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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-03-21 - Orange Coast Pilot17 . . • _ease-fire m anon l ................................................... Coast Beaeh Sauey Sea Lions Ban f:in Effeet Until Wednesday On Spring Spree ... DAILY PILOT * * * 10< * * * I •·•· .;, •• ~ J.• • ··; VOi.. 11, NO It, J SECTIONS, >t P'AGES Af' Wlr.,_ .. Reaction to the latest contract agreement reached between coal miners and operators following a contract explanation meeting at Southern Ohio Coal Company were mixed. Some members gave the tbumbs·down as they were leavin~ the ~atherin~. May Lift We dne sday Coast Beach Ban Remains ·in Effect Street in Newport to Beach Boulevard in Huntintton Beach. Monday, with the repair of tho sewer line~ the ban was partlally lifted so that only tho area trom · · sand Street to Brook.burst Str,et remains closed. ' II II Sea Lions On Sp~ee Wruhed Up by Stonn, They I~ Laguna By STEVE MITCHELL Ol Ila o.ilf l'li.45t.tff Laguna Beach's sick sea lions look over the town two mornings in a row this week, sleeping atop convertibles. window shopping on Forest A venul' and in one case raiding the water <tis· tnct's rash pond up lhe '1,ippery beasties during lhe1r two·day spree in the Art Colony. LAGUNA BEACH LIFEGUARD Jim Stauffer as caring for more than two dozen sea hons in makeshift cages behind the city's sewer plant. The sea lwns were washed up during the most recent storms and many of the m suffer mjuries from the rocks and pneumorua. The two block excursion from the sea hons makeshift cages behind the city sewer plant lo Laguna Beach County Water Distn ct early Monday morning apparently~as abetted by a spirited group who had been in a bar earlier But the water district took a more sober view or the escapade. It cost them about a dozen gold fish, mcludingsome venerable favorites. But at least five of the cagy creatures were feeling their oats Monday morning and early today when the great escapes occurred. Jt all started Sunday night when a sea And Police Sgt. Dave Avers wins the hero title for nearly single·handedly rounding <See SEA LIONS, Page A2) Cease-fire in Lebanon PW Demanding Israel's Total WithJrau:al TEL.AVIV, Israel (AP> - Israel declared a cease-fire in southern Lebanon today, but the Palestinian mahtary command said 1t was "not enough." "The minister of defense has instructed the chief of the general staff to effect a cease· • fire along the entire front in Lebanon as of 1800 hours today," said the brief Israeli army s pokesman's announcement. "As from that hour the Israeli defense forces will maintain a cease.fire." In Lebanon, Mahmo\Jd Labadi, :.pokesman for the Palestine Liberation Organiza- tion. said "Israel's declaration of a cease·Cire ls not enough. What is needed is an uncondi· tional total withdr•wal by Israel from the whole of south Lebanon.'' The PLO earlier brtished aside Israeli talk of a ceue-flre, but observers in Beirut believed the final response woulti depend on the outcome of Syrian·Lebanese talks underway in Damascus. The announcement came after a day of scattered shooting between Israeli forces and Pale1tln1an guerrillas around 'fyre. But the shooting had died down Crom previous days. Seven days ago Israel launohed an air, land and sea at· tack to clear Palestinian rue,... rlllas from the area along its northern border. The operation followed a Palestinian terrorist attack in Israel whlcb killed 35 the cease-fire and whether the Palestine Liberation Organiza· lion would go along with an end lo host1litaes. The Israeli army claimed to control all or southern Lebanon System Moving up to the Litani River. except for a small area around the port ci- ty of Tyre. A token U.N. peacekeeping force was wailing lo move m (See ISRAEL, Page A2) Showers Expected In Northern State By The Aasodaled Press A low pressure system was moving slowly eastward across Northern California today, bringing a chance or showers and thundersbowen for much or the state by Wednesday. The low brought scattered showers to some parts of Central California on Monday, but rain· fall amounts were negligible. Fresno recorded the most rltln wilb .13 of an U\ch for the 24 bours endlnc at 4 a.m. today. Jn the San Francisco Bay area, skies will be mostly cloudy with a chance of showers and perhaps a thunders hower through Wednesday. The forecast for the Sacramento Vall~y calls for mostly cloudy skies with a chance of showers and isolated thundershowers, increasing on Wednesday. Half an inch of rain fell on Bakersfield in a three-hour period d\lring the night, flooding downtown streets and some ------------• businesses. Police said at least 12 major Fl.JP OF COIN orBIS MAYOR ·intersections were flooded and portions of six stree~ were closed. Beach~ Crom 52nd Street in Newport Beach to Brookhurst Street in 11\.lntlngton Beach re~ main closed today and wlll prob-· ably remain quoranUned until Wednesday, accGrdlnf to Oranee County Health Depart· ment omdals. Tbe beachol wero closed March 13 when n broken wet main ln the Santa Ana River aent raw sewace flowln1 out the • river mouth, coat.a111 naUna tb btacbu. Robert Stone, director of en· • <See BEACH£S. Page Al> Iara ells. The Israeli announcement eame as Prlme Minltter Menachem Begin was meetlna with Preaiaent Carter in WaahlnitQn and 11 the United . Nations tried to work out detailR of a U.N. PffCekeepiJ\8 force to go into aout.h m IA!banon. PORTOLA <AP> -This northwestern C•llfortlla. com· munlty of 1,800 hil • n • dty councilman and an ox-mayor - all ~cause of tho flip of a coln. ' Tb coln toa• put reUred busl· ne11rnan Glenn .D. Ho9"8rd on the council Md put Mayof Ree Riehm out of a job. The two finl1bed the> councll elceUon two weeka ago ln a dead heat. The National Weather Service 'bad recorded only a trace of rail\ at Bakersfield by 4 a.m. from a storm that began pelting the San Joaquin Valley durint the night. The rainfall total climbed to .st hundredths by 7 a.m. ~Jth the line pumpfnl' out mor tban lour mtlllon (Ill of ti a day, health of. lid public "' cf th 11aao.1ies attetclilisa from 38th. .Peace L»ne Sought KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia <AP> -Sri Lanka and Mal•ysla appeoted to tho Unlttd Sta and the Soviet Unlon lo ~uce th Ir rivalry 1n the J.Ddlan Oc an a.ad declare il a sone of Pl•"· Ther w no Immediate ln- dlcatlon lt llrael hid taken a unilateral action In announclnL Howard wUl serve a four.year term whll councllman Dave · Miner will aucceed R1 m u mar~. . . ... , There were rean of potenUal flooding in low-lyine areas around Lamont ln southern Kem County. That area was bard hit by nooding ln early February. Llahtning was reported ln tho Stockton and Fresno areas. Fttsno bad a quarter of an lnch of raln by '7 a .m. ' Waddill Explains Actions By TOM BARLEY Ol Ila o.ltf P'oi.t Staff Dr. William Baxter Waddill explained to a jury Monday that what a prosecution witness thought was a strangle hold be- ing applied to the neck of a newborn baby was actually his attempt to detect a pulse. ''l was ~entlv palpating for a pulse," he told the Orange Coun- ty Superior Court jury. "I was probing around the trachea.,. Hi s testimony during his second day on the witness stand directly refuted· that of Dr. Ronald Cornelisen, an Orange pediatrician who is the prosecu· tion 's key witness. Corneliscn told the jury that Waddill had a choke hold on the baby girl when he walked into the nursery and made it clear that he intended to murder the aihng infanL Cornehscn testified that Wad- d i 11 ordered the Westminster Community Hospital nursery staff to leave the room and then announced: '"This baby can't uve." Ile testified that Waddill pre- di cted the filing of lawsuits totalllng millions o( dollars in damages if the baby, which al· legedly survived Wadd.ill's at· tempt to abort it, lived. Cornelisen testified that Wad- dill felt sure the infant had suf· fered massive brain damage as a res ult or its immersion in the <See DOCTOR, Pa1te A2> Coast We a t h er Cooler Wednesday. Chance of measurable rain 70 percent Wednesday. Lows tonight 50 to 55. Highs Wednesday 58 to 65. INSIDE T ODAY WASP ~brr• mat1 haw not received the aome t1eterana' bmefit• as mOle cotmterpart1, bcit f.heJI have a high Mgrtt of camanufmW,• See Feat~•. Page Cl. .. C2 .... ... M At u •t.J = .... M M I l .42 O~L '(PILOT s "'71 Korea Tie Eyed Mitchell D enies Seeing Payoff Memo 'WASHINGTON CAP) -House fnvesllgators released letters to. day from the 1''81 telling two Nbon admlnlslration otlicials lo 1971 that aidea to SouUa Korean ·President Park Chung Hee con- ttibukd hw1dreds of thousands of dollars to the Democratic Par- ty and thal Tongi:.un Park made payments t-0 a congressman un- der Seoul's direction. But former AltornPy General John N Mitchell test1ried today that he never saw the 1971 FBI memo telling hlm and Henry A. Kas~anger about the alleged uc- ll v 1lles. M 1tchell said he did sec nnother FBI memo quotmg U S. rnlelhgence as i:.ay1ng that mdes to former Hou~e Speaker Carl Albert and former Rep. , I• 4MakeDaul Ho/Jup Yields $1 Million . ST .. JOVITE, Qut·bt•c <APl Four gunmen held up ~Ill :irrnorcd c~c at -. rn • .l(b1<le diner today, shot and wounded two guards and escaped with more lhan Sl nuUion, pohce !;a1d. A third guard was pistol whipped. The robbers fled in a stolen truck. later found abandoned on a side road 10 miles from this com-munit~, 62 miles north of Montreal. Po~ice sai~ lhc guards were having a morning snack m the diner when the gunmen burst in After opening fire, they beat up a guard \\ho ref~scd to yield the truck kt') s, police said. Contrary to sl't'ttl'1ly rules, the armored truck lwlongmg lo Allian<"t' St•cunlt! was left unguarded· outside the diner. police said. ~he r.irm handles shipments for the province's credit unions and recently won, despite oppos1t10n I rom two US. O\\ ned firms, a permit to trans port money and !:il'l:U11ties tor the Quebec· transport IJ0<.1rd. Cornelius E. Gallagher, 0 -N.J, "are connected with the Korean Central Intelligence Agency." "I'm certain I would" re· member seeing the Jetter, partly because of the reference to Korean donations to the Democratic Party, Mitchell told a House international relations subcommittee investigating al- leged Korean attempts to buy in- fiuence with Congress. ·'There Is a reference to a prC's ident." M 1tchell said. .. There's a reference to a con- ~ressman being bought off. I'm tiure I would remember it. Before Mitchell testified, the subcommittee released FBI memos to Mitchell and Kiss- inger, including a detailed one dated Nov. 24, 1971 Kissinger, who at the time was head of the National Secunty Council under President Nixon, has agreed to testify lat.er. said !-IUbcommiUee Chairman Donald 1''raser. D-Mi.M. Mitchell was Nixon's first at- torney general and lat.er became director of his 1972 re-election campaign. He was convicted of crJminal charges in the Watergate cover-up and is on turlou~h from prison. M ilchell said he went to Speaker Albert's office and told him of the memo regarding the aide, Suzi Park Thompson. Big Foot Ache Chiiia's Nuke Test Debris Over U.S. He said Albert replied that Mrs. Thomson was a fine young lady who had been educated in the United States and that the speaker "didn't see any prob- lem." The ~ubcommittee was told last week that the second con- ~ress1onal aide was Kim Kwang who was an aide lo GaUagher. ' Zoo keeper Hoger l\l;J rlens ch<'<'ks the lefl I ront foot of Koa, an J\frn:an elephant at the ~lilwaukee County Zoo. Th<.• pomh:rou:-puch) <.lcrrn has arthritis in the nght front foot, and an absccs!; above the toenails on her left rear foot. W ·\SHINGTON l APT - Rad1nal'live debns from China's rt•n•nt nuclear explosion will ar- r"" nH•r the U.S East Coast late today but the Environmen- t .ti Pnitt•cl run Ag<•ncy SJys there t~ nn t'ilUSl' for alarm. "Wt• do not anl1c1pate any rause for concern during pa~s<i~l' c,f «ontaminuted air over tht• l nrlcd Stall'-;, .. !'>aid Barbara Ilium, EPA deputy ad- man 1strator. The nuclear clouds are being carried by \\mds at altitudes abo .. c 20.000 feet. EPA said , and arc l'X<"tc.'<i to continue passlllg over the United States until Sun- da ~· · This contamination is not mo' in~ J" a sm~le air mass but '" bl·lnl! transported in patches al d1f1eu·nl speeds and dif- ferent altitud<.•s Conc;equently, no singll' trajectory of the debns path would ~1ve the true pic- t url'," an EPA announcement !-..tid. ThC' first of the radioactive clouds arrived over Alaska, western Canada and the Pacific J\ort hwvst late Sunday and early J.lnnd.1y, J.:PA ~aid. Some nuclear debris ma>: E"ro"' Page A I ISRAEL .•. "hen fighting stopped, but U.N. officials in NC'w York said it could hC' "weeks or months" ht'lurc bniel heeded the Securi· ty Council's demand to \\ithdraw troops from Lebanese krrilory. Search Suspended OROVILLE CAP) -Butte County authorities have sus- pended a search for five mildJy retarded men who have been missing since Feb. 24, when they failed to return from a basket- h a 11 game. They are Jack Madruga, 30, and Jack Huett, 24. of Linda; William Sterling, 29. or Yuba City; and Ted Weiher, 32. and Gary Mathis, 20, of Ohvchursl. ORANGE COAST 1 DAILY PILOT • have been brought to the ground by precipitation over Alaska and the Pacific Northwest, EPA said. "There is also a potential for a Wa.!-hout of debris by rainfall over the eastern half or the Unit- ed Stales," it added. But Mitchell said he did not consult with Gallagher because Gallagher was then under in· vest1gation, presumably for a local political fund violation for wh1ch he was later sent to jatl. A third memo to Mitchell and K1 ss1nger quoted U.S. in- telil~ence as saying a con- ,l!re!>sman had asked President Park for a campaign contribu- tion and to make Tongsun Park South Korea's exclusive U.S. rice dealer. Gorman Cop Slain; Wife Jails Suspect EPA activated its air and pre- C'iµ1tation monitoring stations Wednesday, but no stations have reportl'd measurements at- tributable to fallout, said the agency. "No significant exposures are expected from direct rad1allon, breathing of contaminated air or exposure to rainfall," Ms. Blum said. M ilchell said he also did not see that memo and said his in· ltials on it were put there by someone else. GORMAN <AP) -When they heard the ~unshots, Deputy Arthur Pelino's two younge"t sons ran next door -to their father 's one-man sheriffs offlc·c -and found him dymg Pelino, 51, a 19-year veteran with the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department. had been shot repeatedly with his gun Sunday night. and the man he had just arrested was still m the booking office, deputies said, adding lhe gun was £ired until empty. The March 14 blac;t was cs ti mated at "less than io kilotons." Mitchell was asked whether he had ever gotten any information of any olher congressman being involved in Korean influence- buy1ng durmg the Ume he was attorney general. Be replied that he <lid not. The oHice is adJacent lo the three-bedroom ranch house the ------------f'roa Page AJ------------ SEA LIONS CAVORT IN LAGUNA. • • lion bit through the chicken wire fence that holds the sick animals. ''Three of them got out at about 2 in the morning," recalled a sleepy Stauffer. from his home this morninl!. DURING THAT SEA LION siege, one of the 50-poWld mammals was followed by an early morning bar crowd from Glenneyre and Forest Avenue up lo the water district headquarters adjacent to City Hall. "The group kind of herded the sea lion toward the pond. and when it saw the goldfish, it went nuts." Stauffer said. The barking sea lion leaped into the pond, according to Sgt. Avers, "and began eating everything that moved in the water " The final toll was about a dozen goldfish, according to water district general manager Joseph Sweeney, who got that est.Jmate from \\oater superintendent Dan McDaniel. "DAN KNEW ALL THE fish in there by their first names," Sweeney said. "There was an old fantail that would come up to the surface and visit with all the kids. Thal sea hon ate the fantail and a lot more." Sgt. Avers cornered the well-fed sea lion in the pond and Stauffer captured him. That was Monday mornmi!. Last nJght, under the cover of darkness, two more sea lions slipped out of the com- pound and into town. THIS TIME THEY CRAWLED over the bodies of their comrades to make their escape, Stauffer said. ''They all like to lie on top of each other, he said. "Two of the sea hons JUSl crawled up the sleeping bodies and over th,c top.'' The smaller of the two escapees was quickly rounded up by Avers, but the lar~er of the pair escaped to Third and Mermaid Streets where the police sergeant found 1t asleep atop the convertible top of a car. "Avers got that one with a leash," Stauf- fer said. .. RE CAUGHT OR CORNERED all of them," the sea lion doctor said this morning. .. So l 've made him an honorary Friend of the Sea Lion for putting up with those clowns for two mornings in a row." Stauffer said he won't be rousted from his bed tonight. 'Tm going out there later this afternoon to see tr I can keep them in their cages," he said. Thus ending the sea lion siege in Laguna Beach. Delaware Clty, Dcl. At lea.st one person wu killed and several other people seriously lrijured. .. -.heriff provides for his resident deputy in Gorman, a mountain co mmunity 70 miles north of Los Angeles. The boys, aged 9 and 15, ran for their mother, Pat, 47. She hurried-unarmed-into the booking office. Somehow she got Terry Lynn Zachery. 30, or North Hollywood behind bars, said Deputy Jim Digiovanna, a department spokesman in Los Angeles. "She jusl coaxed him into lhe area of the booking cage. then pushed him inside and was able to slam the door on him," Digiovanna said. Deputy Carl Walter, Pelino's interim replacement at the lone- 1 y sheriff's outpost in the Tehachapi Mountains, said Pelino had answered a dis- turbance call al a nearby gas station Sunday night. Pelino checked records for warrants against Zachery before bringing him back to his office, Walter said. "In fact, he had the guy drive his own car and followed rum back to the station," Walter said. "Apparently at that time he was having no trouble with him." Inside the booking ofrice the trouble began. Investigators still weren't sure what happened. "It seems there was some type of a struggle and he was able to get the gun away from Pelino," Oigiovanna said . With Zachery in the cage, Mrs. Pelino put out a radio call to the Santa Clarita sheriff's substation, where her husband had been assigned before being transferred eight months ago to Gorman. The California Highway Patrol heard the call and got there first, with the San- ta CJarita deputies arriving soon after. Walter said she took the two boys lo the zoo to get away from thP scene at Gorman. The couple had six children ranging in age from 8 to 21. Grass 'Bad' In Colorado? BOULDER, Colo. (AP) Marijuana smokers in this uni· versity city nesUed against the snow-capped Rockies are being encouraged to bring ln samples or their slash for testing to see if it is contaminated by berbkides. Tbe testinf, Jn cooperation with the Boulder County district a ttor.ney's office and the University of Colorado, was begun alter the Mexican govern- ment acknowledged that tho herbicide paraquat was used to wipe out marijuana fields. Several groups have protested that paraquat can cause lung damage to heavy smokers. A spokesman for lbe Colorado Daily, a newspaper published to s~rve the campus community, said marijuana samples in plain brown wrappers can be de- livered to tho newspaper ofnce with a five-dlglt identification number • • ! f'roaa Page A I DOCTOR.~. saline .,olut1on Waddill injected into the mother lie said w~dd1ll suggested four other ways rn which lhe child could be disposed or. in- l'ludrng drowrung 1t m u bucket or water Waddill described Comelisen Monday a-. "sort of disturbed, emotionally unstable and quite squirrelly " The llttnlington Harbour ob- ~ t et r 1 d an sa id he fell Cornellsen's hostile atlltude towardi. tum stemmed from the prosecution's witness' resent- ment of the saline abortions performed by Waddill and other doctors at the Westminster hospital W add1ll said he felt Cornelisen may also have decided to testify again:,t him because he felt guil. ty about participating in an il- legal aborhon. Cornelis(•n. in his testimony earht.>r 1t;1 the trial, said he bell<'\ eel the <.1bort10n performed by Waddill on Mary Weaver, 18. wa~ tllegal The baby's molht't has sued Waddill for $17 million in damages in a Jawauit whioh ac- cuses him or misrepresenting the stale of her pregnancy. The prosecution claims that lhe baby was 31 weeks from con· ception when it was aborted. Waddill has testified that the in· fant was 22 weeks from concep- tion. W add.ill stressed throughout a Jong day on the witness stand that l he Haby be allegedly murdered on March 2, 1977, never bad Ufe. - "It was pale .and cold and life- less." he testified. "I couldn 'l find a pulse. I couldn't detect a heart beat and I certainly didn't :,ee 1t brealhrng." Waddill said the only move- ment he could detect in the baby were several short gasps. "But. that was agonal gasping, the e' 1dencc of death and not life," he ~aid. Cornelisen and hospital nurses have test.ifted that the baby girl delivered by Miss Weaver cried when it was expelled from the womb and gave evidence of life as it was being rushed to the nursery. Registered nurse JoAnn Grif· fith testified that the baby had a clearly dlscerni&1e heart beat and was improving its labored breathing when Waddill halted her resuscitation efforts and pushed her out of the nursery. EqumTime For Felines? LOS ANGELES (AP) - Actor David Madden ot "The Partridge Family" television series says if do gs need Ii censes so should cats and he intends to appeal a $S0 fine Jevied on him for not buying licenses for bis two poodles. The fine was imposed Monday by Van Nuys Municipal Court Judge Robert Devich, who also ordered the actor to obtain the dog licenses by April 18 as a pre-condition for being placed on one year's probation. However, Devich stayed the fine after Madden's· lawyer, Bruce Wolfe, an- nounced he intended to me "an appeal on the con· stitutional issue of equal protection." F ro• Page A l BEACHES. • vironmental health for the coun· ty Health Department said to- day it rould take until Wednes. day to get confirmed tests which wou Id show the absence of dangerous le\•els of bacteria at the closed beaches. He explained that the last con· firmed tests, taken Saturday, show nearly normal bacteria counts at the outer edges of the quarantine area, although the area around the river mouth was nearly five times higher in amount of baclena than allowed by law. "We can only make a pre- sumption based on the samples taken Stmday," he said, "but it looks very good at all stations." Stone said that the confirmed results of Sunday's tests are not ltkely to be available until Wednesday. Meanwhile, he said the beaches would remain dosed and the Health Department will continue to make daily tests oC water samples. "The bacteria samples set'nl to be coming down," he said, "but we want lo be con-·'· servative. We won't lift the quarantine until we are sure tbe beaches are within the al•te standard." Sign of Spring NEW YORK <AP> -The ti ... or the 149 members of lhe Uruted Nation were raised around U. ice-skating rtnk "' Jloctet er <:enler on Monday, one of tbo !irsl signs or spring in t.h4 ci.t.J. J I I ~ 7 Orange Coast EDITION VOL. 71, NO. 80, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY., CALIFORNIA Totla).''• £1oslag N.r. Steen .. __ ....,_. .. Wftddill: 'Detecting· Infant's Pulse' ]1 \ By TOM BARLEY Oft• o.lly l"ltet 5tafl probing around the trachea." aillng Want. l>r. William Baxter Waddill explained to a jury Monday that what a prosecution witness I ~bought was a strangle hold be· mg apphed to the neck or a newborn baby was actually his attempt to detect a pulse. l "l was gently palpating for a l )>ulse," he told the Orange Coun-t ty Superior Court jury. •·1 was His testimony during his second day on the witness stand directly refuted that of Dr. Ronald Cornehsen, an Orange pediatrician who is the prosecu· lion's key witness. Cornelisen told the jury that Waddill had a choke hold on the baby girl when he walked into the nursery and made it clear that he intended to murder the Cornelisen testified that W&ld· dill ordered the Westminster Community Hospital nursery staff to leave the room and then announced: "This baby can't live." He testified that Waddill pre· dieted the filing of lawsuits totalling millions of dollars in damages if the baby, which al- legedly survived Waddill's at· r SEA LIONS 'IN CUSTODY' AFTER THEIR RAMPAGE THROUGH LAGUNA BEACH Escaped Mammals Raise Eyebrows in Downtown Laguna, Gulp Goldfish Sea Lions On Spree Washed Up by Storm, They Invade Laguna By STEVE MITC'llELL 011111 D••lyPilotSutt Laguna Beach ·s sick M'a lions took over the town l wo morning!> an a ro'' this week. sleeping <1top convertibles, window shopping on Forest A \'t'nue and in one case ra1d1ng the water dis- trict s fish pond The t\lio block ('XCurs1on from the sea hons makeshift cages bt.'hmd the city sey,er plant to Laguna Dc.-arh County Water District early :\1onda' morning apparently was abetted by a ~p1r1ted group\\ ho had been ma barearher But tht• Y.<Jll'r distract took a more sober nc \\ of thl· t·~c a pa de It cost them about a dozen gold fish, mC'ludmg some \•enerable favorites And Police Sgt. Dave Avers wins the hero title ror nearly smgle-handedly roundmg up the slippery beasties during their two-day spn•c m the Art Colony. LAGUNi\ BF.ACll LIFEGUARD Jim Stauffer IS taring ror more than two dozen sc.-a hons in makeshift cages behind the dty's sewer plant. The sea hons were washed up during the most recent storms and many of thc•m sufrer tnJunes from the rocks and pneumonia But at least five of the cagy creatures were feeling their oats Monday mornmg and early today .,...hen the great escapes occurred. It all started Sunday night when a sea hon bit through the chicken wire fence that holds the sick animals .. Three of them got out at about 2 in the morning," recalled a sleepy Stauffer from his home this mornm~ DURJNG THAT SEA LION siege, one of the 50-pound mammals was followed by an early morning bar crowd from Glenneyre and Forest Avenue up lo the water district headquarters adjacent to City Hall. "The ,:troup kind of herded the sea lion toward the pond. and when it saw the goldfish, it went nuts," Stauffer said. The barking sea lion leaped into the pond. according to Sgt Avecs, ~and began eating everythmg that moved in the water " The final toll was about a dozen goldfish. according to water district general manager Joseph Swl·eney, who got that estimate from "ater superintendent Dan McDaniel. "DAN KNEW ALL THE fish in there by thc.-1 r first names." Sweeney said. "There \\as an old fantail that would come up lo the surface and v1s1t with all the kids That sea hon ate the fantail and a lot more ·· Sgt Avers t•ornercd t hc.-well fed sea lion 111 the pond and Stauffer captured him That was Monday morning. Last night, under the cov<>r of darkness, two more sea ltor1s slipped out of the com· pound and into town THIS TIME THEY CRAWLED over the bodies of their comrades to make their escape, Stauffer said "They all hke to lie on top of each other, he said. ''Two of the sea lions JUSt crawled up lhl• sl<.-epmg bodies and over the top.·· The smaller of the two escapees was quickl) rounded up h) A\•ers. but the larger of the pair escaped to Third and Mermaid Streets wht•re the poltcc sergeant found it asleep atop the converllble top of a car. .. t\ vcrs got that one with a leash," Stauf f('r said "llE CAUGHT OR CORNERED all of them," the sea hon doctor said this morning So J'vc made him an honorary Friend of the 5ca Lion for putting up with those clowns for two mommgs in a row " Stauffer said he won't be rousted from his bed tonight "I'm going out there later this afternoon to sec 1f I can keep them in their cages," he said. Thus ending the sea lion siege in Laguna Beach. tempt to abort it, lived. Cornellaen testified that Wad· dill felt sure the Infant had auf • fered massive brain damage as a result of its immersion in the saline solution Waddill injected into the mother. He said Waddill sugaested four other ways ln whkh the child could be disposed of, in· cluding drowning it in a bucket of water. Waddill described Cornellsen Mootfay $S "sort of disturbed. emotionanr, unstable and qwte squirrelly. ' The Huntington Harbour ob- st el r i ci an said he relt Cornelisen's hostile attitude towards him stemmed from the prosecution's witness• resent- ment of the saline aborUons performed by Waddill and other doctors at the Westminster hospital. ·1 . W addiU aaid he felt Cornelise* may also have decided to tesU againat bim because he felt gui • ty about participating in an il· legal abortion. Cornellsen, in bis testimony earlier In the trial, said he believed the abortion performed by Waddill on Mary Weaver, 18. was illef(al. (See DOCTOR. Paie AZ> Lebanon Blasts Cease-fire Vow TEL AVIV, Israel CAP) - Israel declared a cease-fire in southern Lebanon today, but lhe Palest1man m1htary command said it was "not enough " ·'The minister of defense has instructed the chief of the general staff to effect a cease- fire along the entire front m Lebanon as of 1800 hours today," said the brief Israeli army spokesman's announcement "As from that hour the lsraeh defense forces will maintain a cease-fire " In Lebanon, Mahmoud Beach Ban May Lift Wednesday Beaches from S2nd Street in Newport Beach to Brookhurst Street in Huntingtop Beach re· main closed today afld will prob- ably remain quarantined until Wednesdiily, according to Orange County Health Depart· mcnt officials The beaches were closed March 13 when a broken sewer main 10 the Santa Ana River sent raw sewage flowing out the river mouth. contaminating the bcach~s With the sewage lane pumping out more than rour million gallons of waste a day, health of· fic1als banned public use of the beaches stretching from 38th Street 1n Newport to Bea<.-h Boulevard 1n Huntington Beach Monday, with the repair of the sewer line, the ban was partially hfted so that only the area from 52nd Street to Brookhurst Street remains closed Robert Stone, dire<.-tor of en· \'tronmental health for the coun· ty Health Uepartment ~aid to· day 1t could take until Wednes- day to get ronfirmtd tests which "'ould show the absence of dangerou~ level!> of bacteria at the closed beaches He explained that the last con· firmed tests, taken Saturday. show nearly normal bacteria counts at the outer edges of the quarantine area, although the area around the river mouth was nearly five times higher in amount of bacteria than allowed by law. (See BEACHES, Page A2) Labadi, spokesman for the Palestine Liberation Organiza· lion, said "Israel's declaration of a cease-fire is not enough. What is needed is an uncondi· llonal total withdrawal by Israel from the whole of south Lebanon." The PLO earlier brushed aside Israeli talk of a cease-fire, but observers in Beirut believed the final response would depend on tbe outcome of Syrian-Lebanese talks under way in Damascus The aMouncement came after a day of scattered shootin~ EIR llrged between Israeli forces and Palestinian guerrillas around Tyre. But the shooting had died down from previous days. Seven days ago Israel launched an air. land and sea at· tack to clear Palestinian guer- rillas from the area along its northern border. The operation followed a Palestinian lerrorig.t attack m Israel which killed 3S Israelis. The Israeli announcement ca me as Prime Minister Menachem Begin was meeting <See ISRAEL, Page AZ> Cordova Pushing Ft·eeway Finish Assemblyman Ron Cordova, D-El Toro, told the Costa VeH City Council Monday night he will as"k the Legtsllture to order the environmental impact report needed to start completion of the Costa Mesa Freeway <Route SS). Insisting he was tired of "pussyfooting" and waiting for action from top ranking transportation official Adriana Gianturco. Cordova said he would propose a resolution to that errect next week. If approved, the resolution would direct the newly formed California Transportation Com· mission to conduct the environ· mental study. If the EIR is not included m this year's state budget. Costa Mesans will have to wait at least another year before any action can be taken, freeway backers hav~ warned. Cordova and As.aemltlymaa Dennis Mangers, D, Huntington Beach. have been vocal in sup. port of completing the freeway into Costa Mesa's downtown area. Traffic congestion, dangerous road condillons and an adverse impact on downtown area busi· nesses have been listed as major reasons why the freeway is needed. Despite initial state approval in 1944, the freeway remains stubbed out 3.7 miles short of the city's downto .... rn area. Cordova advised the City Council to send a representative to the April 21 meeting of the California Transportation Com- mission in Los Angeles. ColUICil Approves 'Singular' Homes The Costa Mesa City Council has approved its own plan lo put single-family homes instead of commercial development on about eight acres near Bear Street and Yukon Avenue. However. developers of the parcel owned by William Cagney will get a chance to pre- sent a plan for higher density "patio homes" instead of the larger lot single-family res· c1lman Dom Raciti said he favors nothing but low density homes. Discussion on the anticipate4 request for higher density will center on the possible extensions of Liard and Peace places. The two streets currently ex· tend off Yukon Avenue and stop short of the Cagney parcel, but the city may extend the roadways into the new deve10p- $1.6 Billion Bond Proposed idences. . After unanimously approving the single-family concept, Mon· day, the council then tabled the planned development request until a detailed plan is present· ed. There was no indication when this might occur. ($ee001JNCIL, Page AZ) Coast By JACKIE HYMAN Of ... o.11, l"ttet si.11 Direct.ors of the Irvine Ranch Water District denied Monday that a proposed $1.6 bUUon bond issue for uninhabited areas m the district would encour~ge the development of what are now open lands in Irvine, Tustin and nearby county territory. They also continued until March 27 public bearings on the Hearing Continued by Ranch Water Board proposed bond issue, which would be one of the biggest in Orange County history. Responding to a call by en· vironmentalist Wesley Marx for an environmental impact report, board Chau-man L.E. EbfrUng said the elecllon wotlld give the district only the capacity to sell bonds for sewer, water and ir· rigation hoes 1f development were approved by the cities or county. Water directors have declared that no environmental impact report is necessary. $394 million in interest. ·The pipeline share would be about $2.5 million. Undeveloped areas involved Include parts ot Irvine and Tustin and the Irvine Company property between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach, as well as parts of El Toro. ~Chance of .Showers At issue is a proposal to call an e lection May 23 to approve the bonds. Funding is sought for tbe district's share or a large water pipeline from the MetroJ)OUtan Water District res· ervoir in Yorba Lindo. Each Individual district would vote on lt.s own ruture bonded in· debtednesa. In most of the Jtls· tricts In question, which are un- inhablted, tho landowners would be the only votus. The major landowner ln these areas is the Irvine COmpany, B1ThciAssoelated Prell A Jow preasur system was movlna slowly tutwerd across Northern Callfornla today. brinlinJ a chance of showers and • J,hundenbowen for much of the latebyW y, Tbe low broucbt scattered bowers to aome paru of Central .California on Mobday. but tain· Jail amounts w re nerllaJble .. .Fra.no recont.d lhe m~t rain Wa .13 ol ao ch for the 24 hour8 ending at 4 a.m. today In lhe San Francisco Bay area, ski~ will be mostly cloudy wilh a chanee of shbwora and ptrhapa a thundershower through Wedneeday. The forecait for the Sacramento V lley calls for mostly cloudy sl'1H with a chance or ahowera and isolated lhunderahowel"I, lncreaalog on Wednesday. ,, I I I" addition, the election would create a number of new in- dividual improvement districts and pormit the district lo sell bond• n~ed t.o fund servicea In now undeveloped land over tbenext30yean. Alth~ th atlmated cost of the lmPl'O •ement..t would be '311 mllltOfl t tOday•t pnces, the total cQst inclucHn1 an escalation tactor to IJJo (or tnfiation is lllim1t0d at $1.2 billion, Plus A spokesman for the district also, denied that directors are seeking the May election to . circumvent what could be U>e er· feels of the Jarvls·Gann tax limitation htltlaUve (Proposition 13) 1h0uld it p June 8. Bond lssu approved befona June wOUld n9t be subject to the ( BOND, Pate AJ) Mayor Ed McFarlartd said he supports a higher density de- velopment so close lo the Corona del Mar Freeway, but coun- CM Planner Bids Sought Applications for the Costa Mesa Planning Commission seat vacated by new City Coun· clhvoman Arlene Schafer are now being taken at city hall, Mayor Ed McFarland an- nounced Monday night. The post is open to all Costa Mesa resident.. Applications must be received 8' City Mana1er Fred Sorsabal't olfice no later than April 3. . Tb Ot.Y Councll wm revlcw the applications and hOld publlc interviews belor• filling the tur· rent vacancy on the flve- membcr Planning Commlulon. Weather Cooler Wednesday. Chance or measurable rain 70 percent Wednesday. Lows tonight 50 to SS. Highs Wednesday S8to6S. . INSIDE TODAY WASP tMrnbtts mGJI have nl)t rtcdotd the sam• vdercuu• "INM/U• 01 m4W cottnl•~· bt.lt they ~ G lugh ~ of comarodnie. • Sec Feat1ms. PoQe CJ. l•dex ~ ... ... ,.,. "' .. ., ... .. • ... .. .. I .. , ' A2 DNt. Y PILOT C Funding Orange County planners hope to obtain mo1 e than $500,000 Crom stale coffera the nexL two )'ears to develpP a conservation and Jand use plan ror much of the unincorporated county coaslhnc. Bul even as county plannine commissioners put thelr !rtamp ot approval on the two-year work plan Monday, the planners admitted that only about half the $500,000 might be available. Richard Munsell, an assist.ant director of the county Envlron- tnen tal Management Agency, said he exepects the staff or the Regional and State Coastal Com· m1ss1ons may tram out parts of the work plan lo reduce the cost. Under terms of the California Coastal Act of 1976, cities and counties along the shoreline may develop coastal land use plans with the belp of stale financing. Once those local plans are ap- proved by lhe State Coastal Com mission, the local gov ernmental a~enc1cs would take Over the l!>SUtng Of permits for development along the coast. Monday the commission ap- proved a list of planning task:. to be compl<'led for the Sun!>ct Bcach-Bolsa Chica area, the South Cm1st region and the Aliso Creek area. Two more hearings have been set for March 27 and April 10 on planning issues along the Irvine Coast. Those hearings will be at 7 p. m. at the lrv1ne City Council chambers. Of the $500,000 in planning costs outlined so far, county of- ficials hope lo spend about $66,000 on consultants to help evaluate energy facilities, marrm.• resourn·s and hazard areas. They also want lo earmark $73,333 for displays, mailings and brochures to encourage <'tti zen partic1p<1tion in the plan's development, $68,964 to study ways of protecting scenic areas and Sfi2, 1!1Cl to evaluate ro:.i s ll1nt• rt•ercal1ot1 pos:,;abiht1c1s. !Front Pag~ Al ISRAEL ... \\1th President Carter in Wa'>htngton and as the United Nations tried to work out details of a U .N. peacekeeping force to go into southern Lebanon There was no immediate in· dicatton if Israel had taken a unilateral action in announcini:i the cease-fire and whether the Pale:.lanc L1b<'rat1on OrRaniza lion would go along with an end to hoslihhes. The Israeli army claimed to rontrol all of southern Lebanon up to the L1tan1 River, except for .1 small art-a uround the port ct· ly of Tyre. A token UN. peacekeepin~ force was waiting to move in when ft~hllng stopped, but U.N officials in New York said 1t could be "weeks or months" before Israel heeded the Securi- ty Council's demand to withdraw troops from Lebanese territory. From Page Al BEAC H ES. • "We can only make a pre- sumption based on the samples taken Sunday," he 5a1d, "but it looks very good at all stations." Stone said that the confirmed results of Sunday's tests are not Jtkely to be ava1Iable until Wednesday. Meanwhile, he said the beaches would remain closed and the Health Department will continue to make daily tests of water samples. "The bacteria samples seem to be coming down," he said, "but we want to be con-· servative. We won't lift the quarantine until we are sure the beaches are within the state standard." OltANO! COAST c DAILY PILOT -~ .. (""" Vb~1 .. a.-....... ,._.,II_ ~--,,,. .... ,,. .......... _.. ....... .... CMf'ttt•.a.-"'-' --"'*" ........ ~·-""' Mag 23 E l.ection New Districts, Bonds on Ballot Utilit y Pickete d By LAURIE KASPER Ol t• o.11, ,..._. IUH Santa Margarita Water Dis- trict directors have scheduled a May 23 election on the formation or six new improvement dis- tricts and the authorization of l',....P~Al BOND ••• limitations of the bill, which would cut properly laxe:. drastically. Arthur Korn, secretary or the Irvine Ranch Water District, said the long range planning Wb sparked by consideration or the Yorba Linda pipeline and that the May date as being coru.1dered because of contracts. Some 40 members of the International Brotherhood of Electncal Workers. Local 47. picket Southern Californtii Edison Company's d1stnct off1ccs m El Toro this morning in support of union dcman~s for wage and benefit improvements. Picket- ing before work hours have be~un has not been sanctioned by the union, a self· described group spokesman said. Workers are seeking a 10 percent wage boost in negotiations which have continued since their contract expired Jan. 1. The spokesman said the union members, who are not on strike, are disturbed with the negotiations' slow pace. He called tbe tact that the election would come just before the June election ''a rather in· teresting coincidence." Korn also said that, while seeking bonds to finance im· pro\1ements through the year 2010 may be unusual, "the district has always done its planning as tar in- to the future as we could look.·· Nuclear Debri,s Seen A question was also raised at Monday's meeting as lo whether or not the IRWD Board o( Direc· tors is qualified to call a bond election because five of its seven members are appointed by landowners, primarily the Irvine Company. The other two are elected by registered voters. 'No Dange r ' to Air Over United States But IRWD directors said Mon· day that, under state law, a water district board need not be elected by popular vote uoHI the district is at least 50 percent urbanized. WASHINGTON <AP ) Rad1oact1ve debris from China's recent nuclear explosion will ar· rive over the U S. East Coa:.t late today, but the Environmen tal Protect10n Agency sa} s there 1s no cause for alarm "We do not ant1c1pate any cause for concern during pass age of contaminatPd air over the United States," said Barbara Blum, EPA deputy ad m1nistrat.or. The nuclear clouds are being carried by winds at altitudes above 20,000 feet, EPA said, and are exctcd to continue passing -~ V·'...- _-,..,......". ···-· l""'··:...o ~~ IU~ ca\en TONIGHT ''BEHIND Tiit: HEADLINES" -Or Giles T. Brown lecturer, OCC l''orum. 7·30 p.m . "VOLPONE" -South Coast Repertory Theater, Tuesday. Sunday through April 23, 8 P m WEDNESDAY. MARCii 22 COAST COMMUNITY COLLEGE BOARD -Regular meeting, 1370 Adams, 8 p.m. OCC LECTURE "What's New in Nutrition," Student Center, 7:30 p.m. over the United Stales until Sun- da\. :.This contamination is not moving as a smgle air mass but 1s bt-tng transported in patch.es at different speeds and d1f· fercnt altitudes. Consequently, no single trajectory of the debns path would give the true pie· lure," an EPA announcement :-.aid. Hecklers fit By ERA Foe ROCHESTER, NY. CAP) - Equal Rights Amendment oppo- nent Phylhs Schafley says the people who shout her down when ~he speaks against ERA are against the right to free speech. She made the comment Mon- day after doing verbal battle with backers of the proposed amendment to the U.S. Constitu· lion during an appearance at the University or Rochester. She told the largely male stu. dent audience that when they gradu:.itc, "1f you do," they should thank her for encourag. ing women to stay home and oul of the job market. Sign of Spring NEW YORK CAP) -The Oags of the 149 members of the United Nation w£'re raised around the 1ce·skating rink in Rockefeller Center on Monday, one or the first signs of spring in the city. Mysterious Meteor Flashes Over Coast A quiet Monday night at Orange Coast police depart· ments was interrupted by phone calls from residents who spotted a mysterious blue-green flas h across the sky about 9·50 p.m "All l can figure out Is that 1t was a meteor," said a National Weather Service spokesman who reported dozens of phone calls from Southern Californians about the fireball that shot across the sky in a northwester- ly direction. Gunter Vogel of Costa Mesa said be was reclining in his jacuzzi when a light that ••looked like the blunt end of an egg" raced acrou his view. "It was so amazing that 1 not- Pd all the details," he said. "The center point had a small pinkish s pot, but mostly it was silvery white with a greenish tail." Vogel said the flash lasted Jess than a second, but was "half the size of the moon." The streaking light was visible as far south as San Diego where close lo 100 residents phoned police between 9:45 and 9:50 p.m . The lone flash apparently was not related to two asteroids that streaked past Earth earlier this month, the closest coming eigbt mill ion miles away last Wednes· day evening. Huntington ·Lagoon Plan Wins Panel OK A $2S miUlon, !68·unit con· dominium complex was ap- proved for HunUngton Beach Monday by the regional coastal commlssJon. The project is planned ror 37 acres of vacant Jand at the south west corner of Beach Boulevard and AUanta Avenue. a block from tho Pacific Ocean and just north of tbe Huntlncton Beach Inn. It wiU feature I fOUr·acre lake. a clubhouse and canals de· 1i1n 4 to give it the Oavor ot bolh Venice, Calli., and Venke, ltafy. By a 7·S Wte, the commis.ion approved th one and two· 1*trootn \D'\lt. over the rec<>m· mtndaUon for denial by start members. Tbe stair said the residential development would be pre· mature and would have an ad· verse effect on the conservation of coastal resources. CommJsslon member Arthur Snyder. a Los Angeles city COWi· cllman, dlsalfeed. He said that the project ''waa the lrult of thou1htCul plannJne by the City of Huntington Beach." He said that no one other than the regional commission's start seemed to be opposed to lhe project. Bryan Austin, on associ1te planner for the clt,y, said the project was approved 1n concept by the cit.>' Jut JuJ¥. Cornmbston members had a lelter or support for tht project from Huntlntton Beach Mayor Ron Pattinson. The first of the radioactive clouds arrived over Alaska, western Canada and the Pacific Northwest late Sunday and early Monday, EPA said. Some nuclear debris may have been brought to the ground by precipitation over Alaska and the Pacific Northwest, EP>. said. Directors said they will con• tinue hearings on the bond issue until March 'l7 to allow the cities of Irvine and Tustin and the County of Orange to comment. "There is also a potential for a washout of debris by rainfall uver the eastern half of the Unit· ed Stales," 1t added. They pointed out that hearings began last week and criticized the cities and county for their "laxness" in not responding sooner to the proposed election. Pilot Logbook What Was That She Whispered? By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of ... O.ity ...... Mali They haven't talked about it since, but an exchange between rivals Lucille Kuehn and Paul Hummel was the talk of the Newport Beach City Council race over the weekend. IT HAPPENED Saturday during a candidate forum before members of the LilUe Balboa Island Property Owners Association. Hummel, who is trying to unseat Mrs. Kuehn In the Sixlh Counc1lmanic District, brought a tin cup to the meet· ing and suggested the city needs a TIN CUP type cam- paign funcling law because or what be says is Mrs. Kuehn's TIN CUP is the acronym for an or· ' developer.backed effort to get re· elected. ., ganlzation seeking stiffer campaign funding laws governing canclidales for ",. the Orange County Board of Supervisors. JN AN ASIDE to Hummel following his presentation, Mrs. Kuehn whispered to her opponent what he could do with KUEHli his tin cup. Hummel then stood up and told the audience of about 30 people his version of what Mrs. Kuehn said. "Ladies and gentlemen, this woman has just told me to take my tin cup and --in it," Hummel announced, ac· cording to other candidates who were present. HUM~1EL'S COMMENT disrupted the session and clearly upset two other women candidates, Peg Foreit of the first district who burst into tears and Evelyn Hart o( the third district who was just beginning her speech. Monday, neither or the sixth district candidates would discuss the incident. Both said they fell it would not con· HUMMEL tribute in any way to the dignity or the municipal cam· pai1n. However. Mrs. Kuehn and Hummel both felt free to al· tack each other on the campaign issue that led to Saturday's incident. RUMMEL. A MEMBER or the Planning Commi11sion who ls ldenlified with the anti-develQpment camp, ha!I based his campaign on what he sees as Mrs. Kuebn's pro- developer stance. He claims evidence or her bias can be found in her $9,000 campaicn fund. most of which, he clalm!l, was railed from developers. Mrs. Kuehn 1ays that's misleadll\g, noting that she has received money from 176 contributors, of whom 16 are de· velopera. They gave a total or $3,200, she reports. Hummel says he'll continue to talk about Mrs. Kuehn's campaign fund and she says sbe'U stand on her record. ANO 111EIR Callow candidates say they don't mind as lon1 H the attack.I don't reach the _penonal level lhey did on Saturday. "I told thom th1t I thought It wu a shame that then wa~ a feud deYeloptn1 and I wished they would dlscontlnue it," said Mnt. Forslt, who explained she was ao upset at Saturday'• forum llM WH u.01ble to live her speech. "Frankly, I Wn9t tt's ridiculous. I dOtl't see how that ltind ot thine ~lps ellber candld1te, •• sbe said. ab-Out $1 3 b11Lion in bonds for the proposed special districta. The water and sewer dislncls -five on the 44,000-acre Rancho Mission Vie.Jo and another on un. developed Mission Viejo Com· pany land -were requested by the property owners. The only voters in the bid to form the distracts will be the landowners -principally the O'Neill family and its bank-held trust and the Mission Viejo C<>m-pany. A public hearing on the forma- tion or the districts Monday was continued to April 5. Although no one opposed the new districts. the hearing was continued because some changes were made in cost figures, said Bill Kn1t2, manager of lbe Santa Marganta district. Knitz said the bond amount is high because improvements in the districts are not scheduled for a number of years. He said inOation was included ln lhe cost estimates. The manager said the districts are being formed now as part of the district's overall planning program. Also, he said, the bonds must be approved before June 6 to avoid the effects of the Jarvis-Gann Initiative. which if aimed at limiting property tan- lion in California. I',... Page A l DOCTOR •.• The baby's mother has sued Waddill for $17 million in damages in a lawsuit which ac- cuses him or misrepresenting the state of her pregnancy. The prosecution claims that the baby was 31 weeks from con. ception when it was aborted. Waddill has testified that the in- fant was 22 weeks from concep-tion. Waddill stressed throughout a Ion~ day on the wilness stand that the b.iby he allegedly murdered on March 2, 1977, never had life. "lt was pale and cold and life· less," he testified. "I coutdn•t find a pulse, I couldn't detect a heart beat and I certainly didn't Sec 1l breathing .. Waddill said the onlv move- ment h<' could detect m the baby W<'re several short gasps. "But that was agonal gasping, the evidence of death and not life," he said Cornel1sen and hospital nurses have testified that the baby girl delivered by Miss Weaver cned when 1t was expelled from the womb and gave evidence of life as 1t was being rushed lo the nursery. Registered nurse JoAnn Grif. filh testified that the baby had a clearly discernible heart beat and was improving its labored breathing when Waddill hailed her resuscitation efforts and pushed her out of the nurs('ry. Sears Warns: Beetles Bug Bunny Basket,s CHICAGO CAP> -Up to 100.000 Easter baskets were re-- railed by Sears, Roebuck and Co today because they may con- l.11n beetles Th<'re 1s believed to be no health hazard, Scars said, but lhl' wrapped baskets should be returned to the nearest Sears store. The bac;kcts, sold in all parts of th<' country. may contain an insert known as powder·post bc<'llc>s, said Gar Ingraham, vice pr<'sidcnt of S£'ars retail s:i lc.'s I It• said thl' beetles. which thrive on bamboo <1nd other fibrous materials, have been found in the weave of some bam· hllo bnc;kcts. "While the Easter merchan· disc •~ wrapf>('d and not believed to be contammated, we simply do nol want to take any chances, so we are asking our customers to return all Easter baskets purchased from Sears," In· graham added. The baskets range in price from S2 99 to $39 99 l',....P~A1 COUNCIL ••• menl area where they would eod In cul.de-sacs. Councilmen said they would like to see a Sp<'eiflc develop- menl plan to see how the street exlensions would fit ln with ex· isling single·f amily homes. ~Theft Probed SAN DTF.GO CAP> -N1tvy or· flcial11 !'a)' an investigation is conUnulng lnto th~ lheft over a, four·month period or C0(81ne and tranquilizer pills from the pharmacy at the Naval Hospital In Balboa Park. ) A~WI...,.. .. HARVEY THE ATTACK RABBIT IN HEALTHIER DAYS Vicious Bunny Loses Fight With Ear Infection 'Harvey' Gone • Attack Rabbit Loses Battle NEW YOHK <Al» Harvey. the notorious atta('k rab· bit, fought his last battle .ind died two days before he • was lo have appeared m a tampaign against Easter bunny abuse H1rru.C'l( an Eastl'r bunny turned year· round bull). Harvey d11>d Saturday morning after a brier lllne!ts. Ht' was three years old and a celebnty of some note "They arc not the ~tronge::.t animals when 1t comes to being sick." rt>markt!d Caroline Thompson, director of special projects or the lol·al Amencan Sodety for th<: Prevention of Cruelty to Ammals "I JUSt think it's m<'red1 ble that he p1('kt.>d Easter tu kick off .. SHE Si\11> Tll,\T TUE ASPCA had hosp1tahied Harvey for treatment of an ear mfecl1on and that he ap parently was responding to antib1oltcs But the infection got the Ix-st of him and llarvey died in what for a rabbit 1s middle agt.> llarvev turned h<•tl'ful . '>he sdld. because of abuse at the hands ·or a fom11\ \\ohos<.• Easter rabbit he became. At his death. he still hit anvone who came close. although ht: was beginning to mellow lie snubbed other rabbits. male and ft•male J\ncl he <'a me to symbolize the ASPCA 's ap peals against <tn1mal abuse "lie was a gr<.·a t cduc:at1onal tool for u:,, ·· :,aid the ASPCA, wh1C'h onC'<.' qu1pp('d that Harvey would have made a great wat('h rahb1t llE MADE A NATIONAL. tour last fall T·sh1rts bear mg a hkcncss of the 4 1 H><>und bJa('k ·and-white creature raised thousands nf dollaro., for the ASPCA There is even a TV spel·wl in the works on 1 larve~ At mid day Monda} flan e~ was to have starred rn a m1d·Manhattan proJ:ram on animal abuse geared to Easter Instead. at ubout that time Harvey was on his wuy to bis cremation along with other animals who died dt the ASPCA over the weekend But the show must go on. so llenry the Hare said to look lake llarve\ .ind have an equalJy nasty disposition heroicall y hoppNI into thl' breach and made the ap pcaran('<.' in llan•·y·s place 13. 7 Percent Rise. Travelers lµcrease At County Airport The numlwr of air travelers using Orange County Airport in the first two months of 1978 in creased 13 7 pcr('cnl oHr th1· same period m 1977 When the General Service~ Agency (GS1\) airport statistical report I!> translated to numbers. 1t means 330,033 travelers either arrived or departed from thl· airport 1n lanuar' <ind February A year earlier. the number of passengeri; who used the airport during the two-month period was 290,346 Because air carriers operating rrom the airport are, in effect, • ~imited in the number of flights ·they are allowed to operate, the passenger gain or 13. 7 percent came with only a 1 8 percent in- crease in air carrier arrivals and departures Bad flying weather during January and February limited lbe number or general aviation t) Jet]oim Stork Club LAS VEGAS (AP> When Western Airlines rllaht 567 left for Los Anfeles, there were 83 passen gers on board When it. returned to Las Veaas a few minutes later, there were 84. T he newest arrival. a seven -pound girl, was born tn the galley section or the Boeing 737 shortly after it left McCarran In t.ernatlonnl AirPort Mon day. Two doctor• •board • aaaist.edlh d livery T he mother. Mn. Talal Shaibl. and daupter were reported dotnl well . • or hghl plane operauons at the airport, according to the GSA re port. It showed the number of general aviation flights for thl' two-month period dropped 13 per('ent from the 1977 level And the number of military aircraft that landed and depart t>d from Orange County Airport in the first two months or t97H was down Tbe GSA report 1ndt('ated there were only 58 military flight operations at the airport 1n January and February of '78 while the number was 150 in 1977 But when measured in terms of tons shipped, air cargo opera- tions gained dramatically in 1978, a pick up of 25 percent over 1977. GSA '!I figures show that 435 tons of air cargo was shipped from the airport in the first two months 0£ '78 as opposed t.o 348 tons in the same period in 1977 Pasadena Fires Schools Chief PASADENA (AP> -By a 3-2 vote, the Pasadena Unified School District Board of Educa- tion fired Roman Corllnes as superintendent of schools Mon· day, citing "irreconcilable dlf· ferences." Cortines, who drew applause from hundreds in the audience, was fired after he refused RUP. port for two posts the board wants to create, an assistant superintendent and an om budaman. B)' another split vote, • board majorlty ot Richard Vetterll, Henry Myers and Jerome Meier approved purcb.U• oi the n1DO montba remalnlnl on Cortlncs • contract at an undetermined cost. Tu.day, Mat1:h 21. 1978 DAIL V PILOT 1t :J I 1971 Korea Tie Viewed t I Jolm Mitchell Denies Seeing Payoff Memo • WASHINGTON <AP> -ff()\.We anvestigatora released letters to.- day from tbe FBI teWn' two Nixon admlnistrallon officials in 1971 that aides to South Korean President Park Chun1 Hee con- tributed hundreds of lhuusanda of dollars to tho Democratic Par- ty and that Tongsun Park made payments to a congressman u.n der Seoul's direction. But former Attorney General John N. MitcheU testified today that he never saw the 1971 FBI memo telling him and Henry A. Kissinger about the alleged ac- tivities Mit('hell said ht: did see another FBI memo quoting U.S. mtelligence as saying that aides to former House Speaker Carl Albert and former Rep . Cornehus E. Gallagher, D-N.J., "are connected with the Korean Central Intelligence Agency." "I'm certain 1 would" re member seeing the letter, partly because of the reference to Korean donations to the Oemocralic Party, Mitchell lold a House intcroaliooal relatio~ sub('omm1llee investigating al leged Korean attempts to buy in flucnce with Congress "There 1s a reference to 11 president," Mitchell said. 'There's a referen('e to a con- gres::.man bemg bought off. l'm sure I would remember 1l. Before Mitchell testified, the s ubcommittee released FB1 memos lo Mitchell and Kiss- inger, mcludmg a detailed one !'lated Nov. 24. 1971 OC Florist Mr. Macres, 89, Dies llarry Macre::.. known as Mr l''lowcr Show in Orange County for more than three decades, is dead atlheageof89 The Santa Ana businessman's I am aly operated florist shops in Santa Ana and Laguna Beach. and his floral arrangements had ht'en the• centerpiece of the Orange County Fair since the late t94tr.. Mr Maae~ was known as Mr Flower Show for his manage ment of the floriculture building at the Orange County h1r grounds for many years. He was stlll active in the bw.1 ness. which includes a shop at 190 South Coast Highway in Laguna Beach, up until the time of his death Saturday. Mr. Macres moved to Orange County in 1931 opening his first nursery and florist shop m Santa Ana At one time the florist operated five flower shops in the county Ile as survived by his wife Jo; sons Harry of Laguna Beach, Al and David of Santa Ana and James of Reno. Mr. Macres is also survived l>y daughter. Gena Fishcle of Lake Arrowhead; 15 grand('hildren and seven great grandchildren Services will be held Thursday at 10 a.m. at the Brown Colonial Chapel in Santa Ana. Burial will rollow an Melrose Abbe} M'emoraal Park HBManGets Prison Term For Violation II untangton Beach resident Irving Joseph Richards was or· dered Monday to ser\·e nine months In prison for a federal probation violation. Richards, 47, is currently rac- 1n g bookmaking c harges in Orange County Superior Court and fraud charges in Los Angeles Federal Court. Federal Judge Warren J Jo~erguson ordered Richards to serve nme months in a peruten- taary for an unauthorized trip to Mexico last year in violation of probation requirements. Richards was serving a five- /year probation period stemming from a guilty plea be entered in 1972 oo one count of failure t.o file an income tax return, said U.S. Assistant Attorney Eric Dobberteeo. Richards was ordered to begin servi"l& his nine-month sentence for probation revocation on March 71 Pope Improving VATICAN CITY (AP) -Pope Paul VI "ls gradually improvinc and has no fever" today after a waek of Ute nu, the Vatican an- nounctd Jt aaid it was hoped the 80•year-otd pQnUf( cowd preside t Euter Sunday Maas. Tho lll· nes1 ba1 for ced the popo to cancel mo1t of hllt Easter Week 1cttvlUe1. w A~ W'"""'"9 FORMER ATTORNEY GENERAL MITCHELL TE~IFIES 'Never Saw' FBI Memo on South Korean Pre•ldent K1ssmgcr, who at lhe tame wa!> head of the National Security Council under President Nixon. has agreed to testify later, sa1r1 s ubcommittee Chairman Donald Fraser, D-Minn. Mitchell was Nixon's first at lornev general and later became director of hia 1972 re·elecUon camp81&Jl. lie was convicted of criminal char1ea ln Ute Watergate cover-up and is on furlough Crom prison Mitchell said be went to Spea.ker Albert's office and t.Gld him of the memo regarding tbe uide~ Suzi Park Thompson. He said Albert replied Uµlt Mrs. Thomson was a fine you.pg lady who had been educated in the United States and that the tipeaker ''didn't see any prob- lem." The subcommittee was told last week that the second con gressional aide was Kim Kwang. who was an aide to Gallagher. But Mitchell said he did not consult with Gallagher because Gallagher was then under in- vestigation, presumably for a local pollltcal rund violation for which be was later sent to jail. A third memo to Mitchell and Kissinger quoted U.S. in- telliaence as saying a con- gressman bad asked President Park for a campaign contribu- tion and t.o make Toogsun Park South Korea's exclusive U.S. rice dealer. Mitchell said he also did nol see that memo and said his in· llials on it were put there by someone else. Mitchell was asked whether be had ever gotten any information o( any other congressman being involved in Korean · influence- buying during the time he was attorney general. He replied that he did not. By Fiseal 1983 Youth Held $14.6 Million Eyed In Train As Transit Deficit 'l!'?!!!~'R.~~~ were delayed nearly two hour.. Directors ol the Orange Coun- ty Transit District have ap· proved a five-year financial plan that forecasts the piling up or $14.6 million operating deficits by 1983 But none of the directors was endorsing deficit spending or, for that matter. planning for the spending reversals forecast in the five-year plan For one thing, all but the hs cal year 1983 def1c1t or $6 5 million is covered by a cash re serve fund already earmarked to cover $8. l million or the pro Jected five.year deficit And before voling 4-1 approval of the financial plan. OCTD's directors ordered district of ficials to report back to them with a plan ehminatmg the pro- Jected deficits Moreover, Director Al Holllnden said. "We as a board Brea Driver Dies in Crash A 37-year-old Brea man was killed Monday afternoon when his car went out of control on the Garden Grove Freeway and rolled over across all three lanes of traffic, California Highway Patrolmen said today Moises Sanchez Serna. of 124 S. Flower Ave., was pronounced dead on arrival at UCI Medical Center after the 4 ·is p m. crash. officers said wan never let thl!> • def1c1t spend mg) happen. .. This is simply a plan based on proje.cted levels or operation and anticipated revenue. It's not a budget and I think use of the term defie1t 1s a misnomer here" But Director Phil Anthony "'asn 't buying that version of the• f1ve-vear financial plan ·witb the tremendous rl'· sources of the district 1 can't see "'by we can't come up wi\h • plan that will get us out or these deficits," Anthony said "We should delete th1i. plan 1 from a new five.year transit forecast> and admit we don't have an acceptable fmanc1al plan." Anthony said before he cast the lone dissenting vote The five-year financial plan forecasts a rise in OCTD capital and operating spending from its current $50.3 million annual level to $89.9 million by fiscal vear 1983. And wbtle the bottom line pro 1ection on the '83 forecast is a so called $6.5 million defi('1t. the plan projects a fare boost from the present 25-cenl basic fare to 40 cents by then Not far from view a::. OCTD ., directors discussed the next five years' financial plan was the spectre of changing transit grant programs and the possible impact or adoption of the Jarvi!. property tax reform initiative Ir/\ /~ QUIKSILVER BOARDSHORTS Monday while members of the county sheriff's bomb squad de· termined that a suitcase left on the tracks near Capistrano Heach wasn't a bomb. Deputies held a 17 ·year-old West Covina youth from about 2 I' m . to 4 p.m . while the squad worked on the suitcase. which was filled with wires. batteries, lights and a tape recorder. The boy, who has a history or mental problems, eventually was re· leased lo his parents, deputies said A sheriff's spokesman satd a witness saw the boy place the s uitcase on Santa Fe tracks near the Beach Cities offramp or the San Diego Freeway. The witness contacted a Doheny State Beach ranger who held the youth until deputies arrived. Delayed dunng the anvesllga- t1on were a southbound freight and a northbound passenger tram. deputies said The youth's parents, who were fishing at Doheny, told deputiel' the boy had placed similar paC'kagcs on tracks in the past to recorr1 the passage of trains. Blacks T ake O a th SALISBURY. Rhodesia <AP• Three black moderate leaders "'l're sworn in today to Join Prime Minister Ian Smith at tht• head or the trans1llonal govern ment to shepherd Rhodesia to bla('k rule by the end of thP )ear Thia Famoua Auatrallan Board Short glvea you three Important charectertatlca · QUALITY · RT ·FABRIC In great colors and selection. ....... w18 lrv11ll" Newr«t a.-... h -•r••••C.llrform4 rllOnl' 04? 70M _J ______ _ • A l DMlY .,.LOT Tueeoay, Mwcl'l 21, 11;78 NATION I WORLD Q) Banker, •oney Missing CASSOPOLIS, Mich <AP> - A wet'k aio. Kenneth Rudolph Snyder was a small-town banker respected for has church work. Today, he is the target of • na· lion wide search by the FBI wich~ Tom'-~~~~· MDJ"phine Sharing Traffic Woes RADIO FREE TRAFFIC: Reports just dispatched out of our County Seat in Santa Ana suggest that Orange Coun- ty 's pubhc bus line is about to go $6.S mlllion in the red. But al the same time, the bus brass are moving into a new enterprise They're going to try radio. Plca:;e do not, however, get too alarmed about the budget. The $6 S million deficit won't happen next year. This 1s a projection for over the next five years. Thus the Orange County Transit District wouldn't be that far into the hole until 1983. In addition, it should be noted that transit directors have ordered their administrators to figure out how to cut down :,o outgo is closer to income. So you can rest easy. Orange C<>unly Transit Chie/s Checking Traf /•c llt\\'JNG NOW SOLVED the budget problems, the bus line chiefs have decided to embark on this new enterprise <·.died radio The plan calls for equipping the pubHc buses with radio transmitters so they can ~port traffic conditions to 1•ount v radio stations every 10 minutes. Bus dnvers would 1 cla} the word. Tht.• bus brass figure that broadcasting radio traffic re- ports v. 111 cost the county district $19,300 a year. But in re- turn. lhcy announced with enthusiasm, the bus outfit would }.let S200,000 m free radio commercials. Gettsng something worth $200,000 for just $20,000 looks like a real deal. ON THE OTHER HAND, the plan might backfire. You can hear it now, as the weary bus driver reports in over l11s radio on latest traffic conditions: "Iii, there, all you weary, sweating commuters out there in traffic. This is your friendly Orange County Transit District driver on Bus 43. Too bad you're not riding in comfort with us. You could see this sight too. We're stuck on the San Diego Freeway. Been here for 48 minutes. "We've seen five crashes so far. Wow! There's another one now! "RIGHT NOW l'D GIVE my right arm for a cold beer. I've ~ot three bottles home in the refrig. If l don't get out or this traffic jam and home pretty soon, my bloody brother-in-law will drink all three of 'em. . . " Listcrung to aJJ this on his car r adio. the Jone com- muter vows never to get stuck on one of those buses. He pulls off out of traffic at the nearest tavern. "Gimme one tall beer," he says. ''I'm hidmg here un-til traffic clears up. "1\nd bartender, turn on the radio, will you? "I \\anta find out if that bus driver ever gels home " lone Woman Sails Around the World WARSi\W, Poland <AP> -Krystyna Chojnowska-Liskiewicz of Pohtnd has become the rirst woman lo sail around the world alone, rovering 28,696 miles in a 31-foot sloop in just. under two )care;, the Polish Yachting Association announced today. ll said she started in Las Palmas, the Canary Islands, on March 23, 1976 and closed the loop in the eastern AUantic Monday night aboard the "Mazurek," a six-ton sloop with a 15·horsepower auxiliary en~ine. The sloop was built by her husband. :\1rs Cho1no"ska Liskiewicz is some 1.800 miles from Las Palm.is anci hof>('s to reach that harbor in three or four weeks, the assoc1.1l&on quoted her as radioing. Snyder, 48, who vanished March 14 after telhn.a: colleaauei. he was going to visit a sick rel· alive in Chicago, was charged Monday with embezzling $425,000 from a businesswoman in this small southwestern Michigan town. The l''Bl said Snyder never went to Chicago. "IT'S A COMPLETE shock to most people around here," said Larry Bontrager. editor of the weekly Cassopolis Vigilant. But no one was more shocked than Snyder's m101ster "He's one o( my best friends," said Ralph Vanderwerf, pastor of the Bible Baptist Church in nearby Sumnerv!Ue "l could not have a h.igher commendation for any man than for Ken Snyder. I believe there's a big untold story.'' VANDE R WERF SAI D he thought that charges against ~nyder. a mortgage vice prc•si- dent at the Cassopolis branch of Michigan National Bank, v.erl' "grossly exaggerated." During the nine years that Snyder and his family have ~en mcm bers of the church, Snyder served as deacon . church treasurer, a Sunday school teacher and lay preacher. the minister said "It's a tremendous burden and blow to the family to have al legations made that in no way gibe with the man·s history.' VandNWerf said. fie said Snyder's wife and four children, who the banker left behind, were taking the charges hard THE CHARGES stem from the complaint of Levola Tillman. president of Smith I-foist Co. here, thJt Snyder took $425,000 from her by recording deposits m two false savings passbooks Th~ passbooks and SS0.000 to $60,000 in cash from her safe deposit box were missing Friday when ~trs. Tillman opened the box. Snyder had a key to that box, according to Terry D11Jon. an assistant U.S. Attorney in Grand Rapids Dillon said none of Mrs Till an 's deposits ever showed up in the bank's records. 2 Die, 5 Hurt As Artillery Shell Falls RILEY, Kan. <AP> -The 12-year-old youngster was proudly displaying his latest find Crom an exploration of the rolling Kansas farmland. The next moment the 18-inch artillery shell slipped from his hands. struck the floor and ex- ploded \\ith a force that turned a mobile home mto a fiery death trap for at least two people and inJured five others. Police declined to name the victims. "I WAS JUST sitting on the couch and heard a big ex- plos ion," said a woman who hved next to the mobile home. •·Everything started falling off the wall. I looked out the win- dow. It was just a matter of seconds " Federal and local officials to- day were still investigating the Monday afternoon explosion and fire at the Riley Mobile Home Park in this tiny village on the · north edgP of the Fort Riley Army 10stallat1on. Ohio Hit by Cold Front 1,000 Evacuated Along Flooding Platte T empe r a ture• sourl, wltll •bol.tt one·h•lf Inell of ••In, had the Ollly rf!IO<l.O pr~C!Pll•· lk>n euty today All>u'que AnthO••Qe All•nla B•lllmore 801\e Bos Ion llufl•IO Clllc•90 Ct,.clnn•tt Clevel•M 0.t Fl WU\ Denver Oelroll O..tulll F•lrN"U Het..-.. H-'ulu HollstOl'I K•"'' c11y HI le 70 JS •1 " 13 so SI Jt ., 0 •J lS •• ll SI ll 70 ,. ST 41 IO u ., ,. .. " ,. 11 11 10 H 4' IJ 11 1' •• '° ll ~It .JT .OT 1S .01 .. OS California Slcl•s o"r 5ou1,,.,,. C.•llornu1 wtll i.. < loudy llw°"911 w..,..,.Sday wilt> •ullertd _,, llhly In n>Ojf Woe· !Ions f~ Nel-t W.at,,.r Service .,,. dl<l..t COOi., temi-r•tur~ with 1"9 lllcift In OOwnlown Los Anoetes. w111c11 rHc"*d •f -•Y. droPPl"9 to '"" •-.os Etuw,,.,,., t>lqM .,.. ••1>t<l-.t In tr... lo,. '°' elonQ the coast -In tn- IOfmeCll•i. val~. In ,,,. m1<1~ to m•d so. In ... ........t•IM, ...., In ,,. .OS •ncl 10l 1n the des., ts. Ice Jonas Blamed This is JllSI nne of mJny ice jams on "\ l'brask<.1 rl\ crs gelling the blame for flood mg in the state. This one on the Platte fl1\'er near Fremont. in eastern ~ebrasku, is \\h<'rc the rin•r spilled o\·t·r its b;..rnks Monday ulong a 10·mile ~tretch. Anti-ERA Vote Vetoed Acting Governor Nixes 'This Slap at Women' FRANKFORT, Ky <AP> - Tv. o years ago, Lt. Gov Thelma Stov a II fought successfully to pn•\•ent Kentucky's Legislature from \\llhdrawmg the state's 1972 rallf1cat.Jon of the proposed Equal Rights Amendment. "Ho" is 1t going to look for Kentul·ky, \\ilh a woman heute· nant governor, to lakl' this slap at women''" Mrs Stovall asked then. TllJS YEAR. MRS. Stovall, an ardent advocate of women's rights could not prevent the General Assembly from approv- ing a resolution to rescind the ERA \'Ole. So, in her capacity as acting governor because Gov. Julian Carroll was out of the stale, she did the next best thing. She \'C'toed rt "Through a maze of the most dubious parltamentary maneuvers, the Legislature al- lowed it.self lo be used by the m1sgu1ded and plunge itself into action which I consider regretta- ble," Mrs. Stovall said in her Hto message Monday. THE 58-YEAR-OLD Mrs. Stovall came under immediate criticism £rom ERA opponents, "ho said they would challenge the veto in court That appears to be the only avenue open -the General Assembly adjourned Its 60-day session Saturday and will not meet again Ulltil 1980. A Frankfort attorney, Joseph Leary. said the state constitu- tion, in Section 89, "makes 1t crystal clear" that a legislative resolution can be vetoed by the governor or acting governor. Mrs. Stovall. who announced her c·a n did a c y for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination for 1979 by saying "I 'll run if I 'm alive," said she did not fear political backlash from ERA opponents. "I DON'T WANT to be gov- ernor if l can't stand u-p and do what is honest and true." ~e said. "The people of Kentucky know what they want 1n the gov- i?rnor's chair." The go\'ernor's chair is one of the few in v.hich Mrs. Stovall has not vet s.!l Begsnning 10 1949. she served three terms in the stale House. three terms as secretary of stale and two terms as s tale treasurer before hl·r election as lieutenant governor in 1975. She has never lo-">t a rnee for slate office "We have a Jot of laws pro tecting wom en's rights .. s tate laws." :,he once said ... But. . , wilhoul ERA, without that const1tnt1onal guarantt>e, those statues can be repealed just as easily as tht·y were passed. With ERA, they can't be repealed. We'll h~ne constitul1onal guarantee of pro- tection " MRS. STOVALL SAID Mon- day that she was "darn glad" that Carroll had left for a three- day vacation Saturday. Just as the Legislature closed Ride the BIG WAVE ••• Ski the Big Mountain Win an Air California ski vacation for two to Lake Tahoe .. ~ THE SOUTHLAND'S NEWEST RADIO STATION . at the crest of your FM radio dial • Fo•m••ly f>i AP X Fly to Tahoe's Ski Scene non-stop on Air California ... Stay ~wo nights at Lakeland Village, condominium living on the lake ... ~k1 H~ave~ly• Valley with lift tickets provided. Return home non-stop on Air California. ("Good Ontr-&ncMy""" ~~~ E.