey (I)
"'"" AOMIM , Cf
R .. \4,CI
L11n9,Jb
EmpClft9. c
A-rts, r1
Sfttm..,,21>
Mlltt,lb
SllllMll•. If
J 1 t 0 Pllllllps, 11 2 O O O
, 0 0 0 Sll•llltt,011 1 0 l 0
JO I o 8rac•le1, clll 1 o o o
•OO O Co11nor,p O OO O 2 0 0 0 l i<h••ll, p 0 0 0 0
l O o o Heairn.r. p o o o o
2 0 I I Gl,.,ln, u 1 0 I 0
1 0 0 0 TOIMS 2S I S >
kare-,1-....
Fountain V•UllY
L8 Wit.on
Tltltl• U1
!>utton. 11>-p
s.n.rt. lb
O.vls. lb
Kerdol, u
!.utllll."
c.o1c1sby, c
Cont>ors. rt
Maclclen, lb
WelM>n, p
Peterson. p
Tot•ll
........
4 000
4 1 '0
3 0 0 0
0 I 0 0
• 0 ' ' l 1 2 1
l , l l
3000
l 0 0 0
1 0 I 0
I 0 0 0
11 5. 5
r II .,
100 000 0-1 5 0
OJll 000 x-1 • •
(111~•Mar
... ... 111 Marc lltt, er 3 o o o
Cr. JO!ln1lot1. If 2 I 0 0
H•yH ,11 l 0 0 0
CJ> JOflnslOrl, r1 l l I 0
Sl>Ollln, lb • 2 1 0
MelbOn, lb 2 l l O
si..•m•n, c l 7 O o
H•ll, l b 11 l 1
I.H iit, p 7 0 1 I
Arrana93. p l I O o
Ellmann.u 1 o lo Cot•,ph 1 0 1 1
Tolels 26 10 7 • su re W llW\IAtS
••ta.cle Ill •b r II Ill
8tnMI. lb 1 0 0 0
Johnston, 21> 1 1 o o
Aot>blns. n 2 o I o
P~•nl, lb I 0 0 0
Bra unsdorl, lb l 0 o O
P1wr1o1. ' J o o o Wllllems,dh 2 1 1 o
S.nleMar1a, lb l o I o
Brown, II J 0 I I
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Sobert, lb 7 o o o
l ieu , cf 2 O o O Poka1. 2b 1 o o a
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Tolils ,. 2 s l
r II • 020 O.»-5 8 o
000 171-10 I 3
Ill MIUIM Vlt je
<tb, .. bi
RlchardlOfl. II 1 o o o
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Hiia, Zb 1 0 0 O
To •e,1b JOOO
LaJole. rf • l 1 0 McC<tnn, n 2 J 2 l
81gf\am, pn 1 o o o
Atecl, dh • 1 1 1
Newton. lb l l J l
C<truso, p J O 1 4
Roberts. lb l O O O
Da•I~ ct l o o o Hosrk nltr, c o o o o
McCarty,< 0 0 0 0 Tot~\ ll I 11 1
kweW IMlltfl
Estan<l•
l••llHICWI Viejo
r It • OU 000 0-l 5 2 cm 1~ ll-4 11 2
Golden West College opened
the Southern California Con-
feren ce fl ag chase at L<>s
Angeles Harbor but fell to U\e
Seahawks, 8-1.
San Bernardino, the No. 1 rat·
ed team in Southern California
with a perfect 11-0 record going
into conference play, fell to the
Gauchos with the aid of out-
standing relief pitclfing by Tony
Nigro.
Nigro came on in the eighth
inning with two outs and the
bases loaded. He struck out the
final batter and had no trouble
in the ninth.
Sa ddleback scored a run in the
fi rst on a walk to Vic Hasler, a
stolen base and two throwing er-
rors. Alter San Bernardino tied
it in the second, the Gauchos
scored two more in the seventh
to win on Austin's timely blow.
· It was preceded by singles off
the bats of Mark Stowell and
Bruce Welz.
Golden West was the victim of
a n outs t a n din g pitc h in g
performance by Harbor's Mark
Cherrick. He had a no-hitter into
the se venth inning when John
Moses led o!f with a bloop dou·
ble.
The second GWC hit caan e in
the ninth as the RusUers scored
their only run. Jim Allen was
safe on an error , stole second
and scored on Steve Nemelb's
two-out single.
o .. _...,..111
Mo\41, ti
Nemell\. u
Man\Olono, 2b
C1ark, 11>
~Vtdnt cH\
PenlOld II
~,.,,,.
H•n¥tY, rt Alll'f'I, Jb
Edwerds, c
Wllilt, p
To1et\
... , ....
4 0 I 0
'0' l J OOO
• 0 0 0 JOOO
JOO O 1000
0000
J l 0 0
J 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 n 111
<•1u....-.
,..,.ms, cf
Quick, JI>
LaFal•, 30
Prk e,.U
Roy, e><·lt
S<otl. lb
8.trnefl. pr·lb
S.uer, f f
Huncttwtmf'. s~
Mendor•,dll
GtHnw•r.t Cne<r lei.., p
Tol•ll Sc .... .,,,,,, ....
• .... Ill
3 1' 0 )1 0 0
' , l •
• ' 1 2 0 1 0 0
l 1 l '
000 0
4 0 I I
•0 0 0 4000
300 0
000 0
32 I a I
Gol<HnWttl
LAH.,bor
5<1,.,.,.,..,...(1)
•II rlllll Sm•lll,cf S 0 I 0
Skidmore, If 3 o 1 O
Al.,,.11. If I 0 0 0
Ashm .... II> ' 0 I 0
Dvldsm•I~. u Jo o o He111Mr. rt 3 o o o
Alberluw. Clll 2 0 I 0
HurarcJ, p11 1 o o o
Hotcllklu . )b 3 1 o o
Nell, c 4 0 I 0
Ara90n, 2b 2 o o o
sn....i, t b , o 1 o
McGowan. p o o O O
Tol•ls ll I ' o
;. .. 8erMrd•"°
!>Hcllewck
r b • 000 000 001-1 l 2
JOO IOI OJ•-t 0 2
CU 'rtn9' "*
C41rroll, If
H•Mff, lb ...., .. _,..
Honr•tn,dll
Vr-Ut,cl
MOll .... rl s1 .. 11, lb
Wtll, c
urq,ma11.•
"~'"'·pt\ Aom•ro,u
O'SUUlun, 11
Nl9f'O. p
lol•ls
., ...
JOOO
'' 0 0 l OOO 3 0 1 0
•ooo • 0' 0
4 I I 0 ? I I 0
?00 0
l 0 1 2
0000
0000
0000
11 l 5 ,
r II • 010 000 000-1 • 2 100 000 ~ J :i
S0C81 Trips Aziecs;
UCI Loses-Again
Southern California Collel'e of
Costa Mesa, behind the excellent
pitching of Butch Ward and Bill
Ricldell, defeated San Diego
State University, 3-2. in non·
conference baseball a ction
Wednesday, then had a second
game canceUed after three in·
nines because of a power failure.
At Sawtelle Field In Westwood,
UC Irvin e Ant ·
e aterlt suffered their seventh
straight defeat at the hands of
host UCLA, 6-0, in another non·
conrerence outing.
Ward started on the mound for
SoCal and worked three innings
before coming out with a leg
cramp. Riddell finished up. al-
lowing but one hit over the final
six innings and strilrlng out five.
San Diego State was limited to
two hitJ.
SoCal scored in the first on a
walk to Butel\ Plink, a ba$e hit
by Mark Wood and a hit batter
to load the bases. Mik e Scheeti
then singled in the run.
In the third, Plank again drew
a walk with Wood gelling his
second hit and St~ Thomas
walked to load .the bases. Singles
by Scheetz and Dave Wilson got
the decl1.lve runs across. The
win brings SoCal's record to 6-2.
Former UC Irvine CQach Gary
Adams' UCLA llruins wasted lit-
tle time in juropin1 on t&e Ant·
eat.era, 1corln1 a pair of runs In eactt o( the first two inntnss and
holding a 5-0 eClg\ aftettllM.
* * * lllCM~IJ) n r 1111• J,..
4 I I 0 S ite •••• ,.,,
, • , t .. ,.
le-. .........
1 000
1 0 0 0
I 0 I 0
0000
0 000 n,, >
,.,. •••• 1 0 0 0
10•• •••• t OOO 11 00 •••• ~·I 0
Five of the six runs were un-
earned as the Anteaters com-
mitted five errors.
UCI and SoCal met this after-
noon.
Gauchos Split
In Swimming
Saddleback College toppled El
Camino College, 87-17 but feU to
host Fullerton. 78-26, in a do11ble
dual swimming meet Wedhes·
day afternoon.
The powerful Fullerton con-
tingent won every event but the
SO-yard freestyle and the G aucbos
of SaddJeb8ck did the same to El
Cam lno, giving up only 'tbe diving
event. Buzz Harper had a double vic-
tory In the El Camlno meet, cap·
luring the ~ individual medley
and the ~ backstroke. Fred
Ridge won the 500 and 1,000
freestyle events in the same
meet.
l'tll..,,_.· ,,., IMI ~II
400rn...,..i.,._1 Flll-J:Q.t •
1.000 1....-1. Ort Cfl 10.IU: 2. ~(Fl
10:•.211 ... I ... ISi 10:47.2. 200 tr-I,~ CFJ l:f U ; J. U.IH CF)
1 ·~ J ,) Fr-.,.ISl 1:'4 S. so tr•-'· &ovd cs1 n .1; 1. '"""' ts.l n.s; J.
Hopp Cfl 2J.t
200 lnll. nwdlrt-1 Or~ll ffl 2:1S •. 1.
Ha,..,_r ISi > 01.t; J WU-ISi t ·Ol.i.
0 1Ylft9-1. 9Kk"*1 1'1; 2. San mllh If). l.
F.-cSil. 200 flv-1. ~ (l'I 1·11.•; J. NII_,. ISi ~u.l;_i_~ I Fl 1. "·" 100 frw-1. ~II fl"I j!I0/'2 .,...., (fl'' Sl_.;
>. Wll-. ISi JI•
200 be<l<-1 Oemlll• IFI 2 OI •; J M.,_ CS)
t :ot.7; J. L.OWlllll CFI 1:1' '-SOO ,,.._, a., Cf l 4.Sl.t ; I. llfcl9t ISi J IJI ;
l. ~rry Cl'l \ ll \
Jee tin"I l. Del 11190 (Ill lltU; t. TrtlOt
1;1 ' ?' '. J J.cobMft 1$12.JS •. 400 lrH "4.,.-1 ,. ... ..,_~ 1'.I.
, ....... tll 111111)) ··~ -Mff..., rel•Y-1, ........ II 4:a.s.
1.eot It• 1 llkltl Ill lt1'7,I: t. "~
(5' 11 ·•.6.~a.t lW U 11U ltO ,,.... l ,,_.., IS) l:M.J; f, ...,._ <11
t.•2 I., "'61M<t1 C$) .......
M tr• l ..,. ISi ta..I, 1. .... tw aJ~ i.,
11eo1•1ru • • 200 Ind._, ·I M ...... ISi l 1'1.61t. WlllM
IS) I OI l, l, Miaf'lll Ill I.» i.
OMnt 1. ltW"a n la IU: t ,.. lSt1 i..
McAllllll ltl. Me ll'p I. MllMO l"l 1IU; t ..... ID ,,,, ~ Mll'M?:;' .... t• 1. c"St.t;J ~(D ... 11. .. , .. 1 , • ..,.
.. ~'· HWtw "' ..... ,; ... ,. l •
{II t it\ 4' I. OM Cl ll'12 \, ' * ,,.._,, ._ .... Cll,J:~ll t. ........ CD
U U t t. ..... ltla1-. .... . tot w \,-.-. C~ ti-L -..n •II •1• 111.,...... cm,,.,.., ~"""'.,..... ... ,SS? t .......
f
SWIMMING /VOLLEYBALL I OIRLs• SPORTS
Won;ien's MV S
Athletic
•
Res Olis
...._,,..,..."
~.11 .. C..JtUI UI l'fll-
Ge,.dOllo, 311 S.M<O; Herr..-•, c
>·1·2·0; Ge llegll.,, lb 2·0-t·O
Rob.,ls, If J ·O-l·t: TOM•HI, <.I ~; G.adl1, lb 3 ~: w.iur, rt
>4-HI; Crolt. P 2~; HUl)ff. n
2·0·0.0; Floret, "" 1+1-0. Tot.at• 7H ... 2.
r II e Fullerton 100 010 0-2 ~ 1 °'~ coesu 101 ooo t-J 1 2
~WttCWCll~ Golc1e11 Wesl-fMr1.i, II, .._I 2·t s .. c11tt, d . 441.0; ~:st>. l+o.o.
Wlnlll"'la«, lb. +1·2.0, y~ <,
l..0-M; Sri-, rl, ~; KllO>t, u ,
3·1·J·O; Ro .. 11t>er '1', P, l ·O·O·I ;
Me*M11, 2b, 2'4MM>; RodmMI, pt1,
l ·O·O·O: M 'Hale, pll, 1·0·0·0;
M4t119-, P, M·t.t. Totals: JO·~. k-.~I.....,..
CYP"'S
GoldltnW~l
r II e
011 000 0-1 2 •
002 01% _.. 9 I
WOMeWS Tt!NllllS
~-ISJ l•I UC'"''• Sl ......
Mon• (II •• TMllNl'I •·>, • •:
McC.rtum <Pl Ott Sloclfton ........
C..r'°" (II dlt LUU'I' ~. W ; Ttlolrn
IP) Oef llr,..,..11 M , ~. M ; Young
CPI Clef A,... W, 1_.; !'ti.non (II
Oltl White,,_ M, U , 1-'.
Del*• Morse·Ptte.-i (I) d.i Tsuman·
M<C..llum 1.f., 6-2; Mor._.Tlloten
IPI clef Stodlt-a.rrn.n U , 6·2. 6-1; Wl'lll•m•~Y-g (Pl def Arnet·
CMSOll l •l, 7-4.
GYMNASTICS
VM'llr.,.
Hl9. ~ llSUI cu .. n -· Vaul\1119-1. K•••lk (Ht 9.2. 2.
Wright (H) 1.7; 3. Mc.Celle IHI U .
Uneven PM.ilel ._,_,. McCa~
CH) 1.3; 2. Wright (H) e.O; 3. IWr .. lk
(H) 7.6.
Bal•nce wa,,,_1 Wright (H) a.•.
1 McCelle (ti) 1.0, 3 PHquele (SI " Floor enrc1s.-1 WrlQl'lt Oil t 1
1 l(•ras.k (HJ 1.6'; l. Mc.C..be (HJ
I I.
JWl!lir v •nily Ht9. l•acll (tU.1) llJol.tl s...ote
V•u!ll1>9-t. P .. I"'-" (HJ 8.1. 2.
St-n IHI l .S; 3. OllOM I HI I 4
Uneven perellel bars 1. PrlveH
(HJ 1.9; l . C-r CS> It, 3. Glenr
(Iii •.•.
B•litnce .,._,,._.., Jonn ISi I 7; 7.
Q>ttl'lore lSl a.•; 3. 8-nlley I H) 1.1
Floor ••r<l-1. Couttrup (HI
It; 2. Jone($) U , J, 8er9ff0'! (HI
•. 1.
Vanity
£s1.,•cl• (1'.611 (71U SI -""
V•ulllng-1. l'n.llNn IM) '·"· 2. le<ll'IO IE) US; 3 Cole (M) •·O.
Uneven per4111et bars-I. Cole IMl
•.IS; 2. UrD.no (Ml 4.1; l. li•nsen
Clll.6.
The swimming showdown for the South Coast
League champioaship Tuesday proved to be no
contest after all.
Mission Viejo, displaying the klnc,t of awesome
power that has earned the school three consecutive
ClF liUes, handed visiting El Toro its fi rst se~o
loss, 122-49, by winning every event but the diving.
"That was the best meet, unshaved and un·
rested, ever in the history of Mission Viejo," said
coach Mike Pelton, who watched nearly every
event won with a great time.
The best performance, according to Pelton. came in the 100 butterfly where Jesse Vassallo
turned in the team's best ot t.ne season, 52.63,
despite the fact it is not his best event.
Charlie Ray won the 100 freestyle jn 47.8, well
under his career best of 48.7 and well under the CIF qualifying time of 49.0.
David Barnes turned the 200 freestyle in
1: 46.59 to win an event in which the top three
places bettered the CIF qualifying mark:
Other top marks t ame from Paul Kontrimas
in the 50 free (22.15), Vic VassaJlo's"personal best in
the 100 back (54.60) and Jim New in the 500
free (.C :37. 7). New's t1me was one of the beat in the
nation this year.
Costa Mesa's Bob Dolan had another outstand·
ing day, winning the 200 free in 1:46.59 and the 500
free in 4:43.5, both personaJ bests. His efforts
helped the Mustangs stop visiting Corona del Mar,
96·73.
Dave Varney or Dana Hills turned in a fast
double in Dana Hills' 94-78 win over visiting San
Clemente, talcing the 100 butterfly in 55.4 and the
500 free in 4:51.0. Mitch Kahn went 1:50.S in the 200
free for San Clemente.
Jeff Fults went 22.5 in the 50 free for Newport
Harbor in an 87·80 win over Marina (Huntington
Beac h); Shawn Mcc raney won two events as
Edison Ciluntington Beach) wound up the Sunset
Le ague dual meet season unbeaten ; and freshman
Blair Murphy recorded his third 22.2 time in tbe 50
free for Irvine. ·
* * * ""•nltv lrvl~•Hl9h(U) (6') Oce•t1Vlew
10IJmedleyr•tay-1, lrvlne 1 M s.
100 lru -1 J.,.Mn COi 1· S9 I. 1 0
M<:Corm1<11 (I) 2 OU; 3. Br-n IOI
2 II •
100 IM-t. Auld 101 ?· 17.J• l J
Mc Corm ia Cll t .36.•; l. C. Peu! Ill
] 40 J. ~o Ire-I Murphy II) n 2, 2
Sprag ue (I) 24 0, J. _,.,,se.. (0 1 J.j,J
100 f(y-1 Jonn\Ol1 (t) 1.04.<1, 1
Metti>enl CO) 1:09.0; J. No~r 10) 'u 0. 100 tr-I. Spre-(II S• t, 2
Polly IOJ SS O. 3 P illo• 111SI1
* * * 101. 3. Pattenon<O),
100 fly-I. N•d'I' (01 I 09.6; ,,
MCC•rtllV 10).
100 fr-I. So<.tle (0) I •Ol.7; 2. ;
KrauH <O>; 3. G. Mu""' (I).
100 back-I. CKll II> t:16.I, 2.
MCC•rtt1v 10>; 1 Franu IOI. 100 brHSl-t. Kudlll (I) 1 ... t ; 2.
F•~ 101; 3. W.Cde 101.
•00 tree,..,~ V1-4;12.._
J-V•.Vty ou ... ,,...,, -"'fertei&.
Vanity
£•1-(10tl (SJ) Ml• ... < ...
tWL Y PILOT· J/1:1
·ers Thuntp El Toro ~:U
Cll•n• IFI t•.a;. l. Ol<K ,,., ll.l . 400 hH ntey ll'lulon \ll•lo
JESSE VASSALLO .
Kluk I El 1·~ l , 3. MeMl'I IE) 1.0l •.
100 ttrHSl-1. Uyehwe (El 1.06 l.
t. Penis IHI l·Ot.O, J. Emery CEI
1 09 7.
400 frH rel•y-1. Hul'ltit1gton
861<113:lOO. JVllHr Vanity
... _ llJS) (10) ""' llNcll
200 medl.., rela...-1. Edl10n 2:00 •
200 fr-I. HOllmaft IFI 2:01.J; 1.
H•mm <El; l. llwtrl,_. IEI.
200 Ind. rnecll•'l'-1. warl•I I El
2:21.1; 2. J. SI Siewert <E>; i. ~
(E).
50 ''-'· _ .... <El 24.f; 2
Me•••ll 00, 3. MCCM1"*Y CEI.
100 lly-1. J. Wooden IEI 1:02.7, 1.
Hemm (El; l . Helton (E).
100 r,...._1. Ffff\Al'I l!I f :OU. 2.
Mdtll !El; 3. Ma.-11 (H).
SOO fr-1. Seflborn <El S:2t.4. 1.
J . Wooclel'I IE); 3. J. Stewart IE).
100 beck-I. W.,.,.I IEI 1:06.,; 2.
Hotfmen U!I ; 3. ~I El.
100 l>rU~-t. -k•I <El l:U 1;
2 Armijo IE); J. Al•ll El.
olQO ''" rei..,.._1. Edison J.S7.4. .............
li•l-CUI In> ..... ~
200 m..r1.., rlf•l'-1. H11<1t11191on
8e•cl'I 2·03 2. 200 t.-1. AoOu<llo I El
l :S4.S. IOOlnd • .....olev-1. 0. W-n
CE) l:Gi.2, 50"--1. Berro (H) 24.8. SO 11'1'-l. 0. ~l'I (El fl.I. 100
fre-1. Mucllo (El 54.•. 50 be<k-1.
Bauvn (HI 11.s. 50 ~t-1. Gllf0<0
IHI ll.I. 200 fl'M <91q-I. Edison
1:.U.S,
Ventt'r
""'· 'Va119Y (Ill) , .. , ...... 100 m-41ey retey-1 Fou11\eln
Veil.,. I.SI.I.
200 f,__1 <>Mes lWl 1:S3.t; 2.
Maire <w > t :02.t; J.. u~ <Fl
2:03.7.
200 Ind. l'lledler-1. Ne!fOfl IF)
2: IS.l ; 2, Cro1l1r (WI 2: 11.3; l .
Mlnaml CWl 2:21.0.
SO lrt-f. HOdges (Fl 23.f 1
DMl'lt-1. OtvU (I'); l. ~OWMt J:74.~ tf) I J. L!VlflOtlOM ('I.
100 fly-1. 110.r <Pl se.o; t.
Cnul1r (WI -.S; 3. TlllMll (,, SU.
IGO fr-I. Kodtlts (F) Jl S; 1,
OWlvel (Fl SS.0; S. MMre (WI S.S.4. seo ,,..._1, o.tn <Wl 4:51.11 1
l!lder <Fl 4:51.11 J. ltooeu (Fl s::at.•.
100 lla<tl;-1. Nldlclls (f') t:°' O; 2.
McClemol'ls IF> 1:°' 2, i . um.
pMllO<V (F) l:I0.2.
100 br1~1. MlnMll IWI 1 :ot >;
2 Ne9ure IF) 1:1U; a. Tllldell <Pl t:n 4.
400 ''" rll•-1. '°"'11•1n Valley J .M.6. .,..v ......
~t11, Vellf'Y (tGJ (lfl ............
lOO meoley rete1-1. 1'01111l•1n
Velley 1 s..a.
100 lr-1. Petenon IF> 1; 10.1, 2.
Vlctorl'IO CFI; 3, Twymtin Cfl.
200 Ind. meflel'-1. Nel•I• IFt
2 31.0; 2. S.-°""' (Wl ; 3. Ge<.11. (F) so lr ee-1. Mu'• 1 Fl 2S.•; 2.
Scl'lwertz IWI: 3. SIMl11tl (Fl
100 fl...-1. S.V ... IF) l•a..S, 1 5'>91~1 Cf); J. 11..-Nrd (Fl
100 tre-f. 5<llw•r11 <WI ~ J. J.
Youtll IFl; 1. Mona (Fl: J. O.mpso
IF).
500 fr-1. Twyt\'lefl (Fl 6 od t l Vi~forlno (fl; J. p._. (WI
fOO be<--1. Ganlinler (Fl I lj 0
2. Peterson (Fl: l. kov<IU IW)
100 bf..U-1. S.V-IF I 1.U I, 2
Natale (Fl; l. °""1PMY (Fl.
400 fr•• •• 1 • .,_1. w .. 1m1n11 .. r 4 00.9.
l"relll-~1 ... V•IN\I ( .. ) llfl WHtml,.ler
200 midi.., rel•'l'-1. Founl•ln
V•lfey 2:05.0. 200 tr-I ""'rc>My
IFI 2·14.7. 100 ifld. mH!e.,...1 '"'
dlwiueUll.cL JO Ir-I. 0.mct<\ (FI
21.S. SO 11.,._1. Din*! IFI ll 2. 100
lr•-1. Pegnuwt (Fl I O• t SO
C..<k-1. Herrlng1on (WI 34.0 so
b<'eesl-1. Monclnl IWI 13.0. 200 lrff
reley-1. ~l'IVettey l;Sl.1
VanlJy
MIQI ... viei.11u1 (et) l!t Te••
200 medley n••-Mlulon Vlelo 1411.U.
200 fr-1. 8arnes tM> I:•.,.; l
Cl>Oqllef\llMCa \El 1·0.~. l . Aay (Ml 141.0S. '°° ·-·· v. Vauello IM) 2·01 "· 2 8•rt1I~ (Ml Ill., 3 Tuttle I EI
2.0US. so,,,_,, ICOfttrfmes IMI n u. 1
Brown IMI 21.n : 3 Bet1l•ml11 IMI
n.\.
Olvl119-t. 0.IAio IE), 2. Jolln"°"
(El.
100 11'1'-1. J . VasS>ttlo IM) SUJ; 1
&eftlemln IMI il.16, 3. Barnas <Ml
SU.
100 frH-1. Rr( (Ml •1.6, 1. K...,_
trim es ( M> 4U•. 1 Brown IM) SO 60. soo tre.-1. iww I Ml • n .7; 2. a.o-
quelluanc• <El •·41.S2, 3 8¥1'1l<N1
CM> •;41.'1
100 back-I. V. v .... 110 IMI s.4.60,
2. B•rnn IM> S9.I ; 3. F•rrlnQton IE>
1:04.36.
100 l>rtaSt-1. Bert.r IM) 1:02 ... ;
1. J. llusaltolMI 1.02.I, i c. Tekate
! E> t;Ol H.
J•I• Varlltr
'
I 1Wt -"'tenelt. ~s.,,.. Miu ... vi. .. _ W""-lt, v.......,
.. ..,... ,.,, I•>,,.,..., 100 l'fl4dley ,..I•-'· Newport HltWtlM .. t. ,.. ,,..._,_ .W.k (M) l ;Jl.t; 2
Levll't IN) 1:S:U; a. Wllll..,.a 110 1:52.).
200 Ind. medley-I. Grier <NI 2:01.t ; 1. Davia (NI 2:oa.1; J. err~son <N> 2:1u.
so tr-1. FUits <NI 22.s; i. 5"tll•
IMI 24.2; J. v .. IMI ur.
Olvl~l.MIWI ....
100 lly-t. 0.vl• (N) '6..1; t. JeslM
CM) Sl.2; l. ~(Ml l:QU.
100 Ir-I. AMlatl; <Ml J0.1; 1.
l.a•ini 110 SU; 3. Stew"' CN) 52 S
jOQ fr-I. Wllll .... a (NI 5:06.t : 2.
We!1 .. r (Ml J:01.t; , McGlyM (M)
S:'1.0.
100 ba<lt-1. Gor....,, IN) 1:00.2; t.
Wlt1ft1y (Ml 1:0'!.•; 3. Grier CH)
1:04.•.
100 ...... -1. Ber~ (N) 1:0..S
1 Morabito (Ml 1.06.a. 3. Cree INl
Hit.I.
«IQ frH ,..,ey-1 "'-PDrt H••-l ,. l.
.IWllarV•nlty
New-1 H..-r <1141 IZ1l ftMriM
700 m•Cll•r refer-I Nnrport
HerbOr I: S7 I
2QO Ire-I. OW\ley CNI l :ln.l; 1.
Wnll• (NI; a. Be<kell (NI.
200 l11d. me<ll•r-1. Smltl'I IN)
2:2S.l; 1. Erickson IM); 3. Gauthier
IMI. '° rr-1. 1..eymen (NI lS S ; 2
Tnomes CNI; J. Wlto.r (NI.
100 111"-1 U~l'I (NI 1·0. I. 1
OtmoroO IN); l. O.Uttw~r (M).
100 Ir-I. Owsley (N) 5' 0 l
Wilder IN); J. &ouft" IM).
SOO Ir-I. Wlll<e IN) S:Sl.1 1
C..rlfiO" IHI; 3. ~I (N).
100 bl<k-1. H«t1son CH) 1;06.1, 1.
C•mftbllf,CMIJ J. belle 110.
100 brffsf-1. 1-llgbv (NI 1:11 S 1
Morel'IO (NI; 3. ~IN).
400 'r•r reley-1. Newport Harbor
J:Sl.1. ... __
..... ,.., 1111 (441 -. ...
100 meOIO rel.ty-1. H1twpor l
Hartlot 2 02 J 100 tree-I. Rim> (loll
l .!M.I. \00 jncl • ..-1ev--1. HMIHn
IN) t·lt.t . SO tr-t. Ooerin(I INI
2'~J• SO lly-1. AlllO (N) tt.O. 100
Ir-I. Ootrlnv (NI St.7. 50 be<><-I
Marksbury (NI 32.1. SO brHsl-1
Hanwn IHI 33.4. 200 ff'ff rllay-1.
Newport Herbor2:06 2.
VMMty
F-NI (111) <•O hl.Mci.
200 medley reley-1. Footl'loll
I. '1.J.
lOO fr-I. Sitre<heft (Fl 1:41.7 2
HeMI~ (Fl l:U .1. 3. y.,, Kirk <Fl
l:SJ.OS.
200 irtd medley-I. Oruck9n IF)
2:11.l ; 2. G•les IF) 2:12.1; J.
Bronlcl'le !El 2:11.1.
SO fre.-1. Howerd (Fl 21.6; 2.
Donnell CEI 13.0, 3, Wyell IEI 73 •.
lOO tly-t. Yet1<e't (F) SI.•. J.
OrVtlleft (f) !PU; I. tt.lr1""9 Cf)
t:OJ.2.
100 ,,._ .. Miiier < l'I • t; 2. C-
m lngs ( "> 49.J; S. Galls CPI SI.I.
SOO fr..-1. ~d (I') SUIO.•;-t.
Be<Ult\lnl (E) S:IQ.21 a. L.IMlilltlft .,, J:".21
100 M<-1. MeNHy Cl•) S7.t; I.
0.Me!I <El 1:02.t; 1., Gailt-
(f) 1:04'
100 brNft-1. Miiier '"> t·NJ; f, Strec,.n t'l 1:01.0; 1. vane.., II')
1·09.S.
400 trff ,.,~,. Footllfll JtlA-15.
,,.,... Vai:atty
.._...., llttl lfl •u-c.
200 m•dl•'I' rel•)l'-1. footlllll
2 00.0. 100 frM-t, Benoellle IF>
t:St. I, 200 lllCL ,,......,.._,. SllWft 11'1
, ,.. •• $0 ,,.._1, h•• (f) 24.t, ..
fly-I. Slaton CF) t:UA. 10I 1.-1. "°"'"' Oii (fl u.~ 500 ""'--'. Gf'Mft
'"' •:10 2. too 11ect.-1. ~ '" I llS.•. 100 brtlaSl-1 .... ,,, IFI
1·u .o • .oo tr• re11.,.-1. Foe111111
J.St.I.
..,...s.... '"'"lfl ,,., (17) •• .._ .. 200 medley A l•'l'-1. Foo1~11r 1 S...l . * lrea-1. Gr~'"' 2 .. ,: t. Buru (f'l;S. ~<Fl.
200 kid. ~I. McNll41M (Fl
2, It 4; 2. c.ln!FI; J. ~Sfl!I.
SO fr-t. FlorrnM I fl 24,•; 2.
Hurley (El; 3. DDnill>ue IF>.
100 fly-I. Grl~ (fl) 1:1t.I; 2.
SlftWn ( F); i. Pi"" (Fl .
100 fre...-1. Florman (Fl '7A; 1. 8Utke Cl'l13. lnedoml CE).
100 llaell-t. McMlllen CFI 1:0..1;
1. Grellem IF>: l. OoftallUlt (I").
100 IM'eest-1. Pines IF) t; 141; 2. C•ln(F)jJ 1-.!(EI.
400 frff r9iay-I. Fooltllll 2:24 4.
Vaf"litr
Ulll,,.nlty <ltl) IU) L-. leKll
200 medley. rt4•Y .-f Unlve<Mly
1· .... •.
200 f..__I. llrltlll'I IUI l :N ... 1,
Sl'loet II.I 2:00_.: i. Wllltlock tu
l °'·'· ?to IM-1. "'1denon (UI 2:0J S; 2.
Hel'lll.On IUI l:,..O; 3. Mlllllftfl 11.) , " s so Ir-I. ( .. , Campbell, Grlllleln
IUI n .t; J. Houl.s (U 14.f.
Qt\11119-1. Lorinsr <U>. 2. 1t1mb CUl
100 f!y-t. 8t-(U) S1 l , 2. Alley
(I)) SI l, J. U9Jonn IU 1 OJ J.
100 t,.._1. Cetnpbell CUI St I: 2.
Gr•l'l•m IUI S2.•; 3. HOU!\ IU" t. soo tr-1. er..,,, 1u1 S.:16 1; 2.
Sfloal (I.I S:37.,; '· Whillock (I.) s ... o.
100 becll-1 • .,,_,...., IU> SI t: 2.
Ma.-•ell IU 1:06.5; J. Wooll_.t (UI
IC..•.
• Oc.-.. V'-Nltll JV ...... 11
'
Mo5t vatue11C1· Jett Andr6de; eo-
ceptalns: _. .. and Jllft He; Most
ll'l\pl'Ollad; Jen Na; CilKl\'t ...,O:
TOfft Al'llOftOPOlllos.
~ ..........
Most V•l-e: Mire WlllClft; (ep.
••In: Terry Pfttm•n; Most trn-
Pfov•d: Ron l(n'9n1; Co.tc:l'I'• A_,,:
CraigW-
~ ..........
Most V•luaOle: &Illy Smell ·.,.d
Erl' F11<hier; """"In: Mike Simek;
Most lmprov10: Jolll'I Brh blM,
Coach"• Awanl: Kurt Lell>treid.
Olllrict ~--Most V•l-e: Oo\IO M9nooltlaft
and 01vld Devis; C.ptall'I: °""
Lin; Most Improved: Mllf• Trmer
and N•d NalfAt..-ui; Coech's ,,,..,..,,
Troy Bek~.
'
L..-BeedtMtllll
VMMl'I'~ 100 bf..-1. #Mione (I.) I ... S; 1. ••
HeftSOl'I iU) 1:07.t ; 3. French (I.I
Coacll's Award: J04y l 1a• •nd
Ton., Clements; Mosl Vel11<1ble: I Ollt.O .
•OO frM nlay-Lagul'le a.ec,,
J s..o.
,.,__5"11 u.,.... 9Ncll IU> <tfl u111....,,1y
200 medl..,. r....,.._Utl\IM Bea<fl
2·12.0.
Stt Swim, Page B-4
Loh• w-; Mo5t ln5Pir.ltlonal:
C•rlos can..-; Most I~ Gtttt
Martin.
J lllllW V 1rslty Se« er
Mosl Veluaote: Sf.Oil Cool; C..Cll't
Award: Scot Cool; Most In•••·
tronal; Ktndall Frftlel\. B•l•nct i....,_1 lttlno IE)• 3; 1
6•k•r <El •.•; l. Lawrence <E> S 45.
SOO lref>-1. Brown IOI s SI S; 1
l'looerts IOI s SI.I , 3 Pee..-'°" I II
100 medley •eJ•y-1. Edison l;St.5.
100 fre-1. M<Cr-'1' IE) I 51 4; 2 Plotord IE> t S4.•; 3 wescwe!I -------------·-------------------------------------------------
Floor .. ,..rcfse-1 Col• (Mi 7 IS 1
Springer IMI 6 7. 3 Lewr911<e I El
6.S.
All·ro und-1 tole CMI 1.
~ • ..,,.,.,. IEI.
JtaiarVenlly
£11111<1• (100.4) lt7.ll ~., ...
vaultlng-1. Houston <Ml 1 o. 1.
Aubl• IEI 6,7; 3. Mltyers (Ml ••
Ut1ev1l'I P 1rellel Ban 1.
P1gotoskl (El 6.S; 1 lllel Conovin
(El end Wtcbor9 <Ml • O
8•1ent.e .. .,,._, H.,,,.., IEI 6 ••
2. Wells (El 6 l, l . Fu1lok• (Ml S.t
Fi-•-c1-1 (Itel t-1011 CE>
af>d Fo•I ... CEI 7 I l Actvt1 CEI 7.•.
• Of t . 100 be<~ I MAJrphy I II }1 I 1
M•llan 111 I Ill I l. 0 . Mc:CormtU.
llll Cle l
100 or .. ~I I Auld (01 I 11 • 1 C
l>~ul 11) I 1• J, J Mer<l'l•nl IOI
1 ·~ • .ao tree retay t rv1ne J• 30 1. ,_Sollll
O<Ul'I vi.. ( "' UO) I rvlne H 09h
200 medt.., relay-O<ten V••W
2 1•.l
100 Ir_.. I HedV (0) 1 IA 1. 1
Ku<kll I It I 3 ltr•usr !Ol
100 IM I !io<Jte 101 2·3' ). 1 F1•
(01.
}Cl Ir .. I C.Ctl 111 11 5. 1 Etttot
no 1 ss.9.
100 Ind. m«flev I Andoltl'I It()
l 01.9; l Spntll IEI 2 01 f . 3
u .. uwa <El 2 11 O
SO ,,.,_,_ Cr•"'1ord CE) 7• l. 7
BtrQhOll~ (El 24.6, l Welle< ('ii
1' •
01vln9-1.~k IE).
tOO flv-1. Sl'lletd' IEI St.7; 1.
~owetl (El I :00.t; 3. ltiu-I El 1 ·01u
100 Ir-I. AnOOlln CH) S2.l, 2.
Cr•wlorO ! El ~ O. l. P ICkford I El us
SOO lree-1 McCrMre'I' IEI 4·5' 1.
1 Se>fftl'I IE) 4.59.9. 3. Alley <El
s ". 100 IM<•~-1. West-If CHI 1:03.t. 1.
CdM, Diablos, Tritons
Volleyball Outlook
Two of the four teams
in las t year 's C IF
volleyball semifinals
were from the South
Coast League. and that
circuit again h as an
abundance of talent.
Laguna Beach is the
loop favorite, but the
Arti sts may be
challenged by a trio of
strong teams-Corona
del Mar, Sah Clemente
and Mission Viejo.
League matches com·
m ence n ext w e ek.
Following are capsule
outlooks of Laguna's
stron gest challengers.
....... 1'1ej•
'l'be 1Jiablos lose some
depth from last year's
CIF semifinalist team,
but should still be strong
under first-year coach
Gr eg Swenson.
Five lettermen return,
inalllding two who start·
ed-6·3 hitter -blocke r
Mike Brawley and 5· 10
setter Kevin Severson.
The other lettermen
are 6·1 middle blocker
Dan Cbarnitski, outside
hitter Dave Ochoa and
back row specialist Rieb
Horner. •
Moving up into start·
ing roles are juniors J im
Felcbt and Lan ce
Richardson. along with
senior Jilt) Flynn. Also
seeinJ action will be
junior CUrt Alderson.
"Although we lost a
lot of our hitting depth,
<0ur middle bloc:ken are
still strong and I think
we1U be a better de·
fenatve team," Swenson
says. "We've got some
quickness in the back
row.''
Sanae.e..i~
"Laguna Beach can
be beaten, and I think
we have a team capable
of doing it," says San
Clem ente coach Jack
Iverson . "They're a
great team, but with our
potential. anything is
possible."
The Tritons return
five lettermen. including
three who were full-time
starters last season-
s et t e r Mark
Rivadeneyra, middle
blocker Mark Anderson
and hitter Larry Meara.
Also returning from
last season's 11·5 team
are hitter-blocker Steve
M cAskin and setter Pete
Ditto. Up from lhe JV
team is senior hitter
Tay tor Waters, the
Tritons' tallest player at
6·3. Also vying for a
starting berth is junior
Brian White.
''We'r e a bout half
Junio r s and h a lf
seniors," Iverson says.
"That's the balance I
like. We're a very good
hitting team and the at·
titude is the best of any.
team I've eve r
coached.''
C'oroaa del Mar
Five r e turnin g
starters give Corona de!
Mar a solid, experienced
nucleus to build on, and
coach John Weyrauch
eX'J)ects to improve upon
last season's 9-5 league
record.
Bruce Batcheller is a
See Volleyball, B·4
Trousers by Corbin Ud .•
Plaids and solids all woot or
Dacron/wool blends. Just right to
complement your Blazer or sport ooats.
WE'RE OUTTO BREAK ALL SALES RECORDS.
AND STAYING OPEN TILL ALL HOURS
TODOlt
,,
I I
,
0AA. Y PIL.OT Thiulday. Mtltch 9, 197~
I . I
I
·-aaanp and Run A .........
Alamitos
Racing
Entries ,...,..., ...............
f'l•IT ltAC8I -OM mli.. Pou~
Mires IO flWCICll. •.,.., .._ U -cent. P\lrte S\.J'GO. Olllmlfl9 prq p ,ooo
,.,..., Sleet (Sllort); Stlreedeff ..
(Al*f'Mnl; Sef"9I Hiide lVet .......
1"9haml; -c;,...., (Merl!Welll;
'Gay Sl"OM IMl.-111: e.rt E.ll;flrftS
l LOnQOI; Selwyn GrettMo CRlkht•I;
T-.Co (BeMettl.
SlfClON~ lllACe-O... mile. Pete.
j YHr ofdt~ l'ftdtr _,. • .,_,. o1
MOOllrtl"-'fOllCO. Pufw$2.IOO
A· Sperle lOr11ne1r1: Mw•n
Spec I al IV•ll•ncllllOflMft): ltutu• PrlorlA1tdlrt0nl; ~990" Prince
(L•dl-'" Jrl; Rellel lunerletft•
I Ou1tftlg•n>: ••Ibo• Honov•r
IAutllnl; V--.. Olllcl CGoudnlul 1 •Olstllleo (81ecbnen).
A·C OetaftO enlry 8-A • .._ ... ,,,
TNllllO u ar -One ml ... PiKe.
Clelmlng handicap. Purse $2,100.
Clal ml119 prket $4,000..,500
., . , • t •
Vancouver's Bob Manno Oeft) and Don Marcotte of the Boston
Bruins run out of room on the ice at Boston in National Hockey
League action recently. Manno controlled the puck, but Boston
controlled the game, 6-3 .
.Javaloft ~ II.kt.Ir J,.): Tru
Star lSll'llnl; J• Bew ITOCldl; Jet·
lerton £11PAU (MltkOll); Tiie Oerw•nt ·A llletMll; ~ Tiger
I Anderton>; Prlttllo Blend I O•ullon>; l!d1awood 0Y"llle
I Beelby).
f'OUltTH •Ac:a-OneMlte. P-•
Clalml"9-Mw• lO Jlef'Cent. A yur'
-· 2S .,.,_.,., Pllno $1,700, a.im-1,.,.><e~ODO
PIMleiwl H (ltltdlfofd); Aftdys ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~----------------~Deen (Tod.SJ; Se1to• l.•ur•n
' ~ Edison Girls
I ,
l
' ·Planning Trip
After running away with the CIF cham-
lonsrup in its second year of existence, the Edison
. ttuntington) High girls cross country team will
try its hand at international competition.
t.~ ~he Charg~rs. ranked first in the nation by
·-}iarr1er magaune, have accepted an invitation tOI
'1 c.ompele in the International Schoolsports !''edera· J• tion cross country championships in Austria
• " March 29. j Running as the USA Junior women's team, the
12 Edison girls wtll be pitted against 15 other na-
tional teams in the bi-annual affair. And with only
• one senior on the roster. the school could be pro-
• 1 vi ding the United States entry in 1980.
Since the tnp 1s not sanctioned by the CIF,
Edison coach Gordie Fitzel will not be making the
lrip. Serving as the appointed coach will be Jack
• Kirkhorn, a veteran AAU coach wh.o has a
daughter on the squad.
Sophomore Sharon Hulse. fourth in the CIF
nnals, and senior Cathy Jones, who was eighth,
head the young squad whi ch features four 14-
... ·,ear-olds. Rounding out the roster are Julie
rgdah.l, Cyndi Carroll, Lisa Clark, Tawnny Feft'
• Alicia Kirkhorn, Janet Martel, Kathi Moren,
~ny Rakhshani, Kelly Ringer and Cathy Wall.
J
, Wi~ expenses of $1,000 per girl, the team is
dtl ralSing funds for the trip, which begins March
19 and includes a tour of Europe. Interested
parties can call Kay Bergdahl at Edison High
1962-1356) or write to California Scboolsports
Federation treasurer Jack Kirkhorn at 9122
Kahului Drive. Huntington Beach, 92646.
•
Dodgers,
Yankees
To Duel
VERO BEACH, Fla.
<AP) -The Los Angeles
Dodgers, champions of
the National League,
are ready to pick up
where they were
ceremoniously dumped orr Jast year -in a
baseball match against
the New York Yankees.
IP••-" Jr>: Plum ltum ,._IJI
<••v••nl; ll!HY C•> cor~I; Cen.w.n (ltltchlel: PrillCe Sun (Baltll<h); c-.. ~ (GoudrMvl.
l'l l"Tit llAC• -Oftt mllO. P..:e. S ner olOs & urmr. HofMlll-OI S600 first moMY twice (m¥H, 3 r~1).
PurseU,A
Baron'• Judo• (Petersen Jrl;
Br•ds Sono corul\dyl; M.rc..111
'1anov•r IS.yl-l; Caro H-v•r
(Go11drH ul; Amber AllO-.w 1An-
<lel'50"); ~,. OnJort IDunneti.cl<);
Town Crl.,. N I OunniMnl; Hallle
NlcColg IUW>\Nlll.
SIXTH lllACS -One mile, Pace.
Clalml"O h.lnclcap. QI.tired. Mares
20 percent. ~ YMI' oldt 1S percent. l
year olds JO~ PurM $2,.300.
Oal1nl119 CWICOI SJ,000.UOO
King Awey(Go#ldy); ~Spoyt
(Onom•r>; Anc:ty't C.ftuck IAn· ~son); Biiiy B Fast ,,..NY); Kl"9
Kl119 (MaroMl; WI>-Forty Two <GoudrHul; ~I Tonnto CCertNll •
O\let Ll(llltloot CVatler.dinghaml.
saVlrNTH lltAClf -o ... mll•.
Pace. Fllllt$ ~..-es. Nol l'Ofl..i '"" ttftal-•I. Purw'5,IOO
Seng• Paul•'°"°"'*'>: Amnesi. The remarkable first-ILiOhlhlll); U-rcut (Wllll•ms); vear season for Dodgers <nnll• l'tev 1va11an0111911am1; su~ · ·1 t T L d Foyl• (Goudr•aul; Co101lllc pr o ommy asor a, u1a1c111ord1.
in which his club ran
from the league with a
22·4 start and won a
rain-sodden pennant in
Philadelphia, ended on a
chilly note last October
when Reggie Jack.son's
Yankee Stadium home
, run derby S$Dk the
E IOHTH llACI -One mile. P.tcP
(!aiming -H :IO percent • y .. r
olcts 2' perunt, Pllf'M ~. Claim·
1,. price SI0,000.
Nll~lw Fallacy CAUl>i"l ; TalJMl'IOn
CVallMdlft!ilhaml: Caledonia" Con.-
mind (~rnu); Horth Western
(Mhkelll. ~Bogey <Gr~I ;
Mou Rllonc:ta IR1tcllford): Stng
llronw\'n (lle•lby); ~poy Ct\arlla ICrul),
Dodgers in the sixttr HIHTH 1tAc1 -o... "'"•· •••·
I h W Cloalml"g ll•"dlcap. Put'ff UtoO. g 8 m e 0 t e 0 r 1 d Clalmlng 1>'1Ct$ $7000.1508. Mern 20 Series,, perc•nt. , S.ndr.s 5ofl 11..onfOI; One~ 0..
The teams are 1n sun. IGoudrHul: L,.uc11y Hordo <A11011tl ;
1 'd • N9t l.IPI "'"'" (ltlcllrnof>dl; Nelfm nt Fon a now, ready• <V•ll•nd1,,oi.am1; Ed'• l.•ur•• ing for 8 m&tCb "f'rid1y (Crulu .Jr); Lucky f'erade that is aa lnSJgnihcant <W-•w >;c...'Rl<..-rd(eott•llsJ.
TENNIS I HARNESS RACINO I Ml§CfiLLAN)'
For Col'legea, PreJM
Net Smninaries
Los Alamitos
Race Results ............
f'lllllT ••ca -One mll•. Pece. Clalmlng. ~Sl,100
s.ncty Pl<ll
(Aubin) 1IO 2.«I 2.20
Midnight Bvnl (ltltd!Ml 2.40 2.40 8ombert ~ (WMns) 3.20
Tlm•-2.C1531' Al!.O raced -TM Ott Time, BoKo
Frank, Mornlnt Edllloft, Bold
Uadar, Wlllle T K"lght
ScralCN<I -<Aunt Paree. Prine• S.m u Eucu S·S..Ny f'lc• a •·
Ml11111911l •'tN. P*$11.JI
SlfCOND lllACIE-One Miit. P.ce. CondltlONd 6 .,.., olds & under,
P11rse R.100
Sleeiiy Bye 11'9
(Du""lgenl UO UO 2.olO
R1Veft Direct lltltdllel J.'° J,00
Pe<lflc 0.-. ll.AUllyl J.:IO
Time -2.071/S
Alto recac:t -Arrdys Daft, P11yot1
1'1me, Pr1lrl1 l.yn, Btn Gleftvlle
HOICrelc:het
TNl•O ~ -One mll•. Pote•.
Cooftdtll-0. t.i-Wed. 5 .,.ar Olds & \llldef. Pur.U,too
MIJSS<OOC
ICt-l U.20 6.40 360
Moftterey DI«> (R1te'hlard) 2.111 2.Ml
Sewmlll Sellle (l.tcMt>
Tlma-U• l.~
AllO need -O U0911Y Ann•, ::.::,,~~o, 8oreJo, Fox tlound,
Scretclled -ScllllWebfrd, R•r• 0.Jlllft •
llOUlltTN lltACa-One mti.. Ptc•. -Clalml119 hillldlc.ap. Putse $2, 100 "!Atln Lover
IPel~et1) I.to 3.«> 2.60
Etnalla l ~dllordl J.00 2.20
H•l<ron "9rttage (l.onQo) 2.IO Tlm•-t .01
Also racael -Mary Bar RllOnda.
Von Rom,.,... '"'Mme<\ Adloi, f'\o~t R~rt. P1I Nitt« Fllte
Scr•tclled-Aalla Adlos. Ja a.au
U • .. ct• •·u•I• Lawtr a z. EeMlla, ...... $71. ..
l"lfl'TN lllA~ -Orw Ml ... Trot,
Cl•lmlno hMdiwP. Purse M,.ao
HIPPYEIQWnl
ICrvlsel • :uo 3.70 2.«I
J NI Eddie Uleltlkhl •·OO l.60
Bold Slrtak <U...I 2.10
Time -2.117'2/S
Also r1ue1 -Dire Need, Duke Petasus, Flt"', Francis Sftowdon NoscratdlH
Sl.XTit MC:. -Oroe ml ... PK•.
Vanity
UlllM 9Ncll IUI U) Coste MtH
Slftllft 8uNld9e IU def Werrw H. def
Pa"l.-t 6-4, dtf Aus/I H . def l.eally
M; Toliver IU Woll 1 .. , .. ,, •-t. lost
.... ; Joh,_ IU -.. 3 ... ,. 6.0, 4-3;
David-IU -.. ,, tost 3-6, W01t W.M.
Delllll ..
SWIM. ••
IHa........BnCM ....... tot 111edt.., rel•Y-o.N Mtltt 1:4$.9, Jlt fr-I, l(eM (. ,, .... , I.
Oel-l' <Ol h~I I. u..-.. Cl> 1.S..2. 200 ,,._,_ M. ...,_. co.1=-.•:
I. Wooell ID) 2:"••1 I. ..,,._ ($)
1:1'.7. !I.,._,, lWMMlle CDt IMJ 2.
Hunt C SI UA; a. ._. Cl) SIA.
OMftV-f. ft....._le <SI Ml,7; 1. Wimer COi 11u1.a. ... ..., CD>
10f.J.
IOOflr-t, y_., IDt.,,.., I.~
($) 9'.SI S. W-(1) 1.-i,t. tOt ,,.._,, DelMf'f COi JUI I .
Hunt CS) SU: .. Hw1 .... .,, (Sf 11.S..
500 tree-1. v-. Cot •11t.e, t.
Kehll IS) 4:$1_.; a. ........,. (DJ
~:16.S.
100 bedt-1. M. ...,,_ Cot IU;
2 . ..,_ CS> 1:ou1 a. J. ~ .. CDI 1:01.•. 100 tw-......_t, .,.._ fS> 1:04.J;
7 .... ll» l10U; a. ......... ($)
l :OI.•.
400 frM nfer-s.ttt Cf"'9111• ~:30.9. ..... ~ SH a.-lmC .,.. ...
200 _..,, ,...,........ °"'9111•
2:04.0.
200 1r-t, ...,._ CS) 2tlJ.J; 7.
F...cil CS>; 3. ,_....<Dt.
JOO ,,._1. ~ <0 t1••1 2. 0taef<s1;.a.e:<••· so trw-t. (I) .... , I. ...
ISi; 3. Mc:NUI ISi.
100 flY-1. •Mt Cl) t:IO.J; 1. M<lrlM ($).
100 ,,__ .. te..._. cu .,#1 2. ,oucil (SI ; J. "-ea l D),
100 bOtk-t, Boe CS. he&.61 :1.
Greff <SI: J. Teaa-s cot.
100 brfflt-1 • ...,... ($) t 11U; 2. •-•u IOl;J.f' .. J (0).
400 lr•e ret•r-kn Cll .... ftl• :I:"·'· .--v......., o._ ...... _.., ......
e.tta Mne 00 OJ>~ 200,,,...., ........ 0.-.. ~r
1:47.4, •
200 ,,_,, DUI! co t14U; 7,
Cllom•M (CAIMI 1:51.t; a. a.--1 CCI t:S7.7. 200 ,,._1. P1cMtt <o 1:e.i: :i. Piper (CdM> 2:09.2; J. 0.C.. CO
7:11.S. so,,_,. WNtmore ca DA: :i.
McGovern (CdMJ U.11 a. 0..ell C CAIM) 2&.0.
Olvl...,......1, W9fb (CdM) t2$.6t; 2.
P111Uon (0 tol.151 l . &we CCdMJ 'II.II.
100 ,,.,_,_ ......... (CdM) ,. .. ; '·
C,.llSMw CC> ,,.t; a. O.C.. CO 2:01.2.
100 fr-I. Whit_.. <O SO.S; t.
Duvall (QIM) SU: l. C.IJllO CCJ
Sot.I.
S00-1. Od_.. lO 4:«J.J; !. E..-t (Cl S:lt.O;J.er-(Cl51CJ.a. too ba<lt.-1. Plcll.ett (C) 57.t; !.
Mett•r <CdM> $9.0; a. Tun., co 1.0. ....
100 brtest-1. ll•wllro CC4M;
I 06.0; 2. Castlli. (() ':01.6; I.
stonao•• 10 1:111.1.
400 tr .. rell'l'-<Geto Mltel:Jo.S. ,.,....s.,11
~(IW(WC.. .....
200 maelltY re1ar-cor-del Mer
2:00.0.
100 1,.._.1. ~ <CdMt a:eu;
2. McOoNlcllO;J.~(c.MI.
200 IM-1. Remeflll (Q 2<27.Sl 2 .
Jltnlllnt IOIM>; 3. Clwlt <Cl.
SO fr-1. 8'~ ICdMl hS; I.
Fross !Cl; 1 Bom!tt IC).
100 flr-t • .JeroldM tCdM) 1:11.J; t.
Dino (CdMl; J. OU 10.
100 ,,..._,. Rlng1w ICdMl ao: 2.
Cop1land (CdMl; 3. SemenHft (CdM).
100 blcll-1. R""""" 10 l:OM: ._
WtnU (CdMl; 3. Cr'M4y !Cl.
100 breos1-I . .Jarwolld 10 1i1U,
f I lteirls Soccer Team.
as their last meeting
was important, the first
ga~e of the exhibition
se son. The Dodgers,
w ose only major off.
season change was the
addition or free-agent
Sports (;alendar
Clal mlltQ ilendltAP. Pvrw SZ,300
Tennessee Olrls
ilolld>eli.M-God!rtY ( L) del Wll<o-
nlaft•O' f'l .. I 6·1. •·I; del 1.lu·J.
Wtntar .. 2, W; Otvl~ IU
-1 ....... loSt .... , ...
2. Mcl>oftetd (Cl; J. WNttlw ICdM).
400 lree ,....,._,, c:or.. de4 Mor
•:Ol.O.
<Oesomerl A.DO :too 2.«> -----------------------Ou11ter Byrd (Cl'-) 10_., ~.80
Siar Oust a.w IOoudr .. ul
Tlme-207 . ,.. ~ :~1Bas Rough Slate
r ,the North Huntington
~each Cosmos girls soc·
ce r team recently
played a morning game
in San Diego and defeat-
ed the Bombers, 8·0,
rthen flew to San Fran-
• clsco lo participate in a
: weekend tournar;lent al
-Dublin in the afternoon.
The team arrived at 3
, and played. at 4: 30, de~
feating Las Vegas, 2·1,
.'and moving to Sunday's
! action. On Sunday, the
Cosmos defeated
Dublin, 2-0; Sacratnen-
'to. 6-0; and San Ramon. ·s·t.
On Monday, Calgary
felt the sting or defeat,
5·1, at the hands of the
Cosmos who then won
the event in the after-
noon. After tying San
Ramon, 1-l, in two over·
lime periods, the out-
come was decided on
penalty kick.a in favor or
the Cosmos.
The tdrls, age 14-15,
plliy ill two leagues, the
P atific Soccer League
4'rtlt the Coast Socctt
League. Blll Parker ts
tbe team coacb.
1. Members of the squad ..,.· .
North Coach
~eeted
include: Kelly Parker,
Jody Larson, Carol
Wall, Cara Walth.
Lorna Orr, Jamie
Bridgman ; Alyson
aeverly, Sandy Bottorff,
Liu Knapp, Jo Ann
Doull, Karen Beavers,
Pam Gooder, Tina
Kyler, Lori Clausen,
Carolyn Go~ard, Linda
·Bohm and Allison
Marcoue.
'reliever Terry Forster
late of Pittsburgh, were
oronounced sore but fit
Wednesday for their
spring debut.
"Everyone 1s in great
shape and I'd say we're
ready to go," said
Preston Gomez. the
Dodgers' third base
coach. Gomez said there
were no major ailments.
"just few aches and
pains, which ts normal
aCter about a week."
"All the pitchers were
gettJng in their batting
oractice W<»'k and are
com int -1ong vel)' well,··
he said. "W'! at"e pleased.
T he bitten are coming
alongfme,too."
The new ~d ln eamp
Forster, bas imp~
the r~gu l ars and
manapr Lasorda wtth
~Is ~lrly form, and
will see aetton agalnat
the Y.ahkees in Friday's
game at Fort
Lauderdale. Do\lg Rau
and Lan~ Rautzhan will
also pitch for Los Angeles and the Yanks plan to-use
Ed Figueroa and newly
acqulredRichGossaie.
FV, Edison
To Tangle
Members' of Edison
(H~oting~on Beach)
Hlgh's football team, VOl.I.EYBALL
whlcb lol\ a 6-3 decisl~n to rh•L Fo\int.aJn Coa&la~ 8·3
Valley: ta.st f'all • ..ut take 5-8 back row apecialllt
aiDt' at tbe Barona who proyldn atabllity agalg,-tbt• tlme 1 a forthestarUn1 un1t. a.ad
NllrltMll Wedn••cl•~ Todd lllller ls • •·O ~ ('7~IO) at Fountatn 1eoior eetter i..ct frola van. !DO. Jut 1e.JTt 1Mm.
· ·.\alon1 th• B41.oa ~tber ~ a"9 ~.r:l:.111= t l l'j':"u:::WD~d lhder.~Cra~ Gil
Coll• U :lOI; Goldlft Wet1 Coll-
et U H1rtlof 12) •
SatwWy(~lt111
S"'lmmlno-N•wbury Park, San
Mul no •nd Minion Vl•lo ot
Marouerlte Swim <:e111.w 110 a.m.>; Co•I• Mesa, Unlve<5lty, N••port
H"rbor, Hunllnqton Be.ell, Eslanef•, Capl,lrano ViMley, Marina, El TOJO
In Anaheim 1nvlt.1111oMI It Hewporl
Hlrbor Hiot> I 11 •.m.).
Baseball-Marin• et Edi.on Ill • m.); Wesl"llnller ol Newport
Harbor <no?n); El Toro, S•n
Clemen1t •I Troy t-y; Orange GIM al cap.pr-Valley (11 a.m I;
Bonanr& I I.AS V(09n) ill lrvlM High
<noon!; Huntington Buch •I L•
Qulnloa (If •.m l. Ton-tr Pl,., 01
M1u1on Viti<> C 1 pm I; Soulh-•lern
•I S•ddl•bac~ Coll~ (I p.m.I,
LACC al Golden West Coll-I I
p,m.); Southern C.lllomla College II
W•Slmonl ldoubl~r at ftOOnl;
UC Irvine al USC (~thHCMr al
noon>.
Tenftl.-UC lrvlM at ,._.,.,_,..111,. (2p.m,)
Track-Meter Def at l"olltana lt•lays (10 a.m.I ( .. Poly Pomona,
VC'Santa ...,_. -UC lrvlne •l
S.nte AM Cllllage lnoonl.
Pro Scores
Also raced -Sllo'ffrft, Stormy
Ol"O'ft. Mike Me Boy, IWI, Mll:IW Ou 8uu ~alched -Anll1'S Canuc•, Al ,,_yi Biiiy » Eucta l·T-.. Qr~ & '-OMker ayN, P*lllt ....
SEV•Nnt •ACI[ -One m
0
lle. Padit. Clafmlftl llandicap. Purse
So',700
HOUnctl
(l.ongo)
Bit Time (AUblnl J.«> 2.40 2. 10
2.IO 2.10
2.20 Hine Carll IAndtnonl
Tim• -2.041/S
Al~ raced -Knl(lllt CIWlnce. J J~
Leg•ll•"°"'· GYP5V SMn Noscratcl'tH
EIGHTH lllACE-One "Ille. Pace,
Cl•lmlno ~PU,... suoo
QpnovanA
(Aulllnl a.«>
Bey Fllgllt lflwt.,.,..,l
SellOI Lexie ( S..l!w)
Tlme-2.05
Also raCltCI -EcteeWOOd Quinn, t:''-,_., L.erlL Ml.-L...1..,.._.-
Scretclled-l.llCl1'1910ft ~Miss Rhonda
U IEuc\I J.0-W" A & 2·a.r
1"11911t.f'llW ....
.Jl!MH •ACI! -OM mite. Pece. {I~ c.dcep. P\lr'll N.2GO
Goulllurn Adlot
11.e<l•lt) JIUO 100 4.20 Deck Hencl IGoudr•au) •.20 3.20
Ttllr1WM &esl <U...1 i .20
Tlm•-J.Ol
AIM rac:M -Golden Jim, Pat N
M•dlcln•, Splll P•a. Stir C"9cll.. GOCMI al>d True
Scra1c11ec1 -Fort11 WorllY. Alld C•rnedero
UEu<ta~,,...& ..
O.c• Hatlllll, f'lidttte.• Attendaftc'e -.__,
___ I
CONSOLIDATION
RE-ORGANIZATION
DRESS SUCKS
~Joy
~pane·• londoft
..... $40 ... HOW AIOM
DIE$S SHIRTS
halo. CarlM Cklb
&.-cw• a.t Cron ...... ,22 ~
HOW MOM -.,--
SALE
$400,000
INVENTORY
SLASHED
FOR IMMEDIA lE
SALE
EN'S SUITS
tee.on .... St.~
Eieele ltodlMy ........ "
...... $400 see HPW fltOM ·ug
SPOiit COATS loo--c:... ....
""---...... suo •
NOW HIOM
T SlllttTS -·--c..,.·--~tu.IO ..a.•
SWEATERS Puritan.,.
lcryUd.•lobert ...
....$40 1811 HOW FIOM -~--
ANGLE· FU8RT
SLACKS
TIES & BEi.TS
...... s1uo
HOW 11• . FROM
' ,
J
COMICS /. CR SSWORO
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson BOOMER
1t11U'"' .. ,u .... s.-Ml< J(!(, C10 ~ 1"1~" Wf.
COUl..D e~'l ..tAve A ~i:.ANl~Ut.. ~L..AllON~IP 7
0 1 knew It would come to thls ... not enough
room In his doghouse for him AND his
treasures, too! ..
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
'JJU<I~~ MONE.<.,> F~ A
f-OREl&t-l GOOERtWENT 15 A
PfteT1Q .5ERJOO& OFFEN5E, l~'r rr,eENAu;.
CASEY
MOON MULLINS
GERIATRIX
you ME»' en.a ~
GOING 10 f>. ~~
9.AL-G AT HLJCl(\..f 0eR~ESY~
AND "'tOU'~~ ~~"J'INGHOMe~
• .DENNIS THE MENACE
MISS PEACH
I~ 'TMAT
ANT
triALL.Y
T.-.1 QUalW?
ve~, TMAT'~ Htr !
~&A~NlN' MlelLP, IMA~U
PrA•1..1' APPl.AllCANCE!
by 1'om Batiuk
JUDGE PA~KER
TUMBLEWEEDS
by Wm. F. Brown and el Clsson
weL.L, ~•v'6 "tt>u everz
C<>NS1Dt2eD Jo~r
FAL.LING I~ ~ r
by Mell
DOOLEY'S WORLD
DR.SMOCK
MAlzcH WINO~ 6/VeME roe CRAMP.Sf . .
by Hilrold Le Doux
br Emfe lasbmrner _
-•Nt> ONE WOULl> H~va . BEEN ENOUGH
...
Thurldly, M•eh 8, 1178 OAK. y PtLOt I ..
Pl!ANUTS by Ctt1rlts M. Schult
by Roger Braclfitld
TODAY'S CIGSSWllD RIZLI
ACROSS '18 Row UNITEO f11hn Syndicate ~9 Renge C(HI W d d • p .... So .. _ ... 1 Caribbean 50 Wlnd·drlven e nes ay a Uu•e ........
country clouds
6 European 52 Irish ex-
nation clamallen: 11 Ballet step Var.
14 Bitter 56 By l'llHl'\S of
t 5 Hoofed 5 7 ,power ~~lfffllit' mammal 2 tMl-»ltlililllMIUl.lll~~~
18Hooller :::': liMI~•
labullst ,0 Forrnet'
17 Kind of rlll•· Spanish
man QUeen
19Commllan 61 Lone
offense Ranger's
20 Carried friend
away: Slang 62 Wood
21 Goesaatray eJ •MyGil-\' _....., ~~L.LI .... _'"
22 Distant vte'<lf &4 Senoflta'a ~ 39 Oiatrlluted
24 Acee"'* P9tent t ~ Enerancea . ~-to•• . 65Autll0f 1SFr.upoer tiOnatety
29 TrutJIM Cltllotd-flcuae 41 Oenee •• 27 Nullll>y 18 loal of growths
30 ······.floor DOWN bfead end 4 2 Ravaged
32 Give ea 1 Htld cover 23 Swtearlvef 44 Door sign
merited . • 25 One's roo111: 45 Lateral part
33 Braid ot halr 2 ~no~ 01 Sia n g 46 Sacks ot
34 Tumor: 1,~~1 26 Mutlltude necks
37 SuSelfl~ 3 Oii country 27 Bra11thea 4 7 Amphitheltar as. Fr. 0 28 Piicher 8pece r
38 Laughing 4 ult! 29 Not In-48 Swollen fit.it
39 Lord ····: 5 :!~t! d1vl-1 .. t11tat SO Swlsa
Antl!Ony alons 30 Poe, IOf one hefdaman
Eden e F-.C.d 3 1 ~ncy 51 Roman 40Anger fet
41 Preltfably 7 ~Y· 33 Grow atatesiaan
. 11trlclten la""·-&3Mldwa~ 4l?Prewnt 8-•nd • ..,,.... dtvic• 43 Hangman'• c:nftl 35 tarn. OC day: 54 Univ. •utll.
knots 9 Vari> aum. Pott. ..,. ....._
45Stilna'parta 10Ji...._. 38~ ...,_OWfttft ,.... ··-' . ticlblta 58 -the line 46 T emJ)9rament 11 utt out. 2 38 Surge 59 Cell. for one
J
~ .~----------------~L;fl8;;...;;0;A~IL~Y~P~IL·O~T;.. ............. T.hu•t'ld .. amy•,M•a•rc•h•9•,•19•7•8 .... ~ ... ~ .. ~ .. ~.'.~ .. ~.·.~ .. ~ .. ~ .... ~ ..... ~ ................ llll!l ............................................ llli!' CURIOSITY
CAN BE FATAL
t
,, ~
·;•:Ever y child Is born
.f#flous. Each one hai. an
1rresist1ble desire to
Couch and ta s t t! ~·vitrylhing within their
rench. You mu:.t 1,ec·p
harmful object s away from them
No m e di ci n e 1s H~rmless 1f too mul'h i:.
s wallowed. S imple
household articles, drain
cleaners. paints. all are
d fa'h g e r o u s . C a II a
ph•)'sician if trouble
comes. Phone us 1f you can't locate one qu1C'l.ly.
We'll help you get one
YOUR DOCTOR CAN
PHONE US when you
need a medicine. Pick up
your prescr:pt1on j(
shof ping nearby, or we
wll deliver promptly
without extra charg~. A
great many p eople entrust us with their
prescriptions. May we
compound yours?
PARKilDO PHARMACY
Free Delivery
351 Hol-pitel Roed
Newpot1Beach842·1580
CAPITOLIZE
~· WITH
CAPITOL
CAPITOl.IZAllON MEANS TO
CONV£RT CAPIHl TO l'.ASH
II )OV NtO SJ 000 I~ $$0 000 co· " 0"'1 '°" oiNn ' ~,.,.., °" ot~ ')>rOOfl'ft: r• '1 '"' .,. ""' lot C.t.PlfOl HQo./t LO ... N llfl"9• to UPllOllllt yO<lr
equily Into e '*'I ....,. "'''" lhl ond ''""'<jfy ... ....,.
Teller
Itches
To Hold
Money
OLD LYME, Conn. CAP) -Lots or
people have money problems. but
Theresa Torza's may cost her her
job. She's a bank teller who may be
allergic to money.
'·Inch by inch the skin on the pa\m
of my right hand and my left·hand
thumb and forefinger bas broken out
into an itchy mess," Mrs. Torza said.
She said her malady resembles "a
severe case of dishpan hands."
MRS. TORZA, 21, used to work in
the computer department or the
Hartford National Bank and Trust
Co .• but trans fered to the Old
Saybrook branch near her home soon
after getting married in November.
Dr . Erle Thomas , her
dermatologist, said Wednesday he is
still testing Mrs. Torza but ft is possi·
ble she has "contact dermatitis."
If Mrs. Torza is allergic, Thomas
said, it could result from dye in
paper money or chemicals used to
treat the paper. It also could result
from metals in coins, he said.
"WE DON'T KNOW if it definitely
is money," Mrs. Toria said. ''It
could be a condition I got, and money
might be aggravating it."
...
APWIN,...IO
ITCHING TO GET MONEY
Teller Threasa Torza
She said she still has the rash on
her hands. but it has s ubsided
significantly during a two-week leave
she has taken. She's due to return
Monday.
"If the rash persists and I can't
work with the money, I'm going to
ha ve to look for another job," she
s aid, ''hopefully in the bank because
I have some lime with them.·
WHEN THE RASH was at its
worst, she said, "I couldn't grip
things ... Even brushing my teeth,
I couldn 't really hold tbe
tooth brush."
She said she s uspected an allergy
to money because she never suffered
tbe problem before and the rash
broke out shortly after she began
work as a teller.
