HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-03-23 - Orange Coast Pilot7
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Hospital Charts Monarehy J'oe
lndieate Infant Labels Margaret
Dad 'No Chanee' As 'Parasite'
DAILY PILOT .. ..
* * * 10< * * *
THURSDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 23, 1978
VOL. 11, NO n .• SECTIOffS, .. rAOllS
rae
35 Counts of Fraud Victims'
Identities
Unknown
Ar WI,..,....
Bill Rolland of Malibu view some of the huge cracks ap-
pearing in his apartment building after a huge under-
ground mudslide forced the structure off its foundation.
Cracks appeared several days ago and Rolland says his
$1,500,000 building 1s a total loss with no insurance to
cover damages.
Jury Indicts
Congressman
WASHINGTON <AP) -Rep.
Charles C Diggs Jr. a
Democratic congressman from
M ich1gan ror more than 23
years, was indicted today on
charges of padding his office
payroll. taking kickbacks and
ha v1ng the government pay
employees of his Detroit funeral
home
The JS-count indictment by a
federal grand jury charges that
he defrauded the United States
of more than $101,000. Each
count carnes a maximum penal·
ty of Cave years in prison. If con·
v1cted. Diggs could also be fined
up to $224.000
Diggs. in Moiamb1que when
the md1ctment was returned,
said through his office here "I
am innocent of the charges be-
mg leveled against me."
An indictment 1s a formal
charge made against a person
by the grand Jury. It does not
establish guilt or innocence.
Daggs had been scheduled to
meet President Carter an Africa
next week
House of Representatives.·'
The indictment lasted three
employees in Diggs' con-.
gress1onal offices whose salanes
were allel{edly mOated Three
others, the indictment said.
worked for the House of Diggs
Inc. m Detroit while drawing
moncv Crom the federal govern-
ment on Daggs' vouchers.
Fourteen of the 3S counLc; were
charges of mail fraud -the
mailing of checks to the
Michigan addresses or some of
the Diggs employees involved.
Diggs is chairman of the
House Committee on the District
of Columbia.
<Stt SOLON, Page A2)
'Parasite'
In Royalty?
Arw1,...... ..
FACES INDICTMENT
Rep. Charles Diggs
Vegas Shaken
By Second
Nuclear Test
YUCCA FLATS. Nev <AP) -
The second announced nuclear
test of the year rattled Las
Vegas, 90 miles south of here to-
day as the department of energy
detonated a devide buried 2, 100
C e e t b e n e a t h t h c
desert.
The pilot of a plane that
crashed an R1vers1de County
Wednesday night while en route
from Orange County Airport to
Arizona has been tentatively
identified as a Lake Havasu
man who was ferrying prospec.
t1ve land buyers to view prop.
erly.
Six persons, including two
children, dled an lhe crash.
A spokesman for Havasu
Aviation said the firm is missing
a plane piloted by John Stark
Hill. about 62, a retired Navy
test pilot
A spok~man for the National
Transportation Safety Board
hsled the plane's 1dcntif1cation
number as N 7354 U, which
matched the number or the miss-
ing HavasuAviallonCessna207.
207.
A Riverside County Coroner's
spokesman said three men, a
woman and two children were
killed in the crash.
A Riverside County Coroner's
spokesman said inves tigators
were at the scene or the crash,
three miles north o r the
Riverside Raceway, this morn·
ing. The cause of the crash is un·
known.
Abortion Baby
Diggs defrauded the govern-
ment, the charge said, "in the
form of saJary kickbacks from
certain House of Represcn·
tallves employees and payments
to others on the House or
Representatives payroll who
performed no work for the
LONDON (AP) -An
anti-monarch ist member
or Parliament caused an
uproar in the House of
Commons today when he
called Princess Margaret
a "parasite."
Dennis Canavan, a
member or the Labor Par.
t.y, put his criticism in a
question to Chancellor of
tbe Exchequer Denis Healey.
The blast took place at 8.30
a .m. PST, one-half hour later
than originally scheduled, ac-
cording to department
spokesman Dave Jackson.
The Cessna 207 reportedly
took off from Orange County
Airport Wednesday night. At
about 8:45 p.m .• several
Riverside residents reported
hearing a straining airplane
e n g ine and then a c ras h . Hospital Records
Slww 'No Chance'
81 TOM BARLEY
OfllleDeltrNltMllH
In the case or the aborted
baby, allegedly strangled by
Waddill on March 2. 1977, the
<See DOCroR, Pa1e A%)
PILOI' J'IEWS
1'11E BIG TOP
The days or the Big Top have
been revived in San Clemente as
the circus comes to town. See
Featuring, Page Cl.
"Will the chancellor
slop all unnecessary
spending for the un·
derprivUeeedt. including the l,000 pounas ($1,900) a
week we give to a parasite
Uke Princeu Margaret!"
Conductor Cleve B11rned
'
Woman Dies in Fire That Destroyed Home
•
dt1co SymphonY.
Cleve was scheduled to con·
duet the San Jose Symphony oo
March 11 'lritb suat opet.Uc
atar Sbltle1 Vert«t. iDcludln1 ex· cerpta from The Muted Blll.
He wu to CO oa a conductln tour fD A~Pl'U to lead tbo New
Orleans Phil rl'OoAlc aad tho
Lona llland Sympt)oay. ·
Symphony irilormatJon omcer
}oan lohmOa, whO called Cleve •ftbe mo.t mapJficent eoaduc.
tor we•ve ever haet, 0 11ld tytn·
pbony ofllcu• were badl)'
•h•ken bf &he n wt.
"We got a good, strong jolt
here," Jackson said. "When we
reel it like that, we know they
relt it in Las Vegas."
Managers of high-rise build·
ings were warned earuer not to
have employes in precarious
working positions at the time of
the blast. Tall buildmgs could
move about one Ct'nllmeter at
the tip from the shock waves,
Jackson said.
The weapons-related test, w\th a yield of up to 150,000 tons or
TNT, was code·named
"Iceberg."
It was the 487th announced
detonation since nuclear testing
bee an at the sprawling range and
ihe 313lh undult'Ound tes.t. IA·
nounced since the nuclear test
ban treaty or 1962 banned at-
mospheric testing.
Classes Boycotted
BERKELEY (AP> -Striking
1tudeat1 at the University o(
C&JllornJ1 have demanded that
tho law JC:hool blre more women
and mlnorlUea for tbe raculty. In
a dtmonstraUon 1ta1ed Tues·
da1, Mve.ral hundred lhtdtntl
boycott.tcS Clauu .
<See PLANE, Page Al)
Coast
Weather
Partly cloudy tonight
becoming mostly sunny
and warmer Friday. Lows
tonight in mid·SOs. Highs
Friday in upper 605.
INSIDE TODA. Y
Orange COl.mty got bad~ in
feiUrol ~ bl l&X'Cl 19n
about I~ 1d..t d JIQ6d m
/edercl taus, ~ to a
new nport. Sft ~Al.
Q
0 Q CM ..
M "' .. . ., ..
C4 CM M ~
Crash Aftermath
Newport Hca('h patrolmen and firemen
s urvey Ule dl!lmage caused early Wednei-
day on W. Balboa Boulevard near 8th
Street \\-hen the car driven by John
Robledo, 19, of San Pedro, rammed into
lh~c~ parked t•ars fits passenger, Bobby
W1lha,m:,. 22, ot W1lmU)gton, was lreijled
for minor injuries and released rrom Hoag
Memorial llospllal Robledo was arrested
on suspicion of drunk~n driving.
No Fighting
For Wonzen?
WASHINGTON (AP) -
High ranking Manne and
Navy officers say they do
not think women should be
thrown tnlocombat.
I don't think it's
nt·cessary I don't think
tt s philosophically
:.ound," Vi ce Admiral
James D. Watkins told a
St• n ate s ubcom m 1 ttee
Wl'dnesday.
"I ct>rta1nly don't con-
IC'mplate women carrying
~· rifle and charging up a
111 II • • • " added Manne
It Gen. Robert L
Nichols.
F,....PageAJ
SOLON •..
The indictment said the al·
leged scheme to defraud the
United Stales began around July
I. 1973 and cont1nued until
March 2, 1977.
One count said Diggs put Jean c . Stultz. an employee of the
House Dtstrict Committee earn-
ing $14,667 a year, on the payroll
of his office al an additional
~alary of $19,000 a year.
The 1nd1ctment ni<i Dlg1s
then "directed that th\s addi-
tional salary . . be kicked back
and appltC'd for the use of defen-
dant Diggs."
Ms. Stultz. Feltx Matlock and
Ofleld Duke:;, 1denllf1ed 10 the
indictment as Diggs' House
employees, were listed in seven
other counts as receiving add1 -
t1onal amounts or about $3,000 a
month for s pecified i>ertods
"h1ch the indictment said they
then kicked back to Diggs.
Twelve other counts named
three other Diggs employees
who allegedly received money
from the U.S. government while
.. performing services for defen·
dant Diggs personally. his fami -
ly. and the House of Diggs," the
Michigan funeral home that
Diggs formerly owned
None of the persons who al·
legedly made the kickbacks was
charged in the indictment.
Diggs 1s a senior black
member or the House and a
founder or the congressional
Black Caucus He has been un·
der investtgat1on by the grand
jury for nearly a year.
Neighborly Love
NEW YORK (AP) -Prime
Minister Perre Elliott Trudeau
says Canada maintains a "love.
hate relationship" with the Unn.
ed States even though the two
nations have never been more
neighborly. He explained that
Canda ls trying to encourage
U.S. investment white at the
same time ensure that Its na·
tional identity does not become
too Amertcaruied.
<HIAMOE COAST s
DAILY PILOT
Begin Urges Ta&s
Of Peace Continue
WA SHINGTON CAP>
Israeli Prim e Minister
Menachem Begin, acknowled.1-t·
ing that his talks with President
Carter have been "d1ff1cult,"
nonetheless said today that
peace taJks between rsracl and
Egypt should continue
Begin said "the world needs
some patience" as the two sides
try to reach agreement
.. We've only startf.'d to
negotiate. 1 don't th1nk any
peace treaty was concluded 1n
days," he said.
But Begin, in an interview
with NBC News, md1cated Israel
was s tanding firm tn its refusal
to make the concessions asked
by Carter on the issues of <I>
Is r aeli withdrawal from the
West Bank. (2) establishment of
a Palestinian homeland, and (J)
a hall lo lsraeh settlements in
occupied territory.
Referring to Arab demands
that Israel w1thdraw from the
West Bank and a llow establish·
ment of a Paleslln&an s tate,
Begin said "these two demands
are completely unacceptable to
the Israelis."
Begin said that although ob-
stacles have d1rrumshed the op-
timism felt in the wake of Egyp.
tian President Anwar Sadat's
meeting with him m Jerusalem
in December "I wouldn't say I
am less optimistic "
American officials. however.
Tragedy Sends
Boy, 11, to
A New Home
CHULA VISTA <AP> -Young
Christopher Ashbaugh spent the
night as guest in a police of.
ficer's home a nd went by
airliner Wednesday to relallves m Detroit.
The evening before, he was
visiting neighbors when he
heard three shotgun blasts m the
apartment which he and his
divorced mother Donna shared.
There Christopher. 11, found
her body. Al least one blast had
hit her race, killing her.
The sobbing youngster was
calmed by police Sgt. Keith
Hawkins. Later, Hawkins said
James A. Chance, 29, described
as an acquaintance of the
Ashbaugbs, was arrested at hls
home in nearby National Cit y
and booked for investigation of murder.
Rather than send Christopher
to a receiving home, Hawkins
asked him to spend the night
with the officer's own children.
.. lt wa s an unu s ual
circumstance," explained Chief
or Police William Winters. "ll
usually doesn't happen that
police officers take the children
home with them."
in ana lyzing the talks between
Carter and Begin, cast the situa·
lion in a much gloomier light.
Some members of the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee.
after meetmg today with Pres1·
dent Carter, said Israeli inflex·
1b11tty has dimmed Mic1dle East
peace prospects.
Sen Jacob K Javits, R-N.Y.
said "l think that prospects are
CHILDREN DISRUPT
PEACEKEEPING FORCE-A4
momentarily di!'.couraging" and
described Carter's mood as
dt!eply frustrated after two days
of meetings with Begin.
Sen. George McGovern, O-
S. D .• said that "unless there 1s
!>l)mP more flexibility on the part
of Is rael I don't se~ any
hope for a settlement."
Sen Charles H. Percy, R·Ill.
:.aid Israel "has appeared lo
lake a step backwards in the
peace process ..
Fro•Pa~Al
DOCTOR ...
chances were listed as 1-1 -an
evaluation which meant that the
nev. born tnfant had no hope of
survival
It 1s alleged that the child sur·
\.1 vf.'d a saline solution inJected
into the mother by Waddill after
she agreed to allow him to
perform an abortion.
1l Is further alleged by the
prosecution that Waddill
panicked when he realized thathe
had a live birth on his hands 12
hours later and strangled the
baby in1tscrib.
The baby's mother has sued
him for $17 million in damages.
She claims that Waddill mis·
represented the state of her
pregnancy when he examined her
and determined that she was 22.
weeks pregnanl
A physician who appeared as
a prosecution witness testified
that the haby was 31 weeks from
conception when it was de·
livered, a find1ng which. if true.
means that Waddill performed
an illegal abortion
Waddill, 42, of Huntington
Harbour, ended three days on
the witness stand Wednesday hy
again declaring that the baby he
tried lo abort was dead on de·
livery.
•'There was no way in the
world that anything could be
done for that baby," he testified.
And the accused physician
told the Jury that members or
the hospital staff who were try-
ing to resuscitate the baby when
he stopped them and sent them
from the nursery "read signs of
the baby's death as meaning
signs orure."
Letter Stands
Aide 'Sorry for Offense'
PITTSFIELD. Mass. (AP) -An aide to
Alabama Sen. J a mes Allen says he is not sorry for
calling Massachusetts a "melting pot for neurotics,
cranks and other individuals with subnormal men· tallties."
But Charles Mitchell, executive secretary to the
Democratic senator. says he is sorry if a Pittsfield
woman who received his letter was offended by it.
Carolyn Martin, 57, wrote Allen objecting lo his
opposition to the Panama Canal treaties.
In his reply, Mitchell wrot4: "Your letter bas
been received and placed ln Senator Allen 'a
crackpot file. There are quite a few letters from
Massathusetts ln this rile. Evidently your stale is a
melting pot for neurotic1'. cranks and other in·
dividua.Ja with ·subnormal montalltles. ••
QucsUoned Wednesday about his letter, Utchell
said: ''I may have overreacted a bit and l apolo1iic
to her if I offended h er. But I don't retract
anytht ''
Interim Post
Grier Named
Agency Chief
Though frequently at odds
with one another during the past
four yt'ars. Orange County
1upervisors havp appointed
Chi er Probation Officer
Margaret Grier interim chief of
the ('Ounty's becalmed Human
$erv1('es Agency (IlSA).
M 1ss Gner pretty much wrote
her own ticket aa she accepted
the 1ntt>nm appomtment. includ·
lng a salary boost from $39,399 a
1ear to $52,000 annually.
And the door was left open for
the 56·yeur old (•ounty govern·
D1ent executive lo return to the
probation post she has held since
1967 should the HSA assignment
pot be lo her hkmg
That 1s bet'ause her hand-
picked replacement also will
serv~ u an Interim •PPGJntee.
Miss Gner's new JOb will call
on her to accelerate what ia now
lhe snail-like pace of blending
nine separate county depart-
ments with a collective annual
budget of $152 million into a
single so-called super agency.
David Odell was h1red to do
that Job 18 months ago. But
Odell recently announces his
resignation effective March Bl
after coming under heavy
critJcism from some of the coU11ty
supervisors.
Udell 's JOUSts with the board,
however. failed to equal those of
Miss Grier in recent years.
Last July, for example, the
chief probation officer objected
when she was denied a pay raise
while other department heads
were rece1v1ng boosts in pay.
In the early planning of HSA,
M 1ss Grier fought with lhe board
to keep her department out of
the blend m the super agency
mix
She won lhe argument by con·
lending that probation ts more
closely alhed with the judiciary
and law enforcement than with,
for example, welfare and mental
health activities.
In 1974. Miss Grier warred
with the board when it refused to
build a second juvenile hall
Sony Tr1n11 roo C-Olor TV
with remote control. 21 "·
l!f'. 17 " & 15" dlagonal.
And -all m stock·
fiiiiii.i
....... >
I
I
That argument led to a two-
year encounter over the treat·
ment or minor juvenile offenders
that didn't end until new state
Jaws took prerogatives away
from IOC'al officials.
DurinJI those frequent encoun·
ters, the board once asked for
and received a leeal opinion on
its right to fire the probation of·
ficer. a right clouded by the fact
she was appointed to the post by
Superior Court Judges.
AU those past disagreements
were forgotten Wednesday when
Miat Grier was handed the top
HSA 'pOst.
"We need a tough-minded ad·
min1strator. and ir there 111 one
thing Margaret bas proved, 1s
that she is a tough-minded ad·
ministrator," Supervisor Ralpft
Diedrich said.
Supervisor Ralph C lark
echoed Diedrich'• suplf>rt when
be said. :•1 doo't ~It we could
find a better illtetim appoint.
meot. ·Sht'• a food ad· &ninl~trator and a reaJ driver."
Bvt Supervisor Laurence
ScbJllit laughingly said ho was a lit~ taken aback by the move.
"I'm, not surs [ undeqtand it.
f ~esl it m!Ot have soinetb.ln&
to do with that old bit about lf
you can 't whip them, Joh>
them."
PLANE •••
Riverside SheriH's deputies
said.
The crash site was located
about 11 p.m. by two men who
hiked to the 2,000-foot level of
the Box Springs Mountains, JUSt
east of UC Riverside.
It is believed that Hill had
bee n making round trips
between Orange County and
Lake Havasu City with potential
property buyers. The name or
the company that rented the
planes from Havas u Aviation
was not immediately known.
Sony
Headquarters for
the Harbor Areo
T. V .·Rodio-Stereo
Tap~ Rt"COl"dH-#
Be-ta~
WastMarka
Good Friday
Friday is expected to be
a light busmess day along
the Orange Coast as most
bank• and financial in·
alltulions wlU observe
Good Friday.
The banks generally will
close at. noon. The Pacifi<!
Coatt Stock Exchange and
the national exchanges
will be closed all day qn
Friday.
'Tidal Wave'
Threat Nixed
TOKYO <AP) -The central
meteorological agency issued a
lldal wave warning for parts ot
the Pacific coast of Japan today
after two offshore earthquakes
but canceled it later.
The NRK television network
reported that a 6~·foot wave hit.
the northeastern shore of ffok.
kaldo, Japan's northernmost
rnain island, but th e
ineteoroJoekaJ ag-cy said Lbe
wave Wu only aevn inches bltb.
Tbe underwater quakes, re-
ported in the same generaJ area
'W ed nesday and today ,
measured 6.8 and 7 on tbe
Richter scale, equivalent to ma·
Jor earthquakes. But no damace was reported,
rimp, Hooker
&ill Canceled ·
SAN DIEGO CAP) -The
Pimps and Hookers ball
acheduled for Friday is off, and
all the police officers plann.ing to
attend will have to get a relund
on their ticket&.
Fraternal Order of Polke San
Diego Lodge No. 9 planned the
dance at which law enforcement
personnel from around the coun-
ty were invited to come dressed
as pimps and hookers.
•·we thought it was funny."
Jo~ Scelso, a San Diego
policeman and lodge president,
said Wednesday.
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Orange Coast
·vol. 71, NO. 82, 4 SECTIONS, '40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
l
Today's Closing
N.Y. Stoeks
. :j
THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 1978 C TEN CENTS
~ .
Handful to OK $3.2 ·Billion Burden?
l
I I I
BJ JERRY CLAUSEN Of tllt DMIY ~ IWff
A handful or landowners will
cut ballots by mail May 23
that could make way for a $3.2
billion property tax burden on
futare south county property
owners lasting into the 21st cen-
tury.
Ironically, a good portion of
that probable burden has been
spurred by state ballot Prop. 13,
4l
the Jarvis-Gann property tax
limitation measure scheduled
for the June 6 ballot.
Three of the county's largest
waler dislricls are scheduling
May 23 elections which are ex-
pected to assure a property tax
base for the sale of bonds for
water and sewage facilities re-
quired to develop more than
100,000 acres of ranchlands mto
the year 2010.
Six Die • Ill
.Jarvis Elf ects
Teachers Ask
Firing Block
SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -The
C&lifornia Teachers Association
asked the California Supreme
Court today to block all dis-
missals of teachers based on
potential fmanc1al problems
schools may face 1f the ,Jarvis·
Gann properly tax 1n1tiat1ve
passes.
The class action riled by
several teachers who have re
celved termination notices and
the association, which
represents 160,000 educators,
. said at least 35 school districts
tiave initiated dismissal pro-
ceedings againat 28,773 teachers.
Jar~Gann would cut proper-~ taxes by about $'1 billion an· nually. It proposes to trim taxes
by about two-thirds by Jimit.ing
them lo percent of market value
and limiting er<>wth in assess-
Michigan's
Diggs Faces
Fraud Rap
WASHINGTON (AP> -Rep.
Charles C. Diggs Jr., a
Democratic congressman from
Michigan for more than 23
years, was indicted today on
charges of padding his oCCice
payroll, taking kickbacks and
baving the government pay
employees of his Detroit funeral
bome.
ments lo2percentayear.
ll does not make any provision
for restoring the $7 bilhon
estimated annual loss to cities,
counties and school districts.
The spec1f1c defendants
named are the Board of
Trustees of the Old Adobe Union
School District at Petaluma 10
Sonoma County and the Board or
Education of the South Bay
Union High School District at
Redondo Beach in Los Angeles
County.
The petition said 35 teachers
at Old Adobe and 124 at South
Bay were told tbey would lose
their jobs.
The only reason given for the
dism 1ssals, the petition said,
was the financial impact of the
possible pas5age of Proposition
13, the Jarvis-Gann initiative
The districts, it went on, cited
the difficulty of accurately
forecasting the financial picture
and contended they are com-
pelled to follow the notice and
hearing requirements of the
Education Code for dismissing
teachers and, assuming
passage, would have to recom-
mend reduction or elimination of
programs.
The association said nowhere
in the code "is anticipated finan·
cial difficulty or future
economic uncertainty, made a
ground for teacher dismissals."
The teachers' group said the
reason it is asking the Supreme
Court to take up the matter is to
obtain uniformity throughout the
s late. It said seekmg similar
writs in Superior Courts of every
county would result in conflict-
ing decisions.
The issue. it went on, has not
only a "profound errect" on
employment rights, but on the
quality of public education m the
stale.
The rush to beat Prop. 13 and
its possible property tax·
inhibiting clauses that wo\,\ld
become effective July 1 if ap-
proved is not unique to Orange
County alone.
"But Orange County stands
well above any other area in the
stale in development." said Ted
Stivers, State Treasurer's office
district securities chief in San
Francisco.
The reiult, said Stivers, is that
Oranae County districts are
moat active in getting the jump on the tax-limiting initiative lo
assure project finding for future
developments.
The Orange County districts -
Santa Marganta, Irvine Ranch
and Moulton Niguel -were
formed originally to provide im·
ported irrigation waler for
ranch lands.
As the ranches develop, the·
district.a controlled by land-
owners provide for delivery of
irrigation and domestic water
for the treatment of sewage.
Included within the districts
are the developing communiues
of Irvine, Mission Viejo, El
Toro, Laguna Hllls and Laguna
N ague!. And the proposed
6,623-acre Aliso Vie10 planned
community lies in the heart of
the Moulton-Niguel Water Dis·
trict.
Although some Irvine Ranch
Waler District spokesmen deoy
it, most waler officials agree
that the size or projects
scheduled for bonding authoriza-
tion is due to the Jarvis-Gann in-
1tu1hve.
If Prop. 13 as approved by the
state electorate. general obliga-
<See WATER, Page AZ>
Riverside Air Crash
Exp'lorers' Easter Rites
If you ask Newport Beach Fire Explorer
Scouts Brooks Brann <left1 and Jerry
Tegel <right) how they spent their Easter
'acal1on, they could tell you it was busy.
Here County Fire Capt. John Sleppy assists
them in use of fire hose. They also crawled
through smoky rooms. cut brush, fought
fires and listened to lectures on nuclear ac·
cidents and pyrotechnics. It was the fifth
annual academy for Orange County Fire
Explorer Association held this week at El
Toro Marine Corps Air Station.
Federal Policy Rapped
Identity Aid Linked to Murtkr of CoaAt Man
By JOANNE REYNOLDS Ol lllt O.lly l'IMt Stiff
Congressman Mark Han-
naford, D-Long Beach, charged
the U .S Justice Department to-
day with "inept management"
of the program in which wit·
nesses are given new homes and
identities in exchange for
testimony against organized
crime.
The con gressman. who
represents West Orange County,
has been a frequent critic of the
federal witness protection pro· gram since las•. rail. when three
beneficiaries of the program
who Jived in Huntinetoo Beach
were charged with the murder
or Stephen John Bovan of Foun-
tain VaJley.
since its inception ·in 1971
The cost s have risen
dramatically, according lo the
Justice Department report. In
1975, the program cost $2,762.415
1n direct expenditures for
stipends and housing for the wit·
nesses. In 1977, those d1rec.t ex-
penditures tallied $.5.950,000.
According to the Justice
Department, the average annual
<See BOVAN, Page 1\2)
En Route
FromOC
Airport
The pilot or a plane that.
crashed in Riverside County
Wednesday night while en route
from Orange County Airport to
Arizona bas been tentatively
1dent1fied as a Lake Havasu
man who was ferrying prospec-
tive land buyers to view prop-
erty.
Six persons, including two
children, died in the crash.
A spokesman for Havasu
Aviation said the firm is missing
a plane piloted by John Stark
Hill, about 62, a retired Navy
test pilot.
A spokesman for the National
TraMportation Safety Board
listed the plane's identification
number as N 7354 U. which
matched the number of the miss-
mg HavasuAviationCessna207.
A Riverside County Coroner's
spokesman said three men. a
woman and two chjldren were
killed in the crash.
A Riverside County Coroner's
spokesman said investigators
were at the scene of the crash,
three miles north of the
Riverside Raceway, this mom-
mg. The cause of the crash is un•
known.
The Cessna 207 reportedly
took off from Orange County
Airport Wednesday night. At
a bout 8 :45 p.m., several
Riverside residents reported
hearing a straining airplane
engine and then a crash,
Riverside Sheriff's deputies
said.
The crash site was located
about 11 p m. by two men who
hiked to the 2,000-foot level of
the Box Springs Mountains, just
east of UC Riverside.
It is believed that Hill had
been making round trips
between Orange County and
Lake Havasu City with potential
property buyers. The name of
the company that rented the
planes from Havasu Aviation
was not immediately known.
The JS.count indictment by a
fe~eral gJ'and jury charges that
be defrauded the United States
of more than $101,000. Each
count carries a maximum penal-
ty or five years in prison. If con-
victed, Diggs could also be fined
up to $224,000.
Diggs, in Mozambique when the indictment was returned.
:said through bis office here: "l
am innocent of the charges be· i11J leveled against me."
An indictment is a formal
charge made against a person b1 the grand jury. It does not
atabl.llh guilt or innocence.
Pathologist Notes
Abortion 'Bruises'
Hannaford's criticism of the
Justice Department and the U.S.
Marshal's Service, which runs
the program, came during
testimony befO're a Senate
judiciary subcommittee wh1ch 1s
probing the program.
Wednesday, the Justice
Department released its own
draft report on the program
which recommended some ma·
jor administraUve overhauls to
reduce the size and cost of pro-
tecting witnesses.
5 N-M Buses Fixed,
Back in Service
Diggs bad been scheduled lo
meet President Carter in Africa
aaestweek.
Diggs defrauded the govern·
1nent, the charge said, "in the
form of salary kickbacks lrom
(SM SOWN, Pa1e A?)
By TOM BARLEY
Of .. o.lly 1'1191 IUIH
A pathologist. told an Orange
County Superior Court jury lo-
day that the bruises found
around the neck of a baby that
prosecutors allege was
strangled by Dr. William Baxter
Letter Stands
Aide 'Sorry for O/f eme'
WaddUI are not unusual in the
cases of saline abortions.
Dr. Akiro Metamura teslifad
for the defense that be has ex-
a 111 i ned cc maay dozens" of
fetuses that were the products of
saline abortions at Westminster
Community Hospital and noted
identical bruising and discolora-
tion.
The witness, who is chief
pathologist al the Westminster
hospital, said the bruising is
created when the baby's blood
veaaela expand and bunt under
preuure created when the
saline solution 11 injected into
the pregnant motber.
It ls alleged by tbe prosecution
that tho brulling found on the
neck of tbo baby on March. 2,
(See DOCTOR, Page A%)
~ Bandits Hit
Mesa Liquor Stor.e ·
The report's fjTst recommen-
dation, was that the protection
program be continued because
of its benefits in prosecuting or·
ganized crime, narcotics tra!·
ficklng and while collar crimes.
The report noted, bow ever, the
pro1ram has grown lo include
protection ol nearly 5,600 people,
including 2,200 actual witnesses
'Parasite'
In Roytilty?
LONDON (AP) -An
anti·mooarchht member
o( Parliament ca'°"'ed an
uproar In the Houae ot Comm'ON tod-.y when bo
called Printesl Mar1aret
a "paraaltb."
Dennl1 Canaveo, a
mernber of the Labor Par-
ty. put hls crillcllm in a
question to Cba.ocellor of tb• ExQhequer Deola Healey. uwm the t!benceltor
stop all un11ecetaary
1peacU.n1 for the un· derprh1l~!'.~J! lncludiDI the 1.oot ~ (Sl,900) a jive w a pu:a1Jte llte~~t·•
Five Newport-Mesa School
District buses that failed a re·
cent California Highway Patrol
safely check have been repaired
and pressed back into service,
district Business Manager
Raymond Schnierer said today.
From now on, the CHP will
make quarterly safety checks on
25 percent of the district's bus
fleet instead of a one·shot annual
check of all 53 buses, said
Schnierer.
He said this new policy should
improve the efficiency of the
safety checks, reduce paper
work and help in rescheduling
for buses that might be pulled
from the road.
Four other district buses are
still undergoing routine engine
overhauls and a fifth remains
out of service until brakes are
re·lnstalled. Tbese buses were
t.aten out of semce by tile dis·
t.rict prior to tbe CHP check.
The district is currently leas·
ing three bU8ea to take up the
PllDI' J'IEWS
1HE BIG TOP
The dQS ol the Bic Top have
bom revind In San Cl IS
tb9 clmas ~N to town. Soo
F .. turiq, rqv Cl.
slack for the out of service
vehicles, said Schnierer. He said
the leased buses will be returned
within 90 days.
Or:~:J.Coast
::! I '07 =-._>s:-
We at her
Partly cloudy tonight
becoming mostly s unny
and warmer Friday. Lows
toniRht in mid·SOs. Highs
Friday in upper 60s.
INSIDE TODAY
Orange Cocmt11 got back in
Jtderol ~ in fi8COI 1971
about t~ what it paid ill
f e<Urol ta.tts. occ0Tdt1tg to a
new report. ~e Page Ai.
Q cs a CM .. M .. -•t.a as c. CM .. M
,
AZ DAIL y PILOT c n1u!!d!y. March Z3, 1VTI
l',.._PGfl'J.41
WATER ISSUES •••
tion band luuei would have to
be approved by two-thirds of a
d1strlcl 's registered voters, m06t
attor~eys agree. Historically,
bond issues are difficult to pass
when the requirement ts only
two-thirds of those people voting
10 an election, they point out.
Some attorneys and water of-
ficial~ also believe that vague
wording m the trutiative assures
that general obllgatlo.n bonds ap-
proved by "voters" prior to July
1 won't be oegat.ed by passage of
Prop. 13.
As a result, the water districts
are scheduling the properly·
o~ner elections in improvement
d1str1cts where general obliga-
tion bonding already has been
approved by melbods other than
the ballot.
Most bonds already authorized
were approved by a vote of the
landowne r .appointed water
boards alter the formallty of a
publlc hcanng. Some attorneys
are a\iv1smg that the actions
may not constitute .. voter ap-
proval" and approval of Prop. 13
could void the bond authoriza-
tions.
U oder current law, voter ap-
prov al in the three districts
formed under the old California
Water Districts Act for irriga.
tion purposes amounts to ap-
proval by large landowners who
hold one vote for each dollar's
worth of property they own.
As a result, an estimated one-
dozen persons will vote in the
Moulton-Niguel district where
the M 1ss1on V1eJO Company will
be a maJor voter
The Irvine Company will be
the maJor voter among a
handful in Irvine Ranch Water
U1slnct's balloting, and the
own£>rs of Rancho Mission Vie10
and the Mission Viejo Company
s hould be enough to approve the
bond election in Santa
Marganta Water District.
Jn any case, observers agree
that approval or every issue is
guaranteed, because the owners
need water and sewage facilities
to continue prom-making de·
vclopment.
Moulton N1~uel Water District
is ~oing for a relatively small
$194 9 m1lhon in general obliga-
tion bond authorization for
fac1htics to be spread among four
·new improvement d1stncts. The
districts consist or about 9,0001
acres of undeveloped ranch land.
Most undeveloped portions of
the Irvine Ranch, about 49,000
FrOMPogeAI
BOVAN •••
amount spent on each witness is
$15.900.
Justice department officials
had litll£> to say about Han·
naford's pnmary concern which
is the concentration of witnesses
m a few ~t.'Ograph1cal areas -
sueh as Southern California -
and the lack of supervision of
the witnesses while they are re-
ceiving federal stipends.
Late last year, because of
Jlannaford's criticism, Justice
Department officials announced
they would not allow relocated
witnesses LO' move into Southern
California for a year.
The Justice Department re·
port notes that "mald1stribution or w1tnes.;es has been checked
by certain a dmin1 s trat_ive
m£>asures that steer witness~ to
a vanety of locations and limit
the number of witnesses moved
1nto a certain geographical
area."
Hannaford, alluding to the
murder of Bovan in which wit·
ness protection beneficiaries
Steven Resco, Anthony Marone
Jr. and Jerry Fiori are charged,
speculated that "some witnesses
are using their protected status to
renew past alliances with
criminals."
acres. are lneluded In tbo lrttne
Raneb Wa,ter Dlltriet pl-. to
provide water and 1ewaae at a
!uture coat al $1.8 bllllcm.
Portions of eid1Un1 M isalon
Viejo, Mission Viejo-owned un·
developed land and all of the
sprawling 44,000-acre Rancho Mission Viejo are included in
Santa Margarita Water District
$1.3 billion bonding autboriza.
Uon proposals.
The money, in each case,
would provide water and sewage
lines, reservoirs and treatment
and pumping facilities.
However, Stivers said this
week that "they can't sen the
bonds {even when authorized)
until the state treasurer rules oo
the soundness and feasibility."
Stivers said the state won't ap-
prove sales until all local gov-
ernmental requirements are
met, including environmental
impact reports, and develop·
ment shows there is a definite
requirement for utilities.
Then, as the various special
taxing districts develop,
homeowners moving into the
new subdivisions are to assume
responsibility for most of the im· provement district bonding and
the resulting taxes, be said.
Homeowners already residing
in the various water districts
won 'l be taxed for works in the
new improvement districts,
directors report. Those
homeowners already are paying
for works in their own earlier·
approved improvement dis·
tricts.
While Santa Margarita and
Moulton Niguel water district of-
ficials readily admit that the
huge bonding authorization
moves are Jarvis-G ann inspired,
some lrvinedislriclofficials deny
the Prop. 13 impact, calling their
$1.6 billion authorization the re·
suit of orderly planning for the
future. But Lance Eberling, district
president, admits the initiative
bas had an effect.
"We probably would be doing
much or this (authorization) this
year anyway," he said.
"Whether it would be next
month, guile frankly, is in-
fluenced by the Jarvis amend-
ment. Eberling said, "There are two
reasons for (improvement dis·
trict works) hearings right now.
We are getting ready to
participate in the Diemer On·
terlie) line and have completed
conjunctive-use studies to pro-
vide for eventual complete de·
velopment. We need to have
financing available."
The Diemer lntertie, a multi-
ag ency-sponsored water line
planned to bring drinkable
water to south Orange County
during the early 1980s
onginates at the Diemer plant u;
Yorba Linda. To cost $60
million, the line is to provide
Colorado River and Northern
California water sufficient for
development of all of the south
county's rolling ranchlands.
Eberling also admitted two-
lhirds of the Irvine Ranch areas
proposed for water and sewer
works under the proposed May
23 election had improvement
districts formed and bonds
authorized through the public·
hearin~ method.
The problem, he said, ls that
bonding authorization was not
great enough and the problem of
what constitutes "voter ap·
proval" that would be required
by Prop. 13 if approved in June.
Directors of the other water
districts and their lawyers
aren't positive either.
But they are confident that the
May 23 balloting will remove
any possible property-tax-base
obstacles and assure develop·
ment and property taxation into
the next century.
From Page Al
DOCTOR •••
lowing relocated witnesses to lf!77, was put there by Dr. Wad-
He also charged the depart·
ment with "sheer folly" in al· 1
concentrale in areas and in not dill whe.n he strangled the infant
closely supervising their inl:s.cralibl. ed th th · ked security. · 1s eg a e panic
"Relocated witnesses should when he realized that he had a
not be given the option of bump-live birth on his hands and
ing into each other _or possiblY choked the child to death after
bumping each other off_ at the ordering bodpital staff out or the
local supermarket," he told the nursery. committ.ee. Dr. Ronald Comellaen, the
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
, .... ~ YI<•,.,.....'--"~
,_,,,~ _ _,.,. ......
~II.I.Mt .._P .... Aul~ MIMtlftl .. wa
prosecution's chief witness, was
on the witness stand briefly
before Dr. Metamura today to
restate for the defense some ol
the testlmooy be offered ror the
prosecution.
Cornelisen again told the jury
that he saw Waddill put his hand
around the baby's throat three
times and spotted brulslna
around the neck when he
peraonallJ exarnlned the l.nfanl
Corneliaen earller tesUrted ·
that Waddill tolcl b1m •'this baby
can 'l llft" and pndlcted the ftl.
inl of lawsuits for millions ol
dollars ln damasea ll the cblld
waa allowed to llW"Vlve.
Dr. Metamura then telttftecl
tor the defmse that tho brulllnl seen bJ ComeliMD eould have
been the product of the saline
admlniltered to the mother dur·
inc the abort.loo procesa. Dr. Metamura stnaod that
. he knows botb ComCUica and
Waddill well and 11 on excellent
·l terms wltb both pbtllclan1.
l>ef eoao atto eta said they
~ Intend to •bow jUl'J I tak• Crom d feluHI w cb
abo Pfoduc\I ot a
a bortlon1 performed at Weslmioa~•r Com uall7 ~pi.w..
•
11faeat Plowed Vnder
T~o southwest Kansas farmers plow up
winter wheat on a farm near Johnson as
wheat growers in the area launched a
plowdown errort to show their support for
the nationwide farm strike.
. .
Conductor Cleve Burned
• BERKELEY (AP) -Conduc·
tor George Cleve of the San Jose
Symphony was seriously burned
today in a predawn fire that
killed a woman and badly
damaged his Berkeley hills
home, the fire department said.
Eva.Granger .
Services Set
In Huntington
Funeral services will be held
Friday for 47-year Orange Coun-
ty resident and music teacher
Eva Granger, of Huntington
Beach, who died Monday. Sbe
was 76.
Services are set for 1:30.Jp.m.
at the Granger home, 519 13th
St., where Mrs.Granger bas re-
sided with her husband for the
past 20 years.
A former professional musi·
ciao, Mrs. Granger taught
piano, violin, viola, cello, guitar,
accordion, songwriting and
keyboard harmony lessons dur·
tng her years in Orange County.
Sh e has performed in the
Orange County Symphony, lhe
Los Angeles Philharmonic and
Warner Brothers film company
bands during her career.
Mrs. Granger is survived by
her husband, Charles Adams
Granger Sr.; sons Judson Kay
Granger, or Las Vegas, and
Borden Merle Granger of
Portland; daughters Edna L.K.
Hood and Mary Edith Glass,
both of Newport Beach, Cello
Claire Davenport, of Vacaville;
13 gr~hildren and one great·
grandchlJd.
TONIGHT
"VOLPONE" -South Coast
Repertory Theater, Tuesday.
Sunday ~b April 23. 8 p.m.
FRIDAY, MARCH Z4
COSTA MESA ClVIC
PLAYHOUSE -"Invitation to a
March," March 24·2S, 31-April 1,
8:30 p.m .
$10 Million
Drug Nabbed
MONTEBELLO (AP> -A
raid on a bc>me in this suburb
yielded 24 pounds ol pure co-
caine, estimated to have a st.reel
sale value o1 more than $10
million, police said.
An earlier raid in Montebello
Wednesday resulted in the
seizure ol nine ounces o1 cocaine
and information that led officers
to the Laraer cache, said Sgt..
Richard Anmtrong.
The raids were the outcome of
a Joint lnvesU,aUon b1 police
units from Montebello, Bell
G1rdens, lluntiqton Pa.rk and
Monterey Park.
CoaatMarb
Good Friday
Frlda,y ii expected to be
a uiht ballnesa daY atone
th• Oranae Coast u moat
banks and financial ln·
stltuUon1 wlll observe
Good Friday.
Tb banb 1enerallJ will ~•--at aoo11.·Tbo Paclftc Cout StOdc EstMnae a.Pd
tbe D.U0Pal _.CblDIH will be dGMd all dq OD
Frlda7. t •
Cleve, 41, suffering second and
third degree burns over 4S per·
cent of his body, was taken to
Alta Bates Hospital where the
information office said he was
"between serious and critical
condition."
Fire officials said the alert on
the two·alarm blaze in tbe
Tamalpais Road cottage came
at 5: 18 a .m . Damage was
estimated at $40,000 to the house
and $10,000 t.o the contents.
The name or the woman was
withheld pending notification of
relatives. The San Jose Sym·
phony omce said Cleve is un·
married.
Cleve, in bis seventh season
with the 90-piece symphony, is
widely known for his Mozart in·
terpretations. He is a founder of
the Bay Area's Midsummer
Mozart Festival, and bas guest
conducted with the San Fran-
-..
r-.."1
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cisco Symphony.
Cleve was scheduled to con·
duct the San Jose Symphony on
March 31 with guest operatic
star Shirley Verrett. including ex·
cerpts from The Masked Ball.
He was to go on a conducting
tour in April to lead the New
Orleans Philharmonic and the
Long Island Symphony.
Symphony information officer
Joan Johnson, who called Cleve
''the most magruficehl conduc·
tor we've ever bad," said sym·
phony officers were badly
shaken by the news.
.
Withdrawal Voted
NAPA (AP) -The Napa
County Board or Supervisors has
voted 3·2 to withdraw from the
Association of Bay Area Govern·
men ts.
Sony
Headquarters for
the Harbor Area
T. V .·Radio-Stereo
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275 East 17th St.
Costa Mesa ....................
J D~-...6'c.+tlif.
Phone 642·8882
St0te Hours Dally~ S•t 9-5.30 ,...... ...................... "
Mesan's
F11neral ~
'· .
Slated I ~ )
' Jl'uneral services will be~· d Saturday for Kenneth C. B a long-time Costa Mesa resi nt
and World War I Veteran ho
died Wednesday of natitat
"causes. He waa83. '
Mr. Brown was a member ot
the VeLerans of Foreicn w~· ol Costa Mesa. He was empl ed
for 30 years as a yardman, Or'
Ward and Ha.ningtoo L r
Ya rd and bulldln& suppl ,. in
Costa Mesa. ·
Born in Beaver City, Neb .• jlr.
Brown was an Orange cqut
area resident for more th .... '°
years. He lived at 170 Rocbeiter
St, Costa Mesa. :
He lS survived by bis wicl>w
Delia; a soo, Kenneth ol 'tor:
ranee; daughters, Bern$ce
Pullen of Midway City and J4ar-
jorie Eichelberger ol Colo~do
and hve grandchildren •nd
seven great-grandchildren. •
Services will begin at 11 .. m.
Saturday at Bell Broad'f'•Y
Chapel in Costa Men wtth inter-
ment to follow at Westmimtet
Memorial Park. :
F,.,.. Page Al ·
SOLON •••
certain House of Repre~en
talives employees and payme.nts
to others on the House of
Representatives payroll l>'hO
performed no work for the
House or Representatives."
The indictment listed three
employees in Diggs' QOn·
gressional offices whose salivies
were allegedly inflated. Three
others, the indictment said
workc:d for th~ House of Djgg~
Inc. in Detroit while dra1hiig
money from the federal go*n-
menton Diggs' vouchers.· :
Fourteen ol the 3S counts Were
charges of mail fraud -the m.a i~iog of checks to 'he M1cb1gan addresses of somt of
the ~iggs ~mployees involv~.
Diggs 1s chairman of •the
House Committee on the Dis"1ct of Columbia. ·
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·,·
lllegal,s
Will Be
Protected
By GABY GRANVILLE oe.,. o.it, ,.... ,..,.
Orange County su~ervisors
have softened county govem·
ment's policy on providing
medical care for indigent illegal
aliens at UCI Medical Center .
Stricken from county govem-
m en l 's treatment-payment
policy Wednesday were those
features said to discourage in·
digent aliens from seeking
needed medical care because of
the fear of deportation.
Those reaturea included hav·
ing eligibility workers at the
medical center report suspeeted
illegal aliens to the U.S. Immi·
gral1on and Naturalization
Service.
A task force on medical care
for lllegaJ aliens concluded in a
report given to supervisors that
such policies, whether invoked
or not, forced aliens lo shun
seeking needed care.
The report said that depnving
medically n~y aliens or care
because or their real or im
agined rear or deportation can
"'~-· ........ STEVE WALLENDA WALKS TRAMWAY CABLE IN OAKLAND
The Show Goea On After Uncle's F•ll to Oe•th
· contribute to health problems in
the community where they dwell
and run minor medical prob-
lems Into major illnesses.
Carrying On
Yowig Wallenda Performs
OAKLAND <AP) -"He always told me the show must go
on. I knew that was what I had to do "
That's what Steve Wallenda, 28, said Wednesday atler a
•OO·yard walk on a 75·foot high tramway wire at the Oakland
Zoo only three hours after learning his uncle, Karl, bad fallen uo feet to his death m a performance at San Juan in Puerto
Rico.
STEVE WHO SAYS RE 18 THE last of the famed Great
Wallendas, ~a.s a.sleep at his home iD nearby Concord when the
word came of hia 73-year-old uncle's death.
"He was very upset about Karl," said Steve's wife, Joyce,
29, whom he married here Saturday. "He wants to follow ln
Karl's footsteps."
"I'm a performer; sawdust runs in my veins," Steve ~aid as
he climbed down from the aerial tram wire alter completing the third of f1ve<Jangerous wa11ts usmg a24-Coot balancing pole
HE RECALLED THAT HE WAS seriously injured when
struck by an automobile while crossing a Las Vegas ~treet in
1976. He said he was told he never could walk a wire agam.
"But 1 am a Wallenda." he said, "and Wallendas always
come through.·' . . .
His father retired from the high wire Ln 1862 a.ft.er two
W.allendas were killed and a third paralyzed in a fall during
. their spectacular pyramid act iD Detroit.
NOW IDS TBBEE SMALL CHILDREN by an earlier mar·
riage are training to carry on tbe family tradition by practicing
in their backyard on a wire strung three feet above ground.
"I've got to keep going," Wallenda said. "We've been enter-
tainers in this family for 200 years."
By ROBERT BAkKER °' .. °""' ...... S4Mf Work ers at Southern
CaJUornia Edison Company
electrlcal generating plants
have voled to go on strike in
Huntington Beach and San
Onofre and other sites if the new
contract is not signed by May.
About 1,000 members of the
Utility Workers of America
a uthorized the 1trlke by a 761 to
28 margin. a union official said
today.
The Edison co mpany ,
meanwhile, bas voted lo
terminate the contract with the
u D l O_D b 1 M a y 4 if a
breaktbnJUCh is not made.
Tbe talks are scheduled to re-.
1ume Friday.
Blll Compton , Edison
mana1•r for the Huntington·
Beacb and Seal Beacb area, said
that the company may oper~te
the generating plants watb
supervisory personnel ~r by
temporary replacements 1! the
tallc5 are DOt successful.
The chief hangup, according
to company and union officials,
rs an impasse on a proposed
seven-day rotatin~ work week
for maintenance workers.
Edison is pushing for an
agreement that would require
some maintenance employees to
work weekends without recei v·
ing overtime pay.
Compton said lbal the rotatini
week bas become necesaary
because of overhaul commit·
ments and increased power de·
mands.
"This is something we've been
attem~g to MgoUate slnce the
· 1950s, ' be said.
Agre Limit Rauftl
Supervisors bought five
specific recommendations of the
task force that dealt with
eli m inaung practices that lead
to the deportation fear.
In the process, they may have
passed on a greater cost share of
burden or providing medical
care to the indigent aliens to the
uni vers1ty.
According to county medical
services administrator Murray
Ca~e. county government is not
obligated lo pick up the medical
cost tab for care provided to
aliens who refuse to fill out
Medi-Cal forms.
"Under our current contract
with the university, that means
we have no payment liability in
such cases and, yes, that means
the university will probably be
paying more," Cable said.
Who pay~ was not the issue
before the Board of Supervisors
as a 21h hour public hearing
ended W1th the board agreeing lo
endorse the five task force
recommendations.
Other recommendations were
sent out for further study by
county o((icials as the board
drew prolonged applause from
lhe packed bearing room when tl
softened lbe reporting policy.
Cable insisted during the hear-
ing that UWe baa been done to
carry out the edict to report
aliens who balk al filling out
Medi·CaJ forms to immigration
officials
But task force chairman, the
Rev. Bruce Johnsoo, insisted the
threat of deportation reporting
can have the impact of action.
A cornerstone or the task force
repart was a finding that illegal
aliens pay more in taxes or
various kinds than they consume
in public services.
'Tidal Wave'
Threat Nixed
TOKYO <AP> -The central
meteorological agency issued a
tidal wave warning for parts of
the Paclftc coast of Japan today
after two oCCshore earthquakes
but canceled it later.
The NHK television network
reported that a 611.a-foot wave hil
the northeastern shore of Hok·
kaido, Japan's northernmost
main island, but the
meteorological agency said the
wave was only seven inches
high.
The underwater quakes, re-
ported in the same general area
Wednesday and today ,
measured 8.8 and 1 on the
Richter scale, equivalent to ma-
jor earthquakes. But no damage
was reported.
Senate OKs Joh Bill
. WASHINGTON (AP> -The
Sdate paaed and HDt to the
White J:bue todQ a bUl that
wW nlM tbe maadatory ~
ment ••• to TO for moat Amertam ud eltmioate lt eom.
exceptions, such as persons in
hilh·rilt jobs such as policemen
or firefighters who could sUU be
forced to retire earlier than 70.
The bill provides for some ex·
cepUons and delQ'I.
It wW permit mandatory re-
Urement between 65 and 70 of a
penon, wbo for the two yean
before ~ent wu employed
in a .. booa ftdet executive or bllh
poli~~..malrb\I poelUoo" and is enU to a penaioD of at least
$37,000 mmually.
In calculatinf the income
n1uro fOf' 1uch executives, the
bUI excludel amount.a attributa-
ble to Social Security, employee
contributlou and contributlonl
of prior emp)oyen. .
Colleaea and un1ver1lUe1
would b• allowed to r•tlr•
tenured proteuon at ai• '5 .-. Ul JulJ ~ 1982. They a....-ct
•1•ln•t u.e a eeWna
at all, but Md.l-4 -tbe com-prom to lift tbrm Ume to ..S-J~ bfriai~Ud ..
r
laterla1 Po•t
Grier Named
Agency Chief
Though frequently at odds
with one another during the past
four years, Orange County
supervisors have appointed
Chief P r obation Officer
Margaret Grier interim cblef of
the county's be<:almed Human
Services Agency <HSA).
M lsa Grier pretty much wrote
her own ticket u she accepted
the interim appointment, includ·
ing a salary boost from $39,399 a
year to $:52,000 annually.
And the door was left open tor
the S8-year-<1ld county govern·
ment eJlecutive to return to the
probatioo post she hu held since
1967 should the HSA assignment
not be to her llking.
That is because ber hand·
picked replacement also will
serve as an interim appointee.
Miss Grier's new job will call
on her to accelerate what is now
the snail-like pace of blending
nine separate county depart-
ments with a collective annual
budget of $152 million Into a
single so-called super agency.
David Odell was hired to do
that job 18 months ago. But
Odell recently announces his
resignation effective March 31
after coming under heavy
criticism from some of the cowtty
supervisors.
Odell's jousts with the board,
however, failed to equal th~e o(
Miss Grier in recent years.
Last July, for example, the
chief probation officer obJected
when she was denied a pay raise
whale other department heads
were receiving boosts an pav
In the early planning of HSA,
Miss Grier fought with the board
to keep her department out of
the blend in the s uper agency
mix.
She won the argument by con·
tending that probation . is . ~ore
closely allied with the Judiciary
and law enforcement than with,
for example, welfare and mental
health activities. In 1974, Miss Grier warred
o.IW~IUH,...
HEADS NEW DEPARTMENT
Probation Chief Grier
with the board when it refused to
build a second juvenile hall.
That argument led to a two-
year encowitec over the treat-
ment of minor juvenile offenders.
that didn't end until new state
laws took prerogatives away
from local officials.
During those frequent encoun·
ters, the board once ask~ for
and received a legal opinion on
its right to flee the probation or-
hcer, a right clouded by the fact
sbe was appointed to the post by
Superior Court judges.
All those past disagreements
were forgotten Wednesday whe~
Miss Grier was handed the top
HSA post.
"We need a tough-minded ad-
ministrator, and if there is one
thing Margaret bas proved, is
that she is a tough-minded ad·
ministrat.or," Supervisor Ralph
Diedrich said.
DAIL v PU.OT AS
Patience
Stressed
By Begin
WASHINGTON (AP) -
Israeli Prime Minister
Menacbem Begin, acnowledg-
ing that bis talkB with President.
Carter have beed ••difficult,''
nonetheless said today tbat
peace t.alb between Iarael llDll
Egypt sbould contf.nue.
Beelir said 0 the world needs
some paUenre" as the two sides
try to reach agreement.
.. We've only s tarted to
negotiate. I don't think any
peace treaty was concludecl ill
days,'' be said.
But Begin, in an interview
with NBC News, indicated Israel
was standing firm in its refusal
to m aie the concessions asked
by Carter oo the issues ol (1)
Israeli withdrawal from the
West Bank, (2) establishment of
CHILDREN DISRUPT
PEACEKEEPING FOACE-A4
a Palestinian homeland. and (~J
a halt to Israeli settlements m
occ up led territory.
Referring to Arab demands
that. Israel withdraw from the
West Bank and allow establish·
ment of a Palestinian state.
Begin said ''these two demands
are completely unacceptable to
the Israelis."
Begin said that although ob-
stacles have diminished the op.
Um ism fell iD the wake of Egyp·
tian President Anwar Sadat's
meeting with him in Jerusalem
in December .. I wouldn't say I
am less opbmistic."
American officials. however,
in analyzing the talks between
Carter and Begin, cast the sltua-
tion an a much gloomier llghL
Some members of the ~ate Foreign Relations Committee.
after meeting today with Presi-
dent Cart.er, said Israeli inflex-
ibility bas dimmed Middle East
peace prospects.
SOFA BED SALE!
Queen and
. full size
• TheN are very comfortable
aota beds for sitting 1111d
aleeplng.
•A wide Mleetlon of tabrl~
and color1 to ctloose from.
•Reveraible beeks end eel!
cuahlons
SAVE 20o/o
Several Style•
To Choose From
Sale Period
Mareh 23rd
Through
A.pril 6th
Tr••ltl•••I )ftta••Y wit• •••
_.,.we• .__,.rt,••• It eemnrte
tea eeaferta•ltt ~
YtM' ,~~win B• H•PPY To ASS#Sf Yoo
H.J.GARl\EIT fURNlTURE
P!lOFiSSIONAL
INTlRIOR DESIGNERS
--~-~~=::;;;;::;;=========~
.44 ~YPILOT Tnu11<1ey, Merol'I 23. Hl78
, ~.. Just :~~~·::· ~oasting
Q
with~ Tom~~~{
Marphfne
We're Taking Gas Again
TOO MtJCH AND TOO U'n'LS: Another •uollne
sborta1e la being predicted for our reston tn May. juat tn
time fof' the 1nammer tourist and vacaUon aeuon.
The predict.or in this inatanc. ta our atat.e Controller
Ken Cory, who ts scheduled to be huddllna ln Huntinfton
Beach next week with federal oil olllcial1.
Cory's crystal ball view of a 1a1 1bort••• in a couple
of months ia interest.mg. He HY• the problem ls we have a
glut of fuel oU here, thus cauaJ.ni us to come up short on gasoline.
TRE CONTROLLER'S 101ic leaves you 1plnnin1 in a
revolving door. First, he sugaeata that we are overloaded
with crude oil which should be refined into 1aaollne. But ln
the refining proeess, you not ooly set 1aaollne but fuel oil.
The fuel oil mainly goes to the Eut Coast.
Cory notes, however, that federal rules demand that
for shipment between U S. porta, oU must be carried by
American-flag tankers. There aren't enouah American·
flag tanken to get the Job done.
Thus here in our region, all tM crude oil la stacked up
in storage. We can't refine more 1uollne because you &et
fuel oil as a side product and we're out of places to atore lt.
Thus, Cory suggests, the crude piles up, we can't get lt out
of here and we can't produce needed easollne.
1/ow to Get There Without Catoltne
He says California today is gettlna about 500,000 more
barrels of crude oil than it needs. Moat of It comea from
Ala:ska. He expects the problem lo won;en in coming
months.
H Cory's crystal ball 1s in focus, what a mess. Here
we'll be. up to our ears in crude oil and out or gas.
DESPITE ALL THIS DOOM and gloom, I'll tell you
I'm not golng to gel panicky like 1 did during the late, al-
leged Mideast oil crisis that had motonsts lining up al the
~as pumps
This time I'm ready.
In our family. we'll Just park the cars. We've got a mo-
ped and a small motorcycle waiUnc ln the wln1s. Each
will go forever on a gallon of gas. We 'll store the outboard
motor for the family yacht. We bought a set of oars.
JF ALL THJS FAILS, we still have the 16 bicycles cur-
rently stored in the g;nage. Admittedly, they are m vaned
states or d.11repa.ir.
There must be, however, enouah good parts to put
together four bikes that can be pedaled around
So bnng on the blamed gas shortage
T wonder where I put the bike Ure pump9
Flynt Retrial Nixed
Through Publicity
LAWRENCEVILLE. Ga. CAP> -Porno1rapby publisher
Larry Flynt will not be retned on an obscenity charge becauae he
was shot during hi s first tnaJ, the Gwinnett County solicit.or saJd.
Flynt and his local attorney, Gene Reeves. Jr .. were shot
March 6 during a noon recess in F1ynt'a trial for-diatributJn1 obfcene
material5, specifically the Augusll97'7 isaue of Hustler maaaiine,
A mistrial was declared that af\ernoon.
.. , MADE THE DECISION not to seek a new trial very abortly
after the shoot\ng," Sollc1tor Gary DMia said Wednesday. "The
pubhcity involved with the shooting would not allow it to be retrled
m GwinnettCountJ."
The case could not be moved to another county because the
moral ttandards of Gwinnett County would have to be used to
JUdge the value or the magazine, he sald.
A spokesman at Emory University HoapltaJ in Atlanta. whert
Flynt remained in serious condition Wednesday, said abdominal
inlecUon la the most significant problem f1clng him.
Reeves remained in euarded condlllon in a LawrencevtUE
hoepltal.
Children Cllant
Truce Holds;
T r oops Move In
BEIRUT, Lebanon CAP) -A crowd of IAbaaeae Ch.rbUan c~lldren chanUnc .. We want 15raeJ!0 .,.layect 1 convo1ot U.N. peace
troops today at a border crosalnr. but the truckloads ot aoldlera eventually CJ'061ed into aoutbem Lebuon.
Botb Y~ Arafat'• Pal•tinlan command hi Beirut and lnael's state radio reported only minor
lnfracUons oC tbe CHH·fire tn1 •Caln to.ant the Lebanese
llrael proclaimed Tutsday tGwn ot Gbandourlyye, where
ni1ht. Each 1Jde aceuaed the they were to join the nnt con-
other of ahootinl flnt. tlncentotlranians.
A reCOMaiasance party of 16 A •lmlln demonstration
French officers WH acbeduled Wednesday hid held up the first
to advance lnto the hraeh-convoyforashortUme.
occupied territory aout.b of the TWO HUNDRED French
Litani River today, jolnina about paratroopers arrived in Beirut
100 Iranians who cl'Olffd into from France, and their com-
soulh Lebanon Wednesday from mander said he expected them
the U.N. butter force on the to be on atatlon iD the aouth
Golan Hei&ht.s. within a few daya. He said .00
AT METVLLA IN Israel's
northeast corner, A11ociated
Press correspondent Larry
Thorson reported that a convoy
of 30 U.N. trucks carrying
Iranian troopa and Irish orflcers
bound for the dUputed re11on was
delayed by about 40 children who,
coached by Lebanese Christian
maUUamen, sat down on the
Lebanese 1ide orthe border road.
"We want Israel!" they 1hout-
ed, making the Christiana' point
that the UnJt.ed Nations may be
unable to protect them from the
PalestinlaM if it takes over in
southern Lebanon.
After an hour, an Israeli of-
ficer persuaded lbe Christian
m\liUamen to allow the convoy
to pass. The trucks began mov·
more French soldien would ar-
rive before the end of the week.
U.N. headquarters in New
York said 2,3tS soldien bad
been pledaed to the 4,000.man
force the Security Councll
authorized. They included 600
each from France, Norway and
Nepal, 300 from Iran and 245
Swedes from the U.N. buffer
force between braeli and EtYP·
tian forces in the Sinai Duert.
Despite brael'a earlier in·
siatence that ill forces would not
be withdrawn until il waa as-sured the Palestmian 1uerrlllas
could not return to the area just
above its northern border, the
Israeli television aervlce aaid
lht mvaalon force would be
pulled back acrosa the border ··within the next few days." ·
-,
NATION I WORt;O
Circus Conneetlon F a lb
The never-accomplished circus aerialist stunt, a quadru-•,
pie somersault from the flying trapeze. eluded TitO''
Gaona and a crowd of thousands watching the Ringling·
Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus at New York's
Madison Square Garden Wednesday night. Gaona com-'
pleted the four somersaults but missed the grasp of his
"catcher." Lalo Murillo, above. Gaona landed in the net
and was applauded by the crowd
'•
Mexican Flood Aid Promised
TIJUANA, Mexico <AP) -
The Mexican government has
promised S23 million to aid in
the controversial resettlement of
some 25,000 squatters from the
flood -strlcken Tia Juana River
Valley, says Baja Callforn1a
Gov. Roberto de la Madrid.
The governor or the wind·and-
raln-battered Mexican state said
Wednesday that the proaram
was m its first stages. Govern-
ment spokesmen say the reset-
Slain Official
Tied to Hoff a
Disappearance
NEW YORK (AP) -The New
York Post quoted unnamed law
enforcement officials today as
saying that slain Teamsters of·
f1cial Salvatore Bri&ualto
penonally .arraneed "the con.
lract murder" of JJmmy ffolfa.
Th~ 1~5 disappearance of
Horta, onetime national
Teamsters president. ls un-
solved. But two federal in-
veetl&at.ore ln Detroll have said
the BnguaUo slayin& could bring
a break ln the case.
The sources aald New Jersey
Teamat.en boss Anthony "Tony
Pro'• Prove.nun<>, on trial here
on a loan·kJckback charee. was
believed to have inltlated the or-
der that led to Hoffa's kllling,
accordina to the Post.
Provenzano was one of three
men Hoffa believed he was to
meet the day he vanished.
The new1paper said Briauelio
waa Provenzano'a most trust.eel
henchman. The Post quoted tts
sources as saying that the two
men who actually did the killing
were officers of Briguglio's
Teamsters local
tlement effort, the larsest ever
undertaken in Ba.ja California, is
the llnt phue of a llX· to 10-
ye a r proeram to move an
estimated 30,000 families from
other dan,erous or Ule1a1 areu.
"Right now, our main conttrn
1s with movang those 4.000 to
S,000 families ln the flood area
into tent cities and clearing the
way for establishment or a new
colony where they will be
permanenlly settled in Otay
Mesa," De la Madrid said.
f'aUout Mecuared
WASHINGTON (AP> -Low
levels of fallout from last week's
nuclear test lo communist China
have been recorded al two air
stations ln the United States, the
Environment.al Protection Asen·
ey said Wednesday.
The EPA said air stations m
Denver and Cheyenne, Wyo., re·
ported mild levels or radioactivi·
ty. but 40 other stations said
there was no identifiable fallout.
Dri1'er A••al~d
SAN LUIS. Mexico <AP> -A
survivor or the naming head-on
crash of two Mexican buses that
killed at lt'nst 28 people says the
driver of the bus he was on "was
driving Uke a bat out of hell ...
70, 75, 80 miles an hour almost
all the way."
At least 46 others were injured
in the collision Tuesday night
during a rainstorm along Mex-
1ca n Highway 2 about SO miles
southeast of Yuma. Ariz. Of-
flc1als said one bus apparently
( INSHORT )
tried to pass a small car, which
also was destroyed in the cra!>h
M~ llft!o"ft"ed
MONTREAL <AP> -Police
arrested five suspects, including
two police officers, and re
eovered all the money from the
Sl million armored truck rob-
bery in the town of St. Jovite. a
Quebec provincial police
spokesman said today. .'
He swd the five were arrested Wednesday and lbe money from
Tue&day's holdup wu recovered
later that rught. More arrests
were expected, police said. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cold Front Hits Midwest
Cooler Temperaturea Generate Rain, Snow
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DAILY PILOT
642-4321
l • .
• I
i
'
CALIFORNIA
ontrols
robed
OS ANGELES (AP) -l>o
listen to the message when
'et a so-called junk phone l. or just hang up?
bout 80 percent of the people
receive the call will lislen,
ordJng to promoters of the
omatic ctialing-announclng ·ces, who testified Wednes-
before the state Public
iUes Commission.
onsumer protection
resentatives, however, said
calls may invade the re
ver's pnvacy.
ICHARD SPOHN, director c1f
California Department of
sumer Affairs, said his offm:
..
Coneenaed received hundreds of com
ints about lhe calls.
'They are a total, mt!chanical
asion of privacy • . a re
ted intrusion into personal.
vate spaces, places bnd
, ·•Spohn said.
tomatic dialing-announcing
ices have been defined by the
Al'lr('ss Paml'la Sue Martin, (left>, who starred as Nancy
Orcw m the "Nancy Dre\\" lt!levis1on series, talks with
Tanya Tucker, country western singer, during Project In-
tcrs peak press conference in Beverly Huls Wednesday.
They e'\pressed concerns for the endangered status of
whales, dolphins and porpoises. (Related story, AlO)
C as a computer hooked into
telephone system with the
ability to store, create and
l telephone numbers and dis-
. minale a pre -recorded rh~ssage.
THE PUC' IS holding publll·
hearings to determine what. 1f
<l'\.Y. controls to impose on lht·
devices. The hearings were lo
continue today and Friday at tht·
St ate BuHdmg here The Federal
Communication Commission 1~
!->Cheduled to consider a similar
mattu in May.
A proposal ~fore the state
hoard would han the use of full v
automatic apparatus used for
c:om mercial solicitation
Walter Baer, a phys1c1st for
Rand Corp , sugges ted the usc of
symbols in the telephone d1r<'l'
IOJ'Y to indicate which t:ustomcr~ 1f6 not ~ant unsohc1t('d calls
I •
Smoking Restriction
Endorsed by CMA
SAN fltANC'1SCO <AP> A ballot proposal lo sharply restnct
... mok1n~ 1n pubhc placl.'s m Cahforn1a has won the strong endorse·
ment of the California Medical Association
"Ttus 1s a measure that supports public health," said Dr.
Edgar Wayburn, a San f'ranc1sco internist who wrote the endorse-
ment resolution, <.1pproved overwhelmingly Wednesday at the clos·
ing session of a five-day meeting by the CMA 's 300-member House
of Delegates
TUE PROPO~AL, IF APPROVED BY voters m November,
~ould ban 5moking in most enclosed public places and would re-
quan• restaurant owners to set aside no-smoking areas
The tc\olul1nn lo l'ndorsc the propo5al did not win praise from
1•\·rr.,. onl·
DsO-boat Marina
Panel Studies
Cahrillo Stie
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Staff members of the
Los Angeles Harbor Commlssion have been or-
dered to begin studies for a 950-boal marina. al 1Cabr1llo Beach, despite arguments that building 1l
' at Reeves Field on
( )
Terminal Island would ,..,TATE be quicker and cheaper.
Harbor com-
missioners voted :J-1
••• Wednesday authorizing
: the staff studies after Fred B. Crawford, general
: manager, explained the Terminal Island site is
.11t:edcd for future port expansion.
: Capt. W W White, Coast Guard captain of the ~ort . teslifH'd ;at :1 three·hour heanng that boating
: tond1t1on:. .irt• '>.lfH in the Cabrillo Beach area
~Arson Charge• Dropped
I SAN DI EGO (A I' I Arson <:harges again!.t a
' 20·\ rar-old ~ecurity guard arrested Mar<'h 11 in
}{ ronncctton \\1lh a Balboa Park fire have been dis-
ma!>sed by the district atlorncv because of insum-
f
c1ent evidence
We h:n c rt'JN'lcd the case and no chaq~es
will he falcd." against Judith Ellen Woodard,
· Depul\· D1~tnrl Attorney Louis Boyle said \\'ednc.:;.
day
Requirrweents Still~,.
BERKELEY CAP> -The fa culty at UC
l. Berkeley has adopted stiffer tourse. requirements
for graduation.
The nrw requirements set minimum levels of
, achievement in math an~ foreign languages and
i tighten controls over elective courses
The guidelines, contained m a report released
Wednesday by the un1vers1ty, v.tll affect all t freshmen and undergraduate transfer students ad I milled be~1nning tn either the faJI or 1979 or 1980
rius~t• Free on Bond
SAN PEDRO CAP) -Reputed Mexican Mafia
eader Joe Morgan and his wife were free on bond
oday following their arrest on a federal warrant
harging them with unlawful receipt or firearms,
gents said.
l' Morgan, 49, and Jodie Mane Morgan were ar-
rested Wednesday by agents of the Federal
Bureau of Alcohol , Tobacco and Firearms Control
at their home here, said SpeciaJ Agent Edgar
Dillon. The warrant alleged violations of the 1968 I federal gun control act • ' 1 i Strilce Talb Rn.,..ed
LONG BEACH CAP> -Talks between slnking
1 United Auto Workers and McDonnell Douglas
Thuuday. M.trch 23. 1978 DAIL y PILOT A~
Rape C11rh Bill Proposed
Parok Board Would More Responsibility
SACRAMENTO (AP> -
Legislation to curb rape, partly
by pushing some of the
responsibility onto the parole
boards, bas been introduced by
a conservative Jtate senator.
One of 10 bllls Introduced
Wednesday by Sen. H. L.
Richardson, R·Arcadia, would·
require the Community Release
Board, the state's parole board,
to certiCy that any sex offender
being released wu no loneer a'
danger to society.
RICHARDSON told a news
conference: "The purpose is ac
countability on the part or the
paroling agency "
He added that such a law also
might cause "embarrassment
for those who appointed'' a
parole board if a released
prisoner committed a new
crime
Until the new sentencing law
went into effect, parole boards
had to determine that lnmatei.
were rehabilitated before releas
mg them. But now, releases aru
automatic after a fixed term for
most crimes.
OTHEa RICHARDSON bUls
would require the board to give
nollce to the public and law en-
force meot oHlcials 30 days
before a sex offender is freed.
and would make it more difficult.
for a defense attorney to get in-
formation about the victim of
rape.
A sentencing bill would re-
quire full consecutJve terms for
multiple offenses. of which at
least one was a felony sex
crime.
Richardson said that bill ts
aimed al such offenders as
Sacramento's "cast area
r apist," who authonhes say i:.
still at large after committing at
least 31 rapes m 29 moo~.
TUE "EAST AREA rapist's"
sentence under current law, if
convicted. or 31 charges of rape
whlle possessing a firearm.
probably would be about 6S
years, a legislative consultant
said. Under Richardson's bW it
would be lSS years.
Another measure is a pro-
posed constitutional amendment
that would t.el1 judges to decide
whether to grant bail on the
grounds of "dangerousness" to
the public safety. Such "preven-
tive detention" measures have
been defeated several limes in
recent year~.
( 'fllt; BOOKMA~ )
In the DAILY PILOT
''i\LLYSONS''
RESTAURANT
Announces
Mollie Parnis previews
spring and summer
THEIR TRADITIONAL
EASTER SUNRISE
ENTREES
in Newport~
l ThE' Clai.~1c Marco Polo OmeMle 1·h11·ken ham
and broccoli. v.1morney i.aucc. "h1te chcl·~l· and ham.
Come see the special showing
on Friday, March 24, at 1:30 pm.
Informal modeling between 2
and 4 pm. Special representative
Ruth Mclaughlin from II The Pr<•lcntaous Spinach Souflk '.\larqu1s:
'' p11Jthl'd 1·~i.: mornt·y :.auc:e, "hak c:ht·1."•l· and ham
11 I Thl' l hgh Pleasure Eg(i!s Alexander two poached
eggs on artichoke hearts sen C'd O\ l'r spinach.
w /Hollandaise sauce, capers and ham
Mollie Parnis' Boutique will
be on hand to assist you with
your selections. It's all happening.
in our Designer Solon, 85. ALL ENTREES INCLUDE FRESH FRL'IT
ANO SOUR DOUGH ENGLISH MCl:"f'l~S
Served 7 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Your Reservation Number
675-6220
3421 VJa Lido
Newport Beach
'! Bl~k from Ed~•rd~ l.idn Theatrt'
Your Special
Chance To Save
On New Spring
Vested Suits
Reg. 175.00
149.90
Reg. 225.00
189.90
Thi' style you want mo'it ThP
11bnc.:; and colors ye 1 want
mo:;t-now Spnnq Sale
rr•cPd Light 1r 'J di!•~
IOOP<; in wool-; an.-j WCI I
blend fabrics Choe···
rrom str nes, plJ1rls nnct
<;Ol1c1 t:Ol<"H';
Loolrfor
•ddlllon•I Sptlng Sn/no•
In M•n'• Clothing,
Sporl•w .. r, Furnishings,
Sltoes •nd Wom•n'• WOf'·
Rob1nson'S
Newport Fashion Island
Cool Savings
On Lightweight
Sport Shirts
Reg. 20.00
12.90
Two porker. short sleeve shirt
r 'n w ive polves1or
aM collon w11h doul>l11
track -;tttchinq PPrfr> t
top lot lightwe1Qht
\ ::;l.1cks and short~.
\ NC!lural. bananJ,
l1qhl blu1',
black.
Super Value.
Regimental Striped
Knit Shirts.
Reg.20.00
13.90
Pcrlt?ct summer shirt
in authenltc regimental
stripes Choose from navy
red or tan comb1na1tons m
machine washable
I Corp. have resumed, bul not much proeress has·
been reported.
"We have made a few steps forward pertain-ing to the local issues," union transportation Add To Your Slack Wardrobe And Save
collon and
polyeslt'r
1 chairman Dan Young said Wednesday. But both he I and company spokesm an Don Hanson said the
touehest lasue -wages -had not been discussed
1ince talkl resumed Monday.
-
DR. DA VfD S. POD ER, 0 .0.
C~tMpathk phy11IC'fanl
''"~h"~ to a11normctr o MW 0~'1>Clotlun
wtt/I
DR. GEORG E N. HADDAD. M.n. nc
Co.'* Meta Mt410l C~lf'r
f1f VI~• rttt 11lw l·H
1 C'•'-M a. CA ftU1
JIOtll'I Br Appblntmntt
(11') ~9990
Reg. 27.50 22.90 Reg. 42.50 6 45.00 34. 90
Bell loop and beltless styles. Polyesters. wools, blends.
Great Buys On
Spring Sport Coats
Aeg.100.00 Rtg.115.00
84.90 94.90
Selecl lrom cheeks. plaids and
solids an wool& or wool blends.
Save Now On
Four Piece Suits
Ret.179.00 Rq. 225.00
149.90 189.90
Vested 11ultt With extra patr of
coordinated •lacks
, ..
45 FASHION ISl:AND •NEWPORT BEACH
~, .... •. •
.18 .Ed~t • l .. . Aobert N Wffd1Publ1sher Thomas KMvll/Editor
Orange Coast, Daily Pilot .• ona .r-!!f1..e _______ ~---·.~--iJ•,•1tTS ____ .. _____ Bt•ttw-•a•t(•,.-'b•lc•h•/•E•d•ltor-la•r•P•-ve•E•d•lt•ot'••'" •
SCAG Evaluation
Could Be Useful
Orange County Supervisor Laurence Schmit walked
into a buzzsaw last week when he suggested that the
Board of Supervisors consider the worth of county
ROVernment's membership in the Southern California
Association of Governments <SCAG).
Schmit wasn't suggesting that the county withdraw
from SCAG, only that some studious thought be given to
SCAG'smerits
He didn't get very far with the suggestion. County
Supervisor Ralph Diedrich, who was recently elected
SCAG's first vice president. raised such a fuss that
Schmit withdrew his study suggesllon from the Board of
Supervisors agenda.
That's too bad
SCAG has been around as a Southern California
vcr:sion of regional government for more than a decade
And because it acts as a regional planning body as well
as a clearing house for federal and state grants it packs
something of a wallop.
That's one reason we trunk Schmit's suggestion that a
hard look be taken at SCAG is in order. There's no reason
why members shouldn't hold SCAG accountable for
whatever it may or may not be doing.
Jarvis Heat No Help
A recent Daily Pilot survey. which will be detailed in
• the Sunday edition, reveals that most Orange Coast
residents are now aware of the Jarvis property tax
limitation initiative that wll1 appear on the June ballot.
J\nd a ~oodly number already have decided whether
they want to vot<' for or agam~t the amendment that
would limil prop<'rty tax to l percent of 1975·76 market
\alue
So for th<' Daily Ptlot has not made an editorial
r<'commendatlon on the proposed amendment, but has
Jllemptcd to present avatlable facts and arguments
pertaining to the controversial initiative.
Argum<>nts. often heated, are unfortunately easier to
('Offil' by than cold facts.
Proponents of Jarvis are understandably hot under
the <•ollar over their ever-soaring property tax bills a~
.arc most of us
However they and the amendment's author. are
inclined to ~cl swept along m torrents of colorful rhetoric
that seems to skirt direct answers to questions posed by
the opposition.
We arc assurl'd. for example. that Jandlords, who
would benefit most from the property tax cut, are "sure"
to reduce rents voluntarily if the initiative is approved
And that government spending will be cut right down the
lrnl'. It would be nice to see that in writing somewhere.
In the opposite camp. school districts and local
l-(Ovl·rnmcnt agencies are spewing out floods of
frightening statistics about drastic cuts in services if $7
billion in their property tax revenue is cut off.
Obviously the pinch would have to be felt somewhere,
but the accuracy of the statistical threats is shaded by
the fact that most of those issuing them are worried
<1bout their personal economic futures.
rt would indeed be helpful to befuddled voters -and
erJitorialists-if cooler heads could prevail in the pro.and
<inlJ-Janis camps so that the eventual votes could be
based more on solid economic facts than on gut-level
1•mot1on
Duck Ale rt
Humane soctetie~ and individual animal lovers
usually surf ace at this time of year with pleas to a' oid
the tempt.at.Jon to give live baby chicks or bunnies as
!';as ter gifts.
It's a bad, and often cruel idea, they warn
This year the California Department of Fish and
<.~amc has a special warning about ducks.
Ducklings acquired as pets should either be kept
permanently or eventually eaten. say the Fish and
namers
The reason is ·'duck plague,'· a deadly waterfowl
diseas e that's spreading among flocks of domesticated
clucks -oncn Easter rejects -on ponds and bays in
(';:iliforma. J\nd the resident ducks can contaminate wild
waterfowl visiting the area
Th(' state wildlife service wants to reduce the
domestic duck population to help control the disease
So please, don't figure on releasing your Easter
duckling on a public waterway when it grows up. Either
t·onvcrt it to a dmner or keep 11 around to clean up slugs
and snails in the ~arden
• Opm1ons expressed 1n the space Clbove are those of the Daily P11ot
OthPr views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists Reader comment is 11w1ted. Addresst The Daily Pilot. P O
Box 1560, Costa Mesa CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321.
Boyd/Baths
By L.M. 'ISOYD
What happened 83 years
ago that caused numerous
sensitive ladies to take their
bathR while fully clothed'>
Befort> your Ume? Mine, too.
Still. for several years Just
before the turn of the ciin·
tury. a lot of women with
tender sensibilities refused t.o ~ take all their clothes off even
behind closed doors. It was
the di1cover)' in 1895 by
Will.lam Roell.ti oC tbe X-
ray. W~d for a While
)faybe our two former
Col\1resamen, And1
Jtlnahaw aDd Dtek Han· na, can .,_, ~l m tes In
th Bll House P.O.
there w3s the belief that the
science boys bad come up
with a device that permitted
them to see unspeakable de·
tails through walls.
Our Chief Prognosticator
thinb you'll soon be able to
buy a wristwatch that will re·
·cord your pulse with the
press of a butlon whether
you're lying, sitting, standing.
jogging, playing tennis,
whatever.
Question arises as to what
sort of sport uses the biggest
Pl•yln1 field. How about
polo? (ti field ls 000 ya~s
Joni aDd 300 feet. wido.
Your everyday i'un.of·lhe
.mllJ bat spends about Ia of 1Cs
18yearsindeep1lffp.
Q. The most popular
n aaies for bables in the last
seven\ ycan are-Jetnnller
and Mlcba.el. What wer. tbe
m01tpopular2Syearaa10? 2
A. Mary and John. Fower
tlrll lhan bo)'I 1et t.tie cur·
nnUy ll)(JSl popular name ol Utolr 1ttnekr. About one baby
lid in flfW'Y 25 11 • leruillu ·
fbe1e d~··· Bu\ In ~me l'•ae• one by b01
15 la• hat't.
Nicholas Von H offman ·~
Wars Are Legalized Terroris __ _
The customary drill Cor pre!i
dents and secretaries of ~tat~
after a massacre su.ch as the one
north of Tel Aviv is to issue
statements using phrases hke a
"brutal act of terrorism," and
"cowardly and senseless."
As President Carter was usift#?
such language, othc.-rs were
deploring this
outrageous
murder of in·
nocent peo-
ple. Secretary
of State
Vance also
followed
rttual and
told the world
that the doers
'of this deed
·'should receive thl' punishment
they deserve."
Every time persons de
nominated as terrorists kill,
wor ld officialdom says these
~nme Uungs. Yet on the s ame
day the 37 were killed in Israel.
a like number or a larger one
may have perished in the idiot
proxy war the great powers are
fighting in Somalia and
Ethiopia. No suggestion that 1t 's
a crime to make those pe<>plc
dead. no calling out for punish
ment or labeling the death o( a
Som ah mnocent a "brutal act of
terrorism.··
THE UNSPOKEN premise i.!.
that only duly recognu:ed.
postage slamp issuing govern
ments may licitly and morally
destroy the innocent. Should the
Jack Ande r son
PLO ever become a regular till·
lion with a seat m the UN It
could then kill 37 new lsraeUs on
the very same spot and no
American secretary of l.itate
would dream of calling for the
punishment of the president of
the nation of Arab Palestine.
Such a butchery ml,ght be
termed regrettable. an un·
provoked act or war, etc. etc· .
but it's supposed to be OK when
national states kill the innocent.
Then it's not terrorism All na
tions, cap1lalist, communist or
Hindu taJce the same position
He who has an official flag and
1s a member of the international
postal union can drop a bomb m
a crowded movie theater and.
while it's tough, kid, it's war.
Let the PLO or any other group
without plulalelic credentials de·
tonale the same bomb in the
:.ame movie theater killing the
same number of innocents, and
they call it terrorism.
T H US DO all s tates or
whatever ideology assert they
have a monopoly on violence
and that monopoly is without
moral lunitations. Thus also 1s a
raise and non-existent distinc
lion made between war and ter
ronsm.
War as terrorism. Whether 1t
1s the allies and collaborators of
the slighUy grungy Mr. Yasir
Arafat or the perfectly tailored
and turned out officers and
gentlemen, the primary busi-
ness of soldiers is lo kill the tn·
nocent.
Is PLO's Arafat
Losing Control?
WASHINGTON A~ leader of
the Palestine Liberation
Organization hawk-beaked
Yasir ,\rafat comm ands au
diences with heads of states
throughout the world.
He 1s a man who could spell
the difference betwPen war and
peace in the
Middle East
Should ;1
Pales tinian
homeland bt•
established.
Arafat would
likely be II!->
chier.
Yet he can
not be trust
ed. or else he
does not cootrol his own or
ganizallon. This 1s clear from
the transcript of a three-hour
discussion between Arafat and
four member'! of Congress last
January.
The Palestinian leader plainly
and repeatedly denied that t.he
PLO condoned terrorism. Ohly
two months later, the PLO's
military arm, Al Fatah, boasted
of perpetrating the guerrilla
raid on Israel, which left 37
men, women and children dead.
This was the foray that pre
c1pitaled the Jsrach military oc
cupation of a buffer zone m
l,ebanon
ARAFAT M F.T w1Lh Rep!'..
Paul Ftndle )., R-Ill . Helen
Meyner. D.·N J . Leo Ryan. D-
Cahf , and Larry Winn R -Kan .
in Damascus. Syria. The full
Art Hoppe
trans cript has never been
published. but it has become a
signa!icant document since the
latest developments in the Mid·
dle East.
The transcript doesn't i~ntif}
which congress men asked th<>
questions, but one rai~cd the
queal!oe of terrorism. "Now
there has been terroris m in the
past." he said. "I am not about
to say anybody's free or clean of
that particular charge. But tcr
rorism has been used by thl'
PLO in the past. What ahout
now" What about lhe ruturc? ..
Responding in English. Arara1
declan-d· "You are s aying that
terrorism is being used by the•
PLO? Definitely no. not by tht•
PLO "
"Not bytbe PLO'•"
''Definite. not by the PLO ··
THE QUESTIONER recalled
the slaying of lsraeh athletes at
the 1972 Olympics at Muruch.
"Not by the PLO." the Arab
leader cut an, "definitely ... He
acknowledged only that some
terroristic acts had been com
milted by individuals whom the
PLO couldn't control
"But." pressed bis questioner.
'"the PLO. in a formal sense and
as an organization, does not
engage and has not engaged 1n
terrorism. Is that right""
"Definite.'' "Is 1t your statement that the
PLO is not responsible for any
acts of terrorism.,"
The Palestinian repeated, with
Read Thucydides• description
of the wars between the Athe
ninns and the Spartans and you
read how the Greek armies ven
tured out at harvest time to
destroy the enemies• crops m
hopes of reducing the young, the
old and the female or starva!Jon
Read of the campaigns of an
eient Rome, of the wars of re
ltg1on. or the second world war
or Vlelnam. and 1t 11> always
snfrr lo be a soldier than a
1·1v1han
WARS, more often than not,
art' won by crippling supply and
~h1pp1ni:: foc1hties, destroying m
d u s t r 1 a I p I ;1 n t s , r u i n in g
ai.:n cultun· 0 1 hi demorahung
the t'ncmit•s' will to fight by
turn an.,: I h1·ir ttm ns into mcen
diary smuc.l~t' pots as the Nai1s
did at Coventry and tried to do
to London . as we did to
ll1rosh1ma, mon amour The
PLO murders 37 innocents on
the Tel Aviv Road and it's called
terronsm, and when the Israelis
murder an as yet unknown
number of innocents in Lebanon,
at won't be called terroris m and
revenge. il will bl• celled
punitive action
Tht" use of the term mnocent
an these d1scuss1ons bears look
ang at. 1'hl• innocent art'
civthans, vour traditional "un
armed worncn and children, .. a s
1f they would be any less 1nno
cent were they packing re
volvers. If they are the innocent.
does that make a 20-year-old
soldier boy conscript one of the
c..----et~~~--~,..;;-..--~~~ .. .,.
o --
GUiil) '•
The history o f mill
ethics in the 20th centu.-. .. "" • .,.
been the acceptance o
moral permissibility ot
innocents. In World War l
was a hue and a cry
Kaiser Bill's U-boats lO·f'P4••
passenger liners without
ing. The horror of it was so
1 t was one of the rea
America got into the Great
as that fnghtCul slaughter
misnamed Less than 2S
later everybody's U·boats
~inking the unarmed and
warned
Now the rules or war on1
law those deviltries ~a
gre:.it powsrs think they
technically too impractlc
use. Limits on barbarism
solely out of fear of retali
Alll pnsoners of war woul
butchered and tortured w it
not for fear the other side _.uld
do the same ~
WAR IS an extens&o of
pohltcs. or so goes lhe mi ·
maxim It can be any k oC
pohtacs. whether it be _,b e
handruJ of oddities who ~ant.
bombs m the cause of ~
Rico independence or au an4ent
national state like Franc~t.he Palestine Liberation Or a-
t1on. Since all war is ter m.
lhe solution lies neither iJ\ re-
venge oor fulminations. b"f in
the politics of which it is ~ex
tension. Either Israel ~go ·· es
with the PLO or the te · or
war will go on. ,
' ..
• '
'' I c6n m6ke ~im go dnywhere. If
even more cmpha:,rs: ··ye~. and
we are agami\t it "
Ounng a subsequent dinner.
the swarthy Arafat dictated "
personal letter for delivery to
President Carter proclaiming
that he was pursuing "a
moderate approach" m the Mid
die East The letter was de
livered to <.:artcr's national
•
securi1 y adviser Zbigniew
Rrzennski in late January.
The unpublished transc;ript
raises two possibilities.. First.
Arafat 1s a blatant liar who
couldn't be trusted to keep a
Palestinian agreemen t. Or
second. he has Jost control over
the PLO and can no longer
speak with any authority.
Why Don't Papers Print More Important News?
As an ace newsman, the ques
tion I am constanUy asked at
cocktail parties ts. "Why don't
newspapers print more impot·
tant news?" 1 usually disml56
the subject by saying it's prob-
ably just another internaUonal
con5plraey. But the truth o( the
matter is that I don't know
Take last Friday. "How's it
going. Al?" I saJd lo the driver
as I boarded
the .tl bus.
"Not bad.'.
Al l&id. "But
I'm a JtUJe
worried obout
Russian in·
lervtntion in
the Ethiopia·
Somalia ct>n
fllct on tht'
H orn of
Africa t.b.1s inorninJ."
"Can't 11)' as I blame you." 1
said taklns a seat. "Now that
Ethiopian stronaman Menststu
RaUo Mariam open11 boast.a that
:Cuban l1'00pl are fla,htlng in tho
front llnel. it nre looks bad for
the frtedom·lOvinC peoples of
lhe Oiade:n."
Ian Smith has SJgned an interim
agreement in· Rhodesia wlth
Bishop Abel Muzorewa. lhe
Reverend Ndabaningi Sitbole
and Senator Jeremiah Chirau ...
she said jovially
An old man across the aisle m
a long black overcoat and tennis
sh()(IS snorted "That's easy for
you to say." he snapped. "Bul
do you realize the dollar has
fallen t.o a record low m n!la-
lionship lo other Western cur
rencies, causing consternation.
and panic amoog our allies and
imperiling the very fabrio of the
NATO alliance!"
''No. I dlchft," so1d the fat
lndy ('(J(ltrilely. "I guess I was
Just too darned worried that tbe
Puru!h .
'.l ·. "
·~}:~' .-
~. &,.•
Senate Banking Committee
wouldn't confirm G. WHJiam
Miller as head of the Federal
Reserve Board because Hassan
Safava, a former Iranian official.
said he told three Bell officials
in 1967 that Air ForN~ General
Mohammed Khatemi had an in
terest in Atr Taxi, a company to
which Bell paid $2.9 million
when at won a lucrative contract
from the Iranian Air Force. But
J don't think Miller, who was
head of Bell's parent company.
Textron. knew anythin~ about
at:•
.. BO\', are you n Ponyannu 1 ~
cried the old man. "Ntxt you'll
be saying you think th~ two·
. -~t'l!
-
·• ••• thtin you beat en egg lnto 1t •• :·
months-old Belgrade Cotlrerebee
on East-West Coop eration.
which ended today, was a sue·
C'ess even though the Russians
blocked any mention ot bwnan
rights in the final statement."
"l will not," sobbed the fat
lady. breaking into tears.
An angry young m a.Q with
.. Born to Los~" t.altoood. on his
knuckle1t was on h is f eet,
~wltchblade tn band. ••t..e.ft ~r
alone!" be shouted •t tbe old
man ... Can't you see she-a beoel\
driven to distr actloa over
whether Congress will .. port
the President's proposlill .re·
visions In the federal JlQJMtd 81d
program hi his new _.. billion
education bill""
AT THIS POINT. U.• t>o~
screeched to I.he curb aD4 Al
Jumped out yellln£ for Ule
pohct-.
BelnA a coward, I barSe4 D\>'
nos~ in my newspaper. Whal ctJd
1 $~ ~ "Coed Cba1ns F! C'O ta
fftd as IA\-e Slave -72 boan oC
Suua l Abuo\e"
Roallyt Wl\o ca?8! If th~
newspapcr'll don·t. ~up 8nd
~lJllrt dnotln1 morespece todw!
important atorlM
us J'Udelt, U»ey•n 1'°' c le
lUUCM\f. •
I
••
'
New Spring
Colors In
Givenchy
l-f ave Arrived
Be first for best
selection
W ntcfiff Plaza Owly
PAPER UNLIMITED
WestclH.._.
1112hliMA .....
548-7921 -
• •
•
~ I
New Stock
Just Arrived!
adidas '*
Football • Soccer
Baseball
Cleated
Rubber Sole
Child's Size 11
Thru Men':. 9
t 052 l"lne • Wnicliff rlaaa • M•wpoti leach
541-1614
~PEN THURSDAY EVENINGS
..
Spring I s at Dick Vernon's.
Pass it on.
dick =~ =-vernon's
~port~wcar
W ntcfiff Plaut
17ttl & lrYIM
541-4121
lalboa Island
'75·1904
•• °"()Ur-beautiful
t()m()r-l'"()WS start
f()day with a
·new l()Vk. •• ~
desioned
especially
f()f"" Y()U'.~•
...........
•Skl•Cant
•Jla•l...,.IPMfe11re
•JJaxbl,f
• 1120 Irvine Blvd .. N~ Beach ...._
942-84'4 iiiii
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A AB DAIL v PILOT ORANGE COUNTY I OBITUARIES
Tax IDvestment Pays Off HOLY WEEK 1978 .
Good Friday, March.24 .
12 noon through 3 p.m -The Goocs Fr~y Liturgy·
with meditations, mu!)IC, prayer tnd Holy c:arn.. mun Ion By JOANNE REYNOLDS
OI ._ o.llY,..,.. .._
In tm. the Internal Revenue Service claimed
$790 million in income taxes from Orange County
residents
But in the urn fiscal year, the United States
government spent nenrly $3 billion in Orange
County.
CONSIDERING ALL TAXES sent to
Washington from Orange County in 1977, the
county got back about twice as mu.ch as it paid to
the federal government.
The figures were released this week by
Congressman Robert Badham, R-Newport Beach,
who said he got them from a report compiled for
the oecutive office of the president.
Cormtian Faces
Term in Prison
A man booked on murder c harges after he shot
and killed a young neighbor dunng a fracas in the
defendant's home has been round guilty or
manslaughter after trial before an Orange County
Superior Court Jury
Judge Mason Fenton accepted the verdict and
set April 28 a:-. the date he wlll sentence George
Finnis. 46. of Cyprt'SS, to what could be five years
in state prison.
Fmnis was arrt'sled last Oct 20 after he shot
and killed Rct•ce Rallard. 17, a neighbor's son. It
was l est1fwd that Finn1s, heavily 1ntox1cated, was
beating his w1fto and that the young man attempted
to interven~
Death ,\'ot it-t»s Death .~·oi ice•
aAICEll SKEEN
OllE MAY B"Kf A, rt\ldtnl ol IAENE SKEEN. r.-.1oent or C<»I•
(O,C• Mtw C• Pa\\#0 •w•y o" M•w. C~ Pa~\ofd •••Y on M4rcn 11.
M•r<h 21. ''''· s,..,,..,,,~•d t>v \1\ttr ,.,. SP\~ ... \u''"'t'td.,., ,...,. "'°" LrRO'(
Oorortt B•ktt of (Jl·c~. """°'~ '°" S'etn of S.n 01090. C• d•UQnttr ~tt11tn 8•-er Of C.O\t• M•\•. C• Su\,ann• ,,.....,. SkMn. Jr ot Al•Ui.•.
Gr•veslCW \.tr•1tP\ ••II O. Ntd on f-tt her brother Fred AahtAff of San
Gay M•r<n 14 It/I •I II 00 AM •t 8Hn•rd1no. C• s"'"' M•r9.,tl
tn9lt'•ood P~rti C•""•trr v Smun W•I~" ot 5-tn 8t'f"nans1no C• on~
lutruu L•me. Co\t• Mfow Mo'r"'''" gr•n0<1u•o F"""rat wrv•<H •Ill ot
dif«'(IOrj ...... on Ft'ldly AMrcl\ 1•. 1'11 •l tOAM ••
al!OWN Otll 8ro-y (Ntpel ...., olt~••llnq
1CE.NNETl1 C BROWN rt\tO.nl ol ,.,11 ~ Rtv l V Totnow ot Cnro\I
CO\I• Mtw C• Pa\~d •••Y on Luthit-r•n CJwfth Interment MOUf't••"
M•,ch 11. ''ll ~'"'""'° by '"\ w ife y,,..,, (f'l!Mlttl' S,,1'1 S.n\otrO•noon F11
0.111• Brawn ot (~la -•• Ca '°" <MY l•Or'" 74 "" al I 00 P M lkll K~n~th W Brown of Torr•nct-C•. Bro.dw•y~W.ryairt<.to<"
O•v t nlpr 8Hnt<,. M•rh Pulllfn o l VANCE
Midway '"'· c. • .. a M•tfOrt• AIHHUR w V"NCE rMldent of
EiC"f''be-rQer of (olor•do •ho ~ Mot\•w• \1•11e't' Anzon•_ • form«r rt
.ar1nd<h•tdrf'n •no 1 Qr•.tl s10t"nt m (.oron1or1 ~r C... Pa\Wd
Qr•Nt<f'lllOn~n f"untr•I \4'1'11"1Ct\ •ill •fll•'f on ~rch ?0, 1979 Mf IS \.ut'tflttd
De '"''d on S..IUtCMy ~re,, ll. '"' •• l)y ,,,, #lft £""'"" ~ ... Vane• OI
II 00 A M •I lkll ltt-.,h (,,.JWI At11on•. two ton\ Arll'lur W V•t\Cf,
OU;c1•t109 w1H Cir kt'1t 8oyd K.lftr 1n Jr OI R1ve-rs1cte ..-w;t Ch•rk'S E V..nce
ttrmtnl di Wr\tminstrr Mtmor••I ot Pomon•. C:.. 2 broeners C~rlt\ E
Pllltirti. 0" e< ttd a, Btll 6ro•Ow•Y" VMlce ot llt.r•J,. K•ttWS •fWJ fU.,,,,m
Mortu••Y J V•n<t of c;.,~ Cllv. Kanw•,..,., l
OllEENIN g••ncl<hlldren Friend~ m•v Ull .,
MARV ELIZABETH GREENEN, B•ll Bro.away MO<t ... ry on S.turd<ty ·~ lJ. tr\tatflt ol HUt111"91cn Bu< h, Much 25, 1'11 lrom 12 ,_., to I JO
C• P•Hi"O ......... ot1 w.cr,,.sa .... M•rth p M. Fiuwr•I Mrvtc.-S •nd a,,1.rm•nt
it, ,.,. at Hoe9 AMmort•I Ho,p1t•I ..... bt In Norlh W•IPOle, New
)he 1\ \Ur .,,..o l>Y 1 '°"'· Joupll S<oll H1ry,p\horr ~II Bro.>Ow•y Mortuuy
Green'" •nd (hrl\lOP"•r P•tr1tk d•r•ctor\
C.runen <M HU'111r>qton IHA<h C• r...r
Nr•nh Vtrn •nd Lu<Of• E ",,no"' of Hunlt~ton Brtt<h (.a btOf~r \/trn
Gr••n•n Jr of l)ih•wbrro I lllnol\ .tnd
\•S\f'' Pi1tr1<1• C.o•l1tlm•nn of
PrO\Pf'<t HtlQt\I\ , .. .,,o,, Mr\
Deaths
Grffti•n fW'\ bPf'n • "f'(ttt•rw-IOI' ,.,.. El he
Bllt'"• C•\I"' ()ol ~ny tn IM C•I• sew re
of lndu\t•• '"' I ~ ,,..,, <lnd p"o' 10 • '
SPOKANE. Wash
CAP> Sonora Dodd.
• $3 Billi.on Returns
In F ederm Spending
The statistics provide an interesting inslcht to
the county's economi~ base as well as revealing
some surprises, sucb as the fact the Tenneuee
Va1tey Authority speot $669,000 i.n Orange County
in Ctscal 1977.
ACCORDING TO BADHAIJ'S assistant,
Howard Seelye, the federal big spender of 1971 was
the Department of Defense, which accounted for
expenditures of $1.S billion tn Orange County from
Oct. l , 1976. to Sept 30. 1977 .
Hal! of that money. or about $713.4 million.
was spent on military contracts and supply pro-
.:rams. Another $384.9 million went for resear ch,
development. testing and evaluation contracts.
The balance was spent on military-related
payrolls That fi gure includes $117 million for pay
of active duty military personnel, while retired
m1hlary people received more than $100 million in
pay
CIVILIAN EMPLOVEES AT military
es t CJ bltshments. primarily the Manne Corps Air
Station at El Toro, took home another $68.6 million
m pay
Nt.>xt on the hst was the Department of Health,
Education and Welfare, which spent $814.3 million,
primarily on grants and federal programs.
Social Security accounted for $328.8 million in
expenditu res on retireme nt and disability
benefits.