&"""*'I ALL FREE TO THE WINNER OF THE BIG WAVE/BIG MOUNTAIN CONTEST courtesy of K-WAVE 'r f 1 )STEREO =====~ Here's what you do to enter. K-WAVE would like to know where you hear us and to have your comments on our programming. So fill out the coupon below and mail it to K-WAVE. Must be postm.arked by Midnight, March 31 ... Winner to be announced Tuesday, April 4, 1978. &.•lV-f " .O' LIHle Rock 11 ST ·" ........ , ......... ...,. PlllJ~ 61 Sl Cocutal Weatfwr • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• t NTn. MY NAMt IN THIE CONTEST ••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••• LOSAftO<tl• •• ,7 .01 Ml•ml 1i 11 Mllw-M .. ,. MPl .. St P. ., 2' .OI Nesllvllle 11 SI Pffw()rl-T• 6t N...,YMll .. JT Ollla. Clly 1' '° Pllll ad' Piil• Sl Jt ,....,,1. " ., .,..., ,.... o.._., .............. ""'"'1'1\'-froCl•r II you Do) Itel ~""• ~" P•-h¥ ~ JO o m c.41 ""I''"' I oll\_V""'_,,w1111>e-~ s.. ...... v -8-indey " -do l'Ot ,..w ,-1..,. ~Jt tnoy t1y t • m O'tff ~,,..,, tO •"' -"d yoy, ~ w.u IM a.efiv4'·'"1 C~T ......... ~·~• t').•"'lft C<>U"'" "'-... j.4111 tf ~...,.,, ~•u"''"O'IY\ ~ #W'tWH"'""''" ..... lut r...-. 0•"""" ,. r '"' ,j ""'O •«", ~" J.411\ Citf\ '""O.. 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Surf Rqori NIHlll"ff<M 9"<11 ~ turlotee Wew" -lo lwe l•I wtltl MUl,,....11 '"''"· Ctnflll.,,s poor N.wHrl •••<II: w .... , .... , •• , Wllll M\rtllWHI -II. c.ncllllom - K·WAVE 2061 BUSINESS CENTER DRIVE SUITE 213. IRVINE CA 9?71 5 I rctetrv&d IC-WAVE 11 lhe lollow1ng loc111on· a '"my car a ti home CJ al work The reception was O oood a 1a1r D poor My comments on your programming arl.' I would like more __________ _ I would Ilka lets------------ 1 like K-WAVE aa II ls. 0 I like mualc tllles and arliats announced 0 YES 0 NO What la your age group? n 12·17 0 18-2.t Q 25-3'4 0 35-49 0 60 plU!l NAMr.---------------- STR£ET--------------- CITV·----------ZIP ___ _ p l CALIFORNIA '50,000Loss 6 Oil Tanks Hit by Fire ARVIN <AP) -Damage could reach $SOO 000 from an oll tank fire that roared out of control' for .five hours here, firefighters reported Loday. The blaze began in an oU pressure hose Monday afternoon and destroyed a truck and spread to six crude oil tanks at Buttes Resour~es Co. of Arvin, ---------a aubsutiary of Buttes Gas and OU Co. FLAMF.S WERE con· talned falrly quickly in five tanks but raged un- checked throughout the afternoon in the sixth. Each tank contalned 900 to 1,000 barrels of 011. the equivalent of 37,000 lo 42,000 gallons, Kern County Fire Capt. Phil Johnston said. move water and make it more fluid to ship, killed the engine on his firebox and began running for h e lp. Suddenly, the flames ignited, he said. engulfing his truck and a 500-gallon propane lank on bis trailer as well as spreading to the oil tanks. .............. Twice. firefi g hters h ad to retreat because the burn1ng oil boiled up v iolently a nd s pewed names as high as 400 feet into the air , Johnston said. Low water pressure forced firefighters to lay a t.pecial water pipe to th e high sch oo l a quarter mile away and pump water from a nearby irrigation ditch. GUNMAN SURRENDERS TO POLICE AFTER HOSTAGES ESCAPE Robert Foster, 27, la Wrestled to Ground In Rear of Bank NO ONE WAS injured although the faculty at nearby Arvin High School was evacuated as a precaution. Classes were out for Easter vacation. 111 San Francisco Gay Rights Bill Adopted SAN FRANCISCO <APJ San Francisco supervisors have adopted a gay rights ordinance. prohibiting disrrimmation based on sexual orien- tation in employment, housing and public accom· modations. Deputy City Allorny Donald J Garibaldi said "All this says is that gay people are okay " said Supervisor Gordon Lau after more than t~o hours ?f debate. :·n says, 'If gay people can do the Joh, h~re the.m; 1f they can pay the rent. rent to them. It affirms a basic right to be a human be mg ... DAILY PILOT Gunman Gives Uti J Hostages Freed; Death Wiah Denie •SANTA CLARA <AP> -HJs de- mands for a lethal dose of morphine unanswered and his hostages gone, a 24-year-old man s urrendered to police and ended a tense seven-hour s tandoff in a suburban bank. In custody today for investigation of kidnapping and false imprison- ment was an unemployed truck driver identified by police as Robert C. Foster. SHAKEN BUT SAFE were two bank employees -on e Foster 's estranged wife, Janie. 24, and Phylhs Matthews, 37, assistant manager at the Wells Fargo Banlt branch in a Santa Clara s hopping center. They had ducked out a side door Monday night shortly before Foster gave up, police said. LL Bernard Doleshel said a third woman. Valerie Kaufman, was found by officers hidden and un harmed in an upstairs room of the bank after Foster surrendered. He said the gunman was never aware lhe woman was there. POLICE SAID the episode beean when Foster walked into the bank brandishing a shotgun. He im mediately released most of t he cusk>mers and workers in the bank. •>ut forced his estranged wife and Mrs Matthews to remain. Scores of police and };'BI agents quickly surrounded the bank, cor- doned off the shopping center and set up a telephone negotiating base in an adJoining supermarket. THE TALL. THIN, bespectacled man first demanded enough morphine to kill h1m1oelf. and hat.fr warned he might come out shoolJ~ "to go out in a blaze," said Dolesh~. who along with another ortieer handled telephone negotiations with f'oster. ''He didn't care. He wanted to die,'' Dole~hel said. An hour after sundown. a sobbirv; 1''oster laid down hi s shotgun and walked out a back door where he was handcuffed. AS A POUCE CAR drove him past a huge cheering crowd of onlookers. Foster stuck out his tongue. Ooleshel said Foster fired 21 blasts from his shotgun during the siege. N'o one wat; tut "They were warning shots more than anything else," Doleshel sai4. "lie kept us alert every 15 to 2'> minutes by firing rounds to convioq? us he meant business " SOME 01'' TUE SHOTS crashed through a plate glass window al the front of the bank One struck a dental office about 50 yards from the banl. where pohce had set up a command post. Police said 1t appeared Foster may have been upset by a dispute over custody or his two sons, but they satd this had not been fully confirmed. .. lie threatened repeatedly to con\- m1t :.uicidc," t.aid Voleshel, addu'lg that Foster also made constadt threats lo kill his captives. ACTING ON POLICE instruction,, Mrs. Matthews escaped through a side door when Foster wasn't look · ing. Twenty minutes later, Mn. Foster cs<•aped the same way, The fire began after a hose under 150 pounds of pressure ruptured and spewed heated crude oil in the area. said Craig Reis of Bakersfield, an employee of Lemon's Dewaxing and Tank Heating Service Co. of Bakersfield. Doleshel said the acl!on Monday night makes San Francisco the -.-----------------------------------------------+- only city he knows of in the country with such a REIS, WHO WAS heating the 011 to re- law. IT IS ESTIMATE D that one in seven of San Francisco's 680.000 residents is homosexual The measure passed by a 10 1 vote. with Supervisor Dan White casting the dissenting ballot. HOP ON DOWN THE BUNNY TRAIL Straight to Fashion Island. And bring the kids. Because this Wednesday through Saturday Peter Rabbit Flopsy, Mopsy and even Farmer McGregor · are giving a special show for Easter. It's free. And following each performance. every child receives an Easter treat From Peter himself. SHOWTIMES: (STAGE COUllT' AMA) MARCH22·2S WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, SATURDAY 11&00, hJO, J:JO FRIDAY 11100, JsJO, 4aJO Come to Fashion Island. After all. Easter's on its way. I • Before you grab a hot bamain, consider tliese chilling facts. Maybe you've noticed all the refrigerator-freezer "bargains" in the ads lately. And if you're in the market for a new one, maybe you're tempted But because1t's such a big purchase, here's something you shou1d know before you buy. What you pay for the refrig· erator-freezer in the beginning is only part of the story. You also have to figure what it's going to cost to run over i~ lifetime. <Remember. iCs the one applianet> that works around the clock.) If it doesn't operate efficiently, it can waste energy and cost you hundreds of dollars extra in electric bills over the years you use il As much or more than what you originally paid for it! That's why we developed Price Plus. It's a method for rating brands and models on their price, plus cost of operation. Price Plus is explained in a booklet called "Cold Facts'.' It's yours for the asking. Just fill out and mail the coupon. s;CE Southern C.lilornlll Edison ·----------· I Southern Cahfomia Ed14'llfl I "Oild FRd8" I P. 0. Box AOO I R~mrlld, C1\ lll7i0 I Plt'll~ .-.end me.' "l,•ld Facts:· I I ?\;'"~ __ _ I I Addrc'~ I Make every kilowatt count I Qty State __ Zlp --1 Tele~------------ • ""'fQu91 ~ f"'GIOW.i ----------• Orange Coast Oaity Pllot ig-time Politics · hallenges Voters • ., Daily Pilot. readers who do not keep too close a watch 9n the Orange County political scene may heve been surprised and not a little chagrined to read reporter Gary Gr~nville!s Sunday feature on political comultant& Bill Butcher and Arnold Forde. Surprised to learn that a county supervisor's seat lbat was won with a $13,000 campaign as recently as 1968, cost more than $200,000 by 1972, thanks largely to the campaigning tactics of Butcher and Forde. Chagrined to learn the campaigners' philosophy; .. This is a rough, tough business." And a client's comment. "The name of the game is winning." No doubt this has always applied to big·tlme politics. And no doubt Orange County's phenomenal growth has inevitably pushed its politics into the big-llme category. But it's a little distressing to learn that the pair can boast of 38 wins and only four losses in campaigns they have directed. And that no county supervisor candidate s\nce 1968 has won election without their campaign services. Those serYices a r e what brought local politics into the big-time -computerized mailings, sophisticated voter polls, precinct analy~es. snazzy <and expensive> brochures, skillful. if not quite illegal, bending of facts. No doubt about it, Butcher and Forde know their rough tough business and they know how to dazzle the voters. So one can hardly blame would-be office holders for going all out to round up the cash it takes to follow their advice. What's a voter to do? Not much, really, except perhaps be a little more suspicious of all this razzle dazzle campaigning. And, even if it takes a bit of effort, try to get out for a first-hand look at the candidates when opportunity arises. They could be filled with all the virtues Bill and Arnie attribute to them -but you shouldn't have to take their word as gospel. Worth Re1nemhering Two Orange County sports, champions lost out over lh1s last weekend but will long be remembered for the thrills they have given local fans. Cal State Fullerton's mighty Titan basketball team entered the !'lCAA western regional championships so unheralded that wags were calling them ''Cal State Who?" or "Cal State, Disneyland." Fullerton promptly knocked off heavily favored New !\t exico and then the University of San Francisco. The Titans then gave ninth-ranked Arkansas all tbe Razorbacks could handle before losing by three point.6 . Never again will the Titan basketball team labor in obscurity. Deservedly so. Fullerton is to be congratulated for a spectacular season. Power boat racer Betty Cook of Newport Beach entered Saturday's eighth annual Bushmills Grand Prix off our shoreline as the sentimental favorite of this region. She was the hometown heroine and defendine ch:.impion. It was clisappointmg both for her and the rans "•hen he r engine blew up in the early going. A beautiful driving JOb b>' Joey Ippolito of New Jers~y gave him the victory. And despite a few difficulties with the spectator fleet. the Bush mills race was another great success. So to Cal State Fullerton and Betty Cook, we say better luck next time. We know you'll be·back. Old-fashioned Justice One of the more frustrating aspects of juvenile 'andalism is the fact that, while the young culprit may be duly processed through the juvenile law system , the victim remains stuck with the repair job. Beginning next month. juveniles 1n Costa Mesa will be expected to make direct restitution by working to pay for &tolen goods or repair damage. The Restitution Program, based on dne that has been successful in Seattle, will be directed by an existing youth services program. handling direct referrals from the Costa Mesa Police Department. The young off enders will be assigned either to repair damage or to work at an assigned job until enough money has been earned to replace a stolen or broken item. ll 's hardly a new idea. ln less sophisticated days, families made very sure their children made swift amends for damage they caused to others' property. deliberately or accidentially. And the lesson was likely to be well remembered. There's no reason to assume it would be less effective with today's juvenile mischief-makers. • Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Oatly Piiot. Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and ar11sts. Reader comment 1s invited. Address The Oally Pilot. P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (71'4) 6-42·4321 Boyd I Divorce Cake You've heard of a wedding cake, but what about a divorce cake? Such there's been. In Plymouth, Eniland, a divorcing couple com- missioned a local baker to rnake one. It started out round, but was cut in half with the halves placed back Dear Gloomy Gua to back. One half was iced in pink, tbe other in blue. Was none other than the impresario Mike Todd wbo coioed the word "cameo" c.o mean brief a~a:rance by a star in a fillD. Hla "Around the World in IO Daya" had 42 cameos. The Jaw ol old Venictt re-~ulred every inCJ"Chant who went to the Or\ent to brin1 back an art QbJtet (or St. Mark 'a Cathedral U.ue. Can YoU namt the tbtee Latin Atnerica.n C001tlrl•• tbat doa't uH Sp•nl1b u • their olfJctal lan1ua1t? Braau, Of course, with lta ortu ... Tb'en tbere'a n11t1b In Ouy1•1. An4 French ht Ral.U. Robert N. W-.ct/Publl!lher T~. Matr:h ZI. 1978 &.rbara Krelblth/Edltotl&I P~ Editor -Jack Andenon Bakke Bombshell • ent WASHING TON -OnQ morn. Inc 1000, the Justtces of the SuJ>reme Court wlH enter through crlrnson drapes and drop a l,al bom~bell. Their d~dtfon n the momentous Bakke "revene dJ1crimination" case ls lmmlnent. Whichever way it goes. the rullne Will have the greatest lm· pact on U.S. race relations si nce the landmark school de- seeregalion opinion or 1954. Specifical- ly. tbe issue is whether a 37-year-oid white engineer, Al- lan Bakke, was unconstitu- tionally denied admission to the University or California Medical School at Davis. But in less than five years, tbJs simple issue has divided civil r1ghls forces in lhh country and has threatened the upward movement of blacks m . Paul Harvey American 10eiety. The hi&h court, can decide the Bakke case on narrow or broJd erounds. The Qarrow irounds would confine the fl.ndln1 to a limited sectlon of tbe 1164 ClvU Riihts Act, which prohlblta a number ot specific d11crimln1t· lion practices. Or the tribunal could dee>de more sw~pfnflY that ·•reverse discrimination • h; constitutional or. conversely. that the quota system is unconstitutional. The latter would prohibit schools and employer• from giving priority to non-whilH. ALREADY, alarm is spreading through the Carter administra- tion over the possible reverbera· lions should Bakke win hls case. According to confidential Cabinet minutes, Attorney General Griffin Bell bas "sent a letter lo all Cabinet members re· questing that, in light of the im- pending Bakke decision, the J U!>lice Department undertake an examination of all existing affirmative action program:, throuahout the government " This means simply that the Justice Department is preparing lo end all Cavorltl~m for mlnor\~ lf the Supreme <.;out\ 11houl~ so decree. For among government officials, "af· · firmative action" is shorthand for programa designed to extend extra tu,lp to blacks and other mlnorit,fe:t. The theory is that past raclsm bas short·chanced the non.whites and. therefore, that they couldn't compete with "hitea without special con- sideration. BELL'S private letter also sug gei;ted that il Bakke wins. at least an additional 26 rever:,e dis- crimination suits are already on lap. These sprang from a Public Works Act last year, which re- quires 10 perc1:nt of a $4 billion federal pro~ram to be earmarked Corm lnority belp • Contractor a!>sociatlons, in particular. have protested the minority clause. A Bakke vic- tory would open the flood gates to hundreds of other challenges Last September, the Jusl.lce Department filed an 88-pagt: brieC with the court, supporting special programs to belp minorities overcome the ad versities or past discrimination lt stopped short, however, of en dors ing quotas lo achieve equality. The justkes have signaled they may dectde the case on nar row grounds. Solicitor General Wade H. McCree Jr , for the government , and former Watergate special prosecutor Archibald Cox. for the school. have indicated they feel their chances would be better 1r the court would take the broad con- stitutional avenue It i!> belie\ ed that the Justices have already taken an informal ::.lraw vote on their decision. and the mileslont• opinion is already being dra!tu<l The court may split every which way on the question Few ob!>ervers believe the ruling \\Ill be unanimous as 1t was on the monumental school desegregatson da) GRIM PREDICTJON: The Central lnklhgcnc.: Agency has complied some grim. secret pro Jections on future 011 use in the United States. The CIA estimates that Americans will be burning •·as much as 38 m1H1on barrels per day" by the m1d·l980s. Ttlis b mo~e than double the daily con sumpt1on of 18 4 m1lhon barreb in 1977 Of th1!> vora<:1ous oil intake. a disturbmg 8. 7 mil hon barrels are drawn from overseas 011 fields. Tb1s heavy dependence on overseas oil has made the United Slates dangerously vulnerable President Carter wa::. skep· tical about the CIA estimates He had ::.ccn some e\'ldence, he commented. ·to contradict the CIA fi gures " Buth(' agreed that Americans must learn somehO\\ to break the 011 habit Footnote Aecordrng to the projections. Americans are e'\· pected to burn a record 19.3 million barrels of otl every day in 1978. 011 imports are expeclC'd . to dip slightly because of the s welling now of oil from Alaska But it looks as 1f Alaskan oil will merely hold down lhl' inexorablt> rise of petroleum imports for ht tie more than om.• year 'Sensible Blacks' Set Us an Example You know it's sensible blacks who are going, to rescue us from some or OW' own silliness. Our coveru~ never really fool anybody. The husband who suddenly brings home both flowers and candy .... The parent who tries to make up to the children h e h a s Mglected by showerin& them with gifts .... The wives are not de· celved, nor are the children. Nor the black Americans -so long neglected -on whom we have sou1bt to shower more goodies than are good for them. But fortunately for us all, sensible blacks are now bailing us out of our over·solicitousness. The late Gen. Chappie James C1lme up through the ranks when Art Hoppe A1r Force blacks and white!> slept In separate tents. But when he retired recently as a four-star general, he ap- plaud e 4 the now checkerboarded ranks of our professional military, said there is less dlscrtminaUon in uniform than anywhere, urged blacks and whiles to slop looking back and look forward instead. He promised lo continue to "work his tail off." as he put it, to elect men of whatever color who will keep our country militarily strong. BLACK leader Jesse Jackson recognizing that deference to black school-agers had misled them lo expect something for nothing is deemphasizing the "responsibilities" of citizenship. He says the doors to op· portunity have been knocked open, but young punks and young drunks and young girls prematurely pregnant are un- prepared or unwllling to take ad· vantage of their new op- pOl'tunities HE URGES fellow blacks to exercise seJJ-disc1pline.. "Nobody," he says, "Is going to save us from us but us!·• Opposition to nonsensical crosstown busing of schoolchildren comes now most- ly from black parents. In Joliet, lJJ., parents are re- s is ting plans to bus their children lo white schools. and are sending them mstead to a "Freedom School" tn the k>caJ Mt. Zion Baptist Church. Similarly, in Chicago a Citywide Black Education Com- mittee announces It.self in open opposition to paying this price for school in"tegration. Dr. Bobby Wright, spokesman for the group, is seekine an in- junction to end crosstown bus- ing. Wright says, "There is no evidence to demonstrate that desegregation has had aoy pos1t1ve effc<"ts on the quality of public school education " He says, "Black children and black parenL~ must not be re- quired to !>Ubject themselves to this further danger and further damage to the black psyche .. WREN CllJCAGO'S sens1t1H' Marquette Park area erupted in race-related violence. it "a:, responsible blacks who or gan1zed a CB radio patrol or the troubled streets urging both sides to "cool 1t " The early impatience of black Americans for a fair share of their inheritance motivated guill-rtdden whites to try to make of our melting pot ~ pressure cooker Now it's anxious whites who are uncomfortably uptight and sensibJe blacks "ho are settmi:?" the better example Story of Another Typical Ainerican Celebrity For no good reason last week. a young woman named Cheryl Tiees appeared on the cover or Ttme and in a ll"O-P&ae spread in Newsweek. H~e. clearly, was America's newest celebrity. How had she done it? As she approached her 30th Mrthday last Sep· tember, the CODf.lded to N•wrweek. the •decided to develop a ~allty.'' r. la en- taJlid hlrln1 ~ a pltbllc rela-~ Uon1 firm. , ttrattlbt •• a . prepotal tor a boo1t on health and beauty." having post.n made, ••roa4ln' mo\fie and televlllon Kt'Spta, ' and 1oln1 to pattlet at Resin '• and Studio M. In no Ume, 1he 1aid, sbe w ranked fourth amoni •0111.m the celebrity tennb clrcul , Wbll Mlu '11eo · food. old-1 .. btoned Aislorican ~·~ad· JO •boUld ve IQ tasplnUCG to us I, 1Mr II bound to brinl a frown Of concern to OM pretty brow of Kimberley Kraus. YOU REMEMBER Kim. She was last year's newest celebrity. Hers, too, was just another typical American celebrlly story. Kim was working behind the counter of Ernie's Taco Parlor on 49tb street in mid-Manhattan stuffing burritos when she was spotted by Celebrity Mogul Al Kagel. "Tell m e all about yourtelf, kid," said Kager. ··weu1 JOllY. I'm JUJt a s~t inoocent 1oung thlna, Mr. "' Kagel," 1be a.aid. "And my name's Kim Kraus." "' ''Tbet won't do in tile celeb bu1tne1•, Ida. We 'll have to. cban1e1t." 11My name?'' "No, kid. Your porsoaatity." IT WAS aruellng 'tlfOrk, but k1m's drlvlnc amblUon earned btr tbrougb. Somehow, under Ka eel'• drivln1 lash, 1he manaaed to read the Ire Reader'a Digest o•aop1l1 of Crtmc arid PsmWtmnl, p~ wrlUnc a book on the m tf. rective methods of fumi,gattng basement storerooms, publish a portfolio of 200,000 bumper strips which said, "Kim's in the Swim!" and master the dJCficult four-ten split which skyrocketed her to the number three seed in the Trent.on, N.J., Celebrity Bowling Tourna- ment. In no time, she was given the coveted table by tM rest room at Elaine's, where all the other celebrity guests see you sooner or later. Her big chance catne when Bitsy Lee Bello, 1976's newest cele rlty, broke her tee whlh re- hearsing for ABC's Celebrity Mah·jongg Conte1t. kim sot the a pot. While the lbow bombed. Variety llneJed KJm out u hav- lne .. ,tar quaUty." Her career was made. SOON she w .. matln1 $'500t000 a year bdonlDJ com- puter•. e.i>i>e•r ' at pollt1cal conventions aod makin1 l\Mt •hotl on pa.Ml 1howt where IM was a11ted 1ucb que1tlon1 u .. Wbat do you think of t.be Ethlopla·Somalta conflict!" ("l think they ou"'t to mako up!">: r • "What do you think oC racial strife m South Africa"" I "I think they ought to make up!·· 1. and "What do you think about Joe and Angehna Ahoto'>" (' I think he ought Lo be bolled in Oil I") Kim has always said she didn't want to be a celebrity forever. "It's a lol of grief and hard work and heartaches." she says ... Some day I'd just like to settle down with a nice celebritv husband add raise a bunch of or dinary celebrity kids · · But now that Cheryl Tiegs ha~ come alon1. friends say lhat Kim on.en cries herself to sleep. "The ceoleb bii 1s a tough ea me," says cynical Al Kagel "For every shining s1ar or Celebrity Battle of the Sexes. there's a thousand broken dreams." Perhaps. Rut 1t 1s younft women like Ktm, Cheryl and. ye1, even Farrah Fawcett Me~rs who have proved that •nY lltUe child In this wonderful land of ours can overcome such handicaps as lack of wealth. 1klll1 ot t.aJent to achieve The Gr.at American Dream Cele brft.ybood .. .. I NATIONAL I AT YOUR SERVICE QUEENIE By Phil lnterlondi WASIIlNGTON <AP> -Tune up th~t ~ole-jarred jalopy. Osi tbe horizon tbr s prine is ro.oonshlne·cnaklnl in SotJth Carolina, b1lthtub racing ih Kansas. chicken-flying in Ohio and a pirate takeover in Louisiana. In a 19-page brochure. the U.S. Travel Service lists 9S .May festivals in 34 states and one territory lo help us forget the Infamous winter of 1978. Along the line, there's something for everybody. FOR GOOD CLEAN sport, there's the bathtub race down the Arkansas River at Wlcbita, Kan. Put a ring around the Wich1tennial River Festival. Also listed is street scrubbing at Tulip Time m Holland, Mich. try shad-catching a~ Windsor, Conn qld-t1me fi4dlh'lC a( endrick. Ohio, angling for \,Jgeed fis h al Canton. Okla.; cake-baking at Floriss ant, Mo . anq a lei-making and queen contest ut JlonoluJ.u. Men, save tbat winter facial foluuJe Jl could nab the "best beard" prize al ' Helldorado Days in Lu Vegas, Nev There's aJso a beauty contest for the ladies, and a kanaaroo co1.u't. The e.nt&.re town lakes pan in this (iesia. Poultry fans should note Rooster Day at Broken Arrow, Okla., and the In ternational Chicken Flying Meet at Rto Grande, Ohio. Chicken fiylng has grown in the U.S. and abroad since this event began in JS'T!, saxs the agency. DURING CONTRABAND Days, in Lake Charles, La., a battalion of pirate buccaneers invades the city and holds officials captive. Also, plenty of C1.,Jun music ~ food, atnd other fun-lov10~ events~ , · ... 1"t?sl1\ al of Hose!> the l'anol' race down the Susquehannit .Ri ve r fr o m <'oo~rst<uYD. N Y , to HIWlb~~tt ... N. Y , or sailboat r!cd al Cont.rAbMrid! Ouys BEWA.ltE, f<'ESTIVAL·hoppers with 1:1 weight probl~m. of the sweet rolls filled with fruit and olher dehghts al Pragu~ Okla., and the baklava,Jeta cheese. and stuffed grape leaves al the Greek Sprina Fesh val al Charleston, S C Also. the eullnary dehghts at the Hattan Femvcil m McAlester, Okla. and the free strawberries and ice cream at the So·aw~ry Festinl i.n Sltlwell, Okla. Cultural c\ ents .rnclude the Bttch Mus,<)1 Fe5tival at Bethlehe'!l1 Pa . the Atli.nta Arts Festival. NOr~heast Region<1l Ballet Festival al Dov~. Oel .. the Fine Arts Fiesta iAt Wtlkes-Barre, Pa . and the renowned S[>Olela Fel>tival USA in Charleston, S.C. ta. DAILY PILOT A 7 Drug Rap t'I "l don 't see why you couldn't gel somt:body at the olllce to do lh1s. . " Winter cold will fade from memory at the Hell Hole Swamp Festival In Jamestown, SC. Attractions include moonshine-making, talent contests. horse games, snake show, a wild animal display -and the crowning Qf Miss Hell Hole Swamp. Dancmg? Choose from square, corn, klompen, Scottish highland, Greek folk, str eet and around·lhe-Maypole at various May fesuvals, country fairs and special days. "It's man and his tiny bullet-shaped boat against the rushing waters of the Swift River," says the description of the New England Kayak Championships al North CoQway, N.H.. "Exciting boating thrills!" Joins Panel Actress Linda Blatt;. l~. :)tar of "The &,· orctsl · has won a 30-da~ extension ,fp contest cxtraditlon.·Jp f lorida on charfQeS of possession or .,;i narcotic. She denied in ,1 Connectiq4t c.ourt of having CillY part rn an allc~ cocaine ring. Band-nae-doama•aDangn- DEAR PAT: I have several pairs of hand-me· down cotton-knit pajamas from an older chtld. They're still 1n good condition but they're not flame retardant. Is there a flame-retardant finish I can apply at home" G.E., Costa Mesa No, there's no practical way for you to make fabric flame retardaoL al home. To be effttUve, and durable, a IJame-retardant finish must be ap· plied by the manufacturer. Belter toss them. Refund Granted 011 Wat~rbed DEAR PAT· A $448 waterbed from Waterbed Warehouse in Fountain Valley was delivered to my son's home the day hefore he was killed in an automobile accident. The bed was never un packed. yet th~ :.ale:.man refused to take it back and gi\c us a refund~ Have we no recourse in this '1tuation·· VT . Newport Beach i\ YS contacted Barbar;i Meyer!\, the firm's office manager. She asked you to send her a letter oulllning the circumstances involved, and enclose copies or the sales receipt and your late son's obituary notice to establish the validlly of your re· rund request. Meyers pasi.ed on your request to company officf'r!>, and a full refund has ~ Is- sued. Len Than It Look•? DEAR PAT: Is there such a lb1ng as lull an- ~urance coverage for household items when they are moved? By full coverage, I mean replacement cost. It has been our experien<:e that the actual ' value coverage, which js sold as full value ln· ~urance, is really cost-less depredation. An item which cost $500 20 years ago wouJd cost auround Sl,500 to replace Yet, il is worth only about $175 to an insurance adJusler. M.R., Costa Mesa "10 personal property insurance, movini or homeowner's, provides for foU replacement coat. Most moving companies use a standard depreda· ti on pc-rcentage depending on the Item's age and durability. For example, upbols&.ered famJture bas a 10 percent per year of age depredatloa rate wltb a 75 percent maximum depreciation allowed. Less sub!ttaolial aluminum patio fam.itare bas a ts per· cent pc-r year depreciation ra&.e with a 91 percent. Um it. The depreciation rate must be applied to the replacement value of the damaged or lost item, not lo its price at the time of purchase. Standard depreciation rates and llmitaUoos are contained in a booklet, "Jolat Mllltary/ln· dustry Depreciation Guide." Reprints can be or· dered frorn: American Movers Conference, 1117 N. 19th St., Arlington, Va. 22?09. IRS'• Reach Tlaree \'ears DEAR. PAT: How many years does the IRS have to audjt a particular year's tax return? I'd also like to know how to get copies of past tax re· turns. W C., Huntington Beach The ln&.enal Revenue Service bas three years in which CO au4lt federal income tax returns. But, if yoa failed to report more than 25 percent of your gross Income, the government bas six years to col· Jed the tax or to start legal proceedings. Tbere are nn time limits If you ftled a fraudulent return or U you failed to file a return. Adequate ~rda should include W-2 forms, uncelled cbeckB that relate directly to a tax return entry and medical bills for three years to back up the canceUed ehecks. Tbe IRS generally keeps records for six years. You can obtain a copy ~ your tu reWl'D by writln1 to Ute IJlS center to whiab your re&a1"9 WH sent. Include your social stturlty nurnbu and a notarized signature. c·o~IPETITIVE·MINDED folk can ,,, Baldwi For the Or you could setue for the annual tur- tle races at the -Orangeburg, S.C .• , SACRAMENTO CAP> -Los Angele.c; businesswoman Nancie Knapp has been appoint~ to the stat.9'b watchdog.LitUe I loovec Commiss1on.., ., ' ,, Record Dl••olutlOtU Of M arriag~ Pianos ·~ and r ·-,~~I Organs J • -~ f 't. '""'°" ''"•nt:ln(/ LESSONS· INSTRUMENTS -..._._. -· f7 " . 4•"-ilr -... _, .. -~--;.......-.;..:,;'-',ii~ --~=A FMhtoft lelend .... IOaO ,,,, .. Mlttllt _a,,11 ... . BOSTON, V•lkle l. 4ttlCI Mlcllllel ~~~=;~iiii~;;;:;;;;;;;, E • BRASOf. Ronald L -Dorothy •• A •• SMITH, .Jffnttte M. ...... HeNy L , KETTERING, Doloru Oe- •nd R..:Mf'G ~; JOtlOAN, 0-la A. en~ Fr•nlr. C.; PERRYMAN, Cathleen E. •nd Letter H.; • OAWSOH. M ...... aft L.AIYIH and Witl!Mn Ben; FLOAt!S, ~ And HorltllM R.; MOORE, D•vld Mlcl\111 a nd B•rb•r• Jean; VARGAS. JUOitll Ellen -Ser9lo Rodrl9uu NEAL, Cynll>i• Anne and WllHam ThOma.. LIDELL, Ol.wrlH B. M\d Palrltl•; CHILSON, C¥0lyn J Mid EU11e11• E~r Jt ; WARREN, B•tle Rile end D•le Smllll, KOSICI. Rocll.,d V•rl• """ 1Mr~ M•tt-jlreen Enr19"'; CARGILL. n.omu and M•rv f , ICOCH, Ltlllee •d C.llulo\ Ivan. KUBICEIC, Peul• llnd Jl"rrV J • BESOAIN, G•r•IO DoW.tynl" •nd Cynrlll• Carol. Wll.LIAM~N. LondaJ M>dJollnJ.; F RITSCH, Ann •nd HorDerl ; BAEAl!TON , S rl•I• L •nd P•ul R , THORMODSGAARD • Gary Ernest •lld MM'y ElllM>e111. MORENO, John ~t -Sanclr• JotM; HI ELSEN, Joyc.e A. 41114 ~mll J.; GARCIA, BaftJemln M. end Cecille Alln; PRO,...£T. BrlCll .... O.K. eM .-.SE.; S¥.Ot, Mofle C.. O••SOO'I ....a C:-..W119 0., FOSTER, "jl1c htef 1 •. •nd 'ltellert R .; lt!llOWl.1:1,. MMe NII. ... "- itdW•r'd. -...ia.s"1.111'S PLUMalHC 14EATlMG AIACONO • SI. Lit. 71,.)/ !>#r¥ttt ,...,. !>IMli•I Yov< Door 1(•11 Slo<•-MI YOU< "•H) COSTA MESA642· 17SJ IU6--1eM. MISSIC>tc 't1EJ049s-o401 1't22 ea.NM Ir ...... IS.n D .at -• 8w . SA • tfOMEOWHUS • AUTO l!'Wl"GftC~ If YOU QUAUFY • RABBITT INSURANCE 549-5554 lt14HAABOR BLVD. MOON, N•ncy J. 91141 ~ D.; PERl(OVIC.H. P...,I D . ...., Bl•lr ; COSTA MESA WH Ir I NG PrlHlll• A . end • '-'""'.nu a.; -ES,-6heiM G.•-1 • • • .. .W. ........ .._ , Rlcl••rO A • CRAWFORD. J-• Benton •nd Jos<"Phln• M•rl •: • CHAVARRIA, Debor• Su• And Ronald RKN>rd; LOZANO, Louis V. • Jr. •nO M•ry J . BAR AETT, Arll\ur J Jr• •nd Di.n• • Lynn1 COSTA, CTyst.11 D -,,_.,,, • L. • Wll.LI AMS. Mvow19 Oii ...0 .lit<'rY N •• PHELPS.'o..1-0 and A09tt • B, LEE, W.ndy Jun •nd fredertclr. • "llen; STUBBS. Jllllnll• E. 9nd .1oM • H.; HAYMOND. Susan -T•try L.; McKAY, W....Sy A. •nd ~ l..; • HERCKT, Nditll A. eo'4I Mkl\MI L.; It SIM ltSON, Ernest DuC:loy •nd Tam•r• IC•y; MORENO, LO.-ftlo • Al••r•do •"d Gl•dys •le., •.,F,'l!'Ui~ MOUNSEY, -'-E111rttl Lff and • Jol'C•A,_lle. MANNAM. leatrlc:• L. -M•rry • L.; suTHERLAND, or._ "·.,.., •'°"'u.&.1'~HERB • st"°.rt K., WINTER, L.Arry J. -• Lond•. .• FRJEDLASDER • l't9"1Mftll1 • SMITH. O«otfly .. and CM.ct 8.; .. IS MAKING • LANGLOIS, Constance Jt•nlHlll• it GREAT DEALS « .,,., JoMPll Monte.elm; ~PSEN, .i.<lt A Mn and Allee UK.tlw; SOOTS, • F RE E « ~:ol!\!1tt!: ~At!:~ J":M. .. A., BOSWELL. MMy It. -MldtMI • 50 « K.; 8ROTHEATON, ~ ""· 9"d • GAL..~ • ~~,!.J~~~ri. ":':,,~\~ • OF GAS « .nd Leitw Dllv'td llt; HOl.STEtN, lt •Mhttt, ... a,.ate•,. ... ,.,.,... ,..,,._..,,."' ... S..:.~:o~~l..•ndF.-ictr. * orOll.('llA~Gl:S ti C : LINNELi .• R~ A. Jr, -it •• r-~ "1 U.. ,.....,. lw ii Melba; FIN04AM, J-Wllll_,, Jt ........ ,__,_tar. .. ~~1~.S::-~1~ .. E~.~~~~; » e HONDA e « VI cir.I end Johnny Key; THORNTON, "It llf:lt lloffto lhd. • Cllerle"• •11d Robert Peul; Jt wm1 Wnt-r .. _.m 8AIONE$, R•IMI Y •nd Lydl•; • * * * * * * * * * * •• RAFF, N-V A. Nd M~ P.: • • HEFFERAN. "°99" L. end ~. MG·TRIUMPH • H . DAVIS,DevklT.andJ-E. .. G A • COLLIE~~L..enclJ-s • JA U R tr F; DUHN, Kell\IMn M. etc. •nd "It « Jeclt R.; WADE, Linde LCHI •lid ,.. FIAT ·LANCIA R-ld IE ....... ; MclCINHOH, Seth • ti A. el\d 0-V.; MERTENS, a--ge Jto SJl'.~· ... :::••.: .... m • E. llnd Jenl<.9 M.; 8ABCOCk. 5"Hf\ •~ * * * * * * * * * * *• Lff •nd ROOI<' DMn; WILlETT, ~w Sllfrley """ •11d Carl Miiion; it • TOYOTA • ii =~~\.~~,:.-r.~Dfr~ it 1•1c;.,..,.,.c;,...,.91,,._. « •nd Dl•n• G•v; Mc OONALD, .. ,,.,-(,...... 5JIS4M . Dorothy Delorb-O.•ld H-y. "It* * * * * * * * * * * ~ OllTIZ, Bernice end Romero Jt -OTORHO"'IE • MIM! GEltOO.., E"""•"' Wtntlft .n •' , ~ ....o K•r"Olw J-; BUltNIER. Jee· Jt S "-Ll:''S & RE!\'T Al..S « QIMlllM IC. eo'4I ow.rm E : HATCH, it ·" c,.: •• lttnd•ll &..H •nd Cell'ly Suwn; ,._ RESERVE SOW , « 1(,1!.LSO, Cl•?Jon Je!MI Jr. •nd 537 7177 E t ... .tA • oe'1Mlr• -• S<X>TT, 9onle r.... ....s it • ,x . avv tr 0o"91•• W.; HENOftlC1C4 J-,.. 1r 1lr * * •• * 1r 1r * ... f....,.rlck-Lamll &ell•. .. • LEASIN~ Mffl)e,..t -'-.... Wei~ «llCI; • !\YAN. MknMI( D ..... Gtece M.,.. AIJll~wrip6 ii CARREL, Urry Ht'rbtrt -Jurww r." ..... Le--l'lllle ,._ L• Ver~; IOOICER, Tony L. end* 537.7777 Ext. 600 « Celullno. it* * * * * * * * * * * •• • ft • , .. \ • •t• f'~ll' ' ' cmZENS BAN~ OF COSTA w5A \ \ H"rt>or at f,.1~.t>r ~ ( 71«1 l <>79-4:?CJ< 1 • ~J.~inof'r f DIC B3nk1ngH011r~ Mrm<lw-Thtrr<d•v· '''• r, • Fnd.~y-.91oti • S.ll111.J,w-'J1oJ • ;o 1·; IU // J 10 ,, b tb .1 ~d •ol '" ~v , .... - .. ' • .... . .. •Ht • l I I I I .4.8 DAil Y PILOT Tueedey, Mwcn 11, tt11 NATION I WORLD . TV Hit THE f'A\tl LY CIRCUS. By Bil K eane Ene01111ters U.S. Export a Brazil Loves Kate Lyra as D11mb American Assertion Class Slated April I RIO DE JANEIRO, Brull (AP> -The latest sen•alion on Bra&Uian televls1on is blonde, .beauUful, sexy and talented. And, lronically 10 this land known for its beautiful women, she's' Amerlcan. She's Kale Lyra, born Katherine Riddell in the. lltUe copper mlnin& town of Ray, Aru., 30 yean aeo. IN THE PA ST Y EAR ON a n ationally televised comedy show, she's become one of -.Brazll's m01St popular TV actresses and conse- : quently one of the most sougbt·a.fler models and: covergirls. ·· · Even more than her beauty and acting, it was a single phrase in Portuguese that thrust her in t o overnight fame: "0 Brastleiro e tao bonzinho," which roughly translated means "Brazilian men are Just so nice.•' The line is de· In• e red deadpan after sbe bas recounted to the show's host her latest episode with a crafty Brazilian trying 1 lo lure her into a com- promising situation. ~ LYRA She naively mistakes • has attenllons as gentlemanly efforts to help an · American girl in a foreign land The show is called "Praca da Alegna." which •. means "Happiness Square," and its format is a par k ··l>ench by whlch pass a variety of characters, each with his own c.'Omedy role. Kale Lyra is the stereotype of a dumb, wide· "eyed and beautiful American as seen by her Brazilian gag writers. The performance is a credit to her acting ability, because off the tube she's anylhine but the dumb blonde. AFTER A "T YP ICAL S MALL TOWN American childhood -I was a pompon girl, secretary of the student council and valedictonan pf my class and I had won a beauty contest, and was gOlng to be a lawyer when I grew up" -Kate 'Lyra spent two years al the University of Anzona, then went to Mexico to study Mexican·American law nut In Guadalajara, she got a JOb in a discote· que and later moved on to MeJUCO City, where she got an acting JOb in a film and started dotng modeling for TV commercials. In 1969, she audi· tioned for a Brazilian musical play -"Poor Little Rich Girl'' and wound up with the part and the. author·composer·producer, Carlos Lyra. ' After a two year run or the play in Mexico, the couple returned to Brazil. And a few months later, their first and so far only child. Kay, now 6, was born. KATE GOT A JOB AS a tourist guide, but ··After I'd been doing that for seven days, 1 said .-oh. yuk."' she said, and she returned to her former Job. modeling Modeling jobs led to movie Ex-millionaire Denied Review WASHING TON c AP > -Bernard Cornfeld, whose personal wealth once was estimated at $200 million. has bt>cn denied a U.S. Supreme Court re· view of his 1976 conviction on charges or trying to cheat a telephone company. The 1ust1ces let stand Monday a ruling by the 9th U.S Circwt Court of Appeals that Cornfeld's conviction was valid in his company's use of "blue boxes" to avoid paying for overseas calls. . CORNFELD, A FINANCIER "ND promoter,t was known as a multi·millionair«' after building In· ternalional Overseas Services into a $2.5 billion business with a sales force of 15,000 persons. The company crumbled in 1970 and was taken over by Robert Vesco, now a fugitive living in Costa Rica who 1s charged with looting IOS or more than $200 million. .C OR NFELD'S co1tN,1Lo telephone fraud convi c- tion grew out of operation of his Beverly Hills busi- ness, Grayhall Inc , a real estate holding com- pany. Invcstigaltons by the Pacific Telephone Co and the FBI established that Cornfeld told Grayhall employees to use the blue boxes, sophisticated electronic devices designed to avoid phone tolls, when calling overseas. offers and she appeared m four feature fi.lnu as well as on magazine covers. In her films, her speaking parts were always \ dubbed and, Wlth her Bruilian last name, nobody suspected she was really an American. In 1974, the couple went to Los Anieles and Kale had a couple of appearances oo the Rich Lit- tle Show. She also took a ~. pl&Y·wrlUne course and did vocals on a record le~ng Bobbie Humphreys on the flute. Jn 1976, they relUl'J\ed to Rio and when TV Globo decided to revive its famous "Praca da Ale- gria" show which had previously had·a ·successful 14·year run, she was asked to play the · dumb Am en c an. "When I read the script I thought, 'My god, this is insane. I'll never be able to say lhls in public. But anyway I did and it caught on. All of a sudden it was famous all over." 'Organic,' 'Natural' Ban Nixed WASHINGTON (AP> A 1''ederal Trade Commission officer has rejected a ban proposed by the FTC staff on us· ing such words as "natural" or "organic" in adve r tising lo describe f.os>ds. William D. Dixon. pre· siding officer in the FTC 's proceeding on proposed rules covering food adver~ising, said the record 'm the four· year-old case does not support a ban. HOWEVER, H E did support the recommen dalion for a ban on ad· vertising any food as a "health food " Dixon's 289·page re port will be subJect to public comment before the commission makes any rule final THE STAFF, in a pro· ceeding begun in 1974, argued that the words "natural" and "or· ganic" carry implica- tions of superiority but that the foods are not necessarily better than those marketed without the terms. ''Organic " usually means grown without use of pesticides or com mercial rertilii.ers and "natural" usually refers to food that does not con tain artificial add1t1ves. DIXON SAID there 1s little evidence that or· ganically ~rown foods a r e nutritionally superior to other foods. However, he said, ther e is ''the not in· consequential or irra· tional belief, amounting to a deeply rooted philosophy as to a way o f life, th at organic far ming is an ecological- ly sounder and more de· sirable method of food production which should be e n cour aged, not hindered, by govern· ment regulations." ON T H E WORD "natural," Dixon said there is more reason for believing in the nutri· t1onal s uperiority for suca foods than in those called organic. Call 642-5678 Put a few words lo work tor ou. & "Where was his guardian angel?" Persons ready for advanced encounters-of any kind-can prepare for them ln a one-day workshop at Oran1e Coast Collete titled "Asser· tion Training No. 2 -Advaa:ced Encounters En· counters." The workabop wUI be held April 1 in the col· lege student center be1lnnln1· al 8:30 a.m. Ad· mlsston, which includes lunch, is $10 ln advance or $12 at the door. · Some topics to be discussed include "Positive Self·Concepts,"Assertion: Not For Men Only Not For Women Only," ··oealing With Creative Anger," ··u·s OK To Make Mistakes" and "Being Creative At Work." For information call 556-5880. easte.rwuk 1aham8 eoilor navy, lt.blue, red,brcwn 17f g_hawai1 ... pl<Z..6~ ~ our ~N.at, sq.lcz.ction of' b8w8i1an prints; shirts and swimtrunks niad~ cl' kd.tlec1oth, as ooly nz;yn apoomr can do. both shirts an:i trunks in classic l)BtW.rnsand co-ordina1'iaj eohds. @J~o@@J§@ 44 fashion Island, newport center 644-5070 The $9.95 Special What all of our tellers have in First Federal tellers are a mighty diverse group. T hey come from different backgrounds. And lead a wide variety of 1 ifestylcs. But each-and-every one wears a br ight, shining smile! Yo u see, fast, friendly service has always been a part of first Federal. And we want to keep it that way. T hat's why we have some "very special people" who check all our offices every month for "a smile at every window!' T hese peoj>le, whose identities remain a secret, perform actual ttal\sacrions to evaluate teller • 9tidl tliirUlllllh Jutid ,..,. ~uddlMoe Jqlale~Aed ........ ...... t.tta-1a .... ... _....~a111.Yaw twodlmlili'8wll~ n performance. Later, extra-courteous ~ ~mmo employees receive cash awards for a job ~ • well done. • Wi.th these "coutta:Ycheck-u ps" , we're takiD1extra efforu to try and give you the best la'iice in town-Come in and see us today. W4 llke to ahow you ju st how friendly a ~"1np lnatitution can be l ~at~eo.t llk-.n..-ttwa.raa.J ... P'ltllt l.eftl. ftw .... •• •••Clllll40 " CJllltr.-..Jilaldlaa. .... ISfocilDIJ ... IOIMi__. ... S....a.Md~aad SOllPcws.a.d. ,... .... s.-aa ............... ........ "~want to give you the best service in town!" \. Costa M.esa Office Baker Near Harh<~r fN1Cl ~ ttOUf\5: T>ailv 9AM to '4PM. Fnd.iy 9AM cq 6PM. nrrday 9AM to 3PM. Ampr~ fm parldn . T~lephon~ Si9·914t fot infort1111don. • • ORANGE COUNTY Tl*day, March 21, 1178 CAJLY lllLOT A 9 Education Spotlighted . by Coast Voter League By O.C. llUSTIN<..S Ol U. OAlty l'lltt IWI The Oran&e Coa&t League of Women Voters will put the · :ipotlight on education the week ot Marrh 27·31. "What Schools Need Now" is the theme of seven meetings de· signed to update members and the public on the current balance oC "pocketbook v<>. cur- riculum" in Orange Coast school systems. "Among the questions we will be asking school district of- f1cial s," said Karen Evarts, education chairman for the Orange Coast LWV, "1s v.hat will be the effect on our high- wealth school districts when new s tate leg1s lat1on begins to equalize distnct spending? What about the Jarvis.Gann tn · 1t1at1ve? Will 1t wreak havoc or stimulate reform?" On Tuesday, March 28 al 9 30 a m , Joseph Meler, director of administral.lve services for the Orange County Department of Winning Artists !:ducation, will s peak at the home of Elsie Parry, 25316 Parthenon Ave., Mission V1e10. A lour of the Saddleback UniCied School District's new board facilJty is planned Wed. nesday, March 29 from 10:30 am. to 1.30 p.m . Loa Young, school board president, wall con· duct the tour. Lee Sicoli, board member, lrvine Unified School District, will talk lo members Wednes. day, March 29 at 9:15 am. This meeting will be held at the home of Janice Hathaway, 18701 Vla Palatino, Irvine. On Wednesday, Marcil 29 at 7:30 p.m ., Bill Mecham, presi- dent of the Saddleback Teachers' Assoc1at1on, will :.peak at the home of Anita Diamond, 26622 Cortma, Mission Vie Jo The Newport Mesa U01fied School Distract wall be the focus of two meetings. On Wednesday, March 29 at 12.15 p m. Jl'an !Jarmon, ad· ministrative assistant lo the superln~ndent, will speak. Mrs. Harmon ls district negotiator in the collective bargaining pro- cess. This meeting will be held al the home of Judy Gielow, 4m East 18th St., Costa Mesa. Don Smallwood from the Newport-Mesa school board will talk on Thursday, March 30 at 7:30 p .m. at the home of Peg English, 3367 Larkspur St., Costa Mesa. In Laguna Beach, Marylyn Pauley, a member of the Laeuna school board, will pre· sent views at the home of Bea Whittlesey, 2695 Nido Way. This meeting will be held Friday, March 31al9:15 a.m. All meetings are free. The public is encouraged to attend. For more information. contact the LWV office at 64S.7120. * * * HOWARD JARVIS, co·author of the Janis·Gann property tax l1m1tali on measure, will speak al the Huntington Beach Inn March 28. The beach luncheon af- fair is CO· sponsored by the Orange County Coast JARVIS Association and the Huntington Beach Chamber of Commerce. Reservations at $6 per person may be made lo the Orange County Coast Association, 18582 Beach Blvd., Suite 224, Hunt- ington Beach. • • * ALL Fl\'E candidates for the GOP nomination m the 14th As· scmbly District have been invat· f'd to speak Thursday night to thl• Saddleback Republican As· scmbly Schol<irship "inner~ in a county\.\ idc Color It Orange art 1 1111tt"sl 11wluck, h•1rk. from lt'ft. Gene !\el~on. Edison ll1 gh School. <ind Hoss Perron. Costa l\Icsa l11gh, and lorL•grouncl, from l rft, Judy Ca\'anaugh, Edison, and Cry:-tal lk•rnth. Laguna High. The event, sponsored by lhl' Iks1gninl.( Women of the Laguna Brach School of Art. drt•w 3,ooo C'nlrws. The .. meet the candidates night" starts at 8 p.m . ill the community room of Peoples ~MILE S(i>UARE 1-w.7 FLORIST 16S09~St. Fountcrin Valley 839-5200 Bond Reduction Sought By OC Bomb Suspects 1~ AMERICAN w · BEAUTY '# FLORISTS 17151 leach llvd. 842-6414 REHER 'S MISSION L<>S A:'\GELES <AP I -Five al- lt·gcd r••volut1onarics accused or plot· llnli( tr> bomb :.in office of 5late Sen. .John llni::g!'I say tht'y will seek to h::H <' their bond-.. lowered. despite a 1 .. rt11clton of more than half the bail amount Trial 1s set for March 29. R.ORIST &. GIFTS ACCORDING to <'Ou rt documents, CAU 837-6502 the alleged bombing of Briggs' • 25571 M .._ Fullerton office v. as to have been the r.n.::;' hr<>t Jn a series of attacks. Ml..._ Yi.to Bail for .Ju<11th Emily Bissell, JJ, " 1-; rrdu<"cd \fonday from $750,000 to SJS0,000 by Superior Court Judge Julius lA'clham Other alleged targets included the ~;;;:=;;;:=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~ judge trying Indian militants Paul Skyhorse and Richard Mohawk, the Ku Klux Klan and a militant San Fernando Valley anta·busing or- gan1zat1on called Rustop BJll for the four others. Thomas i\l 1rhacl Justesen, 27, Leslie Ann Mullin. J:l; Man' Curtis Perry, 29; and ( "layton Van LydeEiraf, 62. was low ctt•d fl()m $500,000 to $200,000 t'ad1 THE f'1VE defendants had re· q111•stcd bonds of $5,000. :\f s. Bissell and Ms Mullin have lwt>n identified as form<.'r m embers of the revolutionary Weather Under· gro1infl, an offshoot of the students for a Oemocrat1c Society. Group to Aid Boys' School Carl Kar<.'hcr. president of Carl's Jr. Restaurants, has organized a board of advisors to Father Richard Coughltn's All American Boys Chorus The advisory group wHI help raise funds and develop plans for a boyi1' choir school to be built in Orange County WESTMIMSTSl R.olJSTS 1011 WHt ' fa AYe.. 1 • .~·;..-;r, MCllAW•-.. BROADWAY FLOWER SHOP CALL 546-8284 '"< 2750 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa . Each defendant 1s charged with two counts of possessing a destruc lt ve device m a public place. one count of possessing bomb compo. nenl s; possession or a des trucll ve de· vace wath intent to injure, intimidate and cause damage, and conspiracy Charter members of the board or advisors include Pat Boone , Cochrane Cha~e. William Jolissaint. ~:;::;:::;:;;;;;;;;;:;:=:;=:;~ Jerry Moore, Don Regan, Supervisor Thomas Riley and Karcher ANNOUNCEMENT HARBOR DENTAL CENTER 2706 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA NOW UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT of • Dr. John A Kraiian, Owner Come in and Get Acquainted • Saturday and Evening Appointments Available PHONE 556-8013 WINDMILL FLORISTS 2 5278 Mcintyre LCICJUlta Hiiia • We're In the Wlrtdmlll .Wiid West Plaza 770-0455 ,.. ... ~w•---MOORE ROWERS UIS•A .. ..._,St. C...MftCI 556-7870 2111 ........... c.... ..... 64S..S5'5 ..... .,. .. ,. ... a,. ....... • ESCHBACH'S FLOWER &GIFTSHOP 309 FOREST AVE. LAGUNA BEACH Ph: 494.8527: c.11 eu-1111. Put • few word• to work fo, ou. Federal Savines, 236!r'.E1 Toro Road. and former Newport-Mesa school trustee Marian Bergeson. Orange for its monthly board meeting • * " Thf' candidates lntlude Irvine attorney Bob Wilks, Laguna Beach hair stylist Anthony Matano, San Clemente busi- nessmen James Green, Newport Beach executive Lee Watkins Mas. PIULLJP Manning o( Laguna Hills w1H preside as pre s1dent April 6 when the Orange C o u n t y 1'' e d e r a t i o n o f Republican Women gathers in Fred Clayton, a GOP can· didate for the state Board of Equalization. will speak at tho meeting, which is scheduled to get under way at JO a .m . at county central committee head· quarters. ALICIA'S R.owusa .. m 11oee....,..w., a-....,_.fo.c 1oi.,....-.-- M .......... ec. MISS.ON 0 . R.OIUST & GIFTS J1570 w.pn .. rti.Y 546-5525 lll-1183 CAPISTRANO VILLAGE FLORIST 32033 C•mlno C•plttr•no Von a Shopping Cent ... • MK.-Vlefo 131·2414 COSTA MESA NURSERY allis}atts FLORIST . S... J.,.n Cep•\lr..,o (714) 493-3227 AIRPORT · FLORISTS o,. ..... ...,... Comer of Redhill & Brlatot 556-1744 SOUTH COAST PlAZA RORIST Ill 50lltll Co..t l"leu. • Code Mne, Ce. 754·1607 ---.-.... ..., FLORISTS 117 BROADWAY l1l:i c ........ 9 1 548-6071 MES.A VERDE R.OllST 2'57 KAllOI ILVD. ~ COSTAM!SA •. 545-1708 FLOWERS IY THE SEA • "' s.. e-t Hwy. LOIJl8MI IHcJi 494-9428 1630 San Mlguel Drive. Harbor View Center• 644-4060 «8 East 171h Street, Costa Mesa• 645-8144 2640 Harbor Bl•~ Costa Mesa • Smnng· • COSTA MESA• llYIHI HEWP'OIT HACH • CORONA DR MAI HUMTIH<iTOH IEACH • FOUMTAIH VAUEY let Roger's Florist help you show that you really \. care by sending .,.. ... 1'-an elegant Her first Easter Basket Bouquet. · It's so easy to illtnd tht Joy or Easter. Just call or visit your fTD Aorist and order the special fTD Easter Basket Bouquet, .f/towrr abov~. Fresh spring flowers Jn an embroidered, _.s:~~~~~J!l~m woven basket. It's alive with color and says "Happy E.uter" beautifully. Your fTD Florist can deliver them almost anywhere, the PTO way. Ptuted·FTO Eater Btiktt. Those FfD Florists Mlly get around. FTO Liiy Plant in Woven Bad.cc CYvur FTD Floml ha~ a wide ~electton or nowenng plan!\ ) The FTO Euler Basket Bouquet I\. 11~u1lly 1v1ll1ble f<>f less llun $1$.00. A''" 1ndtpcndc:n1 hu\lne~~m11n1 tech FrO Florist ttts has own p11u• CM°'t fTb Flonlls mccepl majorcrrcflt ~INf. ) e 1t11P\bri .. ,.11-.. ...., ou_, · . . '• .... . . ... . . ~ l I • ~, Je DAILY t'tLOI Truck Driver Cb-rged In Crash Fatalities .. ;.o: MONTl:!:AGLE, T1:nn. <API The driver of a truck that tumbled 100 • reet lnto u ravine, killlnl four mem- , bers ot a Louh11ana sect, iii named in a warrant charging him with murder by drunk driving. Kill Kilhan. ass1st&lnt du1trict at- torney general, said Monday night th a t Er w 1 n Sc h mid t , 51 , of J\lamogordo, N.M., who was one of 18 persons injured 1n the wreck the '>.. night bt•forc, was named in the war. ~ rent. • District Attorney General Bill Pope "7 aaad tbe charge is the equivalent or -.: aecond degree murder, which carries ~ maxjmum penally of to years to Ufe impnsonment ~Jiii.es' P~tltlo" "-SAN FRANCISCO tAP> Al ~ to.rneys for statt' schools chief Wilson [ __ 1N_s_11a_KT_____,,,] statute of limlt~lUOl\S would ha\'e ex· plred. Cri)tpled ....... Sl..i• LONG BEACH (AP> -A crlpphtd, SO.year-old Long Beach woman, not seen by her neighbors In about three days, was found slabbed to death ln her Uvinc room. authorities said.. The body of the victim, Identified as Katsumi Shljamatsu, was lodeed 1n her wheelchair Monday, offlcet'9 added. They said they could not. establish a motive for the slaying a.hla Prnllierat - l't18UC NOTICE Rales plan lo pelallon the California Supreme Court directly today to plllce Riles' name on the June 6 ballot ror re-election, arguing that he has compiled with the intent tf not the Jetter of the law TAIPEI. Taiwan (AP) -PMtnier Chiang Ching-kuo, Generallsslmo Chianj! Kai-sb~k's elder son and •--P-lJB_U_C_N_OTJC __ E __ political heir, was elected president of Nationalist China today, cooUnu. ing the rule his fatl'ler established 41 years ago. Secretary of State March Fong Eu '>3td Frtday that Riles apparently railed lo hie a necessary declaration or candidacy. and that she had no op- tion but lo lake hts namf' orr the ballot The ,·oting was done by the Na· tionaJ Assembly, sit.Ung as an elec- toral college. Mara Beld 111 Slafll•fll OAKLAND (AP) -A 29-year-old San Rafael man, Lawrence Reilly, has been booked for investigaUon ot the drug-related stabbing murder of three members of an Oakland family J'IT Ex~c• Probed WA SHINGTON <A P) -:: The Justice Department is proceeding with crimmal charges against two In- ternational Telephone and Telegraph ~xecutivcs accused or lying to the Senate about attempts lo influence a Chilean presidential election. The charges were filed Monday. the lcuil day before the five-year in their rented $150,000 home. The victims, Francis Ragusa, 29, his wife Jennifer Ann Ragusa. 24, and his s ister, Marianne Jane R agusa. 21. were found stabbed to death Jan. 25 in the home in the Pied·. 'llont Pines area ol Oakland --·--------Death Noiicn OllAWLt.UOM RHOOA ORAWllAUGH, pened .,,. • ., ~II 20, t91'I et AOV"•le <:oft· "alKC"'I HosPUll Ill Senta~. fl< re-~10.nl of Or""9f County sll\C.e 19S4 w LOS ANGELES (AP) ~,S:.':~~~.~':oJn~::~'!~~ -· Mrs. WI ft ii I' e d orew~ ot PWt11 Ho1t'fWOOd. '"' ... Westover Han, 78, early t:vetyn W<Ktan °' LM Moei.s, tw"olher moll on picture actress "IOO'ITI .. ,, HudSM ol AINml>f•. also • ,urvh•d .. ., 1 Vfanckllll"'"' ....., 2 and former wife of the 9(Ht~r«M1C1>11.nn. s.r.tct'I w111 .,. late film star William S Mid Wednefday -n:ll" •• 11 AM H . • P.c111c vie. 1Mtnorta1 P-a..1191• art, died Sunday. Padfl<. llltw -iu.ry New-I lie.ell - <llntCIO" LOS ANGELES (AP) HANNAM~~~ JOHNSON. -Bany Curland, 86, , .. loved molll•r ot l•Oft••d end whose catering firm for Al<llero Jolln>Qn. •IM> wrvlwct by to four decades soothed \he 9r•ndclllldrlf\. Se<vtus 12 !«-W-6-.,.,cs.y MM<11 n. m• ., .,,. Chu«" Of· bung er pangs of racing Our F•l.....,,_ l'Ont1t u-Cypttu. fans at •l..e Santa Anit FO"etl lawn Cnwes& otf1c1<1tlno '°'1 3 MAll$M "fOM lEWIS MARSH, nost"911t ol Munlll"Jlon llM<1o, c;... PtuH •**" on M•f<ll "· n19 ~-by"'~ WI .. Merle C. """"'· 1 •Onl Eric T. ~ .. "° Geoll,., P. Ma•"'-l'llOIM• um ... ------------ IALn.lll•HOM °"' FUMBALHOMI Corona del Mar 67J..9450 Costa Mesa 646-2424 HU llOADWAT MOITUAIY 1 1 O Broadway Costa Mesa 642·9150 SMnK-lVTMU.lAMa WIS'T'C1.WCHArtll. -427 E. 171h St. Co,sta Mesa • 846--4888 Santa Ana Chapel 518 N. Broadway S1n1aAna • 547~131 rtael laO'IMlll ~·~T 627 Main St Huntington Beact\ 538-6539 .... .... ,\T COt..OMIAl fUMIUL NOMI 7801 Bolsa Ave. Wettm1nstet 893-3525 PAClftC VllW .. ....,., ... , ... Cemetery Mortuary Chap01 3500 Pacific Vtftw Drive Newport,. Clllfomla e44-2700 McCOIMJCa wonw.aau Legvn• S.toh 494·H16 L19una HUit 7&8.o933 san Juan Caollltano -495 117& and Hollywood tracks. died Sunday of a heart attack be suffered alter the funeral Thursday or his wife for 64 years, Rae CRrland. Cownel Honored NEED A. LAWYER? a..wuaat, .. •Olv~e • B•nkruptcy • Crlrntnar •Wlll1-~ • • •ncorporaUon • AccldenMnJurv 1 • &vlcUon •COH~ 840-2507 \UM. CONIUt.TATION f'lt t ""~Won<· MOTtca Of' ""° & Of' AU~IU Nollet Is ,,.,..flY t!Yfll 11uo ... .i1t It -''°"' )011 ..-cl.,, of, .. t l"11 (ocN ot Vie '1•1• of c.111 , ,,,. .-nioMf COAJT TOWIHO, IU l~lrlal Waf c--. Me .. , COuflly Of Or.,., Mal• .. Glllf t2'U, ..ilf Mil "'"*le W<I ..... et tale! aClfftU, al to t ,tfl t ll W9'Mtday. ti. tW\ N'I Of '"'-"'"'• ltll,-tOI ....... tut.....,.le. t• wit· 1) TOYOTA Ut 14 .. '11SQA CA VIN· Thi"""· , ......... ,., 111t •'""" ., afUtf\<lflO ""' fl# tile ..,.,, ........ i.1119 AM-·· II\ IN -.I .. 101111"1 •114 .-...... l~tl,,.r wllll , ...... _...,..._ .. ,....... .. Mia. J8ftftMll ... PYMltMlll O'M'9 CNt1 Otillf Piiot MP<ll ti. 1911 2001-71 PUBUC NOTICE fllCTl'10U$ SUSIMSU NAMaS1'A1'W ... NT '... t•ll• .. ltlO ,..,_. .,. cMlltt IWllMUM: •••uco OEflMA .. SHtll'H~"OS.. M1 Ceft9rtsl St~ Celi.~ CA '2'71 ..... " It.cot/It, .. , Contr ... SI., to1te -.. CA '2tn ~A.. K.w. ... tCelllnl•n. <mt• Mesa. CA f'JW Tiiis .,..,,.., i• (Ofl<IVUH •Y • 91n.r.i PMt1Wrs1>lp 9at111ra F. Kot ... Tiii\ .i•I-WH fltlld '*'Ill 1"9 c-1y c1.n Of Or.,,ge co ..... 1., on F-_., M, tt11, PUBUC NOTICE NATIONAL J OBITUARIES PlJBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE . fl\CYITlOUS l~IU!SS .. .MM STATUUilfT 1'f.. '°' ....... --¥9 <IOl"I' ~..,, UOO 8ulldl1t'11 , • Llmltittf PM'lllet'SlllP, 2'°' $.. Htll.sr,, Se<lli. Ana, Cal Konlla '2105 f-..ce A. -S.lly E. We~ll. ~el Pent-«. IJOI Oxton! Une ..._.. a..dl. Callfomi• nwo Hh;l E. -No,. 0. CltY10ft, Geflffal Pan._. 11'3'1 s,>rl~. $Mota ,,.,., Cellfarllla tl1'0S '1•Ylllfl '-"IY TrV$1, Geollcul ~.,,.,; fen L -KetllllrlN 8 Gl4Y1or>, Tf\M-, IMT2 Sai..t .- 011 .... s.nta -· Cellfoml• t2705 Tiil 1 111.!sllltn Is <Oftdu<Vd bY • llmltad 1»!1Nrllllp, ~A.W..Slt Tiiis St .. _t WH llltcl With ""° County Cltrl ol 0r61111B C-ty o,. ¥Melli, tt1L ..,.,. """""'" 0renoe 0trut o.11, 11'1~ MMcll u.2t,21.~u. l91a 1021-7!J NATIONAL Secret . Taping· ·Banned W ASIUNGTON <AP> -The U.S. Supreme Court has let stand a ruling by Florida's highest court that. reporters are not allowed to secretly record in· terviews. The jusiloee relueed lo renew Monday an appeal by Miami television station WCKT and the MJaml Herald lo strike down a Florida law that prevents such recording. 'l'llE APPEAL JlllSSED bJ cm· Jy one vote of bein& granted full renew. The votes of four mem- bers are needed, and Justices William J. Brennan Jr., Byron R. White and Harry A. Blackmun voted to hear areu· menta in the case. The Plorlda Supreme Court Jut October ruled that the state law, passed in 19'14, was eon-- etitut.ioo.al. Esaenlially, the law prohibits, under lb.real of criminal sanc- tions. the filming or recordl.ng ol. any conversation \Without the prior consent of all persons tak· ing part in the eonversati.on. UNTIL 197,, FLORIDA'S law banned recording or conversa- tions in which no party to them gave consent -wording similar to federal laws against wiretap- ping and other electronic ~ ging. After the law waa amended by the Florida Legislature. WCKT and the Herald sued, charging that the amended Jaw violated their free-press rights and in· terfered with invem&ative re- porting i«hn.iQues. • Wells Fargo &nl(, where your Rewa.,.-d awaits you. TUMday. March 21, 1078 A.llARE1TO AND CR•AM joke11 ~at ltil1 pentJt ln town ad nauseum. llven Preaideat Carter felt eompelled to sugge.st that Jordan switch to peadtal and cream. Rudy Maxa, the Washington Post people watcher who first publisbed lbe story, said Jae 's beea amazed at the Impact ~ t.M -edi*! but het11i'l loet ~ sleep aboat the Wllite ll«me'S ngry reacticll.s. "\lfashiaeton ls a ap•rial place. A mu's onl,J currency ia this towa, Uae oaty UUae lte w to trade -. iB hia neuUian." su 2i-1'1U~d Man. wlto &lie DAIL y PILOT A} J WASHlNGTON ENIGMA Cafter's Jody Powetl 111:ieoT91'ed the Wayne Hares· ~ a., semdal. ""Movie st.an ean &et awwy with out· raceous tainp but here reputa· tins ue more important. One nrel.., step cuts doubt on the profes~onalism of a public ~ 11.lXA ll.Ufm TllE ......;Jy separ.t.d Haarlhon Jordan as e•erybody's favorite eossip tepfc. Hi.a peireoeal are is tumultUOlls and tlterefore Interesting," said Maxa. "!Jeaides, what makes Jordaa aad 8<'9e el the other Georlflans ll'k-. pras secretary ,_ hWllll ~ 8llllgmas and, ftterefore, so'-f.-of goss:ip is daat here ~ ltave a president who i• apimt smoking, liquor, i ... aorallty ;lad his staff seems 80 dilh,_t from tim. Nixon's •• all S9811l8'i cu1 frem the same doth." A most ~raordinary Reward ie now offered by \\klls Fargo Bank:. In order to round up Sa:vings Accounts from throughout the State, Wells Fargo has created the Wells Fargo Reward, encompassing the following remarkable Features: · A Personal Checking Account, with no Minimum Balance required, and no Setvice Charge . Unlimited personalized Checks, handsomely lithographed in the famous Wells Fargo Stagecoach motif. . An 8 Dollar Safe Deposit Box, for the secure stowage of Valuables. Or an 8 Dollar Credit tO\V'al"d a larger Size, since availability may vary. Travelers Ch~cks in U.S. Dollara, provided for no Service Charge. The highest Interest Rate a Bank is allowed to pay-a full 5 Per Cent on regular Passbook Accounts, and as much as . 7Yz Per Cent on 6., Year Certificates of Deposit~ The Utmost in Personal Service-the WeJ.lg Fargo Personal Banker." One Man, or Woman, to whom you. may turn with any banking Inquiry. All these considerable Benefits may accrue to any Californian who keeps Two Thousand Dollars in any Wells Fargo Savings Plan-:- Passbook or Certificate. ·&deral law RqUiml tac bfeittm <tf tbne ...................... w. m tha •. Jt rate to that of mguJar passbook savings oo any fuodll Mthdmwn piior to maturly. Coeta Meea aftoe: 450 East Seventaan(h St., 92627; FOUnieln Valley Offtoe: 18025 Brookhuret et .• 9271)$; Newport 8eaoft Offtooc' ~Newport OeMet Or~ 9fM> . .. l I I I : I • • I f . . f 2 DAIL V PILOT Tue9d4ty March 21 1978 > • The San Diego UNION sp•aksoul on your energy future: Non-Answers Won't Do* Last September, Bob Moretti resigned from the State Energy Commission charging that this pow- erful new agency was leading California toward "catastrophic" energy shortages. . It was possible, in September, to attnbute Mr. M oretti's blast to a political falling-out in Sacra- mento ••• But in January, with the benefit of watch- ing the Brown Administration's performance in the Sundesert case, we can credit Mr. Moretti with an astute grasp of how the Energy Commiss~on is pro- ducing nothing but non-answers to a maJQf energy question. . . . .. For eight Southern Cahforn1a utilities, the an- swer to meeting their projected power demands for the period beginning 1985 is to build a nuclear gen- erating plant in the desert near Blythe-a proposal in keeping with environmental standards and the national goal of divorcing energy requirements from imported oil. •.• With the approach ofD-Day for the Commis~ion 's recommendation to the Leg- i~titun; on clearing the Sundesert plant, there has been an eruption of non-answers of the kind Mr. Moretti described-an effort by Governor Brown his aides to build a public case for alternative non- In spite of all the evidence to the contrary, on January 25th the State Energy Com- mission recommended against the Sunde- sert nuclear power plant as a future energy source. The effect of this recommendation is to make it improbable, if not impossible. for Southern California utilities to meet your electric power needs by the mid- 1980's. The cost of not having enough electricity is intolerable .. At best, power shortages will mean rationing, restricted hours and pre- f erred u se rs. At worst, they will cripple our economy with a devastating loss of in- dustries and jobs. But there is still hope! And you can help . Now, the State Legislature must eval- uate the Energy Commission's recommen- Not paidforwlthpublicfunds nuclear energy sources. The contradictions and wild surmises by Brown appointees in the Sundesert record are a textbook example of how to deliberate an issue to death. Ric hard Maullin, the governor's Jong-time political associate who heads the Energy Com- mission , was complaining in November that President Carter's coal conversion policy wa~ bad news for California because our air quality standards do not make coal-burning a likel y al- ternative for new power plants. But in December it was obvious that coal had lo figure in any a lternative scheme for Sunde~ert. Tom Quinn. who managed the gov~rnor 's 1974 campaign and is now chairman of the State Air Resource-.. Board, obligingly declared coal-burning plant-.. would present no problems after alJ. Testimony before the Energy Commission ha~ established that commercial a pplication or geothermal generating technology is too far in the future to be counted a() an alternati ve to Sun- desert. Never mind, Priscilla Grew, the ~talc di- rector of conservation, stepped forth to proclaim that a network of geothermal plants in the Impe- rial Valley and a large coal-fired facility could dations. It can override the Commission and vote to proceed with Sundese rt. And the Legislature will listen to your voice. So speak up for Sundesert. Join with other residents of communities to be served by Sundesert who know that we can't rely on dreams and fantasies for energy sources. Place your name alongside those who know that Sundesert is the only proven and practical way to have enough electric power in tin1c. I Use your people power today. So you won't be powerless tomorrow. S1gmuurc Add rt.'~~ substitute for Sundesert. The governor himself joined the anti·Sundesert chorus on his recent trip to Mexico, advancing the proposition that .California could get electric- ity from a plant under consideration for Ense- nada-another "alternative" to Sundesert. This was far-fetched enough for Assemblyman Alister McAlister of San ·Jose to conclude, and rightly so, that the governor and his commission are now grasping at straws-"concocting any pie- in-the-~ky scheme'' to avoid giving approval to a nuclear power plant. Time is running out on Sundesert. The Energy Commi ssion has the dice in its hand for a frightening gamble that fossil fuels and unproven technology can somehow keep our lights on through another decade of growing energy de- mand. The implications of forcing San Diego Gas & Electric Co. and seven other utilities to move back to square one in planning and building sub- \titute power plants are staggering, considering the economic, technological and regulatory hur- tllcs in their path. *Abridged from an editorial in theJanuary2Z.1978 edition of the San Diego UNION. The S undesert Project wo uld serve: Addrcc:s Zip Address City Zip .. Signature C11y Zip Ci1y Qty Zip I IC • " II N ,. R v r;. L• tk e A .,, Ot ~· Pt ,,,. Cll ( Pe -Mt 76. " •• IGl 1q on "i !::! cc, ,..; O.• ••: (VII Hef Ant Or1 ~~; • = ;~ a w .... Me (VI ~---.. ... . . -,,. .. INSIDE: •Stocks •Business •Movies •Television ~. Mwch 21. 197& PAJLYP'ILOT By ROGER CARLSON 01 t11t Deity l"llet Sull The long road back to a shot at • competing for Olympic honors in Moscow at the 1980 Games con tinues for United States water polo forces in Edmonton, Albert.a, Canada Thursday with the final four·day segment of the Can·Am-Mex series slated. And although this tourney has nothing to do with qualifying the Uruted States for an Olympics berth, it does do a lot in re- establ~hing the Amencans as a world power after losing an op- portunity to compete at the 1976 Montreal Olympics. While the U.S. is eyeing Olym- pics success at Moscow, some water polo observers 6&Y it'll take the juniors' help in '80 and maybe the juniors themselves in 1984 to put the United States b.ick on lhe water polo map. Among coa('h Monte N1tzkowsk1 's American team set for duty this weekend arl' Juniors Jack Graham <lrvine·s University High), UC Irvine's oeuy1'11ot..-o.1111llc»111K-•r Dave Ritchie. USC's Zack LAGUNA BEACH'S PAUL COREY RUNS BY CATCHER BRAD PARKER... Stimson and Greg Fults Cthe_lat Borowiak Surprises Connors LAS VEGAS Unseeded Jeff Rorowtak downed top-seeded Jimmy Connors, 6 J, 6·0 in the OIH'ning round of the Tourna- ment of Champions Monday night bC'fore a t'apacity crowd of :J,200 al lhe Hilton Pavilion. Earlier. Sandy Mayer defeat- t•d lite Nastase, 6·2, 6·2. Tonight ViJay Amrilraj faces Harold Solomon and Bjorn Bjorg 1s matched agamsl Corona del l\tar's Rod Laver. King Ad1'C111ce. PHILADELPHIA -· Billie Jean King defeated Florenza M1hai, 6-4, 6-4 Monday in the opening round of :i women's pro tennis tournament In other matches. left-handed l>1Jnc I romholt1 defeated Mirna .Jausovec-, 4 6, 6 2. 6·4; Kerry Heid eliminated llelena Anliot; ti J, 1; I; Hegtna Marsikova down<'d Lea Antonopolls 6·3, 6·1; .1n1l l\ttt'hclc Tvler defeated • Janet Newberry, 6-4, 6·4. King• Play BMffalo INGLl'~WOOD The Los Angl'lcs Kings complete a four- game National Hockey League homcstancl tonight against the Huff a lo SahrC's The contest is the final meet- ing of the season between the Kings and Sabres. Buffalo has a 2-0·2 advantage over Los Angeles this year. The Kings are 27 29-11 overall w hilc Buffalo has a 40·14·16 mark. The Kings have 10 games re- m a101ng on their schedule, four at home and six away. Arter tonight's game. the Kings play three road tills in five days, at Minnesota Thursday, al Cleveland Friday and at Toronto Monday NIT Finale NEW YORK -The University of Texas and North Carolina State clash tonight in the finals of the National Invitation basketball Tournament. ------·__;.·_PA;..;.;...R--K_E __ R_M--AKES A DIVING TRY TO TAG THE ELUSIVE COREY ... Allen Tabs Kentucky To Win It DALLAS <AP> Since Sonny Allen 1s o 5 against three of the final four in the NCAA basket ball playoffs in St. Louis. the Southern Methodist Un1vers1ty basketball coach qualifies as something of a shell shocked ex· pert on the possible winner llis choice? Kentucky SMU look a 110·86 thumping at Kentucky in the opening game of the season. The Mustangs later lost to Duke 91-67 in Dallas and to Arkansas three times. ter a Newport Harbor High pro- duct) and Terry Schroeder or Pepperdine University. Another ace of the junior category is former Newport Harbor High whiz Kevin Robertson. Although only J9, the former Newport Harbor High athlete or the year has been making his mark on the national level. "Kevin is an exception to the rule," says Nitzkowski. "He's like Pat Haden in football. Most need to be groomed, but every once in a while an athlete comes along who can do it now." Assistant coach Ken Lindgren says of R~bertson : ''He's one or our most intelligent players despite his age and he's ex- tremely quick. We can't lake a4- vantage of his size (5·9, 165) against the larger Europeans, but he can reaUy do a job." Nitzkowski says there are others in the junior camp with bona fide shots at making the national team this year as 1t girds for an invasion of Brazil where victory is mandatory m order to qualify for the World Games this summer, a possible step to an Olympics berth. ··our future with our juniors 1s very bright and a good sign was the resJ>('ct they gained in the eyes of the Europeans during this tournament," says Nitzkowski. "In particular I'm referring to Schroeder, Fults, James Bergeson (Newport Harbor High), Zack Stimson and Graham •·If we have a weakness it's !>1ze as compared to the Euro- peans, but we're strong at goalie and with our setmen. •• While Robertson is a certain starter for the U.S. against Brazil, Nitzkowski, a Huntington Beach resident, says Schroeder. Graham, Stimson and Bergeson could move into the picture on the national team soon. "We don't want to give away too much exJ>('ricncc," cautions Nitzkowski.When we bring most . . . . . of our younger players ~ we want them with 40-SO intern•· tional matches under their belt. "lt showed through loud and clear in Mexico City that ex- perience ls tbe key. Peter Scbnugg, Eric Lindroth, Jon Svendsen, J im Kruse ••• those wet"e the ones that were doing it for us." The Mexico portion of the three·country tourney produced a 7·6 victory over Yugoslavia and an intense 6·4 loss to powerful Hungary, the Yanks• only loss. In charge of the juniors and 1 accompan1ing Nitzkowski to• Edmonton is Newport Harbori High coach Bill Barnett. \ Says Barnett: ''I'd say our prospects for 1984 ate excellent. We have a super nucleus of young players and basically au 1 of the positions are filled. "Schroeder is there at lwo(• meters and Robertson is a very fine driver. And Stimson is a~ fine driver, while Mark 0 'Brien' 1s a v~y gQOd defensive player. ~ .. One thin~ I've seen about all ~ of the Juniors. they can plQy \ good defense, which is so very important " • The juniors competed in tbeJ first leg of the senes at Long Beach's Belmont Plaza. whip-1 ping national teams from> Canada and Mexico, tying Cuba. and losing one· point decisions to\ Yugoslavia and West Germany. Barnett's reaction? ··1 was pleased ..• and yes, somewhat surprised." C-A,.,.Mt• W•tff P91o ~nes Mui~• C:Hy lles ... ts Le.Oor\ .. ,~ -..cod of""" "'"~ t Hung.11ry t? 0.2; 2. VUQOSl•vl• •·l·l· 3 Unllo<f I St•I•> 1·3-), 4 W~I c;.r"'°"'y I .. 2. , f U~t ... Stat" lle•lll~ ' Scon by Ow•rten I Un1IP<I St.,l.s I 2 2 2 1 VU'IO\li•ld I 2 2 I 0. U ~. \(Or Ing ltndroth J, .C ru\e l, S11TWn. McDonald Unit ... St•!et O 1 1 l_. Hun9dry 1 I 2 ,_. US KOl"ln9 S<ooUOQ 1. Fo9Uflroa. Dickmann. United Stat" l 1 J 1-f' (.UO. I 1 3 2-/ U S. scorlnq• Kru~ 1. Fl9uero~ 2. Sc"""li!I. llnclrolh. SY1!n<1,.,..,. Unll9cf Stalft 0 ' 1 I ·-' C.trmenv o 1 o 2-4 U S '<:Oflno Ku;w 1 F•9uierO• D1c11:m.,._, Unlt@d Sl4'1h I 0 I 1 -4 C.•~ I I 0 7 4 U S~ 'cortnq Kru\f" J Sl""UQ\1. L•noroct'I !l..ndJM>. ""0..0..lcl. 11••9'0• Unlle<I SUlft 1 J 2 o 1 ..