She tried covering the first marks
with bandages, then used cotton
gloves. They were hot and hindered
her money.counting. So she cut the
fingerlil>s off. The gloves "helped
somewhat. but they didn't seem to
help well enough."
Mrs. Torza said one benefit of her
condition has been not having.. to
wash dishes, but now, she added,
''My husband's tired of doing them."
. C~pitol
l;Iome Loan
Utility Wants to Zap
Electricity Thieves
I' • Ole ol Cali! '11Ar9Mi loaft8'-.J'~-
SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -Pacific
Gas & Electric Co. bas Jost mon than
$1 million to electricity thieves in the
past year and the huge utility s~s it
intends t.o let customers know such
band.il.J1 conld result in death.
to be particuJarJy alert for altered or
replaced meters.
Clll one OI our-a.,., • ..,i...11y
IOcal..i OllOCM l0t ti.. lac;t>
"A meter is like a watch," he said.
••Eventually we'll pick up the
evidence -when someone gets care·
less."
' Ii
l•
We'd
Real~ like to help
COSTA MESA
3130 HldJQt 8""' 714/~412
ANAHEIM n:u w. UrlCIQln 112•
7141778-3450
LONG BEACH
~1' t. °"Moe llM.
213/421·9333
U842-561'8.
Put • few words
to work for ou.
Warnmgs about the tampering or
meters will be included soon in an edi·
tion of Progress, the PG&E poblica-
tion that accompanies monthly bill·
in gs.
BURT HAZEL, director of
customer services, said the utility had
DO evidence Of or(aril!ed crime WU
involved in electricity theft in Central
and Northern California.
He estimated 95 percent of the
therts involve residents, ranging
"from the guy who thinks he's an elec·
trician to one in need."
Meter readers have been instructed
PG&E SAID IT had found 15,000 in·
stances ot tampering with the dials
that record the number of kUowatt
hours or electricity consumed, the
basis for the customer's monthly bill.
Tampering ean lead t.o the possibi.li·
ty of electrocution, the utility warned.
The utility also has tts lawyers
drafting proposed law requiring
customers be held responsible for
broken meter seals and interference
of meters.
A $2.'i service charge would be im·
posed whenever meter cheating was
discovered.
~Hutton Newspaper
Advertising
lncre~es
,.,.,
' ...
, . •
' . .
P.ublic Finance Grau
How will it affect you
and your personal
investment portfolio?
E. F. Hutton has available a comprehensive report
tor your review .
For your complimentary copy return the coupon
below or call (714) 644-9111.
I am lnter~ted in rec;:eiving E' F. Hutton s reoort The Jarvis Initiative.
__ __;:.-~~--~~-'-~~--,,~---~~~~~~------i
Name
Address
Sta\9 Zip
D 1 do not have an E. F. HLnon Ac.¢0Ur'\
SAN DIEGO (At» -
Television is losing part
ot its-audience while the
outlook for newspaper
advertising is bri.gbt.en·
ing, a New York re·
searcher says.
The view was glYen by
William J . Solich, vice
president of retail sales
development for the
Newspaper Advertlsin&
Bureau.
HE WAS IN San Diego
to speak to 500 represen·
tatlves of advertllln1
agencies and retailers.
Solich quoted flgures
prepared by the A.C.
Nielsen rat.il)g_flrm. in·
dicating 1.1 million
households dropped out
oftbe natlooaJ television
a udience from last
March through Nov-
ember.
Jn contest, he said re·
tail advertising in
newspapers is growing.
Force Can't End Strike
Mi1iers Put Carter's Prestige on. the Li1te
By JOHN CUNNIFF
ll"8-'-1A11•lt'fl "You can't mine coal with
bayonets," said John L . Lewis,
who helped establish the ·nucleus
of today's powerful unions and
who served as the dedicated and
defiant head o{ the United Mine
Workers.
Of this, President Carter is
aware. He knows that presiden·
tial power Is limited. It cannot
force miners back to the job;
were lt able to do so. it co~ld not
make them dig coal nor main·
tain equipment.
WELL, PERHAPS it could,
but the devastating cost to the
country, and the political cost to
an administration that stresses
human rights, would seem to
make it tragic and foolhardy.
The miners, after all, are
balking less abqut money tban
about the loss of health in·
surance benefits. Prone to black
lung disease and other scourges,
they see insurance as a right,
not a benefit.
In fact, much of America
shares this view. Benefits are
hardJy on the fringe today; they
are at the center, and they are
considered essential not only to
health but to economic survival
as well.
HIGH ON THE list has been
health insurance. In 1959,
Morgan Guaranty found in a
study. life insurance and health benefi~ accounted for just 3 per·
cent of total compensation; by
1974 the percentage bad doubled.
Why? Because of increasing
health care ~ts. but that Is not
all. Employers can obtain
volume discounts. And they can
deduct the cost from their taxes
as a business expense. Business
likes that.
But perhaps of more
significance is the realization by
the typical worker. whoever he
and she might be. that health in·
surance benefits, taken as pay.
are tax·free. And so the trend.
WHETHElt THJS trend is
justified is one m alter; that it
exists is undeniable. It is un·
deniable also that the miners, in
giving up some health benefits.
are worried that they are going
into reverse.
In that context it is understan·
da ble they feel cheated.
Progress has never come easy
in the coalfields; to foresake
what had been pioneeredf while
others benefit from their
pioneering, rankles.
* * *
In ~eek an agreemeflt,
lhretore, the president is askin1
a lot or the miners. at least from
their point of view. That is, if lt
is expected that they will
Coresake benefits already won.
IT WOVLD TAKE a tremen•
dous amount or force to aet the miners back
to tht5 pits and
tunnels, and
then what
would be at·
comp Ii shed'?
Little ,
perhaps, but
ill wllJ, low
prod ucti vi ty
and future
pro~fems.
The t~t is Jimmy Carter's.
The prestige, the leadership, the
future of his presidency are on
the line, and he ls challenged to
use all its mightly resources
more effectively than he .bas to
date. And in a hurry.
All the resources: perhaps, but
raw power. John L. Lewis in·
dicated a weapon is useless in
mining coal. And no better, it
would seem, at improving a
miner's sense of security about
his health.
* * * EXPERIENCE HAS taught
workers lb.is. Forced by tnnation
to watch their dollars slui.nk,
they have learned to take much
or their pay in services, and let
the company worry about inflat·
ed prices.
Miner Gets Backing
In· 1sse, fringe benefits -in·
eluding vacations, retirement
programs, Jllsurance, unemploy-
ment programs and the like -
accounted for Just 14.6 percent
of a production worker',s total
compensation.
MADISON, W. Va. <AP> -Women have always worked hard
in Appalachia. They have raised the kids, canned the corn and
nursed the injured mining men. Now, in the ever leaner days of the
co•I strike, they are working to survive.
· Edith Burgess, a veteran of nearly 30 years of strikes
and labor strife, is still feeding her family steak and roasts, even
though they have received no food stamps and her husband, Roy,
has not had a paycheck since last December.
By 1974, the percentage had
risen to 23.1, and the trend since
then has certainly brought the
benefit figure to about one-
quarter of a worker's total com-
pensation .
The Burgesses, who have reared four children, said they bad
$5,000 in the bank when the strike began.
• NEW YOAIC IAPl eoiuv..,. 'h '"' -Tiie tGl~lst ComCIH 1Jlli W4 IS 8 Ml...., I• g::1Sl\r 27 211'11 ICll\el Securities "''*'Tel 29 • ~··~~·~ ~~·" 41\\41'-34111 JSI'> 111-anc• a. lnduit.-g-;/ ,. ·~ •I slocta. ross~o 33 23.\lo "'EL 1114 SV. S~ CUltr ..i ~ '" ~rt~ ,:..,, '~"' 8:1'.!t't., 17 ti
J'lr s~ AVMCp 2'h 3 O.t. 100 IO'J'J II A4cllsnW 9<'1 ~ 0.vtM61 21Y> 23VI AtWRos.& n. , .... De< or In ~ ,,..
Adv Mier ti 11'\oO Oct!,~~ 17\lt llYJ Alberts 10 II
!:1c.nT 2SIJ'J U V. ............. 4.77"•~ ,. 1S
"'llcolnc 17\o't 17~ 0.llMB 23 Ul\ ~~r~a 1•\o't "" 09,,..yEI 1~ I~ Al<ur~I 1• 1•YJ Ol.Crys 171!.0 tlV. l V. JV, OlkJICN 23 , .....
AGt'ffl 1~ 11 Oocut•l ~~ AMIUOS 1lYI ll OollrGn lilt. ll'lt • ATvCom «M ""' Ooftlb$ft 12 ,,~ AWeldno IOV. 11V. Oon11Gs 11* 11 Amtone OOyleOB 1~ .. v. 2V.2 ,,.,. °"""'"0 IOV. 10.,., ... ,,.dlt• nit~ Ou•lron 17V, ,..,.,
A1111e<n8 17'!1t 1114 El>erllne ~ s .... "~ ·~ nil ~fr.~f ·~20\lo ArdM•Y '"" 2 ti """ At-WGs 1.VJ 17 Et*1'8e 711> •v. A'4Cola 101/o 21 EleHU<I µi, •VJ AllGMLC U V. I~ EIMoclvl •V. sv. ::~':~~ , .... 1 ~::f..0,-.;J 1'2'4 u ISV. I~ 11/) JI.lo IQMRI 10 IOVJ ee1 11'11 I~ BHl<R~ S'.11 ~ Iii 11111 .~ ....... 8UM11F ,,..., 17V. FalH'IT I .... 1'111 B•YllMk '"" ·~ FldU11U 12._ U"'lt lleellne ""' 7'!. "':t."'' "" 7~ ttrl..eb 27'111 ..... Ft8 S{,s Sol "'"" bl>Co ..... ~ Fltos n U llo 16
lll=n 2' .... ,. Ftt:mri,t I ..... 81'1< 1~ 2i. FtWn In :l\'o ~ llkHlllft ,,..., 22 "11c1<11r ~ IOflo llof\Mla ~ 4 "llWatU ~ 1 811nlt.s 7~ ·~ FcweslO '7~ ~ lrookS tJ 24 FCH"lft~ll 3 3Vi rwTom '""'" "'"'" f ~"' 9rwnl119 '"" FrAnllf ~--m: llu<k-~ ... FrNllce BUCll•ye . '"' GfllllE1t 114 IV. ~= ~ ... Gf>ll-1410 "' MMS2 CW.IEFft tl\'t ""' ~mPt>Cll 7VI • Gr•Cll1 :It >tv. nr-'H ""' 214 ~Mt 12~1~ ~SwCp •Iii .... AO¥ JO J3 (apl11Alr l ,~ Glfl"UI ,,.. ... 15 ~eel\ ·~ 1 avroOyn ' 3:\t 4\4 ~~ "' 1\0 r'P4'ow UV." 1si.1sv. HenfNI .,.,., I"' lA• """JO\>\ ~tdfl 1714 11 ~Vtl " 11¥ Holobm I" 2 ... ~ ~ ...,,,.r tl """ UtA 33'11 ~ Horl.-s .... 1 Cltl\Jt8 lt ""' Hl*P.., tlMiO'b Gl4Wt!JL • .,,. 30 Hy.i:tCp 11~ 1t CldWC. ""',.. Hy•lllnl ~ ...
Is Mrs. Burgess pushing her husband to return to work?
"No, indeed!" she said. "Some women may be pushing their
husbands but I'm not one of them. I want him to get a good ton·
tract."
Over The Counter
NASO Ustincp
fndHu<I , ... J'olo OtlerTP ~20'11 SWG$Cp 1()W 11 Infra Ind l\Ct 2 OWrsAI' s~ 5-14 SWEISv 17V. 11 fJp• and De.,,.. lflt•l<t, .,...,, PCA l11t IO"r 11 st.,.dy11 291~ JO
llllte "' "•bltll '1~27 .... ~=~~s 21y,n v • '"'.,,,, ... ... sv. Pa<GaR 20 ~ 17 11 NEW YORK (API -T,_ folloWl"9 lllit 1n1mlG1 1..-.1 ::::xr S!h •'I• 51.,1st SV. S¥.o 5/IOwS lllt O...r • Ille • Counter lnllkWSh ·~ '"' 10 1~ Str•wCI 211 ,..,.. stoos •l'\d ww..-s lftet haw 90M.., lwaSout 2''h 27 S-.NIEnt '" ...... V~Eebc I I<. llt tr. most - -tM moS1 ~ "" JMnWPr S•t. ~ S-.tetHH 1SV. 11> ~ ~ i:,•un1 ol c~ r~dless of vo•"""• J•"''°J 12'h t3't. P1rlrol/t lJ 34 •co Sell 32.\lt lJV. J 111r,x "" w. Pettll>oft ,, 21 Tampax '7 • ~:::;:r'i'J.s 1r-'i"9 be-Sl Me ln<I·
.Jos '""" I•~ U' PleclA•t , .... TKumP S2 S4 udecl. N•I -percent~ <"-"9t' Ke llw l(elsSU pt 1' """ Piere.SS .. ,. .... TeM•nt 19 ll difference ~ 11'19 PffVIO\ls ctosillQ Kelv•r ,.... '"" Plnkrt11 2311~ 1w. Tltllt'Y 1:P!t t•V. bid prlc. -to0e~·~.st bid prlc•. K•M•ll-'\ 2'\o'J JOI~ PlonHIB IS1'o 1•"-Tlpury IPlt ll't I(·~"' ,,,,4 ~. Pl•1tlme 11·. ,,,,. ToscoCp •V. ... N•-l...a•I Cho Pct. IC•I e ~ n .. P090Pd n1, ,,,, Trn\OcO 1»111' , O.bron 20 . " Op •l • IC•~•m 1 • Pours , .... ,,, TrlcoPd 31 :Jt\l'I 2 To•ul>O .,~ . , ... Up 345 1Ceer11yt 1~11'1• PtoQro .... 1ll.o TrltllOG '" S''o l 8•rnMl9 l•~ . ... Up :uo ~:!!lt!r 2Sl'J 71 PbSvNC HY e 11•• Tv•onFd 10\? ,,,lit • BarnM"" ,.,. • .. Up 2S o 1114 1311, Purlll•n ...... 17 UnMcGll '"' .. s ~cell> ·~· ~ ,.., Up 11.2 Keyt Fib 1~ '6'1• PvtOCap • ••1., ~~ t~~~ I~ 13\'t • lllodt S'• • ~. Up 161 IC.ey<:usF 4 ..... QuaHM~ a ~ UV. IS r AC.-F >'• • '-Uo 1U KeySlllt ,.~ :%rt· S'4 n:. UVaBsh '""~ • FaorlLO • • ~~ Vi> 10 Klftflnl ™ •v. 1' 20 UpPenP 1t"4 20 • RO Prod , • '• Up ,.,
K11epeV t~ll>~ R•ychm 47 .., V•IYGIS 10'4 10'14 10 SonotnVI s·~ • "' Up 1)' UllUln 2311> :r••t. Raymno 11v. 221.4 ll•11Du~n 10 1~ II CovJ':f8 1' • • "" Up 11 s U.n4Rts '"" =~u~p 7'11 • V•11ce5'> S Sii> 12 Netco~l'• • .. Up II 1 Lene Co 11°4 1114 21"-,, ... Velcro t ~ ll llalrdCil i•,. • .. Up 10. UdStw 19V. 20 Robl>My ,,,... 7.l'h VeN8sh "'/) 20'h ,. CompCre i.. • .... Up 10 s Lintiest :r~:rw. Rowron 2"-~ W .. bPt> ~Jl'l&o IS ...Memo UYo ... ,, ... Up tO 2 Looelrn 111> 1\1. ll-" 114 ::t~~: ·~tn. " Brllf\m Ill\ l'lt. + ... Vp 100 MHJGE 141,i. I RusStov ,. ,,,... IS 15><. 17 Con IA« t 'h + .. Up •.r ,,,,_,orRt 1~1 .. 1 SHJllH ?~ '" WQlllW• UVo ISYJ II Fal•t•tf ,,. .. "• Up • s ,,,. ,_,. ,. 29 S<M>Dat '"" 1""
Weldtr,., 1'1't 21'• 19 CL Ast pl t>i . .. Up •• ~Ant ,.,.. 10 SCrlppH :M'h l7\IJ w1r.nM11 '""' .... ?O ,,.,, .. 1 l .. .. Up t I Maul LP 1SV. ,., ~lsOell ·~ J We l•G• .. .,,,, 11 PAR Sys ~ .. .... Up t I Mc Corm 13\i 11\!. SV<mcllr ~31'14 :!~~~?;, ~ >~ n TPC ) • .... lJp t I McQu.y 14 I~ Seven up ,~>•th 37 3111. 23 su.-..... • ... Up •• Nler'CllllV i-fv. Jt.i Sllawmt 27 H Woodl.'11 ~,.., 24 KelclnOll J\o. • .. Up I J MldlWW SolidStS ~\ •\lo WWE11ar ~ .,. 1S NooduCl'I 10 + ~ Up f I Mdl4<:.ap ~ J:\lo SC.IWlr 14'n IS\lo wr1M' 7\olt n~ · ~:res cno • Pct. MldlllH 11·1• IV. Zion t• 27 ,. N-Mldl8U 231/o ""' 1 VI con S'h -I Ott 1S. ::~eJG 21~ 21'• NASDAQ Sununary t FundSY$ ,, .. -"~ Ott u.o mi."~ , EH Int , -"• Ott ti I MonfCol 1'1.~1'\ 4 Forward 21J< '. Otf 10. Moore$ 12 U\IJ NEW YORK IAPl -Mos1 «11"8 _,. s ICw!fel tf' ... -1\li OH ,, Moor9N '"' ut 0-.Counl• s.loclt.t -=I.cl Dy NASO. 6 PhllaRS8 20'.1 -2 Olf ••• ::f.Res 2 , H~e Vol-Allt.ed ChQ, ' f'•Ylg:J, ..... -~ Otf .... ~·It 1m 1s14 Rt11kOr •• O.S..200 4 M6 4 t.16 ..... ~~ 2>/o -v. °'' IJ MolchM 12 ,, De.... .. 02,200 ~ '"' .. l'o • H• -'• g: l.l MotCI~ 6¥. "" 0.yllll .. 111~ 2 f).16 2 ,,..,. • , ••• to Tut ~ -v. l.l ~lier " It Mod..Cpt tl 500 tO IOYt + ~ ,, Petr nt ,.,... -i.Jt OH I.I Nar~ ,,....,.....
CmpCom IJ0,700 tv. l'h -.... 12 Kellst.i 3~. v. Otf 7.t H8t I U V, IS .... ON'<lh .. 111,,6Qll IO ~ +I I) ~·''° 10\'t ~ Otf .. , ~t~ "" IYt T.,.,,pu tOS.400 11 31 + 2\o'r ,. • rC.O J .... "" Off •.7 ~R' S"'• 5\4 811r1onH 1:1,000 I~ 1 S.16 ... ,. IS HunoryT llh ~l<:V.Otf •.r Hwld9RE ~ A". MofluCp • ~ 11"'-llYa • 14 ,. SIH11~ J~ 14 Off :1 NJNGu I~ .. " Mtcllees 7 1 M• 114 +I·,. 11 WI"'' 7\"> ..,, Otf Hi.1111 A 2H'O~ " Crump£ ~ ~ Ol'f '·' ar· 21~ ni. Actv•nc ect ••••.. -:::::. • • • • • • • • 450 ,, Pl,,...,rll 4 :~ ~-' rGs lO'l'lt ... O.CllM<I .................... ,,. l'O Rom Am • S.t 01 un •14 4'14 IJncJWl>Oed • •• • .. • • • • • • • .. • • ,. 21 z-wt ' u NMNG~ 'IO'A ~ n NoSt&qt ... -: g:f :t:f:$ ft MV. totwl lu.-.. .. .. . .. .... . . • .. .• UJ: 23 M<>nuE11 2"' -, .. ,~,... New lllOhS ..................... 14 Bk Tr-• \I) g; • t,J """low~...................... 17 gri1vvM -r Uy, Tol•I Hies ....... •• • .. ..... . .. 10,11$,JOll u NI0.1.C 1\tl -~ 1.l "'-'"
MUTUAL FUND~
':"
'
.v
STOCKS/ BUSINESS
Tbureday's
Cloaing Priee8 NYSE
ThUT'lday, March 9, 1978 l/N DAILY PILOT •f
Airlines Cater-~ • . •
To· Diet Needs
' ' By SYLVIA POlt'l'D ._ .. , •
Do you pride )'OUnell on f amillartty with exotic f~ ! !1
What r&taurant will prepare a l1ct.c).1)vo verttU&• 1
Then try this qukk qul1: I'
meal? Wb~ can you cet kosher met ol aolef KOIMr ;
curry? Wbo serves chicken chNMUr? ~ can 1"11 ,
select from a.O.menu variation? 1 ·~ ,!
DID YOU GUESs A FAMO\JS restaurant In Stockbq{~ 11 for the veaetarian meal? Wronc. You can request a lact0-1·
e>vo meal before you boafd Tram World Alr~ea. •·
A Delhi hideaway for the cW,.,.7 No. KOiber CWTY la '·
served on Air India an~ kosher met of sole ls available:, :j
from American Airlines on request two wM.ks beCore yaur ~ rueht. .•
Chicken ch.alhur at an upper Easblde bistro ln 'Ntw ::
York? Probably -but tt'a a1ao avaUabJe on special ordd ;
from Onlted Airlines u part ol lta Weight Watchers lunch. • •
The menu with 40 variations? Scandinavian AirlbSd ~t
can produce 40 special -<
request ~eta wjth ad· · ·!I
vance DOlioe. M 'a :•
Deliberately un-Ol1ey e ;·
heralded. air carriers w:-....ah
serve thousands or "''
special meals annually '
to passen&ers whose re· ------"'
Uglous requirements or diets dictate them.
. :1 .. . ..
YOU CAN GET SOUL l'OOD with tobasco sauce on ~
quest from United; a special low-cholesterol menu lf yo" .
travel American; a special bland meal if you travel TWA.. •• i
What•s more, despite the medical restrictions that , •
govern the preparation of many or the meo95, airline food •
experts generally make them appealing. •!
TWA tallied ptssenger reaction to sr.cial-request 1
diets served to 19,000 passengers last Auiua and received . •
only 102 complaints, report.a Burt Kenyon, spokesman tor
the airline's rood and beverage planning. ~
MOSI' POPULAR OF THE special meals is koshtr ~ 1
food, accountine for nearly half the requests. United 1
servea close to 50,000 kosher meals a year; TWA recently :;
added roast turkey to its traditional kosher menu entree of ·:
brisket of beef. A favorite breakfast on TWA is kosher, '-i
consisting of cheese blintzes with cherry sauce or pan· ;,
cake1 with blueberry sauce. American has four kosher .Jo
menus for first class and coach that rotate every three ~
months. El Al serves only kosher food.
Such special amenities as a wedding or birthday cab ~
are frequently available if requested in advance. ~
Sky Chef, a subsidiary of Americn an Airlines, pre-
pares meals for 33 other airlines. United has 19 kitchens, ~
producing the bulk of its own meals. So does TWA.
SOME SPECIAL REQUFSl'S WON'T be approved ...
TWA .refused a request for small meat balb -: for a :
parakeet. Pan Am nixed a request from an economy-class ~:
passenger who said his physician insisted his diet include a ::
lot of caviar. Pan Am recommended fish. ::
A key to special diets is advance notice. You can order ::
most popular special meals by requesting them four hours :2
in advance of night time. Less popular meals can requi('e ~
24 hours. _ :•
Passengers from the West Coast order more special :l
diets in the low-calorie and vesetarlan category than their :1
Eastern counterparts, according to TWA. • 1
While ,the airlines are under no legal obllfation to :?
serve special foods, they seldom fail to follow through on a ••
reasonable req~t. · ~. !?
Internal Factors
Aid Another Gain
·' • ' :f .,
' ' . •
NEW YORK (AP> -The stock market staged a small
and en-alic advance today, struggling lo extend its recent:
technical upswing despite some negative innaUon news. :
The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials was down 0.81: poin~s to 7S0.00 after an adnnce of 8.lS points the last two:
t
sessions. • •
Gainers held a 7-4 lead over losers in the broad tally Qf Ji
New York Stock Exchange.listed issues. ,•'
Anaty,ts have attributed the market's recent stren~
to technical forces after the sharp decline or January and
February, when the Dow fell 89 points.
•'The market apparently found support at around tht
740 level oC the Dow,'' said Newton Zlnder at E. F. Hutton
&Co.
si~iu ,,. .,.~
Spodlgltf DoWJlone•Ar•r~·
N~..,l"INl~tt«-s
STOCIC$ NEW V09'1C IAPI· ~ .... 4 p .. m. pric• ODeft ..._ .._ 0.. 0. -,,.t dllfl9t Of «tie 111'-'I ,,_, .cllv• JO 1114 )SU) 1SJ.• 1•.'5 UO • .._ o.-J Hew Yerll S!odl EJc.1111.... INWS, 20 Tm ... 201,06 ...... ""·n -o.a ttHlnt M!'-lly e\ ,_. .,_ •t. 15 Utt lOS.• 106.0t 10"91 IO!l 62+ 0.11 ~!..~T •.•.t .... ·.·.·.·.· e= !!~ ·.··;.;: 6l Siio. lU,_ 2'A.10 2'1.4' l6LQ-O.lS """'' -·, ,.. 111<1<11 .... • •• •• • • •• •••• •• •• • 1,1u,-H•~ • . .. • • • • 200 , ..... + 41.; Tr Of\ • • • . • • . . • . . • .. . . . .. .• . 411,ao ....... • . ••.•. .•• t«J ... JJ\.'f -.... UUI~ •• ••••• .••••••• .... ••• _ ..... "). Xerox C11........ 117.JCIO C2"'° + Vo .S 50. .. ••• .. • . • • • • • • • . • • • . .. ~
lllM •• ••••••••• 111,100 lM .... -H'o .--------------.-. W"totl £1. ••• ••• 16t,* 17 -Ml S.•rt1'• .... .. . . ,..... 24\1.1 -14 En9" ......... tU~ 44 -14
o..CMm . . . . . . 15'.. ""' • Yo ""' Alrtln. ... .. .. ,.,,. ..... -.... St~r•IMh....... 14',lOt ~ • ~ Al ............ 1~ ""'° .... . • •• KtMll,.... us.• ~ -~ O<ilf 011....... •• 1M... 24141 + la
What Stoc-k# Did
HEW VOfllt; CAP)
U~IS
HIW VIAi( (API ·NY SIO(• ~ ~~'=.. ·::::::::::::::::. ~~== w..~ eto .................. ,. • 20.ao;oo. _, ......................... o ... . Yeff 690 • ••• • •• . .. . .. •• . • •• • • 11,Alll,WO '-~-··············· 21~.-J~ 1 111 o.te . ..• ....... .... "9,Ut.! ttn , .................... t.m,ott. .. ,. t. -.. .. .. .. . . .. . . . 1..1'1,111),
WMAT AMEIC 010
NEW YOltlC IAPJ
1111 DAILY PILOT L/sC Thursd.P. March 9, f 978
'I t Was lJp t o H ere'
Mary Harrigan of 850 Camino de los
Mares, San Clemente, points to the spot
on her garage door where flood waters
r eached duri.ng last week's heavy rains.
United Way
Project Needs
Volumeers
Volunteers are being sought
for a major social needs assess-
ment study sponsored by the
OranJte County North-South
United Way.
The project will benefit exist·
ing and future social service
needs in four areas of the south
county, including Irvine, Sad·
dleback Valley, the Laguna
B~ach area and the Capistrano
Valley.
-VOLUNTEERS AR E needed
to conduct the population sur·
vey. with two-man volunteer
teams conducting 10 t.o 12 in-
tm-views in their areas.
!Capistrano Valley committee
chirman Ollie Harris said the
sarvey approach has never
before been attempted in the
Utited States, but cannot be suc· c ssful without the help of stu·
d nts. retirees, senior citizens
and housewives to volunteer
some lime to the study.
The first forum for volunteers .J11 be held Tuesday at Dana
HJlls High ~hool for residents of
l4aguna Niguel, San Juan
c;ap is tr a no, Dan a Point,
Capistrano Beach and San
~emente. The workshop will be
held from 3 :30 to 6 p.m.
sTHE IRVINE AR EA forum
will be held April 3 at several
schools in that city. Volunteer
wor~shops for Laguna and Sad·
d)e back areas have not been set
u_p to date.
To volunteer your services or
for more information , call
Ronald Hukill at 770·2856 or
634-2252.
Nursirig Grad
Bites Slate d
At Saddlehack
tigbteen Saddleback College
student nurses will eraduate
during noon ceremorues Sunday
In t he campus FJne Arts
Theatre.
Graduates will be given
'°8cial plna marking completion
of the college's registered nurs-
ing program and ellJibility for
the State Board Exam.
The Oranp Coast graduates
are;· Kat hleen An n Grose,
Johanna E. Harding and Saan.
Eileen Smith of Dana POhlt;
Renee ~ Nielers of El
Toro; Loretta Louise Brundage,
Valerte Saal Edwards and Hollie
Lynn WUlls Of Irvine, and Nancy / Louise Bl'Olt of Lal\ID• Beach
AJ•o. Teri Bretton of L•IUDa Bills, Dor~ McGre.aor of'
Laguna. Nl~; Claudla Poirier
ol MlsslOft \1ejo· Sau LoW.Je
Knock of San Clemente, and' JUdJ Carol Jeonm,. ot SAD Juan
Cai>lslr1DO.
SaddlebaCk Arts
CompleX Rites Set
Dedication ceremonies and a classical concert will herald the
opening of Saddleback College's $3.7 million Fine Arts Complex on
Sunday.
Tours of the art, music, speech and theater wings of the center
will be conducted beginning at 6 p.m. in the fine arts courtyard.
TUE DEDICATION will begin
at 7 p.m. followed by the col·
lcge's concert chorale and sym-
phony orchestra performing the
Puccini Mass, "Messa Di
Gloria," and Beethoven's Triple
Concerto.
Admission to the concert is
free. However, reserved seat
tickets are required and may be
obtained in the fine arts box of. fice.
A reception in the courtyard
will close the activities.
MONTE LABONTE, director
of the Fine Art$ Division, said
the complex is potentially "a
center for the performing and
visual arts not only in southern
Orange County but also for the
greater Orange County and Los
Angeles area as well.''
He said the uniqueness of the
complex is what is unique about
the fine arts division .
•'There is an intermixing of
the d\sciplines, where people get
toJ(ether and cross the dis-ciplines in working as a total
unit," be ~xplained.
TICKETS FOR THE dedicta·
lion activiti~ may be obtained
in the college box office between
8 a .m. and S p.m. Monday
through Friday and from 5 to 7
p.m. Monday through Thursday.
Information may be obtained
by calling the box oHice at
831-7414 or 495-2790.
Slae'U~e
Bree Alexander, 19, of San-
ta Ana, a junior at UC
Irvine, will be one of 50
competitors for title qt
Callforgia Ci~rus Queen
Mal'ch 30 at National Orange Shpw in Sa~ Bernardino. ·
Trustee Plans
Lecture on
Govenunent
Robert Price, Saddleback
Community College trustee, is
scheduled to address the Orange
Coast League of Women Voters
on local government in the Sad·
dleback area Monday at 9:30
a.m . at Lincoln Savings & Loan,
23601 Moulton Parkway, Laguna
Hills.
Price, former president of the
Saddleback Area Coordinating
Council <SACC>, is to discuss bia
position on future incorporation
for Saddleback Valley, said
chairman Norma Sharp.
Sb.e said the league has com·
pleted a report on the study of
government and services in the
valley and is conte mplating
studying the benefits and
drawbacks of incorporation.
The public is invited. ,
Sunday Lawn
Bowling S et
The Newport Harbor Lawn
Bowling Club will begin otrering
Sunday bowling for the first
time in its 40-year history belin~ ·
ning at 2 p.m. March 19.
The club will stage an open,
house throughout the afternoon
featuring exf\ibit games, in·
struction for prospective players
and refreshments.
The bowling greens pre locat·
ed in the San Joaquin Hills
Park, one block east of Roger's
Garde.Jl.S in Corona del Mar.
OCC S11mmer
Session Set
' Ree\stration materials fi>r
Orange Coast College's \978
'urqmer sessjon are available In
OCC's admi&aions ottice. .
The session, ~ich will offer
approximately 450 different
classes, is 1cheduled to run .June
19·AU1. ll.
Persons '*'e11rollri at OCC
may p i cit QP .re1l~ttatton
mat•rlala at the ad,Jnlsak>n• ot-'
fice ~ May at. Re~
Uon a~rneau will be m•Ued
June 2, and re"8traUon will be
conducted oo a n appoh)t~l
baafs.June 1a tbri:Maah l ..
,
LOCAL
Computer lnva~ion
8~==~7:~!~:.u:.~~:!:::?~. cw ... o.t.,,........., clded against IBM in favor of a ment has also taken ste8-lo re-As computers eet sdlaller and Rhode Island corporation that gulate the nation's co~uter i.b·
smaller -and more affordable purchased a computer system dustry.
to a v< amount of ~mall busi· from the massive, multi· nesses -consumer rights could national conglomerate. Schwarutein cited an antJ,,;
su.ffer from potential co!D~uter • 'That kind of a case has trust case aialnst IB)( med in ~rrors, an attorney s~caalizing caused great concern ln the in· New York.
tn comp':'te.r law said in San dustry," he explained. "Buyers The case, which involves ex·
Juan Capistrano. will apparently tlot sit back and tremely complex testimony and,
"We are talking about a whole be abused as they have done exhibits, is expected to take•
new ball game," Rt.chard before." year~. · Scbwarzstein told a Capistrano
Valley Exchange Club meeting.
"Years ago a businessman
would think of a small manual
adding machine to belp his book-
keeping. .
"NOW THAT BUSINESSMAN
is thinking of a lease/purchase
program where he can afford his
own computer.''
And that increases the poten-
tial for invasion of the public's
, privacy.
"By digesting great amounts
of information, they <com ·
puters) can watch you all
along," the Newport Beach at.
torney said. •;computers are
working their way into our lives
completely.
•'There is a possibility for
abuse."
SCHWAllZSHIN SAID,
however, the government is talc·
ing steps to protect the con·
sutrler.
"There are limits now about
what the government can fJ.nd
out about you," he said, citing
recent privacy legislation that
affected computer records.
And be cited the Federal Fair
Credit Billing Act as enabling
consumers to examine their
credit ratings through a written
request.
BUT THE Nl'ENTIAL pro-
blems of a computer-oriented
society don't involve the con·
s umer only.
Scbwarzstei.lt said many small
businesses face problems grow-
ing out o{ dealing with a product
of which they'r e not very
knowledgeable.
"Despite th~ claims of com•
puter manufacturers, the in·
stallation of a computer is a
very trying process," · ht said.
"Probably there are no two
companies tbat are exactly
alike.
., AND FREQUENTLY THE
representation and fine print on
the contract aren't exactly what
you expected," he continued.
"The courts are filled these days
with cases that are showing
greater sympathy for the com·
puter users."
'Needs' Topic ·: ,,
·Capo Valley Meet Planned ..
" ..
• Human needs in the Capistrano Valley area is the topic ot a ~
community meeting sponsored Tuesday by the United Way of •
Orange County at 3:30 p.m. at Dana HJUs HJth School. "
Residents will be asked to join one of three discussion 111 gro~ps .~aling with community needs of youth, adults "1d ' senior citizens. "
A similar meeting is scheduled for Irtine, the Laguna area
and Saddleback Valley, however dates and Umes for these bave not been announced.
Volunteers are also needed to assist .in conduct.ina a popula·
lion survey on area needs. Interested people may call e:M-2252
or 770·2856~
ii
It
' ~,
Ba~am AppOintments
• .
.
Three From Coast ··
Get Academy Nods
Three Orange Coast men have been offered ap1>0intmenta by tbe
Air Force Academy at Colorado Springs for the school year beain·
ning in July, according to Rep. Robert E. Badbam, R·NewpoJl Beach. ·
They are Devin Bower, 26692 Valparaiso Drive, Mission Viejo;
Christopher P . Russick. 2801 E.
El Camino Real, San Clemente,
l\D d Eric T . Slake, 2014
Pbalarope Court, Costa Mesa.
T H EY WERE AMONG 20
young persons nominated by
Badham.
Bower, the son of Mr. and
Mrs. William P . Bower, attends
Mission Viejo High School where
be bas been a member of the
varsity football and track
teams.
llUSSICK IS mE son of Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Russick and at·
tends San Clemente High School,
where be is active in varsity
football and baseball.
Stake attends Estancia High
School and is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Roy T. Stake. He is an
Eagle Scout and plays in the
school band.
Exercise Program
Planned by YMCA
A six-week exercise program
for people with back problems
will begin at 7 p.m. Monday at
the Orange Coast YMCA.
The class meets Mondays and
Thursdays for one hour. For in·
formation on registration call
642-9990.
....
•
Do you have time to
listen to Walterread?
In 15 mlnutea the average person can read to himself
3,750 worda. You probably read faster.
·~
In 1 S minutes the average new• broadcaster on radio or
teliVl•lon reads only haH ••.many words.
That means you get a tot more Information In leu ttme
by reeding a newspapar than by watching someone read the
MW9to you.
El
. I
I
i .
• f
11 .
\
,
,
I NS.IDE: •Television •Ann Landers
itEntertalnment •Horoscope
Ttnirsday. Ma.rch 9, 1978 OAILV PILOT
That Golden Voice
His name is Sterling Holloway, but you're more likely to
remember his voice ~ Flower in 'Bambi,' as Winnie
the Pooh, or as the stork in 'Dumbo'.
By DENNIS McLELLAN
Of ... o.lly ...... IUff
At the recent Community . and Americana
A warda Night . at C!/Pf'ess College claaracter actor
Sterling Hollotoay was escorted to the stage by hu .wn RU:k to accept the award. .
An outpouring of love in the form of o standing
ovation grttted the 73-year-old whose /amilJar voice
brought Winnie the Pooh and a menagene of other
cartoon character& to life.
"I tba{&k you Jrom the bottom of my heart and
pacemaker," Holloway told the C11dience.
lt ~Ilia flrit pt.ibltc oJ>pea~e 3ince a year·
long ho3Pital stay. It tDa$ abo the flrst time he was
able to wear a new velvet suit.
"You may come feel it later," he joked. "I'm so
glad to be wearing it vertically."
* * *
Several weeks later a nurse greeted a vis·
itor to the hilltop South Laguna home Holloway
designed 14 years ago to get away from the bus·
tie of Hollywood.
ALTHOUGH HE IS feeling stronger than
ever, be tires easily and requires a nurse
around the clock. And, whiie he plans to visit
New York in May, it will be months before be is
feeling up lo par.
But the actor was in good spirits this after·
noon as he sat in his Ii ving room reminiscing
about his career, one which spans more than SO years.
Stepping down into the living room -a
spacious room with a hardwood floor and high
wood-beamed ceiling-is like entering an art
gallery. An avid collector, Holloway has filled
the white walls with large colorful paintings by
Lichtenstein, Stella, Appel and others.
Competing with the artwork for attention
are large picture windows which frame a
breathtaking view of the ocean and miles of
coastline far below. .
While it was built in the early '60s, the one·
bedroom split level house is still decades ahead
of its time. It has, in fact, won numerous
architectural design awards.
"I WANTED TO be high up, have space
around me and have a view," said Holloway,
seated on a large white sectional sora, accented
with a dozen red, yellow and blue throw pillows.
"I looked up and down the coast. But some
friends of mine were down here and I liked the
looks of it. The coastline is beautiful. It's like
Italy a little bit."
Holloway's shock of brilliant orange hair is
toned down with gray, but his eyes are clear
and blue and his complexion pink. He looked
comfortable wearing a cardigan sweater and
moccasins. A pre-Columbian beaded nedclace-
one of many necklaces he owns -hung around
his neck.
While his son slept in another room and the
·nurse read a paperback book at the kitchen
table, Holloway talked.
He said he will visit New York where be has
an apartment "just to be there. The doctor says
I can go if I take the two nurses."
.. ·
. • •
Delly f'llM,.,...., ..... ,._
Sterling Holloway: 'I wouldn't quite know what to say about it', he says ot his voice.
He described receiving his recent award as
"very nice. I wondered why, but I appreciated
it. It was kind of fun to be in front of an au-
dience again and both nurses wanted to go, so
we all went."
ONCE NEWS LEAKED out that the actor
had.been admitted to nearby South Coast Com·
munity Hospital aft.er suffering chest pains, be
was deluged with letters from fans.
Even Jimmy Carter called to wi~ him
well. The president revealed that Amy ii a big
Holloway fan and has al\ of his records.
Holloway laughed. "I saw (cartoonist) In·
terlandi the other day and said, 'Yo!J lay off
Carter; he's my friend."'
Before his heart surgery Holloway was "do·
ing commercials every now and then. but I
don't do movies anymore.''
<See VOICE, Page C3)
Holloway's voices have included, from left, Amos in 'Ben and Me', the stork in 'Dumbo', Pablo in 7he Three Caballeros', Rpquefort in 'Aristocats', Rower irt 'Bambi',
and, above, The Cheshire Cat in. 'Alice in Wonderland:
.•
By Cheryl Romo
(2 DAIL V PILOT Thursday, March 9. 1978 ANNLANOERS/ERMABOMBECK
.Teen Sad About
I f
Kurt Lautenschlager demonstrates early music development to class.
Music Man
A series of music enrichment pro-
grams is helping fourth-grade students
of Turtle Rock and Bonita Canyon
elementary schools and third grade stu·
dents at Harbor Day School become ap-
preciative listeners to various types of
music.
The program is coordinated by the
Irvine Philharmonic Committee, which
Club Calendar rons each Wednes·
day in the Daily Pilot and contains
notices of women's and service club
meetings and events for the follow-
mg week -Thursday through Wed·
is part of the Orange County
Philharmonic Society. Mrs. Eldon
Hauck is chairman.
Upcoming programs include an in-
troduction to folk music on Monday.
March 13; a vocal demonstration by
Juilliard graduate Lenore Silby on Fri·
day, March 31 ; and a discussion and
demonstration by the University High
nesday Send nctices to Club Calen·
dar, Dally Pilot, P.O. Bor ISfiJ.
Costa Mesa. CA 92626 . Be sure to rn·
elude your name and phone number.
Noti.ces must be in our hands two
School band led by director Larry
Granger on Friday. April 14.
'the programs are designed to
stimulate interest in existing music pro-
grams in the schools and prepare pupils
for the Youth Concert Program offered
them in the fifth and slxth grades. More
information is available from Mrs.
Frank Siler, 551-6373.
weeks in advance.
To re~st a ptcture, wnte or call
the Features Depar1ment. 642-4321.
Pictures are limited to /und-r01Sers
open to the public.
Study Sees Security Problems
WASIIlNGTON CAP) -A govern-
ment task force says the Social
Security law treats men and
women differently and favors
families where the husband works
and the wife keeps house.
The task force, headed by Social
Security Commissioner Don I.
Wortman, reached no conclusions
on how to solve these problems and
called for further study.
The retirement system entitles a
spouse to an extra SO percent of her
husband's benefit. whether she
worked or not.
But if the woman worked and
paid Social Security taxes, her
benefits frequently are less than the so percent spouse's benefit she
would get anyway.
The task·force also said, "Many
consider it unfair that benefits can
be lower for two-earner couples
than for one-earner couples with the
same average lifetime earnings."
For instance, a working couple
who retired and has earned $6,000
each would be entitled to benefits of
$3,173 apiece,or$3,346togethcr.
But a couple with only one wage
e arner who made $12,000 would get
benefits of $7,640 a year.
Meanwhile, the Social Security
Administration is proposing regula-
tions to determine how much a
person's age, education and work
e xperience should count in deciding
whe.ther he qualifies for disability
ben~its.
The .administration said 75 per-
cent of the disability cases are re-
solved solely on the basis of
medical considerations.
Housewives Saw Winter First
With all due respect to
the long.range weather
forecasters, I'm always
interested ln what the
naturalists predict in re·
gard to the weather.
on the way. besides, we rarely used
This is the year we tbe fireplace as it
cleaned out the freezer smoked up the bricks.
-,ieavlng only three This is the year we put
snowballs from 1971, the sleds up lD the attic
five packages of squash -on the far side where
which everyone hates. there ls no floor and you
and 12 packages of have to crawl through
chicken innards to be the insulation and put
thrown away on garbage the rope in your teeth
.
Parental Praise
, ' . .
DEAlt ANN
LANDERS: l've read a
lot lately about how un·
grateful kids are. 1
wonder if some of the
parenta who read your
column will see
themselves in a little dif·
ferent light after they
have answered these
questions:
A•• Lallders
When was the last
time you spent an hour
with your child -doing
what be wanted?
teenagers out there who
are in the s.ame boat. -
NOT SOUR, JUST SAD
~hat he has in mind. If
so, how? -F.S. IN W.I.
DEAR F .S.: Cross
talk ls always dangerous
-eapttlally when deal·
log wllb lovers. If tbe
man ls planning to drop
your friend, she'll get
the message soon
enouah. S&ay out of It.
When was the last
time you said to your
child, ''You did a great
job, rm proud or you! ..
When did yoa last say,
"Let's talk about
anything you want to
talk about. I'll listen and
answer all your ques-
tions if I can.'•
DEAR SAD: Tbankl
for writing. l 'U bet this
ls one column tbat will
be b~nded to lots of
parenta who have been
polntlDg oat certain let·
ters for Uaetr teenagers
to read. So be IL We can
all learn from each
other.
CONFIDENTIAL to
Depressed: Buy the
paperback book ShYMSS,
by Phil Zimbardo. It
will do you a world of
good. J. When was the last
lime you said, "I'm
sorry," or "I made a
mistake."
How long has it been
since you said, "I trust
you. I know you have
good judgment and will
do the right thing.''
I'm a 16-year-old girl
. and I've never heard
one of these statements
from either of my
parents. I know more
about raising kids right
now than they do. I'll bet
there are plenty . of
DEAR ANN
LANDERS: A very
close friend or mine is
involved with a man she
Is counting on to marry
her. The problem is he
has informed me that he
has no such intentions.
The truth of the matter
is, he plans lo break off
with her gradually and
then have a relationship
with me.
' Wedding and engog~
mmt onnouncemtnu ru6 ·
on Sunday in the Doilfl(,
Pilot. F'omu ore avoUobfr."
at all Daily Pilot of lien o~.
by calling the Feature4:.
Depanment,642·4321 .• , 1'
Engagement annotince>. -
ments, with black·ancf.. ·
white glru&y of the fvtur~ :
bride OT the couple, musf ·
be received by the ·
Features Depart~ six '
Wf!ek.$ before the wedding
date. ~
I have never led this
man to believe I have
any interest in him
whatsoever, so help me.
Now I need to know if I
should tell my friend
•• .Solo
(From Page CU
ting involved with the world. Com·
municate with others by asking
them questions that require more
than just a "yes" or a "no"
answer.
Saturday night I watched an old
Humphrey Bogart movie and went
to sleep stlll feeling sorry for
myself. By Sunday morning the
rain had stopped and my dog and I
went out on the beach to watch a
spectacular sunrise. We went run-
ning and I worked off a lot of ex·
cess energy (physical exercise js
an import.ant part of emotional re·
covery).
Then an old friend called and
asked me to go tlylng and I re·
alized that even though I have
neglected m~ friends for a while
-they're stin there. Up in the air,
we flew high above the menacing
gray storm cfouds and rose to
view the majestic white cumulus.
I sat in awe of the incredible beau·
ty. There wasstiU hope, after all.
Later, I drove along Uie coast to
Laguna and stopped ln to see a
friend I hadn't see in months. I
found him radiant and excited. He
confided he had linally, after
seven years of searching for the
right woman, fallen in love. My
happlness for him was such that I
couldn't help smiling and feeling
alive agaJn.
Monday morning the sun came
up clean and fresh. Once again l
was moving in time with the uni-
verse. I had passed through all
the stages of accepting the good·
bye and survived. Someday I've
just got to ask Paul Simon about
those 49 other ways.
Soloizing
and men bring wine or son drinks.
Admission is SO cents. For in-
formation call 552·8899 or 640-2496.
BALBOA SKI CLUB: A trip \o
Mam moth Mountain is being
planned for March 24, 25 and 26
<Easter weekend) and another one
is scheduled for April 7. 8 and 9.
C,all the answering service for de·
tails at 646-4871.
ORANGE COAST SINGLES: A
wine and cheese party will be held ,
at the home of Anne Bragg in HW\.·
tington Beach beginning al 5 p.m ..
Sunday, March 12. Call Anne at
846-0432.
A St. Patrick's Day celebrawm
will begin at 8 p.m., FnQ'ay,
March 17, at the Santa Ana t.ome -
of Ruth Stiers. Call Rull& at
979-3191 for Information. Or4Jtge
Coast Singles is for single pe~oos
over 39.
SINGLES ONLY: The ~~·ca.
ington Beach Community Ci\s sponsoring .a discussion gr~ r
singles between the ages of 25'
40. This week's topic will
"Alcohol, Drugs and Behavii· ' beginning at 7 p.m., Frid ,
March 10. Next week's discuss
will be on cancer detection. For~
form a tlon, call the clinic ~t
536-8333. '.j ·.c
WE CARE: A non-sectarian si· · port and social group for sin
persons. Meetings begin at _ 7
p.m . each Sunday evening at
Newport Harbor Lutheran Chu~,
corner or Dover and 16th Str~.
Newport Beach. . :-,~
NEWPORT SINGLES: Singles
over 35, affiliated with the Harbor
Reform Temple. Call Sylvia at
645-4701 or Jack at 552·0119 for in-
formation.
This year, they all hit
it right on the button.
They knew back in early
December Ural this
winter was going to be
wet and rotten because:
. day ... someday. and slide, lt caref\lllY
caterpillars had heavy previous ones. I knew it This is the year we got along the beam before,
coats. was goine to be a the puppy, rationalizing you fall through the
SAFARI SINGLES: Planning
Thanksgiving trip to Puerto
Vallarta at 7:30 p.m., Saturday,
March U at the University Park
CommlBlity Club House in Irvine.
For information, call Betty O'Don·
nell at 552-9720. Age range: 40
Soloizing for Singles calendar rum eacPl Thursday in the Dmly
Pilot arad contains nctices oJ OC·
tivtHei /OT singles for the /ollottnng
~•le -Friday through Thurtday.
Send notices to Cheryl Romo, Daily
Pilot. P.O. Bor ISfiJ, Costa MeSCJ,
92626. Be tuTe to include yoUT name.
addreu and phone numb.In'. <Notices
mu.st be fn our hands two weeb In
advance.
The elk and deer came
down early from the
blgh country.
Mud-dauber wasps
were buildinl their nests
higher.
Skunk nbbales grew
taller.
W o o 11 y · be a r
Bears were fat. bruiser because: that we could watch him floor. •
Sq u i r re Is had Tbls ia the year eight when be started to t~l Yep, no doubt about It.
ravenous a_p_petlt'es in pairs of boots ln our around ln a circle., o-ab When our 72-year-old
the /all. t bouae didn't match one blm and put bim out· mllkman got ne~ teeth
They should bave plll r of fe·et. J h la ·side. and began to look more
asked housewives. They phenomenon occu.rs'only This is tbe year we like Robert Redford
alao have an inside ooce in every 72 years didn't b~y firewood, every d&)\ we knew It
track on bow the winter and can only mean that because ·we figured L\ was going to be a cold
la going to compare with blizzard conditions are was too expensive and winter.
through 60. •
ACLU SINGLES: A social even-
ing will be held in Newport Beach
al 8 p.m., Thursday, >farch 16.
Women bring cheese and crackers
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Our professionally tralM,d therapists specialize In the control of acne and in the teaching of
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The produci• uMd In our.C~ters h.v• bHn endorsed by the following: ~
Karen M. Kiruh say~·
"'or tM pe\I few """· my lklll .. H l11CAHl1'9IY bKOft\1119-.I-br ... 1119 out more, end,,.""" 91111119 ~ .nci ,._,, I lrltd to.tp\, la<i.ls, pins
91'41 cllet te ,,., end ~H tfllt llo"lbl• defonNtklft e4 mv
fKe, •II ..... *P"t
I wos bt<omlne l'IOlluably Mlf conscious ••Ill my •P. pe"'"''· tni"9 to ltOWff II up wllll m.Kt~ .ild klel>-lflt my hol r Close to my feet.
MY r-"llY Olld frleftdl .. l<lltd "" w1tlldr.w ,_.. ind mof'e lrohl my UWli pef_.llly. Tolkl119 IO me .OOUI II
only~, ........ ''"''"°of dtfoet.
Ofl the rteOnll'l'e ... lolt .. • lf'iel'ld, I deddld tMt ,.OClll119 COUid lie .. to,...._ l'l\Y Sltlll, to I ~1111\tod
to Wit lreMl!'flMa.' I -*' to,_. -r..w~ olttf tllt first tlNtlNlll1 .... I llttlOll .. IMftk 111111 I Qlllid ttt rid ot tllll-"'°"«\IWI"• 'l'N tnt~~ _.. ... ., °"' iwlte ,.i111-. hi feet .. .,.,. ,. .. .,flt,
I •••• .,. ........ "' tM '"''"' .... II Ind tn foci WH or.w Of ""'.,.....: r•w -..., t~•IY ~ -'° conlfOI l'l'IY • .,._ l«t". wMdt .. llMClth. eo'\ IM
11111vOllY llton;.rt I,_., l'"' OlitfOI" ... Ill~ I ~ ltlk ~ II l'IOW WI\'*' t'ftlflt ~. • :.:
C11l '°' tnformltlon TODAY Alltt u•lllO y_. OftdU(.l IW tlWW IMlllM. '-=8 ll'l\PfOW!Mflt IO CllWlllU IN ""1 Y.-.,__. Or."-Y M.. •
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As o pNftMIOnOI 1111ne -111111 wllll • '4atlc ~ lltvt rtcM41"*._..._ ~te~lefttl.._C_
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'· • -...
HOROSCOPE
j•
. ,•
-:.·
:·
' L . •'
Holloway
was also
the voice
of Winnie
the Pooh.
... . .
e
SOt!rUCOAST
ACTORS CO.() P
.tllw•vs -dllng !Of' MW l•lenl
of •II •o•s·hPU. Poulbte
emplovm•"' '" Th••I••· Fiims· TtlevtslM·Co"lmtrclat s
orE111rn. (714) 957.0282
[ __ H._o_r_o_s_c_~_p_e___,) • • • Voiee
._ 'l"'•,
Jti f ..
~··
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY
WlllaY•W.t ........
FRIDAY, MARCH lG
By SYDNEY OMARR
vious, try to start a
rumor factory -with
you a central target .
LEO (July 23-Aug .
lt22 Hst.or ll•d..
cost • ..._ -sca.02st
ARIES (March 21· 22): Obtain hint from
April 19): Elements of Cancer message. Don't
luck, timing, popularity take motives of others
ride with you. Moon in for granted. Some
y our s ign , p Ju s around you are re-
.
Does your
group
numerical factors, point sentful, tbough they
to success, broadening grant you grudging ad·
of vision and outlook, r e-miration.
sumption of cash flow. VlllGO (Aug. 23-Sept.
TAURUS (April 20· 22): Breakthrough in-
May 20): Check details, dica ted. Mystery is
be aware of behi nd solved. Money situation
scenes activity, be dis-is clarified -involves
creet , but also let others partner, mate. Cancer.
kn o w you a r e n ot Capricorn figure prom-
without allies. i n e n t I y . B r i n g
GE MINI (May 21 · priorities into sharp, need to raise J ~ne 2~) lligh.li gh t clear focus.
fr1endsh1p, romantic de· LIBRA <Sept. 23-0 ct funds? is ires, r.utfillment or 22): Emphasis on con-
hopes, wishes. One who s umm a tion of deal ,
lf~ournon·proflt is a rticulate aids you in s pecial arrangement,
organization needs r esolving traumatic a g re em e o t
help raising funds, situation. partnership and mar-
call Huntington Center CANCER (June 21 · riage. Don't force is-
and ask us to mail July 22): Climb to a sues. Lie low. Observe ~~:=~~,~=: more elevated ~ilio!l· signals, hints, subtJe in-
Fair) detalls. Accent on. standing m nueodoes.
Phone897-2533 community. Some SCORPIO (Oct. 23· ~~~~~~~~~~~~p~e~r~s~o~n~s~,~w~b~o~a~r~~~e~n~-Nov. 21): Good lunar ~ as pe ct coincides now
with work ~hie, health, _
unique services, depen-
de nts. Leo, Aquarius
fi gure prominently as
you gain opportunity for
new starts in new direc· ~jiii~~~~~~~~~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiii~~tions. • ~ SAGITl'ARIUS (Nov.
Steve
Handler
-.A"a@ "' ~.__, , ~
~~ tll~ 11411? t-fA~[)lfl?§
Specializing in hair
·designing & custom
permanent waving . a.~~
t'n•f'('om1ultalinn • -~,
1120 Irvine Blvd .. Newport Beach ~
642-8484 ...
22-Dec. 21): Accent on
creativity, affair of
heart, conflict between
emotion and logic. You
can collect what you
need. Key is to analyze
data, to bqild for 1'hure.
C an c e r, ·Ca pr i corn
figure prominently.
CAPRICORN (Dec.
22·J an. 19): Obtain hint
from Sagittarius
message. Accent prac-
tical matters. Be
familiar with basic is·
s ues . Do you r
homework.
AQUARIUS (Jan.
20-Feb. 18): Ideas bear
'-· .. · -..Bequqe• 4 'a!lli~ fruit -what had been .. ~ whistling in the wind
be comes productive.
• ·~ .. · --"1!'. ~Of s~ ... ~ae Close neighbors, r el· .. ~ 1~ 1.&&5&~ atlvesarelnplcture.
· PISCES (Feb. 19·
i 1
• Los An1teles Magazine rece ntl y March 20): Empbuis on
.. ~·"-issued "a Singles Guide to encl costs,. protecting con· ~· ~ ~II Singles Guides." hiRhlil'(hl· c e pt s • form at s ,
1:: • ing a fascinatin~ n~w o~nccpt v a 1 u ab 1 es . Com -
• :-that enables selective smgle municate. go out of your way to make contacts, '! people to use v_ideotape to welcome challenge. You
•" fulfill their expectations. • could meet one who ex·
This extraordinary Issue is now a Cot.tectors . cite• and'inspires you. ~ ·Jtein, but if you~! call Great Expectat1ons we 11 bl~ t :~e:, •:0~ 1.o:!
;t,. send Yf!U a repnnt. CXJ creative, independent,
it> 714155'l-1fi02 born. Leo, Aquarius = ~ passionate and stub·
~~ 4311 ~St.. Suite 105 !~.... personS' play ltriportant ~~ Ne'Wf!" Beach · roles in fOdr Ufe. . ~~~~.;...;.-.. .... ----------------------------------------------~----------... ~~ 6fi!lm...._ ...... __ 75f:It v\iutr~~g· ............. __.-.
..
ANNE KLEIN
A wedp that plays COOi
durfnt 1tlo9e summer months.
Navy, Bone or White Unen.
All with Crtpt Sole Ind
Nattnl Me Wedae.
(From Page CO
His m06t famous must be for Puppy Cbow-
"l' ve made eight or 10 of them with more to
do." He also does one tor :Shout-" You want to
get the dirt out, Shout it out."
The Georgia-born actor said his son, who
deals in investments Mld handles his father's
businesa affairs, does not have any acting ambi·
lions.
"I'm the only actor in the family, except for
way. back; there· was au ancestor, Lady
Boothby. Since then there have been no other
actors.
.. Bur I STARTED young enough to make
up for everything. AU my life this is what I
wanted to do. When I was very young I wrote
plays and had the other kids play in them."
When he enrolled in the American Academy
of Dramatic Arts in New York a questionnaire
asked how lonj? he had contemplated a career
on the stage. He said 16years. ''B~I was only 15. · ·
Fellow members of bis clas s at the
Academy included Spencer Tracy and Pal
O'Brien. He was asked if these soon-to-be world·
famous stars displayed any signs of greatness.
He paused. then said, "Yeah. But I pro-
bably was too busy thinking of myself to think
of other peOple. ''
While be went to the Academy to learn to be
an actor, he said, he always was given comedy
parts. One day he complained.
"You go home and take a look in the mir·
ror," was the reply. That sentiment was to be
echoed.
HOLLOWAY APPEARED IN numerous
plays and revues in New York. In one revue he
int.roduced the Rodger& and Hart song
"Manhattan." "Then I came to the movies and
didn't do one musical, so that's the way the
business is."
He.was invited out to Hollywood to make a
screen test for Paramount in the early '30s.
When be didn't hear from the studio for a month
after the test, be went in to see the studio bead.
The verdict? "You might as well forget pic-
tures-your face is too repulsive." Ironically. as
he was leaving the studio, "I met the four Marx
Brothers coming in.•·
Not long afterward bis phone rang. It was
Walt Disney, who said he didn't care what
Holloway looked like. "He said, 'You've got a
•crazy voice. I'd like to use you.' So I did six or
seven Disney things."
Some of those Disney things include Flower
the skunk in "Bambi," the Cheahire Cat ln
"Alice in Wonderland," 01' Doc Stork in "Dum-
bo," the snake in ''The Jungle Book," (for
which he earned a gold record), and, of course,
"Winnie the Pooh."
HOU.OWAY'S SON RICK, who was now
seated OD the sofa, mentioned that his father
bas never said which character he felt the most
affinity for.
"Probably the skunk," said Holloway. "I
really don't know. I never thought about lt."
Becaus~ be enjoys eating, be noted, "I'm begin·
ning to look like ~e the Pooh."
Has he ever deftned what ma'kes hls voice so unique? "I wouldn't quite know wl)at to say
about tt," be said. 0 1t seems normal to me."
DeaPtte the low esteem of. bis face at Para-
mount, Hollowa;Y did, of course, go OD to act in •·
string of movies, something be never
particularly en.Joyed, he aaid.
\. But because it was fun to m.ite. CDe of bis
favoritel b "llemembe.r the Ni.Cbt'' wltb Fred MacMurray ana Barbara Slanwyek..
.. 1 wu a btrecl boy OD tM farm·and maclly
in love with Barbara Stanwyck, .. be recalled. "I
UMd tO follow her ~.all the time, wblch wu5•·" H reached over to plct \lP a book. It was '"I'be 11 Rosen Scrapbook,'' ln which be
11' Intent.wed. "Have y'OU teen tbla! .
I
,,.,Ul"lday, March -..1011
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBUC NOTICE
CN1»
MOTICS TO C..EotTCMIS
OP' IMll..K TltAJffP'•R •s.cs.•11'1 -•1417 u.c.c.t Nolin Is htrtby olven to the cr.adllo rs of GARY G EORGE
GORSKI, Soc I el Sec urity No. ~S1QI, Tr.,,.,wor, wftolo MdrftS
Is 2'4SS Ory Doell c-. Clly of 1.A19UM
NIQ"91, County of Oranve. State of
C.llfoml• 1hllC. bull! tt-.r •• -to be made loGLEN LOUIS CANALE,
Sotl•I Se~rlty No. H 1·1t·11t2,
TrM!sf-~ buslnes~ address It
13SS Mesa V-EHi. ~ J6C. City
of Cost. ~ County of OrMgt, St•• ofC.lllomla.
The p._-t-, to bt tr-fen'ecl Is
dHCrtbod In ~·•I M: All .... In trade, 11'"-s, equl-lf ..,. gOOd
Will Of Chai IT*1lla.rt -... 11 bolllM6a llno•n H THI! NAIL MAKER -touted at tm l!ast ~aclflc C-tt
Hlgllwey, Suite II, City Of CM-del
,,,..,. County Of Or.,.., Slot• of
callfornla.
TIW lllulll tr~ Wiii bt C-·
m•ttd on °' after tlW 10lh dey Of
M.rc h, 1971 at 10:00 A M '•t
Pro{tsston.i Escrow s.n1eos. 1'21
North Tustin A-. S.nt• Alto,
C.llfOf'TI •••
SO lar u Is II.-to tht Tr~.
.i1 bustneu ~ -addr-11.Md
bV Ille Tr--tor the -• ll>r .. vur• ore: SAM!;,
Ooted: Mord! :a. 1911.
Glen Lou11 C-lo
Tr-.. ,.,.._._ E-s.ntc..
1'21 Norttl TlahA-
S.llt• Ana. CA 9°"
EK,.• No. 7t4Ml·M~
Publl$Nd Or ... C.st Dolly Piiot Marcht, 1911
PUBLIC NOTICE
P11BUC NOl'ICB
.. ...,,
Publlsrted OraP199 eo.st Delly Pilot
March•. 1', ll, JO. tt11 .
PUBLIC NOTICE
DAllYPILOT 0
PVBUC~lt .
PUBLIC NOTICE
R1t41t
Cel*al 0..-.. a-ty J.-CW D4W"tct
Ht Chk C11t11W Or •• Wetl
s.tA AIM. CA '271\
SUMMONS
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eat.
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~YPILOT
111 1 1<-..11 \)
.. , , :::SC*b ............ .._... ._ ............. ...
....., .......... ti.. """' ~ l~llUNCH
J•n le det~ IO
estsbllltl her -Identity. en.ROOeaa
The rook.. ,,,... w
tt-.tllllP..,..IOt...._
lngupgun~~
oot thedty.
··-oew.~ ··~~ I MCNlWS • 1:11 PlJ!DQE Ml!AKI .. . ·.;
..... . . .
'\
"'· ,,.
' \,.
AeglMr'ly ~ pro-jjJIM•••• llWY -~ due to pledge~
1:25 e CM!.ft EAIY e:ao. MOVWI! ** "Aloh• M••n• ~.. ( 1974) 8.-y
Slnilhera. J-F~
c19cu9. A t.mtlld ~
women with • r•• btood
type cll9coww'9 ..... '° ..
the unwllllng "-' d~
to a doctof"• II aoft, ( 1 hr ..
30 Min.)
l~TION
Endora oa•t• an
"embltlon• IC)el on Dwr1n
8lrftOel bf'Mklng up •
lltllidlfllp and • ....,_
"llOCllllkln. ~YUM Unguilga''
Cl) Nim> WOM.D
''AITicen Pertea ..
0 MSW GA1F'F1N
1:00 D N8C NIW8
I UAASClUB
A8CNEW9 0 IOWUNOFOR
DOU.AM
• •LOWWCV A MfMr 19 P'CI to do e _.. on ~ mented
~ end c::nooe. the .......
• NIAM-12
A ._..dope eddlct end
• .._. ear ttllet flgflt
Iha ... end Offtoers.....,,
endAled.
Julie Andrews and her Muppet guest,
Miss Piggy, turn up with the same
Easter bonnets in Julie's special, One
Step Into Spring, airing tonight at 8 on
CBS, Channett.
• a.aM:Nal.. / LDNft
MPORt /8 HOMEGAllllll IER
"Deelgnr
Cl) TO TB..t. lffl TRUTH
7:aG 8 S100.ooo NAME THAT
TUNE
l •NEWl \'WED OAMI!
THE OONQ 9HOW
JOKE.R'S WILD
• THE 8AAQY BUNCH
The er.df• c&.in, OI'-,
coma to \Mii. «8 ADAM-12
The officer• COY9f Ille
-terlronl
• LA. INTERCHAMOI
·"Next&r
• NEW8CHEICK
Tapk191..._ .. ...-.rtl·
ed on. ~ end from Orwioe County.
Cl) .. IEAAC:tt OF-....__.,.
• Telerision
'Te• .. •'B•a
George Carhn brings his
offbeat humor to the Tonight
Show where he'll fill in for
Johnny Carson tonight and
Friday at 11: 30 on NBC,
Channel 4.
Crenna Co-stars
In 'Crr' Movie
LOS ANGELES CAP>
Richard Crenoa will star with
Mary Tyler Moore in Ute ~
movie "J1nt You Cry," hued
on newswoman Betty Rollin's
book about . her operation for
breast cancer~
. 'the film ai.o stars Anthony
P.erklns. J9nniter Warren.
Ricb.-rd Dyysart and Florence El~i~e. ..
o4
TONJGHTS LATEST LISTING
Ed Asner Horwred
As 'Man of Year' ..
By IERRY BUCK
L OS ANGELES (AP)
Television star Edward Asner
was named .. Man of tbe V.ar"
during the 18th annual llltema·
tional Broadcasting Awards.
Asner, star of the CBS·TV
serles "Lou Grant" was In·
troduced for
the honor by
Mary Tyler
Moore. whose
show pro
vlded th e
start of his
own aeries.
M t s I .
Moore 1 0 ·
troduced a
brief eiccerpt u
Crom tbe aeries by s aying, "You
have seen many eommerdala
here tonight. Now here ls one for
one the finest men I know. He's
been 'Man of the Year' in my
life formanyyeatfi.'
THE AWA'llD TO Asner waa
presented by the Hollywood
Radio and Television Society
during ceremonies at the Cen-
tury Plaza Hotel, booortng the
beat television and radio com-
merclala from around the world.
Asner.said he was touched by
Mias lloore.'s Introduction and
kldded that he was going to
reptSH ~ acceptance speech
from the Golden Glob
ceremony. Asner's lengthy a
ceptance speech was cut fro
the tele•laed Golden Gte
awards ceretDOQY.
wnB UFB&ENCB to
show's raun,s. be salcl, 0 J
intend to leave t.bJ.s podium
CBS picks up the show." "
Lou Grant Show" started slow
ratings, but has been climbm&
the past several mooths.
Mlaa Moore was introdueed
another alumni of her seri Ted Knight.
Television host Peter M
was the emcee durinf t
ceremonies, attended by a
1,000 advertising and broa
ing executives and their
COUSTK4U
SIATED TUESDA
LOS ANGEi.a (AP> -Ca
Jacques Cousteau probea
pill,1e of Grecian art 2,
years ago in the TV ape
"Dividing for Roman Pl
on public broadCUUBg
Tuesday.
Greek a ctreaa Meli
Mercouri will narrat, t
special, filmed at the A•c•
Sea site of a sunken Romu
that had been stealing
with the treasures. .
•
7
ENTERTAINMENT / INTERMISSION
~ :UFORNIA'S MOST
ELEGANT DINNER THEATRE
LAST TWO WEEKS
Live
On Stage
3503 S. HARBOR BLVD SANTA ANA
hair mile north of San Diego Fwy. behind Downey Savings.
betwttn Sunllowei (. MacArthur
(714) 979·5511
*TDISHIY-C..i! .. PEll'S e~n DRAGON~~(~ Plus
"ACROSS THE
GREAT DIVIDE"
Thursday. March 9. 1978 CAIL V PILOT (S
'Weakness' Not Fatal
It is ironic that playwright Georae Kelly, who
turned his saUrical sword on community theater in
his 1922 comedy "The Torchbearers," should be
treated so charitably by a community theater
£l"OUP in a product.ion of bis last, and probably
least impressive, work.
"The Fatal Weakness" ls virtually
self descriptive, such are its ibortcomm.s in plot·
ting, dJalogue and characterlza.
tton. Yet the Saddleback Valley
Communlly Theater has at·
tacked this soggy, maudlin soap
opera script with something ap-
proaching religious zeal.
Director Ben Jutzi and his
dedicated cast baye taken
Kelly's 30-year·.Pld "trauma
drama .. about indiscretions
among the idle rich and given it
their utmost endeaveor in their M'l'D«
attempt to breathe new life into lackluster prose.
That they quite nearly succeed is a ringing tribute
to this young Mission Vi ejo-based theater group.
MOST NOTABLE IN TIUS regard is Jean
Hyde, who delivers a beauWul performance in an
emotionally demanding role of a middle-aged
woman who, on learning her husband is unfaithful,
pursues the "case" relentlessly to learn all she
can about her rival. Even in the final scene, wben
Dreyfuss Horwred
By HanJard 'Pot'·
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. CAP) -With thanks to
Yale's "Whiffenpoof Society," actor Richard
Dreyfuss accepted Harvarc;l's Hasty Pudding
Theatricals' manoftheyearaward.
"I think we can do better than that," he joked
when presented the award in~ form of a pudding
pot before the opening of Hasty
Pudding's 130th production, "A
Thousand Clones."