The TV A. a JS.year-old aaency created to dam
tbe Te~ River system for Oood conU-01 and
power JeneraUOD, spent it.a mooey in Orange
County ~I equipment. Seelye reported,
lo dllcussm. Ute rep_ort, Seeyle Q9ted that in
1977, the S71IO rnnlloo ln federal lncome taxes paid
by countians was bued oo an ad.luated gross in·
come of $8.8 billion. ·
near tbe top of the list, handing out $111 million to
county veterans in education and training funds
and ln diaabWty and pension payments. The TVA,
a 3.5-year-old apncy created to dam the Tennessee
River system 'for flood control and power genera-
tion, spent its money in Orange County buying
equipment, Seelye reported.
HE NOTED THAT 1977 was an off year for the
TV A in Orange County. In 1.976, the agency bought
$42 mUUon worth of equlpment here. In discussing
the report, Seelye noted that in l!TT, the S790
million in federal income taxes paid by countians
was based on an adJusted gross Lncome of $6.6
b1lhon
Seelye noted that income taxes account for
about S2.5 percent of the federal government's in-
come
USING THE $7to MILLION figure to ex-
trapolate Crom, he calculated that Orange County
may have sent slightly more than $1.S billion to
Washington in all taxes in lm.
"Considering that the government spent twice
that here. Orange County isn't dolng too badly,"
he noted.
Disaster Aid Data
Remains Available ANOTHER LARGE TALLY was rung up by
the National Aeronautics and Space Administra·
lion. whi ch spent $118.6 million on research and The Disaster Assistance Center in Orange has
development in the county. according to Badham 's been closed. The cutoff date for California's "d1s-
report. · aster period" was March 13, federal officlals an-
The Veteran's Adminsitr~on was also near nounced
the top of the List, handing out $111 million to c~-However, disaster assistance is still available.
ty veteran.c; in education and training funds aWa in Information 1s available, toll free. at (800> 252-9364
7:30 p m fr" Fiim:
"THE GREATEST STORY EVER TOLD"
With Max von Stdow and Ctw.rlton Htslon
Easter Eve, March 28 ,........,,
11 :00 p.m. The Midnight Easter Celebration Wit"
Gregorian Men's Choir, Candlu, Chants .oca Euc harist
Easter Day, March 26
I 1.m. end 11 a.m. Holy Eucharist
9:t5 a.m. Festival Eucharist with choir
and trumphets
ST. MARY'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH
428 Park Avenue, Laguna Beach
(across (rom Robi~n's) 644·5300
COSTA MESA: 2300 HARBOR BLVD.
(Harbor Center) 642-4711
•LAGUNA HILLS: 24221 CALLE DE LA LOUISA
(acroi:.s from the Broadway) 768-7771
FULLERTON . 320 N HARBOR Bl V0.1526-8331
OPEN MONDAY THAU THURSDAY 9 1111 4 ( 9 tlll 5)~
FRIDAY 11116·SATURDAY1011112.
CiLENl4LE FEDEAQL ~AVINGS ANO LOAN ASSOCIATION
d1sab1hty pension payments. or, collect. at (213) 688-6578 .--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.:::=========================:::.
Pl'BUC NOTICE
NOTICE TO CltEOITOllS
SU ~ElllOlt COUllT OF nu:
STATE 01' CALIFOllHIA FOlt
THE COUlfTY OF OllANOE
Ho AWl>t
E\l•tt OI KAIHl(lN HELM
~UIAES ••• .-!>OulREt. •k• IC H
SQUIRE\ Ot><NI~
NOTICE I~ HEREBY GIVEN 10 Ii. "tdllOt\ al,,... .tbO~ ,,,.,,,.., M<l'd<'nl
'"•I elt PH\Qln\ 1'\1¥1"9 (i•1m\ .t9iitr\\I
lhit 1"•10 o.<-~·nl •rt requirf'Q to lllf'
them. w tth thlt fVl'Cf'UM'f VO!Khfn In
thl Office of thto tlHk Of tl'\f' •Do•fo ""
tU6t'<d court Of' to Qf'f"\f'Ot ttwm ""1(n
1he "~(f'\\JrJ' vl)u<-hf'r\, to ttw un
cter\19nrd dt thf nH•<f ot &.>th J
McMullen, lllOI OoYt )t,....I. Nr .. 00<1
8••< "· C•ilfO<tH.\. ~.,,, I\ ow pl•t ft ot 11<1\lnt'\\ ,,. lht' unO<'<\lqnMl In •II
m•tter'\ ~f.,.lnH'9 to Ow ~tlttft of \.d•d
Ol<f"Otnl. wttt'un '°"' '"°"'" .. •tlH the
t 1r\l publl< "''°'Of thh no11c t O•te<I Ftl>t\Hlty 11, 1~18
B••n<"" H E•Oahl
f u cvtri• of thfo 'W1u o•
t r"llt' •OOW rwnwd Oi'<C f'<J•nt
IE TTV J MCMULl.EN
14tl Oe .. SOWi
S'll••.00
New_,-· C..lltw..i• t»40
Tel 7U·lltcl
AUerMY , .. 1-... n•
PuOll)'" 0r•-"'9P '°"''' O••fv P1•of AA.itch t lo 13 lO ltl~ •H II
PlBLIC l'\OTICE
23-0L Size! Perrier Water
from France
11\AI hU !>Mn a ••<rf'tMy In tlM HU'11
tn9ton 8••<h Pollt .. O#C'•rt,,..•nt
~mor1•I \,f'f-v•c..-. will bf-Con4u<tf'O
on Fnoo ~"" 14 1'1111 e JO p M
•• Pi•t<~ 6rolhrr\ $m1U"t\ Mo'tu•rr
_.,th FeU~r OttWh\ Lyon\ P•\tOf' O'f SI
M•rv ' By tr... ~. C..tfotol•< °"'" 11 ot
h t1•t•n9 lt\lttmtnt ••II bt Oft¥•1f
f •m•I\' SUQOf'\h ,,..mori•I\ bit" M•O.
10 Trtt> Or-'°""'• (Mt(.,. Soc:,.,,
PittCf' tHotner\ 5'mtl~\ Mor1u•ry
dirt<IOr\
ltll-Uo\llt
W£Al1Hlf M KAAMEA, ,.,...,_.,.,
or Co't• ~\• C• P•n..i •w•v on
MAt(I\ 11 1~11 S,Uryly~ bll ... r ,,....
8111 Kr4mpr ot l •rt<•ster, C•. )
O•UQhlen f wirtvn Anclit-r\Ol"'I ot 11'\dl•n•
•nd 8t'\\•t l tvnn ot Ind"'"'
ServiCf'\ will ~ hitld on MoncUy
March II, '"' ., " 00 A M Bt>ll
6..a.Ow•y O..i»I Oll1C1a1t119 "'"" o. Rev Joh rt LtnctY•lf tf'll•r ~nt ell S•n
Glb'l•I c ....... 1.,y lrt S..n G•l>nrl C..
Bell 8ro•dw•v MortU!lry dtr•<l.Ot\
., .. ,.
C-al 0r•"'9 c-ty
J.-iclal Ohtrlct
1tt Ovk c-t.,. Or • •ut S--. CA '7101
SUMMOMS
• ~-ltMlll l'ttlnt.tl cr-E~T llASING
96, known as "The ·
Mother o f Father's
Dav" since she founded
Father's Day as a JO<'al
observance in 1910 to
honor her father, died
Wednesday. CORPORA TIO... a C<lllfl><n•• <O•PG••
llon
THET .. 0110
ALPHA Q 1HETFOAO, tH•drnl ol
Colt• Mf~tt. CA P•t\.f'CI •wey on
Mat<ll 11, 1•11 Surv•••O by h<r
O•u11.,lor 0.11 T .... llO(Cf Smith of OJ•I.
C• , \on Me!Yln T,,.11.,,0 of S11,t\la,
C•. two bf'-ort.-r~ JMnH F Jf'rn•9'1'n
Ot Al•••• -J~(lh Buti.r of P•lm
S(irlng\ c. '"'° dMIQhletJ v.,d•t
Tul\t\t•ll ol Co\I• -... Cl •ncl Ztll•
Mo •11•n Of (O\I• M••• c. •
9,.•ndtf'Htdr•n o1 nd 1 orr•I
grandOUldrM Frtff'Kt\ m•y <•II to,.
v1slt•hon •t &rlt ftro.ao••r Mor tu"' y trom 11 ,_, IO I JO P M on '>urtO•v
~rth 7• l"I FU4'Wt•I """"-' r\ w1U
be h•d on -.O.v ~"" u . "'' at , Jo P M AOM Holl\ Me"-111 Pu•
Slty Ch•HCll, Whlll1rr C.t *""
Eotern Star ~""" l •Qlll Ch•plor
• os "' Lone Br.t<h, o oll><••1tn9 Tp,os,e who wtlih 1n ON of hO"Wer' rnay
mekt ...,.,ton$ to '"" O.M\Q<' County
C•n<•r So<ltlv 8•lf flroadw•y
M ortuary 01re<.ICM~
For the
Rf>:cord
,Harriage
LAS VEGAS "'•• -M•rrt•gt> ttcen,..s 1\\.U!Pd twr• 1nc1uoe
M.irc11 1
PCTEASONSlOOTWEG -S<olt
RoO.rl. "· ,,. AN,...•m .,,d Yvonl\e
19 of Hunt•"Q1"" Beach.
Molt<ll l
GREEN SMfTH AU~r M•nrv,t SS
>f Wr\tfY1't'\Slfr al"ld P•trl(1•
01m•r.-, 47.ofO<t•n\tCW
C:Ollll'lS ..... ll Johrl l'l°"d ll
>O •no Row M.tt1,. •• both ot E.t
Toro
PIERSON HAVES -~r~ A u , ,.,,., u,,.,. F ll l>Oln ot Newp0rl
Buen
~ ......
FLORES M<NAOB R~ld JoM
11. of Hun1•noton Be&ch and
Stt.,"•"''~ StJ1tttte. 11 of F"ount••n
V•llPY
BACA A Ell..4 RHOADS Ru•wll,
------------H •rtd M,mlyn Jo.nt'#, J8 11<>1" ot
Hunt•r>Qlon Be•h
IALn-tHGHOH
fUMHAl HOME
Corona del Mar 673-9450
Costa Mesa 646-2424
llLL HOADW A Y
MOITUAIY
110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
642 9150
SMmt. TVT'HH."'-.AMI wmcUPf CH.Ara
427 E 17th St
Costa Mes• • 646-4888
Sant• A11a Chapel
518N BroadWay
Santa Ana• 547-4131
'111CI llOTHIH
$MfTMS' MOITUAIY
627 Main St
Hunail'lgton B•ach 5~9
fAMt\Y
COlOMAL flUMtuL
MONI
7801 Botta ~ve.
Westminster
8~3-3525
PACtlfC YllW
MRlfO•tAL 'Aal Cemetery Mortuary
Chapel
3500 P'clflc View Drive Newoort,
Cllllornra
... 4.1700
~ ..... ,
PAV NE SOMAN Jrllrev M ll, ol
Hu,,11nqlcn lllH<h •nd NllW F 14 Of
Fovn111n \lllley
,O,lBANV·AIOOEA -Al-I Anthon~,
71 •ml Vtro<nl• Ann, 19, both ot Hun
1•"11104' BH<h.
SMITH AllEH -UtTY 0., 0, ot Newl>Ofl 8eKll Md ,,....., Lou, JJ, of
lfvln•
AOAMS.lEMONNtli'.A -Oonntv Al· ,.,., 1', ot Cml• ,,... .. .tnd Sylvl• C ,
"· ol HurtllrlQI"" Beach
Birth•
"OUNTAIH YAU.EV
COMMUNITY MOS~ITAL
INl'tll •. ,.,.
Mr anel Mn W1lll•m Slr•art.
WUlmhUl ... ,Qjn
~tt.1fft
Mr .,.., Mrs. T...,,,_ B••..-Hunt
1n411on 8e<Kll 9tr1
M< anti Mrs Oanl\ts Hill,
We\lmln>le< otrl MaftJI 11, ,.,.
M r •"4 Mr1. Jo1110 McCr•r•.-.
We\ttn1tt1•. boy
Mefcll 14, "" Mr -Mrs Don 8'owt1 II. H11nl· 1no1ontHdl,boy
M r •n<f Mu Cherltt H•ll Jr ,
H11nt1noton Bct«fl, 9111
Mlftlt ... 1'71
Mr ~ Mn. l'f'et!tklt t!llitrOlft,
11 to"9, .....
Mr. tllf Mrs. f'ra<'dt T •ylor. ,,_,.,., ve1i.v, 91'1 "''· •llCI..,,. _,_, ..... ~. ,,,, ~1111,tm ,,,, •• ,.., Mn TltN>1.11y Oremm,
F-l•ln Val .. y, bty,
Oelenct•rtl FREO 1" BEllOWS
•nO DOES 1Utn>ugn10, ln<lu>•v•
NOllCltl Veu ... ,,. -•~ Tiie
"'"" may *<:Ide ... '"" "°" wltt..ul ,_, Ml"' ,..,.. tlfllttl rov rnp0tMI
wlllll" )t UV\ II ... ti. 1"'°'"'"''""' WI-.
AVISOI Ut1" 1'11 ""° cl0m•rt41.tdo
El Ttlbvl\all ,.._ -.C1dlr contr• Ud
'"' •udl.,.cl• a me-q.,. UCI ,._
d• Oentrt IM JO Ola• U• I• lnletme
(tot\ QVe ,,.,_,
I TO THE OEFENOANT A <••II
compld•nt ,,., -"'"" bv llM' pl••n 1111 .cJ•IMI YoU I• 1ootnol•"I
• U 'tOU .,1,n to dfttna tt''' 1ew\uO
vou mu\t, w•lh•" JO d•V' •ft~r '"'' \ummor'I\ I\ W"ntf<S on you f1Jt w ith
tPti\ court • wrftl•n Of#dd1no "'
rt\pon .. f' to th!' compt••nt lll •
Ju\tlff' Cniurt "°" mu\t flit with lht
l0U't • wrtttM P'•..,,•l"Wll Of (ilU,,., •n
or•I pl••d•l'Q to bf' entttfd In ttw
do<kt:t• Un._\\ Y0\100 ~. ynu, °'''"'"
will br .. ntitr-.d ut>Of' ~h<•flon Of,,.
P'••nt1tt anO '"'' cour-f m..tr rntrr •
1"°9ment "'O'•Mt YoU for tl'W' rf'He'i Or
tn•t'tO~ 1n tn.-compl•1nt wtl1<n <Ou•d
r•\ult 1n °'9'1'\t"""""'nt Of ••O•H tA._lnQ
Of monf'y w pr-OC>f"Y or otrwr r~1f1 rt
OU'f',tf'O ,,, t,_. <O'f'ot••f"I
I> II .,... Wi•~ te -,.,. •1rlce 91
a" •ll•r...., '" t1M1 "'at• "" ,....,,. Cle .. ,.,_,, ,. ttwl •-writi.ft
... -••• 11 ... ,,, ""'' ... ,,, ...... "-· Oeted Jon • "'~ [)()fllALO l AA MOUA
Cle<k av Je-•nn1,.. C.•••·\
Oellllly
tS£Al.I
SHll,.Hl:ltO,SMEPHEllO 6
OUHOAS
1600 0•1re St., St• Ul
Newport .. Kii, CA tl ...
Tel. 17141 m....
Aller"O ..... l"ll'Mllt
·rhtr word 1·<ompl•1n•" 1nclu0t\
c rOH·COmpt•1nt. "pl•lnllfl .. In< ludt•
CfOH (0'9\Pl•llWnl, 'del•nt!•nl ....
ctudo cren deltt1~n1, 11n9uta1 In
Cllld•• ,,,. Plurlll ""d m•~cullrw 11'1•
cludu '"''"INrw ~ .,..,,., A "'""'"' ple.d•n11. lflCtlldi"O •n •n1wer, d@mu1
r•r-, etc . m"lt tw fn ttw l«ff\ reautred
l>Y ,,. C•HIOY"'• lluln ol Court \1011r
0( l9•n•I plHdlnq .....nt be lllf'd In lhll
court wltll ll'OCIP' lillrtO '""' ...a 0<oot tn.t a copy tt.1to1 ..,., wrv•o on t.t<ft
p19111t111 1 •"°'""Y •M on .. ,,, p1e1n. 1111 not , __ ,.., o.. an enor ... v.
,,.. llme wtwn • 1ummot1J It cllHnwd
M•YfO on• party m•v vary dt.-nc11nq
on ll'e method al <#<vlct ,.0( tum
pto. '" CC.P •ll 10 lntOU9f1 •U .0 Put>llllled Or-c,,.11 0.11y Pilot.
~rch • M. 1J JO. '"' •u II
PUBLIC NOTICE
1-Lb. Can!
ll!ll!P""=~~~ Chock Full O' Nuts
Coffee
•perfect kw
111 type• of
coffff m•k•ral
ltmlt
2 cans
per customer
. .
All Akron Stores
Join The Celebration!
ALL AKRON STORES are celebrating the great event ...
the Grand Opening of our sensational new store in
Huntington Center. We invite you to examine this
selection of some of the exciting values at your
neighborhood Akron Store. Vi sit us now and m
the days ahead ... join the celebratio.n !
..
OPEN
Mon. thru Sat. 1M
Sun.10.7
., LAGUNA HIL.LS
Laguna HHla Mall.
•
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LOCAL I AT YOUR SERVIC~ Thunday, Ma1ch 2'3, Hua DAILY PIL.0 r I 1t •
.,c_u_E_lN_1_e ______ s_;y_P_h_i1_1_n_•e_r1_an_d_i Electric Good Friday Services Set
.. Help a fellow gel a new set of epaule~·!"
"Cot a problem? Thl'n wnte to Pat Dunn. Pat wifl
cut red tape, getting the ar1swe1s and action you need
to .sol~ meqwtres m government and business Mall
your que.stlOl'l8 lo Pat Dunn. Al Your Service, Orange
Coo.!t Dmly Pilot. P 0 Box IS60, Costa Mesa, CA
92626. As ftJOIJY Letters a! posStble 11.1111 ~ answered
but phoned inqumes or letten not includJng the
reader'& /ull rwme. oddres~and busrru>ss hours' phone
numbercOl'lnot ~ consulered This column appears dai
Ly trcept Saturdays "
Gre11p Aicb DbablH
DEAR PAT: Is there a national organization
that looks out for the rights of disabled people?
I'm writing on behalf of a relative who has a
severe pbys1<'al handicap. He would like to make
contact with such a group.
C.T., Fountain Valley
American CoaJltion of Citizens with Dis·
abllllle& (1346 Connecticut Ave. N. W., Jloom 817,
Washington, D.C. 20036) is an umbrella orgaoJza.
tlon of 45 national, stale and local groups con·
cerned with physically, mentally or emotionally
handicapped Individuals. It represents Interests or
the disabled lo federal a nd s tate governments.
Vour rt>lallve also may want to contact Dlsabllity
Rights Center, 1346 Connecticut Ave. N.W., Suite
1124. Washington, D.C. 20036. DRC monitors
federal enforcement of civil rights and consumer
prol('<'tion for the disabled. It also issues reports
and researches compliance ertorts of federal agen·
ell"!>.
Rnatal Depo•lt• ~f unda61e
DEAR READERS: One of the most [ngueat
com plaints received by A VS ~ems d~s
between land.lords and tenants o•er tile rdurn or
deposits. Erledive for deposits made a~r Jaa. 1,
1971, the landJord is required by state law to retan
to the tenant within two weeks after movhlg out,
all of the cleaning or security ~sits t.taat are not
reasonably DttHsary to remedy tenant defaults,
lo repair damage caused by t.be tenant, or to clea11
•P· If a landlord acts in bad faith and does aol re·
turn the money or properly account for any part be
keeps, be may be Hable for up to $200 la punitive
damages over and beyond \be amount of the de·
posits unjustly retained. A new rule also places the
burden of proof as to tbe reasonableness of tbe
iamounts claimed on the landJord.
Ou deposits made prior to Jan. I, 1971, there is no right to rttover the $ZOO punitive damages, but
a tenant can sue tor the actual amoWtt of &be de·
41><>sU lo Small Claims Court.
Mail Ff..,. In Dead Letter•
DEAR PAT· l h ave a problem with American
Boutique, a ma1l·order house in lllinois. To make a
tong story short, they did not rm my June 20, 1977
order and $6 78 1s owed to me. This 1s n 'l much, but
J want a refund and can't gel any response to my
letters
MC., Costa Mesa
American Boutique declared chapter 11
bankruptcy Nov. 3, 1977. Your onJy recourse is to
1ubmlt a refund claim, with prool of payment and
order ddalls, l-0 the firm's altomeys. Write to
~bern and GUlogly, One N. La Salle St., Chicago,
Ill. 60I02. A YS suggeats sendlng a carbon copy of
your refund clalm to the llllools Consumer Ad·
wocate'a Office, 160 l'J. La Salle St., Room 2000,
<blcago, Ill. &OIOI .
Rate Cut
Enacted
A. number of services are scheduled
on the Orange Coast to commemorate
at Good Friday services the Cruclfixlon or Christ.
Cbureb schedules include;
-St. lames' Ep1"opal Cllattb, 3209
Via Lido, Newport Beach, at 7 .30 p.m.:
"Th., Crucifixion" <a meditation on the
Passion> by John Stainer will be suni
by the choir. Soloists will be Dr.
William Lock, baritone, and Fredrick
Stoufer, lenor.
SAN FRANCISCO
(AP) -R.caidents of the
s ma II Northern
califorbia community of
Westwood whO observed
a self.imposed weeklong
blackout last month to
protest high electric
bills have received a -Lake Wlls Commuol&y Cburcb,
rate reduction. 23331 Moulton Parkway, Laguna Hills, 1
-Sl. Paul'• LutberaD CbW"Cb, 1186
Glenneyre St., La&una Beach, 7:30
p.m .; Solemn Tenebrae.
-Charda of ReUgloas Sden<-e, 144
Ave. Serra, San Clemente, 1:30 p.m.: A
series of metapbysJcaJ ioterpretaUons
of Jesus' final lesson for all mankind,
•'Victory Over Death."
-Cb.rtlt Luu.era.a Church. 760 Vi c·
torla St., Costa Mesa, noon: Meditations
on the seven last word& of Christ with
spechal choir music. At 7:30 p.m.,
Service of Darkness with the Rev. Dr.
Erwin Kurth preachlng on .. The Glory
of the Crofis." The state Pub Ii c and 8: 1S p.m.: "Victory at the Cross," a
Utilities Commission ap· meditation by Dr. Harold F . Leeatma.
proved reductions in Music will be provided by the youth
electric rat.es amounting chorale, and soloist will be Steve Can--Abldlnl Savior Lutheran Cburcb, to $84,812 annually for field. 23262 El Toro Road, El Toro, al noon:
the Lassen Division or Presentation of the last words of Jesus
C a J lf or n a a .Pac if i c -Good Sbephe.rd Lutheran Cburcb, from the cross. At 7: 30 p.m .• Tenebrae
Uliltlles Co., wbicb 4800 JJ'Vl.De Center Drive, Irvine, al 8 servicese.odin&lncomplttedarlmess.
serves 104 customers in p.m .! Joint candlelight service with lbe -&. MJcltael and All Angels, 3233
Westwood. parishes of St. MatUiew and St. An· Pacific View Drive, Coroda del Mar, at
drew's. 9 E d 1 IT ALSO approved a a .m .: n of vigi and morning
$12,958 reduction ror the G----G Co ··-· rt. prayer. At 12:30 p.m., Ecumenical Ob· -aa\lll:u rove Dlllhuuty "uuttb, s ervaoce -Harbor {;ouocil of
company's Weaverville at noon: Pastors will lead three hours of Churches.
Division. se rvices. At 6 :30 and 8 p .m .,
The c uts, eHective Candlelight Communion Services. -Cburdl of tbe Ruorrecttoa, 98~
April 1, are the result of highlighted by a choir presentation Hamilton, Huntington Beach at 8 p.m.:
a decrease in Pacific from Handel's "Messiah." . Tenebrae service.
-Lutheran M lss1on In Lacuna
Niguel, at the Sbepllerd of die lllJJa
Cburcb, 30121 Niguel Road, 7:30 p.m.: A
Holy Communion Service. The Rev.
Ray Farness will lead a study on Psalm
22, and the service will conclude with a
''Veiling of the Croes" ceremoo,y.
-Harbor Area Council of Churcbe•
at the F\rst \Jolted Meu.odll& Cb.,-dl,
.a20 W. 19th St., Costa Mesa, noon:
Three·hour services beginning with a
45·minute worship for downtown Co.sLa
Mes!\ business people.
-United Methodist C•utth. 2C(4Z
Moulton Parkway, Laguna Hills, noon.
Seven pastors of the community will
speak on the seven words of Jesus
from the cross.
Car Wash Due
The Saddleback Community Hospital
employees recreation committee bas
scheduled a car wash from 10 a.m . to 4
p.m. Apnl 10 on the parking lot o! the
Medical Center, 23561 Paseo de Valen·
c1a, Laguna Hills.
Cost 1s $1 for cars and $2 for vans.
Proceeds will go to the nonprofit com·
munity-owned hospital.
Gas & Electric Co. re· 1 ..... ..-1 ....... -:~------=~~;;;;;ii&;;;;=o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.,-~~-.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.--~-sale rates authorized by
the Federal Regulatory You are invited
Commission
THE NEW CUT wiU
reduce the average
monthly winter bill in
the Lassen Division oC
customers with a lifeline
allowance or 240
kilowatt hour by an
estimated 33 cents and
lhose with a basic plus
water healing allowance
by 30 cents.
Many customers in
Weal'fVood observed the
blackout Crom Feb. 12 to
Feb. 20 and it gained na·
tionwide publicity. They
swapped candles for
light bulbs and con·
versatioo for television
and fired up wood stoves
for heating and cooking.
Spring
Skiing
'Good'
ByT•eAaoc:iated Press
Here are skiing condi·
t1on1 ln Sou thern
CaUfomfa mountains as
r epor ted by the
Califor nia Stale
Automob•le Association:
a10 alA• -arw -ON-NII laot
NM ot -l<M ~ ~ -Ing snow. wlt11iwer111a-. •••oHTWOOO ,_ to 11w 1001 i..~ Of -....,~'""'-""
Sl'O•, Wiii\ -lilb -n ANGE\.IS CllllST -CIOlff -to
ro.d <.I0\"""'9. H ere are Sierra
Ne vada skiing cdll'ldi·
lions as reported Wed·
nesday by the
automobile association:
MOUNT 1"AITA0 U.SSUt l'A•K
-e ... 12 l•I, PKl<M l~no IOll
•O"IAL-8-7 teet, 'P<lno ll<I·
1'1uo•• ltOWL -e.s. u '"'· DIOeO. NO•TM STA• -8•se 7 1 .. 1.
sor•~. A\.l'INIE ME ADOWS -e .... to
""'· '"''"O HOMIWOOO -ene s IHI,
~~A;4iALUY -.... llVI teel
II 1,200 pac,lnQ, -1"0-
TAHOE Mt• MIWL. ene' '"'· ""'"' HIAVUtLY 'ltAU.IY -e-4 '';~?":~\.IHI -llHe 3 feel ••
~rl"(I
MOUNT ROSI ..:. e .... lee!,
P•<k•d Sll!RRA 5'<1 aANCM -en. 1 ..... '"''"9 l(IRKWOOO MtAOOWS -en.
ll IHI, pac:Mcl
eEAR VALUIY-MOUNT a11a•-8as. fl 1 .. 1. pack~
00001! "IUOOa -8-M 1 1 .. 1.
pack.cl. aAOGIR l'U. -Bna l•I) r .. t, ~··d JUNE MOIJHTAIN -BIM 11 IHt,
'-0'"'9
CHINA l'~AK -Bue t '"'• .,.oec1.
GOOD FRIDAY SERVICE
duriftCJ tM noon hour
frotn I 2: 15 to I :00 p.fft.
NEWPORT-MESA
CHRISTIAN COOEI
148 Eat Tw«ftfr·s.co..d St.
Costa Mno 645-''20
5-Function
Men~s LCD Watches
from TEXAS" INSTRUMENTS
• ta~• command ol the boldnt LCO styhne yet•
• ov~I ~I.iv window conl.,..ally retdsout hoor
and m1nutn P<•5 onOl lor ITO'ltll
and date. twice lot WIOOnds
• wnlour bodV gives way lo 1 ~ matclunc
Wild y«lrlll'M IVS~ 1n
iet blad< °' GOCOi b<own 1
12.99
e~ 14.99
19.99
•• 11• ---......""'
SPENO EASTER AT
Vtirporter
q00Cf[otel
POOLSIDE CHAMPGNE BUFFET 10 A.M.-2:30 P.M.
Mediterranean Room
Eaatet Sunday Brunett
10a m. lo3p m
Otnnec' 5 to 10 p.m.
18700 MAC ARTHUR BLVD.
IRVINE. CALIFORNIA
(Qppo~1re Or;inge CountvArrportl
(7 14) 833-2770
Our lowest prices ever!
Our pm:es are now slashed 6(),; below tne onginal tags
on exquisite Vag Simulated Diamond Jewelry I
YAG Rings: dinner. codltail, solitaires
(some wrth genuine rut>tes, emeralds. etc.)
At our lowest prices ever •.. 603 off!
Ring Special: One-carat YAG, set m 14-karat gold
originally $60 ... SALE PRICE 23.99!
YAG Stones. toose.percarat 3.
YAG Pendants & Earrings
-o.eui_ .. __ _ .._ __ .,,. ...
f-, lfln lloc>oaoM. It~ ..-........... .., ..... ...;.....,. .. _.,,0.-1
AMERICAN
Food Processor
• perfect tor the Bll"nnel -I llM5a-lor Ille SllOft-order cool<! •ii MS, Chol>$. 5"~. paf'e:S. Sl!C>M. ~ '""'~ •nd m0<e .• uwaMy 1n less th.JI 30 ~ ... whips YliCllS ID ~h per1ec11Qn and purees. too•
• sturdily c:oostrudlld housing d-C E Leuo"'
-~GE.motor
Jn<I 8 bQ<!es
(3 ol st.1 .... ieu steel)
49.99 freel 2.99 blade radt
wltflpur~!
' .. .,,.. Save$2.00 now
on Old Forester
$J.49ft
~1298
1¥ lite-59.2 O&.
Llmstrd Offet
Size.
• 48 delido~ ounces
lie
..
• 8 DAILY PILOT rhuraday. Marcl'l 23 , 1018 MUSI~
'Beatles' Rock Concert Vanishes
~
LOS ANGELES <AP! -In a
"'e1rd bit of promotional slei&ht
of hand, "The World's Blaieat
Concert," wh.tch was to feature
rock heavies Rod Stewart. Eric
Clapton, Neil Young and lh.ree of
four Beatles, has vanished
before the very eyes of scores or
report e r s and Hollywood
hangers-on.
reporters announcing that Rod
Stew art and former Bealle
Georae Hamson would bold a
Wednesday news conference at
the Beverly Hills Hotel to an·
nounce lhe details.
Reporters gathered in hordes.
Groupies sneaked around out-
side the elegant old hotel hoping
for a glimpse of a rock demigod.
Everyone awaited the birth of a
Hollywood Event.
~
8:~0-SHOW AT CONFERENC£. "4. ..
Just Tuesday, somethine
called "Project Interspeak" was
the hottest item io town. It was
to be a benefit concert for the
world's hunted whales and
dolphins.
Neither Harrison nor Stewart
shoed. Almost all lhe big names
mentioned for the concert said
by midday lhey would'nt take part. ~1 Singer Rod Stewart A MAIL.GRAM WAS sent to
·.
...
, ...
~·
4
(".; . . ..
~
nr. -.-
~~
~
~~
-.
.
~r ~' .• f
'
: ...... ) ..
J ' . • !
I
I -
fly high, soar, dive, hang
innovative,
d ecorative,
invigorating 11
\ I
\I
.y
'
I I
I
/
....._. kite~ --kites, kites
all ready to go
;,
\ , ' \
outdoors-odom rhe skies w1rh speooculor color.
corch o breeze and let your k11e Ry. selling high
over porl~. houses. rree rops. beaches -liffing
your sprm.s and srrerchlnc;i yovr eyes ro rhe sky.
Indoors -aeore o vibrant environment, easlly,
slmpty, colorfully. odd fife to any decOf hong o
k1re from me celltng. above your bed. over your
desk. along yovr hall or stairway-z.1p a breezy
.sp1r1t lnro yoor space!
( 1) pointed silk or pope<. hondmnde, bornboo frame lroditlanol Chinese folk arr. bfought bod< from
ourown nips to Conran. Chino . • i .69to 12.95
(2) Giant 66" Srreok, 66 Inch wingspan, free cord, high impoct, durable plostlctonstructton. with d-25
foor streamers. by Stonbel. 4 oo
CJ) 4'5 foot 11.olnbow Dragon. ocrobottc. elegant, 5Uf)er-tough mylar; seen for m lles and miles. a Mylar
Stor Kue • 1.00
(4) ~ky. the flying ribbon, 10 feet long. flies In most any wind, o Mylor 5'0f K~ •. 2. 00
(5) Skyflnks 4', o high Ufr, low drog oerodynomlc phenomenon-bullds 'llOfioffons-tondems. rrolns.
" giom. °' srun1-sc.11t Yo01 whim or wind. Oy Synestruct1a Inc. 9.00
,
(6) Porofoll, rhe "$Oft" kite, no rigid frame. some design 1.ised for recovery of spoc~ vehicles mulri-
colored nylon cloth for lifetime use. 26" x J5", with 500 t~t of 100 lb. resr Sfrlng, and clorh poud, from rhe Kire Factory In Seonle. . :)(),QO
(7) Winged Mylar Dox, space oge de.sign, shiny sliver mylar. 4 Wings fOf added soorlng llfr. Dy Go ~A ~~ ~00
(8) BQf 2, o high soiling, Jet block bot, mode of 5!'1009 clOfh. 18" x 51". 7.00
kif• spool, 500 fHt of 20 lb. re• kite fine. :>.28 from Son FraAClsco Ktre Co.
olJo books on 1~1res, flying kilos, making klt@s..
· South Coast Pima
r..545-0431
Pulnle Hilt. Mall w .. 1 COVIN 'Mhlon Plaza Otl Ame ,.Ion lq11a19
~-·•'Id ...,,.ey
' , I
WORRIED FRIENDS OP the
wbalea repeatedly said the big
names would come to their
re.cue eventually, while the
commissioner ol the Loa
Angeles Coliseum, where the
concert was lo be held in late
May, called the whole thmg "a
lot or baloney ...
What happened?
Appar~ntly a group calJed
"Friends or the Earth," a San
Francisco-based environmental
organization, received verbal
encouragement from Harrison,
Stewart and some other big rock
names and formed "Project In·
~ terspeak" with hopes of pulling
ocr a big, lwo·day benefit con·
cert in Los Angeles dunng the
last week of may.
R INGO STARR, FORMER
Beatles' drummer , was
scheduled to boat the event. Har·
rison also was said to be very
sympathetic and the promoters
received posltlve response from
a third BeaUe, Paul McCartney,
said Win Anderson, one or the
show's producers. When word
got out Tuesday that the in·
dividual Beatles were being
sought for the concert, a EX-BEATLE NOT THERE
George Harrf1on
1tad1e lhaeli
music lovers' sale
---
-------·-··~. ------;-~--
The Realisti(
compact with
everything in*
and s6o off ..•
For people with t1yht spar~ reqwr~ments and c,r
music budget<. R••illi!>t11 s Clarineue' systems 11111
1t ;ill t.ogettwr w1tlHJ11t 1 utt1nq cornt:r'i Cassette tapr
rerordPr pl.1\"' Stt>rl'O radro and pt1ono Two b1q
22" high w11ol1·1 1w1·e1er ~pt'ill\{•r!> Loo~ at tht>
· everyth ng 1n · f1'<llur1•s ubOvl!. Tt1~n consider that 11
Shar.:k ,. ~ n11od Pnouqh ro butld pNsonal computers
we re certain y qood t•nougti to build your personal
music systPrnl TIH' sail! pr1c1•d 23 o-oll Ctannettc
"'98 '. a<.k lor :; l 3 1198
*Everything in:
· "J CASSEnE '/j 3 SPEED .:! I TAPE DECK CHANGER
~ ~~~~=OLS ·1 DIAMOND ~ J NEEDLE
··;1 STEREO
_:.J TUNER
~:;1 TAPE
~ J COUNTER
-11 TWO
_:.J SPEAKERS
I TWO VU
MET ERS
r/j MIKEIFONE
INPUTS
(i g~e!R
·; STEREO
' AMPLIFIER
··/i lWO TONE
_'{j CONTROLS
reduced to
95
Reg.
25~5
!/llltJllllt..'-CHARGE IT {MOST STORES) Will, VISA
If you r audio system needs an additive (mikes, tones, etc.)
you'll find it in stock at Radio Shack at the right price r
A headphone with controls!
Reahst1c's Nova-14 ster<'o hPadfonPs have separ.
ate ghde·path conrrol~ for both balance and vol·
ume One of audios greatest and1t1ves1 This pa1,.
ts one of our favorites Ask for t133 1013
All cassettes are not alike!
Realfstlc C·60 and C·90s are made m our own
magnetic tape factory in Ft. Worth. Texas. and
they're sold In alt our Shacks worldwide Quantity
(lrscounts when you buy a dozen or more-a4k et
The Shack•
A cardioid-electret mike!
Realistic card101ds pick up mostly from the front.
cut rear mike feedback Electret condensor tech
nology gives you that brt>1 thless ·now sound ··
Ask for #33· 1045 at The Shack .
Cassette album!
Holds 24. Folds small
Has a handle Press and
pop for easy removal and
storage #44 609.
Cartridge care?
Maintain your phono
pickup, or replace 11 or
the 11ylu1. Oo-1t yourself
kit #42 108.
ALL STORES WILL BE OPEN EASTER 8UNDA Y
MM a.a.4'TI ...... < __ COIOMA D& Mil POUNrd4 YALUY U~ llAc.4 M1SS10M V8.10 ,..,,,..._...,. .::.::.~-,_a::,_ .................
COSTA ...U .. ',~ .....,., llACM •::.:=:: HUM!MTOM llACH t.\WCA ....va ==-.::. . . ==:= ... ._ ........ I A DIVISION OF TANDY CORPORATION PRIC[S MAY VARY AT INOIVIOUAL STOAES
•
=· ' ' .
ast ays
,
all 44 stores join in celebrating the
opening of Mervyn's new stores in
Mesa and Tempe, Arizona
these are only a few of the over two hundred
items now on sale in our stores
Prices effective through Saturday, March 25th
.all •12 to •14 handbags on sale
Canvas or leather-look
vinyl; organizers. shoul-
der bags and swaggers
REG. $12·$1.t
9.99
TO 11.99
20% off "Instant dress" fabric
Eyelets, long length.
reg. 60¢ in. . . . . .. 48¢ IN.
Short. pn!'lts. reg. ~ tn • 24C IN
REG. 50e INCH
40~ INCH
Eyeleu.
Shon length
1.01 off swimwear for girls
One, two-piece or bikini
styles. Nylon; polyester;
some polyester/cotton.
Sizes 4-6X, REG. M
2.99
Sizes 8-14, REG. $6
3.99
girls' tailored shirts, smock tops
Shirts in plaid patterns.
smock tops with trims
Polyester I cotton blends.
Slzea 4-6X. REG. 4.50
3.59
Sizes 7-14. REG t5
3.99
Levi's' suit separates for men
Sport c~t. ~.reg. t60 .. Ml REG. $100
v .. t S·M·L·XL. reg. •20 .. •16 •so Pa"t. WllllU 32-40, reg $20 $16
3-pc.Set
men's woven plaid sport shirts
Short sleeves: 2 chest REG. 6.99
pockets; plaids. Polyes-4 99
ter/cotton; S-M·L-XL. •
all 3.99 bath towels on sale
Cotton/polyester terry. REG.3.99
Hand toweL reg. 2 99 2.157
WMhcloth. reg 1 49 . 117 2.97
1/3 off all 10K. 14K gold jewelry
Rings. pendants, more; AEG. t2&-$132
Gold or gokf with atones. 16.69
Fine Jewelry Dept. TO 87 _gg
16% off Star Ware"' toys
Po.terl, S*ter an teta, REO. 860-4.96
puulel ~more. • '90
l'ov[)prtment ; TO 4.20
men's Qiana· nylon
dress shirts
Short Sleeve
REG.10.99
8.59
Long Sleeve
REG.12.99
9.99
The look and feel of silk with easy-care
Qiana® nylon. Full plackets, perma-stay
banded collars. pearlized buttons. Solid
colors in sizes 14 'h to 16 % .
T-strap Easter sandals
for girls
Man-made tJppers on a cushioned wedge.
.Black. white, camel Sizes 9 to 3
Shoe Department
REG. 7.99
6.·97
crew neck knit shirts
for boys
Short sleeve knits in
assorted styles. Easy-
care pc>tyester I cotton,
insiteS8to18.
RE0.4.60
3.99
men's print front knit
shirts and jerseys
Numbered jerseys,
assorted print front
shirts. Easy-care 100%
cotton. Sizes
S-M·L-XL
REG. 5.99 EA.
2FOR•9
4.79 EA.
\
Thurllday March Zl, 1978 DAILY Pll;9T J J
DittosC9 jea
for gals
20%off
HkiM~.
reg. 18.60 . . . . 1~
Saddleback styfe.
reg. t17 ....•• 13.IO
Featuring Oittosb
famoos look and fit
Polyester I cotton
brushed denim; white.
yellow, powder, nevy.
brown. Ju"'°'
sizes 3 to \5.
boys' and girl•'
guarantee~
Dura-Jeana~
'
15% off
Bova· denim or Mill.
Sizes 4 to 7. regular and stm.
~ii:,·;2.·~~·~;t
reg. 7.99 .............. f179
Boys' corduroy.
Sizes 4 to 1. regular and 8'm.
reg. $7 .........••.•.. !l.89
Sizes 8 to 12. regular and aim.
eg. $9 ............... l.59 ~ Girfs' brushed de~m. ~Sizes 4-6X. regular and aim,
reg. $7 .........•..••• 6.89
Sizes 7· 14. regular and aim.
reg. $9 ............•.• 7.59
3.01 off soft-look
junior dresses
Wide selection of short
sleeve or sleeveless styles.
Polyester. cotton or polyes-
ter/cotton. Junior sizes 5-13
Dress Department
REG. $13TO $19
All of machine washable
polyester I cotton blt!lnd.
·H~ ...... -.. or-.~OOlt. )uet ,._,. them
.... -"'9 rep9ce ...,. widl. -piil.
9.99TO15.99
save 20o/o on women's and girls' panties
women's briefs
T allofed acetate. sizes 5 to 7.
reg. 3 pr. 2.65 •... 6 PR. 4.20
TaUontd nyton, sizes 5 to 7.
reg. 3 pr. 3.45 ...• 8 PR. 6 .40
XL. reg. 3 pc 3.90 •• 6 PR. t6
TaUored oatton, siz" 6 to 7.
reg.3pr.3.75 ...... 8PR.f8
XL, reg. 3 pr. 4.25 .•• I PR. 6.60
S1rnch nylon. one size flta 4
to 8; XL flt9 lizet 9 to 11 .
Reg. 1.26 pr ........ e PR ...
l.aC9 trimmed. alzee 6 to 7,
reg. 1.60 pr ••....• I PR. 9.90
women's bikinis
Tailored nylon. white, pastels,
sizes 4to 7.
Reg. 1.15 pr ...•.• 8 PR. 6.40
Cotton: Eiderlon«i • pastels.
prints, sizes 5 to 7.
Reg. 1.35 pr •••••• 6 PA. 6.30
Lec:e utmmed, white, pm tels,
prints, sizes 5 to 7.
Reg. 1.35 pr ••.••• I pq, 1.30
Stretch nyton, white, colors;
one size fits stzes 4 to 8.
Reg. 1.26 pr .•..•••• 8 PR. t8
girls' briefs, bikinis
Print Eklerlon9 briefs. our
own brand in floral prints:
sizes 4 to 14, pkg. of 3.
Reg. 2.49 .•.•• 2 PKGS. 3.98
Our E1derlon9 brieh, white.
J>Mltef aofids: 4-14, pkg. of 3.
Reg. 2.49 ••••• 2 PKGS. a..qa
Trimmed brief-. nyton or
ootton/potyeatef: ... 4-14.
Reg. e9¢ pr ••••••• 6 PR. 2.95
TellaNd bUtln.. Ekterlon9
or nyton: *816 to 14.
Reg. 89¢ pr ....... 15 PR. 2.7'
Shop Monday· Friday 9:~9:30 ••• Saturday 9:~ ••• Cloled Elater Su~y, March 26th
CYPRESS fULLE""1N HUNTINGTON BEACH TUSTIN
1o:zD1 VdlJr/Vlewh'let----Cl.-aoedl c.m.. IZOI Ult Ycwbe L.lnd9--.-> 1111 AdmmaA~ 11112 lMne BtYd. 131 *3
31 MORE ST~ES TO SERVE YOU THROUGHOUT ARIZONA, CALIFORNIA AND NEVADA ,
I
f QAIL Y PILOT Thursddy, M•rch 23 1978
Mervire Hospitals
~Medical Techs Expand
• ' By JO\'C:f: l •. Kt:'\':\EO\
• Dear Joyce: Could you dii.cu!>s ~loaedlcal equlpmt>ot tt'chnklani.·~
-E G , Seattle, Wash.
( CAREERS J
Advancement 1s limited to
supervisory po!-1t1ons and seH-
e m ploiment, unless you return to
schoo to become a c linical or
biom edical engrneer.
CAREERS I LOCAL I CALIFOANlll
German Classics
Silent Movies Set at Sadtlleback .
Classics from Ger many's silent had the first movable camera and~
fi lm era will be screened~. ednesday filmmakers had the ab1hty to crea
evenings through April at Sad-mood and atmosphere and use heh
dleback College. mg and d~cor, even as early as
T he black and white fi lms, fro \9201>.
duced between 1920 and 1933, w1I be ,•
shown al 7:30 p.m. in Fine Arts 202 "IT' WAH A R EPE RTOIRE utili1;
on the Mission Viejo campus. mg the best talents of act.ors. technl;
cians. designers and writers," sr.a ADMISSION IS F REE and no re· said. ·-~
servatlons are necessary. Mrs. Bander obtained t he !Hm.c; 04
"The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari," a a private Joan for this series. •
i or an estim att'd 8,500 workers who
1ervice medical t•qu1pment, between
~ • .500 and 3,000 arc said to have ~kills
ttua liCying them as biomedical equip·
m e nt technicians <BMETs>. Pay
•anges from $10.000 to S23,000 annual·
l,.v; the higher fl~urt!s arc for
~uperv1sory job:..
Com munjly t•olll'i::cs and technical .:~i:'ll~:.:~.; mm created in 1920 and directed by
Robert Wiene, will open the series
' This is an expan11lng 11l rupat1on ,
and a good t·ho1r1• for 1·IN·tromcs
technicians ~ho ('l\JO\ th1• p.,~l'hlr re·
'Wards of mamtainini.! l1f1· !'>uppr,rt
@q u\ pment AMF.Ts \\ho \H1rk for
flh aoufactun•rs ma)' ha\1· lrJ\1·1 op·
portumlles here and ahroad
• TEC"llNIC'IANS JNSTAl.L, m<i1n
t.11n, adJust and rrpa1r t•qu1pment
nnging from ~ample blood warmers
tlo complex coronary-care systems.
'fhey may operate or supervise the
~uipment. including safety aspects.
~echnicaam; orten teach nurses and
~er h06p1lal staff how to use the
equlpmeal.
"" • Most BMETs arc {'mplOYl'C''i or in-
,jtvidual hospitals, contrat:l main-
4enance rums. or ~roup., of hm;p1tals
•bicb band together t1i form ··.,hared
1hvice o~ania1tions ·· A few lechn1
,ians arr .-.1•lf cmrloyc•d .ind .,,.rvi<'l'
1t1 number of smaller hnw1t.1h
~
BM ETs c. mplo) 1•d h~ m;rnufa(
i urers may work 1J1 rn thl' dt•S1f:n.
~ssembly or testinJ: of factory umb.,
f'lr < b) as ftl'ld techn1c1ans ~ho travel
to hospitals as factory represen-
tatives.
OTHE R BM E TS W O RK ror
ical research organizations and
mi ltlary s.erv1ces.
schools orfer programs that supple·
ment the knowledge of an electrop1cs
techn ician, or provide basi c
specialized training to the newcomer.
A good choice ·~ an assocrnte degree
in biomedical t(•chnoln~ v nr clec
tronics.
CERTinC~TIO'I, 1-., 1nc·rt•a.,ini;I)
important -th1 ., 1., .1 1111·a.,uq~ of
competency b' t''l'•'• ll'Ol't' ;.ind or education. Nea1 h iflo H~l ET!-. are
certified at this t1m1·
The most up to-datt• 1nformauon 1..,
found in a 1977 br1t>f, 'The
Biomedical Equipment Technician."
It's available Cor $1 from Chronicle
G u idance Publications. Moravia,
N. Y. 13118. The brief includes a list
of BMET As~ociations across the na·
lion you can contact for rareer ad·
vice.
Laguna's Adult
Classes Slated
Spnn~ tnm••'ll•r Jdult education
< lu:-.s1·.., bl·~1n ,\Jonday in the Laguna
lkal h Cnif1<'<1 Sd1ool l>1strict with
l'IJ'>st•s l·onlmurn~ throurh June 9
Cour!'>l'!'> offal'd rangt' lrom art~
and crafts lo typin~. wr1t1n~. foreign
languaJ.!l'S and nutrition.
For more information on spring
clJsses. <:all the adult education of-
f1l'e at 494·8546
tJniform Phone
JP olicies Sought
,
EARL'S
PlUM81HC
' Hf.ATIHGo
AIM COHO
C:,I l 1(_ 1 "&\1
~'"''~ ltn'f' '>tt'tfh4'' Your Ooot
t(dlt 'llOff' Nt:.tt,..\t VC>U' Art'•)
CO~TA MH&642-17SJ
HU l<Mw-t 81¥0 i · SAN FRANCts;co <·\Pl Tdeµhom· com·
~an1es must establii.h uniform rult.·' covering the
Jtts(·.losure of unhsl<•d l1•lephon<' numbers. credit
f!'kirmation and record~ of Ion~ d1:.tuncc calls. the
rullforrua Public Utilttws t:omm1s:.1on has r uled.
erJal. ...
MtHIOH VIEJo49S-0401 z"u ~"" C..01>1•1t•n• IS•n O r:rwy •I Awr P~w I
NEED A t.AWYER?
low l•gal Fee
•Divorce
• Bankruptcy
•Criminal
Teacher's Pet
Prl's1dent Carter plants a kiss on the cheek
of Elamc Barbour of Montrose, Colo .• who
was named 1978 teachc>r of the year.
April 5.
"Nosferatu," a vampire film of
1922. will be shown Apr il 12. A classi<'
tyrant film. "Dr. Mabuse. der
Spiegler," will be screened April 19
"SCHLOSS VOGELOD," T HE
ftnal film in tht' s~ries, i" scheduled
• to be sho"W-n April 2ti
Carol Bander. "ho teaches English
as a Second Language and German
at the college, wJll introduce eat h
film and encourage d1scuss1on after
the screenmgs
··Early German cinema is so
good,'' said Mrs. Bander. "Germ any
Awareness Class Set
llq~h School and from 9 to 11 a m in
room J ·2 al lhc college.
Homeowners Group
Sets Annual Me eting
The South Laguna H ills
llomeownt•rs Association has
'('heduled llS annual board of dire('
tors election Tuesday at 1·30 p.m. in
Valencia Elementary School on
Paseo de VaJ{'nc1a at La Paz Road.
The area covered by the associa-
trnn 1s <"ounty service area 8, which 1s
essentially the homes m Laguncl Hills
south or Leisure World.
MERCURY SAVINGS
II rd(.,,, 11 llllJl•H'ill f wtr
Individuals wanting to improve
their sel(·a\\ areness and rt>la
t1onsh1ps \\1th others <·•rn benefit
from Saddll·back CnJleg£>'s eight
"'eek Personal A\\art>ness class
Counselor Bob Froehlich will tn·
struct one ~cct1on or Guidance 163
Tueadsys. beginning March 28.
and Thursdays from 8 to 9 a m 1n
room K-1 at the Mission VieJO cam-
pus.
1-'rochch said the personal aware·
ness sc.,..,1ons utilize group ex·
pericntt•s for ind1v1duals who arc 1 !'>hy. ha\ l' d1H1<•ulty making friends
or find 1l d1Htcult to give or receive
affection.
E .ecultve Oll•ces· 7812 ll1mqer Ave.
Huntmqton Bcarll, CA 9:.>&47
STIMULATES young mi nds
Kathie ffodge will teach two sec·
tions beginning Wednesday, March
29, from 6 to 8 p.m. at Dana lhlls
Saturdays
in the
Save $10! LECTRA·CHEF®
Gas & Electric Barbecues
• Ml' 1~i:tr.t lhth. tea•ur~ stenerousc.oo•un~ \V"·' I\
Nr "'dt r.Jd1af1ng l•v• rocli,\ 4'1ttr'hd!'lf'
"Vll•rr tOduj., !O lii~O fOQI$ •nd c.ondt,,,tn'-r•Ut>V
• ll•S mOdllt IOI~\ •h OWll !al'• •nO wl>ttl~ lrom l)O'(I> to P<tl>O'
• "1111"Q H..embly
• "'""'9' """""""" Sii) •• ,_,..... 799'6 99 99'
DAILY PILOT
• .uuU11•rn l. l1'IOrn1 I f?p9ionJI Oll•Cc •
~ l'iS V.1fl"I V1rw !:ii (:l,,,,n3 Park Cl\ 'l'l• ~
• Oil!>~. Avalon liiv•J~ Ca•son. CA 9074t> Gl ;> R21 la~ll F0<,.~I Or., (lllkf' For,.~\) FI Toto, CA 92630 :
1001 l lmpe11.1f H"'·f. l.l Hdbll C.i\~hl' JI
4140 Loni) Beath Blvd. Long Beach. CA 90801 1o•oa1 Hl'i''i Irv n~ Blv•1, Tu~t•ll CA C!2F.Hll MOH~••ll
235 N, Citrus A·te •• Wes1 Cov111a CA 91793 11 ~0111
Derue 74" Size!
36-f'osition Banana Lounge
• J, rlu• rnm•-•rt lb'--UtyatJnul nf soff vw.yt on
t ·~I fll ... 'I "1••1ttl ff.'H'r' .. •~ 74 lon9 Jr'C) 24"' ~I
•4~ abPd.~ein•t'f'w•r
.l11u\I\ to Jb ~1-•1
• !>••!'.' \.""''JI;)<"-"'.> •""'-1.'Pol mull•·~'
8.99 F' Pacific, General ~ind Continental Telephone
panies were given 140 cfays to file new rules for
eromentageoc1es w1sh1n~ toohtain unpublished
THE PUC SAID A~ENCIES which could ask
unlisted numbt.•rs include fire and police de·
• Wills-Probate --
ttment.s. criminal justice agencies and various
e r locaJ. ~tale and federal agencies involved
h investigation or prosecution or criminal ac-~1lU!s.
i T he new rul~ st(•m from three complaints
~i1td in 1976 a~a1n..4't Pacihc Telephone and a sub·
~~quent formal probe hy the PUC into the matter r-conhdential information.
T he PUC srud that between 28 and 30 percent f~ a ll California phone subscribers have unlisted
r ·mbers.
") R F,QUESTS F'OR UNLISTED NUMBER S
tnust be in wrihn~ except in emergencies, when
he aJ!ency may ask for a number by phone.
Telephone companies may not give informa·
ion directly to a caller. but must call the agency
ack tovenfythc r equest.
Release of credit inrormation and long-
istance re<:ords may be obtained only be legal
ocess. inclurung searrh warrants, subpoenas,
ummons and court order~.
HOWEVER, THAT I NFORMATION may be ~iven lo the phone company's own collection agen-
y or another phone company and that the FRI
~y obtam Ion~ distanre records when the U S
AllQrney General has indicated m writing thal na-
tional security 1s involved
t The new rul~ al<.o say a subscriber must be
give n t he name of any a~ency which asks for the
· ne num ber, credit inform ation or long distance
records.
• I ncorporallon
• Ace ident-tnjurv
• Ev1ct1on
• Collections
640-2507
'<iHR. CONSULTATION-$10
TIU: (;tU:\T
A'1•:RIC:\'
·\ 'tll'Si:'1F.'T ('0.
Antiqu e S lots, P ins
Arcad e;(.:-:--..
Gam es .. -
2009 It. Milt Slrn l
Sa.ti All (114) m DIGS
TUES· SAT 10-S, F•t TH I ,........,c-....c--
In One Beautiful Location
In addition to compl ete mortuary services,
Fairhaven has Chapel s, Mausoleum,
Columborium, Gorden Crypts. All this is located
in a tranquil setting, hidden almost entirely
from the casual view of passing traffic. But
Fairhaven unfolds its inner beauty os you
proceed along its winding drives, lined with
trees of rare variety.
We will be pleased to discuss mortuary ond
,cemetery costs or any other detail of
importance to you. Many families are find ing
how convenient it is to have EVERYTHING IN
ONE BEAUTIFUL LOCATION.
llALl'tf W. GORDON. Mortuary Manager and KELLY W. FVSSEU
· comhine over 50 years of mortuary exoerience in serving
area families. They both extend a warm Invitation to their
many friends to stop by for a personal tour of the new
'aclllties.
f"irhoven f lemoriftl park
MORTUARY -CEMETERY
('114) 633·1"2
1702 & Fairhaven Ave. Between 'l'UStln Ave. & Qrand Aye.. Sant.a Ana
•• f
I :
Foldi ng Patio Chair
• u',, \ Jt H Jfl .. l"I '°" fml )t'\lr
•, •O\ of \()t1 pbable v1rtyt
wrap ft.IV'" j,,J ri"""" l
.,tu"1y t· '""'~ in o .. • 'fOtJ v• ,,, ~ tvft<":'"'""' t"f''r"""'1' • N1·1"'1~'a1••" •nd ti• ~Ill
iiol'IT''•\T. f'.)I) • (ht'W')Y 1' f I "'"'' I
fJ, b <N I
\ 7.99
\
I
1.9 & 2.5 Liter 'Air Pots'
• tto,~ lfY''''-: tJir r ~1 r•,) ~ 1.,..,...,
v..t uum cutrhrr with cl d•!.P''"'\..\"" tro t t
pl',• tr.I' "''"'fl c,°"Oe~ lr• ~ JU '"f\S ~ '' .. •"P' 1'.;ljiff.;11 """''·"~ 11\.i'P •1,ho •..i"-.'
• ('W'k 3 Ct')l'\t111mpty;iry "-' '!" 1t "10" Jii ti"
t'1 \ ~ ~'Vt I ''VT\ C.f .JI ("f ' .11rh'~? f -.1
JN~~
. ' ·f I
-·:"°'.:.
l 'lltrr 8 .99
to•• 12.99 .. : 1. • . .,. .
4
•
·.
MATIONAL
. ~o Marry
Country and Western singing star Merle
Haggard and country singer Leona
Williams arrive at London's Heathrow
AirPort. Merle, in London to •ppear at the
annaal Country and Western festival over E~s!er, said he is planning to wed Miss
W1lbams, but hasn't se_t a date yet.
:Genealogical
I .
!Meeting Set
I SALT LAKE CITY {AP) -Mormon church
President Spencer W. Kimball has announced
plans for a 1980 World Conference on Records
aimed Ul part of making Utah a repository of
known genealogical information on everyone who
ever hved.
Elder Theodore M. Burton of the Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Sainla (Mormon> First
Quorum of the Seventy and president of the
Genealogiral Society of Utah. said the conferenre
would attract 10,000 parl1c1panls from throughout
·lbe world ... .
BURTON SAID, IN AN INTERVIEW after the
announcement, the church expects to have by
the time of the conference computer storage
,:-apacity for every genealogical record in the
:world.
The Utah society. supported primarily by the
church, 1s described by church officials as "the
largesl and most active genealogical organizat1on
.. n the wrld.' ·
! The first world conference in 1969. also in Salt ~ake City, "resulted in a dramatic increase in the
number o( genealogical records preserved
:Worldwide on microCilm," President Kimball told
.a news conference
"WE HOPE TO MAKE ALL PEOPLE aware
l>f the need to preaerve ba.sic information and vital
ncords,'' the church leader said.
,,. Asked if one purpose of the e<>n!erence was to
-make records available tor special Mormon tem·
:Pie ordinances, Burt.on said, it was. No other men
:tion was made or the church's massive work of
~roxy baptisms and other ordLnances for the
•World's dead -pnmary reason for tls mterest 1n
!genealogy. .
• Mormons believe families c"ntinue after
:death, and that special ordinances are necessary to
!bind them together
• "THAT'S ONE OF THE PURPOSES," Burton
:said, adding. "but there are many reasons· '.4 r
:genealogy.
: He aald scientists have used church
.genealogical records to fi&bt hereditary diseases.
: Theme of the conference, to be beld Aua. 12·15,
;t980, is to be "Preserving Our Herita1e.'' About
:S,000 people were invited to the 1~ conference; '"7.800 att.eoded
ALEX HALEV, AUTHOR OF "Roots," was
·named as a conference participant. Some 200
seminars are planned on such topics as family and
local histories, genealogical research, demo-
.graphic studtes, and royalty and heraldry.
• Holding up an inch-square piece of film he said
~ontaioed the Holy Bible, Burt.On said miniatunza.
:uon of records would make it unnecessary for the
church to add to lta mountain vaults southeut of
•Salt Lake City, where historic records are kept.
San Juan
Programs
Sfuted
The San Juan
Capistr ano Hecreat1on
Department has an
nou need plans for a
numbe r of spring pro·
grams.
Each Sunday at 8 a m
beginning April 9. the
San Juan Jogging Club
will meet al lhe furthe!>t
wei.t pier at Dana Point
Each week different dis
lance runs will be of·
fered from be~inmng to
marathon distance
trauung There 11; no fee.
THE DEPARTMENT
also w1U loan ind1v1dual~
or groups a bag of equip·
ment including an as·
sortment of balls, bats
and various ot her
recreation equipment
for 48 hours A $20 de
posit 1s required which
1s refunded when the
equipment I.!. returned .
The bag<; can be
p1cked up Mondays
through Fridays
between 8 a m and 5
p m. al the City offices,
32400 Paseo Adelanto
THE GAME Mobile
will continue to/rov1de
games. arts an crafts
and sports from 3 to 4 45
p. m. at the following
locations
Moncl•y lflll-'M" JuAn
11111•41• --'"•'d•• •110 C•01\tr•l\o Tt rm1"u' l•I llt•mllM•~
-W-Mlrf -'°"' P•r> C.111 •rroyo (~Hwy J
Tll1Huh• 0 .. 1 Obllpo
P1Ayllt1"1
-~•IO•y -~Juen lltmtnl.,y
Pl•fll•ldl Scw•nq SI
• ~·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·-· .. ·-·-·-i ~ AUCTION I ii ESTATE SALE i !i I :.1 Thi• Hie lncludH proper1y from •I
the eat•te Of the late
:.·,• Mrs. Edward H. Stoteabury 1• of Palm 8each, Florida.
• • ·• I ;1 Property includ11 fine cut crystal, porcelain figurines, china sen, • ;j orient1I Ngl, bronz .. , oils, furniture, clocks, fur cottts, etc. Also, I
: • many it.ms of fine antique and modem jewelry including large i . ti die. solttaires. clustar dla. rings, dla. necklaces, and several import· • -...!i ant dla. pins. Other ml,scelltneous items include gold 'chains. I 1 i ~OS. diamond 11Ltd earrings, etc. .i
ii Sale Date: lhis Fri., Sat . ., & Sun. i
] I • at 8:00 p.m. • ~1· I n1pecdoll of property 1!
c 7:00-8:00 p.m. sale night
• Pl'OP,rtv moved for oonv1nleric. to: I
! NEWPORT GALLERIES, LTD.
1
•
2642 W. Coast Highway, Newport Btah I (714) 848-2200
c-.i. !Ml°' ~Cini. w.w ...... °'"* 1' I Ce ................. ~tll 1100 ....... ,,...
Audtonw -AffT Ll\111'41
i ..................... ~-·-·-·---·-·-. ,,
rr1'-•• ...,... ••• ~...,. .... -•• '-LJI·• w .. • • • • •• ... • • • ~ ~ ,;r ;J,
L .. P
fUllllllf "'• (llltC u·· r f \1°0 I•"
... ( .
BEACH BUM . Beach Quilt
• billowy p1llowy bea'h bum $.Often~ vour landing, th·~ wmmer •
• II 1trlltCl'l-OUI JJ •68 . •I pal'l-S up 1nto
its own 11inyf tole s11 sun lovin1 o•tterns lo clloo~I
Water B~ll Came
• llOW yOll Ctn 1119(11Cie 'lll"lf flOOll """" IWld Of by .... cMtCJlt l:IUU4 ... ,,.,. 131\ ...
~ .WirlchJdld
·~l9QUl!t0
6.99
.
/,4 ·-14.99
Golden T roplcs
Tanntna 011 & Lotton
12.99
• GUf!l• "" 2. 99 ~--.-.:ti!
HUNTINGTON BEACH OPl!N
t!untlngton Cen er Mon. ll'lrv 8al 10-1
lun.10-7
DAILY PILOT A JjJ
Plantin& Mil • rea. ..
79c 49~
89c 59c
1.29 69c
l 79 99c
Potting SoiJ
reg
4~c 29c
79c 49c
1.29 79c
Rain forest M~
• ~ronrq I~
99c
Cl1r Pots ' Slucm
From Some Very Famous Makers. ..
Spring Toppings for Him & He ~
• looking s~rs. lor soring> r1«>len1
your cuual wardrobe trom ou
superbly priced collect
• lor him ~hort sleeve t top!. ot soft cott
in a ""'"de ol brilliant color~. ~ires s. '-1. l shol't •lee~ knit shirts. many one-of ... Joiind t ,..._.IM medium !.1zes ONL v ... ~wnt $htMS Wit
r : embroider~°' 'patchWl)(k front• to pull o 1Hns or trunks for sizes s. M, l, X~
• IOI' her super soft collon den•rq
saclltts en a trio of sonng's be$t stylu
SilHS, M.
11op 2,9
l<mt shirt 5.99
LAGUNA HILLS
Laguna Hiii• Mall J
..4 I ':I DAIL V PILOT L/SC Thur1day. March 23, 1978
Senators Request Cop Aid
LOS ANGELES (AP> -Two
state senators held a closed door
hearing on the Hillside Strangler
case and later announced they
would seek more than $250,000 an
fltate runds for a rlngerprtnt
1dentification computer to aid
police io their search for the
killer of 13 women
Computer Sought in Strangler Case
Sen. Alan Robbins, D-Van
Nuys, and Sen. Alfred Song, D-
Los Angeles, who head the state
Senate Judiciary Subcommittee
on Violent Crime, told reporters
Wednesday, that police confided
in them some details of the
stranglings which must remam
secret.
quest lo the attorney general
and the governor directly.
Robbins said the hardware
would cost $250,000 with an addl
tional anticipated cost of SO
cents for each or 200,000
hngerprint sets to be pro-
grammed into the computer.
The 200,000 prints would Include
those of known sex offenders
with a history of crimes that
might be consistent with the way
the strangler has operated.
six months. has stumped tocai
investigators. Robblns said
more than $1.2 million has been
spent on investigative work on
the case and as many as 200 of·
ricers have been assigned at
times to the special Hillside
Strangler Task Force.
The last known victim of the
strangler -Cynthia Lee
Hudspeth was round nude and
strangled in the trunk or her car
m the Angeles National FOl"6t
on Feb 17
ROBBINS RELEASED ONLY
two pieces or mformatton -that
the Los Angeles County Sheriff's
Department ii; turning over its
C:Qlllput.er flies lo the city Police
Department to wd in the probe
and that the fingerprint com·
puler is being sought
THE STRANGLING CASE,
which has claimed 13 v1cl1ms In
The 20-year-old Glendale Com-
munity College coed had lived
Robbins said Assistant Police
Chief Daryl F. Gates asked for
the computer -nicknamed PIC
for Print ldent1f1cat1on Com-
puter.
"They (police) do not have the
capability to check every
fingerprint agamst fingerprint
cards on file," Robbins said-
ONLY TWO COMPANIES
manufacture such equipment,
which has not been used by any
other law enforcement agency m
the nation, he said.
If funds are approved for the
1 ·oject, Robbins said he would
~eek immediate deh-ry of a
computer from one of the two
firms -North American
Rockwell of Anaheim and
Technology Products Inc of
Sacramento.
He said 1t would take at least
two months bt>fore the computer
could be dehverl'<f_
"VERY LIKELY, THE
Hallside Strangler wtll be ap-
prehended before that," Robbins
:;aid. Ready to Fly .,. ............
Asked if he had any evidence
for such a prediction, Robbins
Teplied: "It would be good if it
happened. It 1s nothing but a
·hope_"
· The srnat ors returned to
Sacramento to pn·:.l'nl their re-
Astronauts Robert L Crippen. 40. left, and John W.
Young, 47. display the model of a s huttle scheduled for
its first orbital lc:-,t fltghl nl'~l spring. Crippen was
named pilot for the flight and Young was named com-
mander for the test. The announ<.'ement was made Wed·
ncsday al the Hou..,ton Spat'!:? < \•ntcr
Countians Promoted
Coast Businesses Advance Personnel
• ~amoel Elzbt>rg has resigned as a director and
chairman of the board of Far West Financial
' Corp., Newport Beach, and as a director of its prin-
£ipal s ubs1d1ary. Stale Mutual Savings and Loan As-
sociation.
William Elzbt-rg assumes chairmanship of
. Far West Financ-1al in adcl1tion to has duties as pres-
ident and rhll'f <'Xccut1ve oCficer_ Howard i\.
8tegel, pr~1dC'nt and <t director of State Mutual
Savings, fill:. thl' \ ..ic-ant·y on the Far West board of
directon;.
• • A. D. C'hrii.topher, Corona del Mar, has been
elected lo the board of d1rec-tors of E. C. Cochrane
& Co., Inc., an Irvine securities brokerage and in-
vestment bankmg Ctrm_
' ,
He was formerly associated with the
brokerage firm of Cruttenden & Co , Inc., as an of-
ficer and director, anct was a registered principal
of the Boston, Madwe~l. and Pacific Coast stock
exchanges.
• William R. Ford Jr., Irvine. has been promot-
ed to manager of Security Pacific Bank's Brea of-
• (ice. He is former assistant manager at that office. . • •
Gloria Doxey, Newport Beach. has been pro
moted to assistant manager or the lrvlfte Co. 's
Promontory Point Apartments in Newport Beach.
She joined the company m 1974, spending the
first year at Parkwood Apartments in nearby
Irvine. In March 1975 she moved to Promontory
Point as a leasing representative. She was named
: leasing supervisor before being advanced to the
assistant managerial position.
' •
..
George M. Johnson has been promoted to the
position of president of Shiley Scientific Inc.
lrvine, a subsidiary of Shiley Inc. '
~ He assumes responsibility for operations of the
subsidiary, which has a staff of nearly 200
engineering, research and de-
velopment personnel. Shiley
Sdeotific is involved in the re-
• search, development and pro-
du c ti on of cardiovascular
products and respiratory car('
products. including heart
valves and blood oxygenerators
• Johnson J01nc-d the or
; ganization in 1971 as a senior
~project engineer and three .a.
~years later was promoted lo '°""SOM ~ 1)l'Oduction technology manager. He became dirtt-
" tor ol research and development early in 197S prior
; to belna appointed lo the posttJon of vice pruldent,
• wtdcb 6e held ror a little ove1 1 year.
" • • ~: B4wla a. <Ted> Ftm&er, Corona det Mar, re-~ ghmat '1ce presJdent of Boyle EnOneertnc Corp .•
: 'Newport Beacb and =..:;s t>een · elected •!Wll J>Nlident of the Eaitneen A1·
' aodaUoo of Calllonla. A atatewtde oreanlaaUon ot
c!eomulUne enlineerln1 companies and Individuals,
• .. it 11 the California arm or tho 8,000·member f"' Amertcan Conllul\lng En1tneen Council. f: He II .,Ut prealdent or both the Onnge County
,:chamber of Commerce and the Oranae County A.a·
.:sodatlao.. bas bet-n an aasoclaUon member rcw
--~many ycan, fftvln1 1s a director for the past
thr y and u an otn r for two.
the Smith Tool. C.ilweld. Dnlco Industnal and
Gruner Williams ct1v1~1on:.
Smith International as a manufacturer and
supplier of dnlhng tools and equipment for tbe
energy industries and provides related services to
these 1ndustne!>
Boyer JOint:d Smith Tool m 1960 as assistant
('Ontroller, and later ""as named controller, vice
president t1dm1n1~trat1on. a nd then executive "ice
president In l!>i.i!J ht• Y.as named pre:.idenl of
~mith Tool, and 1n J97t> wa:. elected to the addi-
tional po.<,I of l:OrporJtc 'ice president • John Workman ha:-been named mining in
du&tnal manager of Oyna·Drill division of Smith
International, Inc .• Newport Beach.
lie spent the 41 1 years before joining the com-
pany with Martin Decker as product manager or
mining. In has new post he is primarily responsible
for the development of the mining and industrial
market.
Smith lnternataonal, Inc. 1s a manufacturer
~md supplier of dnlhog tools. equipment and relat-
ed services for the energy industnes • Gt"ri Bartosh, f'cwporl Beach has returned to
Petricks Porcelain Salon, Newport Beach_ Her
background m<'ludes s<•\·eral years with Bu£fams.
Armstroni(s m Pomona. 11 i years at Petricks and
the last eight months al Pacesetter in South Coast
Plata •
Barry Grosi., Irvine. has joined Biddle
Developmeai, Inc., Newport Beach, as controller.
lie is responsible for the corporate accounting de·
partment and as involved in corporate tax plan-
ning and corporate cash now projections.
In a previous position wilh Kenneth Levanthal
a nd Co., Newport Beach, he served three years on
auditing, accounting and tax assignments.
• Wes Roblllard has been appointed catering
director for the Registry Hotel in Jrvine. He is
former convention director for the Rancho
Bernardo Inn and has also been affiliated with the
Las Vegas Hilton Jnd the Winners Circle Lodge in
Del M<1r
• Gary R. lloopPr has been appointed product
mnna~er. clinical chemistry and coagulation.
Hyland Dla~nosllc<i, Costa Mesa
Has experience has mcluded work as a market
research anal)'st for Pharmaseal, division ot
American Hospital Supply, and as product
manager at Sky Climber Inc., sub5idiary of
Western Gear Corp.
Hyland Dlaanostics Is intematiof\al produeer
o f quality cofttrol and immunodiaanosUc teat
systems for the cllnlcal laboratory. • Ardis Doyle, certlOed senlot' escrow otncer,
ha" Joined Serille EHrow Cofl). u manager of the
independent escrow company's main office ln
Irvine_
Before JoinJn1 the company, she attWated with
another llceMed escrow Cirm in the south bay area
or Oran1e Count)'. She Is second vice president of
the Oranga Caunty Escrow A.,soclaUon, a member
of the advisory committee• or CoasWne Communi·
ty Coll 1e, Saddleback Community Colleae. and
Santa Ana CoUeao 1nd she teaches principles of
escrow •l Co1stlln• Commuruty CoUege. • Ced! IL lrar, NtVrport Beach, hll been
elected to tho bo.rd of d.Jrttton of Bank qt New~ Nhpert Beach.
lte,Ji chairman or the bOlrd cbld ex·
ttutJvo OlBCer ot Hines Wbol Ile Nan ne;.. IAc.:. Santa Ma.
•
just across thf street in Glen-
dale from another strangler vie·
Um, Kristina Weckler, 20, a n art
student whose body was round in
Highland Park on Nov. 20
MANV OF TUR strangler vic-
tims, ranging ih age from 12 to
28. had beM hitchhikers or pro-
stitutes who were part or the
Hollywood street scene. but vic-
tims Weckler and Hudspeth
were exceptions_
Both were quiel, studious
young women who seldom fre·
quented Hollywood.
Brown Cites
Urban Lure
Study Need
SACRAMENTO CAP) ·-
Califorruans are beginning to re
turn lo lhe cities. and govern-
ment shouJd assist by m aking it
harder to continue urban
sprawl, Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.
says_
The Democratic governor said
that is the thrust of the 45-poml
"Urban Strategy." which he
published last month
BROWN MADE HIS com
meots in an mterview recorded
for broadcast Wednesday on the
Public Telev1s1on Network ·s
MacNe1l-Lehrer Report
·-we're talking about a shift 1n
values. a shirt in the cultural
thrust or Uus count-J '' Brown
said
"We have experienced an ex-
plosion out or the cities. We are
now beginning to see an 1m-
plos1on. And as we resolve our
human relations problems. we
are seeing a greater attractive-
ness or the cities themselves
"WE HAVE Rl::i\CH ED a
point of diminishing rc•turn in
the explosion outwarrl That
turning back into the cities is a
cultural. l'Conom1(', env1ronmen
tal, demographic fact of life that
1s just now emerging," he :.aid
Bro'>' n also said government
regulallon or construction on thc-
fringes of the cities will slow
urban sprawl and make 1t more
attractive for builders to de
velop aree1s that "'ere leap
frogged over m the rapid ex
pans1on of suburbli in recent
years
He sa1d in future years. he ex-
pects to see higher population
densities in the c1t1es and
greater care to preserve c1U~
"GIVEN THE REDUCTION
in the Sile of the family, the
younger professionals moving
back into the c1t1es. the older
people who want smalll'r apart
ments. I think you're going to
see to\l.Tthouses, condominiums
and more moderate priced hous·
ing as community altitudes re-
cognize the value and the quality
or a higher density community,"
Brown said.
"{ see that return to the c1t1es,
that rebuilding of what we have,
in the sense that the throwaway
ethic and the obsolescence has
to give way lo an economy of
care and conservation and pre-
servation or what we have "
Capistrano
Home Looted
A burglar who entered via tht>
unlocked window took property
valued at $1.000 from a San Juan
Capistrano home_
Orange County sheriH's of-
ficers said the theft of stereo
equipment, a television set and
leather clothing was reported by
planner Marie Elena FuhrmaM,
35, of 31101 Calle Del Campo.
She waa oot of town at the time.
2 Held m Forgery-
uKrAn (A Pl Two Reno
men. Johnny Billinger. "!8. and
Tom Preston. 18. ~ho alll'j!t•dl)
breezed lhroul{h this :.mall
Northern Cahforma town pa~!.
mg $1,847 in bad checks at 28
businesses, are in the jail today_
police sald.
LB Fireman
Losea Radio
A Lacuna Be1dl area
fireman returned home
from flre.fi8hllna duty to
find that a lwo-way radio
b values at •1.000 had
t>een removed from his
car.
Oran1• County 1heriff's
omten a&id the theft was
reported by county
fireman Steve Wayne
Sbomber, 31902 Circle
Drive, La1una a ach.
Tb J 1aJa \be vehtcl waa
unl~ked.
LOCAL I BUSINESS I CAUFORN11
Dog Trtttks T~k
Shaw, 4-year-old Doberman. led her owner, Rita
Schroeder. left. and Rita's daughter Ltsa to their stolen
pickup truck shortly after the theft was reported Wed-
nc~day 1n Stockton. Mrs. Schroeder says she told Shaw,
··Find iL" <1nd the dog led her about four blocks to stolen
\ ch1<.'lt·
Special Swimmers
Hope to Make Splash
By JACKIE HYMAN
Ol tlw o .. 1y ,.,.._ s1a11
Volunteer coach Helen Fernandez faces some problems with her
future Olympic swimmers that most coaches never run into.
Some <'an 't speak to her and have trouble understanding her direc-
tions Some al-;o have problems controlhni:: their movements.
But. says Ms Fernan<f<•z. -·waler 1s an equalizer " And she isn·t
about to let a few handwap" -;top
ht'r nine·member learn from
rompetmg in lht:> Oran~r Countv
Sp<'r1al Olympic'> April 30 1n
Fullerton
"TH ESE CHILDREN can do
things in water that they <'an't
do on land .'' sa1ct Ms
Fernandez, a Newport Beach re-
sident and a lifelong swimming
enthusiast.
'These children can't climb a
jungle gym or play hopscotch,
maybe." she sauJ. "but once
they·re in the water vou can't
teli" them from anv other child
They know this · · -
Although this )ear v.111 be !ht•
f1r~t t1mr the>} eompt't1..·. :\b
Fernande1 ha.s been working
with hl'r kam member.s for
three ~cars. The youngsterc...
who range in age from 9 to about
19. attend Lindbergh Elemen
tary School and Parsons TMH
!trainable mentally re -
tarded> School. both 1n Costa
Mesa
THIS WILL BE the first
special olympics swim team
from the Newport-Mc-sa School
D1stnct, Ms Fernandez said If
the students wan at Fullerton.
they will f!O on to the Southern
California Spec-1al Olympac-s
June 23-25 in Santa Monica and
possibly to the 1979 1nterna
ttonals in :"cw 'l ork
The team grew out of a two-
week afterschool swim program
at the Orange Coast YMCA in
Newport Beach several years
ago, Ms. Fernandez said. She
was an Instructional aid al
Lindbergh School and volun·
teered to assist YMCA personnel
in the brief swimming course for
her TM R studenls-
With the cooperation of YMCA
aquatics instructor Ivy Gorman,
Ms_ Fernandez went on l<>
establish a program in which
two to three students at a tame
rt"cc1ved up to a month or af.
tl'rschool sw1mm1ng instruction
"STARTll'\G IN September, I
.said. 'Hey, we're ~01ng to haH• 11
swim team.... Ms f<'ernandl't
said
So she chose nme or her best
swimmers. who practice three
days a week Cor an hour and a
hair at the YMCA_ Six suffer
from Down's syndrome and
many have coordination pro·
blema.
One glrl has dlffirulty 1pre1d-
ing her arms but can swim wt°'
a ntpperlike breast st.toke, Ms.
Fernandez said. "You wouldn't
believe the speed," she added.
ANOTHER PROBLEM arises
because student~ love lhe
freedom of swimmin& under
water and have to be persuAded
to swim on the surfac&, she snid
M 1 Fernandez look adv an
lace or the fact that her swlm
mera, especaally the boyt,
stron1l1 identafy wllb TV
heroes.
"I Lold~e bo that Baretta always nrims he Rurface, to
now he " she said "J ~ ' .
---.
\
~t>ll '1ust like Barella'~
him.and he 1ust goes crazy "
OTllF.R PROBLEMS invotv~
imtllllni:: c-ompetit1\'eness. She
askt·d on<' boy to swim two
kni::ths of the Pool as fast as he
coulci and he nskC'd, "Why""
··They have no competitive:
ness basi('ally." Ms. Fernandes
said "They're very kind)
gracious kids."
Bt"nent.s t.o the swimmers art
"self esteem. very important.~
Ms. Fernandez said. "ll give$
them self-respect, dignily. jU$
does wonders with their egoes
and gives them a sense or aci-
comphshment
"TllE MORE THEY prognisf
in th<• v. alcr, this spills over intb
tht> cla:.<,room." she said. "Thq
do hettrr Parents have told m>
thr' r<' l'alm<'r. qu1<'ter ·
Tht• youngstrrs are otherwis:it
shut off from most normal socia'
outlets ·It's e1lher wat.ch TV~
!\ t a r e i n t o s pace. ' ' M !l.
Fernande1 said
She noted thol the cit,y if
Costa Mesa has recently started
a recreational program f<'r Tifft
students two aflernoona a wee&.
In addltJon, the YMCA Is seel·
Ing funds to permit a swim dm
for interested TMR students Ult
other three anemoon1 durf'IW
the wcok. •
"WE'D LIKE TO hive a ~
lf'am." said Ms. Femandea. b1ft
noted she and her three vol"'·
lterai ~an't handle more studerue
v. lthout nddltloo11l help •
M aybf> " big success at t"9
11pcc1al olympics would draw the
1ntcre1t ind runds that are
needed, ftta. Ferna~1 hopes.
Does she lhln.k her team will
win"
"We b1ve a tremendous
c·han.-e," o aa.id.
I
-
~NTEATAINMENT I LOCAL .. Thuf'lday. Match 23. 1975 DAIL'( PILOT A I:;
f.
Surgery ·'Sheer Luck' c .. ,_,_,
DeUa McGarry,
22-year-old Miss
San Clemente,
is one of the 50
entrants who
will be compet-
ing for the Utle
of California
Citrus Queen on
opening night of
the 63rd Na-
tional Orange
Show lri San
Bernardino
March 00.
Wlalle in lail
Mayor Wins
Second Term _ i ·TV Director Survives Quinttiplet Byp888
~ By HANK GRANT
I ......... ,_.__
Its mol'e than sheer luck that Barry Shear is
<halo alld hearty and ready to renew b1a director
; action with Columbia TV's two-hour verite movie f for NBC, .. In&ide the KKK." It's not generally
, known that Barry underwent open heart sureery
tat Cedars-sinai 1n January -a quintuple bypau
J operaUoo (a record number?) for arteries to bia
J. heart that were so clogged his doctor l'Ul5bed him ~into surgery less than an hour after he'd diagnosed
\ Barry's ailment. The miracle, aside from making f rnedical history, ls that Barry now f~ls and acta t 20 yean younger. Dramatic as "Inside the KKK"
'I will be., more dramatic would be •·Ioside Barry i Sbear."
( · IUI lreland'1I showing the t.Own lo her visiUJ\g ! brother from Irela nd. And would actor John
dae.r on record, a cl06~ contender is 20-yr.-old
Gree H. Sims, whose flrst pie, "Get It On!" is ~ine readied for release. He'll pop his second pie,
.. Jimmy Diamond: Top Secret.'' come April on
locaUon in Wash10gton. Like the song goes, they
tried to tell us we're too young?
Jl's been a long haul of sub rosa negotiations,
but lt appears that ABC wHI be the web to collar
Paul Newman for his telemovie
debut. In a property of his
choice, no doubt, and for report-
ed salary of a quarter-million
bucks plus a few fringe benefits '
(like foreign theatrical rights?)
• . • Jack Carter buzied us
from Palm Springs to assure
RICHFIELD SPRINGS. N.Y. (AP> -MayO,r
Edward M~ki. in i..U oo cbaraes ot al'$0D and
second-de1ree murder, bu been elected to a.
second two-year term.
He scored a 245-52 victory Tue.sday over a
write-in candidate.
..
Man:esk:.l was char1ed !Mt week in ooanectioll wltb a New Year's Eve flre in which a 73-year-old
man died. Two Herkimer meo ban beeQ char1ed ·
with Maneski, a Democrat who a1ao aervee as ~ .
councilman on the Richfield Tuwn Board.
Maneeld ls aleo a former Richfield town
superviaor and served many 1ean u vWai't .. clerk.
,f' ~ ' 'w CJa
J, M~~ ~ ........ t~ ...._ ,,,/ 1
.. .......,. a walking cast m "Luv" with
Ireland believe that John
Ireland is also the moniker of •
Jill's brother" ••. New Two
You; Bob Crane and Sandra
Giles, munching again at Mat·
teo'!. ... StJU Steady As They
Go: George Hamilton and
Barbara Carrera ••. Ditto:
his pals that even tbougb be h~tu~~~ina~~~.-----------------~,------------------
lutweek.he'scarrymgonwith. P~MNG HOS
Shella Mac8ae at the town's Center Theatre.
. Carter says every night ts a surpnse gas with the
, surprise walk-on role at the finale. Tbus far: Bob 0 R HOSTESS Hope, Plall Harris and Buddy Rogers, with Frank
Slnat.ra due on a 01ght of rus choice. The sbow
must go on, too, for Sinatra and Hope, because ~he ~·. ·~·. -.. f •• ,,. I
ii \ J ·4'
Karen Gorney and direct.or
John Badham • • . And the new
togetherness of BeraadeUe
: MAATIN Pe&era and comedian Steve i M artia reach~ a peak when they tandem a bill for
. the flrst lime startlng June 22 at tbe Riviera in Las ! Vegas ••• Add to our item aboat 18-yr.-old
· LawreDCe Follies being the youngest movie pro:
~Collllty Resident
'.Nruned to Board
' Laguna Htlls resident A H. Khazoyan has been
re-elected to the board of directors of Goodwill In-
. duatries ot Southern California.
Kbazoyan is prealdenl of Kbazoyan Brotbers
~i.O Pasadena and will serve on the board unW 1981.
Goodwill lnduatries of Southern California, a
non-profit organization, emplo~ more than 750
disabled and d.lsadvanlaged people in repairing
and prepartng public donatiooa for sale.
THEF\\1lL\ crncus. By Bil Keane
&
"let's toke o commercial break."
•
:l'o
rainstorms have completely devastated the ID· FOR EASJER? tersecting Bob Hope Drive and Frank Sinatra
Drive in Palm Springs with mud up to here. Carter •
cracks: "I wori't say the rains were murder here,
but I got a t.icllet for driving against the current!"
New Two You: Muscleman·turned-actor · · ... SERVE LA AIA]_ Arnold Scbwaneae11er a nd Maria Shriver
<Sargent's daughter) .•. Still Steady As They Go:
JobnWayneandPatStacy ... MyBritisbSpySirLee. WONDEROUS 'Sm Irk reports that Andy Wllllams, in London t.o pro-
mote hts new record album. made a quick side trip to
Paris JUSl to buy several pairs of Chrfstlao Dior's
pankboxershorts(tomatch shyAndyblushings?)... COCKl"AILS Seems that Rudolph Nureyev has finally found the
girl of hisdreamsin French heiress Douce Francois.
Everywhere he goes, she goes.
Isn't Warner Bros. gonna jump the gun with a
first bid for screen rights to Oomden·Green's "On & YiO u WON'T lhe 20th Century,•• now an indisputable smash bit on B 'way? . . . Tbe character named "Marlo
La.ua., in the Toa1 llandall Show bas gotta go, ac·
who have so notified MTM Enterprises ... New cording to attorneys for the late Lama's estate, L/i.~ AN EGG
Two You: Woody Allen and .lea.a vu dee lleanL
And it's gotta be love if Woody spells her name
correcUy ... Steady As They Go: composer ff. B.
Barnum and Wm. Morris agent Naola Adair ...
Ditto: Rebttca Baldlng and Bruce Dnison. And
il's gotta be love because Rebecca is scheming to
wangle a leave from hPr "Soap" series chores to
v1s1t with Bruce on his Munich location for "Brass
Target" with J ohn Cassave&ea, George Kennedy,
. Sophia Loren. et al. « .. ..
PhyWs George and hubby Bob Evans wm
have a new neJghbor an real estate tycoon Richard
Cohen, who's ju.sl bought. the
manse next door to theirs in
B evHills for 750Gs. Maybe
notso new, or didn't Richard on-
ce have a romance brewing
with Phyllis? ... My New York
spy Fre1da Moggen report.a
that A&P heir Haotlnctoa
Hartlord gave up his court fight
to halt ahmony payments of
90Gs per year to ex-wife Dlaae
because s he's liYing with OEo•oa
another man in Gotham. He couldn't lick a recent
State Court of Appeals ruhng that ex-wives are
sllll entitled to alimony even ll lhey do have live-in
lovers ... Rodney Dangerfield sends along this
sign in the window of a dry cleaning lhreadery in
Las Vegu. ''Whl.le You Gamble, Why Not Get
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Al DAIL'( PILOT lhurlday March 23, 1978 CALIFORNf4
'Tax Cut Bills ComparetJ,------------..
,
California Voters to Decide in Jone Ballot
SACRAMENTO CAP) -When
Cali.foruia ~ choose June 8
between the Jarvis tax cut in·
!t_iatlve and the Legislature's tu ~t pla.o., they will also decide
whether to adopt dJtterent tax
ntes for bomea and other pro.
W!Y· .. This would be a split property tax roll. But 1t bas been all but
torgotten in the debate over ~arvis and the Legialature•a SB
,.. , lb)' Sea. Peter Behr. R·Tlbulon.
• r. ti t
A SPLIT TU roll could have
11npred.ictable loae-ranp effects
OD the tax slructure. •
Here ii bow the split roll l NEWSANALl'SIS J
t:31vutd work, and bow it fits into • f e dispute:
.. -Tax critic Howlll"d Jarvis'
•. lnitlatlve, Proposition 13 on the
Jane ballot. cuts taxes on all
property -including homes.
hslness, farms and apartments
.~ -an average of 57 percenL It
does not replace the estimated · "1 billion annuaJ revenue loss to 1ocal government.
-THE BEHR PLAN, which
..... ,.,...,.
TARGET OF DEBATE
Critic Howard Jervla
assessments in other parts of the
city or county.
"As it's now conceived. one
can't say any single homeowner
will have his or her taxes
restricted to the cost of laving in-
dex increase in any single
.year." &?hr said. "Wjth cyclical
reappraisal, there will b<! a yo
vo eCCect for 1nd1v1dual
homeowners · ·
has been IJ"OWl.Dc rapidly with
reassessments -and the aha.re
paid by othel" prpperty tax-payers.
Between 1973 and 1976, the as-
s eased value of homes in
California increased 6S percent
while the aasessed value of te.n·
t.aJa increased 25 percent.
COMMERCIAL PROPERTY
went up 39 percent, industrial 34
percent, uUliUes H percent,
rural properties 13 percent, and
vacant urban land S percenL
The split roll is also essential
to the Behr tax pJan.
Behr's plan cuts taxes 32 per-
cent at a cost of $1.4 billion an-
nually. while the Jarvis plan
needs $7 billion annually lo cut
taxes by 57 percent.
The only way the Behr plan
can give tax cuts approaching
the magnitude of the Jarvi! in·
itiatave ls to limit the tax cuts to
homeowners, which requires the
spilt roll.
BUT TIIE SPUT roll. and the
manner in which the Behr bill
would use it, bas other effects:
-Proposition 8 puts a prohibi-
tion in the state constitution
against using taxes from com·
mercial and other non ·
residential properties to reduce
homeowner taxes. But that
doesn't give farmers, busi-
nessmen and apartment owners
any tax cul
....
"
,
I '
~o.,,C. a· (\Ct'\\ \0 ,,,/ SiJ.\I(!~~ ~{\:.(\ft'\ (I \_,...--/
\ \\)~? _/ .. ,, ./ /
,./ /
..
H ey, Element<lry Kidc;! .
Thousands of chocolate eggs to be tound !
And hundreds of pnzes,too.
Cc&blu
\ ilta~f' Cf'ntf'r
•. r ;<•;r111 IH OIH\1' ... NE~·"O". I • t
uts property taxes on owner-
J)Ccupied homes by an average
cf 32 percent, is financed from
the state budget surplus. It lakes
effect only iC Proposition 8 1s
passed and Proposition 13 is de-
feated.
-Proposition 8 by itself only
allows the Legislature lo tax
owner-occupied homes at a
lower rate than other property.
Jn addition to that, Proposition 8
also would trigger the tax cuts Ul
the Behr b1U, and it would im-
pose Behr's revenue limits on
Jocal government.
BEHR SA.ID IF Propos1t1on 8
passes. he has follow-up leglSla-
tion that would smooth out the
yo-yo effect 10 three to five
years.
Sen Albert Rodda, D
Sacramento, who chairs the --======-=-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Senate Finance Committee, says
that is Justified because it is the
homeowner who has suffered the
most 10 recent years from re-
Those hmils are designed to
automatically force tax rate
cuts when assessed values rise.
But individual homeowners
"'1ould suU face 5leep property
lax incn•a.s!'s when their homes
are reassessed
The revenue limit is based on
a cost-of·serv1ces scale that 1s
slightly higher than the con·
sumer price index Most
analysts believe at would hm1l
the i1terease in revenue from
property taxes to around 8 per
cent to8hpercentannually
assessments.
-HOMEOWNER TAX relief
in the Proposallon 8 package is a
percentage of the tax bill, which
means the tax relier will in-
crease wtth inflation. Renter re-
lief as a flat $75, which will lose
\ alue if inflation continues.
TRAT~ BECAUSE TllE ~·
venue lirruts apply to a city,
county or distncl's entire tax
~· roll. If one-third or one-fourth of kl tbe tax roll is reassessed each
year, which is the case in most
When assessments increase
faster than that rate -which ha~
bet.>n the case statewide m recent
years -automatic tax rate cul'\
would be imposed to hold the total
revenue down to the 8 percent to
8 1fl percent ceiling.
REASSESSMENTS WOULD
be subject to the ceiling, but the
taxes from new construction
would be outside the limit.
Apartments are lumped
"'1th commercial properties on
the less favored tax roll. which
means renters have no reason to
t•xpt'ct rent cuts comparable to
the tax cuts promised
homeowners.
·'You can expect a greater
s hift in the tax burden onto ren·
tal and commercial property,"
Rodda said. "Combined with the
fixed dollar amount of renter re-
lief. you have a dual effect
which is negative toward the
renter So that as going to put
pressure on us in the Legislature
to increase renter benefits in
future years ·•
..
counties, those reassessed pro-
)>erties would shoulder a bigger
-portion oI the tax burden wtule
the tax rate cuts would apply
across-the-board.
Between reassessments, a
homeowner would benefit from
tax rate cuts caused by re-
A number of stales have had
split rolls for years.
The reason for the splat roll as
to freeze the current ratio
between the bomeowner's share
or the property tax bill which
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~·a-usine-ss _____________ _sino~ts ---_, lhu"dB'f. Man:h 23. to78 DAILY PILOT .c ; •
It's a Dream.· Com.e True for Bra~ning.~
By HOWARD L. HANDY
OI ... o.llJ Pllet 5'-'1
When Rach Branning was a
senior at Marina High School
Oluntington Beach), he was
look mg for a university to attend
where he could fulfill a lifelong
dream.
Branning picked Notre Dame
University and is on the verge or
completing that childhood
dream this coming weekend
when the Irish play Duke in a
semifinal game Saturday ( l p.m., Channel 4) with a good
chance of reaching the NCAA
basketball championship game
Monday night in SL Louis.
••ves, this is somethini I
dreamed about before I was in
high school," Branning told
the Daily Pilot by telephone
Wednesd~y night. "I used to
watch the NCAA champ1onsbips
on television and dream ot being
there mysell.
··our first goal this year was
to reach the playofts. Then, once
we got in, it has really been
something. Now we are shooting
for the NCAA champion.ship and
thut may be a once in a lifetime
thing. .. But right now, we aren't wor-
ried about the nahonal cham-
pionship. We are thinking about
playing Duke Saturday and then
if we win, we'll think about the
championship."
He tells or his pursuit or an
education or higher learning and
how he carefully selected a
school.
"I looked at the caliber of
players and I saw some very
good, young players here at
Notre Dame," he says. "I felt
MICKEY MANTLE, JR. SWINGS A BAT AT YANKEES SPRING CAMP.
Houston
No Match
For Jabhar
HOUSTON (AP) -Houston
roach Tom Nissalke praised Los
Angl'les center Kareem Abdul-
J abbar following the Lakers'
v1dory ovt>r the s lumping
Rockets Wednesday night.
··ue·s the greatest basketball
player of all titne." stud
Nissalke "JI was JUSt ciifficult to
slop him When he is making
tough shots hkc that, there 1s not
much you can do to stop him "
Jabbar poured in :n points,
hauled down 14 rebounds and
blocked eight shots as the
Lakers stomped tho Rockets.
12·1-106, in a National Basketball
Assoc1alJon game.
Jabbar's 31-point performance Jcft him only 24 points shy of the.
20,000 mark. a feat ac.
complished by eight NBA
players.
"I haven't been hitting my
Jump shots rccenUy but I was
tonight and it complimented my
other shots," Jabbar said. They
t Rockets) tried to play ag.
~ressive defense against me. but
I think I can hold my own
against any center Jn the
league."
Los Angeles connected oo 6.'J
percent ol its field goal attempts
while lowering its magic
number for clinching a playoff
spot in the NBA's Western Con·
ference to ei~ht games
Calvin Murphy notched a
game· high 36 points for Howiton,
which dropped its 13th straight
contest
Mantle Makes Bid
Mickey's Son Gets NY Tryout
HOLLYWOOD. Fla. CAP> He is in the right town
Where else but an a place called Hollywood would you find the
son of Mickey Mantle trying out for the New York Yankees?
The face and the batting style are pleasantly familiar.
Young Mantle look s and swings like his father. The question
Yankees officials wonder about is whether he hits that way
Loo.
He 1s 23 years old. a senior citizen in the sea of
youngsters working out at the Yankees' minor league train·
ing complex. He knows his age 1s against him. He knows the
fact that he hasn't played baseball for five years is against
him. But Mickey Mantle decided he wanted to lry and when
the Yankees heard that, they invit.ed him to their camp. It is
the only place for a guy named Mantle to be
.. I sold insurance for a while and I was an assistant golf
pro at a course in Dallas," Mantle said "But I decided I
didn •t want to do those things and I thought of baseball l'm
getting old and I wanted to take a shot before it was too late "
Young Mantle talked the idea over with his rather whose
l7·year Yankees career 1s chronicled in baseball's Hall of
Fame.
"We had qUJte a long talk last winter,·· Mickey said.
··ne·s never pressed me into baseball He said If he had
worked with me the way his dad worked with him, I'd have
been in pro ball, maybe even the big leagues two or three
years ago.
"I think, dei!p down, he always would have liked to see
me play ball. He said he'd help me any way he could.•'
There is no contract or guarantee.
"He's here on a trial basis," said Jack Butterfield, the
Yankees vice president in charge of player development and
scouting, "We'd be delighted to sign him if he shows the
necessary skills "
There arc some tough roadblocks facing him. Perhaps
the biggest is his age. He 1s starting late in professional
baseball.
When Mickey's dad was 23, he batted .306 with 37 home
runs and 99 rbis. He was in his fifth major leaaue season aod
that was the year he became a rather ror the first time. Three
more sons, David, Billy and Danny, followed but none was al·
tracted to athleUcs as strongly as the first boy, lhe one the
)tantlesnamed Mickey.
Now baseball has become a serious business as the
youngster bids for a pro contract
"I would llke lo play !or the Yankees but I've got to show
potential."
Butterfield watched him swing.
"He cocks his head just like Mickey did," he said.
Jn Hollywood, stranger things have happened.
the potential was here and that I
could do something to help. The
sooner J.be better as far as I was
concerned. ll is also a fine
academ,jc school and combining
that with basketball made my
decision.••
D~s he think Notre Dame is
building a basketball dynasty
similar to that at UCLA under
John WOOden?