-.xico 2 • o 2-S '-u .s. lCOrlng: M~Don•ld J, l.1nC1rot11 2. Otckmann, F,_..,,.. Tonight~s TV Menu · 6 p.m. <9> NBA BASKET- BALL -The Los Angeles Lakers take on the Spurs in San Antonio, Tex. Taped earlier tonighL ? , Texas (25·5) is sparked by former El Dorado High ( Placen· tia) and Cypress College stand- out Tyrone Branyan. North Carolina State has a 21-9 record. "Kentucky i s really a tournament-exJ>('rienced team,'· said Allen. "They have four seniors who got to the final four as freshmen and lost to UCLA As sophomores they won the N l T ( N at i on a I I n v it a t 1 o n, Tournament) and last year as juniors they got beat in the Eastern Regional finals by North Carolina." &.;;ii.M~~~~~~-~-----~1 .BUT COREY SLIDES ACROSS THE PLATE WITH THE WINNING RUN AS PARKER WATCHES. SEE STORY, PAGE 8-2 &edFln~d NEW YORK -New York Knlcks coach Willls Reed, who has waged a season-long tlrade against. National Basketball. Association officials, has been slapped with a pair or $1,000 fines by NBA commissioner Larry O'Brien. The fines were levied for a March 7 incident In which Reed was ejected from a game by referee Ed Rush and his postgame criticism of officials Bill Saar and Lee Jones last. Tues- day nleht. Drfl•dale to ABC NEW YORK -Don Drysdale. the wianin1eat pltcber ln Dodcers history. baa been ai1ned to appear as a broad- caster on ABC'& "Monday Nlabt Daaeball'" for tho upcoming aeaaon. Dry1dale played wlth the . Dod1er1 fOl' 14 ,.ar.. flrat in Brooklyn and tbell Jn Loa Aotelu. He won 209 1ames bef0t ritlring ID 1919. Drysdale broke Into broad-. ca Una liJ 1970 with the Montreal I--. See Paae I!:' Allen said the Wildcats were Fu "the most physical team in col-tore lege basketball. And they have • Is Unlimited··Tanana that great Kentucky tradition which can be a big factor m tournament play. They've won four national titles." Arkansas rates a chance from Allen. "Arkansas is certainly capa- ble because they've won more games than any team in collese basketball," said Allen. "They also are tournament ex· perienced but not like Kentucky. They have trouble against the press but Kentucky ls more of a half-court defensive team. Arkansas can handle a balf- court press." Allen said Duke ls ••play1ng great basketball even If they are the youngest to make it into the llnal four. They are a big 1ur- prtae. Nobody upected them to be anyt.b.lna th1s year. Tbey are a very lntelU1ent team. They are young but amart. They have that enthuslum and d lrt." He : "I've seen Notre Dame ao much on televtllon I re 1 Uko we'n played them. All tbal TV exposure 11 llke a tournament atmosphere. lt sbouldhdptht1m." Angel,s' Star Appears Over Ann Probkm PALM SPRINGS CAP) -- Frank Tanana or the Califbl'nia Angels was concerned about his future, which is un- usual for a pitcher in the second year of a five-year contract call- ing for more than $3 million. But that was before be took the mound against Milwaukee in a recent elthibition game. •'The ann injury last year was worse than I thought," said the 24-year·old lert-hander who led the American Leaeue in shutouts with seven and tn earned run average at 2.54 last year. "I may not be 100 r ercent read7 forthcleaaoo ... But since that 1ame against Mllwaukte, ln which be threw five 1huooul lnnlngs, bJs tune has chanitd. "There'• no telling how many sames 1 can win this year." be said afterward. "Tbe future ls unlimited aiain." . .. Tanana spent the winter work· ing out under the direction of Los Anaeles Rams' trainer Gary Tuthill, who put the pitcher on a weight traminf,? program de- siened to butld up bis Opper bddy. Tanana won 10 of his first 12 decisions In 1977. One oC those losses came when lhe Angels were no-hit by Cleveland's Den- nis Eckersley. Jlis teammates were shut out by Boston in the other defeat. He bad a shot at 30 victories and was supposed to start the All-star game for the American ·Lea1ue when he strained • lrlcep muscle while pitc~ 14 stral1ht complete 1ames. "l 1ave the arm all the rest I could," 1ud Tanana. •'I 1tren1theoed the tissue all I could by llftin8 wea&}\t.a. The ten· dona hurt. It's tou1h to clear up. "Every pitch r has to pitch in j>lln.'• be uld. "It's accepted as t I part or pitching. Wbat•s in my favor is my control. I know I've Jost something ore my fastball. "Youth and the fact I can pitch are in my favor." Tanana hasn't allowed a walk in three appearances thla sprint. He has given up seven bits and tworunsin12innings. "That was very encoura1iof, .. be said •after his appearance against the Brewers. "That's the best I've lelt In eight month.' With progress like that we'll be in business. "I'm still lagging, but I'm def- initely enthused about that one " . Tanana was married to Cathy Mull, a ~rofessional dance in- structor. lD January. Some peo. pie thought there would be a ciif- ferent 1'"rank Tanana pltchlni for the Angela thla season. "l have a atrona drive within myself all the money in the world lsn'l goto• to cban1e." Dark Ousted By San Diego YUM~ Ariz. <AP) -Alvin Dark was fired as manager of the San Diego Padres today. the dis- missal coming with less than three weeks remaining before the start of the 1978 baseball season. The Padres selected pitching coach Roger Craig to serve as in- terim manager and picked Chuck Estrada as Cral" 's replacement. Smith gave no reason for lhe sudden ouster or Darlr. who was hired to replace John McNamara JastMay30. Dilrk,56, had two years remain· inf' on his contract as manajter. Estrada has been the Padreb • minor league pitching coach. Craig 47, is starting his third ~ar with the club. Dark said tho firint came as a aurpnselohim .. I Md no inkJlng this mominJ that anything was amiss.'' said. "1 just walked in and was tired. l'm not. even in shock yet. lt wa11uch a qulcklhJng." ft DAILY ltlLOT Tueecsay, Marcil 21. 1971 OellY Pllee,..... 11>'1 llkUN ~ BASEBALL I MISCELLANY Tourney Artion Oilers Stay Alive; FV, Marina Fall Rico 'Thompson pitched Hunt- ington Beach lligh to a 2·1 vie· tory over Esperanza High (Anaheim) In the Anaheim Easter tournament, but Foun· lain Valley and Marina High <Huntington Beach) Jost their tournament btAaeball aames Monday. Fountain Valley's 3-1 defeat to La Habra High bumps the Barons out. of the Anaheim tournament, while Marina's 4·3 loss lo Santa Barbara Hlgh came in the Santa Ma.ria tourna- ment. Thompson struck out six and scattered seven hits while hold- ing Esperanza to just one run. Both of the Oilers' runs came in the second inning, when Shawn Cisco led off with a single and Tom Samperi followed with a double to send Cisco to third. Thompson helped his own cause by bitting a sacrifice grounder to score Cisco, and Shawn Gill followed with a sacrifice Oy to score Samperi. to resume action today at S at La Habra. Marina had a 2·0 lead going in- to the final frame, but Santa .Barbara came up with a pair or runs to ,;end it. into extra in- nings. Then ln the top of lhe eighth, Santa Barbara slruck for two more runs and put the pressure on the Vikings. Marina loaded the bases with none out to answer Santa Barbara's challenge, but could only force one run home on a walk. Eric Ruilhenchild bad a bot bat, getllng three hits and one rb1 to pace the Vikings ' attack. His single kept a fourth-inning rally alive, and his double scored one in the fifth. Fountain Valley found itself completely handcu£fed by La Habra, as the Barons could manage just two hits. Their lone run in the first inning came without the ~nent of a hit. CAPO VALLEY'S ALAN FAWCETT GETS BACK TO FIRST AHEAD OF THROW TO STEVE KESSLER. Huntington Beach is scheduled Charlie Sickman was hit by a pitch, took second and third on errors, and scored on a ground out. ~------------------------- Bonin Def ends OCIR Crown Gordie Bonin of Canada will return lo Orange County In· lcrnut1onal Hul'cway Salurda~ to defend his funny rar l1tlt• on Fox Hunt mghl A top rock band, The Peter Rabbit Rock 'n Roll Show, v.111 entertain immediately follo.,..mg the r acing pro~ram with all feminine Cans admitted free. Gat(•S opt•n ut 10 for qualifyin~ ;.ind time Lnals \\1lh the fir~t 1•ltm1nation round of funnv l'.1rs Jl7 . F;1<·ing Bonin will h<.' John J.omht1rdo, Pal Fo~lcr and the 111sano br.olh(•rs Alon~ with thf' funny C'ars. Jot• Delp1l'!> Smokl'Y HPd whecbtandt•r will perform a~ v. iU the Jl'l clrn~ster, Green Mamba, of Doug Ho~c More than 40 funny cars arc t>xpected to try for cine of the u; ~tarting positions Non-league Baseball Laguna Sweeps, Dana Hills Splits Timely h1lt1ng enabled Laguna Bt'ach I ltgh to sweep a non-league baseball clou l>leheadcr ''1th '1:.1t1ng Capistrano Valll:v Monday, "htl(' host Dana Hilb High could manage only a spl l in t\\o pmc.., v.1lh El Modcn.i Jl1gh of 01un~c Laguna Bcal'h n1pp<'d C'ap1..,1r;.inn \'allC'\'. 1 ~. an lht• tirsl g::ime :md \\on the second. f, ~. \\hilt-Oana l11lls squeaked pa..,t El ~lodl·na, ~i 2, 1n its 111n·nl'r und lost. 4 3, in tht• st•c-ond ganw l.a~~ma Rearh's J\rt1sls won lht• t1rst half of their tv. in bill when Terry Haught dchvt•rcd a two-out single in the bottom of the lust inning to score Paul Corey and break a 3 -3 deadlock Corey had singled and stolen second to set up Haught 's clutch hit A 11 three of Capistrano Valley's runs were unearned as the Artists committed four er- rors behind the strong pitching performance of Stefan Lipson. In the second game it was Steve Kessler providing the key blow for Laguna. Kessler snapped a 2·2 tie in the sixth in· ning by blastrng a two-run homer over the right field fence. Wayne Johnson was the hit- ting star for Dana Hills, going five-for-five in the two games, driving in two runs and scoring twice. Johnson has had at least one hit in each of the Dolphins! .,even games this season. but Dana Hills' record drops to 2·5 with the split. SPORTS BRIEFS .. • Jn the opening game the Dolphins jumped immediately on El Modena for two runs when Johnson walked with two out, .John Hunn tripled him home, and Mike Brooks singled in Hunn Continued f'rom PaS<' B·I F.xvos, spent 1972 dding Texas n unger games and has been do m~ Angels games smce 1973 Ht- will continue to handle the Angch this season. Drysdak, who appeared on ;'\ nc l:.isl ) t•ar during thf' pla) off J!.1m<'s. will tl•am with Keith Jad,son ancl llow<ird Cosell to form the main broadcast team for ABC's Monday night games. Al Michaels, Bob Uecker and 13111 White will form the backup unit A~bTri.,..ph PALM SPRINGS -Ike H ampton rapped two doubles and scored two runs Monday lo help the California Angels rally for an 11 9 exh1b1tton baseball victory over Cal Stale <Fullerton). California pitcher Chris Knapp was taken to a ho11;p1lal for X-rays after being struck on the right hand by a hne dnve in the first inning The X-rays re- vealed no fracture B....,,..on DI~• PARIS --JaC'ques Brugnon, known as the "fourth musketeer" of the French Lennis team that dominated world tennis· for a 10-year period SO years ago, died Monday. He was 82. Brugnon excelled as a doubles player but he was respected as nn equal of Rene Lacoste, Henri Cochet and Jacques Borotra in the closely knit ba11d that monopolized the Davis Cup from 1927 through 1932 He won the doubles cham· pionshlp of the French interna- tional tournament six times, teaming with Cochct or Borotra. He teamed with Cochet or Borotra to win the Wimbledon dou~les title four times, NCAA Profle Befll•• ANCHORAGE, Alaska -The University of Alaska-Anchoralle has received official nollrica11on that its varsity men's basketball program 1s under invest1gat1on hv the National Collegiate \thlet1C' A.ssoc1at1on . Dr Wendell Wolfe, UAA thi.!n· cellor, said a prclimmary in· qu1ry by the NCAA has resulted 1n charges of "sufrtc1ent sub· ~tance and reltab1llty to warrant an official inquiry. "UAA is currently cooperating with the NCAA in responding to the allegations," Wolfe said. He said the charges "remain confidential at the request of the NCAA, pending the completion of their investigation " Readers' .. Hot Corner .i Daily Pilot Sports Staff I would like lo express my ap preciation to the Dally Pilot Sports staff for its coverage of the Mission Viejo High School basketball team this past. season. · It was always nice to see Roger, Laurene, Ernie, Dave or Howard at one of the games. Your paper does an excellent job of covering the athletic scene on the coast and I feel your coverage of Mission Viejo High School has been very fair. I know the players and myself always look forward to the sports page of the Daily Pilot and the stories and pictures about the team. We are looking forward to a good year in 1978·79 and to hav- ing your staff covering our season. Thanks again ror your efforts and I'm looking forward to seemg you next season Sincerely, Bob Minier Varsity Coach MVHS Basketball Boes Slam. Trojans' Orange Coist Colleae blasted th• use junlor vanity baseball team, 18-0, in an opening ro\Uld game of the Wendell Pickens tournament Monday at Orange Coas~. Tonl1bt (7> coach Mike Mayne'• 00C Pirates take on ruace4 M•Ut._Arhona at TeWlnkl Park. Meta, with two winl 1itcoda1, baa a 16-4 1euon matk. Kiko Sodden hl1hll1b~ the ftreWOTlal by cloutlnJ • P'and . aJam bomer over the •oo.foot 1tp l.n eec lteld. 'J'be Ptrat scored 1lx times tn that inning to turn an already.Jopslded 10-0 game into a complete rout. OCC's Bobby Smith olftO had a fine day, collectlnf( a triple and four singles in five trips to the plate. He also stole thrH bues to eclipse the career stolen-bue record at Orange Coast. Smith's third theft of the dt\Y aave him a total of 38, 1'Ul"PU8· Cn1 the record of 11 set by Dan Spain lnt.ho1J7S-76aeaaon1. Jerry Sanchet pltched 1ix 1tron1 in.nlnp for-the Bucs, al· lowtna Jtat one hit, then nst.td while Bandlomo Roundtree and The eventual winning run C'ame in the fifth when Brian Kinney walked, took second on a wild pitch and scored on Johnson's double. In th<> second game Johnson's thre<• h1tc:; v.cre the only safeties Dana Jilli!. could manage. ... ".~ Deit•Mlli.UI •• r II r.i Bums, lb l 0 t C J 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 l 0 1 0 0000 0000 lS J 9 3 Jtffen, rf. Kln,..v. u Jot1nion1 2b Hunn, JO Broo~s-c !>mllh,cl El Mo<len• Dan• Hiii• J O 0 0 M<GreQOr, dlt l 1 t 0 Wiiiock, P11 l I 2 t Cl\Ampltu•, II J 1 1 t Mllt ... 11, p 1 0 t 1 Howe, p 3 O 1 o Tota11 SUN~IMI .... , " . 000 t01 0-2 • 2 :IOO 010 •-l ' 3 ~0.- 0auMlll•UI ........ Jell-.. rf IClnMV,H Johfl llOn, 1b HUM, lb Srnltfl, di\ How•, pl\ Broou,c. flModtn• D•n• Hiiis. 3 0 0 0 Burn$, t b 1 J 0 O CNmpleux, If l 1 3 I ""<Gre90f', cf J 0 0 0 Stout, p 100 0 Wllloc .. ,p 1 O 0 O Eltlow, D 3 0 O O Tolal1 Sc.,....,, .... '- aooo JOOO 3000 0000 0 0 0 0. 0000 lJ J l ' r II • 000 200 2-4 • 1 1112 000 ~ a I 11'1"1 OMfta C.phlr-v•n.., 111 1•1u.-a.c11 Mrll,_. allrllrltl l'•wutl, II • 1 1 O H•"9111, 211 > 0 0 1 S.lat, ct 4 O 2 O Ja11ul, If J O o O P•rker, rf 4 1 1 o Kt.nltKll, lb 3 1 1 0 V1111f'eurw~4 O o o ~ICMrdfoCMI, Jb l I I 0 CAiiey, 2b 4 1 0 0 Ciornpf, cf 3 0 1 1 Hun, tb • o o o l(•nter, lb l O I c 114111, dll 3 0 1 0 LlpSOfl, p l 0 0 0 U..rfet, u J o t o NlchOl1, rf o 0 O O DIHllvln, c 3 O O O CAiderwood, dh J 0 0 0 Wllkfllton, rl 0 0 0 0 Cory, c J 1 I 0 5c1tw•r1, p 0 0 0 O T01AI• 21 • S l Tol•lt 33 3 • 0 1cerew1""'- C•pl1lru10 v.i1.., L•gun• &eedl , ... 002 001 O-> 1 0 200 001 1-• s • ~Game c.,1t1r-v.i1ey m 01 u.-llM<1I .. ,..._, •rllrW l'llWCetl, If • 0 o 0 H•utht, Jb l O o o S.lu, cl J t 1 o h<Ofl, It l o 1 o Par .. r, c J O t t ICleullKll, Jb 2 I I 1 V.n,...,rwm,.lbl 0 I 0 IUchef'CI-, IS l 1 0 0 Calley, 21> 2 0 I I GOmpf, ct l 2 1 o &tll,rf JI O 0 KeMler. lb SI J 4 WllklllJOn,"'1 JI 0 0 LI-. dh • > 0 1 1 H•yn. 1b 3 O O O He!lder!IOI\, rf 2 o o o 0..rlH, U J 0 0 0 Moo<e. C ) 0 0 0 Cukrov,p 0000 WHvtr,p 0000 'Tttill• 21 I • I Tetela 71 S • S $( .... .., ...... r " • 000 101 ~ j ' cm* x-s', .JV, 16·0 Jim Campbell completed the shutout. Or ... CMMIMI ........ • j s ' Soll>, all 2 0 0 0 Smltll,rf OOtMfl,lf IOW•llle,lf "Ollerl-,n W604tf't, d Nel-,Ut< "'kll1Clll MIM'lll .. ~ .......... ' 1 t 1 ll•r,,.u. ta • o o o o o • o 1trll1or~. ~ ' t o o • 0 1 t ""••11'9.~ 1 7 J 0 s > t 1 Hl!Mtll, ,. l 0 0 0 ' t • ) ltft<llff.llt •••• , , '0 "WM!''"·· • 0 •• 2 t o o C.mptlft\1 • o • o ~ ' t t • • ,...... .. " .. 1t St-.., ....... . " . -, ............ ......... .. -~ • LAGUNA'S STEVE KESSLER GETS HOME RUN GREETING. The Barons loaded the bases with none out in the fiCtb, but. couldn't cash in any runs. H...U,..tOtlhac"UI •• r 11 rt>! TllOmPSOn, p 'TllOmu. n J o 1 O Giii, c v..,dnb<lscll,21> J o O O 01...,.,o!ld. II GI .. , dll l 0 t O L•wrence, d C•KO, rt J 1 1 O Fun•, lb S.mperl.lb l 1 to Tot••s. 5<••~· ... ·- 1 O 0 I • 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 , 0 1 0 0000 20 l 5 l E\o-rA,ua t<unt•n9tan E-.11 r II • 000 OtO 0-1 1 1 020 000 l0-2 ) \ -tat" Valley 111 abr"rtM !>IOm..,, 7b 1 1 o o S11a111n 1r Lut>q, lb 1 0 O O Cow•n. rl AomlM cf 2 0 0 0 Glnton, n "'"'"-•b J o o o eonnor P Emp11n11. c l o o o Total• Sc•·~· .... ·- 1000 3 0 1 0 l 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 20 1 a o Fountain va110 L• H•t><• r II e 100 000-1 l 1 011 ~l s l Mu1n1 !JI lb r 11 l"bl M1"•· rt • 0 0 0 DIV•\, If • J ' 0 0 Por1111, ( • t 1 0 Coy, cl 3 0 0 0 Autt1>encll1ld, 1113 0 l ' Capello. 7b l O 1 O Cr\<I, dll • O 1 t Irwin. lb 1 0 O I Bo-•. p 0 0 0 0 !>prln~r. n ~ 1 1 O Totals 31 l Tl S.nla Baro.ira M•rln• Score by lm11n9• r fl • 000 000 n-• 1 I 000 110 Ot-l 1 l Dodgers Rip Texas, 14-1 VERO BEACH. F1a. -Reggie Smith and Dusty Baker slugged three-run home runs and Myron White and Rick Monday belted bases-empty shots Monday as Los Angeles overwhelmed Texas 14·1 in an exh1b1tion baseball game. The Dodgers, 4-6 this spnng, battered three Texas pitchers for 17 hits, eight of them for C'<· tra bases. Monday also doubled and singled twice Don Sutton pitched six innings for Los Angeles, giving up the Texas run and yielding six hits. nookle Boh Welch, the Dodgers' top selection m last summer'<> free agent draft, hurled three c:;corele~s inntn>!s Ticket Demand Is Great Irish Seeking Third NCAA. Title in '78 By The Associated Press Of course, the phones were ringing off the hook al the Notre Dame athletic office from the minute It opened al 8 o'clock in the morning. There was the mat ler of thousands of people ask ing, "Do you, by nny chance at all, have tickets for the NCAA semis and finals in St. Louis?" There are 1,200 tickets allotted each team In the "final four,'' bul there Is a special interest in Notre Dame's allocation because it has never gotten one before. The Irish have never lasted this long in college basketball's most important tournament "It's a coach's dream to make the final four," said D1g~er Phelps, who guided the sixth ranked Irish to an 84-64 rout or No. 3 DePaul Sunday and earned the right lo meet Duke in the NCAA semifinal next Saturday "Thanks to 14 kids, it 'c; a reali- ty. All we've been laving for 1s this moment. The rest is gravy " The rest also is pres.sure and emotion and sellout crowds and national t.elevlaioo audiences as Notre Dame -national college rootball and fencing championi; already this year -goes for its third Utle ol 1978. Senior forward Dave Ballon noticed the pressure's effect Sunday, when Phelpe let his re- serves finish off DePaul In the Midwest' Regional final. "To show you bow emotional . Digger WU, when he took UI out, -. - he was crying," ~aid Ballon "That shows a lot or man 1f he was that emotional." Then if the 23-6 Irish end up wmnrng the title, they might need to bave a stretcher on standby al the St Louis Checkerdome. First, however, there is 26-6 Duke. The seventh-ranked Blue Devils downed Villanova 90 72 In Sunday's East Regional final. "We set the tempo right from the opening tip," said Duke center Mike Gminski, "We came out smoking. We got our running game going. I can't re- member when we came out as fired up. There was no way we were going lo be denied this trip lo St. Louis ... Neither were the first-ranked Kentucky Wildcats, 28·2, and No. s Arkansas Razorbacks, 31·3. ··we'd prefer to play Kentucky rather than Michigan State," said Arkansas coach Eddie Sutton. "You know tbere's cer- tain ball clubs you play better Ulan others.·· Kentucky defeated Michigan State 52·49 on some clutch shoot· ing by Kyle Macy in Saturday's Mideast Regional final. The Hazorbacks bestt>d upset· mmdcd Cal State (Fullerton) 61 ·58 in the \\'est Regional to set up Saturduy·s ronfronlal1on. Arkansas plans to use its SPl'Cd ugamst the WlldC'ats. "\\'(''r<' ~om~ to have to run the hall on tht•m because they're so big and phys1c:ll," said Sul· ton. "Quickness wise W<''re go· ing to have th<• advantage on th"m " Meanwh1l<', Kentucky officials say there arcn 't enough tickets to begin to meel the demand. A third of the tickeLc; were dis· tributed to Kentucky students by lottery Sunday night. The rest wall go to the band. playerc;. c-oach1ng staff, athletic board, Gov .. Jul1:ln Carroll and the uni- versity administration. Players \\-1ll get four tickets each, for a total of 64 tickets, and the band will get 39. But uni- versity officials declined to give a breakdown for the other tickets, saying at wasn't firm . The SO to 100 remaining tickets will go to legislators and others with enough clouL to demand and get seal'> Austin Tops MV Field Tracy Austin, the lS-year-old Californian who Is ranked first in the United States Tennis As- sociation's girls' 18·rear-old division. leads a field o 208 con- testants scheduled to compete ln the third annual Tournament of Champions May 16-20 at Miaslon Viejo'• Mariuerlte Recreation Center. Austin, who won the 18·and- undcr clua last year, will be one or lour playera repreunting Callfornla tn tho tournament. Each •late. lntludin1 Alaska tor th~ Clm tlme alone with the r ... District of Columbia and Puerto Rico, will be represented by four entries -one playing in each of the tournament's four age division.<;. The age diVlsions are 21, 18, 16 and 14-and·under. Others expected to compete are Linda Siegel. 16, who also wall represen\ California; Joy Cummings. 15, ~country's No . 1 girls 14 player who will play for Massachusetts, and Anctr.a Jaeger, u_ who will represent 11- llnol!\. .... . ... .. -.... BASEBALL I TRACK I MISCELLANY Tuesd1y, M.irch 21, 1978 DAIL 'V PILOT B:J. fl Top Spike Stars Invade UC Irvine Coast Are a ···: Sports Calendar UC Irvine's Meet of Champions ahould llve up his collegiate debut, is pitted against the event·~ to its name when the flfth annual event sets under most consistent performer in Robinson, wbo had way Saturday at noon only three jumps under 25 feet last year and 1s The track and field invitational attracts top coming off a great mdoor campaign. names in nearly every event, headed by 1976 UCI's Mauricio Bardales, who finished third 111 Olympic long Jump champion Arrue Robinson and the NCAA D1vis1on I decathlon a year ago, 1s one former world record holder KjeU lsaksson of of four athletes ~ntered 1n the IQ.event competition Sweden in the pole vault. who have scored over 7 ,000 pomls The feature race will be the mile where six lsaksson, who bas a best of 18·4, heads a pole runners who have broken four mlnut.s are en-vault field that al!;o mclud~ another member of tered. The field ls headed by UCl's Steve Scott, the exclusive 18·foot club. Don Baird < 18·2). In all. the defending national AAU champion who will be five vaulters who have gone 17-41 :i or better are running bis first outdoor mile or the season. entered Several other UCI athletes will be showcased. The athlete lo watch m the :.pnnlb lb LeNorns STEVE SCOTT Freshman La Monte King. who long jumped 25.3 in Marshall, the Anzona prep star who ran 60 me~rs T ourney Play Tars, Eagles Topple Rivals (''>'port Harbor and Estancia lhgh (Costa :\Tt•sa 1 l'ach needed late-mmng outbur:.ls to sur- \' 1ve tournamt•nt baseball games Monday, while l n1vers1ty High Clrvme) was eliminated from another tourne~. Nev. port Ii arbor won its Apple Valley tourna· m<•nt opener over Ontario High, 6-2, powered by !\like Hogan's :.1xlh-mning home run and sets up a dash v.1th El Toro tonight at 7. El Toro was an 11 l wmner ovt-r Apple Valley Il.Jgh Estancia came from behind lo beat host Los Am11rns High. 5-2. in the Bolsa Grande tournament • 111d Unin·rsity Jhgh Jost to Villa Park, 4 3, 10 the S:.inta Ana Elks tourney. Hogan's blast for Newport Harbor tied lht' ).!amc at 2, and the go-ahead run came when Bud dv Darucl, aboard as a pinch-runner, scored on l>ave Berman's suicide squeeze bunt. The Sailors added three insurance runs in the ~1·\.1'nlh during a rally highlighted by back-to-back duubles from the> bats of Alan Gaddis ~nd J eff Pws kowsk1. Hogan's homer help('d his own cause as a pitcher. lle notched the victory while allowing JUSt four hits and striking out 10. Estanl'1a entered the sixth irlning or its game :it Los 1\migos trailing 2 0, but exploded for five 1 uns to \\Jn. Rob Braunsdorf's rh1 double highlighted the rallv. wh1l·h inl'luded JUSt two hits. Los Amigos ('omm1tted three £>rror.., in the innmg and walked t .... o hatll•r ... to op<.·n the doors for Estancia. t 'n1v1·rs1ty oulh1t Villa Park, 8-6, but Jost on thl' srorPbodrd and dropped from the Santa Ana Elks tourney. T1l·<I 3 3 art<•r the regulation seven innings, l '111\·Prs1ty surrl'nrkred two walks and a stngle in lhl· l'ti.:hth 11mini.: to load the bascc; for Villa Park I he IW\l bulll:r \\a.., hit m the nbs by a pitch. .111d the \\lnnml! run was given a free pass home * * * * * * IEll.M<lltUI Unt .. l"llly UI ~b r h ••• ~It r .. ... ~•nt111Mat•d ti> n Hobbins ~\ (I I) W illiam\ dh I) (> P 1Yrslt t ] l:lt•unsd Jft lb ' Cloff:,..mttn tt 0 l Arunrr. u " 0 V.1CK"r It 0 .... ~,.., ,, . I , .. ,.,an '1 I 0 th•nt\f!fl •b 1 0 I 'va;i.ncJahl p 0 ~ lnl!i!ih )I) ~ore by IM11uo , .. ' ''"" . •;/) , .. 0 \ \ &.O\ A11 1qo. .,; QIU 0 1 ~ Checking Area Golf Cour ses WOMEN SOOll' RANCHO SAN JOAQUIN GC 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 n 0 n . , BIA(' M•tk\ Toun••m~nt A F llgl\I I IC•lhy Porry. l 8 f ltQM I [llMn Yr.cf'burn. 1 1 tt1tf ltll1~ ~. Mar1•n MCGr•th, 1 c FltQhl 1 rnel lu Wiiiey, o ... Holm , S 0 F llljtll-1 Rose Aobln..,,,, 1 C.tnl1IP 1b J 0 0 0 Rois~.<• 0 0 0 Mull lb I ) 0 Tiiie<. lb ) Lanqmao., hdh I Ev•n•.cl 0 I Mur •Sitko p l 0 0 Huoh••· < ) 0 0 '><l>ffl " I 0 0 P•rker or Q 0 0 Lt'°· Pf 0 0 0 5hdW \ 0 0 0 rot•h II l ) SonWlflfllfltll • ~ • \Jruv•n•lf 000 300 00-J • 0 VIiia Par-001 001 01 ' • 0 N--IHl~ltl •• • ~ "" C,.n'uth, rf 3 0 0 0 Sdue,.brf'" If 1 0 0 0 Oonlol II fl 0 0 G•dd• \. )b ~s l 0 P1•skow\ti;1, JO I I Darr, c.t • , 0 0 H09an, 1> I 1 I l l Ec1u••. dh I 0 I ()' Frff'm•n. tb ) 0 1 1 Bu111no1on, ll·rl J 0 0 0 Bul< •I 0 0 0 0 Stium1n. ''\ 0 0 0 I Btrman, 2b 1 0 0 I M lll•r. c 0 0 0 0 Toi al) lO • • , II • "''"'00'1 H•rllof 010 002 l -6 8 7 Onla,.o 110 000 0 1 • 3 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- BOB CHARLES JE~F FRAZER Cha.rles Lauded HJ/C 's Frazer Player of Year lluntin~ton Valley Christ.Jan CNcwport Bcach1 H1~h basketball star Jeff Frazer has been chosen player of lhe year in CIF s mall schools classifica- t1on by the Citizens Savings Athletic Foundation board. And, Capistrano Valley High a ce Bob Charles has been honored with a first team berth on the CIF l·A teams Frazer was a sconng wizard for the Con qucrors for two years, cappmg his ~enior season with a 23.9 average. As a Junior he led his team lo the CIF fmab and this year's team advanced to lhe sem1fmals In 23 gam~s Frazer scored 20 points or more 15 times and was in the 30s four times. The 6 8 center was a dominant factor in a 16 7 season. Yi hich included four losses to 4-A and 3-A rated schools. In addition lo his scoring prowess, Frazer averaged 11 rebounds a game Frazer, a Huntington Beach resident wllh an academic average near 4 0, is eyemg a basketball· student future at Pepperdine University with a chemistry major. Charles, who led his teammates to the CIF 1 A semifinals with a 25.7 average as a 5-11 guard, wa:. second only to player of the year Loon Wood in the voting al guard. Charles showed he could do 1t all with his out side shooting, ability to dnve the la ne and out standing defense Charles was consistent from the opemn~ buzzer, scoring m the 30s seven times and connect ed for 40 points in one game Twice chosen El Toro High 's athlete of the year as a sophomore and junior, the three-sport star 1s now involved with Capistrano Valley c; baseball team. * * * * * All-CIF 1"\ First Team m Eric Bailey, Cathedral fi·5 Craig Fuller, Banning fi·7 Joe Stewart, El Seguncl11 n·S Chris Klckas, Bishop 6-3 Rob Hicks, Big n ear 6 5 Greg Bewernick, Bosco TC'ch 6-4 Leon Wood. St. Monica 6-3 Bob Charles, Capistrano VallPy S· 11 Ray Owsley, Cathedral 6·2 Terry Washington, Leu11nger 5-9 * CJ. Avg. Sr. 2U 0 Jr 17 9 Sr 28 5 Jr 16 o Sr 16 1 Sr 16 t Jr 36 I Sr. 25.7 .Jr 14 O Sr 21 :1 Alamit o s Racing Entries Ton1911t l "•nwu E"'""' Ftrsl P0\11 0 FllUT ltACE One mllt P10 C la1m1ng Ma~• 10 Ptte•nt. l YU• 010• SO j)f'r<onl Pu•~ U,000 Clalm• 1no Pr•t• U,000. Plum Rum Porul\ IMcc:.on.Qlf'I C•n•v•n (R1tcP'llPJ E•\Y (•I I L•CO•l•I. Howlt>orne Volo CSllO•U. foJ1 Hound (L•Cl4111r Jr>~ Pr1nc~ S•m 1 Dellllthl Count P•r•• I GouOrf'•uJ (If' E ... u .. onQ'(H SECOND RACE OM mtl• P•'"· (Al b•td S yur old• 6. under. M&IO.n> Plirw U . .00 E••<I• M••• tRllClllfl And~S Amy (MUf'll~rl L411C'f 8r•vo 1~rt 9orv1 ,'Jo Aoro flilllu1yt lh•rlt•\ Aunt lC,rvrichl Grt"q\ folly tl•bf'llrl ~ .. n,1vs Or••m 181•.,10<1t.J Andv' p,.btr CM.atOf'lnf Tl41RO RACE °"" mlle l•OI ll•lmlno l'l•ndlC•I> PurH U ,•OO. (l•tmlng prtCH ~ ()()O.S,000 6.000 k: R•t•Of'I lro.Uf"-t>'HI Prince Toby c LPvt'n\on Mytterv l r-1p CM<G•nn>. Llont Hou~• Cn1p t Juhn\on) Johonv A ov•lf' N 10•,omer), .Armbro Prj1e tWJi'°lard•. E:do•wooa H•naor• &•rlon.t», Wr019 Kty Gou<!f'HU). FOURTH RACE O!'P mll• P•r• (lie1m1no hAndtc•P Mar~s 70 per ~ t•nl Puf\.a U .MJO. Ct•1m1n9 prtCft )~ 00(). s soo E•n•ll• IAatrhlordl la" IM••oMI, A•CI !ioull•n llonool Toronto N lGrunCly). S••1>1>Y•ll• ((11111 Cl.Ute O.-.ton IFOl•yl Mo•· ,., Ou a.,.,.. ll•C.0..l•I Ont 0.. o .... tC..O\ldrtAUf FIFTH RACE OM m•t• I'•<• ~ v••r oldi & uno.r non·wlnn•r '600. Flr\t mOM1 t•• r (~rH.) t•<•\). Pu••• \1 'llO W•nt•w•n Ct1rti. tOesamert, Wf\1te tvy fShor u C.tHo H•no-1~r I Goudr••ul. B C AOtO\ IB4Ylf'UI Aoptr. AllOYf'f CMcDouv•fll Mmb•O T nco l All<"torol ~y ~m •Aub1nl JJsC.IMy•Ro<hmondl SIXTH RACE r fa1m11"tQ h.andic•P M4r~' 10 ~r u~nt Purw $3.000. Q.11rn1nQ Pf1Cn $6.000... SOC>' Study C.0.n IC.ta,,..) Ed'• llurl• fCrui.a .Jr J Lordy Boy CH1rdt•I ~<obi• l.o .. l'ion"PlrOI Spudlwl Sun tWhfflerl At Ja~ Bitty IOtnomtr Sheraton t4 tL1otrt"110. P roo 801' ICltlll SEVENT" RACE On• "'''' P4( .. Non w1nnrr $10(0) 11 '' Al\O flo91bl• non w•Mf'f $11,)00 11 11 ti f'\Oll w1nrwr of Sl,900 Ont mol'\t'f' 1n 11s1 S ,,.," Al)O ell91t>'• nan winner SI.HO In 11>1 S •loris Purtt U .SOO N .. vJllP Ja~ N ·~c>t'tQO"\). O•n<t Conl•-.tf'r l W1lllAM\of C•ll B•t k l•CD•I•) T1mP Strtam ll'l•l<MOrCll ,.,~ B•o w '"°"'°"' · llut\ M1tr1n~ tOf\Omtr), M•\t•r N •c ~ Cvn1.,0yl Cav•lltr N (fl( IJ,bl•t EIGHTH RACE 0"' mllP Pace c1a1m•nQ nand• tP 4 w••r ota\ MAr•\ 4S PoeH•nl Puri• S•.100 (l•1mt"O l>"IUS $ 11 000.13,000 ~ .. Q. Ru<YfU\ IBUlbyl Royal Roel<\ Wey IKUf'blorl, Ju111na Bell' tOunneb&c~), Pf'O\\M s Solrl1 fTj•· "trl, M \le< F•ll-'V C AUbt'll HT A CM1\~f'IU. Sw1ff Sh•OOW fH•td1f'J. >••nt Cl••r ~et•a C A•lthfOtO' MINH4 RACE Olw mllP. P•tt C.l•imlnQ ~rf'1 )0 Pf''Cf'"t Pur5e ~ 200 C.1•"""'9 p ..... '10 000 !.~no• Colt>y ICiOv<lr••ul ll•ld.o ' Lad CAYb!nl p,illflf SU'""tne 'Lono o>; Thun<Jtr\torrn A f0f'\Otn•r>. Golcrt' tSpr•90''· Outt" SlrHll lllornou LaClvbyrO L 8•r (ll(upOlf!tr). (r 4p C.•me 111doons in 6.26 last month at Sao Dieao. beaUnf a field tbal included World Cup champion Steve Williams. • Sam Turner of Cal State <Los Anaeles> r anked second in the United Stat.es, and forme; Pac-8 champion Lindsay Guerrero are matched in the 400 intermediate hurdles aloni with UCI's fut rising freshman Tim Chambers. The diJcus field 1s led by Jim McColdrich <215·1>, ranktd fourth m the U.S, and Ray Burton ll97·11>. third place llnlJber at. tbe 1977 NCAA championships. Ticket.a are priced at $3.50 for adults and $2 for non-UCI students. UCI students and children under six will be admitted free Los Alamitos Race Results ,..,-.y l'lltST llACI One mllo, Poco (t•1m1no Purw U,000 "\ l L H•I I L•<0'1tl • 10 l 00 , 20 Tlta 0.••~l A lller,,.11 ) 00 1 20 luuoo•Man.lR•IChlordl JZO T1mt -1 OJ4, S Aho rjt(l'd Euy Vtl•<C. Btrl E AUr•u, Plnel•nd N, S.ng• Lii•, Ga loG !>ual<ntd -Reptarry $01\0I H •d• 11 IU<la I L l H•I & J.Jfle 0.rw..,l A. Pa141 $11.40 \ICONO RACE -0.... mlla l•ot, C101m1n9 ~1c~ Pur.e $" 900 Ou,.. Pto•sus CHarptor) 10llO •80 )20 .JM Eddie l&>lll<h) • 00 3 70 l(.olly • l(•lmuO IShorl) 3 llO Ttme -101 AIM> •IK"" f1•'11 Bold <;ttHk, F r1nc 1\ SnowdOn Ma;ter P•lom1 • AIM\ (htteJ ~crat<"4td u,,,. Ntt'd Vern 5al•1 H•no.•r THlllO llACI: OM milt P•c~ cono111onfd IXNW II. s v••r Old\ & u~r Pur.e '2 . .00 M•c O•ubtr fAmo-,.• J R Mt Aon (TO<IOI R•YC"f\ Ou~ct I R1tct\,ti lime 1011 I AUo r•ceo Morn1no l.01l1on W1 lit Won~• W•·llt•ll:•iw. Dr•QOn Pttnce, VOOdCN>Clllld '><••ltM<I Bui Gltn••lf. 9.,~ D•n<•• l'OUlt TH llACE -Ona molt. Pa<f', C•••m1no ......0.c.,p, C•I bod Pu,,.. U •OO My OOUQll lWl'lee•erl a oo 1 llO 180 Point Purd"" la«>'1P> 4 10 • •O • S1><1nnh Mou IM<Gofw91fl • 10 '""• 1 on s A!>o r•<.O Ltllolk•d, Or Al•n I(, ( a9le T r&&)Ure, Andy \ Dr•n, 01•monte St•r S r•l<ho1:1 Cll•tl L1or111001 U Eucta •·M'f 0.0..., & ~Point Pu••u•, P•td $1Ja.io Volleyball Varslly Otun View a.f Bos<o Tt•n IS 11 H '·IS• J ....... v.,..,,, Oo•n Vttw dof B<»<o Tnn 1\ 11, 1) 9, '11'TH JIACI -one mtl• Pa<• Condlllon.d CCO.ll. Putw 5',500 Mr B•n<lll I D•ullonl U .0 I Ml • 70 M•rk II Tl,,.. IHolll 1 20 J Ml Su. FoYlt (11•11-t~tn) 2 t0 Time )())IS AU• rAC•d -Hatcy01l H•r t, £dw•rd EOtn. B111 !t9+'•no. Pun No scraltllu SIXTH RACE -0.W mlle Pa<t C1a1m1ng 1W1c11c:.p Pll•M ».)()() Question A (C••nel 1 ... 10 3S .0 9 00 Addles Boy I R•l<hlordl 10 .0 • tO lumber Pop (HolU S IO Ttm•-2CM AIM> r..:.o -E1gle Alc!OI'. B•I ltry, Sondrn Son ~orol•n Boy, :.t\OOPV Rody !>V•IC .... 0 lordy lloy U E ucu J.Oulilkla A & 2·Add1n ••r. Patca~,,.,.oo SEVENTH ltACE -One mtlo P•ce Cf11m1ng h•nd•t•P. Puf\t \UOO Nino Carol I ltnO."onl 11 .Ml • •0 • 70 Cralg•ncv COtiomed f 00 • 10 Tru Chmu IWllll.mil • 10 Time 1 Cl Al\o r1tt..i -Thrw l.1~1> Hounch WhtrllnQ ~kel.IO. 819 l 1me, Td•• .. C.rf'Q9 Sc r al< Md -c..ioe Rev EIGHTH ltACI -0.... m•lf' P•<r. Condllloned CNW-l) .• , .. , Did• & Un• ~r. Pu, .. P ,200 Gold A•noe c Blackm..,1 > 10 1 IO l '° J•u Fo1tv1t 11..onQll>l 1 IO J llO Hn .. 1 CCllttl 110 Ttme 2 02 Also r•cf'<I -Wol MOh•nl, Anorv W1ven Rov•• Ay>e~, Albcrt1u••~ ~"•un H1nover H Scr•l<ned Bv• By" V•<tor U Euti.. >Gold 11•"9" & l •Ja" Ft1llYll. P•tcl $J0.00 NINTH ltACE -0... m1t# P.-~. c1a1m1119 h.ond1c..p. Purse ~.000 M•rk Mon1Q""' 1~on9ol 11owav GVV (8f""'O No Cal IGordonl Time 7 01• s HO HO 3 llO • 40 S 80 H '° Al\O ••td -Oonov1n A 0.< • .-.•nd, E.d91WOOd 0\11nn, f l•minge Ml''· A,,dv• H•rrttolt• Scratched -L••l>Dn l•d. S."O• L~••f' u EH<'-2·Mllr11 _,q ... & •· How•y G11y, Paid U6 IO Alltnd•n<e -S,1..0 JC Golf Summaries s...tllent C.lllen!I• c-1..._. T__., M lt..iclla Par11 TH"' kor"'Q I LA H•rbC>r JM 1 R 10 Httndo >ts. 3 s.n11 Monico lt9 • GolO.n w .. 1 40.J, s. Cypre" '4>'. • I AHd Cl.A HMt>or) 1J ) HMI'°" lltlo Hondo) I• l H••no, ILA Harbor) 16 • Al<llarcbon CS.t>I• M onica > n, s Costello IS•.,•• M o.,1cal 11 •· NPl•o" IS•"'• Monlc•I 71, I L••I" !Golden Wulf 11, e TllorMlll IGoldon w .. 11 11 • Spallr ICyprtH) 11 10 HOl\•m ICypreul 71 Or•nt• c .. 11 UHi OKI Gold•" w .. 1 Al Ht1111l"'49n Sffclm Or•nge Coast V•n O•~• 1S Collln> 11, Fr_,_ 78, erouloy 1' Burke 60 GoldPn WHI McCullouQh 12, 1.. .. 1,, II. Thoml'llll IO, Bun ll. Barry I I S.1'1~ eo.11 ""'.....,.• r ........ , !Al w .. l«ft Hiii• CC It\ CIUllOI Tum •~Oft> I Fullerton :k•. 2 Gronmonl JIO, l OrM199 '°"'' 313 ( S•" 01090 AA<>•• :JIM. S (If Pl S.nl• A,,a, Ml S... Anlonto *· 7 C.rrllo• )9' M•d•lhh 1 (I••> C1mobo11 lFull•rlOfl), e.n11r IGrossmonll, 10 Oranoe Co••I VanOy•a 75. .:ro\\ley 16, Colllns 16. Porrtlo 71 Sl1n\On II M(ulen~T ... ,,.y l•I El lttlldle V-. ltl•llel Toam scons-1 Cllf\IS :I'll, 1 S.n Oi41QO CC m . 3. Sc>u111Wotl••n l'IS • Aiv•rsldt 401 s. P•lomar .02 <:NI· l•Y and ~t-k did not >core. Or1119t CMsl 14711 U•I LA If•- I al Ceti.. Mna '" occ scMln;-Oannv Porello 11. Jim Bure kif 11, Steve Sll~on 71, Ray <.ollln• 1' w_,,,.. Cl'OS.\lry 7q ll•n O•k• IO. Pro Scores N•llMotl ~llAnocl•lltft lnd1•n• 111, ClevelMtd 10. N•llOMI Hoc•ey Lt•guo Phll1dtlClfl16', NY hl.tMerH Montt••I S, V~OCJW"r 1 ExN~1 .... a .. u11 MOnlfHI S, Ml-M>I• l OPlroll •· C1nc1nn1U l 8a1tlm1>r~ I, Kans"' Clly I '"'' avo 9 New V0<1l t NJ 8 lo\ Anqtltt U l•••' t (•hfOf'f'll• I 1. CS Full1trlon ~ S.MHr 10, M 1lw.utc. .. 1 Oakland 8. c1e.,.l•nd • ~·n O•eoo S, S6n Fr•ntt..-o 2 P•ll\bU"9f\ S Boston< NfW YO<k IAI I, Allat\I•) l or.,.,10 ~ ~· Lau•~ 1 ........ , lllMHll DI $wlmrnlng-<IF M OMl'O llftl *'~ •lld llMll et ...,.•Ir Hiiis HIGlll I ~ P'i'r~clt -St. Paul •I Mater m u l.Sl. ii' 11...,_ll-He.,,.,...I ... ,bl>I' •nd ~s Tere •I Apple V1ll•Y to..!•"0¥1°!4., M••IU al s.ni. MAltl• tournttf.,.."" Edi-•I~ tlUfMY. ~ di"-<" Col ..... , 5"" 01900 .. -..r .... -:;. • 2: SOI; Cl\apl'ftal\ et 501111\er•-f' •S: c..11tor11I• Coll .. U·)Q); w~ ~..i "1c1te111 '-NV at Otano-eo;, ".'.;3 (0119" (OCC ~ Mew, ArlL l.Jfl~~ <>r•ntt eoo11 "'' ~ 1t1.,.r, w•.:... ~ •I TeWlr*lt P•rk.1 p.rn.. • "" Olru IOl-.i1-1n11111 H~ at co.i.. • •:; Me,.() in. .~ ... T._....y CMa~ DI _.•:,.: Swlmml....-.CIF ..,A f!Mls •t Ealt" ·~ LH An981es Oot•-( 1 p.m.I, Gol!':?• • e" WHI Coll-•t El GlmlAO (7 JOI.•!,: NCAA cMmpl-hll'& al Bel,,_. ... , ...... ,,. Bna~ll --Golelfn West Coll-•t " Hancock lovrnay (GolOtn WtU v, C.n•d• (OlltQtt 11 Elks Flald, S.nl• M•rlll; PllA X •I Mal ... Del (3; ISi, Ed"°" •I H•w111«ne rounwy. T<1<k Mu-N at ll'VIM Hip r l 1'), Golden West, Saddltblcll Coll•9•. Or•nQt Cout Coll~ •f Southern C.lllCM'nl• JC R1l1y1 at C.oll*'19 of ,,. O...rt <• •.m 1. Glr11 lr«k-Or-co .. t Coll ... , Goldtn w .. 1 at Sou11Wm C.lllOt'lll• Rel•" •l Colltoe of lhe ~ ... rl (9 .tm) G.,11 soHb•ll G,olden wui Colle99 tourney (Golden Wnl n -Mt ArlL 11 II am I ,...,.y(MM'Cllt.41 : Swtmm1119-Coll-of SeqWIH at •• ' ~c'.:l"11:~:~1c-:!:=..11 ~:. • m 1' "- Butblll-Sanl• M• at s-1ei..c_. Colleoe 'l'tOOll). Golden W•M ColltQt •t Htncoc1< tourney (Golden West vi Collt!I• or Sequol•' •I Htn<o<• Coll*'19, ):JOI. Hunt1"0l0<1 8'l•<h •I S." Morcos 13 lSl, founlaln V•llcv \ .,, Oo• Pueblos Cl IS) ~ Tr•O· Or.tnge CCMtst COllPQf> •• :!o•n Jose Rtl4'f1 Grmnullcs-Gol()tn Wt•I Colle9' •t Ch Ito S111e nhlDtlton l Gtrl• b•sltt•b•ll Golden Wot '] Colle~ •I Pu_.,. ln••laUon•I Girts softball Colc!tn W••I COiie..,. lnvli.tl<lnal. S.t....Uy IM.arcllUI !>w1mm1no-NCAA ,,,,.,,•I B•I· IT'Dnl P14La. 8aHbdll HU11tmQlon llf•c h ~• Do-. Pueblo\ 111 • m) Founl•ln Vallty •1 S•" Marcos (11 • m.l; Sou111~rn CAlllorn1• Collt9t •I San Fr•n< t'><o s11te Cdoubl-~r al noonl, vc lrWI,.. II oi.ptNn (all-(n<>ool Golden Wnl Colleoe al H•ncon tourney I Golder! Wttst ~ ~Ania •l Elk\ F l•ld,S...taloMr ... ll°'lO• m 1 Troclr.-SaddlU••ck •l S•n•• B•rblre relays; _of O...mplonu1 UC Irvine lnoonl, Oran~ Coo>1 Coll~•IS...J~~tlays. Ttnnl\-Y•l••IUClrv1no(lp mt Grmn•.i•u.-COIClrn We.I Collt'9<' .u c111co!>l•l••~n·1>ohon ""'' Bul<elb•ll Goldtn Wnt Collr-oeal Pt\dden.t lnw11a11an.t1 Girl5 \Ollllall-Golo;.n We>I (OlltQ' I nv1 C•1ton•I. MD Girls Rated No.I Mater De1 11.Jgh Schoo! <Santa Ana> continues to hold the top spot m the girls Cff basketball poll with an undefeated slate while Huntington Beach's Oilers are third " and the Marina Vikmgs c Huntington Beach) arc seventh. Mission Viejo 1s the lone area school listed in the 3 A poll The Diablo-. .arc currently in :-01:\lh place. Cl F Gi•h aaslt•lNll Poll 4-l<Oms- 1 Malt< o.i. 1 8U('n,J; l Hvnt. '"tton 1•1<11. • Thou\lllld o.o' ' 81sf'M>p Amatr t. (h.irblnlil Bvrrou~t·!t 1 Morini , e LB Poly t S•n Gl brttl 10 AtMT\.t"Y J..A Otv11t_. 1 LO> AllOS, 7 LOS An•l'lO' , 1 Upland. • R1Q11c!lll S Santa M~"·' 6. Mlulo" Viti<>. I. S(hun I Non~ q~vc-r,1d•,. t Rowt111nd. tn M •r•te\te 2·A 0.Wluan I All• Lom.i, 2 ll••wlPY J { n•o ntl l\l•nd\. • ln91 ..... ood· ~ L• S1•rr• 6' Sdnta Cl•r• I U (..trl'91ld I Et)•N>r .. ~ l#mp•t" C•1Y". 10 C.a 1on 1-A Olvtllon t 81\hOp Ott<JO 2 lmP"rtotl 1 'l•lltv Christian 4 °'1la1•0 Ch••" ti•n \ Ro!toamond • .Atesc.~,,, 1 ~t 8on•Y~f\turf' • I Or•f'IQe Lult\tran, 9 F1llmttr,., lO !thando'l Lo .. Nol TOIJ'Mmenl ,.. Flt9lll I Ginny Stasko, •1. 2 LOI\ HOWt!H. n All CIF l·A Second Team IL•Co.ir1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- B fl19hl I Phll ~r, 71 ) E Ileen Yreut>um, 72 l S... Ewtr,, 7l • Jon Hubbard 7• s ll••I M•n•" M<Gf•ttl LUii_. ~~ 7• C F 11gh! 1 Iii.I J1ne J..:uon, ~' Holen, n l 8drtNr• Smith, 7t,. ~ P•Q Smtlh, 16 0 FI tQht I I Uol S.Olly lllUQh•"· I( •Y Lui•••• ... IO, 3 P•I S.O•ISltln, •• HUNTINGTON SEACLll'I' CC HlndlUP M•t<h Plly Tourn• "'*"' I< Fll9ht I Corlnn• Rl<h•rd\O". 1 Joan Sl911m1n, l M .. varel I(.,.._,,•· F1oeo .. 11 6 FltQhl I Jun4' Oovl•. , \/Min 'Troutman, ), VI O'C.ro, '· E••l'rn Rico c FllQlll I P•t uc•,..r. 2 Miry 'll1ndtrSommen. l. Dolly St<.ofd, " l:lelly Poltfton I< FllQhl' First conool1tlon-1. Ann lewh, 1 Rulh Day. Se<ond cons,ol1 lion -1. JOln w .... ,, 2 l!owm•ry Lrt<llson B Flt;M First cons,ol•llon t. £st11ar Kl'ftland, no --Stcond consolation -Slllrley Zeller, 2 ~lrloy cummaro. c Fllohl First COftlOl•llOf\-1. J••n Gtnl•Y. 2 M••lh• P•vne. S.cond conlOl8llon-L11 CO.sl<tll, J, /tt\lddlaB...,,.,. Low Gr-, L.ow Ntt TourNl.....,I A Flight (Gn>M)-1. Jolln Wea .. ,, •1. 2. Ann~'-.,, (Ha0-1. l!u11\ o.v. 16. 1 Glwi• llol...cl, 11 B Fllglll (Gronl-1. Jot" '!tlt~m•n, O ; 1. Ill•~ Maro• P•ttrs,on, M"'I• CW1nlnohlm. ff. lN•U-1 OoClo ~. T>, 2 J- Cl•llln, 1S C Fllohl CG,.,.sl-1. AoHm••'I' P•ll•rson. "' t (V.l Aobert. An· drtws, Abby Qooper, '°'-CNtl)-1 ,,,..,, tt•\llnp. .. , 2. k.t't Ttmmlno, 1• •tO CMfYOM CC MM'bar...-i T-t (lhtter liell ol part11erd: A r11oht IOrMtl-1, l(llUIMfl Nittytr, Caftn .. K IMlt CS...W Ntt CO, «J; LMM'le Or•J, Si.ila keCM IM9M VK• CCl.8'. (Nat.-1. TVflt Ollpll.9M, o-1t s..,.n ($11fft An11 CCI, '4J 2. J- Hlftlll, Je<AM .,._ Ill Hltutf CCI, .. : t __... outlets. ..... PHr1• (,,._ V.,_ CO, 61; '-S-.. 0.Mllla, lrtt er-tH«ktllN CCI, U , S, 9 . J . Sinltll. Allt" Cam-. (Vlrtlftla CC>, .. , 6. ,_. Nlkfl. K•U. ........... ''"""' CM« CC>, ... J A1111 Hallt•lll, Htlr11 ltlt11llM llrvlnt c .. u CCI, 70, e. Merit '•rto, rr111 Qin._. ICAlffof'wll• CCI, to. t PllQlll C~-1. Hltltfl I~ a.tty .. II O • .a Jeela CCI, ... t. All•\a lrltll•eol, ~ Htlly c.-.. v._.. ((),ti CNttl 1. a.,,.,. Deflte11ce, N11111e Wr<_, 11"'1111 CINd «I, es1 J Mldll Ft~I, ,_...,, ...,_ Cll ,. .. ,.. ca • .,: a. L.a1Te1M Grtrr. Otlle Htll IAl\a VllM c;Q, '1; 4, 1w " .. w, Piii\' ow .. Clnllllill ._..,, CCI, 6ti J. He14111 ~ o. .a. ht-CIMl!t a.l CO, .. I to.; Mlrft rtl ....... JIU Joltll CVlrtl a co, 1', .. Swim Club Tryouts Sla ted Tryouts for the Beach Swim Club will be held daily al 6 p.m. this week for bo ys and g i r Is age 5 · 2 2. under the management of coach Preston Hobbie at Golden West College. The swim club, which includes such Olympic Games stars as Tim Shaw, Bruce Furniss and Jack Babashoff, uses Golden Wes t College, Newport Harbor High and Bel- mont Plaza in Long Beach as its home sites. Dave Walls. Cathedral fi·4 Bill Drachslin, Notre Dame <Hiv . l 6·3 J ohn Rokas, St. Joseph 6·5 'Mitch Panek. Morro Bay 6 4 Renaldo Wmsey, LA Lutheran 6 6 John Vermeer. Valley Christian 6-3 Tracy Jones, Lawndale· 6-3 Tom Lord, Chaminade 6·4 Michael Smith, Valley Chn st1an fi·O Bill Moses. Harvard 5 11 Donnis Edwards, Marshall Fund 5.7 All·CIF Small Schools Lewis McClinn, Pasadena Poly 5-10 Bob Turner. Calvary Baptist 6·2 ·Jeff Frazer, Hunl Valley Christian 6·8 Wayne Stark, Orange Lutheran 6·3 Max Pray, Pasadena Poly 6·5 Dave Falk, Rivers ide Chnstian 6·5 Dave Champlin, Chadwick 6-1 David Ripley, Lee Vining 5·10 Tim Cresto, Villanova Prep 6-1 David Ellis, Don Lugo 6·5 Steve Hight, Orange Luth<'rnn 6·2 Sr Sr Jr S1. Sr. Jr Sr .Sr. .Ir. Sr Sr Sr Jr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Jr Sr Jr. So. Sr . 14 7 17 5 16 0 lR 0 11 0 10 2 15;, 25 I) l7 3 17 2 17.0 1:1 9 31 5 23.9 15 5 16 9 18 2 18 i 22.9 17 6 25 5 14 7 Peiif Old Sparks GWC Rustkrs Edge Santa Monica, 6-5 eventually scored the game's winning run in the fifth by opening up with a double, taking third on a wild pitch and scoring on Penfold's s crillcc fly. R u!is Penfold tripled and hit a key sacrifice fly to lead Golden West College to a 6-5 victory over visiting Santa Monica City College Monday tn Southern Cal1Corn1a Conferance baseball act.loo. S a n t a M o n i c a The game had been threatened ln the· b d l d ..... d seventh lnnlng wben it resc 0 u 8 ..... on ay Joadod the bases wl\b after ha vln( been none out. buL relJever r:,.~~ed March 2 due Dave Tbeopbllua came Steve Nemeth ind In and e.~capcd with onty John Moses each ex-ono run com\ng across. tended their hitting • He then set down San· streak.' to~ games, and ta &fon1ca in order In the R lck Clark alao de· al1ht.h and ninth to pre· livered • couple ot im-Mrv•t.be~lctory. portant bH1 tor lbe Ruatlers. • Golden Weat pla)'ed CJark'1 triple 1D tbe boll C~ In another third lnnJnc brou1ht conference makeup bome lwo rum, and. b aam• today. ........ ,,., Mows, ct J•cllson, Jl>)b Ntmttll, U M1nsollAO, ~ All.,.,Jb Cl•rll,Cllt Mffet.ff lnriaa,11 HMIV.y, pit-If Pwflltld, lb Enants.c Sitton, 0 "*'1-.1> '"'"°"""" p Toltllt •II I .I ' l .1 1 0 0 ' 0 0 0 ) I t 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ,. 6 ac... ... ...,,... " rlll I 0 ' 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 , 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 ' ' 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 r " • ,. .... Mofll<.e 000 uo 100-' 10 1 Oolckl\Wtil . 1112 ~10 ~ , 2 * * *" IOUTM H .ff CAL CIOtt l'll!INCll • I. 01 I.A 14ar'W I 0 Crpren ' J ,.,., Gotl'911 *"' • ) ,. , '-41i.~. • , • IUOHO!!Oe J 4 ''°' LA lou1'""'9C I i t I.et Afllal• c:( 0 • I ~..!.-:'t::::...cas ,...,.. ...... •cv.- Women's Result s Glr1t Trot lt Mol"" Ott 11•1 tJ•I \11ciw lletloy JOO I f ,,.,.m~n f MO> 11 J LU 1~n IMOI ll 0 l HHlry (VI IJ I 1'0 I FreemMI IMOl 11! l 1 Lu 1•n (MOl 191; l Purdy fMOI ,. , HO 1 l Dube (MO) I CM • ) C.•••\ IMOI l o~ I, J P.,i111a (\/) 1 DI• ·~o I J Oubf' IMOI 7 "', SN~tl IMOI 2 lll I, l C•mPl>all 1111 2 0 I M11t 1 Rell IMO) S 5' 8 1 Curly lMOI • 01 0 l Brown lVI • "0 2 molt I K Oubl' (MO! 17 ,. 1 1 Wlnl~t .. r IMOI U 0 0, 2. H~rly lMOl IJ Sl I llOLH 1 Clark (VI 111; 2. D•ll IMOI 11 1 l OudltY IV) 11 I HO reloy I MallW 0.i S4 3 MllP rOlay l ~llW 0.1 ( )( ' >iJ 1 Cl.,k (VI ' 10 l C•rmlchHI (VI 4 •; l l'urd~ IMO) • 1 ~J 1 Fr_,..,, IMOI ,., .. 1 L111•n IMO) i..s ... l. C.•mtChHI tVl t.f t• .. SP 1 H~"'Y IV) 32·1•1; l. S<hnl•r IMOl 1S.7~; 3 B•cu IMDI l • •• radio pafer WIDE AREA COVERAGE ORANGE.ro.-L.A. '17.10 ....... ~-NO DEPOSIT ON APPROVED CREDIT ,, Continental Mark V- THE MARK OF SUCCESS. More people Qyy this luxury car, more people lease this luxury car · than any comparable American luxury car in California today! \Nhy follow the Jeader When you can drive It yoorself? Whether you • • buy 0< lease the magnificent Continental Maf1( V. you will enjoy the distincl1nn r of driving one of the most suooessful luxury cara built In Amenca. Tract111ooally, 61 evidonce of their O\l9t'WhGlm1ng popularity, our Marks have rotu~ more ot their O<lglnal sticker Qfice than Gadillac Eldorado Coupe. Here rn tho Golden State. the Continental Mark v IS the undisputed leader Jn~ fiold cf Amerlc:an· made P9™)nal luxury cars. Based on R. L Folk r lstratlon data. more Californians buy and lease the Continental Mark V an other oomparable American luxury cars. There are gOOd reasone tor ,auci'l popularity Nowhere will they be more obvious than during a cSetsonal test·dnve at lhe Wheel of a M.arK V. l.. Let us arrange It fOC' you et your earliest ccnven10000. ..] LEASE OR BUY AT THE SIGN OF THE CAT! I ... ;:. ... .... ... II\ ... on nd .... "'' E i .. • , .. ... • ~ DAILY PU.OT Business Al'WI,..,.._ JOHNNY HICKOX KNOWS THE OKEFENOKEE He Ought To -He Nearly Drowned In the Swamp Okefenokee Lives On .~{.!~~.!?!!. OKEFENOKEE, Ga. - ''They say you don't really know this swamp until you fall in it," Johnny Hickox isaid, leaning p~· carlously out ol the boat to pluck a water plant. "Well, I came near drowning in it once, so I reckon I know 1t " JOHNNY HICKOX IS the cb.ieC gwde at the Okefenokee Swamp Park. He knows the swamp at its northern edge all the way to its southern edge, lo 'way down upan the Suwanee River, the celebrated stream that spills its swamp·bom waters into the Gulf of Mexico. Like the Suwanee, Johnny Hickox's very origins are the waters and wilds of lhc Okefenokee. "It isn't the same as when l was a boy. Now, I'm not saymg that's bad. We have the swamp, and that's good. But the swam- pers are au gone. It's Just a shame we can't have both " A SHAME AND an Jrony, but Johnny Hickox is right. The swampers did not make their living off the swamp but Jt was their way of Ille. They were a rare species. Too bad they. like the SWlllDP, could not have been put under federal prolec· lion and saved for posterity. Johnny Jnckox, who is 53, got a youthful taste of that way of life as the last tn a whole geneoloey of swnmpers. THE LINE GOES back to hls great· great· granddaddy, Obediah Barber, known in his time as King of the Okefenokee. The title was never disputed. During bis rein, Obediah Barber. mailo mano, killed a bear. That feat was never dis· puled either. He bad witnesses. It was not for their physical prowess of derring·do that Johnny Hickox laments the swampers' passing. What be mourns is a lost sense or independence, identity, self. sufficiency. Short on money, short on education, never short on pride, Johnny's forebears kne~ijiey could attain on their own M\at everyone, after au, ul- timately asks of We: survival MANY SWAMPERS, like Johnny's father, lived on the edge of the swamp, grew their own 'But the Swampers Are All Gone And It's ]wt a Shame,' -Guide vegetables, did a tilth: bootleg- g 1ng, and when times were tough there was always the swamp with its bounty of hides and pelts. Times were almo:.t always tough. .. My father only had one arm but be could skin an alligator quicker than any m;in I ever saw," Johnny said. "He shot the other arm off ac- cidentally when he was out coon hunting, alone, and walked seven miles out of the swamp to get it tended to. He was some kand of man." IT WAS ON AN alligator bunt, some of whlch lasted for weeks, that Johnny, as he said, came near drowning. "We ~bot an alligator and left it for dead. Next morning I went to skin it. He whap~d me with his tail and knocked me under the sw>tmp, in a peat bog. I was Jucky my daddy got to me. A shot alligator is not necessanly a dead alligator " ( ___ AM_ERI_et______,) The lessons of the Okefenokee come dearly. When the swamp became a federal reserve ln. 1937 -and ~wampers became exUh cl so that more endangered creatures might survive -Johnny could nu longer hunt in it but he still could explore it, and did, and t•ontinues to with a passion bordermg on zealotry. "I STILL MAKE my Living orr the swamp as a gujde," he said. "but it's different. l could spend my llfe here, JUSt never leave it. 1 even come out here on my days orr." He laid bis push-pole cross the gunwales and let the boat drift. Silence ··1 just like to sit here and listen to the swamp breathe." Incentives Lure Foreign Investors to America 6y MJCJIAEL L. GECZI A~ 11..tllfts WrllW The open-door policy or the United States toward invest· ments from abroad already is reaping large dividends. But 1•ven bigger and better benefits muy be m the offing. In the past five years, direct foreign investments in this coun- tr.> have more than doubled to ~30 billion. according lo a new rqrnrt compiled by Bank of Amt>raca. the San Franc1sco- b<.1~ed mslilullon that is the na- twn s largest commercial bank. SOME OF THE recent ac- ll\ 1t1es tiave ioclud<.•d the $210 million purchase by Societe Jmetal of France or a 67 percent slake 10 PHtsburgh's Cop- perwe ld Corp.; Michelin Tire Corp. of France's announced plans to invest $300 million to ex- pand tire production, and San- cloz Ltd. of Switzerland's $190 million acquisition of Northrup King & Co • a Minneapolis aericultural chemical producer. Of the $30 billion invested in 1976. about 41.6 percent was con- centrated in manufacturing, the report said, and nearly 20 per cent was invested in petroleum operations. The largest in- vestors were the Netherlands, Canada and the United Kingdom, each with roughly one-fifth of the total. Though the growth has been substantial, there appears to be a great deal of room for future investments. Foreign-owned businesses accounted for less than 2 percent of the United States' gross national product in 1976, according to a s tudy by the Conference Board, a New York business-research firm. BANK OF AMERICA cites three reasons for this rather modest showing. "Companies based abroad frequently have cited labor costs, taxes and the sheer size of the U.S. market economy as fac- tors that have restrained them from pursuing the advantages of di rect investment here," the re· port states. These disadvantages have leveled off in recent years, the , ... bank says, leading to the con clusion that mvestments will continue to increase, possibly al a faster pace. In addition, it says, the United States will be aided by two other factors: -More earnings for invest- ments are being generated by continued economic r ecovery abroad. -MERGER ACTrvJTY has grown sharply in both Europe and Japan, thus creating com· panies that have both the finan- caa l expertise and capital to in- vest in the United States. Though the impact or the &n· vestment has been relatively modest, the report says that the United States already has . benefited in a variety or ways, including. The creation of about l. l million U.S. jobs and Sll 4 billion in additional wages by the end of 1974. AREAL ITALIAN DELICACY ~ radio papr WIDE AREA COVERAGE Mesa Builder Reports Increase LANCIA COUPE Take a test drive for the taste of IL Luxuriate In tho leather uph ols lered front budcd seats. And enjoy drMng as good as you ~ knew IC could be. IWIM Tho-111tdlgmt ~- DICK MILLER MOTORS 12ow.w-~ 41 M•n SMtaAAe 557-2112 ORANGE.CO.-L.A. '17.10 .:.:r::, Standard· Pacific Corp .• Costa Mesa-based home building firm, has reparted fourth-quarter and year-end results as follows: net income for the fourth quarter ended Dec. 31, 1977, rose 19 percent to $2,255,823, equal to 62 cents a share fully diluted, on revenues of S'20,957,S69, compared with net In- come or $1,888,843, or 51 cents a share fully diluted. on revenues or $241676,116 for the same period a year ago. For the year net income climbed 48 percent lo $7,236,011, or $1.99 a share fully diluted, from $4,875,238, or $1.36 a share fully diluted, for the prior year. Total revenues for 1977 climbed 12 per cent to $88,525,301, compa red with $79,334,485 in 1976. Earnings per share have ~n adjusted to reflect a 3·for·2 stock split, effected as a 50 percent s tock dividend to shareholders of record on Nov. 15, 1977. CAPITOLIZE WITH CAPITOL CAPIHllZATION MEANS TO COtMRT CAPITOL TO CASH Taxes and Inflation. estimated to be 6-n In 1978. are making It harder for people to retain or bl.llld their assets. The IRS has aggressively eliminated meny tax lncenl!Yes used by Investors tn the past. ~ with the constant tax nrou-11oaorol'iOCJOOc..1> and """ "*"' • "OfN °" 01"'*' ~t ~ tor .,. no• ,., c.v>1r01. HO"! LOAN ... ,_ lo c.IPllOlll• ll<>u• t<JUllV Into 1 QI!> -. "'"" 1-.1 - 11\•ndty• .. - Ci law rev\51ons, ~re ~ stDl oppottmdtlaa ...uable for ln~ors to shelter or defer ltotll i.w..tawat lllMI anaec1 Income (I.e. salary end commission). If you plan your 1978 program now. rather thari wait till year end, you'IJ h8'Ye emple Ume to anelyze ond property choose the one which will meet your objective. Pora pef'llOIYI co ..... Uoca. Including if you w!sh your talc ettomey or C P.A. cont«t Pullar o.Je, 8eatM Via ~ ot (714) 644-4620 or the eddrest shown t>eto:w- Capitol Home Loan OflltofOllll~~ &. __ .....,..,~ C1ll_{I( ____ .., ~--.. ...... ,.,.. We'd Really like to help CX>STAMESA ~-......... 11.U640-4412 ANAHEJM miw.~''"' 114111&-34SO lONOBeAO-c ..,. ~ Dll ,.... """ 21S/421-0333 The generating of technological and product im· · provements helped along by new methods and processes from abroad . "THE GENERAL attitude of the Uruled States toward direct investment from abroad is one of friendliness and invitation." Bank of America says "There are at least 14,000 local in· dustrial organizations supported by state or local JtOvernment lhat actively promote invest- ment." The United States exhibits that friendliness in some of the ways it seeks to recruit iove~t· ment. A good example is the JtrOUp Of ftn;.incial incentives Pe n nsylvania offcrC:'d Volkswagenwerk AG of West Germany when the auto maker was looking for a spot to locate its U .S plant Ovt•r 1,lu~ (~o uutt•r MASO listinqs Among the incentives offered were a $6 million loan from two state rellrement funds at 8.S per- cent annual interest and a $40 million loan from the Pen- n sylvania Industrial Develop- ment Authority that financed the purchase of the existing site. Under the agreement, VW pays interest or 1 75 percent annually on the loan for 20 years and 8 percent for the last 10 years. f}p• and Doacns N•- ; ~~~~(_~wt f J unt1Sv\ 4 lnclN.,.-1 S D•l•rm & f'"cFbl 1 r ~•\l•fl 8 ("~"'" 1 ,,.., ... , 10 Al,..(•m I I~ II ... Ol(IUt> .. '• lafiAHd(C' 1 1 1• IJ ConF•h< -' ,,. l 4 Afln(.o • • lS tHQP\,,., un t tAi \ft "Ay,.""1 11 • Pldn0-1 • 19 l'i,\llfV t • U V1<tr,.')t 10 WnMo•d n7 21 Hu<l<PAO 1'l.I 1> '••~SM 1 na 1l t mo1r•.n11. J.. \J4 '' l'Jo.-,llfftd 'I& H M••ll hi u~ Ld\I ... 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'°' HMM< f t! 1~ ._ Ma~ • t '4 ~ ~ ~tr, ! ; ~ ~· . tj ti lll '4= \It w•e 1 • 6 aw lm'"C. i '4 , ~:::: aw '•:,!I et:·49 1 "' al,t Si J:l:• ~~Ka i: ';! 11\h ""~II.~ 2 14 1: ft .,,.,_= 1 J ~ 12 11 ~~. :::.t1r..-.f J \ji-\lt I ., n + t: a t ~ •+ I tr':~ = :: ft n:~.~ =··--I~ ., ;:+ :: =wllf '1.>tl 't ,..,: ~~!, ~ ''I 1 2' ~~ ~ ::TJ.. ~ t I~ , ~.~ • ., .. W.-\'t ='' i' d! 't:~'" ul ,11 i,~····· .. ,..w .. '"' l;-" """ .. ~ AO" 10 ._." 1:) J it n:t.:·~ .'''l\ :a J " ·~-~ 1 ........ fA1 i = 1= ~~ft t' .. l .,~_:,• j" H·i..=·~ ~:,~:ii' ,: il~:::ij :1:~0 '.: ,• J8'1~.~ t: : It! ~I ~ ~~-· ~ ... t!r.. r-:: ... ti ;· j ":,;: • : ;: ,m. ;:.., t._ i ' + "-=:lf",' • !6 1._ i. ~Olbfy ::ttlO JI I'"";:;: pf t.. •• d 4 • " X ~ -JC I 4N--• " • • .. , Dt!·:.·~ ~" -:!t "& , • 1?: E· _,11 ~ l tt::.... W i 1 ~. ~ .r:.. ~ • ~ lfla~ , ... H e1-l~ -11u];;;!" .... ·~ •• ~is ~~ ! . ~ S:'":i• 1 •• ,f , .. ~ ~ Aa il".:" (la" . : ., 16\lt-~ .-'I Q • ~ in 1t ,. • ~ •· ~ -Rec 1 10 ~... ,. ... "l -"'-" LJ 1 1t •••.• _ 11_ 1.. """'"' .. ~ ~ -.. ....."' ·l! ti ~ 'L. .... , ,,, .. , !!l... ~ 1 .... , ~ 1 ..... ... , ~: Eli I :.·,-: :t 1 •• ' +"" ~ •. t;!U 1f -~.~ 0 I' m;~.1" I rl .J L ~ .. 1 ~·: ~ • • ~ +t I iii:.• t i >t 11 --. 1S '"°'• " z.au.n1;i4 " ..-.a.e 'll +·• • • .. .. . . ..... . • ' lt.-d1y, March 21. 1978 N DAILY f>ll OT 85 Import Battle Takes Twist BJ SYLVIA PO&TEll It'• scarcely news that a bllter balUe ls beinf w11ec1 between those •bo want d>eap lmports and those wbO want to cut back oo imporu to protocl the Jobs of Americans In related nelds. It'a a basic coNlJct and no solution hu beell found . BuL aomelh.ing new has been added, a o&sty lwht tbal mlabt be called .. inten:aaJ protactfonlsui." TBJ818 AN El'PO&T BY OM U.S. industry to stop Ute growth of another In order to protect ita own &ha.re ot &be economic pie. If auccesatuJ. It would replace tbe consumer &s the ul· Um ate dccidlnc force 1o tbe marketplace with • torm of eoverrunent COl1lrol remtn!ICCDI of the gwJd.a ol the MlddJr Ag ea. Yet some baslneas interests are, throuih ignorance or Jndll- ference, advocallng lt. The real lo&ens can only be consumttS. Money's Worth The battJe is • spln- orr from the contlnuiog squabble over sugar lmporfs and sugar prices.. . Sugar industry leaders contend thal unbm1led imports. wiU bankrupt domestic sources ol supply, so that when the next abortage emerges, suge.r prices again wlll skyrocket. They advocate controls in lmpo~ in order to even Ot_Jt these swings. Whether this f.,ar is well based or not a& beside the point of this report. WHAT lS IMPORTANT JS that tacked onto the latest "Sweetener Supply Auuranc~ Act" promoted by. domestic sugar interests is a dew proVlSlon that makes it illegal for even domestic producers to make more of any sweetener than the secretary of agriculture decides is required by consumers. The logic ls simple: Limit competing supplies. raise and maintain prices and keep more or the business for the sugar interests. U domestic sugar (mainly augar beets> wins, com farmers and corn processors lose. . . Com produces a variety of products, including in- dustrial adhesives, candles, vinegar, antibiotics, coolt\ng oil, margarine, rust preveotJves and soap. It also makes s weeteners used in baking products, chocolate drinks. pies. cakes, cookies. jellies, etc. IF THE AMOUNT OF CORN that could be used for sweetening is limited by political press ure, the beel. growers would get more money and the coro farmers les.s. Consumers would be bit in the pocketbook. . Worse, this could become a precedent for cartehilnc the economy. Once the idea ls accepted that the producUon of domestic industries can be planned for this purpose and In this manner, what is the point of competition? MonoP?lY makes sense in an economy where the object is to restnct production rather than to spur competition to produce bet· ter products, cheaper prices, more jobs. And, top of this, taxpayers would have to put up tht' funds for policing the producers and punishing those who commit the "crime" of growing too much or making Loo many sweet pies. Srock Market Yields To Profit Taking NEW YORK (AP> -The stock market fell ln moderate trading today, giving back much of the gains ac cumulated the past three days, Analysts generally cited profit taking by investors as the maJor reason for the market's d~line. Beyond that, brokers offered a number of secondary reasons. One suggested that cooern over peace in the Mid· die East might be adding to market jitters. Several said that a report by Sears Roebuck showing lower fourth quarter earnings tended to depress the market. "The basic reason is that the market has been a bit over-extended or over-bought on the up side and it's nov.· correcti.ng ror that," said Newton Zinder of E.F. Hutton & Co. . The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials. which posted a gain of more than lS points the past three sessions, Cell ll.00to762.82. Overall, losing issues out.numbered gainers by a S·3 margin among New York Stock Exchange-listed issues. Si~la In Tiie Spof If ghi NEW YORI( IAPI· s.i... 4 P.tn price ll"CI n•I c._ of tM nn..,. "'°'t a<ll .. New Yori< SID<ll, Eachlnge 1-, ttadlng n.a1.-11y •1 More then " Se•rsRb . .•• .••• 6'f1N10 22"' -1~ RCA • • • • • • •• m.soo 24 _,.,.. Eoo" . . . • 1n.eoo 45~~ -1 Ttt•omp . . 10l, too IO'"o + \\ Clllcorp 20:1,IOO 19>.. • • Mlf\nlt'IM • 1 ... SOO ... "It -1~ SntFtlnt 193,aQO 14"'-• -LUCl<'I' Str 1n, 100 u -v. Chris Craft 1'1. tOO tO'• + -AllRlc.flfl . •. 1'1,9(111 .U .. -1"- VAL Inc 11:1,.oc>O 21~ -~ c.rr1 ... Ct> 116.llJO ••~ • -OowC ... m • IW,.00 2l"a -._ GPU Cp • IH,100 lO''ll . , aenkAmtr • • ua,.t00 22w. -f\ Allllftie!an uaders NEW YOllK tAP). Sales. 4 pm. prkt """' ... , '"""°" Of ~ lfn "'°'t a<l1 .. """"tun SlllCk Ere~ •~'''°'• ~::b':f,._n•ll°"."1.ly at me;'~.=" ~'Ill _ "' AJl19 Alrl •3.000 •• , . ~·.:.· Corp •••• 1··~ -~ n 011 47,'100 11"' • 1 HerllMt CO. 4A,100 10~ .••• AngloCo LIO 0 , 100 9 -V. Olemp Ho . l7 .JOO f , •• ST P CorP. • lol,700 2114 • · .. NYTlml'S A • 31, 100 '1 • V. Cenv111c • . • . 29,t>O:> u~ • .~ Doaelone•A r~rafl#• New Yon(API Flnel Dow..JoN1 •VffAQttt STOCICS Lo CIDW Ottl JO 100 ~St ':,'J"' .. 1.0:1 1ua?-1100 JO Trn 710.36 211 1• 107 :I' 207 IJ-I •s 1S Ult lot '3 10. ll t()S IS 10. O.? O.S4 's Stk 211.n 2n .1• :i.1 11 26' ..,_ 3.ol 11\dUS •····· .•• .• . .. . . .. . . •• 2,112,000 Tr•n ••.•••••••.•...•. · '"·= UU11 ................. •••• m 6S Siie • • • . • • • • • • • • J,.)26.400 M'hal Sfo<-k• Did NEW YOJIK fAPI ACIVancf!d Otcllnf'd Unclltn9"f Tot .. IUUM Ntw hlOlls Ntw I-\ $/All\ .. loday '1:v ... 10141 •Jl 477 4)0 ,., 1•11 ,.,, lf .. '" !) NEW 'VC>f!I( IAPI ·NY :.tock ~•lt'O ~~r:i:-;:....: . . . . . . . ~:~ = WHll. •GO . • • 14 -000 MOlllll •OD • •• , • 1•.= Yt•' -•• It, • l-YNn aqo ,. ,. .. 11.~ Jen 1 to CS.t• • •• •••••• •1 1. 14.t~"':-1977 to d•I• • • •••• ••• 1.IM,'!!~ 1'7+ ID &le • .. 1.S1),S_..,, WHATAMCX CJ•O Hl!W YORI( (API TDIHV "t:T "' ~u nt b 1 >JI ,.. UI ,,.,., '° ~. I I -..-.>·--...... ----·· ........ ·-------.. DAILY PILO't Tu.tday. March 21, 1978 Television TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS 11 1.°'I>.\) EVENING I.GD 8 i =-NeWS e EMERBIHOY ~EJ WMn a huaOand and wit• t>eCome emt>rolled In a vlolant ergument, the petamedlca .,. celltd In to lid the Injured G NM BAaKETIALL lotl AngelM Lak ... I VI. San Anlonlo 8f)Uf1 G) THE BRA.DY BUNCK Annoyed at being eo 8"\811, Bobby trlM 9"erct... to mai<t hfmMlt taller. When 1het flllts, he tries to become a mental giant. Q) AOOKIE8 Huonan bait· two po1a. -~t &o entk:e en tllu9iw lrr.ngler SI E1..ECTfUC OOMPAHV I!> PIAIONAL RHANCE ··wonc And 1noome·· 0 A8CNEW9 l~IJ MOVIE • • ·~ • Man'• Favotlt• SP<J(lr (Part 1) ( 11MU) Rock Hu<lton, Paula Pr- tou. A Mll-daomed span .. In Suspense • •• ., 'Pafll ~"(1941) Sldnay Potllet, Paul Newman A peir ot Am«!· ~ In Perie romanoe two 1'11 on v-=auon (2 hr•) JAMES MICHEHER'S WOA.LD "Spe1n. The Land And The Legend" M~ ,,_ tile unique hlS!ory Of the COUftlly chronloled In 1119 noval, "lbet\a," att.-ni>Ung to cal)ture the "~ •IC™-, colO< of e ~. 1tr111109 and contradictory land." 6' TURNABOUT "HOW To Survtve Your Job" The ten moat ..,..._ lul occupations; tile 'Wiim· Ing alg1l8 of ltr.t; n.xible work IClhtldulee -Jol>- rtl•led t91\11Gn. 1:30 f) (I) SHIELDS & YAAHEU "ean-" 0 THE HOTDOOOERS: A WINTER EQUINOX n .. Kllon of en lntorne- t1onel competition tn A"*1Ca'I ,_t and lae- tnl growtno dertldevll sP<J(l, lr-ty\tl 9kllr>g or Hotdogglno .. I• pr_,1. ed man. 11\ougll -"•Vlf'IO lllhe<I In hla Ille, mU9t now do Iha rHI thing In order 10 uve hie buUt-up repule- llO<I end hf• l<>b ( 1 hr, 30 min) G) BEWITCHED Count BanJola hangs up!-.ldl' do\\ n I rom the ce1lmg to play "Alabama Bound" on the l>anjo on "The Chuck Barris Rah Hah Show" tonight at 8 o'clock on Channel t. II) CAOSS-WITS '1!) OVEREASY 9.00 6 (.I) CBS MOVIE *** -support Your Locml Gunfighter'' (1911) J-a.n-. SUzenne Pteahette. In 0<der 10 swin- dle • small town. • con man romenoea a mine owner'• daughter and lnveni. a hired kill«, (R) 0 NBCMOVIE Darrin becom. a Oa Vinci with • klU and a twitch from Samantha fl!) OVER EASY '1!) THE OAOWINO YEAAS R-i drllWll dnk dlJty tJi) MACNEIL/ LaiRER REPORT a!) HOME GARDENER "SOll51" (J) JOKER'S WILD "Studying Children Cl) UNTAMED WORLD "Sahara" t10J t.l~V ORIFflN 7,30 0 CAHOIO CA.MERA 0 NEWl YWEO OAME 0 ®) HOLL YWOOO SQUARES 7!00 0 NBC NEWS 0 LIARSCLUB 0 ABCNEWS II) ILOVELUCY RN;ky and tile Mertzes arn Iha c.entral character• on Lucy's flrst oovel. Cl) AOAM-12 Malloy dr11w1 a po11ce rook.e u a pa11nur when II) THE BRADY BUNCH Mlk• and Carol are hevtng d11focu1ty adjusting meir two lamlllea to loving In one house. Cl) ADAM-12 R-i 1s assigned to write a magazine article about Malloy fD LA. lmEACHANGE Chann~l L ist i ng• tJ KNXT (CBS) LO'> Angell·'> 0 KNBC (NBC) Los An11e1es 0 KTLA find I LO!) Anqt'les 0 KABC·lVIABCI Los Angel~~ 18 t\FMF3 (CBS) S.in O'eqo 0 KHJ· TV (Ind) LO'.> An<Jule., n~ KCST (ABC) San OtPQO II) KTTV (Ind) Los AnQcl1·~ Cl) KCOP·T\/ (lnel) Lo'.> Anq• le~ fD KCET· TV (PBS) Los Anqeles a!> KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntinqlon Beach I lnstde Streight" a!) NEWSCHECK An 1ntonnauve colloc:Uon ot Oranoe County news. government •nd consumer attelrs. people and SPof11, Cl) TME GONG SHOW 1!001)($) SAM Alter un84lOCtllSlully pur- suing a burglar loaded with loot from a gun st0<11, Sam ~nd Br_, take on •pair of h11ecker1 trying to get rid or a trucllloed of ••Olen CIOlllee. 0 CHUCK ~RJS Guests Cab C•lloway, Chuck Betry, Lynn Ander· son 0 MOVIE • • •,-. Countdown·• 11961!) Robert Duvall, J~ Cun. An American utronaul landl on the rnoon only 10 diecOYW a demoltahed Ru utan spaCt1Ctal1 (2 hrs I 0 @) LAVERNE & SHIRLEY ·Too C.u1li6" Tiie g1r11 aet out 10< a livo-d1y cruise tolle<l wit/I son, tun and men (RI II) CAROL BURNETT ANO FRIENDS Cl) MOV1£ **V. "Misty" (1981) Oav\d Ladd, Pem Smltll. lwo youngatllf• cap1ure a tabled wild llOrae and her con and find lh•t taming tlltlm p<Ollldes •n unex- pecled dividend O ®l THREE'S COMPANY "Janet's Promotion" Jacil end Chr1aay talk • reluc- llflt J_. 11110 uldng '°' a promotion a1 thtl ft0<1tt lhOp wt*9 She workS. (R) CD MERV ORIFFlH Gueata: Tony Bennen, Serah Vaughan, Berne· datte Peters, Kuen Morrow, P91• Borbuttl. fD OOQJMENTARY SHOWCASE "TVTV Looks At Tiie ~An lmprMalon1a. fie view of thtl 197 6 Acade- my Awards. a!) MASTEAPIECE THEATRE ''Anna Karenina" Anna heart •boU1 Vronaky·a auempted auiclde; Vron- Como Takes It Easy SINGING HOLIDAY SPECIAL WEDNESDAY Debbie Boone, Kenny Rogers, Perry Como Three Paramnunt Pilots Filming The Hollywood Reporter "Legs," "Spanner's Key" and "True Grit," three pilots from Paramount, are being filmed on three different sit.cs ''Legs," a Garry Marshall proj~ for NBC, is filming on the lot and stars Caren Kaye1 Marcia Lewis, Scott Baio and Lynda Goodfriend in the situation comedy built around the lives of Las Vegas abowglrls "Spanner's Key.'' an NBC pilot, was created by Peter Benchley Filming began on the un- derwater action-adventure in Key West, Fla. Stallley Kallis is executive producer. ~n Chap- man produces with Alex Singer directing. Michael Parks, Mary Louise Weller, Moosie Drier, Felton Petry and William Windom star. ''True Grit," an ABC pilot starring Warren Oates and Lisa Pelikan, began lllming in and aroond Canon Cit.y, Colo. s..ndor Stem ls the ,,_orlter-producer wllb lUcbard Heffron directing. Actress Rep~es 'Roots' TV Role LOS ANOELF.S CAP) -Lynn Moody wUI ~te her rolo as Irene for ••Roots: Tho Second H red YC'arJ" when productioft bepn ln April. ProduceT Stan Maraull hu alpod John E rrnan to dim:t the fint end thlrd eeamcnts end WUUam Craln to direct tho IM!CODd ment. or the 12-P&r.t • Geora Sta.nrord Brown bas also bMli JiDH tor bls role u TODl. Pion ,. black clftematorr~o.bn M. WUcota Will rve u director ol apby for the D•Yld:.L. 'ol productloD. , (/ Vewran of 45 Years ' Show Biz Picks Spot,s By JAY SHAJlBU'JT LOS ANGELES (AP) -At 65, an age most men arc taking 1t easy, Perry Como is .•. well, by goll}, he's taking it easy, too. He used to be on TV every week, now only checks in once in a while. On Wednesday, he has an ABC music special, "Perry Como's Easter by the Sea," done al Sea World Park near San Diego. It was to have been taped in sunshine. Alas, it rained most of the time. (10 p.m., Channel 7) "THAT SHOW'S GOING TO BE a helluva ad for rain ~ear,'' be laughed, meaning the rain didn't stop work, just gave a slicker look to the product.Ion, which co-stars Kenny Rogers and Deb· by Boone. The ever-relaxed veteran of 45 years in sbow biz spoke by phone from his home in Jupiter, Fla.,, north of Miami, where he spends most of his time. He was asked what kind o£ schedule be keeps these days ''Well. I kind of make my own:• he amiably allowed. "I work as little as I can get away with.. I do two or three specials a year and a couple of trades (reciprocal guest appearances>. ••1 AM DOING A Ll1TLE MORE recording now, though," he added. "l goofed off for a while because I was doing quite a bit of television, and I was really picking my own pockeL "Because that (records) is, as the kids say, where it's at." Como, wbo began his career in 1933 with Tom· my Carlonc's band at a mighty $28 a week, was asked if the more recent era of acid rock ever made him think his easy-listening-style was finis. "NO, I NEVER FELT 'rRAT way.'' he said. "There are always good songs cropping up. Hect. 1 cul 'Impossible' and 'I Love You So,' both hits in that era. But I never try to push anything. "U it <a song) doesn't show any sign of lire. t just. get off of it. But they're writing some fine, what you'd call 'contemporary,' songs today. There's a lol of good music out there if you listen for it.•· It's a physical fact that as singers grow older. they haw a tougher time bitting the bigh notes. They tend to pitch their musical arrangemenu in a lower key. Como says he's no exception.. .. YES, r'VE GONE DOWN ALL right.1• be laughed, launching Into a story about lrimsel.C. He was doing ~ coneert last year. be said. and was a bit hoarse. The musical arrangem ent s~meci a bit high at rebeanal. So be said, he kept telllog the pianist, ••-rato 1t a UWe lower, a little lower: and finally be says, 'Gees. Pent, I'm 1'\lDDID3 out of piano.• And the· bnd just broke up." EASTER SUNDAY BRUNCH ''With 1""-EaJter Bunny In Person'' 10 A.M. -2 P.M. WTRU.Y ... 5 P.M:. • 10..30 P.M. TUBE TOPPERS KCET ,i6' 8 00 "Spam, the Land untl The Ll'gend " James Micht?ner. author of "Iberia," takes anolht>r look at Spain's "essenct>, fl('hness. color" KHJ 0 8:30 "The Hotdoggers. A Winler Equinox " America's fastest - growin~ darcde\ ii sport. freestyle ski- ing. is cxamim•d dunn~ international competition. KOCE ~ 10 · 30 -"\Jew Orleans Concerto." Composer Richard Dickerson, his music and his influence are featured. lily eoc41pts a d1tian1 army poet In order to lorget lier. (Pan 7 of 10) 9':30 0 [I SOAP "'Epoaode 24" Jod,. auc- cumba 10 a women a cnerma, """"' JH61ca 8\lf8/ls 8 jury I WtdlCI In ,_ trial 10< llMI murder ol tenn11 pro Pet• Campt>.il 10:00 Iii B NEWS D 0 HAW.0 BABIES ·Old Frlenda" Wiien an un'Wed moUIW decklell to gl,,. lier O.by 10 ,_ beat friend. WflO ta married but barren. an. ~ they must -their reletloo- shtp Cl) HONEYMOOHERS Ralph enters a OOfltltlt plcllfng the category or popular lllUllO, and seorna 10 haw • aoaootll roed 10 the top prize. fD MICHAEl JAac.8~ a!) NEWSCHECI< An lnlorm1uve eollec11on ol Oranoe County newt, • government and coneurllllf aHaJr1, people and sporta. 10:30 m m NEWS fD ~EIL /LEHRER REPORT CD SPEaAL New Ortalna Conoet 10·' Black cluaical rnualc com- PG&M Roger Dlcileraof\ crea-h•s "New Orieaf\s Conc>er1d'; • ~talion of u... pieoa end • IOOlt. •t !hit compoe«'• experience and lnlluenm 11:00 80 O (I)@) NEWS D LOYE.~N STYLE ' L0\19 And The J&alou1 Husband" Joon wanra to teat h11 wife's hdeoty · Love And Th• Frae Weel(end"' Tony lnv11" L•urle to stiere en epart• ment lor •weekend. G MOVIE • * * •·Time limn" (19571 Aictowd Widmark. Rlehard BeMnar1. M OHIO« laces poulble court-marll•I ~ of ev;denOe thet l'MI rlrY'Nled lnlonnellO<I 10 tl'MI enemy Wiiiie In 1 P o W camp (2 hra I II) THE 000 COUP\.E Oec:et gala deadhne )1ttera enat convniltlng hln\Mlf to wrlllng • booll Cl) LET'S MAKE A DEA1. fI!) DC< CAVETT G.-1' dancer 9l1d c:N>te- ograpl\e' ....,ce Cunning- ham. a!) MACNEIL / LEHREfl REPORT 11-30 6 (J) C88 LATE MOVIE * * • "Columbo: Double Expo9Uf8" ( 11173) Peter Falk, Robt1tt Culp. A ruth· t-mollWUonal r-cll 1peolellst ~ -bt8Ck- mall to further his care«. murders • man about 10 tum him In and tr.,._ the victim'• wile (R) 0 TONIGHT H<>'I. Johnny Carson Gueeta· Blr>g Croeby, R•v Bolger, Mervin Haml19Ct!, Burt Mustin, Cemec.(R) 0 LOYE. AME.RICAN STYLE "Love And 'Tile Pluml>er ' Agathe tliee to attract the ettentlon of Ille ~­ •Low And The New Size S" Pmty ren.ns from a -'lh apa With • ,_ fl"a ABC MOVIE • • "Twin Oeteeuvea • 111176) Jim & John H11Q8f, un1an Gllh 'Twin pn1111e detectowa •Uemptlng lo HpoM a psychle con oroup become lnvotved Ill mlKder (A) m THATGIRL ··aone Witll Tiie Breeze'' Cl) OETSMART To obi.in • 11et ol enemy I llQenla, ~TROL l!IM.M • 0... 'Miii Ille hat a OW1,.. E CAPTIONED A8C I NEWS MORNING 12.00 D TW11.JO..-r ZONE: Strange occurr anoe• 1n • ..-natl town IMcl people to believe they •r• being Invaded G) MOVIE "ThtM Houra To Kiii' ( 1954) Dana Andrewa, Donna Reed. A men attempll to solve the mur· dor of hie brother, veer• alter he WM acouMld of ll'MI Ctlmt and MCeoed. (2 !Ira.) CD MOV1t * * "Firemen, sa.... My Chtld" (1115-4) Spike JonM, Buddy H.ct<ett A tore ltatton, mennec! by Spika Jonee and 1111 bend of lanlea. get their ftrat ouo- WM-dtlven engine. (I ht 30min) 12".30 8 MOVIE * • "The Lemon Drop Kid" (11151) Bob Hope, Mentyn Ml.X'Well A gano ster -a bad up anc1 lnalall 11\11 hos lnlormet ~ s10.ooo 'Wlth•n • montll. (l hr. SS min.) 1:00 D TOMOAAOW TIMI Rev. Bob Rlc:harda, Olymplc gold m•d•I ....mi-, tatka eboUt Amero- cen athltltea: ex. Ire Got· denl>efg tell• why he ciOMd Francon4a CotleQe. 0 NEWS CJ 18PY "To Flofence Wnh Love• (Part 1) 1. 15 IJ (I) KOJAK "LOMr Takea All" A pau of Nlldt loY9ra (Lntle Nki!Hn, Ja'Net Du8ol•l coflal>Ofate on • m~ <!Ollar diamond hel1t But, In the pian'a a10ecutlon, the woman'a llulband I• lnedvenenrty murdered (R) 130C!) MOVIE ** "Look In Af\y Window" (11161) Paul Antee, Ruth Roman. A 1~1 perwlll f!Nllly r9llllze hOw bed thel< llOme kfe II Wh8rl their &On Is 8lrwled for prowling. ( I llr., 30 min I 2'00 0 NEWS G MOVIE * *'·~ "Tlltl Onl'( Wey' ( 1912) Jene Seymour, Marie Potter. n,. N1111 occupetlon of Dllnm•r1< ts met wttll rlllil1ll008. (2 hrt) II) MOVIE •*'A "HI• Kind or Women" ( 185 IJ Rot>Mt M•tchUm, J-~ A 11111 guy. belnO uMd to bring • recl<•t-bllCk to Iha U S lrom Meaoco, d,.. COll'lrl the ptol and w~ ""'"' ln'lm9•1oon oHoc•al• to th..,.,, the crime (2 hra.) U6f)8 N£WS U08 MOVIE * • "Plltow 01 Death" ( 11145) Lon Cheney Jr , B<enda J0)1:e A lawyer murders hi• 'WIN and tam•- ly efler talllng In love with 1.motllat woman ( 1 hr . 25 min) 3.00 IJ MOVIE • • * 'Mldaummer N1ohl'I Dream" (1961) Animated Narreted by RICl'lard Burton. Shall .. apeara'a comlC fantasy of tove end the conruaione that 11 can create Is pr-tad ( 1 hr . 30 nun ) Cl) NEWS 3660 NEWS •.oo e MOVIE * • "Onty lhe Coot .. (11172) Lilli Palmer. Michel Constantin Not redzlng ,_ '-band .. wotl<lng - en eep40neoe agent, • woman bel .. ves lie IS hev- tnO an •"•" ll'ld kills hit hlmale usoc1ate (2 hra ) B MOVIE * * ''The White Spld«" ( 11183) Joachim Berg«, Kartn Doc' A muter detec· 1tV41, WhOM ldenltly NI bMn kept a eecret. II the only hope of Ille free world against organized death and destructlOn. (2 hrs I G) MOVIE ** "L.oma0oone"(1951) Rtcllard GrMne, Carl Ben. ton Reid OpprtlPtld Eng.