Hasty Pudding is a Harvard
undergraduate organization
that claims to be the oldest
dramatic organization in the
United States and the third
oldest in the world. Harvard
men h ave played men and
women in the shows since 1844.
o..-nuss Dreyfuss, nominated for an
Oscar for his role in the film "The Goodbye Girl,"
also appeared in "Jaws," "Close Encounters of·
the Third Kind," and "American Graffiti."
'.fbe Hasty Pudding woman of the year award
was presented earlier to opera singer Beverly
Sills.
11EAJ'AES-ORANQI co
SENIOR OTmNS S2.00
50 COAST PLAZA
Intermission
Tom Titus
Kelly's potboiler runs over, Miss Hyde displays
enormous strength and skill.
Balancing Miss Hyde's performance with a
touch of humorous de xterity is Joan Sidell as her
friend and confidante, who engineers an elaborate
bit of espionage. Mary Lou Humphrey enacts the
unhappily married daughter with a disturbing air
of rigid superiority, reminiscent of the girl Patrick
nearly weds in "Mame."
Michael Bielllz contributes a stron_g. believa·
ble scene as Miss Humphrey's estranged husband.
"Tifll l"ATAL waAllNlllS"
A dreme by G«>rge K•llv. directed by Ben Jutrl, tecMl<AI dln<tM -Mt dulen bv Jim ll...i-rt. produ(llCW\ coordlNtor Elli' EsleS, _..., by the
s.ddle~k V911ey Conwnunlt., TIINtw with clo$lng ~ Frluv
end ~I~ M I p.m. end s.ino.v et 7 lO p.m. In ttw tlltle tt>MIM of MIH!Gfl vi.10 H19b ~-RMoerntloN ~2 TMa CAST Mn. Peul E-$hMle • • . • . . . • ...••...•...••.•••.••....•. JHll HY* ,,_.bel W...U •.•...•.••....•..••.•••.••....•.• , •.•..•.•.......... J09n si.11
"-twl't • • . . . . . •• . • . .. . ..... , , ...................... Mery Lou HUf'llplvrf
Ve,_ ~ ••• , • • • .... • •• • • .. .... • ••••••••• ., ••.•.•... Mk'-1 81911U
Pe11IE--........................................ JollllCHIOrns
AMO . , .•....... , . . . . . . , •.••.•. , ....... Koy Oetting
John Cblldress, in his stage debut, is effective, if a
bit hesitant in bis deli very, as the straying spouse 1
of Miss Hyde. Kay Oetting completes the cast as '
the family maid.
THE "FATAL WEAKN~" of Kelly's play,
one that even a strong Saddleback cast cannot
overcome -as it does the tiresome, expository
first act and the limited dimension of the cbarac·
ters -is the playwright's narrowness of scope.
'There are many noe plays dealing with matters of
the heart on a minor scale ("Middle of the Night,"
''Dear Friends"), but "The Fatal Weakness" is
not among them.
Credit, however, to Jutzi and bis company for
achieving the utmost from a quite unworkable
play. Musical interludes during the-climactic
scenes are well chosen, and the mood of the pro·
duction is sustained impressively.
"The Fatal Weakness" will close out its two-
weekend run with performances Friday and Satur-
day at 8 and Sunday at 2:30 in the Mission Viejo
High School little theater. • CALLBOARD -The Saddleback Valley Com·
munity Theater has announ~d auditions for ils
next production. the British 'comedy "The Busy
Body," to be directed by Michael Beilltz ...
tryouts will be held Sunday, March 19 and Mon·
day, March 20, at 7:30 p.m. in the community
room of the El Dorado Bank, 25255 Cabot Road,
Laguna Hills, for a cast of four men and four
women in \'arious age ranges ... the show opens
May 12.
..,ilDOH
MOH AffAIRI"
..,.ALL
ILOHOEMAM
WITHOHE
ILACIC SHOE''
hJlllll Wltttles
IOGARTAMD
IACAU
"TO HA VE AND
HAVE HOT""
6:JO & I 0-.JO
-"DARK PASSAGE"
l :JSOMLY
• THI OHi & OHL Y
IPGt
THI OHi & OHL Y
IP'Gt
41. W oriel's Gn*st Lonr I
V THE EVIL
MOVIE RATINOS
W41.f ~E'f'S
"PETE'S DRAGON"
"GNOMEMOBILE"
"SLEEPER"
"BANANAS" (PG)
"EVERYTHING ABOUT SEX"
"ONE AND ONLY" (PG)
"WW & THE DIXIE DANCE KINGS"
"FLESH GORDON"
MTUNNELVISION"
"THE GROOVE TUBE" (A)
"GAUNTLET" CR)
"TAXI CAB DRIVER"
ALL D•UYC·IHS O"llN 6:JOP..M.HHHfTLT
Cflllcl Ul'd•• 12 ,.,.. Ul'lt•n • Kldcllo ~•nrounct
)
cS\lln;,iif=oJ ·=~:'v.'•
411in;:=..f~~§::::a...:
re....,. .... _
494-1514
1 c -WMf IMSNfM ~ -""" DltAOON (OJ 494·1514 .... '"""' .... , .... .,,s IAT. & llUNo 2M e .._ e , ... & ~tS ____ _,
ti I MST MUii
CHOtDOYS1t1
'"" TAXt IMHYll{SI
llRI ~~:I°'::°':;:-.:;·
--~J,· I IKW9~~~
,_..tMYOlfA
IAT. NIGHT P1YU (It) kUI
unT1CK(I:)
L.., ...... llL~
SIMM=-" 091 ,,... • '*" ........ ,
•
..
'
7 , •
I
7
'
,
'-DAILY PILOT Thulllday. Marcl'l 9, 1978 .CALIFORNIA
APWl,....11
tu SHI NG EARLY DETECTION OF CANCER
t4urse Connie Todd Shows Signs, Stickers
j
·.Southland Skiing
Conditions Told
)Jere are ski conditions in Southern California
mo'lJltains as reported by the California State
AutOmobile Association: .'° •EAll -T-to tl>r• ••t of packed powmr, 0,,. Cl'Mllr -._Ml•· fac•llft\-
1111JlfG HlWOOO -~to thrH Ifft of firtn pack and ""11111 -· -c!Mlr~ ._ wrl•<e lifts-ratlr~ •
... GEL.ES CllEST -CIOMO ., ... to tnumtlde. •-tad to be -II'( the ~ flere are Sierra Nevada skiing conditions as
rei>6rted Wednesday by the automobile associa-tiom
,,.UNTSIHASTA-Foot new-. ti.se21feet, Pe<klld. ~SEN PAllK-No •990'! 1111>11 EAL-8.tw 10 l•t, packed DONNEii SIU llANCH-HO rei-t. mA~lllNG5-Nor•-·· S GAii llOWL-No-' T HOI! OOHNl!ll-8.tse '"" fffl, $!>ring U<llng. ~llTH 5TA111t-Basa ll• '"'· pa<ll.O, •l>fing. PINE MEADOWS-Basa 11 l•t, packed, -il'Q.
Ml!WOOO-Ho reoon.
I OEll llOWL-No ref)Ort.
AW VALLEY-1,100 l•t. MM IS feet, packed, !19ffng, HOii SKI llOWL-0.M 7 leel, •P<ing. AVllNLY VALLEY-Basa I Ifft, p«ktd. INCLINE-8-$ l•I, pack.a, '9f'lnQ. UNT llOSll-kM I l•t, packecf. 5SJDI! MOUNTAIN-Ho ,..port.
SMlllllA SKI llANCN-a.. t'h feet, J>«ked. •• • l ltKWOOO Ml!AOOWS-8aM 15 feet, packed. All VALLl!Y·MOUNT lll!M-Base IS leel, i>«Md. OGl!lllOGl!-Hor990'!,
lliOGl!ll PASS-Bae IO'h l•t, packed. *MMl:n'H MOUNTAIN-No r-1 •
.IWNI! MOUNTAIN-No ,..POrt.
Cll INA NAK-8-11 l•I, packed.
o Controls
lfent Curb Pkrn NiXed
,COTATI CAP) -Voters in this Northern
Calttornia town have rejected a measure. that
woQJd have established the state's first conslitu-
ttoqal rent control ordinance.
:Unofficial results Wednesday showed voters
tui:d down, by a 501-41.5 margin, a measure wb h would have rolled back rents to 1977 levels
~ put the power to grant rent increases in the
barfl)s of a five-member rent control board. ·
~ ·SUNDAY, MARCH 12, 12-4 P.M.
NATURAL ~OOD~
e (O~MGTK~
BRING TIDS AD IN FOR.
IFREEf BQTTLE OF
• VITAMINC
: WITH ANY PURCHASE
~Breast Cancer Still a Major Kilkr
SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -Despite
medical advanees, more than 90,000
American women will learn they
have breast cancer this year and ex-
perts rear the deaths will climb.
"This is partly because we live in a
sea or carcinogens," said Dr. Arthur
Holleb, senior vice president of the
American Cancer Society, who at·
tended a breast cancer confer~nce
sponsored here by the American
College or Radiolo~y.
HOLLEB SAID Wednesday that
one out of every 14 women born
in th e Unit ed States this year
will be a victim of the dlse~. And
studies iihow the mortallty rate
hasn't changed in 40 years, despite
advances in diaposls.
U the statistical outlook la bleak, ·
no leas disconcerting la the cloud of
controversy that shrouds the field. .
Trained medical professionals dis-
agree about treatment and techni-
que, about probable causes and
possible cures. Each aide charges the
other lacks ataUstical evidence to
back their position.
IN CONFEaENCE PANEL dis·
cussions, doctors all •creed on the
SALE "'ICES GOOD THIU WED ... llllClt 11. 1171
~fl php1ograph1c, ~l•rlcal ,
typographical and printing errors
are subject to correction.
All item• subject to stock on hand. •
hoel hoe! bolt
do your garden sol
If your know anY1hlnO about
gardening. you11 know tha1 a
lt\ltdy, MSY·to-handle hoe
Nk• thla one la a muelJ 814.,.x
414" bMlde. MSOeCS. Aeg.5.19 2••
portance of regular self-examination
which they say leads to early dfs.'
coveryollumpsorotbersymptoms.
Of particular interest here was the
·controversial mammogram -the X-
r ay breast examination which
became a medical hot potato alter recent attacks.
Critics, including Dr. John Ballar
of the National Cancer Insti~ute,
charge that the doses of radiation in
the test pose a signific.ant threat of
causing cancer. Bailar said fn a
telephone interview there is no
statistical proof that screening is or
any benefit fO! women under so.
In a speech Wednesday, Holleb
answered the charges, sayln• &be
radiation do.ws have been sreatly N ·
duced in the receni years. He ad·
milted all the statistical evidence
isn't in, but sald tbe known benefits
outweigh what be said were UD·
proved risks.
"The presumptive risks, if they do
exist, should not nullify the lite.
saving potential of low dose mammo-
graphy," be said in the speec.b. "One
must also ask -what is the risk of
not using mammography when it qt.
· ters the first real possibility of r~c
ing the death rate of breast cancer?'•
when being
in hot water
!!.r. !~.!~!~~~m!ant ....
hot water heater to do the Job.I These quality gaa water heaters have safety and efficiency
features to make heating your water less ex-
pentJw and faster than ever before!
30-gaDoa •••••••••••• -•••••••••••••••• 7 411
40-tallOA ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 8411
SO-tall• •••.•••.•••..•..•••...•.•.••• 99"
We also llave I, 10 and '°"talion sites awllaWt.
here's a deal
you11 really dig
Pointed garct.n ahov8I with
relflforced features end long,
amooth-llnlshed hardwood
l'landlei tSLOCS. Reg. 6.69 2••
ralle In Ille
snlngs todafl
Garden rake wtth sturdy, •trono ateet tiMtl'I and frame,
plUa long f\ardwood hand
ISB14CS. Reg. 6.49 311.
men's and wenm's
arcUc Jackets
Ugl'ltwelght. warm and durBM.
Yellow only. Reg. 24.88
1411
. ,
'
7
SU
FREE
HOT
DOGS
&
SOFT
DRINKS
SAT.&
SUN.
5 speed. AM radio, this
week only. (207NJL).
'73•VOLVO
145WAGOH
Auto. trans.. air conditiol'I·
mg. AM radio. (840PK~).
'74 MGI usna.
4 •peed.?>'~~.,. Just
righ 'C:.. 111it"·ach t996K.~
'l999
.. -, ·-----
Pl
•
We're out to make a new sales
·. record.
We 'll be dealing like there's no tomorrow to
sell a new Toyota today, to you .
FREE
HOT
DOGS
&
SOFT
DRINKS
SAT.&. From Thursd~ noon through
the· weekend we're stopping the
There may never be a better time to buy. So
see us during Clock Stopping Super Shopping
Time. SUN.
clock.
'17TOYOTA
SH LOMG WHHL 1-ASI
. PiCICUP
5 speed. air conditioning,
stereo radio. mags.
11J3asa2!. s4999
'72VW
-IARMAMMGHIA Radio. heater. Nice. nice
car. Lo miles. (817EXMJ.
~3199
'72 YOLYO
14SWA.c>M
Auto. trans.. air condition-
ing, AM/FM radio, heater.
luggage red<. (180FBPJ. s
'67 VOLVO
144 SIOAH
4 speed. AM radio with 8
track. One of a kind. See It!
46.000 actual mite;;.
(UOU91:4). SEE 11!
· '72 VOLVO
WAGOM
4 speed. AM radio. heater.
You'll ltke ti. (852EMZ).
S~ort b•O S~~ PICl\uo
AM/FM racho ~ 1PH<1 chrome bumper. Ser t RN23072988
Ike's
~~=e
'76TOYOTA
COROLLA 2 DR. SEDAN
Auto. trans .. AM radio.
rallye· wheels. lo miles.
(TE31116425).
52999
'76 FIAT
124 SPIDBt
5 speed. stereo radio. 8
track. mags. Just in time tor Spring. (326NJF).
5549
'74 YOLYO
141wailbH
Auto trans. air lcondrhon-
1ng. AM radio. luggage
rack (81XJLJO)
53199
7
D2 OAILV PILOT Thureday. u.reh I, 1178 LOCAL .
Teacher
Named
·To Post
Saddleba~k College biolocy instructor
Rlchard McCullough bas
been named cbalrman
for the third consecutive
L:....l!ltll.!il.A~'1li.!~l:!llll!!.L;~111a...1 ye a r or the California
-----------Liaison Committee on
OC Chess
Players to
Compete
Natural Sciences.
The committee is
responsible for ensuring
that science classes of-
fered at the two-year
colleges prepare stu-
dents for courses offered
at four-year colleges
and universities.
McCullou g h, who
A round robin chess h o I d s a P h . D . i n
tSurnam<:nt for first psychobiology, also was
through ninth graders is appointed recentlf lo
scheduled March 18~ the California Inter-
the Stanton Communi~\.Science Council. a group
Hall. "\Yhich attem pts to
Tournament registra· coordinate the state's
tion wall begin at 8 a.m. science education pro·
with play starting at 9 g r ams an d organiia-
and continuing until J lions.
p.m.
Participants are re.
quir-ed. to be members of (JC Club the Orange County
Chess Association. Non-
members may join
before the tournament
begins. Members hip
fees are $2.
S t u d e n t.s a r e e n -
l'Ouraged to bring a sack
lunch and a chess set If
possible. f'or further in-
form ataon Cllll 998·5508
after: 5 pm
LVTHER4NS
GETGIFI
Eyes Park
A proposed urban na·
t ional park locate d
between Corona del Mar
and Lagfula Beach will
be discussed at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at Sad-
dleback High School dur-
ing a meeting of the
Orange County group of
the Sierra Club.
J eff Georgevich will
discuss the proposed
"Irvine Coast Laguna
Greenbelt" during the
PUBUC NOTICE
NEW YORK (AP)
Receipt o f an
anonymously given gifb
was announced by the
Luther an Church an
1\ m era ca for Iii> m 1ssion
v. ork
public meeting. Refresh-'------------
PUBLIC NOTICE
ments will be served.
Call 642-5678.
Put a few w0<ds
lo work for ou.
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
ll'ICTITIOUS aUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
Tht 10110 .. 11><1 l>t"Oni •r~ do1n<1
bU\1nfn di\
SANVIHA DEVELOPMENT
COMP•NV, 31qo O Alroorl Looo
Orove Cos•~ Mo\I CA 921120
Anou\ MacP11"""' INMll, q11
!>eMlcestl• 0.1 .... <M'on• dtl Mar. CA
9'105
Oun o. O.tvlson, 331&1 O<eMI Hill
"CTITIOUS BUSINESS r<ICTITIOUS auSINISS Orl'lle, o .... Polnl, CA. 9261' NANI( STATEMENT N4'MI STATEMENT Curtis E1>9lnHrlnq CorPOrillon,
r11e 1011ow1ne pert.OM ue001n<i """' The lollowlnv per.ans are doing P 0 Bo• 6111, s.n O•-· CA. '1111111 neun: buslneu as: Thi• Duslrwu is <ondu<ted by a 1 WONOEAL.ANOOF FUN,•90W. SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA qenerall).'lrtner,.,,lp
l'tlh SI., Coste Mt.a, CA926J7 SURFBOARD MFG., 1779 Placentfe, DNn 0 O•vh.on
M•rv hr•~ er ..... 1a, 1165 San•• ~lllornl• 921627 This •1•1emenl WH lflfCI with lht
An• Ave., Apl. tlt. Coita Mesa, CA Willl•m Lenee Colllns, 681 w. 1111' Cou111y Cit•• ol Oranqe County on
'2U7 Slreet 111, Costa Mesa, C.lllornl• Ftbr ... ry 1, 1971. Steven M.,11 Greenl1, IHS 92U1
tfl ~•brlllo P.-11 °'~ Apt, H·ll, SMiie hrralta Mat Collfns. 687 w. tit!>
J.na, C.4 '7701 St reel i: a. Costa Mes•. c1111ornt• Tiiis b.nlneu Is conOvcted b't • 92•?1
.. neral i»rtnenl>lp Tiiis business Is conducted by a Sttvtn Mil"' Green1e gtner1l 1»ttnef\ltfp.
This statement wH hied ••1" Ill• T.,,tlee Collins
.......
Publl•ned Or•• Coa\I Daily Piiot.
Februery 1&, 73 • .,.., ~rch 2, •. 1'78
S'4>-11
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE
PUBUC NOTICE
fllCTITIOllS aUSINHS
NAM• STATEMENT
Tiie to11-1ne i»rt.an I\ dOlno bl.I••
nei.s •• LEO AUTO BOOY REPAIR ~
CUSTOM. 1~141 Wur Sl•I• SI WulmlMI ... CA '161.J
Reul Rodriouer mt W. Aurore • '· S.llte AN, CA '1104 -------------· TlllS~IRH• I• conouct.o by • .,,.,. P UBUC NOTICE d1v1ou.1.
R""I Rodrillutt
FICTITIOUS IUSINEH Tiii& stetement w~ flied Wllfl !tie
NAMe STATEMUtT County Cl .. 11 ol Or~ Covnty on
Tiie loll-lnc;i perM>ns •re doing Feb. 27• l971. ~
bvMMU es· F A c Es w e s T t t to 1 J PUblfsllecl 0r-. C:O.st O..lly Piiot. • Melcl\ 2. t 16,. n 1'71 Westmlnst..-A.,.., G•f'"dell Gro.,., ' ' SU.1t ~llfoml• 92'0
Aooer S. Br•nnen, 461 5,1-------------
Cloverdele • 11, Lo• A11ot1es, ~lllornle 90036 PUBUC NOTICE
Je•n S . Bre nnen, 461 S. NOTICaOfll>UaUCHllAIUNG ~!~~o~~~.·~lt,: 11• Lo• •nveles, TO IE HELO av TME
ThO\ Ou•lneH I\ conducled by. ORANGE COUNTY P'LANNING
otntral Pltrlntr\hlp COMMISSION A<>oer S Br~nel\ ON PllOP'OSEO L.ANO USE n1> 'tat•~• was tllod wllh the OISTlllCT CHANGES
County Cr.rk or Oran°" County on Dalee! of Hflarfnq ~rcn ?!, 1911 Jenua•v 13 1978 Time of Hearono: 1 :IO p,m or as
' F ... JJ soon 11\ereetl&r es ~•lofe
PUbll•he<I Ou~ CA>t>t Oally Pilot, Localfon: Room Ill, En<1lneerin9 F b l3 &11lldln9, 400 Civic C.nltt Otl~t WUI, e , 1', . ltnCI ~r, 2. 9. 1978 $81·11 $enla A,,., Cllflfoml•.
PUBLIC NOTICE
PROPOSAL: OWlnee of lOM CASE NO. zc 711-4, secil~AL OISTRICT
MAl' 1'·5·11, to change from lhe -------------IC2!SR) ~'Generel 8uslneu CSl•fl
f'ICTITIOUS BUSINESS RttlrlCllonsl" Olslrlct to Ille
NAME STATEMENT RHt,lS0)/21 (SRI CONO "Group
Tn. 101iowlne r-rtor> Is dojnv busl· Owelllnvs !Sign RH4rlc110flt)" Dls-neu .s. lrlcl utleln pr-1'f localed on the
M B WINOOW CLEANING CO,, n«thw~lt<ly Side of UI" S4rfft. lO
lllS2 Gottltra St •• HuntlnQton Be.ell, feel •outllerly ol Peclllc Cou t
CA 926~ Hlgtlwey In h SUMet !Mach erH ••
M•r<i•rel Lois Brillon, '20 T•nena lltq...,led b'I Wllll.tm Llo'(d. Pl6Ct. Cool• MH•. CA 926'16 c 0 M p LI AN c E w I T H T H E
Tiiis Du"''"'H 1$ conducted by ... In· CALIFO~NIA ENI/I RONMENTAL
O••oau•• QU4LIT'f •CT ·
M¥Q9ret Loh Britton Tftl• Pl'OiKI NS -found ID ......
Tiiis uatenwnt was 111~ w1lh IN no SIQnollcal'lt ..,...,,,. Ml~I on IM •n· County Clerk of Orenge Co.only on Tiii\ stetemenc wu llled wlln Ille
Feb. 21. tH& County Cieri! ot Orenoe County on FICTITIOUS aUSINIH County Clerk of Oren~ Counly on vlronm""I -wes oranlad a ne941t1ve NAMI STATIMINT MMCll 6, 1971 Ot<larat•on. A <oPY of lhe "419Atfvt
The 1011-1119 -'°" IS do1n9 busl F"'1J cttclarttlon wn POSled Ollhloe Ille
nus •s COunty p1.,,.,1119 CommlMlon HHrfno
MARSHALL LE4SING 1701 PuDhShed <>•~Coast 0;111Y Piiot. Room, Room'"· -.00 Civic C.nle< Corln1n1an wn Sult~ D, Ntwport Marcn9. 16.l3,l0. 1911 Orl¥e w ... 1. S...la ,.,,._ end ti.. 8oaro e .. cn. C•hlornl• 92660 116·71 of !>up.rvosors Huronv Room, SIS
Wlllf.tm Ellos M.lrsllall, 612 North ------------l North !.ycemore, SanU Ana.
Jenn Way, Al\-lm C•hlotnl• "'80S CAlftornoe prior to 1tM public hear lnQ
FICTITIOUS BUSI NUS Tll1s ~"'"' •• <onclveled Oy .., ,.,.. PUBLIC NOTJCE da~~PORTUNITY TO BE HEARD·
NAME STATEMENT PUBLIC NOTICE OlvlOualw1111..., Ellh Mar.n•ll J:ICTITIOUS aUSINES5 All penorn eoll>er Javor"'-or 09l'O•·
• The lollowlnQ perM>ns •re OOlng Tlllt tt•l-1 wn llled wllh th• NAME STATEMENT lno this prooosal ••e Invited to prttent buslnen n ,. ICTITIOUS IUSINESS County Cltrk or Oranve Counly on The loll-fnQ PfflOft Is dOlr19 bu1a.. lhtlr vie,... belort the Plennlno Com· TOT4L TENNIS, ._ E S.vtn· NAME STATfMENT Feoru.,y l1, lf}t. ne" a• mission. It I\ ,_,a.cl llWll any writ· tNnth Slrffl. Casie Mes., CA '1'11 The IOllowlnQ persons •re doing ~ NEW POAT GRAPH 1~. 10>3 ltn rasponM be submlltad to the Plan·
Mlcn•llt A Merty, 1 US'> W. t>Yslneu as: 0 I I Wlllle S•llt Wey, Corona o.t M41r, CA 111"9 Commjulon pr/QI' lo Ille lle•rl"9 BaibOI Blvd., Newport 8H(h, CA ROYAL HERl'fAGE MARINE, Pubjlihld Clr11199 ColSI • lot, 92'2S-d•le.
tl .. 1 1'6l All• VIWI Or., Newpor1 8Hcll, Feb. t> •nd Mar. l, '· 16• l'7I nt·ll Sieve B.g,,.11, 1033 White S.llt For furt,_,. k\lotm1llon. te!IPllone
J ene E Tolll, SH P1t11laflno SI.. CA 92UO • Wey, Corone dtl Mer, CA 92&tl llA·lOIS or call at the olllca of Ille
Apl S·20., ~·• ~sa. CA 92•~ I Rlcll.,d Ven Roovan Simon, 216l PUBLIC NOTICE This bU'llr>fts Is conducltd by en In· R911uletfon OMslan ol lhe Environ· Tiiis buslneu I• conOucttd by • Alta Viste Or., Ne~ Stach, CA1 _____________ dlvldu•I m'tntel M•n•<i•ment A91ncr,
venere l P••lnerst11p 92..0 s11,,. 8-811 E"91neel"l119 8u1101no, Room tu, «XI
FtMn Ftoruery 11, 1•11. PubloslWO Or.,. Colst Dolly Pilot, r<•ttJ:l
Merer. 1 9 "· 2~. 1911 Pubhslled 0-enqe ea.st Daily Pilot.
, ... 71 FeD ll end Mer. 2, •. 1•. lt71 683·11
~--~-------~ PUBLIC NOTICE
Mlcl'ltlle A, Mllrcy Katherine Babette Simon, 110 STAT•MUfTOr< WITHDRAWAL Tiiis \lale"1lltlt wes fifed with Ille Civic Cenlr Otlve West, S.nta Ana,
"
• J-E. To\11 Alie VIiia Or., Newport S.ecll, C.4 flllOM P'AllTNEllSHIP' County Cieri! of onnoo County on C.llloml•. Tll lacllll•tt ruponw, ,.. This statement WH fll.O with , ... n'60 Of'•llATING UNO .. l F.b. 27, .. ,.. • ,., to zc n.l
•.. CounlY Cl .. k ot Orange Counly Oii Tiits business Is conducted by • fllCTITIOUI aus1Ness NAM• "*71 BYOADER OF THE
Merch •. 1971 llmlt.O pert-ship. T ... tolfowtno .,..._,.. wUl\dr .. n Published Ol'1n9t C:O.lt Oelly Piiot ORANGE COUNTY
·-
f'AUL AUGUSTINe, Jll. RlchMd V. Simon es e 9enerel partner from the Mefcll 2, t, 16, 23, "" ' PLANNING COMMISSION iUt-Y at Law This sl•1-t wu flied with Ille pertnerslllp -••lno _, tM lie-77._71 Published Orengt Coell Dally Piiot
161 $arl NkolH Or. Sultattl County Clerk of Ora119e County on tltlou1 buslnu• n•me of ABLE Merell tO, 1'71
.. ~ IMedl, CA -l'eb. 27, 1971. MA INT ENANCE "' 21Gll 'Miiie Horse ""'1t "9047• Ln., Huntf"91on Bee<ll. CA 92._..
Publfshed 1>8'\91 CoHt Delly Piiot PuOlfshed OrMl90l Co;nt Dally PllOI. T'" flclftlout b\lslnus name si.lt--------------! PUBLIC NOTICE
March'· t•. u , JO, 1'71 .,,.,. Merell 2, '· 16, 23, 1911 71$-71 r;::.' 1~.:~.,~=•~ ;~=·on THES~T'!!!Otlo·,.";,u11,.~~~1A
l'ull ,,._and adlllreu of Ille person • ... • ....
PUBUCNOftCE
fllCTITIOUS euttN•U
· MAM• STATU•t•N'I" PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICE TOCltlEOITOH
SUPlltlOR COURT Ofl THE STATI 01' CAUFOllNIA FOii
TH•COUNTYO,.Oltl\NOI No..-
Esta tt Of CLA1t£ SMITH, eke
CLAltE RAYMONO SMITH, •lie
CLARE II. SMITM Oe<>t.Mff.
NOTICE IS HEAEBY GIVl!N '° tl'll
crtdlton of,,. el!Ove Mmtd ~•Oln1
llWlt •II persons hevlno clelmt ao•IM1
Ille w ld Ott-114 ar• 1-equlr'ff to lltt
11\em, wltll Ille ne<4H¥Y wuc"'"' lfl tlle office of tfle clerllc llf tilt ~
fflllltd <Olit't, ,,,, 10 PAMflt !Mm, wlll1
tlle MCHSM'Y "OUCMtl, to tllo Ult•
d9rJloneo et ""' OHl<:o 4lf tM f'ultllc Admlnlllretor, UOO Soutll Grend
.Avenw, Sent• Ma, C.llfof'nla t270J, ,wlll<ll I' Ille piece of l)U'.llMSI of Ille
"Vt1t1er1ll!Md In all metten pertelnlflt tO tn. Mt.te Of Mid dt<e4ltflt, wltllln
lour monlllS etter Ille llrtt puDllcetltfl
Of tllls notice.
Oeltd January ti. 1'11
JAM£S e. H81M.
Pulllk Admlnlstrtflor M Alllnl .. 111 .... el CM MUM ..... ..,... NfMd OtcMent
AOltlAN ICUYN•
c-tYC--' ... ,uu•LIAMI. .,.,..,
P,O, .. a\Wt
......... c:.i ....... a ..... "'""""'.., ......... .... ..... , ..... o-.... ci.ete °"'" ....... ... t6, 1'MdMllf ... ,, "" •1>11
wlthdrewlng: 1'011 THIECOUNTYOl'OA4NOE
·-----------• Kai"'-' wt.lie, 211»1 Wl\lle M-700 CIVIC CUfTIEfll OIUVE. PUBLIC NOTICE une, Huntl,.ion 11tec11, CA 92M6 SANTA ANA, CAltFOltNIA Ket-White PLAINTIFF: Mc:OE\/CO, INC., e
Cl'-'US F4WM C•fllornle corporellon, vs.
SUP'•lllOltCOUllTOFTMe Publls~ Oren<at Coest 0..lly Piiot OE FEN DANT Security P•clllc
STAT• OFCAUr<OltNIA Felt March ..... n. JO, 1'11 Ne11on•I 8-•• nati-1 ben.111119 .,.
-. -.. • 927.71 soclellon. '". _..lfTY OJ: OtlAHO CroS•Olmpial,..,,I: S«utl,Pec!llC .... ~ ·-NOTIC• Ofl HIEAltlNO Ofl PUBLIC NOTICE Hetfonel _,k, e ne~lonal at1kl119
f'•TITIOM flOll f'~T• Ofl WIL.L association, "'· Crou·Oeftndant: Je"'" F. Dey, Don I tl'lrouqh X, ,,.. AND flOlt l&TT«lll T•ITAMUf· SUP'ElllOtl COURT OF THIE clu\lve. TAltY ANO AUTMQIUU.TION TO STAT.OF CALIFORNIA l'Olt IUMMOt!S
AOMINISTelt ONOelt )'He TNICOUNTYOFOllANOIE ONCltOSs.coMl'UINT
IND•f'•NO•HT AOMINllTAATION .... ""4191 CAS•\KIM••1t:m1ea
OftSSTATSSACt NOTICa Ofl N•AltlNO Oft eT ""a ~
a11ete of l.#IWAENCB M~ltL1 fllTITIOM PC* f'ltOMT8 Oft WILL c..!t !~y I.::. Ila.:~~
Pl.ANl<1 SA., ell• L. MA LIN A N D fl O It La TT • It I ,._ lellll ....... •lel• Pll,..,...
PL.AHi(, Sit., .... LAWltEHCE M. Ofl AOMINllTllATIOM WITM WILL wlllllrl,. .. .,._ lt"41 Ille hlf-etlell
Tiie fOll-lflD --II dol"9 bull·
nen~~· THE LINE TIUI SERVICE
THAT SPEAKS YOUR MINO, MOI
Coi•t Hwy., LeQ\1'11 BtKll, C.\ '101
Surannte M. 8rferley, Mii Coesl
Hwy.,• 11·B • ._._Beach, CA 92.SI Tiii• bvsl,..n os condUCllCI by •n In
dlvldu•I
SUJenne M. Brltrl•Y
Tiiis statement WH flied wllll tlw
County Clen of Orange County on
Feb. 21, 1'11.
Pl.AN!(, Sit., •ka L. MARLIN ANNUt•O. Ml-
PLANIC, 0.Cffsed. Ellale of GL.ADYS MORRIS •lie, AYISol U1141f Ila t141 ........... 1-------------NOTICE IS HEREBY Gtlll!N ll\el GlAOYS A. MORA IS •ka. GlAOYS •• Tri, .......... -.c1-.r CMl«Ta u-. . 'fOtoaltlCMIC:OUllTOFTH•
PUBLIC NOTICE
LAWREHCI MARLIN Pl.AHi(, JR., AROl!LIA MORRIS •k•, PEOOY0
''" ••dlHcl•. lftartOI 4H Ud ITAT80f'CAUflOltNIAfl'Olt llas fifed lltntfn'• petlllall for ProNW MORlllS ..... GLADYS A. HUNT, ................................. ..: TM• C:OUNTVOflOttANOI of Wiii w for c~ Of t..etwn o.ceHtd. *"'•clollc.,....,_ ..._ .. ,..,I
TetlamellWy to Illa "91111-M'llll HOTICIE IS HEREBY GIVIN tl\81 1. TO THE DEFENDANT: A d vfl NOTIC• Ofl M.•A•IMO Ofl
Wlhorlutlon IO edmllllttw tlw fttnt JEAN INA TAIBBI, MS filed IWRl'1 a complalnl hu b._ll llled 'Y tlM PaTITIOM fll04' .... OCU.111 01" WILL
lltldlr the l"*l*ldl<'A AdirNlllttNtlon petllldft,., ""*-"'of WUl alMI for It-Pfalnllff egelnstyou. (S..tootftOle•) AND LaTTlltt T•ITAM.IWTAltY,
of IEstat• AC1 ,.._,_. lo Wllldl 1• W•l'K• O! l..ltten of Admlnlatretlon a. II 'fOll .. 1111 to deffftCI tlll• flOlt ""'"O.IUTION TO AO·
r'llMI fw V.... -1leulllf1, eM ltwt wltll Wfll ...,..._ ,,...,_. lo ~ .. wtult y00,,,... wltllrn JO dal" a/1M M I N I t T a It U N O • It T M •
Ille time Md pie« el ,..,lftO Ille -'-tn.llde for further PW'tlcvters, -this ,.,;.,,,,_. II ~ Oft ¥'Ill flle IMOl•IMCNINT AOMINllTltA'nOM
J\e1 ~ Mt tor Mlfdl II. 1'71. et llWll Ille llmt -piece ot 11Nrl119 lht •1111 this court • Witt.ft lll4lldlftt In Oft HTATDACT. IO:OOe.m.,fftlN~-., Dltl«\· Jame lies ...,,Mt lor Mtrcll M, 1'1', rnponse to the complelf'lt. (lt • '''"" ... '"°"'' W. SPIEGEL eka mtntNo.SolMld<Alllt'l1MJllOCMc et 10 e .m ., In Ille courtroom of Jutllce Gour1.WU~fllowlUIU1e LOUIJ WALTIElt lf'l.GliL, centw Oflw Wltst. Ill IN Ot1 M s.M.a O.pert~ No. > Of Mid coun, at 109 c...n • .,.,111., ,....,... or c-.., Oo<e-4.
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T"9 llU••t Mlfketlllac• on the Oranc• CO.rt
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS
You Can SeU tt, And It, ( 842 •••78 ) One C8'1 Service Trade It With a Want lid . ~ , Fut Credit ~
•Ml lstot• ........ 1000-2"9 •am•• . . . . . . IJ00.~99 luaiMn, .,_.,_,,-&
Altontlal •....•...• 5()(».5()49
EQUAL HOUSING
. OPPORTUNITY
Wshet-'1Holtu:
All real estate advertised
in thla newspaper is sub-
j~ to the Federal Fair
Housing Act of 196
whicb makes it illegal to
advertise 'lant pre-
ference, limitatloa. o
discrimmation based on
race, color, religion, sex,
or national ongin. or an
intention to make any
S\al'h preference, llmil•·
lion, or discrimination.·'
EAST SIDE FfXH
$67,SOO
Old.le ~ goodie, huge
lot! Zoned R-2! House needs work ! Sitting
porch entry! Cozy living!
Lacee storage sheds!
Better hurry !! Ca ll
MS-0303
F=OREST E
OLSON
'•L t.ta A\. 'Cl'-''
_." ·~-...... .,....,, Lhl ' etllld •.. 5Q5G. >rr'J' ...... ~ S.Vk•s & l..W• ~ ~ ........ .....,,,
f ..... ytMlll & ~. & ...., '~ otlooll ..... 7000-71'9 Tt011w*'icilleft . • • '14»-'"'
~::.~~ ........ )~!~.~~ ...... .
G1Mt>.e 1002 ChMrat 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
FANTASTIC 5 BR
This beautiful !arnily home, with an
x lnt view, is ln top condition;
·carpeting, paint & drapes are new.
Well landscaped; numerous trees.
poolsized yard; location is prestigious.
LA VITA area of Laguna Niguel,
$157,500.
759-0811
IOOZ
w t·:s 1.1·: Y !\i
TAYLOR CO
REAI.TUl\S si11vc 1~4
CAM!<> HJGHLANDS-$179,500
Vie w of ocean & surrounding hills!
Attractive 4 bdrm home w1th fam rm.
formal dining onus rm. Charming
living rm w /cathedral ceiling. 3
Private beaches. You'll love it!
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., REALTORS
21 I I Se111 JGOqlli" HiHs load
MEWPORT CENTER: M.I . 644-49 l 0
1002 Gewef'al 1002
4-PLEX
$165,000
Unique Ulcome property
w/room to add 2 addi·
uonal units Xtra large
owner's unit w 1formal
dininl! room & cle lul<l•
master suite Xlnl rn
come Call for details
646-71TI "'''IN Ill 'I . I\,, . ,, ".
lock lay Retreat
Fix & Save $$$! Prime
location! .34 Acr es 1
Older ranch style home'
Country kitchen! Large
livmg room! Old fashion
service porch' Needs
paint & imag1n at1on1
Ju.st ustt'd! Won't last al
Uus pnce! ! Hurry' Call
&&.5-0303
FORESTE
OLSON
,.,,,.If'.: f"I. "' •t1l4'!11.
MEW HOME
EoshkteC.M.
Builder just completed
Uus 2 story 4 bdrm home.
Featurei; mclude. vault·
ed ce1hngs. 3 car garage
& RV storage. Hurry,
choose your own carpels.
Call~·5880
~HERITAGE ''·. REALTORS
HEWPORT IEACH Highly upgraded. 3
bdrm, family & dining
rooms. new brown plush
carpels. sparkling pool
and lots of extras. Of·
rered at only Sl28,500 .
Call~USl
d'~ .. HERITAGE
• • REALTORS
HICE
MBGHIORHOOD
•·~-c--. EASTSIDE-
4 Bedroom. 2 bath home needs some T.L.C.
Windsor Park area of
Santa Ana . A r eal
bargain al $60,900! ! Call
546-5880
1~~~~~~~~1 VACAHT 1-Vacant & waitmg for new
family. Quiet cul·de·sac TWO.OH-A-LOT neighborhood. Cozy Hv·
Quaint Beach Retreats. ing room. Double brick
Arch doorways. Charm· r 1 r ep 1 a c e . Ha n d y ~~HERITAGE
REALTORS
i n g bay wind ows . gourmet kitchen over·~~~~~~~~~~ Greenhouse too! Call looks family dining. l-
now646-7\71 Tuckaway Master Plus
oPtN 111 9 ,,, s 'UN 1,, •c ,, 1 • Two more Queenslzed
lllMlifiia!;lJll ~::;Y~t ~:~1!u~:~ ~ lituJ;f og:,~~~n~,o~""
[®ilH&ll\I Homes lo au areas, all
sizes. Call:
-
Veteran Hou.<1ing Agt.
541..0100 OCUMROMT
Charming 2 BR. home. 2
car garage. Best 1wim· G..,... I 002 G~ral I 002
ming ~ fishing area\ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• great neighbors!
$275.000! ... lay Prop.
ltHltot's
~ 675-7060 *
MESA DB.MAR
4 Bedroom, 2 bath
beautifully upgraded home. All aew kitchen
w/tr&Sh comp. clshwsbr,
Cornlnc coolttop, new
pe.l.nt. paper •paneWng.
Call 54MllO.
,.., ~~· HERITAGE
REALTORS
PltlMI WESTCLIFf: LOCA TIOM
Sparkling 3 bedroom or 3 + den,
formal dining room, nea r all
Westcllff shopping. Private and
large swimming pool. $18.5,000 and
you own the land.
21e1 SAN JOAQUIN HIUS AD.
IN NEWPORT CENTER
I
7
••
• ~-~~-..... ~-~~c:'! ....... 1~.~~-····· ~!.~!c:'! ....... f ~.~~....... Thinday, March 9, 1978 DAILY PILOT Pl .
1002 Ga•Nll IOOZG••r.. 1002 G ... ,.. 10024••r.. 1oo2 Ho.etfot-S. ......_,_5* HoaetPwS.
...... ,...w.
~····················· ._, ..
...................... ·········•············· ...................... ~ ....................... ..........•....• . ........•. , ........................................................ . •••••••• Gau~ I 002 C.-.. Mm-I Oll .. M• I021
LAGUNA IE.ACH
2 BR, 1 BA, Laguna Charmer. Walk to
beach, Mex. fireplace, oak floors,
I enced yard. Perfect home for artist,
writer, student, couple, weekenders
and anyone who appreciates Lagun~
charm. Only $110,000.
NEWPORT UCK IAY
Quality built John Lyttle home
featuring .c BR, 3 BA, spacious rooms w~ beamed ceilings; wet bar in den:
maids Q,Uarters. This is a great
entertaining home on an extra large
lot w/complete privacy. $145,000.
CAMEO HIGHLANDS
This imrnac. 3 BR, 2 BA + den, not
only has room for pool, but is very
near pvt. beach. Only $169,900.
OLD CORONA DB. MAR
This well maintained 2 BR horn~ plus
gst. unit is being sold by the original
owner. Pride of ownership abounds;
come see it. $174,500.
· EXCHANGE ANYONE?
This very nice Corona del Mar duplex
w /pool and jacuzzi would consider
exchanging for small home, Corona
del Mar to Dana Point. 2 And 3 BR
units w /1 BA each. Priced low at
$189,500.
EMERALD IAY
Spectacular views from Chris Abel
designed wood/glass 3 BR + fam.
room, or 4 BR home. You'll feel the
warmth & charm of a mountain
retreat, but enjoy the sight and sound
of the pounding Pacific surf. $l50,000.
644·7020
2123 SAM JOA9UIN HILLS ROAD
NEWPORT IEACH
1002 GeMral 1002
Ul(ISIDE UYIMG
Waterfront, wood and glass, 3
bedroom that s hows like a model
home. That contemporary feel t
Family room, redwood decking. air
conditioning, and a location close to
the community pool, tennis court and
jacuzzi. In exclusive Lake Forest
Shores at $124,900.
U,_.l()UI: fi()Ml:S
REAL TORS~ 675-6000
2443 East Coast Highway, Corona del Mar
also in Mesa Verde, at 546·5990
~COATS & WALLACE ~REAL ESTATE, INC.
A LOCAll Y OWNED COMPANY St RVI NG
fHl SOUIH COASf AREA SINCE l96J
SPECIAL Dl!AL -Outstanding Mesa
Verde beauty. 3 Bdrms, rustic family
room with fireplace and heavy beams,
big open kitchen with "Island
Range". A cross from park &
play&round. Only 6 yrs old. $83,900.
Cal5~141 ·
HONEYMOON HIDEAWAY -Relax
•and enjoy the privacy of almost new 3
bdrm, den homef Stroll thru to pool &
tennis. Priced ~~only $80,000. Owner
says "Make off er ~. ·Cal 552-6161
Serving Costa Mesa-Irvine
Huntington Beach -Newport Beach
1002
................................................................ ~····
COllOMA Da MAI
Spacloua Duplex, I
bdrm, S bath, patio,
firepUce, + 2 ~. 2 beth. aundeck Oreplace.
$16$,000.
64 ... 7270
..... ~-· P1'elb as Sprinct.lme lo-aide & out! Sun.Dy family
roosn wtt.h redwood ac-
centa and briahl skyllt
living room. Theae are
just two ol the charming
features in this 3 bdrm, 2
bath home. Priced to seln $125,900.
n11..A. ofuwup
Open House Thurs/Frilly 1.S
at 33Z PoiNMltla. So of HwY
An absolutely cbarmlos 2 lfd•m
cottage with gleaming · hardwood
floors and TWO separate 2 car
garages. Reduced to only $134,500 ·
ORIG-IMAL HAllOI VllW WITH VllW
Spacious 4 Bdrm, f amlly rm home
in original Harbor View with form.Bl
dtning, pool, Jacuzzi -AND -
Gorgeous ocean, harbor, island &
night light.view. Reduced to $259.50().
Not open but
Ctll 644-7211 fwOehrll.
~~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!' ••••••••• •• •••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••••
H.UIOR VIEW LUSK DUPLEX
PETE BARRETT
-REALTY-"1n NIGEL "1n Nlu[l.
llAll.[Y 0. nAILf"Y .,
ASSl:lCl/\1£5 ASSUCIAJ(S
llG CANYON
4 BR, fam. rm., 3 baths. Beautifully
decorated family home with patio
views from each room. $335,000
LIDO JSLE
Newly remodeled 4 bdrm., den, 4
baths, living rm. Yi /cathedral ceiling.
Lge. master bdrm. suite.
IAYFROMT
Several fine l)ayfront homes
with pier & slips
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Boy~1d<-Orive NB 675 ·6161
This home has many liSTSIDE
custom features. Large COST A MESA • 642-5200
courtyard, beautiful Two Bedroom, 1 Bath, l ~~ CostoMHa 1024 0-W 1026
olive tree and many r06e Garage. Great location. lalaoa PiMsatlllo I 007 ............ ••••••••••• ...................... .
bus bes . Bui It.in For the investor or ....................... E /Slde Cuatom home. s,.t•M--
boobbelves, lormal din-owner. La.ndlord. Call Steps to beach. ?units 62 2000Sq.ft., IBr, huge Unique Dana Point
ing room, paneled family DOW or it will be too late. br, 1 bacb. Pool. $450,0oo. fam. nn... a CAI' 1ar., 00 landmark bu been COD·
room w /parquet floor, ~~1A.,, HUN 10 61 Mn, . Terms open. 645-0nl R-2 lot. A&t 64&-nn verted to 3 UDita. Perfect b~e pool. [ , ii for owner occupation
·•1 2 BR cotdle, niodem a. MES.A Ya.DE plua income. Ocean
.
.. · .~~ . ·• sharp +bachelor apt.-.C Out ol state owner must view~mpreulvefaeade. -, drs from bayfront. sell3BR,2ba.;onculde $215,uuu.
$130 ,000 . COAST sac.95,000 HORIMSllAl.TY
ADULTS OML y PROPERTIES 673-5410 A. Johnson Bk:r 979-"9&4 * 494-1057 *
~
I l -.1.61 1u \I l't
J I • • I• ' , , ' \ ,
7~1~ I Cml H•1 Co1on1 3tl M11
Beautifully upgraded 1 Peninsula Point. By POOL-TEMMIS year old townhome in a owner. 3 brm l o/• ba •~us I •ir-•1.... country setting. Brick 673-8698: Prin. only. ·
"" A WA" fireplace. air condi·
GREENIROOK ATnt. IUILDBS
$65,500 tioned, earth tones. An Capfstn.o IHclt I 018
Cbateau Blanc 2 story, 2 outstanding value at •••••••M••U•S•T••S••ff••••••••
twin sized bedrooms plus $76,000. CALL 751-3191.
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I h~e bonus room!! 2 Car !p SELECT 3 Br m Ba, 40x20 rec ~arage & ri t f room, W/Wetbar. Lots of P va e pa 10• PROPERTIES surpris-. Open Sat/Sun 1002 GeMral 1002 S6.500 Cash moves you ,_________ ~.,
4 bdrm, 2 ba. Extremely
popular CAMEL01' mdl.
'fhl; lo,~ly home located
on a cul-de-sac within easy walking distance to
So. Coast Plaza, theatres
& lanJ• I lmtlen
Charming 2 Br Cottage
on buildable level R2' lot.
Keep eiliti.ng structure.
build ocean view 2nd un ·
it. Owner $87 ,SOO .
831·'7204
& restaurants. Many out· --------
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• in. Hurry call 962-7788. 1-SPM. Call Jan CODD,
iQ K€Y IAYFllOMTwjPIER :if1.o493•9381 ; ree
CARLSBAD
IDGHLANDS
Perched high ln the bills
d Carlsbad By The Sea
is tb1s 4 Br 2 Ba family
home w /part-Uke yard &
pool. Relax while the
palm trees & lighting
sweep you to exotic fan-
tasy land. Plush burgan·
dy cpt.s & xtra.s galore at
$96.500. CaU:
WALLACE & CO.
REALTORS
714-433-4490
MPT.AREA
EXEC.HOME
A unique opportunity for
a fmly to move lnto tbe
Newport area & escape
paying an outrageous
price. Live in a btll
"Buccola Built" Home
known for spacious rm
sizes & h~e wardrobe & storage space. Only a
few blocks from Chff Dr.
& the Harbor. Just listed.
646-T7ll
VI P.€ALT"'°S IC You have to see it and tbe --------'·"' exciting tbings you can Coro.a .. M. I 022 EARL y ILUFFS do wtlh it! 5 bedrooms, •••••••••••••••••••••••
family, l~ kitchens, · Triplex
4BR,3ba.endunitbeau-large living room, 2 Bdrm., 1 bath home
ty. Nr. pool. 2200 Sq. ft. garage w /chandelier and with rear unlts. Sound In·
View! $165.000 other interesting vestment in Corona del
H. Dowd Bkr 644-0134 "nooks". Terrific loca-Mar. $175,000.
Cl.EAMCOHDOS lion on the WATER w1th HORIMS REALTY VIEW + large front 2 Bdrm.-custom $50,900 pal.lo. Redecorate & use * 494-805 7 *
2 Bdrm., famous Orange for family or home+in·
Treearca, lrvine$64.950 come A home for the COZV 3br. 2ba + guest
creallve person $449,000 house .. Frpl. 2 patios, R·2
includes land. lot. Pnn. onJy. $1~7.000.
~!t~lng features io-Frn t•Y.., 1034
Custom Draperies •••••••••••••••••••••••
Covered patio
Decorator Wallpapers
throughout
OUtdoor gas BBQ
Auto Gar Door Opener
Skylight in Fam. Rm.
BY OWNER 979-8123
Prin. Only $109,900.
Assume4.5 loan. 4br, 2ba,
patio, prime loca. 1 mi.
from bch. lndscp'd. re
deco thruout. S57 .2005 -------
sta p! Sharp!
$84,900
3 Br 2 Ba, lge comer lot.
Quiet neighborhood on
cul de aac. Won't last,
call:
••••••••••••••••.•••••••••••••••••••••••• ······I~~~~~~~~~! c~~.~~ $40,500 1...:....-...i-.....i..-;~.,
-
~IJ'>BUHV Owner, 646-7030
Rt.AL ESTATE COROHA DB. MAil In
Immaculate Balboa Island Super 2 BR cottage on
There's DOthl.n& left at UST IUY SZ, I SO this price, except this In the Bluffs. The lowest IEACHRUUAT SALARIED ~~~~~6~73-e:IOO~~~I R-2 lot w/lots o1 room to MANAGER = add on or build another
* liSTSIDE * 3 BR, 2 ba., lrplc. SUper
clean! Next to park. Best
buy in area. S72.SOO!
Sparkling clean home. 3
bedrooms, eating area,
hearty fireplace. Quiel
cul de sac street. Nearly
new pool & jacuui for
TOT AL DOWN one. 3 BR home, NOT A priced 4 bdrm. fee sim-
Winding roadway t o CONDO. Call now it pie home in the Bluffs!
$64, too.VIEW
Stell8 to pounding surf
and crystal sand I Back
yard ls bay area play.
ground. Winding wooded
walkw~ to secluded en·
try! Gourmet kitchen.
Step-down conversation
area plus fireplace !
Sun shine breakfast
patio. Pool-jacuzzi-
volleyball. Garden living
at its ftnest. 847 -6010
u~· ue Homes of Mesa ---------11.Ulit. Very sought after, v •-ol"' rt OH WATER better call now. aoaring 2 story retreat! wm'tlut. Tbe ownen are moving
Private grounds protect 54"3666 &'must sell quickly.
e ... 1e ng a mon· . 54"3666 tbly salary plus com-Ultobstw .. tec1 Yu v-REALTOR 631·5454 summer fun. $84,500,
STUART FtME
secluded entry to lavish v-Reduced to S1S9,SOO. Call
, living room! Gourmet today.
missions to a licensee ex· Beautifully de<:orated 2
perienced in tbe Costa Bdrm condo on the water
Mesa real estate market. with possible boat slip
desiroua of managing, available. Privacy, lux·
Wltela11 By owner, Mesa Verde, BKR.~1720
lcitcben overlooks sun·
shine courtyard! Wind·
ine stairway leads to
sweeping master
Wltela1i
REAL ESTATE
bedroom plus child's--------
retreat! Hurry, seller is
aruuous. 847~10
O"fN flt Y •II S IU I 1011 ti .:C'
J~·,IR&ll
CONTEMPORARY
TRJ.LEVB.
Executive home in one of
our fmest areu. Walk to
2 parks. · Frml dining.
H~e bonus rm w /Wet
bar. 3 car garage. Im·
mediate occupancy. Just
~640-7711
SURE
BET
Take paint and cleanser,
and elbow grease and
save $$$! Modero 3
bedroom with fireplace.
Near South Coast Plua !
RED CARPET 754-1202
Real Ett.ate JUST LOVB. Y
INVESTOR'S 3 bedroom, family room. dinlng room. Portarino SPECIAL $46,000 model plus separate
Guarded gateway pro· bonus room witb batb.
tects lavish courtyard COLI OF NEWPORT
wttb pool. Secluded entry REALTORS to executive llvine room. · 67r 5511 Sunshine gourmel----~----
kilcbeo overlooks
private patio. Sweeping
master bedroom plus
child's retreaL Owner la anxious, Submit any or.
fer! 847-8010
oPIN 1119 ." s 'UN roef N'(f' l:&llMI
Ges•r• 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••
EAST
SIDE
Charmer! 2 bedroomt 2
bath! No eonunon. wall.a I Freab paint I MOC1ern
Jdtcbea I Double 1ua1e !
All for only -.soo!
REDCA1\PET75'-1202
cae:·
110111 ILlllS CD.
OVER 60 YEARS OF SERVICE
NEWPORT IEA~H
Immaculate · a Br Den
Condominium With View Of Ocean
From 2nd Floor. Close To Pool.
J acuzll, Sauna & Tennla Courta.
Call Us For More InformaUon.
Priced at $129,500.
SPY•LASS
Spectacular Upgraded One Story
Newporter Model. Rieb Dark Oak
Floorinl In Liv. Rm. & Din. Room.
Spacious 4' Br. + Fam. Rm.
W /Wool Carpeting. Kitcben W /Deluxe 11Je Flooring. Custom
Bullt Pool With Jacuzzi.
Uoobatructcd Valley View.· An
Oulat.aodin• Oftertna at '329,000 A ••Joy Of Newport'' 'Lliltiq.. .
organizing and promot· ury, security. Pool.1-.:=======;:._ ing Unique Homes In the Shown by appt. Sl45,000 Mesa Verde/North CQSta
REAL ESTATE
COUNTRY LIVIMG-
in CdM
please contact Jim Wood HOMES
open this s.t " Sun 1o-4. JAABl!I I · 1590 Myrtlewood. Lo\•ely .~ .. 3bdr,1.114 ba, lrpl, newly1-="'-="-==-'=.,;;;;_~...;;;;..-=
painted. for only $81, 750. 4 Ill $17,500 YA
tn5-544·3979. VALUE In 2111 sq. ft.
S&ME
A 01 \'1~1on or Ol'IN '" 9." s If.JN ro u N<r'
_'_'a_r_bo_r_1_n_vc_·s_1m_c_·n_1_r_n_. [ ~' IRAIHI OCEANFRONT
Mesa area. If interested, -WAT[RFRONT
at 67s-6000. Replies will REAL ESTATE
be kept confidential. 631-1400
A roomy 3 Br, with
formal dining and family
room Wlth some ocean
Ylew in front and baclcing
to the Irvine Ranch. See
CaUle and deer grazing
alyourrear(ence.
Lovely East.side home on
quiet cul-de-sac near gol/
& tennis clubs. 3 bdrms,
2'1J ba, dining & lam rms.
19x26 family room
w/frplc., Lrg. kitchen.
tile & cpts. Near ~hie
Square Park.
JIM WELLS REALTOR VERY SHARP!
FAU.BROOK By owner, 2 Br 1 Ba ea 3 Br, 2 bath home on
lllDEAWAY MESA VERDE unt.locatquietendofW. quiet corner 1n Mesa For Details
CGI 644-72 t I
wet bar. Lots of extras. ___ ss_7_-0264 ___ _
$103,900. .-1111sg1°" hoch I 040
BYOWNER TRIPLEX Newport. 548·7219 or Woods. Quality tbruout,
3 Br 2Ba traditional Located in Costa Mesa's 1_5SM221 ________ Fireplace, patio, atrium.
Seashore Real Estate
675-51K>O •••••••••••••••••••••••
FAMMHM-T ASTIC
home on ~ acre. Over best area. Owners unit lam room, attached dbl MESA VEaDE "1n NIGEL
100 mature trees. Call; has frplc. Ea. unit bas * * * gar.Theownersarevery OPENSAT/SUNll-4 GAILEY &
l\SSOCIATES
$69.500
71~or~ private patio & s~parate lttty Stroh arudous Bring $89.000. 284.sCorvoPI. !•-------•I laundry rm. Great In-2111Serrc.o N rtPi R It Byowner4BR2Ba,lplc,
Only word that describes
prfoe & condiUon of lhis 3
bdrm 1~ ba. fTplc • all
newly decorated.
897-0321
vestment. Call now ! lalboa ewpo ier ea Y .. OLD"HrbrYl•w & Fam Rm, beaut pool
T.PLAM 545-9491 You are the winner of 2 · .,111<Ydf Two best buys in CDM on w/jac. $126.~. 546-9179
This la one of tbe most tickets to the .&41MidliluT namJm!E same blk. panoramic ---
popular 3 bedroom noor IUGS IUMNY 2005 Balboa Blvd. ocean views from each. 3 • "''"....,. plans in the Orange Newport Bch.673-2058 br, fam rm, form. din East Costa Men, 1 year
County area. u bas a blg ___ R_e_al_Et_ta_t_e__ FOLLIES rm, lrpla, beam ceilings, old; each unit with 2 BR family room, cozy brick at the beaut. pri v. patios & nice &2 baths fr~~! Real Eitate
fireplace & a big MIMl-«.ANCH41R. ANAHEIM MOVEIM yrd. Must sell 1. By EYB.YMC D S&S Resale Specialists.
spacious yard. Located POOL-$66,400 CONVENTION Ll.,EFLY .... M owner. 759-9448 or REALTY 552-0434 3,4 or 5 bdrm models
0 0 CENTER "' " 644·2641 tr no answer --------close to schools in a YAN D WM For the 3 IDRM CONDO 644-8722. Open House 1·5 Client needs fix.er-uppers. !!..a1l:... some w /pools.
prime neighborhood. Circular drive. Large MARCH 21st u ded Sat"""· lll"' Wb. s lls .,.,.,......... Owners J>ougbt another family sized living room. pgra ' new carpets, ,~n. • ite a •1110K. Any area. Also Pennington Properties
&mustsellquicklyaton-Country kitchen. Dine. Performance pa Per. Pane 1 , Way,CDM. needed positive cash --------"---
ly$86,000.CALL751-3lil Wallofglasniewofcov· ~~lm~:U~==~.333• to :f:s~::,r~:rf~mll~t~il: CostaM.ta 1024 ~~~~:Ta~::
•
SELECT ered pavilion & lush * * * private patio, private ••••••••••••••••••••••• SS2-4414
grounds surrounding i---------d urn-fR([ --------PROPERTIES H&F Freelorm poo1.1_________ ~~Ji a,~~.. ttl ~ By owner. Open hs'e daily,
leca-aW......
In Lusk Realty's new
Resale office in Hunt·
ington Beach. Confiden·
tial Interviews are now beJn1 taken for licensed
Real lllatate agents or
SOOD to be licensed. Ca U
today •boat lbe many
featur9 we have to offer.
~n.-
1 I °' r.. .. I' I \I I'
}) "' t : J4 ' Hw, " · 1 J• ._.,,
Separate wing for hide-DUPLEX Pool, sauna and quiet Housing. Zero down, nro 1oam~m. 229 Princeton
away Master Suite & Extra large, 4 bdrm. & 3 seclusion. What a pad for oosts. Any ~yin Orange Dr •. Co 11 e g e Park .
children's quarters. bdrm., fum.labed & re-$50,000. Co. Call 24HR VF:r AGT S88.SOO.CallS56-8674. Hurry for this unique """',...,.,., ~~~'·~=biNicP s~e':-,•u:nom~ ;e;~al:: 400E.tr... FORJM ~~SB.I.MOW EMCHAMTIMG [ : I Leasehold. $195,000 C.M~~ ~CS ,li.J~'H ll 673-36113 67~777 Eves ~!=!li!-!!!·!-!~!~~I College Park 3 br •din· Three Xtra large BR's, 2 ---------&•{ ;;;u'uliJ .; ~·to COSY~~•~: . :3:g di~ ":,·,~u:: :~: -~-··un-RIL-·C-OH_D_O_ _ ----·=•••!!!!!:. 831·9081 fai ryland garden In •••cHY·LUES _, tts·~~ooo l~.2 ~.2 ~· SOUTHPORT -,,,. pauu. ust ...,.. _.,, · Located in plush adult IUUTY PRICE RB>UCID TWO OM A LOT community with 24 bour
L v I y 1 m I 1 b 0 m e • 5 Bdrm Peninsula Pl. * EASTSIDE• securily, Only 3 years
Cathedral celllnga. Stepstobeach. $189,000. LIVE IN ONE-RENT old. Man1 amenities
About l mile to beach. I•-------• THE OTHER I Rare IBS,000. Close to bUte trail by .._.ofCce:lu'f Newer Ocean view tlnd I Completely llfll@.J !l'~:ln~!!t
rt Qui_. u1.a--3 duplex, Dana Pt.. eeparate living In a ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ lf1... .• ~J1\ -~!:.!~ ~.rmi;~ ~~' =b•::m n:.'cl:o~~~ $1~,ooo. cbarmln1 upgraded 2 "" 962..i.471(i:• 648-8103
bdrm1. Cov'd patio. 22fi'ultt:Nes,pvteountry 5 Bdrm, pn'vate beach, ~bomeANDa3 64M600
Phone now foe •.wt to roed. I Br 2 Ba Vbta Corona Hltblands bedroom home---------•l·--------
aee.5'5-tdl ~EA~~;UL, S7~~4~. =~~ld W\de ;:..~J.aragea too! -·c•OUM--•E•P•A•A•k-•I :c~~~ ~ Walker C lee Call: 1---------3 Bdrm, 2 balb, family
WAUACl&CO. HORSE RANCH, 2 Br 1 d ~~~ m room , fireplace, =~=.Gf:!~1~~ ••• • 'TOIS Ba, lighted arena, tack Pl\O~ "POOL", new deckina. -..,.. ooo formal dintn1, l arge n4-72Nt81orm.4t90 ~:.'51Y run, •'"• · -,400-GUAl~~~ 118,toO. 15x36 awimmlog pool. Ro., McC. • Huny • aee tbls peat
1002 ~••ral 1002 -------· 1110 ......... lhocL famllJ .. ome at only .. ...... ._............ ....................... .... ewe.. S-. c......._ 1a.1nt $&41.SOOCaUS.O.llll ... It eoukla't burl to call
Ou:lr: NNb about a re-
wardlq e.,... lD realt•-------•I ~,~ 4 -HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
P11C1 muca .. 1214.too ,..,. °' o~
~II. macnab I lrvtne ?-mlty
....... ~ tralnln& if 1~,.~qaalitf~~-1tN~~10~1.~~I u11 •••••A ... I~~~~~~~~
1.; a Br, trpAc, 2 bat.hi. llove m. EXEC CONDO
• Impressive youn1 duplex.
Generous 4 bed.room unU with
pitched beams and elegant decor.
• Large 3 bed.room u.olt tor rental
income iq a super location.
SPTKASS OCIAM YllW
Great Value! Sma1bio1 ' BR,
f amJly rm residence w /f abulou1
day &\rtll@t VIEWS! Only S2SS.OOO
w/landt Laszlo Sharkany 752-HH.
. (N·l32)
t42-&Ut '44 .. 200
to1 o."r Ori-. .._..., ~ c.nw
trv11111 •t ~"" v.aa.v ClflW 751-1414
llUSl'SELL
"'ftmUl!!K
la coad, Prln ODIJ CQZYPIREPl.ACE
....-. will co-opwat.e S Br 1~ Ba + dowel-. withbrobn. R-1104 oownd pe.tlo. :be (aclJ.
-OPl:NROUSBSUN 1.$
llaa Veordt 1upu cleau. • ._. a ba. MW'tr rec1ee Opt• Sat/San 12·5.
.. l.IOl/offer. Owoer.1·--------1 ~
~~ -. a A.-151-0'701
To Place your
••rut R•vlt"
Service Di~ory
lld •••• call Now
64Z.1671
MUI
COW411COMPAll
MUST S&L MOW · 1Am t.baft 2 al to~. X... del llar I w, )ba, Mac It Cltpper La. ,.,,._
...... dr opn.c. ~to aume VA.~. DOqu.a.lllY· iWt.. Sll.IGO.at..-i iq. sn.-./1.#.-.sm
~=·!:.a~:~ ~o..r ......... Well•• 6 a.dao hll & tobcb,,Ji int: " .._....,..._. e-= •mt ..
'.
7
D.f OA1L v PILOT Thut'Mfay March 9 1978 I
Ho.ts... For SM Houttt For S• HoaH For s• HouHS For Sal• ......•••...••.•..••.•..••••••••.•..••........ ·•·•··················· ····•·•••·············· ........... a.-. I 040 lnlM I 044 Lagmo leocll I 041 L.cllfiMCI hoc1' l 048 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
POOL HOME
3 Br. 3 ba, frml d1n1na
rm, RV atorage. 8 blks to
beach Open Sat/Sun 1-5
at 9102 Mabalo.
SHAFER & ALLEN
Realty Inc. 175-6741
Wsat lllSALE
SPECIALIST
3,4, or 5 Bdrm models
avail. Some w /pools +
Oondoe. Member Multi·
pie IJsting Service.
WALNUT SQUARE
SPA
Oen 't miss aeemg tblS 3
bedroom townhome that
ls bright and airy. 3 large
bedrooms, and only
1>7,000.
'-960-4361 RJ illlli ~~:o~LTY ---------·LA R <i E FAMILY
LOVELY ELEGANCE
-Etecpt 2 bechom. 2 bath. .... gcrdeft
home in prHtlcJIOMs ad111t coMtH11lty.
Prof.sslonally la11d1cap•d atr1 ... , and
superbly custo..iaecl lftterior. 0c ... •lew,
Mah1talned gro11nd1, pool, lacHal,
clllMloul•. Minutes to golf, .._.., ~.
LaCJuno leacll. Mew aed
... ocapled ... s' 14,500.
495-1720
Hou•H For s• HOUtH Petr We ..... , For Sal• Ott.-IHI &tat. Uwfwnf thecf ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
Me-wporl hach I 06' Newport hoch I 069 Maba.-Hwa lftcOfttt 'r-operty 2000 JJ02
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• l'orSGlt I 100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••• •••• •••••• Real estate investor~ tiAx *VETS* A 40'10AT SLIP •ILUFFS• dererred exchang~ You fOUl(bt tor 11 , own ii 3 Br. 2\'I Ba. spac. •U"Y N.S. Dbl wide 2 Br, xlnl counseling. Seashore piece ol rt now. no down. comes with thus water·
front home overlookmg
the bay! 3 Bedrooms, 2
baths. large patio & close
to schools!
J Q U.AlL (ll
PL.AC J!l
~ PRO PlC"RTI:&:a 752·1820 l oo
1.00 ~ ST.NIEWPO«f MACH
OCIEAMAllE
DUPLEX
Two up, two down, both
units redone, new c a r p"t t s . e t c . I m ·
maculale. Seconds to the
breakers. Good rental. J..ea4ebold. $1110,000.
Burr Whit ~ n~alt~r
condo. Attached 1ar. nr. ~e~a~~·P poo~d~~h, Real Estate. 675-5800 Vfttl'an Houslna Agt.
pool Xtra.lr&mstrBR, 8'75-li57 Y· s. 541-0100 ~Arrugos Way lf9 TillPUX-$70,000
$114,500. Owner/aat. Aae9ge for Sde 1200 All unit.I remodeled, new HOMEFlNDERS
6'0-4277 or64o-6500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• plumbing, paneling, tile Thousands or Rentals
Selling at a IOllll IUILDERS le pa.mtln & out All arus a II pnces
South ,., Or C 754·7800 Sample:
SI 0,000 DOWN choice"" lot 8:'~c~::~~'. 175 Bach, walk to beach
New 3br, guarded gate Man.y to cbooee from In S:L60 Bach NB Util pd
Broadmoor Home. Pool beaut. areas. Last of $2202br, kids, yd, dplx
jac, & tennis. Corner lot. speculative milt. BKR. UFETlMESERVlCE
Owner Wlll carry bal. of m4> 617.5691 557-0122
$21.5,000 al $1.595 mo. No OR 522.~ ·----i-•-..11 3206 cred. needed. Vac, move ... -o C t M -'II -rightin. 759-0448 MtMI HOllSE RANCH ....,... ' 01 a ••a ••••••••••••••••••••• • • Priced Ill hnM to Mii. LJTTI..~ ISLAND LIDO ISLE :moSq. ft., 4 BR, 2i,; BA, ~ ----..a-RONT
I 3 b 2 b barn, trees, & etc. One ~ ex.._..,.":f up. BAY F lmmacuate r a acre renced. Just re-,rhtc. o•ly. Call 3BR.2BAupperduplex. home, beam ceilings duced. BKR. brok.r SSa.ll2 Y t! a r I y I e a s e ~t. beautirul ced.ar (714 > 676.5717 • 1 tBSO/month. Don Tyler &
paneling, south palto, OR 522.2080 SEVEN DUPLEXES Associates. Call 675-4000.
Prin. only. By owner.1---------$248.000. 224 Vin Eboli. Conwrclal SAN CLEMEMTE 3br. 1.,.,ba older bse on 3 BR Townbome, 1 level in
unit, former model, nr
Huot. Harbour. By
ownr/agl, $64 ,900.
557·732.s
67S.ZJ06. Open House 1·5 ~ 1600 Ocean views, all 2 BR, canal. $500.
4 BR. 2 BA, well located ~~fNAT LSAOGUJ~~\ LAGUNA ---------------------••••••••••••••••••••••• 1~ BA. Less then l yr. 640-2019
home in Irvine. Carpets 493·11812 499 4551 ~~~~~ HARBOR VIEW HOME I 076 MEDICAL ILDG ~d·p:ra~~ tAoss~f~~ ~~~hy eap1tr.o hoc.h 3211
~IUDGm 2901 Nl'wporl Blvd NB
(71 41675·4630
& drapes & fenced yard. 3Br <or 2 + den). 2Sa, ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. ••••• hrick fireplace. plus charmingly decorated, At the beach, Riviera dis· <Dntwn San Clemente> S118.000 each. Offer on ••••••••••••••••••
more. Its a clean & basic parquet ent. comer lot, tnct, nu 2 sty, 3 BR, den, Sale·Lease-Trade qwck sale. JBr, 2' tba. fncd yd, ~alk
bo p ed f ~.750. By owner. Pnn fam rm. 2"'2 ba, many 7 Rm Dental Suites BERTHA HENRY to bch. grdnr provided.
