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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-03-22 - Orange Coast PilotI ~ Wad Tells Jury Again' 1 .. 1 ' f He'd 'Do W EDNESDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 22, 1978 Ve&-11, Met. 11, • l•C'TIC*I, 41 PAMS It • Man Defies Bell for WHe .. - ~ .. . • Naked Patient Captured • CdM Wrestler Fells Suspect • Surprise: Showers Ret1•rn Circus Show ' ' ( l l 1 { l ' I • µi I f , t Tempers Flare Coast Rain Returns Waddill: 'I'd Do It Again' By TOM BARLEY Ol Ille INffy ...... $Utt • Dr. William Baxter Waddill told an Orange County Superiot Court jury Tuesday that if he were to again confront the situa- tion he faced in Westminster Community Hospital on March 2. 1977, his actions would be ex· aclly the same today as they \\ere tben. The Huntington Harbour physician testified during a Jong day of cross exammalioo that the death of a baby girl follow· ing an abortion he performed on the mother was "unavoidable and inevitable. "There #as no way in the world that that baby could have Jived," Waddill told prosecutor }Jobert Chatterton aftel' agaib depying that he $lrangled the in- f afJt.. in the hospital nursery. "I used my stethoscope on the fetus and heard nothing. I felt around the throat for a pube and felt nolbini. And I obly saw aaonal (dyine> casps." J>e testified. "Were t.bose gasps before or · after<te:..tb. doctor?" Cha$tertoo asked the defendant during a murder trial that is packing one of the largest courtrooms in the Santa Ana county courthouse. NetDJJOn '.l'een "I don't know. Does it make any difference?" Waddill replied. "Do you really care?,. Chat· terton asked the witness, flusMd with anger. Tempers Oared on both sides of the counsel table as Chat· terton intensifie<l his questioning or Waddill and reJ>eatedly ac· cused the defendant of failing to answer bis questions. Defense attorneys Charles Weedman and Malbour Watson repea1':!dly got to their .feet to protest. the form ol the prosecu- tion questioning but got little sympathy from Judge James K. Turner. He overruled all but two of the objectiODJS. It is al~ by ijle prosecution that W~U·strangled the baby after b~ -reallied that the saline soh&tton that be injected jnto the motbet 12 hours earlier had failed.to Jbort the fetus. I n a.o effort to refute testimony of five prosecution wltties·aeJ. Watldill again claimed Tuesday ~t the inf ant ~ver ~w life from the mo- ment if was expell~ from the mother's womb. He said mvses ahd a doctor <See DOCroR. Pa•e AZ'> Suspect Subdued By Wrestling Bold ·~-· ....... .1 O STORIES ~5ATH • w1,.. Welk.er tcnda ·-- Wallenda, 13; FOU. to Death During Show Showers Clog Sout h State Freeway s By Tile Assocla&ed Press Rains returned today unex· pectedly to Southern California. dumping mudslides on roads, rtooding streets and dousing un· prepared commuters. Two or three people were killed when a cement truck cruiibed a passenger car on the slippery southbound Long Beach Freeway north of the Artesia F r eeway, the California STOCKTON HIT BY RAIN-Story, A3 Highway Patrol said. Freeway systems and surfltce roads thi"ougholtt Los Angeles County were heavily backed up after the first rains started fall· ing just before the morning rush hour began before 7 a.m. A mudslide dropped on La Cienega Boulevard near the Baldwin Hills, scene of heayy mud damaee this month, and the tUghway patrol issued a warning to travelers between Rodeo Road and Stocker Street. Today's rains, said weather service specialist Wade Carter, Naked J>atient were triggered by a low· pressure system off the coast which is expected to break up by nightfall. Carter said partly cloudy skies and a slight chance oC ram was forecast tonight and ThursdJly. The National Weather Service said 26 inches of rain fell in downtown Los Angeles between 7 and 8:15 a.m. today, bringing the season total to 30.65. That contrasts with 8.18 inches last season. a normal of 12.02, but still hadn't beaten the seasonal record of 38 18 set in 1883, Carter said. The rain struck throughout Southern California, with mud slides closing one lane of U.S. 101 at Rincon Point near tbe Ventura-Santa Barbara County line. Rain fell in the Grapevine area south or Bakersfield, but California Highway Patrol Of- ficer Jerry Hennes said In- terstate 5 at that pass remained open despite a threatening . mudslide. Flasl\.Oood warnings were is- s ued for coastal s lopes and foothills or Los Angeles and Orange counties The snow level, said Carter. was reported at 7,000 feet. Malibu, which suffered e»- <See RAIN, Page AZ) Man Defies Bell He Kills Wife, Cheats Cancer NORTON SHORES, Mich. (AP) -"I would rather spend an eternity in hell than to see Molly live a life of hell." said the note found near the embracing bodies of Lyman and Molly Briggs. Police said Briggs, 66, wrote the note before he killed his can· cer-stricken wife, Molly, 58, and then killed himself Tuesday. A single .32·caliber bullet was in the right temple or each. Police Chief Charles Curtis said Mrs. Briggs was on a bed in the living room while he~ husband Jay with his face and arms in her lap. ··1 don't want to call this a murder case. He obviously loved her a lot," the chief said. But Curtis added a routine police investiaation is under way. A. son, Tyler, 24, told Police after tho bodies were dJacovered that hla father loved hilt mother deeply and had watched her auf. ferins tor a lonJ Ume. Jetty Cook, a nelahbor, deacrlbed tho couplo as "°pre· clout ndlhbors. She •u \h lype to caver up t.h dog 1D cold w tlher .... H was tbo Upo of inan who would http anyono." Mn. O>ok said ~r\111 ritlrocl l11t year to e for bla wUo but nffde4 to rk ono 1"ek pe:r 15 years. They were the best in the world. And, they're not in hell," Mrs. Cook said, referring to the note Briggs len behind. Partly cloudy tbrou1h Thursday. Chance of measurable rajn 10 per- cent tonight and Tbun- day. Lowa tonight 52 to s1. Hishs Thursday 63 to 68. I NSIDE T ODAY I/ JIOU IDQll/ lo put E:cuter dinner on tlM! latU quick as a bunn11 ao JIOU'U llcuic time to celebrate too, we f'ood. Poge I Cl. month to maintain lnsuraace coveraae tor Mrt. Brl•· ••we were thm netpbQ?I rar ---...... --------t ~ AZ DAIL y PILOf s ii U.N. Peacekeepers ~ f Move Into Lebanon x. °' l Ofl :r1 >QI nt N~ e ,. ,q n ,, td BEIRUT, Lebanon <AP) - The first U.N. peacekeeping unit m oved into embattled south Lebanon today, a Lebanese 1ov· ernment spokesman said. Palestinian guerrillas claimed major violations riddled the l.!raeli-declared cease-fire. An 18-man Iranian recon· naissance party entered the Le banese Christian town of Mar· jayoun, six miles north of the Israeli frontier as the vanJtuard of a 400.man Iranian U.N. con· tingent, the spokesman said . The unit · drove in at mid· morning from the neighboring Golan Heights fronL It will tour Tuffy's Puppy Legislators Replace Dog AUGUSTA, Ma ine CAP> -Rep. Stanley "Tuffy" Laffin, who complaine d that his wife took his dog when s he le ft h im , has a new puppy -thanks to the bipartisan efforts off ell ow st ate legislators. The cigar-chomping R e publican ftom Westbrook, whose nickname typifies his feisty de bat- ing style, told the Maine House recently durmg de- bate about the harp seal hunt: "1 remember whe n m y wife left me. I was glad she left, but when I fo und that she took my puppy, I cried." A "Committee for Tuffy's Puppy" was formed a nd on Tuesd ay, R ep. John Joyce, D-Portland, took the ~pcakcr's rostrum to, in his words, "right a great wrong." Laffin was called forward as J oyce opened a wooden box and pulled out a Pekingese puppy. Foreed Into Van Abductio~ Rape Reported by Woman A 30.year-old Anaheim woman told Newport Beach police Tues- day that she was forced into a van by two men and raped by one o f her abductors this weekend. The woman told detectives she was wailing for friends outside the Stag Bar at McFadden Square Sunda y night when a white van with lbe two men in it pulled up. She said they r epeatedly asked her if she wanted a ride and when she repeatedly r efused to accept, one got out and dragged her into the vehicle. She told the men she Jived in Anaheim near the Riverside Freeway and State College Boulevard. She said one or the m en raped her while she was be· ing driven to that location. She said she was freed once the van got to the freeway near her home. Judy Carne Hospitalized: LOS ANGELES (AP) Comedian Judy Carne was treat- ed at a hospital after she col- lapsed from what a sheriff's spokesman said was a possible drug overdose. But a hospital of- ficial s aid the problem was ''vertigo and nausea." Miss Came, 38, was released by he r pnvale doctor about 45 minutes after her arrival Tues· day at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, saad hospital spokesman Larry Baum. T he "sock-it·to-me" girl or television·s ''Laugh In" show is scheduled for a heari{li April 3 on a mlsdemeanor marijuana possession charge. Plant' Knocked Out SACRAMENTO (AP) - Replacement of a tiny light bulb caused a short circuit that has knocked the Rancho Seco nuclear power plant out or com- mission for several days, utility officials say. OAANOI COAST s DAILY PILOT She described both men as be- ing in the mid thirties and the one who assaulted her as being a bout six reet tall and weighing 160 pounds. Fro. Page Al I DOCTOR ... were deceived by what he described as agonal gasps and reflex actions from a dead baby that had been immersed m s aline for 12 hours. Waddill 'told the j ury that a fetus cannot survive a saline abortion for any length or lime and would be nothing more than a "brainless vegetable" if it did. "An yway, it couldn't happen." Waddill was promptly con- tradicted by Chatterton. Chatterton named three babies he claims a re laving normal lives and without any evidence or brain damage after surviving saline abortions. His statement brought both Weedman and Watson to their feet in protest. Both lawyers an- grily demanded that Chatterton be admonished for attempting to influence the jury when he does not l}ave the evidence to back his claim. Chatterton said he will pro- duce the evidence at a later stage of the trial and may even bring one of the babies into the courtroom for the Jury to in- sped. The prosecutor said his claim is based on the statements or three Southern California phys•· cians who contacted him and as- s ured him that they had treated normal healthy babies who arc aaline stavi vors. Weedman told Judge Turner that if adequate proof is not forthcoming he will move for a mistrial. He told Judge Turner that Chatterton probably intended to present evidence related to babies who had been exposed lo lesser amounts of the saline solution and lor a shorter period of time than lbe Wuver baby. Chatterton commented outside the courtroom: "I wouldn't have introduced the evidence if I dldn 't think lbe racts about these three babies are closely related to the Waddill cue." RAIN ••• tensive dama1e In . earlier atorma. wu qain plaped by mud11Jdea ad beavy rain today. •'The ~e Malibu area II not recommended for travel bec:auae of slides and tbinp," said Hennes, "It's not all closed, but just noc r«0mmended." But 1ome road• remained eloted ftom prevtoua •lldes, and Henna aald one hew clot\lre -Mall~u Canyon .Road in tho moudtalna -wa1 closed by tid11•• ril.Mtoim. the Litani River area to choose the p ost s the 400 Iranian pea c ekeepers will take up Thursday to disengage guenilla and hraell torcea. the spokes man said. Another advance unit or Sinai· based U.N. observers wu ,.. portedly prevented frol!l enter- ing the coastal ana or IOU1h Lebanon by Israeli-backed right.- wing Chnatian militias in the ar ea. Le banon's state radio said a thi rd advance party of 200 Fnnch peacekeepers were ex· peeled in Beinrt •hortl1 to aet the stage for deployment ot • 600-man French contingent in the south. The government s pokesman said that "intermittent" viola- llons or the cease.fire occurred an the areas of Nabatieb, in the central sector of the battlefront, and the coastal area of Tyre, 12 miles north of the Israeli border. A P a l estine L i beration Organization military command communique reported heavy fir- ing by both Israeli troops and guerrillas during the nlgbt )n both areas, but the Israeli army said its troops did not do any shelling and the cease-fire ap. pea red to be holding. The communique said guer- rillas pounded Israeli positions on both sades of the Lebanese- 1 sr aeli border with rockets and started fires in two northern Israeli settlements. It also reported machine-gun clashes around two villages in the Arkoub rel(lon, al the foot o( Mount Hermon on the eastern side of the occupied zone and claimed that guerrillas' with bazookas knocked out an Israel armored car and repulsed. an Israe li attempt to consolidate positions east of Tyre. France, Norway and Nepal will send about 600 troops each in the days ahead, and Britain will outfit them with ra tions and other supplies at its bases on Cyprus. Se c retary-General Kurt Waldheim hopes to get 2.000 more troops from Austria . Sweden and other nations to complete the 4,000·man• force authorir.ed by the Security Conn- ell on SUnday when it called on Israel lo get o ut of south Le ba non immediate ly. But Jsra el has said it will not withdraw unhl it can be cert.am the Palestinian guerrillas ex· pelled by it.s forces will not re- turn. At Least 30 Die as Tiro Buses Collide YUMA, Ariz. (AP) -Two Mexican passenger buses col- lided head-on about 40 miles south of the border town of San Luis, killing at least 30 people and injuring scores of others, San Luis police said. The police said many of the victims burned to death in a fire that erupted alter the crash. U. S. CUstoms agents at the San Luis Port of Entry saad Mexican authorities told them that the accident occurred about 8 p.m. Tuesday and involved two buses carrying 81 people. They said a s mall car also was in- volved, but they did not know how many people were in the vehicle. San Luis police said 30 people were killed, but U. S. Customs agents said they were told the Cigure was closer to 40. Fourteen of the injured were transported to Yuma Realonal Medi cal Center. A nursing supervisor, who a.!ked that her name not be used, said four adults and one child were ad- mitted with bums, while one burn vlctim waa airlifted to a Tucson hospital and four others were to be airlilted lo a Phoenix hospltal. CMA. OIU Credit carru SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The C&lllomla Medical A1toclatlon ha• decided patient. can PAY bllll with credlt cards. At Tueaday's sneeUn1, the CMA. HOU•• of D~le11tes adopted the credit card re1olutlon, •lter the meaaure'a author, Dr. Amold J. Breit of San Mateo, Hld: "it•a la~u.ttl~t.,;th~ CM4 f.•~• n..,uie.uu1"4:'ntt.l('l. After d cldinJ ~it wai ethical tor t-• MA'• lS:tOOO mcmben to ucept cred t urd1 from pa- Ue11&1, d.ete1at •orovod a 1 t of rules &oftmlfta Umitet\ alvert11tn1 by dOet.ura. Oil Spill Casualty APWtr..-.. A F rench medical studen t holds up the body of an oil soaked sea bird. It was <.imong scor('s of birds killl'd br seepage from the s hipwrecked supertanker Amoco Cadiz, which spilll'd up to 68,000 tons of crude 011 along thl' B'ritt<.1n~ t0<.1stline f'rora Page Al · WALLENDA KILLED. • • daughter Rietla on a 50-foot wi re. Harrington said the Wa llendas were hired for the circus's current run in the c a p ital of Lhis U.S. com- monwealth. The run started March 1 and fi nishes Aprjl 2. Asked if Wallenda wa• not warned about the wind, usually strong a long San Juan's ex· elusive beachfront hotel strip, Harring ton said: "No, he thought 1t was fine. lie tested and installed t.he wire himsetf." Wallenda li•ed in Sarasota. Fla. His wafe, Helen, was with him in San Juan, but not performing. Ga r y Willia ms , a l ocal newspaper photographer, said Wallenda was leaning into the wind as he inched his way hold mg a balancing pole across the wire strung between the towers of the Holiday Inn b locks separ at ed by San J uan's Ashford Avenue. "As he got past the middle, he' seemed to be losi n g it," Willia ms said. "His balance pole was going . up and down. One or the people who work w1lh him in the act was watching from the roof. He,. yelled : 'Sit down! Sit down!' Wallenda sat, but he missed the wire and went down," said Willi ams. Williams said the hundreds of people watching from the ground and hotel balconies screamed. "The people who work with Wallenda in the act ran around in a p~. screaming 'Ob my God! Oh my God!' Everybody was hyst.erical. People were fainting, colla ps ing on lhe ground." Two men in the Wallenda act were killed in Detroit on Jan. 30, 1962 when a human pyramid col· lapsed on the high ware at the Slate Fair Coliseum. Mano Wallenda, then 22, was paralyzed from the waist dov.n in the 35·foot fall. Dieter Schepp, 23. whose missed step caused the pyramid· to topplt, and Richard Faughnan, 29, were killed Karl Wallenda bung by his legs from the wi re and caught Christina Schepp, 17, sister of the dead man, as she fell. Karl's brother, Herman, 60, caught the wire and Herman 's son, Gunther, 34, managed to re- main standing lkrman and Gunther were back on the wire the next night. ..w., can'l lQSe our ner ve," said Karl, who suffered pelvic inJunes. "We must go on ..• this 1s the fi rst time anythm~ like this has happened in 38 years v.1th the act." There was no net in Lhc Delroat performance. The state leg1:.lalure made nets man- datorv after that. A"· 6.000 people watched in horror, Schepp, who was making his far<.,L appearance in the act. cried out "I can't hold on anv longer." Then the pyramid coi lapsed. Faughnan was Karl Wallen- da 's. son·in·law. Wallenda, who began performing in 1920, was back on the wire within 24 hour., of thC' tragedy. He said al thP tame: "Our lire is show bu siness Wi thout show business we do not sun1ve and we have to exist." Prisoner Dies LONG BEACH CAP) -Chf· fo rd Holloway, 26, of Long Beach, was found hanging by a sock from the door of a cell 10 Long Beach Jail. 1110 Apollo Body Found OnOC Beach Not Identified Orange County Coroner's in· vesl1gators aa1d today they haven't yet identified the slteletal remains of a man's body found Tuesday morning on a Seal Beach jetty. T he r emains consist of a pelvis, four leg bones. very little flesh and what app~r to be n·mnants or blue jeans worn by the victim, investigators said. Two teen-age boys fishing off the• east SeJil Beach jetty at 9 a m. Tuesday spotted the re- m a ins wedged in some rocks and cont.acted police. Coroner's investigators said the remams aµpear to be those nf a man between 35 and 45 H'ars and from five reel, six 11H'hl's lo fave feet 10 inches in height. The remains appear to have been .it Sl'a several months before washing up on the JCtly, one 1nvest1galor su1d. E4R SUCING BRINGS JAIL LI MA. Peru (AP) - A man who t•ut another man's ear in half at a 1978 New Year's party has been sentenced to a year in }all and a fi ne equivalent to $92 30 Danie l Esteban Riviera's lawyer said his client had been drinking when he halved the ear of Teoralo Quispe. He asked tbe Judi:e for leruency. Hylan 1JP1* Oul~ide IN hffl Counlel'. ~ 1onq111' F ... •lblo fool f08m nylon "'-"'" Scr,.w 1n spoke sr.. 111m. s1s9s AO 1032 Promodel l'Oht top. fOlm Plldded uppers lutround 11nllle1 kw form. com- lortebl1 1uppor1. Ltllher 11r1oes. I (o)adidas 1 ''095 646-1919 : I I Orange Coast EDITION Today's Closing N.Y. Stoeks I 0~. 71, NO. 81, ai SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, MARCH 22, 1978 . C TEN CEN-TS t () Q ~ ' High Wire Artist Plunges to Death 1 ) .t J >: ,, SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) • Karl Wallenda, who ch,eated eath for more than hall a cen- ury on the high wire, was killed ay when he fell durlnt a pro- otion al appearance for a ·rcus in wtuch he was perform- with his granddauahter. ii Wallenda, 13, consistently re- J. tused to give up performing, espite accidents throuch the p ears which killed four mem· 0 ~rs or his family and left his ~ ~on paralyzed rrom the waist 1CfOWn. •! "I feel better up there than I t) • q do down here. It is my whole life,'' he once said. Wallenda, wbo first walked the wire in 1.920, made the stale· ment less than three weeks aft.er two· members of the Great W allendas were killed and he himself was injured when their famed seven-member pyramid collapsed in an appearance in DetroitonJan.30, 1962. Today's accident occurred while Wallenda was walking, through strong winds, on a wire stretched 10 stories high between the towers of a beachfroot hotel in a promotion for the Pan American circus . Wallenda fell an estimated 120 feet lo the driveway of the eon. dado Holiday Inn Hotel before hundreds of spectators. He died in San Juan's Presbyterian Hospital at 7:20 a.m .• PST soon after the fail. "The people who work with Wallenda in the act ran around in a panic, screaming 'Oh my God, oh my God'," said Gary Williams, a local newspaper photographer. "Everx_body was hysterical. People wer~ fainting, Irvine Request collapsing on the ground." Another witness, Victor Ab- boud, an accowitanl from Mon- treal, aaid: "I saw him go down on his knees on the wire and I thought be was kneeling to rest. But then I saw he was shaking. The winds blew him off and he went ail the way down, head first." Williams said that Wallenda, balancing pole in hand, was leaning into the wind as he in· ched his way across the wire "His balance pole was going <See WALLENDA, Page A2> It t1 ri j; ~ I I Water Issue ~ I [( I 4 • • I ~ J J i ' ' ~ I • ' ' l ' • t l I f Delay Asked - By JACKIE HYMAN Ol IM o.llf l"ltet Si.ft The Irvine City Council asked the Irvine Ranch Waler District Tuesday to postpone action on a proposed SI 6 billion bond issue. Council members asked the lRWD to wail until after the June 6 general election and until the slate attorney general issues an opiruon as to whether or not the composition or the district's board or directors is conslllu- t1onal. An IRWD representative at the meetmg said the council's request will be discussed at an IRWD board meeting Monday. The city has requested the al· torney general's opiruon. Coun- cilmen questioned the structure of the IRWD's seven-man board, five of whose members are ap- pointed by landowners rather than elected. The major land- owoer m the city is the trvine Company. IRWD directors bave asserted " that, under state law, a water .. ,.."_,..,.. district board doesn't. have lo Qe o.lly '"' ... , ..... ..-... ARTHUR JULIN OF COSTA MESA FENDS OFF RAIN Don't Look Now, But It Fell Again Today Coast Rain Brings Muthlides, Floods By The A&&ociated Press Rains returned today unex- pectedly to Southern California, dumping mudslides on roads, flooding streets and dousing un- prepared commuters Three persons were killed when a cement truck rear ended and crushed a passenger car on the slippery southbound Long Beach Freeway north of the Artesia Freeway, theCahfornia Highway STOCKTON HtT BY RAlN~ry, A3 Patrol said. The two men and one womaQ occupants or the car were pronouriced dead at Paramount Geoeral HQ&pital,. Freeway systems and surface roads throughout Los Angeles County were heavily backed up after the first rains started fall. Jni just before the morning rush hour began before 1 a . m. A mudslide dropped on La Clene1a Boulevard near the -< Coast Weather Partly cloudy through Thursday. Chance of measurable ram 10 per- cent tonight and Thurs- day. Lows toniihl 52 to 51. Highs Thur&day 63 to 68. INSIDE TODAY If 11ou wont to put Easter d1nner on the tobtl quick 01 o bunn11 IO JIOU'U hawr time to celebrate too, •e• Food, Page Cl. ••• It AIY_..,..._ • ... M. .. "' e:: t,;;jt, Baldwin Hills, scene of heavy mud damage this month, and the highway patrol issued a warning to travelers between Rodeo Road and Stocker Street. Today's rains, said weather service specialist Wade Carter, were triggered by a low - pressure system orr the coast which is expected lo break up by nightfall Carter said partly cloudy skies and a sLight chance of rain was forecast tonight and Thursday. Rain fell in the Grapevine. <See RAIN, Page A2) Cycle Racing Sound Levels Set for Study Costa Mesa city officials and race track Promoter Harry Ox- ley are expected to eompare notes next Wednesday on aound level tests from recent motorcy- cle races at \,he Orange County Fairgrounds. Both sides have conducted their own teru and the results will be discussed at a spedal fair board meeting set for 12:30 p m . at the fairgrounds' ad- ministration building The big question is whether new mufflers and a sound bar- rier have reduced noise geherat- ed by the races. City officials have said they will go to court to try and block any more races at the fair- grounds if the nolae level sUll exceeds the city maximum of 55 decibels. Oxley and faJr board ofridaJs say they are doina everythine possible to tone down the noise, but that the city really bu no control over races at tho 1tato· operated facUJty. Oxley is expecled to return to the City Council Aprtl 3 to re- quest c1ty b lnes• permJti for 2S Friday ni&:ht races t>e&lMlna next month. 4'\11 h ap~I OI for bu5Jne11 rmlu only a1 (O\lrt 11 t.o c•'1· elected by popular vote untll more than half the district is urbani~ed. Although council members gave no specific reasons for their request that action be de- layed wtlil after June 6, that is the date when the Jarvis amend- ment, Proposition 13, will come before the public in statewide balloting. Proposition 13 eventually would cut property taxes lo l percent of market value. IRWD board members said earlier this week that, if their bond issue is approved before June 6, it wouldn 'l be affected should Proposition 13 pass. The bond issue would cover the district's share of a major water pipeline from Yorba Lin- da and provide for possible sewer and water service to un- developed land ~ring the next 30 years. The bond measure would be one or the largest in Orange County history. In addition to the City of lrvme, the IRWD ~pert of Tustin. El Toro and unin- corporated Irvine ColnPMY prop- erty between Corona del Mar and Lal{Wla &och. The electi(>b also 1VOu1d establish new Une.rovement dis- trict.I wlthin.th~lRWD. , tr a May electiorvt:s called by IR WO directors, each indivijlual district will vote only on its own bonded indebtedness. ......... Since occupied areas would be affected only by the $2.5 million pipeline cost, registered voters could only vote on t}leir share or that expenditure. The remainder of the Sl.6 billion bond issue would be voted on by owners of unmhabited areas, chiefly the Irvine Co. The bonds would be repaid by property owners in those areas KARL WALLENDA FALLS TO HIS DEATH IN PUERTO RICO Famed High Wire Artist Plunged 10 Stories to Pmvement 'Peace' • m Lebanon Fint U.N. Troops Move Into Embattled Zone BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP> - The first U.N. peacekeepmg unit moved into embattled south Lebanon today, a Lebanese gov- ernment spokesman said Palestinian guerrillas claimed major violations riddled the llrull-deelared c.ae-f 1 re. An 18--man Iranian recon- naissance party entered the Lebanese Christian town of Mar- Jayoun, six miles north of the Israeli frontier as the van~uard of a 400-man Iranian U.N. con- tingent,lbespokesman said. The unit drove in at mid· morning from the neighboring Golan Heights front. It will tour the Lit.ani River art!a to choose the post s the 400 Iranian peacekeepers wi II lake up Thursday to disengage guerrilla Drained Reservoir Problem for IRWD What began as a routine main- tenance program rive months ago has turned into a weather watch for officials at the Irvine Ranch Waler District. And while they watch. the million-gallon San Joaquin res- ervoir sita nearly empty. An lRWD spokesman ex· plained today that the reser voir. which sits at.op a hill separating Newport Beach from Irvine. was drained for routine main- tenance. Before the holding facility could be completely drained and cleaned, il started raming and rainwater and mud flbwed mto the reservoir, which also 1s used for storage by the city of Hunt· ington Beach, the Costa Mesa County Water District and the Coastal Municipal Water Dis · trict. AccordJng to Edy Jorgensen, a spokeswoman for the district, the small amount of wat.er that 1s preventmg the cleaning of the reser voir can 'l be drained until tpe rain slops . "When we originally took down the reservoir, we did 1l JUSt by Jetting the water be used m our sy~tem and not replacing it " she said. .. But the ram has kicked up a lot of mud and we can't let that out through the system, so we have to wait for 1t to stop ra1mng so we can JUSl let that runoff water dram · But customers have not ~n suffering a water shortage. Mrs Jorgensen explained that Metropolitan Wale r District waler has been gomg directly in- to local water systems. without being stored in the reservoir first. She said district officials aren't sure when work. on the reservotr will be completed. "We'll finish up whenever it stops raining," she said. a nd I s rae li forces, the· spokesman said. Another advance unit of Sinai· based U.N. observers was re- portedly prevented from enler- 1 ng the coastal area of south Lebanon by lsl'aeu-backed nght· wing Christian militias in lbe area. Lebanon's state radio said a third advance party of 200 t'rench peacekeepers were ex- pected in Beirut shortly to set the stage for deployment of a 600-man French contingent in •he south. The government spokesman said that "intermittent'' viola- t tons of the cease-fire occurred 1n the areas of Nabatieh. m the central sector or the battlefront. and the coastal area of Tyre, 12 miles north of the Israeli border. Groups Fight Tuition Credi,t WASlllNGTON (AP) -Public education groups launched an offensive Tuesday to counter the effort m Congress to give a tw· tJOn tax credit of up to $500 per1 student to parents of private school children. The American Association of School Administrators, the Na- t1ona I School Boards Associa· tJOn, the American Federation of Teachers, the National PTA and other groups banded togetbei: to fight the bill ln a National Coali· lion lo Save Public Education. The tax credit plan bas 49 co. s ponsors in the Senate and was approved 14 to 1 by the Senate Finance Committee on Feb. 23. Prisoner Dies LONG BEACH (AP) -Clif· ford Holloway. 26, of Long Beach, was found hanging by a sock from the door or a cell m Long Beach Jail. CMAOKs Credit Cards SAN FRANCISCO (AP) The Calilomia Medical Association has decided pataents can pay bills with credit cards. At Tuesday's meeUng, the CMA House of Delegates adopted the credlt card resolution, after the measure's author, Dr. Arnold J. Breit or San Mateo, said: "It's about time the CMA came into the ZOtb Century." After decidin1 it was ethical for the CMA's 25,000 mernbers to accept. credlt ctrds from pa· tlenta. delegates approved a sot Of rules 1overnina limited advertising by dcx:tors. \ A.2 OAJL v PILOT c w~. M.oil a . 1!?! Construotion Cut? • .. .. lroine :-tOmpan'y. Eyes '1iO'me Reducdon By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of .. o.11, ..... (~I Irvine Co officials said Tues- d ay night they would cul future home con.st.ruction on the firm's undeveloped land In Newport Seacb by 20 percent. The pledge, made by David Neisch, a consultant for the land flrm, came durlnc the study au1ioo held weekly a.s part ot lbe clty'a current r.evlew of bow much density tQ allow on the 900 vacant acres remalnine U, the city. The statement drew mixed re- actions from about SO audience m embers. or the cilys undeveloped 900 acres, about 325 acres are owned by the Irvine Co. and arc earmarked for homes and apart· ments. Neiscb said the present general plJn would •How the lalld comP•nY to bulld about 2,450 units on that land. He said conceptual plans prepared by the Irvine Co. now call for a lota) of 1,985 unJts, a reduction ot 465 unlta. r ..... r~Al According to Neisch, "this density re<luction may be even greater on those of our residen· tiat sites that overlook tbe Upper Bay. This includes such parcels as the Newporter North , Castaways and Westbay." To prove Neiscb's point, Irvine Co. staff member Keith Greer. in discussing plans for Newporter North, said that, in- !>lead of bwlding the aUowed 704 units, the company would only put 440 homes on the i;ite north of the Newporter Inn, a reduc- tion of 37 percent. WAI4',ENDA KILLED. • • up and down One of the peopl,. who work with him in the act wu watching from the roof. He yelled: 'Sit down, sit dowo.' Wallenda sat, but he missed the wire and went down." James B. Harrington, the manager of the Pan Ameri<'an ffonored Dnnna Palrykus of Hunt- 1n p,ton BPach, w ho ove>r - < am1• her poho-c uused han- cltcaps to IC'arn to handle a l'lerica l ,10 1'>, is the 1978 Goodw11l Jnd11:-.tncs · worker of the year for Orange County. "lrs Patrykus is now c.i clerk m the Clly of Huntin gto n Beach 's Purchasing Department. Upper Bay Bird Watching Tour Planned The final lour of the migratory bird season will be he ld Satur- day when m embers o r the :friends of Newport Bay guide walking groups around lhe Up· per Newport Bay. The tours are free and no · reservations are required Those who wish to join in ~hould be at the intersection of Easbluff and Back Bay drives hetwec•n 9 a m. and 10 30 a.m. Each tour will depart as soon as a group of about 2S assembles. The 741 acre preserve is owned and operated by the state Department of Fish and Game and staff biologist Preston Johns will be avaJlable during the tours to expl ain the depart· ment's plans for restoration of the marsh. E4R SUCING BRINGS JAIL LIMA, Peru CAP) -A man who cut another m an 's ear in half at a 1978 New Year's party has been sentenced to a year in jail and a fine equivalent lo $'92.30. Dani<'l Esteban 8iviera's lawyer said his client bad been drinking when he halved the ear of Teonto Quispe. He asked the judge for leniency. c DAILY PILOT ="C ""47~~·~-=-:a.:: =--.~-:r. ' ... ,. .• """' .. ,.~'Wt--t .... ' ............ .. ~-· ............ ,.,,_ .,.14 • °"'9 .... c.lilt•'"• '"'"''•lit<t .,. ,., .. ~ ". =:,;.w ... , .. • _,. """'.., l .. -.... ~~ .. • circus. was asked if Wallenda was worried about the wand. "No. he thought it was rme," said Harrington. "He tested and installed the wire hlmself." Wallenda, who was born in Germany and came to the Urul ed States in the 1920s, was performing nightly in San Juan on a so-root-high wtre wtth his granddaughter. Riella. His best-known -and most <langerous -act was the three· fevel pyramid. The bottom level consisted of four men, linked, two each, by shoulder bars. Two more men stood on the shoulder bars and a woman stood on a chair balanced on a pole SUP· ported by those on the second level. "We had close calls many times, but never any serious in jury until the pyramid," Wallen- d a 's brother, Herman , once said. The 1962 accident killed Wallenda's nephew, Dieter Schepp, and Richard Faughnan, the son of Wallenda's first wife's brother. Wallenda ·s adopted son, Marlo, then 22, was paralvzed. Wallenda saved himself by hanging by his lees from the wire; he also caught his niece, Christiana Schepp, 17 Wallenda was hosp1lahted with pelvic injuries and Christiana s uCfered a bram concussion f'rot11 p~ A J RAIN ... area south o( Bakersfield, but California Highway Patrol Of fi cer Jerry Henn es s aid ln- lerslatc 5 at that pass remained open des pite a threatening mudslide. The National Weather Service said .26 inches of rain fell in downtown Los Angeles between 7 and 8.15 a.m. today, bringing the season total to 30 6S The snow level. said Carter , was reported at 7,000 feet Malibu. which suffered ex· t e nsive damage in earlier storms, was again plagued by mudslides and heavy rain today That contrasts with 8.18 inche!ii last -season, a normal of 12 02. but still hadn 't beaten the seasonal record of 38.18 set in 1883, Carter said . The rain struck throughout Southern California. with mud slides closing one lane of U. S 101 al Rincon Point near the Ventura-Santa Barbara County line. Flash-flood warnings were is· sued for coastal slopes and foothills of Los Angeles and Orange counties. "The whole Malibu area is not recommended f or tra vel because ol slides and things," said Hennes. "Jt's not all closed. but just nol recommended ·• 7-story Fall Kills Student BERKELEY CAP> -A 22· year ·old man apparently com· milted suicide when he hun& out the window of a University of California building, let go and feU seven stories lo a concrete loading dock. Daniel Josepb Chaklos, of Springfield. Pa., reportedly astu· ieat at Penn Stale University, 1ied a short time later at Herrick Memorial Hospital, police u.td. Nonotewufound. The land company's plans for lhe Jamboree Road develop. mcnt were among four "concept plans" unveiled by Greer al the meeting The four parcels -Newporter North, Wcslbay, Big Canyon and a former freeway parcel on MacArthur Boulevard -are be· ing planned for townhouses. Greer stressed the proposals arc geared lo the general plan discussion and they are a long way from being the specific type of plans necessary for city ap- proval or coastal zone permit applications Westbay with 71 acres stretching along Irvi ne Avenue north of Santiago Drive and Newporter North with 88 acres were the two biggest sites dis- <'USsed The other two pieces are each less than 15 acres. fie estimated that it could be at least two to three years before all the necessary ap- provals are gathered and con· ~truct1on work begins The plans for the two larger parcels contain provisions for public parks, public street ac- cess and bicycle and pedestnan trails along bluff tops. One Irvine Co. official in the au d 1en<'e privately acknowledged that the parks proposed for Westbay and Newporter North were designed t o incorporate existi n g arc haeological sites protected by law from development. There was little audience re- act ion to the plans until the close of the meeting. Allan Beek. often a spokesman for the political faction which opposes Irvine Co. developments, said he believes d1:.cuss1on of the plans would be meaningless because the com- pany hadn't produced citywide traffic daui that could be used to analyz<' the effect the new de- Hlopments would have on the city'~ roads His remarks were countered by Glen Martin, executive of· ficer of the Newport Harbor· Costa Mesa Board of Realtors. who lauded the land company for its voluntary move to reduce residential density. The meeting closed with another anli·growth spokesman, Dan E mory, attacking Prfartin. Lion Grabs, Kills Boy, 4, Then Shot TEHACHAPI CAP) -A 4· year.old boy believed lo be from Or egon was shaken to death by a lion al a wild aolln-1 compound west of here, authorities said. The lion grabbed Corbett S. Maples when the boy reached through a lO·foot high chain link f e n ce to retrieve a paper airplane Tuesday afternoon, K~rn CoWlty Coroner Rlcbard Gervais said. Young fdaples was iJ>Ull•d through an eight.inch aap at the bottom ot the fence and the lioo began shaking hlb; vlolealb, Gervais said. Witnesses were unable to diJ. tract the 14-year-old lion, so a policeman shot and killed tbe aol~al T'ttll a rifle. TDffy's.· PUppy. . . .,.\ . . Legialalon ~Oils. AUGUSTA, Maine <AP) ..... Rep.~aru-y ''1Vlfi'' Laflin, who complained that )\is wlt toOt bU dog when she left hlm, has a new puppy ...,. thanks to tBe bipartisan efforts of fellow state legltlatol"I. The clgar·chomplng Republican from Wat brook, whose nickname typlftea hli f elst)' deb•t; • fnl style. told the Maine Houle recently during de. ~bate about tJie harp seal hunt: "I remember when my wlfe left me. I was Siad aho left, but when I ound my pupp1, I cned." .. ,..,. .. ...4 A I ror Tuffy'1 PuPPJ" WU Conned and oo ay, Rep. JOh:n Joyce:·D~POrtl , tOok the speaker"' rostrum to. in his WordS, "nght a great~." La.flln was caUed lorward as Joyce o ned a wOoden 'bOx and pulled out a Peldn1ese puppy. ' ' Oil Spill Casualty A French medical student holds up the body of an oil-soaked sea bird. It was among ~cores of birds killed by seepage Crom the shipwrecked supertanke r Amoco Cadiz, which spilled up to 68,000 tons o( .. crude oil along the Brittany coastline. Greenbelt Aid Delayed Tax Refonn Vote May Affect Laguna Action By KATHY CLANCY and Irvine funds, recommends . or uw °"''' ,.. ... si.H preserving most of the land as a Action to preserve the publicresource. 10,000-acre Laguna Greenbelt_ It also calls for sharp limits on will have to await the outcoml ~development to preserve scenic of property tax proposals on the ridgelines and maintain wildlife. June ~ ballot, Orange County And as a way to implement supervisors ruled Tuesday. the preservation plan, the report The board asked county plan-suggests a possible increase in ners l o work the n.e~t L~o the county's Harbors, Beaches, months with city officials in and Parks District tax rate lo Laguna Beach and Irvine on finance public purchase or ways to impleme~t a three·year prime open space. study on preserving the 10,000 Without de lving into cost acres s urroundtng Laguna estimates. the study team also Beach. . . suggested that city officials pro- The study. fin anced with vide some financing for green· $8,SOO in county, Laguna Beach belt open space in their boun· daries and that stale aulhori.lies Mesa Water Meeting Room Now Available Costa Mesans in search or a place to hold public meetmgs are anviled to lake advantage of a new addHion to the Costa Mesa County Water District's head· quarters. The new meeting room at 1965 Placentia Ave. is now available free of charge to civic groups. district officials said today. Room capacity is 45 people and kitchen facilities and a public address system wUl be provided. The meeting room is available weekdays, evenings and weettendJ and there is plen ty of free paflcing Those interested in usmg the room should contact Shorty Schearer al 631-1200. be asked for help. County officials also said dis· cussions lbe next few months will have lo center in part on the possible impact of recently. enacted property tax reform legislation as well as potential passage in June of the Jarvis· Gann initiative which would restrict properly laxes. Jolm Wayne In Hospital, Actor John Wayne h as c hecked into Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach to undergo "some routine tests." ac cording to the actor's estranged wile. Pilar Wayne said Tuesday Wayne is expected lo leave the hospital by Thursday. Hospital officials refused to confirm or deny the actor's presence at the hospital. The report identifies the greenbelt as one of three re- maining major open space ar~ on the Southern California coast. The area st re t c hes fropi Scotchman's Cove south of Corona del Mar along the shose to South Laguna and inlaod along the sides of Laguna Can- yon Road to nearly the San Diego freeway. TONIGHT COAST COMMUNITY COLLEGE BOARD -Regul~ meelmg. 1370 Adams, 8 p.m. "VOLPONE" -South Coast Repertory Theater. Tuesday- Sunday through April 23. 8 p.m. OCC LECTURE -"What's New in Nutrition," Student Center. 7·30 p.m. THURSDAY, MARCH 23 CHART -Hegular meetin1. ~ewport Beach city council Ca.Q· d1dal<'!>, Downtown Community Center, 694 Ccnl<'r St., 7:30 a.m. Raises Rescinded SAN DIEGO CAP) -Reacting to strong public opposition, lbe City Council voted to rescind a 53 p e rcent pay increase its members voted themselves last week. Reconsideration of raises ts scheduled for next Monday. 5, 1 0 AC)Ollo Ny4on Ul'Pe' Oursde IOf'. hl!f'I couni. Padded 1orig"9 F"'•oblo fool.fotm nybl sokl s,., .... ,n 'P't. 5)'Slem ~1895 I AG 1 OS2 Promodel Ligtn 1op fe<1rn pedded uppers aurrounct 1nkle1 tor firm. com. torteble &upport L•ether ltt1pea. I {')adidas I • ACl1011 ... .., Ulh41MNr~"-.Mlumb180'1~ ll'd! ""'"'1· crv-IMttw !NOie. F1 .. 1blt 1oe cep. Y-. ll'*'t •« •~ra ~ Open 9 to 6 -Closed Sunday • ' 538 Center I !HU Jet I ~'of rugoed btve nvton Soft •ntle c:on.r Plddrno Culhtony ,_, -¥ fof Ht•• protec:ltOf\ 646.-1919 Diedrich ~ral ... WI~ e~ed ::.. By GARY GRANVILLE .. .-.... 0.11,...,.. ..... • Orangtt County Supervisors Jhalph Dl~rtcb and Philip An· thony won't know until later this \\>eek iC p leas to have their criminal indictments dismissed Will be answered. Anthony. Diedrich ond their C:O·defendants' attorneys spent Tuesday in oourt attempting to convince Superior Court Judge Mason Fenton the Indictments should be thrown out At the end of the day, Judge Fenlon said he wall rule on the motions to d1sm1ss later this week Ba~k From Flu The indictment!> charge Diedrich, Anthony, Anaheim Ci· ty Councilman Wilham Kott and onetime financier Gene Conrad with violating state campaign regulations. When handed down last July 1, the indictments nl!>o charged F'ullerton attorney M 1chacl Remington with joining an a 1976 criminal conspiracy to violate campaign regulations Pope Paul Vl acknowledge!> cheers from the crowd as he appears at his window al the Vatican toda). The pon· tiff was forced lo skip hts .. ,eekly general audience due to a boul with the flu l>ut he's expected to hold Easter ser\'ices. Remington, however. h:.s • already pleaded guilty to a 'single charge and no longer figures in the case except as a possible prosecution witness. The campaign irregularity in- dictment 1s JUSt one or two cases • pending against Diedru.'h He was named Dec 15 in a multiple-count 1nd1ctmenl that Nia rges ham and architect t:eRoy ROl><: with bnbcry related offenses OC Studies Options In Face of Tax Cut Those problems for the second district supenasor \\Crc put on the back burner Tuesday as the lawyers argued £or quashing of the pohucal conspiracy indict rpenl •• • IL alleges the four defendants with joimng an a conspiracy to •hide the true source or money -funneled into Kott and Anthony "campaign'> 1 The defense lawyers argued '"t.he indictm<'nt should be 1 quashed becaust• l'h<illcnges to Prop. 9, the • faw go\ l'rnlng c~1mpa1~n prac tit•es 1n Cahrorma. h<tVl' bt•en up _peld on t•11nst1I ul wnal grounds (bV a Los l\ngt•l('s C'nunly Judge • 1h1.· Grand Jurv that hrnndcd clown tht• indac·tm~·nl \\a" J <1<.'ling illt•gally ~Ci.IU'it' its l<'rm l. officially ex pared 12 hours before , it voted to md1cl the defendants. • -Judge Fenton already t pulled the Orang~ County Dis · ,~rict Attorney's Office ft om pro- ~cut1on of the case on grounds t1f the apJ)C'aranc-e of bias, a find ·irtg the dl"fens<' lawyers said •taints the DA 's mle in the indict men1 prf)('('ss Nol all lht• J!r:ind jurors \\ho votl'd for the· anrlactment were present at all st'cret hc:.rangs ·leading to the tharg('s Compct1n~ with the drfcnsl' lawyers for lhC' Juilge·s car werl' lawvl'rs from the st~te's /\t· l'>rney General's Office who ?la vc replaced the lJA as pro!> 'fcutor oflhe case They argued that the Los Angeles case has no bearing out· side that county because the c·onstitutional issue has not been • ~ec1ded by higher courts ·• Furthermore, the stale pros •icutors stud, the Grand Jury's '• t~rm had bN•n C"\lcndcd the ad : d1tional hour::. I.>) :J \ al1d court brder issued b>-Superior Court ":1udge James Wabv.orth And, the {>rosecutors argued, not all the testimony in the in- est1gation that began in late 6 pertained lo the cbar9u 'Ought in the. indictment.a he o~d quorurn of jurors s present when testimony rel· ant to campaign pracllcei. i heard, the lawyer11 said ·~Another rebuttal ~rgurnent o(' e proaec1.1tion lawyers was at when J~dge Fenton yanked e DA from prosecution ot th~ se he found no real preJudic~ t only an appearance of pre,s· ice that ~gbt aba.ke p1fb1lc• nfidence in Juttlce. Orange County supervisors have taken steps to find nev. sources of ineome in ca"e Proposition 13, the properly tax 101t1al1\'e. 1s approved by voters June 6. Super\'1!.ors v.ere "'<.1rned b~ County Aud1tor-Controller Val' Heim that 1f the Jarvis Gann 1n· 1t1ative were approved and 1f county go\·ernment wer<• permitted by law to operate in the red. county coffers could be as much as $90 million in debt an 15 months. The initiative would cut prop· erty taxes throughout the slate an average of 55 percent But state laws don •t allo"' local government to opcrC1te "'ithout a balam·cd budget, M> superv1:.ors look these !>ll'p.., Tucc;da~ Created <1 c·omm1ltet• of * • * OCMandates Public View Of Budget Plan Orange Count} Admantstraltw Officer Robert Thoma.., ~<1s told Tuesda) lo open his preh manary county budget rcv1ev. sessions lo the puhlic Thomas asked for Count.> supervisors' direction Inst week after saymg he felt holding open work sessions could interfere with a'free exchange of thoughts between his staff and county de partment heads. Thomas said Tuei;day he didn't intend to create problems by closing the session!> but meant only lo encourage a "deeperd1g1ntothmkang " The administrative offu•er drew heat from the presb and public when he CJected a re porter from the openu~ budget review meeting after holdtnl( open sessions lhe past eight years. He said thi9-oyear'6 meetings Wt•Jd ~enter on the serious bvdget problems facing the county if the Jar vis initiative 1s approved by voters June 6 If appr oved by <'al1forn1a voters, the initiati\C l •I ii J I .,,.,.I< out up to 68 percert of the· t 1,, Ly's property ta:ot ·rc\•cn1ac Super visor Ralrih o 1·d11ch told Thotoas t.hat if ~ .. me rlq>:irt mel'lt heads are reluctant tu dis cuss certain budget im;iacls Thomas 1hould Corce the lst.ue:. to be l.Ud on the labll' Bubb/,es Investigation Sought By Tbe AasoclalNI Press When heroei1 ar~ llillod in this country, ttio 're en tilled to two thin• a nice funeral and a conspiracy lheorv Bubbles l.he hippo~ who crubed out or J..lon Country Safari in February and atayed on the lam ror three week• befort dying March 10, didn't 1et a nice funeral. Her two· ton built wu eut up for a.a a~y thca &hipped to the MU1eum of Natural fflatoey In LoaAneelu. BtJT LAGUNA IUUS~roine cot her eonaP.lracy lbeof'J: One man, pectlftf'....,inaUon, form.alb' no que.ttd an tnfflttl& lion !pto Bubbt.a• dut.h .. "We .hove review th facts and clrcu&l)1t1ncea tur- roundlu the death of thl" htppopotamu•." Deputy Oranae County District Attorney Cllrf Harri• said Monday, "and lt does not :appear tbtl tny criminal act has ~curred." • Hi\8 WRlTfNG THE flndinp ot lM lnvatl11Uon in a kU T to th man wbo h d request the lnq iry, Ger Id Jack.son of Vllta, concluded : 'A 1 led that th poeitlorJ n which tbe animal ln t tr n.quWdd It.Mo ~d.Md to 11.ltrocate 1~~~Qa1ll ~-'~~t~~~!~U, county adm1n1strators to search for new and increased rees that m1#!hl bl' charged for countv services lo offset a pro;ecte<l S78 R million loss in property taxes that could rc·sult from (l<ts-.agf• of the m1t1at1\e Callc•d for an immediate re \ll'\\ of how well department heads ar<• follo\\ing orders to ..,e<.'k cuts 1n next year's county budget Ordered a report by next "'et•k on how much it would co:.t to hire p financial consultant to ~<'<'k f;Jvorable inlere~t rates for !-omt• $20 million the county "'ould need to borrow at sum ml·r·!> t•nd llc1m s:mJ the• S20 million bor 1 owinj! doesn't hinge on vott•r approval or rt·jl'Ct1on of th<• J.irv1s 1111llali\!• Tht· t·uunty traditionally hor rov. s funds to carry its opera lions through the "dry period'" between August and the lime ne"' propcrt.> tax payments are collected m December. he said tn the pa!>l. l~l banks have supplied those rundS, based on tax antic1pat1on notes How<'ver, local bunkers have said borrowing might be more d1Hicult this year because of un certa 111 tax lt!g1slallon II e1 m said local b<ink officials ha\ c suggl·sll'd thl· rountv con-~1der hirmg a consultant l~ <se<.>k .1 favorabJe bond rating for lbe county (:ounty Delays Campaigning Gift Deadline /\ $1.000 hm1t on individual donations to campaigns for Oranj?t' County government of. flee s<.>ckl'rs won't take effect un- t1 I Julv l, suf>{'rvisors decided Tu<'sd.i\ The board followed the sug. gest1on of Superv1!>or Phi.lip An- lhon y and amendea a con trovers1al stttion of lb#! cam- paign reform qrdinanc~ enacted three w~ks C3r1ier. ,- As originalty adopt~the or d1nanc<.· excluded donations alr~ndy received {~ the Sl.000-per-election iQdt'vidual donor limit. ~ Anthony last week asked that tht• $1.000 hmJ! not go into effect ontil after the June primaty. Alt the llllre, he coneti'Sed the ordinance favot'~. \'in&imbents who tradltionally b~g1o cam- paigning and fund rahing earli er than other candidates." fie also acknowledged that es written it appeared to Cavor one group over a nother. Wheelchair Ramps ·Slated For Highways Wedneeday March 22. 1978 ONLY PILOt .43 Tempers Flare ·w~ddill · Tens t lJt•y 'I:.d Do It Again'· .. ' By TOM BARLEY 0t 1i. 0.111 ,., ... "'" Pr. WUUarp Baxter Waddill told an Orange County Super::ior Court jury 'J'uesdl\)' that ii he stage of the triaJ and may even bring one of the babies into the courtroom for the jury to m- i.pect. lie told Judge Turner that Chatterton probably intended to present evid4nce related t~ babies who bad been exposed t9 lesser amounts of the salint solution and for a shorter perio4 of time than the Weaver baby 'were to agalo confront the silua tlon be faced In We.stminster Community Hospital on March 2. 1977, fu~ aeUons would be ex actly the :>lime today a1> the~ were thcl1 The prosecutor said hu; chum 1:. based on the statements of three Southern California physi <:1ans who contacted him and a:. s ured him that they had treated normal healthy babies who are Chutterton commented out.side !>alinesurv1vors the courtroom "I wouldn't ha'\•e T h e llunt1ngton Harbour phys1c1an te~t1f1ed during a long day of cross examination thjlt the death of a baby girl follow ing an abortion he performed on the mother was "unavoidable and inevitable Weedman told Judge Tumer introduced the evidence if I that 1f adequate proof as not didn't think the facts about these forthcoming he will move for a three babies are closely related mistrial. to the Waddill case .. ·"There was no way in the world that that baby could have lived." Waddill told prosecutor Robert Chatterton after again denying that he strangled the in fan\ m the hospital ouqiery Man Defies Hell He Kilh Wife, Cheats Cancer "l used my stt>thoscope on tbc fetus and heard nothing. I felt around the throat for a pul:>c ancJ frlt nothing. And I only saw agonat <dying) gasps.·• he testified. "Were those gasps before or after death, doctor?" Chatterton asked the defendant during a murder trial that is packing one of the largest courtrooms in the Santa Ana county courthouse · I don·t kno\\ Does 1t makt' anv difference"'' Waddill rep.fled "Do you really care" t:hat lcrton asl.ed th~ v. itness. rlushed with an~er Temper:; flared on both sides of the counsel table as Chat terton mlens1f1ed h1!> questiorung of Waddill and repeatedly ac- cused the defondant of failing to answer his questions. NORTON SHORES. Mich. (AP I -"I would rather spend an eternity in hell than to see Molly live a life of hell." said the note found near the e mbracing bodies of Lyman and Molly Briggs. Police said Brigg!>, 66. wrote the note before he killed his can cer·stricken wife. Molly, 58. and then kiUed himself Tuesda} A single .32·caliber bullet was an the right temple of each Police Chief Cha rle!> Curtis said Mrs. Bnggs was on a bed 10 the ln·iog room while her husband la" with his face and arms in her lap .. I don't want lo call this a murder case. He obviously loved her a lot," the chief said. But Curtis added a routine police 10vestigation 1s under way. A son, Tyler, 24, told police alter the bodies were discovered that his father loved his mother deeply and had watched her suf- fering for a long time. Jerry Cook, a neighbor. des,crlbed the couple as "pr e· cious neighbors. She was the type to cover up the dog in cold weather . He was the type of man who would help anyone." Mrs Cook said Briggs retired Inst year to care for his wife but needed to work one week per month to maintain insurance coverage for Mrs Briggs "We were their neighbors for IS years. They were the best 10 the world. And, they're not in hell." Mrs. Cook said, referring to the note Briggs left behind. Defense attorneys Charles Weedman and Malbour Watson repeatedly got to their feet to protest the form of the prosecu- tion questioning but got little "Ympathy from Judge James K Turner. Hl' overruled all but two of the ObJCCllOO!I Northern State I t 1s allcJ?ed by the prosecution that Waddill ::.tranglcd the baby after he reuhzcd that the saline solution that he lnJCCted into the mother 12 hour-; earlier had failed to abort the fetus Flooding, Slides Caused by Showers In an effort to r efute tesllmon\· or rive prosecution v.>r tnessc&, WaddlJI again claimed Tuesday that the infant never knew hfe from the mo ment 1t was expelled from the mother's womb lie said nurse-; and a doctor "'ere decei' ed bv what h e de"Scr1bed as agonai ~asp~ and reflex actions from a dead bab, lh:it had been immersed 1n saline for 12 hours Waddill told the Jury that a fetus cannot survive a saline abortion' for any length of time and would be nothing more than a "brainless vegetable" if it did .. Anyway, 1t couldn't happen." By Tbe Associated Pre5!> A week of fair weather in Northern Cahforn1a was ended b\' a wave of showers and thun dershowers that caused minor street flooding, rockslides and traffil' problems in some areas. Stockton g6t the most rain Tuesday with l 68 inches in the 24 hours ending at 4 a.m. today National Weather Service rainfall figurei. for other c1t1c~ s ho'4 ad Salinas had l 09 mches. Child Molest Suspect Free SAN DIEGO CAP I A Waddill was promptly con tradicted by Chatterton Chatterton n amed three babies he claim s are living normal lives and without an) evidence of brain damage after sur\'1 v1n.R saline abortions ll1s statement brought both Weedmap and Watson to their feet an protest. Both lawyers an· gnly demanded lhat f;hatterton be admona:;~~ fgr a.ttempti!)g to infloenc-e th~ JU~ when he does not ha\e lhe evidence to back h1!' claim Super ior Court Judge has di:-, missed charges against a man accused of molesting h1<, daughter, saying San Diego courts are so jammed with criminal cases the man wa.l. not brought to speedy trial In dlsmissin_g charges Tues da). Judge Haul Ro!.ado !>aid congestion in the court system 1s "a !>Ofry state of affairs . . We do not have enough Judges .. r know my decision wall be unpopular," he said. "but this man has been denied his con stitutional right to a fair tnal " Chatterton said he wlll 'pro duce the evidence at a later Gem Talk By J. C HCJMPllRTES GPmt>loUllt THE WONDER METAi.. ~ fn the news once agofn Gold -that most sought-after of precious resources, Is In the news agafn. Demand keeps growing, u more new uses are found for tnls wonder m etal. The latest Innova- tion uses gold to help save e nergy, Scientists have found that or- dinary Mndow panes, when Im· bedded with flec:;ks of 2'·k•rat gold, rettect the 5un's heatlno reYt outwe(d during warm weather, thus lessening the load on air CiOft· dltlonlng. Ute same "gold lnsvl• tlon'' hetps a room rotaln It warmth durln~ winter. A meJor Amer(un firm now offers • com- plete Une of OOld-reflectl~ win- dows. TtMt~ cost more than or· dlnerv glass, of course, bUt the .energy ~O$t savings pay off over just a f w years. the man of fashion is \~ring nioney WIDEB~ND . GUD COIN JEwaJN A , w vi fl\Qn<)' •~ 1n ·•. Richly worked cOin\, ol1i and new T"-aenuine U.S. tnld plc~n ere be1utifully rr11mcd tn 141C cold. Cnins un lie yours or ours. Come In 10 Re our lvae tth:c:1iot1 ""'" Bakersfield 62. Monterf.'~ 77. Oakland til. Monett "Field .59. San F'ranc1:;co Airport 48 and fo'resno 37 The r~ >l$o put the city of San Francfsco .02 o( an inch O\ er the seasonal normal or 20 66 Not since the city soaked up morl' than 25 inches dunng the winter of 1973-74 has annual rainfall total<'<f anywhere near the normal Bct\\Cl'n July 1975. and Jul~ 1977. when the two-year drought ~truck Northern California, San Francisco had only 17.4 Inches The r:uns were causing prob fems for San Joaquin Valley farmer<, After two years of com balling lhc drought, they now find that the wet winter of 1978 has soaked their fields so badly that spring planting mll!it be delayed. Northern Califorma will be un- dt·r a temporary ridge of high prt·s~urc today but another \\£>alhcr ..,vstcm 600 m iles west of the coa~t "'111 bring more ram and snow Thur~dav and Friday Lon~cr ran~e prospects sho"' fair \\ eather for Easter Sunday Meanwhilf?, a new mudslide blocked two southbound lanes or Jnlcrstate 5 betwl'en the San Joaquin Valley and Los Angeles lhts morning as rain continued to pelt the area Wh~t . does this newly-crHted , dem&no mean to th world'.s gold supply? Experts HY there wUf be no 1t\ortage of Qolts In this century. For those of us who enjoy gold Jeweir.vr tt maans that prices are NOT •llPKted to, rlu dr matl,•1· ly. And \hat' ~ news. toa. In jewelry, In windows end In thou ,11n~s of other usu, th 1123NEWPORT llt.:VO.,COSTAMESA - CONVENtENTTERMS S.nU.mer1card asterc:Mrgt wond r metet still hi .. , .lOYEARSINTt4ESAME LOCATION PHONES41-:M01 • ' • I • Jl.f D.t.ll Y PtL.OT Jarvising Up the \V orks JU~PING JARVIS JIVE: It is clear today that a new aberraUon in slang has crept solidly into the lexicon of our bureaucrats and politicians. The word is Jarvis. It now means alm06t anything. Consider th1s headline that appeared ID a mom1ng newspaper today: ''Anticipate Jarvis Service . Cutback, LA County Told •.• " What 1~ the world is a Jarvi.s service cutback? • WelJ, Its apparently about the same thing as a Jarvis )Ob loss or a Jarvis savin&s or a Jarvis threat. Or, in the hallowed halls or government. you might hear some bureaucratic functionary whisper to one of bts colleagues: "WE'RE HOLDING THIS aecrel meetlng because of Jarvis." The word is everywhere. Once not long ago, the word Jarvis was actually a man's last name. He is Howard Jarvis. He and another man named Paul Gann got together this property tax cutback initiative that will Juvis appear on the June 6 ballot as Proposl· tJon 13. It became known as the Jarvis-Gann Amendment. IN THE SLANG OF 'IOVernment and politics. however, the much.feared proposal has been shortened to JUSt :Jarvis. You suspect this happened because his name was listed first on the 'Proposition. Thus Howard Jarvis loses his name to a plethora of other meanings that now gush forth from the halls of govern· ment. Orange County administrative chief Robert Thomas was apparently worried about lhe county's Jarvis income cut the other day so he proposed to study a Jarvis budget and wanted to do it behind cl05ed doors because of Jarvis. G4'11N City halls and school districts in our region are alao holding Jarvis budget sessions and studying Jarvis cut· backs. 1'1 Ei\NWIOLE, PRO·JARVJS enthusiasts are holding .Jan 1s r<1ll1l's. passing out Jarvis literature and pushlng tht• Janis campaign. Editors are getting lots of Jarvis let· tt•rs If this proposition does pass, you can just hear the ,::ha~tly cry of .the hapless bureaucrat who gets a pink slip and 1s out of a JOb : "I've bt>en Jarvised." Or the road department supqrintendent whose budget has Just been whacked back telllng hls job foreman: "We'll just have to Jarvis this street until next year and see if the Jarvis pinch eases up." . SO YOU CAN PlTY poor Howard Jarvis. His proposl· t1on may win the election but his name has been gobbled \JP by the word mills of government. Jarvis now means e.veryttuna ex.cept a person He is almost as anonymous as Kilroy, gremlins, or gnomes in the forest. Paul Gann should be thankful his name got listed last. Now I think I'll get the Jarvis out of here. House Passes Bill Fanning Package Backed WASHINGTON <AP> -An emergency farm relief package passed by the Senate promises higher food bills for the publi<' and the possibility of parity for some farmers. But cMtlcs say the promise or parity Is only an election.year hoax aimed at disgruntled farrners and has no chance ol becoming law. The higher prices for consumers. however. are likely lo remain 1n the bill no m attet how it is otherwise changed. The package, approved 67-26 by the Senate on Tuesday, would add at least $100 a year to the average family's food bill through a ~ystem of payments to rarmers for not planting Pnudt~• Set ROME CAP> -Goaded by the kidnapping of former Premier Aldo Moro, the Italian govern- ment declared a "situation or emergency" and ordered stiff (JN SHORT ) new penalties and broader police powers to combat grow- mg terrorism. The government decreed man- datory ltfe sentences for kidnap- pers if their victims are killed and 30 years if they aren't. SLr ,.~ C'lllHI JACKSONVILLE, Fla. CAP> -Six Americans who fled their country in skyjacked airliners have come home in prison irons -willing to face possible death sentences rather than austere, bitter lives in Fidel Castro's Cuba. ''They 're anxious to go home," said Thomas Morris, an assistant U.S. attorney, as the six prisoners were taken before a federal judge here late Tues- day after a Clight from Havana via Jamaica. Gull•an Na~d LAKEWOOD, Ohio CAP> -A 29-year-old man, enraged when his ex-wife received a call from another man, held her at gun· point for 10 hours Tuesday before police and a psychologist talked him into surrendering, authorities said The couple was divorced two weeks ago Paul Jancsek, 29. had threatened to kill his former wife. Hetty Jo Egler, 33, and to Lake his own life, a police spokesman said Retirement Age Upped? W ASlDNGTON (AP) -The }louse passed, 391·6, a bill Tues· day to raise the mandatory re· tirement age to 70 for most private sector employees and abolish the age limit for most federal employees. The representatives approved a compromise measure worked out by a congressional con· ference committee two weeks ago. The bill was sent to the Senate for Its action after which President Carter is expected lo sago the bill into law. THE PROmBmoN on forced retirement at age 65 for private business would go lnlo effect on Jan. 1, 1979. The ban on forctd retirerpent for federal em p toyees would begin Sept. 30. The measure applies to private sector workers whose employer has 20 or mote persons on the payroll. Thal cov- ers about 70 percent of the labor force. THE BILL would grant up to two years tor age·SS retirement provisions to be phased out of existing labor union contracts. The application of the new up· per age limit to tenured college and university laculty members wo!Ad be delayed until July 1, 1982, to glve the inslltutions time to adjust their hirin& policies. More Flooding THE BILL would permit man· datory retirement at age 6S of an lndlvldual who, for two years before retirement. is employed In an executive or "high policy making position and is enliUed to a pension from the employer of at least $27,000 annually." Proponents of the business ex- emption said tbls would g1vt.' younJ people more of a chance to climb up the ladder to ex· ecutive levels. The labor secretary would also be instructed to conduct a study of the feasibility of com- pletely abolishing the man- datnry r etirement age for private workers. ed High Waters Continue in Midiooat Ri,vers Ten1perat•res AltMl'Que •t••11t• ll•lllmo,. llolN llM..., e'9Wnsvfll• •1111 ... °''~ Clncl,...11 Cl.,,... 04ll•l't, Wiit Olft ... r .,..,.., ~llf""1*• ........ HeNluflt ......... lllM'•Cltt utV .... Lllllt ,_ea. u.eA•t• MllM'lll 11.U•evll:w .......... NaSllYlllt ....... ort-l'l••Yorll Ntu.,.. N• ., ... " ~' ·" .. . ...... . .. . .... ..... .. 17 .n ... .Q •a n .. • b .. ... ., » • n • •t ... ,, ... " .. 61 11 .. , 1S " ..... •• 61 • ·" IO Q 44 .. "'· m .......... llDll ,. • ..... <t44 '--. -...==.-~ ~ ..... _ o..111'94 • llllml ---••• to S.vl ... •n c etflornl•. dumplno 11\Ud\lldH Oft,._, ffoo.:11"9 strteb 8f>d ~ .. WI~ O:omt"Nlerl. r<ree•e'f IYll•lflt eM IUTIK• ,...._!!I,...,.,..,. Los~ County -n ,,. ..... , IM<kecl,. etier ttit "''' r.i11s Sien.cl 1 .. 11,.. lust .,.._ llW "'°'111"9 .... -IM9en ....... 1 . "'· A rnu••tldt ••ot1Ptd 01110 Lo C:I~ ~ -lllt le..,.,fn Ml"'• K-Of -y m..-4tf'fl .... tlli. lfttfllll, 111111 11'11 MGflWty ... trot tuue• t , .. ,111110 10 lr•v•l•n ...... llfl i.e11eo ..... M>d $ttck~ "'"l to11'D Denver '" Man ·Blown U~ In BOmb Blast DENVER <AP) -A man was dismembered ln one ot two ~ plosiona that rocked a U1ht Industrial area near downtown Dennit· early today and police found a third bomb in a newspaper vend~ machine near one ot the blast sltes. •• Parts of the unldentlfled dead man's body were found In Bann<>@· Street, near the aecond blast, at • the Denver VFW Poat No. l NEAR THE BANNOCK Street/ headquarters buUdina. The blast blast officers found a package ib decapitated him. a Denver Post newspaper velJd.I lnl machine and called in •• ''IT WAS AN individual who sharpshooter. Flve shotgun had found the device or had set charaes failed to detonate t.,be. the device," Police Chief Art package and bomb squad me~. .............. Dill said of the blast vlctiLm. bers removed it . The first expl06ion occurred at DUI said a Umer was attachW. 12 02 a. m. MST about eleht to lhe package. He said bomb E'otoad Dead The body of Keith Holliday, 5, who had been missing from h1~ fam1lv's home in Alexan- dr 1a, Ky°. sin<'<' December. \\as foun<l in the family 's s wimming pool Tuesday The slow!)-thawing pool was covered by a lay~r of algae which hid lh(' boy's body un- til his mother ~aw a floating blue cap. blocks away on ElaU Street. The squad members had told hirn building dama1ed there had there was dynamite inside the formerly housed a part of packaie. Deaver Metro College. Dlll said the police dep(rt~ The second explosion occurred m ent had received no botr\b 13 minutes later. Dill said. threats prior to the blasts and A 16-square-block area was had no explanation for them. cordoned off as police searched •'The only th mg we can cori· for other explosive devices. elude is thal we are dealing wttb When sightseers Cirsl gathered, a disturbed individual." he saiP. police cars equipped with The blast at the VFW hall di~ loudspeakers crawled through little visible damage to the ~ the streets ordering people back. and one·half storied while bric~ structure but omcers said ther4\ was damage lnside the buil~ Oil .Tanker Spills 44 Million Gallons BRESr, l"rance (AP> -The wrecked American supertanker Amoco Cadiz has spilled al least 44 million gallons of oil into the sea and all lS of its tanks are believed to have boles, Amoco vice president Harry Rinkema said today. It is the worst 011 spill on record. surpassing the 1967 Torrey Canyon disaster off England by al least 15 million gallons. "TWO SALVAGE EXPERTS surveyed the ship yesterday on deck checking the oil and water content of each tank. 0They beUeve from this survey that all the tanks now are open to the sett, and that 50,000 to 70,000 tons of the cargo are still on board," Rinkema said . A metric ton of oil i~ equal lo 294 gallons. The 1,007 fool vessel was loaded with 65 million gallons or oil "hen !>he went aground on rocks a mile off Portsall harbor last Thursday night following a steenng failure and an unsuccessful al· tempt lo low her to safety. The cargo was insured for $20 million and the ship for $12 million. " STORM \\1NDS, high seas and driving rain lashed the wreck today for the third day. preventing preparallons for an attempt to pump out the remaining oil before It add:; to the pollution now ex- tl'nding at least 70 miles along the Brittany coast. .... , ........ 1t1U Retire "Enormous pressure is building up on the French government and thus on Amoco lo try to get this work started, but you can see the weather. A whole .~ange of ideas are being put forward to try to stop further pollut1on, said a source close to the salvage operations who declined to be Identified. "At the moment, much of the oil is rising and fallin& inside the tan.ks, noattng on the water underneath. But In the extreme tides next weekend, 1t will pour out " Sen. James 0. Eastland, 73, whose 36 years of service in the Senate outranks all col, leagues, announced today h~ will retire in January at the- end of his sixth term. • DREXEL • HERITAGE • BAKE R • HEKMAN' • MASTERCRAFT • WIEMAN • HIBRITEl'-l • • • ...J w x w a: 0 • uJ C> c( l- a: w :r • • • • FINAL 2 WEEKS Sale • OllllUJ Newport Store Only We are 1n the final phase of our moving· sale. After fifteen years in the same location, we are about to move. Prices are rock bottom, many reductions slashed from existing winter sale prices. Save up to 50°/o on famous brand names we are known for. We cannot take everything with us, so t~ke advantage of this once-in-a-lifetime sale. All sales final and cash or credit card only. Our new location is at the corner of Newport Blvd . and 16th Street, Costa Mesa F"! ~.I~ ld .. ~P. ·~Cl ~iaflablt. -71!1/•1111a.tf. ~ TO""ANCI ZJetl ..... °"" ~. ,,,,, 111-1111 Fifi# p.,..,,.,.. ""'l•IM# om,. NfW9'0ftT HACH 1121 •oetlff o. .. {7'41 MUCllO Al.&. ITOfllll °"" ~y THIW IANttOAY -I i\1111 TO I ae N LAGUNA HACH >&I N<Wttl C-1 Hwy 111•1 ...... , • '"':':°'.:-:"'.:"':"~--~-:""":.""------------~ ..... --------------------------------------....J • KAAQ&S • HICKORY CHAIR • 01x1e • WOOOMAAK ORIGINALS •• MARGE CARSON • , l • > :D m r-8 ~ a> m 0 0 ~ ' • c... .> ~ m Vl -i i z ~ m ~ -4 .. ~ :D g z . ~ 0 ~ )> :q ~ . 0 :J) a z )J r;; n :JO )> ~ ~ )> z ,... )> ~ J • .,, l) "' 0 :D n ~ 8 0 .,, m lll ,.. > ~ ~ • t , f ~ [ I. ~ ' l ~ • :AUFORNIA \fi'ilmA.d fJrdered (Jn Buses · I.OS ANGELES (AP) -Much o, tho dismay of district direc- Qfl, Southern California Rapid ~ranslt DJstrlct buses have >etell ordered to carry advertise- nenta for the adult movie "Sex Norld.'' •Superior Court Judge George ~ said Tuesday that under a ;tate Supreme Court ruling, »ansportaUon companies owned >1 1J>ublic agencies ml1$t accept uhertl~g from anyone. · ,THE ONLY exception, he ;.~14. is JC the ad material is ~lous or obscene. Attorneys for the three P-ussycat Theaters and Essex D~tribuliog, Inc., flied suit ,e~king the ad space for posters :o.r. the film. -f>ell said the RTD must accept t~ posters, pending another q~g of the case. ·ESSEX attorney Robert McDaniel said the court ordered tt)e post.er to appear on buses by n~t Mopday. The RTD bad re-. reeled the poster March 14 bi'e~use o~ fear or negative public reaction, officials said. ?4cDaniel said the poster has r\-0 pictures. It reads; ;1!~stworld was for children. r t'!'~rewor(d was for teen-agers, O)it Sex World. • .is definitely r~adutts." ·. f)aldand CBer fotroded on I' Surrender John A. ~erst and Roberta Sm1th. both 33, who have been ident1fwd by the FBI as members of the Weather Underground. surrendered Tuesday to the U.S. At- torney's offic~ in San Francisco, on federal explosives charges pending since 1971. W9dneeday Ma~h 22. I Q~8 DAIL y PILOT As Gasoline Shortage Seen j' :1 I State De/ic~ney Predieted in (JO Days I posed by Prealdent Nimu In ? 19'3. ' SACRAMENTO <AP> -California may havtJ a easoUne shortage in a couple of months because of a crude oil elut in- sufficient storage. and too' tew Amerlc•n·flaa tankera, says state Controller Ken Cory. · Cory. a Democrat, told a news briefing Wednesday that when crude is refined you get gasoline and fuel oiJ. The oil goes to the East Couf. But when you're s hort of gasoUoe, you can't simply refine more crude because there's no place to store the fuel oil that comes with iL "OUK SfORAGE tanks are just about full ..• Within 60 days we're going to see u shortage of gasoline, because the refinenes won't have any place to put the fuel oil, and they will have to cut back," be said. California is receiving daily about !i00,000 more barrels of crude oU than lt needs. Most ls from Alaska, aod tPJe J>roblem wlll worsen ln coming months. California's power plants can't burn the fuel oil bec9use the sul- fur content.. ••ceeds atate alr quality stlllldittdl, Cory aald.. AND THE FUEL oil can't be shipped to the East Coast because federal law requires · that oil shipped b etween American ports be in :;hips fly- ing the American flag, "and there are just not suf£ic1ent American-flag tankers.,. "I don't have an answer. I am presenting a problem • • • We can have ..• a gasoline ~ortage, and at the same time we 're floating in 01L" Cory. also chairman o( the State Lands Commission, criticized the federal entitle- ments program on crude oil im· THE PROGRAM froze prices on existing domestic oil supplies and attempted to equalize all oil prlcea by provtcllng penalty pay- ments for cheap domestic oil and government subsidies tor forei&n oil. Cory said the system hllS un· ralrly penalized Callfornia. whic h bas extensive 1Jtate tidelands oil, because product.len costs have risen but not prices. .. You can make a bigger profit buying $14 foreign oil and mak- ing gasoline than you can buying $4 California oil 11nd making gasoline.'' Cory said. Brokerage to Pay $1 Million HE ADDED,."This convoluted set of formulas bas destroyed the market\)lace • • • Richard Nixon socialized the oil Industry 10 1973, with some or the worst elements of socialism and some of the worst elements of capitalism." Production ot the Long Beach offshore field bas dropped since 1973 from 100,000 to 74,000 bar- rels daily ''because our costs are too greaL We can't afford to prcr duce," he said. I t ( __ sr._:4_TE __ J stock market analysts agreed was worth nearly $40 million. Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. to head California's scandal·plagued mental health system. Director Ple~d Farabee. 51, will be $40,764·a· Cory said a group of govem- m en t, industry and consumer leaders will meet Thursday to discuss the oil entitlements problem before meeting federal officials in Huntington Beach next week. SACRAMENTO <AP> year director oC the new Mental Psychiatrist Dale Farabee, Health Department, one oC five former Kentucky state health to be created from the current director and mental heallh state Health Department under director, was named Tuesday by legislation passed last year. ~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~------~~~~~~ Hayu:ard Vandals Sought HAYWARD <AP) - Hayward police are seeking vandals -ap· · parently motivated by racial.hatred -wbo d1d an estimated $15,000 damage to the home or a black man and his while wife, Police Capt. George Kelly said. Marc Sangara, a native of Africa and a steel company ex· ecutive, aod his wife, Loretta. who works in a motel cham advertising office. have lived in the three-bedroom house smce last August, Kelly said. CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF ANOTHER KIND . Another kind, altogether. As. when you get together with your dentist. Could you get closer than that to Dr. Arnold Flanzer? Wetr. he doesn't like to let money keep people apart. So you could get pretty close. For a lot tess than you might suppose. Dr. Amold H. Flanzer 370 E. 17th St. Costa M~sa 642-0112 MOnta 01' "•ut .... ••MO HOTIC. IS HUtEaV GfVUI &IWlt e '*"k ""'1n9 wlll '9 ,_..., l9't CltY C-cll flt I .. City .. OllCI ~ .,. Atlfll J, 1t!I, It IN llOW Of 4:• CUI>• lfl IN Clwl<ll ~ " City H .. I, 11 ,..,, Clf\ft, C::.te ,_... GI\ IN ............ ,,..,. .... Alll'l'•At. ,,_.. JoM 0. ''~• .....,_~ ~ &.....-M9morl•I .. w-... u Oltl• ·-· (Ml.I "'-· .. '"' ... lne9f ... .......,.,__" '" (~11111\ ..... ,_ ..... ,..,", l'Ms> ,..,.... HOTICC IS ,UllTH£" OIVlH tt.at' ...... lllM ......... _., .... •" ,.~ .. -~_,_ . .._ ... ,...,d _,, .... Clty "9vntll .... .,. --94\·---ltLJ[IH P. f'HIHMl:Y, • City°"" ,.,.,. Ohnlta.l Diily "¥- Mer'CA Q, lft . \919 I ' l . l. t • ' • -- r · Orange Coast Oaoly Po lot Edii,orial p ag.e ________ W·ed·"···ad-•y •.• M.•.rc·t'l·22-.• '9·7·8·------·R·o·t)j'-rt·~-·,w.bcl·ffd·'"-KP\J·,.e·~-~.::.~./.~.d.lt·or·T'.~.' ·p·:.·s·K·;·d·:.~r./E·O·t't.or ' I I I ! t . ! I t ' i ' i t • City Must Uphold Voters on Rezone The major it~ of the Costa Mesa Cit} Council opposes the rcc:ent voll'r rezone of three north city parcels Lo '>Ingle 11\m1l~ homes only, but the council was wise in let ting the d<'\'l'iopers rarry the battle into court themselves. Dt•\t•lopl'I"' appt•ared hcforl' the council last "eek in , the attermath of the March 7 municipal \'Ole. The election eUmmtttcd pLins fol' upartments and a compromise pro· 'PO.' al tor <I combmation of single-family homes and a pro · fos~ion<il olht·c l'omplcx on 63.8 acres near Soulh Coa::.t Pla1:1 Amonf.! tht· <ilternat1ves suggested by the developers "n::. a ne\\ 1111tiativc lo overrule the rezone generated by thl' i\orth Co'>ta ~lt·-.<1 llomeowncrs Associat10n. ~urc.•lv lh<' t'lt\'s \Oters are not m the mood for <lllollwr 1111t1all' t' 'ott• C'Onsidcnng the emotionalism and tont ro\ <'I':-.~ pn•tc.•d1ng tht ~larch 7 vote ·1 ht• l'nunc·1 I aho "a-. \\ 1:-.e m reJt•ctang -.uggesllon-. th.it llw c 11.Y ="l'l'k "cll'l'larator~ relief" a1rnin-.t the n.•zont' \\ lwtlwr or not llw <'it\· !\Upports srngle·film1l} home-. 111 Lhl· .in·a. 1t h.1 .... ,1 dut~ lo uphold the rezone unles.., ;1 l'OUl't l'llll':O-olht•t \\ l'il' School Bus Safety JI \'"" un-.t·lllang to learn that nearly 20 percent of tht• 5:! ..,dlool hus1·-. 111 lht• :'\:ewport-~tesa L'naf1ed School Dis I rt<'! "l'l'l' pullt•d t rom the road recently beC'au.sc of main lt•nant·l• dt·kch tlrnt rnuld be• considered ::.afet) hazards 111 ..,tuclt•nt .... l>1 -.t1wt oll1ual-. "·" fi\(• of the 10 \Chides ,,·en• t :ikc·tt 0111 111 "''I' l\'l' tor 1:outi11c m.11nlenance. but anolhl•1· fl\ t' t.11lt·d 111 rn:1i-.1• till' grade under a Calttornia ll1gh,,a, !'al nil .1111H1.d 1·lw1 ·1\ Thi· 1111pr11p1·1·l~ 1n..,t:1l11•d brakt'"> and rad1.1tor ll'ak:-. \\ 1ll lit' 1 t·pairt d and lhl' <.J1..,tr1tt hc.1-. leac;ed other n~h1dt·s 111 t lw 11wa11t1111t• C'hal<lren .ire hcmg tran..,portt.•<l to ~1'1111111111 ...... 11-l'ljllljlllll'11l. J >a-.t 1wt ofl 1t·1:1J.... ha' l' downplayed the siluatton .ii I ho11i..:h its a :--at c ht.•l llwt p:.irents an~ a bat more con l'1•1 rwd 011 ,1 1111111 opt1m1 ... 11c-noll'. \H' :-.ho11 td he grateful for 1 lw I h11rou1.!11 "<11 t•t' chC'cks of the Cl IP Calif orn1a ·~ .... ..iwol lllh .., .. fr1' n «111 d 1-. ouhlandang a~ is the training (II O:.!l'.tlll 101 IHh d1 I\ t'I .... Jln\\('\t't". 11 , ....... 1111 .1 m\•;tery \\hy the distract missed tilt' fl\I' <'Ill' poltt·d dt•fl•ch durmg th regular :m cia\ .... 11 1•1' <'111·1 1 I >1·-tr1t t olt1e1~1b ..,hould .... tn·:-.-. a mon· t !1nr1111:.:h -.;1flot' t ht'l 1-. 11! 1111:--t· .... 11> .n ottl ... 111)1)ar prubll'm-. 111 I ht• lltt 1111· A Pronrising Council 1;1111d 11.it\11 t'll 11ht:s :.ihnul Cost:i :\ll'!->a ·.., l'll~ 111111 hc·r:-. ·· h:" t• IH•t•n c·irculaling .ti 1out thl.' cal\ since the 11· 1·h·c·t11111 111 '\01 ma llert10g a11U the elct'lion of \rlene S!'l\;1(!·1 to llw ('IL\ l'OlllH'll \\1th \ ll'l' \l,1v111 :\l.11' Smalh\OOd alrt>~Hh on tht• 1 011nC'1l ('o .... ta \fo-.u '" tht.· onl~ Orange Count~ c·tl\ \\Ith u :t-:! ll·m:ill' ma1orit' Hui till' 1c.~latl\ l' 1111\ t•ll\ ol the ::.1tuat1on \\ 111 \\t•ar off qu1ckl~ .met llw m•w l'Ou1w1l l1tt:-. ... tlread~ -.ho,~n 1t ,.., "111 1111-! to l.id\11• till' IH-.i\' 1:-...,lll'" th.ti arc facmJ:? thC' l'll' 1-:<I \kl·':11 l;111d h.1" hec>n st•lt.•c·tccl mi.l\Or :md hi-. .11· 1 ion" ;1-. :i 1·11.' 1·0111wilm.111 have -.ho\\ n him tn he 1111fopen d1·111 :11111 .1 p11lt•nt1 .. tll\ .... 11ong leJder I .il-.t•\\ 1-..t·. "l' t'Jl1 1•\pect the ~amc mdept•tHh•nce and 1•0111rn11nat' 111nc·c·1n from ou1· three female ll'lffl''.'!l'll· t;llt\1·:-. and <'nlllwalma11 llom1n1t· Hacili 1 lkn: \\Ill of 1·m1r:-.t•. be up~ and do" n~. and not all 1·min ctl ,ll't '""" \\ 111 lw grL•Ctl•d t'nthusiast1ta I ly h~ rl'sl d1•111-. 1111\\('\ t·r llw ltlcll\ 1du:.tl member!\ of tht-t'ounc1l ha' t' -.h11\\ I\ •I \\ tll11lg!l1's-. lo )1Skll and look al ~ill :lSJWC'l" Of the• t'\:-Ollt"' ht'111t l' tuk1ng a<'l 1011 \\\• l':rn·t ask for rno1't' • Op1n1on ... c>xprcssod "' the space above are those of the Dally Pilot OthPr views Pxpressed on this page are those of their authors anCI ar11s1s Reclder comment 1s inv1teCI Address The Daily Pilot. P O 13011. 1560 Costa Mesa CA 92626 Phone (71 4) 642·4321 Boyd/Signs By l,. M. BOYD Not <''er) Scason('d C'1t11en rt•t Jib <1 r;.1,·ont<• Burma- !-.h,I\ t' s1itn but most do !-.uc•h a-. :\h mun \\nn't sha \l' , says lla11;1l llu1 but (should worry Dora·-. docs Rurma·Shan · Or "Does your husband misbehave couldn"t somebody dubbed Chubby Checker'> In two out of every 100 households nationwide is at least one calendar And 83 out of e\·ery 100 of lhes<? were gifts from businesses Q. "Ask your Love and War man how many women over age 50 are on their second marrage'>" A. Three out of four. says he. And five out of six men In that age bracket likewise. ~runt and ~rumble 1 runt and rav<• , shoot the brut~ ... ome I Hurma .Shavl' ·· Or "Listen, birds , those signs cost I money / Sc) rcx>st a while but 1 don't ~et funny I Burma Shave " If somebody in your house h oW as ks . " W h at Burma Shave signs'>" kindly • explain it to the littler i shaver. ? Am asked how that Q. "Can you verily lbe claim that the band abo~rd the Titanic played ·Nearer My God To Thee' for atmost all of the two hours forty minutes the ship was sink. ing?'" • rock 'n ' roller Chubby t -Chec,er came to be so ~ • celled. Credit Dick Clark·s ' w1ft> with 1:11.·lnf( Ernest ! Evans that stare name. If ~ =" :n°o'::i~~~dl;kew~~~s aD~~\~~ i .. could make al, said she, why , } J J I i ' ' . •• I ' ' . . I • .. ' ' • .. l Dear Gloo m y Gu. A . Whal it played was ragtime and then the hymn "Autumn." Q "Jimmy Durante for years closed out hts TV Shows with the Une, 'Good· nlaht. Mrs . Calabash, wherevt>r you are.' I un· dcrsland he finally revealed arter 20 years tha~ Mrs. Call.lbash was his pet name for bis wire Jeannie who'd di d in 1943. How did he come to refer lo h@r that way'! .. A •• Repe>rt hi Ile aQd his wit• ooc:e found cause to re· JDembGf with 1reat aftecUon • litUe CA>wn outalde Chicaao called CaJabalb. Nick Thimmesch Uninvited Do-gooders Do Harm WASHINGTON -Oh, how well·intentioned ~ Americans are. and how stupidly we sometimes act. How else lo ex· plain how a pair of do-gooder House members dispatched two Americans uninvited -to Guatemala to monitor the recent elccliorui there; how aoe momtor cried "fraud,'' .and thereby angered many G"uatemalani., who might regard their voting booths ru; sacred as ours, and wish Uncle Sam would mind his own business It turned out that theo Guall'malan elections weren't so fraudulent after ull. Be- ~ •des, ha\ c n 't there been some ballot box pro blems in the LIS over the years' Who arc we to poke uround elec· tion!'i 1n other l'Ountnes, shaking a Calv1itist1c: finger at our Lc1lm neighbors'? T ll E GENIUS behind this stunt 1s Rep. Donald M. Fraser, D Minn .. d1a1rman of thl· llousc Sub('omm1ltee on lnternu- t 10 n .i I Organ1tations His partner 1:-Rep Millicent Fl•n" lt'k, ft N J Both profc5s great conu·rn for human nghls and volL' fraud in other coun Int•-. So Fraser got the Democratic Part} to sponsor a trip by Professor John Plank or the llnt\'Crslly of Connecticut lo G ualcmala to observe the elec llons The United Auto Wockers union paid Plank's expenses Since lhe Republican Party wouldn't sponsor or pa) for Rep Fenwick's representative. John H1chardson. president of Mailbox Freedom Howse, she became his sponsor and paid his way from her own private funds. GUATEMALA. unfortunately, has long been torn and suffered violence by extremists of the left and right. The March 5 electjons we~e the first held In m\any years, and featured a military cast. Voters were a.i.ked to choose a President among two drmy generali. and a colonel. A general already runs the coun- try Nalurully . a !'icene lakt> this attracted repre6entauves ot Europe's democratic parties as observers. Only now, for the first time. the U.S. got into the act. While the Guatemalan gov· ernment didn't invite any of these "monitors," once ttus in- spection gang set root on their territory they were well re· ceived and treated cordially. But after the election. whose outcome isn't clear yet, Professor Plank cut loose with "The fraud perpetrated here as so transparent that nobody could expect to get away with it" He \ 1111'rt' rr~Jit 1q• 11111.,t dn ,11111t'rh1nt:' T1'111mrl 11p .11111rf11•r 5.llt)() 1111•11 .md .• end them to Alri111' aliio noted that the fraud "sam· ply reenlorces the deep cynicism oflbe Gualemalan voters." Fraser and Fenwick are now trying Lo pl11y down the criticism of their inspection team because the uplift effort is geUing mixed reviews in Guatemala. "They were not invited, and their presence is offensive," said Julio Asensio, Guatemala's ambassador to the United Na- tions "This 1s congressman Fraser's concept of playing God Almighty. He acts as 1f we were trying lo hide something. I think I wall get a team and go inspect his election an Minnesota next fall " NO MATTt:R. f''raser as un deterred "It as my hope." he piouisly declares, "that it <the monitoring> will be followed by other 1rutiataves and that even· tually we (the Democratic Par- ty> will be joined by the Republican Party and The Socialist International.'' Ms. Fenwick is equally ar· dent. "We've done Guatemala a service," she says, "and are much appreciated there. We m usl try to get the non - Communist nations concerned about human rights For their U N ambassador to threaten to ~o to Minnt•sota 1s unproduc- t1n· Go0<1nes1> -.akcs Can t these pecksniffs realize that their team "as uninvited, that for Fraser lo make his announce- ments about lhe monitoring on Congressional stationery 1s to put lhe emblem or the lJ.S. Congress on this questionable C'nterprase'> In the name of human rights, this bunch, by sniffing around this way, mq::ht well be violating th(' human rights or people try- '"~ to have an election. Complaints Unfair to Animal Shelter To the Editor Thl' rN'l•nl letter" app1;1anng in )·our newspaper regarding the u.,c of the high allttude chimber an I he dc-.truclton of unwanterf pt•h at Orungl' Count~ Animal Sheltl•r h,1,·c been most unfair lo th.at fonht\ \\ 1tho11t dehalmg the merits or thl• 1111t1attH' tn abohsh the w .. e of the· decompression chamber at 1s 1nter<'sltng to note that not one• n~1taonal humane society has gnnc on rc<"ord tn support or the tn1l1at1\'e, "-hllC' the American llumant• Assoc-1at1on. Mercy Crusade, the SPCA, and the California Slate Humane Association are all against out 1<1 win~ the chamber. II 1s c11ffic.·ult 1n the present t·mot1onal atmosphere to view lhl:-. S\lbJC'<'l ObJCClt\'ely. but the horror :.tones wh1ch were UM~d as 11lustrat1ons in the recent letters admittedly only occur \\hen the chamber 1s nol in good \\Orkmg order or lhc personnel 1s untrained or unsupervised in its use It 1s. to isay Vie least 1rrespons1ble to suggest. e,•en by 1mphcat1on. that Orange Count~ Sheller staff. as '"ell as the humane orgamtataon volunteers \\ho \\Ork there. \\Ould countenctnce for a momerat the. inhumane practices described an such terrifying detail. SUCH FALSE and misleading <;tatemcnts do mcalculablc harm to our <Jntmal rC'scue efforts Contrthuting to people's already irrational fC'ars af the "pound" prevents finders of lost pets from bringing them there, and manv heartbroken owners and pets · will never find each other lls a result. Instead of attacking the symptom, let us unite our humane efforts in attacking the cause or the deaths at the shelter. Recent Los Angeles County Animal Control figures since tnilaation of their low-cost spay-neuter clinics, are astounding: in three years. the number of an1mnls 'impounded by the shelter has d«reased 69,000! i\nd the number kiUed d-.crensoo from 101,297 to 41,177. Los Angelc5 City. also. has Pil~scd an exrellent ordinance Lo control Indiscriminate breeding Why CM) 'l Orange County do the ume? · RUTH FRANKEL Cod• _, COltdtu!t To the Editor: The Dally PUot Is way off baa~ with tho recent editorial oplnlon obJecllng to the relnstlt.utlon of the Rt ubllc•n 11th Commandmtnt, "thC>l.l shalt not speak Jll of anotht'r R public n.. • The Pilot f8\'o~ campaign r orm to rnlse the level Ol .. local poJltka. Yet, at the s me tlmc opvo g • •plun••r~ and CQro.m ndable effort by local A public 1' to cloan up t ~ m p J 1 ).( n r h l' l CJ r 1 l' a n d mu t <: l'l <ih h\' ii ).!l' nll t• manly agreeml'nt to el1m1natt.• c-.1mpa 1co -.mt'.1r:-; <1nd 1111nt'<'t" .. s.11·~ mucl 111111\\ IOJ? \'ES, s111·h an ~1-:rl'f!m<·nl b) Republ1<'.111 t'Jnd1dalc!'i for ~mhl1c off1lt' "1ll l'11m1n~tt-... oml' of the 1111<'.' ancl dt•grading stuff th J t makes for ncws p:qH·r slOrll''-But. the p~nplc of Orangl' Count) "ill be wt'll ..,en c<l b\' '>ll<'h .a c·od1: of conduct among cand1dalc.•.., Sh.iml' on \OU for lh1nk1ng of th e· nC\\!ipapcr business r1rst and the public good M.•condl)'' Whl'n lht> Hl'publ1t·<1n I Ith Comman<lmt>nt wus in fort'<-' 1n the I ale HIGO .... lh<· It.•\ el ol Orange Count) 1x1htscs \'as h1~h \\Ith frill' c:onsc.•r\at1v<' Republican lt•alkrsh1p al the helm We coultl use som<' or thut kind of qu1<•l , efr1c1ent · Republicanism in this count) today THOMAS A FUENTES Oth~rs /\'~ ll~lp To the Erlitor Yc.•s, Buhblcs .-. dt•a<l i\nd we• do feel '-.orro\\ and n•grct. It's OHr ;1nd yet for th<' first lime sinct• 11 all twgan I ff'l'I unf{r) and fru'>tratNI ~1y feC'ling ... ccr taml\ aren't d1rl'l'led at Lion Cou~try as J feel only com passion for their tremendous vet disappointing t•fforts J know their loss fipanc:1ally as well as emotionaUy is u great one and J !lave only admiration and praise ~r t heir heroic attempts to save Bubble"S No. my frustrations concern the fact lhat Bubbles was JUSt one wild animal needing as- sistance and certainty she re· ce1vcd the most professional at- tention available Whal I can't stop thanking aboot are all the millions of other \\1ld animals who sutrer at the hands of the profiteers or lhl' world OON'T ALL or vou, who took up pen and paper to scream about the rights of Rubbles. feel the same compassion ror the baby seals in Newfoundland who ere now al thns moment being clubbed to death for the sake or lheir J>(!lll? Dof>sn't it udden you to know that whales are be· 1n1t slaugh~rtd needlessly in all our waters and that PQrpolses ure caught ""d destroyed tn the l'l&me nel'l UllNI to catch tuna? And what about our beaullf\11 und majestic blrd1' ol prey who fall vleUrm to th<> po111ons and pesllt'ld we ullllze' Is It only when we pick out one animal, 1ovc it n namr nnd at· tribute cf'rtnln tute and cudd)): .. tra1u t.n it thnt we foci com- passion aNJ are moved Co ac· lion? I JUeas what I'm Hj1n1 11 that tr II t~ fanto11tlc publltfty, th~ , t phone C'alb and lhl· tclc~rums that you angril:. and d1hgl'nll) directed toward the pre-.ervation nf onl' animal could be directed to" ard the c•au~c of the other masses of animals in need. lhen rtnalh \H' would Sl't• somr at·llon l<•ken· on c1 IE.'vd "htl'h "ould bc.·nefrl ..,o mam l\flcr all 1t 1s uni) through .;11 our concerted efforb that lcg1slat1on "111 coml· a bout to aid the caw.c· of I he rt' mainin~ \\lld ammab th.it ~till c."\l~l toda\' Lf'\,l>I\ W,\llL .t l11rd.-r To the Editor On Thursda)'. March 16, 197k, there was a photo of a Lebanf'c;r res<·ue worker holding the body of a child killed in Jn lsr<teh air attack. Then again on Frida}, March 17. there was anolht.•r photo of an Israeli father crying O\.·er his son's grave. an Israeli soldier killed in the attack on the PLO. If you are going lo show photoi. of killings, let's get things m the right perspective and why "asn 't there a photo of lhe bus "here 36 innocent cavifians. not ~111 ll>raeh, women and children Wl·re murdered bv thos<• coward ly butchers called the PLO WAR IS hell and I know when bombs. rockets and artillery are used there will be clvihnn casualties. but when civilians are shot down wit.h automatic weapons at airports. bombs placed in areas where knowingly children and women are pre~ ent. where hand ~renades are thrown at civilians. then this 1s not war but out and out cold-blooded murder Bloodshed 1s still bloodshed re gardless if 1t 1s Arab or Israeh and I hope one day •ety soon this will end and both ~pies will be able to live in peace JACK A BEJTSTOCK 1tbhf1•WCUhfl To the F..d1to1 How washy -washy can you ftet '.' Y 011 didn 'l i.uppor-t us North Costa Mesan:> tn our recent er fort lo reduce• building ionln1 and lo av01d future tratrlc prob. lems. In fuel. you opposed U.'1 Ir\ your editorials Now you come out with an editorial (March JS> aiskinl( for support CA> obtain algnatures on petitions for compltling lhc Costo Mesa Freeway and al· levlat• "t.J\c congested and danaerou~ trafrtc alttallion on Newport Boulevurd. " Can tl be that Ulc Daily Pilot found Itself not rcflcctina ~ta ~teun1' beUers H tvidtnctd in the recent inlllaUvc P•t.SanJ:, and ts tryin1 to get back in !!lcp with what 1fft want for th city" It so, welcomr-aboard! JOEY KUMAGAI 'f fsH #P ttf T a x To the Editor I am a \\-1do" "1th no children but I ha\'e taken a keen interest in th<.· Pilot !'i article about lht> ...iudent p1cket1ng or the f:d" ards C1nt.•mas I support \Ir Arthur Riie\ <Mailbox Feb 22 t I rlon ·1 want m} laxes going to pc.1) school administrator ~1r. Pc>rry to train pickets when he tould bettcr put hie; tame in lrmnini: the.,e students to read and learn ba ... ic math )( this 1s ;,Ill J\t r P('r-rv has to do with ht<t t1ml' I wouid like· him off my propertv tax<>s The l'W1s1<•d rt•hutlal tn a IC'ller !\1ailbox bv Mr llo\\ard Gcnsll'r madt• V('ry l1llll' sense as all 1l clad was tn tn <tnd distort the facts as mct'I~· presented by l\J1 H 1 I t• \ :\1 r G t• n 5 I c r " h > -.houltln t tht· property la\ ht• shifted to rnl'Omt' rather than propert) • In th 1s w <1 ~ tht' persons thal (';:tn hcsl afford to be taken will be "took Isn t 1t interesting thal all lhCSt.' losers can '.'-.a} l!'i that Lf the Jarvis Amc.·ndmC'nt goes throuJ?h the srhoo1' wall be shut do"n and the fire• an<l police force wall he cut m half "\ot once ha\(' they mcnllnned thry would ha\'e to get rnl of the f!eadwood in r1v1l '-N' ace and put the rest to \\oOrk A time "tudv c;howed lhr' actuall~ work an average of two hours and fifty six minutes each worktnJ: day per person Why do I have to pay for dou hie clapping and triple d1ppmg pensions when orten there ha\'e been no p('ns ion deductions whatever') I certainly would likt• to know \\hy I have to pay th1· ciental hill~ for the ram1ly of civil scrv1cl' employees while I lack money to ft'( my own teeth due to my ta"<es. It always up· sets me at the check stand to have to pay ca!;h for my pound or hamburger while the one ahead or me buys six hig steaks \\1th food stamps Over the '"eekend 111 the 1?rocery park1n~ lot the' rar next lo mine said For Offl<.'1<11 l'se Only ... yet 1t '"a~ rull n( ch1ldrC'n ilnd beinJ? used to pH'I< up tht• week's sup ph of 1otroc'Nll·-. ThJs ~ l'.ir I "JS \t'I ~ happy lo rt.•ct•1vc ;:1 6 pc.•rc<>nt raise hut no"' I s('(• lhl' llunllngton Bench Tenrht•rs an• dt•manding a 20 percent nus~ wharh will cerhun ly w1pt• out m~ hllle one And the ones that hung like a mtllslon<' around we property taxpayers nc·cki. have th<' nerve> to l\Sk why wt• Arc J(oin~ to vott> for the Jnr\'I:< Amc•nclmcnt' MARY l.Otr PAHKER • l.C'ttf'rt /rom r•odtr• ort iwf.Nlmr Tht nght to roredin '" lt'Clt>rs to fl.I trp(Xt or th"' tncU" ft t>c:J as rtttrl>f'd l.t:tter1 of lOO word& "' l•u Wtll ~ giU«'n prt/utn~•. All ldtcr1 mu.ti 111- ellld# titrt<Jturr and mo.ding oddrf'S' but Mmt maw be w1~1d OI\ re qllHl 1 f ftt f /tt'l ht( r NIOfl U oppo ft'l'll l1Wi ry i.Jill llOt I , • • • ' • , • r • i • ' t • I! •• ,0 AT YOUR SERVICE /NATIONAL W..an..day, March 22, 1978 DAILY PILOT A 7 .11 ... ! ( .. . , '. •'"• .. '• .. ,• ,,, ''•' _, ... 1111 'I lu fl\ 111 111. 