- llsh ,.,.~ oroanize and 111tack a ruthless oulla'W 111m11y (2 llrt I Wedne •da11'• Bayt.int~ Mo"M-• MORNING 11:3011) **'"'.Flesla"(1t47) Est'* Wllllams, Ricwdo Montalban. A twfn boy and gtrl grow up 10 beoome butltJohtera at their ,., ...... deaire, but the cell OI • music Is 1tr0fl9tlr for the boy (2 hrs. 20 mon ) AFTERNOON 12·00 0 * * • "I'd Clomb The HightlSt Mountaon" (19511 Rory Calhoun, 6u•en Hayward. A fflfll S*'IOfl end hi• c11v-bred wife accept • poaltion In \Ufl'I• or-the-century rural Georgia. ( 1 hr., 30 min ) Carol Burnett E ds 11 .Years of Co By lF.BllY BUCK LOS ANGELES CAP) • -The charwoman perched on her bucket and began to sing. "I'm so ~lad we had this time together •• .' came the familiar theme of lke Carol Burnett Show. a happy lime. ••. •CBS WANTEU \JS back, but T think it's classier to leave before you 're asked lo leave. 1 'm proud or our show. I'm no dummy. It's t.Jmelo put it to bed." Tears welled up in het" eyes and !:C:zi~ started down her cheeks . Seated in the aud.Jeoce were such performers es Bernadette Peters, Al- len Ludden and his comed1an wife Betty Whtt~. Roddy McDov.all and pioneer movie actress Lillian Gish. who will appear wslh Carol in the up- coming movie, "A Wedding." " ... I 'M FEELING OH so blue ... and still the happiness comes thl'ougb ••• comes a time we have to say so long." . T ugeing at her ear. her traditional salute at the end of each show, the Ped-haired (omedian walked to the end of the stage. Turning once to wave at the audience and throw a kiss, she kissed a sleeping guard on the top of his bald head, and was a:one. J IM NABOBS, WHO appeared·on each or tbe season open~ shows for 11 years, came later. Miss Burnett, whose show was the last surviving to provide hve enter- tainment without electromc gim- micky, says her plans include After 11 years, 1,500 tomedy sketches, 500 musiae.l numbers and spoofs o{ virtually every old movie, Carol Buntett was calling it quits. ·several specials, another moV1e and a lot or thought about wbat else she wants to do 10 the future. ,. MISS BURNBl"l' TAPED her final MIXED EMOTIO;s-show~ CBS T~levbio!l City on Fn· day night. It will be aired as a two Carol Burnett Qufts hour special March 29. Much of the show LS Buntett llOStalgia -repeats Hatton Role of sketches from old shows with Harvey Korman, a 10-year veteran or the show, Dick Van Dyke, a regular- LOS ANGELES CAP) earlier this season, and several guest -Lauren Hutton stars t . ''H" b R . s ars. 1 n 1 g 1 s e. ' ' a While sitting oo the bucket, Miss thrUl!?r Warner Rros. Burnett talked to ber audience: ?-'elevisiOlll \s n•w mak· "1 have very mixed emotions. This mg tor l'me. is like &raduation. It's e sad time and ' NiiHMOlll ~~\ .................. , w..-WOlllD··• + ' • \. J. ... .... I ,:-..=, -----..UDllMW ... GDIJCl19illdl lECHNICOLOR• liilc• •. .,, ... ....,_l!!I MA* IHIATllS ...,._ l lt·IJH IDWAIDS 1MIA 1'llS ntEATAES-OfWIGE CO SENIOR ClT1ZlMS SUM> SO. COAST PLAZA M 11 lnlltll a. M6-V11 llll,..... ''SEMI TOUGH" Ill DAILY ~ 6~:00-1~ .... ,,.,. , ... _ __..,..,.....,,. SO. COAST PLAZA MIH1t1ttt1St.5*nll ,..,_. ..._.,_., * ·-~ ,.,,..... ~--·., -~YMOPASID ­.,_,_.- Wo\f 1:A6-.a--.......... 1AJ..-4 P.M. 9UM1~ .... ,- SO. COAST PLAZA 11ue • ....,....,.m•t 11111 ..... I .,~ftOI Ml.~·--•ll ,.., .... '1DUaanl"' -·-CINEMALAND c:a...W"fe ..... ,,0 ----------c:a... W..t ni~n ....._.a.-64'-lln ) ....... ,~ tJt.IMI ~~ .. .,,.7161 •• st .. 77W446 Cell 60-5671 . Put a few words to work for u. • a • • • • ,. ...... -,,.. ..... -,. -.. .. JI -,.._ ..... • .. - -.... _ • . --··--'·--·--..., ......... -------· • t . . . , ... E"!, ..... , r AtNME:, •. , ......... '-v1s.01~ Original 'Grizzly' Hated Animals SAN FRANC'lSCO fAP> On the tube, bcardt.tJ (;nzily Adams 1s a ~How mow1la1n man who doesn't t''}t meat 01 wear unimal skins. His best friend is a gentle bear named Ben Most of the dialogue on NBC's popular serws, "The Life and Times o' Grizzly Adams," consists of pfcasant chat:; bt'lwecn Adums and the critters. They appt>ar to com mun1cate quJle surcessfully So much for leltw1s1on's Gnzzly Adams. A. CENTURY l\GO, the real hfe and limes or James Capen "Grizzly" Adams sizzled with grisly death struggle:; with bears, wolves and other beasts And Adams picked most of the fights. "That's true," says Charles t:. Selher Jr . creator and producer of the teJev1s1on series and its pilot movie. "In doing my rl'search, I round that the original Adams pro- bably bated animals." Take it from ol' Grii himself. Here's a typical passage from his autobiography. "The Adventures of James Capen Adams," which was compiled by San Francisco newspaperman Theodore Rittel to 1861> after a series of mterviews w1th the famous mounlai.n man· "THE BEAR, AS the ball slapped loudly m the fat of her breast, stag- gered and fell backwards, and began pa wing and biting the ground ... " After firing five more shots into the beast and stabbing her, he witnessed the folio\\ mg scene. "Again she endeavored to rise, but was so choked with blood that she could not. J drew my knife across her throat. and after a few convulsive struggles she expired." TELEVISION"S GRIZZLY Adams would rather flee his beloved woods for New York's Hell's Kitchen than comm 1t such a dastardly deed. The real Grizzly gloried in his kill. "I was alone in the gorge," boasted Adams, "and, as l looked upon the dead monster, I felt like Alexander sated with victory and wishing another foe to. engage, worthy of my prowess." Who is this vicious fiend and why did they make such a nice television show about him? ACCORDlNG TO B IOGRAPHER Richard H . Dillon, Grizily Adams was born in Medway, Mass .. in 1812. He trained as a shoemaker, but even- tually tirt-d of Lhe sedate life and headed west. Often near disastrous -but every lime Grizzly emerged, lorn and bruised perhaps. but intrepid still, uncowed, with ever a sarcastic word in his mouth for the natural fright of his romparuons." ADAMS' F AME GAI NED full stride as he began to catch, rear and traln a string of grizzly cubs -after mangling their mothers, of tourse. Grizzly brought his bears here in 1857 and became an instant bit, both with the act and the wild yarns which sprang free- ly from a rather large credibility gap. Three years later, Adams took his California menagerie to New York where he caught the eye of circus king P T Barnum They became partners. On the show's opening day, Adams. dressed in his standard garb of skins and furs, paraded his eight or nine growltng bears down Broadway. Reviews were favorable. ON OCT. 25, 1860, at age 48, Adams died. Cause of death: A scalp wound first opened by an angry bear and frequently aggravated by playful pats from his trained gritzlles. Sellier admits the real Adams and his Adams -portrayed by actor Dan Ha~~crty, himself a onetime animal trainer -have some ph1losophlc dif· ferences about humanity toward animals. • Ile says the maJor similarity is that both Adams have a pet grizzly named Ben which was raised from a cub. ..... NOMINATED FOR ACADEMY AWARDS lnclud1ng Beat Picture Best Actor • Richard Dreyfuss Best Actress -Maraha Mason " . Nell Simon makes feeling good legal ... GENE SHALIT. NBC-TV (PG) A RAY STARK PRODUCTION Of A HERBERT ROSS Al>f NFILSIMON'!:> ~THE GOODBYE GIRL: RICHARD DREYFUSS· MARSHA MASON & . Dressed for Her Role Actrcs::> :\11..i Farrow models the 1930::; dress she wears in the role of .JaC'qul'IHH.' de Belle fort in a film based on Agatha Christie's ,m\stcr.v "l>C'alh on the Nill'" She plays a Jillt•d woman whose pn·~C'O<'C' thn•alt·ns tht· Egyplian honeymoon of her former lover HIHl his hndC' In California's mountain gold coun· try. Adams became a hunter or the animal which soon would give him a nickname. "TUE CIL\RACTER I created is much more bt'ncvolent, ~ort of in love with animals and life," says Selher, president of Sunn Classic Pie----------------------lures. :_ ~ ......... : 1561 W SUNHOWER "PARDON MOH AffAIRE*' vv or RRISTOl c M 540 0!>94 • THl O ... E & OHL Y ,,.~, WJALL BLONDE MAM WJTHOHE BLACK SHOE" &M)lla ~ Worid'• ~t Lo<tw IPGI • THE EVIL WALTER MATTHAU GLENDA JACKSON ART CARNEY RICHARD BENJAMIN NOW PLAVING' STADIUM DRIVE-IN CI NEDDME 21 OrangP C.39·8770 Orange 634·2553 EDWARDS CINEMA t.lon T~urs 7 1~.q t~ ft1 800·800·1000 Costa Mesa 546-3102 S.t A Sun '2 00 ·4 OO·li00·800 ·1000 DAILY MATINEES "CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE THIRD KIND" (PG1 SATITUES a OC).4 ·~r.»10:111 "HOUSE CALLS" ~ IM.1M lM 16-1015 "HIGH ANXIETY" (PG) • 6A T-I ilo-2 l(M &CM U-8 "6-t Cl'A5 , 00-1 ~ »-e ~ 45 "THE FURY" (R) · 1~.-'0l).10:to "SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER" (R) w "RETURN TO WITCH MOUNTAIN• "NEVER A DULL MOMENT' (Q). "SATUAOAY NIGHT FEVER" (RJ "LIFEGUARD" .. THE ONE & ONLY" "WW & THE DIXIE DANCE KINGS .. (PO) "HOUSE CALLS" "SHAMPOO" (R) "THE FURY" (R) "THE REINCA~NATION OF PETER PROUD .. The cover of Dillon's "The Legend of Griztly Adams" growls. "Ills C'n- counters with his quarry were many and varied, not always sucressful "And although J used the name Grizzly Adams," he adds, "I just d1dn 't feel audiences were interested In a guy who walks around the . ~ 1 lderness beahng things up." A t horoughly infectious com edy \'ou don't have to know a nose ~ whf'elie from a tailspinncr to rnjoy "Skateboard." • rtl:~'~ Y.~ The mcMc thcJt deflet ~I :-... , l ,,~ i:1w111. fi:::.:-i AlUN 6ARrl!lO ""KAIHlHH llOlO .. ~ Hlf &mm HOFRv1AN h 'STRAIGHT TME ~~HARRY DEAN STANTON • GNN BUSEY • k"*'I ~0 ol hittteu 6mlasl Sllf1,e114m. 1111t1t fONl AlU • lllll OMUl nphlD!AAIU'Jlf •Gm!~· ~,~mimun1 ·w..hlWI~ · i.i.i1ioa us ~;l:e~MIU!M•mrnu nr~xa~ .. ~!~~1~~ ~· ... ~"'!·~...,...Mil--~·--........ __ •?'iJ NOW PLAYING f, ua CITY l AllAMllM DRIVE-IN •3 EDWARDS Oringe 63h'l911 Anaheim 8M·98~ tRISYOL CINlMA Olll llGI Mi ll •J a DOUtactt •I Sant.i An~ S.C0-1444 Ora119e 637·0340 £1 T0to 581 suo fOWAllDS wtlTlllOOI( CllUMAlAllO •l Gir(fen Gr011e ~O 4il\1 All.lhe•m 63~·7&01 10 NOMINATED FOR ACADEMY AWARDS I Including Best Picture Best Special Effects. Best Sound Best Director -George Lucas NOW SHOWING HISTOL C1NIMAS Cosio Mo'° CIMIOOMI Qraroe $40.7444 634·2!63 STADIUM ORfVf IN OrOngit 63Q 1860 ·-··-->~ ....... -.. -..... ;i.... ~. - - ' ( ...... , "'' ...cl•h &l .i~.I --.. ... = ... ~ OU$DH MOfl~N SH AIGHT TIMI ra1 l~-­"ntlGOOOln Gtll.M 1PG1 ,.__,,, •• •11 U.f.+--hl6-Ji;ll,.l<ll,.,,. ........ .IOfM JM"°" f. SA TUUAY HtGHT HVH M I ...... ,,1 .... ,. .... ,.,__ ... ~ ..... .,.114 ... ,_ 111aw10 CAbliU • VIC'TOill ~ "THE EVIL" 1111 ~u• "TKE GAUNTI.ET''1111 ONNAU.ftP J0MH 'l'UVOlfA UfVUIAY NIOt!l IMa (l\ 'WI L1knet1 (I) OUSJIH HCWl~H ITLUOHT ~ ta) ~ 1M1 mt (I) ,....., ____ _ . .. .. ' 'I DAIL. Y PIL.01 Triple Perfonner Adrcss Cathy Lee Crosby rounds out her l'areer by starring in Crown Interna t1onal's film. "Coach'' With' her back ground m athletics she was a natural for the role as coach of a boys' high school basketball team. A graduate of the Uni\'Crsity of Southern California, she was a ml•mbcr of a 410-yard relay learn, and she held seventh place in the US. Tenms Association single r.ankings Fleetwood Mac To Tour Russia The Hollywood Reporter Warner Bros Records act, FLe~twood Mac. 1s planning a Russian tour for lhe summer. A spokesperson for Fleetwood Mac said, "The tour 1s confirmed but there are many ex traneOlL'i d<.>tails that must be ironed out before it's definitely on " These details have to do with guidelines set down by the USSR. The Fleetwood Mac Russian tour may involve only a few dates. The tour is being arranged by the !-;ov1et government and the group's lawyer, Mickey Shapiro of Los Angeles Fleetwood Mac 1s one of the most decorated rnC'k acts m the music industry. having taken numerous awards, induding a 1977 Grammy for Album of the Year "Rumours 1 Marian McCargo's Role a Natural LOS ANGELES <AP> Marian McCargo, former top junior tennis player and wife of former Calaforrua congressman Alphonso Bell, plays ten- nis star Ahce Marble m "Little Mo." The NBC film is based on the life story of the late Maureen Connolly Miss Mccargo played against Miss Connolly in a 1uruor title match in Philadelphia in 1951. () ... ..... ... .... -...... ENTERTAINMENT I THEATER 'Two ·by Two' Sure-fire Hit A moving tJt.ory. A romanUc story. A atory of envy, hatred. friendship. triwnph. and Jove. Take a composer with the tuck record or Richard Rodgerb, a director ol musicals with the track record of Kent Johnson Md a playhouse with the musical trnck record of the Westminster Com- munity Theater and you have all the ln&redienta Of a sure-fire hit. True to form, these three entities mesb superbly into what must be termed the most en- joy able show of the season -"Two by Two." It's Otange County's first look at the musical based on the story of Noah and the ark, and it's an im- pressive ooe indeed. COMPOSER RODGERS, WHO WROTE the music to Martin CharnJn's lyrics and Peter Stone's book, certainly needs no ip- troduction. Johnson has be~n the hottest local interpreter of musical theater since bis first ''Stop the World, 1 Want to Get Off" in 1965. And the Westminster theater bas given Orange Countians a lengthy list of first-rate musical shows. Johnson has assembled a top drawer cast to carry out h.is intimate concept of the show JOHNION that kept Danny Kaye working for a year on Broadway. And his Noah, Richard Rowland, turns in a masterful performance despite coming aboard late in the rehearsal period. Rowland's charac- terization of a 600-year-old man is skillfully achieved, and his later transition to a younger, more vital Noah is equally impressive. Rowland's Noah is Tevye without angst, a fanatical yet funny servant or God who, if he's told to build a giant ark, will shrug his shoulders and hop lo 1t and Lord help anyone who tries to throw in a rudder if it wasn't in The Plan. This situation leads to one or the funniest musical con· frontations in the show THE SUPPORTING CAST AS an ensemble is excellent, but three in particular stand out. Pat Burson veritably glows as Noah's stern wife, Dan Angel displays a rousing comic vitality as Noah's I -I NOW PLAYING /. I~ ;/ ~e OLIVER REED cross his eyes} ' See RAQUEL WELCH cross her legs. See MARK LESTER cross hisllngers. See ERNEST BORG NINE crosS his heart. And see GEORGE C. SCOTT. REX HARRISON, DAVID HEMMINGS and CHARITON HESTON get double crossed. ee the biggest cross up of them all .. . .... . . . .. .. . ... ---- Intermission Tom Titus second son, and Linda Wolfe is captivating as a girl from the pagan parade down the street who arrives on the scene just ln tlme to catch the boat. ~=======~=====~~~~~~~~~ The duet between the latter two performers, which gives Miss Wolfe's rich vocal chords a workout, is another highlight. Dave Chandler turns in a spirited performance as the younger, rebellious son. Jim Flynn and Diana Lincoln are well cast as Noah's mlserly elder son and bis shrewish wlfe, whose wheeling and dealing in manure alter the fiood is excep· "TWO IY tWO'' A IYlllSkal "' llllCMrd RodOf"· Martin awm.lft Md PetM st-. dlre<t· ed bt Kffll Johnton, muslc61 04teclor 8111 Wolle,...-.-, F...S Albr19ht, cllore09rap1ty DY EWIM a.....-, Mlulld aftCl 1'9hllft9 Dy llll<henl ~Ill _., Jollll 81eka, ~ed Fridays and ~hWdi'I" e4 f ;lO ""-"April U •1 llw WHlmlnster Comnl4.WIHy ri-1 ..... 7272 ~ 6( .. WfflnllMt.r. A.-vallOlll .., ... ,. TMtlCAST ~ • • ••••••• A~n:I lllowlencl Either • .. • . . • • ••• • Piii lunon Jape111 • . .. . • . • • ... • • • • • • . • .. .. • • • .. • .. .. • • • • • • • o. .. Owllldl"' Slltm , . . . .. . • . . •• • • • • • .. , • ,. • ,. ............ ., • ,. , .• Jlfn FlyM l..Hh ... •• .... ••• •• • ................... ~LlllC.0111 Ham • •• •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • .. • • • • • • .. . • • • •• Deft Af'091 R•<htl ........ ,. • • • •• •• •• •• . . • • , • • .. • • • • Ly ..... To~ Goldie . . • . . . . . . . . • .. . . . . . . . . • ............ Li'* Wtlle tionally funny. And Lynda Towler makes a scin-.. tillallog stage debut as Angel's unloved sp0use. The Rodgers-Cbarnln musical s~re is out- standing, even if the individual numbers are too parochial to take fltght on their own. The aforementioned "Rudder" number between Noah and his three sons crackles with precision; Miss Burson's "Old Man" solo is stirring and poignant; only the earlier "Put Him Away" piece needs tightening. "Two by Two" goes flrst cabin all the way, with a special bow to its helmsman, Kent Johnson, for yet another exciting piece of musical theater, and another to his exceptional oarsmen. Put this one on your "must see" list. MEL BROOKS THESE TWO COMEDY HITS NOW PLAYING TOGETHER ONLY AT EDWARDS CINEMAS MADELINE KAHN · Ct.OOIS IIAcHMAN ·HARVEY KORMAN __ .. .,. r&Tlll·lllltWT ---I lllSIC flOM "'MIGi AllXIOr MUil! 01 UUTli/ASTUIM MCOWOS & TU>CS] ~--~;;·• ••a_::."~umo• CiJ. 'ANN IE HALL A ~r~nce. SCHEDULE FOR BOTH CINEMAS FRIDAY ANXIETY: 7:45-11:05, ANNIE: 6:00-9:30 SAT ANXIETY: 1:00-4:20-7:50-11:10, ANNIE: 2:40-8:05-9:35 edwards NEWPORT NEAR COAST HWY. & MACARTHUR JJEWPORT 0 omrn:a 644-0760 f 1 . , . --.. SUN ANXIETY: 3:45-7:10-10:35 MON TUES ANNIE: 2:00-5:25-8:55 edwards HUNTINGTON I UCH AT ElUS, H.I. 848-0388 .... . --.. ' :: -· • . . INS I DE: •Erma Bombeck-•Comics •Ann Landers •Classified 9NL.1eoturing_._. _. ____ Ci A WASP Looks Baek Though the women pilots have missed a lifetime of payments, they have had lives marked by achieve- ment known by few women. By Jl'DITll OLSON Of ... D•tly Pl ... SCMC Questton . What is the definition of a veteran? Unfortunately for members of the World War II WASPs (Women A1rforce Service Pilots), theanswerbas notincluded women pilots. Though they flew important missions for the United States during the war they never re- ceived the same housing, medical and education benefits that other servicemen did. The WASPs ha~ sought veterans benefits since they disbanded an December of 1944. Attempt after allempt has been made in Congress over the years and President Carter finally has signed a bill, but the women do not know what their benefits will be yet. ••If we had golt.c:n the same benefits as the men l probably would have had my doctor's degree in something," lamented Vi Cowden, one or the just over 1,000 members of the historical group The WASPs have spent "months" lobbying in Washi~ton, DC. recently, Mrs. Cowden :;aid, b<•causc ~omc or the women need medical care and want to be treated at VA hospitals. THOUGH THE women have missed what amounts to n1•arly a lifct1me of repayment, they have had J1vt•s marked by camaraderie and achievement known by fevr other women. OseBr WBnts You The ann•al Mtional pastime o£ trying to gue6S which movies will win 06cars at the Academy Awards ceremony April 3 is un· derway. Il was a b1g year for romantic comedies, science fiction and, after a long dry spell, mov· ics about women. • But regardless of who or what earns the hardware on Oscar ni~ht, the Daily PUot would J1ke to know who 1ts readers feel deserves the ~olden statuetl<'. . To cast your votes y<>11 are asked to ml out the contest form and return it lo the Dally Pilot no later Ulan Wednesday, March29. · Entries should be addressed to <>sear Race, Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, 92826. Results will be published the day of the Academy Awards ceremony, Monday, April3. · BEST PK'TURE O "Ann\<-Hall." (j "The Goodbye Girl." O "Juba" 0 "Star Wars." D "The Turning Point:• BEST ACTRESS O Anne Bancroft, "The Turning Point." 0 Jane Fonrla, "Julia." O Diane Keaton, "Annie Hall." O Shirley MacLaine, "The Turning Point." O Marska Mason, "The Goodbye Girl." BEsTACTOR D Woody Allen, "Annie Hall." O Richard Burton, "Equus," D Richard Dreyfuss, "The Goodbye Girt" 0 Maftello MastPoi~ "A Special Day." D John Travolta, "Satvda1 Night Fever.'' 9VPPOllTING ACTRESS D Leslie Browne, "The Turning Point." O Quinn Cummines ... The Goodbye Girl." 0 Melinda Dillon, ''Clole Erd>cauM8 of the Third Kind." D Vaneesa Redgrave, "Julia." D Tuesday Weld, "Looking for Mr. Goodbar." st1PP01ttiNG ACl'OR 0 Ml~ 8ar)ielmtkov, '~ Tarulng Point." > O Peter Firth, "Equus." O Alex Guinness, "Star Wan." D J asoo Robards, '"Julia.., 0 Maximilian Schell, "Julia.0 .. I I o.lty """ .......... ow-,~ I \-1 Dowden with P~1 Uustang Sf Movie/and of h3 Air Museum.. ' 1 Mrs.&~ a~ &Mil 1'elideet, was one ef the S:rst women pilot. to volunteer when the war broke oltt. !lie said the WASP traini:ne was coinpetili Ye and rough and the war years were difficult.. but it is a1t expe.rienee she weuld•'t track...,. ..,oung. Mrs.. c..dell. Ulen a .35-yeer-<>ld first gTade teacher iA.a>utJa Dakota, was 111 t.ae t.airtl class o( W ASPs 4' w• at Sweetwaw, Tex... for six muta>i All the womea wen expeneoee4 pllot.s. nery targets, flying as practice targets for Mrs. Cowden said that 25,,000 had volunteered searchlight crews and makia& adminJstrative but only J,830 womea were aecepted. (){tile lat-hops. ter, 1,014 were _.aAlluatecl aNi assiaae4 to .flli.bt Though they were not dropping bombs. the .tuty. WASPs raced the same hazards as their male counterparts. Thirty-seven, in fact, were killed in aircraft accidents. I THEY WRRE VS.D at rtnt~· tn.in-iag airplanee te free Men pilots , at 4i\J. ty, but later they were assigned-. type& ef" noncombat ~es we.a as f:owi:nc aerial gua- ...., .................. What made a 25-yeaT-Old with a~ job (SeeWASP,PageC2) , Finding A Lawyer Ken ~ ft,.... dMQilf~ t> &'8 e l'!lfllt ~'° dlive • Mr.• The bar association offers • advice on when to use an attomey and where lo look for me. Fear of Flying 1he way t> oonquer a llN!Jrol p/ane6? 'Go flying~• says 0[18 thf:Jrapist. • .Je• ll ..... ** w ....S.C• b111•1e M balband is 1etUng impetient.. He bell91f'ee ~at lheJ lhoold travel aow t.bet tbmr ...,.,._ .... "'°""' and IOJte. . And Joan la aat alone. ..An en1 .. tec1 2S million people are afraid ~ !1:d" said Ken Hutchins, • &utalt t.berapiat peycboloa teacber at 0raa,e Coast CoUece •bo r1111Ml3 (s.Jl.Y.~) ---= ... ___ ,..__ ...... ,,... •--.. ar .... ,_, •• • - Bt~~~ Toe 9edlllwln1 ap a will. --a di.-..e Oft bU)'iai •home. You want a lawyer. Would JOO blo• bow to find one? Too often, tbe answer ls .. no. 0 Tiie American Bar Association is trying to cbnge the altaation. Concerned about reports that legal Deeds of m1n1 Amaicam, particularly in the middle class, are not beln1 met, ~ lawyers• l"JUP is olffllin8 adTke on when to an aUomer, wbere to loot for one and what you ea e.pect 'to set for JOU!' moa~y • AcCCl'dlal to a new gWcle published by the m,OOCNDember ABA, preveaUve legal advice ls Jun aa lmportant u pr~tvenlive medicine. "One ol &he mall Jmport.uit reuou to see • lawret' ts CSeeL\'fltm.hleW ............ . ·---. DAil Y PIL.01 r ••• Lawyer <From P•ge CU to ba~e him give you a 'legal check-up• This type of ••• l"w ts e.speclaily helpful to people wbo are lhl.Dtinc ol at.artln1 a bull.Desi. plannln1 tomarry,~l,oaabomeorprovidlnsforbein." At tM same Umo, Lho ABA cautions: ''There are lastances ..• wbtn lt la not n«:eua.ry and even alUy to UM a lawyer. Americ&nlJ bavo become too quiet to 10 to ~t .•• •• la eaM:S ot mtnoT dlapalel, the ADA sui-1esu auch remedies u the Better Business bureau, small clalma courta and settlement services offered by tho American ArbitraUoo Association. Copies of the 1uide, "The American Lawyer: now to Choose and Use One," are available, at $1 each, from the Am«ican Bar Aasociation, Circulation Department. 11.55 E. eoth St., Chicago, Ill .• 60637. When you need a lawyer, lt pays to know , where and how to look. •Start with friends. "The betSt recommend•· tion generally comes from someone who bas ••• WASP <From Page Cl) r give it all up ror grueling flights and danger? .. Mrs. Cowden smiled and paused over her lunch at the Seaclilf Country Club in Huntington Beach, wber'e she was on a break from her job as an instructional aide with the city school dis· , I trict. I She really bad no ans'wer, but a long con- versation with the attractive former teacher gives some clues. ' She began flying in Spearfish, S. D., where ~ she had been teaching. "I knew in high school I wanted to do it,•• she said. One day she and a friend were sitting at the : airport wat.ching the planes and they t.~~ to an instructor. He told Mrs. Cowden, I think I you 'd make a hell of a good flyer-Jet's go." A SHORT TIME later she bad bad ber first lesson and was addicted. '"I never told my parents tmtil I soloed," she said. . "That was such a neat day. You never knew ~hen you were going to solo. They used to pl•y r ecords at the airport and that day they played 'You'll Never Smale Again' and 'You 'll Never Walk Alone' and I knew I was going to do it." Th<> opporturuly to serve her country at· tracted her lo the WASP. ''I fell good. I felt that J was really doing something," she said. "I don't know 1f I feel that way any more, though. Thl'n we were so busy doing what we thought was right." Mrs. Cowden explained that if she were to f lv the :.ume planes today she probably would havl' thought more about what the purpose of the planes wa.s. "I would be Uunking more about what it was doing. We could scarcely bf.'11cvc lhcn that World War 11 was happening." THE WOMEN PILOTS were too busy to even thi.nk about what was going oo. They were in school for six months first, studying, flying and attending classes from early morning until 6 p.m .• and then they began to work in earnest. "The psychological part of school was the h ardest," Mrs. Cowden said. "We did ever· ythmg that the men did, exactly. We had all men iil6tructors and t.be1 would do things like ••• Flying (From Page Cl) instructed a Saturday seminar titled The Air Fhght Experience. SEVERAL PEOPLE in the audience openly admitted their fears and Hutchins himself said he has always been terrified o! flying, even though be was a training and sales manager for a m aJor airline. There's basically only one way to conquer a fear of planes, Hutchins satd. "Go flying. That's absolutely the way to handle it. ''What you're experiencing is a fear a s- sociated with flying. You cannot fly and be afraid to fly." H utcb.ins dealt briefly wtth the .. realities" of air lravel, s uch as safety fact.ors and crashes, then moved to the psychological experience. "It's more dangerous to take a bath or drive a car than to fly, statistically.'' be said. "And more people survive air crashes than is general· Jy thougbL Sixty percent walk away." He emphasized that the safety factors of an aircraft are extensive, and that planes have back-up systems that make them a much better nsk. than autos. Rt.n'CllINS WAS asked why some people are afraid to fly and others not. "ll's a matter of social conditioning," he said. People have the feeling that they "should be comfortable flying" when in reality not everyone bas learned that s klll. The truth is that "you're being shot throuah the air in a metal tube and you want to be com- fortable about it. Tbat'a t.be upabot of lti" Hutchins said. There is a difference. he pointed out, between actually fl ying and lmowin8 only the rear of it. IL ia pouible, be said, for someone to go som9Where on a plane dd aevs have flown at all. Ht.s m<lther. for ~ample. recently traveled to Hawaii tor the f\rst lime but she was so anx- 10U5 about the trip she was rigid all the way. .. She didn't fiy to Hawaii.'' Hutchins said, "and 1'he d1dn 't csperieoCIO flylnS-Sbo experienced her fear." THE KEY TO enjoytng fbiog, the Jecturer ;i.i1iterted, ts to "take the excitemtet and let It IJow into the activity" insitead ot blocking lt bnd tu.mini It Into anxiety. Letting ex.cti.mtot now into activity ls not Always W1 or plq.ta.Dt. to do, ffutchlna 11td. h111' a problt>m sun1lar to yours and llad 1t re· 6olved to hu; sau~r11ct1on," HY~ tho ABA. •Try the public llbrary. The Martindale- HubbeU Law Directory gives brief biographical sketches of many lawyers, dftlcrlbes the type of praclioe they engage in and, for some, rat.es their legal ability, ethical st&ndardl and pro- fessional reliability. •Check the phone book. Many bar aasod.a· tions operate Lawyer Referral Services, lisl.Od· in the Yellow Pages lDlder attorneys ... Under an LRS plan. a lawyer will consult with you on a legal problem for a half hour without cbarae or for a prescribed fee and then render whatever services are requested for a fee mutually agreed upon," says the ABA. "U be cannot han- dle your problem, he will reler you to another attorney who can.•• Look for legal clinics and Legal Aid services -for civil complaints -or Defender office6 -for criminal cases. •Read the ads. A 1977 nJling by ~ U.S. Supreme Court paved t.b6 way for adve!'Wsing by lawyers. tum off the gas and makes us do forced land·. ings. They would tell us we couldn't fly." The pressure got so bad once, Mrs. Cowden ·said, that she became ill. But she was d~ terminoo to make it to graduation. "I bad a check ride oo graduation day, .. she added. "I had to. fly a general and I thought l was going to wash out on graduation day." The night duty, where she new small, single-engine planes, bad lts high points. Once when she was flying from Pboenix to Long Beach the wheels of the plane locked and the aircraft caught fl.re as she landed. "I saved the plane and got a letter of com· mendation from the Air Foree for th.st." she said. ANOTHER TIME she landed in Marietta. Ga., only·to find herself grounded for a week because of the weat.lter. She was the only woman on the base. "The men came and talked a lot that week." sbe recalled. "just to be Mlking to a girl." • Dunng the BatUe or the Bulge she didn 'l go to bed for two weeks and other times she didn't cat a meal 10 the same city for days at a time. "F1ying was a total life," Mrs. Cowden as· serted. "When we were deactivated I couldn't s teep. 1 rouldn't bear the engines warming up anymore. Thal was the bardeet ad.}ustment I've ever h.ad to make." Aft.er the war thEl'"e were few opportunities for women to fly so Mrs. Cowden operated a ceramic shop, married and had a daughter. She has let her pilot's license lapse but is planning to reactivate 1t when 6be helps her daughter, JClm, 19, team to fly next fall. Kim already bas bad ber fint lesson, and her teacher, ironically, is one ~ Mrs. Cowden's iormer fellow fliers in the WASPS. Mrs. Cowden is anxious to get back into the sky after a Jong absence. "To ny by yourseU is the dessert of lile," she said. ''There's nothing ill the world that's as spiritually satisfying. .. You get up there and find out how little JOU reao, are.". Actor Marloo Brando, who often throws up before be goes on stage for a· performance, is a classic example. When asked why be becomee ill the actor . replied, "I'm one of the most exciting actors I know." If be badn 't gone with bis excitement, Hutchins not.ed, the actor would Jive a flat performance each time he tried. There are several ways to "handle" or dis· sipate excitement. HutchiM said. They include physical activity, sex, drugs and bypnotiam. He noted that excitement associated with flying is doubly hard to deal with because "peo- ple usually fly for exciting retl.'IODS." ''WHAT DO YOU do with th.la excitement? Jn an airplane you can't run up and down the aisles. And before you fJIO you laave to do a k>t of siUlng.". Hutchinll sugge.ted talking •bout the fear and excitement and not packina too early. "Don't Jet it go on in private. Don't try to solve your fear~ fiying by youraelf." Those who fear flying also can try to keep from addina extra meaning to the experience. The human mind, wbicb Hutchins sald is ••rather stupid.'' will bring \lP negative ex· periences from the past to a11ociate wlth planes. "Pay attention to what'• ha~e. not . your belief system," be streeeed. •You may be afraid to fiy the rest of your life but eo wbtt? You can learn to be more comlol'table.'' Many people 8"' afraid to look forward, he added. and speod tb«r lives with a "l'Ml' view mirror" atUtude, always lootinC for a pa.st ex· perience to use aa a basis for t.be pretent. . . ..TllEBE ARE THREE barriers between you and direct experience," Hutcblna userted.. .. You compare the experience to a Ilk• ex- perience, you 10 unconscious or dumb -a food part of life la lived with your upta olf -Cll" 10" hue catastrophic expectatioos. .. People are willing to throw the estC~e out and keep the belief. It 1bould be ~other way." Hutchins aald that the bc*om ·llne ls that anyone Qylng might as well enJoJ it becaUIO .. you ha~ to ao through lt anyway. ''Just open op and be pnblic about what's going on with you.•• And get out and go flyine. Uutcblns pleaded. He'll even go alone to help turn your fligbt. into flight. Para, London or Rome! Ju.It call him at 556-tmS. He'll even Ry to San Diego. FLORAL EXTRAVAGANZA ., llOW THROUGH El TER South Coast Plaza -.. ........ ERMA BOMBECK I ANN LANDERS On My Diet ll's no use ror me to diet. 1 know that now ( Horoseope ] A 1l t.ho:.e years when my knee• rubbio1 WEDNESDAY, Ml\llCII Somc~lf-anulysia would to&elher wtdapeted "No, tz be In orrl1·r no," but there waa a By SYDNEYOMARR CAPRICORN (Dec. .. Ye•, yea" ln my ARIES (March 21· 22·Jan 19 > Good Moon mouth, I fouiht the bat-Ai1nl 19) · Ac cent on aspeC't rt>veals chance tJe. work, health , depen· for travel, publication. All tboM yean wben l E~ dents, pets. l:>ervice, ser-broader dt•g1ee of rec· lo.t ten pound.I every vanls and a bility t o ognilloo. Monday (fi•e lo my ••••eek coordinate efforts with AQUARIUS (Jan. neck and five In tny those who share basic 2().Feb. 18): What had bust), I bung In there. · goals. been taken for granted All those years when I · TAURUS (April 20 could now be elusive, embraced cottage By~:30,Iwufurious. May20>: Money counsel evasive, evanescent. cheeae as a formal r&-Row dare my bU8band can be obtained from li•ion, I dave lt my all be late and for« me to Aries. Love t~ in picture PISCF.s (Feb. a.Mar. e • l dd d 20): Duties, re· But aft.er yesterday, I ob ea 1ty? a e and you could prove sponsibililies spelled have to admit. l'm whipped potat.oea to the lucky in speculative ven· out ~ You wanted chance beaten. rm figbtina the meal. lure. to prove a thesis -you batUealooe. By 5:45. as I s tood GEMINI (May 21· l(et it . It started In the morn· watchlnl tbe driveway, June 20): Gain foothold:....;..;_ ________ _ ina when I faced the I got a bon1fylng feel· insist on knowing where __ R_U_f_fE __ lL_'_S __ refrigerator with my log. How could you mone y i s go 1 n g. band over my heart and possibly serve dry Spotlight on mves t· y once again pledged el· whipped potatoes? I menls, building on solid UPHOLSTER Ieciance to hunger. I added a pan~ gravy. ba6e. Older perso n .._ Y• W..t poured myself a half By 6 :00, the fish s hares experie nces ...,...,. glass of tomato Juice looked tttminal. 1 de· c ap r i corn. Cancer ftll tt.rtior lhd. mixed with half a glass c 1 de d lo get my figure prominently. C..t•MtM-Ml-0159 of buttermilk and toaed husband's mind off the CANCER (Jun" 21----------it down. I tell virtuous. small main course by July 2 2) : You ge t At lunch, I threw down giving him a robust ap· messages from afar. a cup of bouillon and pether. I rolled out Commun 1 ca tion s pretended celery wu tboae little butte r . sparkle. flow; you gain wicked. cheese and Dour things iasights into motives , J had dinner reedy to stuffed with olives and aspirations of othe rs. serve by 3:30 in the af. popped them In the Aries, Libra hgure ternoon. It was well· oven. prominently balanced and would be By 6:15. I sliced the LEO (July 23·Aug. totally satisfying. apples a nd covered 22): Money opporturuty Broiled fish, an oil-free them with a pie. is practically banded to salad, asparagus and an At 8:30, my husband you. Taite the ball and apple. . walked iatlO tbe k:it.cben. run. ae a self-starter, in· At 4:00 p..m. I 1oo"'8d "I'm home!" be shouted dependent, creative, at the dinner agalD. lt brightly. confident enough to pre· looked pale. ao I sur· "You •nimal! You sent concept, plan with rounded lt with a fruit don't c~ about other verve, duh and with 1m· salad with cocoa.nut in people at all. How they print of your own style. it. look. How they feel VlllGO (Aug. ~Sept. At 4:~. with aattdna about themselves. Ir I go 2 2 > : s t a d y L e o to do, I rolled out a pan to my grave with pan-message; be tndepeo--====:::c=====-of biscuits to pop iltto tyhose around my hips, dent, dyom:nie, willing lbe oven. 1 el it b e on Your to invest in your own By S:OO. the asparagus conscience!" . , abilities. Timmg is on looked naked without a He pretended be didn t target. Judgment, intut· sauce, so 1 opted lor a know what I was talking ti on are b ooed to Hollandaise.. about. . razor-sbarpnet>s. It's No Joke DEAR AN°N: LIBRA (Sept. ZJ-Oct. 22): Highlight fun, versatHity: laugh at yoUT own foibles. One who is env1ouis, sings the blues, should be treated kindly. but not taken seriously. Meet the Easter Bunny Sometimes you are so b~sy trying to be cute you forget to give ad· vice. ReceaL1y a U-oyear- old wrote to you and asked, "What can hap- pen it you get bit ta the wron1 place?" You answered. ''What do you consider tbe rleht place!" SCORPIO (Oct . 23-BringvoorYQungsters Nov. Zl): Emphasis on to Huntington Center·s "escape" from routioe. llttkt red ba'Tl Friend shows way to lnthe08f'lterofthe skip red tape. Maintain mall. Photos available open mind without being IJP)n reQUest only 52.50. jtullible. Darty 10 to 6 and evenings SA.GITrABJUS (Nov Except Sat. 6 to 9. Beach 22-Dec. 21): Your work, Bllld.. a Edinger at job is beine evaJuated: ____ ih_e_San __ o;_ego __ F_wy_. OK. 10 the kid ,,_.•t · very sped.fie, but 7ou better &ell JGm' ... i sure u bee* mw what dad, teaew or eome ------------------- place be wu talktna ac1alt and Hk to lte • about.. II you didn't taken to a dedmr • be know, you coaJcl uve clleeked._ asked eomebodJ. DEAR ANN: Please e You seem to have stop saying, "When you ·forgotte.o the embar· marry a divorced man • raaament suffered by you marry the whole adolescents concerning package -bis cbildrecl, personal questlons. bis ex-wt!e, ex-ta-laws, • They write to you old friends -the whole because they have faith shebang." You're oat of • in your ability to help your mind • them. A few more Recently when I mar-• answers like that one ried a divorced man I and you woo't have any made tt plain I would • WU Telegram • 611PST MAR 16 77 • NEWPORT BEACH CALIF. • SHOP OUR NEWLY REMODELED STORE .•. STAFFED WITH OUR • SAME FRIENDLY PEOPLE I WESTCLIFP SHOES DICK MAROWITZ • • teen-age readers left. not be bothered with any e There la no need to of the aforementioned '-------------------' print t.hl8 letter btft I kooks. American courts _________________ _ hope you Vi1l1 rMd lt and have the idea children remember it -DIBA.P·' are better off with the POINTED mother, even if she is a DEAJL D.: Y• are-ecNWball. So I say, let rtpt. 117 amae1 wu her paddle her own ten1ble. I am prtDUai canoe. -JAC1'SON- 1oar letter beeeue It VILLE • w1ll belp me remember DEAR JACKSON: U's •bat I'm....,..... to be eaay to say, "IM ber dotn1, wbeD I ned U paddle ber own canoe." aga.ln. b1lt wbm tile canoe bas AJld .. l'D .... ,..... lambud'• Idell lD tbe k.ld'1 QeetUoD tho K, yoa'd beUer take a way J alao•ld ll••e Heond look. If 1our aHwered H tlte Ora& U.b~ Is laalfway de· t.lme. II yoa ae& bit ID &be eet1& be'D keep In &oacb wron1 plaee, tbe pal.a with Illa cblldrell. even cu be ~ bat tlloa'1t tbelr mother la a claaaeea an DO ..-. aat. .A.ad lbat me.ns d'ama1e •• dolle~ U, 10G'D be ID toPch. too, after Uout U mlllatM Ba~. wbetber you tbe palD .. dll •wflll. ~ ... aot. - ni--....... -=-n• LARGE-SIZES lA~GE-SI. lARGE-S ----•lARGE-S LARGE-. IQ1I . •. 14~26~ • mau Lmalll SIOlllWDI I RJUBAT'IOtl$ E11a Ror's RALF-SIZE ·saop ~ DA~ .. COSTAJ81A , .. ,..,.,,~ ·--~~--r·-IUCI .,., 11:1 ·c-. u.aauaw . ~ ........... E1\STBR Gift-Giving IS INCREDIBLY CHIC WHEN WRAPPED INA HOWES BOX! P.S. ft need nvtbe expensive. Our gifts s tart at $10 ... but the quality loolcs far more C06tly! B.D. HOWES and SON FINEJEWl:.LERS tOR FOUR CE.:\! R.\l IO:'\<; NEWPORT BEACH 3412 Via Lido• 675--2731 LOS ANGELfSIPASAOENA ~ANTA BARBARA PALM 6PRING8/l4()N0l ULU .. .. . - • - '!7 ( MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson =-- BOOMER I \o\-45 J.f 1Hf1rl WE.OD1t.JG AJ17 I k'l.l£w IHf. MA021AGE. WOULoN'T LASI. -- MfSS PEACH "All right' All right' I'll make some gingerbread dogs. too'" FUNKY WINK ER BEA N 50 YOO'~£ GOT W{)f\ 0 i1LH , (UN~ t Z CASEY MOON MU LLINS 'COLC>5 ARE ~OTHING roStJEE2EI': -.A80UT, YE.AH . TilE<,l CALL IT T~E I KISbfNG Dl5EA5E' BECAUSE (,.txJ CAN GET IT F~ K15S1NG I GERIATRIX GORDO UNOE~STANO GO.JNCIL:' 'MN ~ fl'A'I Et'ITEt2 THe Q.Ac'E R)l2 I .suve:~o12 .... WH6. T 7 ""-A,IZE HIS CHN-.cE:::-~ \~ _r:_r-~ ASOUT AS ML.lCH A.<; 1 HA.VE: P"--l$t..E- D.\ T1NG WITH THE Yb~~ by Tom Batiuk WE.LL I I'M SAFE! By Charles Rodrigues by Ferd and Tom Johnson JUDGE PARKER DENNIS THE MENACE TUMBLEWEEDS .· ~ ,•/ NANCY by Wm. F. Brown and Mef Casson JWHEN iH~ J 81210€ ,, 5uPPo:;;e.r TO 'SAY .. r oo~ NO, EXCEPT MAYSE F'Oi: THE MO~MON TA&EJtNACLE CHtJ1~ .• DOOLEY'S WORLD EXCEU.ENT! 'itXJYE ~f.O NEW HEIGHTS, MA}..'' DR. SMOCK '{£A~!.. IF YA t<E.EP IT UP, SOMEDAY YoulL Bt M£DIOCRE 1 I T~. MMch 21. 1t1e PEANUTS RIGtff FROM THE Yf.RL/ FIRST DA"( I WAS BORN ... DAil Y PU.OT .CJ br Ch41rles M. Schub: TH8<' SAID I WASN'T RIGHT FOR. THE PART! by Roger Bradfield 1 by George Lemont MY, IHAl1S A RAIHeR UNUSUAi.- SiGN .. euT ~ GLJess eveN FAMl i,Y J:'OC"T"O RS H Ai:=rA HAV e A PL.Ace i'O PRINK THE: GUY WHC Poes TH IS STRIP HAS"T"A ee el..-Ft.-tPPO.' MOTLEY'S CREW by Gus Arriola ' . . by Harold Le Ooux by Tom K. Ryan by Ernie Bushmiller TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1 Chinese gelatin SFrenchg1rl friend 9 Ab<aham s wife 14 Not one 15 Singer • Ponselle t6"Notas ··" Not generally 17 Expand t8Ch1nese clan 19Vo1ce 20 Literary wortc 22Putupw1tll 2• Ogler 26 ·····fever: CaHfe d•s· eaae 27 Time pert0ds 29 Drtnk dellcalely 30 Allef zeta 33 Commotion J7 Petti used as a boom 38 Does '1ouaehof<1 work 39 Pub staple •O Rural crossover 4 t "It ..•• a bell" 42 Get down to "Seeing faculty .. -......... 45 Ffuller 46 Drinking boot 47 ·····up. Ao 1usted •9 Pans night clubs 53 Cheered SI F1m1ntnP name 58Sale111te path 59 trrilaled state 61 Insane Slang b2 Nephew'> sister 63 Sego lily Slate 64 Notable ages 65 Doof ltgn 66 Largequan Illy Informal 67 Poly s partner DOWN UNITED Feature Syndicate Monday's P11u le So/II.a': ruler 36 H1ghest 10 Zones note 11 Undersiztod 31 Paper seller animal 40 ·--pigeon· , 2 Drug plant Informal I 3 Place '"" 4 2 Destruction group 43 Cry un- 2 I "The controllably Hourglass' 45 Ktndof author spread I Guardian 23 Egreas 4 7 An instant spirit 25 Ham's com-4e Tooth. 2 Furze panlon Prefix 3 Wm by 28 Gets w!R· 2 50 Nova Scoha 4 Recompensing words town s Wiie 30 Extended st Inner: -'net. 6 0J)9fl le> poem 52 Impertinent: debate 31 lnfOfmel Informal 7 Negaltve speech 53 Whelstona phrase 2 J2 Son of Zeus 64 Colleens words 33 Part of name 6 Aene 2 Hlberr'111 55 "It's. - worda 34 See-thru You're on 9 Subordinate device ~Phone 35 Pine tru•t 60 Artrcl& . . . .. . --.. .. • . Cl OAILV PILOT 1 ~!~!.~~~.~~ ........ ,~~!!.~~~.~~.~ ..... ~~!~!.~~~-~~ ....... !~~!~!.~~-~~ ...... . GaMr.. I 002 G ... ,.. a OOZ G ... ral I OOZ GMttol • I OOZ ··7"----------,,--------..... --..... ------------------...... ----~--------------,~----------, ...., ............... ,--The BIU .. t ~·on the OrqeCout ~.-~~ DAILY PILOT CLA-SSIFIED ADS l....,_ .. "'-······ l'oot)\ .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• t::':7~.~=-You Con Sell Jt, Find Jt, [ 642 S&7S ] Ono Coll Service 1" .. '" • ..,, .... -Trode It With a Wont Ad • fast ued1t Approval ...._......._ .......... -..... _ '-·····-'-"" ........_, .. _ ~--............... EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY ~ ...... Motk•: All real tiStat.e &d\'ertlsed In this newspaper la sub- Jed to the Federal Fair Jfous ina A cl of 1968 wtuch mak~ il tllegal to advertise "uny pre forence, hmllallon, or discnmmallon based on race, <:olor, relJgion, :;ex. or nauoual origm. or an intenuon to make any such prererence, Um1ta lJOn, or dLsc: ri l1llD a llon , • • Th1$ newspaper will not knowingly accept nny advertising for real estate which is m vtola· uonofthelaw ~.~.~ ....... i~!.~~-~~ ....... ~.~.5:!:. ....... 1~.~.~ ...... . «hMrol 1002 Ge...,al 1002 GttM~ 1002 GtMt"til 1002 ··•·••··············•·· •···•···••······•••·•·· ··············••····•·· ...................... . DUPlEX-IALIOA ISLAND Steps to beach. 2 BR, l BA eath, unit Older but well cared for. $185,000. 200 Gamet. FOR MORE HOUSE FOR YOUR MOHIY Try our Westcliff Beauty. 4 BR + den or 5 BR, 4 BA, 2 fplc's, cozy farntly home. 1436 Estelle Ln. $185,000. . -·0 ' ~~::~~di!~: Balboa Island Realty 1\~1> l;\'\"P.'-1 ,'\~:\'T eC\'\1'1':1, \ 673-8700 ~"UHi~ & VU~LLAl;t '-CJ/ REAL ESTATE. INC. A LOCALLY OWNlO COMPANY Sf HVING THE SO COAST ARlA SJHCl 1%3 IMYESTOltS wo uld )'OU like to assume a $56,000. VA loan on a prestige 3 bdrm home. Immaculate. Close to shoppi ng, ach ools traru;portaHon. Call tor full details. 640-6161 WAIT TILL SUMMER7 -Even if you're not Hunking "Pool" right now s11mmt•r will be here sooner than yo~ tlunk 1 Buy this fine custom pool with dt·t·k111g and patio and start swimming hy mid May. A neat little 6 yr. old • home m Irvine goes with it! Only $74,900. caa 54~4141 Serving Costa Mesa.Irvine Huntington Beach·Ncwport Beach llACON IA Y IS UHIQUE • And unique is b1g in Beac-on Bay. Community specialist Marilyn Hodges has just listed a classic! Beam ceilings, pine doors, brick patios, 2 bedrooms, family room and, get this. a l bedroom income unit over the 3 car garage. It's all localed just 4 doors from the private beach and docks and about 2 deep lobs from the tennis courts. The Beacon Bay way of life is worth $millions. This listing is Just $182,500, (substantial down payment required). U,_.l()UI: li()Mt:i REAL TORS~. 675-6000 2443 East Coast Highway, Corona de! Mar iJlso in M1·sa Verde. at 546·5990 1ooz·~eftff111 1002 G IG •·••••••••·••·•··•••••• ...................... ... r .. ~.,.a1y.0L~~~~Ps,.1:L~:T~os::.· ~r~e.: •.. ~:~! .......... ~?.~~ .. ~~~! .......... !?.~~G ~!!!!e"!!!!"!!!'e1!!!Ct!!!O!!!!!!R!!!O!!!!!N!!!A!!!!!!!!D!!E!!!!L!!!!MA!!!!!!R!!!!!!1!!0!!02!I ~ ~ BIG CANYON ··•············•··•···· •·••···•·····•··••····· 4 RR, fam. rm .. 3 baths. Beautlfullv decorated family home "1th patio li~llty for the first;,.:. views from each room. $335,000 Exceptionally attractive 2 bdrm. cornd JftMr'Hotl o..ty LIDO ISLE h · Newly remodeled 4 bdrm . den, 4 ome, recently r efurbished · thruoul CAMEO SHOUS-VIEW-$310.000 Fantastic view of the blue Pacific - on one of best streets. Lovely home with 3 lge bdrms, 4 baths, den w/wet bar, formal DR & sparkling pool. Minimum yard care. 3·Car garage. Housn for Sale ••••••••••••••••••••••• Genet-al 10~2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• "1 '" ' 9 • I 111'.J TOAl '"" PLUS neat l·bdrm. unit over large, baths, living rm. w /catht.'<iral cc1lrng. 2 car garage. Great tax shelter, Lge. master bdrm. suite. inflation hedge & fine appredation IA VFROMT possibilities. PRICE REDUCTION OF Several line bayfroat homt.>s $2,000 _NOW ONLY $166,500 with pier & slips BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 759-0811 341 Bayside Drove, N .B. 675·6161 Fiut btu' G\w Wuuiut Be.&9. WESLEY M. TAYLOR CO., REALTORS 2111 S-Joaquin HUls Rood NEWPORT C&&TER. H.I. 644-.49 I 0 GeM•al I OOZ GeMf'OI 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ····•····•··•·•········ 8'AHDtMG7 DESIGNS> FOR EXECUTIVE . GRES-.IROOK A BED 00 ASSUME $302.6' • .,. R MS Need more room ., LIVING $74,900 l'>O"IEW•"1H1 CENJE:HDHIVE 7590611 Transfer your present 4 bdrm, 2 ba. Extremely J>OPU)ar CAMELOT mdl. OCEAN VIEW NEWPORT 9 .. uty cCNrttre.ctto11, 2 llt, t IA. w /frplc. ::.c:.ul.-e woUpo,tra ... otlghotit, ........ ~ fow ~Al...., bWIMll appli.c.1 ·+119-.~.._.c...._ro.p MW1t C4dar-... ...,..... ,.,.._.. cloorl op .. Jatg to ~OMd deck. Step. fnMn your door to beociL U I 5.000 CANHBtY VILLAGE IHYESTMl:t4T oppot l•lty, HctUewt 1p.cfaffy "'°P locaffOA. Wood 1W..ga.ct 1t.Cjh Wlct.g °" fee land. $I 00.000. CAMEO HIGHLANDS. CORONA DB. MAR Th" imm«. J IR. l tA + deft. Id Olllly hos rooM fw pooa, .belt ls .,...., ...-pri. bffclt. Redr.lced to SI 69.900. LAGUNA IEA.CH CHARMER 2 BR. I BA. Walk to beach. ~dcmt frpfc. .. oak floon, *-ctd ycrd. Perle<t ho1M for arffst. writer. thtdetilt, COUfM, '#HbNen and GllyoM who ~lat.a Laguwa ~ o.ty $I I 0.000. , EMERALD IA Y Sp•ctac.lar •i•w home of N. qualJty o•ttfookmq &net aid ky. 'erlKt f..ily '-otM for tlaoM dffiriltCJ ttlia ,,...t p.t. COftHll-ty. Hen dew ka 00M. Mp.. lhlcty + 1toroge. 4 u. 2 ·~ $495.000. 644-7020 2123 SAH JOA9UIM HfUS ROAD NEWPORT IEACH [®IHaU:I] This lovely home located G•Mr• • I 002 G•Mral I 002 on a ~~e--sac wtthso ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••• •••. ••••••••••••• Grral C<l6ta '\11"S.• 1111·:1 equity bere & assume This brautifully up· lion. Short walk to V.A. lo&n-7 percent 10· ~~~'~LB~icv~~g "::~ schools, & shopping. Wl•ll Getterot J 002 Gftterell f 002 terest-$302.61 mo pays . maintained and writ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••-••••••• all Big living room. with big Fireplace pnl'l'd spaciou<i famtlv 1 _________ ,1 Bnrk fireplace. Huge NEWPORT BEACH ll1ghly upgraded. 3 bdrm, family & dining mom.-;. new brown plush carpets, :.parkhng pool and lots of ex tr a:-Of fore« al onl.)' $128,500 Cal I S.10-115 l Large Maslt'r ll<-droorn, home 01-'or dt!la1ls CALL INVESTOR'S kitchen family room. highly upgraded with 556-2660 SPECIAL $46,000 11.UEWHm GEM Gl f flnisbed ...__ pnv:ite l'Otranet' tn . • Prlvacyreignssupreme! gan JC l uvuUS oardcn a l"ea. Slum•1 !p SELECT liuarJed gateway pro-room! Priced reduced " • ll·cts lavish courtyard Gracious family home in $2:500 toot Take advan stone planter,.; hi1:hlil!hl PROPERTIES with pool Secluded entry prestigious Westcll((. lal(e of super price. the room backyard ---toexe<"ullve hvm" room. Formal livin g room ,_ •. 1 C 11 Mesa Verde Living at its MINl--«ANCH 41R. Suns h Io e go~ rm et w Ivie., of gar den :;;,..~;,'apace a now B~st! si29.ooo Call POOl-$66,400 kitchen overlooks atrium! Formal dining f ...,,..1111·11HlJN101<1NJ<•· 546-2313 VANOOOWM pnvate p,ilto. Sweeping room overlooks lavish 1~ I ~HERITAGE REALTORS ---------1 I ~'liiiimi ~.~7J·~:!·~;~·\f.~:z· ;~.·~::.~~~,0.·~,,~~:,:.~ ~E?:~; .'0'~uarnt . ~ ~J__ Wall of glass view of l'U\' • , ... CAPECOD cred pa\1hon & luo;h [ JUS w·.':0° Sh .. ~5.~:!~? ,m,, Eit:r::!¥~:·:~~!. _ ® IB&Hi~ , ~~ .. TOT .AL DOWN rondo with chef'rful frplc a~ay Master Suitt• & · -'•c----fronl home; open beams Winding roadw.iy to & xtra large room Sll':l'S children s quarl•·r., S&S nu ·LITT 'i:~~~~~~~~ m hv. rm. bdrm; patio -.oannJ: 2 !ltory retreat' thruout Xlnt location Hurry for this unique T A I j Dbl. garage w /opene-r. Pn\ale .:rounds protect lk·aul.iful grounds create barg:11n! 963·7881 Sellt•r moving & must PXl.OOO ~duill'<l c>nlry to )Jvish pr1rk hke setting. Ju:.t • •· .., . ., , .:.t•ll ht'> 3 RR pl~ dC'ft. H• &tcJl.nlucrs' S,.Ci°' 673-3663 833-0523 Eves. h\ ing room' Gourm1·t put on market • belter [ ~ 8111] Al\ ~ bt>auty Wants Easts1de Costa Mesa, big k1t<·hen O\l'rlook., ~un Wkt•alook' • an offer this "'"ekend & lot wtlh Z bdrm home. '>lunr l:Ourtyard' W1od y ' pnn-d Jl only $'iS,OOO Plenty of room (or boats, sng stairway leads to (~awm;rn•!tBJ 540-3666 cars, RV's, bobbf~. dogs 'wee P 1 n g m a st c r RPal Estate IRVIHE UMIV Pk or gardeo--wnh alley ac. h!>droom plus child'" MUCH DESIRED cess! m,.soo. n•tn'.1l' llurry, st•ll<•r 1s ---------1 anx111u.., 1147 f>(HO OXFORD PETE BARRETT ,,,.,, 1 • ''' •litf'P1 1 •1• f A Below market. Supn -REALTY-~~< - • .• ~ or d Action view from this 2200 sci ft 3 , br. 3 ba. formal din rm & BEACH VALUES 642·5200 Call a trenager·i. hideaway PRICEREDUCED ~ CLUM COMDOS 2 Bdrm., custom $50,000 2 B<lnn .• famOU8 Orange Tree area, Irvine $84,950 IEHTSOH & IROWN Steps from pools. lenni:i 5 Rdrm Peninsula Pt. Daily Pilot crts, park!' & srhools. &.t'Jl6 to beach $189.000, Phone today for appt lQ AD-VISOR see. M-5-~1!)1 642-5678 Nt•wer Ocean view duplex, Dana Pt . $145,000. IHC. 833·978 .!_j~~~~~-~~~~~~ ___ Heal f:•Hatt> START BUILDING 5 Bdnn. pnvate beach, Ara equity! Low down Corona Jltghlands payment! VA & FHA associated BROKERS-REAL TOllS l Ol\ W lolt>oo '7 l·Jb6l 5'otlMd $5000. $4,700. HOW $64,500. Ea.staide 2 Bdrm fixer upper at 381 Costa Mesa St., C.M. Make ofrer. Terms. 400Ul" fib RIUll ~4§)t,llW TRIPLEX S1S9.000 World Wide terms! 3 Bedrooms! IM co ME s 9 o s. ~~:! .......... !?.~~ :~:! .......... !~.~~1-Brok-·ers· -.6'73-454S;;;-_-. -_-_-.-.-.-,· -~-·-~-· _R_ED __ c_AR __ P_ET_., --·ss-·,·. ,·s-o·. -• PRICE $155.000. b Spacious Duplex. 3 nus ts one of the most Gas saver location 0 w HER I AG T. macna I Irvine bdrm J bath, patio. popular 3 bedroom noor wallt to major 11hops easy wal .... n~ distance to So. Coast Plaza, theatres & restaurants. Many out standing features in· elude: Custom Draperws Covered patio Decorator Wallpapers throughout Outdoor gas BBQ Auto Gar Door Opener Skylight in 1-'am. Rm. BY OWNER 979.8123 Prln. Only $109.900 UDO ISLE Beaut. MedJl. 3 BR. 4 BA home, Jrtra wide lot. huge court yard entry w/We fountain Lido Isle $259,500 JACOBS Rli.L TY 675-6670 NEW HOME Emtsict. c . M. Builder just completed this 2 story 4 bdnn home. Features include: vault- ed ceilings, 3 cac .:arage & RV storage. Hurry, choose your own carpets. Call $46-5880. ~HERITAGE REALTORS HANDYMAN'S DIEAM Garage lull.y wsulated. Built rn work bench. Large lot with RV ac cess Newly painted. paneling and wallpaper Four Bedroom Horne in Mesa North. Truly a G~at Buy for $76,000. S46-23U Y .A. HO DOWN! Yes, no down payment requ1r~d t o buy this beautiful 3 bedroom home. 1o:ourmet k1H•ht·n, larJ?C living room . fin-place, covered pat10. waterfall, brick lHHJ Ux'ated near the harbor and Hunlm.:ton manna' 1 rrule to beach. Pnced fOt" qwclt salt• $t.'9 ,901} Take ad11antagl'. c .. 11 ~61 ( ,,.,, 'I I ... • /' f l(J. '-/ /f/ ~, ~ NEWPORT HTS One of a lund with M'Cludt.'<i tree lined •'n try Completely re· modeled with laur room.<., pot bellied stove plus oak planking floors Utning room. family room. large bdrm!>. and pn\•ate patios. OPEi'< SUNUA Y 1-5. 2916 Cla) ~ Call !>16-S880 ~HERITAGE REALTORS [~ll&Hil~~ -~ LOTS OF ROOM ---------i .. for less money' 3 Bdrms., family rm • 2 a.co,. a W-enMr in Lusk Really 's new RPSale ofhce in Hunt· mgtoo Beach Conliden llal mt<TYW~!I art' now betng taken for licensed !Wal J:iitall• ag(•nls or soon to be licensed Call today about th<" many features we have to offer I .... ., .. II - •SUPEtl DUMP* sre-s TO WATR At Newport's ~l beach. Thts one needs lot.1 or T.L.C--but the location i.<i ''THE GREATEST' $102,000 Newport Pier Reolty . 2005 Balboa Blvd. Newport Bch.673·2058 frplcs • beautiful super greenbelt; many extras garden patio Exc1uni: llluCf-; E Plan & well pnN'<f at Sl59.500 SALESPEOPLE 2 Openings for ex perienced, ambitiou .. people to J(ltn the stafC, 111 xlnt Eastbluff ennron menl Compelltive ccrni missions offered. Con- f1dent1al intrn·1('wq, ask. for Chuck. C. F. Colesworthv AHffon 640.00~0 TRJPUX $70,000 All units remodeled, nel4 plumbmg, paaelmg, t.1lc & paJJJl Ill & out. 754-7800 VERY SHARP. ' CORONADELMAR T.PLAH VAottF+tATBtMS C • RR y 2 .._. D I firepla<'t'. + 2 bdrm, 2 plaos in the Oranee partc, schools ond bus A " • rea ty bath, suode<'k fireplace. County Ith bl atop. 4 Bdrms, 1'•4 bath,.,, OPfN 111 'h,, s f\11'410 Ill,......,. _;.._2_~_:_~-~-~-~7~.M. A BEST BAYFROHT IUT! ~"·~4 .. 7270 5:,~::-£;~ .~!·~==•• [,IJJIHl!tl ~••=~=" HU OFffRIMG CM OPEH DAILY 1-5 ""(~ S~ close to schools ln prime --sro.ooo. Newport Beach, $59,900 . WOW!! Drlu:lee Townhome' :i Spac1ou~ bt-drooms' Soft carpets! Sun patio• Choice RrC"enbelt loc.i tion' Close to shopp1n~ Owner anxious 1 Can't last at thJs pnce ! Call 6'5--0303 Luxury Coll. Park condo, ~"~ neighborhood. Ownera 1---------4 WSJS WHAT Ba.lboa Perunsula. Check 2 br ea. wtth full ba, prof. 324 MORNIHG STAR LH. '7' boQg.bt MOlbet' " must FOURJ'LEX out this super buy with decor & A/C. Attchd 2. Single story traditional home with 3 REALTORS sell quickly at only Cbolce Huntington YOU P.AY bay view from upper un· <'ar garage w/opcner. bdrms.1 cozy den & frplc. Spacious $86.000.CALL751·3.19L ....... _~ .. "'-. o-...-y in BatyoumaystilJgetthis tt.Hurry,call546-1l51 .SELECT ~'""'' ""' • •vy«•~ huge 4 bdrm classic in Ideal for single buyer living rm. views the quiet bay in Uptopsha~I a Bdrm., x1nt aru for less than with limited savings. Dover Shores. Slip for your boat. . You don't need a gun to . PROPERTIES ba. owner 1 untt. Priced $86,000.9611-3371 Low down payment. <>n· d f tosellat-."000' Jy $69,500. Call now. $495,000 Including land! Calhy " raw ast" whl'n you ....... · ~5!MS Schweickert 642-8235 CQ·l37) place an ad in the Dally BLUFFS FINEST lcAoalcryProp. J,,lot Want Ads' Call now Ob the water. 3 BR R.altors SIX UNITS 642-8235 64-t-6200 -M2-5678 Aleut 6'4·1133 * '75-7060 * ln xlnt rental location in 901 Dover Drive Harb« View Center Gf'Mf'Qf =;;;;:;l'-----~1~00~1lr-~~~~~~~~~ N. Costa Mesa. Btrl Iii & layout with large pool 85 Irvine at Camous Valley c.enter ••• •••••• ••• ·--·•••• •••••••••••••• .... ••••• C.a ll 642-5618 1002 addf'd aUract.lon. Close 752-1414 to m*>r shoppine le bus Lines. "6-7711 =:= Walkr.r t: lee F.eal Elttate CE f IDllB ILlllS . ca. OVER 50 YEARS OF SERV1CC 4 .ftDtlOOM CHARM& Immaculate .. C" PJao Townhouse. .Decorated In YelJows & Greens. Gracious 2 Story Entry W /Separate Guest Suite. Winding Stairway Leads To High Ceilinged r,iv. Room & Spotless Modem KI tc hen W /Lrae. Cheerful llreatcrast Area Overlooking Spaclous Sun·Deck. Hallway Leads To Master Suite + 2 Extra Bedrooms. Call Now $139,500. u' oova DllVI &:11-1800 ............................................... fllc~~~~ OVIRLOOIONG LAGUNA Tasteful, exciting, adaptable. 4 BR or 3 BR & den view home constructed with finest materials: finished with richly customized de ta I J s. . . qua Ii l y ca bj n els, appliances, hardware, carpets. View ol ocean, sunsets, moWltains. Premium neighborhood. Quick sale allows buyer some selection tn finishing details, fixtures, etc. ~7,500. A COLDWIU. U ... CO. 644·9080 ttn IAH"°"°"'N HIUS ..n, flllf~rcono I ... = 6.-. HERITAGE • • REALTORS _._ liiiiiil macnab I Irvine realty HIGHT LIGHT VIEW! Phase J Carmel! 3 BR & £amily rm. Close to schools & shopping. Comm. recrcat1on incl. pool, jacuzzi & tennis ct. Lynne Valentine 644-6200. (Q 132) srA.m.JMG OUM.EX ... CdM Gracious owner's unit w /3BRs. 21~ baths, in dinin~ rm. lile kitchens & patio. Rear unit's almost identtcal. Only 4'h yrs old. Wal.le to beach & ~hops. Great. for owner or pure investment fhrbara Wright 644·6200 (Q 133) M2·1235 644-6200 901 Cover Drlw Harbor Vtew Center Irvine• C•mPll5 V•llPV Center 7Sl·1414 ... -.. . . -- Jbr l\g~ h1 twum hv rm frpk + lbr apt ~~lull' ~ IO, OOJ 67 S 4!:lSll Bc6oo Ptftinl&llo I 007 ·····•·•·•····•········ P cn111sul11 Point U} own~r 3 brm I·'• IJ.i ti73 8008 Pnn onl) "iu•r 3 Br 2 b,1 un M 1111 ll•ni $195.000 \farshJll Hit) fi7~ \t.IXI lmmaC'ulate dull l\nu•w. R 2 $115 000 h t5 4H2!1 t'H•rung\ 1022 ······•••••·····••••·•· Corona .i Mor .! lkirrn , I bath h1>rn1• with two n•ar unth ~1·11 l'stabh:>h<.'d arr a & "'ell tarf.'d for $175,000 HORINS REALTY * 494-8057 * cnzy 3br, 2hJ ~ ~u.-... 1 hou.st> 1-'rpl. 2 p..c t '"'. H ~, lot Pnn onlv $1.1 1 IX.let Owner. 640 10:io SUNSET PREVIEW Open House D.11111 I ti 424 Mendota Teri· at l' 3 BR, dm rm,' 1cw lachenmyer •.-.Y htc. 646-3921 545-3413 MESAVBDE OU\ of st•te owner mu~t r.ell 3 BR. l b111 • 011 t·ul dt> SU(' $'8!>,000 i\ Jotu1s1111 Uk r H79 4!lM GREEHIROOk 4 bdrm 2 b.i l::ittremelv popular CAMELOT mdi ·nus IO\ely homt• located on a cul dl• s.11 within t•asy "'all..1111: distance tu S.1 l'<1.t~t Plata tht•atn•-. & rt•;.t.rnranL-. Miln\I out Sl1tnd10~ featUrl.'~ Ill· dude Custom Draiwnl•;, Co' erL'<i p.itro f)(> .. or .1tor W allpaiwr:. lhl uu.:hou! 01111foor ~·•' A IHJ Auto <:.ir f>oor Opener Sk\IJght in f"am Hm II\ O" N EH 979 H12J l'nn Only $109 900 REl>UCB> S7,000 I Yr old F.ast Co!ll .i Mc;,.i lnplex. deluxe un its l'a w '2 hdrrns . 2 ba . tbrunl( .ut•a, laundry & frplc Now SI 78.000 EVB. YN COPEL.AMO REA1.TOR 552-0434 R-Z'ZOME Solid 2 bdrm home, dou hie 11ara~e LJr)(c lot $1!:!.SOO Roy McCardle 18 1 0 Newport ll•d. Costo Mesa 548-7729 2617 REDLANDS Roomy 3 BR, 2 Ba. cul de·Sac St Ba ck R,1 > art'a $89.~00 Agt 675·0000 BACK BAY \ tll.ige J bedroom. :!'. b.ilh Townhomt•' J U.!tt off Tustin near Newport~ Bal k Ba>' Call now ' RED CARl'1'7f. 754·1202 Wt>Sts1de. 1300 sq ft hou:w + zoned for 2 morl' Par.le IJke Jrea $74,950 Pnnr Ortl.> Agt 644! 96&l New CondOI>, 2 Br 21 2 Sa. 2 frpk 's ceramic tilt• k1t<'hens & bath Pool & s pa. 67~4912 Brokl'r Dana Point 1026 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Spanilft Mansi°" lln1que Dana Point landmark com ertl•d to 3 units. Perfect for owner <X'<'Upat1on plWl ln<'Oml! Ocean view. lmpre.ss1v£> facade & immaculately remodeled 1ntenor NORINS REALTY * 494-8057 * BToro 1032 ...•.•.•.•...•.....•... WANTA VIEW BY OWNER :---------------. SfACIOUS COMDO E -;1dt' t'harmer. 2 BR f wo l>l"~t bu.) ... IO C'L>M 1111 "' gut·~t hou,,e. dbl gar . ,a111~ blk. p.1n11r1&m 11· nice ba<'k}d, fully fnC'd . 01t•.in'1~·ws from •"1t·h I St.., to Jpprt'c1ate 428 E 111. rJm rm. l11ru1 l1111 ll:Hh St Cal l ownr rm. rrpb. IH•Jrn 11·1hn.::-. 548 k9hl Upgraded. 2 BR. 11, bJ Mountain view:> quiet area Owner will help finance $60,000 V.GROODlY RLTRS nl'w r~:. lw..iut prn i p<1t1os &n111· ~;or(j, \1u't wll I ~J87.f~l0 75>1 !:14.iM or l:ioW 2ii41 If n" .in~wt•r Iii-I H72;! llp1·11 ht11J"' ~at Sun I ~ .ol-.11 "'k1h ., Hari>of' Vi~w fiomu Just Lovely I· \ ~. H 'i II 0 I> \ .S I \ \ I> H I ·1 E I h 1• l'11rlof1n11 1111111<-1 "'Ith wµ.lr alt> l11in11~ roorn /I. bath BrJut1ru1 Ill'• 111 bnC'k patt0 with ratst'd v.oud dcck for l'\t'tt 111.: .. ntertamml'nt 1 '.d I for appointment COLE OF NEWPORT Rf,,\LTOllS 675-SSI I l-.A•·1·ut1\c lri: 1 llr hm1• \ I lund. \I('~ ('llllll'lt•lf' Jln\ ,fl_\. S::.~ (J~I &H~l...I FAIULOUS VIEW POOL & PRESTIGE JlplJghlfully orwn and frt"Shlv d•·roral,.cJ 4 hrlr 111 hom1• ·with l.im1h rc>11111 :.ind largr pool p.1t111 JtCa Thi: pt•rfol'l f.111\1h home for 1nil0<or outtlt>111 rntertainmi: anil pn ... ,.,., ~391i,OIJU 1nrlud1• ... I ht• ldlld OPF:N DJ\11, \ llt;l'I Sabrina TerrJt:C. Ct>M - ~1\llHIHll'ltl ll0"11., REAL ESTATE 6Jl·l·l 0 CostoMn o 1024 ······•·•·············· VETS FREE llousmg Zero dow11. 11 ru <"ML<; Anv <'tt\' m Ornnt:<' l~ Call i.iHR Vfo:'f i\t. I' 5S6 0717 MUST SEU NOW Colle~e Park 3 br & din mg rm, C'oven'<.I pal 111 Terms to ~wt ~1.~100 H.11 !«1111 BEAUTIFUL POOL HOME MESA VERDE Huge torMr lot • mini estate w tbtn landsci.p init & freeform 16x36 pool w1board 4 bdrm-.. C!' • ba, din rm. rmly rm. n1·w "eartl\tone" cpt m hv rm & fmly rm Near schools pork & shopping & roun try club' S45~91 MUST SEU NOW Mesa del Mar 3 br. 2 ba. ~araAe dr opnr Terms lo suite $79,900. 831 9081 IEAUTIFUL FML Y HOMI PlllSTtGIOU~ MISAVYDE 1>1.1L uu; \Ill H Ml)~ F.'t 111 10) 1•ar.,' If h1.,tory rt! J>l'dl!i 1t::.clf 1n I~ the rt!· ... all' value or t.lus approx •, d1·r1: Costa Mesa Ranch will be doubled. 3 -.uix·r hr v.· P• IJa. l'rpts. drt"' frpl1· t hachl'lor unit for a1td1tional 10 r nm1' Might tin a lilllC' !radm~' Ol'PORTll:"/IT\' \ta) never return !>on 'I 1111." 1h1' one' OPE'\ I< >It INSPECTION S.it ,\ ~m I 5 pm 2225 C:.i 11\'l•O Hd eo ... ta \lrsa ( "" tf \It .°'.:.\Sil RE \I f\ t•I:' IJ34dJ)!> 1>42 65i8en·::. 494-1611 Fountain VaHey I 0 H ....................... IYOWHER SUPERIHOME 2600 sq ft Aw;trd home. pool, central uir lllnd tiled roor. upgrades thruout. Ready to moH· m. $159.900. Will toni.1der trading for 4-Plex 963-6339 or 979 416."i BY OWN ER 4Br, 2Ba, many xtras $811, 000 962 353;1 SI 0,000 lelow M"t. Large 2 Stry. 5 br. pool home. 3 baths. rrml din ltlg, 2 frplcs, cvrd palm easy care lav.n 6 maturl• fnnt trees All Ct'ram11 Movinq To Orec)on kitchen &entry $117.0llO !>p.•n llouse Dally tuam· firm Pnn only. (Ull 1.pm J Br. 2 ba. Beaut. owner al 968-7&&5 Ol 1li-l·or Gall' for boat or cupancy 30-90 ~.!Y~ 1rtr Vl·get garden. fruit fot.1ti19on leach I 040 tr<.'Cs dbl gur 229 Pnn· ••••••••••••••• ••• ••• •• o·etoo Ur. College Park Pm:ed to ~£'11 556-8674 MHDST.LC. 3 bdrm fixer upper w b1.1: .-6 DLX. UNITS • fmly rm Wood burning l ndrrronstruction frplc, hardwood noor~. Will ht· fmishC'd approx block waU fenC'mg. Could <1nl· munlh. $250.000 be your dream home w /a STUART FINE llWework. 759-1501 REALTOR 6! 1-545~ (~1wnnrn11tfaj Brand new 3Br .• 3Ba. ex· Real Estate N 'Ul1ve home with ---- •'•'r:tmi( Irle t>nlry. SUD· s&S Resale Spec1ahs ts kl'n lmng room. beams. 3,4 or 5 bdrm models l'atht>dral rc1lini:. fplc. a\'ail. some w /pools formal din rm , dream 968-4602 lutchen. with micro· Penrungton Properties ...,a\e. larjle Cam rm. n\crs11ed yard. M a~ter llrlrm " sunken Bath. 'ti.Iii) Suhm1t all orfi:rs SSH.500 Pnnc1ples onl.> \ft 5. h42·5S48 Assume 81h 0 o Loan l.ocall'd 1n beautiful N. C·~t.1 \1<'!1J Huge Fam Rm '4-Swedish fplc. total 11aym1·nt $S6S mo 754-7800 WlKHOW that 1t sounds too good to be true So we won't tell you that. You can steal this 3 br Beachwalk w /ll~ own jacun1 & bonus rm 968-3371 Real Estate WSICRESALE SPECIALIST 3,4. or 5 Bdrm model~ avail. Some w /pools + Condos. Member Multi TWO UNITS pie Listing Service. I<:arh unit has 2,000 I 960·436 1 I .,qunre feel. Bwlt to con· .:--version specs. Does not :Mmlll have to be lax deferred.~ $225.000 e;;;;;;;;;~;1 J QUAIL lll VL.A Clr: ,, PROPXRT.?XS. 752·1920 Ina I fOO OUAIL ll HlWl'OM ·~ .. LOOKING FOR A POOL? Herl' It i!\ Htd/Clll 'd , sur- rounded by a profusion of grttnery & a lrg 3 BR house Located Ln a rural atmot1phere of the Upper Back Bay area Call us to see. SJ is.ooo VAWY 640-ttOO OWNER DESPERATE They've moved " own two & M UST SELL NoWl WOW what a home! With 4 lar1te bdrml. l~ bath. 11parkL Inc brick fir eplace. cathedral ceillnc. bn Mbt family /dining room & neat landacaptnr lt'• a ht()' you just can't mil,. aee1og-hurry, call 81M·7521 Forest E OLlon. Rllr IYOWMIR Only S81.500 fnr th11 1'...Gftac IJ"l'•t.f bdrm. 2 bath fmly a.. J Bdtma. Villa Paclnc Condo. l ?:1110 to ~•ch. Ml~ & 1hake wal)J. Shows like model Poob, sauoa , jar. courta, KV/Boat ston1.ie. Red to $74,900. Ul-0291 & ~ rm home. Has bl& y11rd Taste•?? w/rm for pool Nf'wly ,. • palnted iniide & out & ~uu11ous showplace. new drpor1e~ thruout tastefully •PPolnted ln lnt•ted on lvl.Y itreet on rich eart h tonu . 4 r ml de-ur t.ou or bedroom ham• wlt h 11tora1t • hu 1anjcnl111 family room. eaUna area shed. Make an o(ferl and firepla ce Putttn1 ~9491 IT'f'On. $129,SOO. BKR, S4()..1720 ~ Wal km & I ut! -------· IMVISTOIS OHL Y Hue• doubk 1ol, 2 unitt. wi\h old r .. h\on charm. Owner wm cerry, Subo mltl l Ml-'1111 """' r11 ••rr \Ill'• rOIM ~lfl• THE -RE-AL 1 ESTJ\T[RS --_ _._,. WATfo:RFROl\'T B\ OWNf.R SEAGATE Custom tile Or & pat10.1----------(rpk, 30 shp water view fmt & bck. 3br . 3ba. 3 deck&, pool, 1acua1, ten· nis, dbl gJr $234.000 714 848-4829. 213,597.~ -----lnlne 1044 ••••••••••••••••••••••• TURTLEROCK BROADMOOR PATIO HOME OWNER I S DESPf:R/\TF.' Submit your ocrcr o n thi:s 3 bedroom :! bath beauty wtut•h 111('fodes <t huge f.muly room RAMCHRULTY 639-7000 ---- rRICE REDUCED WOOOIRIDGE IEAUTY Tht'I elej?ant exeC'utive home has JUSt been rc- ducC'd to $130,000 4 big bdrms. 2 baths, over 111zed lml.v rm w .1eozy frplc. frml din rm. Super upgrades A real s teal 759 1501 Real E:-;tate IN IRVINE IUILDB~ CLOSEOUT * IM lltVINI * Only l Patio Home left 2 Bdrm+den, 2 baths. frplc, refrigerated 1ur conditloning. mirrored wardrobe doors, 2 C'ar garage with aulo opener ... plus full recrea lion fadllties incld 'g 8 tennis C<>W'\$, 2 pools anti a pair of jaeuz.m. All this and Irvine too! On Irvine Center Dr <Moult.on Parkway) JU:;t east of Jeffrey $69,995 Call 551·1263 •VA $1751<• I work w1tb Orange Co Vets only. Homes t o $175.000. For info c:tll Vet 541·0800 R.AREFIMD 3 Bdrm single story end urut, with large f1repla<'e separallng living & dtn· ing room . Pr1\'ate enclOlied patio und 2 c·ar garage, near rerreallon room & pool. Cn II 113-3310 ln-iM'so..ty RIO CARPET L01J111M1 HI .. 1050 ••••••••••••••••••••••• COUMTRY SETTING lmmac . .' 3 bdrrn. 2 bat.h condo. Mlnute5 to frwy, mall. beaches Comm. pool. View. ~. down. By owner $64,900. 130-9446 For Sale by l)wner 4 bdrm 2 ba 3 years old Call 768 1~ HURRY Owner must sell' lOCJWICI HICJMI 1052 4 Br, fam rm, 3 ba, AIC. ••••••••••••••••••••••• BE A GOOD EGG THIS EASTER Treat your family to a new home Room for a romp or or an Easter egg bunt on the croun<U of OCEAHAIRE DUPLU • UU.. beaut.Jiu! S bedroom home. Priced below mMket for QUIC.k sale. CaJJnow' 1'wo up. two down, both units redone, new l'&rpets, etc. Im · maculate Seconds to the breakers. Good rental. Lease hold. Sl.80.000. Burr Whil ~ i?l'alt~r 2901 Ne-wpori Blvd NB 111.i; 675-~630 Qntu9' kTco rfi 21 .. Mcwteft RHI &tat. 640-5357 MoW1e.._u.a., AtthRM1t We have numt!rous 4' beautiful mobile borQ-e~ for sale m e,,tablislled parks in CM, Nwpt Brh. Huntington Brh Laguna, El Toro, 1''tn Vl y, Anah~tm & Westminster. In pricl' ranges to lit most people's pocketbooks. $10,000 to $40,000. We are asnearasyourphone CALI FORNlA PACIFIC Mobile Home Realty ' 2706 Harbor. Ste 208 540.5937 OWNS MUST SELL 10'x40', re modeled, xtra dean, l br. $7800. F\irn Across from K-Mart Shop Ctr 2191 Harbor Bl IS34, CM Adults only 646-8118 HUMT.IUCH Beaullful 2 Br. Cozy ln:.h Cottage for two in P''t garden like setung 5• Adult Park C'ompletl' w/pool, tennis cts, & mu<.'h much more (JY1228l $16,500 CALIFORNlA PACI Fil Mobile Home Realty LIDO ISU NEAR BEACH Z706Harbor.Ste208 Newly remodeled, 2 lge 2 BR 2 Ba, den, pool ___ S.W.~9_:rr __ _ Br. 2 Ba, beaut oak $87 900 67" 07A5 paneling, beam clgs, By + ' . .,. .. ' BY OWNER 24'x6-t ~-500 v· S57-l~ Great Lakes 1974 owner.__..,, . 117 1a ---------Yella. Opn Dally 1·6. HarborVi.wHon.s Spacious 3 Br. 2 b.i ~ "CAaMB. W/SPA" charmer l...o<'ated "THE MEADOWS". Irvine btfulJy decried. great value at $129,900. Call UECUTIVE Decor'd T/0 , 3 Br . FR, Beaut 5• adlt, no pet. OwMr 11 A.ftxiCMIS ILUFFS HOME LR. DR + much more. park 559 0229 eves It to sell thl.s beautiful 4 on upper Newport Bay 5 lmmac rood. 1833 Port wlcnds 95.5-1836 4 BR'i ONLY S7 4,000 BR, 2 BA, family home BR, 4 BA home w /5000 ~OMHSET" IELOW MARKET! located 1n prime area sq. ft of elegance. Fan· Three Woodbridge Best of upgraded tastJc view of Back Bay Elegant pro( decor'd. 5 PAJUC R&CT $97.50 Hunllngton Bch adult Vt'' park. The luck of th1· lnsh can be yours. Tb1~ beautiful double wide lwcu.ry home. 2Br, 2Ba wihot & cold runntng lepreC'hauns C'an bl' yours. Seemg is belie~ mg, but be sure to bnng your 4 ·leaf rlover CMF~l HAPPY ST PATRICK'S DAY CALJfo'ORNlA PAC!Fll' Twnhms. various fealure s. Super & Fashion Is land Br, FR, LR, 3 car gar, models. REDWOOD. lands<' aping w/under 5475,ooo huge bnck patio+ m.'lny $89,995. STONEWOOD. ground spr1n It.le r s. more xtras. Fee land. $113.500 EASTON. pror Recreation fac1hl1es \l AHCHORAGE 1621 Port Barmouth Don l miss th1s ideally located Cahfom1a Home on a cul de sac Near !.rhools. park and shop· pi.ng lndscpd & upgraded . 7 Prked to sell $134.900 IHVESTMIMTS aa.ffs Special Clearwater , $139,950 LopMI MICJMf Rfflfty Prol decor'd end umt 3 TURTLEROCK, sper '495-5220 49J.94f4 l714) 4''47711 BR w/parlc vu, sec taC'ulara BR w atrium & 496-2413 130-SOSO N ~=.....,..,,.==rt=C=r=e=s=t =T=wn=hs=e.:'.I system, etc. Jmma <' xtras. 31 Bethany. Xlnt ~~..... $165,000 w/appraisal. SSO bey. 4BR Also. GREEN· walk to .beach. ~en crt.s, Vist.a Grande For pre· TREE. HAMPTON, 43.31 Olarrrungncw3 Bedrm+ pool. Ja<'UU1. Agt. view call· PROPERTY Brookside. $104,995. den 2 bath fam·rm 646-7171 HOUSE Patnck Tenore Patrick Tenore Agt. A/C, Fteoch d rs. p vt "BLUFFS" Twnhse. 4 br. Agt. 552-44l4 Mobile Home Realty Z706 Harbor, Ste 208 540.5937 552·4414 front courtyard, $123,900 Cam rm, Wit cond, qwet UDO ISLE Owner.831-7098 street. Agt646-717t. Ex-lg 4 brm 3 ba, mod RAHCH REALTY 551-2000 ... WOODBRIDGE PLACE' Spec1a.I o!Cering. 3·5 bdrm. Contemporary de· ~ched family homes in open. woodsy .,<fesi(ln . J ust short walk to lake & parks 111 Village of WooG· • bndRC From SI 15,000 5S2·4101 Transferred-must sell' Woodbndge 2 BR & den, or 3 BR Form din'g riv. atrium, upgraded, lndsrpd. $99.950 bt>st ofr SS 1-0685 OMEOF .. Univ. Park's newest 2 bdrm. models. Hard to resist extras such as de· co rator paint & wallpapers, levelors throughout. prof. de- signed & landscaped patiO!I $112,900 • rT'SUNUSUAL LIVE IN FABULOUS WOODBRIDGE .. And lt's a good one! 4 BR. 3 baths and color coordinated lbruo ut Could be used as 3 BR with the in-laws in the 4th. You'll be the IMer if you don't aee th ls one. Call today ror details We have most every plun to suit your lndlvtdual needs and price range. Ji"rom 3 bedroou condos pric:OO a t $70,900 to free standing homes priced al $122,500. For complete lnforrnatlon, call US! f!j WOODllJDGE REALTY 551-1000 red hill~· .. :. 552-7500 Deerfield Twnhse Plan2 S'7'UOO Woodbridge est. Adams $lr7,500 551·5000 University Parlt ~3Br, 1~ ba on greenbelt. $83,500. Her bert Hawkins 9'79-8100 Im. • 1044 ..... 1044 ·~····················· •.........•...•.•.•.••• macneb I Irvine realty SEE IT AU! ! ! from lhls beautiful home high atop the hills of Turtlerock. 3 Bdrms., fa mily rm .. atrlum & oversized lot. Quiet & convenient to all schools & 11hopplng. $129,900 -Fee. Llla Harper 752-1414 CQ·138) '42·tu5 '°' Oowr o,1w JUST LISTB>I 3 Bdrm .. 2~ bath homr, close to s<.'bool & lake, new paint & carpets plus a large yard with mature fruit trees. Prked n~hl at S9l.500 BLUFFS 3 Bdrm "Bonita" plan. All one level, new cpts, floor ing &. shutters. $145,000. Own I Agt SJ3.85.51or644-2148 eves. •JUMIOVA• k.ll, 1 VJ lot, patio, nr ten nls & priv. bearh. $249,500 Owner 675 62S9 CAMALFROMT Rumpus rm. + family rm. w/pool table; 4 BR, 2\.7 ba. Walk to bea<'h. pooh• tennis. A real cllarr.1er. only $155.900 CA 't WOOD REAL TY INC. 548 1290 I work with Orange Co Vets only. Home'> to $175.000. For mlocalJ: Guarded beach commuo1-VetAgt. MI·0800 CUSTOM IUILT ty, walk to ocean-bea<'h. Newport Hts home. comm. jacuzzi, sauna. ----------1 Cheerfu!Jy decorated. 3 pool, tenni11. 4 Bdrm, 2 CllffHAVEN Br, 2ba View. Fully ba , 2 patios. romp beam tt1l's, used bnek funusbed indd. paint-WITH POOL frplc 222 La Jolla Ln. mas. color TV, el<' By Sl4l,SOO 642-9740forappt appt. only. 642-6671 o aft 7pm. 493..as98 Charming 3 bedroom HV Homes, Carmrl 3 BR home with elegant + Fam Rm, pvt yard. 3br, 3ba, lam rm, all Spanish tile fireplace. $139,900. 752·0617 lndsp'd, near lake, on Lush land sc aping. C'IWT1T/_a.;..gt __ _ cul-de·sa<' Owner will Pnced righi, don't wait! S.. Clemtnte consider fanandn g 645-7221 1076 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IEACHIOYS lAHD GIRLSJ See us for mobile homer. In all beach areas. Wr specialize! Member Calilomia Multiple Lis- ing Servi<'e. XJnt financ · ing available. PACIFIC COAST R ESALES. INC 21036 Brookhurst, HH 963-0991 Newport Bea<'h 2 Br 1 Ba. xlnt cond. Pool hPach. adlt.s. $23,000. 675-1957 Walk to beach-Skyline :? BR. 2 Ba. dbl ~1de. adults $29,500. Broker. 6464.'JRO /\Ol.'LT Park It\ Westminster 2Br 2 ba beauuful Unwersal dbl wide. Walk lo markt't & bus stop. Prado Verd" Park. Bargain at $26.5011 Agt ~9332 _ _ _ SltS,000. 493-9796 For Sale By Owner 3 BR l:V. Ba. prLced for rast sale. $83.500. 25212 Via Piedra Blanca. Laguna Nlsuel. 494...01: 4M-S800 BR. 2 ba, hi·bms, frpl, I b t · I Ontu Sweeping ocean views. 3 Ocean view, IBr. new k enc . c-a a na. u 1 • 21 dee s + bonus area. !!hared. $13.50() 494 M94 $118,000. 492-7il5 ~ TM l--V-1-EW--..,..-0-L __ , ACftCl9t fw Sale 1200 Westclff 1.~ + rv ••••••••••••••••••• •• •• ,._,, Fun for a ll the family. MIX'f BAYSHORES BY To~~ •eou1sll! OWNER, $179,000. 3 BR. Spacious 4 BR, dining rm INVESTORS " ram rm w /forever wv...-1; 2 ba, newly decor. re· Beaut tful ly k ept 4 modeled k.ltch., Open Sat bedroom family home & Su.n 12·5 or by appt, Lots ot views! 2~ Bat.h.11 7 14 / 63 l · 4 639. 2662 ocean view. Owner anx· Five acres South of i<x.&s, has bought another Corona on paved roads. $1.S6.SOO. good for lot spilt. BK R. BERTIIA HENRY (TJ4 l 67~5717 3 Car carace. Quiet loca· Crestview. t.loo. 5 lllnutes to bus, -=......:...:..:.-.:._.:._ _____ 1 REALTORS OR522-2080 21.SDel Mar . 492 4121 --------- beaebet aod freeway WANT A VIEW Jbrhome, wlkinitdi11tanC'e HORS£ RANCHES S188.!IOO IY 0W)4al to beach, scbl, park. C51 Coldwell Banker 3 Monarch Bay Plaza Laauna Niguel 4t'97ll2 ll 1-0136 BEST VALUE! Tbls 3 bdrm • 2 bA. patio h ome s hnw, like a model. wtth vaul~ ~ll­ lnp , levelor bUnda. Lov· al)' .,.tJo areu • much more. Co mm. pool. Jacu.ul. 19'1,500 (85). "' 'I , t I ~f l I l\J, I• j / I I , , , , I ' ' ' 1,1.1 llhl llJI 1.1nH Twobestbu~inCDMon 8.-0808 Large onetc. small1>r same blk, panoraml<' ooea, new OMS, shghU)' ocean views from each a Sen Clemente Custm used ones & fixer uppers. br, fem rm, form. din Hillside home. Nearing Wehavelhem all BKR rm, frpls, beam Cetlings, completion 2,000 11q. n 3 (714) 677·561H new rugs. beaut. prtv. bdrm. 2 ba, lam rm, OR 522·0500 paUOl ltn.lce yards. Mwrt br eat< a• t no o t . CoircW ~ll 1. Sl87,000. 7•9448 ftttplace, wet bnr, 'un "°"'rty 1600 or 8'4·384L JC no anBlfer deck, 2t~ car iaraae ••••••••••••••••••••••• 644-8722. OSM'n bouse Sl.LS..000 No a1enu '114 .... 11!.AIC .... • 1LD~ Seus.u> J -G. alto wkdy5. 