Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-03-24 - Orange Coast Pilot, ii Tanker rea ' ~ ' Lightning .Jolts Soviet Cosmos Two U.S. Jets; May Soon Fall No One Injured Out of Orbit , ... DAILY PILOT II * * * 1oc * * * FRIDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 24, 1978 VOL 71 NO U, 4 SECTIONS, .. ~AGES I ERA in Future I Site V11known Red Satellite Selection Delaye d One Day / I I ' •~wir....- E .R .A .. c\'cn if 1t never becomes national law. 1s assur('d an active future because that's the name of this baby girl Rer mother , Judy M cCarthey of Phoenix. was in Washington Thursday lobbying for the Equal Rights Amendment. More Spill ~ue Heavy Seas Break Supertanker Apart "" BREST, Fral')ce (AP> -The wrecked American supertanker , Amoco Cadiz broke in two early today, a it. 1ltrn aecUon with 1"5 broad t.0weri121 bridge and , huge •"fine was swung complete y aroun d ~by the lle>~~~"'fo~wa:ro section, 1tm ahoa1Jht to .hold up to 11 mUHon .I :,allon• or oil, w bearana the I 1uu torce or rbe torn,. and 1 iS-loot awells. • •• l ------'!"'-~--~~~~ 'FURNISHINGS' I J'WOR FE41VRE P~ak tides due over the weekend may completely break up the vessel, ending any chance of savin1 the remaining oil from Jol..,ln& tho record 50 milllon gallon• already Coulln~ the Brittany coast. The tanker broke Ill back and 1pllt almo!lt ln two within hours ol grounding March 16. But until early today it had held together on the port side A full pollution al~rt was ordered in western Normandy as the oil slicks continue to drill eastward acrou northern Brittany. Oil pollution control experts Jrom America and other naUon.'I wer• bitter over French reluctance to take their advice on cltanil'IJ up the 1piU, which lopped the tM't U'orr•y Canyon 4 dlsa1ter oft southwest EotJPd , by at leUt 15 mllUon 11llons. 'I May Soon Fall MONTREAL <AP J -The Canac11an Press today quoted Lhe space laboratory m Bochum, W<'sl Gt•rmany, as saying that Jnother Soviet satellite may fall out of orbit aboul April 20, but that ii was loo soon to tell where ti would fall The news age n cy s aid I l<'inrich Kaminsky, director of lhl' laboratory. reported in a tt>lcphone 1nterv1ew that Cosmos fU!l was followin~ a similar path Lo that of an earlier satellite that crashed an the Northwest T<'rrtlones this year The earher salelhle, Cosmos 954, was nuclear·powered and show t•red radioactive debris over the Canadian north when at t•ras hea . but al was not 1mmed1ately clear whether tht> :,,eco nd sat e llite also i s nurlear powered In an interview from Rochum with /l<ouvelles Tele· Radio. the French langua~e broadcasting service of the Canadian Press, Kaminsky said he has asked the Soviet space agency in Moscow for further information about Cosmos 849. It was launched Aug. 18, 1976. Meanwhile, radiation levels Bushmil/,s Runs Again The power, grace and tension of the Bushroills Grand Prix are recalled in a full page or pictures tn today's Daily Pilot. The race featured the world's fastest fleet of offshore power boats. See the start·to·finish photos on Page CJ 1 have increased sharply in two e1l1es as a res ult of China's recent nuclear explosion, but the Envaronmenlal Protection Agency said today the levels do not pose health hazards. The EPA 's air-monitoring tests found radiation levels reaching 85 picocuries in Denver. Colo., an!.1, Cheyenne. W yo Nor m a I b~ c k g round radial ion measures from 10 to 15 picocuraes. and not until the level reaches 1.000 is there cause for concem . EPA spokeswoman Martha Casey said At 50 other aar m omloring stations around the country, the amount of radiation did not exceed normal levels, the agency saicl Low-level nu<.'iear clouds are stall crossing the country wttile those al higher altitudes already have passed over the country. she said The Chinese blast March 14 was described as "less than 20 kilotons." Unlike some previous blasts, radioactive debris was round as low as 20,000 feet and was broken up by high winds, creating a scattering of small nuclear clouds. In some previous Chinese blasts, radioactive debris was contained in a single mass al an altitude over 30,000 reel. Alien Bus Cr ashes SAN DIEGO CAP) -A U.S. Border Patrol bus carrying 79 illegal aliens s ideswiped an erratic car and crashed Into a freeway embankment Thursday. Nobody waa reported hurt seriously. A second bus also filled wtth 73 aliens swerved across Interstate 805 but avoided hittin.c the car. ·~··,...,. .. NEW POLICE CHIEF LA Selects Gates Bolu Strike 2 U.S. Jet,s Nearing Tokyo TOKYO (APJ -Lighlnin~ struck two American 1umbo 1elc; over J a pan, causing wing damage to one. but both landed safely , Transport Ministry officials reported today. There were no reports of injuries among passengers and crew members of either plane, the officials said. A Pan American World Airways jet heading for Tokyo from San Francisco with 78 persons aboard was hit three time s Thursday night by lightning over Chiba, 30 miles southeast of Tokyo. The lip of the right wing, including an antenna, was tom off and panels covering the rear part or the first engine on the left wing were destroyed, officials said. It landed safely 13 minutes late r a l Tokyo International Airport. Ministry officials sa id a Northwest Airlines jetliner was hit on the nose by lightning, also over Chiba Thursday nlghl. Pilgrims Carry Crosses JERUSALEM (AP> -Thou· sands of pll1nms trudged alon1 the raln·dampened Via Dolorou thla Good Friday, many or them laborlnt under heavy wooden croase1, to mark Chrlst'1 march to his crucl.fhdon. Tho IOJemn proce alon ltd by Francllcan friars tn brown habtta wound tbrou1h the ancient Ian of Jerusalem'• Old Clty, ltO!PPll\I for devotlons at th 14 ltaUON of the cross. The hour·lon1 walk encbl at the Cburcb of tbe 1.flol)' Sepulcher, tho tradltJonal site of Calvary. ln the courtyard of the 800·ye&l'·old church, knots of worahlppen walled thelr turn to Ole throuth tho wooden doort. The Latin lltur echOed off lb• llcmt W4l1a i tb• t b a• tb pUpims ni.ct up tbo tees> atalrcHe to ti~• 1pot where tradttloll bold• Cllrlat waa crudRed. "JD of tbe cbaOI d Procealarl. 1 felt a P"Mt deal of • tJ:' .,ad Ru B araea, a pll1rlrn trolil South·Wtst Africa ... This tends to 1trengthen my faith In ChrlaUanity. "Parta of the proceaslon were badly orsanited, but everyone seemed to aet lnto the spirit or tbin1s. 1 wasn't dluppolnted at all," he1atd Some pUgtms lit candles and atopped at C'hrtlt'• tomb lnlid the aame church, juat a few yards from Calvary. The l01Db wlll th c Iller of Easter Sund11 celebrations. ( IUT , ra1t AU • LOS ANGELES CAP> -Daryl F Gates was named as the city's new police chief today, s ucceeding Edward M. Davis The decision was made by the t•1tv Police Commission after several rounds of lengthy interviews. The fi ve members of the commissi o n d e layed the selection one day to call back Gates and deputy chiefs Robert L. Vernon and Charles D. Reese for final interviews Thursday. Il was the lttird lime the group had been interviewed. None of the three candidates or members of the commission would discuss specific questions asked Davis retired this year arter serving as chief since 1969. He 1s see kin g the Republican gubernatorial nomination. Gates, 51, who finished first on the civil service examination for chief, spent the most time with the commission m the final interviews. The 29·year veteran, who took th<' police chief examination in 1969 and finished fourth, became closely associated with Davis in the following years. He is said to have been groomed for the chief's job by Davis . As director of the office of operations sance 1971, Gales has directed all uniform. patrol, traffic and air s upport operations of the department He is best known publicly as the <See GATES, Page AZ) Coast ---~ \leather Sunny and warmer Saturday Lows tonight 50 to 55 Highs Saturday 70 lo 75 INSIDE TOD~ Y What u balUd as o major Wtat Coaat !howfng o/ latt urrealism arh1C Wilham Baziotes o~ned today al Newport H arbo r Art Mu•rum Story and photo! on Poat Cl . lad ex r f\2 DAILY PILOT s F!!d!y. March 24, 1979 ,.,,WI,,...,.. PORCH OF BROWN'S POSSIBLE RETREAT FEATURES ROCKING CHAIR IN DOORWAY Governor May Purchase Rustic: Remote Home: ·1eo Acre• of Peace' Brown Finds 'Peace' Covenwr Eyes Remote Country Home By WALT ZEBOSKJ -I•&.-""'•,, ... .._._. NORTH SAN JUAN -Gov. Edmund houses. three sheds and an outhouse Rrown Jr. des('rabt.'d the retreat that he plans surrounded bv blatk oaks. ponderosa pine, lo buy near this old G"ld Rush town as "160 sugar pine, man.tanita and madrone trees <1cres or pcan> " and largt> gramte rocks covered with green The place hves up to his description. Hlvel moss It 1s pe<il'eful, remote and rustic. The old farm is JUSl 85 miles by road from the Capitol m Sacramento -east lo the Mother Lode J11ghway, then north past Grass Valley lo a !'>Hies of progressively more intimidating paved and muddy roads lo \1ontezuma Ridge near S • .m Juan THERE ARE NO TELEPHONES and no elE'ctnc1ty Wat.er comes from a spring. The elf'\. a lion as 3,000 feet · On the rronl porch of one of the houses, I found an old wooden rocking chair and walkmg stack A wood-burmng kitchen stove, at least half a century old, was in the kitchen of one of lhl· other houses TllF. ORl\'E FRO!'t THE Capitol look more than four hours, including several stops for directions and the time I was stuck m a 1k<•p rut in the road al the bottom of the bill leJding to the ~overnor's land. Milhous Ac.·res. named for. relatives or .• .former President Nixon, -is ·about lYl miles ""'l'Sl. Puhtler Pnie-wioning poet -Gary -....f'nyclt•r, Q friend or the governor, aJso lites ··.rll' ;1 rh y All thl' bu1ld10cs are vacant. and they look hkl' they've been that way for a long lime BROWN DOESN'T OWN THE property yet. but l<>rm s of his SSJ.000 purchase have be<'n completed, aides sa1d. lhe farm consists .of three aging wooden "He has an option which he apparently will exercise," said his assistant press ~l'crctary, Bobbie Metzger. Avco to Pay $631,000 Ex-Niguel Residents Win Property Suit By TOM HARLEY OI ltlo D•llf l'ilM Su.ti Dama~es totalling $631,000 "ere i.I\\ ar<kd against Avco <.:om m urut~ Developers Thurs· d<iy h.} an Orange Count.} Supl'rior Court JUr.} wh1t·h heard ti'st1monv that five former La~una l'i1gul•I residents were v1ct1m12ed b.} the c·ompany The \crd1ct ended a two- month trial in Jud$(e Robert H GrE'en's c•ourtroom . Av co lawyt'rs :-.aid they will appeal the \erd1cl Strong Quake Hit,s Sea Area WASHINGTON CAP> -A c;trong t•arthquak<' occurred Thursday evemng in the Atlantic Ocean about 250 males southwest or Bermuda. the u S Geological Survey reported Thl' tremor struck at 7:42 pm EST and registered about 6 0 on the Richter scale. survey c;pokesman Frank Forrester said. There were no immediate reports of damage or whether the quake was fell on Bermuda. Forrester said the earthquake, the strongest ever registered in that part of the Atlantic, was the sixth strong quake lo be recorded In the past three days. The others occurred off the Kuril I slands in the northwestern Pacific Ocean. Forrester said the Kuril Island quakes. which ranged in magnitude from 6.2 to 7.2 on the Richter scale. were unrelated lo the tremor off Bermuda ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT ::::r:c.~~~;·r, :=.::~ :;,~ (°"'\I f'\Nt\Al"'t(.omOt"'V ~·tf!M1t~ ft_. OUftl"l't+d ...... f IMW'tf" lllridAr IOt ('"-1_. Mr-w H......,.. •••Ot ... ,,.u~ .. ~ " r'"""" t•'" Y•Htt ft••ftf ~-4'.lffa.t(t. Yto., •Mt ~=~~~~~·n·~~~';7_ r;::~i;::;:~1:.~,·:;.~~'~ no wn• , • ., 11•-.rtH -PYt\1tV>,,1 4M PuN1 #t JMll It (W•f V•u P,,Otch.,t•'WIGot,...,., .... ,...,, ,_"lltnM l cmor ,,__,AM ........... ...,••Q•"9 l.ilor j;Ml'lttM l-~~ .-.n Al\jlJAflf Mt#'•_... ...... OfftcH c.-••Mo•• ue..,. .. ....,,,..., 1.0V<"'• lkH" UM 0.._,..., ~,,_, .. C:..'1.:.t~~~,.!''t'.':O~~~~.=~ •tW11101 ... ,, ....... Telttpflon• (7141~ Cl•ttlfMcl Adverll.tngtU-Mn ,_.,N..-C-Y•l"1-0ll•• .. , ... ,10 ~-..... ,.._ 4tMIOO , _ _,_o. ..... ~c--1i.. MOott'ZO '-1:::. Or~<:::..~~·~ =i,., -••r.,,, .... ft .. ._,. ,..., ... ,. ......... , .... , .,,..... .. . ...... . ,~ .... ·-,.,_ ,, ... ~u·r. .... "' CM\I -. .. ,. Ca•lf..-•t• , .... , ••••" lh• .... rl•r '' •i ..,..,,._,,. •Y m"" Jf if f'nOiflt"•Y. _..O•t1ry ...... -""·~ The jury's biggest award went to Eugene W. Ventre of Costa Mesa who was given $120,000 in com pensalory dam ages and $135,000 in pumtive damages Ventre, suffenng from a heart disability which he claims was worsened by Avco harassment. is one of five former residents of the La Vela tract who claimed that Avco persecuted them and violated their property rights in 1971. All five were sued earlier by Avco for $12 million In damages with allegations that they un- lawfully conducted real estate transactions from their homes The Avco lawsuit ended in an appellate court defeat for the company after a series of ad \'erse ruhngs m Superior Court The five defendants 10 that ac lion then joined forces against ,.\\co and asked the Jury JO Judge Grel'n's courtroom to award them $12 m1ll1on in damages They got $631,000 in damages with the Jury voting 10·2 in favor of an award for each of the five plaintiffs It was alleged for the plamtsffs during the trial now concluded that Avco tried lo impose architectural res trictions on homes in the La Vela tract to ensure that valuations on nearby Avco property were not affected by designs that did not fit in with Avco planning. The balance of the $631,000 verdict was distributed as follows : -Chester Lautzenheiser of Apple Vapley, $117,500 in com· pensatory damages, $115,000 in punitive damages for a total or $232,500. -Pete Peterson of Diamond Har. S12.500 10 compensatory damages and $50,000 in pumtive dam ages for a total or $62,500 -f'loyd and Sharon Hartford of Yorba Linda, $3,000 each m compensatory damages and S.17.500 each 10 pumtave damage-. ror a total of $40,500 each Frmtt Page ,1 I GATES ... head of the department's task force working on the Halls1de Strangler case Altho1,1gh the commission had not Connally voted. a motion to name Gales was seconded rapidly, and even commissioner Stephen Reinhardt. who earlier expressed reservations about the civil service selection process, said Gates "is my choice." Commission President M artanna Pfaelz.er said, "Never has there been a search as intensive in the history of Los Angeles police chiefs . . . We emphasized we were seeking change. We didn't want a monolithic structure in the Police IK>partmcnl. We wanted flexibility." Reinhardt. repeating his view that "no major corporation would select a person lo a high leadershJp position'' by use or a written exam, said he was backing Gates ''with some reservations. · · l have talked lo him about this," Reinhardt said. "I have said I want a more constructive, more open relationship with the ch1er lhan bas existed in the past.'' Lew Bail Blamed 32 Nabbed in Vice Sweeps in Oxnard OXNARD <AP) -Vice and narc0Uc1 det~Uves from the Oxnard and Ventura polJce departments have arreated 32 persona in a 1wffp on vice which police HY has skyrocketed tiOO percent In five years. Batt ln Tbur1d1y nl1bt'" arreata ••• an undercover oollcewom&11.1 wbo wu aollclt.d by 27 men 1be atood ln a parkiq lot 1t U>o Plaza Marina 1boppha1 oealer ln the t1'1'• aout.h end. Two were arreated for lnL&rt n.n. wtlh an omcer, another lor bel~I uDder lb lnllu c.d nueot!ca •• aM aal ln a blr. · " Oxnard pe>Uce U. Dod Hanline attributed the rise In vice acUvlty to the city's low ball or $2.W for arrested pro~titutes. "Other areas have bails as hlah aa $2,500. and the word ls out." be aaid. ''The pimps are brln1lna 1n alrla from all over th• pJ1c. ••• PoUce 1a.ld cttbem have been robbed, be.ateP, bl1ckm1Uld tUld kidnapped, onen at aoutbsJde area moteh. Two motel operatort were arrealed dwin1 t.bt IW I), A V•~ tura Count1 deputy dl1lrlct t.\torne1 wu pr t durb\& tbl! fJ'ftltl to stve S>ollee Je1alr ad•lt• on avofdias tnlrap llluatloDi. • '(Jnpredirtable' Coal Miners Purse Snatch' Angers Crou:d To Vote Again SAN DIEGO CAP> -A 2l·year·old New Yorker was a~ted after an an· gry mob gave chase when an elderly woman was struck to the ground and her purse snatched. WASIDNGTON CAP> -The nation's striking coal miners, defiant and unpredictable throughout lhetr 109·day walkout, arc votin~ again on whether to 31'<'t'pt a new contract orrer. As before, most officials of the United Mine Workers said they expect a close dec1s1on by the 160,000 soft coal miners ehg1ble to vote today at umon halls from Appalachia to the Rockies .. [ ain't makUlg predJct1ons · about the final outcome, UMW President Arnold M1Jler said Thursday whale rlying from Wash10gton to his home D1stnct 17 in Charleston, W Va But then he predicted that the 21,500-member d1str1cl, the union's largest, wouJd approve the new accord. Union spokesman Paul Fortney said that, if the balloting is close, the result may not be known until late tonight Early today, an the first reported voting returns, UMW Local 1810 111 Alledonia, Ohio, n•Jccled tht> proposed contract by a 3-to I margin Local president Joe Hoskins, Trio Arrested In Tow Truck By NB Police Three lluntinglon Beach men rtd10g 10 a tow truck were arrested by Newport 8eC1ch police early Thursday after a patrolman became susp1c1ous as the truck cruised the Balboa Peninsula. Officer Thomas Tolman said he stopped the truck after verifying that it was not respondmg to a motorist's call for help lns1de, the patrolman said he found a stolen parking meter head Booked on char~es nf receiving ::.tolen property were Donald Dolph , 27, of 18301 Patterson SL • Darrell Sanchl·z 24 and Ralph Sanchez. 20, both of 19301 Weakfish Ave Dolph was released late Thursday after posting $2.500 bail To I man said he bPcame SUSPICIOUS of the truck which he spotted after 3 a .m because of a series of thefts of parking meter heads that has plagued the city in recent months Patrolmt>n havP bl'en ordered to look rur a tow truck bt>cause one was seen by witnf:'sses at the sct>ne of one or the thc•fts 7 Arrested In Drug Raid LOS ANGELES (AP) Authonlit>s scJy they have seized 10 pounds of rot•aane worth an est1mat<>d $J million and arrested seven pPople 1n an alle~cd drug npl'rat10n which extended into Eastern c1lll'S as well as lo llawa11 and Alaska The five women and two men were arra1~ncd Thursday before U.S. M ag1slrate Halph Geffen on char~es or con :;piracv to distribute heroin and cocaine and possession of rocaine Geffen set a preliminary hearing for April 4. HAVE AN who said he believed the contract wouJd be defeated when all votes were 1n, announced that his local1voted 316 104 against the c<f'ntracl Three weeks ago, the local abo defeC1ted a proposed contract, by a 2 l margin Union officials forecast a close vole three weeks ago, when a prcv1ous conlrnct proposal was put before the miners The rank and-file turned it do't\ n by better than a 2 1 margin After the contract rejection, miners almost universally defied a federal Judge's back to-work order which President Carter obtamed undt-r ttte Taft.Hartley Act UMW officials said their members would ignore the order, as th.:y had during a series of strikes 30 years ago. Even it the miners a~ept the latest offer from the Bituminous Coal Operators Af;sociaUon, the strike would not end automatically The UMW and the Association of Bituminous Contractors ar'6 negotiating a separate pact to cover about 10,000 mine construction workers. Miners ready to return to the pits under a ratified~ontracl may refuse to work if the construction workers are "1thout an agreement· and throw up picket hoes The latest proposal -the third tental1\e agreement reached since the strike began Dec. 6 -contains industry concessions in several are?., 10cluding reduced payments by miners for health care. impro\ed penswn benefits and deletion of a clause letting com panics discipline leaders of w ildc al strikes. But most miners apparenlly still don't hke the contract, particuJarly a provision calling for individual company health insurance plans lo replace the single. independent health care fund operated JOIOtly by the union and the industry for three decades. Front Page 1\ l RITES .•• Worshippers knelt to kiss the stone or uncllon, where Christ's body is said to have been wrapped in a shroud Others had their picture taken at the stone or as they hoisted a 10 foot cro:-.s outside in the courtyard Daniel McCormick was arrested after about a half doien Pacific Beach resi· dents chased a man over rooftops and fences and down an alley, police said. Martha White, visiting from Connecticut, was treated at a hospital ror cuts. Her purse was re· covered with its contents intact Bullet Fired, Shatters Fluor Window A .SIH?aliber bullet flred into the Fluor Corporalion•s admlnlatratioa buUdin& in Irvine Thursday nieht sbattered a specially constructed reflecti.qg class window valued at $1,200, police said today. No one was injW'ed in the 7:45 p.m. shooting. Police· aafd t..be bullet went \b rough a seventh-story window and an interior dry wall in t.be engineering company's building al 3333 Michelson Drive. The incident was reported by security guards at the building but no suspects were seen, police said. A search or the area by police with the aid of the Costa Mesa police helicopter turned up nothing, police said. The window that was shot out faces the San Diego Freeway. Police said the bullet could have caused serious injury to members of the housekeeping crew, who were working nearby. Plane Crashes, Couple Killed SAN FELIPE, Mexico CAP) - An Amencan couple died when their light plane exploded in lhe air Wednesday, Mexican authorities said Thursday. The U S. Consulate in Tijuana identified them as Mr. and Mrs. James C. Ham or Los Gatos, Calif , both in their early :;Js. Their Plpeor J.3 plane crashed in flames after taking off from San Lws Gonzaga airport lOS males south of San Felipe. Annual Event Pair Re-enact CrucifiXion ) MANILA. Philippines CAP> -Two Filipinos had I hC'msclves nailed lo wooden crosses one after another on Good Friday m a re-enactment of Jesus' l'I ucifixion almost 2 000 vears M!n A crowd of 40.000 shrieked and jostled for a better view, fir<it of Juamto Pirmg, 35: then Mariano Bagtas. 28, \\ho were nailed through the palms and stay<>d on the crosses for three minutes. . Their rruc!f1x1on took place on a stage in the \'llla~e of San f ernando, 30 miles north of Manila. Ptring, who has been crucified on Good Friday for several years running. railed the ritual an "atonement for my sins and those of others." DEN'S .., ... 1 ..... :iiisiailatiaii: ·custom drapsries ~.NO nom linoleum • wood floor , 1663 rLACENTIA AVENUE • 'COSTA MESA, CALIP:. 92677 • ~HONE 6.46·-4838 -6'6·23'.5 \ I ' t I I I ~ I Orange Coast ED I TION 'l'our Hometo w n . Dull y ~ewspaper VOL. 71, NO. 83, 4 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A FRIDAY, MARCH 24, 1978 C TEN CENTS Jarvis vs. Cordova: Reform vs. By GABY GRANVILLE • · °' .. Deity ...... ~ Wben they weren't sticking verbal barbs into one another during a debate Thursday, tax r efor m advocate Howard Jarvis and Assemblyman Ron Cordova, D -El Toro, took turns praising and condemning Proposition 13 As was expected, It was Jarvis who praised the June 6 ballot measure that bf>ars his name. the Jarvis-Gann tax reform initiative. As might. be expected, Cordova walked away from his encounter with Jarvis a winner in the eyes or a majority or the audience, members of the American Association or Public Administrators. A poU taken at the close of the session in Garden Grove showed an overwhelming reaction .............. E .R.A., even if it never becomes national Jaw, is assured an active future because that's the name of this baby girl. Her mother. Judy Mccarthey of Phoenix, was in Washin gton Thursday lobbying for the Equal Rights Amend ment. Avco Developers Assessed $631,000 By TOM BARLEY OI .. o.lty " ... SUH Damages totalling $631,000 were awarded against Avco Community Developers Thurs- day by an Orange County Superior Court jury which heard testimony that five former {,aguna Niguel residents were victimized by the company. The verdict ended a two- m onlh trial in J udge Robert H. G r een 's courtroom. Avco la wyers said lbey will appeal the verdict. The jury's biggest award went to Eugene W. Ventre of Costa Mesa who was given $120,000 in compensatory damaees a nd $135,000 in punitive damages. Teen Suspects From CM, SA Held by Cops Ventre, suffering from a heart disability which he claims was worsened by Avco harassment. is one of five former residents of the La Veta tract who cla1med that Avco persecuted them and violated their property rights in 1971. All five were sued earlier by Avco for $12 million in damages with allegations that they un- lawfully conducted real estate transactions Crom their homes. The Avco lawsuit ended in an appellate court defeat for the com pany after a series of ad- verse rulings in Superior Cbwt. against Proposition 13 by association members, most of them government employees. Cordova condemned Proposition 13 as "a ripoff" that pretends to befriend homeowners and renters while actually favoring large property holders. Proposition 13 seeks to clamp a lid on property taxes by rolling values back to their 1975-76 levels and limiting tax rates to what county assessors said was then full cash value Jarvis started the debate's verbal darts flying when he characteriz.ed Cordova 's operung remarks as coming from "the voice of inexperience and a \ acuum or opinion . From that point on, the debate was a heated d1scuss1on between a 30-year-old freshman state assemblyman and a 75-year-old retired businessman who has spent more than a decade crusading for property tax relief Cordova made it clear that he, too, favors tax rehef as well as restraints on government spending. "But does Proposition 13 limit government spending? No," Cordova replied in answer lo his Gates Named Los Angeles Picks New Chief .. LOS ANGELES <AP) -After its chairman called for change and flex.ibihty, the city Pohce Com mission unanimous ly l>elected Daryl F. Gates today as the 49th ctuef of the Los Angeles Pohce Department smce 1851. Cheers from about 50 officers and headquarters staff broke out after Commissioner James Fisk nominated the Sl·year-old Glendale·born assistant chief to the post of chief, succeeding Edward M. Davis. Gates blus hed and beamed nervously as television camera:. and lights swung toward him. "l am going to take a look at CM to OK Police Car Uasing? Costa Mesa will spend more than $172,000 over the nex\ 18 months to leue 24 LTD II Fords as police cars despite a trend toward compact cars in some cities. City Manager Fred Sorsabal said Thursday the City Council was asked to approve the lease expenditure because there is "insufficient manpower" in the Corm of mechanics to service the police cars. So, rather than buy its own vehicles, a move that Sorsabal says would require the hiring of two full-time mechanics, the police department will continue to lease the intermediate-sized Fords. The lease agreement with Theodore Robins Ford of Costa Mesa at a cost of $399 per vehi- cle per month was approved without discussion Monday night by the City Council. Sorsabal and Police Capt. Robert Moody said the depart- ment has been considering a switch to smaller police cars like the Chevrolet Nova that Newport Beach uses. However, Capt. Moody said there have been complaints about a lack of head and leg room in the smaller cars from some police officers. A cost analysis will be con· dueled over the next 18 months and Sorsabal said the police de- partment may eventually buy its own vehicles, possibly the smaller Novas. The lease bid from Robins Ford was the lowest received, he noted. Possible passage of the Jarvis- Gann property tax initiative that would slice the city budget is one of the reasons why the city is re- luctant to buy jts own vehicles and hire mechanics to service them. Because the cars are on the road an average of 18 hours per <See LEASE, Page AZ) Some Beaches Remain Closed The quarantine on beaches stretching from Newpor t Beac h 's 52nd Street to Brookhurst Street In Huntington Beach remained in effect today a nd t here was no indication when it mlaht be lifted. The alrands wer e closed March 13, a day alter a sewer line broke lo Garden Gro•e aplllln1 a.ewaae lnto the Santa Ana River. OH Lb8n fbur million gallons ot ....... QY nowtd down the rlv r to tb9 SM before the li.ae •N rep&l alter the btaelt. Heal\h officials ~aid tbe beaches woold remain cloa~ until water samples abow oo un u l of bact.rla. :.ill facets or the department," he told newsmen afterward "Other chiefs have virtually bl'en given a blank check, but I come mto the department durmg hard, lean times" Brief comm1ss1on s peeches precluded the unanimous voice vote The decision came after several round s of lengthy interviews and some second thoughts about a selection process which Commissioner Step hen Reinhardt charactenzed as inadequate. Despite his r eservations. Reinhardt said Cates "as my choice." The commissioner repeated his view that "no maJor corporation would select a person to a high leadership position" by use or a written exam . "Never has there been a sea rch as intensive in the history of Los Angeles poli"e chiefs," Commission President Marianna Pfaelzer said. "We emphasized we were seeking cha'tlge. We didn't want a monolithic structure in the Police Department. We wanted flexibility." CSee GATES, Page A2> Annual Event Pair Re-enact Crucifixion MANILA, Philippines CA P> -Two Filipinos had themselves nailed to wooden crosses one after another on Good Friday in a re-enactment of Jesus' cruc1flxion almost 2.000 vears al1o. A crowd of 40,000 s hrieked and jostled for a better view, Cirst of Juanito Piring, 35: then Mariano Bagtas. 28, who were nailed through the palms and stayed on the crosses for three minutes. Their crucifixion took place on a stage in the \ 1llagc of San Fe rnando, 30 miles north of Manila. Piring, who has been crucified on Good Friday for severa l years running, called the ritual an "atQncmenl for my sins and those of others." Coal Miners Vote On Pact Today WASJDNCTON CAP) -The nation's striking coal miners. defiant and unpredictable throughout their 109-day walkout, are voting again on whether lo accept a ne w contract offer. As before, most officials of the United Mine Workers said they expect a close decision by the 160,000 soft coal miners eligible to vote today at union halls from Appalachia to the Rockies. "I ain't making predictions" about the f(nal outcome, UMW President Arnold Miller said Thursday while flying from Washington to his home District 17 in Charleston, W. Va. But then he predicted that the 21,500-member district, the union's largest, would approve the new accord. Union spokesman Paul Fortney said that, if the balloting is close, the result may not be known until late tonight. . Returns from 109 or the approximately 800 UMW locals this afternoon s howed the contract being approved by a 7,930 to 5,689 vote. Union officials had forecast a close vote when another proposed contract was put to a vote three weeks ago, but the rank and file turned 1t down by better than a 2·1 margin. 'Visual Roek' S. Laguna Queried on Aliso By STEVE MITCHELL OI .. o.llY l'lt.t Sl.llf It's covered with prickly mesquite It's difficult to climb on. You can't really see much of it from the highway And, as Thomas Cutkomp's wife says, you can't get rive people on 1l 9.'ilhout someone ralline oer. So why is the county considering payine $140,000 for Aliso 'ftock in South Laguna? "I thtnk lt'a ludicrous to spend taxpayers' dollars for a rock whose only real use is visual," lbe South Lacuna builder said. Cutkomp would like to build his house upon the rock which juta out from the ocean aide or South .Coast High way at the mouth of Aliso Creek. 8ut Fifth Dlstrtcl Superviaor Thomu Riley would like lO aee the tounty'a Harbors, Beaches and Parka DiJtrict purchase the roe Ir. Rlley says two cou.nt,y atudlea .r com m d 1cqu11IU00 of the rock aa a . landmark and pot tlal buff betw bO and th 1 ~b1Je cb at Allio. But the d .elo~r f&YI the count.t tuts l:ecit'h.lm betw a rock and a hard place for the past 15 months. Cutkomp has been seeking county permission to build since last June but the Planning Commission's decision has been delayed by the possibility the county might buy the local landmark as an addition to Aliso Beach Park. If he had his drutheu, Cutkomp, would like to see the county approve his plans to shave oll a bit. of the rock and build his home. But if they decide to s hell out $140,000 to buy the rock, that would be fine with him too. "l' d really like to get an an1wer one way or the othor," he said. "I've spent close to S2S,000 for fees, environmental Impact reports, processine fees, architectural costa and arcbaeolostc•I studies." CuUcomp, •ho has an optioa to buy the rock from E d ward Bowler for $140,000, said be i1 lirect of bdnc •trunc alona • His 1ut feell.Qf. he said, JI that tbe county won't buy the outcropp 111· "Wben It com down to it. t.bat rock ll of no me < AUSO, •• A!) \ Ripoff own question. "And in what manner does it provide tax relief, equitably or lnequitably" I suggest to you that Proposition 13 is the biggest ripoff we can imagine." Cordova went on to say. m effect, th'at the Jarvis brainchild offers only token relief to homeowners and renters while giving major property owners CStt JARVIS, Page AZ> AJ>Wi ......... NEW POLICE CHIEF LA Selects Gates Pilgri~ Walk Path Of Christ JERUSALEM <AP> -Thou- sands of pilgrims trudged along the rain-dampened Via Dolorosa this Good Friday, many or them laboring under heavy wooden crosses, to mark Christ's march to his crucifixion. (Related story, A7.) The solemn procession led by Franciscan friars in brown habits wound through the ancient lanes of Jerusalem's Old City, stopping for devotions at the 14 stations of the cross. The hour-Jong walk ended at the C h urc h of t h e Hol y Sepulcher, the traditional site of Calvary. Jn the courtyard of the 800-year-old church, knots or worshippers wailed their turn to file through the wooden doors. The Latin liturgy echoed off the stone walls inside the church as the pilgrims filed up the steep staircase to the. s pot where.. tradition holds Christ wa~ crucified "Jn spite of the chaos during the procession. I felt a grPal deal of spirituality," said Rex Barnes , a pilgrim from South-West Afnca. "This tends to s trengthen my faith m Christianity. "Parts or the procession were badly oq~anizcd, but everyone seemed to get into the spirit of things. l wasn't disappointed at all," he said. Some pilgrims lit candles and slopped at Christ's tomb inside the same church, just a few yards from Calvary. The tomb will be the center of Easter Sunday celebrations. Worshippers knelt to kiss the stone of unction, where Christ's body is said to have been wrapped in a shroud. Coas t We athe r Sunny and warmer Saturday. Lows tonight so to 55. Highs Saturday 70 to 75. INSIDE TODA. Y What i.s btlled os a major Wt•t COOl1 showing of late aurrealiam artist William Boziotes opened today al Newport Horbor Art Museum. Story nnd phntos on Pogtt <"l latl~x l.J cs IU C:..t ., M AJ .... CM CM M .. .. A2 DAIL y PILOT c '"d!Y, M!tof\ l4. 1 '71 • He~lth .Chief Q~ts Broivn Denies Firing Direefur SACRAMENTO <AP > - Embattled state Health Director Jerome LacArner will leave h.ts JOb April 1. A source in Lackner's agency said he bad been fired By Gov. Edmund Brown Jr., but Bn>wQ denied it today. Brown said Lackner agreed to leave his JOb because directors for (1 ve new s tate health departments will have been appointed by April 1, 1tlthough the new departments will not be legally established unlit July 1 He also announced that he appointed Beverly Myers. an a ide lo Sen Edward Kennedy. D·Mass., as clireclor of Health Services. largest of the five new health departments; and Henry Zaretsky, d.ireclor of research for the California Hospital Association, as head or the new state Office of Health Plannlna. "There Is no way the old regime and the new regime can operate at the same lime," Brown said in an interview lie said Lackner had agreed with that assessment al a meeting Thursday night. But a source m the state Health and Well are Agency, who asked not to be 1de ntif1ed, quoted Lackner as saying after the m eeting that Brown had fired him Lightning Strikes 2 Jets Over Japan TOKYO (AP> -Lightning struck two American jumbo jets over Japan, causin g wing damage to one, but both landed safe ly . Transport M in1stry officials rcPorled today There were no reports of injuries among passengers and crew members of either plane, the officials said over Chiba Thursduv night. The plane was heading for Tokyo International Airport from Hong Kong with 385 passengers and t•rew members aboard, the offtc1als said. Lackner could not be reached for comment. Brown a.aid Ed Beach, deputy director or the state Finance Department, will be interim state health director aner April 1. He saJd Beach'a role would be limite d to "technical and administrative backup." ·'I said oublicly many Umes that I would put the reorganization into effect al the l?arliest date," Brown said. But Brown had not announced previously that Lackner would be leaving before \July 1, and Lackner was not reported lo have been making plans t o resign By law, Lackner's job 1s not scheduled to be eliminated until Jul y 1, when the Health Department will be split into five smaller departments. Lackner, 50, former personal phys1c1an to Cesar Chavez and a farm worker clinic organizer, has been under constant criticism for the state Health Department's many troubles, 1ncludmg scandals in s tale mental hospitals and prepaid health plans. R ecently Lackner clashed with nrown by defending Dr. .lo:.etle Mondanaro, the state drug abuse director in his deµarlment whom Brown fired because of a profanity.filled l e tter she wrote on s t ate s tationery. O.Uly "* l4Mlt ,,_ WILL IT BE THE COUNTY'S ROCK BESIDE ALISO CREEK OR TOM CUTKOMP'S ROCK? Plen To Bulld on South Laguna Outcropping Hes Caused County Opposition Fro..r~Al ALISO ROCK: A 'HARD PLACE' • • • to the public," be said. And, he says, the house he plans for the s1le will blend m with the rock. The 3.000 square foot structure is designed to conform with the rock. he sayd. "We want lo cut a tiny slot on the lop of the rock for a caq~ort and foundation, then cantilever lhe house out from that. So we're not grading the rock or mutilating the site. "And we're not screwing up anybody's view because the sides of the house are slanted on the beach side. They kind of creep down the sides or the rock." Cutkomp said he and his w;fe and two children want to live 1n the four·bedroom house when it's finished. "It's the American dream deal," he said. "You work hard, buy some land and hope to build your home. "Only now we're catching flak from the neighbors and thf' county." Cutkomp !aces a litUe more fla k April 5 when county supervisors will hold a public hea ring on whether or not Harbors, Beaches and Park District funds should be used lo buy the rock And county Pla nn ing Commissioners will make their final decision April 11 based on action by supervisors. That's when Cutkomp expects to know if h1s home will be built upon the rock. A Pan American World Airways Jet heading for Tokyo from San Francisco with 78 persons aboard was hit three t imes Thursday night by Lightning O\er Chiba, 30 mile'.> southeast of Tokyo Bullet Fired, Shatters Fluor Window Oil Tanker Breaks ·Apart The tip of the right wing, tnduding an antenna, wac; torn off and panels covering the n•ar p;:irt or the• first cng1nt• on the 1 c ft Y. I n J.! W l' r L' d l' \I r 0 y Cd , offlt•iab '.>aid It l•rnded safely 13 minutes later al Tokyo tnlt·rnullonal Airport Min1:-.lry 0CC1cia l s said a Northwest Ai rhncs jetliner was h1l ''" lh1• nO'.'>l' by lightning, also A .38·caltber bullet fired into the Fluor Corporalion'c; admimstrnt1on building 10 Irvine Thursday ni~ht shattered a specially constructed reflccltng glass window valued al Sl,200, police said todav No one was inJured in the 7 45 p m. shooting Police said lhe bullet went through a seventh-story window and an interior dry wall 10 the engmeenng company's build.ing at 3333 Michelson Drive Fro• Pa~AJ JARVIS DEBATED. • • g1ganllc benefits. In rebuttal. Jarvis said, "It 1s id1ot1c lo say we should have only relief for owners of occupied d'~clltnJ.(s •· To say ~·:'re hurting the homeowners 1s silly, · Jarvi'> said as he labeled C"<1st1ng properly r<'gulat1ons ·grand fl'lon) theft " T h e v <' t c r a n r e r o r m campaigner wt•nl on lo fall back on const1tullonal property rights ~a f egua rds lo support his advocacv. Hu t whC'n Jarvis alleged that ~tatew 1de there are "7,500 foreclosures from tax failures a month." Cordova quickly went on the attack "No home has succumbed lo taxes 10 this county in the past fi ve years." Cordova said to rl'fute the claim or massive lax foreclosures. He went on lo argue that Propos1t1on 13 will force local s:overnmenls Lo dependency on the slate for revenues needed for lheir support. "And the slate has never passed an opportunity lo seize more <'Ontrol over local governments," Cordova argued We'll fix that, Jarvis said "We have another amendment about ready to i;:o. ll will freeze all sales and income taxes at their January 1979, levels." J arvis said. When asked, he balked at citing any examples of so·called fat in government spending, but decried th e doubl i ng of government employees in Los Ange les County since 1965. But Cordova argued the Jarvis approach t o reduced OAANOE COAST c DAILY PILOT ·-·-,..,..,.fli, .,... ~ . .,.. Jocltlll.-Vlr• -IOtllt .... 0.-ol _....., T-"·-lfll .. •lllMM•A.M ...... MeNtl ... ldllor .,..... " "" "'< .......... .. """'""'Ma,,.., ..... ,.,. government spencling is a meat 11xe approach "that would cut the lean out as well as some of the fat · Cordova also charged that Proposition 13 backers' appeal for support from renters has htlle substance because "ther e 1s nothing but a personal guarantee from Mr. Jarvis that rents will be lowered." Wc"ll soon fix that .. Jarvis sa 1d , announcing that full page new s pa per ads will soon appear thal wil l l'arr y sponsoring landlord guarantees of no rent increases for two years should Proposillon 13 be enacted Cordova appeared to catch Jarvis off guard when he pulled ou l a computerized I etter soliciting pro·Propos1t1on 13 funds from apartment house owners, a letter that sa 1d landlords have the most to gain from an election v1ctorv "Yes. that's ours," Jarvis mused as he studied the appeal for a $1 million war chest needed m the Proposition 13 campaign. Frottt Pa~ A I LEASE ..• day, it would not be feasible to buy police cars and have them ser viced by the deale r, said SorsabaJ. The lease agreement assures a quicker return time on police car repairs. So111abal explamed. The city vehicles get preferred service when the dealer doesn't have lo deal with purchase war· ran ties. Costa Mesa has always leased its police cars from a local dealer. Most Orange County cities buy the vehicles, accorcling lo Costa Mesa officials. Newport Buch la omong dUes that bas boueht itll police fleet and operates ila own service department.. Joan Little Loses NEW YORK CAP) Scrtamlng and sobbtn1 as abe was can1ed rtom ~e courtroom, Joan Little hu been sent back to jaa1 following a }ud1e'1 ~er that she be held for extradiUOI\ to North Carolina to complet~ a prison aent.ence. RevocaUcn of Ml1t LltUe'1 bail 'l'bW'lday by 1tate Supreme Court Juallc• Leonard Scho!nlck prompted a .notay outbw'st bJ about !00 ot ll• Little'• .upporurt •ho crowdec1 tbe 8rookl7n courtroccn. · ( BREST, Frant'e (A P) -The wrecked American supertanker Amoco Cadiz broke in two early todav. and its stern section with its broad towering bridge and huge engine was sw ung completely around by the pounding seas. The forward section, still thought to hold up to 15 million gallons of oil, was bearing the fu II force of the storms and 25 foot swells . Peak tides due over the weekend may completely break up the vessel, ending a ny chance of saving the remaining oil from joining the record SO m11Jion gallons already fouling the Brittany coast. f'ro111 Pa~ Al GATES ... The five members of the commission had delayed the selection one day lo call back Gates and deputy chiefs Robert L Vernon and Charles D. Reese for hnal interviews Thursday. It was the third lime the group had been rnterviewed. All three candidates sat rigid 1n m 11itary style during today's session. Vernon, 44, is a 23-year police veteran who heads Central Bureau Operations and ser ves directly below Gates. Reese, 50. a 23-year veteran or t!ie department. is in charge of fiscal planning Gat es, who finished first on the civil service examination for C'hief. spent the most time with the commission in the fina l interviews. The 29·year veteran, who look the police chief examination in 1969 and finished f o urth , became closely lssociated with Davis in the following years. He is said to have been groomed for the chief's job by Davis Davis retired this year after serving as chief since 1969 He is !;eeking th e Republic an gubernatorial nomination. As director of the office or ope raltons since 1971, Gates has directed all uniform, patrol, traffic and air support oper ations of the department. He is best known publicly as the head of the department's task force working on the Hillside Strangler case. Gates will be sworn in to take over from interim chief Robert 1''. Rock at 10:30 a.m. Tuesday in cer e monies al the Los Angeles Police Academy. Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. was scheduled to attend. Oil Policies Of U.S. Hit SACRAMENTO (AP)-Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. aays California oil producers "are gelling a raw deaJ from Waablngton" in the form of price controls. Brown made the comment Thursday, when be prealded over a two-hour meeUnc or 40 oil company executl vu and governmtnt officlals who lllreed that the sy1t1m of federal 1ubaldies and pe.na.llles known ea "entltle"'ent1•• muat b1 ctia.ncctt • 81ld Bro .. Rlsbt ow, bttaUM of the I ral pf'Olflm. oll la· not 1old tor what lt'• wortb" ' The lanker broke its back and split almost in two w1Lh1n hours of grounding March 16 But until Parly today it had held together on the port side A full pollution alert was ordered m westt:rn Normandy as the 011 slicks contrnue to dnft eastward across n orthern Brittany 01 I Pollution control experts from America and other nations were bitter over French reluctance lo lake their advice on cleaning up the SptlJ, wtuch topped the 1967 Torrey Canyon <lisaster off southwest Engl111'\d by at least 15 million gallons French press Cril1c1sm also was growing over the French gove rnm e nt 's f ailu re to coordinate and start a c leanup of waters and beaches soiled by the spr eading mess. ;\t least five American com pa mes specializing in oil recovery had been trying :riJlce c;hortly after the accident to inte rest i''rench authorities in their services, \\ 1thout success. Strong Quake Hits Sea Area Mesa Man Charged In Pawn Shop Rap WASHINGTON (AP ) -A strong earthquake occurred Thursday evening in the Atlantic Ocean aboul 250 miles southwest of Bermuda. the U.S. Geological Sun cy rep()rted. The tremor struck at 7 :42 p.m EST and registered about 6.0 on th e Richter sea le, survey spokesman Frank Fo rres ter said. There were no immediate reports of damage or whether the quake was felt on Bermuda. A Costa Mesa man who suf· fered cuts on his arms when he allegedly tried to smas h a win· dow and rob a pawn shop early today 1s recuperatmg at city Jail. pol.Jee rep()rted Michael Edward Stanley, 20, or 775 Shalimar Drive, was ar· rested on suspicion of burglary lnvesllgators said Stanley was found hiding in his car and was bleeding profusely afte r he ap· Buslunills Runs Again The power, grace and tension of the Bushmills Grand Prix are recalled in a full page of pictures m today's Daily Pilot. The race featured the wor Id 's rastest fleet of offshore p()Wer boats See the start to-finish photos on Page Cl 1 HAVE AN UC. NO. 2>0422 parently broke the store window at Newp()rt J ewelry a nd Loan, 1759 Newport Blvd. al about 2 25 this morning. Stanley was taken to Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital where his cuts were treated. police said. J le was then taken to Jail Mesa's Kids To HlUlt Eggs Costa Mesa's annu11I egg hunt and Easler bonnet parade will get under way al 10 a m Satur· day at Estancia Adobe Park, and this year there will b<> a separate egg hunt for adults who want lo get into the spinl. M arionetles and the Easler Bunny will be on hand at the free two-hour event sponsored by the city's department of Leisure Services. The park is located at the cor ner of Adams Avenue and Mesa Verde West. For more mforma· hon call 556-5300 DEN'S Forrester said the earthquake, the· strongest ever registered in that part o( the Atlantic, was the s ixth strong quake to be rt•C'ordcd in the past three days. The others orcurrcd off the Kuril I s l ands in th e northwestern Pacific Ocean. Forrl'ster said the Kuril Island quakes, \\h1ch ra n ged 1n ma~niludC' from f) ~to 7.2 on the Htl'htcr seal<'. \\<'re unrelated lo the tremor off Bl'rmuda. 'FVRNISHINGS' FLVOR FEATURE You'd eicpect the top two floors of the Fluor building 10 J rv me to be dcC'orated with contemporary furnishings, but in fact. it s pure 18th century See f''caturmg, Page Bl. ••••••••••••••••• • ·Installation· custom draperies linoleum • wood floor 1663 'L.ActHTlA AVENUE • COSlA Ml:~ cAUll. 92627 • PHONE 6-46·-4138 -6A6·235S ' .. Fnd!y. Match 24, 1978 DAILY PILOT ·::Inf ant Autopsy Evidence Blasted : Appeal Vowed W addj)) Benson Loses OCTD Post °""' ,. .... "•" ,.,,. ... LOSES BID FOR JOB Carol Benson Corruption Alleged In County LOS ANGELES <AP> Umon trust funds arc losing millions of dollars each year because or widespread corruption 1n Southern California's construe· twn industry, p;,irttcularlv in Orange County. a federal pros eculor says Assistant U s Attorney Douglas W Lofgn•n said Thurs- day unt.lisdosc<I t«.1:.h paymcnL<> and double sds of rN·ords result in big losst•s to union trust funds ::ind the lntL·rn <ll Ht•\ l'Out· Service lie made the comments before U S. District Judge Robert Takasugi. who later sentenced Freddie B D1a1 a former auditor for the Carpenters Trust Fund:; of Southern California, on a bribery plea The typical carpenter nowadays makes about $10 an hour extra toward fringe benefits adm1n1<;te red hy the \ arious funth Superior Court Judge Leonard Goldstein refused Thursday to reinstate Carol Benson to her $32;()()()..a.year post as executtve director ol the Orange CoWlty Transportation Commission. Judge Goldstein told lawyers for both sides after a bitterly fought hearing that he thought Mrs. Benson's lawyer was pursuing the wrong type of legal action in the battle against her firing last Nov. 1 by the commission. Ile suggested m his ruling lhat he felt attorney Robert Concolino should have attacked the commission's decision last Nov . 1 via a breach or contract action Concolino commented outside the courtroom that he felt Judge Goldstein was "utterly and absolutely wrong." "We will go to the court of appeals and I predict that we'll have this decision overturned," he said Mrs. Benson claimed in her lawsuit that the commission notated its own rules when she was fired at a special meeting The Newport Beach woman further contended that none of the reasons given by the commission for her firing were supported by facts Commiss ioners t old Mrs Benson and the press when she was dismissed that they were dissatisfied with her performance as director smce bhe took over the JOb four months earlier and that they "had lost confidence in her performance." Mrs. Benson commented outside the courtroom that she now feels that the comm1ss1on never intended that she should hold the job of OCTC director for any length of time. "Despite the fact that I wu s brought here from Washington, D.C., I feel that the comm1ss1on all along fully intended to g1v<' the job to Tom Jenkins." sht• said Jenkins, a former planning director for the Orange C~nty Transit District. was named to the OCTC JOb after Mrs Benson was fired. ''He had some problems with lhe transfer of his retirement benefits and I was hired until he got them sorted out," Mrs Benson said. "They always intended to fire me as soon as he was available." 2nd Red Satellite May Fall From Sky MONTTU-:AL <A P > The Canadian Prrss today quoted the spare laboratory 1n Rochum, West Germany. ;1s saying that another Sov1rl satdhte may fall out of orbit about April 20, but that 1l was too soon to tt•ll "he re •· at would rall T h e n 1• \\ s a i: c n c y s a 1 d Jleinri<'h 1'.aminsk}. direC'tor or the laborat<•n r••rorted in a telephom' mt<>r\ If'\~ that Cosmos 8-19 \\as follll\\lllg a s1m tl ar path ,. to that of an €'<1rl. ·r ' tclllte that C'rashcct 1n \ht• Northwest Terratorit's th1:-y1·,1r The earlier satellite, Cosmos 954. was nuc l<'~lr powered and showered radioactive debris over the Canadian north when it crashed, but 1t wa s not immediately clear whether Lhe second satel lite also is nuclear powered In an interview from Bochum with Nouvelles Tele· Radio, the French-language broadcasting service of the Canadian Press. Kaminsky said he has asked the Soviet s pace agency in Moscow for further information about Cosmos 849. It was launched Aug. 18, 1976. Meanwhile. rad1at1on levels ha\ie increased sharply an two c ities as a result of Chana·s recent nuclear explosion, but lhe En v1 ronmental P rot<>c t ion Agency said today lhe l<'vcb do not pose health hazards The EPA 's a1r-mon1toring tests founk radiation . levels r each ing 85 plcocur1 cs 10 Denver, Colo., and Cheyenne, Wyo. Normal background radiaijon ft>easu.res from 10 to 15 plcocbries, and not until the levefreacbes 1,000 is there cause for concern, EPA spokeswoman Martha Casey said. Round Out Easter :-By Re1'.ding Pilot (SUND A Y'S BEST J lull-scale ombudsmen. OUT OF OPPICE -Iv~ towers won't do for at leaat two Oran•e County ex~utivea who find they're dolns better by not bein1 desk-bound. Stories oo two dlverae tlrma wltb almilar mana1emen.t viewpoints wW be on the Buslnesa pa1e1. COMEDIAN TUaNS 01a1croa -Dick Mai't.Jn 0( "Lau1b·In" tame aaya be ii t-.ltlllln1 • lllttlme ainblL1 w1~ a new role u dlrectcr of aome l•leTt1ton 1bow1. Tbe lornabO\lt iD llaffin'a Ille la eaamlned ln a A11oclat~d Pr - Dllilf ll'llet ,._Illy llk 1Wr9 K- FIREMEN CUT AWAY WRECKAGE TO REMOVE VICTIMS OF TUSTIN ACCIDENT Three San~ Ana Men Die In Headon Crash Earty Thia Morning 3 Santa Anans Die In Fiery Car Crash Thrt•t> mt·n d1rd in Tustin l'arl~ today when tY.O car-. coll idC'd and burst into flames. Poller <;aid attc·mpts to pull thl' thrN' victims from the flaming \\reckage failed when would be re:;cucrs were dnven back b;, Intense heal and names Coroner's invesl1gators 1dent1fted the victims as· John Hernandez Ramirez. 20, of 2205 S Halladay St.. Santa Ana Joe Resendez, 17. of 310 St Andrews St., Sanla Ana. Zamarripa Ysidro 'lumtero. 50, of 2813 Brook St . Santa Ana A<'<'idenl reports indicated that Ramirez and Resendez wt•rt• trav1•lin~ eastbound on Warner Avenue JUSl east of the Newport Freeway when their auto crossed over the center line and collided head-o n with Quantero's westbound car The report described lhe eastbound auto as "travehng at a high rate of speed " A Santa Ana policeman reportedly was first to arrive at the scene of the 2:15 a .m . accident and told Tustin investigators the Ramirez auto burst ml-0 namrs on impact. He and olhers who attempted to free the men from the burning wreckage were thwarted by the flames that quickly engulfed Quintero's car as well as the Ramirez auto. police said Plant Eyed for FV ~y Mean 800 Jobs \ large German-based corporati on 1s proposing to build a 186,000-square-foot factory m Fountain Valley that could eventually mean about 800 new Jobs an the area, officials announced today Fountain Valley City Council members plan to m eet Tuesday night with RASF Corporation representatives to d iscuss the proposed $29 million video tape recorder factory that may be built on the southeast comer of Talbert A\'enue and Ward Street City Manager .James Neal -/ said today negot.Jallons are still under way with BASF officiaJs But Neal added. "They are anxious to get under way with the plan." Neal said city aides arc still analyzing the BASF plan and do not yet know what it may mean in city tax revenues .. tl appears to be a pretty sig nifi cant in crease in revenue:.." Nt•al said Neal said BASF IS the 18th largest corporation in the world with facilities in the U S and other countnes , .. ,·. Blooming Hanging Basket ,_. .} :, '.\ROSE BUSHES _.,...._.:.~ IMPATIENS \It• ~ .. <..IJoo~ ft um reel, !'ii'. rully-blonomed · • or"n~c. y4!11o,.., 111111. ~~t~:l.l"'f~,'1· In red, n"nJ!C, CH 1t1tld ;• pink Of ""h1IC l 11.allnn s11e • • 6" put tile v./h.anacr Rel! S4 9'1 : ·~ Rfjt. SS 91) ~;t'it: $ ~ ~:~lEE '3. 9 All-Purpose Fertilizer . .. . ....... ....... - '\II IU ,.., 1111\f t'"I GUARANTEED ANALYSIS 18% NITROGEN 20% PHOSPHORIC ACID 16%POTASH PLUS CHELATED IRONI 1 Air Crash Victi.Jns Identified Six persons who died m a plane crash in Riverside County while en route from Orange County Airport to Lake Havasu. Ariz., have been identified as three Lake Havasu res idents and three visitors from Germany. The Riverside Count y Coroner's office identified the pilot oC the chartered Havasu Aviation plane as John S. Hill. 62. Th e pas s en ire r s w ere iden t ified as Dominique Heinrich Stemich. 15, of Lake Havasu, and his mother. Sigrid Stemich, 38 Also, Margita Wortmann, 38. of Kassel, Germany . her son. Mark Rene Wortmann. 7. and Tim Kruger. 1. also of Kassel, Germany The group reportedly had been on a visit to Dis neyland and wai:. returnmg to Havasu. when. for unknown reasons, the Cessna 207 crashed into the mouotams about three miles north of Riverside Raceway. Hans Wortmann and Ludger Slemich, the husbands of the two women killed, had chosen to drive home instead of flying, authorities said. Several friends of the victims had flown back in a separate plane. which landed safely. The small plane crashed into the side of a hill in the Box Springs Mountains cast of UC Riverside just before 9 pm. Wednesdav. ft was badlv s mashed up but didn't catch fire, authorities said The cause of the crash 1s under investigation I MUMS TULIPS HYDRANGEAS Jury Sees Slides '' By TOM BARLEY Of._ Delly fl'IMC IUff A coroner's finding that. a baby allegedly murdered by Dr. William Baxter Waddill in West min st er Comm u nity Hospital was strangled to death was repeatedly challenged Thurs day in Orange County Superior Court testimony. Using slides to illustrate the portions of I.issue he took frorn the dea d infant, Dr. Akio Metamora told a jury that the coroner's officer who conducted the autopsy i n correctl y identified other tissues taken from the body when he testified as a prosecution witness. Dr Robert Richards performed the autopsy and appeared earlier in the trial to advise the jury of the steps that led to his returning a finding of manual strangulation. The defense contends the finding is based on errors and repeatedly used Dr. Metamura'i. testimony Thursday in urging the jury to dis regard Richards' evidence. Prosecutor Robert Chatterton said he will offer testimony to counter Dr. Metamura's claims when the trial reopens Monday Judge James K. Turner called a three-day weekend break in the trial late Thursday. It is alleged that Waddill. 42, of Hunting ton Harbour. strangled the newborn baby in the hospital nursery after his efforts to abort the birth failed. H c earlier injected the pregnant mother with a saline solution and bas testified during the trial that the baby was dead when the mother expelled the fetus from her womb. Members of the hospital staff have testified that the child was alive when it was rushed to the nursery and that they were trying to help the ailing baby when Waddill ordered them to leave the nursery. A doctor who was with Waddill an the nurser y bas test1f1ed that the defendant repeatedly clamped bis hand around the baby's throat with the stated intentJoo of ending its lire Road to Nowhere? SOUTH LAKE TAHOE, Calif. (AP> -The Tahoe Regional Planning Agency agave its approval T hursday to a controversial $400,000 ••1oop road•· around the casinos in Stateline, Nev. 1l might be a road to nowhere, because lhe California Tahoe Regional Planning Agency <CTRPA> warned 1t probably would not allow the road to be connected with any California highways. INTERNA TIONAl. COOK BOOKS NOW Al '3.95 rounuln v .. 11ey o"ty ~4 DAILY Pit.OT Q wiCh~ Tom~~>i.' Marphine SMOKE SIGNALS & BUGGY WBIPS: Con•lderable alarm developed amonc Lacuna Beach Clty Council' membert the other nt1ht when the tnteWsence came to C.hem that Laguna might be gettJ.Da an alrport next 4oor. You have to understand bow shocklnl tbla kind of news is to the Art Colony of our Orange Coast, where the populace believes it is livin1 m a spot isolated from the huaUe and confusion of regulu luburbl• If you don'l believe that, visit Laeuna'a maln buslneaa atem on Forest Avenue at mid-day ll()me Ume. Study the populace. You will figure the world suddenly went lnto slow-motion. NEW·FANGLED IDEAS also are viewed with dlalrult by a large number or Lagunans. Items lllte curbs, auUera, .sidewalks and streets without potholes are viewed u the claptrap of urban sprawl that should be avoided. You have to remember that the coastal hl1bway through Laguna was designed to handle 1938 traffic. The other way in and out of town. Laguna Canyon Road, isn't much improvement since il was a stage coach route from Santa Ana. Laguna Politfcian Soundmg the Alarm Thus when the communication came to Laguna City Hall that Orange County government was studyln& possible new sites for a small-plane airport, Laguna officials almost went into culture shock. The possible airport site listed was In Moro Canyon, a picturesque, bucolic area just northerly or the town that opens onto beautiful El Morro Beach. Laguna's Shakers.and-Movers thus suffered elevated blood pressure and roundly condemned this proposed rape ..or the pristine landscape. A LATER CHECK PROVED, however, that county goverment had eliminated Moro Canyon as a possible airport site some weeks ago. This suggests that the location had been proposed, listed, studied and rejected before Laguna City Hall even beard about lt in the first place. Thus if laguna Beach officials think they are keeping close tabs on the action of county government, their methods or communicallon are suspect. MAYBE LAGUNA'S ENVOY lo Santa Ana travels by tiorae and bu HY. If so, he probably got stuck in traffic out on Laguna Canyon Road. Laguna City Halt should try to update its communications system with county government. Maybe they could install a telegraph. Treaty Foes Work To Recall Senators WASIDNGTON (AP> -Ignoring constitutional precedent, OP· poneots ol the Panama Canal Lreaties in al least rive slates are or- ganizing attempt& to recall senators who voted for the first or the a1reements. The final Senate vote on the two treaties is still to come, but various iroups are voicing their displeasure at the initial vote by seeking enough signatures to begin the mechanism cutting short their senators' six·year term of office. Actions againat senators who voted for the pact are known to be under way in Wisconsin, Louisiana, Arizona, Tennessee and Montana. NATION I WORLD 'Hawk' Begin Shows Claws WASBIN(f TON (AP) -Prelldent Cuter'•' club with l1raeli Prime Klnl.lter Menacbem BeCSn Htl their two countries on a col· llaon course, dima Mldeut peace proepecta u.d 1 vea Carter 1rop- tn1 for a policy that works. Ftndlna one will not be easy. U Carter trtea to exert more presaure on Iarael, be will run political risks with Jewlab- Arnerlcans, a 1roup that eave blm immense support ln bis 1976 prealdeoUal race. BUT TBEBE ABE other alcna the president and bla pollcy makers may have more political freedom to get tough with lllrael than any presidential adviaer would have thought poaalble in tbe past.. In an Associated Press-NBC News poll this week, 42 percent or the 1,60• adults qulued agreed that all U.S. aid to larael should be suspended if Israel declined to sign a peace airee· menl with the Araba. The response seems to reflect con· siderable impallence wit.b Israel and il.8 prime minister. Begin, in a speech before the National Preas Club here Thurs· day, acknowledged that bis talks with the president were "dif· licult." THERE WERE repoTts, meanwhile, that high-level American 0Hir1als had con· duded progress toward peace was possible only if the 64·year· old leader s teps down. There is no evidence, however, that Carter int.ends lo try to force Begin's ouster. Carter has already taken several political risks, calling for a Palestinian "homeland," declaring that Palestinians have ''legihmate rights" and prepar- ing to sell the righters to Israel's Arab oeigbbors. Henry Kissinger dealt with a Top Cleveland Cops Nixed By ' Irate Mayor CLEVELAND <A.P> -Police Ch ief Richard Hongisto, who swept into town like a lawman hero three months. ago, has been suspended by an angry mayor in front or the poised pens and whirring cameras of reporters. Dennis Kucimch, the 31-year- old "boy mayor" elected last November, called a sud-. den news con· f e r e n c e Thursday to confront Hongisto, former San Francisco County !'iheriff. about his charges MONOl5TO that the police department was being pressured to commit ''Wl· ethical acts." When Hongisto balked at clari- fying hls remarks with reporters present, Kucinich announced his surprise decision. One published report Thurs- day quoted sources as saying the mayor has told Hongisto to re- sign within the next few months. The story said Kucinlch was up- set because of Hongisto's dis· putea with the mayor'• staff and because Hongisto receives more publicity than the mayor. Hongtslo, 41, who established a liberal, free-wheeline reput.a· lion tn San Francisco CoWlty, was hired Dec. 14, the first big appointment for Kucinirh, who tabbed Hongisto "one of the best law enforcement officials in the country " atubbom Israel three years ago by declaring a "reassessment" of U.S. weapons shlpmeftt.8 to Israel, auueatlne that the masalve 11alet could end. Whtie hie approach may have over· come Israeli resistance to the terms of a Sinai dlsenaagement a1reement with Egypt, at daneerously rattled U.S.·Israeh relations. CAllTEB IS GMNG no hint that. he too might apply a mUitary aqueeze to Israel. In fact, he la promising continued u .s. aid in the hope of elving Israel a sense of security to take some risks ror peace. The arm1 option removed, Carter doea not seem to have many left. The reallzation is deepening, meanwhile, that Begin as prime lllinlster will not be transformed into a dove. There 1s now no doubt lhal he 1s a hawk with an extra set of claws. Mon Rescues Pair ,., ....... When a small plane crashed in front of driver Allan Thomas' Greyhound bus on the Pennsr,lvania Turnpike, he ran to rescue the unconscious pilot, Harold Den- linger, and his daughter Emily, 8. His calls to other motorists for help were ignored. Instead, several took photos of hi s rescue work. He is shown at home with his wife Betty, right. and daughters Beth, left, and Susan. The pilot was hospitalized in poor condition; his daughter was listed in satisfactory condition. U.S. Birthrate Rises But Zero Population Growth Appears Likely WASHINGTON <AP ) - America's birthrate 1s on the rise. but population experts say the nation may nonetheless reach iero population growth by the m iddJe or the next rentury. Provisional statlst1cs com· piled by the Department or Health, Education and Welfare show the birthrate climbed to 15.3 births per 1,000 population last year, up about 3 percent from the 14.8 per 1,000 recorded in 1976. It was the first increase re· corded in the annual birthrate since 1970 and reversed lhe slow decline of recent years TnTorist• Bla•ed TURIN, Italy <AP> -Three or four gunmen s hot and wounded a former Turin mayor outside has home today and an ( IN SHOKI' ) anonymous caller later said the urban guerrilla Red Brigades were responsible for the am- bush. poUce reported Police said Giovanni Picco, 46. was hospitalized with five bullet wounds in the legs, arm and shoulder, but was not in serious rondition. Wallenda Eulogized SARASOTA, Fla. <AP) - High-wire aerialist Karl Wallen da will be eulogized m the large home-town arena where he performed for the many other circus people who have their winter homes m Sarasota Wallenda's body will be on public view at the Robarts Sports Arena on Euler Sunday from 2 p.m. until 8 p.m. Funeral services are scheduled in the 4.200·seat arena Moodily morn-ing "'~··· ldenilt~d DENVER CAP) -A man blown apart in an early·morning bombing two days a&Q bas been Identified as Charle!' "Carlos" Zapata, 29, administrative assis· tant of a Mexican-American rommunity group here. The Denver Coroner's Office adenllhed Zapata from dental records after the man's jaw was reconstructed. Police say Zapata was either placing the bomb at the Veterans of Foreign Wars build· ing or picking 1t up when it blew. up The Biggest Wt In The Desert. Iroiiwood. Our combination ot smart country club home~ and Palm Desert's best location, w ith 36 holes of golf and 8 tennis courts, has created an unprecedented demand at f ronwooJ. We are now taking names for the next unit of these popular single-family and duplex homes, many with dramatic views of the encircling mountains and desert below. Several priv,1tely owned homes from earlier offerings arc currently available through Ironwood Property Management Company, the exclusive sales aRent for Ironwood Country Club. Arnold Palmer, president of the Ironwood Golf & Tennis Club. invites you to come out for a visit and to re~i!.ter with the Fort Wayne Flooding Sales Office 11 you'n· mterested in a home at Ironwood. IRONWO~~D Temperat11re9 ..... u. ~ ,. u 62 JS .'1 ., ,. " S2 ,. " 11 ,. ,. ,, ,, ,. .. .. '0 .. ,. '9 ,. SI .0 01 .. 24 ,. ~ , .. .. lJ 01 .. n JO ) • • S1 a ·" " " 11 ,. ·" " lJ A 11 jO ti S1 ,Q .. u 71 71 ., 21 • tt 7t .. 77 " ti 0 .OS --- Surlllqort HllftllN\111 ...,_I ...... -.. tw• feel wltll tfft•Ht •••"· c~.i1u ..... ,.., ""'°'' IMKll; .. ,,..._ ................... .... _.,, CINll ...... ,. ' Counby Oub Home9 ln Palm Desert from f&.5,700 to $157,900. Aolm S,.nllP H~ UJ ~I'" 0tw'1 ;-- In ralm 0Mrrl 2 m1lr' ~nuth on rortol~. ltlt;ihone (714) 34<>-0Ml ) CALIFORNIA I PEOPLE • DAILY PILOT .4$ J&rvis' Measure Attacked Edison Refunds Ordered. Court Rules $133 Million Credits to Customers r LOS ANGELES (AP) - Former Governor Edmund ••pal" Brown ha& confirmed be wrote a letter saying that Com- munists would want the Jarvis property lax initiative passed because it could damage the country. Tbe letter, dated Feb. 16, was obtained by Howard Jarvis and reprinted by Jarvis with lhe ad- dressee blocked out It was not .known Thursday to whom the letter had been sent 8 lt'OIRftl Barned CHINO (AP> -Six women employees were recovering to- day from burns suffered in an explosion of gunpowder at the Aerojet Corp .. a ftre department spokesman reported. The explosion occurred Thur- day in a section of the plant where the women were loading a [...___sr,_i4_TE_) few grams of the gunpowder into ammmun1tion for the U.S. Air Jo'orce, swd Acrojct spokesman Ed Smith. Gun111an K iH~d INGLEWOOD CAP> A man who held a dry cleaning store owner hosta~e ror about six hours was fatally shot by police marksmen as he appeared al the door holdmg a weapon lo the head of his capt1H The man. 1dentif1ed today only as "Dude " fired two shots at of hcers, polJcc said, before he was felled by marksmen from the police special weapons and tac- tics team. Fare Bik~ SrPn LOS ANGELES CA Pl A 10 cent fare incrcar.e 1s looming on the horizon for about 800,000 comm utt•rs who use Southern California Hapid Transit Dis· tnct buses daily The SCRTD submitted an i:'n vironmt'ntal impact study Thursday hsllng six alternative fare increase proposals and a series of service cutbacks. 1n eluding the cancellation of four lines effective June 25 Body Rrcol'rrrd OAKLAND !AP> The body of Stanley A Kelly, 57, the Marin Yacht Club harbor master who disappeared off his JO-foot cabin cruiser March 12. bas been recovered in Bay waters orf Golden Gate Field."> rc.tce track StlU Critical .... , ......... San Jose Symphony Conduc.· tor George Cleve. 41. re mained in critical eond1t1on toda v with serious burn~ sustained inn fire Thursda\ that killed a woman anti caused $-10,000 dJmage lo Cle,e's home in Berkl'lt'~ Marin Cowity Kids Suffer Lice Epidemic SAN RAFAEL C•\P J So many duldrcn in c.tf!lut:nt Mann County have head hn• th<it to keep them all out of da'r. "'ould Close the Sl'hOOh, SJ.} S C'hH f county health offieer 1 ht•1>d.11 c HiaU. He blames the C<Jhforn1i.l drought. "This is the worst 1t s ('\tr been in Marin," he said Thur., day, s urmising that so many families were so intent on con- serving water that they didn't wash their haJr often enough THE DROUGlfJ' is over now, but the lice r emain. In a press release. Hiatt urged parents and !>Chool officials to consider "a program f or giving schoolchildren shampoos en masse to combat the widespread e pidemic of head lice." Children who are cleansed of the lice can become eastly rein fected by playing with children who have lice, he said THE PROBLEM cam<' lo the county's attention last week arter a Greenbrae doctor notin•d that his two daughters had head hce. lie checked with neighbor:-. and found that their children too. had lice School offtc1als 10 this count., north of San Franc1sc<J hnalh concluded the problem "as widespread SAN FRANCISCO CAP > Southern California Edison Co overcharged customers by $1J;, million and must refund the money through credits on their electric bills. the California Supreme Court ruled Thursday. The 4.3 decision affirmed an April 1976 stale Public UtiUtles Com m1ss1on order which re· qu1rt:'d major uti l ities lo amortize money they over collected through fuel cost ad· JUStment clauses by crediting l'UStomer bills Coe 36 months. CUSTOMERS ENTITLED to lht.> credits will share on a pro rata basis $133.2 million, µlus :-.c\.cn percent interest earned since April 1976. It was not known t:xactly how many of the ut1lit.>"s 2 9 million , U">lomers would get the credit..s The overcollection occurred between May 1972 and April 1976, the court said. During that tame. Edison raised its rates at l1·,1st a dozen times under the fut•I adjustment clause, 1t said But hecaust' of unusually heavy prec1p1tat1on in that period, plenty of cheap hydroelectric power \\J:. available and the Judge Nixes Nude Beach 'Liberties' !'-.\'\DIEGO l/\P ) A \lunll ll>itl Court JUdgt: h:is re Jt'l'lt•d J t•ons1ttution;1I t•hallen,gt' to San Diego's city ordinance banning nude '>unbathing. Judge Judith Keep refused Thursday to d1:.m1ss charges against six members of the Nude Beaches Comm1llee and ordered them all to appear March 31 for arraignment on misdemeanor charge., ATTORNEYS for the group of nudlly crusaders led by Robert Jacobs, 29, argued a,gainst the ordinance, soug ht by voters in a <'1tv referendum last vear The comm 1ttee says the· ban 1n fringes on freedoms of spt·ech, rc- 11 g ion and association, and restricts personal liberty J\11 six were ticketed Nov. 5 at Rlack's Heach when they bared ..ill In prote~t or the ban. Bio.FORE THE ordinance. nla<'k's had been the nation's on ly ~w1msu1t optional beach. Th<' defendants face max 1mum penalties or six months 1n Count~ Jail and S500 fines. ut1hty collected more than It needed to pay for fossil fuels CALIFORNIA EDISON challen&ed the PUC's order re· quiring refundb, contending the money was lawfully collected under a rate structure the com· mission found ju&t and reasona ble at the lime. It claimed an or- der to return the money con slltuted "illegal retroactive ratemaklng" But the hi~h court said the PUC's dec1s1on to let Cabfornia Ed ison and other companies raise rates every few months to compensate for higher fuel co!>ts did not constitute rate making m a legal sense " ... THE COMMISSION's de- cision to further ad1ust those rates so as to compensate for substantial past over collect1ons may well be retroacli ve 1r1 er rert, but it is not retroactive rate-making ," the court declared. Fuel cost adjustments are used by utilities to collect more money from customers to cover higher costs for fuel, particular- ly oil, used lo generate eleclrici· ly In the past two years, dunng California s drought, a lack of <'heap hydroelectric power forced utilities to use more oil. /\s a result, f uel costs and customers' bills rose sharply BUT TIIE SUPREME Court said EdJson seemed lo view its fuel clause ru. accomphshJn~ a different purpose. It said the firm's r,ate engin~r Where Trt~k Driver Died "dest'rlbtd the adjustment , . as a m1ruature rate proceed.in& intended to 1enerate whatever higher rates were deemed necessary to prevent decar i~ the uUU ty's overall rate o re. turn ... " TUE PUC in Apr il 197. changed its rule~ on the fuel ad, justment clause to try to preven\ massive overcollections by utilities. Dissenting in the case. Justice Wllliam Clark Jr. said the PUC's order "patently con· stitutes retroacUve ratemak.IJlg" because 1t provided credits for diflerences bet ween rates char1ed and those it now believes should have been coJ. lected t { r ... ..,........ Rc~cue workers. bottom, remove cans of cat foorl from rah of truck which was dri\ t·n b~ Palrrrk lfttll. 34. near Kmg City Wednesda\' Polit•c ~ard llall "as killed "hl•n a front t ire blew out, sending the • truck out of control and o,·~r the side of L' .S. 101 The cab, with Hall inside, landed un its top a t the bottom of the underpass. Sun desert Publicity Blitz On Chad Everett Wins Case A VOTE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE ~ICTITIOUS IUSINl H ,.CTITIOUS IUS INIUS lllAMl STATIMllNT NAMIE STAT(MUtT l~t follow1no perton I\ dotn; bu1t Tr-.e tou0_,.09 Pffton 11 oo.n9 bv'" ,." ., ntu •\ ll<E ATTITUOE J" A M•roM SIVfN SEAS CUSTOM Paternity Suit Against Actor Dismissed FOR HUMMEL A••nu•. 6.llbe>ot l\lon<!, CA "1M2 '°''EA IOAS. Jll~I ~v•n !>1o1\ O"""'• Guy Pl1llllpo, 11130 S.n F•an<1.co L.IQuna °''Q""' CA '1•n Sl•MI, Fout'llO•n Valley, CA '11111 Trhn• Rolhtn1»ro ~olh, 31761 Marv Pf\lltlPt, t17JOSM1 francisco S.v•n .,.., Od.,., Laquna N19u.t, CA StrMt, FCKH11•tn Valltv. CA '1IOI •lU/ From AP Dispatches A judge dismissed a new court DC'tion which seeks to declare actor Chad Evert-tt the father of actress Shella ScoU's 4.year-0ld child Superior Court Judge AUred Margolis dis- missed the suit bro ught by attorney Caryl Warner as guardian for 4·year-old DaJe Andre Lee Everett. The Judge ruled that a Sept 20. 1973, out-of-court settlement decided the issue by declaring that Everett. who starred in the defunct television series "Medical Center," was not the boy's father. • T he White House says Ros alyn.n Carter will visit a (vuen training center for the mentally hand1<'appcd in Winder, Ga .• on April 22 Mrs. Carter also will go to M11Jedgev1lle, Ga. to attend a reception at Georgia College Mrs Carter's mother. Allle Smith, will re<'cive an award from the college alumni club, accordin~ to Mar y Ho yt, Mr s. ( J Carter's pre:s secr etary. l PEOPLE Karl Wallenda, who ________ _,. flunged to his death ro m a hi~h wire Wednesday in Puerto Rico, had been negotiating to- performtnSen D1ego Stadium. The patriarch of the Great Wallendas family walked 130 feet above ground at San Diego In 197S on a shaky cable stretching 660 feet from the left field upper deck lo the equivalent spot high over r i&ht field. At the lime. he was 71. ·'He was supposed to return to the stadium in May or June," his sist.er Gertnide IUenle said More than $40,000 ls altUni m a bank ln Ridaefield, N.J . _.hile ca.Ju B. DalJ decides ••LL "o• what lo do wtlh t.be funds collected durtnt the W1ter1ate scandal by his Committee to Save the Prealdent. Daly, a form.er Leonia mayor, started the commtttee lb Beraen County ln 1978 to atd thtn· • Preatdent Richard M. Nixon. The committee received con trtbuUona trom 250.000 persons 1cro11 t.be tJDlted States Daly, ea, says he and his lawyer are not aure what ht should do with tht money. JdeanwhUe, about 544.000 11 col· lffttna tntcl'6t in th• N atlonal Community &nk, wher. Daly to be 1 vfce praadtnt. A black &od white chalk draW1n1 of S.a.Ja•lD haakllli •• aol4 at Soth y•a fan• art aucUo.n bou.at tD l:.QndoD !Oii tlO,JSO The 18lb ccnt.ury wort by French acWptor Jean-Antoine Houdon was probably a !lludy for 'one- of Houdon's portrait busts of the early American statesman. IS A VOTE Thi\ bUS•no\\ II <~led by ... In Tni• bu\l ... u ,, (_ .. a by ... In dfv1du1I dlvlduttl Mary Ptllll•P• Trtw Ro1,.nro.rg Aotn TrH\ ~t•ttorrlfl'nl WI\ filfld wilh tPw This \ftl1t"mt>nr wd' ftlf'd 'tllttfh ,,_. Countv (lf!r .. of Or•n9f County o" Count., C••rtt, ot Or•n0t-County Of' M•r<h I• 1919 Mor I It/I The drawing was sold by the Baroness Eugene de Rothschild and purchased by London art AG~Ai N ST dealers Baskett and Day on behalf or o client, a M Sotheby's spokesman said PUBLIC NOTICE ,,m, ......,. PubllS,,.d OrM19A ca.st 0.11, l"llot PubH\,,.Cf Ori9n90 C~•I Dally Pllol, Mu II 2• 11 ,,.,, 1 .. ,. '°'' II Much 10, 17," JI, 1tlt 'Ol 71 With bare toes prolr~ding rrom a pair of tat-HIGH 1'1CT1nouuus111us d . h D 8 h DENSITY NAMIESTATIEMINT l'ICTITIOUSIUSIN(SS l Pre tenntS S OeS, OUg rl g Am, 17, Of Th• followi1>9 petloelll •tt eoino NAM( SfAT(M(NT Montpelier trudged to \'ICtory m the third annual """""u.. T,.. 1o11-•1>G ~,...,,. '00ono 1>u" R tt S k " t l t "" t I \:'t COHOOlt H0Bl t1$, 1113S $11., ,_,.,.,. 0 en nea ers COn es 3 IY10n pe ler, · Paul Hum-E....,..,.. ~n... P.1rk CtrCI~ II( ltvt~ (A'11U JAY KAY MOO[ll"G ... B•~tt Brigham was one of 23 Montpelier young peo-7900 f,, ....... w..,.,..,.. "'" f•l>Orl.ll•on• Lid • (•l•torn•• Sir.•• Su•I• ••J Co••• Mo.• Pl<' "ho strode across the stage at the cltv''i .,,.,., win c.r.-o.. . ..-<O•e>0••toon 11u1 S•• Pu~ c""• .::•1'"""·••1•i. I ~~~~~~~~~~ ::E ''"'""" ~tl11• E••'fl'\f' ,_..,~n .. l1• H~• Y0t11t recreation center, sporting the most threadb11re -Tht• """~• l><oMu<••d b• •<or eo11uM .. c.1.1or .... t;im sneakers their closets had to offer • • • • • • • • • • • • • PG••"°" Th" Du••,,.u "<-....•~by •n '" ---------.., EXPOATATtONSLTO Gl••OUAI • • ~ CL A"'11n PrK El•y,_ ~'""'" • Thi\ \t•ten"ttf'lt ••• fHf"'d *•lh 1,,. l h1• ife1,.ment w11i1 1.1.., ••'" thr • Counly Cl•fk of Or•noit Countr on ou"ty Cltrk of Or4n0f' Cou,.,tv on M••<ll 14 ,.,. Falltuart I. 1•ra • · "'"' "' .. n • Publ••-0r•"9t C.0.11 Ooity P•t•t Publl•hfo<I l>M90 (~\I D•••y P1101 M•r 11, H JI. A.f>' 1, 1'11 ICJl .. ll M•r<h 10, 11, 2•. l1, lt'8 '70-11 PlJBUC !'liOTICE I I A& Ed• • I p Robert N W\!ed /Publl~r l~~ K•'1U/Edltor orange eoasr oa11y P11ot ltOftO !!fJ..e••••••••F•"•o.v1111111.•M•arc•h·2·.·.'.91•"••••••••••a.•..wr••a•K•"'•'b•'•c•h•te•d•'•'°'.·.·.• •P•,,ge•E•d•'•tOt'••• Law Priorities Sometimes Baffle This week in Sacramento, Assemblyman Mike Gage. D-Napa, introduced Assembly Bill 3022 which would "create a Grape Crush Report Advisory Commission t o advise on the a nnual grape crush report.·• No doubt this measure is of some interest -perhaps importance to the wine producers up Napa way, but the odd descr iption of the bill can't help but catch the cynical eye of State Capitol watchers who try to keep track of the thousands of bits and pieces of legislation that surface in each session of the Legislature Lust ) ear. for example. our diligent lawmakers introduced 3,625 new bills, of which. after due discussion, l,285 were added to the laws of the state. While the J\ssembly is pondering the grape cru!>h report, we learn about a great scandal involving drug p ushing by unscrupulous doctors who hand pills out to Medi-Cal patients like salted peanuts. Some of the patients are hooked on the prescription pills, some sell them, some both. Either way, the taxpayers arc paying the profiteering doctors' bills. But we further learn that it's difficult to get the goods on these medical criminals because someone in the state Department of Health decided it probably would be illegal to issue Medi-Cal cards lo undercover investigators to help them check out suspected doctors. That loophole, of course, could be closed with some swift ac:t10n by the stale Legislature. Indeed an appropnate measure was introduced, but it apparently disappeared :;orneplaC.'e Now there's new talk of lcg1slation to facilitate nailing the drug-pushing doctors. Just talk so far. Something may be done some day. Meanwhile. it s probably easier to address legislative conern toward the grape crush repo rt. A Solid Choice Orange Count) Transit District COCTD) directors :-.1\ cd themselves some possible headaches recently "hen they quickly named Jim Reichert to replace dl'partm~ ~rncra l manager Ed Lontz. HclC.'hcrt was a good selection. The new general 111:.rnagcr has been \\ ilh OCTD in an admmistrallve post for the past four ) ears. He's a known quality. While n•rlamly less flamboyant than the man he :-.ucceeds. RciC.'hert could well be just what the doctor ordered for stable transit district management. I11s quick selection also nipped in the bud uneasiness that was beginning to show among OCTD staff workers .is Lontz became a lame-duck general manager. Lorilz acted responsibly when he told Transit District cttn·ctors in l<-1le February that he would be leaving May 12 when his conlraC'l expir es. !Us early departure notice al· lowC'd for a possible lime-consuming man hunt should < >CTO directors decide to go off on one of their patented na- t 100 wide searches for his rtplacemcnl. Tht• llmt• l<.1g b('came academic, however, v.hen the utr<'ctors lappl•d Hc1chert on the .shoulder and ga\ e him llw joh W elcoine Decision The 'I r.ms1t 01slr1l'l directors look another forward :--lcp this v. eek \\ lwn they adopted a formal open records policy. ln thC' past. some OCTD officials have been choosy .1bout deciding \\hat records and reports are f 1t for public l'onsumpt1on as v. ell as when they s hould be made public The ncv. policy acknowledges that the district's records "arc a matter of public information and, therefor(', opC'n for inspection." And. 'er} wisely. OCTD's d irectors said they recogni1.c that access to information concerning the 1·1md ul'l of the Pl'oplc's business is a fundamental and 11rc·C's.,<1rv right of C\'cry pC'r.son." To l hat \\'l' s:iy a nH•n. • Opinions expressed m the space above are those of the Dally Pilot Othf>r views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists Reader commenl 1s 1nv1ted Address The Dally Piiot, P 0 Box 1560, Costa Mesa CA 92626 Phone (7H) 642-4321 Boyd/Diaries BY 1..:\1. BOYD ,\ m a~kt>d if I C'\'er kept il ell an /\~ a I.. 1d for a hout thn·~· 11<1\s nnC't.' Tho<tC' lillh.• plai.t11 rov<.'n•d di;incs with lo<.'k s trap"> Wt'fl' prl'tt~ popular ~l'Jrs ago. Still arc. evidently i\hout 5 prrC'ent of the teenage boys and 35 per c<.•nl of the lecna$tc i:tirls keep diaries now Even though far more females than males JOl down s uch daily records, most or the famous diaries tn literature have been written by men. There's a reason. Women tend lo record what they do. men what they think Daily doinJ:s turn out to be less signift l'<.tnl than bright icfeas In our l..o\t' and \\ar man's vol uminous fllrs about romantic places is li-.. ted th1• lown or \'"rclf'n . the N <>t herl ;rnds Tht• I 1 m b-. of Dear Gloon1y Gus You 'd think those Rbarples in Sacrnmento would at ltast have the detency to return the Interest they earn on th '3 billion surplus ac cumulated by o\•crtait· log u1! E.P.B. numerous beeC'h trees thcr<' ;ire mtc•rtwincd in knots. lov !'r's knots to ht' <'Xart. t1cl1 t h a t W ;i y :1 !'I t \.