4' By Phil loter.lond_i Birth of a N'lj:tU)tj~, 'Republic of Kinney' Reno.~ces Red Tape,,"" ...... ,,,,... 3-Z.~ ~(~~· "Sorrz. I don't take 'cigar tatton. • •· "Got . a problem 7 Then write to Pat Dunn. Pat wtU cut Ted tape, getting the. answers and action you~ to :solve inequities m government. and ~ness. Mbil yow qUA!.stions to Pat Dumi. At Your Sert11ce. Orange CO<Ut Daily Pilot. P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. As many letters.°" posS1ble wUl be Cltl$Wered. but plumed mqumes or letterJ not including the reader':s full name.addres~ and business hours' phone 11umbercannot bf.•cons1dered ThtScolumnappeor~da1 lye zcept Sal urdoys ' Title Shields DEAR PAT: We JUSt bought our flrst bou:>e. The real estate people didn't explain j ust why we had to have title insurance. Wha t is it and why is it necessary? PW., lrvme Title insurance protects against Joss or damage if the tiUe is not marketable or bas de· feds or liens. The insurance company will protect you from claims of forgery and possible lncom· petence of the parties who deal wilh the property; for rxample, that the seller was Insane, a minor or had Jost rights to the property because of marriage or bankruptcy. The Insurance usually d()(>s not protect you against things that are visible or could be dis· closed by an inspection or survey which the buyer can get himself. Governmental regulations on land use such as zoning ordinances are not covtred. The buyer c an usually purchase extended cov· erage and ask for a special Inspection and survey to guaranttt accuracy. Con~tion Sa.,es Cash DEAR PAT· I'm making a real effort to cut down on my household s uppltes bill If J remember correctly. you once published a r ecipe for hom e m ade furniture polis h. Could you repeat the form ula so l could give 1t a try., NJ .. Costa Mesa This recipe, supplied by a reader, calls for mixing 10 drops of lemon extract with one quart of mineral oil. The mixture costs onJy about six cents per OUDC(•. .~tatio11e,.,, Mail Lo•t DEAR PAT I placed an order lai.l October with the Wrilewell Co of Boston, Mass • for some pcrsonahzed printing J sliJI have 1:1ot received part of the order . which was due before Christmas My letters requesting a refund or shipment have not brought any satisfactorv response L f . Costa Mesa liar\ Rose of the Wrltewell Co. says your ship· ment bad been overlooked by a former secretary. Following A VS's cottlact, Rose found your order and malled i\ Immediately. A leller and token apology gift also were s ent to you. lUNNEY, Minn. CAP)1 -The "'Rdpublle (If K1011ey" has a l)&vy. a mayor who anakes $.1S per council mee ting a nd a s logan; .. Filed jn Triplicate." , The slogan tells the whole tale of the new coun. try. which declared ats mdependence from the United Stat.es last year lo protest government red tape. The move provoked hardly a yawn in Washington. TOE U.SQUARE·BLOCK community located in northeaste rn Minnesota will begin issuing passports next week. All residents will be eU,ible Campaign Set Blood Donors Eye Tax Break NEW YORK <AP1 Oo behalf of Am eracani. who feel the tax man is bleeding the m dry. Robert Mahoney says blood donations oucltt to be tax. deductible The Interna l Revenue Service says blood- giving is a donation of services, hke a carpenter. who d onates work to help build a church. BUT MAHONEY. A BlOLOOY professor at Skidmore Coll ege at Saratoga Springs. argues that giving blood 1s not a serv1ce. and m a country tha t allows lax deductions for gifts or old seersucker s uit&. blood cells should be ded ucttble, too. "Blood 1s a contribut ion oC one's property "ht>n you gH t.• II to a nonprC>Cit org anu:at1on." Ma honey told a congressional oornn'htlee. ~J ahonc), \\ho has been giving l)lQqd since 1961 <rnd helped or ganize a camp14.S dona tion program. decided in 1968 lo push for e change in the tax rules so that each donation of a pint of blood to a nonprofit organizat ion would r esult in a $25 tax de d ucllon. UE HAS WON SOME BLOOD bro thers Edwa rd Koch introduced a blood deduction bill 1n Congress every year from 1970 until he was elected mayor of New York this year. Conairess is con· s 1denng a s imilar biU in this session. rn Arkansas. legislators last year approved ~ $25 blood deduction. but tax offi cia ls say 1t is toq early to :.ay \\ h~thcr more blood is being donated. But lht• American Red Cross. the American As:-.oc1atmn of Blood Ranks, the Ame rican Blood l'omm 1ss1nn and the Council of Community Blood Centers all oppose Ma honl.'y's proposa l. according to Morrll' Flagg, director of l'Ommun1 cat1ons for the Rt>d CrO!>!> There •~ no l'\ 1denc:c that a lax deduction mol1v<Jtes an~body to give blood," Flagg says "It gets people away frOJll giving blood to relieve other s• sufferin~. and >instead they do it to line tht•lr 0\\-'Tl J>OCk<'tS .. 'Tree Drug' Eyed For Bladder Ills WASlll'lCTON IAP1 A drug that is derived from the ~ubstance that trees use to cement "ounds ha~ tentative federal approval for use in treating a bladde r ailment T he drug is dimethyl sulfox1de, som etimes t•al led OMSO lt is an animal linimen t that once was called a m1rcale drug fo r humans. THE ft'OOO AN D ORUG Adm1rustration said 1t would permit marketing of the drug for treat· ment or inter~tit1al cyst1t1s 1f the company that produres 1t agrees to the agency's suggested la bel 1ng c:hanJ:(C':. lntcr .... t1l1al c·vst1t1s 1s a chrome bladder cond1 t1on that <:an affect both men and women but u~ually strike:. middle age women The disorder is chal'arten zcd by frequent a nd painful urination O MSO which 1s for symptomatic relief of the ailme n t, 1s ma nuf actu r e d b y Tera P harmacl'Utl<'als Qf Ruena Park, for Resear ch In· dustnes Corp . a Salt Lake City firm The brand name 1s Rtmso-50 • to re~ve tJle paasports. which requi polf a handshake. .. There won't be any forms to rm out," said James Randall, an attorney f<>f the feJ>\lbliC of 600 peoJ'le. Tbe Filecs4in TdpbcaUi,slogan wiJl appear on the passports. :'.\. O~tai~ will'quallfy foe Jll1l.5Sports ii they can meet the requirements. RUCW! said applicants must a~ in peuon and ah•e hands wUh town officials, ~ho will then deci~ if appUcants are honest and desetving of passports. . . THE REPUBLIC E•EaGED AFl'ER the town wu overwhelmed by fe4'ral red tape im its efforts to get a $186,000 grant for its water and sewer syi;tem. • Since secechng, Kinney ha' received • 'foreien aid .. -a new police cruiser and several cases of pizza from Duluth industrialist Jeno·Paulucci. Randall s ays there alrea<Jy are two equally qualified applicant& for the pQSt of admiral. One lives on an island in Lake Ver.!Jlillion and the other has a canoe and World War JI experience. RANDALL NOTES THAT 'l'HE nearby city or St. Cloud hired a grant expert /or a $20,000 saiary a11d iot $380,000 10 public llSBast,mce the first year· tcinney can't a(ford tbat kind of money. he nid. ''ALLYSONS'' RESTAURANT Announcet THEIR TBADITJONAL EASTER SUNRISE ENTREES I l'hl· <:IJ~~1t \lilr<"o Polo Omelelll' chicken. h;,m and IJICICToh " morrw~ .,U\.ll'l', white <"hee~e and ham t I Thl· 1'1l'll'nt111u-.. Spinach Souffle Marquis · \\ IJOJtht!C.l l·.:i.: morney saucl• \\.h1te r~e and ham Ill Thl' 111.:h Pll'a~u1e F.i:~~ Alt>>.ander t1o1oo poached el!l(S on 11rllchoke heurt:. served over i.pinach. \\ ltnllunda1se saure. capers and ham ,\LL ENTREES INCLUDE FRESH FRUIT '\ND SOUR DOUGH ENGLJSH MUFFINS ~rved 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. Your Reservation Number 675-6220 3421 Via Lido Newport Beach ', Block bom Edwuds Lido Tbutre , .. ~,.,.t, PUBLIC AUCTION sh1pmen1 entry #78-136671. 27 bales date ol entry 12/ 1/77 s to pped kly Customs under u ct1on 304.T A manongs and HLIASID flOt. SALi on 1 /1 6/78. We will auction the above shipment of fine wools & silks & olheB to recover various charges incurred due to long delay m clearance AUCTIOH WIU T All l'UCI SUNDAY. MAR. 25 AT 2:00 P.M. . THE REGISTRY HOTEL IUENA PAD Ir COSTA MESA ROOMS 1100 MACAIYHUI IL VD. IRVIHE. CALIF. &lllbcnsy A11etioMen Licensed & IOftChd Info: C21 ll 91 I ·8542 ,_ c ... .,,. a..c. ""••dioll I "-"'-T•S. • Cerfffk ..... ·~ • WI• hery blJ Pwdi9e NOW OPEN! ON TH[ 8£.AUTIFUI. BACK BAY • OVERlOO<ING YACHTS g<ittin9 Nady for<Z.astcz,r ... NEWPORT BEACH (. !formerly Ouffy'sl SUPERB WINES • COCKTAILS PA.5SING BOATS SPACES TO 000< EXTRAORDINARY SEAFOOD GIANT MAINE LOISTl':RS-U' TO S US. St•4·Up OJster Bar r ALSO USDA PRIME STEAKS SALADS • POPOVERS FAMTASnc DESSERTS I • ,, thz. h~htAtst \>.IZ.1~t ~ COBt yo.1'11 ~r 'l).ArZ.dr, compli~ntis our tropical "t>R.~ht., trounrs by COft81N LEADERSHIP! INTEGRITY! LUCILLE KUEHN IS 'FHE ONLY 6th DISTRICT CANDIDATE WHO HAS ALL FOUR ... LUCILLE KUEHN'$ RECORD Traffic. Only incumbent seeking reelection to the Citv Council, 'She has championed logical, unem otional solutlons to the traffic problem. As chair man of the Council tnter·C1 ty Committee, she has helped to reach agreeme nt with Laguna Bea ch and trv1rie on critical Bonita Canyon by~~ rolftt f • : \ Budget & Taxes. As member of Council Budget Committee, she has helped reduce city tax ratetrom $1.20 In 1974 toS1 02 in 1978 ' Growth & DeMity. Fought for cost~revenue analysis of General Plan amendments to protect property owners against dramatic tax increases. Opposes "nq-.w:owH' ~tagnatiQn" advocates who also block ro:td Improvements. Open Government. As member of Council Appointments ComrnlttE!e, she helped reform systems and brocedures for selecting vital appo1nt1ve personnel . Airport. She has maintamed a leaoe rshippasitlon in the policy of containment for the Orange County Airport, arid the search for a new reoional site. Library & Senior Citizens Center. Led successful ca mpaigns for establishment Of Newport Center branch library, and Oasis Senior Citizen Center. LUCtLLE KUEHN'S BACKGROUND PREPARED HER FOR THE FUTURE ·Orange County Gr and Jury, 1964 • Orange County Juvenile Justice Commission • Ch&rt~r P'fe~&ht, Le~gue of WofTlen Voters of Orange Coast • Of'.¥.VG.COUf!Ly MentM tiealth A4v1sory Baatd • Orahge County Criminal Justice Council • Ur1iverslty of California (Irvine), Asststant to Vice Chancellor • UCl , Instructor, Department of Urban A'ffalrs • Ctaremont Collegest Vice Chairman, Center for Continuing Education •Lincoln Middle School, PTA, Past Prestdent, Honorary Lite Me mber • Corqna del Mar t'flgh School PT A, Mem~r E,utcutive BMrd • Newi'Qrt Harbor Art Museum, Vi~e President, Chairman .Budget Committee • l;iarbor Day School, Trustee • Interfaith Council of N~wport, Irvine & COsta Mesa, Board member LUCILLE KUEHN'S CAMPAIGN STATEMEftT "Newport Beat~ fac~s l•creaalag problems -auocla~ 'wltla maaaglac rnsouble ~ wit.bout .. Mllclag oar qaalll)' of We. I pronh eKferledce u a dedicated wwldDC me•bu of Ute City Coo.nett. as a profeulollaJ muacu.e•t an•l1st a.ad u a 20-ye.ar resident ol Newport Beull. Tb1a bukcroud relafo«ttS lllY .u.i com mltlllld to 41ewelop ,oaitlve, RscaUJ.-.nd tol•llona to ,... proble .. of traffic, law eaforeemeot. popalaUon ud baUdbl& cleuhJ'. Prepnly~manaeed v•wtla mast co••i•er ·entroamtata.I, ffOllOmlc, CGlt1lraJ ... .edal values. Tbe praervatlo 9f &be_..._... ol oar city u ~ rHte• aDd l•pleaee& tlae GeaeraJ l'tU calla for tlae "1nd of apetkmce 1 olftrr. '' ..._ Ladllt ~a · VOTE APdlL 11th · I · i · 'f Liicille Kuehn I I ' • ' ' • •• " .. • Kuehn •• Council. 52t A~, OW'oN del Mer, • CA 9l6U. ~om C.sey. QmpaJgn Chetrnian • DAILY PILOT Wed"-ld•y. Maroh 22. 1978 PUBLIC NOTICE PlJBUC NOTICE 1-tJBUC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE Ptiauc NOTICE . PUBUC NOTICB P'1BLIC NOTICE PUBUC NO'l'JCB ~ I • . ~ ' • " f I. . ,.....,. ten~. .. ORANGE COUNTY I 061TUAAIES I PEOP.LE . ' himal Care·Focus of Course CareWu, Caretakers, Pet Oimen Target of UCI Series By JACKIB BYMAN .. .. .. ...,"* ..... A 11t1l1. Ute people, can •urter uv rely !tom'"'"'· -Do1• can catch mumps from children and children can aet rtnaworm Crom cats. -Until recently, no laboratory nnlmal could be infec:ted wlth leprosy lo lest new drup. Now armadillos have been lound to be vulnerable to the dis· ea!Je. -Cases of animal abuse are viaorou.'fly proeeculed ln Oranae County and have resulted in fines of $.1()0 to $SOO and permanent removal of animals from their owners. THESE ARE SOME of the facts that will emerae from a UC Irvlne Ex- tension coune called Fundamentals of Animal Care, which begins April 5. Courae coordinator is William H. Dieterich, Oranae County's Veterinary Public Healtb Dlreotor slnce 1973. Dieterich will also teach the April 19 seaslon on animal health, disease pre- venUon and lmmuniiaUon. The course, to be taught by veterinarians, 'is aimed at anyone who cares for animals or plans a career re- lated to animal care, Dieterich said. The cost ls noncredit $'70 and credit l80, but he sald he encoura1es tbole with a specialized interest to take indlvldual sessions, which cost $8.:SO. • WESLEY A. YOUNG of the North Am enc an School of Animal Sciences will teach techniques for handling and restraint of animals on April S, a class on animal t'are, diet and nutrition on April 26, and an animal care workshop on May 31 Robert H. Haight, Orange County sup<.'rvisor of veterinary services, will teach administration of first aid to animals on April 12. He'll also teach legal aspects of an1m al care on May 10. ALSO SCHEDULED are: May 3, care or horses and other selected larce animals, by Dan R. Evans; May 17, animal and bird care in the ammal hospital, by Kendal P. Svedeen; May 24, principles of laboratory animal care by Charles C. Hunter; and June 7, careers in the animal care field by William J . Winchester. Even people who have owned anlmals and cared for them for years may be unaware ot some aspects of animal health, Dieterich sald. "Probably most people have never given much thought to the fact that animals surfer Crom stress, .. he said. •·some people naively believe that animals don't reel, and this lsn't true." TYPICAL STRESS situations Include a puppy removed from Its Utter and a horse taken from the pasture and put In- to a train or truck for shipping. Symptoms, due lo excess adrenalin. Include poor appetite and weight loss. "Training is gradually exposrne an animal to things which could be stressful otherwise," D1etench said. ''IC you're going to train a traffic horse for a policeman. you take the horse gradually mto the city" IN ADl>rftON to 1tr 1, peoi>t• ana anim all •hart Ulnes1e1 rariclnl from mumps to:rable1 and rin1wonn. .. We've wiped out tho klnd of tuberculosis that k.lda used to &et from drinking milk.'' Dieterich aald, but not. ed that undulant lever ca.o be contract· ed from animals. One rare fatal clileue found amonc people In New Gulnea hat also turned up ln aonUu and chim· pan1ee1, who take 12 t.o 20 yeara to de- velop symptoms, Dieterich Hid. Armadllloe have been found to be SUS· ceplible to leprosy, and t.bey are useful In laboratory tests, Dleterlcb 1a1d. AMONG Ol'llER little·known facts students will learn, Dieterich aald, is that "75 percent or treating an animal is having it properly restrained." He explained that subduing a bull ln a field or a tiger in the too was extremely ditficult Wltil the recent development of more sophisticated restraints and anesthetics. "This is what kept a lot of women out or veterinary medicine for many years, because they weren't physlcalJy able to restrain a bull," Dieterlcb asaerted. CRUELTY TO animals is one subject that part.Jcularly concern• Dieterich. "We enforce this law," he said. ''We take pictures and impound animals. Judges are very aY'tnpalhetlc." Animal abu1ers range from homeowners who tie up does with pain- fully small collars lO do-gooders who take in large numbers or strays, then try to treat their illnesses with home re- medies. The classes will include actual hand· ling of animals as well as lectures and discussion, Dieterich said. Pet owners wtll also have a chance to aak about conditions or problems that may con· cem them. Additional information is available by calling 833-5414. Billy Answers Critics Art Group To Meet Alex Bozickov1c will give an 011 painting dem- onstration Monday at 9·30 am. at the Laguna Methodn.t Church, 21632 Weli ley Drive, South Laguna. From AP Dlspakbes Prf'~ldf'nt Carter's brother, Bllly, says his gas slal100 in Plains, Ga . received special emergency allotments of ~asol1ne during the oil embargo b<'caus'e it was the only station serving motorists in the area, the Atlanta Journal reported. In a telephone interivew Carter answered questions about a federal probe into al.leged abuses in Georgia's emergency fuel allocation program during the 011 embargo in 1973 and 1974. . The St. Petersburg Times reported that Billy Carter "kept a two-pump gas station 'alive' -and very profit.able with the help of up to 25,000 gallons or emer&ency state easoline a month." '* The vice-mayor of Vallejo was arrested on charges of using more than $1,000 in city funds to finance a pleasure trip to Hawaii. He was to have gone to Tucson James J . Bertuui Jr., JS. turn('d himself in ( ) to District Allor ney Neal PEOPLE Mccaslin and '>'as ar-_ ra1gned on a charge or --------- felony grand theft before Valle10 Municipal Judge Rltbard J. Swan. . Further court action was postponed until April 3. ... Now it's the sayings of Jimmy and Hubert. President Carter and the late Sen. Hubert Humphrey join the ranks of Plato, Voltaire and 2.000 other thinkers in a new book of quotations about freedom. "Bachman's Book or Freedom Quotations." publisht'd by Bachman and Tlmler, is a collection of sayinf(s spanning the past 20 centuries. It is edited by Michael Ivens and 1te1lnaJd Dunstan, leaders of the right·wing British or~ ganiiation "Aims of Freedom and Enterprise." who contacted Carter and Humphrey for contribu- tions. • Dr. Frederick S. Scroggin of Dry Rid~e. Ky. has been selected president of the National Wildlift' Federation. Also elected at the or· ganliation's 42nd annual meet- ing in Phoenix were new federa- tion directors, including act.or Ro~rt Redford. The group, with J.S million members, describes itself as the nation's largest conserva- tion group. • Until recently, Sen. Alan uoPOtO Cranstoa1 D·Cah! , thought the giant redwoods were the olde1t livin1 thinas on earth. And he said so in a newsletter mailed to constituents. Pubhsher Todd WaUdns read the newsletter and informed Cranston that he was wrong. According to Watkins, the world's oldest living tree is a 4,500-year-old Bristlecone Pine growing at the 10.000 foot level in the White Mountains of the Inyo National Forest. Cranston corrected the mistake In a later newsletter. A teaching session for approximately two hours will follow. The class is aponsored by the Lasuna Methodist Art Group. Further information may be obta10ed by call- in& the elus secretary, Doris Vao Winkle at 494~288 . l•LTZ·Hl•UOM NMIULMOMI Corona del Mar 673-9450 Cotta Mesa S.8-2424 llUHOADWAY MOl1UAIY 110 Broadwav Cotta Mesa 642·9150 Detitlu Elsewhere ,...,...~ WllTCUfP CHAf& 427 e. rnn st. COl1• Mtll • 84M888 ·santaAna Ch~• IU8 N.. Broadway StntaAna • 5.47-4131 '1IRC9 •OtMIU MfHS' NOITUAIT 627 Main St. Hunt1r10ton S.ach ~~39 ....... T ~GLOMl.U W" .. A&. HOMI 7801 ao1 .. Ave. WMtrnln•t•r 893-35211 SNEEM ll'eland (AP) -Cearbbill O Dalal.ab, 61, president. of the RepubJlc of )reJand from 19'74 until bis res· l1natton in 1976 follow· lna a claah witb tbe de- f e 01 e minister. died Tuesday of an apparent heart attack. NEW ORLEANS CAP> -Jan bandleader Loul1 Cottrell Jr. 67, a veteran of the Colden A•e of D~lelaM who SACRAMENTO (AP) -Ernett Aeppll, 81, dt· sl1ner of the approach structures for the San Francl!ICO B~ Bridge, dled Friday. He wa1 also the deslgner of the nower •xhiblt b\ll.ldlna 'charmed audimces with ht1 mellow clarinet.{ died Tuesday. Cottrell payed with at least uvea buda, amon, lhem tb• Youn1 Tuaedo Orche1tra, tb• Golden---------- J\ule lWi4 and the Hertta1e Halt Jiu ln nta Barbara. Band. uwlAQal,.. • OJvoru • Bankruptcy • C:rlmll\OI • Wllls.-Probltt • lncqrpor1tlon • AccldenMnJury •Eviction • Collections ST. MICHA&. AHD AU. ..... .., CHUI CH EASTER S•RVICES W~. Mateh 22. 1178 OAJL Y lttl.OT l'l1BLIC NOTICE P\JBUC NO'l1CB ''CREST'' TOOTHPASTE ASSORTED House Plants ASSORTED ·11ATTAfr ''SCOPE'' ''CONTAC'' ''BAN'' ROLL-ON Mouthwpsh & Gargle .CAPSULES . ANTl-PERSPIRANT TWIN BALLOON RABBIT~IZ. 1. 85 . BUNN!l/r DZ. 1. 39 YAKITY JACK Joz. 1.09 WOOLY WILLY Joz. 1.1 g BUNNY POPS 7 ia oz. 290 u. .CREAM Rlbbtt or Egg 15C · EA. FOIL EGGS PIPER BUNNY . gee 3''r ll. ASSORTED EASTER PLUSH TOYS A large assort- ment of sott and cuddly animals for the young at tieart FROM ~ 2.49 ASSORTED FILLED EASTER 1L~;j BASKETS~~1u ~ Full of your 1 ~ ,, ."· favorite ~" ~ :-. goodies. ~~~.P .~~ 1.49AND~P LONG NECK • DUCK SQUEEZE TOY 790 5"4" RABBIT with CARR~4" 1.19 CHICKEN ON NEST FLOWER BASKETS Allwlth 1 59 surprises. • FUZZV or FUNNY Cbocolate MALT BUNNY EGGS Use as a flower decoration 01 for your Easter baskets! 3'•"· 98! au.us 980 4~u.1.69 l~IL 1.19 ROOSTER or BAROri voN EGO BUNNY BUNNY or 2~ u. 59! ~~~~ .. 98° Fill 'N THRILL EGGS ~:G•I 1.59 ASSORTED "EASTER" F:~N~~ fill Easter &1~ basket or display on table. . Palmolive GOLD DEODORAlt SOAP ,___,~,I EASTER BUNNY and CHICKS ENSEMBLE ,· PARTY SUPPUES • """"II' u.m.. ie.,tla. Pit " 11 • Hit er C* C.,S. 7 oz.. Pit of I • 1" or , .. r.,. Plata. ht If a PLASTIC GLASSWARE • Old flnl11. 9 ll. PAK tf tr • HI 1111. 10 oz. PAX If 18 ~.,;i.:-u LIQUOR & WINE SMIRNOFF VODK• IOPF. 10 99 1.75 LITER • LORD CALVERT CAllAOIAN WHISKY 11 49 ~.'ii UTBI a SEAGRAM'S V.O. CANADIAN WHISKY 7 49 .... Pf 750 ml. • LAUDER'S SCOTCH ~~lml 11.99 LANCERS ROSE 750ml. 3.99 • • .. f TOP RAMEN CUP O' . 7-UP REGULAi . LlllEllSOR NAPKINS ORIENTAL NOODLES ADORN BRITISH STERLING SELF-STYLING COL OGNE, 3.8 oz. with FREE 4 oz. AFTER SHAVE MOISTURIZER. HAIR SPRAY 6.50 SOL 1.39 DEP for Your HAIR AMINO SHAMPOO ggo Gentle as nature Itself. 1............ Asst. Forroolas. BLO DRY HAIR CONDITIONER 29 TREATMEJIT 1 Asst. Formulas 12 OZ. • LIBBEY Crystal EGGS Clear elepnce for imaginative home detofallni. 1a::==.::::;. With Stem 531M oz. u oz. 1.19 1.39 ALL PURPOSE SPRAY PAINT Do it yourself I Dries hard and and tast...use less to cover more! Assorted colors. SCHOLL ·Exercise Sandals .. OCWllVE 11JE BJllP . ·~ ~~ 11.88 PYREX BRAND "''~ Un4:andla mo or SUGAR FREE NOODLES #516.95 "CHINA" FOAM Pw11c Tableware rr r~=::i'tl Piiia or Platters (Put Of 101 • =-::~':" 2:s1 (PAK Of 1!) ~ rumc Spoons I Forks 770 Alst. Coin 100'& Pil !!f!~IN B-12 139 Botti• of 100 .. MULTI-POSITION CHAISE LOUNGE ~ wD DB.UXE VINYL WElllN8 Heavy duty construction. Great for sunny days. SAV-ON BRAND Baby SHAMPOO EnricMd...areat for --·-the whole family! 16 oz. Baby POWDER~ Sort n' silky. 14 oz. ~ c"'.:l::~e BBc EA. ~ £44/eli Spedat INDIANA GlASS ''Crystal Diamond Point'~ CHILDREN'S I TEENAGER'S NOVELTY Wrist Watches GIFTWARE . ITQWMllEDNa R2.Q2 and Q.SPO on dial. rr••• um FACt --• TAU RJOTtD ann. cm. 2i)llcl llCOnd a1r1p. alVG1'! . IDEY I llJlllE TElflll WATCHEI • llAY0/8M& sa Chrome cm, 21)1ece seciond strap. a re. · • DMDED RELISH • TMWD SET Z Po. ~~~~tJ • DECAmR I ~ STOPPER • OYAl IOWL YOUR CHOICB a. ., ., ... -~ .. ,. .. ,~,, ..,. . . ·' , . ,,.~-·~~~-.-.n~·~~ .. ";"1":· .. -1-,. • .. • • • • w ,.. • ...;.& .... ~ •• ' A'. I I ~ ~'. :J I \1 .-...a:_......._.,AL&. .. ·.. • •. -•• . ... -•• _.. .. ... • •. - • - -• -.. .. . ... IU':llt-M .. ~•r ·; s1 """' • .....,IOUMf.,..YAWY ........ ~w ... M1WP01J11AC ..... 1at..-..w••,,,._ SAMT4...._,,., ,.I I REYNOLDS WRAP "DAI" DAllSH HAM ..'SUM-FAST' PROTEIN POWER DIET 1'5 Caloff1 M:al in mllla or chocolate flavors. TIES EVE'S CREATIONS =-·2.99 LADIES BLOUSES LADIES PANTS ::::.~4'"99 SlZESl-18. • UDlfl SCARVES A bldfut IAOftmlnt of colorl and designs. al .99 -· . A J2 DAILY PILOT Wednesday. March~. 1978 HEALTH . .. ACE ~RI'GA1ION SYSTEMS ,, . " Smoothing Out Wrinkl~S Takes an Expert 'wnat yoo see is what you fJd It By DR. STEINCROH'N Dear 01'. etauoba: Call me some sort or hybrid. 1 took y°'11\g and old al the same time. I am 48 and would paJS for 35 1f 1 didn't have tltie darned wrinkles. I have them ouulde my eyes, on my upper lllld lower lips and on my forehead. At a .cjistance I look almost like a young chlck. But when you get close and get a good look at those fine wrinkles, you know the calendar isn't lying. You may think I'm surrermg from too much vanity and self· ~U!Uii&..11&11...:.U..Mlllllia:i..t~uu love. but really r am not. My pro· blem is that I'm a private secretary \n a responsible position afraid or lt>.!lng her Job. f'Vil heard recently about a pro ~tss called chemical race peel. Shall 1 comlder it! Whom shall I see'! Mis COMMENT: l'll tetl you w~m NOT to see: anr.one who is not a medical expert n perlormini this treatment. Don't be taktn in by advertisements ln magazines which prQrnise excellent results. Have your own family doctor refer you to a skin specialist or plastic surgeon experienced in the pro- cess. The procedure has been used at least 15 years. Jt is much more ef· DOCTOR IN JHE tiOUSE fectlve \han dermabra Ion for re- moving ftne wrinkles. Sometimes it \s u9'd for a"k{n p1gmenlaUon problems. Usually it Is rontraln- d i cat e d in dark-skinned in- dividuals. Neither will chemical face peeling help acne scars. T H E FORMULA is a special mixture of phenol. water, croton qil and liquid soap. Arter skin is dried wllh ether. the solution Is pa- Uently applied with a cotton-tipped applicator Tho doctor avoids con· tact With th~ CODJUOCtlva or the eyes. After lbe pnenol mlxture ha<; been applied, the face ts covered with waterproof adhesive tape. The tape Is left undisturbed for 48 hours. Arter removal the moist skin is dried at intervals by apply ing thymol iodide powder. IT FORMS a dry mask. Washing is begun the following day and an· hbiotic ointment applied. Within a "eek the skin 1s healed. It is bright red and smooth ( ke~p ~tressing the use or trained specialisls. M1s1 ft. to pre-. ent romplicallons. JI your doctors tell you thnt you aro a nt patient for having chemical face peel. you can look torwarcl to a more youthful skin. * * * Psoriasis is not catchlng. It seems to improve ln the summer ' · when exposure t~ the sun as greatest. says Dr. Stelncrohn in his booklet. ''Practical Gulde To Skin Problems." f'or a copy write him al lhts paper enclosing SO. cents and a stamped, self- addressed envelope. 2 SCRIPTO MIGHTY MATCH DISPOSABLE 1SAVE 11:3.00! ri\1 lMm j!J ~~~~ 69'-89< m. • Mill CHOCOLATl 99 .. ,, HOllOW IUNNIU ~ . , .. ~ ....... _ _ Jllll lllD IGG 49 ~ ASSOITMfNT c "" , ... ~ YOUR CHOICE "><>lod rolo,. or qu1QI pr•l\I~ '°' C>al .. l•\'e' 4 tton f: r ~ dt .. \\Of\porl '' ,1ol1 ~ REG. S.99 LONG SUEVE 399 STTUS ea. §COURTLEY' CUSTOM TIES YOUR 219 ~ CHOICE \-.1 sol.41, Mlf I.au i MtJ , ft ·-lt4i tl.s i..•• tihl IEG. ue YOUll CHOICt LIGHTERS & WllllNSOM UIOl hw ttl 2 l et. nc Scn,19 lltlittn ............ 1-4''rwzwfw ., .............. •VllUOSf •HHllOU •HTIRSllAfC •ti/If C.Wlltll •flltll(ll (tlOllUO • MONOGRAM STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY "ttG. 1.49 KIDDIES' Gin JEWllRY HOLLY HOllY MINATURES Ctrlt ~ ....... dowl ' Uttle Miu ,....,.,, -wltlt ,..,,., .......... .-di. PIO-PEDS SOCISWITH POM POIAS Dit--• ~· ...... ..,.. ...... ... .......... ...,..,_ttlc:ely .,..,. g SYlVANIA MlGtCUIU ~laOf J - ::::. 1.59 KLEENEX SAU ,.ta ~~~l~~44c .. , •It• '" •Mt•. flNTlSTIC lfDUCIJ) Pll(l REG. 9.99 STEAM -N-CURL MIST STYLING STICK o...u .R .... , ..... ' Mist <...wot , ....... <""•· ............. ,. ' "'" , .. . str11J leeks ;,, .....,,.,. 0. & 1,.;, l.,it11, Seottl c.,4. CHI r., Stido 11.W.. fSAVE _ __l~ NOW!l~snR I ·'_.. .,,,,., (...t_, • e JJ I 77" -) •. Oeutll fifM4 Nt ~'It if het ftwtf t.U 1,.11 le • .., , .. --Wftlt ,,wheel M "" ... ( ..... tnut ... ' I 00 -' st ai,,tt. Stena ril lleo ""'" De<IM 'IOI w Ill polye\fer fifl. fANTASTIC REDUCED PRICE gge,'!~~ SOOTHING VISINE EYE DROPS I) 01 Mtflltl ~rttlitl, fth "" ... """ SUPlR PRICl SUPER PRICE SUNSHINE CHHZ·IT CR A CIERS FANTASTIC CONTAC llOUClD PllCt ~~~.~!~~ 103 &"tf• .. ·•-· SUPER PRICE Wlllll UOO\ l&ST' FANTASTIC REDUCED PRICE 169 STAYFRU aunESs MAXI· PADS ... tf,. .... , .... •114.1 AnWlt FANTASTtC REDUCED Pllct WITH llftll 11~ MAYBElllNE GREAT LASH MASCARA ,., ._ .. ._., -.-........ /9"° HUNTINGTON BEACH 21131 8 .. ch Bfvd. 1t Att1nt1 UNTINGTON BEACH ' INSIDE: •Stocks •Buslne 9 •Movies •Television . ' ,Bllffato !Blitzes Area Stars Swim. in , iKings,6-2 INGLEWOOD -Richard Martin and And.re Savard each scored two goals to lead the Bur- !alo Sabres to a 6-2 National Hockey League victory over the Los Angeles Kings Tuesday night. After a 8foreless first period. Martin'triegerecl a five-goal Buf- falo outburst against Kings' goalie Rogie Vachon in the :second period. Martin scored bis 25th goal Of the season at 1:48 or the period. The Kings tied the g-ame at 3:07 when rookie Dave Taylor fed Danny Grant in front of the net. But the Sabres scored four successive goals, with Ric Seii- i ng, Ron Schock, Martin and Savard tallying. El'ert Adl'ane~• PHILADELPHIA -Chris Evert Jatmched defense of her ti - tle in the women's pro tennis tour's Philadelphia slop by de- feating Laura Dupont, 6·2. 6-2, Tuesday. In other matches, Tracy Austin ousted Barbara Potter, 6 2, 6-1; Betty Stove eliminated Francoise Durr, 6-3, 6-2; Evonne Vermaak beat Pam Tee guarden, 6-3, 6-1, and Renata Tomanova struggled to a 5-7, 7-5, 6 3 victory over Zenda Leiss. IUdaar• LOR!S ATLANTA-Julie Anthony de- feated Newport Beach's Renee Richards, 6-3, 6-1 Tuesday in the first round of a women's tennis tourney here. In other matches Brigitte Cuypers beat Maureen Louie, ti-3, 6-4 and Caroline Stoll defeat- ed Marita Redondo, 6-2, 6·2. /l~ls Roi~ 5-l PALM SPRINGS W1lhc Mays Aikens drove in two runs with a third inning double to pace the Callfomia Angels to a 5·1 exhibition baseball victory over Cal Poly (fOllUllQlV Tues· day. ·• LONG BEACH-The nation's best collegiate swimmers invade Belmont Plaza Thursday In the first or three day-nteht sessions as the 1.978 NCAA awi.mmlng and diving champion1hlps begin. Trials are at 11 a .m. and finals are at 7 p.m. each day. Four-time champion USC faces the cballeqae oI Ten· nessee, Auburn and Alabama in its quest to rePt'al again. Among the toP qualifiers for this meet are a pair of ex- Mtssfoo Viejo •ta.rs wtth Olym. pie GaU'jes backgrou.od. Brian~ood~U. who earned two c.old. medals with world re.cord I Fans Keep Dry performances in the 400 and 1,500-meter freestyles. is a freshman at UCLA and is the one to beat in both events. Thursday's 500, the opening event, bas Goodell with the second best enterlne time < 4: 23.33), behind Southern Metnodist's Andy Veris <•:23.Z7). Also in the 500 are Harvard's Bobby Hackett, Ten- nessee's Keilt Martin (4:25.77) and Tim Shaw (4!Z'L66) of Cal Stale (Long Beach). Also with a M issioo Viejo flavor is distance freestyler Casey Converse, the defendjn" Two baseball fano; huddle under an umbrella asl~ an- cia High's Mike Williams bats fgainst.. }lolsa de during a light ram Tuesday at Rancho Alamitos sm the Bolsa Grande toumam t. See story, additipnal photos, Nie B-2. . 1 1 l,650 champion. Converse is among the top seeds in the 1,650 05:27.11), but far off the pace Of Goodell (1S:ll.86). This~ NCAA fina.11 looms as one ol the most competitive irr year.a. Tennessee, Auburn and Alabama were all ln the top five at U>e lB11 national meet. use, without such past aces as Jobn Naber, Joe Bottom and R()d $.rachan, who carried the Tr0Jan1 to the last four con- quests, reliea on sprinter Scott Fiododf, versatile Btuce Furntu and• pair of solid l'elay team&, • , I Te~'s runs are seolor 1?lude ~ann Undividu ' Bob Sells, sophomore 1'farc bl~dley), Furniss (200 free> Foreman and others. Aubu.m's Conve""8, Shaw, the tfn>.tlm Seott Spann is listed aa the No. 1 1'.inipln in the :Kl() free, Cal'• entrant in the 200 individual (;rabam Smith (100 and medley (1:50.86), 100 breas\ breast), Mike Brunner of Stan- (56.38) and 3>0 breast (2:03..f4). ford (200 fly) and Michigan's Other Auburn stars include Matt Cbellch (one.meter di 6prlnters Rowdy Gatnes and in~). David McCati. as weU as ,,..,.._,.,.._.. t l ted _,_., ••-., ~/I': ,.._,,,. .. ,,...,..,,....,..,1 .. m.> a en .___, -m.s. soo f'"5tv••· aoo 1no1v1d ... 1 mec1••'f• 5' Converse. aloog with aprWu .. tv•·•~=i!a:= .. .,nuv. Jony SkiMer and butterfly ace • ~11~ ~v. 200 ,,_tyte, 100 ti.:.1111< Mlke Curington, 1••4 ,,.,,ih* ~. 100 lltWstleroM, eoo Alabama conlln6eet. "' · w..., .•• .,...t• ... -o-""e entries -"'even '00 '""•111•. 200 ~lrSlnMc•. 200 11tus1stniM n--WJ IU" .. 200 114111.erlly, J1Nt4ll' CIM!lll. 1,6SCI ft'lfttYlt, :ilfef~·~mpiom. 1'Uy in-,,...,..,Q, . _____ , , . ( After Loss SAN ANTON10, Texas (AP -The San Antonio Spur " walked into the National Basket ball As59(:iation p!ayoffs Tues day night but not without strag.ic. Tbe Central Division-lea · Spurs knocked off the· Lo Angeles Lakers, 109-105, which coupled with Milwaukee's 1 vic::tory over Atlanta, pushed Sa Antonio into post-season play 1 the second consecutive year in tht; NBA. Tonight the Lakers play-Houston. The Spurs led 107-99 in the . final two minutes before the OtiTl'r .. ffJ•t Olo•lld 9 at S:SS Laker& reeled off six straight un ans.w~red points, four b Kar~m Abdul-Jabbar, wh nnisbed with the game·high o 32 (Geor'1> Oervin." Doo Aase and teen Brett com- l>Jned to limit the collegians to one run and eight hits. Aase went tlle first five mnings to pick up the victory. Brett blanked the Broncos over the final four in- nings. Borg Rolls To Victc:-~Y Over Laver LQok 1 0ut for tlie Rull ''It waa.-.aot your classi game," said San Antonio coac Doug ~oe. "We were holdin back offen&lvJly at the end. F some reason, all our guyJs tho1,f8bt they had to go t Gerv1n.tiniabed with 17 points, 10 ...,belqw bis avera~e, but Billy: Pa ult~ responded with 20 to hel pull up tbe slack. The Lakers had a late op~ portunity to tie the game when~ with 21 seconds remainmg"' rookie Kenny Carr was fouled b. Paultz as both men tried for Dodgers Win, 6·l W t;~T PALM Ht:ACH, .t~la. - 'fhe Los Angeles Dodgers, cou- pling heavy bat work by Ron Cey and Reggie Smith with good pitching and the opposition's loose defense, defeated the Atlan- ta Draves 6·1 Tuesday in exhH.11- tion baseball. Cey knocked in two runs with a double and a sacrifice fly while Smith had three hits. n.a...BlreE.,••• LOS ANGELES --The Los Angeles Rams have announced the hiring of their 11th assistant coach, Clyde Evans, who will be m charge of the National Foot- See Briefs, Page 8-Z Padres Ila••~• Roger Craig. an ex·Dod~ pitcher~ was elevated from pitching. to manager of the San Diego Padres Tuesday after Alvin Dark ·was fired. • Ozark Plans No Fine After Luzinski's Rampage CLEARW'ATER• Fla. <AP) - Pbiladelphja Phillies owner Ru- J )f Carp.enter and general mana8er Paul Owens are upset, but mmiager Danny Ozark, lm- placabl~ as ever, says he plans -no fine or reJ'timaAd for slugger Greg LUZUllki's ratI)page in tbe leiam 's clu~se. l.uzinski. the usually even- t ~ J'Q p e r e d .t>J a y er w h o s e n.,::kname i6 "Th& B'1ll'' becal.l$e of his burly pbyilque and hitting p.rowess, to?e up tbe Phils' locker room late-tast week before the t.eatn left tbl a three-· Cl'y trip lo the Dominican R~public to play the St. Louis Cardinals. ~LO?.inskt' was upset o~er mak- i~ the tnp, as were m~y of his teammates, d.i1grunUe0 by tbe team 1s de!ayed departure and irritated because some team- ~ates wel"e ~xcused from the ttJp, accordini to eyewitnesses. His tantqJrq (eft (hree batting helmets smashed and severai lockers damflge~. along with a radio owned by the clubhouse manager. ''I've gotten upset and thrown 'some things ll)yself in my time," said Ozark, whose stoicism is a trademark. "I can undersland it. It d()esn 't botber me "We didn't leave at a certain time and there were guys in- volved in instigating," said the qianagi?f, who didn't name the other eiayet's. Owenp said Luzinski, run- nerup-ln 1971 to Cincinnati's George. li'Dster for National Lieague Most Valuable Player, apoloeized for the outburst that surprised almost everyone on the te!lrn. "He apologized like the man' that, he is," slid Owens. "Damn righl' I ~ upset.• I djdn 't know about elf tho damage because I arrived after It was all over." Owens sald c.,;penter called .IWn in Santo Domingo to J,ell hirn what had happened at the Cfe'arwater clubhouse. "'Ruly was very upset," he sa~ "What upset me. is itaat. Dwnny·wa$ tfitre and didn't s1.oJ1 it .. <nark;. disrnh&ed the intlideot. as nu.t.hal and ~.ater over th'e da~." Ma·ny" of tile' fhillies w'1o made the t!)'P. -in which , Philadelphi-'(<>Ok~two of three from St. Louis Jes\ weekend - complained· bitterly Tuesday. CArpenter said the trip was ar- ranged (Qr the good of baseball. "It set us back four days io sprtog training," said shortstop Larry Rowa. ''They were the worst three da1s of my hfe, worse than the army." "Tbe hell with them Cthe pl~~erlij)," said Owens. "They go where I tell them to go. If 1 can o, they can o." Pebf¥ln1. '1' >to~f Jl~~~~n~~r~1t~!r ~;n~. two free throws in the bon tituat1on. And with five second left. the Lakers' Charlie Scot ·had U> f9U) Gervin in desperallo .,and 'the NBA's second-leading scorer responded with two mor 11 pomts. "Even though Carr missed th free throw!;, that was not th game," said Los Angeles coac J~ WeJl. "Our turnovers 1 the fitst haJf buried us tonight.'' I.OS AHOe&.U CIQ51 -o ... uev 10, Ford l 111>- <lul-"'·~· 32, Nl•on o. liudson II, Scot! I C..r H, ~~thy 2, ~Ol>ladl S. T01au 4,l 1t-U IOS . siut .\HTOHIO (1091 -Ot~ln<k l, l(fnQI\ u P•vll• 20, Gale U, G•rvln 11 Oti:.roo"' t, Bri\low 1, 0.mfl,, C~ Green 11, ~11.u 1 .. T01ati '1 IS.JI !ft. Jeu .. ""' -Kt-·Tot1I '°"'' -Loi AnQelf'S tl, $111 Anton+o 30 Tttl>nle•I\ • llbckAI J.-r. San Anlonlo Coa~ ~MM. A -9,111 ..... .8Z DAILY PILOT Wedne.day, Match 22, 1978 Delly PIMI......_..,._ ...,_ ESTANCIA'S MIKE BENNETT MAKES TAG ON BOLSA GAANDl!'S RICK COUTURE. Vanguards Sweep Foe; Wilson Stars Dave Wilson hit home runs in both ends of a doubleheader as host Southern California College (Costa Mesa) swept Pacific University (Oregon), lS·S and 7-4, in non-conference baseball Tuesday. Butch Plank also had a hot bat for the Vanguards, collecting five hits, five runs and five rbi in his nine trips to the plate. In the first game Wilson hit a solo homer in the third inning <ind Mark Wood contributed a two-r un blast in the fourth. Plank got two doubles and a single to drive in five runs. Butch Ward struck out five and upped his pitching record to 3·1 behind the support of a 12·hil attack. BASEBALL I SWIMMING /AUTO RACING Gurney Witry of Eagle Bobby Uruer to Drive at Ontmio Sunday By HOWARD L. HANDY Gf .. Dlllty ........ Dan Gurney feela the Eaaie ts the car for USAC championship raclns but hla AU-American Racers ol Santa Ana will put a different type of race car on the track thla weekend for the 200-mlle race at Ontario Motor Speedway. Gurney, a resident of Corona del Mar and lcmi·time racing authority u a driver, car owner and now crew cblef, aiur1 be lan't certain about the future of a new Eagle he. is bulldln1. In fact, he doesn't even know il the car will be reedy to run at Indianapolis ln May -but be ls hopeful. ••our new car is still about a month away but we are going to run it a aoon as we can." be says. "'Right now we are waiting on a new gear box and we have bad. some other setbacks involving some castlngs. But generally, we are makiDs &ood propess with the car." In the meantime. Gurney and car owner Teddy Ylp wW put driver Bobby Umer behind the wheel of a black Coswortb· powered Ughtnlng that will race as the Areographite Special. "We have both cars entered at Indy but we'll concentrate on one car to run. We want to eive our entire attention to one car and one driver back there, .. he says. • ..There's remarkably little amount of time for practice and we have to concentrate our ef- forta.'' One of the reasons for the de- lay of tbe new Eagle is the fact Gurney and Yip are committed to race in all USAC cham- pionship car events this season and the time it takes away from the shop to race is cut.t1JIC lDto the development Ume. , "There's a good chance tlle Eagle wUl not be quite ready for Indy," Gurney admits. un•a all new and unless we can get IUUI· cient miles oo ll ln practice, we will want to go with a known quantity -that. ls, unleas it 11 ao good we can 'tstand it." He adds the last 1tatemeu1 with a wilttul look in hi3 eyes. As far as Sunday's Ontario race betag a tuneup or warmup race for Indy, foraet it. "Some people call them wa.rmups for Indy," Gurney admits ... But we are definitely there to win the race and on race day, eveeybody else will be trying to win, too. .. Gurney and Unser, a Newport Beach businessman, will be one of four racing teams with drivers from the OrBJlie Coast area competing at Ontario Sun· day. · Danny Ongais of Costa Mesa will drive for Newport Beach's Ted Field in an lnterscope- Parnelli and could be the one to watch. Others include Dick Simon and Steve Krisiloff, botb of Capistrano Beach. Swi.m Prelims Diahlos Rolling Toward Crown BJ ROGER CARLSON a•°"'Yl"llllCIUH EAST LOS ANGELES-With the potent 1·2' punch of Jesse Vassallo and Ed Ryder leading the way, Mission Viejo High's Diablos tuned up for the CIF 4-A swim finals Thursday with an awesome display of power and depth at East Los Angeles College. Eyeing their fourth straight CIF championship, coach Mike Pelton's Mission Viejo jug- gernaut made it clear the only question to be answered Thurs- day evening (7) is who wiH cap· ture second place-Foothill CTusUn) High or Long Beach Wilson. the ata1emeudmed eems. were Mark: Barber, Vic Vassallo, Steve Barnicoat, Mike Barnes and freshman Doug Barker. While Mission Viejo was dominating the scene, there were other Orange Coast area standouts-such as Costa Mesa's Bob Dolan, who qualified in the 200 (1: 41. 80) and 500 frees t4:39.46); Marina (Huntington Beach) High s printer Chris Rehak: Estancia <Costa Mesa) High 's Phil Obie; Newport Harbor's Jim Berge.9011: and El Toro's Craig Takata (l:Ol.53 100 breast). In the second game Wilson again chose the third inning to uncork a home run. This time his blast was part of a five-run rally that enabled sec to over- come a 3-0 deficit. ERIC ROBBINS TAKES PICKOFF THROW AT SECOND BASE FOR ESTANCIA. Among Tuesday's prelims were Vassallo's leacting 1:55.05 in a 1·2·3-6 effort for the Diablos in the 200-yard individual medley; Ryder's bests m the 200 free 0:40.86) and 500 free (4:28.08) and a sparkling 400. yard free relay clocking of 3:10.30. In 3-A action, lmne mgh fre s hman Blair Murphy qualified third in the 100 back • (56.40) and 50 free (21.81). Rob Stonelake added Icing to the cake by unleashing a solo homer in the sixth inning, and pitcher Tim Lynch had little trouble recordmg his second vie· tory of the season. The twin bill sweep boosts Southern California College's re- cord to 11-4 on the season. "'"'~ ~ c..i CMleee ,,,, .. , .. .-I t>1an11,n Wooc:t,rl GrHr,cf ~mn,11>< ~t\HU,C eno, lb lwn, 31> 4 J 3 s ·w119Mr.""' "' 1 1 2 Mlyas111rv, an 3 I I I Hou I•, If 7 I 1 I Slonela~e. II l 0 0 0 "' 1 2 0 1 0 0 0 l 1 1 0 7000 0000 3 0 1 1 ,.., ... &, 21> 1 0 1 0 Ward,p l 3 1 1 Tol•I• 3' .... ~IMI- 2' ll 12 I\ r II e Pacoli< U 100 030 ~s S l Southern Cal CoH-ve 20 JJO 11-ll 11 O ~0-... ~ c.1 Clll .... en .. r1,,.. Pl•ntt, H Wood, rf GrHr.cr Tt>omH, II> 5clle•lt, c Wilson, 31> 4 2 t 0 Mly-"lro,"" 41 1 2 I Slo,,.lalle, II 3 0 0 0 Grillln, 21> 3 1 o o Lynell, p l 1 0 0 COU!tlloe, p 7 1 1 l Tol•li 3 0 1 0 l 1 1 I l 0' 0 000 0 0000 2t 1."' scere--,1M1,.. P•collc U Soutltern_Gtl C011999 r '-• JOO 010 0-' 9 l oos 101 •-7 ' 2 'Burns, Kuyper :Top All-CIF . , . Brian Burns of Channel Islands (Oxnard) High and ;Mayfair (Lakewood) Hlgh's 'Tom Kuyper have been chosen, co-players of the year ln ClF 2-A baaketball circles aa selected by the Cltlzens Savings Athletic Foundation board. Burns, who averaged 17 points rand 18 rebounds a aame, led hls team to the CIF c.bam.pionship. ·Kuyper, also M, averaJed 21.6 : points ud 12.8 rebounds a saiaine. · ,..,...._.M-<1,Mkll •R .....,,...... "La. A ... T_ll.....,~ M Ir. 21 .. ..._....,_a--tlda'ldl M sr. 17.0 ..... 17 +':":':;'" H sr. IU ~a.ti. 1y M SI', 2H s--=:;• w 1r. 110 t .leff c.ri.nc...,._, M Sf', 1U •WINI-, VtctwV•Mrt .. 2 Ir. 1U • ...,_.....,.,C*Hltlt S.11 Ir. 1t.O ;MIMT•fll-.,,.,...,.v .. .., S-11 Jr. 1U f OIMOlalllAIUll,Clll.,.,, .. J SI', 1U I ........ _ OIMIM.-.V'CWVtll.., .. , Sr, UT ~-..... Mlf-.r H Ir. ttt • Yertl 0Nm. Qlm1llD .. $ Jt, tl.O Btlt~a...1111-....... u.o 1Ma.l9t,.C11t..._ .. ,.~ 1r. u.a .-n'f1'udllr,...,. ,_, 1r. u.• & """"~Alt... . .M tr. n.• •Miiie............ M tr, 1:1.0 J ...... ~Nlll U!tllt .. Ir. 1U "'*'" ... ................ w ... ''-' J o.II~..... .. ... 1U t!o."t=·--~ ... M.J (' Mltll ..... .... "· ,... ... Olfat'lll .. It. "" OWi M ...... A11Wf19r'"* M •• '1A A*!V ...... ~ II :ir. IU Jiff ....nt. ~II Wllif U St. tu Qll l!C.W, ,...,,.... .., tr. M..I ...,.. ... (lllllN4 l&I ... u Ir .... llB Claims Consolation Sailnrs Swp El Toro; Vikes, Eagles Fall .Junior Charlie Ray led off with a 46.8 in the final relay, which also included Jesse Vassallo, Jim New and Ryder. Huntington Beach High won the couolatioa cllampionsbip of the Anaheim tournament with a 9-6 victory Ovet' La Habra Tues· day, but Marina (Huntington Beach) and Estancia High of Costa Mesa were eliminated from tournaments in their baseball games. And in the Apple Valley tournament Tuesday. Newport Harbor subdued El Toro, 6·1 . Estancia was the victim or a no-bitter by Bolsa Grande's David Carroll and lost, 2-0, wtule Marina was stymied by Arroyo Grande, 6-2. in the Santa Jrfaria· RigheUi tournament. Huntington Beach's Rod Stultz provided the key hits in the Ollers' victory. He doubled and singled to knock in two runs in a game shortened to five innings because it extended past the tournament time limit. Their 7-0 lead after three in· nings seemed comfortable enough, but the Oilers squan· dered most of it as La Habra rallied for six nma in the third and fourth innings. Stultz' key double ln tbe fourth knocked in one run and provided Huntington Beach with some breathing room. Bolsa Grande'• Carroll struck out six and walked lhtee 1n re· cording his no-hitter o•er Estan· cia. The defeat puts E!Staacia's reeord at 3-' for the season. All BoUJa Grande needed was a modest rally in the seco.d in- ning, when two walks, two singles and a double accountect for two nas. Marina and Arroyo Grande were tied 2·2 unW the fourth in- ning, when a three-run outburst by Arroyo Grande sctUed mat· ters. Marina's Vikings could manage only two bits. Their first run came on a bases-loaded walk m the first inning, and the second, one i.aning later, scored· on an error. Newport Harbor's Jeff Nelson allowed El Toro jwit three bits and coasted to victory on a win· dy evening in the high desert of Apple Valley. Today (5) the Sailors play unbeaten Barstow for the title. Gordie Barr hit one up into tbe wind and over the left field fence to power the Newport Harbor at- tack. Barr's tw<>C'UQ homer put the Sailors in front, 4-1, in the filth inning, and the Chargers never challenged the lead. .. " . 000000~03 002 000 11--t s ~ SPORTS BfilEFS. • • ConthNHMI Fnm Pa1e B·l ball League team's condltionlng program. Evam, 34, apent the put f.our years with the San Dleao Chargers in charge of their wel1ht·llftlng pro1ram. Holl tbe flrat full-Ume condlUonin1 coach the Rama have aver held. Wa&'-lerMfl Store. SPRINGFIELD, Mus. - A buketbell Jersey once woro by L0e Aoplea Leten' IDpentar JerrJ West was rlppect from a dl.s-~lay at tbe B•Ulball 1W1 of Fame Tueeday by three teen-a1en wbof!llcaped..PQUeiaa.14. ..... 91ea P.HlLADgLPBIA -An autop11 wa •cheduled tod"1 for boxer wbo coll•psed and dlod rter lol!n• a .abt·round pre· llmlD&r7 DOt Tueldal;!ll_lbl Cl• "'Jcim" ~ rr. )oat OD atloatth.:round Uttllnlttl knock -to Oart1a Par~ lft mldcllewdabt _ bed. ntaaued ••tMicla (01 • r II,.. Soper, cf 1 O 0 O 6-ltaMari._ Jb 2 0 0 O FrydencNH, ~ 0 0 0 0 S.tcs.do, 2b 3 o o o ero-. It 1 o o o Robbin,, H I 0 0 0 ISl«u, If 1 0 0 0 Wiiiiams, c9I 2 0 O o LMl,,.er, rt 2 0 0 0 a,...,_. c 1 o o o a-11 • ...a 2 o o o PIMr'KI, c 1 0 0 0 Riiey, p 0 0 0 O Peyan, lb 2 O O o OonMllY.P O O O o ~-.-..,11> '... T-• 20001 M.HtMCJI o..,,, •• " Coy, cl O.pello, 21> lrwln, lb • r • .., f'lweWI, c :I O 1 0 3 t 0 0 Rullllndlld,. 1b I t 0 o 2 I 0 0 MHfoef', 11> l 0 0 0 l 0 1 0 0.KI, ~ 2 0 0 0 *'"1"'·" MMlu.~ :z 0 0 0 Sfnlttl, p 0 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 F-1•, p 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 I Total• 21 2 2 1 5cwellyl-.. r II • 200 300 ..... '° 1 110 000 ~2 2 1 " n c• lleec9 Cf) R ,. • .., Samperi, If Ti--,• 3000 T~tb "~ 2t> :I 0 0 0 """'· lb NortJtrup, 2b 1 o o O 0111, c GIH, p 1 2 0 0 Sllllll, 3b GClclMftdSI\ p 1 0 O o S. l..wmu. ct OIClO, rf 2 2 I 0 Olaonond, d O. l..wr11et, rf 1 o o o Totals ,_....,, ......... 2 2 1 0 3 1 1 J 0000 3 ' 1 1 3022 I I 2 t 0100 a',, HUfttlnCrtllll 8-d\ La Hwa ............... "' r " • ens to-t • 1 002 ....... 2 •rll,.. Cll llT- 811n', ,, " 1 2 2 Beel!. cl 0 0 0 0 o.ddll,. .. 0'. PIMl!OWlltl, lb 4 0 0 I H09an, rt 3 I 2 o Bulllnvton, di' O I o o Sl'llltll, II I 0 O 0 I.. 'EclUH, dh 3 2 2 1 NellOll, p 0 0 0 0 "'"mafl, lb J 0 2 t Oenlel,C JOOO Berman, ,_ 2 1 I • S.uerbny, pl! 1 O 0 t Tota1' :JO 6 10 J Bryent,lf Cra~tb Huddltln, rt Olelloela, cf Key, :lb KKllelell\,11 Gibbs," lntlellert. " Brunner, lb lrwln,c GI I Hon, P" Total• SC-lly ........ a11r1WW 4 0 I 0 4 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 I 0 3 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 o I 0 o 2000 3000 2000 1 0 0 0 71 1) 0 N.wl'Oft twtlor II Toro r II • 020 Gn l-6 tO I Olt DOI C>-1 I 2 El Toro Apple V•ll.., ....,.. ....... ••T-(11) •r•"" s 2 1 • 0.1111,c I J 1 0 lnti.ll«C. • .. 1 0. ,,... ... "" 1 I 1 0 9f'\lllner, tb 2 • o o 111.-r •• 4241 011-.--• 0 I 1 Toi.ts ............ 0000 2 0 I 1 l. 0 0 1000 JOOI 1000 :II" •• , It • no 10• 4-11 • 2 000 001 _, l "' Ray, who was not a finalist in either sprint in 1m, showed his capabilities with a 46.93 and 21.87 in the 100 and SO freeetyles to qualify second and third in lus specialities. If points were scored for Tuesday's business, the Diablos would bave tallied 297. In rolling to a 57 ·point victory in 1977 the Diablos picked up 222 points. Among the work Tuesday was a 1·4-S-10 finish in the 200 free; 1·2·3·6 finish in the mctividual medley; 1·3-4-S finish in the 500 free; 2-4-5 finish in the 100 back. the winning free relay; and a 1:37.90 in the medley relay. second to Long Beach Wilson. Doing the honors for the three· Ume champions. in addition to Area Sports Calendar T1MnMy (Merell 2JJ SWfmmlill>-0 F .. A finals .t Eat( Lele Angli!H Co11eoe (1 p.m.); Gol-Wnt Coll<IOt at El camlno l1:aa1; NCAA c~lllpa at a.1. ......,tPi.u. kseb.il-GofclefO Wftl C.011 ... at Hanc«k toumey (Gotdlft w..i n C-. Col1-.. l!lk~ f'leld, SailM ~lal; Phn X al IMt ... Del CJ. UI , Edl-atK-..'°",...,· Tracll-Mar•MIM •• ,,.,,,lie H19i-CJ: ISi; a. ..... w-. Saddlebecll C.oll991, Or-0-l Cell ... •t Soultwnl Cellfor1'1a JC ae .. yt et Col .... Ofho.-teta.m.1. Girls tr«*-Qr11>911 C.O.st Coll ... , Ool.., -... •t ~ catlfwnia R.iavt at oin...,. of tM OeMrt CU .m.I. Olr11 IOf .. I Oltdln Wltst CollllQll _,.., COtlM w.etvsM9M, Arlt. al 11 a.MJ ......,IMafftM) "''"'""'-Ql4 .............. Ool•w..t c:.11 ... , .... A.I'\.); •CA4 "'*•at~ ....... ~ AM et Saddl•bld: Oon<1119 ,_,; 0..... Wiit Olll ..... H41ftcock -y COolCM!I Wllll n c:.11 ... el ~at "-It Coll ... , 2:aol; HunllnQton &.acll •I Sen M9rco. u 15): F-u.ln Vall.., al OM"'*"• (J UI. 48-hour Gmne Ends Memben of the Marina mp SC!bool <Huntlnaton Beacb) •U'IU.Y and Junlor varalty volleyball t.eam1 a.Ion, wttb their COech, 1'llD Reed, are clalmtna the Gulnneu and school reeordl for 1ame lon1ovil1 ~r playlna contlnuoualy for '8 hours th1s net. · Tbo 11 p!ayen and their coach be1an acUon at 10 o'clock Sunday mornln1 and concluded the marathon· • nt at tho aam hour Tuesday. Tho Ustcd record tor a volleyball 1ame ta 42 houn whno tho fonDC!ll' .MarJna 1cbool mark w&t 38 houri. All 11 of the oiialnal p1ayen completed tho action and all except me toach are atud nta at Marina mp, eluded cn toam ftrt Nalm Butt, Tlm II Iller, } .Daft Elai. Dav. N lea, 9Dot& Strtal. Mark HunUey, ' Wlllle Jtrepwt.n.kle. ~ , lUct Lanen. lA.rrJ Bo-. 6t, l'llD ti1kr aJaDi wi&h a.id. Cl F .. A $wllR "'"""" 200 mtdley '919¥-1. LB Wll-. 1 ».1t7 !. .... •IM Viele l ........ t. ..._,Mc~"-" 111-11 1 D.•; 1. Foothill 1:&20; .t. VIiie Par1t 1 .a"· s R.aanclS 1•41.23; .. .....,.... ...... 1; 41.7 S; oai.tn: 11. MartN 1: t4.M. 200 lrM-1. •llW IMIMla Vle)e) 1:-..; 2. O.tu CC811a M9MI 1:41.a; l. Bucko !Sunny Hiiis) 1'.42 tO; 4. ..... (Ml.._ Vle)e) 1:0.ll; S. eerHa CMhtl .. Vlefe) 1 :U .Jt; 6. H•yu I Newbury P.,kl 1:'3 44; Otllen: ti. a.tow CMlulM Vle)el 1:4S.tt. Ht l114o-1. J. v ....... (MtMlma Vlrlel 1:&15; t. earn .. CMl11to11 VleJol 1:S6.'1; I. (II., 8ar11lcNI (Mll&I• Vleje) -"' Mlllef' IF-111 1 S7 7S; S. K-1\le (S..nny Hlli.l 1:51.11; 6. v • V HM 110 ( Mitsltlt Vleje) l : J&.JS, SO Ir-I, l.Mmy (Ralllngs Hl"s) 21.39: 7. leuc..a (VIII• Park) 21.7'; I. .... (Mi919eVJejel :n.11: •· F~na CH•rverd> n.cw.; s. lt .... k CMarlNI Zl.1'16. Oltle C~la) U.lt; Geln: "· 111•1 IC.-ri-(MtlUMI 'l\eje) 2J.JIL 100 lly-1, StMc:Nn cp_,,.111 Sl.2*; 2. Mllo!f' (Foollllll) SUI; I. M9-SMllh (Rad!-) SUI; • c.ora1n (L8 WI._,) U.1'; s. Mclflle (VIiie f'llrt<) s2 n: '· v~ <Foo11111u sa.ts; OU.On: '· MC OonouQll (MllllOft Vl•lo) s.J.SJ. 100 lr-1. l.Nmy IRotllno Hllld -..S; 1. ••, 1111...._ Vletel ...,,,; J. ISudlo lS-.y Hms1 <17.31, 4 Fretehlll• CH«Yartlt 47.11; S. (~I • R1c11.., • ., (9everly Hiiia) .,... Slwtmlr ,_,, • u; oi-.1 tt.....,.. ,......., ••; 11.~ llsta•'Clal .. '1. SOI ............ ..,... (,.._. V1e)e) 4:a•; 1.. .Atltl.,_ (SUMy Hltll) •:M 11; 1. 9-IMk• \IU Vleje) • n ... ; ...... IMI--vi.,., • u .H, s. J . v-.w11e c.1111..-VleJel •:an • ._ .,.. .. ( c:.ta....., ,,,. ..... 100 l>aclt-1. ~· .. ILIS wn-1 51.43; L aanilcNt CMbllae v1ei.1 A.M; s. StrKl>ert CFootllllll ss.60; 4. V. v ..... <....._ v;.jel SJ.7t; S. a.r .. s (MIUIN VleJe) 14.J6; •· Halll<Kk (El Modlnal 54.'3; otm.'11 tt. 0.-CN....-t.....,, 16.Jt, 1• ......._, ......... (L8 Wllilllll) IUI; 1. Ber• (Ml,.._ VltJel 1:•."; J. ..,..._ , ..... _. ""'1l9r) t :•.'1: .. Gelwo'9S {Trv\I) 1.0UO; S. DleflW (Mira Coate) l :OUO; 6. T- (1!1 hnl 1:.i.a; o..n: '· a.tiw ,....._ vi.fe) 1:11.14; t. Iii<~ ~ ~l 1.12.M; 11. 0rW ,....,_......_, 1:11..61. 401 lrM Ntay-1. Mlulea Viele C•ey, J. V.iMll-. """· •YlllW• >:tt.aJ !. s-., Hiiis 3: ll.ta; J. Fooll•fll 3: IS.29: 4. ......,.,..., Pltrlt 3.17.60; s. a-1:11.P ; ._ Ao1n119 Hilb a:1u1: otl>e~:t. ................. , ...... Rustlers Fall To Cypress Golden Weal Collete fell back to the .500 mark in the Southern: California Confereoee buebell standings Tuesday, losing to .host Cypress College, 5-3. in a makeup game that was rained out earlier in the season. One of the few brilbt spots for coach Fred Hoover's GWC Rustlers was a two-run homer in the seventh inning by Russ J>en. Cold to break a scoring drought. Penfold's blast came after Rick Clark had singled. The final GWC run came in the ninth inning when Dave Severin walked and Doug Manaolino aintled to cet1ter. When the ball went b.Y-tbe out· fielder, Severin ~ tbe third and final Goldu Weat tall)'. John Moe.el at.ended bi.I blt· Uni atreak to 18 straltht PJJMS wtlh an td&bth lnn1nl lln&I• but Steve NelMlh WU f>lankecl for tho flnt Umo thla year. ......... ,,, • r • ,.. Pw!f.W, ta I 1 , t S t I t 1-1, " 1 I I 1 a • • • t41tnvtr, 11 • • • o ' ••• '"''. ... • It 0 , ... ~ .... -.... "I I I IOll-.11 ettf 4 I I I T.W• a~ 1 a ............... p ... ...... ,. ••11ao4at .J .J .I J .I u •I .I• -.. ........ -.... BASEBALL / HARNESS RACING J MISCELLANY Wednesday March 22 1978 DAILY PILOT 83 ,Split Twin Bill Busy Pirates In Title Game .. occ Crew Orangt• l'oa .... 1 C:olll'Jlt ., ,., ,." 1s looking forward lo another ti.111nr·r .. ,.<i.,on Last year OC<'. "'•llh ro"" ai. a J\' uml against maJor colh.·~l's .11111 u11" c:1 s1llcs, compiled a 22·6 record und won lhc.• \h'>krn Sprints cham pionsbip The P1rate1> open the season Saturday. hosting Cal SlHle (Long BeachJ Opener Set who stroked OCC: to three vH·tor1cs in the Henley Royal Regalta m F;n~land laM summ •r Scott R,1dkc. a fi 4, UJO-pounder. ope1ates from the bow seat while Gury Gould, a 6·3, 196·pounder. rows at two. Scott Ste1sl'I, who stands 6-7 and weighs 200, anchors the boat at four Aftl'r a sat1sfy111g ser1t•s in the Wendell P1c·kt't1s bascball tourna- me 11 l, Orange Coast ColleR<' resuml's lL'i busy s<.'heduJed ThurBday mght with a 7 o'clock J(ame ngain:.t Green River (Wai,hingtonl at 'TeW1nklc Park in Costa Mesa The OCC P1rnt<•s were -"<.'heduled to meet Mesa. Ar11on.1 Thursday af pwni.h1p The gamt•s v. ere postponed todJy bt•caui.e of ram On Tuc1-ct.H· the J> ir a t e.., o u t s I u g g l' cl .Moorpark, 13 10, to <1uatirv for thl' LournPy t h a m p 111 n s h 1 p g <1 m t'. <ind latt•r that l'Vl'mng fr II lo Ml· .... a. Ill I, in a non· tournamt>nt t•nt·uunll·r Aga1n~t l\1ooq1.1rk. 01 anJ.:t' C'Oa!'>I shov.t•d two different suit"~ a :>hak.> defense and an explostvl' offeru,e Th(• Piral<'s com m 1tlerl fl\'c t•rrors 1n the f1r..,t 1n111ng and spotted (',olden West Fae~ Canada :--\ '\ I \ \I A H I 1\ <.oil.kn ~ t·i.t l'cillC'gt· will dul'I Canada l'ollt•t:<' 11f l<t•dwood City ThurscJar 1n the OJ>t•mni: rouncJ of th<' annual i\llan llan- C'Ock IJ.1-;l·hall tourna- nH'nt. h<'n· <;we s Hu-;tln ... ali-o ra('c• Coll<'i!t' of '-;«•qur.ia" r \'1sal1,11 Frida~ .ir1tl llt•A 111:1 < c llJ1l·rt1n111 ~.JI 111 d.1\ lit-rt• .11t• lh1• p;u1111g ... ThUf'\d,,11y ' ,. , 11·•d 10 JO l f,, ·hh .,. .. -. .. llH j.. {#Olden Wf''ll ., f ,.,_, lff.t ti 10 f i. H tO H t~(l'll: 1rii t \ ( t Ari / 1 i I H' Y•'"'° "FHdlr t "' f •·•·i 1 l c. ,,n,.nr'I' .., ('.,,,HJ.I I JO ("''"'0--. I/\ t•,.Arlt·• H "'< 1H IJ-10 JI) H.•,,t:ot Ir "'' • (!Clt1tll, 1 JO Gotdffl _., .. ,, ..,... '>• \.ttwrd.o f t• f u>U1 10 JO (i.ol04>n W•U • fH-Alt/it 1 J(J C#UtlO\. ¥~ I 'k>U\1lf. ..... t\(OC~ 10 10 H..tn,ot• ¥1 <.•n«t•. 1 lO C.n'f'Of'l\V~ ~•d't Moorµark a 5 0 lead, but they eventually <:rackl'd out 16 hits and lJ runs to overshadow the sloppy fielding Mike Sodders highlighted the outburst by slugging h1s secood homer in two days. Each sailed over the o;ame 400-foot sign m center field. Monday's blast was a grand :-.lam and Tue:-.day's a three-run shot s;xlders got four rb1 m the gamP wh1le Hick Woolard knocked rn lhrt•t• runs. The 1'1rales took llbertH•s on the hascpaths against \lo11rpark stealing l'lghl basf's. four of those h'r Bobbv Smith I n t h 1• n i g h t c a I> ;.ir,.un-.t 1\Je~a. Orange Cu:.i~t wa:-. onc.·e again plagued hy t'rrors It 1•om m1ttt>d four crucial m1~cul'.s 111 the fourth in· mng which enabll'd Mesa to ~core st'vcn limes That was all pitcher .J 1 m ,\ nderson needed, ;c~ ht> :-.ubdut·d O\C hv ..,,.,11 ll•ring '>C\ en hits Ftr\1 O..m• O<•nci-~.I I Ill ~,..f?"•Flt• 't Ho~rhor "" nt.vn t Oocwn 1 • I '•C~ or. Si.iOOf''\ Jb ll•rn~lt in 11,,f 'IJf •• .., lb \<ttJ•ir.ltw-d /410flr D ROUl\dlrf"t p •b r "rtu I 1 t ~ ' , t ' ' I J 1 0 J ~ 1 0 v 1 0"' I I 0 • 1 1 ' • '1 1 0 0 0 0 ) 1 I I 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Tor•h )I IJ It II XIW't by """"'P r " • ~OC•PM• \00 200 00) 10 10 1 O'dnq• '-""'' OU) 171 01 IJ lo I 5.«-G•m• °'-Co.t.c ( 11 C.m1H\ rt a.rl')t>fl ]tJ \.1Ho1, Ph ",,~,,,, ... ,.. 10 MO[H-r I Ori \~ Wc.11.Jl .. rO, It ~J1 ,<;on Ill { • ,., Ir "" (IOt\ilr! '1h ~dot r\, Jt lo I YtO" fl 1 .. r '""' • f41 l"lrth If ~1"'1~on p •b , n 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 ~ 0 0 0 0 ~ 0 ,,.n,J'\f'/ f\ 1 • 1,.1t).rl I ''!!l~I\ )) ' \<.Of"W tty ll\flH"9l " 11>1 1 0 0 0 0 0 D 0 ' ' 0 Q 0 u 0 1 u 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 I r II • M1tV. ~ r tona IOI 100 010 fO It 0 OranQ• Co.no 000 001 000-1 1 ) Mo11arcl18 Clipped In Pitcliing Duel ha..,('hall rm lhe losrr's d1Jmond l\11kc ,Witt won the p1t1·h1n~ duel for Sen tie, striking out JO - SKATING STAR LINDA FRATIANNE. Skaters Set To Perform \n 1r1t1•r11.1t11111.il trouµt• of figure :,katmg ... 1,11 .... l11l·l11t11ni.: Lrncla J-'rat1annt' Anell f'1wl1s1 h 111 l·:,1sl C;t•r nl<IO\, and LJ:.a :\lane Allton "1111 tr.1111~ 111 <'osla ~ksa. will perform .1t lht· Forum 111 lnt.:ll'\\Oocl Saturday night Th1.• i.:11111p includt·s sk.Jters Crom the 1 · S, E.1-.t <;c·rman~ ltJly, En~lanrl. Russia. J ,1pu11 and I 111111.:an Jlld all µc.irt1<.:1patcd in !ht• rt'l'Pnt \\111 ltl thamµ1on..,h1ps in Ott<iwa. (' .111.1d.1 S.it•11 rl,1.1 Fur urn ,.., 11111• rl1:1n 1 1111'" llw ~llHI 1\p11l n1;.!l1t 's dfJJ1t•cirance al lh1· of l i ... top~ in l' S and Cana •rn1111 \\Ill makf' clunng .\larch F1.111:mrw. 1'111'11.1h ,Jlld ,\!fen "'ill ht: 1111111•tl hv It.di ' su .... 111n.1 IJr1ano 1n latl1e-; ..,inglc·.., i\llt·11 plai•t•cl ..,c•11·nth 1n the \\orld C'Ofllpt'lllllJIJ \o\llh f'Ol'll ( h r1rst f'rat1ann1.• "l't·or11! ;mcl l>rli.rno lh1 r«il M r•n'-. 'Ingles sl;J1 s Charles Tickner rt S 1 •• I.in ll(lffrnan <East Germany>, Robin < 'ous111.., tc:rc·al Bnl.11n > and F11m10 lgarash1 < J <ipan 1 \\ 111 abo skall' in the world figure skat int? tnur program I ran.1 Hodnina of the So\lel Union and a JO t1mt· wor lei champ111n in pairs with two d1f- ll'tt>nl partnl'rs. '"Ill hl· 101ned by her current p;ir lm·1 and husband. ,\leksan<lr Zar be,· Tht.>~ frm..,ht•d first dl Otta"'a \l'i<1 111 pair-; w 11! h<· '1anuel;i :\1aJ!er and ll\\t' HC'\Hr tlnrll ol f':ast C;crman) and Ti:!I H<1bilnn1.1 .rnd H<ind\· 1:ardnl'r of the CS Thc•y f101!-oht•d st•t·ond and third in Canada T1~0 d;rnc·c· ll·<1ms 1\Jll also perform rn duding l\rr..,11111 .1 Hno""" unrl Andras Sa 11.J\ or llun~111' 11h1rd1 t1n<I .J anl'l l'hc1mp ... 11n and \\';irrc·n :\laxwell of Gre .. , Bn lain I rourth) "We have the Potential to be very good this year." says coach Dave Grant. "We have good size and quality oarsmen. We can be one of the ~st boats on the coast this year if we continue to improve with euch workout and each race." From a physical standpoint, OCC will pul its biggest boat on the water in 10 years. The Bucs average 6-'1, 189 pounds. Two oarsmen in the boat .stand 6-7 and weigh more than 200 pounds Last year's JV eight averaged 6-3, 187, and the 1976 boat avcra~ed 6 2. 181 · This boat 1s about a:1 bag as our 1968 one that \\ c.>nt undcfcal£'d and won the Western Sprints,' · S3)'s Grant The P1rat<'-. JV e1~ht features all sophomores anrl 1s led by Larry Thomas. a 6·2. 175-pounder Jim Essick, a 6 7, 205-pounder, rows at six. Others m the boat include Grei Row. Kevin Moultrup and Paul Laux Cox.swain Guy Mondt is the only freshman in the boat Mondt was a high school Wl'estler at University Hlgh (Irvine) who won a third place medal m the AAU Junior Olympics. OrMI .. C..•I Crtw ~. S•I _,cl>H CelSl.tltllon(l .. 4M:lll&lflle-1S.y \<II , "4>111 I 'Wfl OleOo Crt• CINJk Ill MIMlon .. ,. Otrwr5 ~oqipetlnq lnCIUCI<! Herv••O. Navy, W.tSlll"QI.,.., W111mr1t1ri, ~,1 • .,11, c.fttornla llnd C0<nell S..t , April ts UC (S... Oi~I -S-Ca Cftra at Newport 8•Y ~~n April JO -St.Mlord, UC ln1IM Md CM SUit 11.9flo 8H<llJ •I ~•.,port S.y Sal , ,,.V 6 N•-t R-lt• et MeWllOrt S.y 011 .. rt <0"11>9UllQ lfl <I-C•lllorlll•. UCLA, UC lnil.,., LoYef•. t.i St-(~ DeiKlll -~ la C:••·• ~•I aftd S<ift , ,,_., IJ.14 -Wfttff'll Sorlltl\ •I La•1ngo.,., Hew<Wu, Nort1torriC .. llorN• All r..:.s .,. K,_leel lo •lart 6' I JO• m Alamitos Top Softball Tea~ Racing Enter GWC Tourney Results l'wT-y l'IRJT RACE One mole P•<• (l•1mlnq Pu•~ U,000 Hewthorne Volo •Snorll 1110 \00 • •o Coyni Par ... ((.ouor .. eu' \ •O " 10 foA Houno CL .. ~,'•"' I (SO Tune 10.. I S<r•I• ri.d M1lloroh (noel 84m l><>Ot U I: a.tct• • t41wt,,.rM Vete .. 1 Co11111 ,.., .. , P••o uo ~ $£COHO RACE Onr n•o • Pt t Cond1t•onf'd 4MOH, C.tl Ot•tJ 1 vt4r 01°' ~no ~' Pvr\f' $1 .00 Art<lv•R•- IM.,,,.,nl ~IQ J •l 100 AnGy\ Am1 tM~llf'tf J 10 160 l~o. l'H•vo•C.--•I 1 llCI T•m• 1011 ~ ~c r •I< l'w-0 Jo Soto ~r•r 'lhC>Ollt"r Hf'bot't R!'d\tc:ww THIRD ltACll °"" mu. r•o C••·m1n9 hef"G•C...O. P"r\t> 11 ..x> W,.onq <~v IGoudt..,•u• £ d!iit"•OOO H•nOor • I &•rt°"~ I < /0 Arm bro Pr11eCW1"'n"'t:t' Tom• 1111 ) 140 1IO l..O JOO . _, Scr•tC"""<I f al"t O•rl, Reno E.11. l'OURTH Al>CE Ono,.,,,. Pe<• (t1t1fn1nq f\«Mi<.U<•P tJur'\4 \1 floOO 01\ .. 0f\OM (C,ouor•·dUI ~--fOUrt>JM l(ltUI E ,.ndlltt I Q"h P'tfl)tOJ l •m• 1 Ol• ) ~<ritttn~o ~Hln .. y Rro...,n IQ 00 S •O 1 SQ I 00 i :V 1 •IO U E .. <t• I On• on Ot1• a $. nippy•ll~, P•14 1100 SO l'll'TH RACE Ono m.i• F'•cr Cond•t10!'\iflld t MW n .. .,.,,., OIO\ .. I'd ur-c)t, p"'" u.~ 'c>t"• s .. m IAUOl~I JIO 19'1 1"1 C'••o 'l•no-!Goullr~•u• l «1 7 eo J J • C.lorv I Rlcllmoncll l to Tim• ?Ooll ) '><181<""<1 Kffl> "°""'II, '>l\•4•"4 °""'\tor SIXTH RACf Onfo m•" P•<• C.l•1truno ~·<• '-"Vt)f u 000 \PU<ID•C '"" w1t...,1.., 'oO • :o 1.,, Sh~r•lM ~ fL1QttlPu1t1 A •O J .o Nobl• l~-. ISlo.o••OI J 00 T ..,... 10).o ) \c r~l(f'U·O t(eM•hl H E U<I• S Spwdb•C S1111 I. I Sll•r•ton H, PtHI 11)0 00 SEVENTH RACE On~ molr P1ttP Condlt.on .. d !CD U PU''f' \UOO N"vlllr Jrt~\ N ISprogg, I J 00 1 •O Oolnto (onteiltr IW1lll.tm••• I)() 11m,. Str,.41m (R.;rcMortfl Golden West College will host a three-day women's Junior college softball tournament beg1nn1ng Thursday w1lh two Arizona teams inelurll'cl in the field of erg-ht Da\ games will be pl<.1yed 110 the campus fit•ld~ l1l'g1nn1ng at 11 1\1lh nqzht action at <;r1.·c.·1 Park t<11:1n'" < ;oldt·n \.\ l''l Hou It-\ Jrtl on ~11-Farldt:n > lll'l.lr lhl' GWC campus Golden West, three· time defending national champion, will be favored to win the event. Coach Judi Garman's GWC Rustlers are 7-2-1 for the season a nd have three outstanding pitchers K ath1 Hosenbcr~ rt·- turn... rn1m last s~a~on c.ind I!'> J01n~d h\ frt·~hrnan !'la1s Diana -'lani:.111111 Manna ll1~h 1 Alamitos Entries ForT_..., Fl ... tPHtl 0 FIRST RACE 0-moop P•c• l I" mil'IQ Pt.H\1' t.1000 C•.ttm1nq f'H'•c., .. \lOQO Matfl'' :x:i Pfrt('nl f tr•r Old"'•'"' 4~ PfrC.,1"11 M illard\ Ch1•t 181•t •rnal"ll. Bom1M11 O•re<• ll.AClelr Jr> V••loy JI'" (GrAntJ ')Cott R40tr 1 Mc C.on<1ol•I t.11u Roo Be~u!v (fr,,fMl't lOCAI f",.•l"Kr l~IA1o11nl Q,• ,,,., RO\y' 0 r,,.,n.., l~dlmdtf'r I 11~m1>oo1 I R~l<hlo<d) Sf COHO RACE Otw• rTHI..-Pd,,-. ')t,.t11on\ .tnd Qt>lttmq \ .,, .tr .,,d'i. ~ U''HJt<"t non w1nnt-, ot WJO 11r)t tT1oor• ()tl(t Purw '1400 810 0MW.t'r U~rty) 6ed B1t"n..,.tlt 1 q•h hlr..1rdl RU'\\ R1•Q.-n ·~~rrtn1 AM'(\ ~illQOflf (Rl•'C: •m-"nl An, 11•f'll Mttr1nPt IK'H"Ol,.,1 Ir~• 'II Jilr.11'\-J t C,o\ldrt•.,1uJ Hflo()ibfr q~\tont• j Oct,. lf•\\1 Sl•r \hoo1 .. r IMeOw•ll1 THIRD RACE 0.W molP p,.lP C•• b'""'1 ) ,.,. . .., oicr .. & ullQPr Non -~"""'' 1•'10 ,,,,, "'"" .... ~ lw1c• M•rn, J rMe-S Put'W' ~100 Boro10 C Auctul'J O\loqqy Anhft •B•1'1f"\SI N•\'\ S<-001 «Cr4111f't, S..n Al'\Orf'a\ I L1~V,1U Af'\OV-\ Mt:-rlno ' T Odd I R1trflo °'"'•on '0untW"b.ft'" I 51r~•1t1r 8rooki ll•CJ••r Jr ~u•rtotrO "•''·"f\d1nqt'I~"' FOU ATH RACE 0-...,,,~ P.tcP (ldlm1"9 n•rul1< ,iip Pur\t-J:• .Y•rro\ J'J ~r· 1 nt ( •1mt11 '.I p.-•<.•\ ~DOO 000 C.rio._ &L•(fot, Jr EOQ-"WOC\d Ovmit@ fk,.P1Dv Impart M•nbor f P"rt1q1nt1 H~ltyon ._.•rH•Qf' tlonc)ol f•mir•v V1\tf'lfi 1fW.f'rl Ru\ tv Jou1 CO. rY'U\J. M;., f 8-ar RMl"W1~ , Oun,,~b.tc.•d N•f Vt' o-~l(t9 ((,Out1r~•u) Sl>cTH Rl>CE °"" mu• P•<• C•111m1"9 .-Wno1c•p ~,.., 10 ptprffli'l'll ourc,• \1400 Cl••m•f'HJ pric•' HOOO HOO An<ly'\ C...uck ll>n""r'°"I• l11e C.ol1Qhlly cc.o.id•••"I 1o1.r 1t;runt11, St•r Du't &.-u l8eyttt\\1 ~4owdy SOtJrr tO.\.Omt-rl. S1on .. y 8rown lH.:H01e ) lumh~r Pr~ ..... 1\1""'"'. ~tlfl"l,ithl i I("''"""'' l AmDlir IVOVfltfttlUI SEVENTH RA.CE On1 nnh• Pdtr (fd•r'l''"~ l'\dnUl\dlJ -1 '¥1'.tt ulCJ\ 1'> DPr<•nl Pur'fl UJOO (f.,1m1nQ µric-r-. \t)Q00.'1>000 .&tmbro Ma91< CC,,ovtt•t•vt c:,,.,o,v Sam •W•S"'•rd1 H1·1n1"'n<1 Champ fHdrCf1t1 PhMwo lt•'f 1K\l('Dlf'' (~pp\,1((1no fRll(htf'I K f\q JA1 A Aub1n1 Suck N IA.t1tcht~,,a> ~mon• O•pl\ell IWt>o 1 C..•on1\I (IGHTH Rl>CE On.. m1•" P"'• C•o11mt"O ~1c.., M.lrt·~ 10 Of'• 1 •M 4 Vt'.lt Old~ 1, pr"""' Pu,•1 \4000 Cl••m•nq pr IC I\ l'IOW •Y'(I l\ubblonq ""'"' 18.vl•)•I. 11 .. •l>O• H.ano .... er r AUbfn) 1 c,,1..,...."••n (.om m-tn::1 tGchldrr.tul S•l'IQl &oq.-y f P.-1~nf''1 JrL ~.al#•·~ (lt•tny Thttl'"""\ ~'l U0f190•. l1Uw,,,, l.1.:J 1 Ofl''O"""'• Htl•1•Doot11n A c ~"'"bl•, HINTH ltAC£ °""" rn11,. Pft"r rl••niir\Q "'M"df<•P Motff".S '' pt>r 'f)nt Pur\ot \ltOO C.l•1m1ng Pr•C.r~ \IOOl'I • SllO Gt>od AnC1 T ru .. •RAV If\\ I, SIAr Cl>••" (r(uco••.114Y ~llQf>I IPPl••~n Jr) Norrh w,.,,,,.," '"'""•"" 1ngndmt1 l"Yonfi'On <Cr.af"lllll~ C-W.N>y Prin(• t k.u~bh•, 1 M"\ Rnoncs" 1R•tt tllord• k•w• Amb.-1 and Cindee Secr1st <Westminster). Secrist threw a no·hitter against Pasadena earlier this season. Mangano pitched Marina to the CIF championship last year Golden West wJI! fac<' Mesa. Arn:. at 11 Thuri- day 1n openin~ acl1on \\1th the winnt•r playrn,,; a);c.itn ThursdJ) n1cht at 7 Tht• l11Ser pl<.rys at :i 1-'1n.1 b 111 lhl' tourna ment .ire.• "('I fnr S:ttu1 <I a \ a t I a n cl ') r I lleC'<'..,sary Golden West h<1 ' parhc1pated m the la-.1 three national tourna m('nfs and has won all three. Last vear Me-s:i was also 111 the tourne~ In 1976. Golden West de fral<'d c-;kndalc. Ariz. in the f1nab Fullerton and L A \' a I I <' \ a I .., " purt1c·1pall'd in· lhl' l!flt. t'\ t•nt l'tlur\O.ly·\ Gi1mt~ \1 it m (..olQe~ Wt~.,t t1 M.1 Af•I l(,Arr1t-H P.i.\~~l'\4 v• Wt •1 V~ll•y IC.emo 1• ' c; rn LA v lllft-r "' VHUt1,t t<..-.mt JI • Ullt•ton "'' C..IPf'KS•I,. Ar11 (~llmf" ti l 0 m l0\.4"r lo QamP.,_ l 0.tn1'1 •C.•m,. \t $ p"' ,r,, .. ,.,,. b; I pm 4(,""' .. , • JQ a rn 'It """' ,, ~t"'\> ' .t~d ' l(.,4mt-I• fr.curs G.#m~1 t C> "' W1t'WW'r Q<l"""' ') I~,. q..tm. I IG•,.,~ •• l C' ,.,, Winn 'f' Oi',.,.. l('\~r CN~• I fG1m,. I"" Al~P•rt> 1 p m Wion-r CJ,.'"._~ 1 -'"'IJ ' tC.•'TI"' 11 • ;tO u '" w.,....,., .. Qftl"Ntf' 0 'tf"tf 11 (.,•~"' U1 Soit-.Or'•~m .. tO A m W•nt'l.,..r Qftfl'~ t • f(') .. ,. .. q1tm1+ ti 1(,4~ fl t rm w,~r o .. rn-o ff ""'"",., q.IMP l) tc;..,...,,. 141 l p m 11 fV"C f'\\ar-.. ~ 1 F T' H A ACE ()f'w m 11 •· P ,.r P \ --::.-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilil ...... vr-.tr 010\ & llndf'r W1nr'll'r'\ of on.-bul 'C.ou<:tr••u1 \l:111·r l>t•1 ·~anla \11.1 1 llt1'h p1t1·h111J:! arl' \1l' \l.11t1r1 hasn I J.!l\'f'll up :111 1•.1111ecl run 1n 28 1nn111~ .... hilt Ill' !'till rtt1l'ih1•<1 ,cs a ln"l'r Tul''- d.1 \ ~ind allowing three hits '-----------------------' rn posting the shutout Tim• 1011 ~ No uretchM r.ot mor., tnan l '4'""" "'" fnt ~000 F lr\f moMv Gu Oft•d\> .)l'\0 m.tr•\ • ritCftS Pur\P \lOOO fly• bf• V•<lor 151\Mll PO<koro.o I P1thmondl Hflll•~ MC COIO SI' I \ I l 1• 11 l J.' h fl f \11,1hc•1m sc·r11pp1•fl for l\\o 11nt•arn<'<J run., 1n lht.• tnr or lhl' !.l'\l•nth 1nn111g lo IH•at \1arl1n and " •• I t: r [)I' I -i 0 ' I n ,\ n )! 1• I 11 ' I, t' ,1 g U t• Baseball Standings ~OUTHE/IH CAL COHFCRCHCE l A HArbQr (\'l'U,\\, (,ol(kn w .. ,, ~•ntaMonit• R1011onc10 I A '>outhw"'I l •l\ AnQf'le\ CC T"""•r·• Seer• r vP•e\\ S C.01""'1> Wnl I w l c;a A 0 I 1 1 , • • • J J • ) 4 • , I \ b 0 • I r-..v'•Gamtt Rio 110.,0n •I <;.o•dtft w .. c t A <;ouinw.tt •• LOI An<141•f\ ( c r fpre\\•I 5'M\14Mon1Col MISSION CON"f'lllNCl So<.t ... ..., Oivlt•Oft ~outh~•,lfl'tn P•lomt4't ~•dO••Da<k W L Ga I l 1 l J 7 ~" 011110 7 4 1'' Hor1~01'tl- Cl!ru• !>•n B•r,..rolno Cltafley "IYtrt•O. "-r•k-P•tomer I, S... OC.90 J T-r'•Oame !>-i.t»ck al S.. ~ ' ' ' ' , 1 4 2 ANO•wtL•~oue w St Paul S.rvlht M•ltt D•I a"hOC> Mll'\l_.-y 8•tllooAm.ol "'•u1 )( J 0 J I ,, 7 I I I 1 ) 0 ) )1 I 0 l l ,._,, .. "_ !>t. "'nul I, Plut )( 0 ... rYll• J. ~IM 0.1 0 • ' 81111011 "'4l11l11omt1v at lll1llop Amat, pp<I • rein T1Mwlay'1 0--. • St ,.tut ti 81\llOo Mo<lt-ry ~lie "' 11"'°11 Al'MI •I Gle ... r .... ,. PluJ lit et Mat.,. Del Martin fanned five an<I !-.Ur rendered JUsl I wn hits Bui \\Ith two out 1n lht• lop of the St'Venlh. Mark P1rrurcello walked. -;tole "econd, look third on an error and scored on <1nother error to hr<'ak the spell S<'nite s Rohbic Da' cl o u h 1 e d h o m e t h l' '>t-rond run M41Car 0.1 COi Jof'IU It HOO<! 1b Dr•1b.-ii 11 Dott~fft( ,, M•rttn o M,.•ch•m 4'\ SilV.trt, lb Sc.h•PJ>f't ' (",on1al1\, rt Luni-'(d.t, lb •I> r ) t\ rtu o n J 0 0 0 n 0 0 0 0 ' 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 Tc.tAI~ H 0 Sc0<9 t>y 111nin9• 0 0 .. ,.,y,,,. M•ttr Ot1 r II • 0000001111 00000000)1 Pro Scores ... 11 ...... 1 ••~htball •-1 ...... Wu111n11ton1"· ~1on101 ken,.., c:nv 116. O.tro11111 S.11 Ant""lo 10', lot Angele\ 10) Mll••llll• 100. Atlante" Inell•,,. II•. ~nh• llS Ctll < 119t 101, Houston 9' He•Orte-tl1,HtwJor1tv '" New Vo<ll llS, 0..-.. 114 Got«Mn Stlll• 111, 8uff•to 1114 Pot trend !02. '-•tti." "~.....,l.Npe 8~tOl'I '· Cl ..... llll>d) MlnMIOt. 1 Pitt&burQll I 8uflalo •. I.De...,...,, llMllltlMIS-A Otlroll 6, Pl\11 ........ e S Clll<•ve CAI S. T-lo4 l(tflW• C.'11-t 11, He* Yor~ IAI 10 MO"ltr•al tO Ml""'IC>I• • •••llmor111. re"" 1 Ho•" ton S, Clnc:1 ...... 11 I lot A"flt~ 4. Atlotflla I C•lllornt. S, C,. ,..,,_. I Clllc ... (NI •, ci.vctlen41 S ~•Ille S, MHw .. ~ .. 4 San Oteoo•, SM l't9'1Cleot N.,., 'l'Ol'lc (N) 1, Sl. lciult S e .. 1011 J, PlttlOUf'th ' Area Prep Baseball EIOHT14 Rl>CE 0.,.. mol• I'•<> C••1m1ng ltandi<dll Pu"• ~.IOO M•sl•r F"alftKV !Aubin) l 00 7 Ion 1.0 Pro\ .. fr \ Soirit t T ,,,,..., i I •IJ \ Jill) S..lnl Ct.ttr F-41111 I ~elC,.,ft)f'dl ~ 40 l'rfthn"U ... l.H.1)111 l'O\lftt•t" V•U1y E1111r tovrMy Nt...,Hr1 H•rbot U > In P•c•f1c•• N~#onrt H .. ,,, ir \qT1\ , 1 t, (,,..,,.,,.""I OQ-0 o4\ '"'Df'"IJ )D 1t00 '""4'h rt 1 J) I .Nt-Jlfr\ dh I 0 1 l 5•1f' I I IC 0 0 CJ•n !i,4u.,rbr•v If) l 0 0 0 ., •0\1 lf I 0 0 0 (P\l.t• ""IA Oh 0 0 0 0 f1t,.f'l'l•rt D 24..().Q LA{•r•rwtf"Ut '"" t 0 0 0 o ...... ~ !aturrbtfl" 1n , 1 • 0 .-'•"•'' .. h 1 0-0 'fot111\ 11 o • .. Scor• bv IMln<J• , ... P•fOflC<> 110 OQI} 0 1 Nt...-oart H•roor •.11l Oill ,. 6 t. I ..... port H•rt>or Ill 111 ~In v.11., "'"'•port M.u()t''H \1rt+n" \~ 1 o~ •. 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OH) Q'IC> o t ... I I T1mtt-102\ \ ~rrt1l(McJ Llbtr4Uf'<S L•ny Win d.,w,.., H £ue11 ~M ...... l'•ll•c, A ' Pni .. er 'Soinl, P1ld '41 00 PAUL DOUGLAS "LEASING MAMAGH" c .. ,_. M-lltfe Ir~- 7I4 /148-2: ll 2tl/5'2-14U 1113 ..... llYd., HWlliwgt• hoch #9-----1st/, u\nnivrM!MY L4.WEEJUNS , M •Vt· 1213 A l\'i • \2·13 • 7Y,. 12·1J c 7 1l·13 D 6 • 121) f 1. 11v; With the return to traditional menswaer, the timeless Bass Weejun Is the just right finishing touch for both town and country dressing. Genuine moccasin construction and quality leathers are MensShop ~ lf~~ SHOES paired w ith the unsurpassed comfort. $36.95 P9nny L.oaltr WffjlMl Brown . Blaclc "' Cordo c.ir Open Fri Unlll 9 PM 98 F a1hlon laland. Newport Beach • • • 79-9551 f fl.H)htn111, M onlf'r,..v D•D tRetcnfo,.tU .-.0111,teir <V~•lcJnrt ,,,O'°l•m 1 f fy+nq AOd c (.,o\u;tr.-(_'u 1 .. .,,..,., ,,., F "'""nt I (ru• r Jr Jtm T,,.- Volleyball adidas-.•· Foot ha II • Socrcr Bast•ln1ll Cleatefl Ruhht.•r Sole• Child ·s S11e 11 Thru Men~ !1 PONTIAC'S FIREBIRD ELEGANCE IN SPORTS DRIVING LEASE DIRECT! I 971 ttt0MT1AC SUHllAD COUttt! . . . .,.. ,. "~ ~ . •Oft• .,,, •t ! '"'II '"' \-l it S.:11') , .... ,,.., ,. 1t)• ••• ,. 11 .. ·~ ·~· D~ l""•t.itc'.1,_ .,,IWM.,.O.,•\, • S891Jo YOU'LL FIMD FAIR PRICES. EXCB.LEMT SERVICE AND PERSONABLE PERSONNEL TO SERVE YOU. t '71 POMTIAC GUMD 'RIX s14393 MO. '··~~, -... -"' .. Sf OAIL Y PILOT Wedn.-day March 22. 197'8 Business Car Repair C~~t, Po ·cy Blasted Tiles Grace Atrium WASHINGTON (AP) - Almo~t "°percent of the money spent on car repairs is wasted because of fauJty -sometimes fraudulent -repair wqrk. poor owner maintenance and new car design, the head or the federal highway safety agency says. Joan Clayb ro ok, ad ministralor of lbe National Highway Trame Safety Ad· ministration, told a Senate com- merce subcommittee that the total cost was more than $20 billion a year. ''CONSUMERS LOSE vast amounts of money through in· dustry repair practices that are legal and acceptable, but wasteful," she said Tuesday. We believe that slightly more than half of the $20 billion waste resuHs from frt:tuduJent, incom- petent or unnecessary repairs performed by the repair in- dustry," she said. "The remain- ing losses appear to be atlrlbula- ble to new car design or a lack of owner understanding of their car's maintenance and repair needs " She said the $20 billion estimate was probably con servalive and was based on sur· veys by her agency of problems consumers have with their cars. CHAIRMAN WENDELL H. Ford, D·Ky .. called the $20 billion per year figure "~tagger­ ing." \\.'orkmen from ~la~tcr Tilers, ,\nahc1m. hcgan ~londay lay mg 15,000 individual Japanc~c tiles m the citrium court nf the :'licwport Beach Marriott Hotel. Tiles should be in place in the 3,000-square-foot atrium by Thursday and de- corations and furnishings ~hould be returned by Fnday. according to f he hotel Ms. Claybrook said one of the most w1deps read ways that con- sumer dollars are wasted is through package deals, s uch as telling a car owner he needs a lune-up when there is only one bad spark plug. "Outright fraud by repair facilities is common but is by no means the only viUain," she Fluor Share Earns $1.10 Company's Subsidiaries Report Contracts Fluor Corp . Irvine, has reported results for th<.> first quarter ended Jan. 31 of net earnings of $18,618,000 or $1.10 a share, on consolidated rcvrnucsof$627,075,000. New orders for the period were $611 million and backlog al Jan. 31 was $12.7 billion. First quarter results included financlals for Daniel In- ternational Corp., a company acquired by Fluor in the third quarter of fiscal year 1977. Re~ult.s for the first quarter ended Jan. 31 , 1977 . and cxcludan J: Daniel International. TAKING STOCK were net eamin~s of S 17 .495.000. or $1 04, on rt!· venu<'s of $407,991,000. New ordf!rs for the first quarter of 1977 were $991 million. and backlog on Jan 31 that year was $8.8 billion. Fluor also h as declared the regular quarterly ca!'h dividends of 75 cents a share on Senes B Preferred stock and 30 cents a share on common sloC' k. payable Apri I 15 to holders of record at the close or business on March 31. ,\ magnesium oxide plant valued at approx· 1m .. tt•lv $100 million will be constructed 1n the Ncthcr.lands by a Fluor subsidiary. Fluor has begun work on the project under a lettPr of intt'nt from a JOtnt venture of B1lhton In ternalwnal Metals BV, the Netherlands , a Shell PREP ARA TIOH OF TAX RETURHS , ... --' fax~ Martin l Schnoyer Attomey et Law ~ ... ('.Mll>Ml'ullllt:Ar<nvnl.,1 ""B'l lT...,oonl "", .. 01L..,.ll~l r.,;,1,...,.,,oi , •• u- lf 410"~ Of"tor9 us , ... C1urt o!ld US SuP<ornn COUf1 J('lfl(J Wh'"t't Pi '--'11ro ;';"') f~ttirt Be.ch (;A 9-'f')tJO 833-1164 State's Economy Hailed SACRAMENTO CAP} -A state ~partment of Finance report says ~===============~construction activity is CAPITOLIZE WITH CAPITOL r»ITlllZATION M(ANS TO ~T CAPIHl TO OOH ,,,.,.,_ .. Jl(JIJ ____ _ yC<I -• -('IP -,,,.,,.,,..,,. _, ...... -. ... ~ ...... LOAN ..,,,.. ro CtllllOll,. l'flll' ~-·c-.._. __ _ .....,_.... G) .Capitol Home Loan C.UOf'eOlce....._X ZC iSiTttf ..... ...__ ....... ,_ We'd Rnlfy fika to help COSTAME8A ..... 11<41~12 ~EIM •1•~'1. 7!4177&4450 providing "a great deal of strength" to the economy Tbe bi·m o nthJy California Ecooomic Jn- dlcator..s concluded that "overall economic ex- pansion in the state ap- pears to be continuing at a healthy pace.'' It aaJd 270,221 permits were issued last year !or private houses, includ· \ng stngle·famlly and apartments. Thal w .. 21.8 percent more than In 191~ Becao .. of that· in· crease and lnnaUon hl housing costs, valuation totals for single-family hou11 es rose 32 7 perceont to $7.5 billion for 1171. PUBUC NOTICE .... uh:-.1dwry, and the Northern Development Co., 100 percent owned by the Dutch state Fluor Nederland BV, Haarlem, wiJJ design, engineer, procure and manage construction of the 100,000-tons-per-year facility, with completion ex· peeled by mid·l981. Another subsidiary, Daniel International Corp., has been selected to engineer and construct a $20 million facility near Savannah, Ga .. for EM Laboratories, tnc. The plant. to be completed m late 1979, will produce a range of high-value. specialized chemicals and is the first grass-roots production complex of EM Laboratories in the UnitJ edSlates The contr act will be performed by Daniel Construction Co .. a principal division of Daniel In- ternational. Preparation of the 200-acre site will begin in April and construction is expected to start in May The Daniel subsidiary also has received a con· tract in excess of S200 million to construct a cellulose pulp plant for a subsidiary of Procter & Gamble Co. The plant, to be located in Macon County, Ga., is scheduJed for completion in early 1981 and will have an annuaJ capacity of about 300,000 tons of cellulose pulp to be used in Procter & Gamble's household paper products business, including facial and toilet tissues, paper towels and disposa· hie diapers. Fluor is an international organization serving the energy and natural.resource industries. Daniel International is headquartered in Greenville, S.C .. and serves the cbemicaJ, power and process industries m site seJecUon, engineer- '" R. construction and equi pmenl insta llalion. maintenance. CAmtUl'lf 21 MaUa Bllfl Century 21 Real Estate Co11> .• Irvine, has com- pleted the acquisition of 100 percent of Century 21 of Missouri, Inc. The final transacllon involved an inihal cash payment of Sl.7 mUUon and additional annual cash payments through 1982, depending on the Missouri company's future earnings. The former owners of the Missouri company, Nathan Moviu and Ed Noonan, will continue to manage the company. Dd Webb Seea P~•·· .Del E . Webb Corp., which includes the Newport.er Inn, Newport Beach, amoog ita bold· 10gs, and Park Cattle Co. ot Gardnerville, Nev., have announced that they have filed applications for licenses with the Nevada Gaming Board for operation of Park Tahoe, which is being completed at Lake Tahoe. Park Tahoe, which will be managed bf'Sylvan Corp .• a wholly owned Webb subsidiary, on a fee arrangement under a 20-year contract with Park Caltle, owner of the property. PUBUC NOTlC~ PlJBUC NOTICE \I sald. ''Large sums also are lost due to incompetent r epair in· dui;try personnel and equip· menl. Consumers themselves have some responsibility for losses due to incorrect preven· tive maintenance policies." THE SUBCOMMITTEE earller polled slate consumer agencies and found that most of those r esponding na m e d automobile, problems as their biggest source or consumer com· plaints. Ms. Claybrook listed these other causes of cons um er loi.s . -Unneeded repair because ol Inadequate d!egnosis of the pro· blem. Too rrequcot pre\ ent1ve maintenance. -Cars prematurely retired due to inadequte maintenance Ms. Claybrook said efforts to address ttus problem are dlf· ficult, in part because "there are more than half a mtllton auto repair and service shops throughout the Umted States. M ost are mom-and-pop garages." ( CONSUMER J SHE URGED THAT diagnostic mspeclions in some place other than the repair shop be made available to con· sumers. Demon~tr.ition proJects by the hq~hway safely agency have found that .1 complete car, in· spection costs about $15 a car. 'No-name' Goods Sell Grocers Learn Buyers Approve Savings BY LO\JJSE COOK J.-i._. ~· Wrll•r Consumer s who say they would rather have tower prices than fancy packa1?1ng are get- ting a chance to put their pre- ference into practice. A growing number of stores ofCer "no- name" products selling for as much as SO percent less than na· tional brands. "The program's working real well," said Michael H att of Jewel Cos .• the first chain to in· troduce unbranded items in this country Tll E PRODUCTS come in plain cans or boxes. bearing on- ly the name of the item and a description of the conten~. In some cases, quaJlly is lower or the frills have been removed Tissues may be unperfumed, for example. Vegetables or fruits may be standard grade rather than fancy or extra fan- cy. The stores say there is no difference in nutritional value. only in eye appeal. The stores say they save money -and pass the savings on lo customers by buying in quantity, by cutting packaging and promotional costs and by selecting the lower grades. THE IDEA STARTED in 1976 when Carrefour. one of France s largest supermarket chains. in· troduced a no-frills line of pro- ducts. Jewel Cos. t ested the plan in 14 stores in the Midwest last February. The program was formally introduced in Jewel stores last October and 100 of the ch a in 's 235 stores in fi ve Midwest states carry a line or about 100 no-name items. Star Supermarkets, a Cam- hridge, Mass.·bS'ied operation that 1s part of Jewel . introduced unbranded producL'\ in August :md has carried the line an all 59 of its stores since Nov. 1 Big Bear Stores Co. added what it calls "Un-Brand'' pro· ducts to SS stores in Ohio and West Virginia late last month. And Pathmark, a New York· area chain, started selLing the plain-label food ant.I non-food items early In !t1arch. MOST OF THE stores orrennJ? the non name items are in the Eastern half of the countrv. But Ralph's Supermarket chain has Ovt~r The Counl••r NASOUstinqs begun advertising them in Southern California and City Mark et~. a Denver chain, is re portedly planning to introduce them next month. "They certainly fill the bill ." said a Boston shopper who re- gularly buys unbranded canned peas, corn and beans. He said he used to buy frozen vegetables. then switched to the no·name cans to sa\ c money. ·'They seem to be sallsfaclory,'' he said Asked "hat hl' thouRht or the no name product::; i n g<'ncral, the ~hoppt-r replied. "I think tht>y n• cheap · Savings vary. Tom Stemberg of Star said tht• fiO unbranded products blocked by his cham sell for an avera~c o{ 35 percent less than national brands and 15 percent less than house brands. What about complaints re· garding quality? There have been a few. 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W.•lf Gt\ -·II 'rll\ l"'1«1l1 ..,.._..,,., T'11 th to. 11..IO M•n P.l'*ld· ll>llf ,., UI l'fll-0 10.1• Ill Wit< I~ 01 NI. llllcl\ Utt,,.. Am wr ,.. Tr .. a!.11 ~ ·•• Ml~ t.n u; = fl\ J;: ;: ... """°" w::e .. '"1r.; tit. .. Ht J:" J,,.~ .... 1:ry l~· ;.~ ::o 1.01 ,,,, .. ......, ,,_ =· t!! ~n ~ g NL • 14..jl Hll~ltl ?Ua't .. tnt.,111¥11 tlJ' ea.13 MfO ttot \Ut •llM IUD 1US Tntll M;& MO Pl,.. \ .. \. I I , { • • 1 ' ,, • ,, t t ~ J I .J1 STOCKS I BUSINESS W eduesday "~ Closin g Prices NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS •.I. I ......,, I I ,.,. C\ciot W~nesd•v March 22. 1978 llN DAILY PILOT Ba Regulators Aim At Phone Woes By SYLVIA PORTER. The t.elepbooe hu bttome an annoyance, resultinf 1n a debate over whether and bow to ~gulate telephonf' sollcltatkln. At lssue are two richts. the indlvidual's rlght or privacy, and the business or&an.liatioo's ri&ht o( CO.tn· rnercial free speech. The stakes are high; tbe solutions Wlll not be 6.lmple. THE DEBATE WILlhCENTER in Washineum and Califorrua. 11>e Federal Communications Commission ii. planning bearincs and new regulallons for telephone !IOlicltation ID general and automated dialing devices in particular. California's Public Utility Commission is con ducting an inquiry wtlh th~ same goals. Three days or hear in gs opened today iD Los Angeles Me.itnwhlle. lawm akers in sever~tates and in Congress have Introduced measures to umit. control or ban certain lypea of so-called "junk" calls. Their etco~ fall into three major caugori~· Ct) Some Jegis · lators are focutlng on automated dialing devices with pre · recorded messages. These mactlines cao dial up to 100 sequential numbers an hour. in- Money's Worth cluding unht.ted ones Although (ew businesses can use th1 ' technology economically (the m~hanes cost up to $12.000 • and fewer than 1.000 have been S10ld nationwide, nearly .i dozen state!> have passed or are weighing laws to ban them . (:?) ANOTHER R EGULATORY AP PROACH 1s con tained in bills introduced by Rep. Le$ Aspin, D.·Wis , and Sen Wendell Anderson, D.·Minn. Their measures, bemJ: l'Onsidercd in similar Corm by about 11 states, would givt- people the right to ~ local phone companies not to g1vl· out phone numbers to solicitors other Ulan such groups a ... 1·hcirities. polttical perties. pollsters, ltlerary. sc:1ent1fic and nonorofit oreanizations l3 l About four states are tryuig to regulate un solicited calls by placing them under the •·cooling-of(. re gulat1ons that govern door-to·door sales. Ui>der thestt"ru)e~ lht> buyer usually can back out of a home soli.c1lat1on sale up to three days art er the ~u le SERIOUS ADMINISTRATIVE AND c.:onslltutwnal quei,tions are involved in many of these suggt'Stions Wh). forrnstance, under the Aspin-Anderson propo.!ial, should ... poltt1c1an or a publishing firm be allowed to use the phon<' to solicit contributions or customers. while a vacuum or real estate salesman cannot" Another problem 1s that a ban oo unsollciled phont• calls c?u.ld conceivably prevent people from rece1v1ng say. official prere<:ordcd emergency warnings. W1th1n 30 to 45 days, the White House OHice or Telecommunat'ahons Policy i'I slated to release a 100 page• report on thl' pol1c) 1mphc-ations of automated and lrad1 tional phont• cnmmumcat1on. Leading businesses U"'"~ 11·1~·pnunt• m.1rkcting .ire lorming lhe releph<>ne M<1rket.in1, Courdmaling Council. which will try lo help shapt.o expocl t:d n·~ulatwn We ha\c had more interest in ttus iss ue than 1t1 anvthin~ else we have looked into because al touchel:> i.ll uf U!>, • sa)s a commun1cat1ons expert an the Whit~ House Ot ficc. Selloff Followed By AJWther Loss NEW YORK CAP> -Stock prices lost more ground to day in the wake of Tuesday's selloff. The Dow Jones average or 30 indu.strials, wb1ch feJJ 11 points Tuesday for iLc; sharpest decline in 2'~ months, wa-. off another 5 28 at 757 .54. Losers outnumbered gainers by aoout a 3·2 margin among New York Stock Exchange-listed issues. AnalysLs said some light early selling might have been prompted by unsubstantiated rumors that President \n"'a r Sadat of Egypt had ~n assassinated By mid-day sources an Cairo and the Egyptian embassy m Washington denied the rumors Several Wall Strcetnc; said lhe reports had not ga1nNJ much credence in the investment Mmmunil v even before they were denied • .'itor l.:11 111 T hf" .-.pot light I l .. "' I "~ .. Ml101 Sloc-k • Did NEW Y()RIC (API AdV•M..S o.<11-U11tll•~ Totoll In••• Nt• lllgM N•w lows SALf:S NEW YOAIC 1-.P1 .. NY Appro• llr>.tl ..... '°"' .,.., .,,., .... •90 .•• Mof\11\ •90 . • Yur-. Two ve•n -. J•n I (0 "'°'" 1'11 to d•IP 1916 to IUI• Stoett \.91H 1t.9j0,000 >•.•10 000 n .140.ooo 11,•.IO 000 ,, J4i0,CIOO n . .os •10 t,1w..s1•.• , 108.110 OQO •.-.10f •Jt w.4&T AMf IC 010 NEW YOAI( I API ... .,,,_eel o.<11...., UIKMn~ total '""" HtW lllq/11 ~-·-· Odd IAll• .. DAILY PILOT Wectn.ci-r, March 22, 1978 Television \\'ED~ESIM Y EVENING I 00 (I) C88 NEWS 88 HEWS 8 EME.AOEHCY OHEI DeSoto mu11 decide wttether to ampo .. 1. • trapped con111uc11on work•'• 19Q Q NllA 8A\KET8ALL La&en at H~tOft Q) THE BAADY BUNCH Marcia mal<• • promlee ahe dc>Mn'I know how to keep. Q) ROOt<IES Flyller II Injured by Ill IX- prlllOM' OUt lor r~ fl!) El..ECTAIC COMPANY CD HISTORY OF MEXICO "Arrival 01 Man In Am.on ca·· If§) A8CNEWS 11:306 MOVIE • * ,.., "Men 1 Favonte Sport?" (Pert ~I ( t9&4) Reck Hudeon, Paule Pren- tJ ... A Mlf-cllilMd 8j)O(l• mBn, th<>Ogh nev9r havtng fllhed In hl9 Ille, mutt now do the rMI thing 111 ord« to aave h11 bulll..yp repuia. hon and hll IOb (1 hr l Rich Romance 8) BEWTTCHED Samantha u-lntulll lo pleaM a poet while Damn u-an amulet 10 c.urb Endora's ln5ull• Ann Dusenberr) pla) s Uw uaughtl'I' ol a \H•allh\ L'ontratlor ''ho -.ho\H·rs Grant <.oodl'\l' \\ith t''\PL'OSl\l' ).!ills on Eight 1s b10ugh tomght :.at 8 on ABl'. Channl•I 7 fB OVEREASY (li) DIMENSIONS IN CULTURES .. Arct111eology" van do W•ler demon- atralee lhe running stitch, whipped and threaded running stitch, and the Pek1nese slllch ll) JOKER'S WILD (I) UNTAMEDWORLD "New England" ®) MERV GRIFFIN 7:00 D NBC NEWS lJ UAASCLUB 0 ABC NEWS Q) ILOVELUCY 7;30f) WHEHHAVOC STRUCK Lucy orgen1z" an orehes· tra among h« girl fnen<ls and aslcs Ricky 10 hfllp (!) ADAM·12 The on1cora tangle with a bow-and arrow wielding Indian and w•lh an armed and wounded robber FD MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT (li) ~TlllE I STITCHERY Arll$1/lnllrut10• E11119nor ' SOS -OISNtllnl At Sea" For over 2.000 y-. man hH Mruggied with the !Mia and now that ocean 1r11vo1 11 coming 10 an end, 11s 1ml)C)Mlbl• to say who • won 0 SHA NANA Guest Jan St•fta<<I 0 NEW\.YWEOGAME 0 MATCH GAME P M 0) THE BRACY BUNCH Cindy a levome doll 1s m1&51ng •nd the !Jlm111 1nonks Bobby has h•dden ,, ('han n el List in9• 6 KNXT (CBS) Los. Angele'> 0 KNBC (NBCl Lus AngelPS 0 KTLA t1nd I Los AngPltJS. 0 KABC·TV (ABCJ Los. Angele~ m KfMB 1CB~1S1r1 D•equ 0 KHJ TV (lt1l1 l lt1~ Arlflt'it'S. 101 KCST (/\llCI S.m 011·q1J m KTTV 111•d) l I' An l"IPS @ KCOP TV11n I J l ~ Anrif'lr, ED t<-CE T 1 \ I Pf<.,t l :>, Anq1•11 ~ (ID KOCf TV 1Pf!S1 H1111t.nqlori Beac• Q) ADAM-12 The olfleera in111a1e an invoe110111on into medle«I ltaud fll) L A INTERCHANGE "Snapshola (li) STARBOARD (I) I 128,000 QUESTION ®) FAMILY FEUD 8;00 6 (I) RETURN OF CAPTAIN NEMO Capt81n Nemo find• lhe lost conllnenl or Allanhs 11no encoomon the rule< ot that unusual land (Pert J l'I 3) 0 QRlZZL Y ADAMS r,.,e R~•' ,., W•<IOwflr cPal•><'k w1yne1 end ht~ ~oung son. 11ran<led "' lht< ,.,ldl\fneu lo 1ow1ng .I Pveta moont•tn S'1 ffm 10"1 Mams an<1 1no1an ch1ella1ns Sttver Fo• and Wateni 1n a .... 10.nesa eel· ebra11on of EHi« 1n 1h11 90-minule eP<IOd• 0 MOVIE • • ·T1wt Magi<: Serpen1• I 966) HOfOkl Mal&ukale, Tomoko Ogawa Ten yMra arter the dHth ol hll lathe<, 1 young men chll· IMges Ills klllt>r 10 combat 11 hr . 'lO min J 0 00 EIGHTIS ENOUGH Poor Lillie Rich Girl In .1h 1111emp1 10 buy htS .1ffec11or>' lh11 lM!ff 111aurflcl .. ~t-of • Pf'Ol'l*'*lt oontfKIOI' .,_. Da'ild .tth ~ gl"8. ID CAAOl BUAHETT ANOl'RIEOS ~Cati Aelli« Cl) MOVIE ..... "Comenche" ( 1"8) Dana And,_, Unde Cri.- tel Two cavally llCOUll mutt llnd 1111 tmponant Comeoche cf\lef In order to prevent 1 full·ecal• w81'. (2 hr•) SD GREAT P£AF<>AMAHCE8 "V«dl Requiem" Leontyne Prloe, Florenza ~to, Luciano P•verotll, NloOlal Chleurov end Henry Georgee Clouz are 1911- lured In the Le Sell• Orcf\M1r1 prodUC11oo ol V«dl'a Requiem. conduct· eel by Herber! von Kera)an. (li) SIX 8EJOEA8CCl<E MEMORIAL FESTIVAL I 30 0 PROTECTORS «D ~OSS-WTTS CD OVER EASY 9 00 f) CBS MOVIE • • • The B•g Bus" ( 11178) Joseptl Botogne. Stoc:kard Channing The ltral nuciear-powerec:l lu•u- ry bu&. complete wllh swimming pool. boWllng 11i.,. end en INOl'lment of eccentric p111enge11. begin• e m11den \IOyage, lraughl with peril, from N-Yclfll to OenVilf ~i~R~:·s Wings" Krl1 I • IMnging and den le when 1 aen.. of om-ol·t~l- llke eccldentt plegoes • tllm company G-Barry. Shani Wellls. Nehmlah Persolf, guest 11"8. (R) 0 ORAL ROBERTS SPECIAL ID MERV GRIFFlN Gues11 8111 Cosby Jimmy Connor•. ~Y Rogers, Oent>y Tefr10 Anne Murr1y Jim Stalford, Frank Welke< W AUSTIN CITY LIMITS Chet Atkins I Merle Travlll Two of the ltnesl gu1ter1s11 1n the country turn 1n memorable pertor. m~ (() RICH MAN, POOR MAN Julie f>Tecolt, 1pumed by Rudy Jo<deche, begln1 111 an1tr wnh the town play- boy; Tom Jordache 9815 • lire and 11 banllhed lo his uncle'• 1n Cahlo<nl• 9 30 0 ALL YOU NEED IS CASH Oeorga Harrison. Mick Jagger. Paul Simon. E11c 1<11e B1enca Jagger. Aon TUBE TOPPERS CB.5 6 9.00 -"The Big Bus." The TV premiere of this 1976 satare on dis- aster movies features a nuclear-powered luxury bus and a collection ot offbeat passengers. NBC B 9:30 All You Need is Cash. An original parody of the Beatles with ex-Beatie George Harrison, Paul Simon and Bianca Jagger (see review below). A BC O 10 : oo Perry Como Special. San Diego's Sea World is the setting for this musical variety show with Debby Boone and KeMy Rogers Wood. OWt Ayluoyd, John BelueN, Glldl ~ and 81• Murrey Join In • f>81ody of the mue1e Ind mcwtee or • W0!1d-llmOU9 roe* Qua<· tel from Llverpoot, England f.I LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE Love And The ~ 1er1" Two 1m•ll town newecaetera vie IOr pot!· lion wl"«1 the<y learn thet the<y are being rated fE SPECtAL "R~ Where All Thlnge Selong" A cefebfa· lion of tne ongolno rebirth of men and nature 10:00. G NEWS fJ 9 PEARY COMO "Elater By The Sea" A <*ebfatlon In aong It Sen Diego'• S.. World Perle with gueet• Debby Boone. Kenny Aogen, Seamor• the S.. Lion. Flo the Wllrua and Shamu the l(ftler Whale «I) HONEYMOOHERS Trytno lo mike up with Aloce el111t a quanel, R•lph I ekN Ed' t ldvlce ll\CI -.cit'*• recording fD MICHAEl. JACl(SON m SOONOST AGE Fiddler• nv.. Country rociler Doug Kera111w, l~ock vtrluoeo .i..n lUC·Ponly end clMelclst ltzek P.,lmen perform ••Plfllely and In e remarllabM ene.nble 10·30 «D Cl) NEWS fE MACHEl~/LEHREA REPORT 11,0Q IJ 0 0 (I) ®\ NEWS 0 LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE "NolMn' But The Truth" Corte decides lhat lhe and Paul mual be IOl811V truln · ful with 86Ch other 0 MOVIE • • "Italian Connec11on·· ( 1973) Henry Silvi. M!irlO Adrot A emell-Ume plm in MJtanO 11 the uirget tor the N9w YQl1( and ltaftan Mal\a. ( 1 ht.,~ min ) ., THE 000 OOUPl.E Feb deddee to become a wrlW end Olclr lhlnlUt he'• wasting 1111 um. ar>d money Cl) LET"S MAKE A DEAL 9 DICK CAVETT Gueat1· David Lloyd and Mll'lh .. BrictlmM. former comedy wrilMt for Cavel! (Part 1 of 2) e:!) MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT 11:30 D (I) HAWAII FIVE-0 McGurell dh1covera • Ct1mlnat ring hiJldllno air cargo lhlpment• wtllle he'• ll'IY9eltgattno the death of "' airport MCotl!y under· COY9t agent (A) 0 TONIGHT Hoit· Johnny Carton GoM11: McLMrt S1even- 10n, Kenny Roger•. Rod· nay D•ngerfleld Or Mldlael Foa 8 LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE 'la.. And Troe AnAIOUI MltTll" Mra Albano tr- io gel Julio 10 pr~ 10 "" <laughter "Love And The Reincarnation" ()jane ,,_ to get Nick 10 notice ,_ 0 <II POLICE STORY "The Ten-Veer Honey- moon" After working together on the pollce loroe for 10 YMB. IWO partneu oet on each 011-'1 nerves when one ot them ttert1 ectlng 1tr1nge- 1y Claude Akin•. Paul Surl<e guest 11ar (R) ID THATOIRL "Kimono My House" Q) OETSMART The Chief atsigns Agont 86 and AgMI 99 10 retrieve a deadly sc1enlll•c , A. Legend 'lltat'll Last Until Loneh th J \ \ -..uARBt'TI LO._ Al\(; f· I ('," I \I'> lk;itle.s freaks .,., ho dug thl' movu·s Jl;1rd Days :\1ght" and ··Help .. must ~ct• an '\ H<" ..,hov. t11n111ht :it l 30 on Channel 1 called ··All '1111 ;";t·i·d is Cash It has nothing "hatsoev{'r to dfl \\tth the fl<'all cs Instt>acl. tl tl'lls lht• :-.lory of anothC'r famed pop ~roup from L1H'rJH1<1L Eni:land ThC'y arc the Rutles \'ou may "''' kncm of thl'm. but thc·~"H· 9cc!omt' a rumor in th1•1r cmn lime - The show claims thev tut such hits as "A Hard J)ay's Hut," such albums as "Shabby Lane" and :·1rag1cal llJstory Tour· ·Y OU m uy SUSPl'(.'l tlus IS ·' $p1,of of ever~ known d o c u m c n tar y n n l h c• lie a ties. T\' HEVIE\X' You might lw right Consider that Er 1c· Edie'. latf' of Monty Python's · A thoroughly infectious comedy .. \'ou don't have to • kno" a no,o,e whf'elle-from a tathplnnrr to enjo~ "Skatt'ho;inl." NOW PLAYING UA cm 2 &UN(IM DIUYl·lll ., Ota~ 634 3911 A...ahe"'I l]q 98~ DIWIGI MAU •S l&COUl&Cll •I O<lllQI 637·0340 El Toro ~·I !>&SO CllllMl l.AllD •> AnlMi'" 63!>-1601 IDW&llDI lllllTOl CllllM& !