5aMl>?4 or TJOI0·4180 ~ ~ ..., • S. ...._ (Onlwn San Cl•mm~> CAM~OMT _. Sale-Lease Trude 4 Br, a ba +loft. CUstorn c.,........ I 07t 7 Rm Dent.al Suites tUc. m lCt'OWave, frplc, ••••••••••••••••••••••• I Rm Medical S\111~ sundeck + many llt..raa. •AIAMOOMll)• Jtlf W Yeah Co Priced to aell fast at NEWPORT BEACH 4t~60 4"·2JJ7 sue.soo. 642-3381 Ai;t or _ • M5 024.1 ~llM ucrlflce, your a.c... Properly 2000 IAYYIEW SI.in 1 Redot-4 •~r ••••• ••••• • • •• •• •• ••• • • LI% bf% ba mobil• hom• ::o·~Jiu.':.R,1:.1:i:!1 C.M. DUPUX In nclu. Bayside VIII Double aaure. How Owne2" mmt 14\11. Best E· Clubl!M, pool, Jae., pnv $77,900. a!de on Ji'11)WH' St. Prtff. LtM,_.., IOH bch. pou. bOat slip. WAU.STIUT anty.m.cmevCl!I. •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• SS1,J00.875-7I031'73-71M8 RULESTATC S.IUn• 11\)'t.Jlln1 wlth ,. UPIJ'Mied Le1wa• vmaae Npl Shotw, By OwMr. Hl-1110 4fJ-UOJ 1>eUy Pilot Clualfled AU CciOdcs. atlr, 2ba. •W.. 4br, :zbe, 2 car l•l', Dt• lt a llmpi. mattu swrec. Ownet41'7·1t31 m4115."'at.·ML1 Wa:ntMa C.llfO.S671 l\dtcall&U S6TI. • • • . . ?19' -... --... --. -..... l I ... llb I t, blc- ·~ ,r 'b . ry l II 1- •• It u .. r . 11 -· Houet U~ ....._, Uat.1111• 1_, ....... ,. .. u.fww.. ........... Uidw.. ..,_ ....... u.tw-.. ._..to S.-. 4300 ....................... ....................... ....................... .................... . ............................................ . CWLVPa.OT IMll•tm ............ _, hsd "-nUafawl•sd a...,...leedt 3241 MlwpoetlMdt 32" .... a...d 3106 Mete 3124 ...,....._. 314111/F, 2lyni +,reliable. •••••••••••••••••• ........................ ••••••••••••• .... •••••• ............................................. -•• •••••••••••••••• ... •••• .............. ••••••••• •..-.••••••••••• .. •••••• $1.Skno. + .\~ otll. HB ....,_,.,,,,..., ZOOOO•rr.. l.202 p '•Y..., 3234 Ocean""' home, 3br, CAMEO SHORES HNat1new 1 br w/frpl New.2Br,2ba,aUbllns, CLOSF.TOBEACH _63&-_9805 ______ _ .. -••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... ••••••••••••••••••• 2~ba. an preati1lou11 ~bit-ins, la . .W frpk. encl • .iaraae, 2 Br, 1 Ba, upper,crpts, FftD&leover2Stolbaro 2 DUPLD HOMEnND!:R.s 3 Br 2 Ba trpl DO peta Portafioa S75t. ~ 381', lg corner lot, ocean be. 2.13[-.qm patio, lndry rm. $325. dr}9. sto\'~. tt1ri1. No BR apt, CdM. w /samt=. ~ aha.rp z BR unrta, 'lboulaodlofllent.11 $U01mo. • • ' "-Jslle... 3250 virW,$1200mo.67~ , ... M 3107 TSLJqml 6'2-UI0.1 cblldun, no pet1. About 8 blks to bcb. botb w/prvt pattoa. AUareuallpnce:l ~11DlaLU:30pm_. _ ... _ ...... .-. ......... HVHomea. C&rmel. 3 llR ......... ::~•-•••• NEWLYDECORATt."D $350i.";y."&,~~mao ~mo+~uul.Fr'ee 0...-wtU bclptuiance S&mple llwl ... •leedl 1240 4 Bdrm., 2 bath vlew + t•am Rm, pvt yard, u..,2 bat.~'OOdOODOC"ell· 2br, new crpt. wtr pd, Rollltor. • UIU03 lacil GtO-O'ilS bet locoCDe '100 per mooth. SHOBacbfumutHpd •••••• .. •••••••• .. ••••• home. A1r caadiUoned, pool $650 PlQ, 752-06.1'1 fra& 00 Perun. Under· S25(). 21D2·B Placentia. '49' 2ut. 10am or ~v-. Or leave ~toSUM.SOO. S2002brfocdyard ftnpl.ace. I car aarace. uwnt'/agt. ~ ~prime. $oti5 mo Call btwo 1-S M-F _ mesa betwu 9 & sonly. C41111'40-5112A9. ~3Brpetafroet'd AJ LASJ nlce yard •nnaher and ytly lle.&n-'lB>oralU. 63Ml2D t;:!80LargeSUnoylBr 7n-7547 LlFETlMESERVICE dryer avallable. Ex· s.a.-• 3276 sn.a. .. ft_ 3Br lb.dPoolPaUo (Sll6)ea ----.. -n.~---T-··--... --_ 7 UMITS c.M. 1t57 A•z~ cclleDl locaUoo· dole to • ..-.e town.boWleapt, \;& ~ area w......., v -... A ...... SerTfce rreewa " ibo an --•••••••-....... 2b&,frpl.c,patib,garage. Unfurn bdrm, Pnv ba ~I:~~ ti! ~·t'ti-d 3206 Y•C.FMt center~ 14so1J!11t~ Olodo. 2 lrl br, 2ba, far, ~~ .!!:',;\;~~..!; Qulet complex. Adoll.S, J=~~G{:G) Non asnokoi-$UO. townboumo, all bltn1 , ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mtt-WHta lea.ae. Avail1ble April rec room, $32S. Palisada )'l'ly.fW.S..um,~ no pets. $1fS. 8'S-S381 _MaJrm;.,;;_...:....;....------crpg.. dr}9. nun-y. buy 2wtbouee,patio. Yearly, WE&UAllAMTE! ut, CMll owner at off.ramp. 71"'63:M7ZO. ...._. 3122 87$-51"9 -$330Beaut2BrUt.dPool now. Tom Lee, Rltr, S5.'50moincl.utiLnopet.s, •Wldeltaele«Joopoea. ~!J.4!6C2-0U8. S.. ..... · ........... -.......... New decor mr. lBa, + EDcYdA.JC (5816) .._,elJH 6Gl8m. 675-1819 •lnhoueecomputeuys. •POOLHOME• C4lst1G110 3278 garage. W. Side. nr ........ 631-4565 for•...t 4J50 IGarcmadel Mar 3222 •DaUJtelepbooeaervice Seosatlonal ' BR. 2 Ba --·••••••••••••••• ••Pu;k Npt. a!llr, 2ba, acbls, shopping. $210. .. •••••·--·--· SEVIMDUPUXIS •VacaocietveriOeddaiJy w/air cond, fplc, D/W,' OOI'BAGEOU$2Brl8a, gar. Jae, pool, •P•. t.,n 548-9'0 ............ 3152 Available now, $3S mo. SAHc::t.l!M!MTI! ••••••••••••••••••••••• •nilllllattotcounselors super area S•B5 fplc. D/W. &uier area. crt.AllUtllpd.Nocbldm ....... ._ ...... •••--nearNcrwportBJvd.CM. Ocean views all 2 BR, Spotlea.,. Walktobch. •P°t'eet.oageda&over 96M567,aaent,nofee. • $38.S. ICMS6'Z. A&ent. no or peu. $US/mo. S32S. 3 Br 2 Ba upper. CONDO 611-32'13 1~ BA. i.e.; then 1 yr. 4Br3BaYm~2100eqft •.Freel"t!Dtalcountellng fee. 6TM661;87$-5"128. ~ No pet.a. 1021 3 Bdrm. 2~ ba w/blto -------- old. Walk to state beach Yrly,500Acaoa64>70'8 -opeo 7da)'l8:()0.ij:OO Cmdo, 3br, l:V.ba, 2 car Valeacui,-..S ~eo ~ Disbwasbet" <>Mc.a.tal 4400 4 park. Asking only CdKmwerlge3BR2Ba. gar, view. $375 mo. COND02sty2BR,com EASTSIDE near new 2 "Alrl'Ull1 fullycarpet-.......... ·-·-••-•• SUB,OOOeach. Ofleronall lite.-·-· &woodsy. s. ot RENTIMES S.:U.21613afl4 pool, Pa.seo Carolina, 1 ra -::-BR 1 n-,_.ft encl gar, at" dra~ Ready to THE EfFICIBIT orpart. ..... T child OK, Andren, y u.. ·-move an. Located on BERTIIAHENRY Hwy,$S25mo.G7S-076' ForProless>00alService ~HicJuet 3252 '93-88!2 . 'l1. avail Mar, 1.5. $32S per Crown Valley Pkwy. ALTERNATIVE REALTORS Jo'or Reot. Immediate s at ....................... s.taAIMI 3210 'l~r!.s.. mo. Otww/aat-6'3-llBl RENT$375/mo Mo. to mo. rent incl: 215DelMar; 492-4121 bdrm. H.V.H. view, ten· Call 6311'155 2 Hr, 2 ba. East Nine, -·•••••••••••••••••••• GAlU>ENAPTS GardenApt, bus &ahoPll. 3MUesSo.ofS.D. Fwy Rec e Pt· • 8 r v • • llDUCB> $7000! ~·,.1'!';!01 $.\50. 6H·1183 OR STOP BY w/pool. A''.ail. April 1st. $2Z5 mo. lBRhouse. Nice CORONA DELMAR 2 Br, rebig/stv. Klds Call Mr. D'Amtto personalized phone C0~1 •.-v .... 19J6 tlarbar Ind $360. 497•2426 --t avail now Good .. 0 _ ~---&.---. i....c-ottnopets. SZ'fV, 541M237. (714)898-3376 ttage, roof'. rm, lllail HU11e Ea:statde m.analon ,,_ .. , • ... -.. ~ .. .,.... aerv underground PU& extra rental. pn!Sellt in-C~~lkNo.ofJ.9t.t1St.) Latc.Fon.t 3255 area. SS7..o863, 54~17 Pool. t.ennia. Some ocean 2 Br, l'h Ba ~e. Mlwportleodl 3169 ll~i.DNewport. come$6SO,Greatstarte CostaMeso 3224 ACalif.Corp. Sal Fee ·-••••••••••-•••••••• Mary. &Ca&.anna Vlew&. Close garage, patio, pool, •••··---•••••••• THE EXECUTIVE 1nvestmenl. Now ••••••••••-••••••••••• REAL FIND 4 Br 2 Ba 4 BR, 2"'2 ba, 2 sty, lake $280 mo 2 BR timl yd ta Faslllon bland & fine Jaciuzi. Adults only. PAIKMl!WPORT SUlTE,&40-5470 $108,000. DnYe by .. 3 Br, 2 ba. 4MIO Cocllege Cl>tll, med yard. $415: view home. Club pnv's Cbild"'emJpelok.Avatl beach.AlsolBr.6"-2611 $375.mo.~O Bacbelors. 1 or 2 OfficeSpaceavail pvten-Magnolia St, then c Ave, Colleae Park. lose 96:H56'1 agent oofee. incl. Cloae to schls, now SSJ-0843 S40-l'T2il Bedrooms&1'ow 2 . • 1 agnt~. to scbooUl le shops. $475. • sbop'g, recreation. Many Mar). • ...._(ialcwe!~ Froro$289 so try, s~tes. reas. 827 mo.548-16311 lBedroomcoodomio.ium, xtras.CalloMZr,S81-3022 · ---New l Bdrm Apt. WOod WebavelOOO'solboUles. ~ ... · t •-i We11tchU Dr. NB. 12 U .... ITS be il r l ail .,...,_ac ... ar sp11., Ow. 631--0800 " DUPLEX 2 Br1 Ba, cpts, ~· t.ennis, super loca· arf6S-7667 CMdaduimws ~ ce . l"'P c. Av dplu. apts now, all recreation proaram, --------- !!4 ~e to beach. Tbes ~.no pets. sml fncd Uoo.$250.Call~77 N.wportleadl 3269 a..irw••d 3425 April 7.$39:5f1no.S5l-5836 area,a.allprica:Saveon socialprogram.7pools,8 EXPAHOIMG717 wont lasl a~ only yard.$295.19C81el950B. HUNT 1 NG T 0 N .. ••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Spect.acularView ~-t.ermiscourt.s.At.Fashioo Fully serv. o!c space s:do,000. Great income I'd eyer. 6 4 s. 4 8 s s HARBOUR bra.ad new NO FEE• Houses condos 2 BR l'h Ba, pool, rec Xtra lrg, luxury l br, 645-4900 Ji.9 Island, Jamboree & San starts at 640 sq ft in the trade-up from you evs/wknds d 1 · R' 1• facil or shops & school 1 k t b b Joaqui11Hillll Ro11.d. dynamic NB airport. di.t>lexor4-plex..Walch encil~to;')'~Bdrm.2ba, up .exes. enta $375~.H.B.963-8882. wa o eac •2br,lba.$26S.Newpaint, (7141644-1900 .• e~pire grow. can nowNew2 brl'OOdo.Pool,spa. all.built·m,Jac,pool,etc. Pav&lioo,675-4.912Bkr. wash /dryer, ~qJle . Jndryfac,oopeta.269·B ________ _,bus. area. Space avail fOl'morel.D.Co From $375. Kids & pets Privacy.$550.8'6-4408. ...EWSll!"VIEUI For lease. Blue Lagoon ~~o yrly. Util mcl. E.18thP1.~ Lido lale Baytront 2 Br, a>o-16,000sqftlewarehse OK. ,.. .. _ n KOA ., " condo 2 8 2 Ba b h v•~ sp. aoo sq ft. Prop. Mgr 54~3666 &7M913.,... · Stunning 2Dr Beaut. Yd 3 Br 2 Ba pool, tennis, • r, ' c ' . 1 BR new apt. all bltns, frplc. $600. Call bt.wo 3-6 Judy Clark, 833-M13 or Wllelc-.11 •__...._._ r-._.__11 Kida Pets Welcome S32S Jac $84Sy~ly. 675-0562 pool, t.ennis. 499-3!MJ4. $300. Lrg 2 br, pn. bc:h ac-crpt. drps xlnt location pm,673-0770 stop byCom.mercoParlc. cnrwa __..... N Schoola Sbo (8480) • "'-'-u..fww 3600 ccss, elec. stv & dshwshr. Oran• ii i 4l00 Birch. We have lOOO's of houses, r Jl8 SEAVIEW 3 Br popular -r-llH 487 Morning Canyon 1767 ge. Ava Apn 11..tah Galon!! ---~----- d 1 t 11 ' ••••••••••••••••• .. •••• 63 L $260 646-79m 6Gll55 nr b 000' of a......~ P xs, ap .s now , a S400FamilySize4+2 Bar Harbor pnmeocn vu 673-7 l ----. • "e avel s ·~· "'OH THE WATER• arus,allpnces.Saveon LgeFDcdYdNewCpts $950.547-7044,833·3215 EASl'SIDECM CodaMaa 3824 lBrw/stove.reCng, dplxs. apts now, all GreatoUlcespace.300to REAL ESTATE fee G ~-••~ . (8476) -3Br Dplx,encgar.$395, Closetobuses,stores. areas,allprices.Sa•eon 1000 f\. All sizes ck 64Mto0 ..... _. r.,_uu.;auon 4br. 3ba pool home. Agt.646-4884. ••••••••••••••-••••••• fee. IQ TWO+ HOUSE ~ ..,._, 631-4555 Gardenmg, pool serv tn· Adult 2 bedroom, s uper Adlts.oopet.s. 645-4900 Jt.9 sbapes,somew/wetban. COSTA MESA BR house, beaut ocean & cl'd $800. 549-0GSS Capo Beach u~ 38R 3 Io cation . N 0 pets S411-415l8 -& frpks & terrific views. Owner'surutinrearwilh CanYOD view yard, giant New-elegant·2 bedroom --. Ba, ocean view, bllns, $225/mon tb. 568 W. $240.lbr,refrig,stv,C&D, Cbarm.ing2Br2BaDplx ~ei:~~ge~ey~~!! huge ti replace in mstr bdrm, $395 mo. ($.SSO) or 2 bedroom + BlGCANYON.Lwumous s undeck. $425 mo. Walsoo,inqwreapl.E. patio. Adlt.s, oopets. 724 CoiyFinlplaccSeaVu gottoseelttobelieveit• beautiful family room' +uUl ~ den <SS75> CedBlar&kwm-2 Br, 2 bath con· ~1 CJames,673-771Jlpm Woo'tLast$36S (675'1) Call Sus:e Zauo al • · · dow home. 5 oc s to do m 1 n 1 u m h o m e . LA MANCHA APTS • Slt~m! gbllaslsdn~'?°raspedto -.... 4 br, 2~ ba, F.R .• beach. Private 2-car New/never lived in. Wet New plush duplex, 3 BR, 3 L ""ge 2&3 bedroom 2 _Br. cpts, drpe, refng, (714)675·8662 for an pooi iug Y u.'>c _. F II ba !rpk $650 mo _, '"'ds ok 60 S3301BrViewtbeSea a--.or•top._· .. on-Fn •500 ·pool. teruus. ga.rdeoer g~rage. ~ Y main· bar/lrplc . $675 . • • · garden apts. Dsbwbr • ..., • no pets S2 · Pri YardA CP l ,,_ .. "7-$137, Owner.6'MH>008 tained yard. Adults. N.o Sa.Usbury R.E. 67J..alOO 64.S-2111, 646-0:m _ bltns, encl. gar. gas bbq. 831-9081btwo9&S vat.e I 00 8 :30 to 5:30 at Lido pets ln 525 18th St -Dishwasher+ (6"1) M.anrul Village, 3475 Via J QUAU. lll Nwpt Hgts 2 br duplex. (714)~~~ . 2 BR 2 BA. D/W, dspsl Pool Gas pd. TIS Scott Pl lBr, near So. Coast Plaza llath91 631-4555_ Oporto,Suite20S,N.B. Pt..ACh. ' d d d I "'0 ,..,..... LIDO ISLE $2'15 mo Wtr pd Santa 642-5073 ..,.n T>nul'ft;R'TtEU. l'nc Y • a u ts. ~· "" An . 556-8599 It --_,.,mo. 3176 • • 752-1920 l•v Pt.'TS.$325.Gas&wtrpd 3 BR, 3 ba, cust. home. l Own er will lease 5p:i area. a E/Sade, airy 3 Br, 2 Ba, 540-8493 lMOFREERENT ,cooOUAJLST NEWPO«TeucH 673-2256 blldromocean,cpl.only. FURNISHED OR UN-bltns, new ~pls. drps, -••••••••••••••••••••••• Harbor Blvd/Balter . No children. No pets. FURNISHED MAKE paint. $350. 552-4201; lBOO Meyer Pl.. n~,ne.w lBR.$225.Enclgar,pref area.C.M.3@«>0sq.ft. DELUXE E SIDE tnplex 3 Br. 2 ba. frpk, 2 car gar. Refs. 536-1484 AN OFFER. You have 8 Apcrtments funtished SSH2Al twnhse apt, 2 BR 1 2 Ba, mature sngl. Avail im-400 sq. ft. Ground floor. w owner's 3 BR. 2 BA Encl. yd. Kids ok.. $450. choice: Large2 Br +den ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~;~.,?.:alto, gar, $325. med.493-2134or"92-m66 x.lntparlring54().2200 +frplc 3 Yr~ m.-w. <.id ~2274 3 Br, 2 ba. N. Hunt B<.'h. and ta S7SO 2 lc6oaPeNmula 3707 MESAPIHES .....,.....,,., terms. YEAGER HL TY - -Near Westm. Mall $400 pa 0 mo or ----------•-1.,a..t1 fw'llished Ofc Downtown Laguna. c"-""171 QUIET PRIVACY mo Call892·3206 Rr 2 Ba, large deek and ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bach, $230. Some ...,... """"" · · VJ EW ""'IC/\ mo Both un l BR pati·o '"""" mo gas w / " a r a" es . Po o I , 0-Point 31Z6 or Unfwwished 3900 275 Sq. fl. Plush cpls · 1 br. encl. gar., new cpts, . · ~ . · • · ~ · " " ••••••••••••••••••••••• paneled, mcls ulil $17S. '4Hses-Reduced$15K drps, stove & refrig. Nr ~.OOOSPAN VILLA f> 1ts are freshly palnted p-cUd, steps to bch. No Jacuzzi Adults. no pets. ••••••••••••••••••••••• TIIEEXCITlNG 494·3S8lor494·TI96 One 4 BR & three 2 im, Westclllr. Adlts, no pets. br, 2650'. xlnt toe., 3-gar und carpeted ORI VE pets. Avl now.759-1914 Open daJly. 2650 Harla Duplex. ocean view. New PALM MESA APTS. room !or mo,re uniti;. $275. 673-6372eves. $595/mo. 968-4851 BY lll Via Lido Nord l Br, $350 yrly. Off street ~\ICE.C~~-H~~=~ ~1~1)~ ~. :;t.;~~ 2!f.l ba. MINlT'fES TONPT .Real Estate Conne~'tion Two new 3 br 2"'2 ba Lovely 3 br 2 ba home, nr and call prkng. Avail immcd. 549.2447 OCH. 1714) 54&-1665 (•vs 1714J twnbs, atnum, 2 car gar, beach. Super yr d Waterfro.t Hocnu Call 67S-0387, 646-6238 2 Br. 2 ba, woodbuming Bacb, 1&2 BR. 556-9974 ~/D.z:etrtg,pool.tennis, '!!n_glllardn4 ~m1 o. (213> 631•1400 $2'l5. Vacant Studio, nr MEWE-SIDE frplc, d/wash, gar. from$220.&up l.ohforS• 2200 J3CUZZ1,recroom.Klds& 'I0'7" .~ bch, shops, restaurants 3br,2ba.Townhouse Up-Childreo ok. $275. Adults.No Pet-. • •••••• •••• •••• petsOK $435&$485 dys graded Lge patio. 493-00757am-7pm. 156lMesaDr. Single to 3 room swte avail in full service blg • DI' 0.C. Airport, Startin~ at $165. Cnll 833-364-0. EXECUTIVE SUITES .. • •••• • •• • K35-TI1.9 .eves640..soo6 TIUS ONE'S FOR YOU, B GCANYONTOWNHSE Adlt.83J-3307;G73-7077 Cluldren ok. 645 9543 15BlksEa.slofNewJ')<>n. OFRCE ILDG SITE '--sharp, 3 BR 2 BA. w /fpk. I • Corona del M 37 22 646-4262 Bach urut. refng, Sl80 mo. Bl d 1 HunllnitOn Beach F • ..... Ly HOME cpts, $410. 963-4567 agent, New 2 BR. 2 ba, crpt d & er eves, days adlt.s, no pets. Avl Apr 1 v l . ..._.... nofee. drp'd, spectacular Golf ••••••••••••••••••••••• 546-!lll(,O 27,000 sq. fl ot near t; h &Id r c n & Pets Cours.c & lake view. Sep 1 br. incl. utilit1es, 1---------•1 1714) 833-0821; 640-07Gg ~~~,~~;.~~i1~'g1·H~ weloome. Lg fncd yrd, ClOSETO IEACH gar , tennts & pool. garage, patio. close·tn, LACASAl&.AHCA roll ---RootM 4ooo Cent.er $13S.OOO pat.Jo & garage. 3 br 1 ba 2 BR, formal Din Rm. 1 Lse/opOoo 644·2416 newly redec, 838·7•147 loda. I ..... AYI How 3 br. panoramic ocean ••••••••••••••••••••••• lsl & last + secur. ~00. . All utds pd .. cpts, drps, view, new. frpl, lg deck, Room w/ kttcnencue Luxunbus offices. ex ecutave secretary. personal phone co'· _ er.age. receptionist. coo ference room. xerox, notary. Lease or month David Bourke Rltr 642. 1200, 64S.2S77 eve sly, pal.to hme, f~I~ wet Rentals Galore!! Costa Mfto 3724 pool, lndry fa<.''s. Adults $500 mo. IREN 496-5600 $50week & up. 54& 9950 bar, tennJS, poo Ja c •••••. •. • ••• •• ••• •• ••.. 548-9755 ,.,._-Aofl"--'w F.astsideextrasbarp3br, RV storage. $400. 9722 WebavelOOO'sofhouse-:.. over 35. np pets or FoMt•Yaley 3834 _ ---- ...,... _..._ .. , 2 ba, !rplc. rrucrowa~. Verde Mar <Broolchur.;t/ dplxs. apts now. all children. Call Sue: •••••••••••••••••••••••Ambassador tnn an Costa Property 2550 wet bar clec garagedr Hamilton)54S-33S9 areas,allpn<.'es Saveon S50WEEK&UP 5S6·7707 or Henry: AllUtili'tiesPat.d'. Mesa,22T1 Harbor Cen· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ' . · fee Studi 1 bedroo 642-9137 all I ed 235 opnr. Gardener mcl. Coodo,ocean \1ew. bach. 64ir ,.900 ""--' • o, m Gorgeous2Br2Bas:115 tr Y ocat • rooms. PCS'k Ptoce-Oceoanside 1.575. mo. S48-006.1 trpl, walk to beach $275 ~ ~':f' zr3~~=~.~~. Great Location (9624) =Y& ~-h s!:~~~:g 2 &J BEDROOM $425 Per mo 3 Br, den, 2 m 0 • 9 6 0 -1 8 3 0 ° r C-OM newer lge 3 BR 2 Ba. 548-9755or6'5·3967 s.'2S New 3 br. 2 ba, E· pool, J3CU7ZJ, and ret: VA·i'~ ba, fncd yd, or Estancia 2131249-:MOO_ -lite, 81ry & woodsy. S. of -side, deluxe, encl. gar, MustSeeToBelieve room. Daily & weekly -~;ARDENTOWNHOM l-:. ~S. lst/last + depos. re-3 Br bse, bike to bch Lrg _!:!wy, SS25 mo. 67S-0764 _ SUS CASIT AS ~Leaf:=!· 642•1603 Be~~~~~2Ba ~> rntes st~rting from $4R a .. car garages. q d. 631-0700 aft 6pm. yd. $395. 1st, last & clean· FtHElt HOME Nkely furnished l bdrm. _,;;;,..------• Ru•lns 61 I -4555 week. het 1·757°1&21 Slen1This2B G $295 ing s.s7.:nJ9aftn A Closed gar. $230. up. 3Hr2Baapt.Qwetarea, RA.NCH ESTATE COHYDU&IT TO AIRPORT K ... OKEnrlYemdG · THllLUFFS Adults, no pets. 2110 bltns,cpt.s,drps,nopets . ..._llaiJ•leoch 3840 Lovely-pvt ha-no smk· lu.'I c ar u.~-Gorg"""'" full bay v1·ew N.....nnrt Blvd. ........, 557 ........ Bl N Sb (9603) ·~ .. ~-...,...,, • ~~--'"'="'· ~ -···-••••-•••••••••• drink-mature pers. SW· tns r ops ~ 3242 pnme "front rowB"Rtoc2a-Rentals Galore!! •YlUa Medlira• SHARP, beach. 2 & 3 BR, CM $150 646·103."l Charming 3Br Be8t Area ••••••••••••••••••••••• uoob· . ~QIDBI it el 3 d • ~,t We have lOOO's of houses. 2 B 2 b ·1 ald fr PI ' dash was her• -M~~ter Ste Kids Pets Ok 'Br bowie, 2'tW bath, fa mi· a. sput· eve en um r, a. uu . P ex· garage, patios, ~2358-Sagi room w/bath &. pvt "" 1 1 j . $825 with gated courtyard en· dplxs. apts now, all ccpl elect. Encl. gar. entrance. A·l zoned. Taxes only NewCpts$36S (6461) yrm,poo, acuZZl. · try & spacious, priv. areas,allprices.Saveon Couples prerd. Children LIVENear'J'OOBeach! 548-4589aft4 S912 per year. Totally RenthnH 631-4555 mo. ALSO 3 br condol, patio. Im mac. t.hruout & fee. ok, no pets. $305. Mo. 2324 Cena del Sol · to month. Near So. Co&l Plaza, O.C. Atrport & Freeways. Call 979-2161. Deluxe off i ce~ w/secretarial serv. Nr o.c. Airport. 752·5626 -W.ATERRlOMT .. New office space from 300 sq ft. Mos t com- petitive rates io area. Fantastic Views, pati~. in the CANNERY Vlu.AGE-Parking incl. For appt call Ed 673-100.'l, 28081.alayetle Ave., N.B Dix Office Space Call 831-9950 SAN CLEMENTE fenced w /3£,1,) deg view. waterfront, 2'11 ba, poo. trul . An 64r ,.900 ....... 1:'1.i-au UM:!C Vacation R....tal1 4250 I od I d MES "" VERDE/' II!• <E tennis, .. 00. Cell Linda Y gracious. excep· .,... _,. ~ ....,......,.., Beautiful Adult Apts C-Omplet.e y rem c e . "" ~ •• 846-4292 t.Jooal value at $750 per ------Gas&WaterPaid. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Officespace673-3022 open beam ranch home Lovely 3 Br bse, 1590 846-U7loreves · mo., until 12/1/78, then 0-Polnt 3726 BargainPriceHugclBr *"''OH"' ___ _..:. ____ _ d d l En Yd B••--La F 21661 Brooklrarst, HB -"' * OFFICE FOR LEASE wrappe aroun poo , Myrtlewood. $460/mo. 1--L...-3244 Ntlt\per mo. ••••••••••••••••-·•••• c """' un ac nd b k t 2 .,._ -.,.,..Du I N (.iut:r::.o 962-6653 WE HAVE CONDOS '"""sq fl with lobby of Jacuu1 a nc pa 10. ll(X).544-3979. ••••••••••••••••••••••• · Ag_::.ent _____ 64o. __ 5560_ Super neat lbr villa, _,., P ex ow ..,.,...,,, UAN • car attached garage and INHAWAif !lees & conference free standing 11tora~e LEA.5E $460. mo. 3 Bdrm, RENT A.LS ILUFfS COHDO ~~ private, $225. s:.l02Br, 2Ba w/Petio 2Br. cllildren welcome. 00 lntm'l R E. N~twork facilities in pnme loc:a · bldg. Convenient to 2 ba, clean & sharp. 3BR, 2 Ba ... · .. • .$550 1 Story 3 bdnn. Clo6e to ---------1 Bit.us Encl Yd Garage pets, starting atS24S mo. Newportlie1ghts Rlty t1on next. to freeways. airport. ALL TlllS & Mesa Verde. Vacant & 3BR,2~ba .•... $495/525 school le shopping. No l1u11i11901tlHch 3740 NewSbagCpts (4945) -MO$Y7---------L--..:64:.:.:S.::.:.5:.04..:...:4 __ ...J S510momcl.util.Admin. BEAUTIFUL S MOG avail. Kids OK. Agt. 4BR.2~ba •..•.•.• $750 peta S650 Agt 644-7270 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ReMi-s 631-4555 IRANOHEW tt-""-&.torL-4300 or wholesaler tenants FREESETTING ONLY m.&96 48R,3Ba ......... $690 . . . 5..,.1DIO ~ ~ preferred. Cont.act Mr. 35 ooo c 11 G ---------New Twnbse w/tranqwl 'IV 2 Bdr, 1 Ba, C/D, blbns, 2 & 3 BR st\.dio apts, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Singer, TUes or Thurs. ~ey'at · a .eorge •Wes~ide C~ta Mesa, panoramac view, 3 kmgsi .. Wetldy Rahs" gar, $250/mo. As,'t. huge backyard. children W /M. 34, would like smgle 540-EB21 542•345, 2br, 1 a .. enc gar, patJO, Bdrm.s. 3Ba. frplc, pat.Jo, Fullkitcbeo&TV ~I. OK. $350 & $425. Dys, or divorced woman (1 ,:.-.;_;;.-;;;;;.-;.-;;;;.-. wash/dryer area, nu balcony, dishwasher, Llnens&Utibties ----848-2655;evs536-4873 child OK) for compa 1" BENHINKLER I:.. carp/drps, freshly paint trash comp .. 2 car gar. MILETOOCEAN DUPLEX 2 bdrm, $:Dr. .._ ...... ~"CH nionsh1p &: lo share 2 "Ulness forces sale". ed. Move in cond. w/opnr. Beaut. crpt, RoyalS.ltesMotel $290. 751 Scott Pl Call .-~ Bdrm. duplex m Costa ownr mll.'lt sell or part $325. /mo No pets drps. Children OK. $550. 721YorlttownBlvd 67~ &CIYICCEMTER Mesa-~ 25 to 38. Call trade 20 beaut view 646-12.46 negotiable. 9'TJ..971M Beach Blvd at Yorktown EASTSJDE 2 BR w/encl BRAND NEW. Spacious between fl pm le. 10:30. <tcres. Great hunting & East.side beaut. 3 br, 2 ba Newport Crest Condo. 536-0411 yard & gar. $310 mo. dehlxef~ & 4 Br. All 64S-381)4. fLc;hing area. Nr Moab, on qwet c:ul-de·sac. Liv 'l ,.,,,. 2 or 3br pool & ten t-•~a. 3748 Adlt.s, now avail. &4S-7S22 ~Y·or .... -·.:. ~arJus. lgt We yesdt. I...,._,: Ft-;, sh_a_r_c-fum2 Utah. New. never lived rm, huge fam rm w/9' 't5 3C'AMPusl>a~IRVIME ~ · · --.----..,.... ~..,,..u -........ m 4000 sq fl home. Would brick frpk, bltns. lge rus. Agt 645-0295 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ol Beal'b Blvd. 536-1718 bdrm 2 ba Rancho San make a veat group club bonus rm w/sep. en-TUIT\.BOCI( Cil.84 5 br 3 ba hg 2-sty home LAGUNA BEACH MTR. Joaqum Townhouse w/ retreat. Hurry, 11ubmll trance over dbl gar., TO-..~'SE lrg yrd,' manv extras. INN. $65/wk & up. Maid Nice 2 BR, nu cpls, &: view $275 mo Call I A · ...,,~ J l TV h ted paint. 8 bllts fr oco, ~ blk 752-6375 all of ers. sic •ng fncd bk yd. $535 + sec. be Back Bay are a. serv. co or • ea s tores. trans. $285• __:.---------1 $149,000,29%down,owur dep.M2·1Sl6 View, four drooms, Soela/petsOK.$1125.Lyn p(d. ('n'> 4~ 1115 5:&12:86 Roommate wanted, will ftnance balance 8%. 2,200 aquare feef. Im· Jennings. 556-2660 or N. OoUtBwy. ---------LagUJ'laHills, $175/mo. SCS-7825anytime. E~":~cr'a'r,•fresb :~~:!~~~ ;!,f~'!feen~ ~. __ ............ 3169 Upgraded 1 Br, ''Rtg Aft6,581·3104,Bob. · J f d n 1· s. $650 Im on th. 2 Sty 3 br, 2 ba A·"ram". ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bay" twnbme. pool. ...,. paint, cpts. ge nc • ... adlts_ Brookhurst/ GIRLS. J 's company- •••••••••••••••••-•••• yard, gar, wsbr hkup, AV A IL ABLE IM · Dsbwhr. frplc. Walk to ••v.:BAU'W' Adams2l3/547·l60l pro( sngl man is loolnmi Space now available in the newly refurbished Lido Shipyard area: um que marine :;elling, custom offices & bus1 · 11l">S spacE'. Ample park· init. A D1v1o;100 of llarhor Investment Co. F .. L.-..1 wtrpd. No dogs, $27Smo. MEDIATELY. bc:b, tennis. $600. mo. yr -·"'-"' 1;::::;:;;:=;;===:::...--.,1 -tor 3 (em rmroates, 23-38 ..._..11 "-$525 tnove io. 2426 ty.6'Z-3361A&\. 3B~2baths. Yrly,$S50 l#oof()(QnnaColl....,.s 2br, lba. No pels. Close to to share a beaut 4 BR ••••••••••••••••••••••• 0r A 3"""' d_ QUA.1L m ..... c~oo ''Ir' •• , oLXoFFicEINc.M. eo.t.MeM 3124 an&e ve .• J ........ 3989 ~ -• "'" mostbeOUltfulOl>Olfrnent sbop'g.$240. fumbome.inS.W.Sanla Nr~Fwy.Sl2Smo..util LEASE $,75 c 11 PRO~ 2BR.2ba,yrly.$425 communties.A ~g 768-8764 Ana. Tired or coming pd.?5l.Qt92AM's ·-•••••••••••••••••••• • o flfe FOR LEASE STEPS TO IEACH borne to an empty apt? ..:---------..... ...._.II Park,30BR2Bal,2fpl/cs, t-OUML7:"J.a:....,~ Lov•'"2bdrm 2b 3BR.2ba,bayvu$.Ul50 setllngwfl'ISh!Oms.· $260stealsThis2Br Then come" bve ma ...-Ullfthll 4450 We ban lOOO'• ol bouaes kids K, Av «16 78 . ..:.=:..=;;.;;;;;.~.;;:,,;_~-""'....:...-1 "" • a UP· ly waJel1olS. ond moJl!stlc Cozy Den Plush Carpels family style atmosphere ••••••••••••••••••••••• dphu, apt• now, ali Drive by 2528 Duke Pl. 3br~condoinTerrace, w.Apt.farttntat$525. 2 BR.2 Ba.,yr .$400 rreesFeotur1ngpoolS GreatArea (4381) Full use of the house: 4 DRUXE OFC 'S Conf. rm , seal 25, all paneled. sm. wbse in re ar. 1 or 2 YT· lease. Lall.- Forest area. Kent Harklns . A-, _,, prl .. -. "'-ve 00 Call 963-2543 or 5519-Q21 pstiO, comm pool. Nr El mo. localed at 428h JCICUZ2I souno b''"""'s. $1 f' ---.. ,..., °"' R b $450 Beoronla """'u lDrDuplexNearBeach Just 75 mo. or more fee. NrWestcliff,ruestbsefor ~ o. mo 3 8droi. fam-rrn v1ew ondexclllngclubnouse Lodsc9EnclosedYard infocall:~'lO '4Mf00 A9 lpenoo,cpts,drpe,$196 -borne. localed an :\ wtlhSOCIOleverfi.Tennis. NrShopeS215 t5363> MF enjoy pool, tennis. Its ,ortltedt ll6' mo.~ lnUniv.Pk,2bouaesnow. private auarded area gym.ond\IOIGYt>Olot ....._, 631-4555 Apt. or tnbse. 645-746-S; • !..••••••••• ... -•••• _ .._._., ~••• ' BR + Fam Rm, $700 wttb many ameoJUes for The Vloge. More of 6"-~ A Homt> • _,._ ~-per mo. AND 3 BR + JUM at $87~. mo. 2125 ~ · loOk Spee. 3 Br, 2 ba, Pen· ..... 8 ~II ... _.................. fUD Rm, $$15 per mo. YtcM Radiant, ....... Galonll f Fum&l ~:a.a: lhouae. New c:rpt, drJ!e, Woba\llDlOOO'• ~i Saper2br,lba,car .. ~ml ~---3Bdrm.denbomc,lout. or. f firtA:J19intthNoct.Gar. :· .. r:.'c.:.oS!v:~ =~u vu, vrt, ....._..._. 3241 edlllSpyaJua.$800.JUo. :':1~:e!~·~~i oneona?woBedrcom :,o~mo.~ toe. 1 ........... -. ......... •Dnkm&l>'. areas, allpriCGe. Suveoo Adutllvlng. '4Mt00 Jt4 VIEW .f. LOC. DOWMTOWH fee. Orrtct1 open 9 00 to 6.00. Mee 2br w /pauo, aar, Ema Ito 2.Br, 2be+dln· LA.G41NA '41>"4900 __ A-1.._Now __ ,..._nlln__;;1g_. ___ _, JndryBe a .. rmh • •. •w .. mron .... Nrr. J BR. den, ·~· ~atio, lna nn. Jast dec:otatecl. O.hlxe 2 bdrm., 2 bath " ... .. "' NeedoGrcat Roommate'.' CU(Uvtnc~! cau The Oranl(e County Prot~1ooals Ho.e Mates u.ttd 832-4134 Dependablo.aince 191\ 714.581.9393 ........W'-kll 4500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IUILD TO SUIT S,000 20,000 Sq. ft. Plac:entta Ave. C.M. WESLEY TAYLOR CO REALTORS 644-4910 ~ ~·~-':' r,'~ Walle to beach. 11iOOJmo. duplex rental. Ou'-tand-6'13-m2 .n~ ._~~ •• 4D4'SIS«N4-9513 tncocean•vutai1e'Viow,l~~~~~~~~~I •-leach 3141 RmmltoshJ'lu~lrv. patio New6,'lOO'undu2I0'.1810l .. .,,.,._ .,.. _,b a;-... -blk• ,-•••-•••••••••••••••••• .....,..... bol'De Sa11m11. pc>0l, Jae, Redoodo Circle, w»t JJ. _;;;;;:.--:-.............. ----·1Fs; .. .af111•iaY..., 1234 ~--...,. ,., .. uun ·SUPER % "Bt<, 7ard •••••••••••-•-••••••• C"tc.12:i()mo.213·39')·!U77, llUJ'ltBch842..m.l to tmm " beac:h. H"'e -tO.d. do' G •oral 3102 LOE 2 BR uppt-r view ... '"""""' -..._ U.,. :sltlled ....................... Uv nn. • dloini ale<lve. ~-· ' .... ••••••••••••....... new cpt!\, drps,. i\~ bib u~vvuuu m> sq f\. ~ Placentia -••••••• .. ••••••••••• Huc•Co\anlal'+2 Leo-kltcllm w/bltt·lns, ecz.7145 12621 lo'lower Street to bch .. twn, Helsl<'r Concenlal homt-, C'ost1t C M. XJnt loc. G a ti 1202 Hld P-1w1c2 tar Gar Inc I. "uh I d r ya r. IAR.P 2 , f&)le, Cpl.I, (Garden Orovo)t~arse 1 PIJT'k. $400. No children/· Mesa Bdrm & Ba 25.30 64&-'--_75_12 __ _ t:ncloeedY $42$ (1938) Separate 2 car 1an••· elec ~. patlo. J'tom bod.room.. .,U, doH to pd& 49'7·3109 pttf'd. Sl30. 9'19·323l 1t-""-&. W__.._... .. L"O An outatandJ..a1 otrcrtn1 $l501-.CdM:m.M1'7 •!;Cf.lot. Laundrr ----....v at S&OO Mo. Ref. r•· I ooehU4tien, no Deeatllul almost ocean F. ZJ 11"1 'ftMdl ••mo to ••·•-••••••••••••••••• qui.red. Call: Newport • "91/mG/lllOllth. id U... wtt.b a tront 2 8& •Pl, n o share 2 bdrm apt In CM Jlr.tlnd qlie ad 2 br W'I· <>? RSA.LTV ..,,,ard, -pekl Call JW>. ~Pl Cl.uldtledAd, ,m>peb. • $12S.frnoplm'4tuW..caU tum. In Cdll 1eue"' "'-4t4-01JI ,,qh. bis mi>-.. MM11rL PDIWRail1e7·3'611 168111Alttr5 lb11$375.1'1'5.m3 OAJLY PU.OT • ~.._i-lnconw lair Mo•'-J ,,...........,.,...,,"9 ~ Acea& flNg C..,.. S..-.lce a.ctrtcal Gw••... ....., ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ I T ..1>. prt'parat1on by "Two Men Will Move PaioU&ll. lntr/Extr 2Syrs HOMESAVERS. P umb F/Ot&Bkkperw Ct>uryt"ll Cllrp4'tManw1Ulay)·our1 EW.;C,9I'RICA.J..SEkVH.'E JOl(NTHl!:GARUt:Nt:l{ (ortncrlR S .tgcnt You " We handle lrg & In Harbor amoa Sl Lie U\C4'HeaUnl( Free el!l , current. p A ('XP wanh or minti ll•P¥lr:1 & CALLS SU hr." SMAl.L t'ur Prof grounds earl' TH E SUH S H I N E 7S4 OZT2 :1rul mo vu office & 1&328l,"2·23.58 SlO hr. Honest & reliable ~to work on tn your dle&IUJlibl too' ~uar ~ork JO~M2-8233__ cllal1>rtl Jod~~r~a~.rsfoe:mp •• ~ GlllLS • II - -household . Olatancc & , .. ...._u.a.o.M!t..l"'"'G -ten'lce BofA. MtC OK ...... ce or my hotne «al a uer 111&VU'lil rree •• ""~ • Hou.1>1!clt•.tnmg °' o 1ct' WuuJdn 't you rather have local. a lso packing •ranvu~•" ~or847-0383 9G.1052alter~pnl ~t.~~ _ IWabcrdBectric While House Gardener spec1all:.ls SpH nn 4 ceru!1ed publlr;1N·oun Lowest legal rate. 20 yrs exp. Free est. Llt• 3lt'1311 MS 6974 Penional serv ~-M4ti apt.\ & R E work S1i1 v t<.1nt prepare your 1n Lic/111Srd Cal T lll·!H4. 645-2181. Alk for Bob. Ptumbiof repair t!lc ~ Shampoo & steam clean -- ---7 <Ltys wk Hooded, in come t.u return., .fo'ur lln Ph u 7 7278 . Lied, S yrs exp Reas. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Color bnghtentirs. whl ~ECTRlClAN·Priced Jorer esl for een ~ardt:n 5 u r e d s 4 o 9 5 z s appl m your home call _ '"-_ -~ lnt·En &Repain. nu.es. Jim. 64.5-639-C .DrJfUQ&. ardutectur~I. cpts 10 nun bleach Clean n&!sl·frec ealimate on i.ng & hauhng. ~ 7!t26 lanytime) SmatJ jobs o .K . stdol drafts man, c.o~p. hv. din rm, ball SlS. Avg largeoramalljobi. after3:30 961H11.82 Poinffftg/PapwilHJ Call 8roce543·~ RooflRg avail. eau 7Sl·962'7 rm $7 50. couch SlO. chr Licensed _ 673-0JSS GeMral Senrl.;t --L..mc;~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• $.5. Guar elim pet odor ---••tl.ous~·leaningdonehy ••••••••••••••••••••••• Uyrs. Painttna O.C. YOUNG MANS yrs expr ROOFS wtaJfod factor> AJpllatt Repciin Cpt rt!µ111r. 15 yrs ex pr El.ECTR)..SBVE ....................... reliable couple Rl'f:» l..ANDSCAPlNG Res Comm Apt lo rates. in wallcovenna. Free di.red; esuib 3S yr1 C'.<}11 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Do work myself Refs .. More lban electricuuus HANDYMAN C'urpentry · MG-1793 .Kcai.onablt' Priet"l> l..lcttnS8J9.1.886!499·290l eat. 645-3576 Andy Harold Gwm549-2961 Has rain damagt•d vour ~1 0101 979-4941 electrical. plumbing & -_ --__ -- "•pbalt., C'-'11 631 "•40 ----floors.841·2781.557·4504 96S-87S3or~7 5846 p~,.ERSPAINTlNG Pat chtoa . painttn1. ls For Less. AU typos. .... "' ..... Carpet Cleaning. STEAM ~ -M.lyako Housecleamng Landscuping. Tree trim· Expr'd. Reas Rates. g~am. work E•per'd, Li bond' ur. Fret: Bonded, he., insured uc-SHAMPOO Abo floor ••••••••••••••••••••••• HANDYMAN. Homes & Service, how;cs, yachts. ming. Clean-up a yr-:. Free Est. Call Gene f• & ••.a..c.-.a• ••I!. esll e. 894·0421 or A--'--& window care. 97l-11S4 RL'DWOOD FENCES apts Cons. cienllous ani• & parties. Oneota! F en E t Jay u-.n..~o ~~ _!i37...;_-4..;,l33 _____ _ ---.,. Out hM t "' Crafts Call645-0302 """' up r ' :. · ......,..,..... CaUSSl·lOU. ••••••••••••••••••••••• _c __ am enance _ Bl.ult to order, licensed, man _ _ _ exceUeoce.631·S470 No~oru. 848·4043 or All P ROFESSIONAL -11W A & E Systems. Auto roll C.•nt/~• guaranteed. EVES ~oclltg _ __ _ _ ~-~ Painting. lnter/Exter . Fat.ber 6 Son. Cooac1en· ••••••••••••••••••••••• upawnlngsror tl\emotor ••••••••••••••••••••••• 6'2·2a7J ••••••••••••••••••••••• r-~~atclean1ng Alsowc .. _._. t t101u satla •uar CERA ... 'CTILE Special home & tr el t I All '-""'""' www11 etlClriC• Reas work guar 642·0386 • · • · .. u . · -colors av r r. Padflc <.'01ll'rete Lo 1~ ffoor"I Haul, skl~loader dump do vacant houi.e:. & apt:. ••••••••••••••••••••••• -=---875-8338 evn or leave ty: Entnes/floors. 25 yn. f h" sues. Jmmed day & full day r<Atc:.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• trk, grading, tn-e wrk, t11 \!827-6900 REHT AL PREPS Pamung. Extr/lnlr. Ex-mess. ex-pr. 962-1883 ree ome 1nstallat1on 645-3257 after JPM f'loo . Wood ct!ramic demolil>Oll!l l!tc gJ} 1257 pr'd, boneat. oeal. reas. -T c:-i - S.lOAM & S-7PM --l & t" 27 · - - -Xlnt housecleaning don1· Hr~ & ~n. 642-5703 l..lc'd S64-UHS Dave ,... ~T ce (213)S92·S020 Contractor viny ''P s · Y r:f HGulltcJ by lady wtexp. Depen<la-- -......,./lc'p9ir ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----••••••••••••••••••••••• licensed contractor ... ••••••••••••••••••••• bl tr 847 3637 htcnolw 'I Fine Exler. Painllng by R 1 · · Mpailllng ll.J .Humnan & Son, (;tn Ca~~r:,. S3l-8440 occ Student t Ton -.rurk e. 0~ _ans. . ............ ~ .. •1•1••:•b•• R. Su>0r. St. be., ms. Try ·;;:;;:~;;;;;;;;;::s•• ;:;;;: ~~r!s~.~J~·~: ....................... Contr CustomAlt&Add, Gcwdenlftg Trash, tree tnm. Ron HOUSf<;CLEANI NG Dnckwork. Sma JO li me 836-~3'hrs. R&EST. lfl-1439 m.w.red.6'2·2624 Will babysit 3 mo:.-4 yrs, pat 1 0 :.. c , b 1 n e t :. . ••••••••••••••• •• ••• ••• 642.5703, 97lHl489 Uood work. good rel:.. Newport. C~la Mei.a & ----------------f _....:..;.;...;.._ _____ _ Adams & Bu1>hard fornuca New eon1tl nes Prof Japanese Landscap· __ 67~U589 lrvm~67S.3175evcs _ Prof paiot'ii & p aper PATCH PLASTERING Tree Serv1ce. Tree prun 968-3987 • omm'I 645 464A or 1. d M c•-n student big trtl(•k hanging. work guar. A 11 types Free 1.11g. removal. topping. -"' ,. · · ·• mg "' gar erung amt . .,..."-6 ' ' Hou:.l!clearung b:v exp & Mo•'-t 780 Ccrpent.. 548-454_1. Lu· & bonded mcl. moWIJlg, tnn:urung. tree7~!.ts•_ clnu2p129, haul.mg. rel woman Xlnt ref:. •••• :.;•••••••••••••••• !'.:!;~;, .. ei. . 536·4 • estimates. Call~ uc,lns.6'6471 spraymg, weeding. lt'ree 494-......., "'494 k ...,...._, -••••••••••••.,.••••••••• Gen. coolractor: Founda-072 -S12_ 50 w 979-064!1 Pro(. serv. w/AUas co-:.1.l. PLASTERING Use the Daily Pilot caii>enter & Cabmet wrk lions. add1t1on1t. re· esll~~ . .545-7 -~ 00 more Fn-e est. for Paiftt Your CGStle Homes. additions. re-"Fast Result" servtce Free estun.ates sml JObs modeling. blockwork. CLEAN UPS/HAULING ••••••••••••••••••••••• NB Irv area, yng caus local & lng dlSl Or Cty. Speci.alu:ing in residen· stucco. free eaY. lo..J & repzun., evs. 673-5125 ~8241 Pruning-Planting Want a REALLY CLEAN h06p tmd. rea1t ratt!s. Van & Stora.:e. PUC Lie tial homes. ant. & ext. rates.586-4893 di.rectory. Your Alvin _ Fr~est 642.9907 HOUSE ? Call Gingham Kim ~9602aft 4 PM Tl ll ,015. 5J7·3160 or Please check our r e -----------1 service 1s our Ca rpent er fr~eTr:v a Daily !'tint ---- - -G~J.Freee.st~Sl.23 _Classified Ads sl'll big 537-~Sl _ - -fert'nces. Lac~ 320881 Pa1duog,int/ext./found.. specialty. esu mates, Any siie Jobs. Classified Ad lo bu). ~ell f'lnd what you want in Fmd what you want 10 items. small lll•m:. or 1-'lnd what you want LO Guar., 1nsrd, free esL rpr. Bonded. lic'd 14-0607. Call 642-S67S ext. :ta Tony. 646-9666 or nmt somelhmg _ Dady Pilot Class1hechi. DailY Pilot Classlfleds. any item ~-~ti Dally Pllot Classu1eds. _ Ted. ~7085 1!9'l-3&M ~ S005 ~-~~ ••• ~?.3.~ ~!.~.~ ...... ~~-~~ ~~~~ ..... ~!~~ ~~~~~ ..... ~!~~ ~~1!.~!'.~t~.~ •..•. ~!.~~ ~~'!.~:-.~::! ..... ?!~~ ~~~ ..••• ?!.~~ ~!~ ..... ?!~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pvt Prty owns $2,000.000 ~l' CAT· Lite-brown 4 ASSEMILERS • SAM CLEMENTE worth of prop. Wants 2nd yr old Burmese male. N HANK IOYS 15 to I 7 Oerk ' Groorrung & Pet Shop. TD money. Will pay 10'~ Lag~.494·lTAI -ACCOUNTING CLERK :11~;:~0~ 1v:c~t11Jo~P: P/tirne eves. 6 to 9:30. Rellnng a(ter 7 good + pumts o.esirc fast PenoftGl1 5350 1•1n•· Quaht~ Nt'wport Ba!>ed Retail Store ]', 1631 Plac tia £!M Senior Teller Must be intelligent & Yea .... , (1'ne 1~nat1on & ~_ervi_ce. re_fs 644-1'15.2_ T p eo • ----G·ta-ann· g. 54c27...., •., "'" ••••••••••••••••••••• •• currently lnterv1ewmg For Part· 1mc os1l10n -,.,.. .r \14' chentele. $68,500 Mortogacp~ Trust Spiritual Reader In Thl.'1r Office Staff Job opening requires skill lmmedl11te opporlumty BUSBOY·exper'd, Fri, BERTHAHENRY ~ 5035 181..SSo.EICamlnoRt>al \\llh Ill kt!y adding nlllchme, knowledge of ATTENTION"' for an 1ndivldual with Sat,nightsonly. Rfo:ALTORS ••••••••••••••••••••••• San Clemente. f\llly he. C!urroughs L-5000 & L 6000 machines. bas11· 18 OR OVElt preVtous experience as a 540-3&'1 21.5Del M~ _492-4121 Forappt.492-~ _ knowlt'Clgt' of inventory, A/Rec & A, Pay & Mo ~qMr'.MC•H tellerpre!errablyi.ooew ----------1 LOWEST payroll Hours nex1ble. Salary commensuratf! Workmnewomce accounts. Duttes include CARWASHHIELP Newport, 2 ex1stmg 01·e<&n RELAXlNG MASSAG f; w1lb ex()('nl.>nce. Pleasant surrounrlinJ!s. Please Opening m Costa Me:.a trairung tellers, handling front take~ut, Ml·down l~t flat•t 8ohJames-L1c Masseur "C'llri re,umc to customer transact.ions, Jl'ullor part-time. restaurants Owner will I t TD • _.__ Outcall 9-9. 494 5 ll l c•--ua......1 "'d ..,. 212 new accounts and collec· Metro car Wuh finance.A.John:,-0n,Hkr s · .s.----ou».-rJ.v~ ...... Man or woman Wor1e ddl . to 2950HacborBl,CM 979-4964 2ndT.D.Loans. •SA...,.DY'S* c/oOallyPltot.POltox 1560 wtyouogpeople.Enjoya. uon.sma t1on assist· ---Fairest Tcrmssmce 194!1 J"'lll Costo MelO, Calif. 92626 ble & interesting work mg savings manager. CarWmhM..,.... Partner wanted. Oil pro· Sattht-Mhj. Co. Outcall Massagt' w rapid adv;,ancement Qualified applicants call lmmed. employment ducts, silent or :Jtt1ve 642-2171 54§..0611 913-0329 oppor in our educational (TI4) 768-7771. avail for full 18r'Vice car JUre opportunity. S8SOO - - ----•SHERI LEE• products dJv1.S1on. Age no wash manaaer . Must be se<:ured 7688494 ReuredC''"ple has money 1-L...w 7075 HetpW--'-... 7100 barner 1f 18 or over. Gffndale Federal ex.,,_..'d in all phases of """ Certified MasscU!ot.' _. anted ... ,wv M h 1 ~ ..-to lend. lst •-2nd TD· • ust ave P easing car wash management .... ~ORT.~ ... CH or ' House Calls . By appt ••••••••••••• •••••••••• •••• ••• • • ••••• ••••••••• l c II bet . "'"""..-~ Agent,1837·3744 838.6838 penonally a wn 24221Calledc aLowsa Top sal +bonus+ Rt'StaurantForSale _ ----lntell, !>lam. beauttCul 9am&2J)m LagunaHllls,CA comm. For interview Pnme loc. on Manners Alwtounc.,,.nh/ FOXY LADY female desires ru~tomer ACCOUMTIHG call714/~. Mlle. ll!OO Sq ft bldK + Personals/ or pubhc rel al.Ion type Payroll clerk with uun. 645-4514 Equal opportumty land. all for only $200.000 1 --t • r_..:_..1 o.tcaA Mos~ JOb. F1ei..1ble, will travel of l year exper., IO key~~~~~~~~~~ employer M/F/Jl Cashier wanted for car Realooorruci.. 675-G700 ~ • ~ 7ll·l56I Prefer N.B .. Irvine area. by touch, Ute typing. r ---1---------• wa&h m Sant.a Ana. Ex· - --••••••••••••••••••••••• P.O Box 1475 Newport So&9-0713 AutomoUvc Bkkpr. per. 11referred. Call Gift. Sh<>p, bt:st NB lorn· ~en.wk S IOO PREGNANT"'Caring-Beach,92663 ---Acct's receivable. acct's Bartender, yng, attract 644-4460. lion. F.P $25,000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• con!idenUa\ counsebnll & -ACCOUKTING CUC payable. Burroughs J>O$l· fem. Exper. good salary ----------t -_ 67!'>-2473 Clasi. guitar 1 .. :111ons, referral. "bortion, adop-Http Wanted 7 100 Famil>ar w/A/R. J\/ P. an~ machine Harbour & ups. Cbe:r. Monique. Cashler/Clerk·RESP. de· UTOTEM Convenience Market Posttions oow avall. 2nd & 3rd Shifts at all· our locations. Start $2.65·$3 hr. lolerviews conducted Mon-Fri at: 12442 Lampson, Garden Grove s:lT-4840 We promote from within F..qual Oppor Employer Day /eve cl uses. Place ment Ass1t. 751.9194 So. Calif Cocklatl Waitresses, Irvine. Cocktail Waltr•H School Earn up to $300 per wk Low tuition. Placement n~;w-• t ...,000 music educator, beR /an lion &k~ing ••••••••••••••••••••••• billing. payroll Must be Volkswagon 18711 Beach 28 7 52 Marg u er 1 le pend able woman for """" me <.1vcrn .,., t d c:.c..c 117il a""ur typist Mm exrv•r Bl HB 842-4435 Parkway, Mission Viejo. eves & wk.nd work. App· ---------dwn 2014 Pl<.1ce nlla. CM. a v ,,_. APCARE S47·2563 .a..CCOU ..... TS ... ..-' ....:.. ~ -----Jy, OC Airport GtCt Shop, Collector Traine e assist. 751·9194. • ...____. 5 300 "" " 1·2 )rs f'a.st expanding AUTC> . . ed I F1·oaoce ba c lrgrnd 5.5_7·7490or_642·4810 Lost cs~ OUTC • • 1 M .... .,SAGE electronics mfr offers Beautician wunl w ex. aft.4pm ••••••••••••• • •• •••• ••• ,,.._ _,. PAY AILE r ARTS COUMTER per in newest hairstyles --'---------1 helpful, must have good Earn extra 1n1•ome., -t ... 0 d . ,,,.,t'' '" 11 •731.0931 * CL£.DK s:ood pay. benefits. con· p~so..., for Children's Hair styl-CERAMIC WORKERS telephone voice. xlnl G .. _ .. n l ......., or .. un .. "" "'a ..... aen1al atmo1tnht're. ~ .... lf thro ts l c l l ~ ro....... oor oppurtuni Y . . ----.. •· ID" saJon in M.V. Im med you can w po on s a ary. on ac -.r. with exciting new PilrtY An 1 ma I Ass 1~ la n ( e 1 LINDA & VICKI EOE Call for mtcnw. t• time. wm tram P:irts ., a wheel and are interest-Goodman.6'5-2&C4 plan -part-tame ()r full-Le~gue537-Z273. no fee We currently have a full OECC salec>, mvcntory t.'Oolrol. ~~~vf:~ni:!1~· Ja0:m~°;, ed in a steady job, call ___ __, _____ - time. Call toll free Lost Rik Mm Poodle. 15 j OutcdlMas50CJe lime tempon1ry opening lrvrne :>46,17:11 Some service wntmg ~l MARKEL CERAMICS, Companion needed. 80()..242:2135 for more in-nold.app. l:?"hi,tn\lt' Fortt..F.ofit! fora6monlhpenodw1lh - - -Sea & Sun Su baru. 979-012.l mature, Christian formation or M agnolt a t All ant a. Serving alJ Orange Co. t.he possibility or becom· AdiYities Director 842-067~ _ Beauty shampoo assist. --C-HEM-- 1 -C-AL-- 0 -,-R---i woman to stay w /elderly ...__.to Loan 5025 HB 5J6..S028 -83>7313 -i.ngpermanent Alleasll C.erufied. £/lime Mesa AlITO needed by progressive woman on wlcnds io .._.. ... , SUS ••s year vaned accounts Verde Conv Hosp. 661 PIX/RECE.-T. Newport haircutler. Call $3.50 per br w/periodic CdM. 640-l392betwn 9am ••••••••••••••••••••••• SCRAM LETS • 1.-* payable experience Center St. CM S48 5S8S 1 ..... .:;..-'ot .. ·· forappt. M4·7680. reviews. H.S. chem. or &5pm I st, 2ftd & 3rd T.D. 'i • Outcall Massage Abihty to operate a w - - - -mm"". opening 11~r -w 0 r k e x p e r -=.:.!-------- LOANS AVA1LABL1': 10AM-2AM 731-4462 keyamust Pleal.eapply Air National If you're clerical dut1ei.. Must •llKESTORE• w/cbemicals preC'd. <;OOK, exper"d in guest Cred1tnoprobl(·m ANSWERS ---h1tv1nguhatdt.1meflnd-havetypmg&JO!ceyadd Assist. Manager for 7am.J :30pm. E .O.E. home, 10·6 weekend:-lrc*et",752·5903 DANCEOFFUN mperson ang work and are en macl\expr.Conl.actMrs. Schwinn dealer. Sal 549-3281. C.M.640-6716 \erate -Basic Beaut. nude a1.rls dance terested in a career in HauserS4&-l200 $10,400. Must have prior . Party-F.ldest -& rap session. lOAM lo TRENDATA electronics. wratbt•r ConneUChevrolet bike mechanic exper. m Chore girl needed. must Coolcforpre-scbo?I. 9~m-QUICK CASH BETTER lAM Mon-Sat. l2PM to CORP. forecast 1 n g. n r 2828Harbor Blvd. CM a store 552.9222 have own trans. to run Jpm, greatpart-umeJOb. His boss haled him ~o 8PM Sun. 625 N. Euclld, Standard Memones l>t\', telephone/teletype m -----· errands, 2 dys wk. 3 hrs Coot.act Jo~mily Tbeurich. 1st & :.!nd Tru~t o,•N.t much. Just before he Anah. 559-61.50 An Applied sta!Jauon and repair, seer----------day. $3.00 + mi. 646-8359 director, 551""533 loans arranged for ;my fired him. be gave h1m a FREESESSlONW !AD M • your Air N<1tional Guard •VOH Boat Building after4PM. rea. .. on ~red1t no pro-riuse so he would be los--agnellcst,;o Recruiter. We need men ISLAHDER YACHTS ___ ....;:__..;.... _____ -1COOKS. Bartender::.. blem BolTOWQn the In· rngaBETTERJOb Slnglemale,newt.oarea, 3400W Segerstrom andwomenaged17·27in TAKE AVON llasF/timeoperungsfor aen·-~· Delivery Driver:-.. creased value or your - -5---see1'iog female rompa· Santa Ana, CA 92704 terested 1n gelt.mg ahead FM FWlhen ....,, P /lime openings for home Call today for fa~t. Lost old Eng het>p dog. ruonsh.tp Enjoy dancing. (714) 54G-3605, ext213 m today's compeht1ve TO LUNCH 100°' FREE ~ & men w/outgo t'Ourtoous Ulforma uon reg. w /pohcl" N. 8 . Hgt.s Non-smoker &16-2588 · Equ.al Opportunity Job market. You can get Resp. for completing the /0 ing person ah ties. Over 21 area. Please r eturn . ----1·--E•m•p•lo•y•e•r•M-/•F--free vocational trairung Sell to fnends and co-boat in the final station. & able to work eves D . . • Reward 64.2..()098 TOUCH OF CLASS _____ _ _ _ ·-with excellent pay plus workers 111 your offlt·c : Exper. req'd. Good st.art· l!sct'Ow Secy $8SO $2.70.$3 to start. Apph /).; }AJaXCO. Lost M Y~rk;;-;/;G SEESRCVIORCETOu&tcMll~D~L free medical cover age =ey:::t~o~lle~=~~ ~<'~~1 p~gempr~~?Je~~ .lr.AcdlMJCflr $750 ~=P'!;11%~.~~:: . 11 "'~1 ' 4".1.°""" Rewanl'VicHeJlerPark a Y P· Account.mg and travel. f'or more in your own 1Jus1ne!is Apply. 1922 Barranca SecyllOsll $1000 i7't.bSt,CM Licensed Hom<' Loan btwn Orangf' & Santa pomtm~~-7118• COLLECTOR formal.ion on openin~s without gn·1ni.-: up your SecyRE•" to $1000 ...;:.__..:.;....__:.. _____ _ Brokers servrng So Ana Please call 646-2?00 A.lsoIDnng Salarted PoS 1n Costa and quahf1r.alions call regular job To rind out Rd_._lrv_me_.______ ~~........_ $ 575 COOKS Calir forl7YrK Callour 646-J868 Mesaofc.Minl yrexper Sa rge ant Arrollo more. call 5-lll?IWl or BOAT CANVASS _. IT_. Break.fast,luncb,d.lnner. nearest o ff1 1·~. --- ----EXECUTIVEOUTCALL helpf ul. Call Bill 714-9797363 or apply at 7.enltJ\7-1359. PRODUCTS CO. n~s Geft $700 Exper'd. Apply 111 714-337·3744 Last M Blut1ck Hound, MASSAGE Watkins. 714 /549-4200. 2651 Newport Blvd, Costa A••Prodach, lnc filters & installers, Gt.OfcR9'Cept $650 person. Ma Barker 's -----Sall & pepper, col· N 12.P ... .,_.,.9491) EOE. Mesa. permanent pos ition, r_......n.-$95""-n..-. • 212 E 17lb Speculators, 1ovestol"!I & 1 a r t a ., . v i c oon ~ -·'""" -----_.,...... -r .. _,,. °""' ... uran.. . h $$ ., -·l•iiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiii•iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir--I Amb1t•o"a Couple Want--' - --~-benefits. will train. c:--f to $1100 ct CM owners 8 rt . term 19th1Fullerton. 646.(>424 • .... ~ <'\i Bab _ .. T <· I l .--e ary .:.....,:...::.... ______ _ t1 r t BU D K • G f "'~·-•·-g to mana"e a small busi· ys1ttcr wanln• u s· .... a ary comm.ensura e ava · as · 1 aveo-after5 JO 8Vln can ""' .. """' ..... ' " I Sat 2-6 PM CM area w t'Xper. 64"·2247 for °'*'DA to $700 Coob&Dithwasi9en port 549-Dtm --- - -" • • ACCOUMT AMT ne.ss plume W1I not in· appt . • ---------iFOUND· Wht Ch1!1ua.hua Hanny Birthday Sharon & With demonstrated wnl· terfere w your present 673-40 _ _:1 _ _ -------• PtnOll Fri $750 Appl~ in~. StaN~o·-. muc puppy, Vic. F.lden'" GtMa Ness Your secret ing ability for special JOb Must be wilhog lo Babvs1tter wanll•d, So. BOOKKEEPER, Full Keypanc.h $675 5930 · asl wy,_ WHEN YOU NEED C~H, CM ~ m~-642·338l Admirer proJect to write course learn. Mr. Hal!.:.!42·1634· Cs i PI a z a a rt' a. 4 chrg, exper In gen 'I cac-MEYY A FEE 1--------- Found · Sml mlJ(ed Male SPENDAMO"''TH -lessons for leadmghome Ambitious ladies earn children 3 1nkscch111. ct'gtlmll finFancial.s1~ate- d I h '' study schools. Com· ...,,,.... w~k .. """"•OJ f•ir $45-$60 !)('r wee a mens. am1 1a r ° K • n ~ • 1 r · JN LONDON _,.., .,.. . ..... "'' • k r J k J tin & bud ts blk/bm/wht. Vic 16th & Frt!c. except iurrare. :11"'~ :! ~~~geo~:~~ ~ No deta1b over _~ __ 1_a~ or ac _ ~n~red:e or c~':n: CONT ACT ~P 648-6859 - -Fanuly home. 35 min ject. Accounting bkgd ..,_ ..... "' -BABYSlTTER. one 9 yr putenzed btlling system COASTAL rwlOftMfAgency 2790Harbor, C. Mesa 54()..6055 UMIOM Lost Black Labrador pop· from London, S br. mdn w/knaw'I ol curttot pro-AMBITIOUS COUPLE old girl. Vaned hrs pref'd. Send res ume & H,..,.....ir.Lo•MS P.Y. 31; m_o old, wearing ktcben, den. Volvo avail. cedures & demooatrated Help manage family Mns. eves. cx:cas. over request for appt, P 0. ----------i "'-~ il .. _,_ """" .. a.... ~...._ ___ Y""'" home for ...... .iR.. bili't u I ~'--· /t u::7-0215 ru0 hts. Your home or Bo" ... 1, Irvine. eaur ... ________ ml Union Home Loans ar-s ft'rCUAUJ . ...-~~ ... ~w.;"' this sum· """-a Y essen 8 · ......,..,.,.,~...,--mine. Send r efs SIT· " ,.... I , ho ._,...., Suboul niaume to North -9Z716 Clerical ranJe loans1or meorFOUND : Purebred mer. Agts. fee. Call American Corrupon· AptMgr,couplepref.,ex· TER.P.O.Boxl27R,NB ---------• propcrtyownersof$1,000 Afghan, lite brown, 1480 714/583·8263. Judilb deoceScbools.440l Bir<'b p'd only, in maint. & bk-~or call 549-5072 lirt. IOOklCEEPEtl/f..time *JR CLER" to $100,000 or more. And Monrovia, Nwpt Bch. Rusk, ffome Exchange Sl. N.B. 92663 Alln: Mr. kpg, 5S unit complex, 6pm_ _ ___ Experienced. Small • ft through Union Home 646-4732 Service. P.O. Box 33464, VaJore. Dir. of Educ•· C.M.(2J.3)~38Sl _ Babysitter. mature NwptB<:boffice 642-2tl25 *SR. CLERK L o a n s y o u g e t -----San Diego, Ca. 92100 EOE Homeowner T e rms, FOUND: German Shep, bOo. • perion. 2Vt yr old boy. BOOKKEEPER·Moulton COOKS EXP ERIF..NCED Top rat-Goad hns hllrP/thm Al sWftJ GYail APPL V 1N PERSON iolos Restmr•t 23000 t.ake Fore:st Dr Laguna Hills F.qual Opp Emplyr m /r wblcb are generally MesaVetdearea.Callto SoddCa... 5400,________ ASSEMBLERS Newport Hghts £-Side Plaza Pharmacy, •CLERICAL ASST muchbetterlhanrinance ideoti.fy.MS-3716 . -••••••••••••••••••.••••• g~;r!~· ~':r'i/'';.'~rn; ~~;63-~~s. Mr. Varied jobs with & ('()Olpanylerm.'\, LOST: SIAMESE 1heSing1e'sSolat1on Aroow11ing 50TraineeAAsembler> PM646-0159,494-3009. -"'-"'' -witbout e~per. in good COOICS.DPH'D c~:-Tenws IEWUO D~~tgh~~· Exi::.:~~-~~ Ni::,~l~~:~~y --:-----IOOkKHPSlF/C ofc surroundmgs. Call ONLY. All shlft.s. Jr>lb ,_ 'ff1IW' 3/18178. Vic: Newport OilllnlrovieW75.2-54ll for multi·state com· Asslgnments Babysiuer/h!!elceeper , 1 Girl ofc, M/F, A/P, Today! Roger.400S. co85t llw)'. a.dgef.Setect Blvd le Meaa Dr. Seal· 1____. 5450 puteriud payroU. Req's 3SbiftaAvailable llve out/In, mature, nn· AIR. payroll. taxes. HOf&S Laguna.Beach. RUY AMOITIUD PAlt'Tl Y AMORTIDD JHTlltlST OML Y point Siamese, sutures nHWt M.ustbaveowntransp smlu. 1 infant. 499-4415 (man atate, mvo1cing. ~8~ office • --on left side or face. Nda ••••••••••••••••••••••• lO key by touch & Ute typ-Cal Todov 556-8520 eve,<;. etc. Typing a must. Co pd COOKS med. Call anyllme, ReU.ble CO\IJ>le wtll drive \ng. Must enjoy dela.11 4r Free. Top Pay. VacPay Ba II Manuf act~ health/life ins. Cole overload f\111 time. experience 631-1030 your car \o Otuo lhi!l busy alm.Qsphere. Xlnt Yk:t T needed for day. swing & 1.mtru~t Corp. (714) necessary. sauteman. ft'ek. Call Dr. P1.1lmer, working coods & bens Oii' ......-ary graveyard shift in Costa 642-8080. E.O.F.. -S57.006t brollermao. It pan Reward. Siberian Huaky N.B.615-8589 Apply National Systems Senlcn Mesa. Call Mr. Wacblel 3'123B1ttbSl.NB tryman. XJol be11ef1t!o ..,.,_.., .... ill OC.· ttd4'wht. Vic Garfield/_ I ::! --c.orp.,Qt\Bittb st,N.B. t)\vWalterKldde&Co 8'12·S254 IOYS.tifRLS and opportunities with cOrdcmce with stete MainoU•. Nda medica· :,_~ <Noar0CA1rport) EOE. 20825. E. Brifttol lHG years ot age. Bven Hyatt Corl>. Ask for Cher low tionl&'l.14.11>. ,., ~ 8«'10 Newport Buch ins work. Obtain new Clerk 714/T12-S900 • ·-...... -.. •••• ...... (CorMr' of Bri1tol & Banking aubenipUons for lhe Dal· PHARMACY' ClBK -1f rcr &11.Y realOtl we c•P· LOST: Gold coin bracelet. _,. w-..... 7071 Can>pu.s ~Ski TELLB/ ly Pl.lot working with an p /time position avail•· COOllS p /TIME = ::,..~1·~0:: c~ ~:Pzt1l~=h~ •••··-•-•-•••"•• Acdna Bkkpn~ Carl'aJr) UPU.S&tTATIVI adldt auperviaor. Earn blo for penouable in· Exper'd. Good salary & «obligalioo. Club Raward 846-7221 Literate, 0.l'eJarloue TIMPOIAAY I~~~~~~~~~ Branch olc u-et1 bonda· S3ll to $30 prr weoek «>r dlVklual to work wilb our beodits. Call s.riew or~ . male coll•&• a rad ~Today to work,_________ ble teller/capital <'lub more. Call (213) m-0396 pbam111cllt. calUna doc Ooav. Ro&pital.642-3505 UNION W/~oxperlnaal~. onvarioolaceow>Unf• .............. ,...S _ _.•live. Plan• noon lo $pm. (2 ~3) ton. typln1t labell le W"'~ LOat Cit· 6 moa. blt/bm PR, fl the poliUcal • bookk eepto1 uslan· (;~7'or ;,J:,'~;t;;och•llon day «11-3473. 5pm·OJ>m. Ci&ll waJUn1 00 cutornen CC>ote ""'"''..., mottled. Men V•rde .lepl arena bu ~located menta. Work flos~ to vwyard tzipa Contact Hlld1.1 Ter· C.oUfft _ Will lrain. t to 3 Tua 6: Xblt benef'rta. Sal Ol>f'n HOME area. SSJ-7630 to N.B. LoollinJ f0t opp you r home. Fl1ure Cr1I · Noexp~ ranove. <'114)644-725.'\ Wtd, 2 to I pm Mon. ~i~~ffs.~od203 to MeQC. • P'O't •/firm Clerke co Sr. Ac:coun · IAftlTcrm•F.REE Western Frdtoral 11\un It Fri. weekend ----·~----~ Lost : Wbt •rMll ~batlY tnthlla~~n. tenta needed thruout VldOll'T....,CW.y Savina• wortc. Pleuecall m1r.to Wb.al'&YCU'Tre~ ti.!.1 '0'1 ANS dot. Fem. vie or Cly liaperieoced PAINTER OranaeCo. s.r.ac.. 2744E c.outHwy.CdM ForClasslfitdAd -~lntcn1ewappt. Sl.Gpern.y ~ If-\ _dump. !WCM!l.48/549-tui_ -.ekl Full Tl me wort Robert Hall'a ~S E. Bristol Equal 0ppor Employer ACJ'JON n.WNDrwlls That'ititUetopay NoOco'lll..e..-ifftHome Loa t. O old ch arm Brulb1..;. r.oller. Atrle.. Acc:ountarnps Suite IO NewportBcb l~~~~~-~~~I Call a l&lOSanMlpelt'>r. for•u1d lntba DaAty Net LouBrokeraaeFtnn ~ w/S cbUd~'• 1pr9.e&1tOn,ef'i'i.QGl No-5()().r:..:.~a~=nJt llM 20 ~ NewponBeach s.vtc...tlndarythlltcan •T.. 710.JOl t fACea.'7!-2'11S IWOJtS• .-U emploJ· lnTbeCl~otOrul• ~~~~~~~~ Tntc1t> JOIU' old ttuff for IQ.Jl78 M4-1ll0 =Y-~f"4'~ Mllltldl 141-J2JI Have~ eo lt'U!l 'lolb&utomp.UDantA>St. 11'113Ml03 SBLL lclle It with a oew aoodiH with a fanNtioacallto.5111. Claaslftl!d ada dO It wen. alhm; w.tm 1. Dail7 PUot O..lfied Ad c illed ad. 6fUl71 _ !~antA4 Help? 6&Nftl .. Of OAJLY PILOT 1UHCs.y, M~cl'I :!I t97S .....,, W..ted 7 I 00 Help W..ted 7 l 00 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... W..t.4 7100H.t,Woatflf 710 H.tpWo"t•d 7100M\~SIWSE fU:CEP· P!STCONJIOL ••••••••••••••••·•••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• TlONIST Brand new SERVlCEMAN 1''/llme f.Wp W..+M 7 f 00 H.fp W.W 7100 Heep W..t.d 7100 Appa-.cn 10 I 0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• kealdeotia l cJeunin1 c~ PBSOH Lad••• ~criuu11 about H B l>PM Ot'eds foxy So. Oranae Co uu. UU$y pnnt1na compan>. Gu Attt'ndaol 5 d)'" t·hanemi vour 11rciwnt ladws for mus~euse re ~11or831·1024 "rv1cf' needa people SICRETARY/Adm. •TB.9HONE with own tram, 20-25 hr with buaioeu back· PIX Oft!RAT~! WaslMrs & Dryen Oh: moc,lt+'I, ~omplt'tt'I)' reblt, rd1nl1bed .. ·~ fi:U.U•nt~ Your choiQ«' SU> Flt'<'de!Jv!;'f) .~ llf(ht paper wurll. PIP, ~If.. waaes + cumm .. tiwd.ttrrl of J1~1n11 thru \'t'p(1uru.l. no exper nee. 6'2-0621 42008il't'h, NB .-onumtr;it4·1J i.ork wt wtll tram, diiy & mghl Couli.l"l"t!!A GIRL ._ __ ~;-;-.-. _____ _, ~le p 11111u C.1,111 tor 1.1~01011> C•ll for tn PETITIONERS F\iU/part time. Good p11y wk. C'.all tor lntl"rvlew ll'OUnd to asa1st vice· ~uant v.-orkin1 cond1 a.flt'r~ PM ~<Mi996 pre.1dent tn ur1anlcan1. t1011~ 1n tu~t 1trowina coord1naung of satH Orangf' County Atrport Rh.ideftt Aldn o~rallon. Secr~t:mal Cnmplcx with bu"y ,...,u. ,.. MPJ)t .41M51b8 • lc•nat-w btwn 10AM for dry <'lrarun11 plant in Gow!raI Otnce JOPM at Town & Cuunt.ry II 8 arrll. »~rm poA ltlCOIDSCl&k l..A.>1(111 Sec'y,NB, nHn. :i Spit, 21-'0 yr~ ""'rerre:d PIZZA Mon Fri. Jo;xp'd only NabOolil education farm yr. t'Xp an J,!t'n eracl1ce, 963-77Z1 &la.Ion& pt.ua & on the 8'2·2050 has immed. open1111 lo incl'& dorn rfl S11.I open ----------• ovens. Exper needed. da.lty S36-m 1 Maturr womeu. Xlnt dutle.: JO key, typln1 C.'he11y de.iler! lndudl':s bfonef1la Adult reaad 50wpm, S/H helpful but U1tht bookkl'.iflnx typ Cllt'e Cmter. ft.31·~ D0t Dee. S.itlary ~n, de· Uta. Opportunity fur lid ---peodlns upon expu v41n(·t1tnf!nt' SeC' CXf1ct' Reat.aurant WalttnfWaftreuea Cooa/Dl .... wcnhen <irJJMJ OJJ('om1 Sule ._ Murch 15 Jl So Cout Ap,1i11n newest ~tore C71 ()' ~l--.Ol"~-2S42 ~-' handle productk>n con Avpl mdy uu1u1re aft •1 AT UR E W 0 MAN 5C8-71l83 CREDITCOU.EC'TIONS tro4 reco.rda for our rn. tin 9750213 p /t1me to welcome ----_ :~e~lm~ .. ~~~\~r:~ houaeut~t ~bo~r~·s uQuoR MARKE1' !!,~~~:,~sFl~xi~~:h~~1 893-~l or 531-172.S. AiJt M i r , H 0 W A H U for Dart~. C.'btl11rolet, Dove & Qui.ii Sts , N~wport Be .. ch ----!!.· NR. NEW RERJG :· tronu·i;. 045 7040 IKJ ... rr:e,ud 4! Wyil~..' t •,11w t' Very, very busy store, Nl.'cd car hte typio&. u.,... ~. ...ig o rau1 nt.>eds 5<>me very ~ery 541 300 ' Plasllcs &l..taoya Apply San Fritnciaun 1617 Westcliff Dr, N.B. Secretary/ReeepUorust ~ Le11l office, Laguna Whirlpool ele<'tnc drye(_ Hilla.Muatbegood,neat Tele.~a.h.'lS 1tdv,fullorp1t $6S, Lady Kenmore t)1>1$t, nun 60WPM and Some 11:.iles $3 hr ~ wu:;her S7S, Pnrtabl~ $UIS 644 96J$. indWltrious indl.v. Xlnt good people. Apj,ly 10 · 5 <.:ustodiun/Maint man Ne,wport Harbor Lutheran 548·3758 Aft. 6 PM benefits & working con. person. ;1m, :1114 1 So Mechanic fur 11m111l di.. Apply National linstol.SA enflnes Need exper. Syblems Corp • 4361 penoo to maintain neet MA.CHIME OPRS Graveyard sh.aft !llPM 7AM > openines for lrAlllffS or exper'd injec · tion molding machine opr11 in our med1c.11l d1vunon. Very clean working environment, paid lunch, S3 hr starting waie for trainee. Rapid growth. X1nt benefits pkg mclud co paid ma JOI" med., Lile ck den tail --able to handle reception, ~mm.83.S·9692,83S·3861 Maytag ctryu $9~ RESTAUHANT HELP, telephone, & aeneral of. Guaranteed & dcliven-t 6'.S--5.'m. DELI litrch St. (Nr OC Llquorclerk,ovcrlS. of Jawnmowlng equip· Airport) EOE. purt time, I or 2 n1tc:.. ment & small trucks. 40 Meyerbof's Restaurant lice duties. Call Mrs . Teller, some exper 1>r~f'd, ~8672 in S. Coast Vllla2e bas Winslow tor app't . South Wci.t Bank, ' lmmed openings tor: 1137·1060. Laawia Be11cn A11k for Lake new "f''lalr" 40"_,. Manager worbr, Salary + 548 786.1 <kneral factory helper ~am mutenal cutting, somt! heavy lifting Dnver li It(', reqwrcd 64:?-GS37 Hrs wk. Permanent. LVN • Medil'ol We1s;ht Good working conda· Control, full time Mon tlona. Location Irvine. Fn $650. mo + ~neflls Call 552-8200 for mure In· S d h k •----------Joan 497 1771 elec dbl eye level ove~ .. an WIC ma era, "' s&l"•ET·RY --I II .. food preparation. Ph ~" "" w pu out range , DB.I VERY 1-'/time Freeway Auto ~ Avery Parkway at San Diego F'r-wy, M u.iilon Vlt'!O ._ Tow Truck Drivers ex ~torage by f'r1gt"da1r~~ Glen aft 2PM for in· lnveatmeut firm see..s 'd T 1 ., ..,.. per · op pay Appy R~re find at $18 S~ terv1ew. 540-8064 qua.lified, well-groomed, "'·WT ooo 1 .. ~ 968-4737or96J 9768 formall~n. ___ _ Start SJ.00 hr Cuslom1 _________ -.j ------1 take charge person to as· u.. owing, 1 rvuae 673 947i aft 6PM Ru L_, Ave, NB 642 1252 ---------2 " or •" sist company ollicers l6 Cu n Coldspot Rdng; Home l>elnery, auto route w J The Heguter Permanent P tr :.1tuat1on as a earner dealer. Ap vrox hrs 4~m.7 dys/wk Need respc.>n!>ible person w/ good car. Gross earn l.oo:.t' Lear Co. 18091 " Rt>dondu Car , Hf! li.t2 7717 MACHINrST P1ume 3·11 or 117. CM Duties varied. Salary TRAVl!:LAGENT 2 door t op freezer. area.s.&93061 commensurate with ex with expl•r i.t:llang Avocadocrnencolorm: ROBBIE 'SRAC&MOP perience.Sondresumeto cru1ses/lourL Top 900-5996Aft s MECHANICAL ~I~ + profit shanng EHGIHEER 200 Bnggs, C<X'!ta Me:.a GENERAL OFFICE, I full & l part lime, exper w typin g, £11tng telephone & lite bkpn~ OC Airport a~ -4760 Aggrt'ssave small 1n Call546-44ti0 dust'J instrument co ELECTRONIC need:. growth onented MB>ICAL W d Secretary. P 0. Box l278. benefits 67S 1311 omen nl·e ed for NewportBeacb92:663 houseclean1n1 serv. ssssss engineer who wants ex.-S@-0757 SECRETARY 1ng!i Ovt'r $3SO mo. HU & 1----------1 CM art'a. Call 54G-3008 Tool & Die per m manul product de· 1~~~IN~S~TR~U~M~EMT;.;.;.;;S~d•-~~=::~:--• ~t'lopment marketing I~ ROllMSOHS SJ.Jan· based on cape bah-P,...Sc.hf T ~twr WESTMl .... STRa t v f; q u a I 0 p p o r " • '""' Xlnt oppoc for efficient sec'y. Top skills. Fai.t pace R.1'.:. olfc, N .B. Xlnt OJlllOr for sharp gal. Call Lila. 833-2900 befnoon. ~bvery boy w/good dnv mg record & exp w/turn. S3 hr Call Belly btwn !1·10.642~ DELIVERY MAN-fo1 t·arly AM Route, N. C.M & II B. Must have dcpcn dublHar 546 4481 Dl'l111cry Driver & General Secy lkkpr to SI I 00 rroc &gr S24k ~1 Handling Pk9 fftcJineer S24k Sr R&o CIM-m $26k MARY HICKLE AGEHCY 170 Mtwport Ctr Dr Suite 245 Newport Bch CALL 640..2920 J'roduchon Worker. $.1 tol----------1 start CJll 642 2256. 01.'11 workt•r. l''<per, reha bit., Tu<'/ fo'n 9-4 G1ov an n1 s. 1380 N <.:st Hwy Lag Bch GENERAL OFFICE, t}'P ing fahng, phones. exp .. r pref d 642·5830 GEH'L OFFICE -Good typrng :ik1ll\ l>t·nl~I HeC'eption1\t for net.>de<I. 50 wpm, 10 ke> 1..-.o.:1rl front office, I H hv Louch Must be :.harp l'\P 8JO 1395 oc1 details Apphcallom, lll:nlal t:ha1r~1de As~1st IJeing taken 893-2-121 or in " H. Pleasant group 531 17251\sk for Glach s pral' f':'!pcr nc·~ lndude~ alternate S11t \\f '11 &$(). 1122 Oishwoslter /Co°" lla1rdresst>r wanted for Newport Bch salon <.:a II 673 SJ.t~ Precision Grinder lathe Ope-rotor Ac..,.Gricley S.tup Op.rat°" PERM f''t'flM 1-: XL.NT BENEFITS & WORKJNG CONDS WITH OVI-:HT IM fo: ROSAN, INC. 2001 W Coust Hwy "Jc·w1)()rt Beac•h l':qual Oppor Emplo~t·r Employer 894-~I ----:.Ca_IJ 6'6-1444 W1U t.nlervu~w appbcants for MECHANIC PUSS OPR Retired mon part to Exper.ABD1ck360t hek, flUme Newport Beach PlP.642-0621 Golf Course. 751-4344. 3100 Irvme, NB Presa oper ator, ex. penenred on A.B. Dick MB>ICAL/R•cept 360. 333 Xh1rd St. Lag for allerg11t•s office. _Bc_h_. ____ _ Salary acl:'ording to ex· PRINTING pr ~seJO -&per'd LHho ML'dll'al Rotary OHM+ l'.ood preparation Ullh<y Kitchen Help Walter /Waitress P/tJme PoSltiorut avail. Exper. prel'd, but w1U train qualified appli cants. Apply personnel 24Mon-Fri. 400 W"trniftltw Mall Equal Opp Emplyr m/f FRONT OFFICE Pnss Operator "llt'l!i! resp. person Must know s napout & Rapadpay,advancement w/..ome exper in 1 doctor continuous busi ne1>s & fun. Estab. accts Car oft-f'/lime in H.B. formspress.S.A. area of req'd. Mu.st have desire. 8<\2 8~11 Orange Co. 714/~0-8027 P it & Fil Fuller Brush ROUTE SA.US ..... a..IC 1· SECRETARY Co Call art 6pm. ~ AL PROPERTY MGR 114-35.2 MACHIHIST/Gen1 For orthopedic office in For Newport Beach. TopPay Nwpt Be;.ach, Juli lime Mustbetenacious&bard SAJLMAKER to sew Set up & !>hort run mall cJ a Y s • m u s l b e nosed, willing to work dacron & nylon sails. Ex- lathe, punch pn·s1> Gd knowledgeable tn takrng Tues thru Sat. Percen· pt!nenced only. Salary oppor to toxpund medical btstory, rapid tage basis, Cor negotiable Jntervlews w gro..-.m~ co s DJy/40 typing & transcribing. established business Fridays 8-6 &l&-0038 for hr wk C'o pd hfcthosp ~alary commensurate Real Estate License appomtment ans Cole Instrument w abLhty Exper'd only helpful 675-4912. SALES Aide wanted for need apply. 64-4-7840 ask CEoOrpE 1711 > 1,.12 8080 for Mary 1----------1 Newport Pool:i of Orange -----RMI Estate Sales Co ~-6lS4 Sec'y for aml oflice- requires abort.band, good command ot Eng. gram mar, xlnt typing, & gen'J oltice exp. 673-5972 SECRETARY Motivated person for 11 growing mgmt & lnvesl co in N.B. Bookkeeping knowledge, good phone manner. Will train. 546.-0013. Sec'y/Bkkpr. Real Elll/const exp req. Mail resume to 2845 E. Coast Hwy, CdM 9262S SECY /RECEP'T. Newport Ofc. Must be e.x· per'd. Xlnt typing ab11J. ly. Dictaph. attract, non smoker, intelligent. Ask fer Donna, 644-5090. SICY/UCEPT Creative N.B. adv/PR agency needs sharp, en. thusiastic ind.iv. W/xlnt ~s1stant. Country Club llairstyllsl for beauty Conv. Hosp, ~9 3061 salon in San Clemente Ca II 492·MS.S for appt Oork mastt•r '-; A si.1,, tJnt wanted J.'1tim1· Opt•n ~<llary Call 673 3515 (XJNUT SHIH'. IJ ,llmt• .11! aftem & evl.' shift!> H1l6tess. ex.p'd p IT App Iv 1n persun. Beach lluuse Inn, 61!1 Sleepy ll11llw Ln. Lag Dch MACHINIST Men:hanc:liH Mgr. LUSK Rlty, a John D N 0 co needs Clas-. A Rcceavmg. Beach area Lusk Company is now Machanistfor Bndgeport drugstore. F /time, taking inter views for Mill & Hardangl' Lath(• perm. RNa.11 exper nee. licensed real estate sales \.:l()l;e toleranN• prt'cmon 67S-0!50 Mr Elwood people. Call for appl. work Expt-r req d 'fol) Mt•.,st•n~er 25 -hr ;;ck ~963-436 ___ 1 _____ _ SCllH-Oefiy-skills, fleXJbWty & ac- -· r curacy for busy recep-J( you have :i definite tion desk. 833-3960. need for a p/time job ---------- S-9pm & are seriously in· Secy/S.,.nlsor ~rested 1n working, call For loan origination us oow 531-0842 depl. of mortgage broker ask !or Ron i\cJams f c 11 _, - -ISALES ft.rm, Loan background req'd. In Newport. Ctr . Self defrosting hr.it TYPIST J\elvmator refng., xlrrt. PERSON Jt'RlDAY l'Olld S250 498 3340 Busy, busy omce. Non llkES & MOPEDS -smoker SS wpm, good pay. Boat Bwlder'I 6!17 Nc·w & w.C<I. buy, 6l'll; Randolph. C'1 trade Cycle & Co ZoU!a Nl·wport Bl Yd, C M. Typist 642-7910 A<.'CW'ate typt~l for real IS ydn 8020 ::_ ~ 1te loan d10e pkt. 50t WP hl\f • • ~. • • ••••••••• • • • •••• • ..wumum, ey ouc . W .__ B 11 . Apply Jn person. B.rnk of t'1.1<:0 MX , A oy nms. Qlliforru;.a 1401 [Jove st frec·whl, •.t11>er cond NB. KO. Jo:. $120 968 1R74 Cah IO JS TYPIST ••••••••••••••·••••••·• Thi_okol Corp. ne~d.s. a Himalayan k1tten!I Cf''A typ1!!t. 50 wpm for ;in ~n Ri r adnro / Min It Ch 1u try level ofc pos. We o~rer tme reserve now 540-1760 xlnt benefits & starting --·------ wage. Oppor for adv. BJue Male Persian, Cf'I\ New facilities In lht' reg 10 wlcs old. Trained; Jrvine lndusn Comple:1; 494-71165; '499-4816. Jul1l· IC you art-interf.'::.ted "---IO'"O please call !714>3323560 --r ., & as.It for Personnel. ••••••• • • •• • •• •• • • • • • • • Equal Opp Emplyr mtr DOC TRAINING Your Place or Man .. TYPIST WANTB> John Martin 548-005!> F lt.zmePoS 1nourtyplnJt -------- dept. Xlnt worlun~ cond.!. Spnnger Sparuels, Ar..c & co. benefits. Must be champ. lines. hver/wht, reasooaibly fast & accur 9wb:.shots. 646-7686 _ Apply Jn person. E'en s c n N A u z E R !'> n.ysaver, 1660 Plat·l•nha MINIATURE, AKC. • Ave, c. M UHUSUAL Waihn/Waitr-.sses RA.RE 11.ACKS Must be people onente<I 9 wks, .shots. 3 mal~ $4 hr. Vac, sick days, in Pct/Show. 646~5237 sur benefits. 644 S404 ------- WAITRESSES Apply in Pt'rson lo Stavro'b, 5!130 W <.:oai.t Hw}', NB I yr olJ fem Great Dene. Faun. w 1paper. $100 Call Bud. 714-586-0042 . 714 5116 28flS • nail. Woman u.:e 2S or over. Apply m persc>n, Dippity l>onuh. 1854 Newport Blvd, t:M H<Yl'l-:LDJ>:SKSUPRVSR ~llnta Ana 0 c. a ••aa... Ellcn Carter b(>nt·' E () E 5.'>? !JOSI ~.uar.ant~ + ex~nscs. • 960°436.1 I Ft. desk or night audit Maicl.s, top wages p111d DavadSmith atS49·887l ~ Ladies Haberdasher exv. nee. Oppty for ad. Apply . The lnn al _M_O_T-ORROUTEt. · hasopeningfor vJncement to asst.mgr. Laguna, 211 No. Coast experienced wathm 1 yr. Apply in Hwy . Laguna Beach LMge Daily Pilot route saleswoman. DRILLPRESSOrR .Pt·rson. Mr. Mauola. 9 M d t d s I ff 10N.SoucltllMLagduna-thLagunba SR~SEPSERTASTOE.._. l3lft'ashaon lsl.Mall am to 12. Ambassador aa wa~.e •. • e1!c 1 igu• · on ay roug --. " 759-1770 l 5 yr., exper for stru1ll lnn,2909S Bnstol,Sanla Motel, 1661 So Coast Friday afternoons, We'reexpandingaga 1 o& --- 644-8824. Fnt.to You 8045 Wa1tress, l'xper food & ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------cocktajls. days & nights Beaut. spayed Jlusk1e, aJ1 Sec'y/typis t , Mon·Fri, open. Exceil working shots 10 good ho11>e 12·5PM. 65 wpm. Sal. cood.s. Apply an person 492-6243 d.Q.e. Npt Cntr. Call Mr. G's Restaurant. 3100 Electronics <.:o. 1''riendly Ana Hwy Laguna B ch . Saturday and Sunday looting for top caltber Sales atmosphere, apply GLG 494-4892 morrung!li Approximate-salespersons wath high I HOMEMAKERS ~ystem~; 11152 . Covndor llOUSEKEEPEH L1\C Jy $450 per month gross perform. ance records & UA..-.-... 1 ·obs ... vc • rountain Iv 1n,Span1shspeak1n.,.OK rrungs $5000c: .. shde ...,ng __ ,_ ""n •777 .., 1 l'i.I · • · exper. 10 local area Call •-a.~ to ,a__. 7 KathyorLinda. 759·9501 Irvine Ave, NR Whl Chihuahua mix PIJt' --py, 3·4 mos, hsbrlffi, -Service Station Atten· WAREHOUSE/M-F sma __ rt. 642-3381 ____ • dant, exper'd. Day & Eves. Full & p/time. Ap Non .smoker. Oppart lo Lo' ahle Ion it haired Malt ply. Shell Station, 17th & advance. Rl'f!\ r~q Good Jc11t} 3 m08 old Aban .....,..... $220 mo H B areu Mai Department posit required. Phone ' pt St 67" -11 """"._.-u nnu C"' I "TOR/P '"'C"ER .or ap . eve .r<N y h ' rr Vri''<'r Earn xtra tn 846-5377. 846-!lO<n ....__ "" " 6424321. ask for c1rcula-R~'s Redty ou can ave un o er- l. 0 mt·. ear I y ,\ M Mature md1\ needed lo lion Lea\ e name and 37 E Co H mg charge accounts in a lrvme, NB. pay. Boat Builder-.. 697 doned 646 3192 ---------~ph~M Service Sta. Night Attend '---------t ~ 8050 2 :30-5 JO. dt'li\·rry LA Hnusecleaners needed Pdtkagf· educollonal number and make ofl 27 · ast wy major retail store, 20 Tun~. C~ta Mt''" & Npt Mature Top SS. Car nee m:it ls 'lio t''.\Pt'r ner auto to be used and your Corona del Mar, Ca 92625 hrstwk & make S3·SS hr n h s35 6421403or64S-3439 Fac1litv located on t·allwillber_eturned ___ n--• Estate Sales People t'Omm .&wetrain !!! Service st.a. Attend. Full "'--ru""amo.ormore ;;:J,.m:Ort'a · 0 mn OUS_E_ EP_R_ d-Warner St In Santa i\nu E ':tect. Up to 90/10' 0 ADS <21.3) 94.5·3961 or p 1time. Hrly +com· ;;tt;~g-;obile homes. 2 Or S nites a wk. Apply, ••••••••••• ••. ••••• •• •• Shell,17th&lrvine,NB ***** H KE E neede · Apply Personnel Dept . HOVIC rornm. spilt. Nwpt Bch (714)52J.SJ65,ext5J() mission.673-3320. Will train. <.:all Paul. EIHtr11n1l \ Hl't'entl ~ <Jge 40-60, modern new National Syslc'm.s Corri . LEGAL SECRETARY 631-0900 63S-Ql22 Anah · WOMEH&MEH 51, ft lcmg custom padded portable bar wath multiplex tuner, 8 trad, & turntable.all are built ins-plus two custom wrOOS!hl iron bar stool "t'paratt•d , l'lt•r:i n!'> home on Bayside No 1361 Birch St. NB tNr f'or Nwpt C'enter Law --Saleslady needed. full Suvice Station Attend l•--··--·e.im_. __ <~rade E5 and belo") children Musthaveo~n OCAirportlEOE f''lrm goodtypmgskills. RealEstate tirne,eltpcr 1nanfanl,or F /time days. Light ------ ·•rr nt'Cdt.>d to Cill rurrent traru.p & rer·s. $200 mo 759001 TIRED OF WORKING c h 1 l d re n • s wear. mech'l knowledge. Neat Word Proc~ssor parl·timt' vacancies an + meals, uniform & gai, -----FOR PEANUTS'> Youngland, 2300 Harbor appear & bandwritmg TyptSt, secretary. Strong _Sharp I 58Vi«Q the Costa Mesa Air Na allo~P~s-3733_ Ma.mtenance NURSES AIDES Tired of hauling people HIYd. C.M S&S.1440 Apply, 2590 Newport SH & typing req'd. i\pply tional Guard. We nl'cd Housekeeper w/car. rel.ta~ Days, full or p/time. Ex-around? Ttred of un· SALES Blvd. CM m person to Mr. l''ucntes. ml'n a nd women ex· ble lmmed Permanent per'd & trainees. Mesu qualified bu>:ers? Curtis· Let's le Hottest Service sta. attend. F/T. Robert Bt'in, Wilham Jlf:•nen.rcd m <'le('tron1r'\ ...,,., wi·•·sabl""" lady. Call CUSTODIANS V<'rde Conv. Hosp, 661 Investments ts looking lo . f b f , Frost & Assoc:' l<10t Quail I h "'M w '"""' c train ex--r licensees in It you weren llook Ing or Me c exp. p re d . · · q·pair. te cp. one i 7111:17926 l'<·ntcrSl. M "" a e o Chevron Sta 3000 St.NptB<'h. t<•letypc mst11ll11t1on und - -----investment ck exchange a new c r e r • Y u Fairview, CM • ---- rt•pair. mt'ssai.:e cent<•r HOUSEtCEEPER 2nd Shift NURSES AIDES business. Potential earn· wouldn't be reading this Would you like a busane<1s operations, and weathl'r 1-'or motor hotel in Requires 2 yeur<1' t•x. F.xper'd 11 ·7. Country ingsinexcesao!SIOKlst ad. and if we weren't Serv.StaHelpneededim· ol your own? You don't lorecruilmg. Here as your Laguna Beach. Reply to perience perform an R ··(.;I u b C.o n v. H ome, mo. Call 962-2456 for con· looldng for someone to do med Full or p/t. Apply, need an oWce to start. opportunity to earn a t1asslfied ad no. 216 <· 'o lac1Uty, 1an1tonal duties 549-3061 fidential interview. Ask a job, thJs ad wouldn 't be 990 E. Cat Hwy, Nwpt Begin at home, full or s ubslanllal monthly in Vuily Pilot, PO Box 1560, Including operation ol -I fOl"Vlnce. ,here. lf you are a carether Bcb.. . part/time. Ideal for t t I a.run. · l NURSES A DES ---------1 minded adult & want e husband & ~1te team come. r e 1remen CostaMl'Sa,Ca92S26. ce geqwpmen . ... bene£1ts, buse exchange Ir ORDERLllS •--------1 oPPlY to earn three to Serv Station Attend, Full 64&-4SJ3 pnv1leges. and MORE• Hot1seli~ We offer modern . S9 Bed faciUly. Join s RECEPTIONIST five hundred dollars 8 tirne. primarily !or serv ---1-'ormformallononopen F ;time & p /llme pleasant working cond1 happygroup &enjoythe week, call toll free Cl) island s. exper not YARDMAN 1ngs and quahhcallons Rayview Manor & <:on' tions, excellent company xlnt benefits. Bayview llXl 327·9006 anytime (for < necess. Must be willing Rental <'enter ha.s OJ><·n · ta ll Sgt Arrollo. Hosp C.:uod sal & benefits and a com Corw. 2055 Thurln Ave, With the followinit rl' recof'dedmessage>. toleam.Nostudents.See in gs for 2 rnen i14·979-7363 or apply at benefits ti42-3SOS . pet.tl.Jve salary including CM 642·3..'iOS quirements: _ SALES-Ladies p/Ume, Mr. ~tts, 3'90 Fairview, Mechanical knowled$?e ~l Newport Blvd, CM ----2nd shift d.1Herent1al. Sharp Person earn S8-$10 per hr. Call at Fair, CM. helpful, neat handwnt ----Housekeeper wanted Please contact or applyl•-·~--c-E•H-a· •,.--Pleasantappearance 9622 tng nee. Wct>kday off. &crow Secret.-y Newport ar<'a. sep. p~1 in person 10 "'rT"J Good telephone 837· · SfWIMG OPRS Will train. i\pply. 1930 MARlNERSSAVINGS accom. 5· ddyS week, 2 Needed p llme in N.8 personality SaJe5, pl·Um~. Mature. IEXPEa'DOHLY NewportBl.C\1 Is suking a qualified days off. 2 children 10 & P•rsonn~ D~f. Must enjoy working (;oodtyplngskills friendly woman. The 6C2-3C72, DepU,CM ----~crow Secy for its N B 11 Must have r efs wJfigure-i & people. Will HOft Smobr Ca(fee Bean, So. Coast tl(c. Mm 6 mo's escrow Salary open Call btwn tram 1'1cx.1ble hn1. Send Plua,549-17~--SGT. PEPPERONI'S secreta.nal exper. req'd. 7·9PM, Mon·Fn. 646-2015 MSI leuer w phone number Call Mrs. Whlle for in· PlZZASTORE XJnt saJ. worltio1 conds -to Cl11Ss1J1ed ad no. 215, terview appointment. Salesperson. exper. for · Now Hiring forfull & Anficplff 8005 & benefits including den-Housewifc to clean home. DATA c/o Dally Pilot. PO Box MOC.her-To-Be Maternity p/time opeajng.s ·at locn-••••••••••••••••••••••• tal. Apply at main ofr 4 hrs week for work mg 1560, Cocita Mei.u. Calif Paul Dosi~r abop. 7777 EcUnger Ave, uon near OC Airport. __________ , """W-tcliff Dr NB rouple 644-0439~ay~. CORPORATION '"""""' .... .._ f-Hntg. Ctr. 897·9312. Mu.'ltbel8orover. Apply ••••••••••••••••••••••• MUStCIOXES **I BUY** G1lOd used 1''urn1turc I. Appliances-OR I ~•II sell or SELL for You MASTERS AUCTION 646-8686 & 833-9625 CASHPAU> F'or gd lL<;e<f furn . anti que5 & err TV's. !157-8133 Hlful Barker Bro .. fnntwood cbma cab, O\'al tbl, 4 cane bark chr' w gold velvet cushion .. hke new. paid Sl800, sell • ~.S48sm ---r ha\e a SPECIALL\ made contcmparary 9 ft . off white pronncaal naugahyde couch that ha.s been well cared for & 1s in xlnt condtt1on. S225 ln<'luded an that pnce arc J fuU bl"O<'aded pillows rn off white madr t-spenal ly for lhe couch C.1 II &&s-0580 btwn: 12 :10 &.. :1. and alt 5PM. & l:iat ~un anytime. C'ash only ~ •• P.,. .... .,., 1 •, u .. • oe • .. • · • eo.':! :i~:~g;:.,., ~. cOSTA M'Es.t. SAYINGS in ":'s .. E. era1.1 appoLntment642-4000 Personal Lines Un OfflCETRAIHH (714156&.7075 ".COUNSELOR SantaAnaHei&bts F,quaJOpporEmployt•r derwriler &. sec•y. ,..hualOpportunit" iuoo-4 7""°""c """ ' STA.RT $621 MO New accounts &tellerex-..... _.._, ~ ............... --...... __;,"".;..~...:._...:._______ EmployerM/F • pernecessary. Equal Op-(NexttoMcDooalds) CLOCKS Herliner. dark hro .... r1 vinyl, l'ood cond SlOO Slot Machines, Nickeln 1;45 0922 wknch aft Ii Exec.Secretary to$\2K Island Salesman & Auto~~~~~~~~~I MOREWITHEXPH. Receptionist, for busy pty Employer. Call F.qual()pporEmployer »-•: · t $750 r: Quick pay raises switchboard. Exp. l:'e· n~"'~~Olllll to Tech needl'd. lmmed Maintenance man for 55 Ad potent! l quired. Lite typing & bk· 754·1801 Orange Cout Soc. Dance & health dub ~&irow ~y ~k openings w /major Oil unit apt complex in C.M. V=t~~~~Uvltles a kp'g. Benefits. N.B. loco. Savinga 4c Loan Assoc. nda ~ mgl'S. etc. deons, phonograph~ wkdyq World's largest sclec g pr Co. Hilb salary + xlnt (2l3)865-38Sl Full --panv '--efits Apply in person. btwn S"'. ,. .. STR"'""' P.T. earn while U learn Irvine Pers<>nnel Agency benefits. t1:ply in ""rson "''" ., """'' 3901 ,.. Arth St i:.nai "-"'> S2 1 .... E 7tb Cost M "" In N~M n-acb l(}.4, ,..c ur. e ....... ·uon 'o~ sall loh. ,000 mo. or more. ts -.1 a ~a t.o:Unioo 'lServiceSta· Mait1t•w•Mon 2123~ morcallElliot7S2-7170 ,....., It.,..,•_ .. ~,,.. 1" easy.973-9183 SUlte224 642-1470 t100, 1810 Elena St. General maint., nafnt· ..... '""' ·---------1 Ftfoving bdrm & h h furn ~ ----,. washer & \ aruurn ._ ---~--~ Redondo Beach, Ca. ing. apt clean-up. Costa Pt.t.nter, non·union. Must R!CB'TIOHIST 1---------llj 7-11 SI'ORE, Full " p/l WHOLFSALE 642 . 