"I don't think there wtU ever
be a dynasty Jike UCLA put
together because there Is too
much balance these days. There
are great players all around and
1t would be pretty hard to do
anything Uke that now. Yes,
Notre Dame will have some ftne teams IOI' several yeers -but
there are others with a lot of
talent, too . .,
For the record, Branning is a
sophomore In tbe starting
lineup. Kelly Tripucka, another
starter, it a 6-T freshman. Bruce
Flowers, a tbird starter and
early-season starter Bill Laim-
beer both have at least one more
year ol eligibility. And the Irish
have some other outstanding
freshmen iD reserve roles.
Spons in Brief
NCAA Swimfest
Begins Tonight
LONG BEACH-The 55th
NCAA swimming and diving
championships are under way
tonight (7) at Belmont Pla:z.a
with the finals of the SOO.yard
freestyle, 200 individual medley,
50 free, 400 medley relay and
one-meter diving scheduled.
Four time kmgpio Southern
Cal will be trying to repeat
against the challenges of Ten
nessee, Auburn and Alabama
Among the star-studded field
1s former Mi:.s1on V1eJo HJgh
star Brian Goodell of UCLA.
Goodell, a freshman, is the
world record holder and gold
medal winner at the Montreal
Olympics in the 400 and 1,500·
meter freestyles
Tonight he competes in lhe 500
free where he's expected lo be
challenged by SM U 's Andy
Veris. Harvard's Bobby
Hackett, Tennc:.scc's Kent
Martin and Tim Shaw of Cal
State <Long Beach>.
Action contihues Friday and
Saturday with prellms at 11
am. and finals al 7 pm.
Angel. Lo•~ .. 1·6
PALM SPRINGS -Jack
Clark tut a two.run home run
with two out In the top or the
ninth inning to give the San
Francisco Giants a Hi exhibition
baseball victory over the
Cahforrua Anf!els Wednesday.
The Angels• Nolan Ryan
pitched the first five innings for
California and allowed rour
runs.
~•Ed~9-a
MIAMI Dilly Smith scored
the winning run. capping a four·
run llth·inning rally, as the
Baltimore Orioles outlasted the
Los Angele~ Dodgers 9 8 in an
error-plagued exhibition game
Wednesday.
The teams l'ombined for 12 er·
rors -six by each club. Nine of
the 17 runs were unearned.
Evert. Wade Win
PfllLADELPlllA -Chris
F.Htt and Vingin1a Wade sur·
\.I\. ed ~trong challenges Wednes·
day night to win matches in a
\\Omen':. pro tennis tournament
hl•re
Evert overcame the challenge
of ReginJ MJrs1ko\a, 4 6, 6·3, 6 O
to reach the quarterfinal round.
Wade completed the first
round or play by defeating Kris·
tien Shaw, 7.5, 6·2.
Wendy Turnbull barely sur·
vived in a match that came
down to a third·set tiebreaker
before a decision over Terry
Holladay 3.-6, 6-4, 7-6.
Rosie Casals defeated JoAnn
Russell, 6-2, 1-6, 7-5 while Kathy
May defeated Lesley Hunt 6·3.
6·0, Glynis Coles eliminated
Ruta Gerulaihs, 6·3, 6-0 and
Virginia Rmici ousted Katja Eb-
bingbaus, 6-1, 6·3.
KSV Oii PrefJatio11
MANHAITAN, Kan. -The
Big Eight Conference bas placed
Kansas State University's foot·
ball team on probation becau:.e
it signed 43 players to
scholarships last year -13
more than the rules allow,
SeaUle Coaf!h Out
SEATILE -Bill O'Connor n·
signed Wednesday after six
years as head basketball coach
· at the University of Seattle.
O'Connor had a career record
of 73-87 at Seattle including
marks of 11·17 overall and a 6·8
in the West Coast Athletic Con·
ference this season.
Surf Tumbles
To Rochester
The Rochester Lancers scored
three goals in Just three minute•
near the end of the first half tc
post a 5·1 North Amencan Soc
cer League exhibition victory
over the California Surf Wednes·
day night at Anaheim's La
Palma Park.
The Surf did not score until
seven minutes remained in the
game.
Francisco Bolota put the Lan·
cers ahead 1-0 after 17 minutes.
I.ate in the first halt Rochester
got the quick series or goals by
Abraim Silva, Mike St0Janov1c
and Joseph Horvath
Jim Roth of Rochester and
Manuel Cuenca of the Surf
scored the only goab of the
second half
Branning was selected
player ol the game in t..o o
three playoff eames in t
NCAA championships so far. }
.. I was very honored," b
says, "but I also realize bask.el
ball is a team game and lbatlw
are reaching our peak now.
"I think the tough schedule w
had helped us to reach this
because we realite we are ca
ble of playing with any team
the country."
Did he notice the success of
Cal State (Fullerton> i.a winnlni.:
See Bra.nn.lng, Page ll·Z
RICH BRANNING
Barazztitti
Missing;
Dibbs Wins
J
LAS VEGAS (AP) -Corrado
Barazzutti of Italy did not sho~1 up for his opening round malcni
al a $200,000 World Cham
pionsh1p Tennis tournamen
Wednesday night, and WCT of
f1cials said they had received n
word from tum.
A WCT spokesman said it wa
reported Barazzutti left Rom
on Monday en route to Las
Vegas. A spokesman for the Las
Vegas .Metropolitan Police saict--
Wednesday night that no miss·
mg person report had beeo filed
with Las Vegas authorities.
Barazzutt1, 25, had indicated
he was eager to play in the
Tournament of Champions.
which has $.5,000 guaranteed for
each player and $60.000 to th~
winner when the tournam•nt
winds up Sunday.
Barazzutti. who 1s not fluent in
En,i.:hsh. became one of the
world's top ranked players U\
1977 whl'n he won $106,994 in
prize money.
While officials continued to
hope Barazzutti would appear-
Wedncsday night, they moved
his scheduled match against Cliff
Drysdale· to late evening, and
the match between Eddie Ditbs
and Ken Rosewall was moted
up
D1bbs defeated the 43·year-o1cf
Rosewall 6·3. 6-4. Then Dryscbth·
defeated Tim Gulhkson, a Ja.c;t
minute substatutc for Baraz"'t1,
6·1, 6 2.
For. Kentrreky Satiuday
Hogs Planning No Tricks '
ST. LOUIS CAP) -In spite of
a scar<' thrown at Kentucky by
Michigan State last week,
Arkansas docs not plan to flag
down the Wildcats with a zone
defense when the two collegiate
powers colhde.
Razorbacks coach Eddie Sut-
ton pledged that Wednesday
while weighing his fifth-ranked
team's chances against No. 1
Kentucky in Saturday's semi·
finals of the NCAA basketball
tournament at the
Checkerdome.
"At ttus point or the season, I
don't think anybody's going to
put any tricky plays in or just
ditch what has ~otten them to
where they are,'' Sutton uld
from Fayetteville, Ark . dunng
a telephone news conference.
"We're basically a man·to-
man basketball team," he
added. "Wh at's going to ~ a
key as far as we're concerned 1s
defensive board play. 1 think it's
the biggest problem we'll face
with a team hke Kentucky."
While Sutton rejected de·
fensive alterations for Ken·
tucky, 28-2, which got by
Michigan Stale 52·49 for the
Mideast Regional title, Wildcats
coach Joe Hall was equally
against change.
"There are things 1 feel are er
fective against his club that
we 're jU3t not capable of doing,"
Hall said of Arkansas, 31-3.
"Quickness has been a pro-
hlem for us," Hall said, alluding
to problems Kentucky might
face if 1t attempted to capittlizc
on the apparent weaknessel of
tts foe against pressing de-
fenses.
The sentiments on strategy
voiced by Halt and Sutton were
echoed in large part by NOtre
Dame coach Digger Phelps and
Duke coach Bill Foster, ~e
teams will clash in the other: ball
of Saturday's double-header.
.. [just think that we've got to
play with what brought us
here," said Phelps, whose 1'o. 6
Irish, 23.fi, flattened three oppo-
nents . rncludrng lhjrd·ranked
De Paul 84 64, en route to the
Midwest title.
Houston led 59-54 early in the
third quarter, but the Lakers
~cored the game'a next nine
points and were never headed.
Charlie Scott and Norm Nixon
fueled e 12·4 Los A.n1eles spurt
later in the same quarter &a the
Rockets lost their eighth
stra\1ht bomt games.
Ticket Scalpers Making It Big "Obviously, that's our pth
and our being physical. We're
not looking to change &nJ ot
that," he added. ''( think ba dis·
cussing Duke that Bill Foeter 1 has done an excellent job of 1et·
ting his kids to play basketball" I Scott and ?flxon 1cored 20 ahd
18 points foT tho Lakers who took
their seventh victory in their
lat1t t 1 road contest.a.
"We're aryin& to bulld
momentum tor the playorr1."
said Lakcrs roactt• Jerry WaL
l.Ot ..... l.U tl~•l -0...1 .. y 11. 11....i ,.
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&At A11tefe t4 • 81 Jf.-1 M .• .._. I Jr ti ,...._.
,.., ... --ll!WIM. ~ ,.,, ,.., -..... l """'•Ul,HMlftlAA-1,•
LEXINGTON, Ky. CAP> -
Newspapers tblt week have
been replete With c1usllltd ad•
vertlsement.s for tic Ir eta o tho
NCM toumamtll.t lb St. U>uls.
Sollle ban been p1alnUve,
some desperate, otherl •mug.
Moat were from Milt , bul
ther 1 ftO f ana
wantin• to ~. On 1d rt
four tfcltet to tli K tuc 7
I> rb1 i1l trade. ~uy 01 ft aeaied, anted
to mMt 1.n St. Louil, wbtn Ken·
tucty, Arkansas, Dute •nd
Notre Damo wtll battle for the
n•llonal buke,baJl cbam-
ptObJhlp.
Wednesda)''I Lexlnaton
Herald and Lexington Leader
ftaturcd 11Gveral 1ucll td1:
"Wanted -NC,t;,\ T\cltets.
lmpov rlahfod ri!Cent u~ erad
n_!!tde one J>r twp reaaon1bly
prICea NCAA Uc . Dcspe.rat
••• A.at for Jlcn. ''
• " or -4 NCA~ lioaJs
Uckell ••• Make oUer."
The affOOd ad ~arrled an ln·
dlan1 phone number. Other•
were J>l•ced from Miuourl,
WlscoNJn, Tenneuee, Vlrpua
aJ1d two from Georgia. There
were several, of course, from
.round Kentucky.
A c&ll to a Lexinaton li1lln1
turned up a man who had suc-
ceeded ln roundln1 up ei1Ch\ sets
of the coveted ducats. which ln·
eluded tkketa for both semlfintl
and final rounds in st. Laub.
He said ~ ~dill rour from 1
man In St. Louis and the rest
from the manager of a J.C. Pen·
ney Co. store in Mllwaukee -
"He sent 'em COD and I got 'em
this morning" -at a total cost
ol $400. He kept four set.s and
M>ld the rest for '200 each -1
neat $400 profiL
''IC I'd had 20 sata, I could
hove sold 'tm," ha said. "In
!tel, tho darned phone's been
rtn1ln1t off the hoolt all day. ll'1
u.ctbe.1.ievable. People. have fot
See Sca.fpen, P•Je B-t
Duke's Foster. a longtime
friend of Phelp.s, returned his
rival's compliment, labeli~I the
Jrl!•h .. a very dM?p club."
"I lhmk thP. interesting UtinR
in watching Notre Dame is that
they are a combination ot a
power te!am. maybe to a l&tlle.
dC!ll(rce, but they're also a ftry,
very •ell di&ciplined team.
Tbear defense moves around
v ry well. and this is what we·n
£ eon S.turday a!ltrnQ01l."
11
I
·\
Bfl DAILY PILOT
BRANMNG ••
Conllauect From Pase a.1
two games ln the playoffs and
then barely losing an the third outing?/
"Ye~ did and I was kind of
pulling for them,•' be says .
.. Everybody kept asking me.
'who's Fullerton.,' and r would
tell them the tschool is in Orange
County where L come from. I
was really happy to see thom do
as well as they did and I think
eoacb Bob Dye did a great job."
When the Irish played UCLA
at Pauley Pavilion early in the
campaien, Branning had an
ankle injury. ls it healed now?
"Jt's fine." he says. "Yes, l
bed both of my ankles sprained
the last week and a half of my
senior year at Marina High but r
didn't have any trou bJe last
year. This time 1t was my right
ankle but it is all right now "
l s the spirit of the Notre Dame
:;tudent body as rabid as Jl was
for tbe football team?
fhur.day, March 2'3, t971
·Diablos
SWIMMING I BASKETBALL I MISCELLANY
Go After Swiin Crown
MVSeeks
4th Title
Ina Row
By ROGF.R CARLSON
Of IM 0614' l"llM S\.ltf
EAST LOS ANGELES -Mis-.
sion Vu~jo High's awesome
Diablos return to East Los
Angeles College tonight (7) to col-
lect their fourth straight CIF 4 -A
~w1m champ1onshiptropby.
A ranty in sports, the Dlablos
or M 1ss10n VieJo coach Mike
Pelton are the ab~olute choice lo
~apture the crown "This is spnng recess and a
lot of the students are m Flonda
right now and very few are on
campus. But the spint has been
tremendous all season "
. 0.11,~ .... ~ MIKE BARNES AND MISSION VIEJO HIGH ARE IN THE SPOTLIGHT TONIGHT AT THE CIF 4-A SWIM FINALS.
For M1ss1on V1eJo, the goals
are not simply wading through
the opposition to earn the tiUe. It
1s to go 1 -2-3-4 in the 500
freestyle; go under l : 36.2 in
beating Long Beach Wilson in
the medley relay; go 1-2 in the
backstroke; and better Santa
Clara High 's national prep mark
of 3:05.8 in the 400-yard freestyle
relay. set inl971.
When he was pomting toward
a college basketball schoJarship,
did he do anything special to
prepare for it?
"I have always felt that a
basketball player is made dur-
mg the summer when you are
working out on your own and
spending a lot of lime in pickur>
games. I spend quite a bit or
time practicing in the summer.
Kings Charge
Tampering
LOS ANGELES CAP) -Larry
Carriere, who participated in u
fight between the Loi. Angele!>
Kmgs and his Ruffalo Sabres
during a recent game, may be
involved in an ofC-lhe-ice batUe
Carson, Price, Koehler
Earn All-CIF Honors Additionally, M1ss1on Viejo
enters with the lop three prelims
limes in the 200-yard individual
medley and a bundle of other
assorted placmgs. Where will he spend the com-
ing summer?
· 'H Golden West College can
offer me a couple of courses I
need, I rrught go home like I did
last summer and attend school
there. Otherwise, I wall probably
stay here and take some das:;es."
How about the future and pro-
fess ion" I basketball"' Has he
J.!1ven ttus any thought'>
·between the two clubs, accord
ang to the Kin gs· general
manager.
George Maguire of the Kings
claims the Sabres were guilty of
"tampering" when they signed
Carriere. a former Kang , and
Maguire ts threatening to file
suit against the Sabres
Three Urange Coast area
basketball standouts, led by
South Coast League player of
the year John Carson or San
Clemente High, have been
honored with AJl-CIF 3-A laurels
by the Citizens Savings Athletic
Foundation board.
Carson, a 6-6 whiz at guard,
was chosen to the first team,
while Estancia <Costa Mesa)
High's Jim Price and Corona del
Mar 's Dave Koehler were
placed on the third team.
Making Mission Viejo's lofty
goals within range are such
:.;tars as Ed Ryder, Jesse
Vassallo, Mark Barber, CharlJe
Ray, Mike Barnes, Steve
Barnicoat, Vic Vassallo, Jim
New and a host of others. So
talented, some are not shaving
for the meet, pointing lo
competition at tbe national
indoor short course
<.'hamp1onshais in Austin, Tex.
April 5-8. · lt h as been in the back of my
mind." he admits .. If I'm
meant to plCJ)' pro ball, fine If it
<'omes about, I would hke very
much to try it."
··1 have filed a tampering
charge with John Ziegler <Na-
tional Hockey League presi-
dent)." Magwre said "I have
asked for a hearing before the
Board of Governors. If I don't
get it, J 'II gel a hearing tn court
I'll sue."
Player of the year is North
<Riverside) H1gh's 6-5 Richard
Rox, a two-way standout who led
hi.!> team to the CIF finals before
bowing lo Ganesha (Pomona I
High Hox averaged 21.8 points a
~ame on a team which featured
rive s tarters with scoring
averages in double figures.
JOHN CARSON JIM PRICE DAVE KOEHLER
Among the 4-A standards
threatened tonight are the 200
medley relay (1:36 07), Brian
Goodell's 200 free 0:37.15) and
500 free (4·20.81) marks, Cary
Hall's 100 back <52.50), and the
400 free relay <3:08.2).
He could be savmg himself it
grC'at deal of money if he does
:;1gn a pro contract. He is study.
mg business management with
an eyc-on pro sports mana~e
ment. Havmg such knowledge
when he graduates two years
from now couJd be a big help in
signing a contract.
But right now he isn't looking
that far in the future. Jn fact, his
though~ are on Saturday and a
semifinal round NCAA playoff
1-1ame agairu,t Duke in St. Louis.
SCALPERS ...
Continued From Paie B-J
more money than they've got
:sense."
The man said 1t was his fi rst
eltperience with ticket scalping,
wbich is 11legal m Kentucky.
"I first started out last week,
dgbt after Dayton where Ken
lucky defeated Michigan State
10 the Mideast Regional. J had
been looking for two weeks. I
called one guy in Atlanta last
week and he said he had some.
but it would take $400 a ticket to
gel 'cm away, "the man said.
He finally scored after run-
ning newspaper ads Saturday
and Sunday m St. Louis and
Saturday through Wednesday in
Milwaukee
Despite the hassle, did the $400
profit make it worthwhile?
"Well, no," he said. "I've got
about $100 in collect phone calls.
The operator called once and
spid, 'I've got a collect call from
Mr. Basketball. Will you accee>t
tbe charges?' And once they'd
>:el on lhe line, then thry'd want
to talk basketball and you ended
up talking about 10 or 15
minutes.
"I got a caU last night at mid-
night from Milwaukee. l got
anoUier one at., a.m.," he said.
•'We,. finally took the phone of£
the hook.
"Besides the phone calls," he
saict. "lhere'a lhe expense of go-
iftg out there and I've still 1ot
ttio Uckets for $175 to pick up
when I get there. I don't know if
they'll still be there, but you pay
yout' money and lake your chances."
M agwre added, "I have ncvt>r
signed a letter of release for
Carriere lie has a letter. but I
never signed it.··
The Sabres s igned the oe-
fenseman as a free agent March
13, and Buffalo general
manager Punch Imlach said the
dub received league permission
to siJ?n Carriere
Carson. who operated in the
bCJckcourt as a guard or who
could move to the front line and
average 9.5 rebounds a game,
averaged 19 4 points a game on
a team which averaged in the
low sos. In his league finale, he
scored a school record 42 points.
Price was the key to Estancia
lhgh's second place finish in lhe
Century League. His scoring
average or 15.6 points a game
was augmented by a rebounding
average of 11.8 and he was
Davu,MacPhailConfidem
A's Moving to Denver?
DENVER (AP> -Despite
financial haggling in the San
Francisco Bay area over the
Oakland C-Otiseum lease. Denver
oilman Marvin Davis and
American League president Lee
MacPhaH are moving ahead as
though the OakJand A's are <."Om-
mg here.
Davis has ordered stadium ad·
mission tickets printed but lost
his bid for Cindnnali 's Bob
Howsam for his general
manager and has talked with
Alvin Dark, who wants the t eam
manager job
MacPhail will be in Denver
F'nday lo talk to Oeover Bears
<Montreal's Triple-A affiliate m
the American Association)
owner Gerry Phipps and general
manager Jim Burns about tak-
1ng O\ t'r the Hears· territory
Davis said, "It's a hectic time
schedule MacPha1l will come in
Friday and work out the Bears
deal Thursday morning we'll
meet with city officials on the
stadium lease.
"And Finley will be here Mon-
day to sign the contract for the
..,ale of the learn," Davis said.
"I 've talked with Finley,''
Davis said Wednesday. "And
while he's still fighting to get the
best deal he can, he believes set-
tlement wtll be reached to free
the team to move here."
The Bay Area parf,ies are still
haggling over who will pay what
in the Oakland Coliseum's $3.2
million demand for breaking the
A's lease with 10 years remain-ing
Durr Signs With Oranges
Francoise Durr has signed to
play with the Anaheim Oranges
of World Team Tenms this com-
ing season, completing the team
roster that also 1ocludes former
Marina High <Huntington
Beach) star. Kathy Harter.
Durr is a four-year WTT
veteran and has played on win-
ning teams In each of those
seasons, ln 1974, she was with
tfJe league champion Denver
Racquet.s and was selected as
most valuable feminine pJaycr
in t.he all-star match in 197S.
The addition of Durr com-
pletes the Oranges roster.
Others include Rosie Casals,
Cliff Drysdale as playing cap-
t a in. Mark Cox and Anand
Amritraj along with Harter.
The Oranges open their home
season April 24 at Anaheim Con-
vention Center.
Davie; .s aid former Bears
O\\ ner Jlowsam "has this
personal service contract for
three more years with Cincin·
natl and he feels he must honor
1t
''I've talked with Bing Devine
c St. Lows Cards executive vice
president and S?eneral manager)
and John Claiborne (former as-
sistant general manager or the
Boston Red Sox) I like them both
and we'll s~ what we can do
shortly."
Howsam said by telephone
from Sun City. Ariz., "I have
committed myself to the Reds.
I'm glad Denver is getting a ma·
1or league team. It's going to
take a lot of work but in time 1l
will be a good baJI club."
The Bears' Burris confirmed
Mac Phail's request for Friday's
meeting. "He indicated that
something still could go wrong
hut he obviously thinks the deaJ
is on or he wouldn't be coming
here "
Davis also talked Wednesday
with Dark. thc-deposed San
Diego manager who requested
the interview. "He seems to be a
fine man," Davis said. "But l'd
.say that we'll stay with the man
we have (Bobby Winkles) for the
· time being."
generally considered the No. 2
player in the Century League
behind El Modena (Orange)
High 's Steve Trumbo.
In his last 21 games he scored
in double figures every time and
chipped in 30 points against
Tustin in a key league issue.
Kochler, one of a ball dozen
juniors honored, averaged 1.5. 7
points a game at guard and was
the key to Corooa del Mar's
annexation of the South Coast
League championship.
A shoulder injury knocked him
out of hls last four league games
and it hurt his effectiveness an
the playoffs. Prior to the 101ury
Koehler scored m double figure!'
16 of J7 games, had a high ~ame
of 25 and was Corona de! Mar s
most consistent player.
AIM:I~ ).A a-tt ~ll'lt Tu"' ...... ,,,SC. .... Mt Cl AY9 Af<ft•td 8o•. Noreh I AIW"r'MC)e) • s y 21 R Orl•ndo W•ro. L~ AmlQO• ., Sr t I P•ul Glllle<t. Ya1...c1a • s S< ll• Sl~ve Trum«io, El-. •• !>< 711 J•m•\ Vwtoon, ~,_. ". y 70 6 G-..r9" H.-..t,,.,,,.., G~l\4 6 10 Sr 11 0 Trr•n IOCJlll, Lyn-64 <,r ta Jtll A~n.. Soul.II Torr-..ce ~9 Sr. 27 l J ..... c.,__ :i... Cle~ •• Sr. ,,.
Mlkt C,,..,.,, Ocwr.r s 10 Jr 18 6 S..-T•...,.
Don Bar'MS. Nortll C Al,,.r!JOt'I 6 6 Jr UJ Br•ct TOCl<I, VPl...o •o Sr 11 ~ Scott M<CoOum. (.ovlna •• Jr 71 0
Wa<H! K "<"""'.,...... Auboctou< "' <;r ,, J Ttrry Br.w>. Arllnqlon 6. Sr ,, ,
JC>fttl AllU1le, 0ow,..., • q Jr 1' s W•rrtn Ellis. LO> Aml91K 60 ~. " I Sltw• Hanson. UP1..-o 6 1 y 110 Kevin So.land. Bre• .. ) .... "9 Jamo Oow.. ~11.t ) 10 v •• J TIMnl TN,..,
Cr•l9 8owfl". Bl•lr • s .,, II 0 Eur113 8-.-, Oomlno..et .\ ... ,, ~
Jim ~no. E•'-'-·~ !.<' U• O.rt~ Brll ...... CJ•r...-6 I ~-,. 6
Doi Parlrs, ~" 6 ~ Sr. :IOO Erk 8arMtl, R1,_.~do POiy 6-J .... I).
C.OfOf' !>mill\, Nori/\ I Rlwrsldot) )1 Jr, 11 ~ T°"' Tebbi, Los Alto\ ·~ !>r, 1S 0 o .. vi. ic-. eor-... -r .... Jr. UT Tom B•lin, LosAll~ • J Sr. 111
Area Girls on TV
The Huntington Beach h;ir;c·d
SCAT girls gymnastics tc·am
will be fcalured on K)';B(' TV ...
Saturdav Show this weekend
The two-hour hve bro:Hka•.t
begins at 3:30 p.m. and will bt•
filmed al the SCAT"s ultr:i
modern facility on 5822
Research Drive, Huntington
Beach.
Ryder was the leading
qualirier in the 200 and SOO with
clockings of 1:40.86 and •:28.08.·
And Jesse VassaUo's qualifying
time of 1:55.05 in the 200
individual medley is not out of
reach of Bruce Furniss' 1: 51.83
standard.
Critics or the Mission Viejo
dynasty point out the talent 1s
not home grown and the Diablos
are strictly a long-distance
team.
There is some truth to both
statements Vic and Jesse _
Vassallo c Puerto R1co1, Ryder
CFlor1daJ, Barber
1Phlladelph1<1), Barnes
1Ci ncinnat1 ) <lnd New
c Portland> arc not exactly
nall\'C's of M1ss100 V1eJo. And
there are numerous other
transfers, with the bulk of the
~t'<ir"s work under Mark
Schubert of the Mission VieJo
Nadadores AAU team.
llul 1( M1ss1on V1eJO dtd not
scorr a single point in the 200 or
500 freestyles, the D1ablos would
still win the mt>et
OthC'r Orange Coast area stars
b1dd1ni.: for glory tonight in the
c hampionship finals <1re Costa
Mesa·s Bob Dolan (200 and SOO
free >; Estancia I Costa Mesa)
ll1gh "s Phil Ohle 150 free >:
Marina <Huntington Beach)
J11~h's Chris Rehak (sprints>.
Newport Harbor's Jam Bergeson
< 100 breast>. and El Taro's
Craig Takata (100 breast).
In 3-A aetion, which is
conducted wilhrn the same
meet. Jrvine High freshman
Blair Murphy enters the 50 free
and 100 back as the No. 3 seed. m each event.
Games Rained Out
Newport Harbor and El Toro
t'ach got rained out or baseball
games in thc-Apple Valley
tournament Wednes day, and
new dates for the games are ex-
pected to be set within two
weeks.
1978 Crew Outlook getting nzady for easte.r
chambray ..
Banner Year for UCI?
Wlth Jut year's entire varalty boat return.inc, l.JC Irvine crew coach Bob
NHrman is hoploc tor a banner s'ason.
'We now have 20 ••nfty oarsmen
in th• J>l"OIJ'Am. That's 1lx more than l•l year, We have a lot ol talented
5*homoree and freshmen " he say,. ••so I think we•N) faster tbb Year, but
it will be toulb to dupUcate last sea1on'1 record." ln 1'77, UCl M>n alx or nlDe races
alj:l defeated 20 or 25 oppononta, the m~t successful aeaaon Jn Anteaters blatory.
ewman•1 oatamen opened the
s .son Jut Sa1Ul'd•7 wlU:a 10 Jm-
J> ulve \'lctory over UCLA on
N wport S.,. ·~ei~ •uon'1 o nlna loa to tho Stu •
owtn •boal'd · Tbre•bold, tbe
• 1 vanity 1ht bOilt tor ua. are ~ senlor captalD Jan Cuter and
junioni John Auauatine, Jeff Ransler
and ChtU Mllitor.
The April 1 San Diego Classic Is
considered by Newman to be the
virtual aacional crew cbampiOMhips.
Harvard. Penn1ylvanla aod
Wa1bta1ton, u1ua1Jy tbe fa1teat
crew1 to the country, wiJJ be compet-
ln1 with l.JCJ for lbe coveted Copley
Trophy. In last year's Cluslc, UCI
won the Calltomla Cup race.
Newman, in hi• fourth seuon as
UCl's crew coach. la a former
Oranae Coast Colle&e and UCLA
oaraman.
UC UMq H•W ICl410UL•
S.I., ~ ,_..., 0..., C... C...." et MIMllft ....
• • rn. Olllen ~tlfto lnc1'1* er.,... a..e, ~ ..... ., • ., ........... ~. '9-yt~. C.•...W•
.... CM'Mfl '"~~........,.. .. M«tN ..... .., ••• .1111. •
""·· •• ~ .... ,,.,......,., J '·"'· IM.. Al'M D>-a.._, .. ,,......,, a.r. f a.M.
................ Or-ea.a ........... a.y, fLfl\. ........................ ,.. ......... ~ ..... ._ ..... --.. .,,., D# ., ,.,,, ~ ...... .... ...... ~···'·
chombr ny, always a fbvor lte.
f8bnc. trnch~1ooal sport.coot
w1th mt'ltr.hmg trouser-s if
you demnz.
nczw rramourto1bott t)~ shop;
'Chambray•ellk m etn}X8
end plaid.5. ~r<St colorings
comp1micrn't our coet.s end
trouS<Z..rs.
44 fMHon il&and, newport center 644·5070
-
,HARNESS RACING TRACK , MISCELLANY Thur!ldav March 23 1978 0 -'IL V PILO f 83
Edison Star Alamitos Los lllamltos
~·-Diving Tille .
'.Won by Mack
BEVERLY HILLS-Kev~n Mack or Ed1son High
School <Huntington Beach) culminated four years of
~ompeUUoo by winning the CIF 4-A diving cham·
plonshlp Wednesday al Beverly Hills High
&chool with a score of 456.80.
Two other area d1 vcr s placed in the top 12 ln-
tJudlng Ric~ Lubchcnko of Marina High (Hunt·
in,ton Beach> in sixth place and Chris Plates or
J.Junlillgton &ach High in eleventh. ••ck took command ol the contest very early on
·wedneaday with a reverse dive and was consistent
throughout the com ·
petition. according to his coach.
Larrv Br<'nnan.
·· 11 '-' missed a couple of
dive ... but came back very
strong," Brennan said. "He was
cons istent throughout the com-
pN1t1on and has worked hard to
get to the top "
c;omg mto the final round of
three• rllvl'c:;, on<' required and
" v1111 MACK 1" o optional, he did an out
ngJoh lhs final <11,.1· wa<> a 11"2-pike from the
ete r board ..ind sc orcd .i ~tra1ght 81 <t from all
. This ts 41n t'l>.trl'mC'ly hard dive to gel
arou on, according to Rrc·nnan
l\ ck started chving as a freshman when he
asked o learn diving Sanc·c that time, he has spent
man~ our:. 1wrfc·l'l1ni:: h1'> d1 H·:-. and. according lo
his co ·h, 1s not H natunil cilhl<'lc hut one who has
work1• ;ird lO<.H'h1t•\ 1-.-.tH't·1·s.-.
In mnw r /\1\\' 1nmp1•ht11m, ht· was selected
of lhl' v~a1 in the' ~Pi\A U and nominated
ndini:: di vc•r in fll'g ion 1J
A.,, sophnm or•• hi' w;,.., c·1ght h in lht: Cl F <ind
las t yc·a f1ni.,twrl "lTOn1l.
Cl~ e A 011/ll<C Fll<Al.S k 1£ .. ....,) OS. IO. "1uSIY ,,.,.,,.,.., ... (Nrwl>Ury p,,,.,
(Nr IAl ... rnt>••I 1'<0 10 • c...,. Hov-.e ((Jo\ Pwble>sl 17' JS,)
n IHdN""'l l • ~\ • Roe• '-""'""••0 l~rlMI J16.M I\ P~H IHunllnqlon llU<hl 211 u
O.ally Pllec P-lty (#My A.-...
UC IRVINE FRESHMAN LONG JUMPER LaMONTE KING
UCl's King Flys High
Versatile Freshman Duels Robinson
BJ ERNIE C \STll.LO 2G !>. J11i, bl-st l<'g 1t1m.itl' effort was
Ol IN O•oly Piiot \C•lt :.!S ti.
In a c:; p o rt do m 1 n at<' d b v · h h h II th King ~·~ s w t'n e reca c; e SPCl'Hil1sts. L<1Monll· King :-.urv1vc'> c,l·ratch "It was m y bes t JUmp
by moonlight1n~ evf'r." ht' say~. "Tha t wa<> it "
I\ VC'r~.itll ~· :1 thlt:t1· Y.ho ha:-. ll is a('(omplis hmt·nt " in high
excelled in <•.,..-rythini:: from d.tnr ing schools would make any t·oach drool
to wrc.stling, King is a potential lie was a thre•··H.'a r letterman in
world·rlass Ion~ JUmpt·r a l l 'C lrnne i;ymnast1c·s. ""r<·stl{'cl took cla.,c,es tn
who is fa.st enough to do .some modern dance ;inct playerl football
sprinting on the "1de before tnJunng a km·e Rut 1t was in
He'll be in both role:-. at Saturday'c; lr a('k that he· m aclt: hi., m irk ;\1 eet of Cha mpions at tJCI. meeting Oly mpic chJmp1on Arnie Robinson in At Oy~art High in Surpn:,t· Artz .
both the featured Inn~ Jump and the "ing had th<' three twst prep long
200.m etcr dash 1ump m a rki, an the n.1t1on. 1nclurltng
Robinson one of the few 27.foot a bes t nf 25·9··~ lie ran 100 vards an
long jumpt·rs is running the 200 to 9 l. was lhl' first \nmna pn•pstt:r to
ha\'P somt.' fun and get an ..,0 me 'i(>('ed run the 1:.'i1 h1i:h hurdlt•s undn 1.i
"ork. Kin,e. meanwhile. has a shot at ~c condc; on t.'lel'lron1 l· t1m1n)( and
the t:CI record in the 200 but h:Js his <..k1mmt>d the 330 1ntl'rm ed1e1te hurc1I C's
mind nn another rhanc<' 10 Jump 1 three in<'hc·s hig hl'r th.in CJhforn1a 's
a gainc;t Robinson. whom he lost to lows l in Ji ~1
during a brilliant indoor rJ mpa1gn ,\t 5·9 and \.16 pound~. King do1•.,n't
"ll 's Jumping a gainst <;omcbody ha \'e the height of either Hobinson
vou alwavs u.;ed to read about," .said < ll·O > o r L'SC's de fl'ndin~ NCA1\
• king tn ~:h~hl awe "But romp<-lll1on c hampion Larr;. Douhlt·y 16·A'
Racing
Entries
TNl9'1t't M-£11lrlff lllUT llOSY r:u
l"IAST .,,Cl -~ mitt Peo
Cl•lm •no Purse uooo Cl•lm1n11 IH'I<• $>000 MM-.s ?O perc;..,1. 4 yelr
Old\ H S>er<tnt
~· L 191>1 tCr•tWI: l•On Lown I P•ttr\on Jr I TH Ott Time IClllll ;
flu Sl9'J !Sllorll, M1dnl(ll>I llrrd
I Rlltl\l•I. llomb n \ Coun ~el
IE 10IMI : Stno• l<•ld• (Vilfl•nd·
lngNml, fl~••rv 1 Todcll.
SICOND llACI -Otw mlle PK e.
\ yUr Olli'\ .. u..0.r. !00<>--r of t.oo llr\I ,,_, -~ P\lrW U.00
John \ M•Olt M •\\ cvot1•rol:
Al••Y> ~-••I IV•ll-lngt>•ml. J R Mcron ITOdOI; Ce<•ll•\ Prum
t C.rundyl O••Ullf<I IB••<•m•nl,
O•n'ord H ( Orntth) Pr~•"# l "l't
'Q .. lbyl, ft"-'I Prnie N IClllll
TK••o ••Ct: -One "'"e P«t s
Vt•r OtO\ & ~' ~ l"M.Jfl Wl~f cit Mi00
'"'' rnont-t> l•H *'"'~''' J t 4(1'\10Vf"' U'OO .
l>H •I H O•wber l l•<~ty I: A••P•"o •C,.on•) Kt-•P Hon~\t
IC.Ord<lnl, TroOtt CMr~r !AdMn\I
'>m•Clllt Cioni lk"""ll NowPorl
f I Ow t r f Wttlt•m\\. G •tt•\•l d
IAwblnl, 11.t<on ' J..oge <"-lff~n
Jr
"OUIUK ltACI -ON mlle. "eo.
Cl••,..lng "•n<l•<•o Pvr~• U.00. Cltomlnq ll'•<H ..000.dOO
A~burn l•9f"t C AnOH~J. Prlv•l~
61~no IBM'<"°''· Tru !oil" ISl•••nl
J• IH•w 110001 RoDf'1 J W I Fo•rv•
S.twf'n Gr•H•n CA••c .... J;. Pe9-l~U$
Abbty (Toronlor l, Von Rolftrnel ((.1111 1
l'lfTK 1t.aCE -0.... molr f>d<,.
C1•1m tng Pu"~ \000 Cl•lmlnQ
~"<• SI0,000 AMrn 10 ..-runt • , • ., old\ H P"rc...i • ye11 044 mares
0 S>e«•nl Tu11~do w,,., fLbtl\\i,. Jd. Maril
M u tllOU .. <Udylf\•d. V IC c Tdr
t l-'"" ''"'u tndf'r o c 1oc101~ tC,oudteauJ lct1J•mon IV.;lldnd·
1ngh•rnl, Lwc >.v Hondo !Aubin ); ~"V• 8r_.,.., lllfflDyl
SIXTH ltAC£ ~ mol~ Pa<t·
(ll lm lnO """"''"P t.11 b<ed. M.rt'~
20 Ptrc•nl • """' old• 1S porc.nl J .,,., OIOS JO twrrf'ftf Pur)e 7WIO.
C•••m•nv pr1<•' uooo.~)(IO E 1 Tore,.ro IC•r•n•ll. E•gle
Tru\urr !Sflct<ll 111 E'9te llroo.>I.
(111ly Q F•\f 11>.ffyl, Oltel l lQl!tlOOI
1v111•nc1·~1 oc1no 1<1no <Sue·
<trot tr t tc.1nQ Awly tGrt.1ndy);
NWyW Prt""~ ILA<ktYI
\EV I NTK ltAC~ -One "'""·
T•ol Nol OCl'CO<f •nv•IMIOtWI Pu-
''"°° ••u !\ti 1~•99'1 l OUo,11! Goo<MJ N
( VfunO•). S H ~Ol'liq ( V•ll•nd•
t n of'l:am), R•d~r ' Su,or •s~
lll•ICllfOf dl, lout ~"" l~1~wn
Jr). t-44001 l •O't"\) ((.ru•!ir Jr'
l Ovf' M•tt'IHW' C(,ovdrt.aut. Qu,ti..
~"'" "* t(loll)
EIGKlK ltACE O<>e mole f'<'<P
F 1tf1 .. , A ~,,. Not "°~·~ 1nlf•td
l•on•I Pwrw \6600
5,.nQ.t ~On•• I B•••Oyl . JO\•t 't.
(.no1<.t· IGorOOl'I M1df"l19M (.~on
Choo 'V•Uand1f"l9P\•m' Amf"lf'~la
r L10PtouU • Co1oru,c t R•tcMOl"O>.
'>•no• P•ula I D•\Omff I : Ladv 0,.1,"" !Pfonnl\I. Orum O~••ol\t
Ill•~··"'.
NINTIO ••CE ~ ml" p,.. •
Cl•lmlng ""ndlC•P ~rM ?Or>e•o 111 pwf\e 13300 Cl.i1m 1ng p roc••
tlOOO 1500
r.1oldPn J1"1 trr•nt). N•ttm l\/4lltndl~1 11atttr¥ llwbonl;
(. OOf'w 1od Atrf'l·tt f M •r•wp•U · c,,.,,., A1ctwrd fA•tchto,.OJ 'Of'I
IA '''"Y ~l•Qhfn11t1 8rn 0Uf"\t
IBdrlOMI. t.eo-g1"" BdV 11.o<o.lrl
Pro Scores
Of •1-•I a.i.....,.n Auoct•ho"
flo\lon 1:M. Cl•.,..•-"'1 N,.wJ~ ,.,.,.1-·. (h1<~4't
Wit\t'lt"")IOI\ 114 ,..,.w Ort~"> 10'9
-. \n\•• (tlY tJO. P!\H.oPlotu• 108
l O\ An?f"h"" , • • H°"''on ti.If;
Si •II••" 6vU•tr ·n
Of•l-..1 Kochy IA .. ue
r ,,_,, qo •. w•...n,09ton-:
Color-~. Pllhl>v<~ 7
NV '''•nOPr-\& toronto 1 °"'''"'' .t • .&H•ntd t N "t U•nQltf\ '· ~l LOU•\ 1
l('ache~ you to j ump bl'llt'r r look However, he hktns h1!:t c:;tyle to that of iilliiliiiii .. 1 for" ard to 1ump1nf:( against him " t''<·USC great Rand) Wtlllam s
1...i11111"" a.w...-.11
M 11"1n•\OI• \ Hou\ton 1 11pttt
JQLMdl
M 1nn("\Ot• ' M ontrtdl t.SPl•f
'S KEVIN MACK
l\ID's
Shot
r~wn Nabs
t Record
day to lead tcr Dc1
Vince Brown okc u
school record~ utting the shot 60 011.1 edne~-
High <Santa > to a
7M3 victory 0 r VISll·
in1 St. Paul HI <Santa
Fe Springs) in n&!<'lu s
Lea1ue track d field
action.
Mike Dolte
had a big day f
Del. winnin~ th wind aided),
<23.4) and the J
<io·'l~). v ..... ..,
• ... ~-f(Ol OSI
I , ..... ,. OMWw IMI
r als o
~ater 100 (9.9
h~ 220
gjump
~" SI ,._,,, l•I l"I Motter Del
100 I, "•rl\Co (Ml IO.$w; "°"'•'"' ISi, J GKcl• (SI. no 1 V•t1sco <Ml u 2. 2 C.t1v•~
!Ml , l GCIN•l<K ISi
o o. I Klno ISi S4.6: 7. Wood IMI;
i Walker CMl.
H O-I Ucl\ylll (M l 2:12 •; 7.
C•oom ISi, l Ou,_ tSI.
Miio-i C•rcla ISi, S OJ t; )
Oooloy IMl,J l(ll"(SI.
7 nule-1 P1"4to IMI 11;11.0, l .
Dooley IMI, J G«cll IS),
JlOLH -1. J. R-..S (Ml 44 t; 1
RO'lirl !Ml, l -'""<Ml
U OHH-1 Re•lre (Ml It 3. 7.
Fovtftler ISi. l ,..,,. CMI.
440 ,.,.,_, Mtl .. Del"·'
Ml .. rec..,-1. Miter Del J·CI 2.
HJ-I, C..lvtt lMI ~; 1, Coot.
tMI. > oi ... csi
L.J-t. Va•ll<e IMI ll·O~: 1.
T-y CM>; l , Sendel (11111.
PY-1 • ._ (Ml H. "° _.,.,. °" llllnl.
Sprintin~. he says. 1:. almost a "The m ain thin,e Arnie does 1s not
hobby worry about anything but c;pecd c1own
"I'm :i long Jumper first and a the runway," Km,e sayc:;. "Doubley
s printer seMnd." says tht· confident. has those real long leJ,!s 1 'm like
but modest. lA·year·old "But JUSI Williams r try to ,eel down fast hut
Jumping, that would get monotonous pop up
t don't think I would like to JUSt ··r think long Jumping 1:-. 70 percent
Jump " technique a nd 20 p<"rc~nt .spt·ed "Lon,e Jumping 1" my priority Plus," he laughs "~·ou h<J vc lo hkc to becausl' l'H• had mor" s ucress lhert• play in th1.• :.and .. than sprmt1n,e," hc adds Once an a
while 1 hki• to Just <'onccntrate in thi• For a ma n of his ability Kin~ has
long JUm p but spnntan~ ,makes 1t managed tn ket·p thtn~s 1n the ir
fun · • proper persr<>cl n t· \ lot of J)t'()pll'
It hasn l take n King lo ng t o J round us had Lalt·nt. .. h l' says \.\'p
establish himself in both areas Jn all had ahihl} I JU~I hap pt•nc•ci lo i::ct
UCI 's opening meet. he soared 25·3 m tou ch" 1th th1· right ptopll· "
for a school record Two "~eks later, A stud1ouc; tyJ>('. K1n,e as undeclared
he Jumped 2\ 71 •. won th<' 100 in 10 5 an has maJor but woulrl hkc• to tcarh
andthe200m212matri·mttt!'lweep and. poss1blv. rnac h R1 j:!ht no"
that earned ham Southl'rn CahCorma however. hC' has no thought of <'ndang
Athlete of the Wet:'k honcm; his long Jump can •<'r
Then last wc<'k , a l lht> Norlhndge ''I'll jump 'tall I can't jump ::iny
Relays, he l(ol off a ''pop" that long more," he says "Or unlit I sta rt
jumpers dream of, only to sufCer a coming hack down.''
competitor's nightmare -· a scratch. At th<' rate he's flying, that might
\QUA~I
~( tou" 8, K•n'"' City 0
f\Altlf'nO!'P '·LO" A.nQC'lf'\. ( 11 •nn.)
A tf•nt .. I '"•"' 0 Ph•l•<lt lOl!t• 10 c..ic-IAl s
'><-•lllf' .. °"" ,..,.,, • S•n FrM>CIKO I, ,..,,,,M,..10 6
C•t.vf ldnd v-.. Mllwauliof"f!, ppd.,,. , ... ,..
') • .tr, 01.-90 4 ("l'.l?O fNJ 1
"-'•• Yc>t ~ f~I '1 (1n<l,..,.i• t
O•tro1t¥. fOfCJr'fo O
Women"s Golf
ltAt>ICKO SAN JOAOUIN CC
) 1 J T iur~-""•"I .\ ~ •Ohl -t
J,.t.. fl'f Olt 11 f) F"I Qht-1
M•ttnl!' \tr•<t fdnd . .U • ( ~61Qtil 1.
O • t Hf)t•" 11 "» 1 l Otd
8.,ll>OIO-• tt J Lu W•ll•y, 11. 0
F 1191\l-I Row JiOOIMOl'I, 1'I
.,.,,,, fi.~e lo• Nr t Tournttm~f'll.
A I l•QP\t I K•lhv Pt-rf'y 14 ) ~ dY ""'"" ,, r, f 11f)t.t-1 .... , ~ue e .... , ...
M .\•lnr Sfru 1'1•nd~ 6'9: ), SYO•I
Fo,ltt 11
c Floohl-1 """Srnlll\, "' J. lh~I ,,,,,, A••ll\olomp• R•tlv Sel~r\e<"
II, • 111•1 C..11 HOVI. Carol 8r0d•~.
ll
His unoffidal jump was measured at be a while. ~~~~~~~~__;..~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
O F110111-1. 1.,,,, £11rnn•rl. 11; 1.
l<•y L tulw1ltr, H, ), 8tltY
Pol..O.• It<, I'll. • Conftle 8¥nttt, to
Calendar
"'*" t Merci! 20
S•'"'""'"IO-Coll-of ~uoi•\ .al Go1e1er1 Wnl Co•lf9t ( 10 JI) • m I,
NCAA fl"'" •I l\el,,_1 PIAI• 8e'tlWlll-~• A,,. el !Mlcldl•N<•
College t,_,.1. ~ W•11 Colltgt
•I H•ncoc• toumey '"""""" Wt•I "' Coll~11• 01 Sequolot •• K1ncoek Coll-. ) )Ol; Hl'tltlftoton Bt•ll 11
Sen M.tr<ll'I IJ ISi, 1'-telll Y•llf'I'
el Dos P..-U 1>l
Y•Kk-Ore1199 CM" Collf9P el
$.111 JOM A .. e'f\
Gv-tl<.~llltft West Coll999
et Cl\ta llate uNbl1lon
Gltll bHkeltNll-GttOen Weil
COllf'Qe at P-lftorittllOl\tll G•••i ••1111•11-0eld•" w .. t tel .... lflvlle41eftel
~'t~llUI
Swlmml,,._NCAA tlllel• at
SHIP AHOY
N.1 utrCcll cluck pant:, in
c: ot t rm I dacron -cotton
l..111t '>hirt-cotton \\eh
b<'l l J u<it n~ht on hoard
or a c;hore Available 1n
'>C'v<.•ral color
combination~~
Cl> tO.t; l......_. IMI
Ut-t. O.lltrer _._11• ISi ns.
SP-I. '--' tSI oU-11 J, °"""1el ..-------------(Ml; S. Of ... IMI.
_,,.,., ..
)IS.
......... Al9NI "' (Ml A.t; a. "9'" fM '"-'· ........ ...__,. IMI Ult 1;
!:t'-•· Mlt.-T, Udy (Ml ff.I ; t lt.,.I ctl 41tU1 a. Al.,.< ")•1111llt-t, ....... I
-..Wl!a ISi JO:» O; J. ,. .....
UtlH-T. Reyu
'111tM' IMI <It.I; 3 LM ,.,. .. _,,,..,.,(SI
4'1 M.I; J. LJMt ISi 11
... Nley-1. Molter
•• Mllenil~t.M.tt• HJ-t, '""'1lr IMI u-1 •tt: a.,..., .. • • Loi-•. o.cc~r c ...._,.IN:I.
:..>. ..v-t. ,_C.J'tM; ,.., I. lfrltet CMI ....
~t . ._..... I~ ~ It<,_.
,.ur•I: 1. lucl ( 41·11 I . hll , .. ISU4tV),
·-
.............
SI. P .. tOl Ott~ Ott
t00-1. -.nw. <SI t0.1, I. V...l!i<'e IMl:l A.Atultre'IM),
210-1. v...lw• IMI u.s; 2. MllM 111111; 3 ........ ,51 • •«>-•. """"' ... tu: 2. llo\ef11f1 (11111; S. Mlt.I <Ml.
110-1 Tllol'lllll lMI 7;11.SI '· Y-eer 1$1; 3. --...ilO (11111.
Mlle-I, Oercl• Clllll J;01.J; I,
TrlClltlt (11111; J. Mlllllwl Ct),
J·mlle-1 • ..._., .. <SI 11 :1'.0; 2.
()ldfl.tlYI (M) ... CWllf• Ill.
POUt-t. Mlldhe IMI UA, I. Mle-
e1MCMl1 I. L......_(M),
10..H-t, C:..-llto (II H.J; 2 •
Dllll CSl;l,l..WllClt!'MfMI.
.... rttrf-1. Ml"" Otl JO.t. Miit •tter-1. ,_.., 0.1 ~-L
HJ-I, Or_,( .. MJ 2. ,...._
ISi: l . ..,,.._, IAQ • u-t. ,...._CM> 1 .. tt1 t. , .....
ell I i ."· Wl"'-M CHI, H-1. R~ fM) N: I. ...... fl>: M lrllr& ,,..,, HlllMI CM> Jt.7; 1. L9'8ft IS>;) Orey 151. 17th Ir ,,,,,M Aw .. Nt-pc'>ff .... ch, C•lif. (714) '4$-4>192
I --
Race Results ..... -.,
,..IT "ACI -0.. mil•. P.c•.
Cl•lmlllf Pwv Sl,000
MIHRHa.-'(
ICteMI •AO l IO
81-t lllel<l'llor•I 2 to Lo•••"''""• 'Sl ... ltll ThM-201
Aho O<tel -Miiiora, Chief,
Bomb•• DI••< I. Vlllt1' JI"'• S<Oll
11.otr. 0Ulft "-Y O'C.•.OY
Scr1ICIMCI -ltt91•rry, Wiiii. T l("IQl!I
U 1 .. cu ~MIH 1tW IH•IY I .. • ....... ,,,.~JU ...
St:CONO a&CE -One"'"'· P•O. C-111-ll'jW ll S!llllOll, A Qtlll-
1"9\ S Jelt olcb A _,. PwM U,400 He_R ____
IB•v•~ul IS.0 •oo •.to ~ldr !.1>001 .. !Mark-HI 10.40 3 60
llffl C.ltM•I• I R•l<lllOtd ) 3 10
Ttm• -2QI
Af\O t•rd -Big O.n<er, AU'\S
Reo•r1. AM1S S~ IOPt<. AllCltfll
M•,.lner, htine.• K•"O
S<r•t<""' -T•,.,_..I Pr1• H . ~KlllO •ACll -~ mli.. P.t<f'
COft<llllClftt<I (HW 21 ~I bf.cl S ft4f
old1&-Pli•MU.100
!>l•Hlltr Br-l
(le<, • .,, 11 .0 • 00 • '°
$.In An<lr•"' lllQl\1111111 S.60 J IO
M•H Sc-!Cl-I J,tO
Time 1 O'll11
Aho ••<•d -80<olo. Ouogov
14""4!, • ...,, s Meftno, R•r• o.sion,
~wlttblrd
S<re1c""' -•-r.o. Trickel
CM•lltr
FOV•YH ••cf -One mll• P«•· Cl••m l"'J "->OIC~ Pu•-e U,400
H:\l\.h Jou•
t Ot-hl 20 40 1 tO ' 60
Tlmel1' Vlsloft 18"<1 S.20 7 .0
H•l<Yon H~rtl-llO"QO) 110
l omr -1 Oll21S
Al\o r •tt'd -ChOw, t.Og.ewOOd
Dvmlle, ,,_, ~(f}P.tr, Mirr Ud• {I
Area Prep
Baseball
'-Y•n.IY ,. .... v..-r--..t
Ck• ... View 141 Ill a...u ....
Orfl'4" Vlf'W-"«,,.,, cf. l...0..l 0;
Hungerle, "· 2·041, ~"'"'· di!, J ().I 0, Belllnl, .lb, 0~ 8rl'b<"", •ti. 1 I ·0.0. P•" 0t 1).6.0.0, COOf'-
m•n. II, l-4-M. A•IM•Oltl ,, ~.
Kotf~r. p , l·t·O·O. Slood•'d f f •
0 0.0.0. f l(""'911 lb, J I 0.0, Kno9n1. <. 2·1 1.0. T"'"'' ,, ... ,
SUreltJI•._
"'"" •ACli -One 1n1i.. P• .. c-•1-l'WMaUOO
"IY1"9 A4lcl
COouorH11I II 00 5.10 4 ...
~Ill e-1er..1 .. 1 1M S.ot
Hollllltr (V .. l~fl9Nlftl 1.IO
TllM-20..IS AIM> raced -8ye ,,. Victor.
PCMlero~. H11Ut M<COl9. MofltlrtY
O.b, Jim 1i. a..r
Ho ICfM'llti
Jill TH uc• -One mi ... P••· Clelml119 ~ Pvrw .,,..
ICemallt t Kt1melttl 6 tO •.60 t 60
Sier Ou\I 0.... 18'yl4t>l>I J,00 4 60 14,., 1Grunl1l t IO
Tlmt -lotlfS
Ah o •«ta -,aftCl1'1 C...\ltlt, lhe 001191111.,, Howdy $p0r1, Slctfto•
Br-11, l-F'rfts
S<retU..O -The Hus~. s.My Piek
U l•eda •K-& 4-M# o-1 .................
SIYRNTH •.ac£ -One m ile.
,.., •· t1.im1no IWMI<•,.. Purs.
U ,JOO
Pen••• lk'( IK.,._I 19.40 '00 5 20
4.00 l 60 u o 11>1"9 Hy A IA\IOlnl
C.vosr !Him 1w 1.,..,dl
Time -20ll/S
AllO receo -14rmbro Me91c,
HIOfll-Owmp, C-<ino, Buo
"'· 0.-~ e.o., No Ktet<lle~
IUOMTM •ACE -Otw mlle. lr.c•.
Cl•imlne l>endiup. PIKM Jl,000
ll~l..0
10 .. omerl 1l lO 4t0 l60
BUC>Oll~ vi..w < e.vitt>I l 10 1 bO
C'1•donl•n c.omm.nc1 tGouart~I Joo
l •mt' -2.046/S
Al\O r•ced -Bilbo• 1<.tno.i·r.
S<mg• BOQllY, Seno.t lHI•. 11>1r1 ... ,.,
tl~\I, H•lll.._in ,a
No \Cr•tc,.~ -
H I! •Ute 1·LIU1eft l•d .. I 1-.a..v....,,,...,.,111.110
NIN'YM ••cE -One mile. Pt<~ Ct~lml,,. -"SI· PurM U,.00
b•Y l'llQ/11 I P~I•• \enl S.60 3 llO 1 tlO NorthW•'9•m IVelllndl~I •AO 4 00
~DOY Pr"-'tl K...tll«I 3 00
Time-7033~
Alto re<.O -Good...., Tru9, ~la•
C...,O, V-, Ml~ II-, K w 1 ,.,., ... r
Screlcl!ed -Goulb<lr11 ACl•o•.
Luc•yH-
U l!uei.t ,_.., ....... a 4-~
YYHI..,., P .... $66M Allon<Unc• -,,,.,, '"•;:::=============. 010 "'° 0-l • ,
000 0 1 •-• • I
00# v-{JI (fl ...... 11 ...
O<"d" Voew -Horner, Cl 11·10
Sc"ull, dh, di! ti l I C>O. Atw't,.tn,
D. 0 0 0 0 Hur>qPrlf' \• • 0 1· I (~
n'\on II 4 0 ' t AP1nn.ott1. rt tt>.
O O·O •'-Oth·r '°· t 1 1 g r,,. l\•f'll•·
lb D J v 0.0, ~ tlll••>?n, JD, 1 0 I I
i<n•oM. t , l·Oc 1.0 Tot~I• 1J J I l
$< .. t by IMI"'' . " . ••·•tlo,. ooo ooo 1 ·2 1 o
O<r•n ll1tw 100 OCll 1-J I t
Ocun View pld~ fr1!l~y. I I'm. di
lvnwOO(I HtCjllh In n(.!Jlf fOUfMmf nt
oorne ~luro.ty•ll •IL.•wna•I~.
.. .-... ...... 11
..-...v1t...,T_ .. ,
"•wP«I H-UI 141 U K•ll<•
Ntw oort HerbOr Aa1otwli1, lb
11 1·0, Som<, " • C l·O, Smith, <1
l IH 1 N~lll~. di' 3-0.1 l !.ll•r, <I
• 0 I I Ddn ......_,,b<tV, ID l·0-1~.
I")\' " J~·OO, o ........... , ..... y 71>
3' l·O. l<.('r'kt\. o ()..l).(t t; l w ,.n.ur.
""' O 1 I) O. J..-nuut ••O•u. <. 0 0 ~-0
Tol•I\ N \." \ S<-"' 1 .... 1n~ ,
L~ H•I><" 011 001 Go • •
N«wOO<I H•rtior 000 010 J S I
s-1e1Lt .. ..,. ,.,._, H-ISi 1111 K""I 9MC"
Nf'wport H.t,.bor ~'"'· \) 1-CY·t Atro~th lb I t f t • ..,Pf'bf"fQ, lt>
~ 04 0 "-"'tlh. ti l~ f·I NtUltt, < 1 () '] I• Jbf'lV\olf"-.\il I ( 1.0 0 0 (,Mf\
!.JUf'b'<f lo I tOO (11•ctfC.tt/J, rf
t 1J 0.-0. <.1fl·'· <• ).1 '0, O.tn1p4 1b
1 o.c . o ..... c;,,ue•b•~. 1b 1~0.
lt<av•l1 lb 7.(1 (11), ''°''·II 2°1.00;
LaC.r•nd•ur. p 0.1·0 1, l •~,.,.,I, D
1·01>-0 fOldl\ 11H-S..)
M\Jnt tnQ\on U•dCh ·S .. or.»o. c f
' 1 1 l, (-Oft~""' )b. l•t 0. OM,....,..
\,. J .. o.o 0 J.lftttf•P'J. lb • O·O ll
Ouc.tl~H"'e. t l 1·l I VC"Jw,.tl, r•
1·1 1·1 ~PtV It> f 1 O.f (H1 \If 0
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.. DAIL V PILOT Business
School Listed as Top Joh Aid
WASIUNG'fON (APJ -1'here
will be 17 million more Jobs
available m the United States by
1985, but if you want one of them
you'd better slay in school, the
Labor Department says.
or entry for mo:st Jobs, L•bor
Secretary Ray Marshall said
while releasing the depart-
ment's massive Occupataonal
Outlook Handbook
various JObti, rt.-quired quahfica-
taons. working conditions and
earnings, JOb prospects and
chances for advancement.
Potential employment in
various occupations through 1985
is assessed in the handbook
Actordlng to the new edition,
A high school education has
become the minimum standard
T HE VOLUME COMES out
every two yea~ It describes
Kodak Loses Judgement
NEW YORK (AP) -A federal
court jury has awarded Berkey
Photos, Inc., $37.6 million ln its
civil antitrust suit against
Eastman Kodak Co
almost five days of deliberation.
The deliberations capped a
three-week trial before Judge
Marvin Frankel to determine
the size of the award
film. color pnnl paper, and
photo fmistung
The largest award Berkey re-
ceived from the Jury was com
pensatory damages for loss of
sales on cameras after Kodak
introduced its new 110 Pocket
lnstamatic in 1972. For that
tlaim Berkey :received $15.25
m11hon
Alvin Stein. a lawyer for
Berkey, said the actual total
award would amount to more
than $112 m1lhon under treble
damages.
Kodak's liability was
established by the same jury al
an earlier trial. which took six
months. The panel dectded al
the first trial that Kodak
monopolized various amateur
photographic markets since 1969
and thus utjured Berkey's bu~•
ness
In other determinations
Berkey received $11.5 million as
compensation for excess prices
tl paid lo Kodak for amateur
r11m purchases and S8 8 million
for excess prices Berkey paid
Kodak for color prmt paper
Kodak saJd 1t would appeal.
THE AWARD WAS voled by a
1ury of eight women and two
men in the U S. D1str1ct Court tn
Manhattan on Wednesday after
TH E MARKETS covered con
vent1onal and movie camera5,
LANCIA
SEDAN
£~ dl~
~
Thia famDy-sae car
dckra superb sports car
penorman«.. A study In
comfOft. englnttling •nd
lntdlgent use of spece.
Tut d~ one today.. 11nd
uperience a grut luxury
petfom*'Ce a1tomobk.
ICM•M
Tlw: lntdlgent llltenwli'w.
Dl~lll MILLt:K
MOTORS
120 W. w...,.n-
Al Mei11
Santo Ana SS7-21l2
TWO GH AT DANCilEltS
TO 't'OUIE't'IS
ly TEHY
Gil.ANT, •·""--I twn· Jrt' m.in~ <·:•u't''
11! bl1nd111',,· trnm
• un~1·n1L.1l th•ft•t l'I 111
.11 < 1clcnts Bui. 1" u
1lif1crcnt dt•J!1•npr.t11\c
• and progn.-ss1H• d1scasts
are .1 .l(re;1f t1.1n.:t-r Lo
pnsons OH'r Ill Senile
calar<it'ls <· 1u'~ ahout
IJ'; and Gh.1utomJ about
1 i•,, of all hlmdnc:.s
llul ealaraC'l..'\ can be
'.:.1fclv rcmovrd and
J!lauC'oma t'iln he
1·nntrollt."d J)fl>\ 1r:hn1: Lhr
d1a1:nos1s of c1thcr 1.s
made and trt>atml'nt bt•gun m 11.s rarly slaJ'tc:>
Tht• o nly sun• way to
i:uarcl a~amsl thcsi• I \\o
11:.ingl·rs 1~ to h:.ivt• ~·our
1 t·ycs <'"<am1ncd b} a fJoctor t.•very two years
artt'r the <•I!<' of 40 It
t a k 1• s .1 n 1·" p •'rt lo
"· • •110 .• t• them.
YOUR DOCTOR <.:AN
PHONE US when you
nt.'cd a m(-dl('inc. Pick up
your prescription 1r
shoppmg nearby. or W('
wi II deliver promptly
withoul extra charge. A
"real many people
entrust us with their
pre~rriptions Ma:v Wt.'
<'Om pound your;?
PARK UDO PHARMACY
Frff Delivery
351 Ho9pltlll Road
Newport Beectt 642-15IO
~~~~~~~~~~~
Chrysler Rocked
New Yorker Delivers Punch
By MILTON MOSKOWITZ
As if Chrysler Cqrp didn't have
enough troubles ma1ung end& meet
these days, it also has to contend
with the new mayor of New York
City. Ed Koch, who's intent on dem
onstrating his incorruptibility
Chrysler limped through 1977 Its
s hare of the U S auto market
dropped from 13 to 11 percent ll lost
$36 million in Britain It incurred
losses totaling $35 m11l1on 1n
Australia, Brazil. Peru and
Venezuela. And its overall profits for
the year declined 62 percent lo $124
million
NOW, ON TOP Of' ALL that
comes Koch He rode 10 a 1974 Chrysler
Newport owned by the city The brakes
failed -and Koch promptly labelt-d
the car a "death trap," a plug Chrysler
really didn't need.
Chrysler representatives macle
several telephone callc; lo the city, of
rering to check out the car and ht'lp
repair the brakes The ttty or N€!w
York said nothing do1n~ !ft would
rather suffer I
Then, two alert c·ar dcalc.-rs, tht'1r
sales crippled by one o< the worst
winters m 100 years, 1nform<'d Mayor
Koch that they "ould be delighted to
let him have a car gratis A Cadillac
dealer said it would be ~ilhng to
lease a Caddy to the city for a dollar
a year Another dealer offered a
Capri, at no cost
KOCH SAJD "NO THANK vou"
because he has a "long standing
policy or not acceptmg gifts wh1lr I
serve in public office " (Now once hf'
leaves public office. . 1
It then turned out that New York
City owns a 1972 Cadillac that Koch
could use. But that gave him ~ome
pause. How would 1t look for the
mayor to drive around m a Cadillac
when there are a million persons on
the welfare rolls and the city 1s close
lo being bankrupt?
Koch had a brilliant idea Why not
ask the people of New York what
they thought about the mayor usmg a
Cadillac? So he asked New Yorkers
to give their opinions
THE RESPONSE TO this de-
mocratic impulse was pathetic In a
~ Money
Tree
two day period the city received 93
<:alls and letters approving the use of
the CacWlac while 141 voted against
the idea. Eight mlllion people live in
New York ln short, New Yorkers
couldn't care less whether Koch used
the Cadillac
Discussing this important problem
al a press conference, Koch referred
to the Chrysler Newport as a"dealh·
mobile." This glowing testimonial
prom ptcd another call from a
Chrysler representative, who was
then tnformed that the Newport was
~01ni:: to be replaced by a 1976
Plymouth station wagon, which was
said to be more in keeping with the
Ma yors public image than a
C'ad1 liar
Since Chrysler also makes the
Plymouth, the company offered to
<'heck 11 out for the mayor And guess
"hat" The-rtl\ or "1ew York accepted
the offer
WHILE ALL THIS nonsense was
going on, the Ford Motor Co. was
having no trouble negotiating a tie·in
with the 1980 Winter Olympics
scheduled for Lake Placid, N Y
1-'ord will give the Olympic organiz·
1ng committee more than S2 million
in return for which it will have the
rights to market a special-edition car
sporting the insignia of the 1980
event. To sweeten the deal, Ford will
donate 600 vehicles for use in setting
up and staging the games. And for
l'ach special-edition car it seUs, Ford
will give the Olympic organizers a
royalty or S2 to SS.
Chrysler needs to come up with a
deal like that for New York City
After all. it already has a New
Yorker model in its lmeup But come
to thmk of 1t, that model hasn't done
much for ('hryslt>r -or New York
C'1ly
Redwood Expansion
there will be oul standin1
growth in clerical work,
particularly for cashiers, rec:ep.
Uoniats and &eeretaries
ON THE OTHER hand, pros-
pects are dim foe compositon,
historians, mathematicians and
newspaper reporters.
Dl11cussing tbe educational re
qulrementa, Marshall said even
a four-year college degree is not
the sure ticket to a good job that
1t once was He said that in re-
cent years, more and more col-
lege graduates have been forced
to seek employment fields not
trad1tiooally entered by colleae
graduates.
Overall, the handbook says,
the growth of the economy ls ex-
pected to create 17 million new
Jobs by 1985. And 29 million
workers will be needed to
repl:lce people who d1e or retire.
ALSO A MONG T H E JOb
markets expected to expand
rapidly are positions for service
workers such as chefs, cos-
metologists, guards, police of-
ficers and nurses' aides.
The handbook cited an in-
creasing demand for medical
care and security. And it said
rising levels or income should
cause more frequent use of
restaurants, beauty salons and
leisure services.
In the technical fields, the
handbook predicts a strong de·
mand for computer workers.
IT SAYS GROWING efforts rn
energy production, transporta·
lion and environmental protec·
tion will increase the demand
for scientists. engmeers and
technicians
The medical professions are
expected to grow as the health
industry expands, but not all
professional Jobs are this pro·
mising.
Teactung will continue to be
overcrowded and competition 1s
expected to mtensify from the
growing supply of law school
graduates
She Flies (Jnited
Gail Gorski. 25. a professional flight instructor and cor-
porate pilot. has been named the first woman pilol for
United Airlines. The announcement was made as sbt sat
m a mock-up of a 737 at United's training headquarters
1n Denver.
Pros Push Up Cost,
Of U.S. Car The/I,§
the stolen-car field, making it more difficult to r ver the
vehicles intact or al all, a Justice Department officials .
WASHINGTON <AP> Professional tnieves are ~g into
Ralph K. Culver, who specializes an investigatin property
theft, told a Senate subcommittee Wednesday that S9 pe t of the
value of stolen autos was recovered in 1976, compared th 86 per-
Car theft traditionally has been an area dominal by young cent in 1967 ·~
people, some of whom take the car for a "joy ride" an en aban-
don it.
Culver said stolen cars are either cut up for p~s, retitled
through a counterfeit title or taken out of the country, pecially to
Mexico. If a car is stripped of major parts, \he owner ay recover
apartofits value if the body is located.
Ov~r Tiu .. eount•·r
NASO u,tinq'
IJp • ard DotDatr
Pci. Up JJ J
Up 211
Up 2t •
Up 20.a
Up 200 V1' ,, 1
Up 1& I Up OJ Up HJ
Up u l Up IJ_.
Up t) 6 Up '31
Up tl 0 U9 11 s Up t11
Up n 1 Up 111
Up 11 I Up 11.1
Up 1U Up 1t \
Up 11 I
Up 10.S
Up IOJ
Pel. Ott )0 c Off ,, <
Off 1) < Off 10..t on •.a
Off • ' Oii • l 011 a 1
Off • ) Off 11 Off 11 Off 11 Off •• Off ., Off • , Oii , ,
Off • ' ()ff •• Ott .,
OH •~ Off .\
Off • ' Off • \
Ot• 5' Ot• )'>
CAP ITOLIZE
WITH
CAPITOL
Blamed for Job Cuts MUTUA L FUN DS
CAPITOl.IZATION MEANS TO
COOERT CAPITOi. TO CASH
rfyou~ST OOOrnS$00l)()r1'"' .tnO
~· O'lfllln II "°"" Of OtMf p•n,,..n • .... I la< Ot "°' I., CAPITO H "~ I OAH llrll'\04I 10 CIO•ll>hte yOU1
eG••IY 1"10 • ..., ~ ,...,. ''"' .,,., ,.,.ll(lty .........
HomeLoan '
~(If Qlllf 'I ~I ""': ,,...,_, . '•llon•lf ____ '1
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We'd
Really hke to help
COSTA MESA t1IO.....,, ...
714/540-<Mt2
ANAHEIM ua1w Ur#lt1h
7'...,778-3450
lONGBEACH. Mt•I.._,.,_ .....
213/'421-e333
By The Associated Press
The Redwoods National Park ex-
pansion "will have a devastating ef·
feet on a lot of families." William
Walsh. senior vice president of
Arcata National predicts.
Two other timber companies whose
redwood logging operallons in the ex
pansion area would be ended by a bill
awaiting President Carter's
signature, agreed the area's
economy would be crippled
TH E BILL, WHICH pused the
Senate by a 63-26 vote, adds 48,000
acres to the park's 28,000 acres of
federal Janet at a cost or $432 m11Uon.
including $-IO million lo assist dis
placed loggers find other work.
The par-k also includes 30,000 acres
of slate land not affected by the
1 e fC.lal a tion.
In tbe loor dispute over the ex-
pansion, DO flnn flau re of job losses
was given, b ut estimat es have
ranecd up to about 2.000.
SEN. 8. I . Hayakawa, R·Callf .•
who voted against lbe expansion.
took a dim view of the $40 million
jobs package that ort&lnally wu in
only lhe Ho~ venloD of tho bill.
"Tht people ln the area doti 'l want to
be retrained u abort ord r cooks."
Hayakawa u.ld.
Jack Raaeto, producUon manaier
for Lout.siana·P•ci"c at Semo.a. said
bl.I ~ompany already haa laid off 'lZ7
emptoy1e1 at oo plant and 28 al anotber.
"We hope we can k"P I b I HW .
mill in Samoa operating through
March," Razzeto said, "but we have
predicted a loss of at least 319 jobs
through June.•·
HE CALLED THE Park enlarge·
ment a "damn shame" and said, "It
violates the rights of property
ownership."
A Simpson Lumber Co. spokesman
who asked not to be identified said
Northern California communities
"fought long and hard to beat this
bill We didn't do it It's ioing to
hurt "
Walsh said the expansion of the
park takes m "the most productive
timberland 1n the world" and means
that more than one·t blrd of the
redwood timberland ia io public
hands and "no longeT' available to
us .. • "THE WEATHER rs unsoucoabJe
nine month., of the year fOT' use u a
park," Walsh added.
Rep. Phillip Burton, a San Fran·
clsco Democrat who wu a ml,jor
sponsor of the bill in the HOUH, aald,
·'It Is bard to believe after all thtt0
years we finally won the b1tile to
uve the reclwoodl."
••• STOCKS I BUSINESS·
-...
. ::
. -
•
Thursday'•
Cloaing Pric~
'
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
VN DAILY PILOT •5
Older: Wiser?
Pending Law Exami,ned
By SYLVIA POaTER
ln a matter of dayit, lei1111Uon wiU 10 on the books
ra\Biog the lt1al mandatory retirement aae tor mO&t peo-
ple ln the work force from 6S to 10.
The new retirement ace will become effecUvc Jan. 1.
1979, for milliona in priY1te enterprtso and it.ate or local
eovernment jobs, with exe01ptioas for top buslneu ex-
ecutives and tenured colleae professors. ~ of Oc:l 1. the
federal government's retirement age of 10 for moet
cMUan employees will be abolia.bed, wltb r~tricted n-
ceptfons.
EVEN BEFORE TRIS ADJUSTMENT takes place.
the pluses and mlnU$et are beiDC debated with a.ruUMy •
Opponents forecast shock waves over the entire business,
industrial and academic worlds. Pension plam are belnf
rewritten or renegotiated, many firms are tryina lo work
out systems under which workers wllh inferior reeord.s
still can be compelled to retire at 65, the extent to which
the burden on the Social Security System wlll be eased Is
being calculated, etc.
One concern is how their own peers can define and ac-
curately measure competence among fellow executives
and professors.
Another is how to judge whether an employee is de·
leriorating physically
or mentally lo the point
where he or she
becomes a drag on the
company.
Whal is deadwood?
Whal is competence
among top executives
Money's
Worth
or professors who may be unpopular but still of value to
their institutions.
HOW WILL YOUNGER WORKERS respond wbm
their promotions are delayed because those ahead o( them
are remaining on the job?
Whal will be the impact on job opportunities for
-women and minorities, particularly, if the employment
ranks are Jammed?
Can workers keep performing at acceptable levels as
they age?
An encouraging report, privately circulated by Pren-
tice-Hall, suggests that "for many companies, keeping
workers on the job until age 70 would pose very few prob·
Jems."
THREE PROBLEMS EMERGE AS serious: (1) the
.. delicate problem of dealing with reduced job
performance among people wbo are only a few years away
from retirement," C2> increased costs due to absenteeism.
benefits, etc., and (3) "dealing with advancement for
younger go-getters."
On the challenge or dissatisfied younger workers,
possible solutions include offenng incenttves to older
workers to retire before age 70, offenng incentives to
younger workers to stay with the company and revamping
com pensat1on programs to tie pay more clos1ly to
performance
On the problem of Jobs for women and minontaes, only
.i percent of companies expecl opportunities to shnnk, ac-
cording lo the report. Several corporations said they would
make an effort to see that highly qualified minorities re
ceive special advantages
lrwestors Cautious
Prior to Holiday
NEW YORK IAP) -Stock prices drifted in a mixed
pattern today m a quiet and incooclusave pre houday
session. The Dow Jones average of 30 1ndustnals was off I 04
points to756.50.
Gainers held a slight edge on losers in the broad tally
of New York Stock Exchange-listed issues.
The markets concluded the trading week today, with a
holiday scheduled on Good Fnday.
G Wilham Miller, the new chairman of the Federal
R«:'serve Board, indicated to reporters that the Fed would
not be hesitant to tighten credit ir the recent acceleration
of inflation persists.
Analysts said his commenl<J evoked the prospect of re·
newed upward pressure on short term interest rates.
which might attract money out of stocks and into interest
bParing investments such as Treasury bills.
St"'"k" 111 The
.~pallight
NEW VOlll( 14'PI S•I" (pm J>t•U
""d nee <MnQIP of ,,,. Ill'"" '"°"' Kllw N•w Yo.-• Stoo E•<Nnot •>•l<f>, lradl~ n•llONlly •I ..-e t1-$1 ... mTT Pf8.. St0,100 •t''ll + ~
S.arsR:otb fft, TOO ""• .. 1.., H••Cle•• m.JOO 1•"' -..
I( "'•'' JM 'IOO 1' -•• Clll<orp HUOO 1''41 • '"' 8erhy Pno 711 100 1 -... C.rrl•• C.O 111 . .00 11\'J + ·,
W•ilOll Et 10?.100 1 ... -'"' C.lerpTr '"•too 0,,. -·l'"I T•teproMp ltl,100 11-. + '"'
Hc>r1on $1'ft , ••• ...J» 11'• + '• Gen MOIO• \ 1'1 ;IOO 611>\ .. Sou P•c 10.toO lJ ' 1 Gull O•I l•t.tOO 2S'°" + " Pan "m U0,600 }l9 + ·~
N[W YOfll( CJIPJ
Adv ant .ct Otcllr>fll
Uncllen9ed Totet ln1•n
N•w lllOM Ntw tow\
NEW YOfll(
A111>fO• final Pr•vlOU\ O.y
IAPI WV '>to.' 'lll••
w ... -•OO MO<llll a~ Y•er •90 . T*O r .. rs _
J•~ I to O.le 1'11 to d•I•
qt)' to <Mlle
WH"T AMEIC 011>
NEW YORK (AF'I
11 1.o 000 11 •Ml aoo 1S 000.000 11,no ooo "~.000 11,Sl4.UO ... , ...... I 711,'60,000 '·••.111,c.t
NfW YORK l"P) -TM N"9 YOf'\ '>toct<
E•clwl._ -lotd I._,. 000 IDI lrM1M(
llOft& l>y ptlllC),.. ~ f<>f Wo<IM\fUy
P11r<llHO> 61 t2',)A6 .... ,., ••I•• of
Jtl,tlt \Ilk~ lf'lhldlno I 111 .... , .. ,_
\/\Of I
-------.... -
-OAlL Y PILOT lnurMSay, March 23, 1918 BUSINESS
. ' . .... .
Orange COastBusinesses Report Groivth, Activities
ICN Report• Sala llUce
lCN Pharmaceuticals Inc., Irvine, has report· d sales of $84.S million for its fiscal year ended
Nov. 30, an increase of 2 percent over 1978. and in:
come from operating unita of $8.2 million. an in•
c:rease of 4 percent over the previous year.
These results exclude operations of the com.
pany's German subsldiaries sold in February 1916,
and an $850,000 specfal charge for inventories in
1977
Net loss for the year after all adjustments was
$457,000, compared with net income of $7.2 million
in 1976. The company sald the 1977 fourth quarter
ruults were adversely affected by an· unexpected
bookkeeping charge to biochemical lnventories of
'850,000, made as a result of revised computer pro·
grams. ·
Excluding that inventory adjustment, ICN
ebowed a profit for the year. Other items reported
as adversely affecting 1977 results were increases
io contingency reserves ot $350,000 and foreign
currency translation and devaluation losses of
over $1 milhon.
ICN Pharmaceuticals is a multi-national en·
terprise m the health care field. Its domestic and
international operations serve major markets in
the fields of pharmaceuticals, research chemicals
and diagno!>Lic services.
• PacTel llqorts C'~
Despite improved earnings, all-lime highs 1n
productivity and the fulfillment of record dernands
for service. "uncertainties of California's
economic climate" continue to cloud Pac1f1c
Telephone's future, according lo Gordon L. Hough.
board chairman
Afore than 56 percent of Pacific Telephone's
lf77 earnings remain in jeopardy because of ratc-
ctecisions during the ye~r by the California Public
Ul1hlles Commission, he said, calling the decisions
primarily ''tax related."
"A direct result of these dec1s1ons," Hough
s~id, "was to ha\e our bonds downgraded during
the ) car 10 rdlcction of what was termed a
cent•rall\ difficult regulatory atmosphere "
Pal'Jf1t• 1'l'lcphone 1s seeking rate increa..,cs
totalin~ S.171 m1ll1on a yeur
th t•armngs last year rose 13 percent on·r
1976. to S2 33 per common share Revenues and
othf'r income amounl<'d lo $4,097,627,000, com·
'J)an·cl "1th SJ.698,383,000 in 1976. Expenses, la>.e!>
and inlt'rcst last year were $3.691,868,000, up from
$3,J·rn,567,000 the previous year.
TelefH~ Rrports Bikes
T('lt'filc Computer Corp , Irvine, has reported
that . total revenue jumped 95 percent, and net
earnings broke the million-doUar mark for the
first time in fiscal year 1977, ended Sept. 30. Fis-
cal 1977 "a:. the sixth consecutive year that the
company Droke Dotn revenue and earnings
records
\udlh'd yearcnd f1~urcs show total rc>venuc or
$11 .fiOl.865 1n fiscal 1977, compared with $5,952,676
lhc pre' 1ou.., year
!\<.'learnings were Sl,126,867 m fiscal 1977. a 53
µt•rn~nl mcrease uvc·r the S736,617 figure posted in
fiscal !97G. The 1977 income was aided by an ex-
tn1ordmary item of S456,000 that resulted from tax
bcnt>f1t considerations. Net income the previous
~·ear 1ncludcd a tax benefit of $341,289.
The carnm~s increase boosted shareholder
equity lo $3,320,115, all or which has been ac·
cumulated in the past six years.
Consolidated fully diluted earnings per share
were 85 cents, including 34 cents from the tax
credit, compared with 56 cents. and 26-cent tax
c:red1t, per share in fiscal 1976.
Nearly $900,000 of revenue was contributed by
Tekfilc's European operations. established m
1976.
NB f'i r111 t o Btdld Cntt~r .
Santa Anita Development Corp., Newport
Beach, has purchased eight acres of land at the
,outhwe"t corner of 17th Street and Cabrillo, Santa
1\.na, and will construct a shopping center on the
·•le. anchored by a 52,000-square-foot Fazio 's
Market.
The sale was from Park center Corp., Santa
Ana. for an undisclosed amount.
In addition to the Fazio's Market, the center
will contain 22,000 square feel of shops. Already
leased for the center, located within the 170.acre
Parkcenler development, are Panjo's Pina
Parlor, Keystone Auto Supply, Dr. Honda, op·
tometrist; Hallmark Cards, a laundromat and dry
cleaning establishment and an ice cream and
yogurt parlor. A spring opening is planned, ac-
cording to the developer.
CM Solar,.,,,... Purc ha•ed
Solar Control Corp., Boulder, Colo. bas an-
nounced the acquisition of Solar Energy Equip-
ment Corp., Costa Mesa and Engineering Design
and Development, Inc., Pacoima.
Solar Control is involved in the engineering,
production and distribution of components tor
solar heating and cooling systems and energy.
saving devices.
Donald S. Sather, chairman or the board of the
publicly held company, said the move into
California "is in recognition of the lead which the
state has taken in support or the solar industry.
The California 55 percent lax rebate on the cost or
an installed solar system is the single most
pQaltlve commitment made by any state."
PUBLIC
AUCTION
CUSTOMS STOPPED
MAMDMADE Olll!NT' AL
CARPETS & RUGS
shipment entry f78-13e971, 27 bales date of entry f 'l/1/77 •toe>P•d b)' Custom• under Hctlon
3().4.T.A metl<lngs and IBIAllD fl04t SAU on 1/18/78.
We wlll auction the above shipment of fine wool• & silk&
& othert to recowr wnous ctwgee Incurred due ta
)Ong delay In dennOe. .
~W&&.TAJIPLACI
SAT., \QR. 25, AT 2:00 P.M.
THE REGISTRY HOTEL
IUIMA PAii a COSTA ..sA IOOMI
llOf MACAl'"UI .. ..,.
. •vtMl.CAW.
?t1emorex Corp. over the next year Solar Equipment is involved in the distribut1on
and service of swimming pOol and domestic bot
water solar systems. It i5 the exclualve distributor
of the Falco lille ol solar products in Oran&e
County.
ll also markets the Solargenics hot water
system and other energy saving devices
throughoUt Southern California.
The initial release is $1,S001000. Memorex has
options on addltional unlts, which would Increase
the total order to more than ~.000,000. The con·
trollers are plug-compatible with the IBM 3211·2
and 3272·2.
in& February 1978 for the best Februury m the
company's history, with a growth of 31.3S percent.
over February 1977.
llHcrodata Cotitpletn ...
M1crodata Corp., Irvine, has announced con·
clusion or its transacllon to acquire the remaining
25 pert'ent inlresl in Computer Machinery Com·
pany Ud. of llemel Hempstead near London,
England.
0,. PubHeo• Mol'es
Jjm Martin of Palos Verdes has joined the
company as vice president and general manager
He previously was general manager of the Fafco
distributorship in Los Angeles County.
Clay Publicom, Orange County public com-
m unications firm. has moved from Tustin to
larger quarters in Irvine. In an earher transacllon, Mu~rociata acquired
'75 percent of the common stock of CltJG Ltd. and
product distribution '.lgreements rorlit§ equi{Jlnent.
in the United Kingdom and elsewhere.
Tril'e% Get• Coatrad .
In the Airport Business Complex, the new of-
f&ces occupy Suite M, 17801 Mam St .. lrvme 92714.
Goldftl W•et Sets Rtt0rd Tri vex, Inc., a manufacturer of IBM compliti
ble terminals in Costa Mesa, has signed a contract
to supply IBM 3270-compatible controllers to
Golden West Airlines, Newport Beach, has an-
nounced that 44.024 passengers were carried dur-
Microdata is a small mainframe supplier of •
computer equipment to the business marketplace.
~··· Sale Prict!S Good Thru Wed., March 29, 1978
1 All Photographic. typographical. clerical
and printing errors are suiect to correc-
tion.
.,---~--~--~----~ ....... here's no ONE best hardwar
store. Clark Dye doesn't have It
all. nor does Builders· Em·
oonum or Fedco. The BEST is
up to you .. that's what makes
hie so great. So, one of the best
things 1s ltnd1ng out Maybe you
shoula try Kerm Rima (Hes
been around since the world
was flat .) Find out 11 he 1s the
best for you• AND . we might
mention that because we have a
clean. well-stocked store, super
mtetttgent sates people ana a
great boss. that we might look
expensive but we re not1 It
iust m1gtit be lhat
the BEST1
_ -, the great ~~l>J:9"--------• s d sn't ta\l8 brain gobbler de this ger·
Vlater.53VlftQ it 08 0Ut draiRS tn-S1n1r.-Erato~ ro~ trouble·•ree to clear une drain oage dlS~~~e\, "1bret1on·free baCk•SOOlh~!l\y. Weter-11 just takes ;x~~r~~~~st th~ th1~f ~~:;~~~n. 112-h p. motor. ~333.
from Chicago ~e~ tnet delivers opener b~u costl'/ plumbers ~19~ Re9· 44 .95
saving snower" oret1no burs1s. ~3o:-:'9sl9opped up smlr.l Reg. . 349 5 llght spray or 1n;~9 ~;.59"""· ·;.,~~~~~'.:~-:-~-:-~~.J:~:::!!~~~~~~--
~·
when be ng
In hot water
Is what you want ...
SANf A ANA
one coat
can do it
Glidden Spred GeJ.flo 011
base hOuse paint, E111ra
thick t or one c oet
coverage. Flows on easily,
Reg. 16.95 gallon
rising to
greater heights
fantastically
spreadable
Glidden Acrylic l ate)(
Spred House Paint goes
on easy, dries fast and
looks hke a m1tllon' lesls
a long, long time, too.
Reg. 12 95 gallon
999
gallon
Choice of Vlgoro·a 5-lb.
boxes of fertlhzers ... Rose •
Food. Azalea & Cam11t1a
Food. Tomato Food.
Citrus & Avocado Food
and All-PUrPose Fertilizer.
your choice
1!!
CCOSED EASTE SUND
MARCH 26th
Jwiistl
lock up your castle
with the king
of lock sets
Highly reliable Kwikset Belair Entry lock Set. Key
opens outside, thumb latch opens ins ide. Polished
brass finish. Reg. 12.19.
88
kids can't
knock it
Kid tested Glidden Spred
Latex Semi-Gloss Enamel
gives you a non -
yellowling, Improved
durability enamel hntsh.
Reg. 15.25 gallo~
899
gallon
'ff· Ut qwrf .......... 3.29
repel ts
the
vannlts
Vlgoro's 'Sevin' dual to
use on "•oetables, .,,.
shrube. lawns and e\len
dog& 'nd cats to rtd them
ot pqiy lnaecta. #SD-2'.
2·1b. can
lasting finish
in flying colors
Glidden Spred Satin
latex Wall Paint ••• goes
on amooth and easy and
stays beauhlul longer.
Easy water clean-up. lots
of colors. Reg, 9.99 gallon
699
fallon
to your plants"
good health
Vlgoro• liquid Plant FOOd
·-helps promote good
growth and better y1•lds
ol blooms and lrutts. Even
makta grass grow
greener on your tide of
ll'le teoeel 1-gellon.
Reg. 2.29 1••
E)
J
17
INSIDE: •Tele~ ion
•Solo
•Entertainment • •Ann Landers
~. MMch 23, 1978 OAILYALOT ·Featuring ........ ___ •• ___ _
Garry Thornton and his Performing Samoyeds.
Under the
Big Top
By DENNIS McLELLAN
Of lM 0.11, Piiot SIMI
ll wac; only hours after the circus rolled into
town early Tuesday morning and the San
Clemente llJgh School football field had yet to
be transformed into a three-nng extravaga122a.
The scores of Circus Vargas performers
who appeared m Burbank the night before were
sound asleep in their house trailers.
And the elephants, tigers, camels, bears
and assorted other beasts were still packed
away in the truck trailers lining the street.
But for the work crew the day was already
well under way as 1t carried on what today is
seldom seen circus trad1llon: raising the big
top.
A dozc•n men in T shirts and jeans ap-
proached the massive blue canvas spread over
the fteld.
The tattooed tarantula on one man's bulging
bicep grew even larger as he and the other men
strained loliftthe long poles
TUEY WERE NOT without help, however:
two 4 ,000-pound elephants, harnesses on their
backs, pulled chains which easily raised the
heavy poles mlo the air.
"I think the· elephants can do it better than
they can,'' said one freckle-faced boy.
Dunng a pause, the elephants, their trunks
doing a delicate toe dance along the grass, seemed
ohltv1ous to the men barking four-letter orders al
each other . .. An elephant 1s still 1 mportant in selling up
a show of this kind," observed Fred Van
Voorden, Circus Vargas general superintendent
or as he says, "general troubleshooter."
' Van Voorden, a native of Holland, is an old
circus hand, having been in the business most o(
his life.
Van Voorden, whose wife and daughter do a
foot-juggling act, watched the crew wielding
sledge hammers which drove the tent slakes in-
to the growid.
The shOrt wiry man who retains a Dutch ac-
cent came lo the United Slates in the early
1950s, about the same time the last big traveling
tent show disappeared.
"Il was the end of an era that could not be
r<.'p<.>ated." ~aid Van Voorden. "The bi~ tent
could not b<• mon•d because of 10 million prob·
lcms"
Thal than~<'cl about h\'e years ago when
circus veteran Clifford Vargas. a native Califor-
nian. assembled Ci rcus Vargas, billed as the
world·s largest lra\Chng big lop.
"TIDS MAN COMES along and he does
something magnificent," sa1d Van Vooredn ... I
don't think there ever has been anything like this
-not because I'm partial -that's the opinion of
everyon~ in the business.
"lie has done the thing that could not be
done: he has created the miracle."
The circus would be tn San Clemente only
through Wednesday. Then the approximately
160 employees would pack up and move to West
Covina.
Van Voordcn laughs when he hears the old
cliche that the circus must get in the blood.
"In a way it does that,'' he said. "I don't
know what it 1s with the life in the circus. I do
think it makes circus people different from peo-
ple who have an ordinary eight-to-five life.
"The entire way of life, the traveling, the
living in trailers. m•kes ror a very strong
family-type unit with everyone connected.
"There is a feeling we are all in the same
boat. IC we don't hang together we fall apart."
W'Jat's a circus without an elephant act?
Mark Pierson fixes tear m tent.
The t;t'OWd csn hardly believe its eyes. ...
. . . . •
;f..Z OAIL Y PILOT Tnurlday. March 23, 1078 SOLO I OSCAR BALLOT . . • ~ . , . . . ~.
· Osear Wants Yoa Woman With Chains
; ' , The annual naUGnal PMtlm• of trytn1 to
. i ~ which mo'ri• will wiQ Oscars at the
: /Academy Awards ceremony AprU a 1a Wl· . :•rway. .
It was a bit 7nr for l'OmanUc comedies.
science nc:uoo and. after a lona dry spell, snov-., jea a bout women.
' But re1ardlesa of who or what earns the
hardware oo Oscar night, the Daily Pilot would
like to know who ib readers feel deserves the
goJden statuette. .
To cut ycNI' votes you are uked to fill out the
1 eoatnt f«m and return tt to the DaU.Y Pilot
: • · eoiatertban We&taesdl.y. Narcb29.
Entries ahould be addrelled to Oecar Race, ~·· J>ally Pilot. P.O. Box 1680, C08la Mesa, 92628. ~ ~lleault1 will be publlsbed tbe day of the
1• Acade1D1 Awantaeeremony, Mooday, April 3.
...... . BFSr PJ<,TURE
I •
' : ; = I . : ..
I . 1 .. .
. . . .. .. . '
O .. Annie Hall. ..
O •"The Goodbye Girl:' O "Julia ..
O ••star Wars."
0 ''The Turning Point.''
SUPPORTING ACTOR
0 Mikhail Baryshnikov. "The Turning
Point."
O Peter Firth, ''Equus . .,
0 Alex Guinness, "Star Wars.''
0 Jason Robards. "Julia." 0 M.aximilian Schell. "Julia."
SlJPPOBTING ... ..._..~D As_ you read this. four-week lecture series ""' .. ~ hopelUUyiamvacetw-at ...... t.._ .............. _
0 te ly comm. down 110me m.-1 ...,..,. "" -.vaie
POL·t.... slle Btowne.. "Th6 Turning-maplflc.nt white akl ' !~::Jo_!fi!~~=o.~
1D sl~ with my cblldren . 6olo Tbe ·ct,__
1 0 Quinn Cu.mdiings, .. The Goodbye ri.ht behilld Ou front ' tbrou1b ·~ ......... _.:.: A..-. G rl. •• of}) me. I s~ ehet)'I Romo. lt ~WW. ~ You Me, we are oa an mun Y ...._.~ ... aiMl the 0 Melintfa Dillon, .. Cl~e EncoUiiters adventure to Lake first cJus bec:Lna •t 1:30 of the Third Kind." T-.. n p.m., Wedneld17, A.Dril ... oe. '• tbo first time 5 at the Golden View D Vanessa Redgra\t~, "Juli~.·· :-:e:= ~ O:S: the last f my paltry Hunlinlion Beach Com-Elementary School. D Tuesday Weld. '"Looking for !rfr.. of ~ eunent mu in aavinta U¥t !lne bad munUy.L~Hnlc wll~ Toad HaU. 172$1 Golden
Coodbar.'-, my life. l'ormtr the air~ in my IJ>OllSOI' uu.s week's lee· View Lane. Huntlnltm B.EST Aero a bo1trtendll have ahra.ya Urea cbetkecl. I have ture called .. Fear of Beach.
been re1pon1lble for beu mating ll1ta of Lovins•• for alnales Solofnng for S~a D Woody Allen, "Annie Hall" tblqi Uke ~ca to remember ao between the qes of 25 calndar ...., cacla r-.. O Rlcbard Burton, "E:quus. w pureb'..m, :;::a J!f!; we 11 be halfway or-and 40. The eveninc do'I/ m U. Daill/ PUoC ac1 D Rlchard Dreyfuss_ ·~ a....vn....-and cenerally putttnc ••nbed. begtna at 7 p.m. Friday COtUafu •oticea 01 oe-• Girl.•• • ~u3v the wbole tri tog .... _ Tllere la one thing I and . for direeUons call tnritW1 /or lingla tor Uw P eMRir. neelected to do before the cllnic at 538-8333. Jollotobtg toeelc -l'rfdq 0 Marcello Mastroianni, .. A s·~a1 And boyfriends always we embarked OD our ad-WE c through Tlnn-.dq. and Day:• yg';& drive. venture: make reserva-ARE~ A non-notlte1 to Cl&nJ' &mo. Recently I decided it tions. So, if you're bead-sectarian support and DaU PfJot P 0 Bo:t 0 John Travolta, "Satllrday Night was t.Jme I became sell-inc up north this Ea8ter social group with meet-Colt: 11ac:. m.. Be!:;
'tever." sufficient. So as I write weekend, and happen to ings held beginning at to mclrm ·--..,,.., --'. Ulil, 1 feel compelled to .. 7:30 each SuDday ~ve-.---BEST ACl'RESS brag that it was I who come upon a little wbfte ninf at the Newport meu and p/'loM nannber.
att.acbed the borrowed car with a gigantic ski H a r b or Lu the ran Notice• muat be t-Giil' D Anne Bancroft, "The Turning rack on top. with three Cb b hanct. No tonlca aa 01£. Point." ski rack to the root of people sleeping in it sit· urc , corner of Dover wnce .
the car and I who went t.lJ1I up. you'll know my ~daclh6tb. Street. Newport F.========-=:-0 Jane ~onda, "Julia.0 to the auto ........ -·--to pc •
D Diane"'~eaton, "AnnleHaIL•• buy the ~~;en omiulon WU a aerlous KIDS, CAREERS~ ~ tho "''" r one. CHAOS: •1A SUrvival Kit 0 Shirley MacLaine. ••The Turning u.,.. m not aure bow Regardless of what f o r t be Work 1 n
Point." to.f:!re~~ for happens, at least Ava Mother'' tg a one da: O Marsha Mason, 11The Cood"-e thla sudden trandonna· an d 1 w 111 b av e workshop and will be
GU'. L'• u1 lion -.-.-.... who something to ta1t about conducted be.n .... :nd t u-.a --at lunch nen week. and . &U&&U a a ·' doesn't know which end for the first tlme in my 9.30 a.m., Saturday, ,_ _________________________________ ,.. of the fluhll&ht to open life I'll be
8
woman with April 8, by ~bbe Som· Does your
group
need to raise
funds?!
to put batten• In, to b . mer. Participants may ··~-7-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--·••••••••••&~---~m~~w~bubec~e u~ns~~~ ~~~~~d~~ 'captainOftheship. So/OJ.Z/·ng the Tamura Elementary
• • ~
..
FLORAL EXTRAVAGANZA
IOW THROUGH EASTER
South Coast Plaza
The first is that my School Multipurpose
childrenaregrowingup.· H 0 L l 0 A y Room. 17340 Santa
My son, wbo is ts, prob-8 EM 1 NA a S : M 0 0 a Suzanne Street, Foun-
ably won't want to be Coates, professor of lain Valley. There is no
seen in public with bis sociology and human admission fee and the
mother much longer -sexu.allty at Orange workshop is offered
much Jess go on a trip Coast College, will through Coastllne Com·
with her. And I don't direct a sexual aware-munity Colleee.
want my kids to grow up n es s seminar in FINANCIAL PLAN·
remembering their Mazatlan for Cinco de NINO FOil SINGLES:
mother aa a spineless Mayo, The two-day Ronald C. Gable.
pansy. seminar is for singles C.F.P., will lead the ~;;;:~~~~~~~~!!!!!!~~!!!!!!!!~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~~n Second, I have this a.nd c06t of transporta. -,--~--iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilll&iii..iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiii~~ friend named Ava. Ava hon, accommodations •
and I rtleet once a week and the seminar is $278. Damas De Caridad
· for that special date or prom-
be
Classy&
Sophisticated
Contemporary
and
Junior Fashions
sizes3-13/14
at UNREAL prices
Mosterchorge
BonkAmericord
ondViso
SMASHING
ina
'
10ne-Of-A-Kind"
DESIGNER
ORIGINAL
especially for you -
always perfect! !
and, at
FACTORY
DIRECT prices too.
OPEN DAILY
10-7-Sun. 11-5
SEE OUR FASHION SHOW AT THE HUNTINGTON INN, APRIL 20th
;
Cf«s11i ~st :J'as~ions
5-POINTS SHOPPING CENTER
18559 MAIN STREET, HUNTINGTON BEAa-f, 842-0454
. .,..
8llllk PDf'lt -
. .
for lunch and talk about F · f all her wild and fan· or in ormation. call
tastic adventure.~. She's 673·1235.
a travel writer and goes · NEWPORT JEWISH
alone to places like SINGLES: Purim
Africa and Europe -i:.ervices -beginning at
and has even stayed in a 7:45 on Friday evening
banana republic with a at the Harbor Reform
man who slept with a Temple. 1400 W. Balboa
gun under bis pillow. Blvd., Newport Beach.