>1"11 AN '>40 1444 lDWlllDS WllTlllOOlt Gl•Cl~n Grovt 530 4401 Fl) 1ng Cirrus. "'rote and ~tars 10 this 90-minute cap<·r llE Pl.AYS \RF.PORTER and al<,o a Rutle Dirk '.\lcQu11.~ll·y Otht•r<; 1n tht' group they call the f'n· F;.ih Four an• Ron ~<•Sl) :"lc-11 lnnesl. ~tag o ll;u :1 1 H1kl.1 h1t;iar 1 and Bari") Worn 1 John ll<tlsl \ l Thl· .. ho\\. ... t.ffb b\. n•)ttng the Rutles. formed in 1962. ha\ t' l>C'cOml' ".1 musical legend that will last until lunl'ht1ml' " It shows how t hl' fl utlE's were discovered by l.l'~;.:' ~lnuntbatten \\oho became their manager. onl.\ t11 nwt•I a sad. l11nt:ly t•nd· "He accepted a tca1·hing po ... 1t1on in Australia " ThP Hulks begin at a llamburg club, the Rat Kell1•r 'wh1rh meanc; l1lcrally in German. cellar <>I r,1ts" ,ind then return to England to sign with D1tk .J..1ws. ":l music publisher of no fixed ability" WITll TllE Rf:l,Ei\SE OF that first hit. · Pleas<' Hut Me," the phenomena known as Rullemania s"'ccps th<' "'orld much in the way that Heatlemanaa swept "The Ed Sulhvan Show" and scl1>ct areas of Scotland Jelle reH'rent1ally details The Rulles' con- troversial career, aided by interviews with Mick J aj!ger. Paul Simon and "a v1s1ting professor of applied narcotics" at a un1vers1ty in Cahforrua. The profcssor, some will note, talks hke one In trar.mg the black origins of Rutles music. Idle dec<.1mps to a Louisiana bayou to chat with legendary blu<'sman Blind Lemon Pie-Blind Lemon as asked how h~ became a legendary hlucsm<.1n WELi,, HE SA VS, llE worked on the railroad 30 years hut didn't know ~nythang about music un- til hl' hf'ar<I tht.> Pn·-Fab Four "Everything I learned. I learned from the Rulles Oh, ldlP says And 11 's off lo other aspects of Rutlemanaa. including lhe 196fi uproar when Ron Na sty was quoted as say mg Thf' Rutles are bigger than God and that "God never had a hit record." Of special interest to the viewing segment known as "heads" ts the chapter on how the Rutles were introduced to tea and subsequently were blamed for widespread use of lea by the young. ~l~~~~~·~ I ' ·-i• ... •• ....... . :-:._-_-_. -------' UMA WERTMULJ.Y'S 11MIGHT FULL OF RAIM11 1•1 Call 642-5678. Put a few word s to work for ou. arle uin DINNER ~THEATRE NOW PLAYING '"::...::., George Aaelrod' • 1ldetpllttlng co111edy GOODBYE CHARLIE ,,.,. Nlrwpl>Oto SETTLING THEIR SCORE WITH THE SEA TLES Gary Weis (left) and Eric Idle THE Rl:TLES' LIV ES /\RE explained. lake" 1sc lhf'ir guru phase and also the legal battles ... thal finally ended the ~roup, battles so fierce that Slig O'Hara "sued h1msf"lf accidentally " Despite several lengthy misfires. ··All You :--.ieed is Cash" does a first-rate JOb of settling ac- counts with Beatles historians and documentaries Ir you mass 1t. you deserve the Bay City Rollers 1V Movie Lawsuit Settlement Told AUSTIN, Tex. CAP} A form-er Austin policeman who helped storm a tower at the University or Texas and kill sniper Charles Whit- man in 1966 has reached a tentative settlement in his invasion-of-privacy suit against the producers of a television movie about the incident. Ramiro Martinez, now a Texu ranger, had sued MGM Inc. and NBC for $1,025,000 after NBC aired the movie called "The Deadly Tower." He clalmed lhe movie depleted aspects of his private life. Plan 1 day or 9Venlng at the Ice ~ Chaltt It's tun !Of the young, th• young1t-tletrt. tor the whole femlty. W.'Ye got a whoi. bunch of dlff«tnt waya io h.ve tvn on the Ice. tee abttng 1-.ona for all agea. loe-ootheque dl9CO Ice dancing for teen• and edultt (you don't have to be YefY goOd, ju1t wllllng) Ind ot:>ett publle eke1tng houra mo.i of th• week. Ea•ter Vaead•• 0. '"' Sat., Marell la.&la .. Maftla 28 ate All *Y NeoaTHa..-...-. "-: DINI • DAIKllG • PRl -SHOW un&TA1618n EAS SUHDA Y BRUNCH 'I I~ .. ,.... 503 S. HARBOR BLV D., SANT A ANA ~~'"·~~i:f.r,:• IC£ CAPADESCHALET Jf:.~ ....... [lllt RVATlON ~ t~1'> '17 ·.SSU _____ ,, TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTIN~p 1'-Y ,,_., KAOS • CAPTIONED A8C ..wt MORNING 12.'00. 'TWIUBHT ZOk£ A tittle bOy ~ a prlte fight• OOod ""* In hi• -***llglll. ., MOVIE * *°" "TOQetllet Again·· 11944) Irena Dunne. Olwtee Boyer. An• • wom1111'a lat• i.lbend'e statue le Ruok by lighl· nlng, 9he commluloN 1 ICUlptof IO h It. (2 lwl ) G) MOVIE • • 1/\ "Bliek Horn Canyon" ( t954) Jo1I ~,... M811 Blandler<I A cowboy II ob....0 With the dMlre IO captu.e 1 wild tlalllon. Cl hr , 30 m1r1 ) 12:30 0 MOVIE • • • "The Men Who Aeclalm•d HI• HHd .. ( 19341 Claude Alline, Joan Bennett. A bttlllenl authO<' Miiii hlmeelf to an amb1- Uoue publlll,_ • ..-ulling 1n tragedy ( 1 hr 30 min ) 12;350 ISPV "To Florence Wllh love· (Pert 2) 12:.11 8 <Ill A8C MYSTEIW MOVIE • • ' 01el A OHdly Number" ( 197 5) Gary Cotlln1. Gemma Jone• Wiien an CUI-of-work actor poeea .. a P9)1Chletrl91 lo help • hy.t«lcel 01r1 wfth nigh...,.•. he unlcnow- lngty Mtt the atege kif hie own curtaM Cllll. (R) 12:40 IJ (J) KOJAK "Waft Stneat Ounallnoe<" Kojllk poeee .. 11 Greek mul!l-mllllonalre In hos -en for • mUfderer W•lh $20 mlUlorl '" eecvrit1e1o (R) 1 00 0 TOMORROW Henry Kyemb• llllk lbOUI Ugandtt 1 30 (!) MOVIE * * I WH A Shophller \ 1950) Scoll BrM!y Mone Freeman A deleLI•~• po-., e ahophltllt 11) 1nl11tre1e a ga"g ot profai ~tonal• ( t hr 30 min ) 140 0 MOVIE * *'"' "The K•lle" ' ( 19'61 Burt L•ncatter. Ave Gardner A tormer boJ<er beOOmet lnVO!ved Wllh lhe ayndlclle (2 hr1 , i min I UO IJ NEWS 2:00 D 0 0 NEWS «D MOVIE • • "Rogu11s Of Sherwood For"I (19501 John 09rek, 01ane Lynn Robin Hood ' son round' up 'h• old gang lo stand up 10 Prince John's oppression (2 hrl) 2:058 MOVIE • • "018nwu ·hoers'"•' • WINNER OF 11 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS Including Best Picture (11188) ~ &xon, ~ nendo aencno.. A young INll\ M'8 out IO ll¥9ftQ8 lhe OMth °' 1111 tllher ,, the hendl of • bOUnty llunl•. (1 tv .. 55 min I 2ao D MOW! ••~ .. TIM The End Of rime" ( 1!148) Dorothy McGuire, Guy Mldtton A WM widow ~ tO the llld ol • ClOllfuMd .....,_ embittered """ wllO .. iu-t returned IO olvCnen rtt._; (2 hr•. !!min) 3:00Q) NEWS 3:46 G MOVIE , • • * "Beck Street"• ( 1114 t) Chari.a 8oY1W. Mer-, garet Sull1v1n. A INltTted man end hie mlllr .... W'1o 11t eontent to remain In lhe badtoround. Cltlry on .. hlelong rom.,_ ( I ht • 46, min) ~oo m MOVIE • • "Tot>or Tr>e 0t .. r· ( ID54) Chartee Dreka, Kar- in 8oolt1. A mect\lnical device, lnve11ted t.o conquer men·a emouon9 In' ~ fligtll. la 1.-1 10' ._ • ...,I boy'• lrte. 14 ht • 30 """ ) 4-o&D NEWS ~ 100 MOVIE * • "Slack 8att8110n·· Ftank Peters T hur sda y •• Dafld~ Hovi~• MOANING 11.30 Q) **'I, "Beyond The • Fore11" ( 1949) Betle D.-, Joteph Cotten. Wiien •a wealthy I~ offlll'S tichea and tuxury to the wilo of • counlTy doclor• /\et greac:t reauln In trage.- ..ty (2 hr• , 20 min ) AFTERNOON 1200 0 •••;."Sailor Of Tr>e King·· ( 11153) Jelfrey Hunt· e<, MIChael Rennie.Outing 8 IM'AfCh for • Geflnan st\4Q .n World W11 II, I 8rltl$li "'""al offlGN t1nds his son tn h•S a.quadron. ( 1 hr , 3Cf ""'") 3 00 10 • • ·Was ltahan Style ' 11g87) Bu11er Keeton. Mirtha Hye< ~ pelf of AmerlC&n I04dler1I ~pe with pi-for an 1nv .. 1on, bU1 CMI I COi>· v1nce anyone of lhelr •ulhMtletty ( 1 hr , 30 mln-1 3 30 0 * * "The Mllllon Eyes Of Su-Muru· (1967) Fran-- le Avalon, George Ne<ler _ The beaullful Su-Muru t>flod~ • natton'Nide orqan1. zallDn or women who try 10 01lta1n world powe< by 1tnslaving tt>e worl0'5 m<>"I lnlluanllal men 11 hr • 10 m1nl ae1t Aclre!ll • Anne Bancrott Best Aclresa • :ihlrloy MacLa1ne Besr Supporting Actor • Mlkh1ll Baryshnikov • •• Best Director • Herbert Ross DAILY MATINEES ~CLOSE tNCOUNl EAS OF THE THIRD KIND . (PG' wt.I" ~, ?M44*·1;-\1tO!• MC'•t-4 fUt t,. 1 30 I I" l~ HOUSE CALLS 1PGI wfo rnuA!. SUN-~ t!>-4 ''" t!>A FRf SAT 2t~41•...e1Mt"l0tb -..o N fll[<'_. 1''9 Cf'\ CASEY'S SHA WS" (PG) NlO !'>UN 4 16~0~-·rucS-aM "YOU LIGHT UP MY LIFE" WED "'UN 2l01110-101SMON'T\Jf8-!11'•01~ "HIGH ANXIETY" (PG) wro IHU~'I '>lJN ""''~~~·~Ito!() fRt "-Af 1007~~·~444Q.10l~ MON TUC.b f ~ llO "THE FURY" (R) wro '>UN 100.110-54().4!00.10:.>0 l.'ON flll ·• -7 3~ 'IO "SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER" !Rl "RETURN TO WITCH MOUNTAINh NEVER A DULL MOMENT" (0) SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER CAI urEGUARD THE ONE & ONLY"' 'ALOHA BOBBY & ROSEM (PG) "HOUSE CALLS" "SHAMPOO" CR) "THE FURY' "THE RE1 NCAANATION OF PETER PROUD .. "THE FURr (R) "THE REINCARNATION OF PETER PROOO" ALL OIUVI' INS 0'KN 6.JOP.M.Ht•Hflf Cllllll Und•• U lfree Uftl<IU • Kkl1ll• Ptanrownd ... • I r ·-. ENTEATAINMEl"T I MUSIC BOX 'IA Chorale Concert ·G~est Baton Inspired There are those -in and out of the chorale - W'ho belleve that the Los Angeles Master Chorale without director Robert Wagner on the podjum is like roast beef without Yorkshire pudd1ng. To be sure, Wagner has welded thls fine l'horale into the musical force that it undoubtedly ~·~ become. But he would be the first to say that its. s uccess does not binge on hls baton and, or course, he would be right. The proof or that viewpoint was richly evident S unday when Richard Westenburg, whom this writer greatly admired when be was director of Musica Sacra and the Collegiate Chorale, took over al the Los Angeles Music Center. WESTENBURG AND TIIE Chorale had two things ~oing for them before he even walked to the pochum. One, 1t was Palm Sunday and what helter. day to perform Bach's B Minor Mass? Secondly, we were just two days away from Johann Sebastian Bach's birthday -the great master was born March 21, 1685 -and you couldn 'l ask for more inspiration than that- ·Movie B~iness '.RetUITIS to Jersey NEWARK, N.J . (AP) -The first fuJl.Jength ll?Ohon plc~ure to be filmed entirely in New Jersey s mce the silent film era went mto production here today. The MGM production. "Voices," will be a heartwarme r about a 29.year·old Hoboken bachelor who lives with his family but is de- termine<! to break out on his own and ~ut a record. During his quest, he meets a deaf girl who wants to be a dancer. Whatever the impetus, Westenburit can renect with saUsfaction on hla conducting debut with the Master Chorale. He brought hls own brand of direction to the massive, moving Bach mass and he obviously was delighted at the response or the chorale. MIND YOU, nIERE WERE moments in the ' Bach wben Utls writer was far from delighted. The work could bave bad a far better aerompaniment tban the one provided by the lackluster Sinfonia Orchestra. And it was a mistake for Westenburg to pre- side over the harpsichord continuo. It detracted from his overall direction of the mass. The Bactt B minor isn't a work you can oversee with one hand while the other is seeking the keyboard. But the overall impression was that of a fervently delivered, capably directed offering. The sheer, overwhelming genius or Bach was placed before us yet agaln by a chorale that rose t>plen- didly to a demanding occasion. CHORDS AT RANDOM -All goes well with rehearsals for the Irvine Master Chorale's .all-Beethoven program April 8, the column is as- sured. John Alexander's charges will bein the Santa Ana High School auditorium at 8:30 p.m. for a performance of the Mass in C major and the Ode to Joy, two works made to measure for the rich talents of our IMC. W3dneedey, March 22. 1978 DAILY P:Lf"T I ~ sec UVE.R REED aoss bJs ~. See AAQUEL WELCH cross her legs. See MARK LESTER crou hl9 fingers. See ERNEST BORGNINE cross his heart.· And see GEORGE C,SCOTI. REX HARRISON, W\VID\tEMMINGS and CHARJ.l'ON HESTON get double crc>Med. ~e the biggest emu up of them all ... NOMINATED FOR ACADEMY AWARDS Including Beat Picture Best Actor ~ Richard Dreyfuss Best Actress • Marsha Mason •' ... Nell Simon makes feeling good legal ..• GENE SHALIT. NBC·TV . (PG) A RAY Sl"ARK PROOUCTlON ~A HfRS£RT ~ ALM NEIL~MOO'S IHE GOODBYE GIRL RICHARD DREYFUSS· MARSHA MASON The story focust:$ on their tender romance and the interaction witb his family. with lots of music. The. film w'll feature John Ontkean, who played in "Slap Shot" and "The Rookies," a tclev1 s1on sen(?s, Alex Rocco. who had a role in ··~he Godfather," Barry Miller of ''Saturday Night Fever," Herbert Berghof and Viveca Lmdfors. New 'Butch' Movie.-_______ __ Jimltly Webb, who composed "By The Time I Gel To Phoen~x" and other Glenn Campbell hits, wrote the musical score. so. c~:~t:uu "CASEY'S ~WS11 C11u 11tu j I -... .,.. .,.. ..,.. )411 llis\411 M)llll'f • _,,__ S*llll M0'AHfl .....,..., ... nu,... t AC:A0CMY llWAllO -M,\l~ "O.OSE !HCOUKTIRS Of THE .tUtU IUMD" lf'GI llll PAllJlll MANN'S "AMERICAN HOT Wil0 .CIMEMAllNO _,_,__ IPGJ • 411~ s. ...... ,,,~.,-·--·~·-..,..,. -.n111- Ul-lltl .. ,~,..._ ,.,,_. ".At4t411 HAU." IPGI -.,., __ ,_ ... -fllll-6:Jf.llrt• "ISLAHDS IH THI STUAM" -~..__.,_ ..,...,__.,, --rHE FURY' IS SO STRONG-NO HITCHCOCK THRILLER WAS MR SO INTENSE, WENT SO FAR. OR HAD SO MANY 'CLASSIC' SEQUENCES." ~Kc*~"°"*Mooah • -NOW SHOWING --- 10 MnSTOL CINEMAS Coeto Meta CINEOOME ~ ~7444 634-2553 4TADIUM DlltVl.fN Ofcr.ge 6J9-7860 NOMINATED FOR ACADEMY AWARDS including Best Picture Best Special Effects Bett Sound Best Director -George Luca• ~ MADELINE KAHN· CLORIS LEACHMAN· HARVEY KORMAN ...,_,.DICK YAM PATTEH ·ROM CAR£Y · HOWARD MORRIS A MEL BRm FU ·Ptm:ed lld IQ:ted by Ill BRlnS ~!l Jl1l1l1la.!!"".,~'::"~ .. !_j1 CLoN ~~ THI '!J_.,. •• ,_ "4-2«>0" lt1M e ~-e ltM e a::I A IOlaG s c .... " ~., ..... " 494·1S14 I OSCAll ~llOHM THI OOOOIYI GllL1..01 l1~141 ... 1M130-IO;O DUSTIN HOff ..... "STUIOHl TIMI" ti ) ""u' "1"1 lrTZ" tel S OKAll NOMINATIONS THI ooooan GllL "'°' n • • 2'» • .. ,., • -• • .,... """11111 .... & "''· •OM:M-.-"THI GOODIYI GflL" IPGI ,._,., .. .,., .. ,.~ ...... ·-·~,,_,. With "Annie Hall" at Edwards Huntington And Newport Cinemas --------------~_,~ ___ .. _...._ "'OH 900" lPGI LASIR l&.ASI"' IPGJ ,, ------· ';.. --- • DAlLVPILOT p . . . • .· . . . . . ENTERTAI NMENT/ INTERMISS~O~ ~St~ge Shows Lure Kids 'Star Wan' ·~<[Uel in ·Production Easter vacation is the ideal time !or children's ter, and youngsters are being entertained on t levels this week, at Orange Coast College with a Mudenl production of "You're A Good .Man, ~rlie Brown" and at the Anaheim Convention '-f,!'ter by the Bugs Bunny Follies. If your kids are under 10, chances are they'll d the Bugs Bunny Follies, on stage nightly t ougb Sunda~. Little ones also may get a kick o t of OCC's "Charlie Brown," but it's geared inly to the post-cartoon show group. You might want to pack a pair of earplugs if Yttake in the Bugs Bunny Follies. It's several de-e Is higher than necessary, and since it leans to . rge measure on audience response, the shriek- lQB young voices make it even louder. T HOUGH GEARED TO THE very young, it's ~pleasant program, aided by the taped voc-1 styl- 1~ of Mel Blanc m the multiple roles of .Bugs, D Hy Duck, Yosemite Sam, Tweety Bird, S lvester, Porky Pig and the rest. An extra added attraction is the appearance of B$1tm an and Robin m an extended routjne on household safety as the Dynamic Duo foll the dangerous plot of the Joker. the Riddler and the C•twoman. Emcee Schahan Tchapraste ties things together as the ingratiating host More imaginative is the OCC production of "Charhe Brown," which ends its brief vacation, run with performance:> today and Thursday after- noon and an evening stint Thursday. Killian Collins directs with a fine flair for characterization aod has thrown Woodstock into the cast for good measure. E RIC SIEGMANN IS engaging in the title role of the celebrated loser, but the show stealers are Tami Rattleman as Lucy and John Jaenicke as Exhibitors Fight Blind Fihn Bidding BOSTON <AP> The film was by Stanley Kurick. Expectations were high. Even though no one had seen "Barry Lyndon" at the time, Malcolm Green paid $15,000 for the right to show it in his tbeater. Months later, when he finally was able to see tbe movie, Green's heart sank. "l knew it was a born b, but I was stuck with it," ~said. The film earned only $4,000 during the mon· tb·long run at his theater io Glens Falls, N. Y. Green and other theater owners want to abolish tbc practice they say is responsible for many of their losses: blind bidding. Some theater owners testified Tuesday before a Massachusetts legislative committee considering a bill to outlaw the practice --\\ lwn .,. '-111111.-.. ,-,. -, .-,,,-,.,-".-. ,-.. -,1 U-N-_~rvw-_~:._-SA_';_•_TU_D_1_o_i_T~o-u=A- WALTER MATIHAU GLENDA JACKSON ART CARNEY RICHARD BENJAMIN ''House _ . Calls'' .. ~~ NOW PLAYING! STADIUM DfUU·UI CINEDOME 21 Orange 639·8770 Orange 634·2553 EDWARDS CINEMA Mon ·Thurs. 7 1s • 9. ts Fri. 6 00. a oo. to oo Costa Mesa 546·3102 ~t & Sun. 2 oo. '4 oo. e·oo. a·oo • 10:00 Intermission Tom Titus Snoopy. Miss Ratlleman is the epitome or crabbi· ness with an Ethel Merman voice to match, and her physical resemblance to her character is amazing. Jaenicke revels in his "Red Baron" and "Suppertime'' numbers and adds a skilled dan· cer's talent. Others m the well·chosen cast are David Engel as the blanJcet-hugglng Linus; Terri Catalano as Peppermint Patty; Mark Patterson, a real pianist, in his stage debut as Schroeder, and Scott Sullivan miming the Woodstock character, Both shows offer bargain prices for the younger audiences, but the tarif£ is hieber for adults viewing the Bugs Bunny Follies. When pres- sed for a!avontc after viewinj both. the kid in our household allowed as bow he "liked them both. best " LOS ANGELES <Al» Darth Vader lives! Production is ready to bHin on the first sequel to 'F'Star Wars " Mark H amill, Har· rison Ford and Carrie Fisher have been signed to continue their roles ~n location in Europe a nd Africa. Leigh Brac~eu based his screenplay on the second in a series of 12 ~ories from "The Ad- ventures of Luke Skywalker" by George Lucas, who wrote and directed the original film. " ... Scenes of staggering power. Great f " ' per ormances . . . -Walter ~noer WOR Radio "A truly touching and thrflllng love story. Fonda has never been so bea utiful a'nd gives a dazzling performance!! -Liz Smith, CoMnOpoUtan A Jerome Hellman Production A Hal Ashby Film J~fiN/a ... ..701t.¥?t &eel>Wt. /.~10 // I/ . rft/Ate Sa.'\'npldv by 5tDly by Otrectorof ~ Waldo Salt.ux1 Robert C. Jones Nancy Dowd Haskell Wexler A~ce Pmtlu<v• Producod by Dreaed by Bruce Gilbert Jerome Hellman Hal Ashby SHOWING EXCLUSIVELY AT edwards CINEMA CENTER HARBOR AT ADAMS, COSTA MESA. MESA VERDE CENTER 979·4141 JRl4tJi!t'r&~. T~~ SHOWTIMES Wed-Sun 1 :15, 3:45, 6:15, 8:45, 11:00 Mon/Tues 7:15, 9:45 W•d. Aftll.lely: 3:4S, 7:10, 10·30 Thu•a. ' Sun. Annie: 2:00, S:2S, 1:55 edwards NEWPORT Hl.UC OAST HWY.AMACilTHUlt aewlOll'i'O cmmm 644-0760 edwards HUNTINGTON I UCM .t.T 1Ul$, IU 148-0388 ~ HARBOR BLVD ~ ORIVEIN HM>or~ nNr MeFedden Sanl•An• • 531·1271 • f ( ..... I •• • ~INSIDE: •Featuring •Club Calendar •Ann Landers •Special Diets lit Yo.or Basket Easter, one of the joyous holiday a throughout the year, includes many festivities that ro1~inatedfrom the pagan rites of spring. In Central Europe, Easter begins on Holy Saturday as the kitchens are filled with the aroma of baked ham, breads and pastries. Jn the Slavic countries many or the people follow the old tradition of taking their food baskets to church lo be blessed. In the mountain province• of Austria musicians and carolers roam the streets m lhe valley, Accompanied by children carrying Hghted torches and singing. From the old European custom of the Easter Walk has come the Easter parade of lo· day. Usually after the parade are open houses or a special family festive dinner. Some of America's tradiUons are the color- ine o( eggs, egg-rolling contests and the all-time favorite Easter basket filled with assorted chocolates, edible bunnies and Jelly beans. " CAKE On 12-oz. pkg. (2 cups) Butterscotch. MOl'•ell \)a cup water 3 CUPfl unsifted flour l measurlnc tablespoon bakinf powdtr 1 measuring leasPoOn salt ~ C\ll> golden rats\«19 1 cup butter, softened 1 cup1u1ar 1 measuring tfupooo vWUa ennct 'tji[5(S I cup milk "• cup tlncly cho~ cand!ed cberrte1 ~ cup chopped almonds, touted A EMBLY: r{'wo 40" lon1 Itri 11\lm.lpum roil 36" l011g pJece color yan> • l~arn bow J Uy ~""-~·~'*' ...... Semi.Sweet Rell ChOcOlat.e Butteracotth Mortell l \ coco Q 3\~ Wedneeday. March 22, 197& DAILYPU.OT If you're decorating bard-cooked e1p this Easter, you'll want them to look a.s pretty oo the inside as they do on the outside. Proper cooking and immdliate cooling will help lo prevent that grey-green nng from forming around'tbe yolk. Hard-cooked eggs should never' be bolled. It's best to bring the water rapidly just to boil· ing and then turn off the heat. Let the eggs st.and covered in the hot water for 15 minutes fur large-size eggs. Adjust the time up or down by a bout 3 minutes for each size larger or smaller. smaller. . J. Immediately cooling hard·coobd ecgs aner cooking serves two purposes. First, lt halts the cooking process and helps to prevent a grey• green ring from forming around the yolk. And, it helps make peeline easrer by causing contra~· tion o(.the egg within the sbeU. If you sometimes have difficulty peeling hard-cooked eggs, it might help to pierce the eggs before cooking with an egg piercer or punch. <Or, substitute a carpet or thumb tack or pin.) Piercing the large end of the ega before cooking will help prevent the eggs from crack· ing by providing an 011Uet for alr pressure which builds up during cooking. In addition, a small amount of water may seep Into a "pierced" egg during cooking. This helps lo separate the egg from the shell, making peeling easier. When peeling a bard-~ed egg, it's best to first crackle the shell all over by tapplng it gently on a table or counter top. Theo, roll the egg betwei!n your hands to loosen the shell. Start peeling at the large end of the eg9, where the air cell is larated. To help ease off the shell, hold the egg under running co4t water or dip in a bowl of water as you peel. If the eggs you've bard·cooked are esptteial· ly fresh, they might be difficult to peel. YQU may find it helpful to place the cooled eggs 1n the freezer for about 30 minutes, and then dip them in warm waler before peelin1. Don't forget them in the freezer, though! Hard-coo~ed eggs should be refri1erated just as soon as you've finished decorating them for Easter. Return them promptly to the refrigerator alter the egg hunt, too, if they aren't eaten immediately. Hatd-cooked eggs arc at lheir best when refrigerated as SOOD after- cooking as possible and used within a week. Want to fix those Easter eggs In a way the kids will love? If you add a UtUe stuoedded cheese to your favorite egg salad recipe. you can make a terrific grilled sandwich. Cook just as you would a grilled chttse sandwich, remov· ing it from the heat when the bread is browned and the c~e ii melted. Here are other ideas for those Easter eggs: EMl'Ba EGG DIP If you ha't(e any Easter Egis left over, here's a super dip you can make. Serve lt with frestJ vegetable dippers, or use it in sandwiches. 4-hard cooked eggs 1 cdp or 1 carton (8 01.) dairy sour cream 1 jar (5 oz.) pasteuriud Neufcbatel cheese spread with pimiento 1 tablespoon sweet pickle relish 1 t.easpoob prepared mustard Peel the eggs and chop them. Put in a medium-size mixing bowl. Add the sour cream, cheese. relish ancl mustard and stir until all mixed together. You can use lhe dip right away, or cover the bowl with plastic wrap and put in the refrigerator until you are ready to serve ll. Makes about 211,, cups. EASTER EGG SALAD DRESSING 3 hard·c<Mlked eggs 11.J cup salad oil 2 tablespoons vinegar 2 tablespoons lemon juice l tablespoon instant minced onion 1 teaspoon sugar 1".i teaspoon salt v. teaspoon oregano 1 4 teasa:>oon pepper <See EGGS, Page a> Food Cf l Easy EastfJr Bonnet Ham is dinner focal point. Easter Bonnet Dam When planmng an Easter dinner. few of us have hme to prepare an elaborate meal, yet most of us like to present a rather spectacular array of foods to family and friends. For a stunning center of attraction, how about planning your holiday dinner around Easter Bonnet Ham? This glamorous masterpiece is bound to turn heads when viewed amidst a parade of foods on your dinner table. Yet is is surprisingly easy lo fix. Easter Bonnet Ham is dressed up with a tasty and attractive golden menngue flavored with :i:esty prepared yellow mustard. The mer- ingue 1s an appropriate hmshmg touch for the leaner, boneless hams popular among shoppers today These hams do not have the fat cover· ing necessary for scormg and studding with cloves as was lrad1llonally done in the past. After using egg whites in the menngue, the remaining yolks can be added to the FluHy Potato Casserol~ This dish. when made from mashed potato flakes, will also simplify your dinner preparation. The e~g yolks add color and a lighter texture to the potatoes, while freeze. dried chives add a hint of spring. You may wish to accent your meal with spiced peaches, buttered ~reen peas with mushrooms, spinach salad, and a lemon cake roll. EASTER BONNET HAM 1 fully cooked boneless ham, about S Best Buys With Easter approaching at a steady bunny hop. consumers ..ire planmng their tradihonal Easter feast. The good news is that most holi· day favorites arc in ample supply. A few may be priced higher due to the great demand. Quality will continue to improve because of the warm Spring wealher FRUIT Easter means an irtcreased demand for strawberries The rain damage was more ex- tensive than earlier reported and supplies and quality arc reflecting the damage Eating quaU- ty 1s fair and prices arc holdmg There should be enough berries to satisfy consumer demand The indus try predicts improvement in about two weeks if the weather continues warm. Apples remam the sam<• with supplies com· ing from controlled atmosphere storage. Quali- ty is good. Grapes. nectarines, plums and peaches from Chile continue in ample supply wfth prices high. This s 1tuat1on will remain steady till local supplies start in about eight weeks. VEGETABLES There is bad news for artichoke lovers, sup· plies are d1mi1tbhing. Prices and quality are holding steady. If asparagus is on your Easter menu, be prepared to pay a high price. The rain damaged most asparagus crops causing short supplies. However the Imperial Valley which receives less rain than most areas, is shipping some quality asparagus. Again, the supplles are short due to damage. Prices on iceberg lettuce are up as demand exceeds supply. Butter and red leaf are pnced lower but quality is marginal due to rain damage. Romaine is still high for marginal quality. . Tomato prices are temporarily up. Qualtty is good wilh ample supplies arriving from Mex· lco. Other Mexican vegetables: bell peppers, cucumbers. eggplant and squash are all higher as supplies will be ending in approximately two weeks. Quality remains hi(ch. Corn is more plentiful so prices are drop- ping. Quality JB good. Cabbage ii aJso a cood bUY wtth prices down and Cluallty 1ood. Spinach ts abundant and prices are reasonable All Easler bunnies wlll be glad to know that carrol supplies and quaUly are good. Broccoli is higher due to short supplies. CauUnower is •leady but quality Is low. SuppUes look aood for potted nowers auch as mums, tulipa and lilies, but prices are up a bit over last year. There is a good supply of or- chid coraai . Cut nowers are in short 11upply duo to rain dam•1e. pounds 3 egg whites I/• teaspoon cream oftartar, if desired 3 tablespoons brown sugar 3 tablespoons prepared yellow mustard Bake ham following directions on can or wrapper Transfer to heat-proof platter or bak- ing sheet. Beat egg whites until frothy; add cream of tartar and heat until soft peaks form. Gradually add sugar, continuing to beat until stiff peaks form; gently fold tn mustard. Spread mixture over ham, completely covering top and sides. Bake in 400 degree oven about 10 minutes, or until lightly browned FLUFFY POTATO CASSEROLE 11 '• cups water 3 tablespoons butter :i,, teaspoon salt 1 tablespoon freeze-dried chives 3 • cup milk 2~4 cups mashed potato flakes 3 egg yolks Combine water, butler, salt, and chives in a saucepan; brin~ to a boil. Remove from heat; stir in milk and potato flakes. When liquid is absorbed, stir Ughtty with a fork. Beat egg yolks until slightly thichened. about 3 mmutes. fold into potatoes. Spoon into buttered small casserole. Bake in a 400 degree oven lS to 20 minute~. until lightly browned. 6 servings .• Easter Buns . Greet your family Easter monung with the· delightful aroma of a spicy home-made bread filling your kitchen. Your traditional Easter breakfast or brunch will be deligbUully enhanced by "Spicy Pineap· pie Buns." You'll be pleasanUy surprised bow easy they are lo make, and bow good they taste. This tender bun is gently spiced and filled with bits of canned crushed pineapple, currants and a UtUe candied fru1t. You'll discover they are lighter and more delicately (alvored than many hot cross buns. Enjoy them pJaln with butter or marg~nne. or split, toasted and spread with cream checs<' Quick and easy lo make, this yeast bread Tequires no knt:adiftg. Just a few turns on a fio'1red board to work in Uie fh.Qts. PJOY PINEAPPLE BUNS 1 (8'4 oz) can crushed plneapple 3 tabJeapoona syrup rrom pineapple 1 tabJespoon water 1 package active dry yeast I large eeg. beaten . ~cup granulated sugar 2V.. cups sitted all purpose flour ~ teaspoon nutmea V. teaspoon cinnamon s tablespoons melted butter or margarino ~ cup currants \~ cup finely chopped candled fruit :1f cup11ftcdpowderedsu1ar Turn plnt'app)e into wlrc strainer ovtr bowl, and let draan, saving syrup Combine 3 tabl spoons syrup ftom p1oeapple with water Sprinkle with 1eaJt and let stand 5 minutes to • soften. Add ~H. su1ar and 1 cup flour to )IUS\.o and beat well. Pre~ out as murh IY"'P from <See 81.INS, P11ea> u r .... ' ' ~ £2 DAILY PILOT W~noad•y, March 22, 1978 • FOOD Between Mousse and an Ice-Box Cake 1' i ct u re I aye rs o t processor. }'ollow these c hoc o I a le and ripe c:lirectiooa: banana s1Jces separated by a creamy liqueur· ITALIAN CHOCOLATE· spiked filling ••• that's BANANA STMTA our Italian Chocolate-1 envelope plain Banana Strata, a cross aelatJ.n between a mou."se and ~ ~blte creme an old·fashioned "icebox de cocoa Dem' cake." 3 CUJ19 akl.m milk The fillint is easy to· ~ tup parl·•klm do in a blender or food ricotta~ •• (From Paae Cl) Blender Method:· Cut eggs ln wedces or rhunks. Place in blender container. Add re- maining ingredients. Cover and blend on high speed until smooth and creamy, about lS seconds. (Ir necessary, tum off blender oc- cas1on ally and clean sides with rubber spatula.) Mixer Method: Chop or sieve eus into small mixing bowl. Add remaining i.Dcredienta. Beal, beginning on low speed and 1ncreaa.ing to mediu\n speed, until thoroughly blended, about 2 to 5 minutes. SAVORY SANDWICH PUFF 2 slices day-0ld whole wheat bread Butter 1 z cup finely chopped cooked roast bee! 2eggs 1 :: cup milk 2 tablespoons grated Parmesan cheese J •h teaspoons instant minced onion 1 2 teaspoon dry mustard ' 1 teaspoon salt 1 tj teaspoon pepper Pari.ley, optional Trim crusts from bread. Butter bread. Place one slice of bread, buttered·side down, in I "'!·CUP shallow baking dish or pan (5 x 5 x 1'1''- inch works well> Top with beef and remaining bread slice, buttered-side up. Beal together '-'ggs, rrulk. cheese, onion, mustard, salt and pepper. Pour evenly over sandwich. Bake an preheated 350 degrees F . oven 35 t.o 40 minutes or until knife inserted near center comes out clean. Garrush with parsley, if desired. Note: For 2 servings, recipe may be doubled. Place sandwiches side by side in small loaf pan (8\1'.a x 4"2 x 21,',-incb or smaller, if bread slices will flt>. Bake as above for 40 to 45 minutes. 00 YOUR OWN EGG THING I package <3 oz.) cream cheese, softened 21 2 tablespoons half and half, light cream nr mtlk 1 ~ tc-:ispoon salt · lt'c.tspoon t•urry powder ~ , ll'..i!->poon ground coriander J 1 tc..1spoon pepper 4 hard-cooked eggs, chopped In ~mall mixing bowl, beat cream cheese and half and half until •mooth. Add aeasonings and beat until blended. Stir in egp. Cover and cbtll to blend flavors. Spread on crackers or cocktail rye bread u an appetizer; uae as a sandwich filling or as a stuffiq for tomatoes or celery sticks. · ••• Cake <From Page CO ASSEMBLY: Position cake on serving piece, flat side up. To make foil handle, fold c.'ach stnp of aluminum foil in haJr. Crimp· together with twisting motions lo form foil sn .. kes. Braid foil snakes with yarn. Tie yam bow to handle. Stick both ends securely into cake to resemble a basket handle. Fill center hole and 1" circle around bole with Coconut Grass. Top grass with jelly beans and morsels. Decorate remaining top of cake and aides with Whipped Cream piped through a pastry tube. COCONUT GRASS: In small bowl, combine <'Oconut and green food coloring; mix until coconut is evenly colored. WIOPPED CREAM: In small bowl, com- bine heavy cream, confectioners' sugar, vanilla cJttract and yellow food coloring; beat until sort peaks form . • • ·.B11DS <From Page~co pineapple ac; possible, using back or spoon, and add the pineapple to yeast mixture. Stir in spaces and 4 tablespoons butter. Then gradually mix in remaining 11,', cups flour to make a moderately stiff dough. Cover bowl, and let rise in warm place until doabled, .about l to 1112 hours. Turn dough out onto -floured board, and knead In t.be currants and .candied fruit, working in a liWe additional nour ;f needed. Divide dough Into 12 equal portions and shape into buns. Place on UpUy 1reued baking shfft, about 2 inches apert.. Brush with remaining tablespoon butter. Let rise in warm place until doubled, about 45 minutes to l hour. Bake In moderate oven (350 degrees) 2S to 30 minutes. until browned. Remove to wire rack and let cool about 10 lo 15 minutes. Mix powdered sugar with a little re- maJning pineapple syrup, to a thin glaze, and spread over bun&. Serve warm or cold, plain or 1Spllt and toasted. Makes 12 buns. , •Lindberg• RawUneelted ALMONDS REG. $2.'45 18 oz. '• tea.'lpoon sail (or lovely flavor' Why not time you want a low-cal drained water packed butter-fiavored salt) add 1t to the dash you're nibble. Raw mushrooms while meat tuna, flaked 3 or 4 ice cubes making; i.1mply cut down taste entirely different over torn romame let- '· serving box on other liquids. If you from cooked ones. Lots of tuce, with onion rines vanilla ln.stant pudding s1.r........ have DO US& for tbe mushroomfanslikethem and tomato wedges. mix ._. muab.mom "broth" inlhe even better raw (me in· topped wlt.h diet Italian 12 c:bocolate icebox reelpeyou'reworkingon, cluded)1 dressing. cookies save the liquid in the Shrimp 'Nr Green 1 lar1e ripe banana, refrigerator for your next • MEAL-SIZE Pepper-or cold cooked sliced 8 81.rbva Gibbon soup or stew. Or use it as MUSHROOM SALADS crab or lobster, on a bed Sprinkle gelatin on liq· Y 5 ·the cookine liquid for Here are some slim or lettuce with scallions ueur and set a.side lo Ol.bervegetables. combinationa to try; add and 1 ow -ca 1 or i e aolten. COOK.EJ;> OR RAW? sliced raw mushrooms Thousand Wand dress. Combine milk, ricotta Yes. then(are still some to: ing. and salt in covered people who have never Steak 'N' Spinach -• Chicken and Celery - blender and blend com· Depa t' t 1n en t 0 f With that 1D lhind, it'• eaten m&.WllroolJ\$ raw. If chilled leftover lean Cor cold roast turkey) pletely smooth. Aericulture a whol~ time to answer 1e>m.e of· youbaveo'l, by all means roast beef or steak, red mixed wllh diet mayoo- GenUy heat gelatin in pound ol. mushrooms is ten. ask•d questioDI try it now. Slice raw onion and diet French or naise and minced onion, liqueur until it melts. only lZ1 calories (a haJf. about mushrooms . muabrooms into a salad, Bleu cheese dressing. mounded on lettuce, Add t o blender and cup, slieed. is only 20!). DRAINED OR UN-or serve them as an ap-Egg 'N' Spinach -garnished with sliced blend smooth. Add ice Mu.shrooma may be ex-DRAINED? Many ree· petiier with a tangy dip hard-cooked eggs, raw~ mushrooms. Or stuff the cubes and bleod until ice pensive, but name ipes that use canned (or some bottled low· spinach, oruon and diet filling Into auper-size is dissolved. Add pud· another .. luxury" food mushrooms call for t~ calorie ulad dressing.) Italian dressing. Strew mushroom caps (chop ding mix and blend thatcostsyoutbatlitUe mushrooms to be Or111implyspri.oklewith onsomeb,Jconbits. tbestemsintotbesalad smooth. (Mixture should in calories! drained. What a waste ot salt and pepper the next Tuna 'N' Tomato -mixture). be thick. If nQt, chill in =..:..:::..:.:.:=:......----......::.:....:=.::.:.:....:..:..::.:.:.~..:::.:.:....:.:.. ___ ...:......:.:. _______________________ _ refrigerator a few minutes and it will thicken.) Arrange six cookies.in the bottom of a loaf pan. Add a layer of the pud- ding mixture, a layer of bananas, more pudding mixture, a layer of the remairung cookies and the remaining pudding mixture. Chill 12 hours, until the flavors are blended and the mixture is set. Ten servings, 145 calories each. DIETETIC VERSION J'OR SUGAR·DIETERS -Use a 4-serving en· velope of dietehc, sugar- rree vamlla pudding mix and dietetic chocolate WE WILL BE CLOSED EASTER SUHDA Y, MARCH 26 cookies. Substitute 2 tea-1-------------,..-~;;;..---....,......,"""""'~~~---~~----:~~~--'"T------~'.""""'.'~~~~:-'1 ~poons brandy or rum URGE CALIF. U.S. HO. I RUSSETT RED. IPE ~1:a~~~~~~pmc•:i~dw~~e:. •vocADOES NT~IOES IOMATOES in place of chocolate liq-M 1' ueur. Because dietetic Io... pudding mix 1s not "m-C.UO log stant" and needs cooking, lollow this procedure: Soften gelatin in cold water mixed with brandy na voring. set aside. Pre pare pudding mix J...,...:::!!!!!l!!!!!!!l~;_'='_~~~L.. with 2 cups skim milk ac- cording to packa~e d1rec lions. Remove from heat and combine hot pud- ding. ricotta cheese and soft gelalm mixture an covered blender and blend smooth. Chill in refrigerator until slightly thick . Layer with bananas and cookies in a loaf pan. Chill until set. Ten serv· ings, 100 calories each, • Rosemary Farm • Large Grade AA EGGS 1 DOZ. REG 95• 'r.ticK.A5C SPllNMU TOMATOES I -. ' .. ' LI. FOSTER or L\CKY FARMS MARY KITCHEN FRYINI ·cHICKEN 21/J 0%. CUlltS Roast Beef Hash 15 oz. CAM ~SA~!~L ·J9c • . - FOOD Wed~ay, March 22, 197(1 DAILY PILOT ~ Sirnnel Cake Welcomes in the Spring Holidays "S1mnel cake," frutt·Mch, fragrantly spiced with cinnamon and nutmeg, and lavisbly spread with almond pa:.tc, 1s a beautllul and festive Easter dessert, even though this centuries-old type of Englh;h cake was originally made lD celebration of" Mothering Sunday." On this Sunday in mld·Lent children v~iled parents with treats and trinkets, a simnel cake among other goodies. Several centuries ago, loving daughters as~embling the ingredients for this traditional cake, had to go to one or the many fairs to buy the spices and dried fruit re· quired, for then there were nQ grocery stores u we know them today. S1mnel cake, uke many heaV)t fruit cakes, keeps for weeks 1f protected from drying air. In England, any leftover cake for Mothering Sun· day can be stored for Easter. This year, in the United States, any remaining simnel cake can be hidden Wltil Mother's Day early in May. There are many variations ol the slmnel uke recipe in England. The following r~ipe from the test kitchens of the American Spice Trade Association can also be changed a bit. You can, for inslance, use H'l t.easpoom allspice instead of nutmeg and cloves. Use pecans, 1f pref<.>rrcd, or some other nut. Use butter frost- ing in place of almond paste, if desired. SJMNELCAKE 3 cups all purpose flour 2 teaspo<>ns ground cinnamon 1 kaspoon ground nutmeg 1 teaspoon baking powder ·~ teaspoon isalt '·!a teaspoon ground cloves 1 box (1 lb.) dark ram.ru; 1 box (1 lb.) currants l cup coarsely chopped walnuts '·'2 cup halved candied cherries 2 tablespoona brandy (optional) 1 cup butter or margarine, softened l box <l lb.) dark brown sugar 5eggs 3 cans (8 oz. each> almond paste v.i cup apricot preserves, melted Line a greai.ed 8·inch spring-form pan with waxed paper. Grease waxed paper. In a medium bowl combine flour, cinnamon, nutmeg, bakrng powder, saJt, and cloves; set aside. Combine raJs&ns, currants, walnuts, cher- ries and brandy. set aside. In the large bowl or an electrtc mixer beat butter and sugar until tight and fluffy. Beat in eggs, one at a time, beating well after each addition. With mlxer at low speed, alternately stir in the flour and the fruit mixtures, one-third at a time. Stir just un· hi blended. Pour mto prepared pan; spread smooth. Bake an a preheated slow oven (325 degrees) for 1 hour. reduce oven heat to 300 degrees and bake for 2 hours more or until a cake tester mscrted in center comes out clean. Cool cake on rack for 1 hour. Turn out onto rack: remove waxed paper and cool complete· ly. Cut cake horizontally Into two layers. Knead together 21 2 cans of the almond paste; roll out mlo two 8-inch circles Brush top of both cake layers with the prtlserves. Place almond paste <'1rcles on pre11erves. Arrange layer cake fashion with almond layers in center and on top Form remaining 1,~ can ot almond paste into 12 balls. Place around outer edge of cake. Bake in an extremely hot oven (525 degrees) for 2 minutes or until paste 1s golden brown, if de· sired. Let. cake cool. Store in an airti&ht con tainer. Keeps well for several weeks. If desired. fill and top cake with hard sauce made by heat· ing together ~-cup butter or margarine. soft- ened with 2 cups confectioners' sugar. OLD ENGLISH APPLE PIE 14 cup firmly packed brown sugar lr:l cup granulated sugar 2tablespoons flour 2 tablespoons apple pie spice Pastry for 2·crust, 8 inch pie 1 can Cl lb. 4 oz.) pie sliced apples, drained 12 cup dark seedless raisins 3 tablespoons orange JWCe 2 tablespoons butter or margarine Combine the sugars, flour and apple pie spice. Spr\nkle 2 tablespoons sugar mixture over bottom pastry Alternate apples, raisins and sugar mixture over pastry Sprinkle with orange juice. dot with butler Cover with top pastry Flut(' edge::;, cut slits m top crust. Bake 1n a preheated hot oven (400 degrees) for 45 minutes or until nicely brown. Serve warm with cream or cheddar cheese 1f desired YIELD: l 8·inch pie. S1mnel cake for spring holidays. Soarin' Souffle Whether novice cook or culinary pr'o. a soume that soars sublimely to ~olden he1~hls lifts the sp1nls of its <'rcator The Top Hat ChHsc Soumc 1s .1 dish for the most elegnnt company meal or ml.lmalc dmner 'fherc·~ no hnrrn either Jn inviting thl" spe<'ial t·ntrct> to cl fJm1lv week day mc•<•I to pol1:.h your souHlc :-1k1llo; I 2newme Tht• key tu success with a wuffle 1s controll· Jng the all important in- )!rc>d1cnt al its heart - air To produce · max- imum volume, egg ~hill•:. s hould be at room temperature before beating. Stiff peaks will form when the egg whales have bt'cn beaten su!f1ciently. To rel.am as much or the air as possible, the egg whiles should be folded very carefully into the rest of the sou!rte m1x- · ture The jaunt} tnp hat ef· fret • .., '>l lllptt·d into the top of thl' s11urrle mtx· lllre "''th the tip or a '-POon The top h;it rises high during baking to IJl..t• its bow at the din· ner table. Because the Top Hat Cheese Souffle should be :;erved immediately, the other courses in the meal must be timed around 1t To provide a nice con- l r as t to the delicate ~olden soufOe, Spinach Salad is a good choice. Serve 1t crisp or walled, (•tther a~ ;.m appetizer course or an accompanl· ment with Ute eolree. A wilted salad can be pre- pared by heating the dressing and tossing wilb the greens just. before serving. TOPBA.T CDEF.SE SOtJFFLE •!! cupmarganne 1'3 cupOour \~2cups milk 1 teaspoon salt Dash of cayenne 2 cups (8 ozs.) shredded sharp natural cheddar cheese 6 eggs, separated Make a white sauce with margarine, flour, milk and seasonings. Add cheese; atlr ontU melted. Remove from heat. Gradually add sli gbtly beaten egg yolks: cool. Fold into stiffly beaten egg whites; pour Into 2-quart soume dish OT' casserole. With Up or spoon, make a slight indentaUon or "track" around top of soulne l lncb in from edge to form a top hat. Bake at 300 de~ 1 hour and lS minutes. Serve immediately. s aerYinal. 8PINACB SM.AD 2 gt&. u Jb.) ten spl.nach 4 crl1ply cooked bacon dceft, crombled Ortton rinp , hard-cook.ad qp. ebopped Golden eae1ar or ItaUan dreulna Combine 1plna~ bacon, ooJons, e11• enou1h drenln• to ota~• u,ii1.1.1. • toll . . For a wilted Hlad beat tho dreaalllc .,. to11 with &ho 1plllach j . belcnitnlDC. ger When ycu make hot dogs or hamburgers, do you think about the bun? Or is it just a device to hold the whole thing together? The Roman Meal Company thinks that the bun should add a taste and texture all its own. Roman Meal Hot Dog Buns and Hamburger Buns are made from a unique blend of natural whole grains that are combined with other nutrttious ingredients like enriched flour and pure golden honey. Light brown in color wlth the delicious taste of Roman Mears natural whole grain goodness • Once you try them, you'll never use any other kind. Baked by 'Webers ' . - ca OAtt. "( PlLOl FOOD Sugar Overtakes.Starch in Nation's Diet ByDOROTHYWENClt [ ] the •Ulared cereal& -after a meal or snack excess au1u uuses 1boald llO& eat alliellfld Joalitute. These recom- 0r .... c:w-y.-.... _ tor ezample. tome will help cut down on dJ1betea. Scientis ts at all beeaue It &a !lip meodatioaa allow eome Sugar ha:s been in the . a _._A . cbeeee, peanut b\ltter on tooth decay potenUaJ BP· aren•t sure that sugar lo la ebole.aenL Doel W• abellflah -claau. tiews a lot lately. ~~ ttllhal'Q crackett, bard preciably. the diet plays any part locl1de all ''•Ufl1111 scallops, O)'lterl, crab. D. F lr s t0 c ~-m1e t hhe cooked eu. enn a bot Q. Mv -•~-•, ..... 1.a__ at a It l n ca u al n g e •en 1 b r Imp a a a and lobettt -but not. n11et!!YSt.aOa14 or ~_! dos. These food1 are eat IO 'm~c::'f ....... ~ dJabetee. C\trttnl think-lobster, wblt.b tae dear11 sbrhnp, tn cbol•aterol· Ub tt'l:Uh 5 te.s tepro5polltGU hlcber in protein than otber •• ~, ........... -1t:='p tile ls that it does not. It loves' control dim. In earlier Y e ena e ect 'Wttll 111Uk. I fti1tre 11•1 yoqr queetioDI ia "yes." cereal and wiU alve the ,._1 .. _, .. ~ • .:=:::.. U'":."';1 could hHe an indirect A. Some new tnlonna-recommendaUont, all CodmHmiltee 0N°.~~tdtion ~tt.er Uaat &bey eat um A btet.tflit ot tuaattd breakfast more •t.a~to .... ""'1 .. t d7i.:::"•',·::_."'1~ effect, however. if it is a lion bu ''Ome atooa re· 1beWiab wue Uated " an uman ~. · tbu Dodrlng -t11t.t? cer•1tl with mUk def-power. "' -II----contributor to an obesity gardlng the cholesterol foods to be avoided. Jf Ooe ol the goals wu a Alto, ir 6e)' brula their inltfl.)' Is bett« than no Susar consumed as 911• aagar doem't caaaae problem. Adults who are content ol aheUBab, and ab rim p la au c b a r e commendation that teeth after breakfHC, breattast at all. part of a meal ta less d.laM&es. Wbo'ariptf obesecanbunorepron modlfled recommend•· favorite of your Americans reduce their won't tlll• •elp coH-Perhaps, however, you likely to cauae tooth de-A. People who have to developlns diabetes. e lions abot& lhelltbh tn husband'•• l>Olllbly be consumption of reftned tend &be bad effect of could gradually in· c ay tban au1ar con-diabetes must ourtaH cbole1terol-QJ11ttol diet.a could aubsUtute it oc· aodpl'OOe9Hdaqanby ah Hl•i'ecl cereal oa lroduee aome other aumecl as snacks their consumption of Q.Myhmballdlaoaa were made about~ caaioaall7 lA limited about 45 percent IOU.at Utelr teeaat fooda for breakfast to (especially ltidty, aooey suiar 80 tbla may have .eboleeterol-eoatnl 4IJe& years ago by the Na· amounts as an ea al· bugar would ac~ !or A. The 8DR'ft to both replace or substitute for ones). Tootb bru~ given you tbe idea that aad lau beell told Ile Uonal Heart and Lung lowance. onlyaboutlOperceotot :--------..... --------------------------------------------~------~-----------------------------------------------------------------total ener17 lntake. The commit.tee fcu.ad t hat over ball (~ per. cent) of our carbohydrate l.lltak~ na· t1onall,y, is from auaar, while 47 percent ia from complex carbo~ates (starch). This picture has been changing gradually over the yean. Back in the ea rly 1900s, s tarch m ade up about 68 per· c ent of the c a r bohydrales in the American diet and aug. ar 32 percent. At that time people ate more ~tarc hy foods such as b reads, potatoea, cereals, pasta and l6s of the costly protein foods such as meat and poultry as well as a 1.Jttle less s ugar. ·. / The Easter Feast Fill your basket at Lucky and T h e Senate Select Committee felt that re· t urning lo a diet having a .higher proportion of ~larch to sug<Ar would be mor e healthful. They therefore recommended t ha t along with reduced sugar consumption there be an increase in the consumption of complex ca rbohvdrates and 1 ·naturally occur ring 'u~ars" las m fruit) - fr om about 28 pcn·1mt to -1K f)ercc•nt of our •mergy intake Another news item "as the recommend a tron by a Federal Trade lo m m1ss1on !FTC> rnmm 1ttcc that the ad 'crtismg of high-sugar : food s on children's 1 television he banned or regulated t This recommendation was based on evidence that sugary foods and the "bwet>t taste" pre· dominated among t he many food adver tise· mc n b directed to children on television. Several pubhc citizen ~ro ups are behind this proposal, cla1mmg that 'oung children are be- ing exploited and that they are m danger of de· Hloping hrelong habits of eating too many sug. ary foods. !\ow, the March issue of Consumer Reports, pu b lis h ed by Co n sumt'r's Union, features an extensive re port on :-.ugar. t illed ·Too Much Sugar"" In t his article we learn that \\hlle the total mount of sugar m our diets has not increased greatly in the last SO years. the amount of control we have over the _._ugar has changed. ln t he 19~. 64 per- C'cnt of the sugar used in l h as·country was purchased i n bulk by consumers for addition to foodc; made at home while 30 pcr<'ent went to indus t ry. Today, con :.umer~ buy only 24 per <'Cnt of th<' sugar as sug a r . and 65 percent is used by mdustry The sui;ar used by in dustry is "hidden" in a multitude of ever yday prepared foods. Jt will be listed on the ingre· dient list -but often by a variety of na mes since the industry uses dif. ferent forms of sugar. Tbus a label tlstlng miabt lnclude, in addi· tion to sugar: sucrose, glucose. dextrose, lac· tose. tructose, corn syrup solids, molasses. honey etc. In some products. 1r yo\t put all the forms of sugtr together, s ugar would be the number one ingredient. But by Jistbi1 them separately 1 the company can nota letttni you know th.la. became anothei-llllf&' dieot •uch as cereaJ will be the nnt to be listed on tb• label u the most predominant s lnile in· 1redJent. SO 1.f you 're try 1111 fo cut down your auaar con1uml)lion. be sure tO Joo>r tor all lht wordJ for sugar on a libel, Just 0 1u1ar.t•· • Q. llf: am• wer7 ~aa1r.1 &a C114 mora .. 1 u4 t • one f eod __, ., l willlllt· 17 l• a c real .. A tradition In menus. You almost can't say the word "Easter" without thinking automatically or ham ... delicately smoked, ready for the addition of cloves and pineapple and maraschino cherries for garnish. We have turkey, if that's your preference. And we have the greatest looking rib roasts for the beef eaters in the house. A lot of folks are breaking the ham habit this year in favor of our rib roasts And we have the trimmings: yams, brown-and-serve roUs. salad tossings, pineapples -fresh or canned, even juice for basting. Try turkey that way: delicious! Pots and pots of lilies. They're so elegant, you mtght want to share a plant with a neighbor. It's a pleasant [a.,ler gesture globe before the color·dunking. We still teese our son about the year he e >cperlmenfed with shoe polish. Those wen? quickly disposed of a., inedible, but we had to admit he was creative. Point Is, decorattng eggs Js A timeless ... and tmely •.• pleasure of this season, and a good family pro1ect A time for •haring. Sure there·s a great deal more to a holiday than just the food. But the warmth and sharing of breaking the bread together has a great deal to do with keeping families together. Easter 1s a time for the renewal of certain traditions that remind us of our joint Interests, concerns ... and origins. Many famiUes who don't gflare the reli9tous conviction of the day's significance, still find it has deep emotional importanc~ to the family group because this 1s a time of feasting, a time for celebrating the abundance that spring will bring. We understand all that, so we've prepared f~ your shopping nee<iJ. We don't mean to give you a hard sell pitch about our pria!s this week. Not for Easter. We'd rather leave you with the thought that Ifs our understanding of your family's needs, (and yes. your budget among them) that make!' us unique. We feel that's at the heart of whcit discount is truly all about. Eggs, the f amlly tradition. Our family 1~ now old enough to be quite creative. One daughter, who is ·:into" natural things (using her vernacular) d ecorates at least a dozen •'99" with natural Ingredients like tea and coffee and beet Julee and onion skins bolled In wakr. The other daughter takes the normal packet of food dyes and wields a ·paintbrush for some one·of·a·klnd designs, as the spmt moves her. Last year, It was rubber bands wrapped around the eggs before dipping tht!m In color. She got some interesting effects. And the year before, we dipped pa1afm on each poor Uttle white Fres h Meats SHANK PORTION ~rv~~o .... lO .97 LARGE END RIO ROAST D0NDC00££f •••.. lO. 158 fRESH TU~KEYS Al' f\ V f ·~~ ,.il1AI tl IJ .78 DONELESS HAM C\IO.\HV 't. 0.L 01\ tiALI WAlff<AD0(0 flJ\.l'fCOO•!C lD 198 TOP ll.OUND STEAK IONllUI O()NU(O Kii . . . • \0 1 • 8 8 oo,..nm TIP STEAK l'ONOIOOtH /ICl.'<tl.... Ill. 1, 98 LAAGE END ll.10 STEAK ~DUI........ . ... I& 1.68 £XTM LEAH G~OUND OE£1 i 48 llOO "°' ocuo ,, ' fA I • IA. • DOHEUSS Slt't.'IHG otu l'iO'UOl((f •• •• ttl 1.58 OSCAP.MAYER DACON ' '-tOm«• 2LO.) '> . •• t IL At.(;. 1. 7 8 LADY ~-EE SllC~~ O~~?.~cs. 1•48 OUlT POll.TIOH or HAM Ml•<OC..tll • •• •• • .lO. 1.08 CENlEP. CUT HAM SLICE~ "\ 98 ""' "'"'"V(OO>lO • 10 L • OOH[O T~OUl Fresh Meats CUll.E &1 HAM HALF ~~'-·t~·~~Y(/X)t> j) •••• H\ 2.79 Fil.ESH POPVY DUCKS -· ;,·, )l.01 ...... c.a. 1.09 c"oss l\ID P.OAST llO>Ol<l"OCll<D((>D(HPIOCX •• , .CA 1.58 YMU ENO RIO ROAST i e• OONl)(O 9(1 • 1a. • u llONELESS P.UMP ROAST f -.. I 1 ••• l0.. 1 .58 7 O~NE1 CHUCK P.OA!>T ·~ 1.09 T DONDTEAK , .. , ~ 2.18 TOP 51RLOIN ~TEAK • • 1. n ., •• • 2 .18 C:anned &Packaged ! BROWN & SERVE ROUS 49 HAl\llnT Ot.'f . .. ... 120 PK(,. e Canned&Packaged f'·PlAHTEll."SMIXEO NUTS ¢ ""1HIUHUI\ • , • •lOLCNO 1.6J CMMOEll.ll.Y ~UCE t.AD'flll AUJIO°'WHOU. • ll>Ol ~'l .39 r LAOY LEE PIHCAPPLE 0 "AIO'llJV""-'1tfjj • lOot.CAM .49 L ~;~:.oAS·~-P~H~oi..-• 96 t ~~r!!:! ~~-"~~CAN .so P DIGOATCHCOOKIEMIX i 89 0 1rm CllOCll(JU:"-0-); 01 OOll • b ~N~llON ~~?t~'~1 .19 A ~:~~·~TE ~I\~:~ 1.29 P' EAP.L Y CALIF' OLIVES h )f\IHJ M_At1•,.~ I , 1/ I 1. 2 9 A ~E~~~.s.~~~~~~.D2•0:.i.•• .59 ! ~~~F,.~~~,oz .. ~ .69 P CHEEZ·rT CAACK£M 6 llJl•l"''t . 11'>Cll l!CI• • 7 3 b ~OY.L_EET~MATO~~ •22 ! ~~.~~~~~•,Ol.CNt .22 Health & Beauty Aids f' DAH ll.Oll·ON • MGl.UA °" llfkl>i!U) • u Ol t ll 1 . .3 9 l MENH[H SPEED STICK 79 0 Y<1 Hlf\ool IM t1tG '1 ~ 01 !ITt • JOHNSON 6 JOHHSOM ... ~II<:"~ (A" 'r "'<i Clrf\O .59 HOlO COUGH SOPP9.ES$At4T AQADOllO«Otla<L ...... 1\JQiOfl'I .76 L ~~~~ °:"~~~ "" 1.09 Delicatessen Dairy & Frozen !LADYLEE ICECREAM 89 5QUAllIS~ GAL.CTN. e !LARGE EGGS GRADEM 69 WW UC •• DOZ. enc. • .!: ~~~~~-~~~~~o.e 1.99 p Biil.OS EYEV£GETADlE~ I; IMll.C>\141\llllUI •• • •• 100L"'.G .69 Household & Pet P' AlUMIMUM FOil b UCWUtMll.V'(f'JIJ"t ) ''#l'O\ .69 VILLA PAP~~ ~lU •coo,.., • 99 c,_1ot ,01eov1<.c1ov~·"" •• P<Qlll• n. ~· •1 ...... ~~·,,.,,..~•111t~(W't~r0rl'trl'Oiif'd ....... v...~~ .... c...-... ~.,... liquor & Wine L LAN~-~:~o~-~:'! ... 3•99 l' DLUE NUN WINE 0 l•~OI ••••••• !OOE.81'.. 7.99 P' CHEMIN OLAHC WINE 0 l" .., Nol.flNOL • • t SL 111.111. 2 , 99 J. !IEOASTlAHI MT. WIMES 2 99 Ill C. YIN llO'l Cl<AIJ.6. 'IHa•L IL • MATEUS l\OSE WINE ............. 500l.A. 6.99 ALMADEN MT. WINES C.. ,1,tiR1(t11» ••••••·· •••· t )l'f'f\ 81\... j.15 GAUO \VlHE ·~1"0~2 89 '•••''-'" twAf'IC Mf>ntv~n(;1_tMQ'f....... • ANDRE CHAMPAGNE I• ~ C".!UIC .. °' 1'011\R. 2 . .39 LUCKYVOOKA r • r , • 1 1)11'\ t'L 7.22 LUCKY OOURDO,., •• r r ~IMY>I .I 7'l"'-81\. 9.77 ~ C~ ~OlAO~~~--.S9 L ~·UP ll~E~G~ ?eCll. ...... .33 AVALA31 Oll.V A I~ Wlnt\IQUOll 1'°' . Produce CALI FOP.NIA AVOCADOS LAl\GE St1E. ........ CA. .29 RED J~,.. ....... ~ .• 38 HAWAllA~ PINEAPPlE 88 1 Arl()Oll(. OEllOOIJ!I .. • •• l , • HONEYO£tf MO.OHS V~llO I...... .. ......... ~ .~9 EASTEP. WU..S DLOOM 0 IOI, ., ••• .,... •••• , •• C4 2.6& ,_ ... ..,_,...~._,_........._ "'-- ... what discount is all about. I t .. .,, ........ 11110. ITATI OOi.UOI 8&.Y • '""""'°" .. MO.IUCUDAfl. '"1U.19'TON 111 MO. IAYOtlOND • OUHMOf'Oft 11m MAOMOUA AfL All Lucky Stores wUI be CLOSED EASTER SUNDAY So our employees may enjoy the holidoy with the4rfamili@s. 9ft•lllM ... - -. . . . r . . :' . .. . ~ . . . . . l ,, I i I FOOD WednMday, March .22.1978 DAILY PlLOT ca Spe~ial Diefs By June Roth Energy-Saving Meal for Easter Diet Can: Help Gout Recovery The medical term "gout .. usually bnngs lhouehta of~ fat old roan wtth a i,wollcn throb. bins big toe. The fact is that this affllction can strike men of every s hape, as young as thirty. Women seem to have a natural protection from aout until after menopause, when they are then just as vulnerable to attack. Gout is considered to be caused by a hereditary ailment of a metabolic defect of overproduction of uric acid in the blood. An attack of gout <·an sho~ up as intense pain m the b1i:: tot• cir 111 <.1n\ ,,lh<>r body Joint It s im portant to gel a mt•d1cal d1agno~1s of whethn a hurting JO\nt is aC"tuc.1lly caus<'<l by ..:out Left untreated by medicine and diet the Joint can become inflamed with l:.wollcn red hot !;kin in the surrounding area. ll's the kind or torment that can make even tough guys cry. Besides medication, many doctors reeom· mend a low-purine diet to combat the ache and inflammation of the joint. While the attack 1s lD progress, the doctor may prescribe the elimina- tion or animal protein. such as meat, poultry and fish; organ meats, such as hver, kidneys, and swei!lbreads; and all dned peas and beans. Fats may be hm1ted to one tahlespoon per day. Some doctors advise om1-;s1on of coffee, tea, cocoa. and uU akoholic-hev<:rai.:<:" too \fl1•r th1• initial ;itt,1cl-h.1-. -..11h..,1dt>1I. lcun m1·•1ls. fish and r)()ultr~ an· l!l'rwrall~ n·strictl'd to \\\.0 -.mall Sl'rl<ltll!" u du} J. 't ra pr<Jlt'IO can bt• d1·riH·<l from t'I!~"· 1 h1"'"1: dncl 1·n•a1rl\ Pt'dnul butt1·r A\md gra\.~. mt·..it ha..,ed llt<Jlhs org<rn meats, wild gamt>. dutk. ~m\ hov1es, herring, sardines, mackerel, :.hnmµ, :.callops, and oysters. Eal only refined white grained breads, re· f"med cereals, pasta, and white rice. Avoid asparagus, cauliflower, peas, mushrooms, pep- pers. and spinach. Eliminate nuts, !ip1ces. and rich desserts. Proparin1 Euter d.l.nner fort.be family used to mean that tho cOQlt would start the oven early m the morning and spend most of ber dv in~ kitchen. Today's homemaker, however, ls just as much an efficiency expert • lbe ls a good cook. She prefers a dinner ln which all the oven dishes can be baked simultaneously, for a sav- ing of fuel and of her own time and enercy. Less time in the kitchen means more time to spend with family and friends! In celebration of Spring, the vefetable casserole provides a delightful variety o tastes -corn, fresh zuecblni, onions and the bright warmth of stewed tomatoes. Layered in a caaserole, they bake to a marvelous medley ol garden flavors. Spicy Peach Salad is the perfecl comple~ ment to ham. Combine canned sliced peaches. a .spicy syrup and gelatin and chill briefly. Fold 1n instant nonfat dry milk that bas been wblpped to airy lightness with ice water and lemon juice This gives a beautifully light t ext\Jte to a very clt>gant molded salad De!tsert 1s another treat a Chocolate Orange Refrigerator Torte that.can be made the day ahead Layers of chocolate cookies crushed w1lh <·hopped nuts and butter alternate with layers of fluffy orange gelatin (the fluff comes from instant nonfat dry milk crystals and ice water beaten to stiff peaks). Thia light but aaUs· fying dessert delivers maximum enjoyment with a minimum. of kitchen time and labor - exactly the right formula for any enera-uvini feast! VEGETABLE C~EROLE 3'h cups (two 16-ounce cans) drained whole kernel corn 4 cups< t pound) shced zucchini squash 1 _. teaspoon salt '" le<1spoon pepper 11 ,. cups coarsely chopped onions :1• ,. rup" Ctwo 14 "1 ounce can1» Stewed Tom at()('s and JUlc't• Ham, Swiss Pie Easter ham, casserole, torte. 2 tablespaom cornstarch Place com ln buttered tb:912-incb baking dish. Place zucchini oo ~· Sprinkle with sait. ~pper and onions. Drat,p ~aloes: reserve Julee. Place tomatoes on top Of cmons. Combine r eserved juice and cornstudi. Pour over top of vegetables. Cover with foil. .Bake in moderate oven (325 deg?'ees) l hour 15 Dlioutes or w:Wl zut'cbini is tender. / SPICY PEACH SALAD 2 cups 06-ounce can) sliced peaches Peach syrup plus water to mak~ t l'Up 2 tablespoons vinegar 1 t cup !lugar 10 whole cloves 2 c:tnnamon 1Ucb 1. packqe C3 ouncea> peach flavored cotatln . ~ eup instant nonfat dry mWc cJ'1lta1s ~ cup lee water ttablesPOCJDlemon juice vrain pucbes; measure syrup. Add water to make 1 cup. Combine peach syrup. vlneaar. t-ugar. cloves and cinnamon stick.a ln saucepan. Heat to boiUni; cover and simmer 10 minutes. Strain syrup mixture over 1elalln ln bowl. Stir until gelatin ia dissolved. Chop peaches. Add to gelaUn. Chill until corasiatency of unbeaten ea whites. Mix inst&Dt milk cryst.ala and lee water In small mtler bowl Beat at bllh speed unW aoft ~ab form (3-4 mioutes>. =eJJl<JO iulee. ConUDue beatlnC unW atiff form (3-4 minutes). Fold into gelatin mlxtW'e. spoon Into I individual th-cup molds or one kup mold. Qlill unUlfiqn.. 1ielatin CHOCOLATE.ORANGE tEFBJGERATORTOaT~ 1 packaee (3 ounces) orange flavored t cup boiling waler "2 cup cold water 2 cups (about 22 cookies) crushed creme· hlled chocolate cookies ~~ cup chopped nuts i,, cup melted butter ¥.t cup lnatant nonfat dl'J' milk C1')'Stala ~~lcewater 1 ta~poon lemon julce l>luolve gelatin in boUiDC waw. Stir In eotd water. Chill to consistency of unbeaten egg whites. Combine crushed cookies, nuts and but-ter. Combine instant. milk cqstals and ke water in small mixer bowl. Beat on high speed until soft peaks form (3-4 minutes>. Add lemon JUice. Continue beating until stiff peaks form 1 3·4 minutes longer> Fold into gelatin Press half of cookie mixture on bottom of 0-inch '-Pring form pan Spoon half of gelatin mixture on top. Repeat layeri. Chill until firm. 2·3 hours Olympia Gold Light Beer Gelatin, plam ice ercam, plain cake, and pud· dings may be the only desserts allowed by your doctor ('lllCl\I·:~ JWSf·.'1,\RY I hr1>1l<"r 1·h1< kl·n. quartcrt'<I 111\M AND SWISS PIE •1 inch pie shell h l'Ji(g!;, bcatl'n has a small announcement to make. l'un ft 011·11 111 .1ng1• 1u1l't• ('Onl'r>nt 1 al•• • ll'Lt'ipoon d1 l•'<I n1-.t·rn;.ir> ', lc<1s poon ~Jlt . ':• <·up wut1·1 1 teaspoon corm.tan h Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Arrange chicken 1n a :-.hallow bakin~ pan. Combine orange juice t•oncentrale. rosemary, Jo.alt. water. and <·ornstc.1rc:h in a small saucepan heat and stir until smooth and thick. Spoon over <'hicken and bakt• 1 h'1ur Makes 4 servings. BAKED VEAi. C.1IOPS 4 \l'al chops, ',"thick 1 1 cup tomato JU1ce •:: cup crushed corn flakl':-. ':: tca<;poon dried 1ir1•J.:<H\<1 4 slices lt•nwn Prehc•at O\t·n to ;175 I' Tnm chops well of rat. Dip l'hop:-. Into tomato JUICe and then into crushed <·orn flukt>s Place 1n <!n ungreased shallow b<ik mg p.in Sprinkle with oregano Bak<> 45 minutes. or until fork tender Serve "1th lf'mon sh<.:l'S M akcs 4 sernngs POTATO SOUP 4 large pcc-icd potatoes. diced t onion, diced fine 2 stalks c·ell·r~" d1('ed fin" 2 cups watc•r l ('Ups skim milk ' , tC'a.'ip<lon s ail I s prig fres h chllwced I l('<1Spoon butler PlaCl' potatoes, onion. celery, water. and milk in a mcd111m s auc•<>pan Add salt. d11lwecd, and butter S1mmc:r 20 minutes. or until potatoc" are !;oft Ladle into bowls Makes 6 serving~ I l'llP ,, ()/ I 'hrcrldcd Sw1:.!; cheese I cup rhopped cooked ham 1 can < 4 oz > :-.liced mui.hroom s. well drained I cup haH and half or ltght cream I tablespoon instant mm<'ed onion ' ~ teaspoon salt 'i teaspoon dry mustard 1 , tcaJ-.poon pepper Uru:,h pie shell Wllh a -.mall amount of the ~alcn e~gs Pride bot tom and sides with fork Bake in preheated 450 degree oven 5 minutes o r until li ght golden brown. Set aside. Stir together cheese, ham and mu s hroom s. Sprinkle into pie s hell To the beaten eggs. add remaining ingredients Beat until well blended. Pour mto pie shell over cheese rruxture. Bake m preheated 375 degree O\ en 30 to 35 minute:, or until knife inserted near center comes out clean. L<'l ~tand 5 minutes before serving Tut ·n Ready is the only paper tower with three working I ayers So 1t can rescue you from even the toughest messes. And now you can use the coupon to save 20¢ Leave it to Tut ·n Ready to 9et you out of a mess-for less. ' , • .t f tlJ DAILY PILOT Wedn.day, March 22, 1971 ·FOOD Try Short-Cut Bread LEM 0 N EAST EB. dough. ~ginning with roll eacb ol these pieces into 10" ropes. Loosely twist these pieces and place on top of orlelnal twist. Bruab Twist wlth melted butter. Let Twl1t raise ln warm place un- til tripled in me. Bake in preheated 375 do1rff oven 20-!5 minutes untll golden brown. Remove from pan and allow to cool 1ll1bUy on rack or absorbent paper. Frail witb Sunny Lemon Ic1D1 and decorate. SUNNY LEJION ICING \.\ cup powdered suaa.r Lemon Easter Twist TWIST the 8" side, tightly roll 1 J)OUDd loaf ftoHD bread dough 1 tablespoon fine~ gr a led lemon pe~l 1 tablcspoon melted butter or margarine Let frozen loal thaw. ~ teupoon lemon extract 1 ~ i. 1pooo water Yellow loocl coloring uses frozen bread dough. dough in jelly roll fashion. Cut dough lengthwise lnto 3 equal P.,leces. Uaing more nour 1f Deeded, roll two of the pieces lnto ta" ropes. Loosel y twist these pieces together and place OD creued baJdnsr On lightly Ooured board sheet Cut remaining· roll dough out to 8"xl2" piece· of dough into 2 r ectangle. S p rinkl e equal pieces. Again, us. l emon peel over tbe Ing mote fiour it needed, M Ix tncredienta unti 1 smooth. Add yellow food coloring for desired col- or Frost Twist while atlu warm . Decorate wit h jelly beans and 1llvered almonds. Crab, Grits Unite Quiche, a custardy, cheese pastry dish lhat originated in France, is qu ickly becoming a popular entree in this country. One reason is that American cooks have discover ed how eas y thls French de - licacy is to create. Crab and Grits Quiche ts a flavorful va riation of this favorite that 's un be lieveably simple to prepare and even more wcredi ble to eat. The unique flavor and texture of grits -an Amer ican favorite - make Cr ab and Grits Quirhe C\CO more full· bod i e d t ha n i t s Continental counterpart. And viva la difference' Jt comes out of the oven f t rm. mois t and mellow with a na"or all 1t.c; own Surculcnt bits (Jf flaked c rab meat , Swi ss t hl·csc. choppl'O onion and an unusual hlt•nd or spices add C\'Cn more in· tercst to this dchciously d1rferent main dish you c a n make in m inutes ci nd bake in 45 to 50 m inutes. Serve Crab and Grits Quic he with butte r ed asparagus spears and a fresh fruit salad. You'll have a European-style m eal that's sur e t o b ecome a popular favorite with your All- A m er ican family and guests. CRAB 'N GRIT S QUICJJ E One 7 •~ ounce can rrab meat, well drained, naked 1 cup (.t oun c e) shredded natural Swiss cheese \,. cup cho pped onion One ~inch unbaked pie shell 4 eggs 1 cup half and half or light cream 1 c up hot cooked grits 1 tablespoon dried parsley fl akes 1-: teaspoon sail 1,;. t easpoon dry m ustard i,. teaspoon cayenne Sprinkle crab, cheese and onion into pie shell. Be at together remaining in gredients; pour into pie shell. Dake in pre- heated moderate oven (350 degrees F.) 45 t o SO minutes or until knife in- serted into center comes out clean. Let stand 10 minutes before serving. .Makes 9-inch pie. 'B AV A R IAN PORK CHOPS 4 thick pork chops <about 2 pounds) 1 can (10% ounces) condensed cream of mushroom soup V. cupmUk ~ cup choppe d onion an teaspoon caraway seed ~ teaspoon salt G eneroua dash pepper 1 small bead green cabbaee (a b o ut 1 pound), cut lo 4 wedges 2 cups allced carrots 1 cup allced celery Jn skillet. brown chops (u se sbortenin J lf nece11ary); pour off lat. Stir In 80Ul>r milk, onion and 1eaaon1ngs. Cover: cook over Jow beat 2S m i nut es. A d d ve1etable1; cook 20 minutes moro or until done. Stir occaa.ional11. Uncover ; cook to de- a l r •4 c on1htonc7. X u., 4 ICJ'Vln1a. . (NICJl..._L:: 11 1 Nj a. IRAIVl!RINT bath.• ., , ' WE RESElllVE THEIUGHT TO llMIT OR REFUSE SALES TO COMMERCIAL OEAlEAS OR WHOLESALERS. CHECK STATER BROS. WEEKLY CERTIFIED BEEF SPECIALS FOR BIG SAVINGS! Sf&'IU .... ..., ucx M&aAll'l'D • -.ulTY MUJS &19Ga11fBllD AU. Sl'A ID MOS. MAJll[ft'S WIU. a DIM USRll SU•DA Y 9 A.AL• 7 fl.& ~--- c " LB. 81U STATDIUOS. RIB JUMBO ROAST WIENERS SMALL END '1.711 LB.• H.B. PKG. si3! 8 9~ USDA GR.ADI A FRYING CHICKENS sa CUT-UP 53' LB. • ~ WHOLE BODY •7~ .... CHUCK ROAST BLADE-CUT 79~ HOFFY s 1 o9 llSDAOllAD(•·-fJIOZCN 69< :3) HAMS :~~IO.. . ,. JR. TURKEYS .... LA. ~•lllADf:.CUI 89C CHUCK SOAK .... u 69# "'fSHfllOn N $149 .. TURBOT FILLET ll •m. CHUC>'. POT s 1 09 eur. CWUCK s 119 ll[f. •""Ol l NO $ I 59 u$ ,,.u.;,1101111 $llt AllMROAST .. •• 7·•0M1•0AST .. 1•. Rl•STIAK ........ u s TA Tlll lllO~ • UST • $l IC£0 LUNCHEON MEATS :.~z l • 12• BITS O' SHRIMP llQF•llOUNO •&ONl •N $149 llECf•CHUCl(•-CllSS $169 llH,•C::WUCll•90HHU~ $179 ~ .. ~· llUMP ROAST •• SHOULDE• llOAST. lB SllOULDIR S TIAJC . ll P&TlltCll CllO&HY ss•• flllStHllO/(N $1 '' CANNED HAM >•• .. '" SHOW CRAB LEGS ' .a .·touf•llC/tf£.:. ·-·K $I 59 .·(ouf•IONU .. US·---$1 •• ·····W.O·AlTUK $199 PATlllCKC\JD4'1Y $ 98 fRfYHllOl(H $219 ..... ·-•• L8 • ...-••• ,ll. .. .......... U .. CA_N_N_ED_HA_M_H_•_· ·-·-·· _t_._8 __ .. 1_C_ELA_N_D_1C_HA_l_l_BU_T_ ... _ .. _•_11 ___ np•oASTs. . .... ,,, $189 CU-STUK ...... ta. $209 TIPSDAK~ ............ t .. $1 99 I I I •••••• REO.Ptc:Q. ···-· ..... 1-0z. 4 2c •••••••••••EA. 7 3c s .. tM>z.53C ............ 1u 49c •··••••••• 11-0Z. s14' TYROL IA WINE i1m.$ 2 29 FRENCH'S VANILLA ~77c FOOD COLOR KITS ~,~.73c \tJl\de~. dutGI\ ~ bol\Cry S Pl:CIALS ' ' . '-~ 79' =-7~ -.... -· ~ ......... .... 7~ i:9 =,._'I" ...... -· ... t •• ... . --· ...... ·--·· t ... I I ' I ·I I FOOD Holiday Orange Glazed ham. Citrus Adds to Easter EJstcr Sunday is perhaps more symbolic of 'Pring th;.1n the first da} or spnng itself. The tla\' docs symbo117e new life. and observances ,incl fri>llv1t1es are studded with th<' first flowers t•f lhf' year, tulips. daffodils and ltlic.;; It s ti splendid diiy for feasting and lhl'n•forc calls for the most exciting of menus A bake>d ham 1s the traditional fare on Easter Sunday, but spiced and glazed a de lrc1ous new way, it can become Holiday Orange Ham You bake> the ham a-; usual in the oven for about three hours ThC>n seore the fat surface ;ind stud 11 wrth wholt· clo\t•s for a spicy aroma 'l.:o\\ rnmes lh<• II\ rly or<inge glaze that will m.1kt· thr'> \rar s 1-:<1-.ter frCJ.,l the best one yet '1 lw )!fan· I'> u blend 11( •>ranKc JU1cc con 1·pnt r <ii<• t ompl<'nH.'nlC'd \\ rth the flavors of 11w1,, ... .,,._,, mu-.1.1rtl J?ntll'd orange rind and 'I a b,l'>l'll J>t'j)Jll'r Si.IUl'(' Tht• fla\or is rich and natural and orange 1u1rc bring!'> out the best in ham /\s you bake t hl' ham for :int>ther 45 minute.,, the glaze Flavors the nwat and i::ins it a nch, elegant ap· pea ranee You'll also ltk<' Orange Raisin Sauce to :-erve at the tablt'. Its zesty, nch flavor is the perfect <:omplemcnt to baked ham. The sauce is made with orange juice and raisins. and sweetened with brown sugar. A touch of vinegar makes the rith fla\·or stand out Nutritious oranJO?e Jiii<'<' 1s '>O versallll' 1.1nd tt 's ex- l<'llt•nt ll'-l'd 1n salH'<'" for bnght, fres h flavor ,\.,p.ir.11.:11.., "1th Grapefruit Hollandaise ~.111c 1· '" th1· right 'cgctable choice for your !-:.isl c•r rlllllll I (hrs dehCIOUS ~reen vegetable is •'H'n m1111· so toppt·d "1th a spnghtly sauce r I a v o r l' II '' 1 t h g r a p e f r u 1 t J u 1 c e . ll re · q111n•s no c·ook1ng JllSl hlendmg -and is r\•ad v in a Jiff~ c; r apt·fru 1 t Hollanda1se Sauce is a hl<>ncl of l'gg }olks, grapefruit 1u1ce. a touch of salt ;ind peppc•r and melted butter. It's a thick smooth -.,iuce thJt i.:1 \cs extr;1 snap to vegetables. And aftc•r :-.uch a hearty dinner what could he h<'tll•r ,1pprcc1n1cd than a light, fresh Mint ('1trus Salad'1 l"rc!>h J{rapefruil and orange sec t1011s, nch 1n vi tamin C. are served with a special nrangl' mint dressing The flavor combination Is .1 ll\eh tart swcc·t11n1• 01 .111ge mint di c·:-~ing 1s a simple bl~nd of mint 1dh horw ~ orange Juice concen 11 .1t1· and oranRe .ind grapefruit nnd lt's a n:.i1111 allv good dre!-.s1ng that's nutritious, too - .1 pl'r kt t ".1v to crown the Easter feast 1101.lDAY ORANGE HAM 10 to 12 p<•und "hole ham 1 ran I 6 ouncec; > frozen orange Juice con· tentralc. thawl'd, undiluted 1 ~ rup unsulphured molas~es ' , rup prepared mustard 3 tablespoon-; grated orange rind 1'l leaspoon hot pepper !-.auce Whole cloves Plac(' ham on rack in a shallow baking pan Bake m 325 degree oven 3 hours Remove ham from oven and remove rind. 1f necessary Score fat ~urface and stud with whole cloves. For glaze. blend together undiluted orange juice concentrate molasses, mUl>lard. orange rind and hot 1x·pper i.auce Brush part of mixture over ham. Bak<• 45 minutes longer. brushing oc- cas1onall} with remaining glaze. YlELD: 12 serv- ings. ORANGE RAISIN SAUCE 2 cups seedless dark raisins I cup light raJsms 2 cups orange juice l rup water 2 tablrspoons cornstarch :l tablespoons grated orange rind 1 • 1<.•aspoon salt :.! t.tl>lcspoons vinegar Combine raisins. orange juice and water ln .1 m\•1Jium saucepan Simmer over low heat 10 m1nult·.., ,\l1x brown sugar. cornstarch, orange nnrt and !->all, ~tir into raisin mixture. Sjmmcr until th1C'kcncd and clear. Add vinegar and mix well. YIELD. 4 cups. ASPARAGUS WITH GRAPEFJtUJT HOLLANDAISE SAUCE 4 packages (10 ounces each) frozen asparagus spears 6 egg yolks I l CUP arapefrujt jUiCe ~~teaspoon salt 1 s teaspoon white peJSJ>er l cup butter, melted and healed Cook asparagus spears as directed on package; drain, place in serving dish and keep "arm Combine egg yolks, grapefruit juice, salt and pepper in electric blender container. Cover and process JUSt until smooth. Remove cover and gradually pour 1n the melted butter while blender 1s ~till running. The sauce wtll thicken \ e ry quickly : serve Immediately over asparagus YIELD. 12 servings. ~UNT CITRUS SALAD 1 • rup mint jelly 14 cup honey 2 tablespoons frozen orange juice concentrate. thawed. undiluted - I tablespoon ~rated orange rind l tablespoon grated grapefrult rind Salad ~rrens 4 cups grapefruit sections• 4 <'llfl" orangl· sections Mint sprigs Mix mint Jelly, honey, undlluted orange JUlle concentrate. orange rind and grapefruit rind 1n a small bowl Line a large bowl with salad gr<'l'ns and fill with grapefruit an6 orange sections ~rve with orange·mlnt dress- ing and garnish with mint sprigs. YIELD: 12 servings •To ~ect1on erapefruit and oranees, rut ... 1sce from top. then cut off peel in strips from lop lo bottom. cutting deep enough to re· move white membrane, Or cut off peel round and round spiral fashion. Go over fruit again to re· move .iny remaining while membrane. Cut along sid e o{ each dividing membrane from outside to mid die or core. Remove section by section. Knapsack Snack Plus Knap88ck Granola Snack Is a good sport of a treat for bike- hikers. It doesn't get jostled easily. Though your path might be rocky and steep, it's as fresh as when it started at journey's end. And that's something btkers themselves can't claim Make this golden eranola the nlaht before the outing. Just stir together peanut butler, honey, brown su1ar and butler until they're well blended -that la, arqooth and creamy. Then pour ln the quick or old fashioned oats and the peanuts, both 1ood sources of protein. Bake the beautltw mixture, sUrrinl OC· caslonally until liihlly browned. ToasUng the oats 1lvea tbtm a aenuilonal nut·Uke flavor tnd texture that's very com· pllntnlary to the peanuts. When Knapuct Granola Snack tomes from tbe oven, cool It on an unaNasod cookie abHt. KNAPSACK GllANOLA SNACK \11 cup peanut butt.tr ~• cup bonoy ~. cup firmly packed brown au1u ~cup but.Wr01' mars arlne J ~ cups quick or old f 11bloned o ti, uncooked " cup pea.nut& Com nut butter, bo-y, Knapsack Snack. brown auaar and butter In I-qt. saucepan. Cook ove'r low heat, atlrrlhl conatantly, until well blended; reraove from heat. Add remaining ln1r1dltntli mix w•U. Spread mixture evenly tnto ungreaffd 13x9-lnch baktn1 pan. Bake in preheated moderate oven (350 dttreea) 11 to ao minutes, 1Urrtnr ~uloaally. unlll lJJbtly browned. Spre don· to \LDlttased coolcl sheet; cool. Break Into blte·•litd plecea. Makes about 4 cupt crunch. AdQUd ftom a Chlneae r.clpe. L£1TtJC SP •,~ cup each cornstarch. soy sauce and water 1 :i teaspoon sugar ~• teaspoon pepper 1 pound eround beef chuck 2tablespoons aalad oil 2 medJum onions, chopped fine t cup mushrooms, chopped rlne a.ounce can water chestnuts, diced (Yl•lnCh) lO·ounct pack a1e frozen areen peu, cooked and drained Sauce 1ee below 1 head tceber1 lettuce, oored and 1eft whole . Stir tos~er until 1mootb the corntlatch, aoy ••uee, water, 11u1ar and pepper; ms.. ln the bee!. In a 10.inch 1kUlet heat the oU i add the beef mixture, onlon ana mu11hroom; cook, crumblln1 wlth a fork 'Ultll rneat loees ita red color. Add tb• water cheetnuta, peu and Sauce: cook, 1tlrrtn1 conataatl1. untll lhJckened. Eaten apOOn portion& ~the mixture <tetved bot> Into larr• leUuceleav and.roll UJ>, • SUr tocether Ul 1100CIUI 1· tables))9qlb cornat&tch, t ·tablts- poons y aauce, \4 te poon cblclle boallloo rranut• IDl1 ~ cupw t • Namr Stteel ·- Wedneeday, Ma.rch 22, f978 DAIL y ft1L.OT C7 ~r.l~~~and will help you get it with the 15¢ Coupon below Here 's the Details: 1. Use the 15¢ coupon to buy one jar of Vlasic Pickles. Be sure to save the label! 2. Buy three more jars of Vlasic Pickles and be sure to save these labels. OHtr hplm Apr1I 28. 1~71 c;fnd 4 l•t..I• lo """ P 0 Bo., fl "'"°· f ~•.-7Q•r; NBm 3. Send all four labels to: \'IJ~ie' P1l Ides P 0. Boit NB7J7 l I P.bo, Te\il~ 7Qq77 4. We'll send you $1.00 back by mail. and treat yourself to richn~ worth a second cup. Why settle for ordinary coffee when you can en1oy the special richness of Yu ban•? Ground Yu ban's 100% Colombian coffee beano;. Or instant Yu ban's own spe<:ial blend. Either way. you get a cup of coffee so deliciou!>ly rich it's always worth a second cup. Use the coupon to~ve 30¢ on whichever one you choose-and make yourself a little richer right away. Y\lb4!11I•1 reol~t.rt4 tr•demerk of the Gtntral Foocb C~ C8 DAILY PILOT Wednesday, March 22. 1978 jt V egetahles Star In Meatless Menu • MeaUess meals are a good way to keep your food budget from getUng out of hand. But, careful attention should be paid when planning the menu to make sure you don't shortchange your family on taste and nutrition. One of the best places to start your meatless menu planning is in the food section or your newspaper. Look for the specials on frozen vegetables Vegetables are key factors in the meatless meal because they provide important nutrients And, the freezer section or your supermarket contains a wide variety of vegetables from which to choose al steady, rea- sonable prices. Dy tak· ing advantage of weekly vegetable specials, you can save yourself even more money Lima Mineslrone is an excellent example. This delicious soup contains froze!\ spinach, a good source of vitamin C and ,\. and baby lima beans ~ h 1 c h <' o n t a i n h 1 g h quality vcgctabll' pro tc1n. Add Macaroni. canned tomatoes, herbs .ind a l.:l'nl.'rous sprm- k I 1 n g of Parmesan t hccsc. and you"H! got a meal in a bowl. Rest of all, Lima l\tmestrone can he made 1n only JO minutes. Saute onion hghUy m butter. Add broth, salt, Italian herb seasoning and basil. Heat to boil- 1 ng. Add spinach and limas, and heat until vegetables can be broken up. Add macaroni. and simmer Dipping Sauce SZECHUAN SOY DIPPING SAUCE 1 " cup soy sauce 1 tablespoon corn starch 1'2 cup beer bouillon 2 tablespoons d ry sherry 1'2 teaspoon crushed red pepper In s mall saucepan stir together soy sauce and com starch until smooth. Add bouillon. sherry and red pepper. Slirrinl constantly, br- mg to boil over medium beat and boll 1 minute. Cover and chill. Makes abOut ~cup. ------- -----t\1.e HAPPY CCJOKER Yo• AN ,,,.,,,.., .. Joa. 0.r .. .,. ..... ., .... c.-... a..... r....,., • .,,...,.. r....-, . ..-1. 11on 10. .... Stuffed Arttchokes. Stufftd Mushrooms. Sour Dough Rolt-Upe 1'•_..,• •.a J4,Frcaca Coq au Vin. Crepes Stuffed with Souffle T..adcf. •orcA a. F111o Do. .. Apple StrudeJ. Vattous Appetizers 1hr••.,. A,ptfl '· ...... Ch~ IO.lzv. Charlotta Russe 111....ro,,A/Hfl. JI. PNui.cw F......,. Cassoutet. Poached Pars wtth Creme Anglatse ' n......,.~-.Pl-o...i Chicken Rocham u, Bananas Fotter nu,.Mp.A,flln ...... Paella.~ho Class time on ed &y: 10-.30 a.m to 1:30 p.m $10 for your first $8 for etich . Rts8rwtl0nl '" .am.c:t by peymcnt of -fl\ 9dwra: MlW.JJM.W.tw.,._. ..,_,....,..~tWJ•JoP1alr••'7J.IM9 1 '{a teaspoons garl1<'. minced (2 small cloves J ~ teaspoon salt 4 cups (8 ounces> thin egg noodles, cooked <or whole wheat) lf!i cup grated Parmesan cheese 1h cup half and half (light cream) Thaw spinach and press out excess liquid . lleat 011 with basil and garlic. Add spmach and salt. Cook over low heat about 5 minutes, stirring frequently Meanwhile cook noodles, drain well. Add spmach mix lure, cheese and half and half. Toss until well blended. Make!> 4 to 5 servings (5 cups noodles with sauce). PIKES lffl<TIYE WEI., MAI. 22 TlllU TUES., MAI. 21, 1911. / 5- BLOOMS OR MOH,, --- FOOD From front, //ma minestrone. spinach pesto, and broccoli green nee are three delicious ways to solve meatless men- planning . HIGH PROTEIN .. • Large End Cut. Here's A Real Company Roast. Juicy and Tender. Fresh Hen TURKEYS USDA Grade 'A' Pl\Jmp, Tender and Meaty ~lb. c USDA CHOICE Fresh LEG OF LAMB USDA Choice Short Cut Sirloin Off ~ ~lb. Pork Sausage12-0L9nc Best O' Fryer 99c Safeway Whole Hog . Pkg. ;J · Fresh Zacky Farms lb. ~~!~!~o!~C°.~ .. ~~:: $138 ~~~o~~. ~!t~~i tb.$119 C 81 H Hormel ,~ f B f Ribs Attached sl tt Ur8 ams Boneless lb. c... ryer f88S Zacky Farms lb. Sii_.. Ham Safeway 4-oz. ftne Mas..._'--Hams. w11son $3n "1IRI Imported Pkg. ~~· MJt ,.._ Boneless lb. HERE ARE JUST A FEW OF OUR BIG WINNERS • PAMELA TULLY • JACQUE MONTPETIT• GARY MCCULLOUGH Santa Monica Laguna Niguel Santa Ana •1 ,000 Winner •1 00 Winner '1000 Winner •DUANE SPELLMAN • POY GUN LEW •ALAN PATTERSON Simi Manhattan Beach Pomona •2000 Winner •1000 Winner '2,000 Winner • MARY COSTANZA •ARMANDO RODRIQUEZ • LOREN BUTLER Los Angeles Glendale San Pedro •1000 Winner '1000 Winner •1000 Winner PlllD WAUI ~ .,, .. ., .. S10 15 11 TOT All Sflllll SL~22 ODDS CHART lff£CTIYl MARCH 12, 1171 .... ..... TOTAL I " "'"' l1CUT TICllTI 11 IM.Zll 7'.112 lot •.z• ..... m ,,,.., 2.114 Utt 1,142 411 uaz U 51 291 121.47' " u 121.lll 71 ••• "" ,. TlCllfTt :n.-. u n 1.m lU 133 l.1 l .O Updated odds will be posted In all partic- ipating stores and any newspaper ads. Promotion available at Safeway Stores located on Calitorn1a count1ea ot Los Angeles, Ventura, San Bernardino, Riverside, San Luis Obispo, Inyo. Orange. Santa Barbaro, Kern end Mono 1167) and In Clark County, Nevada ( 13) Beglnr11ng January 18 and scheduled to end April 18. 1978. or when all llckels are d11trt· buled Promotion termination w1tf be an- nounced MO OlllHTION AND NOTHING TO PUllCHAU TO lNTtll CAME SH OfflCIAl IUUI ON COWCTOll CARD f09I COMPlm DETAILS. Savings From Safeway! !·-+)Fruit Cocktail ~~:s~ 3 1J~::-$1 a~ Mayonnaise Nu-Made 3~:'-99e 1-$ Detergent Brocade Liquid 32-oz. 99c Size Small End Aoast...lb.'199 Boneless HAMS Smok-A- Roma Fully Cooked Water Added. s r----..:. -~~ I rf . ' !I ; :>_'\.>-' '.~I '~I lb. ~~~~~ S~sa~~~:: $1 &9 Little Sizzlers 12-oz.$119 Hormel Frozen Sausage... Pkg. K ock t Safeway 12-oz. ,121 n WurS Ouahty Pkg. J S Little 1 ·lb. ones ausage Links Pkg. '1" Brown 'N Serve ROLLS Mrs Wright's •Twin Rolls •Flaky Gem •Clover Leaf Cragmont Soda Pop Refreshing Thrist Quencher r.. ~~ Plus Deposit Bottle Shop Buys! c Prices Effective In Licensed Safeways! SEBASTIAN I MOUNTAIN WINES CHENIN BLANC ..... te~:~~ll $249 Chilled 750-ml. ~!~~:·.~iz-f ... 3=i*5 ~~~!~ ~.~.. Z-B\ 1so-m1.8399 Scotch %-£· · s31e Winner·s Cup. 80 Proot7150-ml. Ten High 80 Pr. l-S·1 s31e Hiram Walker's ........ 750-ml. Wednelday Mwc.h 22. Hl78 Fresh, Sweet i Strawberries 1 It's the strawberry season again, and we've got the ' Season's Finest! They're beautiful berries. straight from sun-warmed berry patches! Surprise your family with Strawberry Shortcakes ~ ~ Basket ·EASTER LILIES ~ Multi-Bloom 6-lnch$289 Pot Large Si- AVOCADOS MOST SAFEWAYS ARE OPEN EASTER SUNDAY, MARCH 26 Buttery Smooth Honeydews Melons .......... . Tomatoes Fresh and Film. Dried Figs Town House ••• 1~~~ •p• Cucumbers .................... each 19c Specials For You! SPECIAL ·PLANT-A- RAMA ,,. EVENT • STARTS EASTER SUNDAY AND CONTINUES ALL WEEK . D$Pineapple .cJ~~~,~~~~h•d 22t.::·s100 ~=·~i ·Whipping Cream L~;:~~e ~~: 49e @~Cool Whip oes~~~sr~~~tng @ • ..!c~'>Cake M1·xes Mn•.Wrighrs 1 u p layer Varieties s-oz. 59e Ctn. 1a11i-oz.59c Pltg. Z$Cream Pies M~!~~~e~·n· 4 3~~z. $1°0 @J .,.!c~ Bel-a1·r Corn cut Golden 4 10-oz. s100 r I • Whole Kernel Pkgs. ~Wesson 01·1 Forsa1ad.s;ooking z4-oz. 79c ~ or Frying Bottle ~ Fo1·1 Wrap 'Kitchen Craft 3 25-Sq. n$100 ~ . Aluminum Rolls ~ Fleischmann's Ma~~~~ine c~!n ege ~Ice Cream cr:a~;l~:;ure G'!:.~n 99c Your E aster Photo H eadquarters! KODACOLOR FILM C -110 or C-1~6 ~ $149 Color Pack Film ~ 20 Exposure Roll 88Ch =~~ .... Peckof3$143 ~'~~~,~~~ .. Peckor3S1 99 !!~!!.~~~ .. ~Pack ot eSl 49 ALBUM 1 ._lhove:.,. 7 7c Thi• Week Album& hell Melt '211 ~ B I a· Peas 2_.b 99c ... and this isn't a111 ll/IFi;' e -Ir :rozen Pkg: More Safeway specials 1.n your store! !+)Cream Cheese Lucerne ~-::.· 49~ ' '+)Strawberries ,~~~~~~ Jri~:,1~39c Canned Yams Cu~~rhW~~,. ~ 69C • 100 a.y.•• Or .. .......,... .... ~ • ., ..... ~ .......... L...-..... • 211 L11tll St .. c:..te...._ PRICES EFFECTIVE 7-DAYSI Wld., M•. 22 ftlrU Tua., Mar, 28, 1878 In SoutMm C1Hfomt1 (Except tatlf lna, Im D llld I pstal COUntletJ. -ao\ 1.te~a..t. s.a-... • •~ .. ~ ............. .._.. • t4417 c.tter Dr ... w-... ~i... . "' €J 0 DAILY PILOT Wednesday. March 22. 1978 FOOD. ..-.-ot Cross Buns ith a Switch Use candies instead of candied fruit in Easter breads. l Hot Cross Buns take dough. Shape each por-loaf, 40 to 45 minutes for .,n additional "magic" lion of dough into a larger loaf, or until iv hen made using r ound. Place largerpor-done. Remove fr<JUl fhopped "M&M's" in t10n in greased l pound cans and cool 10 to l:S the yea~t dough and top-coffee can and smaller minutes on wire racks. ping with additional can-portion in greased 16 Frost tops of loaves with • i es. The Russ i an ounce vegetable or frwt Confectioners• Sugar Ic- Easter Bread, Kullch, is can (about 2 cups). ing, allowing some icing another holiday favorite Preheat oven to 350 to drizzle down sides of ~ade quickly and easily degrees. Let dough r ise loaf. Sprinkle with addi- csing the bot roll mix 10 warm place until dou-tional chopped candies. and t.hecolorfulcandiea. ble. Bake 30 to 35 Makes l large and l .m::_::in~u~te~s~f~o~r~s~m~a~ll~e~r.._1s~m~a~l~l~lo~af~.~~~~~~::_~:..:::~=:~~~===~~~~::_~::=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==::::::::~:=:::_~~~~~~~~~ fASY ~8Js CROSS ,-~unis!~~l~~::ro/, Switch to Ralphs the Number One Club ancl : ;~lfE~§~; Fiii your basket with super .. ,~~~;;~;:;.~: Easter sav-1ngs Chocolate Candies, chopped Confccti oncrs' Sugar Icing .. Additional M&M's Plain Chocolate Candies for decorating Glaze 1 tablespoon sugar l tablespoon milk ln large mixmg bowl, combine yeast from hot rol l mix and warm water. Let 1'.land about 5 minutes. Beat m butter, 2 table:;poons sugar, the -.·gg, lemon peel, cm- 11amon and nutmeg. Beat in flour mixture Jrom hot roll mix ,:!radually. Slir in cur- rants. Knead dough on lightly floured surface until smooth and elastic. Cover and let rise in warm place until double 1n s iz e, about 4 5 rnrnutes. Grra~1· 2 hak· 1 ng sheets Holl dough 1nlo circle .ihoul 12 10l'ht>s in diameter. Sprinkle chopped can- dies evenly oYer top; press into dough. Fold dough in thirds :.ind press. Divide doug h i nto 18 e qual portio ns . ~h apc e ach portion in to a ball. Place on greased baking • sheet. Let n se until dou- ble in size. PrebC'at oven to 350 degrees. Bake 20 tn 25 minutes. MC'anwhlle, star together l tablespoon su~ar and lhc milk Rrush O\'C'r hot huns. H cmo\'l' buns from pans and co<ll on wire r ack. M<ikt• a cross with Confectioners' Sugar king on top or ea('h bun Decorate w1Lh candles. Makes 18 buns (' 0 N f' t-; CT I 0 N F: RS' SUGAR ICING 11 z l'UPS sifletl l'On. fcctioners' sugar 2 tabl espoons l.iboull milk or half an<I half 1 tablespoon butter or m a rgarinr. softened 1.! teaspoon vanilla extract In medium m1 x1ng bo wl. bea t sugar, 2 lablespoons or the milk. butler and vanllla until smooth. Add add1t1onal milk until 1t reaches d<'- s1 red s preading con- sistency. Makes ,Jhout 1 ~ cup. EASTER "'RUIT BREAD 1 pack a g e c l 3 ·' , ounces) hot roll m1'< 1 :i cup warm watC'r •,. cup butte r or margarine 2 tablespoons sugar 2 eggs 1 teaspoon vanilla extract 1Y1a teaspoon rum ex· tract ~ cup &olden raisins 1h cup mixed can- died frwt 1 2 cup M&M's Peanut Chocolate Can- dies, chopped Confectioners' Suear lcina (about :}4 cup) · Additional M&M '• Peanut Chocolate Can· dies for decoratinf ln larie mix!ne bo~l, combine yeut from hot roll mix. and warm water. Let atand a to 6 minutes. Beat ln butter, sugar, e1gs and ex- tract.. SUr in flout llllx· ture from hot roll mix. Add raisins and candled fruit. Covet and let dH in. warm place unu l dou· bJe Jn size, 45 to GO minutes. Knead do\uth on l"htl)' noure4 aur- f ac:• unUl 1m09tb •nd ela1ttc. Roll into a olttle about 12 inc.,_ea in diameter. Sprinkle chOpped candl11 evenl)' over top; PA hito dou1b. Fol4 · ibto, I t.bird• and f reaa ~ top.Uter. cut di ~ o1 .- Beel R1b-L1rge End 49 Ntw Zt1l1nd-Frozen Whole 39 Rib Lamb Roast Leg Roast 'USO~ lcl!_O].CSJ Farmer John or Dold Biii Chuck-Bl1d1 Cul Shank Portion Chuck Fully Cooked Smoked Steak Ham per II USDA per II lb. CMOICf,, lb. For Humber One CfuJJ· mendJeps only Plus'ftext weeJi's super coupon savings Pde up lhlM auper coupons NOW ttuu Sunday at RalphS and you can MIVe 50010 on lt'8M Items NEXT WEEK • Glove A-1 Spaghetti • Ralphs Stuffed Potatoes • Playtex Gloves If you haven't joined yet. . .lt's eaay, just aak us how ... details at Ralphs Golden PTemlum Meatl BH•C"<.c~ 109 l~•~o0ci 7-Bone Steak ,,.. Ill -hel lllll·llll•r Atl'llO'ltd 119 u\OA R"b S ak ,, .. [~3 (I I te lb 1 Bttl Rovnd 111 l~•sa~tr Top Round Steak ,,.. Ill llotl Round 199 'u OA T" R t Pfl • •o•:i 1p oas Ill • BfffC~k 129 t~.WMRound Bone Roast Pt• lb Bffl 199 @@Cube Steaks ""' lb DSllC•d 131 Calf Liver P•t lb A new third alternative for super savings , • UTDOCN P "[) • 111r1 to.:; ·~~ ... -.,..._, --=Ir~ r,., -\ . ' u . . h • l \rDHlltcl l.1_ , -. ,.._ - ~ 5·;;;~k;nr;m r.,11, C .o•td IOll• In Center Ham Slices ~ i>';;ku's'teak ~ Y~~;:.Q Ducks ~ r:~;;u;;,s M c1~~··5;'r~s, ~ o"~er Sole Fillet W(nes & Spirits ~ 53.;d~:vcda ~ s7r;;.rt8~~ ''" 50·hndr l1bcAlll1l•r Imported Scotch , .. 111 , 198 r·•* II I'•· 139 1n por .99 lb r .. .79 lb 2s9 "" I~ 289 per lb Quart 399 11n Q••·• 41e bl! Qv•t1 529 1111. R1lph1-D11iclou1 Sunklst Brown & Serve Navel Rolls Oranges pkg. II per 0112 lb. GrMn Gl1nt-WtM>l1 Ktmtl R11pt11-A11ortld Golden Premium 59 Niblets Ice Cream Corn '1 gal. ? 12 oz. II round ....... can r ... ., Cut Daffodils bunth • 79 ''"" 79 "Mini Vae" Bouquets -=h. Ctml>ld.,.,. Orchid Corsages While Suppliea Last eKh 141 v1';~~ v.1=~·c~ ~ MO ltllld Bathroom Tissue V s~rr~;j~;fP~tatoes ~ f:~ifcOOktan ~ r~ci;·oiai>ens Super Deli Rt;u•er I Sloek L Imperial Margarine ../ c;=i·Fi~1s R•'P"• r am11, &1a Longhorn Cheddar Home 'N Leisure s.,,,..Produce H Ch .39 Oth .29 Pantry Fiiiers lpk 73 pkO t [;?] Jeil~FGelatin 5Sot 59 pig • ~ Re9~1;;[i·;;;;;~ 17oz 39 C•1' e ~ sii;~N:5e;:;;·5'i;,,. •Oct 346 DkO ~ Hab1tco 100 Whole W1'e1t Triscuit Wafers ~.39 bul'Ch .25 601 35 bOI • 1701 .79 llo• , ., .49 P'O 1101 73 11o •• Super Bak~y 1111 61 P"9 • l oz 31 p•9 • •• , 193 lb l oz 57 P•V I •:.:-3se ~ H~t0c~C>;s Btm V B1~tt;Crust Bread '!\/ t;;J;'(;rea Cake P•t 79 of I • ,... 69 loal a ~: .89 Frozen Foods lloz 69 10-". Pric• effective March 23 through March 29, 11178 Wt ,.,...., t~t ofN to limit cw '•'v•• 0•1 lo comm«ot•I d••._,. or ......... , ... ., ........ ........_.__. • ...w ..... ~ .. i.c .... .. , _ __.........,. Switch to Number One* ••• Switch lo c.IW.Ga•t• ..... fne .eoo.262-1600 ·~ -o~1llf.ro-ua1'1!f!~ Beautifully and uniquely cralled COOkW1'1 Outhty end vtkJt tor wt'11ch yoo'd expect 10 pay 1 101 more are et Ralpllt ~ay low ptloet. I ;~ t ..... -... --- 1 • f • -- • I ,. I COMICS I CROsswo.1u MARMADUKE by Br id Anderson BOOMER 1111 ~ .. ·-· ~ • ~Y. F~1~ ~ 1 HeAA 'bu Ger A JOS A~ M AC1Z>fl Mo Oto A Gff fOOO COttMERCIAL. (.()Q i'f ! MISS PEACH A (l.1" ~H~{ t ~XPLA1Nf "Boyl That was a close call!" 'jN. Ot.D I s,A '-( I N G.J I ~ > f ----r~---..J FUNKY WtNKERBEAN by Tom Batiuk TEU. ME I 1-«){.1.) ~ 400 Kt-0(.U -----. JF '1bo'VE GOT \_ 'IY()~: FUNK~ z. WELL I I JU5T FELT REALLC) U5TL£S5 I llREO I AND DOWN ... A~D I Dl~'T FEEL LIKE OOING AN01J.11NG AT ALL! "!HAT t;0uf.l[)5 LIKE OOE OF ~ ~O DA<,!S I CASEY MOON MULLINS WE LE.ARNE[) HOW TO WRIT£ CHECK5 Tc::>J.'r M, J.1£.RE C0..11£ MY PROFE~S/ONAL. 1 MOlJRJJ~ NOW. GERIATRIX r---'\'!'11! ... ., :;.u12..;:eoN GeNB<AL 5,l.Y :=:.\"'.C'~E PEACE I r1c:-e \~:e:ROU~ T~, '~"'Ui::. HE~LTH , THE?N Bii,..:'\\' ~ S(' f IL. L..10N C"J ~i.;:H TE'i;::-n.ANE ! OENNtS THE MENACE • , ll By Charfes Rodrigues by Ferd and Tom Johnson GORDO JUDGE PARKER TUMBLEWEEDS NANCY WIU.! "THIS CALLS R>R AN APF'ROPRlAIE · MNFAft'E:- by Wm. F. Brown and Mel Casson M'1£~ ! AO~O K~ICHUP IT TA5Tel7 0¥..AY ! DOOLEY'S WORLD MY GRAN'PA HASA ™W~Y ABoUi 1li£ RISING DI VoRCI: RATE OR. SMOCK AAIRROR , MIRROR, ON "f'H S: WAL..L.., WHO'S IHS: FAJR S:ST OF THS:M AL..t...? MOTLEY'S CREW ~O COAAP'-.A1~6., 6' fl.IE: V.A.'I, 'l'OU 60N'i0 IHE PTA ~E.E;T',NG "fONlv•lT; by Mell by Gus Arriola by Harold Le Doux by Tom K. Ryan LIKE: A 9L.ARE OF KA'ZfXJS AM? A CLASH OF 6ARIMG£ CAN J...IVS c: by Ernie BushmUltr I HAVE TO GGT MY ANNUAL CHECK-UP TODAY / HEY ·· l DON'T LIKE 8 EtNCr WIRE.TAPPED PEANUTS by Charles M. Schutz [ HAVE To HUR~ HOA\E 100W SCHOOL .. WE'RE I HAO AN UNCLE~ W45A COUSE~\ 60tN6 iO VISti Ml{ ltiCLE -- -11 :i I I I l I J I _,. . WHEN™E HOCKE'/ FRANCHISE MO'IEO IT 8ROKE HIS HEART by Roger Bradfield by George Lemont NOW I F YOU weRe A PL.-AYe>OY e>UNNY O R A N AIR l..JNe S TeWOR ... TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS UNITED Feature Syndicate r>umbi>r 4& f ~ISPhOOd 1 Cyprino•d 4 7 Chessman i ~Hd•n Pv111• So1 .. a fish 49 Sc:uto1ure 'Ar.~ 'ii I I M I E r.:1s""'A~R""A.,..t-. 5 Y,men 11edl!~131 , 'iii]'( R o S A A R u ! c1111111 51 Cluoyanl ~ it'llr'O 11~1 ~ " ! '" o H 9Scowl 54 Canad~ s ~. , ••< "'A 1 t '4 Bad dol~ •o• CllO•lal l I I! R T [ )( " s Caes.ir 58 Obes,. , T 1:. 11r iT 1.1. 15 Flair 60 P,11nf1ll ) '(; t N I A"' 1 6 P•neapo'e 61 R aho in 100 "*11 Hl c~H':+iii~ffi"tW'! -~\'f.'i'rlf 17 Rel•91ous 6J Tt1algir1 Fr in 11 ffs+!!11sff+Ai1~M~~5 group 6.t Combine • .._.ll._.1 t'fW'l~A~f1''1i"'"0~1;ttt.nn~ I 8 U S lerm 65 Length l! - produce 2 br&adlh l A T I II I ll II ll A words 66 Markflf • D :, r 1 u 1 ~ 20 Ms 67 Ft upoor • I ' I A A A -• '-!~r Fllrgeratd h0u5e , , , , ~ _ ~ .. 21 Three 61!V11us - Preli• b9 Walk'd 11 Skin pro· AO Oulcome ot 22 lnsecl luberancP. an at• 23 BOdy ooht•t OOWI~ 12 Cnem•cal Su11,, 25 fd•l•ce' sull ' • l Kind of cooe 21 Occupancy 1 Plays crac~ 13 V.olai.on •6 Benl< dea1 lee 2 Grown •Jr• HI Comply 48 Most 29 Oen1,:if 3 Wme bOHle 2·1 Provide will\ ngaclous 300 inc.ome 49N t egger stand 2" A .. o sour thrusl 4 Cnnd•l•on ol 26 Sa:ebu~k ;o2 AGv1d II 34 Utihre W"B'lh ,, ret ng 36 Hinder 5 01v•de 30 fxcos~1vo SJ In a spot 38 Cameo s 'I drinker 54 Creative U• IX 31 T hree·COI·' k 39 Conversion 6 Orunl\ as. nered '"'" wRor1 ...... n. to Pubhc <JJ """' aervice 1 A country's J2 Aurnor Comb form 42 Being lnlerest 2 unlo.now11 56 One of Pulled 2 words Abbr lrlplels WOfds 33 Turn 57 Olhclal 43 Country 8 lrisecl 3.t Military Pl•· records youth 9 Highway toon 59 Doctoers or .t4 Moreover strips JS Reasonable hoos •S Ooubi. d~1t 10 For-tty J7 rundolmenlal 62 Libel ..... 38 Tritt , I f:J2 DAILY PILOT SOUTH COAST LITEltACY COUNCIL: Thirty. volunteers will graduate from tutor training class m Enalish as a second language Thursday, March 23, and Tuesday, March 28. The Thursday ceremony will be from 10 a .m. to 1 pm at the Dana Niguel Library, Laguna N1auel The Thursday ceremony will be from 7 to 10 p .m. at San Juan Elementary School, San Juan Capistrano. The next tutor trainmg classes will begin Tuesday, April 18, at the San Juan Elementary School, and Thursday, Apnl 20, at the Dana Niguel Library For information call 493-6279. •'RIDAV ANGLING LUNOIEON CLUB: The club will hold an Easter hat parade Friday, March 24, during luncheon at the Newport Harbor Yacht Club. The group is planning an outer space pro gram on Friday, April 7. For more inlormat10n call Ray Nielsen, 548·6888. • HAPPY HOMEMAKERS: The group will meet at 10 a m Friday, March 24, at Fountain Valley Civic Center Program will feature William Ref1ce Jr. and his techniques for mak- mg garrushes Dee Cox, head of the Home Economics D1v1sion of the Orange County Fair. ~111 speak on the fair. CITV OF HOPE : The Sarah Schoenfeld Chapter will pre~l·nl a shde-lccture on the treasures of King Tutankhamun at 8 p.m . Satur- day, March 25, at the Great Western Savmgs Rank, Buena Park UDO ISLE WOMAN'S CLUB: An Easter party for all Lido children, friends and relatives will lake place at 10 a.m. Saturday, March 25, at the Lido Clubhouse WOMEN'S AMERICAN ORT: The Orange County West Chapter will hold its fifth annual t•elebrity auction at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, March 25. at the Fountain Valley Community Center. Admission 1s $2.50. Auction items have been donated by celebrities. B'NAI B'RITH WOMEN: The Anagrove Chapter will meet at 8 p.m . Monday, March 27, Jt Columbia Savmgs, Anaheim. t'CJ TOWN AND GOWN: James Roosevelt "ill speak e1t JO am. Tuesday, March 28, m !"ocial Sc1enC'e Tower 220, UC Irvine. Topic will he the Panama Canal An American Problem Opt•n to the publtr TUESOA\' CLUB OF NEWPO R T II \RBOR: T he annual fashion show and lunrheon will take place at 11 a.m. Tuesday, March 28. al the South Coast Plaza Hotel. Proeceds will be divided between the Braille fnsl1tute of AmenC'a, Orange County Chapter <Jnd lhc Manon Parson TMR School in Costa \lesa More information· Mrs. Glenn Schlegel. 