1141 bt>fore 6 r\4 'ElrJ>. waitress nded. App-213·373-1M2 Mesa area. 6421603. have exp. & own truek. Challengtnc posatlon *Secretan·eS* cl«tCaroigbts. Apply in TOTIJETRADF. CL<\honly ly in person only 11 AM-6 JACK Oil JILl MAIN'TENANCE·aeneral Startina aal. $4.50 hr. with active Newport person, 28933 Crown ----- lion. Also gift s, Yellow vinyl plu~h furniture, antiques. game kitrhcn set. likc- American International, new S200 Red. wht & blu 1802 Kettering; Jrvme. child's d<'~k & dressf'r 75'-lm. Open Wed ·Sat. $45. 552·52.87 p M H 0 n g K 0 n a OF .......... DES ~ft""'ting carpentry"'. elCC'· Cal1~32839-SPM Beadl Developer. Good , Gen'l OfneelrLe1ala NlValle7 Prtwy, Laguna NOW OPEN Goodlookm~ drk wood din Rataurant 1170 Baker ~·-i-ut telephone, t yping, EmpJoyenPayAllFees i. lbl.2xlr.1leaves.~rhr,. CM Will train but trical & plumbing, mu_~\ Party Rental Store needs clerical skllll reqwred. JJz Reiadttw Acency -.... =--~---..---1 JQ PUBLJC $200 498-3340 exper{s welcomf' be neat. food pay fol:' d~ young lady to work 1W Salary commensurate Birch Ste CH •-..;r-"'-'"C SALIS Fast Food SOLDERJNG Pend a bl e Per I o n • thru Sat mornJ cleaninf with abWty. 675-aU. ~ • 1 Tired ol Lbe rouun~? OPEN 7 DAYS Mature aduJ~. retirees, WOODPRl!:·FINISH 548-5100 party equip. Apply 2Cm•------"-----=~.!.~lll~OO TbiaJobistoryoul A WEEK H . Sr-. cltit.eml Applications HEAT STAMP Newport Blvd. CM leceptjLMlal Tr.. ~~~~~~~~~ O.fl Us Now AL 5-clo .. ~Ltd EASTER llOUSESALE NEW Beaut. 5of1 & loH. s:J116_ ~pc wood parquel din & game sel $425 w 'match1n' 3-pc coffee tbl set Sl&s. Form ~an din rm set w/chJna "5<>. ftO'lr befna ac_...,. for LIOHTASSEMBLY MANAGEMENT-women ---=---------• NBlnra/c.C7(7iAJA)tC0.8SllO :: llJ.1095 15292•-L-CMca ... ..~.,..-u interested in eanunc ad·l---------1~~::.!~~~=~ ~ t\a11 Ir Ptr J>09ltlons on Viuietyohbortruns d.llional income! Full or PBX •£.jfflO-,..X Secrcbry.Pt.timelloolr Time-LileIJbraries kl.f714fl9J.7509 day Is evenlnr ab.11\s at lodoors1cnall abop FuU part t.imo av all. Call __,.,,... Fri, tam-Sptn. Full Ume EqqajOppEmJ>l.YT m1r Nau11 .. Drlve-Tbru COf1lPGJt1'Mncflt1 Cteat.lveCooc•J>tslorJn-Peoplecrieateddatapro-aft.er Ma, JJIL Muat be Restaurant. Good •tart· Jn Nt1~123lk'acb t«vin'. m-9is't. OPERATOR ca11n1 co. need1 re· Jr.lot tTPial w /pl ... ant lnl wa1e. hollday & ,,_.... eept./pla opr w/pa.uant teJcpbcine V'Otce. Sendro- vauUon beneflta, op ----:-:-:----~---------1 Part time, 5 Day1, 20 peraooaJlty to •reel sume Ir uJ.ary requln. port1mltJ for adva nr• JOI hours. l ;JO.f:IO wltdyi. ~u1tomer1 • bandle meats lo Urbanomlca meat. A.Pl>ly 1,. J>efSOQ 2 Dap I*' wit. Perm. MANICURIST l :OO.l2:00 Sat. .F\111 com. heavy telepb ay1tem. RelMtth. P.O. Box 181, llon-~r OAK·llAM, ...... r -.J. -----N.__._..lm-.... ,·.·-ty. panybenents. .. Some JnY. exper. Pl'•· ...:Ol:::::M:.;93825:.:::;;;:_ _____ l 2P'll-tPK, 1 PM -12P N. ..... • •au, .... -· .. ,~..._ ~U:Ume"J.:1~ rd. Xlot beMlfttl Ir work- 112115 Bt'Ootblll"ft Av•.--------i FQNonlalandAre& FOC'lnlefVlew inl l'IChdl A>on. Elaine S.C.etwy/TYDl•t FV wrvnnNCHER 'fst-UUext280 p=~~lc• ror •ppt ~. lnte-Stroni typl~ "iii. App- Mll"U 642-4131.u.tm IX"l'tmdDataCorp .• Costa ly Jn person to Mr. fllllll BRUSH NHded ••• 8urrou1h• OIAHGiCOAST M.e.MMmO. FuentH, RobeM Bein, UIOO fl lAOOO. Part-time i. Your Prott':!1$1on DAIL y PILOT R:is... WllUarn Freet Ir Asaoc .. !'.arucwe:rta.a-rbr.Tht po1ltloo w /llulble HOME REPA1RS1 H01Qu&IJSt.N.B. l)erffft J>/t batmeH. ,_,., Bal3e lmowi.ctie Did bow 330W.Ba7St. ...:~:::.;.;:::..:..;J'Ol..;..;.llC;.;.• ....... '754;...:_lf..;..7_1._, ol bly • Rnpond pl.r. cJUtm!r.:~~ f..qual()pportunit1 LUCZ<2nCltENSOUP S«~ P/t·f'ft. Sh • t to: the Daily Ptlot s.r,.1~ E.aspk>yer ... n couJdn't butt co call typlq. l4 h.r 1t • .Vloa1 o.rdeaer, eap'd, tJr 61 OlllUlftedad no. ?13 Dt--tor • whol4'J-==::::===::::::::=::~ Chuc~ Naab abo\it • r• of....;c_ . .u._....;aa. _____ , -• CllG)pl bl c.w. • .,_.,.., --·-,..., ma-..1 ~lol>aDJPllot n>o1:1th '°" u mu. u The taatat cliaw ln Ute ....... ._ w PO &t:s UIO Sl.G per da71 For more We1t. .• a DaU1 Pllot Cllt.lte. h-.. trainJn& U SELL Idle l~m1 wiUt a Coit.a , Ca Dal inion.nab. c-11 Cl a,. IO~d Ad. Pbooe 100 qualitr. 540-SlOt O.U1 P1Jol Claa.a.lfied Ad . &4U678 Ma-Wll IQ.5111, • I ~ONE SfEWARTROnt Be1u1. df'cor lllmJ>~. Cit.& 1 •• ANTJQUF.S ~ chn. etageres, ron-~ Luge.tae1ectlon tenlp wall designs. SIARS of American Oak _Tfi_0..-__ 1 ____ ~~ S.ut. Roebuck & co. In Oranae County Gar,. s. 805 s bq lmmecL opcnlnfl 101' '750 E. 'Dyer Rd. S.A. ••••••••••••••••••• .. •• t•lepbone "a l es ' (alNwptf'wy)7!il·8922 .Manual ~mlth tcoroo ... H\llWlatiTeS. Full or ..... c.. 10 I 0 t)'P«'Wrltrr SI ~. rush pltime. Xlnt company ••U••••••••••••••••• •• lawn mowrr $7 N••w beetl.t.s. Pd Vile at.ion, 1X1 FRO HT DAM Ac F. o stow away Urt-4< Mm for boUda71, ..nployee dil· HOTPOINT SA!,£, 330I\ AM(' $20 H1 t~ck aealer cot. Entct-a cluilleaalna w. Warner nr Harbor, and c11ulklnc rnrnpoottd wodd ol telepboco lalH s.nu Ana m.mt S1 Heh. 4 new 4 tuic Apply In P«tllOll Sears. · rims, tits NG, Pinto • Roebuct • Co. Sant• CASH PAJD Capri SU. ut 74 GIMC! Ana C«rtnl service . .COO For Wahr/()rynfRefr1g radio~. '7' OwlY)' ~r-Wc Wamer A... Ap 'Mll'k.irl1 or not 95'7-113.3 m. •herl S4 lf2 337t plica.tJoot a~ Mon --- thtu Stt. g am to ' pm. Retrt •• •&&hew'.. AJC. rn E Dh St. C.M. Gliw. Equal Opportunity Reuonable. rlnth•. lot.a or UIPC. ~ Mo-as1e. bl:n-Cpm . ' ----- Brand New '78 HONDA 4 SPEED CYCC HATCHBACK IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ••• : Equipment 1488 CC. Honda CVCC tour cylinder engine. 4-wheel Independent suspension, 41Pff<f syncromeen transmission. rack & pinion steering, bumper guards. Inside hood release, wood gl'tln dash, hinged rear side windows. fold down rear seat. whit• 1ldewall tires. arm 1'91t&. day/nl;ht mirror, AM radio. '"'window delr04ter & manulac:tunn asaembly fine test tor Calif. 12 TO CHOOSE FROM (~White SGC 4'0054001 (9823 Brown SGC 4'0033051 (9981 White SGC 4'003991) (9982 Blue SGC 4004986) '976" Red SGC 40007661 (9868 Brown SGC 4'0032881 (1031 Sliver SGC 40057531 ( 10024 Red SGC 4005290) (9080 White SGC 4004125} (9936 White SGC 4'003152) (9986 White SGC 4'004161) ( 10032 Red SGC '400531 Ol TAKE YOUR CHOICE ••• · ••••••••••• PLUS TAX & LIOENSE . . BRAND NEW '78 CIVIC Brand Hew f978 CIVIC CVCC HOHDAMATIC ( 1151) CSGM61118i) IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ' WAGON $ ORDER YOURS TODAY! FULL PRICE • $ 5 TO CHOOSE FROM IMMEDIATE DELIVERY llllMVtllowSOI!~) (tl0?9U-Naa>1fl1) l1181'1R41d8Gl!~l 110001""" llGU<W•33a 18833 VtllOw SGE40CCS1711 53977 PlUS TAX 6 LICENSE ~.~!! ............................. !~!~ ~.::..Mtw• &IOH ~!:~~ ..... !?.~~ ~.~ ........ !~.~~ 1='1~ ~,160 ~.~.~~.:~ ... !~.~~ !~ ............. !~?.~ ..................... . Washer. dryer, like new LEAVING Ara. Lillian ....................... GRIAT •73 Coluuj)la 34 ....................... '63 Jeep Wagoneer 4W '72 I>odae Van 313 St:and. WANTED!!! S2SO both, el~. mower & Ballard membenhip "2 Workbenches, wood & RSHIMG 10.ATH Like new coad. DJx Rent a 1977 ExcutlYe driv~ hadepeode.nt WI· Tram. Xlnt. cood. '250(). Good. clean low rnU&aae - edgerSSS.894-9934 price. lncludea $20 met&l, glass sbowcaaes, custom iatr. 1 ft Motorbome or Mini· pension. Needs work. &45-3865 can..C..UDneSkiff. Hofws 8060 ~:.~~~r -~~eiP ~~:~ ~~d ~=d r~:k~: Zlft. CHAMftlOH headroom main salon. motorbome from Herb ~./btt orr. S~• -.-F-d--V-an--Jt-hr_t_llf_t.ed~ •••••••••••••-•••••• w1md.s drafting stools, exec. & CFS417BB. Flybrtdge, diesel auxl, auto ptlot, Friedlander. Call any oC later 10" t/Wbeel 302 HORSES FOR SAU sec'y chairs $25·45. single screw, galley, :i:f~·0 ~1g'~ c!~b/u;,r~s. lbesena'9~77 '74 GMC Jimmy. Wht, ene,~W7-3710 ' RAY fLADEBOE LINCOLH·MERCURY 1 Reg AQllA daughter of K 1 NG CAMBRIDGE t y p e w r I t e r s & head, baJllanlt. Sleeps 4. (TI4)S31-3SSS many xtras. $4.SOO/bst Mister Alert & Clabber W A T E R B E D calculator"S.631·Z177. Engine completely re 537.7777 olr.&4&-8S25 '89CbevyVan JR~ blood lme. Abo haU Arab w/ullraaoruc v1~rat.on & Three each: FS200 Bur· built. Elearoruc gear in· Ca1 21, new sail.I, &HP 828-1111 Tnleb 9560 $1.500orolfer. ll0.7000 ~din$?. F:xccl\cnt rtd· heater; 3 rails steel roughs Acco untiog cl. depth finder & brand O/B, $1800. J"vt pa.rt)'. ,76 .,.._ball 22 • full ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1194.9934 ... ......__1~ " 1737-644.9 mot.Orcy<'le lrlr: Dyna-. De'tf, unused 2-way FM Call675--0558.. .. lCe • ~ • Y FUU sa ~ .... .........__w_..._..a 9590 ---...,...-. ,_ ~-Gym, Minolta SRT 101. machines, 3 yrs new -'•-•-RDF ~""" ..... .tp 23000 Ml SlP6 6 ~110n -~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cla s 6000 addreuo rawu "" · _,.,., or • ..,.. ... · ' · · OF 1971 GMC ••••••••••••••••••••••• ... ....._ R-9705 J.-welry 1070 wide angle 2x telephoto 11 • heel offer Call eves & Montgomery 17 • late SU.800.557-4846 _.,.. _,.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 200mm. t.riPoll "cue. i~!~~o~pcelal~~t~~?~ wknds 64i9376 1977, fully equipped, Traltn. T et 9170 MOD&SHOW WIW1UIUY •••••••••••••••••••••-WA~ED TI().2087 ~age.cabinet.a & sup. ---------makeof!er.SS1·29'll ••••••••••~•••••••••• Pickups, vans, 4X4's. YOURDATSUH '6S Alfa, 1600. Veloce TOP CAS';; 'ooLLA R CERAMICS-Figurines, lg pliee: Pit.Dey-Bowes mall 1978 Columbia Challenger, :M' 31• Airstream 1970 model Suburbans & Jim mys PAID FOR OR NOT Spyder. Prof restored, PA I D FOR YOUR ceramic dogs, plaques, lnserttt. Open to of!er. fibergl.aaasallboat, fully Good condition. By ap-pricedaslowas TOP DOLL.AR mny xtras 536·6338/ JEWELRY. WATCHES, also others made to or· Pleasecontad.Mrs. l'in· SEA RAY .equip'd.Veryreuonably pointment $6,900. Call. $4358 FORTOPC.ARS _842_-4982 ______ _ ARTOR.fECTS,GOLD. der.84&-a579eves. neganat63l-l,200btwn8 priced,581·58'3. 8'6-6096Alter4P.M. '78 GMC ~ton Audi 9707 SILVER s ERVlCE. amt.oSpm.wkdys 30' Sport Riiier loah. s11-1 ___ _, plckup-(515889). • •••••••••••••••••••••• FINE FURN & AN· zo .4o-so.so gallon 28perf.bl.lccushionatack Outriggers-VHFradio Doc:br-9070 5f:~~-a~d~lllsfo~~:kl~~ Audl,"72,1001..SAuto.xmt TIQUES 645 2200 aquariums S12 t.o $30. i.ng chairs. Sl lea. Desk Bait t.ank·depth tounder ••••••••••••••••••••••• monthly. 54.11.6173. cond $2075. 497-2845 aft --5'l5·l446 3x6, wb1te top, $55 andMuchMore ~ Interest in Avalon ----1 WE BUY Spm. Mltc.OCllMCMIS 8080 n-1.-& ds t te b Matching table $45 DeMO loot. I o.ly · mooring (50') •t6J. Call '73 JAYtO EAGLE tent ------••••••••••••••••• •••••• """""" recor 0 ac all Id d Ir W In i " SI CL!!:"' RS IMW 97 I l Sl•rlloa 11arvi·ha (or 8. reading by vowels cost 1rn go es •d a u s~ial p~·C~ (tn'S)922·3190or922·577S trlr. ps 8, xlnt, ex:tra.s, ~MCA. L"' t M d I '"'j over $100 new Sell for top, S2S. 2 goo extc r--Sl&'iO 548-3281 I& TRUCKS ••••••••••••••••••••••• un a r ita • new. So\S 642 3379 chain;. sso TU ·W. 17th $39,950 Wanted: slip for 40' pwr belowrosL 67344!H . CM., wut 1)..7, Tue a(l boat. Seldom used. '77 TERRY. 25' stereo, SUk screen eqwp. dry\ng WA HT ED noon. ~12 rest of week. HARRISON'S MG-2815, 640-U03 ~~ 'iS 1~r" bed. $67SO. -------CONNELL rac:k.sque<'geea,mk,elc TOP CASH DOLLAR _631_·137_2 ______ 1 SEARAY loata.Spe.d & ---------"''6.11otem'lPU.Shortbox. CHEYRO ET '114·963-llfiOO. PAID FOR vouR rets 8087 Jl01CoutHwy,N.B. Sid 9080 AutoS.-.fc•.Pcrts ~ts~ewf115·~'k0~b· L Walnut Reception Det!k. JEW'ELRY, WATCHES, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 6)1-2547 ••••••••••••••••••••••• &A.ccftsorin 9400 et, ·CY en,.. r . 2828HarborBlvd. w/retura. $125. F.xec ART OBJECI'S, GOLD. Rabblta Is ewnea pigs, ------.---'76 Tri-bull, 11'. Volvo ••••••••••••••••••••••• m-Ol83or75'--0l4& COSTAMESA cbalt$.'i0. Kenmore W /D, St L VER SERVICE, 18/each. S 1 • Uhl r I c ll 111 o o eq. Must. aell, $3800 or Auto Parts ·~ Chevy '77 Datsun P.U. Sunroof. 146-1 ZOO '15 ea, lge oak table, FINE FURN. •AN· 546-9965. SponAl\aber P1ybrtd&e. bestoffer.548-2864 frontend,hood,gnll,and mag tires, custm inter.~---___ __, 1978BMW's HERE HOW! $.U0.673-4119 TIQUES.64.5-2200 twint60HPdlesels fenders SlOOor bestoHerl AM/FM stereo. Call WE PAY TOP DOLLAR Cerp~t. maouracturer Friendlyredtallboa,!5~' Try$27.500 AYMS-IM>OO T1a1pa tulbs takes!536«n4Ph1l ChrisorHarriet979·5345, FORTOPUSEDCARS COMPLETE oblng out mUI trlallll & WGGAGE TAGS Jong w/aquarlum. $100. 35' Chrltcraft Tri-cabin •••••• .... ••••••••••••• AtITO PARTS: '59 Chevy or eves &wknds 673-0521 FOREIGN. DOMESTIC I OOY SHOP irft&ulars 5498181 fromyourbusmesscard. 840-.5489aftll. Cbry1 V8's, 2 beads, Cu.1ra.Sale/ radiatDr$20 Rebwldable-l '76 Dat.aun PU Longbed U~~~~clean MOW OPEN -~-------1 Send one card ror each PSaMSliOrcjCIM 1090 sounder $14,000/trade leftt 9120 289 Ford Eniune block AMtFM /CBShellwbeels seeuafint Baseball type p\nball tag plus one spare. We ••••••••••••••••••••••• AY64&-llOOO •••u•••••-••••••••••• :~~~-~:rk bench S3500/&tofr675-7066 IAUB IUICK EXCB.LEHT mach1~~S~~· return permanently ''192S"oakupr1chtp.i.ano. 16' Fant111 Hydrocraft FORD SHELL $200. or . 292!5HarborBlvd SB.ECTIOMOF 11ealed attractive tag & $87'!5. lllkl bcMlt. 16 Hp Evlnrude, best olCeT Call after 3 PM '62 FORD 112 Ton P .U C:O.ta Mesa 979.2500 strap, meeting airline 675-3282 ull for Rady elec ablft. pwr Wt, tacb. 6CS-5061 Autot fof-Sale New auto tran111, mtr. in IMW RISA.LIS l.D. requirements. Pre· hour ID8'et ou cover ••••••••••••••••••••••• xlnt cood. FOUi' la.,. new TOP We m111y have your next vent toss & theft! For 8 Hammond C2 orran. .._.. nSt4JX17 • '75 GMC cmpr Van. •itt-/ . tires. Shell camper. rarlnour.i.Dventory.Call penonallf.ed tag encl<>H Leslie. BHt o(r over trlr . .,._.,. Loaded. Xlnt cond. $7995. dt!fu 952 $1,400.5544077 DOLLAR uat.oday! wallpaper, fabric or $1.500.&46-a833eontwknda 'lfZ Unlfilte ('75) Loaded. 49'7·1789dya,4!MH497eva ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------PAID 131-2040495-4949 "Day Glo" paper & we s,o.-tlncJGoodt 1094 AutoPilot, radar. Sonar, Pord Courter allell 51 Kai1er "Deluxe 6" ·::.~~;.1:,:r.u·~!~h FOR CLEAN OUHGICOUMTY'S ~-b;J/'.! rw~ c: ....................... -.ooo. A 2 boat owner. $200/be8t offer Call aft 3 Body •tr al gbt for 28, muat .... $1700. ·~CARS OLD!ST .__ .. •-ba;:1r". Ski booU,· Humanlc, si must lllell. Day1 wkdya, PMIW.>5061 Restoration $1200. Call 497_11184 .,.... ..., .. 894 !5351, eves/wknds 642-3379 --------AU. MODB.S & PRICES: '1~ ~. l~ $18, t 4c 'J~ IM0-4474. MoferfllH.... t 140 '75 Toyota Long bed, 4 spd GeeorCI/~ S8&$5.5'&-4'7M · ••••••••••••••••••••••• 58MGACLASSIC w/air, AM/FM stereo 4/5 tapSl.80eL Store.btt__,, ~p~ ;r:eQ,~: HIWl4T4VI $1000nRlrf. A.SIS GTiporta top, new~. &/'9bpSl.SOea. ._. 1095 Me,H•'-i.. 71HiT3-41li xJot intr. $3800. Ph Salel-Serrice-Leasing 10-more$140ea steer'"', SUSO. L1Ule ......-R C .__ .,. . • ••••••••••••••••••••••• II ·-~-~ al 0:..-:I! ............. Sal•Taxln haded uaed..Ukeno.1131-4300 Low Mllea~ $.175. Call "...........,_ __.,,......_______ • NO CARD? 3 Keeting staJnlest •Uel --.. a-.u 9060 966-0863 Veflldes 9530 im Nr nu.Chev Luv, air. Rolla Ci! BMW Draw JOU? own or send IU Cryer. Gd cond. ti.t -.. -••••••••••••••••••••••• chrome whls. AM /FM l5'0Jarnborff name, eddnea, phone is oft. n4 SS7 ·2882 11 AK -8 ... •••••••••••••••••••• Hood.a*>. 2 yrs old, c 1 D 8 Newport Beach S.O.&'-« -'ll __ ._& _..... _ _. _. Nd.all)' FUJI. y AM.AHA. P.P. $250. _o_r_v_.• r_,1 une Ultrl>', c$au. 1 pee stripes, WE BUY "1J Bav-... a, ..., ... ml. N•; -_....... -.... u ,_ n•ta.M-ttln ..,.. r .. , many x u . 1995. (Sa v approx ... .-... -tat.Md25'each. ty ..... DIAi.BS '8U){bstofr.e42·#7htU SUOO.)LowML131'"'300 USED CARS tires, maia. full pwr, Send cbeck or maney ar-Nit Shrwo IOfl Vlldlt Brot«afe lln8Hoada!O,new 4w...IDriYff 9550 73Dataun vt..·~. 92.000mi, C .. ' 'GARTH xlnteood . .-c>tt»t CWJ ct.to: -·-·-••• .. • .. •••• ListlnpWa.aW!dl MuatMl.L $300 & .. ...., ~ ~ <2l3H'7·1398 PLOr'PllNTIMe BUut2S"COLOR'l'Ycon· S:uAwe....,. ao.1123 ........................ lllO muat Mil cheap. Ask· U~CarMgr C.,t 9715 P.O. &oal.511 _., $151, 1 yr warran· YtldltS.. Motw:ydet/ COSTA MESA ~J~ ~1:,~d-540-5630 ..................... .. Ooltalleaa.Ca.-.ZS ty.freedellv.to-ISNO. 3810JewportBlvd. ke-hn 9150 AMC.JEEP Mu1l aell immed. '73 2600. Nu dutch. 1..,,. __ '"""'_..""""'.,.• BAltlTOOLS. Super Diet. 21" lialD&YM color ccm· .Nftpoc1 Beacll ..... •••••••••••••••••• #I bl ~ ~ ndlall. Xlnt cond. HID&A·BED. lole, walm&cabl.Dlt'1QO. (Tl4)m«IU '76 Hooda H O·• SS • -~--MU--W.--,,_--'TS-MS-1084 862-l.S'1 8D-'1152 Udo 14 mo. Q.u\llab ta ~JhrJbar,on· FREE Toyota long bed 2t29CO~~~:kvo. '74 2800. Snrf AM/FM IM•••-MHrlJ' new t lan' TV -. 11' Sloop psG. Ski :&i:r u CCIDd. t9'7S AJrCa.dlflH1r w/campershell. Nu Urea ---------steno, sep. lape decks. Wllililcl IOll acr H D, coat .,,000. bullM.&1813552"880 onnewl.IJ7'7&lr78J~ps. ft wbla, AM·FM, lo ml. WllUY New radials. pnl & batt 8taif Mir.ft K ti 1 ) Does not In clude $3100/betoft.842·9274 Snug flt cover. $2650. •••••H•-••••••HH••• . .....,_ 21 ' h l usder, •1&, a1'a1a 4ooca tr p e WaeoneerllmitedCJSor USEDCJ.lSl fil3..S27'1 llrC!banf9 I Tut Ucketl ...... ...._ LOADED w/eitpnllv• Ver')'fOOdcondlt.lon. CJ7. Offer good only 00 '75 Luv Mikado, mags, f?U We're the new CbeVTOlet --------..., I or 11&1 21 for l I '! lit erul1ln1/raclu1 1u r OMJ.JS. factory •Ir equl pped r..is, 29,000 mi. Aak g dealenblp ln the Irvine Colt 9711 ticitor.lllrcb2S.M4ol'TOO .... T. ••••••••••••• .. • Clilt1.Q101u·911.) pt,000/t ?•HOte• vehJtlH. Offer •xplr• $3000.981).31M6 Auto Center. We need ••••••••••••••••••••••• ttillk.. IMtl,Poww 9040 ANIOt Cl200 M~ba1.im. v-tl70 11MUledcarl lt7JDOOGE lat 2 ... IOll ;;~-;·-::·=;;;~~ ~,:; ~~~t11:i =-~~=j o:T:.• ;~ .. ~=:::·;;·::;·~:= MAC~OLITSOM ~tfT~Nu~).~A!~fcAoatl~:.".· Z511P mot.or. l'W\9 1ood. eelU l,1&&51...., bu',TMrr.c&•cuah.lon. •49.aOJJ. Cuatom paint, Gold n&Y~ \16 u ... .. 5tt-ZS39 , tl590.mta7. ~ Velvet Interior. Wide laVtrfor --·-ou COLUMBIA IT f or _ ... -......... mfffA:RBORBLVD crqen~.&4.233'19 21Aut.oCenltTDrlv• ONLY $1075 """.....,•~ .. a ds.t.rtet', call fM rataa. '•P-Slnlntllninl . IRVIN! • ratbwbe lllA1? NB.17MN;l'B40fl · cmd. Stnlhr ldt, )Ota OI COSTA MESA Ha .. aomahinsnou want 761-72%2 S.daalUleailaDIOllO cllroru. D1I "MIT&. a.u l.b1ap t.aat wiihD&ll7 k>..U? o ... 1fled ada do --------• ~~~ Itcabea Nelib'I 80"71 ..am~ PllotWantAds. l..U......,,., 0 """'«1MI MUCTa ,.. ~-.. -·- Atlto1, Import.cl Auto1, Imported Auto1, l"'port.d Avtot, UMd ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ....... lMported '· .. poriwd ..... '727 "12 vw:.:s dlow c .. ··············-······ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ t741 • 7 • very a II t1' tflO A¥fo1,U1ed Auto1,U1ed •·••·····•···•·•······••········•··········•·• • ••• ••• •• ......... ••• • • load . • ...,, Ur... • ..................... . 9120 0..-972 JW '725 lrmd H.-'77 .. ~ ~ ed lo . .J tiaoo . &U-llu evea, im Ila'* rv. lliot c:oad . ....................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... HONDA C 'ix";;'.;i~ =diu:: s~~so'. 54().-0llOOdn. to.ded. tinoo. Pvt Pt.Y. * DRIYl A* .~:=~et MAkY ars 499.~. 68 Bur. AM/FM 8 track, 567IOObtwu&-5PM C ll!-..--,l""-_L..... 9750 new P•lnt, tires, int. C:.-.-tH 9932 * Ll...,.E. .. * ' 1peed, rad&C>, be•t«. To1M11se rTVIRI --Good co•d. '1200/olr • S •v1E 1 • ... LOT L: t~N~ u p e r • UNIVERSITY .-...................... ~ ....................... . BARWICK DATSUN SH~P.c:.PARE St411 ow.-wa. 1!~~:ik1:::.ci .. vw au,. Good coad. ·c~,·7;• 115 ~•.a &SU,...SUIARU Hand. c_.. • GMC ownr, many 1tlra1. Malnt,W..$1000. I -" Week: 6.U-7064, Eves Ir 640-1208 NlCES!:LECTION! ,,U1 flLltl\ ·ti•hl t Ul1t 831-1375 493-3375 17~ Beach Blvd. Tl"9Cb tnds -HOW"'• .. ~L.......-a-.a HW\1JJ1gton Beach 2ll:IO HarbM .Blvd. w • 11~-"78 VW Coovert. Like 1ui - -... ...._.. DCB.UNr SELICTIOM INSTOCkFOR IMMIDIAT! 842-.0675 Colt.aMeu 540-9640 'tl6Poncbe912. 19M ml, air , a tereo, DO'VEllQUAILSTS. 'TIDat1uuB2lO,Htchbll:,4 ----~ 9730 MusheU,makeorr. xtru.MuataeJJ.fM-3:271 =~=ur, Jam· sp, A/C, CB, AM radio, '7 5 FI at X 1 9, A IC • ••••••••••••••••••••••• Call -.5093 Volvo f 71J NEWPORT BEACH blue.$3000.NO-SZI?. Alf/FM, m1&gs, xlol '66 XKE 2+2 6 cyl bl lt.....tt 9755 ... •••••••••n••••••••• .. -SaJe·""'•Da•uunB cond $3500. 559 1970 • ., · · • C .. n_. 9933 r ;:"...,,.. o!'e...,r' -before 9am or art 6pm ~IX!.,.?". •, $5500. Eves •••••••................ llfORI YOU IUY :iir ...,... ' .............., TEST DRIVE OUR A USID YOI. YO. • .... •••••••••••••••••• CalJ~aotS Spider.1.34,nowtop,magll X.K O MC R da Nll!.C.&.11 See us at Soutbarn l!Couaar,rt>Jtcni.auto. DELIVERY SALES-SERVICE P~LE.ASING '78Da """" 2 2 bt!J lb!reo ~ Ii • oa ter, .,.. ~ ,_,__a r~·-•·-' VOi IS. A/C, bl.It lot. Xlnt U\Ul -... + . ' ' l>it ._ Mmt. Expenalve. ~.THE ye."" .. " ;;~~-~ a vo transp car, reas. priced. loaded, lo mi, J&ns. _,......., 7U-6M-41•7attSPM """' l!;AA ._ .... ~ COSTA MESA DATSUN 673-3987 aft5Plrl Ji'Ut 'T7, l2C Spyder, 2,500 ., _ __._._._ 9735 Good 1n~tory m stock. M.AllOUIS VOLVO ,_a._1« _______ , Alrl/FM 5 d .. -ffiary•hiletbeylast! M~ONVJ&JO ft...c... "lO Datsun 520, 4-dr, auto, ma. • "P • ••••••••••••••••••••••• MJ8 ... CLE -...,... nu tires batt $1100 C'lean . $5100/olr. '73 K Gb.ul 34K .... u ..... ,,.-/a-...aULT lll·UIO•tl-1210 •••••••••-•••• .. •••••• DM-1550dys 0 548-Uooevs . l-879-7US armann d. I .__._ ~ '9 Charger, runs Cood. -m1, ammac .. ra 1a s, 2.l:iOHArborBlvd. Ol•H451COUNrY Newmetanccreeo.,.wt., ~H6~R10805~"BL2VD13· 197S Datsun 280Z . .A/C. '74JU9,xlntc:oM, auto. $3550/offer. COSTAMESA VOLVO white interior, mags, .. V'" .LU.FM. f'A-e&rW/00 · lomll.u&e. 493--03Udys 6-"1!§700 -<A i2.1 "-briJJo c u .;;......i;..;:;,..;..""'-1 1"""23 00 ........ 0y. •&ooo 546-!!18S eves/wke.ds. ---"-. -----· .. ~ EXa.USlVELYVOLVO _.... --~ Datsun 1200 Deluxe Y •7068 •1• • ' '68 VW Ghia, convertible. t ....... east VolvoDeaJec 751-4840 · -.. n'"640-16 1.971, auto, 4 dr, u1r -• ---------• a uto. trans., radio Honda 9727 Nu top. Xlnl cond. $2400. cond. Mechanically inOraaieCouotyJ um Aspen.& cyl, AV/FM heater.greatecono.car '76 280Z 2+2. cop-••••••••••••••••••••••• 675-6023 sound. New paint 1 BUYorLEASE sm-eo, asking $3400 or $UIOl"lrm 49S-0322 per/beige int., all estru. "15Hood.a Civic, 26Jl00 m1 Maida 9738 owner P.P. <LPA306J DIRECT bit otr. SC&-T746 bef S.30 7' a;oz 2 2 AM!>"M Loou ....... "8·1132 dnt <ond M0>t "'" ....................... .,._ ·1f~-or .... 1139 .... ,30 ~'. ~i-~~~gs ·~:-. ~. cond-. -N-u s-::-'1:-:- 0 -;;-,:-':. 3 ~~~ ....... ??.~~ ii•J riij !\::!..--........ !?.~. Eves MM836atte.r6:30 ~Pl1otClas~Lf1t'dA~ •t DEALER IN U.S.A. 2025 S. Manchester ~-PHIL Auto1, UHd • Autos. UMd Autos. Used m ROY · Anaheim 750-2011 LONG •••••••• ••• •••••••••••• ·······················-····· •••••• •••••••••••• 'lo 21 so H.t:tior llYd. R CARVER FOR Coda w.sa '45-5700 r ROllS·ROYCE ~.~........... • o Met-c•d.s 1eta 9740 1*J•m~•· ·~ ••os NeWPof"I lle.1,h ~ 7 11 '74 VW IUS 4 :;pd • AM/FM stereo. heater. air cond & much, much more. I 17143UJ "Hurry Now" •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• '72 FORD MAVERICK R <1d10 heater. eutomat 1c. air COnd . pwr. steering & V-8 enotne. (863FTIJ. s1595 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• '73 DATSUN 610 COUPE 4 '>Pd . t\eater, mags & air cond. C200KORJ A real sharpy! '2595 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• '72 DATSUN 1200's Radio. heater. eutometic and much more! (262HAA). Starting al s1295 3 To Choose From •70 MERCURY ST.ATIOMWAGOM Radio. heater. power steering & atr cond. A real nice car. (180ESOJ. s995 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• '75 MUSTANG GHIA Automatic peppy V6 eno1ne power steeong. radio. heatef & • much morel C438PW.X). s3395 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• '72 DATSUN 240Z With AM/FM radio. heater. air cond1t1oning. mags & more' (91295). A real nice car tor only · 53895 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• '70 DATSUN SIOW.AGOH Heater, automatic & much more Extra low ,,-.les! (0820LIJ. A real beauty. '1795 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ''----J~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1976MIZ280 SEDAN. With s unroof, atereo, pwr. wndows & tow miles. Immaculate! <720RLF> CLOSED SUNDAYS AMC '75 Pacer DL XLNTBUY AM /FM Stereo, air, "' c'--,66 Sil Sh do auto. 26000 M $2495 ._ ____ ...___. ..,. ...... ., ver a w, 673-8280 .__,_.1..,~°""'"''••••• white. R.R.-Right band .... _.._'- 1 _ dr. Xlnt rond, $14,900. 11.tkk 991 o -=======:!:::==::::::....I 1975 M.22.oc CallPatrtclt, 552"'414 •-•••••••••••••••••••• i6 Granada, grey. tow With a Ilise control, Saab 9760 '12 l.:ltate wen • .18,000 mi. mi, auto. air, PS/PB. i.leroo, pwr. wi.odow & -·•••••••••••••••••••• Good coad. Sl29S. $3950. 549-9923 dys, pwr door !ocb-A fine '73 S<moet III. top cond, 6'5-1179 ~164eves. automobile. <826.MIT>. $2.900. Orig. owner. Ca•ac tttS Sacrifice, new car in, 1972 MIZ 220D '964iS38 ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• must aell '7S Gran ad<., Automatic & air •ond. s.bai-9 9762 s · '4K mi's, T.0.P. + cub For the luxury of a ••••••••••••••••••••••• cl!t:r.6'S-2890 Mettedes It the efhc1en· SEA & SUM '68 Falcon. Auto. 6 cyl, f d I 834EIE SUIARU nms good. Bargain. $3SO. MISSION VIEJO IMPORTS •~• .. • ' \ D '·•,•• Jt110 ~ .... -• ' ..... , !31.f148 495-1104 '73 l80 S.E 4 5 A real beauty, soft II.hr ant, snrf & all OpUOllll. Ownr has taken xlnt care of car. $8450. 546-9150 Bernie '59 Mercedes 220S, gd cond, $2500/Bst ofr 557-46116 dys, 675-2463 evs M.B .. '72 250 sedan, air, full power, nice car, $16.\'.iO. 552"'231 p . p . '69 280SE·40,000 mi's, new, xlnl cood. P/S,P/B, tape deck. A/C. etc. S&l60. 536-9993. Large d.a.scount, large • Call548-4f07. selection. Br•ts -' Mn--h l d · n..-.c1u1,·a ,_._, w ee nve wagons. ~-.... ••--•••-·•-••••••••• Free from Subaru $100.00 5-Ylh Cewter Bulova watch with • purchase of any new Subaru on or before Apnl a:>, 1978 Sea Ir s. s.baru 175.55 Beach Blvd Huntington Beach 842-0675 76SUIARU 2Dr.OL Raclio, be4ater, autom.Uc transmission. (460N.RP) $2188 OVER 100 CADILLACS TO CHOOSE FROM AT Au. TIMES Nabers Cadillac !2600 H.1rt'>or Blvd. Co\14 M~sJ .540~ I OQ ORANGE COUNTY'S NEWEST · LINCOLN-MERCURY Deaienb.ip is DOW OPEN RAY FLADEIOE LINCOLN-MERCURY 16-18 Auto Center Or. SDF'wy·Lake Forest exit LR VINE 130-7000 '77 Marquis Brougham. 4 door. Lo mi, fully equipped. 546-2331 . .... mg 9952 ....... ............... . IRAHD HEW 1978 llG SUR M INl-MOTORHOME (Vacatton lnd1A$tr1es Newest Ed1t1on) Completely self-contained and factory 9Qu1pped Range. oven shower. dual holding tanks, fear dinette Dual wheel chassial El!cellent Finance Terms. (Ser • F34BF7V082&4t) 59877 8 YEAR BANK FINANCING AVAILABLE ON MOTOR HOMES OM APPROVAL OF YOUR. GOOD CREDIT VISIT OUR HUGE RV DEPARTMENT FOR BIG SAVINGS! 1971 Mercedes 3 5 coupe. Beaut cond Silver/blue metallic. snrr, lo ma, never parked in sun. Pm detail See serv. re- cord 67H642 su & suH suuau 17SS5 Beach Blvd. Huntiogt.oo Beach 842-0675 ~-------IJJ&S Mmtang, 6 cyJ, 3·spdll••············ '75 CJ>e de Ville, lo m1'1, ont.befloor. Hard torU>d •• eaNSU.MErtS • ----MG8 9744 ••••••••••••••••••••••• H MGB Roadster . hardtop, spoke wheels, $2400 631 01.26 ___ _ 'T7 MGB. awaiting new car. must sell, mint cond, 16, 000 mi. 847-0803 PRINTED ADVERTISING BEST ......... . A recent study by the American Association of Advertising Agencies shows that consumers arc inost f avorablc to the ads they see in the print media. Second are ads in the electronic m~ia, and least favorable are outdoor a nd direct mail advertising. xlntcond. ~c. 661-30.11 Toyota 9 7 65 • 494-19159 • ••••••••••••••••••••••• --------•Q dnt cood. oew ~. 73Sedan DeYllle, black, tape d eck, A M/FM ruuy eqw p'd. 1 owner. radio. ~9640. &M-987 4 1973 FORD 17 FT. SHASTA MINI MOTORHOME V8 llfl!Jme, air condll1onlng, power 11~ng, autom~1c trens1r11SS1on, stereo. Loaded with lf*OUYOU SEU YOUR TOYOTA. SEE US! MARCi)UIS TOYOTA M.ISSION VIEJO 831-2880 495-1210 Eltlras. (314HXT') execdnven. $2700. Hugh, l1lt11 Ford Mustang, 289 l~~~~s-.JS VB.coodcoaditiori s5977 1967 Eldo. '18.000 mi, "77 Mua::::S:1 Ghia, silver & blk, top cood, s:noo. • Cyl, 4 spd. Vin •••••••••••••••• new tires $l 800...,.. "~'"" t.op, PIS, P/B. air, like ••• vi..--.v oew.7~or&42-8907 1971DODGE18 FT. '68 Toyota Corona. Call '69 El Dorado, •bowroom for info. Nela, 640-8119 or cond, lo ml 'a, '2195. ~Mustang. great cond. 4 OP&l ROAD MIMI MOTORHOW! 751·201.S (!Mi). 49'1·3710 Spd. 289. $1300. See •l va engine. automatic transmission, power --------~ Broad St, NB bet s_!~0~g. arr condiho"i"O· Loaded wtttt Extras. '70 Mart ll wgn, 4-sp, tt 17 _2P..:;...m_. 6'2_·_2878_. ____ 1 (1tl2CTR) • good coodition. .. ..................... Oldrt a.a. 9955 ___ 962_·7_5_71_. ___ 1969 Camaro 327, R .S. ••••••••••••••••••••••• s5577 P/S, P/B, auto, silver 'e8CuU 442 72 Toyota Corolla cpe, landau, au paint. 661-3031 ass • 70,000 mi, xlnt cond. $800orbestoffer. $1.SSO. 6.1l-3624 0..W'Oltf 9tZO _:Rum;:;.:~g~ood:::::.:.·-~49U303:;;~:11••············ '73 Celie a 4-apd, Alr cond., ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....... 9957 cass., AM radio, radial tires, great cond. $2250. 64().1749. It VolbwCl9" 9770 _. ••••••••••••••••••••••• • WEIUY&SaL • VOUSW ACi84S • Largest Selection In The Area! ! ! ....................... B)'owner. um Pinto, auto new paint, good tin!S, lo • ml, like new. $1250. .. S36-CY1S7 .. .. "18 Squire wgn, 4-spd, air . ,.. Xlnt cond. Nu tires. it 29,000 ml. $31SO. PP. 642.132C dys • ~~~.;._~~--·I• .. WEST CiERMAN IMPORTS J.98SHarbor .Blvd., C.M. .. . '71, By owner, autom, nu pt-brakes, gd tires, lo mileage. Uke nu. $1.lOO. ROGER MILLEA SAYS. "\ow Pricnt• 714/645-6120 LEASINCi '74 XJ12L. Xlnt condJtJon . .., ... llll 546-tf'7 Best otr over $7500. 673-2464 eves 1974 VW Bua. Xlnt e<1nd. Nu brlr.s, ahocka, all nu Wliversal, Unted 1lass. s:nso. 4!M-~1 C&ll 536-0757. '12 Runabout, ~L paint, mags, tract.ion ban, ft •licb. etc. S.Sl·2956 '76 Pinto Wagon, 8 cyl, air, AM/FM, take over pymnts, $124 mo. 646-22112 days. ..,,. ... ....................... I 972 FORD SUNDIAL 18 FT. MIMI MOTOIHOME Fully sell~nt.ained sleeps e1tt"11 Mmny, Y8 eflgine. aut°"'8tlc transrr11sS1on, power ateeftllg and 111any extras (289FZJ) 55077 VISIT OUR COMPLETE SERVICE DEPARTMENT. WE SERVICE All CHRYSLER PRODUCTS AND ALL RECREATIONAL VEHla.ES. SERVICE DEPARTMENT IS OPEN SATURDAYS TILL 5:00 P .M. The AAAA study concentrated on consumer attitudes toward advertising and sought to pinpoint the is.sues which mold public opinion. '70 VW convt. Sound eog. Good body. $1800/ofr. 67S-40M aft 6 FOR YOW C<»4VMEHCE· The 5*udy found that the oven.Melming majority of the public endorsed advertising as an essential institution in the economic system. '73 vw 02 Wacoo. '75Moo..-Twncpe, V-1,lo Pu:CiK 9965 All.IF/JI. 8 trt, radiab, ml. AJl.·Pll 1-trk •t.ereo. •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• •Int. Lo mi. $1850, $!11115.SIS-&178 "'It flrebird, dark cr-eea. ~ '92 Corralr ..... llOW BOC,auto.,rullPOWer, ---..__ ocl __._ Ddl tome DS-., extras, low mlle&. ..._. ..._, • -:.tr. 1t Dl!IW batt.. new •boc:k.s WE ARE THE BIG SUR HEADQUARTERS FOR ORANGE COUNTY!. Your dally newspaper is the best place for your advertising message .. Along the Orange Coast people read and trust the 21,000ml. ~U:.:appr-.e..w~ 11.t seU: Belt Offer: 54&4al,~ 831-d88 ~111.....;;..-arr;..;.;.,.~~---- ?4 VWIUS .17 Cbev7 l'iova n m KUll..U. "131AJrfanaGT, 1~1Mal.opeed, ·~ P/8 P /B, act C-. 1-apd atJct, 350 eel, radio, beater, 1WU'OOI. S'1$t M5-'580 Alf/'111-trk, mt cond. OSfJ.£0) · 161&12tatU pm. H•• •Belaln. Good= n t11•t1 tt10 SIA I SUM SUIAIU =-.:.~· pwr .......... ·--••••••••• 17516Beaeb8lvd. ' '15 T-Blrd, loaded, HunttnatnoS.ach '75 Chev1 Moo .. t+2 udhh, hndau, "11 vw Sq.a~t re. b&chba. Wb&/recl ID.... AM/I'll, ort1 loter in buUt ent. $a.JOO. or' best ~ ~ ~ = datlbape. esi..JOfl alt• • .,.... ...u. Good ...,. lrd Cll' ... tt74 'M VW~ lilt nm'f, D4-1tudt nt t aJ', IO J£ ...-........ ••••••••••• 1tod1 • ••• work, .-Oftrm.~ "1• V• W11mt. atfq.. /o.b..o. ..,., ... a.a: llGllO. t.at.. OARAOS IALB ldl tTNllT · tMl>t.Ur PUo& brblehlp. "7• <;r llkbbct, 44pd. lo 'M VAN 'Ill 1'9U.1ta. To plae. 76Ur mt. Alf·FM tape, drk A:ond. Beatol· drawlaf, card, pboae bra. XIDt. itG> or otr. t.od.97. MMU1 I . , VICTORY DODGE OF COSTA MESA 2 888 HARBOR BL VD. C afl now for frc" approi~cl 556-4620 \el, .....t. 41 .._ • oft,.,. pubh, _..,.., All , • ., plou l<1• l9td he.,,. ... aNf ...t.1PC I '" ,., .. ,..,, .. I J' I 17 I Huntington Beaeh Fo1•ntain Valley EQITION Afternoon N.Y. Stoeks j I l VOL. 71, NO. 80, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY1 MARCH 21, 1978 TEN CENT l t HB Blight: Blooming Signs of Spring Never mmd the crocus and the dafCodil. Huntmglon Beach 1s blooming this spring with thousands of political signs. Part of the trouble ts that o;igns have been put where they don't belong. Only nobody knew for sure where that is. planter areas, gutters and sidewalks. This is the policy the cit7 adhered to in past elections before waverinc this sprinc after a change in the sien or· dinance. City watchers say there never bas been anything lake it The signs are nearly every· ~here -on top of giant cranes and in city parkways, planter areas and center medians. Some have ~en planted in the green grass of the civic center. The Huntington Beach City Council moved Monday night to restore order by voting to enfore a current sign ordinance. In a report to the city council, Cily Administrator Bud Belsito recommended that political signs be allowed in public rights· oC-way as long as tbey don't That ordinance prohibits signs, political or otherwise. from being placed in public rights-of-way such as medians, OlllY ~ ... Staff ~· SEA LIONS 'IN CUSTODY' AFTER THEIR RAMPAGE THROUGH LAGUNA BEACH Escaped Mammals Raise Eyebrows In Downtown Laguna, Gulp Goldfish Sea Lions On Spree Washed Up by Storm, They lmxule Laguna By STEVE MITCHELL Of Ille 0.lly Pli.1 't.ett Lai::una Beach's sick sea lions took over the tov. n two mormns.:s in a row this week. sleeplng atop convert1blCts. window shopping on Forest Avenue and in one case raiding the waler dis· tnct 's fish pond. The two blot'k cxcur<;1on from the sea lions makeshift cages behind the city sewer plant to La~una Beach County Water District early Monday mornm~ apparently was abetted by a spirited i::roup v. ho had been in a bar earlier Aul the v. at er district took a more ~ober '1C'wofthccscapade. ltcost them about a dozen g<1l<l fo.,h, mcludmgsome venerablcfavontes. And Pohce Sgt. Dave Avers wins the ht•ro title for nearly single·handedly rounding 1111 the slippery beasties during their two-day :-pree an the Art Colony LAGt:NA BEACH LIFEGUARD Jim Stauffer is caring for more than two dozen :-l'a ltons in makeshift cages behind the city's s<'wcr plant. The sea hons were washed up <luring the most recent storms and many of them suffer m1uries from the rocks and . pneumonia. But at least five of the cagy creatures were feehng their oats Monday morning and early today when the great escapes occurred. (t all started Sunday night when a sea hon bit through the chicken wire fence that holds the sick animals. "Three Qf them got out at about 2 m the morninJ! .. recalled a sleepy Stauffer from his home this mornine DURING THAT SEA LION siege, one of the 50 pound mammals was followed by an e:irly morning bar crowd from Glenncyre and Forest Avenue up to the waler district headquarters adjacent to City Hall. "The group kind of herded the sea lion toward the pond, and when it saw the goldfish, it went nuts," Sta\lffer said. The barking sea lion lE!aped into the pond, according to Sgt. Avers. "and began eallng everythmg that moved in the water." The final toll was about a dozen eoldfish, according to water district general manager Joseph Sweeney, who got that estimate from water supeript.endenl Dan McDaniel. "DAN KNEW.ALL THE fish in there by their first names," Sweeney said. "There was an old farftad that would come up to the surface and visit with all the kids. That sea lion ale the fantail and a lot more." Sgt. Avers cornered the well-fed sea lion in the pond and Stauffer captured him. That was Monday morninJ?. Last night, under the cover of darkness. two more sea lions slipped out of the com· pound and into town THIS TIME 'nlEY CRAWLl':D over the bodies of their comrades lo make their escape, Stauffer said "They all like to lie oll' top of each other. he said. "Two of the sea lions just crawled up the s leeping bodies and over the top " The smaller of the two escapees was quickly rounded up by Avers, but the larger of the pair escaped to Third and Mermaid Streets where the police sergeant found it asleep atop the convertible top bf a car. ''Avers got that one with a leash," Stauf- fer said. "HE CAUGHT OR CORNERED all o( them ," the sea lion doctor said this morning. "So I've made him an honorary Friend of the Sea Lion for putting up with those clowns for two mornings in a row." Stauffer said he won 't be rousted from his bed tonight. 'Tm going out there later this afternoon lo see if I can keep them in their cages," he said. Thus ending the sea lion siege in Laguna Beach. cause a safety hatard to pedestrians and motorists. He said a great deal of city time would be spent removing the ofCendlng signs because or their inordinate numbers. Belsito based his recommen- d a tl o n on a city attorney opinion which said the ban on political signs In public righls-of- way could be a violation of the freedom or speech. Mayor Pro Tem Ron S henkman and Councilman Richard Siebert led the fight against the promiscuous signs. Shenkman said that he was concerned for the safety of motorists who might have their attention diverted by signs. "There is a possibility or serious accidents." he said. Siebert. said be was concerned about safely as well as the city's Denies Choking Baby Jiabillly ror sprinkler systems and foliage lhal might be damaged. Mayor Ron Pattinson. Ted Bartlett, Al Coen, Shenkman and Siebert voted in favor of the restrictions. Harriett Wieder, who is run· nlng for Orange County s upervisor, cast the only no vote. (See SIGNS, Page AZ) Waddill Explains 'Search for Pu1se' · By TOM BARLEY Of l.llit o.llt Pli.t SUll Dr William Baxter Waddill explained to a jury Monday that what a prosecution witness thought was a strangle hold be- ing applied to the neck of a newborn baby was actually hls attempt to detect a pulse. "I was gently palpating for a pulse." he told the Orange Coun· ty Superior Court jury. "I was probing around the trachea." saline solution Waddill injected into the mother. He said Waddill suggested four olhcr ways m which the child could be disposed of, in· eluding drowning it in a bucket of water. Waddill described Cornelisen Monday as ''sort of disturbed, emotionally unstable and quite squirrelly " The Huntington Harbour ob- s tetrician s aid he felt Cornelisen 's hostile altitude towards him stemmed from the prosecution's witness' resent· ment of the saline abortions performed by Waddill and other doctors at the Westminslel" hospital. WaddiU said he Celt Cornelisen <See DOCTOR, Paite AZ> His testimony during his second day on the witness stand directly refuted that of Dr. Ronald Cornelisen, an Orange pediatrician who is the prosecu· lton's key witness. 'Cease·f ire Not Enough' Cornelisen told the jury that Waddill had a choke hold on the baby ~1rl when he walked into the nursery and made 1l clear that he intended to murder the ailing infant. Total Withdrawal Demamled by .PLO Coroelisen wstified that Wad· dnt ordered the Wes tmlnsler Community Hospital nursery staff to leave the room and then announced: "Thia baby can't. live." · He testified that Waddill pre- dicted the £iling of lawsuits totalling milUons of dollars in damages if the baby, which al- legedly survived Wadd111's at· tempt to abort it, lived. 0TEL AVlV, Israel (A.P) - Israel declared a cease-f\re in sou them Lebanon today, but the Palestinian military command said it was "not enough." "'fte.. tnlnlster of defense has instructed the chief of the general swr to effect a cease- fire along the entire front in Lebanon as of 1800 hours today," said the brief Israeli army s po kes man's announcement. "As from that hour the Israeli Cornelisen testified thao Wad· dill relt sure the infant had suf· rered massive brain damage as a result of its Immersion in the Coast Beach Funeral Mass Ban May Lift Slated Toni ht Wednesday g Beaches from 52nd Street in Newport Beach to Brookhurst For T March Street in Huntington Beach re-• main closed today and will prob- A funeral Mass will be said ably remain quarantined until tonight for Tom Lewis Marsh. a Wednesday. according to Huntington Beach attorney who Orange County Health Depart. died Sunday at the age of 35. ment officials. Mr. Marsh was a member or The beaches were c losed the school advisory committee Ma rch 13 when a broken sewer in Huntington Beach. main in the Santa Ana River He is survived by his widow, sent raw ~wage flowing out the Marie; two sons, Eric and Geo£-river mouth, contaminating the frey and a mother and brother m beaches. Riverside. The family is sug-With lhc sewage hne pumping gesling donalions be made to the out more than four million Amertcan Cancer Society. gallons of waste a day, health of- A Mass of Christian burial will fic1als banned pubhc use of the be said tonight at 7 :30 at beaches stretching from 38th Saints Simon and Jude Parish, Street in Newport to Beach 20444 Magnolia St., Huntington Boulevard in Huntington Beach. Beach. Monday, with the repair of the i;ewer line, the ban was partially defense forces will maintain a cease-fire." ln Lebanon, Mahmoud Labadi, spokesman for the ' Palestine Liberation Organiza· Uoq, ~aid "ls ael's declaratioa cl I ceau-Rf is not enough. What is need~ is an uncondl· tional tot.al withdrawal by Israel from the whole of south Lebanon." The PLO earlier brushed aside Israeli talk of a cease-fire, but observers in Beirut believed the final response would depend on lhe outcome of Syrian-Lebanese talks under way in Damascus. The announcement came after a day of scattered shootiog between Israeli forces and Palestinian guerrillas around Tyre. But the shooting had died down from previous days. Seven days ago Israel launched an air, land and sea at· tack to cJear Palestinian guer· rillas from the area along its northern border. The operation followed a Palestinian terrorisl attack in Israel which killed 3S Israelis. " The Is raeli announcement came as Prime Minis ter Menachem Begin was meeting with President Carter 1n Washington and as the United Nation~ tried to work out detail~ of a tJ.N. peacckeeptnR force to go into southern Lebanon. There was no immediate lrt- dication 1f Israel had taken a unilateral action in announcing the cease-fire and whether the Palestine Liberation Organiza· tion would go along with an end to hostilities. Wall May Seal McFadden Fate Jifted so that only the area from 52nd Street to Brookburst Street remains closed. Robert Stone, director of en- vironmental health for the coun- ty Health Department said to· day it could take until Wednes· day to get confirmed tests which would s how the absence of dangerous levels or bacteria al the closed beaches. The Israeli army claim~ to control all or southern Lebanon <See ISRAEL. Page AZ> A C'omprom1se was informally reached Monday night that may pot the brakes on the McFadden • A'Venue controversy thal has ptagued Huntington Beach tor a nµmber of years. A major ingredient in the com- promise a lready has b~n dubbed "Al Coen's Wall" by ktbltzers. Under the plan des igned to re· -dtice trafl1c in residential ~-~ns , a block wall'barrier ~d constructed across the in· ~ 1ecUon ot McFadden ot Bolsa Chica Street. Leaders of a group that has been fighting closure of McFad· den at a more eastern point say \bey can live wilh the plan. The tentative agreement was reached at an 11th-hour meeting l\~ndt-Y night at wbi.ch Coen sumrnonl-d both sides to the dis- pute. The meeting was not an- nounced publicly and took some Cjty Council members by sur- prise. ·Fest F11nds Denied l~OS ANGELES <AP> -The c•ty COUl'lcll has denled a re. queat for $30,000 In advance fuoda for the 1071 Garden Tbeat r Fasttval and fonn&Jl.y •Pologised to the Roman Catholic Church for all•led anU· Catholic r marks clurlna • :It1tlval pui manct lut yur. After the council vote Monda1. Warrt11 Chrl•ten.seo, director oi • ,, ' the fesUnl held in Hollywood's Barnsdall Park, Hid dtnial of the tunda would force lhe festival to "clo:se it34ooni." Couneu mflnbert YOted to CC)ft· aide!". the fiiffi!lnf requ t at rec· uln bucUet ICMJons tieatnnlnl next mon1h. ney pl'Cldic:ted tbO mon•>' WOuld ht apl>f O~ed by the council 111\d. become 1v1Uabte In lune . representatives of factions both favoring and opposing McFad· den closure. Some City Council members earlier had favored closing off McFadden at Cambay and Chemical Lanes. Coen ln lhe past had been a proponent tor closing McFad· den. OushYictim Amirded Fund DETROIT (AP> -General Motors Corp. and the Top VaJue lrad1ne stamp company have a1reed to pay $625,000 lo • ~r.la ,U-1 who was paralyzed ln a tar ac~ident when sbe was horlcd out ot her baby Mat and· into tb• car's d bboud. Aa attofney for Tammy DuUer, 111 now a fln.b·Ctader ln AUanta, hid •flued ~fore tM o -of ·court tltment that both UIM-CbtfJ ll and tb baby -pur_chasat \lrlth tndlnl at . -- He explained that the last con - flrmed tests,' taken Saturday, show nearly normal bacteria counts at the outer edges of the quarantine area, although the area around the river mouth was nearly five times higher in 8J;DOUnt of bacteria than allowed by law. 41We can only make a J>fe4 sumptiori baaed on the samples taken Stmday," he said. "but it looks very good at all stations." Stone said that the confirmed results or Sunday's tests are not likely to be available Ul\lU Wednesday. M eanwhilo, he said the boaches would remain closed and the Health Department ~ill continue to make d•lly ~sts ol wat•r 1amples. "Tbe bacteria umples seem to be comln~ down,' be aald, "but we want to be C!Ob· servalive. We •on't Un tlle qunanUM unUI we are sure the b th6 ero wlthln tho atate atl.Adard." t • Coast Weather Cooler Wednesday. Chance of measurable rain 70 percent Wednesday. Lows toni&.bt 50 to SS. Highs Wednesday S8to6S. INSIDE TODAY WASP~may~ not receioed th• 1ome v~teram• beMfils o.s mole coamlnpa1U, but tltey ho~ a high def1r'ff of comaroclme .• S.t F'~e1, Page Cl. l•tlex f Gormaii·"·Uop s1~m Deputy's 'Wife ]ail,s Suspect GORMAN CA P> -When they heard the gunshots, Deputy Arthur Pehno's two youngest sons ran next door -to lhc.ir father's one-man sheriff's office -and found him dying. Pellno, 51, a 19-year veteran wi~b the Los Anieles County Sberilf'a1 Department, had been shpt repeatedly with his gun Su,qday rught, and the man he b~ juat arrested was aUll ln tho 1971 Data On Korea link Eyed WASfllNGTO'.'t <AP) -House im c~t1gators rdeased letters to- day from the FBI telling two Nn:on admin1.,trallon off1c1als in l!n1 that aides to South Korean P~sadent Park Chun1 Hee con· I nbuted hundred, or thousands of dollars to the De-mocratlc Par- 1 y and that Tongsun Park made payments to a <'Ongres:.man un- der Seoul's direction. But former Attomey General .lohn N. Mitchell testified to<lay that he never saw the 1971 FBI m.emo tellin~ him and Henry A. Ktsi.ingcr about the alleged a<'- t1nl1l•s. N1tchell l>Htd he dad see •mother FRJ memo quoting US mtcllJgence as saying U18t aides to former Hou,e Speaker Carl Albert and former Rttp. C'ornehus E Gallas:her, D N J ., ··are connected with the Korean Contral Intelligence Agency " ' I'm certain I would" re- mem bcr sct•rn,:: the letter, partly because or the reference to Korean donations to the I>emocrat1c Party, M1tchcll told a Uouse tntcrnat1onal relations MU>commtllt>c tnvest1gat1ng al· l<').!<'d Kore:Jn attempts to buy in· Jlui·nce with ('(lnl!re::.s. ' ' Tlwn' 1s :J rl'ft•n•nc·e to a prC':,1dent," J\t1l chcll ::.aid. ''Ther<''s a reference to a con· ~n·ssman httin~ bou~ht off. I'm ~urt• I would rem<'mh<'r 1l. lieCorc Mitchell lt•st1ried, the ~ubcomrnlltt'e r<'leased FBI !l'emos to M 1lchell and K1ss- rns:c r, mcludtn~ a detailed one daled Nov. 24, 1!171. Kissinger, who al the time was liead of the Nal.Jonal So~rity Council under President Nixon. has agreed to testify later, said ~ubcomm1ttee Chairman Donald Fraser, D Minn. . Mitchell was Ni:icon•s flrst at· torney general and later became director of his 1972 re-elecUon rampa1gn Ht• was convicted of cr1m1nal cht1 rges 1n the Wateq~ate cover up and Is on furlou~h from pnson. . Mitchell said he went to ~peaker Albert's office and told t11m of the memo regarding the a11l<', !-iuza Park Thompson. Grass 'Bad' In Colorado? BOULDER, Colo. CAP) - Marijuana smokers in this uni· 'ersity city nestled against the snow-capped Rock1es are being t•ncouraged to bring in samples of their stash for testing to s« af at is contaminated by herbicides. 1'he testing, an cooperahon ~ 1lh the Boulder County district nttorney's office and the University of Colorado, was bei:un after the Mexican govern- m~p t acknowledged that the herbicide par~quat was used lo wipe out marijuana fields. S£'veral groups have protested tbal paraquat can cause lung damage lo heavy smokers. A spokesman tor the Colorado l).aily, a newspaper published to ~~rve the campus community ~1lid marijuana samples in pl~ ~own wrappers can be de· livered to the newspaper offlce With a five-digit Identification r4.tmber. OAANGI COAST H f DAILY PILOT booiiaf offlc4t, rdeputle1 11Jd, adding the gun was fired unUl empty. Tbe ot11ce is adj•cent to the three-bedroom ranch house the sherifr provides for his resident deputy ln Gorman, a mountain community 70 milu north of Loi Angeles. The boys. aged 9 and lS, ran for their mother, Pat, 47. She hurr1ed-uoarmed-jnto tbe Jet Joins Stork Club LAS VEGAS CAP) - When Western Airlines flight 567 left for Los Angeles, there were 83 passengers on board. When it returned to Las Vegas a few minute! later, there were 84. The newest arrival, a •even-pound girl, was born in the 1alley seclJon or the Boeing 737 shortly after it left McCarran In- ternat1onal Airport Mon- day. Two doctors aboard assisted the delivery. The mother, Mrs. Talat Shaibl, and daughter were l'('ported doing well. HBMan Gets Prison Term For Violation Huntington Beach resident Irving Joseph Richards waa or. dered Monday to serve nine months in prison for a federal probation violation. Richards, 47, is currently tac- i n g bookmaking charges In Orange County Superior Court a nd i'raud c harges in Los Angeles Federal Court. Federal Judge Warren J. Ferguson ordered R1charda to serve m.ne months in a peniten- tiary for an unauthorized lrlp to Me-<ico last year in violation of probation reqwrement.s. Richards was serving a five· year probation period stemming from a guilty plea he entered ln 1972 on one count of failure to ftle an income tax return, 5aid U.S. Assistant Attorney Eric Dobbertttn. Richards was ordered to begin serving his nine-month sentence for probation revocation on :'11arch 27. From Page Al SIGNS •.. She said the city was tnkina an elitist approach •nd that the quarrel seemed lo be much ado about nothing. Belsito said he planned to con- tact all candidates today to re: move unauthorized signs. City crews would remove them after 48 hours and the city perhaps would charge the of(en. ders for the expense, Belsito said. Search Suspended OROVILLE <AP) -Butte County authorities have SUS· pended a search for five mildly retarded men who have been missing since Feb. 24, when they failed lo return from a basket· ball game. They are Jaek Madruga, 30, and Jack Huett, 24, of Linda; Willlam Sterling, 29, of Yuba City: and Ted Weiher, 32, a nd Gary Mathis, 20, of Olivehurst. Roper, Speaker bookiotoCnce. Somehow she got 'l'erry Lynn Zachery, 30. of North Hollywood betund bari, N.id Deputy Jim Digiovanna, a department spokeliman in L06 Angeles. "She Juat eoued biai lnto the •ea 4>t the bOQking cage, ~ puahed him inside and wu able lo slam the door on him," Dl&iovanna aaid. Deputy Carl Waller, Pelino'• interim replacement at the lon. ly aberiff's outpost in tbe Tehachapi Mountalna, uld Pelino bad anawered a dis· turbance call at a nearby ftS station Sunday nlcbt. Pehno checked recorda for warrent.s agamat Zachery before brlqina him back to ba oC!ice, Waltier said. .. Jn fact. he had the guy drive bis own car and followed him baek lo the station," Walter said. "Apparently at that tlme be was havinii no trouble with haro." Inalde the booktfll office the trouble began. Inve1tJ1ators sWl weren't sure what happened. .. lt seems there was some typ.e of a struggle and he was able to get the gun away from Pelino," Digiovanna said. With Zachery in the cage, Mrs. Pelino put out a radio call to the Santa Clarita sheriff's substation, where her husband had been assigned before being transferred eight months ago to Gorman. The California HiE:hway Patrol heard the caJJ and got there flnt, with the San· ta Clarita deput.les arriving soon after. Walter said she took the two boys to the zoo to get away from the scene al Gorman. Tbe couple had six children ranging ln age from 8 to 21. f'ro91 Page Al DOCTOR ••• ~ay also have decided to testify against him because he felt 1iuil- ty a bout participating In an u. legal abortion. Corneli.scn, in his testimony earlier in the trial, said he believed the abortion performed by Waddill on Mary Weaver, 18, was illegal. The baby's tnotber bas sued Waddill for $17 mi111on tn damaa:es In a lawsuit which ac· cuses him of misrepresenting the ~tate of ber pregnancy. The prosecution claims that the baby was 31 weeka from con· ceptlon when It was aborted. Waddill has testlfled that the ln· fanL wu 22 wei!ks from concep- tion. W add.ill atreMed throughout a long day on the witness stand that the baby he allegedly murdered on March 2 li77 never had life. ' ' ''It was pale and cold and life· less," he t.eatiOed. "I couldn't find a pulse, I couldn't detect a heart beat and I certainly didn't see lt bretthinf." Wad dill said the only mov• ment be could detect ln the baby were several short gasps. "But that was aaonal iaaping, the evJdence of death and not lite" he 1aid. ' Corneusen and hospital nurses have testified that the baby girl delivered by Miu Weaver cried when it was expelled from the womb and gave evidence of life as it wu belng rusbed to the nursery. Registered nurse JoAnn Grif· fith testified that tbe baby had a clearly discernible heart beat and wu improving ill labored breathlnl when Waddill halted her resuscitation efforts and pushed her out of the nursery. Ford's Son Joins Pro Rodeo Circuit LOS ANGELES (AP> -stne Ford, the 21-year-old son of fonnel' Prelldent Gtraltt Ford. wa1 •tined Monday u a catt roper and cbJef public spokesman for a profeaalonal rodeo tam. Tbe well-publlclsed 1linlnl ol Ford wu \ho fourUa ID low c1aJ9 by the Lo• An1tJea Rou1b Rldcra, OQ.a ot l1x rodeo teams tn the nation tbat are launohlnl a maJor teatue rodeo "lrcwt th1I year. .. I fed that the cone.pt ol M•· jor Leacu• Rodeo wUl 1lve Amertca'• ofcfeat 1port t.U AC• OJnlUon Jt deHrv.. and wUl ranchlng and tralnln1 1toek horsea in Nevada, Montana and California. Most recently, Ford, who lives in Newport Beach, bu worQd as a vetetlnartan'1 .Sde at Loe Alamitoe Race Tract. Ford baa appeared frequenUy in indepen· dent rodlol. The Rough Riders, who bealn Jea1ue PllU' April 1 in Denver a1alnat the Denver St.rs, are coached by nfne·ttme world·chal!\plon rodeo cowboy Caaey Tlbbl. Ttbbl and Ford have ~ work!ni &ocetbv tor the past~ 7oars. · sbow •• , wbat truly tln• •thletes toda1'1 rodeo "rlo~ •t•·'' 1tJd Ford. Who •ludlod aplcu1'ure at Utah Bi1ld•• Lo• ADltlH and Denver, the Western DivtaJon ol tbt rodeo dmllt •• eom9riled or the a.it&.-. Cit>' a~voae. Jo tb• Eu~ Dht1I011, UM came State Uolverall1 ud ••• al 1cl1Dc• at Callfotnla lite Pol1tecbnlc Unlvu1U.1 In Pomona before worklnf In , · •r• th• ltantat Olt7 TrallblAlzen. tb• SaD Anton.lo Rowell and the Tulsa Twllten. tAlloiU,Ma;;.;;,;o;.;. ;....;..&:.;~~ Nuclear Debris Expected WASHINGTON CAP) - Radioactive debris from China's recent nuclear explosion will ar- rive over the U.S. East Coat.l late today. but the Eovlronmtn· tal Pr~tion Agency say• !her. as no cause for alarm. ··We do not anticipate any cause tor concern durlne passage of contaminated air over the United State5," sald Barbara Blum, EPA deputy ad· mlnistralor. The nuclear clouds are being carried b,Y wlnds at altitudes above 20,000 feet, EPA uld, and · are excted to conUoue passint over lhe United States until Sun· day. ''This contamination is not movmg as a single air mass but Is being transported In patches at different. speeds and dif· !erent 1ltttudea. Consequently. no ainale 'trajectory of the debris path would live the true pic- ture," an El>A announcement aald. The first of the radloactlve clouds arrlvtd over Al11Jca, weatern Canada and the Pacific Northwat lat• Sunday and early Monday, EPA said. Some nuclear debris may have been brouaht to the eround by precipitation over Alaska and the Pacttic Northwest, EPA said. "There l~ alto 1 potential for a wuhout of debris by rainfall over the eaatem half ot the Unit· ed Sta let," tt added. EPA acUvated lt.a alr and pre· c\pitatlon monltortn1 1tatfons Wednesday, but no staUona have reported mea1urement1 at· trlbutable to fallout, aaid the aiency. Beaetions Mixed "No 1l,rutlcant exposures are expected from direct radiation, breathlng of contaminated air or expoauN! to rainfall," Ma. Blum said. Reaction to the latest contract agreement reached bt'Lween .coal miners and operators following a contract explana~1on meeting at Southern Ohio Coal Company were mixed. Some members gave the thumbs-down as tht>.'' \\l'l'C l<.·nvmg th(> ~athcring. FUP OFCOIN ovsrs MAYOR Couple Questioned About Cash Haul PORTOLA (AP) -This northwestern California com- munity of 1,600 has a new city councilman and an ex-mayor - <tll because of the flip of a coin. The coin toss put retired busi· nessman Glenn D. Howard on the council and put Nayof Res Riehm out of a job. The two .. finished the council election two WC't.>ks ago In a dead heat. . NEW YORK CAP) -A Colom- bian couple were detained and questioned by a number of law enforcement agencies today after showing up at Kennedy Airport to claim baggage con- taanine nearly $600,000 io cash, federal authorities said. The couple were identified aa Colombian nationals Heriberto and 1''anny Castro by David A. DePctris. an assistant US. at- torney in Brooklyn. He said' they new into Ken· oedy late Monday from Los A~g~les and reported their bags massing. According to TWA, Castro Oew from Loe Angeles alone and presumably joined the woman here. The flight arrived at lO :ll p.m. Raimhmoors Expected in North State By The A11odated Pre11 A low pressure aystem was moving slowly eastward across Northern California today bringing a chance ot showers and thundershowers for much or the state by Wednesday. The low brou1ht scattered showers to some parts of Central CalifomJa on Monday, but rain· fall amounts were negligible. Fresno recorded the most ra.in with .13 of an inch tor the a.· houra endin1at4 a.m. today. ID the San Franclaco Bay area, skies will be mostly cloudy with a chance of sho'Vers and perhaps a thundershower througbWednesd1y. The forecast for the Sa cumento Valley calls for mostly cloudy akles with a chance oC showers and i3olated thundenbowera, lncreulni on Wednesday. Halt an loch of rain fell on Bakersfield ln a thtH·hour period durtng the nl1ht, noodlni downtown street• and aome bualnessea. Police aaid at least 1% m.Jor interatdlona were flooded anc:I portions of alx 1treet1 were closed. The National Weather Servtc6 bad recorded only a trace of nln at Bakenfleld by 4 a.m. from a storm that boca.n pelUn1 tht San Joaquin Valley durJn1 tht nllht. Tl\e raJl'\fall lOt.a.l cllmbed to .ai hundredth." by 1 a. m. Tbore were !ears pf pottnUal floodln• lo low-lyln1 art11 around fAmont ln southtrn K rn Co"'1\1· n.t area wa1 bard hlt by nQOdln1 ln ••ti)' ftbruary. UOtoinl WU r.ported 111 th• Sloc&toa atid Jrr .. no arH1. Fr.tao btd a quarttr or an 1.Dch of r&l.n by 7 a.m. • • The Castro bags were aboard •nother TWA plane that landed three hours later after a scheduled st.op in Pittsburgh, ac· cording to Angus McClure, spokesman for TWA. He said the bag~age crew fn Pittsburgh saw that one bae was ripped and that currency was visible through the hole. That in- formation was sent to TWA at Kennedy. Port Authority police were notified and opened the bags when they arrived at about 1:15 s.m., discovering that the two bags held a total of $593,()80. The Castros were ddalned when they showed up at 6:30 a.m. to claim the bags, the Port Authority said. No charges were placed against the couple, but they were being questioned by agents of the New York police, FBI, Drug Enforcement Administra· lion, Internal Revenue Service, and Immi gration and Naturalization Service the Port Authority said. ' A DEA agent said the couple's names were not among the 90 lJste~ in indictments of alleged cocaine smugglers from Colom· b1a, 24 of whom were seized dur· ing the weekend. The IRS filed a jeopardy as· sessment, a device for hold1nl( the money on the likelihood that t•xes are owed on it, accord.Ing to the U.S. attorney's office. Manager Resigns SIGNAL HILL CAP) -John Jameson, 28, baa resigned as Signal Hill city manager alter three years m the ~,OOO·a·year. POst. Howard will serve a Cour-)'1!ar term while councilman Dave Miner will succeed Riehm as mayor. Fro"' Page AJ ISRAEL .•• up to the Utani River, except for a small area around the port ci· ty of Tyre. A token U.N. peacelteeptng force wu walUng to move in wh~n fighting stopped, but U.N. officials in New York said it could be ''weeks or months" before Israel heeded the Securi- ty Council's demand to withdraw troops from Lebanese territory. 2, Injures One LOS ANGELES (AP> -A man and a woman were killed and a third person waa in criUcal condltion aner their car slam med into a boxcar early to. day in the Glauell Park Mdion ot the city, authorities 1ald. ~olice Sergeant Duane DeneU said one of the victims died in the collision and the other died ~n route to hospital. He 1afd the injured person, believed to be th• driver, wu bospitaUitid in C'rltlcal condition at County-USC Medical Center. 4MakeBaul Ho"ldup Y~lds $1 Million ST. JOVITE, Quebec (AP> -Four iunmen held up an armored car at a roadside diner toda}·, shot and woun.dt:~ two guards and escaped wlth more tha_n $1 nulhon, police aald. A third guard was pistol whipped. The robbers t~ed in a stolen truck, later found aba~doned o!" a side rond 10 miles from this cont· mumty. 62 mdea north of Montreal Poµce sai~ the 1uard.s were having a mominJt snnc~ m ~he dmer when the gunmen burst in. Af'ter openmg t1ro. they beat up a ~uard who refUl'ed to yield the truck keys, police said. Contrary to security rule~, the armored truck belonglng to AJllanee Securtte was len un;uarded outside the diner, police said. The firm bandlu 1hipment1 for the province'• credit un.fon1 and recently won, des~lte opposttlon from twa U.S.-own d firms, a permit to transport money and securlUes for lhe Quebec transport board. ---------.... ~ I 7 17 Irvine EDITION VOL 71, NO. 80, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, MARCH 21, 1978 • Waddill: 'Detecting Infant's PUlse'1 By TOM BARLEY Ol t• Dell, l'llM , .... Dr. William Baxter Waddill explained to a jury Monday that what a prosecution witness thought was a strangle hold be- ing applied lo the neck of a newborn baby was actually lus attempt to det~t a pulse. "I was gently palpating for a pulse." he to~d the Orange Coun· ty Superior Court Jury. "I was probing around the trachea " His testimony during hls second day on the witness stand directly refuted that of Dr. Ronald Cornelisen, an Orange pediatrician who is the prosecu- tion's key witness. Cornelisen told the jury that Waddill had a choke hold on the baby girl when he walked into the nursery and made it clear that he intended to murder the ailing infant. Cornelisen testified that Wad· dlll ordered the Westminst-er Community Hospital nursery starr to leave the room and then announced: "This baby can't live." He testified that Waddill pre- d icted the filing of lawsuits totalling millions or dollars in damages If the baby, which al· legedly survived Waddill's al- tempt to abort It. lived. . Cornellseo testified that Wad- dill felt sure the lnfant bad suf- fered massive brain damace ~ a result ol its lmmenion in the saline tolutlon Waddill injected lnto the mother. He said Waddill suggested fo~r other ways in which lbe child could be dlaposed of, in· cludlne drowning it in a bucket of water. Waddill described Coroelisen Monday as "sort of disturbed, emotionally unstable and quite squirrelly." The Huntington Harbour ob- stet r i ci an said he felt Cornelisen 's hostile attitude towards him stemmed from the prosecution's witness' resent· ment of the saline abortions performed by Waddill and other doctors at the Westminster hospital. Waddill said he felt Comellsen may also have decided to tesUfy against him because he felt guil, ty about participating in an iJ. legal abortion. Cornelisen, in bis testimony earlier in the trial, said he believed the abortion performed by Waddill on Mary WeaverlJ8, was ille1tal. <See DOCTOR, Paie A2) 1 , , Lebanon Blasts I i I I i Dilly "1MI l'tlt .. lly •kMN IC~ SEA LIONS 'IN CUSTODY' AFTER THEIR RAMPAGE THROUGH LAGUNA BEACH Escaped Mammals Raise Eyebrows In Downtown Laguna, Gulp Goldfish Sea Lions On Spree Washed Up by Stonn, They Invade Laguna By STEVF. MITCHELL 011 ... 0.1lyPll-4Stetf Laguna Beach c; sick sea lions took over the town two mornings in a row this week, sleeping atop convertibles, window shopping on Forest Avenue and in one case raiding the water dis· tncl 's fish pond Tht• t1o1<0 block excuroion from the sea lions make!>h1ft cages behind the cl.ty sewer plant to L1guna Beach Count v Water District earlv Monda} morning apparently was abetted by a spirited group who had been in a barearher But the \\-ater district took a more sober view of the escapade It cost them about a dozen gold fish , including some venerable favontes And Pohcc Sgt Dave Avers wins the hero title for nearly single-handedly rounding up the slippery bea<;ties during their two.day sprl·e in th~ Art Colony. LAGUNA BEACH LIFEGUARD Jim Stauffer is caring for more than two dozen .,ca lion!> in makeshift cages behind the city's sewer plant The sea lions were washed up durmg the mo!>t recent storms and many of them suffer inJunec; from the rocks and pneumonia But at least five of the cagy creatures were feeling their oats Monday mornmg and early today when the great escapes occurred ll all started Sunday night when a sea hon bit through the chicken wire fence that holds the sick animals 'Thn:.'t' of them got out at about 2 1n the morning," rc>l'all<'d a <.,leepy Stauffer from his home this morning DURING THAT SEA LION siege, one of the 50·pound mammals was followed by an cnrly morning bar crowd from Glenneyre and Forest Avenue up to the water district headquarters a~jacent to City Hall. "The group kind of herded the sea lion toward the pond, and when it saw the goldfish, it went nuts," Stauffer said. The barking sea hon leaped into the pond, accordmA to Sgt Avers, "and began eating everything that moved m the water." The final toll was about a dozen goldfish, according to water d1str1ct general manager Joseph Sweeney, who got that estimate from water superintendent Dan McDaniel. "DAN KNEW ALL THE fish in there by their first names " Sweeney said "There .... as an old fantail that would come up to the surface and v1s1t with all the kids. That sea hon ate the fantail and a lot more." Sgt Avers cornered the well-fed sea lion in the pond and Stauffer captured him. That was Monday mormnll. La<;t night, under the cover of darkness, two more sea hons slipped out of the com· pound and into town THIS TIMF. THEY CRAWLED over the bodies or their comrades to make their co;capc Stauffer said ·'They all hkc to he on top of each other, he said. "Two of the sea hons Just crawled up the slecpmR bodies and over the top." The smaller of the two escapees was quickly rounded up by Avers. but the larger of the pair cscaj)('d to Third and Mermaid Streets when• the pohce sergeant found it asleep atop the convertible top of a car · A\crs got that one with a leash," Stauf· fer said "HE CAUGHT OR CORNERED all of them," the sc•a lion doctor said this morning. So I've made him an honorary Friend or the Sea Lion for putting up with those clowns for two mornings in a row." Stauffer said he won't be rousted from his bed tonight ''I'm gomg out there later this afternoon to see if I can keep them in their ca~es," he said. Thus ending the sea lion siege in Laguna Beach. I 'No Danger' Mysterious Meteor Flashes Over Coast · f'rom China's : Bomb Debris WASHINGT-ON <AP) - Radioactive debris from China's recent nuclear explosion will ar- rive over the U.S East Coast late today, but the Environmen- lal Protection Agency HYI there la no cause for alarm. "We do not anticipate any .:ause ror concern during f paasa•e or contaminated air ' over the United States," srud Barbara Blum, EPA deputy ad· mlnislrator. .. The nuclear clouds are belng earrled by winds at altitudes ' ~bove 20,000 feet, EPA aald, and are exceed to conUnue passin1t over the United State. unttl Sun- G day. .. Tliit contamination ts not ;movln1 as a 1in&J<' aJr ma .. but b beln1 lranaported ln patches at dlfler ot •P ds and dJf-f rent alUtudos. Conaequ ntly, • no 1tn1t t.r.J c1or)' of the d brts Ui WQU!d glvo Ule tru pie· · ( D P•••.U) A quiet Monday night at Orange Coast police depart· ments was interrupted by phone calls from residents who spotted a mysterious blue-«re•n f1a.sh across tbe sky about 9 · 50 p. m. "AU I can figure out is that it was a meteor," said a National Weather ~rvice spokesman who reported dozens of phone calls from Soulhem CalirorniaM about the fireball that shot across the sky in a northwester ly direction. Gunter Vogel or Costa Mesa aaid he was reclining in bis jacu1d when a light that "looked like the blunt •nd of an en" raced across bis vlew • "It was so amazln1 that l not· ed all the dewns," ht Hid. "The center p0lnt hltd a small plnkiab 1pot, but moaUy tt WU Uvery white with• veen h tall." Voael tald the tlah luted le. ~ than a MCOOd, bu.t WH "balf the alu of tbe moon.." , ' The streaking light was visible as far south as San Diego where close to 100 residents phoned police between 9:45 and 9:50 p.m The lone flash apparently was not related to two asterot~ that streaked past Earth earlier this month, Ule cl0$~t coming eight million miles away last Wednes· day evening. Newspaper Drive Slated in Irvine The lrvlne Teen Center b con· ducUng a recycled paper drive and will pick up newa~ra from dty re ldeou on Thurldaya, a ipo man has an- nounced. The Teen ~ttr, l~ated at 18552 OUlver DtlH, can be eon· tacted at 752·Wl (or further J.n. lot mat.Ion. Cease-fire Vow TEL AVIV, Israel (AP> - Israel declared a cease-fire in southern Lebanon today. but the Palestinian military command said it was "not enough " "The m1mster of defense has instructed the c,,hief of the general staff to effect a cease- fire along the entire front m Lebanon as of 1800 hours today." said the brief Israeli army spokesman's announcement. "As from that hour the Israeli defense forces will maintain a cease.fire." In Lebanon, Mahmoud Girl Grabs Purse in Irvine Heist Irvine police are seeking a teen-age girl who knocked an elderly Irvine woman to the ground and grabbed her purse, then fled in a waiting car. Pohce said the victim. Nma Bell Van Brunt, 82, suffered tn· juries to her right hand and knee in the struggle at about 5 p.m. Monday. They said the victim was walkine home from shopping when she passed the girl, who was silting on a planter near the intersection o( Michelson Drive and Butler Stre~t. The girl reportedly said "hello," waited till the woman had passed her and then lunged at her. grabbing her purse and knocking the woman down in the ensuing struggle. The girl, described as tall and thm with shoulder-length brown hair, just laughed when her vie· ti m asked her to return the purse. saying it contained her medication. The :.uspect chmbed into a \\ailing car. described as a white American-made sedan. and drove away No description of the driver was available, police said. The purse. missing $20 in cash, was later recovered by a tenant of a nearby apartment complex who round it in his parking place, poli~e said. Irvine School Board Mulls Tax Measures Trustees of the Irvine Unified School Dist.rid will be asked Wednesday to decide if they want to take a position on either the Jarvis or the Behr tax relief amendments. The Jarvis biU, Proposition 13 on the June ballot, would cul property taxes to one percent of ' cash valae. Critics have charged the but would mean dra1Uc cuts in school revenues. The Behr b6U, approved by the state Le1lalature, . and con· tlncentontheJarvisbill'adereat, wouJd briq-more modest tax re- Uef to bomeownora but would not aff ectachoolt. Tho sneet.tn1 wlll bctln at T:30 p.m. at lrviDe Hieb Schoo.I, 4321 Walnut Ave. COncert SCh doled Labadi, spokesman for the Palestine Liberation Organiza· tion. said "Israel's declaration or a cease-fire is not enough. What is needed is an uncond1· tional tot.al withdrawal by Israel from the whole of south Lebanon." The PLO earlier brushed aside Israeli talk of a cease-fire, but observers in Beirut believed the final response would depend on the outcome of Syrian-Lebanese talks under way in Damascus Tbe announcement came arter a day of seattered shooting Sl.6 Billion between Israeli forces and Palestinian guerrillas around Tyre. But the shooting had died down from previous days. Seven days ago Israel launched an air, land and sea al· tack to clear Palestinian guer· rillas from the area along its northern border. The operation followed a Palestinian terrorist attack m Israel which killed 3S Israelis. The lsraeh announcement C'ame as Prime Minister Menachem Be~in was meeting (See ISRAEL, Page A2) Water Board Eyes 30 ¥ears Work By JACKJE HYMAN OI -o.r l'llM Stall Directors of the Irvine Ranch Wat er DisUict denied Monday that a proposed Sl.6 billion bond issue for uninhabited ar~as in the district would encourage the development of what are now open lands in Irvine, Tustin and nearby county territory . They also continued unlit March 27 public hearings on the proposed bond issue, which would be· one of the biggest in Orange County history. Responding to a call by en· vironmentalist Wesley Marx for an environmental impact report. board Chairman L.E. Eberling said the election would give the districL only the capacity lo sell bonds for ...s.e'!'e.r. water and ir· rigation lines if development were approved by the cities or county. Water directors have declared * * * Water Bonds, Districts Go to Vote By LAURIE KASPER Ot I .. o.tty ...... St6tl Santa Mllrgartla Water Dis· trict directors have scheduled a May 23 election on the formallon of six new improvement dis· tricts and the authorization or about $1.3 billion in bonds ror the proposed special districts. The water and sewer districts -rive on the 44,000·acre Rancho Mission Viejo and another on un· denloped Mission Viejo Com· pany land -were requested by the property owners. The only voters in the bid to rorm the districts will be the landowners -principally the O'Neill family and its bank-held tru11t and the Mission Viejo Com· pany. A public hearing on the forma- tion of the districts Monday was contintied to April 5. Although no one opposed the new districts, the hearinc was continued because some chances were m~ute ln cost· figures. said Bill Knttz. manacer of the Santa Maraattta district. Knits said the bond amo~t Is high because hoprovemenll in the districts arc not 1cbcduttd tor a rtumbtr of years. He uld tnnauon was Included lo Ute cost eatlma ~ The manaaer said th~ dlttrtcl, are bdnj tOrmed now aa part or the dJ~tt's overall p~ procs:-am. Alao. ht aald, the bondi must proved before .Ju.,. t avo 4 tho etrecw d the .Jarvb·G lftitfative, wblcb it a ed at. JiJnttiq ~ WCI· Uoo lo Ca.Utomla. tbat no environmental impact report 1s necessary. At issue is a proposal to call an electioo May 23 to approve ltte b<>nds'. Funding is sought for the district's share or a large water oioeline from the Metropolitan Water District res· ervoirin Yorba Linda. Jn addition, the election would create a number of new in· divldual improvement districts and permit the district to sell bonds as needed to fund services in now undeveloped land over the next JO years Although the estimated cost of the improvements would be S311 million al today's prices. the total cost including an escalation factor to allow for inflation is estimated at Sl 2 billion. plus $394 million rn interest. The pipeline share would be about S2 5 million. Undeveloped areas involved include parts of Irvine and Tustin and the Irvine Company property between Corona del Mar and l~guna Beach, as welt as parts of El Toro. Each individual district would vote on iL<> own future bonded in· debtedness. In most of the dis· lricts in question, which are un- inha biled, the landowners would be the only voters. The major landowner in these areas is the Irvine Company. A spokesman for the district also denied that directors are seeking the May election to circumvent what could be the ef- fects of the Jarvis-Gann tax limitation initiative <Proposition CSee BOND, Page At) Coast Weather Cooler Wednesda y. Chance Of measurable rain 70 percent Wednesday. Lows tonight SO lo SS. Highs WednesdayS8to65. IN IDE TODA. Y WASP ~$ may have not rtctiv•d the $Clmt Vftttartl' ~fib a. mole cowslnparts, but they hoM a high d.egrH of cornarodem · Su Feat&ni, Page Cl. .. 