1042 me. nc to sell ast. LOIJl8MllHch 1048 LOIJIMCIHlguel 1052 only644-r46.1or640.l44-0 xtrG• -"'.OOO. 498-3484, SRmMedicalSuiles REALTORS ~ mo 897·7027
$79.900. ••••••••••• •••••••••• • • ••• •••• ••• • •• • • • • • • • • • • .., ~ J W Y--A-C M CHRISTIANA IAY • V 0 C.-v c-Cod Cbarnung new 3 Bedrm + 2'13/4»2716 ay • ~ 0 215 Del ar 492.4121 CoroM del Mar 3222
--1 -r-de 2 bath r 2ND HOME h.I 49e "660 "'99-2237 n1-ll!V SI I 0,000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 sty, 3 br 2YJ ba lwnhse Immaculate restoration n, • am-rm. Mtn.ium care summer or Sweep~g ocean views, · .-~ f""5A
•••••••••••••••••••••••
wfpriv gar, lndscpd yrd. o;;a\ f.S~ 4 &inns., 2 baths, den. AJC, French drs. pvt year around.' 2 BR. l BA beam ce1hng, frplc, 3 SOX213 Ft. lot on Coast N. E. Costa Mesa. Lrg. 2 2 Br l Ba, fplc, w/yard. no
Boat dock. By Owner. ~ country kitchen with frootcourtyard,$123,900. $26,500.CallS75-4392 B~. decks, bonus area. Hwy, N.B. w11475 sq. ft. BR , lh BA units . pets. s37 5 mo. Call _J$1~4~5~,000~.~846~-34~14~:;;---l~====:::::::;1 skylights plus separate Owner.831-7098 HALPIHCHIH ~c~ be.low mrkt. En· retail store +garage & garages. patios. good 640-4829afl6PM
-WATERFRONT artist's studio. Walk lo For Sale By Owner 3Br, REALTOR JOY living tn great invest· apt. or office + 2500 sq. ~~~LLs REALTOR LGE 2 Br 2 Ba. fplc, dbl
BY OWNER ·SEAGATE BUILDER•s beach & sch~ols. 01~ l"'• Ba. Priced for rast ---------1 ment. $118,000. 492-7715 ft. vacant pkg. area. 557-6264 gar, Avl 4/1. l 'Yt Blk bch.
Custom Ute nr & patio. CLOSEOUT t;tiarm : move·tn condt· sale $83.500. 25212 Via WESTCUFF s-...... . $195,000 SMSmo.675-1957
frplc, 30• slip, water view tion. $1S9,500. Piedra Blanca, Laguna Beautiful family home: C I .. I 078 DLX OCEAN VU DPLX fl"nt & bck, 3br. Jba, 3 •IHIRVIME• MORIMSREALTY Nlguel.4944401 located in one of .... !!!!~.~ ........... Profess. bldg. across By Owner, Capistrano Bdrm, 3 baths Harbor
decks, pool, jacuzzi. ten· Only 1 Patio Home left. 2 * 49~ •057 * 1067 Newport• s finest MOYE IH TODAY from N.B.P.0. 1900 Sq. VCaJiew1.,.lfiJ.,,~.So. -50/mo. rus, dbl gar. $234,000. Bdrm +den, 2 baths, .,... Missiolt V1•jo neighborhoods. Come ft. Lse SSOO mo., sell ~~45•000· 493
"
2190
; • __ ........, __ , ... ____ _
714/84G-4829,213/597·55S3 frplc, refrigerated air An&n'IOH' ••••••••••••••••••••••• see ... you'll thinlt it was $52,250 Sl2S,OOO.Agt..646·2414 ---------CostaMffa 3224 conditioning, mirrored • By Owner-Lovely 4Br, Immed. possession wardrobe doors. 2 car Cbeckusforallthelatest 2Ba, 2000sq.lt., 2 blks lo built witb you in mind! w/small down payment RESTAURANT •••••••••••••••••••••••
g arage with au t 0 Lag!lna . B.each area shl &shop'g. nr comm'y $170.000 & E-Z terms. Cozy living .... ~RT 111! ... CH Loh for Sale 2200East.side 2 br. corner Jot. multiplehstln"s MEWPORTIEACH _.,_,_ m •· spac "5 "r-"" 5"' ••••••••••••••••••••••• Remodeled & redeeorat· opener ... plus full recrea· "' · pool & tenn. $95,000. rm, uuwig r .,. · ~ B bid I d nE.1.• .TY 675-1642 BR's C&U today ...-.OOO uys g., an · WE HAVE w1"dc s"lecl1on ed. $385. 645-7221 uon facilities incld'g 8 Pnn. Only 837-6417 ~ · · all oo prime PCH loea " tennis courts, 2 pools and mfi'i'afiG;}ff'~ WALL STREET tion ot Land parcels. Contact, CENTURY 21
Plan 102 in theCalifom1a a pair of jacuzzis.All tbis OO@~Illl~ Super sharp El Dorado 3 HA:g<>~ib~W REAL ESTATE RealonomicsCorp MIKE SAVAGE REAL Wntdiff Realty
Homes feat .. r...., 4 large andlrvmetoo! 499·2800 brl~•ba,famrm,lgcor-48R,2ba,famrm 831-3750 493-2202 675-6700 ~ATE,642·9601 ....... On Irvine Center Dr ner lot w/R.V. access. ------New 3Br, 212ba, duplex.
bedrooms. formal dinmg (Moulton Parkway} just Hilltop Ocean vu 3 br 2 ba Prof. landscaped. Cov-$154,750 • 640-1440 PRIME .,_.HS/ OFACE ILDG SITE fireplace, lge back yard,
room and large family east of Jeffrey. Fam rm deck f/pl Prin. ered wood deck patio. O I "'L ...._ ~ 1800 Huntington Beach 2car gar.
room. Asking only $71 ,995 onty536-Q63S62-5373 New carpets, gar door ADULTS C MMERC A ••••••••••••••••••••••• 27.000 sq. ft. lot near sso.6393
912.800. for this 2000 sq. CalJSSl-1.263 opener,+ many extras. LOT 4.ptex, Huntington Pacifica Hospital, 5 ft home ~~~~~~~~~I GU .... "' By "-·---$83 750 Open Points Shop. Cntr •· c1v1·c Br, 2 ba, 2410 CoUege . . I-LA "A ' Hou~';''Sat/S~n 10-5. w/frwy access near Buf· Harbor area, 3 yrs old, Center. $135,000 . .,. Ave, College Parle. Close
ruRn.EROCK Condo. Huge deck over· ONLY fy's & Avery Park frwy fully rented. $225,000. David Bourke Rllr to schools & shops. $475.
Plan 8-Fee land-3 Br, 2 looking ocean. Living 586-3J9l ramp. 9,200 Sq. ft., ideal 848-0822 • 546-99SO ,_mo_. 548--__ 7638 _____ _
Ba, + atrium. Assoc room w/beam ceilings, BeauUful upgraded El Walk to "WESTCLIFF for fast food business. 4 units, beaut 2 BR, 2 ba, BR 2 BA r 1 & green bit & pool. $109,500. frylc, 1 BR & den,. 'r'a BA. Dorado 4 br 2 ba on cmr PLAZA" Crom this lovely $13S,OOO. tio cpts drps bltns Spectacular Ocean front 3 • P c. garage,
DEERFIELD kitchenw/allappba~ces. lot. Warm eart.b tones. 3 bedroom townhome. 4 rood An~bei~ toe'. lot. Three·Arcb Bay, storage, massiv4:1 yard,
Plan Ill. Twnbome va-Im med •possession. remodeled ktchn, lg rear Close to sauna, pool & AHCHOltAGE $169 . 000 . By .own r South Laguna. ~r413}A2S. Av64a12~0p83r !:
cant. 3 Br 2 Ba, locd Priced at Sl.22.000. yrd. Must sell. Below rec. room. Submit all of-INVESTMENTS 84&-1461 $325.000. ......, "• evs "•
RANCH REALTY pauo, elec gar opnr. As· AMERICAN HOME market at $82.900. By fers. $99.500. Call day or 17 I 41 496-77 I I Private Community with _646-6423 _______ _
551
•
2000
soc. greenblt & pools. REALTORS Owner. No agts. 23682 nigbt64S-7221 IRcOflW Property 2000 large Beach and lenms **LOOK **
__ _ _ $84,500. Call Benson 494-1001 494-7511 C&lleGanador. 768·7217 7 ~ •AIAMDOHB>* ••••••••••••••••••••••• courts. B.M Craig. 3BR.1BA
WOODBRIDGE PLACE 752-6488 • --Hi-11 .. --· 1050 Opell. n House Sat, March DUPLEX owner. 714 /499-3070 or $400PER MONTH
S I fr . 3 5 ~ • HEAR IEACH 213/682-3305 lst+last+security
pec1a o ering · ••••••••••••••••••••••• Seller sacrifice is your Extrasharp2BRunils, bdrm. Contemporary de· Htwporl •adt I 069 ed ~ both w /prvt patios. BUILDERS Fncd yard, gar, pvt pty.
lached family homes in Happy ••••••••••••••••••••••• =· 3~~BR, !pllon~ Owner will help finance. Dana Point ocean view _83.S-_37_oo_l_v_ms........:g:...._' __ _
open, woodsy design. Golden Years ocir.• a...aEBOMT W..tdfff RHlty den. Premium location. Income $700 per month. tots. 3-triplex, 1-fourplex. College Park -s Br. 2ba. 2
Just short walk lo lake & 3 Bdrm., 2 bath. hilltop ~rv"ft Reduced to $134,500. parks in Village of Wood· (7 14) 64 5-9 9 5 O suite in Leisure World. Cute beach bse w /dbl. W Oceanfront4 BR beach Double attached garage, Cal 640-5112 75% subordination. frplcs, xtra fam rm, cov-
.bridge. From $115,000. Brandnewwithfant.astic car .garage+ 2 xtra ~.$295,000 now$T1,900. A.fl. Artbofer Realty, ered patio, dbl gar. c,,.,.101 WOODIRIDGE 1 •. perking. spaces. Owner u--'--"Rlty .,.,., .,,"" WALL STREET 548-0040. $450/mo.640-4656 _.... 51B>ROOM vlew of the va ley .,. willbelprmance. _ ... ,....... ..,,...........,., REAL!'Sl'ATE TWO+ HOUSE
mow&ains. $84,000. HOL..I.JS WOOD 831 3750 49'11220' 2 cos•. MES. Ollt of eo..ty 3 br or 2 br w /laUDd.ry 2 ba 2600 sq.ft.+ 3 car gar, NORINS REALTY REALTOR 675.as76 BLUFFS • .,.. '1 A A Property 2550 Comp. remodeled.
Prescott model, nr park, * 49" •057 * 3 Bdrm .. Bonita" plan. OP94 HOUSE Owner's unit in rear with ••••••••••••••••••••••• Adlts/no pets ~00/mo
fully upgr, includ air .... RB>UCB> All ooe level, new cpts, huge firepla ce in ~
1044 •••••••••••••••••••••••
SHARP! SHARP!
IRYINE GROVE
OffERS cond.landscaping,patio, 1---------N C C d flooring and shutters. SUNDAY,NOONtoS beautiful family room! Pn~de 1---------alrium, light fix, ap-Vil.LA PARISA MODEL ewport rest on o. $145•000 Own/Agt 27991VlaDelCerro Sliding glass door to 2&3BEDROOM 3br2'r'abatwnhse,w/rec. •
A beautlrul Sycamore in pliances, crpts, wood & 3 Br 2 Ba d«:luxe. Many Hlghly upgra~. hrdwd 833-855l Anxious ownr, no quali-pool! Highly landscaped. YA·FHA rm, tennis, pool. jac. Dys
tbe fabulous security Pavers tile fl. mirrored xtras.FirstUmeoffered. firs, 2 BR, 2 ba. den,---------ryingw/2.S'll>downor as-$137,500 GARDENTOWNHOME. 83.S-7119,Eves~5751
$14.5 000 Adt 960-1701 or writ.rm & library. Side · ·
Irvine. The 3 bedroom Bkr /owner. 552-021. _~ __ 5420 _______ 1 will carry 2nd. Lrg 4 BR. Q U AIL m L......, 1-757-1623 New 2 br condo. Pool, spa aated community or closets . $193,500 • · 11>.. oceanview Reduced for OCEAHVIEW sume8%VAloan.Ownr d_ 2cargarages.
1mmed. sale Owner. Just2yrsnew,2BR,2Ba PL.AC E 5-...., From $375 K"ds & pet..s
palace also has central 1aOWM'"'RKET' SELLERS WANT QUICK $128 950 642 1242 uru·ts, wt• car gar & 2 ba,famrmw/pool,up-PRO P' ... E""'R...,t'Tt:ES....., ·~~~~~~~~~I OK. . B~-air atrium bwlt-in light ~ • ' · • ' .. graded t b r u out . __ 752-1920 xno -67~12 ,.. · fixiuresand garagedoor Three Woodbri.dge ~Jo.:ot~1!.~~in~ _642_-67_06 ______ ~at loc. $175,000. Call Ownr/agt, Ranch & 14000UA1L5"T.N""'°'"'euac CUSTOM 4br, 2ba. Close to schls.
opener.Asking$196,000. TwdnhlmeRs,EDvWar010ouDs cood. Air. many erlras. IYOWHER _67_~--agt-=--·---HarbocRJty,493-5543 •---------COHSTRUCTIOH bcb & shop'g. $475 mo.
mo es. • Fantastic front view. Spacious Executive IOATSLIP F••t-tfc--.1. •ZTriplHes* ~ n10 557-3225af\3PM $89,995. STONEWOOD, ....... -g $67 500 C&ll to I --1 Near Lake Park. Min. to .........-.. $113 ,SOO. EASTON. ,,.,....... • · home. S Bdrm, 4 batb AVAL.AILE Spacious 3 BR 2~ Ba. bch.1-4BR,3ba;l-3BR, Spaclous2bdrm,2ba~h. EASTSIDE, huge 3 Br~
$144,900. Pat.rick Tenore. see.Agt58S-3137 w/view in prestigious &aviewfromeverywin· Ca&ilaa. HIGHLY 21h ba; 1-3 BR, 2 ba. 5 fireplace, bltns & dis· Fam Rm, !pie, just re·
5524414 Agt. L.cllJll'G MHJ-1 I 052 Dover Shores on Galaxy dow in this elegant 2 BR u p G R A D E D . 2 garages, frplcs. $185,000 hwasher. 2 <'.ar garages modeled. 123 23rd St. $465
WOODIRIDGE
••-••••••••••••••••••• _Dr_._646-_2332 ______ condo, so clean you'll balconies w/great view each.1709-1713Alabama, for each. unit. Prestige mo.~ think its new! Agt, of'-:11. •·-· ... yard foun Hunt. Bch. 536·1718 commuruty. Low vacan· ---'--------•1UJ0 ..... v .... • • cy area. Low price or COLLEGE PARK 3 Br, l'hba. pond, foun-INVESTORS SPECIAL ILUFFS 556-4175. tain. $79,500. Arcb Bay Owner. R.ANCHREALTY tain, gourmet kitcb, Best condo buy in "Old"HriwYlew ReaJFAtate661-18ll ---------~.000.Goodrents.Call 3BR.2BA.frplc,dining
551-2000 mini-vu, lake" mtns, Laguna Niguel. 2 BR, 2 CONDO 7UHITSC.M. Geo.Frey,5'2·3456 room. dishwasher. ---------1 walk to pool, apa & prop BA. 2 car garage Stl 500 Two best buys in COM on Santa Alta I 080 Beautiful brand new 4.1 BEN HINKLE R. E. INC. $425/mo.
WOODIRIDGE shop cntr. Bargain only w/catbedral ceilings. • same blk, panoramic ••••••••••••••••••••••• br, loft. f/p. 3-2 br, l 'r'l ba Real &tote llG YARD
Broadmoor home, 4 BR., '89,500. OwnrW·l.582 Walk to shopping center 3Br, l~ba beautiful con· ocean views from each. 3 Santa Ana Condo townhouse, all bltns. W.ted 2900 3 BR. 2 BA. ne~ paint,
f t.rl 1 & public transportation. dition. Many extras. Call br, fam rm, forrJ?. din ly OWMf" crpt.s drp6 Hurry buy 1 to school ....,c/mo am. rm., 8 um, poo • TURTLllOCK collect, 203/655·7029. rm. frpls! bea~ cetllnftS. 2 bdr. 2 ba. Air cond. now.' Tom. Lee, Rltr, ••••••••••••••••••••••• c MESA WOODS· ~=~e~~~~~·e 1!~;~·:. 4Br,Zbath.famllyroom ~.:!!:..wt-aa...a.. Prin.only. beaut.pnv.patios&ruce Pool$38500S57·S4l5 642·l603 2·3 BR. 2 ba. forced air, Beduc:ed to $125,000 "a~um. Pldab c.rpel & ....,..... •--r-• --·r ~~~~~~~~~I yard. Must sell 1. By ' · beat., frplc. No fixer up-3 BR, 2 BA, model hom~.
d d d '-"" 493-9494 496-2413 owner. 759·9448 or 41R ul,900 NEWPORT per $525/mo.
AGENT 640-5560 ~.OO:~SS:1~•.ng . 49~5220 830-5050 PANORAMICVIEW 644-2642. lf no answer Sharp 5 yr old HEIG~S 646-8301 751·3191Hofff
644-8722. Open H~use ~·5 townhouse, all elec. bltn "1 !p SELECT FABULOUS Sparkling pool " jacuzzi, 1--.... -~---1EW---1 Sat/Sun. 1114 White Sails kitchen, 2 car garage. DUPLEX Rmtab
DEERRELD
on lge cul de aac lot. Im-""""''"• Way.COM Near South Coast Plaza, Cozy & cute, 2 bedroom, ••••••••••••••••••••••• PROPERTIES
mac1 4 Br 2.,..tf~· :.~ TWO STORY EXECUTIVE HOME pool, & hr\ completely redone PLUS Homes Fwnkhed MESA Da MAR sep am rm w .,".. For-sale by owner, 3 Br, Patio entry, 4 BR 3 Ba, 2 JlM W REALTOR dau.ling new 3 bedroom •••••••••••••••••••••••
A 3 bedroom townhome ~~1£'7~i;rssi2s~ 2~ ba, lge fam. rm., fplc's,ooeinrumpusrm, 557~ STUDIO. Two baths CostaMeso 3124 5 bdrm. 3 bath. New
with tile entry and up· by owner. l4761 Athel. w/frplc. Lge fncd yd compl remodeled, inc OtherlealEsfate eacb, fireplace and •••••-•••••••••••••••• ~he~· x~;·B=:
graded earthtooe carpet· S52-S3T1 w/dog run. Many up· kitcll w/microwave ovn. ••••••••••••••••••••••• dreamlritcbens! $179,900. • .... Galore!! mo. OwnerTIO-l804. ~ ~:ie e~s~~~sg~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,_~...;:;..·_~_'_$l_z_._ooo_. _P_nn_· _c_.1 ~-~:~~tr!: ~S*tto.es 1100 :':1~:e ~~~s ~o~~s:ii OJte 2 BR Duplex, knotty
$85.900. COMPUTE ~Locatloft dbl detached gar .••••••••••••••••••••••• d QUA.IL. m areas all prices Sa\•c on pane,$350.mo.
IMCULVEllDALE Mature fruit trees. 1 Mob19.._U a-. ~~ f • · 646-3568eves
s re ... , or new to beach. 3 car gar. Two r-lblcMr RHlty At lb FMHt uoo OUAA. IT.NflWl'OllT euCM 645-4900 Atjt &!per clean, 2 Br bse. best I It' • .ru i the 4 Br, • fam rm, close ~ D.Jw lmmed occpy. $164,500. •...., _ 752•1920 100 ee.
.
. owner. New carpets and beaut. brick paUos, gas $325,000 42 51 We have numerous & --'-'---------•--------Eastside loc. Jnclds
drapes, great location. BBQ, frplc, bltns. By Peg Broms RJtr 645-1531 6 .47 beautiful mobile homes Tn~eX Mewport hoc:h 3 I 69 w ID. stove. New epts Enjoy the community ownerSll8,500 ~u.L.W... for aale in established ••••••••••••••••••••••-. thruout. perfect for cou·
pool, tennis and~ sn-S886 UDOISLE By"T;""" .. er'"".ziOO'~g .. aret parblnCM,NwptBcb, E.Slde ostaMna pleor smallfamily.$425 clubhouse. IJvable patio Open J..2..S Daily H U'n tin lt 0 n B ch . 2 br owners unit w I OH UDO ISLE mo. 640-9089 aft.12:30PM
andpriceclrlebt. Owner PRJC-MIB• 205ViaJucar Dr. BR,2story,custocp L" l T Ft fencedyardTwo,2brun-owner will l ease ll.AMCH llALTY a.r "~ tg od built solar home. Beam •suna, oro, n KIDS 19CY$ ()I(
1•12000 nyabrlngolfer.Call for IB.OWMARIET :.·l~~ot.brmpa~ob.~~en-ceilings, loll of wood, Vly, Anaheim ts =:!..°:7~000Call FURNISHED OR UN· , .... ----ll'--·-----t furtberdetalla. w/leaae/option $128,900 nls Ir beach. $249,500 used brick fireplace, Westminster. tn price -----~---FURNISHED: MAK E Eastside2BR. gar. $350. JlANCHOSANJOAQUIN for tbia , BR home in light &r airy. Brand new ran1ea to flt moat PALM SPIUMGS AN OFFER: You have a 1 __ 64U848 ___ o_r _67_5-8258 __ _ a BR, 2 ba, air cond, den, custom area w /air cond _Own __ *_· 6'1_5-Q59_____ pool &jacuui (also solar people'e pocketbooks, 21 units. Xlnt JocaUon. choice: Large 2 Br+ den $2165 Looking To Save?
wet bar. fully furn'd. ls high quality. Palric:ll M. ,...,.... . heated). $122,000 llnn. SlO,OOO to $t0,000. We are M_, trade for other pro-and patio. S'TSO mo. or 2 Spaci~ 2+2 Duplex
ftf1Der mod.el. Prim• 131·'41 I 494-IOJS "Realtor br Profession, Open House Sunday ~~i~i9nc perty. Prin cmly. Full Br 2 Ba. large deck and HardwdFlrs! (54S7P) •counelocationovu·j~~~~~~~~~l l.ZS7SCstHwyLa Bch NotbobbY' .Forresulta 1-SPll or by appoint· MobUeHomeRealty price $190,000. Agt. ~~':.~~:::d 1ookfD1 late. Princlples call: Property House, meoL~ .. orf'15.a855 270SHarbor,Ste20I 66'-9513 and carpeted. DRIVE $375ExpensiveTastAtAL
#011. $129,500. 712·1211, A Gorn-nus ...:552-4(1~~~4~&1~en~L=-----l·----~--I 540-51m 1...__.._5 BY A Savers Price! Huie lifta"5;75M761 ~-----------1 n..-~'"" lUVlalJdoNonf 3+2w/Pool! (67S3P) ... ---Pool llMlll~I SUWARDS .waann OMTHlllACH • FIRSTUSER andcall • ......_, Ul-4555 _......,D % BR, 2~ !!!!! F\taay buyers only, call -..MIW Sea~-Aaunseta,a btfl Slxunitatobecompleted W .. a;fi_,HCMM• be twnable. Frp&c. "dbl • .la jaat one or the to see tbl.I prestigious DIAD OR AUVI 1 _,,1.; radlae ZB t ln .int E/Sicle CY -4 bdrm. 2 ba, condo z car .l*"•::t:Dice. $73,800foc aaatomlzed features of 1 1 1 1 a......., pa · r + reLal area. Call A&t. •-.--'3-1·.14•0•0--•I garaoe. End unit pool _.~ 115-al Ulb lovely TurtJ.erock B u f 1 h o m e . but prefetab y a Ive bmw rm in El Morro By -.... f-'' ......._ 1• -_q;:.;w;;;.~.:;.;..;;...;.;.;....· _____ 1 •lnal• family home. 4 Profes1ioruilly decor'd bu;yer fo~ ~allalically tho Sea, your own pvt __ _._, .... _ .. coop. _MZS.;___o_wn_er_75_1_·1_163 __ _
Bdrma., 2~ ba., farn. thnaout-<otal c1-u. end priced Harbor View bch. park m>t on))' $110.t•--------DELUXE WATER · 2 Bdrm home. S275. mo. ~;t..formal din. rm. unit. For pc-evtew call: Homes 5 bedroom CAL t. T 0 DAY t "-&-....teot FRONT CONDO. Vista 6'5~ctorla.
l'lA.15 a neat locaUonl Propertyffome $omenct. 8Ha&Jlully CPl,POM) Sharp 3 bdrm 2 bath dtl Udo. Espandcd t BR 546-912& Well-.cttiill21.t00 Plll'fdlT...,.. mahliained, beautifully CAIJP'ORNIAPACIJ.'IC bome with tfreplace ~/beaut vtew of 2 tum· --------
'f5Z3 CAMlvs~l~M .
WOODBAIDOS BY
·Al'mt.ISW'14 up1raded. DoQ'l be lloblleHomeRalt.)' +Hparate Duplea •~baaln1, pool, sec 2 BR. den, i i.; ba, rein~ • ..... ~y-...... 90ff1,call 2108Harbor,St4t• always rented to make aub-teTnnean gar. dr)'«/Wuher, huge yd, -rvn 54te)..5$3'7 tb• payments! Qulet , otil lnc. $1.,050 per fruit trees, $425 mo.
nn. w/pool tab.._' BR, "---Q<to\beheartotOrante 2'41 ba. Walt to beach, le>'MO', 1~ aua Oounty Brand new lilt. ......... !!" LARGE Z bf' homed CJ)t$,
pools, t.enftil, C.nalltont clMn, 1 br, $1800. F\arn. lQI at· $1.29 500 so B.£ WebaftJOOO'sclhouses. atv, retrt1. fned 1 • 1a.r.
RoQ)plla nil + famll.y ~· 0 _ .._...ST~-1 .,... w1t.b buildln1 actlvi· mo.~lOllOatt. ...;eta-..:;:....;1....;.5l!....;.I ____ _
c:harmer,GG)y~~ ACl'OH from K·Mllt HERE na5ri 531-SIOO dplxs •• ,,. now. •U adlta$26$!mo. ..... 9808
, ________ I CAYWOODREALTY ......_.......... ShopC\t'.11.tUbrborBl open.wt --..uprtca.Saveon
INC. · Ml-1290 64NH7 =-~" AduJta onl1. ~ U ......_. t"MtOo Afl Thalia-tMlillw ...
onh~COlet ~IU
~not._,.• beautiful '** home rlabl. Oft U>e beach? 2 Bedroom, a '*M, hi 1tc1Uity pted
SID a.m..&.e c:oannun•·
t;y.SLll.•
WHATAIUYt
Thi moat PSeoua bom• tliMT.11.ACH
ln llertlol' View Hom•-Buutlfal 2 Br, Cosy Cdt.·
bar oone. Pnlt...ac.ally tu• for two lo pvt. decot'd thrwuL lmpec· ofdcn lib MUlq I• PANORAMIC VIEW cabM I Br a Ba Fam Adult. Parlr cctmpl•l•1-_. _______ Dtlwc I 8R, den. Jt,; ba
Am. I a.T 1ar., Dln Rm, "1oooi. t ... ta eh, • condo. ~ator to beach ele1ant tbruout. muck aacla a.ore. or tuat ••tcb U\ct aurf.
So•HrHt Model. J'or U\'119).!.. Pool, Spa, aaun a • .m.. call: Propety CAl.d'ODIAPA.Clnc ----------poolroo•, 1ec"rlty ..... *'°9.._B..ity .ut't • iamo per mo.
,..,..,...... IM8:;t~8td0i A1t. 11'/0l•OSOO, ~-...u --
317' .......................
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DAILY PILOT
CLASSIRED ADS
842-
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ThundaY. M.,-ch 9. 1978 DAILY "'LOT HoeMtU•tw••d .._... u .. ,...t.h.d ......_ u.........._. .,.. ..... , • ......_. Apa 1 ... ,. u.tw.. .,_ , .... h """'"'-••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• c:.e.MeM lU4 ........ 3z44Ml.,..leedi 3269 c.ti1M9M 3714 c.w .. w.r JIH CGllNMIM JIM Afimt_......... .,_tuwah........ Offb._... 44 .. ....................... ....................... ....................... ....................... ....................... ........••............. ...................... ....................... ...................... .
Nl!WI B:a 1 ltJ, apt. bit t1nmnU.Y Pan 4 Br, I~ BlO CANYON. Luaurioua -E!Slde. alr1 3 Br, 2 Ba, .._,... 31 H MlwportlHdt. 116' ~ntl WATa•>~
by316BamUSAID.tl.then decorat.d. ~/mo or domso1um bome . Stud.lo,lbedr«>m 'Iii, t __ ~_ _ paint, triplex. Vo lo mo Duplex, 2br, 2ba. Oceao ...... Gtlon!l 1000 aq ft. All a1J,ertt tplc, 1ml yd. l&r~ 4riv. batlla, (am nn. NewlJ 2 Br, I batb COD• SIOW.AUP re '"v bltaa, ~ew Cp\I. dr)l9, ....................... ·-.. ••••••••••••••••• Gre9tattloe•,....., call~.-Omo. lH/opt. 752.7m •v .. Nn/Qevor Uved lo. Wet. llaidten'ice,pooi ~ $160.ssz..4201or55l·li'1 vu. SJZS mo. Avail now. 'W•bavelOOO'aotbou.Me. wpea.wmewtwctb&n
Dupla,Zbr,pr.121$.No MO-Olli ~~l~E.~$. ~~~~· GARDENAPTS., MISA PIMIS SU.antor830-191J dplxa, apt1 oow, all ~!t~=~v~:
pet.I. n7~D PlacoaUa. Wood!lrid&• Sbr 2ba, den. CORONA DEL MAR 1 Br S2:15. 2 Br. ~ .. &may, irpuklial1 CIHIJ are.as. all prices. Save 00 ln Udo v~· You"v•
MS-'Jm frplc, an&! bM ~/atriwn. Lara• I br, 2 ba, den, SUS CASITAS 2 Br Townboule. frplc. ~ w/aaraaea. Pool, lBr., ocun view. blt.DI, fee. aot lo eee lt to bOuev• it!
QUIETP
Beaut. IDdacp d, comm family home. Newport Nlceb' furDiabed 1 bdrm. Pool ienoia Some ocean Jacuul Adult.I, no pets. DO kids or peta. SZ35/mo. 645-4900 Atf Call Su•l• zauo at
BJVACY pool, lake Ir park. Lie fflbta, 2 children ok. No Cl _... ...,3o •-ca'._.,. __ . ,_ Open dally. 2l6$0 Harla 483-7231 lbr,mctaar.,newcpt.'l, $550 rno. ~Janet, peb. $SSO. 541-1251 or Ad!ii: •::· ti 'z~fo a ........ VacWI. Cl~e Ave, C.Jil. (II•• Verde ---------•T..tt. l l t O (714)8T5·8H2 for an drpe, atove Ir retrt1. Nr evt (213) 3Sl-060S col· 919-~ Newpo.i Bl j9 . to Fubioa lalud as fme Dr E. olf Harbor Blvd) Unique prdea apt. Beau\ ••••••••••••••••••••••• appt., Olt ·~by MLrJ1 Westcliff.Adlt.a,nopeu. lect'. . v beacb.Alao1Br.M4-2Sll SG-ZU'J ·decorated. AU eleczBrZbafrptcw ht.rlc 8 :30to :ao at o
$27S.m.&372evea CDM quiet old Corona, I 1 Br trailer $1'10 + uW kitchen. 1 Br, deo, drfi s:i2s. • u de Marina Village, 3'75 ~
RSJ 3 Br~~ Ba, former br 3ba, tri-level, 500 aq ft 133 E. 1ah St, ipace a; ~eu. Walltt.obcb. an.d"9w ... ,.. tropical lanai. $2'75 yrly ~ alt.Im':;, + p. ()pol'to,SU11e2Cl5, N.8 •
..... Go.._ll model. prime aolf cow·"H fam rm. recently re· "2-91A dr3Ba Fm rm ZlOOsqft Delu.xe 2br 2ba loft. 1r 2 6 leoae. Refs req. 498-0295 • P
We have 1000'• of bouaes, 6 lake vu. 1875. 547-7°'4 . f\ubiahed. Av all. tmmed. Yrl.Y, 509 Acacia M5-70fi8 den •J>llt-level. Frplc, Bach · refri #If twah hrlll•d u: ~~ ~ji~ :Wat er dplu, apt• now, all leodt $550. mo. Lie only. 1st & ..... GtllonU skyllgbt.a deck Country unit, a.S1'10lllo. Of'Uli~ ... 1cl JtOO areas,allprice1.Saveon ~ 3241 last+ dep. Firm. Webave1000'1otboUIM. Extralgeduplex,2br,2 _ _..,_.,No cblldren or na~~t,!,:, no pet•·••••••••:: ............. area,C.M.300-800~~
fee ••••••••••••••••••••••• 673-1206 .._ f 1 be llC\Mlle· ......,._,_.,. 11~• 40' aq, ft. Grow>d ·-.._ .. ir1 ..
900
DOWHT W dpln, apt• now, all ~ ¥araae, rpc, am pet.1.180B.21st.M5-9543 collect ' THEEXCITlNG llntpark.lna540-2200
__________ A...:fl~1 LAG~ M BlufCs single level 2'Br, 2 areu,allprices.Saveoo cell 1• ocean vu, pvt eves.~days PALM MISAAPTS. Fowt• ,.., 3234 ba .. beet greeobelt loc. fee. beach. $."525. mo. 675-320.1 bl Love~ 2 Br, 2 ba w /focd MlNlfl'ES TO NPT omcE SUITES
••••••••••••••••••••••• Deluxe 2 bdrm., 2 balh .,-rs. Agt.. 6'4·1133 645.4900 Afl ODna Cove 1 Br as den N1ew.12 Br, 2 b1a, all tna. ·yar . $325/mo. Call BCH. duplex rental. Outatand· u'X · cl· .... ···•"N •a" rp c. enc · garage, 4116-5600Act. Bach 1&2BR lo Newport Bea~.
Cathedral Celling•
$9115 Vie• &i Fireplace
3+2Beated Pool (8392P)
M2S ForThe Family!
Enormous4+2w/Pool Frplc,Xid OK. (8936P)
m&ioc:ean&villageview, BAYSHORF.S -10 .... -. ope .... paUo,lndrynn,f325. ' . bri•M uit.e9 'ttj yetonlyafewshortblks. 2Br. yard, yearly, $&50 0-Polmt 3726 ~5-2388. TSLM1mt 642-1803 tW...,_leodl 3140 from$220.c!rup. ~~. ~11ar.,•
to town 6 beach. Huge mo. 646-5430 •••••••••••.•••••••••••• $390. lee 2 Bl' 1 Ba. elec •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• Adult.a, No Pets
liv.nn.&diningalcove. $SlOoeeanview,2BR,apt st.ove.D/W,dispoaal,pvt ~e':D~~~E~. SHARP, beach. l, 2 & 3 ($e.:8i!:-J~!•rt ~Hall. <n•>MS-~
Lge. ldtcben w/bilt·ins, A, 25081 La Cresta. bcb access. 487 MOl'O.Ul& $250. 2192•8 Placentia. BR, frpl, ,dishwasher, Blvd.) 1..:...~-------
i o c I. w aa b I d rye r . OH UDO ISLE Ownr, ~ Canyoo. 673-7631 Ca I I b t w 0 1• 5 M • F garage, paUoe, 960-2358. 546-8860 Office for rent in corona
Separate 2 car garage. 0 w o e r w l ll le a a e 636-4!20 deUlar. All~ offering FUFURRNNJISSHHEEDD ·.ORMAUKNE· tW'w'•~ 3740 _____..__,.....~ llAHOMEW LAIGl211 Call644-84N al $500 llo. Ref. re· ..,. PRIME LOCATION Nice 1 Br. pool, adults, no 3 Br apt/condos, conve-FROM $235 MO. Ofc Do ...... , ........ a . ...,5
FANTASTIC 3 Br 2 Ba. quired c.u· AN OFFER: You have a ••••••••••••••••••••••• peU. S250. &U·S251 days, menUoc. 5 units avl. $600 ....... -e>_. ~·
fplc, D/W, fenced yard, llISsIONREALTY choice: Large2Br +den STUDIO SBedrooms.$400mo .. lst 64fr.371}8after6pm. up.~1507.640-1751 Quiet bldl w/beautiful Sq. ft . Plush cpU.'
lli<ll & pet OK. $405. ,._494-0731 and patio. $750. mo. or 2 -W~I...... Ir wt. ~~zau Moothru UVENearTbe Beach! lndscp&, cov'd 1arases. paneled, incls util $115.
ReullWts 631-4555
963-4.56"1, agent, no ree. Br 2 Ba, large deck and Full .. 'l eo •-TV Fri. Agent. ooree 2 Br. kids ok. pool. $2.50. ,. __ ...._. .r.-J adults. no pets. Ideal for ~or4M-7796 3 Br 2 ba. Atri blt.os VIEW Both ou • ____ :_ .-mo. cau between lOAM _ _.. _ adults 35 or older.
Beaut. 3 BR 2 BA home ' u.m, ' . · tfi,50mo. un· Ltnen.s&UUllUes -.--. .-.n. .. n..-_. 1c7PM.MS-8084 BeautilulAdullApta LEEWARD APTS, 2020 EXECUTIVEOFFJCE d $f1 • drp, pr. Walk to bch. its are freshly painted MILE TO OCEAN Gu"' wa~r Paid. Fullerton Ave. l blk E. of Custom 1-man offices.
6
i:c:PaoyMldl :. ~ m~ J~. !:"ail7. 020· ~. mo. 'til aBnYd carpeted. DRIVE R__. Sllht Mohl Coiy bacb. atudio, l E/Side2'ood loc., almost 21661 Brootbunrt, HB Newport Ave, 1 bllr. S. of Rent includes~·vat&ci· -....,. ... ,._ person. $250. Util Curo. l '-'·8 d D•u ...... ~ fj . u· .... te lll Via YdoNord 727Yorkt.own Blvd ~7030 new. r, ..... a con o. 96U653 .._,. ..... ~.......... ce lD pres s"' • * * * and call Beach Blvd at YorkiowD frplc, fncd yd, dbl gar., 1 receptionist, personal K"in Lsntt Wal .. fr-=' u~1 536-0411 Darling 3 Bl' 2,,.; Ba, front child O.K., no peta. 2Br, c~ welcome. no R.-4000 telephone anaweriog,
............. 3240 -.._ duplex. s. of Hwy. Great $375/mo. 494-8452 peta, st.artln& at $2'5 mo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• coo f er enc e room.
•••••••••••••••••••••••
LOVELY 3 BR, 2 Ba
w/frpl, DW, crpt, kid/pet
OK. $405. 963-4561 Agent.
Noree.
·~~V~ia 631-1400 SMALLBEACHHOTEL cond. Patio, gar, s:w. M.E.5A V}:RDE 1 .. equlet 84&a>7 Roomw/kitcbenette Secretary, bookkeepe~ • ~ .... y ROOMS$32.50Weelt 673-75Uagent 2 Br 2 Ba adlls .. Do pets' $50week&up word processor, etc. ~~:::,\';,~ wh>ntt of 2 BeauU!ull~ demate4, A .. llJIO/mo, .... ,... N8W t Bdrm Ap1. Wood , S2'IS "'°' iuo Cinoamoa: Seawind Village '48-&'1'5 • t~-.!:t~:t, cru1ie ":Fs
I UGS IUHHY Catalina view. 3 Bdr m, ~leaclt 3741 beam ceil, frplc. Avail 9'19-1658 New 1&2 bdrm luxury Ambassador Inn lo Colt.a (Canada Bosioess
2'1!1 ba -:r:ownhouae. All••••••••••••••••••••••• AprU7.$395/mo.S51·5836 Large3Brlowohouseapt adult apts in 14 plans Mesa, 2277 Harbor. Cen· Center), Lake Forest.
1 Bedroom condominium,
pool, tennis super loca·
tion. $250. Call.&Ml-4471.
FOLLIES Rec. facilities. 1 Cb.lld LAGUNA BEACH MTR. ' from $270 + pools, teo· -.11°1ocat.ed, 235 rooms. 7811-7283 at the OK. ~Lease. 642-2184 INN. $65/wk & up. Maid 2BR, 2ba. Brand nu. Sun· 2 ba,frplc, patio, garage. nis, waterfalls, ponds! MANY wltb kitchen . . ANAHEIM att.6pm. serv color TV heated deck. 2·car gar,~ mo. Quiet complex. Adults, From San Diego Frwy ..._,_... & TV Swtmmtng' Singl~ ~o 3 room swte CO=~ON 2 sty 3 br 2 ba A-frame pool: (714) 49'-5294, 985 Mike: 644-0525, 640-74.40 ~~ $375. 645·3381 or drive North on Beach to ~ jacui~t. and rec. ~r;a!/oo ~ll ;i~~~ircte
Fort.he
Dshwhr 'rrplc. Walk tO N.CoastHwy. 2Br bllns patio carport McFadden then West on room. Daily & weekly start' 101 a·t · ..... ., ca11' ' ' ' ' ' 2 Br, util. rum. Children McFadden to Seawiod tes · r $48 _...,. MARCH 21st bch. tennis. $600. mo. yr· Oceanfront. 2 bdr 2 ba pool, or beach, adits, DO ~ N ,..... M A t 4 Viillao (n•)"""Sl98 ra atartmg rom a _833-__ 3640_. _____ _
Performance ly. 642·3361 Ajt. 1V. "ar, frpl, W J~e. o~ pets. $350. 64G-0819 ..-. 0 .,....... gr. P · .e. • -.r week. c.ondo,ZBR,lYJba,frplc, r~·ttS42~8 t .,...,. t • ... 00 lilllOWallace,645-7181 V&"""l""•-ryCoodo.l '-'· 645-4840 Prime N .B. 2 omces,
newly decor'd. Nr shops. "'"-. .#,, .• :x ~ .....,, o Luxurious Dplx. 3 Br, 2 pets, nu crpt1, .,. . eo.taMtta 3124 ._. • ~ -n ~.secretarial service S300mo.963-12't2 claimyouruc e . ba, rrplc, Newport 494-579a. ••••••••••••••••••••••• l Br, ctps, drps, encl. ba.Newlydecorated,rec Beaut rm. pvt bath, & answering serv.
REAL FIND 4 Br 2 Ba, * * * lights. 645·2111 or lBRapt.s,fum,allutlllo· Adull 2 bedroom, super carport.$235. area.~.Pb5Sl-86Z3 empld mature lady. Lite 7S2-2873
3 Br condo, l YJ Ba, D/W,
lndry facil. Slater &
Newland. 897-0586
(pie, cpts, fncd yard. Lai)llRaHih 3250 646-0303 cl, lndry facil, pvt location. No pets 645-22'74 Mana.gen Unit 3 Br 2,,.; ~~efa. Laa Bcb,i....;~-------
"25. 963--4567 aceot, no ••••••••••••••••••••••• M~SeeTo Believe• park'g, avail April l, for $225/montb. 568 W. New decor 2Br, lBa, + Ba, fplc, 2 stall garage,•---------EXECUTIVE
fee. ...J 4 Bdrm .• 2 bath view OceanViewt 2+2Beaut. perm.resldenta.250Cliff Wllaoo,inquireapt.E. gara1e, w. Side. or Mr. Gorbett, 897·2515. ROOMFORRENT SUITES
Su C d
home. Air conditioned, Frplcl $385 (8754P) Dr.497·3493 schls. shopping. $270. !MWMdys EASTBLUFF~. + Luxurious offices, H· per oo o, ru: beach, 2 fireplace,
2
car garage. LA MANCHA AnS 548-9'49 ___ ,;...______ 64().2810 agt aft. 4 e c u ti v e secretary.
BR. 2 ~a. teruus, sauna, nice yard & washer and $465X R 1 $175. Furn. small cozy Large 2&3 bedroom New deluxe Bach, or ---_;;;.,-----personal phone cov-
jacuzz1. Secured gate dryer available. Ex· tra oom.3+2 bach.Nrbeach.Utilpd.l garden apts. Dshwhr, ** * ocean,frplc.wooddecor, Lovely Lg & pvt ba No erage, receptioo.ist. con·
$370 mo. '93·9797 , ce.llent location; close to =~eeS:~Y(':,~~"> respempldadlt.494..(2()() bltns, encl. gar, gas bbq. Mcllh9w q.ilter skylights, kitch, ~ ba, smk-drink Resp. Mature ference room, xerox,
496-3758 freeways & s hopping ltatuthules 611 _.555 l.aglllMIMicpet 3752 Pool Gas pd. 778Scot1Pl. 20762 LOIJlllMI Canyon pool. util pd, $275. Male $1 50 SW CM notary. Lease or month
•Condo. Lrg
2
br. den. centers. $450 /m onth ••••••••••••••••••••••• 642·5073 Rd. . 962-778'7 _&66-~_1035_______ to month. Near So. Coaat ::;"'Xr,dt'°,.G;~~ \",",'." c~~f "::•~ .~·~: SEA ~~~~~~~R Hme. s,:.:;:• .~~~~;,,'~::~ HEW f>.SIDE ""-' -h ~~~~.£'Vu V--R-4250 r.:.::;.:::'i;.,~,:W,;'.," 714/642·01.38. sn~I sty, 3 Br, 3 Ba. 2 Near Regional Shopping 3br,2ba, Townhouse. Up· Yoo are the winner or 2 PlushCarPets (8700P) ••••••••••••••••••••••• ATTa.TIOM!!
3 Br 1~ Ba, Fam Rm. f~lcs, dbl. gar, all elec. Center. Heated pool, graded. Lge patio. ticketslo the 01.1• cpts, drps, rncd yard, nr Ideal 3 br 2 ba, 2 car gar ~tcll: poo!. tennis. spa, jacuui. Nr. corner Alicia Chi Id ren ok. $37 5. IUGS IUMHY $290BargamSaver! *AL n-* Atto.•p. Ardlltedt .
shops $495mo.847·1908 condo,pool,$380.847·3563 View! All an a pvt. grd. Pkwy&PaseodeValeo-6'5-9543 eves, 646·4262 FOLLIES 3BRCondoStyle WEHAVECONDOS E•Jinen. CPA's etc.
' 557·2179 comm. $850 Mo. 96J..3111 cia. days. atthe lhedr C . lNHAWAll a-..-6 Ofc ....._ '-t .
$W>Delightful2br 2ba •--.... 1-....1 3252 Or968-6623 ALICIAPLAZA . -;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; w/Ca al eilings. Intm'lR.E.Net.worlc ~ -.... .-. SlidingDoOTStoPalio! -.,.--"..,...... ANAHEIM KidOk (9687P) N rtH t htsRt•u OC'•lirecl.Ocetm•Ww·
NearSboppinJ (5817P) ....................... BlGCANYONTOWNHSE &VILLAGE LA CASA ILAMCA CONVENTION RawlilMt 631-4555 ewpo e & ...,. )CW prbcJ. So. LCICJlllC'
SEA TERRACE Garden New 2 BR, 2 ba, crpt'd & 581.&Sl. 581-6130 ..... I ~···Mow CENTER ___ ,_4_s._s_o_4_4 ___ ,
$350 Exquisitely Styled! Home. 2 br ~ den, 2 ba, drp'd, spectacular Golf Sorey· no pet.s. For the 1 Bdrm, close to beach. EASIER SPECIAL dw wr Mat to post
Unique3+2TwnhmeW/ beach, tennis & pool. Course & la~e view. Sep Mewporta.och 3769 ~~~·ia~~;8·A~~s MARCH 21st Newcpts. Nopet.I. Year· Big Bear Cabin 2 Br. ofc. Gooclfor-ot-
BltllS&Pool (9630P) $ 5 2 5. 4 9 3 . 6 4 9 0 ' gar., ten01s & pool. ••••••••••••••••••••••• over 35, no yet.s or Performance ly.673-04.22 rpJc, sips 8. Wk/Wkod .... bul. Concession
......... 631-4555 <213>896-507'7 Lse/option.6442416 Npt B. 2 prof. men seek childre n . Ca I Sue; Call M2·56'18· ext. 333• to 9a ........... ~ 754-6341 &.._.t......,-.etlittlh 1 claim your u ckets. -""' ns.,...,
CHARMING
2
BR l Ba, Lease Lake Park J Br 2 HARBOR VJEW HOME third to shr lux hme. ge 556·7707 or He nry : * ;r * 2 & 3 BR studio apts, MCJ0. SIMwt ..... OC•.
w/ cpts, renced yd, con· Ba. Fam Rm, upgr aded. 4 BR, 2 ba, lrg ram rm, pool RSS/mo.6'0-4330 642-9137 ---buge bacltyard,cbildren Reeutcbto~ 4100 ~ ......... 5 Yr
venieot area . s
375
. ~~Y· 495·6265 556·7441, 9>"75 mo640-1440 UNIQUE P ark-lake set -OK. $350 & $425. Dys,••••••••••••••••••••••• l se ok. Ow ne r
963-4.587. Agent;noree. ..~UFF Btfl
3
br.
2
ADULT COMDO WESnAY T1l1PLEXES ling, 2 Br twnhme, fplc. 848-21655; evs536-487J Roommate wanted to 499·1625. """"'_." patio, adults. $350. shar 2 BR d 2 b
3 Br (b
.. ae ms•~),
2
Ba, ba. ra m. rm, walk to 2 BR, 2ba, yrly. $425 COSTA MESA "H-4423 HEAR IEACH e ' en, a •• --__ i------R-__..._.---~-.. -50-
.... u STIPSTOBEACH NEW3BDRMFAM1LY _, Laguna Hills condo.--.. .. 2,000 sq.ft, frpl. patio, .,._wport hoc:h 3269 schls & shope;, $625/mo. APTSFROM $395. &CIVIC C&n'ER view. $200 mo. (213) .................... -.
$475 incl.1ardener. J o,••••••••••••••••••••••• 646--0100. 3BR.Zba,bayvuS1050 Private back yards, 1::f:~1~J;:;:~~A~~ii BRAND NEW. Spacious :r72·0977, (213) 625·1.245 4DauxEOFC'S
M6-13Tlor846198S AJ LAST R...W.Cialore!! 2BR,2Ba.,yrly.$AOO ngaroapgeests. 2Nc!lla.lrdresnouotkh. ~."!~707 Shalimar. ~~ef~l~.~;,T;~:J~ Bob. ~·,_.rm .. sea~-~· all
Completely repainted in-We have 1000'• or houses, · "' .............., 502 Yorktown -'1ust West Fem. shar lge. quiet dix, _.....,.., sm. w.....,
10
re· s1de3Br 2 Ba.llkenew "R--'-'ir-tc:• dplxs, apts now, all Coast Plaia. Rental or----------olBeachBlvd.""""1718 2Br, 2Ba, pool, on bay. ar.lor2yr.Je.a.se.Lake
d
"' 11mn11 __...-,, ... fice open Wed. lhru Sun. Mesa Verde 2Br. 2 batb, _.,. F t K cpts, bltns fncd yar , Y•C•~ areas,allprices.Saveon l2-4. 820 B-.. er St, 1 blk ... ,_b h ll"" ft Best N.B. loc. $ZSO +,,.; ores area. ent patio. 2 car car. $400 mo. ,....... fee. '"' ...., wu er . "" sq • Beaut. 2 br, 2 ba, dbl gar utll. ~5-3499 Har1'ins. 97'U761. At.,.._ Witla 645-4900 Ari w. of Bristol, 557-5215. frplc. $350. Ph im-&S33 'coodo. Pool, jac. frpl, 71""581-9393
1
WE GU•
8
•~a
1276
New 2 Br. D/W. encl gar, Deluxe 2 Br townhouse. security. ~5-6161. Need a great roommate? ._ .... _trial R~ ~soo
3 BR, 2 ba. lwrnry ad t "'9'A"' Cutlivingexpen.ses! -cmw .. condo. Pool, etc. Up· •Widestselectionposs. ra~ORY n S270. Avl Mar. 1. 2025 ~· Bltns, gar, lndry Nice 2 BR. DU cpt.s, & Call The Orange " •••••••••••••••••••••••
graded. Close to beach. •In house computer sys. ••••••••••••••.••••••••• VtftV"" 1 Charle Apt B. 548-5763 faca1. A~s only· 1919 paint, 8 blks rr ocn, 'la blk County Professionals New 6,¥00' under 20<. 18101
No pets ' $470 mo. •Daily telephone service Go\f Course View, 3 Br Spectacular ocean/bay ~~ ~lh06e1 m St. Mgr. stores, trans, 536-1286 Howe Mahl u..ltd Redondo Circle. unit P,
536·5789, 842·0163, •Vacancies verified daily adults, little yard care. VJew. 1 BR, furn apt. No ~d~l.:~ no plets. 2 br, ,_,.... HuntBch842·'2834 •F.u.ll slalf of coUDSelors Part rum. $S.'i0. 1-492-3666 pets, no children . l8"~" poo · . Lai)llRa leoch 3841 832-4134 1m2.2595 Fr to ed
65
•. KCl\/-"""th Avatl April 645-2498 2 br l'h ba, 2 sty tnplex, •••••••••••••••••• .. ••• Dependableaince 1971 Mi---t•--
• ee ag ... over S.. JllaR ..,.,., UJVU • nodop $300 -Hwtl.,MJIOll •FreerentaJcounseling c-a..traRo 3278 lat. Agl, 833·0200 or $450. New a br 2 ba E· · 494.S673 1 Bdrm Apt. Ocean View. Supercondo2br 2ba f/p Reetals 4650 Hart.Our 3242 e()pen7days8:00-S:OO ,.,.:r.:••••••••••••••• 673-5208. side, deluxe, encl. gar, 'la blk to beach $290/mo. pool, cibbse, $loo.' mo: ••••••••••••~••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• ,_2 BR il 3/lllh frplc,yard. TWNHSE,2Brl'hBa,2 494-7287 Pvtentr.645-7953 Space ava1l for sm
RENTIMES 3 Bdrm Duplex, 2 bath, l .... & , ava ru TSI..Mgmt. 642.1603 yrs old, fplc, pvt patio. mtrhm, camper shell, H.J:SJ'u~ Nb G ~ 0 N ca: ga!+ carport. 2 8/ll. <llhwar, 1ar, steps gar, new paint, adults, n ~OODS .COVE. Charm· Roommate Capo Beach. boat & trlr up to 12·.
end .fdrn n:w For Professional Service sw1mmu1g pools. $350 to bch, call for appt 3 Br 2 Ba apt. Quiel area, petS $300 mo 646-7027 mg studio apt. Frplc, lrg Linda. 540·0500 ext 33 6'5·0873 E·slde Costa
all b1.J~.' lac, poomi~ et~'. Call &ll j C55 979·1473 lv msg 2 1 3 I 4 4 6 • 4 7 S O . bltos, cpu, drps, no pet.'l. · · deck, oce~ vu, 2 blks to Eves, 493-0423 Mesa. 1" 213/446·9220. Open hse $325. 557-4238 $225 mo. 1 Br, pool. 1 adlt, bch. avail lmmed. Pls _.....:.;, ______ _
Privacy. $S.'i0. 846-4408 OR STOP BY OUTRAGEOUS 2 Br 1 Ba. Sat" Suo 10.2; 5206 Nep· no pets. 32S J 171.h Place. call 661·1181 dys, ~-t097 4br 2ba Washer & dryer-..-S fl est/
Huntington Harbour Coo 1936 ~ •a....d ~·. ~~. peAgr•n~nao. tune. FOURSEASONSAPTS aft UAM aft6 gar-Di.shw. $2SQ Incl util "'2-.~ ftY d B h I t & .---.. .,, -............,. " ., Spacious 2 br twnhse, l 'la • Female on)y. 548-6028 ,._e
0 · ac · w 1 ove ('hblkNo.of19t.hSt.) ree. R..tabGdorell ba, pool. pvt patio $325. 3 Br 2 Ba upper. LagmaMiC)llet 3152 . . •··~··•••••••••••••••••
rer\i, dshwbr, Crpl~ ACaW. Corp. Sm Fee Sc.ulaAMI 3210 WehavelOOO'sofbouses. Adulu. No peta. $275. 735 Carport. No pet.a. 1021 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Gtrl, 2 .rooms., pnvate ~ f~~~t)~748S dplu, apts DOW, all Joann St. 646-6483 Valencia. 546-698S 3 BR, 2,,.; BA condo. Cl& to bath, ldtcb. pnv. Conv. 0ppcw laUty 5005 areas, all prices. Save on pool, huge mstr BR $JOS. Jocatioo. ~$-6865 aA6pm •••••••••••••••••••••••
fee. S240 lbr. $270. 2 br, refriJ, S22S Prime Locale! Near Call T. Mair 831·7048 Avail. tohses. apts, homes SAM CLEMENTE
645-4900 A.fl pvt patio. Adlt.s, no pets. CM Country Club. 2 BR wknds &evs lo share. Pool, tennis, Grooming & P et Sbop. 731·BW.18th~3-7787PM W/Ameruties! (6464P ) l.Gb Forftt 3155 rac. ball. Share A Home Retiring after 7 good
THE SEVILLE $3lO Private Patio Area ••••••••••••••••-••••• 645-7465;644-5658 :·ears, fine location &
2 Br w /gar• ad Its, cpts. Modem Kitchen sets the 3 BR, 2 ba Townhouse, F to _ .. are 3 bdr h-•ae 1 cllenBteERleTRA. S68.500HEN. RY
••••••••••••••••••••••• drps range fncd yd Mood L 3 """"P) ..., ..,_ • • I g +2 (__.., (rplc. air cond. comer block fnn beach $150. & REALTORS ~;!:.~ .......... ~~~~ ~~~!~?: s:rta ~a rv~: R..,.._s 631-455 lot. Lake & club prlv's. Util Fri & Sat 10·4 215Del Mar 492-4121 ...::!.:::::.:..:...:::~~.:...;.....-__ 1---------l ...;._-----"'-'---• 13742Newland St. (Garden 6364120 l to5. 1 BR, $?:.!O. No children. n 87l·3B89 ,_~_s._1_80_1
______ 1
S
naclou• brand new G ul bdr ...._ rt•--a. 3169 3yrlse,6yropt,$480mo. r rove) Beautlf 2 m peta. Ref rig. uwwpor __.. GarOIJH 800 ft xln 1 f townbome, 2 br, 2~ ba. a p t s l n x l n t Almost new 2 br, 2 ba 642·1694 ....................... ..... 4350 sq • t oc or re-
$495. 3 br, 2~ ba, ~75. neighborhood. P rivate ~~~~ar. '325. 2 Br......, C~ pd uPark Npt. 2Br, 2ba. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~s~::~~t·r.~:;'f;
patio view from lovely _...,._, -· , water · gar jac pool spa ten klt ohene; e o chd 2516 "A, Orange . 'All , • 'd Dbl garageNrHunt'gCtr .• _559-_7_185 ______ _
g a r a g e
• ·, p o o l ·• 63M.120 betwD 14'& 5 pm crl UW pd. No chl m $40 & up. Call 847 ·2119 or .. or pets . $445/mo. 968-G67. NEWPORTBEACH ~uo~C lei; Cno _s>eolta.(7S31!5) $15()8l:c. oewtnhse, 2 br, 878-8681; 875-5728. ~ W Interior .. Destro lStudio. ... · a •• • · f 1 d I • ga.ra1e "°' 131 . 1!l>O sq.n . Fine ocation 8811013 1~ • rp c, Y • enc · PAD MEWPOIT · 1ar,lodryrm, Eastaide. 8 b 1 1 r 2 St.C.;..,11:....... & .clieotele.d..Send in·
12821 )'tower 'l'SLllamt 842-ac e ora, o v•3-"o' qwries to: A No. 168.
'l1ne deluxe s br apts. Bedrooi::z!~ Offlal_... 4400 ==~~l~.
tQ5 _pr mo. 381 La Pe.rte Spectacular spa, total ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ln,CM.MS-9'220 recreation program, &eautfwelow lute Balboa fut rood stand.
sodal program. 7 pools, 8 ate space in Newport· Net profit $30,000/yr.
EASTSIDE near new tennis courts. At Fashlon Airport Af'U,. Reception, Seashore Real Eatate,
BR 1 Ba, fplc, e11cl gar, Ialand. Jamboree & San pbooe aerv. conference ,_87_5-5800 __ • -----"'-
avail Mar. 15.. $32$ per Joaquin Hills Road. rm, tilcb, s~y serv, die· mo. Ownr/agt. 813-1181 l714t644-l900 tat1ng Is copy macbine. FAST FOODS
1 B&-$235-130 £, ~Udo Isle Bayfroat 2 Br From$290. (TI4)752-7170 ~.:J~c':t~~f:a~u~~~
St. Coay, beam ~lg1. frple. t&OO. Call btwn M Tii9 EFFICllMT eome health rood ttcms. ~~==1:: pm,m.o770 .. --... ··nv1 Short walk from o.c. n--1-..1 1 l Tri ,_. 1 _.._ eou.. A mooeJ maker CVI· rw•-~ OE' l person N ca 2 Bdrm -ple11:, Mo. to mo. rent Incl: t'.\,000 CALL~ or ~pie. M2·Ul5 or frplc, new cpt1, xlnt R t at · · 'JM.OllO eood. Nr Bbr Bl fm. ~ ~ ~"y: C: SELECT a.... Allt. bQI It abopa, ea.1072 eraa•. C!OGI. rm, mall Te PROPERTIES-
2 Br, ntrt1/1tv . Kid• 1' 3 brm i ba, frpl, fam :"·• U:.::S prt1 at/DO peta. t:i1'70· 548-m'1. rm. ctea. dbl 1., tt00. ~ m:& V"E SUSCUIM *J:!/.:,O.,:·ie~~ll1 1:~; ~.:~· Nwprt SUITE, Me»470 EatahlI;::'"!!owits·.
I09=v·rm.srutuea. 2 BR. 1 ba apt, elOM lo 250aq.ft.delwteoCnce, W. ~!::.deli~·~ n..n ..... ...,... _...... 19th St, C.M. $!.50 mo. equtp,
-.... ·-· -Tom.MO-DIO aftlpCD
-. 1 BR. ZBA. Upatain. ·~s * •• ... o s •LV •GE
I -•a c ll Office Space avail. pyten-"'v' ~ • ~'. no _£,ll· • •DILUXI-try. z aultet, reaa. 182'7
,Ill E?aatbluff 3 br, 2 ba Wulelllf Dr. NB • .,., b··•~w· 1• ._. ...... !l Lease. Incl. 1pac:. master G14IOO ~• WJ • utens ve
Wt bi .. ot sulte, dill t'm Is dbl Inventory. ~Utnat for lho
d I
"1000 ~tl' aarac•. Auto door Del use offlcea • pri~ottbelnd\US,000.
P u, ••LI aow, • opeMr ••all. Pqol _ • w~rebooee •P•C•· CALL___, ::u-au.,w..a.n• NCJ_. uw. Mani 14004100 eq. n. hU !pSEL:ECT HI •toO oolJ. No.-.-. HCUrl\.7. M•·~4P or ~PE -~,,., IO-TllM I r""'-' RTIES ·
MEW
It DTRA SPECIAL
•••••••••••••••••••••••
UMTALS
2 BR,+ D, 2~~ .... $V.5
3 BR, 2 S. ....... $525 /550
7
-N OM.VPtLOT E ; • •-I-i_·> ... ~ ...... 4', ... 1 .. r 16) .. ~·' 1 ... J Tllll~ ,_
.
• ... "' • l. ,J,._
•
....
I .
'Na Ms; Ca• I I Ud"9 C.,... s.nlce ..................................................................... G.....,.al SenlCH ' Ha•1d••tint Lm•c••g P ...... fP••"-9 1Wlat/P•""9 . ...............•.............•....................... ~ ........................................................... . •••••••••••••••••••••••
P/(:b1 BkkDer w /four m . klldlR C....... Carpet Clean1Jl1. STEAM RIMODIUMG
tdrriol. "I.A. exp wut.11 reftnl.abed. Is reblt like <1' SHAMPOO. Al9o noor eustom Room Add$
HANDYMAN. Homes &. Have time for yourself, LANDSCAPING. 15yrs. Painting O.C. · Ibt·~6llepalns
apts. Conscientious call the MoPpett.s Clean. Reuooableprices. Ra/C(>mm ADt'lo rates. 1 " SmalljobeO.K.
~to wort on ln your now free eatlmatu • wincSov.: care. '71·1~ cabinetaCounl~ l:!ee or my bome. eau .in-m Dutch M&10tenance Apt-Office-Comm· Alt.
Craftsman. Call 645-0302 Ing Service. 546-2393 re· 86M'183or 547·SM6 • Lie/Im 85-ld/499-2901 , . Call Bnac:e 543-20&5
-um after 5pm CUstom Homes"' Uruu Handyman. repair. ._. 1 C. p1attc Carpet, vinyl, " tile re· Quality not Quantity upgrading w /Work 4P*•c• ....... ....................... pair. Guaranteed. Wm B. Anderaoo·Builder w lhomeowDer 5'7-8007 ••••••••••••••••••••••• . 645-7488
fernla ' --------Landac.aplng. Tree trim·
ming. Clean·up. 8 yra
up. Free Est. Jay
Noboru. 848·4043 or
PETERS PAJNTING ....... ,llepalr
Expr'd. Reas Rates. •-•••~•••••,•••••••••• Free Est. Call Gene VERYNEATPATCH S52~ JOBSlrTEXnJRE Wlhr' ~ dlbwsbr re C&111enler Ir Cabinet wtt --------Free F.sl. '31·0381 ~ , pal~a·. Reas. 646·58'8 Free esumau. sml jobs C.•nt/eo.cnte Bedrical ...................... .
aoythne & repalra, eva. 673-5125 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Haul, sklploader dump
---~~----•1!97-28112 ~est. m.tm Ail ee's Hou1ecleaning.1----------1All PROFESSIONAL
Reas, rellable, refs. Own Landsc•ping and Hauling Pa1nUng. Inter/Exter. PATCH PLASTERING
trans.642·7207or646-487l Tree trimming, rototill· Rus,workgu.ar&42--0388 All t,ypes, Free ArcWtectwGI Alvin All types concrete, ELECTRICAL SERVICE trlt, <r~ding, tree wrk,
••--••••••••••••••••••••Carpenter. Free blo~kworbk._ p~aj.ter: CALLSS15 hr,&.SMALL demolltionetc.831·1.257 Rosemarie's Houseclean· :f:~ Ume Free est. Painting. Extr/lntr. Ex· .estimates.Call~
A estimates Anysliejobs cus om rt e ic JOBS842-8233 Hm*nn rehltectural Drafting, Tony' ,,,.,,, """"'"' · bonded. 642-6894____ ~ OCC Arch student. re· ___ __.:....;•_ ...... _...,.,..___ ~ Sectrfc •••••••••••••••••••••••
ing. Refs, reason. own pr·~. honest, neat, reaa. PLASfERING
tram. 642·1403, 645-3439 Maid Service Lied 964·1045 Dave Homes, additions, re-
asonable, fast, call Carpentry & Masonry Cement Work of all klnds. ~327136 64S-69'7• OCC Student.~ T. truck. '1S1·11827 Fences. covers, decks Free Est. Blockwork. ---------Trash, tree trim, Ron
••••••••••••• •••••• •• •• · stucco free eat.a, low Housecleaning, bard Young Colombian lady F\neR. SiExteStr. Pliatn~ngTby rats.~
....... lepaln Brick block concrete 556-0757 ELECTRICIAN·Priced 642-5703, 979-3489
••••••••••••••••••••••• ::~~eJJm Free esl. eo.troc:tor right·free es~1mate on Strng M:udent, big truck,
worker, good references. will 1 bo nor. · c., tns. ry 1....;..:.;.;.;;.....:..:..:._::..:.:;..._...;.;. __ Own tr 67.,9589 c ean >:our use, toe. 8J6.S5SS 24 hrs. pt , .. an.sp. ..,. speak.s EnetJ.sb. Mana. • • • -g a.:-Tax ~-Prof palnt'g & paper ••••••••••••••••••••••• U.S rain damaged your ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~eorsmallJobs. . tree cuts, t'lnup, hauling .
itpbaJt? Call 631·2440. CUstoro dec:lung & over· R.J .Huffman & Son, Gen Licensed 673--0359 494-76m &49'-2129 ........... " ........... Un... hanging, work guar. HOMESAV~BS. Plumb--Y F t S36·4780 In&• HeatiDC. Free est. Bonded, lie., insured. bangs, int. & ext. repair, Contr. Custom Alt & Add,
. '--'--rels. Eves. 615-0982 Bob patios , ca b t net s .. ~"' .. ---r fonnica. New const. Res ••••••••••••••••••••••• Carpet Service & comm 'I. 645-46'4 or
A & E Systems. Auto roll ••••••••••••••••••••••• 548-4541. Uc & bonded.
up awnings for the motor Carpet Man will lay yours
home & travel trlr. All or mine. Repairs & ~-contract~~: Founda·
colors & sizes. Immed. cleaning too! Guar work t1ons, add1t1ons. re·
free home installation. at bigger &avings. Free modeling, blockworlt .
.. 10AM&S.7PM est,64.5-3646 556-8241
___ <2_13_>_S92_-5020 ____ 1Shampoo & steam clean. Comm'I, Indus. Bldg re·
Color brighteners; wht novatioo. Qual work on l•pltHwg cpl& 10 min bleach. Clean all phases ot constr. Xlnt
••••••••••••••••••••••• liv, din rm, ball sis. Avg refs. Will handle lrg or
U c. Daycare, my home.
K·Mel Electric: Ind., Heatt.g&A.lr COftd Tax preparation by ., ...................... ~es • • $10 br. Honest" reliable
comm, res, & ma int. 11vs. •••••••••••••••• ••• •• •• former I7~~~ent Brickwork. Small jobs. service. BofA, M /C OK.
Honest & reltable. Free Heating & A/C Service & Newport, Costa Mesa & Paillt Y..-Castle 7Sl-31SOor847-0383
est. 9'19-8542. $24.SO lst hr. installation. No jOb too Wouldn't you rather have Irvine. 61S.J17S e~. Specializing in residen· Roofing ~ small.537-8007 acertifiedpublicaccoun· Moving ~ tlal bomes, int. & ext.•••••••••••••• ... •-••••
••••••••••••••. ••••••••• "---~ ta.nt prepare your in· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Please cbe~k our re· ROOFS installed factorY
CLEAN-UPS/HAULING :~••••••••• ~r;;.e ~ax rei~? For 8~ "Two Men Will Moflil ~rences. Lrdic 1# 320881 direct; estab 3S yrs. Call
Pruning·Planting Want 8 REALL y CLEAN ~182 your ome ca You" We l)andle. lrg &}. T:'~ 6J6_';~ • ree est. Harold Gunn MB-2961
Free est. 642·9907 HOUSE? CaU Gingham . . . s ml moves-.off1ce & ---------1Roofs For Less All types
JOHNTHEGARDENER Girl. Freeest64S-5123 Individual, partnership, household. Distance & toast Painting. Cstm ext Liclbood'd I~ur ~
For Prot. grounds care ·--------•I corp.20yrsexper. loc al, also packing. /int .. airless spraying, estimate . H•·o4Zl or 546-3255 Lowest legal rate. 661-6262 · call John. 2S yrs exp. 2 THE S U N S H I N E I--'--I..tc /U\Srd. CaJ T 111·9'4. _s:Jl_-413S ______ _
Hort. degrees. former GIRLS :.:"."::'!................ Pb 847-7278 Painting. lntr /EXtr. 2Syrs Wlildow c....-. White House Gardener. u--~• , . in Harbor area. St Uc ••••••••••••••••••••••• Personalserv.645-8446 ~c;arung le office P;rofesslonal Ironing & MOVING, HAULING & • Over 3 years. 556-3846.