586 7665, or Mrs. C E . Chamberlin, 586-3264. NEWPORT BEACH FRIENDS OF THE LIBRARY: The group will meet at 9 :30 a .m . Tuesday, March28, at Mariners Library. V J ohn Kre hbie l. who was appointed Ambassador to Finland under Preisdent Nixon, will speak on his experiences and duties. Reservations may be made with Mrs. Cecil \lanell , 548 9789. by Friday, March 24. ORANGE COUNTY MEDICAL AS· SOCIATIO"J : The Aux1hary will present a pro· ~ram on Creative TV from 9.30 a m. to 2 30 p m Tuesday. '\larch 28, at the Anaheim Con· 't'1\t1on Center t\nnntc• speaker ~ill be CBS news reporter U.1rbara Simpson For more rnformat1on, call X15 5fiti2 . 0 RANGE COUNTY DI ETETIC AS- SOCIATION: Kathy Wishner, M.D. Ph.D., con- '>Ultanl m nutrition and biochemistry, will speak at 7 :JO p.m. Tuesday, March 28, at the Com- munity Hall in the City Shopping Center, Orange. Topi<' will he Drug and Food Interactions in Nutritional Assessment. SOUTH COAST COMMUNITY HOSPITAL AUXILIARY: The Las Madrinas Chapter will hold its annual installation dinner and meeting al 7 p.m. Tuesday, March 28, at Ben Brown's restaurant CUISINART-MICROWAVE COOKING CLASSES: The Broadway department stores a re offenng classes using time-saving equip- ment. Cost for the two-and-a-half-hour classes is $15 and includes instruction, recipes and food sampling Classes are planned for 10:30 a.m. Tuesday, March 28, m the Huntington Beach store, and 10 30 am Monday, April 3, m the Laguna Hills store UNITED NATIONS CENTER: The Orange County Chapter will present Lisa Wataghani's private collection of gemstones at a UNICEF benefit coffee at 9.30 a.m. Wednesday, March :!9, at the UN Center. Santa Ana. Reservations may be made by calling 542-9743. NEWPORT BEACH EXBLEM CLUB #314 : Salad bar luncheon (or dieters and non-dieters wlll be held from 11 a.m . to 4 p.m. Wednesday, March 29, at the Elk's Lodge, Newport Beach. Nutritional consultant Dr. Albert A. Hertz wilt be the guest speaker. For information call 673-6796. • BETl'ER BREATHERS' CLUB : The Lung Association of Orange County and St. Jude's Hospital will cosponsor a meeting at 7 p.m . Wednesday, March 29, al the hospital's re- habilitaion department. Dr. Paul Ovando will speak on Anatomy and P hysiology l>f 1be Luna. More information 1s available from 835-LUNG SHER MAN FOUNDATION: The Spring 1978 Education Program of Sherman Gardens in Corona del NJlJ' is now taktni raervations for ala tours, n ries and woruhops scheduled throughout Aprll, May and June. For more information, call 67S-2281. Club Calendar I . . . Springtime Fantasy Dolores Griff Cleft ! and Karen Bland get ready for a fa5h1on show and musical revll'w at the Tuesday, March 28, benefit luncheon at the Mar rtott Hotel, Newport Beach Sponsored by Las Amigas de San Jose for the benefit of St. Joseph llosp1tal, Orange, the day wiU begin with a social hour al 10:30 a.m. Reservations may be made with the volunteer office at the hospital Gourmet Cookin g Classes Les PC'tites F'leurs Auxiliary of Children's Home Soc1C'ty will present a gourmet cooking series on four consecutive Tuesdays, beginning March 28 at the Dana Point Commuruty Center Above, Chef Susan Be1gbeder shows Diane Stockton and J an lhrth new cooking techniques. For cla~ ulformation. call 495·5695 World of Fashions C 'est Magnifique Mrs. Richard E. Griffin (left) and Mrs. Stephen DuBow admire one of lbe fashions to be shown by I. Magnm al the Twentieth Annual Youth Concert Benefit Fashion ~how, beginning al 11 a.m. Wednesday, March 29, al the Registry Hotel. The event is sponsored by the Orange County Ph1lharmoruc SO<'iety Women's Commit tees. For reservations call 646·6411. DIMa IOSINa 41t1'1!ST CO.UTNWT. -.o.tT --'4M470 I • • ~ Club Calendar ruru each Wedneldoy 1n the Doily Pilot and contam5 Tl()ftcn of women'& and sertneP club meE'tmgs and events for lht /oll0tum9 week -Thurs- da11 through Wedne$day Send nohcea to Club Cal~ dar Daily Pilot, P 0. Box 1560. Costa Meta, CA 92626 Ht> sure to include your name and phone number f\'ot 1ces must be m our hand& two week$ m advance "Set me for car, home~ lift; health and busiam insurance." . To request a picture, wnte or caU the f'eaturu f)eportment. 642-4321. Pictures are umited to Jund· ra111ers open ta the public \!tlft~"·~,..,,c.,..... ... l ••0•1t\·~·'~ ~--· .. ,..... ,.....; .. ' t 1i,.1'" Give your loved one The Wealth of the Irish The Goddess Undine with yellow hafr RARE TREASURE now available at by Bell eek '14 .. Pluol• ••truly a collector"s lavonte" R.Of:t:on s-Cr.{.ee Galler{.f es SOUTH COAST PLAZA 549-5277 ~~~ Mrs. Elbert J Conner·~---------------------------..... !left I and Mrs. Ruth Fashion Plus Theo Horton models a fashion for the Xi Mu Zeta Cha pler of Ileta Sigma Phi Lo be held a t a luncheon on Apnl 1 at the Costa Mesa Golf Club. Tickets are $7.50 and available by calling Linda Keef, 536·2904, or Nany Gray, 968-0172. Proceeds go to Cystic Fibrosis. Stanford Kidney Research Foundation and a scholarship fund. ALPHA GAMMA DELTA: The Newport Harbor Alumnae Club will meet at 11 a.m. Tuesday, March 28, at the home of Mrs. Robert Muller. Corona del Mar There will be a salad luncheon foll owed by bridge Plans will bt' d1scus5ed for the annual Alpha Gamma Delta Reunion Day Luncheon to be held Saturday, April 22 LAGUNA NIGUEL WOMAN'S CLUB: M irhael Nardozia. M1sMon Viejo High School teacher, will show slides and speak on backpacld.ng through the Sierru at 7 ;30 p.m . Thursday, March 30, at the MouU.on Nl&Uel Water District Building. Seaver Kennedy display 1nternat1 o nal dolls, representing the s pring fashions from around the world lhal will be c;hown at the Tuesday fRANCI8 -0RR Club of Ne wport f' · !'how and luncheon at 11 1l corona del mar Jlarbor's annual fashion 1ne s+at1onery am Tuesday,March28, ~~~~~~=;:::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~ at the South Coast Plaza .- Hotel. More information is available from Mrs. Glenn Schle&el, 586-7665, or Mrs. C E. Cham- berlin, 586 3264. Wedding and engagP· merit omtotmeemcnts run on Sunday m the Dall11 f>1wt PormR arr aooilllhlr at all Doily Pilnl off •ct'~ nr h11 cnllmq the 1''eoture~ nt'parl mcnt . 642 4.121 Tn ovoid dis11ppo1nl menJ pro.~clirt bndt' 11 re rt>rrundf'd tn hal'e their u•f'ddmq 1tone~. with a block.and whdP gloss11 o/ the bnde or of the couplt. to tM Peotures Oepart· mnat orw week ~/ore the w f>ddmq. from our bJys ~-for eastczrvaCBttion ... . . I . ; I . . f . I ' f I l f • . ' I Thru March 25 Visit PETER RABBIT'S GARDEN @)~o@@)~@ • I See The Easter Bunny 44 fllNon llland, newport center M.4·5070 SOUTH COAST PLAZA I I J • ' • Featuring ••• ............................................... W-*-day, ~h 22. 1978 DAll Y PILOT C 13 . ' Will the Real Author ... Oscar ·wants You D R R those who just let you EA EADERS: I say "Hello" and don't. The annual national pastime of trying lo ~ess whicb movaes will win Oscars at the Academy Awards ceremony April 3 is un· derway. It wu a big year for romantic comedies. science fiction and, after a long dry spell, mov- ies about women. But regardless or who or what earns the hardware on Oscar night, the Daily Pllot would like to know who its readers feel deserves the golden statuette. To cast your votes you are asked to fill out the contest form and return 1t to the Daily Pilot no later than Wednesday.March 29 .• Entries should be addressed to Oscar Race. Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, 92626. Results wlll be published the day of the Academy Awards ceremony, Monday, Apn 13. BEST PICTURE O "Annie Hall." O ''The Goodbye Girl" O ''Juha" ~ D "Star Wars.'' O "The Turnm~ Point·· SUPPORTING ACTOR 0 Mikhail Baryshnikov, "The Tuman~ Point." O Peter Firth, "Equu::.." 0 Alex Guinness, "Star Wars." O Jason Robards, "Julia." O Maximilian Schell, "Juha." D Les lie Browne, 0 The Turning Point." D Quinn Cummings, "The Goodbye Girl." 0 Melinda Dillon, .. Close Encounters of the Third Kind." promised to print "at some later date" tbe respond -blow the original, uogarbled Aaa whistle as bard aa you version of the definition can aod it will Just about • -~-tokeblsearoff. or Success as lt was &JG~ No charee ror this, written in 1905 by Bessie Ann. It's a payback for-Anderson Stanley. The author's son, Arthur J. au the pleasure your col- Stanley, Jr., a senior umo bas given me and • my family. -GRAND judae of the U.S. district consider U •o act or the phone com ~He RAPIDS, MICU. n Vanessa Redgrave, "Julia." n Tut.•sday Weld, "Looking for Good btu'. '· court in Leavenworth, frtendsblp. suggested anothe ay DEAR GRAND: My· Mr. . Kansas, has provided D E A R A N N to get rid of the sickies. friend• at Ma Bell teU documentation from the LANDERS: My ~ousin, Buy a dimestore whistle me tbe whistle ls not a Ka~sas State ~listorical Wilma, age 16, lives in and keep 1t beside the 1ood Idea. A "violent" Socaety that his mother Texas. She bas written phone. When an obscene reactloa from the victim is indeed the author. to say she ls coming to call comes throueb -or u wbat the slclde wants, BEST ACTOlt LJ \\'oody Allen. "Annie Hall. ' O Richard Burton, "Equus." 0 Richard Drey! uss, "Tbe Goodbye Girl." [ J l\1:.irccllo Mu..,lroianni, "A Special Day." l] John Travolta, "Saturday Night Fen~r." BEST .\CTRESS [ J Anne Dancrott. ''The Turning Point " 11 .lane Fonda. "Julia." l j Diane Kl'aton. "Anrue Hall." l J Shirley MacLaine, ''The Turning Point." [1 Mar:->ha l\lason, "The Goodbye c; 11· I. .. When I first printe<L visit during spring vaca-someone who likes to aod u will brtoi laJm the essay in 1966, ~tion. Wilma is a neat play games -h ke back foe more. Tbe best reader said it wu by girl, Iota ot fun and she breathing hard and not way to &urn ltlm oa ls lo Ralph Waldo Emerson. has a terrific sense of sayrng anything -or, bani ap wl&hoat a word. Subsequently, 28 people humor, but she weighs-------------------- wrote lo say THEY had as much as my 18-year· written it and wanted old brother who plays on credit. With pleasure the high school football C and a slgb of ~UeO J sel team. the record straJght. Mom says J have to fix SUCCESS her up with some dates by Bessie Anderson or I can't go out when StanJey she is here. All the guys He has achieved SUt'· I know want lo see a pie· cess who has hved well, lure. I'm afraid lo show laughed often and loved them what she looks much; who has enjoyed like. the truth or pure women. I know it isn't fair to the respect of intelligent prejudge a girl by her m~n and the love of little looks, but the guys in children; who has filled Lincoln, Nebraska are ELEGANCE ON E.1711' STREEJ' lJN'BELVi NEWPORT BEACH ·COSTA MESA'S CHIC LEATHER EMPORIUM IMPORTED and DOMESTIC LEATHER and CANVAS HANDBAGS LUGGAGt ·WALLETS-ACCESSORIES .., h is niche and a c -funny about blind dates ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ complished bis lask; .and I'm~oneh~k~a 369 E. 17th ST., CO.STA MESA IN WESTPORT SQUARE --~ ( Horoscope ) who has left the world a spot. Suggest something better place than he f a s t ' -T EX A S found it, whether by an p R O B L E M O F A improved poppy, a pret-CORNHUSKER -646-:i.S33 ty poem, or a rescued DEAR CORNY: H ~==================~ soul; who bas never there's any oil in Mr. and Mrs. Taylor Anniversaries A surprise open house was given in honor of • Mr. and Mrs. Ralph A. Taylor on their recent 40th wedding anniversary. Hosts were the ·couple's chidldren: Mr. and Mrs. Gary Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. John Taylor and Dr. and Mrs. Earl W. Isbell. More than 100 friends and rel- atives gathered to celebrate and surpnse the Taylors at the Johnson home. The Taylors moved to Costa Mesa in 1942 and settled on Pacific Avenue where they farmed four acres Mr. Taylor 1s retired and was the former owner of the Laguna Beach Redi-Mix Concrete Company. Mrs. Taylor has been active 1n 4 II, the Costa Mesa Historical Society and the Costa Mesa First United. Methodist Church, besides other c1v1c afra1rs. . *. Albert and Naomi Santini recently celebrat- ' ed their 50th wedding anntversary at a recep- tion given by their children, Albert Santini, Pacific Grove and William Santini and Betty ; Dubbs, both of Costa Mesa. The Santims have • been Costa Mesa residents for 25 years. Mr. Santini was in construction work before he re- . tired. • • • Nevah and Adon H Brownell recently celebrated their 6Sth wedding anruversary at the Huntington Scachff Country Club at a party given by their daughter, Gladys Bostek of Lawndale, and son Arthur H. Brownell of Hunt· ington Beach. The Brownells live in Manhattan Beach. • have seven grandchildren and 18 great· grandchildren. ) l-~1. 80' 0 DAILY PILOT INFORMS In lhe THURSDAY, MARCii Z3 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (March 21- Apnl 19): Emphasis on getting job done. You are able now to sense weak points, correct er· rors. separate fact from Caney TA URt:S <April 20 · May 20> S1gn1f1c·ant t'hanges dul'. don't hug status quo. You havt• marvelous opening for expression. ~rnph1C'ally illustrating meanings, desires. GEMINI CMay 21- June 20): Finish rather than begin assignment. Evaluate relationship. Your securaty, emo- tional well-bemg could be at stake. Choice between intrigue and happiness 1s yours. CANCER (June 21· July 22): Ideas bounce, sparkle -humor much in evidence Be confl dent. flexible Display \'ersatility You meet someone who could play important role in your life. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22>: Emphasis on dc· term ining what 1s of value -this is a time lo discard the superfluous. · You also sort out rela- tionships. Who is good for you? VIRGO CAug. 23-Sepl. 22 > · What had been .. frightening" 1s dis- posed of -you t'all your own shots, dance to your own tune Cycle is high -take 1nthahve. make personal appearances. LIBRA (Sept. 23 Oct 22 >: Judge situation based on factual material. Avoid rushmg to conclusions. There is "trade" or back!\tage in formation accessible. Key is to persist. SCO RPIO COct 23 Nov 21 > Act'ent on re suits from busrness. professional endeavors Indications point to change, communication which wins friends, m tW .... K ...... , Reclines only 1" from the wall ................. Americas No 1 Rechner6 .. "'°" ""'° .............. . JaltJWiap::l•"Y· _..,. ...... _ _,,_, __ 4fMtDJ __ ._IMMI .. , • Le-l-IMhn" The cn111rs tnat break their backs tor vcxJ"' ...... "'-'" Sehth•" The recllning Sofu C05TAMISA HIWPOIT HACH Ht .. I 1'11 5"tt ............. _,_ .. ,. ... __...,.,,_ 642 .. 617 -~IN M 1•1 -IM fluences people. SAGl'ITARIUS (Nov. 22 Dec. 21): Practical affairs related to home, business, income poten- t1 a I, cash flow -tbese tend to dominate. Taurus, Libra figure prommenlly. CAPRICORN <Dec. 22 Jan. 191: Favorable lunar aspect equates nnw to journey, gain through reading. writ· mg. publishing. Aura of my!->tery is an asset. Know 1t and don't reveal all AQUARIUS (Jan . 20· Feb. 18): If persis· tent, you get rounded view of situation, ven- ture. Business at band is made lo order for you. Key is lo know it. What appears hidden becomes available once you dis- play confidence, convic- tion. PISCES <Feb. 1.9-Mar. 20): Spotlight on your understanding of public responses, willingness to make a commitment, ability to complete a project and to get best legal counsel. Aries, Libra figure prominent· ly -so does number 9. H March 23 is your ·birthday you are in· quisitive. a natural re- porter, attractive to op- posite sex, a quick study. fond of travel, change, variety. lacked appreciation of Wiima'• family it earth's beauty or failed woalda't hurt &o mention to express it; who has it. lo tbe meaotlme, always looked for the don't try to nx ber up best mothers and given with the dudes who have them the best he had; dozens of cbJcks lusting whose hfe was an in· after them. Pick some or spiral1on; whose the leu-ln·demand memory a bened1ctaon. larcer pys. They would D E A R A N N probably welcome a LANDERS: I have a flxed·upda~. good friend who bakes D E A R A N N som_e very spec ial LANDERS Youradvice cookies and bnnl;S them to the woman who was to my home peraodl~al· frightened by obscene ly. A great deal of ti me phone caJls was good and _effort go mto her You said, "Don't utter a cookies. <Not to m.enllon sound. Simply hang up her c~stly ingredients> The caller gets his lnvar131~ly, she puts JOilies from an angry these divine cookies in a response and will con- shoebox. llnue to harass you if Even th<?ugh she uses you fall into the trap." Jots. of tissue paper My husband works for packing I can "taste" the shoes before I even put the cookies into my mouth. I don't want to hurt this woman's feel· inga but I feel I should tell her. Can you suggest a tactful way? -ALL BOXED IN IN COLUM · BUS DEAR ALL: Go t-0 the corner hardware store or the Flve-and·Dlme and buy some plastic containers. Or, do you by any chance save the Uos from fruitcakes, candy, etc.? Don't walL until your friend brings over another batch of cookies tbat taate like shoes. J>'ttscnt her wllh the containers and tell her the truth. She wlll Club Calendar run& each Wt'dnelda11 tn the Daily Pilot and contams notices o/ women's and service club rru!etrngs and e!Jfflts /or thP /oll<Jwmq week - Thur!day through Wednes· da11 ~ rwt1re'i to Cluh Calendar, Dmly Pllot, P 0 Roz 1560. Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Be irure to mclude 11our name and phone number. Notices must bP. m our hands two weeks m advance. To request a J»Cture. write or call the Features. Department. 642-4321. Pie· tures are limited to Jund· raisers open to the public. She walks in beauty. Our sideswept strap unfurled in bone kidskin. What prettier way to greet spring! Gently priced. 22.99 • M11ter Ch1r111 •Vo~ SOUTH COAST PLAZA 3333 SOUTH BRISTOL• COSTA MESA· Biggest Greatest Selection Anywhere I· r1•1 • n.11111•' on vour ( h, 11 ol.111· l:t!i.:s. trn1 and I h< prices arc ,,,,/,/ In Your Cups "'·~Mill­• D & DD'1 G,....._ c......._ wishes you a are arriving • Short & long gowns & robes • Baby dolls • Paiamas •Jumpsuits • Coverups • Eyelet camisoles & tel) pants • Hostess & Pa110 dresses We apeciali:e In filling bras in eizea 32A-thru 46F. Ylelf•ll ....... ................. ........ d ....... ..... AMPUPA..._ llJ I. I 7ttt St. COIN MeM • '42·1430 1 I ••• 02 ••• ! \~ - I . ·-"' •· I; p m ,, 1;· - 12 .. 2 ... .. .. /Jelicates~en Dubuque $898 HAM ~A~ H1,ul\t11l1111.111d 1n1 anilllll!•\' Polish Ham POlkA •• s698 I .ii.11 .. 1111 • I lo 111 , II•'> (5 lbs ••• 1098) R 11 PlllSBURY 4 9 C 0 S BUTT£RflAK£ •••• • 1<1 .111, 111 1.,,., "' / (CIH!IAMON-911 oz ••• 59c} BUTTER s239 COOKIES f Shrimp Cocktail 49c I 1 , '• 11 l 1 , 1 r' .,,,.. , 1 "" Cream Cheese . 59 c " " I • I I 'htl \ ... I/ pl-.. ROQUEFORT 79< Dressing I I 111 ""·"' \\"Ill ........ , .. ,,,. Lic1uor f Jep 't. Ballantine's S 1498 Scotch ;-.: .. .,. rrd111,.d ·I 1111' I~;, lt11 r Crown Russe ... s 899 I 111•• \ dL1 111 Iii• I lt11 r ''" Gordon's Gin .. sl0 99 ,, I ,\l' I '"'11111111 I 1 llr 111 Gallo Brandy ... 5599 ••11 ,, I Ht d 11 I ol I If(' • . lJ11 111 Lancer's Wine . s399 ti •• 01lh1 'h,,1111\\li1!1 ldili MT. WINES \111 1111 11 ••• ll 11 111dv. Ch 1lili~. c I 11• t. l<li111•, \,. 1' 1r l\ro-. I ,, 1111·1 CUT CORN or PEAS .... , I : I I •f\ .1h I I .!ll C•/ 11.11: Orange Juice ... 45e \!11111!1• :\J 1111{l•fll1111[.ilt lo 1 ( White Bread ... 79e APPLE PIE :o;,11,1I.11 l\q!. 11r J)utt'h ,JO oz h1i: Cool Whip . . . . . 59c Waffles ........ 49c I >1111n\ flake B11tt11111111\ If•"' pk.: Lemonade ...... 23 c ~linutc Maid White· or l'mk -H 01 ICE CREAM Royal Host Prfl!lium Pack half.gallon s12' r- FOR ROASTING! FRESH LEG O' $ 149• PORK En--tern pork! \\ hn)(' or 1;hnnk half FRESH DUCKS THIS WEEK WE FEATURE ALL THE GOOD THINGS TO MAKE THE HOLIDAY MEMORABLE! 99~ SPLIT 69 BROILERS ~ Grade "A"! Average weight 4-5 lbn Large meaty Grade "A" fryers Cure 81 Ham BoNnEss ••••••• s289~ Hormel's fabulous fully cooked ham! Whole or half Our own ham -an old f a..,/11om•d cure tliot y1w ancl your folks are bound tn enjoy! You 'IL love the flat'urful tPndrrn11.,~ -(1•an and niit too :.moky. And >t1U 'll lo1 • M!rumc an eye-app1:almg, ta:ste-batt:./)mg bakt·d ham El Rancho Ham wHou •••••• s 119• The right sn:e to feed the hungry hordt•! (wiltt lddtd) El Rancho Ham :kN ..... s1°9• ~tr~YJY ~v El Rancho's grt'al quality in a smaller piece. (waler added) El Rancho Ham = ...... s279• Ct>ntcr c11t -thick or thin -lt·an nnd lender! (wa~er added) II Rancho Ham =t:~ ............... lll! F.1 ... 11•r d11111t·r h1·l·o111t'' n•r\ "Pl'r1ul ''h1•n it'!' plnnn<·d oround El Rancho's lully-cooked nld-t1nw rnrc lwm! (water addtd) Sliced Bacon ... s14~ Sausage rrWANsTYU • s1 st Bratwurst uwat0·s s1 5! Our own recipe-. and no nitrilt's Pork, veal, sea~ning -no nitrite .. Frosh Tnrke111 ~RAa:cN.~~~ElfS ••••••• 71 ! l<-<1<.1·d 111 :--.111 h rn.1nd11 \ .dl1·v -'l'lt'rll'cl tu he· rh~ qu.1111\ .. ,u prefer· A value you'll hr p)NJ<>l'rl to serw:1 Avcrai:-c 111 t11 1;, lh". Turkey Breast . s1 6~ Oysters ~~ •.•• s1 s? Turkey ~ru •••• 49 ~ I r1·-.h <.r.11k · .\ · 1' nh, 1~1 .111d i:iltl11' Fnr your dr~srng -Rot.. (WESTIJllf ••• $1.49) Bu~h dark meal -fresh Crud<' "A ' Now York Strip UJorc::. .... !l4/l \J.q.:r11t11 .. n1 • in m1•,1t: l.01111•11 1 of l IS DA. Choice hN•f -naturally a~cd to he trndrr nnd Oaw1rful! 7 Bone Roast .. s1 1~ t h11ck t 111 L' S 0 1\ l h11111• hf'l•I CHUCK STEAK 99! U.S.D.A. Chu1cP bl'rf. to be i;urr - N.Y. Steak ....• 5 37 ~ Loin t Ill of U.S D.A. Choice hfl f BONB.ESS ROWD BEEF ROAST Chuck cut ... Choice &houldrr clod S uper Fresh Produ ce 0 Bone Roast .• s l 2~ (;huck cut l'.S D.A. Cho1cl' l>c·ll GROUND S 129 BEEF:~~ ., Lean ••• Diws not exceed 22ri lat. Grapefruii TEXAS RUBY RED •••••••• II,, 1 I A treat for your Em;ler brC'akfu.,t ••. Storl the day \\1th the bright refreshinit flavnr of thri;e juicy favorites! Broccoli . . . • • • • • 39~ Fresh! .•. tender ·rnd all itrl'rn RED YAMS 39~ Bake the U.S. No 1 quality yam! Orange Juice • . • 79~ Our own -freshly squeezed, no add1tiq·' Navel 4 Lsl Oranges f • California's finest ••. largt site! and Eas~er ~ilies .I ••• Comparr /fir quality.' Ours arP all /we bloom.• or more ..• flor111t 711al1t'Y nnd {ml u1rapprd ••. thl' kind vr111 Rlllt' wit Ii pridr! Or rhrio .. • from our duplav.~ o Chry~nntllemum.~.Rt'Ronia.~. Colr1•/nria~. ltfrirnn \!111/rt~. Colnrl1im1 .. c·ut fluwcr• -and more! ••. each an out.•tandin11 lwrticul/ural 11prc1mn1. Gold Medal 79" FLOUR~': ~ Regulur, Self H.i11111~. Unbleached • Cookie Mix . . . . • 79e · Nc11lh:'li Chuculutt· (')1111-l:.! 111: Snack Crackers &9e Choice ol Nllbu;co vuriel1es Dressing :ais':~y. 75e All l'ur~e or Corn Bread-12 oz Springfield ] ]< SUGAR ~.': Colden or Dark Brown, Powdered Napkins :asOfT • • • &9e Large and 1><1Jt. 3 ply. pkg vf :;o Sweet Gherkins 79c t-lt!inz .•• cn&p, flavorlul-16 o:i: jar White Vinegar • 45e Heinz makes at ri~ht 1 Quart bottle POTATO 79c CHIPS Laura Scu<l<kr,., X 117. Twan Patk Cranberries sm •• 33e Springf ll'kl !:)trJaned or Wholc-16 oz Jell-o ..•••••••• 35e All flavors in the 6 oz pkg Marshmallows . • 49e Campfire-the fluffy ones! 16 oz PINEAPPLE Dole's-in juice! Chooks, Crushed or Sliced -No. 2 can 49( Dressing 1 sus • • • • 53 c 1111 lum, llcrb/Sp1ct, <.;rc1:11 (.;oddc-.,.-:-ot. Rice Mix MJB • • • • • • 79c Uro1q) or White wllh \\ tld-:; Ol Rolls BROWN 'If S£RV[ • • • 45 c !'>pringfield Party Flake -pki: of 12 Oranges lWfJARIM ••• 45c Springfit•ld for \.lllue-11 oz can PAPER 55 TOWELS < ·.;p1llm:tlt• Colors or l'rint~-bi~ rnll Instant Coffee • 5449 Ripe Olives . . . • 59e Spnn)!lwld C:iant "'' 111111 d :--;,, 3l~I Peanuts DRVROAST •••• 98c l'lnnll•r -lt1r th1 1otk .111 h1•11r! J.!•l Foil ALUMINUM •••••••• _39 c ~pringlidcl in I hr. ~:; lr>11t r .. 11 LIQUID JOY A nin• r1•1l11"111u1 -t! ol (20¢ off) / 't 11 ,., Ill 1//1 • I f h11r ,\/ 1rr Ji _!,/ tl1ro11Rh \\,cl . .\Int, Ir •111 ( lflt'fl ,/,11/\ 11 /11 !I Na ,ufn tu d1•alns ClOSED EASTER SUNDAY ARCADIA PASADENA SOUTH PASADENA HUNTINGTON BEACH N EWPORT BEACH EASTBLUFF tRVIN AGUNA HILLS SJnt•I •nd Huntington 320 W, Color1do llvd (r•mo11t and Huntington Werner 11nd Al9onquen 7.117 N•wport 81v.1 2~~~ tulblult Or Un1v•rtily 11nd Mict'l•lton 2314, Moulton P11li••y IEI A1nct'lo Cenl•r I JP ol Orengegrove !Soutt'l•a" corn•r 1 iUtrbour M all I 10n lh• Ptmntu•o 1 l aalblull V111.ir,.~ C:1•11IP1 1 1 Perk Vo•w C~nlt't I 1Moullon Pukw1y Plau HAIR CONDITIONER .•••••••••• $1.49 \ .O. ti Ht•l Oil 'l'n:nt mtnl pk~ ol 2 ,II ox RIGHT GUARD •••••••••••••••••• ggc Sflr&y Ocodunnt ••• ftN•ntt :1 c (lk tlfl V.O. 5 HAIR SPRAY ••••••••• $1.19 CALCOM,., "' .. ~ .••.••...••••.• 89c 'Rtt., Un!IC'enltd, Grty-X <1r nun·lto1111oOI Cltc tft) S.th Oil 1Woli1, Huhhle B11th •• , lfl n111w1 CLING FREE •••••••••.•••••••• $1.49 1~111.:r.n r•hru: tOl\tnrr ••• pks: ~I 36 1hft.t1 ADHESIVE BANDAGES •.•••••• $1.49 ,f 6' .J'" "l~nd A1dol''-H~ .. ShHr-Val~t pt1rk SPRAY ••••• $1.39 r .n.s .••• Rtl(Uw, Extn·Stren,tth-311& EYAPORATtD MM ••••••.••••.• 35e MAXJ~ADS •••.••••••••••• , ••• 89c Economize Mth P t ••• 13 ounce an F .. trmw1th Stay Frrc' pkitof I'? SAFFOLA ........ -• 69C Nn t h11l .... 1trol C:l'lflt'Ctn With th ! l U. Cfn -• •j ) 1 \ .. ·~· .... ..-----.. -· .. . . -- r • .. - I Houst, For ~ HOUHI For s• Wedneeday March 22 1979 * DAIL y PILOT DI ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 For S-. Ge•r., 1002 G1•r• 100? HoulH FM Sa&. Ho4.u1 For Sale Housu For S. 1Houw1 For ScM ....................... ········•·······••····· ········•••············ ···•····•··•·•····•···• ·············•········· ·············•···•····· ..................••..• G1Mral I 002 Gew el I 002 Ciwrd I 002 G....... I 002 Gewrai I 00.Z •······•••············· ••····•••······•••····· ....................... ··············•········ •.••............••..•.. EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY P'ublllhft-'1 Notice: Houn1ForS. ················••····· Gt'Mral 1002 ....................... INVESTOR'S SPECIAL $46,000 Guarded gateway pro- teds l avish courtyard With pool. Secluded entry to executive living room Sunshine gourroet kit chen overlook!. pnv1tte patJo. Sweeping master bedroom plu!> chJJd's retreat. Owner 1~ anxious. Submit any or rer• 847-6010 .,,, , . f 'I .. S&S'f)UALITY Ail AU UNDER THE MARKET! 3Brcondo Irvine f,64,750 28rcoodo $64,750 lrVll\l' 4 Br borne Sant it Anil $65,000 3 Br home loullerton $67,000 3 Br home · Anahci m $&J,000 3 Br home Fntn Valley $&J,500 3Brhome $71,000 Brea 3 Br home Anah111m $72,000 3Brhomt> Yorba l..tnda $76,000 3 Br borne Anahe1 m $79,000 TRIPLEX S70.000 llWI.. Y UMIQUE IN H. V. HIUS . • .and also clean and nice. Three bedrooms and a den, and open living area that includes living, dining, entertainini and kitchen areas all surrounding a fireplace. You should see it! Done in Country F~nch. You should see the wood floo · , harbor and ocean view and pool si e Jot. A Un1que Home at just $180,000. U~l()UI: ti()Ml:S REALTORS", 675-6000 2443 East Coast Highway, Cor~na del Mar .11~0 1n MPSd VPrde, at 546-5990 All real e11late ad vt>rtis1.'<1 m thtS oewspa~r 1.s sub Ject to the lo'ederal fo'a1r llous 1n.: Act of 196tl which rnalr:('s 1l illegal to advertise "any pre rerence. hm1tat1on, or d.IB<'nnunauon based on race, color, rehjlaon, ~ex, or nallonal ong1n, or an intcnlJon to a\ilke <iny .such preh•renCl'. hm1ta t100, ordu.cnminataon. ' Ttu.s newspaper wall not knowangly acrept any <1dverl1i.1ng for rt'JI est.ate wluch ii. an '1ola t1on of the law Seller m1)\ mg & most ?-.t'l1h1S3BRplusdcn, l·'• BA S&S b•auty. Wants an offer th1s weekend & pnced at only $7S,OOO. All wull> remodt'l1.'<l, new!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ plumbmg, paneling, tile l-&piillltnt'7u~OO ~~! .......... ~~.~~!~~ .......... !~.~~ 540-3666 Houses fw Sale ••••••••••••••••••••••• G~rat 1002 Wltela11 REAL ESTATE 6 AS'T,q4 ~ ••ulhtale,ln<. ....................... ---- NEWPORT IE.ACH BEACH VALUES 111 hi d d PRICEREDUCEO $59,900 WOW!! g Y upgra e · :I 5 Bdrm Penmsula Pt bdrm, family & dmmi: , room:., new brown plush Steps to beach. $1tl9,~. carpet.5, i.parkhn~ pool illld lot-; of extra<; Of fered at only $128,500 call 54().1151 ~HERITAGE Nl'Wer Ocean view duplex, D.tna .PL., $145.000. 5 Bdrm. pn' ate beach, Corona U1ghldnd ~ Sl5ll,llOO Wnrld W1dt· Deluxe Town home 1 3 Spaoous bedrooms' Soft carpet:i ! Sun p11t10! Choice greenbelt loc a hon' Clo:.e to shopping Owner amcious' Can't last al this pnre' Call 645 <nJ3 REALTORS ---------Brok11r-. 673-4545 CONTEMPORARY TRI-LEVEL i-:xt'<'UlJ\ e homt• m ont• of our hnl'l>l <ff(•a .... Walk to :.! pJrk~ Frml dining lluge bonu~ rm w ""l'l h<ir 3 car garai.:c. Im mt'<iaate O<'<'Upan<')'. Just h~tl.'d 646-7711 Ht>al F..'ltatr GREENIROOK 4 bdrm. 2 ba Eir.trt'mely p0puJar CA\1ELOT mdl ·nu~ lovely home IO<'al<.'<i on a cul de !'oar w1thm c."a.<\y w alkmg dtStancl' to :-.t1 Coa~t Pl,1za, theatres & n·-.taur:ints Many out ~tand1n~ Jratures in • lu1h• <.:u.c;tom Drapen•'" \'overed patio l>t·(·orator Wallpapt'r, throughout OPEH THURS 1-4 47 BETHAHY tlcst buy 1n best area of Turtlerock; close to pool ---------& tennis. Charming 3 bdrm • ram1ty rm .• cen FUNKY HOUSE tered around ~a rd en OH TWO LOTS a trium with rock waterfall; profess . $50,000 landscaped. with terrac N o t m u r h o f a 1ng & underground house .. but 1t ran be drama~e. A bar!{ain al bought for lot valuP only $109,500 • you own the Livable .. but prohahly land! beyond fi~mg up llurrv. C. F. Colesworthv ~e c:aii~ ~1AA R~on _ UO·~~!O 'd"P.EALTORS IK IRVIHE UHIV PK LIKE MEW DUPLEX MUCH DESIRB> 1 Blk Lo tx>ach, less than .i OXFORD yr., old, blln-.. nil·•• crpt'g & drps, frplcs, 4 t·ar1gar. Below market. Super VICW from lhlS 2200 SQ ft 3 br. 3 ba, formal din rm & teenager's hideaway Steps from pools. tennis l'rts. parks & schools $189,500 JACOBS REAL TY 675-6670 Phone today for appt. to ·--------~<>e MS-9491 Rt'al E.o;tate Slothed $4,700. MOW $64,500. r.asts1de 2 Bdrm hxt'r upper al 381 C-O!;la M<·<in St. C ~ M.ikc offrr Terms CORONA DEL MAR TRIPLEX . .. on large; legal R-3 lot, 1 block from ocean Blvd., which is just above Big Corona Beach. Bdrm. arrangement is 2. 2 & 1 -always rented! An xlnt lax shelter, with fine appreciation potential. $215,000. 759-0811 fiul""' Glut Wt4u'lJt Bt.dg. ELEGANT PACESETTER HOME -4 a.droom. 2 bath home witt. di.WrMJ room. Deli9'1tf11I kitchen with uw appllancH. Lonly thing room with flacptOM hesth -aJI newty painted. new carpdlftCJ ud draperlu. Profe11ionally landscaped. • . S 119 ,500. ...,O(Tll L\Gl'N,\ 199· t551 497-3331 LAGl'N \ "llGUEL 495 li20 1002 Gen.rol DANA POINT 493-8812 1002 ....•....•..............••.................... B.AYCREST HAMDYMAM'S DRE.AM Garage fully insulated. 'W' l·:SL l·: Y N TAYLOR CO. HEALTUHS :--111..:t: 1H4(; DCLUstVI LINDA ISLE Stately stone & wood custom home on 113' bayfront on tip o! island with big bay view. Finest of construction without regard to cost. 4 BR suites & maids qutrs, 2 pwd rms, Cam rm, den, billiard rm. elevator, sauna, unique pool, jacuzzi & boat dock. $775,000 Lse-hold or $1 ,375,000 Fee. Seller will finance. By appt. only. WESLEY H. TAYLOR CO .. UALTOIS 211 I S-Jooqol1t HJlh Rood NEWPOIT CEHTE:R, M.I. 644°49 I 0 SPYGLASS Open Daily, 32 Drakes Bay is one of a kind -brand new Lusk -never hved in - view. CoU 640-6161 LOOK FOR THE GOOD LIFE -This neat 3 bdrm Tiburon Condo will do it! lt'5 large & spacious with family room. 2 1~ baths, separate double garage and air conditioned. Large open patio with tlUiJt in BBQ. Asking S78,900. Call 546 .. 141 Serving Costa Mesa.,..rvine Huntington Beach-Newport Beach ~~!'! .......... !?.~~!~~~! .......... !?.~~ BIG CANYON 4 BR. fam. rm .. 3 baths. Beautifully decorated family home with pat10 views from each room. $335,000 LIDO ISLE Newly remodeled 4 bdrm .. den. 4 baths, living rm. w /cathedral ce1hng. Lgc, master bdrm. suit,e. BAYFROHT Sc ... er al fine bavfront homes with pier·& slips BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Boy-.1de Or1ve.N.8 . 6 75·6161 CieMt'ol I 002 GeMral t 002 ···•·•••••·•··•·•··•··· .....•........•........ SUPER DUPLEX BARGAJN PRICED at $93,000.· Newport Beach. Balboa Perunsula Cherk out thJs super buy with bay View from upper un· it Hurry. call 54().1151 ~HERITAGE REALTORS EASTER SPECIALS 'llwpt Perun Dupl<'<c Fantastic Joe $102 ooo Newport Custom llomc 3Br. l'IO!'l' to Ikach $158,000 Outdoor ~as OBQ \uto Gcir Door OP•'nl'r Sk\ hi.:ht in Fam Hm. HY OWNl-:H !17:} 8123 l'rm Only $10!1,9011 CLEAN UP NEW LISTING Lo•e country charm? Tius SJ>t'Clal home IS for you Beamed ceilings, warm wood paneling. BuHl in work bench ---------Large lot with RV ac ress. Newly painted, --------· Beautiful Mesa W00<b 3 Br. 2 baS89,000 1 m::==~=~==~I huge bnck rlrl!places in Rring your mop and pail' I• hving room aod farruly :1 Bdrm. 2 bata CM&ly i room-4 bdrms and din. ----• years old! Great area! $51, 900 mg room. Be the first to ---------• Vacant' A Steal! $73.000. see th1'• and make it SS W e I l m a 1 n t a 1 n e d " 9,950. REDCARPET754·1202 townhome m ('Onvt'nienl yours~ $179,000. VAOR FHA TERMS locallon Btn ~round<; w, PETE BARRETT <.;" -.a~er lol'at1on PRIDE maturl?ln'c<i&shruhs ~ -REALTY-" .ilk to major shops bd. 2 ba w I clubhouse par!.. 'l hools and hu., pool & -.auna Owner 642·5200 -.lop t Bdrm .... I'• h,1\ho., Sec it for $78.900~ t transrerr('d Mu-.t s<'ll -.----.-. -_.__ f11t•plan'. dbl .:arai.:(• Brinn. 2 bath, shake rnof. NOW' 646 7711 ~~~ : .. 11 :>llOOoP<•ncves. dishwasher No wax Inti RE Network noori and rruit tre{·~ ! REDC\RPET754 1202 General 1002 G~rot HEW__.,.EW Cu.<;tom bwlt-3bdrm. 2 bath, family room, I 002 -------fireplace Fully lnsulat ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------1 ed. double garage. macnab /Irvine realty A BEST BA YFROMT BUY! OPEH DAILY I ·5 324 MORHIHG STAR LM. Sm~le slory trad1t1onal home with 3 bdrms .. C'ozy den & frplc. Spacious living rm. views the quiet bay in Dover Shores. Slip for your boat. $495,000 ln<!'1uding land! Cathy Schweickert 642-8235 (Q-137) '42-1235 901 Dover Drive 644·6200 Harbor View Center I rvlne at Campus Val ltV Center 752·1414 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• CE 110111 ILllNS ca. OVER .SO YEARS OF SERVICE Vl!W HOME THUi ARCH UY South Laguna. Architoct Designed. C tom Built; 2 Years ~oun . Magnificent •Br & Fam. Rm. llom With A Forever Ocean VJ w From Nearly Every Rm. A ri~ht • Cb rtul Cootemporary WJV ult d Ceilin 1. Exquisite Docor, Expensive Honey-Beit& Cplg. Splendid U e 01 Glas& & Wood . Priced At S31B,OOO. MEW HOME Ea1tMde C. M. 1 Builder JUSl <'Omplt•lcd tJu.s 2 story 4 bdrm homr Features include. vault ed ceihn~s. 3 rar i:ar:il(e Easts1de Costa Mesa. $88,500 <PS Better bop on over' I Roy McCardle 1110 Mewport ll•d. Costa Mesa 548-7729 & RV storage llurry, ---------rhoa'le your own rarpeL'I CaJI MG·S880. ~HERITAGE REALTORS HEWPORTHTS One or a kind with secluded tree lined en· lry. Completely re· modeled with large rooms. pot bellied swve plus oak planking floors. Dining room. family room, large bdrms. and pr1 vale patios. OPEN SUNDAY 1 S, 2916 Clay SL Call ~-5880 ~HERITAGE REALTORS macnab /Irvine realty paneling and wallpaper HEADACHE? Four Bedroom Home rn Tako aspirin & no more Mesa North. Truly a Irish whiskey. House Great Buy for $76,000 hwiung ache? Call us. 546-ZU3 We're Harbor Realty, ,.,.,Nro1 ·,·11 Hu"lrn-•Nt'1' the one with a great r WJ IS&Hdl s:~~:~~b1l1~:~'~! l ----··-·-~ The Bluffs, for a pa1nlt-o.,s OCEAMVIEW 4PLU Lge 2 br, 2 ba units wt beauliful Interior~. Very altracll\'e perky cedar thruout. Low ma1ntenanC'e redwood exterior. Developing harbor · Mai'lna area J us l ltSted. 646-7711 DESIGNED FOR EXECUTIVE LIVING This beautifully up- graded Bue cola Home' Spacious Living Room with big Fireplace. Large Master Bedroom, highly upgraded W•lh private entrance to garden area. SlllmP stone planters hiihllght the room-backyard Mesa Venje Ll\'l.n,e at 1ls Best! $129,000. Call 546-2313 OPf"I Ill 0•HS11.J'j ft'.l IN I• $159,500 in fee• Did wr say painless" Well 1t may hurt a httle, but 1t s a heck of a buy DUPLEX BALBOA ISLAND Steps lo beach, 2 BR 1 BA each unit. Oldl'r, hut well cared tot. $185,000. 206 Garnet FOR MORE HOUSE FOR YOUR MONEY Try our WestclHr Beau· ty 4 BR + den or S BR. 4 BA. a.lplc's, coiy Cami· ly home 1436 Estelle Ln. $185.000 ....,,..f I 002 GtMl'Of I 002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Colc:IWell Banker RfSIDENnAL BROK£RAGE CCMMNV .. New & Beautiful Costa Mesa Condos 3 Bdrm, 212 baths $82,500 V.A. BUYERS 3 Bdrm Fantastic l lomc ~.500 Newport Pier Realty • .._ ::mdP#(•TI 2005 Balboa Blvd. Newport Bch. 673·2058 LAKE FOREST Beauty-deluxe thru-0ut 3 BR. 2 BA. lrg. family room, tons of extras. $91,500. Univenitv Pen Yale. 4 BR. 3 BA. mm c m condjtion. $129.SOO fct• By~Sea Surf within ~leps of th1'1 great family homl' in Newport BeaC'h Only $125,000. Low Price Hampton model 1n Seaview. Newport s finest. Fantashc \'1ew. only $229 ,500. -------· OCEAM VIEW NEWPORT quality construction. 2 IR, I IA. w /frplc. E•p•nshe wallpap•ra througiMMat, sunk" tub, new c~ four skyli9'h-A.ff MW tMdlt-in ClfPll•cn · + 119 a ldtchea. IHm ceil9gl. r09Cjl sawn cedar tflrooucJhout. Fnndt doon openilMJ to ettdostd dKk. Steps h-om your door to bNc.h. $215,000 CANNERY VILLAGE INVESTMENT opportunity, Hc.al•t specialty shop l~atiOft. Wood thinglM sin9le buildlOCJ on fff IORd. $100,000. CAMEO HIGHLANDS CORONA DEL MAR This immoc. 3 BR. 2 BA + deft, ttot Oftly hos room for pool, but 11 nry near pvt • bHch. Redlaced to S 169, 900. LAGUNA BEACH CHARMER 2 IR. l BA. Walk to bNch. Medce11t frplc., oalt floors, fenud yard. Perfect home fOf' crti1t, writtr, 1tudeftt, ~. weekenden and anyone who appreciatu Laguna charm. Only SI I 0,000. EMERALD BAY Spectocuilcr Yiew home of fiM qudlty ourlookiftCJ Emerald lloy. Perfect fmnily home for thole ~tiring this grHf pvt. comm..Uty. Has dartlroom, 1ep. study + storage. 4 IR, 2 BA. $4'6,000. 644-7020 2123 SAN JOAQUIN HILLS ROAD NEWPORT BEACH G...eral 1002 GeMral 1002 .......••..............................•....•. MIHl~AMCH 48R. POOL-S66.400 VAHOOOWH C1rt'ular dnH' Laritt' fam1\\ ~IZl'CI h nng room Counir' k1lchl0rt U1nt· ~all of .ila'is \'IC"" of 1·11\ l'rl'd pav11ton & lu..,h 1:roundo; :.urruun1Jin1: ll&r t-'rt'dorm pool. Sl:par.il<' \l.1ni.: for huJt• awa~· .\1a!'tt•r Su1t1• & rh1ldrt-n's qu,irl<'r!'> Hurry for th1' unique hari:am' 963 7Hlll • J• BETTER HURRY! NEWPORT BEACH. 1·ompletely remodeled upl(raded home an lbt.' n•'""• ne"" new-painl an out , cpts, drps. plumb m~. kitchen & landscap mg 3 Bdrms. custom bm·k frpk A better bu~ you wont gel. Onl~ $114,900. 644-7270 ,-1«.:tut S#fdi tJ~~ [~ •Ji-==R~CALTOR~S . · CAPE COD TRIPLEX INCOME $905. VERY SHARP . PRICE S 155,000. OWMER/AGT. CARRY 2MD . 2266 MIMER, C.M. PH: 548-5 777. CLUM CONDOS 2 Bdrm • ('U.,tom ~ 000 :.! Bdrm f.1mnu , Or<inl!'f' l'rt'\' arl.'a lrnne S&l.9W IENTSOH & BR OWH IMC. 833-9781 $53,900 $2,150 TOTALDOWM \\ tndtnl!' roadway tn wanni.i 2 ston• retreat' J'nval<' ~rounds protect. secluded entry to lavish h\'tng room! Gourmt>t kitchen ovl'rlooks sun- stunr rourt.> ard ! Wmd 111i:: ~tci1r'l4 <1} leads to s""t-ep1n~ master bedroom plus child·., n·trPat' Hurry. seller 1~ ;j,nXlllUS 1\.17-tiOIO General 1002 GeMraf 1002 •••••••.....••.......•. ······················· C OROHA DEL MAR CHARMER B c• a u l t f u 11 v n• m o d e 1 e cl ho us e , wulkin~ d1o.;.Ulfll'l' to beach. Hdwd. fir'> .. nl'\\ k1trh. w .Jena1rc BBQ, sh in ~lrd 1·,lt•r an•a. Delight to see. $1 IR !)OO A COLDWEU. IAHKIEtt CO. 644-9060 :1161 SAN'10AOUIN HILLS AO IN NEWPORT CENTER ~~!'! .......... !~~~l~~~ .......... ~?.o.~ macnab /Irvine realty A truly ~radous, highly stylish Spanish horn<' on approx. 4 _acres . Maintained with perfection. 4 bedrooms + endless views from twaut1ful p:ltios, each with its own privacy. Dining room t:xpansive ycnr·rounci lol{gla f a<'ing pool. Detached n<'l1v1ty room for family frolics. Sav~ $100,000 -try $685,000. •j CALI •• JOHN \1;\CN .\B &12·8235 '44·6200 H.trbof' Vl4'W C..n .. ,. ' ' D2 OAILYPILOT * Weon..01y,Marchn.1&78 ~!.~.~ ....... ~!:!.':!~.~~ ....... ~:!!.~~ ....... ~!~!!.~~.~~ ........ ~!!!~~ ........ ~'!'!!4!!.~~ ....... tto.n.. For S. ......._For We Hovau For Wt Coda MeM I OJ4 ,......,__ leodt I 040 lnine I 044 Lapita leoch I 041 &...,.... Nlplt I 052 Newport.._. I 069 ~···················· ···•···········•······· ············•········•• ...............•.•••••• . ................................................................................................................. . ; -.. .. , al I OOl C..... dlf Mer I 022 Carw .. Mor I 022 ~ lt•ale Speclall!lb Cory Cape Cod • ~ .. ·•••••••••••••• •••• •••••••••••••••• ...... • •••••u•• •••••••••••••• VEJS fRE£ 3,4 or S bdrm model• A JTRACTIY[L Y Thi.a ~ whlil Laguna b GATI GUAIDB> $I 0,000 DOWH f FORMER MODEL ffou11q. Zero down, uro avail, some wJpoola. PRICm all about! Beautifully COMMUHfTY Assume Bal of $165.000 Ooo ye1tr uld, :Hledroom, ~u. Any city ln Oranic 988-4602 restored charmer. 3 BtauWW Nl1utl Shores ~! !: c~ ~~r \ 2 bath In u~cut1ve A PANORAMIC VJEW encompasses Co.CaUauu\VETAGT PennlnglonProperUes SYRACUSE Bdrms .. den, library, town)aouae. Walk to SHOO mo. lmmiac cond • neighborhood. wath a the Oceao and Green Rollinj! kills. ~. formal dlrung room, t1wun11UD1 pool, 4 lmiu• .lleruodeled. Qui k • long hst ol extru & o up 1'h" toml ed 5 b d 1 l llWU(R skybt rountry kitchen & court.. Pnvate beatb. 2 No credit nHd~ po311, itrades Uno!M!tructablt! is cu.s 2 e room, 8 ng et MUSf Sa&.MOW unn separate artist's 11tud10. bedrooms l~ baths, 7~ view of rolling hill a. story home has a lovely courtyard and Collete Park 3 br "dtn· O£SBrDIJE la Collese Park. we havt> Eaby walk to beach & ex-patim and larie ya.rd . • Priced for quJelc sole a 3 car gar. Reduced to $274,500 (fee tnl rm, covt!red patio. n;aA th.la 4 bedroom, 1650 sq rt cellent ocean v 1ews. OnlyS8'2,SOO llG CAHYOH • f134,000 CALL751·3191. land) Term. to lull. $80.500. They've moved ,. own botne with tile roof, $189,500. Beautifully decor•t.od 3 •• SELECT 8319081 two" MUST SELL sin1le story and on a .... ORl .... SR••LTY br2~bahomow/-'& • NOW! WOW what a laree loL Allktn& only ....,. " ~ ....,.,. ;;, PROPERTIES SO OF IIIGHWA Y this absolutely FA.MTASTIC home! With 4 lar1e '87.000. * 494-8057 * SMonarcb Bay P laza =.~OO '3U,OOO. • charming 2 bedroom cottage has EASTSfDEHlia bdrnis, lti<. t>.th, aparkL @; LagunaNtguel OCEAMFROMr gleamin~ hardwood floors and TWO HEWPORTICH l nuic k fireplace, ijj LAGUNAIUCH 496.7222 131·0836 SEAVIEW Port Royal 2 separate garages. Reduced to only Moet desirable section of ca al cell1ot. bright IS A Story, 4 Br, a S.., beaut Oaa.nn.ing 2 BR home: 2 C. M . Walk t 0 a I l family/dining room & WAY OFUFE view, 18.D<bcaplQa, finest fat gara1e. Beat swim-$134,500. markets. churcbea & neat landscaping. Jl's a (WHAT A C'hlruung new 3 Bedrm + upgrades Best buy-By mine & fishin1 area, Caft '44·7211 fw detail& schools 3 bdrm", 2 ba. ~)'OU just can't miss WAY TO UV"'.) den, z bath, tam-rm. Owner.$2'79,000.64Me90. • close to stores & " seeing-hurry, call "' .-restaurants $275,000! M.lm~ Lge lot. Only $'86,500! 89f..7S21 I UP AT A VILLA, A/C, French drs, pvt ~ ....... __ lay __ op. M>!M.91 ForeatE o•--Rltr RA.HCHRULTY Located high up on frontcourtyard.$123,900. • -..-..-t '. ' • t S • • • ~. Laguna's famed Rivitra Owner. 8317098 ' Realtors _ _ _........___ 551•2000 c.-oastJ1ne. Detail~d Harf»or View HoMts "'CAl..Mll. W /VA .. ~"d T/0, 3 Br. YR, L.R, DR + much more. lmmac eo.d. l&33 Port SL&Dbope. * 67$.7060 * SU & PAJU( VJEW Mediterranean arch1tec· JUSTUSTID! ~~~~~~~~,.~-...t...•M-1022 Upgraded2s'""'"",RVac-IUILDIR'S ture w /ehallt ~hile 3Bdrm.,2~bathbome, -_._"""" -Costa Mfto I 024 _,, plaster, red tile rooflmes cklee to school le lake, 31R + IOHUS ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• MUST saL uow cess, ~.soo. By Owner. CLOSEOUT & ·11 t 2 -1-t ,,_ •• l " Open House l2-S pm. iron gra ga es. new p ....... carpe..., p u.s S 3 0 3M 0 . -PAYS ._ 8112% Loe. Mesa del Mar 3 br, 2 ba, ZlBBUGowa Ln. 968-21S3 *IN IRVIHE * Bdrm. OUTSTANDJNG a larae yard with rnaturt' AW FAIULOUSVIEW Located in beautifuJ N. garaeedropor.Terrmto OnJylPaUoffomtleft 2 VALUEAT$199,500 fruit tn!e!. Pneed ndit "'SOMEISU- Ele&ant prof decor'd, 5 Br, FR. LR, 3 car ear. h\lie bnclr: patio + DUI ny more xtr&ll. Fee land. 1621 Port Barmooth. Nl'ed more room? rooL •PRESTIGE C.O.SUI Mesa. Huge Fam suite.$79,900.831-9081 1111111~• Bdrm +den, 2 bath:., 2 HOME & INCOME, tn attel.500 Transfer your present OPENDAILY Rm, w/Swedish fplc, ~ 1042 frplc. refngerated air this Dana Pt. duplex, t.'Qwly here & assume • 1139 Sabri1ta THr. * tot.al payment S565 mo. IEAUTIRIL POOL ••••••••••••••••••••••• cood1tionmii:. mirrored mam urut has 3 BDRMS. VA I 7 7r .. 7800 HOME WATER.,...,·ONT wardrobe doors, 2 car &2 BATHS. Lge. hv. rm · · oan-percent in Dt>h rrhHully open and ~.... c ~ • c· I c b It · t l $303 all " MES"' VR8DE BYO,..,,.""R. SEA·~ATE ga rag e with auto w s.one U'ep a e, 1 ·tn &es mo. pays f~hJy decorated 4 bdrm A IA\ "'~"' "' k teh·' PLU"' 1 BDRM u •· B-' k ....... fJ l ,_, ,...._._m tile nr & patio. --er .. plus full recrea 1 •0 " · · uig uvmg room. nc home with family room ~uge comer ot • m....,. '"""'w """'' APT RENTAL IWfs Special ' "" I H "' 1i..n J d.s frplc, 30' s'·p, waler v1"ew lion fae1Ut1es meld ·g 8 · • kirh"P ace . uge and large pool/patw es..i.tew,.... an eap-tmt"-bcuk 3b 3b 3 tenniscourts,2 poolsand SEPARATE RM . GOIOATIMG 1tc en-family room. "reu. 'fhe perfect family ing & frttform 16x36 pool "' , r, a, w I F 1 R E p LA c E 1 ed Prof decor'd end unit 3 BR w /park vu, seo.: system, etc. Immae $165,000 w/appraisal. s.5(1 V1Sta Grande. For pre· view caJI: PROPERTY HOUSE Patrick Tenore Agt. M2-«l• '"' "' _,_,.._ pooJ ' · a pd.irofjaeuzus. All this · on the lake, ocat near G1ganue fl.lllShcd bonus homeformdoor/ouldoor w/board 4 bdrms, 2"'2 ua.:a.>nl d'bt ,JacuuS21,ten· andlrvinetoo' NEEDS PAINT & th1sbrandnew28RFox· room I Pneed reduced enlt'rtainmi< and prival'Y SECLUDB> ~aeart.h,dtnt.ormne"~mJcpyt lnrm1·1'vnremw 11:i~a. ~i31Jt~· Oo Irvine Center Dr CLEANUP! Real value &love model home in S2SOO too! Take advan-$398,000 includes thl! (Moul p k at$115000 beaut. Laite Park. Li"hl luge of super price, land. THREEIB>ROOM &fmlyrm.Nearschools, ton ar way) just 3 STANDING ON THE & airey & private terms & r.pace ! Call now Fr es h p a i n t a n d park & shopping & coun· ChrfttfCllMI lay e~l or Jeffrey. ER . 752-1700. -WJ\TERf"RONT wallpaper enhanc~ this try club! 545-94.91 Watert1ont Ca~~ ~~~N Lag~!n1o~~:1':0~ $99,500. [~' Hfllilx·Q·,···ll ~flft'l.'~Nl ~.·(f•~ R6E~3~1-:11s4;0!0:e ~~:e.be;r~cec:I~~~:~ (~1~m1941mrnm ~.~~Rp:i ~y~C~~j ~~u~ ~1~o~~g;~ ~ANCHORAGE , , $80.000. Ready for you to 7-9: 30AM, 213-59'l 5889 & s c EN I c o c EA N IMVESTMEHTS UDOISU Ex-lg 4 brm 3 ba, mod kit, 11~ lot, patio, nr ten- n Is & priv. beach. $:>,19,500 Owner~ move in and start hang-Real Estate 10 .. 4 Transferred must i.ell. VIEW. bv. rm. w/red '-==='7=1=4=1=4=9='-=7=7=1 =11 ing. Y,our plants on the New Condos, 2 Br, 2'h Ba, l"i;w ., Woodbndge 2 BR & den. brick fireplaet 2 Bdrms. - JUSTUSTB>!! OCUMFROMT patio. :? frnlc's, ceramic tile ••••••••••••••••••••••• or 3 BR 1''orm dm'g rm. & dtning rm. floor plan. 3br, Jba, Cam rm. all IESTIUYIN .,.. CULVERDALE atrium, UP!'raded , servieedby2baths."AN lndsp'd, near lake, on IRVINE TatR.ACE d_ QUAIL.. ID lutehens & bath. Pool & $84.900 lndscpd .. $99,950/be:it OLD E LA G UN A cul-de·sac Owner will Newport Heffjllh Located In the NEWPORT HARBOR HIGH SCHOOL DlSTRlCT on a huge cor- ner lot Wlth alley access and room for your boat 1s one or Newport's lowest FEE LAND homes' Handsomely remodelffi with graceful entry, rock fireplace. beamed cetl· ~! $105.000 3 Bdrm , I '• b . .lth ot'l'Jn fronl homt• op<'n beams in hv rm , IHI! rn • pat111 Ohl 'i:arJ~!l' " opc•nl'r SH>.000 Jll<itthehomefortheex ;~~;;:R'rur.e. spa 67~1.2Broker Warm and aumptuous ofr SSl-0685 OIARMER"for$129,500 l'On111der f1nancine. ccut.Jvc that nct'1Js a pre _ 75::1-1920 Ino I•--------hving room, sunfllled ._...,.,.... ..... ...__...,....,,_. 4 WOODED ESTATE. $115,000. 493 9796 sltge aren Featun•s i 14000UA1LSTHEWP<>flT~H UbCMcbtt Soeip coun l ry k i le be n, •VA $1751< * NESTLED BENEATH ------ BR. FR 21 2 BA and a I 2617. RFOLANDS It couldn't hurt to call separate master. huge TALl.. SHADE TREES. Lake Fornt I 055 swimm1ni: pool A warm. • . Chuck Nash about a re-c-overed pallo, steps to 1 work Wllh Orange Co in a secluded section or ••••••••••••••••••••••• comfortable home of~ Room.> 3 BR. 2 R.i , l·ul· waniaog career an real pool & park. Don"l wait Vets only Home'! to the vtllage Detailed all Upgraded Laguna Village f>IJ 3663 llJJ IY.>23 Eves fered at a reduced pnr<> di! sac St Baek Bay eitate Free lralmng 11 CalJ640-7171 S17S,OOO.l<'ortnfocall wood exterior w <'~ Condo, 3br. 2ba, \lt'W oC $207,500 and .>ou own area $tl~.SOO. Agl. youquabry.54().5101. C>H•1•19••'<" ,,, ,, ., ,. Vet A.gt S4l·OHOO ten~1\e use of glass Recfac Ownert9714:?6 associated BAC"ll.CAS-AEALT01tS JOH W l olboo •1l·IOJ red hill ·~:!:. theland! 675-~ _ --------·Ir ~ I Spacious 3 BDRM . & MlssioftV~jo I0&7 MESA VERDE , ,!Ufil!j\1 DE~ floor pl~nF Ex ..................... .. "'+~~~d~~q2ft·!'::5e~ ~ ijQHjf On~~!!!.~~ ~~~~~l~s~oo°rs c~:; By Owntt-Lovely 4Br. DE-ESCALATED Park-1.tke area. $74,950. Woodbr1d1e Village. J paneled walls.' wood 2Ba, ~ n • 2 blks ~o d QUAtL ID Y .A. NO DOWN! YI':\, n1> down payment required lo buy this beautiful J bedroom hom1'. i:ourmcl kJlc·hen, li.ri:e liv1ns:: room. f1replact'. cov!'r<'d patio. "alerfall. brtl'k llll(J. J..ocakd m•ar lht• harbor 552-7500 Corona def Mor 2 Bdrm • 1 bath home with two rear umts. Well established area & well carl'd for. $175,000 MORIMS REALTY * 494-8057 * and Hunl111mon marina 1 ---- 1 rrulc to beach. l'm·(•d Costa Mno I 024 for qwck salt? $tl9,00-0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Take advanluge. CJll ~167 JlttJll 9 •11 '""'OllN.(l• 1.~•l 100& ••••••••••••••••••••••• LOOK Eastside $75,500 3 BH, hardwood floors, fplc, Igo yard. Won t last' lbr hse. hi beam hv rm, 1u"ro.'"s frplc + lbr apt. Estate OP(N HOU~ AULTV !210,000. 675-2358 17630.."9e C.o•la-., lal>oo Peninsuto I 007 ___ 64_5_-_9_16_1 __ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Peninsula Point. Hv owner. 3 brm 1 '• ba t,73-&1J8. Pnn only Nice 3 Hr. 2 b,1. on Mon tero $195,000 Marshall Rlty 675-4600 In naculate doll homw, n 2. Sl15,000. 645-4829 l'vl!nings. Corona def Mor 1022 ••••••••••••••••••••••• rozv 3br. 2ba + ~uest hou."" l"rpl, 2 patios, R 2 Jot. Pnn. only $157,ooo Owner, 640-7030 • Ex~utive lrg -4 Br hme. · A·l cond, view, c•omplete privacy, $275,000. 644·5'64. LOOklMGFOR A POOL? Herc 1t 1s. Hld/rill 'd, sur roundro by a profuswn of grl'f'nery & a lrg 3 BR house. Localed in a rural atmosphere or the Upper Back Bay area. Call w; to sec. $115.000. V.AU.EY &40-9900 - IOOZGeMraf 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• macneb I Irvine realty "VIEW RtOM THE TOP" -CdM Day. ocean & night liJthts are yours in this superbly kept 4 bdrm. home with wood paneled den. Cathedral ceilini.?s in living & formal din. rms. Large sunny eating area orr gourmet kitchen. 3 Car panolad garaee W/?Clnt storage. Huac outdoor patJo9 for your entertnlnlng. $288,500. JC!anelte Havens 644·6200 (Q-40) PEUICf FOil PAMJL Y UYI Comrortable 2 bdrm + den home, convcn.lenl to schools & 1hoppinJ! Community pool, Jo~uizl & tennll cts. SlU,950. Lynne V lcntine 641·629!> (Q 1) PRICE PnncOnly.Agt.f.42·9666 WQOOBRl""E Bdrm, formal dining beamed ceilings W/l'X· shl&sbopg,nr<'ommy Ua rom, near "ommun1ty posed timbers. JUST pool & Len. $95,000. Pna. Spacious 3 bedroom with ~ , ,.,.... D Only 837~17 PLACE PJ'\o~p-aa=t-1-1-ES.~ -7S2·112D lno. 1-CIUAILIT~~ A -'•, beach and lakt• U>J• E AT Sl77.000 · fanuly area & skylight. EST TES .......... ss1ou RI! ·LTV Formal entry lo formal PROBATESALE Prlee.d to sell. Call Ml "s:;A M.wportleach 10&9 CANMROHT Rumpus rm. + family rm w/pool table: 4 BR, 21~ ba. Walk w beach. pools. tennis. A real charmer, only $155,900 hvang room :? polios Al Lovely 3 BR. lrg family 833-3380 9&5S Cst. Hwy, Laguna ••••••••••••••••••••••• $79,500 11 won't last long, room, gn•at buy Clos(' to JUST REDUCED! This lll-3)80 Phone 494-0731 siH'<tll NOW• 6.t!"> 7221 c;hoppin~. $80,000. Call lovely Jefferson. totally lrviM's Only !lope. upgraded & professional RB> CARPET WATCH FOR THE IOATSLIP +VIEW Wntdiff Realty GRHNIROOIC DONAlO M . BIRO An•cl•te,, IMh- 640-6600 **THIS IS FT•• IYOWMER ly landscaped. The owner wants a FAST SALE on this 3 bedroom townhome. Make your dler and be pleasantly surprised. Call now. UJ 4 br 2 ba, cstm drapery & WOOOllllDGE erpts. Bnck frpl & slate ent r y. Van Lu1t Rlil.TY wallcovenngs Sla1ned 551·3000 glass windows Kitchen prof remodeled w / WOOOBRIDGEPLACE microwave oven, btehr Special offering 3 5 blk & stainless steel. bdrm. CootemJ>Orary dl'· Elec gar w/cedar panel· tacbed family homes 10 111g le work bench. Low open, woodsy design. tnaint. yn:I w/sprtnklers. J~ short walk to lake & Fruit & shade trees park.sin Village or Wood Quiet st. nr schools & bridge. From $115,000. OCC. By Appl. 557-4368, 1.SS2-41........;.._0_1 _____ _ 644.3754S111,000 09'0Pohtt 1026 • •••••••••••••••••••••• 1034 ••••••••••••••••••••••• GREAT OFFER! EXCllLENT BUY! A popular Plan 104 in thf' California Home~ 3 bedrooms and formal clirung room. Sell!'r or fers to re·carpet and pamt the intenor w1th colors or buyer's choice New dishwasher and d1s-~al. Askmg $83,500 THE RACQUET CLUB FEATURES fo"rom this t'lei:ant 2 rm CAYWOOD REALTY HURRY Owner musl sell' 4 Br, ram rm, 3 ba, /\/C. btfully decried, great value at $129,900 Call Ell'J(R WHALE t·ondo So dn, you II IW think its new' A~l from thi s h1llt o p _556-417~·-__ _ beauuful home m lovely REDUCED Mystic H.llls. Comrnand-ui.: \iew of the Pacllic. Newport Crt"St Condo llpgraded move.in re-Highly upgraded, brdwd ad} firs, 2 BR, 2~ be, den, INC 548· l.291> BLUE WHrTE GEM I ~Ul30. ___ _ 1aow MARkET! Three Woodbr1di:r Twnhm s, variou!> models. RF:DWOOD . $89,995 STONFWOOC> SllJ,500. E1\STON, prof lndscpd & upgraded .. 7 Clearwatn. $139,950 TURTLEROCK, spec taeuJar 3 BR w/atnum & xtras. 31 Bethany Xlnt buy 4BR Aho, GRE1'::'11 TREE. HAMPTON, 1:131 Brookside, $10i,995 Palriek Tenore A!!l SSZ-4411 PETERS TOWNHOME UNIVERSITY PK Wt• Ofrl'r ror your IO'ij}4'C t1on lh1" rare 3 ix-.troom. 2l00 l>Q ft eXl'LUtl\l' wrkrm & library Side · oceanview Reduced for r".-.L . immed. sale. Owner. '--S'lll\J~21 $128,950. 642-1242, -l:!3llllTr 642 6706 - Mortett R.d Es tat• TM IY OWNER 640-5357 Spae10us Exerul1'"r _________ 1 home. 5 Bdrm. 4 bath w view 1n pn•st1i.:111u~ ~ Hlns I OSO Dover Shores on G.1l.ucy ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dr 646-2332 COUMTRY SETTING fmmac. 3 bdrm, 2 bath condo. Minutes to frwy. mall, beaches. Comm pool. View. $5000. down. By owner. $64, 900. 830-944& For Sale by owner 4 bdrm 2 ba 3 years old Call 7611 1565 OC!AMAIRE DUPLEX Two up, two down, both units redone, nf'w carpets. etc. lm · maeulatc Seconds to the breakers. Good rental. Lease hold. $180,000 Pn v acy reig.os supreme! Gracious family lilome in prest1g1ous WeslclHf. Formal livi.J:ig room w /v1ew of garden 1ltnum! Formal dining room overloolts lavish • grounds 1 2 Fireplaces ' Elegant living at af fomablc price! Hurry ' Call 645-0303 -• • • ._._c- CUSTOM BUILT Newport Hts home <.'h('('rfully decorated 3 Br, 2ba. View. Fully bt•am ce1r s. used bnck frple 222 La Jolla Ln St:! 9740 for ap'-pt_. __ _ HV Homes. Carmt'l 3 BH Burr Whit\! R~altor 1 ~Micpf 1052 ····•····•···•····•···· lownhome that 1s pro· ---------f ess1onall)' dcc.-orated 2901 Newporl Blvd N.B. (714) 67!>·4630 + Fam Rm. P''t yard. $139,900. 752·0617 ownr/al?l and land~c aped \ formal dln1ng room, mar rort>d wet bar and MUCH MORF.• ldt>allv loeat<"<I 2 doors from pool and s pa. SECLUDB> Spanish· Mediterranean garden home 3 BR. den. professionally decoratf'd w cus t o m made handcarved fum1shmgs. Romantic court) <Jrd. Jounlains & BBQ. F'ully lurntSht'd/ready to move lO only $225.000 Lf1918M1 Nlgwf RHfty 495-5220 493-9494 496-2413 830-SOSO Newport Crest Twnh<ie, ----- walk lo beach. ten <'rts, :-<pt Shores, Dy Owner, pool . 1aeu1 i1 A~t . 4br, 2ba, 2 car gar. D.>~ 646-7171 !17J.-O:r. 5. e vs 63 I 5483 "BLt:FP.5" Twnhse. 4 br. ram rm, xlnt eond. qwel s t.reet Al?l 646-7171 Oc~f1 ont Dplx $450,000 I'egnroms Rltr645 1531 BLUFFS OLDIE lllT GOODIE I Rik to ocean l Mrm home, oHt>red al h•t value. $98,0001 NEWPORT IUCH REALTY 675-1642 RANCH RIAL TY 551.2000 1---------......i 3 Bdrm "Bonita" plan Fnr Sale By Owner 3 BR P• Ba, prLeed for fast sale. $83,500. 25212 Via Piedra Blanca, Laguna NEWPORT HTS. Deoerfte.ld Twnhae Plan2 $79,900 Woodbtid!'e est. Adams S\27,500551·5000 University Park Townhouse 3Br. 11. ba on greenbelt $83,500 Herbert Hawkin :. 979-8100 WOODBRIDGE. Brand new Aspeawood Lowcsl price 4 br house an Wood bnd.ge. Owner must ffll lmmedJately. Open Sun day l S Tum left ofr Y1tle at Woodhollow 7 F.lmwood $102,000 7S2-S368 after S PM TUmEA<>a< Ja>m•c <'ond & up- ~. 4 br, form din rm. 2 b• l"am rm w,vl~ G11rd('n nlnum S~e to appr~~late $133,000. ft33.1084 TIRED OF LOOKING •• • et your netchbor'1 win dow1 T Thm we ha~ jlUt wha_t you nC'C'd; a lovely• bdrm , 3 ba. Pl.in 3 In 1VRTL1CROCK. F..xtrft~ lncludt!d· VIEW • Juab la.ndscaplnt ·SP A. AJI Ont• levrl. nl'W ept:., floor1n~ & shuttt•r<; $145.000 Own /Agt 8J3..8S.51or644·2148 eVf'S IESTIUYS OCEAN VIEW Nigucl.~94-·4_40_1~ 4~·-5900_ i-.--... ----;..._...._.,,.....__....,. 81,:: 3 bdrm., 3 bath c.-ustom home with super view! Huge den. flagstone frplc .. 3 cDr ~arage & lots more. Only $21.5,000. Hideaway! &~cape from 1t all m th1:. 2 BR condo. nelir shop- ptnJ:, w1lh new o( hills Pn\"ate end unit. Only a few minutes to ocn NllW selling for $00,900 \tl6) Ko/an R1:.1I [st.ti•~ l11c J Mm1.11 r11 8.1~ Pl.1.f.1 661-116 1 831-3 888 ....... LUSEOf'TION MO PAYMENTS OM&qUITY! Tlull '" ooe of th<' most tasteful and imnfo(in;it 1v.- ho m e!'I 1n th~ arc3. GrnC'lOUS hvlnl( 1, offrred 1n th1<1 beautiful ex ec.-ut1ve home. t>..:tra IArge master sultr, 2 pleasant bdrm<1. 28a, drn frph:, .iourmet kllchtn ana many n · tras. The patio & POOi ~a.s On.' ldf'al for tnt4r· tainlnf w1th 111n outdoor aas BBQ and I uth landseaplnJ $138,000 STAN Al.AND l'ttF..GARG~t REALTY (714) 4.9'7-1744 •••••• pie whn nttd P!'flpl Th.1t'1 wllal the DAJLY PH.OT \'ICK OIRl';cTORY iuUabout! •JUMIO VA• I work with Or:tnJ?r <:o Vets onl~·. Jlomt•s to $175,000 t 'or Info call. Vl"l Agt 541 OROO IEASYUVIHG 3 Bdrm home overlook ing Catalina Dn\'c; 2 frples., new carpet B A y S II O R E S n y family rm. biit enough for a pool table! Only OWNER, $179,000. 3 BR, $145.900 - 2 ba, newl> decor, re MARIMERS COVE modeled lutch • Open Sal "&in 12 S or by appt, REA&.TY 64M46l 1141s31 -.ss9. 2ss2 -....s..TWsw"4r Crestview. lcKk .Al'M CAHALFROMT 4 t>r, • ba, ~rpl. 3000 "11 4 Br, 3 ba + lof\ Cwitoen ft. c.-ou.ntry lutcben. din llle. microwave, Crplc, rm. den, sun rm, rtt rm sundttk + many xlrns pool, jac . lot." of wood Priced to 11rll fast at W W e11>t ov~ parqut>l SlSQ,SOO G42 336t Ail or floo". Fr "-'lndows & 64S-4'1241 <loon. le more St R9.50n IAYVIEW Lt 2 br 2 ba moh1lr homr m ex<'lu. U11)"91de VIII Clubhse, pool, j11r, J>(1V. bch, poss. bool 11llp . $51,500. 675-7900673 7848 No airt, ()pt>n S.it I .t 2301 ~·r<1nr1"'0 Ur &&&&Ml Ouplt'x, two I br furn. tu ocun 2!1th St, NH St!l9,SOO Owner "92· 71il 492~172 -----NEWPORT-.. •-uc-ByOwntt, 3 lk, ram rm, t -a1 ba. Nwpt tights. Pnnc. Owner a~ tell! I 11'1l'ff Only. $115,000. "2·9644 hure bedroom, plua pool acad waterfall. Won't GOIHGOV8SEAS last-ca11M-717l Monteao IMt, 4 Br. 2 bu, (am rm, n~ar new crpt,c; LI yd, wc)()d dttk BY OWNER. 759 OU4 NEAR BEACH 2 BR 2 0., den, pool +JIT,100 111·0HJ ; $,J1.JJMI .. WeddtH lU/D .. Trul1 a 11howpl111c(', curtom in ewry ~i.11. a.u. aee Wt one MfoTr It I . Ul2Dowr Or., ~ r. :h Ii. 5. f18 -- ' HottMs U11fwWsh.d HcMIHt u .. fwW.~ w .... U11funilahld Wedneed!y. March 22. 1978 * DAIL'( PILOT D~ ·•···•··••··········••• ······················· ·················••••·· CodaMfta 3224 t..,.tilq•l•od1 1240 HewpcMi .. och 326' eo-dotoJ hr1 .ApartMemkUnfwn. 1~nhUnfw11. H°""" Fcw S• Ott.-IM ............................................ ·••·•·•••••·•····•····· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ 3425 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• DUPl.l':Xl Hr 1 Jiu. t•µt.-.. AT LAST NOt'1':~! llou:.l'a,C1mdoi., ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cod'OMt-so 3124 CoatoW..O llZf S.Clestanh 1074 MoWMHo.. ---~ 2000 ••••••••• • • •••• • • • • • • • • ~ Sale I I 00 ••••••• •• • ••••• • • • • •• •• drps. no pt'ls. •llll fnnl du PI ext'., tt en l u I llunt tlarbOUI' area, 2 br, "•••••••••••••• ••• ••••• •••••••••••••••••••••91' yard $295 t!Mll & 1950 H Pa' 11100. 67~ 4912 Bk r full site paUo. nr bc-ach, Sweeptni OC"ean "ew~. 3 •••••••••• •• •• • •• ••• • 4 ~edllC.d $ l SK ::ck~ :· :~~~~'·a~r:f1· 111t., ... ..,.cOH""~I YSS) OM. 8R .. lhtt.>t! 2 BR Mey l' r 6 4 5 4 II!) !I Jt. ....... Service i;bopt.. &ch.Ls, av1uJ Apnl 1•\i. wknd:t Y•C•FHI MEW SEAYl£W 1 $32S mo. 963-5228 Sll8.000 4.!r.! 77lS A" ,.. room for more units Se<' us for mob1I hllmt'll R41Ml F.&Lat.e Connt><.1100 VIEW + ,OOl ln all b4•ach ar ~ W1 1714) M9-1~ evi. t7l41 FUn for itll the family i.pec1.ll11.e ! M mber _556-_99'7_4 ___ _ SpaclOWI 4 BR, dining rm eaurorrua Multi • LIS , __________ , & fitm rm w/forcvl'r 1.11g Service Xlnt ocean view Owner anx ing available P 100,,, has bought anoU1er COAST RESAL ' $156.500 21036 Brookhurs Nrw 2 br rondo Pool, sp• f''rom S37S Kids & pet:. OK 67~4912 8kr R..talsGaloff!! We have 1ooo·s of housl's, dplxs, apts now, all areas, llll prices. Save on Jt..t ..._ WMtt 3 Br 2 B..t, pool, tenni:., W'f GUARANTEE Jae, $845 yrly 67~~ For lease Blue Lagoon l rondo. 2 Br. 2 Ba. lx.-h. •W\desue tet100 po.s11 SEAVJEW. 3 Br popular pool. tenrus 49'J.3084 •lnbouaecomputer~y:; Bar Harbor pnme ~" \<u --- •Oatly telephone service t95() 547 7C>&4. W ·321S •bdrm 2 ba condo. pool, 2 •Vacancies verified daily car gar $425. Owner •F\JU .staffofcounselors ~br. 3ba pool home 151-1163 Before 10 AM •Freetoaged65&over Garderunti. pool serv m orAft.8 301'.M •Freerental counseling rl'd $800. 54110655 ---- BERTHA llENRY 963 0091 REALTORS ~~~. 21.S Del Mar 492 4121 Walk to beach -Sky nc 2 ~~~~~~----~! 9 UNITS + HOUSE Only 7 blocks to beach In great condition. Try \5% down. Asking $369,500. Call Bkr 558-3327 rre. 645-4900 ~ d .,.... ... Ullfw'n 3600 Jt.'I •"'.,...07 aysB.00-3 OO BIG CANYON Luxunous ••••••••••••••••••••••• RENTIMES 2 Br . 2 bath 1·011 EA.5TSIDECM OK. 2 Ha. dbl ,ctt•, -38Rhouse,beautot .. eun& Jbt home. wlkmg distance adults. $29,500 Br er NIDE OF canyon view yard. giant to beach, achl, park 64& 13110 mstr bdrm. $395 mo 492-<l!Od A I> ULT-P-a r k OWHEASHIP' +util 645 3000 4 Plex 1n Huntrni:ton San Clemf'nte Cu~tm Westminster. 2Br Beacb Locate-din rapid S500 4 br, 21 1 ba f' R Htll!>!de home Neanng bcaullful tln1,cr:.al dbl ly appreciating area pool. tennis. l(ardenl!r complel1on 2,000 i.q rt 3 wide Walk to mark t & Moment!> to f''ree\\a) & Owner,&40-0008 bdrm. 2 ba, Cam rm. bus 41lop. Prado \' de beach. rneed to ~ell . b r e a k r Ii s t n o o k , Park. Bargain al $26 Call 55B 3J27 Broker 2 Bdrm house F1replacc Pot Profe511lonal St!rvil'e Call 631-4555 do m In 1 um ho 111 t' 3 Br Dplx, enc gar, $395. New/nt'vcr hved m Wt•l Agt 646-4884 barlfrplr $6 15 - --- SallRbury R 1'~ 673 WOO Capo Bearh upper JSR 3 Ba, ocelln view. bllns OHLIDOISU &undeck $-125 mo 4!M4401 OR STOP RV 1936 Hart.or ll•d ( ~"J blk No. of 19th St > 0 w n e r w 1 I I I e a s c -----. i\Cahf.Corp. Smf-'tt FURNISHED OR lJN Newplushduplex,3BR .• l FURN IS II i.-;o M Al\ E ba. frp~c. $6SO mo RF.AL FIND 4 Br 2 Ba. AN Ot'f''ER You hu~e a 64:>-21ll,646-6303_ flreplat'\!, wet bar. sun Agt968-9332 --l '~~~~~~~---I Double garage $345 mo deck. 21 :1 car garage - -• 673-2058 Ai:ent $115,000 No agent1 714 Ocean view. lBr. _,w New 11 umts & older 1 un ~0074 or 714 960-4180 enc I cabana u l ti its on adJ01n1ng loti. m cpts. fncd yard. $415 choice Large 2 B +d Nwpt Hgts 2 br duplex 963-456"1 t r r en 2 BR 2 BA. Dt W. ds~I t'ncd yd, adulti. NO agen. no ee and pat.lo S7SO mo or 2 S2'75 mo. Wlr pd Sdnla pe"N' .,...,"' Gai. & wtr pd 1 Bedroom condomm1um, Br~ Ba. large deck ilnd Ana area. 556·8599 aft ---shared $13.500 494-~ CM Take either one or Excellent 4 Bdrm home m --both. Exchange or owner fine neighborhood ne<1r Co, t il Mes a . l 2 x 4a wtll carry 54~ 7166 -.chools Vacant Ownt-r SI..) lint>. I 12 >rs old - _ _ r.. 1., ..-.. 1 1 VIEW $650 mo Both un SPM 673·2256 poo • tennis. super oca its art• freshly painted -uon $250 Ca 11646 4477 d $treams. waterfalls. a pine forest Among Orange County s most spectacular adult apart ment communities 1 & 2 bdr. 2 bath Move-in ready Off ices open 9 to 6 A PlflECREEH ?'11,1. F ·llh <t'W R·I l. ~!, ~' ·I!> 23tl0 must sell' 195,ooo tabana. like nev.. L• Rfl>UCB> $7000! Pacific ~ R•alty rent. $15,000 hnancin~ Hugt.' East.bide mansion OLD CITY Pt.AU 5411-7~\ _ extra rental present m 3Rr.2ba Crpk,21·dri;rtr ---- -~~ carpeted DRIV1'~ .___.__..Fvmished F:ncl "d Kt .... nk ~t:'" H LI N T I N G T 0 N .....-'"_"'. ' "" #' "" l·' \R BOUR b 111 Via l.1do Nord ••••••• •••••••••• ••• ••• S.l.5·2271 ~1 ranu tit!\\ end l story 3 Bdrm. 2 ha, and l'iill ~ P'CftinMl&o 3707 ~---------C-__.--M _____ 3_8_2_""' QlJli':TPRIVi\l"'t allbwlt·m,Jal'.pool t'l<' WohrfrofttHotnrs ••••••••••••••••••••••• Coronadf.!Mar 3122 v ... o H4 .. I br. end 1o1ar . ncw rpti., Pnvary S.'>50 IW6 440lt 631-1400 1 Br. $350 yrly Off street ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Calt 492-5300 ,, come $65(1 Great -.tarter Ac~ for Sol• I 20iw 1 n ,. es l men l Now SO\ Juan •••••••• ••• •• ••• • • ••• •• S 108,000 Ori ve by 291 CGplstrano I 078 HORSE RANCHES Magnoha St. then tall df"l)!l, SlO\l' l~ refng Nr --.---I~~~~~~~~--prkng. Avail 1mmed. ••Park Npt 2Br. :!ba, ,\dult 2 bt'<lroom, supe• Wcstcllff AdltR,nopl'~ ~on 32 ,. 2 1 Call675·036'7,640-6238 gar. J.tl'. pool. spu, lt•n ISocation hNo RP"wl' $275 673b372eves n.DOW' .. CAMEO SHOR S --------rrt.Allt:ulpd Nochl<lrn 225 monl 56 ••••••• ••• •• •• •........ <11(ent 642 0282 ••••••••••••••••••••••• E $225. Vacant Studio. nr or peli. $445 mo Wllson,mqwr~P!·~ FA.MIL Y HOME l Br house. 21 i. bath. fam1 3Br. lg comer lot. oc1>an bch. shope;, restaurants. 673 8661 ; 675 57:.?6 UMAMCHA.Jt.PTS •Jt.IA.MDOHED• HEAR IE.A.CH Seller sacrifice. your gain! Reduce-d another $2000. 3 Lrg. BR. optional den. Premium locatwn Double garaiie. Now $77,900 WJt.USTHET It F:A L t:.<;T ATE 831-3750 493-2202 Lar11e ones, i.malle'LohforSal• 2200 ones, new ones, sh~htl~1 ••••••••••••••• ••• ••••• used ones & Clxer uppen;l OFFICE BLOG .r.IT ... We have them all BKR. ~ '" (714) 676-5717 Huntington Beach OR 522·2080 27.000 sq. fl. lot near ---• Pa<'1fira Hospital. 5 Points Shop. Cntr & C1v1c Center. $135,000 INVESTORS New l1st1ogs. Largt'll David Bourke Rllr pan·eb SlOO per JCU 546 9950 Bl\K OH522-05:1u Properly 2550 <7 14 1 677 !'>11!1 IOut of County ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ Cetn1t ter'y" Lots I ..•••••••••.•.••••••••. Cryph 1500 S~ Ana I 080 Ch 1 Id r c n & pct s ly rm, pool, Jacuz.z1. $825 view. $1200 mo 673 2464 AdJl. 833-3307 ; 673-7077 welcome Lg fm·d yrd. mo. ALSO 3 br condo, COf"OftCI .. Mer 3722 pauo & garage 3 br l ba waterfront. 21<: ba. pool. CdM newer lg<' 3 BR 2 Ba. tst & last + serur $4<JO tenrus, $700 Call Linda hle, airy & woodsy. S or ••••••••••••••••:•••••• &l21200,645·25i7eve 846-137lorevcs846-4292 llwy.~mo 6750764 1 br, incl. utilities. --garage, pal10, clooe·m, f::i~tstdl' utrn sharp 3 br, lrvi.t 3244 A FtMER HOME newly redec. 838-7447 2 b f I • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • TH"' ILUFF.r. -a, rp c, mlcrowaH'. IC ;> Costa Mesa 3724 wet bar, l'lel' gar .. g<' cir REMT A.LS <~orgcous full b::i} \r1cw , opnr Ciarr1encr 111rl 3 BR. 2 Ba. $5511 µnme "front row" loca ••••••••••••••••••••••• $S7~ mo 54M OOf.3 3 BR. 212 ba ~!JS 525 11em Exqwi.1tc 3 BR. 21 ., SSO WHI< & UP 4 BR, 2•., b.i $751: ba spilt leH•I 1•ntl unit 11:..A'-f~ S4tiO mo :I Bdrm ·I rm. 3 Ba ~ with f.?Jled courtvdnJ •'11 2 ha, !'lei.In & ~.hi.II v lf) & ~pal IOU!>. prl\ l\11~a \ 1•rdt• \a' ,101 & patio Im mac tnruoul & "tud10 l bedronm \taJd sen ice. pool 2::171; :'1:..-wport Bl CM 5411 9755 or 64:,.391;7 ... n.,C, ........ '(41·-·-) l 4? .. ~ GJ\ROEN APTS CORONA DEL MAR 2 ijr To'4nhou~e. frplr POlll. teonii. Some tK'('Jll & Catahna '1ews Ch....,l· lo l"ashron hland &. I 1111· beach Al"o I Br t;.\ I ;!11 11 L11rge 2&3 bedroom garden apts. Dshwhr. blW, enC'I. gar. gas bbq Pool Gas pd. 778 Scott Pl 542.5073 E/S1de. Olry 3 Br. 2 811 bltni.. new cpti., drps paint $350 SS2-420l 551 1241 MESAPIMES y AC AMT ·······•·•••••••• •• ··-Paril Ploce-Oc~de hut loHly lh·nt till l't1rhe :iH7 -.rnl!k.ftJr :.!&3 BEDROOM escrow clo'l''> Corner a., hes a I l' o v e of VA-FHA .c\•a1I l\1d-, Clio. 1\1:1 lrul) grac1ou.'> ,\n t"H'e{l !179 6M'.t6 tmnal valut• at $750 Jl('r SUS CA.SIT Jt..S s:m Lr11 2 br pn h1·h a1 "11cl'IY funusbed t bdrm cess elec stv &d'>h,,.,hr Cloi.ed gar. $230. uµ 487 Morn1n~ <.:a 11 \on lL11 h $" 3 n s o m t' \\ ~ ,I r ,I i: I' " I' 0 II l pt·u111 ,\dulls no ~wh ()pt·n fi,111) :..'t>.'>ll llarl • .\H. C :\1 ('\.1t".,,l \ C'rdt L>r E orr llJrbor 811.d S.19 :.!-147 lot RV <1tl'l'""· :i nn 2 memont's. $95 lll Pa<'1fll GARDENTOWNHOM Jo. •Wc~tsidt• Co:.tJ ,\1 c~.1 mo until 12 1 78, thf'n :!br 1 ba,. l'nd gar pallo $lllO per mo Adults. no pets. 2110 67_:!.-7631 BA. gam<'~ room View \tt.'m Pilrk. NB \2cargarages Delightful gardt•n \1r. Myrtle Shav.. ~12 Ens 1·757·1623 wash1dr)'l.'r area, nu ,\gt'nl ILUFFS CONDO "lewport Blvd. 1-;A.."TSll>E :! Bit w cnd ---"-------Costa Mno 3824 yard & gar $310 mn S71.~ ~outh Chaot1rlt'er~~~~~~~~~~ St..Grand I sland, RANCH ESTATE COHVEHIEHT TO Jt.IRrORT 640-6600 South LOCJ'lftO I 086 ····••••···•····•······ l\t•aut1ful wh1lt' w atl•r 1~·ean 'tt•w Condo JBr cfrn, 211Ba. h11!hly op l(radt'd. $16..'l,OOll Ask fur June Royall Turnt•r "' ~ 4!Y.l 4591 Tustin 1090 ···•••••·····••······•· Neb 68Ml (n!)382-2<ll3 rac1hr View Memond Prk Lots B & c. lot 355 I A l zoned. Tues only Ocean vu 548-0279 $912 per year Totally fenced w/360 deg view Commtrclol Completely remodf'lt•d. Properly 1600 open h€am ranch home •••••••••••••• ••••••• •• wrapped around pool, MED C L BLDG 1at·w11 and bnck p.itm :.! I A car altacht'<i j.?ar<IKl' .1nct tDnlwuSan Clemt>nlel free i.tand1ni.: ~tor aj?c Sal\.' Lease Trade bldg Con\cn1ent to 7Rm0enlal!:>u1les Jtrport ALL TlllS & KRmM<'<hcalSu1tl'~ I BEi\lJTIF'l'L SMC>Ci Jay W. Yeah Co• FREE Sl'..'TTING 0N1.v 498-0660 499-2231 S135.000 Call c;,•ori.:c NEWPORT IU.CH Jo'rl'V at -542-3456 Bt:N lllNKLE R t-Restaurant For Sale LEMOM HEIGHTS Pn I \1 me <><: on · annt>q 'Illness forC'e~ \alt'" A I a r g e w o o d (' d \1t le 1800 Sq rt bldl? f ~ EQUE.<;TRIAN ZONt:I> land. all for only $200.i ownr must sell or part 10( m pre:;ttf.!ous ·~rea h::ic; RralonomH's 675.67 tradt 20 beaut 'll'W three bedroom two lJ;ith -acr~ Great hunting & home. bnck tl•rr.1l'l' 11as ~xnf ...... _ fishmg area Nr Moab UH<.l off ~1Jnt rt".•r ch•l·k Units Sc... Utah New, never hvrd Jnrl two firt•pl;11·1•,., om• •••••••••••••••••••••• m 4000 sq n home Would of p1on~'r ru~t1r hr11 k m 1 Jl I ex, Hunt 1 n gt 0 make a great group duh dmmi: an•a $154,900 Harbor area, 3 )'rs old retreat Hurry, '!Ubm1t fully rented. $230000 all ofCerr; 1\-.klnlt carp1df1l!l, freshly paint ed Move in cond $325.lmo No pet~ 646-12116 ------•VERY QUIET• EJ\STStnE 1 RR, frMh paint. rpls, lge fncd yard, i.:ar. wshr hkup. v.'tr pd No dui::-.. S275 mo $525 mo\ 1• 1 n 24:!f Orani:1• Av1· :1:1 !ltill :1!Jl!!I LEASE $-17~>. Lolll'l!t f'.irk. 3 RR::! Ila 2 fplc-" k1d'I OK, i\\I 1 ti 711 Un q· by 2~>:!1! Du kl' l'I Call ~•C 254J or 559 62<!1 Nr W~tcliff )!Ul'St h~e rue 1 peNOn, t•pt.., tlfl>" $1~1~ mo.~ 95:16 S!!l.'i h:r sunny:! Bil Fncd 'ard t•ncl Rarar.:e Children OK 19!>03, Capt1vat1n.1t 3 BH 2 Ro pauo htd pool !pie \fuch more' ~2.'i 16-1201 Rttm"'H 6 31-4555 tbr patio home Nu crpt". lum & df'P!' No dogs, no kids $300 mo Ph 646-71i5 ,&. ~~1~,1.1~: IIl 1"8-a!22 $149.000. 29'1-down.11wnr ""./J will n.nance balanri-8'' KIDS/PETS OK • ~ ~;;·1~1,;a~-r11~'.~1 l!KCMM Prop«ty 200 548_7825 a~11m<' f..ac;tc;uie 2 RR. "ar, ~~-"- 0 S •••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ~·r.J 1 •00 v••l r NEWPORT 11uet1 Real Estok 646 1&-18 or 67~>-!!2.<il\ DUPLEX &ea... 2800 Dana Point 3226 R"<tra sharp 2 BR un•l •••••••••• •• •••••••. ••• •••••••••• ••••••••••••• both w /prvl patios Owner will help finance Wtll exchanll<' $21),000 Super 2br. Iba, ~ar. 1'1 m1 lnrome $700 per month cqwty of $60.000 2 BH beach, ocf'an 1111. pvt. Red ed $ 34 500 condo, Bl Toro. for hom1'. ....,., iioo 5293 UC lo 1 • duplex. or unHs OrHnf.!t' .-,.., • · Othef-bal Es tote ············•··•······· "00 ··········••··········· 't523 CAMPtl5Dt·IRVl .. E l Story 3 bdrm Close 10 scbool & shopping No pets $650 Agt 644 7270 Univ_ Park, <Terra<'e), 2 New Twnhst· w itranqwl BR 2 Ba. walk lo shops. panoramic view, 3 kin~sz school. very rlean $440 Bdrm.'>. 3Ba. (rpll•, patw. mo. 644-5S7t>eves bakony. clishwai.hcr. TURTLEROCK GLEM trash l'omp. 2 c•ar gar \\ opnr lil'aul l'rpl, TOWMHOUSE drµ. Ch1ldn·n OK S.S50. Vll'W, four bedrooms. ne~ot1ablc ':!13 ~17~1 2,200 S<iuare feel Im marulattdy upi;:radt•cl throughout Pool 'l t·11 n1" $650 l month AVAILABLE 1'1 'vtt:;DIATEL Y J QU.11.tL CB PLACE ,._ PROP'lCRTl r.H _ 7S2·1t20 ,,.,. ·-QUAil. S'T ·-' M.AOi 3br 2ba condo in Terrace. patio. comm pool Nr f'.I Rancho $450 mo 673-2252 Newport Cn•sl <'11nd11 3b.t. 2 or Jllr lllltll & ten n1s. Altt 645 0'.?95 FOR LEASE 1,oH•ly 2 bdrm 2 lJa up per l\pt for n •nt oil $.S25 mo lucalt•d .ll 428·2 Regoni;c 3 Bdrm ram rm '1e"' hom1• lin·ated 10 a prl\ alt' f.?U::irdt•d <1rc.1 with m;1n' :imt•mur~ for lea .. e al ·si11:; mo 2 1:.!~ Yatht Rad1Jnl 3 Bdrm, den homf', ln,•a\ ed m Spnll~s $900 mo R...tals Galore!! •••••••• ••••••• ••••••••I Adlt.'I. now avail. 645-7$2;:! We have lOOO's of houses. New, 2 Br, 2 ba. all hltmc, -~ dpl:<s, apts now. all Crplc. encl garagt., areas. all pnces Sa11e oo pallo, lndry rm. $32S fee TSL Mgmt 642 l60a LA CASA. IUMCA loch. I .... A.vi Mow All ut1ls pd . rpt.~ drp• P<Xll, lndry fac :.. Adult.; ovf'r 35, no pets 11r children. Call Sue· 551~·7707 or llenq . 642 9137 645-4900 .... ______ ..,. Large l bdrm (upper>. $230 Quit'l buildrng w /bcaut landscaping Ideal for adults over 35 No pet:. LEEWARU APT. 2020 Fullerton Ave (I blk east Newport A11e & 1 blk south Bay l 631 0397 3726 ••••••.••.•...•........ Super neat lbr \'Illa courtyard, pnvate. $225 496-5293 ~on leach 37 40 ....................... STUDIO ''Wffkty Rates" Full kitchen &TV Linens & l'lllil1<'~ l\1ILE TO OCl':AN Almo6l new 2 hr, 2 ba twnhse w1t'nd i.:ar. $325 645 5126 • 637 51195 Large 3 Br townhnui.t• apt. 2 ba, frplr. patio (!ar;•K<' Quiel complc•x Adulls. no J>('ls S:r75 645 33lll or $<125 Ne" J hr 2 ba, 1' li75-~1ll ,.uic• drluxl'. 1•nrl .::1r S.'12.5 3 Br :.! Ba ur1pe1 frpll· yard Carport No pt'l!> 1021 TSL Mt.tmt Valen<:1a . 546 691!:1 :I Rr 2 Ra apt tiwet an • E;\STSI DF. m•ar new .? hltn ... cpts, rlrps Oil P<'I" BR I Ba. fpk. c•o<·I i;.1r. S:l25 S.'i7 4238 a\atl Mar t5 $.1.?5 P"' mo ~ nr ai.'t 67:1 I lilt liarden ,\pl, bus & !>hop-;, 2 Br. rt>fn~ .,t\ l\1ds ok nopctc; $210 54R-n:n 2 Br. 11 1 Ba townhou~I' ~arai:1• pat 10, pool )Jt'Ulll \dulb Olli} S3'i5 mo ~ :!UIO 1~r.'\l ~k.> Pr Pl 11 r """ l\\n~e apl , 2 !Ill 11 n .• fnnl patw, g.1r. s3:z;, fi.15 165.'> Dar,:a1n pnC'l·d hu>:•· I HH roc·I yd, hltn,, l.111ndn s::!()Otipl't nov. 1G-~>. In Uruv Pk. 2 house~ now I BR + Fam Rm, $700 per mo AND 3 BR + Cam Rm. $575 per mn 752·0617 agt. 36 Drakes Bay Royal !iuit•s Motel 12'1 Yorktown Bh ii I ps-3411 I llc.•aC'h Blvd at Yorktown Rentals Galore!! --W<> have 1001·~ of hoUM''• Jbr 2ba. form din rm. gn;JW1•.1 Laguno5h36--ac0h41 I _ dplxs Jpts n ov.. illl Poplar mod 10 Wood ~ :M--3748 arerc.. all pnl'1'" Sa,t· on bndge, Creekside Avail -=========== r 1mmed. Walk to pool. • ••••••••••••••••••••••• 6e:S..4900 ~11'.10 :! HR :! n \ "' p.1tw bltn~ Pod ~ .ml g .1 r .1 t.tl' nr"" i.hai: cpts 14!..C1 Rentimits 631 ·4555 r,... 11 2 b r a p t " 1 •1 • _ W Jll~ll l'. i\ pl 1\ S:l2'> amt :!177'1 Mml'r~t s.:11111 tennis. park, i.chls & Sii \RP., RR f I t LAGUNA BF.ACll MTR lake! $495 mo. C..:all aft 1 ~ • Pt'. ~P "· INN $65 wk & up Maid 6PM 1-493-9484 t>le<· rJnJ:<'. pal to Jo rom serv color TV. lwatt'd -· -· _: . $.1.'Jll l~l' Cd M 673 Rfi 17 LOCJllftCIS.ach 3248 pool <7141 494 s:.'!14, 9R5 ••• •••• •••• •• •• •• •• •••• llVllom<'' C:1 rml'I 3 ll H N Coast llwy 2hr. 11.ia $<!h;, 'Iii·\\ t>Jtnl. 2 HH, I h.1. 1•1wl J.'.11 It lndry f;H', no ltt'IS 2W (l JMtlc>. !:!'I~ mo :!:!Ill =H !-: 16th Pl f.1\ tJ.4~,;i Hulj!t•r.., (all MR il:.>!l Cal 640.S 112 A'I. Coo.nty FoMtain Vallq 3234 ZJt.GRODDY RLTRS ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ocean vu home. :ibr •GREAT SSSS• 49" Clt6& I 3 R n-f I 2·~ba. in preSlll?IOU' Mobit. HC>f'nl! Li•in«J AtlkRnest + Fam ltm. p\l v<trd ..wwporta.och 3769 J'.W)C.ll $6SO mo 75l..o6 I 7 •••••• ••. •• •• •• ••• ••••• ownr'al(t I BR n<'v. apt. nil bltn,. rrpl. dfl>", xlnt lo<·at1on 1767 Oran)H' Avail Apnl l $260 646 7993, 642 11 '.'>5 J fir i BJ. ~·inl .111lL-.. 11• pt'\~ 111 -.hop~ S:!S11 liiJ CAAi !).It• 7:Jl'l I RR. no rh1ldn•n "r J>('h Pnt'l l:•H . ~<':!ct :!Q~ F\1lll-rtn11 h-1:? 5~ Wt• have numerouc; & ho•aut1ful mob1lr home!> ror sale m estabhsht'd p.trks In CM. Nwpt Bch, llunt1nf.?tOn lirh . Laguna, 1-;1 Toro. nn Viv Anaheim & West;,,10!.ter In pri ct' rangt'I to fit mot1t people's porkt'tbooks. Sl0.000 to 5'10.000 Wt• art' as near as your phoni..• CALIFORNIA Pi\ClFlC Mobile Home Rl•alty 2706 ltarbor, St<' 20I! 54-0 5937 ..,_ r. 2 ..... rp · no pets, Portahna $7~ 499 -182\l •Opportunity* ---$410 mo Just reduced this supe llenhlh 554 7106 aft 6 J()pm 4 pl ex. four 2 Br um ls. · •• •• •• •• ••• ••• •• •• • ••• urut.'I w/(rplcs Seller '411lM--fwW~ help w financing. Other Orange Co income pro· pert1es avail Call now for details. agt •645-4722• 7UMITSC.M. Rentah Galore!! We have lOOO's of ho~N dplx!!, apt'I now all areas. all pnccs Savt' o)n fee. Your!> for the <1skm1? llugl' I+ 2 hld pool $395 2 car gar nr all 1962.1 l $42.'> family •med 1+ 2 lge fnld yard. pool beaut fplc 189361 Rfttfftnts 631-4555 ~HRCJlOft S.ach 3240 ··•··•···········•····· Laguna HUI' 3250 Newport hi lhr hse ••••••••••••• •••••••••• w yard $390 ) rh (Ju1ct neigh n.-fs 673 Ii 19 I Bdrm . 2 bath \·1rw home. Air conditioned. BLt;FF-'S heaut :i br 2•12 fireplace, 2 car garai:e. bit. ba) ~1ew 9IOC> Mo ruce yard & washer and 1\j!t•nt 644 113-1 dryer available Ex cellent location; close to 3 Rr, :! bath hntM" I hlk l•l freeways & shopping hfh s.n:; mo md trnn1,, centers $450 month & <o w1m l·lub Call lease A\allable \pril 6...11 J09fl. ftpfs reQ Bt. Call owner Jt Ni':WPORT TERRACE 3 BA.YFROHT 3 BH, 2 baths Yrly $.'lSO ADULTCOMDO 2 BR 2 ba. yrl) $4~S STEPS TO IU.CH :mn. 2ba. bay vu $1oso 2 iJR 2 Ba .. yrl)' wx1 associated IAOICEAS-AEALTO AS a02'. W llolboo • ll·H & l Beautiful brand new 4· l br. loft, f Ip. 3-2 br, I' 2 ba townhouse, al\ bltns. 64§.4900 crpts, df'll5 Hurry. buy tMwnart ... oc:h New rlt'gant-2 bedroom 7141~ Br z•, Ba. f-'am Rm <S.'>SOl or 2 bedroom + •POOL HOME• $475 fi75 <1745 or 557 H~16 ----3169 1Brw1 o;(l)H'. rr•rn~. Clcll\f' lo bu-.('S. :.tori•' Adlt.,, no pet.. 5411 f.:"1 l '4 Dono Pot.rt 3826 •••••·•················ $240 lbr, rrfnR. -.tv C:&O. Ouple).. OC'Can nP"' ,, . .,. pallo 1\dlts no J~h 7:!1 15jll 'Q ft ::? hr. 2 , hJ C Jame!>, 673 7ill7pm $45() mo i59 07116 2 Br. ltJb. drv-. , •. rng Dachumt.refni: $180mc> ktd' 11\.. Oil pd-. S:!hO adlts. Oii pet.' ,\\'I ,\pr I 8.'ll !111!11 ht.,. 11 •1Mi 171 i I IU3 0821 640 tl'ih'I <oil !Br. ni-ar So 1·0.1st S240mn 5'10 IW!IJ Pl.v.1 J hr, prtnoramH on•:111 \ll'W, OC'W. frpl, lt! d1•rl.. $..'iOO mo !REN 196 ~I HUMT.HA.CH Beautiful 2 nr, C.ozy lnsh Colta~e for two in pvt garden like setting 5• Adult Park <'omplelt> w /pool, tenni~ rll>, & much much more tJY1228) $16,500 CALIFORNIA PACIFIC now Tom Lee. Rllr. 642-160.1. Rentals Galore!! den ($5751 ~dar & wm Scnsallonal 4 BR 2 R11 ~-Cl t 3276 Rewtals Galon!! daw home 5 Blocks to w/a1r cond. Cplc. D/W, ~ ettWn ~ ••••••••••••••••• •••••• We have lOOO's or house._, beach. Prl\·ate 2 car super area. $485 dplxs, apts n11w . illl 2 flrlr. l £\H (' I), hlt111!> gar. S2.'i0 nm \i:t fcultoin valley 3 8 34 ············••········· Mobile Home Rt'alty 2706 Harbor. Ste 208 Owner must sell. Best E ~1de on F1ower St. Prin. only. 673·6372 eves. We have lOOO's of housrs. dplxs. apts now , ~II areas. all price,; sav<' on garaf(e. f-'ully main· 968~567. aoent. no fee Condo 2 lrg br. 2ba. gar. ... "' r~· room. r->"" rali7.adJ areas. all pnce:< ,...,;n e om tained yard Adults No "" .. MN f pets. lnquirl' 525 18th St Condo. 3br. t.V..ba. 2 <·ar off ramp 711 f>.13 '1720 64§._.900 (714)9606331 gar. view . $375 mo <r.-Juan A.qt 833-2613 aft 4 .-... 3 BR. 3 ba. cu.c;t home, l Capistrono 3278 :.! nR. monthly thru .lunl' BR. den. wetbar, polio. blkfmmocean.<·pl only. Lake~t 3255 ••••••••••••••••••••••• l~orweekly. l h~errbt•h fee. 645--4900 ·~ bllc to beach Sl900 mo No children No pets ••••••••••••••••••••••• OtrrRAGEOUS 2 Rr I BJ. '13446-4750, 446 922tl Ocean views, all 2 BR, Avail. Apr 1, l yr l111e Lvt' R<'fS 536 t4M l BR. 2~ .. ba. 2 sty, lake fpk, O/W Super area 1'"• BA. Less then l yr m11gw/lPR6756S20 ----VJew home. Club priv ·~ PIS 963-4567 A1tenl, no ~fib SEVEN DUPLEXES S ... CUMIEHTl old. Walk to stale beach 3 Rr, 2 ba N. Hunt Bch. incl. Close to schl~. ree &Mfunlit.Md BY OWNER 24'x64' &t park. Asking onl Near Westm Mall ~·oo - 000 ... OfC J HouNt u.tumldwd · · r shop'g, recreation Many CON[)(l 2 sty" BR. comm ••••••••••••••••••••••• Great Lake11 1914 $118, eacu. erona ••••••••••••••••••••••• mo Call892·3206. xtr Call 58l 3022 -' 6-'GI 3102 Spaclous 3 Br, 2 ba orpart as. ownr, · pool. ra .. eo l'arolma. I 540-5937 ---- charrner.Lo<'ated "THE BERTHAHENRY ~ral 3202 Lovety3br2bahome.nr or7fi8.766'7 child OK Andrea ....................... . MEADO WS". Irvine REALTORS •••••••••••••••••••••••beach Super yrd 3269 ~"'""'l2 12621 Flower Street Beaut $• adlt, no pet. 21SDe1 Mar;492·4121 w/pnin.r. $500mo. (213) Mtwpwthoch -..roo <Garden Grove) Large 1 R.111 l\l'dil MEW~SIDE 3hr. 2ha. Townhou~I' l'p grad eel Li:e pa 1111 Children ok f\15 9543 cvro;, 646-4~ dny~ All ut1hlles paid J!Or)!t•ou•.2 nR2 Ba SJt~. gn·a1 loc·Jt1on rnf;;.!1 1 Mu~t :,('('lo he he' l' · Spacwu.., :J Bil 2 Ba. s.100 Beaut fplr Ul.19i 1 a..,.;,,., 63 I ·4555 IHllMHl ... •Oft S.oc:h 3840 SHARP. bea<'h. 2 & a BR. frpl , duhwasbcr. l(&r2R<' patios. 960-235tl ------ park. SSt·0229 eves It r:::~~a c~e~l~g8erp4 489-1114, 968-81161 ••••••••••••••••••••••• For R<'nl 4 bdrm hou~e bedroom. apts. close to wtmds • 6 DLX.UHITS * bedroom11 • SOS per ....no ONE'S FOR YOU, BlGCANYONTOWNHSE SJC F11mlliei> No pets sboppln&. Laund r:r · U-'- 1 .... r-n 962-7788 or • n.J.3 New 2 BR. 2 ba. crpt'd & ~.~&US radliUes, no children, no 1..-_.;:.-------... PJt.11XlBfT$ 97 • 50 ...-rconstruclon ~u........ aha.rp,38R2RA.w/fpk. drl>'d , spectacular Golf pets. $195/SZSO/m onth 1.YoolOrongeCoun1YS WUJ be flnlshed approic 9(JM cpta, $410. 963 ~ a1trnt. Course & lake vh•w Sep 2 on l'• Ba. condo. Uillities paid. Call Deb mo!.lbeountuloportmen1 LIVF. Near The Beal'h • Casadei Sol &-11ut1ful Adult Apts Ga.'l & Water Pa.111 :!lfi6t Brookhur.-t. lilt 962-6651 HuntinatooBc!hadultpel oaemonth.l.\50.000 HOMEFlNDERS nofee e;·· tennis " pool comm pool enc l gar, bleat(714)~-7343 patlc. Thfl luck of lhe STUART FtHE ,,.. ... 6 ..,_ ,... .....,~ .......-communl!les A reto~·ng lrllb tan be youn1. Thia 1bowlanda ol Rental• CLOSir. TO 1s: "'CH -'~-..... _ . .,._1 .-,..,. eH•-; ,,, .. """" • ...........__ ._..__. 3106 I se111nn wlltl sheoms ... _ tll I do bl .d RIAi.TOi 6)1·5454 Allareuallpnce!I IC !l;A ................ ,,." ...... __ ,, .__.._ •-3210 _,_ .. ., .,.,au u u e w1 e 2 BR. rormal Din Rm. 1 a_.,..__..... ~ -••••••••••••••••••••••• woter1olls ond mo<f'Sh( Jux ....... hom" 2nr. zn-··Pie·. OT oAean •.• k... Sample ol • "''' " ..., • .. " • ~ sty, pal.lo hme, (pie. wt'\ We have lOOO's hou~~. •••••••••••••• •••••••• Rrand new l br w fl'J>l l!ee5 feollJnnQ p()OI<. w/hot & enld runntnl new. Slll0,000. 7~1 1031 $140 Bach rum util pd 11 R lt p rechoun a ein be BrokerM9-l'80 1 S2002brfncdyard bltr, ll'nnls. pool & jac. dpllCI. apts now. • $22Stno. IR hnu'IO. Nie<' parking, bit-ms, lit $12."i JOCUZZI souno b~llorCl'I youn. Stetna 111 bellev -:i S2Q5 3Br ~1 ren«<t RV storage. $400 9122 areas. All priccs Savi.' on yani, avail now Ciood ltw?. 213/360-0773 ol'll1 exerting ckibnouse mi. but be 1 ure to bring 12 UNITS LlFETlM! SP:RVlCE Vmle Mar <Brookhurst/ r~. :C!:;: S."i7 Ofl63. 540 1720 ...._ , .. ,;;;;;-JIOi with soctol events lenn"' 1our 4 ·1Uf clover l4 mil• to beach. Thea 557.0122 l1Amllton)54$~ ___ 64S.4toO A.'J. --·-•••••••••••••••••••• gym ondva1'6vt>oftol ~=~IAPACltl'lC won't tut at onl 1222 Condo.oc.anvlew,bach , Spacious 4 br, 2 ba, $280 mo, 2 BR. and yd 3Br,2bl'r.ondoonocean· TheVlllOgeMoreol Mob&Mllome Ilea~ Sl20.000. OreAt in.com •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• f'rl>I, walk to bearh. $275 +hamlly rm w /frpk. Child It 11ml pet ok. Avail rronl on Pf't\ln. Under· ev«yltllng you re looking 270&Harbof',5'4%0I trade-up rrom you ~..,.watk t.obch. mo . 910 ·1 830 or ~htded aarden •~• now, 5S'H>AA3, 540.1720 ground prkn1t. $4~ mo 1odumll\Jre1sovo•oble M0-15113'1 duplcs or 4-plex. Wale 4Br 3 8a Fm rm 2100..qn. 313/24t-MOO $550. mo. Locl. a•rdeou. )bry YTlY \se. 837-7580 or an 5, one ond ~ Booroom --__:~.;..;..;.---1 emplrtr--f:!"o· Call no Yrly,60IA~acla6'57048 JBrbM,bl.kctobch. '-Avail. April\. '10 El,_... 1290 6'7~. Vi •w... "-e .. in 1-n•'• --~WI ""& Modena. To view call --------Adu•LMng tT::it';.a"rk , ·.:Tb• 14~3'66 Cdl(MWerlplBR2Ba, l:;.'m5~~1sclcan 5CMQ89. ;;;,:·;;.:~;.··;·~~ .. ~~ ~~ 5~:rit:~a~10 Ofllcesopen 900to600 KctdoWI •• 2 DR. l BA1 _..... Ute, alry •woodsy. s . of 5 br a ba, hi 2-sty home ba, patio, r~creadooal yr\y. ~1103. M5 4203 Now tenllng dee. Euy011anclo1. l\e<i Hwy, mo.1754164 Da1pactous2 BR lrl )'rd. O'lany extras. facil, nu paint Nr by ~.::----'-- 1flU Rttall.y$52·'7500 hr Rent Immediate$ Beauttacdyardnrsbope Bult B•Y eroa . acbla•allop'a A».1000. C.-defM• 1122 bdrm. H.V.H. view. l~· Klcb pettok CM80l Snals/PfU OK. 1125, Lyn 53tr-3lilM ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ilia, pool ""50. &M·TTA l.owl1 I Ult1 Ba $.115 Jenoan11. 5H·2HO or Mqnlll~t View! '7Ti1M1141 " bc1~ nrtpl•c• mac 1421 a.tpcr deluxe larae upper Hr1C'hoob <M27> 2 St1 S br, 2 ba A-rrame. ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• dupla. S of hw)', t br. ls tksu Ul-41'5 O.hwtu'. trplc. Walk to 2 OR t~ a.. 1JOQI, l'ft tllb'u.m.ocw bcb.. ttMll. ~ mo.1~· faril, ar ~ Ir~~. •• ~ lO 1eUT MHl'71 lJ,IU-JmAts. U75mo ll tn-1ads~'l••ll ' 2Br children welcom<' no pel'l, startmg al $245 m1 • 1\4/) F001 Seawind Village Nt•w 1&2 bdrm luimrv adult apt.s In 14 plan-. from $270 + pools. ten na, waterfalls. ponds 1 JITom San Diei;co Frw~ driv«> North on Beach to M<'t'add<-n lh\.'ft West on Mcfncldl'n to Suwind Vllla11e. (71' >893 5198 DR 11'1 BA. dbl 111r. lwnhse. ~ m1 lo ~;irh ll«"t j(att. pclOI. j1u·11n1. fplc, '395 67~ 6161. art ~. ~*' f).I CAIL V PILOT * Wedneeday. Maf'Ch 22 1878 ._._., .. Lo. 5025 Lod&Found 5300 HetpWam.d 7100 ..................................................................... ~t ... h~ .... 4000 Office...... 4400 lat.z.d&lrdT.D."s l'bund: Wbt Germ Shep, ~W..te4 710Cl HeilpW;.tM 7100 HefpW.ted 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••• ... •••••••• .. ••• L.()ANSAVA.11.A.BLE fem .• vie. ol Yorldow•/ Aecotznt.lq ••••••••••• ........... 4 •••••••,.•••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• I kartagh• leoch 1140 Ambauador Jnn lo Costa Credit 00 problem. NewlaDcl. 88U738 COUICTOR i Child c.,.. ~ bou.Mket'J>'. ·····~~·~;;;····· ~!!~·1~u!t~~~~: IX=! __ .,_,..._., __ ._1_s_z.._s_t_O_J_ '-1e11ll1 5350 ~-:1:! ~ i~r~~; ACCOUNTIN~~ 9'!\ T~~aP:few~oaN";f~ 3 BR stucho flPl:I. buie MANY wltb kitchen. Luxuriou.a offices, ex-L'YllCK CASH ••••••••••••••••••••••• helpful. Call BIJI ~100, Eves. IMCMl11'9, t.ck y&ni, chtldreo OK. llQooe & TV Swhrunlog ecuttve ucrehry. T-Splri .... a..der Walluos, 7141Sd·•200. Ftne Quality Newport R«aU Store b 640-14'4. Muat l'ltart Im· ~-Dys, 8'8-2115.S; eva pool, Jacuui, aud rec. persoa.I phone cov -1115So. ElC•minoReal EOE Currently lnterviewlDg For ·Time P011t1on mat. 536-4873 rwm. Dally & weekly eraatt. reeeptionbt, c:oo· lat as Znd Tnat Dffd SanCJemecte. F\dl)' he. · Jn nett Ofnce Slalf. Job requires ak.ill -------- rates st.attUi& from $48 a fereoce roum, atrux, locs arrllJlled tor aoy For appt. G2·'7Z96 with 10 key addinJ mac lie. knowled&e of tbore Cirl needed, mwit HEAR IEACH -.et. QOt.ary. Leaae or month reuao. Credrt no pro-Burroughs L-5000 & L ~ rnacbinea, basic bave owo trans. to run Ir CIVIC CENTER 64.S440 to moalh. Near So. Co9li\ blem. Borrow on the lll· RELAXING MASSAC E Aceounlloc knowleci.fe of inventory, NRec & A /Pay & errands, 2 d.ya wk, 3 hra BRAND N~'W .., 1 c.,.,.1 Plaza, O.C Airport & creued value of yoor BobJame.·lJCMUSeW' ACCOUNTANT payroU. Houri flex.Ible. s.•ry commensurate day.1300 +ml~ • · ..,poc ous -~ room w/b&th & pvt Freeway•. cau Wl'9·21f1. bome. Call today for fast, Ouk.U 9-8, '94·5lll with experience. Pleasant tib'fowldl.op. Please alter tPM . deluxe 2, 3 &: • Br. All emruc~. cowteou:aluformat!Oft. WW. demooatr~ writ· send reeo.me to: --------- bltns, frplcs, gar, lge yd. 548-4589aft4 o el u x e 0 t I 1 c e 8 MASSA&E tDi abl.lil)' for special ,.._1tfl•-A •d-212 --------502 Yortrtown . Just West --------/ t&rtat N / 1:1.GUU MODaS proJec:t to write course --.,. ...-Clurical cl Beach Blvd. 536·1118 Beaut. rm. pvt ba, empld ow csec~ aerv. r ~ 'KAi. •ax CO ~ ..., leesoos fM leadlnc home cfo ==llot·t: lo1 1560 100% FR££ t *tU\ •• Airport. T52-5G8 ~ • ESCORTS t d h I c NI 2 BR t •. ma ure person,......., mo. ---Rl.Alt.$rATCJ.OIW; a u Y ac oo s. om~ C...to f. 92'2' ~t. 8 blb f~~~~ ~·blk Laa Bch. Reta. 494·7346 ""WATERRtOMT" l..kenaed Home Loan OUTCAU OHLY pensatioo to be oegotial stores, trans, s28$. Voc:aHo......_ 4250 New office space from Brokers serving So. 631·3811 ~~:~{~~b~ 536-1.286 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 300 sq ft. Most com-ca.ur. fur 17 yrg. Call our /know'I ol t * _..•OH_.. * pelJllve rates in area. no a res t of c i c e , *SA ...... DY'S * !ct curnm pro-Help W..ted 7100 ... W•hd 7100 2br, Iba. No pets. Close to abop'a.~o ~ ,. Fantastic Views. patios, 714-837·3744 " urea It demonstrat~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• •"-•••••••••••••••••••• WE HAVE CONDOS in t be CANN ER y --------Out.call Muaage wrtUng ability esaeotial 1---------·-------- 768-8764 lN HAWAll VILLAGE·Parlnng met Speculators. mvestors & 813-0329 ~~~c':~rt;>e~po~ A1TENTION!ll ~ lntm'IR.E.Network Forapptcal1Ed67J.1003, owners s hrt term$$ deoceScboola,'40lBi-b llOROVR •TELLER• Spac. 3 Br, 2 ba, Pen NewportHeightsRlty Z!DL&layetteAve .• N B avail. fast. Bill Dave.n-•SHERJLEE• ... ..._ PART-TIME ,......., __ N d "-rtified .. ••• ... St. N.B. ~Attn· ""r .--.-.cHt ... ._.... ew crpt, rps, 645-5044 port MS-8803 "'"' ....... e .... e -...... ,.. --r-· firs&pc.intthruout Gar. DbOfflc•<-.-a HoweCalla·Byappt. Valore, Dir. cl Educa-Workinnewoffice· lmmedlate opening In Nopet.s $3.:IOmo.9i!H.220 ._..to5'1are 4300 ..,.-... MoMyWmhd 5030 838..Ql38 taoo EOE. ()peniqlneo.taMeaa !.agwa Office. Savings or 54G-3023 ••••-••••••••••••••••• Cal 83 I ·9950 ••••••••••••••••••••••• and Loan or bank ea-FOXY LADY Man or woman. Worlt perlence preferred. Must Nice 2br w/patto gar lntne: F to share'" " -· l.eet9 4450 Pvt Prty owns S2,000,000 w/yOODg people. &ljoyJt be wllli ng to work 1nc1ry rm $260 ~ N' bdrm 2 ba R San tz:•••••••••••••••••• •• worth of prop. Wants 2nd o.tc~ Maa50ge ~tlnl bte & lnlereatino wort Saturdays and on call u · 0 · r Joaquin Townhowle wt 4 DB.UXE OFC'S TD money. Will pay 10% PAYROLLCLK "' Beach & Warner . view $27S mo Call + polnts. Desire Cast 731·3561 w/rapid advaocemeft needed for work. Ex· 673-2252 752-Q7~ -,; Cool. rm, seat 25. all service. refs 644 1452 Exper'd 1nd1v. oeeded oppor lo our educabon\l ceUmt salary, working _______ ___,,.,,,,,"-paneled, sm. whse 111 re PREGNANT? Car1og, for multl·state com -productad.iviaion. Age it;> condlllona and benefits $260steals lhUJ 2 BR Roommate w a ed, a.r. 1 or 2 yr. lease. Lake Mort9C!'JH, Trust C'Ollfidential counsebng & puterized payroll. Re<fs barrier IC 18 or ov~ Call or apply Monday cozyden,plushcpt.s U.gunaHills~ mo. Forest area. Kent o.tidi 5035 referral. Abortion. adop-lOlteybytoucb&lltetyp-Must have pleas1 g March 27, tO·OO·l2 00 great area (4381) Aft 6, 581·3104, Bob. Harlu.os ••••••••••••••••••• •••• lion&: keeping. mg Must enjoy detail & personality. Call bet noon and 1 30-4. 00 PM. J BR duplex nr beach lndscpd, encl yard 714 <•t 939" LOWEST APCARE 547-2563 busy almos""ere. Xlnt 9am&2pm AMllUCAH GIRLS. 3's company-____ . ...,_._.,___ ""' rof OUTc·· I ....... .,s·GE wortcing cond5 & bena. SAVIHGS P sngl man is looking IARllEA OR ..,._ ,...._ .,. Apply National Systems 64~5 I 4 i 23535 Calle de 111 Lows a for Hem rmmates, 28-38 .,,. Interest Rcrtff •731 "931 * c to share a beaut 4 BR 1...,.UTY SHOP I t TD' also -v orp .. "361 Bll'Cb St. N.B 1-------••I Laguna li.t.UB, CA furn borne. in S. w. Santa Succeuful locataoo 111 1 • • S. UMDA & VICIU <Near OC Airport) EOE. O l'dJBs Goldblatt 770·2816 nr shops $215 (5363 l Rentl,_1 631·4555 NEW2&3BDRM 19202 f1orida St, ll B 968--83116 or 963 11238 Ana. Tired o{ coming Cost.a Mesa. $600 Month 2nd T.D. L.oc:.ts. * AUT LOTMAfl E<tuaJ 9J>portunily home to an empty apt?1 ___ B_ro_k_er_6_7_5-6_7_oo_ Fw~t'rermsamce194.9 o.tcalMcll1oge --------•I Full or part-time. Leito,~~~ Em~pl~o~y~er~M~/~F~-I Then come & live ma lndustrimR..t.I 4500 Sattler Mk). Co. Forft.'-ofitl ~ Bkkpng t.he auto business !rant. f l t 1 t h "4"2171 54r "611 ~...,.-... aJlOrAnoe"-. po11•11y tbe ground up! O~-aDll y s yea mosp ere. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..,. .,.., ....... uq; -""' -· f d ~leach 3848 fo'uU use of lbe boll!«' IUILD TO SUIT ~7313 Register Today to work porturuty or a van · Bartender, yng, attract fem. Exper, good salary & lips Chez Monique, 287S2 Marguerit e Parkway, Mission Viejo J l .,75 F Retired couple has money -------------00 v--'ous accoun.,-g •-ment. See Mr. O'Ne~·11 r •••••• •••••• • •• • • • ••• • • us .. mo. or more lend. "2nd .... • u.n "' I.GE 2 BR uppc-r. vww, Ullo call. 556-8530 5 • i00-20. 000 Sq. (t. to Aae~:.1.a:rrJ1~s *SUSIE'S• bookkeeping assign. Mr. PleTce. HOWA D new cpU, dl"JX', 1 ~~ blks -. Placenta.a Ave. C.M Outcall Musage ments. Work dose to Chevrolet, Dove & 11 to bch, twn. ll<'i:.h-r M·P' CQjoy pool, tennis. WF.SLEYTAYLORCO 10AM·2AM 731-4462 your home. Figure Sts., Newport Bea<b. Park, $400 Nu ('hildren/· ~pt or tnhse. 645-7404 ; REALTORS 644 4910 ~/rrts/ DANCE OF FUN Clerks to Sr. hccoun· Closed Easter Sunday. sx•l!.. 497 3100 644·S658_Share A Home New 6,700' und<'r 20< l810t • __.. & ir.....;_.... Beaut. nude girts dance lanls needed thruout Automotive Bkkpr. -Need a Great f'-'-d c 1 p o.u>• r-..--& · OAM OrangeCo Acct's receivable, acct'~ Beautiful .1lmust Ol'l'iln \.CUVn 0 Ire e. Unit • ••••••••••••••••••••••• rap sesslOQ, 1 to Robert Half's bl B h front 2 UH apt, Ill) Roommate? HuntBch8422834_ ·-Amowtcenwnts 5100 JAM Moo.Sat, 12PM to paya e, ~ sp(jl· h.Jldrcn ~ Cut liv10g ex pew.es! SPM Sun. 625 N. Euclid, hccountempe. sng machine. Har ban c • 00 pc " Call The Orange ~sq ft. 2034 Pla<:enlla, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Anah. ~l50 SOOS. Mam Ste 501 Volbwagoo 18711 Be~t. Beautician wanted w1t'X· per 1n newest ham.tyles for Ctu.Jdren 's Ila tr i..tyl mg saJon m M V Jmmed lop earnings For 1n terv1ew call Carmen 768-8&01 &CNW Secy $150 .... 4cct.cJ Cll $7 50 S.Cy•ala $1000 s.cyu .. to s1000 a.i& ,,........ $575 '"-Office $700 Gem Ofc aecep1 uso Coe• * Opr $950., Secret• y to $1100 er.ro.Ja to $700 ,.,...fri $750 ..,,...... $675 MEYER AF& COASTAL PenollMI Agettey 2790 Harbor, C: M e:s a 540-6055 CleJicaJ *JR. CLERK *SR. CLERK *CLERICAL ASST Varied jobs wilh & wtlhoul uper. in good o(c surroundings. Ca II Today! NO FEES to~ office • ~OJ overload 557..0061 Port.er Heall) i!Yl.~AA CM v•-t I Cl , I No. Tower, Uruon Blink Bl ffB 842 .u.,c -CouotyProfessionals .. Aili 04..'. ass gu1,ar essons, FREESF.SSlONW Al) 1 Th C !Or • · ........, C1..0SETOBEACll Ho .. HMat•iu.ttd 646-7512 music educator, beg., n e tlyo ange AUTO :! Hr, I Ba. uppcr,crpts, 832_.134 n ............... W-"-.... ..600 mt, adv 556-1178 Slogle male, new lo area. 714/83S-4UJ3 Beauty shampoo assist 3723 Bm:b St. N 8 needed by progresMve ~~~~~~~~~ rl~. ,tuH', rdn~. No ""' . ~ lliWRQ ,. seeking female com pa----------1 Pil'TS COUMTE.f u.:opendabl<' since 1971 •••••••••••••••••• ••••• n.iooship .,.ft u..y danc•na _..S ........ 1•h1ldrt'n, no pct., •--"•ir.....;-~ 5300 ·""""" -· •CCOU..-. ... GCL., ..-~ vn Ne)Nl,)Ort haircutter. call for appt 644·7680. ---Sj5() mo LDC Ull1 Rmmt to sbr lux lrv. pauo Retired cple nd 2 br un wn• • r--.u Noo-amoker. 646-2598 ~ "' '" " F /tune. Will train. Prt'l Mary Bo11rdman, home. Sauna. pool, jac, Cum. m CdM leuse by ••••••••••••••••••••••• Familiar w/A/R, A/P. sales, lnventory contl>I. •lllE STORE• Realtor etc $250 mo 213-399-9177, May 1 S375 675 3723 Lost or Found a pet? Call TOUCH OF CLASS billing, payroll Must be Some service writ1lg hss1st Man ager for 494_24_14 ___ 714-17(}.~ Misceflaneom Animal Auislance ESCORT & MODEL accur typist Mlnexper Sea & Sun SubafU, Schwinn dealer Sal Le;igue 537 2273, no fee SERVICE Out.call by AP· 1·2 yrs. Fast ex.pandtog 8G-OS7S.. $10,400. Must bu ve pnor $2801nrge sunny 1 UH Congenial home, Costa Rentats 4650 pomtment electronics mfr. offers ---------bike mechanic exper. In CLERK, Accounts Rec. F/lime 1n busy retail Jewelry Store. Benefits. 549-1424 CLERK·DRUGS, Gifts & Cards Exper. pref'd. N 8.Call~7J73. hldpool p.itio (S8ll>) Melia Bdrm & Ba. 25.30 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lost old Eng. Sheep dog, •646-7118• good pay, benefits, C<>D· -------••I astore 552.9222. pref'd.$130.979·3231 Space ava il for i:.m reg w/pohce. N.8. Hgts AlsoH.inng genial atmosphere. AVOH ---Clerk Engineering nustiC'l llRS:!GOi.:.ir I'' 23 -_ .. _ mtrhm. camper ~hl'll. area Please return.------· -EOE.C.11lforinlervw, BoatBwldmg "VarietyGmon" .l;1cuu1, sauna 15HGll) · Yr.I ne'l"\U same to boat/lrlr up to 12' io;·:i1dl.' Reward 642_0098 _____ EXEClITIVE OUTCALL DECC JAKE AVON ISL.ANDER YACHTS f1ex. mdiv who enjoys share2bdrmaptmCM. C.M. Ph· 6451>873 $;i0 L t-M y k MASSAGE Irvine :>46-4731 TO LUNCH HasF/timeopemngsfor Cast pace will flt 111 ro> &-aut2BRhtdpool Nun Smoker $125.tmo mo. os or tc 3/16 Noonto12PM,6409490 ---Finalfini~ w/friendly firm! Call ENCL> an.I, A1 C !5Hlti) plus 12 ulll. <:all MS·J373 --------~te;nar~~~~~~e~e~~~~~ Activitifl Director Sell to friends and !•· Resp. for completini: the Vickie, 848-1288. Dennis Rftltinws 631-4555 A!tcrS BusiMf .. /lnve-st/ Ana Please call 646·2790 Kevin 6. can! Cert1ried, f/l1me. Mesa workers tn your offitl, boat in the final station & Dennis Personnel -M 11". 2lyrs +, reliabl<', Fir .e 646-31!68 -----------Verde Conv ll<>5p, 661 make about $40 on evcrr Exper req 'd Good st•lrt· Service of Huntmgton t>c-ean view 2 BR ap!