1 ,, ..,. -.... -- ltl-.B..Uttg .............. American Indian Movement leader Dennu; Banks cannot he extradited from CaHfornia to trial Jn South Dakota, according to the California Supreme Court. OC Seeking I.and Use Plan Funds Orange County planners hope lo obtain more than $500,000 from state coffers the next two years to develop a conservation and land use plan for much of the unincorporated county <.'Oa!>thne. But even as county planning comm1S61oners put their stamp of approval on the two-year work plan Monday, the planners admitted that only about half the $500.000 might be available Richard Munsell, an assistant director of the county Environ- mental Management Agency, said he exept>cts the state ot the Regional and State Coastal Com· m1~!-tt0ns may trim out parts of the work plan to reduce the cost. Under terms of the Cahfomia Coastal Act of 1976, cities and tounties alon~ the shoreline may cl1·vt•lop coai-lal land use plans "'1th the h<•lp of state financing. On<'C• thr>!)t' local plans are ap· provC'd hy tlh• State Coastal Cnmm1ss1on. the local gov- t•rn mental a~enc1es would take over the 1ssu1ng of permit..s for dl.'velopment along the coast. Monday the commission ap- proved a hst of planning tasks to be completed for the Sunset Beach Boba Chica area, the South Coast region and the Aliso Creek area. Two more hearings have been set for March 27 and April 10 on planning issues along the Irvine Coast. Those hearings will be at 7 p m. al the Irvine City Council chambers. or the $500,000 in planning costs oulhned so far, county of· f1c1als hope to spend about S66,000 on consultant..s lo help e>va luate energy facilities, marine resources and hazard areas. They also want to earmark $73,333 for displays, mailings and brochures lo encourage citizen participation in the plan's development, $68,964 to study ways of protecting scenic areas and $62,190 lo evaluate coastline recreation poss1b1htlcs. F,....PflfleAI DEBRIS ••.• · tu re," an EPA announcement sard. The first or the radioactive clouds arrived over Alaska, western Canada and the Paclfic. Northwest late Sunday and early Monday, EPA said. Some nuclear debris may have been brought to the ground by precipitataon over Alaska and the Pacific Northwest, EPf said. "There ls also a potential for a washout or debris by rainfall over the eastern half of the Unit· ed Stales," jt added. DAILY PILOT ::.°'=.:"'...:i:.'T.===~= CW<1 -.....c-.-.s_. ... ..,., ...... .,. fl•Jtlll--... ( ........ ,,. .... , ,., C...Lo -.--.H-.............. ~-· t.i~ Yelley, ,,,. ..... ·-' lfollf• -:r:~=;:r~;:; ~~-.. ··-llef ..._o.aaww.c-•1...-ou..._ . ...., ...... ---, ...... c.w, Yiel ...................... __ ,___, ..... ··- Beaches from S!nd Street in Newport Beach to Brookhurat Street in Huntington Beach re· main closed today and will prob- ably remain quarantined unlit Wednesday. accordlne t,o -Orange County Health Oeparl· menl officials. ' The beaches were closed March 13 when a broken sewer main in the Santa Ana River sent raw sewage flowln1 out the river mouth, contaminaUn1 the beaches. With the sewage Une pumping out more than four million gallons of wast~ a day. health of. ficials banned public u.se or the beaches stretching from 38th Street in Newport to Beach Boulevard in Huntington Beach. Monday, with the repair of the sewer line, the ban was parti41.lly lifted so that only the area from 52nd Street t.o Brook.burst Street • remains closed. Robert Stone, director or en- vironmental health for the coun- ty Health Department said to· day it could take until Wednes· day to gel confirmed tests which would show the absence or dangerous levels oC bacteria at the closed beaches. He explained that the last con· firmed tests, taken Saturday. show nearly normal bacteria counts at the outer edges of the quarantine area, although the area around the river mouth was nearly five times higher in amount of bact.eria than allowed by law. "We can only make a pre· sumplion based on the samples taken Sunday." be said, "but 1l looks very good at all stat.ions." Stone said that the confirmed results of Sunday's test..s are not likely to be available ualll Wednesday. Meanwhile, be said the beaches would remain closed and the Health Department will continue to make daily tests of waler samples. •'The bacteria samples seem to be coming down,·• he said, "but we want to be con- servative. We won't lift the quarantine until we are sure the beaches are within the state standard.'' Vtilitg Pirketed Some 40 members of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, Local 47, picket Southern California Edison Company's district offices in El Toro this morning in support of union demands for wage and benefit improvements. Picket- ing before work hours have begun has not been sanctioned by the union, a self· described group spokesman said. Workers are seeking a 10 percent wage boost in negotiations which have continued since their contract expired Jan. 1. The spokesman said the union members. who are not on strike, are disturbed with the negotiations' slow pace. Couple Questioned About Cash Haul NEW YORK <AP) -A Colom. bian couple were detained and questioned by a number or law enforcement agencies today after showing up at Kennedy Airport to claim baggage con- taining nearly $600,000 in cash, federal authorities said. The couple were identified as Colombian nationals Heriberto and Fanny Castro by David A. DePetris, an assistant U.S. at- torney in Brooklyn. He said they new into Ken· nedy late Monday from Los Angeles and reported their bags missing. According to TWA, Castro flew from Los Angeles alone and presumably joined the woman here. 1be flight arrived at 10:15 p.m. The Castro bags were aboard another TWA plane that landed three hours later after a scheduled st.op in Pittsburgh, ac· cording lo Angus McClure, spokesman for TWA. He said the baggage crew in Pittsburgh saw that one bag was ripped and that currency was visible through the hole. That in- formation was sent to TWA al Kennedy. Port Authority police were notified and opened the bags when they arrived at about 1: 15 a .m .• discovering that the two bags held a total of $593,080. DOCTOR ••• The baby's mother has sued WaddiJJ for S17 miJlion in damages in a lawsuit which ac· cuses him of misrepresenting the state of her pregnancy. The prosecution claims that the baby was 31 weeks from con- ception when it was aborted. Wad dill has testified that the in· faot WQS 22 weeks from concep- tion. WaddiU stre5sed throughout a long day on the witness stand that the baby be allegedly murdered on March 2. 1977, never had life. "It was pale and cold and life· less," he testified. ''I couldn't find a pulse, I couldn't detect a heart beat and I certainly didn't see it breathing." . San Juan Prepares To Close Airport The Castros were detained when they showed up at 6:30 a.m. to claim the bags, the Port Authority said. No charees were placed against the couple, but they were being questioned by agents of.. the New York pohce. FBI, Drug Enforcement Admintst.ra- tton. Internal Revenue SerV1ce, and Imm1grat1on and Naturalization Service, the Port .Authority said. Waddill said the only move· ment he could detect in the baby were several short gasps. "But that was agonal gasping, the evidence of dealh and not life.'' he said. Cornelisen and hospital nurses have testified that the baby girl delivered by Miss Weaver cried when it was expelled from the womb and gave evidence of life as it was being rushed lo the nursery. County efforts to locate and develop an alternative south Orange County general aviation airport appear to be too little and too late as San Juan coun· cilmen prepare to go ahead with June 1 plans to close Capistrano Airport. "Locating, acqoiring and building another airport site is a long process," San Juan City Manager James Mocalis said to- day. "I've Informally polled each individual councilman and they do not support keeping the ·airport open past June 1." That news shocked south Orange County Airport comm.it-· tee members who have asked to appear before the council Afril S lo request an extension o the Rains~rs Expected in North State By 1be Auodated Press A low pressure system was moving slowly eastward across Northern California today, bringing a chance of showers and thubdenbowers for much or the state by Wednesday. Tbe low brouiht scattered showers to some part& or Central Calilomia on Monday, but rain· Call amounts were negligible. Fresno recorded the most rain with .13 of an inch for the 24 hours ending at 4 a.m. today. In the San FranclJco Bay area, akies will be mOltly cloudy with a chance of sbo•en and perhaps a tbunderabower throu«b Wedn.eld.ay. airport's life pending tbe out· come of an ongoing county study to develop another airport. The committee is composed of Capistrano Airport pilots who are advocating another general aviation facility in tbe south county area. "We certainly have someWng in the miJJ," committee member Tony DiGiovanni, former San Clement.e mayor, said today, cit· iog a closure loophole set up by San Juan's old council to extend the airport's life if serious plans were under way t.o build another facility. I',..,. Page Al • ISRAEL ••• with President Carter in Washington and as the United Nations tried to work out details ol a U.N. peacekeeping force to go into southern Lebanon. There was no immediate in· dication if Israel had taken a unilateral action in announcing the ceas~·fire and whether the Palestine Liberation Organiza· lion would go along with an end to hostilities. The Israeli army claimed to control all of southern Lebanon up to the Litani River, except for a small area around the port ci· ty or Tyre. A token U.N. peacekeeping force was wailing lo move in when fighting stopped, but U.N. orficials in New York said it could be "weeks or months" before Israel heeded the Securi· ty Council's demand to withdraw troops from Lebanese ~rrlt.ory. A DEA agent said the couple's names were not among the 90 IJ;,ted in indictments of alleged cocaine smugglers from Colom· bia, 24 of whom were seized dur· ing the weekend. The IRS filed a jeopardy as· sessment, a device for holding the money on the likelihood that taxes are owed on it, according to the U.S. attorney's office. Jail Sentence Ordered for El Toro Arson An El Toro man who admitted that he set a fare which inflicted damage estimated at $5,000 at a Mission Viejo pool hall was sen- tenced Monday lo 60 days in Orange County Jail. Superior Court Judge H. War· ren Knight ordered the jail term and five years probation Cor Daniel J. M. Bendgen, 39, of 21802 Ticonderoga Lane, Lake Forest. Bendgen was arrested Dec. 7 alter setting a fire that badly damaged Dan's Billiards, 256.52 Taladro Circle, Mission Viejo. Sheriff's officers said a witness told them he saw &!ndgen car- rying a gas can onto the prem· ises shortly before fire broke out. 0£ficers said Bendgen wanted revenge oo the property owner who earlier had forced the de· fendant to give up his tease on the pool ball. Registered nurse JoAnn Gnf· fith testified that the baby had a clearly discernible heart beat and was improving its labored breathing when Waddill hailed her resuscitation efforts and pushed her out of the nursery. Sears Warns: Beetles Bug Bunny Baskets CHICAGO <A PJ -Up to 100,000 Easter baskets were re- called by Sears, Roebuck and Co. today because they may con· lain beetles. There is believed to be no health hazard. Sears said, but the wrapped baskets should be returned to the near('i;l Sears store. The baskets. sold in all parts of the country. may contain an insect known as powder-post beetles, said Gar Ingraham. vice president of Sears retail sales. He said the beetles. whjch thrive on bamboo aod other fibrous materials, have been found in the weave of some bam- boo baskets. "While the Easter merchan· dise is wrapped and not believed to be contaminated. we simply do not want to lake any chances, so we are askjng our customer<; to return all Easter baskets purchased from Sears," In· graham added. The baskets range in price from $2.99 to $39.99. f'roaa r~ A•. BOND ••• 13) should it pass June 6. 8ood ues approved before June would not be subject totbe llmltations of the bill. which would cut property taxes drastically. Arthur Korn, secretary of the Jrvloe Ranch Water District, said the long ran&e planning was sparked by consideration or lhe Yorba Linda pipehne and Utat the May date is bei.n.g C011$idored becauae ol contracts. He calle«I the (act that the t.•lection would come just before the June election "a rather in· teresting coincidence." Korn also said that, wbile seeklng bonds to fioance ~m· provement.a through the year ~10 may be unµsual, ''the district-has alwaysdooelta planning as far in~ lo the future as we could look .•• A questwn was also raised at Monday·~ meeting a,, t.o whether or not tJ>e IRWD Board of Dire<:- tors is qualified to call a bond election because five of its seven members are appointed by landowners, primarily the Irvine Company. The other two are elected by registered voters. But JRWD directors said Mon· day that, under state law, a water district board need not be elected by popular vote until the district is at least 50 percent urbanized. Directors said they will con· tinue hearings on the bond issue until March 27 to allow the cities or Irvine and Tustin and the County of Orange to comment. They pointed out that bearings began last week and criticiz~ the cities and county for their "laxness" in not responding sooner to the proposed election. Equal, Time For Felines? LOS ANGELES <AP) - Actor David Madden of ''The Partridge Family" television series says if dogs need licenses so should cats and he intends to appeal a $50 fine levied on him for not buying licenses for his two poodles. The fine was imposed Monday by Van Nuys Municipal Court Judge Hobert De\'ICh, who also ordered the actor to obtain the dog hcenses by April 18 as a pre-condition for being placed on one year·s probation. However, Devich stayed the fine after Madden's lawyer. Bruce Wolfe, an· nounced he intended to file "an appeal on the con· st1tutional issue of equal protection " Collision Kills 2, Injures One LOS ANGELES CAP) -A man and a woman were killed and a third person was in cnt1cal condition after their car slammed int.o a boxcar early to- day in the Glassell Park section . of the city, authorities said. Police Sergeant Duane Denell said one of the victims died in the colhsion and the other died en route t.o hospital. He said the inJured person. believed to be the driver, was hospitalized in cnllcat condrllon at County-USC Medical Center. East,er Egg Hums Slated .. Easter egg hunts will be held beginning al 10 a.m. Saturday in three Irvine parks. These are University Com· mun1ty Park, 1 Beech Tree Lane ; Harvard Community At hlelic Park, 14701 Harvard Ave ; and Hoeptner Park, 1 Ho<'ptner Age groups are pre-school, kindergarten and first grade, S('COnd and third grade, and fourth through siJCth grades. In- formation is available by calling 754·3639. The forecast for the Sacramento Valley calla for mostl1 cloud1 1tte1 wf tb a chance of •howen and llolated tbundersbo•en. lacreulna on WodDesday. HB Signs Springing lfp Nos~Film Featiml, Set Never mind t.be noctts and the daffodil, Huntlnston Beach is bloomlne tbi• aprlnr wltb thou.sanda ol political signs. City watchers HY there never has been anythln1 like it. The •lint are nearly every- ,whero -oo top of Ciant crues and lo cll.y parlrwa13, planter areas and center medians. Somo bave been plct.cd 1n lhe green irau oftbe clYtc center. Part of the trouble ls that •lCN ha been put wbero they doo't bcloas. Only nobody knew for 1u1'9 .._,.that ii. Tbe HuntJattora Be.eh C1t.r CoUftcil moved~ Monday ntOt to tor or,s r by voUnt to tlltore a current alp ordlnan~. at ordinance probl~lta • slgn•, poUtlcal or otherwise, from belne placed in public rlgbts-<>f·way such as medians, planter areas, gutters and sidewalks. This is the policy the city adhered to ln past elections before wavering this spring after a chJUtee in the 1iin or· dioance. lo a report to the city councU. Clty Admln.latrator Bud Bebtto recommepd•d that pollUcal 1lp1 be aJ.Jowed In publlc rilht.s· of·•ay u lon1 as lbey don't cause a 1alety baaard to ped Lrtans and motortsla. Re aald a areal deal of clly Ume would be SPf"bl removtn1 lho orfendina 1l1na ~ca~ of ' their inordinate numbers. Belsito based his recommen- d n U on on a city attorney opinion which said the ~n on political signs in publJc ri&ht.s-<>f· way could be a vlolJlUon of the freedom of speech. Mayor Pro Tom Ron Shenkmen and Couftcllman Richard Sie~rt led tho llsht •talnst the promiscuous al1n.~. Shenkman saJd th.al he was concerned tor the aafety of motorl.'ils who mJ1ht bave their attention diverted by sJps. "Tbere \1 a po11lblllty or 1ertoUJ Hcfdenla," he aaid. Siebert Aid be wu concerned about 11af~y a well as tht city's liability for aprlnk1er 1ys~m5 and toliaae that mlaht be , damaged. Mayor Ron Pattinson, Ted Bartlett, Al Coen, Shenkman and Siebert voted m favor oC the restrictions. Harriett Wieder, who is run. nlng for Orange Cou nt y supervisor, cast lhe only no vote. . She saJd the city was taking an elltlat approach and that the quarrel &eemed to be much adn about oothina. Be~lto 1aJd h<' planned to con· tact all candidates today to re· move unautborlzed 1lgn.s. City crews -.ould remove them aft.er houn and the city ~rhaps would charge the olfen· dera for tho opens~. Bel!iilo "aid. I:.ag1111a I South Coast Afternoon N.Y.Stoeks IVOLW;ddill: ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA I By TOM BARLEY Oii U. Dally Pli.t llMI 'Detecting Infant's Pulse' ' l>r. William Baxter Waddill explained to a jury Monday that what a prosecution witness thought was a strangle hold 00. ing applied to the neck or a newborn baby was actually his attempt to detect a pulse. probing around the trachea." His testimony during his second day on the witness stand directly refuted that of Dr. Ronald Cornelisen, an Orange pediatrician who 1s the prosecu- tion's key witness. aillng Want. CorneUsen testLOed that Wad· dill ordered the Westminster Community Hospital nursery staff to leave the room and then announced: .. This baby can't live." "I was gently palpating for a f pulse," he told the Orange Coun- ty Superior Court jury. "I was Cornelisen told the jury that Waddill bad a choke bold on the baby girl when he walked into the nursery and made it clear that he intended to murder the He testified that Waddill pre- dicted the filine of lawsuits totalling millions of dollars in damages if the baby, which al- legedly survived Waddill 's at-,.,,___ ______ ____ • f . I f t r t Delly ............ ..., ._kMN k-r SEA LIONS 'IN CUSTODY' AFTER THEIR RAMPAGE THROUGH LAGUNA BEACH Escaped Mammals Raise Eyebrows In Downtown Laguna, Gulp Goldfish Sea Lions On Spree Washed Up by Sto~ They Invade Laguna By STEVE MITCHELL Of Ille Dally r1i.t Matt Laguna Beach's sick sea hons tookovel' the town two mornings in a row this week, sleeping atop converllbles. window shopping on Forest A venue and in one case raiding the water dis· trict 's fish pond. The two block excursion from the sea lions makeshift cages betnnd the city sewer plant lo Laguna Beach County Water District early Monda) morning apparently was abetted by a :. p1 n ted group who had ~n in a bar earlier. But the water district took a more sober view of the escapade. It cost them about a dozen ~old fish, including some venerable favorites. And Police Sgt. Dave Avers wins the hero title for nearly single-handedly rounding up the shppery beasties dunng their two-day spree in the Art Colony. LAGUNA BEACH LIFEGUARD Jim Stauffer is caring for more than two dozen sea lions in makeshift cages behmd the city's sewer plant. The sea lions were washed up during the most recent storms and many of them surter injuries from the rocks and . pneumonia. But at least five of the cagy creatures were feeling their oats Monday morning and early today when the great escapes occurred. It all started Sunday night when a sea lion bit through the chicken wire fence that holds the sick animals. "Three of them got out at about 2 in the morning," recalled a sleepy Stauffer from his home th.is morninl?. DURING THAT SEA LION siege, one of the 50-pound mammals was followed by an early morning bar crowd from GleMeyre and Forest Avenue up to the water district headquarters adJacent to City Hall. "The group kind of herded the sea lion toward the pond, and when it saw the goldfish, it went nuts,'' Stauffer said. The barkinf sea lion leaped int-0 the pond, according to Sgt. Avers, "and beean l.'ating everything that moved in the water.·• The final \.Oii was about a d9zen goldfish, according to water district gerieral manager Joseph Sweeney, who got that estimate from water supenntendent Dan McDaq1el. ''DAN KNEW ALL THE fish in there by their first names,'' Sweeney said. "There was an old fantail that would come up to the surface and visit with all the kids. That sea lion ate the fantail and a lot more." Sgt. Avers cornered the well-fed sea hon in the pond and Stauffer captured him. That wac; Monday mornan~. Last night. under the cover of darkness, two more sea lions slipped out of the com- pound and into town. THIS TIME THEY CRAWLED over the bodies of their comrades to make their escape, Stauffer said ''They all hke to lie on top of each other, he said. "Two of the sea lions just crawled up the s leeping bodies and over the top." The smaller of the two escapees was quickly rounded up by Avers, but the larger of the pair est'aped lo Third and Mermaid Streets where the police sergeant found it asleep atop the convertible \.Op of a car. "Avers got that one with a leash," Stauf- fer said. "HE CAUGHT OR CORNERED all of them ," the sea lion doctor said this morning. .. So I've made him an honorary Friend o( the Sea Lion for pulling up with those clowns for two mornings in a row." Stauffer said he won't be rousted from his hcd tonight. "I'm going out there Jater this afternoon to see if I can keep them in their cages," he said. Thus ending the sea lion siege in Laguna Beach. Student lnfltn Studied· CUSD Trustees Weigh Spending Reaourees -$810,000 for new showers and Jockers at Capistrano Valley High School in M~siob Viejo, BC· quiring relocatable facmues for t.his purpose unUl permanent ones are built. -$1t8, millb>n for a new elementary school in L&IW\A Niguel, the she of tha achool'de- pendtn&. oo whether the district c-.n a~e a te or !unds tor a sit. ftotn area developen. -$350,000 lbr additional re· .locatable classrooms to ~used at achoob throughout the dis· trlct. · Sctiool board preslct.nt Ted Kopp of Caplstrono Beach qu • tloned whether addfllonal ~l«nulltary clatsroo~s shouldn't be atven i>rtdlil$ over l\ew Caplltrano Valley sh<>w<sr factlltles. "Thi dlatrlcl will be ablo to hou1e eltmentuy acbool 1to· dmta over tho next tn ye an," i1ld 'l'ttoniJle1. ''Tho CtWlch will com at lb til&li jcbool I tempt to abort It, lived. Corneliaen testified that Wad· dill felt sure the infant bad suf. fered massive brain damue as a result ot its Immersion Ui the saJlne solut1oo Waddill injected into the mOther. He said Waddill suggested four other ways in which the child could be disposed of, in· eluding drowning it in a bucket or water. Waddill described Comeliaen 'Monday as "sort of disturbed, emotionally unstable and quite squirrelly." The Huntington Harbour otr stet r i clan said he felt Corn ellsen 's bostil e a ttltude towards him stemmed from the prosecution's witness' resent- ment of the saline abortions performed by Waddill and other doctors at the Westminster hospital. < Wad dill said be f eJt Comellsen l may also have decided to testif~I against him because he felt gun.., ty about participating in an iW legal abortion. ~ Cornellsen, in his testimony earlier in the trial, said be believed the abortion performed by Waddµl on Mary Weaver, 18,1 was ille~l. (See DOCTOB, P•ito A2> Lebanon Blasts Cease-fire Vow TEL AVIV, Israel CAP> - Israel declared a cease-fire in southern Lebanon today, but the Palestinian military command said it was "not enough." •'The minister of defense has instructed the chief of the general staff to effect a cease· fire along the entire front m Lebanon as or 1800 hours today," said the brief Israeli army spokesman's announcement. "As from that hour the Israeli defense forces will maintain a cease-lire." . In Lebanon, Mahmoud San Juan's Airport To Close? County efforts to locate and develop an alternalive south Oranae..Coam¥ pneral avi&.tlGQ airport appear to be too little and too late as San Juan coun- cilmen prepare to go ahead with June l plans to close Capistrano Airport. ''Locating, acquiring and ·building another airport site is a long process," San Juan City Manager James Mocalis said to. day. "I've informally polled each Individual councilman and they do not support keeping the airport open past June 1.' · That news s hocked south Orange County Airport commit- tee members who have asked to appear before the council April S to request an extension of the airporl"s life pending the out- come of an ongoing county study to develop another airport. The committee is composed of Capistrano Airport pilots who are advocating another general aviation facility in the south county area. ··We certainly have something in the mill," committee member' Tony DlGiovanni, former San Clemente mayor. said today, cit· ing a closure loophole set up by San Juan's old council to extend the airport's life if serious plans were under way to build another facility. Three of San Juan's present <See AlltPORT, Page A2) Tavern Thief Grabs Coins An early morning burglar was seen running from a tavern In Laguna Beach with his hancti full of cash from two coin machines. Police said a custodian saw the thief leaving the Marine Roo~? .214 Ocean Ave. at about 4 : 15 tru.S morning. The burglar made orr with. an unknown amou,nt of cotns from a cigarette machine and Ju)[e box in the tav~rn. Officen are aeeklna a white man 1n hil mld·forlles 1ritb sbGrt halr and weart.,,g aports clot.bes. They said tho 'thief left pry tools behind hen ho fled tho ba.c. Clothing Stolen ~ Stor.e Burg)~ Labadi, spokesman for lhe Palestine Liberation Organiza- tion, said "Israel's declaration of a cease-fire is not enough. What is needed is an uncondi- tional total withdrawal by Israel from the whole of south Lebanon." The PLO earlier brushed aside Israeli talk of a cease-fire, but observers in Beirut believed the final response would depend on the outcome or Synan-Lebanese la I ks under way in Damascus. The announc~ment came after a day of scattered shootin~ between Israeli forces ana Palestinian guerrillas around Tyre. But the shooting had di~ down from previous days. Seven days ago Israel launched an air, land and sea at- tack to clear Palestinian guer· rillas from the area along its northern border. The operation followed a Palestinian terrorist attack in Israel which killed 35 Israelis. ' The Israeli announcement came as Prime Minister Menachem Begin was meeting <See ISRAEL, Page AZ> Fake Bomb DelaYs 2 Trains at Capo I { Two Santa Fe Railroad train.I were delayed nearly two hours Monday while members of the county sherif'C'6 bomb squad de- termUied th•t a suitcase left oo the tracks hear Capistrano Beach wasn't a bomb. Deputies held a 17-year-old West Covina youth from about 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. while the squad worked on the suitcase, which was filled with wires. batteries, lights and a tape recorder. The boy. who has a history or mental problems, eventually was re- leased to his parents, depulies said A sheriff's spokesman said a witness saw the boy place the suitcase on Santa Jo'e tracks near the Beach Cities offramp of the San Die-go Freeway. The wit.neiw contacted a Doheny State Beach ranger who held the youth until deputies arrived. Delayed during the investiga- tion were a southbound freight and a northbound passenger train. deputies said. The youth's parents, who were fishing at Doheny, told deputies the boy had placed similar packages on tracks in the past to record the passage of trains. 'Mr. Flower Show' Harry Macres Dies 'Harry Macres. known as Mr. Flower Show in OranRe County ror more than three decades. is deadattheagcof89. The Santa Ana businessman's family operated florist shops in Santa Ana and Laguna Beach. and his floral arrangements had been the centerpiece of the Orange County Fair since the late 1940s. Mr. Macres was known as Mr . Flower Show for his manage- ment or the floriculture building at the Orange County fair- grounds Cor many years. He was still active in the busi- ness, which includes a shop at 490 South Coast JJighway in Laguna Beach. up untH tbe Ume of his death Saturday. Mr. Macres moved to Orange County in 1931 opening his first nursery and florist shop in Santa Ana. At one lime the florist operated five flower shops in the Safe Cracking Attempt Fails A safe at the San Clemente bus depot Wat damaged, but not opened, in an unsuccessful burglary attempt discovered at 8 a.m. Monday, when the station opened Cot business. Police said someone apparent~ 1y cut a hole in lhe roof to Cain entrance to both the bus de\)Ot and the lllijolnlng Anchor Travel office, at 306 s. El Camino Real. The burl1ar tried to open the ufe wltb hand tools and a crowbar, DOl1co aurmls..t from tools Jett belltod. Nothln• was rePortetd tnlsaln& trom eltbet" buslneas. Pea Zone Sought ltUALA LUMPUR, Mal~la CAP>-Srt ,Litnb and Malaysia •ppealec:t to tho UnltOa States and the Soviet U loo to J"edu their nvilry iJl Uie lncllaa Ocean and declare it a 10 of peace; • county. He is survived by his wife Jo: sons Barry of Laguna Beach, Al and David of Santa Ana and James of Reno. Mr. Macres is also s urvived by daughter, Gena Fishcle of Lake Arrowhead: 15 grandchildren and seven great• gr andchildren. Services will be held Thursday at 10 a .m. at the Brown Colonial Chapel in Santa Ana. Burial will follow in Melrose Abbey Memorial Park. Manager Resigns SIGNAL HILL CAP> -Jobft Jameson. 2.8, has resigned a& Signal Hill city manager after three years Ul the ~.000-a·)'~ p0st. Coast Weather Cooler Wednesday. Chance or measurable rain 70 percent Wednesday. Lows l.onigbt SO to SS. Higbs Wednesday S8to65. INSIDE TODAY WASP~' may have ftOC rtceivtd the aame vtterau• beftefUs cu tnalAt counterparta, but t~ haw ca high deflf'H of comaroct.m. S.c Fcatuna, Paoo Cl. > • CJ .... ... :; . as . ... .. .. .. .... ~ .............. Oil's Well That Ends Well? !'~ircmeo ~n Portsall. France, put a pump m place m an effort to remove 011 from harbo~ waters. The harbor ancl the sur· roundmg Brittany coastline were poJluted hy lhe worst 011 spill on record after the U.S. supertanker Amoco Cadiz ran Fro91PageAJ TRUSTEES •• operating budget to pay for addi· tlonal relocatable classrooms. 1'Wl'\.c gone <iboul a~ far as we can in this regard," he said. "lf people tn this community won't pass a bond election, dou· ble se~s1ons may be the only way to go." C1tmg results of a recent dis· trict-w1de survey, trustee Edward Westberg of San Clemente reminded fellow board members that many survey respondents favored initiat111g a year-round school program. Sears Warns: Beetles Bug Bunny BWlkeu C HICAGO (AP) -Up to 100,000 Easter baskets were re- called by Sears. noebuck 81\d Co. today because they may con· tam beetles. There is believed to be no bealth hazard. Scars said , but the wrapped baskets should be returned to the nearest Sears store. The baskets, sold in all parts of the country, may contain an insect known a~ powder-post beetles. said Gar In~raham vice president of Sears retrui ~ales. lie said the beetles, which thrive on bamboo and other fibrous matertals, have been found in the weave of some bam- boo baskets. "While the Easter merchan- dise is wrapped and not believed to be contaminated, we simply do not want lo take any chances so we ;.ire asking our cw;tome~ to return all Easter baskets purchased from Scars," In- graham added. The baskets range in price from $2.99 to $39.99 .. Buck Joins Board Of Water District Gerald E . Buck, executive vice president of the Hon D~velopment Co. in Laguna Hills, has been named a director of. the Moulton Niguel Water D1s-tr1ct. The Mission Viejo resident fills the scat on the seven· member. board \'acated by ;Forest Dickason, who r esigned in January. Sign of Spring NEW YORK (AP) -The f'la~ of the 149 members or the United Nat.ion were raised around the .Jee-skating rink in Rockefeller Center on Monday, one of the :first signs of spring in the city. OftAlltQE COAST 1.1K DAILY PILOT aground last Thursday. · Gorman Cop Slain; Wife Jails S u sp ect GORMAN (AP) -When they heard the guns hots, Deputy Arthur Pelino's two youngest :-ons ran next door -to their father's one-man sheriff's office -and foWld him dying. Pelino, 51, a 19-year veteran with the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department. had been shot repeatedly with his gun Sunday night, and the man he had just arrested was stjlJ Jn the booking offire, deputies said. adding the gun was fired until c·mpty. The office is adjacent to the three-bedroom ranch hou&e the ~hcriH provides for his resident deputy in Gorman. a mountain community 70 miles north of Los Angeles. The boys, aged 9 and 15 ran for their mother, Pat, 47.' She hurried-unarmed-into the booking oHice. Somehow she got T~rry Lynn Zachery, 30, of North Hollywood behind bars. said Deputy Jim Di giovanna, a department spokesman m Los Angeles "She just coaxed him lnto the area of the booking cage, then pushed him inside and was able to· slam the door on him," Digiovanna said. Deputy Carl Walter, Pelino's interim replacement at the lone- ly sheriff's outpost in the Tehachapi Mountains, said Pelino had answered a dis- turbance call at a nearby gas station Sunday night. Pelino checked r ecords for warrants against Zachery before bringing EqutdTi~ For Felines? LOS ANGELES CAP) - Actor David Madden of "The Partridge Family" television series says if dogs need licenses so should cats and he intends to appeal a $50 fine levied on him for not buying licenses for his two poodles The fine was imposed Monday by Van Nuys Municipal Court Judge Robert Devich, who also ordered the actor to obtain the dog licenses by April 18 as a pre·condition for being placed on one year's probation. However, Devich stayed the fine after Madden's' lawyer, Broce Wolfe, an· uounced he intended to file ''an appeal on the con. stituUonal issue of equal protection.•• Theft Char~ Brings Suit Against In'! him back tD bis office, Walter SM id. "In fact, he had the guy drive his own ~ar and followed him back to the station," Waller said. "Apparently at that time he was having no trouble with him." Inside the booking office the trouble began. InvesUgators still weren't sure what happened. "It seems there was some type of a struggle and be was able to get the gun away from Pel mo," Dig1ovanna said. With Zachery in the cage, Mrs. Pelino put out a radio call to the Santa Clarita sheriff's substation, where her husband had been assigned before being transferred eight months ago to Gorman . The California Highway Patrol heard the call and got there first, with the San- ta Clarita deputies arriving soon after. Walter said she took the two boys to the zoo to get away from the seene at Gorman. The couple had six children ran&ing In age from 8 to 21. ~Three Viejo Youths Held In Beer Theft Two Mission Viejo adults and a 17-year·old boy are ln custody today after a night watchman noticed trouble brewing al a beer distributor's warehouse in San Juan Capistrano Monday night. Orange County Sheriff's dep- uties arrested Thomas Sewalk 20; John Janzen, 18. and a juvenile accomplice following their alleged 8 p .m. attempt to carry off 16 cases of imported beer from Staub Distributors, 33207 Paseo Ccrveza. The trio were arrested on sus· picion of burglary. Sherirf's deputies said a watchman heard noises while making his rounds and allegedly saw the trio passing cases oC beer over a fence at the warehouse. Proa Page Al DOCTOR ••• The baby's mother has sued Waddill for $17 million in damages in a lawsuit which ac· cuses him or misrepresenting the slate of her pregnancy. The prosecution claims that the baby was 31 weeks from con- ception when It was aborted. Wad dill has testified that the in· fant was 22 weeks from concep- tion. W add.ill stressed throughout a long day on the witness stand that the baby be allegedly murdered on March 2 1977 never had lite. ' • ''It was pale and cold and life- less,'' be tatlned. "I couldn't flod a ,PUlse, I couldn't detect a heart beat and I certalnly dJdn't see It bruLbin1." Waddill Mid the only tnove- ment he could detect In the baby w49re several abort gasps. "But that wu agon,al 1a1ptnf, tbe evidence of death and not llfe " be said. ' Cornell.Mn and hospital nones have t.esUfied that UM baby ctrl delivered by MlJs Weaver c:rted wbon lt. wu expelled Crom the womb and 11ve 1vid1n~ or Ute Al lt WU belo• rushed to the' nursent. Registered tl11.l"M JoAnit Grif· llth teaWied that the baby Ud a clt1rJ1 dlKwalble hurt beat Hd W improvl.q ltl laband l>rea hen W-lidd.W halted her r ciLaUoa effort.I aod p ed bcf out. QI tbo DUJ"IUJ. Del'elopnaent (Jrged Jet ]oilu Stork Club ffiWD D enies . BOnd Impact LAS V GAS <AP) - Wben eatern Atrlh\ea fli&ht 567 left for Los Angeles, there were 83 PAssengera on board Wbeo it returned to La~ Veaas o few minu~ later. there were &t. By JACKIE HYMAN CM .. o.11, PIMI tlAll Direct.on of the Irvin& Ranch Water District denied Monday that a pJ'Op06ed $1.6 billion bond issue for uninhabited areas in the district would encourage the development or what are now open lands in Irvine, Tustin and nearby counly terrltbry. They also continued untll March Z1 public hearings on the proposed bond issue. which would be one or the biggest in Orange County history. Responding to a call by en- vironmentalist Wesley Marx for an environ!llental impact report, board Chairman L.E. Eberling said the election would give the district only the capacity lo sell bonds for sewer. wat.er and u-- rigation lines if development were approved by lhe cities o.r county, ' Water directors have declared that no environmental Impact report ls necessary. At isaue is a proposal to call an election May 23 to approve the bonds. Funding is sought for the district's share or a large. water oioetine from the Metropolitan Water District res· ervoir in Yorba Linda. In addition, the election would create a number or new in· di vidual improvement districts and permit the district to sell bonds as needed tD fund services in now undeveloped land over the next 30 yars. Although the estimated cost of · the improvements would be $3U million at today's prices, the total cost including an escalation factor to allow lor inflation is estimated at $1.2 bllllon, plus $394 million in interest. The pipeline share would be about $2.5 million. Undeveloped areas involved include parts of Irvine and Tustin and the Irvine Company property between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach, as weU as parts of El Toro. Each individual district would vote on its own future bonded in· debtedness. ln most of the dis- tricts in question, which are un· inhabited, the landowners would be the only voters. The major landowner in these areas is the Clerk Turns Down Bandit In Clemente A San Clemente convenience market clerk ignored his employer's earlier instructions to offer 1¥> resistance in case o( an armed robbery and refused to give any money to two armed men Sunday. Police said two men wltb shoulder-length hair entered the 7 Eleven market at 1118 S. El Camino Real before dawn. O.,e or the men drew a gun de!icribed as a .45 automatic on clerk Henry Godshaw and demanded money from the cash register. When Godshaw refused to cooperate, the second man pulled a chrome revolver from a J e g holster or boot and threatened to hit the clerk over the bead with it, said store operator Joseph Stalford. Still Godsbaw stood firm. The bandits ran from the store, leavmg clear pictures o( themselves on the market's ,.ideo security system. Stafford said. "These fellows who try to pull off a holdup only have a short. time to operate," be said. ••1n the short time they were fn the store, Henry was able to main· tain control or the situation. "This is the s~ond time he's refused to cooperate in an armed robbery attempt -he's a pretty unusual guy." Two Laguna Cars Rifle d By Burglars Burglars ransacked two cars parked in Laeuna Beach over the weekend, taldne 1tereo equJpmenl and other valuables. Marda TUhoan. %7, told poUce someooe used a coat bancer to aaln entrance to bu car parbd fn front ot be.r bouM at 570 er., St. Saturday nJcht or Sunday morolog. The thieve• toot an •ltbt· track tape deck, uveral ta,pea and a 'VOllayball, valued totally at $190. omcen a1ao responded to a oar buralaey at 5'7 Teinple Hilla Drive wbe.re the resident ot that bouae reported hia car had been ri11td. Tbe thieve. opened a wtnd- wln1 on a car owned by RandOlph Lan,Jey, 23.. before mlJd.q olf wllb a \llpedeck, wrlatwat.ch, calculator, brlefCS"IH and a tnan'• rtni. with• total value ol $MS. Irvine Company. A spokesman for the district also denied that directors a.re seeking the May election to circwnvent what could be the ef- fects of the Jarvis-Gann tax Jimilalion iniliati ve (Proposition 13) should lt pass June 6. Bond issues approved before June would not be subject to the hmitaUons of the blll, whlcb would cut property taxea drastically. Arthur Korn, secretary of the Irvine Ranch Water Dlatrict, s aid the long range planning was s parked by corusideralion of the Yorba Linda pipeline and that the May dat.e is being coJlS{dered because of contracts. He called the fact that the election would come Jtut before the June election "a rather in· teresttng coincidence." Korn also said that, while seeking bonds to finance tm· provements through the year 0010 may be unusual, ''the district bas alway.a done its planntnc as far lo· to the future as we could look." A questlon was also raised at Monday•a meeting as to whether or not the IRWD Board of Direc· tors is qualified to call a bond election because five of its seven members are appointed by landowpers, primarily the lrvine Company. F,....Page Al ISRAEL ••• with President Carter in Washington and u the Unlted Nations tried to work out details of a U.N. peacekeepinf force to go into southern Lebanon. There was· no immediate lo· dication if Israel had taken a unilateral action in announcing the cease-fire and whether the Palestine Liberation Organiza- tion would go along with an end to hostilities. The Israeli army claimed to control all of southern Lebanon up to the Litani River, except for a small area arotllld the port ci· ty of Tyre. A token U.~_. peacekeeping force was wrut111g to move in when figbUng stopped, but U.N. officials in New York said it could be "weeks or months'' before Israel heeded the Securi- ty Council's demand to withdraw troops from Lebanese territory. Tbe newest arrival. a seven-pound 1lrl. was born tn the gaUey secUon of the Boe.Ing 737 shortly ofter it left McCarran Jn· ternational Airport Mon- day. Two doctors aboard assisted the delivery. The mother, Mrs. Talat Sbaibl, and dauabt.er were reported doing well E"lection On Water Areas Set 87 IAU&IE &ASPJ;B a •o.ltfNet-... Santa IJarearita Water Dis· trlct directors h•\te scheduled ~ May 23 ~e<:tloo on the formauon of six new 1mps'ovement dis-tricts and the autborl&ation or about $1.3 billion in bonds for the proposed special districts. The waU!r and sewer districts -five on the 44,000.acre Rancho Mission Viejo and another on un- developed Mi.$sion Viejo Com. pany land -were request.ed by the property o~. The onlY voters tn the bid to form the distrlcta wU1 be the landowners -principally the O'Neil family and Ila bank-held trust and the Mission Viejo Com· pany. A public bearing on the forma- tion of the districts Monday was continued to April 5. Although no one opposed the new districts the hearing was continued because some changes were made in cost figures, said Bill Knitz, manager of the Santa Margarita district. . Knitz said the bond amount ts high because improvements in the districts are not scheduled for a number of years. He said inflation was included in the co.st estimates. The manager said the districts are b~ing. fo~med now as part or the d1str1ct s overaH planning program. Also, he said, the bonds must be approved before June 6 tD avoid the effects of the J!lrvis·Gann Initiative, which ~ • aimed at limiting property taxa- tion in California. China's Nuke Test Debris Over U.S. WASHINGTON (AP) - Radioactive debris from China's recent nuclear explosion will ar- rive over the U.S. East Coast late today, but the Environmen- ~aJ Protection Agency says there is no cause for alarm. exposure to rainfall," Ms. Blum said. The March 14 blast was estimated at ''less than 20 kilotons." F,....PageAl "We do not anticipate any cause for concern during passage or contaminated air ·AIRPORT over the United States," said • • • Barbara Blum, EPA deputy ad· ministrator. The nuclear clouds are being carried by winds at altitudes above 20,000 feet, EPA said, and are excted to continue passing over the United States until Sun· day. "This contamination is not moving as a single 8U' mass but is being transported in patches at different speeds and dif- ferent altitudes. Consequently, no single trajectory .of the debris path would give the true pie· ture," an EPA announcement said. · The first of the radioactive clouds arrived over Alaska, western Canada and t)\e Pacific Northwest late Sunday and early Monday, EPA said. Some nuclear debris may have been brought tQ the f!'ound by precipitation over Alaska and the Pacific Northwest, EPA said. "There is alao a potenUal for a washout of debris by rainfall over the eastern half of the Unit- ed States." it added. EPA actlvated its air and pre- cipitation monitoring stations Wednesday, but no stat.Jons have reported measurements at· trlbutable to fa.Uout, aaJd tho agency. "No lllJ'llficant ttpOaures arc expected from dlftet radtaUon, breathing of contamlnated air or four·man council were eleeted March 7. "We're going to emphasize the actlon of the Board of Supervisors toward developing another airport," Di Giovanni said outlining strategy for the April 5 San Juan Council meet· ing. "We're going to ask them to stand by what the council said <about extending the airport's life)." On Jt,eb. 28, supervisors or· d~red a search of potential airport sltes in the county. Included in that search is a site a~vocated by the south county airport group. That site is located near the county's Prima Deschecba dump site. But Mocalis believes San Juan's council will be adamant •bout clostni Capistrano Airport June l. ·'In my opinion they will just not leave it open," MocaUs in· slsted. ''1 thlnk it's a matter o( titning; the city looked for a site for over two years with no suc- cess " MoeaJis said the city would mall lett.ers later this w-e-ek to notify pilots of the airport's im- pending closure. 2, Injure s One lagun.a Track Meet tos ANGELES CAP> -A Q:-. Ann man and a woman w-cre killed ~ops ouneed and • third pers on was in crlUcal coodltlon afta th lr tar slammtd lnt.o a boltcar -.rJ.y to-day In tho GJaueJI Part 1ffllon of tht city, aulhorlUes s.ald. Slgn'lPS are under \Vay in. the Huro•n Allalra Department bulldlni tn La.sun• Beach tor tbe city'• lr1clc .nd field meet April 1. The m4Mlt ls opeo to boy1 and &lrl• from 7 to 1' run of qe. ~lr1 forms must be compt led aocf subinitted by Marth IO. l'or more tnlormatlon, call '974311 Hlens:kln 238. ' Pollco Ser1eant Duano Denell nJd one of the vfcUrn1 di4d in the rolllsion and the other died n route to bmpital. He l&.ld tho injured penon, belle•ed to be the drl , was bol=td tn critical condition at ·llSC • Afedlcal Center. . 17 f I Orange Coast EDITION Tod y"~ C l o Ing ·4 . N.:Y;. Stoeks 1 .1 ( VOL. 71, NO. 80, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES N TEN CENT Waddill: 'Detecting Infant's Pulse' 1 By TOM BARLEY Of, .. o.l1, l"I ... St.ti Dr. William Baxter Waddill explained to a jury Monday that what a prosecution witness thought was a strangle hold be- ing applied to the neck or a newborn baby was actually his attempt to detect a pulse "I was gently palpating for a pulse," he told the Orange Coun- ty Supenor Court Jury. ··1 was probing ¥Ound the trachea." His testimony during his second day on the witness stand directly refuted that of Dr Ronald Cornelisen, an Orange pediatrician who is the prosecu- tion's key witness. Cornelisen told the Jury that Waddill had a choke hold on the baby girl when he walked into the nursery and made 1t clear that he intended to murder the ailing infant. Cornelisen testified that Wad- d 1 ll ordered the Westminster Community Hospital nursery staff to leave the toom and then announced· "This baby can't hve." He testified that Waddill pre- d1 <'tt>d the filing of lawsuits totalling millions of dollars in damages 1f the baby, which al- legedly survived WaddiU's at- tempt l9. abort it. lived. Cornellsen testified that Wad· dill felt sure the infant bad suf· fered massive brain damage as a result of 1Ls immersion ln the sallne solution' Waddill injected into the mother. He said Waddill suggested four other ways in wblch the child could be disposed of, in· eluding drowning it in a bucket of water. M:~~~11asdCfi::rtbe:c ~?!~tr~~ ho:~~~ll 11&id he felt Cornelisen1 emotionally unstable and quite may also have decided to testify. sq\llrrelly." against him because be felt guil- Tbe Huntingt.On Harbour ob-ty about participating ln an il-. st.etrlcian said he felt leealabortion. Cornelisen•s hos.tile attitude Cornelisen, in his .testimony towards him stemmed from the earlier ID the trial, said he prosecution's witness' resent-believed the abortion performed m.,nt of the saline aborlions by Waddill on Mary Weaver, 18, performed by Waddill and other was illej(al. r doctors at the Westminster <See DOCTOR. Paie AZ) i Bi1 B~nd Eyed · Uninhabited Areas Involved SEA LIONS 'IN CUSTODY' AFTER THEIR RAMPAGE THROUGH LAGUNA BEACH Escaped Mammals Raise Eyebrows In Downtown Laguna, Gulp Goldfish Sea Lions On Spree Wruhed Vp by Sto rm, They Invade Laguna By STEVE MITCHELL OllMO•l"Pli.tSUff La~una Dcach s sick sea hons Look over the town two mornings ma row this week. sleeping atop convertibles. window shopping on Forest Avenue and m one case ra1d1ng the water dis- trict's fish pond The two blo<'k excun;1on from the sea lions mJkeshift cages behind the city sewer plant to Laguna Beach County Water District early Monday mornin~ apparently was abetted by a spmted group who had been ma bar earlier. Dut the water district took a more sober view of the escapade. It cost them about a dozen gold fish, mcludmg some venerable favorites. And Police Sgt. Dave Avers wins the hero title for nearly single-handedly rounding up the slippery beasties dunng their two-day spree in the Art Colony. LAGUNA BEACH LIFEGUARD Jim ~laurrcr 1s caring for more than two dozen sea lions m makeshift cages behind the city's sew<'r plant. The sea hons were washed up during the most recent storms and many of them suffer 1DJUr1es from the rocks ·and pn{·umonia. Rut at least five of the cagy creatures were feeling their oats Monday morning and early today when the 1:reat escapes occurred. ll all started Sunday night when a sea lion bit through the chicken wire fence that holds the sick animals "Thr~ of them got out at about 2 in the morn mg," recalled a sleepy Stauffer from his home this momml? DURING THAT SEA LION siege, one of the 50-pound mammals was followed by an early morning bar crowd from Glenneyre and Forest Avenue up to the water district headquarters adjacent lo City Hall. "The group kind of herded the sea lion toward the pond, and when it saw the goldfish, it went nuts,'' Stauffer said. The barking sea hon leaped into the pond, according to Sgt. Aver5. "and began eating everything that moved Ill the waler " The final toll was about a dozen goldfish. according t.o water district general manager Joseph Sweeney. who got that estimate from water superintendent Dan McDaniel. "DAN KNEW ALL THE fish in there by their first names," Sweeney said "There was an old fantail that. would come up to the surface and visit with all the kids That sea hon ale the fantatl and a lot more.'' S~t. Avers cornered the well-fed sea hon in the pond and Stauffer captured him That was Monday mornm$? Last n1~ht. under the cover of darkness, two more st•a lions slipped out of the com- pound and into town. THIS TIME TUEY C'RAWLED over the bodies of their comrades to make their escape, Stauffer said "They all like to lie on top of each other, he said "Two of the sea hons just crawled up the sleepin~ bodies and over the top." The smaller of lhe two escapees was quickly rounded up by Avers, but the larger of the pair escaped to Third and Mermaid Streets where the police sergeant found 1l as)eep atop the convertible top of a car. ·•Avers got that one with a leash," Stauf-fer said. "HE C\UGHT OR CORNERED all of them." the sea hon doctor said Utls morning. "So I've made him an honorary Friend of the Sea Lion for putting up with those clowns for two t1l ornmgs in a row " Stauffer said he won't be rousted from his bed tonight. "I 'm going out there later this afternoon to sec i( I can keep them in their cages," he said Thus ending the sea lion siege in Laguna Beach. By JACKIE HYMAN OI .. O.ltr l"llet Sutt Directors of the Irvine Ranch Water District denied Monday thal a proposed $1.6 billion bond issue for uninhabited areas in the district would encourage the development of what are now open lands in Irvine, Tustin and nearby county territory. They also continued until March 27 public bearings on the proposed bond issue, which would be one ol the biggest in Orange County history. Responding to a call by en- vironmentalist Wesley Marx for IJeach Ban May Lift Wedrresday Beaches from S2nd St~t in Ne'¥por( Be1eh l• Brookhurtt Street in JJ\lntfngton Beach re- main closed today and will prob- ably remain quaranUned untU Wednesday, accordln1 to Orange County Health Depart- ment officials. The beaches were closed March 13 wben a broken sewer main in the Santa Ana River sent raw sewage flowing out the river mouth, contaminaUnc the beaches. With the sewage line pumping out more than four million gallons of waste a day, health or- licials banned public use of the beaches stretching from 38th Street an Newport to Beach Boulevard in Huntington Beach M.ooday, with the repair or the se\lfer line, the ban was partiaJJy lifted so that only the area from 52nd Street to Brookhurst Street remains closed. Robert Stone, director of en- vironmental health for the coun- ty Health Department said to· day it could take until Wednes- day to gel confirmed tests wbich would show the absence of dangerous levels or bacteria at the closed beaches. He explained that the last con- firmed tests, taken Saturday, show nearly normal bacteria counts at the outer edges of the quarantlne area. although the area around the river mouth was nearly five times higher in amount of bacteria than allowed by law. "We can only make a pre- sumption ba,ed on the samples taken Sunday," he said, "but it looks very good at all stations." <See BEACHES, Page AZ> Israel Declares Cease-fire Palestinians Not Satisfie~ Demanding Total Withtirmml TEL AVIV, Israel (AP> - Israel declared a cease-fire in southern Lebanon today, but the Palestinian military command said it was "not enough.·• .. The mlnister of defense hu lnst ructod the chlef of the general starr to effect a ceas~ ' fire a lona lbe enUre front \n Lebanon as of1800 hours today," r aald the brief laraell army spokesman's apnouftcement. r .. As frotn that bOur the Israeli def et\Se forces 'f'\11 m•llltaln a i cease.fire!' In Labanon. Mahmoud La l>adi, apokesman for the Palestine Ubaratlon Or1a~­ tion, said ''larael'a declaration ot a cuse·ftro ht not enouch. • What la n ed I• an uncondl· : tlonal total _..thdrawal by. Janel :from the wbole ot IOUlh • Lebaoon:· The PU>urlJ tin&lhed ldo Israeli Ul of a coas fttt, but. obU.H in Belnit beUeved the 1 fi.oal"r would depend on the outcome of Syrian-Lebanese talks under way in Damascus. The announcement came after a day of scattered shooting between Israeli forces aod Palestinian guerrillas around Tyte. But the shooting had died down from previous daya. Seven days aao Israel launched an air, land and sea et· tack to clear Palestinian iUer· rillas from the area along its northern •border. The operation followed 11 Palest.lnJan t.errortst attaQk in Israel which killed 3S JnaeUs. The tsuell announcement cam4 u Primo Mlnlator Menachem Begin was meetlns with President Carter Jn Washtnaton and as the Unlt.ed Nations tried to wo~ out ddalla or a V.N. peacekeepin1 !Oreo to to tnto '°"them Lebanon. There was no lmmCdlale ln· dlcatlon lf Jsrael had taken a w\llateral ntion In aa.nounclns the cease-Ore and whether the Palestine Liberation Organiza- tion would go alone with an end to hostilities. The Israeli army claimed to control all of southern Lebanon up to the Lltani River, exce.Pt for a small area around the port ci- ty of Tyre. A to)ten U.N. peacekeeping force wu waiting to move ln wheo fighting stopped, but tJ.N. officials 1n New York said il could be "weeks or months" before Jsnel heeded the Securi· ty Councll'a -clem•nd to withdraw tfoOP3 from Lebanese territory. ChaDce of Sho~ers an environmental impact reitc>rt. board Chairman L.E. Eberling said the election would give the district only the capacity to sell bonds for sewer, water and ir· rigation lines iC development were appro~ed by the cities or county. Water directors have declared that no environmental impact report is necessary. At issue i& a proposal to call an election May 23 to approve the bortds. Funding is sought for the district's share or a large water pipeline from the Metropolitan Water District res- Kuehn Fa1'ored ervolr in Yorba Linda. In addition, the election would create a number of new in- dividual improvement districts and permit the district to sell bonds as needed to fund services In now undeveloped land over thenexl30 years. Although the estimated cost of the improvements would be $311 mllllon at today's prices, the total cosl includmg an escalation factor to allow for inflation is estimated at $1.2 billion, plus S394 m1lhon in interest. The pipeline share would be about (See BOND, Page A2) Dohr Withdraws In Co11ncil Race DROPS OUT OF RACE Sixth District's Dohr By JOANNE REYNOLDS 1 Of .... °"''' l"li.t ja.tf William Dohr, one of three candidates for the Newport · Be11ch City Council in District Sht, announced his withdrawal from the campaign Monday in favor of incumbent Lucille Kuehn. "I've known all along that we were close on most of the is- sues," the 26-year-old busi- nessman said. "I ran because l bad hoped to provide a yolltbful alteroative. "I'm withdrawing because I don't feel Paul Hummel (the other sixth district candidate) has been truthful on J)lost issues and 1 am particularly disturbed by hls campaign literature." Hummel couldn't be reached today for his reaction to the latest development in the hotly contested sixth district cam- paign. Dohr said he would be willing to work in Mrs Kuehn's cam· <See RACE, Page A2) * * * Council Candidates Give Views at Forum Newport Beach's municipal problems are not really develop ment and traffic or airport noise, according to the city coun- cil candidates who spoke at a forum today. The problems are realJy that there are a lot of people who want to visit or live in Newport Beach. That was the consensus or the half-dozen couftcil candidates frorn Districts One and Four who addressed about 30 mem- bers of the Newport Harbor Civic League this morning. S.H. "Hap'' Byers, the first candidate to speak, set lhe tone ror the morning's dis<:ussions when he said, .. What we have here are people problems. This ii as cb>e as you're ever 1oing to get to heaven in thia ure and everybody wants to come here." Byers is one of five candidates for the fll'5t district seat being vacated by Trudi Rogers. Here's a look at bow the other candidates In that district and in distrtot four view the city's "pe<>ple prt>blems." Marguerite "Peg" Forgit, l'ltat District: 0 arowth and prop-erty debt.a eo hand in alove. As long as we ke'p producll)g children, we must keep provld· Ina them with plac 1n wMcb to • live and wort. l see no Ntaton for • moratorium." D paid Stiaust, Firat J)latricl: lie s1fd ho " not in f IVOt' Of It· tracUn.« mote vl1ltors to t.•pC>rt Beach by bu ldlna 111or hotels, bu be aald he would to mat lhe clt.Y maH auncti t.o the people who U•o -.. here by buyin~ more parks, particularly at the Castaways. John Tucker, First Distnct· He believes the city has failed to work on problems dealing with the people who come to use the city's beaches. He claims he could re-make the Balboa Pier parking lot and the parking (See FORUM, Page AZ> Or:~eJ .Coast Weath er Cooler Wednesday. t Chance oC measurable rain 70 percent Wednesday. Lows tonight 50 to M. Highs Wednesday58to65. IN I D E T OD1' Y WASP m.mber• may have not rtccaued the •ame vcteranr ~fit• as male COtmU'JIO"'tl, but tMy haoe a high tkfl"H of comaradem .. See F1ah&nt1, Page CI. .. a ..... .. M At as .,., :: ..... M AA ... I A.2 DAIL y PtLOl N I.aad 1Jse Onnge County planners hope to obtain more than $500,000 from state cofff;tS the next two years t.o develop a oouervalJon and land use plan for much of the unincorporated county coastline. But even as cowtty planning Newport land Use Studied Plans for development of six vacant parcels or land in Newport Beach will be reviewed t ontcht duriDI an informal public st:ody session at city haJJ. The meeting, conducted by Ci· ty Manager Robert Wynn, will get under way at 7:30 p.m. and will conclude at 9:30 p.m. Property to be d.iacuased in· qJudes the acreage oo either aide of Superior Avenue at West Coast Highway owned by CalTrans; the Beeco oil fields in West Newport, and four pieces of Irvine Company land - Westbay at Irvine Avenue and University Drive, Newporter North on Jamboree Road, Big Canyon area 10 off San Joaquin Hills Road at the entrance to the country club and lhe unused freeway nght-of-way on the west side of MacArthur Boulevard south of Ford Road. The meeting is the third ln a series or public sessions at which reduction of future build- ing will be discussed prior to Ci· t v Council action to alter the c· it y 's general plan. commissioners put their stamp or approval on the two-year work plan Monday, tbe plannen admitted that only about ball tho $500,000 might be avaJlablcs. Richard Munsell, ao asslst.nnt director of the county Eovlron· mental Management Agency, sald be exepeeta the staff of the Begional and State Coastal Com· missions may trim out 'art.I of the work plan to reduce the COit. Under terms of the Callfbrnia Coastal Act of 1.976, cities and counties alooc the shoreline may develop coastal land use plans with the help oI state financlnJ. Once those local plans are ap. proved by the State Coastal Com mission. the local eov- ern mental agencies would take over the issuing or permits Cor development along lbe coast. Monday the comlDlasioa _.,.. proved a list of planni.Qg tub to be completed for the Sunset Beach-Bolsa Chica area, tbe South Coast region and the AIJ.&o Creek area. Two more hearings have been set for March 2'1 and April 10 on planning issues along the Irvine Coast. Those hearings will be at 7 p.m. at the Irvine City Council chambers. Of the $500,000 in planning costs outlined so far, county of- ficials hope to s pend about $66,000 on consultants to help evaluate energy JacilHies, marine resources aftd baaard areas. They also want to earmark $73,333 for displays, malllnp and brochures t() encoura1e citizen partlclpalion lo tbe plan's development, $68,964 to study ways of protectine scenic areas and $62,190 to evaluate coastl ine recreation pQssi bill ties. Fro•PageAJ FORUM OFFERS VIEWS. • • islands in the center of Balboa Boulevard and produce 800 addi· ltona I parking spaces. William Von Esch, First Dis- trict: Citing his work on com· missions in other cities and the Newport Parks, Beaches and Recreation Commission, Von Esch said the people he would like to see more work done -1th are the politicians from other agencies. Our traffic is largely caused hy other cities and I think we s hould be i.pending more time in cooperating with these agencies to get the projects done we need jn Newport." Charles Larson, Fourth Dis- tnct: "I believe we all share a common interest in keeping this place a special place and I believe the people who are sin- C'ere will work as hard at that as they can," he said in recom- mending that resideols pull together to get highway con- struction montty for completion of the road system before altow- in g developers to complete building on the remaining va· <'ant land. Jackie Heather, Lenon's op- Plane Tires Blow Out· DENVER (AP) -Four of the 10 tires on a Continental Alrllnes DClO blew out here as the Jetliner was landing at Stapleton Inte rnational Airport, but of- ficials said there were no in· juries Cliff TraJoer, a spoket1man for the airline, said Monday, 135 passengers and a crew of 12 were on Flight 923 from Houston. The blowouts came l~s than three weeks after similar inci· dents in Los Angeles and Honolulu. ORANGE~ • DAILY PILOT ............. -..... .... -.,_,,.i::.c......, ~ ..... .. _ '=·~~ °"""""·'-.... , ... ......... ,..... .... ponent in the fourth district was not present, but former Mayor Paul Gruber spoke on her behalf. He noted that she h know~able about city buai· ness because of her Hven years on the PlaDDfug Commluion. * * * ~romPageAJ RACE ••• patgn and al.so stated that he would be rettan.lng the nearly $800 in campaign contributiooa he bas received 10 far. Ht. announcement wu made during a press conference beld at city ball with an obviously pleased Mrs. Kuehn lookln1 oo. She aaid she was unaware of Dobr'• plam to withdraw until early Monday afternoon and im- mediately made him a part of her campaign .oraanlzaUon by givin1 him a speakin1 en1age- ment to cover for her. Dohr, who has been active ln partisan Republican poJltics, !'aid he planned t.o have another try at campaigning again in the future, but he said be has not de· clded what kind of campaignine tbat would be. "I've really enjoyed cam· pa[gning," he said. "I like meet- ing people and l hope to keep it up. "But the one thine I am con· vi.need of is that the election of Mr. Hummel is not in the best. interest of our city.'• Dohr made a similar Rt.ate· ment early in the campaign dur· ing a forum conducted by the conservative Callfornla Republic Assembly ln Corona del Mar. At that tlme, Mrs. Kuehn was the object of bls mis· tru1t because ol ber advocacy of using federal funds, particularly the controter1lal Houal.ltc and Urban Developm.at crant UMld to buy tbe senior citizen center. Asked about their cftver1eace of views on use of federal fundt, Doh r Hid Monday that he felt that wu a dlfference of "in- dlvidoalemphees." He said be and Mrs. Kuehn both want "an open city repretented by a broad •pec- tru nr of residents" and U1e means of • achlevlQf th•t end were a tnatt.er ol lndlvidual Juda· mont." .. ,... ....... J BEACHES. • She Whispered? ISJ .JQA.NNE REYNOLDS .... Oelly ......... 'J'bey haven't talked about it since, but an exchanae between rivals Lucille Kuehn and Paul Hummel waa the talk ot tbe Newport Beach City Council nee over the WtUfJod, IT llAPPENEO Saturday dwini a candidate forum before members of the Little Balboa laland Property Owoers Aaaoclatlon. Hummel, who ts trying to unseat Mrs. Kuehn lo the Sixth CouncUmmilc District, brouehl a tin cup to the meet.· ing and 5ugge&ted the city needs a TIN CUP type cam· paign funding law because or what be says ts Mrs. Kuehn's developer-backed effort to get re· elected. TIN CUP is the acronym for an or· ganisation seeldng stiller campaign funding laws govemln1 candid.ates for the Orange County Board of Supervisors. IN AN ASIDE 'to Hummel followlng his presentation, Mn. Kuehn wblapered to her opponent wbat be could de) with CUDM bis tin cup. Hummel then stood up and told the audience ot about 30 people his versjoo of what Mrs. Kuehn said. "Ladi~ and gentlemen, this woman has Juat told m• to take my ttn cup and -in lt," Hummel announced, ac· cording to other c:andidates who were present. HUMMEL'S COMMENT disrupted the Aessloa and clearly upset two othe.r women candidates, Peg Forcit of the first district who burst fnto tears and Evelyn Hart of the third district wbo was Just be&lnnioa her s~cb. Monday, neither oI the sixth dlstrlct candidates would dl.Jcuss the incident. Both said they felt ft would not con-•UMMaa.. tribute ln any way to the dienlty of the piun.lclpal cam· paien. However, Mrs. Kuehn and Hummel both felt free t.o al· lack each other on the campalen issue that led t.o Saturday's incident. HUMMEL, A MEMBER or the Planning Commission who Is identified with the anti-development camp, has based h1s campaign on what be sees as Mrs. Kuehn's pro- developer stance. He claims evidence of her bias can be found ln her $9,000 campaign fund, most of which, be claim.a, was rabed from developers. Mrs. Kuehn saya that's misleading, noting that she has received money from 176 contributors, of whom 16 are de· velopers. They gave a total of $3,200, slM reports. Hummel says he'll continue to talk about Mrs. Kuehn's campaign lund and she says 1be'll st~d oo her record. AND mEJll fellow candidates say they don't mind as long as the aUacks don't reach the personal level they did on Saturday. "I told them that I thought it was a shame that there was a feud developing and 1 \fished they would discontinue it," said Mrs. Forgit, who explained she was so upset at Saturday's forum she was unable to give her 1peech. "Frankly, J think it's ridiculous. I don't see how that klnd of thine helps either candidate," she aatd. ., 1tJag 23 Ele~tion I , New· Districts, Bonds on Ballot By LAURIE KASPER OIU.o.lly~-..... Santa MargariLa Water Dis- trict directors have scheduled a May 23 election oq t.be format.son of slx new improvement dJs tricts and the authorization or about $1.3 billion in bonds for the proposed special districts. The water and sewer dialrlcts -five on the 44.000-acre ~ho Mlastoo Viejo and another oo un- developed Mlsalon Viejo Com· pany land -were requeated by the property ownen. The only voters in the bid to form the districts will be the landowners -principally the O'Neill family and its bank-held trust and the Mission Viejo Com· pany. A public hearing on the forma· Uon of the diatrlcts Monday was continued t.o Aprils. Although no one opposed the new districts tbe bearing was continued because some chanaea were made in cost ficures, said Bill Kaitz, man.tger ol the Santa Margarita district. Froaa Page A1 DOCTOR .•• The baby's mother has sued Waddill for $17 million in damages in a lawsuit which ac· cuses him ol misrepresenting the stale of her pregnancy. The prosecution claims that the baby waa 31 week.a from coo· ception when it was aborted. Waddill bas testified that tbe in· fant wu 22 weeks from eoncep. lion. Waddill stressed throughout a long day on the witness stand that the baby he allegedly murdered on March 2. 1977, never had life. .. It was pale and cold and life- less," he tesW1ed. ··1 couldn'L find a pulse, I couldn't detect a heart beat and I certainly didn't see it breathing." Waddill said the only move· ment be could detect in the baby were several short cups. "But that was agonal gasping, the evidence of death and not life," he said. ·Cornelisen and hospital n~es have testified that the baby girl delivered by Miss Weaver cned when it was expelled from the womb and gave evidence or life as it was being rushed to the nursery. ·Registered nurse JoAnn Grif- fith testified that lhe baby had a clearly discernible heart beat and was improving its labored breathing when Waddill halted her resuscitation efforts and pushed her out of Lhe nursery. Knltz sald the bond amount Is high because improvements in the districts are not sched"1ed tor a nwnber or year~. He oid inflation was included tn lbe ~L esttmat4lS. The manager said the districts are beine formed now u part of the dlatrict'a overall plann&ng program. Also, he said, the bonds mmt be approved before June I to avoid the effeets oltbe .larvta-Gann InltiaUve, whleb it almed at limiting properlJ tcxa- tion in California. F,...Page.41' BOND ••• $2.S million. Undeveloped areas involved Include parls of Jnlne and Tustin and the Irvin• Company prop~~ between Corona del Mar Laauna Buda, • well aa partl ol El Toro. Eacb iodh1dual dlstri.ct would vote on its own hlture bonded in· debtedness. In m01t of the dia.- tricta tn question, which are un- lnha bited, the landowners would be the only voters. The maj landowner in these areas is Irvine Company. A spokesman ror the dis also denied that directors seeking the May election circumvent what could be the feet• of the Jarvis-Gann t limitation inlUative (Propositii 13) 1hould it pua June e. Bond laluea approved before June would not be subject to the llmitatlona or the blll. whlcb would cut property taxes drasUcally. Arthur Korn, secretary of the Irvine Ranch Water District, sald the long range planning was s parked by consideration of the Yorba Linda pipeline and that the May date is being considered because of contracts. He called the ract that the election would come just before the June election "a rather in· teresUng coincidence." Korn also said that, while seeking bonds to finance im· provements through the year 2010 may be unusual, "lbe district ba.s always done its planning as far in· to the ruture as we could look." A question was also raised at Monday's meeting as to whether or not the IRWD Board of Direc- tors is qualified to call a bond election because five of its seven members are appointed by landowners, primarily the Irvine Company. The other two are electe~ by registered voters. Nuckar Debris Seen But IRWD directors &aid Moo· day that, under state law, a water district board need not be elected by popular vote unW the district is at lea.st 50 percent urbanized. Directors said they will eon· tinue hearings on the bond issue until March 27 to allow the cities 'N D ' Ai Ov U • d S of Irvine and Tustin and the 0 anger tO r er mte t&teS CountyofOrangetocomment. They pointed out that hearings WASHINGTON (AP> - Radioactive debris from China's recent nuclear explosion will ar· rive over the U.S. East CQast late today, but lbe Environmen- tal ProtecUon Agency aays there ii no cause for alarm. "We do not anticipate any cause for concern during pasaage of coota,.mioated air over lbe United States." said Barbara Blum, EPA deputy ad- ministrator. The nuclear clouds are being earned by winds at altitudes above 20,000 feet, EPA aaid, and are excted to continue passing over the United States until Sun-day, Mesan Draws Six.Months On Drug Rap A Cost.a Mesan who admitted in court that he sold cocaine to undercover ofncen for $550 in cash was sentenced Monday to six months in jail after pleading cullty t.o felony char••· Orange County Superior Comt Judge H. Warren ltnllfht or- dered Uie jail term and three ye11a probllUon for Keith David Mellor, 3>, of• Osle St. Mellor t¥H furtber ordered to lffk p1ycblat.rlc counHltna during the probation term. Co:sta Mesa police arrated Mellor lut Oct. 3 on the dru& chllJll• after be bande4 ov• co- caln• t.o ~ olfteel"I, Judie t 1aid Mellor can· servo the f tht months in the Newport Beacb C1'1 .Jail. Of. ncen aaJ4 Mt lncarceralicm in the COUD~ Jail "could J)0.119 prob-lemt for blm. 0 ~Theft Probed &AN DI.EGO <AP) -NaY,J of· nctals~ an ln..sttiiUoa ls contln lnto tile theft O'ftl' a four-moa pertod of coealne an4 tranqVlll• pl troth the l>b•rm. icy at th N•ftl lDBal Park. • •'Th ls contamination ls not moving as a single air mass but is being transported in patches at different speeds and dlf· ferent altitudes. Con!lequenUy, no single trl,Jectory or the debris path would give the lrue pie· ture," an EPA announcement said. The rlf'St of the radioactive cloud~ arrived over Alaska, western Canada and the Pacific began last •week and criticized Northwest late Sunday and early the cities and county for their Monday, EPA said. "laxness" in not responding Some nuclear debris may · sooner to the proposed election. have been brought to the ground by precipitation over Alaska and the Pacific Northwest, EPA said. "There is also a potential for a washout of debris by rainfall over the eastern half or the Unit· ed States," it added. Hecklers Bit By ERA Foe Mysterious Meteor Flashes Over Coast ROCHESI'ER, N.Y. CAP> - Equal Rights Amendment opJ><>- nent Phyllis Schafley says the people who shout her down when she speaks against ERA are against the right to free speech. She made the comment Mon· day after doing verbal batUe with backers or the proposed amendment to the U.S. Constitu- tion during an appearance at the University of Rocbe~ter. A quiet Monday night at Orange Coast police depart· ments was interrupted by phone calls from resklent.s who spotted a mysterious blue-green Oun across the aky about 9:50 p.m. ''AU 1 ean figure out ii.that It waa a m~r." said a Natl011al Weather Service spokesman who reported dozens of phone calla from Southern Californians about the fireball that shot across the sky in a northwester· ly direcUon. Gunter Vogel of Costa Mesa aald he was reclinln1 in his Jacuni whe n a light that "looked like the blunt end of an ec1" raced across h1a view. "It wa.a ao amazing thaL I not· ed all the details," he sa.id. "The center point had a small plnkiah spot, but mosUy It was slivery white with• iJ'eenlah tail." Vocel said the Oaab luted Jeu t.ban a MC'OIXI. b\4 wu "hallthe lhe ol the IDOOD. •• The st.rMk.lo« ~ht wu visible 915 MilHon Asked WASHINGTON <AP) -The Interior Dspartment LI •eetdn« $15 mlllion to rattltle Blldnl Jaland natlvea beeauae new atudln bave found that radl•· tJoo l1"om 1tomlc teltl ln the late 1840.