Ava makes me feel At 8 p.m. Friday.
about as exciting as a March 30, a discussion
leftover jelly sandwich. will be led by Dr. Ira
More importantly, I Gorman. The topic will
recently met and talked be "The Single Dilem·
with a brave woman by ma.•• Call · Joanne at
the name of Patricia 544 -5180 or Ruth at
Herzog. Ms. Henog, a 645-2317 for details.
practicing Corona del OaANGE COAST
Mar attorney, s hared SINGLES: An exc"_,1.00 her experiences with me .... 0
as a single mother to Busch Gardens Bird
before her remarriage. Santuary will be held on
CONGRATULATES
Flowers by the Sea
998 S. Coast Hwy.
Laguna Beach
.(714) 494~9428 .
5th Place Winne~
in
Bal Masque La Femme
She told me about giv-Saturday, April 1. On
ing up and her law prac-the way home the
tice and hawking ever-over·39 singles' group
ytbing -including her will stop at Lillie Joe's
car -so that she could in Los Angeles for din·
take bertwochlldrenon a ner. Call Alice Forney at
three-month bicycle tour 751-1560 for information.
of Europe.Allofasud-__:S~lN~G~L~ES~O~N~L~Y:..:_:~T~be:_~==:==:==:~~~~~~·~~~~~~!!:::::! den, my fears about
·spending a few days in
Tahoe seemed rather
silly.
Fortunately, we were
able to get a friend lo
agree to care for our dog
and guinea pig, and we
bought some week-long
feeding tablets for the
goldfish. My therapist,
who thinks l 'm not
working hard enough,
also loaned me hi s
portable typewriter for
· the trip -on the condl·
lion I buy a new ribbon
for it.
And so we are ready.
The car is loaded from top to bottom with skl
gear. I have withdrawn
ZESTILlnK-
IS BdCK
• •. in time for its role as the TRADITIONAL EASTER
SAUSAGE. For many families everywhere, breakfast or
brunch on Easter morning is a happy event. This smoked
sausage can be served in several ways -usually with
eggs, hash brown potatoes or pancakes. It may be
featured liter in the day, too. The flavor ic: outstanding.
aid deli"'tful. You'll be complimented for making
the social part of E11ter more interestina.
STE IASICETS Ate
The bare IOOktna btMtfchlng ~~ ~1 by
Jovce. ~ styling ln gtecrnlng ~. •
FOOD "'~ACKS
• 644.:..223 ..
•
~N LANDERS I ERMA BOMBECK Thul"ld-v. March 2'3, 1978 OAIL V PILOT ~<tJ
RUFRll'S
UPHOl.STllY ... , ..... ...... A Mother Hang-p? ( Horoseope ]
ltn ...... ••'-
c-t.MIM-141.0Ht DEAR AN
Whe.n~ver I visit m SIS· Aaa ter "s. .)l~se, 1 me SOUI'H COAST away depressed. H oo-
ACTORS CO-OP Laaders ly child ls a 14-ye -old A•.,•r. -w.. 1ew .... ••1•~• boy. He is constan on :~:,•.::,-:,.\'~~· r~:~'i·~~· top of her, playfull pok-~11""•·T•'"''1 ... co ... merc•••• 1ng and touchin her
Jll••1J1•'';;0 ;;;-<iliT•l';;;);;tslil7ii-tiiiim55:;i_ ______ ..:,...... ____________ backside or circl her
~-----7Stl, u\nnilf>Jt<!ClltY ------.
Exactly right for the crisp new
way you're dressing. The softly
tailored looks you love
Navy calf with
gold ornament
waist with his nds.
When she is sea he
rushes to sit bes e her
and lays his hea n her
Jap.
He hangs a ound
whenever she en tains
women friends loves
lo be m on ad t con·
versat1ons. so limes
adding things n his
own. as if he we one of
the group.
My s ister o 1ously
!>ees nothmg ong in
his behavior nd her
hus band nev r says
anything
Maybe I'm azy, but
this does not 1 k like a
normal relat ship to
me. What can l do? -
FEAR FO THE
FUTURE
DEAR F. T.F.: II
• you are as ing me
whether or not you Li'j~ should talk to our sister
or her bus and, thf' SH 0 ES Parental
myopia Is r ely cured ~9 Fashlon I stand, Newport Beac ... 759-9551 by a ctrn.e re live.
'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-If the y i s a s
feminine a mother·
hung as ll '°unds, lhe
child's teaclilu" must see
'igns ol th.Ji behavior at
school. Perhaps you
could quJetJy uk her to FRIDAY, MARCH%(
su1geat counseling for
the boy. Please make By SYDNEV'OMARR
the attempt. Tbal poor
kid needs help.
DEAR A NN
LANDERS: 1 am 11
years old and lhh. is my
first time to write to
you . My moth e r
punishes me when I tell
a lie , but n obo d y
punishes her when she
tells one. Like when she
does not want to talk on
the phone she makes me
tell whoever is calling
that she is not home
Is this lying'! Mom
says 1l 1s exaggerating
W h 0 j S r I g h t .,
MOLLIE
ARIES MARCH 21 ·
April 19): Emphasis on
contracts. obligations,
responsibiJities, payoffs,
rewards, intensified re-
1 at i o nsb ips , invest-
ments.
TAURUS (April 20·
May 20): Finish task,
round out proJect, form
policy. let go of losing
proposition
GEMINI <May 21 ·
June 20) Create, write,
act . give of yourself, im·
print sty le and
personality Now is the lime Cor or igina lity,
DEAR MOLLIE : breaking ne" grou_nd.
Anything that ls not lhE' being )OU and being
truth Is a Ue. Ask your aware. proud and conf1
mom If you can ask peo-denl.
pie who call when she Is CANCER <June 21 ·
busy to please call back. July. 22>. F~ll Moon
Offer to take the caller's position coincides now
name and number and with secu rity , solid
then be sure to get It base. being nd or ~re-
rlght hooey. t en se, understanding ' j1fference between 11·
Club Calendar runs each lusion and actuality.
Wednesday in .lhe Doily LEO (July 23-Aug.
P1!-0I and ~ontoms riot1ces 22): You receive answer
of women s ond urv1ce 1 0 w rill e n inquiry.
club meetings and events G e m in i , vi r go a n d
for the /ollQWtng week -Sagittarius could play
Thursday through Wednes key roles.
day. Send nolices to Club VIRGO ( /\ug 23 Sept
Calendar, ~lly Ptlnt P 0 22). Full Moon spothghl
Boz 1560. Costa Mesa. CA on rinances abilitv to
92626 Bt! sure to include "ork with ~ateri al at
your nome ond phone hand Be spec1f1 c
number Notices mu.ti be direct. frank -say \\.hat
111 our hand$ two uweks m vou mean mean what
adtXJ11Ce }·ou say · ~\\\&Shor ~~ ~d~f.e~l
INVENTORY SA E
UP.TO 50°/o OFF
THROUGH MARCH 2
BARGAINS GALORE
Car Keys
Are Gone
LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct.
22). Personality is em-
phasized -people a re
more aware of you and
your views. Know it and
prepare accordingly.
Get notes in order.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-
Nov. 21) · Backstage
area 1s given benefit of
light Family member
confides, seeks approval
rather than counsel.
30232 Crown Valley Pkway
Laguna Niguel
(In the Mall)
495-6520
25205 La Paz ad
Laguna Hll
(In the Holida lrn)
581-973(
"lleave'n has no rage
like t o te to hatred
turned, ~or hell a fury
II ke a "om an who has
IO!-ot her far keys "
How w you like that?
My car keys have \lnly
been gone two hours, 36
minutes and three
c;econds and already I'm
paraphrasing Cibber
They're gon e a nd
there's nothing I can do
about ii Oh, I could tear
up the entire house. go
through coal pockets,
EMKo
Bo•beck
SAGl1TARIUS (Nov.
22-Dec. 21 )' Accent on
rom a tic haze means
instincts might not lead
you along m ost con-
s tructive path. You'r e
not seeing too clearly
CA PRICORN I Dec
22-Jan 19> Accent on
advancement, willing-
ness to sacrifi ce to at-
l am a goal You're given
a car And that's the more authority. chances
truth! for financial success a re
lone distance, potential,
reading, advertis1ne.
travel. You gain more
e xperience , base or
operations is broadened
You let go or security
blanket.
PISCES <Feb. 19
March 20): Flashes or
insight gamc.>d you get
bene ath s urface and
could come up wilh true
story . A cce nt on
possessions, valuables.
budget as related to one
who is close. including
partner or mate
/ • Only the Delly Piiot ,._11y t.4fi
ycM1 what'• new In your ~
community ... ewry day 1 •
Srart Being The \\bnlall ltxl want co eer :
John Robert PowerSi
PERSONAL DEVELOPMENT & MODELING SCHOOLS ·:
Petticoats
Full Slips
F0<mol Slips
In Fashion Lengt
Top Pants, Briefs
& Bikinis
....
' • •
'
l~l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!,iii~L-em pt) out handbags, look in doors, lhe car 1g-
ntllon. or on the coun·
tertop in lhe kitchen
"here l definitely last
Som ell mes "'hen the e 0 ha n c e d
kids were off at sch~I. ~~A~Q~U~A~R~l-U~S~l~J~a~n~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I'd straighten up my _20 f'eb. 18J · Accent on
daughter's paper dolls.
GRANDI
RE-OPENI G
CELEBRATE
the re-opening
the LANZ SHOES ON.
Come and see the toally
new look of our entir~store.
SHOES BY I
BARETRAPS , FAMOLARE, BERNARt
SBICCA, JACQUES COHEN , CAPEZI'
SHOES & HANDBAGS FROM
USA. ITALY , SPAIN. GREECE. FRA~
WITH EVERY SHOE OR HANDBAG PURCH
WILL RECEIVE A GIFT OF A COLORFUL
PRINT WALLET. (OFFER EXPIRES
Lucky size 9
Designer
all at 1/2
)
put them BYl what's the
use?.
I recogmze what a lot
of women refuse to ad·
mit Car keys are
pedes trian. Unlike coat
hangers and paperclips,
they have no sex life,
but they're mobile a ll
right.
It's happened before.
On ce I definitely re
member putting them in
my beach bag Several
hours later, they were
gone I discovered them
1n the sand under a
beach towel three bodies
down Those little car
keys' feet must have
started moving before I
got m y tan line wet
Why do they do it? It
must ~ as obvious to
)Ou as it is lo m e
They're male. They're
s hort. And they're un-
happy because they've
got a ring in their nose
They think 1 can 'l do
without them . Well,
they~~ wrong. I didn't
alwaY's' have a car, you
know. You want lo know
something? I got more
done when I didn't have
making sure the tabs
went all one way or
I'd make crackers from
scratch or thin
down all my nail polish
and wax the TV anten·
na. 1 was busy. I didn't
need a car.
Who needs car keys?
Do they think I enjoy
dressing up and going
into town for lunch? Or
cruising around the
shopping center s hop·
ping? Meeting my
friends for lennts and
getting rid or the kid!> at
the playground ror a
couple of hours? It's
pressur-e. I don't need
that kind or pressure
One thing 1 know, J 'm
going lo ket>p calm and
when they're ready to
show themselvec.. I m ay
take them back, but I'm
gelling pretty sick of
lbeir theatrics. l '11 try
just one thing and if it
does n't work, I'm going
loforgetit
I threw myself head
firs t into lht> c lothes
hamper and s hout ed
hysteri ca ll y. "l 'M
PREPARED TO
GROVEL!"
OPEN EASIER
.!::~.!!'. ~~.
Rani AITmg1 .. al1 -Canaps
EASTER SPECIAL
~sn• .... s5ts LIUIES I I.II
MUM ... s59s PLAMTS IUI
SAMLOl9CIO
ROSES s I 0 50h..
CUT R.OWERs ...... 1211 -
WIN ~ GIAMT-41/2 ft.
EASTER IUNNY
1•1•10•ecY84AWAY '"·"' ..... SATVIDA Y 3121 ~
• OPIM 1'0 AU. ... • MO biUMnoM
fore.askr ...
our b1aur is a
silk and cotton
madra~, m navy
and tan. th'.. ·
pkatro trouse.rs
from"s1rforha:
an all cotton
b lru6'l, stnpcz.
brilt and l~ilie..r
pu.r~ by rn~s
mak<z.1ta
epnaj classic.
..
' J . . . • ' •
i'.") -,..
()I DAIL V PtlOT Thurlday, Much 23, 1178
Tl II 'KSI>.\ \'
Cl> C-.Nawa
• NIW8
• &tEWN0¥0ND
A rMjor tNlllo pll9-up on a
heMy togbound ,,_,
during """ "°"' ~ ~end~
for fir•, pollc:• and
PlrWMdlc: unltL I ~fWJ'(BUNCH
Greg drewne of genlnQ
natl "'4tft a IOtlO h9 Wl'OCI,
but Mede 1100 to ~for
the recording ...-on.
., RC>Ol<S
The fb>klel ctwwoe ht
'lllfonQ "*' with the IN#•
dw ol • policemen.
• El.ECTNC COMPANY
~ ~FINANC&.
"Spending And 8udgltlng:
aa."
hra)
8 @ HAPPYOAY&·
"Fourth Anntveraery
Spec:lal: .. lcltle't Girt
~ Tiie Cunnlng
,.,,.. Wtlefl L.otl Betti
ll11lii.-. .. the~lor
....... ~. """" lnd-dlinta lrwaMng the Cul\ho
r~.,.rellwd.
** "Chino" (1076)
Oh.,IH Bro1'11on. Jiii
lre!Md. A oowl)oy. a ~
wllo "breaka" must•no-.
beoor1* I~ with a
~ boy, a IWOfhll\
who lo.-l*n and a man
who -tuelly ""'' him oft the reng4a. (2 hrL)
• CAROi. 8UAHETT
AHDFNsa
au.ta: John 0.-.tdlon,
AIMBlml.
• MOVIE
• 9 ABCNEWS uoe MOYE 1
• *"' ''Tiie Ptlentom Of
The Opera" (1962) Herbin
Lom, HMttw 8Mra. Tha
Parl8 0pwa HolMe II t.,..
roriaad ti/ • inullc:lan who
km his mlllel trying to
ad11ancie h~ deughter'•
alnglng '*-· (1 hr., 30
min)
Tomei Pia"
***Y. "By The light Of
Thi Sllwry Moon" (19531
Dorla Day, Gordon
MllCRH. A ~al>lll
man'• flllftlly ~· ha
la halllng en "'* lollth a
Frenoh actr-. (2 "'°") e AltvOHE FOR
T84NYION?
Q CONCENTRATION ID BEWrTCHED
Jeff MacKay Cleft) and Larry Manetti
plan to swipe the towel of showering
nurse Kathy McCullen in this scene
from tonight's episode of The Black
Sheep Squadron at 9 o'clock on NBC,
Channel 4.
"In P1111M Of The lOl'd"
The First Poetry cu.net
o~ Holy WMll With
poeme °' Saith tll\d devo-
tion In a c:tlurc:h Mttlng
SeHlc:ttons lnciude WO<k •
by Wllliem EmMt Henly
w>d John Mitton.
"'
Lo .. at llnt light pre941nts
more prot>lems than
romance for Darrin en<I
Samentha fB OVEREASY
G!) THE GROWING
YEARS
"Prenatal Development"
(J) UNT AMEO WORLD
"Coo_,,a11on"
(\OJ MERV GRIFFI~
7-000 NBCNEWS 0 UARSCLUB 0 ABCNEWS fJ BOWLING FOR OOUAM
ID ILOVELUCY
The Rlc:atdos and the
Merues pool their
resources to buy a restau-
rant.
Q) ADAM-12
1he omcarr. take to the .tlr
u they begin a special
aalgnment with the /\if
Suc>POl'1 OMSlon. (Patt 1) 9 Sf'ECIAL
''T 9'l'Oftlm: The Worid /\ t
S.y" A broadcHI °''
terrottlm. with ~ntervlew.
unel 111111 footage of t1«or·
lat event• from _.,
n1t1on1. G HOME OARDENEft
··5o111 pH"
Cl) .IOKEA'9 WllD
7;30 D 1100.000 NAME TliAT
ruNE
Q NEW\. YWED GAME 0 ntE GONG SHOW U JOt<E.A'S WILD 6D TltE 8AADY BUNCtt
When Jen develope 11n
llletgy, It la f&ar9d ahe'a
attwgto to her new fathef
-~
t Channel Lbting•
iJ KNXT ICBSJ Los Angel£::. 1 0 KNBC !NBC) Los Angeles ' .. IJ KTLA, lnCI I Los Angeles
1
1
0 KABC· TV IABC) Los Angeles
(l KFMB (CBS) San Diego 0 KHJ· TV (Ind) Los Angeles
110 KCST (ABC) San Diego
ID KTTV (Ind.) Los Angeles e
Q) KCOP· TV (Ind) Los Angeles
fll) KCET-lV (PBS) Los Angelti& m KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntington Beach
: <-ABC Still First ..
'\ ...
.~ ..
~ ...
J
•
Prairie Tops
Nielsen List
NEW YORK I AP l An installment of NBC's
lTln<;t successful series of the TV season, "Little
!louse on the Prairie," was the most-watched pro·
~ram durmg the week of March 13-19, ending an
eight week ABC hold on the top spot in the ratings,
A. C Nielsen Company figures show.
ABC was first again for the 25th time in 28 weeks this season -with an 18.8 rating, followed t by CBS at 18 3 and NBC at 17.l. The networks say
: that means in an average prime time minute, 18.8
("1 percent of the homes m the country with TV were
~ w.itching ABC.
~ NBC'S TRIUMPH AT THE top displaced
' ~BC's "Happy Days." the previous week's win-
r, which dipped to No. s. "Laverne and Shirley "
inner the two weeks before that. was second, aiid
.t third ABC show, "Three's Company," No. 3.
All three ABC programs were reruns of earlier
• episodes, while "L1ttte House on the Prairie" was p• the second installment in a two-part show. The
~ · tol BC show had a rating of 31. Nielsen says that
means of aJl the homes in the country with TV, 31
percent watched all or fart or the rrogram. , The last episode o CBS' "Al in the Family"
eries featuring Archie Bunker's daughter. son-In-
law and grandson, was No. 4 in the weekly ratings.
IN ADDITION TO "ALL ln the Family," CBS
trad four other s hows in the llrst 10, "The
.Waltons," "Alice," "M·A-S-M" and "60 Minutes."
That len ABC with four of the Top 10.
I Both NBC and CBS had trouble at the bottom
• of the ratings. NBC's "Hallmark Hall of Fame,"
• fPaturiog "Peter Pan," and CBS' "Shields and
Yarnell Show," were lied for 61.st place. tollowed
. "'by CBS' "Maude," NBC's "James at 18" and
..-Chuck Barris Rah Rah Show," and CBS' "Ko· ~. jak.''
~ HERE A.BE THE WEEK'S Top 10 progruu:
,.: "Little House on the Prairie,'' with a 31 raim. h f'e1>resenting 22.6 million homes, NBC; "Laveme
• ~~ 4nd Shirley," 29 and 21.1 million, and "Three'• ~ Company," 28.3 and 20.6 million. both ABC: "AU
in the Family," 28 and 20.4 mlllton, CBS; "Happy
Days," 26 and 19 million, ABC; •"Jbe Waltoat,"
• 25.9 and 18.9 million, "Allee," 2.5.7and18.7 mlWon.t
.. M·A·S·H," 25 and 18.5 mllllon, and .. 60
Minutes." 24.8 and 18.1 mUUon, all C8S, and
.. Charlie's Angels," 24.2 and 17.6 mlWon, ABC.
The secood 10 shows:
.. One Day at a Time." c8s: "Lon Boat.r'
••How the West was Won;• and "Soap." all ABC:
Big Event-"Pollce Story," NBC; .. B•ro•y
.Mlller," ABC: "Charlie Brown-Easter BeS!;" and '"nte Incredible Hulk," botb CU; " Is Ehousb," ABC, and ••Tbe F1nt .EutU Ra t,"
CBS.
or Tlgef. the dOg. CD ADAM-12
In NP8flte helicopters,
Ille ot11oe<1 ~ a atolen
light elrcratt. (Part 2)
G!) NEWSCHECI<
Topical laaues are pretent-
e<I on, M>out llnCI from
Orenge County.
(I) IN 8EA1'CH OF •••
®J MATCH GAME P.M.
11-00 II Cl) TitE WAL TONS
••Tlla A9wla1ton·· Joton-
Boy announces his mat-
' 11g1 plans and l>rll'IQS hi•
tlancee (Deirdre Lenihan)
hOrne to ,,_. the latntly;
Ellzebetll end her new
Irland George go Into buli·
ll9M tor themse!Yel. D CHIPS
··0og Gone" Ofllc:er Jon
Bale•'• eff0<1s to help a
loet pooch with an Injured
p-are comp11ea1ed by
vengeenc:.bent hlp1><ea.
an ...,.atlc drlwf attempt-
ing to get ,_ husband to
the hoaP•t• and a motor-
C)'Clial lroz.en with paniC
(R) 0 MOVlt: * *'~ "Namu. Tl'MI Kiiier
Whele" C 1966) Lee
Merrwetl'ter. Richard
Erdman. A klllef Wflllle ts
saved from dMth by a
naturallll lntere11ed in
studying hla betMlvlor. (2
1;30 G @l FISH
"Fire And Ice" A tall on an
Icy aldewalk puts Bernice
out or commllllon and
P'OVIOee en oppor1unlly
for her attr~llllU neighbor
to make a paaa at Flatl.
ID TAl/THOA
CONSEOU£HCE.S G CV£1'EA8Y
t:00 iJ Cl) HAWAII FIVE.()
Mc:Gerrett and nl9 FIYe-0
unlt are trying to dlllCOver
which survivor of a
f1mou1. and recently
d-.ed, paint« IS buay
trying to klll off elf the rest
or the artist'• h&1rs 0 BLACK SHEEP
SQUADRON
"The 8llOW Muttt Go On .
SornetlmM" Pappy p<om·
11181 the 6Mbeu front row
Mlata at a gl~ed USO
allOw II they repair the
e1r1trlp Bui lllnesa
grounds the USO troupe.
Joe Santoe iiu-t 11ers 0 III BARNEY MIL.1.E.A
• The Ho.tage" A Wiid·
eyed gunman lorcas Capt
Millar and Illa men to do
time In the company of a
IOony venlr1loqul1t and hi•
oblclne dummy.
ID MEFIV GRIFFIN
Guests: Shecky Gr-..
Loll F 8'ena, BIR Saluge,
Helping Band
Angie Dickinson bribes young skateboarder
Tiger Williams to attach a magnetic track-
ing device to a limousine, enabling the
police to track kidnappers on Pohce Woman.
tonight at 10 on NBC, Channel ·1
Skelton Says 1V
'A Waste of Tllne'
NASlMLLE. Tenn. (AP) -Violence aside,
t.leYlatan 1UU ia "a waste of tlme, at times,·• says
comtdlan Red Skelton. stenon. in town for an appearance at the
Grab Ole Opry House. told reporters that
televlslon violence distresses
him, but added that he alao
doesn't find much to laugh al in
some of tbe lighter ahows.
In the days of radio, he
said, people liltened to "Fibber
McGee and Molly" waJUng for
the cruh es Fibber opened his
junk-stuffed closet. Now, he
said, they tune in to "All ln the
Famlly'' to bear Archie Bunker ••1.YC* flush hit toilet •
~ thlnk this ls f\lony," ho Hid, "bat It
llD't. I think that anythlq th•t roes Into people's bomes. you abould have dignlty for that home ...
TUBE TOPPERS
ABC fl 8:00 -Happy Daya Special.
This fourth anniversary show finds the
Cunninghams being interviewed tor a
term paper.
KCET 9 9:00 -Cuba: Sport and
Revolution. The national sparts program 1 of Castro's Communist nation is ex·
a mined.
l
KJlJ 011:00 -"One, Two, Three."
lo)ames Cagney's last movie, a comedy ~lassie involvint chicanery on both sides pf the Berlin Wall. with Arlene Francis,
ttorst Bucbholz and Pamela Tiffin.
Anden'e Poodtea, .i.<ry
Vale, Freddie SllN.
fE) WOAU>
l''Cuba: Span And Revolu·
Ilion" CUba'I ~al
rtttonel IPOf\I prognm Is
•T'Odeled aher tllOM of the
JiSR and Eut Germany. ID THEAOAM&
~ICl.E8 ~ Aelama: PrMdlnt"
t'.JO ~ A.U. HUDIOfol
lt'lfnl8'•) ~·of the
Af..S (Adult Ernlrgency
S.-Vice) C<-{Gregory
~ra. Stefan Gleruch,
~ Cor1. Susan P8"etZ,
"'1 Stewert, /\llan MUler.
R\una Soto. Ralph
... u) dNI with the oomlc
Ir~ that often oectn In
e hospital emergency
w~
10-00 l'J ~RNA&"t JONES
"Ti. Mercenet\M" JR.
tm~tea a mercenary
to ta'eflnin41 If a mi ... ng
.,,ar -..t•an hU Joined a
corrynando unit tn1r0flled 1n
an ••Mllnatlon plot (R) II ~WOMAN
"FllOOf A Coln" When "''
altracttve wife (Elizabeth
Baurpi kidnapped, an 011
comp1ny boe•d chelrman
~a Collin•) reluetantty
Pepoer end CrOWtey
to a dleOUlsed Joe
Style aa t>agman for the
ran~rnoney
UGNEWS 0 ®) BARETT/\ ·woman Trouble" Tony
h8lpe • pepoary 12 ·veer·
Old glf nnd -f1thtlf t>elore 1111 takes part In a
~ robM<y ano l>reaks
his parole
U) HON~MOONERS
Relph ero Ed 1urn e
meaquerde party into
turmoll
fll) MICHAEL JACKSON
'1!>~
TOOie* ..._are ~t·
ea on, about and trom
Orange County.
(I) OMLAOIMTS
SPEO\AL
10-.30 m CD NIW9
fl) MACHP.. / LEHRti.
R~
'1!> PAOflU9
11-00 fJ D. Cl)([I NEWS 0 L0\11,~N
STYLE
Love And 'The Wlfar
8eO A young .,.,fe orcir5
a w1ter l>ed "Love ~<I
TIMI Lady B&tber" .. ,b
falls tor a lady barbe<.
0 MOVIE
• • • "One. Two. '"-6"
(1961) Jeml!ll Califey .
Ari-Francis. ~
boM• Oaughter
involved with • ~ an
e.i.acutlve doubu his
chances of e<1vano+en1.
12 hr•) G)ntEOOO ~ When Oee«'e uloer lnl
ac11ng up, Fell• an
OOHn voyege wm them
both good
Cl) LETS MN<E ~l
&) DICK CAV£TT
Oues" Dav1d ~ end M•thell Brtckm Ol'rner
oomedy writers f vett.
(Pan 2 of 21 ~ MACNEIL I UtRER
AIEJ>ORT
11:30 II Cl) CN~OVtE *** "Kelly ...,_ ..
( 19701 Cl111l • Tel-
ly Sevelu World
Wrv 11. 11n reot>abte
team or eold....,ak8$ a
Wiid dash ~itl _,,,y
ht-(R) D TONIGHT
Host JohnnyJarson.
Guests Phyt111 lewmen,
Walter Mot9h. Bob
l>ecker, Dee Bridge-
water
TONIGHT S LATEST Lf$TINGS
cJ" LOVE, AMUllCAN ST/Lt
"~Ove /\nd The Woman In
El• Two bacMtor•
t • beeulilul women
tie vacellonlng, 'L~ r The Burglw JOke"
..... l'M>t bolhered In
he .... , bye borg .. r 9 STARSKYl
HUT~
' Vendetta" /\n aging bell-
/ boy tnd a derenged )'OUf'Q
I men wittl 1 compullllOn to
klU, Ml up the detecthr ..
/
11 th.ir nHt vlctlm1.
Stelen Oler11ch Gary
Sandy guael atat (R)
CD THAT Ol"L
"Rain, Snow And Alee" CD OETSMART
Agent 99 tom• Mu on •
trip muquare<11ng as an
alrltoe •1-ardeaa 9 CAll'TIONED AllC
HIW9
MORNING
IJ TWIUQl{T ZONE
On hi• way hOrne. a man
fall• uleep on a traln and
awellena In a town named
Wllloug'1by. 1=:-~
*•~"Orum& In The Deep
South" (19151) JamH
Cr alg. Guy Madlaotl. Wheft
Iha CMI w~ br'Mk• out.
good friends It West POint
taklt Ol>(>OSing -.-s. ( 1
hr ,30mtnl
12:30 8 MOVIE • * "TIMI Sword Of El
Cid" (1962) Roland C111ev,
Sandro Moretti. Aa punish-
-flt 111' oruelty to their
wl1191 the deuglltert ol Et
C1<1, two l\Ol>lemen rmnt
meet El Ckf'• ct11m1>4ona In
l>attle ( 1 hr , 25 min J ID M<>'M * * "CUtle Of The Living
Deed" (t&e1) Cllnatopner
Lee, Gale Germani /\ mya-
terlOut COUl11 ~
tlla ~ to tum hvlng
be•~ Into 11one (2 lln.)
12:37 0 ®' TOMA
"Ambuah On 7th Avenue"
While ln-llga11ng a gang-
land k.Hllng, Toma II given
the added responall>lllty of
a university student
obeerver WhOse Interest lh
the c-pro,... 10 be
more than acedemle CR)
100 0 TOMORROW
J 8 Ston.r, chairman of
the NetlOllll S111es Rights
Party real)Onds to being
called "the most danger-
ous white racist In th15
country ..
CJ llPY
"Sophia
1:306 NEWS di MOVIE
••141 "Nllllt
1.ove" ( 1H5) U11gw.-
~ .. van, J4ll'f'lll Stewalt.
1:411 WW9 1:14 Nl'W8
~1:
• • ''Thi Son Of El Cltd*
(1N6) Mwll Oamoft, """°"'
..... u.si. D MOW!
• •14 "TlfM loet AAd
Time f191••.0.wd'' C1fte)
Sarah Miia, ~yrtl Cuuck.. 2:068 MOVla • * • "The Rare BtWd"
(1966) Jem11 SI.watt,
MIUrNnO'Hara. noCD MO'lll!
••'.\ "Senta Fe" (1161)
Aenoolph Scott. Jlfll• Cert.,
3.00. HEWS ~.26. NEWI no M0\11!
* * * ''Murder In The live
Aoom" ( 1944) Grae:•
M llCdonald, Donald C4ott. "* ~ "Nalced Fury" C1t69J
Gene Medl•on, Kenneth.
Cope
4:000 MOVIE
• • "Acilon Man~ (1167)
Jeen Oebln, Robert Staclt.
4;0I 0 STE\'£ E.OWAf\08
4:30.. MOVlt! ** "JC>ftnny Allegro"
(1949) 0-ge Aalt, Nina
f'odl.
•'ridot1••
Day• hne .t10.,fe11
MORNING
t1:30ID •••"Let No Man
Write My Epitaph" (1960)
SMiiey WIOt•a, 8IM1 ""-.
A hood'• eon and Wife
anempt to eurvtve aft• l'le
11 euouted I>)' tlla mOb. (2
"''· 20 mm.)
AFTERNOON
12:00 0 ** "TheOnlgan
Trail" (1968) Fred
MecMurray, Gloria Talbott.
A pioneer remlly heell•
w"I to atart • ,_ Ille. (1
hr •• 30m1n)
1:009 •** "8arrier"(1ee&)
Joll\na Szczerbic. Jan
Nowlc:kt /\ eurreallatlc
documentary ol youth Jn
the "new" P~nCI Is
pr981\le<I
3:00 [I *•°""Pretty P«*«I''
('tt6&l Anthony Perklna,
fuesdey Weld An e•~
vo<:l retums 10 Pf'llOn utter
I\ t>rlel 1eunt as an Imagi-
nary CI A agent. (1 hr., 80
min)
3 30 0 • • • "In Like Flint"
(19417) Jlm;>S Coburn, lee
J Cobb TIMI Pentag6n
hlros Flint to lhW11rt a
group of 111ma1e revoluttqn.
erias ( 1 h• • 30 min.)
New Collled Lacks Cohesion
By JA V SHARBtrrr
LOS ANGELES IAP) -Produ
Arnold. whose "Fish" and "Barney Mi
air Thursdays on ABC, has a new com
them tonight at 9 :30 on Channel 7
Hudson St .. " stt in a big-city hospital.
It stars a fine actor, Gregory SI err on f the
original ''Mill er" cops. He now play Dr Tony
Menzies. a harried, dedicated
saw bones who run s t he
hospital's emer«ency room
Sad to say. the open mg epic
lacks the comedy cohesion of
"Miller" and the spinocr or that
series. "Fish," whose premiere
effort was a good example or
doing things right on the hrst
try
Tonight's "Hudson" has a
funny prenuse -an ex-Army
medic, now a mental patient. escapes
a doctor. But it's dissipated a flurry
troducing you to Sierra and the other r
THE ROSTER INCLUDES tb umbling
hospital chief, J . Powell Karbo CSteta ierasch>;
a very pregnant nurse. Rosa Santi 1 Rosana
Soto) and a gay male nurse, N n <Ray
Stewart.).
ll takes a while for Si erra to chec
does, he's busy repairing a steriliztne
grousing to Karbo about the hospi
shortages of medical goods.
Karbo. a penny pincher, picks up
gauze and wonders why 1t can't be s
used agam.
"YOU CAN'T WASH
tells him, to great effect.
A better scene occurs when a rob
is brought In. Seems he has stolen a
and, upon being nabbed by police, st
A thoroughly
Infectious
comedy
....
up m his nose.
"You ran'! enter any part of my body without
a search warrant," he informs the forces of law
and medtcme. Whereupon Sierra hands him a
paper tl.ssue and says blow hard. Out pops tbe
pearl.
"What a beauty," sighs Nurse Santiago. "You
want a biopsy or an appraisal""
IN TIME, THE MENTAL patient returns, hav-
ing saved the bfe of a cardiac v1cl1m he saw drop
on the street. He calls himself Dr. Fenton Coody.
Nobody initially realizes he's the chap without all
his marbles
Ka rho even has him do a !>ecret vasectomy on
a hospital bigwig. It prompts funny exchanges
later between Sierra and the guest cutter.
Unfortunately. il comes too late in the show
which generall y suffers from a lack ot focus, with
too many disparate scenes afoot in 30 minutes
ON ntE POSITIVE side, the cast is excellent.
And, as with producer Arnold's two other series,
there's a consistent feeling or warmth and respect
ror all seen In lhe show, loon and non-loon alike.
Despite its uneven start, ttus m~c1ne show -
booked for a five -week tryout -shows considera-
ble potential. I'd wager it'll improve, survive the
sprmg and resume operating when ABC's fall
season begins
DAILY MATINEES
·cLOSE ENCOUNl ERS OF THE THIRD KIND' (PG'
WED .SU"4-2 OQ..I 4" 7 J0.10 I~
MON rues -1:ioa 10 1~
HOUSE CALLS" (PG)
WiQ·fHURS-SUN-2 IS.. IW IM I~
FR• ISAT-2 IM lH IW IS 10 I~
MON ·TUES -7 4&-HO
"CASEY'S SHA WS" (PG)
NEO .SUN -• I 5-1 OS MON tTUE9 -8 O!>
"YOU LIGHT UP MY LIFE"
W!l>oSl.IN -t~ 20-to u MON tTUES-8 ·~·o 15
' H ANXIETY" (PG)
WIO·THUAS -&JN -I 00.2 .. ,... ~ 4!1-11 «) ,Rf ISM -1~2 6~ 50-0.W 40-103S ~·TUES-TOCMW
"THE FURY" (R
WED .SUN -1 0().3 20-~ <f(MI00.10 20 MOH /TUES-r ~eo
"SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER" (R)
WED -&JN -t 20-3 4IMI C»8 20-10 30
"40"4/TUES -7 ~4'
"RETURN TO WITCH MOUNTAIN"
"NEVER A DULL MOMENr' CGI
"~TURDAY NIGHT FEVER (RJ
• "LIFEGUARD"
"THE ONE & ONL V"
11ALOHA BOBBY & ROSE" (PGI
"HOUSE CALLS"
"SHAMPOO" (R)
"THI: fURY''
''THE REINCARNATION OF PETER PROUD"
•·f'He FURY" (R)
'!THE RElNCARNA TION OF PETER PROUD ..
ALL olll•v•·• ... OP&N ~•OPX ... Nn y
Clllf• Un4Mr t t ~,.. Vnl•U • Kl41•1• PllYt•ou~
....
,
ENTERTAINMENT/ INTERMISSION I MOVIES
FoxPlall$
Four Flicks
For Japan
TM lloll1wood a.,o.ner
TOK YO -Twentieth Century.
Jl'ox worldwide 1>roduclion chief
Alan Ladd Jr. arrived here
earlier this month for an on-tbe-
·~t inspection ol tbe compW\)''s
diatribution activities.
Ladd pointed out that Fox has
four major productions opening
bere between March and July -
••Julia," "The Other Side of
Mldn.i&ht" and "Star Wars."
Noting that Japan baa become
the largest foreign market for
man1 U.S. ftlms, Ladd said both
women's pictures and adventure
films have demonstrated large
audfence appeal here.
-Same Time' Stars
..... ..,... He empbaau.ed lhal the lrip is
entirely aimed at observing the
.Japanese movie audience and
that be is not looking into poss1
ble production financing from
local investors. This 1::; his first
trip to Japan, Ladd Sll.ld.
"Star Wan," which bows here
July 6, is expected to make a
run at the Japanese film rental
record of $11 million set by CIC's
.. Jaws" in early 1976.
Alan Alda, best known for tus role in MASH, and Ellen
Burs tyn, an Oscar winner for "Alice Doesn't Live Here
Any More," will play the leadmg roles in the movie
version of "Same Time Next Year," which Miss Burstyn
ongmated on Broadway.
~DBYE GIRL'
SEQUEL SLATED Hamill in 'Red One'
LOS ANGELES (AP> -
Writer Neil Simon, director
Herbert R06s and producer Ray
Stark will join forces again for a
sequel lo "The Goodbye Girl "
LOS A:-.JGELES CAP) -Mark
Jiam1ll of "Star Wars" will ~tar
\\ tlh L€e \1anm in ''The H1g
Hed Ont',·' Samuel Fuller·~
pl'r.,onal war fi lm about the lsl
Infantry Div1s1on in World War
II
lie Just completed his second
ma1or starring role in "Corvette Summer"
Simon 1s wr1t1ng the
screeapla.y for the £11m, wtuch
will also star Ricbard Dreyfuss.
Marsha Ma.son and Quinn Cum-
mings. 1be setting for the new
film will be ffoU.ywood.
Gene Kelly Guests
llam1Jl has been named Star
or Tomorrow by the movie t.'X·
hibitors at the 21:sl annual Show-
A-Rama convention an Kansas
C1tv.
LOS ANGELES CAP) -Gene
Kelly will make a guest star ap-
pearance on the National
Chcerleading Championships,
airing Monday, April 24, on CBS.
WINNER OF 11 ACADEMY
AWARD NOMINATIONS
lnc:kldfng hl1 PldU'9
8"1 ~.Ann• B•ncroft
Bea Actntu. Shirley Maculne
llfft ~rtlng Actor •
llAlh.la a.ry.hnlkov
a..t DtfKtor • Herbeft ROH
"FOR PURE EXCITEMENT
'THE f URY' tS RELENTLESS."
A~ YAOl..AHS 1'11(3(NWIOH
AOAIAH~~
nt£ JURY
Kllll\ ~ JOMN ~ CAAlll( lf<X>Gll[Y,
CHA.AW ~ING NM IR\llHCt NOAC'tl SID/llr..
~byn\AHK~
Dlo.-dbtllll'Wf OlfWJM ~~AON Pllll~
~by .IOt*I fAllM DOied ""°",....,....
M.llltJOHlfWIUAMS ~Ma.nlonAMTJ. lllCON>S (, IN'lS
IR!'4W~ o .... _. (QOI·-· Ah:\
t.ml.J.
NOW SHOWING ---
USSTOf.. CINEMAS Costa.Mesa CINE DOME Oonge
540 7444 t-34-2553
STADIUM DRM·IN Orange
639 7860
THEATRES-ORANGE CO
SENIOR OTIZENS $2.00
SO. COAST PLAZA
"CASU''S SHADOWS"
··--~--........ -Net ... _,.,..
SD. COAST PLAZA
J4111ris111St ~1711 lllCP-..-.. --. .-,...,... "U TUUA Y MIGHT
NVH"llJ __ ..,_,.MO '.uus-..._ __ ,,.l:,._..11,..,,M __ ,,.._.,,.
SO. COAST PLAZA
w Sufi-S4~J»Z 11111,_ . ACAMM'f--"ClOSI IHCOUNTUS ~THITWllD KIHD" lNI ~11:•~·-·._,. ...... .
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CINEMALAND
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"AHHfl HAU." IP'GI ---.... _..,. ...... -·"'9.-41Jt ·ll<le
"ISL.AMOS IH T'Hl STRUM
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"SkATHOARD" IPCi'
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Put • few word•
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.....,.an ,._._.
. A .. ,' Pion • ""'<>< ...,, .. ot t~ ,,. -Cholot
It'• tun for the youllQ, the young-et..ftewt. few th41
Whole famlly. We''le got a whole bunCh of different
~ to have fun on th41 I~. Ice llcatlng teeeont
for au aget. foe-cotheque di.co Ice dancing fOt
tMna and adults (you don't h•v. to ti. vwy gOOd,
juat wJlllng) and °'*' publlc elwtlnQ hourt mc»t-Qf &l'le weetc. •
.. AMHJCAH
HOTWAX .. INI
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It. "WorVa Gn.test l..o•fl"'
V ''USM Ill.AST"" IN)
I \.J'\tl~°f i , ..•. ·:; .. . .. I ~-. ~ ·-------
UHA
WEaTMULI.B"S
"NIGHT
FULL
OF
RAIN",.,
~·iliiOU
TRA'IURI HIGH
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MAMC ntlA TUS .... ,._ 12'-IUf
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~.March 23. 1978 DAil Y PILOT C'j
'Charlie' at Harlequin
If "Goodbye Charlie.'' Georce
Axelrod's amusing comedy
about a murdered Hollywood
playboy rel.ncarnated as a girl,
doesn't quite jell at the Harle-
guln Dinner Playhouse, It isn't
because Ule cast Isn't t.rylne.
On the contrary. They try
much too bard, overplayln1
a script that could stand pretty
well on its own.
Director Harvey Levine -
whose first two efforts al the
Harlequin, "Last of the Red Hot
Lovera" and "Never Too Lale,"
were n.,ht on tar1et -bu b1.s
players mu1g1ng, double taking
and tromping oo the funiture l.n
search or laughs that might have
been there with a little more
subtlety.
THE MAJOR FAILING in the
Harlequin's "Charlie" rests
primarily with Charlie hersell,
"OOOO•YI CHAllLll"
A comotdy by GMtve ............. Olr.cW\f by H......,
Levine, Mt~ by Pwl« -...c;,,,,.,,..,,, 119ftll,.
11, II-VI....., II-. _..,.t..i T-Y' 1"'°""'
S;;ndeyl -II Afwll 2S •I Ille H.,~ O.-r
l"leyl>OUN, l50J 5. "-'~ Blvd , $ent. AN.
AeNrv•llCIN t1'-Ul I
THI CAST
CNrlle 5en1 ........... -GeNtM!Ge c:..tfleW
0.01119 T r.cy.... .. ............ ~I Boyle
All\IY Me\IWUnt ... • ........ ~ry LI,..,
FraMy Se!-, ............. l(etry ~IS
Gr~-ri. .................... ~GAgOr
Constance Cawlfield, who seems
to have confused male man·
nerisms With a forced gutteral
voice. In endeavoring to con-
vince the audience she's only re·
cently changed her gender, Miss
Cawlfield bears down loo hard.
Every lme 1s accompanied by a
macho gesture or some sort,
many oflhem awkward.
Michael Boyle as Charhe's.
longtime friend acquits himself
better, though be too falls prey ·
to'exaggerated reactions on oc-
casion. Boyle's delivery is sharp
.
Intermission
Tom Tlhls )
and sure. and his cbaracterlza-
Uon ia quite believable.
Mary Ll.nduy ii excellent as
Charlie's Ja.st mistress, while
Adam Gregor does well lo the
smaller role of bis attorney.
Kerry Michaels. apparently un·
der the impression that one good
scbtick deserves another,
becomes tiresome in her brief
atageUme.
"GOODBYE CHARLIE'' is
the Harlequin's first an-
niversary production and, lo be
fair, only the second disappoint·
ment in an ambitious 10-sbow ln·
aueural year. However, a de-
layed opening curtain and over·
long intermissions tend to make
the eveni11g dr"g more than
necessary.
On tbe plus side, Harlequin en-
trepeneur Al Hampton opens the
program with his best solo smg-
ing sequence yet Hampton has
a strong voice and a knact ol
putting it across while maintain-
ing a winning rapport with the
audience.
"Goodbye Charlie" will play
Tuesdays through Sundays until
April 23 at the Harlequin, 3500 S.
Harbor Blvd., just north of Costa
Mesa.
* CALLBOARD -The Harle-
qum has announced open audi-
t ions for its next musical,
"Anything Goes" . . . Equity
performers will be beard Mon·
day, April 3, from 9 a.m. lo 2
p. m ., non-union auditionees
from 2 to 5 p.m. at the Masonic
Temple, 6840 Hollywood Blvd. in
Hollywood . both ~ may
try out Thursday, April 6, f~9 to I at tbe theater • • •
Readines for an onelnal ay
baaed on the legend of Callt a
hlchwayman Black Bart wt be
held Monday at 7 p.m. at
Newport Beach Theater
Center, 2501 Cliff Drive, Ne
Beach ... the show will be
duced in slapstick style f0tt
city's \U)COm.ing arts festival
all ages ol act.ors, dancers
musicians are needed . • •
The Fountain Valley
munity Theater will bold D"11'mllis
for '"l'be Pied Piper'' OD
day from 4 to 6 p.m. at the
lain Valley Community Center.
Slater Avenue and B~t
Street. aod at the city reerellOon
center at Brookburst and 1Jeil
from 7:30 to 9.30 that eve.tnc
. .. Herman Boodman ls ~
inc ...
WaltDuney·
Ammat.ors ~ ·
Due Honors
~S ANGEL~ (AP) -the
veteran animators Walt Db'bv
fondly called bis "nine old n:tn••
will be honored with the Pioeeer
in Film Award at the 39th' an-
nual Delta Kappa Alpha awards
banquet April 9 at the UnivenHy
of Southern California.
The animators are Les Clark,
Marc Davis, Oliver John~ob,
Milton Kahl, Ward Kiml>alt.
E r i c L a r son , W o If g t n;g
Reithermllfl, Frank Thoma.s,8J)d
the late John Leunsbery.
They worked on such Dimy
classics as "Snow White an the
Seven Dwarfs, .. "Bam i.''
''F&Dtasia'' and •1c~··
5 NOMINATED FOR
ACADEMY AWARDS
lncludlng L~
BEST PICTURE t ....
·~· GllL (PG)
DUSTIN HOFFMAN
"STRAIGHT TIME"
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"SATURDAY NtO+f1' •rv•r-. """ ---------· IHTICK" C•l----trt
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"''· .~ -fol.,_ -..&&<..,.W"'""'-1!i.. "THI llTI" 111
WAUD MATTMIW
"CAll'YI IMADOW* (N) ~
"YOU UGll II' MY lR" t"I
DAil. Y PILOT Thurlday, M111ch 23, 1978
*11'IR MATTHAU
GLINlA JACKSON
ART CARNEY
RICHARD BENJAMIN
Dan Digs 'Bear Bugs'
''House
Calls''~"
NOW PLAYING!
STADIUM DAIYE·ll• CIN£DOME 21
Orange 639 8770 Orange 634·2553
Q: The scenery is so beautiful In "Grizzly
Adams." can you tell me where It 11 filmed? And
bow much Bea wel1bs! -R. Callahan, Omaha,
Neb. A· "The Life and Times or Grizzly Adams" iS
Cilmed entirely on location in lhe rugaed Wasatch
Mountains, near Park City, Utah. The more than
65 species or North Amencan animals that appear
in the series are maintained In a specially con·
structed compound near the production bead·
quarters. Ben weighs in at 550 pc,unds; Dan Hag.
~erty at 195. "Since we have a deep affection for
each other." Dan says, "l enjoy the bear hugs I re-
ceive from my gentle co-star." After training
more than 30 African lions as well as wolverines.
'Glad You Asked That'
by Marilyn and Hy GardMr
EDWARDS CINEMA M• n ·Thurs 7 1~ • 9 1S frl f> 00•H00 •10 (J()
Costt Mesa 546·3102 !>•• & Sun 2 oo • 4 oo ·Ii OCJ. e oo .io oo eagles, elephants, chimps, hawks. bears. wild boar
---------------------and Siberian tigers, Dan has come to the con-
uTouchlng, sincere, com-
l>••slonate, and wryly funny .•. "
-Jack Kroll, Newsweek
JtAAef=Ow/a
; J;1itf~t
,~i. ~ . ~'l>(/(}1. '~ ·'~fltfhie " (A)
(\Ved.-Sun. 1 :15, 3:45, 6:15, 8:45, 11 :00
Mon.rrues. 7:15, 9:45
EXCLUSIVELY AT
edwards CINEMA CENTER
HARBOR AT ADAMS, COSTA MESA
MES.A VERDECEHTER 979-4141
edwards BRISTOL CINEMA
BRISTOL AT MACARTHUR
540-7444
clusion that some of his best fnends are m cages
Q : Norman Alden is an actor we loved in "I
Ne\•er Promised You a Rose Garden." Can you fill
us in a Utlle about this talented newcomer? -
Grace Cardona, New York City.
A: Talented, yes newcomer. no Alden ha~
been paying his dues ever i.mce he hosted a kid's
show back homl' in Texas when he himself was
JUSL a kid II~ hitchhiked to New York as a stand-
up comic, pop singer and bit player wherever
anyone would give him the chance to shine -from
off-Broadway to club dates along the Borscht Belt
He's appeared in major movies, TV series and
commercials. You may remember him m the ear-
ly "Mary Hartman" series as the actor who
drowned in a bowl of hot chicken soup!
Q: Sometime ago you slated that Joanne Dru
is Peter Marshall's sister. IUs sister ls Joanne
Pflug. She has appeared on "Hollywood Squares,"
introduced as Joannf' Prtug. If I'm wrong I stand
correctt'd. -Mary RlchardM>n, Paris, Mo.
A· Don't gt•l tired standin~ Joanne Dru IS
Pf'ler's sister
'Q: I heard that funnym an 1'1el Brook!>, ju~t for
a laugh, ket-pi. his Directors Guild Award or the
Year prominently displayed in his bedroom. h
that true? -Bernice R., Tamarac, Fla.
A . No Mel's mother. hvin~ 1n M1um1 Be.ich.
I'> the CUStod1an for ;.ill of her brilliant son's
a" ards
Q: Is Barbra Streisand's live-in hairdresser.
Jon Pet<'rs, still being supported by the superstar?
-R.C. Pa'>adena, Cal.
A· Jle never was. Long before he met
Streisand, Peter'> wa!> setr-sustammg. So much so
he operated his hair salon in u building along one
of Beverly llills' most distinguished business
areas Recently the Jon Peters Organization made
a deal to record new talent for the Columbia label.
developing his own roster of artists. He made his
bow as <a record producer on Streisand's album,
"Ruttt•rfly " And his "Superman" album \urnt'd
gold with three million ct>pies sold In his capacity
as producer of the film remake of "A Star Is
Born," Mr. Peters <no longer "Mr Streisand"')
conceived. pro<luct.>d and marketed, worldwide,
the soundtrack of that film Which at this writing,
has sold some seven mi ILi.on copies. Whatev~~ hap-
p~ns personally between Barbra and ,lorr, its ap.
parent that for now. al lust. Streisand hardly
wants to "Wash That Man Right Out of Her Hair "
'California Suite'
Casting Annnunced
LOS ANGELES (AP) An all-star cast has
been signed for Neil Simon's "California Suite."
They are Alan Alda, Michael Caine, Bill
Cosby, Jane Fonda, Walter Matthau, Elaine May,
Richard Pryor and Magai~ Smith.
Herbert Ross will duect for producer Ray
Stark. 'l'he film is about ~eparate stories of couples
at the Beverly Hills Hotel.
DAN HAGGERTY WITH FURAY FRIENDS
"A Deep Affection for Each Other'
o : Did Elvl~ evf'r comment on why he was
juSt billed a'> "Elvi!>," not Elvis Presley? -An·
toinelle S., ~1t'mphii..
/\ Yes, indct>d . Uack in '57 he ~aid· "I lijce lo
sec myself billed an lights as Just 'Elvis.' It makes
n'lc feel like Garbo. whatever her other name is'·•
O: h Rob<>rt Blake really quilting bis hit TV
wrie!>? And might It continue with another actor
pla)ing nart'tta? -<:. ~chmldt, Milwaukee
i\ · That's doubtful Blake IS Barella -no one
l'be t'Ould play the character and be believable.
But the ans~er to the first part
Of your QUCSliOn IS yes. "It's alJ
over," Blake swears. "There\$
no way In the world I'll come
bat•k . . You can only climb a
mountain once When it's over
anct clonl' with, it's time to move
on und d1mb another moun·
tam " Tht• "mountain" to which
he refers 1<, c.s feature film titled
"Thl· Border " For which, he
nut I l'\ l'ah. Sagittarius Produc-
tions "'II pay him hair a m1Jl1on bucks outright -
plus 10 pcrc:ent or the gros<,.
Q : 1·ve 5ttn Sophia Loren doing c:ommerdals
for a \\att'r purifier on TV recently, and wonder
doe'i she need the money thal badly? -Irene T.,
Philadelphia.
A: Sophia's mot1vat1on isn't money -it's her
way of helping others less fortunate. Her contract
with her spon!>or <the s ame firm that employs Joe
DiM agg10 as "Mr Coffee">. stipulates that her
fees <said to be in the mihhon-dollar bracket) be
turned ovt'r to c·ha nt v
Q : Whatever happt'ned t-0 Will Jordan, who did
'iuch an honest takN)fr on •:d Sullivan? He was on
Ed''> !.how at lt>ast half a dozen limes? -J.O.,
1'cw Haven, Conn.
A Wht•n• thl·n"s :i will there'<> a way: Jordan
has rcs um<'Cl pla~ 1ng Eddie, this time in a
l 'nl\ ersal corned~ film about six youngsters from
"\cw Jc·rsl'Y whosl· hvc•s were changed by the
Beal Jes· first '1s1l tu th<· U S.
Q: When Tom Seaver did color commentary
on the World Serles, you suggested hJs "audltlon ..
warranted hli. getting a r egular berth on TV. So
what happened? -Patty T ., Tulsa, Okla.
A: He did get a syndicated show, thanks to
c·nt1cal acclaim The pitcher will host a show this
s pring mterv1ew1ng superstars m the world of
s ports Mark Sp1t1. Hod Laver, Gordie Howe,
Joe Namath. ctr Concluding with a challenge to
thc hnng legends <accordm~ to ··us") to beat all·
comers at thc1r own games ''I've learned,"
Sea\.Cr said. "that no matter what the game, the
highs that comt• from playing competitively are
c"<aclly the samr" cThe only things different
about Tom's new role will be that every time he
faces the mike mound. he hopes te make a hit, not
keep his guests hatless >
Send your questions to lly Gardner, ''Glod You A&ked
That:· care of th1.~ new.~paper. P.O Box 11748,Chicago.lll.
60611 Manlt1n and l/y Gardne-r will answer as many ques-
tions as the11 can in their column, but the volume of mail
make1 personal rl.'phes impossible.
..
• .
ENTERTAINMENT f HY GARONER
•••• •
V4ml w. of Coast Hwv at MacArthur
• tCnOJ! IUCH • 144-0790 *
• Wed.-Sun.
12:00, 2:30. 5:00
7:30, 10:00
MonJTuee.
7:30, 10:00
Another rollicking
adventure om the ...... ~ creato.:s of .
"The Three Musketeers."
~ ~
€......--'" ,ZI ~J~·
iiiiiiiii-
MEL BROOKS
MAIIUNE KAHN· CURS LfADfMAI· HARVEY K(llMAI
·-mllPITIU •Cll'f--j 11US1c 110111111'" wiur lUAIU oa WXJUJasn. m..s & wn.f
With "ANNIE HALL" (PG)
at Edwards Newpon
and Huntington ~nemas
\ . ~
I
t t I
I ~· l
l
•• ... I EARLE IKE SMALL CAR HEADQUARTERS
I
GI ES YOU OREi!
...
I
.. \~~ .,\;
'l~·t
\ \\
INCLUDING 2 Of THE GREAT IMP01lTS ••• TOYOTA & VOLVO ••• FAST, EFFICIENT
COURTEOUS SERVICE ••• AND LOW PRICES ON NEW &USE CARS!!
EARLE IKE:
PRESIDENT
SAYS ...
We ~re working hard
to 91"' you a whole
new way to buy a
car, and we've qot a
co.mp~e t e l y ft ew
pohc;y 1" our service
dept. · · . fast ,
courte ous service
you can depend on.
Come in and see us
• · • you'll be qlad you
did!!
TAX
REFUND !
l rl •9 in your
Htlmottd tax ntvrn
m credit °" e111y new
or UHd car!!!
SE HABLA
ESPANOL
1977 VOLVO
264 GLA
GET YOUR
f!~E.._T}S!ETS
WITH THE PURC Afri z. I"' HASEOFAHY
NEW TOYOTA
12!.':!!r~a~!~K
IN OUR HUGE sr0cK
WS>Mil~l... F«I~ s•r . .,.., SUMD•V
H l2, ll. 24, 2S, 26, lf71
HEW 1978 TOYOTA
2 DOOlSID•H
Custom side md stripes (TE31 ·3095f~). and pin
WAS $3690.00
IKE'S SALIE PRICE $335650
"6 To Cltoou FnMft"
HEW 1978 TOYOTA
COlOHA 4 DOOlt
Power steerm I AM/FM/MPX ~~ uxury ed11ton,
stripes. custom ~o, custom pin c u s t 0 m w eel well mdgL rocker • (RT105-07t•n). Pane Is.
WAS $6473.50
llCl'S SALIE PRICE s5429so
"I To Choos. fnMa ..
1977 VOLVO
264 GLA
Auto. P/S P/8 c:11n st~ ' · .POW9I' ~ndows. · pes. (VC26465H10420<>e) . .., cond .• custom
Auto .. PIS. P/B. air w . sunroof. (VC26'8SH·t~:-e;}'."dows. cuatQm T·too
WAS SIO 190
IKE'S SALE PRICE
58500
•77 TOYOTA
P'.U. LOMG WHIR USI
Auto. trans • AM/FM st radio. heater v ereo ( 1 F83152). • ery to miles
54299
'74 TOYOTA
COIOUA W•GOH
Auto. trans., stereo radio
with 8 track. heater. Lots of
room! (8~KEL).
52499
•73 VOLVO
141WAGOH
J
Auto. trana.. air condition-
ng. AM radio. (MOPKE)
53499
'77 TOYOTA
5 COIOLU UfnACK 51.5
AJ.f::/Jr conditioning, r •O. heater. rallye
wheels, under 17 000
miles. (688SAE). •
54399
'76HOHDA
CMC
4 speed a1 . AM / · r oondrtlOnlng (839:K~).radlo, heater:
53999
'71 TOYOTA
COIOLU
Aiato. trant A'"'' (663DTC). ., '" radio.
'76 TOYOTA
COIOUA WA.QOM
Auto . trans condlhonlng. rad · • a I r
Extra n·--" (90 '°' heater. """" 2PRA).
53399
'74 TOYOTA
COIOUA
4 speed AM/FM mags. (73ll~). radio.
52399
WAS $10 690
IKE'S SALE PRICE
58778
'76 TOYOTA
CIUC•
Auto. trans a· condlflooing, AM/FM Jed; r
Lo miles. (258PSO). o.
s4399
171VOLVO
4
IMleAN
A.:~~ cond!tionlng,
roof, with ~tO, vinvt oontrol e, orulee . leetf\er (872NJO).
'5499
'7 6 VOLVO uz
4 OYllDIJYI speed. air conditioning r,::;.sr..nng powel' di.C
stereo ;.:~~ ~do1wa. roof. (231-' ._... v ny1 $ r "<v·
'75 TOYOTA
COIOUA filTUCJC
4 speed, air cond radio heat •honing.
(619NIU. er. Gas Saverf
'72 VOLVC>
'74TOYOTA
5 CBJC.A•T
... Ms/peed, air condltiOnl""' "' FM radio vinyt .. ..,.
rtllr• wheels. (0279TRuJ:°'·
•3599
HEW 1978 TOY OT .a. HI LUX sas .......... ~ AM/FM __.IT HD TaUCK '1'0no. chrome bum panel (AN23-072688) per, tailgate
WAS $5365.95
IKE'S SALE PRICE
$468392
"4 To Choose From"
B11y a c~ Sltefl 1
99' at tinw of purcha:
~nly f r om o11r h111i!11•
1nuntCHY. '21
MEW 1978 TOYOTA
COlOLU Sl ·5 UFTUCK 5 Sf'UD
AM/FM stereo st I window det~ y ed steel wheels. rear
(TESt-671495). gger and much more.
WAS $4982 SO
llC.E'S SALE N ICE
$467650
"18 To Choose Frotn ..
1977 VOLVO ·
~ 264 GLA
Auto., P/S P/B . (VC26 .. "'.o:u • • air cust ....unt-040791). • om pin stripes.
WAS $10 290
IKE'S SALE PRICE s957a ·-
'67 VOLVO
4
144SID ...
speed. AM radio with 8
track One of a kind See n
46,000 actua~ mil
1
(UOU914). es.
SEE IT!
'72 VOLVO
WA~
4 speed. AM radio. he You 11 ltke ti (852EMZ) ater.
52999
'77 DODGI
eot.TJ Dll.
4 stieed. radio. heater red
•Ith white Interior' Lo
"'Ilea. Nice 0911 (820SWr).
52999
'76 RAT
114 5'IDsr
t
s skpeed. steteo radio "" rac mags Just .... Sprr~g. (326NJF).•n trme lor
s5499
'72 VOLVO
WAGOM
4 soeed. air conditioning
AM radio wtth tape h •
luggage raci< (878EY~~er.
53199
174VOLYO
A l4SWA9GN
uto. trans.. air 00~
tng. AM radio I rack. (8~ • uggage ).
54199
'75 VOLVO 24J SIDAH
4 speed, stereo ntdi tape heat o with (241Mll). er. Lo lo miles.
)
• l
I l
COMICS j CROSSWORD
MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson
I
1
J
I
"Oh, ohl Feeding time!"
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
BOOMER
MISS PEACH
At2TH~~ ~'!-Y'~AI~
;HE O(..D
5A'f tM6-!
7>
~ Af(Ot.»JD
~.AF'f~(l
.4LL. I No MAH
I? AtJ
IS~MOI
by Tom Batiuk
LET'S 5E£ ... IF I WERE
IN 50.(X)l Rl&HT ~.
WHAT lU)(JU) 1 8€ ctllNbo ~
CASEY
MOON MULLINS
GERIATRIX
t~MY~SCT
ON IA. NEMI YACHT
~15 YE.AR,ANP~
THE: U~.-S. SAY,
IT 19N'T
DESDUCT16l.E !
DENNIS THE MENACE
·A '"W MoM I Ya!RE 1HE ONLY~ IN ~E Ww 1 u~ fVfR •NW~ SEHINO MY EAASI' W>af WORlO nf1'o' · ~ •
I
By Charles Rodrigues
by Ferd and Tom Johnson
GORDO
ROUND-
UP
TIME!
JUDGE PARKER
NANCY
MOW PO YOU
LIKE THIS
ABSTRACT
PAINTING
l MADE~
COME 10
MY HOUSE
AT NOON
AND l'Ll.
GIVE
YOU MV OPINION
by Wm. F. 8t'own and Mel Casson
~IG~I ! If: A MAN
OWNS i.ANO I 1H~
LANO OWN5 Hl"1 .'
by Mell
86CAU5i oF Al.L 1'M~e ONi-NIG~i GIG~
AND Cl.LAS OAiE~ ....
DOOLEY'S WORLD
RICH ~1.~ MAN, ~IVW'4, THIEF ...
J-1.3
DR. SMOCK
SO 11-feY ST'IL-t.-
MAKE HOLJSE
CAL..L..S IN llAL.-Y,. f:H, DOCTOR FAVA ?
IN WHICH CIT'Y PO YOU PRACllCe: ~
MOTLEY'S CREW
by Gus Arriola
.
by Harold Le Doux·
by Tom K. Ryan
GOOP HEAVENS! ..iowo YOO GOf:SS WHAT'S
JN 'Tl-f~ J?N'JEJ..OPE?!
Cvc>(oo
CUCl<OO ClJc1<oo
CUCt<OO cuc><o6<)6_ . cucK • cvc)(oo -.
----...
Thmdly, March 23, 1918
PEANUTS
11VE ~OTICEO ON TV 00
SOME Prr~RS TAU< TO THE ~l (~LIE~.
~~\ E l{OO HER T~1EO THZ ?
DAILY PILOT
by Charles M. Schulz
I ALWA'f'5 P.U.: TO
THE ~~LL WHEN I~\\
PITCHING ...
j
' -. ..
. . ..
,, .. .
by Roger Bradflel4
WliAI £VER
HAF'PENEDTO
KEY PUt.lCH OPERATORS
Al'JO COMPllTER,,
~OGRAMMERS !
by George Lemont
by Templeton and Forman ,
TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS 59 Towering UNITED Feature Syndicate
, Common 62 ... 'easter Wtdnno1y's Putz11 Soh,.d: 64 Chill con vetch
5 Maori war· 65 Wiii! haat.e:
CIUbWOOd Arct\a1C
9 Cook"& •c· 67 Oot·daah
cessory system 2
14 Blbltcal son word'
15 "Prince 70 OMne food
--7 I Give olt 16 R19 111i. 72 Macie -'lh
dence ettort
~ ~ .~ tl A L Ulll H
D ES EL N AN~ A
E¥lli C.10 l Q I: " I'
TlR I H E T E
S TA TI •D1• I~ E
If NI• , ... I~ I II s II ~I~ A SOR E
, A Ill l " II II D
1 ~ ' ~ egalnat 73 A111t1elal
t7E 741mre-··: I' l l I ~ T
Strstemeyer Hungarian
heroes. 2 hero
T Ti Al A T s R
~ T fj t t t t. ~
w<>tds 75 Skelton end 19 Belief Grange
~ I ' f '~ ~ I
20 Peacelulas
21 Somelll1ng
IOQQY
23 Does wiong
24 P1ckaou1
27 Back of the
neck
29 0111esls ot
guns
31 Thrust tor·
WBld
35 Appropriate
37 Sulks
39 F Uf oarinenl
40 Entrance
42 In a CX>rner
44~1011e·1
balance
45 S.Uboa1
47 Astule
49 Suet
50Lov109
52 BeQtna
54 Sketch
56 Tracil 0111·
Ctal
I 'N ( ~ ,p 1 I
VIP 41 Goi119
DOWN 12 Prophetic uns1ead1ly
sign 4 3 Annoyaoce
1 · 13 Brings tn a worll
Bulb.•' DIOllt 46 According
Goool novel 18 Revitalize a ro
2 Owall•nQ l11e 48 Sl19ht Quan·
J Americttn '22 Buddy t11y
25 Animals 51 Was in
1175-83 gait operation
contllct 26 Mists· 0111. 53 lnq111ry
4 Athletic ;>8 Ending for 55 Females
group octo orr1.1111 5 7 Fin1slled
5 Boars 30 Slender 58 Orchestra
curved ai.lks grouo
metnber 32 Drive Of 59 Scot caos
6 In pest lime putt 2 60 Not pro.
7 Child's play· words 61 S1noer -
things 33 Noted Cantrell
8 Malicious 11ssay1s\ 63 tta111 capital
bUfntng 34 Part ot a 66 Neoative
9 Mariner's COf P vote
direction 35 Quick SS E11u1p, stiil)
10 Introduces 36 ~un ou! ol 69 Swine
formally gear enctosllfe
I I E lndl1n 38 C1!111'
17
;
a
'
PVBUC NOTICE
•un1a 'YO caaDno••
IUPa•10. COU•T O" YNI
ITATaOPCAUf'OttNIA ~
TM a C:OUN'rr CW D•AMOI
...... 1'1
tlth ol JOSllPHtNE
«ATMClllHI HALL, 0.C..•-
HOTIC.1 1' HlllllV 0fVIN 101119
°c .... lten of U. ..... neme4 ~-M
1NI eel --toev .... <lalrnt -ln&t •toe M id .-C~ ere t-.,lrM IO Ille
JM"', With h n.K-V --\. WI ~ oCllc• OI Ille e1 .. 1o: • -"'° .. ..,. lt!llM (.MM1,.,,. .,~ ll>tfn, wllll
~ n.ctt ... y YOOklWrt, to IM'"' ,_.,.._... 111 .. elflce Of OOOOLA• L.
,MA.MILTON, HOt lrw111e llho ,
IT•tlll, CA. Mllcll It fllit Pla<e et busl· ..... .,, , ... ~ ..... , _llen
1Penetll411t ...... 1 •• ., ..... •<•·
.,...t, •1111411 IGUr rl*tfN Mitt ,,,. llral ~llc.•llOll CW INt noUce 0 •'-4 ..... fl, ,,.,.
I C)AllY l(l!HOI! HAl.l
l!ocUlor of the Wiii 01
,,,. ebOW-*' Clt<-nt
l>O\IOLAS. L MAMILT()tt
UUJ I "'I"' Ill"-kt. N '\'1otll•, CA .... "'* ... , .. .__ , PuOllalled O'-C-tl O.lly Pll~.
Mer< II It, 'Zl. lO. A41tll •· ''" 10.1 It
PUBLIC NOTICI::
PUBLIC NOTICE ··-su .. 1a1011C01.1•TOf'1'H•
ITAT• MCAUf'OtlMIA POii
THI ~MTY Of' <HtMOa ,.. ,...,.
'MOl 1(1 Of' .. IAatNO Of'
PITITlotl '°" ... OllATI Of' WILL ANO POii LITTa•t TaSTAMIN•
TA• Y A"O '°" AUfltOtlllATI~
TO AOMIMllTI• UNOI • TH• ... oaPINOaNT ADMINISTllATlotl
0' llTATUAC:l. l!lt.le of ltAl.P .. P l!DWAltot,
eka llALPH f'ELTOH l!OWAllO~,
Ot<tHtd
NOTICE 15 Hl!lll!IV GIVl!N lllet
MA•ll\N O. IOWAROS. _, ao..it, het
lllH her.In a pelll(on tor PfoNN Of
Wiii •11C1 IOr luuanct 01 l •llort
Tollamtnlary ..-0 '°' A11tllor1a.0011 IO
Adm I ,.,Ill., ""°"' lllt I __..,..,I Ad mtnl>lratlon at E11etn A<I, relerwMt
ht wt\hh t\ m•d• for f"rther
NtllCl•I•••· aM l!lal ""' l ime and !He<• of ....,,,,. ,,,. w.m.. 11 .. 0..1\ Mlt
/Of Al)rll '· 1'71, ~ 10·00 • m .. In IN
cwrtroo"' o4 ~·t-111 .... S Of H •O
courl, at lOO O•I<. c.,.,1.,. D<lvt W.11, ,,., .,,. City Of '91\ta ~. c:.flfornl•
Oat.O Merch 13, ltll
WIU..IAM I It J(ltlN,
c.o..M y Clef1'
""'" ... HAMN llTA,.LI" L NANMI
••• C.let-.. ..-. ,.. ..
"•-•,CAtue1 ""-·-·-----.,,_:-,-c;T--ITl ...... OU-,-.-u-,-1-N_ll_S._S.___ Publl.,..., O'-~ .. 0.lly Ptl<tl
"AMI STATIIMl"T ~tell t•, 11, 13. ltTe
.., ... te1towt,. ""'"°" •• d!MnQ !><.ti• 10'6-71 ... ".' WOODS 01' TNI! l'OltUT 1W ~ltller A-. Ul\lt Cl. Colt• Met•
"9lltor111a "'11 PUBLIC NOTICE
Pl!BlJC NOTICE
-c,....,
•OT1ca TO C•IDI TOIU
Of 11\IUI TllANVI•
(kO • .., •1tl U C C I
Netlc• '' h•,•b~ etw•f"I to '"• <•Mllort .. Vlll(;INll\ '"'<COMa )~
NO S.. flMl~I Tr.,..IHor whO ... .ta
....... fl! \lf"al 110 .. 1 ,, ... .
Hew~rt U...:!I, '°""" u• Or •"VO \l•lo of C.llternl• l!wl • bwl~ ,,.,,.,.,
•• al>o<.lt 10 De ,,_ 10 ('1,_l!iTINA
VAH -.. unE, SS NO Ml •J lltl ,,.,., •• , ....... •dd'•'' ,, !l.M
Coltalt, C.lly Of Coll• Meu Count, of o..,,.,., \•~· .. CelllO<"••
TM Pr-11 IO lie h•n•l•Htd I\
ChKrl-In -··· .. All «IOU ,,. Ir-. fllfhWfl. ~-I •nO 900d •Ill ol l!lotl s-lcll •lot> bll\lnen
llnow11 •t 50\JP EA ~HDWICH -
lout.., •I • E 11111 Slr•I. Cllv 9f
Cotta M•MI c.ovntv of Or.,,ge, Stale ef
C•llfornl•
T!le bulk HMtlo• will llo <~
"'•led on or aft•r tlw l•d .Uf ol '4prll,
ltll at 10 00 A M at !IE RVICE
ESCROW Q)MPANV. w-•QOr"t
'' 10t2·4 llH<!I 111•<1, Wo>1m1n•ler, '*'· C•lllorn••
!.o lat •• 11,._to11>o T'""''''H •tt fNl,"ft.I Mf'n9' flftCJ 4il0id'•U•~ uMO
lly ,,.. T•tnMtrO< IW llW P••I lllr .. ,,.,, .,. """"
O•l•d -rel! 11 1tll
C/Vlll!N \l•n Ole Pull•
Trlnltl'f'iw
11 llVICI IKllOW COM,.AH 'f
142':1-4-lltl ... • .,.,..,,.,,.,.,CA lt2W:i
lacr.w H• Ill DO
Pul>llllled OtanQit C:O.•I Oaolr 1'1101
Marc" U , '"' 1117 11
PUBUC NOTIC'E OotCI £-l\1111 .... Oaue11, 1--------------4
<:Mia Mfle. C.ltfOrl\1•'2671 l'ICTITIOUI llUS.IMIU 11-----------.,.:,~~l h CondUct.0 l>y •n In MAMI nATU.ilMT
Oaorld E L~ IMl~h~'~o~-1"9 petlOtll ere Mine
Thlt Sia-I WH 111..S with IM OU'ltYEA, MALCX>l.M, !>Al V a,
COun11 Cltr11 Of Oran99 Co...,11 0" HUNTE 11, '301 M•<Arlhilr live.,
Marci! ll, It,., Ntwoort IN<ll. C.llfoml• t'Mi
ft1lJf LUllt H ~ II, Ml Madera P11bll>t..o <ll'el'99 CN•t O•llf P1101, Piao , l'ul!«ton, C.lltornl• •»»
March ''· U, ll)...., ""'" •· ltll Tllo mes II -•cotm, ,,,.. Lo• 10k·ll Court, NtwpOrl Buer>, Cafllorllt•
PUBLIC NOTICE
tlMO
Clla•IM 0 O.ly, 14001 ~••rd
Ori.,.., Nloutt Shor .... C.lllorni• nan
Wllll•m S. Hunt.,, 10112 KllM
l'lc;TITIOUI llUSINaSS o,...,, S.nte ""n•, Callto"''• t1f01
"""'' STATIMUn Jonn 8 Mii .... ,.,,. Ul _ .... , .. 1"-foll-lnQ ""''°" ,, dolf\11 bu" Orl¥t, L•ouna Nl9uo1, Ct1llorn1a
MU al 91•1>
• CALll'ORHIA PACIFIC MOllllE Tiii\ bu,, ..... I• cond11Clt<I C>y •
.. OME SAi.ES. 210. H.,bO, lll•CI, 99"""' perl....,,\l\tp
•2111,CO>ttMeu,CAm» l.e\tr•N OurrH
Jack Hi._and, 10!»1 Or<llld f ll" 11•1-l ••• hied w1111 111o
l'ICTIT'IOUS I USINlSS
HAMI SfATIMINT
TM lollO-#l"O --•<• dO•RQ l>v\• MU•• WOl'IO!ALANO OF FUN , •tO W
1tlll St , Cotta ~w CA t'1•~1
M••Y T•••W Gteenl• 11.S !>.on•• Ana Ave AIJI l)t ,.,.,. ~H. CA ,.,,.,,
SttY•n M •r• C,rttn141 1H!t
CabrlllO Par• Or , Apt N 11 ~•nlo
Ant, CA '2I01
Thi\ bu,lnet\ I~ tonduc.l\"d b'I 4
Ql:fHr1t partMr\n•P
5tl'Wft MAr" (-"t•t-IUof
Tiii\ •tdltmotll '"•' 111.0 .. 1th II,.
Coun1v Cl••~ Of O•"n9" Counlv on
Ftb U 1'78 l'tOOt
Publl•IW<I Or•noo C.0..\1 O•llt "'"°' W.•rcll 7. ~. 1•, U lt11
5al'lleAn.HtltflCj,CAt2101 County Cl.,l of Oraneo Coullly on•-------------
T"ll llVSAl'IHS ,, COl'ldu<l.O Df ... In M.,c,, ll. 1n•
,llvld\wtl l't1a1 J..U.Hl~tnd Publ•the<I <ll'.w>Ql! Cont O.lly Pllol T"'' 11•-., .. 111.0 •1111 .,.. M•rcn1•.u,J0.•1",1wa
eo11n1v c1 ... 11 of Or•noe c-1, °"
Merell IJ, "11
"'* t>ubll"-d °'-Co.\I O•••r PllOI
,...."" ''· 'Zl., JO,""''''·,.,.
....J>(JBUC NOTICt:
l'ICTITIOUS •USINU~
NAM& STAflMIHT
TM •011-1"9 ""'""' " -no """ •Mn •\ UNIOUE ....n Cor~~~ ()(,...,,
-..iu11f•"9lon eeac11. CA.,., ...
Ron.io AbratMtm Go1~•9 '1'177
(O•Mrb•OOll Orr .. l<unllrqlOn Bu<I\,
(.A tl~.._
fhit t>usfneu h c.CH"CN<Cfd by •n tn
.Slv1dual
Ranatd A C.Olcl1>u9
flllt \l.otement .... Ill"(! '""" IM County Cletk of Oran~ County on
Merell 1, 1'71.
PUUUC NOTICE
.. OTlCI TO Ct1•D1TO.S
5UPlll!Olt ODU•T 01' THI[
STATI OP CAUl'OllNIA "Oii
TH& CIOCJNTY 01' O•ANOE
-A-Mm
EtUU ol f'AANI( ROPER.
O.o•M<I ~01 ICE IS HERE8V GIVEN \0 llW
~' tdllors "4 1'--,..,,,.., Cle<edtn•
1het all ,..,_., havl1>9 <l•lm• aQ•IMI U. M id ~-at• 1"9QUlr.O to Ill•
"'-"'· "'"" lht neUSWf'f •OUCMfl, fn t"" oUlca ol IN c1..-11 of lht •~• ..,_ 11119<1 l0<.1'1, or tOPrHe<tl \Mfll, •ln.\"9
fl•C•s,•ry VOU(h•r,, 10
Ill• undorale"" at tM 01110 ol
WILLIAM 1!11. CURTIS, 1701 Oovt s1,..e1, \\Ille Jto, News-rt 8 t iKh,
C:.11,.flll•, ..Well II -plW.e ol ""''· NU I/I "'9 .,............, Ill ell m•1ter1
vert.alnlnQ "' tt'9 •lele ol s.ald oece·
donl, •llMn '-ll"OMM .t"1r lhe flrtl
9'11111Utlollol INt llOflU
Otttd "--v U , ltll
El .. ,. ltoper
E•t<Ulor of ti.e Wiii ot
11\e .t.Gvt MmOCI 0.ud~nl
WILl.IAM"" CUllTIS
•LACK ANO CUllTIS
UOI DtvtMtwt
'4111• lll
Ntw,_rt lleech, C.11..,,,b •?MO
Att.ni.r IW 1-tffw
t>11llt11"" Or-Cotti O•llY Ptlol.
M•rcll 1•, 23. JO 1<P<114 1911
10.0. ,,
PUBLIC NOTJC E
MOTIC& TOC•IOITOltS
SUPElllOll COUllT Of' TMI
ST A TE OP CALI P04UUA ..Olt TH a COUN'TY Of' OltANOa
MO....W"1 ~stet• M LULU &AISOUI O.t
._lJlU A. 'llAISOl!lll, o.c..wc1
NOTICE IS HEflEeY OIV(N to Ille
«WI tors ol 1'---1\&med dtCedtfl4
1,..1 •II Pt,_ htvl"fl clitlrm -•nit
Ille Mid ---.._,,..., 10 lilt
ti.m, •Ith .. M<ftMN --s. '"
.,,. office ol -<I-ol the •-en titted GOUf1, or 10 pr_,,1 thtm, w1111
tPle necns.ary YOllCht•s. 10 IP\e un
O.rtf9r1ed •I no '-"'' ,,,,, SlrUI.
C..t• Mtte. C.011191'nla '1•17, -lcll It
Ille place ol bu•lneu of Ill• un
0.~IQMd WI 1111 men .... Derl•lnlnQ lo
f"-.. l•la (II Mid 6'1<-.,., Wll"'" lour -thl ..... tN tlrt1e P\IC>ll,allOll OI
.thlt Mllce, Oel.O ~h IJ, 1'7t
-lertN...,t •19<uttl• of tf>e Wiii Of
·-...,. _,... 0.Cedlnl f'UIHHIMM .. a MAUMTOM
WM. e.NAllOHTOM sa .. tt1Nt.._
..... 111 c.e.-... CIMW'IMnt.11 T .. e.NTQ A-..Yfllr....._ PWll ..... Or...-0.. 0.flY Pilot. ~· .. a-·-~ .. ~ .. ,.
10S).71
PUBLIC NOTICE
•lH•
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE TO C.alDITOM
5UPl•IOll COUllT O'° TNI'.
ITATI! Of'CAU,..,_HIA FO•
THI COUNTY o~ O•AN"
.... A.t4JU
Est•tt o4 ROSE E l<llAKElt tk•
AOSE STONI01 KllAKElt. Ot<n~
NOTICE IS HEREllV GIVEN to tht
c<t.illon ol '"" -.-e flemed ""_.,' 1,..1 •II Ptnonl ,.,...lnQ <lal<m -lnat
Ille .. Id .--1 -r-lrtd lo lllt
them, with tt. nt<.tU¥Y _,,.,., '"
11'0 oOict o4 IM Cl.,ll of lhe ·-.,._ tilled court. or lo ,,,_,, .,....,, wllll
tM necu .. ry vouchtn, lo U.. un-
_..,.,_ et Ute Ofloct Of AMedteft,
Wt<\ur -Dkll•Y. IOO Wttl Fl~I 5'reet, ~ A1'911n. c.ecllornta, wt>IC'll
'' Ille piece Of llusJ""s Of ,,,. tm· -.1_.i In ell .... t191'• Dtrt.aln;nt lO
Ille ttlalt °' .... --· "'""'"""" "'°"'"' after• lt>t tlrsl PUbll<llllon Of thlt llOllc.e.
Ott..S F-ry U, 1'1f
Ru0olflf\Mar111.
E 119CUlor o4 Ille Wiii 01 ,,,._,. .,.,,,_ OK .... I
MAOOLEN, WINKllt AND OICl(I Y ·-tf Hiii T--. • w .. 1 "'"' '1 ... 1 "'uaL•WI Ln • .._.,._, C.ltlwllle .. .,
Ttl!~1-
.. tt•r,..y tw fnc;-
Puollar.o ~-Coal! Oallr f'ltol
M•"" n. n. JO -Ap<ll •. "" 10~.,.
PUBLIC NOTICE
Pl'BLJC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOlli aUSINUS
NAMa HATUllllMT
>Ula
Tiit lollO#lnQ '"',,_' .,. do1n9 -1 .......
COMPVTEll·TUTOR LEARNING
SVSTEMS. lSSU O..r1em.9'W Rd,
L.eQu.-. Hiii•, c.111orn1e •»u
llaymond L !OOO•<d, 1HS7
Charloma91>e Rd , l •ovn• +Hll•
C.lllON\I• nul
Maurto n l<oOQHd 7SHl
Cllarlemaon• lld . l •ovn• Htlh .
C..lllor"I• '2UJ
Tlllt bu•intu I• tc>Mll( It'd b• •
~ntr•I perlfttnlllp
Ray..,_,., L. H"tXl.ord
Tiii\ lltl-1 wt\ fllw w1111 111t
County ti••• 01 Orange Covn1, o" M.,lh 70 1'11 "" .. , Published 0>-eo..11 O•••v Pt101, ""41rcll n, JO..,., Aorll •. , l 1•11
llst-71
PUBLIC NOTICE
----
Pl 'BL.IC SOTICE PUBIJC NOTICE Pt.TBl.IC NOTICE
-~~----~-----~
'11·1'
Pl'BLIC NOTICE-
CNtlt
SUPUllo.t COU•T 01' TME
HATI[ tW CAUFOlltNIA fO"
TM I COUNTY Of 0.ANGI
.... A·~
HOTICI! 01' HIA•INO Of
f'ITITION fOlt Pltoe.ATI 01' WILL
AND 1'011 LllTTEIU 01' AD·
MllflSTllATION WITH WILL AN·
NUllD
Etl•I• ol SIGMUND LICHTER, 0.<H'-"
NOTICE IS HERE&V GIVEN lhal
GLENN PAUL LIOfTElt i..s ltt..i
hertln • Ptlllioll tor Pr-le Of Wiii
•nd for l•WWK• Of Ltllen of Ad·
m1nl11rallon wllll Wlll "'-•ed lo the Pttlllo~r ~-· to ..,1c11 Is -
lor ''"""" IMl'tkulan, -tlwl Ille tlmt •"4 t>I•• ot hur1n9 I,,. """'
11•• bttn vi tor AJ><ll '· 197t , •I 10 <»
PtJalJC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
fllCTITIOUI AllMNlll
lfAM•ITAT•M•NT
Tl!. fellew\fte per-ll ... "I ~·
lltUH MET•• MAllKE.TIMC), *"iflM•
I••. C.Olta llMM, CA t»»
1Cen1 ... S Wlllle, "24 Sllat1let,
(.ost• -· CA. .,.. 1 ... , autlMU " <OMIKIH ., • ""''i.d -1MnlWP. l(-~-11• Thll lie-I .., .. Ill .. wllll UW
Couftly Cl<lttl Oii M¥cll It lf1t. "1n•
Pdll..-M 0r-. CM\t o.lly PllOt.
MArtll 1', U. llll. .,.. .... t'7t
I OS Mt
PUBLIC NOTICE
S.U,.llllCM C'OU•T 0,. nt•
ST AT I Of' CM.I POltM IA POfl
TNll CO\INTY Of OaANO•
-A-fllD
lllOTICa 01' MaAalNO 01'
PllTITION ..ott PltO&AT• Of Wll.L
AlfO llTTfltS TUYAMl!NfAllY
E•l•I• of MARV A. SCHMI n , ah
MARV ,ANNSCliMln. OK .... d
NOTICE IS HEREBV GIVEN that
8ANI( OF AMERICA NATIONAL nusr " SAVINGS ASM>CIATIOH
.... liltd ,,....., a Pllllllon"" ......e.te
ol Will anti luuan<• of l tllt••
Tolamo,.1.er., lo IM """"-' rt· I•••"<• t• ..,.Cl! ft 11'\eOt tor lllflller JM•ll<ular\, M14 t111t lht llm• •nd
pit<• o4 .... fllll .... ---... for Af)f'll 4, 1f11 ... IO·OO • m ., In lhe
ClllH'lroom Of 0oper1,....,.1 Ho. J Of ,...,
~. el 100 OW>< C..0-1¥ Orl"9 w--.
Ill .,._ CllY flf 5eM.e AM, Ge11-e.
0•1.-1 MMcn 1), '"' WtW4Ull L SC JOtlN,
MUllWl~IM°l':.MACDOMAl.0,
MllAOI & llOSa-ALO
AP ... ~~·-... N----a-°""· W..1sll' ..... .-t ee.dl, ~,...
A-yler:~--
f>¥1>11,_ Or-CoHl °""" f'llOI, M.trtll I •• 11, Z>. ,.,.
11»1 71
Pt:BUC l'tOTICE
•·tU" SU,.lltlO. C:OU•T Of THI'
$TATIE 01' CALl,OllNIA P.011
TIU: CIOCJNT" 0, O•ANGC
Na.A-MSJ
MOT ICI O'° MIA•INO O' "''"'°" llHOI• P•OllAT• coo• Ul.S flOll ottDlll AUTMOlllllNO
AMO Dt•ICTINO tuc•cUTO.S TO
T•AN$1'1lll Pl•$OMAL
PllOPllllT" Este l• or E:ONA l("Al'MER
DUHl.AP,OtQoaied.
NOTICE IS HERE&V GIVEN lhet
Ptllll-J, lAUGHLIN £. WATEltS
-FRANK J . WATERS lie .. fll.O
herein • .-ClhOf\"" O<Cltr All\llMltll\9 -dlrtcllnt Eat<ulorl lo Trefltltr
P•rson•I P•oCMrty IO<tltd al 4'1
M•rllO PIK•. P•lm Sc>rlnot. -al 1U·UI South Oran9e Orin, Lo•
l\nQelu. lo EOWARO ~ O\JNV.P re
l•r•n<• lo wmcll 11 me60 lor furlt!er
~rtl<ult••, •~ that ll't ""'' and plau of hearlnQ IN ....,. f\a• -Ml tor APrll ll, !tit, a4 t 00 •"', In lhe
courtroom.,. 0.-1 ...... 1 .... l of .... court, at 100 O •o< CM>IM Otlw W.al,
'" 111e City ol S...l• ...,,.. Celllorllle O•ltd FtO<wrv 2'1. lt71
WI LI.I.AM I SI .IOMN,
COOl'IC'(Cler ..
HOS.SAMAN, KllUIOI'.•, & MA115N au s...111.....,....,....
Lea A"9fl-. ~-' Ttf· 11Ul6aml eN lllOllOl\N, CAf'S & CAlllOMIE
In 1#. M-St., Wte ID6 "" ......... ~.,. T .. ~(tl)I~
Alt«M" Nr. ,.,..,....,..
PYl>4 l111ed Or-c.o." O.llr ""ot.
llAarcll U, 1', 30, ''"
PUBLIC NOTICP. ~:;"') ~7 ~~d cc~:;.~: ~r:~":i':: ---.. -O-T-IC-E-IH_V_l_T_l_N_O_•_l·DS·-·--
g;;7,~,~~\I, In 1"' City o1 Sant• Ana, Nollet I\ lltrt by Qlven lh•t t~
Oalod AMrcll 16. 1~78 80••6 ol fru\tep\ ol Ill• (oHI Commun11't CoU-01\lrl<I ol OrMIOI' WIU..IAM E. )I JOttH. Coun1v. C•lllO<n••. will rt<t•Yt , .. 100
JAMES i~~~I:;: l>lds up lo 11 00 • m , Mond•Y, Af)f'll
JOH"H J, WOLi' ~·ldn;:;.~ ~~,:7;.c;:::~o °::'\i~i
,...,,. • .....,~~••• Ad•m\ Avrnup, Co1U Mtu.
,. • ...._.,, -· C.aflf-• ,... C.llfornla, •l wNcll llmt ~ blch will Tel: 111'1 ....... , Ill! ouollcl'(_....,and<t~lor •1t-y11er·-iu-P111>tJ.-Or-. COoltl O.ilr Piiot, PAINTING OF 1t1' COMllNEO
M•rtll u, JC, >O. 1'" SUMMER SCHEDULE OF CLA~ES
I U"7t
PUBLIC NOTICE
fCCC GWC DCCI
All 11161 re to b9 In«<~• wltll
Ille 81d FO•m lntl<UCllO"' and
CortOlllGM -So9<ilk•• ...... -'!Ith
-hOW on I~• -,.._., 119 MCll....:I In r... offlc• ol u. P11te1W1S1no "'9tnC oe
s.ld KlloOI cl ltr k I
EA<ll lllcldrr mu\I \UbmU wllh llh
bid• calllier •<he<~ urtllled cl>e<ll
or l>lOOtr'~ ~ -NY~t to llol .,,.,., ol I"" ~11 COMmUft•IY Co41evt
Ohlrlct Bo•rd ol Trutl•n In an
•mount"°' tK\ thAn ft~ Pf''',."' U • 1
of Cf\! sum bid•\• fJ\MftW'flf'if' '"-"' '""" bldO•,. writ ,.,,\,, into ttH• propau•<'t
Conl••CI If l"t """' II ... erOH It him tn o~ f'Yltnt of t.tHu,. to ,.,.,_,
1n10 •vtf'\ rnnv.wt tt\r 0'"0C"ffl'd\ of thf'
< lltck will bf> forl•H•d. O• In lhr 'ot o• • t>ond. IM lull •um lhl>••of will bf
le>rleiltd 10 l .. d ... ~ dlth•d.
No bl~r ,,..'( wlllldr-Ills Old tot • ""od ot tor1v 11"" IOI cs.n ett« lht d•lt VI for,,,. oQf'<llnQ lhtrtof,
Tti. llNrd °' Tr111lttl r~H<'\ .. t Ill'
prlvil-of ••l•ct1nQ env -all hld1
t r lo waive any lrr .. Ul•rlflH or
lnlormelllles In •ny bid ot In Ille
bltldlf'llQ,
HO.-MAN E. WA nOH
ltdy, llollrd o4 T "*"" °""': ~110, lt11 -11 :OO e.m.
PvlllltflN er.,. c:ont o.i1r """"-
Mclrch u. JO. "" UOHI
PUB~NOTICE
OAll y PiLOT DS
n. 8'cPfl JUUtplk•
Oft Ult OrWWI Coat
DAILY PILOT
CLAS SIRED
ADS
l eu COi\ Sell It, fwi II,
Trode It With • Wont Ad
( 842-5878]
°"'Cal Sef>rk• f•••CrtHll ~
EOU~ HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
.........,. •• Hotic•:
All real eslalt! •d·
vertlsed in th is aewapaper LS 1ubjett to
the" Federal Fair Hous-
lnC Act of 11163 which
makes tt We&al to ad·
vertae "any preference,
hmitation, or di&·
crimloatlon based on
race, color, relig>oo, aex.
or naUcaal origin, .or an
intention ta make any
such preference, limita·
tioo, or discrimination."
This newapaper will nof
knowin~ly accept any
advertising for real estate which is in viola·
tion ~the law.
l!RIOIS: Act.ft'fli..-.
ta.o.ldc:t.cktwrads ..., ... "'°"' ""-.... I ••:tt,. n. DAILY PILOT __ ,
hMlty for ... first
l•co,.r•ct IHertio•
Olly.
•••••••••••••••••••••••
GeMrcil 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••
DEStGHED-
JOR EXICUTIYE
UVIHG
This beautifully up
graded Buccola Home'
Sp•c1ous Living Room
with big Fireplace.
Large Master Bedroom.
highly upgraded with
private entrance lo
garden area. Stomp
st.one planters highlight
the room-backyard.
Mesa Verde Living at its
Best! $129,000. Call
~2313 c• ""' m o • u -:-'llN m fllf Ntrt_ • [~ISAIHI
MPT. AREA
EXEC. HOME
A unique opportunity for
a fmly to move into the
Newport area & escape
pay1n& an outrageous
price. Live in a blfl
"Buccola Built" home
known for spacious rm mes " huge wardrobe &. storage space Only ~
fn blocks from Ch.ff Dr •
& the Harbor. Just list·
ed. 646-7711
Real l'::.Stat<'
CAPE COD
SSS.000/$2,500
TOTALOOWM
W1nd1ng roadway lo
M>anng 2 story retreat!
Private ground protect
secluded enlry to lavistt
living room. Gourmet
kitchen overlooks sun·
ahtne courtyard l Wind·
Inc atainuy leads to
aweepin.t muter bdrm
plus child's relreatl
HUITJ I Seller is anxious.
"7~10
O'fN 1119•11 S ,UN fOlll MCI '
(~tlfl111d
Q.EAH CONDOS
2 Bdrm., ('USlOm $50,000
2 Bdrm • famowi Orange
Tree area. ll"Y1ne S64.~
IENTSOH &: llOW ..
IHC. IJJ.97 II
t'eople who Deed Pl'OplO
That'• what the
DAILYPJLOT
SDVTC'a DIRECTORY
•uhboatl
$1.&2 per DAY
1bal'1 ALL you pay
for• 30day ad
In the
DAILY PILOT
SERVICE 11m:TI1r
'
..
04 DAIL V PILOT Thursd.ly Ma1c.h 23 1978 Hous.s For ~ I HouH1 For SG• Hout~• For Salt Houu For Mft> tiouHs fOf' S. ···········•··········· ........................................................................................... .
Ge•vat 1002 G.Mr.. , 1002 Gwret 1002 Ge .. rol 1002 ,_,.. 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
G _... I 002 G-.NI I 002 GeMu• I 002 Gfttf'OI I 002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
~COATS & WALLACE ~REAL ESTATE, INC.
II LOCAll Y OWNED COMPANY SlRVINC
THF ~OUTH C ASr AREA SINCE 1963
·A. MIW NOMI 1H MESA. YBDl7 -Not
really, but better. Featunng 2400 sq.
ft., 4 bdrrns .• ..a baths and all the
desirable elements. Truly an "Instant Home -Beautiful" on a choice street.
Unmatchable at $149,000. Please
phone 546-4&41 for appt.
... OYl-fM -Enjoy sea breezes in
lovely 4 bdrm, close to shopeing, beaches, schools, churches. lmagme a 2 story home for only $97,000. caa
"'6404161
Serving Costa Mesa-Irvine
Huntington B each-Newport B each
GtMral 1ooiG-.ra1 1002 ...••.•...........•.......•.....•..•......••.•
~
ORIGINAL HARBOR VIEW with
VIEW. Spacious 4 bdrm, family rm
home m original Harbor View with
formal dining, pool, jacuzZl -AND -
gorgeous ocean, harbor. island and
night light view. Reduced to $259,500.
BEAUTIFULLY U PDATED 2
Bedroom with room to add 2nd unit
for only $135,500
Call 644-7211 for driaifs mmewa
G~I I 002 Gt'Mrol 1002 .............•••••.••.. ····••••··············•
HU OFHRING CM SPANISH VILLA
COUHTIY eeeuSH CHAIM
Extensive (and expensive!) use or
used brick and wood siding on all
three delightM patios surrounding
thi s 4 bedroom Woodbridge
Broadmoor home that reaks of Old
English charm . Professionally
decorated and landscaped (bonus size
lot) near the 30 acre lake. Priced at
J usl $125,000 (Owner is a licensee.>
Upiliij ICJUI: tiUMl:i
REAL TORS', 675 6000
2443 Edst Co.ist Highway. Corona dt'I Mar
.ilso "' M.-sa Vl·rdl' .11 !.>·1u !.>990
~~! .......... !?~~1~~~ .......... !?~~
llG CANYON
i BR. f am. rm .. 3 baths. Beautifully
decorated family home with patio
views from each room. $!35,000
LIDO ISLE
Newly remodeled 4 bdrm .. den. 4
haths. hvin~ rm w /cathedral cf!llmg.
Lge master bdrm. suite
IAYFROHT
Several fine bayfront homes
with pier & sli ps
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Bay~1dPDrivl' NB b75 ·blbl
Lu:<ury Coll. Park ron 1 l ACRE--$71, 90 0
do, 2 br t'a with full ba. fl t:d ti I e roof over GeMral I 002 GeMrol I 002
prof dt'Cor & II.ti:. At SpJru-.h arches leads to •••••••• ••••••••••••••• •••••••••• ••••••••••••• tchd i! car i.:urJ~t· -.l'l·luded entry Oak
w op~ner f dt•31 for beaml-<1 ceilings hi~hht"I JIR + IOMUS BEST FOR LESS
:-.mglc bu)er with hmit II\ rm Caot1na kitchen S 3 0 3M 0 . -PAYS J Bdrm condo SS0.000
ed ~•n.mi;:s Low down plu .. 'oV.t:l'PIOJ! ma!>tcr AU! u p i.: r n d e d . ~~ymt'nt C~nl1YS&l,5-00 bi•drnom µlus 2,.,.t'e d mort' r oo m 'l'oundproofed,pancled
Callno"' 64659-tS lwllrooms Spra'>'l.•nl! Trani.fer your presl'Ol ~apered Lat~&plaster.
Int Seller anx1ou~ rr.1-eqwly here & dbSUmt' ceramic lll~. pr t\ 3tl 9UALITY ~• l!IO Total du14n Call v A loan 7 percent m patio. pm•ate courtyard Ouhtandm~ pool homl· 1 Ow"k 8-ii·tiOIO teresl S30l mo PJ vs f'ool. :. a una QUI ET
with 6' spJ off ma ... tl•r • •· ;ill Big living room ClosetoSo Coast Plaza. ~~P:;'."'.~,:'.;'~,!kd .~,::~; ~~ IB&Hil] Bn<k '"•Pim ""'" (~~:~ $~~~~;;,:~, kitchen family room room chtnil <'Jb&nt•l'i · ' Gigantic finuihed bonu:-. ~ourml'l k1 t1·h1•n & room~ Pnced reduced
... l y I 1 lo h 11 1• 1· o r :J -$2500 too! Take advan Bedroom. d1•n 1hnin~ room. & a i.:rt·at l•ll',1 NEWPORT IEACH tage of super pricl>.