· Sl30mo + •-:a uul. HB ••••• ·•••••••••••••••• SPEND A MONTH Center St, CM 548-5585 $100you sell. You'll ha" 1ng sal & employee _Be_a_cb....;'....;1_61_68_Be_ac....;b....;. __ Adults. no pets, $J7a s.Ji.9605 lusinns Lost M. Blut1ck Hound, IN LONDON Air National If you're your own busines1 benefits pkg provided. Clerk ·\97-2196 F __ ,_ 0ppoe twity 5005 Sa It & peppt<r, col-Free. except 1urfare havmg a hard lime hnd· wtlhoot giving up yo11 Apply, 1922 Barranca PHARMACY CLERK Charmin" l>tudio N e..._over25tosbare2 •••••••••••••••••••••-I a r I t a g. Vic Family home. 35 mining work and are tn· regular job. Tofindoll Rd,lrvloe. p .. . • BR apt CdM w/same 19th/1''ullerton. 646·0424 from Londoo. 5 br, mdn more, call 540.7041 d /time pc191hoo avaala· Laguna. pvt garden, nr About 6 blk~ to bch: SA.>4 ClEMEMTE alters 30 ktcbeo, den. Vol vo avail tetested m a career tn 7.enith7·13S9 B 0 AT CANVASS ble for personable tn· heh You µamt & saVl' or $182.50mo + ,.., ut.JI. Free Grooming & Pet Shop F..xchaoge your home for electronics, weather Avoa~ts. Inc PRODUCTS CO. needs wv1dual to work wilb our S250 mo" I do. 7~·71JZ lndry factl. 640-00lS bef Reltnng after 7 good l''ound: Sml mued MaJc theirs 4 wb this sum f 0 rec as l in G · or fitters & installers. pharmacu;t, calling doc· dys Wayne lOam or eves. Or )eave year:., fme location & dog . Ing ha 1 r. mer. Agts fee Call telepboneiteletype tn permanent pos1t1on, tors. typmg labels & 1 __ Ni__,--3852 mess betwn 9 & 5 onJy, ctient.ele. $68,500 bUc bm wht, Vic 16lb & 714 1583-8263 J udit b slJIJlaUoo and repair. i.ee Babysitter wanted, Tue~ benefits, w111 train waiting on customers --rs-..,.... 751·7547 BERTHA HENRY Sup ~ Rusk, Home Exchan"e your Air National Guard Sat. 2~ PM. CM are., Salary commensurate Will tram. 9 to 3 Tues & ••••••••••••••••••••••• REALTORS ~ Recrwter We need men 673-4011 w/exper. 645·2247 ror Wed, 2 to 8 pm Mon. COHOO Back Bay area Twnhst> 215 Del Mar 492 4121 Lost Black Labrador pup-~rvi~:g:,·& ~~0333464, and women aged 17 27 m· ---------• appt Thurs & Fri weekenrt 3 Bdrm 2,, r,,1 w/hltn Unfurn bdrm, Priv ba -PY, 3h mo old, weanng terebted t~ getl.ulg ahead Baby s 1 t t er. Ii t! -------• work Please call mgr. to 11ven ra~gc. Ui?>hwa.,ht•r N t>n s mo le c r $1 5 O 'llewport, 2 ex1sllllg ocean stlvcr chnm 536~--Social Clubs 5400 tn today s compellt1vc housekeeping, baby ~ Boat Manufacturers set up interview appt &Airrond fullvcurpt'l· 5481223 front take-out, s1tdo~n FOUND Purebred ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• }Ob market. You can gel mo's old. Ref's req'• RberglcnsMolde-" TMGUldD~ ~ & d ·~ t restaurants Owner will Tb frff vocational training 642.filOOJudi & • __ _. __ ~ rape I cad) tn Prof fem wish<'s rmte fi.nance A Johnson Bkr Afghan, Lite brown, 1480 e Single's Solution with excellent pay plus ..........., s 1610San Miguel r. ~love 1n Lol·atect on .,hare 2 BR apt, NB/CM 979-4964 · ' · Monrovia, Nwpt Bch DatebyCbo1ce, free medical coverage Babysitter wanted, S. Expenenced Ne6~4~rt73ee3a0ch ( r!'~n Vallt>y Pkwy Approx '175/~ ulll Prfr 646-4732 Not Chance and travt'I. I-'or more in· Cst Plaza area, • GftcoatHefpH' ..... Hf:NT~5 mn. • n/smlrr over 30. Conni Partner wanLed. Oil pro FOUND. German Shep. Call IntroVtl'w752-54tl formation on openings children, 3 In S<'N Xlnl pay. fringe hens .I M11e.,So uCS D fwy 957 1313 ducts, silent or art1ve. Mesa Verde area. cau to Travel 5450 and qualif1callons call $45-$60 per week. C~I • Balboa Boat Bwldcrl> CallMr.D'Amu:o Rare opportunity. sgsoo d Sargeant Arrollo 54G-609laskforJack 2972CenturyPl.CM \il4)898·3376 Mast<'r Br W/ba, Mesa S""'ured.7"°o•n• i entify.545-8716. • •••••••••••••••••••••• n•....... EOE CU!j12() V d I h ~~ ~ Reli bl I ill d · ..-u • .,..7363 or apply at . . . .....,. --er t' poo ome. no ---LOST.· SI• "'"ESE a e coupe w nve 2651 Ne..-Blvd, Costa Babysitter, 3 .days wee~ ~wporl hoch 3869 ovl.'rrute visitors, drink· 3 StatiOM ,_. your car to Ohio this -....-· 9 30-4 Ch Id M ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1ng or drug11. Full REWARD week. Call Dr. Palmor,._M_es_a_._______ : · 1 1 · aturt 5 Dryers ,-respon adlt. Aft 6::1'> PARK NEWPORT kitchen, washer facU. 3/18178, Vic: Newport _N_._B_.67_>358..:...:.~9_. ____ AmbiUoua C.Ouple Wanted s:n-5294. Bache Io rs. t or 2 will have to sign rental BEAUTY SHOP Blvd & Mesa Dr. Seal· lo manage a .small bwn· _______ __..._ llcdrooms&Townhouses 8a3i:3re0e0m7e0nt. $23252lmo. lnA:Wk!ltinS28. GOOOrossA$S2,f.OOt point S1ume!\e, sutures r:.apu,.w.t~ ne!IS p/time. ~tll not In· Babysitter, maturt> From $!!)19 50 · ext or ""' mg . gen . on left i;lde or race. Nds ~ lerfere "11 'yo~r present pen;oo, 2''2 yr old bot Spectacular spa, total 545 SIOSartS.30 752.7315 med Call anytime, ••••••••••••••••••••••• job Must be "w1lbng to Newport Hghts E -S1w recreation program.~· Gift Shop, best NB loca 6311030 JobaWClllhd, 7075 _leam_._M_r_._H_aU.642-1634. ~~ysar!~: ~~/~~e·: ~~~~grtsrumAl7Lpc><>hl:..8 for etlt 4350 boo. F.P.$25,000 Reward. S1benan Husky •••••••••••••••••••••••Ambitious ladles earn PM646-0l.S9,494-3009. ,, .-a~ Inn ••••••••••••••••••••••• 675 2473 red & wht Vic Garfield/ Experienced PAINTER Sl!OO wt"Ck 5J6..2403 for bland, Jambon•c & S<m A 1 bl ...,.. ----1 M ... seeks Full Tame work appt No details over Babysittenhsekeepet, BOOIUCEEP!R/F-tlme Experienced Small Nwpt Bch orfkc 642 2025 IOOICkEEf'IEA F/C l Girl ore. M/F , A/P, A/R, payroll. ta xe~. fman Stale, IO\'OIC'lng. etc. Typing a must ro pd healt h /life ins Colt> Instrument Corp. (714 > 642~ EO F. Cl.ERK TYPIST Large insurance co. w 1,._ Int work 1n~ conds IV. benefits has 1mmeit opening for clerk typ1-.t Type 45 wpm Hea\'~ pluml'S. Must be well or garuzcd Some math ap- utude. 1 Yr ofc exper pref'd Apply 1n person 8.J(}.2PM Mon thru Fn Joa1uln Hills Road vai 0 e now. _., mo. Beer/Wme tav~m $7000 agnol.la N.u medtca· Brush, roller, Airless phone. live out/m. mature. h'n· __ 7_1_4J 644-1900 near Ne~~~vd. CM d ... 11. 2014 Placenua, CM lion 952·l4lO -----• spray. Call Greg 979. 9621 ~AM-B_m_O_US_C_O_V_P_L_E_ smkr. l ullant. '99-1415 BOOKKEEP ER Moulton _______ _ Lido l<1lc Bdyfront 2 Br. Offi ..... R--&-' 4400 557·7490or642-4810 -LOST. Gold coin bracelet, Woman seelt1 employ Help manage family _e_ves_·------+--p I a z. a p h II r rn a<' y. --------- Safeco Insurance 17570 Brookbun.t Fountum Valley F,qual Opp Emplyr m r frpk S600 Callbtwn36 -.....,.. Earn extra incoml' Fri eve. 317 Bushmlll mentaarompaniontoSr buslDessp/t.5570215 Babys1tterneededll M· Laguna Htlls, Mr Clerk pm. 673-0770 ••••••••••••••••••••••• GrOWld Cloor opportunity Grand Pnx. Balboa Bay Otizen. ~9277 2PM. 4 days wk for :i lno. Dreyf_us_7fi8·3'7S4 --UTOJEM -THE EFFICIENT Wlth excitrng new party Club Reward. 846·7221 Appliance repairman' old girl64&1154 aft. 2l M IOYS. GIRLS Rffttals Gdon!! ALTERNATIVE plan;>art-llme or full· ~893-U.2 __ 1 _____ 1 loteU, slim, beautiful Washers, dryers. stoves, We have 1000 ~of hOU'iCS, tlrne. Call toll free Lo6t Cat 6 mos, blk/bm female desires customer refng's. dishwashers. Ball Man uract ur~ rs l2-l6 years of age E\en Convenience d1>lu, apts now .ill Mo to mo rent incl: 80(}.242-21..35 for more tn· mottled, Mesa Verde or public relation type Top pay to right mao. oeeded for day, sw1 ~ & mg work. Obtain n<'~ areas, all pnn•., Snv1• on R cc e Pt . s e r v . . formation. area 557-7630 job. Ji'1exible. will travel. 494 8009 graveyard shift in C i;ta subscripUons for the Ua1 Ma.a.et foe personalized phone cov-Prefer N.B., Irvine area ---------1 Mesa. Call Kr. Wac~el ly Pilot working with an 11\ 645--4900 A erage, coor. rm, mail ~toLoan 5025 Lost Gold char m P.O. Box 1475 Newport Apt Man11ger, mature 642-52.54 adult superv1i.or. Earn Po6itaons now avail 2nd 'I st'rv underground prkg ..__, <>-ach.....,,,., couple. Beautifully -------+---$20 to S30 per week or & 3rd Stults at all our -P-ark-N-ewpo--rt-fu-m--ba1·h &moN-mNewport. ••••••••••••••••••••••• bracelet w/S ctuldren·s co: ·"-malnt.a.med30unii.C.M. Banking to~ more.Call (2131597·0396 localJons Start $2.65$3 W·11 I TIIEEXECUTIVE faces.675·~ Y.&..W-"-~ 7100 Adult•, no pets. Apt MEWACCTS"""'fv noon to Spm. (2 13 1 hr.lnterviewsconducted 1 assign se at re SlJlTE WHEN YOU •...,. _._ " ~ IP1 ' ..,,.. ., .. 73 5 9p Moo-Fri at: ducedrate 640-1007 ,640-5470 LOST CAT. Lite brown 4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• +small salary & bonus. Will have Important R ...,......,. · Pm· m. Call C.11 week in l:a Collect 12442 Lampson, 2 BR 2 Ra, St°udio apt, Of'ftceSpaceavall, pvt en-NEm C~H, yr old Burmelle male. N. ACCOUNTANTS days,642-4907 ~.:.. plushbram~: II . GardenGroveS37-4840 ,..., 2 ult.es 1827 l...aguna, 494·1721 A ......., •Oil, 833-2700. ~ U>ls I w mot f ·th-fplc, xlnt cond. 315 K "I• s . • reas. OVERLOAD pt Mgr, couple pref .. ex· & Dennis Perso1ne l OYS 15 to 17 e pro e rom wi m Bay. $39S yrly rental. ~~~ 11 ff Dr· N 8 · Found Female Siberian Offers top pay, a variety p'd only, in ~int. Al bk· Service of Irvine, !082 P/time eves, 6 to 9::!0. Equal Oppor Employer 962-8847 · CONTACT Husky, Jnd1onapolis/ of inl4restlng assign-kp~. 55 unit complex, MichelsonDr. Must bt-intelligent & --"""""""'TH&W•...,..•• UHIOH Beech. H.B. S36·8998, ment.s. 11erves the 0 otirc C.M. <213>86S-385 __ 1 ___ 1 _________ neat appearing 645 2;02 CodrtailWoffnss S3.10 larl(l' 2 RR patio "'" .,. • gl( .. , enclosed yard, new C'pt~ Great office space. 300 to HOME LO~HS 536-<&662_______ Orange CouJ:ity area and A/Receivable $9000 Banking BUSBOY -exper'd, Fri. School beautarea (5367) 1000 eq ft. AU sizes & Uruoo Home Loan~ ar-Found Cocker Span. Yng =:x~~e~~~u~nka "Cash-In" TELLER'fTIMI Sat, night.sonly Day/eve classes. Place· shapee, somew/wet bars range loans for home or blk male vie Santa Ana personnel at all levels. on fantastic oppty to Branch ore seeks boida· 540 3641 ment Ass1t. 751·9194 So. Lovely 2 BR lullury apt bltns, new cpl.! $375 K.Mil/peta ok (9628) Ra........ 631-4555 & frplcs & terrific views propeC:.Ooo own0r e~0o/e ~ 1~ Hats. 963 6880 Call today and Jet WI tell work for weU known, <'O ble p/time teller Ex ~r C a I i r C o c k t a 1 l Vtrry competitive rates to $10 u• /\ you bow to become 8 seeking IW!p. lndlv. Call preC'd. Contact ff da Ccr Wcnh Ma1tc19« W&Jtresses. Irvine lo Udo Village. You've through Union Home FOUND: $100, owner bully, well paid Accoun· Amy, ~1288 Deruus & Terranove (714)644-'lll)S. lmmed. employment got to aee lt to believe it! L 0 a 0 11 Y 0 u i e t ldenUfy by denominatJon tan ls Overload Pr o. Deon 1 a Per 1 on o e I Western Federal avail for full serv1cf' car Codctail Waitre·11 Call S11al• Zaun at Homeowner Terms, &: number of bills, al80 ~?"Vice or Hunt101ton Savin-wash manaaer. Must be School z BR, t ba, apts & cirpl, (7U )175-8662 for an which are generally date & location lost fesaional · 2744 E Coast Hwy, C 'Ptf e:rper'd in ;II pha103 of Earn up to S300 ..... wk. •-to bcb 1 •• a-,-••--by .. oa.""-' mucbbetterthanflnance .,....,,..,,..,HBPD Srt7·7'31 Beacb,J.S16S8each. "'-'*1n-.-Empl•fter h _. gar., a""'..,. , Yfl:I• ~ "" ~ • c., t ~ ""'« ...... ...,.,...,. •u car was management Low tmllon. Placement Dya 8'0·66~0 . Evoa 8 :30 to S:JO at Lido oompe.ny erms. 10.UNo. Maln,Suit~1016, Top sal + bonus + assut. 751-9194. 6GQ25 Ma.riAa Village, 3415 Via CltooMTlleTtnM Lost· Cockatlel, 1rey/wbt Saot.aAna comm. For •nterv1l'w OCEAN VIEW, yrly 2 BR Opono.1M'OSU11eFR"'E205R,~· .:;=. ~~:' ~~ar~~ai~~!~d -~--~-pu_bli_c_a_ccoan __ Un_• m~!e~eni PAN1< ca11714/644-4460 c;\l~=~~oer b-r.r/ki;rened 1 BA.dpb. $450 mo. • .,.,, a _546-_37_85 _______ 1 N_...,ed J odl l 1 ' Cashier •·anted for car helpful, mu.'lt have good '""180or&&2-3638 Harbor Blvd/Balter ~ mm a<' Y ScwiorTeler wash in Santa Ana Ex· telephonf' vo1t'e, xlnt ~---area.C.M.300-800sq.ft. FULLYAMOITIUD ~tA~e.mGoGldee""nweShstef.Hbelilt ACCOUNTS ~«-~!,hort~~ per preferred C'all salar). Contact .Mr, ---··· 3176 4()l aq n. Ground noor. ,A.RTLY AMOITlDD ......... ... , ... , ..... E ,,,,_,...men... 644-44M Goodm.an.645 2644 ••••••••••••••••••••••• xlntparldng540-2200 IMTBIST OHLY area 842·36SS____ ,. ,...... SShlftAI Available Immediate opportu ~ty __ lBR,12:25.lbdgar,prcfOf CLER.IC Muttbaveownttaruip for an indivldual \th Dutuer/ClerkR~r de Companion needed. n:saba'e •nil Avail Im e Downtown I,aauna. Lollt:Infrv.srnlM.BJond C4Todlly55M520 previomexperlence 1u pendablf' woman for miatur1•. Chris ti an • ...S.~Z1Mar'92-41966 275 Sq rt. Plush cpu, ......,:ra1,...,..ac-~~g~/•ll wbt chat. wecWTent.lybavearull· Free.T°'1Pay.VacPay tellerprelerrablyln le,.. eves&wkndwork. App Yt'Omantostaywlelderly paneled, incla uW $1~. CMdwC9 wlttll •tat• time temporary openJnl Vlc:torT11•ar• f acalUDta. DuUe111 lne :ade ly, OC Airport Gift Shop, woman on wknds 1n Afl tw• ,...,IMd ~1 ar '94·7796 law. LOST. fo'rlPndly Albino ror a I mccth period with SerYfcft traioina t8len, han~ &rK aft 4pm, CdM 640-1392 betwn 9am •Ulfwlihti1d 3900 ~ Iffor lAf '-UOft we can· Cockateel, 19th St. Nwpl lbe pouibllit,y of becom· Di w-"·-KJdd a.eo cu.atomer tranaactJ ns. --------&Spm ............ ••••••••••• Sin1le to 3 room aulte 8cb. ini L At le v ""'""' • • MW aceounta and co l'e· CERAMIC WORKERS ---.---- THB EXCmNO avail In Ml aemc. bll, :! ~u• be'°::~ C100~14>82J.S840 d.ya; Y••~ri": acco:\! Ste ,:msN:-~~ach Uona I.a adcliUoo to u llt-II you oan throw pot.s on L'OOK. l!rs d tn 1ue~t PALM MISA APTS.. nr O.C. Altpell'\, •t.a.J1.lnl aroblliation. -...:.....-------• P~f_lble e1perltoce. (Oon:l11rot 8riltol & 101 aavln1s mana !er. a wheel and •re tnterc-At· home. l -8 weekends. IUNUTES TO NPT •Ut6S. C.Um.3MO. AbWt7 to operate a 10 C.mpus bthlnd Qual!flcd appll<:ant.a :all ed tn a ateady job, call c_.M_._64UTl __ s ___ _ BCH. OFll'lCEPORLEASE USITHI b)'amust.Pleu•appl.7 Cart'aJr) (TH)788-TT11. MARKEi.. CERAMICS,loootforpre-echool,9am- Bach, lM BR. UDO lq ft wlLb lobbJ, Of· UNION DAILY PtLOT lnpmioo '~~~~~~~ • 1 0 -_...:_ .. sm..0121 lpm, great part·Ume~ob. &om$ZZO.llup. ftcea It coahroce TllMDATA CH!MICAL OPR Coot.act EmllyTbeunch, Adult., No P~ facWUa 1J1 prtme loc•· HOME "FAST ASSIMaa.BS .... -. ,._~.::?:., -· a 13.50 P'T br w/ptrlodlc d.lttctor, s.51""533 1561 M_. Dr. Uon ~ to rr.ewa,... lllULT° COl.P. -n .... uwuc LR\J l"!'Vlr.wl H s chem ar w. nt'Dn .......... otN-_,,._...::~•.oUJ.Ad-'-. (!} (IO)Needfdror LaawiaHllla,CA • · · 11.00KS, Bartr.nden. w--..~ ... -..-• ... av .. ..,U1U. mw ' u SllVICI &ad&tdM.bft'IOlt t>tv. 0Vtl}"ud'.Not_XJ)MC!. °"or k ex per . Dl"ltvr.ry Drivers :_~ or ~~ol11aL_~a~ta ~ • OANS AnAppbed Loo1Tenn6.Jl'JU~! Equalopponunlt w /cbemicala pref'd , P t tlme openlnl(a ro; .I·-.. 000 l';i~~-..........'::·-0/t-n":=a.!: DlllCTORY Ma.peUcllC.o Vlc:MrTeq:.1 ., employttM/l'/11 7am·S:SOpm. E.0 .E . WOUIC'Tl Ir m4'0 WIOUt~ ~-... ~ ·-.... Natlon'al..erftRtHom• For R ull MJOW.~ Sintcet ------.... •I SU.mt. lJ\lpenonal1Uea.Onr21 .... _.................. n! Loan~· F'lrm "'c Call Aaa.,CAtr104 .as. S .Bnltol • able to work eve11. floo!:Ow/kftth nctte • ~WJCRIMC.il. .,_."'" L 770-lOJI 64•1678 ~S:-~~~ 10 Nft'PClltBch Doc't drup the baUt < 1u Clusln"41 adt Hll bJi $2.70.Sl to 1i..rt. Apply ..::-...... •'4P· 6' ;;._f~~*1!.'*!~lltil Hlllltldt. 141-ZUI .... ~-~ ·~~ir'"IF"'_ IHIUO Jollwttbalow-cottIOOr items, •mall J1.em1 or ~~.J!~p~~.:.~~£'. ·-=r=~~5e.e15&~~~~=~1i11!11U-~~~~AM~~l•~T~--~1~~~~~~~~~~:::=;;~~-...~~a.~•==,:::;::!J~~~~~-~-~~~l::==~~~~~==~~!t~1fl~C~l~a~11~l~f~le~d~•:dJ·Ja~n~y~l~t•~m~.~J~u:•:l:c:•~l:l~~~c~•--~:-~.,..~~_,,~o~ :-; ·--i1. .,~ _ _ _ • "' • .......,., '°""'· 1T14Sl,CM • ' ' I ;~ ll). ,y ,. ... ·-...... , ··-.. .. . .. _-~_. ... ..---.. j'=:~"-~"~·· .. ;;;-_~o-~:;=:;i:;;;~~--~~-"..,_..._,.....,.....,.... ~ -----~.....,. • s;;.,: . ., t " • t • ' • ~ I t I I r I I . -.. Wednesday, March 22, 1$78 * l Ace=•itlM c.,. .... CoutsclGI' HdnlJ llecomtTa ,~ ,~aperiftt ""•bin; • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• t'/Chg Bk~r w/four yn. Car Pe o t.: r. Free R.J.Hulfman & Son. Gen Pro! Japanese Landscap· Strng student, big truck, rax preparation by l5yu. Palntlnr 0.C. p .. Your Catie current. .A. exp want.I eatimates, Any aiu jobs. C.ontr. Cu!ltom Alt & Add, ing & gardemng. Matnt. lree cuts, clnup, haulina. former l .R.S. agent Rel/Com. m Apt lo ratea. c_,.,.11 .. _.. 1 -t'"-- at'ds to work on tn your Tony, 646-9866 patio 1 , cab 1 net s . incl. mowing. trimming. ~71& &494·2129 7$4..()272 Uc/ina ... 1116/M-2901 ~---•• ~t.· ~_.ex.'' office or my home. C1i1ll ----------1 fonnica. New con.st. Res spraying, weeding. Free ...... llUIU.99 au .. ... HQMESAVERS. Plumb· lng & Heatine. Free est, $10 hr. Hooest ai reliable service. BofA, M/C OK. 97N065 or 847 ·0383 962·105Zafter5pm CARPENTRY & comm'I. 6"4s 4644 or esUmatea.MS-7072 tlowiec:le , g Wouldo't you rather have PSTERSPAlNTING Pleue chock our re Patio, declls & covers, S48-454l Ll &boded ---------acertifledpubbcaccoun· Expr'd. Reas Rates. fereoc:et. Lie: # 320881 ArcWhc:tural paneling, siding, int. · c 0 · C'LEAN·UPS/HAULlNG ••••••••••••••• .. •••••• taot prep.re your to· Free Est. Call Gene Guar .. inard, tree e1t. 1Kal0flll9Q ••••••••••••••••••••••• finilh, appliance Install. Oen. contractor: Fow1da Pruning-Planting come tax ret11m7 For an 552·°'58 Ted. 636-7085 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Drafting, architt1clurul, Some elec. 4' plumbln&. t1ons. add1t1'ons , re Freeest. 642·9907 THE SUH SHI Ml Anpt in YOW' home "all p ROOFS installed ractorv ;;:;. "182 .. ...1 PRO"'ESSION AL aintin&. lntr/Extr. 25yrs ... ,__.., -tab 35 yn "··1'1 11tdnt draftsman, exp. Free at. Refs. 642-1738 modeling, blockwork. JOHN THE GARDENER GIRLS .....,.... n • " in Hari>or area St Uc ~. -• '-- avail. C.all 751·91121 r--.a Sen'ke · 656-82.41 For Prof. grounds care Housecleaning &: ornce L~cdr Palntinf. loter/Exter. l.8328l 642.zs.56 • Harold Gunn 5'9-2981 ..,....._.R__, -r· all John 2S 2 specialists. Spec. on Ml .. tce....--11'9111 Reaa,worllguar642.o386 • ...,.._, .. ,._rs ••••••••••••••••••••••• a.ctrfcal c . yrs exp. . & R E k Se •••••••••••••••••••••• • P .................. l ... G Roof's For Less. All types. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ca-... Man wlll lay yours ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hort. degrees. former apts. . . wor . rv · LANDSCAPING. Pain•'•"'. Extr/Intr. Ex· --~ " Lic/bood'd. Insur. Fre--....... wru•· H G d 7 daya wk. Bonded. tn· WAA6 20 F t Has rain damaged your or mine. Repairs & ELECTRICAL SERVICE "" ouse ar ener. 8 u red . 5 4 0 • 9 5 2 5 Reasonablepnces. pr'd, honeet, neal, reu. yrs exp. . ne ea · eatimate. 89'·0'21 or asphalt? Call 631·2440. cleanin& too! Guar work CALLS $1S h.r. & SMALL Personal llerv. &65-8446 (anytime) 968-8783or 541·5846 Lic'd 9'4·l<M5 Dave 64$-ZUIL Ask for Bob. 1_537_-4_133 ______ _ Bonded, lie .. msured. at bigger savings. Free JOBS842·82.33 Gwrd Senlcff ~ ~ F1ne Exler. Painting by Jnt.Ext& Repairs Tiie ....... est, 645-3646 Hubbard e.ctric ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• R. SI.nor. St. Uc., Ins. Try Small Jobi O.K. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sha •-t I HANDYMAN·.Ca,....,nlry, ••HOW1ecleaningdoneby -u"""•"-CallBrueeSU.20&5 C'l."'DAulCTILE S 'al •••••••••••••••••• ••••• mpoo "' s eam c ean. Lie 327136 645-6974 • ..-l' bl o~pl R f Brickwork. Small jobs. me . .....,....,.......""' m '" ~ . • pec1 • Col b · b b electn·cal, plumbing •-re ia e c e . e s . t ""'-tri /fl 25 /\• E Systems. Auto roll or ng teners; w t "' 540-1 93 Newport, Coeta Meaa & Pro( palnt'g It paper "-hr/Repair y: c.u es oon. yni @awnlngsforthemotor cptslOminbleacb.Clean ELECTRICIAN-Priced floors.847-Z787,5574504 lrvine.675-3175eves. banging, work guar. •••-•••••••••••••••••• expr.!162·1883 bOine & travel trlr. AU llv, din rm, hall $15. Avg right· Cree estimate on flANDYMAN C t liut ~ ai1 \!in T ir-•-~ &. sizes. lrnmed. rm $'1.50, couch $10, chr largeorsmalljobs. . · arpen ry, Miyako Housecleaning Movi119 Free est. 536·4780, Rl&ft~. at£iU..~9 ,... _...,,Kt free home installation. SS. Guar ehm pet odor. Licensed 673'.0359 electncal. plumbing & Service, houses, yachts. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ • ••••••••••••··~·••••••• 8-10AM&5·1PM Cpt repair 15 yrs expr. floors.847-2787,557-4504 apts & parties. Oriental "Two Men Will Move OUNG MAN 5 yrs expr PATCH PLASTERING Removals. l r1mmin~. (213)592·5020 Do work myself. Refs ELECTRl-SERVE HANDYMAN. Homes & excellence. 631·5410 You" We handle lrg & in wallcovering. Free A I l type 11 • Fr e e pruning. Fr-ee est. Llc'd, ----------1 531-0101. .. Morethanelectriciarus apts. Conscientious sml moves·office le est.~SAndy esbmates.CaU~ wured.642·2634 ~ Carpet Cleaning. STEAM '79-4963 Craftsman. Call 645-0302 General cleaning. Also we household. Di.stance & 1---------p• .a~ERlNG Tree Servke. Tree pnw· ••••••••••.••••••••••••• or SHAMPOO. Also floor local, also packine. a t cbing, painting, .......,. Win bab 3 --..&.... ,.~....._ do vacant houses & apts. L t I g 1 t ~uam. wor'-. Exr.-r'd, Homes, additions, re· ang, removal. topping. ys1t mos-4 yrs, & window care. 971·1154 ·~ ..,...._..., (7 4)827-6900 owes e a ra e. • r -Uc lns 640-4811 ~~s & Bushard. Dutch Maintenance ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 Lic/tnSrd. Cal T 111·944. ast stucco, free ests, low · · ,,..,,r.i,,.., REDWOODFENCES llaul, skiploader tlurnp HOUSECLEANING Pb847·7Z78 &REASOMAIL! rat8!1.S86-4892 wi.dowCleanfnc) Cemtnt/Coltcrde Built to order. licensed, trk, grading, tree wrk, Goodwork,goodrefs. •----------CaU557·10U. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cclipefttet ....................... guaranteed. EVES. dernolit.ionsetc. 831-1257 675·9589 Prof. serv. w/Atlas costs•----------Patdling, int/ext,/ found. lndows cleaned, re· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Paci'fic Concrete. Lo 1,,_ 642·"""3 no more. Free est. for ather •-Son. Con.scien· rpr. Bonded, llc'd 140601. ,~ __ ... v_• ______ u_.a'--1 al & ln dis 0 c "' 8912 3845 asonable, businesses. Carpenter & Cablnet ~rk day & full day rates. R--.--.. ..., Houseclearung by exp. & oc g t. r . ty. tlous, satis. guar. 1 __ • --------• homes&apts.S47-4461 Free estimates sml Jobs 645-3257 after JPM. -• ••••••••••••••••••••••• rel. women. Xlnt refs. Van & Storage. PUC Lie 675-8336 eves or leave DRYWALL & repairs, evs. 673·5125 ••••••••••••••••••••••• occ Student. l Ton trur k. $17.50wk. 979-0049 Tlll,015. 537·3160 or mess. H ta Alvtn Don'tdroptheball ~Geta Floors: Wood. ceramic, Trash, tree trim, Hon 53'7·3161 1------------Ri~garo~S:~~ job with a low·cost Daily 111nyl & cpts. 27 yrs 542.57031 979.6489 NB/Irv area, yng caus. Int &ext, reason., Have something to sell? Pilot Classified Ad. licensed contractor. hosp trnd, reas. rates. SELL idle items with a Sinc&airpaint.s. Have something to sell! Classified ads do it well. Phone642·5678. Cameo Interiors. 531·8440 Classified Ads 642·5678 Kim. 835-9602 aft 4 PM Daily Pilot Classified Ad. 531-8788 Classified ads do it well. People who need People That's what the DAlLYPILOT SERVICE DIRECTORY is all about! ~,.~~·:.~ ..... !!.~~ ~~'!~:a.~·~-~ ..... ?!.~~ ~~!.~~-~·~-~ ..... ?!.~~ ~~~ ..... !!~~ ~~'!.~~~·~ ..... ?!.~~ ~.~.~::! ..... !!~~ ~~~ ..... !!~~ ~~~·!'! ..... ?!.~~ ~~~ ..... ?!.~~ COOKS . Uelivery Driver & F.scorts & Modd'I no GENERALOFFICE,typ lnsurance MACHIMIST/G .. 1 MATURE WO MAN OFFICETRAl .. EI PROPERTYMGR Breakrast,Junch,d1nnt;r. ProductJonWo~k~r.$3to exp. nee. 646-7118 (213 ) ing,Ciling,phones.cxper Unde'lwrite.-Tmff TopPay p /tlme to welcome Lovelylrgolc:.Sometyp. For Newport Beach Exper'd. Appl y 1.n start.Call&l2-22S6. 428~eves. pref'd.642·5830 Large expanding insu~. Set·up & short run mill, newcomers & .contact ing. Friendly happy Mustbeu;n~c1ous&hard person, Ma Da~ker s Deli worker, exper. rdia· agency bas trainee po111· lathe uncb re1s Gd merchants. ~ex1ble !U's· place.156(). nosed. willing to work ~estaurant, 212 E. 17th ble,Tue'Fri,9-4.Gi uvan· fli.CIH'k GEH.LOFFICE uonsava1linOrangeCo opp~f. to ~x p'and Need car, lite typing. BUieO'.Brieo 540-5001 Tues thru Sa~. Percen· _St.CM ni's, 1380 N. Cst Hwy, RecordR.tentlon Goo d t yping skill s Co benefits inclUd sick w/growmgco.5 Day/4o 547·3005. SoelllnglrSnellingof t age. basis •. for Cooks & DI h niters Lal,l Bch. Progressive S&L is look· needed. 50 wpm, 10 key leave & paid vac. Start· hr wk.. Co pd life/hosp MECHAMICAL Newport Beach Agency esl abhshed busrness. A 1 ' wS · mg for resp. self starter by touch. Must be sharp ing s al $550 per mo Ins Cole I nstrument ~IMEIR '340CampusDnve Real Estate License ~~~~rs~, ta;90 s Dental Receptionist for to work m loan file va4ll. on dela1ls Applications w1rap1d adv avail. Co~p ( 714) 642·8080 helpful. 67>4912. ast wy, two girl fronl oHice, 1 yr. Neat appear , typing bemg taken. 893-2421 or Call Judi in Fullerton E.0.E. Agg~esslve s mall in· OfflCEMELP ---------•I exp 830-1395 abthty. Xlnl benefits & 531·172SAsk for Gladys. (714)871-7722 dust 1 lnatrument co. Needed p/time in N.B. Dental Chairs1de Ass15t. adv oppor. Contact Jan Unda in Fountain Vly MACHINIST needs growth oriented Must enjoy working COOKS l':XPERIENCED Top Pay-Good BenH Full &P/Hnw All shifts avail /\rPLY lN PERSON jojos RMtauranf 23000 Lake Forest Dr Laguna Hills Equal Upp Emplyr mlf Hess. (714)833-8383 GIRL FRIDAY (714)549-&lA>l N.B. co. needs Class A engineer who wants ex· w/fJ.gUra & people. Will in N.B. Pleasant group State Mutual S&L P/T clerical position w I Machinistfor Bridgeport per. m manul produc~ de· train. Fiexible hrs. Send f:c~u~·es E:ire~:~te nS;t 4001 MacArthur, NB ty~mg & lite shorthand L~~~ ~~=~~~ 14:n~ue~ Mill & Hardinge Lathe. velopment markettn~. leUer w/pbone number Equal Oppor Employer skills required. Fashion Cl06e tolerance precision Salary baaed on capablli· to Classified ad no. 215, AM 's .640.1122. lsland.G44·5460. M/F openings w/major Oil work. Elcper req'd. Top ty. Equal Oppor. Dental assist. Gardener, exp'd, for 55 Co. High salary + xlnt benes. E.O.E. 557·9051 Employer. 894·5351. c/o Daily Pilot, PO Box wut apt complex in C.M. Handyman needed for benefits. Apply in person ask for Ron Adams. 1560• Costa lllela, Calif. X·Ray Lie (213)865-3851 rental uruts in HB . Relia· t.o: Union Oil Service Sta· MECHAMIC 1•92626-··-------____ 54_6_·3000 ble Mr Allen. 752 7474, lion, 1870 Elena St. MAIDS, Rel.ired man part to1--------- Dockmastcr's Assistant GARDENER needed in aft 7 PM 642·0415 Redondo Beach, Ca . Apply in Person. ALI {/time. Newport Beach OfflCETaAIMH wanted. Fttime Open CdM,xlntworkmgcond.. 213·3'i3·2342 BABA MOTEL 2250 Golf Course, 751-4344, STAllTS6Z5MO. salary. Call 673·3515 Ftt1me. Only hard work Hostess. eap'd p (T . App. J .. ,..w OR JILL Newport Blvd. Costa 3100 Irvine, NB MOREWITH .,_EB ---- ---mg person need apply. ly 1n person. Be ac h '"""~ SOAF"-. DONUT SHOP, p/time. SJ.00 per hr. 40 hrs Ca ll Housl" Inn. 619 Sleepy OF ALL TRADES _M_es_a_. ------MB>ICALRECEl'T. Quick pay raises all aftern & eve shifts Mon-Fri, 8-4 30, 673·2268 llollow Ln, Lag. Bch Will train but Maids; top wages paid. Typing, good on phones. Advaneement potential avail. Woman age 2S or GasAttendanl,Sdys HCYrELDESKSU PRVSH experiswelcomc Apply : The I nn at Cowilltrain.To$700. Varietyofactlvities over. Apply in person. k F'r. desk or ni·ght aud•t SOLDERING Laguna, 211 No. Coast EllieO'Brien 540·5001 Fu.Ucompanybenefil.8 ~s tl!VDl!.n•o . . w . wages+ comm. • WOOD PRE FINISH In C'"'""' ,so.Ar-EA D1pp1ty Donut!>, 1854 4200Birch.NB. exp nee. Oppty for act· · Hwy.,LagunaBeacb. Soelling&Snellingof NewportBeacb 011fL'i. All shifts. Jolly 1_N_ewpo~_rt_B_l_vd_._c._M___ vancement to asst.m~r. HEAT STAMP Newport Beach Agency 646-2123 Ro 400 S C t H LIGIIT ASSEMBLY Maid wanted. Seaclltr 4340Campus Drive ger, · oas wy, DRIU PRESS OPR within 1 yr. Apply in Variety of short runs Motel, 1661 So. Coast ----------OrdDskTme to$MOO _L_a'"'g'-u_n_a_Be_a_ch_. ____ , 1·5 yrs exper for small GENERAL person, Mr. Mazzola. 9 Indoors-small shop Full Hwy• Laguna Bch .. Medical Y•.,. n. 0.. COOKS Electronics Co. Friendly am lo 12· Ambassador company benefits 494-4892 RICEPT. to $700 Personality plus I will Full lime, experience atmosphere. apply GLG LABORERS Anlnn,2909S. Bnstol,Santa lnNewportBeacl\ Sympatbetlc lndiv. win variety poe w/well· IHI Estate Sain LUSK IUty. a John D. Lusk Company is now taking interviews for licensed real estate sales people. Call for appl. 963-4361 I ........ Ii -REAL ESTATE SAi.ESPER SOM We're expanding again & looking for top caltber salespersons with high performance records & exper. in local area. Call for appl. Steve 675-2311 Roger's Realty rm E. Coast Hwy Corona del Mar, Ca 92625 llecessary, s auteman. Systems. 11152 Condor d a 646·2123 sougta for delicate pa· known co. Call Amy, broilerman, & pan· Ave .. Fountain Vly . UrgenUyNeedt• HOUSEKEEPER·L1ve -ITOR LWonu Mail Department tlent contact pos. Call 848-1.288. Dennis &c Den· Real Elstate Sales People • tryman. Xlnt benefits 549-4777 WCll"ehouH in, Spanish speaking OK. JAN IA -COLL.ATOR/PACICB Kay, m.2100. Dennis & Dis Personnel Service of wanted. Up to 90/10"· and opportunities with1---------.-StodlClertls $220 mo. H .B. area. Part&Fttime.546-1330 Mature indiv. needed to Dennis Personnel Huntington Beach, 16168 comm. split. Nwpt Bch HyattCorp.AskforChef. Driver. Earn xtra in· ShlplrRKeiYinCJ 1146-5377,846·9007____ JOB package educat ional Service of Irvine, 2082 Beach. 631-0900 i M/772-5900 c 0 rn e • e 8 ~ 1 Y AM • Must have telephone & mat'ls. No exper. nee. Michelson Dr. 2:J0.5:30, delivery L.A. reliable transp. Long & Housccleaner s needed. 2 Days per wk. P-erm. Facility located on 1----------Painter, oon-un.lon. Must RealF.statc COOK W •HTED Times, Costa Mesa & Npl short term assi nmE'nL'i Mature. 'fop$$. C:ar nee. Car, refs, ovr 60. 673·2289 Warner St In Santa Ana. MEDICAL/Recept have exp. le own truck. TIRED OF WORKING Xlnt benefits Sal open Bch area. $350 mo. 642·1403or645-3439 Apply Personnel Dept .. for allergist's office. Starting sat. $4.00 br. FOR PEANUTS? Apply, Jolly Roger. 203 _545_-cm __ o______ llOUSECOUNSELORS National Systems Corp .. Salary according to ex· Call960-32839·5PM nred of hauhng peoplr Marine Ave. Bal Island. Drug clerk part time, ex· Married cpl only, no KEYPUNCHER 4.161 Wn:b St. N.B. (Nr 1_p_r_._SJO._smo _______ Party Rental Store needs around? Tired of un COUNSELORS p'd mature woman. kids. Llve·in. Supervise 6 Needed ... Burroughs 1~0C~Au-po~~rt~>~E~O~E~.~~~ Medical young lady to work Tues fu::::e:~~~r1~<;;;::~ Sec our ad for !louse _4_96_·_9402________ teenage girls. Exp + sal. L5000 It u;ooo. Part·llme 1-FtlOMT OFFICE thru Sat moms cleaning train exper licensees in Couru;elors wanted. Oak Electronics Recently Oak Tree H 0 mes• position w /flex 1 ble Need resp. person party equip, Apply 2025 lnvestment & exchange Tree Homes, 540-4754. separated vet er ans <Across From _54().._4_7_54_______ hours. Ba.sic knowledge Maintenance w/some exper in 1 doctor Newport Blvd, CM business. Potential earn· COUMTERPERSOH (grade E -5 and below) OrangeCo.Airport) Hous ekeeper 4-SPM of Inventory. Respond ofc . F /time in H.B. PBX Answering Service ingsinexcessof$10K 1st Busy printing company. are needed to fill current Equal Oppor Employer wk days Clean hse & to: CUSTODIANS 842-894.1 Secy. Elcper. pref'd. Will mo. Catl 962·2456 for con part·time vacancies in cook dinner, age 30 50. Classified ad no. 213 ---------train. Must type 35 wpm. fidential interview. A!:lk ~~aper work. PIP. the Costa Mesa Air Na·1---------Must have pleasant c/oDailyPilot MEDICAL SECRETARY Variablebrs.64Q.lll0 forVince. ---------1 lional Guard. We need General personality, appearance, POBoxl560 2nd Shfft For orthopedic office in ----------Counter Clerk, female for men and women ex· forwtdower 640.1667 CostaMesa,Ca9262i) Requires 2 years' ex· Nwpt Beach, full time PIXOPERATOR Receptionist toS7200 Donut shop. Full time. perienced in electronics SR. CLERK perience performing d a Y s • m u s t be No typing. Woman ovr LEGAL TRNE Call586-2SOO repair, telephone/ HOUSEKEEPERneeded, Cacility,janitoria1duties knowled1esblelntaking 40. to receive & fill Fascinating po s ----------1 teletype installation and Long term, temporary age 4060, modem new Ladies Serious about including operation of medical batory, rapid customer orders by w/de£inite future awaits. COUNTER GIRL repair, message center assignment avail Sharp home on Bayside. No changing your present cleanmgequipment. typing &c transcribing. phone. Service or ganiza· a career seeker !! Call for dry cleamng plant in opeTations, and weather rrson will train in A/P children. Must have own standard of living thru Salary commensurate lion. Will train. 40 Hr wk. Linda. 84lH288 Dennis fir H.B. area. Perm. pos. forecasting. Here is your Fl A/~I Exper hel~~~I transp. & ref's. $200 mo =~ien~~t\~e wc!h ~~ ~e offer .. ~_oder:l, w/abillty. Exper'd onlyk Eves/wknds. Slart$3hr. Dennis Personnel Mon· Fri. Exp'd only. opportunity to earn a ex1 c persona 1 Y + meals, uniform & gas · peasant worJUIJg con · need apply. 644·7840 a.a Call 646-4071 morns or Service of Huntington a.12_2050 su ..... lant.ial monthly in· ne<.-ded. Good pay CALL allowance Pb: 675-3733 appl. 494·5168. lions, excellent.company _i_or_M_ary-=-------•-e_v_es_._______ Beach, l&l6S Beach. ·---------1 "" 1mmcd. for interview. benerits and a com· ---'--------CREDITCOLLECTIONS come· retirement HO FEES Housekeeper wtcar, relia-Legal OfcTme $9000 petitive salary Including Merchcmclw Mgr Part lime. exper. req. benefits, base exchange ff · b.e. lmmed Permanent Plush Openlnq! 2nd s hift differential. Receiving. Beach a~ea Bartell Marine Elec· privileges, and MORE! ~Q~ 0 lC e • pos w1d1sabled lady. Call Sharp person wilf love Please contart. or apply drugstore. F /time, tronics. 645·7040 For information on open· 0 over 10 ad 768-7926. the variety & public con· in person lo: perm. Retail exper nee. mgs and qualifications tact w/top firm! Call 675-0150Mr. ElwOod Custodian/Matnt man call S"t Arrollo . -HOUSKEEPER Ceclia. 848·1288. Dennis ,trsoNMIDept. Newport Harbor 714·979·7363 or apply at 557-006 I For motor hotel in & Dennis Personnel Messenger 25 hr week Lutheran S48·3'i58 Art. 6 2651 Newport Blvd, CM . ~~3~723~B~i~rc~h~S~t.~N~B~~I Laguna Reach. R<'ply to Service of Huntington guarantee + expenses. PM _ Classir1e<J ad no. 216 c/o Beach, 16168 Beach. MSI Santa Ana ofc. Call ---------· Escrow SKmory General ornce Daily Pilot. PO Box 1560, David Smith at549-8871 Customer Service MARINERS SAVINGS 1 .... l...,EE $600 Costa Mesa. ca 92626. Legal Sec'y,NB. min. 3 D•T .. Ord Dnk to S 1100 Is seeking a qualiried -"' yrs exp in gen. practice. "" "" MOTOR ROUTE Coordinate sales for ma· Escrow Secy for its N.B. Fun loving staff seeks HOUHkeepen incl'g dom. rel. Sal open. COttPORATIOM I..arge Daily Pilot route PEST CONTROL SERVICE MAN. F/time. So. Orange Co. area. 495-4411or831·1024 PETITIONERS - Full/part time. Good pay daily. S36·TI11 PIZZA Making plua le on the ovens. Exper needed. RECEPTIONIST With the foUowing re· qwrements: Sharp Person Pleasant appearance Good telephone personalt&.y Good typing skills MonS.O•w jor metal fabricator ofc. Min 6 mo's escrow new addition for variety F /time & p /time . Appl may inquire aft 34011'ischerAve inSoutbLaguna·Laguna .seeking career motivat-secretarial exper. req'd. pos. Call Willa, 833·2700. Bayview Manor & Conv. hrs. 975-0213 Coeta Mesa. Ca 92627 Nlruel. Monday through ·--------• cau Mrs. White for in· ed indiv. Call Van, Xlnt sal, working conds Dennls&Dennl~Person· Hosp. Good sal & Friday afternoon&, terviewappoinltnenL 548-71163 • 833-Z700. Dennis & Den· &benefits including den· oelServiceoflrvine,2082 benefits.642-3505. LIQUOR MARKET . EqualOpportunily Saturday and Sunday Plastics PaulDos·aer nis Personnel Service o lal. Apply at main ofc. Michelson Dr. ---------Very· very busy store, Employer M/F momiJlts. Approximate· MACHIME OPRS Irvine. 2082 .Michelson lSlSWestcliHDr NB ---------Housekeeper wanted needs !lbme very, very ly $4:iC) per month gross Graveyard ahif\ (llPM· Assoc. hie. Dr. OrcallPersonnelfor ,.._ IOf'fi Newport area, sep. pvt good people. Apply in ellmings. SSO.OOcashde· 7AM ) openines for COSTAMESA appo1ntment6424000 v.:-nera ice accom. 5 days week. 2 person, am. 3041 So. alntenaiice man for 55 posit required. Phone traineesorexper'dlnjec· DB.I F.qual Oppor Employer RECORDS CLERK days ore. 2 children 10 & Bristol, SA unit apt l.>mplex in C.M. 642-4321, aak for circula· lion molding machine C7 I 4ISS6-7o75 M k S I Natl.anal education !irm 11 Mu t h rs (213)"""'3851 •--• -d · d i I s-.... ~ Earl'o'l..-anager wor er , a ary ""'~. SECRET .. RY -s ave re . Uquor clerk, full & part 1---.,.....-------·I tovu ..... ave name an oprs an our me ca -.---....... ..,.. +.548-7863 ~ "" has immed. opening to Salary open. Call btwn ti E 1 C 11 number and make of division. Very clean ----------_..;...---------•Fluent French, oood handle production con· 7·9PM,Mon·Fri.646-2015 me. ves. on y. 8 be··· .... nd kl · t ., 1 ds f . d.,..494.1533 auto to ....,.. a your wor ng environ men • Recep•i·onlat, for bu~y DELIVERY skills. Beautiful new ofc. tro recor or our tn· ,,~ call will be__. .. _ _. -ft1.11 ch n hr t rt.in • 0 To$12.ooo. bou...e print shop. Req's Housewife to clean home, ,., .. unn>U. ......, un • ~ 5 a ·' switchboard. Exp. re · F/t.ime. Freeway Auto. 11 t . & fg e 4 hrs k r k' Uquor clerk, over 25, .ii wage for trainee. Ra~td ,..,;red, Ute typing & t>J.. ~ Averv Parkway at Ellie O'Brien 540.5001 some te YP.'"g I ur wee or wor ing part tlf!.l~.: ~!>.!.2 nl\es. "OVICI growth. Xlnl benehts ~ .. n--..nta. N.e.1-a , • 1 Snelling & Snelling of aptitude. Willing to train couple. 644·0439 days. ~........ • -.a.1 SICUT •RT k lft Jud Id .. .., ... """''"'" "" San Dieeo Frwy, Mission N-n·ach A11e c industrious jndlv. Xlnt .... _ .. psJ c co. pa ma· Apply ln person, btwn Viejo. ~-....... ...., 0 n y ben ns & k' II --------LoanAlldltClk FOtr ~wpt Center Law Jar med., Ure & dental lo-4, 3901 McArthur, Ste 4340Campu.sDrive ei wor m'i' con-lnspection • 1n-oodt.n>inl ldl1a plans+ profit sharing 211orcallElli<>'75.2·71TO Home Delivery, auto ____ ...;.. ____ , ds . Apply National "' Progreeaive 8"L seeks ~. • • Am route w/ The Register. Systems Corp., 4361 ,...C.IMSPECTOR lndiv. to follow-up on 200"11,.s=Meaa RECIPTIOMIST Penrul.ll\'ntPtrsltuaUon 81rch St, (N r OC lrdShfft lo1tn documentation, MUISISAIDES ~ llt •carrier-dealer. Ap-Exec Secretary toS12K A.lrport)EOK. Rap\dly e~panding compo•e letters, meet D•-,f\&1.lorp/Ume. E•· OMIC Cballengln i position ~hrsU..m,'ldys/wk. Reccptioniat to$1SO ~~~~~~~~~I medicaldcvlccm4lnulac· the public. Good typinfi-----------vv "' with active Newporl Need -"'ble &crow Secy S850+ luring compa°fc has Im (50 wpm) & cornmunlc:a· ANAGEMENT·women per'd.• tralneel. Mesa MIDICAL Beach Developer. Good res...,._, penon F/ChgBkkpr $1'K General fact<?ry helper. edit eed QC. Uon•"'lls....,..'d.Co .. ta"' Jn•.-• ... lne•-ln~ad· Vetdet.Ccmv. Hosp, Ml 1~•· ..... --s telepbon.-, t yping, 'fllf aood c:nr. Gross earn· .lrvlne Personnel A1ency Learn matenal cuttlng, m 8 en or 11 • • ..... ·~'I " "' ..,..,.._.. ,.... _Om __ t.er_st._._C_M_. ____ 1• __ ,..._,_"~---·--dtrical 1'ldUs required. Uigsover$3SO/mo.HB& 488E.11thCMtaMesa aome heavy lifting. Inspector J&11Heu,('714)133-8383. ditionallncoroel Fu or Salary_commensuratc CM area. Call S40-aoc» ~1te23t 642·1410 171iver's U('. required P Jt . 3 StaMteMAu,!_u,,•18"1.N 8 ~~ .. tviemCone ~ev!!!·10Cr•11!. MUaSISAIDEI. PlumberW111'1t.edrorpool& withabtuty.675-4912. belDOOO. '~~~~~~~~"Start $3.00 hr. Cu~tom OS IOD requires l · 4001 ac ... ,ur, . . .....,.... .... -... , aoaDaUIS "Spal.. N4tWPO"t p~·--.-eaipt--~-""---T----Looee Leaf Co. l809l·K years previou.s lnspec· Equal Oppor Employer tervlew. 979-9157. !19 Bed facility. Join 8 ~ , _. l>eU~ftleclerktoworlt f:xp. wa.ltr•s nded. App-l\edondo Cir, llB t.ion el(perience, prefer· .,. i.--=· ai-c....t.be ---------NBla• c. (114)M0&11l bl Nwprt B~h medical Jy 1n person only 11 AM a 942 7T 1 rably wtth plasUca. Locna AGEMENT ...._.,. -yw1 1-b. Moo•f'i, lo.T. No ex· P M II o n c K o " 1 . 1 CN• IMYISTOI TRAINEE xln\ be ta. Ba,yylew "9-Sdl T__.. UCB'f J"X otrlonce nec:ea. Good l\eftauranl 1110 Bater Ci'941JlAL Excellent company llPOITB Earn wbU• lOU leant. Oonv. 2055 'l'lnmll Avtt, C.UN&-1444 ~onenteddatapro- ibtvtna record • &llQSL CM • bl!nc:fita plus profit sbar· d B a r • U a Ill o P • d • CM Ml..-.S. .... , -cessln1 t o. needs re U.ts to at arl. CalJ Heedhoul.-lvestowork t"• Sec:on ary mort111• WJ>7•TUll1Gam .. pm r-.. _.. .. tlMHOext.?U pt hltPood p /Ltme. Unique to· .... deptofpt'OftWllffSti. · OFCVAlllTY Elllel'.AltDlckS/ltek. atpl/p~oprw/pleuanl Dtll-..-..wry--at-stoc-:-~-P...._·_. ~~:Ps.ti~~ ~;:!;' b~~!k.0:~hdt~~ Pleueapplytnpenon ~"::;t~ate::, T~~~s~r:n~c:;,; t: ~~g: ~ _m_ ..... •eca.ct ______ .... , ~:!:::,~:1!>' ._toh:~dr! pe,tlme, daily, Mon thna DOW beUla a~td !or welcome. Call Diane l IOfp.m. tnlil oew partlcl»ationa II H.8. •9• needa foo t.rala. GTeat bee(lta. Pr .. 1 operator, H · htaY)' le eph ayatem f'ri, nooa·Spm. ~.as br t\111 & P/"r poattionl on Blue.HHmext4l08. &oan paymenta, compile lacltes ror rmueuse .... '8'0· per\~ oa A.B. Dlclt Some pr..,. "Pt'r. P~· a.art+ lncreut In ao c111 •.veninl ahU\l at SHILIYLAIS delloquencr reporu, tcDttoost.no~oee .. ~O'lbicft ~ -. m Thi.rd St. La& rcs.Xlntbeoefita•work· datl.CaUTom,~ Naualtt Dtlvt·Tbr~ General Malnteoance 11800Glllitt.eAve hancn.ltlll docwuentt. wtll train., dat • n!Jllll 8De11tn16Snelltotof 8eh. Ual <Olida Phone &lalnc a.tauram. Good •tarl· llhn·Cu t todlan ror lntii..CaW. AceounU1>1 1'/ot loao operuop. Call for ln· NnporlBoacbAftft(f for app\ W«vw. Int~ De&lveryboyw/fooddrlv· lnl •••• bollday • Newpo?t Sp1chll1 mOGOO Ntvl" eic,.r. 'PW'd. tervle,r btwo 10AM• oee>OampmDdTlt -PIUMT1MG eratec!Data.Corp.,Coata re<'orcU1up •/fmn. ncaUon bendlta. op• Ocatcr•Martna. Wt' will Equal Opportunity JQiltoiJpcr. ea.rttct D a 10PN.1tntwn•0Juatrr ,_.......;.__,_;::.... __ __. = areaa..~. 0 hr. C..11 Betty btwn porl,wilty for adnrie • traln •• 600/mo MHt Employer JanHela, mt) QNm SN. U-40 11' pftfCfNCI fWCluaUt.d M ~io;ec.2053 A .. 1 .. ln ,__ 111ork wknda. Pbone ~Slatdluti&alML llb-TIZI AcrtON -f!AI ..... _. ~ (Ol)111flCAnhar N 1' calJa ~ You don't need II IUn tll t>ELIVBRY MAH·for Moo·F'r tAM•llAM, laauruue, ex p'd r ... -... 1no.-am'p1 '' PecPewliloMld'9<1P.. M1.11l know a.napo\lt Ii "d.re• rut" when you ~AM RQl.ltt. H. C.M. IPM-5'M, lPM·llPM. OiVHOltl-=1100 want Ptl'IOllll Llou Un· ""'i-""'!'1:0~ al!OW4ahrr111cllied..W J>e11Jl"Uot cttUHtU. llnlneaa ~Ice an ad In lbo Dally •118.81 band 17Zl5 DNOlhiant AY•· aen1cr ode do detwrl&,r. HC'J. Plod Wtlat &rriceOtnd.ol'JLl tM AJ>.VlSOR filnm~S.A,an.Of PUolWantA.dl!CaUno" e tar.~ rl It fU.N?L _'8Qa l)dlr: No& DAILY Pu.or tD:il1I Oralle Q). '14/MNOIZ'f. -M-51'11. ' .. • ' i • • I • ' ' • I r I l t ! . . . 06 DAILY PILOT * W~nesdity, March 22. 1978 Hdp W..+.d 7 I 00 Met-chm.di .. ...•..•.•..••.......... 8 0 8 0 Mhcc41 mteocMK aooo RETAIL SALES :-. .1 ll " IHI' I t I u n s 111 } l.I rd . p a I H t . h.1rll'>'arc. plumlung & t!lcc. garden. pant•l'g tfrµls f':xµand'g Co sl·eks F /T ,a h•s1wopll· f<' tCo benefits Xlnt .111\ arH'l' oppurl Apply ut or C'all C213) l:!!I !17111 650 I E. Spring St, long Beoc:h He4p W..t.ct 71 00 ··········••·········•· SEC'Y /RECEPT Nt'l'd neut. non !lmoJunJ! ~1rl fur i.m.111 l'Oll>orotl' offlct.> l.1i:ht tyvwi: & ~~ S JI nut r~ nvw. but must l>t' v.1llin.i to lt'Jrn St.art to ~ ,\pp I> 1-'nday \turl'h 2.jth. !I AM to 3 PM 1320 Cam pus Dr . Stl• 130 SECY /RECEPT Crt>ut1vc N H ;i(l\,l'lt Ul:l'lll'Y necdi. :-.huq), t•ra lhus1aslll' 1nd1' w !xlnt skills. fll•x1b1htv & "" 1·urnl'y for IJu:.y rt'l'l'll lion dloi.k. tll3 396() TYPIST W AHTB> ,.. lime' pi.-. in our typlnti dt>pt Xlnt working ron~i!. & co bt.'nd1t:. Musl l>t• rt'Jwn.ibl) Ca.st & ¥Hur Apply in pcr:.un, Pc-n ny)\Jvcr lti6ll Plact'nlaJ Ave C. M J'yp1st Rcc.'cpl1001sl I' T allernoon.., M~ ofr lh) typ111g & m:; MS 5121 - - WalhnfWoltnsHs Mu~t be people onented $<1 hr Vat'. i.ack days, in· sur benefits. 644·5404 WAITRESSES Apply in pt•rr.ou to Slavro''i. 5930 W C'.oui.l ltwy, NA ······••····•·········· .......... 1005 Self 1h•frost1111; hrn ••••••••••••••••••••••• K\'1\10.itor n•ln1: , .. int 1 l"Ulld $250 ~98 J:.140 MUSIC IOXES \Yl'stin.:hou .. t' 11 l'U II CLOCKS rt>rni: frl'l'11•r lmm.11 Slot M1H·h1ne1, N1i·kl-lu $175 641 :i2'Jl U)" Ul'oni., phonographs ~&2 ~6e\s v.lo.n1h World ·~ I arge:.t st>h>1· t1011 l\lso gifts. furniture 11nt1ques Amenl•1m lnlernahonul. l\.t'lvanator rcf 1 ll(U Jtu1 . WhJte $4.5 751 667~ 1ll02 Ketlt'ring . I rvme lkydd 754 .. 1m Open Wed Sal •••••••••••••••••••• • •• 8020 WHOLESAU; TOTHETRAD1': llKES & MOPEOS New & u:.t.-d. buy, ljl•ll, lrnde. Cycle & C'o :HHH Newport Blvd. C .M &t2 7910 •··•··················· OYER STOCK SALE! Ovr LoH la Your Goln-#remhn Cw~ C.c:eiled DML AM ERIC AN GOURMET FOOD PROCESSOR Top Rohod ly Coesun.n ~c.tl0ft1 I.tow Mfr11 W~n• Price $44.95 CASH PRICE ONLY tt Yr. G11CrontHJ Ho C~it Cards Or Checks For This Spe<ial Price Must S~t This Wffkendl Umlted 9uanffty. So Catt Wed & Thur To RffB•• Youn! Hefp Wanted 7100 Hetp Wontf'd 71 00 ··•····•••·•········•·· ······••········••····• S.Cy /~rvisor t'ur lo;in 11ni:111:ll111n ilPllt ul morti:a.:c brokt'r firm LuJn ba1·ki::round rl'Q d ln Nl'"'port Ctr t;.W~ Wa1trcsi.. "°'pei food & cocktail::., dayb & night::. op.•n 1:-:xl'<'ll -..ork1og l'Onth Apply 111 pcr.,on, '1r G's Re~taurant, 3100 lrv1neAH~ NB NOW OPEN TO PUBLIC Webco HMX, l\lloy nrn' frtt: whl. super l'ontl S 120 11611 187 I 8015 Pickup At Our Onty Retail ~Spoc~ E--20 O~ Cowrty Fol"Jro..td Swop Meet Sat & Sun 9.3 llf It Rain' 9· I 21 RECEPTIONIST '°);al"'IJ!.1) Ol't'dt•d. full I" r ~ t•.,. port \' .it· h l ltml' l''~r 111 111f au ts or Hrnkcra.:l• Sal Sun I .Ill' c: h 1 Id r <' n · ' .,. l' a r I) pmg tJll \tr, Hhut.lt•., \ ow1i:la11d, ?.JOO ILarbor h73 8511 for OPIJt Hh tl (' :\1 ~1:; 11 Ill RECEPTIONIST lmmt-d VjX'ntnJ! £or r1· • 1·111 Dutil''> 1nl'ludl.' '"''ll•hho.ird, Tdl•\, vo:.l 111i.: mall & ,1,s1st1ni: 1·1 rt'lun.11 ... 1.1rr fo:;1tp1·r IJI Pf d but 11011 111•1 SJJ • 11mrn1 n .. ura1t· "' t'Xl-H'r 1 .di t;..j:! .~11 & ·"k for l'.1m 'i.\U:'i. l •t's Be Hon.st lf)ou "'1'1l11 t lvokmi: for J n I ... I .I r l' I' r > IJ u .,.uulJ11 l IH.' n'iuhng th1,.. ;111. Jntl 11 "'1' "'"rt'n I looi.. 1111: tor somL'<lnl' lo do .1 Juli, lh1., Jd .,.,iuJdn t ht• hl•rt• I( I OU Jft' a 1'art·1·r rruntl1'tl JUUlt & .,. .1nl the nppl} lo .-.irn thn•l' to It I• I'~. I' f IO..; I:.. I'. f1, .. hundred <lolt.ir.., .1 I' t1rr11• lnr lui.un11u, I l' "'''ck 1·,111 lull ln•1• 111 i1r1·n11•111 h1111)\• lfnt ~! HOO 327~lanyllml' tlur lkh l't.-.1-.,1111 \Hirl. in~: r1•1·or<ll"<l mes,,agl• J ""llcl Mii HHI I. .1sk for >;Jll•s. ·pl lime M;iture, ti.iii fril·ndl) ... um,111 Tht- Sec'y to SI0,000 I girl uk ·1 i'l't' llO .,. pm Shlhnd 100 "'I'm !'.l·ar O<. J1rvurt ~o 1271 .;Pl: ) l\Jll.,l. \ion fo'ra, ll 51'\1 ti5 -..pm SJ( dot' N!Jl C:111r <'.111 l\Jlh) or L1nc.J.• 75!1 •1 • .01 ')L•n•act> StJt111n ·\l11•n rlaral, 1•x1wr cl 1>.1y & fo;, l''>. l•\1 II & I' II nw 1\11 ply, Sht•ll Slalwn. I 1th & lrvtnt'. NH o;.·n·1ce Sta Night Atlt'nrl 2 Or 5 mtt·s a wk Apply. Sht'll. 17th & In mt•. NB 1( E sa11., CoHl't' Hean. :...1 <:rwst ----------I l'lala. f>.l!I l76ti :ierv1cu Stu Attend Fu II nr p1t1m<' llrly + rnm LIKE ('111<.:K EN SOUi' '"ialesp<'r"m. i·xrwr Cur m1s~lun 673 3320 It ('ould11 ·1 hurt 111 1•;ilf \tot.her 'fu·lk \tJ11•rn1ty Service Station AtlL·ntl ~ hu1·k Na ... h ahuut .1 1 ,. ..hop 7777 l::tlan~t>r t. H', t' 11 me• d, L , ht "';ird1111! .' art·1·r Ill r. 11, llntlo( l"tr 1197·'1312 mel'~ ·1 kni>~l~~e ~·at 1· ... 1.1tt· fo r .. 1· Ir ~1111111~: 11 1 Jppc.•r &_ h.antl" ntaOI! ,11uituJhf\ .111 •• 1111 SAl.ESREP toSl4K ,\piih , :!!°>~n '-;t•.,.purt \kdit·al supplwr 11Ht•r!> Bh d ·l"\1 . 1 11nprt•,s1\ c hn•· lo ht• pn I to $1 200 Aj!flrCss1 \l' St'lf ::.lartt'r sou~ht for ::.upcn 1:.ury pos w high volumt' pro duc:rr Call \.<in. 833·2700 Dcnrus & IX-nm::. Person ncl St>nlct' or lrvlnc. 208.2 M1cht>lwn Ur WAREHOUSE/M-F ~on smoker Opport to .ad\an('t' ltt•fs fl'<! Good pay BoJl Rwldt'r... f\97 Handolph C'l\1 Wl\REllOllSEMEN Ht•sponsibll' verson for fabnc: warehousi• Good opply w i:rowtnl! com· PJOY. Salary rom mt'nSUrlllt' W I l'Xper . 5.56 7915 WOMANOVR40 \\ 11J111i.: lo lt>arn Will I r ,, 1 II P B X 1 x 1J c r helpful 40 fir "'" fo:vl'-.. wknds StJrt SJ hr l' ;1 I l m o r n ... ,. ,. l' ' tj..j(j 1071 0Pt:N7 DAYS AWEEK9·6 $undo....., AntiqH" ltd I 52'2 lolH Chico ...... 1714) 891-7509 Sl'EWART ROTH A.'1,'TIQUES Largest sclt'ctwn of 1\mencJn O;ik Ill Orange Counl} 75"0 E Dyer Hd S \ «•I Nwpl Fw) I 751 8!1'.!:! Spnng Cle<1runc·c· 10 ~> , off all :lllllQUt.'S, Sll'rllllg. furniture, jcv.t"lr) nnl·n tals, Jade & l\ory, 011 paint1nj(:o., dt:cnr&itor Items 12 ti daily G;illl·r) One. 1220 N. Coast 11 ... ' Laguna. 494.4444 JUST OPENED F.ngllsh Ma.nor AnllqUl'll Il25A. VictoriaC M 642-<1703 40' container JUSl ;1r rived, super pn('t•s Applianc:H 10 I 0 •••••.....•............ •···•·······•·••·••••·· UJmalayan k 11tens l' F \ R1 cadorn Mintoi Chau lme, r~ene now 5-10 IWO I ST CCHM-1 ST M f"H-So Don't Walt. Admiulon bfurtdltd Witt. PwchoH A~can Premium & PromotiOftal Sales Co. 121 3' 789-5020 Call Collect, ask for Mr. lfff Blue Mak• P1•r.11:111. l' t' \ llllllw/l...__...__.....,.._w/l._._...__.._..._w/lllllli_...__,. ................ ._...._.,.-....._ n?.: 10 wk..'I oltl Tr:unt>d Fr.. to Yoe. 8045 fumitwe 80$0 ~Selk 8055 494 7865; 499-4816. J u 11 t• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ....................... . 1-'t·m U1°J)?lt ~ood .,. I haw a l LS l"C"1 rnJdt• J"'~ry 8070 DoCJf 8040 1•hlh.ln·n ~htJl,, 1'(>.lyt•d l'lllllt•mporan ~ rt. ore ...................... .. ....•.•........••.•.•.. tii.1 :!.IOI ~ ICIR.'.i "'hilt• naui:.1h~dt· ~·nut·h WA ..... JED l){)(; THl\l'lJN<; 'I nur l'lacl' 01 M 1m· Jvhn \l,1rtan 5~ IMl~1't liolden lh'tnt•\ 1•r PUI" "•lrt•n.in ltu.,k\ :!11 mu,, \f\(', malt', \f•1 ~ all1·t I 11111,1!1• 5.'i;! I:! l'I . th;1t h.a' bt. ... ·11 .,. di l"JrcJ n Wh<'IJ>t>d 2 Ii 711 Al\<' Furniture 8050 Pt1 .t I t• !"') & r ._. rt• ._. l t• -~ ••. ••• •••••••• • ••••• • •. for & '' 111 'Int cond11wn TOP t:ASll DOLLJ\1? ~2111 ln1 lu<l1'd 111 I hill I'·\ 11> F 0 H Y 0 U It pn1·•· .111• :1 full hrUl'adt•tJ .IJ.:WELHY, W,\TCJlt;S, p1llu"'' 1111111 "l11lt• made Ull' OBJECTS, GOLi>. •"1x•1·1Jllv lnr lh1· 1·uu1·h S 11. \ !-: H S to: H V lC Jo:, Mleol "1'c t11 .1ppi1•1·1.11t• FINE 1-'U RN & AN· C'all 1:>1:,.11~1110 hi"" I:! :10 TltJL i::s 645·22~-'\ (' H 1" A ti Z )'. I< s MINIATUHE, A"l. UNUSUAL RAREILACKS 9 wks. shots, 3 male~ Pc;t Show 646-5237_ 1 yr old fem Great Darn• to'aun, w paper $1011 Call Bud, 11 l Sllll-0042. 714·586 2885 ,, ·ft ''"J~ n..1.·.lom p.1ddt•tl p 11 r I .1 h It' h .1 1 w 1 l h mult1plt'' lurwr II trJrk & lumt;1bl<' all are bwll Ill:-. plus two t ui.tom wrought iron bar sl1.1ol.,, Shilrp' 581·7411o & :i .111tl &itt WM & Miscellaneous 8080 Sat !-.1m Jn\llltll' L'ash ••••••••••••••••••••••• **IBUY** mah· - Mn,mg bdrm &. h h furn w a s h " r & v .i l' u u m 6~2 1711 before ti I'M Cash Olll\· Good usl'd Fumilurc• & (' t 1 - l\ppliances on J wal I J()()\ ., oolong.tlrk. wood d_in •·II .oL'lLf ,. llJl.-xlrult.lH'>,41hrs ~~· or..,..-, , ur OU $...'tM) l!lk·J.'l-IU MAST9S AUCTION I 646-8686 & 833·9625 I I .ml' l'llff thl $75 Bt•aut tm .\.nm· ~" 11· "1nl!hJt i.. ( \."111'\IU 1' 1·hr ~12> lt111k1·r $:15 Fur l!d w.t•tl lu111 .11111 Olh1·1 llllb• 111•111 LUGGAGE TAGS h 1''1dt>nl1.il • l1"1n•11 i.:1-.cn1,•J to fll'lrl vru -i<·n Station Allt·nd. 1-'ull '''r,\ ll'I' 111 r·lh !''':!"~'' ft',,~IOnal:, CJll \ ;111 llmc. pnmJnlv for ~1·1 \ 1---------- 14 11t1 n\< 11 I 1 ·"" -11 ' r 11.13 '!700 l>enms & IJt'n I d · • • * * * * I-'R G HT UA M .\ li to'. I> HO'fPOl'iT SAl.E 3.1011 W Wamer nr Harbor Santa Ana 979·2'Jl 1 CASH PAIO WEIM \R\!'Ofo:f< for ..,al1 14 IOl.-. ft'm S.50 (;ct hun I I 11 g W ti t l" h d U I! , )/. d w 1·h1ldrrn ~et·t.b Is:•· ) ard 545 05111 \f\C Sprins:··r SpJllll'I, sxa. 7 v.k,, oltl 4u1 .... &drT\', 115, Hl:l:I t,u :1::.11,t.1:.! ~.:l'ih lrom your business cal'd. Send unt! card for each tag plus one spare. We r elurn permanently sealed attraclwe tag &: ..,trap. mt•ellng UU'h ne I D rcqwreml'nts. PTe· H·nl loss & theft! For a pt•rsonalued tag encl&se "'allv&iper, fabric or · Uay Clo" paper & .,.,. -..111 bJt'k & tnm your la)!-. Or try t.,.o t'<1rct, bJt·I-to back .... hl Fi t'lll'fl 111 II\ Ill( 1.ol PRICK'> "" t'.111 r .. r 1nto·n11·... -, . 1' Jn' ""P1 r nut WOMa.&MEH I 11'\l , 11 'l'H "'' r t>r~.onm•I !wrvll l' of ncl'l-:.:. \lu~l bt• .,. 1ll1n.: '1 lr'r ' 11' ' In llll' 20112 M t('hd!ton to learn 'l;u !ttut.l1·n1, St'c ~'.am S.1400 J mo or mon· For Wshr Dryrs Hcfnl! -..orkinl! or not 957 11133 E.\STFR llOL:St: S \LI "IE\\ lkaut '"' J & hi\ 1· ~5 5-pt: WtM>J pJr<jUt·l din &. gaml! ""' ~125 "" mJll:h1og 3 pc roflel' lbl "l't $185 Form. p.>1•an d..m rm sN w china $1>5<J Bl'aut llc·t·or lamp,,, also t·hr; HagPr('s, con· temp w.tll d~:.1gns. TIO~l drt•,:.t•i ;,1.' lung ~caor:l $..'> 641) 47~j R•si· _. _ _. ... ides l>r Mr !lolls, 2-100 f'Jin ... .,. . sl'lhng mobile homt'' .. ~" t F <.:"t Will trn1n C all PJul, I >r old AIJ,;i..an .,. mJl<hllll! rn11r11r $35 1 5tJ)!.'i$1 tj0t'a. :,.;i liWli 6 9 tag_., $1 50 ea \I it 111 •· \' nnwn \ lnl '\.ilt...,, retail shop. Lilguna a air. '' 6JS.~. Anaheim lll'n1'11h \dull rn11I Hilb, mtcnor de:.1gn t'X ::.erv Sta. Help needt'<l am 1----------Wcnhen & Drye-rs :'ttal a mute , ft>m a I 1•, Dix models. c:ompletl'I) spay(·d. papers. shots, reblt, ref1n1~hed . }r $100.64G-ll:>iuft2PM lOor mon• $1 .aUeJ SofJ anllqUl' i.:uhl 'l'ht•t.j Sales Tax Included , on· 1·t-nlt·r 1;;11 :1~.~,;, pt.•r helpful, but will tr~un med Full or p/t Apply. u1.,1,iur.int • Jpable person 768·0451 990 E. c~t Hwy, Nwpl Woiten/Waitr~u~s SAVINGS lkh Coob/Olshwoshers COUNSELOR !-.GT PEPPto:RONI s & lknboys N1•"' ur1·ount)\ & ll'lll'r«x PIZZA STORt-: \pph '>an Fr;111t 1:.1·.rn 1.>cr ne-1.•es!tar; Equal Op Now H1rinj( for full & lhli W1· ... 1d1ll DI "' II ply t:mployt•r. Ca 11 p llml' OJ)('nlrlj!~ ,1t lo1•;t 1.1;; ~.:!:!:' i~t 11101 Orange C11a~l lwn n1'.ir UC Airport IO•:ST \lflL\ '.'I. I 111-.t I', S;nings&l.011n 1bSOC' \hJ)\t bt.'lllor1Hcr Appl~ \l1·\Prh11I' ll1• ... 1aui .1111 ~·.im~ln·~:.l'S. cxp'd lur 111 S ('u."I \'itl.1go· ti.... nu uu. ... in ~ununcr .,. l'JI 11111111•11 op1•11111~.., l11r l';ill M1ndv,ti31-1796 'i ,J 11 ct ... II h Ol ,1 lo. I' i ' &, l1111cl i111·p,1rJI11111 l'h ..,.., r!'t.11") F1•t• Pa11t <.h II .1fl :!l'\1 1111 Ill EXEC TRHE S800 111 person. :!JOOS to: Bri.. tul SJnla Ana I kii.:hh :rl'l·llti7 I 1N1•x1 lo \fcl)on..illb> rA1u.1I < )ppor 1-;mplll) ,.r Would you hke a business or your o"'n" You don't nt.'ed an office to start l~Rm al home. full or flJrl trml' Ideal for hu!>b1111d & w1fo tt•am &11; 15.1.1 guarantee. Your choil'l' ~-toy 8045 $130. Free dell verv ~ OU Grand Open1ng .. Sal~ ••••• • • ••••• •• ••• • ••• •• March 15 31 Beaut spayed llusktl'. all '':\tari.:l' Car"'" · onit h NOC:ARD? SIUOO. Xlnt rnnd $3~:.t> Draw your own or senoJ P.11r nl'" G1n~l·r Jar name, address, phone & I.amp:-. ~5 t'<IC'h l~m wl"ll make one card per l1,1y l h1-st, goltl leaf, ~5 1ai:: Add 2."1' e,arh. 49'.! 7~15 St•nd rheck or money or· derto So. Coast Apph.inn•s shots to good homl.' Cu ... tom t'1·dar "'Jlerbt•t.I, newest stort• (7141 49:!6243 staint•d glass 111 h"ad 'iteri~, ...... wn"''"~lillnd, 531·3964 or 53'7·25-12 board, macramt• l·anop\ la1ttps rnd tbl &. .! t•hrs __________ 1Lnvahll• lonl( ha1n·d Mal<' c:at.11net..., bt'nt·h, k•nl! Kl:l Ol.'.i.1t•\s ---kill} 3 mos old AbJn s11.1• St-t· 1t lo behC'\<' 11 I MOW IS THE TIME Like new ·· Flu1r" to · fton1•d &16 3192 S.'l.'~l Iii~ !ll!l~i W:'' "r 111· d lJ u l' c n for Joh W<'kl·r~ to check d~ dbl l'\'t' It•\ l'I CJ\ t·11., I 1>111pll'l1• w ht'.•tt•r. de• PILOT PRINTING P 0 Rox 1560 Costa M~a. Ca. 92626 """"" lhl' Daily Pilot llt•lp w pull oul rJnJ.:;· & Vt•ry lonng wh111• .. '.ti H1111111·1 i1J1 k bn1"'11 llt'>I' p.iddllll( & 111.,111 W;inl1'<I !'la-.s1f1t•at1on Ir storai.:e by t'r1)!1d.1111· ~.'>f>'ll'! m•t•tb \11111 11.1 I \.111\I • .~~~111 c·11nct ~11"1 ho:irct. \~m111s: hl.111~ Rare rind al $1H[• M2·M~I hl.111.1. \\krills .Ill h )I:!~ (Jll 1~'11111 tJw Joh yuu want 1s nut 67.,9479anGP'l . . ,,.k1h, ilooks & ret·ords to tearh rt•adini: by vowels c":.t "' <'f $100 new Sell for '-15 &t2 3.179 11·n •l'" ,,111 HtH I Corp prc-s will per:-.unal I> tram ambitious m1h\ Call Willa. 833-2700 Also f''t't.' J1>bs DennL .. & l>t·n n1s l't•rsonnel Sen 11:e of lninr. 2082 '\l1chelsun l>r lhcrc you m1Mht consider ... ___ " F R E t-: l I( !\ I f, 1:-.1.1h11,i.: 1·,1h111 .. 1 ~ll·cl1t offPnng )Our ser\ICC's ISCuFt ColdspotHdrii.: l.UMREH F1rt•.,.uod Yl'll11\\ \111\I 11111 ,,h ,1,,,. ~~ .. di•'k.,. 11111 SHOE SALES .,.1th an Jd Ill th1• .Job :! door tup frcl'll'r 646·~ or t.141>256:! aft Y,Jm1.• kill"hen :-.l'l, hk« I houi.. 'twit S..'141. 1h1•..,t 111 Wnntt'<l l'Jlt•gor) Phonc Avocado gret·n colnr $!10 ... I'( Ill'"' S!OO Rl'd. -..hl &: t1lu I '" J"'l'r" sso, lri: Hlll.J :S:•U pcr::.on for bedul "''"' 642 S6711 ,..,,, .,,.,., Aft 5 . • . th1ld ~ d1•sk & drc~s1·r t>IS·il!.",7 Formal dan rm ~et. frun.,.ood, ~caL-> 8, lik1· nt'"' Sat SHSO. ~1747 llt'la1I Manu~:1·ml•111 ASST TO PRES RETAILRRM \1,ituri• profit un1·nt1·tl 'IO.lth rl'l.111 bJ1 lo.i:rountl ') II p I' r \ I ' I 11 11 ll ( ----------" 1rd111u,t•. "'"rl-1111! "''th hHH·r.,, m.111uf;i1 t11ri·1 ,1; '.'>lort• rna11;iJ!1·r' "-11rk Ill all ,l,Jlt't·ts Of rt"l ,111 l<1•s11m1• 111 n111f1cl1 nc • I 11 I h" H 1·1t H.il 1111111 ti:!<fiJ ,\lg11nqu1n. 1111 .,,.,,l'l J< ,. I ,11 I \1 ,, n .1g1• m 1• n I *Secretaries* Cl'n l Or£11·£• & J.c•g;il, 1-:mplnH·rs P;1~ All f' l·•-S L11 Hcinc1ers \J.!t'rll'\ 1020 H1rch. S11· ma :\ 1•wport R<-:i ch 11:13·1:! 190 C..111 for Appl !-:Slab '65 "1~ir1'. oni•nh'il Iv J:ll!~ ~·1•r1.•lan Pt llml' Mon & \\ mun.: ~'"";'P".~' Ht•I s Fn. !lari1 Spm Full t1ml' 1h..,irl'rl fi7~ .17Uw ;1<;k for ;if\ er MU} bl M1.1:.t bt! l!oli xlnl I~ pi st w 1 pleasant RETAIL SALES telcphon(' ~oil'c. Send re -;umt• & salary rl'QUJr<' F1•m, .!H Ill ll;d l'i•n mcnts to L:rl>anomics h1•Jth shop 1;.10 : .. 1 t7 Ht'Se<1rl'h. p () Rox J!\8. HIHlBll-.'S HA<; /I.I MOI' CdM 92fiZ'.\ \\ 0 ml' n II l ' I' U I' c( (ii r h11ust•1 11 .. 1111111: •IH 11757 .. ,., v. ROllMSOHS WESTMINSTER Will ml<·n 1ew appllt-.anls f•ll Fond pn•pJratinn I t1hlv l\1lrht•n lh·lp Wa1tn ".\a1tro·s-. I' l1mt• P"'llllJO'\ ,1\,111 1 ·, Jl('r pn•r 11. hut ... , 11 tr,11n quahf11•1l .1111111 1-.1111)\ \pply 111•r"1n1wl '1 Mon ~Tl 400 Westminste-r Moll 1-;qual Opp fo:mpl} r rn r .;AILMAKEH lo !H'w d11t•ron & n) Ion sails Ex JX'nenc<'d only Salary ncgohablt' I ntcrv11·'4 s 1''r1days 8·6 Mil oo:IH for • 1ppointmt'OI °''\LF.Ci Aide wanted for Nrwport Pool~ or Orunl!t' Co 644-6194 SalH-D .. lnry 1r you have a definite nt'ed foc u p /ltme JOb 5-9pm & are M.>nou.~ly m teresled m workanu, i·:ill us now S31 0842. SALES JR. Women 'a Fashions. EJt)M'r. pref'd Ad91ncemcnt J>MSJblc. SECRET ARY/ Adm. with business barlt- i::round to assist v1ct' prt"S1dent rn organilmJ! roord1nat1ng of snlc•s opl'r:it1on Secretarial c1utws JO key, typing 50wpm, S Jf helpful but not nC'C Salary open, dr pt•nding upon exper. ~-2.121 or 531 li2S. Ask for UJrl1.'l.'n '°'4'<'retar~, Reccpt10111st Legal ofht'<', L<1guna lhlls Mu::.t be good, neat typist, min 60WPM and able to hantlle rccrptton, tdephorn?, & general or~ r11•c duties. Call Mrs. W1nsluw for app't 837-1060 SECRETARY lnvestmeut firm sccks qual.Jfwd. well groomed, takl• charge person to as· -;1st company offlters. Duties varied. Salary t•ommcnsuratc with ex· penence. Sond resume to Secretary, P.O. Box 1Z18, Newport Beach!~ SECRETARY Xlnt oppor for erflcicnt sec'y Top skills. Fai;t pace RE. offc, N B. Xlnt oppor for sharp gal. Call l..lla,833.2900 Applr 1n ptr on , Tht Sec'y/Blkpr, Rl•RI • s.corkt Glinc:t<, 2~ W. Ellt/~t ap l"C'q. tdail <keantront. N.D. resuo to 21'5 £. C'oa"t Hwy. Cd fl362S 'hot' dl•Pl an ~·a~h11111 """""""" WanlAd." <.:all642 56711 $15 5!>2 52117 · Island. Must be c~pr,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~-------~~~~-~-~~~~ Gra('l'lul, r1lh mahoM tallforappt 644-1411 I I t·\i f>l'(!~"laldanml(lhk l'an l\ntaqut.' vluycr piano, rl!bll, has C\ erytbing. SJ1· $1600 556-1747 pcr!..on 2K'l:l:l Crown • {-! "'i "11 ~ "11 ~ "11 Wl I -I . '~""i I h 5&1 r.1, I Valll'Y l'rk.,.). L.a.:una \'""'· >;'I"' N1,i.: • "' , ' f\111M S111• llo" Sprin~ &. \\ alnut R('C('JJtion Desl.. "' rl'lurn. $125. Exec .. l'hatr S50 Kenmon-W D, Si5 t·a. ll!e oak table. Sl'>tl n73 4 I 19 71:~~.r~T~r~~ht,~u~~p~l\pl~ ~ • ·~ pi 6\ -j-p '6\ 4-p t6\ T J DD ~ ~~~t· ~ ~~~ ~~: .• ~ ~1t~1·p~~j~ JI~~~; \."t.f'. . '~' That's pot-pour-rt a contused collect1on. d .~_.._ .. .1-; ,l t'ontlPS !ll,.11~1<1 ll.indpdinted Easter ··:J!!1j' ,,. ,... ... ~1 .. un.,.., .. 11. Fr.1mt' (~0tHJ TaEPHOME SALES Tired or the rout int•? This JOb 1s for you' Call Us Now Al BJJ.8095 Time· Life Librancs Equ<il Opp Emplyr m /f -- •TELEPHONE PIX OPERATOR! Pleasant working condi t1<1ns an rast·grow1ng Orange County Airport Complex with busy Chevy dt>al<'r ! lncludei. hl(hl bookkecprn1t. typ ing. Opportunity for nd \ant·ement' See Office M )(r., llOWl\KD C.'heuolct. Dove & Quail Sts. Newpart JJeach. >IJ.1.0555 Tele. sales adv, full or p t Some ::.ales. $3 hr + comm. l!.35-9692, 83S 3Mt;t $698 Alert pers 1·:in count on exc1tmg ean"io'r bwldmg pos Call Jmny, 833 2700 Dennis & IX>nn1s Per1on nel ServaC'e or Jrvme. 2082 M1chelwn Or. ----Teller. some cxper prcf'd. South Wes t Bank, Laguna Beach. Ask for Joan. 497·1771 Tow Truck Dn vers t•x. per'd. Top pay Apply. G&W Towing, \000 Irvine Ave, NBG42·12S2 TOW TRUCK ORIVl':RS Must have towmR extJ('r. must live C .M . arl'a 646-9638. 8-5 Mon f't1 TRAINEES Need housewives to work p /l1 me . U n 1q ue In terview sit uattoa, this Easter break, children welcome. Call Diane _Bl~ 640-829'l ~06 - , ,., ' ' Item!>, slatuary & wall ~ miscellaneous mixture, a hodgcpodgP <.lu.11!1.~ luru. suf;i. 1 hrs. hJni:ini::s. 10AM·6PM URANU n~w HondJ 1-:x BLUE Fox stole $50, Mink ARTl!>I \Jrbru.'lhc•s U'•t•d \TIO Salc-Raby 1tl·ms. rnH & 1·nd !hi..,, il1n rna c1Jtly Hlli.! Valley F'org<'. press Never rt dden trim jacket $.W. Fox tn m Wold ,\2, Wold M astl•r. bt•O ks, , l d t 1011 a r y , '>l"l ~1 llJOI. 9i'I 01~1 llrookhurst al \'orkt.o"'n $300. Motobecane 10 cape $30, Mohair ~tok Thayer Chandler 1\1, l'lolh1•!.. dune 1·ydc. \HJVIN<i mu .. t si•ll furn II R 962·2778 ____ _ speed$«!. Realistic: un $20,ot.her stoles S.S Fan l'aa..,cheARa1·t·<'s!tOral•:-. mht' 10·1. Salurdu} & as:-.orlt•<I .1t'fl's'. ('.111 Kl!'llG TUT tickets for der dai.h cussetk $25 C'Y embro1dl.'r 1·hlld ~ 979~ l!JlS.11 l'rov1dP1H'1•. 11 B 5J6:..'005alll!rt.i"m Vlarch 30• Make otter. 751 706.1 vests. Cf"O('betcd baby & • G I <' n M a r l i ;1 < t • girl's C'lolhes. jewelry, SIX mati·h1n14 ant•C)U<' Bushard J\dam.. SOl''A . 11 mo~ old 6'1S!ll07 l"WERGLASS Roat 9' J<?reen 'gold plaid cur press but·k. oak ~·h:11rs ller<•ulon pr .. 111. ::-!15 lerllng st•r\'icr for 8• Tri·hull & Ev1nrudc 4HP t~•ns & .. ~"·sprea.tl SIO Good l'Omhtion (1111 aft SURF SKI Larson 9'JO". Km 1;i~rn R h • '" "'-""' P'"I "'"' L' d JI I k 1 "' l.unt Madnj!al. ne-... en~ine o t 1977 s After5J>:\1,557-29HI 5 i> 5Sl u"'°l ... poxy pa c e, i t• ll' • 8055 IK>lowmst 6734491 hi5 OOH fl95 640 4029 C\ e.., Gcraqr Sale · Mcl.A.'lE Edger. hki• ni•w t:OLO!t TV Z1•n1lh Plays ••••••••••••••••••••••• AM f'M •I spea kers $50 Table saw S30 very l(ood $!:15 Rot.u) '770ATSlN200SX.5spd ,\o1,111u.d Sm1lh i1>ron.1 Quadroson1r H trark PeugotlOspd 546 00,10 po.,.cr mower ~:Vi 6.000 m1 All the l''-tra~ l~Pt'"-r•li•r SIS. f'u..,h · 11k ~rrC<'n equip, drytni: ru1•k. )\q u1•ci::ees, mk, <'tr stereo !oo)Sll'm. New -----&16152.."i SUIOO 640q317 lawn molo\er $7 Nt•.,. turntable Pa id $575 OAK ANTIQUES · lable!t, SO I'' A. 2 ,. hr !j n l' w BIKES' Men s Hollrac;l. ''o" a"' a~ t1ri· & nm for BAH ... 'ilOOLS Supt.>r nit't'. i I I 91'3-8600 Must sacnf1c(' $200. p chairs, commode ... lwm wa.~her. dryer, kmJt mat Lad11•s Ph1ll1ps ::\:'0 t\ \\IC ~>c1 Ill la1·k .,,,.1h•r IUDE A-Bl::D. Baskin 615·5000 days bed, arm chalrs. potty, lrt"SSset. full tx•d !..t-tdou $3.5 Comi.;r bt·dnMim .,ct Jrut r;iulkanr.: n1mpoun1l __ _:Cl62·159_7 ___ _ 751-1 l66 lots more. All refm1~hed bit' 642 3a07 SlSO 631 3098 SI t•a1 h t "''"' 1 luK --~ & really well pnrl'd. r(' 11-\N-D-''r oc:h"tl•al old rim-.. f1h !\f(;, 1'11110. 11·10 ·5 0 ·60 J!allon aqu<mums $12 to $31). 72 J9' N0'1AD Tr;nel adv for sail' Sat at "' .. 1om1-; Cal trailt·r \lu,..1 Capn SI" .,,., ii (;\1c Trruler Full> self l"C>n 10AM. 8901 Atlanta J\\e. nevt'r used ltabll•i•hilh .,ell $'i5nroffrr 1·a1ho SS '71 <'hr\,. Stcl•r lamed Like nc·w. F.Z-hrt Hunt. Bt!ach hedsprcad S495. Olli 11-17.1;,;J.'l 111g -..ht-t•l '-I 1;.i:! J:r.•i hitch \wnanl(. S2850 1,. ~abo-,·nr camrvor, sin.. quill. yellow wh1tt' $-1:15 • ymfoam3"th1C'kLotsof S.j5 1-1 l6 S.1f.-5!lf\!I -' • ""' •"" 536-6474 ULBR,\NSE'i Piano \nt1qu1• l.o\" "l'.11 /l, 1l $10 takes all 646-256? 5. rn~ . hydrauhc Jacks lt;.ihan prm inc1al con m :i 1 C' h 1 n i: 1 h .1 1 r ~ Aft r, 70 Lfo: SABHE 1 dr \any( XJnt cond Dbl moton·y (;OYA Gwtar, ,·ery gel suit'. Pncf'<l to ~l'll fast' B<•autiful 1~11; 2.',.11 ------- top. P"r. air, 66,000 m1 cle rk Duo· Therm 111 l'fr'"r d wi1tr radsl,. $1201 l.Jl·.;t f.'\00 c.111 5.11;.4:i.;o afler -Man of La .ManC'ha ti<'keL.; XN1enwt Sb1'!!_t;, "".w•21t~1p11mp _s>wck roof a1r._S.1ll 7952 °C··IPlr Ti mar6•0Y 7P .. 1 ... ,a6Y1a'u11 ::i JoP\I Washt•r. d~l'r. like m•w for Apr 4. it Int seats. Will c..N ,.., """" a .. $;!.)() both. t•ll'I mo-.. l·r & lrd for later dJLe, Pis KING TUT'S Doi!' IJ.Jrk 61''1 R E 0 W CJ 0 D p a t ' o l'<l).!n S.5S H'H '"1:i1 l'all, 979.3429 Hf72 PONTIAC SW 53.000 ll'SS Afnt•an Ha'il'llJI~ , • • furniture. fl\t' p1c·C<'' ------ miles Radials S".!.000 Companions to EJ.:yptian MO\: ING S \I.I·. Ni~ht ~. Nt'l'rb rer1111sh1ng 1900 Camero. 6 ryl $1.000 Pharaohs. Pel s tores stand. mrk noc:ks, rll' ... k. Call aft 51'M 557 8217 568-2045 C'lolh1ng, putao furniture -----asking $100·S250 Our uten'lr"'· plunts. work MOVING L<imps, tabll's. YNA GYM Good Condi· price$.50 Call 64•) 62!14 benrh. lamps. piuno, Pecan hradboard. dw~t tJon.$250.Cirm.Inrludes UNIQUE G-;;:-den table tralkr hitrh. \'at•uum of ~r~wrrs.,1 cha1r-.. mstrucllon manual Call 54" round S250. Magmfl C'leuners. 2562 Grt.•t•n 675-iG82llurry 963-8044 cent wroul(ht iron hong. bnar. <.: M :>45 731!! FU:C1 1~1-~H Ch;ur. brown m FORD Rancbero GT. IOI! light10g fixture $2!15, ' llilUl!h .Xlnl I ond SW Magwhe<'ls,radlaltirl.'s, large earthcnwarl' PUCH MAX I While, l'rOJt'<'tol , s(•rern . air !'hock!I Lie 97579K J apane;e Kamado HRQ ROCxl cond • 1:n•ut for <.tu pl'lr'frl WOOll &14 Ot!36 ., dt'llts. Asking s:uo. <.:all -$2,100 Firm 646 2652 $75.646·2803 586-4575 YPEWRlTER Se3r·, Eves :;ix Pining room chairs. S'sora. new shpC'o\cr, Electnr portable. scnrat 'LASSJCA~ Guitar. blue fabric back. Girl'!! gold • .)ellow. persim-type $60. Watch. Seiko Mnrtin OOIG with hard bikes $35. 5'x7' Mint mon Good cond, Sl25 Bellmatic Alarm case. Beautiful cond. gttenJevelors ~0-1395 644-4928 Calender, gold ss u $325 640-4-029 eves FROM Desert Home J\11 548 1326 IC clubs w /carts Hts xlntcond.Sora. p:urnat WARD'S 19" Color TV '72 Honda lSOeC-sG, and hers bowUnfl ball, tan duurs, Rattan occ. Panason~e stereo Radio Bore kit many new part. central heating furnace chair, Rattan game & Sback Cassette radio Super rast $400. Earl) Antique cameras, pro-dine set, Rattan plan 631 .5149 stock H D springer fork jedor stand wh~I bar tera. tablu Many HONDASSOS.Sl977. M:iny $75 Gokartengine2SO<'( row, mans quality lamps, vehel bench. extras 1,050 males. clutch. elC.haust return. rlothe!\ si.J.e 42. Electric snow equip Cal 1 SST-81189 af'l 5PM Sl,6S(I Ptlll start $40 642·2283 hot plate router iarage 957-0139, Mesa Verd~ 'ti4 VW Knotchback n· a.ale.llenutoonumerous area Glrl's Srhw1nn "Fu1r bwltengineNe~ brakes tolisl. 714 54$-0119 Larly", bikt', iclnt rontl Runs very izood $700 '73 Uncoln Mark IV. xlnl SM m 9544 548 3609 condition. Loaded 14600 642-8826 CAOOVER Camper 81"1' Satiot, almOflt new. M~ pie dlntnit 'let. m1'lc fl7'9 02K1 12· SAJL BOAT <Rambo.,. Skimmer I SaC'hs dirt bike Best ofler 552-7349 , ·ss L10coln. comµlete rlnH• trans rehlt, ~.Jr Vin} I top, SlOOO or bt.•!lt Supc.•r S<11t•. MJrt'h .!1 :!:; 65-1 Hurbor bland Dr.NII (.Just nfl Ha\s1d1• IJrt Somt• Jill 1111.u•s, ho.It .:l«tr. l11Jtls nf l-!flc>1ht•-.. lOAM Fri Is .11 If) t "I 4 11. 3 Magnolia St. C. M A to '/. GOODIES' WANTED TOP CASH DOLLAR P1\ ID FOR YOUR JF.WELRY, WATCHES, l\HT OBJECTS. GOLD. SILVER SERVICE. FINF. FURN. & AN 'MQUF.S. 645-2200 . LEA\'ING Arra. Lillian G:1ra.:t• S.1h·. mllitJry Hall<ini membership 1-'2 fom f\nU'k knarks from prict'. I ncludes UO. :i 11 o v l' r t h 1• .,. or I 11 1 rans (" r ( <' e . $ 1 5 o. ln~truml·nh. rum. dis ()46 6l8R aft 6PM or h!'s, books. doth1"'• tools "'knd..-; Thurs t'rt ~ut, 10571 ------- A.nl(tl, I-\ lllwn Wurd & Eurhd oH Slah'1 237 E 20th St. t: '1 Gia". clothes. lots o f m1 ... t• 9am-1pm Thur, I{ f"n Movin~ Sale All Goe., Make Offer l'h, f'ra, ~Ill :4 2;13 :?S 516 M~r.:Ul'nll' C'tlM Hontt 8060 SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS Pulpit -Bat.he - Tamt -Bchold- U\TIITUB lsn I it a1naung hoW ldrl'I hne a way or .:etUng an· lD <'verythm1. except thl" n.\11mm ••••••••••••••••••••••0 f'OUR KING TUT HORSES FOR SALE ,.IC'KF.T'S Aprll 28. Make 1 Re11 M)ll \ c1.111ch11•r or oflt•r 536-4143 or96Q..5913 M1~trr Ah•11 .~ t'l,1hh1•r blood hnt> Also h.aH Ai ah Geldin~ t-:xt•t•ll1•11l ritl 1ng. 1 73i M4!1 offrr S36 977~ Horses boarde1I SI alls faste:tl drawin""'Ul avail. 20292 H1rrh St, !'rude Sl 100 Autumn HDit• mink Jacket, H 11·1~ for car. van or truct. Jaruce M111ter Gt:neral Delivery NR Wt>1t a Vn1 ly Palo SAH. 979 9008. 646 21!!0 K I NG CAM 8 R t D GE ~~~l1•d Ad. Pbon Hoeas--,hdd Gooch 1065 :' ul~:~~c ~1b~t!. ~ cadlll•_cs __ -to_Go-_Ca_rta_--. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ht•ter. 3 rail~ :tlf'l'I Qn lll matt. & ho~ m . 3 rootorcyclt> trlr. Oyna· Whatever the Fad Od.k dresl"!I ~'20 for all G M 1•-SR1' 101 Roll 'em offlht• mark<'t Child's Cnpt trundlr hNt ~J:·.0;,~o ;l; t~lepbot<; W1th•Chwuf1edl\d .,/bll·1n dr1·"~<'r, ~Ip.« J 200mm llipod ~ CMC', Call Nnw1 642 5678 ~ 2 pr c1r:iJ'I('~. lant'(I, no 20C7 lJMn look, It mlnr 501<"4 -------~ .. CIRI. S H11·ult• $21'1 HO fnr 1t 11 2 Olt II <.:111 pt•l manufacturl'r 211" llo\" tu fi lH.·•·'1 5JO bookcu .... ti lJ ,;to" r1'Minlout mill tria!t & <Jl.OOll llTI • W1111h1Yo nu wi,moll.« fl(,1,.,., :-hr!\"~ lrTP&uJan1 ~181 l'Ondll11111l!i ii.to. h;lll\ hn• $lllw.a F.H•nthini: ""' -- rr'b & nl'" malt11·-.~ s:!.'i t'C"llt'nl A.1t.tifll Ba11eball t)'pe ptoball I " an·1 n d1.11H.'> s;tO mac~ P.r.~. SS ·'2112 s.llJdll' 1t"m" __ 1_14~-1£81 4- • • r • • 1 t I I I I t i l t I ' l , I , ' , . • . ' I I l \ I I I l ' 1 .... ~.... 1010 loatl. roww 9040 Mototen*/ !~.~ ............ !~.~~ ~'!'.~~·.'.":~:.~ ....... ~~·.'.~~~~....... .._ Wed"Mrlay. March 2? 197& * DAILY PILOT lf7 ... ••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... Scaches t I SO • Surfboards for soileo dlf JS ••••••••••••••••••••••• shapes & s1ze11 Brand 19 '78 Honda SS0·4 SS ~: OQ.ly $10$ 214 7lh St SEA R•Y Wlnlb.hJeld, Hwy bur. un A ly 8200 M ex conJ. ~75 Misc:tlCIMQICt 30' Sport Fisher &11~67--- Wmwted 1081 0o~a'Sra·VK1"rad1u Motor Hws. Sal•/ ................... •••• Bait dc-ptb &0Wlder a.t/~ 9160 Exchange 2 Tut llrlu•b and Much More •••••••••••••••••••• ••• May 3 or May 22 fur 1 Demo loat. I Oftly Rent a 1977 t;r;('Ulive beroreMard1is &ull7Uo Motorb.ome or Mloi- M..sical ---Special Price motorhome rrom uerb .. !'!~ ..... ~?.~~ $39,950 =auO:~r~U any ol fo'ender Base Guitar, Pro HARRISON'S 898-6777 base amp, xlnt t•onu SEA RA y 537.7777 AA.I. Sll.ICTIOH OFl'71GMC MOOEUMOW .,kkupt, vans. U4'is, Suburbans & Jimmys pnctld u low II-' $4351 '78 GMC h p1ckup.(Sl..5889). _Ongownt•r $<175.1>42 H14 :no\ ('oa~t Hwy, N ll , ___ 82 .... 188 , Gibt-.on EB·O bou.s gwl<1r, 631-2547 1977 D ........... ea--TT Dlltsun P.U SUllrOOf, $175 ------• _,_..,. IJ\aC lJrM, tustm inter. MIMJ MOTORHo•JE AM/Jo'M stereo Call 642 lJ:JK Lu i: c r 2 I ' fl bl' r )( I a '> ' I '"' 0,..... ' --HUC>l'r l 'hr>,.lcr m.iruw CLOSEOUT!!! Cbns or Hamet !!79·5345, ""t'Oronct c.ood 1·onll l'll/o!. 80. n·,l•lr•·•l In 51 ftto b oreves.wkads67J.OS21 , !fke offer C:"ll 848 Jti:!J " c oose forJm "al•r!l,H Sl'.!50 tr.1of For information rail '78 Da!Aun PtJ Longbed ·_..,_ 1 lcr !'>.5b ti73Jd)s Wendell Rieb or Bill AM/FM/CB Shell wheels Pffiufumitw. & 17 • l' h 1 r 1 l' I.,.. 0 0 Plt'r<'eonlyat $3500/8stofrlS75·7066 '•'Ecp.lfk"'"f 8085 SJ.1Qrbll!thcr Flybndge, PHILLOMGFORD '62 FORD •2 Ton P.U. •••••••••••••• •• ••• ••• • twUl lliOfiP dfosels 7 61-5881 New auto tram, mtr. in Three each b:.'OI) Hur 'fr:v S!l.500 AY64&9000 xlnl cond Fout Jg., new roughs Arcount1nr. '76 FlrebaJJ. 22~·. fully tires. Shell camper. mach1nl'c;. :J , r'i ncv. jj' l'hnsaaft Tn cab10 eqwp. 23,000 M1. Sipe 6 $1,.00. M-t-4077 Cl<t">'> tiUUO <llidrt<..,l>ll Chr)'> \II s. 2 ht<ads, $12,aJ0.557-4641f graph & t'l.1 ~.., 1.100 .'>ounder $14,00U/trade fl"CllDfrs T -• 91701yCIM Craphotypt• 1ndurl ·.: \Y646 YIMK> • l'O'YoSW I 9570 .J,"'tora~(' ralJan(>t~ & suµ -----••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'Phf'S l'rlncy HOlo.t's marl Boats, Soil 9060 JI' 1\11:.tream 1970 model '74 Custom Chevy Va11 rt () t '( Good coodlt1on. By a~ Custom pBlnt, Gold lll.'>e er ix·n ° 11 1'1 •••••••••••••• ... ••••••• Potntm-t -.900 ""1 ... 1·. Velvet Interior. Wide , "fle.t!W t·unlat•t Mrs Vin FUJI y A H .... -""' oogun al tiJl 121.IO l>lv.n Ii • MA A 646-Q)96After41'.M. craters $4950.642-3379 :iit'O l.05 pm wkcl).., DEALERS Spact! avail. tor up to 12 Dodge Van 318 Stand. Yacht Brokerage 8 • d Tr XlnL d ~""" 281><·rf I.ilk t>u!'ihion ,..1Jl'k l.i1otin)!:-; Wanted' x30. A ults. Weekly, ans coo . -'V• m g l'hJir .... $1 h'<•. Dl'sk Southwestttn monthly. :>48 6173. A MS-3865 __ ~--- 3"6· white lop, ~;,;, Yacht Sales 'T.J Jin CO EA<iLI': tt>nt '69 Furd V.rn. lthr tufted Mntch1n~ t.iblc· S·l.1. t I SI 11 1 I t inter, JO" tlwheel, 302 !!mall golu desk, W .llnul 2616 :'lll•wport Blvcl :i~. ~ :Qs~ n · 0 ra:., 3 pd lop, $25 2 go111l l"wi· NcwPort Ik:id1 ___ ___ ___ t•ng~ 4~~--- cbw~. $50 711 W 17th l71-tl67:J·!l'.!ll 'TT TERRY. ~:>'-stereo. 'aJChevyVan CM , untl D 7, Tu1· Jh L.icl;;l~ Si:.o -Su-nfi:-;h 13• a1r, lge bath & bdl $6750. ~~~er. llOO!l, !112 rt'l>t of 11/\'l'k Sl:/5 21' Sloop S3[M} Ski P.h~l42J. 631 1372 hull S95 !'>.">9 18.'IJ 55:! l!AAO -·75 Dodge Van. Fully ~~ .............. ~?.8.~ '73 Columbia 34 Rabh11s & l!Ulllt'J J.l'V'· Ltkt> n1•" cont.I Dix SJ t•Jdl 1 • II " t " Ill I n I r . 7 I t ~11 '"*'" he .1<lr11um m.1111 ~;ilon . ' '·' 111\'"d ,111xl, .111(11 pilot.' f'r1rndh r1-cl t.1111,.,,, •, . , tllllJ.:\, l11rl J•h t•xtra.., Ion)! °" ;c11u.111um $100 ~ ., H fl 1111 o Cr . I' I' &w :">41>:.I afl Ii 11711 !a.II ~ ... I.'> ~or)! l' o u , 1: 11 1 cl 1• 11 'II' I I .1nd1· r . '7 1,, ~lwplwnJ ml\, x 11111 ''"' LO \Ul.D "' '''Pt'll\1\ ,. Ft m.dt• t•\lri•nH'I\" 1'101,1111: rL1un~ t.:1·ar I r ll' n ti I y &. t 0 ~· w h 1 ·... ~~~t upuo rt'Q ) $!9,0001 ? 6'6 173!1 ,i.,,;l-~1\1 --_,--- P\lrc Rrt•tl In sh Si·ll!'r 1975 M' llobre Cat Ex plpe 5 wks $.'.15 ,,..1thoutl1 c·l'lll'nl 1·•md1t1fln Mu:.t ~01" $.10 Wlth 1>-lfi ~;;llj !>t•ll $1.195 ~>.'•l '14!17 _ - Auto Senlct, ftarh cu.-.tomned. Lo mi. Mu.st & Accessoriu 9400 i.c-c 661·31Z7 •..............•..•..•. \uto Part-. h I Chl·\) Cr11nt 1•nd. hood, i.:nll, anJ Cc•ndl•rs SI IMI l)f tw-.t orfrr lakt'~ SJli li'17 I l'hal \ln'O I' \HTS ':>9 Chevy r ad1Jt11r t!u llt>huildahll' :!X!I Furd l:.:n~1m: l.ilot·k s:iel liJr:t)!l' "ork bcndt $5 Ca II &14! 3.J'i!I Lrg mJgs ~ tin·•;, Ford Pi.1lll•rr1 mut-l :.~II. 543· 1261, 754 3675 ----1 A&ltos for Sale ...........••••.•...... ------ 9590 •·•·····•·•······•····• WEWILLaUY YOURDATSUM PAID FUR OR N<Yl' TOPDOUAR FORTOPCARS IARWICK DATSUN S.111.111.111 I .11•1,lr.1n .. 831-1375 493-3375 IMW 97 12 Rat '725 Autos, IMpOrhd Auto1, lmporttd Aatoa.. Used ······••••············· ···•·•········•••··•··· ............................................................... ~. 1978 BMW's HEpENOW! C:OM1'1.ETE IOOYSHOP HOW OPEN EXCEUEHT SB..ECTIOM OF IMWRESAUS We may have your nexl cat Ill our inventory eau us today' 831-2040 495-.4949 CREVIER '15 Fi :at X 19, A IC, ........ • 9755 Yofyo '772 ffl3 Aftt l PM, mags. xlnl ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••• .. •• <'ond $3500. 559 t 970 TUT DlJVE OUR IEJORE YOU IUY n C.O.Car, rt>ll en.c, auto, before 9am or alt 6prn. 'U CAI A USB> YOl VO, PIS. A/C. blk mt Xlnt '74 Xl9, xJnt cond, OF THE YEAR•• See u1 at Sou th .. rn ~'7 car-, re.11:>. pnced.. lo mllea&e. Good Inventory in •lock Oran&e County'a Volvo S46 298S, evea/wkends. Hurrywbllethey l~t· lwdquart.en MIRACLE MilQUIS VOLVO 9727 MAZO_. '°EHAULT MISSION Vll'.:JO t!8 Cbargt!r, run~ toad· • ••••••••••••••••• ••• •• -., "' 1 l I ·2180 49~ 1210 New meta!le green peJ.Ot. lrandM•w '77 21~~t;:~d. ---------while interior, mag,, HONDA Cars 645-5700 MhM.. UH4 ~~~1 Cabrillo CM ·~··········· .......... t----------MANY Roltt Royce 9756 AMC 9905 9T7 Aflpeo, 6 cyl, AM/hf To ChooM From! ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• stereo,, a'lk.Jntt $3400 or UNIVERSITY ' •tOEAlERINU.S.A. t\MC '75 PJCt>r OL t..>totrS41M746bef5:IO Oldl-Wle Jffi ROY AMtFM Stt!rt•o, air, tlr'S487139aftS:30 CARVE,. auto 211000 M $2495 Honda c... • GMC "' b73-~ Ford Tn1eks ROllS·ROYCE -•••••••••••••••••••-•• ""~"H ( d tj40J•,..b0ro luidt 9910 • ~~cs'::bot B ~-9640 \.._ __ __,!:,:1 aucl'I ••••••••••••••••••••••• FQPLH~I Lc5 '12 E.ti.h• -..1:n. :lt>.ooo mi '751londaC1v1c,26.000mi, ClOSfDSUNOAVS Good cond. $1 2!15 xlnt cond. Mu-.t sell! XLNTBUY 6fi5.l6'19 ~ &tofrSljS 5069 Sharp '66 Silver Shadow, '66 Skylark, P /B, P S. 9f 35 9940 UWTA AWA J~ 97]0 &I Sf AHOAOWAY 8353171 ...................... . wtut.e. R.R.-Rlght hand radio, htr, good cond. dr. Xlnt cond. SH.900 cleu,~ Gt2·n'lll ntEu~r·"'•T£0R1v1N.,.,ocH•Nt '66 XKE, 2+2. 6 cyl, bl '3,000 mi's, $S500. Eves -...csse. *USED BMWs• '71200'.!4 ~pd 175:H I) '13 Bu\ ani.I 4 spd ,i94J FS ·73 200'l 4s pct J&l KB V '755301 Auto l:!h:IMCV) 1-\'5 :.'<I02 .\ Sn :?:!36 ·71, 5301A Allci) ~ ~521'QN 'jf;~l(J02·l..,pd S H 2201'QO '77 32011\ S, H 177HSK _Closed On Sundays XK 140, MC Roddster, Mint Exi>en.slve. 714-644.(147 art 6PM 1972XJ6 ~-Must sell. 642·3.Jfil Kcrmainn GhJa 9735 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Foret'<! to !'\ell nne of tht• '73 Karmann Ghia, 34K flnc:.t 1~171 Ha\Jnas on ma, 1mmac .. radials, the l'Oast. Pru1 only auto $3:>:>0/oICer. 213/800-8549. 714 630.:!95!_ 493-0312dyli. -------c.,t 9715 '68 VW Ghia, convertible. _Ca II Patrick, 552-4414 _ Coclloc 99 I Saab 9760 •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• '73 Sonnet ur. lop cond, $2,900. Orig. owner. .(96..8SJ8 Topto 9765 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IEFOIEYOU SB.L YOUR TOYOTA. SEE US! MARQUIS TOY OT A ldlSSlON VIEJO 831-2880 495-121 a • Orange County's SeYillec....- OVER 100 CADILLACS TO CHOOSE FROM AT ALL TIMES l••• , ... ., .... '•" 0..90''• .. -..Y .. , .......... c....... 1~ Sacnfin•. new car lnt must sell '75 Granada, 44K mi's, TOP.+ tasb offer. 64.5·2890 '66 Falcon. Auto. 6 cyl, nms good. Bargam. $350 • Qi II 5'&11-4407. 75 Granada Ghia, 45,000mi, 4dr. exc~p. t1onal. $3750. Dys 55&+&67 , eve 833-8719 ••••••••••• • •• • ••• • •••• Nu top. Xlnt cood .. $2400. ·68 Toyota Corona. Ca 11 '74 2800. Snrf I\ '1 'FM ti7!Hi023 for info. Neta, 608119 or 9945 stereo, sep. lap1· clt'cks 7 "" ( Nc>w radial.;, pnl & batt l!nJ Ghia. 38.000 mi Coco 51·""1.5 M). Nabers Cadillac ••••••••••••••••••••••• "16 Mark IV. wbt/blk Ian. ct.au top, 37M nu's, ~. pp 632·513K !-.nug Crt <:uH'r. )2ti51J brn, lmmH· $3200. hi3-S277 -f..t4 :!:?91, &12·SJ76 ---Colt 9717 ·71 Ruby rt'd c;tua, guar. • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • reblt enJt w 300 mi's on 1972 DODGE ll $2500 or best olr. COLTWAGOH 675-3008 With automatic: trans Maida 9738 li21TD"l) ,\ n·al s:a~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• :.aH•r for miracle mazda 2' so H.t»or lh·d. 9720 Colla Mesa 64S.S700 '70Mark JI "'Kn. 4 ~P. good condJllon. 962·7571 ,,.., - -1 'lo ~I 11 u t>.,, U I 72 Toyota C 011-. l "''' 'h•1 "'lt1 111rn1 ••••••••••"•"•••••••••• · or .. l'P1' ·73 slvr J?ray Grabber, 70,000 m1, ·\Int cond. V-8, vmyl top, new Ures, Sl.550 631-3624 -----'69 CADILLAC =A~a~~;,,. Xlnt cood. "73 Cel.Jca 4-spd, Air cond .....,...,.,.,. l'a.ss . AM radio, radial Conwrt1bll' ... ~rp !-iteal .,,._,_, 9950 l.lres, great cond. $2250 Mc' \/.lfl'l!!Ol ....---1 ~1749. CO.AST AUTO ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..,_.... ORANGE COUNTY'S y--.~w--9 770 l.l42 ..,.....,. M.un ~ '-7'""' SanwAlla 547·5826 NEWEST ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---UNCOLN·MERCURV WE BUY & SELL T.l Sedan l><>V1ll(•, bluclc, Oenlersll.ip 15 now OPW VOLKSWAGENS fully l.'<JUlp'd, l owner. RAY FLADEBOE RABDITS, I moolll llun tCOLllMBJ,\ 57' for Anti I ct:fcs WE BUY CLEAMCARS &TRUCKS ••••••••••••••••••••••• exec driven ~'7110 H~a. LINCOLN-.. ERCUR"' Hf79 3!.IOO, 67S ffi711 -., nl<'S, SJ 00 l'll Wht1·. !Ilk I d1.irt1•r l·all fur r.ile~ bwn. ~POlll'll '""' l1:io 'l;B l.i7a O'JIS. b';'S 2075 r..ililnh S:I tJ() l'.I Koll ~>1 •• U IO' c1 ..... , H Wilmin~lon Pianos & Organs 8090 i.:uc~I 1•ond C1111t<.1rt Rud • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • s" h .1t1 ·• t \\ l's t mo n t ll;Jmmund ("• 11q.!.ir1 C'oll S..inta .Uarbara L1·~l1t• Bl' st of r 11\ n ~~ ~1m JIJ;)J $1500 &tli :ltiJJ l'\':O. -.. knch ----- l'dl :!I. Ol:'W billlS, 611P .st~. Restaurant. \) B, SJ HOO P\ l party. 8Gr 8095 Cdll hi!>-0.'>:>8 ....................... -------- 3 )(eat.mg stamJel>s steel \tontgomny 17 ' late Rn fryer Gd cond. ~l l977, fully equipped, otr. 714 :>57·2882 u AM _ 6 makeoCCer. :>51·2921 -~M daily Columbia Challt•ni:er , 24' 'fY. Radio, r1~rg1a ...... sailboat. Cully HiR, S*eo 8098 f'<JWP d Very reasonably ••••••••••••• •••••••••• pnc-1'<1. SIH-S>\1\3 J3tful .,~ .. C:OLOH TV <'On t-;nr.,on ~7. f.~!. \. llF. • sol<.' $1511. 1 H "arr.co lf1>th '>ndr. 1nhc1 'Int t~· fr1'1·dl'11\ l•t:!:1:~10 mncl :\1u,,l Sl:'l". ~18,000. t;.in.;Jl;JJ 23" \la~·n.I\ ll"C tolur con solr \Oo,1lnut 1·.1b1nct $100 ~7'1.'l:! Aquanll.'> ~1· 197:1. 9 llP EVlll. Lifrline. full <'quip, 3 sruls. \'Ill-' anl<'n. lrlr, C~ss1•tt1· r,.1·nnl1•r Sony t>....nr mwt sclJ 61H·l0!!6, t:Xc-<.'llcnt condition Call 75Ui063 646-2.'l.'H ------- --------Sabot. 2 yrs old, like new. .Nearly n ew gJant TV Jo'ull race, ftew sail. S"r1•en. cost $2.000. 552-4396 Sacnf. $1600 64fi 59~ --------- Jloats & Marine -~lps/ 9070 Equi,.._nt ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 loah M--:-"t nterest 1n Avalon • unn• moonng {50') U6.J Call Ec,iptM..+ 9030 (1Jt6)9Z!.Jl90or922 5775 ···-··················· DIESEL EN<:INF_c; Wanted: slip for 40' pwr I :j6llP & dtc·'t•I J.!Pn bo.it S1·ldom used $1350 Tom H1ki·r f.40.~15,6..tlltlU3 S.IA l.'illl --------W.\NTED· 22 + DANA Bwck JOO c-u in m.mn<' POl'IT SL~P for rt•l1red eni:. 0'1<.; 11utdn. 1 ntrl... b.tcbelor. Can t'"C<'hange prop In bci.it Orig'"' nr NP"' port slip 1( desired. Sl2.<io, or ht''l nf1 f-.H·. 15:! i!HO 673 •i.JlO 9520 ......•..........•.•.•• SM "'1GA CLASSIC' $llXJO FIRM, ,\S l'i 714 673 4119 RKreocmonal Ve-hides 9530 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Corva1r Dunc Buggy, sand rail. many xlras SIJIX> hst ofr 642-3379 art 3 ----4 Whte4 Drins 9550 ••••••••••••••••••••••• COSTA MESA AMC-JEEP #I In Calif. FREE Air COftdftlOMt" on new 1m & 1978 Jeept Does not in c lude Wagoneer limitt'd CJS or CJ7. Offor J(ood only on factory air eq u1 ppcd veh1cle.s. Offer expires March 31, 1978. OVERSTOCKED WITH JEEPS 549-8023 2524 llARBOR BLVD. !'OSTA MESA '6.'l Jeep WaitonN•r 4\\1 dn ... e Independent su~ p<'n,.1on Need!! work S.'iOO hst ofr 536 69H Phil '74 G MC Jimmy. Whl, many xtras. $4500/bst orr 646-8525 Trucks 9560 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '63 Intem'I PU Short box, wht spake whl~. lrg knph b1es. 4·cyl l'nit OCr 979-0183 or 7:>4 0146 '57 FORD PICK UP VS. 4 s1iecd, chromr wheele;. wide tires (:»3J9Yl COAST AUTO 1242 South Main Sl. Santa Ana 547-5826 CONNELL CHEVROLET 2li2H II arbor Bl\ d. COST,\ MESA 546-1200 WE PAY TOP DOLLAH FOR TOP USED CARS FOREIGN, DOMESTIC or CLASSICS U your C'a1' 1.1 at.Ta cleen •ee us first. IA.UstlUICk 292SHarbor Blvd Co8ta Mesa 979 2soo TOP DOLUR P.AID FOR CLEAN tMPORTCARS AU.MODELS ~ 18835 BEACH BLVD HUNTINGTON BEACH 847 7781 -540-0442 *DRIVE A* *LITTLE ..• * SAVE A LOT SHOP&COMPARE BARWICK DATSUN San Juan Cap1~tran11 631-1375493-3375 EXCELLENT SELECTION IHSTOCkFOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ~ALESSF.R\ ICE PARTS-LEA.SIMi COSTA MESA DATSUN 284511ARBOR HL\ U 540.6410 540-0213 1011 ~SO\' & SO\' • LINCOLN•MERCURY '77 Dal'>un B210, Jltchbk. I sp, A C. CR. A \1 radlll, 2626 HARBOR BLVD. blue $3000. 1140 521; COSTA MESA WEIUY USB>CARS! We're tbe new Ch<.'~rolet dealership m the Irvin<' Auto Center. We need your used car 1 for Sale 1974 Datsun B 2111 Best offer ' Ca II 979 2046 '76 280Z 2+2. cop per/beige int., all C:"<tras Lo mr $6400 9f8-1 l:l:! H 710. Xlnt cond 1'u rawals $2300. 846-6836 an er 6. 30 9740 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·n 280 Sf: 4.5 A reul heauty, soft lthr Int, !>nrl & all <>Pllon"i. Well rared for S84.50. :>46-9160 Bcrwe hlwnll·5 \1 II , '72 250 ~<.-dan, air, full power. nice car, $ti550 5524231 p p '69 280SE40,000 mi '~. nc.>'a', xlnl cond1 P1S,P /B. lapc deck, A/C, etc. ~ SJS.9993. 1!171 ltercedes 3.S coupe. Beaut oaod. Sllv.-/blue metallic, snrf. lo mi, nr\~r parked 1n sun. l'l·rf delall Seo serv. re· rnrd 673-4642 -------'i.1 280 A IC. Becker \ \1 FM, pwr windows. Top cood. Make ofr. 4!» 2982 ------- '7i 45051., must sell now, lo nu. loaded, very clean. undt•r wmty, PP 499-3613 t'Vt''f MGB 9744 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '71 L. Orange, 1 owner, !'200 rru, super clean fly. an~ machine. eqwpped w many xtra goodies Call days (714) 97~7065 Eve 1714) 637-8014 p~ 9741 ....................... ·1:-, 50-$ sedan, lo mi, sun rf, fo:XceU eoodition. $USO. 4.1)9 3233.. '74 XJ12L. Xlnt COl'.ldition Best orr over $7600 673-2464 eves '72 VW 411 Squareback Immaculate, nu tires. brakes, $1950. 549-0723 '73 VW Squarebat·k Rebwlt En.i:. $2,500. 497.3984 '72 VW Bug. yellow. \Cry good cond. new tire-.. $1600. 642-1168 eves, :>40-0000 dya. 68 Bug, AM/FM 8 track, new paint, tires. int Good cond. $1200/ofr . 645-3167 '70 VW Bus. good condi· boo., reblt eng, new tires . $2350/Besl offer. 67S.2023 aft6PM '68 VW Bui. Good cood. Porsch. 9750 Nu mt. llres. SJOOO. ' ----16 lBAutoCenterDr. SD.1-'wy Lake forest exit IRVINE GEM 191i7 f:lc111. 7R.OOO mr. 830-7000 SilH•r 4"-lilk. loµ <'llnd. , ------ new 1 irt.._, $1,1100 t>7:l 1,,c;o i1 Marqws Brougham. I -door . Lo m 1, fully 'Ill El Dorado, ~howroom tqwpped 546·ZJ3l. cond. lo m1 s, $2195. Mo-t-995 497-3710 ·-·--., • 2 -------...................... . '76 Squire wgn, 4-spd, air. Xlnt cond. Nu tires. • 29,000 m1. $31:>-0. PP. • 642 1324 dys . ... • 7lPIHTO • SQUIRE WAGOM AM ,F'M. 35000 aules. \009J6X> Sl99S COAST AUTO l2.t2 South Ma in St 5anta Ana :>47-5821; 'il, Dy 0~11er. autom, nu pt-brakl-s, .i:d tires, lo milea11e Lake nu, $1100. C.all !).16 0157. JOE MACPHERSON CHEVROLET --------...................... . 64()..1200 '72 Runabout, cust. paint, mags, traction bars, & slicks, etc. 5.51·2956 21 AutoCent<.'r Drive lRVlNE 768-7222 WANTED !!! Good,"clean low mileage cal'll. Call Dave Sk1rr RAY FLADEBOE LINCOLN MERCURY JR VINE l tl0.7000 '14 260Z, AM/FM, mu~'I. 65,000 mi's, $4450 or tw .. l offer. 642-4818, 49G-6&12 or day~: 213/482·4390 ask forI>ebhi Rat 9725 ••••••••••••••••••••••• llBfifR EASTER SALE OMALl IJ 1-.. 12811 X I /9's. I Zl's IM STOCK THIS WEEK ONLY ' .. ~~.:. of USED FIATS DltASnCALLY RaUCEO .. ·;o Porsche 911T. factory '76 VW Coovert. Like nu mais. nice, $6900/Bcst 19M m1, air, stereo,---------"16 Pinto Wagon, 6 cyl, orrer639 3787 xtras. Must sell. 4~1.3271 • air, AM/FM, lake over •CORVAIR• pymnts. $ta• mo. ·76 Ponu:he 912E, 1mmac, lo rru 'a, red w J blk 1nttir. l ownr, many xtras. Weck: 634 71J6.I. Eves & wknds, 770 2Zl9 '64 Poniche SC, wb.lte e>n blk. not cheap, Must lM't' I ! 639-3787 Classic coavertible1 644-2292 days. xlnt~49S. ftymo8tlt ft60 ---·····················-· '77 BUG Convl•rt. • Yellow/blac-k. A I C. AM/FM stereo, cassl'ttl', cbrome whl-; Many more extrac;. Pairl ~10, make ofr. 67~·8099, 673-60l7 '75 Monz.a Twn rpe, V 8, lo 1974 Ply. Satellite Sta. mi. AM·FM IHrk stereo Wag, s pass., P/S, P/B. $2995 586-6176 Air. Gd. tires, trans. '66VWSqbw/rblt '67 en .. '68 El Camino Mahbu " w/sh<'ll. itlnt <'ond. $1650 MOVING I &fUST SELL! Nu pn~ etc. $1lOO/b.rt ofr. or best oifl'r. 151-4688 60-934.5 aft 3 C'ool<.'r, air !>hocks. Lra1ler h1tch. CB Radio incl Good Cond. $1,800 11215. Orange, S.A. '72914, blu~/blk. App. '67 Chevy No-;; tr~ Group. 551'°"9'7. '14 VW SUPER BUG auto, p s p B, &d cond '74 Gold Duster, si:rpu ·n 9115 Taria, A/C, Lomi's •S2300 $7506455.560 cond.lomileage, AM/Fii/CJ . Alloya, ·~* 640-_18_7_6_· __ _ 0 OOQ _, .. ,_. .,,. ,,__ • •63 Bt-la1re. Good runrung _ • l . nu. •uu. ~ * 68 VW BUG, XLNT rond Nu tare., all pwr. 16 \:olare Prc•m1er WJtn, 546-2274 OONO, Brand oew brk.s $400 9fi8·2A~& lo. m1, clean, ~TOO t • & clutch. $1100/olfer. s.~ van s Foultn Car ~ '75 Chevy Monza 2+2 P..tlel:------,-,-,-5 ==II'=~~~~ "13 VW:m: BeaUe. xlnt hU!hbdt. Wht/red inter. •h•••-••••••••••••••- & 914 1915 Harbor ltl. cond. . 8327189 or 25.ooo ml.<?"'• Lenee. Must~.'731.eMansGT. CM.845-19112 834·1 . Paul Xlnt cond serv re<'ords 3·$pd stack, 350 l'<'. tivoll Cood 2nJ 3T'd or A'tflFM 8-trk iclnl cood ~tt"f, 1'1low w/blk bat. YalYo 9772 studt•nt <'Ar :10 mpa,. ~ af\ Sp~ All.o)'I, JlfaU\. c:qnd. Kat •••••• .. ••••••••••• ••.. S2l6SO firm 673 44GG -·--- atll. MO-tm7 L OiAM(HCOUM"(Y ,._ 1., al ttl rd 9970 •__;a 11" VOLVO ~ ..... ~ o •••••••••····•••••••••· _..... 9711 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '65 T Blrd , lc>aded, ••ntHu•o•H•••••••' txCLUslVELYVOJ.VO 197~ Mark IV M:fht cond. t ad I a I a, I and e u , l8 1171, •&rto, 4 dr, air 1.al'JtltVolvop«!nlc•r Loaded '6700. -.i J>t.1, AM/FM, orig inter in te>od. alHholcally lnOranaeCoilnty! :W0.71klObtwnUPM xlnl&Mpe 6fil·30.1l aouod. New .P•lnt 1 l'UYorLBAS~ . owner. P.J>. <LPA.tqe> ~urecr 78 Continental Town Yt90 tt74 maus ~ 9 Coupe. Coropl•tflJ ••••••••••••.••••••••••• ~-~-;:,g·•--~~:;;·•••>. '""'" ~-'~_\, • eon-.... . fflZ 6738617 2026S~ •••••••••••••••••••••••"f h ---. of\ be · C"'8v.w..e~ 4 GT lthbck, 4 ,pn. In WWQ···"' \Y<>U11 Anaheim 760-2011 * ~••• •~ 11\J, AM ·FM t:ip.-. drk """'-~ ,..._._ *"1n.I • ~ 19711 bm. Xlnt. $1650 or ofr .-.-"--'lli.ct ~Ada to "Tl Voh-o J4S win. Xlnt , Ml>-IK23 nach I.he Oruce COJ•t rond. Dark arctn ~ NlCT. ELEcrtON --------mirMl. _..,. · ' HOW AU C:..•roed c.adiuacs to Go.Carta Pbao M't....__ lX>V~~QUAJLSTS. Wba~verthe Fad ...,.......,.. CNo.ar MaMrt.hu.r, Jam· Rnll ·em o(f the marlltt bortt •Bristol) W1Lh a Clat.si.fit<J Ad NEWPORT .8EACJJ Howl &112.J!Yrm -.. l r , c • • l I I r ' \ I ~ t • , . t ) ' ~ ~ . . I I I I THEODORE ''IOI'' ROii S WANTS YOU . Fill A CUSTOMER 0 ER NOW PAY OMLY OF I CIORY OICE ON ANY NEW CAR IN OUR HUGE OFFER ENDS AT 6 PM 3/26/78 V-6. auto trans. power steering radio. heater llnted glass. custom interior. rallye wheels. to miles Lie !!828KJZ Stk. ;iP3326. 52999 '76 TOYOTA LOMG HD PICICU, 4 cyl . 5 speed trans . white SPoke nms & wide tires. sliding rear window, radio, heater. with cab-over camper shell. Lie. fl1011075Stk !1421AT. 54397 167 vw KOMll IUS 4 cyl., 4 speed .• sunroof Surfers Transportation Special. Runs Greatl Lie. 4!421BOH Stk #3289AT. 5999 IALL INVOICES INCLUDE PREPARATION, FREIGHT, AND FACTORY HOLDIACKSJ LTD LAMDAU V·8. auto trans. factory air conchttoning. power steering. power disc brakes, power windows. power seats. AM/FM radio. heater whitewall tires. tinted glass wheel covers. Landau top luxury intenOf Sharp Car Lie #161MCK 53970 '75 FIAT X·lf ROADSTER 4 cyl 4 speed, AM/FM stereo fao10 with tape removable roof panel rallye wheels. Low miles. Lie. !1494T JH Slk WP3217 53981 ROBINS-READY USED CARS Enry Used Ccr Wt s.fl Must Han Paued T'Mse RJgld Ttsh For • PERFORMANCE • SAFETY AND • RELIAllLITY In Ow Own Modem RecondJHonbtg Depca hw"t ./ BRAKES Unlngs. Pow..-Spte..s Hydrmflc Sphtm ./ ELECTRICAL H0nt. Ughh, IC)ll1\f0ft cmdPowerSptems ./ FRONT END Whefi AJlgiHMftt, sa.ocJu. Clltd StffrilMJ Sphm ./ POWER TRAIN Trans., bar End. CMd Electronic Scope Enc)lnt Diagnosis ./ LUBRICATION Lllbe,OHClt•ge. amt Mtw OH Rlhr 2•/2 ACRES OF TOP CARS BACKED , BY OVER 56 YEARS OF SERVICE TO ORANGE COUNTY . '75 TOYOTA LONG; IED "CICU, 4 cyl., 4 speed trans., air conditioning, mag wheels. custom striping. radio, "eater. Lie. #54512Y Stk #1682AT. 52782 176 PLYMOUTH AlaOW HA TCHIACK G. T. • cyl , S speed transmission. sport package. AM/FM radio, heater. rallye wheels lie. t 477POU Slk. #966A -- 4 cyl automatic transmission radio, heater whitewall tires. wheel covers body side molding lie #088COS Stk •684A 51392 IAlllT 2 DI . 4 cyl . automatic transmission. tinted glass. radial 11res. heater. Low Miles! Lie !1038NIA Stk #971 A ~ 53085 '73 AUDI IOOLS 2 H . 4 cyl . automatic trans . factory air cond . factory sunroof. AM/FM stereo radio, whitewall tires wheel covers. Lie. #004HNO Stk. # 1705A •SALE OC:l'T "°""' • MOftl'ft I AM 1ot,.M. Set· I A M. to I " M • ~ IOA M tol"M •M .. VICI a ,.A .. n• ...... Fri 7 A M to I,. M '°"" ... t,. .. .._.,. •"-'"Tl Ol"T • O"N SAT IAM IOl"M I l , ~ ' • $ ~ ~ t ' ,.... • 1 1 ., , • ' I ' I 1 • I , I r I \ , ' , ' , ' ' , . . I I 1 , • \ I ' I l ' ' 1 i f ! i D11n tingt on Beach Fountain Valley EOlllON •• NOL 71, NO. 81,' SECTIONS, .. 2 PA8ES Afternoon N.Y. Stoeks TEN CENTS1 Diedrich, Anthony Ask for Dismissal .By GARV GRANVILLE • Of ... O.lly ...... ,..,. Orange County Supervison Ralph Diedrich and Philip An· •thony won't know until later this week 1f pleas to have their criminal tndictments dismissed will be answered Anthony, Diedrich and their co-defendants' attorneys spent Tuesday 1n court attempting to convm1·r Superior Court Judge Mason terttof\ the indlctment.s should be thrown out. At the end of the day, Judge Fenton said he wUl rule on the motions to dismiss later this week. The indictments charge Diedrich, Anthony, Anaheim Ci· tv Councilman William Kott and onetime financier Gene Conrad ~1th violating state campaign regulations. .,.., ,.. ,lllH ,_... COUNTY 'RESCUES' SUN SET BEACH WATER TOWER Supervisors Allocate $12,000 for Restor•tlon Tower Power Co~t Lamlmark Gets Flllttb \ The '10 yt•ar-old Sunset Beach \ 1_water towrr has been given a rs12.ooo h•asl' on life today by 1 0ran~C' ('nunty supc•rv1sors A fow Yl':.trs ago thP aging ~ood e n t o wer on Anderson Street wa!'. slatr•d for d1!-.man ling After a brief public hcanng thi s m orn1n ~. super visors agreC'd to spend up to $12.000 in lfedt'ral revenue sharing dollars lo restore the redwood structure The tower 1s part of the old t.Runtington Beach city water ~stem Now unused, 1t hes just ~hside Seal Beach city limits Under terms or a JOmt city· ,county agreement, Huntington Beach officials will donate the ,tower to the City of Seal Beach. The county will restore the structure, and SC?nl Beach of- f1cials will maintain it in future years. Officials of the county En· vironmental Management Agen· cy in 1976 challenged the tower's historical significance and said it "as a hazard. "Perhaps the s ignificant aspect of the tower IS that it is constructed of wood, represent- ing an era and technique of con· struction no longer 10 common use." an EMA report said at the lime. However, la~t year county of· ficials said the tower could be saved "as a historical structure • • ,r_ for the b<!nefit of all people or Ule state ... The State Historica l Landmark Commission has placed the tower on the state his· torlcaJ landmark list. ussell AppOinted· . l~o RB Plan P _aliel •m~~n~~~~t~a~:a~~~~ ~~~~~ food firm district manager Ron Russell, 40. lo the city's Plan- • ning Commission Russell, or 7711 Ontario Drive, WJlS appomted Monday lo fill a vacancy on the plannln& panel created by the resignation of ormer tommiuloner Chuck jbson la.st December. .. A 17-year Huntington Beach '9Sident, Russell will serve the remainder ot Gibson's term, I which expires June 30, 1980. Gibson resigned from the Plannln& Commission to seek 1.he Republican Party nod for the 73rd St•te Assembly District in • the June j>t'lmary " Russell, a ppt president of th• Five Point• Homeowners Al· aoclatlon, work• as a dllllricl tllH manaaer for Frito-Lay nc. of SoUth Gal • ' RoueU ta a charter member' of tbe H\lnUn1ton 8eac Ja1c~ Me ta married and tw two ~hlldieft.; • t I , When ~nd~ down Jaa(Juiy l, the Indictments also charged Futterton attorney Michael Jlemln~ with Joininj in a 1976 criminal conspiracy to violate campaign regulations. Remington, however, has already pleaded guilty to a single charge and no longer figures in the case except as a possible prosecution witness. Tbe campaign trregularity in· didment is just one or two cases pending against Diedrich. He was named Dec. 15 in a multiple-count indictment that Clfarges him and architect LeRoy Rose with bribery related offenses. Those problems for the second district supervisor were put on the back burner Tuesday as the lawyers argued for quashing or the political conspiracy mdict- ment. ll alleges the four defendants with joining in a conspiracy to hide the true source or money funneled into Kott and Anthony campaigns. The defense lawyers argued the indictment should be quashed because -Challenges to Prop. 9, the law governing campaign prac- tices in Califorrua, have been up- held on constitutional grounds by a Los Angeles County judge. -The Grand Jury that handed down the indictment was acting illegally because Its term of!icially expired 12 hours before it voted to mdicl the defendants. -Judge Fenton already pulled the Orange County Dis· trict Attorney's Office from pro- secution or the case on ~rounds (See WAIT~G, Page A.2> Bonfa Battles Siebert $7.6 Million Asked in Counter Lawsuit By ROBERT BARKER °' -o.ily ...... $a.fl Huntington Beach City Al· torney Don Bonfa has Ciled a $7 6 million lawsuit against City Councilman Richard Siebert and Siebert's attorney. Bonfa is su- ing Siebert for $6.5 million and S1eberl's attorney, Ralph Marcarelli, for $1.1 million. Bonfa alleges that Siebert slandered and libeled him in a class action suit that Siebert flied agamst Bon!a March 6. Coast Area Doused b y More Rain By 'l1le Associated Press Rams returned today unex· pectedly to Southern California, dumping mudslides on roads, floodma st.r~ts and dousing un-prepared commuters. Two or three people were killed when a cement truck crushed a passenger car on the 1llppery eoutbboWMf Long Beach Freeway north of the Artesia Freeway, the California STOCKTON HIT BY RAIN-Story, A3 Highway Patrol said. Freeway systems and surface roads throughout Los Angeles County were heavily backed up after the first rains started fall- ing just before the morning rush hour began before 7 a.m. A mudslide dropped on La Cienega Boulevard near the Baldwin Hills, scene of heavy mud damage this month, and the highway patrol issued a warning to travelers between Rodeo Road and Stocker Street. Today's ,rains. said weather service spedalist Wade Carter, w~re triggered by a Jow- pressure system off the coast which is expttled to break up by nightfall. Camr said partly cloudy skies and a slight chance of rain was forecast tonirbt and Tbunday. TM NaUonal Weather Service said .26 incbp of rain fell in downtown LoS Angeles between 7 and 8:15 a.m. today, brin&ing the seuon total to 30.65. That contrasts with 8.18 jncties last season, a normal o~ 12.02, but sttll hadn't beaten the seasonal record or 38.18 ·eet in 1883, Carter said. The rain atruck througho'ut Southern California, Wfth mud slid~• closing one Jane of U.S. 101 at Rincon Poln.