Near Baker & Bear, CM
rm S'l.50, couch $10, chr sml jobs. Free est. & de·
SS. Guar elim pet odor. signs. Very competitive
Cpt repair. 15 yrs expr. prices. 879-3166, 598-11712
Do work myself. Refs eves. Gmerd Senlcff
specialists. Spec. on Alterations. Done in my CLEANUPS. Reason. l83281,6'2·2:3Se !Windows cleaned, r e.-
apts. & R.E. work. Serv. home. 645-8875 Free eat. Coll. students. PA.PBl.HAMGIMG asonable, buaineaaes,
7 days wk. Bonded, in· B&B.673·1166 20 yrs exp. Free est. bomes&apt.a.847-4461 Hsewfe will babysit in my 531-0101. •••••••••••••••••••••••
b o m e . L o c a t e d Tbe fastest draw an the HANDYMAN: Carpentry
State/America. CM .SeUthingsfastwithDaily West ... a Daily Pilot electrical, plumbing & s u r e d . 5 4 0 · 9 S 2 5 Have something you want ~2161. Aalr for Bob. SELL idle itenlS with a (anytime) to seU? Classified ads do Find what you want in Daily Pilot Classified Ad.
548-9565 Pilot Want Ada. Classified Ad. 642·5678. floors. 847-2787, S.S7-4S04 it well. 642-5678. Daily Pilot Classifieds. Want Ada C811642·5678 642-5678.
MoMyto~ 5025 Lost&Fo..td 5 300 PersoMlls 5350 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~~~~t~.~ ..... !!.~~,~~~~~ ..... !!~~ ~~~~ ..... !!~~ ~~!.~~·~:! ..... ~!~~ ~~~~t:! ..... !!.~~ ~~~ .. ::Y.~!!
h t,2-d&3rdT.D.'s FOUND: Surfboard, RELAXJNGMASSAGE
LOANSAVAJLABLE Fordham, College Park. Bob James I.Jc Masseur
Credit no problem. SS7-4257 aft 6P M Outt"aJI 9·9, 494·S111
lrol&er, 752·5903 Lost : Choe. Labrador FOXY LADY . puppy, 7 mo, 3/5 vie. Money Ava1lable, ~any Mag /Adams. 540·4658 Outcal MasMCJe ;,~~~-78ii1~01ects. dys, 964·2207 eves. 731•3561 ~-~-----~1FOUND : Dachshund. ------~-~•
'-"1 llCK CASH Black and Brown. Vic. of OUTCA.LLMA.SSA.GE
,,._.. PlacenUa &19th. SJ6..8312 *731-0931 *
Boat Manufacturer
ACCOUNTING CLERK ERICSON YACHTS
Fine Quality Newport Based Retail Store ls Has the following full
Currently lnterviewmg For Part-Time Position time openings for ex-
ln Their Office Staff. Job opening requires skill per"d help. Wages based
with 10 key adding machine, knowledge of onexperience.
Eurroughs L-5000 & L·6000 machines, basic FtMISH LIME .
knowledge or inventory, A/Rec & A/Pay & CARPEHTERS
payroll. Hours flexible. Salary commensurate C,.. •1 .... ET SH-with experience. Pleasant surroundings. Please -" v.-
bt & 2nd Trust Deed Found: Blue Merle Collie send resume to: A.SSEMILIRS
loans arranged for any mix, 1 yr male. Vic: LINDA & YlctU Cklssffied Ad-. 2 12 9fGIME MAN
reason. Credit no pro· Brookburst & Banning, Oatcal MasMCJe c/o Daily POot, PO lox 1560 Full benefits, medical, blem. Borrow on the in· HB. 968-9418 For the Fm of It! dentaJ, optical. Please creased value of your -----.----Se 11 Or c Costa Mna. Calff. 92626 home. call teday forCast. Found: Beige & wbt rvmg 8 ange 0· apply in person at rourteous information. fnend.ly cat, unneutered ____ 835-__ 73_1_3___ Security Office
Clerk
UTOTEM
Convenience
Market
Positions now avail. 2nd
& 3rd Shifts at au our
localioos. Start $2.~$3
hr. interviews conducted
Moo-Fri at:
12442 Lampson,
Garden Grove 537-4840
We promote from within
Equal Oppor Employer
young male. no collar. ESCORT SERVICE EAICSON Y A.CHTS
Vic : Paul a r i no & 848•9560 Help W onted 7100 Hflf) Wonted 7 100 1931 DeereAve,S.A. Codctail Waitress
b:A}AjaX CO Fairvlew.549·1472 ___ A_ls_o_Hl_n_n"""g'---·-••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~. ~~~~~~~~~! School . n Pl•L [',!~I[ w...! FOUND : Male Keeshond, Bookkeeper, full chrg & Day /eve classes, Place·
Licensed llom_e Loan vie Harbor & l9th, * * * 1---------•I ASSEMBLERS gen'I offc duties . ment Assit. 751·9194 So.
Brokers serving So. S29-2466aft8pm ArtHobenJ ACCOUNTS we w i 11 tra i n . Nonsmoker. Salary Ca I If C 0 ck ta I I
calif. for 17 yrg. can our . 26025 Andr-H Ct. PAY AILE MacGregor Yacht Corp, open. 547-0732 Waltresses, lrvine.
n e a r e s t o f f i c e , FOUND: Female, blond. Mission Viejo CLERK 1631 Plattnt.ia, CM Cocktail Waitrns
714-83'7·3744 Silky mix, 3/S/78, vie You are the winner of 2 IOOICkEEPEA/MGR. School
CustCMMr s.nlce Factory Positions REP Packers, gluers. day & . night shifts. Over 21. N.B. homeb~lder needs Permanent positions
sharp, organized person w/belleflt.s. \:xperlence
to handle . customer preferred. Apply in service. Typmg, filing & persoo Vohann of -ca.
phone work req. Sal 34215 Doheny Park Rd
comm. w/expenence. CB '
Call Ms Ammann•--·-------
50-0500 Food 5-nlce Asst
DELIVERY MAN-for s.bstlt .. e
early AM Route, N. C.M. Oo-Call Basis. 2-2~ hrs
& H.B. Must have depen· per day. $3.10 per br. AP·
dable car. 546-4481 ply to Irvine Unified ---------1 School District, 29·'1
Delivery person needed
for busy Nwprl Bcb
travel agency. Must
have motorcycle, able to
travel freeways. Approx·
Alton Ave, Irvine. (Il4)
~-Equal Oppor Employer
FULLER BRUSH
imately 5 hrs daily, Mon· Earn over S8 per hr. The
Fri. Hourly wage &. perfect p /t business.
mileage P.aid. 833-9617 Ell lab. routes. 754-6411.
Delive~y Driver & Gardener. exp'd, for M
Production Worker. $3 to unit apt complex in C.M.
st.art. Call 642-2256. (213)865-3851 ~utators in tors & Haz.ard & Ward, Garden *AUTO LOTMA.N Ful1 charge thru T /B. ~ • ves Grove 839-3632 t.icket.stotbe I We currently bavea full· Experienced person or Fast w/calculator, %. Day/eve classes. Place· DENTAL SECRETARY· Gen1office-FUlltimeofe
owners sbrt term SS ' · IUGS IUNMY time temporary opemng we will train. Immediate Good typist. Growing ~t Assit. 751-9194 So. RECEPTIONIST _for help for N .B. firm. ~· fasL Bill Daven· Reward : stenograpb lost FOWES fora&moothperiodwltb opening-permanent posi-mfg. co. Newport Bch. Ca 11 f to c let a i I N.B. Ortbodontis·t, Various duUea incl bk· ...,..549-.xt in Promon. Pt. area. atthe the possibility of becom· tioo.. CaJI Sales Mgr. for 64.5-2444 Waitresses, Irvine. salaryopen.6424612 kpc, typmg, purchasing,
Moetpgn.Tnnt _990-0959________ ANAHEIM i.ngpennanent.Atleastl interview. CoCf Sl'oP w 't DENTAL Secy/Recept. customer beJp tk heavy
o..dl 5035 LOST: Gold/Pearl charm CONVENTION year varied accounts 837-4100 493-4511 IOOKIHPEll eo:'s & Busbo Ill resses, or th 0 d 0 n t l c 0 f c . phones. 673-1470.
••••••••••••••••••••••• at Marriott Hotel 3/4. CENTER payable experience with Tbru T. ~l. $4.SO ~~hr -.£Bl~C·ED Newport Ctr. 640-0202. n~-at offi-·. •·.-"'·.OO , 64(). For the some exposure to com-AU T 0 R E NT A L + depending on ability. ~~ u:" ~ ..... o..,..., .. LOWEST _ea_u __ 9333______ MARCH2lsl puteriied systems. Will TRAINEE Opport. for 497-2850,833-2946. Jon'11 is opemng a new Dental receptionist, ex· Mon·Frl. 350 Clinton,
Found: Young Black & Perlormance match vendors Invoices intelligent, friendly, neat unique 24 ~ f<>ffee sboP per, in apptscheduling & _C_M_. -------lalauetl l.tlhs While Female a Nwpt Call 642·5678. ext. 333, to against purchase or· appearing young man IOOKICEEPER at 16190 Bolsa Chica in.surance. Mu.st enjoy Girl Friday wanted for
lltT.D."s.ciho Hghts area. 642·5308, claimyourtickets. ders/receivin' reports, over lB. Previous expr. ThruT.B.Utesecy Blvd. Hunt. Bcb corner dealing w/public. Busy, coostruction field ore in
WT.D. i.o.s. _7_54_-0220________ * * * verify extensions. pre· not req. St.art wilh lot duties. To $1100 mo. Bolsa Chicia & Heil. Ap-ethical S.A. olfc. Salary Dana Pnt. Telephone & ---------. _pare and monitor in· man duties. advance· PleaseCaU640-2920 phcations being taken ., ........ 1 Fairest Terms since 1949 F d -M Hickl open ......... """" some lite typing. Will 11r:.-Ma-~ Co o u n y n g ma I e •SUSIE'S * put/output documents. ment avail to auto rental ary eAgeocy ,_now_._______ train 71.,.547 7078 ~ .... .,. • Samoyed, vie Westclill Outcall Massage prepare ~hecks and do counterman. Good driv· 170Newport Ctr Dr. Dental Receptionist · ·
642-2171 5.45-0611 shopping center. S4S-4903 lOAM·2AM 731-4462 some fillng. Ability to log req. Call 831·2480 for Suitea&S Newport B'eh COOK -DAYS Excellent oppl'y for out· GIRL FRIDA y
operate a 10 ~ey a m1¥5t. appt. iovs. GIRLS • FAST FOODS going pe.rsonable, effi. ,Retired couple bas money Found yng orange/wht Penoeal1stnlcn 5360 Please apply m person • F\all time cook position c i en t person . ex· MinJmal typing. blttpg.
to lend.1st & 2Dd TD's male cat near Yorktown ••••••••••••••••••••••• 12·16 yean of age. Even· avail Moo lhru Friday, 9 perienced ln all phases Approx 30 hrs wlr.ly •
A&ent, 1·837-3744 &Newland, HB. 968-5737 MASSEUSE For top cJass Tia.DATA A.YOH lag work. Obtain new to 5 pm. Apply in person who desires advance· Varied duties, interest·
Found male Keeshond, legit.massage.Salary+ CORP. TA"E AVON subllcriptionsfort.beDai· btwn 2 & • PM. 3095 mentwitbrespoosibility. Ing job. $4.SO hr. cau Anna..c.....,ts/ full grown in CdM, 3/5. Bonus. Plans+ 100% Up. I\ ly Pilot working with an Harbor Blvd. 979-6696 493-6006 6'73-6870for Appt-.
Penumala/ 67J..4l48 Will train those without St.dcrd Memorf•• adult supervisor. Earn Girl Frid · ot Lost&FMd experlence.645-7501 Dlvlaloft TO LUNCH $'lC> to $30 per week er COOK·DinnerHseexpr. D!pendable ~abysittber in CdM .• ~e':!Jnli'oes~ ~··•••••••••••••••••••• Found:l..rg blk & gold mix Sodal Ci..bl 5400 An Applied Magnetics Co Sell to friends and co-more. call (213) ~-0396 Clncut, career minded. ned. Aft.1.2-6.30 $1.2S r. Exper'd. p /lime. call
.Alawu .. llh 5100 mB alkehdog;_ Vci c: ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3400W.Segerstrom workers in your office·. noon to Spm. (2l3) Enerietic 548·'1948 54.S-1980 675-5444. ••••••••••••••••••••••• roo urst "' oast 49S-2473. 5pm-9pm. cau ~ . •---------• Hwy, HB. 9Q-6l32 The Slngle's Solution Santa Ana. CA 92704 make about $40 on every Collect Cook for approll. 3 hrs. a ""'t"'V"able person to ll'OO Girt Friday type answer • * * * . Date by choice. not 714/54().3605,ext213 SlOOyousell. You'll have · day 5 days a wk for &heJpkeepbou.se clean. phones. bootk'eeplog.
GngRoM Lolll: Man's Heavy Rmg. chance your own business CAFETERIA CASHJER, friendly neighborhood Must like dogs. Needed nm errands. For R.E.
'102'/JllgamlaA.n. Oval Malacite set in Calllntroview7S2-54ll .EqualOpportunlty without giving up your M :30PM, 5 days week, tawm631·9898 forMondaya.CallThurs, Mgmnt Dev Co. in N.B. COl"OIMl .. Mcr gold. Tues eve. street EmploYerM/F regularjOb.Tofindout good benefits . c-FITIME S-7.6'1J..39f7 Motivated person.
1 btwn toy store & Jade Ea~ & more, call ~0·7041 or 71'-752·7113847·5809 -I"' .,. • .,II.ft.~ s.t&«lU 3!'0U are the winner of 2 Tree,Laguna.Keepsall:e. ~ v 1 1 r Zeoith7·13St. Exper'd or will train. ~ •---------ticketatothe Ample reward. 494-3880 ......... ., ............ Acctarecei ab e/Gen o . AYOllProMfs. htc CA.RPBrfTB Mesa Verde Conv. Hoep, SHOPPINOCENTER ~
IUFOGSLLIUIEMSMY or494-Wl JollaWMed, 7075 ~=~ ~~~Smtpe=~:~ Skilled for Interior fanish e&l Center St, CM .. :i-E~~?ftta GOTravelAn'alll .-rs
attbe
r ~t gold plated ladies ••••••••••••••••••••••• 548-9617 & detail work In luxury 548-M&S .. /LIIV ... ._ QCll Exec.~retary to$12K ....,., , _________ , _________ BABYSITTER needed, homes. 640·1391 dys, Se:ndresumeto; GeoMgr/RE S:ZOJt+
. ANAHEIM woven bracel:I' near Young attractive female ACTOR'S CO-OP con· DlY bome, 17 mo's Infant. 497.2235 eves. Aak for COOK Rinker Compal\)' Receptionist toS'750
CONVENTION HarborMunJclp Court. relocallng lo Newport sidering financially In· Refs req.184'1-7932 art. 6 PbU Pvt. club, fiexJble bra. P.O. Boxi480 Acd/Audltor $20K
CENTER Has great sentimental Bch . Looking for an opp-dependent woman as an pm. : . req'd. $8 hr. Ba Ibo• Newport Beach92663 Irvine Penoanel Agency For the value. Cash reward. Xl l pole tial in C..Wtr,.._._• 873-77:.> E.O.E. 488E.17tbCotta Mesa 6'1M922 ty to assoc & grow w/a assoc. n n . · Babyaitler·bousekeeper, 1·-···-• ~... 7 MARCH 21st firm lo this area. Start· ~· on profit shanng 'live-In or oUt. CdJif area. Dining Room. Lunch DESK CLERK ....... 2:M 642·1' O
Performance · Lost, Puppy-Golden lngintbeAcctng. Field. ba.515.714/957-0282. lchild.~ Sbllt.Applytofoodm&r'. COOKS FulJandorpartlime.ap-~~
Call 642·SS'18, ext. 333, to Retriever female 4 S P/ti Hotel Laguna 425 So. Exper. Good salary It ply in peuon, A in· "Graveyard answering
claim your tickets. l'hO'a. Vlc. Meyer" ~rf. -~•-mte ex! per, aa an Ambitious Couple Wanted Babyaitter needed in my Coast Hwy, .La1. Bcb. benefits. Call Bayview basaador Inn. 2909 s. _ .... •. t•lepbone,........tor. * * * 1 c.M.~ -..w.w us · ~r a com· to manage a small busi· ·bome Tue-Thurs. 9AM· *-ilSl Convalescent HoapltaJ, Brls ...., • '"' ..._--pany w /'JJJ million per ness p/t.ime. Will not ln· 12PM, Mesa Verde Ea.at. . M2-3SOS tol, Sat'lta Ana. wtmd.1 only. Must be ewer
South Coaal Actona' Co-Op L o s t : 8 m o o I d
searching for t.alent. All yellow /beige Terrier
ages-types. Possible mix, rather lrg puppy,
emplO)"meJlt in theatre· MOD nlte. Please return.
TV-O>mmerclala-Xtras. Vic: Lindbergh 'Sehl.
• 714/957-0282. 842-2648
year saJea volume. Can· terlere w /your present 546-SllS ., • Cbildno 9-12 yns for ad· 1)1$1( CLERK as yn old. 228 Fore$t didate baa masters job. Must be willing to . 1 vertislng distribution. Cook, t1brt order, p.tJme, F/tl .1 r Ave.Lag. Beach.
.degree It passed CPA ex· learn. Mr. Hall,642·163&. BABYSITTER, mature, Trans Port at Ion wtlllftclwlmd.s.CallSlao mat~~f°i~da;~• A ~~19iii~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii9 ~-Reply Ad. No. 201, my home", Mon-Fri., flrnlabed. from Beach & btwn9am&U;&U·1T47 Guards
Daily Pilot PO Boit 1560 Apt Mgr, couple pref., ex-7AM·5PM for 5 yr old Yorktown H.ntg Bcb. CO., ..... -cua..1 bau•dor Inn, 2277
eo.ta Met~ Ca. 92826 , p'd only, In malnt. & bk· boy. 551-3S7 aft 5PM M6-8661 _.,' ~ . Harbor Blvd, C.M. SECURITY
' 11:pg, ss untt complex, . PresU1e dn>~ore ln DllTAIY A.SST
• HBIU •m LOST: Brown purse w/ C.M. (213)885-3851 Bab11itter n eeded tm· aertcaJ ~ area. time, ""11 tJme $2.75 br. b · OFFICERS 4 ~IUUIM. lteJa, wallet .• I.D. $40 Nune often relief. Tem-DI F 11 med. S. days wit. Pia. *TYPISTS & permanent poaltlon. per. h•lpful but not
1 REWARD. 110 qu.Uona poratJ or part time in Aquatic rector u hrs . .inquire •ft Spm, Some wtnds. Beoenta & "'
t
ANSWERS aaked Carol Boyle your home. Reas. rates-time summer, part time 1*1 Kamaela St. H.B. Incentive. Mr. Elwood neceaur1. Bayview Immediate put & tall· 642-9'732 • Call Juli• 979-3363 Clip It spria1. W.S.I., C.P.R. Alt for Jackie. l'ft'DnlllfS* 675-0~ lbbor. SSO W. Bay, CM. time _, ...... lllll&a.1'7 Purely-comet -· Save. Swim lnatrucUon, pool ~ft~ I I0-3505 ...,_....._ retired Ort:ltt -Frugal -Lest: BJJt Lab, .-te. near mngment experience, Babysitter, temporal'f. w.t for the qeeq that Counter clerlt, female, •for •-~.:..DOC:.:.._UMIMT _____ , experpre f ;d ~ u5:f:!,rma Is
ABOtJTYOU powerpJant HD • Llcenaed Vocational supervisory slr.illa. Sua le Wortdq mot.her lSeeda t\11111 tiQ\e into Top S. Donut ~. Full Ume. \A 1011lp talks -bout seMoo8' Nune. Will daywork p/t Sall Club, 247s:l Toledo IDltm'e lady to care for ~ • abort wnn ••· S2SOO COMftOL Cl.BJ( equip. fornlsbed. Musl ~.a bore lalb about or 11 v e ·In . Don • t Wa.y, El Toro. 586-0860 2~ yr old lltl In N.B. alptnema. Top jobt. Top Ellper. ID all phases ~ have auto & pbooe. C.ll blmlell-andabrilliaiitP.,......... 5350 s.m o k e f d r in It . ' bomeunWJu.ne.844-8071 ,_1. You're your own CREDITCO~JONS handling engineering 635-4830 for more ln-
C!OftVerHtlonaliat talka ••••••••••••••••••••••• 213/867·1Sl4 boll Part time, exper. req. drawings, "l'eprodaacUon, format.Ion.
jABOUTYOUI Drlnklntproblem? ASSEMBLERS Bab)'sltterp/tfor•ntant,3 · MORIS Bartell Marine Elec:· ftllag etc. Must type ac· BURNS INT'L C.ll Alcobolllelplioe Dependable ~ to do days wk 2·6pm. Call tronica,~'IOtO curately. FUii bent!fl.ts. ~&,_. 1300 24brtaday83S-3830 Housework. trans. 50TralneeAAemblen 548..mts. ~s~ o f fioe • CIB>ITCMICICH tX>E. SECUmY
'(;;................... ,.,1._......_. Wed.'niura,Frl548-0585 N~.1==:1 IADIMDR/ft-'• ~ fJ overload tmmed. opeo1q for 1n ~~=:ch lm~':rSt
A l<ll"~a~tbu 111.5So.ElCarnlnoReal P~e. Np;[H p/:hne. M&lgnment.I Youn~trac.t.lve, H.· •. 551..0A ... f tlll*'d e:redlt ~lter. Phone657-I051,AskFor ~~~~~~~~
n •• u atJacc !)980emen.'8.Fullylic. wr. v.car. ~er-IShlbAvallable. peri Goodaalar)'ls -m-.. ~NB TMR\IStWmabe~!!O.O)ler•t.a Kath711emann Lapa517-=t3, .,... ror ...... --nnda.-lut trip movln1. ~ .. _ t,ra'"'• Upe. Apply ha penon. • ... &NniM-<;IUIR ~ .. .& ·"S t--__.:-::..:..;.;~·--........ '....;..;...__ fN.854.1.Ms..._1. -u.t-.-owa ...ap. Cttea Moalqu, za1u ewv~•..,., &IC110t•c Nl&~cdau =..~~~ MASSASI MllpW&ls' 7100 ~*;r!~~: llu111erHe Prk1'ly, Call Jtm Sena or Al 'l'ICHMCIAM lblfl.N.&area.U...,._
tftl/Plac .. u a . 1-1 mMl..l•llUftftalS •••••••••-•• .... ••••• ~.. llllaioaVMJo a.te.t· Altman. t-5 llon·J'rl. llechamif.al abUllY d• fUm. R.tUNd .._ T.a.pb ... ._ rl'llll'\.. """""'""..., ~ , ........ .......-,1 .. UWf *• ... nlr t4W1s:L aired. fhovkle• field Is car ttq'd. Nat'l co. ISCOlttS J ~--'· .. ~. Dt·-::..Wltllet,,.!~l&Co ... STOii• & w.ulR CUST_.,.,. Ml'Vlce on analo,aH caDGMSltam3Pm. ,._..:.,:Ills..,... male, --· .. ·-·Y l ~,.., 1' .. "' -Aaal•t. ll••aser for __.. el.rcul tl'J to Wea ern a=Ldof~~ A.JI. ~·Ji.iir;-I ~ Nq to~ Sl.el~SN~~ar.h 84:1twiDD dealer. Sal *SI. Cl.£11 ~~, JllUIM:ld. opmtni. A~ atelH from Orao1e lllalntJll•t for bu.U e=:=.;~;...;..~.;...__jl-~. ·-~·~'i":-.7"'."..c;-. ,c:-:-;---11, on verto. accoooti.ftC.. (COmer of erl.atol ls t:0.400. Mt.Wt bavo pcicw N r...Al. ••st'. I bn ID PM or ta1tJ AM. ~ locatioD. car, ea· aUaa ID San Cle~
11 ~: 9'*ted P.,,y. *SANDY'S* bOOllheplnt uat111· · Caln&Qbeblftd • ._.~:1:z~".r. ~. *"'-lllRi IN ,, l:lq!lf ~· lllllt be ,_. aC!d • C!.: com· c.uc.mslouppt. ~-·~-~~ ' ~"~~~ ~~·br:~. 'iC:-:u:i Carl'a Jr) aaiiUWMS • MUm = ~-rfllt~ E:.T~~.':o =~.:·a-!~lJJ~are"s.1:~!
• : ra 1 ·" k N Qerka to St. Ac:coa.n· •L ;c~ ,.,. ., olc eu~i.11. Call ' Suitt H, Jnlne, Cal. P/t. Applf ha penoa, ~oat ··"1· • e e •· •!IRlltLE£• t1nt1 needed tbruout -" -· · · TodQI mt.S.16·4"11 a-own Hardwan lltr E-M~·~(Nee) ii ~ c.rtin.dll.....i Or~Co;. UstlhoOail.;;Pllot 1 ·:-1ToP19't.J!ur~-MOMS ~HwJC411
... .,., ..,_ ·~ _.. A~ ·· "Fut Result" urvlce npu, Ret"al" ., 1, "hit Result" ryic. IL8Ut + ~e. aood Hl.A.LTHIPA tH a . ••o eo.tC.U.·8)'&ppt,. '.·~Half'• # l :i ~ ~o~ offic e .t.·· UMlh OaiUy Pilot ISCIOWMAMA.. •
a,.iit: -~-;1l1PaSGNA11Tt c~n-•• IGltS;M--.a.JDt directory You.r SemceDtnelory O ov e rload dtrtct0f1.Vour .....,~llrr-'h1dDad,........, r..-mo'•· Y : CoUlaf~ ·n w,11 u11i116 11 No.~-~Buk ltMcelso.ar ad •.. Call Now ...vtcetaour .. ......._ ~·:S-t11.-.U....,. Olu n lL' I riM'NL'~~ la~~alOraap tPeClaltt 641-1671 · 11 117-0MI 1p.twt1 • 1 ....._...,,.._ _.. ··-" '" . :.... • • .._,....._ ~TW ··-,"' -Cal m I• ,,. ..... a;n .r i canoa-~ ,_. .,...:iia'W.,.
, ••• ll lftl AJllCAalt:i-~L! ..... v •~5171 ~t,,mµ: 1 .~ -M · • J;i' · a.at ea.-9171 ~:"2 . ,.--f114t77~114 DaitJPl.lolQdrlZhtt.
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!Irr r r~~~ , , ~ .. ~~~ .... ?!~ ~~~~.~ ..... ?!!. ~~~·:.~ ..... ?!.~ .-•r=~:sd;. top tt.. c•...... PIX,..,.....,. CUC SAl.ESCLBK SECRETARY. P/tlme WATCHMA.kl!a .w.... 1001 0.. 1040 Fwall•• ==.--•• own W.U Mab1 co IA irvilM Req'a 't;;' ;;.60 + 2 Llcpol' store Ii.rt frlday, hrl t -9PM, To a11l1t •01tneer ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••• ... ••••••••••-••••• •• .. ~··•••• .. ••••• ~1 c:omp&u. Some El ezper. ST30/mo. App. Fltime ni bts Mature lion. Tue • Wed. $'.00 w/development of de-f Sheridan d1nini c:halra, AK C G ER II AN Oanlel' pwlliJlJ, 2
Bou•l•u•r• n"ded. know 1 of me~anlca, LQ'uoa Beach Unified sr'd A 'I: · · per hr, + meals. llcate precise lnst.rwnen· band·made 1810. Fine SHEPHERD 4 w..b bed• with bolat •
...... Top q. car nee. byclraw~~~1.~!ectrical, bool Diitrict before ~ w· 1':1 St~ Newponarea.&M-4473 talion for oU field. Good Olina&Ct'}'lta.l.~ Xlntquallty. Good watch t~ored cOlon. l(tJMlit -.~aarM.WG =-t~.'ir!~~~ 3115/71,4~. Mesa.· ' °" . Secrtt•,/1'nht ~n~to:;::.'Eoi~ Duncan Phyfe e needlept dop.tm-all. ~..;-;::2~~
Hnuk..,.., Uve la/out, Xlnt bcoeftta • workift41 PET l T 1 o NE RS -SAI..ISCLERK. Perm p/t Stroac typln& • ib. App-Scientific Drilling diAlng let, oak table, vie· AKC Blond Cocker. G.E. stereo coJ>•Qlf-.
S c!Q/Wi. 2 Ir 5 yr old. ClODdl. See Sam Wa1Un1 Full/part time. Good pay penoa for retail counter ly ln peraon to Mr. Ccnt.rols, Newport Bell trola. bclr fum,etc.llbit female pup. 1 moe. All AM/Fii, Jlbano, fi ·BaDa.meate.-..ort• or Dave Parra. Pnaden· dall.y.536-7711 ule. Honey Baked f\leatee, Roberl Bein, PboaeS57·9054 eond.P.P.536-7084. ahot1. Houubrotea. very aUnctivo '50. • ws...---. tial Overall SUppJy. 18801 Ham• 3700 E Coast Wtlllanl Prost " Assoc., Ask for Ron UtUe Uc'•cn 10 Io $150. '94·2911 ple ltoee ~ burl ~: 111 abaft A•ton, Irvine, 92711. Hwy,\;(;. ............ MN., ... L 1401Quai1St.N.B. ...-ml--..:...a._droalaa
m:t CUllOID beach bome 756-1101. •PHYSICAL forS: u .... _,., ..... SllU'OUT.a.•y WIMDrs ~-~~;;;."·~~·~·~·~·~;;Black Labrador PuPp&es. tabi;'~w~ .....
...-LabDaloachaase -.-a&•IST_. 5"' --...."o:Wne H""""POINT SAL"' ·-Purebred. Swbold. '50 dcbea table w/4 btoe for Umli.ct housekeep. tt•l11•ceW-•nuuu-... SALESDJRECTORS PART-TUIE VN~•--v• ""· _,., t.ogdbome 4n9'U 1 dd d h·1...; ~ .... -..... •-...__A.. 1 H lb 11 wa w. Warner nr Harbor, · · · vlny pa e c ....... ..... .-n a .... ...,...._ poo , Ute malnt. work, 40 br I.nurest.ed in fashion & For management coo-'T"" San ve 1ood cood S30 jaeual Write Claulfied ti -. S 1 di oc Now hiring amlllng taAna.9'79-292l AKITAS -'!-.. · · ..... No. -, D .. nu Pilot, wk. Mature. Alao, need 268 Bed AAute Gen '1 cos me ca. a ea r . •u.ltinl firm. Airport f D p Adult Akita do~ are ._._ IWY -· -v llAID. Travelodce. 6208 .. needed for new firm. area. Good typing skills aces. ay&. art or CASH PAID •~~..;.;... _____ _ !:~~~_mo, Costa w. Coast Rwy, N.B. Hosp. oa the beach i.D Exp. Xlnt for goal & req'd. 7sz.s741. F/time. Applications be· For Wshr/Dryra/Refrlg avallabletoaelect_ m• Corner unit, All/J'M,..., •--.-Laguna. Salary com· roooey onented people. _..;...._ _______ • lng accepted betwn hrs wortingoroot 957.a133 thru Akita Rescue. ~lyr, $175. Deak .._ ~ MA l TR E • D E . men1urate w /ex per. Espree Cos m etics SIClETAIY ol3-5pm. SM-5195 DrYer $35. Dreaer M
eeper lot elderly MAN AGER , Good benefits ioclud. 770.Zl.0 Type60wpm,abbelptul. 2MOS.Brlstol,SA AKCWblteTnvPooclle,7 M0-3Crilalll.
couple. Uve-ln. Valure N . B . cont i a en ta I free health & life lllS. ur. "'alaary commensurate W-L-& Dry--# woman to 4rt ... -~'-"-r ~ .... -~ ttJo-want-" full time _.....-.,, wks, ~oo. 8' ,._. .. "-·-b. U'-e ne-•~. """"" • restaurant. Xlnt salary. Calif. lie req'd. Please ---•-wt--S48-5S33 " ...-u ""' Like d I ltl ~ ~ ~ .., ""' keep bouae Attract n--· r -..-· · · "or .. _. __ ,_ftft1•n. 0..,,. nu e ux mu • 581·'775 ,._. SlOOO -·L'RI -'-' · · naoume to Clualfied Ad contact personnel orfice, Are you lazy, but in a •· .--1 ~,.... -.. cycle model a only. ....,.. • ......... ~ area. Ref's req'd. #ISO, Daily Pilot, P.O. So. Coast Community stat.eofflnancialembar· SEClffAIY transportaton.648 .... •57 Completely reblt . re· OtllSSIMMSevea ~.873-2991 Box 1560, Coe\a Mesa, Hospital, 31872 Coast rassment. We've got an Good typ~ Ir dictation. WOOO WOllkER f 1 n ls bed • ye a r Fneto Y• 1045 Queenaizemattress~bff" ~ $3 hr. S1 for Calif. 92627 lnquirlea Hwy , Laguna Beach. easy sit down job that Nice telep one voice. Exp Int decorator, must guarant~. 1 price only, ••••••••••••••••••••••• sprtng w/oak bead · -~~-~Every Friday. canfidenUal. 499-1311 ext609. EOE. won't interfere w /your Mature. For smaU, quiet read/understand print. your choice $130 each. * * * $l25bstofr 549-88lS
67S-0781 or su.saos. Manufact"-'-o days. Call now 531-0842. olc in S.A. Either 6 or 8 Work at bench w /min Free delivery. SaJe ends Jol9 Wtls
wua., Sal hrs per day Mon· Fri. s per . 1.0 Gd co d March 8th. Also new & Mabog. bedrm set, 7 ~· 3 HOUSEWIYES B.ICTIOMIC PRESSMAN es Call Marge, 540·4242 u vis n. n ' lake new refrig 's, l~St~ oakcbrs,bestoCCer. :".
Wortwhileyourchildren ASSIMILBS Offset pressman, high OPPGORRETUNATJTY betWll9am-3:30pm. pay, benef. Call for appl freezers & ranges at 1h leotAt 631-0201.
are In acbooL 8:30AM· lmmed. requirement. quail.ally
00
instaEnt/com· J' o-~'d R.E. person 540-28&0 or opply Alfred the C011t at South Coast You are wiDPer of 2 ~us FUL •
1 30pu ... Fri . E 'd Id c..A M Gordon Designs, 250 Appliances, c.,.,........ u· .L ... • to• .. -qv E : ua, ... on. • asstSt· xper In so ering, mere•. s p. xper. oo .,.ft,ftSUcarea Sec'y/B .. kpr R eal Y:'<-.. -r C M .... , ~ .,.. ...... ...., . -..Id ta '-nonal AB Di ... "~ .......... • • r "'U'C • . . IUGS 1uuuy 9 .... P-an din set, ... -t me._. en w,.-connector termination . c .. 0£/0r Hamada Super Commission Base Ellt/coosb.exp req. Mail "" ,... "" .... .... can. Adult Rea. Care etc. Location adj OC eqwp. oecess. Good op-(714)49S-0480 resume to 284.S E. Coast WOf'd Processor Wei.'tinghouse Elec Dryer. FOUIES $1300, sl ST50. Beaut. 8~8
Ctr.G1-3SSS. Airport. Xlnt work in& por. for the right quality ___ ........;. ____ -! Hwy, CdM 92625 Typist, secretary. Strong 220 volts. Xlnt cood $.'50. at the & lvseat, c06l $7S5, el
coads & fringe benefits. conscious man or Salee lady, ex pe r. for ---------SH •-l · 'd A I .._.,, .,.,.., AN'"°""IM $1115. 6 pc Qn. bdrm Ml, Hlltpf/Chlldcare. live-In. ,,...,....... .,.,, 3SS SECY/RECEPT "' ypmg req · PP Y _._.,"' 1V11:. cost-,11.uCA. Par~oet u.-• Har.._,_ Ref _-_•_A.Mr_ .. _____ -l woman . .,..,.1 · managing position with in person to Mr. Fuentes. CONVENTION wd ....... -"...... """'· s re· Motherhood Maternity 1·5PM, 5 days, week. Robert Be in, William W e s t i. n g h o u s e CENT game set cost ST • sl
q'd. Musl have Calif. MATURE W 0 MAN PROPERTY MANAGER. shop. 7:;s.9951 Must have good Frost & Assoc. 1401 QuaiJ frec;ze/fndge. & GE lf:g Forth~ $425. ~ ro.ff!'octbl .. ~
driven lie. Salary Of>t!n. p /time to welcome Property Mngmnt rlrm personality & phone St Npt8ch. upnght freeur, both m MARCH 2lst ~.-tam'.!, w.....,all·wu~~
Daya mm6-4830, Eves newcomers & contact Is seek.Ing self.starter in· SALESPERSON skills. Accurate typing a • &ood cond. 963-8143 p--" uu .,,., M0-2803. merchants. F1exible hrs. cbvidual to manage in ex· m"•t Ne~ Sch I cnormance priced below. 770.2881 ---------1 Mature. experienced {or ...., · -....-· oca· YARDMAN Doub Call 642·5678, ext ....... , to -='---------~ Need car, lite typing. cess of 1,000,000 sq rt or Uon 7S2 1833 le doo,• refn'gerator ~ losarance-Group Health 547-3095. romm'l/industrial pro· fuie gift shop. Apply in · · Rental center bas open· ~ ' claimyourlickets. House full of furn. lbr
Oa.lms Examiner. Exp perty. Applicants w /ex· person. FuU & P /time. Service Station Atlen· i o gs for 2 m en . brown, ~-8300 * * * sale, Cheap. Good coad.
at leut t yr. F /time/P /· Mature w~man, P tr ~o per call 114f7S2·0l55 Grafton St, So. Coast dant, exper'd. Day & Mechanical llnowledge 552-4999 time/Homework. Sal sew It wait oo counter in ...;;_--------1 Plaza, CM Eves. Full & p/tlme. Ap· helpful, neat bandwrit-Frigidaire frost-free 1 yr old Germ. Shep, gen-•---------
open. 50-1767. Dry Cleaning plant. P/time Opportunity for SalnR--1..alde ply:SheUStalion,17th& ing nee. Weekday off. w/top freezer, coppe; Ue disposition, to good H.B. Condo furn sale.
H
642-5466 (4) ambitious people. In· ..,......... Jrvme. NB. Will train. Apply, 1930 I.One, xlnt. $150. 960-5286 home. 675-9417 P.l ants, d res a er.
J . . Hall Jewelers. teresting work ln an ex· Good w/phones. $S Hr + Newport Bl. CM ""'-'' n....._.. bide a bed, s ter••-
Bespoosible person to do MECHANIC . panding bus. w /good comm., Great benefits & Service Sta. Night Attend . . AMcfioft 80.f 5 ~on rnx.,,..ura easy %13/!i92·S324. olc work. Exper not nee, Auto. MacGregor Yacht earning potent. Call for hours!'-2 Or 5 rules a wk. Apply, Y°';IDg sec Y for lite work, ••••••••••••••••••••••• with this lovable male•---------
will train. call Sally, Corp, 1631 Plarentia, CM appt. 494-5168 Ellie O'Brien 54().SOOl Shell, 17th & Irvine, NB pnv. pty., P rr. 644-8020, Dachshund. 536-8312 Table Walnut 3~ ft x 3JI. 50-1379 s I"-··s 11. eves p $30. Bureau white " ---------IMec hanlc for small ar.a.•EST ... TE ne.lU1gcx ne IDgof Serv "''-H eed . . UBl.ICFURNITURE PLEASE save me from dra-· un. Hai·r ..t""'er ~ "" Newport Beach Agency . ·.,.,... elp 0 ed •m· .a.~ - -.. i..05 ... d Ab d d -~ _., ~' Ladies Serious about engines. Need exper SALES med Full or p/t Apply _,,..,...... •u *AIJCTJON* uie poun · an one table model $'5 . 18 changing your present person to maintain fleet 4340Campus Drive 990 E. Cst Hwy, Nwpt ••••••••••••••••••••••• fem pup. German Shrthr Beacon Bay NB standard of livin1 thru or lawnmowing equip-Have opening for one top SAL.ES.WIRE&CAILE Bcb. FRJOAY7:30PM Pt'r mix. Will spay ___ _...;;. ____ _
Cone Dt at d WO k ,,_ all k 0 quality producer in MUSICIOW'RS OeaJersWelcome 6J9..813'7be1Fn. Loose plllow Couch & e r e r ment "' sm true s. 4 l · • .__ Est1' mator needed by "., • /ti Call f rvine s .,.,st location. T b Pr h l CONSIGNMENTS"-Cha· l •-bro wJpeop.ep me. or Hrs wk. Permanent. Call f . local e'--"n·ca1 wll'· e "-eac er, e-sc oo CLOCKS "' F I A 1 k ll', rus .,. w~~ appt..4M-516&. G d It' di or appointment · """' "' 9am·lpm,$2.u-.br STOCKUQUlDATION ema e aa ~n xlnt cond. $400. bottt. oo wor 1ng con · Red HilJ Realty 552.7500 cable manufacturer for • 0 .,,. """-:' Slot Ma chines, Nkkelo-.... uryas .a.ucTI,.,.... ~ala mute, good w1tb 545-1866 days, S51·l7$9
LEGAL SECRETARY tiCallons. Location Irvine. pricing & quoting to o.JU"'"'1'I deons' phonographs. ~ N....,:-mvd"'c"M kids, 3 yrs old, 6'2·9359. eves. ask for Margie
Patt-time two days a wt, 552-8200 for more iD· REAL ESTATE customer requirements. Teachers Aide before & World's largest selec· ~· .. -n ~--·• experOllly need apply. formation. SALESPERSON ~perpref'dbutnotre-after school to watch tion . Al so girts, 833-962S 646-8686Wantagdhm.ew/lgeydSimmons Be autyrg,t
Busy but pleasant H.B. MICHAHIC We're expanding again & qw~ed .call Calmont childm\. 6:30-8:30AM & furni,ureJ a nliqu4=S. for 2 yr old St. Bernard. Dual lmg $75. FruitwOod
office '5 hr. call Jacque MARINE for boat repair looking for lop caliber Engineenng549-0336 3·6PM Play ground American lnternaU°'?al; licydel 1020 848-3905 after4pm. bdbrd $100. 673-3684 ev
847-«Kl yard. Anchor Marine Co. salespersons with high Sandwich Shop ~uperv. ~ 4!: craft.a & 1802 Kettering; Irvine. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5 mo old Lab mix. male, Sola, green/blae, like new
LEGAL SECRETARY NB.6"-454.S performance records & GENERALHELP indoor activities. St.art 754-l'm.OpenWed . .Sat. NEW&US EDBIJ(ES blk w /wht mark'g. $135. Lugeage $20•$SO.
temporary. Begin'g exper.inlocalarea.Sub· P/t Mon·FriCalJbetwn S2.6Shr.PossibJeraiaes Recmd.Buy,sell,trade. Hsbrkn, gd w /klds. 64$-0063 ••
March 13, 1978. Call (714.> / . Medicalfrontofc. mit resume in confidence ~3 ·833-8919 • & xtra hrs. S. Cat Plaza STEWART ROTII Cycle&Co. 2488Newport 551·5510 64M440. Expenencedonly. to ' area. NEEDED NOW ! ANTIQUES Blvd.C.M.642-7910 1---------1 9 Ft, special made ,,rr
497·1708 ROCJef"'s R~atty S4<M751. American Oak Dealers 2 G' r S. I Adorable fem kittens. 5 white Italian ProvlncUil
LlBEGMAML SEIJCR ET ARY MEDIC AL 2737 E. Coast Hwy *•Secy'•· Gftl Ofc 750 E. Dyer Rd. S.A. coo'wr·t·1son tm$2gSr/aeya, xcanltl mas old, to very good naugabyde couch, S27S. ag . exper pre-· A Corona del Mar, Ca 92625 llikpn to $11,000 (al Newport Fwy) S59-i34S · • homeonJy, 646·7512. • Off while. beautiful rnar
f'd, must be good lyp1St, BACK OFFICE. Limited Employers Pay All Fees TECHNICIAN 751-8922 eves Funlffw. 105 ble top llalian f)rovine\.al
shorthand.not necessary X·Ray. Experl'eoced. Real Estate Sales People , '·Reinde .... Agency s Id Rale. h b.lt 0 corree table. $125. Oak 8 but e! ....,,. Calil _.. .....,. • .., ,.,. _ _.tr_ u L.--1-al mo o 18 I e. ••••••••••••••••••••••• pr err .. ,.. ex· Newport Beach doctors. wanto:u. Up to 90/10'7' 4020Bireb,Ste104 aecro+tK~ Xlntcood.$80 .,, ... ft..longcustompadd-' drawer triple drellser
per
0
krequlred . N
1
on 644-8722, 9 to 12 noon com..!e;,. split. Nwpt Bch Newport Beach 833-8l90 Aggressive & talented WHOLESALE 754-U80before6PM ~przortable bar wlt""'h w /mirror & 2 c~.., s m er, grow n g only 631.,,.,.,., Call for Appt/F.stab .65 young penoo to be resp. TOnrE TRADE modes. All drawers are Newport Beach Law · for auembllng tell · CGllllf'GS Ir multiplex tuner, 8 track cedar lined. Needs a j.jt·
Flnb. eood benefits. Call Medical/Legal Secretary, REALEST ATE equipment maoufac· NOW OPEN Eqll,...... 8030 &tumtable·all are built· Ue reftnlsbing. $295. ;or
Pat at 1S2 • & 4 2 6, p/tlme, flex. hrs. N.B. SALES tured by our company. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ins.plus two custom bst offer over $275. Cati
MM..u>M. area.Call646-5194. To sell business op· SECRETARY Jlldmt Caodidate must be TO PUBLIC Nikkormat w/ 50 mm~ wrought iron bar stools. btwo: 12&3.lta1\A!r$;30.
1 portunities only. R. Est Newport Beach .<cs Angenn··· machine shop oriented & lens, skylight. mter & Sbarp! 581-74"46. ~ Lega Secretary, xlnl Medical asslslant. ~p. in li 'd M t be must be capable or OPEN7 DAYS lthrAn•e "'-torr"•9 0019 ---------Ktlla, no S /H. N.B., Venipuncture, flt & p/t. c req · ~ d ' an ag. cy wants bright person machining small parts, • A WEEK9-6. .......,. "" '"...., **I 8UY* * Double bed, box sprhtas •
• salary negotiable. COD· Call Margaret for appt. gressive ID IV. who for typing. billing & re· repairiq&troublesbooC.· s ........... Ltcl Cats 1035 mattress" metal frame
tact Mr. Hofstetler 640-01'IO wamstoeami~excessor ceptlon desk. Salary Ing mechanical as-IS2t21ohaCMca ••••••••••••••••••••••• Good uaed Furniture & w/rollers. Less than »tr •
n•tm-OlB3 $30,000 annualJS. No ex· comm. w/expr. Xlnt semblies. Good co. PE Appliances-OR 1 will oldSSS.640-7225 MOTOI ROUR per. nee. Will train. Call benefits. Send resume benefits, salary open. H.1.17141193-7509 cl11:e~: :•i;ksm!f:: sell or SELL for You. . •.
Legal secretary 1·3 yrs Large Daily Pilot route Professional Business and saJary bi1tory to CaJlorapplylnperson, 4M-. MASTERS AUCTION ~Serie 1055 general experience, In South Laguna-Laguna Brokers, John Barry, Ad#230, Daily Pilot, Box Pro-aw Data Inc 181!Sor49!M8l6Julie 646-1616 & 133-9625 ...................... .
salary commensurate M ....... L M d ... ~. h 714 /498-2310. 1560, Costa Mesa, CA -1 I 9UfT ft-8040•---------I
I I
"'6._ OD ay uu""g ,,_...,, l67S2HaJeAveoue ... ,._toy-.. -causeor 1·1. -........ Bay Shores-antiques w exp. nsurance Friday afternoon&, Recil~-"-6 ,,__ Irvine 549-0335 ,......,.. '"'""' ••••••••-••••••••••••• CASHPAID plants clothes misc Sat benefits. Parking. NB Saturday and Su day _,......., ...... , lness. Drastic reduction, DOGTRAINlNG., For od used.furn, anti· .n1.2S8·1v1· ...... ·N .. ~rt.
I "-c u · n •Real Esta~e Office in lots below cost, 1 piece or • ,... """ ,__...., aw 1um. a Debbie at mominp. Approxlmate· SECRETARY / Your Place or Mine ques&clrTV s, 957-8133 714/640-0130 ly S4SO per month gross C-Osla Mesa as room ror BOOKKEEPER Telephone Solicitors ex· entire lot. Dealers John Martin 648-0059 earnings. $50.00 cash de· only 3 more proress1onal Sal f perienced only. Sell welcome. Sale starts Beautiful antique lov·
FT SHOP Fa.sbi.on
Show & Sale. Clothes lor
the whole family at
bargain tirices •.+
b.ousehold items. ~iJt
March 11th, lOam·tp(n.
505 E. 32nd St. N.B.
LEGALS.ECRETARY po•lt required. Phone agents or trainees. aryopen.Frontofice ~ange Coasu· leadm' g Mon, March 6, llAM. Springer Spaniels, AKC e~eal w /2 c h airs. Newport Beach min 3 " G d led appearance. Ability to vo G' . B d . h "'hb & d . • 64.2'432l, ask for circula· ra ua commission handle clients or small newspaperat me.your 1ru ar on Antiques, champ. lines, liver/wht, •• oy resser yrs exper in general .:on. Leave name and program + exlens1 ve -......... Part •:me or full. formerly The Bizarre 8wks, shol!s, 646·7686 w/oover glass & mirror,
practi · cld d u· .. -•-•-office CPA. Call7S9·1721 ~ .. · El c · k bed"-nd ce ID omes c number and make of trilUWig program + on Must be over 21. Highest Antiques. 22$ ammo g sz "'e t.able, 19'
NlaUons. Salary open. auto to be used and your line computer services + SECRET ARY. F /TI.. commission paid. Call ReaJ, Tustin. Want Ad Results 642·5678 GE retng. 640·2531 97~ callwillbereturned. MLS +++.call Roger for Landscape Co. $3.SO 83S-64531·3PMonly.
Leqal 5ecretwy · at Century 21 Crocker. hrtostart. Call'49J-036l
SmaU 'business litigation NURSES AIDES 642·5062 for appt. TB.EPHOME SALES
firm In Newport Ctr c:M.A.CERTCUSS R.E. APT SALES. well SECRETARY Tiredoflberoutinc7
seeks exper 'd legal -luting ao~n. apply established ofc nds 2 he Ve.f~ 1 _...._ 'fhl.sjobisfor you!
sec'y. Dictaphone, typ. Park. Superior, 1445 & highly motivated l"'IUI -_., Call Us Now At iJ11 10+, 1h req'd. call &lpenor. 642·2.UO salespersons. Will train. Secretary secondary 833-8095
liDda,MOeeo. 2ND COOK. &tab. N.B. P/I'ok. Bkr,556-6171. market administrator of Time.Life Libraries
tin tal a national mortgage in· Equal Opp Emplyr m/C LlllAllAMASST. coo ea res~aurant. ReceptloN1t to $750 surance company ' in --=--..:..:.--=--=--~-
!LS. pd. Able to type Reaume to Classified Ad 100%FREE Newport Beach area. TB.EXjftLIMG
March 22nd thru 25th ONLY!
i lot; :pot;po1-1rri ~
3IMO wpm. Some exper. :: ~ .r.;o:· ~: Greet visitors & handle Send resume to Ad#231, Petroleum mkt'g co. lo
iD ftlinl " een'I typing '~uiries -"'~tial. b ~ s y m o d e r n Daily Pilot, Box 1560, Laguna Ni g u e I . req 'd. Knowledge of """ .. ,..... switchboard in new ofc. Costa Mesa, CA 92626 Responsibilities will be -..::~1--~..._ ...
library index system Newport Stationers, Inc Ute typing & variety e~EJ&RY heavy telex & ore. filing.
That's pot-pour·ri : a confused collection. a
miscellaneous m ixture. a hodgepodge.
Pilot Potpourri Is our way of observing
INTERNATIONAL CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING WEEK
by extending savings of up to SO percent.
helpful. Apply, Jack G. ~/Fie c• duties. Call 540·6055. ~ A Prior exp both areas es·
Raub Co., 1Z5 Bater St, Part-ffme Coastal Personnel Agen· P tr position for efficient sential. Some lile secyt'I CK . n...tre Ticket c• cy, 2790Harbor, CM secy. Dictaphone, typing as fill.in. Salary com·
FuUTI & enjoy detail work In menaurate w /exp /· ~/swim lnatrtrs PhoneF~Am; Ask IECEl'TfT'YPIST busy R.E. olc. Call Lila, qualification. (714)
me summer, part f M W P · · Tele & reception exper, 833-2900. 495-1980 Mrs Kraft or time year round . or r. es\,557·9212 type nee, mi.9c duties inl---------MrsKujawa.
C.P.R .. , W.S.l. pref. NUISESAIDES Fashion Island ore. SECmAIY/CLK ---'"------1
Will ll'aln. Sun Ir Sail Temp pos. send resume To handle real estate in· Tow Truck Drivers ex· Club, 2'752 Toledo Way, Allsbifta. FulUcp/t. WlU to: Law Office, 6~0 ve1tor accts. Com· per'd. TO$> pay. Apply, E1Toro.5M-0860 train.UdoConv.Center, Newport Center Dr, munlcalion, typlna, & G&WTowmg,10001rv1ne
1555 Superior Ave, N.B. Suite 1220, Npt Bch. Ca bus. math skills a must. Ave, NB64.2-12S2
LOAM PIOCISSOI 8*7764. 92660 No telephone call Xlnt loc & benefits.
with .. cy skills for please. 644-8824. mortiage broker firm. Nurses ~--------1----------
Loa backO'ouDd pref'd. Rlli...l's, LV..,.'S Receptionist for Newport i-------Nor Fa.blon Isle. " " yacht broker, Sat & Sun, SICIET ARY
7'4/IMoaD+. & AIDES 9·5· Lite typlng req'd,. Comm1 Loan Platform. Jlacblnkt Contact Mn. Rhoades, NeahPJJear. req'd . Good
..._T_OI 673-35ll t)'plnglrllukills.
rwv ""' ..-.. KP•at'C' Receptionl1t, Airport eltft.MACHIMIST Hmnof area, Ute typing,
Ad cut abould bave Staff Belief So. County pleasant cond 'a. 833-2237 ailiaaam 3 )'n exp u
pro.tot7p1 or sen 'I
~hit. Must do own ....._ oa laUM, mills,
•te. Apply at OLG S,._, Inc. 11152 Coo·
dlr Ave, FV. :wl-4m
MACHINE $)PERATOR l'...a. )llaitlc ~ection
o_puator, 1,11 or part ~~~~~~~ time.9'7~1-. -
Ca11714/59·5280 Foe,An Intervw Appt
UNIOMIAMK
610N~ctr Dr, NewpOrt Beach
Equal Oppor Employer
SICUTAIY
IEC.rlOMIST
Full Ume poaltlon avail a·
ble few bright, rapansi·
ble, experHanced
TIA YB. AGEHCY
San Juan Capil. General
Manager. lmmed. open·
Ing. 3-S Yrs min exper.
Contact Tom, 838>9242.
TYPIST
Xerox aoo HpeT'. Busy
ofc near OC airport.
Must be rut • accur.
'152-!3T1.
TYPIST WAMTID
F /tJme position in our
typing dept. Xlnt work-tne cond.I 4' co. benefits.
Must be reasonably raat
• accur. Apply In penson,
Pean71aver , iaao
PlacentJa, CK
It's a good time to clean out and spruce up.
f,1AR . 22 (Wed.) lhru MAR. 25 (Sat.)
• Have a GARAGE SALE!
• Sell your extra PLANTS & GREENERY!
• Get your neighbors together & have
your own SWAP MEETI t I
Ads are limlted to mlacellaneou• merchandise for aale ornyl I (No Real
Estate) Write 1 word each spice, minimum slH ad 11 3 linH.
THERE IS PLENTY OF Tl~E TO GET IT ALL TOGETHER! ! !
Fiii In the Handy ord•r t>iank below .-DO IT TODAY! 11 t
NO. OF 1------+-----+-----i-------1 WORDS 4 DAYS
12 5.00
6.00
7.00
8.00
9 .00
11.00
$12.00 ..
If you need more room for your m•11•11• Just pttnt Of ty~ .. word•
per Mne end lldd $1 .00 ••Ira for Heh addltlonlC Hne.
----------------------------------~-------~----------PlH•• 11ehec:tule my Pftot PotpOUnt ad to run Merch 22 (Wed.) thru March 25 (Sat.)
with no chano-of copy. lfO r8at• for Hrly canc.llatfoft. EndoMd It my check or
money ons.r tor • • • • • • • • • •
Or pl..,. charge the eel : B•nkAmerlc•rd, VISA No ................. , ....... E1Cplres ........ ,
Muttr'c:rt.rge No ••.••.... , ....•.. , . • . . . . . • • • . . . . .. ... "..... Explrts ......... . .
Nome •••• ,, ............................................. , Ph®«. i •••••• ArN COd• •••••••
. Actdf••t .............................................................. ,. C'tY·<J••···········••• ••tt to: Ontnge Co•et Dally Piiot ClaeUfljd Ada, P.O. Box tseo. 330 w; a., It, Co• MeN, C•ttf. 92121. DAILY PILOT a
Tfle ontiot ~ 0.01 Ptlet ,....... .,. tftflt '° ec11t or n5ed-. ~Utl" apy • ...
\
( .
7
~ .............. !~! ~!.~~ ..... !~!,! tr.~/ t I 10 !~ ............. !~!.~ ~·.'!:~.~ ... ~ ... ~~·.'.":~ ..... ..
rtlO DOG TIAJMtHG ••••••••••••••••••"'-•• • 1975 OODGI IMW 971 Z W-9720
.. DAILY P11.0T Thu!!d!)'. March 9, tm
'4'+5* 1015 Misc•••--IOIO Mlcal•aw 1080 ...................... ···••··•··•·•······•··· ••.....•.••.......••... Speclalb.ln1 in problem SEA RAYS '72 Suiuki OT 380 16M SUltFB V4M ••••••••••• .. •••••••••• ... •••••••••••••••••• .. IOlv~, pu~py tral11jng miles Eslraa UOO AutomaUc, pwr. ateor· otlAMGICOUMTl'S 'T7 _, Z I+ 2. a:io1.!'J1• WANTED · ICtUh from O °"' 8• In hOme * RAINS ~TT Lni. steno 8 tr~c,, aun· OLDl5T sac. '900. under NWJ or
TOP CASH DOLLAR lcul\. l&()O.MB-4193 _ service. Ref 's a vail HolM Sd root pl ma. utr lalu over paymta.
'12'' Leopatd PAID FOR YOUR KING C AMBRI DGE ~9'414. OVER ~/S~ •/160 (~. ny u & _831_-<m'l _____ _
•• letor add,n& JEWELRY, WATCHES, w A T E R 8 E D 4 Canarie:s, sas each SALE * ....................... SADOLll4C. SHAIP •~hlne. lar1• bird ART OBJECTS~ OOLD, w/UllrUQl\ic vibrators & w /caaes. Dove U O N.enl a l977 Excutive YALLIY IWOITS Tall~ candle SfLVER S EHYICE, healer; 3 rails atetl w/uge.Call84$-9JOt. lwyaloot Motorbome or Mini-IJl·Z0404tM94' Salea..servtee-Leulni 71 24oz. oew palnt-en. S/SteeJ eoolilnf PINE FURN. " AN· mot0ttycte trlr· Dyaa--k"P4float motorhome from Hub C cbrome-ma1s-auto-
Womau clotbini, TIQUES. '4.S-2200 Oym · Minolta SRT 101 "-" & °"Jal'• I090 We Are Wbeelin& Friedlander. l"'a 11 anv ot ''11 DODGE Van. lllt"WB. loY • .-.er,lnc. AM/FM tape. Great nm-~J..iber Codi wit) Many ...... _ • I .._ I ~ot • ••••••••••••••••••••••• and n--u t--" V" C t al t , Rola ltoyc:e BMW Dini eond. $'100 or best thln11. Sat /Sun ••.,..~•A-ET"''--5 ... ,.,.., ange""' tee., .. 0 ~Ci!Llentconditlon ' u.:a ng thosenumbeTS 9-u. om P n • .ri· IMOJamborte olr.661-291n&ft5Pll
erch 11 • U !Sl ~""., A• 200mm. tripod 4' Cll!ie LOWREY·HOLJJ>AY Save$$$ 891-6777 tertor, wheels & Urea. N b
.,. ordbarn Ave. Costa ~~~ bc~inesfo·! c""ardach. ;ro.1749 ORGAN OVER 100boata1nstt>clc 537.7771 Loa~. must see to up-ewpott Beac 640-6444 Aclt t7JI
"M 7"'1 .,,,.,,. ~ ,_ .. u • "' Lesll ale S800 HARRISON'S t•t .. 811 prec1ate. '7500. Ca ll ... •••••••••••••••••••• '(, esa "·.-lag pfus oa. spare. We Molds ror fibe rglass e:ri_7~rs, ., CTI4)~·SSlldays 1976 R4TXI /9 ~ .... al old tum., ft many return permane ntly Sabots, hull, dk, & p au --SEA RAY bl 1 d b t' ~ -•~c. tte-· ......... 1 ••• Malecl atuactive t.af & Coracc S325 963·3395 M us T s E LL IM 3101CoastHwy,N.B. IUc ve c es an oat '76 Ford Van. P/S, P/B, With ttereo culM!ttAI fJ
f .,,......., ..... "' ..... """ tr "-· · .1.31 •1542 storage space forrentln c ustm inl'"r. $4800. only n.ooo mil••· al new things. Wed-Fri s ap, meer.u1( air IDe MEDIATE LY Equip u "' &.c 2l702lmpaJaLn,HB. J.D. requirements. Pre-4KJngTuCtickels, formerly usedby ---------C.M.~9324 673-3205aft4:30pm (S7PFJ). , "' vent Joas & theft! For a d1CCerentdates. MOODY BLUES YOUR SADDLHACI( • Bushard/ HalJ\ilton. ,__allied ta• enclose 640 7804 • * '7' mater hm, s1Jl6 6, sell '73GMC ~ton surfer van, V"• •EV 1.._._RTS ~ ..--· " EA power amp, reverb FtSHIMG coot, air, power, many V-8 custom, must sac. · -• --v ~asher, Dryer, Apt. size wallpaper. fabric or 2 TuttJ k tsf J 7th ecbo. lSuM spkr cabw1 IO"TISHEAE•.f xtraa.75Hl68.3 aft5. 960-3908atU:30 -IMWRIS"'LIS Hl·Z0404tM94f
'(• Rdrig, fiat.lo furn, anti· "Day Glo" paper & we c e or une ' , 15" JBL spkrs, 2 111m "" '""" ~ wW back & trim your llAM. Will trade for !". ~ que tab e, office desk, ....... Oi-try two cards Mar. or Apr 673·1668 _ Altec voice theatre cabs, '12 ~at Spyder coavert.
'4,000 actual mi. Good 4 speed with sunroof. cood. $1600/l»t otr. Mu.&
1973 l.OCS 'fJT Winnebago 18' sllcont, '73 Ford Van, in ton. 302
sJ .. 5. New crpt, AM /FM V-8, lo mi, P /S, P I B.
tape. super" clean. $5100. $3400. Dys 540·2252 or .,_books, china, misc. ~lrtoback. assorted Shure mikes,
,: Motorcycle for parts. 100 PRICES. KING TUT TICKETS Shure vocal master PA.
v to $200. Everything goes. 4 tickets. 3/28. 963· 7611 OT H ER G 0 0D1 ES I
.: Sal. 9.5 408 Ca lalln a , S2 ea or 3/$5 $2.5 each. Easter week. 567 ·2381. !: N.B. or 64S-JM3 alt. 7 pm. 4/5 laga $1.60 ea. -----• 619 Lap $1.50 ea. M e d . B a u c h I 0 m b M U S T S E L L I M • ~ MOVIN~SALE 10orm«e$l.40ea. Microscope Chinese MEDIATE LY Ham -• Sales Tax Included ... a ... antiqu~ ....a.er ta· mood M3 witb 2 Leslie !,: Everylhin& mus t go! NOC"'RD". ._... ""'" .. $850/b c ·r D f d n ble, archit lamp, gwtar. sp .. rs, st. o r. " ryer, re ngs an all Draw your own or send u 1.a1ou art 7PM 557-2381 ,.. else. For next 2 weeks. -~~.. "" ..... -----
..• ""'"'"EN\ name, ~ess, phone & ,,,_ ............... _______ --! "11 make one card per Sw• 8096
tag. Add 2:i' each. Msc; .. ..,.CMIS ••••••••••••••••••••••• ?our families: Fri-Sat,
• 9-t. Fum, diJlhes, baby ~ things, toys , lots of v goodies. zr• Sandpiper,
,: Mesa Verde.
Send cbeck or money or· Want.d 8081 SWAP MEET Sat April
derto: ••••••••••••••••••••••• 29, 9 3. Spaces avail.
PILOT rRIMTIHG Wanted; Salable items $3.~. Holy Spint Church
P.O. Box 1560 donated for church park· pking. lot, 17270 Ward.
Costa Mesa, Ca. 92626 Ing lot sale. Contact Food, drinks. bake sale & ~otor home Cole men•---------•. Harbor Christian moon bounce. CaU I: cooler Lawn mowers, Church, ~S781 for i.olo 968-8SS8. :: refridgerator, gu dryer, Sl.29.95., Frame, pedestal, & pickup. Tax receipts TY--.-odio.---=------
}-freezer, car top pullman heater, matt, liner and given. MR Sfft'9o
•: sleeper, Patio swing. Aft. fill kit. F1oal'N Dream • !; 10 AM Fri AU day Sal. Waterbeds. 21164 Beach Music:al •••••••••••••••••••••••
:• 64219th St. CM 642-1353 Blvd, HB. 960-3202 lnstrun.nh 8013 Motoro.~a . Quasar Color :::::--:-=-=--:::l•--------1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'IV, 17 , like new. ::Sat/Sun 10-4PH, 17242 KONO Classical Guitar • SS7-77l5 •
8091
21Ft. CHAMPION
CFS417BB. Flybrtdge.
single ·s crew, galley, 963-3395 Eves 67~
head. bait Wlk. Sleeps 4. ---------Enel.ne completely re· '7J 20' m1ru, S/C, Dodge '76 Chevy surfer Van
built. Electronic gear in-360, bunkhse plan. Only Completely cstm. 25M
cl. depth finder & brand 12,031 mi. $6500 FIRM. New tires $5,500. &M-0966
new, unused 2·way FM P .P . SSO·S.lOl a ft 5 '77Dodge TradeamanlOO,
radio & RDF. S6800 or wkdays, anytame wknds . 4 spd. warranty. $5800.
best oirer. Call eves & Trdlen T""el 9170 543~aft.6 . wlmdll. 645-9376 • ---------••••••••••••••••••••••• '89 Ford Window Va
17' 1968 Shasta deep-V, 31' Alrstttam 1970 model Hlgh back seats v~·
f i b e r ~ I a s s • ~ condition. By ap-auto, B·lrk, aux. 'tank:
ra>Cbevy/Merc 1.0 ., lo pomtment $6,900. tau: immac, S'll,000.494-6671
hrs, conv. top, sun seats, 646-6096Mer4P.M.
full Instr. sklls, traMom Autoa Wallhd 9590
bait tank, CG equip., 1976 X-L, 2111', side bath, •••••••••••••••••••••••
Holstrom trlr, 78 Lie. & loaded w/xtras. rn E. WEWILLIUY
Reg. Xlnt opera~ing 21st st. S48-7037 YOUR DATSUM ~-~-Yorba Linda AMtcKforSde PAID FOR OR.NOT
996-18 ••••••••••••••••••••••• TOP DOLLAR
''11 19' Reinell, open bow. Allllt~/ FOR TOP CARS deep V, 20 hrs. on 190 HP CJGuic1 9520
OMC, e xtras. $6,600. ••••••••••••••••••••••• BARWICK DATSUN
960-1491. "·'" .ru.an ( .q u ·'' ·'"'' 831 ·1375 4<13-3375 :; Citron, rrv. 551-6216. Uletime Tiffany's Disco Mdl 120. '73. Xlnt cond. Bt!ul 25 .. COLOR TV
•: Refrig, stereo, Qn stz.e Membership. Will sell $1600/b&l. 556-1947 art 4 sol · ., .... 1 con· loah. R...t/ :. bed, cbrs, misc. below current cost. Call pm. e, ......,, . YT· warran-..-&........£-9050
1930 Model A Coupe,
been in storage, must
sell. Rumble seat, body
& fenders like new. No
dents, no rus t. Ong
spake 19" wbeels. bum·
pers orig, good chrome,
good tires. orig color
black fenders. green
body. Runs like a dream.
Original, never been
restored. 5'500 or best of·
fer. 497-2965 mornings,
betwn7&9
WE BUY
CLEA.HC4RS
&TRUCKS
• 673-7349aft5pm ty,freedeiiv.642-5340. ~
;<;arage Sa le; Antiques. · DRUMS (for sale or trade . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~etc. No dealers please. * * * ror Miramba/Vib) SI -Sansui 2000 cassette re· Charter plush 60' yacht,
) Call aft 6; 645-9937 lartaara Gebtolt ingerland 5 pc. Paiste & corder + speakers $300. reasonable, hourly or :~ Gl4MTS4LEH! 21851 Mewt.d Zildjincymbala. Modern 759-13SO dally.Newport675-2172
; Scout Troop :n. 3rd An-HwulhwJon hoch l1vy dty bdware, pedals, loafs & W.W !< nual Sale. 8:30-5. March You are the winner of 2 xtraa. C~mbal bag, slick Ecfi',_.. loah. Sall 9060
"'11 •· 12 L "d 1 1 bag, stacks. brushes. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• :, .,. • J o s e ticket& to the drum \uto t as & ..:. Clubbou.se. 101 Via Lido IUGS IUMMY bard ,. ':s dru e Gae..... 90 I 0 RIJI . YAMAHA
:; Soud, N . B. Donati" on• cases or ms. ••••••••••••••••••••••• • " FOWES Cond. as oew (Cost * * * DEALERS < (714 > 673-1610. atlhe S.25 00), u k: in 1 $90 0 L,oy.,.. Foshr Yacht Brokerage
CONNELL
CHEVROLET
2828 Harbor Blvd.
COSTA.MESA
546-1200
ANAHEIM O/B0.7l4-759-1S74 3202.WWYorilAn. ~....fsw~~l
CONVENTION ~ .... ._.... --------• WEPAVTOPDOLLAR
CENTER !ooArmstrong Flut.e, JL.lllt Colt.Melo Yodlts.Mt ~.Is•, FORTOPUSEDCARS
For the ll~· .... 31 You 8J'e the winner of 2 2616 Newport Blvd. Rods 9540 FOREIGN, DOMESTIC
MARCH2lst 4....-" eves. tickeutotbe NewportBeacb ••••••••••••••••••••••• orCLASSICS
Performance KlftgT,.....$90 IUGSIUMMY (714)673-9211 Dragster s et up for Uyour carisextraclean
Call 642-5678. ext. 333, to •MB-'166S • FOWES Chrysler or flathead seeusfirst. ~------8-07-0-• cl rum your tickets. at the •73 Coeun.ia 34' engine. $850. 549-3270 BAUER IUICK * * * Office Funlffure • ANAHEIM Like nu cond. Dlx cwstom 4 Wheel Drins 9550 2925 Harbor Blvd. Equl,.,.... 8015 CONVENTION inter, 7• headroom mam ••••••••••••••••••••••• Costa Mesa 979.2500 Nearly new lthr lounge •••••••• • •••••••••••••• CENTER al di el a xJ to cbr. Ladies goJI clubs & 11• on. . es u .: au P CASH DOLLAR cart. Ant. s ewing Royal Elec typewriter, Forthe pilot, dingy, furl Jib, ex·
F 0 R Y 0 U R machine Coffee tbl 4 never used due to dea~ MARCH Zl.st lras. Sac $28,500. PP. Ph
RY. WATCHES, raUan b;.,. stools. sOta. in family. Cost $650. W1U Performance (714)$ll-353S ~ OBJECTS, GOLD, Misc 960-D9U 98C).3'7t0 aac$250.84'7·N60 Call~. ext. 333, to ~Ly ER SER V l CE · • claim your ticket.a. Udo H , #Cl, like new.