!100 CALL751Jl!Jt l11~hly upgraded. :I terms &space•Call no"'l.m:::::;:::;~===
tldrm. family & dmins: 752·t7oo C:: SELECT rooms. new brown plush ,.---· -' -· ·===== 31R + DEN
T'PROPERTIES <'<•rpcl5. sparkling pool [~ ••• ~ POOL+ HORSES
IRVl ..... E U ..... IV PIC I .ind loL'i of extras Of. Gorgeous ~. acr<' horst' " " I lt-rt•d al Clnly Sl2!i.5UO MUCH DESIRB> I ''·II"'·"' 11•1 property' Hugi: llvans: '-' ""' " room & den with OXFORD j f1repla re 1n e ach ' lklow markt•t ~0111•1 ..JUST LISTS>!! Enormous family room
\Jl'W from th1-. 22110 sq ft l OCEANFRONT Wet bar Rambllns:
:1 br. 3 ba. form;1I <Im rm 3 Bdrm. 11, bath oi:ean ranch kitchen Spacious
.« tecna)!cr·, h1dl'Jl4a} ---------front home. open bcJm" bedroom Sparkling blue Stt'pt, frtJm puob. ll'nots --m hv rm . bdrm palm pool Ram Tack Room
OCU.M VIEW NEWPORT
9ualtty c••tnctlon, 2 IA, l IA.
w /frpfr.. :.:::."•h• W•llp•,er• ttiro.gllmt, . fib. MW :,......
four skylkJNs. All .. w blllJMia"'-c" . + 119 .. ldtchetL ..... r..m..g.. "*"
saw• c9dar HwCMaglMNt. Frt.ctt doors
Of*llng to ftldOMd deck. Stepa from
y0ttr door lo beodt. $215,000
CANNERY VILLAGE
INVESTMEtilf opporfuftfty, exce41tftt
,.,.clalty -,, lkoffoa. Wood sMftCjed
si11CJI• ~on fee ,__ SI 00,000 .
CAMEO HIGHLANDS
CORONA DEL MAR
This llWIMQC. l IR, 2 IA + d.tt, ..ot •r
has room for pool. tMlt Is •..Y Mar p.t.
IMach. Reduced lo $169,900.
LAGUNA BEACH CHARMER
2 IR, I IA. Walk to IMach. M.xlcan
frptc., odl floors. ffttced ycrd. rerl.ct
hotn. fdr artist, writff, 1tudettt, co.ipfe,
WHlrHden mtd anyOM who apprKlahs
Loquno charm. Only SI I 0.000.
EMERALD BAY
Spect~ •lew hCMM of fine quality
ourlooldnc) &Mrald lay. rft'iKt family
ho"'e for thoM dftiring this great p.t.
co1vunUftity. Has dor lo OOM, sep.. study +
storo9e. 4 II, 2 IA. $495,000.
644-7020
2123 SAN JOA9UIN HIUS ROAD
NEWPORT BEACH
1002 Gettttol 1002 ••••.••.•.•............
COMPLETELY
REMODB.B>
New •,2" pegged u.ik
floor in k1trhe11 New
d I S h
wac;he. & trash compal·
tor Large family room
plus big den 3
Bedrooms Sparkllnl!
pool W1lh 720 sQ fl deck
1ng. Cool cabana for
summer fun. Dont wail
for summer. get 1n tht>
swam for only S98.SOO
Call 546-2313 '· . .,.
. ..••.•.•••.•..........
OCEAN VIEW
UNLIMITED
:i bdrm , 21~ ba
lownhomc floatunng
i;pac1ous hv rm, fmly rm
w/bukony for 1Jnvale
OCl'J n \ICW1 n j!
Completely luxunously
furnished Vll'w from
every tornt'r Custom
qu<1lll) npt thruout
Amerullcs too numt•rou:.
to List 1\ MUST SEE'
Just IJ~tl'<I 646 771 l
GREENIROOK
<'rts, pcirk' & sl'hools I MIHl--RANCH 41R. Uhl garage w opi•nt>r & corral<; This one has
Phont' toda> for .ipr>t tu POOl-$661400 S300.ooo 1t all for only s110.ooo• SUHSHIME
'("C' ~9491 OW 6733663 ~U523 i-,;\'f''-Don't dela} Call now VA. NOD H 1 bi38550 It may be hard lo re
t'1r<'ular drive Large • • • member. but you can be ~~ll:tco~~~~d k11~~~;; [ ~ •.. ~ f:,~% ~~thtb~~~~~(ui
~ l>drm. 2 ba F:xtrt'mely
popular CAMELOT mdl
Thu. lovely home located
on a l'UI de.sac within
t>ii.'>Y walking dlstam:e to
So Co;i.;t Plata
t.hcalrt'l> & restaur;rnts
Many oubta n d1n~
features include
R('al f: • .-..tatc
l>tnl' Wall of glass view gas BBQ. Pnced nght at
H.AHDYMAH'S of l·overed pan hon & $89.900 CALL 556 2660
DREAM lu.~h i.:rounds surround· ·---------• SELECT r 11 I I in,I! H&F l-'rccform pool _____ _
tiMJI!<' u Y m-.u ate•• ~parate w1nf.! for hide----------COM DUPLEX PROPERTIES Built rn worl( hcnrh awav Ma.;ter Su1ll' &
l..arf.!l' lot with HV ;u• c·h&ldrt•n s quarters $59,950. n~-.:. Nt·" Iv 11aintcd Hurry for th1~ un1qut: VA OR FHA "1'ERMS
paneling ;rnd wallpapt•r bargain' 963 7881 Ga., :-O<l\ l'r lo• atron
Four Bedroom llom<' in 1 • • walk to maJor s hor>:-..
Mesa North Truly .1 [ ~ park. ~chooli. and bu' ~~.,''."' ,.,, '" .... ~ 11~a1t111 ~fl:.~:?~~:..~~·~:
[~ -~ Tr3de your old stuff for -•'•nt•i-R•E•Hdw--ork--~ • new goodies with a ---
Cliiss1f1ed ad 642·5678 ---------
Ge-Mral I 002 G-..r-• I 002 SUPEtl DUrLEX ........ .,. BARGAIN PRICED at ······················· ...................... . SSJ.000 "'ewport Benrh
Balboa Penin.,ula Check out thl!> o;uper bu)' with bay v1ev. from up
per un11 Hurr). r.ill
5-40-1151
~HERITAGE • .• REALTORS
South of l11 ghw;iy ,
s pac1ou-. 3 bedroom.
den, f1replaCl' eal·h un
ll $239.000
644-7270
A HAPPY HOME c~tom Drapcnc:.
Would a s potless hou~(' Cover<'<! patio
make you happy? Well Ot:corJIOr Wallpapt•rs
this 3 bedroom charmer lhrnu,11hout
1s the answer Would you Outdoor gas BR~
like to be moved b<'fort' i\uto Gar D<>or Opener r/"4.tuf ~ summer? Call 546·2.'113 Skylight 1n Fam Rm t; "'' ' I ' • • , BY OWN~R 9791112.1 ·_ -~ R~= [ ® BPdUl] _.~."."-O•n•l.>•Sl-09•.900--
--..... ---~--....._ MEWHOME
5 IB>ROOMS
UNDEtl SI 00,000.
Good East.side lo••at1on.
The large family will dt>
h1?ht 1n this bag family
room & d1nm~ room
home M1crowa"t' an'1
other extras Seem!? b
beheVtnf't '
IHVESTOR'S Eastslde C. M.
SPECIAL-S47,950 Builder J~t completed
Guarded gateway pro
tect.s lavish ground "'1th
pool Secluded <'ntrv to
eKecuttve ll\·mg room
Sunshine l!nurmt•l
kitchen o\·erlooks
privatt· courtyard
Sweeping master bdrm
& ctuld's retreat Owner
this 2 ston 4 bdrm
home Feature-. include.
vaulted ('e1hnJ.!!., 3 car
J:arogt' & R\. c.toragc Hurry. choose your Ol4<n
carpets call !>46 ·~
~HERITAGE
REALTORS
OLD CORONA CArE COD
Truly traditional 4 BR family home
with income unit Beautifully
decor . Williamsburg papers,
porcelain & brass fixtures .
Fantastic loc $225,000.
PETE BARRETT
-REALTV-TRIPLEX &42-s200
1s anxious Submit any ·--------I offer! 847-6010
t_,p{flll,'1 •1r J ,., ,, • I
[91Rtdl1I S&S 9UALITY
4 COLDWIU. l...,.la CO.
644·9060
2111 SANJOAOUINHILLS~D
IN NlWPORT CENT£A
INCOME $905. ~~
VERY SHARP.
IEACH VALUES
PllCE RB>UCB>
s Bdrm Peninsula Pt
SteP6 to beach. $189.000
Seller moving & must
sell hlS 3 BR plus den,
p , BA S&S beauty.
Wants an offer t h is
weekend & priced nt on-
ly $75,000.
540-3666
PRICE S 155,000.
OWMER/ A'9T.
CARRY 2MD.
2266 MIMER,
C.M. PH:
548-5777. Gc•rd 100 GeMrat 100%1------
••••••••• • • ••••••••••• ••• •••• • • • ••••••••••••• G.....-al I 002 G...eret
Newer Ocean \'lfW
duplex, Dana Pt ,
t 002 $14.S,OOO.
Wltela11
REAL ESTATE
mecneb I Irvine
realty
DE ANIA IA YSIOI VIUAGI ,,.,.... ...... '°°' & 1-.:d
HACH COTTA.et
Cut.e 2 BR w /red brick ~arth
nee-dt a little "T.L .C:" but a perfect
ballc plan. (¥.l·mobUe. 1.A.2·h.ouae).
$49,900. <Q·l3S)
"~BA.till" ...
Top-of·the-llne "Dual-Wide .. mobile
home. Bright & cheery sunshine
Y.ellows enhance this 2 BR. 2 bath -
1t's great at $83,5001 CQ·136)
LOIS MILLER 842·8235
M2·8235 "44--6100
tt1 Dover Or1"" Har~ View ce
1rv1ne •t Cempvs V•ll•y <:enttt
7S2·1414
t
••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
CE
110111 ILllRS DD.
OVER 50 YEARS O~ SERVICE.
SPYGLASS
Spectncular Upgraded One Story
Newporter Model. Rich Dark Oak
Flooring In Liv. Rm . & Din. Room.
Spaclous 4 Bedrm. + Fam Rm
W /Wool Carp~ Kitchen
W /Deluxe Tile iFloorin• Custom
Built· Pool With Jacuzzi.
Unobstructed VaJtey View. An
Outstandlai Otrerint At $329,000 A
.. Joy Ot Nowp0rt" Lfstln,.
~ Bdrm, pnvate beorh.
Corona Highl1nd ~
$159,000. World W Ide
Brokers 673-454.S
BLUFFS FIN 6ST
On the w1tcr 3 BR
Agent 644 ·\133
t002 Gewroi
macnab I Irvine raalty
A IUT IA YFllOHT IUYI
OPIH DAILY I ·S
124 MORNINa STAI LN.
IOOZ
Single story tracl1Uonal home with 3
bdrms., cozy den & frplc. Spacious
living rm. views the quiet bay in
Dover Shores. Slip Cor your boat.
$495,0QO Includlne land! Cathy
Schwetckert M2·823S <Q-137)
'444200
fOl ~r Onw H•rt>or View Center
t rvlnt •t ~"'""'Valley Cefltet
7St·141•
EXECUTIVE ENTERTAINMENT
Ocean view from the fiAeSt custom
built home we have seen ln Corona
del Mar & defimtely one of a kmd !
Built especially for executivu
entertaining with its excepti~al. &
unusual double kitchen, built to
accommodate the huge raised formal
dining rm. or the sunken family rm.
with frplc & wet bar. Modern elevator
services 3 car garage & 2 upper living
levels. $435,000.
759-0811
fiut 6flM
Glut Wut,u lJUg.
CAMEO Ha.HLAMDS -UDUCED
View of ocean & hills! A delightful
area -quiet living yet close to
shopping. See this great famil,Y .home
w /4 bdrms, fam rm, formal duung +
bonus rm. Private front courtyd. 3
Private beaches. $175,500.
WESUY M. TAYLOR CO., REALTORS
211 l Saft Joaqyift Hits load
NEWrORT CIEHTB. H.I. 644·49 I 0
1002G~ 1002
·•··•··••·•·•·•·••····· ·····················•· -LAK--E-FOR_E_S_T_ ~~~!~JH
Beauty-deluxe thru-out 3 BR. z BA, lrR Super duplex 1n ex
farruly room. tons of ex C'Cllent cond1t1on Copper plumbing throughout
traUnis ~"1~·500·• ,__._ Walk to eanab, beach &
W"W Lido Village B(':.t
Yale 4 BR. 3 A. mo\e· duplex buy in Newport
in rondlllon $129.500 fee Beach To inspect l'Jll
By ~ s~a 962 nss
Surf w1Uun steps of thtlo ~ KE:Y
great family hom<> in WR€AlTORSA Newport Beach Only
$12.5,000
Low Price
Hampton model 1 n
Seav1ew. Newport :..
finest. Fantast1<· v1t>w,
only $229,500
START
BUILDING
An t>quity' Low down
HlwroaT~
One of a kind witb
aetluiled tree 11.oed et'I·
try. Completely re·
modeled with l•rie rooms, pot belhed 1to¥e "'"'oat plantma noon. l>iatas room. family
room, la.rre bdrau, and
prhate j)atloa. OPEN
SUNDAY 1·5.. 2818 C1u
St. Call 546-~
~>HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
A.UAUUMDEI
THIMA.UIT!
3 Br COGdo lrvine
'64.750
2Breaado
'6',150
Irvine
4 8r home Santa Ana
$65,000
3 Br bome Fullerton
$1117,000
3Brbome Anaheim
$1!8,000
3 Br home Fnto Valley
$1!8,500
3Brbome
$71,000
Brea
3 Bl' borne Anaheim
$12.000
3 Br home Yorba Linda
$76,000
3 Br home Anaheim
$79,000
J_ QU'An• [Il
J>LA C'Kl
PRO'PJCRTl11:0.
.:::_ 757· 1920 l no
1 toll QUAIL ST .MEWl'OflT M.c:tt
DUPLEX
IA&.IOA ISLAND
Steps to beach. 2 BR 1
BA each unit. Older, bu\
well cared for. $18.5,000
206 Garnet.
FOtl MOIE HOUSE
FOtl YOUR MOHEY
Try our Westcll!C Beau
ty 4 BR + den or S BR
4 BA, 2 fplc's, cozy ram1
ly home. 1436 Estelle Ln
SlSS.000
673-8700
TRJP'l.EX $70,000
All uruls remodeled. nf.''4
plumbing, paneling, ttlt•
& pa10t tn & out.
754-7800
6 AS'TAA ~ Reol htote Inc
payment' VA & FHA(•-------•
.. ..L. tlr•ll~
640-6600
VA HO DOWN!
Yes. no down payment
required to buy th1:.
beautiful J bedroom
home. gourmet kitchen,
large living room.
fireplace. and covered
pat.lo Localed near the
Harbor and Huntington
Manna 1 One mile to
beach. Pnced for qwck
sale $69,900 Take ad
vantage. Call 963-6767
, I ./ • f ~ 1 • '.
term~' 3 Hedroomll'
561.500 REI> CARPET.
754· 1200
NEWPORT
HG HTS
3 BR home m xlnt <1r('a
llrdv. d floor ' v. w
l'rpt'it bltn rang<> &
oven Recently r£>roofed
& restucroed Ace & rm
for boat & trlr + dbl
gar
SI 14,900
JACOBS REALTY
675-6670
ASSUMABLE LOAN
$59,900
WOW!!
I Deluxe Townhome' J
Sp3c100.s bedrooms! Sofl -
l'arpet-.• Sun patio'
Choice ~reenbcll loca
hon' Close to i.hoppmg
Owner iJnx1ous1 Can't
last at this pnct-' Call
645-0..103 ama li6ijijll
$12,000 Down, fake ovc•r lai)oQ fdc:Md I 006
payments of SJAfl mo ••••••••••••••••••• ••• • [~
-
. ·. l·--A•gt•.•97•4•·3.136 _____ Jbr b.~e. h1 beam hv rm , ,. frplc + lbr apt. Estate
MEW__..EW $210,000 ~S-2358
* IAYSHORES •
GEM
3 Bdrms . 2 bath garden
home with decorator
features. complete with
all the charm or the
area . xlnt inside loca
lion Owner a n'1ous,
submit all offers'
CIL~tom bwlt-3bdrm, 2 lal>oo Penimula I 001
bath. family room. •••••••••••••••••••••••
f1replact• !''\Illy msulat Peninsula Point B"
ed. doubll' gar11jll' owner 3 brm 1'4• ba
East!>1de Coslil Mrs a 673-8008 Pnn. onJy
S88,500., 1 P.S Better hop Nice 3 Br, 2 ba. oo M-on
on over > tero. 1195,000
Roy McCards. Marshall RJty 6754600
18. 0 Newport ll•d.
C:O.ta Mfta 541.7729 Immaculate doll house C. F. Colesworthv _ _ :v!u~:s.ooo. 645-4829
AHftan 640-oo:lo ~ --·
ASSUME
SS0,000-
Loan-$79,900
3 bedrooms Located
next lo central park and
beautiful lake. f?reat for
fish.mg and sailing. sur
rounded by Sl00.000
homes. Make this horn('
a Rreal buy! Won't last
Jong. cau 963-6767
OCUMHtOMT
Charming 2 BR home. 2
car gs.rage. Best swim-
ming & f1shmg aru. close lo stores &
restaurants $275,000'
lolboo lay Prop. .......
... 675-7060 *
G~
•••••••••••••••••••••••
EASTER
SPECIALS
'lowpt Penin Duplex
Fantastic 10<' $102.000
Newport Custom llome
3Br. close to Buch
$158,000
Deaullful Me~a Woods
J Br, 2 ba $89.000
New & Beautiful
C~ta Mesa Condoc;
J Bdrm. 2'~ bathi. 182.~
V.A. BUYERS
3 Bdrm Fantastic Home
$69,5()()
Newport Pier Reohy
.
3005 Balboa Blvd •
Newport Bch. 673-2058
1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'la~.~
IASrauFf: MIW USTIMG-¥11W
Cheerful, adaptable 4 bedroom
home close to s hops, schools.
Extensive patio and good privacy.
Compare and you'll buy confident
that you've bought the best value in
tbe area Sl49,7SO.
LOWEST PRICE
ATIEACH
2 BR 1 Ba, nr besl ba}
swimrrunFt beach. Qwet
street. pleasant
neighborllood, $110,000
Burr Whit ~ R~.tlt ~r
2901 New p<>rt Blvel N B
(714167!>-4630
CoroMdelM• 1022 • ••••••••••••••••••••••
CoroM .. W..
2 Bdrm , 1 bath home
with two rear units. Well
establlshed an!a & welt
cattd for. $175,000.
NORIMS llEA.L TY * 494-1057 *
FAIULOUS VllW
POOL & PUSTIGt
<>PIH DAILY
*I llt Sebrha
T9'T.•
Oohahtfull)' open. • od
rre1hl)I decorated ..
bdn:n borne with (&mily
room and lart «" e\/P•llo area. The
ect lemlb home fo•
oor/outdool" toter·
taininit and privacy
$398,000 &Delude& lbe
land.
WATERFRONt
HOMES
REAL ESYA'!E
631-1400
Ol1l'ST AMIN
A COUJWIU. IAJ«ll CO. ~Jf:ll, camC'f Jot. 2 + z. sna.5oo . 101
1-hrel•l\ll . Open
Sat/9la.14 644·9060
2161 IAHJOAOUIHHllLlllO
'" NIWPOflT cono
PAUl.MAnlN
~ISTATI
M4-1JIJ
}'
t
r.
r.
It
t
"
,n
w
I
.,
tr
II'
~·
'""'
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17
I . =:.~.~ ....... ~~:::.~~.~ ........ !~~~:::.~~~.~~: ........ ~C::!!!.~~.~ ........ ~!!.<:~.~~: ........ 1~~~~::!!.~~.~'::: .......
\·C.-.. M. IOZJ C..Mne IOJ4 HiwlllMJ•lt«h 1040 nti. 1044 Lorptoa.octt 1041 ~lffdll 104' HouusForW. HMMtFwW. R ... l!staN
............................................... ••······•·••••········· ········•·••···•······· ·········•·•········••· ··•····••·······••••··• ······••·····••··•····• ······••·············•· ··••·············•·•••• "COin' lbr, 2ba + 1u-.t NewCoodot.2 Br,2..., Ba, ... AMTCOMOO CUlYEADAU .... ,....... IOff Ml•,..ilffdi 10" ..... ..._, ~.~J.2p•tJ01,R 2 frplc'a, ceramic Ule Otf..YMJ,000 $14,900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• FerS. 1100 ~~:"oa.17030y. $157,000. kkcbena ~ bath Poot ta Bt1UY ~P:ad41d w/Jo.da Warm aod au-ptu .. us IOAT SllP HIWPOttT HTS. ••••••••••••••••••••••• vwurr,.....,. spa 87S-49U Brultu clcl Jlru. Sbowa Uke • .... v + ""*-Sk I W b I l 2 b bd living room, $Uof11led •••n WT IUYS U77 1 1ne o I e LOOK m '; boll rma, country lut chen, Fromthlsele1ant2BR OCEAHVl w Home lZlH . One ·~ or at~ trader. separete mHtt•r, hug" condo. So do. )'uu'll BJ ~droom low rent in Cll1)'4 )'1'9 old 7S.U01 "' I 3 bdrm .. J bath Co•ta u 'csu, 531.•~1~ • · covered patio, .st~-to thtok ita new I Atct .. "' • ...... l',...._ de $75 500 I a r-rust.om home -Jtb auper afttt5:30 u~n;,I , (~ +:rufiiiji$1J\j ~t:l:fti· Don't wait. ~17s. view! Jiu1e den.---------
o:;
.. 3 BR, hanhvood noon, (."1"1 I I. \I ,, ' •. r1 IB>UCED na&~lone frplc • 3 rar Walk to beacb-Sll:y.lule z
H.ttor View H-• f~ci Jge yard. Won't RuJ Estate --1~ 'Tui·!i·rll Newpon creat Coacfo. f~'ts~~~ota more. Oft. ~d~ts2 ~:~~IB~~~· ~ EV~~~':~~ Y • s 5f: !"s'1~~:c1:~!i1 ~ \\Afij}~ -WrOt1::~ !!: :.~•d• te ~ ~~Jrr:::!n~ 3 a:!5~0~:~~=look -~--------
P' AV OR l TE : The ~~aome w /pool~ -di~ .-cWt.ct .. ,giNd ~ "-oceanview. Reduced for Ing C•tallna Drive; 2 ~forS.1200
Portofloo rnodel with TURTlfROCll o•erioolhMJ do"'"9towa L....--4 tM lmrned. aale. Owner. frplcs., new carpel; ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ .:•t.~1~{':e~o~ Pennington Properttea I\ whlh..ew of tlle coa ..... ldwfw ef '121,9$0, 6U-U42, family rm. bl~ enoUih
brick e-tJo with raiaed IY OWNER BROADMOOR udar, beGM ceHlftcp. a..t• .. of Hie. ~08 ~~s.~1 tab,.e t Only HORSE RANCHES
wood deck for exciUn1 --------• J Bdn:os. ViUa Paci/le La,.,. •tr.et to .... lot ••• $2'7,500. IY OWNER MAl.IMERS COVE Large ones, s maller
:Wtm!::,t. Call tor MESA VERDE =~ :~~:e ':!~1~. PATIO HOME 497-313 I S~acloua Executive REALTY 64M4U :=; !:! o;,es;;:~~i~~;:
COLI OF HIWr<>llT Shows hke model. Pool!,, SOUTH I.ACUNA DANA home. S Bdrm. 4 bath pens. Wo have Lbem AIJ •
.REALTORS DMSCA&.ATB> sauna. jac, courts, 0 W N E R I S LAGUNA NIGUEL POJNT w/vlew in preall&lous s..a...... f07' BK.ft.
675-5511 PRICE RV/Boatat.orage.Re<lto DESPERATE• Submit 499·4SS1 4951720 483a&l2 DoverSbocesooGalaxy ••"•"•••••••••••••••••• (714)67~571'1 $74,900 SS1·0298 & your offer on this 3 Dr. 6'&-2332 v~+ .,,.OL OR 52'i·20llO C-. Mesa I 024 Spacious 3 bedroom with 962-t183 bedroom 2 bath beauty ••" .... ..,
ranuJy area & skylight. --------which includes a huge Newport Crest -r.nhae, "1o for all lhe ramlly. INVESTORS ~·ormal entry to formal Upgraded t:nd unit family room. I-'--1044 •---Ma-....a 1052 walk to beach, ten crta, Spac.'iou. 4 BR, dlnin1 New listings. Large livmg room.~ patios. Al twnJu;e, fplc, g .. r. 2 BR ......,..,.. ~ ~ pool, JacunL Aet. rm & fam rm w/forever n ..... e•·-$1oo ....,.r a"r•.
.......................
*JUST
1lEDUCID•
Beaut 4 BR, rrplc, in
NM.ts Coet. MeH Close
to frwy lk sbop·g. Call
for Information Agt
$79,500 1t woo t last long, l 'h Ba $62 900 Ownr ••••••••• •••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• IUS-7171 ,._. • "" ...-~ ... so call NOW! 645-7221 !>36-......... ; • I Charming new 3 Bed rm • c>celU\ view. Owner •rut· BK.R • .....,... * YOU CAN * + den, 2 bath. ram·rm, "BLUFFS" Twnbse, 4br, 1 o u a. ba s bought (7l4) rn.5an
ASSUME VA LOAM A C. French drs, pvt ram rm, xlnt cond, qwet anot.beBERr~,~·ff~NRY OR S22.-0530 Buy lh18 home. movt" in r r on t co u rt Y a r d • ·•~ A"' •H"'717l •"" .. --'----Save thousand.a Without and began en1oyJne $123.900 Owner 831 7098 oum. ... ...... • REALTORS c. ... t .. y Lota/
havUig 20~ down. No Irvine's great ou~door ~ D..lw ZlS Del M.ar 492 4121 Cryph I 500 MM879.
MUST sa.&. HOW
OoUece Park 3 br & dm in& rm. covered patio
Terms t.o suit. $80,SOO
831..SOSl
quallfyaog, no credit, living . 3 bdrms , 2 ba., 23852 ~s East ,..-••••••••••••••••••••••• ~. oo cloain& COIU RANCH REALTY din rm Large atnum. GOIS COURSE $450,000 San Clemente Cuatm Niche u 471 single.for W"tdiff Rfflty Two day escrow, close to 639•7000 Swunmmg and tennu. " VIEW HOME Peg Broms Rltr MS-1531 Hillside home. Nearing as h e 5 • a 1 c 0 v e 0 r
2'117 REDLANDS beach, $73,SOO. Pnnc. :.hort walk away. Smythe Bwlding. 3 Br, IWFFS completion 2,000 sq. n. 3 memones, $95 at Pacific only.~SC79agt. EXEC 5 IDRM B JI bdrm, 2 ba, ram rm, Ve M m p .. NB Roomy 3 BR, 2 Ba, cul-•--'----__;;;'-----1 • 2 i,, a • b r a r Y ' J Bdrm "Bonita" plan. b re a k I a s t n o o k • i w e • ar .. , . de·sac St Back: Bayl•--------•I ONLY SI 15.000 breakfast rm, den, 2 rt.replace, wet bar, sun ~· MyrtJe Sha_w, 2512 FANTASTIC
EASTSIDi HEAR
H!WPOITICH MOl!t desirable section or
C.!d. Walk to all
markets, churches &
ac.bools. 3 bdrms, 2 ba
Lge lot. Only '86,500 '
5'S-9'91
area $89,SOO . AgL DOLL HOUSE Irvine beauty for your Crplcs, heated pool & All one level, new cpl$, deck 2 ~ car garage South Chanticleer 67~ btgfrnlyorentert.ainer·s Jacuzzi 2~Yrsold,2800 flooring & shutters. $llS,Ooo No agen\5 714 St.,G raod Island, Upgraded 3 bdrm home, paradise. Frml din rm, ""·ft $14 s' 000. 0 w n I Ai t """ ..... 4 .... 714""" ~1ao Neb.68801
BACK
BAY
located near a 11 .,.., ...... •cc1 aH 2l•" .....,....,, v• .....,... oversized fmly rm, J CU MMINGS REALTY ............., or ..... -eve11. (J08)J8Z.2083
Fr e e w a Y .s a n d baths. The charm of 495 1407 EW Excellent 4 Bdrm home . .
Westminster Mall. H's a vaulted ce1bng & a hvy --M In fine neighborhood, Pacific V1ew Memori;iJ
steal al S6J.900. shake roof. Great tennis HORTHVIEW 2-st.ory Sea View hom~ near 11chools. Ya cant Prk. Lots B & C. lot JSS. lfi cow1.snearby.7S9·1S01 TWOSTORY SIS,OOODN Owner mus t sell! Oceanvu.:»48·0279 96•211111•44ilit::71~l"~.:-: iiil54liilii69·e•1~ For sale by owner. :J Br, 4 brm 3 ba, 2 frpls, pool. '85.000. C-rcial
'+523CAlll\PUSDl·IR\11HE 2'7 ba, lgf' lam. rm , 1acuni, tennis, grd radflcSltonRffffV Ptwrtiy 1600' c~1wnmaa>um1 Village :J bedroom, zi,~r----
ReaJ btate
bath Townhomc! Just 3 Br townhouse, nr Hunl
oil Tustin ne ar Hrbr. 164.900 Owner/ Newpart's Back Bay• Agt SS7·732S
C all now! RED MUST SB.L HOW CARPET. 754-1202 Moalllqoa
Meu del Mar 3 br, 2 ba. . HcriMMr I 042
1ara11.e dr opnr, Terms Westside, 1300 sq.ft.•••••••••••••••••••••••
to suite. $79,900. 831 9081 house + zoned for 2 WATERf'RONT
more. Park·hke area BY OWNER . Sl::AGATE
$74.950. Pnnc Only. Agt . Custom I.lie nr & pallo, UM CWc:Jwn SCM!lp 642-9666 rll>IC . 30' slip. waler view
... lt couJdn 't hurt t.o call ---------fml & bck, Jbr, Jba, 3 Oluct Nub about a re _08 "'TES "'LE decks. pool, Jacuu1, ten wardlne career in real rA "' "' ms, dbl ur. S23~.ooo :• estate. Free training 1f Lovely 3 BR. lrg. family 714 846-4829, 213/597 ~3
)IOU qualify ~5101. room. great buy. Close
to shoppmg. $80,000. Call Hope. E /Side Custom home
38r, huge ram. rm , ~ car gar., oo R·2 lot. Agt.
646-7171 •
MESA VERDE err1e
Out ol state owner must \iiiiiiiiiiiCOiiiii.ii. iiiii•ii~iiiii·ii11_..iiiiiiiii~
.sell 3 BR, 2 ba.; on cul 640-6600
de sac. SBS,000 ·--------· A. Johmoo Bkr 97'9·4964 ---------
ChritHClfta lay
Waterlront
Lge 4 BR 3 Ba condo,
$250.000. Pvt Pty Ca II
7.9 30AM. 213·S92·5889
lrvtM 1044 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WOODBRIDGE PLACI':
GREEN I ROOK
Special offering. 3·S
bdrm. Contemporary de
teched family homes in
open, woodsy design
**THIS IS IT*• Ju,,l short walk to lake &
Real Estate
~-----
IN IRYINE
4 BR'S
ONLY $74,000
Don't ml!ii; this ideally
located Callfom1a Home
on a cul de sac Near
achoolis, parlc and shop· ping
RANCH REAL TY
551-2000
PIZAZZZ
PIZAZZZ .y O~ER parks in Village of
b b ...," Woodbrid ge. From Thia 4 bedroom ex -4 bdrm, 2 ba. Extremely 4 r 2 a, cstm drapery SUS ooo SS2 01 ecut.ave home in Wood .
popular CA MELOT mdl. & crpts. Bnck frpl & --· -·--4-1----bndge is loaded with 1l. '"-·· ,_ 1 ho 1 ed slate entry. Yan Luit ..,.._.llllillllwll' .... _.._. .... Wfl'll ,,..._ · I d d · h A...., wve Y me ocat wallcovenngs. Stained ... ,...,ure Y upgra e wit on a cul·de-11ac w1th1n •V .a. $ 17 SIC a large lot on a cul·de· easy wallnog ~tance to glaM windows Kitchen "' * sac. NEW· VACANT ' so. Coas t Plaza , prof. r emodeled w I work with Orange Co Submltyouro!fer
~hoch 1048 ··•··············•··•·· eozyc..,.cod
This is what Laguna is
all about! 8eaut1fully
restored charmer 3
Bdrms . den, library,
formal d1n1ng room,
skyllt country kitchen &
separate art 1st 's studio
Easy walk to beach &
excellent ocean view::..
$.UJ!l.500.
MORIMS REALTY * 494-8057 *
WATCH FOR THE
WTER WHALE
from this hilltop
beautiful bome in lovely
Mystic Hllls. C<>mmand
Ing view or the Pac1flc.
Upgraded move in re
ady
Mart" RMI !state
640-5357
gates. VERY pnv. VAC. OlO CITY f'' •.,.... -r-· w/frplc. Lge rncd yd Owner to carry bal. No --•••••••••••••••••••••••
" dog run Many up· cred1 l. Fu 11 pri ce Cal 492·5300 MEDICAL ILDG-grades! $125,000. Pnnt. ,,~,...,..,.,., 751.8775 .• I>n
ooly 49S-S8~ D'IV-'' •o Jbr home, wlklng dis· ( twn San Clemente)
JUST LISTS>!
3 Bdrm., 2h bath home,
close to school & lake,
new painl & carpets plus
a large yard with
mature fru1 t trees.
Pnced nght at $91,SOO
mtl~~LPt!:l ~IlCy>
499 ·2800 -- -
1055
•••••••••••••••••••••••
U pt(raded Laguna
Village Condo1 Jbr. 2ba,
Vll'W. Rec rac Owner
49'1·1426
MHsioft ~Jo t 06 7 •••••••••••••••••••••••
By Owner Lovely 4Br,
ZBa, 2i000sq fl .. 2 blks to
shl & shop'g, nr comm ·y
pool & ten. $95,000 Pnn.
Only. 837-6417 -----FOR SALE BY OWNER
Cordo\•a La Famtha 3
BR w parent '.s retreat. 2
ba. fam rm. earth tone
lance to beach, schl, Sale-Lease·Trade
H._.._ y1~ H-s park. 491:2.oeoe 7 Rm Denlal Suites ..._ IC'w ._._ 8 Rm Medical Su 1tes "CARMS. w ;sr A.. s-..._
Decor'd T IO. 3 Br, FR. Caphtrano 1078 JjJ9~6w60. Y~,9 .c2lo7
LR, DR + much more. ••••••••••••••• •••• •••• ,. -,. •.&
lmmac cond. 1&33 Port STEAL AT $52,25~ HEWPORT IEACH ~MEaSET" Im med. possession. Restaurant For Sale
Small down payment & Pnme loc. on Manners Elegant prof decor 'd, S e.asy terms. Cozy living Mlle. 1800 Sq ft. bldg +
Br, FR. LR. 3 car gar, room & dining room land, all for only
huge brick patio + Spacious bedrooms. Call $200.000.
many more xlras. Fee today. fWalonomici; fl7S-6700 I a n d . l 6 2 l P o r t WALL STRHT
Barmouth. REAL ESTAT& NEWPORT Gr eat cor
lluHt Speciof 131-3750 49l-2202 loc 1000 S. F. + gar &
Prof decor'd end unit 3 1----------pkg. Only $S7,SOO. Bkr.
BR w /park vu. sec MIWOM SSS _640-_."380 ______ _
system, etc. rmmac. oc~•M VIEW Dupleox.n/ $165,000 w/appra1sal. 5SO .::A Onit.-Sat. I
VlSla Grande. For pre· from this 5 BR home, •••••••••••••••••••~-~~ view call: PROPERTY located on private lot in
HOUSE Patrick Tenore pres t I g 1 o u s A 1 t o 4 ·PI ex• ff u n l Ing ton
Agt. ssz...4414 Capistrano. Watch the Harbor area. 3 yrs old,
boats sail 1n to Dana ~ented. $230.000 UDO ISLE Point Harbot'. $195,000.
Ex.lg 4 brm 3 ba, mod ;t • .... CHO• ·G~ lncomt f'rop.riy 2000
kil •. 1in lot, patio, nr ten---, .... "VESTM~s"" •••••••
0
•• UP•••L••EX••••··· .•• nls & priv. beach. " ......,.,
$2.49.SOO Owner 67S·62S9 C714f 496·7711 Extra sharp 2 BR units,
both w /prvt patio .... -
HO QUALIFYING Owner wtll help flnann'.
theatres & resuuranl$ microwave oven. btchr Vets only. H om e~ lo
Many outslandrng blk & stainless steeL SJ.75,000. Foranrocall
features include· Elec. gar w /cedar Vet Agt 5410800 f!j det'Or Many upgrades l•--------•I Beaut lndscp'd on lrg
NEARLY picturesque lot $79,000
CANALFROMT
Rumpus rm. + family
rm. w/pool table: 4 BR,
21, ba. Walk to beach.
pools, tennis . A real
charmer, only SJSS,900
NECESSARY! Income S700 per month
Taite over exl!sune FHA Rcdoce<l to $134.500.
ftnancing at low U\terest Cal 640-S 112 Afj.
Custom Draperies paneling & work bench ~~~~~~~~~
Co ....... l. Low ma1ot. y rd ver.,.., pa 10 w spnnklers. Pruit & HUR, RY Owner must
Decorat.or Wallpapers shade trees. Quiel st nr sell. 4 Br. lam rm. 3 ba. ~~=~BQ schools & OCC. By Appl A/C, btfully decried.
Auto Gar Door Opener SS7..Ql8, 644-3754 $1 t t,000 g~~~~~ at S129.900 WOOOIRIDGE
StyUgbt l.D Fam. Rm. RlALTY
BY OWNER 979-812.:J f'RICE RB>UCB>! WOOD BRIDGE: Brand 551-3000
l'rin. Only $109,900. ..... u" F ui k 1 new Aspenwood. Lowest ---------.-........ or q c sae; price 4 br house in WOODBRIDGE BY RB>UCB> $7,000 now $84,950 for beautHul Woodbridge. Owne r OWNER. J Bdrm, 2 ba,
l Yr. old East Costa 4 bdrm. home. 2964 must sell 1mrnE'diately. Broadmoor "Wildwood ..
Mesa triplex, deluxe un· Bimini Place, Mesa Open Sunday l 5 Tum Under market at $S7,900. ala, ea. w /2 bdrms . 2 Verde. Open Sat/Sun. 1·5 I e It o ff Y a I c a t 5.59-0092
ba., dinlng area, laun PAUL MARTIN Woodhollow. 7 Elmwood -------
dry &: frpl c. Now REAL ESTATE $100.000. 752·S368 after 51---------~~ COPELAND 644-7383 PM. IUILDa·s
TURTLE ROCK CLOSEOUT
REALTOR 552•0434 fxeCutiVe Im mac. cond. & up * IH IRVIHE *
DOUBLE Mes V rd graded 4 br. form. din Only l Patio Home left 2
YOURMONEY G e e rm. 2 ba Fam rm Bdrm+den. 2 baths.
in 10 yean! 11 hislory re-Professionally decorated w/view. Garden atrium frplc, refrigerated air
peata itaelf ln 1988 the 3 bedroom home, with See lo appreciate cond1tion1ng, mirrored
nsale value of lhi.s ap· custom drapes, carpets Sl.33,000. 833-1084 wardrobe doors. 2 car
prox. ~ acre Costa and tile. 3 bedrooms, ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-f gar ag e with auto
Mesa Ranch wall be eating area, dining, Cl.ASS 1 .... G• •rs opener. plus full recrea·
doubled. 3 super br I am 11 y room an d ,.. ...._ hoo racahties mcld 'g 8
ONE ACRE 831·92'15 CAYWOOD REALTY rate & own lhas 2 sty -------
Spanish home. Qwet cul •GREAT SSSS•
OCIEAHFROHT Newporl S.adi I 069
7.oned R·3 ISO feet or ••••••••••••••••••••••• oceanfront. Sensallonal
views. Large 25 room NEAR BEACH
home. Room for tennis, 2 BR 2 Ba. den, pool
pooland6to8 condoun· +$117 ,900. 67S·074S; its. 297,, Down. Owner _Yi1_·_1046 ______ _
wiU carry. S84S,OOO
3 Monarch Bay Plaza
Laguna Niguel
496-7222 831-0836
•JUMIO YA*
l work with Orange Co.
Vets only. Homes to
S17S,OOO For inlo call:
Vet Agt . 541 ·0flOO
INC. 5'8·1290 de·sac location, many
uperades. Only S69,900
llUE WHITE GEM WALL STUET
Pr 1 v a c y re 1, n s REAL ESTATE
supreme I Gracious 131-3750 491-2202
family home in pre·
stigious Westcllff. 5-taAM 1080
Formal living room •••••••••••••••••••••••
w/view o ( ga rdenl•--------•I
atrium! Form.al dining V ACAHT
room overlooks lavish but lovely Rent till
grounds! ~ fireplaces! escrow cloges. Corner
Elt>gant ll~1n~ at af; lOl. RV access. 3 BR. 2
fordable pnce. Hurry BA . g a m l' Ii r 0 o m
C'.all64S-0303 Oellghlful garden m.ooo l.ocJuM MICJWI I OSZ BAY S H 0 RES BY
••••••••••••••••••••••• OWNER. Sl79.000. 3 BR, IL ---------i 2 ba, newly decor. re-(iii~ FORESTE
OLSON ... ~ To •-A••• modeled lutch . Open • ~ _. Sat & Sun 12·5 or by err•,e
Sb a r p 2 BR, 2 BA appt, 714/631-4639, 2662 ~~,~·~~~~-~~""'-~~~ -.:
town home. mount a in Crest view -~iiiiiiiiCiiiiiaii•ii~ii•'ii1-iiiiiii';J views rrom living & din 1--------CUSTOM IUIL T "' mg area. Secluded Coiy CAHALRtOHT 640-6600
denw/built·lllS ancluding 4Br,3ba + loft.Cu.'ltom Newport Hts hom e .,~~~~~~~~~·! fireplac('. Great working hie, rnicrowa"e, frplc, ~rfully de<."orated 31.
I04( llf "''"'"'~
•Opportunity• Just reduced thts supt;r
4 pkx, four 2 Br units. :.!
units w/frplcs. Seller
will help w /financing.
Other Orange Co. 1n
come properties avarl.
Call now for dela1ls agt .
•645-4722•
7 UNITS C.M.
Beautiful brand new 4 l
I.Jr, Ion. Up. 3 2 br, J •
ba townhoui;<', all blln,,
trpls, drps. Hurry, LIU\'
now. Tom Lee, Rltr.
642 1603
SEVEN DU"-EXES
w/l~• ba, crpt.a, drps, fireplace. Atrium 2 Live. w~\-~e ea~ffl tennis courts, 2 paols
• lrplc+bacbelorun.ilfor patios. $98,900, BKR ~fie R~~konGal~n and a pair of jacunas
additional Income ~1720 to wnh ome. It'!\ AJ lt.tuaand lrv1ne too!
lutchen, separate laun· sundeck + many xtras. Br, 2ba. View. Fully S..... L4MJlllnO I 016
dry room Recreation Pnced to sell fast at beam ceil's, used bnck •••••••••••••••••••••••
facaJ1tJes close by. What SlSe,500 642 3361 Agt or f11>k. 222 La Jolla Ln. Beautiful white water
SAN CLEMENTE
Orean views, all 2 Bit.
11; BA Less then 1 )r
old Walk to stale bead \
& park Asking onlv
SI 18.000 each. Offer nn
all or part.
BERTilA HENRY
RE(\LTORS
-
.... , .... ,do a little trading• On Irvine Center Dr ...,... gorgeous. Owner very k OPPORTUNITY. TARRlll!I I flexible on hnanc1nii (Moulton Par way) JU.St a buy! S78.9~. 64S-02Al 642·9740 for appt. ocean view Condo. 38r .
loguna Miguel Realty ------• HV Homes, Qarmel 3 BR den. 2\1>Ba. highly up
215 Del Mar: 492-4121
May never return. Don't IK"'9 The view 14 magnificent c.>ast ol Jerfrey.
miss this one! OPEN • and the pnce 18 not out S00.995 495-5220 493.9494 llG CAHYOH + Fam Rm, pvt yard, itraded, $165,000. Ask for
496-2413 830-5050 Beautifully decorated 3 $139,900. 752·0617 June Royall Turner As
RS>UCB> $7000~
Ht11te Easts1dt" mansmn
extra rental, presenl 111
come $650 Greal start.e ..
investment. Now
$108,000. Dnvc by 29-'
Magnolia St. then call
agent 642 0282.
FOR INSPECTION Sat "#I In CaOfontla" landish Call for an ap l•--Ca•l•l 56-1•·1263---
tlr Sun 1.s pm. 2225 Ca pomunent tocilly! -------br 2~ ba home w /pool & 60C 4.99 4S91 lovely view. $31 5,00~. ownr/agt · ---
nyoo Rd, Costa Mesa, WOOOIRIDGE For Sale By Owner 3 BR ea.lit MESA VEaDE M~ASH REALTY OPEN SAT ll-4PM 5 llDROOM H• Ba, prLced for fast SEAVJEW Port Royal 2
Owner 640-1841 Npt Shores, By Owner . Of1wt-RHI &tatt
4br, 2ba, 2 car gar. Dys •••••••••••••••••••••••
842 1334 d 2845 CORVO PLACE 2600 sq.ft.+ 3 car gar. sale. S83.SOO. 25212 Via Story, 4 Br. 3 Ba .. beaut ~8 ays By owner 4 BR 2 BA, Prescott model, nr park, Piedra. Blanca, Laguna view landscaping ft>est
eves fplc, & fam rm. Beauti·------•-•l fully upar, includ air Niguel. 49'-44-0l ; 485 5900 up1r~dea. Beat buy·B)I
Brandnew3Br.,3Ba,ex· pool w/jacuzzi, $126,500. cond, landscaping, • • •• • • Ownt>r. $279,000.
ecutive home with 546-8179 md«?treeTwnhm.3Br. patio, atrium, light nx, LEASfOf'TIOM -~---·-----....i eeramic Ule eotry, llun· ---------2i,.t Ba, 2 frplcs, ~aut appliances, crpts, wood ~ , .. YMr~s
ken living room, beams, Dma PoW I 026 decorated. Pool, jacuul. & Paver1 Ute fl, mir· "v "' ~ • LIDO ISLE
cathedral ceWna, fplc, ••••••••••••••••••••••• clbbae. <>wner 559·55'73. rore<l closets. $193,SOO OH EQUITY! lmmac 3 br 2 ba home.
form.i dJn. rm .. d~am ---.ase. M..aon Bkr/owner. MZ-4121. This Is one of the most Bum ce1l 'gs tbruoul. kitchen, with micro-uo; Dana Potot aoalerred·must sell.•---------tastefuJ and imaginative Beaut. cedar puel'g,
wave, la.rse tam. rm., landm.rk converted t.o 3 Woodbridge 2 BR & deo, homes In the area. south patio. Prine. only
098rlbed yard. lluter Wlita. Perfect ror owner or3 BR. Form dul'i rm, Turtlerock view lot, Graclout living la or. By owner. $248,000. 224
Bdtm w/1unbn Bath. ,......,...boll plua income. atrium, apc r aded, brand new, choose nu fered ln tbl1 beautUul Via EboU,67S-2306
973-0375, evs 631..s483 Mobf1. Hotmt
OlDIE .~!'::.••••••••••••• IUT Under construction GOODIE BY OWNER. 24'x64' WUJ be finished appro:ic. Great Lakes. 1974 ooe month $350,000 l·Blk. to ocean: 1 bdrm. Spacious 3 Br, 2 ba STU •RT "'-" .... r home, offered at lot rharmer Located ''TU E A ""s::
value,S98.000! MEADOWS", Irvi ne REALTOR 631-545•
MIWPORT IUCH Beaut S• adlt, no pet, . lllALTY 675-1642 park. 559·0229 eves & 4·Plex, nr oceaf). Like
---------• wlmda new. $190,000. 7Sl ·l031 · Broker 549-1480
• 6 DLX. UNITS • 1100
Mint W Tiiis WHk
lodl ldY At'H HACHIOYS study. SUbmlt aJJ orten. ~ vtew. 1111 ....... 1 .... lndacpd,. $99,950/beat crpt., elec. ftxt.ures. l uecuUve home. Extra
.... tlll,.500. Prlnclj)J• only ,.._. ·~ cir. SSJ-o&llS atry, 3br, ram rm, d10 large master suite, 2 IAYVl!W Aft.5,~ · ~=~~telyi.---------rm.Sletl.800.113·962·2'171 pleasant bdrms, 2Ba , Lg 2 br z ba mobile
4 br, 4 ba. 2 f rpl. 3000 sq
ft. country .lt.ilcben, d ll\
rm, den. sun rm, rec rm, ~. jac., Jou ol wood.
W /W crpt over parquet
noora, F'r. windows &
doors, & more. $189,500
No a&ts. Open Sat 1-4.
2ao1 Francisco Dr.
&l&G41
lAHO Giil.LS)
See us for moblle homes
in all beach area~. Wei
i1peclall.ie' Mrmhe r
C&llfOl'lUa Multipll' Lis mi Service. Xlnl finanr mi available. PACIFIC
COASI' RESALES, INC
210:l6 Brook.burat, HD 1111.S-OWl
12 UNITS
~ mile to beach. The"" ~on t last :it onlv
$320,000. Great incomr
trade.up rrom your
duplex or 4·plex. Watch
l'mpire J(row. C..U now
for more info
All 1112% 1.09 HOIJHS REALTY LIVE IN 8~ BUY JN WOOD· ~~~.::p~d ~~~;me~~ ~tlireCl~='.us>oo~>J'~:~
Locaa.t ln beautiful N. * 494-1057 * FABULOUS r:'~~. ·A~·o,~ ~;: tru. The pat.lo &r pool prtv. bdi, pou. boat ODIU ..... Huse Fam O'lldee ONLY 1113 950 areas are l~aJ for en· 1llp. '57,SOO. 475·7903
Rm, W/Swedl1h rplc, .,... 1012 WOODBRIDGE OPEN .HOUSE Sat:&an: t.ertainini with an OUl· 8'1J.7M8 ~ ~ $515 mo. ••••••••••••••••• .. •••• 1..s, ZS OudaJe. 5"--0128 doer iaa BBQ and luah i---MIWPO---ltT-----i
714-7100 SPACIOUS COMDO --ar·~ '1 .. '!.·0000·
U}llnded, 2 BR. 1~ ba. We ban most ever7 •·-------'AN~~ lmUCID Mountain 9ttws, quiet plan to •wt your ln· Owner, 3 BR, cu.atom, l!EGA.llGEE R!:AJ4TY Owner ,..,_ aeU 11 ThrH Duplex, two t br rum. nr A D UL T P a r II I n
ana. Owner •W hlp dividual needs and price ele1ut, apao. Huae <n4) U'1·17" hure bedroonu pl&11 pool ocean. 2tlb St, NB. West.m.tn.ster. 2Br, 2 ba, ~teO.OOO r&qo.ll'romlbedfoom P'amRm.vacant.llu.at •••••• and waterfall. Won't $139,500 . Ow n er. bcautJlu.I Uftlveru& dbl JAMODDY••-cODdoa priced at $'70,llOQ Hll. $.112,950 /ofr . --------l•t-C.116*7171 49"l·7171,492-6172 wide. Walt to market & ---------·-to fNe 1tandJ.n1 homea n...._1 Carefree Off111r119 ·1•PUNrottNC1• bus~. Mdo Verdel•-------.. LOOmNeFOI 4fU61 I l'dced at $1.22,500. l'or ~~~~~~~~ Ill I 8Y Owner, S Br. fam rm. Park Bararaln at 16 UNITS A POOL1
1r·--,.-.-,.--, --.., ..... 0-l-4
1 ~m~c.. Information, -.OW MA«•ITr Uvlna 11:1•. i1li·i ~.~o:f.~.~nc. s:aa.soo.' Aat 868-1332 tn Anabel m Showci u ... tt l1, Htd/filt'd, ....................... call 1 WOODBRIDGE 1 BR lo tbia 2 8R. 20.,. tlle 1~~~i!!!l!~!l-!!i:il!lllililllli9 Ocean view, lBr, new pmtuve cuh now. Cal~
I• nrrou.nded bJ • PfO• BYOWNEJl f1J dta~c EASTON, prof roof, patio bome hiat 1~ 't eiOIHG OVBSIAS encl. ca boa, ut1 a.1~Bkr~·~SS8~-3.12'1~~~~~
·I ~U' ~tJ 481', da, mm' 11ltat I lndaclid 6 UPlrd. pvt ~"'!:s~ c'l:::~o ~r, IAYROHT Moote o HVH. 4 Br, 2 abared. $1.3,500. "4~ 1.
Jnarunlatmb.p1meo11.-..•-a. __ ea __ am _____ , I loc. '1 Clearwater, Jacu11l 4c clubhouae. Seclud41dl...pc1ute com· -lam rm, near new Coata M•••, J2l(44 NC'WU~6oldc-r 7 un·
-tbe u,,., Suk Bay , ........ IMda 1040 ~W, :i.a~rn· Adult cocnm. Juat munlty. '""I.and, over crpg.~yd., wood deck SlltyUne, 1~ Yr• old , I~ on ad.lo~ic Jou in
.,....._ Ca.II Q.I to He. ....................... I.bi I BJ\, w/atrlwn ., aooo (50) ~~ tbbo::~~:.s r;:! B~ 0 .ER. 75!M>634 cabau. like new. Lo CM. Tab ~1th<.>r one or
GU,000. ~ru. 11 Bethany. ~ Pim den, re-W..tdtff JM/0.. n111t, GJ,000, fhlanclnc both. Eitchaoae or " YAU.ft' 64o.tf00 SIA&PA.UYllW WOOOllMI CWJOO, ORBENTRl;E, cmtb'unra.cled. Truly• showplace, 5tl-1191 ;..:.;,~ wlll car ry.
a Upended I l\OIT, RV aw,n • Bt\ llAMPTON w/tun· cwtom la eYCf1 det.&ll. vw.n, Coed\ in lnint'I --------accu~I fH.1.~00· BJ 4-k, 4131 Jlroouldt, d QUA.u.. IJl Better ,.. tbla oae rt nut P.ark 1 'The I U
oi.a.. ~ 1N Hl·JOOO SlOUllS. l'or prHlW, ~-..... :....-,-11118._ before It'• COH. 1113 llMdowa •• a Bh. 1 BA, 8-st CM ·~•-4•1Un• r:a:: 1 &lo'lfa Lii. ---------1 Purtct T ore, A•t. _ ,..,..., tno Dour Or .. Aceot. den. Eaay flnanctn1. for lea than C!Ol.1\pva~
.._AdlWpl eo.srn ~ , ••. wur.~IUOI ea-01s RtdlU.U R.tttt.y ssa . .,...oo ble. Aceateu.ucn
BA~ Q 11~ .. •l•u•1·h•
540.]666
Wltelc~11
REAL ESTATE
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.... ~.~~.~!~~ ...... ~!~.~:~~ ... Hws Uafunlahtd ~.~~'!! ...... ??.~~ s-c:trqRo 3271 ~~.~~ ... ??.~~ ~~ ....... ?!!.~ ~!.~ ........ !!.2.~ ~~~ ... ~~~
Pteperty JOOO Corw .. Mer 3222 .... .:·0 :·;;;;;3j4 .. Condo. 3br. P.ba. 2 car , ...................... 2 DR w/pall<J, stt'ps lo Sacb unit, rf'fr•K. $180 Pillt MIWPOaT .............................................. .a.fMI 0 a .. r. Vl\'W SJ75 mo OUTRAGt!:OUS 2 Br l beach nwnlhly ur w~k· mo. uc.Uls. no pet.a Avl Bachelors. 1 or 2
TWO +HOUSI ••,••••••••••••••••••••• m2lllt3af'l1 Ba, fpk, D/W Sup\'r ly 1i1 45th M NO. Apr l n u111330821 , Bedrooms &
COSTA MIS'" Ntiwa duplex. 2 Br, 2 b.a \Bedroom condominium -ueu. $385. 963·4567 ~ YilM ~0769 coll Townhowle" ~ f1m rm. d1n1n1 rm, pool, tcruus, a.uper loea ,Atent oofee -~
Owner's unit In rur fl'J>k Soof Hwy ss.25. no t1on ~ C..11646 4477 Ld&e ,.,.... 3255 ' ~•nh ~ 3 br, panoramic ocnn t'rom $289 50
with huge hrepl11ce In P"tll OavC'644·7211 ••••••••••••••••••••••• CONDO 2 il.Y 2 BR, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sp('ct~cular apa. total
' beautiful family room• H U N T I N G 1' 0 N ~ BR 2v, b4 2 ity lab comm pool, Pa Ho G•neral 3102 $;';,,~ .. 7it~~1;.i:: ~k, recrutlon program,
Shchne glas11 doors l HAIUjOlJR br11nd new vlC'~ home 'Club pnv'i; Carolina, 1 child OK An ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---l()('lal program 7 pools.
pool,h11hlyland.sc11ped CodoMna 3224 endlslory3Bdrm.:.!ha. and Clo1>1~ to schls dtta.'93-a12 12ti21 t'Jowcr Street Topofl>P ,alm~lnew, 8 tennis courtb At
'137.600 ••••••••••••••••••••••• all bwlt 1n. JU, JXJol. a.hop'g retreat1on' i''or Rent 4 bdrm houe.e <Garden Grovel L~rge 1 2 br 2 b11 + dt-n. DtW, t'ash1on l&la.nd. Jam
QUAtL Cll E..su11de extra sharp 3 t!l<'. Prl\ acy s55o Many xtras C111l ownr, SJC Fanuli~. No pets bedroom, aptll. cl0$e to ~otOronge Counl't'S balcony, ocean view ~r~Ro~d~an Joll(IUIO °l'LAU~ br , 2 ba , frplc. 846-44(11 5813022or768-7667 $49(5.4~ shoP.J,.nK Laundry moStbeoullfuloponmenJ ~S~~<!:~Nol1&~t (7141644-1900 -;'&i;.<;>.;,a:R-r11~ m1crow&Vt!, wet bar, New·eleganl 2 bedroom Newport leoch l269 racllities. no C'haldren, no communlhes A relaxing ' ~tLSlNE~TllUCl4 eGlardec garaice
1
~~ opnr tl.SSO> or 2 bedroom + ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 BR. 1 ~ Sa, condo, peu SHl5/S250 /month seningwl!ttslleoms.· Top of D p. almoet new, Udo Isle liayfronl 2 Br ener me . ..,75. mo .. __ (u7c) Cedu" •-..,1n comm pool encl gar, Ullbties paid Call Deb· b b I rd o w f 1 Sil!OO C 11 bt 3 6 DELUXE E·SIDE tnplex 548 0063 uo:a• .., " ... "' ... NO YEE! Houaea. con. S3Z'§. evH 4~8264 bae at (7t4l 636-7343 wotertons and moiesnc 1 r 1 a, It Y • I · l'J> c · a wn
W/o er,. 3 BR 2 BA dow home., 5 8locke. to dos, duvlexes. Rental I !Tees Feof\Jnng pool$. $27S + $150 depos No pm, 613-0770 wn li • • , beach Private 2 <·ur •....&..--p ·'-ul 3807 I ail Sml put OK +fl'J)lc. 3 Yrs new Gd LEASE $460. mo. 3 Bdrm, F 11 . Pavilion, 67S-49L2 Bkr •LL L-.t. -.._ 11 JocuUI, sauna, b~hords · "' R...tah Gtllottll terms YEAGER RLTY 2 ba clean & !!harp garage u y main ------~-3211u ••••••••••••••••••••••• OO...s33.49S 4492 We have lOOO's or
M6-6171. Mesa' Verde Vacant & tamed yord Adult:.. ":l0 HEW SliVllEW ••••••••••••••••••••••• J Br, 2 ba condo on cx:eun I oM exerting ctubt!Ouse d
avail Kids OK Agl pets lnq~re 525 l8lh St 3 Br 2 Ba. pool, tenms. $225 fno, l BR houi;e Nace front on Pl:'nm. Under wl!tt SOCIOI evenrs TeMIS, Foulltaia Valey l834 ~'ea~'.xs~l~P~ri~~:' 4HIH-R.~•d$15K m.<6896 <714J9Ql-6331 1ac.$845)'rly 6750562 yard, avail oow. Good ground prkng $475 mol gymon<lvOIJeybollot ••••••••••••••••••••••• Saveonr~ ~-4 BR •-th 2 Bit ---area. 557«1863 540 1720 yrlv I·~ """ 7cun "raft 5 The V11toge More of All •·'·t d
'U'1oc "' ree · DUPLEX 2 Br t Ba. cpls, 3 BR 3 ba, cust home, 1 SEAVIEW, 3 Br Popular Mary. ' ' ·" °"'' """v ' uuu ies paa t.45-4900 room for more units drps no pets sml fncd bile rrom IX-can, l'Pl on Bar Harbor pnme oc·n 637 fi099 every!tl1ng you re IOOktng gorgoous 2 BR 2 Ba S31S ~ £6tat.e Connection yard'.$29S i9"8&l!f50B ly Noc~1Jdn·n NopcL'\ vu 1950 547 7044 ; SZllO mo, 2 BR, :.ml yd. Bayfrl lBr, :!b;J, pool. lorfurnrturersovollObte greatlocauon (962A)Secluded 2Br apt over ~~~&UI& evs l7lO Meyer . 645 ·41:1 55 Refs 5361-iH~ SJJ.3215 Child & s ml pet ok view. secunty $450 mo Oneon<llwoBeoroom looking pool Elet'
l'\'S wknds 3 Br., bJ 'I llunl tkh b
3
b
1
h Avail now, 557-08ti3, yrl~ ti451103,1>4542UJ A<luftllvtng Mu.<il.,eelobehevl:'' IUlchen . <.'arport, $275 ---· ~ .a r. a poo om e S4G-1720 Mary ~ac1ow. 3 BR i Ba $400 mo. 673-4162 days 1.ota for Sa&. 2200 New 2 br condo Pool, 'llear Wl•.,lm .. !.Jll $400 Garderung, pool ~en m· Corona dei Mer 38 2 2 Offices open 9 00 ro 6 00 llt'aut fpk Ullll7 > __..:.. __
••••••••••••••••••••••• sp.t From $375 Kids & mo C .. 111!9'.! 3206 cl'd S800 S49 0655 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Now rennng R.....,_s t.31-4555 Park Newport rum. b.tch
OfflCE ILDG SITE pets OK 675-4912 Bkr -Tustin 3290 Wall assign lse at re ---Lovcl) 3 hr~ ba homt'. nr BIG CANYON Luxunous ••••••••••••••••••••••• duced rate 640-1007
HunUngton Beach R~ G-'-ll heat• h Su pt' r Y,>rd 2 Br, 2 b al h con _ Tus'·-condo. 3 BR. 11• -H.wdlwgton .. och 3140 ---27,000 sq fl lot near ~ ____..... rdn ssoo 1 tJI UJJ • rS 2 BR 2 Ba Studio a t p f 11 we ha e 1000 ' r "'ga r mo ~ dom1n1um home ba. patio, recreallonal ,r, / • ••••••••••••••••••••••• • P ac11ca o:.palal,5.__., ___ d\I su •1891114,9680061 Newneve-rl.Jved•nWet f I l ... b '' HARP,be11ch,2 &3BR. rplc.xlntcond.3151!: Points Shop Cnlr & """"'"""· P xs, apt.s nov.. ..., aci • nu pain "r Y l~!"C.S Bay $395 yrly renlill Ovic Center. $135.000. all areas, all pnce:. CLOSE TO IEACH bar I r r p I c . S 6 7 S schls " :;bop g. 830 1000 ----r r V 1, d 1) h w a!> her , 962_8847
Dav1d Bourke Rllr Save on fee. 2 BR. formal Din Rm. 1 ~bury R E. 673-6900 5JS.3ID4 GARDEN APTS garage, patios. 960 Z:l5" ----------
____ se&._ 9950 645-4900 Afjt ~ly, pal10 hme, fflc· Wl'l C•cMiurlums CORONA DEL MAR SD) large 2 BR patJO
b l •· ,...... L S 2 B T h Seawind Village enrl06ed yard, new cpls Cl LOT. Westside C<>:.lJ 3 BR house. beaut ocean a, enms, poo "' J<Jl'. ...,.,.... IDO I LE u..turNsh.d 342 5 r own ow.e, frpl<.' beaut area (S367)
Mesa. 17.000+ ~'-I fl. & cJnyon view yard. VHVrdstoMragc 8 S400kh 9122 0 w n er w 111 I ease ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pool. lenn1:; Some 0t.ean New 1&2 bdrm luxury
$78,500 gaaol m:.tr bdrm. $395 e e ar 1 roo ur.,l/ FURNISHED OR UN· Hunt. Harbour area. 2 br. & C:alahna views CIObe adult apts an 14 pla111> Lovely 2 BR luxury apt
S4S.ll03 Ai.rt mo +ulal &i5-JOOO Hamilton > 545 3359 Jo'URN ISH!:;D MAKE fulJ.s1ze patio, nr 0c•ad1 l.O Fa.~h1on !">land&. fine New, 2 Br, 2 ba, all bltns, from $270 + pool!>, ten bllns, new cpts $37S
()ut--of-C-__...-~uv b ? b ~'I' 3Hrh.'i\',blkelobt·h Lrl( AN
00
0F1''ER YoBuhavdea shops.schls,avl11IApnl bea~h Ali.o I Hr frplc . enC'I garage, ms. waterfalls, ponds' Klds/petsok (962t;l
_,,, ..,.,.l 4 r.~'·2 a,,-'· '.>'II s395 Jsl, la<;l & c 1t'e.Large2 r+ en l.$325/mo963 5228 6442611 palJo.lndryrm,$325. From San D1e.:o fo'rwy Renti ... s 631-4555
f'roperty 2550 pool, lt!nms. gardener deantn)( 557.JOtlH .iltn and pal10 $750. mo or 2 ---·--------• TSL M_gml 642·1603 drive North on ik'nt'h to1----------
••••••••••••••••••••••• Owner. 640-0008 Br 2 Ba, large deck and For lease Blue Lagoon Almo5t new 2 br . 2 ba McFaddtn then Wl•sl on Two 2 BR's. stove, refng,
$325 spar1ous 2 UH vn:w. $6SO mo. Both un cond
1
o. 2 Br,
99
2 ~~.heh, S3!IO Lrg 2 br. pr1 bt'h t wnhse w / enc I. a ar MC"fo'nddeo lo Sea wand clean, new paint, 1 blk fr
Beaut fnt·d ) ard nr 1L .. are rre:.hly painted poo , lenms 4 . ......,. uress, ele<' slv & $325. 64.S-5126; 637 5895 V1llal(e (714>893 5l9ji beach. $400 mo. OR, 2
:.hop!> and rarpeted DRIVE di.hw~hr 487 Morning BR, rptc, cpts, 1 blk fr
. 2 Bdrm house. Ftreplacf'. Park Ploce-Ocean11de Double garage. $345/mo
2 & 3 BEDROOM 673 2058 Agenl
VA fo'HA
~ARDE.'N TOWNllOM E
Kid:. pets ok t84l!OI AV 4 bdrm 2 ba condo. pool, 2 Ctnyoo 673 7631 Large 3 Br townhouse IRA.MD HEW beach. $450 mo.
3 B 2 b r I 2 Ill Via Lado Nord car gar $'1Z5 Owner l .. ba f I 3 BR studio apts, hu"l' 67" '"'17or 832·">0Q .. r. a, rp <'. car 7511163 Def 10 A M Magnificent Vie ... ' ap · ' • l'J> c. patio, "' ...--.,.,.... l(ar Encl yd. Kids uk Lovely 3 BH 2 BJ $395 and call · ore Su d 1 1 garage Qwet complex back yard, chaldrt>n OK L.-J .... _ ... .,..,., ... 5 227• l~e bnck f1rcplJll' Wat-'r==* H~· or Aft 8.30 PM • per c uxe Jrj!t• up Ad ll t $375 ~""-Dys, 848 2655, evs .t..-hwfth ,...._..-u ~ .,. • N ..-rT ~ ~ ... • ----nur duplex. S of hwy, t u h, no pe 5 · · :::--' .. 0"73 ...,.-or •L-..11..--'-L-...1 390" --- -r schooli. !~1:?71 631 1 ""OO .-645 3381 or 675·5949 .....,......, --'4
2 car garages
Evn 1-757-1623
QUIET PRIVACY RmtirnH 6 31 -4555 1-------.. ____ l ~ltnUnfurn 3600 br.extras 6736004 ••••••••••••••••"-•••••
"'Illness lorC"es sale", l br, encl gar . ne,,. ---••••••••••••••••••••••• ••PJrk Npt ZAr 2ba New decor 2Br, 1Ba, + MliR IEACH TKE EXCITING ~must sell or part t'ph, drps, stoH & Irvine 3244 BIG CA "J Y 0 N EASTSlDECM gar, JJC, pool, spa, ten garage, W. Sade, nr &CIVIC CIEHTER PALMMESAAP'fS.
d b rerrag Nr Westdarr TOW"'llSE 3 B DI g $395 l'rt All Uta! pd •''o :.chis, shops. $270 BRAND NEW Spacious MINUTESTONPT t ra e 20 eaul v1ev. ... ·'It·. no pill• $275 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -" r P x, enc ar . '" ..... 9
G h & r-.u ~ ~ ~ New 2 BR 2 ba c t'd & .1."" '"" ..... ~ c.:hldm or pet~ t.tA" mo 548·.,.... deluxe 2. 3 & 4 Br All BCH acres. real ununi: 6736372 eves RENTALS · · rp ._ •. .,...,._ ......, · fastung area Nr MoJb, B drp'd, speclJculor GoJr -673-liti61 675 5726 $32S. 3 Br 2 Ba upper bltns, frplcs. gar. lge yd Bacb, 1&2 BR.
Utah. New. never h\tJd 4 Br. 112 ba. Jge fenced 3 BR. 2 a .. $550 Cou.rse & lake view Sep CaPo Beach up~r JBR 3 ---Carport. No pets 1021 502 Yorktown Just from $220. & up .. in 4000 sq h home > arcJ Nr schools & 3 BR, 212 ba ... $495/525 gar . te nnio; & pool Ba. ocean v1e"W, bltns. Costa Mna 3824 Valencia SC&.WSS West or Beach Blvd Adult:.. No Pets
Would make J gr\'al .,lw>ps $450 mo. 557.3225
4 HR, 2'-i ba · · $750 u.c· oplton 644·2416 suodeck $42S mo ••••••••••••••••••••••• ' 5J6 l71S L561 Mesa Dr. group cluh rt•lreal 4 BR,38a $&}() 4_94_-44_0_1___ Adult 2 bedroom, super EASTSIDE near new 2 .---<SBlksEastofNe-wpQrt
Hurry, subm1l all orrers Nwpt llgts 2 br duph·'< Refttols Galore!! I 11cat1 on 'II o Pet~ BR l Ba. fplc , encl gar. Nae~ 2 BR. nu tpls, ,& Blvd )
Asking $14!1.000. 29'. FnccJ }d. adulb NO We hJ\.e 1000 s or New plush duplex. 3 BR $2:!5 month 568 W avail Mar. lS. $325 Pt:r p;lllll. 8 blks fr om • 546-9860 down. ownr wall ftnJnl"l' Pt..TI S295 lids & "Wtr hou.ws. dpl'<~. apt.-. now. 3 ba. frplc · $6SO mu W1l~on. tnqWr\' apt E mo Ownr agt 673 1181 bUc 3t~res, lnn!>, $235 ___ ....:...__:___:_ __ _
balance l:l'"r S41:1 7114!5 pd6732256 ~II Jre(" .. di price., 64.5-2-11-1-·~·6303 E Std\', :ury 3 llr. 2 Ba. 2 B-r,-l \_2_B_a_townhouse, 5J6l286 ~••••••••••••~?.~~
anytime •Westside Costa Mesa 64v§'..49oto' 2 BR 2 BA. D W. 'hp>ol bllns new "Ph drps. garage, patio. pool. 2sbhor, Ptbga ~!10pets. Clo!>e to Room w/ kitchenette
C •PTIVE 2br. l ba .. encl 1'!ar, Afjt $275 mo. Wlr pd Santa paint $350 554! ol201. Jaruzz1. Adults only -7·',., u~,.,, $50 ~~·9755&up.
A p..aUo. wa:.h dryer area, CAMEO SHORES ~;~ area. 556·11599 JU 551 1241 ~~mo_. _646_-20_10___ ,,., o ,,... .....,
RENT.AL MARKET nu carp ldrp~. rre~hly ----MIESA PIHIES entd G 11 Spal' 3 Hr, 2 ba, Pen
4 654 .,.LJNITS·alBI rt'nlt'<il I painted Move m t·ond :mr, Jg comer lot. ocean .__._~ "'-·rnt's..__.,, Ba l' h. $ 2 J 0 Som(' WeR ha /e l=~ or thou. .. c. New crpl, drps,
Ambassador Inn in C.Osla
Mesa. 2277 Harbor . Cen·
lrally located. 235
rooms. MANY with
kitchen. phone ~TV.
Swlmnung pool, jacun1,
and rec. room. Daily &
weekly r ates starting
from $48 a week.
rurn+ ren cc S325 1 mo No J''-'l s u5z3C D I view.Sl200mo 6732464 ..,.-... -nnoru ~ firs & paint thruoul garages M Ol'l l u n 1 t1' 646-lZ4G 'T AlllPUS t · RVIME ••••••••••••••••••••••• w garage i. Po o I . houses. dplxs. apt.s now, Gar No pets $350 mo.
.have new paint und ---CdM newer If.le 3 BR 2 lal»oo Petthtwlo 3707 jacua1 AdulL<,, no J><'Ll. all areas. all prices. 968-42.20orS40.3CYlJ
carpets. All havti ncwLl'~ASt; $475, CollegcUruv Park (Terrart'l,2 Ba,ble.airy&wnodsy. •••••••••••••••••••••••Open daily. 2650 Jl arla Saveonfee. roots Call Geo. t'rey at Park, 3 BR 2 Ba. 2 BR 2 Ba. walk to sho~. s or Hwy , s525 mo 1 Br. S350 yrly. OH street Avt-. C M (Mesa Vt>rdc 645-4900 •• N1re 2br w/patio, gar,
542·3456 {pie's, kids {)K. Avl i.dlool. very clean. S4•10 6750764 prkng Avail ammed Dr E orr Harbor Blvd) ---------lndry rm. $260 mo Nr
BEN HINKLE R 1-: 4 6178 Drive by 2528 -mo 644 5576 CVl'~ Call 675-0367, &tG 6238 549 2'147 2br, lba $265. New paint, Be a ch & Warner.
Duke Pl Call 963 ~3 or TURnE.ROCK GLE.... A FtHER HOME MEW E-SIDE lndry fac. no pets 269 B 673 2252 Real Estate 559-6221 "' THE ILUFFS S22S. Vacant Stud1n. nr E t6lh Pl 644 0452
WC!Rhd 2900 TOWNHOUSE Gorgeous. full bay view; bch, shops. restauranh 3br, 2ba, Townhouse
••••••••••••••••••••••• $295 lge sunny 2 BR 'view four bedroom' . r .. 1 Adil 8J3.3307; 673 71.Y'/7 Upgraded Lge patw 1 BR new apt, all bllns, fo'ncd )ard encl ••ara"t' pnme . ronl row ol'a Children ok 645 9543 c ....... A~. xlnl location Wanted· house or duplex
owner fan., fixer upJ)l!r
6314480 p,1 Pt y
... .. :! 200 "''1uare fet't Im l10o EXQW1>ltt' J BR, 21'2 ,._ 372"" 't" ........ • C..1uldren OK <960:!> m.iculJtel) up)!ra,k<l ba spl.Jl le\l'I end unll ..._.ta Mesa ~ eves, 64&-"262 dayi; 1767 Orange. Avail Apnl
Captnatmg 3 BR 2 Ba
pauo htd pool. fplr
Much more' $-i25 !6420>
Rmtirnru 631·•555
lhrou~hout Pool. 'fl·n ""1th i:.i.ted courtyard en ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------• l $260 646-7993, 642 I l55
LA CASA ILAHCA 1 Br wt stove. refng. n1s $f;50 monlh try & :.pac1ous prl\
.\\'A I L \ B L E I M palao lmlll4I C Lhruoul &
Mt::DIATl'.:L \ truly ~rat1nus An ex
<'eplJonal ~alue al $750 d QUAil m per mo, UOllJ 12 1 78,
;~~~:RTi IC8 Ulen S800 per mo.
_ 1s2.1t20 , ... A~ent 640-SS60
,_ OIJ,tJ\_ 5T ~-...CH
··•••··················
•••••••••••••• ••• • •• • •• lbr pallo home Nu crpts. Costa ~ 3 1 24 hno & df"?" No dogs, no
••••••••••••••••••••••• kids $300 mo. Ph 6467175 Rewtah Galore!!
We have lOOO 's of
houses, dplxs. apt.s nov..
ell areas, all prices
ILUFFS CONDO
1<1DS/PETS OK 3br 2ba conrlo in Tt•rr.tce I SU>ry 3 bdrm. Close to patio. comm pool Nr t:l h I h · N East.side 2 BR, gar. $350. Ranch 0 $ 4 5 0 m 0 sc oo & s oppang o
Save on rei!.
6-45-4900
646-4848 or 675-8258_ 673-2252 pet.s $650 Agt. 644·7'l70_
Afjt COLLEGE PARK In Una;-Pk, 2 houses New Twnhs~ w/~ranquil
He le-oc:h 3 169 3Bedroom,diningroom, now.4BR+F:imRm. panor amic view, 3 wpoti bmll·ans, dishwas her. $700 per mo ANO 3 RR kin~sz Bdrms. 3Ba, ••••••••••••••••••••••• frvlc patao btiilcony fireplace. freshly paint-+ fam Rm $575 per mo · · · Rentds Galore!t ed $425/monlh. CALL 752_0617 agt. d ls h washer. trash
We h ave 1000·5 or S5&2660 ------comp. 2 <'ar gar. w/op-
houses, dplxs, apts now, · 3br 2ba. form dm rm , nr Beaut trpl, drps.
all a reas, all prices C:::SELECT Poplar mod. an Wood Children OK. $550,
Saveonree. I P ROPE RTIES bridge, Creekside. Avail negoUable 963·9784
6 45-4900 Jt..4 ----1mmed. Walk to pool. N C C d --------.,. 2 Br Duplex w /gar tennis, park, schls & ewport rest on o.
3 BR. den, welbar. patio. matW'e couple only, $ls0 lake' S49S mo Call art Jba, 2 or 3br pool & ten-~ blk to beach. $900 mo + r ent co 11cct1 on 6PM, 1-493 9484 ms Agt 645 0295 ___ _
Avllll. Apr 1. 1 yr l~e 532-5939. For lse , Broad moor Spacious 4 br. 2 ba.
Lve msg w/IPR 675 6520 DCllMI ftoint 322t. Turllerock, charm1n11 +family rm w frplc
••••••••••••••••••••••• family hme 3 BR or 2 Secluded garden area.
YRLY 3 BR, paUo. car. Super 2br, Iba, gar .. 1., BR + den, 2 BA. l~e ~ mo incl. gardener.
all the comforts or rru beach, oct>an vu, pYt, garden lnlch. 2 patios Avail Apnl 1. 410 El hom~,lBlkfrombeach $32S 496S293673·2428 Walk lo elementary Modena To view call
$7SO mo ------school. $525 per mo ~
673-4617 or 832·31134 WHITEWATER VIEW. 2 ~2448 5 br 3 ba, hi? 2 sty home Br. 21·'2 Ba. pntao derk --frpl, gar, 5 mm wlk to I -a.oclt 3248 lrg yrd. many extras. ..........-Back Bay area. heh & harbor. $485. no ••••••••••••••••••••••• Snglslpet.s OK. $825. Lyn
••••••••••••••••••••••• pe~ please. 714 661 65Rl , DOWNTOWN Jennings. 556-2660 or
G-: 4 1202 a!t s LAGUHA 979 0092 ••••••••••••••••••••••••
C.alifomla Ranch. Sharp, r:o..tain Valhy 3234
vacant, cleao, targe 4 ••••••••••••• ••••• • ••••
b edrooms. $495 per 3 Br, 2 Ba. frpl, no peL'l.
lllOOth. Call 962-1188 or SUO/mo.
549-9568 !)S4·7106 aft 6:30pm._
Deluxe 2 bdrm , 2 bath duplex rentaJ Oulstand 2 Sty 3 br, 2 ba A-frame. Oshwl\c. frplc Walk lo ing ocean &. village bch tenrus $600. mo. yr. view, yet only a few 1 '
short blks. to town &
beach Huge hv rm. & ---------HOMEFINDERS Yours for.._the asking d1n1ng alcov<' Lge.
'lboulanda or Rentals Huge 4+2 ntd pool S39S lutchen w/bill-ins, incl. FOR LEASE
All areu all prices 2 car 1ar or all (9623) wash/dryer. Separate 2
Sample : car garage. An oulsland
$140 Bach furn ut.il pd $425 family sized 4 +2 mg offering at $500 Mo .-aw fned yard lge fncd yard, pool Ref. required call
$!95 3Br peta fenced beautrplc <8936) MISSION REAL TY
UFETllrfESERVICE a..thms 611-4555 rhoM4'4-0731
157.0122 -........ Hwt"4• S.OCh 3240 Ocean vu home, 3br, ~I.a.cl 3206 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 21,A,ba, in prestigious
-.••••••••••••••••••••• Portafma $750. 499-4820
llJEW ~ BR. den ~ BA.
c ountry c h ar m e r
,,J be ama at Je a d•d 1~ mo. yrl.y lH
AT LAST
AR..talS....Vlc•
Y•C•ll..t
At"-W'"9
l.• A!tndlve ar. Jba, den, WE CMJARAMTH
Li lrpJ, acllu. Sl2S 1 r l)' · •Wldett aelertton poss. --m.alX~;;;;.;;..;(2;;.JJ~)-Xf.;.._,~.ot_Tf __ t •ID house computt'r sys,
2br bse north end Lag.
Lovely 2 bdrm, 2 ba up·
per Apt for rent at $525
mo. located at 4281'2
Begorua
3 Bdrm. fam rm view
home, located an a
private llUatded area
Wllh many amenities for
lelM! at $975 mo. 2125
Yacht Rdlant.
3 ,Bdrm, den home,
localed In Spyalass.
IJO(). mo. 38 Drakes Bay
~
11""II 1n \l r'
'•I ~I~ I Cu ,1 Mo11 Co<t;1 lk' fllj· -c.-.. Mir 32J2 •Dally telephone aer~ice
---•••••••••••••••• •Vacencfea vorlfled ~Spc:itlela. Walk to bch. dally
Bch. Sunny breakfast
r m , lite liv rm
w/beamed cellln a "
frplc. Nu French blue
Crpt ·1. Shady yrd
w/brick patio. ISZ5 mo
lncld1 stove, refrl 1.
wabr/dryr. lraah pickup ll Ml'. Ad~ta only, tnusl IMfomca, Carmel. 3 BR have ret1. "94-9925 + Fam Rm. pvt yard •-Hilt lJSO SUO mo. 7U 0617 4Jlr rm nn 2100aqf\ •f'\1ll 1u..tt cl rounaelon1
Yrt.J, $09 Aacla 145-1<MI •Free tl> •led M Ii over , •Frft rental coumtllnl
For Rene Immediate 5 -Open 1 da118:00.S:oo
bdrm. 11.VJI. view. ten· RENTIMES nil,/:' •. M4'71U
19-G a For Prote:ulooal Service
-.--ownr/a,t. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----'=--------
' Bdrm., 2 batb view BLUJl'PS beaut. S br , 21,A,
home. A1r ciondiUool'd, be, ~l' view. 9lO Mo ft~aee 2 Ctr f aNle, Aaeot 8'4·1133
SSO WEEK &. Uft
Studio, l bedroom
Maid sen.'lce. pool
237fi NewPort Bl. C' M
543.9755 or 645-3967
SUS CASITAS
Nicely furnished l bdrm
Closed gar. $230. up
Adults, no pet:.. 2110
Newport Blvd.
Rentals Galore!!
We have 1000' s of
houses, dplx.s, apts now.
all ar eas. all prices.
locJI, I lr-Avt Mow Cloe.e to buses, stores
All ullls pd., cpls, drps, Adlts, no pets
pool, lndry lac's AdullS ____ 548 __ ·65_18
over 35, no pets or si4o. lbr. refrig, stv,
<.'h1 ldren Call Sue . C&D. patio Adlls, no
556-7707 or Henry . pets 724 c James.
642 9137 673-7787pm ------
b E--2 Br, cpts. drps, rernit.
$42.5 New 3 r, 2 ba, kids ok. no pet.S $260
side. deluxe, end. gar, S:U·9081 btwn ~
frplc, yard.
TSL Mgmt 642·1603 !Bl', near So. Coast Plaza
3 B 2 B Q . $240 mo. -r o apt wet area. 540-8493
bltns. cpts, drps, nC'l ----------
pets $325 557-4238 2 Bdr, 1 Ba. CI D. bltms. Save on fee
645-4900 Afjt l Br t Ad I•· -, N gar, $250/mo. Agt. --------ap u..., on y. o S38-8081
Large 1 bdrm fupperl pets. LRG KIT, dining ·
$230. Quiet building area & pool , 1887 EASTSIDE 2 BR wtencl
w/beaut. landscaping Monrovia $225. 548·7924 yard & gar. $310 mo.
Ideal for adults over 35 Two Zbr apts 1975 Adi ts, now avail.
No pets LEEWARD Wallace Apt A $325 and -~:..:::.._7522~------
APT, 2020 Fullerton 2117', Miner St $300 1920 Mey-Pl. nr new Ave n bl.It east NewPort -· --"" blk h B twnhse apt, 2 BR 10,, Ba. Ave & 1 soul ay) :? BR. 1 ba, encl gar & med patio. gar: SJ25
631-0397 pal.Jo. $245 mo 2210 •B. 645-46S5 Rutgers Ca II 846 7129 _;_~:.::..:..------3 ~house Call for ap --Bar am ced huge 1 po1ntmenl 646·3490. 2 Br. 2 Ba, pool. edits, no g ~R
s-BPM pets. nr shops, $250 encl yd. blt.ns. laundry
OmlCI ftNtt 3726 673 0884. 646-7319 $200 dplx now (6465)
Newport~ 376' •••••••••••••••••••••••
IAYNOMT
3 BR. 2 baths. Yrly .$S$0
A.DUtT COMDO
2 BR, 2 ba, yrly . $425 S~TOllACH
3BR, 2b a, bay vu SlO:SO
2 BR, 2 Ba .• yrty $400
associated
ll I! ., >< I 11 :. II f "I T f'I ~ •;
,O: V. tnlh.-."" A. 1 ""' t
$300 2 BR 2 BA w/pat10
bltns encl yard, garage
new shag cpt.s (4945)
R...tirnts 631-4555
Call 631-4555
nlee yard . Wa.ibff and 3 Br. 2 bath house. l bUt
dryu utl.Jlable. Ex to bch. $C'J5/mo Ind ten· cdlem locaUon; do.le to Dia • wt 1 h c u lreewaya II 1hopptn1 1 m t u,.. 1 ._....~II ce-nt era. '450/moatlt at ~ req Wt have 1000'• o f oasroPBY
193' ........... d
O't blk No ot t.9l1' St.)
rJ as woodt1. A Calif. C«p. Sm Fee
"'• $UI mo R8Al. FIND 4 Br 2 Ba,
~~=-~_.......,,-...-~~ cpta, d /w. fncd 7erd.
•*llllnl to .. m tell. llCMStl'1 ta.m.. DO Uwall. f ...
leaM. Anll1ble April NEWPORT TERRACE 3 ~. dplu. •s>t-now,
lit . Ca ll owntr at Br 2.,.. ua. ram Rm, all areat. -JI prl<.'ea.
11'/IGOUI 14'71 171-074S or SS"M°'6 Sa-.. -r ...
I 2~ bi town&;. '4MtoO ~
Ol:-H D vu, .u recrea. I ea. MODWJ \!Ju Jt.\Oe
lottu full. N•wporl ti « ..... ,. l fr Terr .bt.ltblld b c b • .-au.441.4uo; . 21.. ~
645-4840
$260 sleals lh1s 2 BR ----
cozy den, plu.'>h cpls Sngl room w/balh & pvl
great arcJ (431!1) entrance. S48...s89 aft 4
l RR duplex nr beach Beaut rm pvt ba empld l~cpd · encl yard matu're ~rson, si50 mu.
nrshopsS215 (S36Jl LagBch Refs.494-734&
Rmtimrs 6 3 1-4555 -----------Swwu•,.Rtfttals 4200
2Br, children welcom<', •••••••••••••••••••••••
no ~· startmg at $245 Wanted for July, Augw.t
mo. ~000'7 & Sept. 2 or 3 BR apt. or
NEW2&3 BDRM
19202 fo1onda Sl, ltB.
968-8396 or 963~
home. Please write th1~
week to C. Hassell. 2123
E Colter, Phoen1-c
Ariz. 85016 or PH z BR 1'2 BA, dbl gar 602·957·0528. We intend
twnhse. ,,., ma to beach to be in Newport Beach,
sec gate, pool, jacuz:u. March 'l7 or 28th
(pie, $395. 675 6161, aft 5. Vocaffoft Rewtali 4250 5.3&9949
2br, l'.'>ba. Condo
Pool, adullli only
$310. 955 3097
LGIJYM hoch ]148
•••••••••••••••••••••••
•••••••••••••••••••••••
*ALOHA*
WE HAVE CONDOS.
IN HAWAII
lnlm'I R.E. Network
Newport Hcights Rlt >"
LGE 2 BR upper view. ___ 6_4_5-_5_0_4_4 __ _
new cpt.~. drps,. 112 blks Refttols ta Share 4 300.
to bch . twn. Heisler Park. $400 No eh1ldren/ ••••••••••••••••••••••-
pets 497-3109 Irvine: F lo share rum 2
----bdrm 2 ba Rancho San.
Beautiful almost ocean Joaqwn Townhouse w
front 2 BR apt, no view S27S mo Call
children, no pets. 752 6375
Porter Realty 497·2468 --------CLOSE TO BEACH
2 Br, l Ba. up~r.<'rpL<>.
drps. stove, refng. No
rhildren, no pets
$350 'mo anc utal
Mary Boardman,
Realtor
494 2414
$280 large sunny 1 BR
ht.d pool-patio (5816)"
Rustic 1 BR $260 gar.
Jacuu1, sauna (5868)
Wanted Smgle mother
w 1 2 children lo share
lge comfortable Laguna.
hse w same. S250mo + ,, ulll. 1'l deposit. CalL
Pam 546·2044 dys.
497-4349 eves -------M F enjoy pool. tennis.
Apt Of' tnbse. 645· 7464 ;
644·5658 Share A Hom<'
Need a Great
Room male?
Cul livtng exJ)t?nsesl
Ca II The Orange
S320: Beaut 2 BR htd C'.ount)' Professiooat:o.
pool ~Mates u.ltd
ENCL yard, A/C (5816) 832-4134
R......_a 631-4555 _Dependable since 1!r11
Ocean view 2 BR apt , Congenial home. Costa
Adults, no pets, $375. Mesa. Bdrm Ir Ba. 25 30.
497 2196 --pre{'d Sl30 979-3231
harming stud•<> N F. 23 yrs needs same to
Laguna, pvt l{arden. or sh.are 2 bdrm apt tn CM
heh. You paml & save or Non·Smoller. $125./mo
S2SO mo & I do. 752-7132 plus Va ulll Call 00-3373
d)'ll Wayne After 5 ---------Roommate wa nted.
Laguna Hills, Sl7S/mo.
All 6, 58?-3104, Bob.
l.arge 2Br detached up•.
bJlrU, CpU, drps, park-
ing, nc-n view, no pets.
$400 mo yrly 2S2 Cha Back Bay are. Twnhse
Unlum bdrm, Pnv b>
3152 Non s m o k er USO.
548-7m
quita 494-«W4.
CONDO Prol rem wl&bu rm tc
3 Bdrm, 2~ ~a w /bltn abaft 2 BR apt. N B/CM. oven ran1e. t>L .. hwasber App-ox 1175/~ uW. Pl'fr
lk All' COBd .• fully carpet· n/smkr over 30. Conni eel • draped. Ready to 95'1 1313
move ln . Locat•d on ----------
Crown Valley Pkwy. u .. tt1r Br w/ba, Men
RENT $375/mo. Verde pool home, no
3 Mlltt So. cl S. 0 l''wy ovtmii. villiton, drtnk·
CllJ Mr . D'Am•<'<> i nl ol' d ru11. f u ll
(714)111-13'?8 ll:ltchen, wuber r.acu.
will bave to alp natal
2 BR. 1 ba. crptt " d'l'I, a1re.ment, &zn m o.
pr., *Pt to ~h, yrl.J 8U·0070 u t Ul or
Dyl U0·5UO, Eve• ~Sl05af\5:3>.
Ml-5ZZS ~~.;.._,---------~ --.-;.;;;;;..------1Fem tl·U w e1lllt4 to
OCEAN VIEW. yrty 2 Gll Wre nletlf fut'Q amt
1 BA. dpb. ~mo. •Pl la IAC Be CaU ~orG42·3'39 IUdtOT~
l
'
w ...
I<
";.
ht
hi
60
II IT
\Ori
• lri:
Off
roor.
\ler.
Call 'I! t •
I
17
t.
OAILV PILOT
~ c .. , ..... r Coltfl «for G4itdlflin9 ~ ··•·•••··•·······••·••· ••.......•..........• , •.....•.......•.•.....•................•.•••......................••.. l.GftCkc°'*9 PaWt..g/Paperiag PaWtng/rap 1rh19 ···•·•·•·····••··•····· ....•...••.........••.. ···················••#• ..•••.....•••••...•••••
1''1Ch& Bl'1tpcr w/lour c 8 r Pe 0 t er. 1'' r ~., R J Huffman 4r son. Gt>ft
yn <'Urrt-nl PA t'XP at!J:nat.es. Any aa1.t1 Jobs Coatr. Cu1tom Alt & Prat Japan~ Land.srap l•---------U'lg & aa.rdening Ma int THE SUHSHIHE
LANDSCAPING Painting. Extr/lntr Ex lnt Ii ext, re.aaon, Roof• Fot' Lds. All l)'?d.
Reasonable prict', pr'd. honest, neat, re~ SUlchur pamt.s. Lactbood'd. ln1ur. Free
wants accts lo work on Tooy 646-9866 Add, patU>J, cabinets,
in your ofhl.'e or n1y --' fomuca. Nw const. Rea ind. moWUlg, tnmmin~.
spra)'lng, weed1ne. r'ree
est.11nates. :WS-70'1~
GIRLS
Housecleaning &r office
spec1ulli.ts. Spec. on
CLEAN UPS/HAULING ai>b & R.E. work Serv
91i8.g783 or 547 5846 Llc'd 9&&.lo.\5 Dave S31.f788 ei1tlmatc. 894 0421 or
home. Call 962 1052 11fh•r CARPENTRY " comm'l. 6'$·4644 or
Spm Pauo. decks & covers. 5'8-4.541 Llc & bondt.'<I.
Maso.wy . .....•....••...•.• , ... Fine Exter. Painling by ......,./lepalr
R. Sinor St. he., tru.. Try ••••••••••••••••#••••••
me. 836 SSS.S 24 hrs Neal patches Ir textures
SJ7 ... l33
Archihc:twrd paneling, siding, int. ,._ tr ... A • F d fin.i&h, appliance mstall. ~·· COil a., .... r . oun a ••••••••••••••••••••••• Some elec. & plumbiJlg lions ~ additions/ re·
Drafluig, archatectural, ~est. Refs. 842.17311 modelin~.~1~1work. s tdnt draftsman, exp. .....,..._
avail. Qill 751-9627 C..,.. S....fu -
Pruning Ph1ntinr. 7 days wk. Bonded, 10
Free est. 6(2 ll9cn s u r e d . s 4 O • 9 s 2 s
----(anytime)
JOHNTIUtGARDENER 1---------For Prof. grounda care -----
Bnckwork Smnll jobs
Newport, C~la rt!e11n &
lrvme. 675 3175 e\•es ----Moving • •••••••••••••••••••••••
Prof paint 'g It paper Fall EST~ "J..1439 •••••••••••••••••• .. •••
hanging, work guar ---------c ER AM IC 'I' J LE.
Free est. 536·(18(), PATCllPLASTERING Specialty: E n·
536 4383 A I I t y p e 11 • F r e e lriea/fiooni. 2S yrs espt". ---------1 f'Stimat.es. CaJl 54CMlt!2S 962-1883 ---....................... a.ctrtcal ~Repairs . ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••Carpet Man will lay ELECTRICAL Sl-'RVICE . yours or nune. Repairs •. ' ~ rain, damaged 7uur & cleanlDg too! Guar CALLS $.IS hr, & SMALL
asphalt. Call 631 2440. work al bigger savmgs. JOBS 8'2-82.33
all John. 25 yrs exp. 2 ••Housecleaning done
Hort. degree:,, former by reliable couple. Rers
Wlute House Gardener. 540_1_7_9_3 __ _..._
Person!J serv. 645..s4-a6 ---
General $erYic•I •••••••••••••••••••••••
General cleaning. Afso
Wt! do vacant house:; &
apts. !714 }82'Hi900 Bonded, lie .• insured_._ f"ree est, ~3646 .,...._... s.c:trl---c--
A.... Shampoo & steam clt'an. Lie 327136 6'5 6974 HANDYMAN. llomt~ &
----........__
"Two Men Will Movt'
You" We handle lrg &
sml mo' es-office &
household. D1slance &
local, also packing
L1>we!\l legal r.tlc
Lit· an.std Cal T 111 9-l4
Ph 1147 72711
Paint Your Castle
Spec1e.ll:nng m res1den-
t1al homes, int. & ext.
Please check our re·
ferences. Lie 1' 320881
Guru . 1nsrd, free est.
Ted 6367085
PLASfERlNG
Home.s, additions, re· Trw Senk~
stucco. free eat.&, low ••-•••••••••••••••••••
rates !i86-488Z Removals, trimmlnr.
Patclun&. inltexl,/ round pnuting. Free est. Lic'ct.
f1>r. Bonded, llc'd 140607. insured. &t2·263t
••••••••••••••••••••••• Color bnghteners whl ----apls. Co11~c1t.>nt1ou:;
A & E System:;. Auto roll cpts 1o min bl~aeh ELECTRlCIAN·Pnced Craftsman. Call f>'l5·0302
up awnings for tht• Clean lav. din rm, hall r1ght·free estimate on
HOUSECLEANING Cood work, good reh.
bi!>-9589 __ .......... -Prof ~erv. w Alla:. cO!\ts
no mort'. r'r~ est for
local & Ing dist. Or l"I}
\'an & Stora.:e PUC J.11·
Tl I l,1115~ 537 311ifl or
537 :ns1
892 384& Tree Serv1ce. Tree pnut•
Pa1nt1ng. lntr/Extr DRYWALL mg, removal, lopping,.
2Syrs in Harbor area St Lie. 105. 646-4811
motor home & travel $15. Avg rm $7.~. couch large or small JObs Hou.~eclt'arung by np &
lrlr All colors & .,IZI'!> $l0 ctlr ~. Guar eltm Licensed 673 0359 rel. women Xlnt rd.,
Lie 183281, 642 2356 Hang tape spray - - --Richard. 960 1787
lmmed fret• homl' m J>('t' 0<h>r. Cpl -repair. 15 -------Haul, sk1ploadet dump $17 50 wk. 979 ~9 lnt·Ext & Repa11"{ WMclow Cle..a19 s UI II JObs 0 K ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• l II · ... • ELECTRI s-VE trk, gradm~ tree wrk .'!a utwn 8 IOA , .. "' yrs expr. Do work • ll:ft Income Tax
5 7PM myself Refs SJl OlOl ••More tha.n electncinns demolition~ t'lc H.31 1257 •••••••••••••••••••••••
0 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• . d I d Call Bruce :>43·2045 Wm ow:. c eane , re---HOMESAVERS. Plumb· asonab)e, businesses.
YOUNG ~fAN 5 yrs ex pr Ing & Ht'ating. Free est, homes & apt..s. 847""461
in wallcovenni:. Jo'ree SlO hr. Honest & reliable -----'------
1213>59'l ::,1120 - --- --979-4963 t:arpn Cleaning STEAM - -
Ta'< pt l' I' a r a t 1 1• n h ' Pai...tincJ/P~nCJ .•.............•..•.... labtpltting or SHAMPOO. Also floor Aoors
••••••••••••••••-•••••• & window earl" 971 1154 ••••••••••••••••••••••• OCC Studt"nt 1 1on
truck. Trash, tret' ln m
Ron ~·5703. 97!1 64119
rormer I R ~ ,lt.!l'Ul •••••••••••••••••••••••
75-1 0272 15yrs. Paintinll U C. est 6458576Andy servtce. BofA, MIC OK.
----979-8065 or 847-0383 Wiii babysit 3 mo:. 4 yr'> . .E_utch Maintenan~ __ f1oors Wood, reram1l·
Adams & Bu:;ha rd C......t/Cotterefe vinyl & cpl:; 27 yrs
968-3987 ••••••••••••••••••••••• cltcensed ,cotnlractor.
Wouldn t you rather ha\ I!
a cert1f1ed puhllc at
count3nt prcpJrt• your
111romr ta\ return? !-'or
an appt 111 yout homc
call 968 RHl2
Rt-s l'omm Apt lo rates
Lie ins ~111116'499 2'J01 Patching, painting',
guarn. work i:xper'd, Roofiag l!t~tg~ !~!r
St.mg student, bi.I! trurk.
trl"'-' cut!.. clnup, hauling
~17600 &4~·2129
PETERS PAINTING fa.st ••••••••••••••••••••••• a 30 day ad in the ameo n tr1ors CGFJMftf«" Pacific Concret<'. Lo 1 i 531 ·8440
••••••••••••••••••••••• day & full day rates ---------
Carpenter & Cahmt't wrk 6-15-3257 alter 3PM. Don't drop the ball' Grt a
Jo'r£'t' estamalt'' sml Jnb' ---JOb Wlth a low CO'>t Oualy
& rep;Hrs. t·\' f17J 512.S llJve somethani:t to '<'II~ Pilot Cla-.i.d1cd Ad
l\Jvin Cl.is~1f1ed ads do It well_ -~h~e 642 S6'7K
-Get GREEN I.' ash
fur WHITF. eleph:ant:.
with a Cla~i.1f1ed AU
Call 842-~"78
H1ley·s Tax ~t•rvic~
~ YNr-. 'i':xpt>nem·e
Ca II C"12-M42
Expr'd Rt•as Rates & R.EASOMAILE
Frt>l' Est Call Gt'ne Call 557·1041.