~ n~ar the Venturf~ta ;Barbara COQDty line. R ain fell tn the Grapevine area 50\Jth or Bakersfield, but California Highway Patrol Of. ricer Jerry Hennes said ln· terstate 5 at that pass remained open despate a Ulreateniog mudslide. Judy Carlie Hospitalized Bonfa also accuses Marcarelli of being a "plant" on Bonfa 's re election committee. Bonfa alleges that Marcarelh was "planted" In order to obtain confidentlal information on Bon· fa's plans and strategies and to use it against him in lhe election campaign. · Bonfa is being challenged in the April 11 city election by Gail Hutton and Jerry Bame. It was further alleged by Bon· fa that SJebert and Marcarell1 Cireus Show held a news conference for the purpose of obtaining adverse publicity to cause Bonfa to lose the election. Siebert said today that he would have no comment on Bon· fa's multi-million dollar suit. "I haven't been served papers and I don't know what 1t is all about," he said. He said the matter has been properly handled and the courts will decide the issue. Siebert repeated that he is Great W alleiula, • 73, Falls to Death SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP> -Karl Wallenda, patriarch of the Great Walleodas family or high ware artists, fell 10 stories to hia death from a wire ex- tended between beachfront hotels here today, circus of- ficials said. Wallenda, '73, was doing a pro· motion for the Pan American circus, the circus manager, James B. Harrington. said. Wallenda, whose ram1ly has been plagued by tragedy in a ·series ol deaths and in1uries dur- ing daredevil performances. fell an estimated 120 reel into the driveway of the Condado Holi· day Inn hotel before hundreds of horr ified spectators. Montreal accountant Victor Abboud said he watched the veteran performer teetering on the wire m beachfront winds which were "too strong." ''I saw him go down on his knees on the wire and I thought he was kneeling to rest." said Abboud. "But then I saw he was shaking. The wmd blew him off and he went all lhe way down head !inst." Blood stains spattered the hotel driveway where Wallenda fell Hamngton said he died 10 the city's Presbyterm hospital soon after the fall at 7 :20 PST. Wallenda was performmg m San Juan nightly with his grand- daughter Raetta on a 50-foot wire. Harrington said the Wallendas were hired for the circus's current run in the capital of this U.S. com- monwealth. The run started (See WALLENDA, Page A2) .,. .......... 10 STORIES TO DEATH Wire Walker Wallenda Body F o und OnOC Beach No t Identified Orange County Coroner's in· vestigators s aid today they haven't yet identified the skeletal remains or a man's body round Tuesday morning on a Seal Beach Jetty. The remains cons ist of a pelvis, four leg bmes, ~ry little flesh and what appear to be remnants of blue jeans worn by the victim, investigators said. Two teen-age boys fishing off the east Seal Beach jetty al 9 a.m. Tuesday spotted the re· mains wedged in some rocks and contacted pohcc. Coroner's investigators aa1d the remains appear to be those of a man between 35 •nd 45 years and from five feet, six inches to five feet 10 inches 10 height. The remains appear to have been at sea several months before washing up on the jetty, one investigator said. E.4R SUCINC BRINGS JML . LIMA, Peru <AP) -A man wh<> cut another man's ear in half et a 1978 New Year's party has been ~ntenced to a year In jail and a fine equivalent to $92.30. Daniel Esteban Rlvlera'a lattyer said hla client had been drlnklnj wh~ he halvtd tbe ear of TtoCUo Quispe. J-te asked the Jodie tar lenlenc . standing behind his allegations. He previously denied that his suit was pohtcaJJy motivated. M arcarelli said today that Bon fa 's suit constituted ••21 pages of garbage." lie derued being involved in any conspiracy in joining Bon· fa 's committee. "Al no time did lever offer l<> a ssist Bonfa with an ulterior motive or conspiracy," he <See SUIT, Page A.2) lion Kills Child, 4 , At Preserve TEHACHAPI (AP) -A 4· year-old boy believed lo be from Oregon was shaken lo death by a hon at a wild animal coml)OW\d wea_i or here, •uthorities said. T'Jle lion grabbed Corbett S. Maples when the boy reached through a 10-Cool high cbain link fence lo retrieve a ])aper airplane Tuesday afternoon. Kern County Coroner Richard Gervais srud. Young Maples was pulled through an eight-inch gap at the bottom of the fence, and the lion began shaking him violently. Gervais said. Witnesses were unable to dis- tract the 14-year-old hon, so a policeman shot and killed the animal with a rifle. The boy was rushed to a local hospital but was pronounced dead of multiple head wounds and internal inJuries, authoritiess;Ud. The victim's parents left the hospital after their son was . declared dead, and the coroner's office had been unable to locate them by this morning, Gerv;Us ~aid . The rather apparently had been applying for a JOb at the compound which keeps animals for use m movies, the coroner added. Officials did not know where the family lived in Oregon. Director Killed MADRID, Spain CAP> -With his wife watching helpless ly from a balcony window. three gunman assassinated Spain's 40-year-old director of prisons, Jesus Haddad, outside his Madrid home today afier he got into his official car and was about lo be driven to work, police reported. Co ast Weather Partly cloudy through Thursday. Chance of measurable rain 10 per. cent torught and Thurs· day. Lows tonight 52 to 57. Jlighs Thursday 63 to 68. I NSIDE TODAY lJ JIOU taant to J*l Ea.1tn- dinHr Oft U. t<JlM quick GI G mmny ao JIC*'U hoVft time to crlebratft too, $el! Food, Page Cl. . l•d•X: -- I c \ r ' 0 I! tf s n R I' ,,, d ~ •· ·~ ,. 1'. -' ,.. ~ • " " I I I i ' I l I ' ' i !; ., I l j j Appoint Policy Drawn By RAYMOND ESTRADA JR. OI ,,. o.1 .. rle.t I~ Huntington Beach Union High School District officials drew up a prot.'edure Tuesday lo appoint a new trustee In the event a cur· rent school board member is elected lo another political of· flee. Two school board members are currently seeking higher of· flee Board President Don MacAllister is runninc for one ol four seals up for grabs in the April 11 Huntington Beach City Council election. And Trustee Doris Allen an- nounced she 1s seekln1 the Republican Party nomination for the 7lst Stale Assembly Dis- trict S('at 1n the June primary Trustee John ""9ndley said Tue!>day he Is no longer a can· d1date in the 7lrd Assembly Dis- trict Hundley, who declared his candidacy in January, withdrew from the race due to "family :.ind business reasons." Trustees agreed to appoint a new board member if necessary to save the cost of a special elec· t1on A special election could cost an estimated $80,000. school nffic1als said The plan trustees approved Tues day t.'alls for a four· member committee moderated by a paid consultant lo screen applicant!. for a vacated school hoard post. R<'mammg trustees would each select one member of the committee Trustees are now considering Dr. Leland Newcomer. onetime Newport· Mesa school chief, as the panel's moderator. Members of the panel are ex· peeled to be named before the end or the month. Trustees agreed to restrict the four members of the panel to district residents who are not t•urrenlly holding elected pubhc offices 0.11., rn• s1•1 r-... HIGH HOPES -Huntington Beach City Council can- <ltdate John A. Thomus, a builder, uses one of his cranes to get his message above the crowd. Trust(•es also ruled out Hunt· ington Beach Union High School District employees and relatives of district employees or school board members. The unit will recommend one name to the school board for its consideration. Huntington Delays Action on Sign Ban Fro111 Page A J WAITING ••• Enforcement or a ban against pol1l1cal campaign signs in public nghts-0f·way will be de· Jayed until a survey is made throughout Huntington Beach, 1t was announced today. Fro.PageAJ WALLENDA March 1 and finishes April 2. Asked if Wallenda was not warned about the wind, usually strong along San Juan's ex- clusive beachfront hotel strip, Harrington said: "No, he thought it was fine. He tested and installed the wire himself." Wallenda lived m Sarasota, f 'la lhs wire, Helen, was with h1 m in San Juan, but not performing. Gary Williams, a local newspaper photographer, said Wallenda was leaning into the wind as he inched his way hold· mg a balancing pole across the "ire strung between the towers of the Holiday Inn blocks :.eparated by San Juan's. Ashford Avenue. '·As he got past the middle, he seemed to be losing it," Willlams said. •·His balance pole was going up and down. One of the people who work with him In the act was watching from the roof. He yelled: 'Sit down! Sit down!' Wallenda sat, but he missed the wire and went down," said Williama. DAILY PILOT City Administrator Bud Belsito said that parking en forcement officers for the city will make a street-by-street m· speclion to see how many signs are in violation of a city or dinance and lo whom they belong. Belsito said that he expects ci- ty employees to start removing the offending signs by next Mon- day if they are not already taken down by candidates in the April 11 city elections. Monday night the city council confirmed a policy or prohibiting the signs in such public righLc;. of-way as sidewalks, street me dians, gutters and planter areas There was speculation that si~ns would be permitted m the public rights if they creaLed no hazard lo pedes trians or motorists. The champion sign raiser ap- pears to be candidate John A. Thomas. Thomas has erected scores of red signs along Golden West Street and has one atop one of his cranes. He said that he intends to pul up 2,000 signs before he gets through. Thomas said that this week's action restricting signs by the ci- ty council favored incumbents "Candidates trying to unse•t in· cumbent.s have to put up more signs and campaign harder in every way," he said. He said the sign prohibiUon was a violation of his freedom of speech. •'The city is tnviUng a lawsuit on this," he said. grounds or the appearance of bias, a finding the defense lawvers said taints the DA 's role in ttie md1ctmcntprocess. Not all the grand jurors who voted for the indictment were present at all secret hearings leading to the charges. Competing with the defense lawyers for the judge's ear were lawyers from the slate's At· torney General's Office who have replaced the DA as pros- ecutor o!lhecase. Tht>y argued that the Los Angeles case has no bearing out· side that county because the <'Onstitutional issue has not been decided by higher courts. Furthermore, the stale pros- ecutors said, the Grand Jury's term had been extended the ad· dillonal hours by a valid court order issued by Superior Court Judee James Walsworth. And, the prosecutors argued, · not all the testimony in the in· vesbgation that began in late 1976 pertained to the charges brought in the indictments. The needed quorum or jurors was present when testimony rel- evant to campaien practices was heard, the lawyers said. Another rebuttal argument of the prosecution lawyers was that when Judge Fenton yanked the DA from prosecution of the case he found no real p.reJudlce 0but only an appearance of preJ· udlce that might shake pUbllc ·confidence in justice. Judge Fenton said ho will sift through the legal proe and cons of the two-sided areument and issue a ruling of the plea for dis· mlaaal ol the indictment later tbia week. Man Defies Bell " He Kilu Wi/ e, Cheat. Cancer t NORTON SHORES, Mich. police lnvuU&atlon ii un~er CAP) -"I would rather spend way. an eternity in hell than to see A. 100, Tyler• 2', told police Molly live a life of hell," said the after the bodla were dilcovered note found near the embracl.na tbat hla father loffd h1I mother bodies of LJman and Molly deeply and bad watched ber auf· Brigg a. f erina for a 109• time. Jerry Cook, a net1"bor, Police said Brita•. 66, wrote described the couple u "J)R- lhe no~ before be killed ht. cu· cioua neighbors. She was \he cer·,tncken wlfe, Molly,, 58, and type to cover up the doi ln cold then killed hlmaelf Tueiday, wuther ... R was the \)'Pe""' A alngle .~allber bullet was man who would help anyone." in the ritht temple of each. Mrs. Cook laid Srl1ts retlnd Police ~ Olarlel C\lrtls said l11t year to car• ror bitl •lf• but Mrs. Bttus wu on a W lo the needed to wort one woek )>er Uvln1 room wblle her husband rnentb to malotaln lnaurance Jay "1th hi. race nd arma ln coverage for Mrs. Brit•· i..r lap. "We tbtlr oetfbbon for ... don't a. Ul1I a lJ y~ara. They nre Uit belt lft • murder nae. Jk ~ loftd the worl4; ADct. tllet'n not lll w • lot." tM fil 1atd. hell," Mn. Cook ukl, nf.rrtnc Bu\ Cwt1a dde4 a rouUn lo lbo &JM BrtaP left beblnd. 0.1, __ ,,_ Out on the Street Former employees ()f J.be l\tahbu Grand Prix Racing facility ~cket outside the miniature track at 9065 Warner Ave .. Fountain Valley. They appeared Tuesday after all 17 employees or the amusement facility were fired Monday. Tony Maddox, l!l, Fount.1in \'all11\. "ho s~ud he was a · spokesman for the. cmploH·l'S, called the-· mass layoff sudden and un('allcd for. Dan · Morris, general manager or the !arm, said the firings came "because Lh~ !-.lore did. not perform as well as other locations." Waddill Def ends ACtion Says 'I'd Do It Again' as Tempers Flare By TOM BARLEY Of•• oau, r11e1 &i.tt • Dr. Wilham Baxter Waddill told an Orange County Supenor Court Jury Tuesday that if he were to again confront the s1tua· lion he faced in Westminster Community Hospital on March 2, 1977. his actions would be ex- actly the same today as they were then. The Huntington Harbour physician testified durmg a long day of cross exammation that the death or a baby girl follow· ing an abortion he performed on lhe mother was "unavoidable and mev1table '"There was no way in the world that that baby could have lived," Waddill told prosecutor Robert Chatterton after again denying that he strangled the in· fant in the hospital nursery. ''I used my stethoscope on the fetus and heard nothing. I fell around the throat for a pulse and fell nothing. And I only saw ci gon al (dying) gasps," he testified. ··Were those gasps before or after death, doctor?" Chatterton asked the defendant during a murder trial that is packing one of the largest courtrooms in the Santa Ana county courthouse. "I don"t know. Does it make anv difference'>" Waddill rep.lied. "Do you really care?" (;hat· terton asked the witness, flushed with anJ.{er. Tempers flared on both sides of the counsel table as Chat- terton intensified his questioning of Waddill and repeatedly ac- cused the defendant of failing to answer his questions. U.N. Peacekeepers Move Into Lebanon BEIRUT. Lebanon (AP) - The first U.N. peacekeeping unit moved into embattled south Lebanon today, a Lebanese gov· ernment spokesman said Palestinian guerrillas claimed major violations riddled the Israeli-declared cease fire. An 18-man lran1an reeon· naissance party entered tt\e Lebanese Christian town of Mar· jayoun, six miles north of the Israeli frontier as the vanguard of a 400-man Iranian U N. con· tingent, the spokesman said. The unit drove in at mid· morning from the neighbonng Golan Heights front It wlll tour the Litani River area to choose the posts the 400 Iranian peacekeepers will lake up Thursday to disengage guerrilla and Israeli f orces, th<'· s pokesman said. Another advance unit of Sinai based U.N. observers was r<'· portedly prevented from enter inJ! the coastal area of south Lebanon by Israeli-backed right wing Chnstian m1ht1as in the area. Lebanon's state radio s aid a third advance party or 200 French peacekeepers W<'re ex peeled in Beirut shortly to <..l'l the stage for deployment of a 600· man French contingent in the south. The government spokes man said thaL "mterm1ttent" \ 1ola lions of the cease-fire occurrt'd in the areas of Nabat1eh, in lh•• central sect.or or the battlefront. and the coastal area or Tyre, 12 miles north of the Israeli border Defense attorneys Charle!! Weedman and Malbour WaL<ion repeatedly got lo their feet lo protest the form of the prosecu. lion questioning but got little sympathy from Judge James K. Turner. He overruled all but t \\Q of the objections. It is alleged by the prosecution that Waddill strangled the baby after he realized that the saline solution that be inJected mto the mother 12 hours earlier had failed to abort the felui.. E'rOM Page A I SUIT .•• said . lie said he joined Bonfa 's com· mitlee las' summer because he didn't want the city to go through the expense of possibly paying a new city attorney for on the JOb training. lie said he didn't koow Siebett. unlll a couple of months ago. M arcarelli added that -e didn 't bavl' confidentilll material relating to Bonfa"s campaign. • Honfa alc;o c laimed that :\1 ,1rc;.1rPlh hreached a confiden- t1.il lru~t \\1th him by acting as Stt>herl s attorney. Bon fa s a 1 d Siebert '.s la"~u1t contains eight false and ~punous cause:. of acllon hold· ing Bonfa up to nd1cule, scorn, misfeasance and malfeasance in offt<"<'. corruption, dishonesty and the <'Omm1ssion of various <'rimes during his stint as city at· tornl'y S1t•hert ·s lawsuit allt>ged that Boni a took unauthorized trips. that an outside attorney was 11· legally h1r<'d , that the c1\'tl rights of dl'pUly nly attorneys '' 1·11• 'wlatt-d S1ebt·rt f1kd h1~ suit as .a pnvat<' c1t1wn and not as a city councilman Bonfa 1s also suing Siebert a-; a private <'1l11en . · 15110 Apollo Nylon upp<>r 0111\tdl' '"" hl'r•I eounrer P.ld<ll'<l '"fl"l"~ 11 ... 11 •• loot ,,....., nylon :oot1• 5< rPW n S(>t~ Sy<.tl'm s1s9s - AGl032P~ l.Jehtlop, lotmpeddeduppert 1Unounll ank ... for firm. com· fonebl• 1u119ort. Leather .... l®adldasl ; p Open 9 to 6 -Oosed Smiday - ' // J / ,/. ,.,..I !I I ,_. 538 Center f)11l Jet UNJe" t>I rUQQf'd bllll' ny!Qn Soll ,.nkla Lull•• 1.add•ni> Cu,tioonv h"91 -ivfl le 1 ~•I•• ptc:>tl!<.t•on 646-1919 ' • ·s lt X- e. ,, • h ,. or u 1t ·d ,1l IS 1n ot n a ; a ID· nc 1as t:al fut 1as II\ the v (' lh1· "t. nng ~in for nd e to linf! f of ers ieen tft ;?% Vfd. ~~ ~ '"· IJe$S ' rf'• rrnt. :ALIFORNIA Film Ad fJrtiered On Buses LOS ANGELES (AP> -Much o tbe dismay of dlstrict dlrec- ot-s, Southern Cltlllornia Rapid :rans1t Distrlct buses have teen ordered to carry advertise- n~nts for the adult movie .. Sex NorJd." • Superior Court J udge George )t!lt said Tuesday that under a .late Supreme Court ru ling, J ag.sportation companies owned iv public agencies must accept ulV'erlli;ing from anyone. · 'tHE ONLY (:XCeption, he ,aid, is if the ad material is 1belous or obscene. Attorneys for the three l'ussycal Theaters and Essex t>tstributing, Inc., filed suit eeking the ad space for posters or the film. Dell said the RTD must accept th:e posters, pending another ~aring of the case. l • Surrender ..... ~ John A. Fuerst nnd Roberta Smith, both 33. who have hcen identified by the FBI as members of the Weather Underground, surrendered Tuesday to the U.S. At- torney's office in San Francisco, on federal explosives charges pending since 1971. • Wtdoesde'{ March 22. 1978 DAIL. V PILOT A~ Gasoline Shortage· Seen ! I State Deficiency Predi,cted in 60'Days SACRAMENTO (AP) - California may have a gasoline shortage in a couple of months because or a crude oil glut in- sufficient storaae, and too 'few American.flag tankers, says state Controller Ken Cory, · Cory, a Democrat, told a news briefing Wednesday that when crude is refined you get gasoline and fuel oil. The oil goes to the East Coast. But when you're s hort of gasoline, you can't simpl y refine more crude because there's no place to store the fuel oil that comes with it. .. OUR STORAGE tanks are JUSl about full . . . Within 60 days we're going to see a shortage of gasoline. because the refineries won't have any place to put the fuel oil, and they will have to cul back.'' be said. Call!orrua is receiving dculy about :i00,000 more barrels or crude oil than it needs. Most ls from Alaska, and the problttn wtll worsen in coming months. California's power plants can't burn the fuel oil because the aul· fur content exceeds state air quality standards, Cory said. AND TUE FUEL 011 can't be shipped to the East Coast because federal law requires· t hat oil shipped between American ports be in ships lly- 10g the American flag, .. and there are just not sufficlenL American-flag tankers." ··1 don't have an answer. I am presenting a problem • • • We <.an have ... a gasoline !thortage, and at the same time "e're floating in oil." Cory, also chairman of the State Lands Commission. criticized the federal entitle· ments program on crude oil im· posed by President. Nixoo ln 1973. THE PROG RAM froze prices on existing domestic oil supplies and attempted to equalize all oll prices by providing penalty pay- m ents for cheap domestic oil and government s ubsidiea tor foreign oil. Cory said the system has Un• fairJy penalbed Cautornia, which has exte nsive st a te tidelands 011, because productioo costs have risen but not prices. "You can make a bigger profit buying $.1' forei&n oil and ma1c- mg gasoline than you can buymg $4 Cahfornia oil and malting gasohne," Cory said. ,, .!.ESSEX attorney Robert ~~Daniel said the court ordered t~e poster to appear on buses by ll91't Monday. The RTD bad re· iec:ted the poster March 14 because of fear of negative public reaction, officials said. Brokerage to_ Pay $1 Million R E ADDED. •"This convoluted set of formulas has destroyed the marketplace • • • Richard Nixon socialized the oil industry in 1973, with some of the worst elements ot socialism and some of the worst. elements of capitalism. .. P roduction of the Long Beach offshore field bas dropped since 1973 frt>m 100,000 t.o 74,000 bar- rels daily "because our costs are too great. We can't afford to pro- duce," he said. .McDaniel said the poster has nb pi ct u r cs. It r cads : '"\Vestworld was for children Fadureworlcf was Jor teen agers: btt. Sex World. • .is de!tnitely Cqrfdulls." Oakland CBer • .. lhtruded on ... Frequencies •OAKLAND, CahL (AP) -A h.-m radio operator calling hlmsclf Tom Cal and using 11- l~gal high.power equipment in- tEruptL•d delicate communica- t . ns bl'lwl·t•n O:ikland Jnterna- t nal Airport and a hijacked .1ethner last wc·ck, a federal of- flcial has <.hsclost>d. '•.Ser g c Mart 1-Vo 1 k or f, a Federal Communications Com- mission off1c1al, declined to name the Cllcr who, he said, has ugrecd to stop using the equip· rnent and will not be charged. T ll E HIJACKED plane -· later flown to Denver where the incident ended and the hijacker was captured without violence -was still on the ground al the itirport here March 13 when Tom Cat ftr::.t broke into the air wa\ cs looking for conversation. .. Good evening, good eve- nin~." said the intruder. He was urged to g<.•t off the air in a hurry. Marti \'olkoff said, "As soon a., we heard the name Tom Cat, we knew of a local CBer who was :rnspected of using ovcr- JlOW"rcdcquipment." FCC investigators later·vfslted his home about a mile from the •urport. and found "a vast array of l1ne.ir amplif i ers and amateur-type transmitting oqu1pmcnt that is 11le~al to use," Marti \'olkoff said He added Tom Cat was "very t:oopcrat1vl' " "lie d1dn t know what he was doing, obviously," the l''CC of f1c1ul :.aid. B UT JN ITS seven- pagc written opinion, • t he three.judge ap- pellate panel skirted -.. LOS ANGELES (AP) -One of the nation's largest brokerage firms, Los Angeles-based Bateman Eichler, Hill Richards Inc., has agreed to pay $1 million to settle claims baaed on a recent Securities and Ex- change Commission ruling. SEC officials disclosed Tues· day that Bateman also promised the firm would not engage in bloc trading of stocks listed on the American and New York ex· changes for six months. Bateman Eichler also agreed to set up an outside review board that would be in existence Ban Lifted; Museum Slates Film Clrusic HIVERSIDE (AP) -The City Council has reserved its ban on showing D.W. Griffith's classic "The Birth of a Nation" in a city museum film orogram. The council 'voted unanimous- ly Tuesday to show the st-year- old movie as many times as necessary to accommodate those who want to see 1t. T HE FILM, which depicts the South before and after the C1v1l War, premiered in Riverside In 1915 under the b1lhng "The Klansman." The t1Ue was later changed. Under Councilman Sam Digall's compromise motion, during an intermission in the three-bow' film, a historian or sociologist, preferably black, will discuss the sensitivity of its contents. T llE COUNCIL had canceled a March 9 showing of the movie aft«"r receiving complaints at an hour-long hearing that the film is racist and offensive to blacks The museum has scheduled the first showing of "The Birth of a Nation" for April 20. 50 G.\LS OF GA!'\ • .. ' constitutional questions • on which the lower court ! • Judie had Invalidated FREE • .. .. lhe Jaw. . The decision reverses • the Afarcll 13 rullo1 by ,.. 'San Dleco S=lor * (lourt Judi e R W. ,.. • Conren that-the •tale's * • 1972 death penalty In· ,. tftiaUve wu a revllion ,.. ut.bt r than an amend· • 1 m ent to tho California ! <;on.stllutlon. .. ( Sl'ATE ) for at least two years. Finally. the brokerage firm agreed to suspend three of its top officers for 90 days. The thr ee are Willard G. DeGroot, Robert C. Hill and John D. McClure. Cartn-Get• BIU WASIUNGTON (AP) -A bill expanding Redwoods National Park in northern California by 48,000 acres and providing train- ing and JObs for lumberjacks displaced by park expansion is on its way to President Carter's desk The bill. passed by the Senate 63 26 on Tuesday, will cost $359 m1lhon for purchasing private l_and around the present park . SC'n. Alan Cranslon, D-Calif., the Senate sponsor, said he expects no opposition from the presi- dent. llntt Co•trol Nlzed LOS ANGELES (AP) Despite hisses and jeers from hundreds of demonstrators, the City Council voted down at- temp~s to outlaw "rent gouging" and impose a special tax on property sales to discourage speculation. . But the measures' sponsor. Councilman Joel Wachs, said he was encouraged by the public support and would mtroduce the bills agcun. lnt~ntSold SAN DIEGO (AP) -Jn a stunning financial move, Richard L. Burns has sold his controlllng in terest in his multlmJllion dollar oil and gas exploration firm for less than half its estimated market value. The 41-year-old entrepeneur and high school dropout who ex- ploded onto the San Diego busi- ness and social scene last March ufter moving his company, R.L. Hurns Corp. from San Bernardino, took $14.6 million Tuesday for what both he and stock market 81\alysts agreed was worth nearly $40 million. Gov. Edmund Brown J r . to head California's scandal-plagued mental health system. Dirertor Picked Farabee, 51, will be $40,764·a- Cory said a b1l'OUP or govern· ment, industry and consumer leaders will meet Thursday to discu ss the oil entitlements problem before meeting federal officials in Huntington B~acb SA CRAM ENTO (AP) year director of the new Mental Psychiatrist Dale Farabee, Health Department, one of five former Kentucky state health to be created from the current director and mental health state Health Department under next week. director. was named Tuesday by legislation passed last year. ~~~~~~~_;;_~~~_:._~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- Hayrrord Vanda"ls Soughl HAYWARD CAP) - Hayward police ere seeking vandals -ap- parently motivated by racial.hatred -who did a n estimated $15,000 damage to the home of a black man and his white wife. Police Capt, George Kelly said. Marc Sangara, a native of Africa and a steel com pany ex· ecutive, and his wife, Loretta, who works in a motel chain advertising office, have lived in the three-bedroom house since last August, KclJy said. TH E COUPLE CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF ANOTHER KIND Another kind. altogether. As. when you get together with YQur dentist. Could you get closer than that to Or. Arnold Flanzer? Well. he doesn't like to Jet money keep people apart. So you could get pretty close. For a lot less than you might suppose. Dr. Arnold H. Flanzer 370 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa 642-0112 declined to talk with------------------------------- newsmen about the van- dalism. . "In 13 years as a street cop, I've never seen such destruction." said investigating or !icer Don Wallace. FUR N I TUR E was broken. mattresses slashed, paint poured over rugs, potted plants were overturned, and a television set and jewel ry were stolen, Kelly said. Spray-painted on the wall of one room was, ''Go Back, Nigger Lov- er!:· Kelly said PUB LIC l\OTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Pl"BLIC NOTICE oortJon of prlnclp.ol -lnl<f' ... I WlllC" \OOUIO nol 0. a ... -,.., dei•Ull O< curr•d Wh<f'• ,...Ml-'.....,rit ls _.,. bl• d Ille oe1 .... 11 15 -cur..:I wllll•n llHH mont~ lollowlnQ .,,. ...cord•"Q of 011• -·c•, lhe rlglll ol IPIMl•I~· ,..."' will lorMINll• -,,.,. pf'Ojlerty m•y IM >Old. To dtttf'mhw If r •l,..l•lemenl I~ poulbl• 0110 lllO emounl, II •nv. l\f'(fUlr'f lo Cll"e '"" deltull. COMtct "'" bMtflCl.,Y O< mort~ O< IM•r ).Vl <•noo intar~\t, who'\e Mme Md adO••n l'1"' '""""'"Of 11>15 notice •S Hom~ F-••• ~··no~.,,., Loen ..,,_ W<••l•on ol Soon 01~. 101 Bro.>d..,.v. San 01~. C.'llllornl• CM4olhnq AO Clros: P 0 Bo• 2010, Son OIPOO. Callrornl• 971111 DATE 0 F .. Orw•v 7. Hit. HOME FE.DER.AL SAVINGS "NO LOAN ASSOCIATIOM O F <,AN 0 1EGO r \.•ncM R W•rr.r. f" A\t.f Yi<" Prfll'~•Mnt " ElllaOotlll H.,,.,, Anl•l•nt S.Crl'l•Y Publltlled Or-Cout Dolly Pilof, Mucll IS,12.lt, """''~, 1911 SS.11 l •· lh ~ . ~ • • • . . • • • .. . ' ,.. • ' J ~ ' • I • I t l ' I I : i ' I r ! . ..,, i 2 ' • f . t oranaeCDas1oairvPiro1 Editorial Page ..................................................... -AS B/F WednMday. ~ 21.1975 Robert N W~e<l/Pubhsher ThomH Ke.vii/Editor Sartwtra Krelb1ch/Edlt0tlal Pave Editor lt Silly Rules Sour A Useful Service The polilical silly season gol a little sillier in a Hunt· ington Beach candidates' night last week staged by tht: Huntington Harbour Republican Women's Club. Only Republican candidates were invited to participate in the forum. This requirement was rigidly followed despile the fact that lhe Huntington Beach city offices are non-partisan. A spokesperson for the club said that the organiza- tion's bylaws prevent candidates from other party af. filiations from speaking al official functions. -- It would seem that the Republican women !->hould t•hange. their bylaws 1f they are genuinely interested rn lhc exploration of lo<: al ideas from local candidates A':-. 1t turnt•d out. most candidates tor ctl'r council ol li<:es happened to bl' Republicans and w(•re <1ble to part1c1p:Jle by v1rtueClf their part) membership. 1 lowevcr. onl} one city attorney C'and1datc \\a~ ehg1- hlc to take part undc1 the dub rule~. So the audience diet nol get a thorough look at all candidates. One of the best things about non-partisan clccl1ons is that qualified local candidates don't have tu be alf11lated with any part)'. This makes for a more democratic election in ''hi ch 1 he candid<.ite's ab1lit1es arc of the most importance. The Republican women can be saluted for presenting a forum for candidates m an important election They t·ould lie tnu<'h more effective by letlmg :.ill c<.1nd1dall' .... t.tlk. Fund Shuffling Tht· Cit\ 01 lluntington Ht•<Jch \\'tll go to rnurt n(·"\t month to ckfcncl 1hclf against an S8 m1lhon lav.c..uit falt·d by property owm·rs m tho downtown part of the c:1t~. With so mu('h <1t \lake. the city recently authorized spending up to S2::>.000 for C'<pert witnesses lo te-.lif\ <ti JH occcdmJ::!". . The city's clC't:i. ion ..,t•cms {o be appropriate. The suit h:..a':-. lH!l'n han{!1ng hrc lor a number of yc<.1r:-. lollowang th1· 111-fotccl top of-tht• pier r edevelopment plan. \\'hat 1..., punhng, however, is the manner m which tht• 1·1l\ I'> :-.h1llmg tht' money from ont· deparlment to .1notht·1·. · ()fJIC'l,tl-. h:l\I' olflj)l'0\1•cl taking fhl' 'ollrp!US Jrom tin ""t·d ..,,d,111t•.., I 10111 tlh' < 1t~ <.Jllnrney s departmc·nl and 1ranslt'1T111g 11 to tlw t·n11trol of the nt~· aclmmistratrn Tlw 111011t•\ is to lw ust•d for dl•J)():-.1t1ons and ,q1 pri.iis<ils 111 .111 :1ltt•mpt to prove• that lht• c1h d1dn t •h'JW<.•ss I.me! '<illlt's to m<.ike proper't v leso.; expc.nstH' to huy 111 till' l Nil'\ dopmt·nt l'ffort. ft \Hlltlcl s1·c•m th;il lht• money 1:-a 1usl1f1;.iblc IPg:.il f.'' pt.·n..,c· and ':-.hould ht.• dwrgcd to the 11,.>gal depurtmcnt ll bt•ah 11s why it i..,n 't. Seems Unti01e ly \I mmun, ul lla'ic onknt .in· ht-mg !ward m t•r plans 111 Jl•huild <1 hllrtll'd nut. l'1ght cta ... sroom \\ ang ,1l l lu1'pt·1 Elcnwnt:..an Srhonl 111 Fountam \'alle\. Fount.1111 \ .illc•v tclemL·nt.ir,·l School 01 ... t1wt tru..,tee ... have announel'tl plim ... lo elo~e l~\O schools in tlw nL''-t ft'" 'r:..a rs ll<'e,111 0.,(' of clcdinmg t•nrollment But l'lll'llllmt•nt '" apparcnth· clcel1ning a1 ound lht• II:.tqw1 Sthnol an•a ,1.., \\ell. rwo ... <·hoot hoard members are adam:rnll\' oppost.•cl 10 rJo..,u1 (' ol Jl:irpcr School and want to rebuild the gulled "ing I ron1rall\. those samC' two school board meml>l'rs an• Ion gt 1 me n·..,i<lttnt s of l he anfluential Harper School area T\\o lornwr Founl<1tn Vallt•v ma\·ors and other Joe.ii pol!hr<.ll 11gurcs arc also 11.;.t.rpcr.area'residenl!'.. Tht• st'hool hoard \Otl'CI :~to 2 on ~Iarrh 3 to mO\<' .1he;1d \\'Ith plt111 lu1· l"L'huild111g the burned out C'l,1s..,rnnm \\ 111 g rtw 'ot C' slw".., the hounl "as spill on the isi-.ut•. lh'l't.'lll rumhlings of rc!-.idcnts m other area!-. .1lm11t 1 IH· n('(•d !11 o.,pt·nd un 11nspcc1f1cd as yet <.1mnunt of t11nds 1111 ttw rc•c·onstruc·t111n plan !)CCm to r<J1se an imporl<itH as lll' \\'hy spend any more money and ltml' rebu11t.l111~ :1 :-.C'hool when other.., m<1\' be dosed ln the futun•'' TntslC't'" must aclcft·pss this 1ssuC' hf"fore the public as :.non as possthh' • Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Daily Pilot OthPr views expressed on this page are those of thetr authors and artists Reader comment is invited Address The Daily Pilot PO Box 1560 Costa Mesa, CA 92626 Phone (714) 642-4321 Boyd/Signs ByL. M. BOYD Not every Seasoned Citizen recalls a favorite Burma. Shave sign, but. most do. Such as: "My man I won't shave I says Hazel Huz I but I should worry I Dora's does f Burma-Shave." Or: "Does your husband I J:11is behave I Jlrunt and grumble I rant and rave I shoot the brute some Burma-Shave." Or "Listen. birds I those siens cost I money I so roost a while hut don 't get funny I Burma Shave." If somebody in your household ask ci, "Whal Dear Gloomy Gu Edl1on lllill if COD· 1iderln1 apondih' $10,000 ror a marquee while · studcntl an studyl.n1 from h.15lory books printed in 1965. Pcrbape Jarvi l& rl&ht. Le mon y WO\ild moa.o wlsenpendlb . J.A.C. Burma-Shave signs?" kindly explain it to the littler shaver. Q ... Ask your Love and War man how many women· over age 50 a~ on their second marrage? .. A. Three out or four. says he. And five out or six men in that age bracket likewi111c Am asked how thul rock 'n' roller Chubby Checker came to be so called. Credit Dick Clark's wife with giving Ernf'st Evans that stage name ll somebody with a trick moniker like Fats Oomlno could ml\ke it, said ahe, why couldn't somebody dubbed Chubby Checker'> Q. ...Can you verity the claim that the band aboard , tha TJtanlc played 'Nearer My God To Thee' tor almost olJ of the two hour! forty m nutes tha ship was sink· 1011 .. A. Whut it played wns ragtime and then the hymn "Autumn." How can you coll yourHlf an part in th1t game or baseball ii you can't name tbe JtJt w~·s a bat&.el' can reacb buG wilhout getUnc • blt! 11 error. a bHe on balll. cateber drops t.ht tb rd ke, hit. b1 tho pltth, a field r'• choic Jnd :tn tttl~ bJ at.ch r.~--~~ Nick Thimmesch • Uninvited Do-gooders Do.Harm Freedom House, 11bo became his lhi11 attracted representaUves ot also noted that the fraud "sim-l WASIUNGTON -Oh, how well-mtenhone<l we Americans are, and how stupidly we sometimes act. How else to ex- plain how a pair of do-gooder House members dispatched two Americans -uninvited -tQ Guatemala to monitor the recent elections there; how ooe monitor cried ''fraud." and thereby angered many Guatemalans, who might regard their voting booths as sacred as ours. and wish Uncle Sam would mind his own business sponsor and paid bis way f.rom Europe's democratic parties as ply reen!orcea the deep cynicism lt turned out that the Gualemalan elections weren't so fraudulent :irter all. Be- sides. havv- n 'L the rt· bet•n some ballot box pro· blems m the LT S over tht> vcars'' Who ~r<' we to pakc around elec- tions in other <·ounlrH•s, shaking a Calvin1st1c I 1n,gcr at our Lalin neighbors" 1'11 E GENIUS he hind lh1s stunt ts Re p Donald M. Fraser, () \1 I n n (' ha t rm a 0 -0 [ t ht• House Sub('omm1tlee on Inlerna I 1 on a I 0rgan1zat1 on s lh s parlner 1s Rep Mtllicent r\•nw1ck. R N J Both profess great concern ror human nghts and vott• fraud in other coun· tries So Fraser got the Democratic Party to sponsor a trip by Professor John Plank of the l'nl\ £'rs1tv of Connecticut lo Guatemala to ob!>erve the elec tJOns The lJmtcd Auto Workers union paid Plank's expenses. "•nl·P tht• Republican Party \.\11Uldn't sµonsor or pay for Rep f<'l'n" tl'k 's representative, John H1rhardson . president of Mailbox her own privatetunds. observers. Only now, for the oflheGuatemalanvoters." GUATEMALA, unfortunately. has long been torn and aufftll'ed violence by ext.rem.lats of the left and ri.l\t. The Mareb s elections were the tirst held in many years, and featured a military cast. Voters were as.Iced to choose a President among two army generals and a colonel. A general already runs the coun- try first time. the U.S • .rot into the Fraser and Fenwick are now act. While the Guatemalan gov-trying to play down the criticism ernment didn't invite any of or their illipecUon team because these "monitors, 0 once this ln-the uplift effort is getting mixed spectlon gang set foot. on their reviewainGuatemala. territory they were well re-"They were not invited, and ceived and treated cordially. tbeir presence is offensive,·· NBturally. But after the election, whose ~aid Julio A.:.ensio, Guatemala's outcome isn't clear yet. ambassador lo the Uruted Nu- Professor Plank cut loose with. lions "This 1s c·ongressman ·'The fraud perpetrated here 1~ Fraser's concept or play mg G<x1 so transparent that nobody could Almighty lie a<·ts as 1f we were a s c· t• n e l 1 ke expect to gel away with 1t " He trying lo hide something. I think r will get a team and go inspect his election 10 Minnesota next. fall. ' NO MATTER. Fraber is un deterred. "It 1s my hope," he piously declares, "that it (the monitoring> will be followed by other initiatives and that even- tually we (the Democratic Par- ty) will be Joined by the Republican Party etnd The Soc1alibt lnlernat1onal · Ms. Fenwick ts equally ar- dent. "We've done Guatemala a ::.crvicc." s ht• ~ays, "and an· muc:h appreciated there. W1: must try to get the non Comm unast nations concerned about human rights For their ll N amba~sador to threaten to ~o lo Minnesota 1s unproduc- t 1 \'t• Goodness sakes. Can't the::.e pecksniffs realize that their team was unmv1ted, that for Fraser to make his announce- ments about the monitoring on Congre::.s1onal stationery 1s to put the emblem of the U.S. Con~rcss on this questionable l'ntcrpnse" 11 l' mu~r dv .-.1mi>I h1111<' H111111d 11p .111111 lwr .i,tllJtl 1111·11 and ·'t•ud thl'm w Alflc11'' In the nJm<· of human rights. this bunch. hy ~n1Iftng around this wa). might well be v1olatang the human rights of people tn;- :ng to havC' :in election Complaints Unfair to Animal Shelter To th£' Ed1to1 Th<· rC'ccnt lclll'rs appearing 111 ~our nC'\\SJlJJX:r regarding th(• ut>t.· of the high altitude cbamber in thC' cft'struct1on of u~ante<l 1wts at Or<Jnge County ~n1mal Sh<'lh'r haH' bet•n most unfair to that far1hl\ Without clehalmg th£' merits of the 1n1l1al1n• to abolish the use of th•' ckcomprC'ss1on chamber. 11 '' mlt•r<',ltng to note that not 11n1• national human£' soriety has gunl' on r£'<·nnl Ill support of the tr11tlattvt. \\ h1le tht' i\mencan llumanl' AssoC"1at1on, Mt'rc~ Crn!.adP, the-SPCA. and the California ~tall' Humane ,\!-1..,0l'latiun etre all against millawing tht• thamber lt • .., chfficult in t ht• p1 l'se>nt c•mol111nal atmuspht·rt• to VIP\\ !ht!> sub.1cct ob1ect1vely. but lhl' horror stones \.\h1ch were usC'd .is tllu:-trat1ons 1n the recent lrttrrs .idmattcdl~ only occur when tht• l'hamher 1s not in good '~orktnJ! order or the personnel 1s unlrainrd or unsupervised m its use ft 11>, to ::.ay the least, 11n•spons1ble to suggest. even by 1mpltcaL1nn. that Orange County Shl•lt('r staff as well as the humant• organ&lal1on \Oluntecrs " h o w o r k t h e r 1• \\ o u I d l'ountl'nance for a moment the inhumane praclll'C'> dc~cnbcd in ... urh tcrrif~ 1ng detail ~l .Cll FALSE and m1slcadtnf.! statement~ do incalculable harm lo our <intmal n.>scue efforts. Contributing lo people's already irrational fears of the "paund" prevents finders of lost pets from bringing them there. and many heartbroken owners and pets will never find each other as a result. Instead of attacking the symptom. lc>t us unite our humane efforts in attacking the caui;e of the deaths al th& sheltrr Recent Los Angeles County Animal Control figures since m1liation of their low-cost ~pa)' neut er clinics. are astounding in three years. tbe number of animals impounded by the s helter has decreased 69.000' And the number killed decreased from 101.297 to 41,177 Los Angeles City, ulso. hai> passed an e'tceJlcnl ordJnan~ to control indiscrlmina\e br~ln1 Why ctto't. Oranre County do the same? RUTH FRANKEL. fie t 111.,.ll'ftf To the Editor. Our ftlucator11 ore leading op. po~llion to the Jarvis lnltlaUve thaL would provide protection ln>m tf\• horrendous tB1t burden on real pro~rt.y. Thia la the Uhl(! croup rea ponaibl~ for a system wherein our CaUlornla 1luden\$ tonllnually sron> below naUt>nil norm• in testing nd are c-ur- rtnUy · Md b1 trallh\Jf thr Quarters or the nation. A • new demand h•~ been croated for remedial dasses to teach what should haH' been tauf'hl m the fir:;l plact', bul at double the cost. and "competency based lt>stini;" has been implemented as a smoke ~~n to focus on ~tudenl rather than teacher abthl} Thl' ll'achrrs' union has 1ust demanded a 20 percent in cn•asc for this achievem ent The I luntmgtoo Bt>:.ich Unwn J hgh School Board of Trustees voled for aggre:-;s1vc opposition to Jarvis. c1tin).! a possible ""c•<is trophc Tht·re h:.is been no aJ!grt•ss1\'C' oppos1t1on" to kachers who an• disinterested. in£'rfectivl' and delrimental In students Tht•n· is no acl'oun ta h1lity ;rnd no prov1s1on for answt'rtng p:1rent complaints Input for tl.'nchl'r t•\alu:.it1on:. •~ al th ctr opllon' WITH ONLY 10 pl.'rcent pt1rt1c1p:.t1on JO board or trustee elections. parents have rehn· quJ..Shed ('f)nlrol to the moneyed organa2alloos and unions. Wit.han this educational env1 ronment. we sec a ruj!h 1nc1dencc of truan cv and drug etbuse. but we con t1nue lo tonk at the .student. pJrent and th<' fac1hty in assess- 111g cduc,1t1on ratht•r than lhl' ll'acht·rs ~hn arf' crucial to the interJrt1on Professional Education Group of Californ1a ·· reflects n>ncern& .1bout conflicts of un- mmsm vs proh'ssaonahsm, and the• coercion which extract~ as much as $200 unton dues per teacher. Parents arc paying those dues throu&h laxes for s:ilaries, but arc not organized themselves. ' OBVIOUSLY,tl!_eydonotsee PT A groups as a vehicle for ln- vo l v e ment. At Edison High, there are 4.000 students, 386 paid members of PTSA and less than 10 active parents. There are no funds Cor PO'\lal(c, much Jess paper. posters etc . but a ..Teacher of th<' Quarter ' award has been cstubhsh<>d to allow ~tudenb to thank teachers who a re outslandlng an concerns for their prol{ress Many would like to see those teachers paid 41 higher salary, but not wlthouL accountability provi!i1ons for all. P1ren\s must become in- volved lJ\ our system of educ•- tlon. Low partlC'lpoUon In PTA has resQlted In an eUtist attitude among a well-meaning few that assumt no one elso cares. Meet· ings ate scheduled ln tbc dnytlmo, obviom1ly exc1udln1 the ma.joricy of workin& parent.t wnh a coiitributlon to mllke and skal ls to effect chan1e The Jarvi• lnitlaUve een hard· ly creale more catastrophe than we have, MRS. M. L. ALVJ'..S A r ••Ai.ea.nc To the F.di"r.: On Match 8 and 10 the Fount.in VaJley 1 bnol •YJt m celebrated lb annual mu1lc fcstl\<il , with bands <ind orchestras performing beforl' Jud~es for the coveted ralm~ of h1ghl!st competence Hundred'> of <.•hildren demonc,tratcd excellence in perfnrmancl•, pla~ IO,!! the music of lJvorak. Brahms and Beethoven "iow the Fountain Valll'v School District. one of the mo~L progressive in th<> nation, ,.., proposing to demote band and orchestra leaders as w<>ll as l'horal leaders and put thf'm back mlo whatevc·r classroom ts ::J\•ailable during thc-1978-7!J '4Chool vear Thf'v would thus not ;ic·tuall~ losf' thl:lr 1ohs, but th<• flnl' mus1l'. program m Fountain Vall<'y would be hut a memory Tht' justification for th1 ... t'ltmin<ition or music training tn the schools 1s so that the system l'an concentrate more on 'thl• bastes .. The ars~umcnl IS •·w)lich would you rather youi child hear-music or math·> MY ANSWER is that as a taxpayer whose yearly bill is gro\Hng higher and higher, as one "ho lives m one of the most affluent areas in the nation. wh-.. should I have to make such a chmrt··· Where 1s some of m\ monc\ being wasted" l\nyon~ \\ho h~1s had music tr<unin~ knows that through this C''rnctm~ study. students reap percept• blc bcn('f1ts m math as well as 111 read in~ The fine leaders of band and orcht'stra deserve unendrng thanks from the parents of children under their tutelage. As one who attended this year's music festival and observed the Joyful attentiveness of children ranging in age from 9 to 14 , I feel that music should stay a \Ital part of the Fountain Valley school S%tem If "the basics" do not include some study of the arts , then our children's education equals that of children in the most deprived areas of America. Let u~ protest tM!fort' 1l i<. too late JEAN WILLIAMS S•lt .Just l flfltff To the Edit.or At long last the public has become aware. through Coun- cilman Rlchard ~lt~rt'.!4 class ncUod suit agalrist the incum- bent llwitington Beoch Cily At torney, of the multiplicity of problctos Mr. Don Bonfa has created. Havln& personally re11carch('(I most of the same pubhc r~ ol'ds that Mr. SJ~bert Is usln1 b found&ltlon for hls case, I can attest to lht fact that the clo \ action suit nO\ rnvoloua 11 1r. Bonf wt1he the 111.1blic to bclltvt. ang unit. \\htt·h unla\\full~· nego11.1tt•rl ht" 11\1 n 1975 '7•> o.,alan whilC' :it lht• sam1· ttml• f:ul<'d to nC'gottalt' and ~ct llw !.:llar\' of the current Cit v ,\d min1strator \\ho Y.as lt~ted a~ <l memht•r. thc·rd1\' c·ausing Da\t· Howlands to rt·relVl' un ,1uthori1ccl salan \\'hc·rl' \\a:-. ~Tr Ronfa', gr.o.i l<•g:.il ad\tll' t h £' n ' Th l' II 0 \1 E Co u n r· 1 I brought th(•sc.• irregularities to I he II B C1l.\ Counc11"s allenl1ttn 1n Apnl of l!)iG J\fter gellin1. lc•gal op1n111ns from th<' Leag1w of C1l1t•.., ;ind th£' i\1torn1•\ vcncral':. OfhcL. the City Cou11 <'ti a<•lerl lo aholio.,h th1.., har).!.un inf.: unit TRA \'EL t'\J>l'ns~ vouc:h"r' I pul>ltc· n•cords) 1nd1t·atc th.ti i\11. Bonfa dui 1ndcNl travel (''.\ tc>no.,I\ 1•1\ Ill 1!175 al ('lty <'Xpen-.t• In f,ll'I lh1·,c· puhll!' records rt· \'l'al th.it uftcr at·cepling cash advan<'c•s for tr.we! C''<pt'nses. Bnnfa fa1lc•d to submit documen lat1on on ac-tual expenses and or refund to the city the overp;t\. menh hl• harl recrl\·cd for ., pcrao<I ot Hi months. \tr Bonfa !'l.11ms now th<1t thl'rl' '' "' no 't0l.1l1on invoh ed in hh l'i•rl1t•r requirement that all d1•p.1rt nwnl al torneys sign a ... a ror11ltt11>n ol l'mployment an .1grl•1•11wnt that they \.\Ould nor 'c·c.irnp;11~n or run ji.:atost the 1n 1·um lll'nl c·11 \' attorn<'\ ·· If th1 ... w:ts not 1lll~g.1I why ~ould h<- haH· rt•sr1nd<'d and destroyed tnc agrccml·nts upon the review or the D1strir·L Attorney. It i.-; a well known fact that the District Attorney rarely filrs charges when ('orrccltve action related to a v1olalion takes place as a r<'sult of Ill\ esttgat1on. This is a ~ood policy. m tht· publtc"s bestm- terest. as at const·n f'" c·ourt time and ta'<dollars The rharJ!t' th,il rnom•y ~as spent in l!lit\ 1111 1111h11fco lrgal counSt•I "'lho111 lu n1•l1t o( lawful appro' al h' th1· l 11 \ l'111mc1l has mf'rat 1'111• t'tl\ C'1111nc il in fh.'cem h<-1 111 llli ; approved thl' ,. ' p (' n 1! 1 I II r ( I II I' \ (' (' u t • v (' sl':.s1on .. 111 tlh•j;.'..tl ,t('l, upon lh1• reromnu 111t.1t1un nr Ctlv Al· tOI nC'\' Honl .1 Allhoui.:h una\\ .ire· of the filin1: of the ..,1111 11111 II rc•mhng of it in tht' nt•w<.,p.1pt•r.., I o.,·1v hurray for Citv Cn1111<'1lpt•r.,on Richard Slehert rm havm~ tht' coura~e to follow 111 ... ron' Ht 10M by filini: thl-. !'la ... ~ ,1r t1011 '1111 nn twhalf or lhl11l1n~tn11 ll1•Jrh taxpnyers h('1·:1U'-I' tht•\ h:i\1• tndt'Crl twen rl p pct I n(f I l>H Ui\I:\ 1'. FABER • I rlln~ /rnm r~IJtJt>rt ON' u,.komt> na• nyht to r<>nd""'" lntfn to fit • 'flO"'" ur rhmrnolr flbri IJ r#ttrt>f'd ' '"'""" of 300 words ur ~•• """ ~ , <Jll'l"fl J.W'frrHICt'. AU ~tt:r~ must in· • ..tudr ~lur• and tnt.arlmg oddtfu • but nomei ma11 r>. ~ on ,,... qUl'~I 1f 111//1rant,.rto.1o1a.q ~N"nt. f'Nlrv Will Mt bt pll t I t t Irvine VOL. 71, NO. 81, 4 SECTIONS, .. 2 PAGES T o day's Closing N.Y. S~oeks .TEN CENT High Wire Artist Plunges to Death SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP> -Karl Wallenda, patriarch of the Great Wallendas family of h1gh wire artists, fell 10 stories to his death from a wire ex· I tended between beachfront hotels here today, circus of· ficials said. Wallenda, 73, was doing a pro· I motion for the Pan American t Circus, the circus manager, J James B. Harrington, said. WaUenda, whose family hu been pla1ued by tragedy ln a series of deaths and Injuries dur- ing daredevil performances, fell an estimated 1.20 feet into the driveway of the Condado Holl· day ~nn hotel before hundreds of horrified spectators. Montreal accountant Victor Abboud said he watched the veteran performer teetering on the wire in bcacbfront winds which were "too strong." "I aaw him 10 down on his knee• on the wire and I thought he wu kneelin& to rest," said Abboud. "But then I saw he was shaking. The wind blew him off and be went all the way down bead first." Blood stains •pattered the hotel driveway where Wallenda fell. Harrington said be died in the city's Pre!Jbyterlan hospital soon after the fall at 7:20 PST. Wallenda was performing in San Juan nightly with his grand· daughter Rietta on a so.root wire. Harrington said the Wallendas were hlr.ed for the circus's current run in the cap.~tal of this U.S. com· monwealth. The run started March land finishes April 2. Asked if Wallenda was not warned about the wind, usually strong along San Juan's ex- clusive beachfront hotel strip, Harrin~ten said : "No, he thought it ·was fine. He tested and installed the wire bimael.(." Watlencf• lived \n Sarasota, Fla. His wife, Helen, was with him in San Juan , but not performing. G.ary Williams. a local newsjtaper photograpber, said WaUtnda was leaning lhto the wind as he inched his way·hold- ing a balancing pole across the wire strung between the towers of the Holiday Inn blocks separ.1tted by San Juan's Ashford Avenue. "As be got past the middle, he seemed to be losing it," Williams said. "His balance pole was going up and down. One of the people (See WALLENDA, Page AZ> City S·eeks Bond Issue ·pelay I I ~ Rains Return Mud Dumped, Streets Flood By The Assodaled Press Ra ins returned today unex· pcctcdly to Southern California, dumping mudsltdes on roads. noodmg streets and dousmg un prepared commuters. Three persons were killed when a cement truc:k rear-ended and 2 lroine Planners 'Appointed Unsuccessful City Council can· didale Ell<'n Freund was reap- pointed to the Irvine planning commission Tuesday night along with Commissioner Hank Adler, whale three vacancies remain to be filled The appoantm<•nts were made al a City Council meeting at which other commissions and c o m m i t t t' e s w e r e a I s o re · <'Valuated Com m1ss1oner Freund was re· appointed by Councilwoman Mary Ann Gaido, while Com· missioner Adler was renamed by newly elected Councilman Art Anthony. Ile previously had been appointed by Gabrielle Pryor Mayor Rtll Vardoulis reap· pointed Diane Kent to the Com· mun1ty Services Comm1ss1on Four positions remain lo be failed on that board. Vardoulis also reappointed Lyndon Calerd1 ne lo the 1ransportation Commission, where he wall be joined by two new appointees. They are Joanne Turner, named by Coun· cilman Larry Agran, and Dean • Wilker, named by Anthony. Two positions remain on that com· mission. In a review of other city ad· vlsory groups, council members voted to disband the Cable Television Citizens Advisory Committee and to reassign that function to the Community Services Commission. They also voted to establish an Equestrian Committee but said they will wait until their April 4 meeting to make appointments ~d establish the duties and crushed a passenger car on the slippery southbound Long Beach Freeway north of the Artesia Freeway, the California Highway Patrol said The two men and one Y..Oman occupants Of the car were pronounced dead at Paramount General Hospital Freeway systems and surface roads throughout Los Angeles County were heavily backed up af~er the first rains started fall· ing just before the morning rush hour began before 7 a.m A mudslide dropped on La Cienega Boulevard near the Raldwin Hills, scene of heavy mud damage this month, and the highway patrol issued a STOCKTON HIT BY RAIN-Story I A3 warning to travelers between Rodeo Road and Sl•ker Street. Today's rains, said weatber service specialist Wade Carter. were triggered by a low · pressure system off the coast which is expected to break up by nightfall Carter said partly cloudy skies and a slight chance or rain was forecast tonight and Thursday The National Weather Service said .26 inches of rain fell In downtown Los Angeles between 7 and 8.15 am. today, bringing the season total to 30.65. That contrasts with 8.18 inches last season, a normal of 12 02, but s till hadn't beaten the seasonal record of 38 18 set in 1883, Carter said. The rain struck throughout Southern California, with mud slides closing one Jane of U S. 101 al Rincon Point near the Ventura·Sanla Barbara County line Flash-flood warnings were is· s ued for coastal slopes and foothills of Los Angeles and Orange counties. Irvine Site .Vandalism Tab 85,000 ~ toeponslblUUes or that group. Co ast It rn,.y cost as m uch as $5,000 to replace three concrete slabs in whlc::h vandals scribbled names and left foolprlnlS at tbe construct.ion slr. of an Irvine youth actlvlUea bulldlne, police said today. Weather Partly cloudy throul}l Thursday, Chance of measurable rain 10 per. cent. tonieht aJ'd Thurs· day. Lowa lonlChl 52 to 57. Highs Thuraday p to 68 I NSIDE TOD~ 't' If .,ou want fo put Eoittr dinner on tu toblf quick aa a boWUIJI "'t/OU'U ho~ tinu to ~ ect.brota ll>O, .,. l'ood. PaQf • -~J. •••tts The destruction al the site, 4601 Walnut Ave . ., near Irvine High School, was the second Ume vandals had damaged new· iy po~red sla~. police said. They said the slabs, which measured from 450 to 650 square feet, were still soft when they were vandaUsed Monday night or Tuesday mornlng, police said. They 1ald.tht Ruane Corp., which ia wortins on the slt.e, bad ldt no seeul'ity auardl or ll&hta but that a seven·foot·blgh fence aurrounds the area. I 1 Oil Spill Casualty .,,,,,.....,.... A French medical student holds up the body of an oil·soaked sea bird It was among scores of birds killed by seepage from the shipwrecked supertanker Amoco Cadiz, whirn spilled up to 68.000 tons of crude oil alon~ the Brittany coastiine. At Least 30 Killed In Bw Collision YUMA, Ariz. CAP> -Two Mexican passenger buses col· lided head·on about 40 miles south or the border town or San Luis, killing at least 30 people and in}unng scores of others, San Luis police said The police sald many of the victims burned to death in a fi re tbat erupt.ed after the crash. U. S. Customs agents al the San Luis Port of Entry said Mexican authorities told them that the accident occurr ed about 8 p.m. Tuesday and involved two buses carrying 81 people. They said a small car also was ln· volved, but they did not know how many people were ln the vehicle. Sao Uds police aaict 30 people were killed, but U. S. CUstoms a1ent• said they were told lhe ttaure was closer to 40. Fourteen or the injured were transported lo Yuma Reetonal Medical Center. A nursing supervisor, wbo asked that her name not be used , said four adults and one child were ad· milled with burns, while one burn victim was airlifted to a Tucson hospital and four o\.hers were to be a1rhfted lo a Phoerux hospital. Judy Carne Hospitalized LOS ANGELES (AP) Comedian Judy Came was treat· ed at a hospital afler she col· lapsed from what a sheriff's spokesman said was a possible drug overdose. But a hospital of ficial said the problem was "vertigo and nausea." Miss Came, 38, was released by her private doctor about 45 minutes after her arrival Tues· day at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, said hospital spokesman Larr1 Baum. The "sock.it-to-me" girl of television's "Laugh In" show is schedwed for a bearing April 3 on a misdemeanor marijuana possession charge Suspect Subdued By Wrestli~ ;Hold TEHACHAPI Cl\Pl A 4· year old boy believed to be from Oregon was shaken lo death by a non al a wild animal compound west of here. authorities said. The lion grabbed Corbett S Ma pies when the boy reached through a JO.fool high chain link fence to retrieve a paper airplane Tuesday afternoon. Kern County Coroner Richard Gervais said Young Maples was pulled through an cight·inch gap at the bottom of the fence. and the lion began shaking him violently, Gervais said. Witnesses were unable to dis· tract the 14·year·old lioo, so a policeman shot and killed the animal with a riOe The boy was rushed to a local hos p1tal but was pronounced dead of multiple head wounds and internal inJuries, authorities said The victim's parents ten the hospital after their son was declared dead, and the coroner':-. office had been unable to locate them by this morning, Gervais said The father apparently had been applying for a JOb at the com pound which keeps animals for use In movies, the coroner added. Officials did not know where the fam.Hy lived in·Oregon. E4R SUCING BRINGS JAIL LIMA, Peru (AP) -A man who cut another man's e&r In halt at a 1.978 New Year'11 Party has been t need to a year in jail and a fine equivalent lo $92.30. Oanlel Esteban 1Uvtera 's lawyer said his cUent htd bffn drinklna wt.en t>. halved \be ear of Teotllo pe. He 11ktd the Ju.dee '°" len.lency. Board Makeup Probed By JACKIE HYMAN OI U. o.lly l"ltet Staff The lrvme City Council asked the Irvine Ranch Water 01stnct Tuesday lo postpone action on a proposed $1 6 billion bond issue Council members asked the JR WO to wail until after the June 6 general eleclton and until the state attorney general issues an opinion as lo whether or not the compos1 t1on of the district s board of d1rectors is constilu· tional An IRWO representative at the meeting said the counc1l's request will be discussed al nn IR WO board meeting Monday The city has requested the at torney general's opinion. Coun cilmcn questioned the structure of the IRWD's seven·man board, rive or whose members are ap. pointed by landowners ratber than elected. The major land- owner in the city is the Irvine Company. IR WD directors have asserted th•t. under state law, a water dlatrlct board doesn't have to be elected by popular vote until more than half the district as urbanized. Although council m embers ga\e no spec1f1c reasons for their request that action be de· laycd unl1l after June 6, that 1s the dale wh{'n the Jarvis amend· ment, Propos1t1on 13. will come before the public in !'ltatewid<' balloting Propos1llon 13 eventual}) would cut property taxes to 1 percent of market value lRWO board members ~aid earlier this week that. ir their bond issue as approved before June 6, 1t wouldn't be affected should Proposition 13 pass. The bond issue would cover the distncl 's share of a major water pipeline from Yorba Lin da and provide for poss1bll' sewer and water serv1c<' to un developed land during the next 30 years The bond measure would be one of the largest in Orange County history. In add1t1on lo the City of Irvine. the IRWO covers part of Tustin. El Toro and unin· corporaled Irvine Company prop· erty between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach The election also would establish new improvement dis- tricts within the mwo. If a May election is called by <See BONDS, Page AZ) Naked Patient Captured in ~outh Laguna ~ A 23.year.old mental patient frightened residents or Thre~ Art'h Bay by breaking into then· homes Tuesday afternoon after escaping from South Coa,,t Community Hospital II' South Laguna andsprmting naked down South Coast Highway. Sh eriff's deputies said the man jumped through a window at South Coast Community Hospital's mental ward around 1 :30 p.m. Tuesday and headed south. Once inside the posh complex. deputies said, the dlstrau«ht P•· tlent be1an breaking windows, frlaht.enin1 neighborhood tes1· dent.fl. Officers nid the man inhaled a can ol hair spray at one res· ideotc. Myers was finally ar· reat.ed at 2 Portola by ,heriff's deput.i ... He was transported to UC Irvine Medical Center for ob aerv1tion. --,, -- ltor - l ' £ll DAIL V P1LOT W~, U9'Ctl !!, 1171 ~Constru,ction Cut? Irvine Company Eyes Home Reduction 81 JOANNE REYNOLDS Of It. D.Ml1 ""'9t ..... Irvine Co. otnatals sald Tues· day night they would cut future home conllnaclion on the firm'• undeveloped land in Newport Beach by 20 percent. The pledge, made by David Neisch, a consultant for the land fl rm, came durln1 the atudy HHion held weekly aa part of the clty'e cWTenl review of how Fro..P"fleAJ WALLENDA. who work with him In the act '11(H watchin1 from the roor. He yelled: 'Sit down! Sil down 1 • Wallenda sat. but he missed the wire and went down," said Williams Wllhanu aa1d the hundreds of people watching from lbe ground and hotel balconies screamed. ''The people who work with Wallenda in the act ran around m a panic, screaming 'Oh my God! Oh my God!' Everybody was hysterical. People were tainting, collapsing on the ground." Two men in the Wallenda act were killed m Detroit on Jan. 30, 1962 when a human pyramid col· lapsed oa the high wire at the Slate Fair Coliseum. Mario Wallenda, then 22, waa paralyzed from the waist down m the 35-foot fall. Dieter Schepp, 23, whose missed step caused the pyramid to topple, and Richard Faughnan, 29, were killed Karl Wallenda hung by has legs from the wire and caught Christina Schepp. 17, sister of the dead man, as she fell. Karl's brother, Herman, 60, taught the wire and Herman'• son, Gunther, 34, managed to re· main standing. Herman and Gunther were back on the wire the next night. "We (•an't lose our nerve," said Karl. who suffered pelvic injuries. "We must go on ... this is the first time anything like this has happened in 38 years with the act." There was no net in the Detroit performance. The state legislature made nets man· datory after that. A11 6,000 people watched in horror, Schepp, who waa making his first appearance In the act, cried out: "I can't hold on an,. longer." Then the pyramid col· lapsed. Faughnan was Karl Wallen· da's son·in·law. Wallenda, who began performing in 1920, was back on the ware w1ttun 24 hours of the tragedy. He said at the time: "Our hfe ia show business. Without show business we do not survive and we have to exist." Frow1 Page AJ BONDS ••• IRWD directors, each Individual district will vote only on its own bonded indebtedness. Since occupied areas would be affected only by the $2.5 million pipeline cost, registered voters could only vote on their share of that expenditure. The remainder of the $1 .6 billion bond Issue would be voted on by owners of uninhabited areas, chiefly the lrvine Co. The. bond.a would be repaid by property owners in those areas. Irvine Group Set For Europe Tour A cultural arts tour of Europe will be offered by Jrvlne's cultural arts division Aug. 13· Sept. 3. Cost, including meals, performances, accommodation and transportation, is $1,975. Ad· ditional information is available by calllna Donna Schep at 754-3639. OttANOI COAIT DAILY PILOT much density to allow on the 900 vaeant acres remalnln1 In the city. The statement drew maxed re· actions Crom about SO audience members. Of the cJt1's undeveloped 900 acres, about 325 acres are owned by the Irvin e Co. and are earmarked for homes and apart· ments. Neiscb said the oresent ............ 10 STORIES TO DEA TH Wire W•lker W•ltend• Upper Bay Bird Watching Tour Planned The tlnal tour of the ml1ratory bird season will be held SatW'· day when members of the Friends of Newport Bay guide walking groups around the Up· per Newport Bay. The tours are free and no. reservations are required. Those who wish to join in should be at the intersection or Easbluff and Back Bay drives between 9 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. Each tour will depart as soon as a group of about 25 assembles. -general plan would allow the land company to build about 2.450 units on that land. He said conceptual plans prepared by the Irvine Co. now call for a total or 1.~ units, • reduction ot 485 units. According to Neisch, "this density reduction may be even greater on those of our residen· tial altes that overlook the Upper Bay. Thia includes such parcels as the Newporter North, Castaways and Westbay." To prove Neiach 's point, Irvine Co. statt member Keith Greer, ln discussing plana for Newporter North, said that, in· stead ol building the allowed 70. umts, the company would only put 440 homes on the site north of the Newporter Inn, a reduc· lion of 37 percent. • The land company's plans for the Jamboree Road develop. ment were among four "concept plans" unveiled by Greer at the meeting. The four parcels -Newporter North, Westbay, Big Canyon and a former freeway parcel on MacArthur Boulevard -are be· Ing plaMed for townhouses. Greer stressed the proposal• are geared to the general plan discussion and they are a Ions way from being the specific type of plans necessary for city ap. proval or coastal zone permit applications. He estimated that it could be at least two to three yean before all the neceuary ap· provals are gathered and con· struction WO?'k begins. Westbay with 71 acres stretching alon1 Irvine A venue north ol Santiago Drive and Newporter North with 88 acres were the two ~iggest sites dis· cussed. The other two pieces are each less than 15 acres. .,..,., l'llM 5i.tt -SAN JOAQUIN RESERVOIR SITS NEARLY EMPTY WHILE OFFICIALS WAIT FOR RAIN TO STOP Routine Maintenance Started Five Month• Ago Can't Be Flnlahed Untll Weather Cleara Reservoir Awaits Work Weather Interferes With Routine Maintenance What be1an as a routine main· tenance pro1ram five months a10 has turned Into a weather watch for officials at the Irvine Ranch Water District. And while they watch. the mllUon·1allon San Joaquin res· ervoir sits nearly empty. An IRWD spokesman ex· plained today that the reservoir, which sits atop a hlll separating Newport Beach from Irvine, was drained for routine main · tenance. Before the holdine facility could be completely drained and cleaned, It started raining and rainwater and mud flowed into the reservoir. which also 1s used for stora1e by the city of Hunt· inirton Beach, the Costa Mesa County Water District and the Coastal Municipal Water Dis· trict. According to Edy Jorgensen. a s pokeswoman for the district, the small amount of water that 1s preventing the cleaning of the reservoir can't be drained until the rain stops. "When we orig1nally took down the reservoir, we did 1t just by letting the water be used in our system and not replacing it," she said. ''But the rain has kicked up a lot of mud and we can't let that out through the system, so we have to wait for it to stop raining so we can just let that runoff water drain " But customers have not been suffering a water shortage. Mrs. Jorgensen explained that Metropolitan Water District water has been going directly in· to local water systems. without being stored in the r eservo'ir first She said dis trict officials aren't sure when \.\Ork on the r eser voir will be completed. ''We 'll finish up whenever it s lops raining," she said. Greenbelt Action Postponed By KATHY CLANCY Oft"" O.lty "i.t S\lff Action to preserve the 10,000-acre Laguna Greenbelt will have to await the outcome of property tax proposals on the June 6 ballot, Orange County supervisors ruled Tuesday. The board asked county plan· ners to work the next two months with city of(jclals in Laguna Beach and Irvine on ways to implement a three.year s tudy on preservin1 the 10,000 acres s urroundioa Laguna Beach. The study, financed with $8,500 in county, Laguna Beach and Irvine funds, recommends preserving most of the land as a public resource. It also calls for s harp limits on development to preserve scenic ridgelines a.pd maintain wildlife Corona del Mar along the shore lo South Laguna and inland along the sides of La~una Can· yon Iload tu nearly the San Diego fn·eway The 74l·acre preserve Is owned and operated by the state Department of Fish and Game and staff biologist Preston Johns wilt be available during the tours to explain the depart· ment's plans for restoration or the marsh. lroine 's Attorney Appeals DA Action And as a way to implement the preservation plan, the rePQrt suggests a possible increase in the county's Harbors, Beaches. and Parks District tax rate to ranance public purchase of prime open space. Without delving into cost estimates, the study team also suggested that city officials pro- vide some financing for green· belt open space in their boun danes and that state authorities be asked for help. Thl' "report identifies as top priorities for acquisition the Sycamore Hills property, 520 acres between Laguna Canyon and El Toro Roads, as well as • the rid1eline Marcroft and DeWitt pro perties east or Laguna Canyon The re-port calls for rreating a regional park m the Sycamore llllls area and suggests another regional park might be created along lower reaches of Aliso Creek Irvine Plans Cultural Arts Summer Camp Registration is now being ac· cepted for a six-week cultural arts summer day camp to be sponsored by the city of Irvine's cultural arts division. The camp for childreta and teenagers age 5 lo 17 will be held July 5 to Aug. 11 from 9 a m . to 4 p .m . each day. Classes and workshops in art, acting and music will be offered along wtth field trips. The cost is $45 for one child, $75 for two children, $95 for three children and $110 for four children, with some scholarships available. Information is available from Donna Schep at 754·3639. Plant Knocked Out SACRAMENTO CAP> - Replacement of a tiny Ugh\ bulb caused a short circuit that has knocked the Rancho Seco nuclear power plant out of com· miasion for several daya, utllity officials say. The Irvine city attorney re· quested the Orange County Dis· tricl Attorney's office Tuesday to reconsider its decision not to in· vest1gate alleged campaign fr. regularities m the city's recent municipal election. Deputy District Attorney Wilham Evans, who made the de· c1sion not to investigate, said to- day that his finding will probably be reviewed by someone else in the department. The a ll eged violations involved the campaigns of newly elected Councilman Larry Agran and wt· s u ccessful candidate Ellen Freund City Attorney James Erickson has repeated his request that the district attorney's office in· vesllgate the expenditure by Irvine Tomorrow, a local com- munity action group. of $1.052 in bf.'half olthetwo candidates. It 1s alleged that the donation violated a city ordinance restrict- ing contributions to candidates at $250 per individual donor and that the candidates had not properly reported the expenditure. Evans said he decided earlier this week that the allegations s hould not be reviewed because ''ll 's a special ordinance unique to ·the city ol Irvine and solely of local concern." He said the district attorney's Blood Needed Donors Sought in Newport You can combine your shoppin1 with a trip to the blood bank Monday or Tuesday In Newport Beach. THE aED CROSS, which saya ita blood auppUu are low, wiU stallon a bloodmobile at the Marriott Hotel from 2 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. Monday. Anyone can drop in and leave a pint of their blood, provlded the phyaical requirementa for donors are met. On Tuesday. another temporary blood bank will be set up from 12:.U p.m. lo 5:30 p.m. In the employee•' canteen on tbe second fioor ol lhe J.C. Penney 1lt>re in Fuhloo Island. ' office has a contract to in- vestigate violations of Irvine city ordinances at the city's request but that "the contract provides that we need not do so if Wf.' feel the matter is solely or local concern." Director Killed MADRID. Spain (AP) -With bis wife watching helplessly from a balcony window. three gunman assassinated Spain's 40-year.old director or prisons. Jesus Haddad, outside his Madrid home today after he got into his official car and was about to be driven to work. police reported. County officials also said dis- cussions the next few months wlll have to center in part on the possible impact or recently enacted property tax reform legislation as well as potential passali(e in June of the Jarvis Gann initiative which would restrict property taxes. The report ldent1ries the greenbelt as one of three re- maining major open space areas on the Southern California coast The area stretches from Scotchman's Cove south of In add1t1on. the study endors~ state plans to acquire Moro Can- yon along the Irvine coastline. The report n o t e d auto" generally should be limited to exis ting roadways and the planned San Joaquin Hills Cor- ridor. Anderson Wins C HICAGO !AP) -Rep. John B Anderson, chairman of the House Republican conference and the third-rankin~ GOP con· g r f.'ssma n, h as sur vived a serious primary scare from ul- tra conservative clergyman Don Lyon 1110 Apollo Nylon upper Ou1sodf' ti'!! hN'I courtlftr P9ddlcl tl)l'IQU"I ~ "'•ibl" tool·la.m nylon sole Screw '" spct.e system. s159s ' . - AO 10S2 ,.,.,.,.odet l.lgM IOI>. foem pedded UoP9f1 ~ •l'lllln for firm, com. IOttlble 1uppor1. leather ..... I (O)adidas I Open 9 to 6 -Cosed Sunday S'IJ9S 538 Center 646-1919~ " • c Lagu~a/South Coast Afternoon N.Y. Stoeks OL. 71, NO. 81, _.SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TEN CENTSl .. WEDNESDAY, MARtH 22, 1978 Surprise: Rain Again Deluges Coast By The A..saodated Press Rains returned today unex- pectedly to Southern California. dumping mudslides on roads. flooding streets and dousing un- prepared commuters. Two or three people were , killed when a cement truck ,_crushed a passenger car on the 'slippery southbound Long Beach : Freeway north of the Artesia Freeway , the California lUgbway Patrol said. Freeway systems and surface roads throughout Los An&eles County were heavily b,cted up after the first rains started fall- ing just before the morning ru,,h hour began before 7 a.m. A mudslide dropped on La Cienega Boulevard near the Baldwin Hills, scene of heavy mud damage this month. and the highway patrol issued a o.i1y Pli.t JCatt ..-. CRESCENT BAY STAIRWAY CAUSES DEBATE Laguna Man Ordered to Remove Structure Laguna Pits Stairs Against Paper Work A La~una Beach man has been mdered to tear down a ~ta1rw a) leadin~ from has bluff· top homt' lo Crescent Bay tx>ach within 100 days or com- p I elf' a \ ariancc procedure which cat~ officials claim he ig no red Tht' acl1cm by Assistant City Managt'r Terry Brandt came al the conclusion of an hour and a half nuisance abatement hear ing in whi ch s pokes men for the city and the homeowner argued whether a i.ta1r~ay ever existed on the parcel Richard W Barrett, who lives at 263 Cn•sct•nt Bay Drive con· "ested a planning department ~tipulataon thal he needed a variance to construct the redwood stairway last June. saying he was merely replacmg a pre-existing structure leadmg down the bluffs to the beach .. ~low. · But city officials claim there never was a stairway on the • cures and presented slides taken spveral years ago lo prove their )So int And they say they have wit· oesses -including a former owner or the home -who say ~here was never anythine more ... L Coast \\'ea th er P arlly cloudy through Thursday. Chance of measurable rain 10 per- cent toni.lht and Thurs- day. Lowa toniaht 52 to 57. Hiaha Thursday 63 to 68. INSIDE TODAY .,,. I/ you want to put Ea1t~r dlnnn °" lht! table quick cu c bunny '° JIOU'U haw time to cttebrot1 too. •tt Food, Pcge CJ. than a footpath leading to the beach. Barrell, on the other hand, claims he can gel testimony from a neighbor, "who visited the home on many occasions and observed the stairway ." And attorney John Frazer. re· tained by Barrett for the nuisance abatement hearing, challenged the city's aerial photographs of the Crescent Bay chffs, asking who took the slides and at what altitude the photo· graphs were taken. But Brandt told Frazer he wanted to retain an informal at- mosphere in the hearing, saying the purpose of the hearine was to establish whether the proper procedures had been followed for the stairway construction. Brandt found the project in violation, claim1ng the work was done without benefit of a permit, and that the homeowner failed to obtain a variance, requittd because the stairway en- croaches into the required set- back from the ocean. Barrett must receive city ap- proval of the project befoTe <See'~AIRS, Page A!) Naked Patient Captured in South Laguna A 23-year--Old mental patient frightened residents of Three Arch Bay by breakine into their homes Tuesday afternoon aflei-escaping Crom South Coast Community Hospital In South Laeuna and sprintina naked down South CQast ffigbway. Sheriff's d eputies said the man jumped throuatt a window at. South Coast Commun\ty Hospital'• mental ward ai'o\md 1: 30 p.m. Tuad•y and headed &OUth. Once in&ide the posh complex, . dopulies said: the dJatrauicbt pa- Uont began oreaklnt windows, frlghteruni uelahborhood retl· dent.I. Offtc ra 1"4 the man lnhlled a can ol ball •PtlY at one n:s· idence. My was f1Dall1 ar- rnttd ii 2 itola by abe.rttr1 ~ I J warnln1 to travflen between Rodeo Boad And stocker Street. Today's ra1Ds, said weather service specialist Wade Carter, STOCKTON HlT BY RAIN-Stoty. A3 were trigeered by a low- pressure :system off the coast which ii expected to break up by nlehtfall. Carter said partly cloud~ 11dd and a sllebt chance of ralll wu forecast tonight and Thursday. The NaUonal Weather Service said .2S inches of rain fell in downtown Los Angeles between 7 and l :Ui a.m. today, bringing the aeason total to 30.65. That contraata with 8.18 jnches last season, a nocmal of 12.02, but still hadn't beaten the seasonal rtte>rd or 38.18 set in 1883, Carter said. The rain struck throughout Southern Callfornla, with mud slides clos.lng one lane of U.S. 101 at Rincon Point near the Venlura..santa Barbara County line. Rain fell in the Grapevine area south of Bakersfield, but California Highway Patrol Of- ficer Jerry Hennes said Jn- terslate 5 at that pass remained Daredevil Wallenda Plunges From Wire· SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) Karl Wallenda, patriarch of the Great Wallendas famlly of high wire artists, fell 10 stories lo his death from a wire ex- tended between beachfront hotels here today, circus of- ficials said. Wallenda, 73, was doing a pro- motion for the Pan American Circus, the circus manager, James B. Harrington, said. Wallenda, whose family has been plagued by tragedy in a series of deaths and injuries dur- ing daredevil performances, fell an estimated 120 feet into the driveway of the Condado Hoh- day Inn hotel before hundreds of horrified spectators. Montreal accountant Victor Abboud said he watched the veteran performer teetering on the wire in beacbfront winds which were "loo strong." "I saw him go down on his knees on the wire and I thought he was kneeling to rest," said Abboud. "But then J saw he was shaking. The wind blew him off and he went all the way down head first." Blood stains spattered the hotel driveway where Wallenda fell. Harrington said he died m the city's Presbyterin hospital soon after the fall at 7:20 PST. W alJenda was performing in San Juan nightly with his grand· daughter Rietta on a 50-foot wire. Harrington said the Wallendas were hired for the circus's current run in the capital of this U.S. com- monwealth. The run started March t and finishes April 2. Asked if Wallenda was not warned about the wind, usually strong along San Juan's ex- clusive beachlront hotel stnp, Harrington said: "No, he thought it was Cine. He tested and installed the wire himself." <See WALLENDA, Page A2) ltlan Kills Doomed Wile open despite a threatening mudslide. Flash-flood warnings were is- s ued for coastal s lopes and foothills of Los Angeles and Orange cowtlies. The snow level, sajd Carter. was reported at 7 ,000 feet. Malibu, which suffered ex- tensive damage in earlier s torms, was aiajn plagued by mudslides and heavy rain today. Arwi..,.... 10 STORIES TO DEATH Wire Walker Wallenda SC Permit For Ranch Appealed Slaying Cheats 'Hell' ByANNSCOOPBa Of 1M Delly l"li.4 Si.tf San Clemente City Council ap- grov al of a use permit allowing residential, C90Ullercial and in- dustrial development of 1,770 acres on the Forster Ranch has been appealed by Councilwoman Myrtis Wagner. The City Council voted 3-2 Jast week, with Mn. Wagner and NORTON SHORES, Mich. (AP) -"I would rather spend an •t.-nltr JQ · htU Utan to 1ee Molly \tve a lite or heU," said the note found near the embracing bodies of Lyman and Molly Briggs, Police satd Briggs, 66, wrote the note before he killed his can- cer-stricken wife, Molly, 58, and then killed himself Tuesday. A single .32-<:aliber bullet was in the right temple or each 'Police Chief Charles Curtis said Mrs. Briggs was on a bed in the living room while her husband lay with bis face and arms in .her la~ "I don't want to call this a murder case. He obviously loved her a lot," tbe chief said. But Curtis added a routine police Investigation is under way. A son, Tyler, 24, told police after the bodies were discovered that his father loved his mother deeply and had watched her suf· fering for a Jong time. Jerry Cook. a neighbor, (Councilman Howard Mushett op. posed, to "receive and file" the city planning commission's rec- ommendation to approve the use permit. Unless the use permit had been called up for review by the City ColUlcil majority or was ap. pealed by the developer or "any person," said City Clerk Max Berg, the use permit would become finaJ, with no public hearing. Greenbelt Action Delayed by County The proposed Forster Ranch development in north San Clemente, inland of the San Diego Freeway and south of the Shorecliffs tract, came under public attack before the plan- ning commission. One outspoken critic was Mrs. Wagner. who has since charged four planning commissioners with conflicts of interest ln serving on the panel. Mrs. Wagner said Berg told her at 4:43 p.m. Thursday he had j usf discovered that ~e had until 5 p.m. under the dy code to me an appeal of the City Councn•s use permit approval. "You never saw anybody move so fast." she said today. "My husband and I arrived at city baU at c>ne minute to five." The appeal cost Mra. Wagner a $50 lee1 Which lhe .aaid sbe paid with ner own mouey~ Ber• saJd ·he baa scheduled a public heating on the F01'Ster Ranch us, permit and environ- mental ltapact Teport on April 19. Mrs. Wagner, as the ap- pellant, will not be allowed to <See llANCff, Pa1e A2> By KATHY CLANCY Of• Mir l"f• llafl Action lo preserve the 10,000-acre Laguna Greenbelt will have to await the outcome of property tllx proposals on the June 6 ballot, Orange County supervisors ruled Tuesday. The board asked county plan- ners lo work the oext two months with city olficials in Laguna Beach and Irvine on ways to implement a three-year study on preserving the 10,000 acres surroundin1 Laguna Beach. The study. financed with $8,500 in county. Laguna Beach and Irvine funds, recommends preserving most or the Jand as a public resource. It aJso caJls for sharp limits on development to preserve scenic rtdgellnes and maintain wildlife. And as a way to implement the .,reaentatJon plan. the report suggests a possible increase in the county's Harbors, Beaches, and Parks District tax rate to finance ,public purchase or prime OI*tspace. Without delving into cost estimates, the study team oho Taffy's Puppy Legitllaton Replace Dog AUGUSTA. Mame <AP) -Rep. Stanley "Tuffy'1 Laffin, who complained that hl wile took his dog wben she left hint, has a new puppy -thanks to the bipartisan ettorfs of fellow state Jeg~lators. The cigar-chomping Republle!an from We tbri>Ok, whose nitkname t,yplftes his feisty debat-ing Al)IJO, told the Maine House recently durina de- bate boUt t.he harp seal hunt: ••1 remember when my wJf left me. I was alad stie left, but when I (ound thilt she took my puppy, 1 cried." A ••committee for Tufty'• Puppy" was formed and on.'l'uesda)'. Rep. John Joyce, D·Portlal'td, took the s 's rostrdm to, In hls words, "rlght a great wrong.•• ..-.~_.-..... L&mn cal WfttMl\Q bbf pUll ' suggested that city officials pro· vide some financing for green- belt open space in their boun- daries and that state authorities be asked for help. County officials also said dis- cussions the next few months will have to center in part on the possible impact or recently- enacted property tax reform legislation as well as potential passage in June or the Jarvis- <See DELAY, Page A2) lion Grabs, Kills Boy, 4, Then Shot TEHACHAPI (AP) -A 4- year-old boy believed to be from Oregon was shaken to death by a lion at a wild animal compound west of here, authorities said. The Jion grabbed Corbett S. Mapleit when the boy reached through a 10-foot. high chain link fence to retrieve a paper airplane Tuesday afternoon, Kem County Coroner Richard Gervais said. Young Maples was pulled through an eight-inch gap at the bottom oC tbe fence, and tbe lion began shaking him violently. Gervaiswd. Witnesses were unable to dis- tract Lbe 14-year-oJd lion, so a policeman shot and killed the animal with a rifle The boy was rushed to a local hoapltal but was pronounced dead of multiple bead wounds and internal tnjurle&. authoritieseald. The victim's parents len the hospital after their son was declared dead, and the coroner's oftict bid been unable to locate thern by 1.bll mont.lnl, Gervais sald. • The fatber apparently bad been applyin( for • Job at Ut. com~d wb.WI kee~ lnlmal!t for Ule U1 moYt.I, the co r added. Ottldils dtd 11ot khO the f amlb' llvta In Ort.lfOb . -•'\: . ....._... described the couple as "'pre cious neighbors. She was the type to cover up the dog in cold weather ... He was the type 01 man who would help anyone.·· Mrs. Cook said Briggs retired la1t year to care for his wife but needed to work one week per month lo maintain insurance coverage for Mrs. Briggs. "We were their neighbors for 15 years. They were the best in the world. And, they're not in hell," Mrs. Cook said. refemng to the note Briggs left behind. At ~ast30 Die as Tiro Buses Collide YUMA, Ariz. CAP) -~ Two Mexican passenger buses col laded head-on about 40 miles south of the border town of San Luis, killing at least 30 people and injuring scores of others, San Luis police said. The pohce said many or the victims burned to death m a flre that erupted after the crash. U. S. Customs agents at the San Luis Port of Entrt-said Mexican authorities toJd them that the accident occurred about 8 p.m . Tuesday and involved two buses carrying 81 people. They said a small car also was in volved, but they did not know how many people were in the vehicle. San Luis police said 30 people were killed, but U. S. Customs agents said they were told the figure was closer to 40. Fourteen of the injured were transported lo Yuma Regional Medical Center. A nursing supervisor, who asked thal her name not be used, said four adults and one child were ad- mitted with burns, while one burn victim was airlifted to a Tucson hospital and four others were lo be airlifted to a Phoenix hospital. Liglw Ord For Ghost? WASIUNCTON (A P> - Tbe ahost or naval hero Stephen Decatur failed to show at his former home Tuesday But potlce said lights ~nl out. (or the first lime In yeara al tho atte oC the duellnt ,round where he was shol 158 years aao Two Cf>08t legends con. ~roiq Decetur, hero of lho Barbar)' War and tbe War of 1Bl2, teated at. locaUGn$ ell)lt mil apart TUeadQ nig}\t. If tor - l \ ~ t r :.. s a !I it' Id e. ld "' ;s r O· w d- "\l' la 'e· ng Jd ig. od 11- bv ti~ if b it" to SI ... Ctl lal >re· a~­ nd ld- Jd· re· "t'n lCh 110 1C1l m tre aer lily Ile lhe 'ise nge the ses, the ~the f\8S lda. unn ill!i. ms. 111ly. lthe ual. ,VIS ..... ~·" ...... .. -...... ........ Diedrich ;Appeal , ·Weighed By GARV GRANVILLE Ol t• D•llY l'llM Si.II Orange County Supervisors Ralph D1edr1ch and Philip An· thony won't know until later this week if pleas to have their criminal indjctments dismissed will be answered. Anthony, Diedrich and their co-defendants' attorneys spent Tuesday m court attemptini to convince Superior Court Judge Mason Fenton the indictments should be thrown out. At the end of the day, Judge Fenton said he will rule on the motions to d1sm1ss later this week. The indictments charge Diednch, Anthony, Anaheim Cl· ty Councilman Wilham Kott and onetime financier Gene Conrad with violating ~late campaign regulations. When banded down last J'U.ly 1. the indictments aJso charged Fullerton attorney Michael Remingtoo with joining in a 1S76 criminal conspiracy to violate campaign regulations. Remington, however, has already pleaded guilty lo a single charge and no longer figures in the case except as a possible prosel'ulJon witness. The campaign irregularity in· diclment L'S JU.'t one of two cases pending against Diedrich. He was named Dec lS an a multiple-count tnd1ctment that charges ham and architect LeRoy Rose with bnbery related otrenses. Those problems for lhe sec:.'ODCI district supervisor were put on the back burner Tuesday as lhe lawyers argued for quashing of the 1><>litica1 coospiracy indict· ment. It alleges the four defendants with 101rung in a conspiracy to hide the true source of money funneled into Koll and Anthony campaigns The dl'f<.'nsc lawyers argued th£' 1nd1 cl mt>nt s hould be <JUashc•d bc"a11sc Challenges lo Prop. 9, the law governing campaign pral'· ticl'S 1n Cahfornia, have been up- held on constitutional grounds by a Los Angeles County judge -The Grand Jury that handed down the mdJclment was acting illegally because its term officially expired 12 hours before it voted to 1ndJct the defendants. -Judge Fenton already pulled the Orange County Dis· trict Attorney's Office from pro- secutaon of the use on "rounds grounds of the appearance of bias. a f10d1ng the defense lawyers said taant.s the DA 's role in the mdJctment process. -Not all the grand jurors who voted for the indictment were present at all secret hearings leading to the charges. Host F amities For Exchange Teens Sought Jlost famahes are needed for 35 Italian students expected to come to Mission Viejo and San Juan Capistrano through the E .F . Cultural Exchange Homestay Program in June. The s tudents, who are scheduled to arrive ror a month•s stay on June 22, come ~1th insurance and spending money and the desire lo be treated as members of American £amllies. During their stay, the stu· dents, aged 14 to 19, will attend morning classes in English language and American culture at Saddleback College. Interested families are asked lo call Bill Hoffman or David Bratton-Kearns, program coordinators, after 6 'p.m . or weekends at 494-4238. Host famllies are interviewed and will be allowed lo chose the age and sex of the student who stays with them. OAANGI COAIT LISC DAILY PILOT • IMlty ... Sc.ff .... :-., ~ W add.ill: 'I'd :· =· .:. Do It Again' .·' By TOM BARLEY Of U. o.llt .. I,_ Sa.ff , Dr. WilUam Ba~ter Wad.dill told aa Orange County Superior Court Jury Tueada.y ~at U be were lo again confront the sltua-· t.lon he faced in Westminater Communit1 Holplta1 on March 2. urn. b1s actlom would be ex-actlJ the same todQ as they went.bell. Tbe Huntincton Harbour physician testified dwi.q a Jong day of Cf'OU examination that lhe death of a baby 1irl follow- ing an abortion be performed on the mother was "unavoidable aod inevitable. ·'I don't know Does it make any difference'!'· Wadel.ill replied. "Do you really care!" Chat· terloo uked the witness, flushed with anaer. Tempers flared on both sides of the counsel table as Cbat. terton intemified his questioning or Waddill and repeatedly ac· cused the defendant of falling to answer ~questions. Defense attorneys Charles Weedman and Malbour Watson repeatedly got to their feet to protest the form or the prosecu- taon questioning but got Jillie sympathy from Judge James K. Turner. He overruled all but two or the objections tOf • l D· m MYSTERY DONATION OF $15,000 BUYS CAGES FOR LAGUNA'S HOMELESS ANIMALS Nancy Goodwin of Pet Responslblllty Committee Checks Out Shetter Gifts ''There wu no way in tbe world that that baby could have lived," Waddill told prosecutor llobert CbaUertoo aft.er again denyiQ& tbat be straqled tbe in· Cant iD the bospltal nursery. ... used IQY stethoscope OD the fetus and burcl notbina. I felt UOUAd the tbroat for a pulse and felt notb.ina. And I only saw agoaal (dying) gasps," be t.esunec1. ll 1s alleged by the prosecution that Waddill strangled the baby after be realized that the saline solution that be injected into Uie mother 12 hours earlier had failed to abort the fet~. Io an effort lo refute E'rorre Page .4 l WALLENDA Wallenda hvcd 1n Sarasot a Fla His wife, Helen, wa<; with him in San Juan. but not performing Pet Owner Boosts City Animal Fund "Were those gasps before or after death, doctor?" Chatterton asked the defendant during a murder trial that is packing one of the largest courtrooms in the Santa Ana county courthouse. \ testimony of five prosecution itoesses. Waddill again aimed Tuesday that lhe infant never knew liCe from the mo· ment it was expelled from Ole mother's womb. He said nurses and a doctor were deceived by what he described as agonaJ gasps ahd reflex actions from a dead baby that had been immersed in saline for 12 hours. Gary Williams , a loc a l newspaper photographer. sa11J Wallenda was leaning into lht· wmd as he inched hi s way hold· ing a balancing pole across lht• wire strung between the towers of the Holiday Inn blocks separated by San Juan 's Ashford Avenue "As he got past the middle, h<> see med to be losing it," Williams said. "His balance pole was going up and down One of the pt>0plt• who work with him in the i.H'I was watching from the rnof llfo yelled: ·sit down! Sit down' Wallenda sat. but he m1ssrd the wire and went down ," said Williams. Williams said the hundrc·ds of people watching from the g round and hotel balt'on1es screamed. "The (><'Opie who work with Wallenda in the act ran around m a panic. screaming 'Oh my God' Oh my God'' Everybody was hys teril'al Peopl<' were fainting. collapsing on lht• ground." Two men m the WallenWI act were killed m Detroit on Jan. 30, 1962 when a human p} ram1d rot lapsed on the high wire at tht· State Fair Coltseum Mario Wallenda, then 22, wa-; paralyzed from the waist down tn the 35·foot fall Dieter Schepp, 23. whose missed step raust•d the pyramid t o topplc>, and Richard Fau~hnan , 29. wcrt! killed. Teen Hangs On Thl' Laguna Beach Fund for lnJun•d and Homeless Animals ~ot J $15.000 boost this month from an anonymous South Laguna pet lover who said she wanted the money to direcUy bl'nerit arumals at the city's new shelter. The mystery donor also in· d1l'at£'d she'd like to see an out· doo1 t•al quarters constructed at the old SPCA shelter on Laguna Canyon Road and a spokesman for thl"' cit> 's Pct Responsibi)jty ('om m 1ttcc· said his panel is in llw proct•ss of preparing plans 1111 that project Phil May, president of the Pet Rcspon~ib1hty C'omm1ttee, said oi portion uf the $15,000 windfall 2 Busnappers Tran sf erred SAN QUENTIN CAP) -Con· vie led Chowchilla school bus k1dn •1ppers James and Richard Schoenfe ld have been transfl'rred from Vacaville mt·di(•al facilit) to San Quentm !JI 1son. The mo1.e Tuesday wa s described as "routine" by of· f1cials at Vacaville, where the brothers had been undergoing ps~ chiatric evaluation. FrPd Woods. the other convkt· 1•d k1dnappH, remained at V J l' a ville ror rc>asons that were not di sclosed. Suspect Subdued By Wrestling Hold A 15·year-old high school wrestler, whose family sur prised an alleged burglar in their Balboa Island home, used his athletic abitily to capture the man Tuesday. Police said Wilfred Cooper Jr tackled the man as he was about to flee the Cooper home and then used a wrestler's hold to hang onto him until police arnvect The youth is a member or thr Corona del Mar High School team. Officers booked Thomas Volkening, Z'I, of Culver City, on suspicion or burglary. He is be· ing held in lieu of $10,000 bail. The Cooper family told police they were workint oulllde their home at 546 S. Bayfront at about 10:30 a.m. Tbe senior Cooper said he found Volkenlng stand· ing in an upstairs bathroom when he went indoors. He said Volkening told him be was from a poodle clippang bus1· Reclaimed Water Eyed in Clemente Wider use of the city's reclahned water wtll be dis· cuaaed in San Clemente tonight at a meeUn1 scheduled by a cltlzena' committee repreaenl· lng homeowners• groups. Tbe meeUng will be1in at 7:30 p .m. tn Ctly Council chambers at city hall, 100 Ave. Presidio ne,s 1n Santa Monica and was looking for a Mrs. Robinson, whose dog he was to work on. The Coopers decided to call police and Volkenlng apparently decided to leave until the tecn·a1er restrained him. f'rot11 Page Al RANCH .•• participate in the City Council 's d1sruss1on or the use permit and may not vote on the matter, Berg said. She will be able to ad· dress the City Council as a private citizen, however. •'I initiated this appeal because I believe the people of San Clemente should have an op- portunity to gel up and say whether they want this develop· ment or not," sald Mrs. Wagner today. "We are talking about nearly 5 000 homes, which will have a tremendous impact on our air f1uahty, schools. water, sewers on every facet of our city hfe," she said "Using the developer's proJec· lions, we can look forward to 13,000 car trips a day on Camino de los Maree alone," abe sald. •'I bope people In thll town will wake up and come to the public hearing -or write a let- ter if they can't make the mftt.. lng." The San Clemente Homeowners A1uJoclaUon voted Thursday to aupport Mra. Wa1ner'1 appeal and to relm· burst her for the $50 fllln1 fee. 11Bld Charleit Mlttbell, newly "lected asl'loclatlon president. Asked his reactlob to Mn. Wtfoer'a appeal, Ma1or WllUam Walker •Aid. "It's Coin& lo bo a Iona year if eveey Ume she I• on the abort end of a 8·2 vote 1he appeall. lt'a fQ\q to coat her a lot ol moneJ. ll'• also 101n1 to Ue up a lot ol dl1 butln " has a I ready gone toward purchase or SIX Stainless Steel cat cages which have been in· stalled in the newly acquired canyon facilllles. The South Coast philan- thropist, who asked not lo be identified, presented a check to Jen McMenomy, president ol the Laguna Beach Fund for Injured and Homeless Animals, at the shelter ear)jer this month. May, who is also secretary or the fund group, said portions of the fund will go for drugs for the aoamals, medical care, "and any other way that directly af. fects the animals." He said frills. such ai; a new sign for the facility, "doesn't help the arumals a bit " He said the committee will consider the woman's request for an enclosed ouldoor area for cats. The Pet Responsibillty Com· m1ttee has, for many years, taken the task of findang homes for abandoned dogs and cats rather than keeping them three days and then having them destroyed. E',....P~Al STAIRS .