INE FURN & AN: Save$, custom draperies. 3 Busliless desk.a avail, * • * full racina gear. dolly,
QUES.645-2200 direct. fTom workroom, ~~~~· Call 1966 80HP Evtnrude OB, Sl750.MS-1870or642·5380
8078 free est. 631-5210 cd-cood. '650. •NEW HUNTER 2.5
••••••••••••••••••••••• Deep le shallow well Dest top copier , xlnt 646-8205. Sa11awayw/1Dtr$10,995
1 1"_81 __ .. 18 .. 33,, t water pump. & 25 gal. cond, just right for a ~ r-9040 Slip avail. Mariner
,_,. vuu x apers small offc $1250 l week -.......... YacbU67S-Ul93 &t.ool.sS2,?50.Colchester holding tank .$100. trial m.aSu · ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------
·:•l("x36", $1500. Turret 646-5901 George · 20' Mallo, late '76, Mere Udo 14 $750. Sunfish 13,
·Lat~e Herbert, 2·D, LEAVING Area. Lillian Workbenches. wood & 175 OB, 100 hrs, fast. $395. 21' Sloop $350. Ski
,lS/8 • S'l.950. 213·961·3434 Ballard mernbenbip ~ metal, glass sbowcues, VHF rad.lo, outriggers, hull•. 559-1833 552-8880
· 1 1 d s $20 cash boxes, flies $35-85. stereo, full eanvas, bot-. MhcelaMous 8080 r:~~esfe:'cr~e e $lSO. solid wood d esk $65, tom paint, trlr, full rig Willshar~useof27'_Solmg
••••••••••••••••••••••• M6·6l88 •fl fip II 0 ; duft.in& stools, exec. & for olflhore fasb, 3 props, day sailer for tie up.
Tiffany's Club Mem· wtmds sec'y chairs $25·45, nu '78 battery, recent _648-_9ZT7 ______ _
bersbip $2.50. Newpo typewrit e r s & tune, $9500/offer. P .P. CAL 25 loaded w/equip.
COSTA MESA
AMC· JEEP
#llnC ...
FREE
Air CCMdiffotMr
on new lm A 1978Jeeps.
Does not include
Wagooeer limited CJ5 or
CJ7. Offer good only on
factory air equipped
vebicles. Offer expires
March 31, 1978.
OVERSTOCKS>
WITH JEEPS
549-8023
2S24HARBORBLVD.
COSTA MESA Beach. CAU 832-6209 Want Ad Help? 642·5678 calculators. Al·m7. eves, 67s-4884 """"". • ~ '73 Chevy Blazer, custm
: ·F· • ·1·N· • • *c* ···vi** *I* i*u **·A *N* ·**AME*: 'l:E~.:=.\:~ ~~~i ~:.·:::.i.1~ =
• • fast . $950 /bst ofr . '7S red Toyau L/C, xlnt
TOP
DOLLAR
PAID
FOR CLEAN
IMPORT CARS
AU.MODELS
~
1883!> BEACtl HLllL'
HUNTINGTO°" "£ A01
842· 7781 !140 L'442
1~-----........ ---WE
HEED
CLEAN
USED CARS
MOW
CAU.G4RTH
540-5630
• • 673-4454Kevio coud, many xlras. .. You ca n • HOBIE 16. Race equipped 675--SS16, 646.3046 2626 HARBOR BLVD.
Jt « w/lrlr. $1250. 979-2880, Trueb 9560 -COSTA MESA
• ii extZ41 wkdys ••••••••••••••••••••••• •---------
IOll~SO~ & so~
• LINCOLN· MERCURY
• .. •
SEE W·1n t1•ckets : F 0 R s ALE 0 R '631btem'lPU.Shortbox, USEDWEICU"YDS! '-tr CHARTER. 1970 57' wbtspokewhls,lrgknob-"'"'
(2.6.UdCGT. sell.8'<Mli7
1974 2002 ... ------,-7-2-7
4 s peed, air cood. & ••••••••••••••••••••••• s t e r e o c a 11 e t t e . ..a~ 77 (763MCC). ar.dnww
19743.os. HO ..... DA C AutomaUc, air cood. & " GrS sUDJ'OOf. <388KLF>. MAMY
1974 l.OCH To CllooM Fnla!
Automatic, sunroof & Ullo...llVERSITY leather interior . "
(aLN'l'). ~-...
1974 IAVARl4 Hoftd9 C... • GMC:
Automatic, air cond., Trsb
stereo & only 25,000 2850HarborBlvd.
miles. (741.KYQ). Costa Men 540-SMO
1975 2002
'speed, stereo, air cond. '?S HONDA CVCC, 5 spd,
& only 28,000 miles. ammac, 16,000 ml.
(123632). yellow . (047MM0)
1976530f _89'l_~_sa __ ~~~-
' speed with sunroof. um Accord, gold, 11u11·
<ERIN D>. Two 4 speeds roof, air , S..spd. $Sm.
& 4 automatics to chooee UK Miles. SS2-0M9
from. <462RKT). ......... \ t7JO
.._..! 97R7 320i ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 s..-.... ecaro sea ta, ,...,. vvv 11 bl stereo cassette & mags. -~conv. ye ow, r t
(07'9SZK) eng, etc. $4000 . .SSH128. . 494-~70
----~-~--831 -2040 495-4949 ..... 9732 •••••••••••••••••••••••
CREVIER
74 ....... He.ty
Mustard w /laD interior.
3Ul. Exceptional coodi·
&n and care SS,500 (213)
&l ST • H OAO\llAY 8!11·2583
UMTA AMA .__ GWa 9735 835·3171 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'"' uuu••n ~•NG .. ,.~ '64 Ghia, 1d mecb cood. •usED IMWs• s.cso. Call ber. s at
'73 Bavaria4 spd 4~JFS S47·9'732or645-4899 aft. S
'7320024&pd 3619KBV '71 Karmann Gb1a,con·
'7S 3>02.A Ser .2236 vert. Nds body wort.
'76530\A Alloys 452PQN * B13-4869 *" '7620024spdS/R 220PQD --------
"11320iA S/R 177RSK 1958 Ghia coupe. Cbed On Sultdays Complete nu eQI. clutcb,
Dat... 9720 paint. $16B5/blt. 4M-2UO
••••••••••••••••••••••• ._... t7l8
•DRIVEA* * LllTLE... * SAVE A LOT
SHOP &COMPAR 2150 ....... lhcl.
Coda w... 645-5700 •
..!i~~~~~~~!. •••••••••••••••••• !?!~
IUNDMEW78
DATSUM IZIO
OMLY $67.62 Mo.
This car is fully
equipped. 38 month open
end Jeaae. Equal mon·
tbly lease pymta. of
S87.62 month plus tax.
Vehicle value-$3423.95.
Pay only $141.68 t.o lake
delivery on approved
cred il. Total lease
pymt..-$2580.48. Option al
end of lease-$1883.15.
(91B935).
COSTA MESA
DATSUN
1976 MIZ210
SEDAN. Wltb sunroof,
stereo. pwr. wndows &
low miles. Immaculate!
\ra>RLF).
1975Ml%210C
With cruise control,
stereo, pwr. wi.Ddow le
pwr. door Jocb-A ftne
automobile! (82QllT).
1965 MIZ JJOSL
Classic Coupe Roedster.
In immaculate coodilioo·
must see to appreciate.
(487LXJ) •
BUGS BUNNY worth $10 : eo:;=:250 ~~~~~~~~-o1r. i~~~:;~~~:~$
COME ALIVE : •552·7755• ~~3:J.~. yourusedcarl -------1
• loah, Sllps/ &45-1028 aft s wtdys JOE io 280 SE. Ylnt cond .
ii Dod&s 9070 MAC PHERSOH PS/PB, P(W, air, Beker
• • • ,.
• .. .. • .. ,. •
Tuesday March 21
through Thursday
March 23. Five • ,. ,,.
• . •
....
,.
• ,.
~ ,.
Jt-. ,,.
Truly fine family
entertainment. The
voice of Mel Blanc
creating all the
well -loved Warner
....
• ...
'• Bros. cartoon
characters. A Cull ! two-hour show. Tickets
• are $4.00 and SS.00
'• : and can be purchased
• at Anaheim Convention ....;,,..:::!' ...
• Center Box Office, all -;1: Ticketron Outlets.
• Special rates 'I;.
• for groups.
• Performance
: tJmes are:
'' » Tue. March 21-
• 7:30p.m.
,,r • Wed. March 22-
.,. 2:30 p.m .• 7:30 p.m.
• Thur. March 23 -
-• 2:30 p.m., 7:30 p.m.
o. ft Inf or: (714) f>35.5000
• 11 ~ ~· .. ,. -.. • »
It's easy.
Look for your name
-an~ address In today•s
classlfled section. If
you find your name
and aadreas
cell 642·5878 Ext. 333.
We'll arrange for you
to pick up your comp·
llmentary tickets at
the nearest office
of the iilliiilliii•
• • •••••••••••••••••••••• '74 Courter w /camper, Europa AM /FM, bucket
$1699. Nanc y . Dys CHEVROLET seats. $5600. Dys • NEED SUP for new 35'
it sailboat. Mr White S4G-l~. eves. 644-6333 21 Auto Center Drive 754-7585. eves 496-540t
IRVINE '71 Datsun P .U. Sunroof, 76._7222 ID!~~~.,,..,..~~~I '68 zmiL rare 3 sealer, 2 mag tiret, custm inter, ________ 111 1 topS. lo miles, S9500/of· • 67s..t393
• ()fl.abore mooring for
• rent, No. Bayfront,
• Balboa Island. 673-5741
AM /Fii ster eo. Call I fer. 6'13-Q36orM2·9666
Chris or Harriet 979·5345, 4Mtos, a..onec1
or eves &c wllnds 673-0521 •••••••• • ••• • • • • • • • ••• • '70 MBZ 2SOC. Loaded, • •· .. • fl • • • • •
'73 El Camino, 1 ownr, WANTED PIS, P /B, alr, stereo,
$300 Finder Fee for tape, VB auto, tooneau,
permanent slip. Clean 36' xlnt coud, $2150. P .P . Trawler, well main· _540-4480 _______ -i
tained, good references. Toyota '72 P.U .• 4·spd, No parties, no sleeping $la50 .
cm board, no ldda. Live • 964-1303 * ooUdo.~ • -loah.--c--..t---.---'77 Chevy a ho rt· bed
it Sid ....--tOIO w/camper shell, 16000 • mi, loaded. Dual tanks, _. ••••••••••••••••••••••• full pwr, A/C, sharp. « IOAT SUPS *>.ooo. ~eves.
• & IOATS '77 Cbev ~T. Fleetaide
• Avail at beautlful !Ake (8'), Sllverado, loaded,
• Pfll'ria Marina. for re· P•P. 538-8500 aft '1pm. « servations call Don 77 SR.5, trucks, air, mags, « Moore (71A) &57--015 ~ '1ooom.i. lmmac ! Sklpjack 20. im. Chevy Otr. 581..$8216 ·
·it V8, OMC lnbrd/outbrd, iOGMC~Too,4-spd, it cmlY 40 bra oa eng. FulJy $1.450.
• tarped. tDSOO· 4~-4764. 648-0158 -4' 82Ml94 v... 9570
« Tr•p ar;jflll: ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,. ............ ~~
: ........... 9140 ........ ....,,
• ·-·······-·· .. •••• 71 .WC,. c « ..._ ...... Meee4 vs. automauo, power
BATMAN« 81a~k. Low MllHI• .-rinl6'°""'brak•,
AND : .Call.--SI 17.91
aoBJN « 'r::c':-1 tllO .,.rmantlaplaatu SPECIAL a moa&h opeo tlld leue.
General 9701 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••• DaleM..sn
5042 Cortwoocl
'"'-You are the winller of 2
tickets to the
IUGSIUMHY
FOWES
at the ANAHEIM
CONVENTION
1976 DATSUN new tires/valve job, Zt0%Z+J eog/body xlot $5500. ~-1.Saf L o aded incl uding ---------
automatic, AM/FM, air 1971MIZ250C
cond .. bumper guards, One owner car with
arm rest & with Jess than Michelin tires & ln ex·
20,500 miles. Ia excellent c e II en t con di U on !
condition thruout ! (072CXY>.
~7fUX >. 54.DDLBACI(
OHL Y S8 I 78 VAWY IMPORTS
COSTA MESA
DATSUN
Ul-2040 495-4949
CENTER 2.IM.SHARBOR BLVD .
'73 4SOSE, 57,000 mi,
beaut. cond., wbt/blu
int .• all optiOtJS. 83'1-'71123 For the 540-6410 540-0213 MARCH21.et mt 45CS.. 14,000 mi. No
Performance 1975 710 1La wp. Like nu. blemiabes, smell$ DU.
Call &U-Sa78, ut. 333, to lo mileaie. air. mags. Dr. owned. Red, wire
claimyourtickets. $2900. Eva49S-S329 wb.15, warranty. fU..140.7" "* * * n. 71• An Hen _or_6'1_~------
IMW 9712 Allmodell6colors. MustNlJ!
••••• •••••••••••••••• •• .... diote '7S M BZ 4.5QSL
19788MW's
HERE HOW!
COMft.111
IOOYSHOP
MOWOPIM
o.IYWJ T odlly! 644-6817
'72 2.IDSE 4.S, lt blue, all Lut chance for fantastic power, air, AM/'FM, 88K
saviJIO Oil all remaining · rvi ed immac '77modelatnatodl. DU, se c ' .• '8960. P .P. 833-3261
CO STA MESA
DATSUN
-n KB !10 E. Air, Sllrf,
t.o.ded. 6500 mJ, Xlnt
cond. .U.950. Pb m.1112 2MS HARBOR BLVD. 544M410140.021J '72 llBZ 2SOC. Ne w -.We ruby red paint.,
'73aeGZ. 1.,q ml. iood cood. atM. classic loon. ts.ooo
.-lhlKolr. CaU aft e. ml, Ml"f rccb. $7200/blt -
-8'75-57SS '5,_ PIP 6"·99'1'1
'•Tnac& w/'Tl reblteq, '61 ~ Be.m 230S. IXCa.LBn' camper ahell, l ·trk, Orig. owner. P /B, PIS,
GUEST -tr •••••••••••••••••-•••• C•t> cost•taoqO: llaa.
STARS « SUZllJClJUUT9MX ·Laa Uabllltf·Pi?5: Tu, • Chan 5 ...._ naminl tfme. UcenH Is Jat moeth. « lnclGlltll( 1 aet of tl• pe~~: oa ap.
• done, a ump•• 1>\Jce provedcndlt. (!OllM). • aa,4. _, Cell aft 4Pll
S&IC110M Of m•IJ•, $1500/best ofr. xlot ~ $2500 or bst IMW llSM.IS Mustaell, 5'5-0755 _ol_r_. -.ss:M ___ . ----
~l-3474 . We wn.7 have JOUt nu '7a Did.sun. UOO Deluxe,
C8r'IDatarlhvmlOl7. CIU auto. &rans., radio,
• todQ I be.a~ •rut eeooo. ur. tJ 1-JMO 4'"""4t SlJOO PUU1. -..om
'
•
7
Brand New 1978
CIVIC
CVCC HONDAMATIC
HATCHBACK
With AM racho Stock No. (9950) CSG0<4004889). 1599 down
payment. $3689.00 cash pnce plus tax & license. "8 months
financing on approved credit Deferred payment price
$4838.M . ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE 10.97%.
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
$ 33
MO.
Brand New 1978
CIVIC
CVCC HONDAMATIC
WAGON
ORDER YOURS TODAY'
FULL PRICE
$
Brand New 1978
CIVIC _
CVCC 4 SPEED
HATCHBACK
With AM radio. Stock No. (10026) (SGC4005294). $599 down payment. $3539.00
cash price plus tax & license. 48 months financing on approved credit. Deferred
payment price $4640.60. ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE 10.97%.
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
20
MO.
Brand New 1978
C:IVIC
CVCC ·4 SPEED
WAGON
Stock No. (9959) CWBA4004697). $699 down payment.
$3759.00 cash price plus tax & lloente. 48 months financing
on approved credit. Deferred payment price $4935.80.
ANNUALPERCENTAGIRATE 10.9~.
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
$ 35
MO.
Brand New 1978 ..
CIVIC
CVCC 5 SPEED
HATCHBACK
With AM radio Stock No. (1114J(SGE4008074J. 1599 down
payment. $4039.00 cash price plus tax & license. 48 months
financmg· on approved credit Deferred payment price
S5305.88. ANNUAL.PERCENTAGE RATE 10.97%
...................... ······················· ............................. : ...................... : ...................... : ...................... : .............................................................. . Autos, Imported ~Autos, Imported Autos IMport.d Allfos h1tporled Aut~s UHd Alltos Used Auhs Used · Autos, Us•d Autos, Used :
~ .............. !?.~~ ~~.; ........ !?.~~ !~!:~ ....... !??.~ !~::~ ...... !??.~ ~~ ............. ?!.'.~ ~~ .......... !!.'.~ ~=~~ ........ !!!~ ~ ............. !!.~~ ~.~!! ....... !!.~~
'76 Midget. 8 mo old. lOK '74 Bl.ACK 911 TARGA. . 1974 VW IUG '70VW Fastback. auto. '70 Electra 4 dr. '7S Cpe de Ville, lo mi's, * * * • 1974 Oldsmobile CuUass
ITU, $3600. S38 9803 Ai.k Sportomatic. Lo miles. COHVEltTIILE lo mi's. S14SO firm. $600. xlntcond. ot.Y Voented PH IL Hard Top Coupe. ~
for Shaun gd cond. 581-8394 4 speed, low milet1 & an 754-6542 759-1147 art. 7 • 494·1959 • 991 W. 17th St. LONG lhan 48.000 miles. very FORD clean. never damaged
MGI 9744 '66 912, new paint, l7SOcc. e.xcellenl condition ! VolYo 9772 Sl Buick 60% restored, ·77 Eldo. Has most every Costa Meso . OriginaJ owner. Factor)
••••••••••••••••••••••• S-spd. mags. irtras. $4800. <u4LOP). ••••••••••••••••••••••• SS.SO t d " x tr a · Imm a c cond · You are lbe winner of 2 aar. good tires, power ~MGBGT,Ong ""ner, 675-5077eves &wkods OHLY$3495 llFOIEYOUIUY .or ~-~758 $10,400.PP.1-524-5360 ticketstolbe s teering and brakes
xlnt cond. $1800 Uys RftMIUft 9755 llLL YATES AUSIDVOLVO, 9915 C...-o 9917 IUGSIUMMY AM/FM radio. vinyl
644-8260, (Ext 1291 eves. V'MI --RSCHE See us at Southern Cocillac FOLLIES roof. SZ.995 644-0488 831 .. 3361 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -... -.. ..... v Orange County's Volvo ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·:••••••••••••••••••••.•
---TEST DRIVE OUR San Juan Capistrano Headquarters -• 76 Camaro. 21,000 ma at the ·m Toronado~ Good shape
FUii pwr. Nu tires. brk~.
etc. SOOO Ph S48·9816 '72.AM 1FM.w w1re whls. '"'EC.a.R 837.4800493-4511 MAltqutS.VOLVO White. Loaded. Bst ofr ANAHEIM =~~~~~er 645 4817 or OF THE YEAR" WE IUY & SILL MI~JON VIEJO 54().6789 aft 6 CO~~~ON l••• r.-.e•t f '" '\11"' O••to ''•"'••• .,.,.,.,_ • ._wMC...,.•• , .. .....,
·10 MGB GT. Gd cond, Goodinventoryinstock. VOLISWA&IMS lll·Jll0495-lllO • 1~s.c;'f'e~r~u:!~·ai~~~~ M[if'~;J.st
must sell. $1800. 675·13'11 Hurry while they last! LariestSelection OIAHGI COUMTY e>n..ge C...ty's landau. nu paint. 661·3031 Perforl'.Djlnce
Pinto 9957
'70 LTD Stn Wgn, nu tires. ••••••••• • ••••••••••• ••
1ood mechanical, $850. '74 Pinto Squire Wagon.
Day: e••·eBOO, Nile: 4-spd. very c l ean. days,979-3394afl6. MIUCU In'rheAreat!I VOf.VO SnfieC...ter Che•roltt 9920 Call&tZ-5678,ext.333,to
MAZDA,lllEHAULT WIST &EIMAN EXCLUSIVELY VOLVO • ••••••••••••••••••••••• claim your tickets. 644-7325 $2195 /best offer. P P
Opel 9746 2150 HarborBlvd. iu--aTS. Largest Volvo Dealer * * *
••••••••••••••••••••••• COSTA MESA ....-v inOrangeCounty' OVER I 00 it •
M7·7325 '70 LTD Brougham 4·dr --------
sedan. Xlnt coad. Call aft ...,...,... 9960 '69 Kadelte, clea n 645-5700 1985HarborBlvd.,C.M. BUYorLE~E . CADILLACS it-•
thruout, 30MPG. xlnt ltolhltoyu 9756 714/645-6120 DIRECT ,. ,.
197'CHEVY
El.CAMINO
CLASSIC.' Automatic,
pwr. s teering, stereo
cassette & only 10,SOO
miJes! UD11688).
Span;498-3'78 •••••••••••••••••••••••
1974 Ply. Satellite Sta. ~~~~Ion. S8oo sort. ••••••••••••••••••••••• '7~4ll Wgn auto. AM /FM. ~· -~~~-,PJ!~I~ TO CHOOSE FROM • it #1 DEALER IN U.S.A. silver /blk Int. X Int. ' • T • AT ALL TIMES it it ~:= .......... !?.~~ ROY $1600/Bstofr. 6'2·2978 Nabers • :
rRR
CARVER '72 Bue. SUNROOF. AM· 2026 s. Manchester • SADDLEIACX
·74 Ranchero, AM /FM. Wag. 9 pass .. PIS. P 1B,
air, lo ml, new tires. Air, Gd. tires. trans
SSl~ Cooler . air s hocks.
•73 Ford Grand Torino trailer hitch. CB Radio incl Good Cond. $1...BOO.
LARGE Rous-Rover FM sTEREo. RAD· Anaheim 1so-2011 Cadillac • salCTIOH OF IS..OJ•mbom DIALS. Powder blue. •
V AWY IMPOITS
lll-2040 495-4949
Sport. vinyl top, aJr, p IS. 9'l1 S Orange S A
P/B, AM/FM IHrk, minl --·----"-' -·-· --
con<!, must sell. $2100. Husband's car. passed
11.AHD HEW 1978 :;: lmll S1700.4.IM-Olln,83S-0202 I 961 VOLVO 2600 H.irhor Blvd .
PORSCHE 92... 144 Sll»AH (.11\l,l M L'·' .... w \I I{){)
1978 Caprice Classic
Wagon. specially or·
dered. FUU pwr, air, low,
low miles. Call for de·
lails & saving.s. (213)
434-0143or (714) 751-8226
Call 9am·2Pm: 67$-8698 away-'73 very <'lean
·-Granada G'"' 2 d Ply. Scamp 8, nu tires. ~ CLOSED SUNDAYS ·70 vw Bug, reblt eng, nu See us for your best buy brlts. good cond. ' speed, white exterior & "Low O•erileod today-Hurry! XLNT BUY 646-2208 ooly 112.000 miles. Has 1-·=---------
...,,v wa! r. all xtras. 84&-S240 betwn
air, stereo. new tares & 7 & 9am. Priced below
brakes, SUSO. &42-4758 bluebook. llLL YATES Sbarp '66SilverSbadow. been overhauled! ·11 Cadillac El Dorado MecinsLowPrfces"
VW-POISCHE ~~t~iRcon~'.'~4~~ 1:7!s°'"~;~.·~pd, ~ty s1475 ~~-M~: :i:d~.~= 494-1131 54'9'967 '74 Ford Torino wgn. Pwr. -------~
air. cruise. rack. xlral•--------
SU Juan Capistrano Call Patrick. 552-441' MS+ wknds,646-3701 j aspossible644-6194
117-4100493-451 I Saab 9760 For sale by owner. '72 Ml=~:::.. '67 El Dorado Classic,
1965-aSCHE ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beet.le, orange, gd. cond, ... 791 mint cond. full pwr. air, YOU MA.KE OFFER! Mlrc.-y 9950
1973
DUSTER
cln. 11995. 494-2130 9927 •••••••••••••••••••••••
"" Free Ride·'72 SAAB 96. SlS.SOCM, 645-SlSS. xtras. cruise cntrl. best 156 COUPE V4. A Classic. Xlnt cond . ., .. Volvo 1800 S Runs ofr. MG-2380, 785-6095
'64 Comet, rns Cine, •••••••••••••••••••••••
556-3509 a.ft& wkdys. ORANGE COUNTY'S
Auto tr--. A /C, 6·
cyl. °"" 45,000 Mi's.
LUCE HEW, $2195.
1792MVH)
I di · '70 VW Fastback, compl ':.-.. · · Ph Jn excel eni con t1on $1' 9 S. wk n d /eve , ....... $1500/bSl ofr with factory chrome 846-8486, Daya (213) =t eng, very 1ood ~ ·
s:::·,~· (0624). MUST Sl8-0292 Mnts.IT-'thf
SADOLllACk To,at. .97 65 Sll.50/ofr. MM078. --. UMCI
VALLIYl...rolTS •••••••••••••••••••••••
111·2040 495-4949 J ·~~~:
lt71 PoncM91 IT TOYOTA,
s •P••d. aunroof. SEE us• All/FM atereo • lo• •
milea. (121171). MAll9UIS TOYOTA
•ALLEN• CADILLAC
RESALES
HEWEST
Coedll11.tal , 9930 LINCOLN-MERCURY =====~==:J ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dealenhlp is now OP EN NEW CAR ARRIVED RA y FLADEIOE •THI CAI PUCE•
2100 Harbor CM 831-2620
--------· ''7S Mark IV. gold LINCOLN-MERCURY
SEVILLES 197 4 · mttalllc. bu everything, us.tSAuto Center Dr. I!!~~~~~~ MONTE llkenew.S7295.759·0067 SDf'w)'·LakeForestexit '70 Valiant. P /S, New
1976-lt77·1978 •Must sell '73 Mark IV. 1~f!.VI7N0E00 A/C, auto, vinyl top TWENTY CARLO Sbarp, clean, Executive •----•""'-----i Xtra clean! S57·'711S
TO CH0051 NOM 1 _. llii..IDAU car. 640-l71.t, 84().1325 '74 Moateto Win. Must '-Hee
All equipped with full ~" sell. Full power. Ud •••••••••••••••••••••••
9965
IMMAC .... Tiii! BIJEON VIEJO
-.&. YADS IJl·Z•I04t5-1210
power, air cood., at.ereo IJr, stweo. tit wlll. Cclnlfte 9932 cond. SUOO /b1l ofr. 1' Fi.rebird, dark green. _..;.;~-~-----• tape. cnue control, Wt p /dew le&b. \.IKI •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• 111·Z180 350 cc, auto., full power. =~~cl~~; HIWlllHUDJ •CORVITTES 1972 Men: Montego MX :'Yt>!~~~e~·s~==· YW-PORSCHI
Sen Juan C.pi..tnno
117 .... 00 493-4111
•'7' Portcbe '14, 2.0.
~000 mt. 'Sliver /blk. Bit ott. $4o.C718 all e
Pondae tH '73. J apd,
headera, lllcbellna.
~A.II/FM . Pvt.
pty .... Ph~• --COS'T A MESA
OAT~UN
in tert or & some •TfflCAJlf'l.ACE• 19711 Brou1bam, 4-dr, full MUstsell SC.600.S'Tl-~7 ---------• moom••· Cbolce of all 2100HarborC)U31·2620 NICESELECTION! g:}j·air,xlntcond. $12:50.
--------• colonA~ROR>. dilOWAAD ClteYr'Olet lJ ~m ~~?-~~.~~~~nd S PRICIO ·ea Cbe"f waion. very DOVE&QUAILS'l'S. 18'11 llonte10 M X ·~· H)I M.AICH I cleena50. <Near lhcA.rthur, Jam· Villaaer. lo mi. xlnl
-. m •2Sl7 boredrBristo&) ~~n-~L loaded uooo. ms Firebird. Xlnt cond NEWPORTBEACH M:HJm M"-'t sell. Make offer
'• El C.mlao lllallbu19'T7 ---Dark--b-lue--C-or_v_e-tte_1_t..:..tll:::..;;t .. ;:;;.;;. ____ 9_9_5_Z1 MM7S0«540-0737
"'~:J:-'oo.l.J1.s0 matdl'I blue leather Int ........................ -n.•1t.ae d 9970
or.,_. • '*1-41 Loaded. Im mac. 3,500 '68 CcoverUblt, very Ill~ •••••••••••••••••••••••
•• Impala. NW palnl, ml. $10,800. <888TYX) cond. s;atOO. or ofter. •a Convertible. VP.ry nice
...,, Ur•, ada minor (714) 830·2H7 (213) 7D-1181. . cond.$SllOO.orbatolfer. wort .... ~ ot ....;$.10-_7252 __ . ______ , 'ID-1101
-.mJ _.... _,. h'· '• Mutltnlt. Vt. Hto, 1--------'"'-l "71. .....-....,. ... , mag w ... DIW tiret, reoit ........ '85 T ·Bl rd, Io ad ed.
stereo, air, elec windon, brb, AM/111 cNMtle. rad la 1 s . I• n d au ,
m.tOGe"9. All/FM, orig inter in a.Int shape. 661-3031
•
7
DI 0 DAIL y PILOT Thu,.day. March 9. 1978 .
. . -. EW 1978 FIREllRD
Equipped Wittl:
• Power Brakes
• Strato Bucket Seats
• Console
• Power Stffring
• Tinted Glass
• Body Side Mouldings
• WSWTI~
. O•LY
Ser.12S87ABL1 38331
• Automatic Trans.
• V·6 Engine EDIA TE DELIVERY
··New · 1978 LeMans . . .
. .
Ser. t2027ABB112168
O•L~$
Equipped with: • Factory Air COllClltloMng
• Automatic Trans.
• Tinted Gius
• Sport Mirrors
• Rally II Wheels
• lody Side Mouldlngs
• Power StffrhMJ
• Power Bn*es
• wswn~
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
Equipped with: • Factory Afr COltditioning • Tinted Glass
• Automatic Trans. • Sport Mirrors
• Power Steering • AM Radio
• Power lrc*es • R~Dy. Wheels
.. · • WSW Tires • lody 5i. MouldiftCJs
IMilEDIAIE DELIVERY
1976 TOYOTA
PICtcUr Z + Z MlllU UNIT . SIS
4 cyl 4 loeed rlllye -·· c;uslom c>e•nt $3695 • cyl. ' '"96. 81t ~~no. -s2495 V ... eulo u-.. lwdory II< oondtlloftOng, s3795 5 I~. A~M •tereo ra<llO. laoe. Unled s3395 (18eot951. 1t..ine.r-.. ...... ~l'39MHICJ. powerateenng.~(51110.1101. Qlau.rauye-. (769PIHJ •
·1975 AMC '•ca 1977 OLDSMOBILE
'CUTLASS
1976 BUICK • SKYHAWK
1976 FORD
CAMPERVAH .
t cyt . etodt .nift. -ll_,1>9, radlO. s 1995 y.e. •1110. "-• air COftdltlOnlr>g. -$669 11e11er. •M .... 11 llr... llnled gl-, -t!Mf1rl0, tlldlo, ,__., t1111Y9 """"'9. Noh
,,,ii... (S4tflflML bedr ... ,.. ·~·(110A1M .
1973 DATSUN 1977 PONTIAC 1977 TOYOTA 1975 FORD
240% . GRANO PRIX CBJCA UFTIACK 'tz TOM SUP& CAI P.u.
:z;,..eu1.!c.o~ ..-.,~n:. C:::~'.°':~ $M1995 ~':!~::'riicioo~-===.s5595 :..::-:· factory w~fonlng. AM/FM s5195 ~.:"~":s·A~:o••,.:::-1°:'~~ s5195 wllMl1. (179U80) • ffflled gl6M. (%11&.IZI t-cleCt<. '••rw ........ (894Sl0~ cargo w1nd0w. (lle274W) • ' ' . . .
1977 PONTIAC 1977 CHEVROLET 1976 PONTIAC 1977 CHEVY
VIMTUllA MQVA FtlatlD MOVA.
Afternooa
• Stocks
VOL 71 , NO. 68, 4 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA .. THURSDAY, MARCH 9, 1978 TEN CENTS
Huntington Wins Property· Tax Bftttle~
•
By ROBERT BARKER °' .. Dli41y ...... ,._,
The City of Hwttington Beach
has won a lengthy property tax
battle at the appellate court
JeveJ and most residents stand to
be the wiMers on a couple of points.
A decision by the 4th District
Court of Appeals Tuesday
means that taxpayers won't
have to come up with $900.000 in
the event the city lost the
Six Held
On S ex
Charges
One man and five women were
jailed Wednesday on prostitution
charges aflel:..police alleged the
s uspects used a Costa Mesa dat-
ing service to cover a call girl
ring
Police a~sert that two Hunt-
ington Beach policewomen in-
filtrated the operation by posing
as call girls.
The arrests came at a Laguna
Hills hotel where vice orficers
allege the five women and man
were offered $1,800 for "conven·
lion serVlces."
Orange County Sher iff's of-
ficers said 1he arrests were
made possible through the com-
bined efforts of Huntington
Beach, Newport Beach and
Gar'den Grove police.
Vice officers said more than 14·
f!)ale patrons had gathered at
lh• Laguna Hills hotel to
purchase the services allegedly
to be provided out of Kats En·
terprises of 230 17t.b St., Costa
Me~_a. ·
Sam Charles Wright, 32, of 213
11th St. 'and Kathleen Efleen
Hill, 22, of 17402 Waal Circle,
both of Huntiniton Beach~ were
arrested on charges or plmping.
Investigators alleged that
Wright and Miss Hill were lbe
couple who handJed negotiations
bet we-en the group of male clients
and the call girls assigned to meet
them at the Laguna Hills hotel.
Offittrs said the arrests were
made at the moment money ex-
changed bands in the hotel
room.
Also jailed on prostitution
charges were Kathryn J ean
Huberty, 24, Catherine Sue
ferguson , 19, Carla Meredith,
28, and Sandra Baker, 26, all of
Huntington Beach.
· Investigators said the method
1 or selling sex allegedly used by
• the defendants was via what has
become known to vice in-
vestigators as "the convention
approach."
H eart Attack
Kills HB
Jogger, 57
Mathew J. McGrath, 57, col·
Japsed and died from an ap-
parent heart attack while jog-
ging Wednesday afternoon in
Huntington Beach's Central
Park.
He was pronounced dead upon
arrival at Huntington lnt.ercom-
munity Hospital after being
found by park paaseraby.
A coroner's spokesman repcrt-
ed that Mr. McQratb'a d<lctor
aaid the death waa due to a heart
attack.
He was a longtime resident of
Buntiqgton Beach and was
employed by the U.S. Postal
He is •WYived by .his' widow,
Jean, and two sons, two I Service in LoQg Beacb.
· daughters and elgbt
irandchlldren.
• Services will be private.
r 1nf!.ati.on Rate
.. (op &neem
propertytransfertaxcase.
Secondly, the r uling apparent·
ly paves the way for an addi·
tional property tax reduction
which City Council members
promised al !>udget lime last year.
But attorney Christian Van
Deusen, who filed the suit in
behalf or Orin Berge Jr. and
others in 1975, said Loday he will
seek a rehearing. He also plans
to appeal to the State Supreme
Court.
lie contends that several con-
stitutional issues weren't ade-
quately presented.
The appeals court supported
the city's contention that the
controversial tax imposed in
1974 was not a property tax but
"a n exercise or privilege of
transferring real property."
The city in 1974 put a one-half
of one percent tax on all real
estate transactions
APWl,_....'9
LIGHTS ON-:-· A joyous Judy Neal grabs Roger
Krause after being rescued from an·elevator in San
Diego after the city's blackout. Krause and Dennis
Detjen (i::ight) pried the elevator open with crowbars.
.Jackie Dilrk
P~r· Cut in Performanc~
SAN DIEGO (AP) -It would take more than a power out-
age to faie an old pro like Jackie Gleason-even if lbe blackout
was the worst in th~ San Diego area in :?X> years. (Related story,
AS)
"l was trimming my mustache in the dark and when the
ligtits went on, one or my eyebrows was missing," said Gleason.
His appearance in "The Sty Fox" is his first on stage since
1959, when be co-starred with Walter Pidgeon in the musical 1 comedy, "Take Me Alone."
GLEASON SA.ID WEDNESDAY THE week and a half that
he's ~en in San Diego bas been curious, at the very least.
''There have been continuous rains, winds of hurricane
force, a guy running down the aisle who interrupt.ed the show,
and a blackout," Gleason said.
THERE'S NOT MUCH EVEN Gleason can do about rain
and wind and a blackout. But when a man interrupted lbe show
hv running to the stage, Gleason quipped: "How do you like
that? I come all the way to San Diego, and Norton is here in the
audience!"
'rhe actor was referring to the character played by Art
Carney, bis sidekick in their Jong.running television series,
"The Honeymooners."
Huntington Ca se
Therapy V:iolation
Charge Dismissed
Charges of iJJegalJy practicing
psycbology without a license
against a Huntington Beach man
were dropped Tuesday in West
Orange County Judicial District,
James K. Mc.'Caan. a UC Ex· tension business seminar dire(.
tor, wu charged last October·
with f~ codhta of mlating the
State BUsmeu and ProfeS5lOC.S
Code in bi.I now-defunct Run~
ington Beach bypQOSis center,
17522 Beach Blvd. He was not ar.
rested.
of a physician, accord.log to the
State Business and Professions
Code.
Mccann was granted a busi·
neu license last year by the
Huntln_gton Beach City Council
toptadlcebypnos.is.
But siate officials charged.
that be went beyond practicing
simple hypnosis as permitted by
the city.
"UsuallyJ all we try to do in
these cases ts to get the violator
to atop the practice,0 Nunn said;
There were approximately
10,000 transactions before the
measure was overturned over-
whelmingly by voters in 19TS.
Van Deusen and Berge are
seeking refunds of $900,000 for
those who were required to pay
the tax.
A superior court judge last
summer s upported Van
Deusen's contentions that the
levy constituted a form of prop-
erty tax and therefore was in
violation' of property tax limits
set by the city charter.
Tbe city successtulJy-appealed
the opinion.
Last year at pf>perty tax set-
ting time, city oJqcials put the
equivalent or a three-cent tax re·
duction into a special fund in
case the city lost the suit.
At that time, a pledge was
made to cut property taxes
~~,?2er three cents U the city
7 . ailed in the court ac:ti.on.
Gunma~ Escapes
M a:Yor Pro Tern Ron
Shenkman said today be will
re com mend that the tax cut be
implemented al this year's
budget bearings.
However, be said that lhe tax
cut may hinge on the fa~ of the
Jarvls tax-outting iQitiative.
City Attorney Oril Bonfa W&
Jubilant.
••rt ls a great' victory and ooe
of major significance," Ile said.
• ; .
Costa Mesa Hotel .
Guest Murdered
By ftJICHAEL PASKEVICH
Of IM 0.lly ,.,._.St.If
A South Coast Plaza hotel
guest was shot and killed early
today after he refused the com-
m ands of an unidentified gun·
man to join the gunman and two
hostages on an e levator ride .
from the lobby or the Costa
.,Mesa Hotel, police said.
cil'he name of the victim or the
2.f-46 a.m . shooting is being
Mlhheld pending notification or
family ,members. Police would
only say that the dead man was
from out of state. •
i,fhe gunman fled immediately
a(ter the shooting and is still be-
ing sou~ht by police.
A second male guest and a
hotel employee who were being
held hostage by the gunman
managed to escape by dosing
the doors or the elevator as the
gunman fired several limes at
his victim. ·
According to Costa ¥esa
Polict Lt. George Lorton, the
fatal incident began in the
ground floor kitchen area of the
SOUGHT FOR MURDER
· Pollce'Sketch of Gunman I
hotel, 666Anton Blvd.
The gunman -approached the
room Mrvice employee and
forced him to follow him into the
lobby of the hotel where the two
guests were seated.
.Do Effort~ Bore H er?
Lt. Lorton said police are un-
certain as to the gunman's
motive. but believe a robbery
may have been planned. ·
The gunman ordered the two
guests to get into the elevator.
but the victim refused and
began to walk away. Three to
five shots were fired from a
small caliber handgun, with at
least one bullet striking the hotel
guest, police said.
The hotel employee &qQ.
i:;econd guest were in ~·
elevator al the lim~.
The victim was pronounced
dead on ar-rival at Mercy.
General Hospital in Santa Ana.
Descriptions from the unin·
Jured guest ;tnd the hotel
employee have led to a com-
posite drawing of a su spect
described as a white male in his
early 20s with blond to ligl\t
brown hair and brown eyes. The • suspect is approximately five
feet eight inches tall and weighs
between 135 and 150 pounds. ac·
cordingtowitnesses.
Wily Hippo Foils Plan
By P1ULIP ROSMARIN
Cf U. o.lly PIMC Staff .. She came out on the wrong
side of the pond (a trap awaits
on the other side) and slipped
back into the water," explained
Jane Culji.s, Lion Country
Safari's marketing director, in
recounting the latest overnight
failure to capture Bubbtes, the
wild animal park's runaway
hippo.
"I guess she wasn't hungry
. Two Trapped
In Sub 300
Feet Down ·
LERWICK, Shet11!1nl Islands
(AP) -A two-man submarine
engaged in North Sea oil opera-
tions was snagged in a wire and
trapped on the seabed nearly 300
feet down today, operators said.
The P. and 0. Steam Navisa-
tion Company, which is operat-
ing the vessel for the American
Conoco oil concern, said it was
trapped soon after mid-day.' •'the two men aboard have
enough oxygen and food to last
eight days," a company
apokesman said.
"They are sitting calmly on
tbe bottom waiting to be
rescued," be said.
and was bored by the situation."
A bored hippopotamus has an
imposing yawn.
Less im~ing are the yawns
of exhaus·ted Lion Country
rangers who have now spent 17
night-long vigils waiting for
Bubbles to give herself up.
Their latest ruse to get her, a
pole, net and pulley affair meant
to snare Bubbles in netting so
she can be tranquilized, still
awaits testing.
Nobody knows if it wlll work.
ll's the first time tbe rangers
have ever bad to catch a hippo
in the wild -the wild being a
small pond off Laguna Canyon
Road near Laguna Beach,
several miles from Lion Coun-
try.
Today Cion Country officials
seriously considered accepting
the offer of a man who claims to
be the nephew of Frank Buck,
the legendary lion tamer. Only,
D.r. Alan C. Buck purports to be
a hippo tam~r who bas caught
100 such beasts in his day.
Buck's isn't the only offer ·
from self-styled professionals.
Said lilrs. Culji8, •'It's
ab$olutely ·phenomenal, the
Ochoa N&med .
ToOC Panel
. . . . . . . .
num her of people who claim to
do J\Qlbing but caI?_ture b,ip-
popotamuses for a Jiving. And
they're all right in the area.t•
She said at least 35 people
claim the profession.
"There can't be that many
professional hippo catchers in
Soutbem California," Mrs. Cul-
jis said. .. There can't be."
SllE'U NEJ'ER.
SI'IU.Y ACAJN
Among hundreds of sugges-
tions for capturing Bubbles.
Lion Country Safari's wayfaring
hippopotamus, was this lat.es~
one today: .
Fill her pond with plaster or
Paris, a caller advised Let it set.
Then, when dry, Just pull out the
mold and you've got Bubbles.
suitable for mounting.
Coast .
Weather
Chance of measureable
rain 50 Percent tonight, 20
percebt by Friday after·
noon. LiWe cooler days.
Lows tooight in low SO&'.
Highs Friday in low to
mid-608.
INSID ~ODAY
Sterling Horlot00t1 mcy
boue one of Ute most /am~
voic.-in th~ world. Th~
Soatla Lagt.toa ~sident ~
ben tl&c iioice of aeveroc
wU-fowd Z>mlcJI cl.tMuten. ~1""""1 UMt CheshitT Cdt.
Sff 'l'dwrittQ# Cl.
7
.. :, J.\· merry quartet who took a ·
.iU-pll on the Huntington Beach
(.it\r early today are back home
ui" Fontana after learning how
lo use the buddy system
e swimming.
, y the time the 2 a.m. episode
flj)PCludcd, the end Of the pier
•l"'\fli crowded with lifeguard
·J~ps. police cars and lire
engines.
"These four guys walked out
on the pier and one of them got a
brilliant idea to throw one of lbe
Valley Man .
Jlecovering·
·~Stabbing
A Fount ain Valley man ~abbed in the chest and slashed ~cross the back in a Huntington 'B~ach oceanfront tavern fight
S\JJ1,day remains hospitalized to-day but 1s reportedly out or
qanger.
: b 'elbert Ray Calvin, 41, was
Ji~ted in satisfactory condition at
t'acif1ca llospital when first ad-
mitted with multiple wounds.
' llis alleged assailant, Robert
r.eslie Jones, 26, rem ains in
Oran~e County Jail on a charge
o( attempted murder. with a
$.25,000 ball scl
,' £alv1n and Jones were drmk-
fng at the Capri. 406 Pacific
Coast lhghway, and when an
argument began. Calvin re-
portedly poked Jones m the but-
tocks with a buck knife.
Witnesses told police Jones
wrestled the blade a way and at-
l~ked his assailant. then fled se~ral blocks lo his apartment,
where he was taken into
~stody .
. ,,,..
:'County Sets
•'
Ambulance
,I,
'Call Rates ..
Residents of unincorporated
<>range County communities i
,fleed of ambulance service c
· upect lo pay at least $60 a call
Thal is the base r ate set b
county supervisors for the 15
am bu lance firms operating in
unmcorporaled county areas
Firms also arc to charge $3
per mile or travel, $10 extra for
c~lls ~tween 7 p.m and 7 a.m.
.ind Sl2 50 for each 15 minutes of
:~a1ting lime
, In addition. they can collect
• $10 for use of oxygen. up to $20
'.for medical supplies used on a
•t rip and $10 f6r emergency runs. ..
'' Mike William s, county,
·:emerjlency medical services
11 director said according to new
II ' I t ' , , county ambulance r egu a ions
: •all firms in the unlncoprorsted I I area mus~ charge the rates set
, . by supervisors. •.
1' He said the rates are about the
'.s ame as those already charged 1•by the ambulance companies. .,
': Rates will be reviewed again
•in six months by the county's
•Emergency Medical Care Com-
): mitlee, he said. and later wiU be
1! subject to review and possible
:: change annually. ,, ,,
:: Rape Meet Slate d
I' A workshop t o discu ss
4;medical. legal, social and
~'psychological aspects or rape ~ wHl be t\cld Saturday at the
'l ~tington Beach Community
, ,-Ct,Wlic. Th~ workshop will be
l1heJ:d from ·to a .m . to 4 p.m . at
• 1hl-clinic ~ 506 Orange Ave. A 1i ccSntribtltioh of $20 is asked.
ORANGE COAST "'"
DAILY PILOT
other brothers off the end," ex·
plained Lifeguard Lt. Bill
Richardson.
"He was fully clothed and he
couldn't keep himself up."
He said two of the three would·
be r escuers on the pier then
went to his aid, performing can·
nonball plunges into the sea,
which was a dizzying distance
below because of an extremely
low Ude.
"Then the fourth guy took off
all his clothes and jumped in,"
said Lt. Richardson.
Bystanders ran to sound an
alarm as the quartet thrashed
around screaming tor help, try·
ing lo hold each other up and
hoping to survive what must
have been a sobering episode.
Once on the scene, Lieutenant
Richardson s tripped to his
trunks, grilled his teeth and took
the plunge into the 60-degree
sea, making it five in the water.
The tide was so low the first
four hadn't been able to reach
the bottom rungs of the ladder at
pier's end. nor clumps _o f
mussels above them on the slick
pilings lo which they clung.
One· man finally grabbed the
ladder somehow and rescued
himself, Lt. Richardson said. A
second man made it up the lad·
der with a boost. fo'i r emen
lowered a lme lo hoist up the
other two.
Two were treated at Pacifi~
Hospital Cor~hock a nd exposure
and released'. investigators said
Police today were contemplat-
ing what charges, if any, will be
filed against the quartet.
Stnnn Sla ms
North State
By The Associated Press
A storm drenched the
San Francisco Bay area
and sent water brimming
over the banks of res-
ervoirs in Northern
California.
Rainfall totals for the
24-hour ~riod ending at 4
a.m. showed Oakland had
3.40 inches, San Francisco
Airport 2.01, downtown
San Francisco l .50. Ukiah
1 .45, Red Bl uff 1.22,
Sacramento .74 of an inch
and Marin Civic Center
.72.
State Route I along the
coast was blocked by
lides and was h o uts
tween Hearst Castle and
C rmel.
Teen Arrested
In Huntington
On Death Rap
A 16-year -old Long Beach
youth was arrested at the Hunt·
ington Beach City Pier Wednes·
day in connection with the un-
solved Jan. 15 death of a 47-year-
old Hollywood man.
Los Angeles police officers
from the Hollywood Division
said the boy admitted being
present when Ronald Wayne
Waters died suddenly in his apart-
ment.
Police Sgt. Paul Osteen said
the death had homosexual over-
tones.
The youth, whose name was
not released due lo his age, is
now lodged in Los Angeles Coun-
ty Juvenile Hall.
Osteen said the youth told a
"far-out story" on details of
Waters' death. Osteen declined
to release all the details.
Determination of Waters• ac·
tual cause o( death is will be re·
leased when a toxicology test is
completed, according to Los
Angeles County Coroner of-
ficials.
Pair Charged
In Thievery
OLATHE, Kan. (AP) -Two
men were arraigned in Johnson Co'unty District Court on,
charges of stealing periscopes
from four Marine Corpti tanks.
The two were charged wtth
burglary and th~ft •ft•r they
were anested with a Juvenile neat a railroad aiding In Olathe.
Four M-4&\a tanks were parked
there on a railroad bar en route
from Barstow. Calif., to An· oi1ton1 Ala.
Pc>Uc. tald t hey *Potted the
trio at the atdlnt TU...,ay and
tound four per\1co•• aad an empty ~ box In a car drhen b70a•~ I
NEWBURY PARK (AP) -A
looter who took 80 live .20-mm
shell casings from tbe wreckage
of an Air Force jet apparently
abandoned them outside a bank
ca rly today after authorities
warne d the shells were
dangerous.
Air Force Maj. Harry
Cbilttress said the shells were
found outside a Security Pacific
Bank "branch in Newbury Park
early today.
Childress issued the warning
w ednesd.ay that the 80 shells still had the powder and det-
onator caps in 'them although
the bullet heads bad been broken
off in last week's fatal crash of
an F-105G training fighter.
lf they had exploded , said
Childress, "It certainly would
have been lethal to anyone close
by. We're just glad to get them
back."
H e said Ventura County
sheriff's deputies received an
anonymous tip that the shells
were at th~ bank.
In the crash the pilot was
killed but his copilot parachuted
to safety.
Top Citizen
In Cardiac
Care Unit
CLEVELAND CAP> -A would-be burglar paid hle fare lo board a Cleveland bus, took out his .32-
caJiber revolver, and ordered the passengers to turn
over all their money.
But every one of the riders -and even the driver-said they were broke.
The gunman, apparently angry at finding a bus
full of inrugents, fired a shot at the back or the bus,
then hit a passenger on the head wtth the gun.
True to his luck, the gun fell apart, the c"ylinder
fell out and clattered along the bus floor.
The man ran off, and police said they were
searching for him. The pa5senger who was conked
was not seriousll hurt.
Carter Asks Miners
Ordered to Work
WASHJ NGTON (AP) -The
Carter administration asked a
federal judge today to order
striking coal miners back to
work, saying the 94-day coal
strike would "imperial the na-
tional health and safety" if it
continues.
Justice Department lawyers, acting under the Taft-Hartley
Act, asked the U.S. District
Court in Washington to order
members of the striking United
Mine Workers union back to the
min es immediately.
Officials sai d Attorney
General Griffin Bell planned to
be in court when government at-
torneys argu.ed their case later.
His presence was seen as a sign
or tbe importance that the
Carter administration attaches
to the case.
Bell said, "[ believe that the
miners will obey the law and
this includes court orders. ·J also
have every confidence that law
POWER CAN'T HELP (
END COAL STAIKE--86
The government also asked enforcement officers in the
for a court order directing coal states concerned will provide
companies to reopen the mines. adequate and effective protec-
1dle since the strike began Dec. lion for those miners returning Loni:?t1me west county com-6 to work. We are a nation com-
munity service and political The request was assigned to milted lo law." · W 0 r k e r L u c i 1 I e W o J f . Under the Tan Hartlev Act 8 C. · r Judge Aubrey Robinson, one of · ., • Westmrnster 's 1977-7 1t1zen o the 12 federal judges who pre· RobinSOl'I has the power to order
the Year, remained hospita lized side in the district. The judge the miners back to work for 80
today in the cardiac care unit at was expected to set a hearing on days and to direct both sides to
Wes t m 1 n st er Commun it Y t he request and then decide resum e good-faith bargaibing.
Hospital. h t th Failure to comply could result Spokesmen there said s he re-w ether to gran e govern-inllfines or priS()n for contempt of mains in guarded condition for ment's request tor an injunction. court .
observation of heart problems The government petition asks Leaders of the 160,000 striking l that the order be directed at for which s he was recent Y l.450 union entitles, coal com-miners and government officials
treated. d 1 d · expect widespread defiance of a
By JACKIE HYMAN
Of ... Deity f'llet ICAIH
. . .
Coast Community Colle&e t>l&-
trict trustees said Wednesday
they won't send out blanket di.Ii·
missal notices in anticipaiioq of
the passage of the Jarvis-Gann
tax inltiaµve, which would re·
duce district property tax rev·
enues by a bout $14 million.
Some school districts across
the s\ate tiave sent out the
notices, conditional on the in-
itiative's passage, because slate
la w provides that teachers must
be notified by March 15 if they
are to be dismissed for the next
school year. (Related stories
PageA3.)
District spokesman Richard
Simoll said trustees unanimous·
ly voted not to send the notices
but instead to issue information
to all employees about possible
effects on programs and person·
nel if the initiative passes.
Simon said trustees discussed
the possibility of-trying to con-
tinue operating with full stall in
the 1978-19 year and making cuts
for the following year if
necessary.
He said the colleges -Golden
W est, Orange Coast and.
Coastline-would be operated
until funds ran out, al which
time they would all be closed
and an e mergency funding ap-
plication be made to the state.
Simon said trustees cited the effect on employee morale in
deciding not to issue across·
the-board dismissal notices.
Policy Outlined
During ballot-counting shortly panies and indivi ua s name in back·to-work order.
before midnight Tuesday at thecourtpa~:r:s·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
Westminster City Hall, Mrs. -
TOKYO (AP) -President
Carter has messaged Chinese
Chairman Hua Kuo-feng that re-
la lions between the United
States and China are a "central
element" in U.S. foreign policy,
and the United States wants
normal relations with the Com-
munist regime on the basis o{
the 1972 Shanghai Communique.
WolC. 73, collapsed while seated
in the audience.
1''riends noted that although
she had been released from the
hospital only a short time ago,
for years she has been an aVid
spectator at every vote-counting
session.
Police Seek
Huntington
Store Bandit
Huntington Beach police are
still seeking a greasy-haired
bandit who held up a shopping
mall shoe s tore and made off
with $200 Tuesday afternoon.
Armed with a .38 caliber
handgun, the robber jumped a
store employee at Regal Shoes
shop, 7777 Edinger Ave. at 2:20
p.m.
The thug waited for his victim
behind a wall of stacked shoe
boxes. He ordered the shoe clerk
to give him all the cash in the
store register.
T he brown-haired robber
grabbed the cash and fled out
the store's back door. No
getaway vehicle was observed,
police said.
Ocean View
Studems Sing
In HB Co11een
"
Seventy-six trombones would
be totally drowned out by the
1,000 music s tudents from
thrQughout HWllln'gton Beach's
Ocean View School District, who
will perform a choral concert
tonl1bt.
The musical presentation will
be at 7 p.m. in the Ocean View.
High School audltorium near
Warner Avenue and Gothard
Street.
grade pupils have been practic·
ins all year and will perrorm In
six choirs led by teachers Tom
Barnett, Sandy Cupp , Catalina
Koepke, Nancy La Ruffa, Dave
Shephard and C&U\y Short.
No admission will be cbarsed
and the public is invited.
Ininate Back
.After Escape
Sony Trm11rm Color TV
with remote control. 21 "·
19"· 17" & 15" diagonal.
And ·au m stock· all with
our one year warnnty. .....
KV-8000 Sony Trlnitron.
Sony's newest AC-DC.
'nllte anywhett portable. 8
Inch diagonal.
't"i-. ...
'tV·l 15 Sony Black ft White.
U" •creen mea1ured ch&0naU~.
Sony
Headquarters for
the Harbor Area
T. V .-Radlo-Stetto
Tape Recor-dfl-
B~tamcnr
RMK-419 Stereo C.Oms-ct
bas AM-FM, cassette
player-f'ec:order automaUc
record chanaer p11.111 two·
way SensJ.. Basa tpeakers.
275 East .17th St.
Costa Mesa
SL-8200 Sony Bet.amax lets
you record you favorite
programs and watch them
when you please · Nf!W Jow
price too !
ICF ·C670W Low-profile
FM·AM dlti1tal clock radio,
with rich rosewood grain
cabinet is a standout
anywhere in the bedroom.
KV -1951 TRlNlTRON'
PLUS Sony's ~luxe 19" d1a~on11l T. V. Includes
Sony's Lumisponder light
·sensing system and extra
large speaker
Sl'KIAl.
UUrtttel
7
..
f
f
l
. .. .... . . . . . . 8. DAILY PILOT s Thuraday, March 9, 1978 LUC AL
'More to Lile' -~~~f~~r~ Ocean View Boundary Switches MUiled
Ex-principal _ ~ ·r --Formal notice or pcoposed bci)mdary
a dj ust01eiits for ttendance areas
aro~ sevtlD c~puses in Huntington Beach s Oeean View School District will
be sent home soon by principals.
school district," explains Supt. Dr. Dale
Coogan.
tend Meadow and Lark View achoola
could have their choice.
'yes Cllalleh.ge,___._ ~~~
The suggested shifts would affect only
about 110 pupils among the approx·
imately 12,000 enrolled youngsters, and
the district wants lo know what their
parents think. .
Children who wo uld normally attend
Glen View School and are being bused
to College View School could choose
either campus next year. They would be
bused in the 1978-79 school year, but not
in the next year.
Oldei:_ IJ'•de levels. would be mo".ed
the following year, with addition of a
portable classroom to the Marine View
School cau>pua to accommodate them.
By ARTH\JR R. VINSEL
OflM DMly f'l ... S....
Tall, lean, broad-shouldered and sandy-haired,
Dr. Thomas Griffith will tell you there is far more
to life and the world than paying homage to the
daily work-a-day grind and griping about it.
The Glen Vie w School principal who Just. re-
signed. after nine years with Huntington Beach's
Ocean View School District also will tell you
education is the key to satisfaction.
EDUCATION IS ONE OF mE biggest things
in life for Griffith and -indeed-his entire Cami·
ly, who live in Bellflower.
They all keep busy learning and enjoying the
pr'ocess, whether it is scholarly learning or learn-
ing recreational skills to enjoy when they aren't
busy, and that isn't often.
"Mama finally went back to school," he says
GRIFFITH
of his wife Johnie, who
is m ajoring in Ii ber al
arts at Cal State Long
Beach.
Their d a ug hte r
J e anni e, 19 , is a
freshman liberal arts
major there, so mother
and daughter share
hom e w o rk a n d
housework.
J eannie, who this
year won honor s as
Miss Bellflower and
Miss West World, works
as a florist in addition
to school a nd promo-
tional activities as a
beauty queen.
YOUNGEST DAUGHTER JULIE, 1', IS a '
freshman at Bellflower High School and takes
after big sister, with a fl air for the theatrical and
student activities.
Twins Glen and Gary just turned 18.
. "They stay busy earning money to keep their
trucks running," says the educator-outdoorsman.
-A bit of the Renaissance man is quietly exuded
by G riffilh, who is considering a variety of JOb op-
tions while wafting for his last semester with the
loca l district to end.
HE WOULD LIKE TO find one where the
sprawling suburbs don't hem in a man and his
f~m ily so much.
... "I'm considering possibilities both in and out
"of Southern California, but I'm not a n urban
1man," says the trim educator who took his doc·
>torate an 1976 from Brigha m Young University. 1 "'Our family has traveled extensivel.Y in the West and more recently, annually, throughout the
'entire country."
: He lists other interests as "travel, Scuba div·
1ing, hunting, fishing, backpacking, sailing, photo-
1graphy, camping, four-wheel drive vehicles and
!th e creative arts. Metal sculpture especially, weld·
ling them."
1 HIS GREATEST SATISFACTION IN nine
lvears locaUy, says Griffith, has been working
lwithin a district where his primary expertise -or-
'ganization, plus program and curriculum planning
'-has been used. I '-..The administration. ln other words, fa-ve him a ~ob ~ssignment where he did not feel like a square
peg in a round hole.
"That and having an opportunity to direct pro-
jgrams where we could see a positive effect on the
,kids," Griffith explains.
I
I
:Police Auction Set
iln Huntington
'Som e 60 bicycles, a few sma11 boats, assorted
jewelry, tools and other items are to be offered
'Saturday at the periodic Huntington Beach Police
'Department auction.
Lost, stolen. recovered and unclaimed goods will
St. Pat
Ball Set
By Lions
Sounds llf the famous
Big Band Era will echo
Friday night when the
Huntington Beach Host
·Lions Ch11b stages its
first Leprechaun Ball at
the Balboa Pavilion in
Newport Beach.
~ickets ate available
r.-om Willodean Vance,
10122 Kaimu Drive, Hun-
tkagtoo ~ch, 556-0782,
&-ocordlng to dance
chairman John Flood.
Tickels for the 8 p.m. to-1 a .m. SL Patrick's
Day aeuoo celebration
are $7.50 ·'• penon.
P'roceeds will aid
favorite Lions charita· tlte projects for needy
y(>u~·g persons with
etest1ht abd hearins
• blttdlc•,,.· Keith Williama and bis
14~ptece orchestra will
entertain at Frl~&f '.s
sqiree in the hlttort
baysfde ballroom. .
go on t he block at 10
a . m. on the corner of
M a'i n Str e et a n d
Yorktown Avenue, the
police d e partme nt's
parking lot.
Property officers s ay
they h ave about 120
ite m s of inventory to be
sold to the highest bid·
de rs.
Officer Geone Ab· bond o f th e Ad ·
mints trative Services
Division says purchases
will be on a cash-only
basis.
NO ACl'ION WILL be taken until
laLt?r in the spring, when district of·
Cicials and the board or trus tees
evaluate the responses.
SUN VIEW SCHOOL students tem-
porarily going to Pleasant View School
could go back to the campus closer to
hom e, whi ch will get one new portable classroom
CROWDED CONDmONS at Marine
View School resulted from ~creaed
homebuilding in its area, Just J,nland
from the Bolsa Chica Ecolo1lcal
Preserve in the city's northwest eACl.
Trustees also decided about two years
ago not to build a new campus on an ex·
isling site in that area, due to shift.ln5
enrollment patterns. "It's basically a return to their home
Children in kindergarten, first and
second grades who would ordinarily be
enrolled at Marine View School but at·
4x8 PLYWOOD
Shop plywood is
getting crazy
with price
raises. Think
we · .. ,e got the
best price
going. To get
the best price
we had to buy
enough to build
another Noah's
Ark. (Don't say
"Ark", you may
just trigger
more rain.)
Plenty for this
sale.
WROUGHT IRON
RAILING
!J;' G c:•;pu o gu .z
j iifijl·_ - -WHITE ALUMINUM
Economy. the
magic word.
Everybody looks
for it. Not too
much around
these days. Sure
hope thl• ia.
r
RAIN GUTTER
••1• 2oR ;~WNSPOUT
ur SECTION
~~IV~/I
"F: Safe 12 volt.
' 6FOOT s••
MALIBU
OUTDOOR
') LOW VOLTAGE
LIGHTS
C~'t think of a more timely item. a lot of
folks bad eroaion problema that 9utter and
downapout would ha.e cured. Do it now
and be prepared for next time.
36" COLLINS AXE
with
tranaformer. 3 LITE SET ••••••••• 39.99
juat lay the 59 99 cable and flick 6 LITE SET • , . . • • • • • •
4 LB. SPIJTTING WEDGE 2 97 the switch. 6 UTE WITH TIMER • 69 • 99
ROCKWELL 71/4 II
cmCULARSAW
16~!
Rockwell the king of tpace te;clu\ology la
no amGll potatoe1 when lt comes to
quality power toola either. Full depth and
angle adjc.tment.
-. .... :..7 -·-·
SYNKOLOID
CEM BOND VINYL
EPOXY PORCH AND
DECK ENAMEL
Title tella alL I might
buy aiOJbe myHlf
(daring.) For high wear
areas. lt' • tough.
1.97 QT.
6.47 GAL.
% INCH SHOP
¥2 INCH SHOP
% INCH
'%INCH
7.77
9.87
11.97
4" PLANTS
29~
Primula. Pansy. Marigold.
Begonia. Candy Tuft. and
Calendula. Got a raft of them.
nicely watered {thanks to the
rain).
3 CUBIC FEET
DECORATIVE BARK
I ~!.Fr.
How many feet is that you cuk.. I reply.
"three cubic feet" CIDd you say moat guya
Hll the 2 cubic foot bag. Well we aren't
most guys. right?
lt'1 the natural one (100% organic?). The
sunlight filters thru to gin you a nice light
patio. but ahlelded from bmah aun. Leave lt ..... ------------------------------------1 natural or gi•e it a coat of stain. Smashing!
OZITE GRASS
TURF
Thia la something IYNll
on the ~around the
pool, tti..froct porc:h. a
putting gJMD in the
den?
UN.
"·
I keep dreamlng that I've
written tomethlng about thla
before. but I nenr ... it
printed.. (Got to get more
aleep). One drop hold.a ton1.
74cTUBE .
ARMOR ALL
Gl-.ea We to rubbey, Tlnyl.
I leather. (Sptay .,.. OD ... rm
..... ~.. t .. Ung a little oU myMlL)
71. 12 x 16 149.97
12 x 18 192.88
12 x 20 213.97
' 12X24 216.88
14x16 199.88
14x18 224.88
14 x 20 249.97
14X24 299.88
18x16 227.97 ' 18X 18 296.88
12 X 12 127.97 16 X 20 284.88
18X24 3Q.97'
STOCKS I BUSINESS
Thursday's NYSE COMPOSITE
2 p.m. (ED'I) Prices TRANSACTIONS
OliOlall-lft<l .. l'*•""IN_'l'.,...,All~tl.l'e<lllc,1'9W,...._,~ .... ClflclftN11~"9<11 t•~ ~ ~"' ~ .,_ Nellefltl AIM>( 1•1'-1 tf loKIH'lll._ Ot.tlttt • IM'f"'I'
OPEC to Meet Aprll 3
BACHDAD, Juca CAP) -The
OrganltaEion of Petroleum Exportlnc
Countrles will bold an "informal
meeting .. ln Oeneva on April 3, lhe
official Jraq news a.iency has re·
ported.
The dtc:line of the U.S. dollar on
roreign t1tdlan1e marketa and Its er-
fect ~ o(J r.venuea are expected to
be on tbe agenda. .
Arab mernbera of the 13-naUoft or.
pnlaUoa have beetl cal.Ung f~ a
new ~ to calculate crude on
prlcea .. 1-.t weet•a decline in UM
value ot the dollar.
. ...
s DAILY f't\.OT
Special Orden
Airlines Cater ..
To Diet Need8
11
By SYLVIA POllTEa
Do you pride yourselr oo f amlliarity with exotic foodlT
Then try this quick quii:
What reataurant will prepare a lacto-ovo veaetable
meal? Where can you gt!t koaher ntet of sole? Kosher
curr.)'? Wl\o serves chicken chuaeur? Where can you
select rrom a 40-menu variation?
DID YOU GUESS A FAMOUS restaurant ln Stockho1t:Q
for the vegetarian meal? Wrong. You can reque•t a Jacto-
ovo meal before you board Trans World Airlines.
A Delhi hideaway for lhe cul'T)'? No. Kosher curry lJ
served on Air India and kosher ruet of sole ls available
from American Airlines on request two weeks before your
night.
Chicken chasseur at an upper East.aide bistro In Ney
1 York? Probably -but it's also avallable on apeclal orw
from United Alrlin~ as pa.rt of its W~ght Watchers lunch.
The menu with 40 variations! Scandinavian Alrlhleis t
can produce 40 sl>eclal (
request diets with ad· f
vance notice.
Deliberately un.
heralded, air carriers
s erve thousands of
special meals annually
to passengers whose re·
Money'&
Worth
ligious requirements or diets dictate them.
I I
' ' I -l YOU CAN GET SOUL FOOD with tobasco sauce on t;t.·
quest from United: a special low·cholesterol menu lf yo
ltavel American ; a special bland meal lf you travel TWA. • What's more, despite the medical restrictions thati!
govern the preparation of many of the menus, airline foo6
experts generally make them appealing. t
TWA tallied passenger reaction to special·requesJ
diets served to 19,000 passengers last August and receive~
only 102 complaints, reports Burt Kenyon, spokesman fo'1
the airline's food and beveraae planning. ~
MOsr POPULAR OF THE special meals is koshe~
food. accounting for nearly half the requests. Unite
serves cl06e to S0,000 kosher meals a year; TWA recent)
added roast turkey to its traditional kosher menu entree 00
brisket of beef. A favorite breakfast on TWA ls kos~er J
consisting of cheese blintzes with cherry sauce or pa~n
cakes· with blueberry sauce. American has tour koshe
menus for first class and coach that rotate every thr
months. El Al serves only kosher food. ~
Such special amenities as a wedding or birthday ca1c
are frequently available ir requested in advance. •
Sky Cher, a subsidiary of ArMricn an Airlines. pre1
pares meals for 33 other airlines. United has 19 kltchensi
producing the bulk of its own meals. So does TWA. J
SOME SPECIAL REQUESTS WON'T be approved~ TWA refused a request for -small meat balls -for
parakeet. Pan Am nixed a request from an economy·clas
passenger who said his physician insisted his diet include
lot or caviar. Pan Am recommended fish.
A key to special diets is advance notice. You can orde
most popular special meals by requesting them four hour
in advance or night time. Less popular meals can require-,
24 hours. cl Passengers from the West Coast order more specia
diets in the low·calorie and vegetarian category than the·
Eastern counterparts, according to TWA. ,.
While the airlines are under no legal obligation t
serve special foods. they seldom fail lo follow through oa
reasonable request. f
Pinkerton~s Give;
Tips on Meetings
This Is the season of the year when thousands or com•
panies hold annual meetings, and Pinkerton's. the nation•a
oldest private security firm, s uggests some basic
measures to insure a safe meeting:
-tr the annual meeting is likely to draw a consider•·
ble attendance by shareholders, pick a meeting pJaee that
will accommodate up to twice the number of expected peo-
ple. There's nothing better cakulated to produce a dS
gruntled shareholder than having to stand.
-IF FEASIBLE, HA VE A g\M!St book or si111-in sheet
so that you have a complete nicord of those •llending. If
the crowd is large, consider Issuing cards that can be filled
in and deposited as people leave.
-Control entries of the meeting room. People ente
ing and exiting from a number or side doors create noise
and confusion. Have guards or usben posted. The visible
presence of uniforms has the psycbotogtcal errect of pro-
jecting calm and orderliness.
-U you hire a security firm for the meeting, analyze
in advance such matters as whether dissidents. de-
monstrators or hecklers are ellpect.ed to attend, and why;
the way In which disruptive people will be dealt with; the
adaptiblllt;y or the meeting to good security pracUces; ade·
quacy and location ot uUUUes.
-TEST TR£ aOOM FOR ITS acoustics and, if a
public address system la warranted. get a reliable one. 1'
the group ll large, provide portabie microphones for
shareholders• quaUOQS.