\ I J! s h y ,1morous rouplt·s of hygone ~ 1•a rs ·1 hl' pr;11•t i1•1• l'On tsnues Q "Whats 'Qantas' -thf' name of the Au1-lrallan airline -mean"" A. Stands for ''Queensland And Northern Territory Air Ser v i ce." It's the oldest air line in the English- speaking world, incidentally. Founded in 1920 Q. • Who's the Indian who does the single-tear ecology commercial on TV"" A Cherokee actor Iron E) cs Cody ~11ddle East lcrrori~t!'I ha H been at 11 for a lonJ! time Am reminded or 20 vcars ago \.\hen such a c·haracler in Phillippv1le. \lgena, threw a bomb Into a restaurant. It landed In R soldier's bowl of soup whkh put out the fuse. Believe thlR was a relig1ous crisis In that young man's life. Thereafter he took to prayers o r thanksaivln11. The four·mlle Gnnd St. nern.ard Road tunnel borfl throuah thc> Alps betwte n Italy and Swlt~crland. Until it was cut, the s wallows ml ~rat1n11 northward had to fly Into the R.000-feet mountain allltudet. Not unymore. If you look closely at. the old "Lea,·e fl To Beaver" aod ".Marcus Welby. t.D." reruns, you'll note t.be1 both operate Out. or tbe aam• bouae. ' .J Jack Anderson FBI Eyes Super Comput~r File W ASHING'l'ON -The FBI has an insatiable itch to get its haods on a forbidden new com- puter telecommunications -.vstem that eventually could com pile dossiers on virtually t>very pen.on in the United States Officials at the fortress-like J Ed~ar lloovH h~adq uarlers building rt> t·ently made a quiet p1tt•h to obt am lh1• Or\\ ell1an S)S t C'm despite pro m 1sei. by thl' Wh1 l~ Hou::.e and Justice Depa rtmenl not to make a mo\e without consulting Congress THE SYSTEM is known in government circles by two innocent soundrng words : mesi.alo'(e s witching. Onl'e 1l becomes operative, it could place lhe FBI in physical control of all state criminal data in the country. wilh access to every data inquiry from one police jurisdiction to another. T hrough th e wizardry of Earl Waters electronics. the FBI would transmit each message betw~n local police departments. By de· laying or expedltmg m essagel>, the FBI would be In a PoS1tion to hinder or help local aulhorit1e!i for their cooperation with the f''BI THE FLOOD of information throughout the country could easily be copied and stored in computer banks and pulled out with a flick of an l"lH finger By ofCering the service Cree of charge, the FBI would s wiftly gain a tight monopoly un aJI criminal data. Advocates o r making more use or computers m the war against crim e contend that a com pulerized master file would pro· v1de the FBI with speedy and ac· l'urale information needed to solve crimes. This information could be flashed instantly lo an) police unit tn the countr~ But critics fl'ar the FBI message switch1nit would C'reatt- a national data bank and thereby, turn the f<'BI intn <• n;1 t1ona l police force Even if compulen; could be rcl.lricted lo polt,·c rN·ords. these contain name s of thousands of Americans who f!#:K TO BASICS have never committed a crime but have be<:ome innocently in- volved in investigations. In the p ast, the FBI bas abu sed the rights of people whom the late J. Edgar Hoover dido 't like. Agents illegally tapped private phones, opened mail and used entrapment tac· tics against anti-war and minori ty groups that were ideologically unpopular These excesses ha\ e been stopped, and the FBI 1s return mg to the tenacious police work that made it famous. Coosc1en t1ous officials fell they cou ld im- prove FBI efficiency by inslaU- rn g a message-switching sys tem. They ob t a in ed permission from the Justice Department hierarchy to go ahead with il. But vigorous protests from llt>p John !'\toss , D.-Calif . sidetracked the mo\'es. White !louse aide Jack Walson wrote t·oncerned congressmen on De1.• I:! "It ism~ undcrstandin~ that no final dec1s1ons have been made . In fact, a com prehcns1\·c ~tucly on priva1.•y l'> now under\\a) " Three days later, the Justice Department was even more em µhat1c in a private letter to Capitol Hill: .. We shall not be undertaking any lntuadves in this area (mesa.ace awJtcbf.ng> without prtor consultation with and approval by the Congresa. '' YET ONL\' FOUR day1 later, unbeknownst to Congress, the FBI sent out special instructions to computer firms lnviting them to bid on telecommunications equipment. Their proPosals had to include ''lhc hardware and software components necessary for message switching," the FBI declared, in direct violation of the Whit.e House and Just.ice Depa rtm e nt pledges. Furthermore, competitors for contract! would be judged oo the messase·SWllCblD~ factor• t.be FBI emphasized. Jay Cochran, the FBl's assis- tant dir ector for technical services, a r g ued that the solicitation was proper because 1l advised the bidders that the messc1~e system had not been actually authorized. The bureau wished the option proposal in- l'luded. JU::.t m case m essage switching should later be ap- oroved, he told our associate Gary Cohn. Cochran sajd he was unaware of the promise that Congress would be consulted. But con- gressional sources believe the FBI tried lo sneak-play, operat· in~ on the assumption that 1f they could get contractors lo include specific m essa ge- sw1tchmg propQslas in the bids, they could confront the Carter .. dm 1n1strat1on and Congress with a fail accompli. COCHRAN ALSO claimed the FBI had been given permission by the General Services Ad· m 101slrat1on. the government's supplier, to include the message- switch mg language in the bid in- \'Jl a tions. But Frank Carr, GSA 's computer commissioner. said the FBI has not complied with his guidelines. George Orwell in his concept of 1981 warned of an omnipotent st ate police apparatus holding s way over the most intimate lives of the prople. Moss says mcssa~e switching "has an im- portance r.ir tram,ccnding its in· nt)l'(•nt and innocuous sounding n.1m1• It rclall'~ to problems of pres en ing privacy and main- lammg l'Ontrol over expansion of ft•du .ti mnuence m state and - lcH'<l I Jaw enforcem ent •.. L'nder the plan. the FBI would bccomt> a centralized control l'leml•nt. dominating and coo I rolling all slate data " State's Banks, Corporations Pack Clout Although New York. London and Switzerland have the re· pulation or being the financial centers of the world, the in- fluence of California based in- stitutions are not to be taken li~htly or the nation's lop 100 com- mercial banks <those with the large st de - pos its), five or the first 1 5 are 1n California They are Bank or \mer1ca ~ecu r1t\ Pc1cif1C' WC'lls Fargo. C'roc k er and United California. Their com· bincd deposits of more than $101 b111lon is E?reater than the two largest banks of any foreign countries. France's C redit Agricole Mutuel and Germany's Deutsche Bank. The five combined are also Art Hoppe bigger than New York·., Citibank and Chase Manhattan put together, each of which is larger than any other in the na t10n excepting Bank of Amenca OF COURSE, whal makes these facts true 1s Bank of America. It stands alone as the largest bank in the world with deposits of more than $61 billion and assets of over $72 biJllon. In fact BofA shames most of the world's banks aside from the two France and Germ any banks, wtuch each have deposits of around $40 billion Barclay's of London and Dai lch1 Kangyo nf Japan art' nt•-.:t with SJO h1lhon each and th1•n comf's Hanco dt• Brasil. Italy's Ranca del Lavoro, Algemcne Ncckrlanrl. a nd Swiss Bank Corp, each with d<>pos1ts around $20 billion. Any two of California's other top five banks would match any single one of the top foreign banks. or passing interest is the fact that the 15 top U .S. banks have a C'Ombined deposit of more than $320 billion This is nearly equal to the total of all of the largest banks of •17 nations and is more than twice that on deposit in all the rest of the 100 larJ:leSt banks IO the l' S THE BANKS refl~l only one aspect of the wealth within the stale Another measurement is that four of the SO corporations in the U S. with the largest an- nual salt's are the California based Standard. Allant1C' Richfield. l 'mon and Occidental oi I companies. The com bmed s:tlec; of these four of n<.'arly ~IO hilhon exceed thos<' or an) other corporation m the United States except ~xxon and General Motors and that of the largest corporation m the world outside of lhe U.S • the Royal Dutch Shell Company. These huge financial opera- tions are only the tip of the iceberg. Many other large cor- porations in California represent hundreds of millions. Pacific Gas and Electric and Pacific Telephone in the area of utilities a nd aircraft. electronic and C'omputer industries are among these from the standpoint of in- vesl m ents and revenues. WHAT MAKES all this of in- terest polillcally Is the lremeo-- dous influence such wealth bas upon government. Banks and corporallons not only make possible government spending through the payment of taxes but also through the purchase Of stale and local bonds, and the providing of many services and com modilles. Unfortunately for the public. the mfluence ",elded by such mammoth institutions is not necessarily for the benefit ot the people. Integrity of their invest- ments must come first. It is the realization of these facts which had led to lbe de- mand tor full disclosure laws in connecUon with campaigns and those in public oCfice. Cathartic Debate Can Purge Dangerous EDlotions The National Mental Health /\sllociation's annual Calhartic Debating Award went this week lo Angelina Alioto. 1'hc award -a r!Used cudgel rampant on a field of non seq- uitur s -was inscribed simply, "She $b()wed th4) Way." Mrs. Alioto was honored for her slate ment to the pres~ on lht' marriage of h e r f ormer husband, Joseph, 82, to Mlsa Kathlel'n Sullivan, 33. What won the hearu or the Jud1u was not Mrar. AUoto'a common, 11.rdtn-variety eoatc!n· Uona that < 1 > the marrla1e wu ionlld, <2> tho happy coupto were Uvm1 ln s.ln, (3) Mr. AllOC.O was old enough to be M1si. Sullivan's father, <ti all he wanted was a nurn~ma1d, and (5) s he had taken such rotten care of him that he "looks like Ichabod Crane " No, whal copped thf' gonfalon for Mrs. Alioto, was her trium- phant clincher : Mr. Alioto had been swept off his middle-aged (eel, she said , by a young womon who "had really bi1 blps nnd woro boots because she had big ank.lu (and) s he always wore a cape, t.oo." NOW THERE la the llttlf' reco1nlled princ iple o f Cathartic Dtbattn1 carried to 1\.8 zerutb. Mr. Allot.o. beln1 a brllU1nt lawyer, could have presumably responded to lln. Alioto's first five cbll'f •lth th calm &od weU·rt11oned lo1lt-or the brfWtnl l•WfC!T he ls. But 1'ould he call a press con· Cerence to deny lhttl h1S new bride had fat htp:\ and big ankles? He'd look on utter fool No, the best he could do was adopt the suffering smile of a man above the !r1ty SO, through Cathartic Debate, Mrs. Alioto won th«> argument by default. Not only that, but think how much better abe fell for having pur1ted herself of those heaving emotloM Contrast her condut·l to that or your average, run of·the·mlll. JlllCd, mlddle·aited wife who !l:IY!4 politely throu.rh 1rltted teeth that ahe hoJ>CA h~r tormtr husband Md his .)'OUnJC It.Id)' w;Jt be "ever so happy together." This ls the pal.ti that leads lnmr- orably downhill to lho analy&t'~ couch. The key t.o Ca t.hartlo JHbate. l.ben. Is lo achieva both •• a forensic v1ctorv and relief from mental angufsh by simply hurling forth a heart.felt insult that hn.s nothini whauooer to do wltb the issue at hand. lllstoncal examples abound. ''You won't have Dick Nixon lo tiek around 11'\Y more'' is ooe. In the lleld, of parental 1 uldance, the namct of Uuie Borden leads all the rest. And who can ever for1et Custe's famoua Last SUnd: "And. final- ly, t aay lhel any nut who gOH around painllng his flc4) and sticklna tea.then in his hafr ls t~ fruitcnlcc!" So pl'acUre Cat.h.artlc Debal· lna. Tha nnt \lmo your husband ls •inning an arium~nt about lnternaU.on.al mOQC\ary oolicy. tell hlm ~ drlnb too much. True, you m11 ..a the batUe and Joe. the war. u Mn. Alioto .ut tell .YOU. h beatA lo&1:Qa both. LOCAL I RELIGION I OBITUARIES FinaUg Full The Catalina Island r eservoir. which was down to '10 percent of capacity at begin· ning of year. is brimming over as a result of r ecent ram. Residents of Avalon, the island's town, were on .50 percent water D~atla .~ot lt'"f»ll TMllTl'OllO Grun•n •nd Chri•tophu P•tnc- Al PHA B THETl'OAD. <Ho<lent ol GrHn•n l>Otn or H..,hngtOft Be..:h. (o\t• M •w (• Pe\Wd •w•y on ( • , htr swrt!f"llS Vtrn •nd lut11fe M•rch 21. "" Sur•t•td l>Y her Emmofts ol H""hr>Qton IM•<h U d•uohter o.41 TMllord Smlll\ of 01•• brother I/tr" Grt•nen Jr of O • ...., MtlYlft 'Thtttord of S/Ylla. Stul•ber9, 1lhno1s -sl\lor Polrtei. U , two tl<-rt Ja"'" F hrt"0'" GottH lmo"n or P•o•pect H1191\t>, :>! At~k• -.>oM11>f1 Butler ol P•lm lllo,.,011 M " Grttnen II•• t>een • Springs, c.e •-d•uohter\ l/ordlt wcretary tor •he Bu.,... C.tro Oii lUflltall ol C.ta ~-ca -Zella Companv In Ille C:.tv of Industry for Morten er C.oste Meu, C•, • thepe1t 1...,-,..n-prlor1Dlllatwu o r • n o c h 1 I <I r ~ n • n <I 1 • we re tary 1n tt>e Hu"'lr>Qton IMt><ll Q'••fQr•nothltdrtn Fritnd\m•1<-•ll Pollet Otp1rtmen1. Memorl al •I 8tll 8r-•y ""°'t ... ry frem 11 "'rYl<H Wiii be Cor>OU(lt<f Oft l'rl.Uy noon to I lO PM Oft Suno.ty Morell"· Morell 1•, ,.,, •t. lO P.M_ II Pl•«• 1'71 fuMr•• w-rv•ct\ w1U be held on Brot"•'' Smiths Mortuery ••t" Mol\d•Y -«II 11 1'11 ti 1 >OPM F ether 0.rv>ts Lyons, Pastor of St Row Hills Memor1e1 P•r~ s,.,., (.hurt•. M•ry > By lht Su C.tllollc ChlK<ll. Wh1tll•r, ca Wtlh E••t•rfl Sier Surcl\ oll•<l•Ul'IQ lnlermont will "" pr1vele l•ghl (l\OP4W ouso1 L-lkt><I\, ca Femlly ·-·ts --···· be -oll1<11t11t9 Tiiow -wl\I\ 1n llO\I OI to Tno Oro0fl90 County c.nc ... Society tlow,.f\ rn.y nwkt don.lllDf"'\ to th« Plerct 8rot"'9rs Smith$' Mortuary O••nQt Co.;nty CAn<or ~tety ti.II dlft<ton .. flr04td••V Mo<tu••v oire<tors IAllli" llllOWN OllE MAY BAl(EP. , .. ,dtnl ol it F NNf TM c ~ROWN , .. ,.Ol"ftl Of (O)t• Mf'\..J C• Pl\!lot!d 4 ••'1 on ro\td Mou, C• Pauod •"'•'I" on M•rcll 11. 1•11 Survived by •11tar M•nn JJ, 1911 ~rYivt'd by hi' wife Oor•f'e 8a\.•r of Q\1("90. lftlno11, ton 0..111• !lrown o< C<»t• M<>••. C.tl , .an Sttven 8.t•ar ot Co•I• MtU. Ca tct'nnt"fh W Brown ot Torr•n<-•. C• C..r•ve\•Oe wrv1te\ Frid•y Marth 141 d<iUOhltr Brrn•<• Ment Pull•n of 1911 •• II 00 AM af •no••-Par• MIOw.tv C•lv. C•. •nd M•qorla C•mtl•ry !>mllh Tuthill Limb C.O.te E •<hetboroer ol Colo•ado, el•o s Me•• Mort...,..y <11rtctoo. Mlo-4* o•<tl\dchlldrtn •nd, 9re1I oraftd<hlldrM F'-iner•I M>rYiff'\ will b4' lltld Oft S.turd•y Mere II 15, 1918 .ti II 00 AM •I IHll 8rotdway Cll•Ptl OlltClallng will bt R~v Boyd IColfr, 1nfermt"nt •l We'\lMtMt.,-Me>mort•I P•rk 6~U Bro•d-•y MOrh1•ry cJ1rKtOr\ 110£TTEll MINNIE ~OET'TER. rt•ldol'll 01 l•Qul\• fleitdl, ca P••Mld awey on M••<h U . 1'11 i,. 5outh IA9U.._ C. ~ht '' •urvh•td by hor deuoM•r Dorothy Roel..,, of U9UN Bo..:t\. c .. F &.tn•rAI '•rv1c~ wf'rt Pwl<I r r•O.v • "'•rth 2•. 1'11 '" ,.._ "'4toe1 •• P.c1••c Vtrw Mtmori•I P•r~ lnlermef\l P•c•fK V .... ~lal P•r-. Newport flt H II Ptc 111< V1tw Mort u•r y Virecton ·--l• WEAlTHIE M. ICRAMER, rttldenl of Co\l• Mir-\.• Ce P•l'N •w•v Oft M •r(" 21 1tll !wf'vtYf'd by her W" 8111 k••mtr OI '°"• MoH. Ca 1 d•uohtcri Evelyl"I Ander\on of tnd••nit end &t-n•• L LY"" •Ito ot lncltan• ON brotlwr, Fr..,k F. ChU9Q ol N Hollywooo, ca lhrH 'hltrS 8ennd1ne k•lnbfr91r of Covin•. C.. , Mtnn11 Jami......, of ""'" la•• C1lv. Ul•t\ and Brrlhe M. LOPU Of Glen.dor•, C.. Fr~ '"•Y' c•ll tor "'"letlon _. Bell Or-ey Morl&>ary "" ~ufl<lo Merell ,., 1'1t trom lOAM l n 8 lOPM Mr' f(r•mer wa' • memOf'r Of IM Nitw Mti\4 Alnltl•rv \l•t•r•n\ of Fort•~ WAr' 8•rr•<•\ a I Ht 8111 8roacl•.,.Y Mo• I uar y cs,r•< tor\ Nl!llo\ET JOHN NEMET, '100 Cl••• D•I Av,.nuP, Ape'1nwnt "31. t..on; 8•1\.,., C• P0\..-1 _,on ~Y In LaguN Hiii• HI I\ """'....., by I-b•Ol ... rs, E rnHt Not'T'll4. ~ Otment1. ca I nd c .... ,,~, G ......,.,, s. OI c .. pl\t•eno 8 .. <h. C.a . 1WO \lsltrs t ,_ Hatllol<I "' llllltlott Color--He..., A J•n••ns OI Gr-v. lllln<M• He It elM> '"'vtvtd by nlO<M -,,..,,...,, A Mau or Cllrl\llan 8urlel was Col•brat.O tAM, Tv11<1ey, •I Our l1<1'1" of F•ll"'I CAlllollC Olur<h with R•v f•ltwr Ant,.ony McC,ow•n Pastor olt1<1.i1flQ lntn~nt loUowf'd In Asctn\lon ea-tory, El Toro, C• lunn'' Mortu.ory UO Soutll Et Camino AMI, !.on Cltrnento, dlrt<IO•' OJ 1711 O"IEENlrN MARV ELIZABETH GREENEN •Of' "· r1Mdtnt ol HunO"Ofon 8oacll. (a Penecr -Yon W-•Y Mettll "11. 1•1t at ~ Memorial Ho.,.i1At1 She h survived by 1 '°"'· J-11 Scotl IALT'l,.lllC.HOM fUMBALHOMI Corona det Mar 973·9'50 Costa Mesa 648·2'424 llUAOADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway Cosll Mesa 642·9150 SMfTK.T\ITHIU-UMI WUTCLJllf CHAf'I&. 427 E 17th St Cosla Mesa• 646-<1888 S.Ota Ana Ch11pel 518 N Broadway Santa Ana• 5H-<t IJ 1 f'lllCI IROTMIRS SMTHS' MOaTUAIY 627 Main St H untington Beach f>36.8!;3Q rulf4MU.Y ~AL HINllAI. HOMI 7801 80111 Ave, Wettmln1t•r 893-3525 ,AC:IRC VflW .....OllALPAH Cemtt•ry Mortuary Chaoet 3500 Pacific View Drive N•WPOrt Callforn11 844·2700 . WcCOIMICK ..Ol'TVAllH Laguna BHch <40.·94 15 • L~un1 _HlllS 70&-0933 San Juan Capistrano ~9~1770 For the Record Db•oludon• Of Jtf arrfage Fi-l!Mnll 1• 811EEOlOVE. Je.-• W11hem -O•t:>ouh k•v. SANDEllS, llK .... ,d Allon •nd LH A. MUllAAV, P•ln Je•nn• •nd T"•odore-J. Jr • STADER. lino. A ...., A099r D110, CUE RO Marl• Guadalupt and EfM\I Tn.jlllo. UPSHAW. ,_..,.,.,... lynn a "d John ltat1d1ll . SHEPARDSON. Merell Ann.,,., Jaftd BVrOft, NESHA'T, Lindt C. a"° Ho~\Oln McOONELl, J-t R. - Mltl\HI T.; MAASKE, Coll•n F. and Oavld V. POllACK, F•lth C1ldwoll end Sttvtn Kenneth, BATMAN, John W. Ind JOY<• G, MILlEA, M1CllHI C end Kathleen M-; McCUAOV. June J . •ncJ Bruc.o R. SUTTON, J•mH N 1 110 Amelia G , BUCHANAN, S"'rl Ann •nd Chrl~t~r Oo...,; STROM, Truu A -SI.....,, R ; CHRISTIE, Snaron l dl'td .>errv F . FAVElA. l r1n\1lo 0 •lld E~l•lla F Marrfag~ LAS llt:GAS. Nov -M•rrt1oe l•t•n\•S l\~htr• Inch.Ide. IN•<'-I SAlGUCU ANTONOVICH -K•n•n, '3, •nd Be tty Mn, JS. botJI of HUfll• lf'Oton Bu<h ROSE MAVER -We'-A 41. ol HunU"'9tOl't ~.Cf\ •nct Ev• M.ar141, 1•.ol Le t'.ol>fl MM<h• Will IAMS KENOAICIC -Marc Joi• fr v 1• of Pomon• •nd Pt\rlll~ JHnno. lJ, of H..,h"'910ft flet><t\, Deatlu Elsewhere NEW WE ST· MIN STE R. British Columbia (AP) -Bill Kenny, 63, t he last of the original Ink Spots, a smgmg group k n o w n w or l d • w i d e· during the 19405, died Thursday of a res piratory ailment. Kenny recently finished recording an album titled "Bill Kenny 1s Back .. LOS ANGELES CAP> -Isidro Ayora, 98, Ecuadorian president from 1928 until his resignation in 1931, died W e dnesda y. the E c uadorian consul announced Thursday. • NON ·SMOKER? If yo• /011'1 '"'o••· P_n, f'o/Off•Sltro4fr Polley ••)I prol•CI yosr howr, *'° or •Pt1t1-~I /or lus . 54.555, R•BBITT IMSURAHC! 191' Harbor blvd. Co1toMHo O•' ~le-; Is 1•!.Uf )O• ,.Oftr\', • Friday. March 24. 1978 DAILY PILOT A 1 Christians Ponder Meaning By GEORGE W. CORNELL ( ) ACo~~aj\·; ... · \s known :· :_ MIKI• ... ~ ...... .,._ To some, It might seem an odd symbol. It's a rack of torture, an in· strument of pain, shame and death. Yet the cross ls the chief emblem of Christians, and to them, the sicn of hopeful realism. REUGION the blunders, ignorance and flawed acta and attitudes. "Tears clear the eye,•• an old adage puts it. ~ ~~e : Jl\~n , ' . ·.\t. \(e~p? .~ ~ ~ \ .. ! . . ... : ·. ··.: .: :: : ·: . ~ ; . . ::: .. : . . .· ....... ·. ··:·:·· . ·. rationing before storms but are now ra· lion-Cree. Southern California Edison Com· pany officials said full reservoir presents no flood threat since excess runoff goes into the ocean. Five Elected Their attention focused on it today as they meditated on lta meaning. IN CHURCHES ACROSS the land, believers gathered to reflect on Christ's hours of dying on lhe cross and its implications about our ex· islence "The cross is folly to those who are perishmg," writes the missionary· apostle Paul, but 1t is "the power of God and the wisdom of God." It says, most obviously, that rougK and brutal agonies rend our world, that there is hurt and tragedy even for the best of lives, that good is trampled, the innocent abused. IT'S A HARD reality, etched in lhe daily headlines of wars, refugees, s ickness, hunger, dis asters and death, and some call it all a madhouse, an absurd jungle, giving up on it, bunt· ing escape in distractions, "spacing" out. But curiously, the Christian stance embraces tlus tangled life as basical· ly gr acious despite its travail, and finds hope in it, even in 1ls harshest of 1014st1ces, an the cross itsetr. Trouble, to a degree, also can bwld character and courage. "Suffering produces endurances and endurance produces character and character produces hope and hope does not disappoint us," Paul writes. FINALLY, HOWEVER, theologians say that many of the im· balances and afflictions of life re· main unexplainable. As the voice out of the whirlwind told the protesting Job, it's not his business, but God's. Yet the cross says be is "with peo- ple in their pain," Sbea observes. "It's very hopeful. But it's not lhe type of hope that Ignores the tragedy and pain. It's not Pollyanna. It says that God is sacrificial love." That's the theological crux of it: he bi!ars the brunt of it, somewhat like a parent dying lo save a drowning child who in ignorance of defiance has strayed beyond his depth. "FATHER, FORGIVE them ," Jesus implored from the cross, "for they know not what they do " . .. : .. · ·· '·. , ... ' .· NEED A LAWYER? lowL99alFee • OJvorce • Bankruptcy •Criminal •Wills-Probate • Incorporation • Accident-ln1ury • Ev1ct1on • Collections 640-2507 - To Scout Unit "It say!'> that God as suffering with us." the Rev John Shea comments in the U.S. Catholic, published in Chicago "He 1s on the cross. Our suf· fenng 1:; not alone and somehow 1t will be brought to new life in ways we don't know yet." And he died. Yet the process doesn't end there, but opens up a greater frontier. Through his involve· ment, all the questions, fears. tn· justice and dying gives way to an overpowering triumph of resurrec· hon. 1·1HR. CONSULTATION-$10 Pc1Polf1IClll-. Five Orange Coast residents have been elected to tbe board of directors of the Girl Scout Council of Orange County. THAT'S WHY THE day com· memoralmg the cruc1fix1on 1s called "Good Friday." To believers, it says that God h1mself. as mirrored m our dimension an Christ . s uffers the anguish of this somehow disordered, hum an run world, cherishing it, even though 1t kills him "In the world you have tribula· lion," Jesus said ... But be of good cheer, I have overcome the world." HUMMEL They arc Berruce Olsen of Huntington Beach, Jane Patterson of Costa Mesa, Suzanne Reese of Newport Beach, Jacqueline Schaar of Laguna Niguel and Shella Sonen.shine or Newport Beach. New on the council nominating committee are Forest Dickason of Irvine, Fred Sorsabal of Costa Mesa a nd Harvey Stearn of M1ss1on Viejo. Christians. as G. K. Cheblerton put it. believe life is too important to be anything but life. Jn facing its tnals and dying, Shea says, "perhaps the most useful virtue m an can lake with IS supported BY RESIDENTS . him is a capacity for surprise ... But why the atrocities? Why. the old question goes. does God allow the horrors. lhe unfairness, the evil? Death Fall Elected to attend the National Convention of Girl Scouts of the U.S.A. In Denver during October are Mary Baker of South Laguna. Carolyn Hunt and Anne Miller of Huntington Beach; Jacque Jacobsen of Saddleba ck, Calvin P. Schmidt of Newport Beach, Enriqueta Ramos of Fountain Valley, Judi Cawthon of Capi1trano Valley and Lilt an Crawford of Costa Mesa It's a tough qu<'sl1on . with many answers attempted, primarily that mankind wa:; given the dignity of free will, to choose well or wrongly. and that he often does the latter to baleful effect SAN FRANCISCO <AP> A 21· NOT developers Educator Heads Alcohol Council IN MANY WA VS also, the suffer- mg chastens and educates agamst yea r -old e mployee of United California Bank jumped or fell to his death from the roof of the bank's five· story operations center m San Fran- cisco. police said The coroner's omce identified the victim Thursday as Jabez Wonders. a clerk. Peul ...,..,....., Elect'°" C:O.--. ?900 F""' A"" Cor0N clel -_,,Watt~o...m- Ken Jones, director of career education for the Huntington Beach Umon High School District, has been named chairman or the Alcoholism Council of Orange County. Other officers are vice-chairman B. Lee Karns of Newport Beach's Comprehensive Care Corp.; secretary David Kerr, an attorney; and treasurer Ken Williams of McDonnell Douglas Corp. in Long Beach. Members at-large include Len Dursthoff of Hughes Aircrart ; Bob Scott or Newport Beach's Advance Health Systems, and Harvey Sims of Hughes Aircraft New members of the board of directors are Roland Rubalcava. att.orncy; Or. Robert Renouf of Tustin 's Human Relations Institute. Thomas Al· llnson. of Mcnab-Irvine Realty Company in Newport Beach. and dentist Raymond Peterson. Laguna Artisans To Exhibit Works The Laguna Craft Guild will exhibit works r realed by local artisans Easter Sunday on Foresl Avenue. Juvenile Agency Eyes New Home An Orange Coast treatment and referral agen· cy for juvenile offenders and their families plans to m ove from its S E Bristol Street site to county· owned land near the Orange County Airport. County super visors have tentatively approved pl ans of the Assessment and Treatment Services Center of Coastal Orange County to move to a county-ownt.'d site at Irvine Avenue and Orchard Drive The center's present site, at 1640 S. E . Bristol. is on Irvine Co. land that is slated for develop· ment. CENTER OFFICIALS HOPE TO win final county approval for lhe sublease of less than "2 acre of land leased by the county to the Newport Beach Golf Course They said the Irvine Co. will donate the build- ing currently housing the center and that it would be movedlolhenewlocallon. SUPERVISOR THOMAS RILEY, IN suggest· ing the sublease. said the center offers "a much needed alternative lo the formal juvenile justice system .. al no direct taxpayer cost. Course Completed r 0 Mirhflel D ChasE', son rotary wing aviator The street exhibits will be on display rom 1 of Mrs. Jarkie Swenson, course at the Arm y am. to dusk, lining the closed off street from 8651 Wagers Circle, Aviation School, t•t. Coast Highway to Glenneyre Street. Huntington Reach, re· Rucker, Ala. The free craft show will include crafts includ· ce1ved the silver wings Chase e ntered t h e DR. DAVIDS. PODER, D.O. <u~1ropath1r phnlrlan) 11 u/,, • tn a nntmcr u n"u' ri«nn'llin,. 1011 DR. GEORGE ~-11.\00.\D, :H. D . at Coi.ta '\ll'U ~lf'dical Crnlrr 275 \'lctorl• Strt'et ~uilf' I II ( D'ta ~lei.a , C.\ 9:?627 //nur' 811 Appmnlmt"nl (711) 6 15-9990 Proudly Trumpets The Easter Arrival Of A LIVE DIXIELAND BAND ApptarffMJ Enry 5-d.y 11 &a to l p.m. Dwt-i tn.ch SPECIAL EASTER IRUHCH THIS SUHDA Y, MARCH 26 4248 Martin9ale Way ing stained glass, jewelry, ceramics, quilts, dolls, o( an Army aviator and Army in November. He · ballk, leather, clothing, prints, photographs, was appointed ~ war-ls a 1976 graduate of sculpture, weaving and drawings. rant officer. Fountain Valley High Newport Beach 752-8000 IO Prizee Won Doris Walker, a Dana Point writer and public relations 8peclalist, was a top winner in the an- n u a 1 Callforn1a Press Women communications conter.;t, recelv1ng 10 slate priies at the recenl awards banquet in San Diego. NOW PIANOS tor Sale 4t Rent \ ~~~~~~~~~~~~H~e~c~o~m~p~t:e~te~d~~th~e:_:s~ch~o~o~l~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ PUBLIC AUCTION CUSTOMS STOPPED HANDMADE ORl!N'f AL CARPETS & RUGS shloment entry 178-13&871, 27 bat• datt of entry 12/ 1 /77 stopped by Cuatoma under aectlon 304. T.A. markings and lllLIAlm flOI SAU on 1 ;usna. We will auction the abOve shipment of fine woo41 & allkl & others to recover various chargee Incurred due to tong Cl•lay In clearanoe. AUCT10t4 WtU. TAU f'UC:I SAf ., MAR . 26, AT 2:00 P.M. THE REGISTRY HOTEL IUIHA PAK a COSTA MBA IOOMS llOO MAUITH&a M.¥D. 11¥1MltCAW. Paid Polltlcal Advertlaernent 8,ECT Michael C. Gering City Council, District 3 NEWPORT BEACH NEEDS PROVEN ABIUlY VOTE Tuesday, April 11 Mlchaef c. Gering for City Council Commlttee 270 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach, Callfoml& 92880 Hugh Grant. Treasurer L I I I I ' i l t • AB DAIL y PILOl Fttdey. M9f'Ch 24, 1978 "Got a probltm'> Tl1en wnte In Pat Dunn Pat will cut red tape. gettm11 the ari~wer~ and ac11on you need to solve nwqu1lles m government a11d business Mall your questu>ns lo l'al nun11. Al Your Service, Oranqe CO<Ut VmllJ /"'&lot. /> <> Bor 1560, Costa Me$0, CA 92626. As mantJ letter~ as possiblt' will be answered, tnlt P~ 1r1qu1ne11 llr letters Mt includmg the reader's full rJame. addrds~ and busmess hours' phone numbercanrwl bt•con.~1dered. Tlnscolumnappearsdai· ly except Saturdays · · Pauper• N~ded tor Tern• DEAR PAT: Al what age must a child be is· s ued a passport Ill his own name? Can't they Just be included on a parent or guardian's passport? D S .• Fountain Valley It's a good lhing you asked because new passport regulations are ln efred. Persons aged 13 and over have to have their own passports, rather than being included with a pa~nt. The e xception is for husbands and wives wbo may travel on a single pass port. Stale Department officials said \bat bec:awie passports are valid lor five years Jnany persons were pasi.ing lbe age or 18 -when they used to have lo get their own document -and were sllll included on a parent's passport. The Passport Office may require the consent of 1 parent or guardian before issuing a passport to a person under 18. 1ffao'H Do SU'leetftlt>r Tt>•t•? DEAR PAT Now th at an 18-month moratorium on the sat•charin ban has been passed b y Congress to g1 \'l' researchers time to 1n vesttgate whc•ther ~accharinc causes bladder cancer, l 'd like to know what studi11s are planned and who th<• :o.1>0nsors will he J J . Newport Beach Bong Kong R~e Some ol lhl· 1:3 ~ aeht~ competing in the 600-mile Hong Kong to :\Tantl.t t'<.u:c ~et ...,atl from the China starting point. Entries in- r luded ~ arhts from the Umted States, the Philippines, Singapore. I long Kong, Canada. the Netherlands, West Germany, Japan and A ust raltu Tidelands Race Slated The Newport Harbor Yacht Club will send its ocean racmg yachts into action Saturday on the 11 mile Hunt· 1nglon Tidelands race around the offshore drilling islands The lntt•rnat1onal Offshore Rule I lO R I yachts will be Hl competition ro r the Ahmanson Tro phy, the P e r f o r m a n c t· II a n d 1 c a p F I e e t < Pt!Hr) for the Corkett Trophy, and thC' M 1dgl't ocean racers r MORF and \tORA I 1n quest or the Dickson Trophy This ~JS to hove been the sixth race or the Ocean Racing Series, but two previous races were cancelled because of stormy weather. Saturday's race will start orr the Santa Ana River jetty and take the fleets around drilling islands Emmy and Eva and the traffic lane <TL> Ruoy leaving them all to port - and finishing back at the starting po mt • No other regaltai. are scheduled at Orange Coast yacht clubs thts weekend. BOATING /AT YOUR SERVICE Newport's Lipton 12 Clubs Compete By ALMON LOCJ[ABEY o.u., l'IMt a.Ml .. Wriw Eleven yacht clubs have entered ch•lleotes for the Sir Thomas Lipton !lUdden-death race off Newport April 2. The 4efeodtng Newport Harbor Yacht Club will make an even dozen yachts whicb will be on the line for the ~th defense of the cup, one of the oldes't yaC.hUng trophies in Southern California. The primary challenger in this Docksitk Space For Boat Show Now Hal,/ Taken More lhan half of the available dockside s pace at Marina del Rey has been reserved for California's first an-lhe-water·boat show ol 1978 The show opens at Burton Chae£' Park Wednesday and continues through April 2. In addition to dock space, marine exhibitors have rented well over half the tent·booth space, according to Rick Mosier, chairman. The show will include both land and water exhibits of s ailboats. powerboats and a tent bazaar of marine accessories. The show is sponsored by the Boating Industry Comm1llee or the Marina del Rey Chamber of Commerce Dates and limes are as follows Wednesday through Fnday, March 29-31, noon to 7 p m . Saturday and Sunday. April 1·2. 11 am. to 7 pm year's race was the Balboa Yacht Club with John Arens' CF-37 aloop, Cottonta1l. NHYC ucepted the challenge and announced that it would defend with John Miller's CF-37 Windmiller, skippered by Den· nis Duraan. THIS SET THE r&Unt r811Je for additional challen1era to come in with yachts ratint within flve per· cent of the defender and challenger Most of the secondary challencers are CF-37s. Under the terms of the deed of girt or the trophy, sldpper and crew must be members of the defending or challenging club. The race is a sud: den·death affair over a 15-mile course on a boal-for ·boal (no ban- d ic ap) basis. NHYC won the trophy last year at San Diego Yacht Club with George Tooby's one-ton sloop America Jane. In recent years the trophy bas been dominated by San Diego Yacht Club which was the original recipient ol th~ trophy from the famed Scottish tea merchant m 1903 THE LINEUP FOil this year's race· Newp0rt H•rllof' Ye<lll Cl"b (dlPl•-rl, Wtndm•ll« CC.F Jll O..rvtls Ollt'Qen B•lbo.) y e<lll Club (ptlm••Y chell•"l)e•) Cotll>f>t••I (CF JI\ Jt\fln Ar9"S Al•mll~ B•y Y.o<nt Clut>, 1nc1190 (CF 31) Edlor•nce. C•lllorn1• Yee Ill Chib, JltnO ( Y•n~M·lll Bot> ICMln COllONAOO YACHT Chib, Loi• (Hew-'-411 Wllll 011 .. l.O\ An9f'IO\ Ya<M Club, C•onwlnd (CF.JI) 5t•n C.1bb\ L0"9 8HCll Y•<nt Club 111"90 CCF J71 B•rl ~r'dtt•" P•Cl!IC Mermt'n Y6<hl Club, C.llo>t Wtngs (CU.tom \loop I Ml~,. McC•leb l'ALOS VI! llOl!S Y ot<l'lt Club, Jtlltrsoro S.e.,,sl'llp t CF )II 010 4< •er S•n Do•QO ""'"'Club, vrctor CCF Jll HMDJdtnson. S•nl• ll•rW<• Yot<M Club f"ew•l<'t ICF-J11 RIC!wrd ComptOf' S•n,. Cl~,. R.c.•n9 A>MX•at.on, Re~ (custom \IOOPI »no; Purden Two major !>ludies are planned. One will be a s urvey of 3,000·4,000 n('wly diagnosed cases of bladder canct>r, compared to controls <two for ~ach cancf'r U'lt") from the general population, to determine to what extent uccharin was involved. Hair dye w.e, flouridation of water, oc:cupatlonal exposures and smokiDg will also be identified. The .; study will ht> jointly sponsored by the Food and Drug admini!.lration and the National Cancer Institute at an estimated cost of SJ.JS mllUon. It will take about a year to coiled the data and It is hoped a rough analysis will be completed In time to mef't the Congressional deadline. Title Won By Hogan THINK ~ ASTI Discount Ticket Packages to the Long Beach Grand rM I I • Prix, April 2-available only from participating Toyotal"' dealers. But you II have to think fast to get em because the big Grand Prix weel--end 1s almost here Tht' other 'itudy, by thf' National Academy of Sciences, ~ill includt> a review of s cientific literature, and an analy!>is of costs versus benefits and '>O<'ial and economic impacts or regulating the 5weelner. Wedding Band: Tif-That Bound 01-:AH PAT l\ly r1 ancc 1i. not fond of the womC'n's hbt>rnt1 on movement He says he won't ht• s urprised if libbers start urging women not to wear wedding rin~s because they originated as largC' restramin~ devices lo keep brides from re· turning to their families. Is this really true? L.T , Newport Beach That's what the Encyclopedia Americana says. The firsl wedding bands were large rings used to tie up restivf' damsels after their capture. To insure a new wUe'i. continued presence, the girl's spouse placed a rf'Slraining band around her ankle or neck, above her knee, or through her nose, depending on tribal custom. Everyone shop• Dlme·A·U"9S. Salurdaya, In the DAILY PILOT T1 m I loJ(an outscored IR rivals la1>l wt'ekend lo \I. In the Frank Smith troph) for the Etchells 22 lntt'rflN!t ChallengC' at N<•wport Harbor Yacht Club Coa11tal ..-·_.ather Su,.nv •nd warmt"f S..h.HCS..V L •Q"t "V•ri~o1 ... w1nO\ n1qht And morn1nq hoof"\ H1Qh\ ~turc:Mv 10 to Ii CO•\t•I 14"f"nPt''•t~(f'\ will r~n~ btlwun SJ •na '' 1n1ano lfm D"r•IUtf\ will '"MO"' bfttwf"f"n ~and n The .irtatef lf'mpt,••ur• wlll Ot .0 Sun .. Hoon. Tidt>11 l'•tOAY Su.ono •ow J •1 o"" O t .,..conon19h • 10" m ~ I SATURDAY f-lf\I IOW ) >• d m 0 I f:1t'\l l'UQh 'JO•tn •I Y'"""'.,.. Jtpm ~· ~<no~d 'l•Qll • •> P"' ~) SUNDAY F!"l•O* 4GA•rn 01 f-.,,, thQh 10 ''ct m • \ .,..< onCI low • 00 p m O I .... (Ood ll•ljt' 10 "pm ~ J Sun ,._., ~ i7 a m YU• OI p m Moon rew'\6 1' pm. ,,.n S SO• rn Send the Perfect Eaater Greeting ... Our FTD All Euter Plants Beautifully Hollister Holiday Wrapped. Easter Basket Bouquet Colorful spring flowers in an embroidered woven basket. We can send it nearly anywhere. I lt-!1!1) Call ~r viait us tod&y Credit carda honott'o MClrE Easter Gift Ideas: EASTER LILIES FROM 10.00 BIG SELECTION INDOOR PLANTS BEAUTIFUL BULB PLANTS IN BLOOM • DISH GARDENS • TERRARIUMS• MUCH,.MUCH MORE TO SELECT FROM. We will be closed Easter Sun. Mar. 26. ROSE BUSHES in beautiful bloom. ,~· 5 GAL. 7.95 LOOK AT THE VARIETIES ... BUCCANEER• CECILE BRUNNER• CHARISMA• C. ARMSTRONG • CHRISTIAN DIOR• COLOR MAGIC• CHRYSLER IMPERIAL• FRAGRANT CLOUD• DOUBLE DELIGHT• LOWELL THOMAS• DUET• EIFFEL TOWEReMR. LINCOLN• OLE• PALOMA e SONJA• PASCALJ • MONTEZUMA• PEACE• OREGOLD • TROPICANA ... ANO MORE Rose buahea ... great Ea1ter gift• I The race-a genuine Grand Prix racPn through the streets of Long Beach 1n the 1rad1t1on of Monaco Th e CJrs-FormulJ I the fastest 500 horsepower ?00 m p h speed machines Zero to 60 to wro 111 4 seconds fl,it Thv drivers-the best there are World champion.., pa->t und pr0scnt The stake<. SAVEUPTO -valuable points toward tt1c covt·tccJ Worlds Dr1v1ng Champ1onsh1p Experience 1l all-three lull days of glamour. celebrities. thrills and excitement-for a lot less than you might think $10 ON TICKns TO THE For details-see your participating To Jo ta dealer. WORLD'S FASTEST savings from ri~~ac~~ T~~rs~~f~~~ ent Grand Prix Ticket Packages There s no purchase necessary to qualify All four include admission to STREET RACE. three full days of racing Plus some special race events you won t want to miss Like Formula One aua1tly1ng tor pole pos11ton A Formula Atlantic Championship Race A Toyota Ce1tca·Celebr1ty Match Race Even a 10 000 meter toot race The action starts eJrly Fridc1y morning March 31 and keeps right on going throuqh Sunday afternoon April 2. when the checkered flag falls to signal the end of the Grand Pm: Toyota Celica GT Liftback -Official Pace Car of the L.B.G.P. The tourth consP.cul1v" year CE-Ilea has held this prest191ous honor And why not? CPl1ca has been most every- body s pr1x race favorite since its first 1nlroduct1on. and the applause for the new 1978 model hasn t subsided yet Drop by your part1c1oat•ng Toyota dealer and see all the street Cellcas 1nclud ng rhP. GT and ST Sport Coupes You II 11no a little b1: of the Grand Prix 1n every Cel1ca To satisfy that little bit of the Granrl Pri" dr1vN rn each of us YOU ASKED FOR IT REG BOX OFFER OFFICE COST YOUR COST 1 . 2. $37.50 $27.50 $27.50 $19.00 3. -$22.So-J $14.50 4. _.__$_15.00 ~12.00 YOU SAVE $10.00 $ 8 .50 $ 8.00 $ 3.00 YOtJ .GOTlt INCLUDES • • 2'> Rn_,.," d G•.ai\:JS.1.tl\:J S~l olr><;IL1il< & AlC• ClJV C. rl Arj1~ • ~ Oa~ T1t111 Tr J Gr"I A-1m' -.3 D vl'ormula Qr>e GRl<lil" T r Pa r. 4 --- • < 1 'i R"'>'•IK'CI G•antl•l 1n!l St••t l"'·fuctes R11cf'thv Cil"nl A11,., I· ~ O:ivsl T1m1 lt1iil l>• ril 11·11\'1 • ~(I 'I rl'l1m ''" r"l<V> <hrlllJ T r ~ I • u ,. • f°flefiO ' l "' •' I T ..,, TI 't.., TOYOTA . .. ... .. .. INSIDE : •Business •Stocks •Oscar Ballot ··sports ( Street Talk J The Fab Four Smee the Beatles disbanded seven years ago, rumors of a possible reunion have been as perennial as Zsa Zsa Gabor wedding announce-ments. The music world was abuzz this week with yet another rumor that the one-time Fab Four would recreate rock history. Cause of speculation was an announcement that ex-Beatles George Harrison and Ringo Starr will appear m a benefit concert in Los Angeles in May that may be a veritable who's who of rock superstars. But hopes of the Beatles reuniting for their first U.S. appearance since August, 1966, were quickly laid to rest Ringo says he will only MC the show; Har- rison has no iclt•a how the rumor got started; Paul McCartnl'Y SC('S no chance of a reunion, and John Lennon remained mum. Still. the idea 1s tempting. Would you like to see the Beatles .l!l't ha(·k toJ?elher? Day le Lasher, 29, Yorba Linda: "Oh, yeah. It's a whole nostalgia trip-it will take me back 10 years. I grew up with them They came out in 1964 when I was a teenager. When they broke up 1t was like a whole genera· lion broke up " Robin Boone, 19, Huntington Beach: "No, because I'd be really disappointed in them probably. They just wouldn't be the s ame. They've all gone off in different direcUons." Jim Wood, 21, Irvine: "Oh, yeah. For s ure, you bet. I'd wait a cou- ple of days in line lo them, for sure. They're the best as far as I'm concerned . I have all their albums and they're really good." Tom Bedson, 21, Santa Ana: "I think it would be a good concert but l wouldn't be able to go to it: you wouldn't even be able Lo gel near It." Richard Ramos, 18, Santa Ana : "Yeah, because they made good music when they were together. Paul McCartney ls the only one who bas done a nything since." Kevin Wilkey, 20, Hun- tington Beach: "Yeah. I don't know, I'd just like to see the four of them get back together. I don't think they'd be any good; they dou•t even Hite each other. J just don't thlnk they could play again together. In tbelr each lndJvidaal way they're eood." e. Chdy Delk. 30, Costa Mesa: .. Very ~uch so• at least once. l d just like to see them set together one more time just for old times aalce. I like them very much -together, teparately or anyway. We wero 1olq to 1ee 'Beallem1nla.' It'• lbe clOle1t thlna to lt;" Friday, Match 24, 1978 DAILY PILOT 91'"'P.!!'l"'lllll~ • • eoturig_. _. _ .. ___ ., 1 I , . f Left, board room features rosewood table, wing chairs, crystal sconces, and chandelier. The View froni the Tip Top Area in J. R. Fluor office features Italian marble fireplace. Another view of Fluor's office. • t By JUDITH OLSON o.lly ~,, .. Staff Wr11W Ten floors of glass mirror the changing sky Inside, contemporary furnishings are offset v.1th an extensive and varied art collection, in duding prim1t1vc African masks and Oriental tapestries to Cali fornia Watercolors. The sleek headquarters for the Fluor Corporation, Irvine, seems like it would be at home with an exclusively modem interior, but there is a surprise in store for visitors. For the top two floors, cantilevered from the building. and which contain the executive suite. are furnished in authentic 18th century decor. These areas are dis tinguished by oak panel- ing, hardwood floors. high ceilings with mould- ings a nd valuable antiques. Executed by Beverly Hills designer Laura Mako. the 18th century theme was selected because the company desired an executive area which would be beautiful and elegant yet not os- tentatious, a company spokesman said. The firm, which regularly entertains high. ranking v1s1tors from all over the world, felt that such an area would be appropnale to re· ceive them . Mrs. Mako spent nearly two years on t he project, coUecting antiques and American Im· press1onist paintings and ordering carefully er a!ted reproductions when necessary. In addition to the fine furniture. she as- sembled a distinguished collection of Chinese porcelain for the chairman's suite. Mrs. Mako also designed spectacular crystal chandeliers for the grand ninth-floor en- try hall and the board room. J .R. Fluor's ofCices are comfortable with an authentic Italian marble fireplace, spec1ally- designed rugs, the porcelain, a collection of rare first-edition books and a private sitting room. The board room features an oval-shaped East Indian rosewood table and 22 wing chairs. Belgian crystal sconces complement the huge chandelier. The headquarters butlding also includes a dining room with fully furnished adJomin~ kitchen anct small s1ltmf( room, and a directors· lounge with a bar Mrs. Mako also designed the executive vie<' presidents' offices, which are all the same sizl' and shape. Each executive was invi ted to add his own personal touches such as whaling an<l nautical themes. Mrs. Mako, whose clients include such celebrities as Bob Hope, said she purchased the rare books and paintings for both their potential for increased value and their beauty. "American Impressionists are still afforda hie," s he noted, adding that some of her purchases were from the J . Paul Getty collec t1on. Perhaps the most unusual feature of the c-orporate tower 1s the cantilevered sections forming a full octagon on the nfoth and tenth fl oors. The first eight noors open to the interior for maximum light and the bottom two include an atrium lobby Interior designer for the first eight floor"> was Jane Sheldon, Los Angeles. The F1uor Corporation-occupies 105 acres off the San Diego Freeway near JamboreP Boulevard. The company took an option on the property in November, 1972, and then began planning the facllllies, which would bring together workers formerly spread in silt build ings in three cities. The new buildiqs have not been without their critics. Many people think the t~wers·cn the Southern California Division building make it look Uke a prison. A company spokesman said they serve both practical and aesthetic purposes. The oclogon-shaped units contain the warm· ing and cooling elements for the building, which is heated th.rough a highly aopbiaticated system utlU1ing the employees' body beat. The elements were put Into the pedestals lo keep the roof or the build.Ing free ol unsigbtly ducts, the spokesman added. "The corporate view therefore ;, of a clean roof line. The roof looks nice.•· Tbe abape of lbe pedestals also links the lo er to the s prawhnc SCD buUding, the apok manaaid • B2 DAILY PILOT ANN LANDERS I OSCAR BALLOT . .. Club Caleftdar nmt f<SCh Wednt>aday 111 the Dculy Pilot and cont<Uns rwt&et'I ol worn"'-' and st'rvace 1lub trw?e1tngs and t'v~ts for IM f oll<nw1g wet' le - Thur~ through Wt'dnes- day. Send notaces to Club Calendar, Doaly Palot, P 0. BoI J~. CO$ta Mtsa, CA 92626. Be sure to mclude vour name ond phone numbt>r Notl<'es must be m our hands two weeks m odvanct' To requt•at a picture, wnle or call the Features Department, 642-4321. Pie· lures are lmuted to fund ro1&1.'Ts open to the public. RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY w...Y .. w.t ........ lt12 ...... ltl'd. Codo Mes. -541-025' THOSE WHO ·cARE VOTE FOR HUMMEL OScar Wants You The annual national putime of trying lo guess which movies will wm Oscars at the Academy Awards ceremony April 3 as un· derway. It was a big year for romantic comedies. science fiction and, after a long dry spell, mov· lea about women. But regardless or who or what earns the hardware on Oscar night, the Daily Pllol would like to know who its readers feel deserves the golden statuette. To cast your votes you are asked to fill out the contest form and return it to the Dally Pilot. no later than Wednesday, March29. Entries should be addressed to Oscar Race, Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, 92626. Results will be published the day of the Academy Awards ceremony, Monday, Apnl3. BEST PICfURE O "Annie Hall." O .. The Goodbye Girl.'' O "Julia" D "Star Wars." O "The Turning Point.·• SUPPORTING ACTOR O :\tikhail Baryshnikov, "The Turnin~ Point." O Peter Firth, "Equus." 0 Alex Guinness, "Star Wars." O Jason Robards, "Julia." O Maximilian Schell, "Julia." SUPPORnNG ACTR~ 0 Leslie Browne, "The Turning Point." D Quinn Cummings, "The Goodbye Girl." D Melinda Dillon, "Clo~e Encounters of the Third Kind.'' [ ] Vanessa Redgrave, "JUiia." LJ Tuesday Weld, "LookinS for Mr .. Coodbar." BESTACTOlt 0 Woody Allen, "Annie Hall.'' O Richard Burton, "Equus." 0 Richard Dreyfuss, ''The Goodbye Girl." 0 Marcello Mastroianni, ••A Special Day." D John Travolta, "Saturday Night Fever." BESf ACTRESS D Anne Bancroft, "The Turning Point." D Jane Fonda, "Julia." O Diane Keaton, "Annie Hall." O Shirley MacLaine, ''The Turning Point." O Marsha Mason, •'The Goodbye Girl." Jane Pulls Punches DEAR ANN LANDERS: Every four or five months my wife (I'll call her Jane) flies ort the handle and gets physically violent. I don't mean just a punch or two. She pounds me Ana Lalldft-s ' ·... t fF ALLEN FRIES is now doing COW It LUZZETTA BERNARD Hair o.ttotf I W eddlnb end engage- ment onnou11eement1 "'" on Sundo11 in the DoilJI Pilot. F'orma an ~ al all Doil11 P'&lot offices or bJ1 colling the Features ~mmt. 642..(lll. ~ ••. ~2~ ELEGANCE ONE. 171.h smEET .lJN'BELVi To ouoid dfloppoant· ment, prOIJ)fCttw bnde$ Qre rl'/nlnd.ed to haw tMtr iofddlno 1torie1, wirh a blaDJt.and·whU• QW..JI Of tM bride or oJ the couple. to tlw Featurea Depart· rnent one weelc before the w~. E~ment cnnounce- ment1, with bloclc·ond· white otoa111 of the fvture bricU or the c~. m~t be received by the F'ealu~• l>q>ortmenf six weelcs bftfore the weddAng dare. NEWPORT BEACH• COSTA MESA'~ CHIC LEAlHER EMPORIUP.f IMPORTED and DOMESTIC LEATHER and CANVAS HANDBAGS LUGGAGE -WALLETS· ACCESSORIES 369 E. 17tlt ST., COST• MfSA . IH WESTPORT S.OUARE ~· 646-5533 ADVANCI REGISTRATION NOW OPIN. Now is the bme to sign up for w:e :;kahng Ir •, ns .it ti'" I c Capades Chalet. Whether you·ve ice skated ~101~ or ni:vo.:r Ice skated In yoor hfe. one of these class1J:; 1s lvr you Classes fill up last. so call today for all lhe 111I01mut1o:i !Of the whole family. ADVANCE lllllllVATIONS FOR GROUP FUNCTIONS. Ice· Capades Chalet 1s a q1eat plac.C' t '' pm.ii•~ 1 r tns11tut1onal group lur1cl:1on .. L..111 n u' r r ··rv,,,, · • . , • I IC£ CAPADES CHALET • C08ta Mesa HarhOr & Adams 979-8882 Costa Mesa Bristol & Paularino 979-1750 OPEN EASTER with her fists, pulls my hair, tries to scratch my eyes out and throws anything that's handy - like a lamp. a clock or a piece of kitchen equip· ment. storm clouds 1a&Mriag tell Janell abe waal.a to talk things over In a clvllbecl manner, flne - bat no more asaaalt and battery. U she doesn't cool ofr, leave tor an hour or two. anything odd was going on and is utterly dev- astated. Now Bill bas met a man be wants to live with. He ls willing to support my sister and the children, but feels be must follow the lifestyle that makes him hap- piest. Is it ~ssible fur a,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ man who went bomosex-1- 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Plmth-Ccrd1 -Cta Rowrs Floral ArrClllCJen1cnts • Corsages: EASTER SPECIAL USTH .... s59s LILLIES 11.50 MUM .... s59s PLANTS 1 z.so SAM LOUt«O $ I 0 50 ~,ROSES o... ~ ~r CUT FLOWERSm.5250 t.~Jw1H A GIANT 41/2 ft. l.:. EASTER BUNNY l IUMHIU TO II •• ., .. A WAY Ht.ts YAWi SATURDAY l/25 • OHH TO AU AGES• HO OIUGATIOH - 1-U.wicwd, Ylao, MMhr C ..... , ~-bpnM. c .... "-die, DiMr'I Clllb. DOUG'S FLOWERS I 899 PARK AVE. fCO">~ of 19"' Gl'd Perl A•~.I COSTA MESA 631-3944 crljc ~sburg <T'avan . EASTER SUNDAY 12 Noon to 9:00 P .M. Reservations 754-1776 Dinner Includes: Complimentary Appetizer Fresh Hot Vegetable Soup Or Cold Cream of Spinach, Split Pea ond Watercress Soup with Sliced Almonds Or Williamsburg Tavern Dinner Salad Fresh Fish of the Day -SS.95 <Ooc*ad ~to u.. ruo of ow a.I S...-1 Baked Ham -$8.95 (t'rom • t:al17 o\~ bcipe of......._ a. a II.am B4llta 8-) .Roast Turket..._~.95 CWllll G1* 0n.,, _. ._., Leg of Lamb, farcl -$8.95 Cs.nM ... •...., _.. IClifftlol .. ..... ....... pt11t, Top Sirloin Steak -$8.95 ,~ .. .,.. ..... , All Entrea are served wtlh two · Veseubles and Bermuda Potat<>H LitUo CUbem (Under ten yun> $3.95 ,......,,.,._.,.... ...,.., At the Crouroada ol Brlstot Ai Bed Hill Avenue Her temper outbursts are never over anything importanl I don't drink, cheat, or gamble. The way I looked at another woman, or some casual remark made in com- plete innocence, can set her off. This bas been going on for three years. I told Jane the last time it happened that if she lore loose at me again I would give it right back to her. She said, "No gentleman would ever strike a lady." I told her no lady ever behaved like she does. Do you think J would be justified in giving Jane a little of her own m e dicine? -TOO MANY TIMES DEAR TOO: No. Any man who hlta a woman back pegs himself at the same level -and that's pretty low. When you see the U 11be hun't slm· mered down by the time yoa return and attempts to clobber you again, I aaggeat a trial separa· tJon. P.S. Has Jane had a pby1kal lately? There may be sqme neurological problem that 11 causing these wild oatbaratl. She should get a complete check-up U she hasn't bad one withln the tut year. DEAR ANN: I am heartsick. My only sis- ter confided that her husband, who is in his mid·30s (a professional man), confessed be has had several homosexual relationships over the last seven years. My sister and "Bill" were married in 1968 and have two children. She bad no idea ( Horoseope ) SATURDAY, MAltCH ZS By SYDNEY OMARR ARJF.s <March 21-AprlJ 19): Go slow, lie low, let nature taJce lts course. Partnership and legalities command attention. U married, mate urges you to be finished with losing proposition. TAURUS (April 20·May 20): You could literally 1et new lease on life. Vitality returns. You are more in control of your own de.sUny. GEMINI <May 21-June 20): Accent on vigor, relatlaaablps lbat are the opJ>OSite of lukewarm. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Your seuse of what is practical, real and secure will surface. You'll be celebrated for choice tnade lo put. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Study Cancer message. Short trip, ideas, relatives, visits dominate. VIRGO <A-ug. 23·Sept. 22>: Changes mean profit for you. Know It and go with tide. Open lines of communication. LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 22): Light replaces gloom; new hope and money on horizon. Cycle is high; take initiative. SCORPIO (Oct. 23·Nov. 21): What occurs is subtle, beh1od the scenes, capturing the es- sence, detectinl 1ubUe nuances u contrasted to the heavy blow of the obvious. SAGl1TABIUS <Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Em· pbaais on desire, fulflllment of promises, frlfndship, romance, involvement. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Emphuiie PoSiUon, pre11Uge, pride. . AQUAIUUS <Jan. 20-Feb. 18); Fresh start. new Jea.ae oo Ufe indicated -stress orlpnality, darlng, lndependence. Pl8CBS (Feb. 19-Marcb 30): !Jltultlon 11 ac· Uve; JOU know without knowtq tbe ru\es. Thru March 25 Visit . PETER RABBIT'S GARDEN. See The Easter Bunny SOUTH COAST PLAZA ual all.er ratherine two children to return to a -straight lire through psychiatric help? I hate to see ''Bill" destroy himself and his entire family. -HEARTSICK SISTER DEAR HEARTSICK: ''Blll" dldll't tUD lato a bomoaenaJ. He bu been one for a loag time. Ma D)' bomo1ex11al1 marry and fatber children. <Actually these Individuals are bl1esaal bat they uaal- 1 y prefer members of their OW9 sex.> Unleu "BUI" wanl.a to be atralgbt <and It IOQDdll U If be doesn't), therapy ls 111eleu. I bope yoar al.s&er wlll get aom e help, however, since 1be ls the one who la "utterly devastated." CONFIDENTIAL to No Tyrant -Jaat DemocraUc: Sorry, bat I don't agree. I like Sydney Hook'• com· meat: .. Tbe majority rule la not realOll&ble In a family where there are aeveral amall cblldf'en. a prboD OT ID ln1tltatloa for the feeble- miDded." from our "txJys d<Z.pt.foreaste.r .. _ OUT ultra 11w.' p1ncord 3 ·q.ai suit by caf vin, gnwtfbr sprmsarxi summcz.r OCC6S lO'nS. oxford buU.On down sh1rt ta 1 bott madras 1,1~ b:iyssizes 6-20 pre. p siz.es 36-38 44 fashion Island, newport center 644·5070 FLORALEXTRAVAGANZAr NOW THROUGH EASTER South Coast Pfaza BOYS'& CHllDREn~ J)()(~ll~Illl~~ 4SEBAGO , BROWN ELK 12~ 103 ~•oo 3YI toe 28.oo 54 FASHION ISlAMD • NlWPOIT IEAOI • 644 •m Z7 Eat MaJn St., Alhalnbra :21S) 282-3878 . BANKAMERl~O • MAST!RCHAAGE • HEMPHIU.. OiAROE • • t 'I -I . Business Fndtly, Match 2A, 1978 * DAILY PILOT fl:I JOkes mt Below Belt ose Salad Bar? The greens tn this setting are not the kind one eats While the decor resembles that of a marine-style restaurant '!l salad bar. the truth is that 1t 's the United California Bank's Mariner office in Newport Beach. • John Ricci, manager. attributes the 22 percent increase in new deposits to the decor By RUGR A. MULLIGAN .......... ~. •1"1 WHAKAREWAREWA, New 7.ealaod -One of the truths a t'hap qui c kly learns when travelling about this world iS that tbe funniest and the stupidest people always are located across on the next island or over the next border. The Spaniards think the Portuguese are hilariously inept at the art of everyday liv~ and therefore make them the bull of all aorts of jokes, like painting a stripe on the side of the boat to mark where the fish were biting In the bay or hijacking a ~a rbage truck as an act or urban terrorism EVER SINCE THE fighting resumed in Ulster and began go- ing against them, the British re- sumed telling Irish jokes as a defense mechanism, like the one about the IRA man being sent out to blow up a bus but being unable to carry out the assign- ment because be burned bis lips on the exhaust pipe. The Norwegians jest that the Finnish national dance is a knife fight, and the Greeks will tell you that a Turk born with 11 toes grows up to become a mathematician, and the Roma· nians are conviced that the only thing dumber than a dumb Hunganan is a smart Bulgarian. Even m a place with a funny name hke Whakarewarewa, where the landscape looks more like a moonscape and has the funny habit of bubbling up with boiling mud pools and shooting hot steam and scalding water in- to the air, to say nothing of boil- ing an occasional tourist alive,, the native New Zealanders think there is nothing funnier around CAPITOLIZE 'v\llTH CAPITOL Joe Irvine to Retire From Plwne Company CAPlfOUlAJION MtANS TO COOVERT CAPITOL TO LASH "¥Ou nt"f'd S' l')fJO In 'S.:K> l'lllO tat"l '"'' "" i"~ \ ....,,..... f'lt ''"""' P'"OPI"'' ._.. 11 I w r ' I .\Pl 10 ti.;)• f LOAN ,ff'.l\QP IO <.'l'.·lf'lit• )'04.lt" MNt"t u·i10 ~ C&il'I ~ WWP'I tnt •'10 ,..,,,I~ ... ,,,.,. Home Loan Ont al Cal•I t lMOMt l.6*" & ... ,,,llQ"I ,,.,.' C•tt (llttfl: dour~ C~••"' ,. .. , V iOC..ltfld ott• "t,., tN '.t~l1 We'd Really like to ' yip COSTA MESA :11:IOHatto8""' 7141540-4412 ANAHEIM 133• w L.rCOn. 174 714/778-3450 LONG BEACH $414 E OoM l'n'O BIWI 213/421·9333 Par1r.c Telephone's senior ex- ecutive 1n Orange County, Joseph E. Irvine of Santa Ana, will retire March 31 after 42 years of service in the Bell System. For the past eight years, Irvine has been responsible for public and gov· ernmental relations for Orange, Riverside and San Bernardino counties IRVINE STARTED WITH Pacific Telephone as a craftsman and was promoted lo management in 1946 after serving 38 months overseas with the u s. army in North Africa and Europe, where he was &.1warded the Bronze Star and four Batlle Stars. His manage- ment assignments 11iv1i.1t were both hne and staff operations in Los Angeles. San Francisco, San Diego and on loan lo an Atomic Energy Commission contractor in Eniwetok, Marshall Islands, where he s•ipen 1sed construction of a large submarine cable network Irvine has been active m civic work as a d1rector of the Orange County Chamber of Commerce, Public Relations Society of America, Rotary president and Paul Harns fellow, Orange Council·Boy Scouts or America, and as an associate direc· tor of the Orange County Press Club. HE ALSO SERVED as president of the Register Campership Fund and is a member of the UC Irvine Public Relations Councll. Irvine plans to remain in Orange County in an advisory capacity on public and governmental relations for various organizalions. Tax Public ations Might Ile lp Now By The Associated Press There's less than a month left hefore income tax day, so if you've been putting it off, time is short. Tax forms can seem more complex every year and if you need some help, the Internal Revenue Service has a variety of explanatory materials. The "Index of Federal Tax Pubhcations" lists more than 90 up- to-date materials. It can be obtained without charge by writing the Consumer Information Center, Dept. 679F, Pueblo, Colo., 81009. GET THE FACTS BEFORE YOU LEASE OR BUY 1 Fare Cu t T o LA lj ~The luxury car that =more people buy. .. more people lease than any !comparable American ~!luxury car in California! '• .• ' ~follow the leader when you ~ 5 drtw it youreelf? Whether you .. or 1e888 the magnificent Continental Mark V, you • WO onjoy the dlltinctlon pf driving one of the most suooessful luxury cars built '• [((AmeriCa. TrldltlonaJIY. as fMdet'loe of their owrwhelming populertty, our Marks : hive returned mend their oriOlnaJ sticker price thlw'I Cadillac Eldorado Coupe. : ~ tn the Golden State. the Continental Mark V Is the undisputed leader in its • ftild of Arneric8r\<-made per'I008l luxury cars. Based on A. L. Polk registration data, ,,,,,. Clllfomtana buy and toase the Continental Mark V than other comparable :Alnlrieln luxury C8t& There are good reasons for such popular!~ Nowhere , ,Mt1 they be more obviOuS than during a personal test-drive at tho ~ of a : Mark v. Let U1 ArTanQe It for you at your eattlest coni.:en•enco. LEASE OR BUY AT THE SIGN OF THE CATI l Allowed WASHINGTON (AP) -The Civil Aeronautics Board has given Western and National Airlines approval to cut all fares by 35 percent on flights between Miami and Los Angeles. The reduction will ap- ply to first class, coach, night coach and deluxe night coach fares. Under the plan, the price of a regular day coach ticket will drop from $204 to $133. Wes tern originally rtled for the reduction, saying it would drop promotional, economy and mlUtary furlough fares on t.be route. Na- tional matched the pro posal, but said it would retain promotlooal fares. Tbe board OD TbW'S• day alM> rejected a pro. posal by Eastern Airlines to permit it to pay 1tockboldere In travel voucben instead of dlvtclcds. Entert•l nment ... Hllppenlngt •.• Fllma Th••t•r O.nce JJ'ltlUl8llT Televlelon tn lb• DAILY PILOT the premises than an Australian tourist. J UST THE WAY be talks matea him a more outlandish creature to the average New Zealander than the kiwi bird, the rucbUess retarded cousin of the dodo that is the sort of naUODal emblem here. "Do you know what the dif. ference is between a bison and a bulfalo in Australia?" asked the taxi driver wbo bad just dropped off a group oC Aussies at the airport. Before we could even hazard a guess, be was slapplog hl5 knee with a resounding smack. because of his short pants, and laughing up a storm at his own answer. .,IN AUSTRALIA, a bison is something you wash your hands m." The joke bere beln' that such ls the manner in wbicb an Australian would pronounce the word basin. Tbe New Zealan- ders, whose delivery of the mother t.oogue would bring tears of anguish to Sir John Gielgud, can't get over the way the Australians massacre the Queen's English Whakarewarewa, sensibly bet· ter known as Whaka, is a hotel· filled suburb of Rotorua. a city oC 50,000 people that is New Zealand's biggest tourist attrac· tion, because of scalding plumes of steam and hissing geysers that bring in a half a million tourists a year, many of them Australians. The natives claim "the dig· gers," which is even more im- polite than calling them Aussies, come to this spectacular thermal display to get their suits dry cleaned fo~ SINCE ALMOST everyone. especially the men, goes about town in short pants, the locals will advise you t.hat the way you can tell an Australian from a New ZeaJander 1s by looking for the l wo-inch while line around his 1ett ankle and observing a 11hght list to port as he amble5 down the street. "That's wbere the ball and chain used to be," they'll laugh. n reminder that the neiahboring nation and chief rival in cricket, soccer, n11by, beer drinking and all other cultural pursuits was colonized to a si&nificant extent by empt)'iog out bis majesty's prisons. Ao Australian b.i.stonan doing a down under venion of "Roots," I was told here, would belin by searching the guest books of the Old Bailey aod Newgate prison. This hereditary aspersion on the nei&bboriog commonwealth is remarkable 10 a land where Jock Mackenzie, a world class sheep stealer, has a whole valley named for him. NEW ZEA.LAND IS the only country in the world I have visit- ed where lbe hotels put this singular accusatory ·notice in yo\lr bathroom: . "For our guests' comfort we have eqwpped all our rooms with the highest quality of towelling. To allow us to main· tain this standard the manage· ment would be grateful if guests would appreciate that these items are not souvenirs of lhe hotel." The chambermaid, a charm- ing Maori girl. told me it was necessary to remind the guests not to swipe the towels •'because we get so many Australians ('Omio& here." But a 1pokesman for the tourllt bot.el corporatloo, the 1overnrneot a1ency that owns 13 ol the luxury bote1a dla· playing this extraordinary notice. said the home folks were more to blame Ulan the out· ialandera. since the oceupabey rate was running "IO perc:ent New Zealanders and 20 percent from overseu." TOWELS AJlE NOT the only souvenirs taken away by the guests. The Mon Desir Hotel re- ported that thieves one night stole six color television sets, the house cat and the parrot from the downstairs bar. No boles have been reported missing, however, al Arikikapakapa, the golf course in Wbakarewarewa, probably because the course does 90Dle stealing on its own from both Australians and locals. It gob- bles up golf balla and digests them ln its 240-degree mud craters, called dongu, OQ the sixth and ninth boles. The rules al this unique New Zealand club require a one-stroke penalty for landing in one of these steaming hell boles lest too many foursomes boil down to instant threesomes or less. And that's no joke. H4NK SIVCKHOWE~ REWARDED FOR WADING 1'HROUGH REPOirl' SALISBURY. N.C. (AP) -It will pay the stockholders or Security Bank and Trust Co. to read the annual report. Enclosed in each copy of the 2,000 reports printed by the Salisbury bank is a crisp one dollar bW. ·'The bank officer who stayed up nights preparing the omclal report said if you could wade through all those numbers, you de- serve a dollar," said Ed Clement, Security Bank's marketing director. Over T h e Counter MASO Lidinqs I 2 J 4 s 6 1 ti ' 10 11 12 I] u 15 I• 11 00 11 111 ~ 1.122 11 1.S2l u lS T.I • 24 e,7J4.GOO zs MUT UA L FUN DS ,.._ TetMlln ~~::iSJ Pac:FE~ Eldotlll'ld EH lnl ReVI"° PtnlnR~ Tr•Mlnd Acc11rtn APe<lnl SCIP<Crnc> 811~ 8rlnll1 CllzGtllP "'"''"" !.lampdl' C.oMrtnl BernMl9 &ernM un AankOf L••'*' MIK!Wr AFonQ> wt FabWhl DOW MS uu: ... -°"" 1•'t , .. $"-_, 3 -'"' S'n -4 1 -·~ 1'11 -14 11 1'• 1''• •• UM -11• 3 '• 3 -w . . -.,, ~ -.. J•.i. 14 ,,,,, -l'h 2 7 16 ·l-16 •:a... I 1 )'' '~ J• ... .... -~16 "" ~· )141 \It 2 '"' 2 -""' Pel I.Ip JI 4 Up 20.1 Up .,. Up ,._. Up Ul Up U t Up 111 UI> 11 1 Up 111 Up 11 I Up "1 UP 10) Up tOO Up 100 llP '1 UP 'S Up 9• Up " Up ti UP It Up II Up II Up I I uo " Up I Z Pct. Off "' Oii ,. , Off ... Off "1 Off uo Off 111 Off 10 s Off 10 1 Off 110 Off • 1 Olf 11 Off 11 Off 1 • Off 11 Oii 1 I Off 11 Ott 11 Off • ' Off • J Off •' Off 61!. Off • JI' g: ~~ Off s. I ontll U 14 15 .56 ()ptn 12. I Inv Inell<; 1.26 NL MMB f n 10 Pll ftCI f , 14 '·" 5wln Gt 4.1l S. II COMPAHllES HtWS f .00 .... T•F.. 1U2 NL lllY llos .... t.37 M•IMrs 14., NL Price Fl.fth; $o ... r In tO.n llJJ NIEW YORK IAPI NYVn 11 .... 12..56 Ft.i.llty ~. '""' ~: Mlft'lll Ll'l'Cll; Gnwtll f.SI "IL Sclecttl F S.01 NL -Tiie lollo.lfto qt.II> CGF-t .oe • 12 AO"IS 10 °' NL c.... -a4• llftl< ''° It lncom ... NL \l•I• •9"dGr I.all-. ,._i1911 ~ CGlncm I 11 1.14 80ftd l..M NL c..p!t S -ii c.c>lt 11 • 11 H Er• t .lf NL C-F >.IS I 10 Ille "lallanel ""9<~ CSllRsM I 00 NL C..plt 1 • e.11 l"ve'"" ""-' ~QUI& t 7J 10.U H Horii 1.12 NL Olw Fd 4J1 It' •lion of 3Ka.rltlft C.Prff 1.00 NL Conttd '21 Nl. IDS •d 9.14 J.9' M11nl , .. l0.06 TaFre 10.D NL Prot F :uo 4 I\ OHien, Ince.. .... c.tltSllT 10.2111.01 Dally I I 00 NL IDS Ort s.10.... RdAst 100 Nl. Pro FwW .... NL StFrm GI s.u NL , .... P<l<H •I Wlll<h O\allrw ,.., 10.7' D'l"Y ISi..... IDS ndl U2 S.Of Mid AM Sa7 ·s.:M ,.,..,~ -~~..! .. NL SFrm 8• t.Jt NL lMM -111'11~ ChartFd 13.901S.1' Eq Inc 1.U2 NL Mull l.M f.Jf Motl Mkt 1.00 NL P""" Giii -• Slate $t 40.lS .0 !S could ... ,.. '-" 0..'9 Gr..,., M•0-1 16.al • • PrOQ a.G1 l .U MOHY F I.I) .... Prv SIP I.JO tA1 St-""'*' '°Id I Net n"91 FIH>d S '1 •.4' Mun 8d lo.J? NL T .. E• 5.0. S 1' MSll F-d 1l 04 NL Pub\am "'-' •m 1"41 2.11 NL walwl or bow111 Front U• 4 11 Floet 14 a 1S •1 Stoel 16.SI 11 tS Mut BM I .. t 11 Conv 11.i. tl.Jlt AMe P US NL Cw•lw Ph• wl4I $1\aro 6.. 1.. HI Yid IS 05 NL Select 'It ,.., MIF Fd 1 'SI 1 '1 Eqult ... Q 1U4 lnvo'l 1.14 Nl. <IWlrV-l l--.,, Sc>e<I S «I S to LtMun t '1 NL V•r Py 6 OS 6..51 Mlfl Giii l 11 4,09 0-.. 12.JI U.4 CkMft S.10 NL S.11 8t1Y tCl\HpO 10'1 NL Purlln 100410.tl Inv A•~ Sll SIO Mut!Ullol ~ c;r.1h t .'1 ICUO St .. n Roe Fels· AGEFd S.JI SM CllemFd 64101 S.IMI 4.64 s.01 llttl It.a lel$ ""'•' 11 ... 17Cl:J HI Yid lt'7.... hl8'1 IS.If Nl A(ornfl lS.11 NL CNA M9' F<b: Tllrllt 10.11 NL Ivy S.ft NL Grwtll l .10 1.02 lnccom 1 .. e.S't C. 0 US Nl .Adwnlnv t.12 NL UMf »ti 4.JS Tr-If.A.$ ti.Al JP Orth f.46 10.29 lncom 914 ,,, lnvtU 60 1.Cl:J Stod 10.a Nl Alulurt '"' NL Manl\et 1.)41.56 l'IMMl•I Proa. Janu' F ILIS NL T•Frt IS.4' ..... Opt11 u.>4 14.41 MttlGlt\ 16.IO PH "'"IM• '°' NL kl>lnl '"'" Dyna S.B NL JoM Ht ftCOC:k. Mut Snn JO" NL T•E•I 24..D!S.$4 ~y F L44 •n AlllNI' IUI NL Colonial FINI· lnduu 4 a. HL 11•1911 UJ '" NEA Mui 1 w NL VIile 10.11 1115 r ...... GI ..... IS Jt A81'1t1T ,..., 111.Sl Cllwt .... a lncom 710 NL ·-lt.G 2011 Natl '"" 10 11 NL Voyeo 11.ll 11.'4 r..,,.. lnw ... NL Amtf'I<.,, F-Fund l .'3 f.Q FU tn""IOrs Grwlll 4.9' Sa N•I S.Cur S.. llal..Ow 2 12 NL T"" C«I t..111 111 ll•IM 1 ...• ..., ONttll 411 4.J6 Dltc:o S.42 S.'2 .Jol\n\tn 1Ltl NL klwn • 01 '·" .. _... 1.00 Nl T ..... llW'S .. ., 'IS Amcp 6.ll • t7 lncom I SJ f.JJ Grwlll 6.ff 7.lO Kemper '"'-s: 80ftd 4 ft 4.'5 """,. S.01 NL Trew Eq t .97 IG to Mull f lS 10.22 <>PllJ. 10.l2 11.29 lncom U. t.Jlo lncm 10.45 II 12 Olvld 4.05 4-'7 $eft( Ecrt I.II Uo Tlldr H<I U.. NL •Oft9 1-'.M ,,,., Colu Giii ..... NL Stoel! '·" t .13 or-7.ot 1.14 Orwt" s.11 U.I I S.fec Olll Ull 10.n T-c 01, Ut NL C..pll .... 1 JI Cwlth Al!I .'7 I.CM FslMlt A "' NL HI Yid 11.91 11... P1 St• 1CIS )60 Slf'C.9 7.J6 LO. l'#nC Inc •• HL 0,..,,lfl S.M U2 Cwllll C 1.G l.J.I FIMllOI IOJIO NL MoftM 1.CIO NL lncom S.42 S.M Stf'Gtrt 1..SZ LJ2 US.AA Gt J,l.S NL Inc om 1,. ..... Comp lld I .JO .. ., 44 Well "IO NL Mun II lO 11 11.ll ~IOCll 1.., • ., $(...., S.-: USAA lllC "-" NL ICA 11.0I 1' JO Comp Fd 1 ll 1 n Fnd Giii 1.61 l ... Optn 11 •l I) 1' NIE Lift Furwf Com IC t.a ~ US 0. t.AS t 5t NP•n IS 7' 11:.. C.oncont 17.. NL "-n ~: SUmm 11 CJ12 n E<111ll IUf "'°' I-11.11 H\. Unlf ---__,. WsllMI ...... 75 COM tnW ,., 'u Grwlh •.n 4.62 TKh •. as 1" Grwtft ... t ,S7 "'"Ff l.J.JS "l IMloll $«;:; Amor ~el; Cof\Sltl 0 SM NL lnccOfn 11 .. 12.n Totlt t .. 10~ In<-11.6114.7' MM " 10-00 NL 1..-..4 ttl4 ~~P8d • n •.• ~I Mtl SM HI. M<ltal 7.:JO 7 ... l(~t-F-. Ret~ 12 11 IJ.ai ~M· 10.45 NL ..... .., t.. IO c..9111 *=417 ,.,,. c. ur-.i1 SMtl •. n !Ml ' 81 17.47 1&.IS N•~ &er-m: 19«1 u.o NL " '-tl.U "·" fnc.H u:1 fl"ftclfl IM NL FrMlcli. °""9! u\ 8t ltA 21 1' l:nl'llf 1l.O NL Sacurltw l'lnh ""*" t\.$4 ft .. YMltr I M..7' ,Jewtft 0.-.: ._ l.J4 J. Cvt IM UD tll '*111 ts 41 Nt a-f" ._ ........... "-*: E.tewt UI ~I llAI ttA1 OtllTC .... 1 C..1 KI 1'1 La W t • M EctUIY Ut U8 AClDft 1.. ...0 FdAm •. ,,_. '1 0.t-to U 11.42 CfWttl S l2 5..14 Cvt Kl •.CJ UI ...._ Wkf 11.H "l '""'' 1..tl 1M ..... 1.. 1 H Prowld S." 4 Ot 0.l<h t.22 t0• Ut111 U• SU ~' SI 1'-0t 11.• N•wtGt 11 "L Ultra ti.II 11.'5 Olft Of' t.J1 ... AGthFd 5.11 • ,. T•Fr• '. 19 m Ins.... l n l fl UI Sl 1 u us ..... 1 In< ' ..... S..11111 ..... : Cllli lllC ... • .. Aln1111..-. 4Ms.JJ °'i toll MoJ US Gow f.A2 IO.lt '4 Uol (.41 Nldllf'• 117' NL = ut Nl ~ .!•tq •'7 •1"""' uo ""' ~ ,,, U4 (.atHt U• s.n ., 117 U1 Homur• 10 I'll II.jot Siii 11 ... NI. = -tt..,. =vi 11.Jt Nl ..... H\. EQllll ~ t" &.ll•INIOll °'1»: Ho-• If.JI> NI. S.11t ...... ; -ti "" *-• Ut I IU) Hi. F....... ... ••• (.p Lclr "" n.a Nllvetfl f.11 '°,, Orwlh 7 s. Ltt ..... ~.,. ~ J ., U1 •• .. ''*' -. f'llM IM~ ' L., ~ 10.1t 11.\t fnMW Trull •• 11.11 -· swn ... ML -'"<.IWlr ~: °Slit Of-.• C-, I. NI. lU In 10 to II .. m IUJ NL S.ntl,..I ~: V .. 111 l• flill, OallY I • N\. rt _.,.,, I~ 11 e.01 Lu " ~ If.. 1....., N API• l.G US VII I.I '·" 1 ft Orwtll t" • 41 •V9t _,, .. I llld lr •. ,. ... ll .. In• 1 IO IJ1 II S..41 S.• hlel\ 7.G LI• lll<MI ~la J." I-.W 7.• ~ Aa -.... H\. l'lltt 1A1 NL '--\t. ~· ln<aot lM f 11 c...t I 11.AN IU7 i....c;t ll.• JI '-<IT 4.12 U4 lflt .._,.., GH4 S tut..... CNll \O.P NL ~· 1• NL S...try I' 01' UJlt. 5-Slt 4.AI! .. ,, lf•t11v ._,, 66' llK .,.._., Gen ltc J.1' N~ Mui 11.20 NL Ooln U 11 UJ2 SN.-ldlln 0. VtftQ a....in1 WMlt Ul 10.M r."' "'*'"II Grtll lM 11.-"L l.Of'd AMllll' tiiffN 10• NL On1tti 6..11 '-" I-\J.11 If SS A~ H~CJft· l C UNYlll Hal'lllllM' Allllld 7.111 7.1' AIM t 16 'I0.01 ~111'11 Ut S.• lnw" t.4lt 1.111 ... , .. tll .... ~ ur .... "HOA ,,. 411 .... dtl 10.ae 11 .. .,_ ... us HlfW ,. "' C»Mllll USUll (I(-.... _,. \' ...... _.. Onrth .... 7 IMMI 116 ).Q tc: le< , •• 1S.H ...... 1 ... ,, .. n 5"<1 Ml ~1 St•O S.Jt jtl ~•IM 1.$1 ltt I-.... N llll~ll llro llf'MI M Uj t• ~· ll.Pt U..11 V.......,.. f[" ~~~ i.~ ''=.. ~.. z.1: 1 N .. ;;n tt 'ti ar rM::~ ;. r!!l = :.. rn ~~ ~ "n~, Jrr.: , =t =sr.r lH tt ff 11:.. ~, ~1·'~ ro.. , u = c:: ~~ ha '== H~, ~ 1:.i Et =rt.~°1'~ !I-~ m' ~J. ,~ .. r;;; .!!'".ta l'"~ .. ~u. ~ i:ii::.. 'I ~ =.c.. "'" fJi !!=J:J, . . = = Me'N'XlfWlltt: c: ue ! !! t tA1 ~ .N~ t-tJ.i t3 ,ti ;.';Oil ~ l~.C ...... ·1~ ,?! J11 •-..,J.:1 tli ' ttl: ic.i;. 0 Ui i'lE'11 i;· B~ tS. i§ ~ !Hl b ' fR• [j ij l!l~R ti ,Jr cQ:. ......... DAl .. L·Y·~-L.OT .............. fr.fd.~ •• M.~ .. h.~ •.• 19.7 .. 1 .................... ~ ............................ ~ .... ~~~~ ··seott Confident of Breaking Mile Mark By ERNIE GASTILLO Ot•a.11, ........... Six milers who have broken th" four-minute bar· rier are entered ln Saturday's Meet of Cham· pions at UC Irvine but one of them, UCI's Steve Scott, figures on running alone. In fact, barring inclement weather, both Scott and UCI coach Len Miller are expect· ~g a record-breaking run at the fifth annual track and field invitational wtucb gets under way al noon. .. l'm shooting for a personal record but anything on top of that would be great," Scoll sayi> malt.er-or ractll. "I the weather as right there will be no excuses," adds the red·headed senior. "My confidence ls high, I'm feeling good and the workouts have been going good. It's a matter of how 1 feel that day-and the weather" Miller, a man known for bold predictions, echoes the same sentiments "r would ~ay at the very least, if lhe Rival Coaches Phelps' Success Aided by Foster ST. LOUIS CAP> A fast friendship exists between two nval coaches in Saturday's NCAA basketball semifinals that no outcome on the court as likely to affect. That's because Richard "Dig- ~cr" Phelps, lhe coach of Notre Dame, attributes much of bis success to a boo.5t along the way from Bill Foster, whose charges are the Duke University Blue Devils. "It goes back lo 1966, when I was coaching at St. Gabriel's in Hazelton. Pa. He gave me an op- portunity to work his camp m the Pocono Mountains for four weeks," Phelps recalls. "Thal four weeks I spent a lot of lime learning a lot of basket ball from different coaches around the country. and J have to thank him for the opportunity to be part of it," Phelps adds. ··we've been close friends I've lectured al his camp and I fhink he's always been first <:lass, when he was at Rutgers or at Utah or at Duke, where be is now. You meet certain people m the game that you like. and he's one of the people that ·s always been good to me " Foster. a veteran of 19 col- l('~iate coaching seasons, guided SAN FRANasco TO .IAND O.J.? BUFFALO (AP> -The Buffalo Evening News said today that star running back 0 J . Simf)5on of the Buffalo Bills will be traded to the San Francisco 49ers in exchange for s everal dr&ft choices - provided he passes a physical examination Simpson. according to the newspaper, was to lake the physical in San Francisco today. The Bills, the story said, reportedly would receive five or six National Football League draft picks over the next lhree years. The Evening News quoted Bills' owner Ralph C. Wilson as saying he couldn't discuss lhe latest report on Simpson. Rutgers to two National lnvata lion Tournament bids and Utah to one befon· arriving on thl' Duke campu.s in 1974 Ills progress then· included last year's 11·13 campaign, thP school's first on the plus sidf' in five years, followed by this year's 26-6 leap to lhe NCAA elite with the tournament's youngest \.eam. Why the sudden rise of the Blue Devils. who finished run· nersup in lhe Atlantic Coast Con ference and then won the ACC postseason tourney? ''Well. a couple of things We're playing above our years. hopefully. a.s far as freshml'n and sophomores a re con (erned." Fosler explains. "W l' don 'l look at ourscl vec; as besn~ a young team. We feel that we play with maturity and I'm JU'it very hopeful that we'll contmuc to play that wa) ' I think that there arc a lot or reasons." Foster says further or the Duke turnaround with a starting hoeup wtuch lists two fi-foot-7 frt'shmen, Gene Banks and Kenn y Dennard . ;d rorwards "One is that we do have P'< perienced players back and 1m provement or each player that we had on our team last year I thank the freshmen that we have . their enthusiasm and lhe1r interest m team basketball play .. the improvement. as J men t1oned, of our veterans -for the most part Jim Spanarkel. our Junior, and Mike Gminski at center." Spanarkel. Duke's captain, boasts a 20.8 scoring average. lops in the field for the NCAA final four . and Gm1nsk1, 6 11 sophomore. a 19 7 pace that ranks .second. The other Blue Devils starter 1s 6 foot sophomore John Harrell. a ball-handling guard. Sophomore Bob Bender. a transfer from In· daana. is the No. 6player. Reserve cu a rd Bob Bell is lheonly senior ''If I were to look back on the season, I ttunk probably the most significant game for us would have been our first league game away from home al lhe Univers1 ty of Maryland," says Foster. Baylor Accepts Role Angels' Star Rejected Trade PALM SPRINGS (AP> -"I was in left field when Baltimore was winning pennants," says Don Baylor, who accepts but doesn't feel quite at home with the California Angels' plan to use him as a designated bitter again this baseball season. Keeping Baylor in the DH spot is Joe Rudi o( the Angels. Rudi was in left field when Oakland was winning pennants -beating Baltimore for American League titles -and winning World Series crowns In that DH role in that second half or the season Baylor batted .2 81 , hal 16 home runs and produced 4S RBI. His first· half statistics were .233, nine homers and 30 RBI. "He's in a great frame of mind," manager Dave Garcia says of Baylor. "He's accepted being a DH." But accepting doesn't cancel out hoping for the 28-year-old whose best season was 1975 in Baltimore. Thal year he batted 282 with 25 homers and 76 RBI. ··1 don't wish anybody an In 1u.ry. but If someone gets hurt I'll be ready," Baylor said. weather is good. he'll break the meet record." The current meet mark is 3.57 8 which Scott ran last year when he emerged as America's top miler. Though he has yet lo run a mile out· doors this season, he did tum m a 3 · 57 1 in an indoor meet Feb. 17 al San Diego. His lifetime best of 3:55.1 came at the 11177 Penn Relays. Miller bad been trying, l.tke most meet promoters. to hoe up a dream race between the world's top milers. Like the San Diego meet. however. in juries sidelined the top names: New Zealand's John Walker, Kenya's Wilson Walgwa and Ireland's Eam mon Coghlan. And though Saturday's l1t1ld will be among th~ best assembled in the U S. this year. Scott will be mamly running against himself. "The competition ls good but Steve's golng to have to make his own race." Miller said. •·He's going to have to go out and run a good pace Ile ran alone last year and thal's one of his streof(ths He's not locked into any specific strategy. He can lead or he can follow. It doesn •t matter." Scott himself likes to run agalnst the best but says do- mg so doesn't always lead to a record run. 0 1 definitely prefer competition but if there is a lot, you're not always guaranteed a fast race because of the s trategy," he says. "On a thing like Uus, you know you have to go out and you can SeeScoU, Page B·5 o.lty f'llet ~· ..., ........ ,. WINNER BRIAN GOODELL (LEFT} OF UCLA IS CONGRATULATED BY TIM SHAW. Goodell Shakes En·or, Outswims Shaw in 500 By HOWARD L. HANDY Ol I,_ 0.11, P'tlel Stall LONG BEACll -Brian Goodell 1s a two time Olympic gold medal winner and the holder or two world ~wi mming record:. but Thur-;day night at the first turn 10 the SOO·yard free.style finals of lhe NCAA c:hamp1on:.hips al Belmont Plaza Olympic pool here. he panicked Goodell, a resident or Mission Viejo and swimming for the UCLA Brui~ in this meet, was the wanner of the event after finishing the first 50 yards an fourth position. "I was out of control at the first turn," Goodell said after the race. "I didn't have a set race plan when I went out there and when I hit th<' wall at the ri rst turn. I slipped and lost ground And I panicked. "lt was a case of catching up and I swam the first 100 pretty hard and held on the rest or the way. Arter the firs t 50, Bobby Hackett of Harvard was in the lead with Charles Sharpe of In· diana and Tim Shaw of CaJ State (Long Beach) also ahead of Goodell. Goodell stiU trailed Hackett and Shaw after 150 yards, then pulled even wilh Shaw at 200 and went ahead at the halfway mark. Shaw regained the lead al 300 yards with Goodell taking over for good at 350 and going on to win in 4·18.0S His mark is a pool record for the 2S·yard short course "When I saw it was just Shaw and myself. I stretched out my stroke and went on." Goodell added "He's always tough to bea t in any race and he's tougher here at home an Lon~ Beach. He has more NCI\/\ ex perience than I ha\'c but I think I'm used to this (>001 • • w ,IS he nl'f\.OUS before the rmals with dt.>fending champion Shaw havmg thl' fastest qualify· ing time'> · No, I'm fam1har with the set· ting here beC'ause I've competed here a number or times,'' he said "If the meet had been held some where else. I might have been more nervous "But I wasn't really satisfied tona~ht I swam the race the way the other guys wanted to swim instead of having my own plan." flow does this meet. his first NCAA champ1onsh1p event as a t 'CL/\ freshman. C"ompare to the Olympic Games'> "I would have to say at Uus time that th.as 1s a much tougher field and it 1s harder lo make the finals and win.'' be said Goodell wall swim the 400 In· dividuaJ medley in today's ac· lion. the second of three days of t•ompetition lie will go m the I 650 on Saturday and perhaps s\\ 1m on a n·la) learn or two. Casey Comcrse, a teammat!' nf G oodl'll 's al l\t iss1on Viejo during the summer and swim ming for !ht• t:ni,•crs1ty of Alab<im<.1 an the NCAA meet. placC'd 10th m the 500 lie was fourth a year a~o. USC's Scott Findorff, after failing to make the finals in the 50·vard freestyle. blazed to the fa s t est clocking in the night finals m wmnang the consolation race in 19.94. Andrew Coan of Tennessee was a repeat winner an the event in 20 29 as Ten- nessee took four of the top five places Placing four swimmers from one school an the top six for the finals. is undoubtedly a first 1n SttGoodeU, PageB·S Poloists Blitz Mexico EDMONTON, Alberta-With Jack Dickmann scoring two goals. the United States water polo team defeated Mexico. 6·1. in opening round action of the final phase of the Can-Am-Mex tournament here Thursday The US. squad, a mixture of Juniors and members of the na. taonal team, will play Cuba and Yugoslavia today. Canada and West Germany are on the slate Saturday with Yugoslavia the final roe on Sunday The national team from the U.S. is in Brazil to play that country's squad. The winner in Brazil will go lo the World Games and the top six from the World Games will be mvited to the Olympic Games 10 1980 Unl!H Stall'\ 7 1 1 1-4 M .. 1(0 0 0 I 0 I U S HOd"IJ-D•Oman,. 1 Rll(h1• Hdl luUmp. SI•-So<IW-• OtllMkWH Cui.as.~• Wt•l o.r..-y s. YU90sl••I• ~ CubaS.-1,oS HUl\Otrv '· We<l c;.,.,.,.nv • .. I wish it wasn't cul and dried," Baylor said Thursday alter his bases-loaded single drove in two insurance rum in the Angels' 5-2 exbJbition victory over the San Francisco Giant.a. Both teams have 9·5 Cactus Leaaue records. W antlq to play with a winner ... more important um year than pi.,iq ln the field, and Ba7Jor turned down a chance to be traded to the Cleveland In· dJanJ for Buddy BeU. Graham Almost Missed Tee Time "The Anieb are a better team Ulan the Ind.Jan.1." Baylor aald. "I'm not foing. .. I'd Uh to have a chance to win a job. l'd like to play left field, but "'o have the be9t left fielder In bueball out tbere," Butor uJd ol Rudi. Tb•J were t.am mates for one HHOD at Oakland before botll became tree 1aema 1n th fall of me. 8Qlcr _. Uttle plari_q time In tM neia·1at1ev." •ben Rudi mtsMd balf tbe seuoo with a lll'okm bone ha b1I hand. HILTON HEAD ISLAND, S.C. CAP> -Lou Gr•bam, breathless from a hard run to the rlrst tee, recovered his composure for a •·under-par 67 that staked him to a ahare of the 0l'ftt-round lead Thursday in the Herttace Golf Classic. Graham, a l·stroke loser that week, almost lost two atrokea Thursday JX1ornln1 when he came withln aeeond1 of mlsstn1 bl1 tee·tlmc, whJcb was delayed tor an bour by 1 foe that blanketed Ulll reeort laland. •'Tbat '• tbt elo-Ht I tver cam• to mlaa1.ni nty tee UJne," 1ald Gratwn. wtio faced a 2· stroke penalty bad he beat late. "I knew we'd been delayed for '- an hour and I was on the prac· Uce tee when some oC tbe other. guys started yelling al me. 'You're on the tee.• I didn't know they'd played through the starters' times and made up some time. "I ran all the way lo the tee and It was my ehot when I cot there. 1 just tried to catch my brea\h, said 'Let me 1et out of this "''th a oar and we'll 10 on froin then'/1 - Gubam made bla firtt·hole par and blrdttd Hven later holes. lncludlnJ a cleuce on the • 17th that lilted him into a tie for the top wtth Bobby Wal1A!I, a scrambllng non-winner who holed out from a marsh on the 18th, and bi& Howard Twitty. "There•s 11 bunch of fair to middlin' good acores." said Graham. 1 former U.S Open champion who was second to Jack Nicklat11 last week, "but J'm aurprlsed there are some really Cood acora out there. Jt 's one of the best daya to play 1011 I've ever aeen -warm, IU'DQ1, DO wind -at.Id the course l9 ID sreat CODdlUon and the sreeu are put. tlAI true. EH:rythln1 1• JU1t riCbt.'' ' ""' r~ ltedltn T"""4ey 111 IM Het1Uigill Ootf Clank 011 the 6,6SS·Yird • .,.,.,..u-11, H•rbol.lrT-OellU..U: 8 Wei HI ~ l> 6' C: Stedlw l .O••"'•"' )"..U-..1 D (dwerctt H Twitty ~l7 41 R M"llO•le "Curl ~..... 11.f'un .. ll'I P H-oO 1' ... _., l Hlnklt T Wtll>llot»I ~ u-.• G Moro•11 L.N•llOll »..... J HH' H lrwll'I )~1'-4t F LMll" GOllll.,t ~ I Ztttdtr v ...... -.. JI.... 0 c. ........ a 1.1941h ~· A North T Wettoft J>-.11 10 t( l••l•V H.0-»-M 10 8 Nltl'lot.a. M,,.eld )W4-10 A.Tettlt M.H•l9• 11-»-10 J .SlfMll• D.~ 3'44-10 •.S-d a.ICrai.ft ~ro • w.-..., ........... ,..._,. o ...... , LWHlllM ...._,. a.SMit~ L~ ,..._,. M .Mc.l.IMIM .... ,.., aN1-1t .......... cx:.11t...