• and l950I LI at an unufe lnel. The effort markl the aee 4 tilM naU• • hne been mond oil th• South Pacific lllaDd. • ----. --. - as far south as San Diego where close to 100 residents phoned police between 9:4S and 9:50 p.m . The lone flash apparenUy was not related to two asteroids that atreall:ed past Earth earlier this month, the closest coming eight million miles away last Wednes- day evening. She told the largely male stu· d ent audjcnce that when they graduate, "lf you do," they should thank her for encourag- ing women to stay home and out of the JOb market. , Hectic Paee Three F OlUllUJ Set Tlwrsday Candidates ln the Newport Beach Clty Councll race are going to be buay Thursday. They will bf-appearin1 in as many as three torums t.o discuss their views wttb voters. . TRE FlBST forum wtll be held 1t '7:30 a.tn. UDder the sponsorship of the Cltbens Harbor Area Research Team <CHART). All o( the candJdttes have been invited tot.be meeting at the Costa Mua Community Center, S94 Center si. At noon, the five candJdates h'oro the Ftrst District and tht two candtdetes from tho Fourth District wlll speak to the Newport. Harbor Exchange Club. THE NOON tneetlna at the Bahia CortnWan Yacht Club LI open only to club mombcin and their 1ul'Sts. Rest· dents who wilh to attend ahould contact a club member. Tba evcrun1 loft aaain will include all ol the can· didalea who will be addreuinc the West Newport Beach Improvement AsloclaUon. Tbt meet!n( wUJ be held at 1:30 p.m. in tbe Newport ores Clubhouse. Tbe public ts ln· vlted. J l 17 Saddlehack EDITION • Jlfternoo N.Y. Stoeks ..... -: l .. OL. 71, NO. 80~3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGt: COUNTY, CAL:I FOR NI A TEN CENTS1 Waddill: 'Detect¥ig · l:Df ant's " ! By TOM BARLEY Pulse' l , f Of , .. Dell• ...... llell bDr. William Baxter Waddill xplained to a jury Monday that bat a prosecution witness ~hought was a strangle hold be-sg applied lo the neck of a ewborn baby was actually his ttempl to detect a pulse .. I was gently palpating for a ulse," he told the Orange Coun- Y Superior Court Jury. "l was ·~ l..r r 1· ' tility Pi(!ket e d probing around the trachea." His testimony during his second day on the witness stand directly refuted that of Dr. Ronald Cornelisen, an Orange pediatrician who is the prosecu- tion's key witness. Cornelisen told the jury that Waddill had a choke hold on th~ baby girl when he walked Into the nursery and made it clear that he intended lo murder the ailing infant. Cornelisen testified that Wad- dill ordered UJe Westminster Community Hospital nursery staff to leave the room and t.hell announced: "This baby can't. hve." He testified tha\ Wadd1U pre- d1 cted the filing of lawsuits totalling millions of dollars in damages if the baby, which al- legedly survived Waddill's at- Some 40 members of the International Brotht•rhood of Electrical Workers, Local '17, PH'kl't Southern California Edison Company's d1~tric:l offices In El Toro this morning-in s upport of union demands for ,.,:age and benefit improvements. Picket- ing hcforc work hours have begun has not hcen sanctioned by the union, a self- described group spokesman strid. Workers a rc seeking a 10 percent wage boost in negotiations which have continued since their contract expired Jan. 1. The spokesman said the union members, who are not on stnke, are disturbed with the negotiations' slow pace. By The Associated Press A low pressure !iystem was oving slowly eastward across orlhcrn California today. ringing a chance of showers and hundershowtm• for much of the tale byWcdnesday. The low hrought scattered howers to some parts of Central alifornia on Monday, but raan- all a mounts were neghgible. resno recorded lhe most rain 1th .13 of an mch for the 24 ours <'ndmg at 4 a m. today In the San f'rancisco Bay rea, skies will be mostly cloudy ith a chance of showers and erhaps a thundershower rough Wednesday The forecast for the acramento Valley calls for ostly cloudy skies with a hance or showers and isolated hundershowers, increasing on ednesday. HalC an inch of rain fell on akersfield in a three·hour riod during the night, flooding wntown streets and some usinesses. Police said at least 12 major tersections were flooded and ortions of six streets were losed. Fake Bomb Delays Two Trains at Capo Two Santa Fe Railroad trains were delayed nearly two hours Monday while members of the county sheriff's bomb squad de- termined that a suitcase left on the tracks near Capistrano Beach wasn't a bomb. Three Vie j o Youths H eld In Beer Theft Two Mission Viejo adulLc; and a 17·year-old boy are in custody today after a night watchman nollced trouble brewing at a beer distributor's warehouse m San Juan Capistrano Monday night. Orange County Sheriff's dep- uties arrested Thomas Sewalk, 20; John Janzen, 18, and a juvenile accomplice following their alleged 8 p.m . attempt to carry off 16 cases of imported beer from Staub Distributors, 33207 Paseo Cerveza. The trio were arrested on sus· picion of burglary. Sheriff's deputies said a watchman heard noises while making his rounds and allegedly saw the trio passing cases of beer over a fence at the warehouse. Depulles held a 17·year-old West Covina youth from about 2 pm. to 4 p.m. while the squad worked on the suitcase, which was filled w1th wires, batteries, lights and a tape recorder. The boy, who has a history of mental problems. eventually was re- leased to his parents, deputies said. A sheriff's spokesman said a witness saw the boy place the suitcase on Santa Fe tracks near the Beach Cities offramp of the San Diego Freeway. The witness contacted a Doheny Stale Beach ranger who held the youth until deputies arrived. Delayed during the investiga- tion were a southbound freight and a northbound passenger tram, deputies said. The youth's parents, who were fishing at Doheny, told deputies the boy had placed similar packages on tracks in the past to record the passage or trains. Jewelry Stolen Jewelry valued al $7,520 was stolen from a Mission Viejo home while the owners were on vacation in Europe. Orange County sheriff's officers said the break-in was reported by s a le s w om an Sand r a Lee· Hirscbland, 34, of 25975 Portafmo Drive. They said there was no evidence of forced entry. telllpt to abort lt, lived. Comellse..o telUfled that Wad- dill felt sure U. lofant bad aut- fered maaalve ~all\ damage as a realllt of lta lmmerwion ln the saline IOlution Waddill inJ~ted iDto e mother. He aaid Waddill eunested four other ways lo 'Whlch the child could be dlspoaeci or, In- cluding drowning it. in ' bucket ot water. W addlll described Cornelisen Monday as "sort of disturbed, emoU.onally umtable and Qllite squirrelly." The Huntington Harbour ob- s t et. r i c i an said he felt Corneli~n·s hostile attitude towards him atemmed from the prosecuU<m's witJJess• resent- ment ol the saltne abortions performed by WaddJll and other doctors at the Wes tminster hospital. Waddill said be felt Cornell sen may also have decided to testify againat hlm because he felt gull· ty about participating in an il- legal abortion. Cornelisen, in his testimony earlier in the trial. said he believ~ ~abortion performed by Waddill on Mary Weaver. 18. was iJle~al. <See DOCTOR. Pue AZ) . Lebanon Blasts Cease-fire Vow TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) - Israel declared a cease-fire in sou them Lebanon today. but \he Palestinian military command said it was "not enough." ·'The minister of derense has instructed the chief of the general staff to effect a cease- fire along the entire front 10 Lebanon as of 1800 hours today," said the brief fsraeli army spokesman's announcement. "As from that hour the Israeli defense forces will maintain a cease-fire." In Lebanon, Mahmoud Labadi. spokesman for the Palestine Liberation Organiza. tion. said "Israel's declaration of a cease-fire is not enough. What is needed is an uncondi- tional total withdrawal by Israel trom the whole of south Lebanon." The PLO earlier brushed aside Israeli talk of a cease-fire, but observers in Beirut believed the final response would depend on the outcome of Syrian-Lebanese talks underway in Damascus. The announcement came after a day of scattered shooting between Israeli forces and Palestinian guerrillas around Tyre. But the shooting had died down from previous days. S e v e n d a y s' a g o Is r a el launched an air, land and sea at- tack to clear Palestinian guer- rillas from the area along its northern border. The operation followed a Palestinian terrorist attack in Israel which killed 3S Israelis. The Is rae li announcement came as Prime Minister Menachem Bei:in was meeting <See ISRAEL, Page A2) Capo Board Owners to Decide Debates Six Water Districts Pupil Need By ANNE COOP ER Ot-.o.1., ......... Capistrano Un.LRed School Dis· trlct trustees debated Monday where to spend limited re- sources lo house an influx of at least 1,300 new students expect. ed next year. . Capistrano Unified voters three times in two years have failed lo pass school construe· lion bond measures, leaving the district with $2.7 million to build accommodations for the an- ticipated innux: of new students. Of this amount, $2.4 million is available in approved state school building aid and $350,000 in bonding capacity from a suc- cessful 1973 bond election, Supt. Jerome Thornsley told the school board. The board, unable to reach agreement, is to lake the matter up again April 3. Thornsley made the following recommendation for additional facilities, listed according to his priorities: -$670,000 for new showers and Jockers at Capistrano Valley High School In Mission Viejo, ac- quiring ,relocatable facilities for this purpose until permanent ones are built. -$1.8 million for a new elementary school in Laguna Niguel, the size of the school'<ie· pending oa whether the district can acquire a site or funds for a site from area developers. -$350,000 for additional re- locatable classrooms to be tl!ed at schools throughout the dis· tricl. School board president Ted Kopp ol Capistrano Beach ques· tioned wbe\ber additional elementary classrooms shouldn't be pven priority over new Capistrano Valley shower facillties. <See TRUSTEES. Page A2) By LAURIE KASPER • ._ Dltllf "41et S!Mt Sant.a Margarita Water Dis- trict di.rett.ors have scheduled a May 2:3 elecU.on<>n the formation of six oew improvement dis- tricts and the aut.borizatloa of about $1.3 billion in bond• for the proposed special districts. The water and sewer districts -five oa the 44,000·acre Rancho Mission Viejo and another oo un- developed Mission Viejo Com- pany land -were requested by the property owners. The only voters in the bid to form the districts will be the landowners ..--principally the O'Neil family and its bank-held trust and the Mission Viejo Com· pany. A public hearing on the forma· tion of the. districts Monday was * * * continued to Aprils. Although no one opposed the new districts. the hearing was continued• because some changes were - m•d• in cost figures, said Bill Knill, manager of the Santa Margarita district. Knitt said the bond amount is high because improvements in the districts are not scheduled for a number of years. He s aid inflation was included in the cost estlmates. The manager said the.districts are being formed now as part of the district's overall planning program. Also, he said, the bonds must be approved before June 6 to avoid the effects of the Jarvis-Gann Initiative, which ir aimed at limitin{? property taxa- tion in California. * * * Water Board Raps I.and Boost Charge By JACK.IE HYMAN Of U. o.lty rtltie S~fl include parts of Irvine aud Tustin and the Irvine Company property between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach, as well as parts of El Toro. Each individual district would vole on its own future bonded in· debtedness. Jn most of the dis- tricts in question, which are un- inhabited, the landowners would be the only voters. The major landowner in these areas is the Irvine Company. A spokesman for the district also denied that directors are seeking the May election to <See BOND, Page AZ> Coast 8il Sente n ce dered for Toro Arson Sea Lions On Spree Weath e r Cooler Wednesday. Chance or mt!asurable rain 10 percent Wednesday. Lows tonight 50 to SS. Highs Wednesday58lo6S. ' f . . Washed Up by Sto~ ~ lnmde ~- BySl'EVRMITCllELL ot•blltt~......... • LagunaBeach'ssic?ksealionstookovertbe town two morninas in a row this week, sleeplne atop convertibles, window shopping on Fo t Avenue and ln one case raiding the water dis· trict'dishpond. · The t'Wb block excurafon from the sea lions makeablft ~ares behind the city sewer plant to lAJ\.toa Beach County Water Diatrlct. early Monday mo"1in1'.apparently was abetted by a •Plritedgroup who had beenlD a bar rUer. • . lh1t lbO: aw district took • more 80 r. View-of the eecapad•. U ~st. them abOuta den.en £C)ld flSh, includinuome venerabl f avorltes. ADCI Polle s,t. Davo Aver1 wins tbe bero uue roe uaarl11ln11e~handedly rou.ndlna up tbe lli tJ dunn1 their tWCM11aY .. spnelo ArtOolOoy. , . ... If( China WASllINGTON CAP) - Radioactive debrilJ from China'• rl'tent nuclear explosion will ar· rive over the U.S. East Coa:sl late today, but the Environmen· tal Protl'ct1on As;t•ncy says there 1s no cau:.t• for alarm ''We do not anticipate any ca use for concern durlng passage or contaminated air over the United Slates," said Barbara Blum. EPA deputy ad· min1strdtor. The nuclear clouds are being c:trned by winds at altitudes above 20,000 reel. EPA said, and are L'xclc.>d~ to continue passing m ·N the lJnited States until Sun· dav "This c·ontam1nat ion is not men rng <1~ a singlt• air mass but 1s bC'ing transportt•d in patches at different bpeeds and clif- frrent aJlltudes. ConsequenUy. no single traJectory of the debns path would give the true pic- turl.'," an EPA announcement said The first of the radioactive Jet Joins Stork Club LAS VEGAS <AP) - When Western Airlines flight 567 left for Los Angeles. there were 83 pa~sengers on board When 1t returned to Las Vegas a few minutes later. there were 84 The newest arrival, a seven.pound girl, was born in the galley section of the Boeing 737 shortly after 1t left McCarran Jn. ternat1onal Airport Mon- day. Two doctors aboard a~~1sl£.'d thed<'hvl'ry The mother, Mrs Tal.:sl Sh;.i1bi. and daughter were rqiorted doing well. f'ro• Page A J BOND ••. circumvent what could be the ef· fects of the Jarvis.Gann tax hmitallon miliallve (Proposition 13) should it pass June 6. Bond issues approved before Junl' would not be sub1ect to the limitations or the bill, which wou Id cut properly taxes drast 1call~. Arthur Korn, secretary of the Trvine Ranch Water District, :-.aul the long range planning was sparked by consideration or the Yorba Lmda pipeline and that the May date is bemg considered because of contracts. He called the fact that the election would come just before the June eleclton "a rather in- t~rcstm~ co1nc1dence. ·• Korn <ll!>o said that, while seeking bonds lo finance im· prov<'ments through tl)e year 2010 may be unusual, "the district has always done its planning as far in· to the future as we could look." ,\ question \\a<> also raised at \londay's me£'l1ng as lo whether or not the IRWD Board of Direc- tors is qualified to call a bond t'lertion bccaui.c fi\'C of its S£.'ven members arc appointed by landowners. primarily the Irvine Company. The other two are elected by registered voters But IRWD directors said Mon· day that, under state law, a water district board need not be, elected by popular vote until the· district is al least SO percent urbanized. Directors said they will con- tinue hearings on the bond issue until March Z'l to allow the cities or Irvine and Tustin and the County of Orange to comment. They pointed out that hearings began last week and criticized the cities and county for their ••1axness" in not responding sooner to the proposed election. • f OftANG!COAIT sa DAILY PILOT clouds arrived over Alaska, western Canada and the Pac1Clc Northwest late Sunday and •arl)' Monday, EPA said. Some nuclear debris may have been brought to the ground by precipitation over Alaska and the Pacific Northwest, EP.A t.aid ·'There is also a potential tor a wa!>hout of debris by rainfall over the eastern halt of the Unit· ed States,'· it added. San Juan's Airport To Close? County efforts to locate and develop an alternative south Orange County general avJahon airport appear to be Loo little and too lat.e as San Juan coun- cilmen prepare to go ahead with June 1 plans to close Capistrano Airport. "Locating, acquiring and building another airport site is a long process." San Juan City Manager James Mocalis said to· day. "I've informally polled each individual councilman and they do not support keeping the airport open past June 1." Thal news shocked south Orang'e County Airport comn1ll· tee members who have asked to appear before the council April S to request an extension of the airport's life pending the out. come of an ongoing county study to develop another airport. The committee is composed or Capistrano Airport pilots who are advocating another general av1at1on facility in the south county area. ··we certainly have something in the mill." comrrultee member Tony DiGiovanni. former San Clemente mayor, said today, cil· in~ a closure loophole set up by San Juan's old council to extend the airport's life if serious plans were under way lo build another facility. Girl Sought lnlrvine Purse Theft Irvine police are seeking a teen-age girl who knocked an elderly Irvine woman to the ~round and grabbed her purse, then fled in a waiting car. Police said the victim, Nina Bell Van Brunt. 82, suffered in· juries to her right hand and knee 10 the struggle al about 5 p.m. Monday. They said the victim was walking home from shopping when she passed the girl. who was sitting on a planter near the intersection of Michelson Drive and Butler Street. The girl reportedly said "hello," wailed till the woman had passed her a nd then lunged at her, grabbing her purse and knocking the woman down 10 the t·nsuing struggle. The girl. described as tall and thin with shoulder-length brown hair, just laughed when her vie· lim asked her to return the purse, saying lt contained her medication. The suspect climbed into a waiting car. described as a white American·made sedan, and drove away. No description or the driver was available, police said. The purse, missing $20 in cash, was later recovered by a tenant of a nearby apartment complex whQ found It In his r>arltlng place, police said. llyJrant Hit; Water FlotaJ Over Roaduuy Deity f'll«.__..., AICU~ .,._., SEA LIONS 'IN CUSTODY' .AFTER THEIR RAMPAGE THROUGH LAGUNA BEACH Escaped Mammals Raise Eyebrow• In Downtown Laguna, Gulp Goldfish Fro• Page Al SEA UONS CAVORT IN LAGUNA. • • Dl'RING THAT SEA LION sieae, one or the 50·pound mammals was followed b.v an ei1rly morning bar crowd from Glenneyre and Forest Avenue up to the water district headquarters adjacent to City Hall. "The group kind of herded the sea lion toward the pond. and when it saw the goldfish, it went nuts," Stauffer said. two more sea lions slipped out or the com- pound and into town. THJS TIME THEY CRAWLED over the bodies or their comrades to make their escape, Stauffer said. The barking sea lion leaped into the pond, according lo Sgt. Avers, "and ~gan eating everything that moved in the water." "They all like to lie on top of each other. he said. "Two or the sea lions just crawled up the sleeping bodies and over the top." The smaller of the two escapees was quickly rounded up by Avers, but the larger of the pair escaped to Third and Mermaid Streets where the police sergeant found 1t ::isleep atop the convertible top or a car. The final toll was about a dozen goldfish, according lo water district general manager Joseph Sweeney, who got that estimate from "ater superintendeot Dan McDaniel. "Avers got that one with a leash," Stauf. fer said ••DAN KNEW ALL THE fish In there by their first names," Sweeney said. "There was an old ranlail that would come up to the surface and visit with all the kids. That sea lion ale the fantail and a lot more." "llE CAUGIIT OR CORNERED all of them," the sea hon doctor said this morning. "So I've made him an honorary Friend of the Sea Lion for putting up with those clowns for two mornings in a row." Stauffer said he won't be rousted from his bed tonight. '"I'm going out there later this afternoon to see iC I can keep them in their cages," he said. Sgt. Avers cornered the welJ.fed sea lion in the pond and Stauffer captured him. Thal was Monday mormni. Last night, under the cover of darkness, Thus ending the sea lion siege in Laguna Beach. 'Mr. Flower Show' Harry Macres Dies Harry Macres, known as Mr. Flower Show m Orange County for more than three decades, ts dead attheaeeof89. The Santa Ana businessman's family operated florist shops m Santa Ana and Laguna Beach, and his floral arrangements had been the centerpiece or the Orange County Fair since the late 1940s. Mr. Macres was known as Mr. Flower Show for his manage- ment ot the noricullure building at the Orange County fair· grounds for many years. He was still active in the busi· ness, which includes a shop at 490 South Coast Highway in Laguna Beach. up until the time of his death Saturday. Mr. Macres moved to Orange County in 1931 opening his first nursery and florist shop in Santa Ana. Al one time the florist Fro• Page Al ISRAEL •.• with President Carter in Washington and as the United Nations tried to work out detajls of a U.N. peacekeeping force to go into southern Lebanon. There was no immediate in· dicaUon if larael bad taken a unilateral action in announcing the cease-fire and whether the Palestine Liberation Organiza· lion would go along with an end to hostilities. The Israeli army claimed to control all or southern Lebanon up to the Utani River, except tor a small area around the port ci- ty of Tyre. A token U.N. peacekeeping force was waitin& to move in when fighting stopped, but U.N. officials in New York said it could be "weeks or months" before Israel heeded the Securi- ty CounclJ's demand to withdraw troops from Lebanese territory. operated rive flower shops in the county. He 1s survived bv his wife Jo; sons Harry of Laguna Beach, Al and David of Santa Ana and James of Reno. Mr Macr£.'s 1s abo i-un ived by daughter. Gen.i F1shclt• nf Lake Arrowhead , 15 grandchildren and seven s:reat· graodch1ldren Services will be held Thursday· at IO a.m. at the Brown Colonial Chapel in Santa Ana Burial will follow in Melrose Abbey Memorial Park. Sears Warns: Beetles Bug Bunny Basket,s CHICAGO CAP> -Up to 100,000 Easter baskets were re called by Sears, ROt'huck and Co. today because they may con· lain beetles. There 1s believed to be no health hazard. Sears said, but the wrapped baskets should be returned to the nearest Sears st.ore. The baskelci, sold in all parts of the country, may contain an insect known as powder-post beetles, said Gar Ingraham. vice president of Sears retail sales. He said the beelles. which thrive on bamboo and other fibrous materials, have been found In the weave or some bam- boo baskets. "While the Easter merchan· dise is wrapped and not believed to be contaminated, we simply do not want to take any chances. so we are asking our customers to return all Easter baskets purchased from Scars." In· graham added. The baskets range in price from $2.99 to $39.99. Coast Beach Ban May Lift Wednesday Beaches from 52nd Street in Newport Beach lo Brookhun;t Street in Huntington Beach re- main closed today and will prob- ably remain quarantined until Wednesday. according to Orange County Health Depart· ment officials The beaches were closed March 13 when a broken sewer main in th~ Santa Ana River sent raw sewage flowing oul the river mouth, contaminating the beaches. With the sewage line pumping out more than four million . gallons of waste a day, health of- ficials hanned public use of the beaches stretching from 38lh Street in Newport lo Reach Roulevard in Huntington Beach. Monday, with the repair or the sewer line. the ban was partially lifted so that onlv the area from 52nd Street to Brookhurst Street remains closed. Robert Stone. d1rt'clor of en· \'ironmental hea1th for the coun- t.v Health Department said to- day it could take until Wednes· day to get confirmed tests which \\ ould show the absence of dangerous levels of bacteria at the closed beaches. "We can only make a pre- sumption based on the samples taken Sunday," he said, "but 1t looks very good at all stations." Buck Joins Board Of Water District Gerald E. Buck, executive vice president of the Hon Development Co. in Laguna Hills, has been named a director or the Moulton Niguel Waler Dis· trict. The Mission Viejo resident fills the seat on the sevt'n· member board vacated by Forest Dickason, who resigned in JanuMry. F .... PflfleAI TRUSTEES •• •'This d1:.Lrict will be able lo house elemen\ary 1cbool stu- dents over lhe next two years," said Thornslt!v ... The crunch will come ;1t 0 lhe high school k\~I. .. ··asn't there some way around this'" asked Kopp. "Do the stu- dents have to take showers every day'?" lllgh on his own list of priorities in coping with fast growtng student enrollments, su 1d Kopp, are preserving "neighborhood" schools and avo1d111g double se!isions. ~ built my hoGSe next to a school because I like my children to walk to school," said Kopp, a general contractor. "l am willing to add more portables to try to save our neighborhood school concept. "I will never vote for double sess10M, even if we have to ~tart dropping programs," be said. '"Some children do not operate '>'Cll late in the after- noon." Trustee George White of San Clemente obJected to increasing the drain on the district's operating budget to pay for addi· lJonal relocatable classrooms. "We've gone about as far as we can in this regard," he said. "If people in this community won 'l pass a bond election, dou· ble sessions may be the only way lo go." Citing results of a recent dis· trict-wide survey, trustee Edward Westberg ot San Clemente reminded fellow board members that many survey respondents favored initiating a year-round school program. Froa Page Al DOCTOR ••• The baby's mother has sued Waddill for $17 million in damages in a lawsuit which ac· cuses him of misrepresenting the state of her pregnancy. The prosecution claims that the baby was 31 weeks from con- ception when it was aborted. Waddill has testified that the in· Cant was 22 weeks from concep- lton. Waddill stressed throughout a Ion~ clay on the witness stand that the ha by he allegedly murdered on March 2, 1977, ncv£.'r had life. "It was pale and cold and lir~ Jess." he testified. "I couldn"t find a pulse, I couldn't detect a heart beat and I certainly didn't see it breathing." Waddill said the only move- ment he could detect in the baby were several short gasps. "~ut that was agonal gasping, the C'\ 1clencc of death and not life," ht• 'oi.lld Cornelisen and hospital nurses h;i \'C testified that the baby girl dt•ll\ ered bv Miss Weaver cried whc•n ll was expelled from the w nm b and gave evidence of life as it was bemg rushed to the nursery. Registered nurse JoAnn Gri!- fith testified that the baby bad a clearly discernible heart beat and was improving iL'> labored hreathmg when Waddill halted her resuscitation efforts and pushed her out of the nursery. Gross 'Bad' ·in Colorado? BOULDER, Colo. CAP) Marijuana smokers m this uni· 'ers1ty city nestled against the snow capped Rockies are being encouraged to bring in samples of their stash for testing to see i( it is contaminated by herbicides. The testing, in cooperation with the Boulder County district attorney's office and the University of Colorado, was begun after the Mexican govern- m cn t acknowledged that the herbicide paraquat was used to wipe out marijuana fields. Several ~roups have protested that paraquat can cause lung dam al!e to heavy smokers. A spokesman for the Colorado Daily, a ne~paper published to serve the campus community, -.aid manjuana samples in plain brown wrappers can be de· h v<>red to the newspaper office ~1th a five digit identification number. BB· Signs Springing Vp siana, political er othel'w1sr. from being placed ln public rlahts-of .way such u medians, plant.er areas. l~Lters and 1ldewatb. Thl1 Is the poHcy the city adhered l<> lo past elections before waverinr this 1prinJt after a chanee 1n Ute alcn or-dinance. 1A a l"CJ)Ort to the clty mmcll, ctty A&nlnlstrator Bud Belait.o recommsnded tba• polltlcal ai1n1 be allowed tn public rtabts.- til-w91 as Joni u they don't cause a 1arety ~asard to pedatrtan. and motori.au. He •aid a creat doat of c:Jty time would be a t. re vJ.Dc lbe offeadina 11 because of II their inordinate numbers. Belsito based his recommf'n· dation on • city attorney oplnlon which said the ban on political stens in public rlgbts-ot- way could be a violatJon of the freedom of speech. Mayor Pro Tem Ron Shenkman and Councllman IUchal'd Siebert led the fiabt a,alnst the promiacuolll sl(M. Shenkman uld that he was concerned ror tho safety or motorists Who mlgbt bav t.bt!lr atteoUon diverted by sltns. "Thtre 11 a ~•lbility or sel"tous acdd m., ' 11Jd. S•ebert laid he wu concerned about aafety u well al the city's llabllllf ror 1prinkler 1y1tems aod folln10 that ml1bt be damaged. Mayor Ron Pattinson, Ted Bartlett, Al Coen. Shenkman and Siebert voted in favor of the rHtrictions. Harriett Wieder. who ls nm- n l n 1 for Orange Couoty supervisor, cul tho only no vote. -Sh~ satd the ctty wes tallng an elitist approach and tbat the quarrel 1e-emed to be much ado 1bout nothing. Belstto aaJd ho planned to con- tact 1U candtdatee today to re- move unautborbed •iJU. CHy crews woald remove them 48 hours and the city pcrh1s-~d cbarce. tbe Offen- ders for tho expense, Bdalto said. . . -----·-· . . T~. March 2t, 1978 s DAIL y PILOT A3 , $14.6" Million Transit Deficit Seen· Direct.ors of the Oranae <.:oun· ty Transit District have ap· proved a five-year financial plan that fore<:asts the pUing up of $14.6 mUUon operatlng deficit.I. by 1983. But none of the directors was endorsing deficit spending or. for that matter, planning for the spending reversals forecast in the five-year plan For one thing, all but the fis- ca I year 1983 deficit of $6.5 million is covered by a cash re :.erv~ fund already earmarked to cover $8. l mlllion of the pro· )ected rave-year deficit And before voUna 4-1 approval of the financial plan. OCTD's directors ordered district of ficials to report back to them with a plan eliminating the pro j~cted deficits. Moreover . Director Al Hollinden said, "We as a board will never let this (deficit spend- ing) happen. "This is simply a plan based ,.,. wi...,...i. HARVEY THE ATTACK RABBIT IN HEALTHIER DAYS Vicious Bunny Loses Aght With Ear Infection 'Harvey' Gone Attack Rabbit Loses Battle NEW \'ORK <AP> -Harvey, the notorious attack rab bit, fought his la!.t battle and died -two days before he was to haw appeared in a campaign against Easler bunny a l>use ll1m!.elf an Easter bunny turned year round bully Harvey dit•d Saturday morning after a brief illness He "as thret' years old and a celebnty of some note ·'They arc not the ~trongest animals when 1t comes to being sick." remarked Caroline Thompson. duector of ::,pecial proJecl!> of the locaJ Amencan Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. "I just thank it's mcred1 ble that he picked Easter to kick off " SHE SAID THAT THE ASPCA had hosp1tahzed IJarvey for treatment of an ear infection and that he ap parently was responding to antibiotics. But the infection got the best of tum, and Harvey died in what for a rabbit 1c; middle age Harvey turned hateful, she said. because of abuse at the hands of a family ~hose Easter rabbit he became At his death. he still bat anyone who came close, although hf' was beginmng to mellow. He snubbed other rabbits, male and femal<' And he came to symbolize the ASPCA 's ap peal~ against animal abuse. .. Ile was a great educational tool for us." said thl' ASPCA. which once quipped that Harvey would have made El great watch rabbit llE MADE A NATIONAL tour last fall. T-shirts bear mg a likeness of the 4112-pound black-and-white creature raised thousands of dollars for the ASPCA. There is even a TV special 10 the works on Harvey. At mid day Monday, Harvey was to have starred in a mad Manhattan proaram on animal abuse geared lo Easler Instead. al about that time Harvey was on bis way to his cn•mat1on along with other animals who died at the ASPCA ovl'r the weekend. Bul the show mu::,t go on, so Henry the Hare said to look like Harvey and have an equally nasty disposition heroically bopped into the breach and made the ap- pearance in Harve:v's place Decatur's Ghost on projected levels of operatton IUld anUclpat.ed revenue. It's not a budget and l think use of the term deficit ls a misnomer here.·· But Director Pbal Anthony wasn't buying that version of the five-year financial plan. ··with lbe tremendous re· o;ources of lbe district I can't see why we can't come up with a plan that will get us out of these deficits," Anthony said. "We !lhould delete this plan Planners Seeking Ftinding Orange County planners hc;pe lo obtam more than $500,000 rrom .state coffers the next two \ears lo develop a conservation .rnd land use plan for much of the uninrorporated county l'OUSlhne Hut even as county planning rom m 1ss1ont>ri. put their stamp of approval on the two-year \\ oi:k plan Monday. the planners ,1dm1tlcd that only about half the $500.000 might be available Richard M1msell, an assistant director of the county Environ- mental Management Agency, said he cxepects the staff of the Heg1on:il and State Coastal Com· missions may trim out parl'> of lhe work pll:ln to reduce the cost l 'ndl'r term!, of the California < oastal Act of 1976, cities and rnunt1c~ along the s horeline may develop coastal land use plans with the help of state financing Onc·c thc>l>e local plans are ap· proved by the State Coastal Comm1ss10n. the local gov l'rnmental agencies would take m·er the issuing of permits for development along the coast. Monday the commission ap· proved a list of planning tasks to ht• completed for the Sunset Beach Bolsa Chica area, the South Coast region and the Aliso Creek area. Two more hearings have been "<.'t for March 27 and April 10 on plannmg issues along tJ>e Irvine Coast Those hearings will be al 7 p m. at the lrVine City Council 1•hambers Of the $500.000 m planning to!> ts outlu1l'd so far. county of fH·aals hope to spend about S86,000 on consultants to help cv a I uate energy fa cilities. marine resources and baiard . areas They also want to earmark $73.333 for displays. mailings and brochures to encourage l 0 1t1 zcn part1cipat1on in the plan'::. de,·elopment, $68,964 to study ways of protecting scenic .1r('as and $62, 190 to evaluate 1· o a s t I 1 n c r e t' r e a l i o n poss1b1lltli.>" Brea Driver Dies in Cra sh A 37-year-old Brea man was killed Monday afternoon when his car went out of control on the Garden Grove Freeway and rolled over across all three lanes of traffic, California Highway Patrolmen said today \101ses Sanchez Serna. of 124 S Flower Ave . was pronounced dead on arrival at UCI Medical Cf'nter alter the 4 15 p m. crash, offl re rs .'iairl Legend Testing Slated WASHINGTON <AP ) - Tonight's the night. Will the ghost or naval hero Stephen Decatur return to his former home 158 years after bis death by duel on March 22. 1820? Or will it perhaps seek out the infamous grounds, eight miles away. where the fatal shot was fired? Both versions or the legend about the hero of the War of 1812 will be tested toni1bt on the an- niversary eve of his death after being wounded at Bladensburg, :Md. According to the legend, every March 21 Decatur's ghost re tuTns to the North Drawing Room of Decatur I louse to pe(•r sadly out the window Sometimes. the shade visits the bedroom where Decatur died or wanders through the eleaant mansion built with prlie money awarded by a grateful Conanss Until tonight, the legend bas never been officially tested. But .. this year we decided lo give It a try," said Vicki Sopher of the National Tnist for Has- t o ri c Preservation, which Point Proved? Thur11day. The U.S. Post Otlice, thol.llh. dldn 't appear to be too red-faced ebout the matter. T reated in • routlno manner. the letter WH accompaoJed by a rorm letter from San Francisco Poatinuter L.P. Lee. apolosi1· tna for tho d1l1.1 manages the building near the White House "Our plan basically is to sit by 1·nndlelight 10 straight-backed 1·ham; and see if anything hap- P<.'ns ' sht• 1;aid Another legend involving Decatur 1s that the spirits of those ktlle d at the old Bladensburg dueling ground re- turn to haunt the place According to a book by John Alexander, "those who have had occasion to walk across lbe area have on.en told or fog-shrouded shadows of 1nen of another era" those who bad met their fate on the due.Una ground. This angle will be covered by the police department of Colmar Manor. Md .• near the site o! the dueling field Chief of Police Erne11t Mulllgan says he'll in· struct his men to keep a sharp watch on the site for manlfeata- Uons. More than 2S persons dim at the dueling lleld in the flnt balr of the 19th century, tncludin1 three m mber' of Congreu. Eveo alt r duellnc was out· lawed. eontcalant.I du ed clu- d atlnely In the area. lh ndaome and d I rtna. Decatur hu Men called tbe <from a new five-year transit forecaat> and admit we don't have an acceptable floancial plan.'· Anthony said before be cast lbe Ioele dlssentln& vote. The five-year financial plan forecasts a rile in OCTD capital ana operatl.nt spendlne trom its current $30.3 million lannuaJ level to 189.t million by fi5cal year 1983. And while the bo'tom Uoe pro jection on lbe '83 forecast la a so called $4.3 million deficit, the '" •. ....._ '" ....... American Indian Movement leader Dennis Backs cannot be extradited Crom California to trial in South Dakota. according to th~ California Supreme Court HBLagoon Plan Wins Panel's OK A $25 million, 368·unit con- dominium complex was ap- proved for Hontlngton Beach Monday by the regional coastal commission The proJect 1s planned for 37 acres of vacant land at lhe southwest corner of Beach Boulevard and Atlanta Avenue, a block from the Pacific Ocean and just north of the Huntington Beach Inn 1t will feature a four-acre la~. e clubhouse and canals de· signed to give al the flavor of both Venice. Calif., and Venke. Italy. By a 7-5 vote, the commission approved the one and two· bedroom units over the recom- menda1ion for denial by staff members The staff said tbe residential development would be pre mature and would have an ad· verse effect on the conservation of coastal resources. Commission member Arthur Snyder, a Los Angeles city coun- cilman, disagreed. lie said that the project "was the fruit of thoughtful planning by the City of Huntington Beach " He said that no one other than the regional commission's staff seemed to be opposed to the project Bryan Austin. an associate planner for the city, said the project was approved in concept by lhe city last July. Commission members bad a letter of support for the project from Huntington Beach Mayor Ron Pattinson . ' plan projects a fare boost Crom the present 25-cenl basic fare to 40 cents by then. Not far from view as OCTD's dlrecton discussed the next five years' financial plan was lbe spectre of changing transit ~rant programs and lbe possible 1mpacl qi ~dopUon of lbe Jarvii> property tax rerorm inltiaUve. lf approved by the stat~·s voters in June, the Jarvis in· 1tiative would evade the $3.6 milllon in property tax revenue the d1strtct ant1c1pates receavmg m each of lbe next five years OCTD's directors last month set the transit district's max tmum revenue from property taltes at $3 6 milHon annually. a lid that helped add to the forecasted deficits Also, federal and state sources that provide OCTD with mucb of its Income are under scrutiny by legislat.ors and could be over· hauled, thus having on impact on district revenue!. J3.7 Per~ent Rise County Airport Travelers Up The number of air travelers using Orange County Airport. in the first two months of 1978 in· creased 13.7 percent over the same period in 1977. When the General Ser vices Agency (GSA> .airport statietlcal report is translated to mimbers. 1t means 330,033 travele~• either arrived or departed frorn the airport in January and February A year earlier. the number of passengers who used the airport dutina the two-month period was 290,546. Because air earners operating from the airport are, m effect. limited in lhi? number of flight~ they are allowed to operate. the passenger gain of 13. 7 percent came wilb only a 1.8 percent in crease ln air carrier arrivals and departures Bad flying weather during January and February hm1ted the number of general aviation 'Good E yesight' or bght pl&nt! operations at the airport, accordin~ to the GSA re- port It showed the number of general aviation flights for the two-month period dropped J3 percent from the 1977 level And \he number of militan· aircraft that landed and depart ed from Orange County Airpott in the first two mdnths of 1978 was down The GSA report indicated there were onlv 58 malitar' flight operations at the airport in January and February of ·7g whale the numb<.>r was 150 in 1977 But when measured an term!( of ton!. shtppcd, air cargo opera t1ons gained dramatically '° 1978. a pick up of 25 perct'nt over 1977 GSA 's figures ~how that 435 tons of air cargo \\-as shipped from the airport an the first two months or '78 as opposed to :us tons an the Rame pcnod in 1977 Witness Identifies 'Nazi' in Chicago CHICAGO CAPJ • Speaking tn Polish, the witness pointed to a South Side factory worker and said that was the Gestapo agent who 36 years ago had shot and killed a ghetto woman who re fused to remove her clothes for him. "I have very good eyesight, said David Gelbhauer, a 60-year old locksmith from Batyam. lsrael. Asked if Frank Walus was the man Gelbhauer remembered from the Jewish ghetto in Czestochowa, Poland, he saJd . "Yes.'' Federal prosecutors have cha.~ed the 55-year-old Walus in a civil complaint with lying about his past to immigration of ficlals when he became a naturalized citizen in August 1970. Walus could lose ha s citizenship and face deportation hearings if U.S. District Judge Julius Hoffman rules in favor of the government, a prosecutor said Monday after opening argu men ts. Gelbhauer testified he was a forced laborer at Gestapo head quarters in Czestochowa and lbat his jobs there included re ~ QUIKSILVER •OAllDSHORTS moving v1ct1ms of Nazi question- ing from inlerrogahon rooms when they were unable to leave on their own. He said he sk" Wal us there numerous limes The locksmith. who spoke through a translator. said he also had to pull wagons carrying bodies for burial when Nazi~ began "liquidating" the ghett.o lie recalled one such 1nc1denl in October 1942 Gelbhauer said he was loading bodies onto a wagon when he recognized Walus, dressed in the uniform of an oCficer of th<- Gestapo, or Nau secret police. talking to a woman with two children Ile said he heard Walus order the woman to ctisrobe. When she refused, Gelbhauer said. "He shot her ..• through the back of the neck · Gelbhauer :-.aid he turned away. "because I heard those children screaming .. He said l wo more shots rang out. Hr looked back to see the children lying next to their mother . Prosecutors said 11 wilnesses would swear Walus is the man they saw terrorize and murder Jews in Poland ThJ• Famous Australian Boatd Short gtvn you thrM 1"1J)C)l'Wrt cherltderisttc. • QUA1.nY • RT • FABRIC In great colors end M leCtlon. 10~ Irvine-. Ntwpott &.>.ch c.t.fmi14 "'°"' 642-?00• The form Jett.er explained that 50meUm pieces or matl are left ln pouctiea. althou•h employeu are iaatructtd to mate Utt pou ar emp- ty. When tbos ~uc:hes arc: 1tored. l~ can be .mltlald un· tll tbe bip are u1ed •1aln, C ar liadbtr'lh ol UllJ d.A.J. Hit etplolta tn lour wars tlP· • t\lred public lma•iriatlon and ------------------ helped establish count1"7"1 • l'bnn lt1 t r a d. naval lhtdi • I A 4 DAILY PILOT Tuuday. Mateh 21, 1971 ~ with~ Tom~~''' Jus t ... ~easting Morphine Sharing Traffic Woes RADIO FREE TRAFFIC: Reports just dispatched out or our County Seal m Santa Ana suggest that Orange Coun- t v 's public bus line 1s about to go $6.5 mllllon ln the red. Hut al the same Lime. the bus brass are moving into a new t•n lt•rpnsc Tht•y'rc i::omg to try radio. l'lcw.l' do not. tiowevcr, get too alarmed about the budgl'l The $6 5 million deficit won't happen next year This 1s .1 pruJt'cl1on for over the next five years. Thu.'> lhe Orange County Transit District wouldn't be that far into the hole until 1983. In add1t1on, it should be noted that transit directors ha\'(' ordered their admm1slrators to figure out how lo cut dm' n so outgo 1s doscr to income. So you can rest easy. nranqt• County Trnnsal Chtt/ s Checking Tra/fte Jl,\Vl~G NOW SOLVED the budget problems, the bus line chiefs have decided to embark on ttus new enterpnse <'ailed radio The plan calls for equipping the public buses with radio transmitters so they can report traffic conditions to county radio stations every 10 aunutes. Bus dn vers would rclav the "ord. The bus brass fi gure that broadcasting radio traffic re- ports "ill cost the county district $19,300 a year. But in re- turn, they 1innnunced with enthusiasm, the bus outfit would get S200.000 in frc•e radio commercials. \.l'lt111g ),omt:lhing worth $200,000 for just $20,000 looks like a real lkal ON TH E OTHER HAND, lhe plan might backfire. You c:.in hear 1l now, as the weary bus driver r eports in over his radio on latest traffic conditions: "111, there·. all you weary, sweating commuters out lht•re in trnffic. This 1s your friendly Orange County Transit District driver on Bus 43. Too bad you're not riding in comfort with us. You could see this sight too. We're stuck on the San Diego Freeway. Been here for 48 minutes. "We've seen five crashes so far. Wow ! There's another one now' "RIGJrr NOW l'D GIVE my right arm for a cold beer. I've ~ol lhree bottles home in the refrig. lf I don't get out or this traffic Jam and home pretty soon, my bloody brother-in· law will drink all three of 'em. . . " Listening to all this on his car radio, the lone com- muter vows ne,er to get stuck on one of those buses. He pulls off out of traffic al the nearest tavern. "Gimme one tall beer," he says. •Tm hiding here un- til lraHic clears up. "J\nd bartender, turn on lhe radio, will you? "I wanta find out if lhal bus driver ever gets home." . Lone Woman Sails Around the World WARSAW, Poland (AP> -Krystyna ChoJnowska·Liskiewicz or Poland has become the first woman to sail around the world alone, covering 28,696 miles m a 31-foot sloop in just under two years, the Polish Yacht.mg Association announced today. It said she started m Las Palmas, the Canary Islands, on March 23, 1976 and closed the loop tn the eastern Atlantic Monday night aboard the "Mazurek." a six-ton sloop with a lS-borsepower auxiliary engine. The sloop was built by her husband. Mrs. Chojnowska·Liskiewicz is some 1,800 miles from Las Palm as and hopes to reach that harbor m three or four weeks, the a ssoc1allon quoted her as radioing. NATION I WORLD Banker, Money ~ing CASSOPOLIS, Mich. CAP) - A week aeo. Kenneth Rudolph Snyder was a small-town banker re11pected ror his church worl<. Today, he ls the target of a na· tlonwlde search by the FBl. Snyder, 48, who vanished March 14 after telling colleasrues be was going to visit a sick rel- otive ln Chicago, was charged Mo n day with embezzlin g $425.000 from a businesswoman tn t h is s m a ll southwest ern Michigan town. The FlH said Snyder never went to Chicago. .. IT'S A COMPLETE shock to most people around here," said Larry Bontrager, edjtor of the weekly Cassopolis VtgUant. But no one was more dloeked than Snyder's miniater. "He's one or my best friends," said Ralph Vanderwerf, pastor of the Bible Baptist Church m nearby Sumnerville. "I could not have a higher commendat.ton for any man than for Ken Snyder. I believe there's a big untold story." V ANDERWE R F SAID he thought that charges against Snyder , a mortgage vice presi- dent at the Cassopolis branch of Michigan National Bank. were "grossly exat'gerated." During the nine years that Snyder and his family have been members of the church, Snyder served as deacon , church treasurer, a Sunday school teacher and lay preacher, the minister said. "It's a tremendous burden and blow to the family to have al- legations made that in no way gibe with the man's history." Vanderwerf said. He said Snyder's wue and four chlldren, who the banker left behind. were taking the charges bard. TH E CHARGES stem from the complaint of Levola Tillman, president of Smith Hoist Co here, that Snyder took $425,000 from her by recording deposits in two raise savings passbooks. The passbooks and $50.000 lo $60,000 m cash Crom her safe deposit box were missing Friday when Mrs. Tillman opened the box. Snyder had a key to that box, according to Terry Dillon, an assistant U.S. Attorney in Grand Rapids. Dillon said none of Mrs. Tillan's deposits ever showed up in the bank's records. 2 Die, 5 Hurt As Artillery Shell Falls RILEY, Kan. CAP> -The 12· year-old youngster was proudly d1Splaying his latest find from an exploration of the rolling Kans as farmland. The next moment the 18-inch artillery shell slipped from his hands, struck the noor and ex- ploded with a force that turned a mobile home into a fiery death trap for at least two people and injured five ot hers. Police declined to name the victims. "I WAS J Usr sitting on the couch and heard a big ex- p losion," said a woman who lived next to the mobile home. "Everything started falling off the wall. 1 looked out the win- dow. It was just a matter of seconds." Federal and local officials to· day were still investigating the Monday afternoon explosion and fire at the Riley Mobile Home Park in this tiny village on the north edge of the Fort Riley Army installation. •~e lams Blamed This is just one of many ice Jams on Nebraska nvers getting the blame for flooding tn the stale. This one on the Platte River near Fremont. in eastern Nebraska, is where the river spilled O\'er its banks Monday along a 40-mile stretch. Anti-ERA Vote Vetoed Acting Govenwr Nixes 'This S/,ap at Women' FRANKFORT. Ky (AP> - Two years ago. Lt. Gov Thelma Stovall fought successfully to prevent Kentucky's Legislature from withdrawing the slate s 1972 ratification or the proposed Equal Rights Amendment. .. How is it going to look for Kentucky, with a woman lieute- nant governor, to take this slap at women?" Mrs. Stovall asked then. T HIS YEAR, MRS. Stovall, an ardent advocate of women's rights. could not prevent the General Assembly from approv ing a resolution to rescmd the ERA vote. So. tn her capacity as acting governor because Gov. Julian Carroll was out of the stale, she did the next best thing. She vetoed it. "Through a maze or the most dubious parliamentary maneuvers, the Legislature al- lowed itself to be used by the misguided and plunge Itself into action wtuch I consider regretta· hie," Mrs. Stovall said m her veto message Monday. THE 58-YEAR-OLD Mrs Stovall came under immediate criticism from ERA opponents, who said they would challenge the veto in court. Thal appears to be the only avenue open -the General Assembly adjourned its 60-day session Saturday and will not meet again until 1980 /\ Frankfort attorney. Joseph Leary. said the state const1tu- llon, in Section 89, "makes it crystal clear" that a legislative resolution can be vetoed by the governor or acting governor. Mrs. Stovall, who announced h e r c· a n d i d a c y f o r t h e Democratic gubernatorial nommallon for 1979 by saying "I'll run if I'm alive," said she did not fear political backlash from ERA opponents. "I DON'T WANT to be gov· ernor if I can't stand up and do what is honest and true," she said. ''The people of Kentucky know what they want in the gov i?rnor's chair " The governor's chair is one of the few in which Mrs. Stovall has not yet sat. Rcgmnmg in 1949, she served three terms in the state House, three terms as sec r('tarv of state and t" o terms as state treasurer before her election as lieutenant governor in 1975 She has never lost a race for slate office "We have a Jot or la"<; pro· tccl1ng women's ri~hl s 'tale laws." sht: once said. "Out. "1thout ERA, without that con:.t1lut1onal guarantee, those statues l.'an be repea'ted just as easily as they were passed. With ERA, they can't be repealed. We 'll have constitutional guarantee of pro- tection." MRS. STOVALL SAID Mon- day that she was "darn glad" that Carroll had left for a three· day vacation Saturday, JUSt as the Legislature closed. Ride the BIG WAVE ••• Ski the Big Mountain • Win an Air Californ ia ski vacation for two to Lake Tahoe.-~ THE somLAND'S NEWEST RADIO STATION * at the crest of your FM radio dial •fn'"'"' y YAPX Fly to Tahoe's Ski Scene non-stop on Air California ... Stay ~wo nights at Lakeland Vi llage, condominium living on the lake ... s.k' H~ave~IY .. Valley with lift tickets provided. Return home non-stop on Air Ca hf orn1a. ("OOOd ~tlwu T-1• llold..,. Ea~ Ohio Hit by Cold Front ALL FREE TO THE WINNER OF 1,000 Evacuated Awng Flooding Platte Tetttpernf ure• Atl>\l'qlle An<PIOraQtt Att•nt• B•lllmore Bolte Boston lluff•lo Clll<•90 Cincinnati Clnet•nd 0.11'1.Wlh Denver Detroit °""'"' Fet,.,,.,.•~ ~­.._,,,.., HevtlOft IC•n a City LftV"9t L.llllthO ~MOtl• Ml.ml Mllweu•M Mptt-St P NHllVllle NewOrtNM New Yor• oi.11 Clly ~lltMl'pllla '"'*nt• HI l• ""C 10 )~ ., ,. IJ SO SI 1' ., ., 4l JS .... JI ~I le .01 10 56 n •I .1S IO ~S .Ot ., ,. .. ,. .. l6 ,. .ts 21 10 ., ... u 71 ,. .. 60 .u .. 60 n u .2' .. 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Tll9 NalloMI WMtlW Service -dktM ceollr ,_..,_ wltll Ille fW9" In......_ LM Ano-In, wN<h ,_ ...... MellMV ....... to -........... £1MW'*9, lllOfts are llQl«ted If! tM low .ca Moftl Ille coast ""' In tn-~I•• ,..ten. '" IN mlcMOt to ml•'°' !ft .. _ ... ,,._ Ind 111 IN 60s efMI 10l 111 .. Clel«U. COG8tal 1t'ftltfano Mtstly C'-0¥ with _, llMly l!lr9Ullf\~'f. Llt lll v..-IMI• Wl114h ntollt I nd on.r11lnt1~ .. ._..~ .... '° ~. Coastal ,_,..,.,_ wttl re11oa t11el•1•11 S4 lfld •' tnl•nd tem .-ratur.t wtlt rano-lltl-56 erlCI ... Tlwl w11W teffllltfllwn Wiit Ile ~t. Sun, Moo11, TIM• TUatc>AY Slcondtow 1:400.m. <01 S.c-hllll 7.JOp.m. 4' WWDff•JOAY "t"l IOW 1:•a.r11. 1. P:l"l lltlll 7 .411.m, J I SKW..._ 1 .. p fl'I • .01 S.C41M 111r 1:1• p.rn. ,. 1 5"" fl-J1U 1.lfl.,9t'96.1Sp.m. ..... n.. a111,.m .• -. 4·~ 1.m • Sttrl 8qor• ' K#l""911 tiNdlt °""" ...... \ w ... ,...,.•t•twtw1111 ........ •••ti. ~..... ...,. ".,.,..,. t •hfl• Wuu '"' '"' wltll ~--1.CllNIU!IM,.... • • THE BIG WAVE/BIG MOUNTAIN CON I EST courtesyof K·WAVE ~ )STEREO ..=:::::.:.~~~~~~~ Here's what you do to enter. K-WAVE would like to know where you hear us and to have your comments on our program ming. So fill out the coupon below and mail it to K-WAVE. Must be postmarked by Midnight, March 31 .•• Winner to be announced Tuesday, April 4, 1978. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ENTEi' MY NAM[ IN THE COHTtsT ••••111111••111111•1111•1•1 H K-WAVE 2061 BUSINESS CENTER DRIVE, SUITE 213, IRVINE. CA. 92715 1 rectilfed K·WAVE gt the following location a in my car a II ll0m9 Cl at WOii\ Tflt nte•ptlon WIS tl (IOOd 0 felr 0 poor • My commtnt1 on youf programmi ng are:• t I would hke mor&----------- 1 would llke leH ------------ 1 lllte K·WAVE es It la. 0 "111ke music titles and artiatt announded 0 YES 0 NO Whetlayouragegroup? O 12-17 0 18-24 0 25-34 D 3~9 0 SO plus NAME------~----~~--- s111en·~-~~-~---~----- ___________ 211" ___ _ STOCKS I BUSINESS T u e8day"M NYSE 2 p.m. (EDT) Prices w;., ... COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS O..Ot•H-l!W:t-.,..,.,..i tt>e Nh Yon..~. ~e(ltl(, ~•W. l!lollan. 0.trotl •"Cl (II>( •-ti llOO A.«,_t .... -1.0lt\'IM NellOf\414$MCl•l-Of$«u<llwtOt•i.n•ftf l•IJll ... I ~ ,,., '""' >•t ....... .... I h l\..P.f ll J 'l 11•1 I(..,,. 0~ ~· ··~1 ,.,,, ... '"" ,. I 1•..n• (l\Jw (11\j ru.csay, March 21. 1978 s DAILY PILOT S weetener Plan Import Battle Takes Twist By SYLVIA PORTER 8 5 .: It's scarcely news that a bitter battle is being wate<I between those who want cheap imports and those who want to cut back on lmports to protect the jobs or Americans in related fields. Jt's a basic conflict and no solution has been found. But something new has been added, a nasty lwt!lt that might be called ''Internal protecUorw;m." THJS JS AN EFFORT BY one lJ.S. industry to slop the erowth of another In order to protect Its own share of the economic pie. I! successful, It would replace the consumer as the ut. tlmate deciding Coree in the marketplace with a Corm of government control reminJsc.nl of the li(uilds of the Middle Ages. Yet some business interests are, througb ignorance or indif- ference, advocating it. The real losers can only be consumers. The batUe is a spin- ort from the continuing Money's Worth squabble over sugar imports and sugar prices. Sugar industry leaders contend that unhm1ted imports will bankrupt domestic sources or supply, so that when the next s hortage emerges. sugar pnces again will skyrocket They ad\'ocate controls in imports in order to even out these swings. Whether this fear is well based or not 1s bes ide the point or this report WHAT lS ll\IPORTANT I. that l:t<'ked onto the lale8t "Sweetenl?r Supply Assurance Act ' promoted by domestic sugar interests is a new prov1~1on that makes 1t Illegal for even domestic producers to make more of any sweetener than the secretary of agriculture decides 1s required by consumers. The logic 1s simple : Limit competing supplies, raise and mamtain prices and keep more of the business for the sugar intcrcst~ rr domestic s ug<ir <mainly su.;ar beets 1 wins, corn farmers and corn proc<.•ssors lost> Corn produce' a variety of product... including in· dustnal adhesives, candles. \tne~ar. antibiot1C''\, cook1n2 .. 011. margannt.', ru't preventives and soap. rt also m~c·s s weeteners used in baking products, cho<;olall' dMnks, pies. cakes. cookies, jellies. <:tc U' TllE AMOUNT OF CORN lhal could be used for s weetening is limited by political pressure, the beet grower~ would ~et more money and the corn farmers less. Consumers would be hit m the pocketbook Worse, this could become a precedent for cartelmng the economy Once the idea 1s accepted that the production of domest1c industries can be planned for this purpose enc.I 111 this manner, "'hat is the point or competition" Monopoly makes sense in an economy wh('rc the object is to rcstri<'t production rather than to spur compellt1on to produce bet ter products. cheaper prices. more JObs And. top of t.hts. taxpayers would have to put up thc funds for policing the producers and punishmg those "ho commit the "crime" of grovr1ng too much or making too man)' s we<;t pies Running the 6auntlef Northrop Corp. worker in the Hawthorne pl<int appears ready to run the gauntlet. Artu<ilh he'- inspecting two sections of a fuselage built for a Being 74i. Northrop produces the 1S3·foot long passenger compartment under the large!'l known commercial subcontract ever awarded. The plant builds three fuselage shipsets a month Union Homes Loan Opens Toro Office Unton Home t..oan5, home loan brokerage hrm, has Opened IL<t nnt El Toro ofrtce al 24602 Raymond Way, Suite Y. The brnnch is the newt!1it or the firm's 35 ofhces 11\1 California nnd A1rtona. u According to m1najler Cordon Finn. Union arnniu Joana between borrowers and prtvat<' investors. thPy are aecu:rcd by tn1st deods on rul property. Since its found.in• a quarter ol a century aio, Union Home r..oarus hH ar· rao•ed almost hall a billion dollan In loans on all types ol pro~tty. with ai.nJle family home1 es lt.s major area ot apcclalluUon. Mervyn's Plans Stores crvyn•s. a Wen CoHl 1tor. chain, bas announc.d lt. wlll open D w •~ la.ta thil year In Upland and I Redwood l.Y to brint the chaln to 41. Al ~a,dy .p\ann fot ea.rUer th.LI year are new atora ln CotorrA ifid Coll 1e Grove. ! . • ~ • -DAA.Y PILOr Television TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS I I 1:s 1J1\ Y EVENING •11=.HEWS 8 l!MIEROEHCY ONEI Wtitn • huSband and wt .. ~ embt'olled Jn a violent argument, th• paramadica are eali.d 111 to aid the Injured. 0 H8A IMl<'18All Loi AnQ9lel Laker• vt. S.n Antonio Sl>Ufl m THE llRADY BUNCH Annoyed et being '° aman. Bobby triN Petci-IO mike hlmMlf tallef When thal 1a1i., he trlN to become• rnonllll giant. Cl) ROOKIE.8 Human t1e11· hwo pol.u- "'°"*' ou1 to entic. •n e1u11 ... 1trengw. fD El£CTAIC COMPAHY '11) PEflSONAl FINANCE "Wort<: And Income ®J A8CNEWS 8'30 0 MOVIE In Suspense **'~ "M1n·1 Favorite SPOtl?" (Pett. t) I t864) Aoclt Hudson. Paola Pr- 111.s A .... ~ llC)Ortl- man, thOugh ,_ h1Y1ng llahed In hi• ~ta, rrnn1 now 00 lhe real thing 111 e><del' to U\1'8 hla b\1111-<Jp reputa- tlOll and hla )Ob. ( 1 hr , 30 min.) m BEWITCHED Count BanJola hangs up~1dc do\\ n from the ceiling to pla)' "Alabama Bound" on thl~ uanjo on "The Chuck Barns Hah Hah .Show'' tonight at 8 o'clock on Channel 1. Dal'Tlll beeomoa 8 Oa Vinci W11h a klsa and a 1Witch from Sama11tha tiil O\fEREASY '11) THE GROWING YEARS "Studying Chlldren .. Cl) UNTAMED WORLD "Sahara .. ®) MERV GRIFFIN Aeed draws desk duty tiil MACNEIL/ LEHRER REPORT '11) HOME OAAOENER so11~1·· (J) JOKER08 WILD 7'30 0 CAHOID CAMERA IJ MEWL YWEO GAME 0 9 HOLLYWOOD SOUAAES 7:0C> D NBC NEWS 0 UARSCLUB 0 A8CNEWS m llOVELUCY ID THE BRADY BUNCH Mike an<1 Carol ara hdv1ng d•ttlCIJlly adjusUng lheor two r.,,,nies to IMng on ona house .. A•cky and tile Mertz~ '11a the C4tlltral characte.s on Luc)'s first novel (!) AOAM-12 Manoy Or•*s a pot•c.e rookte as a p.i11ner when (!) AOAM-12 Reed os assigned 10 .. m~ d magazine artoc1e aoou• Malloy fD l A INTERCHANGE c·hannet Lbi ing• O 11.r~.:l !CBS> lo• Angrl• 0 !\NBC fNBC:l Lo<: An<Jt•lt'-. 0 l\llA (Ind) LO'> An·jt:ICS 0 KABC·TV(ABCI lo" Ang1•lr• ({l "FMB !COS) San Diego 0 KHJ· TV (Ind , Lo~ AnQeh!'> l'f~ KCST (ABC) San 011>qo ID KTlV (Ind ) Lo5 Angelt·~ Q.) KCOP TV (Ind) lo~ Angl?I!'~ ID KCET· TV (PBS) Los Angcll-'S '11> KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntington Be.icn ··1n~>da Strlllghr' '11) NEWSCHECK An 1nlorma11ve colh>ctoon ol Orll/lQG County new1, 90lltlf111nent and consume< aHa1r1. poopte and sports l f) THE GONG SHOW 11·00 tJ (J) SAM Allet unowccesslully pu1 !Ul11g •burglar loaded wllh loot f~om a gun llore. S11m and B1aeo lake on a pa11 of h11acker1 trying lo Qt>I rod ol a truckload 01 llolon clOlhl>I 0 CHUCK BARRIS Gues19 Cao Calloway Lhuclt Berry. L~nn Arld••· ~n 0 MDI/IE • * •,, .. C..ountaown I 1968) Flobarl Duvall Jame. Cun An Amencan astronaut lands on the moon onty to dllCoYe< a demolished Russ11n spacecr111 (2 hrs ) O ®l LAVERNE• SHIRLEY •rtoe Crulte" Tiie girts Ml out le>< a f1Y9-(lay e<urte l•llad with s.in, luo 811d mo11 (R) ID CARot BURNETT AND FRIENDS (!)MOVIE .. ·~ "Psls81u9" (19e1) Sidney Poitier. Paul Newnwl. A !>* ol ""*1- ~ In Parta romance two Q'!1t on vacation (2 hrl > • JAMES MICtia.EA'S WOALO "Sptiln: The land And The l~" Mlcnaner ,_ 1119 uolq~ h11110ty of the country dlfonleled In his 1\0\'91, "lbwla," attempting to caplufa me "....-ice, rlc"'-, COIOt of a wild. atranoe 80d oonltedlotory land .. G~ .. How To SYtvlva Your JOb" The ten lllOllt ...... ful oooupatlona; the wam- "'O mlgna of arr-. fle;tlble ""Oftc ad*ulee -Jot>.. '91alec:l*'lloo. I~ 0 (J) SHIELDS & YAAHEU ··c-·· 0 THE HO'TDOOOEAS: A WINTER EOUINOX llle acll<>rl OI an 10tema- 11011al compet1t1on In A,,_1ea·a newest and ru- teat growing daredevil •PO<l. fr-lyle Skiing or "'Holdoggtng" ts pr-11· ad ID CROSS.WITS '11) OVEAE.ASY 9 00 0 (I) C8S MOVIE * * * .. Support Your loc., Gu11toghlllf (19711 Ja,,,_ Garn« Suzanna Pleahetle 111 orde< to swin- dle a •mall towo, a con man romanc:aa a mine owoer s daughter and onvanta a hired killer ( R) 0 NBC MOVIE **'II "Misty" !1961) Oavod Ladd, Pam Smith. Two youngaters capture a lablad wtld h<><M and her colt a11d find thel laming them prOV!des a11 unex- pected dlvldaod. 0 (!§} THREE'S COMPAHY "Janers Promotl<>n Jae¥. 111d CMlasy talk a rek.oc- 1ant Janet Into aaalng le>< • promooon al tna flo<lst stiop-e She work1 lR) ID MEAVGRIFFlN Gue&lf Tony Benne11, Saran Vaughan, 8e<na- del1• Peters, Karan M()(rOW, Peta Barbutll. fEl DOCUMENTARY SHOWCASE "TVTV looks At ~ha Oscar•" An lmpreulon1s- toc: view of the 19 76 Acada- '!!Y Awards. W MASTERPIECE THEATRE 0'An11a 1(11roolne" Anni hears about Vronsky'a anempted llUlckle, Vroo- Como Takes It Easy Jleteran of 45 Years' Show Biz Picks Spots By JAY SHARBUTr LOS ANGELES (AP) -At 65, an age most , men arc lakmg 1t easy, Perry Como is .•. well, by golly, he's taJung it easy, too. He used to be on TV every week, now only checks in once in a while. On Wednesday, he bas an ABC music special, "Perry Como's Easter by the Sea," done at Sea World Park near San Diego. It was lo have been taped in sunshine. Alas, it rained most of the time. (10 p.m., Channel 7) •-tHAT SllOW'S GOING TO BE a helluva ad for rain gear," he laughed, meaning the rain didn't stop work, JUSl gave a slicker look to the production, which co·stars Kenny Rogers and Deb· by Boone. The ever-relaxed veteran 0£ 45 years iD show biz spoke by phone from has home in Jupiter, Fla .• north of Miami, where he spends most of his time. He was asked what kind of schedule he keeps these days. .. Well. I kmd of make my own," he afniably allowed. ··I work as httle as I can get away with. I do two or three specials a year and a couple of trades (reciprocal guest appearances). TUBE TOPPERS KCET 4J 8:00 -·Spam, the Land and The Lcj'.!cnd." James ~l1chcner author of "Iberia," take:; another look at Spain's "essen<·c. rirhne::-.s, color " KllJ 0 8:30 "The Hotdoggers A Winter Equinox '' AnH'rica's fastest· growing dan'dt•\ 11 sport. freestyle ski· ing, is examinl•d during international competition KOCE so to::m "New Orleans Concerto " t'omposcr H1charcl Dickerson. his nrn::.1c uncl his influence are f catun•cl. ally 110C9Plt a 11111a11t army poet In e><der to forget ha• (Pett 7 of 10) 9-.30 8 {!)) SOAP "Eplaocfe 2.C JQO.e !IYC• cumba to a woman a charms, whole Jenica awalla a IUft • V111d1CI on her trial for Iha murder of tann11 pro Peter Cat11pbail 10;00 0 0 NEWS 0 {!)) HAVING BA&IES "()jd Fr1end1" When an uowed mo1i-decldaa 10 glYe her baby lo her ball friend, who 1a marrlad but barren, she realwia tlley mua1 .. ...., their relatlor\· stl\p (I) HONEYMOONERS Ralph enlwa a conto1t P'C*lng the category ol popular music, and -s to have a amooth road to Iha top ptlza. f.t) MICHAEL JACKSON '11) NEW8CHECK An lnlormat1Ye col~tlon of Oranoe County newa, • government and con1t.1mer attalf1. people lll1d •port .. 10:30 Q) CD NEWS fL) MACNEIL / LEHRER REPOAT '11) SPECtAL New Orleans Concerto Black Class.cal mulic com- P<>aar Roger Olcka<10n etaele1 hoa "'New Orleans Coflc:et1o· . a pr_,tatJon ol the !>*-and 1 look at Iha compoaar'a ~ and influenc:.. 11;00008(1)0 NEWS 0 LOVE. AMEAICAN STYl.E • *. "'Time limit .. ( 1857) Rlchatd Widman<, Richard Baaahatt. An otto0« lacaa pou1bl• court-m1rtlal beceuM OI ~ Iha! he r-'9CI lntormatlOn to lhe enemy wtlrte lo a P ow camp (2 llB I ID THE 000 COUf»(.£ Oecat gall dMclkhe ji11an ahw comtntttlnQ himaell to wmtno a boOIC C!J LETS MME A DEAL El;) DOCCAVETT au.I: ~ and Chor•- ogrllj)ller Meroe CU!lnlng- ham. m MACNEIL/ LEHRER REPORT 11-30 fJ (I) C8S LA Te MOVIE * • * .. Columb<>'. Double Exposure" ( 1973) Peter Falk, Robert Culp. A ruth· '-motivational r-rch apeclallat wl\o u-black- mall to !\Kiiier hla cat_., muroata a men about to turn him In 11\d lramea the victim'• wlffl (RI 0 TONIGHT Hoit. Joho11y Caraon. GUMll! Bing Crosby, Ray Bolg«, MllMn Hamllacto, 8uf1 Mullln, Ctir'NIC. (R) G LOVE.~ STYLE "Low And The Pbnt>er'' Ag9tha trial to attrw:t the attention of the repairman. .. love Alld TM "-Site 8.. Pally r8tums trom e '-hi! ape with a MW t~·· D O ABCMOVIE * * "Twin Oetact"c,M" (18711) Jim & John Hagfl', UU\an Gish. Twin pttvate detectfvaa ettemc:itlng lo expoae a paycllle coo group beoomfl lnvot.oad In muider.(Rl Q) THATOIAL To Obtau1 1 llsl ot -ny ,agelltl CONTROL tnakn 1 deel with the ._,. owner ID CAl'TIOHEO A9C NEWS MORNING 1 12:00 fll TWIUOHT ZONE S 1•81199 oocurr anc:iea Ill a tmllt to111n IMO l»O(>la to believe llley are being Invaded Q) MOVIE "ThrM Hou11 'To 1<111·· (1954) Dana Aodr1w1. Ooona Reed. A man 11tempt1 to aoi ... Iha mur· d« of hi• brother, yeera aner he wu acx:uted or the C#lme and eacaped. (2 hra.) «I) MOVIE ** "Areman. Save My CNld" (18s.41 Spike Jonea. Buddy Hackel! A fire 11111or1. "*'Nd by SPlke Jona. and hla band of ZMIN. get their ,,,_I g&ao- H~rtvan eng.na. ( t ht., 30ml11) 12:30 D MOVIE • • "'The Lemon Droo Kkl" (1951) Bob Hope, Manlyn Maxwell A gang. ater ~I bad Up and lnaiat• that hit lnlormet Clell\ler S 10.000 Within a month ( 1 hf • 65 min.) 1;00 0 TOMOAAOW TIM Rev. Bob Richards Olympic gold medal winner, talk• about Ametl- un athletes: Or Ira Gol- denberg tella Why he ck>Md Franc:onla College 0 NEWS B ISPY .. To Fl0<ance W•lh Lovu .. (Pllt'l 1) 1:15 tJ (() KOJAK "lo-Tak .. All" A pelt or llNclt lo-. (laalle Nletlari, Ja'Net OUBoi1) collal>Ot•to on a mllllOn dotlv diamond helat. But, In the pl811'• 8Jlacutlon, the woman'• huatland II ll\Mlvertently mwOered. (R) 1:30 Cl) MOVIE * * "Looit In A11y Window" ( 18111) Peul Mite, Ruth Roman A ·~· paran11 ronany reelQe how baa lhaot holne Ille la wh«'t their IOf'I II arraatad ~ ptOWllng. ( t hr., 30m<n) 2.-00 0 NEWS 0 MO\flE **'~ ''The Onl)I Way" (t912) Jane Seymour, Marla Poller. The Nazi oca.pat iorl of Denmark Is met With raalrtance. (2 hrs.) Womat1" ( 1861) RoO«t Mll(.hum J-RulMll A lall V"Y. beong uaad 10 IHlhQ a tacket-baCk IO lhe US from Mt1~1<:0. 011 COvetl lha plot and WOtlll Wtlh lmmlg!allor'I OltKAall 10 lhwWI Iha crime (2 IV•) t-26 fJ 8 NEWS 2:30 0 MOVIE * • ·p111ow Of ONth·• ( 1945) Lon Chaney Jr , Branda Joyce. A lawyer murder• hi• wile and teml- 1y alt., 1a1tt11g In 10ve wlth another woman ( 1 hr , 2$ min) 3:000 MOVIE • • • ' Mldaummer Night'• DrHm" (19111) Animated Narrated by RictwCl Buoon 61\ek• apeore'a comoc: la111asy ol 10ve 8llCI the QOf!IU91ona that It C•ll crMt• ta pt--.ted (I IV., 30 ml11.) CD HEWS 315&0 HEWS 4:00 IJ MOVIE • • ··only The Cool'' ( 1972) Lllll Pai,,_. Michal Conatan1111 Not realwng her hu•band •• working aa •11 Mp<onaoe ageo1, a ... oman beloevea Pie '' l\av. tng an aJlalr and kllls hi. !&male uaoc:.late.. (2 hn ) 0 MOVIE • • .. The White Spider" (1963) Joachim Berger, Karin Do< A mastw dalac- tlve. whose klenllty hu !>Mn kept a .-:rel, la the only h<>pll ol llwt lrea world ag1l111t org&nlieO death and dettrucuon. (2 h!S) m MOVIE * * '"l0<1111 OOon11" ( 186 lj R1ch1rd OrMne, Carl Bel\- ton Reid Oppt ... ad Eng- llSh larmara organize 811d e11ac1c a rulhlels outlaw lamlty (2 hra) Mredn .. sday'• - Doy,irne Mo.,les MORNING 11:300) ** ""Fleala .. (t1M7) Ellh« WIUiama. Ricardo Monlalban A "'°"" boy and gOt1 grow up to become bullflQht.,. at lhelf lather'• oe&lre. bul the call of mualc Is stronger lot tl\a boy (2 hra~ 20 m111 I l>FTERNOON 121>0 0 * * • ~rd Climb The Hogl!Mt MOUllt .. 11 .. (195f) Rory Calhoun. SuHn Hayward. A new PlrllOtl end 1111 city-bred wife acx;ept 1 position In turn- .. Love And lhe .IMloua Huebattd'' JOfln wanta to taat hll wtla'a fldetlly. "Love And The free WMl<end" To11y Invitee Laurie lo '1\ar• a11 apart• nient tor a weekend. "'Oona Wlth The 8rll8le'' Cl) OET SMART ID MOVIE o f-111 a-century rural• • Georgia ( 1 hr • 30 min.) ' ' B MOVIE **\I\ .. His Kind Of Carol Burnett Ends 11 Years of Co1nedy ~ B.Y JERRY BUCK LOS ANGELES (AP) -The charwoman perched on her bucket and began to sing. ''I'm so glad we bad this time together -•• ''came the familiar theme of the Carol Burnett Show. Tears welled up In her eyes and ==~ started down her cheeks. " ... l'M FEELING OH so blue.- and still the happiness comes through ••• comes a time we have to say so long." Tugging at her ear, her traditional salute at the end of each show, the red-haired comedian walked to the end of the stage. Turning once to wave et the audience and throw a kiss, sbe kissed a sleeping guard on the top of bis bald bead, and was gone. After 11 years, 1,500 comedy sketches, 500 musical numbers and spoofs of virtually every old movie, Carol Burnett was calling it quits . ~ISS BURNETI' TAPED her final a happy time. " •• CB.S WANTED l'S back, but I think it's classier to leave before Jou're asked lo leave. I'm proud of our s how. I'm no dummy. It's time to put it to bed." Seated in the audience were suc.:h performers as BemadcUe Peters, Al- len Ludden and his comedian wife Betty Whale. Roddy McDowall aJMt pioneer movie actress Lillian Gish, who will appear wilh Carol in the up. coming movie, ''A Wedding." JIM NABORS, WHO appeared .on each of the season opening sbows for 11 years. came later. Miss Burnett, whose show was the last surviving to provide live enter- tainment without electronic gim; micky, says her plans include several specials, another movie and a lot or thought about what else she wants to do m the future. "'" wi .. .,.... h CBS . MIXED EMOTIONS s ow at Television City on Fri· • SINGING HOLIDA'f SPECIAL WEDNESDAY Debbie Boone, Kenny Rogers, Perry Como "I AM DOING A Ll'ITLE MORE re<:ording now, though," he added. •'I goofed off for a while because I was doing quite a bit of television, and I was really picking my own pocket. Carol Burnett Quits day nighL It will be aired as a two· ---------hour special March 29. Much of the show is Burnett nostalgia -repeats Three Paramount Pilots Filming The Hollywood Reporter "'Legs," "Spanner's Key" and ''True Grit.'' three pilots from Paramount, are being !Umed on three different sites. "Legs," a Garry Marshall project for NBC, is rtlming on the Jot and stars Caren Kaye, Marcia Lewis. Scott Baio and I"'ynda Goodfriend in the situation comedy built around the lives of Las Vegas showgirls. ''Spanner 's Key," an NBC pilot, was created by Peter Bencbley. Filming began on the un- derwater action-adventure in Key W~st, Fla. Stanley Kallis is executive producer. Ben Chap- man produces with Alex Singer directing. Michael Parks, Mary Louise Weller, M006ie Drier. Felton Perry and William Windom star. '°True Grit." an ABC pilot etarrlng Warren Oates and Llsa Pelikan, began film.lag in and around Canon City, Colo. Sandor Stem is the writer-producer with lUcbanl Heffron directing. Actress Rep~es 'Roots' TV Role LOS ANGELES (AP) -Lynn )foody will rccreatb her role as Irene for ••Roota: The Second lfundred Years" when productlon betins ln April. Producer Stan M•rsuUu bas aiped lohn ~nnn to direct tbo ftnt and third se1ments •nd William Cram to dlred ueoGd m t of th 12-part aeries. Geor1 Stantord Brown bu a}Jo bee.a s~ for rote as Tom. Plon r black cln~matoarapher Jobu M. W1kota Will ICl'Te tor of ~aJlh1 fw I>&TidL FOCtuetJ~ • "Beeause that (records) is, as the kids say, where it's at." Como, who began his career in 1933 with Tom- my Carlone's band at a mighty $28 a week, was asked if the more recent era or acid rock ever made him think his easy-listening-style was finis. "NO, I NEVER FELT THAT way," be said. ''There are always good songs cropping up. Heck, I cut 'Impossible' and 'I Love You So,' both bits in th.at era. But I never try to push anything. ••If it (a song) doesn't show any sign or life, I just get off of it. But they're writing some fine, what you'd call 'contemporary,' songs today. There's a lot of good music out there if you listen for it." Jt's a physical fact that as singers grow older, they have a tougher lime bitting the high notes. They tend to pitch their musical arrangements in a lower key. Como saya he's no exception. ''YES, J'VE GONE DOWN ALL right ... be laughed, launcbing into a story aboot hltmelf. ~e was doing a concert last year, be said. and was a bit hoarse. The musical arrangement seemed a bit high at reheanal. So, be •aid, he kept telling the pianiltt, •"Take it a lllUe lower, a lltUo lower,' and finally he says, 'Geez, P~rry. I'm runnlnJ out of piano.' And the band just broke up.•• EASTER SUNDAY BRUNCH "With Ttie Ea1111r Bunny In Person" Hutton Role LOS ANGELES CAP> -Lauren Hutton star~ in "High Rise," a thriller Warner Bros. Television is now mak· ing tor NBC. or sketches from old shows with Harvey Korman, a 10-year veteran of the show, Dick Van Dyke, a regular earlier this season, and several guest stars. While sitting on the bucket, Miss Burnett talked to her audience: "l have very mixed emotions. This is like graduation. It's a sad time and llllfJRKRIOM. lll10I Af!!lillAIK ..._ .... 1.aDDllMIWPDDDUO...-~ TECHNICOLO~ ml._. ----~ ~ WalOOSelt--1ROOitC.Jcns ~Nmw;y~ 0.041~ .... Wexler ,__,__Sn.a Gibert f'tadoad~ Hellman ~-,Hal kJ:lJy . . . M.A*fttUTIU ... ,._ 119-UJt &WADS THIATllS c-....-. HMHO Da.UllYE.L't' AT, ~ edwards CINEMA CENTER MA.llOIAT ADAMS. 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