-Keep \.be progam aa brief as possible. while covet·
Ing all the essentiall and allowtni the 1harebolders a tea:
sonable time for questloM and answ.ra. If )'OU fall behind
schedule, c:ut parta of the presentation rather than time for
shareholdtra' questions.
Sec:wit,.y PaclfJc N atlonal Bank In South Laguna sub-
mitted a whlft1nt bid of 5.lS percent for the purchaH of
$2,150,000 ln feMral obllpUon bonds from South Cout
County Wet.et ~ct.
Six Cltber bids ransm1 up to U$ perc.nt ...,. .....
c.lved.
fbe f\IDdl wlQ be mM bJ the• Wllttr diltrid to ece-.
atruet a 1 mllllall·plloe t.rm1ul llora,. ,.....,..,Ir on a 11 ... •c:n 1ke ln the IOUtb.-t perl ol the ctiltltct. TM.
NltrvOlr Will .. CCIUtrVtUd ulkltrpwnd. JN'O~I nr-
faee •,.ce for htwe rMft.uon..J us..
tuu.09 Cl( tM bontJ :'WM .,,..O,.d by I aajortt.J of
lit tM cti1net lit p[4i ,._a) elecUc.10 NOftlDber.
~ Wort cm tH ~ IS now betnt compMtecl Md ~ ls G'ped.ed to,. adff WIJ' 1n the early
1Pr1la1.
,
3
r
I ,,
t
0
8
'I
5
(ti
IS
d
"'
T oday's Closing
N.Y. Stoeks
1 VOL. 71, NO. 68, 4 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, MARCH 9, 1978 TEN CENTS
Teacher
Notices
Eschewed
-Irvine Unified School District
trustees are figuring that the
Jarvis/Gann property tax in-
itiative will be defeated in June.
or that the state Legislature will
bail out underfunded scho@ dis-
tricts if the initiative does pass.
Wednesday, trustees refused to
order that notices of prospective
dismissal be sent to 321 teachers
-about half the district faculty.
District administrators say
that many would have to be dis-
missed if the initiative is ap-
proved by voters because. with
the resulting loss of property tax
revenues, there wouldn't be
.enough money to pay them.
The Irvine dis trict bas
estimated the impact of the
property tax meausre to be an
$11.3 million loss of revenues, or
45.6 percent of the total projected
1978· 79 budget.
Jn advising the board not to
send dismissal notices. thus
committing the district to carry-
ing a fulJ staff. A. Stanley Corey,
superintendent of schools. em
phasized his belief tbat the
schools will be funded, one way
or another.
Corey urged the board to en-
dorse Proposition 8, the im-
plementing measure for Senate
Bill 1, the Behr Property Relief
Bin.
That legislation provides for a
property tax cut of 30 percent,
and includes a system for ffind-
ing schools, which Jarvis/Gann
does not.
The school board, at Trustee
Frank llurd's urging, took no
stand on either proposition and
ordered a staff study of the ef·
feels of Proposition 8
Hurd also wanted a county
counsel opinion on whether the
board legally is able even to sup-
Port or oppose ballot initiatives,
because of the que!slion of spend-
ing public funds to lobby on
public matters.
Core~ warned that lf the board
tried to mount an actual in·
form a lion campaign ag&.inst
Jarvis/Gann, "You can almost
make book you'll get sued ."
One r~ident, Robert Gordon,
irritated because the board gave
up the opportunity to begin the
process for layoffs if needed,
warned that would mean tbe
schools would have to be closed.
Corey agreed, but discounted
that likelihood.
"There is always a chance
that California will split off and
fall into the ocean, that tomor-
row won't come, lnat -Gaii k>mia
education as we know it has
come to an end.
"It is our judgment that it has
not.
"But you're right. Without an
<See NOTICES, Page A2>
UCI Plans Meet
On ·Farm Workers
The UC Irvine Support Group
for Farm Workers will sponsor a
slide presentation on mechaniza-
tion and its impact .on farm
workers at 7:30 tonight in the
Linoleum Room, Mesa Court
Commons, on campus.
There will be a speaker from
the United Farm Workers. Ad-
mission is $1; the event is
public.
Co ast
Weather
Chance of measqreable
rain 50 Pm-cent ionipt, 20
peraent by Friday after·
n0on .. Littte cooler days.
Lows t()ni~t in low 505.
lfigbs f'riday in low to
mid-005. ·
INSIDE '1'8D£ Y
~nEscapes
Costa Mesa Hotel
Guest Murdered
Keeping Her Cool
A young girl showers in a stream close to her family
hut on Burma's main trunk road north of Rangoon.
She's a Tamil Indian living on Kipling's legendary Road
to Manda1ay.
Six Coast Residents
Face Sex Charges .
One mao and' five wPmen Wfre
Jaifed'\Vednes'llay an prostitution
charges after poliee alleged the
1u.spects used a Costa Mesa dat·
ing service lo cover a call girl
ring.
Police assert ijlat two Hunt-
ington Beach poli~women in·
filtrated the operation by posing
as call girls.
The arrests came al a Laguna
Hills hotel where vice officers
allege the five w-0men and man
were offered $1,800 for "conven·
lion services."
Orange County Sheriff's of-
ficers said the arrests were
made possible through the com·
bined efforts of Huntington
Beach , Newport Beach and
bet ween the grO\lp of male ~lients
and the call girls assigned to meet
them attbeLagunaHillshotel.
Officers said the arrests were
made at the moment money ex-
changed hands in the hotel
room.
Also jailed on prostitution
charges were Kathryn Jean
Huberty, 24 , Catherine Sue
Ferguson, 19, Carla Meredith.
28, and Sandra Baker. 26, all of
Huntington Beach.
ln}4!stigators said the method
of s€lling sex allegedly used by
the defendants was via what has
become known to vi~e in·
vestigators as "the convention
approach."
By MICHAEL PASKEVICH
oe •• O.llr l'li.t Si.ff
A South Coast Plaza hotel
guest was shot and killed early
today after he refused the com-
m ands of an .unidentified gun-
man to join the gunman and two
hos tages on an elevator ride
from the lobby of the Costa
Mesa Hotel, pohce said
T he name of the victim of the
2:46 a .m . shooting is being
withhe ld pending notification of
family members. Police would
only say that the dead man was
from out of state.
The gunman fled immediately
after the shooting and is still be-
ing sought by police.
A second male guest and a
hotel employee who were being
held hostage by the gunman
m anagcd to escape by closing
the doors of the ele\'alor as the
gunman fired several times at
hi~ victim.
Costa Mesa police said today
they are seeking two occupants
of an orange 1976 Porsche that
was seen leaving the hotel park-
ing lot about two minutes after
the shooting.
Police are not linking the car
occupants to the shootinj? but
Stonn S lams
North S tate
By The Associated Press
A storm drenched the
San Francisco Bay area
and sent wale.-brimming
over the banks or res-
ervoirs in Northern
California. ·
Rainfall totals (or the
24-hour period ending at 4
a.m . showed Oakland had
3.40 inches. San Francisco
Airport 2.01 , downtown
San Francisco l.SO, Ukiah
1.45. Red Bluff 1.22,
Sacramento .74 or an inch
a nd Marin Civic Center
,72.
State lloute 1 along the
coast was blocked by
s lides and was houts
bet ween Hearst Castle and
Car~I.
-Gitroen GNWe·police. l!nder Taft-Hart leg
-
SOUGHT FOR MURDER
Police Sketch of s;unman
are seeking mformallon that
could be crucial to the murder
case, investi gator Gerry
Thompson said.
According to Costa Mesa
Police Lt. Gebrge Lorton, the
fatal incident began in the
ground floor kitchen area of the
hotel, 666 Anton Blvd.
A wait Rescue
The gunman approached the
room service employ ee and
forced him to follow him into the
lobby of the hotel where the two
guests were seated.
Lt. Lorton said police are un-
certain :.is to the gunman's
motive, but believe a robbery
may have been planned.
The gunman ordered the two
guests to get into the elevator.
but the victim refused anct
began to walk away. Three to
five shots were fired from a
s m all caliber handgun, with at
least one bullet striking the hotel
guest, police said.
The hotel employee and
s econd g uest were in tht
elevator at the time.
The victim was pronounced
d ead on arrival al Mere~
General Hospital in Santa Ana
Descriptions from the unin
JUred guest a nd the hotel
employee have led to a com
posite drawing of a suspecl
described as a while male in his
early 20s with blond to light
brown hair and brown eyes. The
suspect is approximat ely five
feet eight inches tall and weighs
between 135 and ISO pounds, ar
cording to witnesses.
z-Trapped inSUb • 300 Feet Down
LERWICK, SbeUand Islands
(AP) -A two-man submarine
engaged .in North Sea oil opera·
lions snagged in a wire about 80
miles east of here and was
trapped on the seabed nearly 300
feet down today, operators said.
The P. and 0 . Steam Naviga-
tion Company. which is operat-
ing the submarine named the PC
9 for the American Conoco oil
concern. said it became trapped
ht mid-day.
"The two men aboard have
en~gh oxygen and food lo last
e il'!t da ys," a com pany
spokesman said. "They are sit-
ting calmly on the bottom wail·
ing to be rescued · ·
The two were believed to be
British. but the company said It
will not release their names
"until we are sure their next-of
kin are notified.··
The sub had been workmg on <i
wellhead in the Murchison field.
the company said.
He said the mother ship. Sub
Sea 2, is standing by while a
second mother ship, the Sub Sea
1, is steaming to the scene with
a rescue submersible from Mon
trose on the Scottish e ast coast.
Vice officers said more than 14
male patrons had gathered at
the Laguna Hills hotel ro
purchase the services allegedly
to be provided out of Kats En-
terprises of 230 17th St., Costa
Mesa.
Sam Charles Wright, 32, of 213
17th St. and Kathleen Eileen
Hill, 22, of 1740~ Waal Circle,
both of Huntington Beach, were
arreitedon charges of pimping.
Work Order Requested
"The Sub Sea 1 should arrive
on the scene Friday and star\.
rescue operations immediate!}
with the manned submersible it
is car rying, the Mermaid 3." th<'
spokes man said
Investigators alleged that
Wright and M~ Hill were the
couple who handled negotiations
Solon Probe Due
WASHINGTON <AP) -
California Attotney General
Evelle J . Younger said Wednes-
day .be will launch a slate in-
vestigation of possible corrup-
tion in the California legislature
because federal aulhorilies
won'l ti.am over any information
from their lhqulry.
W9\SHINGTON CAP) -The
Carter administration asked a
federa l judge today lo order
striking coal miners back to
wo.rk , saying the 94.~day coal
strike would "imperial the na·
tional health and safety" if it
continues.
Justice Department lawyers.
acting under the Taft-Hartley
A ct, asked the U.S. District
Court in Washington to order
members of the striking United
Mine Workers union back to the
mines immediately.
The government also asked
fo.r a court order· directing coal
cQm panies to reopen the min es
idle since the strike began Dec
6.
The request was assigned to
Judge Aubrey Robinson, one or
the 12 federal Judges who pre-
side in the district. The judge
POWER CAN'T HELP
END COAL STRIKE-86
was expected to set a hearing on
the request and then decide
whether to gr~nt the govern-
ment's request for an injunction.
The government petition asks
that the order be directed at
1,45<> union entities, coal com·
panies and individuals nam.ed in
the court papers.
Officials said Attorn ey ·
General Griffin Bell planned to
be in court when government at-
Wp .. Foils 'em A.gain
Bubblei, Side1teP. Snare; Trap Still Untat«l,
Nobody knows if it will work.
It's the tint time the ran~rs
have ever had to catcl:J a hippo
in the wild -the wild being a
small pond otr Laguna Canyon
Road neat Laauna Beacb,
several miles from Lion Coun·
lry.
Today Lion Country orti~s
seriously c:onsidered accept.in&<
the offer of a man who claims to
be the nephew of l'rank Buclc,
the legendary lion tamer. Only.
Dr. Alan C. Buck purports to be
a hippo tamer who has caught
100 such beasts i.n bis day.
Buck's isn'l tho only otrer
from self-styledptofesslonals.
torneys argued their case later.
His presence was seen as a sign
of the importance that the
Carter administration attaches
to the case.
Bell said. ''I believe that the
miners will obey the law and
this includes court orders. I also
have every confidence that law
enforcement officers in the
stales concerned will provide
adequate and effective protec-
tion for those miners returning
to work. We are a nation com-
mitted to law."
Under the Tan-Hartley Act,
Robinson has the power to order
the miners back to work for 80
days and to direct both sides to
resume good-faith bargaining.
Failure lo comply could result
in fines or prison for contempt of
court.
Leaders of the 160,000 striking
miners and government orrtctals
expect widespread defiance of a
~SeeCOAL, Page A%)
One Arrested
In Boat Tiff
SAUSALIT6 (AP) -A brief
rhubarb at Waldo Point, scene of
repeated protests by houseboat
owners who oppose construction
of a new marina, ended ~Ith one
arrest. deputies said
Marljl County sherUf's of.
ficials"'aald the confrontation oc-
curred Wednesday when de·
velopera tried vainly to free a
flOatlu p~yer which was bl~ecl in. tbe barbor and bas
halted conttrucUon ror thrca
moDU\s.
Al tbey hoe' tn tbe pHt.
boUMboal owners &warmed out
in a ~.ma of ,mall 00.ta •nd ~ ~ _path Of 1he
_, . . I
WW11ySets
~ulance
Service Fee ·
Residents of unincorporated
Orange County communities in
need of ambulance service can
expect to pay at least $60 a call .
That is the base rate set .by
county supervisors for the 15
ambulance firms operating in
unincorporated county areas.
Firms also arc to charge $3
per mile of travel. $10 extra tor
calls between 7 p.m. and 7 a.m.
and $12.50 for each 15 minutes or
waiting time.
In addition, they can collect
$10 for use or oxygen, up to $20
for medical supplies used on a
trip and $10 for emergency runs
Mike Wi l liams. counly
e mergency medical services
director. said according to new
county ambulance regulations
all firms in the unincoprorated
area must charge the rates set
by s upervisors.
He said the rates are about the
same as those alrea&darged
by the ambulance companies.
Rates will be reviewed again I
in six months by the countv's
Emergency Medical Care Com
millee, be said. and later will be
subject to review and possible
change annually.
Policy Outlined
TOKYO (AP> -Presatleat
Carter bu meuaged Chine."le
Cbalrmao Hua Kuo.fell• U.t. re·
laUona between the Unlled
States and Qtna are a "cca.U•I
elemem•• tn \J:S. foreign policy,
and the united States w
normal rtia.Uonl th the ~m
muD.llt riatme on tho bub of
tho 1m~ai Communl«Jlle,
A2 OAIL 'V PILOT
Newport
R.esident
Arrested
A self-employed Ne wport
Beach builder was arrested to-
, ~y ·on manshluKhter charges in
the hit-and run death of a young
. woman Wednesday in Newport
.Beach
· Sus pl'Cl Steven Ja y Lan-
. (lng<m, 26. of 445 Catalina Drive,
was booked into Newport Beach
.. City Jail. according to police
Sgt. Ken Thompson. Bail was set
at $2,500.
Killed instantly in the 12:20
a.m . accident Wednesday was
Doreen You, 18, who was stand-
ing on a curb on the Arches
<> ve rp a~s on Coast High way
; ~en a white pickup truck
:'..swerved over the curb and hit
her. Thompson !>aid. The truck
s ped away without stopping
Thompson said a description or the truck provided by Wlt·
nesses was circulated to various
auto repair and parts shops with
-f-note that there was probably
•jtaO'lage to the front end and a
,:-b?oken headlight.
.... ~Re said a parts dealer led
: police to the vehicle. Landrigan
turned himself in at about 8 30
a .1Jl . today, Thompson said.
•":"fhe cause of the accident is
.,till under investigation.
.. ?hompson said.
•• Ao Oran~e County Coroner's ~~uty said today that Miss You
had apparently lived in Newport
Beach for some time but didn't
ha vc a fixed address. He r
parents. who identified the body,
lave in Raldwm Park.
Funeral arrangements are be·
ing handled by Roy C. Ad
<JJ~man and Son F'uncral Home
: tn E1 l\lontc•
: .. .: . From Page A J .. ~~COAL ...
beck-to-work order.
Carter directed Bell to seek
the ordC'r after hf' n·ce1 ved an
11-pagc report on the strike from
a board of inquiry that thC' pre ... 1-
<j.en._.. cr('atcd undt•r thl' Taft 11arllcv Ad
The board's rt•porl d<•h verC'd
.to the White House earlier today
sat-0 the strike had "re~ched
alarming proportions · The
threc ·m('mber board said
•'Already thousands of worker~
in other industries have been
ll\id off or placed on reducrd
• y.io.rk schedules and this can
J>nly accelerate.
•·Jt is imperative, in the na-
tional interest, that the parties
find a basis for resolution of the
s trike as expeditiously as poss1·
ble.··
Among the l ,450 defendants
named 111 the ~u1t were the Unit·
cd Mine Workers of America
~nd its affiliated locals, and the
Brtumrnou::. Coal Operators As·
sociation and the minin~ com·
panics the organization
• represents.
' The government's move for a
court order came as the Labor
, Department reported that 25,500
, factory workers were laid off
· last week as a result of the
strike.
Tbe government said about 45
·' percent of the layoffs were in In·
' diana. with workers in Penn-
' syl vania, Illinois, Maryland
·and Ohio also afCected. The
· layoffs were up 2,900 from the
.; previous week.
.:Six Railroad
I• • : Uus Derailed
.. ROSEVILLE l AP) -Six
• railroad cars, including one car-
•: rying 30.000 gallons of high-proof
! alcohol. have gone off the
· Southern Pacific tracks in this ~suburb of Sacramento, but there ,. arenoinjuries.
;. ·SP spokesman Bob Cedarholm
:.eJ4 it happened Wednesday ·as
• yard trainmen were puttinJ?
': tbgether a 70-to 80-car train for
• · San Francisco. ..
I
I ' ,.
•• ..
ft
" •• ..
OAANQE COAST
DAILY PILOT
~.::~~~.'r.:=1:::~::..:;; °'"' """'"""" Com!>tftf, ~.o1 • ..i11""" ... t:!~~~~·=.:.;.::,=~
'"" Valltv, ••••~•. l•H1"•' v.i1ey ..., ~ ..... ,,_, .. c:o..t.A,.._......,.., ... ,..,. 1t -•"'41d s., .. ,..~ ..w ~., ,.,.
ci;i:~~".U:~:.:,.,m ~ ...
"'""" ..... .......... ,.,.._,_
l•Clll.CWW, Vie•""""_, __ .. __
f1"1M•llt ..... UUo.
no.-.... .........
M.tlMtl ... loillr
~ ... ~ ~ ........ AHIJt_...........,,.. .. _.
'~ • Oftleet
I ext.Mo~: ,_""9tl 1111¥5'-• • ~ .. •dll !I .. ~~, ... ......... WI.._, 011lho(I\...,..._., t ... 1-,Y•l'-Y•t\101 .... ,_,~ ··--~~,_.,
• T1t&f1NM <n•>__, ·ct••lhd M-f911f .... ....,.
....... 11 • .., ..... °""" 111..,,0
..... a.... .....
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LIGHTS ON-A joyous Judy Neal grabs Roger
Krause 3fter being rescued from an elevator in San
Diego after the city's blackout. Krause and Dennis
DetJen (ri g ht) pried the elevator open with
crowbar:--.
.Jaekie Dark
Pmoor Cut in Perfo~e
SAN DI ECO (A P) -ll would take more th"an a power out·
::igc to faze an old pro like Jackie Gle~son -even if the blackout
,,as the worst in the San Diego area in 20 years. <Related story,
A5l "I was trimming my mustache m the dark and when the
lights went on, one of my eyebrows was missing;• said Gleason.
His <1pJlN1ranc.·e in "The Sly Fox." is his first on stage since
1959, when he co·starred with Walter Pidgeon in the musical
corned~. ··Take Me Along.''
~
GLEASON SAID WEDNESDAY THE week and a half that
he's been in San Diego has been cunous, at the very least.
"There have been continuous rains, winds of hurricane
force. a guy running down the aisle who interrupted the show,
and a blackout," Gleason said.
THF.RE'S NOT MUCH EVEN Gleason can do about raln
and "'ind and a blackout ~ :ut when a man interrupted the show
hv runninR to the stage. Gleason quipped: "How do you like
that? I come all the way to San Diego, and Norton is here in the
:md1ence'"
Thl· a1·tor was referring to the character played by Art
• C<irnl'y, his sidekick in their long-running television series
.. The Jlon£'ymooncrs."
Airport Advocates
To Meet Tonifiht
On the heels of a county·
sponsor e d report citing a
s hortage of airport space in
Orange County, a south Orange
Coasl airport advocacy group
has called a meeting tonight in
San Juan Capistrano.
South Orange County Airport
Committee members plan to dis·
cuss the county General
Services A~ency <GSA) •port
which claims a gap bef ween
county airports and aircraft is
expected to reach 1,152 tic·down
spaces by 1980.
The committee was organized
to search for another airport site
in the south county after San
Juan councilmen ordered
Capistrano Airport to be closed
June 1.
The county GSA sludy men-
tioned two possible airport sites
in the south county area:
-A San Juan Creek site local·
ed one mile north of Ortega
Highway near Bell Canyon.
-The so-called "Prima
Deshecha" site which abuts an
existing county dump sile east of
San Juan.
On Feb. 28. county supervisors
ordered a sear ch of potential
air port sites in the county. The
two south county sites are in·
eluded in the search.
South county airport commit·
lee members also plan to dis·
cuss actions they could take to
keep Capistrano Airport open
until a new south county facility
is developed.
The meeting will take place at
7:30 p.m. in Capistrano Unified
School District offices. 32972
Calle Perfecto m San Juan.
Inmate Back
~ter Escape
TRACY (AP) -An attempt to
escape the Deuel Vocational
Institute e nded with a
superficial gunshot wound and
recapture within four hours, for
a convicted murderer serving
life. officials say.
Prison spokesman Cliff Reed
said Wednesday that Lorenz V.
Karlie, sentenced from Los
An~eles County, cut through two
bars of hi~ cell window and was
<'limbing over a fence at 2:05
a . m. when tower guards fired
six shots. ·
Fro. Page Al
NOTICES .••
alternative, without state relief'.
that's right-we'd have to close
down.
• "There would be no good fairy
al the end of the rainbow."
Buntiagton Case
Therapy Violation
~ge Dismissed
Charges ot illegally practicing
psychology without a license
against a HunUngto11 Beach man
were dropped Tuesday in West
Orange County Judicial District.
James K. Mccann. a UC Ex·
tension business senilnar dlrec·
tor was charaed last October with four countl ot v1olatin1 the
State Businus ond Professions
Code in hls now·defUnct Hwat-
infton Beach hypnosis center.
17522 Beach Blvd. He wu .not ar·
.re1ted.
Dtputy District A~ Klb
Nunn asked the cblrtet •tabrat
)I c:C.nn be dropped beca\lM the
J)ro1ect1tor recelv•4 ''at· surancea" from the accused
hypnotist that the allefed wiola·
tion1 woald not recur.
KcCann doled hla ~
graetlcie late tut Odobir. He decllned to comment on &bl cu.:
mt.,&l ol cb.U,. b;, VCm.ldJ,MiJ
1""
Judge Kenneth Smith.•
Nunn said a female un-
dercover agent from the State
Me dical Quality Assurance
Boal"d l"eceived "hypnosis
therapy" &om McCano during
rour October vUits to the hyp-
notist's otQce.
HypnOlSis therapy can only be
u sed by a li~ensed hyp-
notherapist or in the presence
of a pbyatcian, accordin1 to U>e
State Bueinou and Prof eulons
Code.
McCMD WU granted a b,l&l· nt.. Ucenae last year by the >tuatmatoo hacb Cit;r Couacil toprac8~hnt>Olil .
But •ta~ oftlclala char=
that bo ll'9Dt btyood pr1Ctl
slmpJo bypnoels as permltted by
th• elt1. ''U•ua.\11, all we ttY to d6 lD ..... ca. .. to •et the Yi.o&etor' ~•tot U.practlce," Nmm lald. .,
•
Orange County Republican
candidates, many of them facing
stiff primary competition, have
been asked by their party's
county central committee to
sign its so-called 11th command·
ment: Thou shall not speak ill of
any other Republican.
A code of ethics has been sent ,
by the Orange County
Republican Central Committee's
Ethics Committee to all GOP can-
didates.
Candidates are asked to sign a
statement that they wm conduct
their campaigns ethically, not
attack the integrity, abillty or
sincerity of other Republican
candidates and support whoever
wins their party's nomination.
A list or candidates signing the
pledge will be made public .
Candidates ignoring the code
of ethic.-s may lose the central
committee's s upport in the
general election in November.
Grievances will be heard by the
ethics committee.
The committee is chaired by
Bill Hill of the 70th Assembly.
Other members include Central
Committee members Louise
Steel, 69th Assembly; Jim
Meehan. 73rd Assembly;
William Dougherty, 70tb As·
sem bly; and Rutlr'elyn Plum·
mer, 74th Assembly.
Additional information is availabl~ by calling 547-8006.
Gym Classes ~lated
Classes in beginning and in-
termediate gymnastics are be·
ing offered to children six and
older beginning March 21 at the
Orange Coast YMCA.
C l asses are sch e:duled
Tuesdays a nd Thursdays from
4 : 15 to 6 p.m. For more informa-
tion call 642·9990.
C'91iii'j
Sony Trinitron Color TV
with remote control. 21"-
19"· 17" & I~" diagonal.
And ·au i.n &tock· an with
our one year wa.tTanty.
·~.
KV-aooo Sony Trinltron.
Sony's newest AC-DC.
nute anywhere portable. a
inch diagonal. .. ..
1V ·115 Sohy Bla<S. Whit•.
ll'' screen muaured
4aeonally.
It Didn't Pay
· .·· Yictinu Broke-:Oan T~
CLEVELAND CAP) - A would-be burglar paid
his. fare lo board a Cleveland bus, took out his .32·
<'ahber revolver, and ordered the passengers to turn
over all their money.
Dul every one of the riders -and even the
driver -~aid they were broke
The ~unman, apparently angry at finding a bus
full of mctigents, fired a shot at the back of the bus
then hit a passenger on the head with the gun. ·
True to his luck, the gun rcll apart, the C'yhnder
fell out and clattered along the bus floor .
The man ran off, and police said they were
searching for him. The passenger who was conked
was not seriously hurt.
Won't Be Closed
Alpine Inn Told
To Reduce Noise
The 26-year-old Alpine Inn in
Sllverado Canyon won'J, be
closed down, Ordnge Cd"unty
supervisors decided Wednesday.
Pair Charged
In Thie.very
OLATHE, Kan. CAP) -Two
men were arraigned in Johnson
County District c.;ourt on.
charges of steaUng periscopes
from four Marine Corps tanks.
The two were charged with
burglary and theft after they
were arrested with a juvenile
near a railroad siding in Olathe.
Four M-48A3 tanks were parked
there on a railroad car en route
from Barstow, Calif., to An·
niston, Ala. ·
Police said they spotted the
trio at the siding Tuesday and
found four periscopes and an
empty metal box in a car driven
by the men.
Sony
Headquarters for
the Harbor Area
T. V .·lodlo-Stttt0
Tope RKorder
letamax
• HMK-tlt Sttrto C.omP9Cl
hl• AN·FM, cauettt
player-recorder automauc
record ch•nll!!l' plua two·
.,_, Sen1 .. Ba11 lpeakera.
'
27 S East 17th Sf •.
Costa ·Mesa · .... ~·~ a ..... w.-.. c...11.
· Phone 642:&882
Store H04N8 Oily M S.t. P-5:30 ... .............. *
Rather than revoke the inn's
operating permit, '"Supervisors
ordered that weekend rock
music which irked some inn
neighbors should be quieted
down after midnight.
Supervisor Ralph Diedrich
suggested that if additional
soundproofing can be installed
by inn operators during the next
90 days, the midnight music
curfew might be lifted.
Some inn neighbors had com·
plained aboul l ate night
amplified rock music on
weekends as well as noisy
motorcycles and the behavior of.
some inn patrons.
Others viewed the inn as an&·
set in the rustic, winding can-
yon and said its operators had
tried to be good neighbors.
Diedrich said Wednesday he
viewed the rock music noise as the chief issue.
According to supervisors' or·
der, 'music still can be played at
the inn after midnight. But the
a n\plifiers must be turned off at
the witch.mg hour.
SL-8200 Sony Betamax lets
yuu record you favorite
p-ograms and watdl lhem
v.hen you please • New low
price \(1(1 I
-ICF ·C67oW Low-profile
F'M·A~! di~ilal clock radio,
wllh rich rosewood grain
cabinet is a standout
anywhere in lh~ bedroom.
KV·l951 TRlNITRON
PLUS Solly's Deluxe 19"
diagonal T. V. Includes
Sony's Lwnisponder Ueht
sensing system and extra large &peaker
5'1CJA1.
SAUPIJCE
s49500
For .. .,.,,., lwlt ...
-Yo• owe .If to ,....... to cMc.k _.
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-...
Laguna/South Coast
·-
Afternoon
N.Y. Stoeks
VOL. 71. NO. 68, 4 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, MARCH 9, 1978 TEN CENTS
• ' , '
: ~ ~' . .
"' l ' ~ *\
'
0.1ly PllOI Shll Pllo1•
NEW LAGUNA CONTINUATION SCHOOL STILL NOT FINISHED AFTER EIGHT MONTHS
Soll Problems, Incessant Rain Combine to Thwart Construction of Project
Construction Lags
On Laguna School
,(' . The whole project was expecl-
<'d to take 160 days from start to
finish
But Laguna Beach Unified
School District officials say it's
been more than eight months
since the~ broke ground on the
new t•onlinualwn high school
building And they still don't
know "hen 11 will be completed.
Construl'l111n crews began
work May 23 for the new build·
ing. located at the east end of the 14-acre high school campus.
School officials expected the 25
or so continuation students
would be moving in last Oct. 30.
But district business manager
Clyde Lovelady says move-in
day is still a ways off. "I figure
1C we could gel six weeks of good
weather. wt· could get it done,"
he said
The hr.st problem encountered
by work crews. Lovelady said.
came ..., hen they attempted to
sink largl' stc£>1 caissons into the
earth.
"The soil report was incor·
re ct ," he explained. "It was sup.
posed to be good soi I, but they
found big chunks of concrete.
steel supports and other Junk in
th(' ground · ·
It appears the area was used
as a dunwing ground for build·
ing materials from other areas
of the campus. Lovelady said
Then the rains came, and with
the deluge, more delays.
The 2.~ square fool building,
which hangs out over tiny Nita
Carmen park, was designed by
Newport architects William
Blurock and Partners.
The $153,975 price tag dropped
to $149,079 after trustees cut
som e items rrom the blueprints.
The wood structure will in·
e lude ;1 la rge classroom. ao
audio nsual class area. an arts
and crafts room, offices for the
continuation school c;ecretary
and director, and u large o~
door patio.
(See SCHOOL, Page AZ>
I SU:perviSor Clark
1 Backs 'TIN" CUP'
By GARV GRANVILLE
Ol tllo O•llY Pllel Shll
County Supe r visor Ralph
Clark endorsed the T IN CUP
political campaign reform in-
itiative today.
Clark cast the lone dissenting
\'Ole last week in a 4·1 Board or
Supervisors ballot that enacted
a c o unty campaign reform
meas ure.
In endorsing the TIN CUP
ballot measure today, Clark said
he will move to have the county
ordinance rescinded should the
county's voters approve the in-
itiative in November.
As things stand now, TIN CUP
CTime Is Now. C l ean Up
Politics> workers are circulating
petitions seeking about 54.000
voter signatures needed to move
th~ Initiative onto the ballot.
The Anaheim supervisor also
characterized the county or-
dinance as "more illusion than
reform."
Simultaneously, Clark said he
is "not entirely satisfied with all
aspects of TIN CUP."
In contrast to the county or
dinance, the TIN CUP initiative
seeks to control campaign ac·
tivities of county supervisors
rather than all elected county of-
ficials. .
I t s ets the amount
s upervisorial candidates can ac·
cept in any year from individual
political donors to $500 rather
than the $1,000 per election
Ji m itation in the county legisla-
tion.
TIN CUP also aims its reform
a r rows at lobbyists and the
amount of influence and -activity
they can generate on the county
campaign front.
2Trapped
In Sub 300
Feet Down
LERWICK. Shetland Islands
(AP> J\ two-man submarine
engaged m North Sea 011 opera·
Hons snagged m u wire about 80
miJes east or her e and was
trapped on the seubed nearly JOO
feet down today. operators said
The P and 0 . Steam Naviga·
tion Company. which is operat·
ing the submarine named the PC
9 for the American Conoco oil
concern, said 1l became trapped
at mid-day. ·
"The two men aboard have
enough oxygen and food to last
eight days," a compan y
spokesman said. "They are sit-
ting calmly on the bottom wail·
ing to be rescued.··
The two were belie\'cd lo be
British. but the company said it
will not release their names
"until we are sure their next-of.
kin are notified."
The sub had been working on a
wellhead in the Murchison field.
the company said.
He said the mother ship, Sub
Sea 2. is standing by while a
second mother ship. the Sub Sea
\, is s teaming to the scene with
a rescue submersible from Mon·
trose on the Scottish cast coast
"The Sub Sea 1 should arrive
on the scene Friday and start
rescue operations immediately
with the manned s ubmersible it
is carrying. the Mermaid 3," the
spokesman said.
Blackout Touches
Piece of County
Residents and businesses in
south Orange Coast areas ex-
perienced a momentary power
fluctuation Wednesday as a re-
s ult or the San Diego County
blackout, a San Diego Gas and
Electric spokesman said today
(Related story, Page A5). .
The momentary power loss oc-
cur red in San Clemente. San
Juan Capistrano, Laguna
Niguel, Dana Point. Capistrano
Beach. South Laguna and por·,
lions of Mission Viejo. Laguna
Hills and Coto de Caza.
Gunman Escapes
Costa Mesa Hotel
Guest Murdered
By MICHAEi. PASKEVICH
Ol ti. 0.11'1' Pllet Sl•ff
A South Coast Plaza hotel
guest was shot and killed early
today after he refused the com·
mands of an unidentified gun.
man to join the gunman and two
hosta~es on an elevator ride
from the lobby of the Costa
Mesa Hotel. pohce said.
The name of the victim of the
2 ·46 am !>hooting is being
..., ithheld pending notification of
family members. Police would
only say that the dead man was
from out of state.
The gunman fled immediately
~•fter the shooting and is still be·
1ng sought by police.
A second male guest and a
hote l employee who were being
held hostage by the gunman
muna~ed to escape IJy closmg
t hl' d6ors of the elevator as the
~unman fired ~e\cral times at
his ,·1ctim
Ac-corrl1ng to Co!.ta Mesa
Pollet Lt George Lorton. the
fatal in ciden t began in the
ground noor kitchen area of the
SOUGHT FOR MURDER
Police Sketch of Gunman
hotel. 666 Anton Bl vcJ.
The gunman approached the
room ser vice employee and
torced him to follow him into the
lobby of the hotel where the two
gues.ls were seated
Lt. Lorton said police are un.
<.'ertain a s t o the gunman's
motive. but believe a robbery
may have been planned.
The gunman ordered the two
guests lo ~cl into the elevator.
but the victim refused and
beftan to walk away. Three to
five s hots were fired from a
s m all caliber handgun, with al
least one bullel striking the hotel
guest, police said .
The hotel employet-and
s econd gues t were in tbe
elevator at the time.
The victim was pronounced
dead on arrival al Mere~
General Hospital in Santa Ana.
Descriptions from the unin
JUred guest and the hotel
e mployee ha\'e led to a com
pos itc drawjn~ of a s us pect
des cribed us a while male in hi~
early 20s with blond to light
brown hair and brown eyes. The
:.us pcct is approximately five
feet eight inches tall and weighs
between l3S and 15-0 pounds. ac
cordingtowitnessc:..
Optimism, Support Eyed
Laguna Aides React to New Majority.
By STEVE MITCHELL
OI , .. o.!ty f'llOI Shit •
The mood at city hall follow-
ing the election of a new City
Council in Laguna Beach ap·
pears today to range from hesi-
tant optimism to outright sup-
port.
Anonymous comments were
elicited from a dozen municipal
employees in five city depart-
ments· this morning following
the election Tuesday or coun-
<.'ilmen floward Dawson, Kelly
Bo~ d and Wa yne Baghn.
The three new councilmen.
"ho campaigned for fiscal
responsibility, wlll be s worn into
office Wednesday night
And while so me city
employees were hesitant to dis·
cuss the new conservative ma-
jority. others were vocal in their
s upport or opposition to the
change.
"We're due for a change, .. one
employee s aid. "I think they'll
do a hell of a good Job. There's
been a lot of wa!>ted spending as
far as I can see."
'"The bureaucratic system
must prevail. but there's got to
Contract Talks Set
For Capo Teachers
Teacher contract negotiations
"'ere scheduled to begin today in
the Capistrano Unified School
District. where teachers have
proposed a 10 percent pay hike.
In addition lo the 10 percent
salary boost. aachers represent-
ed by the Capistrano Unified
Education Association have pro·
posed a contract calling for full
health care for de pendents.
more flexible workin~ hours and
binding arbitration.
Teachers have also proposed a
new pay schedule for speech
therapists. improved working
conditions for school nurses and
new 'Coachinj{ positions for
junior high s ports .
In its counter proposal, the
school district has offered an in-
crease of four percent. which
would cover fringe benefits.
salary increases and a ny other
cost increases.
Cost to the school district if
the CUEA proposal were accept·
ed would be $2.8 million. said
Sam Ch.icas, assistant superin·
tendent for general services.
The district's four percent pro-
posal would cost $850,000. includ-
in g $350.000 to maintain lh<'
present teacher salary schedule.
said Chicas.
The annual base pay for a
hej:!innin g t eacher in t~e
Capis trano Unified School Dis·
tricl is currently $10.555. An ex
<See CONTRACT. Page A 21
* * *
City Voters
Blamed for
Bond Defeat
bt' some sense to 1~ ·
Another employee compared
recent Laguna Beach elections
lo a pendulum. "First it was
way ov~r on one side, now it's
way over on the other side
Chan ges a r e bound to co!lle
about. but what they are l?OIO~
to consist of. I can't guess.
"Generally the change 1s for
the better, although I \~Ould hate
to sec a concrete belt instead of
a greenbelt."
A third employee said he c>.
peels to see s ubstantial person·
net replacements in the next few
months. ''Two of the candidates
said they would make from 23 to
28 cuts in employees. /\nd they
s aid those cuts would not come
from the 100 public safety jobs.
So they 're talkin{:? about culs in
human affairs. planninR. finance
and municipal ser vices."
/\n immediate resolution to
the -lawsuits over development
of Svcamore Hills is predicted
by one e mployee. who would not
say whet' -.r that solution woultl
come <i. by negotiation or
other me ....
That employee ::ilso P\Cd1cts. a
more friendly relat1ons h1p
between Laguna Beach and
other c1lles. as \\ell as Orange
County go,·ernment, GalTrans
and large property owners.
··But hopefully that new rel<i
tionship will not be at the ex
pcnse of giving in to those en
tities. just lo keep things on u
more friendly basis ...
A long-time city employee
said he is happy with the expect
ed change in philosophy of the
new panel. ·•1·m glad to see
sQmc progressive thinking peo
ole in there. I think the era of
<See AWES, Page A?)
Coasc That drive has continued
despite enactment last week of
the county ordinance seeking to
regulate campaigns or those in
quest of county elected oCfices.
Clark criticized that ordinance
for. among other things, creat-
ing "a paper tiger" fair polllical
practices commission "hand
picked" by the Board of
Supervisors.
Hippo Foils 'em Again
City voters were blamed by
Capistrano Unified School Dis·
trict Superintendent Jerome
Thornsley Wednes day for the
Tuesday defeat of the di!llrict's
$49.3 million school consl~ction
bond issue.
The spr awlin g Capistrano
school district , which lakes in 20
percent of OrangE;,. County land.
includes the unincorporated
comm unities of Dana Point,
Capistrano Beach, Laguna
Niguel and eastern Mission Vie·
jo -where the bond measure
passed -and the cities of San
Jua n Capistr.,-io a nd San
Clemente -where it was ck
Weather
Chance of meas ureablc
rain SO percent tonight. 20
percent l'>y Friday after
noon. Little cooler days.
Lows tonight in low sos.
Highs Friday in Jow to
mid-60s.
..
Vandals Hit
Bubbla Sidestepa Snare; Trap Still Unte1ted
Nobocly knows if it will work.
It's tbe first time the rangers
have eve.-had to catch a hlppo
in the wild -the wild being a
small pond ofl Laguna Canyon
Road near Laguna Beach,
sevpral miles from Lion Coun·
try I
Today Lion Country otriclaJs
seriously considered accepting
the orrer of a man who claims to
be the nephew of Frank ~uck,
the legendary lion tamer. Only,
Or. Alan C. Buck purports to be
a hippo tamer who has caught
100 s uch be&!iU ln his day.
Bu<:k'a lsn't the only offer
rrom sell·atyled professionals.
Sa i<l Mu. Culjis. ·'ft'•
a b1olutely phenomenal. the
number o{ lM!OPle who clahn to
do ootftlnlt but captqre bl1.>·
poPot•mUSe.t for 1 U.vlnf. And they're all rt~t ln tbc area.''
feated. ,
"Jn the unincorporated areas.
the bond measure was the only
tssue on the ballot. and It passed
2 . .s to 1," said Thomsley. "Jn
Mis.ion Vlejo the vote was 10 to
1 in favor of the bonds. But the
two cllies, particularly Sao
Clement.. pulled lt down.·•
The defeat of the bond
measure -the third In two
years -prompted aome Mlaion
Viejo resident.a to ••k Thornaley
to'ftM•aJ suidtllnes for creatloi
the1i own lllaslob Viejo achool
dlllrlat. M..lwon Vl-.io vOten have eon·
11-t•ntb' tupported bond lSIQetl
( lfoND, Pas ,U)
INSIDE TOD" Y
Sterling Holloway may
have oYW! of the most Jomous
voices in the world. The
South Laguua re.t1dent hos
been C~ voice o/ se~rol
well~loued Dimey charocters.
including the Clle3hart Cat
Set PtoturlnQ. Cl
•••ex
..
1
r
s
l
fo
p
I
I
I
----.. ----.. --~
,
iit2 DAILY PILOT LSC
Coal Strike Lashed Six Held
On Sex
Charges
Judge Asked to Order Miners to Work
. une man and five women were
Jailed Wednesday on pro!hlution
Charges after JK)hce <allefed the
suspects used a Costa Mesa dat·
1,0g serv1ce"to ('Over a call girl
ribg.
J:>ol1ce as~ert that two Hunt·
1d~ton Beach policewomen in
f\\trated the operation by posmg
~ca ll girls
'the arrests came at a Laguna
Hilb hotel where vice officers
allege the five women and man
were offered $1,800 for ''conven·
1100 services.·'
Orange County Sheriff's of-
fH·crs .said the arrests were
made po!-.siblc through the com·
lllncd efforts o f Hunti ngton
Bea rh, Newport Beach and
Garden Grove polit'e.
V1<.·e officers said more than 14
malt• patrons had gathered al
th e L aguna ll i ll s hotel to
purchase the serv1<:es allegedly
to he provided out of Kats En-
terp riscs of 230 17th SL, Costa
Mesa.
Sam Charles Wright, 32. of 213
17th St and Kathleen Eileen
Hill, 22. of 17402 Waal Circle,
both of I luntinJ,!ton Beach, were
·arr ested on <.'hargcs of pimping.
Jn ves tigators alleged that
Whght and Miss Hill were the
~ouplc who h;1nd1cd negotiations
\let" cen lhe group of male clients
<md the rall g1rls assigned to rntt.et
tbem at the Laguna l lills hotel.
Officers said the arrest~ were
roade ut the moment money ex-
ch an g,td han ds In the hotel
.room,,
A l~ra1 l~d on prost1tut1on
char Clo. were Kathryn Jean
ll uber v. 24, Catherine Sue
f''er,.:usu . 19, Carla Mercclith
28. and Sandra Baker, 26. all of
Huntington Beach.
Investigators said the method
of selling sex allegedly u!>ed by
the. defendants was via what has
b~com e known to vice 1n -
vcst1gators as "the convention
·a-pp roach ...
··Booster Club .
, ·lnLBPlam
' J '~~!.~.~~~~: 10
. be-a t the super intendent or
' schools at blackjack you'll have
I · yoor chance Saturday at the
La~una Beach High School
Booster's Club Las Vegas Night.
District officials, including
Superintendent Robert Sanchis,
will be dealing at the 18 black-
Jack tables from 7 p.m. to mid·
night Saturday in the lower
parking area al the Villali(e
,F aire, 1100 South Coast
1 Highway.
.. The popula r fund·raising
'Event netted Boosters m ore
;'than S4,000 last year, which went
. ~to the high school pep squad,
·:band and other groups.
!'. The price is S7.50 which in·
•icludes buffet dinner and $S worth ::<>r play money for bingo, black·
,;_j ack and other casino-t ype
•.games. '· '· '• i:Chamhe r Break.fast
i\Slated W e dnesday
, • A special Cham ber of <Am-
•'. merce breakfast is planned for
i·Wednesday morning lo ln-
•!troduce chamber members t o
:1new Laguna Beach counc1l
1·members
1; The brE'akfast will be held at
: the Hotal Laguna beginning at 8
':a. m . Cost is S3 and reservations
::may be made by calling the
1 'chambcr at 494·1018. ,· ,. ,,
::~reight D e railed
(! .J USTIN, Texas <AP> -Fif·
1ttc~ cars of a 67-car Santa Fe
1·fre.ight train derailed near this
• ~north Texas town today. ,. --~~~~~~~~~~-• I <
I
I• 1;
ORA NOE COAST
DAILY PILOT
11 ~~..:t.~~~."r.i::::::..:=~=
•• C.oHl~'"''"4Comrp.,,y ~ ..... ,~•'• °'*'~• Montt.tv tftrouC'ff't fl°fld•Y fOI' °"'" Mt .. Ht•"'1 &no H""'I-_,,,.....,
111n V•llty H•t1f"!r 51ft.Ojtba(~ Y•ttn ~ *=~~~.~~!',t~~·t:. ~~~~:-~'l.~1'1~~~~'1~ W..t &lw ...... ,, .. ~ ........ ~, . ..., __
, ...... Cw ... V>o "'n-teNI0.,..."4~
'"'""'"·-· •• u ...
~..:.~at
Qltf!M)I ~ lt\dltrt, ..... "'""'-""'~ ..... t!dlt"" LIO""• 8eech 0Moe {\MG.__.. ....... ""'"'"'"'-.. ' ,,o ...... m 'l1 °"'"• """'Clo~~,,~== -~-, ....... ., t_ .... .._._ ••S...01 ... ,._...
, ........... ('MCJMM111
Ct .. ""9d Adv......,.eo.Mll
t:; •'-~h-AIDIJI •aMm l',• ,...,... ... ......
Keeping Ber Cool
\ .\ oung girl :.ho" er:. in a s tream close to her family
h11L on Burnw 's main trunk road north of Rangoon.
She's u Tamil Indian living on Kipling's legendary Road
to '.\J;.rndalu.\.
Airport Advocates
To Meet Tonight
On the heels of a county-
spon sored report ci ting a
s hortaj:!c of a 1rµort space in
t Orangt.> County, a south Orange
Coast airport advocacy group
has called a meeting tonight 10
San Juan Capistrano.
South Orange County Airport
Committee members plan to dis-
cuss the cou n ty Gen eral
Serv1('es Aj.!cncy (GSA> report
which claims a gap between
county airports and aircraft is
l''<Pt>cled to reach l.152 tic-down
s paces by 1980.
The committee was organized
to search for another airport site
County Plans
Canyon Creek
Bridge Work
Orange County fire crews are
!.''<peeled to be at work the next
couple of days to reinforce a
Laguna Canyon Creek b:-idgc
weakened by recent rains.
The bridge, near the El Toro
Road intersection, cor.nects
about 25 homes on Sun Valley
Drive ~nd Stans Lane with
Laguna Canyon R"ad. county of.
f1cials said.
County Fire Clue( Carl Downs
insp .. cted the bridge Tuesday
and found it weakened. He noted
its collapse would be haza rdous
t<:' area residents and would
hamper fire and rescue opera·
tlcns.
County fire crews with the
help of Jail inmates are sandbag-
~ing the bridge abutment and
!;horing up several homes next
to the creek.
E'roM Page AJ
AIDES ...
:Let's keep Laguna to ourselves
a nd to hell with everyone else' is
out."
"I think we'll see progressive
development. controlled de-
velopment instead of just shaft-
ing everybody who wants to
build here."
Another expects a reshaping
of the pla nning commission.
board or adjustment and the
committee system, and predicts
some e mployee dismissals in the
proc~s.
"You don't know the names of
any newspapers in Portland, do
you," the employee quipped.
·'One with a large clauified sec-
tion?"
Aliso Viejo
Plans Aired
Laguna Niguel Homeowner
Association mem hers wUI hear
plans for the 6,600 acre Aliso
in the south county after San
Juan counci Im en order ed
Capistrano Airport lo be closed
June 1.
The county GSA study men-
tioned two possible airport sites
in the south county area:
-A San Juan Creek site local·
ed one mile north of Ortega
Jlighway near Bell Canyon.
-T h e so-calle d "Prima
Deshccha" site which abuts an
existmg county dump site cast of
San Juan
On Feb. 28, county s upervisors
ordered a search of potential
airport sites in the county. The
two south county sites are in-
cluded in the search .
South county airport commit-
tee members a lso plan to dis-
cuss actions they could take to
keep Capistrano Airport open
until a new south county facility
ts developed.
The meeting will take place at
7: 30 p.m. in Capistrano lJnified
School District office!, 32972 ~alle Perfecto in San Juan.
E'roMPageAJ
CONTRACT
perienccd teacher. bolding &
master's de gree, can earn
$33,045 a year. 'Teachers with
doctorate ~grees earn an addi·
tional $675 a year
t. 1976 teacher contract 10-
cre a sed Capis trano Unified
teacber salaries by 8.4 percent.
/I. six pe r cent salary boost
agreement was reached in 1977 ..
complete negotiations before
sch ool is out. a nd we ad-
ministrators would like to be done
before the new Ciscal year starts
July 1, but it doesn't usually work
out that way," said Robert
Knapp, personnel director. ··we
nrny be in negotiations through
the summer."
Teacher salades. excluding
fringe benefits, accounted for
$13.1 million, or 45 percent , of the
$29.4 million 1977-78 school dia-
trict budget.
E'ro.. Page AJ
SCHOOL .•.
The continuation school
youngsters will move out of a
home across the street from the
school which was given to the
district in 1936.
That, 1.400 foot building is be-.
ing vacated because It does not
meet s tate earthquake st·an-
dnrds. Lovelady said the district
might use the old structure for
adult education classes In the
ful.,re.
Mea nwhile. it houses
YO\&.Dgsters who are close enoueh
to their new classroom to hear
construction crews. And. with
any luck at all, that noise should
stop in a month and a half.
Viejo Company proJect between San Juan Boose the San Diego Freeway and
Laguna Hills Monday night.
The assoctatJon will meet at IA>oted by Thieves 7:30 p.m. to hear company · •
spokesman Art Cook outline a lntrudctJ who &alned entry b.Y.
proiram which wlll include lltuna the kitchen window off l&.s
20.000 homes ln the 1reen rolllnl track toot 1lh .. rwan. Jewelry bills to the weat of Lacuna a.nd a televilloo aet from a San _ ....Ni&Uel. Juan Capistrano bome.
'tbe mfflina 9ril1 bi held Jn the Ora.nit COunt:r tbet'lrt'a of.
' i• ,.,...M ........ a.... .. ,__~.,......,._..-
Moulton NJpel Water Dislrlct ncera Wd the break•iD WU "'9
offlcta at 27500 South La Pai ported by letter carrier Georp
Road, South Laiuna In the COO· CectJ Gracie, $8, Of IW1 Calle
ferepce room. For mol'e ID·__,,VIUa Cl.r~ Be ••• oUt ol town
formation. caU Suale Rln1 al at the tlme. n. IOI& WH nlued
493·00'1'-•t $2.250.
~ =-~cc:..."'tt~~ _...,i.,., ~-It ... ,.." .... ., ;I -:;,-.;t::-, t-1•1 "rlftlUIM\
.......... , •• , ....... ,. ...... CrtV jilt~
Gtttl••11lt $-tr1r1 ... 'W Ul'tlH' UN ='J.!...·u.:::.J.vr -·~..,, ......... ,
•
WASHJNGTON {AP> -The
Carter administration asked a
fe deral judge today to order
striking coal miners back to
work, ~aying the 94-day coal
strike would "imperial the na-
tional health and safety" if it
continues
Justice Department lawyers,
acting under the Taft-Hartley
Act. asked the U.S. District
Court in Washington to order
mem bers of the striking United
Mine Workers union back to the
min es immediately.
1,450 union ent1t1es, coal com
panies and inwviduals named in
the court papers.
Official s said Attorney
Genera l Griffin Bell planned to
be in court when government at-
POWER CAN'T HELP
ENO COAL STRIKE-86
torneys argued their case later.
His presence was seen as a sign
o f the importance that the
Carter administration attaches
to the case.
Bell said, "I tx>hcve that the
miners will obey the law and
this includes court orders. I also
have every confidence that law
enforcement ofrlcers in the
~tales concerned will provide
a_dequate and effective protec-
tion for those miners returning
to work. We are a nation eom-
miUed lo law."
Under the Tafl·Hartley Act
Robinson has the power to orde~
the m iners back to work for 80
days and to direct both sides to
resume good-faith bargaining.
T he government also asked
for a court order directing coal
companies to reopen the mines,
idle since the strike began Dec.
6
The request was assigned to
Judge Aubrey Robinson, one of
the 12 federal judges who pre-
side m the district. The j udge
was expected to set a hearing on
the request and then decide
whether to grant the govern-
ment's request for an injunction.
County Sets Rates
On A~bulance Ride
The government petjtjon asks
that the order be directed at
E'ram Page AJ
Residents of unincorporated
Orangt" County communities in
need of ambulance service can
expect lo pay at least $60 a call.
Thal is the base rate set by
county supervisors for the 15
am bu lance firms operating in
unincorporated county areas.
Firms also are to charge $3
per mile of travel, $10 extra for
to pay for new school construe-calls between 7 p.m. and 7 a.m.
tion. San Clemente voters have and $12.50 for each 15 minutes of
just a s consistently been op-waiting l!Jne.
BOND ...
posed to the three attempts to In addition, they can coll ect pa.~s the bond measures. $lO for use or oxygen, up to $20 ~an Clemente people havt: to for medical supplies used on a
realize th~y . are . not ~UPJ><?rt~ng -trip and $10 for e mergency runs. school bu1lcling Just m M1ss1on
Viejo." said Thornsley. "They
are going to need new schools
right in their own back yard as·
development begins on the three
major San Clemente ranches."
The bond issue, if a pproved,
would not have increased th1;
district's 1978-79 tax r ate of 90
cents, Thorn s l ey said . A
$27 .2 million lease-purchase
agreement. which will ap.pear on
the June 6 ballot, would increase
the tax rate by 36 cents for new
school construction.
_...--·
( "iiiii'J
Sony Trinitroo Color TV
with remote control. 21 " -
19"-11" & 15" diagonat.
And -~U m stock-all with
our one year warranty.
·~
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Sony's newes t AC ·DC.
Take anywhere pm1ble. 8
inch diagonal. .. _ ..
~;t 15 Sony Black• \'fblte.
11 screen measured da~naU-y
Mike Williams , county.
e m ergency medical services
director, s aid according to new
county a mbulance regulations
all firms in the unincoprorated
area must charge the rates set
by s upervisors.
He said the rates a re about the
same as those already charged
by the ambulance companies.
Rates will be reviewed again
in six months bv the countv's
Sony
Headquarters for
the Harbor Area
T. V .·Radio-steno
Tape Recorder
Betamax
HM.K-411 Stereo Com,,-c:t
baa AM·f'M, caaaette
pla)'et'·rec:ord• .utomauc
rtcord chan1« plus two·
WI)' Senst-Baa speakers.
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Costa Mesa .................. a ......... .:;c:.~.
Phone 642-8882
~Hours Daily U S.t. 9-5:30 ......... ,,,.. .......
Emergency Medfcal Care Com-
mittee, he said, and later will be
s ubject to review and possible
change annually.
Storm Slams
North State
By The Associate d Press
A storm drenched the
San Francisco Bay area
and sent waler brimming
over the banks of res-
ervoirs in Nort h e rn
California.
Rainfall totals for the
24-hour period ending al 4
a.m . showed Oakland had
3.40 inches. San Francisco
Airport 2.01. downtown
San Francisco I.SO. Ukiah
l 45. Red Rluff l. 22,
Sacramento .74 of an inch
and Marin Civic Center
.72.
State Roule l along the
coast was blocked by
slides and washouts
between Hearst Castle and
Car mel.
SL-8200 Sony Bet.amax lets
you record you fa vorite
programs and watch lhem
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-
7
'I'oday"'s Closing
N.Y. Stoeks
VOL. 71, NO. 68, 4 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, MARCH 9, 1978 N TEN CENTS
MiJWrs
Ordered
To Work?
WASHINGTON <AP J -The
Carter ctdminislration sought a
back -to-work court order
against striking coal miners to-
day. saying the national "health
and safety could be imperiled" 1r their 94-day walkout con-
tinues .
U.S. District Judge Aubrey
Robinson set an afternoon hear
ing on the request. made under
the Taft-Hartley Act. The re-
quest also asks for an order
POWER CAN'T HELP
ENO COAL STRIKE-86
directing coal companies lo re-
open mines to the strikers.
The United Mine Workers de-
r1ounced the request in advance
as an "outrage_"
Coal operators had said they
would comply and open their
min cs lo all strikers "'1shing to
work.
Officials said it was likely to
be Monday before miners would
be expected to report for work.
But there were expectations
within the union. industry and
government that defiance of a
back-lo·work order would be
widespread
President Carter directed At-
tornev General Griffin B. Bell to
seek the order after receiving a
J(loomy r eport from a fact-
finding board of inquiry he set
up this week under the Tafl-
Ha rtlcy Act.
The report said the strike had
"reached alarming propor·
lions."
·'It is imperative, in the na·
tionat int<?Test. that the parties
find a basis fol' resolution of the
strike as <'Xpediliously a s possi-
ble," il said.
Carter wrote Bell that the
fact·finding board felt there was
little chance of settling the dis-
pute without outside interven·
lioll' adding:
"As a result of dwindling coal
stocks in the affected region,
electricity curtailments are Jn
effect. the production of
<~COAL,PageA2)
Six FromHB
Arrested on
Sex Charges
Une man an·d five woinen·were
jailed Wednesday on prostitution
charges after police alleged the
suspects used a Costa Mesa dat-
ing service to cover a call girl
rinJ?.
Police assert that two Hunt-
ington Beach policewomen in-
filtrated the operation by posing
as call girls.
The arrests came at a Laguna
Hills hotel where vice officers
allege-the five women and man
were offered $1,800 for "conven·
tion services.··
Orange County Sheriff's of-
ficers said the arrests were
made possible through the com·
bined efforts of Huntington
Beach. Newport Beach and
Garden Grove police.
Vice offlcers said more than 14
male patrons had gathered at
the Laguna Hills hotel to
purchase the services allegedly
to be provided out of Kats En-
terprises or 230 17th St., Costa
Mesa.
Sam Charles Wright, 32, of 213
17th St. and Kathleen Eileen
Hill, 22. of 17402 Waal Circle,
both of Huntington Beach, were
arrested on charges of pimping.
Investigators alleged that
<See CHARGES. Page A2>
Stonn Slarm
North State
..
AP Wlrepbolo
Keeping Ber Cool
A young girl !ihO\\Cri. in a strt•am clo:-.e t o her famll~
hut on Burmi..l·s main trunk ro:.id north of Rangoon
!:ihc 's a T~mil Indian lh mg on Kipling':-. legendary Ho<td
to !\J <111dalay.
2 . Trapped in Sub
·300 Feet Down
LERWICK. Shetland lslands
<AP) -A two-rna11 subtnarine
engaged in North Sea oil opera-
tions snag~d in a wire about 80
miles east of here and was
trapped on the seabed nearly 300
feel down today, operators said.
The P. and 0 . Steam Naviga.
lion Company, wl\ich is operat-
ing the submarine named lhe PC
9 for the Amerkan Conoco oil
concern. said 1t became trapped
at mid-day
·'The two men aboard have
enough oxygen and food lo last
eight day s." a company
spolcesman said. "They are sit·
tin~ calmly on the bottom wait-
ing to be rescued."
The two were be.lieved to be
British, but the company said it
will not release their names
"until we are sure their next-o{-
kin are notified."
The sub had been work mg on a
wellhead in the Murchison field.
the company said.
He said the mother ship, Sub
Sea 2, is stanrung by while a
second mother ship, the Sub Sea
1, is steaming to ~e scene with
a rescue submersible from Mon-
trose on the Scottish east coast.
"The Sub Sea 1 should arrive
on the st·cne Friday and start
rescue operations immediawly
with lhe manned submersible it
is carryfng, the Mermaid 3." the
spokesman said.
One Arrested
In Boat Tiff
SAUSALITO <AP> A brief
rhubarb at Waldo Point, scene or
repeated protests· by houseboat
owners who oppose construction
of a new marina. ended with one
arrest. deputies s~.11d.
Marin County s heriffs of·
ficials said the confrontation oc-
curred Wednes day when de
velopers tried vainly to free a
floating pilednver which was
blocked in the harbor and has
hailed construction for three
months
As they have in the past.
houseboat owners swarmed out
in a flotilla or small boats and
ha\'e blocked the path of the
plledri ver.
Man Booked
Held in Newport Hi~ruii Death
A s elf-employed Newport
Beach builder was arrested to·
dav on manslaughter charges in th~ hit and-run death of a )Oun11
\\Oman Wednesday in Ncw1xm
lkaC'h.
Suspe('I Ste\ l'n J a) Lan
dngan. 26, of ·MS Catalina Drive.
.... as booked into Newport Heach
l'tl) Jail. a<·<·ording to police
Sgt !\en Thompson Bail "'as set
ul $2 .500.
Killed instantly in the 12.20
a m _ accident Wednesday was
Dore~n You. 18. who was s tand·
mg on a curb on the Arches
O\'erpass on Coast Highway
.... hen a "h1le pickup truck
swerved over the curb and hit
her. Thompson said. Tht: truck
:,ped away without slopping.
Thompson said a description
of the truck provided by wit-
nesses was circulated lo various
auto repair and parts shops with
a note that there was probably
damage to the front end and a
broken headlight
He said a parts dealer led
Police to the vehicle. Landri~an
turned himself 1n at about 8 30
" m . today. Thompson said
The cause or the accident 1s
sti ll under inve s ti~ation,
Thompson .said.
An Orange County Coroner':.
deputy said toda~ lhat M 1ss You
had <tpparenlly lived m Newport
Beach for i,omc time but didn't
ha \'4.,' a fixed addrci;s. Her
parents. "ho identified the body.
la ve in Baldwin Park.
Furu.•ral arrang<?ments are be-
in J? handlt'd by Roy C. Ad-
dleman and Son Func·ral Hortie
1n El Monte
Costa· Mesa ·Hotel
Guest Murdered
Dy ~11CllAEL PASKEVICll
Ol IN O•llY 1'1lot ~Utl
A South Coast Plaza hotel
guest was s hot and k 1llcd early
torla) after h<• refused the com·
mands of an un1dentif1ed J?un-
man to jom the gunman and two
hostages on an elevator ride
from the lobby of the Costa
~le!'<i llotel. police s<.11tl
'l'hl' name of the 'ictim of the
2 Iii a.rn l>hool1ng i . ., bctng
"1th held pending notification of
family mcmoors. Police would
onl\· sav that the dead man was
from out of state.
The gwunan Oed immediately
after the shooting and is still be-
ing sought by police
A second male guest and a
hotel employee who were being
held hostage by the gunman
managed to escape by closing
the doors of the elevator as the
gunman fired several times at
his victim
Costa Mesa police said today
they :ire seeking two occupants
of an orange 1976 Porsche that
was seen leaving the hotel park·
mg lol about two minutes after
the shooting.
Police are not linking lM car
occupants to the shooting but
arc seeking information that
could be crucial to the murder
case. investigator Gerry
Thompson said.
According to Costa Mesa
Police LL George Lorton, the
Solon Probe Due
WASll l NGTON <A PJ
California Attorney General
Evellc J _ Younger said Wednes-
day he will launch a state in-
vestigation of possible corrup-
tion in the California legislature
bee a use federal authorities
won 'l turn over any information
from their inquiry
SOUGHT FOR MURDER
Police Sketch of Gunman
fa la I incident began in the
ground floor kitchen area of the
hotel. 666 Anton Blvd.
The gunman approached the
room service employee and
forced him to follow him into the
lobbv of the hotel \\here the h\O
gues-ts were scaled.
LL Lorton s:.iid Police arc un
tcrla 1n ;_cs to the gunman':-.
moti\'e, but believe a robbery
m;iy have been planned.
1 he gunm<1n ordered the two
guests to ~cl into the elevator
but the vit'tim refused and
began to \\';_elk away Three to
fi \ c shol !. \\ t•n· fired from a
:-mall calilJcr hand,gun. with at
least one bullet striking Lhe hotel
guest, police said
Tht• hotel employee and
second guest were 1n lhc
l'levator ut the time.
The \'iCtim was pronounced
dt•ad on arrival at Mercy
General llosp1tal in Santa Ana.
Descriptions from the unm
_1u reu gues t und th<.• hotel
employee have led to a com
positc drawing or a suspect
dc·scribed as a white m ale in his
early 20s with blond to light
brown hair and brown eyes. The
suspect is approximately fin•
fed eight inches tall and v.eigb:.
bet ween 135 and 150 pounds. ac
cordingtov. itnesscs
Hippo Hiatus
Bubbles Bypasses Net Trap
By PIOLIP ROSMARIN
CM Ille Dally l'llol St•ll
··she came out on the wrong
side of the pond (a trap awaits
on the other sidel and slipped
back into the water." explained
Jane Culjis, Lion Country
Safari's marketing director, in
recounting the latest overnight
failure to capture Bubbles, the
wild animal park's runaway
hippo
"l guess she wasn't hungry
and was bored by the situation."
A bored hippopDtamus has an
imposing yawn.
Less imposing are the yawns
of exhausted Lion Country
rangers who have now spent 17
night·long vigils waiting for
Bubbles to give herself up.
Their latest ruse lo get her. a
pole, net and pulley affair meant
lo snare Bubbles in netting so
she can be tranquilized. still
awaits testing.
Nobody knows if it will work.
It's the first time the rangers
have ever had to catch a hippo
in the wild -the wild being a
small pond off Laguna Canyon
Road near Laguna Beach.
several miles from Lion Coun·
try. I
Laguna Canyon Road wUI be
closed from 8 o'clock tonight as
Lion Country Safari officials
mull the wisdom of draining
Bubbles' watery temporary
home.
CalTrans has approved the
road clOSl,lre, which may con·
tlnue in effect until 8 a .m . Fri·
day.
'SHE'U NEYER
STIU.Y AGAIN
Arnon1 bunmds of augaes -uona for capturina Bubbles.
Lton Count.ry sarari 'a wa.Yfaring
bjppopotamus, WH this latest
one today:
Fill her pond wlth plaattt or
· P"rl1, a callet advlsed Let lt. set.
Then, when dry, Juat pull out tbe
mold and you've got 8ubbltl,
suitable ~ mou.nUn1.
The draining of the pond had
not received final appro\·al as of
early afternoon today, however
Asked if the chance of rain
might postpone plans for drain
ing the pond tonight, Safari
representative Jane Culjis just
laughed.
"If we can't catch a hippo, we
can't stop the rain, .. ~he said
Today Lion Country officials
scriouslv constdcred acceptinR
the offer of a man who claims to
be the nephew of Frank Buck.
the leE?endary lion tamer. Only_
Dr. Alan C. Buck purports lo be
a hippo tamer who has caught
100 such beasts in his day
Buck's isn't lhc only offer
from self·stylcd professionals
Sard Mr!i. C ulJIS. "It '~
absolutely phenomenal. lhC'
<Stt IUPPO, Page A2> oranga coas•
.._ .. L:: _a..:~
Weathe r
Rain returned today and
there's ~ percent chance
-for Friday afternoon. Lil·
lle cooler days. Lows
tonight in low 50s Highs
Friday in low to m1d-60s
INSIDE TOD~ Y
Sterling Holloway may •
ha~ one of the most /omo143
voicu in the world. The
South Lcguria re31Mnt has.
be~n the ooice o/ stueral•
well-lo~ Disney character•.
lncludrng tM Chc1hire Cat
See Featunng. Cl
lad ex
~
1
r
s
l
t·
I•
' .
AZ DAIL v PILOT N
College
Vetoes
Ousters
By JACKJE HYMAN
OI Ille o.11, ~llM •IMf
Coast Community College Dis-
trict trustees said Wednesday
they won'l send out blanket dis-
m issal nollces in a nticipation of
the passage of the Jarvis-Gann tax initiative, which would re-·
duce district property tax rev-
enoes by aboul$14 million.
So111e school districts across
the slate have sent out the
notices, conditional on the in·
iliative's passage, because stale
Jaw provides that teachers must
be notified by March 15 if they
~ are to be <fumissed for the next
.._school year. (Related stor ies PageAJ.)
_ _......... ___ _
•
Oeerry Blossom Time
Af'WI ........
Dis trict spok~man Richard
Simon said trustees unanimous-
ly voted not to send the notices
but instead to issue information
lo all employees about possible
-.effects on programs and person·
• .oel if the initiative passes.
This whjtc-cutfted }oung lall). µorlrnymg
a moon goddess of Shinto myth, will be
one of the participants when San Fran
l'l!>l o celebrate~ its annual Chern
Blossom Fe~t1val beginning April 13 ·
.. --Simon said trustees discussed
he possibility of trying to con-
t 1nue operatin~ with Cull staff in
the 1978-79 year and making cuts
f~r the following year 1f
necessary
lie said the colleges Golden
W est, Orange Coast and.
j:oastlwe would be operated
<1nt1l fund:, rJn out, al whkh
lime they would all be closed
and an emergency funding ap-
plication he made to the slate
Simon :,aid trustees cited the
cffel't on employee m orale in
clec1dinJ( not to 1s!>ue acro..,s-
lhe -hoard d1:.m1:,sal notice~
· :'lhieves Take
.:BaJ,boa Isle
Welcome Sign
A picturesque wooden sign
welcoming \'1s1tors to Balboa
Island has been stolen and
island shopkeepers arc appcal-
rng to Orange Coast residents lo
help them re<:over 1t
"I don't know of anybody that
could use it." said Jim Jcnnin~s.
owner of Jim .Jennings Balboa
Island l 'nion Station and a co·
sponsor of the sign
"It _has to be a college rrate~n1ty, thats the only thing I
t·an figure "
The four-foot hy four-foot sign,
about six inches thick and
weighing 150 pounds, was stolen
last weekend. Jennings said. lie
said heavy boll!> holding at do\'.o
had been cut.
An earlier sign, put up about
four years ago at the intersec-
tion of Park and Marine
avenues. was :.tolen about two
years ago and immediately
rl'placed .. Jl'nnings ~aid. "Thal ·s
the last one we're going to
purchase." he added
The sign. which <·ontained the
message "Welcome to licauliful
Ualboa Island" surrounded by
hand-carved borders. cost $350,
he said. The Village Inn and
Jennings shared the cost
rt didn't start out to be a
landmark. Jennings said but "it
' was so colorfully done th~t every
tourist who came onto the island
immediately stood beside it and
had their picturt:' taken."
Front Page A J ,
· IDPPO ..•
number of people "Who claim to
do nothin~ hut capture h ip-
popotamuses for a living. And
thev're all right in the area."
, She said at least 35 people
claim the profession.
.. ..
.. ..
·'There can 't be that many
professional hippo catchers in
Southern California," Mrs. Cul-
jls aa id. "The re can't be."