-u..-n a.o-1w J .c.l .. rl ~ a.c." ... ~l'O J4.l1-11 >f.J:1 11 ~,, ,.Jl-11 »-» 11 ~---" ~ .,, Jlli..»-11 J7·1'-11 ~JI-It 1~--11 JIM-II ».»-11 »-&-71 ~1 ~' JJ.a-n ,,....,, u.11-n ........ " ..,._n ~n A's Not Moving --Finley DENVER -Charles 0 . Finley has withdrawn his offer to aell the Oakland A's major leaiue baseball team to Denver oilman Marvin Davis, Davis' lawyer said today. Lawyer Ben Stapleton banded out a terse statement from Davis. wbo is vacalioolng In California, which indicated the negotiations to move the A'• from Oakland to Denver are dead. The statement said: ''Charles Finley bas withdrawn his offer to sell his Oakland franchise to Denver. ''It is 1 sad day for baseball, a sad day ror Denver, and a sad day for me. l wu determined to bring major league baseball to Denver this year. If Finley would reconsider bis decision. even at this extremely late date, we still bave the capabilities to complete the transfer." Stockto• llpset Tony Roche upset Dick Stockton, 6·7, 6·4. 7·6, and Vilas Gerulaills defeated John Alex· ander, 6-3, 6·3. lo complete the first round or the Tournament of Champions tennis tourney Thursday night. K•llfl, Wade Win PHILADELPHIA -Billie Jean King, Virginia Wade, Betty Stove and all other seeded players advanced Thursday night to the quarterfinal round of a women's pro tennis t.ow'lla· ment here. King eliminated Renata Tomanova. 6·1, 6-2, Stove topped Yvonne Vermaak. 6-7. 6-1. 6·3. Wade downed Glynis Coles, 6·2, ti 3 and Tracy Austin prevailed over Kathy May, 6·3, 7 6. In other matches. Kerry Reid outlasted Rosie Casals, 3-6, 7-6, 7 5, Wendy Turnbull downed Dianne F'romholtz, 7-6, f>.2 and Virginia Ruiici ousted Miebelle Tyler, 4-6, 6·3, 6·4. ~BftisB091er ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. Hon Cey belted a first-inning home run and followed up with two doubles to lead the Los Angeles Dodgers to a 12·1 exhibi· lion victory over the New York M els Thursday. Steve Yeager also bad a big day for Los Angeles, knocking in three runs with a sacrifice fly, a single and a triple. The Dodgers hammered out a total of 19 bils. Bostort Gets D•ll11 TUCSON -The Cleveland In· dians. apparenUy conceding the s hortstop JOb to either LarvelJ Blanks or Tom Veryzer, have traded veteran shortstop Frank Duffy to the Boston Red Sox for minor league pitcher Rick Kreuger llrabosky s~tt~ ST. PETERSBURG. Fla. The St Louis Cardinals an· nounced Thursday a $5,000 set- tlem cnt with former Cardinal pitcher Al Hrabosky. Hrabosky had filed a $11~000 grievance m an attempt to col· lect bonuses contained in his <'Ontract for ach.ievemeots such as winnin~ the Cy Young Award and makm~ the All·star team The proJe~:ted bonuses amounted to $55.000 for the years 1.978 and 1979. Kings Trh,..ph BLpOM!~GTON, Minn. Marcel Dionne's second goal at 9 09 of the lhird period tri11ered the Los Angeles Kings to a 3·1 National Hockey League victory over the Minnesota North Stars Thursday rught. Dionne's 29th goal ot the season broke a 1·1 tie and start- ed the Kings to their first victory an Minnesota since March 18, 1975. a span of five straight losses. lnfield~r Bud Harrelson or the New York lleu wa~ traded Thursda7 to thE Philadelphia PbUUes fot minor league infielder ~ Andrews and cash. I I I , I . )., I • SWIMMING I BASEBALL I BASKETBALL ···MV S Log Another CIF Title • ers By ROGBll CARLSON Of Ullt o.11, f'I ... MMt EAST LOS ANGELES Mission Viejo HJgh's powerful Diablos swept to lheir fourth straight CIF 4·A swimming championship Thursday night before 2,100 fans at East Los Angeles College with a winning margin of 124\.'.i points over run· nerup Foothill (Tustin). Leading the Diablos of Mission Vlejo coach Mike Pelton were Ed Ryder and Jesse Vassallo, as expected. Ryder won the 200 free. Vassallo claimed the 200 In· dividual medley and then Ryder and Vassallo went 1 2 in the Diablos' specialty-the SOO freestyle-in pacing a 1·2·3·4 M lsslon Viejo finish. It was a night of outstanding efforts wtth six CIF records faJI .. mg (none to Mission Viejo> and the action was capped by a phenomenal 3:07.87 400 freestyle relay effort by 3-A kl.Dgpio San Marino-a national prep record. Also sparkling in 3·A compeli· tion was Irvine High freshman Blair MUfl>hy, who swept to the 100-yard backstroke cham· pionship in 54.84, taking the lead -at the outset and in command all or the way. Murphy was in the lead at the mid way point with a 25 89 effort 4ind he wenl on to beat three others hy over 11 2 seconds. The shouting had hardly sub sided from San Marino's record breaking effort lJl the 400 free when Charlie Ray, Jesse Vassallo, Jim New and Ryder took to the waters for the 4-A 400 free relay-but although the Barons Star Diablos won the race as expect· ed, ther came up short of San Marinos mark with a 3:09.19 clocking. Other outstanding accomplish· ments included Ray's 21.77 and • 46.95, good ror a second and a third in the sprints; Mission Vie· jo sophomore Steve Barnlcoat's 52 47 in the 100 back for a second place; Mission Viejo's Mark Barber in the 100 breast (second at 58.95); and Costa Mesa's Bob Dolan, who nearly pulled off the upset or the night before giving way to Ryder ln the 200 frff. Barnicoat's clocking was un· der Gary Hall's CIF record of S2.SO set in 1967, but Long Beach Wilson's Mark Gordjn, also a sophomore, held off the on- rushing Barnicoat flarber also pushed the winner to a CIF record with Wilson's Greg Winchell repeating as champion and breaking hts own ret•ord. Hyder k<l all the way in the 200 free, hilling the turns in 23.40, 48.30 and 1: 14.33, wbiJe Dolan stayed within range al 24 14, 49.70and1:15.74 before his rally al the end fell short. Holmes Selected To All-CIF Team Fountain Valley High basket· hall star Roger Holmes, the Sunset League's player of the year, has been chosen to the second team of the All-CIF 4·A selections by the Citizens Sav- ings athletic foundatJon. • The 6·4 Barons senior avera~ed 22.0 points a game and was the leader on a team which completed its second straight undefeated league season. Player or the year in 4·A circles ls Greg Goorjian, the rec· ord-breaking scoring machine from Crescenta Valley (La Crescenta) High. Goorjian scored 1,259 points in 29 games, an average or 43 4 points per game. lhs selection as player or the year was unanimous. The CV star broke the state record of 1,232 points in 32 games by Bill Cartwright of Elk Grove High and his career mark of 2,506 points in three years falls short only to Mark Wullemeyer of Troy (Fullerton), who holds the mark with 2,608 points set in 9S games over a four· year span. Nineteen of Goorjian's 29 games this season were 40-plus crrorts and he scored SO or more eight limes. Four times he went over the 60 mark. All·CI' '-A flnl T•- ~l•Ytr, \c-HI. Cl. A .... l~I Mar.,...ttl, Verbum Del 6-7 Sr. 1' • O•le Coollr, Pewden.a •-& Sr. U 1 Oa11 L•"°"• Ventura •·• Sr. U 7 Aey Wlllll"9. LOnQ S.ach Poly •·• Jr. 11 O M•url<• Wllll....s, Ve,,,.,,., 0.1 6-7 Sr. IS 1 Chris Holdtn, P•-., 4-7 Sr. IS• Greo GoofJI..,, Crnc•llla VAllPY •·2 Sr. '3 ' Dou9 M•rty, LB Mllllk"" •·t Sr. 23.1 Al<Mrd Pot•, M<l'nl"9Mdt 6 2 Sr 1' 0 Tim We<J-r, V.nlur.a • 1 Sr U J ROGER HOLMES Stc:eMT- Rtt Oonntltt, k•i.lla •·S llY '°" Seo«. Mttftl"9S'Cle 6-4 P•ul Boll .... Lootola ... JtrOmf W•lllllm\, Muir HI M lkt Ram>9'1, SI. AfllPIOny ..... Jow Sle"9h1tr, ComolClr\ .. 4 Scott Slmclk ~ml ValltY 4-l Clllf Pruitt, 11.rt>um 0.1 .. K ••In Spat'l!s, Pl ... )( 6·1 .... , Htlnwa, ~R Vallty ... Ttol,.Tt- M••-StwalO 8HllOP Monl~ry .. , Jolt S.lo CrHcenta Vell*Y ... Rtlnor Wulf, 01$flOP ...,.,.., M Ct(ll MO<TI" Loyola ... R•ncly W?ll.rcloft. 1<•~11• •·l M1k1 Win, 5erv1l• •·1 Ray A19tlado, SM! ~itt 61 Altc Acosta, BllllOCI Amal .. l l(e11t Ko-. Ntwt>urv P•~ 6·0 Sl•v• Grllflt\, Loftt Bue" Poly .. o l lm lu<hr.P-.. J ~-204 Jr. 17.J Sr. 160 Sr. 17.4 Sr. IS S Sr ,, l 5'. )I 0 Jr. 1JS Sr. 11 s Ir . 22.t Jr • ,, . Sr ... Sr. JS O Jr • "0 Sr. JI l Sr. IS 1 Sr. ,, , Sf. 24 0 Sr. 14 0 Sr lH Sr to The evenloe's only real shocker was the opening 4·A championship final where Mia· slon Viejo's quartet was dl&· quallCied when the free1tyler jumped too soon In the Diablos' quest of overtaking Wllaon. While that may have made the Diablos look less than the lour· lime champlona they are, they made it crystal clear 1n the soo free where Mlasion Viejo stands in CIF 4-A circles with a 1·2·3-4 effort as New and Dames held off Dolan to complete the sweep. C1"Nlwtl'ft.-! .... 200 "'tdlty '91a't-I, L8 WllMft 1:1Uf CCI" ,..cordl;t,Fwtlllll1:-...;l.~1:411.M;4. VIiie "at1l 1·.t0.f1; t. .....,... ...,._ c---. ......... °'""-, ... , t1•t-": ~ v-.. Ct:JS.ISl .. 10.W.:1l.~Mt14'.M. 1• ftH-t. !IWW cM1.-v1ti-> t:•u: 2. 0.laR ((.MUI Mne) 1141.11; J.. INw (MINIM vi.- lei 1:0 .U; '-He~ (~y P.ar-) 1:42.JS; S. 8arMI (Mlllielo Vle,.I 1:41.ttl 6 l11<M CS.-y HI Ht) 1 '1 U ; 0919n: II . ..,_ IMht ... V .... I 1:44 .... JOO t11clo-l.J. Veual .. IMIMIM V .. lel l:Sl.te; 2 Mllltf IFooll\1111 1 SUJ; l. V Y•»al .. CMI .. t6M Vl•lel I:~; 4. ~ (-vi.i.1 1 "'"· f. ...... ,..,... .., .. ,., t:tuti .. K•ne~lt (lwwty Hllll) 1;$7 ... jO ltM-1. '--Y (i.oillnl Hllltl JO.,.; l. II., IMIU .... VleJel n.n: J.. Kuc•• (VIII• ....., 22.IM; 4 FtetldMlla CH_,,er_, 22 OS, t. 0Ne CR1l•R<ltl D.lt; 6. Ila ... (~IMI D.11; o...ra: 11 . .....,... <Miii ... VltJel zu•. 100 tty-I, 5tradlell l'-111111 fl. 16; 1. Miii# !Foothllll SI.»: 2.. Gonllft CLS Wll-1 sz.o•: 4. V anc•y CFootNlll S2.60; S. MoflM I VIII.a ,._1111 SJ 36. M.......mll\ IAtdlendll clQ; O!Mn; t. Mc~,.,..... V1ei.1 SJ.a. 100 lrH-1. LHmY CAolllftl Hiii,, •s ... 1. Sh•mlr !Muir> 41>.to; J.. ••Y IMlnlell Vt.le> 46.ts; ' lluUo ISwnny Hllltl '1.00; $. Fr-11111• (H., .. rdl '7.70; • lll<l>lflefl ( .. verly Hlll•I .. SI: O~: t. ·--CMw!MI •46; 1t. OMe llE•l•IKl•I ...... 500 tree I. II~ IMIMltll Viet-I 4:U .41; L J. ll•u.alt• IMltiliell Vi.Jel 4:11M; J. IMW IMIMIM Vltfel 4•f1,t1; 4 . ...,_. IMI..-vi.jel 4.al.11; S Del•R ICM'-MINI 4;16.11; 6. AlklMOn l*'"Y Hlllll 4 J7 U 100 t>ack-1. Gonlln CL.8 WlllOlll S2-" CCIF rec0<dl; 1. a.n.kNt (MitMoM Vi.jet U.«1; J Slra<IMn lFoo4hllll t.l.l6; '-V, V._... I~ Vltjel SMll S. H4olheocll IEI MeoMMI SUI, '-..,_, ....... ..,.,&ti;~' ti.e.-, .. ___,.....,,, 100 ltr...C-1. Wlflthlll CUI Wll11111I S6.Jt (Cl!< record I: L ...,._ CMI..._ v .. ,., M.tl; 3. Golliatn cr,..,1 "1S1 •· ..,...... ,....._. · ....... ,, 1:11.G; s. '*'-(Ml•• Cotta> 1.01112; '-Tall.ti. Cll T-1 1<'1.M; 09len: 7 . ....., CMllll•R Vlei•) 1: ..... J It. MIW IN......, M•~I 1:11.41; ti. Mco-.ta CMl ... lell ~I t:M.U. 400 lrH r•l•y-1, Mltslff Vlei• lllty, J. Vaualle, ........... , J·tt.1'; , """'Y Hiii• J · 1 t SO. l Foel"lll l. U.71; 4. 1101111>9 Hiii• l 16.U , S. Newbury P•rot l 11.'6; •· 11....,• J 18 11. ~-rs: L N•w'9rt HerWf' 11..AYlftt, l"tHtveAI. DHlt., ,111111l.11.M. Ttem ScorlftQ: '· MIM .... vi.le U1; J -UI ll'l'l'I, l Lii WlltOfl .. , ._ S.-,..,. Hiiis 13. S VIII• P.rk J1; 6 Cli.I ROW"O Hll~ -N...-y P•NI 54. L Ntw'91\ ........ U .. Cl I' >A Swllft l'l ... lt 100 m.<ttn rel.ay-1. El Dor-1:J7Jl5; :100 ff'9f'-I. ~I IS.II Marine) 1.•.•I; JOO I~ cto-•. v_.,,. ,.,..,.,,...,, 1 :M.ts; jO lrM-1. WOOd liell M.rlnoJ 21.lA, 100 flit-I. VelOI CEI s.o..n- Clol Sl.17 ICIF ,_,,I; 100 ,,___,, W-IS.11 M"'lnol 46 '7: 5001...-1. Sc.enneit IS... -Inell 4 n.tt, 1• lle<Jl-1. _,.., ll"'l<M Hitlll MAC; 100 breHl-1. IC•llrt Canyoti) fflO ICIF •t<· cwdl; '°°I'" rPl .... -1. 5'ln MarlllO 3:07.11 ICIF and N•tlon.tt Pre!> recordl Tt•m 5co<l119. I. s.tl M«i'*' J60; 1. El Dor-. U9; 3. Sctrvllllt 75.. Area Sports Calendar ~(~2f) Swlmml119-NCAA llMll •I llelrnMI Plu•. B•Mf)ell~Ulltll'QIOll a .. c .... ~~I" • m .>. F-1.ai11 ve11..,. •I Sall Met<~ 11 l am l. !.ovttwr,. CalllCln\le Coll-., S.an Fr•11ct'<O Stale ·--ti noon). UC tr.lrw •I c:Nc>-• man Coll-1roan>; Goldtn W••t Coll-•t H•ncoo ,_., (Col ... We-tl vs o.iuwi ac Et-s Fltld, S...t• Marl• •t 10· JO• m >. Trao -Seddl-• •I SMiie 81M'e.r• •••~. M .. I ol CN,,,Ponl •I UC lrvlne 1-.1. Ot- CNsl Coll-al S... .10M Ret•~ Ttn11ll-Yllea1UC1"'1nt (1 pm.I. Oyrna11tllu-Go1oen W•tl Coll~ At C11lco Stale ul>l!Mtlon. Gl•ls bU••lball-Goldtn W•ll Coltt91 •I Pa .. ~na lnY1t.at1-l. Girt• .oflball-Golden WHI COll99f lnwlt ... tlonat, ~c~m B•stlMIHrvlne Hi.tt .. Don luvo u "'. :)ra1>9t Cont al~ 11 p.lfl.I; UC 1rv111e ti Col St• (Oemlft0\l9l Hllll) t .30. T....,h Ari-State al UC 1rv1,,. f2 p"' l; Foothill 11 ~ 8Ncn CJ:lSI. Glrh •oflNll-~ &teen City Coll999 •I Gol .. n Wet! Coll~ Ill Glrlt ltrWs.-SeodltbKk •t S... oc..-CllY Collt91 11 p,m.1. Girts 9""1"41Sllct-Oc:ean v .... •I C..pt•trano w'•llO CJI. r..-., 1Matt11111 Trac• Maltr Del •I !'>l Paul Atl•"; Colt• Mt\o\ •I o-Hllll ll. 151. Tennis FO<A'ltain Vallt't' •I ~ H..-llor. Marina •I Hu,.llnoto11 lleacll, E41M>n •• oNutmlnsltr 1•11 •I 2 JOI; SaM• ,._•I E~l.t ll :UI; Irvine Hl9" .. ~.,,_Vall~ (l:JO); '-\t. S.11 Antonio Coll ... ti 0.-..... C.0.•t QM_,., C:YPAU °"'-et Goldllft West COii~. PalomM' 1! S.ddltMO. ColftOt. ~ Coli.Qe .C UC lrYIM !all al 11, Edison Bats Sound Off Chargers Wi~ 12-10; Mater Dei Ties, 7-7 Edison High or Huntington to Rick Oxenham. Then the Beach survived a slu1te1t with baserunners executed a double scored six times in the innln, 'host Bellflower, 12·10, in the steal. and Schaeper came bome and coasted to victory. Ha•thome baseball tournament later on a wild ptteb. Rtll-f\U Mrlt,. Tbundl.1 while Mater Del <San· Edison ra~ out 12 hits but Stout.cf 3 I I 7 Hoffmtfl, 211 , 0 ' ' ta A.na> raWed for a '1·7 tie with even with al that firepower, the FAurta, If O O 0 I l'Oftder, If , ... Hltl,U J 0 I 0 Spafte, lf<I 2 ' 1 7 Ph•• X in Angelus Leasue ac-Char1ers' key blow was a bunt. S.urel',M 0 0 0 0 Lllftml\. t oe oa ti on. · Tom S&otke laid down a two-Mtllftdrl, .1b J 2 1 o er.-.ry,~ 0 10• Macy, le 0 0 0 0 Falley,< I 0 t t It.tater Del's game with visit.-strike squeeie bunt with the $Inert. 1._rt J)) 0 Ec1V9ll,p 1 000 Jng Plus X WU caJled by dark· hues loaded and the score lied "·'-·"' o 1 o o Pallca, p 0 1 0 0 ZIM, lb 1 2 , , Oocl.tld, 0 0000 .,.ess aft.er tbe Monarcbl scored at 5-s. 'lb• ball roUed paat the O..Mlta, rf 0 0 0 0 Sclwrtf'. o 0000 ~~06 run in the bottom of the mound to ICOl'e one nm, and two ~.t• 1 0 0 0 Ttlalt :i. 11 11 10 v--•.111 J 0 2 J • •..eighlh Inning to Ue the ••me. others came acrou oo a throw-Sc-.lllfl ..... ·::· The lff·Hw afCalr 1t1w Mater in& ~rror to nm base. r II t Btlttltwef' 001 112 4-KI 1 J .~el lake t.be lead, 2· 1 after Bob· The Chargers eventually ···-J02 °'' .w-tt tt J 'by lrle.acbarn tripled home two ,.....,..," runs ln the first innlnr. ..,,,.. Tbcn Plus X tied it in the third s . . ...... 4110 ·-·· 1011 lnnln1, and came alive !Ol' four wamm1ng ....... • • ' 0 5-eft<ef. "' ., .. :::.cf S 1 I I 0..llMfll, 1111 1••• more na In the flfth to take a s f • • .,.,_,.., tf .. 1 •• 6-2 lead. 'lbe litooarcba needed a .:::.-:::-~-s •ta A1t11e. 111 '.,) ....... .., •• c..... k~.~ •••• Tettl• a 110 • elm.di, tbree-11.al rally ln tbe luL • .,....'91...,_,, o.i... ............. kO.lf.-10•0 ot t.be MVelJtb Just to 1end the 1,tOO 1,..._1, t.-<•I 11:1U; a..,_ C•> le_"',... I h 17 .t, a. alcMtdt COi II JU. r II • cout.tt lato ewa lnnlaas. HI ,.,_ I. ~ IOI 1 .. .J: 2. ,,........ CO> ~1111 llC IOI Ml tl-7 1 J tlU..t; L O.W Ill ttOC.1 MMwOll ., ... ,,_, 1() 4 Jell ASeUo soi the key hit ln St frw I. 'Mlllil IOI ... f 1. K-. (t)) IU; L * * * ~lllEl$U, the 11venth, roclreUnt out • HI CM. ..-,Y-t, Wllftt 10) t: It t i I.~ ...... LVI U...UI bHOl·loadecl double to pick up llJ 111u;a,._ COi t ·ft.'-W L T ee M f,.,_I. "109ra 101 I IA.I; 111 --tit IMYI .. 4 I t -all tl\Ne runneni. "'"' ...~ J • • " • Aftu Ph&1 X w nt Sn front ... ,,.._\rl!Nld (OI II.Alt.. A9Mte (IJ --°" 2 1 ' , .... ... :a.11 .. r ,.,, L....,..., .... ,.,., 1 t I I . :t•ill wtLb • ·~· nta in t.be (Qp ... -·-~ ~0) lllUJ ..... l&) -.u. . . . "" - 1 tU Mater Del ~ CWLl;t.fllllt OU. Pt•• •>•l'n · ,. • IJd. a l_. . .au.ck. • -............... ·~ ,,..,. a. ...,... ,., fta ........... Jl;t_l~ .... (JU-.1, =-~--..... ,.,.. . • Sln• Scllz started wlU:i • • --(01 ..... , .. ~,., -. ... __., li•U1:.:,1cw .--.. Mew ... ,, ,... • , Cl 1111.J, .......... " • e aa4 ..coail OD a walk .. 1.0-. ....... ....... CMAllUlllAY JIMNIW GOODELL •.. Co11Uaued From Page B4 the history or the meet. With this bevy of talent In the SO along with the eighth place finisher, Tennessee holds the point lead m team standings after the first day with 92. The University of California (Berkeley) was a surprise second with 68 points alter win· ning the medley relay. USC and UCLA are tied for eighth place with 36 points each. ~ott Spann of Auburn repeat· ed as champion m the 20().yard individual medJey with a time of 1: 49.30. All three individual swimming events were pool records for the short, 25-yard course. Tonight's event~ include the 400 individual medley; 200 freestyle; 100 butterfly: 100 backstroke; 100 breaststroke; and 800 free relay. Flrwl r'tWltl ~'In the 5$111 aMuel N~ Olwl•lon I llWlrnmlno -chino champlOMhiPS al the U.yilf'd 8tlrnonl ~au pool: ,.,, ,_, .. , ..... , 500 y ard!I -1. Geode! I, UCLA. 4: II OS. 2.. SIMw cs Lone !leech, •:It.I•. 1. Harr10 .... Not1t CarollM St., 4·21.U. 4. Nortllwo. ArllONI, •·n .o. s. Ht(kett, H•r.•nS. ''" '1. •· S/1¥pe, 11101a .... 4. 29.)t 700 rntdlrt 1. Sl).tn11, Auburn, I ·4t.>O; 1. Furnlu , Soutr.em CAI. 1 4t 41 J. For...,_., Ttt1 MU ... 1.4t IS '· Smllh, C.alllornle, I 50.ll. S Rocca. C.tlllor11la, l.j() SI. •· Zubero, Florida, 1 SI 07 SO -1 t.Nn. Ttnneu ... 20 7'. 2 Falrtlan• C•lllornl•. JO l1 1 Ne.-. TtMtH", to" • S.11\, TtnMUM, 20.64 S Wtlllt, Ten11t~-. l0 U 6 AllbrlllCWI, Flor-Sl, 7t '4 One meter dlw -1. Chester. Al•., 41$.10. 2 £1Mrl•, ONo State, 461 13 3. Grllll11, MlctliG'I' Sl•la, 07... 4. Btsonl. Ohio 51•11 4"' U S Vostw. ONO St.alt, 4Sl.:S. .•. Snoclt, Florida 44412. 400 me<ll•y relay -I , Calllornl• !Rocca Smith, Arvlduon, Sim•>. l . 11.76 2. Allburn l 1'.03. l. Al-tN. l 'lt II '· T.-UH, J:tta S UCLA. 3 JO 64 4 Inell-. l JI 61 T .. rn Sc.0<'1"9 1..,._h IOUI plt<e TPMH-n. Calltorftla .. ; Al-41; Aut>um 4S; °"'' ~~:~ .. :~ c!~;~~!'t'~~~•~• w UCLA 34 Fnoay, March 2•. 1918 oAtl v P1Lor Ba Rustlers Hot, 11-6; Pirates Not, 12-5 Golden West College opened the Hancock baseball toumn· menl by shelling Canada Colle1e <Redwood City). 11~, Thursday, but Orange CouL College Iott the Wendell Pickens tourney championship game to Mesa <Arizona), 12·S. John Moses extended his hit· Ung streak to 17 games, the second longest in Golden West Collece history. when be blasted a two-run double in the second inning. Moses is chasing the bitting streak record of Dave Huppert, who rolled up 20 consecutive games before being held h1Ueas last season. Doug Mansollno also got an rbi double in that second·lnnlng rally as the Ru.aUera picked up rive runs. In the fourth Inning Jim Allen hit his first home run of the season, and ln the seventh Frank Meraz clouted a two·run triple to highlight a four.run rally The victory put Golden West into a game today against College of the Sequoias, which lost to Cerritos Thursday, 18-4. The Hancock tourney is a round· robin affair. 0 range Coast faced the formidable Mesa team on Thurs· day in a game rescheduled from Wednesday due to wet grounds UCl'S SCOTI. Continued From Page B4 come with something excit· 101( ... Oddly enough, Scott's preparation this week re· sembled a vacation be owed himself. ''I've been mainly taking it easy," he admits. "Next week I'll get back into training, run 90 nulesorso. "But I figure I've been working real hard for the last four weeks so I can take a week easy to go out and get a good time. Just knowing I still have it can ~et my con· fldence up before l go back into hard training." The meet was one of the few Miller planned to have Scott run the miJe in. He's been concentrating on the 800 meters for a dual purpose- to give him more speed work {ind lo avoid last year's grueling grind in which the national AAU champion was at Tewtnkle Part. The Pirates beJd a abort-lived S..3 lead ln the fourth t.nnln1 after Mike Sodden blast«t a two-nm bomer. Sodders baa now bit. three rouncl-triJ>J)era in the la&t four 1ames. OCC 1ot another two-run homer ftom Ede Peyton, but by the time the final out wa.a re- corded, Mesa bad far out· matched Oranae Cout. al the plate. Mesa rapped out 11 bill, In· eluding four by seeond buemaa Marty Ban-ett, who wu la\er selected the tournament'• most valuable pl$)'er. ...... .... ,,,, ........ Mo .. , er AllMI, )It ...,.,., ..... "-'~.u ,,_,., St.,.rn,,.. Matltollno. 211 J aUM>n,Jlt Ptnfokl,lb s 1 2 > oeroa'-n. W :I o t o 3 1 1 1 lnnH, If I I 0 0 2 0 t I HMl,,.t, rf ) I t I 1 0 0 0 Mtf'tl, rt 2 I 2 1 4 II 0 lln•,,.._< J 1 t 0 I 0 0 0 Hyatt,< I 0 0 O 4 J 4 1 Ht•""ocli,. p 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 11-rtwfl, p O 0 0 O 4 I 1 0 Tol•I• • II U t k_.., ....... r II • oso 101 -11 tl ' 000 04J 000-4 I? t Oo'-C-tUI .. , • .. ""••lbt,. oeoo >eoo CIDOO >too 1 • 0 0 0000 0000 0000 '2 s 1. 5"111 ... rl l 1 1 0 Htmeltl, 1• ....,ton, d 4 1 2 2 Soto, pl\ R_.Uan, u S 0 I 0 8a,,..11, 211» ~.~ JtOO krlll«lan,fll Ntl-.c (I 10 ~,... •• Sodden, :Ill ' 1 J 2 c;.a,,.p11e11 •• FrlO~. II 1 0 0 0 Hueheft, • DolllOfl, 11 2 0 0 0 Total$ Sc_..,.__ • • r II e 11?1 024 ~12 17 I IOI :llOO ~S 1 J simply exhausted at season's end aft.er nine monlhs of non- stop competition. This was reflected in Scott's indoor campaign in wbicb be actually pointed for j~l one meet-the San Diego invitaUooal. Though be was disappointed in not geWnc a chance to run against Walker, Scott came through with bis season best. "Earlier this year, we were hoping to get a lot of the world-class guys to run here and it turns out they're not coming," says Scott. "But with the workouts I've had, the pace I've been running, plus the confidence I've got· ten from running the 800. I think l can run a good race." Miller, in the vernacular oC racing, summed it up best. .. Steve," be said quite con· fidently, "is going to jam it." IESI DRIVETHE WDRY COUPETHAT'SASEXCITING TO DRIVE AS IT ISTO SIT IN. MU>SlllmlS l~fRMOSA S~.0~ NORTH HOLLYWOOD AIU IMW DIALDGIOUP V.i '* Polak BMW Robert Ruehman, Inc. ALHAMBRA 2901 Pal 1f 1c. Coast 4270 Lankersh1m Century Motor <;ates H1ft1wav Boulevard 1811 West Main Street (2 3) 376-0935 (213) 761-6133 (213) 570-8444 HUNTINGTQN PARK NORWALK AZUSA ---Hal Greene BMW F 01 Jr J Motors Sava~ BMW. Inc. 6000 Pac1f1c Boulevard 10840 Firestone Boulevard 791 st Arrow H1gf1w.iy (213) 583·1901 (?13) 927-6635 (213) 967-5331 LA HABR~ PALM SPRINGS BEVERLY HILL:> Bob Mcl.m~ns BMW. Inc. V l.P. Motor Cars Ltd Zipper BMW of 850 North Beach 81vd 4095 East Palm Canyon Beverly Hills (714) 522·5333 Dnve 9372 W1lsh1rP Boulevard (2 1 ~)691-6701 (714) 328-6528 (213) 213-3980 l ONG BEACti RIVERSIDE C~MABlll.Q Lonr. Beach BMW Ca~belf BMW Hal Watkins Imports 36 70 Cherry Avenue 78 Indiana Avenue 411 Dally Dnve (213) 427-54<)4 (714) 785-4444 (805) 482-8878 LOS A~E.lES SANTAANA (213) 889-2312 Hyd<> Park Motors Crevier Motors, lnr_ CM::!OO.A£.ARK 3443 West 43rd Street 208 West First Street Bob Smith BMW (213) 299-3270 cn4) 835-3171 1050 rorcnga MISSION VIEJO SANTA MQt.llCA CalJion oulevi'lrd S..1rJdleback Valley Ocean Motors (2 ) 346-3144 Imports. Irle • 1820 S.1nta Mon1c;1 GLEND.Alf 28402 Marr,uPnlr> Boulevard Tom Ray BMW P.irkwnx (213) 829-3535 818 South Brand (714) 831 2040 VfililiUYS • Boulevard ~EWEQB LBEACH AMW Auto Center {213) 246·6543 Roy Carver, Inc. 5230VanNuys Boulevard 1540 Jamboree Road (2l3) 788-1791 o ma f!Nllcl to111~ (714) 6406444 ' • ) , \ ~ l I I ~ , • .. DA.IL Y PILOT Friday, Mart.h 24, 1071 DellJ .............. , .k ...... ~- Alamitos Racing Entries TMllM't "-IMttff ........... ,, .. P'lalT llACa -0.-mite. Pac;a Clalml110 hatldl<lltl. f'lirH UOOO Clelmlng P<i<AS U..UDO mana 20 ~,,.,., SMvern CT•>: OW Ef'lli;MJI (M- c1erson1; Quellw •~ct 10'....,; The Hualler C Vall.,...fllllllnl; Mike Mt 80'( ( RalchfOrct); ROM 90lltldl ( 1 .. 1Dy I, $p.t11l1ll Town I Short); VallCMrhall (L..tQalr Jr.). taCOND aAC• -O'lt mil•. Pace s Y•tr °"" anct """"· •I-rt ot 2 b\11 not more -o -lite tor MOO ""' "'-·· PlllR'4600. Royal Arnha CGouortaul ; ArmDro Roy ILon1101; Pub C lla tcMordl Ml•lff \lllM (Grun- "' l; Oe•mond I Oesomer), Marltl4•1• Hanover 18ay1"'6l; In 01 ... Chlo! ILIQhthllll. RaOtaM ROd IL•Cosl•) TNll'O flACI -One mile Pacr Clatm1n11 ll•nd1c"' Pur .. '7000 c1a1m1ng P<I<• i10.ooo.n.ooo.t•.OOO Race Results ,.~, "lalT aAC& -0.. Miit l'ate, Cl•lml"9, ~ lt,OOI Flu Step (Sllortl S.noa H1tcta t Vellandlngl\anll RtPltrry I Todd I r1rno -2 ~,s Screl<Md -CM•l•u llOdney Mar CrMd SJ a •ec• .. ..._ Sletl & 1·S.... Mllu ,Pa .. Pt1.• t •COND aM:• -Ont Mlle. Pac;e. COftdlllonH CNW·U s year 014' a. un· cl«. Pur .. U.400 Olalllled (811Kk"'llft' ACwafa SPKlal 11IO t .:IO l40 < va11anc11 ""*'" n 20 • 20 Ca<tlle'a~CGrUftdyl ; IO Tlrnt-l.011/S AIM lla<ied-.Jolln5 Magic Miu, JR M<R.,..,, Ot!llCW'd H, l'ralrle Ll'fl, fem. pontPrlclt No1cr•tdw• nuao RAC• One mlle Pa..• Conditioned INW ll ) year Olcb a. un d« Pur• U,1'00 KHPH-1 I Gordon! J 40 J 00 J IO Pacific 0-r ll.c:Uyt l .a 7 IO Garlsald (AU«>lnl l .0 Tlrnt -1.Q2J s AllO R•C•O Awopa,,o. Trickel Cl'laroer, Smldge Get1t, Newpor1F1owe<,1Mon1.Juooe Scr•tclltd -••Del Amtrlc.,,a, AUrlbella HanoWt T1ma -JO'U.S "''o racH Tu.aoOO WI{.•, .... eelallttlllt, LWC:l\I HO,..., '-.. ....... y .. Hekt .. <MA SIXTH a AClt: -0... mitt Pau. Clalmlt19 -cap. l'wM tUOO f:agleTr-. C~ll 6.0 4,00 UO· Kl"O AWA'f (GNnllfl IS.tel 6.0t 8111t I fast ( .... ryl U ,O Tlme-206 Alao r.c:ed -!:I Tar.,,to, Ill flag ... Clllet Ll""toot, Kine IC,ffle. Mayl>e PrlmroH kretc...., -Poolnt Pv<dll9 .... .-....... T,_&1" K1119 Aw•.,, ..... pn .• ,.V .. ITN a.11c• -0... ....... Trot. CondCllonH. For hon.a 119' -ltd lnYllattGwl. Pu<w $UOO LoUI Sllff ltf ( ,,.,., .... , 24 . .0 10.20 ••• TOU911 Going N IGnlndYI 10.20 Mt No 811 IS9t1-J ,_ .. Time 2023S AIM> rac;ed 5 H ~. !laden Urpr lle. H•PPJ E•PrtU, Love AUthlne, Ou<ck Pl<' N Scratthed -(ash Call. Hallve Slarllnt alOHTH llACll -OM milt ...... Condit-. For tulles & "-" not -lt41 1nYllatleNI. PllrM 16,600 ,..,.,.... .. !Llfllll>illl 6 00 3 90 , ... Golorlllc ( llatc:Hordl 9 10 uf GOLDEN WEST'S CINDEE SECRIST SLIDES BACK TO FIRST UNDER TAG BY NANCY PALMER. Arrlv• llrrd C~I; ~La,.. co 18ee1Dyl; Cookl t Nlontter c PtrrYI. MH!er lllc.ky ll(uetllerl. Walt II am Paul IO•tomerl ; V•n•dl um CVa llandlng llalftl ; Casi.illedow (Beyl .. ); A HIQll Alofl CS11<l9111I. POU a nt •ACI One milt Pac&. J°'"'S(hol(e(~ 09 T~e -2M • Softball Tourney GWC Women Slwcked, 1-0 If the Golden West College women 's softball team is to annex the championship of its e1ghl ·tcam sprang tournament, 1t will have to do it the hard way. Coach Judy Garman's Rustlers were given a one -hit p1tch1ng performan ce by freshman Candee Serri~l but Jo~l a 1 O dec1s1on to \1 es;,i. Arizona in open 1ni.: round action Thurs- d ay on the Golden Wc:-.t field UnfortunatC'ly for the Rustlers a two-out error in the second inning was followed by the hat, a double by Carolyn Shumaker, to get lhe on- ly run across. Golden West had two hats in the game Playan~ rn the lol>er 's bracket 1n lh<' double· Women's Area Golf N~Wl'OttT l lAc;tt GC Throw Out T_.,._nt A Fl•Ohl IG,oul-1 \l.nn1e Sturol•. ll, 2 C.1t1elle Tenuurt, U . INttl 1 ~lllt ~n. S1 1 W!Wld• T ~Ylvr. ~. l 1renes11,,m,5S 8 Flight tGroul I. 9•rDar a J1>< U.on, 71, 1 .Jan MHc;i..m. It. INetl 1 ha M<Cta<ktn, •I 1 Mary Smo<ll, Sl, J -r~rtt Bowen, I) C FllQht IGroul 1 Jun Dion, 91, I AOrlonnt Rnl 'i (N•tl I ~orltl• 8a"f 114 AOrltnne R•tl, 'S. I N•ll I Jan• C:.1n, ~., Shirloy An· <IN~n 61 l (',r.c:t Prll>(t es l..Ow Gro\\, low Nft Tovrn~m,.ne A F l1qn1 IC.ro"l I Vimnle Slurol•, ll 1 Marlll! Wll.,,,,, 90. J Clltl !. ... Mttnl'I, ltfn• ~lufm . k.,thy C.r olhm•n. II I Nell M lllo• "°""'"''"· ~' 1 WanCla r aylor. Sf J C,trryi F-rty e.l O l'logh1 IGrout 1 8•• McCr•c~•n l'l. 2 tMtene A-r10n. 9• l M•rv S..-lt. 101 (Nell I l ~n• l •• ''<•n. S7; 2 l!l•rb•r• J•O'°" 61 J 111tl .Jllft ~i..m, Oorolhy Wallo•r. U c Fl•Ohl IC.ronl 1 LUCf Thr°"''°"· M, 2 """".,_RMI, M;) Graco Pro11te, 111 INtt) I SIUrley .An<le"°"· s•. 2 Kay Pahler ., J. Mar"'• B•rry 7' HUNTINOTOH saACLIP'P' cc Mutt •"" .Hit TOUf'l\Ament ( P•r S • .,., l onlyt A FtioM 1 Pat Penewell. 21, 2 IMUy Paul, JI; >. Ann Lewi~, l2 4 Lutlllt Allen, l1 , 8 Fllght-1 0-SIMrpe, 21''>, 1. Maro• Pet.non, 1t, > Slllrlty Zaller, n·,. ' an Ell'>er1«1, >O C Ftlght -t. Arleti. otrl<h, 27 1 ""otnl• Steven" "· > M1thy Mc K1bb0ft, ,..,..,, 4. lllel R•n•la En,..,1a1. 111 O'Ga<a. )1'1 MAC 110 $89.95° MAC 140 with AUTO SHARP ·MFRS. sua. Rc:TAll. ,RICE loss elimination tourna. mcnl. the Rustlers came back with a 5·0 verdict over Pasadena in an af- t e rnoon contest. J uhe Winklepleck drove tn four run s with a sacrifice fly and a base<;-Joaded double to spark the Golden West 3ttack Kathi Rosenbery pitched a four·hit '>hutout to give the Hus tier!> the ncton Golden West p·layed G lendak. Ariz. <6· 11 this afternoon with the w1n - nt•r moving to a night game (8:30) al Greer Park . The loser is eliminated. If Golden West is to win the tourname nt, it will require seven ga mes including three on Saturday, the final day of the tourney. The team advancing in the championship brackl't could win in four games T\.\O ga me s arc scheduled tonight at Greer Park, the first al 7 between Mesa. Ariz and La Valley <7-0J an the championship bracket. The second game al 8 .30 1s an elimination affair m the loser 's bracket. ~ Wftt 111\li\ttleNI ,., ... ,._ Me .. CAr.I C!I ltl Go!...., w .. 1 Golden W.-1 Erttl, II J 0 O·O, '"'"°"· ti 1-~. Cron, lD, J.o I O. Youn9, c. 1040. Wlnkln>l•O lb 10 00, Brln\On, cl, 340-4. Kno-. "· l o o-o. Mc H•IO. JD, 1 0-0 o Ro son Dery, Ph. H>·<H>, s.cr .. 1. o. 'O·I 0 Totel\ lH~l-0 su ... ., 1""'"9> GolOt!n We\I M•se. /lrtt , " . 000000 002 4 010 000 • I 1 0 Finl ·-SC..-n Wt\I Valloy 10 Pa~) Los•-·~ \!alley I Venl\lra O Gl•nd•I• 4, Full.non 0 ~•8ncket G ...... Wttl UI 111 Pa.-.W Golden Wett-Ertol, If l 1 I o NICllOIS, rl, 0.1.0.0, Crou, lb, )-7 I 0 Young, (. )-l.0.0; Wlnllleplt<k. ID. 1·0 1 • B"n'°"' cl, 341-11. Knoa u. l O I o aosenbery, o. l·O·O·O, Medearis, lb. ~ Tot•••· 2)-,,_,,.. SunitJl""'- r " • PHad•n• 000 000 0 0 4 C.01-Wftl 020 030 • S I O!Mrk-Ventura S. Fulltr1on l ci.a .......... , .. kk .. s.c.-·---k-MeM Ariz., 3, West Valley 1 LA ..,.lley 2. Gl~e. ArtL .. 0 McCULLOC H Portable GENERATOR $379.95 IRA 1501 $449.95 l"A 2001 .,,.~~~ $699.95 (RA 330) S739.95 IRA 330ESJ AT l'ARTICIPATING OE ALERS ONL YI McCULLOCH AUTHORIZED SERVICE CENTERS SANTA ANA ANAHEIM L. W. BEMIS ANAHEIM SAW SHOP 1629 E. Flr'St StrHt 314 S. Mancheater 64J.263i 536-4313 COSTA MESA HUNTINGTON BEACH WARD• HARRINGTON ANOE L'S 127& 8rl,tol 7800 Edl"91r Rd. -.1eoo so.eoea HUNTINGTON If ACM ,NEWPQAT 88ACH J.C. PENNEY -'J.C. PENN&Y · 7n7 ldlnpt Ave. ,..,,'°" '•'•"d . .,.,,,, ~ 313 "OU a TM RACa -0... lflilt. li'ect. Cl•llftl"9 l\llftdlue>. Mares 10 per. cet1I Puna $)400. Cltlrniftg ptlcu ~·soo S•y One ICranel; E•OI• •ldge (Perryl ; Al .Ja'(I Biiiy (0.-,1; J J'I Pellon C84oylKSI, Delta Olrt<:I IVallandlnghaml; Sw•ntes Luu !Goudreau!; R.c:lno Color& 18"rl SanClr•• Son (La '°I P'l P'TH flACf. Otw mite Trot 1rw1ta11ona1 Purse Sll,SOO. Tutu ne I Sprl005l; Jells Pride C Bartone I; Native Slarlloht C Oen nl1). Oar min ILIQlllhllll; Killy Kat !Grundy) ~I Mlh IA•lchlord) Petit• Ev•nder IOu11nloant Gel· tyslluro t B•Ylei.Sl SIXTH a ACE -O.W mole Pao. Claiming haftdlUIC>. Cel·l>Ad. -ru 10 percent. 3 year 04cb loO percent Puru UIOO Cl••mlnQ prices $6000-1~ IOOO Hot Lips.....,_,,, (Ric-); A ... dJS Aactr 11..onool ; Andy's Cenutk IAndtrSOf\I; Wiison Forly Two (Goudreau). K 8 King (LJoillll>llll ; Andr• Harrottle IK\leble<l; ._, Guy ceernatJ, AU•rtAUia 1va1.- lngllaml Sf VE NTH •ACE o~ mll• PMe Fttlle\ M'd mart; lnvU•ltC)ft41 purw 110,000 8ellt Cl'lert IC.r1Nll. Cl .. \y Sam· pie ( Ackerm•n); A•<-~ For Love (0enn1$1, Lolllan IV•ll-lnQhaml Ms IGoudre•ul Native MIU IKueDlert EIGHTH llACll -Ono mil• Pace. ClalmlnQ ..-1up, mer" 70 per. cent 4 year old\ lS percent Purse U IOO claiming P<kH Sll.000-Ji,OOO, Don Apple C Sucurollal; Windy Way t Goud<'e.ut; Oui.slotot -rgle I Kuebler!; He,.rys Oream N IAuDln), MHter Tu (81tlUlchl; S.r •loO• Ean I l'etffMn Jrl; S.POy Cllartte n,_1; Saint Cl•lf 1'•11• IAatc..,ordl Cl al mint l\llftdlc.p.. Puno u.• Priv•l•9- (8"11f l Selwyn Grattan (Ritchie I Ja 8tau IT-I Tlrne -2 0.LS HO 190 2.0 JOO hO JOO AIM> raced -AUburn Tl119r, Tru Ster, Rol>ert J W , "-9AMll Al>Oey, VO<\ Aom-t Scratcllad LU<ky Par-, Cl\orod U a .. ,i. l·Prlvate II•" & • S.lwrn Grau.... Pal.i Ut.M "'"™ •ACll One mil~ P•ce C:l•lmlno PurH \.t,200 MarkMOf\IQUe 18aylHU 1.0 l.O HO T a11em0f\ I \lall•ndlnghaml Ilic 8 Tar I LIQlllllllll soo J.O l 00 raise funds for your club, organization If your non-prof11 club or organ1zat1on needs to rruse funds call Huntington Center 897-2533 and we will send you our Community Help (formerly Chanty Fa1r)deta11s. Alao r.ced -Seng SOnle, Mldftltlll' Ooo 0-, s.e-P-. LAdY Delr-t DfNmo.I .... HoscratdWs U IEtaela .,_.. & 5-Qltlrifk' Pai•1111.• NINTN •Aca -Ont mlle. Paui. c1a1mlnQ l'lllftdi«•I>. Put .. '3.-300 EdQAWOOd Arm•t• (Markwell! ISOO UO 2 ... Btllery IAUOlnJ Georolan Bey lla<o.tel Time 2 032,s J.Z!I 2 ... , ... Also rK.0 Gokten Jim# N•hm,, C~per lllc~ero. F<><t worthy, 9IH'I Ount Seratt,,.., S-ra• Son u EHCla 6-IE--ArmCte & l ·l•llert, P.WPI.• ' .Allendanc;e -S,l!S A VOTE lo FOR HUMMEL,. IS A VOTE AGAINST BUREAUCRATIC EXPLOITATION Paul H..-El«iot ConlrlWtt- 1900 First "-Col'OM del M• JHnWen.~0-.... MESA'S CLARE SUP GETS BACK TO FIRST AS DORA YOUNG WAITS. HIHTH •AU -Ont mite. Pee:•. l============='--------------Cl•lmlno handicap. PvrH $$100 Mar•• 10 {)e<'Cen\, 4 '"'Oldil U per-unt c1a1mlno ..,ic.su~n.ooo. Irvine Spikers Roll Llbar•ted L..oy (9-fltW); Pr-nl Jim (Lonoot; t"•11a11t St., A ISP"001J, I AsMt ( LlgMhlltl 8rawlor ITr-. opp); 8eronus P•f'T\on• l Ad•m1>; M<:Qu~•n 1Ralthlordl. John O Ar•b Jim Rudy and Chris Ingram \.\ere each dou blc winners as Irvine High raced to an 88-47 track and field victory over v1s1llng Maranatha High (Arcadia) Thurs- day Rudy clocked 10.6 to win lhe 100-yard dash and also snapped the ribbon an the 2()().meler C'venl with a 23 7. The oval is set up for meter length races and the 100 was the only yard-length event held Ingram turned an a 56 2 to win the 400 m eters and came back to win the long Jump with an effort of 19-6. Lewis Yang clocked 17 2 to win the 110 high hurdles for Irvine and Tom Stapp took the 3,200-meter race 1n 10 ·09 O. Art May needed only a 35·21, to wan the shot put Vanlly IAll run In,,.. .. ,.. uupt 1001 Irvine t•I !ti) -rM•ti.. 100 I RU<Jy Ill 10 •. ' Narr•\ IMI !Ot,l Sow•rd/1)111 100 1 RU<IV ill ll 1, I No"" !Ml 2• 7 l Soward Ill 2• & •OO ; lnQ<am (ll SI> 2 1 EnO..coll I Ml SI> 9 l ...,..,.,..,n I Ml Sl 1 100 I HtnClr"k' (Ml 1 06 • 1 J C Track Summaries Don SlanlCW'd •7.t•• Sl•PP 111 1 09, l S.tlMnan 111 l II • ••00 I Ceswell Ml • SI ) 1 SPO<'l\tr.t Ml S Ol I, J Gu1M> Ill ) ot ) HOO I Sl•PP !IJ 10 Ot 0 , 1 C:• w•ll IMI 10 II 0 ) Gu1\0 111 10 l• 0 lOOLH 1 Brod•• IMI 0 s 1 Spr•w•ll (I) O I J Btery CMl ,.. t llOHH 1 V•"ll 111 111 1 AIU Ind•• (It II S, l 8-C><I•• l"'I 1' 4 •OO relay I Mar.,al ...... f 1600 (~lay I Mar.,•llW J SI ) HJ I Mayo Ill SI. , Hfflclri• IM!) t. l Nalm1elll s~ LJ 1 lft9ram Ill " •• , RUdy (II •~ l . 3 N1lm1e Ill 11> 9 SP I May Iii JS 1 1, 1 NOIWI 111 34 10 l 8roal• IM) Ji 8 CO.tomerl Pro Scores Natlaul ....._11 Auec:latlM San Antonio 123, Oen\rff 106 Mllw•u..._ lit, ~~ 109 Phoen11 120, Ntw York 108 C.Olden si.te 11', lndt.,. 1U Hatl..i HKkey l..New 8a•tan 1, °"'-0 Phlladtll'N• 4, Toronto 1 Atlanta s. SI. LOVll J Monlr•el S, Color-3 Los Angelft 3, Ml,,...\Ota I GIRLS TaACll AND P'lfLD firftUlllltll ... -11 \lanllY Plll•butQh 4, St Lou!\ 1 Irvine C7JI ltl -·..,•llw Toronto I Pltubvron S tsollt (All raCff In _, e1c-.t II hi "lu•dl "ui..t MonlrUI J l•p(ll souldl, Houston 0 100 Y•rd I M K•lly (II 111, 1 L Oetroll 1. Mo<ltru10 lsp(1t squldl Kelly Ill 11 J, J 0.ovon 111 14,J MonnesOl• 10, eostonO 100 I M K•llY (II Jt 2. 2. W•rrtn leus 5, New York IAl ' 11130 l; J McWetle< (11 ll.1 KanHS City"· (Nc;aqo (Al 3 •00 I LMlly Ill 1 06 '· l SttYer Lo• Angel" 11, Now Vor' I N) 1 IMI 1 12 6, J Bull Cll I 14 0 Phll•Oelpllie IS, C1nc;o,,,,.ll S 100 1 Ml lier 111 1 l• •, 1 OU l•nd •. Milwauu~ l Vaugman (M) l u 2;,,. lh10'1( ChlC•OO (NI I, San Oltoo I 1600 I. Miiie< Ill • 00 •. 2 Smith Calllornll S, San Franc;1sco 1 PAUL DOUGLAS "LEASfMG MAMAGa .. Cll Fer W.. .... A AifA. 714/141-2221 21 l /5'2-14,l 11135 leoct. llvd.. HwllMJf• IHclt $e111-..c..tllerfll• ael•r• Small kl>Mlt Olvl1I• Atc:.tl ... eltN~ l!tla y\ HH Shulll• • GWC 1 06 J H O-S GWC H 2 Son ni mtdlov s GWC no tomt: Dost me4'1ey-) GWC, II 01 7 390 S GWC 1 l2 , . 2·mlle ) GWC I ,. I mtlt S GWCl lO 9 Ill • ot s, no"'"" s ~=.,'~~111~wono~ __ s._._11_1•_,_._o_e_~_•_-_______________________________ _ Fonalloam Korn;. I a..tfer 61 1 LA H•rbor41,).GofdenWUl.0.• S.d· dltbatk JI, s Moorpar• JS, •· Soul""'"'""'lS.1 S...l•Anall G4Mden _, rwulls HJ I oa .... Wllllt, 6-S '1V 1 St..,. Ruhsi..n1 1.1-10 Ct•--•I. l l'°" lloa<.11 ,,,.,,S KenAle-rl-.4,JT-7.0on Stanfor.i. ,.,_,,) Mlk• Por1ff, llCMI, SP l VI .. lll>Sl\llftl, C ..... TJ-l -·1on111 ... JT -1 Ollvl• Leon. 110 0 HJ 1 Pem Bank> S 1 1 m•I• r•l•'f S GWC 11 •• I 01\tanco mfllltY relay-S. GWC U 39 O C.Olclen WHl hn1"'9d6th, Hp0lnl• 110LH I Or•von Ill UJ, 1 McOOf\•10111116,) 8Ull 1 (1171 I •.0 yard ttl•Y I lrv•ne U 6 1600 relay 1 I rvlnt ; '' O "1J I L ltelly Ill S 1 1 Norman 111 S t no tl>lrd LJ I M Keny (I) l1 41" 1 l•no.t Kelly Ill , ... J L.,...n 1(•11• (IJ 111 SP l Lynn Kelly Ill lCH , 1 Swln I°" I 11 16 J' > no'"''" May the Joy of • • • • • . Be With you and yours John Hert Lynn Hart HARTS SPORTING GOODS 538 Center St. Coste Mno J PONTIAC'S FIREBIRD ELEGANCE IN SPORTS DRIVING LEASE DIRECT! 1971 .-otmAC SUNlllD COUPI t C y1 AC I "'Mid Q • ' f & rt fl'• """••t CO•e tt lt.. "'Cl 0ipen ..,._,, ... ,. i'"\ H 'IO"O••o:I Ct9dot tot•"" s.un ,, ·~ ,,,, •• SJi~ AP'\ni,;,..i C»'Cet'lt*19fa .. 1) 2'6 Ct'\" fl'''' k \ 8 OIMityOur'"Ow 1971 flOMTIAC AUlllD S891Jo. 6 •' I ' ''"'"°' ~'•'" ' A~ I '"'"' Oh s 12 9 1 7 ....... ~ CO'lftf• P\ Pt• M ""0 00.., 1Jf"11 l•I\• 61\ •tr>t•.,.-1 ''~M•I lrla/ d"" I• •O t 1 ,.,, <1•1 S. HOO •"'"w•I MO. .. ff .,.,.J. ro11tfl ti~ C4°'ft ~·H "'' •\ 000 ... .v..~-'•·"'~,.~ J. YOU'LL FIND FAii PRICES • UCB.LENT SERVICE AND PERSONAILE PERSOHNB. TO SERVE YOU. \ ~ ;' r ~ ~ • ~ i I ,, 11N SI OE: •Out 'n About •Cal Jam II •Intermission •Galleries Fru1oy, March 24, 1978 OAILY PILOT Weekender 'Dreamy' Surrealism at NB · Museuin Ma jor Bazio tes Exhibit ion Opens 'THE BEACH' DEPICTS 'FORMLESS THING FOLLOWING ENDLESS SHORE' Duo 'Knocks on Wood' Comedy Team Pokes Fun at Presidents By DF.N:">J IS McLELLAN Of , ... O•llr "•lot SIMi ll 's not l'\l'ry t·omedy learn that can boast or having Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford and Jim- my Cartt•r 1n 1ls act But Teter and McDonald l'Jll Actually, the three presidents are dummies T HAT'S NOT A pol1t1cal pundit's putdown. 1t':; a fact they :.ire the life like , but woodenht>adt•d, dummies who often steal the spotlight and laughs from the comedy team. "Somebody oner asked me 'when do you t' h a n g e y o u r a c l ., ' · · s a y s J i m T e t e r · Everytimt• Wl' gel a new president ' Jim Tt•tcr and Jim McDonald. whose .tany al'l mcludC's singing, ventriloquism and sound effects <they do a great beachllead landing routine>. are appearing at Knott's Berry Farm Good Time Theater through Sunday Because of their first network telev1srnn appearance. on the "Tonight Show" last sum mer. thev arc now 1ntrod uced as "America's newest ('Omedy team. · Thal, despite having performed for 13 ) cars "IT'S REALLY remarkable the impact 1t>lev1s1on has, "says McDonald. "You take an en- tertainer who has been playing clubs for years and years <ind he appears on television once and it's likeh<.''s brand new." TNC'r and McDonald are 'regulars on the n1ghlclub cir('u1t where they often serve as oµ<'ntng acts for Vikki Carr and John Davidson. ITht>v \.\Ill appl•ar with Da\1dson at Harrah's in Hcno in April 1 It wus whllt• appearing with Davidson in Co\ mgton, Ky l:i~t May that they made na- tional ht'adlines when the Beverly Hills Supper Club there caught fire The three men helped keep lhl.' a11d1rnt·e calm and were credited with ~aving many lives Teter and McDonald prctfer not to discuss the int·1dent, fl'eling 1t has been overpublicized "It's a tragedy," McDonald says simply The two men. each 36, met while attend mg Oklahoma Stale University. M('Donald had a band imd Teter was a ventriloquist. "We sort of becamc a com<'<IY team through osmosis, "'uYS M('l>onalcl While Nixon. Ford and Carter beamed down from their perch<.'s on a dressing room table. Teter explained lh1• origms of his presidential dummies THE FIRST, John Kennedy, was born 1n ear· ly 1963 while Teter was performmg m a campus revue. "After that I had Lyndon Johnson. who 1s still one of the strongest comedy vehicles." Teter said "lie was JUstfunny." The quality of the dummies-which have been admired by the dean of ventriloquists. Edgar Bergen-are lifelike in every detail, even down lo the 5 o'clock s hadow on Nixon's face. "I always said I wish I was as good a ven· (See OUMMI ES, Page CZ) By JERRY HERTENSTEIN Of 11'1 DtllJ P'll" Slaff '• The late artist William Baziotes is right on if pa anting can be dreams or dreams paiqtµlgs. Baziotes, a New York City artist~ died in 1963, was an abstract surrealist SURREALISTIC IS DEFINED as havtng a strange dreamlike atmosphere. Surreallsm is pr1nc1ples. ideals. or practice()( producing fan tast1c orm('ongrous imagery or effects in art B az1otes' work Cits those descriptions The paint on canvas has been rubbed so that no brush strokes show Most of his later works. 1950s on, have a &Oft, airy look Baziotes at one time worked closely with arhsl friends David Hare, Robert Motherwell and Jackson Pollock The trio dealt with certain .. primeval" themes in the late 1930'::. and early '40s, but then abandoned that approach for an emphasis on "Abstract Expressionism." THEIR ACTION LEFT Baziotes alone. maintaining a commitment to poetry and mystery or conscious and unconscious states of mind. ac<'ording lo information from re- searchers of his hfo "llaziolcs beat h1::. own drum and never left it," s<11d Phyllis .J LutJeans. C'urator of educa- t 1on al Nc\.\port llarbor Art Museum, ,...; l'\.\ port Bt•al'h Mrs LulJ\•an.., should kno"" She. Betty Turnbull. t·urator of colle('t1ons and exh1b1tions, and Sue llt•ngt•r, reg1star editor, have studied much on Ba.t1otes the past year And for good reason What 1s b<'tng billed b) publt('1ly releases a<, 'the hri.t major West Coast retrospective ex h1b1t1on of the work of the late New York abstract sl.frrealtst artist. Wilham Baz1otes." 1s '>hO\.\ ing tod<.1) throu)!h Junc .1 Th<>rc 1s little of llaz1otes' work in must'ums be('ause his output was small. ac cording to .\t rs Turnbull There arc many 1m' alc l'Olll'l'tors throughout the world. Some of tlw 35 paintings <.ind 20 dra\.\ ings in lht• Nt•\.\port t•>.h1b1t1on c·amc from private ('01 lt·ctor" in l'a~adt·na and lh:Hrl) lltlb. accord- ing to Mrs l.UtJl'<lll:-. "BAZIOTES' WORK IS extremely fragile,'' Mrs Turnbull said ·"Th<.' surfacC's are very de· heat<.' "They lc1ok 11 Phvllts and Mr:-Turnbull like to note that to hav·c acquir<'d the exh1b1llon means the must•um "has clout Th<.'y <other museums and pn vale <·ollc('tors I ha\ l' confidence lo loan us this m 3JOr work." th<.• two agreed The Ba11otcs cxh1b1t1on traces his develop- ment from painterly. cub1st1c , heavily brushed works of the 19·10s through his treatment of poetic images. to later :-.imphficd biomorphic abstrac lions he wai. ~orkrngon at l1meofhisdeath !nlCllAEL PREBLE, DIRECTOR of Mt. ~an Antonio College Art Galler). Walnut, 1s guest curator and exh1b1t1on organizer Newport. as 1s often the case. 1s rearrang- ing an enllre gallery, repainting walls gray and adding portable walls. '· Bai1ol es was a man extremely lo himself." Mrs Turnbull said. "He was philosoph1('al. a r>0el very much involved with symbolism" THE ARTIST "STEEPED" himself in poetry or Charles Baudelaire. Paul Valery and Paul Verlaine, Phyllis explained. Baziotcs wws an idea expressed by onC' poet in his painting. ''The Bea('h," 1955. Verlaine's in "The Art of Poetry" writes about Socrates' "sea frontier" philosophy. Socrates described It as an "endless imagery edge between sea frontier and Neptune." Baziotes' "The Beach" depicts it as a form- less shape hovering to the left side of the paint· 1ng. The artist defined it as "a formless thing I round while following an endless shore · · IT IS CLEAR that Bazaotes 1s pamtmg the sea because there 1s curlmg surf line. Part of that surf line, however, reaches up in serpentine PAINTING OF CLOWN EARLY CUBISM form Scrpenl1m.• symbols are another strong t·haral'ler1st1l· found 1n nearly all of his later "t•rk"' Ba11otc..,, Mr-, LulJcans claims, "saw bl'\Ond poss1b1lit1t•:-. of brush almost like space and ind1l'atcd 1t -with penetrating color." B<ilmles' work 1s moody. Mrs. Lutjeans pmnts out that 1s 1x•rhaps most 1mport:)nl. "Looking :.ind sct•mg arc kc) s for the \'lewer," sht' said. '"Che viewer needs to think and red for ht rnst•lf wh<'n looking at a work ll 1sn 't n<.•n•ssary to know the vocabulary " A VIEWER ('AN WALK away from observ- ing latl'r works fc<'hng light and airy and yes a bit dreamy 1f somc"\.\hat puzzled Dreams art' ortl'n puzzles Baz1otes on('l' staled. "I m trying to create beautiful forms that fit together like a puzzle The things m my painting are intended to strike somethmg that 1s an emotional involvement- that has to do with the human ~rsonahty and all mysteries of life. not s1roply colors or abstra('t balances. To me, it's all reality." A symposium with (Uest lecturers, includ· mg Preble, will be held in con1unclion with the exhibit. IL is scheduled April l al 2 p.m. and April 2 at 1 pm. in Donors Gallery atthe museum. Registration is $6 for both sessions for museum members and students, $9 non- members. Smgle session is $5. Tickets are now available and further information may be ob- tained by telephoning Mrs. Luljeans at 759-1122. Museum hours are noon to 4 p.m . Tuesdays lhroui.:h Sundays and Friday nights, 6 to 9 p.m. The museum 1s at 850 San Clemente St. Rooney's Still Hardy Gu it nri~t Dave fa n end young friend po e for photo· graphers moments otter has weU·receivcd s t t Cal ~am II nt Ontario. Looklhg on as Mick Fleetwood t:Whltc hat> who nppencd on stage to suJ>Por\ tx·Fl LwOOd Mao member Bob Welch. More thal\ 1,500 back lage p s ere ued to journalists and p to1ropli from as (ar away u Aullrali • <Story on ~·· C21 • Actor Has Ma ny Worlds t o Conquer By TOl'I TITL'S Of, ... D<ltly P'ilol S.Utll After 50 years in show business, the man who calls himself "the last of the ha~in· pants com edians" is putting away the greasepaint. But don't look for Mickey Rooney m any home for old actors. Al 57 going on 30. he still has many more worlds to ('Onquer. At the moment. he's packing them in at Sebastian's West Dinner Playhouse in San Clemente with the comedy "Three Goats and a Blanket." He'll be there through Sunday before moving over lo the Grand Hotel in Anaheim for another five-week slint. It's one or his last performing pro- Jecta. says the redoubtable Rooney, who plans to devote his time for the next four or five years to an acting course he has been developing for 12 years "It's always wonderful to be a first, and I believe that I'm the first of my genre. or the acting actors, to ever offer a self.study acting course to the public.'' he says. Whal Rooney proposes lo do, in three six-week courses of study, is to "build a level or consclouaness and make people aware ot lhelr own individuality." It's )'et another plateau in one of the loneeat careers in show busineH, one that began in the fertile traintn1 irounds of vaudeville and burlesque. "Many people miaunderatand the term burlesque," he says. "Look at the cr•nt comedians who came out of burlesque houses -Jack Benny, Millon Berte, Phil Silvers. Burlesque originally was a revue wlth a lot or comedic sc nea. Too many people associate It wl\h 1trippers and filth." Rooney frankly dmita lhat ••burlea· 9ue" •~ precls.l.y what b•'• dolnc at Sib"Ntian'• Weat. ":7hla lJ pure buf. looaery. It's not the • ., Jtd be pltYlnl at th• llu&lc center. b Ws la dinner tht:ale and people ('Orne to be enlt.>r tained, to laugh .. t:nl1ke many another big nam<• · in th<.• entertainment mdostry who has ap penred on Orange County stages in the past, cnhcs say Mickey Rooney 1s g1v mg the audience its money's worth. He plays seven performances a week at San Clemente and his audiences know they've been entertained when he's through. ''You know, it really boils me when I read that some ex-football player or ex· swim mer or ex.athlete is going to give up sports and make a few movies It's like we're a bunch or trollops. Well, there are dues lo be paid, and you never stop paying your dues.•' On a('tlna ltselr, he comments. "Act· ing 1s not a 'method • It's not even a syalem. It's an approach to your own In· dlvlduality. The word J use is 'peel · Peel awoy tht layers of self· con1clousne11s to gel at your own In· divldua.llty." Tbla 11 the concept Rooney s~es in hla acUnc coune and tbe philosophy that has kept him in the upper atrata ot llolly\\ ocxl J><•rform<:r.., for a half cen- t un 1 For mformJl1on on the course. \\rile to 7500 lk\'1sla Drive. Holly'>'ood 9()().11) ) Mickey 1foon1·~· M.•cms nc,·er to run do~n On his opening weekend at Sebas- t 1an 's. he performed on Friday night, fl<'W lo Las Vegas lo tape a Dean Martin roast on Saturday afternoon, re- turned for the Saturday night show, rose at the ('rack or dawn Sunday to drive to Garden Grove Community Church. then back to Sebastian's for a matinee and evening performance. What keeps him going at such a pace? "I'm regenerated every day," he says. ·'I'm plugged in " He credits a renewed religious faith for much of this sus- t a med <'nergy · · M 1ckey Hooney 1s not a new-found Chr1...i1an I \'t' been a Christian all my ltCe Th<>r<' was a period m my hfo when I forJ?ot ahout 1t. thal 's all I lhmk we all do that Well I ('an't speak for anybody else. hut that's what recharges my bal- l en · Hts philosophy 1s reflected in the movies he chooses family fare such ns "Pete's Dragon," a rec~t success. And whlle he's as hardened • veteran as anyone in Hollywood, he's still enough or a kid, at 57, to bold b.iah hopes for what he calls "the American ideal." "Without being saccharine about it, l believe there should be ml>vies with more emphasis on us .s people," he declares. "You know, being real is en- tertaining too, and iood taste never aocs out of style " Toward that end, Mickey Rooney has secured the rights lo the piclures pro· bably most re8ponsible for brinamg him into the public eye in the first place - the Andy Hardy stories. He hopes even· tually lo lum them into a television series. ••onJy this time," he wmts. ··1·n be playln• th.GJudce.'' . .... -A I \ • . -._..__...-.,;.. .... -...... . - . l ' t . . (2 OAILV PILOT Fndey, March a•. 191a J &Ill 'Lacking in Purpose' Mo-like Antics Add Little to 'Classless' Event By MJCllAEL PASKEVICH :.... Of .. 1>4111• ............ ... It seemed only unnatural that guitarist Ted '· "Hey I'm God" Nugent would draw the most t : enthusiastic roar from the nearly 300,000 rans ~.,. -who turned out for California Jam JI last Satur-~· day at Ontario Motor Speedway. •• Stalkin& the stage like a wildman cau1ht in .· .. . - . • .. . . • . the death throes of terminal egomania, Nugent and company delivered magnum-force heavy metal that few bands can compete with . But like the event itself, Nugent's aet and zoo ltke stage antics and verbiage were ex- cessive and lacking in class or purpose. ONE CAN ONLY speculate as to the link between Nugent's upswing ln popularity and the fact that PCP Ca deadly dumb animal tran- quiliaer) accounted for most of the day's over- doses. Pushing the music aside for a moment. many questions remain In the aftermath of one of the largest rock concerts ever staged. The youth culture lure or rock Is certainly more powerful than ever, but was it really worth $12.50 a ticket for the thousands of fans seated more than a mile from the four-story mass of loudspeakers? Even if the bill lacked a Stones or Led Zep caliber band to put a proper cap on the proceed· ings. most fans felt the show was indeed worth the money. After all, il was a rare chance for many teen-agers to pack up, leave home, camp out and party with friends. Jam II ran as smoothly as a digital watch with no major problems (traffic or otherwise>. leading some backstage rock obervers to say 1t held all the excitement of a pocket calculator. Push .. E" for "exciting ~ncore." please. WITH NO BURNING political or social 1s sues facmg the less interesting 1970s rock fans, the event lacked the festive togetherness and collective soul or Woodstock or Watkins Glen. On lhe plus side, a mellow air of content- ment hovered over the crowd, helping to erase the incorrect theory lhat such events always re- sult an lhe same sort of violence that ruined the Stones 1969 Altamount Concert. And there were some magical moments. most notably the emergence of Heart as a via- ble contender for superstar status. 1 he• Seattle based quintet 1s fronted by lead !'-tngt>r Ann W1li.on and sister/guitaris t Nancy W1 hon. hoth proving that beauty and feminan1t) arl' no drawh<1rk~ whC'n 1t comes to powerhouse rm· k an tht> Led Zeppel m vem 81\CKED 8\' AMPLE support, Heart of fered a well-paced mixture of enchanting The board of directors for Laguna Beach Summer Music Festival was elected al a recent meeting. Concert program for the 1978 season was also announced. Dr. Stephen M. Pauley was elected presi· dent. Vice president is Carl Mitchell; Virginia Snyder secretary; Nancy Daley and Arthur Fong treasurers; Jim Gessner ticket sales; and Jane Stevens, public relations. THE OPENING concert will be chamber music on July 7. The chamber orchestra will consist of John Heitmann on nute, Ronald Purcell, guitar, Masatoshi Mltswnoto, cello and Delores Stevens, piano. A recital by violinist Ukiko Kamel is scheduled July 14. The Unicom Players of California (a slrine ensemble) wlll perform July 16. Susan McDonald will be featured as harp soloist. Muat.osh.I Mltsumoto Is conductor. Each concert will begin at 8 p.m. at Laguna Beach Hieb School auditonum Ticket orders .and program Information are available by telephoniq $7112. Brewery Tour On VAN NUYS -A new tour of the upanded Anb"""°Buach Brewel'1 lh Van NuY8 )a now operatmi at BU1eh Bird Sanel\Jary. The 15-mlnute mono!'aU tour operated by the Sanctuary 11 reopenlna alteT completion of a $12 million addition to the brewery, a ntw packaatng racllll)' that la nearly one acre In alae and abfe to tum out mor. than 7.5 mUUon botUe1 or bffr a week. Vlattora board the compUmentary tour from an er.a our the Sanctuary entrance. Houn ue 10 Lm. to I p.m. Wednesday• thr9Ulh SUndaya dur· lnl tbe wtdter and dail1 lD lb aumm~ moatba d11i1neh0Uday vac.auoa l*'k>dS. , bftwtf'1 and ctu.ary are loeated on 801eoe Doulnatd Just. w ~t of tbe SU Diqo J'reew17. ,, PART OF NEARLY 300,000 TRY TO CATCH ACTION ON DISTANT STAGE acoustics interspersed with its harder-edged hlls h ke .. Barracuda" and "Crazy On You." Walson . who ('Ould be ca st as a good witch in . Tht.> W11ard or 01" remake. IS the best female roC'k bell.:r to t:meq~e since Grace Slick, and with a touch more onginahty, Heart's future ap- pears unltm1led They were definitely the sur· prise or the show The dis appointment of lhe day award goes to Fore1ghner. the nouveau-popular British rock group that owes a great debt to lhe conservative approach or Bad Company The band quite frankly choked. possibly from nerves. and 1l was only the day's gutsiest performance from lead s inger Lov Cramm that s aved true embarrassment FOREIGHNl::R IS NOT worthy of its plJtanum record s tatus and no effort "'as ma<le to s t retrh out past the safr confines of hits like ··cold As Ir<>'' or '"It FcC'ls Like The First Tim<'," The S£'1 was cautiously brief to dis- guise the band's crcat1 ve snortcommgs. Aerosm1th, coming off a weak studio album ("Draw The Line'') and flagging popularity as America's strongest rockers, followed with a snarling and inspired performance. A new keyboardist shored up the guitar at· tack and lead vocalist Steven Tyler, despite a touch of hoar;eness, kept things dnving w1lh his Jagger-Like struts, shouts and pirouettes. Aerosmith was the headline band on the nine-act bill. although Rubicon and Mahogany Rush foUowed as most of the crowd left in an ef· fort to avoid a massive Cat traffic jam like the one which occurred m 1974. FORMER FLEETWOOD MAC member Bob Welch opened lhe 15 hours of music and was joined onslage by S tevie Nicks and Mick Fleetwood. Next up were veteran guitarists Dave Mason and Carlos Santana, both turning in typically prof('ss1onal and disciplined sets ~ith their t•x1..·ellent backing mus1c1ans. Mason jomed Santana on stage for a Jam durm~ "Soul Sacrifice." a Woodstock showstopper that still held up more than a decade later. Still, it was Nugent who captured the au- dience with his mid·afternoon exercise in hilarious ovC'rkill. He may be a moron, but damned if the cloudy skies didn't clear just before he stepped onstage. Maybe he's hiding something up his sleeve after all. TO CALL CAL JAM II a financial success is a slight understatement. It drew the highest paid attendance ever for a concert (225,000-plus fans worth S2 75 million an ~ate receipts alone>, and the CO!.tly but crisp sounding 167,000 watt sound system will go down m the Guinness Book of World ReC'ords J\ BC TV 1s dut• to cash in on the four 90- mmule SJX'Clals It has in the works. thus giving a large share of the audience a chance to see "hat mo1;l only heard ll 's a safe bet that Cal Jam Ill is not far off The rock and roll money machine isn't about to stop turning, even at the expense of spontaneity and artislry • CAL JAM II fORtkjoy PROFESSIONAL TRAINING PROGRAM "' "' l J' .., ~v Q J' ~ .jt ..,Ott'~....,~ .... ~ 0 & .,.I(.~ 't v ~QI P ~<YI' ... ~.,. .l eor ~0 ~ ~...., ACTING CLA.SSES & GUITAR ~A~~~ 1611 (AST fOURT>l SlflElT $ANIA °'lllA 114/~ /800 HOllYWOOO A Sexual SPOOF! For mature aud ience only. Admission: $3 general; $2 students senior c itizens. 8.30 p.m Mar. 31, Apr. 1, 2, 6. 7. and 8. :? 30 p m Apr. 9 Golden West College Huntington Beach Edinger Avenue at Golden West Street ISLAND 2 TRIPS EVERY DAY \'...,, r,,_....,. ~"'·~ ....,. ... •·• ~ ......,. loW"• ••Vol"!.,._..,.,,.~ l ..... 81.cltli ...... .uo.• ,..,..,..,..,a.t . ._ ,,..."'-.. ,c •• ~ ...,..,.....,,. --..... ~ ....... ,.,,.,, ··~ _. .... , .... ....,,.. ....... ,,..)._ f'91•• -·~ -~ ........ ..... _.,. .............. ...,. ~ ....... ......,,.,,.,.... -..n ............... , ................. Wloe ........................... 9"'"4 ........ .. ,c._.....".....,.,...,_.,.......,.. "· •' ~ ,. __ .,..~ _...; .... __ ~ ~-1---' L•AV1l OOWWTOWM LOtfQ ac&CM l•m 1 •~pm ttt amOf'SwnY1') A~ f rtOAf ~-n•ngs 1 JO p rn At1.-u-. SS Ofte•w•v. 'Nl4••" 112 re,.. ..... ....... f ... ,,..,. ......... ... -CALL P'Oll l'l•SCl'IVATIONS IN,ORMA'l"IOtf (ltli 7H 8111 • (21lf 831·•~21 • (7Ul S21·711 l If pu "" l'ltl" of ll"oCMI 171 lov"'\ wllo ,1 ~l,a,•~ ..,.,h rhe old w:>kf !)·I ~I! ''""" ~-00; .,. I ('"'<JJnly nnl be do\OPP(W'led -...... ;ilotY] °"" ""'l"" Ol-l W c;y j lvt W ""f w,. o•e ;)W)I..-.~ 01 ry o, cl oH t"<l V>. ~lt"Ch onoi Germon -.:i•Pr co,... I·~ *""' IB•h o..-J l"i•t. •eni,r~ )\ -e¥ ?\ oo1 r:""l ,.., nfli. ,,,,.,,..,., ::»":v'\"f •I'll• w e.it :-f I c " .. t':I' \ ~"'"ll 't A I lw,. ry 'rl O''J< _,~ :ll we ".>• t:'"'<rf art Piie<•$ .,....,, yo., .,, , • .,.,. ... , """"' "., ,. ·' r ..... i. .11 , The Star." For Yow aster FnHviHH. We ave e•erything! Plants, Flowers, Arraag1ntetds. .-----1(•11/;Nil-----· ,-----(li[TJ;ftTit----... I _,.,AfW 1111 -COUA"'I : WIMAflfMllllr _,. '1 CELERY l: ASPARAGUS : II SioMU.ID I I 19c u.... II 59c ' I NeeM 11 I I II ...,.. I I ~1 II &.NYILn. I ,, _____ 1:1!!~-----''-----~~ __ , r-----f{l11T;N1t----""r----«•l•I;Mtt----, I.MM-11 .-11D I I AITICHOIES ll AVOCADOS l -It' 11 '".::-..... I I 'I t : l _ s I oo : : 3 s I oo : I UMIH ,, -I I wm1c:-11 ~• I l--------------~~-----~~----~ COUflOMS IX"° THUil.. MARCH~ lt11-7 P.M. WI ACCIPT POOO STAMPS t ' ' ! .1 4, ,· \ 1 I I · 1 ' I .J ' OUT 'N ABOUT I DANCE Easter a Coastal Feast Tiine Short, Choices Many for Dining Plans Time is short to nail down your dining plans for Sunday's bl& Easter feast. Otherwise the family wlll be dressed and ready for a hohday treat that has to be called off amid disappointment. 'fhose who have wailed until the last minute can check out the restaurants noted below and on other pages in this section. While these :suggestions by no means r epresent t he full ranee of possibilities, it's hoped they'll point the way to one a mong the many Orange County places primed t o offer distinctive Easter fare. Wherever house policy permits, reservations should be booked to keeJ> a busy holiday flowing smoothly for everybody. T HE MARRIO'IT HOTEL in Newport Center will offer Easter Sunday dinner m the Pacific Ballroom, with seatings at noon and 3 p.m. Guests will be able lo choose from a variety of entrees includ· ing t:letted ham, baron of lamb, steamship round of beef, chicken breast amand1ne and seafood Newburg. A large array of salads and ve~etables, in add1t1on to platters brimming with turkey and cold l>almon, will also be part of the bountiful feast. 1''or those who stlll have a little room left, an assortment of pies, cakes and pastries will complete the menu. Out 'N About Nor111an Stanley The Harlequin Dinner Playhouse is localed on Harbor Boulevard between Sunflower and MacArthur, just north of the San Diego Freeway. The Easter Sunday brunch is priced at $11 per persoo. SAM'S SEAFOOD will be o~ Easter Sunday from noon until 9 p.m., serving its wide-ranging menu or hot and cold appetizers, salads and louies, steaks and seafood. In Huntingt.on Beach , Sam's is located at 16278 Pacific Coast Highway, telephone 592-1321. In Corona del Mar, Sam 's is at 3901 E. Coast Highway, 675-0900. GRINDER RESTAURANTS In Newport Beach and Huntington Beach will observe the holiday by havmg the Easter bunny on hand from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. As part of hjs duties, the good rabbit will be dispensing chocolate Easter eggs to kids of all sizes and ages. Breakfast/brunch service gets under way at 6 a.m. in the two locations: 1400 Pacific Coast Hlghway, Newport Beach. 642·8881. 21002 Pacific Coast lllghway. Huntington Beach, 536·1664 THE HOUSES OF PETERS -the Crown House in Laguna Niguel and the Ivy House in Laguna Beach -will observe the hoh· day with both a special brunch and dinner. Easter Sunday brunch at the Crown House, 32802 Coast Highway, at Crown Valley Parkway, 499·2626, will be ser ved from 9. 30 a. m. to 4 p. m. Dinner service will run from 4 to 11 p. m. Brunch will be served from 10 a.m . to 4 p.m. at the Ivy House, 384 Forest Ave., in the Lumberyard shopping mall, 494-9491. Din· ner will be served from 4 to ll:JO. Friday, March 24, 1918 DAIL'( PILOT Cl STUDENT DANCER DOES LEAP DURING REHEARSAL Toby C1ements to Participate In OCC Event l\s an added attraction, Marriott's Twin Pianos will be h.-Jturect. A live bunny will be distnbuting Easter eggs to children The prn·<> or dmncr 1s $8 50 for adulLc; and $3.95 for children un· dl'r 12, plu~ tax Early reservation!:> are recommended: 640-4000, \I l'Xl. til0<1 AIRPORTER INN, 18700 MacArthur Blvd. <opposite Orange County Airport). Irvine, 833-2770, is offering an Easler triple· header: brunch in the Mediterranean Room from 10 a.m . to 3 p.m .• di nner from 5 lo JO, and a poolside champagne buffet between the hours or 10 a.m and 2 :30 p.m. BAXTER'S STREET, Newport Beach, and other restaurants operated by Far West Services, will ofrer special holiday duting features. At Baxter's, 4647 MacArthur Blvd., 540·2475, dinner will he served from 3 p.m. a nd there'll be a special early show. Dance at OCC Studems' Concert Readied .r ·' ""' "( JI • 'i;p • I \ ~ •J-} "' ,. • '• • . ' BEN BROWN'S, 31106 Coast Highway lat Ahso Canyon), South LJgun:i, w11l fealun.• special menus for brunch, 9:30 a m. to 3 p.m., and dinner 4 to 9 p.m. Elcvt"n select entrees on the midday fare will be accompanied hy fresh ~tra wbf:'rncs or peach in champagne, hot blueberry muf- fins and buttermilk b1scu1ts. Hoasl ll'J! of lamb will be the featured attraction on the eve· nmg meet I Hescrvat1ons: 499-2663. T llE 11.\RLEQUIN Dinner Playhouse rn Santa Ana will sen P .1 ~pt•ci;.tl Easler Sunday brunch , along w1lh a mat10ee Jll'rlormann! of George Axelrod's hilarious comedy, "Goodbye Ch.trlll' ' l>oor-. \'Ill 01wn at 11 am. with brunch available from 11 30 follm\ l'd Irv llw pl'rformancl'. Reservations are a mul>t and can be ma1.k al !J7!J 5511. I m.1•11n•• kl•11h·~ nl hl'drly soup ~1mnh'nnq <1111•r llfWn hl>Mfh,. • ru,1v '""'~rill w.1rm from hr1ck <>\'• '" •• the ilrnhtl'IH e o f o I r1•11rl1.-,,unr1v 11111 Thi' l'll'•"•1nt J', '''i"'' '''rv1nq V'Jllf ft\\.orttt! •'lllrt•o• .111d d,•J1!Jhfl11l luriclh'' Irr m "hi." ~lu o1rd rn••nu < .. mplo•rn1•nr. d t ,, , .. qui hp ,,1r\. "-•'lt•cf111 t In MacArthur Square fl, 11 ,, k • 425 1 Mar1lngalc> Way. Newport Beach Hc>!>f>rvatlons: 955-2755 PLUS MONDAY THAU IHURSOAY SPECIALS (rn Sat. Sun. ·111 sp m) RED SNAPPER ..••..••. 3.95 MAHI MAHI .•....•..•••. 4.45 GRILLED SEA BASS .••.. 4.45 TOP SIRLOIN STEAK .... 4.75 NEW YORK STEAK ....•. 5.45 LOBSTER TAIL .......... 6.45 STEAK AND LOBSTER .. 7.45 and dozens of others Easter dinner will be served from 2 p.m . at the Moonraker, 18542 MacArthur Blvd., 833-9600; dinner service will get under way at 4 p.m . at the P lankbouse, 6060 Warner Ave., Huntington Beach. 842·5111. The Gorda Liz. 900 Bayside Drive, Newport Beach, 675-5111. \\ill sl'rve Easter Sunday brunch/lunch from 10 a m lo 3 p.m :\llSTER G'S restaurant. 3100 Irvine Ave, at the Newport Beach Golf Course, 751-5223, will serve a l>pec 1al Eal:.ter buffet din· ncr from 11 :30 a .m. to 8 p.m . Tabbed at S4.95 per perl:.on, the buffet include~ lhrl'e meat en t ret•:-. roal>l beef, turkey and baked ham together wllh a tnp to I hl· restaurant's highly-regarded l:.alad bar A s pring dance concert 1s scheduled Friday, March 31 and - Saturday, April 1, by advanced Orange Coast College dance stu-~ dents at the college. The program will take place at 8:30 p.m. each 111 day in the auditonum on campus, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa " Mesa. V Modern, ballet, tap and Jazz dance styles will make up the con-' cert. Works by student choreographers Liz Baron, Ann Mischica • and K~lhy Troughton of Newport Beach, Toby Clements and Don- na Uchizono of Costa Mes a, Alvin Mayes and Toula Thompson of ( Santa Ana and Donna Kulla of Huntington Beach will be fj performed. ~ "BAREL \' BALANCED:' "Bon-Dangle." "In Broken Form," · Jusl a Way to Make You l "nder!-ttand." "'N1ghl Song," •·on the \'crge of Never Gettmg It," "Spectrum," and "'Two Girls for Every Boy" are titles of the dances Tickets at $1 may be purchased al the college ticket office.in the admirul>tration building. SUNDAY BRUNCH AT THE ARCHES ''Newpor!·s. Finest" ''i\LLYSONS'~ R ESTAURANT Announces TIIE IR TRADmONAL E AST ER SUNRISE ENTREES I The C'lao;:.rr Marco f'olo Omelette· chicken, Plnm and broccoli. wlmornl'Y 53U<'C', whrle che-ese and ham. IT Th<' Prt'l C'nl 11)11s Srinach Sou rrte Marquis:. v. poiichcd egs;:, morncy ~.iucc. v.hrlc chee:.e and ham Ill Tht> Hli::h Pl1•a-.urc Egg'> Alc~ander: two poached 1•g.l(s on ar lrchokt• hearts i;erved over &pmacb. v. lloll<Jnda1M.' ~aun·. <'<lpt!r '> and ham ... I DANA TRADER RESTAURANT II Invites You To Join Us For ALL E:\TREES l'\CUIDE FRESH FRUIT ,,ND SOUit D<ll GH ENGLISH Mt;FFl;\S 16278 P•cohc Coast Hwy• Huntington Ben • (213) 592·1321 3901 E Coast Hwy.• Corona Del Mer• (714) 675-0900 111JSt€R(iS t!'{ediwJranr ~ (f oehitilJ SPECIAL EASTER BUFFET DINNER ...... ROAST IEIF, IAXED HAM AND TURDY .ft.US SALAD I.Alt $495:;... .~~ j# .................. ...., Sptclal Lmc:a... ...... Na-,,port' I Blggelf Soup & Salad Bar I r.;;;vN1rwso~· I l,!t~~l 3100 .,..._ A•e. l .... wpcri IHCll Goff COWM) H!WPORT llACH 751·52ZJ H••• . I tran..,ort•tlon t , ,_,"1.n n,.~\)o OPEN FOR : llJ~ ::~~~~ 9 A.M. to 3 P.M. I AU &tries htc._. A Yilit To o ... Fnsh fnlit ...... try Ow Trodlrs Eyt-01Mfti1MJ lloody Mary COMPLETE DINNER MENU SERVED 4 to 11 P.M . Featuring Special 5-Stw AW91d Winning Eggplant Stuffed with Lobster, Q-ab & Shrimp CAU. POI llSllYAT'IOMS 34150 PAClflC COAST HWY. I DANA POINT 493-2603 CROWN HOUSE RESTAURANT 32'02 COAST HWY. LAGUNA NIGUEL !Al C.-Y...., ,_.,, 499-2826 . 49&-5773 EASTl!R SUNDAY BRUNCH 9:30 to 4 EASTER DINNER 4 to 11 Soual& Cooe•'• fllNNa C•ltl.ne EAST!R SUNDAY BRUNCH 10 to 4 EAITER DINNER 4to11:30 • • IVY HOUSE RESTAURANT II I It EASTER SUNDAY SUPPER Ope I :00 p.m.. lHenwffees WTI le •he rpl ... SAM PARSONS TRIO Entertaining From 7:30 I 0142 Ada!M (At Brookhursl) ·HuffllCjfoR lffdl '63·7120 £o.tJta-~. What b.tfD' ~ to crlebrate than at the NNparflr for btiJndt. A si'!{Ully opuknt ~ ef lnaplrtd eui&/11~. And cf aHDW\ t}~ tham~. A.olth, the clwmposnrl $.5.95 pm" ptnOn ($3.95 dul.drm UnMr 12) . nowERS• MUSIC• F.ASI'ER BUNNIES 110'1,Jtmboree 1tmd, Newport 81sicb ~ ' (71-0 666-1700 . - Served 1 a.m. to 3 p.m. \'our Reservation Number 675-6220 3.t21 Via Lido 1'ewport Beach ', Block From F.dward<; Lido Thf'aln- In Our Lounge LIGHTER THAN AIR loo4 trim. pod daaelq, .... tt-. . Complete steak cllD.Den: sp 17920 Brookhurst FOUNTAIN VALLEY I I . .. . r DAILY PILOT Friday, March 24, 1978 FOR YOUR FAMILY aster Sunday is a special day just for your family. And to keep it a mlly occasion, we're preparing a lavish Easter Sunday family dinner ffet, which will include roast lamb, roast beef, glazed ham, fresh ~ lads and much more. Entertainment by Marriott•s Famous Twin Piaoos PINH make your reservation• now by CAilling (714) 64().4()00, Ext. 6106 Singer Flack ·Only Wants To Be HerseH By DOLORES A.BARCLAY NEW YORK CAP) -The song stylist stood before the pinball machine. rhylhrolcally bumping her knee into the crazy technology to make the steel ball do her bidding. "Darn," Roberta Flack said mildJy, a& the ball rolled past the flippers and out of sight. She had only one more chance to reach 100,000 points and get a free ball. She took that chance. Pines pinged, bongs bonged. Every light in the 1ame came on with spurts of red, green and amber energy for a delighted player. A GENTLE SMILE SLOWLY made its way Roberta Rack claims she is bothered when 'people don't accept me as a person.' SINGER All SPORTS EVENTS GIANT 7 FOOT 1V SCREEN Mon.·lhur. 11:30 o.m. to 10 p.m. ni. & Sot. 11.30 a.m. to 11 p.m. COCKT Al LS ~~y 4 p.m. to 10 p.m. 9o93 E. ADAMS, HUNTINGTON BEACH 962-7911 across her face until her entire demeanor ahone as "=jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii bright as the pinball lights -as brteht aa her I award·studded career. "Charles.·m•t that "Wow," she said, as she zoomed over the free ball mark. "Now that's the way w really doll." The pinball empress left the still boiling Hen1ryVID at then· ftVf' table machine and poured herself a cup of coffee in the ~' . West Side restaurant she hkes to frequent. No one ith ft'9 : bothers her there. She can play pinball and is w.• someone nDil'fff"•' J! perm 1lled to be, well ... simply Roberta Flack. ~ n ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ''Itbothersmewhenpeopledon~acceptmeas ~orrrotr -L~-Q!2 . . ,. • . .... ~ ~..: . !1 . -. . . ... -• ~ • J:. ~ : f.. } . l . We want you to be part of our Easter Dinner. Easter Sunday, March 26, 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. The Plaza Ballroom For Reservations call 540-2500 and ask for catering NOW OPEN! OOUTM COR~T PLAZA MOTEL IN ORANGE COUNTY VOESU~N IN'nRNATIONAL ltO'l"ECS ~ P.'!1 lne<S '" ".,...,. w Ill Ur-ll'd ""'"""!> .,, San Diego Freeway at Bristol. Costa Mesa. California ON THE BEAUTIFUL BACK BAY OVERL()()(ING YACHTS PASSING BOATS NEWPORT BEACH • <Formerly Dul fy's) EXJRAORDlllARY SEAFOOD GIANT MAINE LOISTERS-UP TO 5 LIS. Stand-Up . O,ster Bar ALSO USD,A PRIME STEAKS SALADS • POPOVERS FANTASTIC DESSERTS I SUNDAY BRUNCH 1D All • 3 .. FROM s 2.25 I $ Adjoining the Restaurant MAD ANTHONY'S DISCO NIGHTLY FOR DANCING DIRECTIONS: 103 NO. BAYSIDE OR. JUST 30 SECONDS INLAND FROM CORNER Of BAYSIDE & PACIFIC COAST HIGHWAY AT (RUBENS) PHONE 17141 640-5123 OPENS MARCH 28 thru APflL 30 ·.) a person," she said between sips. "Some people want me to be Roberta Flack performer, with cmffed hair and long, painted fingernails and lots or makeup . "I think it's important to be around me when I'm Roberta Flack the person. I've been very blessed. There's a lot of spai:e when I'm just me. l 'm not on stage all the time. NO, SHE ISN'T. SOMETIMES she's half way round the world in concert. Sometimes she's in the studio makmg a record. Sometimes she's home, quietly writing poetry or thinking about the book We don't promise you'll sec royalty at The Five Crowns. But our Roast'd Duckling is something even a fickle monarch would fall head over heels in love with. So dine nobly. At the most authentic 12th century · coach house this side of Buckingham. FIVE~s :~: 3801 East Coast Highway. Corona dcl Mar. (714) 675-1374 that's paw~g inside he~ Sometimes she's com· ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ municating with her piano. And sometimes she·s ..: engaged in a program for the community . And with all that, she works on her doctorate at the University of Massachusetts . Al the moment, she's busy promoting her latest album, '..:Blue Lights in the Basement," her second self.produced record pro1ect. IT IS A MUSICAL JOURNEY through the simplicity and elevation of love and the twists and plun~es of being apart. The vocals have that dis· tinct1ve Roberta Flack easiness -that ability to project a quiet suffering and carry pain elegantly The ab1hty to go from a husky but gentle hum to a near.gospel high. lier last album, "Feel Like Makin' Love," came oul in 1975. Many artists have suffered from !-.Uch lcn1,rthy lapses between recordings, including Grammy winners like Ms. Flack. But she has little to worry about. nlE PINBALL EMPRESS SMILED again. She had a confession: She wants to start writing her own material. "It's the kind of art form that constantly takes you back to where you ca me from." Ms Flack said. "ll s the one most natural to me -the Negro spiritual I hear it in m>· head." "OUJolGlC 494-8088/9 )40 !> C:04 ST HWY, l..A-llAC:H <>,_ 24 Hou" '"····~ ,....,...._ SALOON l l· "'''"'""'" h4\11ri11· 111 0111 \\h.1kr.. ~.111111\ ,. :1111l ll11hit• ( ;11 'il.i111w" M.it HH·\IN\11-:'H Adults Children (under 12) ORANGECOUNTYBALLROO 11 :00 AM to 4:00 PM. HOLIDAY MENU • Dinner Music by the PAaFIC STRJNG QUARTET EASTER BUNNY 4 FAVORS FOR THI: KIDS. ~ SPECIAL EASTER MENU Brunch -10:30 AM to 2:30 Pl'6 music by fred Libby .ii 1he •'Cr11nd" Dinner -5'Cl0 to JO·OO PM Big Band with Ket th Williams -8 JO lo 11·30 PM Rexrvations Requested -Call 752-8777, l:.xt Ill~....---- THE REGISTRY HOTEL 18800 MacArthur Boulevard• Irvine, California 9271 S Taste France With Friends l We want you to meet our famlly. lhay're not all French, but they know how to serve French Food. Not Fancy, but Friendly. Good service ls as Important as good food. Come to Le Blarrttz., a llttle bft ot Fronce In Newport Beach. You'll be dining with friends. l , • ' ,.. I ' J n, -.. . ........ ' ...... -........ INTERMISSION I MISCELLANY Caritone~ Food .,. Hf here or take home PleaSant Fare Mesa StagiDg Slightlf Amiss STAG CHINESE CASINO 111 21st Pf., Newport Be.ch ORlole 3-9S.O .._ te...,....... O~Wnlcetlds Uetll 1:00 G.M. o•• n n.u\ 1M ~ ....... Served from, 3 pm SPECIA L EARLY SHOW PHONE FOR RESERVATIONS 540·2475 ~b4 7 M"CAATHUR 8Ll/0 NEWPORT 8EAC.H ' 1~ ... TJ' Tom Jones will be hos t of NBC-TV's ··The Midnight Specwl" from 1 to 2 30 a m Saturday on Channel 4 . The ~rngcr \\ho wtll lour l h c l r11 led States lh1~ ) car, will s ing songs from his recent albums. Dea/TV Player AtGWC T he ooJy t btnf sUghtJy a m iss la a n otherwise noteworthy production ot "JnvJtatlon to a March" at Costa Mesa Civic PJaybouao la. a program note which reads. "The tiqie la t.be present." Arthur Laurent.a' fragile treatise od class warfare first appeared ln 1880 (jUft a rear before his magnificent ''West Side Story' blt the screen), but his characters are all ruattives from the Forties. They arf) cardboard cutout! from another era, dressed in cnodem •lllre and manipulated by a well-balanced flat skilled in presentational staging. Intermission Tom Titus It is not an easy assignment. Laurents talks to the audience through his characters in poetic platitudes suggestive of Saroyan. E motional in- volvement, to a large extent, is kept simmering on the back burner. Nevertheless, director Pali Tambellini has turned Utls low-key exercise in rhetoric into a pleasant and humorous, if n ot e ntirely dramatically substantive, production. Jack Murray's two-phased setting is richly attractive and well defined from the neatness of the well- heeled tourists' side to the clutter and character of the more down lo earth landlady's. II:==~=============== Kevin Van Wieringen, ~ 21 year-old deaf actor TOP HONORS IN the neatly arranged Costa Mesa ensemble are difficult lo assess. However, Diana Spencer as the unconventional landlady with an illegitimate son and Joanne Wolcott as her primary antagonist (for reasons which soon become obvious) are first rate, and perhaps a cut above the balance of the company jl 11 A Dining Experience Beyond the Expected for Eabte1· four lovontc cuisine: steak. chicken, .,rofood, delicate :;oups, classical salads; r r rx:r1.:d to r.lcaso your palate. Ser1ed m the ombJenct1 of mcst beautiful orii:mtal !;Urrou1.dmq:;. Mako your rcsl.:fvations now ! r n truly i.:n1oyablu dining experience. Opu1 on Ec::;tc r Sund:iy from 4:30 p.m. .0 1rnn1at11 EASTER BRUNCH 9:31 UU:tl P.Jl r resh Strawberries or Peach in Champagne Hot Blueberry Muffins & Buttermilk Btsclllts EUVEH SELECT fNTltHS FttOM WHICH TO CHOOSE Serving Dinner 4 to 9 P.M. Featuring Roast Leg of Lamb EAS'l'ER AT CHANTECLAIR lJinncr will nc served from =~o'clock. In the afternoon unlil 9 o'clock Jn the evening. I\ very special menu will be offered for the occasion. Reservations. please. 714·7!>2·8001 1sm2 Mac Arthur Blvd 1rv1nc who playt'<.i in a recent episode of the NBC-TV :serie:., "James at 15," wall appear at Golden West Col l e~e next Thursday The deaf actor will meet with sign language and theater art students al noon m Math/Science room 123. The session 1::. open to the public I N T HE television show, Van Wieringen co- starred \\ith the series Jead, Lanee Kerwin. Von W1cringen, deaf sinn· birth, was 4 years old bl'forl' di scovering his dc-afnl'sS. H e at· tended a sC'hool for the d t• a f 1 n Vancouver, Wash . where he was ac- ln t• in sports, Mudent gove1 nm<'nl , social af- ' fa irs ;.ind CIC'lmg as a member of the schocl drama club lie then attended Cal State Northridge, which hac; a special program Jor the deaf -Tickets ~ Ready for Jazz Fest Robbi Schoonover handles the most stereotyped role in the play, the high-born socae- C:.mlll• J•Dl-1. ... .. • • Llly8ro..,., ........ • .. . C•r~ Brown .... . OeeOetGf'09"n ....•• Scl\uyfer G<09o'n... . • .. Norm• Brown .. A•ron J•Dlons~I • Tucur Gr-' .... THI!: C.UT . ....................... 01-~·· • • • • • .. • ROOlll Sc-.OWI' . Jetl Lu .. .,, • Jool-WOl(O!I l(evln Mlc,...t• • • • • .. • • 1Cue<1 Llnclen .... . ..... ·:· . ".'1J~r.::,~~ ty s nob, with fine comi<.' finesse Ted Knorr -..lrongly interprets Mis:. Wolcott's more worldly husband, while young Jeff Laurus b quite effec· live as MissSchoonover's bratty offspring. Much of the play's focus is on the romantic trianE!le involving the progeny of the three mothers. These roles are deftly handled by three fine young talents -Greg Carlich as the beachcomber type, Karen Linden as the vain, \ apid society belle and Ke vin Michaels a s her :.tuffy flance GARLICH AND !\llCllAELS display ad mlrable skill in their roles as rivals. estabhshmg their charaeters easily, and with a degree of confident restraint. Mi ss Linden, however , is truly memorable as she breathes life into wh~t. as written, is a rather one. dimensional character. Thls, in essence, 1s whal the entire Costa Mesa production docs wilh Lauren ts· play. and the result is a mOt"e enjoyable evening than might be imagined. Performances continue Fridays and Saturdays at s·30 in the Communi· ly Center auditorium on the Orange County Fairgrounds. Tickets are on sale for Orange Coal>t College's l Ot h a n n ua I J a z z Ens em • 9iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ble Festival scheduled I for April 6-8 in t he auditorium, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Appearances by the Diz1y Gillespie Quartet, the Phil Woods Qwntet, the Shelly Manne-Kenny Burrell Ra y Brown Band, and the Thad .Jones and Mel Lewis Band \\tll highltght the event Tu:kl'ts for each eve- ning c·oncert arc $4, while the afternoon concert 1s priced al $1.50. Tickets are on sale al OCC 's Ticket Office, located in the college's administra- tion building. Happy Easter OfllMIH~ IAIJ. Y EASTll SUNDAY CHAMPAGMI SUHDAY llllUHCH Fr.- t :OO A.M. 64Z·JOI Z7J5 W. Coat Hwy. Newport leech • • • • : •• • t)' * The BOYD GARRISON DUO * DANCING It .ENTERTAINMENT TUESDAY THRU SATURDAY 8:30 PM-1:30 AM ~~n••0•11n•I! l'•IJulouat Boat •h<>w In \hf' CollMYI w, rovld Wll •11 \hf> " •<l1r1·11w~ ... IJtO .,., .. won'\. All •• .. ,. It el'mct In. e• '"' tuur.,•11 \\, 1111nk ¥1\u'll eotnr b•f'tl "11.,n. Oanctn11 M .. r.ftu·rt.1n• 1no·n1 "" ""'' 'uu'll II\• pln .. 1\lly d•lllhL•d with. OIU ml)dtRlt' b<•.,, 1•111111' fHll"t •11\ltllllot, f Friday, March 2-4. 1978 OAJL '(PILOT C..J 'rou ••• " Keepeyou on top of the loc•I THE CHALET OPEN DA ILY G A.M. to Z A.Z.f. 1-'or Your Drrnkrna Pleasure \'OU"U..UKE OUR EARLY BIRD PIUCES FROM I to 11 A..M. DinlnJ • Nightly D111cln1 To Tbe Catuall Jam SHsion Every Sun. 4 p.m. to! t'uturiog Exotic Belly-Dancer HADJA ~•·ltK ~lerSunJa';f On :J/ie Bag CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH •.....•.. From 9:30 A.M . DINNER ...... -.. From 4:00 P.M. 2607 W. Coast Highway 646-0ZOI SPEND EASTER AT z;4irporter q 1111Cflotel POOLSIDE CHAMPGNE BUFFET 10 A.M.-2:30 P.M. Mediterranean Room Easter Sunday Bl'\Jnch 10 am to 3 p.m Dinner 5 to 10 pm. 18700 MAC ARTHUR BLVD. IRVINE. CALIFORNIA f01>P0\1ll~ Ornnqe County Airport I (714) 833-2770 Make this Easte r a d e lightful festive o ccasio n SerW!d from 2 pm Served from 4 pm MOON RAKER • PLANKHOUSE • • 18542 Mac Arthur Blvd. • 6060 Wa rner Ave. • Irvine • Huntingto n Beach • • 833-9600 • 842-5111 • Phone for Reservations [ERIYAKI STEAK .~ A delicious Teriyak1 Steak, prepared lhe $2 651 way you like ti. <1nd served with crisp green salad or home made soup rice pilaf or choice of potato. roll and butter. • · ., Served Friday and Saturday from 3 p.m. to 10 p.m. 1 SPIRES·i COSTA MESA IRVINE ~ It's EotJt:er at Grandma'• Housel ~menu ~ Cheese and Cra ckers, Split Pea Soup, Baked Ham, two Garden Vegetables. Applesauce, Mashed Potatoes and Gravy, Corn Bread and Hc-Qeybutter . $595 ~ .Ji\ ... Our~l ~~hours~ \~~~ will be from 12·9pm . · · ~ Please coll ~orly for your reseruat1on. 3010 Harbor Bl•d., Co•ta MeH (71 t ) St9·0319 \ I I ' I 0.\IL Y PILOT Friday, March 2'. 1971 A Bit Routine : 'Gray Lady' Adventurous 0 Rarely bave I seen anything • mov· Ing •••• At tbe cen&er oC •comlnl Home's' power there ls a petfotmaate by Jan Voight that strikes a blo}' CO the heart wlth da.ullng Impact • • • • ' -Reir llMd N.V. Dally Ntwt By BON PENNINGTON n. ........ ....- The Walter Mlriscb production of "Gray Lady Down," a Miriach Corp. presentation for Universal, is a somewhat routine but effective search·and-rescue picture involving a downed •nuclear submarine. The screenplay by James Whittaker and . Howard Sacltler, adapted by Frank P. Rosen- berg and based on the novel. "Event 1000," by (A Quick Look .at the Movies) David Lavallee, concentrates pretty much on • the efforts to rescue the men who are trapped • on the submarine, which is perched on the ledge : of an Ocean canyon. • A few personal conflicts are hinted at but never developed to any extent as the emphasis is on action and not character drama. ON TIDS LEVEL, the film works W1!ll and the rescue operation is logically and believably developed in both the script and in David Greene's straightforward direction. although : neither manages to create much tension. It's all : a matter of how the job will be accomplished. ; The script allows for little more than basic : characterizations and the cast goes through its paces accordingly. serving the purpose in a credible manner. Charlton Heston stars as the captain who is making his last voyage, wltb Ronny Cox as the executive officer who is scheduJed to take over command of the submarine (a conflict between the two begins to develop, but is quickly passed over in favor of an underwater landslide). STACY KEACH IS IN charge of the rescue operation, which is effected by David Carradine · and Ned Beatty in an experimental underwater vessel called a ''Snark" (the end credits assure us that this vessel is now an operational re· .tlity). Stcvan Laroer's photography is pro· "FOR PURE EXCITEMENT 'THE FURY' IS RELENTLESS. This Parapsychic chiller bolts from the gate so fast that there's no time to ask questions; you just hang on helplessly for the ride. With superb cinematography, and a knock-down John Williams score, 'The Fury' careens with a feverish energy." '"THE FURY' IS FINE POPULAR ENTERTAINMENT. ·Kirk Douglas mobilizes a kind of crazy energy he has not displayed since he was a much younger actor. John Cassavetes is deliciously evil. AN ENGROSSING THRILLER." -l?ichord ScNcitel. rme MoQazlne "'THE FURY' IS A FURIOUSLY-PACED THOROUGHLY GRIPPING PSYCHOLOGICAL THRILLER. A handsomely crafted. unusually tantalizing movie.'' -Kathleen CooOll. NY News "'THE FURY' IS AN EFFECTIVE THRILLER ... Brion De Palmo is one of the best directors in film ... Kirk Douglas is superb ... Corrie Snodgress makes an engaging return to the screen .. .Arny Irving i$ excellent as the psychic girl...lt all works well with a spectacular finish ... " ALL VERY CHILLING." "'THE FURY' WAS FUN. I WAS ENTERTAINED. "'THE FURY' IS SO EXCITING AND SUCH A TRIUMPH OF STYLE THAT THE LESS RMALED ABOUT ITS PLOT THE BETTER. There's all manner of action and adventure: Something exciting or suspenseful is happening In everr, fast moving sequence. • I must cont ess that the film as a whole tended to absorb me Into Its wild fancies. Kirk Douglas and John Cassavetes are excellent." -AN:Jrew Sarris, VilloQ& Voice -Kevin Thomas. Los Angele$ rimes "'THE FURY' IS SO STRONG-NO HITCHCOCK THRILLER WAS EVER SO INTENSE, WENT SO FAR, OR HAD SO MANY 'CLASSIC' SEQUENCES." R A FRANK YAl3LANS PRESENTATION A l3RIAN DePALMA FILM THE FURY KIRK DOUGLAS JOHN CASSAVETES CARRIE ~l\ESS CHAALES DUl\NING AMY 11\VING ANDREW STEVENS Produced by FRANK YAOLANS Directed by BRIAN DePALMA Executive Producer PDN PREISSMAN Screenplay by JOHN FAAAIS Based upon hi~ novel Music JOHN WILLIAMS Soundtrack Album on Al\ISTA l\ECOROS & TAPES~ •• . ©1978 ?Otl'l CENTUP.Y·F'OX COLO!\ OY O@LUXE ® .. If llMU •tCOM,..YI• mtartUDllt UUAllOIU -9 NOWSMOWING BRISTOL CINEMAS CosJp Mesa 540-74A4 CINEOO.ME Orange 634-2553 $TADIUM DRIVE·IN Orange ·. ~9 .. 1860 ,, MOv1e REVteWs MAH'S ''AM CINOOlANO CAM HOT WAX~ _._..... ·&PCil· ltllk....., ........ ... ,.1 . ' MAO'S CINEMAUND Wkll#MI Allllll• m.1tr1 MANN'S CINOOUND MllS. .... NI llHtl• UHM! ... ....---...... ..... -...e.M .... ••~1 $ ( .,..., •t••···· 494·1614 •OSCAA~­"'THI CiOODITI 4MRL" IPGJ ..._.,. ... ., .. ur.+--1:1w.1...,1._,...,..,,~ ----J S c "'"" -l'U\'OlfA (IJ "' ...... "SA Y1111DA Y Nle+tT FIT&-494· 15t4 ,._111M:l9 •~c· ,,,,.,. 