5.521»58 -----
-, ~. --Father & Son. Conscien· /\\I PROFES:Sl<~NAL tious saus. guar
Parnuni: Inter Extt>r t>/5·8336 eve:. or leave Rea~. work ituar 642 0386 mess
ROOFS Installed factory
dire(.'t; es lab 35 yrs. Call
11.arold Gunn 549 2961
DAILY PILOT
SERVICE
Try 3 Daily Pilot DIRECTORY
Classified Ad lo buy, sell DO IT NOW!
o_r ren~ l>O~eth~g _______ 6_4_2_·5_6_7_8 __ _
Rentals to Sh~ 4300 lminns R...... 4450 Mort~s. Trust l.Olt & Found 5300 Hetp WaMed 7100 Hefp Wc:wrted 7100 Hefp Wanted 7100 IHefp Want9d 7100 Help W.t.d 7100
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Oeidi 5035 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ·······················'······················· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hm~tt to "hsr lull lnl 4 DB.UXE OFC'S ••••••••••••••••••••••• Found St Bernarrt \Lah· Ac:c:ounti..,. Clk $150 Bankin" CERAMIC WORKERS \OOKS. Bartender!i.•
pu 0 mm•· • <iuna. PoO · Conf_ rm . se~t 25. ··II l'ras. k & ur0<,khur~• 111 ., ASSEMBLERS " D I very D Tl v er s J ii l . ..:t l S2:>11 mo · u u LOWEST 0 100'1< Jo'R ,.;1:-; TB.lBl, EXPER•O lf you <.'<.tn throw pot~ on e 1 . · ~133:.1!1~177,1111171) 0086 paneled. sm whse an re <iarden GrO\I? 119-i 11~7 :-..u l)p1na c;rl'JI l'" of l.1tt• 1yp1n" N•at ap· a wheel and are mterest P t t1me openrnwgs tor 1 2 1 L k "' 50 Trumct• 1\J.st•mbll'rs ,.. .. erJ & men /outeo-
·
'1 L', :11,·r•. t r1·l1 •bl" . .!r or )r ea~I! . a c ~t Ratff J-'ound Malt' lnsh Sc.•ttcr fer!> .:d ratst'' & >:<l lit·n-'\l•t'<l<'d lmmedaakh 11~ar Contal'l Don" ed m a steady J<>b, call worn -•· . 0 " .. -, ~ " ' Fore' t ;ire a Kent ht T.D.'s, allo \H l!nh & In irw·. Npt for light an·tn~ llk.:d ~ l "n" & Short Term. Mitchell MARKEL CERAMICS. mg person ... ue~. ver SllOmo + 1 , utal JI llarluru. 10 kt'y add rruich Call ,.,, ,... , ..... 10...., 1 ..... K !n90l2l 21 & able to work eves.
5.'ll Sh<l.3 714 5111 ·93!13 2nd T.D. Loani. lkh ldl'nt1fy 631 ~ Coastal Pr,-.,onnl'I ,\.:cm ~s1gnmerll'> vn n •n $2.70.SJ to start. Apply
Female 01.t•r 2!> tu ,hart :! BAHER OR Fai~':~n~:.1~19 ~/'l~ot:R: \~'~ .;~t ~~IO JI arbor CM M~s~~;~/~:~'~r~~~P 610 ~::=~ ~~~e: Dr ~.~~·;"!,~~ic ~r ri5fi': Pda9:f:;, ~~ :.
BR apt .. (."dM w .,.1mt· IUUTY SHOP 642·2171 545-0611 Wht nod c-olla r. \'1C' Ins Call Today 556-8520 558 5280 reviews HS. i:hem. or _i_7lh_S_l._C_M ____ _
S\bBOUl 6 hll..o, tn I.Jehl Successful location inl - -& c,t fl14 y ltt'\lo ard !"rt';• Top Pay Vae l'ay Equal Oppor Employer w 0 r k t' x. p e r COOKS
1-"ree lndr,· fact I t,-10 t)'J15 Broker 675 b'iOO ~emenh/ 1 .,.;• lv.:..i " "1 '-' .... ,...._.,. --' ------'W c ~m•r 3 s pre ll Breakfast, lunc.:h. din· I 2.50 mo • I~ UIJ I C().'lla Mesa $600 Month I ~"" IVJ'r "'CCOUlo..ITS Vl_.,Of' r-~ h I C'' ..
bd \Oam or c·\p'\ Or -- - --1 p--~/ P"'Y"'ILE Servic:~s 7am-J.30pm. E .O.E ner. Exper'd. Apply in ....-..--. Lo"l Golden ltt'trl''' rr ,.. ,.. w 1 K d BANL' c .. , 3281 ll•avf' mP"~ hc·tl4n •1 & ~ilndmtrial Refttol 4500 • -t & r....._... l>I\' d ter 1 de & Co "' ~· _ _ _ person. Ma Barker's ~ ~ pup appros 5 mo' old CLERk ......,., .., L ' B t I TELLER only 7517!'..17 !••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 14l'ano).! lthr t•oll.1r. . ~()~•.,Ne, ns ~. * * Child t·.ire & housekeep I Restaurant, 212 E. l7th
l''frw 6 700 under 21)' ~emtnh SI 00 O.irk i:uld1•n 1·lr \·1t· 'ilt'i t•wporl <X':H:h PART TI~1 E mg Top pay Mon fo'ra St, CM Gf;c{s \KIOI Hedim<lo Cirrlt• '••••••••••••••••••••••• Wt• l·urn·nth hJ\ t' a full 11 'nrner of Bnstol & Immediate operunit in S N 8 ---------P II B h Ho.iit llo~JI }t(".~.ird llnw temporary 11JX·n1ng Campusbt'hmd, 9 Ii ·ea.view,. . Coolts&Dilltwashet's f« et!t 4 350 un1l · uot " I SCRIM LETS An.., tn Md>uff. pb \'all f . th d (.' 1 J ) Laguna Office Sa\ln~s 8338100, EH•!.. ~06179, • 1 . •••••••••••••••••••••••! !Sot:! 28J.t I " • ti4:! .m:ll or J Ii mun pt•rio Jr ., r and Loan or bank t•x-640 1'19l Must :.tart 1m· "PP ~ 1 0 Pers 0 n ·
1 ll SJ! with lhl' po~ ... 1h1ht)-of p ... nencl! prt'ft•rr<.•d med Stavros 593() W. Coa::.t
/\\,II a I' """' ~ mu mi sq fl. 2CJ3.t l'lal't•nt1il , I ANSWERS ~t malt• blk &. wht ln1: bet·omani: p¥rm.:lnl'nl \I '.'tiust tH• w1llmg to work Hwy, Nl:l nt·ar Nl•wporl Bl\d C'1 <..: M Xlnt IO<' haired 111 mu l'Jt 14 hlut• lr..i.st I year 'ilnl'il Jl' ASSEMBLERS Saturday., and on call as ------
t.Jl :t.'il &16iS12 Ginger Pi!lC'h ncJcoll.arti1671151 l'OUnb payahlt' l"\ 130)Net.>dedfor needed for work. ~:x-0Pncal , _________ _
Offic:~Rentaf 4400R...,.alsW~-4600 Troth Fabnc ~•trienrl' .\hallt) to graveyard NoC''lpnl•C cellent salary, workmi.: S · COQIS
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• FORTNIGUT Lost . Pr•''l'r1pl1on opcrdleJIOkeyJmust 1.onl(Term&FREI:-. ··ondlt1ons and benefit~ * ecretanes ,...voERIL'"'CED
THE Efflcl£a..JT Crossl4ord punl<" Can Glao,ses fll"'n V1tt11na Plt•a>.e apply in ~·rsun Viet« Temporary Call or apply Moodily ""'-"~ .,...,
11;n Rel.Ired cple nd 2 br un "You know. l '\C bel'n & /\.Iden·~ on Plat·c•n11,1 <r.-lc ... s March 27. 10 oo.1i 00 * Typl.StS ALTERNATIVE rum IO CdM lease by stumpedbyOnl'WOrdfor c~ !)4g9661Re14ard TREHDATA. __...-.... notmandt·J0·400f'M. ~':. ,.1~ ;1t
0 r~·~t,·~rl :::~;~ 6::~~arh 1 ~;*;~:J~~~·.1:1::~~ F~d v,~c.;11~~1~;a~~~ Standarf!!~~~ •. , uiv Suit;~:~~S~~~r Urti AS~~~~-\H . I w!~~r~:~ a~f!)~ttt Top f'ay-Good ~
hit & P/timtt
All shift• avail
J>t·r.-onoilJm.I phone cm bdrm prfrr CdM Non &. Flot 111.i II B Ca 11 11.n \ppht'll 2l.'i.1S Calle de la Lou1s<t turns time into Top $
erai:<• conf rm. mail smoker, ref<. 642 7165 Clac;s. _guitar lcs,ons 5.1112775 MaRm:tll'S Cti Laguna Hills, Ci\ Lon~ & shc>rt term as APPLY IN PERSON ~1·rv undt"r~round µrk>: ..... .::;.._:~-music educ-al or, b1·~ p-~....1, 5350 ~ w S<·ger,lrom ASSEMBLERS Miss Goldblatt 770 2816 sal(nml•nts T1>p Jobs
& mnn• an Nl·wport ... sc:~ · l d <L;! I 1711 ~ f'nual Qpnnrtunaty To" pa v You re "Our Tl! E EX 1-:n Tl\ t: R ..... als 4650 '!' , a v ~ ••••••• •• • •• •• •• • • • • • • • S.inlJ An.1. CA !ll7tl-1 Xlnl nppor Proj!re!>sl \ <' .Employ';7; ~I F ow:; hos~ "
io jos
Restaurant StJITl!:, &io S-HO ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lott & Found 5300 S 'ritual R • <7141 s-10 JtiOS, 1•xl 213 mt'ilrC'al de\1ct' manuf ....,0 r.r.rr:s is I f ••••••••••••••••••••••• pt ~ r Equal Opportun1l} lot•atl:'rl nr OC Airport n ~ , 1· p.1et' 3\JI or o;m 1815So Ell'amrnollt•al f;mplo>·crM r h f
23000 Lake Forest Dr
Laro:una H11ls
F,qual Opp Emplyr m f Office ~pact• ~1' •111· pvt mlrhm, camper shell. Lost or Found a pet? Call San Clemrnll• J''ull} 111 .,., OJH.'n• "~" or .:J !'o Bartl'nder. YD!i!. • atlr .1rt ~Q~ Off i Ce •
... ntrv .!. !\Ultt·s. rc•a ... lli27 boat trlr up to 12' E An I cn a I A" s 1 !>tan cl' For appt 492 7296 sembler<. of hi:ht pla~tH· fem Ex per, good ~alary 1 d Wt.>~ tt· I 1 ff Dr :-... U side CM Ph· 645 003 League 537·2273. no_foc par~. Xlntdbc~ef\h & & taps Chez Monique, 0 OVe r oa ----------
631 0900 RELAXING MASSAG I': Acctng Bkkpnj? wor 1n1? con s . ,.pp Y • 2 8 7 S 2 M o r g u <' r 1 t e C()()l(S, EXJ'EA'D
"OH THE WATEJl" tu.JMs1/lnnst/
Cn.·al offlrt> -.p.1l'(' 300 tn Finalte•
Lost old Eng. Shrep dog. Bob James Lie Ma~wur TEMPORARY Mt'<lacal De\.ii:e Parkway. l\t1~sion Vtl'JO 557-0061 ONLY. AJI shirts. Jolly r~g w po!Jce N B Hgt.., Outc·all 9 !I, 494 5111 Labor atone" - - -3723 Birch St. N B DAfter, 4005 Coast Hwy,
area. Please return Register Today to work 319R M i\111><>rt Loop Or Reauuc1an wantt'd w ex 1----------1 '"'l'i Reward 642 0098 MASSAGE on 'anou5 acl·ountang & Oit.ta M~a 556 1905 perm newt'l>t hairstyles ---------La~Ulla Beac_h. __ _ I Cl)() ·"l ft A II s 17.t'" &. • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
... hap'"'· '"m" 14 •w1•1
baN & frplrs & tl"rnf1c
"1ewo; \'cry rompt>llll\ •
r,1teo; rn Lido VIiiage
'ou'"c got lo "l't: 1t tn
b<·lae"<' at' Call Susi\' /.;1un al 1714 )t;7;, Kli62 for
an appt , or ~tnp hy
Mon.fo'r1 M :l<J lo ~ JO .it
l.ulo M:.arin.1 \'dl;1g<•.
J.li5 \'1a Oporto Suitt'
~05. NB
-- --bookkeeping as~q.~n Equal Oppnr Employer for Children s Haar 'I) I CLERK. Acrounts Rec coot<.S' -RGURE MODELS ments Work rlo,.,<• to m~ salon m M V tmmcd Fltlme •.n busy retail 1:-"ull limt>, experience
Reward! Val'
S•M ClEMn..rW'r Park btwn Orangt' &
ESCORTS your homt• Fq?ur'e *AUTO LOTMAN lop earnanl(s. For rn JNelry :Store. Benefits necessary. sauteman.
Clt•rk:. to Sr \noun FUii or part tam!' Learn tt>rv1cw call Ca rmen 549.1424 _ ------broilerman, & pan·
A U"'lllO Santa Ana Pleai,e l.'all Grooming & Pet Shop. 646 2790 646 3868 OUTCAl.L ONLY tants M•eded thruoul tht• ~uto bu,int" .•. from 768 880! b f 631 ]81 I 0 (, " ·' ·'·' --- -CLERK ORVGS, G1fl!1 & trymart. Xlnt ene its • range 0 th" 0 ro11nd up' Op d rt ·t· th Retiring after 7 &ood - - -R '-~rt ti 1r .. 0~ t hampoo a--1st Card~. F.:-cper prcf'd an oppo um 1es w1
Ao.,.. a s rJQrtonaty for ad\ancc .,.,au 'Y ~ .;,, NB Call 640 7373 Hyatt Corp. A<1k for )t'ars. fane location & Lost M Blut1cll ll1>und
clien«!le $68,500 Sall & pPpptr, rnl Cl'ountemfh mE'nt St~ Mr O Neall or needed by proi:r1'ss1H• Cht'f 7H n2 5900
fl(JO ~ Mam, Stt! SOI Mr P11.>rct!. HOWARD Newport ha1rcultl'r. C.ill Clerk ----__ -----BERTHA HENRY I a r • l a g V 1 t'
REALTORS 19th1Fullenon 646 o.t24
Outrall Ma:o;i-.il!<'
973 0329 No Tower. l 'mon Bank for appt 644 7680 ,..AM W o...rT8) ln Tht> Cit> of Oran gt· Cht•Holet. l>m c & Quail PHARMACY CLatK C""""' An'
215 Del Mar '492 H21 after 5 30 •SHERI LEI-:•
C.'ert1f1ed M aS!>eUSI'
House C.all~ ~ By appl
338.6838
.. .,c 03 Sis Nt'wport fleaC'h •BIKE STORE• p time posillon availa XJnt benefab Sal open. 714 •.,.,.,.41 Cllhed Easter Sund<J• A I J II R """'
Nt>wport. 2 e't1Slmg ocean FOUND. Purebr<•ci
Afghan. lite brown. 1480
Monro\•1a, Nwpl Hth
646-4732
' >\!'~1st M11na.i;:cr for ble for persc>nable an · PP y, o Y oger. '""
Srhwinn dl'aler ::.al d1 .. 1dual to work with Manne Ave, Bal Island I ~fO !-'REE Rl-:NT front take out. sll·down
Harbor Blvd BJker rf"\taurants Owner will
.m'a. C M JOO 1!00 sq rt fmann• A Johnson. Rkr
ACCOUMTIHG CLK
Fam1har w A H, I\ P.
btlhng, pa) roll Mu~t bl"
aC'cur typ11>t Min exp1•r
I 2 ) n; Fa<;l e'<panchng
elertron1cs mfr offrrs
good P•Y. benehh 1·on
genial atmosph•·11•
EO~. l'all for inlen 14
Automotavt• Rkkpr
Arrt's rC'ce1,ahh•, arct's
pa~ abll', Rurrou~'.h~
po' l 1 n R ma l' h 1 n ,.
Harbour \·0111 .. wa1wn
1871 l Ht';1rh Ill. llll
842 .uJS
SI0,400. Mu~t have pnor our pharmacist, calhns: COUNSELORS
bike mechanic esper an doctor;. typani: l.ihel!I & See our ad for House
a ... tori' SS2 9222 wa1l10~ on l'ustomers. Coun:.elor.1 ""anted Oak 4IY sq ft Ground floor, 979-4964
xlnl p,arkmg 540 22(JO
EXECUTIVE
SUITES
Gift Shop, best NB lo<:a
lion. F P $25,000
675 2473
I U'tur1ous otf1ee!>, ex ------- -t•1·ut1ve s ec.•retary , Bel•riWme tavern. '7l?OO
pt r~onal phone \'fH dwn 2014 Placentia, •·ra~e. recrptiomst. con CM _2:57 7490 or 642·481~
!Hence room. Xt'rox. Earn t'xtra in~ome.
notary Lease or m.cinth Ground noor opPort\JlU
to month. Near~ l oasl ty wtlh exc1llng new par
Plaza. 0 C Airport & ty plan-part·tlmt' or
1-'reeways Call 979 2161 full Lime Call toll free
FOUND. German Shep.
M~a Verde area Call to
identify 545 8716
LOST: SIAMESE
REWARD
3/lli/78, Vic: Newport
Blvd & Me!la Or Seal
poant S1amt•se. sutures
on left s1df' of fan· Nds
med. Call ::rnyt1me.
631 1030
FOXY LADY
Outcalt Mau~
731-3561
PREGNANT-t CannJi.
confidential counst'hnJ!
& reft"rra l Abort inn,
adoption & keep1n~
APCARE 547 25&1
OUTCALL MASSAGE
1"73 1..0931 *
DECC
tnme
Actl•lti•s Dir.ctor
Cert1f1ed. f1l1m1• Ml'i;;a
Verde C'onv llo.,p fitil
Cent.er St. C:-.1 ~ 55.R~
Reward ~beri., Hu~kv L1"4DA & VICKI p,. t u x f' 0 r f 1 c (' , SOO.a&2·213S for more m red & wht Vic Garfif'ld. Aar National If }OU rr
w secretarial 'lerv Nr formation _ Magnolia. Nd.s medica Outc:all Mau~ havins; 3 hard time fmd _o ~:_:'111>0rt 75~5626_· _ u..-. to to. 5025 lion 962 1410 For the fvn of It! 1n11 work and an• 1n
•"6i •T--0 ....-.. -::::;!••••••••••••••••• - - --Servmg all Or11nge l'o terested in a c:ireer m '"A '""rft "' LOST CAT· Lile brown 4 835 7313 elretronirs. weather
AVON
TAKE AVON
TO LUNCH
Sell to fnends and 1•0
worker.. in your qff11 ,.
make ahout $40 on l'Vf'r}
$100 you sell You 11 ha\"
your o wn business
without l(IVlnl!: up )OUr
regular job To f1nrl out
more, eall 540 70.ll or
Zeroth 7 1359
llo<it 1\1 anufactun•rs
Aben)tcns M~r-$
&~
Expenenct'd
G.koat Hetper
Xlnt pay, fnni:t• bens
Balboa Boat Buildt'r~
29i2 Ct>n\ury Pl. CM
E 0 E S56·3720
IOOICKEErER F/C
1 <;1rl ofc. M IF. A r
AH. payroll. tax1·s .
finan state. in'-Oll'lnR.
ett' Typini.1 a must Co
pd healthlhfe ms Cole
Instrument Corp '71~)
&l2 8(»IO f; 0 Jo;
A YOft Procti.:ts. h•c New office space from ht, W & 3rd T.D.'1 yr old Buimese male. N. ------- -forecast in I!. or
300 sq fl M<>tt. rom LOANSAVAJLABLE Laguna, 494 1721 •SUSIE'S• telephone teletype rn BOOKKEF.PER·Moullon
petltlve rates ln area Cttdlt no problem Outcall Massage stallal1on and repair. I•---------Pl a 1 a p h 3 rm 3 c y, FantasticViews,pat.1oe, .,......,752-5903 FOWJd·WhtGerm Shep, lOAM·2AM 7314462 see your Air National 8 h l l Laouna Jilli .~. Mr f f Y "to / G d R t w a y s 1 t t e r , 1 1• .. " 1 n the c ANN F. Ry---------em, vie. o or .. wn uar ecru1 er l" b b Orey·fus 768 3'1M
VILLAGE·Parking mcl QUICK CASH Newland. 962-8739 DANCE OF FUN nttd men and women housekeeping, a Y 9 "' "-ud 1 d ed d · mo's old. Ref's rt>q'd For appt call Ed ...,3ul n cgirs ance ag 17-27 mtereste m BOOKKEEPER. <'xpt'r,
673-loo:J. ~ Lafay\!tte Found Female Siberian & rap session. IOAM lo getllnlt ahead an today'i; 642 6l00 Judi FUii Charge to t'omp1le,
Ave., N.B. lat & 2nd Trust Deed HBeuskby, Hln8dia~386P0891~581 3AM Mon.Sal, 12PM to compet1t1ve Job market 8ab)'1iittcr. 3 days week post & mamtain fman
loans arranged for any ac • · · " · " · 8PM Sun 625 N t:uclad. You can itet frt.~ '-Ora 9 304 1 Child. Mature caal record.'> for an In· Dix Office Space
Cal 831·9950
reuoa Credit no pro-536-4662 Anab. 559-6150 tional trammg with ex respon adlt. Aft Ii 30 ter1or Des11tn F1 rm
blem. Borrow on the In· Found Cocker Span Yng FREE SESSION WJAD cellent pay plu11 free 631 5294 Salary open, please rail
creased valu. of your .. u. 1 s A medical covernite and ---714 54<>-2860 for uppt home. Call today for ""'ma e vie anta na Stn,:le male, new to area, travel. For more in· Babysitter hsl'keeper. -......:...._
OFF1CE FOR Ll'~ASE rut, courteoua lnforma· Hgt~. 963-68&0 ~R female compa· forp:iation on o~nmgs live out 1n, mature. nn IOYS ·GIRLS ff:e~~~'~n~oebrb:~~~ tJQn. FOUND: $100. owner nionshlp.Enjoydanclog. and qualifications call smkr \infant 499-4415 12·16yeersorage Even·
l•cilJUes In pr1 ine loca identify by denomin• Non-smoker 646 2598 Sarge a n t A r r o I Io ev~ Ing work Obtain new
lion next to freeways ~X CO lion 4' number of bill!!, TOUCH OF CLASS 714·979 7363 or apply at -__ <'ed____ subscnpt1ons for the
«JO mo incl. util Ad· • al8o date &t location 104l ESCORT & MOUt.:L 2651 Newport Blvd, Babr.titt.er n ed lOAM Daily Pilot work1nl( with
-A1.fSlAll.).CW6. 536-5621 ffBPD C:O.la Meu 2PM. 4 dDys wk for 3 an adult !lluperv1~or mm. or wholesaler te· Llcen•ed Home L~•n SERVICE Outcalt PY mo old girl 646 1LS4 aft Eam S20 lo S30 per week
nontaprelerred. Contact Brokers •ervinl So. Loat.CodlatleJ,p,ylwht Appolntm~t AmbltiouaCoupleWanl~ 1PM or more. Call (2 l3l
Mr Slnaer, Tuea or Calif. for 17 yra. Call our yetlOW hf'•d pdch face. •64&7118• tD manaRe a small bus1 --------5910396 noon to spm.
-Th_un_._S4().8>2 __ 1 ____ 1 0 ear e • i 0 t f 1c 1 , llese Verd,. Reward Also Hiring ~ p/Ume. Will not in· Bankml( Progresswe, in CZl3) 4...,, 2473 5pm·9pm
... -......, .. -t .Je t yo p-ent de~nt bank, aeekina ...,.. .--------•1-~·~4-83'1~~··~·44~ ___ _,__,~ Probletn1? Want help en re w ur '"1 ... __ ..... ._ .. 'd Call Collect. job MIL~l bf-wllllng to UAlUl • .. ,..... ----THI SHIPYARD Speculatotl, lnftlton 6 Lott: In Jn, sml M . findhlg a solutip'on? FreeN E · learn Mr. llall, 6421634 ar-ct. S.Cretary BUSBOY·exper'd, lo'ri, Space now uaUable in owners sh rt t erm $$ Bload do1 w /all wbt ABC HE L LI • o c. Alr'llC>rt of<' Xlnt. Sat. ni&hts only.
tll.t nc-wly refurbbh~ avall. fut. B1U Da .. n· chit.~ -~·------............. AMBITIOUS COUPLE benef Call or apply 640 3641
UdoShlpyardarea;uJ>I· poraS&.xt ·~ l b 11~"'9& Rtlp mana1r family SAMTIAGOIAHK que martne Hltin1 ... :... w•u : Pr tlldly ~l 100 Pt ..._ butlnftl P/l. $$?·~ ~ E Ftnt'Sl. T111tin C• w.-M-.o«J"'
aastom omc • butl: ......, W..e.4 Su.au Cockat.el, Hilb St. Nwpt ..... ................. 932.•200 Im med. employm<'nl ..-.. ,....-......... 14 pa-A. ••••••••••• .. •••••--••• lkh. C714)1iU·SMO d)'I; ...-W-...... 7071 Appliance repalrmv•~· ., il f ful 1 ·-....... -n ... , ~.. --., -..._ Wuber'IJ ... _.,._ to "'" r;-hlA&l Opport Employtr ava or 1 attv ct' car 1t\i.. Pvt Prt.y owu t:l,000.000 _,.._.. • ...... •• •••••••••••••• • ou' • ' · ~ watb manaaer. Must be
wo.U of prop. Wanlt PWod, Red• wtit Ptm. lntell. ellm, boutlfut refril'•· t!'':i"i:'';:~ 1---------u .per'd in all pha.!!es of
2nct 1D snonOJ. WUl .,_)' Rusky/Sboep mil. Vic. fttnale deslrea c:uatomtr ~.e&:' I BanJctni cat w!Ulh JQ&naatimcnl
l()';l, + pol.n'-. I>ulr• Buo4rd/AU1nta. or P'!blic relauou \ype TBJ.a'fTIMI Top ul + bonu• +
tut un\ce. rtlt. -.o&31. job nulblc. wUI travel Apt Mana1er, meturf! Branch otc lffks bond•· comm For lnterviu""
tM-14$2 Prerer N.B., trvlne coupl•. BuulUully bJep/Ume~ller Eitper caJl?H/144-4460
area. P .O. Box U75 mal..nt.ained 30 wut. C M. prel'd . Conta<'l Hilda Nowpot\ Beacl\, t*3 Adults, no pata. Apt T, r ran 0 v e ( 1 l' ) lF YOU +•mall aal.&ry • bonus. M4-'T2:SS For Cfuslfied Ad
MW • Mt'VIC• lo olfer or oau wftkdaya, M2-4907 We.*'1 P'tderal ACTION
Will train 'I to 3 Tuc•s & Tree Homes. 540 4754.
Wed. 2 to R pm Mon. -------
Thurs & Fri weekend Counter help in ham-
work. Please call mJ.(r. burgl'r stand, lull time
lo set up mlerv1cw appt or pl· lime. Hrs bet"' n
TM Guild Dn19s lOam & 4pm. 673·3430,
1t>l0 San Miguel Or. ~4058 ______ _
Newport Beach
644.7330
CLERK TYPIST
COUNTY. PERSOM
Busy pnntinit com pan~·,
bght paper work Pl P.
642 0621
Large 1n-.urance co Counter Clerk, femalP for
w xlnt worllani:: conds & Doout shop Full lime.
benefit!' has 1mm<'d Call5862SOO
()p(.>nmg for clerk typist ---
Type 45 '<'Pm Hca"y CREDIT COLLECTIONS
phones. Mui.t ht' well or· Part lime, eitpt>r. rcq.
ganned Some math ap. Bartell Marine Elec
t1tude. 1 Yr ofc ex per tron1cs, 645·71MO
prefd. Apply m person . ----8 Jo.2PM Mon thru Fri. Custod1an/Ma1nt man
• 1r ......... _ 1 • .....__ Newport H a r b or ~o "--• Lutheran 5'8·3758 Aft. 6 17570 Brookhurst PM
Fountain Valley ----------
F.qua! Opp Em pl yr m IC DB.I
--------• Manager worker. Salary +. S48-78Gl Coc:ktall Waitnn
School Home Delivery. aulo
Oay1cvt> classes Place· route w / The Register.
ment A!\s1t 751 911M So Permanent P /T salua·
C R I 1 f C o c k t a i I tlon as a carrier.dealer
Wailres!lt'S, lrvmt'. Appro't hrs 4-6arn. l
d.ys/wk Need respon.st.
ble person w/ good 4!1ar.
Gross ~arninKs over
$;ri() mo JIB & CM arH ..
Ca II 5-4().JOCJJ bef noon
Codrtalt W~s
School
FAm up l{) $300 pcor wk
Low twt1on Placement
as.51.Sl. 751 -9194.
--. -----Clauifled Ads sell big Companion nt'eded, Items small item.1 or ~:nrt~' t~yh~::1~~;I~ •n>'lt;m llC.567a. woman on wlnds 1n
1
_________ _
CdM. 640 1392 betwn
~·Spm
COOK, exper'd tn 1ue11t
home, 10·8 weekends
CM 64&671C
Cook for pt"e-sd'°°l. tam
lpm, 1re1l part-time
Job Conutt Emily
'l'brur1cb, dite~tor,
Ml-4533
CO<*S
"111 • 'P/Ume. Eirper'd
Gond bendltA. 8a7vlew
Ma.not ll C0t1v. HOllP, au r.os.
$1.62 per DAY
~ra ALL )'OU pay
ror a
30d•1•d
In the
DAILY PILOT
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
-*to ..U, pla~ an ad Apt 11v. ~·pref., tit· Savmo 0 ~l~lo f,; fa t.bt Dally Pilot p'cf<loly,lnm.tlnl abk· 2744£Coutdwy,CdM AO.~so~ Cl cd a.cttoa • • • kH. 45 unit complex, f'.qua.I ()s>pcir Employer 642~ F\nd hat ;you wam In
M~S671
"~~~~~~;;;:;;:.J~~~~~~~~~;;;;:;;=.;:~;:::;::;::~~f'tt~~l(l)e~Mil~~!171.~~====:;;!.£C~~~·~~21J~~~as~a~~J;~~========::l::..::::::~~~====~t>al~~~P\~l~~CJ~~.,.~ln~ecb~.=1=:=::==:::=.:=:=:== ....
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r',.._ DAIL'fPlLOl Ttiu,,doy M411ct1;.r:J l'J7a HelpWant•d 7100 Hftp Wanhd 7100,....,Wanfed 7100 ~'f.~.~ ..... ?L~~ ~.~.~ ..... !!.~~ ~!.~!~ ..... !!.~~ ~ -•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• .. ••••••••• T . 0 t rL.L llCtlTAIY tatnoc • P•ra e ..... W•t.d 71 Htilp W•ted 7100HtfpW91hct 7'00 MANACE'tt£NT IOltMSOMS NEWPORTBEACH vllamlll enca1H1ul1tlon •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• TRA.INEt-: .... 1 ol
4
t machine daya lull
fl WISTMJMITll 2 -c, I yn HP. t)''j)e ........ E~ii ......... IJua •. DBJv-y Garotatr', exp'd, for ~ JAQC oa JIU Earn whtle you leatn RETA SALES ts+ dicupbooe. $700+ Wu.•v ......... .-..
• Ull unlt 11pt c-omplt1x In C M °'AU TRADES Ba re t t at M o p e d , Wnt lnter\'lew appll· ~l3 ' Jl'rinie1 Apply 8-10 M t'.
F/Ume 11're.way Auto. 1213>~~1 Wllltralnbut (21317497l9JlO..m6pm. Sal~~ positions in yard, Paint, c&n11for· L1nw1lco Lab1, 2148
aD&2 Avuy l'arkway at hardware. plumbing & elec, garden, Food pc'tp&raUoo Sl!CURlTY PERSON Newport Blvd. C.M San Dieco Frwy. Jal ... GARDENER needed 1n expenence 11 welcome MAMICURISY panel •g deplb. Expand 'g Co seeks F /T UUUt1 Kitchen Kelp cQNable of uaumln1 " akloVS~ CdM, •Int work1nl( WOOSODLPDREJU,.Nl~tSH Na.salon &l3-4011 ~alespeopl" F /Co benefl'ts. Xlnt Walt•/Waltreat eHcuUn1 awln1 shlf\ Typlst/RecepUorusdl. Prrr l·und , f'/tlme. Only c. '" " '" P/thne posltlona avaJI. •tor iraveyard 1blft afternoon$ Me o c. h11rd working person HEAT~"TAMP Monufarturint-aener~I advance opport. Apply at or call (213) Exper. prd'd, but •Ul d~et 2 evea per wknd Hvy typ1a& " 1u. Delivery Ille clerlt \o o .,.york In Nwprl Bch
• medlcal lab, Mon Fri.
10-7. No tixperience nece.. Good dnvtna re-cofd a must. $2 88 to start. Call Mo--0140 eitt
11 fot' appt.
need apply."' 00 per hr. t.IGHT ASSY.MBf.Y fal1UT)' work for sPort· 429-9701. train quallfled appll· Call Mi-f783. After $pm
1
...:;.S48...-.s_u;....1_. ------
40 hra Call Mon-Frl, Variety ol ihort runs l n a a 0 I) di ! i rm; 6 5011. C-'-st. L-lt«h cant.a. Apply pet'IOnllfl S54·321Sor9SZ-*4. ~sr • 4 30. 673-2268 lndoon-small 1>hop 1 ''" • OOPM ~ .. , .. 1A.. ~ .. ., ~.... 2~ Moo-Fri 1 1 ,..,
... 1'ullcompanybenet1t1 ·...,....· """"...,. 400We.hd utttMal Sec'y/Blckpr. Rul PERSON FRIDAY
in Newport Beach MASSEUSE RECEP· Equal()ppl':mplyrln/t l!'At/eonat exp l'f'Q Mall Busy, busy o!llett. Non-c.., Attendant. S ftya
wk, wages + comm.
4200 Birch, NB. 646 2l23 T10NJST Brand new I~~~~~~~~~~ J'llWM to 2M$ E. Coaat smok<'r. 5S wpm, 1o00
----II B. spo needs foxy r Hwy, CdM 92CS pay. Boat Bwlde .... 697
J ANITORIAL W ORK ladles Cor mas:.euse re· !;:===========~;;;;~ SAlLMAKER -lo se'W Rando.lph, CM. Delivery &r stock person,
pt·Ume, daily, Mon thru Fri, noon·Spm. $2.85 hr
' ltart + lncreue In JO
day9. Call Tom, 644-8860
Part & f'/llme. 5'6-1330 rept1ol\6t, no exper nee.. dacron &i nylon ul.la. Sec'y rot ma1Ulae pub. ~;__--=~-----
General ----will tram, day & night E it pc rl enc e d only. Mature. ExclUn1 work 8 Typiat . SR CLERK Janitor ('hves. Cep /ti mt e o~n1ngs Call for in· ~ w~ 7 100 i.a.a..w--t......~ 1 100 Salary neaotiable. lft ortAM \o 3. 5:5e-7130 Accurate typ1at f01' ~al
Hunt. Be or rn 06
· t bt lOAM • ...,.. ...._ • ...,. ~ tervlewa F\'ldays 8·8. , estate loan dept. 50 Long te;m, temporary ~an ° > 526 55-11--l~P~e;r To;: & Coun •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 646-0033 tor appola t• S.C y, '°' H.B. law o~rc. WPM minimum, l~key
usslgnment avail. Sharp JANITORIAL try Spa. 21-40 yrs pre PBX Anawenng Scrv!cl' Real ~late SalH P~ple ment. L•1aa uper pref d. touch. Apply In person:
Delivery boy ~/good person will traUl in A/P Sun Thurs eves 5 Hrs rerred 963·77?3 wanted. Up to 90/109' Salary coo:unensurate Bank of California U01
drivlna record & up & A/R. Exper helpful ..., .so hr Exnor'd ~dul" Secy. Exper. preC'd. Will comm. splJt. Nwpt Bell StNs-Otl•~ w/nper. Send resume Dove St NB. E.O.E. Fl bl 1 t ..., "' " ..., MAT URE W 0 MAN train. Must type 3S wpm SJl-0900 11 you h.ave a dellnlfe to CluaHled ad 1182, w/fwn.$3br.C.ll8etty ext e persona
1
Y only Ltwrk !1793923 p /time to welcome Variablehra.640-1110 n-.. for~ p/''m• job DaJly Pilot, P .O. Box .__STWAHTB> btwn~l0,842-2053 needed. Good pay CALL - - ---a:u • w " 1 , ... ,
----' , in•-· ed newcomer\ & contact Real °&late r: -m & are serloualy In· Box "90, Costa Me.a, F/Um• """'· in our t~ DELIVERY MAN.for h~ .or .... rv1ew Jarutonal company ne s ' PIX OPERATOR oft ,,.,,,., ... ......... IY ... 0 ~C! 1 r·ed merchants. F1ex1ble hrs TIRED OF W nKING tereated in work.int, call C.I. 9382"1 ...... dept. Xlnt workin" early "'M Roule, N. CM n ~. • expenenced or qua I' N d I t ?Ito typlng Woman ovr FOR PEA ...... ,....,., •---------.., ~... ... " Q ff • people Will tr.ain Top ee car, Ile yp1ng 40. to rece1H & fill •~nv•.,. usoowS31-084Z. SEC'Y on the water ln conds & co. benefits, & H.B. Must have depen ~ ~ 0 l Ce pay. Want men women 547 3095 Tittd or haulln& people id V 11 ht Must be reu.sonably Cast dabl•car 5464481 l d 23 customet orders by around., Tir•d ot un· SALE.5 L o 1 •:e, yac •. a"cur. Apply In "' · 0 over o a & couples Call 631 111· ECH IC "'L ,___ · "' b .. 'd "' ' ·• M AH ,.. Pnvue. !>t>n1ce oreanila qualJCied buyers" CurtJs Ellen ~rt.er roaer nee s ex per Dell worker, exper, relia--67:J..4356, or apply at K33 ENGINEER uon. Will lri.111. 40 Hr lnv•stments I~ looklnC Ladies Haberdasher gui. Call 87S-76l4, lG-S. p\?rson, Pennysavt:r •
i1 .ble. Tue/ Fri• 9 -4 5 S7.006t ~f 1.,1 ~h ST. CM• Aggressive small in wk. Ev~ ~knds St.irt to t~am exper hcenseea bas operung for SIC"'/lmu-a.P lli60 Placentia Ave.
Giovanni's, 1380 N. Cst 3723 Blf'CbSt, NB -~-dust 'I instrument <'O $3 hr Call 6-t6 4071 in investment & ex-expenenced ' ~....-• _c:...:._.M_. ______ _
• }fwy, Lag Bch JOI nee'ds growth oriented moms or eves. chan&e b111ines1. Poten· i.aleswoman. ~ neat, non-smoklnc Wfliltterf/W~
Dental Receptlon11t for GENERAL OFFICE, typ-2 Da.,. ·-r wk Perm engineer who wants ex-PES"' CONTROL UaJ eamln&s 1n u~s of 131 Fashion Isl. Mall &irt for amall ~rate Must be people onented..
two girl front ofClce, 1 ing.filing.pbonea,exper Car,(.;15'7,vr(l{J 6732289 per >n manuf product 11 SIOK 1st mo . Call 7~1770 oC!ace. USc.b !.typitol 4t $4hr.Vac,aickdays,m-~1395 pref'd. 642 5830 development market1.11g SER V 1 C E M A N 962·2'56 for confidential . phonea. /n no req sur benefits. 644-~
yr.exp. · · 1---------•I Salary based on F ttime. So. Oran&e Co interview. Ask for Salesgirl, p/t. Exp re-oow,butmuatbewilling ..:..::...:..:.:...:..;:..:::..:..:.::..:....:-.:....;;._ _ __, Dental Chalrslde Assist. General Maintenance KEYPUNCHER capability Equal Oppor area. 495-4411 or83l·l024 Vtnc~ qwred, mature & neal to learn. Start to ~. WAITilESSES
in N.B. Pleasant group Man-Custodian for Employer.8~·5351. PETITIONERS · appearanre for Apply Friday March Apply in person hr Prac. Ex per. n ec. Newport Specialty Needed Bur roug h11 RECEtYIHG established children's 3Cth, 9 AM to 3 PM. 4320 Stavro'•, 5930 w. "'-uc MECHANIC Fullt part time. Good to A I at Ge t ;, """ Jocludee alternate Sat. Center & Marina. We LSOOO & lJiOOO Part-time pay dally. S36-?7l_I__ IMSPECTOR sto. re;_,PdP YF t ppeSo. _ea_m_pus=--_Dr_._. _st_e_l30_. _ _,.:.H:.:.wy=.!:'~N:..:.·:.:B:..:· ____ ~ AM's.640-1122. will train. S600/mo Must position w /llex1blc-R'tired man part to k s -..1ulc an a.sy,
work wknds. Phone hours Basic knowledge f/l1me. Newport Beach Islander \'acht6 is see · Coast Villa&e, S.A. Fri & SICY/IECll'T Waltress, exper. food &
-Dental assist. 67:>-81)62. of inventory. Respond Golf Coun.e. 751 ·4344, PIZZA in1o: a~eceivinf 'ipect~r Sat. only 12·5. No phone Creative N.8. adv/PR coclcta1ls, days & nights 'X·~Y Uc. to· 3100 Irvine, NB Making pizza & on the who capab e 0 rea · calls. agency needs sharp, en-open. Excell. working
546-3000 GENERAL OFC, bkkpng ClasMf1c.'{! ad nu 213 -•· ovens. Exper net>dcd IJlg blueprintJI, talcin11: in-thusiasUc lndiv. w/xlnt conds. Apply in person, ---------! exper Small con:.truc-c·.o Daily Pilot M E D I C A .. 548·71163 v t' n l 0 r Y 1 " the SalftcJirf llkUla, fiex.lbillly & llC· Mr. G's Restaurant,3100
OISHWASHERS lion co Hrs 9·4. Appl. PO Box 15tl0 SECRET ARY slOCkroom & is able to F/time. Apply Sherri's curacy Cor busy recep-Irvine Ave, NB
l'/time. Bayview O:>nv. 673-1630 Coste1 Mesa. Ca 92626 L"ur orthopedic orr1·cfi In ldentifyEgood usuaf~dle Bakery, 2.4642 La Phua Uon dale. 833-3960.
Home, 00·3500. ,. '" Plastics parts. it per pre · Dana Pt. No phone calls.
GENERAL OFFICE Nwpt Beach, full time MACHINE OPRS Good start1ni: sal & Sec'y to $10,000 Dockmaster's Assistant Small co. in Irvine needs Ladies Serious about day !I. must be Graveyard !>hift lllPM-employee benent pkg. SALES-JR. Women's 1 girl olc. Type 80 wpm
wanted. F /time. Open enthus1ast1c person for changing your present knowledgeable 1n takm1o: 7 AM> opening 1> for Apply 1922 Barranca Rd. Fashions. Exper. pref'd. Shtbnd 100 wpm. Near
salary. Call 67J..3S1S. gen ofc pos1L1on. '!yping sLandard of living thru mechcal history. rapid trainees or exper'd 10 trvme Advancement possible. oc airport 64-0-1271 ~NUT suop, p/t1·me, skills nee. Willing to concentrated work w typing & transcribing. Jeci.100 molding machine l b Apply ID person, The w ·..1.nEHOUSE/ ..... II!
£AJ
0
tr"'" Salary starts SSSO c I f Salary commen!iurate Receptionist, or usy Second Glance, 2122 W. Sec'y/typist, Mon-Fri, """" f"W1'" all aftem & eve shifts ....... · people p/l1me. al or oprs 1n our medical hbo d E N ok Opport to mo Ask for Debbie appt 494 5168 w •abtlJty Exper'd only di.vision. Vory clean sw1tc ar . xp. re· Oceanfront. N.B. l.2·5PM. gs wpm. Sat on sm er. evall. Woman age ZS or 546-1676 · ___ · nffd apply 644 7840 ask ~ qwred. Lite typLng & bk· d.o e. Npt Cntr. call advance. Refs req. Good
WARD CLERIC
Exper'd. ruu.time. Me:;a
Verde Conv. Hosp, 661
Cent.er St, CM 543-5585
over. Apply m person. Legal Sec'y.NB. min 3 for Mary working environment. kp'g Benefits. N.B Sales retail shop KathyorUnda.759-9501 pay. Boat Builders. 697 Dippity Donuts, 1854 GEH'L OFFICE yr.; exp ln gen practice paid lwicb, $3 hr :.tart loca Apply in person. La • H·11 I -' • Randolph, CM. N....,.....rt Blvd C"'f MEDIC "L/R t 1n" wage for trainee bl w n 1 O · •, 3 9 0 I guna 1 5• nteiior ~-rv1'c• St"tlO"' Atten --..... ' •• Good typi ng skills incl'gdom rel Sal open ""' ec:•p " .. des "'-I Cul b t"""' "" .. •• o MEN Rapid growth Xlnl McArthur.Ste2llorcall ign~xperucp • u dant, ex~r'd Dilly & WAREJI USE Donut Shop-Graveyard needed, SO wpm, 10 key Appl may mqwre aft for allergist's office' bene!\u pkg inctud co Ell.lot 752 7170 Wlll tram capable person Eves. Full & p/tlmt'. Ap· Responsible person for
girl p/Ume. Apply, 135 by touch Must be sharp ~ 975-0213__ Salary accoro1ng to ex-pa1d major med • lire & -7~1 ply Shell Station 17th & fabnc warehouse. Good
E. 17th St, CM. on details ApplJcallonl> LECAL SECRET Mt y pr 5JO.SOOO dental plan~ + profit RECEf'TIOMIST Irvine NB ' opply w /growing c:om-
Ess O,R bemg taken. 893·242l or Experienced. P(·rm Medical shanng. Apply Challenging position Salesperson, uper. for ' pany Salary com -
DRJU r'll 531-1725 Ask for Gladys part·time. so Laguna FRONT O FRC E 200 Bnggs. Costa Mesa ~1th active Newport Mother-T~Be Maternity Service Sta. Night Attend mensurate w/ exper.
l ·S yrs exper for small GIRL FRIDAY ofc Send resume to Call 546446<! Beach Developer. Good shop. 7777 Edinger Ave, 2 Or S rules a wk. Apply, s.56-791:> ElectrorursCo Friendly po Box S66, So Need resp . prr,on ELECTRONIC telephone, typlnti. Hntg.Ctr.&97-9312. Shell.17th&lrvine.NB ---------
atmosphere, apply GLG P4T clencal position w 1 La CA 92677 W/some exper m 1 doc· MEDIC"'L clencal skills reqwred Service Station A'tend WOMAN OVR 40 Systems, 11152 Condor typmf{ & htt: shorthand -guna, -·-tor ofc l-'/llme in H.B. ,.. S I t S I lad d d f 11 ' R.\2~ , .... STRUM~S • a ar)' ",o,mmensura e a 's Y nee. e . u Fl time days. Ll1'h t Willing to learn. Will Ave., Fountain Vly :1kills reqwred. f'ashion LIQUOR MARKET l ..., ~• Wtthabll. 675-4912 t1me,exper1,n 1nfantsor mech'I knowledge. Neal train. PBX exper
549-4777 Island 644-~60.Mif' Very, ver~ bu~y stort•, !'YlerliralAss'tMustb.·l.'1> children• wear an.noar & handwnllng helpful. 40 Hr wk. -------needs ~ome vc-ry, very d d R.c:./bCJOI Tnw Youngland 2300 Harbor .. r~ E k ds St $3 h Drug r>erk part t1mr. ex· Handyman .needed for good peopll· Apply '" perience in ra-w 1ng Plumber wanted for pool!! NB luw ofr. 1714 >64-0-SSlO Bl d CM •545-1440 Apply, 2590 Newport veslw n . art r.
p'd mature womDn ren~al unll!i in JIB person, am, JOH So blood ti'JOAM-lO·JO,\M &spas, Newport Pools, _ --" · · · Blvd.CM Call morns/eves
'r.16-9402 Reliable. Mr. !\lien. Bnstol SA Call for appt. Ask for 644·6194 RECEf'T/PIX -.::.646-=--4~ffl_l_. _____ _
Oebb 640 0140 -----Service Sta. Attendants "'lectron1"• Recently
752
"
7474
' aft
7
l' M . • y. . ----...Sehl T•oc:"-er People orlt>nted data SALES; p/Ume, eve/wknds 20 ****** ~ '"' 642-0415 Liquor dcrk, Tull & J>art r~ " · ,. ..... ~ 6 • .-&•1 .. u-~t l d l ...... _ .. _.it,. .. Mgr "'-II proces41m,. co. ne"""' r"'· _.. ~ .. _ wk. Apply in """"'On WOM1:a.1 & M11::1o..t separa e ve erans llml·. I::ves only C'all ~"'.__...... , ...,... 6'W·H41 ti b I I nt Ir waren't )ook1no •u" ir-'" ~ ~ ("ade E-5 and below)Jkl6tess,exp·d.P /T.App Receiving Beach arc-a ------cep P xoprwpeasa you "" e 6arn·4pm, see John, Eam$3400amoormore ..... ,n---'edtofillcurrrnl ly 1n person , Beach _d_ys-4~1~ drugstore . F t time PRESS OPR per~onality lo erect for a new career, you SheU Station, 3131
111
b'I h ..... """' customt-rs & handle wouldn't be reading thiiJ !It ng mo 1 e omes. part-tJme vacancies in House fnn, 619 Sleepy Liquor clerk. over :?5. perm Rela1l ex per nee E '<per A B I> 1 C' k heavy teleph system. ad, and If we weren't Harbor 81, CM. Will train. c.all Paul, ~~1:J~\.~1rn~~ Hotlow Ln. Lag. Bcb part tu~~ 2 mlcs. 67S-Ol!i0 Mr Elwood 360/lle_k_. P_IP. 642·0621 Some pre' exper pre-l()d(ing for someone lo ~rv. Sta Help need'd 6.'J5-(g!2 Anahe\m.
men and women ex HCYrELDESK~UPRVSR ---Messenger 25 hr week Pres:. operator, l·X· f'd Xlnt benefits & do a job, thi s ad immed r'ullorp/t App
perlenced in electronics t'r desk or nJght bud1l Loans guaranltt + expenses, J'.l(!nenced on i\ B Dirk ~ork1n~ conds. Phone wouldn't be here. lC you ly, 9liO E Cat Hwy, Nwpt Allfl.... 1005 •
repair telephone exp. nee. Opply lor ad· C HIEFIMVESTOR Santa Ana ore Call JOO. 333 Third st Lag t::Jalne for appt tnt.ervw. are a career minded Be~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• tel 'a tall l.J d vancement to asst.mgr R.,..ORTER Oa\1d Smith at 549~71 Bch. Integrated Data Corp.. adult & want the oppty --
etype JU
3
on an within 1 yr Apply in icr---------Costa Me-;a, S46 SOM to earn three to five hun Slorv Station Attend, Full
repalt', meuaae center person, Mr. Mazzola, 9 Secondary mortgage MOTOR ROUTE - ----- -dJ'1'd dollars a wttk, cat! time. pnmanly ror serv operations, and weather am to 12 Ambassador dept of progre!ls1ve S&L
forecasting. Here IS your Inn, 2909 S. Bnstol, San seeks exper'd investor Large Daily Pilot route ---------RECEPTIONIST toll free (1) 800/327·9696 1s I ands, ex per not
opportunity to earn a ta Ana report.er lo set up & con in South Laguna Laguna Pnnung Jmmed openinR for re· anyUme ((or recorded nee~. Must be w1lhng
aubl!t.Anllal monthly in lrol new participations & Niguel Monday through cept Duties include message) to learn. No students t . •me t u.....a-•E--...&D .... Friday afternoons See Mr Botts. 2490 ~~~. ~e l r ... h n nvnn rTVm ~-loan payments, compile Sat rda and Sunday BINDERY switchboard , Telex SAVIMGS F&1rview. at Fair, CM. 1 !I, ase eitc ange lmmed. openings. Ex delinquency "ports. u Y po61.Jng mail & assisting
pnvtleges, and MORf~' per'd or wtll train No handle legal documents monungs Approximate :.ecretanal staff. Exper COUMSB.OR SGT PEPPERONf'S
For information on phone calls. Am· Accountrng &,or loau ly$4.50permonthgross HELP pref'd, but not n'c Sal New accounta & teller PJZZASTOliE
MUSICIOXES
CL()Ct(S
Slot Machines, Nickelo-deons. phonograph~.
World's largest selec-
t 1 on. Also glft.s.
furniture, anl1ques.
American lnternal.lonal;
1802 Ket.lenng; lrvinc.
1s..-1m. Open Wed . .Sat opening$ and quahflra bassador lnn, 2277 service exper pref'd earnings S.SOOOcashde commensurate w1exper e"per necessary. Equal NowH>nneforfull&
lions call Sgt Arrollo. Harbor. CM Xlnt oppor Cont.act J an poSlt r'quired Phone IMMB>l.ATE Call 642-7SIJ & ask for Oppty Employer. Call p/tlme openings at loca·
71.C-979-7363 or apply at Hess. n 141 833-8383 642 4321. ask for c1rcula orENIHGS Pam 754-1801 Orange Coast lion near OC Airport i---------26.'il Newport Blvd, CM HOUSEKEEPER·Live StateMulualS&L t1on Leave name and -----SaVlngs&LoanAssoc
-· h k b d k r Must be 18 or over. App --al-,.... •·Mod I in. Spanis spea ing 4001 MacArthur, NB num er an ma e o FOR EXPERIENCED RECEPTIONIST "-ams•~-es. ·-p'd for I I Fem e ~corts "' c 11 OK. S220 mo. H.B. area. Eq 1 Op E 1 auto to be used and your 074: .. ...., ""' Y n penon, no up. nee. 646·7118 84&-5377.846-9007 _u~.:_ mpoyer rallwillberctumed ANDTRA1NEFA4' for Newport Yac ht nubus.insummerwear. ZJOOS.E.Bristol
{213)428·6330evea. MACHIHIST/Gm'I ---l{rokcragc , Sat1Sun Call Mindy 631-4796 SantaAnaHelghb
Es Offf Houscclcaners needed NEWPORT CEHTEtl WE OFFER. Lii<' typing, c:ill Mrs ___ __;;_.:....' -----549-8674
crow ctt Mature. Top$$. Car nee Top Pay OFffCES •EXCELLENT FRINGE Rhodeb, 673 85J l for 1---------1 (J'l~l lo McDonalds> Pro~ive Independent 642.140.1or 645.3439 Set-up & sh<>rt run mill, BENEFITS appt *SecTetarieS * Equal Oppor Emplo) er b b I ( I th h ('d Girl Friday, attractive. DAY SHJ.,.,.. a aa open ng or ex. ---------a e. punc pre~s , • .. • R E C E p T
1 0
N
1
S T .
per'd Escrow OfClcer HOUSECOUNSELORS oppor. to expand personable. articulate --OVERTIME Gen'l0ffice&Legal$ SHOE SA.LES ~/PR ablllty, Contact Married cpl only, no w/growmg co. S Day/40 ute typing, career op-r time. for luxunous re Employers Pay All F~ person for beaut n<.'w
J>t!l"IOMel dept. kids. Live-in. Supervise hr wk. Co pd IJF,/hosp portunlly with dynamic PLEASE APPLY tir~ment home Hntg Lil Reinders Agency s hot' depl in Fa~h11in
SANTIAGO IAHK 8 teenage girls. Exp + ins. Cole Instrume nt growth company. Salary JN PERSON TO Bch Pleasant workinR 4-020 Birch. Ste 104 Island-Must be ex pr.
53SEF1n1tSt,Tustm sal Oak Tree Homes. Corp l714) 642·8080 Opf'n Call Marilyn <'Ond 8488811, Dsk for Newport Beach 8J3.8J90 callforappt 644-4411
132·5200 S40-.47S4. E 0 E 640 4SSO______ MARTEC Gail C..11 for AppttE.lab 'gs ------~~~~~~~~~7 Jt STORE. Full & pJI F.quaJOpportEmployer Housekeeper 4-8PM MACHINIST HOVICE l•R-E•.•Sa•l•es _____ _,= clerk for mghti. Apply
ltcrow s.cnfory wkdays. Clean hse & N 8 . co. needs Class A LEGAL SECRETARY REPRODUCTIONS LIKE CHICKEN SOUP SECRETARY /Adm. ID peraon. 28933 Crown
MARJNERSSAVlNGS cook dinner. age 30-.SO Mac bin Is t ! or For Nwpt Center La~ It couldn't hurt to call w1tb business back-Valley Prkwy, Lagunu
ls aeeklnt a quah!1ed Muat have pleasanl Bndgeport Mill & Hard· Firm, good typ1ng skills INC Chuck Na.sh about a re vound to assist \lire· Nigc-·---'-----pe rs on a 1 it y, ap-Inge Lalhe C losc 759--0431 ~1d•nt in oroaniz:in,,, FAcrowSecy ror Its NB. pearance, for widower tolerance p;eclsion · • warding career 10 real ,.,_ "' ... • TB.IPHOME SAUS
WHOLESALE
TOTIIETRADE
NOW OPEN
TO PUBLIC
OPEN7 DAYS
A WE£K9-6.
5-dowa~Lfd
I 5292 loha CWc.o
H.I. (7141193-7509
SfEWART ROTH
ANTIQUES
Largest selection
of Amencan Oak
in Oraoge CoWll)'
ofc. Min 6 mo'1 escrow 64().lS67 NURSES AIDES 3311 W MacArthur Blvd estate. Free trairung If coord1nattnc or sales Tired oC the routine') ......... tan~I ex""r. r""'d ---------work Exper re<fd. Top SANTA ANA CALIF operalion Secretanal .,.,_,_
1 ~"'"' ... .... ~.. .._ """ E 0 E SS7 90c.1 Days. run or p time Ex-. you qualify S40 SlOJ d k .. w. Job IS or you I C:.-no Clearance· 10-50'0
Xlnt saJ. workine conds HOUSEKEEPER ;~(~~Ron Ad.ams ·• " ptr'd &t trainees Mesa ~~. ~~H h!ipf~Pb~~ Call Ua Now At df ail anuques. sterling, & benefit.a inchJdtng den Mature. refined.for ---V~rde Conv Hosp. 661 An EQual Opportuntty I not n~. Salary
0
.... n. de-l l l-8095 rumiturc, jewelry. oricn ..
7.SO E. Dyer Rd. S A.
lat Nwpt f'w)·> 751~
tal. Apply at main ofc older writer. Llte work, M "'IDS Center St. CM Employer Mt F Resident al cleaning ,... Time-Ure Llbranes tals. Jade & ivory, oil lSU WestdJlf Dr NB "" US. C1tliensh1p c;erv1ce needs people pending upon ex per. Or all P I ( on Bay, live m. 67s.ao6l Apply 1n Person AI.I .... URSES "'IDES Required with own lral\!I 20 25 hr 893-2t21 or ~1-1725 Ask F,qual Opp Emplyr m r paintings, decorator c ersonne or " ,.. for Darleen. 1 t ems. 1 2. 6 d a i I y • appointment 642-4000 Housekeeper w/car, re-BA BA MOT EL 2250 & ORDIEttUES wk Celt for interview •TIL.frHOH! Gallery One, 1220 N.
£qual0pporEmployer llable. lmmed Perma-Newport Blvd. Costa 58 Bed facility. Join a 'AINTING a/ter 4 PM 5'().699& __ _,Secf'lary: growing In· PIX OPOATOR! Coast Hwy, Laguna. 1J. aJtrees ded A ncnl pos w/dlsabled _M_esa_.______ happy group & enjoy the Rnidfttt Aldn aura.nee agcy needs weU· Pleuant working condi. 494~ ty1:is ~ 0,!ly 1j A~~6 _l_a....:dy:...._Ca_U_7_68_·7'926 __ . __ Maids; top wages paid dnt benefits. Bayview lxper'd Lftho Mature women. Xlnt organized and self t1ons lo fast· growing .:.._.:.._J_UST __ O_P_E_N_E_D __
PM Rong Kong u_.-a. Apply . The lnn at C.onv 20S5ThurinAve, RotaryOffHt benefits. Adult resid mot.lvatlngsec'ytohan. OranieCountyAlrport
R41t.unnt 1170 Baker ~~ Lagwia. 211 No O:>ast CM6423505. ~t O,...,..or carerenlt>r 631-3555. die sales, service, and Complex with busy EngllshManorAnUques
-CM _________ , ~~:veM!no~ 'i ~n~· Hwy .. Laguna Beach. Must know snapout & n~ t ~dminTlslr a~~v.:;_ lune· Chevy dealer' lndtKtes 1125 A.~~rroa C.M.
Hosp. Good sal & ,__CEHB.,. continuous business ru;;ot.auran uons. ype ~wpm. lleht bookkeeping, typ. 40' container jusl ar· Fat Food benefits 3505 Maid wan led, Sea cliff vrrY forms press. S.A. area of Wafhn/Wattreu.s Exp'd or w\11 train, pre· ing. Opport~ty for ad· nved. su-r prices. Mature adulta, retirees, ..;.....;___._M2...-.·;___· ---1 Motel, 1661 So. Coast Needed p/Ume in N.B. Orange Co 714154~. Cool&s/Dlshwashen fer non·smkr. 833-88S7 vanc,ment! 5f...c Off1re ----'..---'------
Sr. cltlito•I Appllc•· Housekeeper wanted Hwy, La1una Bch. • Must enjoy working & .. ......_ M tt r •• H 0 WARD Hummels '75 anruver 71,
tlcm now bt!lng accept· Newport area, sep. pvt _~:.;..:...=..:;.:,._ _____ W/fl~ & people. Will PROPERTY MGR --r• 1 SECRETARY Chevrolet, Dove & Quail '78 annual 78 Bell al110
ed for full• PIT poll· accom, ~day~ week, 2 Maintenance man for ss train. f1exJble hrs. Send For Newport Beach Apply San Franc SClln lnvestmeUl flrm attks Sts .• Newport Beach Call N1ney Ward Uaoa on day 4 eveoJng days off, 2 ctuldren 10 & unJt apt complex in C.M. letter w/phone number Must be tenacious & ~~!'r!',estcliff Dr, N.8 . qualified, well·groomed. ~. 5$7-3312 Wi1fta a\ Naqles Drive· 11. Must have rela. (213)86S-38Sl to CIL'\Slried ad no. 215• hard nosed. willing to ~-lake charae person to ---------
'Jbr\I Restaurant. Good Salary open. Call btwn c/o Dally Pilot, PO Boit work Tues lhru Sal RESTAURANT HELP. assiat company officers. eiepbonc-Appl..cH 1010 ~ llt&fe, bollday & 7·9PM, Mon-Fri. 846-2015 Maintenance position at 1S80, Costa Mesa, Callr. Percentaae basic, for Meyerhof's R'staurant Duties varied. Salary ,Aln'·T1ME, •••••••••••••0 ••••••••
••cat.Ion benefits, OP· Dana Polnt Harbor, n ·92tl26~~· ~~~~~~~ established business ln s Coast V1Uage has commensurate with ex No selling.survey only, FRG HT DAM AGED Portwlity for advance-lb»ewife to clean home, per. preferftd. $.1.48 to ,..; Real Esl•te Lire nu Im med openina• for · perlen~. Sood retum~ $4 per hr + bonus Pd HarPOINT SALE. 3J08
If*\&. Appl>' ln penon 4 hrs week for working start + frin1e benefits, OfffCE Tl.AIHH help(ul. 67~12. Sandwich makera, & to Secretary, P.O Box wkly, day time c M of. W. Warner nr Harbor,
llon-P'rl 9AM·11AM, couple.&U-0439days. 49IH137 STAJtTS6JSMO. food preparation. Ph 1278, Newp0rt Buch lice. so 1"19 Mr SantaAna.9'J9.2921 f J::.s..S~k7bi:!·tUf~. 1n1 u ran c e, exp' d _M;.:.ArNT.:...:..:;.:.EN_AN_C_E_·_«_eo_e_r-al ~I WITH DPH. lffl Eatah Sdes Glen a!l 2PM for in· 921!16.1 Howard CASH PAID
FV Peraonat Lines Un P*inUnl c~ot.ry, elec Quick pay ralles LUSK Rlly, a Jolul D terview. ~ SICIET A.IY Tele. sales adv, full or For Wsh.r/Dryrs/Rdrig
derwrller & sec'y. trlcaJ & ~urnbing. must Advanceme11lpot~Ual Luak Company Is now RcUll Mana111nrnt Xlot oppor for emclf'nt p/t .. Some aaJes. 13 hr+ workiqornot 957~ll3 1
'l'llll Food Service ~i 1_7s;a..;_..;9055~------1 be neat. good pay for de Varlet.)' of adlvlUct lakln1 interviews for ASS'T TO HIS. s.c'y. Top skllla, Fast comm. W.911112, &35 3861 lllrinC now, bl tcwuu ~ pendabJI peraoo ""'·U ..__..,. u _ _.. al •·t 1 .,......
8 c ollel• ltudeota, .lalunMe 548-5100 ru company .... ,. .. ta ce.-."'tt ea ... eaae. llTAILft11UOt p1ct' 'R.E. o ffc, N.. TB.LB
•IC• bouH•tn1. Pro1r10-U... w+ltw y,_. In Newport Beach =i Cell for •PPt. Mature profit oriented Xlntoppod or•blflt 1&1.
•" Uona l o pportunlUea. Lera• apandin1 lnaur 1---------i 146-ll.23 wU.h retail backfround Call Ula, 8.13-2900 HIW ACCOUNTS
·1 .. Uatforma prov ided. asency baa trainee potl· M.an11erTralneea Order de•k for fabric super vi I 1 0 D 0 l Sec'1 ror •ml offlc•-~::~?Its~·~:,·,· Jxo':!
I l"l'lendlf a t ro01phore. tioaa avai.l lnOru1e Oo. UJOJEM wboleuler. Reliable, warehouae, worklaa r equlrH abort band, Maraellc 49l·SUt. "' A~pthll appllcaUona Co benetltt tnc:had aiclt fol learner, iiood with buyers, manul•c· ~command of J!:nt Muiu.I Savtnp &r Loan,
Jl'ri t/14, Mon S/27 " leave " pa.id vac. St.rt· r...11 Stares memory. Bua:r phones, t u r e r • • 4 • t o r e srammar, xlnt t>'Pln1. S10 Camino de Estrella, 'tu• SIU, Z·SPM. Int U I $550 per mo rvuu l)'Phll, nicor kMplng. 101111a1~ .... Work In all Jen'loffh.-.exp.t7a.5e'12 OE
w ....... .,,,...
Dix models, complcUly
reblt. refiolahed . yr suarantee. Yow-choice
$I.JO. Free delivery
Grand Open.inc Sa.le MarchlWl.
' ~ Tttacher'• Fish w/ra~advav&l.I. AntSeeldnaCareer ElcperlenC<e with fibrtc1 uptct • of retalt.1..:::.:-....:..;__;........-=....:....;__ __ i..::San:::..::Ct=:e~m!!:ten~te:.:·~E:::.:·=·::.:...· -"' 4' Cbtp1, Redhltl A: Cal J lldi ln Fullerton Jlfiaded People For: or ,.rmrni mfr re-Reaume In confidence SICllrUY Nier, aome esptt pro·
,,.,n =· Cldt Lo Ward Ii (710 871-7722 MANAGER quired. Escel l co. RIAl.lSTA'n to: The Red BaUoon, Motivated ptT10n for a f'd, Sout.h Weal B.anic,1=========
I • I . • .. See Mfr. Uoda ln rouul&JA VIJ ,...HHS bcntfita. Mlulon Vjejo SALISPllSOM 1SN3 Al1onquln. HB. srowtJ\1 rngml • tnvat t.acuo• 8U~b. Aak fot Ka.Moat.or refri1enlor,
a&&oa ofltonl. <714) 54.f.8lel Jhve op1nln11 tor ate•. T?0-2922 We're expandins 11aln t'.l8t9 co ln N.B. Boolil,keepln1 Joan 497 1771 wbUe. tu.
Sc:i. Co11t. Applian ces
newest store (TU)
Sll·lllM or 537·2542
1 .. 1 .. 1 1u •-looldnt r •~ .. c Uber lcnowledre. food s>bone m.-rc , .. .,,. or p/wm• t er , Painter, oo1Mmlon, M1.11t • or-... • Retail bhnaaemenl, ID&aHr. Will lralb. Tow Truck Drtvera ex· ---------lnla\<le-. w\Jl be held bav• ap, • OWJJ truck. aalapenooa with hJ1h Spoc\I onent.ed. '4 arow $t!M!OlJ. per'd Top PllY· APPlJ, 2 Oveo t>lfttrtc doTC!', ~ l\'id..-y on1¥ from t-l Slatttn.a HI. M.50 br =,,-r::aJ~~ati :!J.,oudnetllredco•mep?c~!?:. O•W Tow Inc. 1000 S.arw CJuak, blll " •~ 0a1U9>o31a •1 Ptaf rw• v ••-Pff t-2. f'\ab lMn. Ave, N8 642-J.m cl'*2 SUO. Of.JOSS 3Q(D 0-0.U Vl1 Prtw1 for afi,-1~11 tor Dob. emer1en01 •ld p ro· ~N11uel P ltwboneedpeop.J• ..--., sram, Newport Hart>or TOWT1UJCKDRtvltRS Admiral Proattree ~ a1...,_c I.ha 21J7 C4ettJfwy alfAIL SALIS CoctHlJ o( Cllauclln. MUil baYetO'llrin& nper, Refrl1. top frHaer. Zqual Opper Em"'°"' Ser'fte9 Dlrtd°"7 bi I.be Coroaa d•I If ar. C. rem, -.CO, Bal. Pa. Ver7 ba11. '45·1050, m\lat U ve C. Bl. uu •· xln1 oood. '1U.
DAU.Y Pu.ar btadl thop. 140-MC1 m.-. e• ... ._, Moo-f'ri -.sm dQit.
l •
'·
...
(',
I~
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I
'""''"""" 101 o 0ocp 1040 Flnihn 1oso GerocJt Sale toss ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
Ulre new "Flair·• tO", OOG TRAINING *•I IUY * * Manual Sm1th/t"orono
dee dbl eye level UVt'O!I. Your r1 .. cr llt Mint' lYPl!wrltt't SlS Pu:.h •/J>\111 out l lllltt' II John Martin 548 oo:,9 Good \lled F\lm1turr & l.1wn mower $7 l\t'w •tar•a~ by Fr111dulN:. Apphancea--OR I will 11tow awoy tart> & rim for
Rue flnd al Sll\5. Goldm Retriever pupj i.e\I or SELL for You. AMC S20 Hi tack bt'ctlt'r
613-kft aft &J>M WbelJM"d Z16t '7ll: AKC MASTllS A UC Tl OH and uuJJdng compound
H Cu Ft. Coklspot Ref rig.
2 uoor top freezer
Mal es & f l4 m ta I u . 6 4 6 • I ' I 6 & SI ea<'h 4 nl•W • lu..:
646-3762 IJl-9625 rims. fll11 MG . Pinto.
Capri $1S ~wt 74 G MC
radio S5 ·1 i Cht>"Y
Steering wheel $4
642-3379
Avoado anen color S90 CA.5H p Al 0 ~59116 Aft. ~ """tv Yo.t 1045 ror ad uaed furn. anli-w .. ttDtbouse 14 cu h ••••••••••••••• ,....... Q\lte$ &t cir TV'•· 95741133
refng/fre.izer JmmaC' Beaut spayed Hu.'llt•t'. all
$175 . 644•3291 dys, !!o!!.3to lJOOd hume. l bave a CUSTOM made ....... .....,. contemporary 9 n. off 6'2-5376 evs/wknd.' -wtlltt,, n-.uaah)'dc couch
Allctiola 80 l 5 r R E E C R /\ T £ that hu been w~ll cared
••••• .. ••••••••••••••• LUMBER/ 1''1r1:wood foc&1Smxlntcond1llon. ._ ________ -! &6&·2900 or 646-2562 an with Shepard cai.teri.
PUBLIC FURNITURE
*AUCTION* FRIDAY 7·30PM
Dealers Welcome
l>IX $210. Included an that
Fem Beagle. good w/
cluldren. Shots. :;payed.
673 2301, 548~
237 E 20lh St. C M Glai.l>
clothes. lots of mu.c
9am-4pm Thuns & Fri ------
Moving Sal<' All (.;oes
Make Offer fh. Fri Sat
3 2l312.S Sl6 Marguente
Cd.M
Antique LOVl' e.eal &
matl·h1ng 1·h.,1r:.
Beautiful 646 2531
.-n... -·......... ------------
I I ~ld•y. M•tC" 23. 1\178 o-.1L Y PILOT QC
Ml~ 101& Mbctft••OltS 1010 MK•11111om 1010 IMh. ,....,. 9040 MMoriaed l1b$ '~•o .•..•.....•.......••••. •··············••·••••· ••••···············••·· .......................•....••....•....•••• ~. "r:!:Jrr-z:;;O(].,.-; tJ~ <'9 t)l'rtl CQ~<::.:I~ CC~ GUA1 M.!::!e~l~nda so, ne~
0 VER s TOCK SALE! RSHING IOATU • 848-8l:a
0• t..... I•.,_...._ -......._ C..... C..ctl!M OMA. 21Pt CHAMPION Mot.obec~m~ sov Mo~-d. tl
AM ERIC AN ~J.YB~ll I9JmnocESSOR ~i~~~;~~rc!~Y:~i.~:;: = ~6 2:::~· Xllll
W..~4Mfr'l4WW...9 5 Mc• ~~,D~~~'!i·~~~!: ... ~/ buih. Electromcz•·•r ln· ff so
• cl ckpth finder brand ....... •••••••• •• ·•-·. CASH PIUC OHLY U Yr. G ... •tHI ftl..'W. unused 2-~F'M '76 Honda 55U-.t SS Mo Crtdt ~Or~,_. lllf1 s,.d9 rtk• =o JfeJtl>{a11 ev~a 0l W1ndstueld, Hwy bar.
M..t W ftft W..u.dl u.tt.d 9'n Pltf. wknds. ~s mly D>O 04 u cood. $TJ$
So C4lll Wtd a n.-To •~· y_..1 631 3767 __ _
fllc~ At 0.. CW, RfteU 0.-.t-S.,.C. 1-20 1978 •74 HOHDA o,._.. C-.ty , ... 111~ S'"ll MHt WA S-t·I Cl 200
llf tt ..... •·Ill • SEA RAY Never used. 500 mllt11, ISTCon.e-ISTStt-•.-SoDMtWait. hlie new. W1ndsbield.
Adllll.tll• lttfwtded Wltfl ~ 30' Sport Rthet-roll bar. re1tr rack &
A.....-k• rri•• & rrwtt-.. WH Co. Outriggers-VHF radau cu:.haon. $550. 962-8437 ESTATE Slbenan Husky, 20 mo'i.
l''ROM NEWPORT '!\KC, male. very affl't'
STOCK UQUJDATION llon1tte 552·1249
pnce are J full brocaded
pillows in off white
made especially for the
couch Must see tu ap
prec1ate. Call 645-0580
otwn 12 30 & 3, and aft
SP M & Sat /Sun
anyume. Cash only
121 l, 7"•5020 C...M c...J•--t, -'-...._LI-I......... Ball~J\danJc~dUCCpth~f!t()UO...-''nd~r Super Sale, M.irl'h 2-t 25. -~ -..--_. _...... .. ,.. " '" Kawasaki 40<k'c tnplt> m ~f~~t)?l~~~:.~II! v~.,. ,.,v'CCJ.:::.0~---o~f/lff, 0-loat. I o.ty VN)'g~~~taon MASTEIS AUCTION ---
207Si,'J Newport Blvd CM Vtry \O'\ 1ng wh1tl!. \' a.l
8.13-9625 &cS-8686 ~:.= needs yuur 11.l
9kydft --8020 2 M..alt.• pups, hsebroken,
•••••••••• ••••••••••••• all .,,hot.'>. 9 mOll Terner
llKES & MOPB>S mn 963·21~
II' Gold tweed sura good
condition. asking $8!1
644 91Z7
EASTl'.~R HOUSt: SAU:
NEW Beaut sofa & love.
$395. S pc wood parqUt>l
New & used, buy, :.ell. To gd home. t-:nghsh Set din & game set $425
trade. Cycle & l:o. 2488 lt·r m.ilc. 6 mvs, hu'I w/matching 3-pe coHcl!
Newport Blvd, C M shoti.. I ov c:. k 1 ds tbl Sl't $18S Form pecan
642-7910 957-0971 Margaret din rm set w china S6SiJ
Cats 8035 r'em Cockapoo puppy. 4 Beaut dtecor lamps.
••••••••••••••••••••••• mo.!> old. recc1 vt·d all a1sc.i chr~. etageres. con
fbmalayan kittens CFA ~ 7511721 lt'mp wiill designs
R1 cadoro/M1ng Chiu -710.2881 __
I 1 o e. rel> er V l' 11 ow Funllitwe 8050 Cw.tum ~dar watcrbcd
540-1760 ••••••••••••••••••••• •• !>t&IOl•d glass an head
. . • • Whl Frenl'h pro\ 1nl'iJI b o Jr d. ma l' r 11 mt' Blue Male Per.;1Jn. Cf-A dre.,,ser 51, Ion~ b rel(. 10 wks old Tra1nl'd .. h . t .. .,, c•unop), ca in~ts. lx•nth. . . , w .ma~<' tng mirror ...,..., k1nl! :-011.l' See ll to
494·7865, 499·41\lti. Juhc 536·6661:1 bclt1.•H· It $.'.>50 67.">·~95
Ori Soml' antique:> huat Misc.etklMous 8080 Misc.elaneous 8080 Picmos ~°"Jam 1090 Special Price '49 Panhead Xlnt rlln r::~ louib of good1c~. •••••••••••••••••• ••• •• •••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• • $39' 9 50 rung cood Stroker lot
Fri/Sul 10 tall 163
LE·\VJ"l<; An•.i J 1lhan LUGGAGE TAGS lldmmond C:! ori~an H"'RRISOM"S lots of chrome. Dy.,
Bdllard nwmlx·r,h111 1 Imm )Our businc:.:. Lc:.hc Best ufr 0\'1•r "' 973-037S,evs631·S.&113
Magnolia St, CM I\ tn /.
GOODlf~I
pnct> lnl'ludt•s $:!0 card Sendonec•ardfor SlSUU 646 :l6J:I SEA.RAY
tr an~ f,,. r rt' e S l '> O each ta" plus unl' :.pan• ev:. · wlmd!> 3 01 Co t It N n 646 filffl! .dt t.l'M 111 " l 8~ wy, · wknd.., We return ptc<rmancntly Early 1900 upnght piano, 631-2547 ~ 8060 sealE'd altral'll\ <' tai:: & natural mah, Good cond.
••••••••••••••••••••••• KIN(; ('AM U It I lJ Cl i-: :olnp. mc~ltn~ turltnt· saoo1ofr. 67S-9747
HotlSES FOR SALE
l Reg AQHA daughter
of MISter Alert & Clab·
ber blood hne Also hair
Arab Gelding. Excellent
nd.lng I r:n 6449
w \ 1 t; H H t-; o I D reqwrcments Pre -
w ultrul>onu , 1brators & vent I~ & theft 1 1-'ar a Store. Rntaurant,
ht>ater J rail'> ,,t...el personalm.'tl lJg <'nc:low lar 8095
motorcycle trlr D)na v.allpapcr. fabric or ••••••••••••••••••••••• G~m Mmulta SRT 101 "Day Glo' paper & v,(' 3 Keaung sta1nlei.~ :.tt?cl
widl· angh• 2x trlephoto v.ill back & tnm Y~.~ gas fryer. Gd l'Ulld bl>t ~ .. i tag~ Or try two l'J•u.3 "'r 71 • n7 . .,...,.> 11 A\.1 200mm 1n1,.,., & ld~l' b k "' .. ""' -. Hor'e" buard1.•d Stall:. 770 :?Ot.'7 batk lo Jl' 6 PM da1I)
avail 20292 Barch St, l'HlCf.'>
SAH 9799698,646·2180 Carpl•t mJnufadurcr 512ttaor3 S5 TV. Radio,
Luger 24' fiberglass
t"nnser Chr)'lller marine
eng., 80'0 re;;lored. ln
water N B. $1250/ b:it oC·
fer. 556-6713 dys.
l9lll Bos too Whaler w /20 H.P. Mere Elee. Center
:.teer'g, $1350. Lallie
u:.ed. like nu. 631 ·'1300
<'IOC1ani.: out mill tr1ab & t a tag!\ $1 60 N HIFi, St.no 8098 Household Goods 8065 lrregulur" S.l!l·llllll 6 '9 tags $1 50 t•a ....................... loah. Soil 9060
Motor Homes, SoJ•/
RtM/StorOCJe ft 60 • ••••••••••••••••••••••
Rent a 1977 i-:xcut" t'
Motorhomc or Mln1
motorbom~ from Hcrl1
Friedlander. Call any o<
these numbers
191-6777
537.7777
821-8811
1977 DREAMER
MIMI MOTORHOME
CLOSEOUT!!! ••••••••••••••••••••••• 10 or mon• $1 40 t•a Btful 25 · COC.OH TV ••••••••••••••••••••••• Oocp 8040 Sora,11•,,$7SOm•v. xlnlsLl'rt'O Wt)\l•n v.oojjQn';,1mu11 &bo:.$9S :j l"lll!H Kl:-V(; Tl r Sctlt·~Ta,lndulfrd .~~·"I" $1S".l .n WJI FUJI-YAMAHA
••••••••••••••••••••••• 9"I ) d C' l •) 5 1 ~ ~~"" !llr.10 • 1'1) I ~Ult.07'1 .._ 0 ,in ~ :-· .1 n:>l' bllnd.IJmp:..rndthl&'.! 1>.'lkdres~rsS220forall. TlCKElS April .!M -~<.:A,· rant~. frH• dl•l1' DEALERS
3 left to chOOSl'
For information call
Wendell Ric•h or Bill
Pien·e only at l yr old fem <.ir1•at Dan<' tush.ton~ 963--itl!IO l'hr.1 R33·01S3 l'\,, Cluld's Ca pl trundlt..• bed Malet· orft>r SJ6 4113 ur Draw ytiur O"n ur '>t·nll &12-~U \ acbl Bro.kcraj!t'
f''aun. w papn $100 .,, 1. , Id •1 • "' bit an dr£•sser sip:. 3 9tiO S9l3 name. addrcs'> vhom· & PHIL LOHG FORD
761-5888 Call Bud, 714 Sll6 0042 ·~~~ ~~~·1~:/~ ',~~ ll~ W J t 1.• r IH• ti Q u t· t' n 1 $2.5(J 2 pr drape.-. hned. "t' II make one l·,mJ Jll'r Cassetlt? recordl'r Son) Listings Wanted t
714·S86-288.S SI~ .. XI t ". rl' sJsU <.'omplelt• "' heall't. di.' I linen look. It color 50X~ Sterlin!( sen It t' tor II taR Add 25' cat·h 1-:Xcellent condition Call SoedttwHlent
• n rnn luxt• puddtn~ &. hl'ad S60 fur all 2 oak Lunt \1adnJ:"I Ol'W Sendchel'kormvnl'yor 6.i6-2531 YocMSaM5
I yr old Al:.i~kan Paar ne~ Gi_nR1.·r J<ir board Mo\lnl! A:.kini: booh.asc·-. Ii, lC30' bt>lo"lll'>l 673·-il'.ll derto 2616Newport8lvd Troilen.Tra-.el 9l70
\taJamute. ft malt• Lampe.. S!S eaC'h Bom St:!S l\tll7:>9·1111 w .,mokc• itla"~ '>hl·lvt·s PILOTPRlMTIMG :\earl~ new giant T\ Newport Beach •••••••••••••••••••••••
,,payed, paper" 'hot:., b:.iy Che:;l. gold lt•Jf. S-t5 Sl~J 1':\ervihmg l''I. Salk 'l'r('t.'O l"QWP. dr \ tn~ p () HI'•\ l~I :.creen. l'O!'>t Sl! .ooo (714) 673-9211 Spat't' 3\'8tl for un tu $100. 646-1154 aft l!l'\t 192-7s.t5 l\1JhOK t•abinl'\. \1ed1t C"llnnt KJl 17;_" ralk sqUl'l'I(<'<'' 1nl.. Sacnf $1600 646 59ft5 --,. slyll'. $85. tll•sk "' to11 ,.. ,.. .,., t'tl 711 !'6:J KbOll C1>!.t~1 Me!>a < " !l~h:!ti •-~ &'°U.....::_ 1.Jclo 14 $750. Sunfish IJ. 8xJO'. Adult~. Weelh
Jilk Lab puppit•\. pun• MOVING must sell ru.rn book shelf $SO, rhe~t of hwetry 8070 B.·\"'S'fO<>l-S s·u1M•r ri1•·1• Misc:.4laMOUs ~&,Ii ~·... $395. 21' Sloop $350. Ski monthly. S48·til73.
bred. Shots $75 & ~;J:>-\Ortt..'<.I ~C('l'~~ (;;ill drawers $!)0, It" BB" ••••••••••••••••••••••• n.; -·~ ' w-.Je-.,.j 808' -m hull""""' c.c.n JG'>'> 5c .. OOU•) • JAYCO E G E
49.'"''1" ..... 2005 rt 6 " "" IOU!<; \ IH:ll urm:ru r·-.po.I.,,.,.,. """ J&."""" 73 A L, lt!nl .. "" " ...,.,. 3 er pm $.5() 645-78.">7 Otamond ran" &. wt:•tldm0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• trlr Sips 8 i.lnt, extra!\
---" " 91):! 1;1tl7 loots. MariM •73 c-L--.L.t 34 .Shellie pupi.. 1\1\(' re Lane coff tbl S7S &oaut Grai·cful. rich muhol( band. I OJ kan.iL,, anti MAN OF LA MANCHA VIUlnU'IG $1850. S48·3281
aaonable, !I mo old Qn Anne ~t,._·tc wm"ba1.·k Pcdf''>liJI dinin" tble. que gold band & ::.etlm1:t. Booli. & r1•1·ord., t11 11·.1rh llckt!lS Apr 4. \Int 'l'ats &,lipnltflt 9030 Lille new cond. Dix • ----
male. ""'S "'"' '.'t'"" J(t " " cert Jppra1,al of S2200 readm•• h• \ttWl'I" ,.u,t Would llkt tn trr1 for ••••••••••••••••••••••• l'ustom. in tr. 7 ft 23 Open Road :>elf-cont •• """ -'"" <'hr $12S Rocker $3S. Can :.eat 10. a fine old .. ' L"S In d Se 1 u~ h 6pu > h mll.'>l ~ell ..,000 nr bt·~.1 11\,•r Sl<Ml nn1, Sdl rm IJter d,11t l'I •all DIESEL ENGINC:.: headroom main salon, " l con · a ...,31.· m ( l c·r masc item~ piece. rarecla" rt. paW.. ""' ·• p • d l 987 644 3291, &t2·S376 SJ.50 Ph S86-s.&7l offl'r nu~' ;it ti-I I 20;1 -j SIS 1..t:! l:fi!I 979 3429 8-36H a. 1e';,C ~t?n dJe:;el auxl. auto pilot, 213 S96· 4
WEIMARANER for salt•
14 mos. fem ~50
huntmg -wall'hdoJ!,
w ch1ldreo :'-it•t••h
yard !>4S·051&
W T f'orm .. 1 d111 "" !\t'l Mu5ical ~.' .. ~356s~I Tom R1kl•r ~12"P.·ooruorloJ1fbr. extl,ra,:. ,. • ....._C'.~,·c ... ,P~ Gd Rl·chner. d .. rk bru ... n Kin.: S11,e Box Spr111i: & A..._. ED "'"° • o -.v ~" .. ~ 1!11 \tnyl. good rnnd SlOO !\1attrc1'!> ~ l''raml' " lnnl"•"'l<I ,,•,1h H 111..1 Instruments 8083 714>S31353S &A • 9400
ll!l' fi.ts-on2 "'J..nd' ,,,, I) Good Cond S7J 003 I~ TOP CASH UULLA It Ol' ... !-iJI' ~ .. I ..... 171i 1 ······················· Bwrk JOO cu tn m.inne t . CCH50t1ff
\l\C SpnngN Sµ.inll'I
~. 7wks old
ti40-4729 ---
SC flNAUZf:ltS
"11Nl;\TURE. AKC
UNUSUAL
RAREll.AQ(S
!I wks. shot!> 3 male·'>
Pet Show. 64ti·S23i
wkdys PA I D I" 0 R Yo l ' II \ 1 <iib&on EB Cl ""'" .:u1tar eni:. O~C outdn cntrls . ., ts· Is I and l' r 7 ft ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~Sale 8055 JEWELRY W.\TCllES. 'nlL'IUI' P J'•'1 pi.ui" Sl75 P~P· In boat Ongu~n~ ... LOADED w1 expcni.1v~ Auto Parl!> '64 Che\\
SOF \ 11 mu" 11ld ••••••••••••••••••••••• AWf OBJECTS GOLU.' rehlt_ hJ\ l'."·nth1ni: t~l:!:!J~ Sl250. or be:;t ufr t-.:ve, C'ruisang/racrng ~eJr front end, hood. grill
lli .. reulonplaid ~:'i li11rai:« Sale. military S ILVER SERVlCr:.1 !'>al· $lf>0<.15.'.)(;l7H 61J.6J10. lhstuponreq.)$29.000/? andfendersSlOOorbc:-.l
846-6<M9 tam. Knick knacks from 1''1 NF FU n N & \ N Old.\ corom•t <loocl rond. &'.B-5309 offer takes. S36-0074 l>hil • ~ Walnut Rect•pt~on 1>.<':.k. !\1alce oHer Call !WI u;23 Lrg portable comprtisl>Or, --------
8;1rely used sofa. end
· tables Good cond Be!!t
vfr takes all S36 2636
(Juahty rum :.ofa. l'hr'
1·0(( & end tbl!-t dtn rm
!>l'l 641 16Cll . !li!I ot 21
all over the world TIQUF .• S f>.15 2200 w return. SI ~s 1'.J<('l' a.sk for Jim used engine & e lcc 40' Class R Wilmington AtrrO PARTS: '59 Cbevv Jn.~truments. furn. dis d1a1t ssu K1.·nmon· --tronics iear, steel good cond. Contact Bud radiator $20. Rebwldt<
hes, books. clothes. Miscdtafte'OUs 8080 V. D. S7~> , ... l~i· oHk la Office FunNture & fa stenings. desks. Schatz at Westmont ble 2119 Ford Eng1n1·
tools Thurs Fri Sat, ••••••••••••••••••••••• hi!• Sl511 ti73 lll!l &,lipment 8085 manne paints. liurplus Coll. Santa Barbara block $50. Garage worl.
10683 Elsoneto. F\' 20 I ll SU till i.:.illon •••••••••••••••••••••••hardware. 23 sa1lboal. 8051900.5051 benchS.SCall642-3379 Btwn Ward & Euclid off Jqu.inum,, $12 1" SJO llJndpa inti•d FJ-.lt•r ThTee e;,ich t-'5200 Bur broken power tools. rus-
Slater Sol5 ltlh ltl'nl". -.l;.ituan &. .... ,.ill rough-. ,\1 1·ount1ni.: ty chain. ell Sei.' Dou~ Cal 21. new ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~, han~inJ.!' 111\~ h• ~ machine" ~ \r ... nrv. or p~ L~o Sh1pya~. 0 B. "~rlatl\ 1111 •. • \.1111·\ •1
<;;uls. 6JIP Lrg mags & tares, Fonl
p, l p.irty pattern must ~ l'l 1
548-42161. 7~·361~
ARAND new Honfl.; t-.,
press Never rid<l1•n
$300. Motnbet·an< Io
'peed $W. Rt>ah .. tit un
rler dash c;1,,:.ctll' $25
751-7063
'IBERGL1\SS Ho,;l !1
Tn-hull & Jo;, rnrucfr 411 P
t!ng1ne Roth t!Ji7':..
biS-0404
That's pot-pour-rt a confused collection. a
miscellaneous mixture. a hodgepodge
BLUE Pox stole $.50. Mink ARTl~I' 1\1rbrushes u!.ed. PATIO Sal<· Haoy 1t<•n,,,
tnm Jacket $50, 1''ox tn m Wold A.2. Wold Master bo 1l k !>. "1 at 1 on a n .
<'ape $30, Mohair 'tolt• Thayer Chandler 1\1 C'luthl'!'. dun· 1·\ l"lt·
$20. oth<'r stol('<; SS Fan Paa,,che AB al·cessone" m1~l· Ill I Saturd•1~
<'Y embroider chilti 'I 979-2839 19841 Ptn\lrlt>nc1 11 H
\il'l;L<. croche!C'd baby & G l l• n \I .1 r t i ,1 1· t
girl:. dothe,,. 1ewclr) <;;tX malchtng untiqUI! Rll,hanl \dam"
i.:reen gold plaid l'Ur pre~sb,1('k oak ch:irr..,
tatn!> & bcrlsprC'ad $111 Good mnd1tion Call afl
Mtcr SPM. SS"r-~IR 5PM 551 b"281
COLOR TV Zcnr1h Play-.
..;uR I" SI\ I La r,,on !I HI
Epoxy paddle hkc n ......
$195 ti40 >402!l l'\l'~
Vt'f") i.:ood S9S Hotarv '77 DATSUN 21)()SX. :, ~pd
pOWl'r mnwer $:1:; l;()()CI n11 All lhl• l'Xl1.1s
h.16 IS2.'i ~.800 1140 9:ll7
SOF'A. 2 chr-.. lll'W BIKE • ..,, \kn " Hollr:.i;.I
wru;her dryer. kmi;: mut l.ad11•, Ph11l1p' S211 &
tress set, full bed :.cl dou $35 L'Ornl•r lx"<lroom ,,.,
bit> 642 3807 SlSO l>.11 :JI~
H \"'ID Crocheted old
nc,cr u:.<'d tablecloth
bedspread S49S Old
qwll, yellow white $43..,
536-6474
IOflff <'.1t 1r.11k1
't.>ll iiS or 1111 .. r
l\.li 1;1>:1~
\lu'I
l:l.BR.\:-.SEN l'1Jnn
llahan pr<1\'tnr1al 1·on
SOil• l'nct•d tn -,t•ll r J:.I t
SSOO C;ill 5·11i· t360 after
;i JOPM
65 Lincoln~ complete
drive trans rehll, 4-dr
Vinyl top. SlOOO or best
ctrer "6-!m2 _____ ,
R Sale z Pc Sectional,
new electric knife, new
10Jd butanf' llghtJlr, equ.,ium with an ac
ceu.. platform rocker,
matcbtn1 blu. tabl
lam111, loYety new wall
tapestry, d1•P" AJl ictni carad. 5411l .QSS4
L· 1• •1 t t C .a"' 11111111 ;,irJrlrt•-.s•i 673-7272 Call67s.-0558 ~ ori.:l ,rou ... 1111., a h & 1 · o ----
\ orklown II II !.II;:! :!iii\ !!.' '1 P ,. '1 "" 0 IO Boats, Pow.r 9040 Monl~omen Ii·. I ale Auto$ few Sale-
Tral11• SI 11•1 \utumn ll,111·
mink Jal·k1•1. "' 11 l' Im
l-.1r. \an ur 1 rurl<. .l.11111·•·
M1nwr l;l•1wrul D1•I" l'rv
NB
Surfbt1ard" 1111 '·"'' '111
shap(•S &: ""t'" UranlJ
c. raphot~ Pl' 1nt•lud J.! ••••••••••••••••••••••• 977 C II d sloral(l' t'abtnt•h &. ~up I · u Y equrppc · ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1s· Fanla:.y ll)droaaft make offer SSI 2921 ~-s/ pl1l'!> Pitn,•v Bowl'" ~ k 1 b 0 at. 1.<i 11 p -·!~
mall tnst•rtl•r Opt•n lo Evrnrude. elec shl£t, pwr Columbia Challc·n~cr, 2~ Classics
otft•r l'lt'JM' t·ont.1t•t lift. tach, hour mNer. nu ftherglass sailboat. fully •••••••••••••••••••••••
\Ir-. F111n,.i.:an al cover, trlr $1250. cqu1p'd. Very rt• 58MGACLASSIC'
b:ll 1200 btv. 11 Ii am to 5 7Sl·40m as on ab I y pr 1 cc d . $1000 FlRl\f. AS IS
pm wkdy.., ----581-5843 714-6i3·4ll!I
9520
nl'~ only ~Ill~ "H Ith SI ;,. 11• rt l>lk 1·ush11m s\.iek
llB mi.: t·ha1r:-. SI l1·a Ot·~k
32' l'nrflll<' < '75 > Load eel
Auto Piiot. rartar. Sondr.
$16.000 A .2 boat owner,
must sell Day:-;. wkdys.
894-SJSI. evc!:.lwknds
Pnndle 16. Full race 111 4 ~Ori•~ 9550
~entory, trlr ~ bl)X ••••••••••••••••••••••' Jv,, 14 httt' 11111 SSS ~hrnr11<1m 3 1h111< l.111, \L..11 .. htnl! t<1hl•· :>IS.
Of I!. $\0 l.11..o•" ,di •.mall J.:Old tlt•,k \\.,1Jnut
tttti 25ti:! \ft " top Q:, .: i:111lr1 t"\ t'l'
Kl~<; Tl"I 111 kl'I., tor rh<11r. .;,,')(1 711 W lith
\.1..a i di ·111 ,,,11.,1. ""l'I CM . unit n , ·rur .1rt
1;.s1, !110.
l.A'.1v1nl! S1o1t1· ; t 1'1111
llJt' it1.i11\ tll•· .1•kin~
SI UIU. Ca1wh.1rt I 'on-.011•
nu SJt;e1 C • ~: T\ rnlor
l!I $200, Ht'lrq• i.;11
nmd Slt.41 f.. """''' I urn
RM ~\:I
l'nrt 1hh.,.shr ~ill
V.-'h1rlpool i:..a' 1lrH·• $:10
(;a., BHQ S!.O li?:l Hill
s1aml'fl l(l.1si. rr1·.1t111n'
Ll•l lht• 'un .. h11w thru
IO l'Ulllr'> frt•l· t•:..l
M70 !lffli• 111 11.'JK ,t 1'17
Re11 llrnnclt v. ;at Pr 1•ol11r
'Wl'"l"IHHI \ dl;q,:1• '
lr.1nwcl. OH1·1 ht 1 •1;1;
l 'n" l'rM\\ \lhlt'l11 !'luh
rnl•mb1•r,h1p n111\ 1nl(,
mw.1 ,,.11 tliJ '1!'>111
:>.'I" Tru .. ut h.1lhh•1 1·ni:
111..1' IH'"' $3i:1
~!Ifill
WANTED
TOP CASH DOLLAR
PAID FOR YOUR
J'E:Wl-:LRY. WATC'llES.
ART OBJECTS. GOLD.
Sll.VF.R SERVI CE
FINE l"llRN & AN
TIQUE.S ll4S 2200
noon. ~ l'.' ri·:-1 11f \H·l'k
1'31 t:li:.!
Rcmani,'lon Cop1e1. v. ork-.
l!rcal SI!):, n .. -.k,,
chair,, table SI I lo $.">.">
ill W 17th t'M t'r111
l>7 Ph liJI 1372 ~;, 71®<
.. , £"'>
8087 .....•..•........•.....
Rahh11!. & ~11101•,1 111~"
SJ carh
54t; !fl.JI>.~
Friendly r<.'<I w11 "w. :i• .. ·
lonl( w .11.juJnum 'SllHI
i;.i0-54ru .1 rt "
I;'' r /.! ,. 11 u " 1; 11 I cl <' n
Sht>phl'r<I m" II mu nlll
Ft' 111.1I1· ,. ~I 1 I'm 1· I)
fr 1 1· n ti I ) ,or. I 11 \ a h I t'
h.lii 1;:~
l'ur.. llrc•cl I r1' h SN lt.•r
l'UI"' '• 14 ks SJ."• "'11hout
,hllh $40 "'11 h &ih 51\.111
RABBITS I mo old bun
mes. $3 00 t•.1 Whtt·. blk.
hwn -.poth'll t\l!->o lgt!
rabbit~ S'I oo 1.,1 ls.12 5'lJ.1
l'adilla< ~to Go l'art..
Whatr\·pr the f-'all
Holl 'pm off lh<' market
With a Cla~s1f1<-d Ad
Call Nowt 642 ~7~
s.M>-44H
·77 SktPJ3Ck. 20· OPt'O
" trlr. bimin1 tor.,
\11F. tl'ak '"'m ..,t1•p 70
hrs, 22S V~ Volvo I 0
~11.!l;>u Tum, rl;iys
tit5· l;IH!l. v.knrls <'\'l''>
,;;s.1n:11
ur llOKlZON n:rn~ ISS
$LSSO. 673-848'
Erl('SOn 27, KM, VII F
dpth sndr, anbd. xlnt
t'Olld . .Must :.~>e. $111,000
646-3631
Aquanus z:r 197;s, !! Ill'
Evin . Lifel10<'. lull
~·quip.~ sa1h, VIII-'
anten. trlr. Ownr must
sell 661 IIW>. 7Sl 6003
COSTA MESA
AMC· JEEP
#I In Calif,
FREE
Air ConditiOMr
Olcb-Berkley Jt>l. Ii track Sabo\, 2 yrs old hkl• nt•w
tape I..ess th.in 100 hr:. Full race, nt'W :.all
on boat & l'n~m1.· '\Jew ~-4396
on new 1977 • l'l·M
Jet'pE; ~s not mrludr•
Wagonl'cr limited C'J '., or
CJ? Offer l!oOO onl.., ""
fal'lory air l'qu1pp1•d
\l'h1dcs. Offer e\p1r1•
March 31. 1978.