O"ANQE COAST "
DAILY PILOT
Thi-0re"Olf Co.tt 0•1t• PWI°' wftft.m•ch 1\(0"n ~f'ltd tf'tie HtW\ Preu I\ ouC»Hthtd bV tN Ot11t1'ql9
C..tt ~-4111'11"'0 Como•"" ~ .. • l'dhion, ,.,. ~·~d MeM•Y thro~ ,,, .. f fO' (01-I• ~· He..,po,1 &-a<h Hu4'tl,,.,,.Of' &M<fll'~~h,n
'"'" V•ll•v. ftY)t\f, \•ddttiW'O V•ll•v .-"ft lAQ'Uf'l4ftflMh Stw•hCo.ut A\iftOltf"l'Q>t"WWI~ t..,.. It OWbfl""" \.l•utftyt .,.,. ~~Y\. T"9
... l"(IHt Pvbl1\"-l"' PhfU I\ •( lJO W'tlt B•;" ftitMt. Co\11 Mtw C•t1ft'tr"IAt'ltJl ..... , .. ·-PttiuO.tU •IW P\Nt..,...
Jft-• CWloY "·~· ,,..ici. .. , ... 0.-11 """-
~· . Tl>-h ICtt•ll
lflt"'
' l' • t-·-~ "'""'"''"' ....... I · •
ClleftMM,W-111-.1'.MllM "''""..,'"""....,.,.llidllen
Huntington Man Freed
Charges of Therapy Violation Dropped
Charg~s of 11legally practicing
P!>Ychology without a license
against a lluntin~lon ReJ<:h man
werl' dropped l'Ul''>day 1n West
Orange County Judicial DistricL
James K. McCann. a UC Ex-
tension business seminar direc-
tor. was chaq~ed last October
with four c·ounts of violating the
Stale Busrnts:. and Professions
Cod(• in has now-defunct Hunt·
1n~ton Beach h) pnos 1s center.
17522 Heal'h Blvd lie wa~ not ar·
rested
Deputy District Attorney Mike
Won't Be Closed
Nunn asked the char ges agamsl
!\1c'Cann be rtropf>l'd bceausc the
J>IO !>l'l'Ulor recti\t.'d ··as
)-.ltranc-c!>·· from the accused
hyµnot1"t lh<il the alleged viola
t10ns \'.Ould not recur
M cCann closed his hypnosis
practice late last October He
dL•clined to comment on the dis
missal of charge:. by .\1un1l'1pal
Judge Kenneth Smith. 0
'<unn sairl a femalL· un
dt'rl'O\ er agent from the ~talc
Ml'd1cal Quality Assurance
Board received "hypnosis
therapy" from McCann during
Alpine Inn Told
To Reduce Noise
The 2fl year old /\lprn(• Inn in
Sil\erado Canvon won'I be
closed down, Orange County
-;upt'r\'isors clecadcd Wednesday
Rathl·r lhan rernke the inn's
operating pt•rm1l, supl'rv1sors
ordered that ~cekend rock
musk which irked some inn
ne11!h bor:, should be qu1etl'd
down after midnight.
Supervisor Rdlph Diedrich
s u_c:geste1I that 1f additional
soundproofing can be installed
by inn o~rators dunng the next
!JO days, the midnight music
curfew might be lifted
Some inn neighbors had com-
p I a 1 n ed about late n1ghl
:.implif1ed rock music on
•
Bloodmobile
Visits Slated
In Newport
The American Red Cross
blooclmob1le will bl· making two
visits to '.'le~ port Center and
Fashion Island this month.
Lucy Hart of the Orange Coun-
ty chapter of the Red Cross s<.1id
the first ,·is1t. from 11 a m to
3:30 p.m . March 27 at the Mar-
riott Hotel. is open lo the public.
Reseorvations can be made bv
calling 835-5381 ·
The next day. the bloodmobile
will pay its regular visit to
Fashion I s l and. where
empl.,yees of ma1or department
s tore s are expected to
partaeipate.
In the past. Mrs . Hart said.
Fashion Isla nd employees ha\'e
donated about 100 pints per visit.
However, because of the addi-
tion of a Bullock's Wilshire and
a Neiman-Marcus store. she
said 140 pints are anticipated
this tima
FrG*PageAl
CHARGES. •
Wright and Miss KiU were the
couple who h.tndled negotiations
between the group of male clients
and the caJI girls assigned to meet
them at the Laguna Hills hotel. '
omcera said the arrests were
made at the moment money ex·
changed hands In the hotel
room.
Also jatled on proalltution
charges wer Kathryn Jean
Huberty, 24, Catherine Sua
Fercusoo, 19, Carla Mered.Ith,
28, and Sandra Baker, 26, an or
Kuntlnat.on Beach.
ll\v•stl11tora said the met.hod.
or 1ellin1 eex allt&edly used by _ the defendan\I was via what has
become known to v1ce ln·
eat11aton u • 'tbt col'venilon
1pproacb."
''~ck ends as w<'ll a s nois y
motorcycles and the behavior of
some inn patrons.
Others viewed the inn as an as-
set in the rustic. wtndtng can-
yon and said its operators had
t nl'd to be good neigh bor.s.
Diedrich said Wednesda~ he
\'le\Hd the rock music noise as
the chief issue.
/\ ccordin~ to supervisors' or-
der. mus ic stall <.'an be played al
the mn after midnight. But the
amplifiers must be turned off at
the w1tch1ng hour
From Page Al
COAL ...
m atenals and parts essential to
manufacturing industries has
decreased. and unemployment
has mcreased and threatens to
mcrease drastically if the <.'oal
strike is allowed to continue."
Many states have ordered
power cutbacks and have
warned that deeper cuts may be
necessary as stockpiles dwindle
Efforts to ~et ne~otiatiom, re-
o;umed between the union and
the Bituminous Coal Operators
Assoc1allon appeared in a hold-
ing pattern.
Both t he Union and the in-
dustr y have indicated a willing-
ness to resume talks, but on
somewhat different terms.
In its report to Carter the fact-
finding board said several wit-
nesses at a hearing "expressed
t he view ... that further
negotiations could produce" a
settlement.
The government's request to
the court was accompanied by
11 aCfidavits from Cablhel me m-
bers and other government of-
ficials, describing the potential
dam age of a continued strike.
The government's claim that
the nation's "health and safely"
were in danger b a tes t under
the Taft-Hartley Act for whether
an order should be issued.
The govemtnent made' Its re·
quest as the Labor Department
r~ported that 2S,500 fa ctory
workers were laid off their jobs
last week because of the strike.
Str ike-related layoffs increased
by 2,900 from the previous week,
the agency said.
Tbe eovernment's petition
asks that the order be directed
at 1,451 defendants, includln1
the UMYl ud its president,
Arnold Miller •• well as hun·
dreds or unlon locals. Also
named u a d4fendant waa the
Bituminous Coal O~rators As-sociation and more than 250 coal companies.
ln •ddltiont the aovernment'a ~Utlon WH d.ire(ttd a1al.nlt
mine conttadln1 cotnpanlea,
which are negOtlatlnt aeparate-
ly wlth the UMW ror a contract
to cover ao eaUmaled 1',000 COO·
1tnctlon miners.
four Octobt•r '1:,1ts to the hyp·
not 1st 's offin.>
II) pno!>1s therapy can only be
used b~ a licensed hyp-
11otherap1!>t or in the presence
of a phys1c-1an, accordmg to the
State Hus111c:o,s and Professions
Code.
M eC'ann was granted a busi-
ness h ccn'ol' la'ot ~ear hy the
lluntin~ton Be<1th Cat\ Council
to pracl1<:t· h~·pnos1s
But slate ofl1c·1ab charged
that he went beyond practicing
simple hypnos1!> as permitted by
the City.
.. Usuall). all we try lo do 111
these cases 1s to get the violator
to stop thl' pract1tl'," Nunn said
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'Speak No Ill'
~.epµ~lj~~ns
Unveil Code
Orange County Republican
candidates, many of them facing
s taff primary competition, have
been asked by their party's
county central committee to
sign its so-called 11th command-
ment: Thou shall not speak ill of
any other Republican.
A code or ethics has been sent
by the Ora n ge Cou nty
Republican Central Committee's
Ethics Committee to all GOP can·
di dates..
Candidates are asked to sign a
statement that they will conduct
their campaigns ethically, not
attack the integrity, ability or
sincerity of other Republican
candidates and support whoever
wins their party's nomination.
A list of candidates signing the
pledge will be made public.
Candidates ignoring the code
of ethics may lose the central
comm itlee's s upport an the
general election in November
Grievances will be heard by the
ethi('s committee.
The committee 1s chaired by
Rill Hill of the 70lh Assembly.
Other members include Central
Committee members Louise
Steel, 69th Assembly ; Jim
M eeh an, 73rd Asse m bly,
William Dougherty. 70th As·
sem bly; and Ruthelyn Plum-
mer, 74th Assembly.
Ethics committee members
also inelude Vera Manning,
Orange County f'ederation of
Republican Women: Bob Whit-
more, Orange County Californ1a
Republican Assembly ; Larry
Gym Classes Slated
Clas~es m beginnmg and in·
tl'rmecliate gymnastics are be-
ing offered to children six and
older beginning March 21 at the
Orange Coast YMCA
Classes are scheduled
Tuesdays and Thursdays from
4 15 to 6 p m . Por more informa-
t ion call 642-9990.
Sony
Headquarters for
the Harbor Area
T. V .·R adlo-Stereo
Tape Recorder
Betamax
HMk-411 Stereo Compect
has AM-FM, caaseue
player-recorder automatic
record changer plus two-
way Senal·Ba .. speaker1.
275 East 17th St.
Costa Mesa ................ ) ...
I._... W ... .Ac.ta Jr.
Phone 642-8882
Grirtith, Orange County Young
Republicans; Tim Haidinger,
Repu blaean Associates; and
Juan ita Pirth and Charlotte
Mousel. California Federation of
Republican Women.
Additional information is
available by calling 547 -8006.
Supplies
Reach
Victims
Twelve tons of food and sup·
plies were airlifted Tuesday to
28 people, inl'lu~ng a Newport
Beach couple. stranded by re-
cent storms 111 Teneja Valley, a
remote portion of southwestern
Riverside County.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Peterson
of Newport Heach, are remain·
mg to care for animals on t heir
ranch until a road is re-
csla blished 111to the valley.
Peterson owns Peterson
D1versif1ed rn Costa Mesa.
A helicopter from Santa Ana
Air Base made three drops of
food, supplies and animal feed
into the \'alley.
A third Newport Beach resi-
dent. Tom lil'ckman. flew inlo
the a rea Tuesdav to care for his
ranch, according to Keith
Cordrey, also of Newport Beach.
Cordrey he lped organize the
airlift.
A private plane brought four
people out of the area Sunday,
Cordrey said. but other resi-
dents are remaining to care for
their an1mab
R1vers1cle County road crews
have estimated the repair of the
13 mile dirt road leading into the
valley could take one to three
weeks depending on th e
weather, Cordrey Cldded.
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Saddteback J\fternoon
.Y. Sto~ks
VOL. 71 , NO. 68, 4 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, MARCH 9, 1978 TEN CENTS
Guest Shot · to Death at Mesa Hotel
By MICHAEL PASKEVICH
0t II• oa11w ,.,._. $t•t1
A South Coast Plaza hotel
guest was shot and k illed early
today after he refused the com-
m ands of an unidentified gun-
m a n to JOin the gunman and two
hosu1ges on an elevator r ide
from the lobby or the Costa
M <'~a Hotel. police said
The name o r the \ 1t·t1m of the
Bold on Tight
2: 46 a .m. s hooting is being
withheld pending notification of
family members. Police would
o nly say that the dead man was
from out or state.
The gunman fled immediately
afte r the shooting and is still be-
ing sought by police.
A second male guest and a
hotel e mployee who were being
held hostage by the gunman
m a naged to escape by closing
the doors of the elevator as the
gunman fi red severa l limes at
his victim.
A ccordin g to Costa Mesa
Polit'P Lt. George Lorton , the
fa tal incident began in the
ground floor kitchen area of the
hotel, 666 Anton Ul vd.
The gunman approached the
room service e m ployee a nd
Oelly l'OOC I'-ft LH l'•YM
John Thompson, an Orange Covnty
fireman, demonstrates use o( firefighters'
hose to Aaron Himelson, 11, and Michele
C<>mpton, 11. Firemen visited Barcelona
· Hills i1ement.ary School in Miliion Viejo Wednesday to award fire ranger badges
and demonstrate proper ~ o{ equipment.
Coumy Sets
Ambulance
Service Fee
Residents of unincorporated
Orange County communities in
· need of a mbulance service can
e xpect to pay at least $60 a call.
That is the base rate set by
county supervisors for the is·
am bu lance firms operating in
unincorporated county areas.
Firms also are to charge $3
per mile of tira vel, $10 extra for
calls between 7 p.m. and 7 a.m.
and $12.SO ror each 15 minutes of
waiting time.
In addition, they can collect
$10 for use of oxygen, up to $20
for medical supplies used on a
trip and $10 for emergency runs.
M i k e W i 11 i a ins, county,
emergency medical serivices
director, saJd according to new
county ambulance regulations
all firms in the unlncoprorated
area must ·charge the rates set
by supervisors.
2 Trapped in Sub
300 Feet DolVD
LERWICK, Shetland Is lands
<AP> -A two-man submarine
engaged in North Sea oil opera·
lions snagged in a wire about 80
miles east or here and was
trapped on the seabed nearly 300
feet down today, operators said.
The P. and 0 . Steam Naviga-
tion Company, which is operat·
ing the submarine named the PC
9 for the American Conoco oil
concern, said it became trapped
at mid-day.
"The two men aboard have
enough oxygen and food to last
eight days," a company
spokesman said. ''They are sit·
ting calmly on the bottom wait-
ing to be rescued."
The two were believed to be
British, but the company said it
will not release theit names
"until we are sure their next-<>f·
kin are notified" •
The sub bad been working on a
wellhead lo the Murchison field,
the company said.
on the scene Friday and s tart
rescue operations immediately
with the manned submersible it
is carrying. the Mermaid 3," the
s pokesman !>aid.
Stnrm Slanu
North State
By The Associated Press
A storm dre nched the
San Francisco Bay area
and sent water brimming
o ver the banks of r es·
e rvoirs in Northern
CaliCornia.
Rainfall totals for the
24-hour period ending at 4
a .m . s howed Oakland had
3.40 inches, San Francisco
Airport 2.01, downtown
San Francisco 1.50, Ukiah
1.45, Red Bluff 1.22,
Sacramento . 74 of an inch
and Marin Civic Center
.72.
forced him to follow ham into the
lo bby of the hotel where the two
guests were sealed.
Lt. Lorton :.aid police a re un·
cert a in as to the g unma n 's
motive, but believe a robbery
may have been planned
The gunman orde red the-two
guests to get into the elevator,
but the victi m refused and
began lo walk away Three to
five shots were fired ·from a
s mall caliber handgun, with at
least one bullet st riking the hotel
g uest , police said.
The hotel emplo yee and
second g u est we r e 1 n the
elevator at t he time
The victim was pronounced
dead on arri va l a t Mer cy
General Hospita l 10 Santa Ana
Descriptions from the unln·
1ured gue!'i t a nd th e hotel
em ployee have IC'd to a com·
po:o;1te drawing of a suspect
described u:o; u white male in his
l'arly 20s with blond to light
brown hair and brown eyes. T he I
:.uspcct is approximately fi ve !
feet eight inches tall and ·.\e1gh!'i
between 135 and 150 Pounds. ac-
cording to w1tnc'"'''
School Trustee
Conflict ueried·
.Six Held
On Sex
Charges
Une man and five wom en were
jailed Wcdne:.day on prostitution
charges after police alleged the
s uspects used a Costa Mesa dat·
ing sen ice to cover a, call girl
ring
Poli ce assert that two llunt
ington Beach policewomen in
filtr ated th't oper ation by posing
as call !(iris.
The arrests cam e at a Laguna
Hills hotel where vice offi cers
allege the fi ve women and man
were offered $1,800 for ·•conven-
tion services."
Orange Co~hty Sheriff's of·
f~rs s aid lhe arrest s were
made possible through the com·
bine d e Cforts o r Huntington
Beach , Newport Be a c h and
Garde n Grove police.
Vice officers said m ore than 14
m ale patrons had gathe re d al
t h e L aguna Hills ho t e l lo
purchase the services allegedly
to be provided out of Kats En·
t erprises of 230 17th Sl . Costa
Mesa.
Sam Charles Wright. 32, of 213
17th St. and Kathleen E ileen
Hill. 22. of 17402 Waal Circle.
both of Huntington Beac h, were
arrest ed on charRes of pimping.
Inves tigators a lleged that
Wright and Miss Hill were the
couple who handled negotiations
bet ween the group of male c lients
and the call girls assigned to meet
the m al the Laguna Hills hotel.
Officers said the a rrests were
made at the moment money ex-
c h a n ged hands in the hot el
room .
Also Ja iled on prostitution
ch a r ges were K a thryn J ean
Huberty, 24, Cathe r ine Sue
Fer guson, 19, Carla Meredith.
28. and Sandra Baker. 26, all of
Huntington Beach
Investigators said the method
of selling sex allegedly used by
the defendants was via what has
b ecome. kno wn t o vice in-
vestigators as "the conve ntion
approach."
Freight Der aile d
Daily Pllet S\•11 .......
CHALLENGES ASSERTIONS
School Trustee Kohler
City Voters
Blame d for
Bond D e feat
City \'Oters were blamed by
Capistrano Unified School Dis·
lrict Superintendent J e rom e
Tho rnsley Wednesday for the
Tuesday defeat or the district's
S49.3 million school construction
bond issue.
The s prawling Capis tra no
school district, which takes in 20
percent of Orange County land,
includes the unincorporated
communities of Dana Point,
Qapis t r ano Beach, Laguna
Niguel and eastern Mission Vie·
jo -where the bond m easure
passed --and the cities of San
Juan Capis tra no a nd San
Clemente whe re 1t was de·
feate d.
"In the unincorpor ated areas,
the bond m easure was the only
issue on the ballot, and it passed
2.5 to 1," s aid Thorns ley. "Jn
Mission Viejo the vote was 10 to
l in favor of the bonds . But the
two cities, particula rly San
Clemente, pulled it down."
The d e feat of the hond
measure -the third in two
years -prompted some Mission
Viejo residents to as k Thornsley
for legal guidelines for creatin~
their own Mission Viejo school
district.
Annuity
Sale Tied
To Vote?
By LAURIE KASPER
01 IN C>,J>ly P110l $left
t\ SaddJcback Valley Unified
School Distr ict t e a c hers'
ba r ga1nin!! unit leader has
raised questions uf a possible
conflict of interest on the pad of
a district trustee
Bill Mecha m , president of the
Saddle back Valley Educators
Ai;sociation <SVEA), presentea
reporters with a letter Wednes-
day in which trustee Bill Kohler
soli cited insur.ance bus iness
from a district tea cher.
About the same tim e the letter
was sent out, Kohler was oppos.
ing a deferre d compensatioo
plan proposed for dis trict
e mployees tha t wo uld o ffer
be n e fits s imilar lo the t ax
sh eltered a nnuity pla n Kobler
was selling.
Th e deferr ed compensation
plan eventually was passed by
trustees. with Kohler casting a
dissentin,I! \'Ole
Mecham admitted he could
not actually charge the trustee
with a confli ct o f inter est
because he has no proof that the
trustee intended to m a ke finan -
cial gain by his action.
lf he had p roof of this ,
Mecham said . he would have
take n 1t lo the county Grand
Jury. Proof, he explained. would
ha ve to be something written or
a w itness's test imony that
. Kohle r said his motive was
pe rsonal profit.
But the teachers' associa tion
leade r argued that lhe combina·
hon of Kohler's opposition to t1Je
deferred compens ation plan anJ:S
his solicitation or employees rOr
the t ax sheltered annuity plan.is
"about as much a conn1cl or jf1.
le rest as you can gel."
"l have not broken an:r laws. l
have not done a nything un-
ethical," Kohler said when con-
'tacted this mornin g.
The trustee said he has nol
threatened anyone in his busi-
ness dealini;ls with employ~
and couldn't t hreaten anyone
because he is not Involved in
the proccsi; of evaluatiqg
(Sec CONFLICT. PageA2\·>
.. He said the rates are about the
same as those already charged
by the ambulance companies.
He said the mother ship, Sub
Sea 2, is standing by while a
second mother ship, the Sub Sea
1 is steaming 1-0 the scene with
a' rescue sub,mer1dble from Mon·
trose on the Scottish eaSt coast.
"The Sub Sea 1 sho\llcJ arri"Ve
State Route 1 along th~
coast was bl-ocked by
s lides a nd washout s
between Hearst Castle and
Carmel.
JUSTIN, Texas CAP) -Fif-
tee n cars of a 67·car Santa Fe
freight train derailed near this
north Texas town today.
Mission Viejo voters have con·
sistently &upported bond issues
to pay for new school construc-
tion. San Clemente voters have
just as consistently been op-
posed to the three attempts to
pass the bond measures .
Co as•
Rates will be ~viewed again
in six months by the countv's
Emergency Medical Care Com-
m\tl~e. he salct an4 later will be
subject to review and poqible
change annually.
Merit Finals
I
'Select 1!air
llij)!O Eoils 'em Again
&ibbla Sitl_ea~ps Snare; Trap Still Vntest,ed
• •
Nobody knows ii it will work.
lt's the first time the rangers
have ever had to catch a hippo
in the wild -the wild bein1 a
small pond off Laguna Canyon
Road near Laguna Beach.
eeveral miles from Lion Coun-
try.
Today Lion Country officials
seriously considered accepting
the ofter or a man who claims to
be the nephew of Frank Buck,
the legendary lion tamer. Only,
Dr. Alan C. Buck purports to be
a hippo tamer who bu caught
100 ,svch beuta in bis day:
B'uck'a isn't the only offer
from seU.styledprolesslorulls.
"San Clemente people have to
realize they are not s upporting
school building just in Mission
Viejo," said Thornsley. ''They
are going to need new schools
right in their own back yard as
development begins on the three
major San Ctemente ranches."
The bond issue, If approved,
would not have increased the
district's 1918-79 tax rate of 90
cents. Thornsley s aid
GOH Cart Theft
Probed by Cops
Orange county abtrlff's of·
flee• .,.. k\veaUJatiag the then.
of a golf cart valued by the vic-
tltn at Sl,500.
DepuUes,aald the lhef~ was re.
ported by Latunt llUls Le_ls\lre
Wor'd ret.lttt,Glen K. Oalta, 70,
or 20.lS·B: lla.rlpoea East. Tba
cart wu taken from the com·
munt\Y carpOrt
i • W' •
\lreather
Chance of measureable
rain SO percent tonight. 20
percent by Friday after-
noon . Little cooler days.
Lows tonight in low sos.
Highs Friday in low ,lo
mid 60s
~
I NSIDE TODA~
Sterling Holloway mcy
/love one oJ the r710$1 /amol.1$
voi ces in the world. Thl
South Loguno resident ho3
bten the voice of severoJ
~LL-loved Disney characlnf. ·
including the Cheshire Cat.
See Featuring, Cl .
l •d ex
Al 01\ll y PILOl SB
.. -.~
I • '
o.lly ...... SC.ff -
SVUSD BUS DRIVERS RACK UP MORE THAN 4.5 MILLION MILES WITHOUT ACCIDENT
From left, Front, Marman, Harmon and Zacher, (Back) Pangle arid Spangler
64 ·Years of Safety
SaJdleback School Bus Drivers Cited
F ive Saddleback Valley Unified School
Distri(.'t bus drivers were presented awards
Wednesday from the California Highway
Patrol recognizing their many miles of safe
drivin g
driver/trainer.
He noted that the district is •·number
one" •with the best driver-safety record in
Orange County. In the state, he said, the dis-
trict is considered one of the three safest
districts. llenry Marman. Bette Harmon. :dinn1e
Spangler and J oyce Zat'her have eat'h driven
'>chool busl'S for more than a million miles
and never had an a<:cident. J oan Pangle has
driven more than 500,000 accident-free miles.
CH P Officer William Fielder com-
mended the drivers for their work.
.. I've found out that school bus driving is
a thankless profession." he said. But, he
added, if critics took the time lo find out what
people have to do lo become school bus
drivers, "they would be astounded, absolute-
ly amazed."
Combined, the five drivers have 64 years
t•xpen enC'c and made the equivalent of 900
" • traps from Los Angeles to New York without
• Zin accident, said Dave Bennett, the district's
Fro'" Page Al
CONFLICT. •
e nu>loyees .
Employees, he added. have
the right to say yes or no to his
b u!iiness proposals.
Supervisor Clark
Backs 'TIN CUP'
'K"ohler a ls o q ue s tio ne d ~h-ether the tc::tC'hers are op-
posed to has lax shelte red annui-
ty business or his oppos1l1on to
public employee unionism.
Mecham ~aid he has raised die issue publicly and written to
)Cobler as well as Superinten·
d ent Richard Welte because •·we want Mr. Kohler to stop fr~) in~ to sell ins urance to us."
· n· his letter to the trustee, he
bls'p asked, "that you refrain
v;c>lit\g on topics which may be
rel'ated lo your bus iness in-
terests."
And. in his lette r to the
superintendent. he s:ud Kohler
.. may possibly" tx.• using the dis-
trlct personnel directory to
solicit business for his insurance
cQm pany. lie argued that the
q;stricl has a policy limiting use
of that directory to official d.tl>· trict business.
; However. Agnes Met·k. assis-
·'3nl to the superintendent, said
1he district has no such policy.
:flu t rn December. she said, a
·aiemo was sent from the person-;* el department informing
4mployees that names and ad-
jfresses are not to be given to
~ny commercial organiiation.
·~ Mecham said teachers feel
;-'f;omewhat intimidated., when ~ne of their school trustees con-~cls them at their home ad-~ ess for the purpose of selling
surance
I •I
Six Railroad ' ~Cars Derailed I
:' ROSEVILLE (AP) -Six
lailroad cars, including one car-~ying 30,000 gallons of high-proof ~lcohol , have gone off the ~uthem Pacific tracks in this ~uburb of Sacramento. but there
re no injuries. St spokesman Bob Cedarbolm
)tale it happened Wednesday as
f.al.fl tralnmen were putting g~her a 70-to 80-car train for
au.Franclsco.
·--~~~~~~~~~~ .....
ORANGE COAST !>&
DAILY PILOT
By GARY GRANVILLE
OI IM O.lly ~tlot St.It
County Supervisor Ralph
Clark endorsed the T IN CUP
politi cal campaign reform in-
1t1at1ve today.
Cla rk cast lhe lone dissenting
\'Ole last week rn a 4·1 Board of
Supervisors ballot that enacted
a county c ampaign reform
me asurl'.
In endorsin g the TIN CUP
ballot measure today, Clark said
he will move to have the county
ordinance rescinded should the
county's voters approve the in-
1t1ative in November.
As things stand now, TIN CUP
(T i m e I s Now , Clean Up
Politics) workers are can ·ulatang
petitions seeking about 54.000
voter signatures needed to move
the m1t1ati\e onto the ballot
El Toro Man
Sues School
Over Injuries
Barbara Lewis' battle with the
Saddl eback Valley Unified
School District isn't over yet.
A three-judge panel in Orange
County Superior Court admitted
Wednesday that it goofed when
it released an opinion lo the ef-
fect that Mrs. Lewis' appeal
against an earlier ruling was re-
Jected.
Judges .John L. Flynn Jr. and
William S. Lee upheld the trial
court's ruling for the district
against the San Clemente
woman who had kept her son
home.
But the embarrassed judges
then discovered that they had
acted and signed the judgment
without the approval of Judge
Robert ff. Green who is putting
together a dissenting opinion.
Judge Green's optnion isn't
ready yet, however. The trio of
judgu will meet March 23 to
discuss his written comments
and then determine how they
will rule on the Lewis issue.
Judges contacted today sa\d it
is by no means certain that the
next decision will be a 2-1 ruling
against Mrs. Lewis.
"It couJd well be that they
might agreen with Judge
Green's views and go along with
him," a judge explained.
"Anyway, they s houldn't
have acted as they did without
waiUng for hls~pinion.
In the trial court, Mrs. Lewis
was placed on three years pro-
b•tio11 after a jury found that
she unlawfully kept her son
home from school.
Her attorney unsuccusfuJJy
argued that the vel'dict returned
last June by a South Orange
County Municipal Court jury
should 1-oyerturned.
Mrs. Lewis prosecuted b~
the Saddleback school district on
the 1rounds that she kept her
12-yoar-oJd son hom• from
school for three month• early
last year without provldlna
school ·~ an acc:tptable doctor's n«e.
Mare Cover~
Other soutb Oro1• COin\J
tOVel'. appean tocfU OD Pa,.
Ba.
That drive has continued
despite enactment last week of
the county ordinance seeking to
regulate campaigns of those in
quest of county elected offices.
Clark criticized that ordinance
for. among other things, creat·
ing ''a paper tiger .. fair political
practices commission "hand
pick ed" by the Board of
Supervisors.
The Anaheim supervisor also
ch aracterized the county or·
dinance as "more illusion than
reform."
Simultaneously, Clark said he
is "not entirely satisri ed with all
aspects of TIN CUP."
In contrast to the county or-
dinance. the TIN CUP initiative
s eeks to control campaign ac-
tivities o( county super visors
rather than all elected county of-
ficials.
It s ets the a mount
s upervisorial candidates can ac·
cept in any year from individual
political donors to $500 rather
than the $1,000 per election
limitation in the county legisla-
tion.
TIN CUP also aims its reform
arrows at lobbyists and the
amount of inOuence and activity
they can generate on the county
campaign front. .,
Father Sues
Schools Over
Teen's Mishap
Damages to be determined in
trial court were demanded from
the Saddleback Valley Unified
School District Wednesday by
the father of a Mission Viejo 1
High School student who as-
serledly was run over by a trac·
tor while engaging in athletics
on the track field.
The Orange County
Superior Court lawsuit was (Ued
by Edward Eugene Hatter, 25892
Serenata Drive, Mission Viejo,
for his son, Bryan Travis Hatter,.
16.
It is alleged that the youth was
knocked down by the tractor
which twice ran over him on
May 3, U117, lnfiict.ln1 •lous in-
juries. ll is alleged that
ne1li1ence by school authoriUes
led to the accident.
Aliso Viejo
Plans Aired
Laguna Nl1uel Homeowner
.Assocl•tion rnembcrs will hur
plaos for· the e,eoo acre Allio
Viejo Company project between
the San Die 10 Freeway and
Lacuna HUla llonc!Q nl~t.
The usoclatlon will meet at
7 : 30 p.m. to hear ~mpany
&poke&IUQ Art Coot outllne a
protnbl wbtch wm ln~lud
:l.0,000 homes ID the pteeD n>Uinl
hlll• to the we1t of La,una
Niguel.
Tbe 'JleellnJ 1rill be held 1n the
Moulton Nt~l Wat.er Dlstrlet
offlc.• at 2'7900 SOutb ~ Pu Roact. South t.aaun• in tM COG· f ere ace room. l'or more in·
• IOnD~ call Smla Blaa at .....
Coal Strike Lashed
1f ASBJNGTON l AP) -The
Carter administration asked a
federal judge today to order
striking coal miners back to
work, saying the 94-day coal
strike would "imperial the na-
llonal health and safety" if st
continues.
J~stice Department lawyers,
acting under the Talt·H~rtley
Act, asked the U.S. District
Court in Washington lo order
members or the striking United
Mine Workers union back lo the
mines immediately.
The government also asked
for a court order directing coal
companies to reopen the mines
idle since the strike began Dec.
6.
The request was a ssigned to
Judge Aubrey Robinson, one of
the 12 federal judges who pre·
~ide in the district. The judge
was.expected to set a hearing on
the r equest and then decide
whether lo grant the govern-
ment's request for an injunction.
The government petition asks
that the order be directed at
1,450 union entitles, coal com-
panies and individuals named in
the court papers.
Officials 'said Attorney.
General Griffin Bell planned to
be in court when government at-
torneys argued their case later.
His presence was seen as a sign
of the i mportance that t he
C~rter administration attaches
to the case
CB Radios Taken
From MV Office
Intruders who gained entry by
throwing a rock through the
glass pane of the front door took
four CB radios valued at $1,lZl
from a Mission Viejo office.
Orange County sheriff's of-
ficers said the break-in and theft
was reported by officials of
Tower Electronic, Inc., 24001
Alicia Parkway. The office was
closed at the time.
Sony Trinitrai Color TV
with remote control. 21"·
19"· 17" & JS" diagonal.
And • au in stock · aJJ with
our one year warranty. .....
KV-8000 Sony Trioitron.
Sony's newest AC-DC.
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inch diagonal. --
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datonaUy:..
Bell said. "f beheve t hat the
miners will obey the law and
this includes court orders. I also
have e very confidence that law
enforcement officers in the
s tates concerned will provide
adequate and effective protec·
POWER CAN'T HELP
END COAL STRIKE--86
lion for those miners returning
to work. We are a nation <.'Om·
mitted lo law."
Under the Taft-Hartley Act ,
Robinson has the power to order
the miners back to work for 80
days and to dJrect both sides to
res ume J.tood-failh bargaining.
Failure to c-omply could result
in fines or prison for contempt of court.
~eaders of the 160,000 striking
miners and government officials
expect widespread defiance or a
back-to-work order.
Carter directed Bell to seek
the order after he received an
11-page report on the stri){e from
a board of inquiry that the presi·
dent created under the Taft.
Hartley Act.
Contr«ct T8lks Set
For Capo Teachers
Teacher contract negotiations
were scheduled to begin today in
the Capistrano Unified School
District, where teachers have
proposed a 10 percent pay hike.
ln addition to the 10 percent
salary boost, teachers represent-
ed by the Capistrano Unified
Education Association have pro-
posed a contract calling for full
health care for dependents,
more nexible working hours and
,binding arbitration.
Teachers have also proposed a
new pay schedule for speech
therapists, improved working
conditions for school nurses ar,td
new coaching positions for
Junior high sports.
In its counter proposal, the
school district has offered an in-
crease of four percent, which
would cover fringe benefits,
salary increases and any other
cost increases.
Cost to the .school district if
the CUEA proposal were accept-
ed would be $2.8 million, said
Sam Chicas, assistant s upe'rin-
tendent for general ser vices.
The district's fQur percent pro-
posal would cost $850,000, includ-
.
Sony
Headquarters for
the Harbor Area
T.V.·Radio-Ster.o
Tape Recorder
l~amox
.
ffMK-419 Stereo Compact
hi• AM·FM. cauette
player·recorder automatic
record chanaer plu. two-
-..Y Stoll-Bau speakers.
27 5 East 17th St.
Costa Mesa
ing $350,000 t.D maintain the
present teacher salary schedule,
said Chicas.
The annual base pay for a
be g innin g t each e r in the
Capistrano Unified School Dis-
trict is currently $10,555. An ex-
perienced teacher, holding a
master's degree, can earn
$23,045 a year. Teachers with
doctorate dearees earn an addi-
tional $675 a year.
A 1976 teacher contract in-
creased Capistr a no Unified
teacher salaries by 8.4 percent.
A six percen t salary boost
agreement was reached in 1977.
complete negotiations before
school is out, and we ad-
ministrators would like to be done
before the new fiscal year starts
July 1, but it doesn't usually work
out that way," said Robert
Knapp, personnel director. "We
may be in negotiations through
lhesummer."
Teacher salaries, excluding
fringe benefits, accounted for
$13. l million, or 45 percent, of \he
$29.4 million 1977-78 school dis-
trict budget.
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.
Flynt
Facing
Surgery
ATLANTA CAP> -A bullet
that s truck Hustler magazine
owner Larry Flynt and lodged
an inch or two from his spine
has left him at least temporarily
paraly:ied from the waist down,
doctors say.
They said the bullet also broke
bones and left debris in Flynt's
body. -
Flynt, 34, was to undergo sur·
gery today, three days after he
and his lawyer were shot as they
walked along a street in Law·
renceville, Ca., where Flynt was
on trial on a charge or dlstribut-
i n g obscenity in Gwinnett
County.
''.The operation hopefully will
relieve pressure on the spinal
column," said Andrew Jaffe, a
spokesman for Flynt.
Dr. George Tindall, a
neurosurgeon, said he would
perform a laminectomy -re-
m ova I of all o r part of a
vertebra.
Flynt "cannot move his legs ,
but he does have sensation in
both legs," said Dr. John
Galambos.
Flynt w as transferred
Wednesday from Button Gwin-
nett Hospital to Emory under
heavy security. Jaffe said the
publisher's family felt "better
e quipm ent and better
specialists" were available at
Emory. He said Mrs. Flynt was
sayin g at the hospital with her
husband.
Flynt has been reported in
critical condition almost con-
tinuously since he anll lawyer
Gene Reeves were shot Monday.
Reeves, 47, was reported in
satisfactory condition at Button
Gwin nett, and authorities said
Wednesday tne lawyer 's vital
signs were stable.
Marine Faces
Court-martial
In 'Hazing'
The Marine Corps says a rifle
filled with blanks was fired at a
recruit acting as a mat&.believe
war prisoner in a Camp
Pendleton field exercise.
A general court-martial has
been ordered for Staff Sgt. Allen
G. Connor, 23, or Brooklyn,
N.Y .. on six charges, including
two alleging that he fired the ri·
fle t wice at the 17·year -old
Marine.
The recruit, Pvt. W .L. Taylor
or Boyd, Texas, was taking part
1n a field exercise llec. 20, a
base seokesman said. Although
no report was ade or the shoot-'
in g, Taylor uCCered a slight
powder .
Medic rsonnel who treated
Taylor reported the incident.
No date has been set for Con-
nor's trial.
Budge t Supported
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The
Assembly Way!'. and Means
Committee has approved Gov.
Edmund Brown Jr.'s $J9.1 mil·
lion request to increase staff-
ing at the troubled stale mental
hospitals.
Thlnday. Match 9, '978 s DAIL 'Y PILOT .,~
:Was Baby Alive?: :
Defense Witness Admits Possibility
Hello There, World
~phia, a polar bear at the Denver Zoo. stands protec·
lively over her cub during the youngs ter's first week in
the outside pen at the zoo. The unnamed cub was born
in December and is laking his first look at the (l11tside
world.
Prop. 13 Threatens
Few Teaching Jobs
SACRAMENTO (A P ) -
Though the Jarvis property tax
initiative would cost California
public schools billions of dollars,
it appears relatively few dis·
lricts would lay off teachers.
With some notable exceptions
like Los Angeles and San Diego,
many of the state 's 1.047 school
districts apparently will not
notify teachers by the March 15
stale deadline that they race
possible layoffs next year .
That means most districts will
have to find other ways to cut
budgets if voters approve the
Jar vis measure, Proposition 13
on June 6, and if the state does
not immediately restore the lost
revenue.
ny. the sky is falling' ·would
create all kinds or problems,"
Fisher added. "Probably
something wilt be done" by the
state to restore the money.
The J arvis initiative would cut
property taxes by 55 percent, or
S7 billion, by limiting them to
l .25 percent of market value, a
figure that would decline to one
percent gradually as bond debts
are paid off.
State school Superintendent
Wilson Riles has estimated the
meas ure would cost schools $2.5
billion, or 38 percent ot their re-
venue. Some school groups have
m ade higher estimates.
A pathologl't who is testifying
as a defenae witness told an
Orange County Sµperior Court
jury Wednesday that a newborn
infant alle1edly murdered by
Dr. Wllllam Baxte11 Waddill
"was probably alive" at the
time injuries to its neck were
nnicted.
Dr. Susan B. Turkel offered
that opinion during a long ~ay of
cross examination from Deputy
District Attorney Robert Chat-
terton.
And Chatterton made no
Supplies
Reach
Victims
Twelve tons of food and sup-
plies were airlifted Tuesday to
28 people, including a Newport
Beach couple, stranded by re-
cent storms ln Teneja Valley, a
remote portion of southwestern
Riverside County.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Peterson
of Newport Beach, are retnaln-
ing to care for animals on their
ranch until a road is re-
established into the valley.
Pet e r s on owns Peterson
Di versified in Costa Mesa.
A helicopter from Santa Ana
Air Base made three drops of
food, supplies and animal feed
into the valley.
A third Newport Beach resi-
dent, Tom Beckman, flew into
the area Tuesday to care for his
ranch, according to Keith
Cordrey, alao of NeWpOrt Beach.
Cordrey helped organize the
airlift.
A private plane brought four
people out or the area Sunday,
Cordrey said, but other resi-
dents are remaining to care for
their animals. -
Riverside County road· crews
have estimated the repair or the
13 mile dirt road leading into the
valley could take one to three
weeks depending on the
weather, Cordrey added.
Possible budget-slas hing
methods include salary cuts,
half-day sessions. elimination of
programs such as band, sports
and counseling, and closing
schools once the money runs out.
Robbery Siapect
Found in Trunk
SAN JOSE CAP>-A man SUS·
peeled of pulling 11 San Jose
bank robberies 'in three months
out, grabbed it, and there he
(Baker) was," Chiaramonte
said.
secret of the fact that be regards
the s tate ment by the Los
Angeles County-USC Medkal
Center pathologjst as reinforce-
ment of the prosecution's belief
that Waddill strangled lhJS baby
to death.
Dr. Turkel earlier testified
that the baby allegedly
murdered on March 2, 1977, in
the W.estminster Community
Hospital nursery may well have
succumbed to hypoxia, an ox-
ygen deficiency that claims the
lives or many prematurely born
infants. •
Using slides to point out areas:
of hemorrhage to the Jury, she.
stated that Injuries su fered by •
crlminaJ action were an unUkely:
cause since s·uch p'b>'~1 ca1•
pressure would bavs Jen hJrger'
areas ofhemorrbage. !
Waddill, 44, of Huntington•
Harbour, is accused of stran-'
llin1 the infant an.er he learned!
lhat the 31-week fetus had sur. •
vived an abortion induced when:
injected a saline solution into the i un~ed, 18·ycar-oldmother. •
Won't Be Closed
Alpine Inn Told
To Reduce Noise
The 26-year-old Alpine Inn in
Sil'verado Canyon won't be
closed down, Orange County
supervisors decided Wednesday.
Rather than revoke the inn's
operating permit, supervisors
ordered that weekend rock
music which irked some Inn
neighbors s hould be quieted
down after midnight.
Supervisor Ralph Diedrich
suggested that iC additional
soundproofing can be installed
.Old Fighter
·Plane Found
Off Catalina
SAN DIEGO CAP> -An old
fighter plane has been found by
a two.man submarine crew off
Catalina Island.
"ll is in remarkably good
s hape," oceanographer Merle
Wilson told a news conference
Wednesday. If his firm is al·
lowed to salvage it, he said the
plane will be donated to the
Aero-Space Museum in San
Diego which is being rebuilt
after a fire.
Wilson said the plane, believed
to be from World War II, was
round Tuesday by sonar equip-
ment or the submarine Nekton
Beta. owned and operated by his
General Oceanographies firm.
The plane was on the ocean
floor three miles off Catalina
Island in state-owned waters.
by inn operators during the nex~
90 days, the midnight must~
curfew might be Ufted. •
Some inn neighbors bad com' plain e ~ about late nigh(
amplified rock music od
wee kends a s we ll a s nolsf.
motorcycles and the behavior ot
some inn patrons. ;
Others viewed the inn as an as-'
set in the rustic, winding can;
yon and said its operators hact
tried to be good neighbors. •
. Diedrich said Wednesday h~
viewed the rock music noi~e aS'
lhe chief issue. •
According lo supervisors' or;
der, music shll can be played at
the inn after midnight. But th&
amplifiers must be turned oC! al
the witching hour.
Club Fights
To Keep Gals
DUARTE (AP> -The Duarte
Rotary Club, faced with the or-
der to kick out its three women
members or get kicked out or
Rotary international, has de-
cided to seek legal action to keep
the club in the parent body.
"We have already made a de-
cision to keep the women," cJub
secretary Bill Brooks salt'
Wednesday.
Brooks said an attorney has
offered his services to seek a
way to stay in Rotary Intel't)a· -
tional despite the fact that its
cons titution prohibits women
members.
"Mos t school districts are
adopting a wait-and-see at-
titude," says Gordon Winton,
spokesman for the Association
or California Schoo l Ad-
ministrators. '"Chey say they'll
run the schools until they run out
of money."
has been captured by a squad of ---------------------------------------lawmen who found him hiding in
the false bottom of a steamer
trunk. William Fisher, superinten-
dent.of the Orinda Union School
District in Contra Costa County,
said Wednesday that most of the
local school officials attending a
r e cent meeting "decided the
best thing to do is play it cool."
He said it could be illegal to
send layoff notices on the basis
of an initiative that hasn't been
voted on yet, and to increase
class size for financial reasons.
Winton's group has issued a
legal opinion saying s uch layoff
notices are invalid. although
some school district lawyers dis·
agree.
"The attitude of 'Henny Pen-
* * *
Police arrested Dewey Caltin
Baker . 26. for investigation of
the robberies.
S pe c i a l Agent Joe
Chiaramonte, bead of the FBI's
San Jose office, said Wednesday
an officer lifted the bedding off
the steamer trunk, which was
being guarded by a German
shepherd dog.
The officer "saw a toe sticking
Chairman Elected
. TOKYO (AP) -Teng Hsiao-
ptng was elected chairman of
China's united front organiza-
tion, the fifth People's Political
Consultative Conference.
;Jarvis Pus-.es Plan
Rent Break Expected
By JACKIE RYMAN
OI 1119 Dllry I'll« "-H
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.4.f DAILY PILOT Thursday, Ma1ch 9. 1978 .
Jtist
~oastiiig
{!'.)
with~~ Tom~~'\'
Morphine
-~~:Jjig Jess Off, Running . . • •ii. OFF & JOGGING -SLOWLY: Word has reached our
• , 'i, region today that Jesse M. Unruh, f~rmer speake~ of the •< California Assembly, former Mr. Big of the Leg1Slatuce . ~ti, a nd former gubernatorial candidate, is once again on the
election trail. • •
'r" t Alas, it must be reported that Jess hasn't exactly '·w, roared away Crom the election starting gate in an
,. ·enormous cloud of dust, scattering opponents in his wake.
. . This 1s somewhat melancholy, when you consider the
• r ': style of his charge off the line nearly
.,.. eight years ago when he challenged .:~,Ronald Reagan for the governor's
•·. •chair.
A TAD SHORT OF Long Green in
the old war chest. Unruh proved back
then that he was a clever campaigner.
He staged a series of "media events."
These well-orchestrated happenings
were calculated to sucker the television
-•people into rushing out with all their uN11uH
' ' lights and cameras and giving Unruh free air time. To a ~•large degree, Unruh's gimmick worked.
One of those "media events" was staged on the
: western bluffs overlooking Upper Newport Bay.
Democrat Unruh, it should be noted, wasn't the least
..._. bil shy about waltzing right into Reagan Country in the ef.
'"":fort to l'>amboozle the T V boys with his Boob Tube
Bandwagon. .
So it was lh::it Jess came down to our coastal region to
decry the "giveaway" in a complex Upper Newport Bay
tidelands exchange between the Irvine Company and
Orange County government
HE STOOD U PON the clif('s edge and emoted while
• tclev1s1on cameras groaned a way. He even got into an
• argument with a couple of staunch Newport Beach citizens
•who h appened to be passing by. It was great fun. :wt: History, however , records that Unruh lost the gov-
: . ernor's race to Reagan and the Back Bay tidelands swap
never came to pass.
But today, Unruh 1s back running again. This time
there are no frantic "media events" for the tube. No brass
bands. No heavyweight hoopla.
Unruh is seekmg re-election to his current post as
state treasurer He didn 'l even call a press conference.
~ • Jess JUSt shipped out a few mimeographed noti.ces. . .
• • C didn't e\'en get one. It was somewhat d1sappo1ntmg
\: in that JUSt ont' year ago I almost became Unruh's pen pal.
l had written a piece about fabled senior citizen
Robert Simpson. who used to picket the capitol halls carry·
1ni:: X-rated placards. The suggestion was the old man had
t•vcn angered Unruh
J ESS PROTF.STED in a letter. saying he supported
the late Mr. Simpson's picketing rights. I wrote that report
too .
Then exactly one year ago today, Jess wrote back
again. lie said, "At U1c risk of us becoming pen pals, let t me thank you for your column on my relationship with the
. ' late Mr. Simpson ... his (Simpson's) 1Vords were too pie·
).: • -turesque for a family newspaper. So they will ha~e lo _re·
'"· • main my secret unless you rome to Sacramento m which
'· case you may expose your eyes to his sulphurous spew· ,. in gs."
,, SulP,hurous spewings?
"' Ob~ously 'Jesse Unruh hasn't. lost his way with words.
'·
___ .._,,,,. mmuter Shoved
to Subway Tracks
~ .
NEW YORK (AP) Waiting for h er't rain during the after-
£on rush hour on the crowded Times Square subway platform, a
f-year-old secretary accidental~y stepped on another woman's
ot.
'Tm going to throw you in when the next train comes," police
y the woman told her.
Apparently not believing her, the secretary remained where
e was. Authorities say that when the train came out of the tunnel
to the station, the woman pushed the secretary onto the tracks.
,/It
"I WAS AT THE OTHER end when I heard her scr eam," said
rans it Authority Police Officer Jack Maple, on duty Wednesday
the IRT Seventh Avenue station. "She was running on the
acks. hysterically scream ing for help.
"Then l saw a hand come out and she was pulled out," Maple
ent on. "The train JUSt missed her by seconds."
The secreltlry. whose name was withheld by police. bad been
ved from almost certain death by an unidentified person, who
ached down and snatched her from the tracks.
Maple arrested Cdrolyn Spector, 29, of the Bronx, who was
arged with attempled murder.
'
Rapid Gain
FOod Leads
Price Hikes
WASHINGTON (AP> -The prices manufacturers receive for
their products rose by the largest amount in three years last month
as food prices showed unusually large gains, the Labor Department said today .
Consumer foods rose 2.9 percent in February. leading the increase
of 1.1 percent for all finished
goods. short s upply becatMe of the
These prices, charged at the severe winter weather.
last stage of production, usually WHOLESALE PRICES turned s~ow up at the consumer level up sharply ror pork, eggs and
within a few months. dairy products in February after
CONSUMER P!llCES have
already begun to rise rapidly,
going up 0.8 perceot in January,
about double the increase or last
year.
The 1.1 percent increase in
fini s hed goods prices for
January was the largest s ince a
l. 9 percent increase in No-
vem her 1974. It followed rises of
0.6 percent in November, 0.5
percent in December and 0.6
percent in January.
Unlike the January report,
most o f the increases were
among foods, some of them in
JFK X-ray
Supports
Findings?
declining in the previous month.
Beef and veal prices rose much
more than in January. However,
prices declined for roasted cof-
fee. Prices rose less than in
January for fresh a nd dried
fruits and vegetables and proc-
essed poultry.
The 2.9 percent price increase
for consumer foods followed
rises of 1 1 percent in January
and 0.5 percent in December.
If food is removed, wholesale prices were up 0.4 percent,
about the same level as the last
half of 1977.
·Prices declined for jewelry,
gasoline and home heating oil.
PRICES ROSE less in
February than in January for
automobi l es. household
furn iture and mobile homes.
However, prices rose more
rapidly for beverages, soap and
synthetic detergents, footwear
and tobacco products.
The Labor Department's
finished goods price index is in-
tended to replace the wholesale
price index, to make the
monthly r eport coincide more
with consumer prices.
NATION f WORLD
Guard at Ready
A \'irginia state t rooper. wearing a not helmet and car·
1·ying a stick, was among guards \\atchmg striking
miners mo\'C~ toward the union hall in Norton, Va . The
feared clash between them and non-union mine rs failed
to materialize.
LANCASTER, Pa. <AP) -
Breaking a 15-year silence on
the assassination of President
Kennedy, the radiologist who
performed the autopsy X-rays
on Kennedy's body said he
agrees with the Warren Com·
mission that the fatal shots
came from the rear.
Some critics of the Warren
Commission report have sug-
gested bullets striking Kennedy
were fired from the front.
Red Bomb Ban Assailed
V.S. Criticizes 'One-sided Propaganda' Draft
DR. JOHN H. Ebersole, now
chief of radiation therapy at
Lancaster Gener al Hospital.
said his conclusions parallel
those of the Warren Com-
mission, wh.ich said the bullets
were fired from somewhere
behind the Kennedy motorcade.
Ebersole, formerly assistant
chief of radiology at Bethesda
CMd.) ·Naval Hospital where the
autopsy was performed, said
Wednesday in an interview he
was breaking hi s sile-nce
because he has been summoned
to meet Saturday with in-
vestigators from the House
Select Committee on Assassina-
lioos at the National Archives
where the X-rays are stored.
He said if he was going to dis-
cuss the case in Washington he
might as well discuss it in Lan-
caster.
"I WOULD SAY unequivocally
the bullet came from the side or
back ,'' Ebersole said. "The
' GENEVA. Switzerland CA P )
--The Soviet Union presented
the Geneva disarmament con-
ference with a draft treaty today
to ban neutron bombs. The Unit-
ed States immediately de·
nounced the draft as a "one-
sided propaganda exercise" try-
ing to divert attention from
serious arms control efforts.
Introducing the draft, co-
sponsored by seven communist
allies, Soviet delegate Viktor I.
Likhachev warned that develop·
ment of the neutron bomb by the
United Stales would deal a
"great blow" to detente and
would "unavoidably trigger re-
taliatory measures" by the So-
viet Union.
. In what atnounted to one or the
s harpest r etorts in recent
sessions of the 35·nation Geneva
conference, U.S. chief delegate
Adrian S. Fisher virtually ac-
cused the Soviet Un ion of
hypocrisy.
front of the body, except for a Hijacking f'aib
very slight bruise above the HONG KONG (AP) -A
right eye on the forehead, was crewman waving an ax and a
absolutely intact. It was the pair of scissors tried to hijack a
back or the head that was blown Taiwanese jetliner to mainland
off. . Q China today but a security guard "There is no. way that I can aboard the plane shot and killed
see on the basis of the X-rays him, police said.
that the bullet came from The pilot and co-pilot were in· anywhere In the 180 degree
angle to the front, assuming
Kennedy was facing forward. It
looked to me like an almost ·
right to left shot from the rear."
Ebersole said he has not been
• told the reason for being called
to meet with congressional in-
vestigators, bul believes some
pencil marks on X-rays may be
punting them.
( INSHORT )
jured by the crewman , identified
as flight engineer Shih Ming.
Cheng, 34, before he was shot,
police said. The plane, a Boeing
737 carrying 101 persons from
Kaos hiung, Taiwan. to Hong
Kong. landed at Hong Kong and
the "situation was under con-
trol.'' a government spokesman
said.
Ban Expected
WASHJNGTON <AP) -The
federal government said today
that a controversial three-month
birth control shot widely used in
other countries ~ too dangerous
for contraceptive use in the
United States.
Wayne Pines. a spokesman for
the Food and Drug Administra·
l ion, said FDA Commissioner
Donald Kennedy has notified the
drug's manufacturer and plans
to announce his decision to
Con gress today. The drug is
m edroxyprogesterone, market·
ed by Upjohn Co. under the
brand name Depo Provera.
~Hu to Meet
WASHINGTON <AP) -Two
guerrilla leaders who have
vowed to take over Rhodesia by
force are meeting with
Secretary of State Cyrus Vance
today as part of an Anglo-
American drive to bring all
black clements into settlement.
Joshua Nkomo and Robert
Mugabe of the Patriotic Front
ha\'c dismissed the current plan
for black rule in Rhodesia as
"th<' biggest sellout in African
history "
Guard Linked
To Pot Buys?
OKLAHOMA CITY <AP> -
Federal authorities are in-
\'('sl 1 i?at1n~ allc~cd use of
Oklahoma Air National Guard
planes to import marijuana
from Mexico. r<'ports the Daily
Oklahoman.
A W::ishington datelined story
in today's editions quotes an un-
named official as saying federal
indictments are expected in the
case within the week.
Brig. Gen. Stanley Newman,
commander of the 137th Tactical
Airlift Wing, said Wednesday
night he was "dumbfounded" by
the report.
lorida Floods Threaten
ScliOOls Close Etirly, Cavem 'Tour Canee'led
Te•pera,ure•
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penlst9d In .,. .,,,.Atlwk •litlft •1141 Into IN OMo V_.ley. Trewt ld-
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STOCKS I BUSINESS
OPEC to Meet Aprll 3
BAGHDAD. Iraq CAP> -Tbe.
Organlutlon of Petroleum EJtportlnC
Countrlet will bold an "infotmal
meeUna" in Geneva on April 3, the
offlclal Iraq news a1ency hu re·
pOrted.
The decline of the U.S. dollar Oil
foreign exchan1e qiark"' and it.I d.
feet on oU revenues are expected to
be oo u. •cencta. .
Arab med\ben of the 18·nat.IOQ or· ,tanltalbL bave .. bffn 1!allbic tor a
new IJ'Nm to calcaJate Cf'Udo oo prtca aft« lut __.., ded1De in tbe
value ol the dollar.
Thursday, March 9, 1918 s DAIL V PILOT 11%....
I SpedalOrckrs • J •
Airlines Cater ,e
• 1.f!.• I
To· Diet Needs ~-·
By SYLVIA PORTEa
Do you pride youraelf on famlliarlty wlth exotic foods! J.
Then try this quick qulz:
What rataurant will pnipare a laclo-ovo vegetablt i
meat? Where can you get kosher lllet or JOle? Roabert (
curry? Who aerves chicken cbuseur? Where can yw .
select from a ..O·menu vartatJon?
DID YOU GUESS A FAMOUS restturant in Stockholm
for the vegetarian meal? Wrong. You can request a lact<>-
ovo meal before you board Trans World Airlines.
•
A Delhi hideaway for the curry? No. Koaher curry Is ·
served on Air India and kocher fiJet of sole is available
from American Airlines on requeat two weeks belore your ntght.
Chicken chasseur at an upper East.side blstro In New
York? Probablf -but it's also available <>n special ordet-~
from Unit~ ~li'llnes as part of tta Weight Watchers lunch.
, The mef\u with 40 variations? Scandinavian Airlln'e.J 1 can prod'4Ce 40 special . •
request diets with ad· ~
vance notice. M ' l· Deliberately un· Oney 8
heralded, air carriers Worth serve thousands or
special meals annually · '"
to passengers whose re·
li&ious requ.inmenta or diets dictate them.
YOU CAN GET SOUL FOOD with tobasco sauce on re:-:--'
quest from United; a special low.cholesterol menu If y~
travel American; a special bland meal if you travel TWA, \ •
What's more, despite the medical restrictions that: :
govern the preparation or many of the menus, airline food~ •
experts generally make them appealing. · ~
. TWA tallied passenger reaction to special·requesl: •
diets served to 19.000 passengers last August and received •
only 102 complaints, reports Burt Kenyon, spokesman for:
the airline's food and beverage planning. ! t
MOST POPULAR OF THE special meals is kosher
food, accounting for nearly half the requests. United~
serves close to 50.000 kos her meals a year; TWA recently:
added roast turkey to its traditional kosher menu entree of:
brisket of beef. A favorite breakfast on TWA Is kosher,!
"onsisttng of cheese blintzes with cherry sauce or pan·:
cakes· with blueberry sauct!. American has four kosher:
menua for first class and coach that rotate every three.
months. El Al serves only kosher food. •
Such special amenities as a wedding or birthday cake
are frequently available if requested in advance.
Sky Chef, a subsidiary of Ameri~ an Airlines, pre··
pares meals for 33 other airlines. United has 19 kitchens,:
producing the bulk of its own meals. So does TWA. ~
SOME SPECIAL REQUESTS WON'T be approved.:
TWA refused a request for small meat balls -for a:
parakeet. Pan Am nixed a request from an economy.class
passenger who said his physician insisted his diet inclu~ a
lot of caviar. Pan Am recommended fish. ,
A key to special diets is advance notice. You can order:
most popular s pecial meals by requesting them four hours ·
in advance or Olght time. Less popular meals can require:
24 hours. 7
Passengers rrom the West Coast order more special •
diets in the low·calorie and vegetarian category than their:
,
Eastern counterparts, according to TWA. •
While the airlines are under no lesal obligation to
serve special foods, they seldom fail to follow through on a
reasonable request I
\ • Pinkerton's Give$ J ..
Tips on Meetings:
This is the season of the year when thousands or com·
panies bold annual meetings, and Pinkerton's, the nation's .
oldest private security firm, s uggests some bask
measures to Insure a safe meeting:
-If the annual meeting ls lilcely to draw a considers·
ble attendance by shareholders, pick a meeting place that
will accommodate up to twice the number of expected peo-
ple. There's nothing better calculated to produce a dis·.-,..
gruntled shareholder than having to stand.
-IF FEASIBLE, ffA VE A guest book or sign· in sheet l
so that you have a complete record of those 1aUending. U
the crowd is large. consider issuing cards that can be filled
1n and depotited as people leave.
-Control entrtes or the meeting room . People enter·
ln1 and exitin1 from a number or side doors create nol~;
and confuslon. Have euards or ushers posted. Tbe vtslbl~
presence of unlf0nns bu the peychotogtcal eflect or pro-
Jectlnc caJm and orderliness.
-U you blre a security firm for the meeting, analyte
in advance auch matters as whether dissidents, de· m~atrators or hecklers are expected to attend, and why;
the way in wtUch di~ruptlve people will be dealt with; the
adaptlbUity of the meelin1 to good security practices: ade· quaey ud loo.Uon of utlllties.
-TB8T THB ROOM FO& ITS acoustics and, lf a
public addresa 1yat.em is warranted. i-et • reliable oae. U
the group ll larfe, provide J>OtUble microphones for
1harebolden' qu..ttons.
-Keep~ Pf'OIJ'•m as brief u pouible, whtle C!Over· ln1 •11 the eaenltali and altowtn1 the sba.rebolden a rea·
sonable Ume for quesUons and answers. 1f YO\l fall behind
schedule, cut part& 'Ol the presenUillon rather than tlme for
shareholders' questions.
Security. Pacific·
Wms ·District Bid . ..,
BB DAIL v PILOT LOCAL L/sC Thursday, March 9, 1978 ~~~ ........ ~~~~~..:..:....:__~~~~~~~~~~~~--~--~~--~~~~~--~~~--~~----~~~~~~~----~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~----------------~ . .
'It Was llp to Here'
Mary Ha rrigan of 850 Camino de los
Mares, San Clemente. points to the spot
on her garage door where flood waters
reached during last week's heavy rains.
United Way
Project Needs
Volunteers
Volunteers are being sought
for a major.social needs assess·
ment study sponsored by the
Orange County North·South
United Way.
The project wtll benefit exist-
ing and future social service
needs in four areas of the south
county, in cluding Irvine, Sad-
dleback Vall ey, the Laguna
Beach area and the Capistrano
Valley.
VOLUNTEERS ARE needed
to conduct the population sur-
vey, with two-man volunteer
teams conducting 10 to 12 in-
terviews in their areas.
Capistrano Valley committee
r hairman Ollie Harris said the
survey approach has never
before been attempted in the
United States, put cannot be suc-
cessful without the help of stu-
dents. retirees, senior citizens
and housewi ves to volunteer
some time to the study.
The first forum for volunteers
will be held Tuesday at Dana
Hills High School for residents of
L ag un a Niguel, San Juari
Capis trano. Dana Point,
Capistrano Beach and San
Clemente. The workshop will be
held from 3:30 to 6 p.m.
THE IRVINE AREA rofum win be held April 3 at several
schools in that city. Volunteer
workshops for Laguna and Sad·
dleback areas have not been ~et
up to date.
To volunteer your services or
for more information. call
Ronald Hukill a t 770-2856 or
634-2252.
Nursirig Grad
Rites Slated
At Saddleback
Eighteen Saddleback College
student nurses will gr~duate
during noon ceremonies Sunday
in the campus Fine Arts
T)leatre.
Graduates will be 1iven
special pins marking completion
or the college's registered nurs-
ing program ana eligibllit.y fol'
the State Board Exam.
The Orange Coast graduates
are:· Kathleen Ann 0 rose,
Johanna E. Harding and Susan.
Eileen Smith of Dana Point;
Renee Kathleen Nieters of El
Toro; Loretta Louise B.runda1e,
Valerie Saul Edwards and Hollie
Lynn Wlllis of Irvine, and Nancy
~ Louise Brost of LBi\l.DA Beach.
Also, Teri Bretton of Lquna
Hills, Doroth y McGresor of'
Laguna Niguel; CJndla Polrlef
of Mission Viejo; Su...n Louise
Knock of San Clemente, and·
Judy Carol Jennlnp of San Juan
· • '· •, Capistrano.
Saddleback Arts
•
Complex Rites Set
Dedication ceremonies and a classical concert will herald the
opening of Saddleback College's $3.7 million Fine Arts Complex on
Sunday.
Tours of the art, music, speech and theater wings or the center
will be conducted beginning at 6 p.m. in the fine arts courtyard.
THE DEDICATION will begin
at 7 p.m. followed by the col-
lege's concert chorale and sym-
phony orchestra performing the
Puccini Ma ss. "Messa Di
Gloria," and Beethoven's Triple
Concerto.
Admission to the concert is
free. However, reserved seat
tickets are required and may be
obtained in the fine arts box of-fice. ·· ·
A reception in the courtyard
will close the activities.
, MONTE LABONTE, director
of the Fine Arts Division, said
the complex is potentially "a
center for the performing and
visual arts not only in southern
Orange County but also for the
greater Orange County and Los
Angeles area as well."
He said the uniqueness of the
complex.is what is unique about
the fine arts division.
·'There is an intermixing of
the disciplines, where people get
together and c ross the dis-
ciplines in working as a total
unit,'' he~xplained.
.TICKETS FOR THE dedica-
tion activities may be obtained
in the college box office between
8 a .m . and 5 p.m. Monday
through Friday and from S to 7
p.m. Monday through Thursday.
Information may be obtained
by calling the box office at
831·7414 or 495-2790.
Ae'U Ce•.,eie
Bree Alexander, 1~ of San·
ta Ana, a junior at UC
Irvine, will be one of 50
competitors for title of
California Citrus Queen
)(arch 30 at lh tio!'al
Orange Sho w in S a n
Bernardino.
Trustee Plam
Lectlue on
Government
Robert Price, Saddleback
Community College trustee, is
scheduled to address t he Orange
Coast League of \f omen Voters
on local government in the &ld-
dle back area Monday at 9:30
a.m. at Lincoln Savings & Loan,
23601 Moulton Parkway, Laguna
Hills.
Price, former president of the
Saddleback Area Coordinatin1
Council <SACC), is to discuss bis
position on future incorporation
for Saddleback Valley, said
chairman Norma Sharp.
She said the league bas com-
plet'ed a report on the study of
government and services ill the
valley and is contemplating
5tudyin g the benefits a nd
drawbacks or incorporation.
The public is invited.
Sunday L~wn
Bowling Set
The NeWJ>Ort Harbor Lawn
Bowling Club will begin offering
Sunday bowllng for the first
lime in its 40-ye'llr history begin··
ning al 2 p.m. March 19.
the club will stage an open.
house throughout the afternoon
featuring exhibit games, in·
struction for prospective players
and refreshments.
The bowllhg greens are locat-
ed in the San J oaquin Hills
Park; one block east of Roiet'a
Gardens in Corona del Mar.
OCC Suauner
'
SessiOnSet
ti" Computer Invasion . •
~ Attorney Warns of Threat to Public Privacy • •
By WILLIAM HODGE Of ... .,..,., ...........
Aa computers get smaller and
smalter -and more affordable
to a vast amount of small busi-
nesses -consumer righta could
surfer from potential computer
errors. an attorney s pecializing
in computer law said in San
Juan Capistrano.
"We are talking about a whole
new ball .game," Richard
Schwarz.stein told a Capistrano
Valle)t Exchange Club meeting.
"Years ago a bus inessman
would think of a small manual
adding machine to help his book·
keeping.
"NOW THAT BUSINESSMAN
is thinking of a lease/purchase
program where he can afford rus
own computer."
And that increases the poten·
tial for invasion of the public's
privacy.
''By digesting great amounts
of information. they I com·
puters) can watch you all
along," the Newport Beach at-
torney said. "Computers are
working their way into our lives
completely.
"There is a possibility for
abuse."
SCHWA RZSTEI N SAI D.
however, the government is tak-
ing steps to protect the con-
sumer.
"There are limits now about
what the government can find
out about you," he said, citing
recent privacy legislation that
affected computer records.
And he cited the Federal Fair
Credit Billing Act as enabling
consumers to examine tl'leir
credit ratings through a written
request.
BUT mE POTENTIAL pro-
blems of a corriputer·orieoted
society don't involve the con-
sumer only.
Schwarzstein said many smaJl
businesses face problems grow·
ing out of dealing with a product
or which they'r e not very
know ledge able.
"Despite the claims of com·
puter manufacturers, the in·
stallation of a computer is a
very trying process," he said.
"Probably t here are no two
companies t hat are exactly
alike.
.. AND FR EQUENTLY THE
representation and fine print on
the contract aren't exacUy wbat
you expected," he continued.
"The courUI are filled these days
with cases that are sho\Ying
greater sympathy for the com-
puter users."
He cited an $11 million suit de-
cided against IBM in favor of a
Rhode Island corporation that
purchased a computer system
from the massive, multi-
national conglomerete.
"That kind of a case has
caused great concern in the in-
dustry." he explained. "Buyers
will apparently not sit back and
be .abused as they have done
before." '
r
AND THE FEDBltAL govern·'
ment bas also taken steps to re-
gulate the nation's computer in·
dustry. ..
Schwarzstein cited an anti·
trust case against IBM filed in.
New York.
The case, which involves ex.:
tremely complex testimony and .
exhibits, is expected to take
years.
'Needs' Topie
Capo Valley Meet Planned .
~ Human nt!eds in the Capistrano Valley area is the topic of a
community meeting sponsored Tuesday by the United Way of "
Orange County at 3:30 p.m. at Dana Hills High ~hool. ~
Residents will be asked to join one of three dlscusaion ~
groups dealing with community needs of youth adults and ~ senior citizens. '
A similar meeting is scheduled for Irvine, the Laguna area
and Saddleback Valley, however dates and times for these have not been announced.
: ,
. Volunteers are also needed to assist in conducting a popula·
hon survey on area needs. Interested people may call 934.2252
or 770-~~ ~
Badham Appointments
Tluee From Coast
' ~
Get Aca,demy Nods ;
Three Orange Coast men have been offered appointments by the:
Air Force Academy at Colorado Springs for the school year begin-'
ning in July, a ccording to Rep. Robert E. Badbam, R-Newport.
Beach. ·
They are Devin Bower, 26692 Valparaiso Drive, Mission Viejo;
Christopher P. Russick, 2801 E.
El Camino Real San Clemente Stake aUends Estancia High'
and Eric T .'stake, 2014 Schoolandis thesonofMr.and
Phalarope Court, Costa Mesa. Mrs. Roy T. Stake. He is an
THEY WE R E AMONG 20
young persons nominated by
Badham.
Bower, the son of Mr. and
Mrs. William P . Bower, attends
Mission Viejo High School where
be bas been a member of the
varsity football and track
teams.
RUSSICK IS THE son of Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Russick and at-
tends San Clemente High School,
where he is active in varsity
football and baseball.
Eagle Scout and plays in the
school band.
.
Exercise Program :
Planned by YMCA :
A six-week exercise program-
for people with back problems.
will begin at 7 p.m. Monday at'
the Orange Coast YMCA. ·
The class meets Mondays and
Thursdays for one hour. For in·
formation on registration call
642-9990.
•"'<J.
Do you have time to
.I
}
' listen to Walterread?
In 15 minutes the average person can read to himself
3,750 words. You probably read faster.
In 15 minutes the average news broadcaster on radio or
televlalon reads only half as many words. '
Th•t meena you get a lot more Information In I••• time
by reading a new.paper than by watching someone read the
new. to you.
And, your newspaper gives you the choice Of atorl•• you
need to be fully Informed about event• In th• world, nation,
ate and county.
~ Addltlonally, only the Dally Piiot bring• you th• n'ews of
~ur community every day -news televlalon Ignores.
I
You get more news In less time when you read It yourself
lnthe . . w • • • :