496 1253 14y.,__,,,~ .. ~ .... ........ ---"OH GOD" CPGJ fi:IZ1l1:11iiriiiiEiiiilau.sariii:IJ1~~s%rlll1PG~•~~J ·-~ii .............. DU lflN MO" MAH "SflAIOHf flMI" (IV -~ "Tltf llU" 19' walfn ""'"""u .. CASITI IHADOW" <"> -111- "'TOU UIMf IJ' MY Uh" IHI --·--°' "0059~tNI "VI ... IWIMUCllll'" CNI ... lllTitOlM "IUUIOUOW't•I "ut "ftllllll AND llOllnllr !NI .. IKARltOAID" tNI ...... "'ltOUDCOAS111" (Nt ................................. ..... - • , I GALLERIES I MISCELLANY f ~tos on Display at OCC Chicagoan to Present Lecture at College PHOTOGRAPHY -Chicago photographer 1lhrbara Crane will display work Monday through Aprll 14 at Orange C.Oasl <Allege Photo Gallery, Fine Arts Building, 2701 Fairview Road, Co6ta Mesa. She will dl.scuas her work Galleries I Exhibits ®ring a 3 pm. lecture Wednesday in Fine Arts ffall, room 116. Gallery hours, 8 a.m. to s p.m .. .Mondays through Fridays. Information SS6·S629. . PAINTINGS, PHOTOGRAPHS -Oil paint· angs by Cec Coburn and photographs an color by Bob Eppers through April 3 at Glendale Federal Savings and Loan Art Gallery, 100 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach. Hours 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Mondays through Thursdays, 9 am. to 6 p. m. Fridays. LECl'URE -An illustrated lecture, "Land or the Pharaohs," 8 to 10 p.m. Wednesday, Mills House Art Gallery, Village Gfffn, 1Z132 Main St., Garden Grove. Currenlexhibit, "Imprints," at the gallery. Hours noon to 4 p.m. Thursdays through Mondays. Information 638·6701. PAINTING WORKSHOPS -Fint of four weekend landscape painting workshops by watercolorist Milford Zornes at Orange Coast College, March 31-April 2. Workshop hours, 7-10:30 p.m. Fridays, 9 a .m. to 5 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays with critiques 7 to 10 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays. Each workshop $25. Registration at Admissions and Records oftice, 2t01 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Other sessions scheduled April 7-9, April 14-16 and April 21-23. Information 556-5880. COLLABORATIVE EXHIBIT -Photo· graphs, sculpture and video installation by artists Ilene Segalove and John Arvanites, UC Irvine Fine Arts Village Gallery, noon to S p.m. Friday, March 31 through April 22. Gallery hours noon to 5 p.m. Tuesdays through Saturdays. A "Wortd'1 G""'"' lo•er" y ''USU ausr· 1N1 UMA WEllTMUUBt'S MIXED MEDIA -Exhibit of watercolors. oils and acryllcs by Elizabeth Longrid1e through May 2 at Newport Beach Police Depart· ment, 870 Santa Barbara Drive, Newport Beach. NAVAJ0'8 WORK -Indian artist R.C Gorman al Muirhead Galleries, South Coast Plaza, 3333 S. Bristol, Costa Mesa, through Thursday. Hours 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday~ through Fridays, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturdays. noon to Sp m Sundays. PAINTINGS, GRAPHICS -Vida Jlackman's wor~ at Wei;t Coast Gallery, 2700 West Coast Highway, Newport Beach, through April 30. Hours 11 a m to 6 pm Mondays through Saturdays, l p.m to s p.m Sundays GRAPHICS, PAINTINGS -Work of Peter Keefer through April 10 at Flavia Gallery, 4945 Warner Ave .• Huntington Beach. Hours 10 a m to 6 p.m. Tuesdays through Saturdays. :Mllne Co. Slates Fullerton Show The L.A. Mime Co. will perform at8p.m. Fri- day. March 31 at Cal State Fullerton's Plummer Auditorium. The quintet of rnimes, Albert Cirimele, Tina Lenert •. Katee McClure, Tommy McLoughlln and Mitchell Young-Evans, specialize in con- temporary comedy sketches. They also do mime in stories dealing with such "unusual" characters as an outer space in- vader, flu bug and Count Dracula. L.A. MIME CO. is accompanied by a live combo that produces music and a variety of sound effects. Tickets are $4 public, $3 CSF students , faculty and staff. Further information is available by telephoning 870-3371 or 8711·3347 weekdays between 11 a.m. and 4 p.m. "HIGHT FULL OF RAIN" ,., edwards NEWPORT edwards HUNTINGTON HlARCOAST HWY.lrMACAITHUlt HACH AT lUIS. H.I. HWro&1'0Cllm'TD 644-0760 141-0lll ' Fndey, Ma~h 24 1'178 OAfl y PILOT C7 iP/ays Honors Due CONTEST JUDGE Shirley JonH 9riginal Works to be Recognized ~ Actress Shirley Jon<'s and come· Nancy Ebsen, wife of act.or Buddy dlan Marty Ingels will be among Ebsen and a children's theater celebrity judges at the ftrsl Onginal specialist, and John Greiory, Playwrieht.s Festival awards recep-television producer, will also act as tlon next Thursday in Garden Grove. Jud1es. The champagne r ece ption is Village Green Arts Alliance and scheduled for 7:30 p.m. at the Garden Garden Grove Community Theater Grove Community Center, 11300 have aided the alliance with the Stanford Ave. festival. THE FEST IV AL. sponsored by the Orange County Arts Alliance, honors persons who have created an original manuscript for future production as a play in categories described as comedy. musical comedy. drama and theater for children THOSE WHO WIN first pttzes will have their work performed by a com- munity theater company in Orange County. Orange <Aunty Alliance Is a non- profit organization composed of 75 cultural and performing arts groups. "A thoroughly infectious co01edy ... You don't have to know a nose wheelie from a tail spinner to enjoy 'Skateboard."' -Kevtn Thomas. Los Angeles Times slim•! A ~~m~~M ~Hl~~( I~ ~rnM ~~ijij~ ~~ij~~~llml AlUN ~ARflHD Ill~ KAlHlHN ll~Y~ also sl111111 Ulf GARRHl ad 111ro~1c111 ~~ of America ·s ~reatest ~~ate~oar~ers. 1ncld111 rnNY AlVA ad HUN ONfAL ~ttmfl~ ~, m~~~~~ !.Wmf Jd ~m~m ~!~f . ~,.;,,,~I~~~~ wmr . M1m ir M~~~ ~~~w . ~Httlei ~I ~rn~~f ~~~f ~aim~ ir ~~~~~~.~WM ad ~j~~AA~ ~.Wmf · lf~~~l~m~r ~G P1~01~a~ s~omrsUG;E\no:~ I 111.0 'Ml lh•OP~lllM:>< NO'lft, _, SOl.OC)IUICtf t.18UWOlo ~ PICOOllS & t.s>{S( e.t11 UNIVEASAl C1TY STUO<OS INC UA CITY 2 Orange 634·3911 ORANGE MALL •J. Orange 637-0340 NOW PLAYING ANAHEIM DRIVE·IN #3 Anaheim 879-9850 SADDLHACK # 1 El Toro 581·5880 EDWARDS BRISTOL CINEMA Santa Ana 540-7444 EDWARDS WESTBROOK Garden Grove 530-4401 CINEMAUND #J' Anaheim 635-7601 (":J DAILY PILOT f rtday. Match 24 1978 ROCK TALK 'Comeback' Albums Really Aren't By USA ROBINSON A few weeks ago, Billy Joel told me. "This busmes1 l!I so strange If the next record I put out isn't .ts big as this one, 1t wall be considered a bomb And tht>n if I have another tut in a few years, 1t will be considered a 'comeback' " Thal ~ol me thinking Already people in the music industry have referred to a few albums about lo be rcieased Bruce Spnngsteen, Path Sm 1th, David Johani.en to name a few -as "comebacks," when that's not really the case at all Brul·e Springsteen was prevented from re· cording for over a year because of legal hassles . ' with hiis former manager Mike Appel. It was a sticky situation which took qwte a long time to resolve (CBS Records a nd lawyers finally "orkcd tt out. with a production deal for Appel as part of the setllcmcnl). But it was over two • and a half years between albums for Bruce. WITll PRODUCER Jon Landau. Bruce hegan lo record on June I, 1977, first at Allan [...__R_o_c_K_T_A_L_K_ ... __ ] tu:'s :'\cw 'i ork studios, then at the Record Plant Now, afll'r <·ight months m the studio • •"1th soml' ttml' off to wntl· and rest> they say thl•v're about fin1:-.ht:<l. and the record is expecl- l'd m /\pnl JI owevt•r, a II the ti me that Bruce couldn't rc<'ord, hl• performed in the U.S .. and kept his ~pints. "l'll, 1f not exactly "up," at least phllo:-.oplucal about his recording future. When Pall• Smith s uffered a fall from a Tampa :-.l.tgt• last .January, she broke her neck and was out of commission for over six months. She had to stay home m New York. wear a neck hrat'C', and rccovt'r but Patti used that Lime to rnmplt•tc her book of poetry (''Babel," re- . lt:a~crl rt.'l'cntly by Putnam), wnte new songs • for ht'r LP ("Easler." released this month by : \ns tal and work in a new band member, : kt>) bo:.ird player Brute Brody. SHE ALSO DID the occasional gig around '\c\\ Yori... ut the Elgin Theater and CBGB's. BARBARA JANE BOOKMAN. HER DADDY OWNS THE TEAM. SHE CAN PlAY WITH THEM ANY TIME SHE WANTS TO. ~ • r Considering her plight, Patti certainly put her recovery period lo good use. Her album. produced by Jimmy Lovine and recorded at NY's Record Plant, is great, and plans are un- der way tor a ttlgh-level tour David Johansen never 1topped performing with a changing lineup still called the Dolls until he was ready to make his own solo record. He also had to wait for a release rrom a former management contract until he sl,-ned with Blue Sky Records. Now managed by Steve (Johnny Winter, Edgar Winter, Rick Derringer) Paul, he's recorded that album with producer Richard Robinson (also in NY's busy Record Plant). Backed by his new band: Johnny Rao (guitar). Thomas Trask (guitar), Buz Verno I bass). and Frankie La Rock a (drums). David's done his great rock and roll songs like "Frcnchelle," "Funky but Chic," "Cool M ctro," "Girls" and other favorite~ with Johansen fans who continued to see him perform during the period of over two years when he didn't record. WHAT A PLEASURE to have these three a lbums <plus a new Television and new Rolling Stones) to look forward to this spring. In Pans, the Rolhng Stones are finishing re- cording their as-yet-untitled LP, and Mick Jag- ger and Gerry Hall continue to dodge photog- raphers. Although the Stones' routine is mostly studio. sleep, studio. sleep. they manage to go BRISTOL AT MAC~RTHUR 540-7444 out once m a while. Mack and Ron Wood even got to the Moulin Rouge one night TM album is said lo sound very "R&B, .. and will be out -it as hoped by Ma~ Hooray for Hollywood. Aerosmith sang .. Come Together" m the "Sgt. Pepper" him where they play vallatns who wear Nazi-type uni- forms and try to destroy hero Peter Frampton According to Joe Perry. they had a "ball" film- ing, even lhough they had to gel up at the un- godly hour of 7 a m for makeup, stand under the lights all day until 8 p.m., then return to their hotel lo pass out. Life of Danger From T .C .. In Chicago: What's Led Zep- pelin doing'? No real news yet from Led Zep, a lthough they do plan to record as soon as Jim- my Page finishes that studio in his house. They've discussed no lour plans at all, and un- less they finish that album and get It out fast, don 't expect lo see them onst.age here in 1978. Linda Purl lives a hfc full of danger in "Little Ladies of the Night" to be telecast as "The ABC Monday Night Movie." The l!l~~I~~~ !'!r a 30 day ad in lhc DAILY PILOT SERVICE DIRECTORY DOlTNOW' 642-5671 Showtlmes Wed/Sun 2:00. 4:15, 6:30. 8:45, 11 :00 Mon/Tues 7:30. 9:45 drama airs9p.m. l\Ionday. Channel 7. · ''A Funny Movie But Too Many Laughs .•• keeps the Jokes comlng at such a furious pace -one- llners on top of sight gags on top of slapstick-that much of the soundtrack was repeatedly wiped out by the audience's laughter." Kc. suMMER'i Washington Po~,.. "If you want a respite from heavy films. lean back and laugh with 'House Calls' .. :House Calls' has an incurable case of Infectious laughter." "-,. ~ :.ac rv . WALTER '~91114 . RICHARb BENJAMINrn 1-0H CALLS' . ' "' Sc:eef11)1:iy by UAX SHU\~l'I 'Ji.UJS I rrsrt.11 a1111 At AN tlA~OH & D!AliUS SH'llR. • ~'Ofy by MU SHmWJ•' JULIUS J (PSIU'I . M.isic ~. Btliff'l llANtl'n. Productd by Atfl VllNll5JIY 41ld A~tl~ Sl.tlll<S. Drretled by Hll\'.lR:l /IHf l•Ptu!ii~P1mtiJll,WNGS LA~G · ~.1.l~lffl~.!'!f~~~ ~~~CE!,!• mi~~qq?$~~£l NOW PLAYING STADIUM DRIVE-IN Orange 639·8770 I . i )j I I I l . ~ ', COMEDIAN Professor Hard-hitting PROTOCOL TAKES PRECEDENCE OVER Corey Goes Somewhere to Get Nowhere PROCEOURE ' ~.JINI'.:~ By JERRY HERTENSTEIN OIU.Dlftyl"IMCIWI "Professor" Irwin Corey. At 64, thll atrag. gly-haired comic "genius" comes rilht out with hard-billing insults as be opens bis nl&htclub act and coven everyUUog from theory ol relativity to perversion. "The World's Foremost Authority•• spent the better part of 15 minutes at a recent Newport Beach appearance talking to a couple seated at the side or the Laff Slop sta&e before he finally took front and center. . He squinted and banged the palm or his Ind against his forehead. Al one point he E ed a door to the outside a.s lf to leave ... This e," the man in baggy pants and tennis s said with a sigh. "I cased the joint a few ~ks ago and the manager told me be put $18 into it." NEXT THE PROFESSOR had his bands · tpaether and looking rather pious said, "Let us P~fY· Here we are ladies and genUemen .•. Wtiatadump." Corey, on salvation, s11ys, "It is its own re· ward. MJQY of you people say what is be talking about. rm only repealing what Nixon said our forefathers taught him. 'they fought and bled' so we can live to fight and bleed." And on he goes. Now be is on center stage and taking verbal jabs at the piano player. "You ding-a-ling. What is this? Practice on your own time. ·~"-. "ARE THERE ANY questions?" be says, ~obing his rorertneer and thumb together. : .• "Whal is gravity?" someone asks. ~ .. All apples fell up." • There are other questions and with some 1Uwers Corey lapses into long explanations that o nowhere just like the absent-minded professor ep<>rtrays. DAILY MATINEES "CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE THIRD KIND" (PG' "Protocol." the prof says, "takes pre· cedence over procedure." Lona pause. "That dosen 't make a damn bit or sense. ''We have enough lime for one more ques· Uon per person," the profesaoraaya. "EXPLAIN REINCARNATION," a patron yells after the laughing has subsided. "l was 2,000 years ago a carrot now I'm a man," Corey says. Then he says, "We have only a few hours left.•• "Do you think priests should get married.?" "If they love each other." He switches from priests to doctors. "Only in America," says the professor, "do we gol the American Medical .Association. In Brazil, ab in Brazil ... the doctor gives you a dis· eue customary to what you can afford. You don't have a disease, he operates." Then Corey asks a quesWQo. .. ARE YOU IN show business?" he says to a man io the front row or the audience. The man shakes his head no. "Then get your feet off my stage, "Corey says. And of course there are many more ques· lions before Corey, looking tired and bored de· cides to end it. ' "I don't like lo talk about politics," he says in response to still another Inquiry. "It's not that 1 am against poliUc1, I'm against the parties." Then he says, "It's that you recognize the humor in this tragedy we are now ex- periencing. . . " And with that he's gone. Laughter ls long and the applause loud. The professor doesn't reappear. He's in a room off the kitchen watching the 11 o'clock news on television. NOMINATED FOR ACADEMY AWARDS Wf~~v:S~:~~:~15 Best Actreaa n------... ---------~ I Anne Bancroft --including--"HOUSE CAUS" (PG) Mo ·THuAs .SUN-11M 1M 1w 1s Beat Dir-tor FAI /SAT -2 IM IM IM 1~10:1$ .,.. MON rucs-14"50 Herbert Ro•• "CASEY'S SHA ¥WED -6UN -4 16"e1>6 MOH/T\JES -4i>!> "YOU LIGHT UP MY LIFE" W£0 .SUN -23CMI20-10 16 MOH /TUU.-4 1&-10 15 ' I NXI TY" (PG) WCO ·fHURS.al!N -11l0-2 s..4.&CM~40 l'Rl.ISAT-l 1l0-2 ~ ~ ~ 40-10 35 MON ·TUES -700-350 "THE FURY" (R WED. o&ll"' -I 00-3JG.e -OO-IQ:20 MOH./TUES.-7 .364.IO "SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER" (R) ftl> «IH.-1 2C)-3 ~1~.30 MQlll(TUE.$ -7:3CMl:46 .Utetl• ...... "RETURN TO WITCH MOUNTAIN" "NEVER A DULL MOMENT" (G) "SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER"(R) "LIFEGUARD" "THE ONE & ONLY" "ALOHA BOBBY & ROSE" (PG) "HOUSE CALLS" "SHAMPOO" (R) 'THE FURY" SU.dlum "THE REINCARNATION OF PETER PRouo·· "THE FURY" (R) "THE REINCARNATION OF PETER PROUD" ALL DRIVIMNS OP'U• 6:l0P.M. ... Nn.T Chlld Under 1 Z l'ru Unlftl • f(lcldi. ,.._.,,.._,.. Li' l~ /see}UVER REED C1099 his~ See RAQUEL WELCH aoM bei legs. I • See MASK LESTER croe8 hit fingers. r See ERNES;(BORGNINE qr>u his heart. And~GEORGEC/SCOTT. REX~N. DAVB)~INGS and C N HES'ION getd ' , Best Actress BFSf PICTURE Shirley Maclalne smRLEY MacIAINE Beach at Main Huntlnvton BHch 848-0388 • Friday, Man:h 24, 1978 is a good day to advertise in the Daily Pilot Classified Section. OAr-1 o --• ~ J ..... e...,. ,,, ............. : AN0111111WOP'lh !j-.,, ~ . , .... MA* ntlATUS .......... Ut-IJJt IDW AIDS tNU.TllS ~..... llNHt c-... W.t "l-44tJ ..... a.-646-011, ....... ~ 119-llM ................ ......... NOMINATED FOR ACADEMY AWARDS Including Best Picture Best Special Effects Best Sound Best Director -George Lucas PE:lffi CUSHING lTld /iW:. ~I Fri/Sat/Sun 12:00 • 2:30, 5:00, 7:30, 10:00 · Mon/Tue• 7:30, 10:00 ,)lEWPORT. OEll'l'llR, ee ••• • • • • • • • •• O''''"'"""'""' '-o• Newport Fashion Island Newp~rt Center Between MacArthur and Jamboree at Pacific CoHt Hlghwa)J 844-0780 ~ NOMINATED FOR dACADEMY AWARDS INCLUDING BEST PICTURE BEST ACTOR -RICHARD DREYFUSS BEST Aef1,ESS -MARSHA MASON tthe Goodbye Girl' Is a joyous comedy~ just what the doctor ordered. Neil Simon makes feeling good legal ... " GENE SHALIT, NBC· TV A P.AV 51AAK PRODUCTION Of A HERBERT ROSS AIM NEIL 5'MafS , 1liE GOODBYE GIRi: , RICHARD DREYRJSS ·MARSHA MASON and~ QUINN QJMMINCS•luo/ Wtbn lij NEJLSlrtm • Proclad .,., P.AV $TMl< • Dketted by HERBERT ROSS M*Scaa:I nl ~ b;D\VE GRUSIN • Sari•GofctiyeQr MdRab11111dbiJMllD~• e P.ASrAR •~by MGM Laba -. . I ·1 CJ9 DAil y PtLOT Television Friday. March 24, 1978 FRIDA\ EVENING l:OO I i :a NIW8 D EMEMEHOY ONEI A~ ftoin tn0"- M&Uon ...... the ttmellglll from Gege Md DeSoto QAM.,- TIE MADY IUNCH Bobby 9'ld Or-a IMk• • bet With the ioe.r twving 10 do ~ the Winner aaya for a WMlc. Gt ROOKIES A dope addict trlee lo 1IMI 12,000,000 worth or c:oc:alne from the police. f.aZOOM ~ Hl8TORY Of' MEXKX> ''First F'"'*°' And Pyt .. mid Bulldars'' a ASCNEWS 9:30 I HEAE AND NOW CONCENTMTIOH llL'WITCHED The High Prleste" of Wllehdom deltwonea Oar· rtn In hi• own cut le f1l) OVER EASY ~CONSUMER SUAVIYALKfT "Secood H~. c.Jc:ula- IOfl, M.oleal 1n1u..nc.e' (I) UNTAMED WOALD Tangled Web •• M ITSUplala" 9 MERV GRIFFIN 7:00 8 THE MUPPETS au.I: Bernadette Pet.,s. Q N8CNEW8 Ron Rifkin and Jesse Wells portray one of fi vc couples m the new comedy series Hus~.mds, Wives and Lovers tonight at 10 on CBS, Channel 2. 0 UARSCLUB fJ A8CNEW8 0 BOWLING FOR OOUAR8 Q) I LOVE LlJCY Alcicy obJ4101a to Lucy's ·new 1()()1(,' a modl•h llohon boy haircut G) AOAM-12 On lemPOfllfY duty 81 L A Awpor1, the ott>Cef• deal 'W1th o runeway boy and a I heft till MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT ~ THE PRESIDENTS SCIENTIST Frank Press, OlrllCIOf of 1h8 While Houaa Olflc;e Of Sclef\Ce end T llCh.nOlogy PoUcy, candidly dlscu- tus role as lhe nation a numb« one M:lence adv•• or. Cl) JOKER'S WILD 7:!/IO fJ AU...a'TAA ANYTMING GOES D WllD KINGDOM "ael)hanll Of AmboMlr' 0 MEWL YWED GAME 0 «§l HOU.YWOOO SQUARES 6 JOKER'S WILD Q) THE BRACY BUNCH Cindy'a llC>PtNlfanC>e on • acllOol play c.u-• lam~y Cfl ... G> .AOAM--12 Reed'• overanxloua atuwnpt at a ten compll- ca1es the Clay for ti•m and his partner f1i) LA. INTI:ACHANGE lnlonned Sources·· a1) SPECW.. US. Senator S I, Heyak-• t• tntllfV!ewed by Jim Cooper on Ls.-ol concern 10 the nllloft and Channe l L t.dn 9• 8 KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles -U KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles -u KTLA(lnd.) Los Angeles U KABC·TV (ABC) Los Angeles (I) KFMB (CBS) San Diego t) KHJ·TV (Ind) Los Angeles @l KCST (ABC) San Diego Q) KnV (Ind.) Los Angeles Cit KCOP·TV (Ind) Los Angeles fli) KCET·TV (PBS) Los Angeles m KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntington Beach Blaek Fairy Tale CaltfO<nlL CJ)THEMuPP£T8 0.-1: JSY'9 P. MOfgan 1-00 I) CJ) HERE COMES P£TEA conOHTAIL Peter fall• to dellwr mOfe aoos lhan evil lrontall, bul 11 salted from dllgraoe by Mr. s ... a1Ya11 and hla lime ml!Ohlne. (R) Q QUAAI( All The Emperor·a Oullli· Norm•" Zorgan lh• MaleYolent <Rou Man~) wtll de91roy Quark uni.a ~ r-'• -•"It" Is Ou8t1c' I only tw>l)e II IO have Ficus, Ille plant, poltl- neta with Zorgan'a sen11r oua d11Ugntet. Je>11n Van Arlt guest stars. (Part 1 of 2) &) MOVIE •••~ "Ulles 01 Tne Field" ( 1963) Sidney ~Ille<, t.llla Skala A ~g black ex-G I helps "Ive refuoee nuna build a chapel In the desert (2 htl.) fJ «§ bONNV & MARIE ai.ata: Roy Clarti, Ruth &ul, Johnny OWtc G MOVIE • • •,. "Brotherly Love ( 11170) Peter O'Toole, Suunl'\ah Yortt A women It tom ~ h« men- tally Ill brother and her •lrallged hutband. (2 llB.) • CAAOI. 8UANETT AND,._INOI • MOW! • • '* "JUlll FOf You" (1M2) BlnO Croaby. J~ ~· .. ·-· thMlrl c:.i produofr llrugglea 10 find 1lrne tor hi• two ~ !fe ohlldren (2 IWL) • G WAIHtHOTON WIE< IN MV1lW a:ao D ~ 8HAAKEY "Punk Rock Sharkey·· ~ Shatkey Is on ,_ tltee Ind pint -11 l«•lty • wllefl he ~ 111> • l>rewl ~tile-Ina punk rock hlngOUI llnO ~wlnelhe'-1 of a 17.,...,-old punloe ~Liu Mof'dente) 9nd Ille -elh of her • llplcioo .. mother (CMriotte AM). •~WITS • WALL fT'MET WUK •·over-The-Counter Profitt" Ou.I: Ralph P Col«r\an Jr , pr .. ldanl, Ovw-~1., Securt· tleeFund,lnc ~ 8 Cl) INCAEDIBLE HUU< "The Player Murder When David Benner ~t he might eclually be the murder« ol • beau· tllul model wtllle lranl· tomled Into the Hulk, hit lnvetllgetlon gel• him tockad In a car'• 1Nnk, ~ '°' • cat c:f'U91Mf Loni An«Mnon, Jeremy Bren guMI alat. Q NCHIE BAC>a<tl.MAN "Junk n To Me Baby" Alchla, mysUllad by e cllen1'1 (Neh«nlah Persott) requeet, outbids two mean IO<*lng brul1«• on a '53 Sludet>alcer only 10 have lhe ,_ owner wan1 11 red~ 10 a cube ol SIMI 0 ®) A.BC MOVIE "Cindy' (Premiere) Char- le•ne Woodard, CUiton Davit A young Southern glrl learns wtlat 11 means 10 be a 1Cepchlld as Ille cling• 10 her dream ol meeting • pm~. In lhtl updated Clndarelle mull- cal-«>med)' ... In New York'• Harlem during W0tldWarll. Q) MEAIJ OAl~IN Gu.ts Millon Berle, Joey Bishop, A.ndy Gibb, Chila Alvera, Chris Ket'mo. 8:) MASTERPIECE THEATRE .. Anne Karenina' Anna heart about Vronsky's 111empted 1Uleld4!, Vrori- lky accept• a d111an1 errny poSI In Ol'der lo forge! her (Paf1 7 of 10) ~ AAINOLINE • A Debacle FOf Journal- ism The Aec>Otllng 01 The TET Oflen11ve" Guest. T U BE TOPPE RS CBS 8 8:00 -Here Comes Peter Cottontail. An animated Easter special, repeated for the young viewers. K1LA 0 8:00 -"Lilies of the Field." Sidney Poitier won his Oscar for hts role as an ex-soldier who helps five nW1S build a chapel in this 1963 movie. ABC D 9:00 -"Cindy," An all- black musical based on the Cinderella fable. (See review below). Pel« Breeelrup i0:00 e Cl) HU88AHOS, WIVD & LOV£A8 Or Ron Wllll• la dumbfCM.tndad 'Whl<'I he tloda hlmMll undll' arreec and charged With .....,,. Ing a voluf)u.oue Pl!llent In hill dental of11c9 Q OUINCY "NO Deadly Sacral" Ouincy 1 romanbe evening With • atewatdeN (Elaine Joyoe) .. lnlarrur>led wtMN1 • man, -aly beelen, appears at hit d00t. Ina Balin gueal llata (A) 0 NEWS D IOU™ AFRICA: A VIEW FROM THE IHSIOE Anne Kae11ner. KHJ reporter, pr_.,11 an up- to-dlla loot< 11 the l\lrmOll lhal Is gripplftg South Alrlea t Whlla minority government and llt black opponents. Cl) HONOR YOUR MOTHER ANO FATHER Compatslonate wav• ol C&flng f()( Ille elderly ara examined 1n lhtl progrom wtioen v11111 unique care c;«tl.,1 In MICNgan, IHln<lll and Montane m MICHAEL.JACKSON '11) WOOLD "~bl. Sport And Aevolu· tlon" Cuba's phen<>menal netk>nal 'POf1S program la modeled alter tnoae of the USSR and East Germany, 10:30 CD Cit NEWS SI MACH£IL I WiREA REPORT 11:00 fJ 0 U Cl) 0 NEWS 8 LOVE, AMERICAN STYLE "Love And The Pr-donr" A young boy goea oft exploring the While Houa. by himaell. "Love And Th• M'(9tic" A guy triM lo get nd ol hl5 glftlnend 0 MOVIE • '"' ··o.ath Dream" ( 11172) JoM Martey. Lynn Carltn Shortly aller receiving notice of their enllattlcl 1on'1 death, the boy returns home, br~lng ~ ror uwr family and deeth for the commu- "'IY C2hn) Q) THE 000 OOUf>LE Oecaf trlee 10 c-up hcl divorce IYom hit \/lairing J"'O'her by moving Fell• out and Ill• llJMl'lfa in C!) L.Er8 MAKE A DEAL fli) DICK CAVETT Gueat architect P1010 6oleft 11:309 (I) M 0 A.0 8'H "MafOr Fred C Dobbe" When Frank INaal-to leave. H1wk1y1 and Trapper John llnd II ~nt doul>'a duly fOI' them and lrMlnt a way to make him llay ~) G TOHtOHT Ho11· Johnny Carson. 0.-11 Miiton Berie, DI'. Lendon Smtih, Donna Pyle (with pet rooet.,). Marllyn HorM 0 LOVE, AMERICAN STYLE "LOY& And The Out-01· Town Clle!>t" A young eJ1ecutive plen1 to aurpriM h1awUe. U lm 8ARETTA · T hll GIOry G4lrntt ' When Tony It fr8111&d '°' the murder of • eusp&Cled gun dealer, he m1111 bllcome a fugitive to cleat his name. 8111 McKinney, Harris Yulln glJMI 11at (A) Q) OUTEJI LIMITS .. COunl..-ghl .. (I) GET SMART M 11X unkhOWlllgiy bu'(9 I vd.labla diamond wNcn IV.OS smuggler• planned to Wiii EEi CAPTIONED ABC NEWS 11:•15 m> MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT MORNING 12.-00 IJ TWILIGHT ZONE Maraha Whlla goes 10 a depart~• store to buy a goldthlmble C!) MOVIE • v, "Brelnl11e" ( 1968) Abel Saru.t, Carmen Monl•JO. · TV's 'Cindy' Lags .1 By JAY SllARBUTT ( f' LOS ANGELES (AP) -Broadway T'l/RE'f/'IE w· folks once made "The Wizard of Oz" i r r • into a sprightly. all-black musical, _ _ .. ..... • .. "The Wiz." Tonight, ABC airs a s imilar effort involving the "Cm dereUa" fairy tale at 9 on Channel 7. It's called "Cindy." It was written by Ed Wembergcr, James L. Brooks. Stan Daniels and David Davis, four eomcdy acl's ARC lured away from the Mary Tyler Moore works last year. With such talent. "Cindy" should be a great show, no? NO. THE SAD news is that most of the two-hour special moves at a pace that could prove a sure ctae for In- somnia. It's a shame, considering all the work the fine cast put into this musical comedy. Young Cbarlaine Woodard has the title role, playing a poor Southern girl who comes to Harlem lo live with her rather, stepmotber and two stepsisters during World War Two. Pop, played by Scoey Mil~hell , claims to be earning big bucks as a doorman at the Plaza Hotel (though as you learn, he actually works as a men's room attendant there). HE'S THE STOCK cliche of the henpecked black husband, forever bowing -with a few exceptions -to the will of his domineering second wife <Mae Mercer), Cindy's wicked step. mother. ''Nell·Rulh Carter and Alaina Reed a.re cast as Cindy's stepsisters, and • 'Company' Star Plam TV Movie LOS ANGELF.S (AP) -Johb Rtt .. ter, star of "Three's Company," will • play his first major dramatic role ln the ABC IDOYie .. Leave Yesterday Behind." It is filmed around Carmel. The :.. film is based on a true evdt lnvolv- !'" mg a young man crippled in a tall spend {:Onsiderable time tormenting the waif. Also in the cast are Cleavant Der- ricks as Michael, a draft-dodging chauffeur for Harlem's "biggest black market operation," and Clifton Davis as MarineCapt. Joe Prince. - YEP, THE CAPTAIN is the Prince Charming, but proves a parody of same. He's an egotistical, glib, rich and handsome war hero who fall.a in love with Cindy at the big dance, only to lose her at the show's finale. Other twists: Cinderella's famed glass slipper is a raggedy sneaker in this production, and her coach ls a limousine driven by Michael. The basic Cinderella plot Is followed, and there's no reason why this special couldn't have been as lively as "The Wiz." Alas, the direction by Billy Grtham is oddly listless for the m<>5t part, the five original songs by Stan Daniels are l,lDdislinguished and most of tl)e scenes seem lo drag on forever. THANKFULLY. TBER E are signs or life late in the program, as when Capt. Prince bires a private eye lo track down Clndy and is told the fee will be ''six dollars an hour and carfare." "Yoo rand me this girl and I'll pay you $1,000," be says . "And carfare?!' the gumaboe in· quires. Another good moment: A funny, surreal spoof olr• routine at an Army enlistm t center when Michael decides atop dodglna the draft and signs up lo ~rve b1a coun-try. The scene is tight, crisp and d fec- tive. And it makes one wonder Wt\f ln the -.forld the program's four authors couldn't have made all of "Cindy'' work this way. CHAALAINE WOODARD GOES FROM RAGS TO RICHES In Ghetto, With Prtnce cntton Devi• In 'Cindy' Hope to Emcee Oscars TV Data Service The Academy Awards celebrate their SOU, anniversary this year, and Bob Hope will be on hand as sole master of ceremonieA. Hope ls the performer who, over the years, bas been most closely as- sociated with the Academy Awards . He baa JDade 22 appearances oo the program, bas been a master or. ceremonies 15 times, and bas acted as sole emcee eight times. The Academy plans to give special attention to this year's show. "The Golden Anniversary Show ls ODt\ ~e hope to make particularly memora· ble, sa)'S Howard Koch , preslden.t of t he Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. The lrvioa G. Tbalbera Memorial .. Award. given to "creative producers whose body of work reflects a con- sistently high quality of motion pic- ture production," will be presented lo Waller M1rlsch. Mirisch is the 22nd person to be honored with the award since lt was established in 1937. Mirisch has been producing since 1947. Charlton Heston will be giTeD the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award1 designated as being for "an in· dividual ln the motion picture in· dustry whose humanitarian efforts have brought credit to the industry." Margaret Booth is being etven an honorary award ''for 62 yean or ex- ceptionally distinguished servic:e to the motion picture industry as a ftlm cutter." ' TONIGHT'S lATEST LISTINGS A~ Der0f1 ~ back from the dMd Mak· Ing revang• on hll ~ (1hr.,30Mln) 11M IJ (J) C88 LATE MOV!i •• ·~ .. The w..t That Wu" (1974) e.n Murphy, Mell Clark. Wiid 8111 HIGkoolt Ind llvttalo 8111 Cody dMI wllh gold.- IUlllng guNNn and twO feuding ,.,.,...._ (R) 12-~· MOVIE 4:000 MOV19 * * '"' "M Act 01 MU<der'' (11148) Fredric March, dmond O'Brien. • 4:21 NEWS 4:acl MOlllE • * "The Crlrrtto .. Canary .. (11145) Noell 8-'y Jf , LOOI Collier• CD MOVIE •flt ''The Men TM)' 001M Not Hang ' (1939) 8ortl K.mrt' Roger PryOf. ••• ''The Sign Of The Cr-" (1132) FrederlO M11rai, ClaVCSetre Colbert A Roman arletocrat NCt1f. lb.a hi• poeltk>n and poe- 4:4' 8 ITEVE IEDW..,._ ~ MMIOf\I f()( Ille tow Of I Ctwlallen girt. (2 hrs., 215 mlr'I) Q) WOALDOf' 8UfMVAL "You C-'t Kid Eiephantt" 12:37 8 MOVIE * • • "An Alf air To Remembet" ( 11157) Cary Gr1111t. Deborah Kerr Two lovet• agree 10 wall alx rnontha' belOfe contUm· meting rhelr romance, 001 tragedy atrllc• bel0ta Ille ~tad ....ung. (1 hr, 30 min) (fl MOVIE * ·~ "Heny-0" (11173} Oa,,.d Januen, Marlin ShMn. A lonnw pol~ rnao acoep11 a Job pro1_!ctl Ing the marf reepontlble fl>' rnal(lng hinl give up hi• bad09. ( 1 Iv .. 20 """') 1.00 Q MtONtOHT SPEOAL Hoel: Tom~ Gu.II: Dan H1H, The EmotlOnl, Elee111C Llghl Ofd>Mtra and KC and lhe Suna111~ 81111<1 0 ISPY "Rome Take Away ThrM~ Q) MOVIE ••*"Boys Town" (111311) Spencer Tracy, Mickey Aooooy. 1 15 fJ TAU<ABOVT 1:30 g) MOVIE. • • ''Out81de The Law" (1956) Ray Danton, L11gfl • Snowdon 2:00 6 MOVIE * * * * "All Oukll On The W•t«n.Frot1t" (1930) Lew Ayr•, Loula WOlheln\.· 2:070 NFN& 2:30 u AUMJM TMCKS- 2:40 Q NEWS 2:415 fJ HEWS 2'.15150 NEWS 3:000 MOVIE * ~ "Thrae Leg1onnalrt11" 11937} Robert Armatrong. Q) MOVIE * • "Bride And s.aar· ( 111581 Ct>ar!Olte Ausl•n, La~ Fu11e< Q) NEWS 3:206 MOVIE ••I-Ir "Th• Lion HH W lnga" (19•01 Merl• Obefon, Ralph Rlctiard- ton . S:\TI IJW/\ Y MORNING 7:00 9 CAMPA THAE& A oeleOfallon of the fJOO, nature'• meeterptaoe Q HONQl(()NO "400EY G 9 SUPEAFRtellDS 0 ~CUJe Q) EUMEHTARY NfWt G'J WOMAN; REa TO REAL fD YOGA FOR HEAL.TH ([) P\.AYOROUHOS 7:.90 8 8TEP8 TO lEAANHJ 0 G().00 GL08ETlllOTttRS 0 PACESETTERS 0. MOVIE *** "Aaelgnment P-'•" (1952J Dena Andrewe, Marta Toren. The PrllM Mlnlller of Hunoaf)' lllld Yugoelavlen Premle(. Tllo -IUlpaCted of coMlao-rating. ( 1 hr ,30 m1n.t Cit BOWERY eova SUi> and 1he boys come to the llid of • friend IOd get tnvolVecl In • cab ww. fD THEADAMS CHRONICLES (CA~ED) (I) BOUQUETS FOR YOlJ I 00 fJ (I) A090NIC STOOGE$ 0 MOVI£ •*'A "If I Hl'd A MIUion'' (19321 W C Flelde, Gwy Cooper. Eight llrllflOlll'a become helrt of an _... Irle rnllllona~. ( 1 l\r.. 30 min) fJ (1§1 lAFF-MYMPtCS D MOVIE •• •• •·captain lloy'Cott" ( 19-t 7) 8'-"1 Granger. KIU.._, Ry8n. Tenant lerm1ra revoCI against. -'lily I•~ et WhO ltlraat-10 evict them (2 hfl.> 8:30 fJ Cl) SPEED 8UOGY (I) MOVIE • * * "Magn1flce11t Ot>...ion" (1llS41 J- Wym41n Rock Hudson-A r!Otl playboy •lud•M rnMl- one to add rNMlnlng 10 his empty Ille and liter n.- tOf'M algM 10 the woman he kMll. ( 1 hr. 30 min.) fZi) MAKING THIHGS WORK I CHAAUe'S PAI) . PBS Hooks Up To Satellite WASHING TON (AP) -The Public Broadcast ing Service is using a new satellite system instead of telephone lines to transmit programs. "We're cutting our umbilical cord," said Lawrence K. Grossman, president of the Public Broadcasting Service. He referred to the single telephone line that in the past has linked the pubtic broadcasting stations nationwide. Under the new system, programs wLIJ be trans mitted by microwave from the PBS studio in Washmgt.on to the Bren Mar te,rminal and then to receiving stations via Western Union's Westar I satellite. The satellite is 22,300 miles above the equator. Grossman said that when all ground transmission stations are in operation for the 270 public television stations across the country, 1l will be the first nallonal broadcasting system relym(!' completely on satellite transmissions Gr05sman said the new system will enable sta- tions to have a wider choice of programs than have been available using telephone transmission lines. He said the system also will provide a superior program signal at lower cost. Senalor . HAYAKAWA . . hostJ. C4 . -·JOlllS 1m oopar lONIGHTAT 7:30pm I I• -- BOATING F~. March 2'. 1978 * DAlLV PtlOT CJ1. Nemport ~osts Baring Speetacular BUSHMIU.S RACE BOATS AND SPECTATOR FLEET LEFT CRAZED WAKES AS THEY TURNED ON THE POWER UPON CLEARING THE JETTY AND 5 MPH NEWPORT HARBOR SPEED UlllT •The Start ••• •The Finish ••• OPEN CLASS POWER BOAT RACES STREAK AWAY FROM NEWPORT HARBOR START LINE IPPOLITO'S VICTORY WAKE f. I •The Victor JOEY IPPOLITO'S CHAMPIONSHIP SMILE DAILY PILOT PHOTOS BY ltielaard KNlller, t1erl•k Patmk O'Dellllell, •t 11et1 ....... - ' .. Cl2 DAILY PILOT Friday. March 2• 1978 . ~ 1n Costa Mesa at Bauer Motors, vve have outstanding selection of MG Midgets & Triumph an Spitfires - "The Pure Sportscar_:s·~"·c~~§ii •AITl•H The Spitfire 1s racebred. Built lo compete and win A winner of Eight National and numerous D1v1s1onal SPorts Car Club of America champ1onsh1ps since 1965 And what Triumph learns from racing · goes into the car You buy. From competition comes its self·ad1usting cahper·lype front disc brakes which were perfected in England and offered first by Triumph on a production sports car as standard eQu1pmen1. Guided by trailing radius rods. hke those on Grand Pnx ca~. 11s soph1s11ca1ed independent 1our·wheol suspension combined with a 50/50 lront-to·rear we1ghl ratio are the keys to 1ls superb 'tiandling Its respans1ve racing-type rack-and·pin1on steenng can turn lhe car w1th1n 24 feet curb to curb And rad1ali>IY tubeless tires are standard. Spitfires 1500cc lour-<:yllnder engine offers lively sports car performance. The lour-speed all-synchromesh 1ransm1ss1on with opllonal gas-saving electric overdrive makes shifting smooth. Another racebred feature you II appreciate 1s one you won't find in any other production sports car under s20.ooo: a one-piece. forward hfllng hood and fender assembly that literally lets you walk around the engine. Everything 1s accessible SUPER SELECTION IN STOCK OF ALL MODELS & PRICES MOST COLORS NOW AVAILABLE FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY The difference between a Mercedes-Benz lease and any other is the Mercedes-Benz. The car you 1ease d oes make quite .a difference. After all, you don't drive 1he lease. you drive the ca r. And when you lease a Mercedes-Benz you drive some· thing special indeed. Whichever Mercedes-Benz model you choose, you drive one of the world 's most respected automo- biles. A car with 4egendary engi- lleering. meticulous craftsmanship, outstanding performance and sa fety. Something else: you'll drive the car you lease for two, three or even four years. Most cars look out of date all too quickly. But when you lease a Mercedes-Benz. you drive a car with classic !Ines and timeless- ness that is never out of date. We have several leasing plans to offer you. One is certain to make it more convenient for you to drive a Mercedes-Benz than you might have thought possi· CJ;) ble. Call us today for the surprising facts. _ Ask about our many convenient leasing plans. Mission Viejo Imports 831-1740 A111lrori=4'd DPnl,•r 495 1700 21701 Marguerite Pkwy. • Son Diego Fwy. at A.very, Mission Vie10 INVEST/BATE SAVINGS AT HURRY-SUPER LARGE SELECTION ' LXs •ACCORDS• CIVICS BUY OR LEASE -IMMEDIATE DELIVERY DO NOT WAIT!!! TEST DRIVE & FALL IN LOVE WITH THE ALL-NEW PEUGEOT 604 ONLY A FEW SUNROOF MODELS LEFT/ FoF A Superior Level of Comfort- Prices Start At About •11.000* . #1 Volume· DULER· 4 IN DISTRICT The Ultimate European Luxury Car That Is ~~~ Priced Thousands ""' Lower Than Its Competition. w. OlW d«ll/ntl lo malc• rootn ltw71•. Beat,,,. price itraeaNI LEASE DEALER DIRECT 504 DIESEL WAGONS & SEDANS IN STOCK *Mtg. suggested retail price. delivery, optional equipment. license & tax not included. BEACH IMPORTS, 848 DOVE ST. NEWPORT BEACH 752-0900 Near MacArthur & Jamboree --.. • • "t. -· 1 - CO< ., di~ -I W; J ' • Av I d11 Co MJ Co , di~ , c. Fe I M. I p • ... u Al '" or I °' I Jo pet ..... . ::,, -ftt ._ "" ... <"' (.OI Iii • ' "Ci IU .. ~ Alf ' M4 •• . . • . ~ . ' lH I "•' 00>1 '"' "" oft RI 01 '° b\I t~· ti• m "" I>' 0 ~ c II t ~ ' 0 0 • It "" .. ,. "' " Cl • II ., c • " .. • F • Friday. March 24 . 1979 DAILY PILOT AT BAUER Buick Orange County's #I Buick Dealership We're Bringing Back the Sale You Liked Best On A Car that's Destined to be the Most Popular Car of the Year UR '' NE PRiCE .:·'io<.·~, ... ~ -. As Long As They Last You CAN Buy ONE foR with Air Conditioning +Plus+ with three easy. ways to buy. Power sfffring, poww brakes, automatic transmission, tinted glau, NmOte control milTOI', V6 engine, steel belted WSW tires, California Emission, exterior moulding package. lSef.129118) Do.I not tndude chrome wheels °' vinyl top. CASH s5999 LOWDOWN PAYMENT TERMS s119~7 MO. 48MONTHS Plus tax and license. Check it -shop it - compare it. You can't beat this price! Full Cash Price $5999 +tax & tic. $163.00 MO. for 48 MOS. on approved credit. $8219.00 total deferred pmt. price. APR. 13.09%. $119.87 per month for 48 months with $1999.67 down. Deferred payment $7753.43. APR 13.09% jOpe• Tiii I 0 P.M. Mo•.-Sat • l'IS ••• a,.. ,.,,,, .... 1111 4 l'.M. All en ~to PriorSale. All Pfttn + tax & Llclme. Pric:M Good 48 Hourp After PUblleatlon. U You Missed Our Last Sale, Don't Miss This One!!! Ends Monday, 3 / 27 Ho•e of tile ele••- frHh nrprlses for 1978 11 f B11if•k 1).-al••r HARBOR 8L VD. I SAN DIEGO FREEWA y DEDICATED TO CLEAN AIR. COOO CAS MILEAC(, AND MAKINC BUICK CJ\llFORNWS FAVORtll CAR A division of Bouer Motors. Opel-Joguor-TriumphMG. 2925 HARBOR BL VD., COSTA MESA 9"19-:BXJ ·All makes, models and colors. Classified Auto Advertising in the DAILY PILOT . .. COMICS / CROSSWORD by Brad Anderson BOOMER by Wrtt. F. Brown ilnd Mel Casson "Thanks for the tip, I guess " FUNKY WINKERBEAN HE<,> MOM! CASEY MOON MULLINS GERIATRIX Ou 'tuU MtNC' I~ WE: rt5..:u7::; THE TIZASH· PIC!iCING ~~I NE S'S ; fifJfrtlt%:1 ~EN 1l-4E UZ..5. Wll..l- 1..i:T 11-G DEOUC r \.\ALF 1).1€ C05f C%-THI$ 1.-UNCHE:ON~ f 8JOA.\f:~ I( 'tW HAO 'fYJ~ l..1~£ 10 L1~ ov~~ MISS PEACH l s .[ I i E u ~~~~~~~~~- /_ kHOW1tJG W~'f YOO l(tWW ~ow. W~Al WOLJl..0 YOU L1K'~ io Be ( I~, YOU Mt.A~'f L.EAR:N 10 MAK£ A O&Cl~JON ! ........ ,~, ....... by Tom Batiuk I l>.X)NDER IF I'M 5lAATI~ 10 0€T ON «OV\16 NERVE& A UifLE ! By Charles Rodrtgues by Ferd and Tom Johnson W~L.L, I'vE TRIED EVERYTHIN<3 EL'SETO~ET P,AST SECOND GR.ADE . I GORDO MAY~ Tt..L T~IN~ ABOUi li.· .. o----. DOOLEY'S WORLD DR.SMOCK HERES A srortt AsoUT A C.P.A. WHO~ OONGCJ.t~D wrrn zs coutJ'TS ~ SWINDLING! MOTLEY'S CREW WE~l., Mii<~, NICE "TAI.KIN' 'TO YOU I 61Jf l ~·foe .. 6efflN' ALO>JC:. ... •a . -r--...... 1~~ -~ i . ----~ by Gus Arriola by Harold Le Doux THE~ THE 0..06 GOT RAIDED WAS THEY HAO SOME 6AM6llN' IN A &ACK R.()()N.. THAT f DION' KHOW NOTHING AWIJT! I WAS ONLY E16HTEEN AT THE TIME! '1"1-r>o~..W HEY. THAT MUST 6E SAM NOW! J WONDER WKAT Hf LOOKS LIKE? IT'S 6EEN LIKE TWELVE YEARS SINCE l Sff.N HIM! HIGH "THe:IR, S\.'VEETS! KIN I HE:LJ' vew 6€1HER FIREWOOD? WHYi ves, L.IMPIV UZARP.1HA1'S VEFN mJLJGlffFLJL OF YOU! • by Tom K. Ryan by Emle Bushmllltr SO~RY-·1 MISSED TME FOOTBALL , DAILY PILOT f riday March 24 197tj nr- PEANUTS by Charles M. Schult @ ~ ;r .. . 1m_,_,,_.,. ·' •v I ATE nlE t.Asr PIECE OF CHEESECAk'E ! I A " .. ~ --Ul_.lt:>----. Vi by Roger Bradfi-6d sou~os LIKE A CE.RTIF1£D PUBLIC No-ACCOUNT! by George Lemont ): ,..~INK VOLJR 5,-uP1Pt-rY "1US,.. MAPe LJS A RSAPeR'S c::>•cses-r Fll.-t..E:R, PA'- by Templeton and Form~a'n irrf iME 1>-.X~ A~~660R~ OFs:lCE/ TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ' ACROSS anrw UNITED Feature Syndicate 49 AnthrODO•d 1 Judic1.il so L.ilulv mac:Jo Thurni., Pt1<1 P "iol•P::! asserlions 52 Branches 6 "Too bad'" 53 Thong La w 10 Animal's 54 Disperse nail 5 7 lnle\ 14 Oak fruol 59 Ocean 15 Rell91ous vessel grouo 81 First 011co HI -hOO() l'lolder 1 7 N. Amer. 64 Economize mammal· 2 11verety word• 87 ProPorloon 19 Seed ooet· 68 Winter tool: ~..-!-!~~~~A;~ 1ng 2word~ 20 All In one 70 Square piece footag" 21 Creating 11 ... a tew dtacord P1111a1echal 23 Supine ,.., SP. 0 • . 25 Society • 11 'd u,~1 9 Boys name 43 Siar.le. 01 e u· 10 Man s newcomer sion Abb 4f: G1ean 26 ••• Moinea "3"'8 '· dB Penn 2 7 ••• IOn'. 73 Saucy 1' Ghl\llY ( StylP 74 Thoe~ p1crr. t ;> l i15tonq ·• 29 Earth's 7~ Put on again 13 Wnrnc Car-5 t Fon•a1ro outer part DOWN t'Mt 1•. P11rt 31 Naught 1 FrPshwater 18 Hltward : d Shrlld • 33 Shelley's fish PilS"> J5 Chicago air• forte 2 EndinQ foe' 22 Wad1nQ bird porl 34 Aegean 1&• Amer, Of 24 Zoo 5f. Irrigate land Mex employ~ 56 Ni<:kel alloy • 36 Add zesl to 3 N o( s. 27 Use a drlll 60 Wear away • 40 Skating'"" America 28 God of war 62 Edible I•~ 4 Atllnut 30 Swtetlltarl llesn 42 Machine 6 Actresa Ur• 32 --Veg11 63 -ben,.: control aull .. _ 36 Flower part Note wen 44 rv inter· 6 Mounhan 37 Not yet on 65 Brief com-t.rence -: Trofl M nd mun.catoan 45 Ple<ct 7 Show lho 11\ CnnlPnd 66 Ten1a1tve 4 / lnvlgorll• way H Fem~IP P•Of!'<"I <1nimat\ f.<j Snar>' r! ••• 48 .... I ~ #' bi~ all 'l y J r). m. 1& llo , ... I ll •1'1 11 I 0 3 aer Dt' he 1ly 1r. I Sil' ell ell (J. ~in '\Cl• an ., . d ht er s. Oft to ng ,. -tr I h l •• .lS n, ,. kl /\• fl y PUBUC N011CE ,-ICTITMIUt a\lllMIU Not.Me ITaTIMCWT TN fol-nt --I~ ...... W.l• ~··· <.OMMUNICATIOH AOCNT!>, 011 Ulll ~ .• '1 I, Wift""4,.\lw, CA. tlMJ L•vrle .,.,_ .. ~. -( .. n••ll.H ...... l~~ .. -..11.CA.- ll11> boJ>I,_ IS (-.._19'1 by .,_ II\ diVIO\l4t. L..,, ... _,~ ~·· ..... _, ... , 10• .......... [eunty Ct•,.. of Or-.. C-ty Oft _,,,,, ,.,, ,._, l'ul>lh...,. Or-C.O.ot 0.lly Pti.t, ~rcll 10, 11,2 .. Jl, 1'71 .,, 71 PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE 'ICT1110UI 81nftftU ~ITATl .. HT Tll• 111-1119 ,.r_ ••• dolnt ................. KOLL IV\INtU ClNfElllS - OltAHO•, not 0.... M~ He•-1 ... o •. c.l ltornl• fJMO Oon•ld M, kell, ... vi. Lido Sovel. .......... , leactl. c:.111 ...... •iwo 0 ~ .........._~ 11 H~I M-. l•y Orlw, C.-Ot• ~, C•llle<nl• •nu 11,,.rttt Oolt. 111. 2ut Mu• Orl'r•, Ne...,....t t••Cll, (elllornl• 92* Tlmetlly I $tr..S.r, ltJO Port :;!:'"· Newport 11 .. t,., C.allhwl>l• s t.,.le<r F. 9r·ooi.ott, ) Point • Ori ...... ,.._, l~e<.l'I, Calllo•nl• ..... --------------1 ·~A. 111"91', '12 .. Ill• $1• .. t. .-nnious ..,,, .... , N.--t ....,,_ c..tfonll•f)WiO N ..... ITATl ..... T < M.,1111 kNMlf, U llacluw•n. TM , .. .....,,. --It -,. t>uil• 1 .... 1,,,.. C:.11-• ntu ....... , 0.¥1d w '--· .., A<•<I• &&.a eLICT1'1c:AL CO.. XI.,... S.11 l.-. L~ Hiii'-C..C-• "-"3 wa.,, o. ... "91nt, CA.,~ Jelfrey All.,,. It Oold Blull ••<"•"' T. llfOWftlne. 109 Gr.,.I lr•lne, Celllorftl•'211• ..... R-lleKJ\, CA ten/I A E Pl'"_.,ltt, llW., </O .&tin• Thk llV>lnHi ho <-19d oy _,. fn. Lii• ln\ut.once """"""""· R .. I f•e." d1"10t.l•I tftw•~tnttnt Oe~rtment, Oft.. (Jvlt lliu..td T 9'own1nq t~n1..-Plai:•, He•ttonl. c;on,,....11cu1 ~M\ .... _. W•\ flltd Wlfh I"" ~U) C•unly Cl.,_ 91 Of•noe Co""IY on Tl'lll bu\• ... U I\ Conducted by • ""'"' 1. ,.,. llmlled PM1ne""'O F-T1mot11yL Sir-• P\/Olh"9d °'""9' C.C..>4 0.1ly P1lo1, fhl\ •l•lt,,_1 ,.., "'"° ••I~ ,.,. M.trc" 10, 11, 24, JI 1'11 (Own It Cl••• 01 O.•nva County on ---------'-' 11M•«"20, 1'11 ,..Utl PUBUC NOTICE ,-ICTITIOUS •UStNISS NAMIE STATIMl .. T T ~ 100owl1>9 i>erWln i. clu4nq IKJ>t MU•\ HIGH PRESSUllC SYST[~. lGf ,_.~nl6. C«..,.o.t tNir. CA '2•1) Arl'>Old N '*"'Y· l04 Po1....,lll• (o<on• Clofl MM CA '2,U Tru~ Ou\.I~\ ., (~Udect Dy .n tl'I Oltlld~•I Arnold N. Hen<y T!t1S SI~-· ,.., llled Wll" '"° c;Gunty Cl••• ot O••noe Co11n1 v <>n Fell. JI, 1'78. P111)H\-0--Co.Ill O.lly PllOt M•r<" 24 JI -Ao<•I 1 1•. 1t111 1160-lt PUBLIC 1"'0TICE f'ICTITIOUS IVSIMIESS MAMI STATMIENT TM lollOMf19 pe<M>ft> f<t dOll\9 BUSINESS AS ALTA EQUITIES, lM Sen MtQIHI Otl11r. Nt"wport 8t•<l"I, C•Hforn•• '2..0 L•lt•l•nd Oevtlopmtnl, • C•lilo•nl• cor-•llon. M 5.on M19uel Orlv•. N1wPO•l Buc)I, C•lllornlo ~n.a rvauc NOTICE • Miil HOflCI T'OQaDtTOllt lllO......., SUl'llltClll 0041U Ofl TNI JUT• OflCAU"°'"'IA flO• t ltl CC*lllTY CH' Ou.GI In lh• Mall•• •f '"'" (•lat• Of ALEllANotll HU .. 0.C: ...... No110 '' _..., .,_ lo cr"'*t•n M~l"9 <l .. rm .,..1 .... 1 IN ._ -·· ~1 10 fllf ulO <Noni• Ill IN .itl<• Of t1't c1er-o1.,,. ,._....., wwl or le .. .. enl llleM It 11'4 \llldert...-..ci •I - olfkt of •-v Lens ...o CroOett Al lor,,.y• •I ~. '10 ""'-' C.niat O••••· hilt MO. H.--t ... , ... C.llla<nl• fZMO, wfll<ll I.Clow olflt• h the P••o •• 1111•ln•u ot tna vii der> ..... CI lft •JI mMWn -lelftln9 lo .. ,f Ul•tt SOi<ll <lelmt Wl1~ lhe ,.. ..... ,., """",,.... mvtt .,. fllecl or ,,. .. ,.,.d 9' tlOf• ... ld ••11111\ , ... , monlll• efw U. ""' pvl>ll{ •Uon of 11\IS "°"'•· D•led M•n:ll 11, 1'/I lll<llMdWlltOn Sell lo E~ Wll.ot1 ~II E•Kulo ... ot llw Will OI .. ICI 0.C-1\t 1161tOY, LANlloCllOClll'TT A ........ ,, .. ~. •11 M••-' GM>ter 0.-1 .. S..11• tff N••-· ~ c..i....-.... ·-Publ ...... d Or-c .. ,1 0•111 Pllo1. Morch u. JI -Ao<ll 1, 14 1t11 ,,., ,. PUBLIC :'\OTIC t: HOTICIOfl ~ILIC HIAlllNG NOTICE IS H[llUY GIVEN '""' • '"'°'le ... .,1"9 Wiii be ,_Id l)y ,,.. (•IV CO<Ht<ll of If• Clly ol ~t• Mtw on AIH'l1 J. ""· • .,. ....., 01 • 30 o m In IM Councll Owwnbor" Of IM Cllv H•ll 11 l'•lr Drive, C....le tN.><1, on IM foUO•lf\9 It_,,. PROl'~EO 0,_0INAMCC 10 _, l>nll•rm Fl-. C.odt l'tOSJl Pullll•...O 0.61\9" CoJ;I O,llly P1lol M•ll h J 10 11 H 1•111 Al'Pl.&l ll'Om OoMkl E H...-r •ulhofl...S t9'nl '"' •-1 JoMWlft, i-1 EHi !tit!~''"'· Cost• AMw. ot ,,.. PliMl"Q c;.om..,1a.lon ., O.nl411 OI z- E attpt1on ZE·,.._4t, '°' • v•tl•nt• tot J I oe•ttnt densll~ d<'•l•llon 0 .... ><!_,.,. fMI per un1ll I~ <Otl\ltU<I JI• "par1menl unll>. l~•l•d 41 Ille •bov• •Odreu. In ~ JU 1~ l nvlr0t1me11t•I Oelermlnollon NtlQ<tllv• Oe<l•••llon A~lEN M COHOON ANO CO tor lon• E-.epllon ZE 11S1 INC,• C.dt•lorn•i <orPoro11on l"4 Sdn II EVOCATION Or ZONE f XCf P M•ou•I Or•u, N•wporl 0••<n. TIO"' ZEii u in.-10 rim McC••• C••1fornl• •1Mo0 C., Cut Cenl•r ono A C tl<K!y ~"°I> IY8 /8 Pl:BUC ~OTICt: Thi' b"'hU!)\ h t.UfldUft\'O b'f d 111t Ar\A~lm A¥tnue, (0\1. Mlt\d tor PUBUC NOTICE PtJBUC NOTICE "'CTlTIOUS 111\INIU NAMI STATU•NT Th• 101towl119 ~ b 40l"9 bllsl nn\ •• M A !>CALE MOOELS. 1010 Monrov1•, C.o" .. M••, C.llfOflll• .,.,, M•t"••i r•t4 Arflt\dorl, 1010 Monrov1•, C.o•I• ,.,.. ... c..111orn1 .. ..,,,1 I nl\ 1>us1nen" cOl>d!Kl.O llY.,, in. Ol\llduA J.l,o l\ffl I A~>dotl Thi' tt•temrtnl •• , Wed w'th r"4' Cou"'1 C.l•<k t>l Or•nge C.011Rly on ~•rch 20 H/1 l'tlMI Publ••-Or-(O.\I Dally Piiaf, M4tt" 14 )1.,...i Aj><1l I 14. 1'11 10l'1·11 Pl BLIC NOTICE PVBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NO'l'1CB PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS •U$1NIEU H•M£ l'TATll .. HT ,,_ l'ullll•""d Ortlllf CN,t o.lly flll!O(. IA•«l'l 3. 10. t>, 14, 1'111 Pt:BUC SOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE ~ NQTlc:t TOCttHITOM • ~ 94'UC'T .. Mll'•ll fS.C..Mtt -ttw u.c.c:.1 N•\ln h "•••lllW t lv•n lo Ille cred.ite>U of Sv&•" HOCIO•••" 9\• ..... • ; DtE"rE.R5 I A~ON'fMOOS It c ,.._, Pvbll\lwd Or-CoHI O.lly PllOt, llUrtll 10, 11. 34,31, "" I \~fo'W.~e.~dl';'1~lC:::.!~ . PUBLIC NOTICt; o•n•r•• P•f"''-!'"Nr' • CoNlltlonal u~. Pwrmd IU OP.r•t• •n - STAT f.MINT 0' ABAHOOMNENT OP'USe 01' fllCtlTIOU~ 9Ui1Nl!SS MAME County ot Clr•"OOI. 51•1» ot C..lllornle lh•I a blil~ lr6111lvr Is ~bo\il 10 I» m•d• \o Aoclty Hill Olvl\lon r 1. • P•t\nttSNO. tr•t\."'ff.lfVft who\• b\lil· MU •dd•ns " 1110 w. Bo•"· City of C.0>1• M•)-1. C..l<.lntv 01 D<.,,o-, Sl•I• ol l'•CTITIOUS •UStNlfSS N"""I STAT!MIHT Tht IOll0••"9 P"')Onl .ilrt do1"9 bt.1\1neu ., "' ''" SVl'IElllCMI COURT 0,. THE ST ATE Of' CAL.,OllHIA "011 THIE COUNTY 01' OllANO[ .... A_, N OT t Cl 0,. HEAlllNO OF l'ETITION f'Oll l'llOMTf Of' WILL ANO f'Oll LIETTIEllS TIESTAMEI" TAllY ANO AUTHOllll.ATIOH TO ADMINISTEll UN D(ll TH( INDIEl'I NOINT AOMINISTllATION 0# UTATUACT ESl•te 01 ERIN P'ANCHON DANIELS. 0.U.- NOTICE IS HERESY GIV(N 1 ... 1 JOHN II 04NIELS N> Utect lwrt•n • pellt1on lor ...._ .. OI Wiii -10' IS- \ ... nce al l.t'lltf• T.-t.....,,t•rv to ttw PetlUOtWr 6NJ ""''"°"•1•t•Ol't tu •d· ml~\ler I,_ ~l .. f vnder Int I-ti 41ifoftt AOMfnij\fr .. lanof E\l.llt\ Att. ti' OtMr Rt!Vl\tr•f\l Corpor•· •uto c.us•om111no, detalllno rt\IOt• llonl Ito~. U'd !>Ody S""P. 1n •Cl 1one loce1 Allen"' '""""" & Co In( ed •• IM ....... ..,.,, .. , ., ••qu.lleo Alltft M C.ondOf\. Pru10."I by oroperly owner Rollo M<Cl•llon l<1ktlMld 104 Wlnclwerd Lent. Nt•P0•1 llot" 0.wl-"' Com1>1~1 NOTICE IS FVR IHEll C::.IVE"' ll'ldl P•l•lc• MuM •• wld lime .,,., "' .... '""Y .,,., •II P,t~Otnl per\On\ 1ntetHtftd ~" •POt•r ttno bit l hi\ \l•t~t w•\ t·ltd •'t" ttw "'••rd t>y t"'t Cltt Councu o" tf'lt Counh Cl•"'-c;,f Ot•n~ County Of\ •toremt"l••ontd ''""'' M•rtll 10. 1'1i EILEEN P PHINNEY, JOttlf I M~,.l'IE.llN4N City CJor• OJ4t c;.,.._ on.. Publl\t•od Or-C.C..11 O•llY Piiot, I' 0 IU 12111 M•<cn 2•.1'11 116~11 New.-1 _._.CA t'l..U ------ PUBLJC ~OTICE ,.I ... Pwb<I\-Or-C.0.•I 0.11., Piiot M.,<,, H, )l -APr•I I, 14, 1'11 ltS~TI Pl'Bl.IC :\OTICF. NOTICE Of' INTENT _,.,.•Me to wt'Mc.h '' m..Mlf tor '"' ""'' .,._.,Ucul•r\, MMt •~•• ,,_,. ""'" •f"d -plkt of ... .,"'II IN W"'* .... , "°"'"~I i.. AQrll 4. lt111 •I 10 00 • m , '" IN <ourtroom of [)p.o-tr1m.n1 ,_.o Jot \•••d <.OUtt. •t 100 (lvt< C.rf'\IM" Or1w Wt'\. In,,,. CllV ot s.nu ""'"· c .. ,,,.,. n•• flifot1(,. 1\ ,,r,•OY v•ven lf\•f t ArtPhH ',rt•piro. 111S We\t<ltff Dr ""'rwpor t Bfoe< ~ C..ltte><l"lt• 9lf:i00 Ntv• t lttd •n •e>oll<-•l•on •"" tM Sourn Co•\t ~,.q10twl CommtS'-fOn '°"' IPW lollowinq P~\.ec:f ~vtl· """~' NOTICI TO Cll[OITOllS \Ul'latOll COIJlll 0, THI( STATE Of' CAUflOllNIA flOll THI COIJN1'T Of O•ANGl HO A '416• [\!alt 01 JOHN M -.NA PP. 0.<eo4'd NOT I Cf 15 HER~BY C.IV( N lo'"' Cf•ChlOI'\ ot IM .00~ Nm.d dir· t-0-~f tri.t itl prnon\ ~YIAQ cl•1m• •04'"'' trw WIO OK~t .,.. 'f(l\llrtd to '"' them . .wttn rtw ""',.,~,~"°'""ht"" 1n ttw ofl1<t ot thit r '"._ ot th .. •hovt "" tit~ tour1. or tn Qf't· ~I th• m ""'"' t"• l'lt:tf\Wry YO~hot·n to the \lr't Cltt1l9n•<1 -'' tn~ otflc,. 01 ~"''" C C~n. UOO Wll>httt Bl•d \uoft 1110, LO§. A.no•ltt. (•lltOf"l'\i• 'IOOlO Wht<., ,, tnt pl.ttt of bu11nt\\ of tht un O.f\IQnfll In all mellH\ p~rltlnln9 10 '"* t\tdilt of w11J Ot-ff'drl\t, wlthlf\ tour monlM •lier ,,,. ''"' Oubllt•llon 01 tf\lt nottltt O•tod MM<" 14 l~/t IWILLIAM f $t J0H1'4. COUflly Cle•~ RONALD STIEL.MAM 1UA"1tl .. Gr-N 5-ft c-. "'ft•ll d10 01 ... 1t All-ytor ........... ., Pvbll\ht<I o-_. Coa>t O•••Y Pllol .,.., 11 18, 7' l'" 10&~ ,. Pl'BU(' ~OTl{'E lll1444S NOTICE TO ClllEOITOlllS ~U~llllCMI COURT 01' THE STATE 01< CALll<O•NIA 1'011 THIE COUNTY 0, OllANOf -.&·MIS. '" thr "•ltf't ot '"' l \I It~ of T H0 MAS G MY[!'<~ 0... ••'<'<I Notice t\ ""',.l:N Q1Vf't'I to trr<1·•or\ fWyinq (.l•1m\ ·~in ... t lttt .• Id dN• Of nt 10 t.l<f' 'l·d (l,lrT'I' Ir\ ltv OH1tt c.t t~ cluk oi '"" .. ,...f'"'•·d t°"'' or to pr•unl tl"lt'""' 10 trw. un.jf'r\~d ,,, tr.r Olf•t• OI M~l(I<, PE(l(ll ... C.All RE TT, A110f"N'Y'!i dl LAw, 0tw Wlf~n1r.,. 61vd , 10,,'1 F l('()f' 0 LO\ A,,,,,..lf'\ (A '0011 wh, •. n l•l~, Offl<f' '''""pl• ,. 01 bu\1f'W'\\ ot fN: ~\19'\f"C'S 1n •II m•I ""'' Pf't\•1f'lilnQ to \Md f'''''~ ~U(I'\ (tdlf"\\ wltt\ OW nt\M\drl' vetvt hitr\ mu\t tw flltd Of" ~f'Wntllltd .t\ "'°''"\••d w 1tftln tout mor\th' ••lf'r ow fltll .,..,,,OH(4tHI, of tr.\ N>l•\.f' O•led M.tftl\ 1. 108 8EA Tllll C.All(14 ~TO •nd EOWAl'tO A lANORY c-111.,,ttrll,,.wlll of w1dck'<e~n1 MUSICK, ~EEL~ll A OAllll[TT OM wu ............. ?tth ,._ L.ot A,...tn, CA'°°" Publl\hed °'"~ (<W\1 0•1ly Pflol. ""•r<n 10. II.'•· JI, 1'11 PUBLIC NOTIC't-: OllOINAlfCI NO It 1t AN OllOINANCl. O" THI CITY COUNCIL Of' TMl. CITY Ofl COIT.r. MIESA, CALll'OllN14 , CH4NOING THl I OH11'40 Of' A l'OllTIOfl 0,. LOT t. TllACT MO t, f'•OM 1111 TO I AND II. THE CITY COVNCIL Of" TH[ c1rv 0~ COSTA MESA 00(5 HCllC8Y OllOAIN AS f0ll0W5 SICTION 1. n.r• IS ""••t>v oc.c..i •"<I ln<lllded I" .... I end II 1-, '" 11\el ••-' -r1Y 1~•11'<1 el * Wot Wll~ Slrttl n11 /I Au."•-P•«•' H11mbtr\ IH IJO·O) llS.fJO Oc Tl).IJO.OS. 11).IJCHll -llS.IJ0.11, lo ... TM w..1 JI) 00 1 .. 1 ol I ... Utl l.J0.00 lftl of l.01 I Tr .Cl No t e\ ~ on • ,...o r~o..,.CI In eoo-• P~ t ol Mlv•u-..... ""-"'· •-dt of OrM>99 C-ly C.olll°""• E.KCEPTING THEllHl'OM l1W ....... '".)<'•I of, .... w.-1 10 00 '"' ollMe .. tUOOl•lofwldLOl l. ALSO EllCEPTI N G THEllEFAOM tlw f)Of1ll t~ 00 l•I of Ille -•I 14000 ,_. 01 the r••I 10 00 .._, .. MldUI I SllCTION J. """\MM lo the or ... 'Wl>l•ns of Stcllon 1l 1' ot 111~ Mlll'l<lo-1 ~ ol tho Clly ol CotU Mey, Olllflct ~ C·• ol 1"9 City of COJt• ~. c~ of °""lch '' °" lllt II\ IN offlo of Ille Pt...,.lf14 0.-lmenl. I$ MrtllY • ..-l)y 1"9 •ddlllon _,.... of 1119 I Mid R .rt• ~'"'...., In S.Ctloa I Nnof SICTION J.. '"" Ordl.._..,• ,,...,. ..... effe<I ... 0. In Ml IOr<• llllrtY UOI cM'(1 from end ~tr II\ .. ,l609, _,,. IH''« i. IM eoplr•llen "' llt\-( 1$1 0..,, ~ lllt .. ...._ lllet..of. .,..., ,.., ,....,.,.... -· In ... Orano-CoUI 0•11y "•"4. /1 ,...,,,,. ... , 01 t •"•ra l c1rc11lat10"· it"n'•" ... d .,,....,,._. Ill lhe O ty at C:-1• .._. .. . ..,.__ Wllll IM_. .t llW tM,..,. ._.,. .. o. OTV c-11 Wi1"9 ,.,. .,.. -..1..-.. _ r ;.ASHO AHO AOOf'TlO lllh )Olll ...,"'~'"' ~HUT~.._. ... Mef'art- Mrl9rfl/"" ~ltr., c;..1.e Mew ill'-"· ...,_.,. CllJ CllA ti .. ~-0.U~ STAUM a.u ... HIA I COUHTY 0# Dl'ANOC I U CJTYOl'OOllTAMUA I I, 111.llH "· l'tOHHIY, C1tr CIWti .. •....rllde °"' tf *' ClttC-H ~ .;_ City el C.t. Mft .. _...., ~,.,_ ............. ..,.... ... ..... MM~ ... Nott ,,_J!ICl'MYC_, Ull~ _,..,. IW l!Ktlell .. a ~ .......... Clt't~ll -.......... Mllml. ,,, .. .. tlltH!lefW --......... . ..... • , • ,......, fl*tl"'I ........ City ci.-cu ........ _.. ... .,Men' ""w ... ~,..., 011 ..... AYI•~ <•O<ll llhlft•Htl ,,.,f .. , l,,._llW9". llHlll, ..,_..., NOi 1c-ll.....,._.,...,_ AIMHT10.-ll,....,..._ ,.._ llC _..,.._ ..... llWL I IWw .._._..,...,.,.en,... .. "' .. ~ Olillt ............ *'"*""' . . ,~ otro.R ... t..,. cw.". Oft CW<c.• ..... (D;flt ... ~-..... ~-~...::.,..,..-~, ......... INSfAlL TEMPORAllY IOE"' I If I{ AT•ON SIC.N lltltretlCf P-.mll A IS~S [Jet,, ~•pttO 18!! w.-!r 1111 O• NtW1>0<l 8e<><n. C• t1MoO Pub'''""" <>-•"<If C:O•>I 0•••1 Pllol, M•r<l'I 2'. lS 16, 1918 110 ,. Pl'BU(' :'\OTICE f'ICTITIOUS llVSIHESS NAME STATEMENT f"f •ollow1n9 Pt'f\Ons 4u·c.· ,101ng bu\lneu ., I< lo H JOHNSON l H• 16~ 8tootrhut\t F1>un1.,1n va11rw C.•lltornl• '1108 .. t-nntl~ o~-" JIJ,,f\\('lf"I ;1_,,~ W•Qnfr Al~r C.1r(tt' F--ounl41m V•l'r• C....llforn•• '1108 How •rO 9,,..,,. Jot'ln\on 14'Ut Spru ,. Slrf' .. l f. ounta•n Va11r,, (.41t1lorn1• '1108 ff\•\ 1>..,,,,,. .. , 1~ or'l(ha<lt'd br • ltm•tt'd P.t't'W,~hfp "" .. ~th 0 JOf\MOf\ HO-¥d 9 John~ t f'il•\ \l.tlf"f'nl"\I •.t\ ftlec:J W•lf'I t .... County-(tfO o• Oranqtt Cownty o" Mo« h 11 1.,8 n1u1 Publlll>od O<•hQP ,.,.,, O••ly P11oc ,.,.., ~ 14, )I 4nd AQ<ll '· 1•, 1•11 1171 It Pl'BLIC :"OTICE Oat&d M..trn H 11111'1 M•rQtartt• St~-.ut kl'\.IOP AOm•n1\tr•tr1• "' lt't•WIU ot tM abovf t\JrT.rd 0.CtOtnc HAllllY C GOOlN __ 11.,.lr•IU••. s .. 11. 11u Les A-In , CA MIO Att•r"•'t fw Adl'nt-.llt•trif PvCMl\l'\ftd OrM"or (O.t\I O•llf f'ifOI M•tUt 1' )1 ~Apt 1 U I '1ft '••1 ,. Pl BLIC' ")TICE FICTITIOUS •USINC~\ NAM[ STATEMlNT T ht to11aw1nq P•, .. nn\ div .l0•"'9 bu\• "'4'\\ •\ 0YNA 1"AIH>4£ INC. 11' .. l N•wt•nd ~ •tutttl""Of 11 l"•·t '-(A '1U6 OV,..A MAPINr A r .. 1,tn,n1A C.Otpor•t~ 1'~1 N"wl•"<t ~t •hmt '"Qlon Bu<" C.A "lW Thi> l>u\IN'\\ I\ <0..-1.0 by• <II' CJOrofi.on 0Y'°'A MAlllN( Robn1 A C...of\!01 p, .. ,1df'nt TP'l1\ \t4U"''"""' w•\ IUf'd with ttw (O\lr'lty C••'" ot Of.,nQif· (U,.lf'IY o" ~rcn '· 1916 ,_ PuOll•l\fd 0•""91' C.w\I 0.111r 1>1101. Ml« h 10. II, 74. )I, 191' Pl'ULIC 'OTlf't: flCTITIOUS •UllMISS ",t.Mf STATCMI NT Tt'lt follOWJf"Q Pl''°"' .,._. dOlnQ t>Vlfl\f'U •t TONY ROMAS PL4C£ UJO Wol Co•~C H191'wtty. NlwotJrt 6r•<'- C.lkorn1e '1060 Rom• NpWO"'(t, I~ "'N~v•O• tor oor•tk>n, JUO weir VM,.1 H•Qn••• Nt'llWOOrt kach CA•itorn • "'Nt-0 f "'" bv\1f"llt\\ t\ (oncJU\. lfl'ICI Oy • « tH por•tfOtt Aorrw Newoor t 1 rv JOlvl M H•ll s.-c .... ,., TPU\ tl.tt.,.,.,,. w•\ ht9d wHP\ ,...._ Counl y Cieri! •I Or •nQlr C..OU11h "" ,.,,.rth u. ,.,,. ''"•t P\11>11.,_., Or-Co.Isl O.lly Pltot. M•,.<111', JI -Ajltll I, 14 ltll 11JO.lt PUBLIC NOTICE Pl'DLIC' SOTICE CP ... l1t SUPIElllCMI COUllT OF THE UAT!OflCALIFOllNIA flOll T H~ COUNTY OF OllANGIE ... A-'°"1 NOYl(f 01' HfAAING 01' PUBLIC !'iOTlCE ,.fTlll~ l'Oll 1'1101.\TIE Of'IWILL ------11-,-.,-,-,----- ANO ' f'Oll LITTlaS Ofl AO· t M INISTllATION WITH IWILL AN· SU~ lllC)ltGOU•TOfTN[ NIEICEO ~Tl Of' CALlflOAMIA f'Oll f\l•I~ ol SIC.MUNO LICHTER. I! C:OU.:!':..!:saOflMfOI 0.<H>od NOT ICI Of' MIA•t"O Of' t•OT1CE IS HEAE9Y GIVEN 1 ... 1 PlfTITIOft UNO£• l'lloe.ATlf CODE ~~:.~N• =-~~,';... \~H.!;o!,:e!. 1~~ U t S '011 0110111 AUTMOlllllllO •nil tor ,.,.nc. 01 Ltllr•\ of Aol AHO Olll!CTIHO IJttECUTOllS 1' TllANSf'fll PEllSOHAL l'•OPllllTY Eslelt of EONA 11.RA(M(ll ,. "" follow1nt uersc;,n~ t\;aiYl' •t•ndo"eid th,. uSt' c;,f the t-1ct1t1ou~ &.uS1t'I\ h t••m• SAS TRANSPOllTAT10N &RO• Ef!AC.Ec CO. '811 Oltford Or., Hun11n91c.11 6t«h, CA n~I lite Focm'°"' 911~~· Nam• r• l•rr9" to ~ .,..,. ltled In Or.,.gt ,...,,.,,.,on 1q124m Sl6nln A ~n1u. '811 O•lord Or., H ...... lnQton &Hell, CA "2'41 E ....... a ~ Sow1,,.111. '821 Oltford Ot Huntt"9100. e.«". CA 112.-1 T•• ................ conclueled ~ .... lftOi"'-'· E~•~So..,._I This ll<t-wl.-111(1$ w'"' t,.. Counly Cltrlt o• Or-County ~tb if. IV7' fU Pul>ll\hed Or-C<WSI O•llY Piiot Mif\l'l'•liOn w1tn W~I· Anne..0 fO flW Pttlt+O,..f'f' ~ff'l'M' t ff.> •t\•C.h 15 m60f fot turt~t p.tr11(UIM\ .iM th.tt the Omf' •"4 Of• e ot ""•"no lht' ,.,,., .. "'' bit' .. n ~t tor Aprlt •. hli. •t tO 00 _. m • 1n ''°"' c.ou.-troc..m of 0.1Mtl~nt No J of \.otiO (OIJ"t dt 1j)O (.h•I( '~""" D, lvr w ... ,1 it\ ttlt' (lty of !Mtnta A.tM (4llfon '* OUNLAP,Ottee-N0f l(f IS H(R~BY CIYlN 1 ... 1 M•fl•l.10 11,14,Mlo t:l4-I Ptllt•-" LAUGHLIN~ WATERS -----------_;c;..:_.:..; Ont•CJ M•rrn l@I 1~1{1 WILLIAM E. SI JOHN, (<.Nnh ''"'" JAME~ E COOPIE.11 JOSIEPl4 J WOlf ana FRANK J WAICAS 11•" 111..S "-'*'" • pe1tt10t1 fOf" Orc>-r At.tth0ft1•~ PUBLIC NOTICE •no dlrc-<Un9 [)f't..UI.,'\ to Tr•"l\•e --------------F'~•\Onll ProQ1·•ly •oc•l•d •I •~I ICOTI C! OF TMf I OAll D Of M~rllo Pl.o< .. F'•lm ~prtn91 and •I SUPtERV1SOllS Of THIE IN ff NT TO •a 111i !>0~1• O••nQ• C.•••• l n l.STAILISM AN AOUL t DA Y An9f!I•\. to EOWAAO H OVNLAP •• "4fALTIC l'LAN1'41NG COUNCIL IM l••tn<t lo wl'll<h I\ m-li>r lur!Nr THIE. COUNTY 0,. OttAICO( 1>arll<ular<. end 111•1 In• llm• end NOTICE: IS HE llEllY GIVEN Ol ltw C..Olllo•n~ , Tne proo...1.,. 10 lie l••n~ftrrtd I' dtHrlt.d '" _,,.., I> All SICI<• In tr•tlt fl•h,#"&\, "'QUIPMt'nl •ttd qood wllt of,.,., Coon -••led ''"""°'Y IKJSI· nu> It-•• Mey1.t9 Coln L•-• •nd loUIN •I 11'0 Vi 9•1tet, C11y Of Co$t• ~ ... C.ountv•• Or-. s .. 1. of C. I lforn I• The bulk tr_t., wlll tw con ... m- .., .. .., on ,,. .. I., lht )t'd d•v of Aorll. "" •• 10 .......... •I c;,_, Ew.row (Of1>0t•llon. --eu I\ 19001 lfl•lnt 91 ... , P.O. Bo->,,. TutUn, C:..llfo,..,,. So ,., ••., ,_ 10 IM Tr--. •" t>vs·-u ,.._,, .-.. eda,.,_ ~ b1 .... ,,_ ... "" 11w p .. 1 '"'" Y••'' •ff s.kM O•ted "'-<di 11. "71 Rocky Hiii O•vtuon : I -' P'l""'r\PUp [d.,•<'d A ~ .. ,, c;...., .. P•r1- Tr.,,sler"' Gr•••r l K,... (M-J l'O ... aln T11t111t.CA t1* Altt1 ~.m cy11.., [KrewHL).111~ ).IJHS-C Publl\"""' 0<.,, ... C<W\1 O•lly PllOI, Sot--( Hew..,.. C•nttr Ottwt • Htwport h•c", (.Atft9'N• t1NO r.1 ou1.-. ... 1 March 2', ltl& Plttct ot t"W"dt1n9 tlw ,.,me"',.' bet"n ''' lntf"t\llon ot the Boaroof Supirrvhor-s ot ,,., 11 tor A11r11 11 1'n, •I t .00 • m .• In lht O••nge Co<>nlY lo este1>l11h • flllMn --------------- AttM"n•vt tw: Pet1tlOl"lf't l"ub'"""° 0<"'9< Co••1 0411v Pllol, tourt•oom ot 0.CMrlmenl No ) ol Hiii ~mllu Adlllt O..y Healtll Pf•nnlft1 covr1. •I 100 CIYI< Ct>nl•• Or•v~ wu1, C.out1t1I .u .illo"'t'd by AB 1'11·1'12. A '" 1ne Clly "' S..nt• An•. c. .. 111orn1• publlt llurlno on'"'' iuble<t I\ wt IO• MM t n 2), 2•. )0 19111 1141 ,. Oeled Ft llf ... ry11 U/~ tt.e 11th 0.y Of Aprtl, ""·•I 10·30 WILLIAM l . '' JOHM, e'tloc' • m ti 1 ... O..m~r~ of tn.o PUBLIC' NOTICE FICTITIOUS BUSINEU HAM[ STATEM[l'4T TrH ft>"O"" ~ C'li(r •I'\\ •H~ doui9 thl " ...... -t\ ~IJ N!.[ I If ~llA(f Hr•MES. 4101 ./ltlt \t.-'"tf f.'fttt4' ~' 101 NtW'lOtl A,,.• f\ (A 11~ Co..n1y C.ltrk &offd 01 ~"Clf"'I'°" ol ,,.. Counlv ol NOSSAMAN. KllUfOlll, A ~All$" Or6"9• \IS ,..orth svurno,. SlrMI. us Soutll "~ "'"' S.nl• A"•· c:..i11om. ... Lo• Ant••-. C..111-• MOil DA TE 0 -.c11 u. "'' Tel· OtJI •!f.SUI 8Y OllOER OF THE 80Aff0 OF •"411110110 .&N,CAH &CAll9'1ME ~u Pl: ltv1SORS OF ORANGE UI W. Slnt!SC .s..fle tU' COUkTY,CALll'ORtllA. LMA., .. lft. C..111-•-· l!>CALI Tel•ll1J)Ut·412• JUNC AlE.<tANOEll Att•rn.ey• tw· ,_..."'M•r1 (h•O: of the 8oardol P111> "'"'Or •119<' c. .... 1 O•oly Potol ~-~""-'°'Or~ C..Ounlv l .. .,. J "'" ,,,,. H ltn f' ""' °'"'"° J Mdttf'l 1) 1• lO it/!i C.•llfrornfa Pt:BLIC l':OTICf: FICTITtOU' IVSIHISS N"""E STATIEMf.MT TM loll-1119 Ptr!oOnl •re dOl"I llvSil\4$\ U OYNA MARINE, 11~2 Ntwl•nd St., Hu(lllnq>on euch. CA 916.46 OYNA MARINE • A C:..llfor.,14 CO•PO••"°"· 10•1 Newl•nd !>I , 14unl· •nqlonl .. c" CA.m. ll\IJ b~M" I> C~lfd l)y • <or· PGr•llOft . DYNA MAlllNE II-rt A c..f>l~e p,.."Cltttl Thi\ ~1•1em.M w•s hlt1' w1rn ,,... 1110 . .03 C.ountv CIHlt of 0<9'111<' (ounly on '"'""., '''~("'•f..tlvn ''(P IN•\trrh 114,11 Pvblt\~0r""'9fC.0..lt0•1lyPrtot, •••,. S•· t(lt N .-r.-:,.,t li(•4(n C.A Mattl\H.11 "~I ~,,~ P UBLIC l\OTICE -----------~ ,.,,.,(~1.lt18 TIH t':J~"""\\ t\ >nd•J(htJ ~'I .J l~ ~·l.Ot\ Trlf' JOM~41P'l'""~'PJ"lf (hr1•t1""'M ~1 l1tll Surt-t.tr'f '" \ It •h,nt-f'll ...... , f(lffl """"' 1i'w <.,...~'"'" (., ,,. of OrJnqiP co~r•y Of\ I •b 10 l•Ull FIU .. S.•.,n•1\~ ()<..;r1"J4.: Co..>t Odlfy Piiot Mt1,tfl; •O ti ~ .. ''HI PUBLIC :\OTICE STATIEMlfHTOI' AIANOONMIENT Of USE 01' l'tCTITIOCJS IUSINUS N"~E The ~lowtnq ~r~ "•" •~l"ldo~d t"t \l\f ~ t.._, hctltlOU\ bUS.lf'W\\ Nn\f C lo M HAIR REPAIR. U 61 l<•t1111•, A.nan.1m~ CA 918CM Tl'I• I' i(llllOU\ E.lu\l ... n N•mo , ... ''"'•d to ~vt .,.,,, tHfld In Oran99 (.ovnly Otl Moty' l•TI M••Y E Wiii. 111.-S."t• Cl•<• Faunt•I" Y•ll~ CA 9POI , Th" t>uvneo ... , conou<lod 1>y •n 1NJIYldv•t M•ryE Wit! FICTITIOUS 8US11f(U N-E SYATl! .. (1'4T fht-tolto'l#tl'\O p. t "'°'" •t• ck I Mi bu\1n"'\\ .M SA140P•H II INN ANO T( NNIS CLU0 ~•01 £ C "''' H· '""'AV '"'""" 0. IM•'· C.A t7-.t: 8•"~ at ,.. • .__port St•tt of tncotoor•flon C••••iJ'"' t Oovf'r •I ~hlttntP"li. H.-c>i0tt B~• h CA vJ..O f f\11 bv,_.f\f"\\ t\ c.OllOUCttd by tl JC)( -••Ion a •n• of "Wwoor t Plch•td 6 MfHft' '>c·n-Vic• "'"'"·"'t 1' h1\ ~••t...,.....nl ¥¥1\ fllt"d wttt\ tnt Counrv (lfflf Of 0r4n9C C.ovnty on hb '· 1'111. *'"'"'"" .. arw.1 ..... Att•rMy\ at Law $.M N"'""' Ce-Or. $1•. A lMw~rl • ..,,,.,CA ,.,.., Publ•\""" Or-Co.l\I Oelly PllO(. M•r<" J. 10 11 1'. 1111 Pl1KLIC NOTICE l'ICT1TtOV$ •USINIEU MAfljl( S1'ATIEMINT T,.,.t fotlowffi'iJ ~twt\S •re 001~ l>Vl•t'lt\\ .a\ C W PllOOUCTIONS. 1.0• 0•1b0<1 Av.-.u• Doi-l\l•tld. CA 92 .. 1 ClyH Lu< ... 1.0. S..ll>o• A•~U<t 8•1~ I••-. C.A 111161 8oOOI L.11<.•'· 1004 e.n.o.. Avenue, 8ell>O• hf-. C.A ..,"'7 ltu\ tiiv\tf"l4t)) t-. CO"Ouct.ct t>v ~ ~•41 o.>rtnt•\l'llf' Cl.,.,. Lut•• Thh ll•lt""'"1 '"4' Wtd "'"" ""' Coun1y Clerlt of O••n~ Co...,ly .., Mu I. 1~11 NICflO'~ALLfT •n-y1tu• •teN••-'Otftwor1 ... ,.,,i.1os N-rt tffdl, CA '1* ~ Pvt>ll1~ Or~ ( ... \I P.olly Piiot. ,_ Pv•••~"'td OrMQt Col"t 0.,1, Pt10\ M.I« II 10. 11 14. ]1 "" PUBLIC NOTl<:E f'ICTITIOUS •USIMllU • HAMI: STATIEMllNT Tiit lollowlnt ~''°"' ••• fol.,. boo>I ........ MAllSHAlL SAll.S. MAllSHAll SAIL llEPAlll, Ut ltrmln•I W•y 11 ll, Cosi. N\f\6. CA <t?UI Man"•ll H Miiie<. 2l1 0 AvoudO. C-• Mf"'-CA 111611 I( •tPll••n e "'"'•', 7)1 0 ·~'•dO. C.0.1• ,.... ... (.A..,.,, T nl< l>U•l""'t I\ toncllKloCI Dy •n in dlvld,..I. ~ ... llH Mlll" This ll•-••• fl!ff with lllt County CIH11 Of Or.,,.. County on Marc" 1._ 1'11 ____________ s-_1;...·_111 """"" 10. 17, 14, 31. ,.,. """' PubH-Or-C:O.tl 0.lly Pllol '!&~It Mer 11. 14. ll. Al>C" 1.1~11 IOIS.lt ·-------------- P UBLIC SOTICE Pl!BLIC j'l;QTICE PUBLIC NOTICE ATLANTIC AN O PACIF'll YACHT !>ALE.S. t/101 C.•l>b Lone l411nllnqlon llMcl\, C..lllornl• •2'41 Fred Aflllns, 41 Summit AvtnUo' !>•lem. M .. t. OltPO Jim Jo""'°"· '1'5 L• C:.•11• ,,_,,.1 .. v.11~. c..tttorn•• Jtlltl MHlitr, .,.., E Pacific Co•··· Hlo"••Y. LonQ .. ~,.. Ca1Hon11a toeoJ Mlt"fff R•Mtlon. 119JI S.ocro, Mission Vtejt, C:.lltwnl• f»IS Tllh ~1,_., 11 COf\<SllCled lly • ,.,..,.i~.,,. MICNt4 0. II__, '"'' Slat-•ff filed Wiii! tl\e c-1., c1en. ot Or•nee Covttly on f•~•Y•. n71 ,,..,,. PW11.-Orange C:O.sl Delly Ptlol M.r<" 14 JI -.o\pf•I 1, U 1'11 111> ,, Pl'BUC ~OTJCE •·TU1• SUl'lllllCMI eou•t 0" YltE STATIOl'CAU,-OllNIA '011 THl C:OUNTY Of' OlllAHGE Ito .&.HIJ1 NOTICI 01' HllAllllNO O P' l'IYITIC* l'Otl 1'110.ATE 01' IWI LL 4NO flOll LETTl•S TIE.STAMEN· TAllT ANO l'CHlt AUTHOlllUITION TO AOMINISTlll UND(lll THE IHDll'llNOINT AOMIHISTlllATION O• UTATUACT. E•l•lt ol HAllOLO J. WYLlf o.c .. ...s NOTICE IS HEREIY GIVEN lhdl SEC.URITY P.&(.IFI( NATIOMAL 9ANI(, l'IH llled ....... 1 ... ~lhon lo• Pro ... t• of Wiii -'°' ls......u DI LAI If<\ Tt >l-•Y -!of Aul-tld hon to AdmlftlA• -Ille 1,_.,.,. ~nt Adrnl~•lrellon of Est.tta Act,,. ftr•nc• •o -"'<,, ti rn.o. for f1,1t tn. P•tt,cul•r\. ~ lf\oll the t1mt-•"" pl•U of '-ti"IJ !tie 5WM -bttn \ I for Aorll 11. "111 ... 10 oo • m, '" '"' COYflr-.. ol 0.0.'1"-1 No J of, ... ., court, et 11» Cflotc c:.r.1.,. °''"" w.11 In IM C.•IT of S-.. A1W C..ltto<n•• 0• l.O M•<h ll. ltll WIU.IAM If SC JOHN c--..o..... l'll•OllllOl 0. "'ILO & SILWTN A CA~ALllO MUIWlll!ll,. ....... S...11• 14lt ~ "-'•· ~1"'"'4o -· Tel• 0111-»tt A-..., ..... l'etlt1- f>u0t••-Or-C-\t Oa•IY •·•01 M•r(h ~4. 21. ll. lfll PUBLIC ~OTICE ll·Wl14 SUl'llllO. coun Of' T"E STATI: Ofl CAL.lf'OllNIA f'Oll THI[ COUNTY Of' OAANGf ...... fflll H OT l(lf 0,. N l A•tNG OP' l'ITITIC)fj f'Otl li'tloaATl. OF Will ANO f'Oll L.ETtlllS TEST.AME N T411Y ANO l'OA AUTMOlllUTIOM TO ADMINISTfll UNDlll THE INOl,fNDINT ADMINISTllATIOf< ,,,., "·'~' .. , '''"' ..,.,,,, '"' Countr C1t<t ot Or•t·~ C.ovnty on M•rc.,, u 1t1a ,.ICTtTIOVS IU$1NIEU NAM! STATIMIENT 11·1Ull St>l'lfll10. COURT 01< TME STATI ~ CAUf'OllNIA f'Oll TME COUNTYOl'O,_AHGE ... .-.....s. -------------10' UTATU ACT. 1'7Sltl Pu,c,11 \,...<I 0...iCJI"' l..04\I 0•~ ., Pllol M•r '~ 74 Jf Act I ,,,. 10/C) ,. Pl Bl.IC :\OTICE HOTICI 01< "U•llC Mf A.INO •l,.ORC T"E CITY COUNCIL Of'THC CITY Of l'OUNTAIN VALLEY NOr•ct IS Hf~f8Y GIVEH 1i..1 on Tue.011. """II•, 19111. •t t 00 • _. In ,,.. <;ouncll 0-.rnbe•, 10100 Sl•ltr Ave-. l'O<l(ll•ln V .. 1 ..... C:..lllon\11 , ... City Covncll Wiii hOld ......... ( l\terl"Q on n.. loll-no 0,_0IHA"'CE NO U 6. Aft Ordlnenct Cf fllt Clly Council ot tflt Cl· IY Of l'ovnl•ln Vl llrr •.._.ol"9 $«· tlon 10 u a.s ot ,,.. ~..,.,t•ln V•ll•y Mu,,ltlP•I Cod• 1M<l•lt1lt1Q to 11>9 -•nten•ntt of no o•l'lllr>Q tOAt• M U<leltl .... IV.Cf r-. "'°'' .,.,.,,._. to lntlfy In tovor O• In°"'"''"' .. 10 Wt Item'"'" bt QIVfll t" 04»0r!IH\llY Ill t10 .a_ II IV•l ... r I,._ lo•m•llon I• 11.-1,...,. yOAJ..,..... <ont~1 !ht Pulltlt Worh OtOlflfft•nt •1 h).llJ11 City '°""'II of tM Clly of ~I•'" V•lley Evet.,.. MtCl....,.,n CllyOwll .... ltllsllad C> ... CHU O•lly flllot, M.,Cll h , 1'1' l 1'•11 Pl'BUC NOTICE T~ to11o#h0-t Pt<t.Ot\ t\ O.llnit b-.,,\~ ,,.,, ., "EWPOIH El..((Tlll(.. Ill •rtn ~I Nf"'oort 8H<" C.. . ., .. , ( <tdt• f 1d1.1l< 10. Ht 'Jtl\ St N•,.o-M 0.e<I\ C• '2 .. l TM• IKJ.,,,.._, is <OftOV<IM! tr1 •ft 1n dtwlOU..t Ed.st• ~•OU<<•d Tnl> st••-• .... "'"" wltfl tr.. ,_,, Cler• ol 0-•..,,. Col/nit "" ""-«" to. 1t1e .... .., l'vbll.-Or-C..JI Oelly Pll04 ,,,., 11, 14,ll.Aor I. !tit .4 .. 11 PUBLIC NOTICE N 0tltl O' NeAll1N'G 01' 'fTITI~ flOtl PltOeATI O"WIL.L ANO ,,011 Ltnl!llS Tl:STAMIEN· TAllY AllO li'Otlt AUTMO•tz.ATIC)fj TO ADMIHllTI• UND!• TM€ INOll'•llOllNT •DMHtlSTaATION 01' 1$TA'R$ACT. Cste le o f "'ANfl L£0NA~O 0Aft1£U. •Ito '--.. F,_ANI( l.. 0 AN1EL$, •tld F . L. 0 ANIEL$, 0.<U\K NOTICE IS MElletl\' GIVEN tf\at VlllOINIA IATTEY 0,t.Nl~LS ""' mM heroin • 11ttn1tr1 few ~It ol --------------! Wiil end lo< ln11•n<t of Le tters .. ICTITIOUS auSINllS NAMI STAT•MllfT T tie lollowl"'CI oeuon •• "'>tno llvtl M~!t ., SOUTH COAST TILE COM~ANY, HO~ Mercu•. Newoort ll••<h, C•lltoi't1li11 '*I O•vld Lerry 911M, '4IOS ~<(IX, NtWPOt'I 91~1\. C..Hl.,,.,I• tl!M.3 Th•• blllln•tl '' c-u<t..S ~Y .., m "1vltfll•I. o ... .., """" ft.ls "•I-••• filed wll" t"9 Coi;nty ci.rtt of °'..," C..VftlY ~ M41"" 14, 1'11 ""un l"vMllhtd 0r.,,.. C-sl O•llv Pll04 . ""-""ti, M, 31...., "P•ll 1, ttlt 1022" PUBLrC NOTICE THl•men•arv -llw AAlll1orl1•tlon to A-lntn .. _, 1111 1---1 A4- mlnht•a\-ol Efl•ttt Act, •••-• to w"l<lt I• m •<I• tor furl,.., p.artltulan, allf '"'"' tM·CI-eftCI pt•o Of e..¥111t IN~ ......... Mt 10t Ao<ll 4. 1'1', II 10:00 •,M , I" the cw tl<Htn of.Oe_t_ Me.) .t Hid covrt. et 100 O•I< °'"'"' ~1,. WHI. lft !"-City of ~"""• C:.Clfornle. 0•1 .. "'«<II IS, 1'1t WILl.lAM ( • JOMN. C.ountyQerit NAltLAll D. n•_,P ltUI ..-.C ·-G<....U HI"' Cel-••1M4 , .. , 111>1 --· .-...yttr:......._ l'ullll• ..... C>-~ OMfY ~lot. Mete" 11, ta, J4, tf7'1 "'"-"' PUBLIC NOFICE Eslol• ot 8EllTVE M WINOLL 0.<tHfd 1'40TICE IS HERESY GIVEl>f INI 9E TTY l TONEll ~ 1119'1 "°'''" d pcrllllon lor ~I• "' Will eftd '"' I\ \uanct of Lf lkf"\ Tn~t•ry •"" 1..-Aul"°'I,.,..., lo Admlnl$1., """" IP\t l"d•~t Admh•111tr.at1oft ot £.\t•lt\ A«~ r•t•r~• to "''"<" ... m-10< to;r1,..,. pan1<.ul""· -tfl•• lf>e ti-encl ,eac• °' NMl"9 n.. .. .,.,, ,.., -n wt 10< Aprll 11, 1,71, .. 10 I)() • m., ln tfW C'OUlf1.room o4 ~rln'W'nl Htl J of .. let ClDU<1. et 100 Clvl< Ceftl•• 0<1~ w .. t. In .,. orv o1 s....1e An• C:.lltornlo D•lecl Mer<ll tz. 1'7'1 WIUIAM l . 5t ie>tiN C:-vOe<'\ Mc KINNA AND l'tTTIHO MU WlltM" llft. l. .. A ........ Colltoonole -1• Tel: UIJI -..UT Aft-Tt ler: .... It._ Pul>ll\lwd Or-Coe•t Delly Pilol Merch14.U 31 ltll 1118 '~ Pt:Bt.IC NOTJCf: ,, ... -· 1 I I I .. • • I • " 1)4 OAJ~ V PILOT EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY ,.... ......... Hotic_: f:r1dey, Merc:n 24, '919 ~::.~ ~ ........ 1~:: .':':.~ ....... . SeMr.& I 002 GtMl'GI I 002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• MEW 4 BDRM. 3 Baths, family room, 2-story home , secluded front courtyard with xlnt view of the lake & park from almost any room! $149,500. 759-0811 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ol I 002 C.....-dl IOOZ •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• SPA~ -Fireplace in the tamily room in th.is beautitul 3 bdrm 2 b•lb home in Mesa Woods. Close to South Coast Plaza and Freeway 1cces6 . Spanish tile roof, new on lhe mark el at $98,000. Ctll 546-4141. MAKI Off& -Owner wants action on 2 bdrm Condo. Close to greenbell, schools, and recreation. Seller wants ull offers. Priced at $80 ,000. C .. t 442-616' S Nv111g Cost:t Mes a Irvine tiunt111gt~Hl t-3 c ilc h -Ncwpo rt Be;ic:h G..-rol I 002 Gftfftll I 002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• MIW IM OlD COIOMA DIL MAI Light and alry 3 bedroom on a tree lined street near the new Bayside Drive park. lnlere1Uog interior t.hat lends to a decorators delights: lots of wood and glass. a waJl of brick. a cheery fireplace, a large rear yard and lt ls now vacant. Be sure to see it if $158,000 sounds rair. U,_.ICJUI: li()M~§ REAL TORS4 , 675·6000 2443 E.ist Co.isl H•ghwav, Corona det Mai also 1n M~s ... Vc1dl!. a\ 516 5990 ORIGINAL HARBOR VIEW wlth VIEW. Spa~ious 4 bdrm, ramUy rm home m onglnal Harbor View with formal dining, pool. Jacuu.i -AND - aorgeou.s ocean, harbor, island and nlghl ll&hl view. Reduced to $259,500. BEAUT11'"UL LY UPDATED ·2 Bedroom wtth room to add 2nd unit for only Sl35,SOO. CalU44-7211 tor...a. ~NIG[L UAILf Y & l\SSUCll\I rs ~Nlral.l: lll\ll.EY & l\SSUCll\T(S C.eMr• 1002 GeMt'ol 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• FAMJL y Pl.AH lll + 084 A OoWUll floor plan tor POOL + HORSES All real est.ate advertised lJl th.la newap1tper ll> !.uh Jed lo the Feden&I F·a1r Housing Act of 1968 wtucb makel> 1t llle¥al lo a dvert1'e · any pre· ference, ltm1tauon, or chscnaunatioo based on race. color. religion, sex. or naUooal ong1n, or an uit.enUon to make any sucb preference. llmila· llon, or dJscnm1nauon " FOUIPLEX MIMl~H 41R. onHSAT. 1-5 roo&..-$6•.400 Ci el 10021G• .r 1002 17082 Gfoo•• Circle VA MO DOWM •• ~ ................. :::~::: .... _ ...... . ea.sy Uv1ng. Inviting en· Gorgeous ,, acre horse try, 4 bdrms. 2 baths propert)' Huge living large dtninii adjoining room " den· w i l h kitchen with breakfast fireplace in each' area. Laree patio in m· Enormous ramlly room v1t1ng b11ek yud, at Wet bar Ra mbhng tacbed doubl~ gauge ranch k1tc:hen. Spacious See lh1s Pnced n ght ! bedroom. Spartlmg blue GeMrol I 0021 GeMrel I 002 1lu.s newspaper will not •••••••• ••••••••••••••• •••••• • • • • • •• •••••••••• knowingly accept any a dvertising for real estate which · 1s in viola tionoflhe law fmtORS: Act .. rtfHn ._.. dwell HMir ads dalty .ct~ er· ron -....etety. The! DAILY PILOT auwiwsl lllMllty for ftw first ift-1 Wl':~Ll·;Y N TAYLOR CO. HEAL TOl\.S sine.-HMH HOW AIOUT HA WAii? $14,tOO Great for an investment & fun for a retreat to paradise on beautiful Kauai. Lovely 1 BR Condo on front rO'-" ocean bluff Private airport. WESLEY M. TAYLOR CO., REAL TOIS Choi ce Huntington Circular drtve Laree Beach Joe. Property in family alzed Livtng room. Up top sllape! 3 Bdrm., 2 Country kitchen. Dlne. ba owner'• unJt. Pnced W.U ol Class view of cov- t.osell at $215.000! ered pavilion " lush IAYFlOMT 11round1 aurroundlnc Balboa's betll locauon! 2 H&F f'reeform pool. Bdrm.s .• 2 bath condo in Separat.e wins for hide· aduJt . .ill secunty bldg. away Master Suite & Walk to ocl!an. pier. c hildren's quarters. "11lage. shoppmg. boat Hurry. !or this unique slip a\a1I All this for barga111 . 963·'7881 $149.j()()' ,.. r·1 n1 '. 'ie. ..... v .,, i , ~;~r~!~;•m', [ ~ lfilltl mini; & h~hrnjie url'a, closr to i.torei. & TllPLEXS70 000 re;,tJurant~ S::i5.000' All units remodeied. new llCJ CAMYOM 4 BR, fam. rm .. 3 baths. Beautifully decorated family home with patlo views Crom each room. Sl3S,OOO LIDO ISLI Newly remodeled 4 bdrm .. den. 4 baths. li ving rm. w /cathedral ceiling. Lge. master bdrm. suite. IAYNOHT Several fine bayfront homes with pier & s lips Bl LL GRUNDY, REALTOR J.11 !\"Y''d' 0 11111• N I\ bl~ b lbl SATURDAY 1 ~ pool Barn Teck Room & 3208 Da.kot11 COCTals Thll one has it (No Mesa Verde, C.M all for only $170,000! oltGlaler> Don't delay-<:all now 400Li:e:ll ":."'°;. , '"" CJA~w [@1 IR~IRI G...-oJ 1002 GtMrol 1002 ....................•.•...........•........... CGrftCt ... ~ °"'Y· I I 2 I I I S. JOCllqltin HHl1 RCMld HEW~T CEHTEtt. H.I. 644-4' I 0 COST A MESA plumbing, panelln&. Ule ' B R 0 0 K V I E W & paint m & out. !!!J!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! mac nab I Irvine realty ~ ~~~~ •....... I .!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Genec al I 002 Getterol 1002jG.._,.01 1002 TOWNHOUSE 754-7100 ....................... ····•······························•···••····• 3 Bdrm:.. 212 ba. all elec bit ins. bnck fpk. up· graded carpets, air cond. 2 Landscaped palloa. comm pool 189.50()' 6.A~ ~ llrolhtu1.,loo• NEWPORT HACH IAIBLIMG BROOK IHVESTOR'S fllgbly upf?raderl, 3 Ttus one has 1l all' Ten SPICIAL-$47,950 lalNMI a.y .... op. lHlton • 675-7060. bdrm. ram1ly & dining nis. pool. J 9eui~1 and Guarded gatc~ay pro rooms, new brown plu)h lu.~h grounds It:. lcss1 tect.s la\1~h .:round with t•arpel:. sparkhnJ: pool lhlO "')ear old, & has al pool Sttlucfrd •ntr) lo and lo~ of l'\trJ,., Of dramalll splll·lt-\t'I n"'orl l''eeut1vl' hvmit room !~~~~~~~--~ fen~d at only $128.'100 I pl:in &•furl' you bu>.,IJe Sunshine i.:uurmt'l' - --- $59,900 WOW!! CallS40-ll5I · 'urt•l1 •.1'l0 th1:.onl'. t-ull k.ilchl'n 0 , .. rlo.,ksl . SIXUHITS Deluxe Townhoml' 1 J pnt't' ~ !JOO I p rl v J le (' "u r l y II rd In xlnt ~nt;.l location in Spacious bedrooma I sort l'\1.1. . .;I :•1!11 s"'f'('lltn!: m:i.,lrr Mrm • !'.; Co11ta Mesll Blrl carpets ' Sun pc1t10 ! !p SELECT I & eh1ld's retrcJl Owner I l.iyoot with large pool as l.ho1ce grecnbt>lt lol·.1 ~HERITAGE I ' I!> anxious Submit any added attraction Clo:-.e t1on1 Close to i-hop111n~. --iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-. PROPERTIES o1rer'84?f.OlO wmJ,Jor shoppin~&bw. Ownl'r 11nx1ou'' Cant M -. • . " lines. 646· 7711 f~,t al this pm·l'' C .ill . REALTORS $57,'50 FHA-VA TBlMS-WOW! Sharp J !Re bdrms, neal as a pm in a good area Clost> to sehools & shop ping Call for detail'> about new Fiii\ program for lower pymL, lst S yrs Don't hesitate• S-1.5 9491 ~ Walker & lee ~!~~~;£:!'~:~~~ ! [ ~ 1m•:t:tf! !--l\'Jl11Ml~IH I "'•0300 -hvrn~ with step down II\' I· 'Ol -~~H!1!!J ~al Fbl:ilc • ing roo~ Format dining llG, llG • • area Stairway to hUJ;(l' ~---------1 master bedroom with FAMILY ROOM ..,.,--t-- walk m closet This uni Sup e r r Io o r p I a n que 4 bedroom home is Separate h1_g ramlly priced to :-.ell Call roomw1thnoortocc1lin(l .546-2313 v.1ndows. with f'ranklm Macnqb-lrvine I. I \I I \ ... ,:1·\.\ HAUOl VIEW HOMES CUMS.MODS. HliTEOrOOL 41EDROOM $77,900 GeMf'af I 002 G~ol I 002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• SAHTAAMA HEIGHTS FtXBUPPB Lots ol potenti a I here' 4 Bdrm. lam rm home localed oo a largt' lot w lots 0( fnul tr~ lt s I •urroundcd by homei. 8ellma for over $100.oOO ANO It's pnced .. t ONl.. Y S83.000. call now for your appt. lO ~ce this i:rcat huy FULLlll llAL TY Ctlll 546-0114 OMTHL. CiOLf COURSE ASSUME uo.ooo- ~$7'.900 3 bedrooms. Located next LO central panc and beautJlul lake. great for nstung and sailin1. sur· rounded b> $100.000 homt'S Make th11 home a greet buy ' Won't last long Call 963-6767 ";o-'• Q •I J ·~ 1 g ( l~llMHI CUSTOM IAYCHST The one of a kind look beamed ceilings. used bri c:k fireplaces -a versatile 3 bdrm family room. dirung room noor plan A must i.ee al $179.900 PETE BARRETT -REALTY- 6U·5ZOO FIMER HOMES NOM $49,500 TO $1,500,000 OWM A IA YROHT IY SUMMl!I 55 · sunny terrace w /pier & slip + sunsets in the evening. EnJOY lg. 4 BR. f a m1l y rm. dining rm home w /bonus rm for teens. 21n yrs. new. $575.000 fee land Appl. only. Dona Chichester 642-8235. CS·ll> CAMEO HIGHLAHDS EXCLUSIVE New ltsting tn Cameo Highlands w /fantastic oc·can & canyon view. 3 BRs. den & formal dining area. Lg. pool enclosed 1n courtyard. $210,000. Appl. o nl y Donna Godshall 644 6200. <S·l2l ::,uper comer loe ot1on' 3 BR. family rm . w pool Ready for your own 1m agmallon :-¥OW ON LY $159.000 o""ner "'111 cl)n '1 de r h· a s c " pt 1 o n i~al i.Love & sladmg glasi. dooor'! to woodse) b.iek) JN Great kitchen with no-wax floors . island eook center CIOSl' to s('hool.!o &: ne11thborhood shoppm~ Full pnee $89.500 CALL Spar1ous entry wa} of former m odel homc leads lo large luxunous ll nn~ room f1msh<.-d v. 1th prerruum gradl' 14.111 Jnd noor ('0Vt'l1nh'' ;>.:J\Ur3• wood burn1111: rirelltan: I Profe:.s1onal IJndsc .ape Owner nt.'f'•h rasl ,., ... 1e, hum call \1c1• k !'62· 771111 8t' sure to s<.-e this spar redecorated ~ bdrm. J l'>alh exeeultH· home -.__...._...._,.._....__,....i The master lx'droom ha) --------- WHA r·s MIEW IH JASMINE CUIU Moon Rest model just listed! 2·story ceilmgs ~oar above LR & foyer . Graceful stairway & exJX)Sed balcony So wrap-around patio, extensive B -1 bookshelves, microwave. cent air & much more! Guarded gate, pools. 1acuzzi & Lennis cts $254.900. Helen Hartley 642-8235 <S·l3> Wltela11 REAL ESTATE REDUCED!! I\ H 'I') spee1al 1200 sq ft mobile home in Ba\ side V1lla~e Reduced for 1m· mro1ale ~all'. with terms 11\ailable rt:11wnng very little down C:irpets. drap.t•:., all l>wlt mi., at- Uichi'd ('Jrport. cnC'lo~ed llllliiiliiil-llliiiiiiiiiiiilllllll ___ I lla\lo oil for only $39.900 South of HiCJhway Carona dee Mar Newly remodeled. Splat level. 4 bdrms, J b.ithll Ovel'81zcd lot with poteon tiAI to build largl' add1 uonal units with s wtm ming pool to boot ' $167,500. 644-7Z70 RB>UC8> S3.000! In ooe ol lhe best are.as o( Turt.leroc:k, close to pool ~tennis: a charming 3 bdrm , family rm . 1.:cn tered around lovely atrium wtth roek waterfall. profess landscaped yard with bnck terracing & undl'r· ground drainage system Now only $109,50(), You own the land' C. F. Colesworthv .......... 640-0020 11.ACH VALUES ... ClllDUCB> 5 Bdtm Peninsula Pt 5--to beech. $189,000. fu ll pni:c Open house Fn l.S See 11279 at 300 E .. Coust Hwy , N.B \ !In 1'11•1\ ol II .ti IH•I l 11\l'"' n1t:tll \ " OOH'T FORGET VOTE APIJL I I HIFTY--,oa-- THE THRIFTY So much for !!O llltle. ndtculuusly low pncc prime locallon Thu; 3 bedroom home 1s cooll'<i by a 23,SOO HTU air con· dJlloner A bnght k1tcht>n and much more Only $65,000 Ca II :>46·2313 "'''· ,. "''II. PHASE 3 Night light \'1ev. rrom th1!' popular Car nH·l model.,., 3 UR:. + family rm. Close to s<'hools & shopping Comm . rccrl'allon inrludl'S pool. Ja<'lllll & tcnna!> court Sl74,500 lS20 b ) Lynne Valentin.: 642 8235 SPAHISH VILLA 1/J ACRE-$71,900 Red tile roof O\er Sparush arehe11 lead~ to )ecluded entry O:ik beamed ee1lin1?s h1J?hhll' h' rm Cantina kitchen plus sweepin~ mu11ter bt.>droom plu'! 2 bedrooms SprawUne lot Seller anx10U!I Try $7 , 190 Total down Call Qulck 84'7-6010 .A' ' 9· ' "~ , [@IR$UI J.CHA.HCE! To own Income property Unfurrushed triplex Excellent terms A·I condition Superb location OPDIHOUSl SA1VIDAY 12·5 117 Clearbrook Ln, CM Anne Keenan, Rltr. 213/468-4191, 842-5788 GftEEHIROOK ~2b60 c=sELECT I PROPERTIES HANDYMAN'S DRIAM Garage fully ln~ulated Built in work bench Large lot with RV ac-cess Newly palntt'd . paneling and wallpaper Four Be<lroom Home 1n Melia North Truly a Greet Buy for $76.000. ~2313 _ .. ,, ., '. J. • • • • ' [~11111 DOYOULOVI YOURMOTHB7 S bdrma. 3 be. 1n Mesa dt>I Mar Separale wing ror mother' Heavy shake root I bdrm l'OUld be fnnl din rm Many ex tras Call no.,., to 5ee th•~ unusual home' 545 9491 DESIGHB> FOil WCUTIVi LIVIM._ Thl11 beautifully up· gcaded Bue cola Home! Spacious Llvina Room with bl& Fireplace t.ar1e Master Bedroom. hichly up11raded with private entrance to garden area Slump 1tone planter!' hlghU1ht tho room -baekyard • K€Y R€ALTORSIC NEWPORT HG HTS 3 BR home In xlnt area. llrdwd fl oors. w /w crpt ·f?. bltn range & oven Reeenlly rerooted & restucroed. Ace:. &r rm ror boat" trlr + dbl gar' SI 14.tOO JACOIS UAL TY 67$-6670 ------- a commanding 'iew or llR + IOHUS .ioU eoun.e Thl' rher's $ 3 0 l M 0 . -PAYS lulehen boasts of ~· i::is AU! :.tove. )eparale electnc Need mor e room" <'OOk topi. new tall' Transfer your pre~ent rounler to~ &. SOlanan eqwly here & ai.t.ume floor Then add to this a \'.A loan-7 pereenl 1n music: room. ramil) din terest-$303 mo. pays all In& rm and a separate Big living room Bnck room for your pool table f 1 r e p I a c e H u g e Loaded with tasteful de· k1tchen-fam1lv room. eoratlng and ant1qul' Gigantic finisht.~ bonui. c harm. Offered at room'. Priced redueed $132.000. $2500 too! Take adv1m· fUUM REALTY tagc of super prit'e, C .. 546-0114 tenns & space' Call now 752.1100. DUPL.IX .. ,,, )· . ·. '''•"'' ~~~:r::r~~ [ ®l lfi~Hil cared tor $18.S,OOO 206 · -= W. · ................. 1 Gam~. .. .. _. .... .-.. .., MEW-MIW fOa MOtlE HOUSE Custom bwlt-Jbdrm. 2 fOtl YOUR MOHEY bath . family r oom . Try our Westcllff Beau ftreplace. Fully 1nsul11l· ty 4 BR + den ors BR. 4 ed. double garage BA.2fple's c:o1yfam1ly Eastslde Co)\a Mesa home 1436 Eatelle Ln $88,500 < P S Beller hop si&.000 on over') 111~ ... wportlt•d. " JUST LISTIDll OCUMFIOMT 3 Bdrm .. 13• bath ocean· front home. open beam"I tn hv. rm . bdrm . patio Dbl garage \4 opener $300,000 67~3663 833-0523 Eves associated loyMc:C-6 0 Coste ..... 541·172' -~--ORO><E RS -IH AI TORS l 1J1', I-. Sulboa tl1 3661 CLEAN UP Brini your mop and pall! 3 Bdrm. 2 bat.h only 8 years old! G real area! Vac<ltll ! A SlHI ! $73.000. RED CARPET '754-1202 Balboa Island Really ""'tlY\,. .. ,~,., '-'"""''~\\ 673-1700 BLUFFS FINEST On the water · 3 BR Agent &44· 113.1 1002 • ...,... 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Newer Ocean view ~bdrm .2ba Extremely MesaVerdeUVUl&at1ls dyplex, Daoe Pl • Real utate popu.Jar CAMEL-OT mdl Bull $129,000 Call PRIDE cae: 110111 ILllNS CD. $1'51000 _____ _....;; ___ , 1bia lovely homt located $46.2113 . on a cul·de·Hi' wltbld 'YI''' 0 • •11· 'C'r• • 1 See it for $71,900! 4 s Bdnn. prlva~ beach. Get GREEN cash eaay walktn1 4aat.tnoe to [!~· 1 ~ 'II 'I Bdrm, 2 bath. 1b11&1 roof, Coron a HI ch I and 1 for WJnTE elepl\Jults So Coast Plaia. theatres U 1· j dlabwasher No ••• $151,000. World Wldej wilhaClasalfied Ad &reateurants Many ovt ~ ·I :t; nooruedfrwt trees! Brolterd73-~ caU 642-5878 staod1n1 Cuture• lo· . , REl>CARPETT54-1202 cl4:ustom Dral)fne; G..,... I 002 G....... I 001 Covered paUo • • ••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••• • • • • ••• •• •••••• Oecontor Wtilpa~ra thf'OUlhou\ Ou\door faa BBQ . Auto Gar t>oor Opener ~YUlht ln ram. ftm. BY OWNER m tl.23 Pein. Only 1108.100. POOL AMI IOMUS IOOM Beautiful Deane home l.n Unlvertlt)' Park wf th custom pool and jacuz&l. 3 bedrooms. 2~ bat ha. .PlUI a fem.lb' room and a large loft bonus room or 1ludlo. $1'7 ,:SOO including tbe land. A~IA*llCO. 644·!060 OVE:.R 50 YEARS OF SERVICE A RAii IEAUTY Lovely Newport Beach 3Bdrm 2i.,\B1. Home. Vacant. Immaculate Move In Condition . Bright Cheerful Setting On A Cul-de-sac Cuatom Drapes Select Wall Papen. Sun·Deck. Thia Home Show• Llke A Jewel. $149,500. A .. Joy Of Newport'' LlsUng. COIOMA DEL MAI .Charm1n1 l Sty. Colonla.J WI 3 Br. ZB\·.-Llv. Room W /Fireplace. .1.'..a..&:lt 8rl1ht Kitchen. Well becorated. 2 Sunny Patloa. Gar&iefGucst Hou.te. Nr. Ten.nil Court.I &c Shopt. SLS7 ,500 631·1 3 IR ,OOL HOME -S 163,500 \'cry romfortable & located m establish ed neighborhood on lree-hned street Lg family rm fa cing mool. 3 fireplaces, formal dining, kitchen w tnook & muc h more' Paula Batley 642-8235. <S· 14 ) llG CAHYOH Plan 3 Broadmoor. Dramatic view of golf course, Fashion Island & beyond! 