OVERSTOCKED
WITH JEEPS twtn tanks Cherry rnnd --;--
includini: traih•r S'42SO Hobie Cat 16 . wht ~ blui•
or best ihk for Rack tramp & wht blu·:-:_<·llow ~·RS34 or su; .. '430.1 \all Xlnd C"ond. SI 150 or 549-8021 · · offer W lrlr 673-~ 2524 HARBOR BLVU
Sell
Then you need o Doily Pilot clou1fled od
16' Hobie Cat 1977. ,ome COSTA Mf-':S,\> _
racinJ! equip. $13SO '63 Jrep Wagone1•r .iw
1>73-5372 drwc. Independent Ml' Cat~IJna 22'. 1976. deluxe pension NPcdi.. ~0;~
model. pop top & $500 /bstofr 5Jti6.l·I
enclosure. kick up rucl l'l\ll
rler fabrt<' cushion~ •;1 GMC Ji mm' \\hi
i.love• & icebox. shtp l" manv xtras $4~·00 ·h -i
shorn radio, rnclud1nJ1 ofr Mi; l\.'i2.r.,
trlr & 6HP motnt .... ail -
cover. man y mor<' Tn.cb 9560
Sacnf1ce S4:.99S. 831 02.59 •••••••••••••••••••••••
loots. 5'ips/
Dodts. 9070 ........•.•.......•.•..
I~ Interest in Avalon
moonng ISO') 11163. Call
(805) 922·3190 or 922-5775 ---
WANTED: 22' + DANA
POINT SLIP for rettrE'd
bachelor Can exchanite
Newport slip af de:.ared
FULL SELECTION
Of 1978 GMC
MOORS MOW
Pickups. vans. 4X I "
Suburbans &r J1mm\'
pnccd a~ low a!-
$4358
'711 GM C t ••
ptrltup (515889) t " 11
8010 Miscelaneou$ .010 _7_S2_·19_1_<> __
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
GULF SHRIMP
DIRECT FROM LOUISIANA
-..sa.1.
$1.79 ..
'
LanpSllr ...
Sl.00 lb.
J..-....
$4.H
De-.llM Crab .••..••••••••••••• ~ ••• $4." lox of 10
Staff.ct Shrt..-•......•••••.••••.•. $7.tt lox of J4
Stwffed .._.... •••••••••••••••• SZ.7S ea. C 14 01.I
Fresn Frotein 5 lb 9o11.-
ntUU. ·RI.· SAT. OHLY t A.M. to 6 P.M.
c., .. .-·.su11 •A .. ..,. ..
JOHNNY'S ME.A TS
21 7 So. Tustin
Orang
loah. SpHd&
Ski 9080 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'76 1'n-hu\l, 18'. Volvo
eng. Musl sell. $3800 or
be9t offer. 548-21'64
Great Farmly Ski boat.
17' Slticraf\ w /283 18.
Perl for family sknnJJ or
c:nUtni. suso. 95S..1448
'63 Jnterntl PU Shor!
box, wht spoke whls. Ir~
knobbies,4cyleng.O<r
t79-01113or154-014&
Tv 1 1p llirfatloa '71 Datswt P U sunroof
•••••••--•••••••••••• ma& tlrf'S, CU.<i(m U\ler C S./ AM /F~t s tert'o. Ce11l iJ::'" . '120 Chrl~ or lhtrtet
••••••••••••••••••••••• 979-5345, or eves &
P'ord Courlu ahell wltnd.,!f3-0S2~--
S200/bcst offtt Call art 3 •62 FORD ,, Ton r t
rM 8'W()St --New A\ltO \ran,, rnlr In
Camp« w/itand. fllll all ;11lnl rood. Four ta . nrw
1· forel1n p u $350 tlre!I. Shell c•DHltH
531·3421 evu!\ or Sl.400 »4-44Y77
weekends. . UJ78 l,-,;;., F~ c.o::;,..,
'75 Ferd Cowitt with '74 with shell set up ror
5-pack camper. Good servi~ s~lves • p1Pf'
rend. 48K mJ. WtU •ell tad: 14.000 males Pnt.'t"
Kp.ttat• or pk1 dul. ~ Phont-540-1463 ,\
11118-mS CU.JI t6
~ RoN camper Call '1'7 Toyot• SR s. A l
F.d 1IQl.f50CI 10: IS to :t.1$ stereo, ma11. 1 mm'"
M·F orrer. sa1..sg
Brand New '78 HONDA
. 4 SPEED cvcc · HATCHBACK
EQuipment: 1488 C.C. Honda CVCC !bur cylinder engine. '4-wheel Independent suspension. 4-speed
syncromesh transmission, re<:k & pinion steering, bumper ouarda, Inside hOOd release. wood grain dash.
hinged rear aide windows. fold down rear seat. whtle sidewall tires. arm re1t1, day/night mirror, AM radio.
rear window defroster & m1nufacturen assembly line test tor Cll1I.
12 10 CHOOSE . FROM
(9994 White SGC 4005400)
(9823 Brown SGC <40033051
(9981 White SGC 4003991 l
(9982 Blue SGC 4004986)
t978'4 Red SGC 40007e6)
19868 Brown SGC 4003288)
. ( 1031 Silver SGC 4005753)
l 10024 Red SGC 4005290)
(!HM!O White SOC 4004125)
(9936 While SGC 4003152)
(9986 White SOC '4004161)
( 10032 Red SOC 400531 Ol
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY •••
TAKE YOUR CHOICE •••••••••••••• PLUS TAX & LICENSE
BRAND NEW '78 CIVIC Brand New 1°978
CIVIC
lrand New I 97W
CIVIC 5 SPEED'S
,.,. c;c Ho<wU cvcc 10u< err -. 4.-..1 ~declel"*" _,.,.;.,, ~ ·~ ...... •ath & .,.,_ ·~ ~ .,.,,._ ......... -'-<! ••'•-"'°"" gr•n o-lllnve<I •---!old_,,, __ , °'"', .. I• Oeylnoonl """"' AM r.0.0 l ,.., ---~-. ••so 11>e1.-CJ'-~1"'1 wllwl1 •"<! c,,,_ "'"' ~. t11Ct1omollor -""'"''<Y o .. .ive-..ood ,._,,," .. _ • "''~ ..-10CWt• ,.,..c ~-.,...,,. b.'C::::O ..-...0 "'-•. ~·011•11• •'llhl., & monutacl..,.., ~ ~ ... llltl
( 1151) (SGA4511189) CVCC HONDAMATIC
WAGON IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 5 TO CHOOSE FRO~
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY $ ORDER YOURS TODAY'
FULL PRICE s
PLUS TAX & LICENSE
PLUS TAX & LICENSE
9 5 70 Autos Want.ct 9590 Autos Wanted .••..•.•..•.•........................................................•.•.•••......•.....•......••.........•........
'till Ford a, Ton PU, 3 'T5 El Camino, ,harp, "'72 Dodge Van 318 Stand
,pd, u1r. clean. Europe PS. P B. A l' lo mi's. Trans Xlnt l'CJOd $25(10
~farc·h 26. must !>ell $3005 !rl'J !:;!JI 645-3865
$1700 497 11184 -Vms 9570 Autos Wanted 9 590
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR
FOR TOP USED CARS I
FOREIGN. DOM 1-~STIC'
or CLASSICS
If your car 1s extra C'lt.•an
st>e us first
WE BUY
USED CARS
CALLGARTll
Used Car Mi.:r ·75 Toyota J A>nS! hcd. ,1 ••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• ••• •• •• •• ••••••••••••
~pd w /atr. AM /FM '74 Cu~torn l'hrvy Van WEWILLIUY
,trrt'o. GT sports top, Custom paint. (;rdrt YOUR DATSUN
nt•w l1rt's, 'Clnt intr Vl'IH•t intt'rtor Widt• PAID FOR OR NOT
$3111)() Ph 631 5622 cragl·r~ $4950 i;.12 3379 TOP DOLLAR
Im Nr nu.Chev Lu\. air, ·m Ford Van lthr luftefl FOR TOP CARS
chrome whl11, AM 1-'M mter . 10" l whN?I, 302
1·ai:.s, spec stripes, eng,3spd 497;n10 5':1995 CSav app r ox
)1500 J Low Mi 631-4300 '75 r>odi:e \'an Fully
. , rustom11<'d Lo m1 :'¥lust -
\luM S<'ll this W('Ck i5 ,.(-.• liGI ·n:.'7
ro)ola loni.: brd
w t·am p<>r 'hell Nu '7:1 [>od&l' Window V.m
t11C'l; & whls. AM 1-'M. lo :.11r. aulo tr.ins P s
m1 $2700 /bst ofr P 8.SJOSO K4.!!lli26
t;,\2 9274
BARWICK DATSUN
:-..111.111.in 1·,,,11,1r.11111
831-1375 493.3375
WE BUY
CLEAH CARS
& TRUCKS
'76 1-'ord £150 :151 \'M
70 Uodgl" 4x4 771'1 auto. p.;;, I' B ,\ C CONNELL
w1campcr & Jucks, A/C Captain cha1rc;, nu tares CHEVROLET c-tcdl cond. good dark wrndow~. 48 500
nuleage 759-lSJS m1 '"-tint rond. ~5 8018 2828 Harbor Rhd
I.AUER IUICk
2925 Harbor Bhd
Costa Mesa 979 2500
TOP
DOI.UR
PAID
FOR Cl,EAN
IMPORT CARS
AU MODELS
~ 18835 BEACH BLVD
HUNTINGTON BEACH
842· 7781 -540-04-12
73 Ranchero w -;hell '77 Chevy Van 6 cyl PS COSTA MESA SELL idle item., w1lh a
Rblt eng, nt>w l1res. PB custom' C'a<;h o; 546-1200 Da.JlyP1lotClass1f1edAd AM/FM stereo. Dys trade TOP OOo 2666 aft ---_ ____;_ ____ _
557·5333. eve 531·3al8 SPM Autos, Hew 9100 Auto5, Hew 9100 -------............................................. . •
INTRODUCING
THE BMW733i.
BMW WILL NEVrR
BUILD A CQNVtNTJQNAL
LUXURY SEDAN.BECAUSE
NO ONE AT B_MW COUL.Q
BEAR TO DRJVE OOE.
If the thought of owning a
luxury sedan that's as
exciting to dnve
CREVIER
MOTORS
BMW SALES. SERVICE , & LEASING
1 ST. AND BROADWAY, SANTA ANA · 831-3171 .. . . -~.. .
540-5630
IW,l~U1ti1
2626 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA
W!IUY
USB> C.ARS!
W<' re lhc new Che\ roh•t
dealerslup an the In inc
1\uto Center Wt• nt•t-d
your used car'
JOE
MAC PHERSON
CHEVROLET
21 Auto Center On\,.
lRVINE
76&.7222 ----
WANTS>!!!
Good. dNft low
mlleage cars!!!
Call Dan Sldff .
RAY FLADEBOE
LINCOLN-MERCURY
IRVlNF.
830-7000
Autos, lmporied ...................•.••
Gefterm 9101 .......................
'73 Austin Marina, 27M
mi, A M/FM, rad1al5,
$900. 960-1150
Alfa R.-.o 9 705
·········~·············
9707 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Audi, '72, lOOLS Auto.
xJnt eond $2075. 4!17 2845
alt 5pm. ---
IMW 9712 •••••••••••••••••••••••
CREVIER
&IST61~Y
aANTA AMA
. 8?15·3171
~Ul.'IWA'tlOIWlNG ... ~
•USmlMWs•
'7UOOU 1pd ('11314)
'73 Bavatta 4 1pd 494.JJ'S
'7130CJI •pd aeeKBV "7UIOl Auto. (283MCV).
"75 2002 A. Ser .2234 ;e l30lA Alloys 452PQN
'78 2002 4spd S I R 220PQD
'77 ~SIR 177RSIC
C&oMd °" S.dap
Forced tb "11 on or Ult
ftncll m• a. .. n•• on tho coaat. Prln. onl1.
2U/aeo.GG, n •.ac>·*9
1978 BMW's
HERE NOW!
COMPLETE
BOOY SHOP
HOWC>ftEH
EXCELLENT
SB.ECTION OF
IMW RES.ALES
We may have )Our nl•;i..t
car in our tn\'entor,>
t-.itt u_o; today'
831-2040 495.49441
'77 IMW 320i
Automatic Sunroor•
fo'actory air. AM FM
stereo tape. alloy
wheels "Flawless Ex·
ample"' (177RSK>
I I I
CREVIER
4 speed, air rond. &
stereo cassette.
(763MCCl
1974 3.0Sa
Automatic, air cond &
sunroor. <388KLF')
1974 l .OCSa
Automatic. !lunroof &
leather inter ior .
(488LNT/.
1975 2002
• speed, stereo. atr cond.
• only 21,000 mllu .
(123832). '"'nor 4 •J*!d with sunroof. <FAl:N D>. Two <4 tPMdl
6 S automaUct to choote
fro1D. ('62RKT).
131·2040 49Mt4t
~ECOUNTY'S
OLOUT
$
Sal -Servlce·1Auln1 aoY C.ner,lllC.
RdJa Royce IU•W
lMOJamborH
N!!e!rt Beach &40-M44
(1181111 v .. 1ow SGE.000~~1 1"901 S••-SGE.00t 11Jn IW11J R9d SGE4004-I
11ooor Red SGl'°°6ll.ll IN» V.llOW &GE400:)171,.
53977
9712 Oa+swt 9720 Hander 9727 ......•......•.....•.••.......................•....••••••.••••..•..•..
·73 Bavana. 36M mi. ~u
t1rl's. mai:s. full pwr.
xlnt rond S6800 'hsl
(213) 445 3454, (213)
447 1398
9715 •••••••••••••••••••••••
74 2800. Snrl AM/FM
st.ereo. sep. tape decks.
"'lew radauls, pot & ball
Snug fit cover. $2650
673-5277
'7'J Capn 2000 auto. Xlnt
l'Ond Snri. $1900 or bbl
ofr 675 9747
Datsun 9720 ······•·••·········•··· *DRIVE A *
*LITTLE .•. *
SAVE A LOT
SHOP&COMPARE
BARWICK DATSUN
"1111 .I u .t11 ( .t,•t,l 1 ,111"
831-1375 493-3375
EXCB.LENT
saECTION
IM STOCI< FOR
IMMEDIATE
DBJVHY
SALES-SERVICE
PARTS-LEASING
COSTA MESA
DATSUN
197ZDATSUM
1200·.
(3) To Choose From
Autom1tlc. radio &
heuter, & much more~
(262HAA ). Starting at
ONLY Sl295
lt77 DATSUM
l"or Salt• I !17-1 Datsun R
210 Best nff<•r
(\ti l '17'1 :!{W1
74 ilO Xlnl Mnll Nu
radials $2300
Mti AA.11i aft•'r i; 30
'7.f 2007.. AM FM, ma~s .
05.000 rni :;, 54-150 or b<>st
offer 642·411111. 496 61)(2
or days 213/482-4:1!1() ask
for Debbi
'il OaLi;un FstbC'k. 12CICJ_
Brand Hew 171
HONDA Cars
M.AHY
To Choow FnMn!
UNIVERSITY
OldlmobU~
Honda Ccrs • GMC
TMICb
2K50 Harbor Blvd.
Ol!lta Mesa 54~9640
Rad'>. \ \1 FM X Int ·75 Honda <.:1vic, 26,000
.. hapc $l250, ofr. ~6 1630 m1. \lnl cond. Must sell~
HA Rl': '70 Datsun l600 $2ll0ll IM ufr ~5069 -
Ruad-.tt•r. mu~t sell ·n C1vu.•, 5 !ipd, radials,
$1375 979 1489 !';!erro 8 trk t;1pe. x lnt
Rat !'ond. a!>k1ng $4000. 9725 492 4:rn
·•·•····•·••··•••··•··· '75 fo1,1l Xl!J, 1\/C,
AM FM , maJ?S, xlnl JOIJUGI" 9710
cond S3500. 559·1970 •••••••••••••••••••••••
before !Jam or art 6pm. '66 XKE. :?+2, 6 cyl, bl.
'74 X19, xlnt c;d, ~ rru's, $S500. Eves
lo mileage. ---·-----
546-2985, t~\·es/wkends. XK 140, MC Roadster.
-----~-=--------Mint. Expensive. l':a .. l;fll/:'2 714-644-4147 aft 6PM
.... lal.. 1972 XJ6
EASTER
SALE
OM ALL
I 3 1 's, I 28's
XI /9's. I 28's
IM STOCK
THIS
WEEK
ONLY
~ Set.cHoa
of
USED
FIATS
DRASTrCALL Y
REOUCED
111w.w.,..•w. s-..-.
S57·2132
$5000 Must sell.
642-3361 r---------Kannom GMo. 9735 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'73 Karmann Ghia, 34K
m1. 1mmer .. radial'I,
uuto $3550/ofler .
19.111312 d~ ..
68 VW Ghia, ronvertible.
Nu top. XJnt cond. $2400.
675-6023 ------1973 Ghia, 38,000 ml.~
brn, Jmmac. '3200.
644·32!11, 642-5.176
i1 Ruby red Ghie, p_i:.
reblt ~ w,300 ml • ~
1l. $2500 or best ofr.
67S.2Jll08
Maida 973& • ••••••••••••••••••••••
iR
Coste M... 645-1700
MetcedH._. 9740 . ..................... .
1976Ml%210
SEDAN. Wllh 11llU'OCll. mno. pwr. Wllidowa &
low mDes. Jmam C'QJ.alel ~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I ('13>RLF ).
IZIO COUH m• Flat,• dr, tza. take Automatic, AM /FM & over pmls. lt71 Ml% 210C
With crul1e control ,
stereo, pwr wtndow &
pwr. door loc:ka-A ftnq
11utomnb1ltl (ltalMIT),
9,000 mlln r <Llc. 847.QS
#80lSDR> 9727 SA.DDLDACK Honda V AIJ.IY IMPOltTS ••• ••• • •• • • • •• •• • •• •• ••
131·2040 495-494' 1J7C Honda Ctv1c htchbck
---------• 2·dr. Auto, 1tlnt gas "T7 Dataun IW.O. Htchbk, rnlleeae ~2625 aft 6
4 IP.. A/C, CB. AM ralllo, A--' ..,., II\ r "'-blk
bl _,,,,,. '"~" -l."\.vnJ I I' II 't' "" • ue. _...., ....,....,17, s ,pd, 3,oot> ml. $5,'00
'71 H OZ 1+2, COP· SCa.961\ -
ptr/bel1• Int .• •ll IX Must sell 'H cvcc tr u , Lo ml. H OO htchblr, 40MPO. excel.
•1112 cand. 883-4816
I t7J MIZ 2200
Automatic • alr oond. Fol' tbe lu xur7 o f a
Mercedea fl t.be ettlct
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
I
I
f
J I
I
~
'76 MBJOOD. 1>un roof.
AM/FM. Icon .i;:old pnt i~ XJ121. Xlnt cond1tmn
<iux tank, xlnl l'Olld Bt·st olr over $7!>00
$14,000. 645·9530 673-2464 ('VI'S -------
PClllfera 9 7 4 7
·····••···••·•········· ·;4 I, Orange, I ""' n1•r
'75 Hut:
:!t.OOOm1
5-111 t>4.~. 646-3041;
!1200 mi. super t l\:.!I\ fl) ·;3 VW Squorcback, xlnl in1t machine. eqwpped "" many xtra goodti·~ cond Newly rt•bu1 ll
Cull days (714 l m;, 7065 en.: . 'tt·cl belted radial
t:v1• (714) 63'1-8014 t I r t' '497.~ • 5 0 0 .
Peugeot 9748 ---.
•••• •• •••••• •• •• ••••••• '72 \ W Huit ) ell ow, very
'7S 5()4 sedan, lo mi. ~un good cond.; new t1r01S.
rr Excell. cond1l10n $l6<10 fi.1~·1168 eve!>,
$4150. 499·3233. !).l()~dy_i,_. __ _
Por"SCM 9750 68 Bus:. AM /FM 8 track,
••••••••••••••••••••••• nt?w patnt. t•res, int.
1 .._ G Good cond. $1200/ofr. ~R E I °"5 311;1
SaECTIOH OF ;11 \ w llu•;, good C'ond1
BRAHD HEW 1978 t11in. n·t.lt eni:. n1·w PORSCHE 924s t1n·s. s:!J.'>O He:.t oHl!r.
b75·2tr.!3 aft l)P~I S<••• us for your 111'-.l huy
todav Hurry!
llLL YATES
YW..PORSCHE
GI \ '\\ 1111~ Con•! <'111111
"u int l111•-. S\noo
t.111 l-'O!!
~Jn Juan Cap1-.1rano '76 YW Coovert. Like nu
837-4800 493-451 I 19M mi. air, ster eo.
· - -xtr~. Must sell. 494-3271 ·70 Porsche 911T. fat'lory
m.Jl(S. nice. $6000 lkst -
ofh·r 639-3787 ' 7 7 li U Ci C on v c r l .
'7ti Porsche 912E. 1mmac,
lo mi's, red w tilk mkr.
I ()Wnr, many xtrn ...
Wft•k: 634-7064, Ev1•s &
wknd,,, 771>·2Zl9
Yellow/black. A/C,
AMIFM stereo. cassette,
rhrome wbls. Many
more extras. Paid $6800,
makt' ofr. 675 8099.
67J.6M7
'M Porsche SC. wh1lr nn ·66 VW Sqb w t rblt '67
.hlk. not cheap. Must en g Nu pn t. t t t'
..,,.,.•' 639-3787 $HOO ~torr. &l:!-9J.i!l art
:l 1975 PoncM 914
, "Peed, AM 'FM . 11
trJrk. Btaupunkl -.tt•n•o
.\. 'pec1al wh1·tls
1L11 #661NXHI
lMMACUU. TE!!!
llLL YATES
VW..PORSCHE
'14 VW SUPER BUG
Lo m1 's • S2300
• f.45-~ •
• '66 VW BUG, XI.NT
COND. llrand new hrk~
& clulrh. $1100/offcr
64.'>-3024
San Juan Cap1-:trano '73 VW Super Bealle, xlnt
837-4800 483-45 I I cond. $2350. 832 7189 or
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Group SSI ·Mil? mtr, mag~. good ('Ond
-$1200 firm ·19'1·2130
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10.1100 m1. Mini SlK 100 hon Sl.'ill
~· 2274 H!lff.:m s
l\;1n'!I Fore1 ~n l'ar 'H \W Comert., mint
H1•pa1rs now h.1\ :\Ir 1·1md. AM FM tape, nl'w
Hill Keith to work nn hrakt•s. !'hocko;, top
\our 91 l & 91 I t!.WS $3.150 &16 1\.1~ aft 5 PM
ilJrbor RI. CM r,.i~ I'll\:! -19fi.'i VW Bug--
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ml Alloys, beaut rond 642 297R
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Must seU. '1'3 Le Mana
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MmtCMC) 9952 _545-8(2} ___ aft-:.Sp_m_. __ -t
••••• • •••••••• • ••••• •• • 1977 POMTIAC
'67 x.lnt cond. new tires.
tape derk, AM t FM
radio ~9640. 644·9874
'76 Mustang 11 Ghia,
$3100 4 Cyl, 4 spd. Vin
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'6S Mustang, great cood,
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63 Pontiac Le Mans,
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979-8670 '74 Ford Tonno wgn, pwr, '6.S Mustang, auto, 6 cyl, •---------
Che•rold 9920 Continental 9930 air, cru1st•. xtra cln. bargain $59S V• 9974
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1
tVOL. 71, NO. 82, 4 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 1978 TEN CENTS
i 'Witness' Aid for llB Suspects Rapped
By JOANNE REVNOLDS
Cit• Dellr ,.. ... Sl•tt
Congressman Mark Han-
naford. D-Long Beach, charged
the U.S. Justice Department to-
day with "inept management"
of the program in whicb wit-
nesses are glven new homes and
identities tn exchange for
testimony against organized
crime.
Tb e congressman. who
represents West Orange County,
has been a frequent critic of the
federal witness protection pro-
gram since last ran. when three
benefieiaraes or the program
who Hved in Huntington Beach
were charged with the murder
or Stephen John Bovan Of Foun-
tain Valley.
Jlannaford's criticism of the
Justice Department and the U.S.
Marshal's Service, which runs
Six Die • m
I
I
Contra~t U n s i g n e d
I
~ Edi,son Strike
Looms
By ROBERT BARKER
Of lM 0.tly "''-' Stllft Workers at Southern
California Edison Company
electrical generating plants
have voted to go on stnke an
Huntington Beach and San
Onofre and other sites if the new
contract is not signed by May
About 1.000 members of the
1 Utility Workers of America
authorized lhe strike by a 761 to
28 margin, a uruon offlc1al said
today.
The Edison company,
meanwhile . has voted to
terminate the contract with the
union by May 4 1r a
breakthrough is not made.
The talks are scheduled lo re-
sume Friday.
Teen-age r ' s
n r Body Found
\ I
1 .lnHB Surf
The body of a 17-year-old Mex-
' jean youth washed ashore m
J{untington Beach Wednesday
afternoon, four days after he ap-
parently drowned in waist-deep
water.
The youth was identified as
Maximo Guerrero who reported·
Jy was visiting friends 1n
Westminster at the time of the
fatal beach outing.
Huntington Beach Lifeguard
Captain Doug D'Amall said the
i.wimmer was believed to have
/alien into a deep hole Fnday
while wading in shaUow water.
"Friends saw him strugghng
for a short lime," D'Arnall said
today, "We sent in divers but
they were unable to find a trace
or him."
D'ArnaJl said that the ocean
fioor has been disturbed to a
great extent this year by surf
conditions, currents •·and a
whole muJUtude of things."
"We've made 30 rescues in
February which is a lot for th.is
lJme of the year," he said.
D'ArnalJ said that the ocean is
not a place (or non-swimmers
because of the dangers of unex-
pected holes in shallow water.
He said that the drowning vic-
tim apparently was not a good
ewimmer.1be drowning was the
first of lhe year al the city
beach, D'Amall said.
• HB in
Rill Compton, Edison
manager for the Huntington
Beach and Seal Beach area, said
that the company may operate
the generating plants with
supervisory personnel or by
temporary replacements 1f the
talks are not successful.
The chief hangup, according
to company and union officials.
1s an impas~ on a proposed
s<•ven-dav rotating work week
for maintenance workers.
Edison 1s pushing for an
agreement that would require
some maintenance employees to
work weekends without receiv-
ing overtime pay.
Compton said that tbo n>tating
week has become tlecusaty
because o( overhaul commit·
menta and increased power de·
maods.
"This Is something we've been
attempting to negotiate since the
1950s," he said.
Union spokesman Ernie Hean
indicated that the utility com-
pany has taken a hard line on
the seven day week and won't
bargain about iL "It's pretty
serious," he said.
There are about 125 Utility
Workers Union member's
employed at the San Onofre
nuclear plant and 66 more at the
Hunhngt.on Beach steam plant.
Mrs. Gr een en
Dead a t 33
In Huntingto n
Funeral services are set f'ri.
day night for former Huntington
Beach Police Department
secretary Mary Elizabeth
Greenen, 33, who died Wednes-
day.
Services will begm at 8 30
p.m . at the Pierce Brothers.
Smith's Mortuary in Huntington
Beach.
A city employee from January
of 1975 to April, 1976, Mrs.
Greenen, a Huntington Beach
resident, is survived by her two
sons, Joseph Scott, 11, and
Christopher Patrick, 9; her
parents, Vern and LucilJe Em·
mons, also of Huntin&ton Beach;
a brother, Vem Emmons, Jr ,
and a sister Patricia
Goetielmann, both of Illinois.
Family members have sug-
gested memorial contributions
to l.be Orange County Chapter of
the American Cancer Sociely.
the program, came during
testimony before a Senate
judiciary subcommittee which as
probing the program.
Wednesday. the J ust1ce
Department released its own
draft report on the program
which recommended some ma-
JOr administrative overhauls tg,
reduce the size and cost of prcP
tecting wilnes:ses.
The report's first recommen-
dation, was that the protection
program be continued because
of its benefits in prosecuting or·
gan1zed crime, narcotics traf·
ricking and white coUar crimes.
The report noted, however, the
program has grown to include
protection oC nearly S,600 people,
including 2,200 actual witnesses
since its inception in 1971.
The costs have risen
dramatically. according lo the
Justice Department report. ln
1975, the program cost $2,762,415
1n direct expenditures for
supeods and housing for the wit·
nesses. In 1917, those direct ex-
penditures tallied $5,950,000.
Ac cording to the Justice
Department, the average annual
amount spent on each witness is
$15,900.
Justice department officials
had little to say about Han·
natord's primary concem which
is lbe cooce:ntralion ot witnesses
in a few ceograpbieal areas -
such as Southern California -
and the lack of supervision of
the witnesses while they are re-
ceiving federal stipends.
Late last year, because or
Hannaford's criticism, Justice
Depart.menl olfidaJs announced
they would not allow relocated
(See BOVAN, Pa1e A2>
Riverside Crash
.,. .........
RESCUE WORKERS, CORONU'S OFFICtALS RJ:MOVE BODIES IN RIVERSIDE CRASH
Plane From Orange County Airport Took Stx Live• In Hiiiside Tragedy
Survival Chart Debated
Aborted Baby Give n Little Chance to Live
By TOM BARI.EV
Ot 1• DMl't ll'ilet Suft
Hospital records introduced
hy the defense Wednesday in the
trial of Dr William Baxter Wad-
dill indicate lhe infant that the
prosecution alleges he murdered
had little or no chance of sur-
v1 v a I.
Rut the Westminster Com-
munity Hospital charts that took
up most or the day's testimony
in Orange County Superior Court
may never get before the jury as
evidence.
Defense attorneys questioned members of the hospital staff.
throughout the day, but were un-
able to determine which nurse
or doctor completed what they
ref(ard as vital sections of the
reports on the baby.
The portlons o( the patient
chart highlighted by the defense
reflect an evaluation system
known to the hospital and
medical community u Apgar.
Apgar is used by hospital
person nel to determine a
newborn infant's chances of ure
In the case of lhe aborted
baby. allegedly strangled by
Waddill on March 2, 1977, the
chances were listed as l·l -an
evaluation which meant that the
newborn infant had no hope of
survivaL
It is alleged that the child sur-
vived a saline solution injected
into the mother by Waddill after
she agreed to allow htm to
perform an abortion.
It is further alleged by the
prosecution that Waddilf
panicked when he realized that he
had a Jjve birth on his hands 12
hours tater and strangled the
baby in its crib.
The baby's mother has sued
him for $l7 million m damages.
She claims that Waddill mis
-represented the state o( her
~----------pregnancy when he examined her
'Parasite'
In R oyalty?
LONDON CAP) -An
anti-monarchist member
of Parbament caused an
uproar m the Uouse of
Commons today when he
called Princess Margaret
a "parasite "
Dennas Canavan, a
member of the Labor Par·
ty. put his criticism in a
question to Chancellor of
the Exchequer Denis
Healey.
"Will the chancelJor
stop all unnecessary
spending for the un-
derprivileged, including the 1,000 pounds ($1,900) a
week we give to a parasite
like Princess Margaret? ..
and determined that she was 22
weeks pregnant.
A physician who appeared as.
a pros~ul1on witness testified
that the baby was 31 weeks from
conception when it was de-
hvered. a (inding which, if true,
means that Waddill performed
an illegal abortion.
Waddill, 42, of Huntington
Harbour. ended three days on
the witness stand Wednesday by
again declaring that the baby he
tried to abort was dead on de-
livery.
"There was no way in the
world that anythinf! could be
done for that baby." he testified.
And the accused physician
told the jury that members or
the hospital staff who were try-
ing lo resuscitate the baby wh~n
he stopped them and sent them
from the nursery "read signs of
the baby's death as meaning
signs of life."
En Route
FromOC
Airport
The pilot of a plane that
crashed in Riverside County
Wednesday night while en route
from Orange County Airport to
Arizona has been tentatively
identified as a Lake Havasu
man who was ferrying prospec-
tive land buyers to view prop-
erty.
Six persons, including two
children, died in the crash.
A spokesman for Havasu
Aviation said the firm is missing
a plane piloted by John Stark
Hall. about 62, a retired Navy
test pilot.
A spokesman for the National
Transportation Safety Board
listed the plane's identification
number as N 7354 U, which
matched the number of the miss-
ing HavasuAviationCessna207.
207.
A Rlverside County Coroner's
spotesman saJd lhtee men, a
woman and two chiJdren were
tilled in the crash.
A Riverside County Coroner's
spokesman said investigators
were at the scene of the crash.
three miles north of the
Riverside Raceway, this morn·
ing. The cause of the crash is un-
known.
The Cessna 2{)7 reportedly
took off from Orange County
Airport Wednesday night. At
about 8:45 p.m., several
Riverside residents reported
bearing a straining airplane
engine and then a cras h,
Riverside Sheriff's deputies
said.
The crash site was located
. about 11 p.m. by two men who
hiked to the 2,000.foot Jevel of
the Box Springs Mountains, just
east of UC Riverside.
It is believed that Hill had
been making round trips
between Orange County and
Lake Havasu City with potential
property buyers. The name of
the company that rented the
planes from Havasu Aviation
was not immediately known.
Cl888e8 Boycotted
BERKELEY (AP) -Striking
students at the University o(
California have demanded that
the Jaw school hire more women
and minorities for the faculty. In
a demonstration staged Tues·
day, several hundred students
boycotted classes.
C o ast
PILOT J'IEWS
1'1lE BIC TOP
The days ol the Big Top have
been revived in San Clemente as
tile circus comet to towu. See
Featurinl, Pace Cl.
UCIMay End Alien Fear Stonn LimitA
Spill Damage
We a t h er
Partly cloudy tonight
becoming mostly sunny
and warmer Friday. Lows
tonight an mad.SOS. Highs
Friday in upper 60s. BREST, France <AP> -
Stormy seas are breaking down
oil from the American
supertanker Amoco Cadiz so
rapidly Shat I.be record 1piU may
cause Jes.• damage than original·
ly feared. some e~oloaiats
belleve.
Much of the 44 mWton eallons
alroad)' spewed from th• ablp'1
1.S tanb hu disappeared at aea
under natural wne act.loo aod
chemical 1prayin1 by 30 ll"rench
tnd ll-ve BriUsh boats, the)' M1d
The retult may be that
dama1e ii limited to abeW\sh
ud P<*Jbly weed bedl aJoaa
70 au let ot Brittany coat. here
~ .oldiut and aallors are belp-
tn1 2.000 cl~WQD.S clean op lb 1Ucty meas.
...
I NSIDE T ODA 'Y
~ eountw goe bock '" fNnol ij)Cftduig in liat:al Jm
abotlt tu6ce daat it paid in
I~ tQ:llft, occordblg '° G
M1D rqart. Set Popi A8.
17
:Li A2 DAIL y PILOT HF
Dell• ,.. ... SUff ~
HEADS NEW DEPARTMENT
Probation Chief Grier
Grier Now
'Interim'
HSA Chief
Though frequently at odds
with one another during the past
rour years, Orange County
supervisors have appointed
Chie f Probation OfCicer
Margaret Grier interim chief of
the county's becalmed Human
Services Agency ( HSA >
Miss Gner pretty much wrote
her own tJcket as she accepted
the mtenm appointment, includ-
1 • a salary boost from $39,399 a
~, .ir to $.52,000 annually
/\nd the door was left open for
tht• 56-ycar-old county govern-
mt•nl cxccut1vt-to return to the
probation post she has held since
1967 s hould the llSA assignment
not be to her liking.
That 1s because her hand·
p1C~ked replacement also will
serve as an interim appointee.
Miss Grier's new job wall call
on her to accelerate what is now
the snail-like pace or blending
nine separate county depart-
ments with a collective annual
budget or $152 millton into a
single so-called super agency.
David Odell was hired to do
that JOb 18 months ago But
Odell recently announces hi s
re~1gnat1on crfccti ve March 31
after coming under heavy
cntic1sm from some of the county
supervisors
Odell s Jousts with the board.
however, failed to equal those or
Miss Grier in recent years
Last July, for exJmple, the
c hief probation officer obJected
when she was denied a pay raise
\\-h1le other department heads
w£•re receiving boosts in pay.
In the early planning of HSA.
Miss Gner fought with the board
lo kC'ep her department out of
the blend in the super agency
mix.
She won the argument by con·
tendmg that probation is more
rlosC'ly allted with the Judiciary
and law enforcement than w1th ,
for example, welfare and mental
health activities.
In 1974, Miss Grier warred
with the board when at refused to
build a second Juvenile hall.
Thal argument led to a two-
year encounter over the treat-
m ent Of minor JUVentle Orfenders
that didn't end until new stale
laws took prerogatives away
from local officials.
During those frequent encoun-
ters. the board once asked for
and received a legal opinion on
its right to fire the probation of·
ficer, a nght clouded by the fact
she was appointed lo the post by
Superior Court judges.
All those past disagreements
were forgotten Wednesday when
, Miss Grier was handed the top
HSA post.
~·~e need a tough-minded ad-
muustrator, and if there is one
thing Margaret has proved is
that she is a tough-minded 'ad-
ministrator," Supervisor Ralph
Diedrich said.
Supervisor Ralph Clark
echoed Diedrich's supPort when ~e said, "I don't think we could
find a better interim apPolnt·
m .e !1 t. She 's a good ad.
ministrator and a real driver ...
(mANGI! COAST Miii'
DAILY PILOT
Thuf!d!y, Match 23, '911
Begin
Urges
Peace
WASHINGTON (AP) -
Israeli Prime Mini ster
Menachem Began, acknowledg-
ing that his talks with President
Carter have been "dlfflcult,"
nonetheless said today that
peace talks between Israel and
Egypt should continue
Begin said "the world needs
some patience" as the two sides
try to reach agreement
"We've only starte d to
negotiate I don't think any
pt"ace treaty was concluded in
days," he said.
But Begin, in an interview
with NBC News, indicated Israel
was standing firm in its refusal
to make the concessions asked
by Carter on the issues of Cl>
Israeli withdrawal from the
West Bank. C2> establishment of
CHILDREN DISRUPT
PEACEKEEPING FORCE-A4
a Palestinian homeland, and (3:
a halt to lsraeh settlements in
occupied territory.
Referring to Arab demands
that Is rael withdraw from the
West Bank and allow establtsh·
menl of a Palestinian state,
Begin said "th~e two demands
are completely unacceptable to
the Israelis."
Begin said that although ob-
stacles have diminished the op·
timism felt in the wake of Egyp-
tian President Anwar Sadat's
meeting with him in Jerusalem
in December "I wouldn't say 1
am less optimistic."
American officials, however,
in analyzing the talks between
Carter and Begin, cast the situa·
lion in a much gloomier light.
Some members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
after meeting today with Presi-
dent Carter. said Israeli Inflex-
ibility has dimmed Middle East
peace prospects.
Sen. Jacob K. Javits. R·N Y.,
said: "I think that prospects are
momentarily discouraging" and
desc r ibed Carter's mood as
deeply frustrated after two days
of meetings with Begin
Sen. George McGovern, D·
S. D., said that "unless there is
some more flexibility on the part
of Israel ... I don't see any
hope for a settlement."
Sen. Charles H. Percy, Rill ..
said Israel "has appeared to
take a step backwards m the
peace process."
Eva Granger
Services Set
In Huntington
Funeral services will be held
Friday for 47-ycar Orange Coun-
ty resident and music teacher
Eva Granger, of Huntington
Beach. who died Monday She was 76.
Services are set for 1: 30.p m.
at the Granger home, 519 13th
St.. where Mrs Granger has re-
sided with her husband for the
past 20 years.
A former professior.al musi·
cian. Mrs. Granger taught
piano, violin, viola. cello. gwtar.
accordion. songwriting and
keyboard harmony lessons dur·
ing her years in Oran«e County.
She has performed in the
Orange County Symphony, the
Los Angeles Philharmonic and
Warner Brothers film company
bands during her career.
Mrs. Granger is survived by
her husband, Charles Adams
Granger Sr ; sons Judson Kay
Granger. of Las Vegas, and
Borden Merle Granger of
Portland; daughters Edna L.K.
Hood and Mary Edith Glass,
both of Newport Beach, Cello
Claire Davenport, of Vacaville;
13 grandchildren and one ereat-
grandchHd.
$10 Million
Drug Nabbed
MONTEBELLO (AP) -A
rald on a house io tbia suburb
yielded 24 pounds of pure co-
caine, estimated to have a street
sale •alue of more than $10
million. police said.
An earlier raid in Montebello
Wednesday resulted in the
seizure of nine ounces of cocaine
and Information that lf'd omceri
to the tarcer ucbe, aald Sgt.
Richard Armstrong.
P,....PageAJ
ALIEN •••
A111b1•shed
Woman, 86, Beateri, RoblJed .
An 88-year-oJd *Oman wu beaf.eD and robbed Wednes-
day ahortly after ahe left a ehu.ttb on El Toro Road and
walked to her car in a nearby parklhl lot, Orange County
Sheriff's officers said.
DEPunES SAID Mary Elizabtth Srideman. a reSi·
dent of La1una Hills Leisure Wotld, had her purse
snatched from her arm by a man and woman who leaped
from a parked car and attacked her as she approached her
own vehicle.
They said the victim told them th•t the man struck her
with his fist, knocked her to Ute ground and lben drove off
at high speed with the purse.
MRS. BRIDEMAN was allowed to go home alter treat·
ment at Saddleback Commuruty Hospital. Officers have
not yet detenruned the full extent of her loss.
f'rowaPageAI
BOVAN .••
witnesses lo move into Southern
California for a year.
The Justice Department re-
port notes that "mald.Jstribulion
of witnesses has been checked
by certain administrative
measures that steer witnesses to
a variety of locations and linut
the number of witnesses moved
anto a certain geographical
area"
Bandit Hits
W_estminster
Store Again
A bulbous-nosed bandit held
up a Westminster liquor store
for the second consecutive mght
Wednesday and again ned Wllh
$100 in cash, police reported.
Witnesses told Police the same
gunman. identified by his large
nose, took $100 from the C & M
Liquor Store. 15553 Beach Blvd , llannaford, alluding to the
murder or Bovan in which wat·
ness protection benef1c1artes
Steven Resco, Anthony Marone
Jr. and Jerry Fiori are charged,
speculated that "some witnesses
are using their protected status to
renew past a lllancea with
criminals."
. Tuesday at 10 :35 p m after dis·
playing a black revolver in has
waistband to the clerk and de-
manding Ute cash.
He also charged the depart-
ment with ''sheer folly" in aJ.
lowing relocated witnesses to
concentrate In areas and In not
closely s upervising their
security.
"Relocated witnesses should
not be given the option or bump-
ing into each other -or possibly
bumping each other orr -at the
loca I supermarket," he told the
committee.
HBTax Fight
To Return in
Rehear Plea
An attorney representing resi-
dents who paid about Sl million
to the city of Huntington Beach
in property transfer taxes is ask-
ing for a court rehearing.
Christian Van Deusen said
Wednesday he is seeking a re-
view before the 4th District
Court o r Appeals IO San
Bernardino because of
•·numerous errors" in court pro-
{'eedmgs
The appellatC' court recently
ruled that the city's imposition
of taxes at the tame that proper-
ty changed hands was legal and
that the caty didn't have lo re·
fund the money
Van Deusen argued that the
tax was illegal an that it was
another form of property taxes
and was in violation or the <'ilY
charter
The court ruled. however, that
the city could charge a fee of
half or one percent or the sales
price of real estate.
The property lax was imposed
in 1974 ~l was defeated over-
whelmingly in a citywide elec·
t1on the following April
Van Deusen saad that plans lo
take his case before the state
Supreme Court I( the appellate
court rejects the petition for re·
view.
Canal Debate
After Easter
WASHINGTON (AP)
Panama Canal treaty opponents
will have more lime than they
had expected to work against
the pact as the Senate has set an
April 26 deadline for debate on
the treaty.
Ending a standoff that also as-
sured anxious senators of a full
lO·day Easter recess, Senate
leaders and treaty opponents
agreed to put the second of Ute
two pacts to a final vote on or
before Uutt date.
A threat by Senate Majority
Leader Robert C. Byrd, D-W.
Va., to halve the recess, which
begins Friday, was a key tn·
ducement for the timetable -
particularly for senators who
already had plans to spend the
holiday mending Political fences
and campaiiJling.
Pimp, Hooker
Bal,l Can£eled
SAN DIEGO <AP) -The
Pimp11 and Hookers b all
scheduled for Friday Is off, and.
all t.be police officers pla.nnlna to
attend Will hAYe to aet a refund
on their Ucketl.
f'rat.ern&t Order of Police San
Dle10 Lodo f No. t plaaned the
dance at ~h law tnforcement.
penon.nel h'ocn around the t'OUD-
ty were lnvlted to come ~ •
aa plmpe and book •
"Wt It wa tunny.,.
Joe Seel to, a SaQ Dleao
policeman and 10010 pialdellt.
uJdW •
The bandit, believed to be in
his early 20's, returned to the
store Wednesday al 1 p.m .,
flashed the handgun. grabbed
the loot and fled in a brown com-
pact sedan north on the San
Diego Freeway, Pol tee said.
Police said no getaway vehicle
was seen or heard after the
Tuesday night robbery.
Cases to Court
SAN FRANCISCO <AP>
State Schools Superintendent
Wilson Riles, fighting to get on
the June 6 ballot, and Secretary
of State March Fong Eu, fight-
ing to keep him off, will argue
their cases before the state
Supreme Court in written briefs.
.SOny Tru11trm Color TV
with remote control. 21 "
19"· 17" & IS" diagonal
And <AU Ul Mock
KV ·8000 Sony Trlnitron
Sony's newest AC·DC
1'ake anywhere portable. a
inch diagonal.
TV·ll6 Sooy Blaclt &
While . 11" screen
mtuured cliaconally.
35 Counts of Fraud
Jury Indicts
Congressman
WASHINGTON (AP) -Rep.
C harles C. Diggs Jr., a
Democratic congressman from
Ptta ch lgan for more than 23
years, was indicted today on
charge-a or padding hia office
payroll, taking kickbacks and
having the government pay
employees oC his Detroit funeral
home.
The 3.S-count ind1ctment by a
federal grand jury eharees that
be defrauded the United Stat.es
of more than $101,000. Each
COtlnt carries a maximum penal·
ty or five years in prison. If con-
victed. Diggs could also be fined
up to $224,000.
Diggs, in Mozambique when
the Indictment was returned,
said through his office here: "I
am innocent or the charges be·
ing leveled against me."
An indictment is a formal
charge made against a person
by the grand jury. It does not
establish gullt or innocence.
Diggs had been scheduled to
meet President Carter in Afnca
next week
Diggs defrauded the govern-
ment. Ute charge said, "an the
form of salary kickbacks from
certain House of Represen-
tatives employees and payments
to others on the House of
Representatives payroll who
performed no work for the
House of Representatives "
The indictment listed three
employees in Diggs' con-
gressional offices whose salaries
were allegedly inflated. Three
others, the indictment said,
worked for the House of Diggs
Inc. 1n Detroit while drawing
money from the federal govern-
ment on Diggs' vouchers.
Fourteen of the 35 counts were
charges of mail fraud -the
mailing o f checks to the
Michigan addresses of some of
the Diggs employees involved.
Diggs is chairman of the
House Comnuttee on the District
of Columbia.
The indictment said the al-
Sony
Headquarters for
the Harbor Area
T.V.·Radfo-Steno
Tope Reocorder
letcunax
HP2SO/SS2SO Thi s
compact entertainment
cPnler dehvers true hl·fl
sound. lnt'ludes AM lf'M
stereo receiver. J-speed
~ulomalic turntable, and
tw o 2-way apea k er
systems.
SNCW.
275 East 17th St.
Costa Mesa ....................
I 0-' Wftt _. c.'h Jr.
Phone 642-8882
Store Hours Oa11y 9-6 Sat .9·5 3Q
s-e.,. ................... ,.
,,,,, ........
FACES INDICTMENT
Rep. Charles Diggs
leged scheme to defraud the
United States began around July
1, 1973 anrl continued until
March 2, 1977.
One count said Diggs put Jean
G. Stultz, an employee of the
House District Committee earn-
ing $14,667 a year, on the payroll
of his office at an additional
salary of $19,000 a year.
The indictment said Diggs
then "dJrected that this addi·
taonal salary ... be kicked back
and applied for the use or defen-
dant Diggs."
Ms. Stultz. Felix Matlock and
Ofleld Dukes, identified in the
indictment as Diggs' House
employees, were listed in seven
other counts as receiving addi·
tional amounts of aboul $3,000 a
month for specified periods
which the indictment said Utey
then kicked back to Diggs.
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VISA • Malfft' c-..
hdcjetTtnn.
17
,
I
I
NATIONAL
s:
f • =To Marry·
Country and Western singing star Merle
Haggard and country singer Leona
Williams arrive at London's Heathrow
Airport. Merle, in London to appear at the
annual Country and Western festival over
E~s~et·, said he is plannmg to wed Miss
Williams, but hasn 't se_t a date yet.
Genealogical
,Meeting Set
SALT LAKE CITY {AP> -Mormon church
,President Spencer W. Kimball has announced
J>lans for a 1980 World Conference on Records,
•aimed in part of making Utah a repository of
known genealogical information on everyone who
~ver hved
Elder Theodore M Burton of the Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mormon> First
Quorum of lhe Seventy and president of the
Genealogical Society of Utah, said the conference
would attract 10,000 participants from throughout
the world.
• . BURTON SAID, IN AN INTERVI EW after the
llnnouncement, the church expects to have by
the time of the conference computer storage
capacity for every genealogical record in the
)Vorld.
• The Utah society, supported primarily by the
t'hurch, is described by church officials as "the
jargest and most active genealogical organization
;n the wrld."
• The first world conference in 1969, also in Sall ~ake City, "resulted an a dramatic increase in the
n umber of genealogical records preserved
worldwide on macrofllm," President Kimball told e news conference. .
• "WE HOPE TO MAKE ALL PEOPLE aware
bf the need to preserve basic information and vital
l'ecords," the church leader said.
Asked 1f one purpose of the conference was to
)Tlake records available for speciaJ Mormon tem-
J>le ordinances, Burton said, at was. No other men-
~1on was made of the church's massive work of
l>roxy baptisms and other ordinances for the
;world's dead -primary reason for its interest in
:genealogy.
·~ Mormons belie ve families cvntinue after
-Oeath. and that special ordinances are necessary to ~ind them together.
; "THAT'S ONE OF THE PURPOSES," Burton ~aid, adding, "but there are many reasons •.._,
:genealogy.
• H e said scientist s have used church
:genealogical records to fight hereditary diseases.
: Theme o! the conference, lo be held Aug. 12·15,
:1980. is to be "Preserving Our Heritage." About
:5.000 people were invited to the 1969 conference;
·1 ,800 attended.
ALEX RALEY. AUTHOR OF "Roots," wu
:named as a conference participanL Some 200
:Seminars are planned on such topics as family and
'local histories, genealogical research, demo-
.graphu.' studies, and royalty and heraldry.
: Holdmg up an inch-square piece of film he said
~contamed the Holy Bable, Burton said minJaturiza.
:taon of records would make il unnecessary for the
-<:hurcb to add to its mountam vaults southeast of
;salt Lake City, where hastonc records are kept.
San Juan
Prograim
Slated
The San Juan
Capistrano Recreation
Department has an-
nounced plans for a
number of spring pro-
grams.
Each Sunday at 8 a.m.
beginning April 9, the
San Juan Jogging Club
wm meet at the furthest
west pier al Dena Point.
Each week different dis-
tance runs will be of-
fered from beginning to
marathon di s tance
traanmg. There is no ree
TH E DEPARTMENT
also w11J loan individuals
or groups a bag of equap-
m ent including an as-
sortment of balls. bats
and various oth e r
recreation equipm ent
for 48 hours. A $20 de-
posit is required which
is refunded when the
equipment is returned.
The bag s can be
picked up Mondays
through Fridays
bet ween 8 a. m. and 5
p.m. at the City oCficcs,
32400 Paseo Adelanto.
THE GAME Mobile
will continue lo provide
games, arts and crafts
and sports from 3 to 4:45
p m. at the following
locations.
Mo,,,,.., VIII~ s.tft J ... n. Voll•~RO.O Tu~•d•Y Allo C•l)fttrano.
f11trm1nu\ LA\ RAl'Y\b••'\.
W.OnncYy -Cool< P•rl, C.lle Arroyo (Ort~ li•v l
-Thuod•y -O~I Olll•pll
Pl•yl'411d&
-Friday -SM JU.I\ El-ltry Pl..,fletdl, Slwl"Q St.
AUCTION
ESTATE SALE
Thi• aate lnctud•• property from
the e1tate of the late
Mra. Edward H. Stoteabury
of P•lm B••ch. Florida.
Property Includes fine cut crystal, porcelain figurines, ch~na •ta.
oriental rugs, broNes, olls, furnitunt, clocks, fur coats, etc. Arso,
many items of fine antique and modem jewerrv including large
dia. .,lltaires, cruster d fL rings, dla. necklaces, and .werel hnport·
ant dlL pins. Other mi•cellaneoua hlm5 include gold: chaln~
wa~es. diamond stud earrings, ate. .
Sal Date: This Fri., Sat., & Sun.
at 8:00 p.m • ..
Inspection of pro'Pet':tv
?:00 -8:00 p.m. •I• nlct-t
GamePlans?
r-. ---I•·
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rummy t•lt 11111• IS" 1 I'~" 1'-9'
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t>aekgammon 1wo ways .mc.>1:1nl ooan1.-i1 mat\,ong
dommoos and th< >1Pry lcJIUM rummy 111t·s•
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t.hall•·nrw1ri p..ich1nku Q,1m1' lrr•sh1y
ltJ•onclll•onO<I lrom 1 Pd~h1n~u p..irlor
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CN•1urny '" vinyl Cflv1•rf!<'J ti.irkg;immon sets
9.99, 15.99, 19.99
m.-ih1on9 'iC'I 13. 99
r .. mmy 111~ Qdmv 14. 99
p;icti•nho g 1m1> 23.99
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''MltJ _..,,. ,,, "'d t~t '*"~l\. 1eond
Ci"'Mlnt1 •t • '' C'I~ '1 'tJOvP lnd (JtH(lwf,,rN l;)Mt
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OPIN
ThUl'lday, March 23, 1918 DAILY PILOT A J ~
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Judge's
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Plantin& Mii • rec. u1t
. 79c 49c
89c 59c
1.29 69c
1.79 99c
Potting Soil rec. Slit
49c 29c
79c 49e
1.29 79c
Rain for est Mix • "''°" l'fC I 991 99
From Some Very Famous Makers •••
Spring Toppings for Him & Her!
• lool\1ne s.o.Jrse tor spring, replenish
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• IOI' him short sleeve Maps of soft eottOI\
in a parade of brllhant colors. sizes s. M, L..,
short sleeve knil shtrf$, many one ol·a l\md to( medium ~1tes ONL V peasant shirts w1tn
embroidered or 'palthwor~· tronts to pull over
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llnit shirt 5.99
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I
17
.\I. DAILY PILOI s
Punch
Court RUiing
Gun Shooting
Policy Upset
SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -The California
Court of Appeal says peace officers have no say
about policies adopted by local governments on
when they may fire their guns.
Jn the first ruling of its kind. the court re·
versed an earlier decision by the Santa Clara
County Superior Court that required San Jose of-
fieials to meet and confer with the city's police of-
hcers union before changing its use of force policy.
THAT POUCY LIMITS WHEN an officer may
fire hts gun.
The lower court ruling was appealed by the
city, itsc1ty manager and its policechlef.
"The use of force policy is primarily a matter
of publtc safety and therefore not a subject of
meeting and conferring under the Meyers·Mllias-
Brown Act," the appeal court said in its ruling.
The MMBA, as the law is known, applies to all
local government employees in the state and pro-
. ndes ror meet and confer sessions, among other
• things. .
FIREARMS USE POLICIES were adopted by
·the San Jose pohce department in May 1972 and
, January 1975. The police offlcers' association later
• went to court, claiming the i>olicy should not have
been changed until officials had met and conferred
• w1lh the umon.
• The 1972 policy was Tc1nstated by the court
;ind an in1unction banned changes In the policy
• without a m t•cl and eonrer ses!>1on and the uruon's
pt'rm1ss1on. •
:: POLICE OFFJC'ERS SAY THE 1975 policy
would endanger lhem and the community. lt
would allow them to fire their guns only on a firing
range, lo kill a seriously ir_tjured or dangerous
am ma I or when "deadly force" ts involved.
But the city argued that the conditions under
• which an offieer may ktll a person should not be
"'placed on the bargaimng table. to be traded orr
against mcrE'JSe~ or decreases in wages, hout5 and .. . fringe benefits " ·
New Car Ratings
Sought by FTC
W ASHlNGTON (AP J -The government
should rate the reliability and durability of new
cars1ust as 1l rates them for gasoline mileage, .. says
the headofthe fi'ederal Trade Comm1ss1on.
"If the consumer knows not only the price, bul
also the avera~e repatr cost for a car, he's going lo
have another important factor to take into account
m deciding whether to buy that car," Michael
Pertschuk, chairman of the FTC, told a Senate
panel Wednesday.
"THE ONLY WIDELY KNOWN piece of hard
information·• available to consumers on all new cars
.. is the gasoline mileage ratings provided by the En-
vironmental Protection Agency, be said. Pert.schult
called this program•' generally successful in inform·
• ing the public about a crucial variable ln the
• purchasedee1s1on.
••shouldn't other ·. 1 basic information con-~[ CONSUMER cerning equally impor-~ tant matters-reliability,
:: durability -also be made
·: av all a hie,·· he asked.
:· Such a system to rate the new car models
: wouJd oot only help buyers, but "would provide a
powerful stimulus to manufacturers to design and ;. build better cars," he said . .. .
~ 'THE NATIONAL IDGHWAY TRAFnc Safety
: Administration, which has focused on vebJcle de·
: f ects, could test a system f()r determlrlinc
: automobile reliability and durabUJty, Pertscbuk , aai.d.
• Pertschuk also said the FTC found ln a survey
that nearly 30 percent of new vehicle owners have
to return their can for rep&irl wbicb are covered
by w&n'anty. Only 7 percent of owners of all other
; products have to return thole products for repain
covered by warrant1, be told the Senate com· merce mbcommlttee oa coasUJ:nen.
The IW'Vey also found that 25 percent of tbo3o who had w-arran.ty problQm1 wltb mot.or vehicles
were dilsat1aOed with tb4t flnA1 result, eompand to On\1 8 percent •ho were 4iaaatisfted wllb tbo war-
rabtJ repairs made an all other productl.
I $ "TRB CONSUMER •AY ll4KE blany tripa ~ back and forth to tbe dealer wltbl>ut a repalt of • ~ aln1Je ~t probltm, .. Perttdut •eld.
" One reason tor tbt• I.I tri«ton bttwea deal n
ao4 mauufactttren oftl" who II ~bl• fer . •arrut;y Npain, he 1md, : 'WarranU: ~ a.ro of Uttle use If auto manalac:tunn do not. .,, perform u tbeJ bave p.nnnlled." ,.
f-Thailand Queen~?
llANGltOK, Thailand (AP) -Tballand'1·new
nn1Ul _ U approved, will allow a ptincua Co
.auct to lbNQ if there It oo male belt.
-
CALIFORNIA I NATIONAL
Student Designs Nuelear Weapon
TORO
TRIMMERS
16~~
Fully automatic
line feed lets you
have more when
you need it.
Eaey to UM.
#1100
3277
SWAN
TUBWALL
KIT r"ir~ 11
1 Approximately
~\ 5' high for
protection
· r p;,... around tu) ' =a' <IN<L Come•
[T ~'~~:I ii-~
[ CLOSE-OOT
SUBlECTTO
STOCI ON HAND
UNI-FIT
REPLACEMENT
SHOWER DOOR 2999
Here ie a nice bright
aluminum frame. with
tempered glaae. dimpled for
dWuelon, adjuatlng channels to make a
perfect fit, and aide rail with latch.
MAGNOLIA
WHITE
TOILET SEAT
3 47
M-100
We homeowner tn>-• know th ... thlag1 do
not lcut Jore•er. Get a nice new one and
,.allr brighten up the bathroom. ·
STYLING
MIRROR
11 99
.. •, '~ ~"
search because he wu Interested ln
the subject and t.houarht it mltht lead
to a aeries of maguine artlcles or a
book.
"I came to realize later that It
would be an error to .P"bliab lt," he
told the committee.
He said he saw a dancer that "peo-
1>le would read lt and 10 out and steal
uranlum" to make a nuclear weapon.
TWO BAR
TURKEY
·coMPLETE
WITH
I Pneu.m~
Closer. Hinges.
AdJuatlng
Channels,
Latch. Striker,
Knob,
Mounting
Hardware.
·-
Wann weather means flying guy•. keep
them all out except the nice breeze•
(won't work at all on the brother-in-law).
FOUR BAR
TURKEY
1297
HAWK
1697
SUPER
HAWK
1997
UP-N-AWAY TUB ENCLOSURE
Thia one .Udea up
instead of to the elde.
And now you want
one that elldea
diagonally. (Working
on ll. working on IL)
SU.VER 79aa
GOLD 99ea
State of the Union address or bock
down the World Trade Cente~."
T • Taylor, a Princeton Unlven.lty
pro(eNOr formerly engaged in nuclear
weapooa design at the Loi Al&m09
Nuelear'Laboratory, called Rotow'1
manuscript 0 tbe meet extensive &Dd
detailed eXJ)OtlUon that I bave Hea
outaldo the clus.lfied literature ...
Perfectly 8<111ded. ~tor your finishing touch (whlch
only you CCIJl ol•e) wttb
cultured mmbw topa.
Fau~Extra..
UNFINISHED"
;r~· .............. 79"
.r~~-. ............. ts"
29'1:1S-1 AAll 2 Drawer. I Door... VY --
3rx2l" 133" 2 Drawer. 2 Doors ••
36"'x21" l Drawer, 139 .. 3 Door. Cut Back •••
llO"x21" 2 Drawer, 1 AAll 4 Door. 2 Bowl • • • • • 77 --
GLIDE-A-MATIC
TUB ENCLOSURE'
ln gold or ail.-r tinlah with
both sliding doora alldlng to
the elde to giYe you a full
open.lng. (But you onlr
wanted a half 01>9nlng?)
7997
SWAN TUB SLIDING DOOR
TUB ENCLOSURE . . . . ~
,~,.,
ENCLOSURE
3777
Thia finlahH the eacloeure of the
tub, the other three walla did their
part. Two allding doon and you'n
got a ahower room tor a nlfty price.
SU.er or gold finleh.
FLUID MASTER
BAllCOCK
U your toilet goe• gurgle,
squeal. and all that all night lOllg
you need a new ballcock to MCZl off
the water clOMt. Adjustable for beat
water conHnation.
3 77
#.OOA
4 FT.
~~~SHOP LIGHT
897
~ . 39•• ~you like a 111ce etched
ewan design th1a la for you. If JO\l
want a turtle. a buUalo, an aard.Tark,
call the soo. SllY•r or gold tlnlah. too.
POLISHED
CHROME
BATH FAUCET
We bought a lot of th ... becauM th•
place they make them at NOlly caN1 to
make them right and at a right prl~ A
great lmpO~ duru1oc bancll ... . 777
MIRROR REMNANTS
1 99
EACH
VOL. 71, NO. 82, ~ SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
Today' Closing
N.Y. Stoeks
I
THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 1978 TEN CENTS
Handful to OK ~$3.2 Billion Burden?
BJ JERRY CLAUSEN
Ot ... .,..,., -...... A handful of landowners will
east ballots by mail May 23
that could make way for a $.1.2
billion property lax burden on
future south county property
owners lasting into the 21st cen-
Ironically, a good portion or that probable burden has been
spurred by stale ballot Prop. 13,
the Jarvis-Gann property ta"l
limitation measure scheduled
for the June 6 ballot.
Three of the county's largest
waler districts are scheduling
May 23 elections which are ex·
peeled to assure a property tax
base for the sale of bonds for
waler and sewaee facilities re·
quired to develop more than
100,000 acres of rancblands into
the year 2010.
Six Die • m
35 Counts of Fraud
Jury Indicts
Congressman
WASfDNGTON CAPJ -Rep
Charles C . Diggs Jr. a
Democralac congressman from
Michigan for more than 23
years, was indicted today on
charges or padding his office
payroll, taking kickbacks and
having the government pay
Coast Marks
Good Friday
Friday is expected lo be
a light busines• day along
the Orange Coast es rnost
banks and financial 111
stitutions will observe
Good Friday.
The banks generally will
close at noon. The Pacific
Coast Stock Exchange and
the national exchanges
will be closed all day oo
Friday.
Irvine Board
Won't Take
Jarvis Stand
Irvine Unified School District
trustees decided Wednesday
I.hey won't take a public stand on
the Jarvis amendment, Propos1·
lion 13, saying that unless they
themselves cut expenditures
they will lack credi b1lity with
voters
employees of his Detroit funeral
home.
The JS-count indictment by a
federal grand jury charges that
he defrauded the United States
of more than $101 ,000 Each
count carries a maximum penal-
ty of five years in pnson If con-
victed, Diggs could also be fined
up to $224,000.
Diggs, in Mozambique when
the indictment was returned,
said through bis office here: "I
am innocent of the charges be·
ing leveled against me."
An ~diclment is a formal
charge made against a person
by the grand jury. It does not
establish guilt or mnocence.
Diggs bad been scheduled to
meet President Carter in Africa
next week.
Diggs defrauded the govern·
ment, the charge said, .. in the
form of salary kickbacks from
certain House of Represen·
tatives employees and payments
lo others on the House of
Representatives payroll who
performed no work for the
I louse or Representatives.''
The indictment listed three
employees in Diggs' con -
gressional offices whose salanes
were allegedly inflated. Three
others, the indictment said,
worked for the House or Diggs
Inc. in Detroit while drawing
money from the federal govern-
ment on Diggs' vouchers.
Fourteen of the 35 counts were
charges of mail fraud the
mailing of checks lo the
Michigan addresses of some of
the Diggs emrloyees involved.
Diggs is chairman of the
House Committee on the District
of Columbia.
The indictment said the al·
(See SOLON, Page AZ)
Waddill Trial
The rush to beat Prop. 13 and
It• poaalble property tax·
inblbltlna clauses that would
become effective July 1 if ap·
proved is not. unique to Orange
Count¥ alone.
"But Oran1e County stands
well above any othtt area in the
state in development," said Ted
Stivers, State Treasurer's office
diatricl securities chief in San
Francisco.
The result, said Stivers, is that
Orange County districts are
most active in getting the jump
on the tax-Umltln1 Initiative t.o
assur~ project finding for future
developments.
The Oran1e County districts -
Santa Mar1arita, Irvine Ranch
and Moulton Niguel -were
formed ori&inally to provide im·
ported irrigation water for
ranrhlands.
As the ranches develop, the·
districts controlled by land·
owners provide for delivery of
Irrigation and domestic water
for the treatment of sewage.
Included within Vie diatricts
are the developing communities
of Irvine, Mission Viejo, El
Toro, Laguna Hills and Laeuna
Niguel. And the proposed
6,623-acre Aliso Viejo planned
community lies in the heart of
the Moultoo·Niguel Waler Dis-
trict.
Although some Irvine Ranch
Waler District spokesmen deny
ll, most water officials agree
thal the siie of projects
scheduled for bonding authoriia·
lion ia due to the Jarvis-Gano in·
1tiative.
If Prop. 13 ls approved by the
state electorate. general obliga-
<See WATE&.. Page AZ>
Riverside Crash
F~deral Policy Rapped
Identity Aid Linked to Mwvhr of C0<1JJt Man .
By J'OANNE REYNOLDS
Of -o.fly ~let St.If
Congressman Mark Han-
naford, D-Long Beach, charged
the U.S. Justice Department to-
day with "inept management"
of the program in which wit·
nesses are given new homes and
identities in exchange for
testimony against organized
cnme.
The congressman, who
represents West Orange County,
has been a frequent critic of the
federal witness protection pro-
gram since last fall. when three
beneficiaries of the program
who lived in Huntington Beach
were charged with the murder
of Stephen John Bovan of Foun-
tain Valley.
Hannaford's criticism of the
Justice Department and the U.S.
Marshal's Service, which runs
the program, came during
testimony before a Senate
judiciary subcommittee which 1s
probing the program
Wednesday, the Justice
Department released its own
draft report on the program
which recommended some ma·
jor administrative overhauls to
reduce the size and cost or pro-
tecting witnesses.
The report's first recommen·
dadon. was that the protection
program be continued because
of its benefits in prosecuting or·
ganu;ed crime, narcotics traf·
flcking and white collar crimes.
The report noted, however, the
program has grown to include
protection or nearly 5,600 people,
including 2,200 actual witnesses
since its inception in 1971.
En Route
FromOC
Airport
The pilot of a plane that
crashed in Riverside County
Wednesday night whtle en route
from Orange County Airport to
Arizona has been tentatively
identified as a Lake Havasu
man who was ferrying prospec-
tive land buyers to view prop-
erty.
Six persons, including two
children, died in the crash.
.A spokesman for Havasu
Aviation said the firm is missing
a plane piloted by John Stark
HUI , about. 62, a retired Navy
lest pilot.
A spokesman for the National
Transportation Safety Board
listed the plane's identification
number as N 7354 U, which
matched the number of the miss-
ing Ha vasuAviation Cessna 'lJ.Y1.
A Riverside County Coroner's
spokesman said three men, a
woman and two children were
killed iD &.be crash.
A RIYerside County Coroner's
spokesman aaid investigators
were at the scene of the crash,
three miles north of the
Riverside Raceway, this morn-
ing. The cause of the crash is un-
known.
The Cessna 207 reportedly
took of( from Orange County
Airport Wednesday night. Al
about 8:45 p .m ., several
Riverside residents reported
hearing a straining airplane
engine and then a crash,
Riverside Sheriff's deputies
said.
The crash site was located
about 11 p.m. by two men who
hiked to the 2,000.foot level of
· the Box Springs Mountains, just
cast of UC Riverside.
It is believed that Hill had
been making round trips
between Orange County and
Lake Havasu City with potentiai
property buyers. The name of
the company that rented the
planes from Havasu Aviation
was not immediately known.
Prop051tion 13, which will be
voted on June 6, would limit prop-
~rly taxes to l percent or cash
value, School staff members
have estimated lt would cut
school revenues by 45 percent
•nd force widespread layoffs.
and sugl'esled a resolution op-
posing the amendment.
"It would seem to me that we
haven't exhibited any rush to cut
our expenses," said Trustee
June L. Foley. "We haven't ex·
hibited anything here to show
that we understand the tax· p.ayers' mood."
Survival Hope Debate~
The costs have risen
dramatically, according to the
Justice Department report. In
1975, the program cost $2, 762,415
1n direct expenditures for
stipends and housing for the wit-
nesses. In 1977, those direct ex-
penditures tallied $.5,950,000.
According to the Justice
Department, the average annual
amount spent on each witness is
$15,900.
Three Irvine
Policemen Get
Advancement "" ,.rustees also discussed Senate
»ill 1 a nd its companion,
~a:oposition 8, the Legislature's
(See JARVIS, Page A2)
Coast
Weather
Partly cloudy tonight
becoming mostly aunny
and wanner Friday. Low!l
tonight In mld·SOs. Highs
Friday Jn upper eos.
INSIDE TODAY
Orange OJUDC ~' bock fn
f«Wal ~ tn l*ol 1m
• obout t1dc:f whot u paid ta • • t•rol to.r.i. CM1COrdlng Co o
,Mt» Npot1 SH.,,. A•.
It is rurther alleged by the
prosecuUon that Waddill
panicked when he realized that he
had a live birth on his bands 12
hours later and strangled the
baby In its crib.
The baby's mother has sued
him for $17 million in damages.
She claims that Waddill mis·
represenlei! the state of her
pregnancy when he examined her
and de&.ermlned that sbe was 22
weeks p gnant.
A physician who appeared as
a prosecution witness testified
that the baby was 31 weeks from
conception when It was de·
livered, a finding which, if true,
means that Waddill performed
an illegal abort.ion.
Waddill. 42, of Huntington
Harbour, ended three days on
the wit.ness sland Wednesday by
again declaring that the baby he
tried to abort was dead on de-
li very.
(See DOCrOR, Page A2>
Woman, 86, Beaten, Robbed
Justice department. oCficials
had little lo say about Han·
naford's primary con~m which
is the concentration of witnesses
in a few geographical areas -
such as Southern California -
and. the lack of supervision or
the witnesses while they are re-
ceiving federal stipends.
Late last year, because of
Hannaford's criticism, Justice
Department officials announ~
they woUld not allow relocated
witnesses to move into Southern
California for a year.
The Justice Department re-
<See BOVAN, Pa~e A.z)
Pimp, Hoo~r
Ball Canceled .
Three Irvine police officers
have received promotions, Chief
Leo E. Peart has announced.
Robert Lennert of Costa Mesa
has received the rank of police
li eutenant. Promoted lo
sergeants are Michael A. White
of El Toro and Victor R. Thies of
M issioo Viejo.
All appointments become ef.
fecllYe ApriJ 1.
Lennert, 33. originally served
as a Costa Mesa policeman who
patrolled Irvine under contract
before that city bad its own
police force. He was one of its
original police officers when its
police department was
established ln 1975.
He is married and bas two
dau1hters.
White began his police career
in 19'11 with the Inglewood Police
Depa~t. joining the COlsta
Mesa Pollce Department ln
January of 1975 and also.patrol·
Ing lr.U.e. He, too, was one of
that city's original police of.
ncen when tt Conned its own
partmeJJt.. White is married.
Thies jolned the Costa Mes&
Polle• Department tn 1m and Jolned tho tmne Police Depart-
"' nt ln J'ebruar,. 19'75, to help
Ol'lll\118 ltl w departm t. Be
WB D lee Offtter: of t.be
Y ar-918 ~ tbo &achanae
Clab J Thies mam~
arid bu a IOD and a da er.
A2 DAILY PILOT
'Panuite'
In Royal.ty?
LONDON <AP) -An
anti-monarchist member
of Parliament caused an
uproar in the House of
Commona today when he
called Princess Margaret a "paraa1te."
Dennis Canavan, a
member of the Labor Par-
ty. put tus criticism In a
question to Chancellor of
the Exchequer Denis
Healey.
''Will the chancellor
stop all unnecessary
spending tor the un-
derprivileged, including
the 1,000 pounds ($1,900) a
week we give to a parasite
hke Princess Margaret?"
Fro.Page Al
BOVAN .••
port notes that "maldistribution
of witnesses has been checked
by certain administrative
measures that steer witnesses to
a variety oC locations and limit
the number or witnesses moved
into a certain geographical
area."
Hannaford, alluding lo the
murder of Bovan in which wit-
ness prole<.'lion benericiaries
Steven Resco, Anthony Marone
Jr. and Jerry Fiori are charged,
speculated that "some witnesses
are usmg their protected status lo
renew past alhances with
criminals."
Jle also charged the depart-
ment with "sheer folly" in al-
lowing relocated witnesses to
concentrate in areas and in not
closely supervising their
::.ecurity
"Relocated witnesses should
not be given the option or bump-
ing into each other -or possibly
bumping each other off -at the
local supermarket," he told the
committee.
Free Concert,
&Ulets Set
A free concert and two free
ballets will be sponsored by
lrvine's cultural arts division
this spring.
All performances begin at 2
p.m. at Irvine lhgh School.
On April 29, the Irvine
Conservatory of Music will give
a concert. The Irvine Academy
of the Performing Arts will pre-
sent the ballet "Sleeping Beauty"
on May 6 and the South Coast
Cultural Services League, Inc ..
will dance "Snow While" on
May 13.
Irvine Recreation
Classes Slated
Registration for spring recrea-
tion classes offered by the City
of Irvine will begin from 6 to
8 JO p. m. March 30 al the Civic
Center, 17200 Jamboree Blvd.
Registration will continue
March 31 through April 7 from 7
a .m. to 6 pm. weekdays. In-
formation about class orferings
is av ail able by calling 754-3641.
aasses Boycotted
BERKELEY CAP) -Strilung
students at the University of
Califomja have demanded that
the law school hire more women
and minorities for the faculty. In
a demonstration staged Tues·
day, several hundred students
boycotted classes.
PILUI' YIEWS
1HE BIG TOP
The days of the Blg Top have
been revived ln San Clemente as
the circus comes Lo Lown. See
Featuring, Paee Cl.
DAILY PILOT
•
,...-p..,AJ
SOLON •••.
lete4 1chdle to defraud Lbe I Ki J J;~d
Unlttd ~ bqan &l'Ol&Dd .J\&lY fjfte
1, 1111 •od tontlnued uotll
M~::!,!:r;ard DlQS put Jean l c h
G. Stulu, an employee of the n ras
House District Committee eam-
ina $14,667 a year, on the payroll
of his office at an additional
salary or $19,000 a year.
The indictment said Diggs
then "d.J.rected that this addi·
Uonal salary •.. be kicked back
and applied for the use ol defen·
dantDigp."
Ms. stultz, Felix Matlock and
Ofield Dukes, identified m the
indictment as Diggs' House
employees, were listed In seven
other counts as receiving addi·
tionaJ amounts of about $3,000 a
month for specified p~riods
which the indictment said they
then kicked back to Diggs.
Twelve other counts named
three other Diggs employees
who allegedly received money
from the U.S. government while
"performing services for defen-
dant Diggs personally, his fami-
ly, and the House of Diggs," the
Michigan funeral home that
Diggs Corm~ly owned.
None of the peraons who al-
legedly made the kickbacks was
charged in .the indictment.
Diggs 1s a senior black
member of the House and a
founder of the congressional
Black Caucus. He has been un·
der investigation by the grand
jury for nearly a year.
San Clemente reserve fireman
Jon Jacobs. 21, was one of five
crewmen killed Wednesday
when a Navy helicopter crashed
on a training exercise in a re.
mote desert region or Nevada.
Names of remaining crew
members were withheld by the
Navy today, pending notification
or their families.
The helicopter was attached to
an antisubmarine unit out of
North Island Naval Air Station
in San Diego, temporarily as-
signed to Fallon, Nev.
The area where the chopper
crashed near Sand Mountain,
about 2S miles east of Fallon, is
used for war J(ames.
Jacobs was on inactive duty
status with the San Clemente
fire reserves after joining the
Navy an 1976, said fire Capt.
Gary CarnuchaeL
Fire Chief Ron Coleman will
be one of those officiating at a
memorjal service, planned tor
10 am. Saturday at Pines Park
in Capistrano Beach.
··Jon was a very, very
personable guy, highly in-
telligent and quick lo learn,"
said Carmichael, who 'hid be
believed Jacobs planned to re·
turn to the San Clemente Fire
Department.
E',....PageAl
WATER ISSUES •••
tion bond issues would have to
be approved by two-thirds of a
distticl's registered voters, most
attorney$ agree. Historically,
bond issues are difficult to pass
when the req\tirement is only
two-thirds of those peopl• voting
in an election, they point out.
Some attorneys and waler of-
ficials also believe that vague
wording in the initiative assures
that general obligation bohds ap-
proved by "voters" prior to JuJy
1 won't be negated by passage or
Prop. 13.
As a resuJt, the water districts
are scheduling the property·
owner elections in improvement
districts where general obUea-
tion bonding already has been
approved by methods other than
the ballot.
Most bonds already authorized
were approved by a vote or the
landowner-appointed water
boards after the formality of a
public hearing. Some attorneys
are advising that the actions
may not constitute "voter ap-
proval" and approval or Prop 13
could void the bond authoriza-
tions.
Under current law, voter ap-
proval in the three districts
formed under the old California
Water Districts Act for 1rnga
tion purposes amounts to ap·
proval by large landowners who
hold one vole for each dollar's
worth of property they own.
As a resuJt, an estimated one-
dozen persons will vote in the
Moulton-Niguel district where
the Mission Viejo Company will
be a major voter.
The Irvine Company will be
the major voter among a
bandfuJ in Irvine Ranch Water
Diatrict's balloting, and the
owners of Rancho Mission Vie10
and tbe Missi::>n Viejo Company
should be enough lo approve the
bond election in Santa
Mar1arita Water District.
ln any case, observers agree
that approval of every issue is
guaranteed, because the owners
need water and sewage facilities
to continue profit-making de-
velopment.
Moulton Niguel Water District
is going for a relatively small
$194.9 million in general obliga-
tion bond authorization for
facilities to be spread among four
new improvement districts. The
districts consist of about 9,000
acres of undeveloped ranch land.
Most undeveloped portion.a or
the Irvine Ranch, about 49,000
acres, are included in the Irvine
Ranch Water District plan to
provide water and sewage at a
future coet of $1.6 billion. Portions of existina Mission
Viejo, Mission Viejo-owned un-
developed land and all or the
sprawling 44,000-acre Rancho
Missloo Viejo are included in
Sula Mariarita Water District
$1.3 billion booclini authorlta-
Uon proposals. The uioney, in each case,
would provide water and sewage
lines, reservoirs and treatment
and pumping faciliUes.
However. Stivers said tbia
week that "they can't sell lbe
bonds (even when authorized)
until the state treuurfr rules on
th soWldnels and feaslbtuty."
Stlven 1aJd the state won't ap.
prove sales until all local gov·
trnmental requirements are
met, lnchullnl eovlron1neotal
hn1>act HJ>Ort•, and develop·
DMnt lbows there la a definite
requlr ment for uUUUn.
Th*D, • the vvloq.i special taxlot dl1t.rlct1 develop, bom.oaen 1novlna Joto the
HW/IUl;ldlVt.t• v to ume ,.~"'11~°ri rnoet ol the hn· pro •meat ct bODdlna ind
tb rihltlai lGU. he sald. maowaen iJ¥ r nt
bi the ·~ water cUJttltta on 't be laxed for wor oew improvcimenL dl1trlct1,
directors report. Those homeowners already are paying
for works in their own earlier·
approved improvement dis·
tricts While Santa Margarita and
Moulton Niguel water district of·
facials readily admit that the
huge bonding authoriution
moves are Jarvis·Gann inspired.
some Irvine district officials deny
the Prop. 13 impact, calling their
SI .6 bilhon authorization the re·
suit of orderly planning for the
future. li di tri t But Lance Eber ·ng, s c
president, admits the· initiative
has had an effect.
.. we rrobably would be doing
much o this (authorization) thia
year anyway," he said.
"Whether it would be next
month, guile frankly, is in·
nuenced by the Jarvis amend·
ment. Eberling said, "There are two
reasons for (improvement dis·
trict works> hearings right now.
We are getting ready to
participate 10 the Diemer Cln-
tert1e > line and have completed
con1unctlve·use studies to pro-
vide for eventual complete de·
velopment. We need lo have
financing available "
The Diemer Intertie. a multi-
agenc y·sponsored water line
planned to bring drinkable
water to south Orange County
during the early 1980s,
originates at the Diemer-plant in
Yorba Linda. To cost $60
million, the line is lo provide
Colorado River and Northern
California waler sufficient for
development or all or the south
county's rolling rancblands.
Eberling also admitted two-
thirds of the Irvine Ranch areas
proposed for water and sewer
works under the proposed May
23 election had improvement
districts formed and bonds
authorized through the public-
heanng method.
The problem, he said, is that
bonding aulboriution was not
great enough and the problem of
what constitutes "voter ap-
proval'' that would be reqwred
by Prop 13 1f approved in June.
Directors of the other water
districts and their lawyers
aren't positive either.
But they are confident that the
May 23 balloting will remove
any possible property-tax-base
obstacles aod assure develop-
ment and property taxation into
the next century.
Pastor Guilty
Of Molesting
VAN NUYS (AP) -Sentenc·
ing is due April 2S in Van Nuys
Superior Court tor Harry W.
Baker, 58. assistant pastor of the
Blble Way Church in Pacoima,
who pleaded euilty to two counts
or child molest.ation.
Baker, who entered bis plea
Wednesday, was arreated last
Janpaiy oo a warrant cbarlina
btm wltb molesting Younf boys.
MeanwbUe, ottl~ a1ao are
aeekini to arrest \he pastor of
the church. Robert Oamana, 54,
on a warrant charging him with
eight counts of chlld moJesta·
lion.
S peel Arrested
OAKLAND <A ) -Tlmoth)'•
J. Chrtstenaen. 22!, ... arreted
Tuesdt7 ln ~OQ wit.b the November llran _ dut.b 0(
Ml Jbot.bti, l>bi 8', and the abbol1Jli·Gl AD\bolQ1
qcen, Feb. 20 lD tolitra OQlt.a
OOuntt • .
~2.'d~:l.Z
Thanks But No Thanks
Artist Gardner Cox of Boston stands next to his portrait
of former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, which
was rejected by the State Department on the grounds it
is "not dynamic enough." Cox said he was told that
Kissinger and his wife didn't like ,the portrait.
E',....PageAJ
DOCTOR •••
.. There was no way In the
world that anythina could be
done for that baby," he tesWied.
And the accused pbyaician
told the jury that members or
the hospita.l staff who were try.
ing to resuscitate the baby when
he stopped them and sent them
from the nursery ··read signs of
the baby's death as meaning
signs of life."
Burned Man Dies
FRESNO (AP) -An elderly
Madera resident, Clyde L .
Lemeur, 78, died at a hospital
here today from bums received
when be fell onto his lloor
furnace March 3.
.,,. ~· .··
Sony Tnn1trm Color TV
with remote control 21 "·
l!I ·• 17' & 15" diagonal.
And • a U tn stock
KV-8000 Sony Trinitron.
Sony'1 newest AC-DC.
Take anywhere portable. 8
Inch diagonal.
"
TV-118 Sony Black "
While . 11" screen
ruea1ured dla•onally.
$10 Million
Drug Nabbed
MONTEBELLO (AP) -A
raid on a house in this suburb
yielded 24 pounds or pure co-
caine, estimated to have a street
sale value of more than $10
milhon, police said.
An earlier raid in Montebello
Wednesday resulted in the
seizure of nine ounces of cocaine
and information that led officers
to the larger cache, said Sgt.
Richard Armstrong.
The raids were the outcome or
a joint investigation by police
units from Montebello, Bell
Gardens, Huntington fark and
Monterey Parle
Sony
Headquarters for
the Harbor Area
T. V .·Radio-Steno
Tape Recorder
letamax
HP2SO /SS2SO. This
compact entertainment center delivers true hl·n
11ound. Includes AM/FM
stereo receiver, l·speed
automatic turntable, and two 2-way speakt:r
systems.
Sl'ICIA&.
'160~0
F ..... PageAJ
JARVIS •••. )
_ l r to LU Jarvi.a bllL
K rUl•e, district' aa1iat at
auperlntendeot for businesa ~ port services, said this bill
impose some revenue llm
lions on the stale but wouJ
affect the school duitrieta'
come.
Trustee Franklin S. H rd
erew noticeably angry as be ~
nounced that be opposes
Proposition 8 and Proposition• 3.
"Neither one parantees at
anybodY will apend less," H
1aid. "Who elves a da
wbether it's property tax
<>r not? The tax bill remains
same. It's government ape
that's the Lssue."
A proposal to distribute a
sheet on the lax measure
Irvine parents was turned
for two reasons. '
Trustees aaid they were d>n-
cerned that even a factual pks-
entation . might violate a sfete
law forbidd.m& them to use &is·
lrJCt (unds to campaign for, Or
against a ballot lllitiat.ive.
Also, <llitrict Supt. A. St~ey
Corey said that because of mlny
variables 1t is almost im~lble
to predict what the effects oflbe
Jarvis bill would be. .
' Trustees expressed regret Chat
they weren't able lo offer trnY
definitive answers to stu~enl
representative Kristi Burton,
who said, "Could you please~ell
me what's going to happen io I
and my sisters and brother will
know whal wiJJ happen Lo ~ in
school?" :
Trustees stopped short of
making a commitment buL: in·
dicated they will look for ways
to tr1m their budget this yeal\
Neighborly Love
NEW YORK (AP) -Prime
Minister Perre Elliott Trudeau
says Canada mainlains a ··1pve-
hate relationship" with the ~nit·
ed States even though the ·two
nations have never been °'ore
neighborly. He explained that
Canda is trying to encouriage
U.S. investment while at :the
same lime ensure that its ;na-
tional identity does not become
too Amer~canized.
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I ~
VOL. 71, NO. 82, 4 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY,, CAL:IF.ORNIA THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 1978 TEN CENTS
Six .Die • m Riverside Crash
Centraet Unsigned
Onofre Edison
Strike Looms
By ROBERT BARKER
Of .... O.lly l'llM $Ult
Workers at Southern
California Edison Company
electrical generating plants
have voted lo go on strtke in
Huntington Beach and San
Onofre and other sales if the new
contract is not signed by May.
About 1,000 members of the
Utility Workers of Americ a
authoriz.ed the strike by a 761 to
28 margin, a uruoo official said -today. ,
Helicopter
Crash Kills
Clemente an
San Clemente reserve rireman
Jon Jacobs, 21, was one of five
crewmen killed Wednesday
when a Navy helicopter crashed
on a training exercise in a re·
mote desert region of Nevada.
Names of r e maining crew
members were withheld by the
Navy today, pending notification
of their families.
The helicopter was attached to
an antisubmarine unit out or
North Island Naval Air Station
iD Sao Diego, temporarily as·
•i«ned to Fallon, Nev.
. The area where the chopper
mshed near Sand Mountain,
about 25 mil• ea.st of Fallon, ls
used for war games.
The Edison company,
meanwhile, has voted to
terminate the contract with the
union by May 4 d a
breakthrough is not made.
The talks are scheduled to re
sume Friday.
Bill Compton , Edi son
manager for the Huntington
Bea ch and Seal Beach area. saJd
that the company may operate
the generating plants with
supe rvisory personnel or by
temporary replacements if the
talks are not successful.
The chief hangup, according
to company and union omcials.
1s an impasse on a proposed
seven·dav rotallnl! work week fo r maintenance workers
Edison 1s pus hing for an
a~reement that would require
som e maintenance employees to
work weekends without rece1v
ing overtime pay.
Co mpton said that the rotating
week has become necessary
bec ause or overhaul commtt·
ments and increased power de
mands.
"This is something we've been
attempting to negotiate since the
1950s," he said
Union spokesman Ernie Hem
indicated that the utility com
pany has taken a hard hne on
the seven-day week and won't
bargain about it. "It's pretty
serious," he said.
There are about 125 Utility
Workers Union members
employed at the San Onofre
nuclear plant and '6 more at lhe
Huntington Beach st.eJ11m plant.
A~WI .......
RESCUE WORKERS, CORONER'S OFFICIALS REMOVE BODIES IN RIVERSIDE CRASH
Plane From Orange County Airport Took Six Liv•• In Hiiiside Tragedy
Federal Policy Rapped
Identity A.id Linked to Murder of CoWJt Man
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
OI 11'9 D.tlly ~let SUit
Congressman Mark Han·
naford, D·Long Beach, charged
the U.S. Justice Department to-
day w1lb "inept management''
or the program lft wbicb wit·
ntues are gi ...., Ito ancl
Identities in exchange for:
testimony against organized
cnme.
The congressman, who
represents West Orange County,
has been a frequent critic of the
federal witness protection pro-
gram since last fall, when three
According to the Justice
Department, the average annual
amount spent on each witness is
$15,900.
Jacobs was oo lnacti ve duty
status with the San Clemente rare reserves after joining the
Navy in 1976, saad fire Capt.
Gary Carmichael.
Fire Chief Ron Coleman will
be one of those officiating at a
blemorial service, planned for
10 a.m. Saturday al Pines Park
ii) Capistrano Beach.
LB Nrunes Fo"Wler
In Closed Meeting
-..1 al • rogram who lived in Huntington Beach
were charged with the murder
of Stephen John Bovan of Foun-
tain v alle,y.
Hannaford'• criticism of the
Justice Department and the U.S.
Marshal's Service, which runs
the program, came during
testimony before a Senate
Judiciary subcommittee which is
probing the program.
Justice department officials
had little to say about Han·
naford's primary concern which
la Ute ~encrltiOll or wit.wees
in a few geographical areas -
such as Southern California -
and the lack of supervision of
the witoesue while they are re-
ceiving federal stipends.
Late last year, because of
Hannaford's criticism, Justice
Department officials announced
they would not allow relocated
<Stt BOVAN, Page AZ>
En Route
FromOC
Airport
The pilot of a plane that
crashed in Riverside County
Wednesday night while en route
from Orange County Airport to
Arizona has been tentatively
identified as a Lake Havasu
man who was ferrying prospec-
tive land buyers to view prop· erty.
Six persons, including two
children, died in the crash.
A spokesman for Havasu
Aviation said the firm ls missing
a plane piloted by J ohn Stark
Hill, about 62, a retired Navy
test pilot.
A spokesman for the National
Transportation Safety Board
listed the plane's identification
number as N 7354 U , which
matched the number of the miss-
ing Havasu Avialion Cessna207.
207.
A Riverside County Coroner's
s pokesman said three men, a
woman and two children were
killed in the crash.
A Riverside County Coroner's
spokesman said investigators
were at the scene of the crash,
three ml I es north of the
Riverside Raceway, tflis morn·
ing. The cause of the crash as un·
known.
The Cessna 207 reportedly
took off from Orange County
Airport Wednesday night. Al
about s ·45 p .m ., s everal
Riverside res idents reported
hearing a straining airplane
engine and t~en a crash,
Riverside Sheriff's deputies
said.
The crash site was localed
about 11 p.m. by two men who •
biked to the 2,000.foot level of
the Box Springs Mountains, just
eaal of UC Riverside.
It is believed that Hill bad
been .rnakioe round trips
betw Oraq~ CbUbt~ and
Late Havasu City with potential
property buyers. The name of
the company that rented the
planes from Havasu Aviation
was not immediately known.
.. Jon was a very , very
personable fuy, highly in·
telllgenl and quick to learn,"
said Carmichael, who said he
believed Jacobs planned to re·
turn lo the San Clemente Fire
Department.
George Fowler, director of
Laguna Beach's Human Affairs
Department, has been named
actwg city manager following a
closed·door session by the City
Council Wednesday night.
Fowler, who has been with the
e1ty for 81~ years, replaces City
Manager Al Theal who leaves
April 2 lo assume similar duties
for the City of Beuna Park
resolution confirming the ap-
pomt~ent when they meet April
29 rn council chambers.
Fowler will assume the duties
of the city manager until a
replacement for T hea! is ap·
pointed.
The council expects to begin
interviews with potential can·
didates for the $34,900 a year
post after April 14. To date more
than 50 applications for the job
have been received.
Wednesday, the Justice
Department released its own
draft report on the program
which recommended some ma.
jor administrative overhauls lo
reduce the size and cost of pro.
tecting witnesses.
The report's first recommen·
dation, was that the protection
program be continued because
of its benefits in prosecuting or·
ganized crime, narcotics traf.
ricking and white collar crimes.
Michigan Solon
Indicted in Fraud
Jacobs is survived by his
parents, who live in S an
Clemente. His father, M.W
Jacobs, has worked more than 20
years as a Los Angeles city
fireman.
Death Blamed
On Overdose
A preliminary coroner's re·
port shows a La~una Beach man
died in his room sometime
Wednesday of a drug overdose,
police said today.
The body of William D.
Truesdell, 42, was found in his
home at 355 Pearl St. Wednes·
day night by police who were
called to the scene by a
neighbor.
Narcotics paraphernalia sur-
rounding the nude body or the
man led police and coroner's of-
ficlall to the preliminary con·
oJp.sion that the victim suffered
•drug overdose.
Councilmen met for 20
minutes in executive session at the end of Wednesday night's
meeting, reconvening to an·
nounce lhe decision to name
Fowler lo the lop municipal post
effective March 30.
They · will officially adopt a
$10 Million
Drug Nabbed
MONTEBELLO CAP) -A
raid on a house in this suburb
yielded 24 pounds Of pure CO·
calne, estima\ed to have a street
sale value of more than $10
million, police said.
Ao earlier raid in Montebello
Wednesday resulted in the
tenure ot nine ounces of cocaine
and 1oforma1i.011 that led officers to tbe larger cache, aald Sgt.
Rtebard An:D$troo1.
Fowler, SO, was the city's first
recreation director, assuming
the title or director of the
Human Affairs department two
years ago.
Coast Marks
Good Friday
Friday is expected to be
a light business day along
the Orange Coast as most
banks an4 financial in·
stitulions will observe
Good Friday. The banks generally will
close at noon. The Pacific
Coast Stock Exchange and
the national exchanges
will be closed all day on
Friday.
The report noted, however. the
program bas grown to include
protection of nearly 5,600 people,
including 2,200 actual witnesses
since its inception m 1971.
The costs have risen
dramatically, according to the
Justice Department report. In
1975, the program cost $2,762,415
in direct ex'penditures for
stipends and housing for the wit·
nesses. In 1977, those direct ex·
penditures tallied $5,950,000.
PIUTI' J'IEWS
1'HE BIG TOP
The days of the Big Top have been revived in San Clemente as
the circus comes to town. See
Featurinl, Pqe Cl.
WASHINGTON (AP) -Rep.
Charles C. Diggs Jr., a
Democratic congressman from
Michigan for more than 23
years, was indicted today on
charges or padding his office
payroll, taking kickbacks and
having the government pay
employees of his Detroit funeral
home.
The 35-count indictment by a
federal grand jury charges that
he defrauded the United States
of more than $101,000. Each
count carries a maximum penal·
ty of five years in prison. II con-
victed, Diggs could also be Clned
up to $224,000.
Diggs, in Mozambique when
the indictment was returned,
said through his office here: "I
am innocent of the charges be·
ing leveled against me."
An indictment is a formal
charge made against a person
by the grand jury. It does not
establish guilt or innocence.
Diggs bad been scheduled to
meet President Carter in Africa
next week.
Laguna Coastal r10:n Goa1s Reviewed
Council, Planners Hola Joint Meeting
percent aareement, I would say
no." McDowell aireed the two
paoel1 sbould not be carbon
eopies ct each other. but said,
"We need to know where each
planntni eomntlatloner atand.s
CID ftJ' bsuef, ••
But Councllwoman Sally
BeUerue intetrupted. 11yln1,
.. You•re u.mJ.na tbe new ctty
Cowiell bas Its own 1oaJa and
pollel .. , tiUl thi1 haven't been
ning eommission, "show them
our goals and see if they agree."
Efforts lo elicit city policy
opinions from the live planning
commissioners failed, with
chairman Dike saying, "We are
heretoaoswerquestionsaboutthe
toe al coastal plan.'·
When it appeared that just
about all that, was goina to be
said, had been Hid. Baclin
leaned blto bis llicropbooe.
"I'd hate to end th1s meetina with a cloud banging over the
b•ad1 of the plallftln1 com·
mialon.0 be said.
"This 1s not a witch-hunt. I've
«ot a lot ol homework to do. J'm
for 1•vlng them (tbo eom·
mJ11lon) toat. Just Uk the
•ct.en ate ISvtq UI a tut.''
Tb council •treed to mMt in
a ttud1 tel&ion after tbey have
( COASl'AJ,. .... AJ)
Diggs defrauded the govern·
ment, the charge said, "in the
form of salary kickbacks from
certain House or Represen·
tatives employees and payments
to others on the Hous e of
Representatives payroll who
performed no work for the House of Representatives.•·
The indictment listed three
employees in Diggs ' con-
gressional officES whose salaries
were allegedly inflated. Three
others, the indictment said,
worked for the House of Diggs
lnc. in Detroit while drawing
money from the federal govern·
menton Diggs' vouchers.
Fourteen or the 35 counts were
charges of mail fraud -the
mailing of checks to the
Michigan addresses of some or
the Diggs employees involved
Diggs is chairman of the
(See SOLON, Page A2>
Coast
Weather
PBrtly cloudy tonight
becomine mostly sunny
and warmer Friday. Lows
tonight in mid-505. Highs
Fnday In upper 60s.
INSIDE TODAY
Orange Count11 got bock in
/edcrol .,.,.ting m filcaJ 1977
about hole. uJhot al JJO*' ift f cdnal tmn, accordi11g to a
MW r~. Sn Page A&.
·a a a c:.w. ..
M Al ., ... , ., ct
M M
DAILY PILOT
o.llJ ...... IUitf ......
HEADS NEW DEPARTMENT
Probatton Chief Grier
Grier Now
'Interim'
BSA Chief
Though frequently at odds
with one another during the past
four years, Orange County
s upervisors have appointed
Chief Probation Officer
Margaret Grier interim chief of
the county's becalmed Human
Services Agency (HSA).
Miss Grier pretty much wrote
her own ticket as she accepted
the interim appointment, includ-
ing a salary boost from $39,399 a
year to $52,000 annually.
And the door was left open for .
the 56-year-old county govern-
ment exei:ullve to relum to the
probation post she has held since
1967 shouJd the JISA assignment
not be to her hking.
That is because her hand·
picked replacement also will
"!>erve as an interim appointee.
Miss Gner's new job will call
on her to accelerate what is now
the snajl·hke pace or blending
nine separate county depart-
m ents Wllh a collective annual
budget of $152 mtlhon into a
single so-called super agency.
David Odell was hired to do
that Job 18 months ago. But
Odell recently announces his
resignation eHective March 31
after coming unde r he avy
criticism from some of the county s upervisors
Udell 's JOUSts With the board,
however, failed to equal those of
Miss Grier in recent years.
Last July, for example, the
chief probation officer ob1eded
when she was denied a pay raise
while other department heads
were receiving boost& Ja D&Y.
Strangled
Infant Had
'No Chance'
By TOM BARLEY
Ol t .. O.lly ,.lie! St.H
Hospital records introduced
by the defense Wednesday in the
trial of Dr. William Baxter Wad·
dill indicate the infant that the
prosecution alleges he murdered
had litUe or no chance of sur· v1val.
But the Westminster ·com·
munity Hospital charts that took
up most of the day's testimony
in Orange County Superior Court
may never get before the jury as
evidence.
Defense attorneys quesUoned
members of the hospital staff
throughout the day, but were un-
able to deterrnlne which nurse
or doctor completed what they
regard as vilal sections of the
reports on the baby.
The ~rtions of tbe patient
ch-rt hiahlighted by the defense
rellect an evaluation •rstem known lo the hosplla and
medical community as Apgar.
Apgar is uaed· by hospital
personnel to determine a
newborn infant's chances ot llle.
OAANOl COMf LJSC
DAILY PILOT
Th\l!!d!IJ. M I'\ D. 1111
Allen~ase
UClRelie ed
Of Rep-orting
By GARY GRANVJLL~
OI tlo9 O.My ..... tt.Mf
Orange County supervit><>rs
baye softened county govern-
ment's policy on providing
medical care for indigent lUeeal
aliens at UCJ Mewcal Center.
Stricken from county govern·
m e nt's treatment-payment
policy Wednesday were those
features said to discouraae in·
dtgent aliens from seeking
needed medical care because of
the fear of deportation.