•• · seeking coastal commission en· dorsement, and Tuesday's ac- tion means he will have to get a plan check and a Board of Ad· Justment review and decision before it can go to the coastal commission. Ballot Requested SAN FRANCISCO <AP) Schools Superintendent Wilson Riles has asked the state Supreme Court to order that his name be placed on the June ballot for re-election. despite Secretary or Siate March Fong Eu's h1sistence that he did not tile a required document. Riley Plans l,agnna Talk Fifth District Supervisor Thomas Riley will talk about the Lagana Greenbelt. Moulton Meadows, Laruoa Canyon Road and the proposed San Joaquin Corridor when he meets with Top of the World Neighborhood Association members Thursday nJght. The hillside community group will meet at Top of the World Elementary School be&inning at 8 p.m. to hear Riley discuss the county's position on city mat· ters. There will be an opportunity for Lagunans lo question the supervisor following his com- ments. For more information on the meeting, call president Jo · Franson al 494--4030. CMAOIU Credit Cartb SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -The California Medical Association has decided patients can pay bills with credit cards. At Tuesday's meeting, the CMA House of Delegates adopted the l'redit card resolution, after the m easur e's author, Dr. Arnold J . Breit of San Mateo. said: "It's about time the CMA came into the 2mh Century." After decid11)g it was ethical for the CMA 's 25,000 members to accept credit c1rds from pa- tients. delegates approved a set of rules governing limited advertising by doctors. 1110 Apoflo Waddill told the jury that a fetus cannot survive a saline abortion for any length or linie and would be nothing more than a "brainless vegetable" if it did. ..Anyway, it couldn't bappen. '' Waddill was promptly can- tradkted by Chatterton. Chatterton named three babies he claims are living normal lives and without any evidence of brain damage after survivin~ saline abortions. E'ro. Page Al DELAY .•. Gann initiative which would restrict property taxes. The report identifies tbe greenbelt as one of three re· maining maJor open space areas on the Southern California l'Oast. I t r The area stretches from Scotchman's Cove south of Corona del Mar along the s~re to South Laguna and inlaftd a along the sides of Laguna Can-•I yon Road to nearly the Sao D•t,go freeway The report 1dentif1es as top praorat1cs for acqu1s1t1on the Sy ca more Hills property. 520 acres between Laguna Canyon ... and El Toro Roads, as weU as od the ridgeline Marcrofl and DeWitt properties east of Laguna Canyon. c d s The report calls for creating a regional park in the Sycamore Hills area and suggests another regional park might be created >- a Ion~ lower reat'hes of Ali6o !, Creek. 1.1· In addition, the study endoJ"'S(>S state plan!> lo acquire Moro Can-18 yon along the Irvine coastline. t · The report noted autos 'g generally :>hould be limited': to 1ld existing roadways and the g. planned San J oaquin Hills Cor· nd ridor. ·n-hy •If· 1r I ... t~ c1l ltt •r<· IC- nd Id· Id· re ~n 1ch Nylon upper Outside ,.,., ~I c:oun .. r Padded IO"OUll Fifo•ibl" IOOI foem nylon soi. Screw 1n '9'ile sy-. tem $1895 In •l'tl m· lrl' ler tll} •le lh<' 1S(' 1ge ~he AO 1032 ftl'OmOdel L1Ghl top, foem peddecf uppe~ aurround enlrlet fodlrm.COITI • for11blt 1u119ort. LHlher llr .... 538 Center . 646-1919' ses. the the has .du. unn Ills. ms. sly. the uul. VtS ..... ..... ....... .. -,.._ '-"., ~I FOR NIA JFilm.Ad i Ortlered f On Bwes LOS ANGELES <AP> -Much ' o the dismay of district d.i.rec- ars, Southern California Rapid .'rans1t Dislrict buses h1tve 1een ordered to carry advcrtise- nents for the adult movie "Sex 1/orld." Superior Court Judee George )tll said Tuesday that under a •tale Sup~eme Court ruling, .rapsportation companies owned >Y public agencies must accept 1dverli<ting from anyone. · •THE ONLY exception, he ;aid. is if the ad material is ..Lbelous or obscene. Attorneys for the three Pussycat Theaters and Es&ex Distributing, Inc., filed suit •ceking the ad space for posters .or the film. Dell said the RTD must accept lhe posters, pending another aearing of the case. ESSEX attorney Robert McDaniel said the court ordered ~ Lhe poster to appear on buses by .: next Monday. The RTD bad re- jected the poster March 14 .· because or fear or negative public reacllon, officials said. McDaniel said the poster has n-o pictures. I l reads; •fwestworld was for children, F\Uurewodd was tor teen.agers. t>vt. Sex World. • .is defirutely • for adults." Oakland CBer Intruded on Frequencies OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) - A })am radio operator calling himself Tom Cal and using ii· l~al high-power equipment in- terrupted delicate communica- tions between Oakland Interna· tional Airport <ind a hijacked jetl1nl'r l.i°'l Wl'l'k, a federal Of ik1al has d1sclosl'd. Serge Marti-Volkoff, a Federal Communications Com- mission official, declined to name the CBer who, he said, has agreed to stop using the equip· mcnt and will not be charged. THE IUJACKED plane - later flown to Denver where the incident ended and the hijacker was captured without violence -was stall on the ground al the airport here March 13 when Tom Cat first broke into the air waves loolung for conversation. "Good evening, good eve ning," said the intruder. He was urged to ~cl ore the air in a hurry. Marti-Volkoff said. "As soon as we heard the name Tom Cat. we knew of a local CBer who w as suspected of using over- pow"red equipment.'• FCC investigators later·visited his home about a mile from the airport. and found "a vast array of linear :.implifiers and ~ma teur·typc transmitting ~qu1pmcnt that is illegal to use," )1 arti· Volkoff said. He added 'l' o m C a t w a s • ' v e r y cooperative " "lie didn't know what he was doing, obviously," the FCC of· f1C1al said P~nalty Ruling Reversed Surrender .John A. Ful'rst and Hobcrta Smith. both 33. who ha\'e hel'n identified by the FBI as members of the Weather Underground, s urrendered Tuesday to the U.S. At· torney's office in San Francisco, on federal explosives charges pending since 1971. • Wednesday Match 22. 197& DAILY PILOT AS Gasolille Shortage Seen • I ' t I State Deficiency P'redicted in (JO Days : I l I SACRAMENTO (AP> -California may have a gasoline shortage in a couple of months because or a crude oil glut, in· sufficient storage, and too few American-flag tankers, uys state Controller Ken Cory. Cory, a Democrat, told a news briefing Wednesday that when crude is refined you gel gasoline and fuel oil. The oil goes lo the East Coast. But when you're s horl of gasollne, you can't simply refine more crude because there's no place to store the fuel oil that comes with it. "OUR STORAGE tanks are JUSt about fulJ ••. Within 60 days we're going lo see a s hortage of gasoline, because the refineries won't have any place to put lhe fuel oil, and they will have to cut back," he said. Call!omia is receiving dady about !i00,000 more barrels of trude oil than it neecLs. MOit Is from Alaska, and the probl~m will worsen m coming months. California's power plants can't burn lbe fuel oil because lhe eul· fur content exceeds state air quality standards, Cory said. AND THE FUEL oil can't be shipped to tho East Coast because federal law requires· that oil shipped between American ports be in ships fly- ing the American flag, .. and there are just nol sufficient. Am er ican· flag tankers." "I don't have an answer. I am presenting a problem ••. We can have .•. a gasoline shortdge, and at the same llme " e ·re floating in 011." Cory, also chairman of lhe State Lands Com mission. criticized the federal entitle· ments program on crude oil im- posed by President NiJ:oo 1n 1 1973. I THE PROGRAM froze prices on exlsUng domestic oil supplles and attempted to equalize all oil prices by providing penalty pay· ments for cheap domestic oil and government. subsidies for 1 f oreiain oU. Cory said the system bas un- f al r I y penalized California. which bas extensive state tidelands oil, because production costs have risen but not prices. "You can make a bigger profit buymg $H forelen oil and mak· ing gasoline lhan you can buying S4 California oil and mak1.0g gasoline," Cory said. Brokerage to Pay $1 Million HE ADDED, "This convoluted set of formulu bas destroyed the marketplace • • . Richard Nixon socialized the oil industry in 1973, with some of the worst elements of socialism and some of the worst elemenls or capitalism." Production or the Long Beach offsbore field has dropped since 1973 from 100,000 to 74,000 bar- rels daily "because our costs are too great. We can't. afford to pro- duce," he said. LOS ANGELES (AP) -One or the nation's largest brokerage firms, Los Angeles-based Bateman Eichler, Hill Richards Inc., has agreed to pay $1 million to settle claims based on a recent Securities and Ex· change Commission ruling. SEC officials disclosed Tues· day that Bateman also promised the firm would not engage m bloc trading of stocks listed on the American and New York ex· changes for six months. Bateman Eichler also agreed to set up an outside review board that would be in ex.istence BmiLifted; Museum Slates Film Classic RIVERSIDE (AP) -The City Council has reserved its ban on showing D. W. Griffith's classic "The Birth of a Nation" jn a city museum film orogram. The council voted unanimous· Jy Tuesday to show the 64 -year· old movie as many times as necessary to accommodate those who want lo sec it. THE FILM, which depicts the South before and after the Civil War, premiered m R1vers1de in 1915 under the billing "The Klansman." The title was later changed. Under Counci Im an Sam Digati's compromise motion. durinJ: an intermission in the three-hour film, a historian or sociologist, preferably black, will discuss lhe sensitivity or lls contents. THE COUNCIL had canceled a March 9 showing of the movie after receiving complaints at an hour-long hearing that the film 1s racist and offensive to blacks The museum has scheduled the first showing of "The Birth or a Nation" for April 20. ( SI'ATE J for at least two years. Finally, the brokerage firm agreed to suspend three of its top officers for 90 days. The lhtee are Willard G. DeGroot, Robert C. lull and John D. McClure. C'arter Get• BUI WASHINGTON CAP) -A bill expanding Redwoods National Park in northern California by 48,000 acres and providing train- ing and Jobs for lumberjacks rl1splaced by park expansion is on its way lo President Carter's desk The bill, pa::;scd by the Senate 63·26 on Tue!>day, will cost $359 m ii hon for purchasing private 1:.ind around the present park. St:>n. Alan Cranston, D·Calif., the Senate sponsor, said he expects no opposition from the presi- dent. llftti Corttrol Nfzed LOS ANGELES (AP) Despite tusses and jeers from hundreds of demonstrators, the C1 ty Council voted down at· tern pts to outlaw "rent gouging" and impose a special tax on property sales to discourage speculation. . But the measures' sponsor, Councilman Joel Wachs, said he was encouraged by the public support and would introduce the bills again. lnterut Sold SAN DIEGO (AP) -In a stunnin g financial move. Richard L. Burns bas sold his controHing interest in his multimillion dollar oil and gas exploration firm for less than half its estimated market value. {;ajferSunJa'J On :Jfre t!Ja'J stock market analysts agreed was worth nearly $40 million. Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. to head Cahfornia's scandal·plagued mental health system. Director PfcMd Farabee. 51. will be $40,764-a- Cory said a group of govern- ment, industry and consumer leaders Wlll meet Thursday to discuss the oil entitlements problem before meeting federal officials in Huntington Beach S AC RAMENTO <AP> year director of the new Mental Psychiatrist Dale Farabee, Health Department, one of five former Kentucky state health to be created from the current director and mental health state Health Department under next week. director, was named Tuesday by legislation passed last year. ~.,;._~__..;:;__~-=-~~--=:.._~~~~~~~~~~~~ Hayuxud Yandau Sought HAYWARD CAP) Hayward police are seeking vandals -ap- parently motivated bv racial hatred -who did an estimated $15,000 damage to the home of a black man and his white wife, Police Capt. George Kelly said. Marc Sangara, a native of Africa and a stee l company ex- ecutive, and has wife, Loretta. who works in a motel chain adv«lising office, have Jived In the three-bedroom house since last August, Kelly said. THE COUPLE CLOSE· ENCOUNTERS • • OF ANOTHER KIND Another kind, altogether. As. when you get together with your dentist. Could you get closer than that to Dr. Arnold Flanzer? Well, he doesn't like to let money keep people apart. So you could get pretty close. For a lot less than you might suppose. Dr. Arnold H. Ffanzer 310 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa 642-0112 declined to talk with------------------------------ newsmen about the van· -----------------------.------------dahsm. "In 13 years as a Street cop, J 've never seen such destruction," said investigating of· ficer Don Wallace. PUBLIC l'l:OTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE POrllon ol prh.:loel ..a lntl'rnt .... IC., would n<>I be due,_.., no del•u•t oc· currHI. wr..,.. reln•t..i-I> ~'' &I•, II tN lllfeult b "°' cvred w11t11n thrH mon~ 1o11-1no n.e r-..:oro1.,q of l"IS notkt, U. rf(lht of relMLtt•--nt will 1.....,lneto ond u. p.o~rtv m•v IHI Miid To determine If ,..lnst.t.,,,.nl ;, poulbl• o nd tho •mount, II ony. ne<oo•rv to CU"o ttwi del•u•t. c0n1•ct lhe 1>en1flcl•ry or "-1009M or U..lr \oUCCf'~\Or\ .,,,f'f'f'\l, Wt'lo\e' ~me •l'ld Mh:lr•H '"ot 1'-' datP of H1f\ notice I<> Homo F..S.ral Sovlnvs ond Lo~n A> \OClollon of~ 01f90, 101 8r°""""'y Son O•tt00. C•lllO<nlo (Molll"O AO drou P 0 , 801t 2070, Son Oltgo. '"'"""''" .,1111 OAT E 0 F..O.uary 7 1'71 H0Mf r EOEAAL SAVING'> A NO LOAN ASS0CIATl0"4 OF S4N OIE&O "\.Inda A Warntr, t .-int lllU P,'°'1-.1 /\/EHUbttft H•rr•\• Auht.tm. Secret.orv P~ll•-Or-CM•t O.i!y Piiot, Mort.I\ IS,U,lt,"41<JI~ 1flt 515-71 PUBLIC NOTICE \ ' f I 1l8 USC Orange Coast Daily Pilot Editorial Pag.e ......... w.~•n•Md···"·· .M.•.ro•h•22•. l.v.1a••••••••R••0be•11•a•:•ro.•w•ffd·'·-~.:.u.~~.::.~.'.~•d•"•Of'•T•1~.•.P.:..'.K·;•d•:•~•;•E•d•u·°' f } I I , J s j . . I r • I , I f ' f I ~ I Move Rei.Df orces Spirit of the Law An w1ortho<lox ploy by newly elected San Clemente City Councilman l toward Mushett, who ref used last week to participate in closed executive sessions unless minute:; were kept, accomplis hed a worthwhile procedura l C'hangc. State law provides that executive sessions may he called only to permit public officers to discuss specifi C' personnel m utters or litiga tion in which the public agency 1s invol\'ed Too often, however, executive sessions are called by public commissions, boards and councils as a cover for rnnductmg government business behind closed doors. ,I\\ .t~ from public scrutm}. Whtie minutes of the San Clemente C1tv Council's C\.· 1·c11ttvc st•ss1ons \\ill remain confidential:they \\Ill pm 'tell' a method of keeping track of wh<lt is done in secret. We hope. as Councilman l\lushctt may have hoped "hen he asked for the record keeping, that it will t..>ngenclt·1· a :-.tricter spinl of public accountability on thl' part of dty councilmen . Gamble Makes Sense Laguna Bt'ach is t aking a pretty safe gamble that Jiab1 hty msuram·c claims will remain :.it or bPJo,, ll'veh of the pust fe\.\-Yl'ill'S in exchange for lower pr<:rrnums to c1tv t :.ixpa;.crs. The City C<nmcil has vott.'d to increasP the ckcluc:tiblc 1>11 tht• <·tty's i.tt•m•r:.11 liab1hty insurance policy from ss.ooo 10 S25,000 per lll('ldent. Thal will mean a potential !';avings ol SS0.000 annual!\ t n the c·1ty m lower 1mrnrance costs. an<1 counc1lmcn are \\ illing to ~amble that claims will remalll stublc L The decision lollows a dose studv of thl' liahil1tv 111 -.urancc history ol Laguna Beach. The city has rec:e1\'l'd only three <.:1a11ns in the pa~t three years that exceetll'd ~;).000. L'ndcr the c:u1n·nt pohcy, the city's premiums would I J , . ... . '" ha\'t' rhmlwcl from S.110,000 a vear to $330.000 about lfl 1wrcent of th1• cit' 's ~eneral fu.nd budget. Jh1t uncll'r the higher deductible schedule. the city \\Ill p:t\' $280.000, tucking away the S50.000 Sa\'in~~ in the ,., l'tll d•um" dimh next ,\'<'[If. 'l'h1• d1•1·1s1Clll to go Im thl' )n\\\'I rall' \',as .i good c·Jll II\' 1 ht• Ill'\\ C1h C11111wtl F arlllers Need Action T\\O larnwrs in San J uan Capistrano's controversial .1)..(l'ttultural prcst-n ·e complained last week to coun c ilmcn over the c·1tv's failure lo assist the farmers m :-.ol ~·111g erosion probiems caused by rain runoff from sur rounding hillside n•si<lcntial developments. Till' farmers ela1m the runoff is carrying :-.ome of !twit· JH'l'l'tous topsoil out to sea and burying the re-.t of 1t 111Hlt't hea\·y houlclt•rs and poorer soil \ 1·1ty ">ponsorccl program to alleviate the an:.i s dl'a1n.igl' problem l'-not scheduled for eompletwn until l!J8~1 \\'hilt· the l'lty h,1s t ;,,ikl•n somL' <lCl1on to speed up lhl! p1 ncl's:-. hy proposrn~ lo include the entire pro.1et·t in .i I 1\ e-yf.'ar budget. there could be more effective n•,ponw When the• City Council created the agricultural pre "l'I' t• 1n c•:ll'ly 1977, 1t agreed to assess fees on city de- ' l'loprncnt to creatf:' a fund to be used as an incentive to I armers located in the• preserve. \mong the possible uses of that money was as :-1,tuncC:' to l;.1rmcrs in helping solve drainage problems 11n I h<·1r land the vcr~· thing at issue in this casl' It's t1m<' the city made good o n its promise. Tlw l\\o farms arc in danger from what appears to ht• 1•011r c·1ty pl.inning for rain runoff. And the l'ity" through th ttJ.!t u·ultur<.· prcscr\'c, 1s seeking to prot<'<'t thl''>l' l.1 rms It·-. t1nw for more al'l1on and less talk. Thl• c1l~ -.lwuld l>l· willing lo dip into 1h agricultural fund to :-)Wl·cl 11p llw <lr:11nage project • Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Daily Pilot OthP.r views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists Reader comment 1s mvrted. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626 Phone (714) 642-4321. Boyd/Si~ By L. M. BOYD Not every Seasoned Citizen recalls a favorite Burma Shave sign, but m ost do Such as "My man I won't shave I says Hazel Huz I but l should worry I Dora's does 1 Burma-Shave." Or. "Does your husband I misbehave I jlrunt and grumble I rant end rave I shoot the brute some I Burma-Shave." Or· "Listen, birds I those signs cost I money I so roost a while but I don't get funny I Burma· Shave." If somebody in your household asks. ·'What Burma-Shaw s igns'>" kindly e xplain it lo the llttler s haver ed out as a slang reference to the copper buttons on the lawmen's uniforms But that's wrong. contend other experts. "To cop" once meant "to catch," they in s1st. So a copper was a catc her , even as a policeman. The term jumped up in England, in 1846. In - cidentally, you knew, did you not, that policemen over there are called Bobbys in honor or Robert Peale, the founder or the British con- s lab u l ar y? In the same honor, they're called Pealers in Ireland. r Debate eoes on aboul the • '"origin of that word "cop" to -''" m e a n ' · po 11 c em an ' · ' 1 Numerous authorities con- Am a sked how that rock 'n ' roller Chubby Checker came to be so called. Credit Dick Clark's wife with giving Ernes t Evans that stage name. If ~omebody with a trick moniker like Fats Domino could make it, said she, why couldn't somebody dubbed· Chubby OK!clcer" ,• tinue to claim that cop start- " Dear Gloomy Gus Q. ..Can you verify the cJalm that the band aboard the Titanic played ~earer Mf God To Thee' for almost 81 of the two bouts forty minutes the ahJp wu alnlc· inf?" A. What it played was taatlm() and theo the hymn "Autumn." l l With tb Lapna G o- belt. so vital to our c-n· vnonment why dld tho other coaatal cltiea elect. conservaUain.IJb lo thilr city WI tMlt not. Lal(Una? How ean you call )'Ounelt aD expert In tbat 41me ol bucball lt you ean t name the 111t ways a baUU can ~Cb base wltboUt It~ ttlDJ a hat f An error, a but 011 balh, the cateb r drops the Udtd ~ hit. bJ t.be ,J).lU! • • fteldtr'• choice Ud Jn· ~utheca Nick Thimmesch Unin~ted Do-gooder$ Do Harm WASHING TON -Oh, how welJ antentioned we Americans a re, a nd ho w stupidly we sometimes act. How else to ex- plain how a pair of do-gooder House members dispatched two Americans -uninvited -to Guatemala to monitor the recent elections there; how one monitor cried "fraud," and thereby a nger ed many Guatemalans, who might regard their voting boottls as sacred as ours. and wish Uncle Sam would mind his own business fl turnt>d out that the Cuatemalan elections weren't so fraudulent after all. Be- s 1 des, have n't there• been some ba llol box pro- hle mi:. m the L S. over the yea rs'> Who are we lo poke around elec- tions in oth<'r l'Olltllt 1l•s, shak1n~ a \alvm1sttl' Ii ng l'l' <1t our Lalin nc 1ghlmrs" TUE GENIUS behind this '>lunt 1s Rep. Uonald M . Fraser, [) Minn , chairman of the House SubcommJttee on lnlerna· t1onal Organizations. His part ner is Rep Millicen t Fen\\IC'k, R -N.J. Roth profess grcal concern for human rights and vole fraud in other coun- tries So Fraser got the Democratic Pa rt y to i:.ponsor a trip by Professor John Plank (jf the University of Connecticut to Guatemala to observe the elec· lions. The United Auto Worke rs union paid Plank's expenses S1n<'l' thl· Republican Party wouldn t sponsor or pay for Rep Fem\ 1ck'-; representative. John H1chardson , president of Mailbox Freedom House, she became hi~ sponsor and paid bis way from her own private funds. GU A.TE MALA, unfortunately, ha!> long been lorn and suffered violence by extremists or the lc!ft and righL The March 5 elections were the first held in many years, and featured a military cast. Voters were asked to choose a President among two army generals and a colonel. A general already runs the coun try ~aturally , a scene l1kt.> tbis attracted representatives ot Europe's democraUc parties as observers. Only now, tor the first time: the U.S. ~ot into the act. While the Guatemalan gov- ernment didn't invite any or these "monitors.'' once this ID· specUon gang set foot on their territory they were well re- ceived and treated cordially. But after the election, whose outcome isn't clear yet. Professor Plank cut loose with ·'The fraud perpetrated here is "o transparent that nobody could expect to get away with It " He ') r•u ·,,,. 11i:hr "'' f/JU'I d11.\<ll1lt'fh1T1,:1 Huund up .1nulllt>r ."i,111111 mt>n .md '"nd them 10Alnc111' also noted that the fraud 0 stm-l ply reenforces the deep cynicism of the Guatemalan voters." ,.,. m Fraser and Fenwick a re now trying to play down the c'l"iticism of their inspection team because the uplift effort is getting mixed reviews in Guatemala. IW .. They were not invited, and m their presence is offensive," te said Julio Asensio, Guatemala's ~ ambassador to the United Na- tions. "This is congressman Fraser's concept or playing God Almighty He acts as if we were trytng to hide something. I think ••• n I will get a team and go inspect hts election m Minnei:.ota next fall." 'fl J NO MATfER. Fraser is un- deterred. "It 1s my hope," be piously declares, "that il (the monitoring) wJll be followed by othe r initiatives and that even· t- tually we (the Democratic Par-t tyi will be joined by the J Republican Party and The Socialist International " Ms. Fenwick is equally ar· dent ''We've done Guatemala 1:1 ~crv 1ce." she says. "and are much appreciated there. We must try t o get the non Com mun1st nations concerned about human rights. For their U N ambassador to threaten to ~o to Minnesota 1s unproduc- l1H· Goodness sakes. Can't. the~e pecksniffs realize that their team was uninvited, that for Fraser to make Ins announce- ments about the monitoring on Congressional stationery is lo put the emblem of the U.S. C:onJ!ress on this questionable t•nterpr1se·) In the name of human rights. th1i:. bunch, by sniffing around this way, m11?ht well be v1olatmg the human rights of people try- 10g to have an t•lecl1on Complaints Unfair to Animal Shelter To thl· Editor The rt.'Ct•nt ll'llers appearing m ~our nC\\ sp;ipcr regarding the use of tht.· high altitude chambt>r m the destruction of unw.anted peh :1t Orange County Ahrmal Sht.>ltl'r ha\ l' b<.'l•n must unfair to th~11 filc1ht~ V. 1thoul debating the mer1L'i ot the· 1n1t1Jtl\l' to abolish the use ot t ht• decompression chamber. it 1s intcrestrng to note that not ont• natwnal humane society has gone on rc(·ord in support of the 1nitiatl\'l'. while the American llumane As:-.ociation. Mere' Crusade. thl· SPCA. and the C'al1for n1a State Humane ,\ s so<' rn t 1 n n Jr e a l l a~ a 1 n ~ t outlawing the l'hambcr It is chfficull in the present t•motionnl atmosphere lQ viev. this subject ob.1cct1vcly, but the horror stories -which were used as 1llustrallons in the r ect!nt lcltt•rs adm1tlerll.} only occur \\hen the chamber is not in good worktng order or the personnel 1s untratncd or unsupervised in its use It 1s, to say the least. 1rrespons1ble lo suggest. even b> 1mphcallon. that Oranj?e County '>helter staff. <rs well as the humane organi1ation volunteers who \\Ork thcrr would (·011ntenancc for a moment lbe inhuman(• practict•s describf'<l 1n such tc•rrifying detail Sl'Cll t'i\LSE and m1slcud1ng statements do incalculable harm to our animal rescue effort» Contribullng lo people's already irrational fears of the •·pound" prevents finders of lost pets from bringing them there, and many heartbroken owners and pets will never find each other as a result. Instead of attacking the symptom, let us unite our humane efforts in attacking the cause of the deaths at the sheller Recent Los Angeles County Animal Control figures since initiation of their low-cost ~puy neuter clinics . are astoundin& m three years, the number of ammals Impounded by the shelter has decreased 69,000 1 Aod the number killed decreased from 101,297 to 41,177. Loa Angeles City, also, has passed an excellent ordinance to control lndi.scrlmlnate breeding Why can't Orange County do lhesame? RUTH FRANKEL Code et c .. d11et To the Edll9r The Dally Pilot is way off base with tht recent editorial opinion objecUne to the rclnsUtution of tbe Republican 11th Commandment, "tbou shall not peak ill or a nother R~publlcan.•· The Pllol favors campaJ1n ~rorm ton· t!Mt lent of ldtal poUUct. Yet. at the same litM oppo1e1 a ~oluntary and ommendable effort by toe l Republican~ to clean up \' .i m p .i 1 g n r h l' l 11 r 1 c· ... n d mall'rials by a gentlemanl~ ;i g r t' e m c n t t o l' I 1 m 1 n a t 1· 1· a m p a 1 J.! n s m l' a r s a n cl 1111nt•cl'ssar) mud throwing \'ES, ~urh an ai.:n•ement b\ R \' p u b I ll' i.I n l' a n d 1 d a l <' s for publ1l· office \\<Ill C'liminatc somt· of thl' 1u1<'y and degrading stuff that makt·s for news paper sloric•s But, the people of Orangl' County will be well sl'n cd b-. such a co<le of conduct .imong i:andidatcs. Shame on vou f or thinking of the· ~u·wspapcr business f1ro;t und the public good secondly' When the Republican 11th C:om m andment was in forrC' "' the late 19GOs, thc level of Orange County 1>0ltl1cs was high w 1 t h f i n c c o n s c r v a l 1 v t• Hepubllcun leaclcrsh1p at thl· helm Wl' could use some of that kind of qu i et. efficient Repuhlicantsm In th1:-. county today THOMAS A. FUENTES Other1' Need B t-lp To tht• Editor \'£'s. Bubbles 1s dc·ad And WI' do foci sorrow and regret. ll 's O\'l'r and n·t fur the· first tame s1nct> 1t all h(•gan I feel angrv .rnd frustratNI. My feelings cC'r ta1nh .1n.'n 'l directed ;it Lion ('ountn "" I fl•(.•l onl\ com passrnn-for thl•1r tn:mcndous yet d1sappoint1nj! efforts I know their loss financially as well as emotionally 1s a ~real one and I have only admiration and praise for their heroic attempts lo save Bubbles. No. my frwaratlons concern the fact that Bubbles was just one wild animal needing as sistancc and certainly she re· ce1ved the most professional at- tention available What I can't stop thinking about are all the millions of other wild animals who suHer at the hands of the profiteer~ of lh<' world OON'T ALL of yuu. v.:ho took up pen and paper to scream about the nghts of Bubbles. reel the same compassion for the baby seals In Newfoundland who are now ut this moment being <'lubbed to death ror the sake or their pelts' Doesn't IL sadden you to know th:it whales are be- mg slaughtered needlessly in all our waten and t hat porpoises 11re cnuibt and destroyed In the ~ame neta used to catch tuna? And what about our beautlCul and majestic hmfs of prey who foll victims to the iw>isons and pesllcldn wo uUll:r.f''> Is It only wit n we pick out one 11nlmal. Ii~• It a name and at- trlbutt. evtaln cute and cuddly trall'l to it that we fc l com· pusaon and are moved to ac· lion! 1 1uesa what I'm s1yin111 that lr all th fantuUc pubUc.lty, the phone coils and the telegram~ that you an1rily and dlUc Y d11 eded to\\urd the presen allon of one ammal could be directed toward the cau">c of the other rna!>-.es of animals m need. thl'n final!\' Wl' would ~cc some aclmn t.1kcn· on a level \\hich \\oul<I benefit so many Afl<'r all, 1t 1~ only through all our concerted efforts that le,1?1slallon \\ 111 come· about to aid the cause of the n· mammg wild ammals thal still t.'Xl~l toda~ LINDA \\.'AllL S o u r Not.- To the Editor This cll'ct1on 1 ampa1g n "tal'tNI pkasanll) 1·nough . but 1•n<kd on a :.t>u1 nolc We'd l1k1· lo lake \'ll{orous exception to <'t•rlai n insults to Irv1nt• voter.., hv one cand1datt• Arthur Anthony. former mayor v..ho \'ame rn second, 1mmed1alt'h launched a pl'rsonal . unprovoked. undocumented denunc1allon of the front-runner His deportment 1-; his problem but when he implied that well over 2,700 Irvine voters cast their votes for an unworthy randidak, he was castmg slurs upon. and attempt in ~ to chscred1t. those voters We arc offended and saddened b\ this demonstration of .. halloY..nci:.s in one who claims OJ po s1 t1on of community lei1tl..rsh1p a nd who campaigned on a platform of bringing Irvine together. Mayor Vardouhs showed similar contempt for the voters dur~ng his TV Interview on election night when be echoed Mr. Anthony's petty innuendos PAUL H. PALMQUIST DAVID A. KIDD Warning To the Editor On Wednesday, March 8, <1 working representative (or th<' Los Angeles Zoo spoke to the Alhambra Kiwanis Club. Among other things, she pomtcd out that the loss of a tranqu1hted hip popotamus IS One OUl O( two Or 50 percent due to the undetermina ble dosage. Why was Bubbles killed with two shots, Such management and inept handling ot 8 ~uperb publicity event and the brightest world in ttrcst ~ws story for a happy news starved world swells • m assive sense of sorrow for Lion Country Safari animals Also · lost is my desire to patronize such management. Perhaps the press can uncover the coverup and strike a blow for imJ)l"C)Ved livinJ( car~ for thl' insolrinc speclmt'n~ or lht• animal world which are Jail«! ror life for our human <"I enjoym~nt DAVE GAMBILL D e f l11IC'°'9 To the Editor: To the ttpOrtel"I. Wt'lt rs and everyo ~participated io lho cowrap. ltom tho ~omedy to thl' tragt•<h of our very own Rubblei:. you did a splendid 1ob Thl•re v.ere those -who couldn t understand all the concern for JUst an animal, as they put 1t. Thl' dt'fm1l1on of C1n animal 1s "an) hvmg thing that 1s not .• plant. an~ crcatun• that can feel ;rnd moH• So v.hat doei:. that make lhes1: :\pctlhettc ones vegetables·• Bes ides. the whole traumatH l'\ ent was much hea\ 1er and del'pt'r than .... hat met the eyt· But those who know. know: and tho-.e \\ho don l, don't l'ven knm' what · ... ~mng on anyway HOSEMARIE JO:"<F.~ :t Mira("lf.•? To t hl· (o;d 1tor Laguna Beach. v.ht•re the peo pit· 111volved in bus inesses v11·v. tlw t•1t\ "tndh from their stand point. .... hc•n· the artists or tht· l'Ultur-al cll-ment views Laguna .1s an l\rt colony; where the re- t1rN•s ho1w fur relaxed living and a place where people could gel about ca'>1ly. v. 1th no smog, noise . .ind lhl' cool breezes and \'le" s of tht• oc<'an. where the en- ' 1 ron mt•11t.tl 1st-. wonde r wh~ there ilrt' tho ... .-hdl bent on self· deiotruc·l1111\ With so many d1f fcrent I Jl'1111rb, 11 1s not surpns ing th:it th1i:. b<·aullful beach cit\ 1s cont 111\ l'rsrnl I !rm l'H'I i.I m1 rade seem~ to have takl•nplare Metamorpho.c;a., has come about WITll THE recent city council election 11 would seem that Laguna 1s at last m accord! Heretofore. the city was mon· or less d1 v1ded into two main fac- tions. Thos<' for high-rise and overbuilding or unplanned build- 111g and thO!>C' for planned buUd- ing, the 36 feet height, and re- taining the basis of what has been a umqu<' and fantastic beach <'1ty Lo and behold' Within l.agun.1 s present City Coum·1l tht' m • .... ty el<'cled ma1or1ty mem bcr-.. iH'<'Ording to their slates are 111 ai:rcc•mt•nt with the former rnunc1I members who ong1nally .id\ oeatNI planned building ell' Some of tho"" who backed the nc\\ ~lnll' wne once for high-rise .ind on•rbulldm~ Their change 1n atlltudt. no doubt. 1s thc- l'pitome of progres~ Met amorphosis., Or promises, promises, promises'> It remains to be ~e<ln. as the new council mhenL'i some or the most 1ntr1c:utc issues Laguna has ever had on tlwir t'ouncil agenda. 'll<'h as the flood basin. Lagum1 Celnyon Houd. Sycamor~ Hills. traff11· .. net purking problem'.'>. and the Jarvii. bill Obvioush tht• nl'W counc1l 1s In lor it and tii1 "lltllAtlon And LA&una , as usual will not be dull 1 .. 1 t ' Orange Coast EOl1'10N 'l'oday's Closing N.V. Stoeks OL 71, N0.81, 4SECTIONS,42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, MARCH 22, 1978 N TEN CENTS I High Wire Artist Plunges to Death SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) Karl Wallenda, who cheat.eel eatb for more than half a ttn· ury on the high wire, was killed ay when he fell du.Jin& a pro- o ti on al appearance for a cus in which he was perform-.mg with his granddaughter. Wallenda, 73, consistently re- 'fused to give up performing, fdespite accidenL'> through the ryears which killed four mem I bers or his family and left his son paralyzed from the waist down. "I feel better u~ there than I do down here. lf la my whole life," be once saia. Wallenda, who first walked the wire in 1920, made the state- ment less than three weeks after two members of the Great Wallendas were killed and he himself was injured when their Lower Ne r '.Irvine R equest I I { I' Water Issue Delay Asked By JACKIE HYMAN Ol 1 ... o.lty l'li.t SU.II The Jrvme City Council asked he lrvme Ranch Water 01stnct uesday to postpone action on a roposcd Sl 6 b1 I lion bond issue Coun<'1l m(•mbers asked the R WO to wait until after the June 6 general t.'lcct1on and until ast Area used by o re Rain By The Associated Press Rains returned today unex- ectedly to Southern California. umping mudslidl''> on roads. loodmg streets and dousing un- reparcd commuter'> Three pNsons werl' kJlled when · ccmC'nl truck rear ended and ·rushed a pas!-.l'nger car on the lippery southbound Long Beach Freeway north of the Artesia f'"rceway, lhc California Highway STOCKTON HIT BY RAIN-Story, A3 atrol said Tht• two men and one om an occupants of the car were ronouncl.'d dt•ud al Paramount enernl Jlosp1tal Free\\ ay systl'ms and surface ads throughout Los Angeles ounty wt•r<' heavily backed up fter the first rams started fall· ng Just before the morning rush our began before 7 a m .A mudslide dropp~ on La 1enega Boulevard near the aldwin 11111<;, scene of heavy ud damaj?e this month. and he highway paLrol issued a arnlng to travelers between odeo Road and Stocker Street. Today's rains, said weather ervlce specialist Wade Carter. :were trigg~red by a low- ressure system orr the coast hlch is expected to ~ak up by i&htf.all. Carter said partly t;loud:r skies and a slight chance ( rain was forecast tonlght and 'bursday. The National Weather Servi~ aid .26 iocbes or rain tell in wntown Loa Angeles between and fkl5 Cl.m. today, b~g e uas:on U>lal to 30.45. Coast Weath er Partly cloudy throu1h • Thursday. Chance of measurable rain 10 per- cent todlght and Thurs- 't day. Lows tonight 52 to 57 • · Highs Thursday 83 to 68. INSIDE TODAY • I/ I/OU want to put Etutftr din"er on U,. ~ quiclc °' a bunn11 to JIOU'll how Ume to c•l•brat. tQO, ttt Food, Po.at Cl. . the slate attorney general issues an opinion as to whether or not the composition of the district's board of directors 1s constttu· lion al. An I RWD representative at the meetmg said the counc11"!> request w1ll be discussed at an IRWD board meeting Monday The city has requested the at torney general's opm1on Coun c·ll men questioned the struC'turc of the IRWD's seven-man board, five of whose members are ap· pointed by landowners rather than elected. The major land owner in the city is the lrvme Company IR WO directors have asserted that, under state law, a water district board doesn't have to be elected by popular vote unlll more than half the district 1s urbanized. A ltbough council members gave no specific reasons for their request that acllon be de- layed until after June 6, that 1s the date when the Jarvis amend ment, Proposition 13, will come before the pubhc in statewide balloting. Propos1t1on 13 eventually would cul property taxes to 1 percent of market valwe IRWD board members said earlier this week that, If their bond issue IS approved before June 6, 1t wouldn't he affected should Proposition 13 pass The bond issue would cover the district's share of a maJor water pipeline from Yorba Lin da and provide for possible sewer and water service to un developed land dunng the "ext 30 years. The bond measure would be one of the largest m Orange <See BONDS, Page i\ZI P eacek eeping tJnit Move s Into Lebanon Bl:IRUT. Lebanon <AP} -'I'be-fi~ U.N. pncekeeplng unit moved into ~mbatlled south Lebanon today, a Lebanese gov· ernment spokesman $aid. PateatOOan guerrillas claimed major vlolatioda riddled the lsraep-decla.-.c:t cease-lire. An 1'8·man h'anish recon- natssanc~ party entered the Lebanese Christian toy.rn of Mar· jayoun, slx miles north of the Israeli £rontier as the vanJtuard of a 400-man Jranian U.N. con· tingent, the spokesman said. The unit drove in at mid· morning rrom the neighborine Golan Heights front. lt will tour the Lilani River area lo choose the posts tbe 400 Iranian peacekeepers will take up Thursday to disengage guerrilla and Israeli forces. the spokesman said. Another advance unit of SinaJ- baeed U.N. Observers was r~ portedly prevented from enter- ing the coastal area of south Lebanon by laraell·backed riaht- wtng Cbrlstian mUlllu in the 'area. Lebanon's state nadlo nid a third advance puty ot 200 French peacekeepers were e>e- .,.cted ln B lrut ahortty to set the st.ago for clcploym nt ol 600-man French contlrteent ln the south. Tho aovernment apoketman said tbal ''lDt.cnnlttent" vl<>la· tlons ot the ceue·ftN occurr~ ln the areu ol Nabatlth, In tho tral 9«tof 01 tbe b ut t. and the &I area or 1'}t?e, JJ tbO I.tit l famed seven-member pyramid collapsed in an appearance in Detroit on Jan. 30, 1962. Tod•y•s accident occurred while Wallenda was walking, through strong winds, o..._ a wire stretched lP stories hiib betwee" the towers of a beacbf~t hotel in a promotion • for the Pan American circus. Wallenda fell an estimated 120 feet to the driveway oC the Con- dado Holiday IM Hotel before hundreds of spectators. He died in San Juan's Presbyteriao Hospital at 7:20 a .m., PST soon after the fall. ''The people who work with Wallenda in the act ran around in a panic, screaming 'Oh my God, oh my God'." said Gary Willtams , a local newspaper photographer. "Every body was hysterical People were fainting, collapsing on the ground." Another witness, Victor Ab- boud, an accountant from Mon- treal, said: "I saw him go down on his knees on the wire and I thought be was kneeling to rest. But then I saw he was shaking. The winds blew him off and he went all the way down, head first." W1lhams said that Wallenda, balancing pole io h and, was leaning mto the wind as be in- ched his way across the wire. "His balance pole was going up and down. One of the people who work with him in the act was watching from the roof. He yelled: 'Sil down. slt down.' Wallenda sat, but be missed the wire and went down." James B. Harrington, the mana&er of the Pan Amencan (See WALLENDA, Page AZ> rt Density Promised l Oil Spill Casualty \ French medical student holds up the bodv of an oil-soaked sea bird. It was among scores of birds killed by seepag(' from th(' sh1pwr l'cked supertanker Amoco Cadiz, wh1c:h spilled up to 68.000 tons of crude oil along lh(' Brittany roastllne -.. Dohr Impact Doubted Hwnmel Says Witlulrau:al Won't Affect Race City Council candidate Paul Hummel says the withdrawal of one of his two opponents prob- ably will have httle effect on the election statement read. Hummel also said his literature 1s based on the minutes of City Council meetings. That literature lists the date and a bnef descnpl1on of issues along with Mrs. Kuehn's vote. Her action then is compared to Hummel's stand on those issues Jn campaign speeches, she has called the literature "trash" and <See HUMMEL, Page i\Z) · I thmk the campaign was really JUSt between two people anyway," the sixth district can- didate commented. Tues<ta1 on learning of the "1tbdnwa1 of William DQhr. Hummel and ·Dobr were: both slated •o oppofe.~ncunlf>ent Lucllle Kuehn in uie April 11 election, but Dohr announced Monday he is drappin~ QOt of the campaign in favor of Mrs. Greenbe lt Actio n Delayed by County Kuehn. • The incument and Hu.mtnel have been waging a llvelr'bat- Ue since the carnpalgn beg_a6. In' wilhdrawint MarldaY and announcing his supp6rt 91 Mrs. Kuehn, Dohr c,riUclzed Hum- mel's campaign literatufe. Today, in a i;repared at.dte· ment, Hummel challenged Dohr's remarks. "My campaign is directed against the incumbent's voting record since she has stated she stands on that record," the By KATHY CLANCY OI Ille O.Uy l'tlel St.ff Action to prest>rve the 10,000-acre Laeuna Greenbelt will have to await the outcome or property tax proposals on the June 6 ballot., Orange County supervisors ruled Tuesday. The board asked county plan- ners to work the next two months wilh city officials in Laguna Beach and Irvine on ways to implement a three-year study on preserving the 10,000 acres aurroundina Laguna Beach. Suspect Subdued By Wrestq Hold .. The study, financed with $8,500 in county. Laguna Beach and Irvine funds, recommends preserving mosl of the land as a public resource. It also calls for sharp limits on developmeru to preserve scenic ridgelines and maintain wildlife. And as a way to implement the presenlation plan, the report suggests a possible increase in the county's Harbors, Be.aches, and Parks District tax rate to finance public purchase or prime open spac<' Without delvin~ inLo cost estimates, the 1ludy team also suggested thaL city officials pro- vide some financing for grffn belt open space m their boun· daries and that stale authorities be asked for help. County officials also said dis- cussions the next few months will have to center in part on the possible impact of recently. enacted property lax reform legislation as well as potential passage in June of the Jarvis· Gann initiaUve which would restrict property taxes. · The report identifies the areenbelt as one of Utree re· malnlng major open 11plce areas on the Southern California coast The area stretches from Scotchman's Cove south or Corona del Mar along the shore to outh Lasuna and Inland along lhe 1ides of Lasun• Can yon Road to nearly the San Dtego frecw•1 • Irvine Company Pledges By JOANNE REYNOLDS Ol I ... 0.llY f""4 Sutt Irvine Co officials said Tues- day night they would cut future home construction on lhe firm's undeveloped land m Newport Beu ch by 20 percent Tht> pledge. made by David Ne1s<'h, a consultant for the land firm, came during the study sl's..,1on held weekly as part of the city's current review of how muC'h density to allow on the 900 vaC'ant acres remammg 1n the city The statement drew mixed re· actions from about 50 audience members Of the city's undeveloped 900 acres. about 325 acres are owned by the Irvine Co. and are earmarked for homes and apart men ts Ne1sch said the present general plan would allow the land company to build about 2,450 uruts on that land. He said conceptual plans prepared by the Irvine Co. now call for a total of 1.985 units. a reduction of 465 units. According to Ne1sch. "this density reduction may be even greater on those of our residen- tial sites that overlook the Upper Bay Ttus mcludes such parcels as the Newporter North , Castaways and Westbay ... To prove Ne1sch's point lrv1nt• Co. staff member Keith CrN'r, in discussing plans for N1•wporter North. said that, in stt~ad or bu1ldmg the allowed 704 units, the company would only put '110 homes on the site north of the Ncwporter Inn, a reduc tion of 37 perrent The land company's plans for the J amborec Road develop- ment were amon~ four "concept plans" unvl'1led by Greer at the meeting The four parcels Newporter North. Westbay, Big Canyon and a former freeway parcel on MacArthur Boulevard -are be- mg planned for townhouses. Greer stressed the prop<>sals arc geared to the general plan discussion and they are a long way from bemg the s~1fic type of plans n~essary for city ap- proval or coastal zone permit apphcat1ons. He estimated that it could be at least two to three years before all the necessary ap- provals. are gathered and con- slrucl1on work begins. Westbay with 71 acr~s stretchmg along Irvine Avenue north of Santiago Drive and Newporter North with 88 acres were the two biggest sites dis· cussed. The other two pieces are each less than 15 acres. <See DOUSES, P•1e AZ> ' CMAOKs Credit Cartls SAN FRANCISCO <AP) The California Meaical Association has decided patients ~an pay bills with credtt cards. At Tuesday's meeting, the CMA House of Delegates adopted the credit card resolution, after lhe meas ure 's author, Dr. Arnold J. Breit ot San Mateo, said: "It's about time the CMA came into the 20th Century." After decidint it was ethtut lor the CMA 's 25,000 members lo accept credit cards from pa benll, d lqates approftd a set ol rules aoverntna llmUed advertl1ln1 by doc ton. _,... &or • l I· lh d " l ·. ll d e l t l ' ' ( AZ DAIL v PILOT N Blood Needed You can combme your s~ will>. .. trll> &6 the blood bank Monday or Tuesday in Newport Beach. THE R~ CROSS. which says its blood 1upplies ar• low, will station a bloodmobile at the Marriott Hotel from 2 P;m. to 6 JO p.m. Monday. Anyone can drop in and leave a pmt of theJ.r blood, provided lhe physical requirement.II for donors are met. On Tuetlday. another temporary blood bank will be set up from 12 '45 p.m . to 5:30 p.m. in the employees' canteen on the second floor of the J .C. Penney store in Fashion Island. · ALTIIOUGD :rtJESDA Y'S blood gatherinc effort will be geared primanly to employees of the major departm~nl stores ln Fashion Island, the public is welcome, too. Lucy Hart of the Red Cross said donors must be between the ages of 17 and 65, in good health, weigh at least 110 pounds and not have donated within the pa.st two months. · APPOINTMENTS for either bloodmobile may be made by Red Cross at 835-5381, but Mrs. Hart noted that an appointment ts not required. Mexican Biu Crash Kil"ls at Least 20 YUMA, Am:. (AP> -Two Mexican passenger buses col- lided head-on about 2S miles east of the border town of San Lws, killing at least 20 and perhaps as many as 30 people and injuring srores of others, San Luis police said. A small car also was involved. The police said many of the victims burned to death in a fire that erupted after the crash Tuesday rught. "There was so much wreckage it was unreal," said Loren Llftiak, a reporter for the Upper Bay Bird Watc hing Tour Planne d The final tour of the migratory bard season will be held Satur- day when members or the Friends of Newport Bay guide walking groups around the Up- per Newport Bay. The tours are free and no reservations are required. Those who wish lo join in should be al the intersection of Easbluff and Back Bay drives between 9 a .m and 10:30 am Each tour wHI depart as soon as a group of about 25 assembles. The 741-acre preserve is owned and operated by the state Department of Fish and Game and staff biologist Preston Johns wall be available during the lours to explain the depart ment's plans for restoration of the marsh. Jolm Wayne In Hospital Actor John Wayne has checked into Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach to undergo . "some routine tests," according to the actor's estranged wife. Pilar Wayne said Tuesday Wayne is expected to leave the hospital by Thursday. Hospital officials refused to confirm or deny the actor's presence al the hospital. Plane Sp ace R ent Raised b y County Owners of the 47S private aircraft parked at Orange Coun- ty Airport will have to pay $1 a month more for their space beglnnin~ July I. SupervU10rs adopte<l the rate increase for the 37 ta SO-foot spaces Tuesday. Monthly fees will range from $34 to $49 each depending upon the sbe of the parking stall. DAILY PILOT Yuma Sun, who reached the scene today. "One bus was a double-decker. Its front was bent at a 75-degree angle. The buses were just twisted hulks. All the windows were popped out from the fire or impact. There weren't really any big pieces oC glass left." Liftiak said that, from talking with police and others at the scene, it appeared one bus was trying to pass the small car when it collided with the other bus on Mexico highway B. "The little car was sandwiched between them and just ripped apart," he said. There was no indication how many were in the car. He said the Santa Elina funeral home told him there were 20 confirmed dead and that it appeared there would be perhaps 10 more when the bus debris was cleared and missing parts of bodies assembled. Tony Romero, A Mexican 1m· migration official, also said there were 20 confirmed dead and the toll undoubtedly would go higher. He said the double-decker bus was from Tijuana, and the other from Guadalajara. U.S. Customs agents at the San Luis Port of Entry said Mexican authorities told them that the accident occurred about 8 p.m . Tuesday and involved two buses carrying 81 people. Fourteen of the inJured were transported to Yuma Regional Medical Center. A nursrng supervisor, who asked that her name not be used. said four adults and one ch.ild were ad- m 1tted with burns. while one burn virtim was airlifted lo a Tucson hospital and four others were lo be airlifted lo a Phoenix hospital. Body Found OnOC Beach Not Identified Orange County Coroner's in vestigators said today they haven't yet identified lhe skeletal remains of a man's body found Tuesday mornmg on a Seal Beach jetty. The remains consist of a pelvis, four leg bones, very litUe flesh and what appear to be remnants of blue jeans worn by lhe victim, investigators said. Two teen-age boys Oshlng off the east Seal Beach Jetty at 9 a.m. Tuesday spotted the re- mains wedaed in some rocks and contacted police. Coroner's investigators said tbe remains appear to be those of a man between 3S and 4'5 years and from five feet, six inches to five feet 10 inches In height. The remains appear to have been at sea several months before washing up on lbe Jeuy. one investigator said. l',....P~AI H O USES ••. t Tb• ~ for the two lar1er • parcell contain provisions for public ~. public street ac, ceu and cycle and pedestrt&Q traits aJong-c~luff tops. One Irvine Co official ln the audience privately acknowledted that the parks proposed for Westbay and Newport.er North were deslgned to incorporate existing archaeotoiical sites protected by law from development. There was htlle audience re· action to the plans until the close of the meeting. Allan Beek. often a spokesman for the political faction which opposes Irvine Co. developments, said be believes d1scuss1on of the plans would be meaningless because lhe com· pany hadn't produced citywide tramc data that could be used to analyze the effect the new de- velopments would have on the city's roa~. 111... remarks were countered by G Jen Martm. executive of. firer or the Newport Harbor· Co~ta Mesa Board of Realtors, who lauded the land company for its voluntary move to reduce residential density. The meeting closed with another ant1·growth spokesman, Dan Emory, attacking Martin. "When these meetings were proposed, we were asked to leave the rhetoric behind and I find your remarks completely out of place," Emory declared. .,.~ Ga.SltorCage'! State Controller Ken Cory says California faces a potential gasoline shortage in a bout 60 days bee a use the state has a glut of crude oil and no place to store the bypro duc t s of refining gasoline. <Sec story, Page \51 F ro111 Page A I BONDS ... County history. In addition to the City of lrvmc. the IRWD covers part of Tu~lln . El Toro and unin rorporatcd Irvine Company prop- ertv between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach. The · election also would establish new improvement dis- tricts w1thtn the JR WD. If a May election is called bv IR WD directors. each individual district will vole only on its own bonded indebtedness Since occupied areas would be affer ted only by the $2.5 million p1pelme cost. registered voters ('Ould only vole on their share of that expenditure. The remainder or the $1.6 billion bond issue \\'.OUld be voted on by owners of uninhabited areas, chiefly the lrvme Co. The bonds would be repaid by property owners in those areas. Director Killed MADRID, Spain (AP> -With his wife watchin' helplessly from a balcony window. ~ 1unman assassinated Spain's 49·year-old director of prisons. Jesus Haddad, out side his Madrid home today after be tot into his official car and was about to be driven to work, police reported. P....,PageAI WAl,JENDA KILLED. • • ported by tboee on the second level. "We hid close calls n:tany tJmu, but never any serious in· Jur1. untll the pyramld," Wallen· d a 1 brotlier. Herman. once Hld. The 1982 •ccldent killed Wallenda'• ne phew. Dtete r Schepp. and R.lchard Faustman. the aon ot fiaJlonda's ftnt wU1'1 brot hel". tt'allenda'• adopted ion. Marlo then 22. was paralraed. W•lleiada aaved h maelf by tsanitna .by bia lep frosn th wtre: he also caUlbt hl• nltC6, OUiaUan1 Seb@p,17. Wallenda u botpttallled with pelvlc li\JUrles and Chrbtlana aufferod a br&ln concuulon. ' • o.ilf ,_. ... S&Mf ~ SAN JOAQUIN RESERVOIR SITS NEARLY EMPTY WHILE OFACIALS WAIT FOR RAIN TO STOP Routine Maintenance Started Ave Month• Ago Can't Be F1nlahed\Jntll Weather Clears Reservoir Awaits Work Weather Interferes With Routine Maintenance What began as a routine main- tenance program five months ago has turned into a weather watch for officials at the Irvine Ranch Water District And while they watch. the million·gallon San Joaquin res· ervoir sits nearly empty. An IRWD spokesman ex- plained today that the reservoir, which sits atop a hill separating Newport Beach from Irvine, was drained for routine main- tenance. Before the holding facility could be completely drained and cleaned, it started raanmg and rainwater and mud flowed into the reservoir, whtcb also is used for storaute by the city of Hunt- ington Beach, the Costa Mesa County Water District and the Coastal Municipal Water Ols· tri('t According to Edy Jorgensen, a spokeswoman for the district. the small amount of water that IS preventing the Cleaning Of the reservoir can't be drained until the rain stops. "When we origrnally took down the reservoir, we did it Just by letting the water be used in our system and not replacwg it," she said. "But the rain has kicked up a lot of mud and we can 'l let that out through the system, so we have to wait for it to stop raining so we can just let that runoff Foreed Into Van Abductio"' Rape Reported by Woman A 30-year-old Anaheim woman told Newport Beach police Tues- day that she was forced into a van by two men and raped by F,.._P~A J HUMMEL •.• said thal 1t 1s misleading. One of the 11 items, she noted. listed her as voting ye:. on "Promon· tory Pomt lype developments " She said that is ·'totally inac curate and misleading." Hummel, in countering both Mrs. Kuehn and her new ally said. "My campaign 1s based on issues, not personalities. "The deep differences between our philosophies for Newport Beach have led to strong statements and deep feel· ings. I would like to debate the issues without questioning tn· tegnty and without personal ran- cor." one of her abductors this weekend. The woman told detectives she was waiting for rnends outside the Stag Bar al Mc Fadden Square Sunday night when a white van with the two men in 1t pulled up. She said they repeatedly asked her u she wanted a nde and when she repeatedly refused to accept, one got out and dragged her into the vehicle. She told the men she lived in Anaheim near the Riverside Freeway and State College Boulevard. She said one of the men raped her while she was be- ing driven to that location. She said she was freed once the van got to the freeway near her home. She described both men as be· ing in the mid thirties and the one who assaulted her as bemg about six feet tall and weighmg 160 pounds. 1110 Apollo water drain." But custome~ have not been suffering a waler shortage. Mrs Jorgensen explained that Metropolitan Water District water has been J!oing directly in- to local water systems. without bemg stored in the reservoir first. She said dt~ln('l officials aren't sure when work on the reservoir will be completed "We'll finish up whenever tl stops ra.uung," she said. Groups Fight Tuition Credit WASlnNGTON CAP> -Public education groups launched an offensive Tuesday lo counter the t'ffort in Congress to give a tw- tion tax credit of up to $500 per student lo parents of private school rhildren The American Association of School Administrators, the Na- tional School Boards Associa- llon. the American Federation of Teachers. the National PTA and olher groups banded together U> ftght the bill in a Nallonal Coali· t.Jon to Save Public Education. The lax credit plan has 49 CO· spon..,ors 1n the Senate and was approved 14 to 1 by the Senate Finance Committee on Feb. 23 7 -story Fall Kills Student BERKELEY (AP) -A 22. year old man apparently com- mitted suicide when he hung out the window of a University of California buildmg. let go and fell seven stories to a concrete loadmg dock Daniel Joseph t:haklos of f)prmgfield, Pa .• reportedly a'stu- dent at Penn State University died a ~rt ume later al Herrick j\f emoriil Hospital, police said. ('lo note was found Nylon upper Oulltde t~. hfW'I COl#lter Pedded tongue Fle•obl" fool IOlm nyton M>le Scr.W·•O IP<ke syslem s1a9s AO 1032 Prvmod.t Ufht top. foem PMldtd U1>C>9rs 6urt0und •nklet fM ftrm. corn- forttbl• tu~ort. L .. ther 1trlpN. l ~adldasl ; ' SXJ9S Open 9 to 6 -Closed Sunday 538 center 646-1919 • ..... r I t- t • I :Al.IFOANIA Film.Ad flrdered ()nBuses LOS ANGELES (AP) -Much a"the dismay ol diatrict dlree- or1. Southern CaUf omia Rapid rr:ansit District buses have .-... ordered to carry advertise- nentt for tho adult movie "Sex IV«rld ... ~uperior Court Judge George )ell said Tuesday that under a ;tate Supreme Court ruling, r~~portaUon companies owned rt public agencies must accept u:fvertl.tjng from anyone. T H E ONLY exception, he ;aid, is if the ad material is .lbelous or obscene. Attorneys for the three Pussycat Theaters and Essex Distributing, Inc., filed suit ;eeking the ad space for posters :or the film. Dell said the RTD must accept the posters. pending another bearing of the case. ESSEX attorney Robert rl~paniel said the court ordered lbe post.er to appear on buses by next Monday. The RTD bad re- iei:ted the po~ter March H because of fear of negative public reaction, officials said. ,.McDaniel said the poster has rto p 1 c t u re s • It r e a d s : •'\vestworld was for children ~eworfd was for teen-agers: blft. Sex World. • .is definitely CQl•dults." 'akland CBer intruded on frequencies ~AKLAND, Calif. (AP) -A tilm radio operator calling htmself Tom Cat and using 11- l~a l high-power equipment in· tarrupted delicate communica- *ns between Oakland Interna- t.Jbnal Airport and a hijacked ,Mtliner last week, a federal of· fl.cial has disclosed. ·Serge Marti-Volkoff, a !'~dcral Communications Com- mission orftcial, dechned to name the CBer who, be s aid, has agreed to stop using the equip- ment and wlll not be charged. T HE HIJACKED plane - later flown to Denver where the incident ended and the h11acker w~s captured without violence -was still on the ground at the airport here March 13 when Tom Cat first broke into the air waves looking for conversation .. Good eveninJ!, good eve· fling," said the intruder. lie was t.trged lo gel off the air in a hurry. Marti-Volkoff said, "As soon its we heard the name Tom Cat, ~e knew of a local CBer who ~as suspected of using over- powered equipment.'' : . !.J. Surrender ,_,.WI .......... .John A. Fuerst and Hob<:>rta Smith. both 33, \\ho h a\ e Ileen identified by the FBI as members of the Weather Underground, surrendered Tuesday to the U.S. At- torney's office m San Francisco, on federal explosives charges pending since 1971. • Wedne&day, Marc.ti 12. Ul78 DAILY Pu.or AS Gasolille S~rtage Seen St,ate Defic~ncy Predicted in tiO Days SACRAMENTO (AP> -California may hove a gasoline shortage in a couple or months because oi a crude oil glut, in- sufficient at.orage, and too few American-flag tankers. says st.ate Controller Ken Cory. · Cory, a Democrat. told a news briefing Wednesday that when crude is ref\ned you get gasoline and fuel oil. The oil goes to the East Cout. But when you're short of easollne, you can't simply refin e more crude because there's no place to store lbe fuel oil that comes with it. "OUR STORAGE tanks are j ust about fu.ll . • • Within 60 days we're going lo see a shortage or gasoline, because the refineries won't have any place to put the fuel oil, and they will have to cut back," he said. California is receiving dally about. 500.000 more barrels of crude 011 than it needs. Moet Is from Alaska. and the problem will worsen in coming monthb. California's power plants C8Jl't burn the fuel oil be~use the sul- fur content exceeds state ail" quality standards, Cory said. AND THE FUEL oil can't be shipped to the East Coast because federal law requlres· that oil shipped between American ports be in ships Oy- iog the American flag, "and there are just not sufficient American-nag tankers." ··1 don't have an answer. I am presenting a problem • • • We can have ••• a gasoline s hortaJte, and at the same time we're floating in oil." Cory, also. chairman of the State Lands Commission. criticized the federal entitle- ments program on crude oil im- poised by Pr ldent Nixon ln J.973. THE PROGRAM froze prices on e:dsUng domestic oil supplies and ~Uempt~ to equalize all oH prices by providing penalty pay- ments for cheap domestic oll and government aubsld1ea for CorelgnoU. Cory said the system has lm~ fair ly penallied California, which ha11 exten1lve stato tidelands oil, because production costs have risen but not prices. ••You can make a bigger profit buyine $14 foreign oil and mak- ing gasoline than you can buying $4 California oil and making gasoline.'' Cory said. Brokerage to Pay $1 Million HE ADDED, "This convoluted set of formula has destroyed the marketplace • • • Richard Nixon socialized the oil industey in 1973, with some of the worst elements of socialism and some of the wont elements of capitalism.•• Production of the Long Beach offshore field has dropped sin~ 1973 from 100,000 to 14,000 bar· rels dally "because our costs are LOS ANGELES (AP) -One or the nation's largest brokerage firms. Los Ange les-based Bateman Eichler, Hill Richards Inc .• has agreed to pay $1 million to settle claims based on a recent Securities and Ex· change Commission ruJmg. SEC officials disclosed Tues- day that Bateman also promibed the firm would not engage in bloc trading of stocks listed on the American and New York ex- changes for six months. Bateman Eichler also agreed to set up an outside review board that wouJd be in existence Ban Lifted; Museum Slates Film Clrusic RIVERSIDE CAP) -The C1lv Council has reserved llS ban on showing O.W. Griffith's classic "The Birth of a Nation" in a city museum film urogram. The council voted unanimous- ly Tuesday to show the 64-year· old movie as many times as necessary to accommodate those who want lo see 1t. ( Sl'ATE J for at least two years. Finally, the brokerage finn agreed to suspend three of 1ls top officers for 90 days. The three are Willard G. DeGroot, Robert C. Hill and John D. McClure. Carter Get• BIU WASlilNGTON (AP) -A bill expanding Redwoods National Park in northern California by 48,000 acres and providing train- ing and Jobs for lumberjacks displaced hy park expansion is on its v.ay lo President Carter's desk. The bill. passed by the Senate 63·26 on Tuesday, will cost $359 million for purchasing private land around the present park. SC'n. Alan Cranston, D·Calif., the Senate sponsor, said he expects no opposition from the presi- dent. stock market analysts agreed was worth nearly $40 million. Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. to head too great. We can't afford to pro· Calif<;>rnia's scandal-pl agued duce, .. hesald. wu t Pl •·-m ental health system. Cory said a group of govern- .vsl"e'C or ened Farabee. 51, will be $40,764-a-rnent, industry and consumer SACRAMENTO <AP> yeardirect.orofthenewMental leaders wUl meet Thursday to Psychiatrist Dale Farabee, Health Department, one of five discuss the oil entitlem ents former Kentucky state health to be created from the current problem before meetmg federal director and mental health s tate Health Department under officials in Huntington Beach <Urector, was named Tuesday by legislation passed last year. next week. Hayimrd Vandals Sought HAYWARD (AP> - Hayward police are seeking vandals -ap- parently motivated by racial hatred -who did an estimated $15,000 damage to the home of a black man and his white wife, Police Capt. George Kelly said. Marc Sangara, a native of Africa and a s teel company ex- ecutive, and his wife, Loretta, who works in a molel cbam advertising office, have lived in the three-bedroom house since last August, Kelly said. __ _;.__;._~:._--_..:,. ____ __::__ __________________ ~~~ CLOSE ENCOUNTERS PUBLIC NOTICE OF ANOTHER KIND Another kind. altogether. A s. when you get together with your dentist. Could you get closer than that to Or. Amof d Flanzer? Well. he doesn't like to let money keep people apart. So you could get pretty close. For a lot less than you might suppose. Dr. Arnold H. Ffanzer 370 E. 17th St. PUBLIC NOTICE Costa Mesa 642-0112 PUBLIC NOTICE f l -, ·'· ROOt-rt N . W~ed Publ1)"9r ThomH Keev111Ecs1tor orangeeoas1oa•tv~•o1 Editorial Pag_e ......................................................... _ Wedneaclay, M1rch 22. 1978 Barbara Kreiblch/EC1ltor1e1 Pe91 Editor 1 .. State Remembers ! Freeway Debacle .. . , f ' I I '. • ~. t . I' Newport. Beach residents and city officials hnd themselves in what might be described as a delicate satuahon with the folks at CalTrans involving a couple of seemingly unrelated projects. On the one h and is the much sought-after new bridge on P~icific Coast Highway where 1t crosses the Upper Bay. You m ay recall the new seven-lane structure was to have been •·on the line in '79." The construction schedule has been moved back by CalTrans and it's become "hope it's done by '81." Meanwhile on the other side of town, city offic1al~ have a couple of ~ticky problems regarding land that the ~tate agency own s and wants to sell. The city faces a n especially ticklish problem with one of the parcels, the old Pacific Electric rig ht of way parallel to the highway, because of a dispute over the land's value The city wants ll I or u park and sa) sit 'snot worth murh more than $400.000. CalTrans notes that it's zoned and !.Ub d1v1ded for dupl(''<es. making it~ value around Sl.5 million. rnm1mum And CulTrans has not been shy about telling city of I 11: ia Is that any all<.'mpt to change the zoning to park use 11n that lamt or to lower proposed densities on other nearby CalTrnns property could be met with legal action. The agency's position is that any effort by the city to alter the zoning is really being done to lower the price for "'ty purchase Bolh of thcst: problems are predictable and have their roots rn the debacle of the last decade known as the Pacifi c Coast Freeway. IL would seem that quite of bit of resentment still ex 1 ... ts on lhl• state level from the \'Ote in which residents n •scinded lht> (•x1sling righl·of-way agreements for th(• I l"l.'l'"' :J\ CalTran.., 1'CJ>l l'"t.•ntat11,,cs \\ere quite blunt m telling 1·1t~ pcoplt· thut 11<1 \\Ork would he done on any protect 111 "\e\\ port Beach \lllll•ss there was an obnous unanimity n l 1·1l) upmmn in f~l\OI of it. In fact. that view was th(' b<.1s1-. lor th<.· tnrm~1lwn of the c1l1zen's Bndge Action Team. But 1l ..,t.·<.·m.., th.it tht' c:1ty is stilJ reaping a harvest ot hard fct•hng m Sa<.·ramcntoas reflected in'the continued dt' lays m the bridge construct1on and in the hardlme at~1tudc about th<.> handling of the CalTrans properties in West !\ C \1, l>O rt. School Bus Safety It w.i.., u11sl.'l! l111g to learn that nearly 20 percent of th<.• !'1:s ..,1')1onl bu..,t·s rn tlw :'\cwport-.\Iesa L'ntficd School Dis 1 nl"l \H•rc pulll'<l Imm the road recently because of main 1t'nant·e deft-eh that could be considered :;afety halards , to s tudents. {)1stnC't oll1t'1als 'JY five of the 10 vehicles \\ere I .ih.<.•n out of M'l'\'J<'t' 10 1· r:outinc maintenance, but anothL'f I I\'(' fml<.•d to make the J::racJc under a California Highway I 't1lrol annU<ll cht•('k The improperly installed brakes and radiator leak.., "ill be repaired and the district has leased other veh1C'les 111 lhl· meantime. Children arc being transported to :-.c·hoo1 in sate equipment D1strn. t ofliriab have downplayed the s1tuat1on :tlthou.l!h its .1 s<ifo bet that parents are a bit more c:on 1'1'11\t'cl On a mo1 c oplim1sl1c note. we should be grateful tor 1 llf' t hnrnu~h safct \' checks of the CHP. California c; 't'hool hu' :-.alcl~ re.cord 1'> outstanding as is the training program tor bus drn·ers. J lcme\ t:r 1t is still a mystery why the district miss('d t hl' fl"e f'll P-spotted defects during its regular 30-da~ ,;1f<'I ~ tht•l·k D1stnct officials s hould stress a mon• thnrou1!h s;.1let~ t•heck of buses to uvoid similar probll.'ms rn thL· futun· • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Datly Pilot. Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and ar11sts. Reader comment is 1nv1ted Address The Daily Pilot PO. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phpne (71 4) 642·4321. Boyd/Signs By L.M.BOVD I Nofevery Seasoned Citizen reC'alls a favorite Burma- Shave s1i:tn. but most do couldn't somebody dubbed Chubby Checker? In two out of every 100 households nat1onw1de Is at least one C'alendar . And 83 out oC every 100 of these were gifts from businesses Such as· "My man I won't .shave / says Hazel Huz I but l should worry I I>ora 'c; does Burma-Shave" Or· "Does ~·our husband I misbehave I grunt and grumble I rant. and rave I shoot thf" brute some I Burma-Shave" Or· "Listen. birds I those signs <'Ost. / money I so roost a while but I don't ~et funny I Burma· Shave." If somebody in your household asks. "What t Burma-Shave signs?" kindly explain it to tho littler s haver . Q. ·•Ask your Love a nd War man bow many women over age SO are on their second marrage?" A. Three out of four, says he. And five out or six meo in that age bracket Ukewise. Am as k e d h ow th~t • rock 'n ' roller Chubby ? . Checker ca me to be so Q. "Can you verily the claim that the band aboard the Titanic played 'Nearer My God To Thee' for almost all of the two hours forty minutes the sbip wa• sink· ing"" t ·~ caUed. Credit Dick Clark's • wife with giving Ernest Evans that stage name. If somebody wHb a trlck moniker like Fats Domino , could make il. Hid she, why Dear A. What it pl aye~ was ragtime and then the hymn ••Autumn." Q "Jimmy Durante for years closed out his TV Shows with the line, 'Good- night, Mrs. Calabllsh. wherever you are.· I un ders~nd be finally revealed alter 20 years that Mrs. Calabash was his pet name tor hla wife Jeannlo who'd died In 1943. How did be C!Ome to refer to her that. way1" A, ~ is he a.nd bts -wife o found c"use to re- ineinbi!t with ft'e'lt attect!on a liUJo Wwll outside Chlcaao c:allcd Calf&b.94b. Nick Thimmesch Uninvited Do-gooders Do Harm 1 WASJIJNGTON -Ob, how well-intentioned we Americans are, and how s tupidly we ::.ometimes act. How eh;e to ex- plam how a pair of do-gooder House members dispatched two Americans untnvited -to Guatemala lo monitor the recent elections there; bow one monitor c ried "fraud," a nd there by angered many Guatemalans, who might regard their voling booths as sacred as ours, and wish Uncle Sam would mind his own business I t turned out that the Guatem alan elections weren't so fraudulent <irtcr Jll. Be sides, h avt' n't the rt· Ileen somt- ballot box pro· bll'm::. in thl· US over th1• ~('Jrs' Who .ire we to poke around elec lions in other <'Ountnes, shaking d Calvinist11· finger at our Latin neighbors., THE GENIUS behind lhts stunt 1s Rep Donald M. Fraser , I>. Minn .. chairman o f the House Subcommittee on Interna· !tonal Organizations His partn<.'r i:-. Rep Millice nt i"enw1cl.., R NJ. Both profesi> un•e1 t concern for human rights and \ ote fraud 1n other coun tr11•s So Fr;iscr got the Democratic Party lo sponsor a trip b} Professor John Plank of the l nn er!>1ty of Connecticut to Guatemala to observe the e.lec- t1ons The United Auto Workers union paid Plank's expenses S1n<'e the Republican Party ""nuldn't sponsor or pay for Rep. f"t.•n w1ck's rcpresentill1ve. John H1chardson , president of Mailbox Freedom House, sbo became tus sponsor and paid bis way from her own J)rlvate fund&. GUATEMALA, unCortuoately, has long been tom and suffered violence by extremlats of the left and right. The March 5 elections were the first held in many years, and featured a mditary east. Voters we r e asked to choose a i>,tesident among two arm y generals and a colonel. A· general already runs the coun- try. Naturally, a !>cene l ike this attracted representau ves ot Europe's democratic parties as observers Only now, for the first time. the U.S. aot into tM act. While the Guatemalan gov- e rnment didn't invite any ot these "monitors," once this Ln· spectton gang set foot on their territory they were well re- ceived and treated cordially. But after the ele.ction, whose o utcome is n 't clear yet, Professor Plank cut loose with· "The fraud perpetrated here 1s so transparent that nobody could expect lo get away with it!' He '' I \ 0 \ ' . . \ ··, ,, 11, I t \ '' '• :. '. \ \: ' ~ \ . l C111 'rr rii:ht IH' mu ... r d<> .... om ... rhini:' Hound up .mnther ."l lllJll mt'n and stond thl'm tt>Alrica'" also noted that the fraud .. sim- ply reenlorces lbe deep cyrucism of the Guatemalan voten. '· Fraser and Fenwick are now trying to play down t.be cnticism or their m~pec\ion team because the uplln effort is getting mixed reviews m Guatemala. ·'They were not invited, and tbelr presence 1s offensive," !;atd Julio Asensio, Guatemala'S a mbassador to lhe United Na-. t1ons. "This is congressman Fraser's concept of playing God Almighty. He act.s as if we were trying to hide something. r think l "ill get a team and go inspect his el~ction m Minnesota next fall." NO MATl'ER. Fraser 1s un· deterred "lt 1::. my hope." he ~1ously declares, "that it (the monitoring> will be followed by other 1rutiat1ves and tbat even- tually we lthe Democratic Par- ty> will be Joined b y the Republican Party a nd The Socialist International.·· M s. Fenwick is equally ar· dent "We've done Guatemala a se1-'vice," s he says, "and are much appreciated there. We must try t o get the non· Communist nations concerned about human rights. For their U-N ambassador to threaten to go to Minnesota 1s unproduc- 11 \ l' Goodn~!;s sakt•:-. <.:an 't these JH'<•ksniff~ realize that their lt•am was uninvited, that for Fra~~·r to make his announce- ments about the momtonng on Congressional stationery is te> put the emblem or the U.S. Congress on this questionable enterprise" In the name of human rights. this bunch, by sniffing around this way, m1~ht well be violating the human rights or people try- ing to have an elecllon Complaints Unfair to Animal Shelter To the Editor· Tht> rcccnt letters appeanng tn your nc"-spaper regarding the use or the high c1.llllude C'hamber m the dest ruC't1on of unwanted pell' al Orani:e County Animal Shelter have been most unfair to thr1t facility Without debattng the merits of thl' 1nlli:tliH• IQ abolish the ust• or thL• d('COmpresslOn chamber 1t 1' interesting to note lhat not one national humane society has gone on record in support of the m1tial1H'. while the American Human<· Assonat1on. Mero Crus ad<.•. the SPCA, and lhC> Ca l1rorn1a State H umilne i\s:-.oc1at1on a r c all against outlawing the chamber ll is difficult tn the present emotional atmospht•re to vie'.I. th1-; s ubJecl obJf'ct1vely, bu.t the horror stories which were used as illustrations 1n the recent IC'ttcrs admittedly only occur when the chamber 1s nol in good '.l.Orking order or the personnel is untrained or unsupervised 1n 1ls use It t!'>, to sa.y the least. 1rresponsiblC' to suggest. even by 1mphcat11m. that Orange Count) Shelt('r staff as well as the hum ant.' orRan11at1on volunteers \\ho work there . would rount1•nance for a moment the inhumane praC't\ccs de!'cribcd in such tcrnfymg detail SUC'll FALSE and misleading. <,tatemcnts do incalculable harm to our a nimal rescue efforts Contributing to people's already 1rratlonal fears of the "pound" prevents finders of lost pets from brtni;(ing them there. and many heartbrokf'n owners and pets will never find each other as a result. Instead or attackin g the symptom. l et us uoite our humane ~(forts in attacking the cause of the deaths aL the s h e lter. Recent Los Angeles County Animal Control figures since initiation of their low-cosl spay neuter c linics, art> ablounding: in three yfars. the number of animals impounded hy the shelte r has decreased 69,000! And the number killed decreased from 101,297 to 41,177 Los Angeles City. also. has pas"ed an excellent ordinance to control indlscraminate breeding. Why can't Orarige County do lhe"ame" RUTH l"RANK~t.. Cod~ of C4nld11et To tlie Editor: ' The Dally Pilot is way off base with the recent edllotiat opinion objtc""' lo the reinstitution or tl\e Republican lllh Commanchnel\t, "thou ~baJt not • s p e a It 1 r I o f a n·.o t h c t Republ.lt''9n." The Pl1ol fa\:•fl campalrn retorm t• ral&e th l " of loc:tl1 poUUCJ. Yet. al tho . amc Umc oppout .Jl. xolun tuy and comm ricfabltt rtort by local Republi can lo clean up ' ca mp:.11gn rh<.'lor1l and materials by a gentlemanly agreement to cl1m1nate c·ampa1gn ..,ml'ars and unnec<.'<,sary mud thrO\\ 1nJ: \'ES, SU<'h an agreement b~ llepubhc<in candidates for public office "'ill chminatc somt• of the JUll':'t" ancl degradm~ stuff th at makes for newspaper ·qori<•-.. Hut. the people of Orang<' County will he well scn N I h\ such a codt> of C'onduct among i:and1ciatcs Shame on you for th1nk1ng of the newspaper bm;int•ss first and lht• public flood secondly' When th<' Republ1t·an l llh Commandment was in force in the late 1960s. th1• level of Or:rngc County p<.1l 1t 1cs "<is high with f1n1.· tons1:rvc.i l 1vc• Rcpuhhcan leadership at the ht•lm We could use -.omc of that l..111d of quiet. <•ff1c1cn1 Jfrpubhcan1sm m this count) Loda' Tl!OMJ\S J\ FUENTES Oth~rtr Ntt'd R.-lp To the f:d1tor Ye::.. Bubbles is dead . J\nd ~c do feel sorrow <tnd rl'grcl. It's O\'C•r .ind yrt for the first lime sin<'c ii all hcgan I feel angry and frustrnted ~1y foelinJ:s ccr tamlv aren't d1re<'ted at Lt0n Country as I feel onlv com passion for their t r<'mendous yet disappointing efforts l know the1 r loss financially as well a .... emotionally 1s ~· great one and I h:1v1• only adm1rnllon and pra1sto for their heroi<' attempts to save t3uhblrs No. my frustrations concern the ract that Bubbles was Just one wild aninrnl needing as- sistance and <'Crtainly she re- ceived the most professional at- tention available. Wha t I can't s top thinking about are all the m1lhons or other wild animals Who suffer al the hands or the profiteers or the world DON'T ALL of yo~. who took up pen and paper lo scream about the rights or Bubbles, feel tile same <'Ompass1on for the baby seals m Newfoundla nd who are now al this moment being clubbed lo death for the sake of their pelts" Doesn't it sadden you to know that whales are be· ing slaughtered n('e()Jessly lti aJI our waters •d that porpol are caURht And destroyed in the ~•me nets used to catch tuna? And what about our bctautllul and majestic birds of prey who fall victims to thO poisons and ~sUeides we uUllie" 11 It only when we p~k out one oo\mal, Rltto U a namf' and at-tr1bu~ cert ln cute and cuddly tr alt• to 1t that we feel c:om· passion and art moved to ac· lion" l 1r "-"'at I'm UJina la that lf 1n th t naasuc t>Ubllclly, the phone call and th leltll'ams that )'OU a11UUv add dlU1cnUy dlrected towll'\l \ pr of one animal could be d1rc<'lctl to"' ard the cause or the other masses of animals in need. lhc•n finallv we would s1.•c :.ome action t .1ken. on a level wh1C'h \lo.Ould l1l'neflt so mam After all. 1t 1.., only throu~h a·ll our concerted efforts that leg1slat1on v.-111 come <tbout to aid the C'a usc or the rt• maining wild animals that sttll t"<ISI todil\' Ll'D/\ WAHL ltfurdt..- To the Editor On Thursday , M<1r< h Iii. 19711, there was a photo of a Lebanes<: rescue worker holding the body t>f a child killed m an Israeli air attack Then again on Fnday . March 17. there was another photo or an Israeli father crymg over hjs son's grave, an lsraf"li soldier killed in the attack on the PLO If you a r e go in fl to s how photos of killings. let's ,:!et things m the nght perspective and why wasn't t here a photo of the bus where 36 innocent civilians. not all Israeli. women and children "t•re murdered hy tho~e coward- ly bul<'hers called the PLO WAR IS hell and I know when bombs. rockets and artillery are used there wHl be c1v1Jian casualt1cs, but when e1v11Jans are shot down with automatic weapons at airports, bombs placed in areas where knowingly children and women are pres ~nt. where hand grenades arc thrown at civilians. the,.n Utis 1s not war but out and out cold· blooded murder. Bloodshed is still bloodshed re· gardless if it is Arab or Israeli and I hope one day very soon this will end and both peoples will be able to live in peace. JACKA. BElTSTOCK Warning To the Editor· On Wednesday, March 8, a working re presentative (CJT' the l,os Angeles Zoo spokt> to the Alhambra Kiwanis Club. Amoni;( other things, she pointed out that the loss of a tranqu1hied hi p popot.amus is one out of two or SO percent due to the uodetermtna ble dosage Why WH Bubbles JtiUed with two shot!l" Such mana.Rement and Ulepl handling of a superb publicity event a,nd the brightest wodd tn ter~l news story ror a happy· n.ws starved world !!wells a musivc sense or sorrow ror Lion Count.-, Safari a nimal5 Also lost ls my desire to patronbc !'IUCh mllM(lement Perhaps the prcn can uncov~r tho COV<'n.IP 1nd str•kc a blow for lmpmved llvtna care tor the tn a plrln~ specimens or lhe animal woe-Jd which are Jnllt'd for life f or our hum an <., > ~n)oyment l>AVE GAMBILL jtli•au.-of Ta..r To the Edltor I am a \\idow \lotlh 1111 chlld1cn but I ha\ c taken a keen tnler~!>l in th1: Pilot s art1cl(• about the -.tud<'nt p1cket1ng or the f:dw<irds Cinema:-. l support \fr l\rthur Riley !Mailbox Feb :?21 I don't want mr taxes goinc 10 pa\ school administrator l\tr. l'l•rr~ lo tram pickets when he l'Ould better put his time in tra1n1ng thc:-.c students to read .111d learn basic math. Jf this is .111 Mr Pl•rry has to do with hts t1m<' I would hk(' htm off m' prop«rt.v laKCS . The twisted rc•butl a I in a letter !\-fatl box by Mr. Howard Gensler made ver y little i.cnse as all tl did \\-:ls to try and distort thl' facts <.1s n1<'<'ly presented by Mr. llilpy Mr Gensler. why '>houldn I tlw property tax be '>h 1ftt•d lo 111<'nmc rather than prOp<.'rty' ln this way the pC'rsons th:.il c un best afford to be taken \lo.Ill he "look." Is n 't 1t mt('rest1ng that all these los<.'rs can sa\ 1!'> that if the Jarvis /\m<'nclmenl goes through the schools will be shut down and th<' fin· and police for('e "ill ht> cut in half Not once ha\'C' they mc•ntmne<l they would haw· to get nd of the deadwood in c1v1 I "t'n ice and put the rest t o work A tim<' study showed the.v actual!\ work an average of two hours and fifty six minutes each work in~ day per person. Why do I have to pay for doll· blc clipping and triple dippinl{ pensions when often there bavf• been no pc•ns 1on deductions whatever" I certamly would like to know why I have to pay the dental hills for the family or l.'1vil service employees while I lack money to f'ix my own teeth due to my taxec;. ll a lways up- sets me at the check stand to htiH' lo pay cash for m y pound of h ambur~er While the ODE' •theed of me buvs six big steak~ with food ~tamps. Over the weekend m the grocery parking lot thf' ('3r next to mme said · f'or Offtc1nl l'sc Onl~'. .. yet it \\as full of rh1l'1ren and being u-.f'd to p1L·k up thl' "'eek 's sup- ply of gmcem·-. This Yl'.tr I "',1.., 'l'r\ happy lo recc1v<.' " Ji 1wrcen1 raise but now T s~· thf' lluntington Beach TeaC'hcr::. are d<.•mandiog a 20 percent rww which will certain· ly wipe out my little.· one. And the ones that h1t ng hke a mlll~lonc around we property laxpay~ necks have the nerve to ask why we are going to vole for lht.• Jnvi Amendment! MAHY 1.0tl PJ\RKE'R • l1Urr1 trom rt'odrra arr UH"ICO'"" Thlt npllr lo rondrnar lt'tlers lo JU .,,at"r or rlamanatt libfl u rdnwd Lt1rn1 o/ $00 word.I <~ ~ Will bf' gn)f'rl prr/rrrncr. AU ~tm """'bl· <'l~ s-grictv~ oild rnailmg ~u bllt aomn may be eodM«d °" rr· ..,, '' "'f/jaeltl ,,.~UOIUIClpparnat, Porlry """ ..., ~P"4""-"~t::"i Saddlebaek EDITION VOL. 71, NO. 81, .C SECTIONS, .C2 PAGES Afternoon N. Y. St--.. .. ...,. TEN CENT ·surprise: Rain Again Deluges Coast : By The .Usoclated Press Rains returned today unex· J)ectedly to Southern California, dumping mudslides on roads, flooding streets and dousing un· l\f'epared commuters. Three persons were killed when tt cement truck rear-ended and crushed a passenger car on the Jtlippery southbound Long Beach Preeway north of the Artesia 1 . \'reeway, lheCalifornia Highway Baek Fro m F lu Patrol said. The \women and one woman occupants or the car were pronounced dead at Paramount General Hospital. Freeway systems and surface roads throughout Los Angeles County were heavily backed up after the first rains started fall· ing just before the morning rush hour began before 7 a.m. A mudslide dropped on La Cienega Boulevard near tbe Popl' Paul \I acknowledges cheers from the crowd as he .ippcars at his window <.1t Lhc Vatican today. The pon- llff was forced to skip his weekly general audience due to u bout with the flu, but he ·s experted lo hold Easler Sl'rVll'CS W aJdill Testifies, 'I'd Do, It Again' By TOM BARLEY Ol 1,_ O.Oly l'lltlt Si.ff Dr William Baxter Waddill told an Orangl' County Superior Court jury Tuesday that if he were lo again confront the situa- tion he faced m Westminster Community llosp1tal on March 2, 1977, his actions would be ex- actly the same today as they were then The Huntington Harbour phys1c1an test1f1ed during a long day of cross examination that the death of a baby girl follow Jng an abortion he performed on the mother was "unavoidable and inevitable "There was no way in the world that that baby could have lived," Waddill told prm;ecutor ~oberl Chatterton after again denyin~ that he strangled the in· , fant in the hospital nursery. "I used my stethoscope o"""'1e f~tus and heard nothing. I felt around the throat for a pulse and fell nothing. And I only saw 11gonal (dying> gasps," he t~Stified. "Were those gasps before or after death, doctor?" Chatterton asked the defendant during a murder trial that is packing one ot the largest courtrooms in the S.nta Ana county courthouse. "I don't know. Does It make eny difference?" Waddill replied. <#Do you really care?" Chat· terton asked the willless, nushed with anger. Tempers Oared on both sides or the counsel table as Chat· terlon intensified his questioning of Waddill and repeatedly ac- cused the defendant of railing to answer his questions. Defense attorneys Charles Weedman and Malbour Watson repeatedly got to their feet to protest the form of the prosecu- tion questioning but got little sympathy from Judge James K. Turner. He overruled all but two of the objections. It is alleged by the prosecution that Waddill strangled the baby after he realized that the saline solution that he m1ected into the mother 12 hours earlier had failed to abort the fetus. In an effort to refute testimony of rive prosecution witnesses, Waddill again claimed Tuesday that the infant never knew Jife from the mo· ment it was expelled from the mother's womb He said nurses and a doctor were deceived by what he described as agonal gasps and · reflex actions from a dead baby that had been immersed in saline for 12 hours. WaddllJ told the jury that a fetus cannot survive a saline (See DOCTOR, Page AZ) I ' Naked Patient Capture d in South Laguna ! l r~-Coast Weather Partly cloudy through Thursday. Chance ot measurable rain 10 per- cent tonight and Thurs- day. Lows tonight 52 to 57. Highs Thursday 63 to 68. INSIDE T ODAY l/ 11011 wcmt to put Eaner diftntr on tlw tot* quick a.s a bunn11 80 JIOU'U have time to ~lebraJe too, ff~ Food, Page Cl. ••• 31: "' .... . , .. AA "' at 81J All .. .. .... •• N A 23-year-old mental patient frightened residents or Three Arch Bay by breakine into their homes Tuesday afternoon after escaping from South Coast Community Hospital in South Laguna and sprinting naked down South CoastHl11hway. . Sheriff's deputi.es said the mnn jumped through a window at South Coaat Community Hospltal 's mental ward around 1:30 p.m. Tuesday and headed south. Once inside the POSh complex •. deputies aaldt tho dlRtrauabt pa· tlenl began Dreaklng windows, frithtening neishborbood tesi· dents. Offlcen 11.ld the man Inhaled a can' ol haJr spray at one res- idence. My was finally ar· rested at 2 Portola by ab riff'• deputJes. He WAI Irvin M Hrvatl . Baldwln Hills, sceoe ol heuy mud damace thla month, and the hlgbway patrol 111ued a STOCKTON HIT BY RAIN-Story, A3 warning to travelers between Rodeo Road and Stocker Street. Today's rains, said weather service spedaliat Wade Carter. were trigeered by a low: pressttte system off the coast whleb 11 expeeted to break up by nlghttall. Carter said partly. cloudy skies and a sllebt chance of rain was forecut. tonight and Thursday. The National Weather Service said .26 inches of rain fell in downtown Los An11eles between 7 and 8:1S a.m. today, bringing the season total to 30.65. Daredevil That contrasts with 8.18 Inches last season, a normal ot 12.02, but still hadn't beaten the seasonal record ot 38.18 set in 1883, Carter said. The rain struck throusbout Southern California, with mud slides closing one lane of U.S. 101 at Rincon Point near the Ventura-Santa Barbara County line. Rain fell in the Grapevine Wallenda Plunges From Wire SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) -Karl Wallenda, patriarch of the Great Wallendas family of high wire artists, fell 10 stories to his death from a wire ex· tended between beachfront· hotels here today, circus of- ficials said. Wallenda, 73, was doing a pro· motion for the Pan American Circus, the circus manager, James 8. Harrington, said. Wallenda, whose family has been plagued by tragedy in a series or deaths and injuries dur- ing daredevil performances, fell an estimated 120 feet into the driveway of the Condado Holi· day Inn hotel before hundreds of horrified spectators. Montreal accountant Victor Abboud said he watched the veteran performer teetering on the wire in beachfront winds which were "loo strong." "I &aw him go down on his knees on the wire and I thought he was kneeling to rest," said Abboud. "But then I saw he was shaking. The wind blew him off and he went all the way down head first." Blood stains spattered the hotel driveway where Wallenda fell. Harrington said he died in the city's Presbyterin hospital soon after the fall at 7 :20 PST. Wallenda was performing in San Juan rughlly with his grand· daughter Rietta on a SO-foot wire. Harrington said the Wallendas were hired for the circus's current run in the capital of this U.S. com- monwealth. The run started March 1 ahd finishes April 2. Asked 1f Wallenda was not warned about the wind, usually strong along San Juan's ex- clusive beachfront hotel strip, Harrington said: "No, he thought 1t was ftne. He tested and installed the wire himself." (See WALLENDA, Page A2) Man Kilb Doome d Wife area south or Bakerstleld, but California ln&hway Patrol or .. ficer Jerry Hennes said In- terstate 5 at that pass remained open despite a threatening mudslide. Flash·flood warnings were is- sued for coastal s lopes and foothills of Los Angeles and Orange counties. Tbe snow level, said Carter. was reported at 7,000 feet. ,.,. ........... 10 STORIES TO DEATH Wire Walker Wallenda Diedrich Waits for Decision Slaying Cheats 'Hell' By GARY GRANVILLE Ol tlle o.llY ,.1191 St.it Orange County Supervisors Ralph Diedrich and PhiUp An· thony worf't know until later this week if pleas to have their criminal indictments dismissed will be answered. Anthony, Diedrich and their co-defendants' attorneys spent Tuesday in court attempting to convince Superior Court Judge Mason Fenton the indictments should be thrown out. NORTO'N SHORES. Mich. CAP) -"I would 'rather spend an eternity {in hell than to see Molly live ~"lire or hell," said the note r0W1d 'near the embracing bodies or l:y.man and Molly Briggs. Police said Brigs, '6, wrote the note before be killed his can- cer-stricken wife, Molly, 58, and then killed himself Taesday. A single .32-callber bullet was in the right temple or each. Police Qllef Charles Curtis said Mrs. Briggs was oo a bed in the living room while her husband lay with tus face and arms in her lap. "l don't want to call this a murder case. He obviously loved her a lot," the chief said. But Curlis added a routine police investiaation is under way. A son, Tyler. 24, told police after the bodies were discovered that his rather loved his mother deeply and bad watched her suf· fering for a long time Jerry Cook, a neighbor, At the end of the day, Judge Fenton said he will rule on the motions to dismiss later this week. The indictments charge Diedrich, Anthony, Anaheim Ci- ty Councilman William Kott and onetime financier Gene Conrad with violating slate campaign regulations. Suspect Subdued By Wrestling Hold When handed down last July 1, the indictments also charged Fullerton attorney Michael Remington with joining in a 1976 criminal conspiracy to violate campaign regulations. Remington, however, has already pleaded guilty to a single charge and no longer figures jn the case except as a posslble prosecution witness. The campaign irregularity in- dictment is just one of two cases pending agairusl Diedrich. He was named Dec. lS in a mulUple·count. indictment that charges h1m and architect LeRoy Rose with bribery related offenaea. Those problems for the second district supervisor were put on the back burner Tuesday as the lawyers argued for quaahing or the p0litical coosplracy indict· ment. It 1tlleges the tour defendants with joinin.g in a consl)lracy to bide the true source ot moriey funneled into Kott and Anthony campaigns. The defense lawyers areued (See WAITING, Pace AZ) A 15-year-old high school wrestler, wbose family sur- prised an alleged burglar in their Balboa Island home. used his athletic ability to capture the man Tuesday. Police said Wil(red Cooper Jr. tackled lhe man as he was about to flee the Cooper bome and then used a wrestler's hold to hang onto him until police arrived. The youth is a member or the Corona del Mar High School team. Officers booked Thomas Volkening, 27, of Culver City, on suspicion of burglary. He is be· ing held in lieu of $10,000 bail. The Cooper family told police they were working outside their home at 546 S. Bayfront at about 10:31> a.m. The senior Cooper Prisoner Dies LONG BEACH (AP) -Clif- ford Holloway, 26, or Long Beach, was round hangioe by a sock from the door of a cell in Loog Beach Jail. Tuffy's Puppy LegUlaton ReplilCe .Dog a said he found Volkening stand- ing in an upstairs bathroom when he went indoors. He said Volkening told him he was from a poodle clipping busi· ness 10 Santa Monica and was looking for a Mrs. Robmson, whose dog he was to work on. The Coopers decided to call police and Volkening apparently dee ided to leave until the teen-ager restrained him. lio n Grab s, Kills Boy, 4, Then Shot TEHACHAPI (AP) -A 4- year-old boy believed to be from Oregon was shaken to death by a Hon at a wild animal comµound west of here, authorities said. The lion grabbed Corbeu S. Maples when the boy reached through a JO.fool high chain lmk fence to retrieve a paper airplane Tuesday afternoon, Kern County Coroner Richard Gervais said. Young Maples was pulled through an eight·inch gap at the bottom of the fence, and lhe lion began shaking him violently, Gervais said. Witnesses were unable t.o dis- tract the 14·year·old lion, so a policeman shot and killed the animal with a rifle. The boy was rushed to a local bo!plUl but was pronounced dead or multiple bead wounds and Internal injuries, aut.boriUea 1aid. The vicUm's parents left the hospital after their son was declared dead, and the cc>toneT's oftJce had been unable to locate them by tb1a morning, Gervais 1ald. The tatber apparently had been applytq for a job at tbe compound which kteS>S antmala for use ln movlea, the coroner •ddcd. O!llcl 11 did not know wbtre fain.Uy llvecl in Ote1on. described the coupll..' as "pre- cious neighbors She was the type to cover up the dog in cold weather ... He was the type 01 man who would help anyone." Mrs. Cook said Briggs retired last year lo care for his wife but needed to work one week per month to maintain insurance coverage for .Mrs. Briggs. "We were their neighbors for lS years. They were the best m the world. And. they're not in hell." Mrs. Cook said. refernng lo the note Bnggs left behind. At Least 30 Di,e as Tiro Buses Collide YUMA, Ariz. (AP> -Two Mexican passenger buses col- lided head-on about 40 miles soulh of the border town of San Luis, killing at least 30 people and inJurmg scores of others, San Luis police said. The police said many of the vil'lims burned to death in a fire that erupted after the crash. U. S. Customs agents at the San Luis Port of Entry said Mexican authorities told them that the acC'1dent occurred about 8 p.m. Tuesday and involved two buses carrying 81 people. They said a small car also was m- volved, but they did not know how many people were in the vehicJe. San Luis police said 30 people were killed. but U. S. Customs agents said they were told the figure was closer to 40. Fourteen of the injured were trans.P,Orted to Yuma Regional Medical Center. A nursing supervisor, who asked that her name not be used. sajd four adults and one child ~re ad· milted with burns. while one burn victim was airlifted to a Tucson hospital and four others were to be airlifted to a PhoeniXJ hospital. I I ,,..