4 BRs, formal dining, expanded family rm w/plenty of roo m for pool table. Lg. yard w /pool & jacuzzi. $384,SOO. Lynne Vale ntine 644·6200. (S-15 ) START THI DAY IJGHT EnJOY smashing view of Npt. Bay & ocean w/your morning coffee. Great home w '4 BRs & charming family rm w 1brk fpl. End the day w corkta1ls & the sun setting over Catah n:.l S224 ,5l)Q Holly Markas 644-6200 cs 16 ) LINDA ISU E legant custom built bayfront home w/superb view of Big Bay. 6 BRs. 612 baths, family rm, formal dining rm & gourm et kitchen. Im porled tiles, stained glass windows & French doors. Pier & s lip. Appl. only. $695.000. Cathryn Tennille 644 -6200. (S-17) DOVB SHORIS Spacious bayfront on oversized lot w /sunny exposure + dock for lg. boat Over 5,000 ~q. ft. featuring family kitchen & brkfst area, mirrored dmmg rm & S BRs. Pool & jacuzzi for entertaining. $.SS0,000. Cathy Schweickert 642-8235. (S-18) IAYCUST-Sl7t,OOO -POOL Quiet lree·Jined street -4 BRs, 2~ baths + lg family rm w /stone fpl. Eating area in ne.w kitchen w/lots of s toraie. $179,000. Mary Lou Marion GU-8235. <5·10) NJC• TO ·SIUJ Don't miss lhia ''Seat Buy" in HV HJlls. Spacious 4 Br, family rm home built by Lusk w I Oowtng Ooor plan. Enclosed private co~~rd + patio w/mlnl-ocea.n vlew & Ulhts of Fashlon Isl. Park green can be viewed trom most rooms. $185,000. Marjorie Mabon 644·6200. (S-3:1> '42.e23.S ..... 100 IJ01 OoV'lr Ori-.. H.,.. Vltw Ctntet INIM •t Ctrnf)u1 Vall•• Ctntitr 752-1414 \ .. ,. -~ .. ~· .. · .. 1. •• " 1 .. • r. ' , 0 •• • ,• .. .. 1.1 (' \ .. . ~:.~~ ....... ,~:.~~~ ....... =.~~.~ ...... . .... ,.. I OOZ G •• ,.. IOOJ G•1r1' 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • :: '· !: ~ [· • • t ~I ' t • ... • . ! OCEAN VIEW NEWPORT 9• lit, contntctl0tt, 2 U , I IA, w /frplc. :.:.c:uhe ••llp•,•ra =~ .. All:w: c= + 119 IR ldtdin. a.-. ce11a': ta.git MW• ceclw tt. oepr.t. ,...._. doers °'""" to 9ltdoMd deck. 5tept from yow door to Mock. $2 1 S,000 CANNERY VILLAGE tHVESTMEHT ~rtnlty, n ullut 1c:lolty .. locoHUft. Wood~ • 9• w~ °" '" Sand. s 100.000. CAMEO HIGHLANDS CORONA DB. MAR Na 1.....:.. 3 •R. 2 IA + deft. not °"'Y has r'OOm for poof, but It YH"f Mar p ... beoch. Reductd to SIH,900. LAGUNA BEACH CHARMER 2 IR, I IA. Walk to beoch. Mulcan frplc .. oak floors, ffttcH yard. rft'ftct hon!• for crffd, writ..-, '~• couple, weekfltden and anyone who appttclcrtH lag_.a chann. Only SI I 0,000. • EMERALD BAY • • • 644-7020 i 2 123 SAN JOAQUIN HILLS ROAD ~ l-IEWPORT BEACH !ASTIR SPIC1ALS NWJJt Pcnin l>up1•x Yanlastic k>c $10%,000 Newport CUat.om Home 3Br, cloee to Bead1 $151,000 BeauUful Meea Wooda 3 Br. 2 ba $119,000 New&BeauWW Cceta Mesa Coodoe J l:ldrm. z~ bat.ha '82.500 V.A.BUYERS 3 Bdrm 1"antastic Home $&),500 Newport Piet Reotty @tt:u::mdllllln-11 2 0 05 Balboa Blvd. Newport Bctt. 673·2058 NEWPORT HTS One of a kind wllh secluded tre~ 11111.>d en try. Completely re modeled with large rooms, pot bellied :stove plus oak plankulg floors. Dining room, family room, large bdrms. and pnvate patios. OPEN SUNDAY 1-5, 2916 Clay St.. Call Soi0-5880 ~HERITAGE REALTORS 1006 • •••••••••••••••••••••• 3br t\se, hi beam liv rm, frplc + lbr apt. J::.statl $210,000. 675·ZJS8 lcAoaPellilllllla 1007 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Nice 3 Br, 2 ba. on Mon· ten>. 1195,000 Marshall RJty 675-4600 Jmmaculate doll housC', I "R-2,. S115,000 645 4H:!!l evenings. -------- t '-------------:~~!'! .......... !?.~~1 ~~~:! .......... ~?~~I LOWEST rRICE ATIEACH 2 BR 1 Ba, nr b<'~t b<iy f CA,E COD ' :>Wlnurung beach Qwl'l : $55,000/$2.SOO LAKE FOREST s treet. p 1 ea s ant J TOT AL DOWN Beauty deluxe lhru-0ut neighborhood. $110,000 r 3 BR, 2 BA. lrg. famrl) Winding roadway to room, lon~ of edras ! soaring 2 story retreat 1 I Pn d $Bl .500. Burr Whit e R~alfor 2901 Newport Blvd NB. vate groun proted UniYen~ Peri , secluded enlry to lavish • livang room Gourmet Yale. 4 BR, 3 A, move , ________ _ t kitchen overlooks sun-in condi•Jon. $129,500 fee. C7.141675·C630 isttine courtyard 1 Wind By The Sea Cor'Ofto ~Mar I 022 •'Ing stairway leads to Surf wiihin steps or lhi~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• J sweeping master bdrm 1treat family home tr COZV 3br, 2ba + l(ut·~t i plus child·~ rctrf'a l' Newport Beach Onf) hotL-.e. Ftpl. 2 patio-. B 2 t Hurry 1 Seller 1s <1n,mu:. S12S.OOO lot Pnn onl~. i1J7,000 •847·6010 L Pri 10'4ner,6407030 ., <'· •. OW C~ [~ -~ llamptnn mnclc-1 ir SUHSET,REVIEW • ' !-.c.i\lcw "''"'J)l)rl ~ OpenllouseOa1h·1 ti ' • Cint-:.l. ~·antai.llc '1ev. ~Mendota Trrr.icc. . '. only S229.500 3 BR. VICW $329.000 .. . NEWPORT HEIGHTS CD ........ _.. 640..6600 VA NO DOWN! lachenmyer • · · R f'Glty Inc. 646·3928 S4S·l41l Yl"I, no down payment rcqui red to buy this Harbor Vi•w Homes beautiful J bedroom Juat LoY~ly home. gourmet kitchen. EV F: R Y B 0 [) Y · s I u I! e I 1 v 1 n g room, Jo' AV 0 R I T 1'. 'J' h 1· ftrt>plare . and covered Portoflno model with SUPB DUrLEX patio Localed near the separate bonu~ room & 'BARGAIN PRICt:D at Harbor and Huntmgton bath. Beautiful det·or. sro.000.· Newport Beach. Manna I One mile le brick -pet.lo "'1th ra•~t>d Balboa Peninsula. Check beach. Priced for quick wood deck for exciting out Uu.s super buy with sale Sli9.900. Take advan· entertammeot. Call for ~ bay view from upper un-tage Call 96J..6767 appointment. iiliitit [ ~·-j ,_c_ou_~_r_r:_:_r_.~_'_0-R-T H $59.950. YA OR FHA TERMS Gas sa,cr location walk to maJor shops IEST FOR LESS • park, schools and bui. 5top. 4 Bdrm~. P• baths. fireplace, dbl "arage. , 531.·58000J>('n eves. 3 Bdrm condo. $50.000. U p g r a d e d . soundproofed, pan<'led. paJ>('red. Luth & plai;ler. ceramic tile, private paUo, private courtyard Pool, sauna. QUIET. Close to So. Coast Plaza. 631 So. Fairview B·C OPEN SAT &SUN l·S Inn RE Metworll 400E.17" FOR AU C.M. ,_us COIOHA D& MAI CHAIMll Beautlfully rem od e led house, walking di.stance to beach. Hdwd. firs., new kltch. w /Jenalre BBQ. .shlngled ext.er. an?a. Delight to !lee. $148,500. A ca&.DWILl ....... C:O. 844·9080 FAIULOUS VIEW POOL & rRESTICWE OPEN DAILY • 113' SalMifta Terr.• Delightfully open and freshly de<'orated 4 bdrm home with family room and large pool /p<1t10 area. The Pf'rfect fam!ly home for indoor /outdoor entertaining and privacy S398,000 includes the land. - WATtRFRONT HOM£c; REALEST~TE 63H400 Hout•• For ScM OAltV PILOT 0 5 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• C:-.Met. 10.Z4 e.t.MeM IOZ4 • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ' PAM'rASTIC ~~~~~.!~.~! ~!.~~-..... ,~.~.~ ....... ~.~~ ...... , ________ S&S a.ale Spectallall. Int.If I 044 tm. I 04i4 • IMdl I 041 ••TttlSISfT•• 3,4 or 5 bdrm modela ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ...... •••••••••••••-•••-•• WT5aDIMlAI MIWPOITICH lbt dcalrablo MCUoo of C II. Walk to all market., cbu rcbe:s " ecbooll. 3 bdrms, 2 ba. Lge lol. Ooly $88,SOO! IY OWMa avail, aomo w /pools. 4 br 2 ba, estm drapery & a68-46Q2 crpts. Brick trpl It 1l1te Pennlnctoo PropertJea TMIS lS THI OMLY WEa 91D 5'5-9G1 e nt ry. Van Lual wallcoverlop. Stained illlM windows. Kitchen pr~r. remodeled w I ancrowav~ oven, btchr blk • stalnlesa steel. Elec. gar w/cedar panel· lng & work bench. Low ma int. yrd w /aprinkleni. Fruit " shade trees. Quiet st. nr schools & OCC. By Appt. M7-4388, M4-37'54 $111,000 MUST SB.I. MOW Meaa del Mar 3 br, 2 ba, lllra£edropnr. Terms to suite. $79,900. a:n 9081 1-------- ..... a.lc:bR 5CMlp ... lt couldn't hurt to call Chuck Nuh about a re· ward.Ing career In real estate. Free training lf you qualif)'. 54().5101. E Sade Custom home. PRICE RIDUCID! $4.S50. P'Ol! qutck 1ale: now $84,9150 for beautiful 4 bdrm. home. 2964 Bimini Place. Mesa Verde. Open SattSUn. l ·5 rAULMARTIN REAi.ESTATE 64.C.73t3 38r, huge fam. rm., 3 car --------- gar .. on R·Z lot. Agt l:'vn"".tn.e 646-7171 U~UI GR.EEHIROOK Mesa Verde Professionally decorated 3 bedroom home, wllh custom drapes, carpels and tile. 3 bedrooms, eat· ing area, dini.ng, family room and fireplace Atrium. 2 patio&, $911,900, BKR~l720 IYOWNEtt 3 Bdrma. VIila Pacific Coodo, 1 mile to beach Mirrored & shah waJls Showa Uke model. Pool.i., a11unu, Jae, courts. RV/Boat e.torage Red to 174,900. 551-0298 & 962-tl83 Up1raded end unlt twnbse, fplc, gar, 2 BR ii,, Ba, $62,900. Ownr. 536-IM.93 SU & rARI VIEW UPCJ"adedhtory, RVac· cess. $119.SOO. By owner. Open Houi.e 12·5 pm 21881 Kiowa Ln. 968-2853 YOU'U SH THIS ADI During lhe next few days we lif'e going. to sell our beautiful CuJverdale home to the highest bidder. This spacious 2150 sq. ft. home has 4 BR, 2'r.r HA, excellent landscaping & many upgrades. Sealed bids wil l be accepted. 80% financing. We've enjoyed this home for 4 yrs, bave good equity and are not greedy to get the last dime out. Of course, we reserve the right to reject rificulously low bids. However, we sus pect some family who is pr epared to act !a.st will obtain a real Irvine housing bargain. Call 552·0536 for appointment. NORIN S REAL TY OPEHHOUS~ Sat\lrd11y l to5 prn, • By OWller, 3 BR, 1 ba nw 1044 ........ 1044 home Prime location. ••••••••••••••••••••••• -••••••••••••••••••••• 68SThalla St .. Lagunr cozy CAPE COD·Th1s 1s what Laguna i9 all about! Beautifully restored charmer. 3 Bdrms., den, library, formal dining room. 11kylit country kitchen &. separate artist's sludio Easy walk t.o the beach & has excelleol ocean VIeWS. $189,500. Must ~ee lO appreciate $87,500 1738 Pine St. llB 531>-0390 ASSUME VA LOAH Save lbousands without having 20% down No qualifying, no credit, check, no closing costs. Two day escrow. close t.o beach, $73,500. Prine. on· ly. 89J.M79 agt. CULYBlDAL.E Transferred·muat aelt. $8 90 Woodbndge 2 BR A den, 4, 0 or 3 BR. Form dln'g rm, Warm and sumptuous atrium, upgraded. living room. sunfllled lndscpd,. $99,950/besl counlry· kilchen . olr.S.Sl-0685 SPANISH MANSIO:"J aeparale master. huge ---------• Unique Dana Point covered patio, steps to i--.... .-...-._._.._.._~ landmark converted to 3 pooleau!!11J>ar71.7k.1 Don't wall. •VAS 175" * unita. Perfect for owner ....... C occupatico plus Utcomt-Ol'IN "19 .,,~11JN,o1<1ii.i J wort with Orange o. Ocea.o view. Impressive , ·· ' · , 1175.000. Por lnloeaJI: remodeled lnteripr. 4 bdrm, 2 ba. Extremely popular CAMELOT mdl. 'l'b1s lovely home l0<;ated on a cul-de-sac within easy walking distance to So. Coast Plaz.a, theatres & restaurants. Many out· standing features io· dude: [e-~ Vet• only. Homes to facade & Immaculately ---------1 , ' , VetAil. 541·0808 $21.$.,000. 'W'AftB~I DE=~!! ., .~ . ~~ COROHADRMAR I lllUK"'-$7,SOO. Under Market' IN IRYINE JOP 0' 2 Bdrm., I balh heml• Custom Draperies Covered patio Decorator Wallpapers "#I In Califomfa'' Beautiful huge 2 story. " with two rear units. Well bdrm plus ~£'paratc 4 BR"' THE TERRAC" established area & ~df Ou~DQ MESA VERDE AuloGat DoorOpener OPEN SAT lHPM Skyti~hl In Fam Rm. 2845 CORVO PLAC f': BY OWNER 979-8123 By owner 4 BR 2 AA, Pnn. Only $109.~ fplc, & Cam rm Beaut ranuly room. giant cul ~ I: cared for. $175,000 de·i.ac lot 1 Mlle to 0 y $J OD"' ocean Now$82,500 NL 4, u Tht' highly desirable OWN YOUR ow~ llJ11~Try .. ~·.':T-1 .... "=_.!::-... ,.,-. C.irdJff. ooautifully de· Large 2 Bdrm. 2 bath <f. lli....~ ~~.~-~!::..!~ Don't miss this ideally corall•d in earthtoncs y.o. Y.i hlock to r.1,1111 962·4471(~~~)546·8103 located California Hom'° and immaculately m3m· Beach. $89,500. Finaiw pool w/jacuzzl, $126,500. RB>UCB> $7.000 540-9179 --------• on a cul-de·sac. Near lalned. Available for u 10g available. schools, park and shoo.. proud new owner. Asking * 49 .. •057 * r $89,900. Beautiful view or .,_ 1 Yr. did East Costa -------- Mesa tnplex, deluxe un-Meea Verde $82,SOO by ,._ /2 bd ~b owner. Spac 4 br & Cam no, e&. w rnas .• ' a.. nn.. 2 Ba.~lc. Secluded di.run~ area, lauudry " frplc. Now St'lB.000 tropicaJ e. 556-1530 EYB. YH COPELAND * $f1 & ERS * REAL TOA 552.0434 Living in Nevada now lo escrow m Nevada DOUBLE Tenant mov111g out now YOUR MONEY 3 BR, 2 ba Cul de sac tn JO ~eari' If history rt' Mesa Verde. $85.0oo peal:. 11.:.elf 1n 198R th~ re· A Johni.on Bkr 9;9 -191;.1 sale! value or this approl<. 1 2 acrt• Co:.La l\1t•sa Ranch will be doubled 3 ~Upt!r br v. P• ba. l"rpb. dflll\, frpk + bacht"lor un1l for add1tlonal in com<' Might do a ltttle tradmi:! OPPORTUNITY. May never return. Don't miss this one! OPEN FOR INSPECTION Sat &. Sun 1 S Pfll. 222S Ca· nyon Rd, Costa. Mesa. Cahf. McNA.S U Rf.Al.TY ~2 1334day-. 6-C? 6578 e\ t•s ~~~ ~~~ Jt,,.s..,... 81/J0/e Loon l..n• Jted in beautiful N CO!>tJ MM:> llu~e Fam Hm. w Sw<.'d1sh fp lc. tot.ti paymentSS6S mo 754-7800 LC>Ot<ING FOR 264 Santa Tomas ltktweton Del Mar & M~a Or .. off SJntJ An..1 Ave. l I YPar nt'"'" :l bdrm. 2 bath. 24· fomt ly ~ining room. Jlug1: rear yard. sprinklt•rs lmmed. possession . $82,900. for Cast sale Roy McCordl• 1810 ~port II, CM 751 -9999 548-7729 Hen't h NffdS• IN THE llAYSTM;K vou've bttn lookinl{ for • :! Houses on l H:! lot Convrnll'nt loc..1t1011 Each:! Rdrms. I b.1lh Compact & tasteful!~ cl1· corated Priced n.1:ht, call now $96.900 Turtfen>ck R~otty AL WIL..c;()N Rl'allor 752·6618 552·02 I 6~Y • EASTSIDE 3BR • Very Cln, lge crnr lot. won't !~st. ~4l>-8025 A POOL? Sbr. 2ba, fam rm. Lge yrd Here It Is. Htdlfllt 'd, sur· w/trees. cvrd patio. nu rounded by a profusion of crpts. nrs. 2 car itar. Nr gret>nery & a lrg 3 BR schls & So Cst Plaza hou.'le-. Located in a rural $94,500. Opn Hse Sat/Son :1tmo1;phere of thf' I 'ppcr 10.J0.3:30 951 Lansrni: ll.1ck Bay ar('.> l"Jll us to Ln. ~ 8.l27 VAL~~ooo 640..9900 --HAUCREST $73,500 ·by owntJr 3 BR :! ~ ha, frpl. custm drapes ~Ron<Z. o\\ £ £~5-\otcz p p~~CZ lrg yard near schools, ~ sbopplllg ·S49_-2682 ___ _ WOODSTREAM CONDO LOOK Nr Bk Bay, spit level. 3 Br, 2 Ba, 3 car gar. super decor, $94,900. Owner I agt. 548-7933 OPEMSAT.1·5 $59,,00 8191 Penrungton. AUanla & Beach. Charming 1 Bdrm Condo, pool, air C'Ond., built-Ins . near btach. lmmed. occupan· t"Y C-all Jun!! Bl:ur, Agt <7141968-3229 Open HouM ly Owner Scrt/S&ln 10.5 3 Br, 2 i.tory. upgr..1dPrl rondn $fiti. !HlO q6112 H1rklt•\ Ur Ph 962 35:.?7 S&5 In lt•\CI, 5 br 3 l.JJ J car )?ar, beaut. dt-cor $1~.900 ll92 7677 --- PRICED for quick sale. $67,t!SO FllA or VA terms. 3br, 2ba, gd loc. Bkr /ownr Cal I 751·7760 or 9611-6894. -------r JUST LISTED lmm..1t·ulatt• :i br P• ba h<iml', fam kitchen. mov e in co111lll111n Cl~t· to .,:nlf l"Our:ic & lirach ~UIOO 1'1ffan~ llt:il i-:-.t;1tc IS-lb •Jilt. 5'1:! n1:1 ......... °" HarbOw 1042 .....•.•.........••••.. WATERFRONT ping. c m o u n l a i n s r o m SEASCAPE CONDO secluded park-like loca· ln San Clemente, 2 Br & uon. den or 3 Br, highly up· grad'd. Owtlr purchast'd another & must sell now! $94,500. Lease/option. ~ • Lockbox. Hurry. call! FANTASTIC VIEW RANCH REALTY MonatthSummit 11 Plan 551·2000 B 3 Br, 2 ba prnr WOODIRIDGE RANCH REALTY lndscpd & clecora~cl 55 I ·2000 $119.500. Ownr botllh• IEAUTY --------• another home, hurri ONLY $85,500 HURRY Ownt•r must sell' bring offers! •• Nearly new townhouse 4 Br. fam rm. 3 ba, l\/C, EXCLUSIVE OHL~ Elegant end unit w/up blfully decrted, ,:tn•at Laguna Beach mo11·I graded cpting & many value at $129,900. (;all w I ch arm. 22 u n 1 h. other extras. 2 b ig 955-1830. $750,000. Super loc cm bdnns, Z batbs, fmly rm, WOODBRIDGE B d oceanside o( hwy. 1 blk tr. Irvine's best. 759·1501. ~: ran public bch. Swimmrni:t new Aapenwood. Lowest TURREROCll BROADMOOR PATIO HOME price4brhousein Wood· pool, view, somt: bridge. Owner must sell w/ltitchen. Prine only. immediately. Open Sun-l ACRE OF LAND day 1 ·5. Tum left off Yale W /F ASr FOOD at Wood hollow. 7 OUTLET Elmwood. $102,000. Ample parking. Supl'r 752·5368 after S PM. value&. loc. SSS0.000. TURTLE ROCK lmmac. cond. & up· gradl'd 4 br, form. din 1257 S Csl Hwy La~ Ht h 49U035 rm. t ba f·am rm O W N E R I S w "iew Garden atrium, DF.SPERATE! Submit Sl'c to a pprec1a le. your offer on this 3 $133.000. 8331M4 bedroom :! bath beauty . BOND REALTY which includes a huge Garden Hom<' in Univ. •SPECTACULAR • familyroom. Pr~. Irv. 3br, 2ba. OCEAHNWS RY OWNl-:R ~EAGATE Custom llle nr & p<1t10. frplc. JO' shp. wat<'r 'icw rmt & bck, Jbr Jba, 3 - d('Ck.'I. pool, jacuz11. ten· m~. dbl ~11r. $234.000. 71~/846-4829.213/5.97·5553 Designed ta full advan· Luxury custom hom« 1n tage or 1 slry pnvacy, PorUfina. Very..!Jpaci9us Loe near 2 pools & tenn LS (3000 sq ft ) 2br. &-n. courts on a beaut. green· 2~ba w/dram11t1c in· 1_be~l_l._7_14_·_S.S_l_·S89_1 ____ 1 tenor. Priced betow mkt TurtJerock view lot, brand at $283,000. Offers 111. Chri1Hana lay new, chooi.P nu crpls, Vlted. IY O~ER Wcrt...front RANCH REAL TY t•lec. fixtures. t stry. 3br. LJ:e ·I Bit 3 Ba condo, fam rm. drn rm. $166,800. 499·1965 S2SO,OOO. Pvt Pty. Call ____ 6_3_9_-7_0_0_0 ___ :?13·962·2771 OPEN SAT 12-5 65.!} Bolsana Dr 7 tr 301\M. 213 5!12 ~ REST BUY IN WOOD· Pnmf' WJt<'r Location. PIZAZZZ BRIDGE. 4 Hdr., 3 ba. WATCH FOR THE Aeautlful custom hnml' rm din·g .\tnum. up overlooking hrealhtak PIZAZZZ grades. 0:'\LY $113 '.150 EASTER WHALE in~ ChnM1ann Bay. 1 hr OPEN HOUSE Sal Sun, &alltheextrasyoucan 15.280akdale.S44·01~ from this h1lltn11 imni:me, l'nc1>S335.000. This .t bedroom ex·i---------•I beautiful home in lo\',~lv Tiffany Real E.statc e<:ul.Jve home in Wood· Mystic HJlls. Comrn.acrl 840.ti621, 592-3393 bndge is loaded with it. Owner, 3 BR, cuslom, ing V1ew of lhe Pacilw ---Entirely upgr3ded with a elegant, spac. Huge Fam Upg.raded move-in Jt Ll!XURV large lot on a cul-de-sac. Rm. vacant. Must sell, ady WATERFRONT NEW-VACANTI Submit S112.950/ofr. 71Hl.94·S641 Eastside $75,000 3 BR, hardwood noors. fplc. lge yard. Won'l last! BToro Spacious 3 br custom 2 your offer. I 0 32 sty home. d<'n. frpl, huge IElOW M "Rl(ETI, llv rm, wet bar. 40' boat ~I "' ""' ~ flUl'"'Al'l1"' Ol'f"N M0119'l lllAl 1"Y '>,JI. fll'::l' ITtrJO.•~v•.CO•I• Me .. 645·9161 ---------- MESA VERDE 06-ESCAl.ATED PRICE Speclom 3 bedroom with family area & skylight . Formal entry to formal Uvins nJc>m. 2 paUos. At $79,500 it won't laat long. aocall NOW!~ 7Z21 ••••••••••••••••••••••• dock F:ntertainer's de· I WOOOBRIDG E 3 HR tm~Occupancy Ii~ $349,000 dramatic EASTON, prof Lg 5 br fam home, sale or Tlffanv Real E.~tolc lndscpd & upgrd, pvt lol' lse opt.Ion. $5500 down 846.6821. 5!12-3393 7 Clearwater, $139.950 SSSO mo. Agl. Dolli - ---TURTI..EROCK. ch.irm S89,500. 493-1137 or I~ 1044 tnJl J BR. w/alnurn &! ________ _ 493-0290 •••••••••••••••••••••• WOODBRIDGE x tr as. 31 Beth ;1 n y •1 ________ _ Fo.MtaillVahy 1034 WOODBRfDGEPLAC'E REALTY $llS.900. GREJo:NTHEI':, OYBLOOIUHG ••••••••••••••••••••••• Special offer1nJ: 3 5 I BR HAMPTON w :.un •"GU .... " 55 1-3000 deck. 4331 Brooks1rlt• ..-"""' GRHHIROOK bdrm. Contemporary de· ---------$104.995. For prev1C'\\<. Tasteful, exc1tin1t. ;acb11 SPECIAL ~c~ ~~~:/~':;:;~~~ nJRTI..EROCK Patrick Tenore, AgL. table 4 bedroom or ;1 Lrg 4br. 2 stry fsm . Just short walk to lake & Plan 8-t'ee land·3 Br. 2 552-4414 bedroom & den VIEW home w/2'/00 sq n. Top parks ln Village of Wood· Ba, + atrium. Associ---------•I home. coostructed w1Lh F.V. loc, nr Magnolia & bridge. From $115,000. greenblt & pooFllEL. $1D09.500. COMPARE VALUE fin eat mate ri a Is · Talbert. $10,000 under 552-4101 DEER Clnished with r1rhly mr1ct for this mode.I at ---------• Plan Ill. Twnhome va· Newcarpet, newdrapes, cust.omized details .· Sl29,0Gp. Easy going WO 0 DB RI DC E 8 Y cant. 3 Br 2 Ba. fncd fresh paint. Just the qualit y cabinets, ap· ownertl.gt w1U list.en lo OWNER. 3 Bdrm, 2 ba, patio, elec gar opor. As· ldeaJ place fohrthe young pllances, hardware. • Broadmoor "Wildwood" soc. greenblt & pools. couple or t o retired carpets. View or ocean. )'OW"ten;:e.SMO Under market al $97,900. $84,500. Call Benson ~-It's a Notre Dame sunsets, mountains. prt'· 559-0092 7si.6C88 ln Villatte 111 and it can m1um nei~hhorh ood ' be yours for $85.900 Quick sale allows buy1>r TURTUltOCK GLEH TOWHHOME HUDSON BAY REALTY, LTD. (7, 4) 6 4 5. 9 9 5 0 .. '.,., -· . red hill ~:.;. some selection an f1nishln1 detail ~. ft\ lUttS. etc. $297.SOlt EMBALDIAY ~~~~~~~~~I Attractive c bedroom -family room. forn\lil chn 552-7500 Lagmoh«h 1041 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 111g room, view homP 10 private community --------•I Walk to private beach, 6 UMCHfT &IRA.CHIT t.aiuna &acb County area. 2 bdmu, 2 bath.•. hardwood floors, open beam celllnu. brick frplc CHors.1 Leral) $117.500 MAURY STAUFFER SEAUONREALTV • · •1 E C.lHwy, Cdll ~ mJN. OltHwf .... uaa --- t.tnnls cowts, 4 pools. Beamed ceilings. RecenUJ redecorated. Quiet cul...._c location. sm.ooo MAGMIFIC&n OCUH& CMO'OHVIE'W HoUst bc>m~ bey t.odny NesUtd on q111ct, prlvatr alrfft In the hills or Laiuna Boach 2 Leveb · 3 bt.'Cl.room.• 3 baths " kitchens Lowt>r lrHI may .,. rt'nled. Only lllS.000 ca Coldwell Ranl<c:r l '· 1l .t '· .. , • ,. t j -• • t. 0 • -. : I ... , .. ..• ., ol '!> ., .,, .. ,. . ,, - •• ' l ,. .. fJ 1l l!fl DAILY PILOT Friday, M;uch 24, 1918 ;~~ .. iMi~~~ ... ·;; ;~~ .. ;;,~;l;~~ .. i0"52 ~!::.~~.~ ....... ~~:.~~'!: ........ ~~.~!~ ..... . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mewpcwt 1Hc1t IO" Mtw,_ I IMdi I 06 S-..._ MoW. Ho.ma ._,.. ••rtr JMO ••••••••••••••••••••••• SIYIH DWLIXIS ..................................................................... ····••••••············· •••••••••-•••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• C !'•mo 1071 Fors-. 1100 ---------............................................ . ~ OPEN HOUSE SUMDA Y I :00-5:00 21522 TREETOP LAME MEW WOOD AMD GUSS CUSTOM HOME -Haff.cl I• • old t.calypt.a grove, ••P•••h• oc••• and Catalh1a ........ $119,500. SOUTH LAGUNA 499-4.SSl 497-3331 LAGUNA NlGUf-:f. 49H720 DANA POINT 493·8812 l..J-leoch I 048 ~ leodl I 048 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• OUTST AMDIMG lilGAIN Panoramic ocean/sunset view from elegant spacious 4 Br, 3Ba home at the top of Portofino. Handsome fireplaces in living rm & master suite. Sunken tub & interior atrium are just a few of the many luxurious appointments in this custom home. O,EH HOUSE SAT Ir SUM 12·5 CalforD.talb MAY 0 ("O llPO llATI O"-./ 380 GLENNEYRE LAGUNA BEACH c {714)494·2146 K Logma leach I 048 LogMIMI Miguel I 052 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• EMEl.ALD IAY Spnn&l1me Special· the MOM.ARCH IAY i..!ed bnck dnveway & TERRACE entry establish the warm New custom home under & inVlting feeling or this construction W/4 BR 3 freshly decorated 3 BA farruly room & dm bdrm home. Hdwd · n<><>rS, new carpeting & mg area. Spa off_ master pauJt lastL'ful wall CO\ bath alrlum. Sllll time enng~ & <·oiy dt·n makt>I for buyer to selcd lh1s an ideal l'hUll't' for carpetmg, drapes. etc 11 tht' family who wdnL~ to lovely view home & move now ()(·e~in '-Ide & only $265.000. only steJJ5 to the bcal'h. PICTURE THIS $359,000 Only steps lo the recrea- COMDO hon center & beach! 2 BR + study. View of garden from every room. "FUN'' near the sea . Best buy-lowest priced. PEACEFUL VALLEY VIEW Dramatic entry wath vaulted ceilings & vertical s kylights create an atmosphere of warmth & spaciousness the combination fllm1ly rm/kitchen adJacent to the patio garden area, which has room for a pool are just a sampling of the features which enable you to live comfortably or entertain in this new 4Br, 3 car garage, never been lived in home. It only awaits your individual touch valued at $139.SOO. LET US SHOW YOU! MAY 0 C 0 tt POR A1" I ON 380 GLENNEYRE LAGUNA BEACH CK {714) 494·2148 •JUMIOYA• I worit with Oran•e Co Vets only. Homes to $175,000 For lnfo C'oll · VetA&t. 541 0800 BAYSHORES BY OWNER. Sl79,000 3 BR, 2 ba, newly decor, r~­ modeled llitcb., Open Sat & Sun 12-$ or by appt, 714 /831 -4839, 2682 Creslv1~. * * * * * * * GOlf COURSE SAN Q.IM&fTI IM CHA.IMIHG & IEACH!! Ore.an Yictr•, all 2 BR. old San Juan Ca pi.sLrano ll.IDUB> TO Slt .500 1 ~ BA. 1.-tbe:o 1 YT· A r f o r d a b 1 e u p • 2 Bdrma, 2 baths, wet old. Walk to &ta&.e bc:acb CUICOD Ir staln/dowMlaira con bar, fam·rm, 1unken Uv· • park. Atkin• oo ly COUHTRY SC!NE dominiwn. 3 Bdrms • 1111 rm, lgc lutcben. Park '111.000ucb. Otter on all Views o f wide open baths, caqieUng, wuidow rent $182. locld. ulll. or part. space&, lu•h g r een roverinp, built-ins, two 536-8608 BERnlAHENRY hilla1de "aparklln& night car garage & patio. By r • ... I_,... $97 5-0 ... "~~arTO, ~ ~ ..... ··-•· Ch ln 2 bd owner. Moo. thru Thurs -""""• • ~ .....,1 .. .___-.., u .. -. arm & rm <days). call 846-2158, HW\tington 8C'h aduJt pet Harbor View Knoll con· Fri. lhru Sun. (days) & park. Thi.I beauUlul dou· UDUCED $7000! do, with wet bar, wood 1 ll ,714 ) ble wide lux11.-v home Huoe Eutslde mansion burrun1 frplc, bay win· eveb ncs, ca ' _,, . - dowa wood decking '93-0588. 2Br, 2Ba w/hot & cold extra rental, present in· ~~~~~~~~~ running Euler Bunniea come $650. Great starier CAMALFROMT $148,500 · Subject to bck· -can be yours. Seelog ia l n vestment . Now 4 Br, a ba +loft.. Cuatom up offers. ~n Sat/Sun OM APPROX beUevm&, but be I W'e to $1.0l.000. Drivo by i9't tile, nucrowave, frplc, 1(~4:... 27) 64 Hillview Dr 1/s ACRE bring your Easter Bon· llapolia St, Ulen eill sundeck + many xtras. .;>-... ,__ k net. <MF46SS-6) aeeot8fiZ.Q282. Prked to sell fast at ~~~~~~~~~ in lovely M.-ioo Cree . ,...._. 'FORNIA PAClFJC ........:::;...;._ _____ __._ ""' 3 BR. 1"4 BA home. ~ 12 U._. ... S $158,500. 642•3361 Ai1 or LOOk!lt HI B b l y up e ra de d Mobile Home Really "'• 645-0'.IMl Westcllfffamily borne w/decor. Sl.25.ooo. 2706H:;,.~&ea ~mile to be9cb. Thelle 3Lg. BR,3'1\bath.s _,....,., won't laat at only ae.::~~e!2~ted 3 H111edeo +tam. rm. 4 .AHCHOllAGE AD u LT pa r k In ~d~upG~lm iu~c:~ br 2~ ba borne w /pool & Sepa.rau, laundry rm. ltilVUTMBfTS Westnunster. 2Br, 2 ba, d\lplex or 4-plex. Walch lovely view. $315.000. 2 Brick frplcs. C7 I 4t 496-77 t I beautiful Universal dbl empire crow. Call QOW Owner. 640-1841 ChUdreu's playhowse wide. Walle lo market & for moreinlo SI70,000 CHARMING 4br. 21,.<Jba bus atop. Prado V~rde 4 J SEA V1 EW Port Royal 2 MEWrORT IEACH mdl. home (Sunbollow) Park. BargaJJl al $26.500 .... ~;.liifiii•a Story, 4 Br, 3 Ba., beaut REALTY s77 .900. Prin only. Agt968-9332 view. landscaping, fsne~l 675-1642 545-3261 492-4337 ~:;...__ ______ _ upgrades. Best buy Bl ---------Ocean view, l Br. new Owner $279.000 640 6600 THE EVBYTHIHG en cl cabana. u t 11. ~~~~~~~~!!!~ .y Ow .... ER LI DO shared $13,500. 4!M-8894 23152 FGl"Jf'fffta Eaat " UDO ISLE HOME GOLFCOUISE Spac1ou~ i-;x~cul1vc Exotic garden entry TWO+ HOUSE home. 5 Bdrm, 4 bath lmmac 3 br 2 ba home. ._..._r~-1200 COST'"' 11 .... uer• • V EWHOME l• h t->48 000 w/fountain. leads to ...___,..-.----A-A I w/v1ew In prestigious Beam cei gs t ruout. .JI. , Italian tiled foy e r••••••••••••••••••••••• Owoer'aun.itinrearwith Smythe Building. 3 Br, Dover Shores oo Galaxy Beaut. cedar panel'g, Super 3 + den, re-/ in t.ai to buge fireplace in 2 ...... B a. I 1 br a r y ' Dr. t:W! .,..,..., south patio. Prine. only. w curv g s rway HORSE naucHES "--· .. "ul family room! 7 " .,..,..~ By ..,A8 000 ""A modeled kitchen, dbl car ups t a i r s b d r m s . Mn uc...... ..-breakfast rm. den, 2 -------• owner. _.. • · ~ f t · S · t SlidiJlg glass doors 'o frplcs, heated fcool & Newport Crest Twnhse, ViaEboU,675-2306 gar, across rom eon15 pac1ou1 m s tr 5 e Large ones, 1maller alk to be h l rts ---------crta. \.ola blk from clubhse w/frplc +4 more bdrms. ones, new ones, sllg.bUy pool, highly landscaped. jacuu.i. 2..., Yrs o d, 2800 w . ac • . en c • i•yvi~ & bch. Bathhouse & fnnl .o1;-fam rm w/wet· $1.37.SOO , sq.ft. pool, Jacuzz i. Agt. --5"' • '"''·Jlf bar Anduu.. bl fth usedooes&fixeruppers. d CUMMINGS REALTY 64&-7171. Lg 2 br 2 ba mobile home jacuu.a....... or appl · w a a vu 0 e We have them all. BKR. Q OAIL Ill --------i · 1 Ba ·d v·u wwpolled hill5! To ex· (714) 676-5717 PL.A.Om ____ 49&-_ 1407 "BLUFFS" Twnhse, 4 br. in exc u. ys1 e ' . perlence tb.ia luxurlow; ORS22·~ PROPJllft'rilCl!I I d Clubbse, pool, jac .• pnv ,,_1·deoce _ .,92,000 _ ----------r --_ 1u-1t20 Inc COZY 3 Bdrm home ram rm. x nt C'On . qwet bC'h , poss. boat s lip. 1v11KA11TS • ..., .. 1400 ~ST.M~IUCM n~tled in Laguna N1gut>l street Agt. 646-7171. $S7,500. 675-7903 67J..7848 OJ1t1t1 .. ovH llfALlV call INVESTORS . U1 ghla nds, puched 11030.•"9<0.Co•••""'.. VAWYREALTY New listings. Large OELU:XE,E-SIDE tnplex above valley, hght:. Jnll ORIGlt-4.AL BLUFFS t-4EWPORT-645-9161 496-4977 731-6050 parC'el1t $100 per acr~. w/awner s 3 BR. 2 BA 1 mln view from 2 covr'd l"am home, 4 br 3 ba. RB>UCED BKR +frplc. 3 Yrs new .. Gd patJOs. low ma int yard, frpl. beam cc1lmgs, vu of Owner says sell'! Three A The Endless (7141677·56&1 terms. YEAGER RL'l"Y ... d ff bd Fash Isle. open & airy. ~171 shuanl( rs o mslr rm $144,900. Open House huge bedrooms plus pool WIMMER Lands OR S22·05.'IO . & country kitchen , Sat &m 1 5. 2146 Vista and wate rfall Won't Coodoin Bluffs,4br,3ba Cape --- firu.shed gar. as:.ocp p<>odl Laredo 644·2432. p P. Jast-<:alJ 646-7171 pla)'Tm, 2 bars. 2 pvt ls what you see from the c. ... t .. ., Loh/ & rec. center rice °'''"''~·••HUN hf"'" bll" I patioofthislo.vely 2sty ,.~ 1500 below compel1l1on al ---------•t[a pauoe,ongreen cu · home l led th hills _,,.... S94,900 Call VISION for •OPEN HOUSE* .,, .{ =~·~~T~fi~b above ~C's ~bt!rical ... •••••••••••••••••••• directions to open house D-....'T MISS " • ._...,..~~~ membership included. valley. Entertain your Niche #447, slngle,for 768-TIOl """ ~~~~~~~~~ By Owner. $l74,500 Criendsbythesparliling ashes, alcove .of Executive's Dream Pnvate comm 3 BR. 2 ba , with 180' ocean view Spac1ou~ & stunning home Feature~ too numerous lo mention True pndc or owm•r!.l11p s:ll9,000 151) Ko/an • R1 . .,1I [j~t.1li: /11c. 3 Mo11,uc:/1 8.1y f'/,1/,1 661-1161 B31·3888 THIS OME BJGCANYONTWNHME m-0331 Prinooly pls pool, serve gourmet din· memones. $95 at Pacific Sat&Suftdcry 12-5 2 br 2 ba, Greenbner, oers intbeformaldininll View Mero. Park, NB. priced to sell. By owner HURRY ~ or gather lll the Mrs Myrtle Sha.w, 2512 2402 "'-htdHIDPL $153,750.640-7477 TillSWON'TLAST architectural grace of South Chanticleer ~ $147,SOO the living room. we are St.. Grand Is 1 and , 31r, llo. 3 car gar NEAR BEACH REDUCED FOR offering this stylish re Neb 68801 2 BR 2 Ba, den, pool QUlCK SALE s1dence at$139,900 (308)382·2083 __ _ UVl"llGRMwfTplc +s87 .900. 675_0745 , lt's abeautyinNewport ,.._ C tRJty 1 DINlNG & FAM ILY RM Hght.s, 3 br, 2 ba, sunken _,,on "" Pacific View Memona 557-l<Ma L R .. copper plbg.. ..-974-4700 Prk. Lots li & C. lot 355. TO FIND Locate Irvine Av al Me!>a Dr. Go east on Mesa Dr thru golf rourse to Upper Bay Place. Left to Orchid Hill. Harbor View Hornes Guest hse w/bu & ba. --Ocean vu. 548 0279 "CARMEL W /S,A" covered patio overlook· OCEAN VIEW Conntrcial mg spacious yd. Open Stylish & spacious 3br. rroperty 1600 Decor'd T IO. 3 Br, FR. Sat/Sun 12·5 415 Pirate 2Yaba twnhme w /120 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LR, OR + muC'h more Rd . <OH Cliff Dr.) degreevu.Only$89.950. lmmac cond. 1833 Port 646-093l VAWY REALTY &.aru:~OMERSET' Westcliff 2 BR, 2 bacon· _4_9 _M.,--9_77-,--73_1_-6_0_5_0_ Elegant prof decor'd, 5 do. Sep din rm, frpl, 2 OlllerlteaUstat. MEDICAL ILDG (DntWD Sao Clemenle) Sale-Lease-Trade 4 HMHleducecl $I SK One 4 BR '5 three 2 BR. room for more units. Real Dltate ~ (n4) ~1665 evs C O SSM974. t UtilrTS + HOUS& Only 1 blocks l.O beach. In great eond.iUon. Try lS"."o down. AsklDg $369,'80. Call Bkr. 558-3327 rtlDEOF OWHEASHlr 4-Ple x. In Huntingt'On Beach. Located in rapid· ly appreciating area. Moments to Freeway & beach. Priced to aell. cau S58-3327 Broker. See forever while water view; this 3 bdrm. unit has been highly up. ~raded with 2~ tiled baths, microwa~. trash compactor; gated for privacy & security. $165,000 Call today .•. $122,950. DON'T MISS THIS Lovely bright weU-ltepl home m cul-Oe-sac area ol fine homes. Acreabe Estates 10 Back Bay Area. Br, FR, LR. 3 car gar. patios. pool, only m,soo. •••• .... ••••••••••••••• buge brick patio + rnany ~Open Sat 1·5. Mobl. tto..a 7 Rm Dental Suites 8 Rm Mecijcal SWtes 11 unrts Ir older 7 WI· SPACIOUS Remarkable panoramic "1ews : l.bls 4 bdrm. home 1s de-;igned for gracious bving & entertaining Ideal for the mature rarruly Many amemlles $289,500 WONDERFUL UF£ 4 Bdrm, 2 ba, fam rm in this Niguel Shores 3 Frplc, bllins. Close to BR, 2 BA townhome beach. 3 car gar. Sur· beautifully landscaped. rounded by 2 bnck patios FUIJ recreation facihues w/gas BBQ. $99,700. lb. · l Open Sat 15 m ts priva e area. SOCALJFORNIA RLTY V a c a n t I m a k e o f CALL 546 5605 fer ... $99,500 GREAT FISHING EASTER IUM9'4Y at the beaut.Jful 40 acre S,ECIAL fish stocked lake which 1s willun walkmg distance Freshened by ocean from this sharp J BR. 2 breezes. :;uperb Jnd BA brand new home spacious 3 bdrm Patio Don't miss seeing this Home nestled in the one ... $93,500. foothills Formal dining, LQ9111G Hlguel Realty uruque gourmet kitchen 1105 N.CooH Hwy.,Loguno 49,..2413 49)..9494 Rare h nd 1 493 7185 or 494-1177 Agt. 894·7!i21 4i!!!.~·· 31601 Coait Hwy., S.loguno ~4~9~S-~5~2~2~0~~·~3~0-~S~0~5~0 --'-------499-4591 I· L.alce Fonst I 055 -----ii~uldesac & golf course •••••••••••••••••• ••••• Colonl.al neighborhood, spac. 4 br Upgraded Laguna Village I l t Condo, 3br, 2ba, view Charming 2 story ex-2'"-' ba, xtra g 0 · Recfac. Owner497 1426 ecuti ve home m q u1 et -'$1_85_,ooo_._4_95_·_027_9 __ _ ma lure vu a re a UST LISTED' Mi1sion Vlejo I 067 Versatile MBR suite has J · ••••••••••••••••••••••• · d" & 3 Bdrm., 21"2 bath home. adjoining stu 10 vu cl05e to school & lake: balC'ony. 3 BR. $164,500 (837) new paml & carpels plus a large yard with mature Cn.ut trees Priced nght al S91.500 Ko/an By Owner Lovely 4Br. 2Ba, 2000sq fl . 2 blks to shJ & shop'g, nr t•omm'y pool & ten $95,000 Prin Only 837 6417 Comer lot with complete pnvacy. 2 backyards. l w/lge patio and room for pool. the other for dog and garden tool house. Sil 1.500 OWMf' wiU FincMc~ Airpori RHlty 5Ceftfury 2 I Oceauf1 Oftt Dplx $450,000 Peg Broms Rllr 645-1531 more xtras. Fee land HARIOR VIEW· For Sale 1100 lS2l =s;:d~ CARMB. ••••••;:;;.;;•;;;;•••••• Prof decor'd end unit 3 Tius 3Br, 2Ba, fam rm & <-•at BR w /park vu . sec din rm home 1s pro· -.-- syst e.m, etc. lmmac Cess1onally upgraded & $19,950 $165.000 w/appraisal 55'J sits on an oversized night 2Br. 1967 Magnolia 20x40, Vista Grande. For pre· hghl & mountain view just liated. HWTY on this v1.ew caJJ · PROPERTY lot, on a qwet cul de·sac. one. SN FNJl.22-3 HOUSE Palnck Tenorl! RV boat yd. Open house $23,700 Agt 552-4414 by owner Sat 12·5 at 2006 2Br, 2Ba. 1973 New Moon Port AJbans Circle, NB. 24x44. (181S8X-U). 5 • CAMALHOMT ~7 Park, Just llSted. Rumpu.s rm. + fa mily REWARD 3 Blks to bch $26,950 rm. w/pool lable: 4 BR. Crom charrn'g 3br. 2 ba, PACIFIC COAST 2Ya ba. Walk to beach. lrg. fam·rm, frpl, tennis. RESALE INC. pools, tennis. A real & pools. Upgrd'd thru Anahei·m 991 -8660 charmer,only$155,900 out. $103,000, Ownr JayW. Yeats Co 49~60 499-2237 NEWPORT IEACH Restaurant For Sale Pnme toe. on Mariners Mile. 1800 Sq. n bldg + land, all for only $200,000. Realooom1cs 675·6700 NEWPORT Great cor loc. 1000 S. F +-gar & pkg Only $97,500. Bier. 646-4380 jJl~~~~~~-lrvine BLUFFS CAYWOODREALTY 646-78S2. Huntington Bch J Bdrm "Bonita" plan. INC. 548-1290 --------. _.. __ 963-09 ___ 9_1__ EASTSIDE All one level, new C'pts, --------•. ~-It t\l I' \'\'1 flooring & shutters. IEST O'THE Mobfl.Hotm Uving PROFESSIOMAL $145,000. O wn /Agt 11.UEWHmGEM CREST Atltsfinnt ILDG. 833-8551 or 644-2148 eves. Privacy reigns supreme' Open Sat only, 12-5 We have numerous & Pride of ownership Class ---------• Gracious family home in Front Row-beautiful mobile homes A bldg. w/6 units & am MEW prestigious Westchff. Oen vu condo for sale in establisbed pie parking. Only 2 2.storySeaViewhome Formal living room NEWPORTCREST parltsin CM.NwplBch, block s lo b u sy $15,000DM w /view o f ga rd en 1123 1maLowCt,or call Huntington Bch , Newport/Costa Mesa lll· 4 bnn 3 ba, 2 frpls, pool, atrium! Formal dining OuiA Harwood 833 31121 F •-rsect.· O er offers d room overlooks lavish F R 1 · Laguna, El Toro, tn u; 100 wn jaC'uzz1, tennis, gr erguson eators Vl y, Anaheim & flexible terms w/sborl VERY VAC grounds! 2 Fireplaces! l~~~~~~~~~~j s 23 gates. ' pnv. Elegant h v1og al a { 1: Westminster . In price escrow. $170,000. < · ) Owner lo C'arry bal. No fordable pnce! Hurry! SUPER IUY ranges to fit most Paula Ba.aley642-823.S its 00 adjoining lots in CM. Take either one or both. Exchange or owner will carry. 540-7766 au Best CM area-selling for lesa than compara- ble. Agent 64.5-1103 SMW.MOTB.. Loog Beach area - Call for informat.Jort llHTSOM & IROWM Recitton 83)..9781 DUPLEX We have two duplexes Ii. tbe Newport Heights area. $82,500 And ws..soo. M.AltfHEJlS COVE REALTY 646-4463 * 16UMITS * 6MON111SNEW! FULLY OCCUPIED Under $41,000 per wu~ STUARTFIME REAi.TOil 631-5454 Rr'.11 [ ~1.111 ~ /11c '100 GI· •11111~ VII' Slll)l!I 4~4 1"1473 5 49 -0316 By owner, Madnd 360, 4 credit. Fu I I price Call645--0303 people's pocketbooks, ~~~~~~~~~I A"""A~~ Br-den, 2 frpls, 3 ba. lrg $265.000. 7 51·877 5: SJ.27.500 $10,000 to $40.000. We are c-...l--!··-:--~ow•-ll .... u.:11.n.:..> ramrm.mastrbdr 370sq 64().n78 Dovtlt"ShoresArea,4 br2 phon --~na~ ft w /frpl view, pool ---------i ba,compl.redecor.&re-asnearasyour e. t.a.nfor 1700 4 99· 2900 36xt6. newly decorated Must WI This W~ landscaped. C~1ti'!=ep~~~[y!C ••••••••••••••••••••••• MEW 11 UHITS Xbrt Westminster loca- tloo. Sellers will trade'or sell outngbt. '"'895 /HO'Ptr.I -===-='------de •-out pro lodllcryAna Owner will finance. Z106Harbor,"••.,.,,.. ""''. 'IQ. ForSaleByOwner3BR insi "" ' 2{r Drive-by.1900DoverDr . u,.5937~""" $48,000 Gross annual in P• Ba prLced for fast fess1ooally landscpd 4 br, 4 ba, 2 rpJ, 3000 sq .... c-o-c-Ownr 34444 _,. come .. Top .coast Hwy ~.ale . .;...,500. 25212 Via OPEN HOUSE Silt 25th. n. country kitchen. din ---------___ l_Agt.::;....._67 ____ _ ·' ...., S 26th 26701 V I den sun rm rec rm BY OWNER. 24 'x64 · location 1n centr al n.edra Blanca. Laouna un • a rm. · ' · 8y0wner.3 Br.ramrm,1 B 1 ri " Panso pool, J3C'. lots of wood. CUSTOM BUILT Great Lakes. J 974 Laeuna. eaut1ful Y N1guel.494..WOI :485 !i900 768-16m. WtW crpl over parquet ba. Nwpt Hghts Pnnc. SpaC'1ous 3 Br. 2 b a restored landmnrk bldg --___ floors. Fr windows & Newport Hts ho m c OnJy $115.000. 642·9644 charmer. Localed "THE MEWPORT for~~U~~~~RM a.Wioniot-4 FQRSALE·BY OWNl<:R doors. & more. $189.500. Cheerfb11y ~!!corat;dll3 S.Cfetntnte 1076 MEADOWS", Irvine GARDEHVILLAS Cordova La Famtha 3 No agts. Open Sat 1·4. Br. 2 al.I' iewed. bu Yk ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beaut 5• adJt. no pet. Two homes in unique MO,AYMIEMTS BR wlparent"s retreat. 2 2301 Franct&eo Dr beam ce s. UlJ n c park. 559-0229 eves & Super Uvmg m prestige location with views. And. OH Ec;>UITY! ba, ram rm, earth tone 646-6S4l frplc. 222 La Jolla Ln VIEW + POOL wknds. JocalJon. 2 BR, 2 bath are priced al only This is one of the mo~t decor. Many up1:radt's ---------642-9740forappt. FUn for all the family. condow/separatedining Sll9.500each. tasteful and imaginative Beaut lodscp'd on lrg Duplex. two 1 br furn, nr HV Homes Carmel 3 BR Spaciou_,4BR,d1mngrm rm. & fpl. Pool -patios. ___ .:_...::;_ ___ _ McCORMACK homes in the area picturesque lot. $79,000 ocean. 29th St, Nil. + Fam Rm, pvt yard. & tam rm w/forever Costa Me s a, 12x44 $81 ,500 (5-21> •2Trilllexn• • .,.,TY .. 9 .. 7551 831·""'5. $1"" 500 Owner 492 7171 ocean view. Owner anx-Skyline, 1. l,<J yrs old, Harriet Perry 642-8235 Near Lake Park.. Mln. to ~ .. ,... Graciousllvingisoffered --"£_•______ -· · · · · $139,900. 752-0617 ious,hasbo""btaoother. cabana, hke !lew, Loi~~~~~~~~~ bcb.l .. BR,Jba,· i .3BR, in this beautiful ex· * * IEST * * 492·6172 ownr/ant -t .,., ooo "---clng 1-.... • 1.-'S ..... •Rl(ET ----"""-------$156,500. ren · ...,, • '™ · n,.= ~ 2• ... ba·, 1 • 00 2 ba. s _,...,.. l""IA ecutive home. Extra '-Of..,.,,_ OVERS"'•r tn:'1'rny "-"""'l -an 711 ~ -. OCEAN II'-HOUSE IUY -n-w SiAi> StaHAUOR VU BERTIIAnO.,..RS~" ....,..,.,. 1100 garages, frplcs. SlBS.000 FANTASTIC large masler suite, 2 w Mont.egoHVH, 4 Br, Zba, REALT , each. l709-l7l3Alabama, VIEW-Quality 3 Bdrm., pleasant bdrms. 2Ba. 4 Bedrooozm and formal fam rm, near new crpts. PRIVACY oo a bucc lot. 2lSDel Mar m-t121 VUd.bg Coach lo Irvine s "•••••••••••-••-•••• Runt. Bcb. &3S·l'Zl& 21At bath home. Open den frplc , gourmet dining & c lubroom+ , .. yd, wood deck. BY Lgpatio,w/separeafor finest p,ark, "The •·plex Huntlneton ,.,,___ beam celllnf, Spanish kitchen and many ex-bonus room. Great loca· ..... play or pool. Nr SC'bls. 3br home, wlklng diAanCE Meadoww •. 2 BR. 1 BA, JI.arbor' area 3 yrs old _""';__UC£ __ .------ stucco interior, quality tras. The patio & pool lion. nr La Paz & OWNER,759-0634 $196,500. Open Sat/Sun to beach, 1cbl, park. den.F.asyfinanclng.Red fully rented. $230,ooo: SMWMOTB.· carpeta, etc. A must see ~as are ideaJfor enter· Margumte. IY OWNER 1·5. 1831 P. Stirlin&. 492--0808 HU1Buity552-'ISOO 848-0822 Lon& Beacb atta at$142,SOO. ~\~~ :~dou~~~~ RJGlITREAl,TY llGCAMYOM 644-644.1 San Clemente Custm 1977SkyllneMobileHome e.co.. .... operty 2000 CallforinformaliM r-& c lllOdscaping. $139,000. ___ t_7_t_-t_S_l _l___ EL OORAOO Plan, 3 BR. Npt Shores. By Owner. Hlll5lde home. Nearlnll l2x44. One bedroom, low ••••••••••••••••••••••• IBfTSOH Ir IROWM __.., ~ S'l'ANALAND Ml..-.1 leoch I 069 scp garaee. best view lO 4br, 2ba, 2 car gar. Dys complet.ioo 2,000 sq. n. 3 rent in Costa Mesa. oup• EV R.attor1 lll-9711 llOCSo. Coast wy. ME',..ARGEE REALTY r--t -""-Sat/Su Call ..... ,.,..,. 631 t.o<>3 bdrm. 2 ba, fam rm. 631·3C74 afterS:30 ldOA LAGUNA BEACH """ • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ;:d~;Y"~3.1689 n. "''""""'"• eV11 . ...., break fas l nook , Extra sharp 2 BR units. Loh for Sale 2200 497·2457 '!1!>~·!1!4 IOATSUP OLDIE fireplace, wet bar, sun Walk to beach-Skyline 2 both w/prvt patios ••••••••••••••••••••••• +VIEW WHtdffllR/Dett IUT deck, 2~ car earage B!tt.2 ba. dbl wide, Ownerwtllhelpfinan<'e OfACEILDGSITl ~Hlls IOIO Beauti!ultwostnrvhome Prom Uus eleeant 2 BR Trulv • showplace, ,._ __ IE Sl15,000 No •tents 714 aawta. $29,SOO. Broker. looome $700 ~r month Huuu-... ~n·ach •••••eeeeeeeeeeeeee•eee ..., • .., I ~ t1111D: ~..t 714<W/\ ~180 ·~ ..t41At\ D-..1 -..ti .,._...<IV\ ~UC: 3 )TS. new 3 Br, 21'1 Ba roncto. So ctn, you'll custom 10 eve..., detail. _......,or .._.... __, .....,.,.uc.,..to ...... .....,. n I A ., l·Bllt. to oc.n; 1 bdrm. C.. 640.51 IZA~ %7.000 sq. . ot near $1.25,000,byowner. think it• newt ll 8eU«1eethisooebefore home, orfered at lot ExmlenUBdrmbomein HUMTIMGTONICH ..,.. Pacifica Hospital, s. -,,...==·~=581M..===•I 556-4175. lt's 1oae.l3l2Doverl>r., valPe.-0001 One nclahbort>ood. a.ear Uh new, 1975 ffow•rd •GRUTSSSS• NDCISbop.Crltr4'Civic r BLUFFS? AgenL &'2-CmB MIWPOlT llACH ecboob. Vacant. Own.et Mmor aua.. 38r, 2Sa ln Center. $135,000. USE THE Ct&IYLAICI .. .a.aw 67~1442 autaelll115.000. ~ bead! area •Oppttl ... tf* Da.kSBDartteBltr DAILY PILOT ~· ' Pedflc s..-. • .., pan. <A·B886!:). Call Just rectucect tb11 super 1t1 1111 "FAST IY OWMB ..-.otrT HTS. OLD CITY Pl.Ali 10UI' b9acb .,. mobile •p1a. tow 2 Br entte, 2 COROMA DB. MAit Ute f1lh1ftl ll aalllnf in UST IUYS ,.._ 4_1300 b o 11u •pee 1a111 t utUi. w/f'rple9. Seller wUJ *-1 ·OT• llSULT" your own b1ckyard? -...,,,. PACll'IC COAST belp w/finaoetnc. Other .,,......,._. SIRY C Tb1a lg, venaWe bome ~ VllW IP RESALES, INC. 210Je Oranto Co. tncom pro. <I'm OP' A KINDi US I I oaprlvatelatebulBr Bff I bdrm., S bat11 Y Btootburet. H.B . pstle. avail. Call now foot Bluff lot wttb DIRICTORY llit.ee, ea w/pvt bath, + as.om b.o«rie .wt super • BR, famll.1 bome ln llD-0881 fardetails,qt. panoramic views of ForResult utudyllJgfamrm<rc· vlewt Huu d•n, prutl1loua "Can-,.._......, *'4M 7ll* Ott.an,, harbor and en-sulatlon 1be pooJ tbl l.n-Oaptone frplc., 2 Ut t.anuar". A fea) pride of tran~. and penlnsf)ta, Scrvlc~ Call cludt'd). Convorta readl· praceiilota m(ft. Only ownerlblp bome, re· ~~ 1 UtillTS C.M. HURRY • WtLL N()T '2:~:l' r.:.11$ :r::'1':i1!~:J Cll5.;:sy UYIH 1 ~~~.t;,aJommedlate ~M= JZ tie!u~r:i Beautiful brand n~w 4 1 LASl'l rm for entertalnln1. a Bdrm. home OY•look· BDntAHENRY home by the buC'b wtth br, ton., f/p. 3 2 br, l~ ba d QU•t~ ID.,. Shown by appt 892·&111.S lq Ca&allna Drtve; 1 REALTORS Ma C*Pl at 1uosf'U. K.l(b townhouse, ill blln1, ~~~ oreu . .,.$lb0,000. rrplc1., new carpet: 21JDtlllat 4.12..CW Apeta2Bwrelco+~UlerUor!.. CJllU, drpl. Hurry.~ --'J'U.tlr.IO .,...,, h OU. 2 uuu ... now. Tom Lee, IUtr, 1•C11N.ST . ......,._.,. UDO 15'.I taaiUJ nn. 1111 ~11 *• CD ceilln1. rtplc, wtprivat.e beach. to-llCll. b ·ll • bnD s .,... mod rar • table I Olll1 na eJJU, • Uo • CAJ.,,IFOR.NIA.PAClnC ....;.;.;--------1 Cl LOI'. Weltalde oau. l~ lat, P&Uo, nt \.tO• l~ \o Jlobli.8omea.Lt7 4-Phs Dem' OOt&D, ,.,.... llleaa.17,0llO+sq~ ala • _prh. bncb. MAM•5COYI Oalllla.a llDSs.t. ... 118 -.mo.ooo. -.-. ......,onerlTHm llAl.ft '4M461 ,,........ ,. ...-s7 m -11man:tcs.1eo ... u.AllL •· creative Investments Call 644-9513 Covington 4·plex, l lelt in Oceanside. $165.000. By Owner/Bier. 968-3270 UNITS Sm & large u01ts. Very large inventory, Long Beach & Orange County Prin oo.ly Agt.. 639-9070 ~Macnab-Irvine 1 • ' \I I \ I 'I \11 \' \ 'ti: Ma r.na ~ · I rvme I r .. ,. ... .... . -- •t . ... ... . .. a • -.. .. . ... _ .... '· I" 'I I . ' ·' ....... -., H~Ht Unf.ami~ Ho.net Unt.lmithed HcM.tet UnfurWahed HcM.tH U1tfuml~ ~nh fwwl.htd • ........... ZlO ••••••••• •••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••• • ••••••••••••• •••••••••• • •••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• FnCS,,.,March 24 1978 DAILY PILOT DZ ....................... CodeMfte 3Z24 t .... lld•~ 3240 LIM...._t 3255 Mlwportleoc:lt J26' ...,._.._. 374' .. ,,...,. .. .....,..._ Apwhaah~ . .. ..................... . •.............•....... ·····•·••·••··•·••····· ............................................ . • OBILF.HOMF. PAB.K ......................... ._.................. •• -f'ORSALE CLOSITo•••cH Waterfront 4 Br dock New 1'Wnh&e wttranquH LAGUNA BEACH MTR. eo.t.Mes. 3124 eo.ta..... 3124 Mlwpotta..d 3169 ~aJI • lar e ark 4 Br. lY. ba, l&e fen~ -pe&ao. air, waahe~. dryr: PIU)OC'amJC view. 31dn&s1 INN. 1115/wk" up. Maid ••••••••••••••••••••••• •-•••••••••••• .. •••••• ••••••••••J11•••••H••••• Oratltre c'oupot I, ya.rdNrachool.a&ahops. 2BR.forma.1Dln Rm,l vttyclean.Aprl.~'15 Bdtms.38a.lrplc,pauo. ~. colorlV, heal~ Adu112_bedroom, aupe l BR E1S1de, encl ear, ,ARtCMIWPORT Bueniield" Anzo~· 5'50/mo.~7-3225 sty,paUobme,fplc,wet-llt,lut+ll00.8373098 balcony, d1abwHber, pool. (714) 494~, 9& lot'atloo. No pel=o $230mo Nocb.lldrenc>r Bacbelors, 1 or 2 Prin-'~ ..... .._9070 N......, H"'•., b d 1 .... bar, taUlll, ~.}' }!22c, trub comp., 2 car aa.r. N.Coul.Hwy. $225/mooth. SH W. -·.MZUIM e.ctroom.1•Townhouaes """1· 0 ••· -· ~~ &'"' '" r up""'· RV ator 10 . ......,. •• w /opnr. Beaut. crpl, Wilaon, lDQutre apt. E. .--From S289.60 0..of~ P'ncd yd, adults. NO VmSe Mar <Brookhunt/ Mewportleoch 32'9 drps. Children OK $.\50, M.wpori'IHch 3769 EtSid . 3 8 2 8 Quiet 2 br baa ln lnplx, Spectacular 1pa, totul ~op11i+, 255 ~~.Gu&wtrpd Ha.aultoo)S45-33SD ....................... negot.iable.963-9784 ....................... blwe, aJry tr. d a, tt:bp.adlt.s,oopeU. Non· recr~1ttlon proeram. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Br hse, bi.lee to bch Lr& NO YEE! Houses. cond<>!>, Spti"lous " br, ., ba. pa1·nt' n:~wsocp55a2. 42ropi11, smkr S2SO. M6·2323 ISOt'lal program 7 oool~. K 1-:as~ideutrasharpJbr yd $395.lst.laat&clun duplexes. Rental +'i;mila ;m w/Crpk ss 124.., . . . -b h -rl-1 ltmnbeow"b.Atl'~ashlon '""ec•0 ........ -1...1-2 ba, frpk, m1crowa\1·. ing.M7-3089afln Pavillon,67~.ill2Bkr Seclud~ garden are" • _!_ __!___ 2hBdrhm. 2 Ill . I Ii Lsland, Jumbort-e 4t Sun 2&38EDROOM Wll ar, tit't' gardgt' .. r ~.mo. incl. gardener MlSAPIMES I l r ed vu .... .... -.a.uiw t b I ... '" u B was er' t'rpt!I, c rp~. J""'?w.n lU"-Road YA·FHA opnr. Gard1•ner ·rnrl DeS32Stfspadc1ow.d2BRh HEWSUVIEW Avail Apnt t. 410 El ~e Bach, 1230. some ~~d,En:~id~.e ,..e:;nt. 7141644-1900 <JARDENTOWNltOM E ~7S. mo. 548 0063 au nc yar nr 11 ops 3 Br 2 Ba, pool, tenms, Modena. To view c111l / p I ().708:J ----' c"'~ aaraa..... -----Kids pets ok (8480) jac, $845 yrly. 675-0562 548 """"'· w garages. o o . Dick 548 '1729 or~ -Lido Jale Bayfront 2 l1r. 4; .. .. •"'" •West d C ta M • ........., Jacuu1. Adults .. no pets N Ir 3 BR t bit frptc. ~ Qall btwn 3 t> lvn 1·757-1623 2b • sbi e os <::>.a, G' Open daily. 2650 Harla ew , g ap • ru., m 67~0 'L r,I a .. encigur,paLio, Lovely38R28a$395 SEAVlEW, 3 Br popular 2Sty 3 br , 2 b1& A·Cr&me. Bl Ave. C.M. (Mesa Verde crpld, 2·Cat gar, beaut P ·--"""-''------~~~~~~~~~wash/dryer area, nu lgebrickllreplace BarHarborprimeocn vu Dshwbr, frplc. Walk to Dr E. off Harbor Blvd). CorMZS.558-1901,631·3538 1_,ahGalon!! n.... ..... t•·• 3 OOO n b earp/drps, freshJy palllt· Nr scbooJ.s (842'7) 1850. 547·7°'4· 833-3215 bch, tennis. $600. mo. yr. u" ........ (' 1-.. ... • aq omc ed. Move in cond R......_• 631-4555 ' ly.6'2·3361Agt. • _._.., Stunning Jge 3br aarden We havelOOO'sofbouses, vew> on 2~ acres· $325./mo No pelis. ---------4br, 3tfa pool home. apt.Pool,recarea.$315. dplu, apts now, all beat.eel glassed tn pool 646-~ DYNAMITE 4 BR 2 Ba, Gardenln1. pool 1erv ln· Sclll...... GREAT RECREATION. 710W.18tbSt. areaa,allprlce.s.Saveon b • r n ·BBQ· man Y --------1 fplc, D/W, convenient cl'd. $800.549-0655 Capshcmo 3271 Swlmmlna, luuoas, 2 fee .l~twa .. U au. So. San LEASE $475, College a rea. $435. 963-4567. ••••••••••••••••••••••• health club!!, bllUarch, Newly dec<>ral4!d lrg 2 Br 645-490~ ·~ .uaa Obispo nr Arroyo Park, 3 BR 2 Ba, 2 (pie's, A"entnofee. BlG CANYON. Lu•unous '"'"'° ... GEOUS2 Br 1 Ba. 1tpl, well·managed, oo ---------=--'--.a-Call '""l71• d ~ 2 B 2 b h vvu"' night-lighted tennis .._,.. 675 ,,..,,, v•......,. ... ...... ys kids OK, Avl 4 /6/71!. r, at con · fplc, D/W. Super urea. pets,....,.,/mo "'"""· Secluded 2Br apt over .,.5 for 1nformat1on Dnveby2S28DukePl. 2Br, Crplc, quiet street domlnaum home . ~ Pro&proshop, ---.-.---looking pool. Eltil' COwner l Call 963-2S43orSS9·622l near elementary srhJ, lg New/never l.JVed in. Wet $385. 963-4567. Agent, no golf drivmg range, party $195 1 Br, incl. util. Crpts. lutcheo carport s:?iS fnc.-d yd $.175 mo. Call J an bar I f r p It'. s 6 7 5. _c_ee_._______ room drpa, patio. qwet adults, mo 67J.4i62days. ' CAPTIVE $?95 lge swmy 2 BR l''ncd yard encl gara/.{C 673-4162 SabsburyR E 87:Hl900 COND02sly 2 BR,comm FUN ACTIVITIES no peb. 1828 Ph1cenlla . pool, Pase<> Carohna, 1 F\aUttme dareclur. free 644alS8 Park Newport furn badt. :--UNT AL MARKET S4 UNITS-all rt·ntt•<l Furn• II renlt·d ages M~t um!~ haH' w paml Hnd t«1rpct!, All have new roof, Call Ctuldrl'nOK (9603) child OK Andrea, Sund11y brunch. BBQ s . .----Or-------. Wall assign he at n• OHUDOISLE 493-88l2 mps. part1e~. sport l'wool ongeCounrys O.Of'oint 3126 ducedrate.640-1001 $350 3 Br l ba, huge k1t,1•---------1 ammac. Nr Beach & El· Capli\ a Ling J BR 2 Ba Its 8121 Lil. Palma Cr, palm htd pool, fpk Sorry nodogg1e~! 0 w n er w i I I I e a s e ----tournaments & more' most beoU11ful opor!ment ••••• ••••• • ••••• •••••• • l''URNISHt:o OR N· 2 BR, lo\• Ba. c.:ondo, BEAlfflfo\JLAPTS commun111es Areklxtng Uuplex ocean view New 2 RR 2 Ra. Studio ap~ fo'URNISHED MAKI-: comm pool encl gar, Sin I 1 ....... .-. 'seningwlltls1teoms · 1550..,, ~ 2 br 2~ ba fplc, xlnt rood. 315 1'-g es. ""' ucuroom.. I ..,...,, ""mo 7c.o 0700 Bay $395 yrly rental. AN OFfo~ER· You have a $3l5, eves 493-8264 l'\am & unfum Models woterfolls ond mo,esnc ......... "" 96211847 Mut•h more' $4.25 (f>.t~I E_erruru Realt~tiJ9...:.6623 Geo. Frey at 542-3456 Refttimu 631-4555 lrviM 3244 ••••••••••••••••••••••• BEN HJNKLfo: It I': tbr p~Lio home Nu crpb, RlHTALS choice. Large 2 Br +den Tudln 1290 c>pen da.il> 10 lo 7 Room !Tees feorunng pools Lge 3 BR 2 Ba. W /D area, -------- and patio. $750. mo. or 2 mate •erv1ce avail. No Jocuut ~"uno b"llOrds (pie, balcony. r~ar pa•·o, $330 large 2 BR patio luio & drps. No dog~. no 3 BR, 2 Ba ........•.. SSS0 3 BR, 2\.'.a ba ..... $495/525 4 BR, 21r'l ba .....•.. $750 4 BR, 3 Ba ...•..••.•. $690 Br 2 Ba, large deck and ••••.•••••••••••••••··~· ,... " "' "' V1EW.S6SOmo.Bothun· Tustin condo, 3 BR, 12 lease reqwred Sorry. onrlexclllngcklbhouse gar.Nopet.a.55e-71.94 enclosedyard,newcpts Real Estah kids. $300 mo. Ph 646-7175 hdatge 2 8 00 -KIDS/PETS OK at.s are freshly painted ba, patio, recreataonal adults only' no pets. wlltl SOCIOI events Tennis, Bach urut, refng, $180 mo beaut area (5367 > and carpeted . DRIVE facil, nu pa!nl. Nr by Oakwood gym. ond volleybON OI adlt.s, no pet.s. Avl Apr l Lovely 2 BR luxury apt •••••••••• ••••• ••• ••• • • 'C"fto d BR <MCI\ W II h ._st.s1 e2 . gar . ...,.,.,. 1 exc angc $2t),000 &&&-4848or675·8258 BY schls & abop 8· 830-lOOO, Garden Apartments The Vdloge. More ol (714) 833·0821; 64G-0769 blln!i. new cpts $.175 111 Via Lido Nord _536-__ :m.t_______ .,.,..,... ~Herlto ",,., · IOOkl l'Ull equity of $60,000 2 BR ---- condo, El Toro, for home. COLLEGE P .ARK duplex, or un1l~ Orange 3 Bedroom. chmn~ room, County. hudt 1n..,, ct1sh~ a ... ht.'1 . ,JAGRODDY RLTRS 11n·pl.1re, trt·shly pa111l and call TUSTIN PLACE. 3 Br, 2''z 880 Irvine> <at 17th' eve., ... 1ng you re ng Kids/pet.s olc (9626) Watttfront Home a baths Condo. 2 story end IMS 0550 for Fumnure Is ovo~oble 3 br, panoramic ocean RenthMa 631-4555 631•1400 unit wtrrplc. $425/mo .,.,..,...a..ch/S-"t OneondlWoBedroom vtew. new. frpNl4.961g deck, 2 BR. 1 ba, crpls & d~. 731-()!IQ} or 675-1642 Avail 17()l !6th ~1 AOult LMng S500 mo IR F. 5600 nar . steno: Li> bcb, yrl~· 494-8611 1•d S.1<!., month CALL BIGCANYONTOWNHSE June Isl 1 ()c)H'r Jl IMtll .. ,.... t>l:!lll7o Off1cesopen 900ro600 TopofDP,almost new.2 Dy~ ll40 5650, Ev'·' 3425 Now 1enhng ~~l~o~;. ~c~:~ \~!e~· ~-5225-------. s:ns + $l50 dep No la~t OCEAN VlEW. yrly 2 Hit 645 4~ 19ti 44!12 1 BA dplx $olSO mo R;;. &tcrh 1' .>.x; '.!titiO New 2 BR, 2 ba, crpl ·d & SELECT 1 drp'd. 'pel'taculur Goll Want.ct 2900 Course & lake new 5<-p ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------•! •••••••••••••••••••••••! PROPERTIES ~ar . tennis & pool HunL Hart>our area. 2 br. IAYFROMT Wanted. hou~e or 1luph•:\ -.523 CA_..P05 Da·IRVl"E L6e opll~ 641·2416 _ full-size patio, nr heath 3 BR. 2 baths Yrly,SS50 e>wner Cm. CixC'r uppN 13 llH 2 bJ nu 1 rpt:. & shops. schls, avail April ADULT CONDO ti44 6il!O or 642 ~ Top of 0 P alm~t new. l , br l ba I!! yrd D/W 5275 Two 2 BR s, stove, refn..: + S1SO de~ No' 1Jst clean, new paint, l blk rr Sml pet OK. 645 4~3. beach. $600 mo. OR, ~ ~ BR. fplc, cpts, 1 blk rr Gill-4480 Pvt Pl> drps, freshly painted. UnJV. Park, (Terrace>. 2 RentalsGalott!I l.$32Slmo 963-5228 2 aR.2ba.yrly $425 n 1 c e r c' 1dent1 a I BR 2 Ba, walk to shops, We have tOOO's of houses. STEPS TO IEACH beach, $450 mo. 'llatals n1'11(hborhood, close lo school, very clean. $«0 dptxs, apls now, al I 4 bdrm 2 ba condo, pool. 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• schls &shop·g,$399mo. mo.644-~76eves. areaa,aUpncei;.Saveon car gar $42S. Owner 3BR.2ba,bayvuSl050 -~ Funsilhed 96.17473 fee. 751·ll63 Before 10 A.M 2 BR. 2 Ba , yrly. $400 -•••••••••••••••••••• --------1 Turtlerock 4 Br, 2t.'J ba, 645-4900 A,,,. or Aft. 8:30 P.M Ooata Me.a l 124 2 Br Du PI ex w I gar. across from park, tennis, ----------'";..... ,•••••••••••••••••••••• mature couple only, $150 pools. New cpts, drps, CAMEO SHORES ~XH u..funt 3600 R_.._. Gal 11 + renl collection. new landscap i ng ••••••••••••••••••••••• inrruot • ore.. 532-5!139 w/gardner Ava.11 early EASTSIDE CM We have 1000 s of houM·-<. -Apnl $63.S Ph S33--08l3 3Br, lg comer lot, ocean 3 Br Dplx. enc gar, $395. dplxs, apts now, al!IJ br c.:ondo, pool, frpl, lg ----v1ew,Sl.20Qmo.673·2464 Agt.&M>-4884. "'llreas. alt pnn·s s." c unj pallo, :! 1·ar ~Jr Avail TURTlEROCIC GLEN ILUFFS CO .... DO rl.'t' 1 15 s.n:> 11111 :1 tir. taml TOWNHOUSE " • ... 645-4900 Aqtl 1111 htn•· 1n :-Jo. < :'II View. four bedrooms. 1 Story 3 bdrm Clo~e to Capo Beach upper 3BR 3 Ba, ocean view. bltns. sundeck $425 mo 494-4401 twwportS.och 31691 1n,rd1•ntr ,tr11l .1uld•· 2200 square fet•t Im· .!ichool & 1>hopp1n~. No -·•••••••••••••••••••• '"' ''ad 1 1' ~ll:J I maculately upgr..idcq pet.s $6.50 Agt. 644 7270 Rentals Galore!! ' !>4IU',OO throughout Pool. Ten A FfMER HOME We have lOOlfi:. c>f hou"•'~ ~H;.'iA \ ERDE. :thr, :!ba. :~\~A 1$~ ~ 0 8 1 Lm~i n/; THE ILUfFS New plush duplex. 3 BR. 3 ba, frplc , $650 mo 645-2111. 646.6303 dplxs, ;ipts nllw, .ill hltn~. dw. frplc.:, l'ne MEDIATELY. Gorgeous. full bay view: areas, all pncc:.. Save un patm, $4:!5 f>l!!_-051_7 _-1 prime "front row" loea-2 BR 2 BA. DJW, dspsl ft.-e. Newly rcdec 2 BR hse. d_ QU.t...IL IB tioo. Exquisite 3 BR. 2''l $27S mo. Wlr pd. Sant.a ....,45-4900 Agt avail 3/25 2-car gar . ~RTa;a. b~ spilt level end unit Ana area. SS6·8S99 aft -vn1 y 3 BR patJO car all $350. 5.581901, 631-3538 _ 752-1920 Ino with gated courtyard en-SPM , "'"' • • • ,_ GtWL ST . ......, 8IACH try & s pacious, pri v. -.,--.. -1w--£-_...,Fu_mi....,..lhe...,......-.,d,..-lhe rom!orts of home, 1 3 Br, 2 ba CoUege Pk. Stv. -----------1 patio. lmmac. thruoul & .... Dlk from beach $750 mo. rcfng, Crplc. Cov'd pat. 3br 2ba condo in Terrace, truly gracious. An excep-••••••••••••••••••••••• 673--4617 or 832·3fi84 $450. &&&-'152.8 pauo, comm pool. Nr F.I tiooal value at $750 per lc6oa l'1•Mla 3707 Rancho. $4 50 mo mo., until 12/1/78, then ••••••••••••••••••••••• LIOO ISLE, 3 Br, ilen, 3Br French Quarter Con welbar, pauo. 1 J hlk lo do $39S mo beach. $000 mo L-.t.·. LH • 5-lfi 201R msg w/I PR 675 6520 ----~Unfumish~ Dana Point 3226 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• General 3202 WHJTEW\TER VJEW, 2 ••••• •• •• •• • •• •• • •• • • • • Hr. 21 ~ Ba. pallo dt·ck. .C-lHorrua Honch. Sh.1rJ1 frpl, gar, 5 min wlk to 1 ~·acanl, clean lar1:<' I bch & harbor. $485. no bedrooms . $195 pN pets please. 714 661-6581, month Call 962· 77811 or aft S 549-9568 _________ __ F-ountain Valley 3234 HOMEFJNDERS ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'l'housand.-. of Rentals All areas all pnces Sample .$140 Bach furn ulll pd \'2002br rncd y:ird $295 JBr peu; fenerd LlFl:..11.Mf;SERVll'l': 557-0822 :l Br, 2 Ra, frpl, no !X'ls. $410/mo 554 7106an6:30pm. Yours for the asking 1luge4+2 htd pool $395 2 rar gar nr all (9623) ~'itianct S42S fam1l)< <;11cd 4 +2 3206 l~e fnetl )·am, pool •••••••••••• • •••• ••• • • • beaut fplc <8936 l oNEW :J AK, dt•n J H \ Rentimu 631-4555 c; o u n l r y ,. h a r m 1· r ~/beams & lt'adt>d Ria..,.,, ~on leach 3240 -aso mo yrly l<ie 675·~1-1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Attractive 3br. 2ha, df'n, lrpl, adlts $625 vrly 67~362il (213) 367 0177 Coronade4 Mer 3222 ........................ Spotles.s Walk to hrh 4Br 38a Fm rm 210()!.qft Yrly, S09 Acacia 645 70.111 For Rent lmmed1;.it£• ~ bdrm. H \'.JI Vll'W, ll'll 11iS, pool $5.'Xl MI i711.1 759 0143 Ntwer duplex :! llr, 2 ba, ram rm, dJ.mn~ rm. frplr So of Hwy. $.'>.25, no pet~ 'Oave&e.4-7211 . Newer duplex. 2 Br. 2 ba, wam rm. dlnln!! rm. frpk . So of Hwy. $.525, no peL~ .l)eve6"-7211 . AT LAST A Rental S~lc~ YCMICmthd AtHOIMWith WE GUARANTEE 673-_2252_ __ S800 per mo. 1 Br. S350 yrly Off slr~t lnUnav.Pk,2hou.,esnow Agent 640-5560 prkng. Avail 1.mmed 4 BR + f'am Rm. $700 ---------•! Call 67>-0367 · 646-fi238 per mo ANO 3 BR + FOR LEASE $225. Vacant Studio. nr fam Rm. $.'>i5 per m u bch. shoPfl. restaurants. 752.()617 agt Lovely 2 bdrm. 2 ba up· Adlt. 833-3307: 673 7077 per Apt for rent at $525. 3br 2ba, Corm dm rm, mo. localed al 428': 2 br. steps to beach. pool. Poplar mod an Wood Begonia S325 pr mo. Til 6 30 bndge, Creekside Avail 3 Bdrm. (am·nn view 645-0721 1mmed. Walk lo pool, h 1 d · --------tennis, park, schls & ome, ocale 10 a Costa Mesa 3724 Private guarded area lake' $495 mo. Call art · r ••••••••••••••••••••• •• 6PM, 1493_9484 with many amemues or SSO WEB & UI' lease at t9'75. mo. 2125 S ud. ..._ .. Yacht Radiant. l . 10, 1 u.:uroom For lse. Brolldmoor a8drm,denhome,locat· M&.1d serv1ce,pool Turllerock , charming ed in Spyglass. $900. mo. 2376Newport Bl, C.M. family hme 3 BR or 2 BR 36 Drakes Bay. S48·97SS or 645·3967 + den, 2 BA. lge jO?ardcn ltitch. 2 patios. Walk to elementary school, $525 per mo. 95.'>-24411 DEERFIELD TWNllSE 2 Br. den. 2 ba, wood deck, plush crpt, elec j!ar opnr. nr pools. park~. ~chis Sorry no pets S46S mo S59-571J, 640-7CTT2 ~leCKh 3248 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ocean vu home, 3br. 2~ba, in prestigious Portafa.na $750. 499 4820 --1~ ( l , :-, k ~ I{ I \ l I 't ,, j, • •1 I ' j, .\ \,1• I •' !~1~ I Cml Hw1 Corona dtl lolar IMfomes. Carmel 3 BR + t'am Rm. p\1. yard. $650 mo . 7S2·0617 ownr/agt. FcultainVdley 3834 6T.H617or&32·3884 ·········~·· .. ••••••• ............. ,....llterd New, 2 Br. 2 ba. all bltns, All ul1ht1es paid °' u.tw.llhed 3900 Crplc, encl. garage, gorg~2BR28JS31S ••••••••••••••••••••••• associated BROK ERS-REALTORS 201\ W lolboo • 11 1661 pauo, lnd.ry rm. $325. great locauon <!J6Z.S >I TitE EXCITING TSL Mgmt 642 1603 Mui.t !'-~to bt>heve • I' ALM MESA Al'TS. ---Almo5l new 2 br, 2 be1 Spacious 3 SR:.! Ba $400 MI NUT ES TON PT Rentali Galon!! twnhse v. encl l(ar $325 Bt>aul fplc (83971 BCH We havt• lOOO's of houst's, 645-5126. 637.,:5895 _ Rentimu 631-4555 Hat'h, l&:! BR d 1 1 11 from S22<> & u11 P xs • ap s nu~· a Large 3 Br townhoust• apt. a.a..~Oft leac:h 3840 Adult.-.. No l't•t:> areas. all pncc~ SJ' 1' 11n 2 ba, frplc, patio, garai:t• :::;·.:::............... 1561 Me),J Di (('(• Qwet _comple~ i\dulb SHA HP, beach, 2 & 3 BR, (5 Blk::. Easl of :-..•wporl 645-4900 Agt no pets $375. 645 3381 or ( 1 d !! h . 8 h , r Blvd 1 67S 594.9 r p . I • w ii c , 2 BR, monthly thru June · -----~araRe. pallo:-., 960 2358 _ 546 !ll!C.4r lSorwcekly.l hseftbch. New decor 2Br, lBa. + 213-446-4750, 446·9'a<l garage, W. Sade. n r -----sch ls, shops. $270. 2 BR w/pallo, steps to 548-94@ beach, monthly or week· --------- ly. 111 45lh Sl. NB MESA VERDE home at· 546-.5684 mosphere 2&3 br dlx ••••••••••••••••••••••• GtMral 3802 ·········•·•··••·•····• apts. no pets. 540-103-i EASTSIDE near new 2 BR I Ba. fplc, end .:ar, $325 per mo Ownr <1b't. 673· 1181 2Br, children welcome. no Rooms 4000- pets, starta.ng at $24S mo. ••••• •••• ••••• •• ••• ••• • 844> 000'1 Room w I kalchenette $50Wttk&up. Seawind Village S48·9'7~ - 12621 Flower Street <Garden Grove) Large 1 bl>droom. apt.s. close to s hopping Laundry faclliues. no children, no pets. S19S/S25-0 /month Uu.lilJes paid. Call Deb b1e at (714) 636 7:W3 New 1&2 bdrm luxury Ambassador Inn in C05lai adult apts tn 14 plan5 Mesa, Z2'17 Harbor. Cen- Crom $270 + pools, ten· trally located. 235 room ... ms. waterfalls-, pond-;! MANY with kitchen~ From San D1e~o Jo'rwy phone .& 1V .. Swmm:uni: dnve North on .Beach to pool, Jacuzzi. and re·• ~kfo'adden then West on room. l>ruly & weekly 2 Br, 11 ~ Ba townhouse. Mc Fadden lo Sea wind ratt~ sUlrtlng from~ ;.i garagl', patio. pool Village 17141893 519H wt't'k. 3806 ••••••••••••••••••••••• J&CUZZ'-Adults onl> -645-4840 $375 mo 646-2010 Rental1 Galore!! We have lOOO's of houses dplxs. apts now. all areas, all pnces. Save cm fee. 64S-4900 IRAHDMEW Beaut rm. p\1 ba. t:mpl11. 3 BR studio apts. huge maturt• person, $150 mi>. back yard, chal.drcn OK Lag Bch. Refs. 494.734i; $42S Oys, 1148-4$55, evs -- 536-4873 ~ R~ 4200 • - .. , _ .... .... ·~ •I L.• '~ I • I .. I 1 ... ., '• • • . . .... -Hr a ;;J C.Jutltt C..edor flloaros If-Lg t1••-•t ,.......,,.~ flllmtw,laepalr Ta. ..................... , •••••••••.••........•..••.••..•...........•..............•••.••.....• ············••·•·•····· ..........•...•.•..•••• ....................... . ......•........................•.••.•••••••.• P'/O,~/:: w/four >'~ Oupen~ It Cabl.Mt wrk Rc:mHuf8:n fc A~ fd~ F1oon: Wood. ceramic, OCC Student. 1 Too tNck. Bnckwork Small jobs. F1M Exter. Painlin1 by Neat patchts & tf'xtur\'1 lc'ERAMIC TILE. Special· ~.: · ._ n plnwan ~ eftlrnatea eml jObl tr1. &om b t • vinyl " cptl. 21 yrs Truh, tree trim. Ron Newport, Coala Mesa & R. Sinor St. lie:., bu. Try RlHUT. ltl-109 ty. Entnea/floon. 2S Jn ..-.... worahoOA Y~ • repe.in, eva. 871-Sl2S pal 01. ca 1 n e~s, llceoaed contractor. GG-5703.~ lrvine.67S.3l7Sevea. me.831S-55.\52Ahrli. -------upr 962-1883 uauce or my ~. "411.J Alrin (crmlca. New con.st. nes cameotnunon 531-3440 PATCH PLASTERING MZ-1Q.52aftvspm It comm'!. 6454844 or · Ho:medeaMfMJ Mov""a Pror paint'g & paper All types , 1''ree T,...Senk• Nl:Mwdw'lll CAJtPIHTRY ~1. Llc&booded. hdec•MJ ....................... ••••oo•••• .. •••uun ban11ng, work auar. eatunates. Call540-682S ...................... . Pat.lo. cSe<:U "' covers, . -•••••••••••••••••••••••Want a REALLY CLEAN "Two Men Wiil Move F r ee est. 536·4780, Removals. trlmm1n1. ••••••••••••••••••••••• paoelioa 1ldln1, lot. Gen. contractor:. Founda-Prof J•puiete Lltllchcap-HOUSE? Call Glnabam You" We handJe lrg & 5311-4383 PLASTERING pn.aniog. Free est. Llc'd, Drat\l,. arcbltectural, ftnisb. a.,Puaoce i.nalall. llon!4, addlt1on11, re. lnC "aardenmg. Malnt. Girl FreeeatlWS-5123 aml movu·offlce & Homes, add1t1ons. re-insun!d. 642-2112A std.at raftamaa. exp. Some elec. & plumblna. model.lna. blockwork. I.net. mowing, tnmming, . household. Distance & Paint Y CMr CCllffe stucco. tree esti., low --------------- avall.Call 7Sl·962T Freeeat.Refe.642·1738 ~l --sprayina. weed.ins. Free ••Houleclearungdoneby local, also packing. Speclalizing in residen· rat.es.586-4892_ --Tree Service. Tree prun • ...... a.,xa RIMODB.IMG estimates. 545-7012 reliable couple. Rers. L owest I e g a I rate . tial homes, int. • ext . Patching, int/t>xt,/ round. ina. removal, toppllle. ••••••••••••••••••••••• C..,.t W.k• CUst.om Room Adds ,...EAN UPS/HAULING $40-1793 Uc/1.D.Srd. Cal T lll-IM4. Please check o ur re· rpr. Bonded !Jc'd 140607 Uc, Ina. 64&-t8'71 ••-••-••••••••••••••• Cab'-r~·-~ . Ph r•rence L·c • """"'"1 ' . Ha rain dama1ed your .... e~ ....,...,tertope Pruninl·Plantinl Housedea.oin& by exp. & 847·7278 .. ~-1 .,. ..... ""° 892·3846 wa.dow C..., la I ••phlllU Call Q 1·2'40 K:'arpet Mu will lay yours Apt-Off1ce-Comm·Alt. Frt!e est. &62·9907 rel women Xlnt re!i Guar .• msrd, free est. •••••••••••••••••• .. ••• Bonded lie lnsured . or mine. R e p airs & CuawmHomea"UniUI s11'sowk 979.0IMB . Pmt. eerv. w/AUas costs Ted.636-7085 DRYWAL~ Windows cleaned . re· ' ., • cleanintt.oo!Guarwork QualitynotQuanUt J OHNTIIEGARDENER · · no more. Free est. tor . . Jlangtapespray. .... al biuer eavinga. Free Wm B Aodenon-Bull~er For Pror. il"OWlds care lllco.M Tax local & lne dl.Bt. Or. Cty. ~au>~tr/Extr. 2Sbrs Rlcba!JI 96G-1787 asonable, busioeeses, ....................... est.~ Free Est. 631·036l call John. 25 yrs exp. 2 ....................... Van & St.oraae. PUC Lie ~642_JI:•· Sl c ""•lllil'9 _ homes&apta.84'1"411 A~ ~~terns. Auto roll Sbampoo & steam clean Dal W Ph.Ill Ce Hort. degrees, former Tax preparation by y.;,11.015. ~37 ·3160 or •••••••••••••••••••••••t----------C'l:'e ror~e~otlii Color bri h . b. e . . 1 ps menl Wlute House Gardener. rormerJ.R s aaent ...,, 3161 Int·Ext&Repalrs cobs " 11~. 'fmmed. cpta1ozn!b~!~~~·c1:.! ~ic·~01teot:de~mall. Pel'$Ol'Wserv.~-754·0272 ---P'aillHfMJ/Pap•rilMJ c~~~~ H~:~~~~n~5·f{~~':s~: the home m11taUation. llv, dln rm, hall $1S. Avg M2-2162al\S. VEHY LOW PRICES Wouldn 't you rather have ••••••••••••••••••••••• $10 hr Honel>t & rehablc $1.62 per DAf g.10AM "5·7PM rm ff.SO. couch $10, cbr On Gardening Muin acertiliedpubllcacroun 15yrs Painting O.C YOUNG MAN 5 yrs expr service BofA. M C OK. (213)5'2-5020 ~ Guar dim pet odor. a.ctric.. tt.'IUUlce George 549 2015 tanl prepare your 10 Res Comm Apt lo ralel> in wallcovenng. Free m.806.5or847 0383 Thal 's ALL you pity for a Cpt repair. lS yrs expr. ••••••••••••••••••••• •• ---come tax return ~ For an l...ac/UlS 839 1886/499-2901 est. 645-8576 Andy ------••tai"... Do work myself. Refs ELECTRICAL SERVICI!: CMMral SerficH appt m your home call AQY plumbing, wat<-r ~ JO day ad ••••••••••••••••••••••• 531-0101. CALLS Sl5 hr. & SMALL ••••••••••••••••••••••• PETERS PAINTING Patch ing, pa inling. serv. leaks. bathrm t!nd, Wi U bab~lt 3 mos-4 yn, . JOBS842 8233 fiANOYMAN. Homes & 968-SlS2 Expr'd Reas Rates guarn. work. Exper'd , ceramic tile. Rea~. m the Ad a m e &s Bush ard ~=g~~AM ~ &ctri-;-apt& Consc1ent1ous Riley 's Tax Service Free Est. Call Gene fast 832 2468 9e31187 :-wmdow c~e. 971_1~ Lie 327136 645_6974 Cratuman Ca II 64.S 0002 28 Y~~ ~~ence 552 0458 Ir REASOMAILE a-a-_______ , DAILY PILOT SERVICE DIRECTORY Will ba by.l.l d ays. Nr DutchMa.lntenance '"=a4bws All PROFESSIONA L _Ca_ll_SS_7_-1_04_1 _____ 1._ .... .._, ELECTRICIAN p ed WI Ulim~ I tr ••••••••••••••••••••••• !_!~ ScbJ. L1ceOJ1ed. CHaM/CORCrefe right r e e t ~a~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• L..t.capinc) RePa nt1ng.k lnterL";;"0386ter Father & Son. Conscaen· ROOF'S installed factory .....,_ · r e s 1 on Haul sk1ploader dump ••••••••••••••••••••••• as. wor guar ....... t ious, s a tis . g u a r . .... ___ ·, es•~b '"'yr!' Call ----------1••••••••••••••••••••••• largeortmalljobs · UJ.1"'-'• ... ..., " Li nsed · trk, gradtng, tree wrk, LANDSCAPING. Painting. Extr/lntr. Ex· 675-8336 eves or leave Harold Gunn M9·2961 C.,1 tl:at Padfic Coocn!te. Lo 'tlt ce 673 03S9 demolJllons etc. 831 1257 Reasonable prices. pr'd hon,...t neat reas ~. --••••••••••••••••••••••• day & ruU day r ates. ' '"' · ' · RooC F Les All Carp e n ter. F r ee MS-325'7after3PM. B.ICTRl-SERVE Try a Daily Pilot 968-8783orS47·5846 Lic'd9S4 lo.t5 Dave --lnt&ext.reason., Llc;~d'd. l~sur.ty~ese DO rT ICOWI 64~5678 eslimat.es,Any11lzejobs. -Morethanelectncaans Class1riedAdtobuy,sell Find what you want an Have something lo sell? Sinclairpaints. estimate. 89~·042 1 or Tony. 64&-9866 Classified Ads 642·5678 979-4963 or rent somelhmg. Daily Pilot Classifieds. ClllSllafled ad& do it well S31·8788 537-4133 .... .. lusinKa ....._,, Rentoli 4650 Lott & Found 5100 Penonal1 5350 Help Want.ct 7100 Help Wanted 7100 Hetp Wonhcf 7100 Help Wonhcf 7100 'C)pportunity 5005 ()ppcwlwtity 5005 A•••••••••••,r•1••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••::.pace ava1 tor !>m "'ctl a.a.1 01-~ ••UTOLOTM.a...a IC>Ot<KE.,.ERF/C CLERK. Accounts Rec. mlrhm. camper bhell, LOST 31161711, 4 mo Set· PREGNANT" Caring, "' "" ~• ~-•or . A A" m:;r-boat'trlrupto 12' t:1>1dt• ter /Doble , brown ronfidenUaJcounsehnt:& Certl!ll'<l, f1Ume Mesa f'ullorpart·tlme. Learn l C;1rl ofr. Mt f', AP, l" tame in busy retail c M. Ph 645 0873 Whtlred collar. Vic. Ins tererral. Abortion, Jdop Verde ~onv Hosp. 661 the auto business from 1\/R, pa) roll, ta"<e-.. Jewelry Swre. Benefits. I t/ --& Cst Hwy. Reward. lion &keepmg. Center St. CM S48·SS85 the around up! Op C1nan state, 1nvo1c mg. _549-__ 1424 _______ _ •·-'--s/ ft'fel l ...... 1027 portun1ty for advance etc. Typ1n° a must Co pd ~e ..... --------APCARE 547·2563 Air National Ir you're ment. See Mr. O'Neill 0 ; health/lire an s. Cole O.ERK·DRUGS, Glfts, & BUY NOW! CONSIGN NOW! • Net $170 $200 per week. We have 1.1 million Contractual reservations backing with AAA U S.tCanada le the followtne airlines United, Delta, Western. Hughes Air West, Continent.al. KLM "Dutch", Swiss All', Luthansua. • JOto;. Investment ta" credit • deprecaallon deferrments • We have 118 '77, '78's m Fleet need 200 total by May 1. • Purchase at factory mvo1ce 4 Star's minis or ~outhwtnd's 2S's IOO' r Fmancmg of mvo1ce sales tax & license thru CROCKER. 12.0 APR, 1 )ear note For further information contact Mr. Lassoer or Mr. Miller Dale's RV Rentals Inc. (714) 559·4446 Outside Ca. 1·800-854·0399 (Telex) Dale's IRlN 69·2378 Denver, Colorado Opening May l. t\llowing 2 way Rentals to L.A. ••••••••••••••••••••••• lllaiMu OpporiwWty SOOS ....••....•••.......... SAN CLEMENTE Groom.ang & Pet Shop. Retanng after 7 good years, fine loC'allon & cl.Jent.ele S68.SOO BERTHA HENRY REALTORS 215De1Mar .i924121 Newport, 2 ex1st1nJ! o<'ean front takeout. s1l down restaurants. Owner will finance J\ John:son, Ukr 979·4964 ---- Gift Shop, best NB lm·a lion. F.P S25.000. 675 2A73 Beer/Wtne tavern $7000 dwn 2014 Placenua, CM. S.57·7490 or642·4810. -- R...tals to sa.... 4)00 Office Rental 4400 ~~~nag/~~ ~0[ hsa~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mohawk supplies. $3500 Roommate wanted. "'WATBFttOMT" CM 714638·4999 Laguna Hills, $175/mo. --A1l6.581.311M. Bob New office space from A bus iness w a pro 300 sq Ct. Most com· sperous future in N n •IE SaECTIVE• petitave rates m area Natural food eatery shop Garn a reliable Fantastic Views, patios, rombo 548·5927 in the CANNERY --.-roommate. 64.5-7464 •SHARE A HOME• -F 22 nds same to share 2 bdrm 2 ba f\lm apt. on Balboa Penn $2SO mo 1st & lu l 67S-2058 673-2999 VILLAGE-Parking incl .U.Ss Wanted 50 I 0 For appt call Ed 673 1003. •••••••••••• ••••• • ••••• 2Bl8 Lalayette Ave., N.13. Wanted Restaurant w ll quor lic, NB -CdM Call 805/967-1924 OFFlCE FOR LE~ E 1200 sq ft with lobby, or- fi ces & con ference facilities in pri me loca· MoMy to LOCllt 5025 ....................... Male roommate wanted, 2 tion next lo freeways. ht, hd Ir 3rd T.D.'s LOANSAVAJLABLE Credit no problem. ... .... 75~5903 BR home, blk from bcl\. SSlO mo incl. utiL Admin. Yrly. Aft5pm: 675-2604 or wholesaler tenants Room In 3 BR home, pool. prd erred. Contact Mr. Nr Harbor shop'"' Ctr. Singer, Tues or Thurs. • ~l Speculators, investors & All priv's. Male pref'd.1----------owners shrt term $S 64.5-~l Office space for rent in avail rast. Bill Daven 3 br 2 ba house clOBe to {;orona d el Ma r. Call portS49-9803 beach. 2S +. tidy & 644-8494. -----T-- respon. ! S225 pr mo • ....__.""'*'-"II Mott~i. nnt +phone. 964.l(Ml "',, _.. .. vn.. Deedl 5035 Nwpl B. 2 straight prof men seek Jrd to share spacious vu home, lg pool. S265/mo. 640-4330. Offfuaewta1 4400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• . THE EfftCIEHT ALTHMA.TIVE Mo. to mo. rent incl : Rece p t. serv., personalized phone COV· erage, conr. rm, mail serv., underiround prkg '-more ln Newport. .AHCM1teys. ArchitKt1, • • ••••••••• ••• • • • • • • • • • fft)k un. CPA 's etc. LOWEST ~ ofc bldg. ;.1t llthrest ••• ~ Oc ... •'-w. lltT.D.'s, olU> >CW= So. LOCJUlta 2ltd T.D. Lo.ts. best N.xt:rost Fairest Term..~ since 1949 ofc. Good fer M' Sattter Mtg. Co. def' ....._ CCMICftsiOfts 642-2171 54~06 I I & ..._. ~•HWtth Retired couple has money ll9'JDo Sllot't tftwt OC• &olend. lst&2nd TO's Cllf•CJ pos~. 5 Yr Agent, 1-837 3744 I I • o le • 0 w n e r l am a yng successful prof 49'· 1625. fam. man who 1s buyinl( .__.__11--A_. 4450 a new home in my prl' _. ....,.,.. sent NB ne1ghb<lr ror •••••••••••••••• ••••••• $215,000. I want to beat ----------i 4 D&UXI OfC'S the excessive interest Office Space a van. pvt en-Con!. rm., seat 25, all rate charged by the local try, 2 suite&, reae. 1827 ......... led, sm. w"~e 1.0 re· S&L's, especially when I TIIE EXECUTIVE SUITE, 640-5470 Wu t cll ff Dr. N B . ,,_.... "" think l' tl $80 000 631-0800 ar. 1 or 2 yr. lease. Lake m pu mg · For es t a r ea. Kent cash down Call me al .._. THI Harkins 64G-<&t7 or SS7 4632 It you _... WATB" 71.45819393 wa n t to have my Great olftce apace. 300 '° · · beautiful new house & 1000 aq ft.. All 1izes 6: 1••1a OR equity Ir I derault on your shapes, IOID& w /wet ban -6: frpks •terrine views. llAUTY SHOP 9%, 30 yr 1st TD rather V~ .. coc:QDetl\Jve ra~ Succeaatul location In then have it go back to an 1ft Udo vru..ae. You ve Calta Mesa. SllOO Montb _S6:L. __ Pri_o_onl_Y ___ _ eot1'°1 sees ltlto bellz eve lt!t Broker67U?OO i.s1H .. u••/ l::a u1 • aun a p rl•/ (7U )l7$·1H 2 for an ll:dlldhW ...... 4500 :.:'~ appt., or atop by Mon-Fri ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 8 :30 t o 5:30 al Lido Nnl.100'under2or. l8101 +•are1•Rtt 5100 Mtrlna VIUaia, 3475 Via Redondo Clttle. unit P. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lost male blk & wht, Ing LINDA & VIC1<1 havtng a bard lime f111d Mr. Pierce HOWARD lnstrument Corp. (714J Cards. Exper. pref d. hatred 10 mo cat w1blue ing work and are ID· Olevrolet, Dove&. Quail 642-8080. E.O !!: N.B.CallM0-73'13.. flea collar 640·7051 OYlc• Mas~ teresled m a career 10 Sts .• Newport Beach. Forthef"ounofM! electronics, weather ClosedEasterSunday. Lost · Prescr1pl1on Glasses Blwn V1,-tona & Alden's on Placent1a, CM 548·9661 Reward. SerVUlg all Orange Co. r o r e c a s l I n g • o r 835-731.3 telephone/teletype an- stallallon and repair. see •SUSIE'S• your Air Nallonal Guard Ou(call Massage Reen.at.er We need men 10AM-2AM 731-4462 and women aged 17·27 tn , terested tn getting ahead Automotive Bkkpr Acct 's receivable, acct 's payable. Burroughs post· 1ng machine. Harbour Volkswagon 18711 Beach Bl, HB. 842-4435 Loet. M. Blullck Hound, Salt & pepper, col lar t tag . Vic 19th t l-\lllerton 646·0424 DANCE OF FUN m today's compelltn·e Beaut nude girls dance JOb market You can get ---------• & rap session lOAM lo free vocational tramang AVOM after 5 JO - - -JAM Mon·Sat. 12PM Lo wtlh excellent pay plu~ LOST: SIAMESE 8PM Sun. 625 N i-;uchd. free medical coverage TAKE AVON REW A.RD Anah. ss9 6150 and travel. For more m 3118 111. Vic· Newport FREESESSION W tJ\I) formation on opemn~!. TO LUNCH Ulvd & Mesa Dr. Seal· Smgle male. new to area. and qualifications C'all Sell to fnends and co· point Siamese. sutures seeking female com pa S 3 r g e 3 n l A r r 0 11 ° workers in your office, on left side of race. Nds nionship. Enjoy dancing. 714·979-7363 or apply at make about $4() on every med. Call anytime. Non-smoker.646·2598 26SlNewportBlvd,C0&ta $100yousell.You'llhave 631-1030 Mesa. your own b us iness Problems" Want help -b---C--l-W--ted-without giving up your Reward. Siberian Husky finding a solution? Free. Am iuous oup e an . r ..... •· wht. Vic Garfield/ ABC HELP L l N E. to mana_ge a s~ll b11:5•· regular job. To find out """' nes /t e w II ot 1 more. call 540-7041 or Magnol.aa Nds medlca· 645-2222 s P Im · 1 n n· '7-·tb?-'"/Ul. terlere w 4 your present """u .,,,_ lion 962 1410· •TOUCH OF CLAS s * JOb. Mwl be willing to A•• rrodtlch, htc Found Female Stbenan ESCORT & MODEL learn Mr.Hall,642·1634_i--------- Jlui.ky. lnd1anapol1!./ SERVJCEOutcall by Ap AMBITIOUS COUPLE ~~ H B 536-8998. pointment646-7118 Help manaf(e family -Penonal 5-nices 5360 business P t SS7 0215 Found Cocker Span Yng ••••••••••••••••••••• •• A-I --- -, · pp aance repairman ; blk male v1c Santa Ana Gal Friday will as'1~t Washers, dryers, stoves. Hgts 963-6880 w your errand~ transp refng's, dishwashers FOUND SlOO. owner 646-9134.497-12.44 Top pay to right man. 1dentt.f'y by denomanallon &tdoywftent & 41W-8009 & number of bills, also ~ Apt Mgr, couple pref., ex· date & location lost ••••••••••••••••••••••• p'd only. an mamt. & bk· SJG.5621 HBPD Jobs WClllled, 7075 kpg, SS unit complex, Lost. Oockat.Jel. grey /whl •••••••••~••••••••••••• C.M. (213)865·3851 yellow head peach race. lntell, slam, beautiful •-M "' .... "'GER Mesa Verde. Reward female desires customer l'4T 1 Al""llA 546-3785 or publ.ac relation type 32 Urut complex, 1 blk to --------1 job. f1 exible. will travel bch. Prime H.B. loca· LOST. Friendly Albino Prefer N.B .. Irvine area tion. Apt. + salary. Call Cockateel, 19th St. Nwpt P.O. Box 1475 Newport Cor lnfoS4().JS3S. Bcb (714)821·5840 dys ; Beach,92663 --------- S37 ~19 ....... W__.__... 7100 ARCHITECTURAL JR •--r _........ DRAFTSMAN Young Found' Red & wht Fem. ••••••••••••••••••••••• growing H . B firm, re· Husky/Shep max . Vic Accounffng C• $750 sident1allype V 536-8832. Bus hard/Atlanta . lOO%FREE 3-5PM 968-0426 No lypUlg. Great co of Found SCHNAUZER .rersgdra1ses&gdbens l•---------1 DOG. Vic: lnd1anapohs for light acctng bkgd & 10 & Florida. HB. Call key add mach. Call SJS.2775 Coastal Personnel Ag~n­cy, 2790 Harbor, -C M Found Poodle, Vic: S0-6055. Masaon V1Uage, San Juan ---------• Capo , no lags. Pt Cocker" 493.0523 ------ Found Cem. Husky nr Murdy Prk Call afl 6 or wknds 847 6094 LOST sml blue point Siamese Cal grey mark· mJ?, cream body, right eye tears. Mon 3/20 m Easlbluff. Fam. frantic. we love her. Call 640·6414 or 558-8666. Reward ACCOUNTS PA.YA.ILE CLERK We currently hav<-a foll lime temporary opening for a 6 month period with the poss1bili1y of becom· lng permanent. At leai.t l year varied accounts payable experience ASSEMBLERS SOTramee ruisemblers Needed Immediately Long &Short Term Aas1gnmenls 3Sh.alts Available Must have own transp. Cal Today 556-1520 1-'rf!e. Top Pay. Vac Pay Vidor T ewiporrry Set-flus Div Walter Kidde & Co 2082 S. E Bnstol Ste 10 Newport Beat•h (Corner or Bristol & Campus behind Carl's Jr) Babysitter. lite housekeeping. baby 9 mo's old. Ref's req'd 642-6100Jud1 Babysitter. 3 days week. 9 »4 1 Child. Mature respon adll. Art 6.30 6315294. Ba bys1tler /hsekeeper. live out'in, mature. nn· smkr. 1 infant 499·«15 eves. Banking Progress1 ve. in· dependent bank, seeking bank exper'd lnwtdt S.Cr'ffrry O.C. Airport ofc. Xlnt benef. Call or apply SA.H'TIA.GO IA.MK 535 E First St. Tw.tm 832-5200 Equal Opport Employl'r Banktng TB.LER P' /TIME Branch ore seeks bonda· ble p/time teller. Exper. pref'd Contact Hilda Terranove (714 > 644· 7255 Western Federal Savmgs Z744 E Coast Hwy, CdM Equal Oppor Employer Banking TB.UR. UPER'D Lite typing. Neat appear Contact Dons Mitchell UMIOM IA.MIC 610 Newport Center Dr Newport 8e'1C'h 558-5280 Equal Oppor Employer BOOKKEEPER Moulton 1 ________ _ Pla2a Pharma cy, Laguna Hills , Mr . Dreyfus 768·3784 __ _ BOOKKEEPER Gen1 Ledcjet' Clk Entry lt>vel pos for mdl\' w, nun 2 yr~ manu<il G IL posllnR e"per. Good benefit pk~ & workmg ronds 640 89SO for appt BOOKKEJo:PJo:H, t-"<pl'r. Full CharRC to l'nmp1h•. J>06l & mamlam fmanl'ial records for an lntcnor Design Firm. Salary open, ple a se cal l 714·540-2860 for appt. BOOKKEEPER. postmg, AR, AP, on peg board system, bank deposits & recon c1llat1ons, cash now records. property ledger. lite typing & fat . 1ng. Working directly w company owners & CLERK TYPIST Large insurance co. w /X· lnl working conds & benefits has immed operung for clerlt typist. Type 45 wpm. Heavy phones Must be well or. ~amzed. Some math ar- t11ude 1 Yr ore ex~r prer'd. Apply m person II :.J.2PM Mon lhru t'n Safeco Insurance 17570 Brookhurst Fountain Valley t~ual Opp Emplyr m tf CocktaH Waitrns School Day/eve classes. PlaC'e· menl Assil. 751·9194 So. Ca lif Cock t ail Waitresses, lrvme. • Cocktail Waitns• School outside accounts Sm Earn up to $300 per wk growing company Croan Low twuon Placemcnt Eng 1 n e e r i n g 5 SI! 2 assai.l. 751-9194. Ml'.'Fadden. H.B 893 0561 C d ... -ompan1on nee e11. IOYS -GIRLS ma lure, C h r 1st 1 <in 12-16 years o( age Even-woman to stay "' elderh· lng work. Obtain ne" woman on wknds 1n subscnplions for the Dai· CdM. 640-1392 betwn 9am ly Pilot working with an _&_s...:p:....m ______ _ adult supervisor. Earn COOK. expcr'd in guest $20 to S30 per week or h o 6 k d more. Call (213) 597 0396 c0r.'f~16 wee en :.. noon to 5pm. (213) --·------- 498-2A73. Spm 9pm. Call Collect. Car Wash ManCICJft' lmmcd. employment avail for full Sl'rvice car COOICS Full & P/Ume. Exper'd Good benefits. Bayview Manor & Conv. Hosp, 642·3505. wash .mana~er Must ltc COOKS. Bartender,, experd mall pha:.<·s of Del ivery Driver s. car wash manaj?l•mt'Dt p time openings for Top "al + bonus + women & men w outgo· comm For _intcrvu.•w mg personal1t1es. Over :!1 rall 714 644 4460 & able to work eve,. CERAMIC WORKERS S2 7().SJ to sLart. Apply If you can throw pots nn after 5pm daily. Me N a wheel and are mterc"t Eds Puza Parlor, 410 E ed In a steady Job. call 17th St, CM MARKEL Ct:RAMICS. CO-Ok--S---· 979--0121 Breakta.st, lunch. dtnoer. CHEMICA.LOPR Exper'd . Apply 1n S3 SO per hr w'penodic person. Ma Barker's reVlews. 11.S chem or Re;t.auranl, 212 E. 17lh w o r k e x p e r . _St.........:...C........:...M ______ _ w chemicals pref ·d 7am 3 30pm E .O. E. 549-3281 Ctuld car<' & houst•kl'<'P in~ Top pay Mon l'·ri 9.s. ~ea\·1C'w. NB 833-8100, F,\'l'S f>40 ti179, 640-l4!M. Must start 1m med. Cooks, day s hift. Reuben's. 1555 Adams Ave. Appl. accepted dat· ly bwtn 8-lOAM & 2·4PM 54().9672 ------- Cooks & Dishwashers Apply In person. Stavro's YJJOW. Coast Hwy. NB Lotll white with blk mrk· ings long hair Siamese cat. 3 /18 or 3119 REWARD 254 Catalina NB 548·5004 before 9 AM Ability w operate a 10· l•--------- key a must. Please apply l•--------- ln penon ---------1·--------· ASSEMILERS Bartender. yng, attract Clerical COOKS. EXrEll'D ONLY. All shifts. Jolly Hoger, 400 S. Coast Hwy, La.guna Beach . Loet, Lra mixed breed Terrier type dog. No tags, no collar. Vic: CdM area. 644· 1667, 644-4000. PtnOMlls 5150 ••••••••••••••••••••••• TREMDATA (30) Needed for fem. Exper, good salary graveyard. Noexpnec. & tipg. Chez Monique. *Secretaries COIP. LooeTerm&FREE 28752 M a r g u erite Standard Memories Div. Vk:torT•r:•IM'•., Parkway, Miaeion Viejo. * Jvnicts An APt>lied SerYlcn Beautician wanted w /ex· ! .. -£ Magnetics Co -.as. E. Btist.ol per in newest hairstyles *GEN L omc =:.\nS:~c~= ~ite 10 Newpe>rt Bcb for Children's Hair styl· Work roe' the agency that (7l•) $40-36()6, ext213 556-1520 Ing 1alon In M.V. Im med tum<J time anto Top s Equal ()pportW'lttY top earoings. For m · Long & short term a!'I· sprit.I R~ £mployn-M/F terview call Carmen signment.,. Top JObll Top t815So El Camino Rut ASSEMILHS 'f6&.880l pay You re }our own COOKS f\111 lime, experience necessary. sautemao. broller man , • pan· tryman. Xlnl bendits and opportunities with Hyatt~· A.'Jk for Cbef . 714m2-SOOO --------- Oporto, SUlte205. N.B. Runt Bch 842~2.834 San CJ ""·ll •· Xlnt oppor Procreuive --------. -IJM.<1. COOi( W AMTID Claas. 1uttar leuon11. ement.e. l"U y uC. medlcal device manur Beauty shampoo llSSISl Xlnt benefits. Sal open. UIO FIU!:E RENT IOOO aq fl. 2034 Placentia, music educator. bes., __ For appt. 492-7296 Acdnt BkkJ>l'lll located or oc Airport needed by . progress1vc MO FHS Apply, Jolly Roger, 203 H a r bor Blvd /Bake r C.M.Xlntloc. 'int.,adv.556·1178 RELAXlNG MASSAGE T!MPOUAY haa op•ninll ror u Newportha1rcutterCall ~o~ office • ManneAve,Balisland . .,... C. M. IOCMIOO ',?.. fl. 146-1512 Loait&f.omd 5300 Bob Jama-Uc Museur IUjilter Today w wMk Mmblera of llJht plut.lc rorapflt.&M·7690 · O overl oad COUNSELORS =-~~ oor, Wanted lncluatrial apace ....................... Outcall9-9,49''5111 oe variousaceountla•fl J)al"ll. Xlnt t>.nefit1 4c •IO(ISTOltl• See our ad for House _ for lite carpentry. Lost or Found a I*• Call bookkeepina a11l1n· ~c:t5ri!fl!1• Au lit. Manaier ror 557.00'8 CouNelors want.ed. Oak Slqle t.o a room 1u1te &n-4187eva Ani m a l Aulatance MASSA.Ci! menu . Work e lMe to Labor•~• SchwlDD dealer . Sa1 1~~3723~B~ltt~h~S~t.~N~.B~·~dc'rr..~rtHomes;-b;1..~;-l;·-S4b..;;l' ..au JD run wvlca bit. ' om 12.000' , ced lafU! 537#73. no fee. RGUU MODELS y our bo m .. ,., • u re 3t• Ill Airport Looo Dr $10.400. Mutt bave prior 1: =~~-tanlnl fatd.c.All or i>a::1 of. Lolt old En,. Sbeep doe. ESCOUS f.=' ni:.l:d :::~~:i. Calta M.. e.st-1905 bit• mec:bank eapcr. m aertt c.::~~~rJf ti!!'! --------· -lt'vl.ne.Gl·a640 l'elo w/PoUce. N.B. Hat• OU1'CAU.'OMLT Oran&eCo. F.qu;al0Hor'Entplo10t aata'e.ssi.9222.. PKAIMACYCLBI( pt.tlJno. lh betwn ioam DICU'nVI ..... W..... 4600 ~l>~ returl . 611·3111 BobertHall'1 ASSIStANf MANAGER B>aUlcuractunn P/tlme polttJon nalla· laepm.rn.3'30,f79..40GI SUITIS ....................... .'• .• llOOlf=~~50l COUPLE ....... Moktlf1 ble for penonable In COUMl8PaSOM I Loxurlout omc:a, •· aetlNd eople"" I'"' UJ'I· FOUND: trlah Setter, ·~AMDY1S* No. Taww, Union nit tor 147 un.11 com,pl in & la .. 1ra =~~~.::er nuu print1nc rompany eciattve Htr•tar1, fam. ln Cdll lease by fe male, abt 1 y r old, Ou&ca.lllllasHI• Jil'l'beCU.yofOraoie S ant a Ana. ""•band Expetleoced tors. t ypln1 label11 & b~ PtkPll' work. PIP ?!"!!"~':!.!!!.. c.!!: ilaY1$1'7B.'7M723 Orani• Wood " Weai. mo:m Tl4/UMI03 muiOnow maintenance. ..._.....,_.. waltln• on cu1lomers. 6G-081 ___ 1 _____ _. 1 _ __, ·-~ -G.0 .534-4701 --------1--------•1 Maturem.lddl•aredaou Xlnlpay.frinsebcns. ftr '9 room, ••ro•, WOlltinl W. bacbll • -•SltERILES• pie onb' Ref'• r.q\llrecl. Balbo8 Bc>al Bwldera W\U traln 9 to 3 TuC"A & Colmttt Clerk, female fol ...,. i.M.or moaUI bdtTo P"f•r CdM. Noa FOUND: Puppy, brown Certintd ll• uae ACCOVMTIM9 a.1 '100/rno + tJ.:,gt. Call 2'7'2Century Pl. CM Wed, i to 8 pm Mon, Onnut ahap. FUii limo lO ~; NtaJ'So.CoMI tmalit',N11.IQ.'71D w/bl k wbi. chln, 3/19. Home0tllt•B1appt. , .... _."at w/AfR AIP. btwnt"S. . E.O.E ,558-3120 Thun le Fri wffkend CallS.2500. P1a.1a. O.C. Airport 6 ._.....,. ~_,....:. .... 1 . Eaatblutf P a rk, NO. a.-. r aJULll~ ·:1 .__ work Pleoawecall m11r. w _______ __., ft_.aw.Oallm.il'I· ~ ...... _...., a.pace IJ~'lm . blllina. pa .Ml.I.Ill ""' Ti n.at Boata Jetuplnttorv1tw1ppt, CREDlTCOLLECTIO~"'S 11-» 1earpeatry. , FOXY LADY ~ t ':!°~A:'i 11.&1,..