Tboce features included bav·
log eUgibillty workers at the
medJcal center report 1uspected
UJegal aliens to the U.S. Immi·
gration. and Naluraliutioo Service.
A task foree on medical CJre
for Illegal aliens concluded in a
report given to supervisors that
such policies, whether invoked
or not, forced aliens to sbun
seeking needed care.
The report said that depriving
medically needy aliens of care
becaqse of their real or im-
agined fear of deportation can
contribute to health problems in
the commwtity where they dwell
and run minor medical prob-
lems into major illnesses.
Supervisors bought five
specific recommendations of the
task force that dealt with
eliminating practices that lead
lo the deportation fear.
In the process. they may have
passed on a greater cost share of
burden of providing medical
care to the indigent aliens to the
university.
According lo county medical
services ~tor Murray
Cable, county covemment is not
oblieat.ed to pick up the· medical
cost tab for care provided lo
aliens who refuse to fill out
Medi·Cal forms.
"Under our current contract
with the unl•enlty, Ulat means·
we have no payment UabWty in
such cues and, )'e&, that means
the univeralty will pn>bably be
paying more," Cable Hid.
Wbo ~ WU not tbe la.sue
belore ~ Board ol Supervbon as a 2~ hour pubUc bearing
ended with tbe board agreeing to
endorse tbe five task force
recommendations.
Other recommendations were
sent out for further study by
county ofOcials as the board
drew prolonged applause from
the packed bearing room when it
softened the reporlinJ policy.
Cable insisted dunar the bear-
ing that little has been done lo
carry out the edict to report
aliens who balk at fHllng out
Medi·Cal forms lo immigration
officials.
But task force chairman, the
Rev. Bruce Johnson, insisted the
threat or deportation reporting
can have the impact of action.
A cornerstone of the task force
report was a finding that illegal
aliens pay more io taxes of
various kiods than they consume
in public services.
SZ9 Million Issue
Moulton District
Voting Postponed
Moulton Niguel Water Distnct
directors have pos tponed
homeowner voting on about $29
million in water improvements
in four water district areas.
That means voters in Mission
Viejo, Laguna Hills, Laguna
Niguel and the Nellie Gall
Ranch will not be voting June 6
on bond sales authorizations to
build emergency water storage
facilities <Related story, Page
A3l.
"The board of djrectors felt it
was premature to We a general
obligation bond issue to the
voters," district General
Manager Carl Kymla said to-
day. •'They felt the timing was
improper and they wanted more
precise estimates of the cost (or
facilities)."
Kymla said the issue would
not come before voters until
next fall or the following spring
-depending on the outcome of
the Jarvia-Gann property tax
Jimitation initiative in the June election.
"If Jarvis does not pass,"
Kymla said, "we might have an
election next fall at the earliest."
He said directors want more
time to explore various
alternatives for emergency
water storage facilities to serve ~e district's already-populated
nnprovement areas. (The dis·
lrict is conducting $194 million
water bond elections May 23 1n
landowner-controlled jmprove-
ment areas).
"They (the board) want lo
Easter Egg
Hunts Slated
Peter Cottontail wW be hop-
pine around San Juan
Capistrano Friday laying eggs
in three locations for area
children.
Easter egg bunts· will take
place at Cook Park betinnina at
12:30 p.m., Marco .Forster Ju· ntor High School beldnnla,c at 2
p.m. and Saa Juan Elementary
School beginnini at J p.m.
Cook Park is located at Calle
Arroyo and Ortega Highway,
Marco Forster School la localed
at 2:5601 Curii.ao del Avloo and
San Juan Sehool is located at
31642 El Camino Real.
CbUdren Crom 4 throuah 13 7eara old are io.vlted to
pUtlclpate.
Mayor Joins
S&LBoard
study various locations, su:.mg
lei:hn&ques and cost," Kymla ex-
plained. "We're continuing with
our studies and looking at djf.
ferent techniques."
The general manager said the
Jarvis initiative could com-
plicate funding of the improve-
ment projects if it passes in
June.
•·our attorney believes the
Jarvis initiative would not allow
general obligation bonding,"
Kymla said. "ln that case, we
wou Id have to go to other
sources of funding such as short
term borrowing or pay as you go
fac11Jties."
Ky mla said the $29 million
would primarily pay for
emergency s torage facilities
that would provide up to 30 days
s upply of water should the dis
lric t 's primary feeder line
become inoperative.
F,....PageAJ
SOLON •••
House Committee on the Dlstnct
of Columbia
The Indictment said the al·
leged scheme to defraud the
United States began around July
1, 1973 and continued until
March 2. 19Tl.
One count said Diggs put lean
G. Stultz.. an ernplo)'ee of the
House Di.strict Committee earn-
inf $14,667 a year, on the payroll
or his office at an additional salary of $19,000 a year.
The lndJctmeot said Diggs
then "directed that this adw-
tional salary .•. be kicked back
and applied for lhe use of defen-
dant Diggs."
Ms. StuJtz, Felix Matlock and
Ofield Dukes, identified in the
indictment as Diggs' House
employees, were listed in seven
other counts as receiving addi-
tional amounts of about $3,000 a
month tor specified periods
which the indictment said they
then kicked back to Dtggs.
Pimp, Hooker
Bal,l Canceled
SAN l>IEGO CAP) -Tbe
Pl m ps and Hooters ball
scheduled for Friday is off, and
all the police officers planning to
attend will have to 1et a refUDd
on their tickets.
Fraternal Order of Police San
Diefo Lodp No. t planJ>ed the
dance at which law e.a.torcement
peraonnol tr6m around \be eoun·
ty were invtted to come dressed
ta DlmPt and bt>Qkers •
• rwe thouiht 1t •• l\mzly."
J'ott Scelso, a San Die10
policemen aod lod&• • prealdl!nt,
Hid Wedntisdq.
Fle•P-AJ
COASTAL. •
rntewed the 1tcrt ~-Tbq abo vot..t to wttte a hrt· ter to tbe stai. eouw eop,.
rnl.Uloo. teJflnl tb1t JJanti.utat
La1una.. !Mal COutal Plan
wW be a UWe bit lat.e.
A1nbushed
Womaii, 86, Beaten, Robbed
An ·~·old woman wu bea~n and ~ Wednes· dly 1bortl)' t..fler she left a chw-cb on El Toro Road and
walked to her car ln a nearby parkina Jot, Oranse County
Sberilf'a officers said.
DEPUl'll.:8 SAID Mary EUiabeth Brtdeman, • rwl·
dent of Laeuna Hllls Leisure World, bad her purse
snatched from ber arm by a man and woman wbo le.peel
from a parked car and attacked her as she approached ber
own vehicle.
They said the victim told them that the man atruct ber
with h1a fl.st, knocked her to the ll"Ound and then drove off
at high speed with the purse.
MRS. BRIDEMAN was allowed te so home after treat·
ment at saddleback Community Hospll.al. Ofl\cen have
not yet determined the full extent of her loss.
7 Administrators
OK'd for District
By ANNE COOPE& Ot•o.ttr ...........
A plan to add seven new ad-
ministrators to the central office
staCf ot the Capistrano Unified
School District at an annual cost
of $173,000 appears to have aolld
truatee support. ••we feel we must do
something," said school board
President Ted Kopp of
Capistrano Beach. "Some mem-
bers of the central administra-
tion have been working up to 1S
and 16 how's a day.
"Thb looks like a tremendous
number of extra people, but it
really involves a number or
changes ol position and UUe as
well as some additions," Kopp
said. "I expect we wUl find in
the long nm that the added ad-·
ministrative personnel will ac.
tually save the distrJct some
dollars."
A six-month, $14,000 manage-
ment study prepared by consul·
tants Arthur Young and Com·
pany resulted in Z7 recommen·
dations presented to the school
board last week. The findings in·
dicated that the school district
would benefit from additions at
the middle management level.
Mon day, Superintendent
~ny Trm1lron Color TV
with remote control. 21 "·
19"· 17" & I!'>" diagonal,'
And • all in stock·
...
KV-8000 Sony Tlinltron,
Sony's newest AC·DC.
n.ke .aywhere portable. a
klch diagonal.
TV-111 Sonr Black • W h He. 11 • •ereea
measured dlaaanaUy.
Jerome 1bomsley made bis own
recommendations to lhe school
board, based on the study.
Thornsley's proposal calls for
new positions in district ad·
ministration including a comp.
troller, personnel mana1er,
data systems coordinator and a
community affairs coordinator.
Other new posts would include
a pupil peuonnel services
coordinator. elementary educ•·
lion director, and a secondary
edu~ation director.
In addition, Thornsley recom·
mended elimination of fourpres-
ent administraUve posttiona, in·
clurunt that ol dep~ty superin·
tendent, a position held by
Truman Benedict, who will re-
tire in June.
Three posit.Jons would tnvolve
simply title changes and two
positions would be replaced by
new, more specialized positions,
if Tbornsley's recommendations
are approved by the board.
In addition to the $173,000 in·
crease annually in ad·
ministrative costs, the re·
organizations wouJd raise such
support services as secretarial
expense by an estimated i10,ooo
a year, Thornsley said.
Sony
Headquarters for
the Harbor Area
T. v.-Rodio.S..eo
Tap•R~
let--.
HP250/SS250. Tbh compact entertalnmenL
center delivers true hi-Ii
soand. Includes AM /FN stereo recmer. I-speed
a utomatic turntable, and
two 2·w•1 speaker ayatems.
IPICU&.
'16000
I',... Page Al
BOVAN ••• ~ ..
wl'l\«'aa '° mova imo Sou"*11 C omta fat a JQr. :
The Justice Department~
port notes that "m..JdialrlbuOon
ot witnesses bu been cbecied
by certain adminlstrattve
mea1u.res that 1teer witn~ a variety ol locaUoos aad 11 t
the number of wU.neaa mo ed
Into a certain ieocraphihl area." ;
Hannaford, alludinc to t,he
murder of Bovan lo whlcb -jlt-
neas protectlon beQenctarjes
Steven R.esoo, Anthony Marfne
Jr. and Jerry Fiori are charged,
apeeulated that "some wttneqes
are using their protected statd to
renew past alliances wltb
criminals." ~
He al50 charged the dei*'t·
rnent wilh "sheer folly" in :al-
lowing relocated wltneues; to
cOlleentrate in areas and in pot
closely aupervislog tb.ir
security.
•·Relocated witnesses sbo4ild
not be given the option or b~J>
ing into each other -or possi=lY bumplnc etieb other oft -at e-
local supermarket_'' he told e
committee.
Five Panelists
'
Appointed .
Laguna Buch couneil .. en
made five new appointment.t to
council committees Wedn~ay
night following an intervtew
session with potential papel
members.
Glenn Wilkins was named to
the city's Parking, Transpofta.
lion and ~ulaUon commltCee.
Rita Unlma11 8Dd Tom Ad8ns
were appolnted to the Hwaan
Need4 committee.
Alan Grant i.s the new me~r
on the Parks and Recreation panel and Roos Bregozzo .,as
named to the Cable televbioo
committee. ~
Withdrawal Voted
NAPA CAP) -Tbe Napa
County Board of Supervisorslias
voted 3-2 to withdraw frQm :the
Association ot Bay Area Govfrn-
menls.
SlA200 Sony BeWnax lets
)IOU record you favorke •
p-ograms and watch them
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FM I Alf built In & phooo fnput. Faur speakers roe
sound &Pl baa body and depth . AC or battery
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Super Sony Speclal1!
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Orange CO•t· Today's Closing
N.Y. S'oeks
..
. f •VOL. 71, NO. 82, 4 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CA~IFORNIA THU RSOAY, MARCH 23, 1978 N TEN CENTS
l
'•. Handful to · OK $·3.2 Billion Burden? . '
BJ JEBRY CLAUSEN °' -Olilly ..... , .... A bandfUl of landowners will
CHt ballots by mall May 23
that could make way for a $3.2
billion property tax burden on
future soutb county property
owners lasting into the 21st cen-
\ury.
lronically, a good portiOJl of
µiat probable burden has been
spurred by state ballot Prop. 13,
the Jarvi•·Gann property tax
limitation measure scheduled
for the June 6 ballot.
Three of the county's largest
water districts are scheduling
May 23 elections which are ex·
peeled to assure a property tax
base for the sale of bonds for
water and sewage facilities re-
quired to develop more than
100,000 acres of ranchlands into
the year 2010.
·Six Die • Ill
Sarris Elf ects
Teachers Ask
Firing Block
t ..
SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -The
California Teachers Assoc1at1on
esked the California Supreme
Court today to block all dis·
missals of teachers based on
potential financial problems
schools may face if the Jarv1s-
Gann property tax m1llat1ve
puses
If he class action filed by
$everal teachers who have re
~elved termination notices and tth association, which
represents 16-0,000 educators,
said at least 35 school districts
)Jave initiated dismissal pro-
·ceedlngs against 28,773 teachers.
• Jarvis-Gann would cut proper-
f;,t ,taxes by about $1 billion an-
oually. It proposes to trim taxes
\by about two-thirds by limiting
U..m to percent or market value
and limiting growth in assess·
State Eyes
,3 Newport
1 r':Land Plots
I 1 .
; Three parcels of state owned
\ ~and in Newport Beach. current·
ly the center of a brewing con-
~ troversy. are being studied for a ~ J slate-run development program.
~ The three parcels are all ID ~ j. We.st Newport Beach. One is the ~ former Pacific Electric Railway
'} •right-of-way that parallels West
{ Coast Highway from the Santa ~ Ana River to 59th Street. I The other two also abut the
l highway and are localed on ~ either side of Superior A venue
ments to2percentayear.
It does not make any provision
for restoring the $7 billion
estimated annual loss to cities,
counties and school districts.
The specific defendants
named are the Board of
Trustees of the Old Adobe Union
School District at Petaluma In
Sonoma County and the Board of
Education of the South Bay
Union High School District at
Redondo Beach in Los Angeles
County
The petition said 35 teachers
at Old Adobe and 124 at South
Bay were told tbef would lose
their Jobs .
The only reason gaven for the
dism iSff.ls. the petition said,
was lb• fa.nancial impact or the
posalble passage of ProposiUon
13, the Jarvis·Gann initiaUve.
The dlstricts, it went on, cited
the difficulty or accurately
forecasUng the financial picture
and contended they are com-
pelled lo ro11ow the notice and
hearing requirements oC the
Education Code ror dismissint
teachers and, assuming
passage, would have to recom·
mend reduction or elimination of
programs.
The association said nowhere
in the code "is anticipated finan-
cial difficulty or future
economic uncertainty, made a
ground for teacher dismissals."
The teachers' group said the
reason it is asking the Supreme
Court to take up the matter is to
obtain uniformity throughout the
state. It said seeking similar
writs in Superior Courts or every
county would result In confli ct·
ing decisions
The issue, it went on, bas not
only a "profound effect" on
employment rights, but on the
quality or public education in the
state
The rush to beat Prop. 13 and
lts pouible property tax-
inhlbiUng clauses that would
become effective July 1 if ap-
proved is not unique to Orange
County alone.
"But Orange County stands
well above any other area in the
state in development." said Ted
Stivers, State Treasurer's office
district securities chief in San
Francisco.
The result~ 1ald Stivers, la that
Oranee County districts are
most active in eettlng the jump
on the tax-limiting initiative to
assure project fmdlne for future
development..
The Oranae County districts -
Santa Marganta, Irvine Ranch
and Moulton Niguel -were
formed originally to provide im-.
ported irrieation water for
ranchlands.
As the ranches develop, the
districts controlled by land·
owners provide for delivery of
irrigation and domestic water
for the treatment of sewaee.
Included within the districts
are the developing communities
of Irvine. Mission Viejo, El
Toro, Laeuna Hills and Laguna
Niguel. And the proposed
6,623-acre Aliso Viejo planned
community lies in the heart of
the Moultoo·Niiuel Water Dis-
trict.
Although some Irvine Ranch
Water District spokesmen deny
it, most water officials agree
that the she of projects
scheduled foe bonding authoriza-
tion is due to the Jarvis-Gann in-
itiative.
If Prop. 13 is approved by the
state electorate. general obllga-
CSee WATER. Pa1e AZ>
Riverside Crash
If you ask Newport Beach Fire Explorer
Scouts Brooks Brann (left) and Jerry
Tegel (right) bow they spent their Easter
vacation, they could tell you it was busy.
Here County Fire Capt. John Sleppy assists
them in use or fire hose. They also crawled
through smoky rooms, cut brush, fought
fires and listened to lectures on nuclear ac-cidents and pyrotechnics. It was the fifth
annual academy for Orange County Fire
Explorer Association held this week at El
Toro Marine Corps Air Station.
Federal Policy Rapped
Identity Aid Linked to Murder of Coast Man
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of Ille 0.11., l'llet .....
Congressman Mark Han-
naford. D-Long Beach, charged
the U .S Justice Department to-
day with "inept management"
of the program in which wit-
nesses are given new homes and
identities in exchange for
testimony against organized
crime.
The congress man . who
represents West Orange County.
has been a frequent critic or the
federal witness protection pro-gram since las• fall, when three
beneficiaries or the program
who lived in Huntington Beach
were charged with the murder
of Stephen John Bovan of Foun-
tain Valley.
since its inception in 1971.
The cos t s have ri sen
dramatically, according to the
Justice Department report. In
1975, the program cost $2,762,415
in direct expenditures for
stipends and housing for the wit-
nesses. In 1977, those direct ex-
penditures tallied $5.950,000.
According to the Justice
Department, the average annual
<See BOVAN, Page AZ)
En Route
FromOC
Airport
The pilot of a plane that
crashed in Riverside County
Wednesday night whlle en route
from Orange County Airport to
Arizona has been tentatively
identified as a Lake Havasu
man who was ferrying prospec·
tive land buyers to view prop-
erty.
Six persons, m cluding two
thildren, died in the crash
A s pokesman for Havasu
Aviation said the firm is missing
a plane piloted by John Stark
Hill, about 62, a retired Navy
test pilot.
A spokesman for the National
Transportation Safely Board
listed the plane's identification
number as N 7354 U, which
matched the number or lbe miss-
ing Havasu Aviation Cessna 2117.
A Riverside County Coroner's
spokesman said three men, a
woman AUid two children were
killed J.1ltbe Ct'Ufl.
A RlvenJde County Coroner's
spokesman said investJeators
were at the scene of the crash,
three miles north of the
Riverside Raceway, this morn-
ing. The cause of the crash is un-
known
The Cessna 207 reportedly
took off from Orange County
Airport Wednesday night . At
about 8 :45 p .m .. several
Rivers ide residents r eported
hearing a straining airplane
engine and then a c rash,
Riverside Sheriff's deputies
said.
The crash site was located
about 11 p.m. by two men who
hiked to the 2,000-foot level of
the Box Springs Mountains, just
east or UC Riverside
ll is believed that Hill had
been making round trips
between Orange County and
Lake Havasu City with potential
property buyers. The name or
the company that rented the
planes from Havasu Av1al1on
was not immediately known. .
f
I ) .
I
I
J . CalTrans officials in the Los \ Ange lea office confirmed
Wednesday that the three pro-
perties are among those being ID·
vuitoried for development as part
of Gov. Brown 's "urban
strategy."
But lhe CalTrans spokesman
cautioned that the inventory or
extes1 property owned by all
stale aeencies is just getUng un-
def way. U is still too early to
Pathologist Noles
Abortion 'Bruises'
Hannaford's criticism of the
Justice Department and the U.S.
Marshal's Service, which runs
the program, came during
testimony before a Senate
Judiciary subcommittee which is
probing the program.
Wednesday, the Justice
Department released its own
draft report on the program
which recommended some ma-
jor admlnistrauv, overhauls to
reduce the size and cost of pro-
5 N-M Buses Fixed,
Back in Service
tell whether the development
pl"ogram will be applied to the
Newport Beach parcels, he
ded.
···The inventory was ordered
this week by Gov. Brown as part
of his statewide urban strategy to revive dDwntown areas and
limit urban sprawl,.
To be completed by May l, the
·Utventory is to, p('OVide the gov·
ftbor's staff wtUl a list of land
that would be suitable for low· co t houain& or commercial de·
(See PARCELS, Pa&e A.Z>
By TOM BARLEY
Ol .. Dell'f,......_.
A pathologist told an Orange
County Superior Court Jury to-
day that the brulles found
around tbe neck of a baby that
prosecutors allege was
1trangled by Dr. William Baxter
Wadd111 are not unusual in the
caaes of saline abortions.
Dr. Akiro Metamura testified
for the delenae that be has ex·
amined "many dozens" or
f etusfs that were the products of
saline abortions •t Westminster
tecUng witnesses. •
The report's first recommen-
dation, \fas that the protection
proeram be conUoued because
or ·its benefits in prosecutine or-
ganized crime, narcotics traf-
ficking and whlt.e collar crlme.s.
The report noted, however, the
program hu crown to include
protection of nearly 5,600 people.
includine 2;200 actual witnesses
'Parasite'
In Royal,tyf
Five Newport-Mesa School
District buses that failed a re-
cent California Highway Patrol
safety check have been repaired
and pressed back into service.
• district Business Manaeer
Raymond Schnierer said today.
From now on, the CHP will
make quarterly safety checks on
25 percent of the district's bu.<J
Cleet instead of a one·shot annual
check of all 53 buses. said
~h'1lerer.
He said this new policy should
improve the emciency of the
•afety1 c~ecks, reduce paper
work ana help in rescheduling
for buses that might be pulled
from the road.
Four other district buses are
stlll undereolng routine engine
overhauls and a filth remains
out of service until brakes are
re-installed. These buses were
taken out or service by Ute dis-
trict prior to the CHP cbeck.
Tbc dlltrict la currenUy leas· tns threo buses to tab 1IP the
alack tor the out of Hrvico
More Covel'88
r Newport Bt ob co••
today cm P•
. . '
I
vehicles, said Scbnierer. He said
the leased buses will be returned
within 90 daY'!.
Coast
Weather
Partly cloudy tonight
becoming mostly sunny
and warmer Friday. Lows
tonight in mid·50s. Highs
Friday in upper 60s.
INSIDE TODA. Y
OTcmoe Count11 got back in
Je<Urol apendinQ an fiscol 1977
obout holce what d paJd '" f«le~ tor•1. occonfino to a
ncio r'JJOl1 Sft POQC • .U
..
'•
A2 DAILY PILOT
WATER ISSUES. • •
tlon boad llaua .outd bave ~ ·~ are hicluded lb• kYlne
be approved by two-lhlrdt ol a Raneb Water ~ plaD Jo
district's regtstered voters, tnoet pro•Jde water &Dd MW t at •
attorneys agree. Hts.toncally, future colt of $1.t bil.lk¥l.
bond issues are difficult to pass PorUons of exlaUn1 Misslon
when the requirement Is only Viejo, Mission Viejo-owned un-
two-t.hirds ol Lbose people voting developed land and all ol the
in an election, they point ouL sprawling 44,000·acre Rancho
Some attorneys and water of· Mission Viejo are Included In
lic1als also believe that vague Santa Marearita Water District
wordina in the initiative assW'es $1.3 blllloa bondJn1 authoriza·
that general obli&atlon bond.a ap-Uoo propo1al.s. proved by "voters'' prior to July The money, in eacb caH,
1 won't be neaated by paasaae of \Vould provide water and aewa1e
• 0 lines, reservoirs and treatment Prop. 13. and pumping faciliUell.
As a result, the water districts However, Stivers said this
are acheduling the property· week that "they can't aell the
owner elections in improvement bonds <even wben authorbed>
districts where general obliga-unW the state treuunr rules 00 tioo bood.ina already has been tbe soundness and feulbility.''
approved by methods other than Stivers said the state won't ap-
the balloL prove sales until all local eov-Most bonds already authorized ernmental requirements are
were approved by a vote of the met, including environmental
landowner-appointed water impact report.3, and develop-
boards alter the formality of a menl shows there is a definite
public bearing. Some attorneys requirement for utilities.
are advising that the actions Then, as the various special
may not constitute "voter ap-taxing districts develop,
prov al" and approval or Prop. 13 homeowners moving into the
could void the bond authorlza. new subdivisions are to assume
ttons. responsibility for most of the tm-
Uoder current law, voter ap-provement dlatrict bondlnJC and
prov al in the tbree districts the resulting taxes, be said.
formed under the old California Homeowners already residing
Water Districts Act for irriga-In the various water districts
tion purposes amounts to ap-won'tf[:ed for works in the
proval by large landowners who new · rovemenl districts,
hold one vote for each dollar's dire'. rs report. Those
worth of property they own homeo'wners already are paying
As a result, an estimated one-for works in their own earlier·
dozen persons will vote in the approved improvement dis·
Moulton-Niguel district where tricts.
the Mission VieJo Company will While Santa Margarita and
be 8 m<l,lor voter Moulton Niguel water district of-
The Irvine Company will be ficials readily admit that the
the major voter among a huge bonding authorization
handfuJ tn Irvine Ranch Water moves are Jarvis-Gann inspired,
District's balloting, and the some ll'vined.istrictofficialsdeny
owners of Rancho Mission Viejo lbe Prop. 13 ift\pact, calling their
and the Mjssion Viejo Company $1.6 billion a~rliation the re-
sbould be enough to approve the suit of orderly planning for the future. bond e 1 ec ti on i o Sant a But Lance Eberling, district
Margarita Water District. president, admits the· initiative
In any case, observers agree bas bad an effect.
that approval or every issue is "We probably would be doing
.cuaranteed, because the owners much of thU (aut.borizaUon) this
need water and r1ewage facilities ye a r an f'w a y, • • he 5 8 id.
to contmue proht·makmg de· "Whether it would be next
velopmenl month, guile frankly, is in·
Moulton Niguel Water District fluenced by the Janis amend-
1s izomg for a relatively small ment.
$194.9 million in ge~eral. obliga-Eberling said, "There are two
t ion bond authorization for reasons for (Improvement dis·
facilities to be spread among four 4.ict works) hearings right now.
.new improvement districts. The · e are getting ready to
districts consist of about 9,0001 articipate in the Diemer <In·
acresofu. ndevelopedranchland. a;ie) line and have completed
Most undeveloped portions or . junctive-use studies to pro-
the Irvwe Ranch, about 49,000 · ·de for eventual complete de-
velopment We need to have
Fro.Page Al
BOVAN ••.
amount spent a. eacl witaesa is
$15,900.
Justice department officials
had little to say about Han-
naford's primary concern which
is the concentration oC witnesses
rn a few geographical areas -
such as Southern California -
and the lack of supervision of
the witnesses while they are re-
ceivmg federal stipends.
Lale last year. because of
Hannaford's criticism, Justice
Department officials announced
they would not allow relocated
witnesses to move into Soulbem
California for a year.
The Justice Department re-
port notes that "maldistribution
of witnesses bas been checked
by certain administrative
measures that steer witnesses to
a variety of locationa and limit
the number of witnesses moved
into a certain geographical
area."
Hannaford, alluding lo the
murder of Bovan 10 which wit-
ness protection beneficiaries
Steven Resco, Anthony Marone
Jr. and Jerry Fi.on are charged,
speculated that "some witnesses
a re us mg the1 r protected status to
renew past alliances with
criminals."
He al.so charged the depart·
ment with ''sheer folly" in al-
lowing relocated wUnesses to
concentrate 10 areu and iJl not
c l osely supervhlng their
security.
• · RelQCated witnesses should
not be given the opUoo of bump-
ing Into each other -or possibly
bumping each oth'r off-at the
local supermarket,•• he told the
committee.
OftANOl COMT
DAILY PILOT
._. .....
~ .... --
Joo •.cw-i.r \l.a .......... 1 ... 0.-,,........, ,,,_..._.
lfllilf
~::...-=-
CMIMtlt.~ __..,. ... ......... ~ .... 1,. Mllwt
financing available.''
The Diemer lntert.ie, a mulU-
a gency-sponsored water line
planned to bring drinkable
water to south Orange County
during the early 1980s,
originates at the Diemer plant in
Yorba Linda To cost $60
million, the line is lo provtde
Colorado River and Northern California water sufficient for
development of aJl of the south
county's rolling ranchlands
Eberting also admitted two-
thirds of the lrvine Ranch areas
proposed for water and sewer
works under the proposed May
23 election bad improvement
districts formed and bonda
authorized through the pubUc-
hearing method.
The problem, he said, is that
bonding authorization was not
great enough and the problem of
what constitutes "voter ap-
proval" that would be required
by Prop. 13 if approved in June.
Directors of the other water
districts and their lawyers
aren't positive either.
But they are confident that the
May 23 balloting will remove
any possible property-tax-base
obstacles and assW'e develop·
ment and property taxation into
the next century.
Frota Page Al
DOCTOR •••
ing or lawsuits for millions of
dollars in damages if the chUd
was allowed to survive.
Dr. Metamura then test.ifted
for the defense that the bruising
aeen by Comellaen could bave
been the product of the sallne
administered to the mot.her dur·
ing the abortion proceu.
Dr. Metamura stressed that
he knows both Cornellaen and
Waddill well and a. on excellent
term• with both physicians.
Defense attorneys said they
lntend to show tbe Jury alides
take1tJrom dead fetuses wbkb
also Are Lbe products of saline
abortions performed at
Westminster Community
Hospital.
They Hid the llldH WUI
further prove that tbe neck
brui•lne which led the Ora.n1e
County Coroner'• Office to re·
turn a verdict of manual
1tran1ulaUoo 11 not unusual
amona aaUne abortion• and
•bould not have I.ct \be coroner
to return aucb a flndin1 .
Tb• bab)''a mother bu sued
W adcUll tor Sl.7 mlllton In dam•a•. Sbe clalma that Wad·
dill, .U. ot Hunttniton Harbow',
mllrtpneented the at.ate of Mr
pre1nallCJ wtwm he namlAtd
her and ctet.nnJ.ned th•t •h• was 22 weeka prepanl
A ph71ldan •ho appeared
a pl"ONCWOa wtmeaa tttW\ed
lh•t tbe bab)' WU 81 • ~
toDOPtlOG WbtD It ••• d•·
llvtrtd. Tbe flM1DI, II _ •
would aiHn that Waddill
~rlormed an W al abort1olL
'
Newport Beach patrolmen and firemen
survey the damage caused early Wednes-
day on W. Balboa Boulevard near 8th
Street when the car driven by John
Robledo, 19', of San Pedro, rammed into
three parked cars. His passenger. Bobby
Wilhams, 22, of Wilmington, was treated
for minor injuries and released from Hoag
Memorial Hospital. Robledo was arrested
on suspicion of drunken driving.
Candidates Air Views
Newport ColDlcil Hopefuls Review Pet Issues
Tbe candidates nearly out-
numbered the audience this
morning as the Newport Beach
City Council race moved tem-
porarily into Costa Mesa.
Ten of the 13 council hopefuls
showed up for the meeting
sponsored by tbe Citizens
Harbor Area Research Team
(CHART> at the Costa Meu
Community Center.
CHART is composed o1 resi-
dents and businessmen from
both Newport Beach and Costa
Mesa. Its meetings usually are
held in Costa Mesa.
The dozen audience members,
including supporters of the can-
didates, heard the campaigners
discuss their favorite issues.
Only one, Evelyn Han, whose
sporting goods store is a block
away from the meeting site, dis-
cussed how she planned to deal
with problems common to the
two cities.
Noting that the two cities
share a school system, Mrs.
Hart, a candidate in district
three, said "neither city can
continue to expand at the cur-
rent rate without improving
traffic flow."
A few minutes later she was
followed by Jackie Heatber, a
candidate from district four,
who noted that Newport Beach
needs leadership that "can see
beyond a limited horizon.
Newport Beach is not the end of
the world and we need to look at
our dec1s1ons to see what the im·
pacts are going lo be with other
agencies."
Here's what the other can-
didates bad to tell the audience
a bout politics In Newport
Beach:
Lucille Xaeba, the incumbent
from the sixth district, stressed
th al she offers positive
leadership and action in working
on the city's problems of traffic
and growth. "I'm not one of the
'agaloers' ,"she declared.
8. II. "Rap" Dyen. a can-
didate from the first district.
pledged to run the city like a
business and to reduce un-
necessary staffing.
Donald Strau.sa, another fl.rst
district candidate, said one of
the things he wants t-0 work on
improving is the quality of the
water in the bay. "There are
areas with problems ~r~ater
NB CANDIDATES
MEE1' TONIGHf
Newport Beach City
Council candidates are 10-
inc to tell residents of
Weal Newport bow they'd deal with the area's prob-
lems durinl a forum
toniabt.
Tbe meeUn1. sponsored
by the West Newport
Beach Improvement Aa·
aociation, will becin at
7:30 p.m. in the Newport
Shores clubhouse.
F,....P.,,eAJ
PARCELS •••
1 velopment ln urban areu.
Brown's plannlns end re-
Harch dlrector, Bill Prell, said
IUCb ptreell would be told or
leased at ec11t to local 1ove111·
ment agencies or private de·
velopen1.
''Then are many parcela of
v1c11nt lancle, ln urban areas
particularly, that .,-. not bcini
uaed and have no antlclpat..CS
future UM, that could be mado
nallabto for hou.lini or com·
merelal or lnduatrlal dtvelop-
melJt.," be •aid.
'
than ours that have solved them,
and I think we can, too,•• he
said.
Jolla 'l'tldler, also a farst dis-
trict candidate, said he la dis·
satisfied wtth the current city
council. "What have they done
to help us!" be &Q~. He said
800 parkine spaces could be
made available on lbe Peni:osula
by reworking medians on
Balboa Boulevard and \n tbe
Balboa Pier parkine lot.
Mlcbad Germg, a third dis·
trict candidate, said he favored
the on-going city work to lower
density on vacant land because
of the impact that development
will have on traffic.
Frank lveng, also a third dis·
trict candidate, said he believes
he's best qualified for the city
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council because he had eight
years experience working as as·
sistant city manager, is avalla·
ble to devote full time to tbe job
and has no economic conflicts of
interesL "I'm no one's boy," be
said.
Charles Laraaa. who ls oppos·
ing Mrs. Heather in tbe fourth
district. suggested the whole
coastal area should work together in solving common
problems such as traffic and use'
of the airport.
Peg Forglt, a first district can·
didate, cited her 40 years of liv·
ing in Newport Beach and own·
ing a business there. She favors
controlled growth and said "it
has been a beautiful thing lo
watch Newport Beach grow into
the gem it is now."
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SPICIAL
Michig~
Solon· '
Indicted
W ASHJNGTON (AP) -Rtp.
Charles C. Diggs Jr.,• a
Democratic con1ruaman f~m
Micbi1an for more than '123
yeara, wu in.dieted today 9n
charges of paddint Illa ofllce
payroll, taking kiekbaeb and
having the government play
employees of bis Detroit funetal
home. •
The 35-count lndletmeat~a federal trand Jury cbar1es at
be defrauded the United
of more thao $101,000. Eeich
count carries a maximum ~
ty of five years in priao.n. U ck·
victed, Di115 could alao be fl*<I
up lo $224,000. •
D1gp, m Mozambique w•n
the indictment was retum~.
said throu&b bis office bere: ... 1
am lnnoceat of the charges be-
rng leveled against me." ·
An indictment ia a formal
charge made agalnst a perton
by the grand jury. It doe. pot
eatabliab guilt or innocenee. ·
Diggs bad been aebedule.i to
meet Presldeat CarteT ID Af~c.a
next week. 1
' Digga defrauded the govern·
ment, the charge said, "in ~e
form of salary ltickbacka f.,m
certain Houae of Represen-
tatives employees and paymenLc;
to others on the Houae:: of
Representatives payroll 'fho
performed no work for ine
Houaeol Representatives.••
The indictment listed uiree
employees in Dig1s• cpn-
gressional offices whole aalafies
were allegedJy inflated. Three
otbera. the indictment si.id,
worked for Lbe House of Dligs
Inc. in Detroit while dra\lfing
money from the federal covern-
menton Digp' vouc:hers.: : .
Fourteen ol the 3S counts •re
charges of mail fraud -lbe
mailing of checks lo lhe
Michigan addresses of somjf of
tbe Diggs employees involvecS.
t
Diggs is chairman of khe
House Committee on the Disfnct
of Columbia. ;
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114
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Saddlebaek
EOlTION
VQL. 71, NO. 82, 4 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
Afternoon
N.Y. Stoeks
f
TEN CENTS
:Six Die .in Riveiside ·Crash
..
'
A1nbushed
Woman, 86, Beate~ Robbed
An 86-year·old woman was beaten and robbed Wednes-
day shortly after she left a church on El Toro Road and
walked to her car in a nearby parking lot, Orange County
Sheriff's officers said.
DEPUTIES SAID Mary Elizabeth Br1deman, a res1
dent of Laguna Hjlls Leisure , World, had her purse
snatched from her arm by a man and woman wh1.> leaped
Crom a parked car and attacked her as she approached her
own vehicle.
They said the victim told them that the man struck her
with his fist, knocked her to the ground and then drove off
at high speed with the purse.
MRS. BRIDEMAN was allowed to go home after treat-
ment at Saddleback Commuruty Hospital. Officers have
not yet determined the ruu extent of her loss.
35Counts
Michigan Solon
Indicted in Fraud
WASmNGTON (AP) -Rep
Charles C. Diggs Jr , a
Democratic congressman from
Michigan for more than 23
years, was indicted today on
Wast Marks
Good Frida . y
Friday is expected to be
a light business day along
the Oran~ <blst as 1noat
banks and financial in·
stitutions will observe
GOod Friday.
The bank.a generally will
close at noon. The Pacific
Coast Stock Exchange and
1 the national exchanges
will be closed all day on
Friday.
charges of padding his office
payroll, taking kickbacks and
having the government pay
employees of his Detroit funeral
home.
The JS.count indictment by a
federal grand Jury charges that
he defrauded the United States
of more than $101 ,000 Each
count carries a maximum penal·
ly of five years m prison If con·
victed. Diggs could also be fined
up to $224.000.
Diggs, in Mozambique when
the indictment was returned,
said t.broujh bis office here; "1
am innocent of the charges be·
ing leveled against me."
An indictment is a formal •
charge made against a person
by the grand Jury. It does not
establish fUilt or innocence.
Diggs had ~n scheduled lo
meet President Carter 1n Africa
next week
Diggs defrauded the govern·
m ent, the charge said, "m the
form of salary kickbacks rrom
<See SOLON, Page A2)
En Route
FromOC
Airport
The pilot or a plane that
crashed in Riverside County
Wednesday night whHe en route
from Orange County Airport to
Arizona has been tentatively
1denlified as a Lake Havasu
man who was ferrying prospec-
tive land buyers to view prop-erty
Stx persons, including two
children, died in the crash.
A spokesman for Havasu
Aviation uid the firm 1s missing
a plane piloted by John Stark
Hill, about 62, a retired Navy
lest pilot.
A spokesman for the National
Transportation Safety Board
listed the plane's tdenlification
number as N 7354 U, which
matched the number of the miss·
mg HavasuAviationCessna207
A Riverside County Coroner's
spokesman said three men, a
woman and two children were
killed in lhe crash.
A Riverside County Coroner's
spokesman said investigators
were at the scene of the crash,
three miles north of the
fiiverside Raceway, this mom·
inf)< The cause of the crash is un·
known
The Cessna 207 reportedly
took orr rrom Orange County
Airport Wednesday night. At
about 8 .45 p.m .• severa l
Riverside residents reported
hearing a strainmg airplane
engine and then a crash ,
R.i verside Sheriff's deputies
said.
The crash ~ was I ated
about 11 p.m. by lwo meta who
hiked to the 2,0QO·loot level of
the Box Springs M9un ains, just
east of UC .Nve,..ldt!.
It is believed t,hat run had
been malting round trips
between Or'ange County and
Lake Havasu City wft.b potential
properly buyers. The nam.e of
the company that rented the
planes from Havasu Aviation
was not immediately known.
A~WI ......
RESCUE WORKERS, CORONER'S Of'FICIALS REMOVE BODIES IN RIVERSIDE CRASH
Plane From Orange County Airport Took Six Lives In Hiiiside Tragedy
Federal Policy Rapped
Identity Aid Linked to Murder of Coast Man
By JOANNE REYNOLDS Cit .. a.Hy ,.. ... Sl#f
Congressman Mark Han-
naford. D·Looe Beach, charged
the U.S. lwtlce O.partinent to-day 'with .. iiMpt m.aaqemeot••
of the program in which wit·
n~sses are given new homes and
identHies in excbance for
teat.UDQ.Q a&aJ,lrt\ organlaed
crime.
The coneressman, wbo
representa West Orange County,
has been a frequent critic of the
federal witness protection pro-
gram slnce last fall. wben three
beneficiaries or the program
who Jived in Huntington Beach
were charged with the murder
of Stephen John Bovan of Foun·
tain Valley.
Hannaford's criticism of the
JusUcQ Department and the \J.S.
Marshal'• Servi~. which runs
the program, came during
testimony before a Senate
judiciary subcommittee which is
probins the proaram.
Wednesday, the Justice
Department released its own
draft report on the program
which recommended some ma·
jor administrative overhauls to
reduce the size and cost of pro-
tecting witnesses.
in direct expend itures for
stipends and· housing for the wit
nesses. In lm. those direct ex
penditures talhed $5,950.000.
According to the Jus tice
Department, the average annual
amount spent on each witness 1s
$15,900. ...
Justice department officials
had JilUe to say about Han
naford's primary concern which
is the concentration of \\-1tness~
m a few geographical areas -
such as Southern California •
and the lack of supervision of
the witnesses while they are re
ceiving federal stipends
Area's Edison
. Workers Vote ~ f For Strike
Their Bo1~11ing Desire
The report's first recommen·
dalion, was that the protection
program be continued because
of its benefits in prosecuting or·
ganized crime. narcotics traf-
ficking and white collar crimes.
The report noted, however, the
program has grown to include
protection of nearly 5.600 people,
including 2,200 actual witnesses
since its inception in 1971.
Late last year, because of
Hannaford's criticism. .Justice
Department officials announced
they would not allow relocated
witnesses to move into Southern
California for a year
The Jus tiC'e Department re
port notes that "mald1stribution
of witnesses has been checked
by c e rt a 1 n a d m 1 n 1 s t r a t 1 v t•
measures that steer witnesses to
a variety .of locations and llmtt
the number of witnesses moved
By ROBERT BARKER
CM Ille o.lty ~le4 S~ff
Workers at Southern
C11lirornia Edison Company
• electrical generating. plants
have voted to go on strike in
: Huntington Beach and San
Qnofre and other sites if the new
: contract is not signed by May.
· About 1,000 members of the
Utility Workers or America
.-wt.horized the strike by a 761 to
28 margin,. a union official said
. today.
The Edison company,
meanwhile, bas voted to
terminate the contract wllh the
union by May 4 If a
breakthrough ls not made.
The talks are scheduled to re-
sume Friday.
Bill Compton, Edison
manager for the Huntington
Beach and Seal Beach area, said
that the company may operate
the generallne plants with
1upervisory personnel or by tt:nt porary replacements if the
tAlks are not successful.
The chief hangup. according w company and union officials,
ls an impasse on a proposed
deven-day rot.atinc work week
fbr maintenance workers.
Edi100 is pusbin• tor an
atreement tbat would require
~ome maintenanco employees to
work weekends \titboul receiv· tn• overtime p~.
' · ColJlJ)toll said that the rol•ting
. •~et bas become necessary
b6eause or overhaul commit·
ments and increased power de·
·mands.
''Thia is something we've been
•lltt9mptjng to ne1oUale since the
1950a ... be •aid. ,
Teens Learn Firefighl,ing Techniqua in El Toro
By LAURIE KASPER
Ol IM 0.11• Pllol Stall
They could be sleeping late
and spending lazy days during
this Easter vacation break
Instead, these 72 teen·agers
are rising before 6 every morn-
ing just so they can crawl
through smoky, gas -ftlled
rooms, cut brush, fight fires and
listen lo lectures on s uch things as nuclear accidents and
pyrotechnics
The students. all fire explorers
from Orange and nearby coun·
ties, have paid $35 lo attend the
Orange County Fire Explorer
Association's fifth annual
academy going on al the El Toro
Marine Corps Air Station th.ls
week.
For some of the teen-agers, the
academy IS fun. But for most or
the others. it is serious business
which could affect their future
careers.
"I 'm looking for experience.
That's why I've come here," ex·
plained Lou Hardin, one of the
association's assistant chiefs
who is a fire science student at
Santa Ana College.
He frankly admits that he
hopes the academy and bis in·
volvement as an explorer will
"better my chances" of getting
on a fire department.
The explorers' advisers agree
that this is possible.
'theresa Miller, one or the ad·
vlsers whose husband is a
firefi&hter, said it is "near im·
possible" to get hired by a de·
partment now. Bu\ with the ex·
perience behind them, explorers
are a step ahead or other can·
didates, she said.
"You know (the explorer>
wants to be a fireman," ex-
plained Dick Pilkington, a bat-
talion chief in San Juan
Capistrano. And, he added,
they· re a known quantity.
"You're not laking any chances
when you put them on," he ex-
(See FIRE. Pase AZ)
The costs have risen
dramatically, according to the
Justice Department report. In
1975, the program cost $2, 762,415
· into a certain geograph1cal
area."
7 Administrators
OK' d for District
By ANNE <:noPER
Ot .. Deily "lllt l~ff A plan to add seven new ad·
ministralors lo the central office
staff of the Capistrano Unified
School District at an annuai cost
or $173,000 appears to have solid
trustee support,
"We feel we must do
something," said school board
President Ted Kopp of
Capistrano Bea.ch. "Some mem-
bers of the central adminlstra·
lion have been workln1 up to IS
and 16 hours a day.
"This looks like a tremendous
null)ber of extra people, but it
really iuvolves a number of
chanees of position and title as
well as some additions," Kopp
&aid. "1 e.spect we wll1 rmd in
the long run that the added ad·
minlstraUve personnel wut ac-
tually save the district s'orne
dollars ...
A six-month. $1',000 manaee·
ment atud,y prepared by consul·
tants Arthur Young and Coin·
pall.)' resulted ir\ 27 recommen·
datioos presented to the school
board last week. Tbe finc:llnp in·
dic.ted that the acbool d1atrtct
would beoellt from addWons at
the JDlddle management level.
Monday, Sue>erlntendent
i
Jerome Thornsley made his own
recommendations to the school
board, based on the s tudy.
Thornsley's proposal calls for
new positions in district ad
ministration including a comp-
troller, personnel manager,
data systems coordinator and a
community affairs coordmator
Other new posts would include
a pupil personnel service~
(See TRUSTEES, Page A2)
Coast
Weather
Partly cloudy tonight
becoming mostly sunny
and warmer Friday, Lows
tonight in m1d·50s. Highs
Friday in upper 60s
INSWE TODA'\'
Ora~ County go( bock rn
/ttteral ~ in fi$ccJl 19n
(l()ou1 h.ofcc 1dlat it paid '" /~rel t~s. occordmQ to a
MW t~. Sn~ A3.
I
l .
AZ DAIL y Pll..OT
Infant
Had'No
Chance'
By TOM BARLEY °' "" o.llf ...... Rift
Hospital records Introduced
by the defense Wednesday In the
trial of Dr. William Baxter Wad-
diU indicate the infant that the
prosecution alleges he murdered
had litUe or no chance of sur-
vival.
But the Westminster Com-
munity Hospital charta that took
up most of the day's testimony
an Orange County Superior O:>urt
may never get before the jury as
evidence.
Defense attorney• questioned
members of the hospital sW(
throughout the day, but were un-
able to determine which nurse
or doctor completed what they
regard as vital sections of the
reports oo the baby.
The p<?rtions of the patient
chart highlighted by the defense
reflect an evaluation syatem
known lo the hospital and
medical community as Apgar.
Apgar is used by hospital
personnel to determine a
newborn infant's chances of life.
In the case of the aborted
baby, allegedly strangled by
Waddill on March 2, 1977, the
chances were listed as 1-1 -an
evaluation which meant that the
newborn infant had no hope of
survival.
It is alleged that the child sur-
vived a aaline solution injected
into the mother by Waddill alter
she agreed to allow him to
perform an abortion.
It is further alleged by the
prosecution that Waddill
pamc ked when he realized that he
had a live birth on his hands 12
hours later and strangled the
baby in its crib.
The baby's mother has sued
him for $17 malhon in damages.
She claims thal Waddill mis-
represented the stale of her
pregnancy when he examined her
and determined that she was 22
weeks pregnant.
A physician who appeared as
.i prosecution witness testified
that the baby was 31 weeks from
conception when il was de-
livered, a finding which, if true,
means that Waddill performed
an illegal abortion.
SC Fireman
Dies in Navy
Copter Crash
San Clemente reserve fireman
Jon Jacobs, 21, was one or five
crew men killed Wednesday
when a Navy helicopter crashed
on a training exercise in a re-
mote desert region of Nevada.
Names or remaining crew
members were withheld by the
Navy today, pending notification
of their families.
The helicopter was attached to
an antisubmarine unit out or
North Island Naval Air Station
an San Diego, temporarily as-
signed to Fallon, Nev.
The area where the chopper
crashed near Sand Mountain,
about 25 miles east of Fallon, is
used for war ~ames.
Jacobs was on inactive duty
status with the San Clemente
fare reserves after joining the
Navy in 1976, said fire Capt.
Gary Carnuchael.
Fare Chief Ron Coleman will
be one or those officiating at a
memorial service, planned for
JO a.m. Saturday at Pines Park
in Capistrano Beach.
"Jon was a very, very
personable guy, highly in-
telligent and quick to learn,"
said Carmichael, who said be
believed Jacobs planned to re-
turn to tbe San Clemente Flre
Department.
Jacobs is survived by bis
parents, who live In San
Clemente. His fatb~r. M.W.
Jacobs. hu worked more than 20
years as a Los,Anaeles city
ct rem an.
DAILY PILOT
...... ,,._IUH .....
HEADS NEW DEPARTMENT
Probation Chief Grier
Grier Now
'lnteri~'
HSA Chief
Though frequently at odds
with one another during the past
four years, Orange County
supervisors have appointed
Chief Probation Officer
Margaret Grier interim chief of
the cowtty's becalmed Hu~
Services Agency (HSA).
Miss Grier pretty mu.ch wrote
her own ticket as she accepted
the interim appointment, includ-
ing a salary boost from $39,399 a
year to $52.000 annually.
And the door WU left open for
the 56-year-old county govern-
ment exe<:utive lo return lo the
probation post she bas tield since
1967 should the HSA assignment
not be to her LLkmg.
That js because her hand-
picked replacement also will
serve as an interim appointee.
Miss Grier's new job will call
on her to accelerate what is now
the snail-like pace or blendmg
nine separate county depart-
ments with a collective annual
budget of $152 million into a
single so-caJled super agency .
David Odell was hired to do
that job 18 months ago. But
Odell recently announces his
resignation efft?ctlve March 31
after coming under heavy
criticism from some of the county
supervisors.
Odell's jousts with the board.
however, failed to equal those of
Miss Gner an reeeDt years.
Last July, for example, the
chief probation officer obJected
when she was denied a pay r&Jse
while other departmtnt heads
were receiving boosts in pav.
In the early planning of HSA,
Miss Grier fought with lhe board
lo keep her department out of
lhe blend in the super agency
mix.
No Fighting
For Women?
WASIDNGTON (AP> -
High-ranking Marine and
Navy officers say they do
not think women should be
thrown into com bat.
"I don't think it's
necessary. I don't think
it 's philosophically
sound," Vlee Admiral
James D. Watkins told a
Senate s ubcommittee
Wednesday.
"I certa1nly don't con-
template women carrying
a rifle and chargln1 up a
hill ... " added Marine
Lt. Gen. Robert L.
Nichols.
M oultoo Nieuel Water Dillrlct
director• have postpon ed
homeowner voling on about $29
million in water improvoinenta
in four water dJstrict a~.
That meana voters in fdjssion
Viejo, Laguna Hills, Laguna
Nieuel and the Nellie Gail
Ranch will not be YOtJ.u June 6
on bond sales authorbatioos to
build emergency water atoraie
faciUUea <Related story, Pqe
A.3).
E'.-...PageAJ
SOLON •.•
certain House of Represen-
tatives employees and payments
to others .on the Rouse or
Representatives payroll who
performed no work for the
House of RepresentaU ves."
The indictment listed three
employees in DiJgs' con·
gressional offices whose salaries
were allegedly inflated. Three
others, the indlctment said.
worked for the House of Diggs
Inc. in Detroit while drawing
money from the federal govem-
ment on Dlgp' voucbefS. :
Fourteen of the 3S counts were
charfes of mall fraud -the m ai Ing of check's to the
Michigan addresses of some or
the Diggs employees involved.
Diggs is chairman of the
House Comtbittee on the District
of Columbia.
The lnd1ctment said the al-
leged scheme to defraud the
United States began around JuJy
1, 1973 and continued until
March 2, urn.
One count said Diggs put Jean
G. Stultz, an employee of the
House Distr~ct Committee earn-
ing $14,667 a year, OD tbe p~roll
or his office at an additional
salary or $19,000 a year.
The indictment said Diggs
then "duecled that this addi-
tional salary ... be kicked back
and applied for the use of defen-
dant Diggs."
Ms. Stultz, Felix Matlock and
Ofield Dukes, identified in the
indictment as Diggs' House
employees, were list~ in seven
other counts as receiving addi-
tional amounts of about $3,000 a
month for specified periods
which the indictment said they
then kicked back to Diegs.
Twelve other counts named
lbree other Diggs employees
who allegedly received money
from the U.S. government while
"performing services for defen-
dant Diggs personally, his fami-
ly. and the House or Diggs,'' the
Michigan funeral home that
Diggs formerly owned.
None of the persons who al-
leeedly made the kickbacks was
charged in tbe indictment.
Dlfgs is a senior black
member or the House and a
founder of the congressional
Black Caucus. He has been un-
der invesUgaUon by the grand
jury for nearly a year.
Pimp, Hooker
Bal,l Canceled
SAN DIEGO (AP> -The
Pl m pl and Hookers ball
scheduled for Friday is off, and
all the police officers planning to
attend will have to get a refund
on their tickets.
Frateftlal Order of Police San
Diego Lodge No. 9 planned lhe
dance at which law enforcement
personnel from around the coun·
ty were invited to come dressed
as pimps and hookers.
"We thought it. was funny."
Joe Scelao, a San Diego
policeman and lodie president.
said Wednesday.
p,..,. P.,,e. A J
nRE ACADEMY •••
plained.
While experience offeNd at
the acadedty helps the fire de·
partqsents, It a1lo help• the ex-
plorers aet a more realistic plc-
tute of what ia Involved in the work·.
''h's an even trade,'" Pllk·
initon said.
Hardin, a member of a post
attached t.o a county fire station
In TUJUn. aveect. Firemen tell
U.e exploreri •hat It'• llke to 10
throu&b a build.lna when they're
blh:tded by the amoke "but ac-
tually, pbyllcalty dolns It ls dlf.
ferent. A tot of people tet
aeared. •• hi laid.
"Tft~ board of dl.recltons fell it
was premature to take a general
obligation bond issue to the
voters," district General
Manager Carl Kymla said to-
day. "They felt the timing was
improper and they wanted more
precise esUmatea of the cost (o(
facilities}.•·
Kymla aaJd the isaue would
not come before voters until
next fall or lhe following spring
-depending on the outcome of
the Jarvis-Gann property tax
Limitation mitlative in the June
election.
"If Jarvis does not pass,"
Kymla said, ·•we might have an
election next tall at the
earliest "
He said directors want more
lime to explore various
alternatives for emergency
~aler storage facilities to serve
the distnct's already-populated
improvement areas. <The dis-
trict is conducting $194 million
water bond elecUons May 23 in
landowner-controlled improve-
ment areas).
"They (tbe board) want to
study various locations, sizing
techniques and cost," Kymla ex-
plained. "We're continuing with
our stud.lea and looklng at dif.
ferent techniques."
The general manager said the
Jarvis initiative could ~om
pllcate funding of the improve-
ment projects if it passes in
June.
"Our attorney believes the .
·Jarvis initiative would not allow
general obligation bonding,"
Kymla said. "ln that case, we
would have to go to other
sources of funding such as short
term borrowtng or pay as you go
facilities."
Kymla said the $29 million
would primarily pay for
emergency storage facilities
that would provide up to 30 days
supply of water should the dls-
t ri cl 's .primary feeder line
become inoperative.
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LON (AP) -An
aoU-rnonarebist member
of Parliament caused an
uproar in the House of
Commoos today wberi be
called Pribeeas Mar1aret
a "paruite."
Dennis Canavan , a
member of the Labor Par-
ty. put his criticiaoi tn a
question to Chanc:tllor ot
the Exs:hequer Denis Healey.
"Will the chancellor
stop all unnecessary
spending for tbe un-
derprivilfged~ including the 1,000 powias ($1,800) a
week we give to a parasite
like Princess Maraaret?"
Tragedy Sends
&y, 11, to
A New Home
CHULA VISTA <AP> -Youn&
Christopher Ashbaugh spent the
night as guest in a police of.
ficer's home and went by
airliner Wednesday to relatives
in Detroit.
The evening before, he was
visiting nelghbors wben he
heard three shotgun blaata in the
apartment which he and bis
divorced mother Donna sban!d.
There Christopher, 11. found
her body. At least one blast bad
hit her face. killing her.
The sobbing youngster was
calmed by police Sgt. Keith
Hawkins. Later. Hawkins said
James A. Chance, 29, described
as an acquaintance or the
Ashbaughs, was arrested al his
home in nearby National Caty
and booked for investigatioo of
murder.
Rather than send Christopher
to a receiving home, Hawkins
asked him to spend the night
with the officer's own children.
"It was an unusual
circumstance," explained Chief
of Police William Winters. "Jt
usually doesn't happen that
police officers take the children
home wlththem."
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INCIAL
' TRUSTEES.! •
' ' = dlnc:tor. And • -uc•Uon cllrect«. • •
ln addation, '11\omsley redDm-
mended elimlnatlon of f~
ent admlnlatraltve poaJU~-
cJudlnc that of deputy au •
tendent, a poaitloo be by
Truman Benedict, wbo w re--
Ur• in June. Three positions would in
almply title chanaea and
poeilions would be repla
new, more apecialhed post lf Tbomsley's recommenda
are approved by the ~d.
In addition to the $173, in· c re a s e an nu a II y in' d ·
minlatrative costs, tbe !re·
or1aniutlON would raise*°cb aupport services u sec re ·al
expense by an estimated $1 000
a year, Thomsley said. •
Board President. Kopp saicl the
bOatd bas ex~ted the propdsed
adminlstratlve expansiori to
generete aome public opposil$on.
For thla reason the boa.rd ~
built up to the proposed cbaues
over about three years, be 2'lid,
"lo be sure we do it ri1ht." :
As well as aileviatlnc the '«>rk
load on ~resent administra~· , the addition of new manage ent
personnel will enable the sc
district to take advantag of
grants, which admlnistralors
have simply been too bust to
pursue, Kopp said. ;
Jn 10 ~ars the Capistrano
school district baa added 12 pew
school• to accommodate a titu-
dent enrollment which has ~e
from 6,000 to 18,000 students,. but
has hired only one new cerilral
administrator. said Thornsle~. • .
$10 Million ~
' .
DrugNabbe~
MONTEBELLO (AP) ~ A
raid on a house In this su•urb
yielded 24 pounds of pure: co-
caine, estimated to have a scnet
sale value of more tban: $10
million, police said. :
An earlier raid in Montebello
Wednesday resulted in ,the
seizure of nioe ounces of cocJli.ne
and information that led offi,:ers
lo the larger cache, said ~gt.
Richard Armstrong.
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Young Wallenda Perfonm
OAK.LANO CAP> -"He always told me the show must go
on I knew that was what I had to do."
That's what Steve Wallenda, 28, said Wednesday after a
400·yard wallc on a 75·foot tugh tramway wire at the Oakland
Zoo only three hours after learrung his uncle, Karl, bad fallen
120 feel to ht!> death in a performance at San Juan in Puerto
Rico.
, .. , .. STEVE, WHO SAYS HE IS THE last of the famed Great
Wallendas, wu asleep at his home in nearby Concord wben the
word came or his 73·year-old uncle's death.
"He was very upset about Karl," said Steve's wife, Joyce,
29, whom he married here Saturday. ''He wants to foUow in
Karl's footsteps."
"l'rq a perfonner; sawd~ runs ii\ my veins," Steve said as
he climbed down from the aerial tram wire after completing the
third orr1veoangerous waucs usang a24-foot baJancingpole
HE RECALLED THAT HE WAS seriously injured when
11truck by .a auromoblle wtdJe crdssillg a t.u Veeu street Ill
lt76. He said he was told he never could walk a wire again.
"But I am a Wallenda," he said, "and Wallendas always
eome lhrougb.'' · '
His rather .retlred (rom the .h~ V(ire tn aa art.er t"(O'
WalteDd.as were killed abd a third pautyi«l ill a fall duting
t.belr spectae!Ular pyramid act in Detroit.
NOW IDS THREE SMALL CIDLDllEN by an earlier mar-
riage are lra.ming to carry on the family tradition by practicing
in their backyard on a wire strung three feet above cround.
"I've got to keep going," Wallenda said. "We've been eoter·
tamers m this family for 200 years."
Senate Backs Bill
OnRetiretnent Age
WASHINGTON CAP> -The
Senate passed and sent to the
White House today a bill that
will raise the mandatory retire-
ment age to 70 for most
Americans and eliminate it com-
pletely ror federal employees.
Tbe Senate vote was 62·10
after tbe House -approved it thil;
week. President Carter is ex-
pected lo sign the legislation.
"This bill ts a significant
milestone for older Americans,"
said Jacob K. Javils, R·N. Y.
"No longer can an employer
arbilrarily force a worker to re-
tire at 6S if he or she is qualified
to do the job and wants to con-
flnue gainful employment."
• As soon as the president signs
the bill, Rep. Claude Pepper, o.
Fla., chairman of the House Ag· inc Commitue, said he will in·
troduce another measure to
j• elimJnata all mandatory retire-
ment, thua allowt.n1 everybody
• to work as lone u they are capa-~ ble or as Jong as they cm find ~ 1r0rk. · ~ Tbedbtll 1oin1 to Carter · • amen s tbe 1987 Ase Dis-
crimination Act by ml.kine it
unlawful for private employers
to force workers to retire before
qe 70 as ol Jan. 1. 1970.
Bepnnlna ln September th1a
yur, federal workent 'WOU.ld be
allowed to e()flllnue on lho job
until they are ready to relil'e.
For moat Civil Ser•lce •mpto,_., tbo forc.d retJ.re. meot ap ii~. ,
,Ttlle'WD~ ;JdR&a.-o. Wortft~~ 0 ~ . ' .c.;· ~ .
20 or more employees. This
takes in about 70 percent or the
U.S. labor force.
Employers would still have
the right to discharge persons or
any age for incompetence, said
Pepper.
State and local govemmenLc;
are covered under the new age
70 retirement cutoff provisions.
But lbere are some occupatiooaJ
exceptions, such as persons in
high·risk job.s such as policemen
or firefighters who could still be
forced lo retire earlier than 70.
The bill provides for some ex-
ceptions and delays.
It will permit mandatory re·
tirement between 65 and 70 ol a
person, who 'for the two years
before retirement was employed ~ "bona Ode executive or high
polLCy.makfng poslUoo'' and is
entitled lo a pension. of at least
$21,000 annually.
In caleulatkai the income
nrure (« such executives, the
bUl excludes amount.I attributa-
ble to Social Security, employee
contributloos and contributions
of prior employers.
Colleges and universities
would be allowed to retire
tenured professors at age 6S un-
til July 1, 1982. They argued
aeainst changing the 65 ceiling
at all, but settled on the com-
promise to Jive them time to ad-
Just their bliin.I policies.
Spohemen for the blcber
educatlooal l.altlttrtJons arcued
tbat clasatoom• should be
.at u..lau4 wltll frt•b, In·
·novaUM W•u from youn1er Oi'OfiilC ·o,po.-u Nkl the lmtttutt onlf wuted to rttire •
bl1ber Hlan.cl toac ta and
hlre leme.r paid, YoUDI ones.
Th• bll1 wW not alt4t:r 6S .. tho
qe at Ch molt people can ~ ~ tM.tr.mutmu.m
oclal Security benetlta.
How-.ver. t SI anildl tetl that tile ltHadal p.resaw-. cm the
SOC!ll ~tJ Qttem woWd be •Wtiat ~ at
!hurwd!y. March 23. 1978 OAILYPtlOT .4:J
Landowners Seek Bonds
~ . -
$3.2 Billion Would Cf!,uy Into 21st Century
8¥ JEil.RY CLAUS
Of .. Deify ...........
A bandtUl of landowners are
to cast b.J.Jots by mall May 23
that could make way for a $3.2
billion property lax burden on
future south county property
owners lasting into the 21st cen-
tury
Ironically, a good portion of
lhat. probable burden bu been
spurred by slate ballot Prop. 13,
tbe Jarvis-Gann property tax
llmitation measure scheduled
for the June 6 ballot.
Three ot the county's largest
water districts are scheduling
May 23 electiom which are ex-
pected to assure a property tax
base for the sale of bonds for
water and sewage facilities re-
quired lo develop more than
100,000 acres or rancblands into
the year 2010.
The rush to beat Prop. 13 and
its possible property tax-
1nhibiting clauses that would
become effective July 1 if ap-
proved Is not unique to Orange
County alooe.
"But Orange County stands
well above any other area in the
state in development." said Ted
Stivers, St.ale Treasurer's office
district securities chief in San
1''rancisco.
The result, sa.d Slivers, is that
Orange County districts are
most active in getting the jump
on the tax·limiting Initiative to
assure proJeCt finding for future
developments.
The Orange County districts -
Santa Margarita, Irvine Ranch
and Moulton Niguel -were
formed onginaJly to provide im·
ported irrigation water for
ranchlands.
As the ranches develop, the
districts confrolled by land-
owners provide for delivery of
irrigation and domestJc water
for the treatment of sewage
Included within the districts
are the developing commuruties
of I rvtne, Mission Viejo, El
Toro, Laguna HiUs and Laguna
Niguel. And the proposed
6,623-acre Aliso Viejo planned
community hes in the heart of
.
bolrds after the fonnallty of •
public hearing. Some attorneys
are advising that the actions
may not constitute "voter ap-
proval'' and approval of Prop. 13
could void the hood aulbori:r.a·
tions.
Under current law, voter ap-
prov al in the three districts
formed under the old California
Water Districts Act for irriga-
tion purposes amounts to ap-
proval by large landowners who
hold one vole for each dollar's
worth ot property they own.
As a result. an estimated one·
dozen persons will vote in the
Moulton·Niguel district where
the Mission Viejo Company wiU
be a major voter.
The Irvine Company will be
the major voter among a
handful in Irvine Ranch Water
District's balloting, and the
owners of Rancho Mission VieJo
and the Mission Viejo Company
should be enough to approve the
bond election In Santa
Margarita Water District.
In any case, observers agree
that approval of every issue is
g"arant.eed, because the owners
need water and sewage facilities
to continue profit-making de-
velopment.
Moult.on Niguel Water District
is going for a relatively small
$194 .9 million in general obliga·
lion bond auttiorizallon for
!aciLities to be spread among four
new improvement districts. The
districts consist or about 9,000
acres ofwtdeveloped ranchland.
Most undeveloped portions or
the I~ Ranch. about 49,000
acres, are included In the Irvine
Ranch Water District plan to
provide water and sewage at a
future cost of Sl 6 billion.
Portions of existing Mission
Viejo, Mission V1eJ0-0wned un ·
developed land and all of the
sprawling 44,000·acre Rancho
Mission VieJo are Included in
Santa Margarita Water District
$1.3 billion bonding authonza.
t1on proposals.
The money, in each case.
wou Id provide water and sewage
Unes, reservoirs and treatment
and pqtnplng tacUities.
However, Stivers sald this
week th.at "Uley can't HU the
bonds (even when authorized>
until the state treasurer rules on •
the sotlDdnfss a.nd feasibility."
Stivers said the atat.e Wc>o0t ap-
prove aales until all local eov·
ernmental requirements are
met. inclucllng envjroo111ental
impact reports, and develop-
ment shows there is a dcllnite
riuirement for utilities. hen, as the varioU& special
taxing districts develop,
homeowners moving Into the
new subdivisions are to assume
responsibility for most of the im-
provement district bonding and
the resulting taxes, be said.
Homeowners already residing
m the various water districts
won't be taxed for works in the
new improvement districts,
directors report. Those
homeowners already are paying
for works in their own earlier-
approved improvement dis-
tricts.
While Santa Margarita and
Moulton Niguel water d.islrict of·
ficials readily admit that the
huge bonding authorization
Samaritans
Stabbed in SF
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
Two men who rushed to help two
women being threatened by two
knife.wielding men on Nob Hill
were themselves stabbed.
Tbe women, Robin Lehman.
31, and Karen Vogel, 32, were
walking Tuesday night w~en two
men tried to grab one of their
purses.
The women began screanung
and a taxi driver, Joseph
Borsky, 43, and his fare, John
Ankeny, 31, chased one of the at-
tackers. The attacker stabbed
both men in the stomach and
fled with the purse and $7 .15 in
cash.
moves are hnfs.Gann inspired.
some lrvinedistrictof'flcialldeny
the Prop. 13 lmpact. calling tbe1r
$1.6 blllloo autborization the re-
s1ill oC ocderly planning for the
futur.,. . . _ Bu\ Lance Eberling, district
president. admits the· initiative
has had an ellect.
"We probably would be doing much of thls (authorization) this
year anyway," be said.
"Whether lt would be next.
month, quite frankly, is in-
fluenced by the Jarvis amend-
ment.
Eberling said, "There are two
reasons for (Improvement dis-
trict works) hearings right now.
We a re getting ready to
participate in the Diemer Un-
tert1e) line and have completed
conjunchve·use studies to pro-
\.lde for eventual complete de-
velopment. We need to have
fmancmg available."
The Diemer lntertie, a multi-
ai ency-sponsored water line
planned to bring drinkable
water lo south Orange County
during the early 1980s,
originates al the Diemer plant in
Yorba Linda. To cost $60
million. the line is to provide
Colorado River and Northern
California water sufficient for
develo\>ment of all or the south
county s rolling ranchlands.
Eberling also admitted two
thirds or the Irvine Ranch areas
proposed for water and sewer
works under the proposed May
23 election had improvement
districts formed and bonds
authorittd through the public-
hea rmg method.
The problem. he said, 1s that
bonding authorization was not
great enough and the problem of
what constitutes "voter ap-
proval" that would be required
by Prop 13 if approved in June.
Di rectors of the other waler
districts and their lawyers
aren't positive either.
But they arc confident that the
May 23 balloting will remove
any possible property-tax·base
obstacles and assure develop-
ment and property taxation int.o
the next century.
the Moulton·Niguel Water Dis· ---------------------------------------
trict.
Although some Irvine Ranch
Waler District spokesmen deny
it, most water officials agree
that tbc s ize or projects
scheduled for bofldin& auihonza-
t'lon ts due to the Jarvis-Gann m· it1ative.
If Prop. 13 is approved by the
state electorate, &~.ral obliga-
tion bond ltsv watld bave to
be approved b.J 1wo.thitds of a district's registered voters, most
attorneys agree. Historically.
bond issues are difficult to pass
when the requirement is only
two·tblrds of those people votmg
in an election, they point out.
Some attorneys and water of.
f1cials also believe that vague
wordang in the initiative assures
that general obligation bonds ap·
proved by "voters" prior lo July
J won't be negated by passage of
Prop.13.
/°\s a result, tbe water districts
are scheduling the property·
owner elections in improvement
districts where general obliga-
tion bonding already bas been
approved by methods other than
the ballot.
Most bonds already authoriud
were approved by a vote of the
landowner-appointed water
'Parki,ng Lot
Raput' Hits
In San Rafael
SAN RAFAEL (Al») -Police
are JCJC)ldq fOI' a "parting lot
rapist" who tella women their
parked cars have been hlt and
offers to ride alone with them to
see if the cars "tilt.'' Then 'he
rapes them.
Capt. Gerald Soma says the
scenario that occurred in the
parking lot ol a big department
store Monday was "absolutely
identical" to a rape in the same
lot a year aao. It also was
simUar to n1f11 ln five other
cttJes ln the Su Fra.Ddsco Bay
a.rea ln tbe taa 1ear and a ball,.
he said.
Thia is tbe npllt's novel ap-
proach, Souza uld:
After a woman parks her car
in the lot. be follows her into the
store and teUa her someone bit.
her car.
"My wife and ldds got the
licen.se number. My wtre is on
the phone naw," be aay1, walk·
tne wllb her back to the car ad
pointinc out the new acratch. ·
Thu. m1sh1 be dam.,e to tbe
fratne. bD •UIPIU. a.nd rldee
with ber fo aee.U the car ''Ultt ...
Once ln ..._car, hub to drive
IO ::~:m ur.r.r:a~
be drn•, be arabbed btr.
pushed lwr bead down, atuck •
1barp ~. qaiost Mr sfde
and told her he bad a tnile. 'nle
vlcUm aald ahe wu fcri'eed tow:.-
l'll ove soma clothln• aad
perform aexual act.a before &be
n•r•
SOFA BED SALE!
Queen and
full size
•These mre 119ry comfortable
sofa beds for sitting and
al .. pfng.
· •A wlde-.ctlon of fabri<:a
and colon to chooee from.
~bllCkaMd ... t
CUlhfona.
SAVE 20o/()
Several Styles
To Choose Fro"'
Sale Period
Mareh 23rd
Through
April 6th
Tra•ltl•••I •e••tY •••• ••·
......-••1•"9 alltl It ee•wert11
mt~ •bi> wl\lld ba"
MMrr.flljl•• • • :~::·~!l;:J!!lll~~
8"~
• wel1Jdf11114Kt
A ·I DAIL y PILOT Thursday, Match 23, '"78
" .... . .... I ~'" Ju~t
·~·:;::~oasiing
·~
with~~ Tom~~~\'
)larphine
We're Taking Gas AgaiD
TOO MUCH AND TOO LITl'LE: Another easollne
sbortaee is bein1 pr9d!cted for our region in May. just in
time for the summer tourist and vacation season.
The predictor in this instance is our state Controller
Ken Cory, who is scheduled to be huddlln1 in Huntington
Beach next week with federaJ oil officials.
Cory's crystal ball view of a gas shortage In a couple
of months is interesting. He says the problem Is we have a
glut of fuel oll here, Ulus cau111nt us to come up short on
gasoline.
THE CONTROLLER'S logic leaves you spinning in a
revolving door. First, he s uggests that we are overloaded
with crude oil wl\ich should be refined into gasoline But In
the refminC process, you not only get gasoline but fuel oil.
The fuel oil mainly goes to the East Coast.
Cory notes, however, that federal rules demand that
for shipment between U.S. port!, oll must be carried by
American-flag tankers. There aren't enough American-
flag tankers to get the job done.
Thus here in our region. all lhe crude oil is stacked up
in storage. We can't refine more gasoline because you get
fuel oil as a side product and we're out of places to store it.
Thus, Cory suggests, the crude plJes up, we can't get il out
of here and we can't produce needed gasoline.
Children Chant
Truce Holds;
TrQOps Move In
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -A cn>wd of Lebanese CbrtsUan
children chanting "We want Israel!" del&1" a convoy of U.N. peace
troops today at a border crosaing, but the t.rucldoadl of soldiers
eventually cf'06sed into southern Lebanon.
Both Vasser Arafat's PalestinJa.n command ln Beirut and Israel's
state radio reported only minor .
infractions of t.he cease-fire tn1 •Cain toward the Lebanese
Israel proclaimed Tuesday town of Gbandourlyye, where
night. Each side accused the they were to join the fint con·
other of shooting first. tingentoflranians.
A recoMalssance party of 16 A slmllar demonstration
French officers was scheduled Wednesday bad held up the first
to advance into the Israeli-convoyforasbortUme.
occupied territory south of the TWO HVND•ED French
Lilani River today, joining about paratroopers arrived in Beirut
100 Iranians who crossed mto from France, and their com·
south Lebanon Wednesday from mender said be expected them
the U.N. buffer force on the to be on stat.ion in the south
Golan Heights. within a few days. He said 400
AT METULLA IN Jsrael's
northeast corner, Associated
Press correspondent Larry
Thorson reported that a convoy
of 30 U .N. trucks carrying
Iranian troops and lrlsb officers
bound for the disputed regiod was
delayed by about 40 children who,
coached by Lebanese Christian
militiamen, sat down on the
Lebanese side of the border road.
"We want Israel!" they shout
ed, making the Christians' point
that the United Nations may be
unable to protect them from \he
Palestinjans if it takes over tn
southern Lebanon.
Arter an hour, an braell of·
f1cer persuaded the Christian
militiamen lo allow the convoy
to pass. The trucks began mov·
more French soldiers would ar·
rive before the end of the week.
U.N. headquarters in New
York said 2,345 soldiers had
been pledged to the 4,000.man
force the Security Council
authorized. They Included 600
each from France, Norway and
Nepal, 300 from Iran and 245
Swedes from the U.N. buffer
force between Israeli and Egyp·
tian forces in the Siqai Desert.
Despite Israel's earlier in-
sistence that its forces would not
be withdrawn until it was as-sured the Palestinian guerrillas
could not return to Lhe area Just
above its northern border, the
Israeli television service said
the invasion force would be
pulled back across lbe border
"within lhe next few days."
Oreus Connection Fails
Th(' nev('r-accomplished ci rcus aerialist s tunt, a quadru-'
pie somersault from t he flying trapeze. eluded Tito'.
Gaona and a c rowd of thousands watching the Ringling
Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus at New York 's•
Madison Square Garden Wednesday night. Gaona com-
pleted the four somersaults bttt missed the grasp of his
'catcher," Lalo Murillo, above. Gaona landed in the net
and was applauded by the crowd
. ---:-·.:.:::-_ _,.,,_, ___ . __ _
-..,.....---,~--?-;. ------:::::=::c • -~ ,A..i._/ .. -.:.. .. .__ --. ~ -,____.... o · ..; _, ~·. --Mexican Flood Aid Promised
How to Get There Without Ga&ohne
H<.> says California today Is getting about 500,000 more
barrels of crude oil than 1t needs. Most of it comes from
Alaska. He expects the problem to worsen in coming
months.
If Cory's crystal ball is in focus. what a mess. Here
we'll be, up to our ears in crude oH and out or gas.
DESPITE ALL TJUS DOOM and gloom, I'll tell you
I'm not golng to get p;:m1cky like I did dunng the late, al·
leged Mideast oil crisis that had motorists lining up at the
~as pumps.
This time I'm ready
Jn our family. we'll Just park lhe cars. We've tot a mo-
ped and a small motorcycle waiting in the wings. Each
will go forever on a gallon of gas. We'll store the outboard
motor for the family yacht. We bought a set of oars
IF ALL TIUS FAILS, we still have the 16 bicycles cur
rently stored m the garage Admittedly, they are 10 vaned
:.talcs of disrepair.
There must be, however, enough aood parts lo put
together four bikes that can be pedaled around.
So bring on the blamed gas shortage
I wonder where I put the bike llre pump?
Flynt Retrial Nixed
Through Publicity
LAWRENCEVILLE, Ga. CAP> -Pornoerapby publisher
Larry Flynt will not be retned on an obscenity cbar1e because he
was s hot during his first trial, the Gwinnett County r.olidtor said.
Flynt and his local attorney, Gene Rttves. Jr., were shot
March 6 during a noon recess m f1ynt '1 trial for dlstri bu Una obscene
materials, spedf1cally t.he August urn lasue of HusUer magazine.
A mistrial was declared lhat afternoon.
.. , MADE THE DECISION not to seek a new trial very shortly
after the shooting," Solicitor Gary Davis said Wednesday. "The
publicity involved with the shooting would not allow it to be retried
in Gwinnett County."
The case could not be moved to another county because the
moral standards of Gwinnett County would have to be used Lo
judge the value or the ma~azme. he said.
A spokesman at Emory University Hospital in Atlanta, wherE
Flynt remained in serious condition Wednesday. said abdominal
infection is the most significant problem faclnt him.
Reeves remained in euarded condition in a Lawrencevillf
hospital.
TIJUANA, Mexico <AP> -
The Mexican government has
promised $23 million lo aid in
the controversial resettlement of
some 25.000 squatters from the
nooct-strirken Tia Juana River
Valley, says Baja California
Gov. Roberto de la Madrid.
The governor of lhe wind-and-
r a 1n-battered Mexican state said
Wednesday that the program
was in Its first stages. Govern-
ment spokesmen say the reset·
Slain Official
Tied to Hoff a
Disappearance
NEW YORK IAP) -The New
York Post quoted unnamed law
enforcement officials today as
Miying that slam Teamsters of·
ficial Salvatore Briguglio
personally arranged "the con·
tract murder" of Jimmy HoCCa.
The 1975 disappearance of
HoHa, onetime national
Teamsters president, is un·
solved. But two federal in-
veatlgatora in Detroit have said
the Briguglio slaying could bring
a break in the case.
The sources said New Jersey
Teamsters boss Anthony "Tony
Pro" Provenzano, on trial here
on a loan-kickback charge, was
believed to have initiated the or·
der that led to Hoffa's killing,
according lo the P ost.
Provenzano was one of three
men Hoffa beUeved he was lo
meet the day he vanished.
The newapaper aald Brl&ugllo
was Provema.no·s most trusted
henchman. The Post quoted Its
sources as saying that the two
men who actually did the killing
were officers of Briguglio's
Teamsters local.
Cold Front Hits Midwest
Cooler Temperatures Generate Rai"' Snow
Temperatt&tta ...... .._ ..
.. 40 ••
.. 4.1 u u ,. 4' ., .
4S 2' .. 44 .. . 12 ,.
42 u .•
" IS " 44 ... ,. . .. " .. :w ... • , ,, .ce
4 21
•• •l '° Jf M n
7J " H <It ., . ,. ... ., " .,. JI ..
.. l1 .. ,.., ~ ti ., .,
11 u
tttwvtfl " OtlltllofM(tty u " $1
• ,. • 11
JI .,
" •• .. .. ,. •
•• 11.s.s .... ...,
A ........... celd flWlt ·~ ,,_ -.......... ~ Laa .... . .,.,... ......... .....,, ........... •• __ ._.. .............
-.ntw-lft .. Nlillll'f mi..cUM.
.u "•'" wet tatll111 In ••II•••
.OS OlllafltlN, te--. w-1 ......
.OS .,......_OMe.-Wtll v~
9ellllld"" ...... -~ .,, .,,,,
• $2 .,...~ ......... -::-: .. ... ~-~ .... -.......... 8*1'Mlllt ... u• 01\ NtllrHjla •111tlt=t ._..,....._..,._ Hiii ,.._..,,..,,. .. .... ~
Ctdltonel•
tlement effort, the largest ever
undertaken in Baja Callfornja, 1s
the finit phase of a six· to 10·
year program to move a n
estimated 30,000 families from
other dangerous or illegal areas .
"Right now, our main concern
Is with moving those 4,000 lo
5,000 families in the flood area
into lent cities and clearing the
way for establishment of a new
colony where they will be
permanently settled in Otay
Mesa," De la Madrid said.
Fallout /tlea.Mred
WASfilNGTON CAP) -Low
levels of fallout from last week's
nuclear test la communist China
have been recorded al two air
stations in the United States. the
Environmental Protection Agen·
cy said Wednesday
The EPA :.aid "air stations 1n
Denver and Cheyenne, Wyo., re·
ported mild levels of radioactivi·
ty. but 4-0 other stations said
there was no· identifiable fallout.
Orion-A••atl~d
SAN LUIS, Mexico CAP> -A
s urvivor of the flaming head-on
crash of two Mexican buses that
killed at least 28 people says the
driver of the bus he was on "was
driving like a bat out of hell ..
70, 75, 80 miles an hour almost
all the way."
Al lt>ast 46 others were injured
in the collision Tuesday night
during a rainstorm along Mex·
1can fligh\\ay 2 about 50 miles
southeast of Yuma, Ariz. Of.
facial:. said one bus apparently
( (NSHORT J
tned to pus a small car, which
also was destroyed in the crash.
Mfnlefl ~1'ered
MONTREAL CAP> -Police
arrested five suspects, Including
two police offic~rs , and re·
cowred all the money from I.he
$1 million armored truck ro~
bery in lhe town of St. Jovite. a
Quebec provincial polic:e
spokesman said today.
He said the five were arrested
Wednesday and lhe money from
Tuesday's holdup was recovered
later that night. More arreslS
were expected, police said.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
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I 9 ... GtiM 1U e --
Gas Negotiations Continue
WASHINGTON (AP>
Congressional energy negotietors,
after laking a major step toward end·
mg their long deadlock on natural gM
pricing, are gingerly trying to work
out their remaining differe.n~.
By narrow margins, both sides
agreed Wednesday to back a rom·
prom1se that would lift price cont.rol3
from newly discovettd natural gas ln
1985 and provide for • steady \n· trease ln the regulated price between
now and then. But they differed on
how \o ac('Omplish lbls dereculation.
The Senate con!e.rffs want the con·
trols to ('()me off J •n. 1, UJ8S. The
House negotialor1' want them to re·
main on for an addJUonal six months
and to make it e sler lO reimpo&e
them Ir the pr .. ldent or Conaress
feels It ne(etsary
~ .. i..2; :\ .s~i Amuatng
'~obArfftfON
SS..., ... -._, of llfe
•tong th•
Ortttge Celt•t,
SMtftfttd bf
1naflweeo1t,
Int"•
DAILY PILOT
I
OAll.Y PILOT BS
By SYLVIA tO&TEll
tn a matter of days, leg.lslaUon will go on lhe boob ral~lng the legal mandatory reUrement age for most peo-
ple in the work force from 6S \0 70.
The oew retirement ate wUJ ~me effective Jan. 1.
1979, for mlW0115 in private e.oterprlao and sute ~ local
government jot)f, with uemptioos for top business ex·
ecutives and tenured collep professors. As of Oct. 1, the
federal government's reUremeo\. age oC '10 for mo:sl
clvlllan employees will be abolished, with restnct.ecl ex·
ceptiong.
EVEN BEFOU TRIS AJ)llJSTMENT takes place,
the pluses and minuses are beina debated with amuety.
Opponents forecast shock waves over the entire business,
Industrial and academic worlds. Pension plans are being
rewritten ot renegotiated, many firms are trying lo work
out systems Ul\der which workers with inferior records
still can be coznpellcd to retire al 65, the extent lo which
the burden on tbe Social Se<:wity System wtll be eased is
being calculated, etc.
One concern is how t.Mlr own peers can define and ac·
curately meuure competence amon& fellow ex«utives
and professors. Another is how to judge whether an employee is de·
teriorating physically
or mentally to the point
where he or s he
becomes a drag on the
company.
Money's
Worth What Is deadwood.,
What is competence
among top executives
or professors who may be unpopular but still of value to
lheir institutions.
HOW WILL VOUNG ER WORKERS respond when
their promotions are delayed because lhose ahead of lbem
are remaining on lhe job?
What will be the impact on job opportunities for
women and minorities, particularly, if lbe employment
ranks are jammed? Can workers keep performing at acceptable levels as
they age? An encouraging report. pnvalely circulated by Pren·
lice-Hall, suggest:. that "for many companies, keeping
workers on the JOb until age 70 would pose very few prob-
lems ."
THREE PROBLEMS E'ERGE AS senous: (1) the
"d el icat e problem of dealing with reduced job
performance among people who are only a few years away
from retirement," (2) increased costs due to absenleeism1
benefits, etc., and (3) "dealing with advancement for
younger go-getters."
On the challenge of dissatisfied younger workers.
possible solutions include oCfenng Incentives to older
workers to retire before age 70, ortenng incentives to
younger workers to stay with the company and revamping
compensation programs to tic pay more closely to
performance. On the problem of jobs for women and minorihes. only
4 percent of companies expect opportunities to shrink. ac·
cording to the report. Several corporations said they would
make an effort to see that highly qualified minorities re-
ceive special advantages .
ON THE QUESTION OF JOB performance, m~ny
employers sa.td they would t1ghteo their ~hc1es to make
sure employees in the older age groups are working up to
par.
Prentice-Hall also found that while the mandatory re·
tirement age 1s rising, the number of employees choosmg
to take early retirement also 1s increasing.
Museum's Owner
Reports Increase
Great Southwest Corp., whose Six Flags, Inc., sub·
sidiary operates Movieland Wax Museum an Buena Park,
has reported record revenues and earnings for the year
ended Dec. 31. il.!i third consecutive year of earnings
growth
The company had net income last year of $17,721,000.
or $3.99 a s hare, a 31 percent increase over 1976 profits of
$13.571,000, or $2.82 As a result of these earnings. the com
pany has a positive net worth for the ru·st time since 1970.
Revenues rose to $125,312,000, a JS percent increase
over the prior year level of $108,857 ,000
Net income in 1977 included extraordinary credits
from tax loss carryforwards of $7.428,000, or $1 71 , and
$6,744,000, or SI 44 m 19'16.
Jn the fourth quarter of 1971. Great Southwest had a
loss or $3,763,000, or 89 cents, on revenues of $1\,380,000,
compared with a loss of $7,941.000, or Sl 80, on revenues of
$6,447 ,000 in the like 19'16 period
The company usually reports a Joss for the fourth
quarter because of Its involvement in the seasonal amuse·
ment park industry. Great Southwest's operating subs1d1anes are Six Flags
Inc and GSC Develoµ·
------------ment Corp. The Six
(
TAKING J Flags subsidiary also operates Snc Flags over STOCK Texas. between Dallas and Fort Worth ; Sue
Flaizs over Georgia,
near Atlanta: Six Flags
over Mid-America, near St Louis, Astroworld in Houston,
Great Adventure in New Jersey, and Stars Hall of Fame, a
wax mui5eum in Orlando, Fla
GSC Development Corp. operates two industrial parks
in the Oallu-f'Ort Worth area and the S,000-acre Coto de
Caza property in Orange County.
Great Southwest is a 9'·1M;rcet1t owned subsidiary of
Pennsylvania Co., a wholly owned subsidiary or Penn Cen·
tral Transportation Co.
Ma~ ~rt• 6al11
Marlne-r'I Flnancaal Corp., Santa Ana, owner of
Mariners Savings and Loan JUsociation, has announced
earning& for l.M yur tndcd Dec:. 31 wf'~ $4,862,575, coll)·
pored wtlh SJ.m ,754in1876.
Ptr·sbare earnina:s were ""01. ~mpared with tl 17,
computed on the bula of tho averagf' shares out.stand1na
durin• each year (1,&13,123 shares in Hm, and l,SU.90&
abaru in 1976).
Atsets increased to S221,120.0C4 from $168,074.SN at
ycarend ln 197t. Savlnl'I t.otaled $l"f1.1T4,Ul8, growing ftolh
$131,159,353 •t. the prev1ous yearend. The loan portlollo ~u
*113,080,317 al yeattnd 1971, ln<:renlnR from $133,14\883
al the end ot 1811.
DAILY PILOT Thunoay, March 23, 1111 BUSINESS
Orange COast Businesses ~eport GrO'Wt~ Activiti.es
. CN Report• Sales B~
~,.. • lCN Pharmaceuticals Inc., Irvine, has report· ·.a Jales of $84 .5 million for its fiscal year ended. ~ot. 30, an increase of 2 percent over 1976, and in·
~ome from operating units of $8.2 million, an in•
·Crease of 4 percent over the previoWJ year. !: These results exclude operations of the com-
l>t(by's German subsidiaries sold In February 1976, .m. an $850,000 _special charge for inventories in
Net loss for the year after alt adjustments was 7 .000. compared with net income of $7 .2 million
} 1976. The company said the urn fourth quarter
ults were adversely affected by an unexpected
'bOokkeeping charge to biochemical inventories of
llS0,000, made as a result oC revised computer pro-
sams. ·
Excluding that inventory adjustment, lCN
Lowed a profit for the year. Other items reported
edver::.ely affecting 1977 results were increases
contingency reserves or $3SO,OOO and foreign
rrency translation and devaluation Josses o(
oiyer SI milhon
JCN Pharmaceuticals 1s a multi-national en
~rprase in the heaJlh care field. Its domestic and
international operations serve maJor markets in
tlie fields of pharmaceuticals, research chemical:>
and diagnostic services.
f'•cTri Bqort• C~,._.
• Dc:-;p1te improved earnini:s, all-time highs in
pfodUl'ltV1ly and the fulfillment of record demand'>
f6r sc•rv1cc, "uncertainties of California·..,
~conomic climate" continue to cloud Pac1f1 t
Telephone's future, accordmg to Gordon L. Hough,
board chairman
More than 56 percent of Pacific Telephone s
1~7 earnings remain in jeopardy because of rah'
dtcisions during the year by the California Public
qtllit1es Commission, he satd, calling the dec1s1ons
J>Jlmanly "tax related."
"A direct result of these decu;ions." Hough
sp1d. , "was to have our bonds downgraded dunng
tbc vear in reflection of what was termed .1 ~erall~ chffi<:ult r egulatory atmosphere "
Pac1f1c Tell'phone 1s seeking rate inC'rea::.t-s
t•tal1ng S.171 mil hon a ye<ir
: Its l·arnings last year rost• IJ pl'rcPnt o\·1·1
1'76. lo S2 :1:i per com moo share He\ enucs ancl
other income· <.imountcd to S4,097,627,000, C'nm
pared with S3.698.383,000 in 1976. Expen!>C!>, taxi·..,
and intt•rest last vear were $3,691.868.000, up from
$3,3-1b.507,000 the pre .. 1ous year
Telefl,._ Bqoru D~
Tcll'ftle Computer Corp • lrvtnl'. has reported
tnal total rC'\'t•nuc JUmped 95 p<.>rcent. and nel
earnings broke the million-dollar mark for the
t,)rst lime m fiscal year 197'7, ended Sept. 30. Fis
C!11l 1977 was the s ixth consecullve year that the
<$mpany broke t>oth revenue and earnings
11cord:;
Audited Yl'arend h iturcs show total rrvenuc of
Ql.601.865 in fiscal 1977, compared with $5,952,676
fjle prt.'VIOUS year
I' C't carnm~s were Sl.126.867 in fi scal 1977, a 53
percent increase over the $736,617 figure posted in
f.lscal 1976. The 1977 income was aided by an ex
ttaord1nary itern of $456,000 that res ulted from la'<
~neftl cons1derat1ons. N«!l income the previous
jear included a tax benefit of $341.289.
• The earninJ\s increase boosted shareholder
t><iuily to 53,320,115. all of which has been ar
<1umulated m lhc past ~ax years.
Consolidated fully diluted earnings per share
\\pre 8.'> cents. including 34 cents from the tax
c:red1t, compared wilh 56 cents, and 26-cent lax
ned 1t. per share in fiscal 1976.
Ncarly S900.000 of revenue was contributed by
'l'elehle's European operations, cstabhshed JO
]976.
NB l'f,... to Btdld Cnetn-.
· Santa Anita Development Corp., Newport
Beach, has purchased eight acres of land at the
~outhwcsl corner of 17th Street and Cabnllo, Santa
1\na, and will construct a shopping center on the
.ate, anchored by a 52,000-square-foot Fazio's
Market.
The sale was from Parkcenter Corp., Santa
l\na, for an undisclosed amount.
Jn addition to the Faz1o's Market, the center
w1U contain 22,000 square feet or shops. Already
l0ased for the center, located within the 170·acre
Parkcenter development, are Panjo's Pizza
Parlor, Keystone Auto Supply, Dr. Honda, op·
t.Qmetrist; Hallmark Cards, a laundromat and dry
cteaning establishment and an ice cream and
yogurt parlor. A spring opening is planned, ac·
cording to the developer.
CM Solar l'I,.,.. Purf! ... •ed · ·
Solar Control Corp., Boulder, Colo. has an
nouneed the acquisition of Solar Energy Equip-
ment Corp., Costa Mesa and Engineering Design
and Development, Inc , Pacoima.
Solar Control is involved in the engineering,
production and distribution of components for
solar heating and cooling systems and energy.
$aving devices
Donald S. Sather, chairman of the board of the
publicly held company, said the move into
California "is in recognition of the lead whlch the
state has taken in support of the solar industry.
The Callfonua 55 percent tax rebate on the cost or
an installed solar system is the single most
positive commitment made by any state."
,~ .. ,~~ PUBLIC
AUCTION
CUSTOMS STOPPED .
ltAMDMADE OllENT AL
CAIPm&IUGS
ttllpment entry 179-136871, 27 bel• d&te of entry 12/ 1 /77 atopp~ by Cu•tom' under Hctlon
604.t.A. mer1<1ngaanct INA•flOISMtoo 1/1~/18. We wlll aUcilon the above 1hlpment ot fine wooll & 8'1111 a others to rf1CC1119r various cti.gea tncu"'*' due to
IQng delay In c;luranQe. ... 4'.UCTIOM WU TAD Pl.ACI
AT., MAR. 25, AT 2:00 P.M.
' I
THE REGISTRY HOTEL J.,... 'An a:COSTA ..mA ROOMS
llOO MACAITH• aYD. ...... ~.
Momorex CQrp. over the next year. Solar Equipment iJ lnvolved in the distribution
and service of 1wlmmine pool and domeaUc hot
water solar syatems. lt la the exclualve diltributor
of the Falco line or solar producta in Ora.nae
County.
It also markets tbe Solareenlcs hot water
system and other en,rgy aavlnc dtvlces
throughout Southern CaUforula.
The initial releue is $1~,000. Memorex bas
opUons on ~ddltional units, which would increase
the total order to more than $6,000,000. The con-
trollers are plug compaUble with the lBM 3271·2
,.nd 3272-2.
ing February 1978 for the best February in the
company's hlsl.ory, with a growth of 31 3S percent
over Febr'1ary 1977.
Mlf!reclata Cotiapleta ••
M icrodato Corp., Irvine, has announced con-
clusion or lta transaction to acquire the remainll\C'
25 percent lntrest in Computer Macrunery Com·
pany Ltd. or Heme\ Hempstead near Londoa,.
England.
'aGv P.tdJIJeolll H•e•
Jim Martin of PaJos Verdes bas joined the
company u vice president an<J general manager
He prevlo\ISIY was general manager of the Fafco
dlslrlbutorship in Los Angeles County.
Clay Publico01, Orange CoWlty public com-
municatioais flrrn, has moved from Tustm to
larger quarters ln Irvine.
In the Airport Business Complex. the new of·
fices occupy Suite ft!, 17801 Main St., lrvme 92714.
II\ an earlier triansllction, Mlcrodata acqulted
75 percent or the cornmon stock of CMC Ltd. and
prod1,1et distribution agreements for its equipment.
in the United Kingdom and elsewhe1e.
Tri1'e1t Gee. c .. trad .
Trivex, Inc., a manufacturer of IBM compati-
ble terminals in Costa Meaa, has signed a contract
to supply IBM 3270-compatlble controllers to
Golden lt'•et Set• Reeerd •
Golden West Airlines, Newport. Beach. has an·
nounced that 44,024 passengers were carried dur·
Mlc:.l'odata is a small mainframe supplier o(
computer equipment to the business marketplace.
J l
Sale Prlees Good ThrU Wed •• March _29, 1978
All Photographic, typograph1ca1. clerical
al'ld printing errors are su1ect to correc·
tlon.
--~~--~~~~----... here's no ONE best hardwar
store. Clark Dye doesn't have it
all. nor does Builders Em-
oorlum or Fedco. The BEST 1s
up to you ... that's what makes
Ille so great. So. one of the best
things 1s finding out Maybe you
shoule! try Kerm Rima (He's
been around srnce the world
was llat ) Fino out 11 ne is the
best for you! AND . we might
mention that because we have a
clean. well-stocked store. super
intelligent sales people and a
great boss, that we might look
expensive but we re not1 ll
iust m1gt>t be that, for you we re
the BEST'
-.. ___ the great ............_ .:-._ . s
water-saving
b Ck·SOOther a .....r1a\ty. Water·
from Chicago ~:;d·lh&t deh11ers
saving snow•r 111gorallnO bursts.
hght spray or in 4 49
11123WS. Reg.
24----9 ___,.
d sn't take bram gobbler ade \h1S gar· it 08 ut dra\nS '"-S1n1<-Erato,.. :r trouble-tree
\0 clear 0 Ll"e drain bage dispoO~~t v1brat1on·I!~! ew Clear ser111ce. • tor #~
It 1ust ~~~ ;ll1ord. Just \1'\e~~~~ opera11on. '\/24' p. mo • i.;;.:·~~~~~~.... 34is
one coat
can do it
Glidden Sprecl Gel·Flo 011
base house paint. Extra
thick lor one coat
coverage. Flows on easily.
Reg. 16.95 gallon
rising to
greater heights
~Hxe" bleak-off plastlo
aprlnkler need rrser.
Allon you to adjust the
tielght of your .:prlnkler
h.,d tor proper Mttf'lng
of la~ or Q•rden. • ,..
A.O. l9"
10tn
[J
fantastically
spreadable
Glidden Acryllc Latex
Spred House Paint goes
on easy, dries las1 and
looks like a m1tllon• Lasts
a long, long time, too.
Reg. 12.95 gallori
999
gallon
Choice of Vlgoro·s 5-lb.
bOxet of fertlt1zen •.. Rose •
Food. Azalea & Cam1llta
Food. Tomato food,
C11Ns & Avocado food
and All·Purpose Ferttllzer.
y~r cho1c:e
1~
lwiistt
lock up your castle
with the king
of lock sets
Highly reliable Kwikset Belair Entry Lock Set. Key
opens outside, thumb latch opens inside. Polished
brass finish. Reg. 12. 19.
88
kids can't
knock it
Kid teated Glldden Spred
Latex Semi-Gloss Enamel
gives you a non-
yellowl1ng, Improved
durability enamel llmsh.
Reg 15 25 gallo,._
899
glllon
, ... Ut "'9rf .......... 3.29
repalls
the
varmlts
Vigoro'e 'Sevin' dust to
use on vegetables •• shrubs, lawn• and even
dogs 4nd cata lo rid them of peaty lnMC\a. #SD-2'.
2·1b.~I\.
lasting finish
In flying colors
Glidden Spred Satin
latex Waif Paint ••• goes
on 1mootn and eaay and
stay1 beautllul longer.
Easy water clean-up, Lots
or colors. Reg. 9.99 gallon
699
ganon
to your plants"
good health
Vlgoro• Uquld Plant Food
-· helps promote good growth and better yield•
o1 bloom• and lruitS. Even
make• grass grow
greener on your aide of
the fence! 1-gallon.
Reg. 2 29 1••
ID
Conve,,ient'Y Lota tad •. . Ea•Y. To Ream
2666 HARBOR BLVD.