-~~~~~~~~~--' lights Out For Ghost? WASHINGTON CAP> - The ghost of naval hero Stephen Decatur failed to show at bis former home Tuesday But potlce !!aid lights went out for the first time in years at the site or the dueline iround where he· was shot 158 years ago. Two ghost le11ends con- cern Ina Decatur, hero e>r the Barbary Wal' and the War of 1812, w tested at locatlON eiaht mlJ~s apart Tuesday nia)lt. f ' ' • A% DAILY PILOT Sil Wedneedey. Men:h 22 1971 . Greenl;)elt Preservation Delayed 87 KATllY CLANCY .................. Actlon to preserve the 10,000·acre Laguna Greenbelt will have to await the outcome of property tax proposals on the June e ballot, Oranae County supervisors ruled Tuesday. The board asked county plan- ners to work the next two month• with cily olllc•ala in Lasvn• Beach and ltvlne on wa.r• to lidptement a lhr .. ·ytar lludp CD lW ...... int lbt 10,000 acrH 1urrou1dln1 L11una Btach. The study, nnanced with $8,500 in county, Laguna Beach and Irvine funds, recommends preserving most of Lhe 1Hd u a public resource. It allo calla for sharp llmlt.s oo dc~oploent lo preaeTV• s~c rl4ltU.n11 and 111alntaiD wild.Ult. .Ahd u a way to Im~ th• S>rwervaUon plan tbe report suuests a po11ible ~crease ln the county's Harbon, BeacMI, and Parks Dt1trtct tax rate to ftnance publlc purchase of prime open space. Without delvln1 Into coat eatimates, the 1ludy t .. m allo suneated that city oUlctall pro- vld• some ftAancln1 for fr'MJ'· belt open 1paee In their boun· dart• and that atate aulhotlU be uked for htlp. County oftlctal1 also aald dls- cuaalons tht next few mont.bl wUl heve to center ln part oo the possible impact of recently· enacted property tax reform le1l1lat1on as well as potential pa1aaae in June of tb• Jarvf.I.. O~~n.. UaUve whJo •ould telU'itt ~-W•. Th~ report identifies the greenbelt u one or three re· m alnlng major open space ueas on the Southern Callfornla couL Tbe aru llrttcbH from Scotchman's Cove south of Corona del Mar along the shore to SGutb Laguna and inland alon,-the sides of L11una Can· )'On Road to nearly the San Dle10 freeway. Peace Forces Enter Lebanon The report idenUfies as lop priorities for acqujsitlon the Sycamore Hllll property, :520 acrea between Latuna Canyon and El Toro Roads, ea well as the ridgellne Marcroft and DeWitt properllea east of La1una Canyon. BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - The first U.N. peacekeepin1 unit moved Into embattled south Lebanon today, a Lebanese gov· ernment apokeaman sald. Palestinian guerrillas claimed maJor vlolatlons riddled the Israell-Oeclared ceaae·flre. An 18·man Iranian recon· na1ssance party entered the Lebaneae Christian town of Mu· Host Families For Exchange Teens Sought Host ramlllea are needed for 35 Italian students expected to come to Mission Viejo and San Juan Capistrano throu&h the E .F. Cultural Exchan1e Homestay Program in June. The students, who are scheduled to arrl ve for a month's stay on June 22, come with insurance and spending money and the desire lo be treated as members of American families During their stay, the stu· dents. aged 14 to 19, will attend morning classes 1n English language and American culture at Saddleback Collegt' Interested families are asked to call Bill Hoffman or David Bratton Kearns. program coordinators, after 6 p m or weekends at 41W-4238. Jlost families are interviewed and will be allowed to chose the .i~l' and sex or the student who :-.lays with them. Anaheim Man Dies in Freak Truck Crash An Anaheim man was kllled Tuesday tn a freak freeway acci· dent when a disabled truck· tractor jacknlfed with a low· truck and spilled the victim out onto the highway Highway patrol investigators 1dent1fied the man killed In the 5 05 p m. accident on the Orange rreeway near Bas tanchury Hoad as Albert R. Celaya, 49, of 10921 Gilbert Avt', Anaheim. Investigators said the victim was tossed from the traclor- truck he was helping lo guide as 1t was bemg towed when the tandem trucks, for unknown reasons, jacknlfed. Arter belna hurled to the pave- ment, he was run over by the wheels or the truck he was gu.id· Ina when the two vehicles careened across the highway, accord1n1 lo lnveiillgatora Litter Removal Project Approved Plans to spend $60,000 to re·· move litter and dead eucalyptus trees from a portion or Serrano Community Park In the Sad· dhtback Valley were approved Tuesday by Orange County supervisors. County officials said residents near the park site, at Bake Parkway and Toledo Way, have been concerned about the possi· ble fire and safety haaard posed by the debrta and brush. °"ANQI COAST .. DAILY PILOT jayoun, six miles north of the laraell frontier u the vamcuard of a 400-man Iranian U .N. con· tlngent, the spokesman said. The unit drove In at mid· morning from the nelahborlng Golan Heights front. It will tour the Litani Rjver area to choose the posts the 400 Iranian peacekeepers will take up Thursday to c:Uaen1age auerrllla and Israeli forces, the 1poke1man said. Another advance unit of Sinai- based U.N. observers was re- portedly prevented from enter ing the coastal area of south Lebanon by Ier&eU·backed ritbl- wlng Chrlatlan mlllllaa ln the area. Lebanon's state radio aald a third advance party of 200 French peacekeepers were ex- pected In Beirut ahort1y to set the stage for deployment of a 600 man French contingent in the south. The government spokesman saad that "intermittent" viola· taons or the ceaae·flre occurred m the areas of Nabatlth, in the central sector or the battlefront, and the coastal area of Tyre, 12 miles north of the Israeli border. FroraPageAJ WALLENDA KILLED. • • Wallenda lived In Sarasota, Fla. His wife, Helen, was with him in San Juan, but not performing. Gary Williams , a local newspaper photographer, said Wallenda was leaning Into the wind as he inched tUs way hold mg a balancing pole across the ware strung between the towers or the Holiday Inn blocks separated by San Juan 's Ashford Avenue. .. As he got past lhe middle, he seemed lo be los ing it," Williams said. "His balance pole was going up and down One of the people who work with him In the act was watching from the root. He veiled: 'Sit down! Sit down'' Wallenda sat, but he missed the wire and went down," s~ud Williams. Williams said the hundreds 0£ people watching from the ground and hotel balconies screamed. ''The people who work with Wallenda in the act ran around In a panic, screaming 'Oh my God! Oh my God !' Everybody was hysterical. People were fainting, collapsing on the ground." Two men in the Wallenda act were klUed in Detroit on Jan 30. 1962 when a human pyramid col· lapsed on the hlCh wire at the State Fair Coliseum. Mario Wallenda, then 22, was paralyzed from the waist down in the JS.foot fall Dieter Schepp, 23, whose missed step caused the pyramid to topple, and Richard Fau1hnan, 29, were killed. Karl Wallenda hung by his legs from the wire and caught Christina Schepp, 17, sister or the dead man, as she fell. Karl's brother, Herman, 60, caught the wire and Herman's son, Gunther, 34, managed to re maln standing. Herman and Gunther were back on the wire the next night "We can't l<>1e our nerve," said Karl, who auffered pelvic F,....Page.41 DOCTOR .•. abortion for any length of lJme- and would be nothina more than a "brainless vegetable" lf lt did "Anyway, it couldn't happen." Waddill was promptly con· tradlcted by Ch&llerton. Chatterton named three babies he claims are living norm al Uves and without any evidence or brain damaee after survlvln(( aallu abortions. Hb atatement brou1ht both Weedman and Wataon to their feet In proleat. Both lawyera an· grily demanded that Chatterton be admonlahed for 1ttemptln1 to tnnuence the jury when he does not have the evldence to back hla claim. Chatterton aald he will pro- duce the evldene• at a later stage of the trial and may even brln1 one ol th• bablea into the courtroom ror the Jury to ln· ape ct. The proteeutor uld hi• claim is bHed on the atatementa or thrM Southern CaUfomla physi· clan• Who contacted him and U · aurtd blm that lht)' had treat.ed normal healtl\f bable1 who are Hll\\eaurvlvcn. Weedman told· Juda• Turner that lt ad~u•t• rroof l• not fortbcomJna he wll move ror • ml1trlal. He told Jud1t Turner that Chattetton probably Intended to pre11nt evldence releted to babltl Who bad bun Ul)Olled to leutr amoUAll of tb• Hlln uon and. for.. ta pertod of Um•tb&a ~ W••• r. bab1. CllattlftCIB comment.Id \&ld the eo~: "l ul 'l ve Intro~~:: I.he nldtncie lf 1 't f 1tt1 1b6u\ th three babMI an e10it.11 nl to th• Waddill CU&.,, ' lnJuries. "We must ao on ... this is the first lime anything like this has happened in 38 years with the act." There was no net In the Detroit performance. The state legis lature made neta man- datory an.er that. As 6,000 people watched in horror, Schepp, who waa making his first appearance in the act, r ried out "I can't hold on any longer." Then the pyramid col· lapsed Faughnan was Karl Wallen- da 's son·in·law. Wallenda, who be~an performing in 1920, was back on lhe wire within 24 hours of the tragedy. He said at the time: "Our lire ls show business. Without show business we do not t>urv1ve and we have to exist." CMAOKs Credit Carth SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -The California Medical Assor1at1on has decided patients can pay bills wllh cred1l cards. At Tuesday's meeting, the CMA House of Delegates adopted the credit card resolution, after the measure's author, Dr Arnold J. Breit of San Mateo, said: "It's about time the CMA came into the 20th Century " After deciding 1t waa ethical for the CMA·s 25,000 members to accept credit cards from pa. tients, delegates approved a set of rules governing llmlted advertising by doctors. Body Found On OC Beach Not Identified Orange County Coroner's In· vest1gators said today they haven't yet adenlified the skeletal remains of a man's body found Tuesday mornin1 on a Seal lffach jetty. The remains consist or a pelvis, four lea bones, very little flesh and what app .. r to be remnants or blue Jeans wom by the victim, lnvesll1ator1 said. Two teen.age boy1 fi&hlnl off the east Seal Beach jetty at 9 a. m Tuesday spotted the re· mains wedted in some rocks and contacted police. Coroner's inveaU1ator1 said the remains appear to be those of a man between 3$ and 4S years and from five feet, six Inches to nve feet 10 Inches in height. The remains appear to have been at sea several month• btfore washin1 up on t.he Jetty, one invesUcator 1ald. Fresno Firea City Manaser FRESNO (AP) -Clt)" Mana1er Ralph W. Hutley waa fired by the ell>' councu nen an a 5·2 "lOfls ot conlldenct ¥0t•." The vote Tueaday follow.t 1 nearly three·bour txtcutlvt seulon and came 1tv1ral month• after Hanley""" Police Chief Harold E. Britton, an IC• lion that cteat.d controvtr11 In tht clcy. The lat .. t CODUoHHY WU over ffanley's refusal to pei'mlt a C!ll1 councllman to ... • ~ t1port on tbt daup\er Of t 1Jroml t rteinan • dl.1 att.ornQ naled 1' wu pormiaalble. A Palestine Liberation Or1antutlon mtlltary command communique reported heavy fir- inl by both Israeli troopa and auerrlllu durtna the nlcht in both areas, but the Jaraell army aald Its troops did not do any ahellina and th• ceu•flre ap- peared lo be holding. The communique said suer- rillas pounded lsratll poelUons oo both sides of the Lebanese- Isr aell border wlth rockets and atarted flrtt ln two northern Iaraell 1etUement.1. The report calla for creatln1 a realonal par~ In the Sycamore Hill• area and 1u11eau another re1ional park ml1ht be created aloni lower reaches of Aliso Creek. In addition, the study endorses atate plant to acquire Moro Can- yon aloqthe lrvlnecoasWnt. The report noled auto• cenerally 1,bould be Umlt.ed to ul1tln1 roadways and the planned San Jo.qu.ln Hilla Cor· ridor. Gcu SltorCage1 State Controller Ken Cor> says California faces a potential gasoline ~hortage in abo\Jl 60 days because the state has a glut of crude oil and no place to store the byproducts or refining gasoline. <See story, Page AS>. ll also reported machine-gun clashes around two villages in the Arkoub reiion, al the foot of Mount Hermon on the eastern aide of the occupied zone, and claimed that guerrillas with bazookas knocked out an Israel armored car and repulsed an lsraell attempt lo consolidate positions eut of Tyre. ,.,....,,_.,;11 WAITING FOR RUUNG. • • France, Norway and Nepal will send about 800 troop• each ln the days ahead, and Britain wlll outfit them with rations and other supplies at lts buea on Cyprua. Secretary·General Kurt Waldheim hopes lo get 2,000 more troops from Austria, Sweden and other nations to complete the 4,000-man force authoriled by the Security Coun· cil on Sunday when It called on Israel to get out or south Lebanon immediately. But Is rael has said it will not withdraw until it can be certain the Palestinian &uerrlllas ex· pelled by ill forces wlll not re turn. the lndlctment 1bould be quHhed becauae: -Challent• lo Prop. 9, the law 1overnlna campalan prac· Ucee In Callfornia. have been up. held on conallluUonal arounds by a Loe An1eles County judae. -The GrJnd Jury lhal handed down the indictment was acUna illegally because its term officially expired 12 hours before It voted to indict the defendant.I. -Judae Fenton already pulled the Oran1e County Dis- trict Attorney's Office from pro· secutlon ot the cue on .crounds arounds of the appearance or bias, a finding the defense lawyers said taints the DA 's role in the Indictment process. -Not all the grand jurors who voted for the indictment were Foreed Into Van Abductio"' Rape Reported by Woman A 30-year-old Anaheim woman told Newport Beach police Tues· day that she wa11 forced Into a van by two men and raped by one of her abductors this weekend. The woman told detective• she was wa1Un1 ror friends outside the Stai Bar at McFadden Square Sunday nl1ht when a white van with the two men In 1t pulled up. She sald they repeatedly asked her IC she wanted a ride and when she repeatedly refused to accept, one aot out and dragged her lnto the vehicle. She told the men she lived in Anaheim near the Riverside Freeway and Stale College Boulevard. She sald one of the men raped her while she was be- ing driven to that loutlon. She said she wu freed once the van 1ot to the freeway near her home. She described both men as be· ing m the mid thirties and the one who assaulted her as being about six feet tall and weighing 160 pounds. BERKELEY (AP) -A 22· year.old man apparently com· milled suicide when he hung out the window of a University of CaHromia building, let go and fell seven stories to a concrete loading dock. Daniel Joseph Chaklos, of fiprin1neld, Pa .. reportedly a stu· dent at Penn State University, died a short time later at Herrick ~emoriaJ Hospital, police said ~onotewasfound. AO 10J2~•19Cf .. L10ht IOp foem ~ Ul)pefl surl'OUl'd enklit9 for firm. com· fortebl• aupport. LHthtr '1r"'9" present at all secret hearings leadina to the charges. Competing with the defense lawyers for the judge's ear were lawyers from the state's At· torney General's Office who have replaced the DA as proi.· ecutororthecase. They argued that the Los Angeles ca,,e has no bearing out- side that county because lhe constitutional issue has not been decided by higher courts. Furthermore, the state pros- ecutors said, the Grand Jury's term had been extended the ad· dlt1onal hours by a valid court order issued by Superior Court Judge James Walsworth. And, the proset'utors argued. not all the testimony in the in- vestigation that began in late 1976 pertained to the charges brought an the indictments The nt'eded quorum of jurors was present when te~llmony rel· evant to campaign practices was heard, the lawyers said. Another rebuttal argumen1 of the prosecution la"'yer s tvas that when Judge Fenlon yanked the DA from prosecution of the case he found no real preJutlice but only an appearance of prej- udice that might shake publJc confidence in Justice Judge J-'enton stud he will sift through the legal pros and cons of the two-sided argument and issue a ruling or the plea for dis· missal of the indictment later this week. Director Killed MADRID, $pain (AP) -With his wife watching helplesslv from a balcony wmdow. three gunman assassinated Spain's 40 year old director of prisons. J esu.s Haddad, outside Jw; Mad rid home today after he got into his official car and wac; at1out to be driven lo work, police reported s1s9s ••• .. \ "I· Open 9 to 6 • Oosed Sunda'y 538 Center 646-1919 I .Ffuoding . ,. .. ~Follows ··~' ., ... •Z :• :., 'howers •;1. -\•<.~ By '!be Aslffla&ed Pr~ss :; .. A week of fair weather in :: orthern California was ended 1'f a wave of showers and thun . dershowers that caused minor ~~reel flooding, rockslides and traffic problems m some areas. Stockton got the most rain Tuesday with 1 68 lnches in the 24 hours ending att 4 a.m. today. Na lion al Weather Service Tainfall figures for other cities abowed Salinas had 1 09 inches, )Jakers:ield .62, Monterey .77, • Pakland .61, Moffett "F'1e"1d .5.9, ~an Francu;co Airport 48 and Fresno 37. The rauts c.1lso pul the city of San Fcanc1sco Ol of an inch over the seasonal normal of 2<>.66. Not since tht.> city soaked up more lhan 2S mches during the winter of 1973·74 has annual ramfall totaled anywhere near the normal Between July, l!J7S, und July 1977, when the two year drought struck Northern California, San .-ranc1sco had only 17 4 inches Easter Bonnet Contest The rains were causing prob lems for San Joaquin Valley farmers. After two years of combatting the• drought. they now find thc1t thl• wt•t winter of 1978 has soaked their fields so badly that spring planting must be delayro Tricia Young , 2. and her sister Juhe, 6, of Fountain Valley prepare for Saturday's Easter bonnet contest at Huntington Center. The contest is open to youngsters from 2 to 7 years of age. Judging will begin at 10 a.m. at '1777 Edinger Ave., Huntington Beach. The contest is .,ponsored by members of the Fountain Valley Jaycees ''omen's group. Northern California will be un· ~er a Lemporary rnlge or high pressure tod<1y but another weather system 600 miles west of the co<1st will bftng more ram and snow Thursday and Friday Longer range prospects show fair weather for Easter Sunday OC Studies Options In Face of Tax Cut Meanwtule. a new mudslide blocked two southbound lanes of . ~nterslate 5 between the San ·~oaqum Valley and Los Angeles this morning as ram continued to pelt the area Two lanes remained open, but there were some delays, the highway patrol said. Motorists -.were urged to take the alternate route to Los Angeles over Highv. ay 58 east to Mojave and Highway 14 south through Lan CHSter Mudslidt•s on the Ridge Route south of Bakersfield delayed and al times closed Interstate 5 several t1mt•s durmg the heavy storms the past two months The late ... t rmn threatened flooding at L:.1mont near th<' valley's southern edge and ·mudslides at Ll•bt•c· on the R1dgf' Route Rain Damages MarineBme Hatn damal{c estimated at more than Sl m1lhon to Camp Pendleton roads has been left at . the nation ·., larges t Marine Corps amphibious training base. The heaviest rams in 95 years cut off bcathcs, washed out roads and 1solat<:d bridges. Col W.C. f<'rank, assistant chief of staff for Caciliti('s, said 1t may .take scvernl million dollars to tnake repairs. · A total of 32 inches of rain has ·.fallen since .July. most of it since .January "Grenade Heist Suspect Held DAYTONA BEACH , Fla. ' ~ P) -The FBI hai; arrested · iddie Mack Lock Jr , 30, for al· l-eged ly robbing a Daytona ..,.. each bank and throwing a live ~·. enade at his pursuer. ~; Lock was arrested on a charge .~of robbing an undisclosed •mount of money Crom a branch the Sun Bank on Feb. 27 • The FBI said Lock tossed the v,. ·renade at a motorist who • ased him as he ran from the , ank, injuring slightly the ~... otorist and a young woman ·~ • • alking nearby. Orange County superv1sorl> hd \'e taken steps to find new sources of rncome in case Proposition 13, the property tax 1mtiative, 1s approved by ·voters June 6. Supervisors were warned by County Auditor-Controller Vic lleim that if the Jarvis-Gann in it1alive were approved and if county government were permitted by law to operate m the red, county coffers could be :.is much as $90 million in debt m 15 months. The initiative would cul prop- t•rty taxes throughout the state an average of SS percent. But state laws don't allow local government to operate v. 1thoul a balanced budget, so s upervisors took these sleps Tuesday: -Created a committee of C"ounty administrators to search for nt.>w and increased fees that might be charged for county s ervices to offset a proJected $78.8 million loss in property taxes that could result from passage of the initiative. -Called for an immediate re view of how well department heads are following orders to seet ruts in next year's county budget. Ordered a report by next Wheelchair Ramps Slated For Highways LOS ANGELES (AP) -The C alifornia Department of Transportation plans to build 6,000 wheelchair ramps for lhe handicapped and elderly on sidewalks along state highways m Los Angeles, Orange and Ven tura counties. CalTrans District Director Robert Datel said Tuesday that the $2.7 million two-year con struction program was mandat· ed by laws passed from 1968 lo 1972 Many of the ramps will be near cotnme.rcial developments patronized by the handicapped or neat hospitals, convalescent homes. preacrii>tion pharmacies or similar lacilities. Hippo Probe? ~; Bubbl,es Investigation Sought By Tile Assodated Preas When heroes are killed in this country, they're entitled to two tbinRs a nice funeral and a ~iracy theory, Bubbles the hippo, who crashed out ot Lion Country Safari in February and atayed on tht" lam fbr three weeb before dying March 10, didn't aet a nice fwieraJ. lier two- lon bulk was cut up for an autopey then shipped to the Mwiaum of Natural History In Loi An&eles. • BUT THE LAGUNA HILLS heroine aot bOT conspirac1 theory: One man, suspecting assassin•ti n, formallt r• quested an lnvestigaUon lntq Bu bbl•' d a . "We have reviewed the facts and c1mmutan r. round Ina the death of thli. hJppopotamus," Deputy Orance County Dh1trlct Attorney CUtt Harris Slid 1"onday, .. and 1t does not appear lhut a&ny crimlnaJ act has occurred.•• flA1lRIS, WRITING THE findlhaa of the tnvestt1atton 1n • lttt.er lo Ui man who had requested lh• inqujey. Gerold Jackson of VI ta, concluded: ''An autopsy revealed that the poslUOn in which the anlmal li.7 In Its tianqu!lliea atate cau id It to auttoeate on iU m iv tiitemal orga and lntestirieS'""". ~~------ week on how much 1t would cost to hire a financial consultant to seek favorable interest rates for some $20 milhon the county would need to borrow at sum- mer's end. Heim said the $20 million bor· rowing doesn't hinge on voter approval or rejection or the Jarvis irullative. The county traditionally bor- rows funds to carry its opera lions through the '"dry period" between August and the time new property tax payments are collected in December, he said. In the past, local banks have supplied those funds, based on tax anticipation notes. However, local bankers have said borrowing might be more difficult lh1s year because of un certain tax legislation Heim said local bank officials have suggested the county con- sider hiring a cons ultant to seek .1 ravorable bond rating ror the <'OUnty. * * * OC Mandates Public View Of Budget Plan Orange County Administrative Officer Robert Thomas was told Tuesday to open his preliminary county budget review sessions to the public. Thomas asked for County s upervisors' direction last week after saying he felt holding open work sessions could interfere with a free exchange of thoughts between his staff and county de· partment heads Thomas said Tuesday he dido 't intend to create problems by closing the sessions but meant only lo encourage a "deeperdigintothinking ... The administrative officer drew heat from lbe press and public when he ejected a re· porter from the opening budget review meeting aner holding open sessions the past eight years. He said this year's meetings would center on the serious budget problems facing the county if the Jarvis initiative is approved by voters June 8. It approved by California voters, the Initiative could knock out up to 68 percent of tbe coun- ty's property tax revenue Supervisor Ralph Diedrich told Thomas that if some depart- ment beads are reluctant to dis* cuss certain budget impacts Thom as should force the issues to be laid on the table. Child Molest Suspect Free Wednesday March 22 t'l:8 s OAIL Y PILOl , ':J FBI, ms Investigate . Billie Sol Estes Target of Probe • TYLER, Texas <AP> 1'1f· teen years after be defrauded the federal government and 400 individuals of several million dollars, convicted swindler Billie Sol Estes is back in the promoting buslaess, accordine to several embittered Texans. Tbe man the U.S. Jaycees once named one or the 10 ··outstanding Young Men or America" is being investigated bv the Texas Attorney General's ortice, the FBI and tbe Internal Revenue Service. The probes were sparked by two suitcases or documents turned over to rnvestigatlve agencies and The Associated Press by Mississippi developer Don Trull la.st year. Trull, a cigar-chompine, se!f- described gambler, said he shared an Abilene office with Estes in 1976 and took the docu ments because his "friend of 20 years" persuaded him to buy several saeging properties and then reneged on a million-dollar loan. Trull moved to Tyler. where he continnued his efforts to get back his initial investment with Estes. Last August, Trull allegedly splashed gasoline inside a Tyler ortice and held a man hostage, demanding that Estes and Tyler millionaire Billy Pyron come up with $1.6 million. He was charged Wlth kldnap J.?IOg: and this week jury selec ttOn 1s wtder way Ul Tyler. Estes and 69 others have been sub poenaed to testify, and the de· fense may be planning, m effect. to try Estes for his alleged bus1 -ne~s dealings with Trull. ,.,._...... .. IN TROUBLE AGAIN Biiiie ~I Estes l!:ste s, known for hi s persuasiveness, has refused to comment. Trull and eight other Abilene. San Angelo and Houston busi- nessmen were interviewed by The AP. Their collective stories and sworn statements weave a complex web of promotional schemes which they say were orchestrated by Estes, mcluding a steam cleaning operation that has attracted state and federal mvestigations. Estes, paroled io 1971 alter serving six years or a lS·year sentence and now seeking a pres1dent1al pardon has bef'n barred from any self. employment or promotional ac- tivities. Last monlb, • federal judge ordered blm and bis wUe. Patsy, to pay $45.6 million in back taxes on the millions be re- ceived m tbe 1963 swindle. When Estes arrived In Pecos, Texas, m 1~51, be seemed a vi ucky, hard·working Horatio Alger character, clutching a beat-up bnetcaae and appearing tor all the world like the typical young man trying to eet. .. toehold on h1s future. His first step was to buy a rarm on credit. 'Iben be used bis silver tongue and knack of fmd- 1.0g shortcuts to big mooey to build a paper empire of cotton. fertilizer and a Dl)'riad of other interests that ran into the million~. Estes found op- portunities In federal farm pro- grams to pyramid bis holdings. L;!ter, President Kennedy cit-ed Estes' operauoos as one rea· ~on for changes in national farm lawi;. By 1954, he was a milliooaire. Jl took nrne years before authorities figured out why, and he was convicted of fraud. Upon his release from prison, Estes told his parole board be was going to work as a truck dio;;.. patcher for a Midland-based 011 company owned by bis friend. Ray Horton Last month, Horton agreed Lo an inJunction requiring him to pay three equipment leasing comparues $604,545 he and as· ~oc1ates received in an alleged fraud scheme mvolving non· existent or unworkable st.eam cleaning units. Murder, Rape lncrea.se in California Campaign Donation Limit Rule Delayed LOS ANGELES <AP) -Whtie overall streel crime dropped m Southern California last year. the number of reported murders and rapes increased, accord.mg to figures released by the FBI. P asadcna was the only one of 12 c1t1es with population of mort- than 100,000 reporting a reduc lion m the number of rapes, FBI spokesman John Morrison said Tuesday. Morrison said 86 rapes were reported in Pasadena 1n 1977. compared to 115 m 1976 Only Anaheim, Huntmgton Beach, San Diego and Riverside had fewer murders, Mornson said. All large Southern California cities reported an increase m car thefts, Morrison said, except Anaheim and Santa Ana. A national study released 10 Washington. DC. by Attorney General Grirfin Bell showed violent acts increased by I per cent last year. A 4 percent decrease was registered overall m the serious crime category. the report said, the first im provement since a comparable dip in 1972. Tbe 12 Southern Cahfornia cities with population of more than 100,000 are Anaheim . Garden Grove, r.:endale, Hunt ington Beach, Long Beach, Los Angeles. Pasadena, Riverside San Bernardino, San D1e~o. San ta Ana and Torrance Gem Talk • Ry J, C. HUMPHRIES , Gemol09111t THE: WONDER MET Al u 111 the ~• once again A $1 ,000 limit on mdivldual donations to campaigns for Orange County government of fil'<' seekers won't take effect un Mile Square Parking Fee Will Remain Orange County supervisor~ won't be dropping the SO·cent parking ree charged motorists us ing Mile Square Regiohal Park in Fountain Valley. Without commenting, wpervisors followed the recom- m c n d a ti on of the county Harbors, Beaches and Parks Commission Tuesday in dcc1d mg that the 50-cenl fee be re tained Robert W Johnson, developer of a shopping center near thl' park. had asked that the fee be discontinued because or tls possible impact on area parkmg lots County offic1aJs said the Milt• Square lots seldom are !tiled but noted it is common for residenLs to park on nearby streets ap parently to escape the charge. The Mile Square lots general ed $34 ,638 m county income m the 1976·T7 fiscal year, they said Gold -that most sought-after of precious resources, is In the news again. Demand keeps growing, as more new uses c-re found for this wonder metal. The latest innova· tion uses gold to help save energy. Scientists have found that or- dinary window panes, when Im- bedded with flecks of 2,.·karat gold, reflect the sun's heating rays outward during warm we.ther, thus lessenlng the toed on air con-- dlt1onlng. The s.me "gokt lnsut• tlon" helps a room retain Its worm~ during winter. /!. maJor Am rken firm f\OW offers a com· plete tine of gold·,.f lectlva win- dows. They c:ost more than or-dinary glass, of ~ourse, but the enervy cost savings pay off over Just a few years. I the man of fashion is wearing money WIDEBAND GOLD COIN JEWELRY I\ "1ow af D'IOM1 is ''in " Ricllly worked coirl'. olc1 .,Id new nine a~nuine u.s JWhl • ptec:ci arc •~11u1lfollv fr~mt'd In 14K sold Coln• cftn M youB or ourJ. Corl!O In 10 Jl!CO out lariit ~clcctKll\ ..>On. t1 I July l, :,,upervisors decided Tuesday The board foUowed the sug- gestion of Supervisor Philip An· thoay and amended a con- troversial section of the cam- paign reform ordinance enacted three weeks earlier. A s originally adopted, the or- d tn an ce excluded donatioo,s <.1lready received from the Sl,000-per-eleclion individual donor lim1t. Anthony last week eisked that the $1,000 limit not go into eCCect until after lhe June primary. At the time, be conceded the ordinance favored ''incumbents who traditionally begin cam- paigning and fund raising ear her than other candJdates." He also acknowledged that a~ written 1t appeared t.Q Cavor one group ovt•r another. Plane Space Rent Raised by County Owners of the 475 private c11rcraft parked at Orange Coun- ty Airport will have to pay SI a month more ror their space bef'mmng July 1. Supervisors adopted the rat£ increase for the 37 to SO-foot .spaces Tuesday. Monlhly fees "111 range from $34 to $49 each depending upon the size of I.ht parkmg stall. 1SUNEWPORTBLVD.,COSTAMESA CONVENIENTTERMS 8enkAmerlcard-Mast9rCh What does this newly-created demand mean to the world's OOld IUPJ>ly? experts say the,. wtll1be no shortaQ of ~Id In thl~ cent~. f,or those Of u who enjoy gold Jewelry, It means that prlc.s .,. NQT e~ted to rise dramettcal-1v. ~NI t's ~ newi, too. tn 7ewefry, l.o wlndow1, and In lhou1ands bf other uses, the .¥toncter metal ltl" hlnes. ..:.r.1-~~-a:.-a;;&=::i:::O':llE::!lltC!l!lltEii!l--!!m-S'.li~ 30YEARSINTHESAMELOCAT10N PtiONEso.M>t • 1 f ~ ' ~ ! '• ' f • ' f , , . I ~ , ;. i ' I j f 1 .Al·I DAIL V PILOT ~ Jost ··Coasting t *,~~J ···h~ ( Tom \ ' Marphio~ Jarvising Up the Works JUMPING JARVIS JIVE: It is clear today that a new aberration in slang has crept solidly into the lexicon or our bureaucrats and politicians. The word lJ JarviJ. It now means almost anything. Consider this headline that appeared in a mornlna newspaper today: ''Anticipate Jarvis Service Cutback, LA County Told. . . •• What in lhe world Is a Jarvis service cutback? Well, it's apparently about the same thine as a Jarvis job loss or a Jarvis savings or a Jarvis threat. Or, in the hallowed halls of government, you might hear some bureaucratic functionary whisper lo one or his colleagues: "WE'RE HOLDING TIUS secret meeting because of Jarvis." The word is everywhere. Once not tong ago, the word Jarvis was actually a man's last name. He is Howard Jarvis. He and another man named .Paul Gann got together this property tax cutback inlllative that will appear on the June 6 ballot as Proposi· JARVIS t1on 13. It became known as the Jarvis-Gann Amendment. IN THE SLANG OF -government and politics, however, the much·feared proposal has been shortened to just :Jarvis. You suspect this happened because his name was listed first on the -proposition. Thus Howard Jarvis loses his name to a plethora or other meanings that now gush forth from the halls of govern- ment. Orange County administrative chief Robert Thomas was apparently worried about the county's Janis income cut the other day so he proposed to study a Jarvis budget and wanted to do it behind closed doors because of Jarvis. OANN City halls and school d1stncts in our reeion are also hohhng Jan 1s budget sessions and studying Jarvis cut- b:.il·ks. M f.ANWlflLE, PRO.JARVIS enthusiasts are holding Jarvis rallies, passing out Jarvis literature and pushlnt the Jarvis campaign. Editors are getting lots of J arvls let- tt-rs If this proposition does pass, you can just hear the ghastly cry of the hapless bureaucrat who gets a pink slip and 1s out or a job: "l'vc been Jarvlscd." Or the road department superintendent whose budget has just been whacked back telling his job foreman: .. We'll Just have to Jarvis this street until next year and see if the Jarvis pinch eases up." SO YOU CAN PITY poor Howard Jarvis. His proposi· lion may win the election but his name has been gobbled up by the word mills of government Jarvis now means ever) thine except a person. lie is almost as anonymous as Kilroy, gremlins, or gnomes in the forest. Paul Gann should be thankful his name got listed last. Now I think I'll get the Jarvis out of here. Hoose Passes Bill Farming Package Backed WASHINGTON CAP> -An emeriency rarm relier package pa~sed by the Senate promises hither food bills for the pubhc and the possibility or parity for some farmers. But <'rittcs say the promise of parity is only an election-year hoax aimed at disgruntled farmers and has no chance or becoming law. The higher prices for consumers, however, are likely to remain in the b1U no matter how it is otherwise chaneed. The package, approved 67·26 by the Senate on Tuesday, would add at least $100 a year to the averaee family's food bill through a system or payments to farmers for not planting Pftlaitfe• Set ROME CAP) -Goaded by the kidnapping of former Premier Aldo Moro, the Italian govern- ment declared a "situation of emergency" and ordered stiff ( INSHORT J new penalties and broader police po~ers to combat grow- ing terrorism. The government decreed man· datory life sentences for kidnap· pers if their victims are killed and 30 years if they aren't. Slz Flee Cllba JACKSONVILLE, Fla. CAP) -Six Americans who fled their country in skyjacked airliners have come home In prison irons -willing lo race possible death sentences rather than austere, bitter hves in Fidel Castro's Cuba "They're anxious to go home,'' said Thomas Morns, an assistant U .S attorney, as the six prisoners were taken before a federal JUdge here late Tues· day after a flight Crom Havana via Jamaica Gun ..... Nall~d LAKEWOOD, Ohio (AP) -A 29-year·old man, enraged when his ex-wife reC'eived a call from another man, held her at gun· point for 10 hours Tuesday before police and a psychologist talked him into surrendering, authorities said . The couple was divorced two weeks ago. Paul Jancsek, 29, had threatened to kill his former wife, Betty Jo Egler, 33, and to take his own life, a police spokesman said Retirement Age Upped? WASIDNGTON CAP) -The House passed, 391·6, a bill Tues- day to raise the mandatory re- t1 rement age to 70 for most private sector employees and abolish the age Limit for most federal employees The representatives approved a compromise measure worked out by a congressional con- ference committee two weeks ago. The bill was aent to the Senate for its action after which President Carter is expected to sign the bill into law. THE PROIOBITION on forced retirement at aee 65 for private business would go into errect on Jan. 1, 1979. The ban on forced retirement for federal employees would begin Sept. 30. The measure applies to pri vale sector workers whose employer has 20 or more persons on the payroll. That cov- ers about 70 percent of the labor force. THE BILL would grant up to two years for age-65 retirement provisions to be phased out or existirig labor union contracts. The application of the new up· per age limit to tenured colle1e and university faculty members would be delayed until July l, 1982, to &ive the Institutions time to adjust their hirlna policies. More Flooding THE BILL would permit man- datory retirement at age 65 of an Individual who, for two years before retirt!ment, ls employed In an executive or ''high policy making position and is entitled to a pension from the employer or at least $27,000 annually." Proponents of the business ex- emption said this would give young people more of a chance to climb up the ladder to ex- ecutive levels. The labor secretary would also be instructed to conduct a study or the feasibility ol com- pletely abolishing the man· datory retirement age for private workers. ed High Waters Conlinue in Mi~st Riven AllMl'que Atlanta .. mmo,. Betw 80tl01'1 Browf'ltvllle au1tal• Clll<.990 ClllCllll\ttl c,.,..,_ 0.1· .. LWlll o... ... r 0.1 .. 11 ... ,,..""". Hei.N .... hill• "-'"' Kffl"I Cltr """'-' l.1111• ••di l.otA .... I• N larl\I 111111 ..... " Mllttlt ... . N• ... •111• NtWOtlt-"9•Yerll It Soulhtfn C:.llfor11la. dumplnt muct•ll•• on r-. ,_,,. '''"" tnd doU1I"' -..rad tommut••• '"••a'I' 1y1lem1 and 1urlaca rC>H• th'°""'°"' i...o. Arlot'" Ce.int., •••• ...... 11 ... '9<Ud up., .. , ttit ,,,,, ralM tltri.I falllll!I Just befOrt ,,... mernl"t ,...., -., ~ wtor. r • :· muOll,.. dr•u•• 01111 l.1 CJeM .. -Yatd -· .... lltldwlft Mlllt, K-ell _,,, -.. ma91 """ _ ............. llitflwt., ..... .. lnued • ••"•I nt to 1raY1ter1 l>tl•nfl "°"'" •--Slocll• '""'· Ceutal W~•laer ,. ertt., cltUdy ''"""" Tflu<tdly. Ttfl percem ~ .. ret11 ..... l ... t Md Tlwl'tdilf. l.ltht ... , • .., ... 1 ..... flt~ ·~· 1'1«'\11'11 ,,.._ t41ttW TIMlrMAY al to ... CNtl•I •-et-wllf ronoe Mtwetll J6 .,. .. "· 111101\d ltm• llffllurn wllt fontil "''-" ~1 tnd 'IO., ....... ....,.,a111tt Wiil .. '° s...., /tloo11t Tide• .. DtllSOA'I t.<Md few 21• I•'"· 0 I lt< ... d lllltl TMUtHD~~• 1>.M. U "'""..., 11na.m. 06 ,.,.1111111 t1th.m. J.I ~'"' t·a'-"'· ~.o ....,,., """' ...... I'll. u lu11 r1.-.ti.Ma.m .. ..u•·•••"' MMll ...... •1•. "'·· ........ '·'"· StwlR .... f't MVlltf~ a..dtl ~ 1urt. •.... -.. ~ ... , ""'" ..,... ..... ~._ ... ,., ..., ~ llekllc WIM - -feet 11-u.. -~ CMlllllM& ••• ,._., ,..,, Downtown Denver . , , . . s Man Blown Up ·1 In Bomb Blast·: DENVER CAP) -A man wu dismembered in one of two e~ ploslons that rocked a llibt lndustnal area near downtown Denver early today and potlct found a tturd bomb in a newspaper vendinc machine near one of the blut 1ltes. Parts of the unidentified dead man's body were found in Bannock. Street, near lhe second blast, at the Denver VFW Post No. 1 NEAR THE BANNOCK Stre~ · headquarters bulldina. The blut blast officers found a package lD decapitated him. 1t Denver Post newspaper "'.end· · rng machme and called m a s harps hoote r . Five shoteuo charaes faded to detonate the package and bomb squad mem· bers removed 1t. AP Wire ....... f'otatd Dead The body of Keith Holhda.>. 5. who had been mi::;sing from his family's home in Alexan- dria, Ky., since December, '"as found m the family's swimming pool Tuesday. The slowly thawing pool was CO\ l'red hy a l:iyer of algae \\ h1ch hid tht· boy's body un- til his mother saw a floatmg blue cap. "IT WAS AN Individual who had round the device or had set the device," Police Chief Art Dill said of the blast victim. The first explosion occurred at 12:02 a.m. MST about el1ht blocks away on Elati Street. The buildin1 damaeed there had formerly housed a part or Denver Metro College. The second explosion occurred 13 minutes later, Olli aaid. A 16·square-block area wu cordoned off as police searched for other explosive devices. When sightseers first gathered, police cars equipped with lc>udspeakers crawled through the streets ordering people back Oil Tanker Spills 44 Million Gallons BREST, France CAP> -The wrecked American supertanker Amoco Cadiz has spilled at least 44 million gallons of oil into ~he sea and all 15 or its tanks are believed to have holes, Amoco vice president Harry Rtnkema said today. . It is the worst oil spill on record, surpasstng the 1967 Torrey tanyon disaster ofr England by at least 15 million gallons. "TWO SALVAGE EXPERTS surveyed the ship yesterday on deck checking the 011 and water content of each tank. They believe from this survey that all the tanks now are open to the sea, and that 50,000 to 70,000 tons of the cargo are still on board," Rinkema said A metric ton of oil is equal to 294 gallons. The 1 067 .fool vessel was loaded with 6S million gallons or oil when she' went af(round on rocks a mile off Portsall harbor last Thursday night following a steering failure and an unsuccessful at· tern pt to tow her to safely. The cargo was insured Cor $20 milbon and the i.h1p for $12 million. STORM WlNDS, high seas and driving rain lashed the wreck today for the third day, preventing preparations for an. attempt to pump out the remaining oil before it adds to the pollution now ex· tending at least 70 mlles along the Brittany coast. "Enormous pressure is building up on the French government and thus on Amoco to try to get this work started, but you can see the weather A whole range or ideas are being put forward lo try to stop further pollution," said a source close to tne salvage operations who declined to be identified. "'At the moment, much of the oil Is rising and falling inside the tanks, floating on the water underneath. But in the extreme tides next \\'Cekend, it will pour out." Dill sald a timt:r \\-as attached to the package. He said bomb squad members had told hlm there was dynamite inside the package Dill said the police depart- ment had received no bomb threats prior to the blast.:; and had no explanation for them. ''The only thing we can con- clude is that we are dealing with a disturbed lndi vidual," he said. The blast at the VFW hall did little visJble damage to the one and one-half storied white brick structure but officers said there was damage inside the buildin&. APWI~ MU Retire Sen. James 0. Easlland, 73, whose 36 years of service in the Senate outranks all col- leagues, announced today he will r~tirt' in January at the end of has s1-;lh term. • DREXEL • HERITAGE • BAKER • HEKMAN • MASTERCRAFT • WIEMAN • HIBRITE!I( • • FINAL 2 WEEKS Sale .. ovtng )> :II m r-8 ~ al m 0 0 • • ..J w x w er 0 w IJ <( .... a: w J: • • a: UJ ~ c( c:o • er w ~ u z 0 ..... z ~ en • Newport Store Only We are In the final phase of our moving sale. After fifteen years in the same location, we are about to move. Prices are rock bottom, many reductions slashed from existing winter sale prices. Save up to 50°/o on famous brand names we are known for. We cannot take everything with us, so take advantage of this once-in-a-lifetime sale . All sales final and cash or credit card only. Our new location is at the corner of Newport Blvd. and 16th Street, Costa Mesa T09'l'ANCI JJl4I ""'"'* ... lhod • (111) 171 Int Fne DtllYlry 11M1 Destp StrYfce ~taIIHle. FiN FfH"llilwn t1N l•l#W om,. NUW'O"T HACH 1727 Wlltdiff °'· ('1t41 litt•IOIO LAGUNA IEACH ,... Norf'I c-' Hwv. 11141 4941561 z Cl • .. :I: M z :II m 0 0 z ~ 0 0 0 ~ )> :II ~ 0 :II Cl z > r-tn • AL~ lfOftU oPCN MONDAY TMfllU tAT\lltOA\' -e AM TO e JO ... '-----------------~--------------------~--------------------------------' . • KARQES • HICKORY CHAIR • DIXIE • WOOOMAftK ORIGINALS · • MA.AGE CARSON • • - :All FOR NIA Film Ad Orclered OnBwes LOS AfiGELES (AP> -Much o lbe dismay of diatr1c.t cilrec· 01'$, Southern CalUomJa Rapid rrans1t District buses have .een ordered to carry advertise- nents for the adult roovie •'Sex Norld." Superior Court Judge Georie )ell said Tuesday that under a :tale Supreme Court ruling, ransportation companies owned 1y public agencies must accept 1dverti11ing from anyone. THE ONLY exception, he ;11,\d, is tf the ad material is ibelous or obscene. 4'\llorneys for the three Pussycat Theaters and Essex Distributing, Inc .• filed suit ,eeking the ad space for posters :or the film. Dell said lhe RTD must accept :he posters. pending another Jearing of the case. ESSEX attorney Robert McDaniel said the court ordered th~ poster to appear on buses by aext Monday. The RTD had re- jected the poster March 14 because of rear or negative public reaction, officials said. McDaniel said the poster has ns picture s. It reads: ''Westworld was for children, futureworld was tor teen-agers. lUt Sex World. . .is definitely :or adults." Oakland CBer Intrude d on BUT IN ITS seven- ;page written opinion. t.he three-judge ap- 'pellate panel skirted 'constitutional questions ,on which the lower court ;judge had invalidated •t.he law. ... !ii Surrender John A. Fuerst and Roberta Smith. both 33, who have hcen i<lenllfied by the FBI as members of the Weather L'nderground, surrendered Tuesday t o the U.S .. At- tornev's office in San Franci:>cc.>, on federal explosives charges pending s ince 1971. • Wectn..say, March 22, 1918 DAIL y PILOT AS Gasoline Shortage Seen J l Sime Deficiency Predicted i11 60 Days • • posed by President Nlxoo ln '"" SACRAMENTO (AP) - Callfornla may have 11 1•sollnt1 shortage in a couple or months because of a crude oil glut, in- sufficient atoraae, aQ.d too few American.nas tankers, says state Controller K~ Cory. · Cory. a Democrat, told a news briefing Wednesday that when crude is refln~ you 1et gasoline and fuel oil. The oil goes to the East Coast. But when you•re short of gasoline, you can't simply refine more crude because there's no place to store the fuel oil that comos with it. "OUR STORAGE tanks are just about full . . • Wit.bm 60 days we're going to see a shortage of gasoline, because the refineries won't have any place to put the fuel oil, and they will have to cut back." he said. California is receivlng dally about !i00,000 more barrels or crude oll than U needs. Moat la from Aluka, and the probleJn will worsen in coming months. California's power plants can't burn the tuel oil because the •ul· fur content exceeds state air quality standards, Cory aald. AND nlE FUEL oll can't. be shipped lo t he East Coasl because federal law requires· that oil s h ipped between American ports be ln ships fly. ing the American flag, "and t here are just not sufficient American-flag tankers." "I don't have an answer. I am presenting a problem • • • We can have ••. a_ gasol_lne shortage, and at the same time we 're floating in oil." Cory, also chairman of the St a le Lands Commission, criticized tbe federal entitle- ments program on crude oil im· 1.973. .I THE PROGRAM froze pnces on existini domesbc 011 supplies and attempted to equalize all oil prices by provldln& penal\)' PAY· ments for cheap domestic oil and eovernment subsidies for foreign oil • Cory said the system has un-- fairly penalized California, which bas extensive state tidelands oil, because product.ion costs have risen but not prices. ''You can make a bigger profit. buying $14 foreign oil and mak- Sng gasoline than you can buying $4 California 011 and making gasollJle," Cory said. HE ADDED, "This convoluted set of formulas has deslroyed the marketplace • • • Richard Nixon socialized t.be oil industry in 1973. with some of t.be worst elements of socialism and some or the worst. elements of B k t R $1 Miz•11z·On ca;:~;:c:~~ortheLongBeach ro e ... age 0 ay offshore field ha.s dropped since • I 1973 from 100,000 t.o 74,000 bar· LOS ANGELES (AP) -One of the nation's largest brokerage firms, Los Angeles-base d Bateman Eichler, Hill Richards Inc., has agreed to pay $1 million to setUe claims based on a recent Securities and Ex· change Commission ruling. SEC officials disclosed Tues- day that Bateman also promised the firm would not engage in bloc trading of stocks listed on the American and New York ex· changes for six months. Bateman Eichler also agreed to set up an outside review board that would be lJl existence rels daily "because our costs are Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. to head too great. We can't afford to pro-' ) stock market analysts agreed d e ••he s":d ( Call.forn·1a's scandal-plagued uc • ... • was worth nearly $40 million. SIA.TE mental health system. Cory said a group or govem-iru-tor Pf-•A-d Farabee, 51, will be ~o.764-a-ment, industry and consumer .,.. ~... "ft'e' """ leaders w1·11 meet Thursday to ...____________ SACRAMENTO (AP) "ear director of the new Mental " r fi d1·scuss the oil entitlements for al least two years. Finally, p h " t · t D l Farabee Health Department, one o ve syc ia ns a e • t problem before meeting federal the brokerage firm ag-ed to K t k t t health to be created from the curren ·~ former en uc Y s 8 e und off1·c1·a1s 1'n Huntington Beach Suspend three of its top officers d " t d t l health state Health Department. er 1rec or an men a nextweek. for 90 days. The three a re direc~~w~namedTue~s~d=~~b~y~~~~g~is~l=a=ti=~~p~a=s=s~~~l~~t~y_e_u~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Willard G. DeGroot, Robert C. - Hill and John D. McClure. Hayu:ard Vandals Sought HAYWARD (AP) Hayward police are seeking vandals -ap- parently motivated by racial hatred -who did an estimated $15,000 damage to the home or a black man and his white wife , Police Capt. George Kelly said Marc Sangara, a native of Africa and a stee l company ex· ecutive, and his wife, Loretta, who works tn a motel chain advertising office, have lived in the three-bedroom house since last August. Kelly said. CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF ANOTHER KIND A nother kind. altogether. As. when you get together with your dentist. Could you get closer than that to Or. Arnold Flanzer? Well. he doesn't like to let money keep people apart. So you could get pretty close. For a lot less than you might suppose. Dr. Arnold H. Flanzer 370 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa 642-0112 PLBUC NOTICE PO•tlon of prl"Clpel •nd lnt~.st -•ct> would not I» -....S ""o.f•uU oc-currrd wr.t-• ,...mt•t.-m...,.t I\ Po\1•- ble, If the cMl...it ~ not cur.cl wlth•n thrH monthS IOll-•ll<l 1"9 re<OfC111'1Q or 1hl, no•k•. t~ "G"t ol rl!'lnst•~ mont w fll ltrmlnllt end the pn>t»rl'f m•1 0. '°'" To d•t~mlnit If relMtilt-t I• po111bt1 •nd the •mounl, ff •nv .. MCtsHry to cure the Otl•ull, conl•ct 0'9 b_,1fllCl.,Y O< mor19&9" O< IN1r s.ucc•nors lnter•,t, whow n.me Md 8d<ll~u M of ,,.. 11<11~ or this notlc~ 1s >iom~ F ...,.,,.1 S.vlnq\ •nd Lo... As· \Otieuon of s..n 01119<>, 101 Br....a-r. S•n Ol~o. C•llforn•• (M81hng .AO· arou; PO. Bo• 2010, S.rt Olego. CAl1lornl1 92112) OA r E 0 F•brU.'"V 1, ,.18. HOME FEOER.AL SAVINGS ANO LOAN MSOCIATtO~ OF SAN DIEGO /"Lind• R w.,...,. • AUi. Vic@ Pr,,.•<lenl " Ell .. t»tll H•rrh, An1tt.ant Se<rrtery Publl''*' Or~ Cout Oalty Piiot, Marcnu.22. ",Acwlls. ma PUBUC NOTICE FICTITIOUS auSIHUS HAMI! STATl:MUIT TIM fOll-'"O 1»non 1, Ooof\9 bvv• neu ••· LAOVNA PETflOL£0M COMPANY, 4 LIMITED PARTN5R$HtP, $1111• 0 , 310 <011nney19 Sl,...t. La911na 8eac11. Cellltrnlemn c Nell ~. C.-•1 P•mwr. l11U HOiiy Drive, Soutn L•9YN. Celllornl• '1611 This bYll,..U 11 ~<194 .., '" 11ml'9CI P¥lntn111P. C H~I RoNool> 0-1tP<ir1.- Thll ····-... ,,,., """' ,,,. Couftly Cl.,._ of Or-Cowlty on Febnlery 14, 1~ P'IG1'I Put>11"'9d 0renoe c..st 1>e11y 1>1io18 Maren I. a, IS, 22. 1'71 121 '. PUBLIC NOTICE • f ~ ' .. . ' 1 • ; .... q ~t ' ' . • • . ; "' E '.JI • t ri I p Robert N. Wffd/Publl~her Thom.a IC.Mvll/Edltor Orange Coast Dally Pilot .. ' 0 a ag.e ________ W_·d·n·..O.-·y·M·M·C·h·2·2·.'.9.78 __________ 8"_r·b4-ra_K.re·l·b·IC·l'l·E·d·lt·o·rl···' ·p·~-.E~d·ll·O'--· School Dollars Must Be Hoarded ~Jddh·l1m·I\ \'alll''> l'ntfiC'<I ~l·hool Di:.tn l'l trusle.:s I.1st \H•l•k 1t•h1..,t•d fol' the set·on<l ltmt· lo commit their last liuildmg-honll dollars on plans for M\ inter mediate sc·hool in l..tguna 11111.., Trusll'l's dtd not <h•bate J.lfOJl't·t1011s '' hic:h tnd1tat l' llu· ... d1011I '' tll lw rwt•<lc'd h:.· tmn lnslead. tht' rnajonty ",,.., c·1111t·c•rm·d l h.11 a bon<l election . ~xpN:ted tu be calle<l m .Ju1w, Hl79, \\ottltl lail Then th<>y would b<• IE'ft with lht> pl<11 1-; and no mmH'\ to hullcl thc :-c.:hool or ust· tor soml· ottwr nt•t·dl'cl f:H·1l1t' C'o11..,1dt·ring th~· t·urrc•nl pulJlk sentiment. their C't>n 1'l't tl'i an• .1usttflt•d Pt•oplt• simph \\<int lu e·ut goH•rn mcnt spen<lrng . It·.., hl•1•11 rl'lh-l'ft•d "' lhl' ne1ghbnnnj:! Capistrano l nrf rc·cl Sd111ol 1>1..,trrd \\hl•n• a bond 1s..,11P has failed thtt'l' t111w-. 111 tht· 1,1st l\\O \l'lll·s. ~U\\, off1c1db an lhal dist 1·11'1 illl' h11p111g lo gt•l \ oter apprcnral of a IN1se purt·hw .. t· 1-.Mh' S,1ddlt•h;1t·k 11 usll'Cs amt ;u.Jmrntstrators should wal<·h .end slud~ \\ h:il h.1ppl·n.., tu th1·11 nt•1ghbors In the mean· trmt•, th•·.' -.1111uld sct\t' a:-much munt•y J:-o peN,tblc so lhl'.Y t'otild oht.1111 s 1111w p11 rtahk das..,rooms ti the\. don't have 1•nuugh cloll:tr:-. to hurld a \\hOll• n1.•\\ st:ho111. Poker Gaine In tnt· l 1111 wd St·hool Drslnl'l trust ees slu hhornly g,1 n1bli-d\\11, 11 lh1•\· rdused lo l"sue <:ontingerwv ler m in~ lum 1111t1n·-. to 1•n1plo~t·1.•s as a hedge against massl\t' budgt·I c·1111>,11·b if the .Jan 1:. 'Gann property tax 111 1t1ath l' I'"""''" 111 .Jt11w l"n1111 tht· 'It'\\ o l tht• d istrict's teachen-. and ad m 1111..,l1<1t11r-.. 11 1111.-.1 ha\·e s<'l'med a desen·c.'d \Olt• of <·1111l 1dP1w1• ,1nd ;1 c·11111m1tn1cnt to c:ont1n umg l'>.c:ellenee in l'd111-.1t 11111 H111 frorn 1111' 'tl'\\ ol p;ncnb and stud~nts. 1t ma) h,1\ t' '.'.l't'lllt'd ,1 p11w pukt'r ganlt.'. \dlh the lruslel·s t'alhng !ht· l1h111 111 tf11· '11ll'"" and lhl' legi..,lator-. ,ind with po11 l'lll'> .111d -.t11d1•1\h as elups I h1· t 11i-.t1·1· :1c·t 111n ('Omm1b the d1:-.t11et lo :i full pro ;.:ram 1111 l'li!'I 'i'I. \\hdher th<:re ~ mone~ (111 rt or not f nil'" tlH' tru ... lcl·:-. \\tn thl'ir bet that .J :.in·1s \\tll fail. 111 th1·11·-.111 .. Iii'! 1111 lht• I.1.•g1slatun• t11 pull a l111.11w1.d 1 alihtt nut ot ,1 h.11 llw -.1·h1111f.., 'lrnph \\ould C'lo:-t• dn\\11 \\ht•n tlu.• ll\11111'\ 1·1111 ... 11111111111111\ l"ll \!t-a11111111· \\t' h,I\ t 111 \\11111lt-r about the fcl'lmgs ol 1111' p :1rt•11h .111d s tud1·nt-. \\ho ... 11 -..quarcl~ rn the middle of I Ill s ~.11111111! p11I It's Your Investment \lo11cl;1\ \11-.. ... 1011 \ 11·1e1's ~Iunt('ipal \1h l!!>Or~· Coun<:tl (\I \1 ·' "111 1111•1·1 t11r lht• ll111 cl ti mt·'' 1th :\liss1on \'icio L"o n·pr 1 ~1·111 :tlr\ t·~ to hni.:J..:lt• lfft•r the t'omp<rny\, ('Om 111l'l1t·11-."1° .11111·11d11wnt 111 1h planned l'Ommunity d t• \1·l11p11u·11l pl.111 ;1nd It""' Ttw 1\\11pn•\11111' "''s:-.11111 ... \\t'l'l' sparst'I~ allt>nd1•d, a11 11111d:iu-.llilt· 1·1111d1t1011 111 \J\'\\ of !he more lh~111 11 .000 l.11111111 •' that 11.1\e• n111n·d t11 the l2 \e;.ir old pl~1nned corn lllllllll \ l llt· .11111•nd 11w111 rt ..ippro\'cd ()y Or;mgl• Count\ .... upt•t '1su1 s 1·11uld ch&.111gl' the plc.tn111ng ('Otlcept ot thl' 1·11m m 111llt' d ra..,t 11 -.1 ll' I Cl I rt lht> need>-111 ('Oun t) and l'hm p<11\~ 11tl1e·1.1(-. I >11r111g t •w I 1r-.1 l \\" ml'C'l mg-., C'Ompan\· offH·1als h,1\ t lit1l'll l'.1!.:t'r t111·011pt·1alP \\Ith :\I \C memht'rs t•l1..1<'kd II\ \I 1-.-.11111 \ ll'ICI l'l'sldt•llh I ht· 1·11mp,1n.' h~1s 111nt•&1..,E'tl lot-s1ZC' minimum-. to 1011t111·n1\\till1°111·11·111 standards and ha.., md1tatl·d a \\di lllJ.!11<'""' 111 1·1111s 1dt•r d\\1•llu1g un1L density rt>slnct1nns 111 1•I1m1nal1 · 1111 p.11 ·l\ •cl IH'l 1-: h hor hoods 1\111 till' 111°\\ pl.11111111).' <011m·1·ph l' . ..,lablrsh ft>\\ r1•qt11n· 11w11t-. 111 1·111111m·n 1.tll\ ;111d 111riuslrt..ill\' l01tl'd .11'1•;1..,, 11•.1\ 111c .tllcmt•cl t·rni...tr11e t1un uµ to lhl' toutll) 's pb1111mg .. l!l'll<' \ \11d 11·s1d1•11l1;il 11v1ghhorhoods C'ould d1a11gc•. Tilt• pl.1t1 'd11d1 doc·.., 11111 1n<·n•:isl' the number of homes al lm\'t•cl 111 ~li-.-.11111 \ 1t·111. c·ould result in dense hou-.m g ;1n•:ts lo :tllcJ\\ 111w11 -.p:1n· 'creek-.. golf cour~cs. pa1 h-. :ind pr 1'1 till' c.111' on-. 1 m .. Jrt•.is mile!> away 'I lw l'CllH'<•pt r-. 11111 Ill''' County devclor>ml•nts h:1\ t• 111·1·11 mm 111g Ill I Ill' -.p:H·t• 11 ude off direction for a ro11pl1· <ii '1o;11' \nd p111h<il1I\' lhl' plan is good. The :\J1 ... -.1on \ 11• 111 t 'n h.1.., a l11s t11n 111 pr11tt'l'l1ng lrle-~I.\ le qu:tltl\' rn 1h pl.111111·<1 <'11lll1tlll111l) .rnd \O\\s 1t won'l ullow s h:.ihhv plall· lllll!.! to I Ulll \\h.11 h:.i-. bt•t>n Cl'l'iJll'd But \l \(' t11l'rnhl·1· G .11'.\ Stoney nol<.'s. · · \T ...,..,ion \'H•10 1-. a '-llJlt'r e·1111Hnuntl \ Then· :-it•t•ms l1!llt• rt•.i-.on to 1'11.1111.!1• 1l \\ h1·11 ,,l'.l'l' -.o tlow to c·ompleting 1t Pt•oplC' l111ughl ''1th 11111· <·on1 Ppt I don l \\ant to chanJ,!c rl 100 <11·•1..,( l(':tll\ .. Th.it s ont· p1•1 so11 's opmwn Olht-r~ should d1~pl.J~ an 1nl 1·n·-.1 111 tlll' ;mwndmt.•nt wh1I(• the\ l':lll mai..t' their '111e·1·' lwarrl on a lot•al IC'\'l'I • Tlw~ hau• .1 lot Ill\ L'slccl • Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Daily Pilot OthP.r view s expressed o n this page are those of their authors and artists Reader comment 1s 1nv1ted. Address The Daily Pilot, p O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626 Phone (7t4) 642-4321. Boyd/Signs By L. M. BOYD Not <'Very Seasoned Cilizen re ~·al ls a favorite Burma· Shavl' <-1J!n, but most do Such as "My mnn I won't s h ave says H1w~l Hui I but I shoulct worry I Dora's does I Burma Shave" Or : "Does your husband I misbeha ve / ~runt unrl s.:rumble /rant and De ar Gloo1n y Gus She escaped from her planned t'<1mmunlty In violation or thr• CC&Rs 10 tht Company h d to klll Bubbh!11 T.F.T. rave I shoot the brute some I Burma-Shave." Or: "Listen, birds I those s igns cost I money I so roost a while but I don't get funny I Burma· Shave." If S-Omebody in your h ouse hold a s k s, "Wh a t Burma-Shave signs?" kindly explain it to Uae Bttle r 1ttavet. Q. "Can you verify the claim that the band abonrd the Titanic played 'Nea r er My God To T hee' lot almost all or the two hours forty minutes the ship wu sink· ing? .. .. A. What It played waa ragtime and then lhtt hymn "Autumn." How can you can yourself an expert in Lh t f.am~ o! buebaJJ J/ you can t na me the six ways a b1Uer can re•ch bas~ without 1 ttina a hit! A n error, a base on balb, tM catchtr dro the tblrd 1tri.ke, hit by the plt.(b, a tieldtr'a choict Ind ln· tetf t nee by the catc~r. Nick TIUmmesch Uninvited Do-gooders Do Harm WASHINGTON -Oh, how well·tntentlon~ we Americans are, and ha w :s tupidly we somehmes act. llow else lo ex pllun how a pair of do.gooder Ho u11e members dispatched two Ame rica ns uninvited -to Guatem ala lo monitor t he recent elections there, how one m onitor c ried "tra ud," and there by angered m a ny G uatemalans. who m ight regard their votmg booths as sacred as ours, and wish Uncle Sam would m ind h1s o~ n business It t urn ed out t h at the Gualt>ma lan c.•lecllons weren't so fraudu l<'nl <.1fter all He s1dl•s, h a\e n l t h ere bet•n ~Orne b<t llot box pro hll1 ms 1n lhl' l S O\ l'r the ~l·ai...·) Who a rl· w l' to poke around t·lec- lluns Ill other l'llUlllrtl'S, .... h:Jklllg .. I (',1lvinasl1l' f1ngN at our Lalin neighbor::." THE GENJ lJS lieh1nd l h1 ::. stu nt ts Re p. Donald M . Fraser. n Minn . chairman of the Ho use Subt·omm1ttce on lnterna· l 1o n :.i l Organizations. His partne r is Rep Millicent Fenwick, H ·N .. J Both p rofe::.1> ~rt·at c·om·ern for human rights und voll' fraud JO other coun· tries So Frasl'r gut lht' Demncrat1c PJrty to sponsor a trip by Prorcssor John Plank of the l "'' crstl\' of Connecticut lo Guutemala to observe lhe elec- tions T h(• l'nitcd Auto Workers unwn paid Planks expense::. StrH'l' lhc Republican Par t\ "'llU ldn 't sponsor or pa) ror Rep Fl•n" l<'k s represent all\ e. J ohn H 1<·hardson. pre::.1dent of Ma ilbox Freedo111 House. Ii.he became h.hl sponsor :md patd bu way from ht•r own private run<J:s . G UATEMALA, unfortunately, has long been lorn and auffert:d \'IOJence by e.xlremisls Of the left and nght The Mar ch 5 elections were the first held in many years, and featured a m 11ilary cast Vo ters wer e aske d to t•hoose a Pres1denl among two army general:. 1:1nd a t•oloncl A gl'neral alt ead) runs the t•oun try Natural l:., u sn·ne likt' this attracted representatives ot Europe'11 democratic parties as ob servers. Only now, for the first time. the U.S. ~ot into the act. While the Guate malan gov- ernment didn't invite any of these "monitors," once thi11 in spection g .. ng set foot on thelr te r ritor y they were we ll r e ceived and treated cordially. Hul after the election, whose ou l come isn 't c lea r yet . l'roCcssor Plank cut loose with 'T he fraud perpctr alt!d here 1s so transparent thut nobody could 1."\ pcl'l to get a\\ a,> "'1th .Jl " He ~ 1•11'11• r1i.:/11 111 11111•1 do "'111c ch111;:' /\••11111/ llµ .moth1 r ,;,111111 i111•11 11111/ •t' 11cf I ilr 111 r p , \/ 11cu '' also note<l \.hat U1e rraftd "SJm ply r eenforce11 the deep cynicism oflhe Guatemalan vottrs •• Fraser and Fenwiek are now try ing to play down the onticisin of their im1j>t!ction team becau11e the uplift effort is gelling mixed reviews m GuiltemaJa. ·'They wer e not invited . a nd the ir presence is offens ive," said Julio Asensio. Gua tem al a's ambassador l!) \.he United Na l11ms "This is congressm an Fraser's conct'pt of playing God Almighty He acti. as if we were lr> ing to bit.le something. I ttunk I \\ i II get a team and go mspel'I ht!S e lection m Minnesota next 1~11 .. NO MATil-:R. f'rasl'r 1s un dtttcrred ·•tt 1s my hope," he· 111o us ly declares, "th al 1l <the 111onitorm111 wtll be followed b" other m1l1allves and that even tu ally we (the Democratic Pai I y) w ill be Joined by the Hc•publlcan Party a nd T hi• Soc1ali::.t lnlcrnallonal." Ms Fenwick 1s equally a r den t. "We've donl' Guatem ala a sl•rvice," :.he suys. ··and an · m uc h apprc<'iated t he re. Wt• m u s l t r y l c1 g d t h e no n Comm uni s t nations concerned about human rtJ?hls For their l N amba-;sador to threaten to go to Mmnesol a 1s unproduc- 1 I\ l' Goodnc-.s sakes Can 't t hese J>l.'('ks n1ffs realize t h at t heir l l'a m "as un1nv1tcd . t hat for Fraser to m ake his ennounce- nwnts about the monitoring on Conf,lrcs:-.ional stationery is lCJ put thl· emble m of lhc US t'ungr f'ss on th is questionable 1 nk r prrst"' In the naml• of hum an rights this bun!.'h , by sniffing around this way, m ight well be vio lating lht• human rights of people try- ing to have• an election Complaints Unfair to Animal Shelter To I ht• Erl1l111 I hl1 n·<·c·nt ll'llt'I'' :.ippear1ng 111 ~ ou1 lll'""Pafll.'r rci.:urrling lht· u..,c of thl· h1J!h altitude c·hamtwr Ill the dc..,I ruet111n 111 um' antl•rl pet::. al Orang{• Count~ An1m;if Shl'ltl•r h.IH' hl·cn mo'1 unra1r lo that f.11·1hl.\ W1th11ul cl<·hatrnc tht• merits ol ttw 1111t1.1lt\l' t•1 .1hohsh th<· u ... ,. 111 I ht· 1lt·e11mp1 l':-... 1on ehaml)i•t . It ,.., 1111l't l'"lin~ tu noh th;11 11111 11n1• natton.11 hum;1ne -.11<·11•1\ h;1s gont• 11n n·to1 d en ""PJIOJ l 1~r lhl· tn1tiJll\1' \\htlt lhl· i\rnen1.111 Jf11man1.· \ ... s11t1.il11rn, Mert\ ('rusildt'. lht· ..,pc,\, and lhl· l • .1 l 1 t n r n 1 a S l u l ,. 11 um an•· '\s..,oc·1;t1to11 ;11 e alf against oull<twing tll\' l'hamlwr Tl 1s rJ1HJtult HI lhe prt''-('OI t•mot ional ;atmo ... phert· lo V1t•w this ..,tlhJl'l'I ol.J.1l't'll\clv. hut thl' horror slOrt<'S which WC'l'C ust•cl :cs ellustrat1ons tn th1· rt'Cl'nt ll'fll•r ... ad m1tt1·cll\' onlv <H'<·ur "hC'n thl' c·hamlw1 h not in g1w1d "ork 10g order or t hl' pt'rsonn1·I '" untr<1inc·<I or unsupcr\'iSl'd in 11!-. use 11 i!f;. to say the le.1-.1 . 1rn·s11ons1blC' to suggC'Sl, e\'en hy 1mpltcal111n, that Or.rngt• Cour1h Shclll•r :..taff, as \\f•ll as lh<' hum.im• ori.:.1ntlJl1on \'Olunl<'t'r'> \\ h 0 \\ 0 I' k t h l' I f' , W fl U l d <·ounlcnanC'l' for a moment the tnhumant• prae tires des<·n~d 1n ..,uch lt·rnr) ini.: cll'tail SUCH F \1$F. jntJ m1slt•ad1ng s!al<'mt>nl<., do m<.«1fl-ufable harm lo our <llltmal n.·scue effort!> ('onlnbuttn.(! to JlC'Opfc's alrcHcJ.V irrational frars of tht: "pound" prevents findc•rs of lost pt"ls from bringing them there, and m any h<'artbroken owners and pe ls will ncv<'r rind each Olht"r as a r esult. Ins t ead o f attacking the !lym pto m . l et us un ite o ur humane efforts in a ttacJ<ing the cause of t he deatbs at ttie s h e lter Recent Los Angeles County Arumal Control figures since initiation of their low-cost s p ay it\euter c lini cs, a r e asto unding in three years. the numbe r or animals impounded by the she ller has decreased 69,000! And lhe number killed decreased from lOt ,297 to 41, 177. Los Angeles C1ty, also. has passed an excellent ordinance to control indiscriminate breeding. Wh> c an't Oranse County do Utt same'' RUTH FRANKF.L Code of CORdaaec To the Editor: The Daily Pilot Is way off base with the rcicent editorial opinion obJt-ctJng to the rc1n11tltutton of t h e Republican 11th Commandment, "thou shalt not a pe•k ill o f 11 n ot h c r Republican " The Pilot favor s campalrn r erorm to relse Ui ll!vel of local polJtlcs. Yet, at the sam e lime oppoa s voluntnry Qnd 'ommendoblc effort by local R cpu b l lcn n ~ t o c l ean up (' :1 rn p a I /.! n I h l' I II I I e a n ,, matc·nals h\ a .i:t•11tl1·m.111h .I g I t' ,. Ill •• II I I () l' I 1 m I II al t• l .i 111 11 .1 1 J.: 11 -. m t• ;i r ., <1 n 1J 11nn1.•t'l'"S!ll :-11111d thl'O\\ 1nj.! '\' t::-., Stll'h ill! <tJ.!rt't'ml·nt II\ H1•puhf11'.111 l'<Jncl1tl;1tc' f<1r pnhhe· nff11·1• "Ill t•hmintttt· sonw of lht• 1111e \ .1ml d1·gr:1<1111i.: stuff lhal 111,11\1•-. 1111 nl'\\SfJ:t(H•r s l 111 11•, 11111 I he· pl'11plC' or (l1;1nf,!1' ('11111ll\ \\Ill h(' \\CIJ ...i•r \ 1.·d '" "lll'h .1 ('lllll or c·ondut.•l .1-1111111~ 1 a 111l11t.1lc"" ~h.tllll' on \1111 1111 th1nk1ng 11f the· Ill'\\ ... pap1.•1 l111stnl''-" first .and th1· puhl1t: i.:ootl -.1·t·11ncll\' Whl'll th1• Ht•p111Jl11•,1n 11th l'om m :111dmc·nt \\ .1~ 111 I or ct· rn I h c l ti It' I !Ifill-.. I ht' It• n· 1 or Orani.:t• t '11unh pol1 t 11•s was hil-(h \\ I t h f I n (' (' 0 II ' ,. r v it I I \; \' Republit·Jn lc"o1d1•n .. h 1p <et th1· hl'lm WC' ctiuld 11 ... ,. '"m<· of thUI " I n d (I ( q u I ,. I l' ( f I (.' I (• n I Hl'puhhcan1sm 111 this 1·ount.\ toda\ THO~tAS /\ Fl E~TES 01.h(#r tr ~'t¥d llt-lp To lhP F:dtlor Ye'' Buhbks 1-. cl1•ad And \\l' do h•cl .111 rn" :oind n·grt't It s O\'l'r and H'I for tht• ftr..,l t1ml' sine e 1l .tit ht•J.!an I frc.·I angr\ ~ ;md fru ... 1r.rll·lf \f\ f1•1•1tn~~ ('1'1 ta 1n1:--ar l·n 't di n•t'll'<I .it I.ion Counln :1s I f Pe·I nnh t·om. pa-. ... 1t1n for lht•ir lr<'mt·ndou ... \ l'I cl1sapp111nt 1ni.: l'fforts I hno"' lhl'11 lo .... :-. hnan<.·1C11ly ;1s well as C'mot 1or1all~ ..., a gr cal one an<I I have nnl) .11lm1rallon and prm:.t· for their hNoir uttempts lo save Bubbll's No. my frustrallons concern the fuct that Bubbles wus jusl on e wtld ani m a l needtng as· sistance and c1.·rta1nly s he re celved tht• most professional al· tention a\.allabte What J can't stop llunkmg :.ibout a re a ll the m 11l1ons of olht'r wild animals who s uffer at lhl' ha nds of the prl)fill'rr.s oft he world DON'T AU. of you. "ho took u p pen and papN to scream about the r ights of Bubbles, feel lht! sam e comJHl"'sion for the bahy bt'als in Nc\\foundland who are now at this mome nt being clubbed to death for the sake ol t heir i>elts? Doesn 't it sadde n you to know th1.1t "hales are be· lnR shrnghtered needlessly In all our wntera and that porpoises are caul{ht and dcstroy<'d In tho sume nets used to catch tuna? Atld what about our beautiful a nd majestic bards <>f prey who fall victims to tht' poisons and pesUcfdt we utilize? Is it onJy wh('n we pick out one anima l, aJve It ;i name and nt· trJbutc <'t'rtain cutt> and cuddly traiu to it that we fool com paas1on and w-c mov~I to ac lion ? I aue what I'm s1ytn1 Js that it •II th~ fontastic p ubllr.lty, lhe phonl' 1·.ills .m<I lht' lrll',l?ram .... that ~ou angnl\ .111rl cl1ligt!ntl\ 1111 t•c'lt'<l lo\\ard tht.· pr1.•st-n alum 111 1111l' ammnl rnuld ht• d1re<:ll•cl lo\\ .1rtl lhl• 1'a11s1· or th1• oth1•r mas-.l'S uf un1mals 111 tll'l'd, lht•n fin a I I\ "l' would Sl·e som(' act ton t.1kt'1; 1111 ,J h•H•I \\h1th would lk•nt'f1t '" man' Afll•1 :ill, 11 1s onl.} throui:h all 11ur ('Ont't'rlf'(I dforts th<1t leg1::.lat111n will l'Oml' uhoul to aid tht• c:au ... c of thl· rt• ma1n1n~ \\lid .1mmal' that .... 1111 1·x1st toda.\ J.1'\)(),\ \\\Ill. Sour \f)t«• I o I ht· f:d1t111· T h 1 s t' I et• I 1 o 11 c ,1 m p .1 1 g n ..,t:trlt·d pll'a ... anth t•nou~h . hut l'ndl·d on a sour note W1•'rl ltlo." tu takl' \'lg11r11us 1'\C'C·pti1111 lo 1·1·1t,1in in ... ults lo I r\'irlt' \ ulc•r.., h\' tlllC' C'ltlldltlalt• 1\tthll1 \nt holl). torml'I nta) or \\ h11 e ,1mt• i11 Sl'('llflcl, 1nHn1•!11.11t·I~ I :1 u n 1· h 1' cl :1 p C' r -. 11 11 a I . unpro\ okc<I. unrlocumcntl·d clcnunciat1on of lht> front runner I Its dl'p<>rtmcnt 1:-. his problem hut "hl•n ht.> 1mplwd that well 11\ 1•r :!.i<>O Irvine voters cast 1ht•1r \Otes fo r an unwo rlh\' ca11tl1tl.1lt'. he was caslJng slur·-; u 111111 . .1 n d at t e m p l 1 n g to 111,< n·tl1t. those voters \\ c· :en· offended and '<lddcned "·" th1 ... demonst r ation of shallO\rnl'ss tn one who claims a po.s1t111n of 1.·o m m un 1t,· lcaderslup and who campaigned on a pl:Hform of brin,c:ing Jnme t 11 g <'th l' r. M a yo r V a rd o u Ii s showed similar contempt for lhe 'oters <luring his TV intt>rvicw on election night when he echoed Mr. Anthony's petty innuendos f'At.JL H. PALM Ql.IST DAVID /\ KIDD lt'arnfng To the Editor · On Wednesd ay, Ma r c h 8, a working representative for the Los Angeles Zoo sPQke to the Alha m bra K.Jwams Club. Among other things, s he pointed out that the loss of a tranquilized hip· popotamus is one out of two or !'JO percent due to lhe unde termina ble dosage Why was Bubbleci killed with two shots? Such management and inept handling or a superb publicity eve nt and the brightest world in- terest news story .for a happy. news star ved world s wells a massi ve sense of sorrow for Lion Country S afa ri animals. Al.so lost is "'1y desire to pntronize s uch m&nagcment. P erhaps th(' press can uncover t he coverup a nd strike a blow fol' 'mproved livina care for lhc lns plrinj! SJH~c\mtns ot th(' unini al world which are jailed for llf<' for our h u m*n <'> enjoyment. DA VF. GAllflULt, Muae •I 'l'a:r To the Editor. l m a widow ~Ith no childrtn 11111 I h;1q· l,11\••11 a kt't'n inlt'rest 1r1 tht Pilot " .1rt1t'll' about thl' stlldPnt p11·k1'1111g 11( tht' Eel\\ arih {"inl·mas I ~up1xirt -'1r \rthur Hill'\ 1 M:JJlbox Feb :n 1 l el1111 I \\ant m} taxc.., gu111g tu pa) ..,< h1w1I arlmm1strator )1 r Pl•t 1 ,. 111 trnm ptl'kl't5 "h«n h•· 1 nulcl lwlll'I put h1-. time 1n lra1nini.: lht•w stucknl.., lo rC'ad ancl 11..'<irn basil' math If this ts all \Ir Pl'rn has tn do \\1th h1-. l11rn· I \\uut'd llkt· t11m off m-' 111111,,.rt \ l~n<'" fht• t \\ 1slc.·tl rehutt al in a lt'ttN :\t atlho'\ h\ .\Ir llt1\\Jfd Genslt:r m acfr H'r v lltt It• sc•n..,e as all Jl cl1cl \\a.., ln tn ;tnd distort l ht• f,1rh a.., 1111•c.·I) pn·st·nlt•cl h) J\tr H ti <· \ ~1 r <: <· n .!-I c.• r . \d1 ' sh11uld11 I tht• propNly tax tJ~· s hift t•d lei 111C'o11w r<ilher th<in pro p1•1 l \" I n I hts \\ ay th<' 111·1-.ons th:cl 1·:c11 hC'-.l afford to h\• l .d11·11 \\ 1 II hl' took " fsn 'l ti 11111•11•-.teng that all lhl'S\' 111 ... (·r.; c ,1n ""' 1s that 1r th1· Jarvi .... \mc•ndm«nl J!oes throu,:!h the s,·h11ob \\Ill ht• -.hut do"n and th,· ftrt• ;ind poltc·1• force \\111 be C'tll Ill h:1l1 '°'Ill Oh<'l' ha\e thev m1·nt1111w1I thn \\11uld ha\'e lo gt•I nrl 11f tht• ;ll'atJ \\l)()(f m civil "t'I\ 1t 1• and put the rest to work \ 11 mt -.tud\ showed thev <H·tualh \\ork .m averai::e of t\\;) hour .... and fiftv six minutes eac·h worl\111i.: 1la~ 1~·r person Wh" do I huvc lo pa) lor dou bk 1ilpp1n~ and triple d1 pp1ni.: pcn:.1on::. "ht·n ofll'n there han· heC'n no rw nsion deductions whafrn•r'' l C'«r latnf\' would hke to knn" why I havt: to pay thl· dent al bills for the fam ily of <·evil ser\'irr l'mployees while I la!'k mon1•y lo fix my own teeth <1111.• to my taxc::. lt always up· sc•ts ml· al the check st and to hJ vt• to Jld) c·ash for my pound of hamburger while th e o ne ah ead or ml' b11ys six big s teaks \\1th food st.imps. Over the wt"ekend in lht• grocery park111~ lot tht• ('~1r next lo mine said · For Offln1l l <;t• Only,·· yet 1t "as Cull or children and bein~ usl'd lo pit I. up !ht· "eek 's sup- ply of JtrOC<'rtC's Th1*i \('nr I was \'f'ry happy to recet\ (' ;1 Ii Jll'rl'l'nl ratSl' hul now J se•t• lh1· I luntington Bea<'h Tea chers :1n• tkm andmg a 20 percE'nl raise· wh1th ""111 certain- ly wipe uul n1~ little o.n<• And the ones that h11 n g like .t m11lslo nt' 11round we p ropert) taxpayers n<>cks h ave the ne rv<' to lHlk why Wt' arc goin.c lo vc>k for the Jarvis i\mcndmenl ! MAln' 1.ou PJ\RKF:H • l.rt1rr1 from rrod~rt art' UV"lcome. Th~ n(lht to cond-11tt lnttrr :n fit ~ or clun1not.-ltl)(ol u r~i:m>t'd l.('ftf'T• Of JOO WOf'dl ()'r lf'3$ Wt/I ~ Qn.itft ,,,._/h'tnct>. All lt'tltT$ mWJt in· <'ludfi '1gMJ11r~ and "'Odlfti/ odd".~!! but "°"'" ma11 lwt w1t~t.d on rr: qwit If 1111/Jcffnl rfdMft ~ nppar~. 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" """""· ,t I ' U.S. Deficit Climbs W~SHINGTON <AP> -The United States tlnlshed 1977 with a $20.2 bllllon deficit ln its international pay· ments. more than twice the lar1cst previous deflclt In history, Com- merce Department said today. The deficit for the final three trtonths or lM year amounted w $7 bllllon, up from $4.3 billion dmina the "Previous three monthl, t.M .,.ncy. 11\d. These huie ddtclts art largely respons.lblt tor the sharp dodine 111 v aJuc o< the dollar on lnterna· tlon \ money market.a In tM pall year. The deficit Is In th• nalkm's so- catl~ current account, which In· eludes the valuo of aoods atid 1trvlce traded between lM UnJted tat.a arid othe.r countries, Invest· ment tneorne and p mment ll'•ls pension payme_ntl abroad. ' ~. Mateh 22. 1878 s DAILY PILOT ·~ 'lunk' Calls Regulators Aim At Phone Woes By SYLVIA PORTER The ulephonc has become an annoyance, resulting in a debate over whether and how to regulate lelepbone aollcltaUon. At issue are two ri1hts: the ind1vidua1·~ n1ht ot privacy, and the bualoeaa orgaru~auoo·s rl&bl ol com· merclal free speech. Tbe stakes are blab; the solutions will not be almpte. THE DE'"TE WILL CENTER in Wash1naton and Call!omha. The Federal Commwticallons CommJulon ls planning hearings and new regulations for telephone solicitation In (leneral and automated dialin& devices in particular. Calllomla's Public Utility Commission 1.s con· dueling an Inquiry with lhe same goals. Three days of hear· lngs opened today in Los Angeles. Meanwhile, lawmakers in several states and in Coneress have introduced measures to limit. control or ban certain types of so-called "junk" calls. Their efforts fall into three major categories: (1) Some legis- lators are focusing on automated dialing devices with pre· recorded messages. These machines can dial up to JOO sequential numbers an hour, in- Money's Worth cluding unlisted ones. Although few businesses can use this technology economically <the machmes cost up lo $12,000> and fewer lhan 1,000 have been sold nationwide, nearly tt dozen stales have passed or are weighing laws to ban them. (2) ANOTHER REGULATORY APPROACH is con- tained m b11Js introduced by Rep. Les Aspin, D.·Wis , and Sen. Wendell Anderson, D.-Minn. Their measures, being considered in similar form by about 11 states, would gi\'1:? people the right to ask local phone companies not lo give out phone numbers to solicitors other than such groups as charities, political parties, pollsters, literary. scientific and nonorofit orl!anizations. (3) About tour states are trying lo regulate un- solicited calls by placing them under lhe •·cooling-0£r" re· gulatlons that govern door·to-door sales Under these rules, the buyer usually can back out o( a home solicitation sale up to three days after the sale. SERIOUS ADMINISTRATIVE AND constitutional ques\ions are involved an many of these suggestions. Why, for instance, under the Aspin-Anderson proposal, should a politician or a publishing firm be allowed to use the phone to solicit contributions or customers, whale a vacuum or real estate salesman cannot? Another problem is that a ban on unsolicited phone calls could conceivably prevent people from rece1vmg. say. official prerecorded emergency warnings. Within 30 lo 45 days, the White House Office of Telecommunications Policy is slated to release a 100-page report on th~ policy 1mphcations of automated and lrad•· tlonal, phone communication. Leading businesses usmg telephone marketmg are forming the Telephone Marketm~ Coordinating Council, which will try to help shape expect· ed regulation . "We have had more interest m this issue than in a nything else we have looked into because it touches all of us." says a communications ex~rt in the White House Of· f1ce. General Institutes Flextime Plan General Telephone Co of California plans to allow most of its 20,000 employees to determine the hours they work. The company announced Tuesday that it is graduatly instituting flextime, a flexible-hours system, to "improve the quality of hfe for both its employees and, in the Jong run, its customers " R. Parker Sullivan, president, said the decision was reached after pilot studies were made by employees m the company's South Bay division and Santa Monica business office. THE SYSTEM OF FLEXIBLE work in~ hours Is a way or arranging work hme that giH'> employees some freedom in choosing the hours they will work each day, be said. It will not shorten an employee's work time of 40 hours a week, eight hours a day. However, General's flextime system will give flexib11ity in time of arrival and de- parture and length of lunch hour. Flextime will app1y to most employee~. Each department will ( ) set its own houn;. ON 11IE JOB Operators, for example. --will not have qujte as much flexibility :onct.• their hours are com- puterized and the demands of customers must be met oo a 24·hour basis. Most other employees will be expected to work at peak business hours and not be absent dunng those periods. called "core ts me." For example. In the company's South Bay service of. nee In Torrance. it was determined that the work day would be any time between 7:30 a.m. and 5:30 p.m. to al- low for flexibility. Core time is from 9'30 to 11 a.m. and 2 to 3:30 p.m., when all employees are expected to be in thl' omce. CONCEIVABLY, AN EMPLQJEE could work from 7'30 a .m. lo 4 p.m. with half an hour off for lunch An alternative i$ a two·hour lunch with work until 5:30 pm, ''General Telephone's flextime program will demand that employees communi cate with each other in determin ing coverage for the various operations of the company," said Sullivan. "We expect a number o! advantages." he said. "To name a few· improved employee attitude, increased pro- ductivity, reduced parking lot and building congestion, re- duced lardtness and absenteeism, and improved customer relations." FLEXTIME JS Bf;tNG conducted on a trial bni! un- der an aarcement with the CommunlUlJons Workers or America. Gen rnl la a subsidiary of General Telephone A Elec- tron &cs Corp., headquar~red in Stamford. Conn. Flextime onglnatcd ln G«many In 1967. Its devl'IOP· ment stemmed from the needs to reduce traffic and con· 1esuon and to provide a comfortable means for tho work· lng motheor to integrate employment and per~oaal responaJblUdes. • Showroom to Open Bat Products Co. lnc •• the nAUon's lar1est utalog thowl"OOm merchandiser. will open lta fifth Soulhcm Calllornl.a 1bow1'00m in Cerritos in late September. ,,.;....._ Tbe 14 QOO.square-fool atzuctur. wm be in tho Loi ~ Hti>t Man,' on 183rd Stnet oar tho lntercbanp ot J.eos and U.S. l'loute tl, and will employ u maoy u 100 people. I . ' • 118 DAILY PILOT TeleViSion EVENING • t.'00 tJ ()) C88 HEWS 08 HEWS l 8 EM!.AO&HCY ONEI Oa8010 mull decide wnethw 10 ampureta • trapped conllructton wont•"• lag 0 NBA 8.<Ul(ElllALL • L•l<•n•IHOU>ton G) THE BAAOY BUHai M.-d• makea • pr<>mlM en. doaao't know how 10 kMp g) ROOKIES · Ryll• la Injured by •n ax- priaon« wt for revenge. f:D ELECTRIC COMPANY m> HISTORY OF MEXICO "Arrlvlll 0 1 Man In A1111t1I ca'" 0 A8CHEWS 8:308 MOVIE ••'h "Man'a Favoriie Sport?" (Pan 2) (19641 Rocle Hudaon, Peula Pren- tis&. A Mll-clalmed apona· m1111, though never llavtng fllhecl In hi• lite. mual now do the real thing In order to MV9 hla Oulll·up llll)Uta• Uon •nd his Joo ( 1 ht ) Rich Romance Ga BEWITCHED Samantha u-lnaulla 10 ~ a poet wtllla Darrlri -an emulat 10 GUrb Endor• a tnsulla Ann Dusenberry plays the daughter of a "ea I thy contractor who s howers Grant (;uude\e with expensive gifts on Eight 1s Enough tonight at 8 on ABC, Channel 7 fl) OVEA l!ASY m> DIMENSIONS IN CULTURES ""An;h_,iogy" ven de Wet« damon- •tr•tH the running 1t11ch, whipped and lhr••decl runntng atltch, and the Pek1neee stitch CJ) JOKER'S WILD Cl) UNTAMEOWORU> "N-Engl•nd" (Il!) MERV GRIFFIN 7-00 0 NBC NEWS 0 LIARSCLUB 0 ABCNEWS CD I LOVE LUCY 7 30 f) WHEN ti/l.VOC STRUCK Lucy organ1zo1 on orchos· tr• among he< girl friends and 81«1 Ricky to help II) AOAM·12 The officers leogle with a bow-and errow·wlaldlng Indian end with an armed and wounded robber fZl) MACNEJL / LE11RER REPORT C°!) Cll\EATIVE STITCHERY Ar11a111ns1ructor E111&nor "SOS •• Dlau1en Al Sea" For over 2.000 years man hat 11ruggfed with lhe sea. end now that ocean travel Is eomlng to an erid. It's lmpou lble 10 aay who s WOri D SHA.NANA Guest· Jim Stafford D HEWLYWEOGAME 0 MAT~ GAME P.M. G) THE BRADY BUNCH Cindy's lavorlte doH 11 mlaalng end lhe family lhln*1 Bobby has hldd•n ti Chann~I Listings 8 KNXT tCBS) Los Anq,,,,.,, D KNBCtNBC) Los Anqell!'> O KTLA tlno ) Los An9c1e~ 0 KABC·TV(ABC) l OS Angeles ({) KFMB (CBS) San Diego 0 KHJ TV (lnc1) lo,, An ;eles RO! KCST 1ABC) S.ln Du~qo W KTTV !Incl I LOS Angl"IPS II) KCOP·TV (Ind i lo'> Angell'S W KCET·TV (PBSi LoJ Angeles m> KOCE·TVtPBSl Hunllngton Bea~ C!) ADA.M-12 The 0Hlce11 lnlltata en tnvMllgatlon tnlo medical fraud. Q3 LA. INTERCHANGE 'Snepaho11·· m> STARBOARD Cl) $128,000 QUESTION O]) FAMILY FEUD 8:00 8 Cl) RETURN OF CAPTAIN MEMO Captain Mamo flnda Iha loat continent of At1an111 and encounters the rui.. of thet unusual land (Plft 3 013) D QRIZZL y ADAMS "T~ ~Ill'' A widower tP•lrlck W1yne) and hi• yoong aor" 1trenda<1 In the wlldarriaaa following • -• mounlllln storm, join Adem• arid Indian chiehaina Sllv• Fox and Watant In 1 wll<ler.,.u <>al· .O.atloo of Eatt« In lhla 90-mlnute apl90de 0 MOV1E * * '"The Megtc Serpent t t968) MorOl<I Metau1<11a. Tomoko Ogewa Ten years •lier ltla dea1h of tus ta1h«, • yourig man chal· lengea his klllet to combal (1 hr. 30 min I O @l EIOHTIS ENOUGH "Poor llllfe Rich Girl" In an anempt to buy hi• art«:llon1, Iha Mlf·asau<ecl daughter of a ~t oontnc:tcw .noww.. DllYICS wtth ~ Qlfta. • CWIOl.. llORHETT AHDfMH06 G!Je9t; CM~. • MOVll ··~··'Comanctla"' (1958) o.na ~.Lind• Cf-. tal. l'tloo cavalry aoouta mu.at find 1111 ~t COl'lllllnctle Chief In "'der to ~t-~w.,.(a hrs, 90MAT ftEAFOAMAHCES "'V•dl ~··Leontyne Prlea, Florenui CollOtto, Luciano Pavwottl, Nlcolill Chieurov arid Hanry Gaorgae Clouz era tea· lured In the La Scala OrehMtrl l)foduotlon of Verdi'• Requiem, conduct· ad by Herbart van Karajan. m> BU< BEIOERKCK& MEMOAIAl FESTIVAL 8.30 Q PROTU:TORS CD CROM-WITS '9 OVEAEASY t:OO II C88 MOVIE * * * '"The Big Ekl8" ( 1978) JOMph Bologna, Stocilerd Cnanrung. The ftfat nucleat..pow.ed lwq>- ry bus, comp'9te with awlmming pool. boWtlng a114Pf and an ~ment of accantrlc PHHngere, blOlnl • maiden VO)'ega. fraugf'lt with peril, from New y 10 Del'!-. 0 ue·s ANG "A In The Wing$" • singing aod d•indrrali~ Wilen • .., ... ot om-of·t~•· Ilka accident• plllQUM • lllm company. Gene Barry, Shenl Wallie, Nehmleh Pereoff. guest a11111. (R) 0 ORAL ROBERTS SPECIAL W MERV GRIFFIN G.-ta. BIN Colby, Jimmy Connor1, ~y Rogers, Deney Tefrlo, Anrie Murr•y. Jim Stafford, Fr11nk Walk« Q[!) AUSTIN crrv LIMIT'S ' Chat Atkins I Marte T r1\'la'' Two of the ,,,_, gultarlata In the country lum In memorable pertor- mancea (I) RICH MAN, l"OOll\ MAH Jul,. Precott. &p1.1med oy Rudy Jordache. beQin1 en atleir with Iha town play- bOy Tom JordllChl Mia a fife and II beni.hed to hla uoc1a·11n Calttornta. 9 30 D AU. YOU NEED IS CASH George H•rrlson, Mick JIQO«, P11&1I Simon, Eric Idle, Bilrlca Jago«. Ron TUBE TOPPERS CBS 6 9:00 -"The Big Bus." The TV premiere of this 1976 satire on dis· aster movies features a nuclear-powered luxury bu! and a collection of offbeat passengers. NBC D 9:30 All You Need is Cash. An original parody of the Beatles with ex-Beatie George Harrison, Paul Simon and Bianca Jagger <see review below). ABC fJ 10 .00 Perry Como Special. San Diego's Sea World 1s the setting for this musical variety show with Debby Boone and Kenny Rogers. Wood, Oen Aylcroyd, John Beloahl, Glide Radner and Bin Murrey IOlf\ In a parody ol lhe mualc and moYlaa of • wortd·famoua rock quar. tat from lhlarpool, England 0 LOVE, AMEAIOAH STYLE "Love And The N-.eu- 11<1 Two small to ... n -..t•• 11141 for poe1. tlon When they INtn 111a1 they.,.~ rited. fB SPECIAL ''Ren~ Whet• All Thlnoa Belong'' A caleb<e lion ot Iha ongOlng reblrlh ol man WKI n•tura 10:00 Ill 0 NEWS 0 tB8 PERRY COMO "Euter By The Sea" A celebflllon In eong et S•n Olego"a Se• World P•rk wUh gueat1 Debby Boone, Kenny Rogers, S•amor• Iha Sea lion. Flo Iha Walrua aod Sh11mu the KlllerWhell II) HONEYMOONERS Trying to make up with Alica attar • qu111ral, Relph tekea Ed'I a<Jvtce and sends h« a recording fZl) MICHAEL JACK.SON m> SOUNOSTAGE .. Fiddlers Three·· Cwntry rocker Doug Kershaw, )u:.t-rocll •lrtuoeo Jean luc-Ponly and Cf&NiClll llHk Perlm•n perform separ•tely and 1n • remarkable anaembla 10:30 Q) Cl) NEWS fD MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT 11:00 II D 0 Cl' 1.0-NEWS D LOVE. AMERICA.N STYLE Nolhln Bui The Truth" Corle dacklea that She and Paul mual be tot111v trutn 1u1 with each other 0 MOV1E * * · Italian Connection f 1973) Hanry Stlve, Mat lo A.Ciro! A amat._ume pimp In Miiano le the twget for the New Yori! and llallan Maf1a (1 hf., 35 min.) Ga THE 000 COUPLE Fellx daCklee to t>eoo<ne • writ« and OIGar think• .,.. 1 wutlng hi• time end money G) LETS MAKE A DEAL fD OO<CAVETT Gueeta· David Lloyd end MWlll'lall BtlClcman, torn>« comedy wrtt«• tor C.wtt (Part 1ol2) m> MACHEIL /LEHRER REPORT 11:30 IJ (I) HAWAII FlVE-0 McG•rr•ll dlscovera a criminal ring hlj8ci<ing air catgo ahlpmenta while he's 1n,,..Ugat1ng Iha death or an elrporl MCUrlty under- cover •oen• (R) D TONIGHT Holl Jonnny Careon Guee11. Mclean Steven- son. Kenny Rogers, Rod· ney Dengarlteld, Or MlchaelFOM. 0 LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE "Love And The Anxious Merna" Mrs Albano lrlea 10 get Julio 10 propoM to her daughter "Love And Tiie Relncarn1110n'" Otane trtee to get Nick lo notlGe h« 0 ({I POLICE STORY "The Ten-Year Honey- moon·· Aller working together on the police loroe tor 10 yeera. t.o pertners gal on each other a nerves Wilen one or them 111rt1 ac11ng atrange. ly Cleud• Aklna, Peul Burka guee1 1tar CRI CD THAT GIRL "Kimono My Hou .. II) GETSMART The Chief uslgns Agent 1111 •nd ~gent 99 to ratrlella • deadly scientific A Legend That'll Last Until Lunch H) J \ Y SllARBll'fT LOS ANG 1-:1...:s I Al') Reatles freaks who Jug the mov11·s "11.ird Day's Night" and "llelp," -n ust sec an !\BC show tonight ul 9 30 nn Channel 4 r•a lled "All You "IJ(•('() IS Cash rt has nothtng •\ hal::.oevcr to do\\ 1th 1 h<' Beatles Instead. it tt•llc; the story of another ramed pop .!roup from LI\ npool. En.i:tland Th<>y are the ~utles You m;i~ not know of them. but the) '\e 1~come J rumor in their o"' n time The show claims they cul such hits as "A Hard f><Jy's Rut." such albums a~ "Shabby Lane" and trag1cal History Tour You may su.specl this is a .p1.1of of every known locumcotary on the Beatles. You might be n~ht T\' RE\'lEW Flying Circus, wrote and stars in this 00-minute • caper II E Pl.A YS A REPORTER and also a Rulle, 01 rk M cQu1gley Others 1n the group they call the Pre·Fab Four an' Ron Nasty <Neil Jnnes>. St1g O'Hara ( R1kk1 ,..Jtaar> and Barry Worn (John Halse' 1 The show starts hy nollng the Rutles. formed in 1962, have become "a musical legend that will last unt1l lunchltml' " ll shows how the Rutles were discovered by Lt-ggy Mountbatten. who beeame their manager only to meet a sad, lonely end "He accepted a teach mg position in Australia." The Rutles begin at a Hamburg club, the Rat Keller "which means literally in German, cellar of r ats" and then return to England to sign with Dick Jaws. "a music publisher of no fixed ability." TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS t'*>ry trom KAOS • CAPT10HID A8C NEWS MORNING 12:00 D lWIUGHT ZONE A llttle boy ~ a prta fight., good luck In tu• ~figlll tD MOVIE • •~ "Tc>Qelher Aga•n· (11144) Irene Dunne, CharlM Boyw All« a woman'• lat• huaband'• ., •• ..,. le lltuclt by llQhl· nlng, llt'9 comm1 .. 1on• a 1CUlpl0< 10 1111 II. (2 hrl ) G) MOVIE * * ~ "Blick Holle Canyon" ( 1954) Joel McCre.t. Mll't Blanclwd A cowboy 11 ob-..d wllh lhe dellre to capture a wlld atalllo<!. ( 1 hr • 30 min ) 12:30 8 MOVIE * • * "The Man Who Reolalmad Hla HHd" ( 193A) Claude Raina. Joan Bennett. A bnlllant authO< aetls hfmMlf 10 an ambl· tious publllh«, r-.ilttng 1n tragedy ( 1 hr, 30 min) 12:350 ISPY ··To Flotenca Wllh Low" (Perl 2) 12:.37 0 ®) A8C MYSTERY MOVIE * * · Olal A DHdly Number • ( 1975) Gary Colllna. Gemma Jonea. When an 001-0l·Worl< actO< l>OM8 u • peycn1a1n11 10 help a hylUlfieal girl wtlh nlghlm111a, he unlmow· 1ng1y Mia the stage tor hi• own curtain c111 (R) 12':40 .. (I) l(OJAI( "Wall StrMt Gun•Hnger" KO)alC P<>&M ea • Greek mulll-mllllonalre In hi• Maren for a murderer with $20 million In .. curllf•• (R) 1:00 D TOMORROW Hitnry Kyamba talka about 1J9and1 1:30., MOVIE • • ·1 Wu A Shoplllter' ( 1950) Scon Br1dy Mon1 Freeman A datacllva po1111 aa • ahop1111er 10 Infiltrate a gang ol protea· $Ion ala (1 hr, 30 min I U0 0 MOVIE • *'\ "The K10en ' ( 19~61 Burl Lanceater Ave Gardner A former boxer becomea involved with tl>e synd!Qte f2 hrt i min l 1:508 NEWS 2:00 0 0 0 NEWS W MOVIE • • Rog~ 01 Sherwood Forest (1950) John Derek. Olan• Lynn Rob<n Hood ' son rwnds up Iha old geng to lland up lo Prine. John's oppreu1on 12 hra) 2.060 MOVIE • * "D1ango Shool• First . ( 19M) GlaM 5-1, ,,.._ nando 8anchO A )'OUllg man Mia out ll04l'M'IOlh dMth °' ,,.. t.a. .. the ,... of a "°""'Y ....... 11 rw .&sm1n1 2:20 f) MOYie .. .. ... ''Tll The End Of Tlma" (1948) OorCthy MoOun, Guy MacllaoA. A w., IOlldow ~ IO Ula aid of a oontuaed 8lld ambltteNd man"""°,_ . Ju•t rwtumacl ., ClMl&an .... (2 tn., e nWi > S:OO. NEWS S:488 MOVI( * * • "Back SlrMt" ( 1114 1) CMr1M ltoy«, MW• geret Sullaven. A m.n1e4 man llnd 1119 miat,..., """° la content to remain In tbt background, carry on a llfalong r-. (1 hr., 45 min) 4:00&D MOVIE * * "Tobar The Great" ( 1954) Charlaa 0r.-•• Kar· In Booth. A macnanlcal daYIC•, Invented to conquer man'• emouone In ~ tllgtrt, la ~ to -• amatJ boy'• .,.. ( 1 hr.,30 min) ..... Nl!W8 4:108 MO\/lt • • "Bleck B•ltallon" Frank Pet.,.. Tltur•day'• ·• Dayd•e Mo111~• ~RNING . 11:30&D **'lr"'llayondTha : ForMt" ( 19~9) Bette DaYIC JOMl>h Cotten. When • -'thy land<>WI*' off•• rlcllM and luxury to the wit• of • cwntrv doctor1 • her greed r-.lta In trllg4li> dV (2 hrs .• 20 min ) AFTEBNOON t2;00 0 **'Ir "Slllor 01 The· Klrig" (1953) Jeffrey HuM-, er. MlchHI Rennie.During I MlrCh tor I Garman ah'lp~ In World Ww 1: • Bntlal'I Neva! officer find• hie -' In hie equadron. (1 hr., 30 m•n) 3-00 ~ * * . Wiit llallan Style" ( 19871 Buet61 Keeton. Martha Hy«. A' pav ol Am«iean eokllen asupe with pl-tor en 1nvUIOn, but can't con- vince eriyone of t~, au1h8nt1Clty (1 hr, 30 min.) 3 30 0 * * The Miiiion Eyes Of Su-Muru· (1967) Franlt~' le AValon. George NIKI•. The beeulllul Su-Muru he•d• • nallonWld• organ!· z.oon ot woman who lry 10 obtain world po-by Malavlng the "'°'Id'• m§e1 1n11uen1111 men. ( 1 hr., "' min) .• < WINNER OF 11 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS includlng Beet Picture Beat Actress • Anne B•ncro" aeat Actress • Shlrley MecLalne Best Supponlng Actor • Mikhail Beryshnlkov Beat Director •Herbert Ron Cons ider that Eric Edie, late of Monty Python's WITH THE RELEASE OF that first hit, "Please Rut Mc," the phenomena known as Rutlemama sweeps the world much m the way that Beatlemania swept "The Ed Sullivan Show" and select areas or Scotland. APWlrepMto A thoroughly infectious comedy You don't bne to "know a no se whPt>lle from a l:ill!tplnner to pnjo) "Skall'boa.rd."' TM movie that defies gravity! ''" '' l 'dliJJWllU/lEIW~' n"IOr• AlUN ~ARfllrn •II KAl~lHN llOYO p 11~1-i l(~ smm • ~ ... 41 al bc11m ;1111111 Shl1h11fo1 .w., IOU AlYA • llllN GM!Al ~..,,,hlOJ! ~ l111fillPHl~ • .. i.l!Ol~Uil •1 ~Ylllfl , ..,,~aWit~ "811~WITUll111lr.ll.a I U~ I" ~.1t....S•..J:!~ [.....,, .... .,~,.,, ......... \I .-1'M'IUC• ... !WOii.;.-.;.;:-;:;, NOW PLAYING UA CITY 2 AllANllM OfllYl•lll •i Orange 634-391 t Alliht m 879 98~ OflAWl MAll •S UOOlllACK •1 OrlllQI 637·03•0 El Toro m !>880 . ~ CllllMALAltO H Wlltim 635· 7601 \ lOWallOI llUITOl CllftMA S•nt.1 An;a !140·7"44 lOWAllOS WUTlllOOll Guden Grove 530-4•01 Idle r everentially details The Rutles' con· trovers1al career, aided by interviews with Mick Jagger. Paul Simon and "a visiting proressor of applied narcotics'' at a universrty in California. The professor, som e will note, talks hke one. In tracing the black origins of Rutles music, Idle decamps to a Lou1s1ana bayou to chat with legendary bluesman Blind Lemon Pie. Blind Lemon ts asked how he becam e a legendary blues man WELL, HE SAYS, HE worked on the railroad . 30 years but didn't know anything about music un- lit he heard the Pre-Fab Four: "Everything I learned, I learned from the Rutles Oh, Idle says. And it's off to other aspects or Rutlemarua, mcludmg the 1966 uproar when Ron Nasty was quoted as saying The Rutles are bigger than God and that "God never had a hit record." Of special interest to the viewing segment known as "heads" Is the chapter on how the Rutles were introduced to tea and subsequently were blamed for widespread use of tea by the young. ~~~~~·~ . ' •ltwN• Dt • "'' • ·-' . ------- UMA WBTMUUB'S .. MIGHT FULL OF RAIN .. 111 Call 642-5678. Put a few word• to work for ou. SETTLING THEIR SCORE WITH IHE BEATLES Gary Weis (left) and Eric Idle THE RUTLES' LIVES ARE expl ained, likewise their guru phase and also the legal battles that ftnally ended the group, battles so fierce that Stig O'Hara "!>ued himself accidentally " Despite several lengthy m1sf1rec;, ··All You Need 1s Cash" docs a first rate Job of settling ac- counts with Beatles historians and documentaries. If you miss 1t, you descnc the Bay City Rollers 1V Movie Lawsuit Settleinent Told AUSTIN, Tex. (AP) -A former Austin policeman who helped storm a tower at the University or Texas a nd kill sniper Charles Whit· man in 1966 h as reached a tentative settlement in his invasion-of-privacy suit against the producers of a television movie about the incident. Ramiro Martinez, now a Texas ranger . had sued MGM Inc. and NBC for $1,025,000 after NBC aired the movie called "The Deadly Tower." He claimed lhc movie depicted aspects of his private life. Plan • d8y or evening 1t the Ice Captioes Chalet. It'• run rot the young, the youno-«t·heett, for the whole famtly W.'V. got I whole bunch Of different ways to haw fun on lhe Ice. Ice skating le9son1 for all ag-. loe-<:otheque dleco Ice dancing tor teena and edutta (you don't have to be vef'/ good, just wllllng) and open publlc skating hours moat Of the WMI<. Ea•C..r \f •e•CI•• O• 1 .. s.tc ... Mar.It IS-S.• .. Ma"'b M Sk••e ""Day N .. a Tll 19130 p.m. DAILY MATINEES 'CLOSE ENCOUNl ERS OF THE THIRD KIND (PG' WED SUN ~4~7J0.101S MON 1UES-730&10U HOUSE CALLS" !PGI WEO·IHURS ·SUN -11!>-4I~1M 15 fRI ~AT 2 1~~ 1'>4 1M 1!>-10 16 M()f; TUES 7 4~50 'CASEY'S SHA WS"(PG NtO SUN -4 IW05~ rucs-t~ "YOU LIGHT UP MY LIFE" Wt'.O SUN_, 10.(; ;>O 10 IS MQo.t T\JES -e 1!>-10 15 . HI H ANXIETY" (PG) WED IMURS SUN -1 00.2 -~ 4M 40 fR1 1SAT -l 002 55-<1~4~«1-IOM MON TUES · T OCMI $0 "THE FURY" (R} wro -SUN -1OQ.320-&~00.11>~ MON ITUrS-7 3Meo "SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER" CR> ~tittl• Hall¥• SladlU"' RETURN TO WITCH MOUNTAIN" "NEVER A DULL MOMENT" (G) SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER" CR) LIFEGUARD'' . THE ONE I ONLY" 'ALOHA BOBBY & ROSE" (PG) "HOUSE CAUS" "SHAMPOO" (R) "THI: FURY .. "THE REINCARNATION OF PETER PROUD~ "THE FURY" (R) "THE REINCARNATION OF PETER PROUD" Al.I.. OIUVl'.·IN' Ol'&N 6:JO,.M.Ml•Nft.Y •. Clllld und•r 1 t P"r" unrau • Kiddle l'Utvtround I !."---------------....-: ..