°"7 Lot man wanted for 1\eGWklDniat Pa.rt Ume. aper req ~'~Q U 1 ~),~ m.blf M. ·-~: f !f;b'1 "tal~.: OilUIM---~ mfr. oCftrt I•' Tblt'tllUJe'°~ dcall1na boala. c.Jl Lou ltlOSanMl•utl f>r . Bartell Manne Elcc OC.AllDor\ m.am O~O llMS17.., 7ll ~ pd 1)11, • --, eon· formlil_ Dll1b'PU6t ._Gl_·ZMT__._____ Newpon•acb tnintca.MS-~ ' ~· H ClUltned •4' wt blt ' ~ • ..nlal atmo1pbtre. ~,., __ ,, tMl,can PeoplenoDMdpeople 644-7ll0 Cullodlaallleinl ., ....,...,,..0 =· • , U...I 1mall Reau or l'dilll M 11tsb . •• u•••••1 IX> Calif« ·-• . . J'OUI'"" '*' &1'"19 \be --------N e wport Hartle .,..vwace Hf ttm • .J•at ca11 sail • 1"IDt .'' ~-DICC...... ldealu1. l'or IDDl't la.: ~Dlted«7ta P1Dd what 109 want la Liii.Wm ~SI A.a: 1 . Wiii .. ....... ,_ ':, • 'M-~" .:::__:_.~ .. ~ •711...,ll•t· l""9 MMT1l ..,..C8D~. l>MLYPILOT DalJyPUotClaatl\eda. Pll • c -• ·--- f .. . -. ... . . .. ,... . •• f • ._ .. ' • r I \ -"' .......... -• ..... ............. ~":£. .ir ~, ··---.-I • ..... .. : .. "t .-.. .. • • ............ ..,...,...-.~.~~..... ~ ·~ ---.. ·~-.:--~" ..... ..__,.,. . • ... ..... - : t I ... --· '' .. ,,. •• '• (' t ,• . . . ~ '• !I. :·· I ' . : ... •• I I 1"1 t 11 •!JI ~~•~•••••?!~I~!'.~ ....... ~!~~~~~•••••?~.~~ ~~-~ ..... !!.~~ ~~.~.~·::! ..... !!.~~I~.~::.·::! ..... ?!~~ Ft1day. March 24. 1978 DAILY PIL.OT 89 --------------Me4,W•ted 7100 HelpW..t.d 7100 HllpW..t.d 7100 Dal Gens8l 1murw;aee -I ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mana1er..,o.rhr.SaJary SR ClrnK U...luwrit..Trw MAM RET .. IL S.&.LES uc:.TIOHIST ~ +.$48-1183 • UI l..atl• upudlna fmur. Muat hau exper. 1n A A SffNtary: 1rowana In· PAaT-TIME ---------1 Lona tMm, tem""~•"" .aencybQtra!Aee-1· --1-t·1-1-· -·ta"--t Sales posita·ons in vard pa'nl lmmed open1nC for re· auraocearcynecdlwt'll N ........... J uu.,;nmt'nt av.11 Sha;.p ib. avail lo <>ranaeco. ~~~.l-pme';t ... & <T ' 1 ' cept. Dullea include orc111nlzed and self· ... 0 --....~•urv~ 001d DB.IV Y u in IP Co benefit. lnclud 1 k h ..., .. hardware. plumbing & elcc, garden, 11wildlboa.rd. Telu, J)Olal mouvatmc sec'y to han .. per + ua. F/Ume . .-..eieway Auto. ~.wh~r b~:,~I. Juve&paidv:c.S~ ave a woraln11 panel'gdepts.Expand'gCoseeksF/T lns mall Is a11lst101die1ale>S, ~erv1ce, and wtdy,dayt.imeC.Jl.ol· ~Avery Parkway at Flu1ble peraonallty lni ul $S50 per mo ~":ii;'~~:~~tt!~~~-. salespeople. F /Co benefits. Xlnt ~~ 1Wf. ~ri admlo1ttrative funr ntt.S&lllUlr. lioward ~ jol>leao F\'wy, MiH&on needed. Good pay. CALL w/rapid adv .vall. APPtY at, Orance County advance opport. Apply at or call (213) ...... · not ne<:. a ~ Type 5560 wpnl. Tele. saln adv, full°' pit. e . immed. for interview. CllUJudlln •\lllerton Restaurant Services, 429-9701 c:ommensuraste w/exl>f'r Exp d or will train. pre Some nles. $3 hr + H~: ~e~:r~~gl~ret;~ NO FEES Lmd~~)~7Z.~vly ::!~a::'~~~=~r."· 6SOl l.~St.Lci.Jheeh ~~ 642-7SU "uk for _re_r_~~~=7 comm.=~31fl PennanenlP/Taituat1on ~o~ office • (714l54Ml61 I-,~. -.... R.E.Sales ual"r•• perhon Good HIWA.CCOUMTS as a carrier dealer. Ap O overload M I I "~ 111 .. " proxbn•-6am,7dys/wk Island Saleaman & Auto IWllenance poet on at 'I ,, UKECHICKENSOUP typ11l Non.smoker. Exp'd, perm., xfnt N~ responsible person · 557_0061 Tecb needed. lmmed Dana Point Harbor, ex· f II ... ll couldn't hllrt to Cllll Good comp1&ny benefits. benefit:1. Call Joi.a w/goodcar.Gross eam opemngs w/maJor Oil Jlll'r. preferred. $.1.46 to .....iij Start.l.ng&11lary '6<1C)mo. Maraelle 493·S651. 3723 Birch St, NB Co. Hi"" saJ ... v +f1xlnl •tart + fringe beneltts, ' Chuck Nub about 8 re· E O E 844-4242 Mutual Savin•,. & Loan, ing.s over $350/mo. HB &•"'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ llo"' -oT "9&-813'1 warding career in real _ ... CM area. Call 54().3008'" benefits. Apply in person estate. F\'ee IJ'ainin& i! SlO Camino de Estrellil, befoooo General Maintenance ~:UnlonOilServiceSla· MAINT'ENANCE-oeneral U...W--*-~ 7100 U.&..W--"-~ 7100 youqualily.540-SlOl SECRETARY . SanClemente.E.O.E. ---· Man·Cu stodlan ror t1on, 1870 Elena St. . " 1 •--r ..,._ •-,.. wnwv Xlnt oppor for efficient Deliveryfileclerktowork Newport Specialty Redondo 'Beach, Ca. ~a'f'lpcf~b~tryg,:;,:t ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• sec'y Top skills f'ast TeUer.aomWeexperpre!'d, in Nwprt Deb medical Center&Marina.Wewill 21J...373-2342 beneat.aoodp~;orde-NURS!SAIDES PRINTING Resldentlal cleaning paceR E.orrc,N B ~Int ~:~~Be~:~ !,~nf~ 0.b, M""·Fn.10.7. No ex ln•n. 1600/mo Mu" pend able p .,,0 0 • • ORDSIUES ,·~-••f'lt• need• poop le "I""" 1..-ohup gal. C.11 J • ~,.,,,.177 .. 1 perience neces. Good work wknds. Phone JACK Oil JIU 548-5100 with own trans. 20-25 hr Lila,833-2900 OWJ..... _ dnvint record t 87~ Of AU TRADES 59 Bed facility. Joan a wit. Call for interview T T k 0 · a mus · -·--happy groun & en1oy the _,. ~PM c~~ Sec'y for sml olhce-ow rue nvers <'"· S2 88 to start. Call G1ta..111!.B ... 10FFtCE Willtrainbul _,_ be rr B .... er.. .~.... -r'd Top pay Apply 640-0t40ext 71 f t U"I~ expenence la welcome Manager Trainees All.It ne its. llyvaew Mulll know i.napout & •reqwr~ shorthand. good ..-· · · ' -or!!'p Smallco.inln·meneed!> W .SOLDER_INGISH UTQTEM Conv ~ Thunn Ave, continuous business RESTAURANT HELP command of Eng gram G&WToWlllg,lOOOlrvme Delivery boy w/good dnv enthus1ast1c person for OOD PRE-FIN CM 642·3505 forms press s A area of Meyerbof's Restaurant mar. xlnt typing," &en'I Ave. NB642·12S2 _ mg record & exp w furn ~en ofc pos1t1on Typing HEAT STAMP Orangeeo.1141M0-8027. in S. Coast Village has offlcee>.p 673 m2 TOW TRUCK DRIVERS $3 hr call &Uy bt-.n !>kllb nee Walling to LlGfIT ASSEMBLY Food Stores OFACETl.AINU immed openings for s~RET ... RV"--Mw;t have towing el(per. 9'10.642-20.SJ tram Salary :.t;;rb $550 Vanetyohbort rum. AreSeelungcareer START U2S MO. PROPYTY MGR Sandwich makers, & 5"' • ' must live C.M . orea mo A~k for Uebb1e, lndoors.small shop Minded People For: MOtl.E WITH EXPEtt. For Newport Beach food preparation Ph MotJ\.ated pers1 o&n for Ill 646-96J8. 8.5 Mon-Fri Oeh worker. e'Cper, reha· ~1676 f'-'Ucompan,ybenefllb .. ., Mustbetenacious&hard Glen aft 2PM for In groWU\g mgm tn\e:. ble. Tue l-'r1, 94 <:1ovan ~ -ln Newport Beach MA.HAGY TRAIH-S A<tv~~!r!!~t~:ual nosed, wlll.utg to work lerVlew. ~ co in NB BookkeepUlg TraUlee-Operate vitamin ru's. 1380 N Cst Hwy CrENERAL 01-'FICE pos1-646-2123 Have opening.s for rttime ,....._ Tues lhru Sal. Percen-knowledge, good phone encapsulalJon machme, Lagtkh. t1on with es.·tabhshed &p/timeclerk.son2nd& Varietyofacllvilles Restaurant manner. Will tra10. da..,.., full time. English T I F N "'·U be ft t a g e b a s i s , ! o r ,,~ --ext1 e arm 1n ewport J....rTOIUAL WORK 3rd &bills. lf intere5ted, ru company ne 1 .s established busaneSIS . J~. MACS S<MHiOlJ SJ>ll'aking. F\'inges. Apply Dental r ecept1on1st Beach. Appl.leant must Pa.rt&Fttime~l.330 contact our nearest lnNewportBeach Real Estate License lsNowHlringForA 810M·F.LmwllcoLabs, Mature.exper. type & spell accurately. --marketoraoto 646-2123 helpful D~Hoat.u SECRETARY 2148NewportBlvd.C.M. 6441405 $600 tart I Janitor eves. P /tame. 1AM42LampsonG.Grv ·675-49l2. Minof5yrsconstruc.ex --- . -Call64mo s mg sa ary. HunL tkb or Cerritos. M thru ""-'9 5 Order desk for !a bric Apply twn3&Spm Sh 80 i 70 Typ&Sl/Receplioolst Prr Dental Cha111.1de A!>s1st ~l066 00 .... am· pm wholesaler. Reliable, Mon·Fri.Start$2.75hr per. ' typ ng · · G~ .. OFFICE Call Alan (1) 526·5511 . forlnlonnaUonpbone It.al fstat. s.t lOl4lAdamsAve, H.8-Must be familiar w/con· afternoons. Medofc. Hvy in N.8. Pleasant group 5".. <7l•)53'1"4840 fast learner, good LUSK RJty, a John D. tract&cbangeorderpro-typUlg&ins.548·5121. prac Exper. nee Good typing skills JAHITottlAL EquaJOpporEmployer memory. Busy phones. Lmk Company is now RetallManagement cedures. Salury nego Includes alternate Sat needed, 50 wpm, 10 key Sun-Thurs eves. 5 Hrs typing, record keeping. k' . ( ..... S'TTOPR .. S. CallJudy, (714)833-86tl0. AM's. ""0-11"''. SJ 50 h E 'd d It Ex""'n·ence w1'th fabncs ta ing interviews or -s "" = by touch. Must be sharp . r. xper a u s r-li ....,., 1 t t 1 RET .a.IL FIRM DISHWASHERS '1> /time flu\' l(•w Con\ llome 642 35o5 on details. Applications only. Lt wrk. 979·3923 MANAGEMENT or garment mfg. re· cens1•""1 ~~a11esr a e 58 es " Secretary Ptr II 2 f'u,h TRAINEE quired. Excell. co. peop c. "'11 or appt. Mature profit oriented emergency aid prol(rJm. being taken. 893·242. or J .a. ...alTORI ... L • ""'" •. ..,1 th l ·1 b "k d :>Jl 1725 Ask for Gladys ~ • Earn while you learn. beneflls. Mission Vtt'JO .....,..._ WI re a1 a-. groun -Newport Harbor t:ounc1I -- - -P time 4.5 hrs nil(ht. 5 Bare t la Moped . area. 770 2922 Su Pe r v Is i o n o f of Churches Ver)' busy TYPIST PERSON FRIDAY Busy. busy office. Non· smoker. 55 wpm, good pay Boat Bwlders. ti97 Randolph, CM_. __ _ Doekmaster ·~ J\~:-1,lant I' T l'lt•ncal positrnn wt Armstrong, Irvine --Painter. non uruon. Must -· buyers. manufacturer:.. Typist GIRL FRIDAY Days wk 1 7 I 8 2 <213 1749 7193 l01i1m-6pm --I 960·4361 I warehouse, workmg with 645-8050, 675·3809 wanted 1'' l1m1• ()pl•n C•n7313 u .a. .... ICURIST have exp & own trut·k Ill ~~II & store managers. Work s~RET .a.ay ' t t p. t f r ru I s.tlary Call 673 3.' .. 15 l~ ping & Uh.· Shl~rthand, _..,...,._ --" Starting sal S4 50 h; I all pecll> of eta I ro T ~ II ~~~~~~o~ ~e~l. ~WP~ • ~lulls r~q_wred F a~hion Jarutonal company ne('d'I N 8 Salon 573·40ll Call 960-32839 5 PM ' ~esum~s in confid~n~c 2 :ar:r't', 4 ~rs el-~~~typt• rrun1mum, to.key touch. DONUT SllOI'. p1t 1m<'. Island 644 5460 ~·-'"-· _ expenenced or qualified Manufacturing-general to Tbe Red Balloon, 65+ dictapbon~ $700+ Apply Ill person: Bank of all aftem & CVl' shift!> Guards people. Will tram Top factoryworkforsporting PARJ JIM£ REALlSTATE 16863 Algonquan, HB 64446U Callfonua 1401 Dove ~t avaJI. Worn.in agt.' ~ or pay. Want men. women g o o d s ! i r m . 926G --NB E O E. U\er Apply an person. SECURITY & couples. Call 631·07'23 7.30-4:00PM,S40-6142 EVENINGS SAUSPBSOH SECURITY Pt:RSUN --------D1pp1ty Donuts, 185·1 673-4356 or apply at 833 We'reexpandmgagain& Retail Management, capable or usuming & TYPIST/C&.K ~ewport Blvd, CM AGENTS W l 7't h ST CM MASSEUSE R ECEP· Adults with out.standing, loolting for top caliber Sports oneoled, lo grow execuung swing shift 60 wpm, lQ key helpful Donut Shop-Gr;vcyard 9AM·12·00 • • TIONIST Brand new attractive personalJlles salespersons with h1gb w/young company. Ref's &./or &raveyard shirt for gen'I ofc & A/Pay as- gtrl p/time. Appl~, lJ5 E . . H · B. spa needs foxy who enjoy working with performance records & desired, 67S-9'102 ask for duues 2 eves per wknd. s1slance. Xlnt loc. & J Full time positions ~t JOI ladles for masseuse re· kids. Start al S3 so per exper. in local area. call Bob. l7thSt,CM Oran°e Co Airport & ce .... •OQSt, no exper nee., fora"""'.Steve67S-2311 Call 6424783· After Spm benefits 644-8824. ------" 2 Days per wk Perm. .,... hr. Phone 642-4321 •250, .,.... RET ... •Ls ... • ir.s S54-3216or962·2844 ---------DRIU PRIESS OPR c.osta Mesa locations Car refs ovr60. 673.2289 will train, day & night between 3-00-s ooP M. ROC)lf''s Realty ., ..,.. --- -TYPIST WA.MTS> 1_5 yrs ""'per fc>r small Eqwpmenl & uniforms · · openings. Call for in A.skforJlm Z737£.CoastHwy Fem, 28-40, Bal Pen Scc"y /Bkkpr, Real Fil.lmepos.inourtypmg f:Jl'Ctrunit·s Co Friendly ~ h MustC hf1ve car 1& KITCHEN HELP-18 or terv1ew btwn 1 OAM · Eq u a 1 Op port u n l l Y C.orona del Mar, Ca 92625 beach shop. 640-!>441 Jillt/coru.t e'Cp req. Mail dept XJot working conds atmo,<.pht.>re. appl)' GLG ep one a or app Y over, exper necessary, toPM al Town &Country Employer Real Estate Sales P~ple RM. resume to 2845 f.o.: Coast & ro. benefits. Must be ~y,tems, 11152 Condor m J)t'rson, apply 223 Manne Ave Spa. 21 ~O yrs preferred ----** · ** Hwy, CdM 92625 rca..."-Ol'lably fru.t &. accur • \vt•. Fountain VI~ BURMS Balboa Island Mar 'n & 9637723 PART-TIME RECt-;P wanted trp to 90,JO'~ Operating room, ex Apply in person. Pl'O· 549 4777 IMT'l SECURITY 28 btwn 4 & 6 M AT U R E W 0 M A-N TIONlST lOAM 3PM. 5 romm spl.Jl. Nw(lt Bch penence necessary. out Sec'y for mai:azmc pub ny~avcr. 1660 Placentia d H a 549 2666 631 0900 pauent surgery, days on Malun•. l::xt·1tmi: work ti A c M l77SE CcnterSt Ladies Serious about p/llme to welcomt-ays, · area. · -ly. No rall, n1ghh . or9i\Mto3 5567130 Vl', ' ·-l~ dt.>rk p;irt 11nw t'' pd matUrl' wom..in 496 ~()2 \nahe1m 63..5·4630 changing your present newcomers & contact PBX Anc;wenng Scrv1ct• Real E.slate weekend:; Outpatient Woiten/Waitnsses GUARDS --standard of living thru merchant:>. F1exible hrs Se<:y Exnor pref'd Wall TIREDO!o'WORKING Surgery Center, lllJ Sec' f ll B I ff Must .... """'Pl~onent .... N d I t .,.. FOR P".ANUTS·'. 'y, or · aw o c ..,.,. .~-" ~-.a.. P 1l1me day'>. perm concentrated work w/ ee car, 1 e typing tram. Must type 3S wpm c. sa-1426 Legal ex per pref ·d $t hr. Vac. sick days, In· Electronics llt•t·cnllv M<ilure, reliable men. people p/llme. Call for 547 3005. Variablehrs.640·1110 Tired of hauling people ---------~ Salary commcnsurult: surbenefit.s.644·5404 separated vderan'i. Fa cllll v 1n Irvine appt.494·5168 -------around? Tired of Un· ROllHSOHS w/exper. Send resume to ---------- (grade E S and below> Co~plex;· Car & phone Lady Nig_ht Manager MECHANICAL PIX OPERATOR quahfaed buyers? Curtis Classified ad 11182, Daily WAITRESSES are needed lo hll current req d_ Call 833-3000 ext S-Upm, T·Bu.rger, 1900 ENGINEER • No typing. Woman ovr Investments al> looking to WlSTMIHSTEtr Pilot., P.O. Box Box 1560. Apply in person to part time vacancies in 191 llam 2pm. w. Balboa, N.B. 67s.2981 , Af?greasive small in· 40. to receive & fill tram exper licensees m WiU mterview applicants Cost.a Mesa, CaU12627 Stavro's, 5930 w. Coast. the Coista Mesa Air Na askforMlke dust'l Instrument co customer orders by investment & exchange for : Hwy,N.B. tional Guard. We need Handyman .needed for · needs growth oriented pbooe. Service organiza. busmess. Potential earn-Food preparation SEC'Y on the water in --'-------- men and women ex rentalurutsUlHB. Reha· Lady to work in donut enltineer who wants ex· tion.Willtrain.40Hrwk. lngsmexcessofSlOKls\ Utility Kitchen Help Lido Village, yacht Wartress, exper. food & ,:ielienced in electronics hie. Mr. Allen 752·7474, shop, 2am·7am, part or per. m manul product de· Eves/wknds. Start $.1 hr mo Call 962·2456 for con Waiter/Waitress broker needs exper'd cocktatl.s, days & rugbts repair, tel c ph on I! / _aft 7 P~~ 64241~--f /time. Apply in person, velopment marketing. Call 646-4071 mom& or ridenllal mterv1ew. Ask Pltime positions avail gi.rt.Call 67>7674, 10·5' open. Excell. working teletype 10<1tallauon <1nd ~ Golden Boy Donuts, Salarybasedoncapabili· eves for_V_in_ce. ____ Ex.per. pref'd, but wa.11 ---cood.9. Apply in person. repair. mt'ssagc <'enter 17741 Beach Blvd, HB, 2 l Y · Equal 0 P po r · train qualified appll SECY /RECIEPT Mr. G'11 Restaurant. 31fl0 OJ>('rllt1on•" und w!'uther .... ~-. Blks No. of Talbert Employer. 894-5351. PEST CONTROL RECEIVING cants. Apply personnel Creative N 8 adv PR lrvme ..we. NB forttast1n1-1 llerc •~ Y•>ur e : SERVlCE MAN. F /ume IMSPECTOR 2-4 Mon-Fri. agency needs sharp. en· ------- opportunity to earn a :;:;:;i Laundromat Ass1t MECHANIC So. Orange Co area Islander Yachts i.s seek 400Wnlmhtsfft'Mafl thusaasllc lndl\• .,/xlnl WARDCLEttK -.ub<;tanl.lal monthh in :,.~•"' Mature woman, p time Retired man part to 495-44ll or 831 1024 mg a receiving inspector EquaJ Opp Emplyr m f skills. nex1b1llty & ac Exper'd. full-tame. Me"a t' 0 me . r cl• r t' ml' n l , ~o""ou~ 7 30·11.JOAM. 673 1890, f time Newport Beach who IS capable of read mg curacy for bu'Y r(.'cep Ven:te Conv Hrn.p. 661 benehL"> basl' l'Xchangt· ~ · 67S-0334 Golf Course. 751 ·4344. p E T I T I O N E R S bluepnnL-i. taking 1m en tJon desk. 833 3960 ·Center St. CM S48·558S pn\1leges. and MOHF.1 --, ~ •~. ------31001rvme, NB F\111 part lime. Good pay tory m Ole st~kroom & SALES Aloe Vera non· • ------- For mformat1on on open If\ me Personnel Agency LEGAL SECRETARY daily 536-7711 is able lo identify good surgical face lift Sale~ Secy/S.-nilOt" WAREHOUSE/M-1= mg~ and qu<1lif1cut1oni. 488 E 17lh Costa Mesa Expenenced. Perm part MB>ICAL/R.ce-pt usuable parti. Ex per Posit• on & d 1 s For loan or1ginatlon Non smoker. Opport to ca 11 S g l Arr o 11 o Suite22A 642-1470 tJme, So. Laguna ofc for allergist's omce. PIZZA pre{'d. Good starting sal tnbutorship available dept of mortgag~ broker jdvance. Refs req. Good 711979 7363 or apply al -Send resume to P 0 Box !>alary according to ex· Making pizza & on the & employee benefit pkg. Call Laura 848-3200 firn;i Loan background pay. Boal 'Bwlders. fB7 2651 Newport Blvd, CM. -566, So. Laguna, CA, pr 530-5690 ovens. Exper needed Ap~ly 1922 Barranca Rd, Sdft.Dell•ery req d In Ne,...port Ctr Randolph CM . Female Fl;corts & Models no exp. nee 646 71111 (213 > 428-6.130 eves HOSTESS _92S77 _________ 1 _M_edl_c_al _ _.______ 548-7863. Irvine. If you have a definite _644_8824_ WA--R"-EH-•_O_U_S_E-.M-E_l'i_ Ex per. mature. Must be LIQ U 0 R MARKET . HOMT OFFICE need for a p/time job 5.c'y to$ I 0,000 Responsible persgo for a b I e t o w o r k Very, very busy store, Need resp . person Plastics ON ST S.9pm It are seriously in· 1 girl of<' Type 80 wpm fabnc warehous1:. uood n1ghls/wknds. Apply needs some very, very w/some exper in 1 doctor RECEPTJ f terested in working, call Sht.hnd 100 wpm. Near oppty w/growing com· EscrowOfflcer 1-:.>-6 PM Mon or Tues. good people. Apply in ofc. F /time in H.B. MACHIHEOf'IS usnowS31-0842. 0Cairport.S40 l'nl pany. Salary com· Progressive Independent D a n a T r a d e r person, am, 3041 So. 842~l Graveyard shift UlPM -----mensurate w / e'Xpcr. bankhasopeningforex· Restaurant , 34150 Bristol.SA. MB>lc.a.•sECRET ... RY 7AM) opening• for With the following re-Salesgirl, p /t. Exp re· Sec'yl typ1~t. Mon Fri. 5.5&7915 per'd Escrow Offi('rr Pac1f1cCoastHwy,Oana """ • traineesorexper'dlnjec qwrement.s· quired. mature & neat 125PM 6S wpm. Sal PR bit ct t Point Liquorderk,full&part For orthopedic office in tion molding mat't11ne SharpPerson appearance Cor doc. Npt Cntr Call WEARE w a '' Y on ac ------lime Eve11. only. Call Be r 1 . oprs In our medjcal Pleasantappearance established children's E-X p A·N·O·l·N G i'('Monncl dept llA:lt.tess exp'd p T App dys 494 1533 Nwpt ach, ul lime . V I Good telephone store Apply at Gcppet Ka_th_y_o_r_Lmda 759 9501 IOOtCKEErER SANTIAGO IANK 1 " · 'n· ach. --d a Y 5 • m u 5 t be division. ery c ean per.i;onabty t·o·s Ch-1·1d Fantasy, So·. Service Stat1c1n Alt"n Y in person. e knowledgeable m taking working environment. " Ab1hly to prepare l'Atl. 5.'ISF.F1r,tSt,TuMin House Jnn. 619 Sleepy L&quorclerk,ovcr25. med1cal history. rapid paadlunch,$3hrstarting Goodtypmgsk1lls C.OastVillage,S A. Fn& dant. expcr'd Day&. 'tatements, payroll, 832-5200 Hollow Ln. Lag. Bch part li~-~2 nites. typmg & transcnbmg. wage for trainee Rapid Hon Smoker Sat. only 12 S. No phone Eves Full & p lime Ap A P. bank stml recon· _x,qu<11Epport t-:mployc•r HOTEL DESK SUPRVSR Salary commensurate growth. Xlnt benefits Call M~ While for in calls. ply, Shell Slauon. 17th & cil Fr d k · ht ud' Loans w/ab11.&ly. Exper'd only pkg Ulclud co. paid ma • ·' s~•rl Irvine, NB Escrow Secretcry . es or nag a 1t eel llf & d 1 terv1ew appointment. --~ - - MARINF.RSSAVJNGS exp nee. ~ply for ad-CHls;IMYESTOR c::.:::ly. 644-7840 ask ~~:+'profit sba':in~= Pc:aal Dosier F/lime. Apply Sherri's Scrvi('e Sta Ni ght Attend Is seeking a qualified van~ement o asstmg.r_ REPORTER Apply Bakery, 24&12 La Plaza 20r5mtesawk Apply, I-i.crow S<•ry for its N A. ~. 1Mrr·M~~:!ra, 1~ Secondary mortgage Medical Ass't Must be ex-200 Briggs, 'Costa Mesa Assoc. Inc. Dana Pt. No phone calls. Shell, 17th & lrvmc, NB ofc Mill 6 mo's escrow am to 12. Ambassador dept ol progressive S&L perteoced in drawing CaU546-4460 COSTA MESA --- !-ecret.anal exper req'd IM, 2909S. Bristol, Santa seeks uper'd Investor blood. 6:30AM·l0.30 AM. RECTROHIC 17141556-7075 SALES-JR. Women's Sen'lce station atlend-;, Xlnt sal, working conds Ana reporter to set·up & con· Call for appt. Ask for MB>ICAL It.--' Oppor s-a..yer Fasbions. Exper. pref'd. .<2> Exp. not req but will & benefits mcludinl'? den· ---------trol new partic1pallons" Debby 640-0140 ~ -·...-Advancement possible mgwortcrs 675·0970 tal. Apply at main ofc ~ froftt D.sk loan payments, compile INSTRUMENTS Apply in person, The Service Dept now hinni: 1515 Westchff Dr NB Immed. openings. Ex deUnquency rrports, MerchandiM Mgr. Receptionist, for busy Second Glance. 2122 W Factory i;erv1re center SECRETARY Good skills. pleasant personahly. desire for advancement m lhe Real Estate field RECEPTIONIST Pleasant. attractive ap- pearance for Fashion l!>land Executive Of- fices Call Mrs. Garo, 759 1511 -------Or call Personnel for .,....'d or wlll train. No handle legal documents Receiving. Beach area switchboard. Exp. re· Oceanfront. N 8 . seekmgrro.onn1•l exper ..--1 •. 1 Plumber wanted for pools 110 112 1 ct 1 appointment642·4000 phone calls. Ambassador Account ng .tor oan drugstore. F /t1 me, ql.lired Lite typing & bk· 10 e e n<·:i 1':qual0ppor F.mployer lM,22Tillarbor,CM service exper. pref'd. perm. Retail exper nee. & spas, Newport Pools, kp'g. Benefits NB. loca. Saleslady needed, full ~yslems, plumbin~. WENDY'S XJ.nt oppor. Contact Jan 6'75-0l50Mr. Elwood 644.fil.94 A 1 1 bt llme, exper in infants or carpentty, f11M>rglas-; ll' Oldf«nhiotMd Exp waitrt>ssnd<•ri App 1 HOUSECOUNSELORS Hess,(714)833-8383 ---------,,.._SchlTeacher 1J1.~~~~~~~~r,S';~ children 's wear pa1r&pamt1111? Toppa' Hambwgen lyinperwnonlyllAMti Married cpl only, no SlateMutualS&L MOTORROUTE Call&46·lrl44 21lorcal1Elllot 7~.7170 Youngland, 2300 Harbor forquaur1cdl>t'rson Ap Now hirin g smiling PM Hon .: Kong klds.Live·in.Supervise6 4001MacArthur,N B. Large Dally Pilot t'O\lte --------~ Blvd.C.M.545-1440. ply al Landau Motor fares. Days. P/lime or Restaur ant 1170 Baker teenaaegirls. Exp + sal. Equal():>porEmploycr ln South Laguna·Laguna PRlSSOf'R RECEPTIONIST SALES; Homes, 1650 Sunflower, 1''/tame. Applicauoos be· _CM Oak Tree Homes, Niguel. Monday through Exper.ABDlck~/Jtek, Challentting position a..t's .. Hon.tt C.M.belwnlOam&Jpm mgaccepledbelweenthe FastFood 540-4754. MACHIHIST/C.et11 Friday afternoon s, PIP,642·0621 with active Newport Uyouweren'tlookingfor Service Station Attend hrs~~~S5pBm .. tor SA Mature adult!'!, retiree!'!, Housekeeper 4 -BP M TopPcw Saturday and Sunday ---------!leach Developer. Good a new career, you F /time days L11tbt _.,., . ns • .• Sr.clUzens! Appbcations wkd•ys. Clean bi1e 4 Set-up• a&ort-han mill, mominis. Approximate· Press :ferator, ex· telephone, typing , wouldn't be reading this mech'l knowledtte. Neal WINDOW TINTER·will now being accepted ror cook dhmer, age JO.so. lat.be, punch prep Gd !,>:.~.~ IKA mon.00 ~st~ :f~ ™,ltt ~! Sclenl. cal skills requiredt. ad, and it we weren't appear & handwnt10g. train, must have depen • f\l1l" Ptr PCJaill<?f's on Must have pleauot on.-.or. t.o expand ::.,·, ... t..-f'""'....,w'red ... Phone Bch. • a ary,llcom~e~'!sura e lookingforsomeonetodo ~ply, 2590 Newport dabletransportat.J.011c:aU "'"~Ir eventna ah1fls at _ .. ,1... ........:.......,.. 0 ..-~, ---------wtt.bab1. ty.v,........,12, ajob,• .. •·ad-·'dn't ... -.... CM (7l~)~"""" N:uales Drlve-Thru ~-v.appearuce., w/_.., .. ,.... co. 5 ay/«J M2-4321, ask for cittula· uuo ""'U\.11 ..., ""-• _........, ResUurant. Good st.art-for widower. MO-l*7 ::.~cof: f:.f:.':::::,~ ttoo. Leave nam~ andr Printing leapt/IAQal TFM ~ ~:i~~ !:U~ Servi~ Sta. Attendants WOMAN OYI 40 ang wege, holiday Is Houaeteeper/cbild ca.re. C (?l"') .. number and maae o NBlawolc. <714)&40-ISlO ~ to eam three to p /Ume, eve/wknds 20-30 Wllllna ,0 learn. W'ill vacation benefiu, op· ""·-ti.a-• •-•. o-orp_ • 6•2•80IO auto to be used and..,...,.. ..._..,, hrs wk. Apply 10 norson • r u.u ua u • 0 .. u E 0 E 1 ~ Rec:eptloolst, for bu1y five hundred dollars a "" t r a 1 n PBX c: s per pottunllJ for advance· room, btt.b, 1V. We need•-"'-'"""""''-...·-------• caJlwillberetumed. BINDERY awitcbboartf. Exp. re· week, call toll free Cl) 6a.m-4pm,seeJobn,Shell helpf~I. 40 Hr ,.,.k. SMDl. Apply ln person you I Call Moo thru Frl, MA.-UIMIST -..... -----c-~---quired. ~lte lypln« "bk· 800/327·9ClllS anytime Clor Slal.lon, 3131 Harbor Bl, Evt'JI 'Wknds. Start S3 hr. Mon·Frl 9AM·1lAM . 8»53064().6291,~vs" "'°"' ~"r""' 5"•~ ua• ........ n-efi••NB J ____,_...m ....... .,e) CM N 8 -n__..._ Cl••• A "'~CIS nu.r .. ., g . ...,n 1..... . . oca. • ~""~ .......,~ · -ca 11 morn s / e v e ~ 2PM SPM, 7PM·l2PM wlmds 7~1986 · · ""'· .,..,..... ....,. vm bt 1121115 Brookhunt Ave. ---------• Macbinist for Br1dfeport Girl Frida1, attractive, IMMIDI .a.Tl Apply in Jltt'SOO, wn Sales. retail shop, Laruna Serv Sta Help m-eded im ~-40'Tl H ... ._ . I'd ... 11 •· u.-"ln&'"' athe _. IM. 3901 MacArthur. Ste Hills. •-• .. nor ..a...,1gn ex-med Full or p t Apply, ------FV ouse.eeper • 1nva 1 .... • nani " • peraooable, •articulate. all Elli~ 7"'" 7170 w.., """" • *' *' *' * • ---------• care 4 daya wit., N B. ClOM tolerance prec:lalon Lile t--• .. 1 ca~r on. OPIHIMGS 2ll Of'c ~ -.· per helpful. but wUl traln 990 E. Cst Hwy, Nwpl Fut Food Serv1c• Rdtreq'd. 5*-3112. work. E'll~r req'd. ToP portun]fy''With d,vnamfc ltlCB'TIOHIST capable person 7~51 Bell. WOMDI & MDI .Hirinll oow, ha tebool It bena. E .0.f;. MMO~t -... .. company. Salary FOR EXPERJEN~ED N t y ... t .,. __ S ... -""-· l·l F..am S3400 a mo or mont hcooulsl~w«elv-•1t.upderoomt10 .' HOUSllCllPBl aslfotBGOAdama. ~ .. ";o"'.' Call lhrllyo A.NDTRAINEES for ewpor/c:o... aLlcut SulDllUTsses, exp'd for ..x'T" tat1on A1lt"'r"' .. u ~.-lhng mobile homtt. .. • Brok•age, Silt qo.riD • nu bus. in aummer wear. t.il'lU!, pnm:lrt Y or serv Will tra10. call Paul • tlooal opportunitl••· llature.hfined·forolder ......... DS WE0'1"'Elt t,yplnt.callllra.l\bod.H, Ol.UM.lnd:y '31-479CI 1alanda, e1tper nnt 63.'>CllZZAnaheun UnUorma provided. writ.et. Lite work, on ....,... Cl! .8¥,.ELL..i....-nor0 .. e73-f511Corappt. ' neccu, Must be wUllng • I b .Ba Uve in fJ7S.eOl7 App'.. In Penoa. ALl HOVl DA'-"""~ ~ r ~ ""' • •---N tud t.s .,. ... _ FTt•nM atmc:rp rre. y, . BAifA MOTEi.. 21:10 UIGALllCllTAIY BENEl'ITS RECEPTIONIST. ~~~F~l::: WOODWOUElt Accep • •PP cat oo.a Housdteeperw/car rdl&· Ne-rt Blvd. Coata l"of' N-Cuter Law •DAY8RlFl' P/time, (or luxurtoua r. *~-, ... n·es* •'tF'·1-,rru. Kmt be Ullr'd ud ab'8 h'l3124.Mcn3tn6'Tuea ...,_ .. _ ___. n.-.!...---..:r~ l'' .. _ ~E b B ~ ~ -""~-to _ _... ... _ ... _......__ .... •12• 2 5pu .t.rtbur ....._ UDUIQll c•:n•MI-w . 11,, ~a....1 .. •atlllf. -VY_•,,_ • tlremeot Ollle. Dll ~ •• _.._..,,~ .. 1.. •-.. .,. .....-- • 0 • • ..... n -•/dlublc!dlad)i.Call • ......... _,.,.... ~h. PJuant worklna ~~ "9t1 .. p .... ":_::.. SHOI! S"-• R~ blu.oprints. Work at 'l'readl.eraP'bb6Chlpa, :;:;;-_ 1._.....:..~. Ir' 1r-• _ _ .. --••n•APDTV • ---...., 1r..,_ ~ b .. I I i Redbllll&Brbt.ol,ntmto -·---·--------~~..........__l .._....YR-s-·· lNPnSoNTO~ CIDOd. ..-u. aM •OI' Aaeaey penqn for b4tau& new eocu,.w, m,,~ m udm. Ward • Ha ...... n,..,.n'I H ...t. ""~ ---Gall .......... ,--..~.;;.1""" aboo dep• in ,...a1hio" llupervu on. U'1I con • , ...... ., • -.o91 .... ~ Pit oUda , ... , DeJl,Marp/UJu..Ex· ·=-~...t..61W_: 1 nd .. r .. PllY • beMflb. can fot ... _.Msr. a,t front of F/tlm• •A ~/time . b"''"• Hilla. ~ ·,~. per'd ai tnloclel. Ilsa l•m111..-----••t '' Tt ...... arn -..eUIO JI a . Mtt•' be u pr. aptJtor-wlympenoo. _._ ...... ______ , 8'YYiew xanor •eoa•. "' .-....... .__ .......... coe ...... VIS'd9 Canv. ibD eGl MARTEC ~ -farAppt/ .. Lab •as callforappt.844....,.tt OOllDOl'fsot.smN iuLI,.. .. ., t101p. Oood 111 • ~-,...._....., ... c... • c n --bcDdltl -~·-. "" d 1----------7·U Sl'ORE, P'Ull & p /t 2$0F\sberAve. II, Good t.ypJni w. Gm1 .e4US05t lblds: tap •• .. Nidr -=_ ~. ~. ---...;;____;__ REPROO'"'TIONS for A Action SECUTAIY/Ada cwtrcwntahb Apply in Pb:541).2800 tic ma.pa req'd. lfl>.l9IO Houukeeper, mature. ApplJ; Tb<'! lnn al N .... OIL-.. W • with butlnau back-i>ersoa, 28933 Crown ·torsppt. live.bl.no• na. tquna, 211 No. CO.tt "" '" INC Call a sround to uslat vice· Vallo)' P'rkw)', Lasuna ~ -. callNJ·Tm.. UwJ.,t.:.sunallucbi."' Cor rtatrtedlale. Mut • ~dalt In oraamz n • N\1. .. ......... _ ....... .. G.rdenlr. up'd, ror u '"" l 111\d led lltr haft 1111\ v pcm('t\lft auw. •c:Nthur:B1vd 0•1v Pil t eoordlnaUDI or .. , .. --. ........ 1001 tall.apt romp JaOJ(. lt0\11 ketPer wapt.,d ~-1·~~.l IH • 1lrlll1. ablHtj to SA.-a'AANA.CALI'.· .. , ,._a••-·. s~erelartal ·--""" SALIS ." .................. .. aul86541St r -•• pu -11"' 'L,._ • 8 ~·~ 11 artlc 11t1 n • To anVISOR d!::i.~. 18 L., ..... pln1 1'todoltborw\m11? rusTOPENED '~ ~ I ·--.I ct.a'9 . 'I ..J'ii. UPDI h ··· OD01M.l'f.B.u.i'0au ADEQual()ppc)rtun11y NI" .~ snl'hel-'":i bu\ TllbJublsfor oul D\dsllllanQrAnllqu1 QVUS''IUY, Ol'C btkpq a. ca :l .....;. .... ~ H,. .... ~ . . ·-··-Office MtclJc .. ~tztll oatQeC. &al•1'7 0.,. • • ~ ... '!~Al lb:sA. VlttorlaC.IL J,· ::.£ ~1~:.;: =i:=~i:,ii'S=~"t:. t.:t'..,~.J1-_u.r;.~"• . 642·~11 ~&~,;:~ _J,:i!~i:~ ::...-..$.!.. .,. ~E."~~~~~~~#~~~=~~~~~===~~~~~~~ !:!-<·""--~-·--:: -· -~, ~ ... __ ..,...,<; --~--., -~r· ,·,··:-, .. ..,. _____ ,_. ~ . . • .. •Je DAlL Y PILOT 'rid9Y. Match 24. 1971 C:.-. Sa&. IOU <hr• Stile IOH Me" •'l' 1071 Mfteeian1Me 1010 Mllctlrow 1010 tan, R......_., .. ~.-.;r................. ....................... ....................... ....................... ....................... ... 1095 ... • 100 ..._........ 1020 ,. .._ • 1010 ... M •c •ucno... ....,..,.,.,a _ .... In -~ r-v.w "" " .. v•u' Eve.,, ... 1 for Lat.bM,Mbarcbwelder,3 • tlft'-.•Atf•6'5 ~ .. --·-cut. K .... :.. ......... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~e. toyt, 1 II . pbAMDC•~tooll ._ .__,___ rd llboew,$375 ) nc&Wll s nleas !llHl •••• ... •••••-•••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• MA.NY FINE lTEMS OF •• 1, ~ O pd ..VWWAW -· Q ••" UlU .... "''• .,_ t.al ..UC AUCTIOH •a• MOPIDS *•I IUY * * ESTATE JEWELRY. biJie, • couch, etc 8'2-1281 631 $490 uvon your.,_.....,... ca MB 11611 au fryer Gd cood. hllt JllANYITEllSOP'l'IN!: New ft used, bU)', aell, ART OBJECTS, AN· .Fra, Sat. Sun 2178 Seod one card for Heb . olr.714M7·2882111Jl·t> IUITATE JEWELRY, trade. Cycle" Co. 3488 Good Uled l'umiture' TIQU~. FINE ruRN .. Placentia lfE CM tlttc1'-1-IOIO la( phat ooe spa.re. We CARPET REMNANTS PMdai.Jy A.RT OBJl:CTS, AN· N'"'wporl Blvd, c .u , Appliancea--OR 1 will 1:."7C. PHONE f"OR IN· 831-0&57 ••••••••••••••••••••••• return permaoeotl)' d '-~-· 1---.;__----- TITIQU!S "' S4 s.UorSELLforVou o sealed attrac:Uve ta1 & bedroom.I. erui. uu.ts, TV Redo !':It. p~lm:E~RfN: 842·7910 MASTaSAUCTI.OH ~-~ BROCHURE. Hon.. I060 WANTED strap, mHtlJl& airline vans, et~ Save 50'~ ~'9 M shno IOH FO. • BROCHURE. Peugeot PXlOE campy 64M616•t33-f6JS ••••••••••••••••••••••• TOP CASH DOLLAR ID. requirement&. Pre 4' ""'· Sbofea Jnttnors, •••••••••••••••••••••• MS-%200 rear extra wheels, 2S" --Manual Smith/corona HOaSIS l'Ol SA.LI PA ID •'OR YOUR vent loea Ir theft! For a 2'S50Avoo, N.8. 642-~ Bt!ul. 2S" COLOR TV con· frame.$18S.498·1"53 C~HPAID typt!wnter SU Pu1h lR.ec.AQHAdauMhterul JEWELRY. WATCHES, personalizedt.a1encl<>11t IBMelec typewriter, &Ole.~. l yr warren· •-------~ f"or ed used furl\. •nU lawn mower S7. New Ml.lter Alert" ClJlbber ART OBJECTS, GOLD. ~allpape.~, fabric or TopConditlon ty,Creedellv 642~ MUSICIOXES MklllcJMaterialslOJS quee&clrTV'11.~7lH33 blow11w1yt1re &nmtor bklodllne.AlaohallArab SILVER SERVICE, DayG\o paper"we M72719 CLC>Ca(S ••••••••••••••••••••••• AM<' S2I> Jh tack i>ealer Celd1n.t. Ex~llent rid· FINE FURN. & AN· wtll back & trim your --C.ssette recorder Son)'. Slot Machinoe, Nlckelo· Moving Suh:! Lurnbt!r. ,. 1 have a CUSTOM made 111111 c11ulk111g compound ln&.1.737~9 TIQUES. &&&-2200 tag.s. Or try two carda Mtc ..... OUI deon1. pbonoaraphs. behind cab tool box. contemporary 9 It, off Sl l'ISCt\, 4 new -1 lug bactt.oback Wmhd Excellent condltlon Call 8011 6'6-2S3l ____ ~ World's laraest aelec whlbarrow, wall heater. white nauaahyde couch nmb. fits MG, Pinto, Horaes boarded. Stalls Furn: sofas, bdrm St, PRICES· t I A I th • hn• .......,._ 11 d I I hi h t S2 31"" ••••••••••••••••••••••• Nearly new gaunt ·1·v on . so g If ts , 5' glass i,Hding door & a. ..,, "'''''"' we care Capli J15. sel 74 GMC a val . 20292 Birch Sl, mp., nu w c r. crp s, ea or -furniture, antiques much more . 21.to for&l.sinxlntcondltlon, radlo~.·74 ChevySteer· SAH.979-91111)8..641-2180 typwrtr. TV consolo. 4/5tagsSUlOea. MANO.FLA.MANCHA screen. cost $2,000. American lntematlonal; Newport Blvd, C.M. Sat with Shepard cast.re;. Ing whNI $4. 642.3379 Ha vi i"•A-d ft..-.-..1... 1065 Electro! ux , & misc. &/ilap Sl.SOe1t. ticket. Apr 4, xlnl seats. Sacrlf. $1600. 6'6-5'98.5 llCrl Kelterln&; Jrvlne. 8-12 $210. Included In that WW• •• ""--~14 lOor more Jl.40ea. WoWd like to lrd for later '1\W-1'1'1'1 Open Wed .Sat price are 3 full brocaded Super Sale, March 24-25, ••••••,•••••••••••••••• . Sales Tax Included date. Pls call, 979-34.29 M.aJDAVOJt AM /fo'M 8 lit · · · Sliding glass door pillowsanoffwh1temade 654HarborlslandDr,NB Qn u m.tt. fl box $95 3 Radio control outfit, ,5 NOCARD? . tape, pbono, quad M"x70"'1", windows; one especially for the couch. <Juat off Bayside Dr) oak dreNrs ~for all. channela,5serv0$,UlllU· Draw your own or send 6 pub cbalrs, armo1rc. adptor.Ml~l8 ---------l 120' 'x 4 3' '1 three Must see t.o appreciate. Some antiques. boat CbUd's C.pt. trundle bed cad$100. 546-311.3 name, address, phone .ti Top quallt,y, form.al din· & ........ WHOL~ALE 120"x59". 64<1·0750 aft C.all ~ btwn· 12.30 gear, load.a or ioodl~. w/blt·iil dreuer, alpe 3 Bur&lat' Alarm. FED·I, we'll make ooe card per Inc no set w/6 high back ~__. TOTIIETRADE 4pm. & 3, and aft 5PM & lOAM. ~· 2 pr drapes, lined. master alarm control t.ta.Add2Steacb. cbalrs. Cbln1, buffet. -.-..-- Now OPEN Custom shutters for Sat/Sun anytime. Cash linea look, It color SOx84 wle'__.ro vole• PAlSA. Send check or money ur· -.319:Z ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. • only Fri/Sat 10 till 4 163 S60 for all. 2 oak .-.:• " dert.o· ..... ........ 120 x59 ' window Magnolli.1 St. CM. A t-0Z bookcases 6h'x30 .. horn w/lrao.Cormer PILOTPIJMTIHG Offk.e ......... •• .......... 9031) To PUBLIC 644-0750art 4pm __ Recliner. dark brol4n GOODIES' wtsmoke glats shelves keys fr 2 panic buttons. po Box 1560 ........... 1015 •••••••••••••••••••••u ec....tras & Hnyl, good <"ond $100. Sl8Sea Everyth1n1 ex· iru.tructaons incl 646-11773 C .M. Ca -••••••••••••• •••••••• OPEN70AYS ~,._,.. 8030 ti-15 0922 14kndl> art ti Garage Sale. military ceUent.831-1711t Tables, coffee & end -OSla esa. ·92626-Three each FS200 Bur· WANTED!!! AWEEK96 •••••••••••••••••••••• 14kdy:. ram Knackknacksfrom Danish modern rtJIUCAUCTIOM rou1hs Accounting Apawerwindlessforl:J s..down ......... Ltd ;,ill OHr the world Mwelry 1070 t $JS r machine!!. 3 yrs new ft powerboat Call Dale I 5•t• •-• ... C"1ca Le1caflex lenses 1fo1 SL> F..ASTER HOUS1', SALE Instruments. furn. dis· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~v .. erFlmar 1°P 3 or MANY ITEMS OF FINE Cla~s 6000 addresso at4~2709. A A-... "' 250mm , 28mm + NEW Beaut i.ofa&loH'. hes.book:1.clothes.lools :"'~Id~~ ~1!'~r s~~y ~~~A~~J~~;:L~~: graph & dai.s 6400 H.L C714119l-7509 Polarizer Lake nu ~ 5 pc wood parquet Thurs Fri Sat, 10683 WANTED Bedspread, dbl qwltt-d, TJQU~. FINE FURN, Graphotype 1nclud·g •ZODIAC ~1418 din & game set $425 Elsoneto. F V Btwn TOP CASH DOLLAR .. bl u Bo li storaae cabinets & sup Port·A·Manne w matching 3 pc com~<' Ward & Euclid oH Slater PA 1 D F 0 R Y 0 UR peacoc.. u ..., w n& ETC. PHONE FOR IN· plies: Pitney-Bowes mail Inflatable Boats Antique Zenith radio Cah 8035 transoceanic portable ••••••••••••••••••••••• looka new & works-an Blue Male Persian, CFA vest·conversatloo piece reg 10 wits old. Trained. $70. W.W.11 flying 494-7865;499-4816.Julie tblset$185.Form pecan ---JEWELRY, WATCHES, ball12lbs~S46443S FO. &i BROCHURE. imerter Open to offer. din rm set w/chana S650 7341 Toulouse, H.B. Sat. ART OBJECTS. GOLD, Fl"anc~can Apple dashes ~2200 Pleue contact Mrs FU\ ~~~e~OM. Beaut. decor. lamps, 9 ·5 Crpls, dryr , SILVER SERVICE aerv. for 8. apic 70LEAVING Area. Lillian neauat63J.1200btwo81----;__---- also chn, etageres, con mater1al,clothin&.toys. FINE· FURN &i AN '. pieces. Like new. Ballard membersbJp ~ amto5pm.wkdys DIESEL ENGINES fortress B-17 radio' re- ceiver. BC·348 115v temp. wal l designs. M t 11 p i TJQUES.IWS-2200 548-0534 1 1 1 d 120 8-36HP & diesel gen. TI0.2881 us se eu al\ rug pr ce. nc u ea · 28..-blkc:ueblooata.ck· $1350. Tom Riker. plUowa, mod furn. &i pie· · d ri _.. St-'-""'gl ti lransrer fee . USO .. .,....b.al worlr1ng antique 1n DOCJI 8040 Cust.om Cedar water~. lures, Beach clothes new Diamoo ng &i wicudlng ""'ocu us crea ons 646·6188 art 8P M or 1"' c rs, Sllea. Desk 548·3581 • k LP" Lo Pl band; 1.03 karata; anti· Letlbeswuhlnethru 3x&, while top, S5s.•---------~·S898 11 l8 ants quegoldband&ieetting ; lncolors -freee11t wknds Matching table $45.Lrgportablecompressor, cert. apprai1al of $2200 ; 8709005or838-4497 Carpet manuracture.r snail gold desk. Walnut used, engine & elec- llavl' !>Omcthing to !tell? mustsell$2000orbest_of· cloeing out mill trials & top, $25. 2 good exec tron1cs. gear, steel vestm. $75. World War 11 ••••••••••••••• •••••••• stalned glass 1n heiid dutr!>yer radio ~quip DOG TRAINING board. m&l'ramc c1tnopy, receivers. RAK 7 & Your Place or Mme Ciiblncts. bench. king HAL 7 w/powcr :.upply & John Martin 548.0059 size See 1t lo bt!l1c\'C 1t crranual A mu-.t'um · -------~.6759495 Cla!>s1C1ed ads do 1t "ell. fer. Ru!!s at 644·2071 Want Ad Results &42·5678 Irregulars. 549·81111 chairs. $50. 711 W. J 7th r as t c n 1 n gs. desks • ---- --CM .. unit D·7. Tue 11ft mannc paints, surplu:> 111ccc $75 !162 357-1 . Cock~r Spaniel pupp1l's, w a-te r b"' cl ~ u c ~· n Mlac .. ICIMCMll 8080 Miaceft...-s 8080 Mltc ... IOUS 1010 C-Ombo bllr & whte TV, noon. 912 rc:.t of Wl'ck hardware. 23' !>3Jlboat. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• stereo & turntable. nice 631·1372 broken power tools, rus- STEWAHT RO fll ANTl<-lUt::S Largest st•le<.11on of Amcncan Oak an Orange Count) 7501:.. Oyer Rd. S.A. (al Nwpt Fwy) 751 R9'l2 AKC. buff & beautiful Complt.>t1: w hl'all•r tit• Cd M !_~·~52 luxe p;11ld1ng & head S1bt-nan Hui.ky puppies board, M<'\ IOI? /\~king AKC. xlnt show or pet, $125 t..all 759 1111 Sl50& up. 838·4996 Mahog cabinet. Ml'd1t Golden Retnever pups style, $85, des I( w /lop Whelped 216 "78; AKC. book shelf $50, chest of Spring Clearance· 10-50";(-Ma I es & females . drawers $50, lrg BBQ $50. oil all anbques, sterling, 646-8762 _64.5-__ 785_7· ______ 1 funut~. jewelry. or1eo· SCH N AU z E R S King Size Box Spring & t-.ls, ~ade & Ivory, oal MINIATURE AKC t ' Mattress & Frame. Good paintings. decorator U .... Usu' •L • C-Ond $75. 963-4290. items. 12·6 daily Gallery ,.... "" One. 1220 N. Coast H14y , RAREILACICS Laguna 494.4444 9 wks. shots. 3 males Solid walnut bdrm l>et. Pet Show. 646-5237 Quality furn, sofa. ch~. corr & end tbls, din rm set. 644-1601. 979·0121 GULF SHRIMP DIRECT FROM LOUISIANA ~··If $2.79 lb. Lcrcp Siii i., $3.ttla. Jllllllbo Slw ... "·'' .. Singer sewing machlnl' & 1 yr old fem Great Dane. Lane coff tbl $75 Beaut more 546 0067 Fayn. w paprr $100 Qn Anne <;tylt.• wani;cb1H'k D 11-...a Crab ._. ff I of IO . . . . Call Bud. 714 586·0042. chr $1 25 Huckl·r $3~ eY wu • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ~· OX l!ummeb 7;i_;111ni~cr 77. 714 586 2885_ Other masc ll<'m!. Stuffed Shrimp •.•••• ,, .•• , .• , ••••• $7.99 lox of 24 78 aMual 111 Bell al~•> &W ~I 642 "376 S ff-...1 1!!1--...1--$2..75 ( 14 0 ) cabmet, $35_ 6i3 6174 ty cham, etc. See Doug or 00X30"' 5-dr awer metal ofr Pat. Lido Ship yard desk. form1cu top, S50 or 673 7272 BARSTOOLS. Super rucc HJDE·A·BED 962·1597 be51 ofr 963 6551 ---------, '76 Sea Kmg Outboard Old Oak plan ftle!>. dei.k Mot.or. '1~ HP, xlnt oond. Books & records lo teach floor ma la SlS. wooden SlSO. 638-1465 readulg by vowels cost desks SM. drafllng tbls, over $100. new Sell for showcaaes, files. a11 loab.Pow1f' 9040' $45.642·3379 sizes, executive & ••••••••••••••••••••••• --------~ secretary wood chrs GREAT Formal din rm set, C.E. Wholesale Office RSH1...r-1o•y11 fraltwood, seats 8, like Funllture 2044 Placen· ~ A •• new. Sac. SBSO. 556-1147 lla. C.lr1. 631·2777 or 21Ft. CHAMPION Antique player piano, rebll, has everything. Sac. $1600. 556·1747 Walnut Reception · Desk, w 'return, $1 25 Ext!c t·h;ur $50. Kenmore W 10 . $75 ea. lgc oak table. $150. 673-4119 S31-2S70. CFS417BB. Flybradge, DUPLICATING Mach. Mimeograph. Ge:.telner 320. Xlnl. for church or pvt. schl. or bu~1nc~:. $.'M or call 5'\8 11&1 or 557 0075 saogle screw, galley. head, bait taDlc. Sleeps 4. Engme completely re· bwll. Electronic gear in rl depth finder & brand new. unused 2·way 1-'~1 radio & RDF. $6800 or Pets 8087 best oHcr. Call ev1·s & ••••••••••• • • ••••• ••••• wknc1' M5·9371-i ·----- ca 11 Nun c• y Wu r cJ WEI MARAN Ek for sale. · · ·;) tu .rv rwKiCi" ••••• , , • • • • • • • • • l'CI. J. 5.57 JJri2 l~ mos. fem,$..')() Gd hun Sofa, a•~, $7W ni•w, xlnl Fresh Frozen 5 Lb Boxes Hand painted East er t a n g • w a t c h d o g · g d c o n d s 1 i 5 . L o u ~ l' THURS. • FRI. ~ SAT. ~LY f A.M. to 6 fl .M. It t t ~ ll R bb t •· Oak hall tree Excel c-ond. w/ch1ldren. Needs lge custuons. 963.4090 ems, s a uary wa a 1 s "' gwn1:a S>l&i., Beveled mirror brass yard.S<&S-0518 hangings, 10AM·6PM $3/each. 1978 SEA RAY hangers $195 559-1833 --------.-Sofa antique gold velvet. Cap'a lob'• S.Gfoods A•ailable at daily 10172 Valley Forge, 546-9965. Sat Shl-nt I Oom AKC Springer SpanaeJ, .. Marge Carson" ong'ly JOHNllr..IY'S Ml! •y5 ~:t Yorktown Friendly red tall boa, s~· r-··~ SllS, 7 wits old. 11000. Xlnt rond. $350. " laA ________ _., Armchairs, Tables, lron 64~4729 Pair new Ginger Jar a...MAMult.L'lo 217 So. Tustin Ttade p.100 Autumn Haze king w/aquanum. SlOO. 30• Sport Fisher cnb, Iron bed, Potty, La h _,_.. ~aft6. Small desk, Commodes, 1 yr o Id A I ask an mps. $25. eac · Bom uw.,. aclcet, 11 11•12 for F1oorlamps,Oaltbench. Malamute. female , bayChest,goldlear,$45 Orange car,vanortruck.Jaoice Baby bunnies, ready for Outriggers-VHF radio Ball tank-depth sounder and Much More 0... loat. I o.ty Oak music cab1 net & a payed, papers. shots, l=-?49'l~· 7M54S~---...;;.__U:=========================;;r;;,I ~Min~· ~te=r~Gen=~e=r~al~De-=li~ve=ry~I Easter, SS each. much more. All re· Sl00.64S-11.S4aft2PM II NB. IWS-9877 Special Price $39,950 HARRISON'S SEA RAY ClNShed & au~r pnced. . 11 t; t; I 8901 Atlanta at Magnolia bred. Shots. S7S. WAY BACK WHEN Blk Lab puppies. pure o p 0 p OU pp next door lo Fazto s 492-9413 11.B 960 5335 Shellie pups. AKC. re- asonable, 9 mo. old male, Applances 80 Io S75 96o.3666aft 6PM That's pot-pour-ri: a confused collection, a ••••••••••••••••••••••• Australian Silkie Ter-miscellaneous mixture, a hodgepcdge. t' R G HT DAM AG ED rlers. AKC. Reg. Call BRAND new Honda F.x BLUE Fox awle $50, Mink ARTIST Airbru!!hes used, ATIO Sale: Baby items, JICYrPOINT SALF.. 3308 968-4139 press. Never ridden tnmJacketSSO.Foxtnm Wold A2, Wold Master. books, stationa ry , W. Warner nr Harbor, Frff--to-Y-----8-0-4-5·•• $300. Molobeeane Io cape SJO, Mohair stole Thayer Chandler Ai. clothes. dune cycle. Santa Ana. 979 2921 •••••••••~•••••••••••• speed $40. Realistic un· $20, other stoles S5 Fan· Paasche AB accessories. masc 10·4. Saturday der dub cassette $25. cy embroider child's 919-2839 19841 Providence, H.B 751-7063 vests, crocheU!d baby & G I e n M a r t r a ct , IBERGLASS Boat 9, glrl's clothes. jewelry, StX match1n1 antique Bushard/Adams. green/gold plaid cur· pressback oak chairs. , .. Tri-hull & Evlnrude 4HP taina & bedspread $lO. Good condition. Call aft. SURF SKI Lanon 9 10 Woshen&Dryen 6s:S':ii~fdMfx~leH;soc::~ engine. Both 1977'11. After5PM,557.2918 5PMM1.Q81 Epoxy paddle, like new. CASH PAID Beaut. spayed Huskie, all For Wshr/Dryrs/Refrlg shots to good home. 1'0rking or nol 957·8133 49'l-6243 ---------·II Apt sz refr1i $35. King sz PkMos & OrgC11tt 1090 bed $35 759· 1259, ••••••••••••••••••••••• _968-_87_53_,_963_·_84_3_1 ___ 1 Hammond C2 o ri:: ·• n KING TUT tickets ror Les he. Be<;l of r o\ 1•r March 30. Make offer S1500. 646-3633 C\ ~ wknd-. _646-__ 91_01 _______ 1 Cust.om Savllle rlertronac 3101 C-Oa.st llwy N.B For Sale 2 RACQUET organ For churC'h or 611·2547 BALL memberships. bomedesinng fane11t type '> , H.B. Club. full facilWes sound but lacking funds Luger w4 hberglass coed or space Bei;t offer. cnuser. Chrysler manne _rroo __ • --'-' 840-4807 ____ -1 m.3751, 889-ll9S eng., ll03 restored In ~avmg State. '72 Pontiac Granville, asking $1400; C8pehart Console. nu, $160; G.E. TV, color 19", $200; Refrig, gd cond $160, & some furn . 894-2919 ----1 water N.B $1250/ bst of· PIANO Birch console 3 fer 556-6733dys. yrs new, xlnt Sacnflce 16, F l H d ft $795 644·2516 an asy y r~ra · skl boat. 75 Hp Evmrude, Early 1900 upril(ht piano. elec shif\, pwr lift, tacb, natural mah, Good cond. l>our meter, nu cover. $300/o!r. 675 9747 lrlr. $1250. 751-4007 J)!x models, completely sh-Ots.645-6299 675-0404 Mel.A.NE Edger like new COLOR TV Zenith. Plays Sl9S. 640-4029eves reblt. r erlnlshed. yr l\M /FM 4 s peaker:. s5o. Table s'aw Sao. very good. $9S. Rotary 'i70ATSUN200SX,5spd Por_t. dshwsl'lr $70. .zuarantee. Your cho1co 2 Male pups, hl!ebroken. Quadrosonic 8 track PeugotlOspd 546--0030 power mower. $35. 6.000 ma. All the extras Whirlpool gas dryer SSO Kawai Studio Piano & l2' Unifllte ('75> Loaded • bench. 6 mo·~ old. beaut Auto Pilot, radar, Sonar. tone. W3lnut r1n t!>h , $46.000. A 2 boat OWDH. $1775 675·2.586 mw.l sell. Days wkdys. p . Fl"eedehvery all shots. 9 m05. Terner stereo system. New · . 646-1525 $4.800 640-9317 I Gas BBQSSO 675-7:r78 GrandOpenln~Sale rrux.963-2163 turntable'. _Paid $575 OAK ANTIQUES ·tables. SOFA. 2 c hrs. new BLKES! Men·s Rollfast ( March 15·31 Must sacnfa ce S200 p chairs. commodes. t-.an washer. dryer. king mat· Lada Phllh S2 · ~x Brandt water col~~ t Coast Apphances Shepherd Golden mix, Baskin 645 5000 day!i bed, arm chairs, potty, tnsuet full bed eel dou SM ~ t>Js, 0 Westwood Village • west !It 0 r e ( 7 14 ) fem 1 yr old. watch dog, 75H 166 lol:I more All refinished ble. 642.:iB<n ... ~ 63 3098er room set framed, Offer. 675-9717 -31164or537·2S42 sbots.549·2430 &really well pnced. re· ...,.,. 1· - To gd home. English Set· 72 19" NOMAD Travel ad y for sale Sal. at HAND Crocheted old. OBIE Cat trailer. Must Uruvers1ty Athletic Club Ltke new ''Flair" 40... ter male, 6 mos, has Tr:a.aler. F\ally self con lOAM, 8801 AUanta Ave., never used tablecloth I sell S7Soroffer membership, moving. Baby grand p111no. Em met blk, xlnl cond, hebl 894 5351, eves/wknds. 840-4474. o(fcr. 552 9435 19tB Boston Whaler w/20 labySpiMt$600 .. &4o-1880 .. H P. Mere Elec. Centt-r steer'g, $1350. L1ttlt! IA'led. lik~ nu. 631·4300 elec dbl eye level ovens. shots. loves kids. 957-0971 ta.ined. Like new. EZ·llft Hunt Beach bedspread $495. Old 847 6635 mualseU.673-5548 hitch. Awning. $21150 -.--quilt, yellow white $43.S l •/pull out raoge & Margaret 546-5968 12 cabover camper, sips SJEHi474 ULBRANSEN Plano. Aaltol, Mew 9100 AMfcK, M•w 9100 Aaltot. New 9100 $)rage -by Frigidaire. ---------11,,1;;0::;.:;;:;;5A:...,,.B.,,,R-E--d---1-5. frig., hydraulic Jacks. ltalJan provincial con· ,••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rare find al $185. Fem. Cocltapoo puppy, 4 . 4 r. V nyl Xlnt cond. Obi motorcy-GOYA Guitar, very gd sole Priced U> sell fast' l/J.9C79 aft6PM mos old, received all top, pwr., aar, 66,000 ma. cle rk. Duo-Therm 10 cond. with cue $120/best ssoo· CaJI ~ alt shots 751-1724 NeXlnw batt. water pump Qulckroo(alr.S4ll-7S52 oHer. ~ardly played 5 30PM er 2•oven electric stove. . t. $1250. 962·2806 Call Tam 640·7326 aft tears Classic, btfl & Red & blk Ing haired 1£172 PONTIAC S.W. S3.000 KING TUT'S Dogs. Bark· 6PM RED W 0 0 D pal I elean $150 494·3065 Shep .• Fem. grt watch miles Radials. $2 ,000 less Afncan Basenj1s. MOVING SALE. N ht furniture ; five pieces --dog. 645-2511. 536·0160 1989 Camaro 6 cyl Sl 000 C-Ompamons to Eu ptlan . · ig S2S Needs refinishing. Aamiral Fr06tfrct' Refng. eves. 586-2<»5 · ' Pharaohs. Pet store!'I stand, nick ~acks. desk, Call aft 5PM 557-8247 lb&> freezer. whale. xlnt -----asking $100 S250 0 clotbmg, patio fumlture, - - eond.$145 96().S286days , Outchbunniew/cage DXNA·GYM Good Conda pnceSSO CalJ•646.6294ur utensils. plant~. work MOVING . Lamps, tables. togoodhome tu>n. $250. firm. Includes · ____ bench. lampi,, piano. Pecan headboard. ches ~E. washer/dryer. Frag. 673-093S instruction manual. Call UNIQUE Garden table trailer hitch \ac uum of drawers, chairs . ~rig, 19 cu Cl. Best of· SMALL MALE DOG. 963-8044 54·· round $250. Magnlf1· cleaners. 25S2 Green 67S-7682flum!' fl:r. 552.0435 Mixed. Xlnl pet, well 1972 FORD Ranchero GT cent wrought iron hang. briar, C.M. 545·73111 RECLINER Chair, brOW" Prigidaire dryer, free behaved. 548·68S9 Mag wheels, radial tires: mg lighting fixture S295, . naugh. XJnt. cond. SGO . .s...,:;;.., d air shocks. Lie. 9'7S79K large earthenware PUoodC~-~AXI. White, Projector , screen, lffDl1er, great coo' $"10. Beautirul $500 New· $2100 Firm e•s-26"'2 Japanae Kamado BBQ g "'"'t;lf't'atforstu· petr'fd.wood.644~ l!!-5120 foundlaod '°good ramily • • . • .. $75 64& 2803 denta. Asiun1 $310. Call: 1.;-_____ _.:..:..;;.__, ~ IOIS only968-9377 Eves . B-4575 YPEWRITER Sear' Jee••••••••••••••••••• ~...11-• 1050 LASSlCAL Guitar. SblXl• ... DlfninbJ roob mkcbGallrs1·' 8' sofa, new 11Upcover, Electric portable, scri ~-.. Martin 0016 with hard ..... a 11C ~c ~ ~ s gold, 1ellow, perslm· type $90. Watch, Selk :PUBIJC FURNITURE case. Beautiful cond blkea $35. 5 x7 &flnt mon Good cood $125 8e11 ma tic A I a r ••••••••••••••••••••••• SOFA, 11 mos 0 Id, $325. 64().4()29evea IJ'"ll levelors. 640-1395 6+t--4928 ' · Cal ender, 1old SSO *AIETION* Herealooplald,$95. II clubs w/caru 11 FROM Desert Home. All WARD'S 19" Color TV . ._St&-.....,,..,.1328--------t • 846-6049 and bera bowline baJI, xlnt cond. Sora. pair Rat· Panasonic 1lett0. Radio '72 Honda 3SOcc SL. Bl t ToNte 7:10 P.M. ,.Ba_r_e_ly_u_e_e_d_s_o_ra-.-e-n-d 11 central beaUnc furnace lan chairs, Rattan occ Shack Caaaette radio. Bore kit many new p '°'"'" Wekonw) tables Good cond. Best AnUque cameras. pro chalr, Rattan came & 6.ll-5149 Super fast $400. Ear • ESI'ATEJl'ROM o(rtakesallS36-2l636 Jector stand wheel bar· dine set. Rattan plan· HONDA~SSt9'77 Many 11t.ockHI>.1pt'in1ttfor NEWPORT ---------·II row, man• quality ters. tables. Many extras 1 050 mile $75. Gokart .. lnezsoc LIQUIDATIONS Sola. wht/aold twin beds, clothes el&e 42 Electric lamps, velvet bench. SS7-8889.aftSPM Sl 6501> clutch, exhaust retum, I b d r " t bo •· tts Gd hot plate router &a rage s now e q u l p . C a 11 . . · -pull st.a.rt $40. 6'2·22113 ovc 1 m oe S , xspnogs ... ma . sale Jtematoooume_rou. 957-0139 Meto Verd~G1rl's Schwinn ··ra1r c=.::i; .~h%~ cond. 545-87l2 to l~t. 714 545-0119 area • La'1y .. , bike, xlnt cond. ·~~ma~~:!~ac:· l v Io f r n> table a, 2 twin beds, complete. I E A · BED $1 9S, "7 Lin M-...a. [V $55. IJ19.!1544 -Runs very good SlOO dofwood, very Cd cond. Dloette 4c 4 cbalra $l7S. 3 coin ..... , xlnt CABOVER Camper a•'J', 548-Jll09 AMT'lqulS _Sl_OO_.S40-4032 _______ 11 Ladles 1olf chabs SlS. condlUon. Loaded. $46()0. Sabot. ahnoal. new, Ma· • maboe•"" desks, I' Gold lweed aofa, •ood 541-MIS M2-l82l8 pie dioloi aet, cnlsc. 'SAIL BOAT (Rain 1191 8~-• 1~--;...,.;..._-----1 f19.02r7 Sll:lm~r) Sacha di tree, e .~.~bore !.~~1271Uon, ••lint $19. HouNbotd•hobb Rolex watch l\50. S.an•-ln---1----,-bite.Blltciller.552·'1349 AeNO.lu. ... pel, ,..... !!P.":J\lllk: 8~. 11', f!x.erc7cle $70. StrollM att 1 I ia1 MW DI l projed.or, ba..odcn. .._ 36 •,Ji". 4'd plat.form strollerl20. l7 cuftnlrt• ~cablne\ 85 Lincoln, complete lbll-..rs •___..ter col HJ._.abed$75,2chn 1 •• .. attach· drive tnns reblt, 4-dr. 6 bit ;.r;tdt.. tv•a: SlJH. ~O :~~=· SlS.842-lm ea, Uh V\nyl lop, '1000 Cll' b9l • plduret. PLUS 845-864l UHd. Oddt ~ ecda. EneyclolHldla, aquarium, ~ r ~uo ~· 1..:°"=er:.:·.;;.538-f'772,;;;:..:..;...:.;...' ---,-.. 11 01 MISC. 751..J'708 l urn tab I o, add In I '850. "11 ~ve;'V'.;, ~ E~ R Sale 2 Pc s.cttoGal, Cbl ~ cu . t macbln•, drytr, noor cond. SZIOO. A\rlomatlc new 41.ectric kotre, now h'elMr. I.Ute ntW Po I I 11 h e r • P e t Palhncdoo N SUreo 1old butnt lllhlcr, Twin bed, la II) Pl. cace/buket,4N-8930 Daya S4'·10U, ~ve, 1quar1um wtth all AC· 114-1$30 ttMS'll cetl. r••tlorm rocker, .O.al1n1n clothes. and•'"--------matcb na blu'"' tabl almoat new, latnt atylN. Hlde·•·btd, Bookcau, ..-Many 1l1C1 off~rf'd at Lr& steel desk w/rlle lampe. k>vely new wall prlete )OU CAii afford. drawer, Haqlnl lamp, t.a,.try • dr•*· ~I 1dnt !'<few Owner hours Wblco(f•!fble.N7.a72 eond 548-05>4 tO:JO·t :OO. CbarHu 0 -:...-r-i-.--. " GIRL'S Rlcyelt SI> :=-:::::-.:::;-:=~:"ilt~~~:;;:;,::~~ OOMt.. ewport It BaJ • .-...---..-· • -... IS" Bo)''.!_ _10 aptttd S30 Rllldtta lJ' Br.akfroftt; '?J DATSUN 110, 4 m.ani. = Sltl,Sll t~' c1baln11 w' I0,000 BTU Wlndow al bat, 9'00la. IO mpa."" OWfttf xlnt • o • condlUot.tr s:ao1• ~~_Jlln coad. ·-•1.m. 4M·l10 100,000 8TtJ O.S forced l'Nl. Cll, B ~ 1>'7, Pb crib II new niaunu as • "• 1 / w Ir• ad' al.P tamaca.: Watb. 1>f1 J111or1G-,_..-11'0" srom drapes • ~.tU-1111 ~-or tn,..,..mt S.Sl-2112 ·~ 110 4 DOOR ''THE LUXUln CAR" 3DAYSALE!I BRAND NEW 1978DATSUN 1978 Datain 8210 2 Or. Fully factory IQUipped. 3e month ooen end leae . EQual month psymen19 of •87.82 month plua ta Veh~te val~23 95. Pay only S1•41.88 to tlke deltwry on ~ C19Cllt Total ...._ paymtl'lt .. 2580.48. Option at end oC ~1883.15. C~l- COSTA MESA ...... -___ , ... - I, I I ' I \ J • '1 1• ~ J • • j it • '-h. r.wer 904 loat'I. Slipe/ Mofol-Hon.a. Sen/ ~/ Trucks 95'0 ...................... Docltl 9070 ... /51•• f 160 ~ 91JO ..................... .. •n Sldpjack, zo• open, •M•••••••••• ... •••••••• •"•••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• AIU SalCTION w/trtr, bimini t.opll, VHP', "' Jatere1t In A ulon l9n DllAMB '51 Olds 88, ' dr. En'1ne OF lt71 GMC t.eM awim 11.ep, 70 hrs, maorins (50') na. Call never touched. Needs MODB.S MOW 2U V·I Volvo I /0 . (805)1D-31JOorm..ms ...,.MOJOIMOMI work.Bestotr.M6-4.llt. Picku-van 4Xt's SU.ISO. Tom day1 • CLOSIOUTIU ..... 1 ' ' 645·1H5 wkodl/evea WANTED: Z2 + DANA ltea'MHMlll Suburbao.1 " Jimmys m.mt ' POINT SLIP for retired 3 ltft to tbooae VIMdft 9530 priced u low u ---------1 bacbdor. Cao uchante For lnfo.rmatlon call ....................... $4351 18' HORIZON JETTE Newport slip 1f dMired. Wendell Rlcb or BUI i41'1lAVELALL, 311hllg. • 711 GI( c ~ t 0 n Oldil-Berkley jet. 8 track 7S2·7910 Aerceooly at Ttlr pq. P/S, P /8, A/C. Jlickll>-(5151188). t.ape. Leu tban 100 hrs on . . • PHIL LOMG FOID Cnise control. All/FM bOal "aqjoe. New twin Wanted. Slip for 35 768-5111 radio S380C> ~-Mlt lanka. Cherry cond. Ul· sailboat, 28' uuut. Call · · · ch.dint traller. $4250 or 644--0C79 BUY NOW! 4 WMet Dfh n tSSO beat. A1llt for Rick. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 968-&34or6'6-9303 • 0 COSTA MISA 34' Stephans 1950 Twin '°=9 Speed 9010 C NSIGN NOW! AMC-JEEP screw $6,000 675·6056 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $1'10-$200 per week. We #I .. c•f. before 8 A.M. Aller 6 LAKI PBIJS have 1.1 million Contrac· P.M. ................ tual reeervatlona back· FREE -.-. ing with AAA 25' Falrli.Der" completely Open an day, everyday, U.S./Canada ~ the AJrCo.dlttoMr renovated. "ray marine, &lip reotall·fisbiDC boat fobowioa airlines Unit· on new um & 1978 Jeeps. $3800. Dana PL~; rentals-sti boat rentala· ed, Della, Western, Does not Include ~ gaa• doc ks-marine Huahes Air West, Con· Wagoneer limited CJ5or bardware-ice·coffee tioental, KLM "Dutch", CJ7. <Xfer good only on 9060 1hop-mecbanic. Great SwiaaAir, Lufthansa. factory air equipped ••••-••••••••••••••• fishing & lots of sun-•10% Investment tax vehicles. Offer expires FUJI· YAMAHA DLUBS Yacht Brokerage Ustmp Wanted' SoeithwHhn'I Yocht ScMs 2616 Newport Blvd. Newport Beacl'I shine-beautiful Lake creditedepreclaUoo de· March31, 1978. Perris. Call Don Moore ferments. OVERSTOCKED m4> 65'1""115 •We have 118 '"77, '78's in WITH JEEPS Fieet need 200 total by Great Family Ski boat, 17' Skicraft w/283 IB. Perl Cor family skiing or cruising. Sl.650. 955-2448 ~~base at factory 10• 549-8023 voice 4 Star's minis or 252>1 HARBOR BLVD. Sout.hWUld's25's COSTA MESA ___ <7_14) 673-9211 __ T~ 100'1> Frnancmg or an · voice sales tax & license thru CROCK ER. 12.o APR, 7 year nOle. USED ••• Udo 14 $750. Sunfish 13, ••••••••••;;;••••••••• $395. 21' Sloop $350. Siu ~.~ • / 9 120 hull $95. 559-1833 552-8880 --....................... For further informa lion cool.act Mr. Lassner or Mr. Miller VALUE 1977 CHEROKEE (PllOJ). V8, automatic, power steering, power brakes, AM/FM stereo. 1976CHEVY B.CAMIMO Conquist.a model. Automatic, pwr. steer· ing, Ult wheel, air cond., shell " low miles. (1C49131). $5295 COMHEil CHtvaOUT 2828 Harbor Blvd COSTA MESA 546-1200 Cony 360.1970, 21,000 ma. $600 645-102.8 aft S wkdys '62 FORD lf.t Ton P .U New auto trans, mtr. in xlnt cood. Four lg., new tires. Shell camper. $1.400. 554-4077 ?3Cabnbla34 Ford Cour ier shell Like new cond. Dix $200/best offer Call aft. 3 c us lo m int r. 7 fl _P_M_~_5061 ______ 1 Ode's RY Rentah Inc. $'995 '7S Toyota Long bed, 4 spd headroom main salon, ;s Ford Courier with '74 diesel auxl .. auto pilot. 6.pack camper. Good dmgy, furl Jtb,/extras. cond. 4SK mi, Will sell $ 2 B • O 0 0 I o r r · P P · separate or pkg deal m4 )531 ·353.5 OOa.226.S · 17141559-4446 Outside ca . 1~-0399 (Telex) Dale's JRIN &J-2378 1976 CHEV BLAZER w/air, AM/FM stereo. (P907) V-8, power steer-GT sports top, new ures, ing, auto, low miles, xlot intr. $3800. Ph rallye wheels, orr -road 631·5622 tires. ~---~~~-- 19T7 Nr nu.Chev Luv, air. chrome whls, AM /FM cass. spec s tripes. $3995.(Sav approx $1500.) Low Mi. 631 ·4300 28' Islander. '76 . LOADED w/expen:.ive Open Road camper Call cru1s10g /rac 1n~ li't'ar Ed 998-7500 10:15 to 3:15 (list upon req ) $29.0001" _M __ ·F ______ _ Denver, Colorado Opening Muy l Allowing 2 way Rentals to L A $5999 $SAVEATOM S 1976 CJ7 <P896> 6 cyl. 4 speed. rallye wheels, roll bar, power steering. 639-5309 __ Sacnfice. rerng .. stove & $4999 10' Class R Wilmington sank Westward Ho a. Loo Bil 1976 CHEV :J.4 Ton 4x4 good eond Contact Bud long bed, $300. 962-3125 4aitf876) V8, automaUc, Schati, at We stmont Motoriud l ikes 9140 power steermg, dual gas Coll , Santa Barbara. ••••••••••••••••••••••• tanks. ~/91B·~l Motobecane 50V Moped, 6 111 ......, ,.,... $5999 , Montgomery 11 ', late mo's old. 2100 mi's. Xlnt MW Mehr..._ 1974 PLYMOUTH Trail 1977, fully equ1 pped, cond $375. 979-9144. 0..,.... Duster (P926) V-8, auto, Must sell this week '7S Toyota long bed w/camper shell Nu tares & whls, AM·FM, lo ma. $2700/bStofr. 642·9274 ,... .... '78 FOl'd El.SO, 351 V8, auto. P IS. P /B, A/C, Captain cha.lrs, nu tires, dark windows, 48,500 cnl'a, xlnt cood, 545-SOlB '77 Chevy Van, 6 cyl, PS. PB. custom. cusb or trade TOP 960-2666 aft 6PM RAY FLAD£80£ • LINCOLN-MERCURY IRVINE. 130.7000 AMtos. lmpotted /JiMlio L..aincJ 9 580 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .......... ••• ••••• •• • •• G 1111rd 9 70 I 1878 921 Porsche ••• ..... • ••• •• •. • •. • ••• Available for Immediate lease '73 Austin Marina, 2?M (Ser #0323) • ml, AM/FM, radlMl11, A VALUE LEASING $QIO. 960-USO 973-~ 973-1059 AHa RCMmO 9705 ~J.105() ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9590 ....................... WIWILLIUY YOURDATSUM PAID FOR OR NO'r TOP DOLi.AR FOR TOP CARS BARWICK DATSUN !'-\.10 .Ju.au t ·~JI''''' .tnn 831-1375 493.3375 WE BUY CLEAHCARS •TRUCKS CONNELL CHMOLET 2828 Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA 546-1200 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR !''OR TOP USED CARS FORECGN. DOMESTlC or CLASSICS If your car 1s extra clean seeushrst. IAUSl IUICK 2925Harbor Blvd Col;ta Mesa 979-2500 '65 Alfa, 1600 Veloce Spyder. Prof restored, mny xtras 536 6338/ 842-4982 9707 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Audi. '72. lOOLS Auto. xlnt cond $2075. 497-2845 an Spm. 1976 AUDI lOOLS, 1 OWNR. 4 dr sdn, auto, sunroof, air, tape sys., v . rool, beige, 32K mi, xlnt cood. Must sell. ~S or bat otr. 55&-4l532 '7.. Audi Fox. Coco Brn 4-dr, 37,000 mi. $2500. 7~ Sales-Service-Leasing Roy CarYfl', Inc. Rolls koycc BMW 1540Jamboree Newport Beach 640-6444 1978 BMW's HERE NOW! COMPLETE IODYSHOP MOW OPEN . . DAILY PILOT DJ J I t7S IMW l.05141 Leather Interior, pwr\. w.ndows, stereo, mtC wheels I& one owner. (879SZK) . SADDLllACIC VAUIYlMPOITS 131-2040 4'Mt4t EXCELi.EMT Capi ' 971 S SELICT10N OF •••••••-•••••••••••••• IMWRESALES •73 Capri. Brand nPr We may have your next paint, new tires. Grein car in our inventory. Call cond. $1700, Pb 75&-087$ us today! 131-2040 4t&-4t4t 7 71MW 320i Automatic Sunroof! Factory air, AM/FM ste~ tape, alloy wheels. "fo"lawleas Example"! (1T7RSK) $10,500 CREVIER '74 2800. Snrf AM/FM .uno. 5ep. tape decks. New radials, pat 6: batt. Snug fit cover. $2650. 673-S2T1 '73 Capri 2000 auto. Xlnl cood. Smf. "ll.9oo or b:.t otr. 87~97'7 '74, xlnt cond, nu tires, clutch, AM/FM, lo ml's. $2200. 64&-78S2 9717 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SANTA AHA Dahm 9720 0 I St 6 .. OADWAY 835·3171 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •DRIVEA * *LITILE ... * TH[ ULftlolA T( OAIYIHG MACHINE •USEDIMWs* '7120024spd (75314) '73 Bavana 4 apd t94JFS '732002"-'pd 369KBV '75530i Auto. (283MCV>. '75 2002 A. Ser.2236 SAVE A LOT SHOP &COMPARE BARWICK DATSUN make offer 551-2921 ~~/ s7395 aircood, power steering, cn.nse, rallye wheels, orr Columbia Challenger, 24' 9 I 50 sn.. moe road tares. '73 Ranchero w /shell Rblt eog, new tires. AM/FM stereo. Dys 557·5333, eve 531·3008 1976 ~ ton Ford Couner with shell · set up ror service shelves & pape rack. 14,000 ma.Jes Pnre $32.()0. Phone: MC>-1463 & 631-3116. TOP DOLLAR PAID FOR CLEAN '76 SJOIA Alloys 4S2PQN ' '762002upd s 1R 220PQD -'T7320lAS/Rl77RSK ""·"' .Ju .. 1n' .. 1p1· tr .1f1•1 831-1375 493.3375 flber&las! sailboat, fully ••••••••••••••••••••••• GYPSY $4999 eqwp'd Very reasonably '76 Honda 550·4 SS 6'1"H• .. -1974 TOYOTA Land pnced, 581 5843 Wind.shield. Hwy bar. on· H .. sai.-Cruiser <Stk#874) 6 cyl., -ly 8200 M ex cond. $975 8 " °"'-.., ~ M FM .. · f'nndle 16. fo'ull ran • in· 631.3767 •1 "~Cent• Js~. A I rau.io. 'entory, trlr w/box ---------1 $4495 SJ~ li73MMI '74 HONDA 1974 CH EV BLAZER Cl 200 (P8S8) Cheyenne, 4 spd. 16 ' llob1<' Cat Fully AM /FM stereo, rallye t-qwp'd L1kt• nu $1900 or Never used. 500 males. wheels, off road tires. h~l orr. 515 4414 or llkenew.Wrndshield.roll $4999 7515315 bar,rearrack&cush1on. 76Tioga 11, 8000 mi. Air 1975 CHEV BLAZE L' . 27 KM VHF $550. 962-8437. cooler. Mu.st sell. Asking CHEYENNE (Stk#P81) c..r1cson • . • $U ooo 639 2003 vs tot dpth sndr, anbd, xlnt Kawasaki 400c~ triple ..:.......:.·--· _. _____ 1 ,au rans. l'Ofld. Mu.st see, $18,000. Very good condiuoo. $5599 646-3631 494-4126. Troilen. Trani 9170 1974 RAMCHARGER A uanus. 23.' 1973 9 H. P '49 Panhead. Xlnt running •••••••••••. •••••••••••• <Stk# P824) VB, auto. iq 1 S 1 f t trans., power steering, Evin. La.lehne. ruh cqwp, cond. Stroker kit, lots of pace •va1 . or up o 3 sails, VHF anten, trlr. chrome. Dys 973-0375, 8JC30'. Adults. Weekly, aircood., tape deck. Ownr must sell. 661-1086, evs631-54S3 monthly. 548-6173. $4999 751-6063 1971 JEEP WAGONEER __ __;_ ______ I '76 Kawa. KHlOO, almost 23' Open Road self cont . ( p w A I T E ) v 8 . :.i· Islander Mk II Ped . new, only 250 ml. S450 xlnt cond .. Seal Beach automatic, power steer- race/cruise. Reduced cash.Musbsee 631·5592 213/596-9874 _ ing,roorrack. $1500 PP 493·0633 -. ----$2995 --'76 Honda 400·4 Super 22 Road Liner Trvl trlr llob1e Cat 16', whl w/blue Sport xlnl cond 9500 ml Air, S C. $112 mo Perm COPELAND JEEP tramp c\ wht·blu yellow S850. 49J.9491. 496·5932 • Lag trlr space $4800 200 I E I st, S.A. sail Xlnd cond. $17$0 or ~2000or494-MJS nrrer W trlr 673 5548 Motor HCMMS. Sdie' Jwlo S«-fice Perts -558-8000 16' Hobie Cal 1977. some .~~/.~~ ••••• ~.~~ lrAccessorin 9400 '74 GMC Jimmy. Wht. racing equip, $1350. ••••••••••••••••••••••• many xlras. $4500/bst bi 3 5372 Rent a 1977 Execu~lve AtJI'O PARTS: •59 Chevy ofr. 646-8525 Motorhome or Mini· adiatorS20 Reb ·1dabte•--------- Catalina 22', 1976. deluxe motorhome from Herb ~ F rd Engin~ block '78 Chev ., Too 4 whl dr, m o del. pop top & Friedlander. Call any of $50. G~age work bench step-side, bl~. P /S. P/B, encl06ure, kick up rud· these numbers ~ Call &42 3379 auto. :.>GO mt. $6700. (213) dcr, fabric cushions. 191-6777 · · 359-5680. --~------~ w v e & icebox. ship to 537.7777 Lrg mags & tires. Ford Tndls 9560 i;hore radio, including 82Mlll pattern must s e ll lrlr & 6HP motor. sail ---------• 548-4261. 7Sot·367S . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1972 Dat:.un PU w /fiberglJ:.S :.hell 754-1428 '75 El Camino, sharp, !'._!~'!. P/B, A/C. lo mi's. ~.979-1501 '71 Datsun P .U. w/shell, mags & stereo, Milke or fer. 546-1169 '77 Toyota SR·5, A/C, stereo, mags, immac. ocrer. 581·5826 '73 Ford eou.... ~ --1. low low pnce If -..._., Sa.. U2A I G<Jod ttwu 3-2'·79. s1795 Bill MAXEY TOYOTA 18il• t~ut1r11B1•d 141 A\\') HUHf lHC.fON lltACH cover, many more. MotorHolMR...tal ---1'6Jlntem'lPU.Shortbox. Sarnracc $4,995. 831-02.59 11,12 to 32, al wht spoke whls, lrg knob----------Autos for S • bae;. 4-cyl eng. Ofr · ·oo Datsun Pickup. 1\ ton, SAC RI F I C E · 2 b o a t FU Uy self contained •• •••• •• •• •• • • • • n • • • • • 979-0183 or 754-0146 owner. Nwpl 28, rully Reserve now for ~/ goodcond. $1000. eqwppcd. perlcct cond. Holidays &weekends. CIGssics 9520 'TI Datsun P.U. Sunroof, 63l·5043 9100Aaltos,H•w Makeoffer67S..6887 REGENCY MOTOR ••••••••••••••••••••••• mag tares. custm inter. HOMERENTALS 58MGACLASSIC AM /FM stereo. Call MOllE 16 TRLR 925N. Harbor Blvd,S.A. SlOOOFIRM , AS IS Chnsor Harriet 979-5345, S250 644·0356 • •531·2503• • 714-673 4119 or eves & wkncb 673-0521 ---~-----· 9100 Autos, M•w 9100 Autos, Hew 9100 Autoa.H•w •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• BMW WILL NEVER BU.LLD A CONVENTIONAL LUXURY SEDAN BECAUSf: ~O ONE AT BMW COUl:.D BEAR TO DRIVE ONE. If the thought of owning a luxury sedan that's as exc1t1ng to drive I 9570 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1974CHEVY >/4 TOHVAM Automatic, pwr. steering & brakes, VB & longbed model. 41,310 miles. (623:1>X). $4395 COMHB.L CHEVROLET 2828 Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA 546-1200 '74 Cuatom Chevy Van Custom paint. Gold Velvet interior . Wide crageni $4950. 642·337!_ 197SCHEVY •/JTOHVAM Longbed model. VS, automatic & pwr. steer· lnJ. (858QSW). $4995 COMMB.L CHIYIOUT 2828 Harbor Blvd. COSTA MF.SA 54 ... IZOO '89 Ford Van, lthr tufted Inter., 10" t /wbeel, 302 eng, 3-IJl'd. 497~10 •75 Dodie Van. Fully c:ultomlzed. Lo ml. Muat lee. Ml·llZJ '72 011.C vao, b1 ori1. owner, lllbt eond.., many Cldna. M7 nuon. of. rer.MMT14 Classy Autos Atlvertised in the DAILY PILOT IMPORT CARS AU.MODELS IMW RESALES Closed On Sundays I RARE '70 Datsun 1600 Auto M 9100 Roadster, must sell. 1973 3.0CS ••••• ~· •• !.":............ $1375. 979-1489 4 speed wllh :.unroor. WE BUY USED CARS <2tilMCG ). 1974 2002 ~ s peed. air cond. & s tereo cas s ette. <763MCC l. 1974 3.0So Automatic. air cond. sunroof. (388KLF). 1974 3.0CSa CALL GARTH Used Car Mgr 540·5630 • Automatic, sunroof & leather interior. (4881.NT). IOllXSOX & SOX • LINCOLN·MERCURY 2626 HARBOR Bl VO . COSTA MESA WllUY USED CARS! We're the new Chevrolet dealership an the Irvine Auto Center. We need your used car' JOE MACPHERSON CHEVROLET 21 Auto Cent.er Ori ve IRVINE 768-7222 ~7s C• z.:. .... ~ .. ........... -. ... . 1975 2002 4 speed, stereo. air cond & only 28,000 miles. (123632) 1976 Slot 4 speed wath s unroof <ERIN D l Two 4 speed.'> & 3 automatics to choo!>e from. <462RKT> 831·2040 495.4949 WANTED TO IUY Qualatyused BMWs ROY CARVER IMW 1540Jambortt Road NEWPORT BEACH 640..6444 lt7' DATSUH Ult •....i '-·_,. __ (IUl'C5! '2677 I t7 I MTIUM 1401. ~ .... __ alrOMd.1 1 .,.._ ....... Cl1ICU'). •3477 . ~ . AND NOW YOU CAN BEAT THE PRICE INCREASE! F . EE Ati4/IM STIUO .. "' ..... .., ........ .,,~ 1179.00 v-Ollw ~""' ....,..,..,. -27. 11178. lt7J DAnuM 240 Melelllc: --ie alt ~-~··---1~•4477 tt74 UtWILf ... • ~ ......... 1 .. "'°"" ( ........ ). 11477 2150 HARIOlt ILYD. COSTA MESA 645-6700 41 MPG HWY ~ ........ ,....... 29MPGaTY 1 t7• MOteA cmc Me1eute -w11111 .... -(DlP'a). •2177 I t71 tr•CUIY c:.NW ,.,,,_!IQ, -~ ....... I~ •11n "' .. ·. . . . .. ' . . , HELP! . w ..... ..,.... ... .... 71YW1aowe'l .... ff__. ,.,.. ..... to..,. HAllOUR VOLKSWAGIM ~ Medlk & Cokan ~·••11 Including "* t ... loot. Otte _.,. a "°"' -.: br•k•• HtlChb•c~. (10311131 sMNows3995 EASTER VACATION , CLE.ARA ... CE SALE B•:iri••-.t ·;, .... ·.ft')fl o f Uo;ed Buqs 1 <.at t. .i, I\ · •.. "a.:t l1tllcs ,,, 0rarige Couri: / 71 Di...t ._.... ~ .................. SAYI • ....... ...m, ___ Ulte-1"2971. '.6J • __ ..._C...,..._ ............ SAYI A,.. ~-lou--11o-...11~ J ..... CMo-74 ...... 7 6 .... : ••• tr-l2Jt5 7•4ICICL(1411Cf'V) 7&A"'o lee&MYMJ 71-IOllP\JUI EASY O H OAS '71 YW .............................. Sitts ·---~--,..,,..,~ la<llOGJ '74 C...,,,, WY C-............. , .... S26t~ C-•...t•-..•oll.,,., (4~~1 · SPORTSCARS '7J D-'-2402 ••...•.....•......•..••• $J7t5 4 tc>d . '" "9 -· e IVt1.11• Cl-IC. (llJeMXTJ '7J J-H9*7 • · · · ... · .............. M5t5 4 "'·· -~ .c....., ...,_ "'"" ... 9'.i. fll tt«Wl Harbour Volkswagen 842-4435 1171 I IHdlll'fd.. ..... ...,..leach 'Sale Hrc MOii Fri. f.f, Sat f·7, S. 10.7 Orat EASTER SUNDAY Al""-Pita Tu & ~ On~ CtwdL Oltllr ~ :).-21 · 79 Classy Autos Advertised in the DAILY PILOT Sl.00 Bl'YSA PENNY PINCHER AD TOSf:U. YOUR fTEM S OF SSO 00 OR LES.5 Call M2·56'13 Cla&if1ed Ads ~. 1_,oc tN ........ l•pot+M .... l111pott.d Mites, 1.11,.,W A.8tot, IMport.d ..,._,, Imported ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....._, t•p•rtH Ms. t7ZO Ha.Im 9727 ,....... 9747 I.all a.,ee f7H V ... w.... 9710 V•o 9172 .................................................................................................................................................................. .,..._ tUO im Dataun, 4 tJ*'d, gokt m4 Hooda ctvk htch~k '74 L. Oranie. 1 owner. •t DEALER IN U.S.A. WI IUY & S&L 1971 VOLVO ••••-•••••••• .. ••••••• carpeuoa. SHOO. Call %•dr. Auto. xlnt a•• tm> mi. super cJea.D fl>'· Im IOY VOUSWA-..S 1XC8&91T m.Qllll mileate.so.MZSans lna mucblno, equipped CARVtR LuaeatSelectJcfl :l4Z~~ ON A.t t7Z5 w/maoy xtra 10ocllea. lnTbeArealfl SB.ICTI •••-•••••••••••••••••• 71 Crvlc. S apd, radials, c:au days (114) lnS.706$ ROUS·ROYC£ '61 IUG S6ff ONLY $4695 IHI~~~~· '75 l'tat Xu. A I C. = a.~~ot;'14oxo~~ Evetn4>637-80H ~"'t'!'.. 0 C05W~> ~J:~~O ......,.. .. ; AM/FM, mass. xlol a-on Ps+ot t741 ..,.... 7 IUG ••tt DBJVBY cond $3500. 559·1970 ....................... C\OS!DSUNDAYS (0218EJ).. 131·2ll04tl-t210 SALES.sERVICF. beforehmoral\8pm Accard '77, lilveron blk, 5 '7SSOhed1.o, loml,1u.nrf, $4S ............ tt7' VOLVO PARTS~lNG '74Xll,xlatcond, ~,OOO mi, $S,400· :..c~ condWoo. $WO. Toyota ;765 Porrowa l!D.01; O.A.C, 264CH. COSTA MESA DATSUN lomileaie. ••••••••••••••••••••••• A.P.R. 23.76 perceol; Sunroof, leather . ~.eves/wll:et>da. ¥uat sell '75 CVCC ,... 9750 llFOUYOU pay bact·•Um.oo iD 2' aut.omaUc, air, crwse, 2MSHAR80R BLVD. 540-6410 540-02 I l btcbbt, 40MPG, e•ecl. ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• SB.I. YOUR mootbs. ttereo wit.ape, rear win· 11Bfi1B cood.98M818 LAICiE TOYOTA. WISTCiEIMAM dowdefrost. C7MNPG> C~ll .,._ 9730 SB.ICTIOH OF IMPORTS $7988 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IRAMDMIW 1971 SEE US! JallSHarbotBlvd .• C.M. PluaTuliUcense MEWPOn DATSUN for the beat b\q iD a Oft' or med Dataunl 833-1300 EASTER SALE OH ALL 131 's. I 28's Xl/9'a. IZ8's IH STOCK ~:.4~i:;1!~•dster, POISCHl!t24, ~~~~A 714/645-6120 Nabers 714-644-4t47 att6PM =J~f" best buy 131·2U04t5-IZIO 75VOLUWACiB4 1972DATSUH IZOO't ~~~~sell. llLL YATES lt76TOYOTA wu~~~u. · Cadillac 6'2·3381 VW-PORSCHE CONlal.Jflla.dc AM/FM cuaettA! fr onl.Y (3) To Choose From Automatic, radio & beater, & much more! (.2l6ZH.AA >. Starttng al SanJuanCaplalrano With AM/PM 8 track 384117mllell (210MOR) 2600 H.irtior Blvl.I. ·~!r;~~~fC:.Z·mre=, 137-4100 4tl-451 I 1tereo. Extra abarp· sHowaOOM FlllSH CmtJ M~·\.a 540·YIOO Must sell. p Ip 54S-89S:l must see to appreciate! MllAQ.I! THIS WEEK ONLY ~ ---------1 '70 Porsche 9UT, factory (SNIF'I'Y). maes. nice. $6800/Best OML y $3425 MADA/1Bl4ULT '71 Volvo 145 wen. Xlnt OMLYSl295 9735 oUer639-3787 2UOHarbor Bl., C.M. cond. Dark 1reeo. $2200. MIRACLE 645-5700 631-4906 1973DATSUM 610COUPE 4 speed. heater, mags & air conditioning Setectto. of USED FIATS DRASTICALLY REDUCED 120W.W_..tM• s ....... 557-2132 ••••••••••••••••••••••• "68 VW Ghia. coovcrtsblc. Nut.op Xlnt cond. $2400. 67H023 Im Ghia, 38,000 mi Coco brn. lmrnac. $3200, 644-3291, 00·5376 '71 Ruby red Ghia. par. rebll eng w/JOO ml s on it. $2500 o r best ofr. 675-2008 '71 Karmann Ghia coo· v er t , A M I t• M 8 · l r k Stl!reo. Nu valves. nu clutch. nu <·xhuust system. Bes t offe r . 495-2968 ----Mazda 9738 ••••••••••••••••••••••• (200KOR). A real -======~ SHARPYfor miracle mazda OHLYS2595 ~0E5s1: DA!§UN USED CAR L OT ::2 .Jt1:> I_ 171/1 ....,,,,.,., ·H c -0 ..... /.\ M l ,-.;,\ .. 631-5690 1974 Fial, 4 dr, 1.28, take overpmts. U7.8CBJ 1975 AAT 124 2150 Hcri»or ll•d. Costo Mesa 645-5 700 SpkW COfr#et'fible 1975 MAZDA 5 speed wilh AM /FM 8 RX4 WAGOH track. <~>. Automauc, usr cond. & OHLY $4095 only 36.229 males . MARQUIS VOLVO i7:nNJOJ. 1977DATSUM MISSIONVIEJO OHLYS2750 1210 COUPE 831-2180 4fS.l 2 I 0 MIRACLE Automatic. AM/f'M & MAZDA/RENAULT 9. 000 m 1 I cs ' (LI c '74 128• gm, new clutch & 2150 II arbor Bl • C M. #801SDRI valves. lo mi $1000 645-SJOO SADDLHAC« s.ia-0000 ----- VALLEY IMPORTS 77 . Xl!l, loal.lt'd. air. Mercecks hm 9740 831-2040 495.4949 AM /F'M, xlnl cond1llou ••••••••••••••••••••••• 759 0064 '7 4 Mft'C••s hrn F~~:~4DatsunB210 Honda 9727 450SL Call 9'79·2046 ••••••••••••••••••• •••• FUiiy equipped. 33,000 Brand H•w '78 mi I e s • I i k e n e w . • 7 6 2 8 0 Z 2 + 2. cop· (496M VK > per/beigelnt .allextras. HONDA Cars $16,995 Lo mi. $6400. 968· l 132 MAMY McU. CadHloc ·74 710. Xlnt cond. Nu ToChooM Ff-om! 2nd & MAIH ra~ter6 JO UN~~~l~TY ;~~;~~~ "74 200Z, AM FM. mags, HOftda Con • GMC 65.000 nu's. $4450 or best Truc:L-1971 MIZ 250C offer 6424818. 496 6642or .u One owner <'ar 14 tth da}s. 213/482 4390 al>k 2850llarbor Bl\cl Mirhrho t1r<·s ,\ 111 t"{ forDebbi C'.cxtaMrsa StO!H>iO rdlc·nt rontl1t1nn! --. -,f-d C--::-~1 (OT..'CXY) ·n Datsun Fslbck 1200. 75 on a iv1r. "o· mi. SADDLEIACk Rads. AM-f'M Xlnt "Int c-ond Mu't !>ell' v.u•r.YIMPORTS •LEASE• IRAHD HEW '78 911 PORSCHE SC sspood, leather, AM/l"M sl ereo cassette, air cond .• eleclric sliding roof, Bil. abocu, pwr. Wllldows, alloy wheels, leather '*ring wheel. blackout ln m & center consoje. (200506). MAZDA/UH.AULT '74 XJ12L. XJnt c:oadillon . .WO.. ___ U_Md ____ _ Zl.50-=~C..M. Best ofr over $7500. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 673-3464 evea .. cir 99 I 0 ---------1 ...................... . '75 Bug. 21.000ml ~.646-3046 9915 Nabers Cadillac ·fl Q.alty Ir Pric• LARGEST SELECl'JON OF NEW & USED IN ORANGE COUNTY CADIU.AC VALUE PROTEC110N PLANS Available on Most Cars • • 1977 CADILLAC SB>AH DEVILLE c:abnolct top, lealher in· t.erior, 60/40 pwr seats, stereo tape, crwse con· trol & tilt wheel ~). $9688' • 1977 CADILLAC a DORADO CPE. Cabriolet top, leather in· ler1or, s tereo & only 11,00miles! C204SMU>. $9588 • shape. Sl250 /ofr 546-1630 $28001 & t of r 586 50G1 I ~ _....;.._ ______ --831-2040 495-4949 Alrtos, Und A9tof. UMCI Autos. UH-d Autos, UHd --••••••••••••••••••••••~••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• i3 280 S E 4 5 A real • beauty, ::.oft llhr int. sorl & all options. Well c-ared for. SMSO. 546·9160 Bernie btwn8-S 1972 MIZ 250C Vinyl top, pwr. s teering. air rond .. leather, AM /FM stereo & only 33,000miles. <929FUO>. • CADILLAC tl TRADE-INS ONLY $7250 MIRACLE MAZDA/REM.AULT 2150 Harbor BJ.. C.M. 645-5700 1975 CADILLAC B. DORADO CP'E Cabnolet top, leather in· tenor, 50150 pwr seats, crwse control, stereo tape & tilt wheel. (210MMM) s200,000 INVENTORY TO CHOOSE FROM • ALL MAKES and MODELS • 73 OfEVY NOVA QJSTOM SPORTS COUPE ~ too. ,,. --..0. -52799 .i-nv ,_~.._, Ollly 11.CICXI ,.._ (118HVZ) 72 CADWAC <X>UPE DE Vlllf l.tlftdw ............ 1.....W. "'" s2999 -•• ~1aca.•oonc1.. ........ , ............ llMOUl'I. 76 OEVY MAI.JIU ClASSIC COtft ·. :::-~~-:.-· s3799 2 to dlOOM from 7• CAm1AC a DOUDO ~ -... _...-. s5499 ""'-.--~ ...... eeM ........ ~ ...... 11.000 1111 .. t I ,,. ••~•Ii.tit ..... llf'KIU ' An C.. Plut Ta I UclnM All C.. 8ubled To Prior a.le 8111 Prw.Oood ThN Mldnu.. 3'129-78 75 GMC SUBURBAN CARRY .AlJ. Sient ~·--Full Pow ... d..el led Ill l~I - crul• """'"" -""'-' --.1100Naz.J 77 TOYOTA auc.A -Tao o· l!w ...,., ~ •Ir -.. ,,...., .11..,.. aoao ,,,.._a -.... (3141?QI. 55699 75 CADIUAC SEDAN DE Vlllf p-lop. di.el ......, _....., 1Mla. ,,__, w/I .. _,. --'· 1c1 ., _.,.., 11111..-. CN11t1 a ....... ,20el'Sl0 75 C.AD11AC a DORADO ~ ................... -comlofl -. el..-!'-· lvll _.,. It el e/11 --.I. & CINI .. ~ ......... ,....a~ 77 OtEVY * TON VAN VI, ......._ Ml -till. O'\Al9e, -·"-""""'_"'_ "'·"' ............ _..._.a ~ t1.ooo --.oa.osn 55999 55999 56499 76 UNtOlH TOWN COUPE • 7-i ·~ ...... ~C9111bt-57499 -Ml,.... • -. °""" .._.,,. ........... , .. ....,. ... 13t1PCPI ·s122QS, mintcond, $4995, FIRM. 631-2420 • '72 914, 35.40 mpg, AM /FM cass. all factory customized inter & paint, ~.best ofrer. 83().3'17 aft6. •73 280. A/C, Becker AM/FM, /wr windows. Top con . Make ofr. '76TARGA. Loaded. War-494-2982 ranly. xlnt cood. Assume $258/mo lae. SU,500. Pb ~ wn MBZ 280E. S14,7S-O or take over lae of $310 pr mo. Ivory I h•mboo lnl, gorgeous. ~1938 eves &t wknds 7S2-8952dally. 71. ~. must seU DOW. lo mi, loaded, very clean. under wrnt.y, PP 499·3613 eves '76 Port1c~ 914, blk, xlnt cood. $7,000. $7000/Best olr. 548-4864 DAILY PILOT SflVICE DIRECTORY OUt•I COl.ICTY VOi.VO DaAJSIVa.Y VOLVO 1Ar1e1t Voho DMJet In Of'allttCounty I BUYotLMSB DIRECT $6388 • 1975 CADIUAC COUPE DEVILLE Cabriolet top, leather in· tenor Ir stereo tape & lilt wheel. (410NAC>. ~ $6188 • • Prioea good lhru Sunday. 3/?.S/78 All cars plus tux & license • OVf:R 150 QUALITY CARS TO SELECT 1-'RO~f • Nabers Cadillac 2600 H.irhor Blvd. CO§lJ Ml'W S40.9100 '7S OfV, mint sreeo. plaid 1111, lo ml 's, alnt eond. All Jtlnl. '8000. 41t-1959 71CADtLUC COWIDIVIW 1'"1lf equipptd, cebrtolel top, AM /FM ltcreo. lcat.bv, cruise control. tilt wheel, 14,000 mUQ (amJUI) "2f S t1 h•C ••; Jlld&NAM IAMIAAMA ~ 543-9421 "'--.. ... . , ..... -. -.. ---" • /I I Autoa, UHd Autoa, Uaed Alltos, UHd Autos, Used Autos, UHd Autot, Uaed ··•··••···••·••····•·· ................................................................................................................. . Fn#f, Match 24, 1978 . ~!! .• ~ ....... !!.'. ~'!!!' .. ·:.'~ ....... !!.~~ ~~'!':!.-.. -·!!.~~ ~.~~ ....... !!.~~ ~ ............. !!.~! ~ ............. !!~~ ~':.~~ ........... ~ ... ~~ ........... ~!·.~~.-.... .. GEM 1'75 Mm lV. M.l.nt cood. "7• Mu1t.a1 II Gbla, lt77 OLDS 1974 FOii> '71 Pinto Htchbck. Nu POllffcE 9961 ......._ 9961 r.tlac 9 65 to.led. '8700. Pvt Ply. '3100. • Cy\, • 1pd. Vin C..... s.pr,.. PINTO IUMAIOUT clutch, ou carb, 1teel ....... -•••••••••••• .............................................. . 1961 Eldo, '11,000 ml, S.0.'1100btwnWPM top. PIS. P/B, air, like If • mt'f. , ap8ed. air ccad new belt., dlac brka. Good '71 Fl.rebtrd, dark ll'eeD Mu.t..U "'73LeMansGT ''10 Ftreblrd f'ormt,a· =~.:.Boo~3c~, '76 Continental Town oew. 'lse.511G7or'42-Mo7 Cabft~!'io:' d~!~m-tlrea 4' ver1 abarp! ccod. $1060.873-2912 a50CC, uto., full Po\Ver: 3·1Pd ~tick, 3SO cc'. P/S, P/B, all". $1700 t. , Coupe. Completely 'M llUIW\l1 ireat eood. fort pwr. teats, ... 11/P'M ~).Salepdcedat ,.,,..... 99'0 many extna, low miles, AM/nl IJ.trk, lLlnt c:ood. '159-905& _____ _ fM El Dorado, showroom loaded very clean -.SO 4-epd •.All-FM caa.. SW.Ow/ltracktape,Wt Otl.Y $1275 :.!!: ................... M:.t~~i' '=.t'~· 5'M02ta1Upm. ~Trans Am Spec-Ed, ~~~·1010 mi's, 5219S. PP.M'i-7325 '. · 1142-38'11beUPll ,.. wheel, cruJae control, MllACLI 1974 Ply. SatelUte Sta. 87l·3ll57 ' · FREE•FREE opt.w£~Mld m~mbaTJ:7 'M Mustang, auto, 6 cyl, rallye wbeelt. pwr. door MADAjl.BtAULT Waa. ~pass· P/S, P /B. NotblncFNeToc:t.y Muat sell. $S,200. P /P '72 EL DORADO Convt. Con.... ,932 bargamSSl5. locka as 14,000 mUea. :moHatborBl c M Air. Gd. tires, \rana. lt7'POMTIAC But'l'bltCo..I""'" WUI ~ Choe. <Ruasett), bone•• .. ••••••••••••••••••• 54l-8083 Muat ... 1 (.OSYY). '41-1700 · • Cooler, air sbclcka, GIAMDPRIX ,_. •---------- mt. ~lop. All special op-•CORVETTES OML Y $6f99 trailer hitch, CB Radio Power-~ ~ door SAVE* SA VE v.,. 9'7 4 W~·~ aft 6Pll ~ 19781 '&8 Cl.ll'SJC PlmTuarUceDM "'16Squi.rewp, 4-spd, air. locL Good Coad. $1,IOO. ~kt. tilt. endse. stereo, 71GIAHDn.IXJ •••-••••••••••••••t••• ~ M Nabe Xlnl cond. Nu tires. 92lS.OrAJ11e,S.A. rallywbeel.I. (281.PQR) New A/C, AM/FM, new 1971 CHEVY ' '72 Old Eldo, blue, whl HNIOCWE~~DECI'IC.._•~•'•t ~~~:~6ebli. A/C. rs 29,000 mt. $3150. PP. '78 Volare Premier Wgn, $4988 tires, P -Seals, p . VEGAHATCHIAt:k top xln ,..... -~ 8'2-133Uya lo ml, cleao, U700. PluaTu&License windows, Ull, P·locks, A~Uc & ooly 5lf73S r ' t cond., best of DOVE&QUAILSTS. '68 Fastback, reblt bl· AUTOCIHTll "1 W .. •pd A/C 518-0'40 rally9 wbMla, vinyl top. miles. Blue w/tan in-• er.&73-4743 (Near MacArthur, Jam· rr d p s Dtv.otNabenCadlllac 2 qoo, ... • • &kf3l05A(T35LRY). t.erior.Arealruceebtvy. boree&tBruitol> f:;a: a!8:·u:c:P&/ma~: 14ZI IAKB ST. root rack, map, iood WIVallant..nmawell Nabers (lil8PJG). C we ''17 NEWPORTBEACH tape deck, :dnt cond + ~FROllFEDCO cond.$UOO.!W-6102 Goodcood1Uoo. 0M.YSI071 •••••••••••••••••••n•• many extr••· $2500. COSTAMISA 73 Pinto Waioa. ' apd', m.la.Mor775-0J.JZ. Cadillac 1977 CHIVY 078 T-top, 2l,OOO mi's, Tom. Dys 6'M8T1 Ditea 54•9 I Of AM/FM 1lereo, xlnt PoM1oc 99'5 ·~ .. CAMUO lll 11°1~1~~·1089A•.~!!~53$8000. 50-3172 .,.. cond. snoo. ~ 8jitiClrJ:a.a. • _. ........., ----------1•H•••••••••••••••••••• '.?600 H.1rhor Blvd. ""''MA7tl ?i~Jf,·00 miles COllCJClr 9933 a.l'IDbHe '955 ·~:~7~so~-;rm~1;'~ '73WllihPfnto. 2~'.65ao~a:::ii.:: :~ C.u~t.1MnJS-l0·9 100 OfferGoodTllSunday '74GThtchbck,4~pd,lo $6195 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'n1'9ll 3 wb old, expert 6'&-1771 S900 mecb, full pwr. A /C, C ....._.iuB.L '67 Cougar, rbll eng, auto. Cut I ass Supreme nm'gcond $1000. 635-0822 1495 842 S9S3 d 1972 Pontiac. LeM ana mi. AM·FM tape. drlt ~" PIS. A/C, b1lt mt. XJot Brougham '78, T-roof, '76AMPin/Fto~_cyXl.140stpdc,oAn/Cd.' 84.S-mev~/wknds ya, lt77POMTIAC Sport.Sml V-&,auto.alr, ~Xlnt. $1850 or ofr. CHEVROlET transp car, reas. pnced 455 eng w 400 trans Bargain, t eturning to w. Ateblrd ¥t ount cond. Ask'& $2000. 2828 Harbor Blvd. !ISS-1487 Loaded. Jn cl stereo tape Europe. must seU 1976 $21600/bsL 551-5197 '63 Pontiac Le Marus. iood With stereo cassette, 645-1418 '72 Vega GT Wgn. Ve~ gd C~A MESA Only :M,500 mi's. lmpec-Cut I a 11 Su Prem e 1971 Pinto good--..... ~ rood, nu brks, tire5, $.l50 ma.is & metallic pill.Ill. '70 Gr--.. Pr'-~-_ ... cood. but nds en& work. 546-1200 '68 Cougar 3-spd, 28K m1 cable cood. ~ Brouibam. 35,000 MI. pvt ..... .; ._ ........ ....,.., or best offer. 979-8670 (465RKS} .... '-' ...., .... Call ---------• oo rebll V.S. reas. MPG, Loaded. White w/blue _..., auto, air. PS/PB, SIW>O. 49t-83Sl. 7S. 14,000 mL Loaded. reliable trans. $1000. tmetrrLASS BRGHM vlnyl top, velour lop. 846-7@1 '88 Le Mana, Auto, P /S, SADOLllACK AM/FM, e.lec windows. '71 V~a, wpd. reblt eng. Llke brand new• See to 64.S-7680 BESTOFFER very clean. $4800. P/B, A/C, low ml, l YAWYIWOlt'fS Clance to own a clualc. newure..arbattay,f150. appr.$3950.645-3464 __ ~ 9'lS 840-0243 97~ WantAdResults 642-5678 owner.7S2·2209 lll·Z0404tM94f Sll7S.PP.963-9900 _fW0.._5230 ______ _ 1976 CHEVY ••••••••••••••••••••••• Allfoa. Hew 9100 A.tot, Mew 9800 Autos. Hew 9100 Autos, Mew flOO Alltos. Hew 9100 Alltos. Mew flO Allfos. Mew HOO CANA.RO J.9T1Aspen.6 cyl, AM/FM ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••• .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. ••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• 11lt"l"e0, asking $3400 or With only 26,772 miles bst ofr. 548·7746 bef S:JO ~PH>. or~7139aft5:30 $4995 CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 Harbor Blvd COSTA MESA 546-1200 Ch.Yf'Olet 9920 ..•.•••...•............ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~PHIL LONG FORD : Sacr1f1ce. new car in, * musl sell '7S Granada, '4K mi's, T.O.P. + caab Q{fer. 645-2890 • ROGER MILLER SA VS. ''Low Prices!" LEASING 494-1131 SU-9967 1977CHEVY CAPRICE '74 LTD SD P 8 . & P .S .. AM /FM stereo, with 8 track tape, &U" cond. (786KYJ) $2275 CLOSED EAST ER 540-5630 IOll~SOX&SO~ • LINCOLN·MERCURY 2626 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA CLASSIC 4 DOOR '74 Ford Tonno wgn, pwr, (4) ToCbooee From air, crwae, xtra cln. Factory all" cond , pwr. ~. 494-2130 steerane. automatic, . radio, heater, ttlt wheel, 62 Falcon Futura. Beige. 17Wf'. windows & two tone $300. ~ 98SS i>atnt. <~RLE>. Take -----· -----1 yourptcltat ~FordP.U.truclt ONLY $5895 $1.200cash. <COMMEL.L 84U44l CHEVROLET ~~ ••••••••••• !!~~ 2828 Harbor 81\d COSTA MESA 546-1200 197,CHEVY &.CAMINO CLASSIC. AutomalH'. pwr. steer1nJ!. lill'rl•o <'81111ell~ & only 10.~oo miles' U011688J SADDLUACK VAU.fY IMftORTS lll-2040 495 .• 4949 •975CHEVY MOH'TECARLO With only :11,896 miles (973M0R). $4295 COHHB.L 2-74UMCOLM COMTIMEHT ALS To Choose From t Coupe. 1 Sedan. Both have full power & lt·ather. {350LUY) 1666KJC> Our Special Price $4444 CLOSED EASTER 540-5630 1011 ssos & ~o~ • LINCOLN·MERCURY 2626 HARBOR BLVD. _COSTA MESA ·75 Mark IV, wht/blk Ian· dau top. J7M mi's, $8500, P P.532-5l.'.l8 -----CHEVROLET '56 8·r> I 462 ene, new 2.828Harbor Blvd t1r<'S, like new. $475. COST A M ESA 631 9946 ___ 5_4_6-_1_2_00 ___ 1 Mcrveri_c_k---9-9-4-7 •CORVAlll• ..Class1r convl•rtihlr. xl.nt cond $1495 SJll.9993. ••••••••••••••••••••••• n slvr gray Grabber, \' ll, vinyl top. new llres, i.tereo cass. Xlnt cond. $2200 496-6860 .:OS E l <:amino Mahbu ------~/sbell, xlnt t'Ond. $1650 '70 Mavenck. 2 dr, 6 cyl. ~or bestoffor. 751 468ft auto, 4 xlnt ~ond, new ---tires,$9()9.631-2336 167 Chevy Nova I(. ~ auto, P /S P/B, gd cond. MercYrY f950 $750.~5580 ·······'··············· '75 Chevy Monn 2 + 2 1htchbck. Wht/rcd Inter. t25.000 m1. Onfl L et111ec XJnt <Ond. Serv .-ecords avail. Good 2nd. '3rd or student ~ar. 30 mpe. 12650 ftrm. 673-44e8 __ _ ORANGE COUNTY'S MIWIST UNCOLN-MERCURY Dealenhlp ls now OPEN ttA Y R.ADEIOE t..INCOLN-KERCURY UH8 AutoOllnter Dr. SDFwy·Lake Forest nit 1977 Chev. Malibu clu11&1r. IRVINE 9-paaa. wp. Ylo/aaddle 8lG-7000 mt. Loaded. AM /FM +lipedeck, lit whl, rack, 76IOICATWA«W>M PC>Wer everythmg Below 4 cyl., 4 speed, radio, book. Bett otfer. 9SS-1931 heater. (1311"CD> evet • wlmds, 752-39$2 $2795 dally. '18 Chevy Malibu, 2-dr. auto tram. BIR. 350 STSO or bell oiler. f'1l.l5"l5 Ck~ ftZI ..... ~ .................. . I f71 CffUSUR COIDOIA CLOSED EASTE1l 540-H30 1011 '°SO\',\ ~O\' • I lf\11 1 •I N MI I 1r I lll"f Leasher ta&ertor, pwr•--~ ...... -----.----~ • door locb, 1ttno. lo"' rnllu . QllCl,JS) $4788 J> Tu'6LkfnH BRAND MEW 1978 CUTLASS SUPREME BROUGHAM load~d tnc:h,ICl•nQ .,, condlllOnmg lllW90, ~ ... 1. vl"YI top, ~ wmoo-crU1M control. etc BRAND NEW 1971 OLDSMOBILE STARFIRE BRAND MEW 1978 OLDSMOBILE 98 REGENCY I &&35) ISM4 7F8M41M089) IMMEDIATE DELIVERY . Tinted glass. 307 rear ax . 250 91111lne. $ 3 se>eed. steo bumper. oeuges. special paint. dome l1ghu. (12219) (TCD148Z515834) • IMMEDIATE DalVUY ( 112381 ( 3X89A8M1292091 (6444) f3T071ll0306432J IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 51 77 DISCOUNT ()11111 Su.4HSTID PACTOtlY UST ... ca B~:D '78 GMC Y2 TOii PICKUP 350 VS. automatic. Power steering. $ pawar brakes. etep bumper, gauo-s. apeclal paint. dome ligtlla. Callt., mirrors. (12211) (TCL 148Z515315) IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 971 ·~:0 '78 IMC 1 TON Call & Chassis Long wheel base. front slab. H D e>0wer brakes. 4 speed. 350 V8. aux tank. pawer steering. radio. gauges. solid paint. (12140) (TCL338Z511759) 56171 Automa1c. power steering & brakes. $ AM/FM radio. electric clock. gauges. 1111 wheel. air cond1tlon1ng. VS Loaded! (12146) (TGR268U506978J '74 DODGE· '75 FORD ~~.!' ... c:. pwr ••••ring .. s3277 tl<alte• •r oond , V1nyl IOC> tJudl1lt Sl!als A"' FM s111<eo • 8 trac1c 111>9 1685MIN). '74 LINCOLN COMntelCTAL MA.It( IY SWIMMll $267 ...,...._...._,__ ______________ _.. _____ _. Pow"' moonrool. •" cono. D'*• buk•• • w!nOowt • OOOt loc:k1 ~" c:onl rlllye wl>f'941. AMfFM II-. 1111 wlllHll. vinyl IOC> l low mi.. l324MMJ). MAKE OFFER Avtoma110. pwr sieering owr brakes vlnyl 100 raO•o hRl!er, cvsiom 1nl•rior l eatenor. I.ow mites 15HISPOl '75 OLDSMOBILE s2977 ~~!!!: . .., oonc1 • fNI', e1..ino a b<lk••· redlo. ,,..,41< t. low mu ... (837MEP). 74 OfM VEGA HATOfBACK Automatic transmission. flldlo. heater & rallye wheels. (877 JGOJ . '72 FORD GALAXIE 2 DOOR VB. aulomalic. power al"'1ng l brakel. vlnyt top. AM/FM radio. air cond, a Po\Nef w1ndowl. ( 174f8E). '73 DODGE MONACO 2 DOOR ve. air oond., automatic, powet ateenng a bralc9I, Vinyl top ' low miles. .. _______________ .. (428HGJ). 73 FORD PINTO RUNABOUT '74 FORD s2977 MUST .... AulOINlllC. -~ .., oond.. r111ve •'-4• AMIFM .. _ a • lrack I-(77S ... MN) Automatic nnemllllof\. rldlo Md heetet. (2MHOW>. 17 6 OLDSMOBILE 441-ote Of A IUMDI AUIOlnllllC. lltr Ci0'10 , AM/l'M 11- pwr 11.-lllQ • 11<111<.. • w1ncio-. CU\tOm QIUQff & r1llv• WllHIS (3&1NLY). MAKE OFFER '77 OLDSMOBILE s4· 777 CUn.ASS SUPltlMI Au1om1hc • .,, ~. vln~ too 1111 ..neitl AM,FM ~le<PO 6 I •M ~ l ,,..,, br81<M. ( 1828111)1 TAKE YOUR CHOICE ._ ____________________ _. ._ ____________________ .... > t MAKE OFFER ' ' $1171 an~·~ oe.....,.. lllWlclne °" ~ o.. .. ~ ~ c. ,.._ 11111 p1ue ... a ...... CIMrr9d ~ ortOt •tafl 04. "*'~ 'MCINTAOI MT! 1U4-., ,, 17 6 OLDSMOllLE fl IMIMCY COUPI s4777 l.oeOed ll'tl. " 11DO. w oond. AMl'M 11......0 t. '-· &.av"""· ...-. ~ door IOC ... , 1111 wll... I Cl'ulM con1ro1 1402064). P, l . -· .. . ~J.f DAIL V PILOT Frldax. M roh "4, 1!71 • CLEARANCE • CLOSE OUT SUPER SAYllllS BRAND Nlw 1977 AUTOMOBILES AT BELOW INVOICE IDIALl:IS' cosn OUR LOSS YOUR SAVI ISi INVOICE AY AILABLE FOR YOUR INSPECftON NEW 177 PINTO 2·DOOI SID.AM FACTORY All CO ... DITIOMHG NEW 177 PINTO J-DOOl IUMAIOUf PACTOIY All COMOmOHIHG Llohl blue, aelectsNlt ~IC. -ff(>nl dloc -· -lie.Ing. durb_ .. ignition, ·--'"° ,..,.., -· ,,llT)1 ,,.., ~ --"°"I bumper Q-delwt• •1-inO -· oound INU!atlon ~. -.....,llellon ._,,, .ex> CID VII -"" ~ _. oont101. tinted e- Buckel -. C010r•eved cut one c:•c>•"oO ,,..~ elec:l1!c: ,.. ""Nlow Clelr°"t., -hall vt"YI root. 2 II 11.,.. \/ .. _.,..., -ol>tlt c:<v......,..,,.hc. WIW redt• llr• -rllCk end Clinton ltMtinQ. -fn>nl doc "'-· -.ixe bu-~· AM t1ldlo. lnlwtor oecor oroue>. tlnled e-cornolel•. CIWll -' """""" --_ .. -.,..,.. molcltngo.. ($er. 7'110Z127604) (Sii. ·~> S..Cke1 Hala. CMl>flllnG nwnl<:OMOle lolcl-,_ -· ....,.nc •-window delroot9', lood lloor C¥P8t 211111., V .. _.,,., _,. cn.M~ CWQO .,.., cover. RWL ,..,... "'""· c:onven-119111 group. -,..,.. -"""°" llHnr>O tour....-; -"""' Or-. -. -ltonl dllC ~ AM r8dlo wtltl ll•eo 1-. eatenor CleCOt orouc>. CW01«:1ton group. -oi-.-. o.>11 -1 mlf'l'ln. br......,, 4-loflled aluminum -IS.. 7Rl1Z1:zs&el) (SO.. •009> BriQN -mellllle -""II cruo..-1e. --c11ec: -· - .. .,.,... ~ '9n1tlon •lffl-ted wow --· -'°""" --· Clrrech11e ..,....ton~ 361 CID VII-· al~ -lnm. bencll-. AM tedlo, -~....-. delwie ~ ccwers. IS.. 7H31k22216tl (SllL 6063) complete. 1911.fwld --. Ml....----.~~(S.. 7.Je3S1964115)($ni. 6196J leteil l'rift .................................... 16611 l•hdl ....... • ................................... SSJ50 l•t11il Pm• .................................... SS72J letttlf '"'• .................................... $6171 ••• P'rb .................................... 15410 &.•oic• Price .................................... S46tS 111 .. olc• P'rb .................................... SSOIJ le•olc• P'rb .................................... SSltZ OUI PllCI .................................... 14910 oua PtUct .................................... S42ts OUI Pl lCI .................................... S46 I J OUI PllQ .................................... S46t1 wk iaCl4I ""'llllic -Ill CfUIM-0"'6UC, -lrl)tM Oo«: br-. --11Q. ~ >Qnihon ayllem. 11 ... _ed recllal -lk-. "--,_ NEW '77 PIMTO J.DOOI IUMAIOUT FACTORY All COHl>ITIOMHG MEW '77 PINTO 2.0001 SID.AM UMIT'ED IDITIO ... PACIAM °""'°"' o-. left.f\oncl -· mirror. ~ dad<. --horn, -'Wfltllallon _.....,._ -lnsulorion '**-· -· lull .+rrr1 roof . .ex> CID VII Buc:l\el -·-Ing, -~ 1<>46-down ,_ """'· ~,..., wonclow oelfoott•. 1oee1 ""°' -· 2 e '""' v .. --· 111....., -111 roo1. ~" Cl'vl•tH>'fMtlc.. """'19 relf\'e pec:kage. wsw n1C11ll ,.,.. ~'ilht gl!OuP. so-metllllc. ""'-" """''°" ..... , ..... ell lltnyl --. COloN<eyeCI cul p+le eerpe11ng """'~· _,nc -..--· __ .., 111c11a1 11<91. br19ht WI-molclrngs. ..... tyfed llM4 wl-w/lr!M --body IU•IOM P•H1til-. °""' IN! room l*nl 1111~ llipuP -•• roof :t8 liter v.e eno•ne, 1o1ec1v.11 cr111....,_1e, -v me,,.,.. .,,,_.. oea• !Nllno1t bu,,_ gtoup AM/FM mon11utrll rlOCllO, llnled ot-<OmPiele. Cll>ll te>ort .-rors. (Ser. 7R IOZ12862&) (Slk. 411&1 Cllllm(>a\f,,.. ~ ~ Po'W• "°"' dooc ~ -11~ Clura1par1< Ignition. ~ed .-i WIW «r• ongN _,,., """""'9e. lllOf'll *'Cftne, IJll ~ -· tlnger1ip-con<rol. --..... eleetrlC ·-.,.._.,, AM/FM -eo. ..,_ t...wy group. tinted gtaN..,.,..,.,..... livh!DtOUP.~-cloaf-(Ser 7J6451511241(Sll< 44701 AM redto .....,, M•eo •-Nllertor decor orouo. extenor -group. llnled gtan-oompl«tl. ®aj ._i mlrtof•. wtre .. -covers IS.. 7RI IZll711MIHSll< 4497) bencl\ ... 1. -.Xe -~·· Cllrectaw• ,,.,,,.~ .. .,,., ~ . .ex> Clo va e<>Qone. all ""'l'I -trim. delu•• bumper orgup. .-~"· -..a -..,..,... IS... 7H31~UMlllStk. 6514) &eteil rrtc• •................................... SIH I 1.t.u Prtc. .................................... sstoo l~.il Pric• .................................... S4t I I let.ii Prtc. .................................... SS70Z ... olc• ~ .................................... S6tJ O llt•olce f'ric• .................................... 15164 h1Yolc• P'rb ........ , ........................... S4J21 la•olc• f'ric• .................................... S417 ~ OUI PllCI .................................... S64J O OUI PllCI .................................... S4764 OUI PllCI .................................... SJ tJI OUI NJ.Ca ................ ······r•~···•·S4J7l /.~Zi~ MEW 177 PINTO NEW 177 PINTO ~ 2;:.t:. 2·00 01 SEDA ... ""'.\ _ -f'ACfOIY All COHDITI~MG 2.0001 SID.AM FACTORY All COHDtflOHl..O l.1ght bluu MJ4ec:t&n1rt Cn.Ms&--<>-mahc. oowet frOf"lt ddC btM• PoW1lf steering, Ck>r..,,.rk 190,1on t.1-..~ted r.Ot•t wsw bre&. WT)1 lntert booVSJiDe mok:hl"IQI front bvm-guarelo. -....e "-wneet '°""" lnsulahOn '*"'-· _.. Ventlllllton llYSlern. 400 CID V8 --· ~ ~ tnm. "'-!IO -control, ,_ CJumpet QVaRll. '"""" glau<>O<nplete. lell"*'<I ,......,.. """°"· lull .meet co~ Ma\l'fekity__,...,,. (Ser. 7J83St0!61VHS!t.. 611MJ l•toU Pric• .................................... $6611 Bucket wets Cllle>etmo fTMnj~ft etecrrte '".., wmdow oeftost«w 2 81119' V-6 engine. MttectSNft CfVls.e-O·tNOC. RWL ,.. ... lKn. conv&nNtnt~HIQN OTOYP power racll ...0 '"""'" """""II· POwtw "°'11 Ckoc btllkes dei<i•• "'-group AM rlldta mtenor oec:xw QrOi.JO, finteo g!ass-comotete, 4-styied st~ ~llttuTI rrngs (SM 7R10l173004J iStk. 4616) Bu.ctii;ef Sftll" CMJ>fl!'f•no rTMru-con~e etectnc rear WJnclCW do&froetftf" t>tue ~t vtn.,t roof 2 8 lifftf V fti eng~ M4ect1tt.tt Ct\ll~ W8W rad~ Ote& pow-et fKk ano ()trwat Cllf)('tfinQ. k:>ut-ww)' m~ ~ .... oowet h'MI d'9C bt_.K. oe1u1,tt bv""°8' QtOuO AM/FM ~ rldiO ,...eN>r oecxw 9rouo '~"'*' o•as\-comotete dull SOOf1 m•rTOt'I • ..,. w,... ~ rocker '*'et '"'*"'nvs (Ser 7R10Z1270101,Stt. 46711 ...... c. f'ric• ................................... ,,5410 l .t11ll PriYW .................................... SSJ70 Retail Pri•• .... ,. .............................. SNt7 . 111.,oice f'ric. ..................... , ...... , ....... S 4 7 I 0 l11•olc• ~ .................................... 14tt2 OUI PRICE .................................... S4tl 0 OUI Pitel .................................... S4ll0 OUI f'llCE •...•••••.••.••••••••••••••••••••••• S45tZ CALL NEW 177 PIMTO 20001 SEDAH FACfOIY All COHOITIOHIHG 546-7070 FOR Buckel •••11 -·"II."""'~· etectnc ·--Oelroller ll 8 111 ... v~ ~tne. se'8C1Wlln a~1hc wsw r.011J ttr• PoW9f' reek and oitruon ...... ng. -""'11 dltc bra~ ... d"IUUI ~""""' AM redlo. ,,,._ - QrOuD ... 1enor""""' group. Ml.CS Oiuo-complet• °'* ._,"""or.. -~ -COYefll lS., 7A10l123667)(Slk. 4~3&) 9l•tell Prhr• .................................... SSJJ4 FREE CREDIT • l11woice Price .................... , ............... $4611 CHECK OUI l'ttlCI .................................... 14211 • 177GRANADA 4..0001 SID.AM f'ACTOH All COMDITIOMING ~.~n;.~:.::!~tt::'.:'!t.~~· ~==-~~~-~~:.c:;~ = ,.q , .. ~ ............ ...._ _ '°"'· J07~V8 ""Ii"'< -"'"'' """'"~""'•!<.,,,,..,;, ''*.-,'"" tJCfW"f' front ct.x br-...S drtu•e bumper ~. Aa.4: r«tao. l'f"l«I c&.aH<.OmP'tte. •~.o!>ohty ll'OUI> (Sot 1W11Jn 3680C HSlll.4 l 471 Original Sticker Price ................ $8355 OUR PRICE •••••• $4855 NEW 77 LTD LANDAU 4-000tl f'IUAAID HARDTOP f'ACTOtlY Alt COHDl110MHG ~~~r~,o:t~:·;~~~~ ... ~~o;!,dt~tMl~~~~- llAf'ld t.n-iote nnor. Mettnc: <tock4 OUli Not@ Hom. color ""9ytld dan:e Wti... pow!lllf" _ .. ,.,,, •Y'lorn • ......i ensulol.,,, ~.Clow s•"I' Mt..,..,. root. •OIJ 00 VII_... :,~~·~c:..":f.~r:':,'~~~.z;:.~=~= ..--lclcU. (s.. 7 X..S14978l) (SI~ -Ml6) Original Sticker Price ..•............. $8860 OUR PRICE •••••• $5860 177 GRANADA 4-000I GHIA SIOAM *ACTOH All CC>f'tOtnoMMG ~J= ~;~~,,~~ cJ'u7., ~roc)fP«~.az::: ~t ';:' ::."1.::.'~1'0.0":e ~~ ~~t.;::;,sec0,.~ ~()Up ... ~~~ :_s:;= ;:r..,:::; ~~'f;'f1f}.)"cst:'~ -~ .,_, 1111'1 fr'OUP. -clOOr loch IS.. Origi nal Sticker Prfce ................ $7511 OUR PRICE •••••• $5711 177 GRANADA 2·000tl GHIA SIDAH f ACfOIY All COHOmOMMG ~;: =~"-"~-===--:..."'n:'~ric.~ ......... '"""'°"' 302~---· Mloct""" (T ..... 0-llt . ..,....._. "'°"P· dorl.tl doclo. Ml•·--· -,_.....-"II -"'"""'-•..,,., -,••t. -"°"' -brol. ... _,, --croup. AM l'M ., .. ..,_ tint«I ~. -~ "'"''°'"' ~ .,oup. power-llCt9 ~. '"*' &tMf ~. """ rinp. (Ser. l'WIMFI 79801)(5tk ... 7> Orlgln•I Sticker Price ..........•..... $7795 OUR PRICE •••••• $5795 '78 THUNDERBIRD FACTORY AJA CONDmoNING Autometk transml11Slal!1 Plll"f' JtHf'"'9. ~ llfelln. lllltf'• ~ Comfflnt ~ tlll ster,lno Wflfft, JPMd control, ~ -t ei.<\rk rHt wltldllW9, etfrwter, AM·fM Slilfff rMle Wftll t~i!.llterW CleCo.-.,...,._ tnt.W hllNry oro.. tlttted eius, w. •1,,1'1St- Orfgln .. Sticker Prfc. ...••..•......•• $1&71 OUR PRICE .•.... $7475 LTD COUPE MUSTAHG PIHJO 2-DOC>a SEOAH Auto. trans . air cond1t1oning, radio. vinyl roof. Lie. #ZOV725 Auto . trans . r•d 10. Lie. 4 speed. radio. lie. #869DSY Stk. #8170. #OYN079 Stk. #8204 Stk. #8166. •75 FORD IUT'E Auto. trans., air cond11toning, AM/FM radio. vinyl toot. ,111 wheel. Lie. #224NKR Stk. #P8084. 53699 176 AMC SPOITAIOUT WAG<>,.. 6 cyl .. auto. trans .. air cond .. p. steering. p. disc brakes. 111nyl roof. 10 #A6A087A154463 Stk. #P8030. 53799 •74 FORD RAMCHBOGT Auto trans., air cond., p. steering, p disc brakes. AM/FM radio. lllt wheel. tuiwry Int .. mag wheels. raised wl\lte Uttter tires. lie t39892U Stk. fP8056. s1999 176 FORD FI SO PtCICUP V·B. auto. trans., air cond .. p. steering, p disc brakes. radio, heater. Ranger XL T Package. auxiliary gas tank. chrome step bumpers. Lee. #979532 Stk. #8502A. 54499 '74 CHEVY YEGA 4 cyl . 4 speed. radio. heater. Lie. #811LOTStk J8105. '75 FORD MA Vlll'JCa 4 DI. 6 cyl . auto. trans . air eond . ...p. steering. p. disc brakes. radio. vinyl roof. wheel covers. luJtury decor option. Ser. #5K~2l 165920 Stk #8139. GlAMADA 2 DI. V·8. auto. trans .. air cond .. p. steering. p. disc brakes, radio, tinted glass. wheel covers. Landau tap. lie. #607RXO Stk #P8129. 54599 .. 176 MERCURY MOMA.lat 2 DI. V·8. auto. trans .. air cond., p. steering. p. disc brakes, p. windows, AM/FM rad io. whitewall tires. tinted glass. w/c. Landau top. cruise control. Ser. t6W35L573031 Stk. #P8108. 53499 176 DATSUN ptCt(UP 4 cyl .. <4 speed, AM/FM radio. white spoke wheels. 7 ft . Bed. custom interior, chrome step bumper. raised Whit• letter tires. Lie. #K42054 Stk. 18049 . 53699 MOMRC.u10 \/·8. auto. lrans .. air cond .. p. steering. p. disc brakes. AM/FM radio. tinted glass. landau toP. «u1se control. Lie #918NZK Stk. #P8117. 54799 •77 FORD LfDWAGOH V·8. auto trans .. air cond .. p steering. p. disc brakes. radio. heater. wheel covers. Only 5,816 miles. Lie. #725SLO Stk #P8070 54699 177 THUNDERBIRD V·8. auto. trans .• air cond., p. steering. p. disc brakes. p. windows, radio. heater, wsw vinyl roof. tinled glass. tilt wheel. Lie. t377TGB Stk #P8125. 55999 175 FORD GIAMADA 4 DI. SIDA ... v..a. auto. trans • p. steenng, p. disc brakes. radio, heater. buci<et seats. silver finish. red interior. Ser. !t5W81Fl75868 Stk. #8109. 1 76 FORD PIMJO WA(l()M 4 speed. air cond1t1on1ng, radio. Lie. #678PKE Stll. #8219. •74 MOVA HATCHIACIC V·8. auto. trans .. air cond .. P steering. radio. vinyl roof. rallye wheels. Lie. #109LGY Stk. #8061. 176 DATSUM 1210 2+2 4 eyt., 4 speed, radio. heater, whitewall tires. wheel covers. Lie. #974PLW Stk. #P8060. 177 FORD PtHTO .c cyl . auto. trans • air cond .. p. steering. p disc brakes. radio. llnted glass. w/c. Only 8.900 miles. lie. #628SOE Stk. #P1589. '73 FORD PIHTO 2 Dll SIDAH Auto. trall'S . AM radio, heater luxury inlenor lie t818GMC Stk. #8209 Huntington Beach Fountain Valley EDITION Yoar Bomeiowa Dally New paper I VOL. 71. NO. 83,. SECTIONS, 40 PAGES i J . ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MARCH 24, 1978 TENC~ S ! . arvis \ t f By GARY GRANVILLE Ot -o.llr ...... SIMf When they weren't sticking verbal barbs into one another durin& a debate Thursday. tax reform advocate Howard JarVJs Jlld Assemblyman Ron Cordova. D·El Toro, took turns praising and condemrung Proposition 13. As was expected, it was Jarvis '\\lho praised the June 6 ballot measure lhat bears his name, Valley Factory Planned A l arge 'German-bas ed corporation is proposing to build a 186,000·square-fool factory in Fountain Vetlley that could e\•entually mC'an about 800 nev. Jobs in the area. off1 c iah announced lodav Fountain Valiey City Council members plan to meet Tuesday night with BASF Corporation representatives lo discuss the proposed $29 milhon video tape recorder factory that may be built on the southeast corner of Talbert Avenue and Ward Street. City Manager James Neal said today negotiations arc still under way with BASF off1c1als But Neal added , "They are anxious lo g~t undl•r way with the plan " Neal ~aid dly aides are ~till analyzing the BASF plan and do not yet know what 1l may mean in city lax revenues .. Jl appears to be a pretty slgni11cant increase in revenues," Neal said. Neal said BASF is the 18th Ulrgeat corporation in the world with facilltJes in the U S and other countries. Neal said the proposed 21·aere plant would cost about $7 million for the building and about S22 million for the m achrner) housed there The proposed sit<.' 1s adjacent to the San Diego J<'rccway within the Fountain Valle y redevelopment area Neal said the City Council will meet Tuesday acting as the Fountain Valley Agency for Co mmunity Development in considering the BASF proposal .. The city contribution toward providing ser vices ror the facility is not known at this lime,'' Neal added. Neal said the firm would initially hire about 400 employees and could hire about 800 worken. within three years 1f lbe project is approved Neal said BASF officials consider the Fountain Valley site a llkely prospect because or the city's Agency for Community Development 1 Teen Suspects , {From CM, SA ? Held by Cops I Two teen·agers wearing fake beards and carrytng 88 guns were arrested Thursday evening near a Costa Mesa shoe store 'po I i c e be I i e v e t h e y w e r e preparing lo rob. I Police said Brian Thompson or Santa Ana and Mark Allen Charkey, 3137 Boston Way, Costa Mesa, are in custody [ today OD charges Of conspiracy to commit robbery Bail for the two, both 18, has been set at $25,000 eacb. I Lt. George Lorton said police I 'were alerted shortly after B:'30 p.m. Thursday by a caller who reported "two su1plc1ous '!Dales" outside a IOoney's shoe score at 281Jl Harbor Blvd. 1 PoUce mov 1n and arrested 1tbe two men, walo were relieved !<If their fab.o beards. LUltr·atyle .~B tun arid a pellet flrln1 rlfle. Runs A.gain vs. Cordova: Reform vs. Ripof the Jarvis·Gann tax reform initiative. As might be expected, Cordova walked away from hls encounter wilh Jarvis a wiMer m the eyes of a majority of the audience, members of the American Association of Public Administrators A poll taken at the close of the session m Garden Grove showed an overwhelming reaction ag a Inst Proposition 13 by association members, most ol them government employees. Cordova co ndemned Proposition 13 as "a ripoff" l.Mt pretends lo befriend homeowners and renters while actually favoring large property holders. Proposition 13 seeks to clamp a lid on property taxes by rolling values back to their 197S-76 levels and limiting tax rates to what county &Saessors said was then full cash value. Jarvis started the debate's verbal darta flyln1 when he characterized Cordova's openinc rem aTk:s as comln1 from "the voice of inexperience and a vacuum of opinion." From that point on, the debate was a heated discussion bet.ween a 30-year·old freshman state assemblyman and a 7S-year-old retired businessman wbo has spent more than a decade crusading for property tax relief. Cordova made it clear that be, loo, favors tax relief as well as restraints on government spending. "But does Proposition 13 limit government spending? No," Cordova replied in answer to tus Huntington Election own q uesUon. "And in what manner does it provide tax relief, equitably or Inequitably? I suggest to you that ProposlUon 13 is the biggest ripoff we can imagine." Cordova went on to say. in effect, that the Jarvis brainchild offers only token relief to homeowners and renters while eiving major property ownen; (See JARVIS, Page AZ) MacA11ister Leads In Endorsenients By ROBERT BARKER 01 ... O.llr ll'loe4 Si.ti Caty council challenger Don M;lc.Alhster apparently has the di~inctJon of being the most endorsed candidate lo date for the April 11 Huntington Beach city elections Mac Allister. president of the Huntington Beach High School District Board of Trustees, has been endorsed by both teachers 3 Finalists and em"ployees in the d1stncl, the Chamber of Commerce poht1cal action committee and the Huntington Valley Little League. He also is among the list of 11 candidates that the Amigos de Bolsa Chica says it can support. Incumbent Al Coen and challenger Ruth Bailey are fighting it out for the next hi g h es t number of Daryl Gates Named L.4 Chief of Police E.R.A. Born E R .A., even if it ncvC'r becomes national law, is assured an active future because that's the name of this baby girl. lier mother. Judv l\l c Carthcy of Phoenix, was in Washington Thursc'tay lobbying' for the Equ'al Rights AmPndmcnt. Pilgrims Trudge Toward Calvary JERUSALEM <AP l -Thou· sands of pilgrims trudged along the rain-dampened Via Dolorosa this Good Friday, many or them laboring under heavy wooden crosses, to mark Christ's march lo his crucifixion Related story, A7. The solemn procession led by Franciscan friars in brown habits wound through the ancient lanes of Jerusalem's Old City, stopping for devotions at the 14 stations of the cross The hour-long walk ended at the C hurch or the Holy Sepulcher, lhe traditional site of Calvary. In the courtyard of the 800·year-old church, knots of worshippers waited their turn to file through the wooden doors. The Latin liturgy echoed off the stone walls inside the church Strong Qualoo Hit,s Sea Area as the p1lgnms hied up the sleep s taircase to the spot where tradition holds Christ was crucified. "In spite or lhe chaos during the procession, I felt a great deal of spirituality," said Rex Barnes , a pilgrim from South·West Africa. "This tends to s trengthc:n my faith in Christianity. •·Parts or the procession were badly organized, but everyone seemed to get into the spirit of things. I wasn't disappointed at all," he said. Some pUgrtms llt candles and stopped at Christ's tomb tnside the same church, Ju.at a few yards from Calvary. The tomb will be the center of Easter Sunday celebraUons. Worshippers knelt to kiss the stone or unction, where Christ's body 1s said to have been wrapped In a shroud. Others had their picture taken at the stone or as they hoisted a l O· foot cross outside 1n the courtyard. LOS ANGELES (AP> Daryl F . Gates was named as the c1ty ·s new police chlef today, succeeding Edward M. Davis. The decision was made by the c1ly Police Commission after several rounds of lengthy interviews The five members of the c omm1ss1on delayed the selection one day to call back Gale~ and deputy chiefs Robert L. Vernon and Charles 0 Reese for final interviews Thursday. It was the third time the group had been interviewed. None of the three candidates or members of the commission would discuss specific questions asked. Davis retired this year arter serving as chief since 1969. He is seeking the Republican gubernatorial nomination Gates, 51 , who finished first on the civil service exammat1on for chier. spent the most lime with the comm1ss1on 1n the final mterv1ews. The 29-year veteran, who took the police chief examination in 1969 and ruushed fourth, became closely associated with Davis an the following years. He 1s said lo have been groomed for the chief's job by Davis. As director or the office of operations since 1971. Gales has directed all uniform, patrol, traffic and air support operations of the department. He is best known publicly as lhe head or the department's task for ce working on the Hillside Strangler case. Although the commission had not Cormally voted, a motion to name Gates was seconded rapidly, and even commissioner Stephen Reinhardt, who earlier expressed reservations about the civil service selection process, said Gales "is my choice.·· Commission President MariaMa Pfaelr.er said. ''Never has there been a search as (See GATES, Page AZ> Annual Event Pair Re-enQCt f:truci~n .,..,,_,... .. NEW POLICE CHIEF LA Selects Gates Trio Arrested In Tow Truck By NB Police Three Huntington Beach men riding in a tow truck were arrested by Newport Beach police early Thursday after a patrolman became suspicious as the truck cruised the Balboa Peninsula. Offlcer Thomas Tolman said he stopped the truck after verifying that it was not responding lo a motorist's call for help. Inside, the patrolman said he found a stolen parking meter head. Booked o n charges of receiving stolen property were Donald Dolph, 27, of 18301 Patterson St., Darrell Sanchez, 24 and Ralph Sanchez, 20, both of 19301 Weakfish Ave. Dolph was released late Thursday after postint $2,500 bail. Tolman said be became auspicious of 1.be lruck which M spotted after a a.m because of a series of thefts of parking meter beada that bu pla1ued the clty In rec~ months. Patrolmen bave boea ordered to look for a tow truck became one was &een by witnesses at the scene of one of the thefts. Raid Nets Seven LOS ANGELES (AP) -An elfhl·month, und•rcover lnvHlifaUon ended.In a aumbu of raids in Les An1eJes County t.bat Dcu.d five m n and two wooiep, boOkmakl.DI records &Da otber naeteri&l.. .. endorsements Coen and MacAlhsler are also on a final list of candidates to be endorsed by the employee organizations of Huntington Beach. The employee groups have interviewed Coen, MacAllister, Ted Bartlett, John O'Connor. Frank Hoffman, Bill Tizzard and Bob Mandie. A spokesman said that a final selection of the four top candidates from the interview list will be made next week The employees groups, comprised of city hall t'mployecs and poltce, fire and marine safety officers also have apparently narrowed their choice for city attorney to Jerry Bame and Gail Hutton. Incumbent Don Bonla was not selected for a final interview and is not expected to be endorsed by any or the groups, a spokesman said. llere is how lhe endorsements stack up to date· -HOME CouacU: Coen, Mrs. Balley, John Thomas. Gail Hutton tor city attorney. -Haatl•gto• Valley Little League: Mandie, MacAllister. Steve Kane. Mrs. Bailey. -Dlstrl~t Edac:ators Association: MacAllister, Bill T1zzard. -Amigos de Boise Cbic:a: (Can support any o f the following): Mrs. Bailey, Coen, Kane, MacAlhster, M andic, O'Connor. Gordon Offstein, Chuck Osterlund, Thomas, Tiizard and Ed Zschoche. -Chamber of Commerce: C oen. Bartlett, Hofr'man. MacAllister. Bame has also gained the endorsement or the Chamber in the race for city attorney. Smuggling Bottled Up KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP) A court in Alor Star sen· tenced two Indonesians, Idris Ibrahim. 32, and Zahari Hamid. 25, to pay fines of $1,000 each or spend three months in jail for trying to !lmuggle 3,885 empty bottles lo Sumatra. The two pleaded guilty . The bottles were found March 6 In a boat in which they were prepar· Ing lo cross the Strait of Malacca. Malaysian bottling firms have been reporting a shortage of used bottles. Coast Weather Sunny and warmer Saturday Lows tonight 50 to SS Hifths Sah1rday 70 to 75 INSIDE TODAY What t• bdhd as a major Weit Coo.it ~ Of tote 11urreoff1m orti•t WUlfam Boztotn Ol)d1ted toda~ at N•wport llarbor Art MUI.um. StMJI and photoi Oii POflf Cl ' . A2 DAIL V PILOT H ~ 'Jlaree Year• 011 FV Post Office ... Site Selected By RAYMOND ESTRADA JL Ot .. DellJ f"lllll Stan A U.S. Postal official revealed Thursday that the "prefe.rred l~allon" for a new, lar ger post otnce In Pountaln Valley ls the l'entral part of the city bounded by Warner and Talbert avenues and Bu.shard and Ward streets. But actual construction or the new postal facility is still at least three years away, said Hector Godinez, district manager for the P06tal Service in Orange County. l''ountain Valley residents and HBWoman Fires Gun; Man Flees A 43·year·old Huntington Beach woman fired rive rifle shots through her Jivingroom window and scared off a suspeeted cat burglar early Thursday, pc1lat•e reported. Harbara Jean Hendricks, of 8831 Deville Circle, told police i.hc was sleeping in her living room with a 22 caliber rine at her s1d1• an tal>I:' a burglar. who ... truck hl'r home Wednesday night, came back. Mrs. Hendricks said she was awakened at 2 23 a m . by a ma le youth tapptng on her \\. lndow. The youth called out, .. Hey, you m there." The armed woman then fired five shots through the curtains, shattered the wmdow and sent the terrified suspect fleeing from the scene No one was hurt The su. ... pected burglar was not apprehanded . Police s aid m~•1ghbors in thl• art'a dad not report the incident and were apparently undisturbed by the shots. Mrs I l<'ndnck:-; said nolhm~ was taken 1n either or the burglary attempts. 32 Nabbed In Oxnard Vice Sweep OXNARD <AP> -Vice and narcotacs d<'tect1ves from the Oxnard and Ventura police departments have arrested 32 persons 10 a s weep on \'1ce which police say has skyrocketed 500 percent m five years. Batt 1n Thuri.day night's arrests was an undercover policewoman who was solicited by 27 men as she stood in a parking lot al the Plaza Marina shopping center in the city's south end. T w o w t· r c a r r e s t e d ro r interfering with an officer, and another for being under the influence of narcotics as she sat ma bar. Oxnard police Lt. Don Hanline attributed the rise 1n vice act1v1lv to the c1ty·s low batl of $250 roi-arrested prosht\4eS. · Other areas have bails as high as $2,SOO, and the word is out," he said. "The pimps are branging in girls from all over the place " Police srud citizens have been robbed, beaten, blackmailed and kidnapped. often at southside area motels. Two motel operators were arrested during the sweep. A Ventura County deputy d istrict attorney was present durlnf the arrests to &Ive police Jega advice on avoidi ng entrapment situations. ORA MOE COAST "'~ DAILY PILOT • I orticiats have waged a six-year battle to have the Postal Service build a lar&er facility In the city to rept•ce the current post ornce on Slater Avenue. "We've been fighting for\'ears and I'm thriUed lo see this -it's the first positive thing I 've seen," said Fountain Valley Mayor Marv Adler. Although all city orficlals said they were encouraged by Thursday's announcement, Mayor Pro Tem Roger Stanton said, "Three years is a ridiculousJy long time to wait." Stanton said city officials wlll meet with postal representatives as soon as possible to speed the process. Postal Service 0Hic1als said the proposed facility would contain about 12,000 square reet of interior space aod be situated on an 81,000.square-foot site. The expanded post office would double the number of auto parking spaces and customer serv ice windows, officials said. Fountain Valley r ei>idents have bemoaned the scant 25 parking spaces and long window hn<'S at the present post orrice. "A new, larger building and site are needed lo eliminate the deficiencies," God1neL said. Conditions became so crowded in the post office parking lot and anterior that its 38 mail earners and their deLivcry vehicles were transferred to the Huntington Beach station near Atlanta Avenue and Magnolia SLreet Ill January. Godine:i said this was an interim solution to crowded conditions in Fountain Valley. FrOlll Page A J JARVIS ... g1gant1 c benefits. fn rebuttal, Janas i.<11d. "It 1s 1diot1c lo say we should hav(' only relief for owners of occupied dwellings." "To say we're hurling the homeowners 1s s illy," J arv1s said as he labeled existing property regulations "grand felony thefl." The veteran reform campaigner went on lo fall back on constilutionaJ property rights safeguards to support his advocacy. But when Jar vis alleged that statewide there are "7 ,500 foreclosures from tax failures a month," Cordova quickly went on the attack. "No home has succumbed to laxes in this county in the past five years." Cordova ~aid to refute the claim of massive tax foreclosures. He went on to argue that Proposition 13 will force locaJ governments to dependency on the stale for revenues needed for their support. "And the state has never passed an opportunity to seize more control over local governments," Cordova argued. We'll fix that, Jarvis said. "We have another amendment about ready to go. It will freeze all sales and income taxes al their January 1979, levels." Jarvis said. When asked, he balked al c1hng any examples of so-called fat in government spending, but decried the doubJtng or government employees in Los Angeles County since 1965 llut Cordova argued the Jarvis approach to reduced ~overnment spending 1s a meat axe approach "that would cut the lean out as well as some of the fat.•· Cordova also charged that Proposition 13 backers' appeal for support from renters has little substance because ''there Is nothing but a personal guarantee from Mr. Jarvis that rent.a will be lowered." We'll soon fix that, Jarvis said, announcing that full pqe newspaper ads wtll soon appear that will carry sponsoring landlord euarant.ees of no rent increases ror two years should Proposition 13 be e nacted. Cor dova appeared to catch Jarvis off guard when he pulled o u t a computerized letter solicitin g p ro· Proposltton 13 funds from apartment hou1e own ers, a letter t hat said landlords have the matt to gain rrom an elecUon vlctorv. ''Yea. tbat'a oura, •• Jarvta mu1ed u be studied I.be appeal for a '1 m1Won war cbelt needed in tbe PrupoeiUoo U campalp. 'FURNISHINGS' :I FWOR FEATURE You'd expttl lb~ ~.01, two noon o1 Ure f'IDOr IKlllGJftl t.n ln lne to be deeoratea ltb conl•tnponrJ tumU 11111, bUt ln fact, lt'a pure 1l&h ~. See J'&INriftl. PllWBl. ,.,,., ........ PORCH OF BROWN'S POSSIBLE RETffEAT FEATURES ROCKING CHAIR IN DOORWAY Governor May Purchase Rustic Remote Home: '160 Acre• of Peace' Brown Finds 'Peace' Govenwr Eyes Remote Country Home By WALT ZEBOSKI ~ . ..-.................... NORTH SAN JUAN -Gov. Edmund houses, three sheds and an outhouse Drown Jr described the retreat that he plans surrounded by black oaks, ponderosa pine, lo buy near this old Gold Rush town as "160 sugar pine, manianita and madrone trees acres of pt-ace .. and large granite rocks covered with green The pljcc hvt!s up to his descnptaon velvet moss. It 1s P<'acMul, remote and rustle. The old fa.rm is Just 85 miles by road from the Capitol in Sacramcnto east to the Mother Lode 111..:hwa>. then north past Grass Valley to a -.eracs of progressively more anl1m1dat1ng paved and muddy roads lo Montezuma Ridge near San Juan. THERE ARE NO TELEPHONES and no t'll•ctnc1ty Water comes from a spring. The t•levat1on 1s 3,000 feet T HE DRIVE F ROM THE Capitol took more than four hours, including several stops for directions and the time I was stuck m a deep rut in the road at the bottom of the hill leading to the governor's land. On the front porch of one of the houses. I found an old wooden rockang chair and walking stack. A wood-burning kitchen stove, at least hair a century old, was in the latcben of one of the other houses. All the buildings are vacant, and they look like they've been that way for a long lime. M 1lhous Acres. named for relatives of former President Nixon, 1s about llh miles west Pulitzer Prtze-wannang poet Gary Snydn, a fncnd of the governor, also lives m•arhy BROWN DOESN'T OWN TIIE property yet, but terms or his $53,000 purchase have been completed, aides said. Tht-form consists of lhrt·c aging wooden "fie has an option which he apparently v. i 11 exercis~," sa 1d his assistant press st'cr(•tar.v. Bobbie MetLger Another Satellite May Fall From Sky MONTREAL CA P > -The Canadian Press today quoted the space laboratory in Bochum. West Germany. as say&nl? that another Soviet satellite may fall out of orbit about Apnl 20, but that 1t v..a:. loo soon to tell where 1t v..ould fall The n{'v..s agency said Heinrich Kamansky, director of the l<tboratory. reported in iJ telephone interview that Cosmos kl9 wa:. following a s1m1lar path to that of an earlier satelhte that «ras hcd an the Northwest Territories this year . The earlier satellite, Cosmos 954, was nuclear-powered and s ho'A-ered rad1oact1ve debris over the Canadian north when it c ra s hed , but it was not 1mm~d1ately clear whether the ~cco nd sa tellite also is nucl~a r-powerf'd. ln an interview from Bochum with Nouvelli>s Tele-Radio, the French-language broadcasting -.erv1ce of the Canadian Press. Kaminsky said he has asked the Soviet space agency In Moscow for further. tnformation about Cosmos 849~ It was launched Aug 18, 1976. M eanwhlle, radiation levels have increased sharply in two c 1tles ns a result of China's recent nuclear explosion, but the Environmental Protection Miners Vote A.gain Today On Contract WASHINGTON <AP> -The nation's striking coal minen, defia n t and unpredicta ble throughout t h eir 109·day walkout, are voting again on whether lo accept a new contract orrer. As befoTe, mott ofn<:lals or the t 'nlted Mme Workers said they tixpect a close decision by the 160,000 soft coal miners eligible to vole today at union halls from Appalachia to the Roc:kles. "I ain't making predlction!i" about the final outcome, UMW President Arnold Miller aaid Thuradl y wbll• t11tnc from Waahlngt.on t.o hia home District 17 in Cb&rl Loo, W. Va. But then he i>redtcted that the 21.~00·1n•mber dtltrlct, t he union'• lar1e.t, would approve the new accord. Agency said today the levels do not pose health lazards The EPA 's air mon1tortng tt"sts found rad1at1on levels rt>a cht ng 85 p1coc uries in o~n,er. Colo. and Cheyenne. W )o !'ormal background rad1at1on m<'asures from 10 to 15 p1c·oc·unt·s and not until the lt'vel rearht·.., 1.CJOO 1.., tht•n• cause r11r C'oncl'rn. EPA spokl·swoman ~l a rth.1 Ca'.'icy said At !'>0 other air monitoring -.tataons around the country, the amount of radiation dad not t"<C eed normal levels, the agency said Low·level nucl('ar clouds are sl11l crossing the country while those al h1~her altitudes already havt.• pa:.:.l'<l over the country, Sh(• ~a1d The Chtnl'St.' bla:.t March 14 \\as de:.critwd as "less than 20 kilotons " l 'nhlo.c some previous blasts, rad1oacttvc debn5 was found as lov. a:. 20,000 feet and was broken up by high winds. creating a scatl<'rmg or small nuclear clouds In some previous Chinese blasts, radioactive debris was contained In a single mass at an altitude over 30.000 feet HAVE AN F rom Pagt-,., I GATES ••• intensive' in the history of Los Angeles police chiefs • • • We emphasized we were seeking change. We didn't want a monolithic structure in the Police Department. We wanted nexibtlily ... Reinhardt, repeating his view that "no major corporation would seleet a person to a high leaders hip position" by use of a written exam, said he was bac king Gates "with some rcst'n altons. · I have talked to ham about this," Reinhardt s aid ··r have said l want a more constructive, more open relationship with lh<' rhief than has existed m the past.·· Joan Little Loses NEW YORK CAP) - Screaming and sobbing as she was earned from the courtroom, Joan LltUe has been sent back to Jail following a Judge's order that she be held for extradition to North Carolina lo complete a prison sentence. Revocation of Miss Little's bail Thursday by state Supreme Court Justice Leonard Scholnick promptl'd a noisy outburst by about 200 of Mass Little's supporter!! who c rowded lhl' Broo klyn courtroom DEN'S Tanker . Breaking Up at Sea RREST, France (AP) -The wrecked American supertanker Amoco Cadiz broke in two early today, aod it.a st.em section wtlh Its broad towering bridge and huge engine was swu ng completely around by the pounding seas. The forward section, still thought to hold up to lS million gallons ol oil, was bearing the full force of the storms and 25-root swells. Peak tides due over the weekend may completely break up the vessel, ending any chance or saving the remamlng oil rrom JOhung the record SO million gallons already Coullng lhl• Brmany coast. The tanker broke its back and :.pill almost an two within hours of grounding March 16. But until early today it had held together on the port side. A full pollution a lert was ordered in western Normandy as the oil slicks continue to drift eastward across northern Brittany. OU pollution control experts from America and other nations were bitter over French reluctance to take their advict- on cleaning up the spill, which topped the 1967 Torrey Canyon disaster off southwest England by at least 15 million gallons. French press Criticism also v. as growing over the French government's railure to coordinate and start a cleanup of waters and beaches soiled by the spreadlllg mess. At least rive American companies specializing in oil recovery had been trying since shortly after the accident to interest French authortlies in their services, without success. Bolts Strike 2 V.S. Jets ... Nearing Tokyo TOKYO CAP> -Lightning struck two American jumbo jets over Japan, causing wi ng damage to one. but both landed bafely, T r anspor t Ministry officials reported today. There were no reports of injuries among passengers and crew members of either plane. the offlc1als said. A Pan American World Airways JCt heading for Tokyo from San Francisco with 78. persons aboard was hit three times Thursday night by lightning over Chiba, 30 miles ~oulheast of Tokyo. The tip of the right wing, including an antenna, was lorn off and panels covering the rear part of the first engine on the left wtng were destroyed. officials said. It landed safely 13 minutes later at Toky o InternaltonaJ Airport Ministry oHtcials said a Northwest Airlines jetliner was hat on the nose by lightning, also over Chiba Thursday night. The plane v..as heading for Tokyo International Airport from Hong Kon~ with 38S passengers and c rew members aboard, the offtc1als said. U n ion 1pokum a n Paul Fort ney aald that, U t he ballollnl la clote, the result inay nol be known unW Jal~ tonl&bl. R41&\arn1 from 10 Of t be approximately too UllW l~a.la thll afternooll •bowed t b1 cootraet !OI reject-4 by a .... .a: iiisiailitiaii: ·custom draperies LIC r-K> nom linoleum • wood floor 1, to wt.,; 1663 PL.AC!NTIA AVENUE • COSTA MESA, CAUF. 9l617 • PHONE 646.-.. 838 -6.t6·23.S5 • Irvine I VOL 71, NO. 83, 4 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFO RN IA FRIDAY, MARCH 2_., 1978 r TEN CENTS t Jarvis vs. Cordova: Reform vs. Ripoff ! By GARY GRANVI LLE Of IN O.lly l'lle4 Statt When they weren't sticking verbal bar~c; into one another during a debate Thursday, lax reform advocate Howard Jarvis and Assemblyman Ron Cordova D·El Toro, took turns pra1sang and condemning PropoMtaon 13. As was expeckd, 1t ~as Jarvis who praast'<I thl• June 6 ballot measure that bears has name. the Jarvis-Gann lax reform initiative As might be expected, Cordova walked away from his encounter with Jarvis a winner in the eyes of a majority of the <1ud1ence. members of the \merican Association of Public .\dmamstrators. A poll taken at the close o( the session m Garden Grove showed an o\erw helmin~ r.eaction I t • 1 ,. Oaain R e action llolly Skmnt•r. 5. tackles a chain contraption with a look of dett•rminat1nn Thursday in College Park in Irvine. I 7J Sht• <.incl h(•r pla~ males wc•re taking advantage or good I spring weather that rinJll~ arrived this week after a \\int Pr nf l';itn \ Hear_i_n_g_S_c_h_e_d_u_l_e_d_ I On Coastal Policy · l T h t-O r a n g t: C o u n t '.) county and which as concerns of J Environmental Management other agencies. Agency "tll conduct a public l''or example, K~Uberg said. J hearing Monday in Irvine on its the county probably will agrtt I p r op o s e d po I 1 c 1 e s on that the state has a legitimate unincorporated land along the concern on the future of Coast Irvin<' Coast Highway through that area and t the development immediately Genl' K.Jellberg, a c;pokesman ad1acent to it (or the EMA. explained that. under the state Coastal Act. the llowe\.er. other policies d 1 concerning land use might be county is required to eve op 3 seen as more local concerns, he set of policies. called a Local said Coastal Program , that ure 9onsistenl with the (lrov1s1ons or The meeting wtll begm at 7 the Coastal At·l p m in Irvine City Council lie :-.:ud the hearing 1s being held to seek public input on which issues and pohc1t•s c;hould be earmarked 11s concl'rns of the state, which as concerns of the fJWlet Fired, Shatters Fluor Windoui Chambers, Jamboree Road at McGaw AH?nUC. 'FURNISHINGS' FLVOR FEATlJRE You· d expec\ the top two floors of the FU.tor buUdin1 in lrvine to be decorated with contemporary fumlshtngs. but in fact, it's pure lllh ceot.ury. See Featuring, Page Bl. against Propoaltion 13 by association members, moat of them government employees. Cordova condemned Proposition 13 as "a ripoff" that pretends to befriend homeownttS and renters while actually favoring large property holders. Proposition 13 seeks to clamp a hd on property taxes by rolling values back to their 1975-78 levels and limiting tax rates to what county assessors said was then full cash value. Jarvis started the debate's verbal darts flying when he characterized Cordova 's opening remarks as coming Crom "the voice of inexperience and a vacuum of opinion " From that point on, the debate was a heated discussion between a 30-year·old freshman state assemblyman and a 75-year-old retired businessman who has spent more than a decade crusading for property tax relief Cordova made it clear that he, loo, favors tax relief as well as res traints on government spending ··But does Proposition 13 limit government spending'> No," Cordova replied in answer lo his Gates Nained Los Angeles Picks New Chkf • LOS ANGELES CAP> -After its chairman called for change and nexlbilicy, the city Police Commission lJnanimously selected Daryl F Gates today as the 49th chief of the Los Angeles Police Department since 1851 Cheers from about SO officers and headqu.arte~ staff broke out after Commissioner James Fisk nom lnaled the 51-year-old Glendale-born assistant chief to the post or chief, succeeding Edward M. Davis. Gales blushed and beamed nervously as television cameras and lights swung toward him. ·'I am going to lake a look at au facets of the department," he told newsmen afterward "Other chiefs have virtually been given a blank check, but I come into the department during hard, lean times." Brief commission speeches precluded the unanimous voice vote. The decision ca me after several rounds of lengthy rnterviews and some second thoughts about a selection process which Comm1ss1oner Stephen Reinhardt charactenzed as inadequate Despite his reservations. Reinhardt said Gates "as my Ex-Chav e z Aide choice." The commissioner repeated has 'riew that "no ma1or corporation would select a person to a high leadership position" by use of a written exam '·Never has there been a search as intensive in the history of Los Angeles police chiefs," Commission President Marianna Pfaelzer said. "We em phas1zed we were seeking change We didn't want a monolithic structure an the Police Department. We wanted flexibility." <Stt GATES, Page AZ) own question. "And in what manner does it prov•de tax relief, equitably or inequitably? I suggest to you that Proposition 13 is the biggest. ripoff we can imagine.'· Cordova went on lo say, in effect. that the Jarvis brainchild offer:. only token relief to homeowner:. and renters while g1vmg major property owners <SN-J ARVIS, Pa'e A%) AP"'I,,....._ NEW POLICE CHIEF LA Select s Gates Oil Tanke r Pilgri~ Walk Path Of Christ JERUSALEM (AP> -Thou· sands o( pUO'ims trudged along the rain·d~~ned Via Dolorosa tbia Good ~. many of them laborin1 ..mdtt' bea\ty wooden crosses, to mark Chrlst'1 march to his crucifixion. Related story, A7 State Health llead Breaks Into Fired by Governor Tiro Pie ces BREST. Franct> <API -The The aolemo procession led by Franciscan friar s In brown ha bits wound thr ough the ancient lanes of Jerusalem's Old City, stopping for devotions at the 14 stations of the cross. The hour-long walk ended at the Churc h of the Holy Sepulcher, the traditional site of Calvary. In the courtyard of the 800-year.old church, knots or worshippers wailed their tum to file through the woodeh doors. The Latin liturgy echoed off the stone walls inside the church as the pilgrims filed up the steep staircase lo the spot where tradition holds Christ was crucified "Jn spite or the chaos during the procession, I fell a grPat deal of spirituality.'' said Rex Barnes. a pilgrim from South-West Africa. "This tends lo strengthen my faith in Christianity. "Pam of tM procession were badly organized, but everyone seemed to gel into the spirit of things. I wasn't disappointed al all," he said Some pilgrims lit candles and stopped at Christ's tomb inside the same chu rch, just a few yards from Calvary. The tomb will be the center or Easler Sunday celebraUon1. Worshippers knell to kiss the stone ot Unct ion, where Christ's body la said to have been wrapped lo • shroud. Others bad their picture taken at the stone or as tbey hoi•t" a 10-fool cross outside ln the courtyard.. SACRAMENTO CAP> Gov Edmund Browl'\ Jr. has fired slate Healtb Director Jerome Lackner, effective April 1, it was learned ~ay. A source within the state Health and Welfare Agency said Brown fired Lackner in a meeting Thursda)' night The source said the Information came from Lackner Br own's press secretary, Elizabeth Coleman, confirmed that a meeting occurred, but said she wouldn't comment on ;rny action that took place. She added, "I'm not sure the word 'firing' is an appropriate one to use ." She didn 't elaborate. Lackner, SO, former personal physician to Cesar Chavez and a farm worker clinic orgamzer. has been under criticism for lhe s l~le Health Department's m•ny troubles, lncludln1 scandals in state men tal hospitals and prepaid health plans He was to have left his 1ob by July 1, when the Health Department will be broken up into five smaller department'> Recently, Lackner clashed with Brown by defending Dr Josette Mondanaro. the state drug abuse director in his department whom Brown fired because of a profanity-filled letter she wrote on stale stationery. Lackner contended the letter wasn't adequate grounds for firing. The s tate Personnel Board agreed and ordered Dr Mondan.aro reinstated Coal Miners Vote On Pact Today WASHlNGTON (AP) The nation's strikin~ coal miners, defiant and unpredictable throughout their l09 ·day walkout, are voting again on w h ether to accept a new contract offer. As before, most officials of the United Mine Workers said they expect a close decision by the 160,000 son coal miners eligible to vole today at union balls from Appalachia to the Rockies. "I ain't making predictions" about the final outcome, UMW President Arnold Miller said T hursday while flying from Wa11hlngt.on to his home Dlstnct 17 in Charleston, W Va. But then he predicted that lhf' 21,500-member district , tht' union's largest, would appro' C' the new accord Union spokesman Paul Fortney said that, if the balloting is close, the result may not be known until late tonight. Returns from 10 of the approximately 800 UMW locals this afternoon showed the contract being rejected by a 1,304 lo 808 vote. wreckl'<i Ameri('an s wpertanker Amoco Cadiz broke an two early today, and its stern section with its broad towering bridge and huge engine was swun~ (•om pletely around by the pounding i.eas. The forward section, still thou~ht lo hold up lo 15 malhon gallons of 011. was bearing the fu II force of the storms and 25 foot swells Peak tides dut' over the weekend may completely break up the vessel. ending any chance or saving the remaining oil from J<ilntng the record Sil malhon ~allons already fouling the Brittany coast The tanker broke 1ls back and split almost m two within hours of grounding March 16 But unlll "arly today 11 had held together on the port side A full pollution alert was ordered m western Normandv as the 011 sllcks continue to dnrt ttastward across northern Brittany. Oil pollution control experts from America and other nations "-l're biller over f'ren ch reluctance to take their advice' • on clc11rung up the spill. which topped the 1967 Torrey Canyon disaster off <;Oulhwest England by at least 15 m1lhon gallons. French press Criticism also was growm~ over the French government's failure lo coordinalt• and start a cleanup of waters and beaches soiled by th<> spreading mess. At least five American companies specializing in oil recovery had been trying since shortly after the accident to interest French authorities in lh('ir servires, without success Coa~C A .38-cahber bullet fared mto \he Fluor Corporalion's administration building m Irvine Thursday nlaht shattered a specially l'OOStrucled reflectint' 1lass window valued al $1,200, police said today. OC Delay Roeks ~Ian Union officials had forecast a close vote when another proposed contract was put to a vote three weeks ago, but the rank and file turned it down by better than a 2·1 margin. Aller the contract reject.Jon, miners almost universally defied a federal judie's back ·to-work order which President Carter obtained under t~e Taft-Hartley Act UMW omcials said their member!! would ignore the order. as they had during a series of strikes 30 yeara aao. W ea Cher Sunny and warmer Saturday Lows tonight SO to SS Highs Saturdav 70 ta 75 No o~ wu truured ln the 7:45 p.m . shooti.nl. • . Police said tho bullet went through a v nU,·atory window and an ln~rlor dry wall ln th • rnalneeriag ompany'. buUding •t 3333 Michel n Drive. The incident was reported by security guard11 at the build.Ina but no suspects were seen, police aaJd. Sol.dh ~ Buikler. Hope1 /or Aliao Home Even If the miner• accept the l~•l offer from the Bituminous Coal Operators AaeoctaUon, the strike would not. end •utom aUcally. I NSIDE T ODA'\'' What " tnllt'd a~ o ma10r Wf!1t Coo..t .thowing of lat.r eurf'aliam ort11t Wdlaom Bcutote• optnf!d today at Nf!t»porl Harbor Art Mua.um .• ~tury and photos ori Pagr Cl .,,,_._..... ... t ... L.111 ...,.. ~ ........... •~P991 ..... 1 .......... • ••• •4 - ' ·-A2 DAILY PILOT ,.,.... ,,---A.I AIJSO ROCK .•• Cullcomp, who hu an opUon to buy the rock trom !:dward Bow1~r for $140,000, uid be is Ur~d of bemg strung along Has gut ftthng, he said, i~ lhat the county won 'l buy the outcroppme "When 1t comes down toll, that rock is or no uae lo the public," he said And, he says, the house be plans for the site wlll blend in with lhe rock. The 3,000 square Coot structure iB designed to conform with lbe rock, he sayd. "We want lo cul a tiny slot on the lop or the rock for a carr.ort and foundation, then cantilever the house out from that. So we're not grading the rock or mutilating the site. "And we're not screwing up anybody's view because the sides or the house are slanted on the beach side They kind of creep down the sides or the rock." d lwo chlldteo want to u ... in the foar·bed.room house when ll'I ftalaMd. "It'• the Ame-rlc1n dream deal." he said. "You work bard, buy some land and hope to bwld your home. "Only now we're catching flak from the neighbors and the county." Cutkomp faces a little more flak April S when county supervisors will hold a public hearing on whether or not Harbors, Beaches and Park District funds s hould be used to buy the rock. And county Planning Commissioners will make their final decision Apnl 11 based on action by supervisors Thal's when Cutkomp expecl'i to know if tus home will be bwlt upon the rock. ' o.11,~M.ttt.._. WILL IT BE THE C04NTY'S ROCK BESIDE ALISO CREEK OR TOM CUTKOMP'S ROCK? Ptan To Bulld On South Laguna Outcropping HH Caused County Oppoalllon Avco Facing Damages By TOM BARLEY oi .. IMll'f ,... 5- Dam ages totalhng $631,000 were awarded against Avco Community Developers Thurs· day by an Orange County Superior Court jury which beard t estimony that fi ve former Laguna Niguel residents were vicllm1zed by the company. The verdict ended a two- month trial ln Judge Robert H. Green 's courtroom . A veer lawyers s&d they will appeal the verdict Culkomp said he and his wife Bill Introduced WASIIJNGTON CAP> -Six Hearing Set • in Toro Death The Jury's biggest award went to Eugene W. Ventre of Costa &fesa who was given $120,000 in compensatory damages and $135,000 t.n purullve damages . Ventre, suffering from a heart disability which he claims was worsened by Avco harassment is one of fi ve former residenu of the La Veta tract who claimed th al Avco persecuted lbem and violated their property rights in 1971. ... .Republican senators introduced a bill Thursday that wo1tld keep pay r aises from shoving some ·workers into higher tax brackets a nd that would offset some of the Social Security tax increases that take effect next year. A bearing to determine whether a 17-year-old boy should be tried as an adult in the shooUng death ol an El Toro housewife is expected to be placed back on a Superior Court calendar in Pasadena soon. The state Supreme Court denied a petillon Thursday that sought a rehearing on the court's Feb 15 ruling that the press may attend lhe juvenile hearing. FrOJR Page .4J Ann Maloney, Los Angeles County deputy public defender acting as attorney for the l'>USpect identified only as Brian W • refused Friday to discuss her next pre·triaJ move. JARVIS DEBATED. • • 01slncl attorney's deputies slated to prosetute the case m Pasadena were on vacation this week and unavailable for comment ~1gantic benefits In rebuttal, Jarvis said, "It is idiotic to say we should have only relief for owners of occupied dwellings." "To say we'r e hurling the homeowners 1s silly." Jarvis said as he labeled existing property regulations "grand felony theft " The veteran reform campaigner went on to fall back on consl1lullonal property nghts i-.a feguards to support his ;,idvocacy Rut when Jarvis alleged that statew1dt> lhue are "7,500 fort·clo:.un•s from tax failures a month.'' Cordova quickly wenl on the attack. "No hom<' has s uccumbed lo taxl!s an lh1s county in the past five year s," Cordova said to refute the claim of massive tax foreclosures. Ile went on to argue that Propos1bon 13 will force local governments to dependency on the state for revenues needed for their support. "And lhe state has never passed an opportunity to seize more control over local governments." Cordova argued. We'll fix that. Jarvis said. "We have another amendment about ready to go Jt will freeze all sales and income taxes at their January 1979, levels." Jarvis said When asked, he balked al citing any examples of so-called ' fat in government s pending, bul decried the doubling o f government employees in Los Angeles Count:v since 1965. But Cordova argued the Jarvis approach lo reduced ~overnment spendmg is a meat axe approach "that would cut the lean out as well as some of the fat " Cordova also charged that Proposition 13 backers' appeal for support from renters has htlle substance because ''there as nothing but a personal guarantee from Mr Jarvis that rents will be lowered " We'll soon fix that, Jarvis said, announcing that full page newspaper ads will soon appear thal will carry sponsoring landlord guarantees of no rent increases for two years should Proposition 13 be enacted. Cordova appeared to catch Jarvis off guard when he pulled Raid Nets Seven LOS ANGELES <AP) -An eight -month , und ercover investigation ended In a number o( raids in Loa Angeles County that netted five m en and two women, bookmakln& records and other material. ~.:i~~:~'T.::.::;:;:: ;;.~ c..u """"'ttl\f,.. (~•"• ,,..., ..... ,llOM, ... O'IMU11Mtl ,_."4iltY '"'#out't ,.., .. ., hw Co1t• ...,,_. ~ t .. <~ H_....,.. 8'¥~ F- l•'-' Yt11t ¥. lt•lflllf'. \e._l..,.ll Ytl~., ·~ ~ .... ~ \ewl~C..•\I ........................ . ·-" -·-~ ......... --..... "" =-c...~:W~.~::.:..z..:,.111 .......... ._ .. _ ,..,~ . ....._, ~"' ~, ... JM'. (.8rWJ Yl<e l"fff--0.-ot--,_, ..... ... , .. out a computerized letter s oliciting pro·Propositlon 13 funds from apartment house owners. a letter lhal said landlords have the most lo gain from an election victorv "Yes, that's ours." Jarvis mused as he studied the appeal for a $1 million war chest needed in the Proposition 13 campaign. Police Seek Hurler of Bottle 'Bomb' Sheriff's investigators are seek ing a suspect who reportedly hurled a lighted Molotov cocktail at a Leisure World security vehicle early Thursday. Deputies s aid an un.tdentlfled man threw the f laming soft-d rink bottle filled with gasoline at security caplam Ronald Burns at 2 ·IS a m. T hursday as he crwsed north on Moulton Parkway just outside the retirement community's walls. Lee Stipes, Leisure World security ctuer. saJd Bums was responding lo reports of rocks bei ng thrown over th e community's wall at Moulton and Iglesia Street. One rock broke a resident's window. Stipes said the naming bottle missed lhe patrol unjt by about 10 feet and exploded on impact. He said Burns spotted a man near the road who shouted "Pig" and ran from the scene. S he riff's i n vestigators a rrested a Laguna Hills man following a similar incident four years ago near Thursday's born bing site. · 3 Capo Beach Nurses Probed Three convalescent hospital nurses have been suspended pending a sheriff's department investigation into charges that they beat a 90·year-old woman who refused to bathe Thursday afternoon. Deputies said a patient at Beverly Manor Convalescent HospilaJ in Capistrano Beach sufrered facial injuries, including a black eye, in the incident. A sheriff's spokesman said the woman reportedly bas a bi.story o r refusing to bathe and apparently "just doesn't like water.'' A hospital spokesman refused to comment on the Incident, pending a report from the hospital chain's headquarters in Pasadena. In seckmg a press ban at the hearing to determine whether Brian will be tried as an adult. M s Mal oney argued that Frmrt Pa~ A I GATES ... The five members of the com m1ss1on had delayed the selection one day to call back Cales and deputy chiefs Robert L. Vernon and Charles D. Reese for fm al interviews Thursday. ll was the third time the group had been interviewed. All three candidates sat rigid m military style durmg today's session. Vernon. 44, is a 23·year police veteran who heads Central Bureau Operations and serv es directly below Gates. Reese, 50, a 23·year veteran o( the department, is in charge of fiscal plannutig Gates, wh() finished first on the civil service eircamtnalion for chief. spent the most time with the comm1ss1on in the final interviews. The 29·year veteran, v. ho took the police chief examinallon m 1969 and finished f ourth , became closely associated with Davis in the following years He is said lo have been groomed for the c hief's Job by Davis. Davis retired this year after. serving as chief since 1969. He is seeking the Republican gubernatorial nomination. As director of the office of operations since 1971, Gates has directed all uniform, patrol, traHlc and air support operations of the department. He is best known publicly as the head of the department's task force working on the llills1de Strangler case_ Gates will be sworn in to take over from interim chief Robert F . Rock at 10 :30 a.m. Tuesday 1n ceremonies at the Los Angeles Police Academy. Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. was scheduled to attend Plane Crashes, Couple Killed SAN FELIPE. Mexico (AP) - An American couple died when their light plane exploded in the air Wednesday, Mexican authorities said Thursday. The U.S. Consulate in Tijuana identified them as Mr. and Mrs. James C. Ham of Los Gatos, cam .. both in their early SOs. Their Piper J -3 plane crashed In flam~ after taldne off Crom San Luis Gonzaga airport 105 miles south of San Felipe Victim of Crash Listed as 'Fair' Carol Lou Brown. 25, of 2 .Vlld Goose Court, Newport Beach, and carried Tom Faletti, 29, ol 3901 Park View Lant, Jrvine, a.a a paaaqer, pollco reported. Paramedics and two teams of ftremen under tbe direction ol Capt. Jack Jones worked to Ctee Bamea from the wreckaae. M las Browo and Faletti were rtle11ed from t.bt hoapltal after treatment for minor lnjurtes. I "confidentiality and anonymity are necessary to the goal or juven11e l aw, whi c h is rehabilitation " The Los Angeles Superior Court disagreed So did the Supreme Court. slating il favors the role or lht' press in monitoring lhe administration of justice on behalf of the public in preference to press restraints. Thursday's denial Cor a rehearing on that decision was made unanimously without <'Om m ent by the seven·man high court. Brian is s uspected or kidoapptng and murdering Mrs. Rachel Sparling of lhe Lake Forest section of El Toro sbortly after she visited her Pasadena psychiatrist on March U , 1977. Police claim the youth was dn ving her auto when it was involved in an accident the morning after the El 1'oro mother of four disappeared. Officers later arrested Brian at his home and confiscated some of Mrs. Sparling's jewelry there. Four days later, hikers found the 36-year·old woman's body in the hills above the San Fernando Valley. She bad been shot in the head at close range. Annual Event Pair Re-enact Crucifixion MANILA. Philippines CAP) -Two Filipinos had I ht·m~t?lvt•s muled to wooden crosses one after :inother on Good Friday in a re-enactment of J esus' cruc1f1x10n almost 2.000 vears ;urn A l'rowd of 40,000 shrieked and jostled for a better new, first of Juanito Piring, 35: then Mariano Bagtas, 28, who were nailed through the palms and stayed on the crosses for three minutes. Their erucifixion took place on a stage in the v1llagc of San Fernando, 30 miles north o( Manila. Piring, who has been crucified on Good Friday for several years running, ·called the ritual an · atonement for my sins and those of others." 'Lightning Strikes 2 Jets Over Japan TOKYO (AP) -Lightnmg struck two American jumbo jeL'i over Japan, causing wing damage to one, but both landed s afely, Transport Ministry officials reported today. There were no reports of in1uries among passengers and crew members of either plane, the orrmals said A Pan American World Airways jet heading for Tokyo Crom San Francisco with 78 persons aboard was hit three times Thurs day night by lightning over Chiba, 30 miles southeast of Tokyo. The tip of the right wing, including an antenna. was tom off and panels covering the rear part of the first engme on the left wing were destroyed, officials said. It landed safely 13 minutes later at Tokyo HAVE AN International Airport. Ministry officials said a Northwest Airlines jetliner was hit on lbe nose by lightning, also over Chiba Thursday night. The plane was heading for Tokyo International Airport from Hong Kong with 385 passengers and crew members aboard, the ofricials said. Launch Postponed CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla (AP> -The launch or a pair of "Triple 7" military communications satellites was postponed Thursday because · offic ials discovered a small helium teak in the Titan JC launch rocket. The launch was rescheduled for 4:09 p.m .. PST. Saturday. All five were sued earlier bv Avco for $12 million in damages with allegations that they un- lawfully conducted real estate transactions from their homes. The Avco lawsuit ended in an appellate court defeat for the company after a series of ad- verse rulings Ln Superior Court. The five derendants in that ac- tion then joined forces against Avco and asked the jury in Judge Green's courtroom t<J award them $12 million in damages. They got $631,000 in damages: with the Jury voting 10-2 in favor or an award for each of the five plainhffs. It was alleged for the plaintiffs.. during the trial now concluded that Avco tried lo impose architectural restrictions on homes in the La Veta tract to ensure that valuations on nearby Avco property were nol affected by designs that did not fit in with Avco plannmg. The balance or the $631,000 verdict was distributed as follows: -Chester Lautzenheiser or Apple Vapley, $117,SOO in com· pensatory damages, $115,000 in punitive damages for a total or $232,SOO. -Pete Peterson or Diamond Bar, $12,SOO in compe.osalory damages and $50,000 in punitive damages f()(' a total o( $62,500. -Floyd and Sharon Hartford of Yorba Linda, $3,000 each in compensatory damages and S37 ,500 each in punitive damages for a total of $40,500 each. Resurrection Try Conlimres HARRISON, Ark. CAP) -A preacher who has failed in his attempts lo raise his mother from the dead said that be will continue to pray for her resur- rection until next week. Daniel Aaron Rogers, who deSt'rtbes himself as an in- ter de nom in a lion al tent evangelist, planned lo arrange for an Indonesian faith healer, S. A. M acAll, to travel to the Unit· ed States lo participate in a resurrection service. However. Rogers said Thurs· day that he bad not been able to raise enough money lo pay for MacAll's trave1ing expenses. which he estimated would cost $4,300 DEN'S tJ11riu:iiiSiillii:iiin: ·custom draperiss linoleum • vvood floor C0$TA MUA. CAUf. '2627 • .PHONE 6-'6-.. 131 -6 .. '-2355 17 Lag11na/Sooth Coast· YourHometo Daily Newspaper VOL. 71, NO. 83, 4 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MARCH 2,, 1978 TEN CEN Jarvis vs. Cordova: Reform vs. Ripof By GARY GRANVILLE Of Ille CN!ly ...... SU.ti Whe n they weren't sticking verbal barbs into one another during a debate Thursday, tax reform advocate Howard J arv1s and Assemblyman Ron Cordova. D-El Toro, took turns pra1s1ng and condemrung Proposition 13 As was expected. tl was J arv1s who praised the June 6 ballot measure that bears hts name, the Jarvis-Gann tax reform initiative. As might be expected, Cordova walked away from his e ncounter with Jarvis a winner in the eyes of a majority of the audience, members or the American Association of P.ubltc Adm 1n1stralors A polJ taken al the close of the session in Garden Grove showed an O\~r-whelming reaction ag alnst Proposition 13 by association members, most of them government employees. Cordova conde mned Proposition 13 as "a rlporf" that pretends lo befriend horn eowners and renters while actually favoring large property holders Propostlton 13 seeks lo clamp a lid on property taxes by rolling values back to their 1975-76 levels and limiting tax rates to what county assessors aald was then full cash value. Jarvis started the debate's verbal darts flying when he characterized Cordova's operung remarks as coming from "the voice of inexperience and u vacuum or opinion " From that pomt on, the debate was a heated discussion between a 30-year-old freshman st ate assemblyman and a 75-year-old own question. retired businessman who bas "And in what manner does it spent more than a decade" provide tax relief, equitably or crusading for property lax inequitably? I suggest to you relief. that Proposition 13 is the biggest. Cordova made it clear that he, ripoff we can imagine." too, favors tax rebef as well as Cordova went on to say, in restraints on government effect , that the Jarvis brainchild spending. offers only token relief to "But does Proposition 13 bm1t homeowners and renters while government spending? No," giving major property owners Cordova replied in answer to tus (See JARVIS, Page A2> Another Red Satellite to Fall? 5 Officials ·Miners Voting On Pact SC Travel r Probe Asked WASHINGTON I AI» The nation's striking coal miners, defiant and unpredictable l throughout their 109 day f walkout, are \Olmg again on I whether lo <1<.•ccpt a new contract offer I As before, most off1<:1als of the United Mine Workers said they expect a close decision by the 1 160.000 soft coal miners clig1bh.> to vote today at union halls from f ::~.'::~~·,~~~~~~:~~;~·.·~~ President Arnold Milh.•r said Thursday while flying from Was h ington to his home District 17 in Charleston. W. Va But then he predtch:d that the 21,500·member district, the union's largest, would approve the new accord U nion s pokesman Paul Fortney said that, tf the · balloting is close. the result may not be known until lute tonight. Returns from 10 of the approximately 800 l'MW locals this afternoon showed the contract being rejected by a 1.304 to 808 vote Union officials had forecast a c lose vote when another proposed contrac~ was put to a vote three weeks ago. but the rank and filC' turned it down by better than a 2 1 margin After the contract reJecl1on, miners almost universally defied a federul judge's back-lo -work order which President Carter obtained under ttie Tart Hartley Act UMW ofhcials said their members would ignore the order. as they had during j scrtc~ of strikes 30 years ago By ANNE COOPER 01 t .. O.lly ~ ... S~I Fres hman San ciemente Councilman Howard Mushett ha:; asked for a dis trict attorney's invest&galton into out -of-town conference expenditures by five c ity officials 2 Marines Held in Rape CllSe T~o Camp Pendleton Marlne1 were arrested by San Clemente poli ce Thursday on suspicion of kidnap and rape. following an investigation in which the 15 -y ear -old victi m was hypnotJZed in order to help tier 1dentifv her assailants Irineo Salinas. 24. was arrested at noon Thursday m Oceanside, police said. Thomas Marroquin, 22. was arrested shortly afterwards at a Camp Pendleton residence Both men reside at 304 S Cleveland in Oceanside, said Lt. Clifford Gates of the San Clemente department. Gates said poltce expected to arrest a third suspect m the kidnap and rape case some time today Saltnas and Marroquin were being held today al the San Clemente Jail on $500,000 bail t.'arh Gates said the two men <See MARINES, Pag~ A2) Ranch Sold SC Land Deal Reponed THE 2,000-AC'RE Vtsbeek Ranch in north San Clemente has been purchased by Nu-West Development Corp. of Alberta, Canada, according lo project director John Belda The undeveloped ranchland, lying inland of the San Diego Freeway at the extreme north end of Avenida Picq, is reportedly slated for development or about 5,000 housing units, beginning tn about a year THE LAND, which one newspaper reported brought a $16 million sales price, was donated to Warner Pacific College in 1973 by Roy Vtsbeek Mushett said '1e has presented expense vouchers and receipts lo dtslnct attorney investigators that allegedly show San Clemente Mayor William Walker and Councilwoman Donna Wilkinson submitted contradictory expense claims for business trips And, he says, he has vouchers that show Planning ComMission Chairman Melford Morgan and Commissioners James Chase and William Greenwall charged their wives' travel lodging and mea ls to the city when the women accompanied their husbands o n a three-day Oakland conference in February. Mushett said he will call for the resignation or the three planning comrnissioners at the City Council meeting April 5. Both Mayor Walke r and Assistant City Attorney Michael Bartlett said it long has been accepted practice in San Clemente for both elected and appointed officials to take their wives on city business trips at city expense. M ushetl said he can fully document his charges against the mayor and Mrs. Wilkinson. using expense vouchers they filed with the city's finance department for three trips to League of California Cities conferences Mushett cited an accounting of expe nses the two council members incurred on a three-day trip to San Diego last October . According to city records. Walker claimed he spent $56 on a dinner at Mr A's restaurant Oct 18. The restaurant receipt 1n city riles indic ates th e waitress served "Donna and Bill," and the expense form turned in by Walker also says the S56 meal wa:; consumed by Donna and Bill " But Mrs <Donna) Wilkinson also claimed a dinner expense <See PROBE, Page AZ> 'FURNISHINGS' FLVOR FEA.TVRE You'd expect the t op two noors of the Fluor building in Irvine to be decorated with contemporary furnishings, but \h fact, It's pure 18th century. See Featurtng, Page Bl. OC Delay Rocks Plan South Laguna Builder Hopes for Aliso Home South Coast Hiabway •t the mouth of Allso Creek. But Flfth District Supervisor Thomaa Riley would like to see the county'• Harbors, Beaches and Pam District purchase the r~k. Riley sny~ two county studfes recommend acquisltion of the rock as a landmark and potentlal buffer between homes and the public beach at Alim. But the developer says the county has kept him betw a rock. nd a hard place for tbt PHl 15 meat.bl. Cutkornp bH been teekin1 county · to build linee lul Juot but the Planntn1 · Comm '• · oo bu ~ • I ... J E.R.A. Born E .R.A., even if tl never oecomes national law. 1s assured an acli\'C future because that's the name of this baby girl Her mother. Judy M ccarthey of Phoenix, was in Washington Thursday lobbying for the Equal Rights Amendment. Daryl Gates Named IA Chief of Police LOS ANGELES CAP) Daryl F . Gates was named as the city's new police chief today, succeeding Edward M. Davis. The decision was made by the city Police Commission after several rounds of leng thy interviews. The five m e mbers of the commission de layed the selection one day to call back Gates and deputy chiefs Robert L. Vernon and Charles D. Reese for final interviews Thursday. It 3 Capo Beach Nurses Probed was the third lime the group had been interviewed. None of the three candidates or members of the commission would discuss specific questions asked. Davis retired this year after serving as chief since 1969. He ts seeki ng the Republican gubernatorial nomination. Gales. 51. who finished first on the civil service examination for chief, spent the most lime with the commission in the final mterviews. The 29-year veteran, who took the police chief exammatlon in 1969 and finished fourth, became closely associated with Davis m the following years. He is said to have been groomed for the chief's job by Davis. As director of the office of operations since 1971, Gates tias directed all uniform, patrol, traffic and air s upport operations of the department He is best known publicly as the heod of the department's taak force working on the Hillside Slranaler case. Altboutb the commlsslon had not rormally voted, a moU~ to na rn c Gates wa1 seconded rapidly. and even commi•aioner Stephen Retnha.rdt, who earner upruHd reaorvatlons abOut tb• clvll nntco selection ~ proceu, aald Oates "la my cboice." Nuclear Titreat Unkno"7Jl MONTREAL CAP) -The Canadian Press today quoted the space laboratory in Bocht•m. West Germany. as saying that another Soviet satellite may fall out of orbit about April 20, bul that tt was too soon to tell where 1t would fall The nl•ws agt•ncy sa id Heinrich Kaminsky. director of the laboratory. rf'ported in a telephonl' mlerview that Cosmos K4H was following a similar path to that of an earlier s atellite that crash ed 1n the Northwest Tt.'rritories this year. The earlier satellite, Cosmos 954, was nuclear powered and showered r ad1oacl1ve debris over the Canadian north when tt crashed, but 1t was not Immediately clear whether the second satellite also is nuclear-powered. In an interview from Bochura with Nouvelles Tele-Radio, tbe French-language broadcasting service of Lhe Canadian Press, Kaminsky said he has asked tbe Soviet space agency tn Moscow for furlh<.•r information about Cosmos 849 It was launched .\u~. 18, 1976 Meanwhile, rad1at1on levels have tncreast.'d s harply in two c1t1cs .is a result of China's recent nuclear cxplos1on. but the E n vtronmcnlal Protection AJ!ency said today the level!> do not pose health hazards The EPA's air-monitoring tests found radiation levels rca<'hing 85 p1coc uries in Denver, Colo .. and Cheyenne, Wyo. Normal background radiation meas urt.'s from 10 to 15 p1cocuries. and not until the level reaches 1.000 ts there cause for concern, EPI\ spokeswoman Martha Case) sate! At 50 other air mon1t6nng stations around the country. the amount of rad1at1on did not cxc<'ed normal le' ch. the agenc)-said Low levrl nucll'ar clouds are sttll crosstn~ the country while those at htghl'r altitudes alread) have passed over the country. sht• c,a1d The Chinese blast March 14 was desrribed as "less than 20 kilotons " Unhke some previous blasts. rndioactive debris was found as low as 20,000 feel and was broken up by high winds. creating a scattering of small nuclear clouds l\'eather Sun n y and warmer Saturday Lows tonight 50 to 55 Highs Saturday 70 to 75 INSIDE TOD" 't. What 1s billed ru a mo}Or Wnt Coo.rl 11howing of lo.le frJrrtolbm artut Wilham Rartoll'I o~ned today at Newport llor bor Art Mu1t1Jm. Slory and photoa on Pag~ Cl . ..... • • • • ... DAILY PILOI SC ~ Lt Fftd!t1 .... 14, 1m Riverhed Da•ag \ Did Conrock Cause Erosion? Orange Count> offlcwb. have laid the bl<Jrne for massive riverbed erosion ln Caspers Regional Park aquat-ely on the doorstep of Conrock, the s and and gravel mmioe operataon that abuts the park. County Environmental Management Agency official Murray Storm agreed Thursday that the January February rairu. by lhemsclvc:. would have Hearing Set On Irvine Coast Land The Orange County Environmental Management" Agency will conduct CJ public hearing Monday in Irvine on its proposed pol1<•1cs Qn unmcorporntcd l.m<.I along the Irvine Coast Gene K1clllwrc. a spokesman for the EMA, explained that, under the state Coastal Act, the county is rt'qum.•d to devt'lop a set of pohc1cs, (•alll'd a Local Coastal Program, that art- cons1:.lt-nt with the provisions of the Coastal Act lie said the hearing 1s beini:: held lo st·ek public input on which tSSues and policies should be earmarked as concerns of the stale, which as concerns of the county and which as concerns of other agencies For example, KJellberg said, the county probably will agree that the state has a legitimate concern on the future of Coast Highway through that <irea and the den•lopml•nl 1mmcd1alely adjacent to 1L. Jlowevl·r. other policies concerning land use might be seen as more lo<:al concerns, he :.aid The mt.~tang will beJ{in al 7 P m . in Irvine City Council Chambt.•r.;. Jamboree noad at McGaw Avenue. caused some erosion problems. But when coupled with the Conrock excavaltons, the ralm and the reaultlng runoff were devastaUng, the agency said. Tbe chief reason for that l!i that a 50·foot Conrock excavated drop·off speeded the flow of water through San Juan Creek as it passed lhrtiugh the regional park. And. county geologists said. the accelerated flow caused widespread damage, Including the washout of a park acc~s road. The finding of Conrock responsibility came at the close or a series or hearings aimed at determining the cause of the park damage. At the end of the hearing, Storm ordered Conrock officials to furnish plans for a structure a wall or sorts -tbat will eliminate the erosion problem. Those plans are lo be in Storm's hands al the end of 90 days and whatever flow control device is selected must be buill by Nov. 30 However, Conrock can lake the responsibility issue and Storm's order to court and contest both. The sand and gravel m1rung company, though, has already voluntarily taken measures to curb the erosion problem by moving its excavations 2,000 feet from lhe park border. Bushmilbl Runs Again The power, grace and tension of the Bushmtlls Grand Prix are recalled in a full page or picture:. an today's Daily Pilot. The race featured the world's fastest fleet of offshore power boats. See the start-to·fini:.h photos on Page Cll. Fro•PageAJ PROBE ASKED ... Oct. 18 Sh<' submitted an expense form for $25 to the city for dinner. No receipt aecom panies the form. W a Iker said he could not recall de-tails of the October trip to San Oic,J!o lie said he did remember calin~ al Mr A's Restaurant. hut said before he rould <•xJJla1n his expense \OUcher. he would have to examine the records at eity hall. "Appar~ntly he (Mushett) has done a lot of looking," said Walker. "I didn't even know I had an expense fil e al city hall." Mrs Wilkinson is oul of town and could not be reached for comment. At Thuri.day's press conference Mushett also questioned why Mrs. Wilkinson had paid $22 a night for acco mmodations at a May conference in Sacramento, while Walker's accommodations were $69 a night. "That one's easy to explam, .. Walker said •·Donna's husband didn't al'eompany h<'r on that trip but my wife did go with ml' The mayor saJd he has never questioned the practice among San Clemente's elected and appo1nlNI offtl·1ab of taking wives or husbands along on business trips al c1ty expense. "It's been cons idered a nice gesture to rnvile part time employees (councilmen and planning commissioners) to take spouses along on out-of-town business trips al city expense rather than breaklna up the families," he said. "I should point out, however, that I have ORA NOE COAST 1..r.c DAILY PILOT T~()r~C:0.1\ Otlt., Pot~ •tf\.,...,rf'lt\(1'1111\ n-·~ t"-,..W'\ (lllr•\t. . ., I\.,_,...,.,_, tr'f Uw o.-.. ~ r""'"'' P-*1""'"c..,.. .. , s..tf'~""' tfO"f\ .,. f>Uh'I""•~ M.nf\tta._ OUOll_,.. f t•t\IY ~ (C'\t• ,...,... H~t ht<f\ H•lftf~ ... h '°"" ..... v .... ., h¥1f'H \4<Nl9tM<t.'-¥••~· •Nt :-:-:: =~~.~~~:r;.=-·~!.. =~:."t.~':':,t,,::.:.,,. m Wft' a.v ...... ,..,,. ..... P.Phi.iJilllf'll•Mrvt.!iln"-"' J•t•. Cw.., V~•-'•"'_,..__.. _ ... - r;e1i. -·-----1.,.114ttll' ~ ........ _.. ...... ........... , ""'""'"''•*' &.eoim• ... cti OMte n.o-.,....,,.... Mtlll"'".,.,,_, ... o ...... •n Offtc•• GM••Mo•• >>OW..<119"-M•Q;;:.~·~~.!'';:..e:r_•,.'::'~~=" ••~O•-r._ •• T...,,...MI (114)142""21 Claultlad AclffttlalfVMJ.M11 Uflmlt .. _. "" o.,.,..~ T...,._. ...... .. ,._ ... c .. - 4tt-tlll0 ~1: =.--= c=:..~ .... r,., ................ "'. := "'" .. ••••.nue -'"'"' ~la4 ~--' .... ,,_._ $9( ..... ,. ' ............. , ~· Mt • C:.Olt•~•• Iv''""''" '' rerrle• U =:t:..":a.~:" _,, .ult~ i always paid by wife 's lransportallon on these trips " Walker said it may be lime to review city policy on travel reimbursements. The City Council has already scheduled a re-evaluation, he said, or golf course privileges presently extended lo city officials and Slaff. Assistant City Attorney Bartlett said Thu~day that it has "always" been the practice in San Clemente for elected or appointed officials to take lbe1r husbands or wives along on city business trips al city expense. "We can't find a written policy to that effect," he stud, 'but in general that's the way it has been done for as long as anyone can remember." Three of the city's planning commissioners who attended a League of California Cities planning institute in Oakland last month took their wives along and charged both their own and their wives' expenses to the city, Mushett said. Commissioner Allan WuUeck did not make the trip . Commissioner Clifford Gellatly took his wife, but paid her expenses himself. Gellatly said he didn't realize until he arrived al th e con ference that the oth er comm 1ss1oners were charging their wives' expenses to the city. When he was Informed that it was the routine procedure, he said he chose not to do it because he felt it would be improper. "l have occasion to travel in m y position with Pacific Telephone," he saicl , "and I would not be allowed lo charge lhe phone company for my wife's expenses when she accompanies me. "Besides, I'm still paying these travel expenses as a taxpayer of San Clemente. Probably tbis is an e thical question wltb philosophical roots lhal fo pretty deep. I didn 'l c ha lenge the other comml.ssioners -I just decided lo do my own thing." Accordlne to city records, Gell atJy's expen ses on the Oakland trip wen $122. The city paid $293 for Chairman Mellord Morgan's attendance at the coorerence wlth hl1 wlfc. Comml11lonn Jamea Chase c laimed $304, includln1 bis wife'a expensu. Commlulo1'cr WUUam Greenwall'• expease.1 wllh hJs wife's, came to $2$5. ' "Yes, l did t.ake my wife at the city's expenae." said orgaft. .. I ob'rioual1 don't nat it'• un(!th)cal, beca e I did it. I'd rat.IWr not comment fwtber anlt-l'•J uaoonbavettw C117 ·~ .. Into tt." Atteml* 1)j t.be Dally pt\ot io co tact Comml lo rt Cltaao and ·Greenwall wer e unaucct!saJ\ll. Tanker Breaking Up at Sea BREST, France CAP) -The wrecked American supertanker Amoco Cadiz broke in two early tod•Y. and lts stern section with It.a broad towering bridge and hu ge engine was swung completely around by the poundmg seas. The forward section, still thought to hold up lo 15 million gallons of 011, was bearing the full force of lbe storms and· 25·fool swells. 04Mly "1IM ""' ~ WILL IT BE THE COUNTY'S ROCK BESIDE ALISO CREEK OR TOM CUTKOMP'S ROCK Peak lldes due over the weekend may completely break up lbe vessel, endmg any chance or savmg the remaining oll from Joining the record 50 million gallons already fouling the Brittany coast. Plan To Build On South Laguna Outcropping HH CauHd County Opposition Baglin Quits Water District Board Post Newly elected Laguna Beach councilman Wayne Baglin has resigned his post as a director of the Laguna Beach County Waler 01slru:t lo ~void a conflict of in- terest. Baglin, who was lhe top vote recipient in the March 7 municipal elections, has been on the water distr .:t board of direc· lors since August, l975. In a Jetter to the water district this week, Baglm said he is re· s1gmng on the advice of Jack Rimel, the district's legal counsel, to "avoid any problems that might anse from a conflict of interest between the two pubhc bodies." Baglm said he intended to re- main on the City Council and the water board earlier this month. hut an analysis prepared by Rimel pomted out possible con· fhcts. It was the attorney's opiruon Baglin swd, that he could not hold the two positions without unlic1pallng a challenge by any c1l1zen and that such a challenge would be upheld. W aler Dis trict gener al mana~er Joseph Sweeney said the board accepted Baglin's res· ignation "with regret." He said the board will appoint an in· terim director for Baglin, whose term continues until November 1~9 • Fro91 Page A J MARINES ... were arrested after police obtained arrest warrants, charging them with kidnapping, rape by force and other sexual offenses San Clemente police were alerted lo the girl's alleged rape by county sheriff's officers, after lhe teen-ager made her way to a residence near a remote area of Tustin where she said the attack occurred. The girl told police three men in a dark green sedan forced her into their car as she walked alon g El Camino Real near Avenida de la Grulla about 5:30 p.m. They then drove her north on the San Diego Freeway, she said. During the ride she was struck ln the face and forced to take off her clothes. police said. In an uninhabited area near Tustin, the girl told police sbe was sexually assaulted by the three men. She was then allowed to dress and was let out near the scene of the assault, where she walked lo a nearby house for help, they said. Two police investigators a!>s1gned full time to the case acted in Thursday's arrests on informalloo supplled in part by the victim, who was hypnotized lo help her remember bow her assailants and their vehicle looked. sald Gates. A local artist also compiled sketches of the girl's assailants, based on her description, Gates said. f'ro•P~AJ JARVIS ..• gigantic benefits In rebuttal, Jarvis said "It is idiotic to say we should have on ly relief for owners of occupied dwelliop." •'To s ay we're hurting the homeowners Is silly," Jarvis aald as he labeled txtsUng properly regulaUons "crand felony theft." The Yeteran reform campaigner went on to fall beck on constitutional property rilhtt s ate1u1rds to support hts advocacy. But when Jarvis allqed that s tatewide there ire •·1,soo f oN"closures from lH failures a month," Cordova quickly went on the attack. "No ~ bu succumb.cl to taae• ln tJWI countJ in t.h• past fivo yean," Cordo'Ta H\d to ~rute the claim or muatv. tax toreclc,. H• wt t oa to arau Ptopo6!Uoa will forH ov rnftMnt.I to ·clfrl*MlelMw th atatit for l'OYR t.b Ir aupporL ' Fr .. PageAJ AUSOROCK. Cutkomp, who has an option to buy the rock from Edward Bowler for $140,000, aaid he la tire~ of being atrun1 alone. His gut feeling, he said, is that the county won 't buy lhe outcropping. ''When it comes down to 1t, that rock 1s or no use to the public." he said. And. he says, the house he plans for the sale will blend m with the rock The 3,000 square foot structure is designed Lo conform with the rock, he sayd "We want to cut a tiny slot on the top of the rock for a carv.ort and foundation then cantilever the house out from that. So we're not grading the rock or mutilating the site. "And we're not screwing up anybody's view because the sides of the house are slanted on the beach s1de. They kmd of creep down the s ides of the rock." • • Cutkomp said he and his wife and two children want to live 1n the four-bedroom house when it's finished. "It's the American dream deal," he said. "You work hard buy some land and hope to build your home. "Only now we're catching Oak from the neighbors and the county." Cutkomp faces a little more flak April 5 when county supervisors will hold a publtc hearing on whether or not Harbors, Beaches and Park District funds should be used lo buy the rock. And county Planning Commissioners will make their final decision April 11 based on action by supervisors. That's when Cutkomp expects to know if his home will be built upon lhe rock The tanker broke its back and split almost m two within hours of grounding March 16. But Wllil early today it had held together on the port side. A full pollution alert was ordered in western Normandy as the oll slicks continue t.o drift eastward across northern Brittany. Oil pollution control experts from America and other nations were bitter over French reluctance to lake their advice on cleaning up the spill, which topped the 1967 Torrey Canyon · di~a!>ler off southwest England by at least 15 million gallons. French press Criticism also was growing over lhe French government's failure to coordinate and start a cleanup of waters and beaches soiled by the spreading mess. At least five American companies specializing in 011 recovery had been trying since 5horlly after the accident to interest French authorities in their services, without success. $631,000 Damages &Niguel Residems ~in Avco Property Suit By TOM BARLEY OI .. o.11, l"li.t Sufi Damages totalling $631.000 were awarded against Avco Community Developers Thurs- day by an Orange County Superior Court Jury which heard testimony that five former Laguna Niguel residents were victimized by the company. The verdict ended a two- monlh trial m Judge Robert H. Green's courtroom. Avco lawyers said they will appeal the verdict. The jury's biggest award went to Eugene W. Ventre of Costa Mesa who was given $120,000 in compensatory damages and $135,000 in punitive damages. Ventre, suffering from a heart disability which be claims was worsened by Avco harassment is one or five former residenLs of the La Veta tract who cla.Lmed that Avco persecuted them and violated their property rights m 1971. All five were sued earlier by Avco for $12 million In damages with allegations that they un- i awfully conducted real estate transactions from their homes. Annual Event Pa·ir Re-enact Crucifixion MANILA, Philippines <AP) -Two Filipinos had themselves nailed to wooden crosses one after anot~~r.on Good Friday in a re-enactment of Jesus' cruc1f1x1on almost 2.000 vears atro A crowd of 40,000 shrieked and jostled for ri better view, first of Juanito Piring, 35: then Mariano Bagtas, 28, who were nailed through the palms and stayed on the crosses for three minutes. . Their crucifixion took place on a stage in the v1llag~ ~f San f'ernando, 30 miles north of Marula. Pmng, who has been crucified on Good Fridav for several years running, called the ritual an "atonement for my sins and those or others." HAVE AN DEN'S The Avco lawsuit ended in an appellate court defeat for the company after a series of ad· verse rulings in Superior Court. The five defendants in that ac'- tion then joined forces against Avco and asked the jury in Ju<l~e Green's courtroom to award them $12 million in damages They got $631,000 in damages with lhe jury voling 1.0-2 in favor of an award for each of lhe five plaintiffs. It was alleged for the plaintiffs during the trial now concluded th at Avco tried to impose architectural restrictions on homes in the La Veta tract to ensure that valuations on nearby Avco property were not affected by designs that did not fit in with. Avco planning. The balance of lhe $631,000 verdict was distributed as follows: Chesler Lautzenheiser ot Apple Vapley, $117,500 in com· pensatory damages, $115,000 in punitive damages for a total of $232,500. -Pete Peterson or Diamond Bar, $12,500 in compensatory damages and $50,000 in punitive damages for a lolal of$62,500. f'loyd and Sharon Hart.ford of Yorba Lmda, $3,000 each in <'Om pensatory damages and $37 ,500 each in puruhve damages for a tot.al of $40,500 each. 'IJSllllH: iiisia11atiaii: ·custom draperies tx.N0.1)0..U linolNn • wood floor 1663 PlAClNTIA AVENUE • COSTA MESA,, CAUF. 92627 • PHONE 6,6.,838 -646.2355 Orange Coast EDITION Your Hona-..town Daily Newspaper 1 I VbL. 71, NO. 83, 'SECTIONS, ,0 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRI DAY, MARCH 24, 1978 i N TEN CENTS t'Jarvis vs. -Cordova: Reform vs. Ripoff I By GABY GRANVILLE Of .. o.lly l'llllt SUfl When they weren't sticking '1erbal barbs into one another during a debate Thursday, tax reform advocate Howard Jarvis and Assemblyman Ron Cordova, D·El Toro, took turns praising and condemning Proposition 13. As was expected, it was Jarvis who praised the June 6 ballot meas ure that bears his name, E.H.A. Born the J arvis·G ann tax reform initiative. Aa might be expected, Cordova walked away from bis encounter with Jarvis a winner in the eyes of a majority of the audience, members or the American Association of Public Adm anastrators. A poll taken at the close of the session in Garden Grove showed an overwhelming r.eactlon ... _,.._ • E .R.A., even if it never becomes national law, is assured l an active future because that's the name of this baby girl. Her mother Judy Mccarthey or Phoenix, was in ) Washin~ton Thursday lobbying for the Equal Rights I 1A 3 mendVment. I ie n Newport City Council Race There are 13 active cand&date1 for four 1eat& on the Newport Beach Ci· t11 Council. The election i! April JI. In Newport Beach, candidate& for aeven-member council must re· aide an the councilmonac da&tnct t/&ey hope to repre&ent. Voter& throughoul the city C03I ballots for , ctJle condidole an each distnct and tfle top vote getter an each di~tnct i! elected. FoUowing ore tme/ pro/des of the too actw.! candidate• in the Suth l>utrict, togethff with their ansu~n (q qaie1Uon.t about &0me of the a.t· .uei. The name of a third person, Willwm Doltr, will c.q:)peor on the &allot for the SU:th I>Utrict but he ~withdrawn from the race. Similar profiU• on otM1 council candidate• toill a~or in iub.!equmt J.aaue• o/ the Daily Pilot. Paol Hammel, 416 Heliotrope Ave., Corona del Mar, is SS, has 1;1 v e d I n Newport ' Beach for 10 1 1ears; re· •eived a •acbelor of acience ••tree ln •ualneaa ad· O'llnlatratlon &om use, ls ' i: re ti r• d ""MMtlL aval B captl.ln a1id a re-*' ruJ properl)' a_ppraber for (Ii ofOc of the LOI An1eles • County Aaaeaaor. He is a put president of the Corona del Mar Civic Association and was ap· pointed to the Newport Beach Planning Commission in 1976. Wby are you qualified for the Newport Beach City Cou.acU? ··1 am qualified. first, because I have experience in govern· ment, specifically with fiscal matters as they relate to taxes. The m alters I deal with on the planning commission aren't un· related to my background and my experience In dealing with many other government aaen· cies. How will yoa ..ate •• tlte Janis-Gau IDJtlaUve atlCl wW would you do as a eo•aell member H It puse1? "I'm never too sure how I'll vole until the final conclu.slon, but unless some miligatlne measure comes up between now and June, it appears I will be forced to vote fol' J arvis. ''I see no crisis ln terms or loss of emer,ency 1 rvices if It panes. We will have to establish a prlort&.J and theri look at the pos1lbl11ty Of cu.rtalll.rit'+ certain cit1 activttiiel .. cir~ flnd{nl other wa,1 to fund tMm, euch aa put- t1n1 truh Pldt·up on t.b water • billa ••• Pidd·fot utlllt,y ... against Proposition 13 by association members, most of them government. employees. Cordova condemned Proposition 13 as ''a ripoff" that pretends to befriend homeowners and renters whJle actually favoring large property holders. Proposition 13 seeks lo clamp a lid on property taxes by rolllng values back to their 1975·76 levels and hmiting lax rates to what county assessors said was then tuU cash value. Jarvis started the debate's verbal darts fl ying when he characterized Cordova 's opening remarks as coming from "the voice of inexperience a nd a vacuum of opinion." From that point on, the debate was a heated discussion between a 30-year·old freshman state assemblyman and a 75-year-old retired businessman who has s pent more than a decade crusading for property tax relief. Cordova made it clear that he, too, favors tax relief as well as restraints on government spending. ·•But does Propos1t1on 13 Limit government spendrng? No," Cordova replied in answer to his Gates Nanied Los Angeles Picks New Chi,ef ~ LOS ANGELES CAP> -After its chairman ca11ed for change and flexibility, the city Police Com m issioo un an i m o u&l y selected Daryl F. Gates today as the 49th chief of the Los Angeles Police Department since 1851. Cheers from about SO officers and headquarters staff broke out after Commissioner James Fisk nominated the 51-year-old Glendale-born assistant chief to the post of chief, succeeding Edward M Davis. Gates blushed and beamed nervously as television cameras and lights swung toward him. "I am going to take a look at all facets of the department," he told newsmen afterward. "Other chiefs have virtually been given a blank check, but I come into the department during hard, lean times." Brief commission speeches precluded the unanimous voice vote The decision came after several rounds of leng thy inter views and some second thoughts about a selection process which Commissioner Stephe n Reinhardt characterized as inadequate. Despite h is reservations, Reinhardt said Gates "1s my choice " The commissioner repeated his view that "no maJor corporation would select a person to a high leadership position" by use of a written exam "Never has there been a search as intensive 10 the history of Los Angeles poli~e chiefs," Commission President Marianna Pfaelzer said. "We emphasued we were seeking change We didn 't want a monolllh1c structure an the Police Department. We wanted flex1b11ity " <See GATES, Page A2) own question. "And in what manner does it provide tax relief, equitably or inequitably? I suggest lo you that Proposition 13 is the biggest ripoff we can imagine." Cordova went on to say, in effect, that the J arvis brainchild orrer s only token relief to homeowners and renters while giving major property owners <See JARVIS, Page A2> ............. NEW POLICE CHIEF LA Selects Gates Candidate May Ba~k Mr~. Hart Upper Bay WOuld End Caldwell May Drop Span Bids Co<Ut Road Out of NB Contest Moved Up By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of Ult Deify l'li.t Stlltl Newport Beach City Council candidate Paul Hummel Thurs day declared that Pacific Coast Hl1hway ought to-be · done away with" and replaced by a freeway "close enough to the coast that people would use it " His remarks came at the con· clusion of a forum held in West Newport for the 13 candidates seeking four seats on the council in the upcoming election. The plan drew no response from the other candidates Half of the forum featured brief s pee c he s fr om the c andidates in whic h th ey addressed questions pertaining to West Newport. The second half of the meeting was opened to the approximately 50 audience m embers to question t he candidates. That portion or the meeting turned into what one candidate later called the "Lucille and Paul Show." Hummel is a candidate in the sixth district, seeking lo unseat incumbent Lucille Kuehn. Nearly all of the question and answer period was taken up by partisans from both camps questioning the two sixth district candidates on their platforms. H ummel fielded the fina) question regarding traffic generated by the city's beaches and concluded his r eply by addine: "I think we'd all be a lot better oft ii 101 <Pacific Coast Highway) were dead and buried. Jt ought to be done away with. "What we really need is a freeway cl0te eaou1h \o the cout that people golng to the beach would use it. The San Diego Ji"reeWay doesn't mllke it. It's too far away and •t's on the bias to the coast. We need som etht ng that wou Id be parallel." Some Beaches Remain Cwsed Paul "Pablo" Caldwell , one of four Newport Beach Caty Council candidates in the Third District said today hrhtay drop cut of the campaJan. A n other Third Distr ict can didate, Evelyn Harl, announced late this morning that Caldwell wilJ hold a press conference Monday afternoon It is expected that, if he drops out of the campaign, he will support Mrs. Hart over two other District Three candidates, Frank Ivens and Mike Fering Caldwell did not appear at the two candidate forums Thursday. saying at the time he was deciding whether or not to remain active in the campaign. Mrs . Hart and Caldwell. a teacher al Newport Harbor ffjgh School, have similar views on the primary campaign issues or growth and traffic. Both support the existing voluntary building moratorium because they want future building density reduced and limed to expansion of the road system. Both candidates have stressed that they favor keeping Newport Beach a residential community rather than a business-oriented city or a tourist town. lf Caldwell drops out or the race. he will become the third candidate to do so. Lido Isle resident La Verne de o.llf ,., ... Jtalf - DROPPING OUT? Candidate Caldwell la Cierva dropped out of the race in the Firs t Dist..rict almost immediately after the close or filing Monda}, William Dohr withdrew from the race in the S i xth District in favor or incumbent Lucille Kuehn 'Visual Rock' S. Laguna Queried on Aliso past 15 months. Cut~omp has been seeking county permission to build since last June but the Planning Commission's decision has been delayed by the possibility the county might buy the local landmark as an addition to Aliso Beach Park. If he had his druthers, Cutkomp would like to see the county approve his plans to shave ort a bit of the rock and build his home . But if they decide to shell out $140,000 to buy the rock, that would be fine with him too. "I 'd really like to aet an answer one way or the other," he said. "I've spent close to $25,000 ror fees, environmental impact reports, processing fees, architectural costs and arcbaeolb&ical studies." Cutkomp, wbo has an option to buy the rock from Edward Bowler for $140,000, aaicl he is Ured of beillf 1truna atoo1. His Ft fedina. be aatd. 11 lhat the county won't bu1 the outcroppiq. "When It comes down to It, that rock t1 ol no use to tb• public," be ta.id. And, aaya, th home be ( ALISO. P•I Al) The much alt.ered schedule for lhe new Pacific Coast Highway • bridge over Upper Newport Bay. was changed again this week, this lime 10 favor of early construction. Representatives of lbe city council-appointed Newport Beac h Bridge Action Team <BAT> along with city officials met Wednesday with Heinz Heckerolh, deputy director of Cal Trans. They reported today that 11eckeroth told them the project would be out to bad by April 1979, shaving eight months orr the ex 1sting schedule. Earlier this month, CalTrans representatives said the project wouldn't be ready for bid until January 1 980. That announcement prompted Wednesday's meeting. The seven-lane structure originally was to have been completed by the end or 1979. Joe Devlin. city director or pubhc works , said Heckerolh told the group that, by going to bid in April 1979, the bridge should be completed in early 1981. According to Devlin. who attended the meeting, Heckeroth explained that the delays were the result or problems the agency is having in acquinng right-of-way for the bridge and a related pro1ect to expand the Coast Highway intersections at either end of the span. Devlin said Heckeroth reported the primary difficulty 1s being caused by new state laws regarding acquisition of right-of-way and relocauon of property owners and occupants. Or::cJ.:ast Weather S unny and warmer Saturday. Lows tonight SO to 55. ffjghs Saturday 70 to 75. INSIDE TODA V What J8 biUro as a ma10r Wt11t COC1$t &howmg o/ latt' 1urreah1m artist Wilham Badotu OJHntd today at Newport H arbor Art Museum. SlorJI and photos on Poor Cl • '. • .. t2 0-'JL Y PILOT N iora 50 Hear.. Candidates West Newport Gets AttentWn About 50 West Newport residents turnc:d out Thur.,day night to hear City Council candidates talk about what they plan lo do for West Newport Eacb candidate was given two questions prepared ln advance. In brief, here's what they had to say: Peg ForgJt, 1''1rst District, m talking about a traffic impact ordinance, said ~he wouldn't * * * Froaa Pag~ A I HOPEFULS LuciUe Kuehn, 1831 Seadnft Drive, Corona dcl Mar. 1s SJ: has hved in I Newport Beach for 20 , vears. re ce1ved a bachelor of arts degree m political science and economics from the ., University of Mtts •u~HH Minnesota and a master of arts degree in American history from UC Irvine; has served as assistant to the Vice Chancellor or Student Affairs at UCI and served as nee chairman of the Claremont Colle~es Center for Continwng Education She has been a member of the City C0unc1l for the past four years She 1s a former member of the Orange County Grand Jury, was the charter president of the Orange Coast Chapter of the League of Women Voters, is a member or the boards or trustees of the Newport Harbor Art Museum and South Coast Repertory Theatt•r l\'by are you qaallfled for the Ne"' port Beach City Council? ·I have demonstrated that 1 h.wc J t'1lyw1d1· interest, that I'm indl'Pl'nd1•nt and that I represent no sµc<:1al interest I ,. it•w the city a!. a total entity and I bcllcn• Wl' n£•cd to manage <i OJ lanced system " llow would you vole on the Jarvis-Gann inlllative and what would you do as a council me m bt-r if it puses? .. , will vote for SBl and Prop. 8 1 the llC'hr bill l and against P rop 13 (Jarvis Cann> ··we JW>l can't cut out those services related to the health, safely and welfare of res1denls. but we can re order our priorities We t'l'ln force the state to assume f1nanc1al obligation for things like maintenance of the publJc beaches. Where we have tourist attractions. the lourisLc; could be made to bear the costs of some of the expenses we incur" ,\c; a council member how would )OU vole Ir another build· ing moratorium were proposed? ·'I would vote against a moratorium J am a problem :,olver and I don't feel a moratorium solves problems What we need lo do in terms of traff1<' is develop a com- prehen1>1ve manai:t>mcnl system which would involve not only road construction but a second br1d.:e crossang the Upper Bay, better parking facilities in the older parts of town, ear pooung to the large commercial areas, park and ride, and staggered work hours" Plane Crashes, Couple Killed SAN FELIPE. Mexico !AP> An Amencan t'ouple died when their light plane exploded in the air Wednesday, Mexican authonltes said Thursday The U.S. Consulate In Tijuana identified them as Mr. and Mrs. James C. Ham or Los Galo6, Calif., both in their early S\ls. Their Piper J -3 plane crashed in flames after laking orr from San Luis Gonzaga airport 105 miles south or San ft"elipe. OAANGECOA8T H DAILY PILOT ~,:;;~"t..~:.!r~,~··r, == ::;:: o. ':;. ( ... · f Pvltt•"'''"' ~ ... ,, .. s,,...,,._, ~''""" .,~ °""'''\fWl>,j ...... , ,,,,.,..,_ ,,.., fi!)' (l)\tA Miiio~ H.,.,~"1 .. "I\ HW""t0"'JtP'I &lt.lf~ fttu't ,.,,. Y•I••• lhH'lt \•M•f"llriM' v., .. ., A"Ci ~~ =~~fu~~"·!:s:e'';,!. CJir•"'<f .. t ~kft1"'4 el~t I\ .. Ja l#t\t .. , \trwl Co\t• ...... (•hfffltl•~ , .. , .. (...., ~""'._..._.O.-•w,...... ---·-1.4111• ,_ .... .....,.. Ma~·--OIM'tttl.'----..~ ..... 11•1'>1~1 M.t....,lf'llll.dlten favor one be<:ause it would i.top growth, which she feels ls an unrealistic way to solve the t•1ty 's problems Donald Strauu, First Dl1trlct. said he believes West Newport needs special pollce "reinforcement" during the holiday periods. He suggested using police Crom other ~gencies to baek up Newport's officers. John Tucker, First District, said he believes those conditions could be dealt with by setting up recreational programs for young people. by giving better tralrung to pohce and by treating visitors with kindness to elicit their best behavior S. H. "Hap" Byers, First District. in discussing the completion of the Costa Mesa Jo'reeway, said Newport's streets are going to have to be expanded to deal with the traffic that will be dumped into the city when the freeway is finished Evelya Hart, Third District, in discussing additional par.king in West Newport, said, "We could cover this whole city with asphalt and we still wouldn't have enough park.mg." She said she thinks any addllional parking ought to be metered. Frank Ivens, Third District, said he favors the annexation of the triangle of county land near Hoag Hemorial Hospital so the city will have control of tl. He noted that the city wants the I and to be used for light industry, but the county has it zoned for high density residenllaJ. Mike Gering, Third District, said he'd like lo see the channel behind Newport Shores dredged out for use as a recreation area "I'd get on somebody's back Front Page A 1 JARVIS ... gigantic benefits In rebuttal, Jarvis said, "lt is 1d1otic to say we should have only relief for owners oC occupied dwellings." "To say we're hurting the homeowners is silly," Jarvis said as he labeled ex1sltng property regulations "grand felony theft." The veteran reform campaJ.gner went on to fall back on constitutional property rights safeguards to support bis advocacy. But when Jarvis alleged that statewide there are "7,SOO foreclosures from tax !allures a month,'' Cordova quickly went on the attack. "No home has succumbed to taxes in this county in the past five years," Cordova said to refute the claim of massive lax foreclosures. He went on to argue that Proposition 13 will force local governments to dependency on the state for revenues needed for their support. "And the state has never passed an opportunity lo aeize more control over local governments," Cordova argued. We'll fix that. Jarvis said. "We have another amendment about ready to go. It will freeze all sales and income taxes at their January 1979, levels," Jarvis said. When asked, he balked at citing any examples of so·called fat m government spending, but decried the doubling of government employees in Los Angeles County since 1965. But Cordova argued the Jarvis approach to reduced government SJ>('ndmg is a meat axe approach "that would cut the lean out as well as some or lht' fat .. Cordova also charged that Proposition 13 backers' appeal for support from renters bas little substance because "there is nothing but a personal guarantee from Mr. Jarvis that rents will be lowered." We'll soon fix that, Jarvis said, announcing that full page newspaper ads will soon appear that will carry sponsoring landlord guarantees of no rent increases for two years should Proposition 13 be enacted. Cordova appeared lo catch Jarvis off guard when he pulled out a computerized letter so lie ilmg pro-Proposition 13 funds from apartment house owners, a letter that said landlords have the most to &aln from an election victorv. ''Yea, that's ours," Jarvis mwied as be studied the appeal tor a Sl mllUon war chest needed m the Proposition 13 campaign. Joan Little Loses NEW YORK <AP> Scrta mma and aobblna •• •h• was camed f\'c>m the courtroom. Joan Little hat*" aent back to Jail folk>wtn1 a Ju.etc•'• order that •h• be held for ntraclltlon to North Carollo.a tO complete a prtaon aentecee. RevocaU~ of Ml11 Little'1 baU «bunday by 1tate SUpremo Court Ju1Uce Leoti.aid &boln.lck p~tUJ)ted a noisy autbanl by •boa IOO of • 11111 U We'1 aapport.era wbo c rowde 4 Ute r ookly n ~ unlit it gets done," be said. J 1 ckle Heatber, Fourth District, ln dlscusi;ing the Cotta Mesa Freeway, said she doubts it wlll go much beyond the current excavation area and promised to work with Co,,ta Mesa to develop road systems lo handle beach·bound traffic. Charles Larson, Fourth District, said be supports annexation or the Irvine coast area so that the planning and development can be better controlled. "lt should not be developed as rapidly as our areas bave been," he said. o.lly ...... MMdl ..... Will. IT BE THE COUNTY'S ROCK BESIDE ALISO CREEK OR TOM CUTKOMP'S ROCK? Plan To Bulld On South Laguna Outcropping HH Cauaed County Oppo1itlon F ro• Page AJ Lacille Koehn, Sixth District, • advocated a feasibility study of a marina at the mouth of the Santa Ana River. She said there are many major obstacles to such a project, but suggested a study to fand out how severe the obstades are. ALISO ROCK : A 'HARD PLACE'. • • Paul Hammel, Sixth District, said he believes a small pleasure boat marina in the area would be a good idea, "although we do have other problems that need solving first.'' plans for the site will blend in with the rock. The 3,000 square foot structure is designed to t;,onform with the rock. he sayd. "We want to cut a tiny slot on the lop of the rock for a carpart and foundation, then cantilever the house out from that. So we're not grading the rock or m utilating the site. "And we're not screwing up anybody's view because the sides of the house are slanted on the beach side. Tbey kind or $631,000 in Damages Ex,.Niguel Residents Win Avco Property S uit By TOM BARLEY Of 1Ae o.lr, ~let Staff Damages totalling $631,000 were awarded against Avco Community Developers Thurs- day by an Orange County Superior Court jury which heard testimony that five former Laguna Niguel residents were victimized by the company. The verdict ended a two- month trial in Judge Robert H. Green's courtroom. Avco lawyers sa.Jd they will appeal the verdict. Ranch Sold SC Land Deal Reporte d THE 2,000·ACR E Visbeek Ranch in north San Clemente has been purchased by Nu-West Development Corp. of Alberta, Canada, according to project director John Belda. The undeveloped ranchland, Jyin_g inland or the San Diego Freeway at the extreme north end of Avenida Pico, is reportedly slated for development o( about S,000 housine units. beginning in about a year. THE LAND, which one news~per reported brought a $16 million sales price, was donated Lo Warper Pacific College tn 1973 by Roy Viabeek. Pilgrims Trudge Toward Calvary JERUSALEM (AP> -Thou· sands of pilgrims trudged along the rain-dampened Via Dolorosa this Good Friday, many of them labonng under heavy wooden crosses. lo mark Christ's march to bis crucifixion. (Related story,A7.) · The solemn procession led by Franciscan friars in brown ha bits wound throueh the ancient lanes of Jerusalem's Old City, stopping for devotions at the 14 stations of the cross. The hour-long walk ended at the Church of the Holy Sepulcher. the lradJUonal site of Calvary. In the courtyard of the 800· year-old church, knots of worshippers walled their tum to ftle through the wooden doors. The Latin lJturgy echoed off the stone walls inside the church as the pilgrims filed up the steep staircase to the spot where tradition holds Christ was crucified. "In spite of the cbaos during the procession, I felt a grt>at deal of spirituality,'' said Rex Barnes, a pllgrim from South-West Alrica. "This tends to strengthen my faith in Christianity. f'l'09IP_,,e AI GATES ..• The five members of the commission bad delayed the selection one day to call back Gates and deputy chiefs Robert L Vernon and Charles D. Reese for fJoal lntetviews Thuraday. Jt waa the third Ume the poup had been interviewed. All three candidates aat rtlid In military ltyle dwi.nl toda1'• teHlon. Vernon, "· Is a 2S-19ar police veteran wbo beads C4!nlral Bureau Operations and aer ve1 directly &.low Gates. Ra.se, 50, a 29-year veteran of the department, la in char1e of rtecat plannlnf. "Parts of the procession were badly organized, but everyone seemed to get into the spirit or things. I wasn't disappointed at all," he said. Some pilgrims lit candles and stopped at Christ's tomb inside the same church. just a few yards from Calvary. The tomb will be the center of Easter Sunday celebrallons. Worshippers knelt lo kiss the stone of unction, where Christ's body is said to have been wrapped ln a shroud. Others had their picture taken at the stone or as they hoisted a 10-fool cross outside in the courtyard. HAVE AN The jury's biggest award went to Eugene W. Ventre of Costa Mesa who was given $120,000 in compensatory damages and $135,000 in punitive damages. Ventre, suffering from a heart disability which be claims was worsened by Avco harassment, is one or five former residents or the La Vela tract who claimed that Avco persecuted them and violated their property rights in 1971. All five were sued earlier by Avco for $12 million in damages with allegations that they un lawfully conducted real estate transactions Crom their homes. The Avco lawsuit ended in an appellate court defeat for the company after a series of ad· verse rulings in Superior Court. The five defendants in that ac- tion then joined forces against Avco and asked the jury in Judge Green's courtroom to award them $12 million in dam aces. They got $631,000 in damages with the jury voting 10-2 in favor of an award for each or the five plaintiffs. It was alleged for the plaintiffs during the trial now concluded that Avco tried to 1mp05f> architectural restrictions on homes in the La Veta tract to ensure that valuations on nearby Avco property were not affected by designs that did not fit in with Avco planning. The balance of the $631,000 verdict was distributed as follows: -Chesler Lautzenheiser of Apple Vapley, $117,500 in com- pensatory damages, $115,000 in punitive damages for a total of $232,500. -Pete Pet.ersoo of Diamond Bar, $12,500 In compensatory damages and $50,000 in punitive damages for a total of $62,500 -Floyd and Sharon Hartford o( Yorba Linda, $3,000 each in compensatory damages and $37 ,500 each in punjti ve damages for a total or $40,500 each. DEN'S creep down the sides of tho rock" Cutkomp said be and his wile and two children want to live in the four-bedroom house when it's finished. "It's the American dream deal," he said "You work hard, buy some land and hope to build your home. "Only now we're catching flak from the neighbors and the county·• Cutkomp faces a little more flak April S when county supervisors will hold a public hear\ng on whether or not Harbors. Beaches and Parle District funds should be used to buy the rock. And county Planning Commissioners· will make their final dec151on April 11 based on action by superv1S0rs. That's when Cutkomp expects to know il his home will be built upon the rock. Bullet Fired, Shalters Fluor Window A .38·cahber bullet fired into the Fluor Corporation's administration building in Irvine Thursday night shattered a specially constructed reflecting glass window valued at $1,200, police srud today. No one was injured in the 7:~ p m . shooting. Pollce said the bullet went through a seventh-story window and an interior dry wall in the engineenng company's building at 3333 Michelson Drive. The incident was reported by security guards at the building but no suspects were seen. police !;a1d A search of the area by police with the aid of the Costa Mesa police helicopter turned up nothing. police said. The window that was s hot out faces the San D1c~o F'recway. f>ohce said the bullet could have cam;l'd serious injury lo members of the housekeeping crew, who were working neerby. Be~ Goes Home JERUSALEM CAP) -Prime Minister Menachem Begin flew home toddy ofter rejecting President Carter's demand for removal of Israeli settlements from the occupied territories as "not just" and appealing to tbe Amen<'an public for backing. I Related story. A4 > Oates, who finished first on the clvU servlc. uamlnatioo for chief, 1pent the most time with the comm l11lon tn tbt flnal 1Dterv181ff. The 29-y ar nteran, wbo toolr lhe ·poUce eblef namtnalloii 199 and n.D.bW mlllJ :iiisi811atiaii:·custom draperies ,f ou rib. beeame c J01el1 ... oel a l\b Da~1 In linoleum • wood floor rot. w ,...., :ue aald to b••• b a -.r0omid tor th re job b7 l>aril. 1662 PlACENTIA AVENll£ • COSTA MESA, CALIF. 92627 • PHONE 6~6-4838 -6A6·2355 ' • I ' 7 Saddleback You r Hometo"'·n D aily New!fp uper VOL 71, NO. 83, 4 SECTIONS, <40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MARCH 24, 1978 TEN CEN Jarvis vs. Cordova: Reform vs. By GARY GRANVILLE OI .. o.tty ...... lutt When they weren't sticking verbal barbs lnto one another during a debate Thursday. lax reform advocate Howard Jarvis and Assemblyman Ron Cordova, D-El Toro, took turns praising and condemning Propos1t1on 13 As was expected, il was Jarvis who praised the June 6 ballot measure that bears his name, the Jarvis-Gann tax reform initiative. A s might be expected, Cordova walked away from his encounter with Jarvis a winner in the eyes of a m ajority or the audience, m e mbers of the American Association of Publtc Administrators. A poll taken at the close of the session Ill Garden Grove showed a n overwhelming reaction against Proposition 13 by association members, most of them government employees. Co rdova c ondemned Proposition 13 as "a ripoff" that pretends to befriend homeowners and renters while actually favoring large property holders. Proposition 13 seeks to clamp a lid on property taxes by rolling values back to their 1975-76 levels and limiting tax rates to what county assessors said was then full cash value. Jarvis started the debate's verbal darts flying when be characterized Cordova 's opening remarks as comrng from "the voice of inexperience and a vacuum o( opinion " From that point on, the debate was a heated d1scuss1on between a 30-year old freshman s late assemblyman and a 75-year-old retired businessman who has spent more than a decade crusading for property lax relier. Cordova made it clear that he, too, favors tax rehef as well as restraints on government spending. ··But does Proposition 13 hmit government spending., No," Cordova replied in answer to tus Another Red Satellite to 'lJnpre dirtahle' Coal Miners To Vote Again WASHJNGTON CAP) The nation's striking coal miners, defiant and unpredictable thro u ghout their 109-d ay walkout. are voting again on wh ether to arrcpt a new e<>ntraet offer As before. most offl<.·1als of the United Mine Workns said they expect a c:losl' dec151on by the Cops Seek Suspect In Blaze SbenfC's investigators are see kin g a s usp ec t who r e portedly hurled a lighted Molotov cocktail al a Leisure World security vehicle early Thursday Deputies s aid a n umdenlified man th rew t h e flamin g soft -drank bottle filled with gasoline at security captain Ronal d Burns a l 2-15 a.m Thursday as he cruised north on Moulton Parkway 1ust outside the r etirement com munity's walls. Lee Stipes, Leis ure World security chief, said Burns was responding to reports of rocks being thr ow n ove r the commuoity's wall at Moulton and Iglesia Street. One rock broke a resident's window Stipes said the flamin~ bottle missed the patrol unit by about 10 feet and exploded on impact. He said Burns spotted a man .n ear the road who s houted "Pig" and ran from the scene Sheriff 's investigators arrested a Laguna Hills man following a similar incident four years ago near Thursday's bombing site Free Books Available AtSVUS D Probably much more than you want lo know about English, math, music and science can be found in books being offered free by the Saddleback Valley Unified School Di s trict beginning next week. A total of 7 ,887 obsolete textboob will be on d.tsplay and offered free in the dlstrict's warehouse from 8:30 a.m . to S:30 p.m . Monday through April ~-The book1 have been collecting dust ln the district'• warehouse tor the Jut four or five yean. "Nobody baa evel\ touched thoae boots since' unification,'' HJd Mike Delaney, director o r elemenUry !NlucaUon. T be 1tate'1 EducaUon Code allow• auch Wtustd materiaa to (See BOOKS; Pa1e Al) ~FURNISHINGS' • FWOR FEATURE 160,000 soft e<>al miners eligible to vote today al uruon halls from Appalachia to the Rockies. "I ain't making predictions" about the final outcome, UMW President Arnold Miller said Thursday while flying from Washington lo his home District 17 an Charleston. W Va But then he predicted that the 21.500-m e mbe r district, the union 's largest, would approve the ne w accord. U nion s pokesman Paul Fortney s aid that. if the balloting is close. the result may not be known until late tonight. Returns fro m 10 o f the approximately 800 UMW locals this afternoon sbowed the contract being rejected by a 1.304 to ~ vote Union officials had forec~t a close vote when anotlter proposed contract was put to a vote three weeks ago, but the rank and fil e turned it down by better than a 2·1 margin. After the contract rejection, mine r s almost universally defied a f e d e ral Judge's back-to-work order which President Carter obtained under ttie Tart-Hartley Act. UMW officials said their m em bers would ignore the order. as they had during a series of strikes 30 years ago. Even if the miners accept the latest offer from the BituminouJ> Coal Operators Association. the str ik e would n ot end automatically. The UMW and the Association of Bituminous Contractors are negotiating a separ ate pact to cove r a bo ut 10 ,000 mine construction workers. Miners ready to return to the pits under a ratified contract may refuse to work if the construction workers are without an agreement and throw up picket lines. The latest proposal -the third tentative agreement reached since the strike began Dec. 6 -contains industry concessions in several areas. 1ncludmg reduced payments by miners for h ealth car e, improved pension benefits and deletion or a clause letting companies discipline leaders of wildcat strikes. But most miners apparently still don't like the contr act, particularly a provision calling for ind.tvidual company health ins urance plans to replace the single, independent health care fund operated jointly by the union and the industry for three decades. ~Capo Beach Nurses Probed The Great lellg Bean Derl>g David Stapleton. 11 (above left). and Carolyn Fourtney. 4. both of EJ Toro. use s lraws to help blow their jelly beans toward a hope d -for victory in the aclion-packed bean derby Thursday in El Toro The contest was held at Olivewood Elementary School and. while it may not have put the Kentucky Derby in the shade. the youngsters appeared to enjoy IL Sales Tactics In Land D e als Aired to Jury SAN DIEGO CAP> -High pressure sal es tactics by sales men for an Arizona-based real estate farm ha ve been described in tape recorded <.'o nversations played for a federal Jury in the land fraud trial of three of the company's former executives, including a M1ss1on V1eJO man The conversations, between Consolidated Mortgage Corp land buyers and office workers seekmg to confirm real estate sales. contained references to sales techniques d e fe ndant Emanuel Singer earlier testified he had banned from use by his salesmen Singer, 52, of Mission Viejo, Robert Gunnison, 35, and Alvin M cCollum, 58, both of Phoenix. Aril., face c harges of fraud in selling land in Arizona and Oklahoma. A 22-counl federal grand jury indictment return e d last September alleges the men took part in an $18 million swindle. A fourth officer of the defunct fil'm, Wllllam Nathan. 41, of Houston, pleaded guilty before the March 8 court session to one count of mail fraud and will be sentenced April 17 ln Phoenix. U.S. District Judge Walter Craig is presiding after s hlfting the case here from Phoenix because o( pretrial publicity. Earlier Thursday, Sioger testified under questioning by his attome~ that he resigned as Conaolidated's general s ales manaaer because he didn't like the way owner Edward Lazar <See TACl'JCS, Pase Al) Bushmillll Rum Again Daryl Gates Named LA Chief of Police LOS ANGELES (AP> -After its chairman called for change and flexibility, the city Police Co mmi ssion unanimously selected Daryl F Gates today as the 49th chief of the Los Angeles Police Department since 1851 Cheers from about 50 officers and headquarters staff broke out after Commissioner James Flsk nominated the 5 1-ycar -old Glendale-born assistant c hief lo the post or chief, s ucceeding Edward M Davis Gates blushed and beamed nervously as television cameras and lights swunft toward him ··1 am going to lake a look at all fa<.'els of the department," he told newsmen afterward ·'Other chiefs have virtually been given a blank check, but I come into the department during hard, lean times·• Brief commission speeches precluded the unanimous voice vote. The decision ca me a fter (See GATES, Page A2) Altllltl,........ NEW POLICE CHIEF LA Selects Gate! Juvenile Hearing Slated in Slaying A bearana to determine whether a 17-year-old boy should be tried as an adult In the shooting death or an El Toro housewife is expected to be t>laced back on a Superior Court calendar in Pasadena soon The state Supreme Court denied a petition Thursday that souaht a rehearln c on the court's Feb. 15 nilln1 that the preH may attend the Juvenile hearln1. Ann Maloney, Loa Angeles County deputy publtc defender actln1 aa attorney for the 1'Us.,.ct tdenUfled only as Brian W., refused Friday to dlscusa her next pre trial move. Dl1trlct attom1y'1 deputies sl U!d to P")lectil• th c lo Paudcna w on not on llW w ek aad unavailable tor comm In 1 a pr bearlila t.o det w r Brian will be tried as an adult. Ms. Maloney argued that ·•confidentiaiity and anonymlly are necessary lo the goal of Juvenile law , whlch 1s rehabilitation." The Los Angeles Superior Court disagreed. So did the Supreme Court, staling it favors the role of the press an monitoring the admlnlstratloo oC ju5Uce on behalf of the public in preferencclo~ress restraints. Thursday s d eolal for .a rehearin& on that decision wes made unanimously wlthout comment b)' lbo sentHnan hJ11b court. Brlan ls 1'l1spected of lcldnaprng and murderint n . Racbe Sparling ot the Laite Forest sod.ion of El Toro ahortly af\er 1be. vlsJted her Puadena yctHatrlit on March 14, 197'7. Pollce tlairn the youth was <see SU YING, P a1• Al) Ripoff own questJon "And in what manner does it provide lax relief, equitably or inequitably? I suggest to you that Proposition 13 is the biggest rapoff we can imagme." Cordova went on to say, in effect, that the Jarvis brainchild offer s only token relief to homeowners and renters whlle giving major property owners <Stt JARVIS, Page A!> Fall? Nuclear Threat Unknown MONTREAL <AP> -The Canadaan Press today quoted the space laboratory in Bochum. West Germany, as saymg that another Soviet satellite may fall out of orbit about April 20. but that 1l was too soon to tell where it would fall The news agency said Hemrich Kaminsky, director of the laboratory, reported m a telephone interview that Cosmos 849 was following a similar path to that of an earlier salelhle that rrash c:d in the Northwest Territories this year. The earHer satellite, Cosmos 954, was nuclear-powered and showered radioactive debris over the Canadian north when 1t cras hed , but it was not immediately clear whether the second satel l ite al so is nuclear-powered _ In an interview from Bochum with Nouvelles Tele-Radio, the French-language broadcasting service of the Canadian Press. Kamansk) said he has asked the Soviet space agency rn Moscow for further information about Cosmos 849 It was launched Aug. 18, 1976 M eanwh1le, r adiation levels have increased sharply an tw~­ cil1es as a result of China's. recent nuclear explosion, but thl" Environmental Protection Agency said today the levels do not pose healt h hazards. The EPA 's air-monitoring t ests found rad iation levels· r eaching 85 picocuries in Denver . Colo., and Cheyenne. Wyo Norm a l background radiation measures from 10 to 15 p1cocunes. and not until the level rearhes 1.000 is there cause for roncem. EPA spokeswoman Martha Casey said . Al SO other air monitoring stations around the country, the amount or radiation did not exceed norm a l levels, the agency said Low-level nuclear clouds are still crossing the country while those at higher altitudes already have passed over the country she said. The Chinese blast March 14 was described as "less than 20 kilotons " Unlike some previous blasts. radioactive debris was found as low as 20,000 feel and was bro ke n up by high winds. creating a scattering of s mall nuclear clouds Or:::wi,:as• \leathe r Su nny and warmer Saturday Lows tonight SO lo SS I ti1ths Saturda~ 70 to 75 I NSIDE T ODAY Whal 11 bdlftf cu a ma,or Wtat Coost allowing of lot• surreaLum arhst William 8az1ote1 opentd l oda11 at Newport Harbor Art Museum. St<>ry 01ld plloln., on Pcgt Cl. l•tlex u 0 u CM u M ,., t ... cte CM .. ... A2 DAIL V PILOT SS ( PH~ Logh»ok J Soccer Fans Raily To Aid Eddie Rau By WlLlJAM HODGE °' -.... , ...... ''-" ABOUT •,000 SADDLEBACIC ValJey soccer fans turned out Su.Dday at Mission Viejo High School lo attend a benefit game for Eddie Rua, the 12-year-old Laguna Hills boy who severed bis spine Ul a fall Jut December whale banglnt Chnatmas hght.s. Organizers of the uent saad lbe eame raised at leut $3 ,000 that will 10 toward purchasing a van wilb a hydraulic tilt. Eddie ls paralyied from the waist down. And Rev. Otto Sporrer of St. Nicholas Catholic Church Ul Laguna Hllls said a fund established there to atd Eddie has gone toward an acldlt1on to the young soccer enthus1asl'a home The addition will allow Eddie to move freely about the Rua houaehold from his o"' n room since other rooms 10 the house do not have doors wide enou g h to acco mmodat e the 12 year-old's wheelchair. R e v. Sporrer said another fundra1sing event will take place April Mooo1 19 10 an effort to boost the fund in hopes ol offsettine some medical bills The April 19 fundraising effort will be through ticket sales to a California Surf sO<'cer game at Anaheim Stadium. Ticket locations will be announced shortly by the local American Youth Soccer OrganiulJon. • • • THE I.OS \NCiF.LES RAMS, consistent losers of post st'<1!-ton t·ham1nonsh1p games, will try their hands agamMl u O\!Y. o~ponenl Tuesday in the Saddleback Valley the Saddkback College Mission Conference·winning ltaskt-tball team The 7.30 pm challenge in the colleae gym will l>ent.•f1t the Steve S"eanngen fund, which was establlahed lo build a scoreboard at the school's future football stadium In honor of head coach Ken Swearineen's son. Young Swearingen was killed in an automobile era.sh last December on Laguna Canyon Road. Tickets for the benefit are available at the college athletic and student affairs offices and at \he Rib Rack Restaurant. 28682 Marguerite Parkway 1n Mlaslon Viejo. Tickets are $2 for adults and $1 for cblJdren under 12. ••• About 7800 Saddleback Valley Uni(led School District flr•ll I hrnugh-slxth grade student.a look part recently in the M 1ss10ncott· Vtejobery Bonk Contest M •~~1oncoll aY. ard'i went to the best lllustratlo~ and \It' JOht•ry awards wf're bestowed on the beat writing £•fforts u monumental task when judging 7800 entrles . Hi llo Local winner.1 included such intriguing titles as "FHt Are Ntat," illustrations by Scott Ashman, and "The Enormous Pickle I perhaps with apolosies to e.e. cummings)," Ulustrallons by Alexandra Guerra. Story titles of wrillng award winners also included a tinge of the bl:r.arre. "Blast OH to Tooreka" by Dennis Kearney and "Kalaru· Royal Hunting Saluki"' by Kimberly Harvey Y.erc among the winners And Sara Thome·s winning "Mike And The Runaway Glove" could have been a Hunter Thompson story about the Dodger.ii 1977 World Series play. Otht>r winnN~ In the Missaoncott illustration competition were C'hris Gregg, Michael Los, Susan Ryan, Kathy Hagerty, Tracey Squ1n•s and Make Martam Other V1eJobery "'inners were Danielle Palardy, He1d1 M ergeler. Sharon Dlttner and Kara Levis. Viejo Eyes Change In Growth Plan Mlsi;lon Viejo Mu nicipal Advlaory Council members will again 1.·o n slder proposed c hange s In the Planned Community Text Monday at a 7 30 p m study session The changes. proposed by the Mission Viejo Company. Include provision.a for shifting densities in areas of the community yet Joan Little Lo8e8 NEW YORK <AP> Screamtna and sobbing as she was carried from lhe courtroom, J oan Lillie has been sent back to jail follow\ng a Judie's order t hat s he be held for extradition lo North Carolina to complete a prison 1<entcnce. Revocation of Miss Little's ball Thursday by s tate Supreme Court Justice Leonard Scholnick prompted a noisy outbu~t by about 200 of Mass Ltttle's suppor-t ers who crowded the Brooklyn courtroom ORANGE CC>Aaf sa DAILY PILOT ,,.,., f')r~ c .. ,, D.t•ly .,._ witf\-M\•t"*""'"' I)~ ......... , p, ..... 'p~bl·~hythtr (\r '"'~ ~·\t Pvhii1tl\•ftllil (t"'°"'"" .....,At• ,.,M~Or\ ~,,_ pyblhh"tt ~'WI•• U'foY.,.. ,.,, ...... II)• f n~lt11 M#W N.-,,~11 ft,.., h H~l"!'\tl~l'!ln fM•CI" f l')Uf\ 1•1"' Ytll•Y Ir" ~• \•ddletwliit-Valltit i'f'I,, ~="~ =:...~•~,~~;:.·\'." :~t';J".:'' ;t r.;:;~~,-:t4'~~'1.~'t·~~~ ~-.::~•• ~'1 ••v ••~1N Wn4 p,•,•tt.~' •"" P1,n1,...,.., .,,,. ,,_.,t.~·,~!; i::' .......... ,,._._te .. ril ...... '':9~~;:,--... ..-.._ ...... ....... ..., ............... '"" 811.-1MckYehvm... »IOt l<l ,._,fl-•I -Dl' .. J;;;,.., Offlcft O..t•AM•• llDWllwan- "..,.,"".., .. o(~ "'"""•""""'-·•·• l•-.. Mh llllC...._....tl .... 1 r • ..,...... <n•)to-4121 CIH.m.d Adwenl•nt.U-M7' s-t·-· ., .... -°"~· .. ,~10 fro111tMIC1t'"""'• ....... (-IP\ ,,,. 0. .... U.\I "'*~"" 0..0. .. ,._., k t ,.... tllf"' •• ,.,.,,,. t•WsMI "'flltt .. ~tll1'f"'•ftll M•t ti .._, ................ _, -··' ,.. ....... u•n••...., ~ .... Clt\t IN11•r. jlt•I II CMil Mt .. Ctlli.<t1lt hlltc• fllltll llf UfflH ., i6 '"'11"''" ............... _ .... ,, 1111111-~1-u.>0 ..... ""' undeveloped and allowtng greater latitude in co mmerclal /1nduslrlal development with f ewer restrlctions MAC members are expected to au ggest changes t o the community text amendment following a discussion ot the amendment's lmpllcatlona. The Planned Community Text guides development of Mlulon Viejo and Is similar to a city ·~ general plan The meeting will take place in MAC orrlces, 27021 L1t Paz Rd , Suite 2K ,.,....,.~ .. , BOOKS ••• be offered to the public free "That's what it says in the law and that's what we're allowing them to do," he said. Delaney said Jndlvldual1 wtll be allowed to take one or several of the books Since the district never before has dispc»ed of its old books, t.M administrator sald he could not predict the success or lh1s eive a-way. But he admitted the books arl' not great b&rialn11. ·'The books themselves arc not particularly 1ppealtn« in tnms of tht1 tHles .·· h e t>JCplalned. "tr we had readlne books, I think It would be different." Included amon1 the tJlles are Robortl EnJllah, Our Lansuaae Today. Power Words, Modern School Math , Modern Arlthmt'ttc, Maktnr end Ualng orapha, L1arnln1 About Me11urement.. J.Aarn \.o Jl'old • Fold to Learn, MlrTOr Malle, Pencll and Paper Geometry, Hulth, Concept~ '" Science and Exylorini Music. I lb re art book• loft at. the end of the mactU\, o.taney 1ald. Ult,)' WW be aold tor 1cr1p. He Umated that tlm would add $100 to '160 to the dlatrlet '• aeneral f\md . ' 1Th•1'1l end up' belJ\C )'()Ur milk eartont a ltw monlba later;• ba aald. Avco Facing Damages By TOM BAJlLEY Ol .. o.11, ............ Damages totalllnl $131,000 were awarded against Avco Commwut.y Developers Thun- day by an •Orange County Supertor Court jury which heard testim ony that five former Laguna Niguel residenta were victimized by the company. The verdict ended a two- month trial In Judge Robert H. Green's courtroom. Avco lawyers said they will appeal lbe verdict The j ury's biggest award went to Eugene W. Ventre of Costa ?.' e1rn who was given $1.20,000 ln com pensatory damages and $135,000 in punitive damages. Ventre. suffering from a heart disability which he chums was Y.Orsened by Avco harassment, 1s one of five former residents of the La Veta tract who claimed that Avco persecuted tbem and violated their property tights ln 1971 All ftve were sued earlier by Avco for $12 million In damages with allegations that they un· lawfully conducted real estate transactions from their homes. The Avco lawsuit ended in an appellate rourt defeat for the company alter a series of ad· verse rulings in Superior Court. The five defenda nts in that ac- tion then joined forces aga.inBt Avco and asked the jury in Jud&e Green 's courtroom to award them $12 million In damages. They got $631,000 ln damages with the jury voting 10-2 ln favor or an award for each of the five plaintiffs. ll was alleged for the plaintiffs during the trial now concluded that Avco tried to impose architectural reatr\ct1ons on homes in the La Veta tract to ensure that valuation!> on nearby Avco property were not atrected by de~1gns that did not lit in with Avco planning. The balance of lhe $631,000 verdlcl was distributed as follows· -Chester Lauhenheiser of Apple Vapley, $117,500 in com- pensatory damages, $115,000 in punitive damages for a total or $232.SOO. Pele Peterson ot Diamond Bar. $12,500 in compensatory damages and S.50,000 in punitive dam:iges for a total of $62,SOO. floyd and Sharon Hartford o ( Yorba Linda, s:i;ooo each In <"ompensatory dumages and $37.500 each in punitive damage!> for a total of $40,500 each. f'ro• Pafl# Al GATES ..• several rounds or lengthy interviews and !>ome second thoughts about a sel ection process which Commissioner Stephen R ei nhardt charactenzed as Inadequate. Despite his reservations, Reinhardt sajd Gates "is my choice." Tht! commissioner repeated his view thal "no major corporation would select a person to a hi g h leadership position" by w;c of a written exam. "Never has the re been a searc h as intensive in the history of Los Angeles police ch1cf1 , '' Commiulon President Marianna Ptaelzer sald. "We emphasi~ed we were seeking change. W e didn 't want a monolllhJC s truc ture in the P olice Department. We wanted flexibility " The fi ve members of the comm1ss1on had delayed the selection one day to call back Gates and deputy chi efs Robert L . \' ernon and Charles D. Reese for final interviews Thursday. It was the third Ume the group had been interviewed. All three candidates sat rigid in mlll\a.ry at,yle d\lrina today's session. Vernon, 44, Is a 23-yeer police veter an who heads Central BW'eau Operations and s ervea directly below Gates Rl'ese. 50, a 23-year veteran of the department, is in charge or fiscal planning. Gates. who llnlahed first on the civil tervtce uarnlnat.ion tor chief, spent the m08t Ume with the commission \n the final interviews. The 29 year veteran, who took the police chief examinaUon ln 1969 and finlahed fourth , b eca1ne closely auoclated wltb Davia ln the lolJowl na ,.an. Ht ls aald to bave bHn aroom~d tor the chief's j<>b by Davl1. D1vl1 retired Ulla year after aervlnc u cl\Jel alntt lla. He is 1eek101 the Republican 1ubematoriat nom.lnaUoo. As dlrec\Or of the ofnce of operauans alnce 19'lt. Oates bu dlrert~d •II uniform, patrol, trefflc and alr 1upport optrltJOftl of th• departm t. He ta belt mown pu 1111 htad ol t.be clft>Utm t'e tuk force W'Ol'kln• on tbt llUJakt Slraaaltr cue. • • Sperial Easter Egg Mike Drades. 6, Tony Palmer, 11, and Kathy Wittman, 11 , (from left) know the egg they're decorating won 't be overlooked dur- ing a Saddleback Valley Easter observance Saturdav. This and other similar sized eggs will be 3udged during a ell\ ities planned from 10·30 a.m to 2·30 pm at El Toro Park by the ReC'realion Department of the Saddle back \'alley Unified School Oistnct. Froa Pag~ Al JARVIS DEBATED. • • gigantic benefits. In rebuttal, Jarvis said "It is idiotic to say we should have only relief for owners of occupied dwellings." ''To say we're hurting the homeowners ls silly," J arvls said as he labeled existing property regulations "grand felony theft." The ve t eran r e form campaigner went on to fall back on constitutional property rights safeguards lo support his advocacy But when Jarvis alleged that s tatewide there a r e "7,500 foreclosures from tax failures a month," Cordova quickly went on the attack "No home has succumbed to taxes in this county in the pa.st fl ve years," Cordova said to refute the claim of massive tax foreclosures. He went on to argue t hat Proposition 13 will force locaJ governments to dependency on the state for revenues needed for their support .. And the state has never passed an opportunity to seaie more control over local ~overnments," Cordova argued We'll fix that, J arvis said. •·we have another amendment about ready lo go It will freeze all sales and income taxes at their .January 1979, levels," Jarvis saJd Fro .. r~Al SLAYING ... driving her auto when 1l was involved In an accident the morning after the El Toro mother or four disappeared Officers later arrested Bnan at his home and confiscated some or Mn Sparlina's Jewelry there Four days later, hikers found the 36·year·old woman 'a body in the hills above the San Fernando Valley. She had been s hot 1n lhe head at close ranee. HAVE AN When asked, he balked at c1ltne any examples of so-called rat in government spending, but d e c r i e d t h e. d o u b l i n g o f government employees in Los Angeles County since 1965. . But Cordova argued the Jarvis app roa c h to reduced government spending 1s a meat axe approach "that would cut the lean oul as well as some of the fa t " Cor dova also charged that rropos1laon 13 backers. appeal for support from nmten, has little s ubstance because ' then• is n othing but a personal guarantee from Mr Jarvis that rents wllJ be lowered '· We'll soon fix that, Jarvis said, announcing that full page newspaper ads will soon appear that w\ll carry sponsoring landlord guarantees of no rent increases for two years should Proposition 13 be enacted. Cordova appeared to catch Jarvis off guard when he pulled out a computeriied letter solic iti ng pro-Propos1t1on 13 fund s from apartment house owners. a letter th al said landlords have the most to gain from an election v1ctorv "Yes, that's ours," Jarvis mused as he studied the appeal for a $1 million war chest needed in the Proposition 13 campaign Plane Crashes, Couple Killed SAN FELIPE. Mexico IAP> An American couple died when their light plane exploded in th<> air Wednesday, Mexican autnorlties said Thursday The U.S. Consulate in T1JuanJ ldenlthed them as Mr and Mrs Jarnea C. Ham of Los Gatos, Calif .. botl'l in their early :>os. Their Piper J .3 plane crashed in (la mes after taking off Crom San Luis Gonzaga airport 105 miles south of San Felipe. DEN'S Bullet Fired, Shatters Fluor Window A .JS.caliber bullet fired inlo the F luor Corporation's admimstration buildi.ng in lrvi.ne Thursday night s ha ttered a specially constructed reflecting glass window valued at $1 ,200, police said today No onl' was injured in the 7:45 pm '>hooting Poll<:(' sci1d thl• bullet -.l'nt through d !>e\ eoth stc1r)' "1ndow and an anterior dr.) .,.. all in the C'ngtnct'rmg company's build.mg at 3333 Michelson Drive. The incident w a5 reported by security guards at lhe building but no suspects were seen, police s~ud A search of the area by pohce with the aid of the Costa Mesa police helicopter turned up nothing. police said. The window that wa~ shot out faces the San· Diego t'reeway. P olice Mtd the bullet could have caw.ed serious injury lo membC'rs of the housekeeping rrew. who were working nearby Fro• Pdg# A J TACTICS ... did bus1nes~ Lazar sold Consolidated to \1cCollum '>hortl} aft<'r Singer's n..·s1gnal1on m May 1973 A lthough he and Lazar quarreled several times over ho" luc\... or promised 1mpr0Hmcnts on Cor'lsolldaled d('V<'lopments hindered his sales furce, Singer said Lazar offered him a raise and a share in another C'onsolidat<'d bUbsidiary when he threatened lo quit. La1ar was later found shot lo death m the parking lot of a Phoenix office building a day before he was scheduled to testify before a grand jury probinft An:iona land fraud. His killer has not been found .. ..... .,.....,: iiisiiilatian: ·custom drapsries UC. NO. 110422 linoleum • vvood floor 1ffi PLACENTIA .AVENUE • COSTA M!S1', CALIF. 92627 • PHONE 646-4838 -6.C6·23S5 ! • Fflday, March 24, 1978 s DAILY PILOT ,.\3 ilnfant Autopsy Evidence Blasted r Appeal \lowed w add.ill Benson Loses •, .· OCTD Post Corruption, Alleged In. County LOS ANGELES <AP> unJOn trust funds an• losing m1lhons of dollars each year because of widespread corruption in Southern Caltforr1111 's conslruc tion industry, p:irt1cul;irlv in Oran~c County. a federal pro., ecutor says Assistant U ~ Attorney Douglas W. Lofgren said Thurs day undic;closed cash payments and double sets or n·cords result in big losses to union trust funds and the Internal Hevenuc Servi ct• He made the comments before l' S. D1str1ct Jud,::c Robert TakasuR1, \I.ho later sentenced Freddie B D1a1. ti former auditor for tht' Carpt'nlers Trust Funds of Southern Cahforma. on a bribery plea. The l.>p1cal carpenter noY. aday:-. makes about SlO an hour extra toward fr1n~e benefitc; a<lmtn1!>lcred by the various funds Therefore, Lofgren said, fram· ing contractors oftt•n record on their books fewer hours than ac tually workC'd. substantially re- ducing flLI) mcnts dut• union trust fund:-. LofJ!rt•n saul I ht• prOSC'CUllon or D1a1. 51. of L.1 Palma. who cidmitte<l Liking" hnbe dunng a 1975 aud11 of :i Santa Ana con slruct1on t·omp:iny, ,., Just the first of man) t·xpt·ctcd in com ing months Takasug1 senl<'nt•ed Diaz to six months in Jail and Fined him $10,000 ln an 1nter\'1ew with the Los Angeles T1m<·s. the exN·utn e • secretary of thl' Or<in~e Counly District Count•1l of Carpenters sai~ the problem 1s particularly serious in Orang<• ('1Junty for several reasons th<' construe· lion boom, bcc1wse many fram ing contractors are hPad quartered there and because skilled carpenters h11ve been in short supply. "The cnrpt•nters have been able lo write their own tickets," said Gerald Stedman Superior Court Judge ~nard Goldstein refused Thursday to reinstate Carol Benson to her $32,000-a-year post as executive director of the Orange County Transportation Commission Judge Goldstein told lawyers for both sides after a bitterly fought hearing that he thought Mrs. Benson's lawyer was pursuing the wrong type of legal action m the battle against her faring last Nov. l by the commission. He suggested in his ruling that he felt attorney Robert Concolino should have attacked the commission's decision last Nov. l via a breach of contract action. Concolino commented outside the courtroom that he felt Judge Goldstein was "utterly and absolutely wrong." "We will go to the court of appeals and I predict that we'll have this decision overturned," he said Mrs. Benson claimed in her lawsuit that the comm1ss1on \'iolated its own rules when she was fired at a special meetin~ The Newport Beach woman further contended that none of the reasons given by th<' commission for her firing were supported by facts. Commissioners told Mrs Benson and the press when she was dismissed that they were dissatisfied with her performance as director since she took over the job four months earlier and that they "had lost confidence in her performance." Mrs. Benson commented outside the courtroom that she now feels that the commis!>.1on never intended that !>he i,hould hold the job of OCTC director for any length of lime. "Despite the fact that l was brought here from Washington, D C .. I feel that the commission all along fully intended lo give the job to Tom Jenkins," sh<• said Jenkins, a former plannin~ director for the Orange County Transit District. was named to the OCTC job after Mrs ffoni,on was fired. "He bad some problems ~•th the transfer of his retirement benefits and I was hired until he got them sorted out," Mrs. Benson said. "They always intended to fire me as soon as he was available .. Platforms Branded as Hazardous LOS ANGELES CAP> The Pac1hc Merchant Shipping Al> soc-1ation of San Francisco has branded proposed Shell Oil Co ctnlhng platforms 10 miles south of Los Angeles Harbor a!'> hazards to coastal shipping The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has been requested by Philip Steinberg, president of the shipping group. to schedule public hearings on the proposed drilling platforms. The platforms are to be hu11l inside the zone separating north bound and southbound com merc\al shipping lanes Noting "we have only so much critical deep water in 1And around out big cities," Steinberg said Thursday: "Our i:•eamship mem hers feel very strongly that oil j!ompanles must find some way to reach oil other than con- structing hazardous platforms in veaa.el traffic schemes." Roundt Out Easter :'· B~ Reading Pilot '· (suNDAY;S BEST J lull-scale o~budslDCJ>. OUT OF Of'ftC -I~ t.owera Wl:lll't dO for 1t l_.. two Oran1e COUn&.r eirecutlfll.t wbO nnd tbty,,.. doln• bett•r by not betna deft·bound. Stone1 on two dlurae fjrms wltb 1lmHer m natetnenl vlowpolntl wn\ be on tho 8ualnea paa s. o.111 f'I .......... lty lllcMnl 1(-1.,. Jury Sees Slides ., Dy TOM BARLEY Of .. o.llY Plllll SIMI A coroner's finding that a bnby allegedly murdered by Dr W1ll1am Baxter Waddill 10 Wt-stminster Communit~ Hospital was strangled to death was repeatedly challenged Thursday in Orange County Superior Court testimony. Using slides to illustrate the port10ns of tissue be took from the dead infant. Dr. Akio Metamura told a Jury that the coroner's officer wbo conducted the autopsy incorrectly identified other tissues taken from the body when he testified as a prosecution witness FIREMEN CUT AWAY WRECKAGE TO REMOVE VICTIMS OF TUSTIN ACCIDENT Three Santa Ana Men Ole In Headon Crash Early This Morning Dr Robert Richards performed the autopsy and appeared earlier in the trial to advise the JUry of the steps that led Lo his returning a finding of manual strangulation. 3 Santa Anam Die In Fiery Car Crash fhrel' ml'n d1t.>d in Tustin l'arl} todJV ~hen tY.o car::. l0olhdt•d and burst into flames. Police said attempts lo pull lh<' thrc.>e v1ct1ms from the flaming wreckage failed when would-be rescuers were driven back by intense heal and flames Coroner's investigators 1dl•nt1f1ed the' ictims as John Hernandez Ramirez. 20, of 2205 S Halladciy St , Santa Ana Joe Resendez, 17. of 310 St J\ndrc•ws St . Santa Ana Zamarripa Y:.tdro (~uintl•ro. 50, of 2813 Brook St . Santa Ana Acr1dcnt reports indicated that Ham1rt.•z and Resendez Y. ere lravel1n1-: l1asthound on W:trn<'r AvN1uc Just east of the !\t·wport Free.,., ay wben their .auto C'roSSl•d '''er the center line ;inrl 1·oll1ded ht•ad on with Teachers Ask Layoff Block SA "l FHA"l.CISCO <AP 1 -The CJl1forn1a Tc<1t.hers Association has ask<'d the California Supreme Court to block schools from f1rml-{ teach<'rs based on a potential f1nanc1al threat posed by pasSa$le of the Jarvis-Gann lax 1n1t1ativ<'. Al stake, said the class action i-.u1t , Thursday, is not only <'mployment rights, but also the quality of public education in lhe stale. The brief said at least 35 school districls have initiated d1sm1ssals a~a1nst 28,773 teachC'rs Quinlero's westbound car The report described the cast bound auto as "traveling at a high rate of speed " A Santa Ana pol1reman reportedly "'as first to arn ve at the scene of the 2· 15 am accident and told T usll n investigators the Ramirez auto burst into names on impact He and others who attempted lo free the men from the burning wreckage were thwarted by the flumes that quickly engulfed Quintero's car as "'ell as the Ramirez auto. police said Garden Grove Man, 31, Slain In Tucson TUCSON. Ariz I AP 1 An argument during a drinking bout precipttated an apparent homicide-suicide, police said Thursday Killed about m1dn1ght Tues day was Douglas R Althouse. 31. of Garden Grove Police said he was shot twice with a small caliber pistol. While pohre were mvestigat mg his death, ®Other shot was heard, but officers were unable to determine its source. About 11 hours later, the body of Richard D. Fortune, 37, was found in some high weeds nearby. Police said Fortune shot himself and was still clutching a gun when his body was found . Fortune and Althouse were roommates. officers said. ;;.;.ri Blooming c.</ I ~{ROSE BUSHES \lfr ~,. Choo~ from red, Hanging Basket ._....-' ..... ·· · IMPATIENS ~ r ullv·hlosromed ..q'lli/l~~ In reJ, or1nAt, '.u • onnge, yelliJw, pink ,'t, ~ Of' •old. .. 2 pllOll SIU ., p1nl. or wh11c • 6 " pol \llt w/h<1ngcr Reg $4.99 SALf $ 'RICE • 'II Rta H .'><I .4 ~ ::~<.CE $3. Air Crash Victiins Identified S1 x persons who died in a plane crash in Riverside County "'hlle en route from Orange County Airport to Lake Havasu, AnL.. have been identified as lhree Lake Havasu residents and three v1s1tors from Germany. The R1-.<'rs1de Count) Coroner's office ident1f1ed the pilot of the chartered Havasu Av1at1on plane as John S. Hiii. 62 The pas se n~cr s were identified as Dom1n1qut• lle1nrich Stcmich. 15. of Lake llavasu, and his mother, Signd Stem1ch, 38. Also, Marg1ta Wortmann, 38. of Kassel. Germany. her son, Mark Rene Wortmann, 7, and Tim Kruger. 7, also of Kassel. Germany The group reportedly had been on a visit to Disneyland and was returning to Havasu, when. for unknown reasons. the Cessna 207 crashed into the motlntain1' a bout three miles north of Riverside Racewa~ Hans Wortmann · and Ludger Stem1ch, the husbands of the two women killed. had chosen lo drive home instead of flying authorities said Several friends of the victims had flown back in a separate plane. which landed safely. The small plane crashed into the side of a hill m the Box Springs Mountains east of UC Riverside just before 9 p.m. Wednesday . It was badly smashed up but d1dn 'l catch fire, authorities said. The cause of the crash ·~ under investigation The defenst> contends the finding 1s based on errors and repeatedly used Dr Metamura's testimony Thursday m urging the Jury to du.regard Richards' evidence Prosecutor Robert Chatterton said he .... 111 offer testimony to counter Dr Metamura's claims when the trial reopens Monday. Judge James K. Turner called a three-day weekend break in the trial late Thursday. It is alleged that Waddill, 42. of Huntin gton Harbour, strangled the newborn baby in the hospital nursery after bis efforts to abort the birth failed. lie earlier injected the pregnant mother with a saline solution and has testified during the tr1ul that the baby was dead Y.hen the mother expelled the lelus from her womb. Members of the hosp1taJ staff have testified that the child was alive when 1l was rushed lo the nursery and that they wer.e trying to hl!ip the ailing baby when Waddill ordered them to leave the nursery A doctor who was with Waddill in lhe nursery bas testified tbat lhe defendant repeatedly clamped his hand around the baby's throat with the staled intention of ending its life Road to Nowhere? SOUTH LAKE TAHOE. CaJ1f. <AP> The Tahoe Regional Planninµ Ag<'ncy agave' its approval Thursday to a controversial $400,000 ''loop road " around the casinos in Stateline. Nev. It might be a rnad to nowhere, because the California Tahoe Regional l'lannrng Agency tCTRPA> warned 1l probably would not allow the road to be connected with any California highways ~ INTfRNATIONAL BOOKS~ COOK DESIGNED BOOKS WITH GIVING NOW AT l~~~l~D s3.95 Pl""• , "' f nunt•1n V •llev nnly All-Purpose Fertilizer ,,=,,.·! k=;i~~~~~ planf 'ood I ~ G UARANTEEO ANALYSIS 18% NITROGEN 20% PHOSPHORIC ACID 16% POTASH PLUS CHELATED IRON! : ASSORTED HOUSE PLANTS I I 214'' sltr 5AlC 39e 2 age (ulChl T!H1I ; 'S 71) I t\•11. S9C PRICE FOR ~ w11h C11UP•'" ' -------------------Fite Lectures E\•crv Weckrml At (.rrfn H11~11 <1nd rl. ~)' V<1lltV t..uden, ........ [A\Tll< A/All A l'A~AIH .r,!(·~. J' Htrt'l you oppotlllnlty In 11rru~ • v,.,, ~lccllon of Aulfl .,.,lc>tlu on ,. rtlt>o.tnl lA\ltr wl't'kt'rl•f lt~lurcs luturc: 11lantlr11t •nd c.nc of At.tit•' At rount.iiln V•llty only. 1114 20 B rO(l llJuarn 'ounta111 ,. an.,. f OlJN l '\IN ('' \II ~outh Of ch• VALL l Y .,.., Df._o '""'.1..> rh<>M llf!Hl7, I O~n 1 o.,., ·~ I A4 DAIL y PILOT .. r ·. Ja t ~::.:·;> .. Coasting ·;_~;-\ Fr1d1y, Match~. 111e Q with~~ Tom~~~\' Morphine SMOKE SIGNALS Ii BUGGY WBIPS: Conalderable alarm developed amooa Laguna Beach City Council' members the other niebt when the lnteW1ence came lo them that Laguna mi1bt be getUnc an airport next door. You have to understand bow abocldnC th.la kind of news is to the Art Colony of our Orange Cout, where the populace believes it is living in a spot isolated from the hustle and confuston of regular suburbi• If you don't believe that. visit Laiwta's main buslness stem on Forest Avenue at mid-day some time. Study the populace. You will figure the world suddenly went into slow-mot.ion. NEW·FANGLED IDEAS also are viewed with distrust by a large number of Lagunans. Jtems like curbs, gutters, ~idewalks and streets without potholes are viewed u the claptrap or urban sprawl that should be avoided. You have to remember that the coastal highway through Laguna was designed to handle 1938 traffic. The other way in and out of town, Laguna Canyon Road, isn't much improvement since 1t was a stage coach route from Santa Ana. Laguna Pol1t1ctan Solmdlng the Alarm ThW> when the communication came to Laguna City Hall that Orange County government was studying possible new sites for a smaJI plane airport. Laguna officials almost went into culture shock. The possible airport site listed was in Moro Canyon. a picturesque, bucolic area JUSt northerly of the town that opens onto beautiful El Morro Beach. Laguna's Shakers-and-Movers thus suffered elevated blood pressure and roundly condemned this proposed ra~ Ar the pristine landscape. A LATER CHECK PROVED, however, that county goverment had eliminated Moro Canyon as a possible airport site some weeks ago This suggests that the locallon had been proposed, listed, studied and rejected before Laguna City Hall even heard about it in the first place. Thus if Laguna Beach offic1als think they are keeping close tabs on the action of county government, their methods of communication are suspect. MAYBE LAGUNA'S ENVOY to Santa Ana travels by <tiorse and buggy. IC so, he probably got stuck in traffic out on Laguna Canyon Road. . Laguna City Hall should try lo update its communications system with county government. Maybe they could install a telegraph Treaty Foes Work To Recall Senators WASHINGTON {AP> -Ignoring constitutional precedent, op- ponents or the Panama Canal treaties an al least five states are or· gantzlng attempts to recall senators who voted for the first of the aireement.s. The final Senate vote on the two treaties is sUll to come, but various groups are voicing their displeasure at the initial vote by see.k.ing enough signatures to begin tbe mechanism cutting short their senators· six-year term or office. Actions against senators who voted for the pact are known to be under way in Wisconsin, Louisiana, Arizona, Tennessee and Montana. NATION I WORLD WASIUNGTON <AP) -Prfsident Carter's club with Iaraeli Pnme Minister Menacbem Beem aeta t.belr two countries on • col-11son ~t dlma Mide .. t peace pro1J>eCta and leaves Cart.er srop- tn1 for a poucy tbatworkl. Flndinl one will not be euy. u Carter tries to exert more pressure on Jarael, he will run political risks with Jewlsb· Americans, a &rOOP that 1ave him immense support 1n his 1978 presidential race. BUT THERE AaE other slgns the prealdenl and bis poUcy makers may have more poUUcal freedom to get tough with Israel than any presidential adviser would have thought possible lo the past. In an Associated Press-NBC News poll this week, 42 percent or the 1,604 adult& quizzed agreed that all U.S. aid to Israel should be suspended if Israel declined to sign a ~ace agree· ment with the Arabs. The response seems lo renect con- siderable impatience wilb Israel and its prime minister. Begin, in a speech before the N atlonal Press Club here Thurs- day, acknowledged that his talb with the president were "dif- ficult." THERE WERE reports, meanwhile, that high-level American officials had con- cluded progress toward peace was possible only if the 64-year· old leader steps down. There is no evidence, however, that Carter intends to try to force Begin's ouster. Carter has already taken several political risks, calling for a Palestinian "homeland," declaring that Palestinians have "legitimate rights" and prepar- ing to sell the fighters lo Israel's Arab neighbors. Henry Kissinger dealt with a Top Cleveland Cops Nixed By Irate Mayor CLEVELAND <AP) -Pohce Chtef Richard Hongisto, who swept into town like a lawman hero three months ago, has been suspended by an angry mayor in front of the poised pens and wbjrring cameras of reporters. Dennis Kucinich, the 31-year· old "boy mayor" elected last November, called a sud- den news con- f e r e n c e Thursday to confront Hongisto , former San Francisco County sheriff. about ha s charges tt<>HOISTO that the police department was being pressured lo commit "un· ethical act.s." When Hongisto balked at clari· fying his remarks with reporters present. Kucinich announced his surprise decision. One published report Thurs- day quoted sources as saying the mayor has told Hongisto to re- sign within the next few months. The story said Kucinlch was up- set because of Hongisto's dis- putes with the mayor's staff and because Hongisto receives more publicity than the mayor. Hongl.sto, 41, who established a liberal, free-wh~Ung reputa- tion in San Francisco County, was hired Det. 14, the first big appointment for Kucinich, wbo tabbed Hongisto "one of the best law enforcement officials in the country." atubborn l.srael three years ago by declaring a "reassessment" ot U.S. weapons ahlpment.s to Israel, auggealing that the massive aales could end. While bis approach may have over- come Israeli resistance to the terms of a Sinai disengagement agreement with Egypt. it dangerously ratUed U.S.-Israeli relations. CARTER IS GIVING no hint that he too might apply a military squeeze to Israel. In fact, be is promising continued U.S. aid in the hope of giving Israel a sense of security to lake some risks fot ~ace. The arms option removed, Carter does not seem to have many left. The realization is deepemng, meanwhile, tbat Begin as prime minister will not be transformed into a dove. There 1s now no doubt that he is a hawk with an extra set of claws. /flan Rescues Pair When a small plane crashed in front of driver Allan Thomas' Greyhound bus on the Pe~lvania Turnpike, he ran to rescue the unconscious pilot, Harold Den~ Unger, and his daughter Emily, 8. His calls to other motorists for help were ignored. Instead, several took photos of his rescue work. He is shown at home with his wife Betty, right. and daughters Beth, left, and Susan. The pilot was hospitalized in poor condition; his dau~hter \\as Listed m satisfactory condition. U.S. Birthrate Ri,ses But Zero Populati~n Growth Appears Likelt WASHINGTON (AP) - America's birthrate is on the rise. but population ex~rts say the nation may nonetheless reach zero population growth by the middle of the next century. Provisional statistics cQm· piled by the Department or Health, Education and Welfare show the birthrate climbed to 15.3 bn"ths ~r 1.000 population last year, up about 3 percent from the 14 8 ~r 1,000 recorded tn 1976 It was the first increase re- corded in the annual birthrate since 1970 and reversed the slow decline or recent years. Terrorbts Bla•~d TURIN, Italy <AP) -Three or four gunmen s hot and wounded a former Turin mayor outside his home today and an ( IN SHOKJ' J anonymous caller later said the urban guerrilla Red Brigades were responsible for the am- bush. police reported. Police said Giovanni Picco. 46. was hospitalized w1th five bullet wounds in the legs, arm and shoulder, but was not in serious condition Wallenda Eulogized SARASOTA. Fla CAP> - High-ware aerialist Karl Wallen- da will be eulogized in the large home-town arena where he performed for the many other circus people who have their winter homes in Sarasota. Wallenda's body will be on public view at the Robarts Sports Arena on Easter Sunday from 2 p.m. until 8 p.m. Fun•al services are scheduled. in the 4,200·seat arena Mondiiy morn- ing. \'IC!tiM fflentfffed DENVER (AP> -A man blown apart in an early-morning bombing two days agi> has been identified as Charle~ "Carlos" Zapata. 29. administrative assis- tant of a Mexican-American community group here. The Denver Coroner's Office 1denl1lled Zapata from dental records after the man's jaw was reconstructed. Police say Zapata was eitberplacing the bomb atlbe Veterans of Foreign Wars build- in& or picking it up when it blew up. The Biggest Bit In The Desert. Ironwood. Our combination of smart country club homes and Palm Desert's best location, with 36 holes of golf and 8 tennis courts, has created an unprecedented demand ill lromvood. We are now taking names for the next unit of these popular single-family and duplex homes, many with drJmatic views of the encircling mountains and desert below. Several privately owned homes from earlier offeri~s are currently available through Ironwood Property Management Company. the exclusive sales agent for Ironwood Country Club. Arnold Palmer, president of the Iro11wood Golf & Tennis Club, invites you to come out for a visit and to register with the Fort Wayne Flooding Sales Office if you're interested in a home at Ironwood. IRONWO~~D Overflowing Rivers Drive 1,000 From Honws I ........... so 75 62 35 .01 •s '' ,, u 1J '° J1 ,. ff J7 ,. .. M 10 •• It .. ,, n .o ... ,. ·" .01 ,. .u '·" 40 J) .01 ._ n JD s 20 • J1 -0 .01 14 " 11 s• ,ti .. D .4' n so 71 51 ..4 .. " ,. ,, ., 2' • ft ,. .. 11 u " a ' 11ltllt, lnch1dl119 • ltf!Ml4M 11Hr 0•11•• lhet $1Ng1d -"'"41• -··· Ad•l-les -_.. -...,_ ti-tf IC-fW • r-<11 a& .. Ne ""~'et -WI lftMllllQ. ca01 .... 1. • Country Oub Homes In Palm Desert from t&S,700to1157,900. In P.alm D~ert 2 mil~ ..outh on ronol~. ftlephonf (714)3~51 Business Jokes mt Below Belt JJ'hose Salad Bar? : The greens in this setting are not 'he kind one eat~ : While the decor resembles that of a marine-style --.·restaurant's salad bar, the truth is that it's the United ·:califorrua Bank's Manner office in Newport Beach. : John RJcci, manager, attributes the 22 percent increase :· in new deposits lo lhe decor. .. By HUGH A. MULUGAN A'-.ecW<rn••rr•u• WHAKAREWAREWA, New Zealand -One or the lrulhs a ('hap quickly learns when travelling about this world is that the funnlest aod the s tupidest people always are localed across on the next island or over tbe next border. The Spaniards think the Portuguese are hilariously inept at the art of everyday living and therefore make them the butt of all sorts or jokes, like painting a stripe on the side of the boat to mark where the fish were biting 1n the bay or hijacking a &;arbage truck as an act of urban terrorism. EVER SINCE THE fighting resumed in Ulster and beean go- ing against them, the British re- sumed telling Irish jokes as a defense me<:harusm, like the one about the IRA man being sent out to blow up a bus but being unable to carry out the assign- ment because he burned his lips on the exhaust pipe. The Norwegians jest that the Finnish national dance is a knife fight, and the Greeks will tell you that a Turk bom with 11 toes grows up to become a mathematician, and the Roma- nians are convaced that the only thing dumber than a dumb Hungarian is a smart Bulgarian. Even in a place with a funny n ame like Whakarewar ewa. where the landscape looks more hke a moonscape and has the funny habit of-bubbling up W:th boiling mud pools and shooting hot steam and scalding water in- to the air, to say nothing of boil- ing an occasional tourist alive. the native New ZeaJanders think there ls nothlng funnier around CAPITOLIZE WITH CAPITOL . Joe Irvine to Retire From Plwne Company CAPITOUZATION M[ANS lO tONVERT CAPITOL TO CASH ft t'OU nMC1 .Sr 000' fO '~.:t 000 Clt\11 •l"+O ~ (l'WM .1 Mrt._.' l")t rltwt1 •"OP •I C*c:f '°' t:I• nnl IM (':APtlOt Hf)ft,1f LOAN a,,1no• to r.1p11oll1• you• tv Into • _,, io.. ""'n let! ""° MM>Otr-"'°" Home Loan °"' o1 c;a,., • l arqn1 • Lo.n~•0-"1'~t ""' ~111 Ofl"()I rlr ~MC"l'Wl•'"' '' v tot••ed Qt! th IU' It l'I I tot I We'd Really like to help COSTA MESA 3130Hort.J< 81"'1 714/540-4412 ANAHEIM ~I W Llncotn l 114 71 41778-3450 t.ONG BEACH &4 ,. e. o.t ,.,,...., 01 ... 213/421-9333 Pac1f1c Telephone's senior ex- ecullv8 in Orange County, Joseph E. Irvine of Santa Ana. will retire March 31 after 42 years of service in the Bell System. For the past eight years, Irvine has been responsible for public and gov- ern men ta I relations for Orange, R1vers1de and San Bernardino counties. IRVINE STARTED WITH Pacific Telephone as a craftsman and was promoted to man agement in 1946 .irter serving 38 months overseas WJlh the us. army in North Africa and Europe, where he was awarded the Rronze Star and four Rattle Stars. ll1 s manage- ment assignments 111v1NE were both line and staff operations in Los Angeles, San Francisco, San Diego and on loan to an Atomic Etiergy Commission contractor in Eniwetok, Marshall Islands, where he supervised construction of a large submarine cable network. Jrvine has been active in civic work as a director of the Orange County Chamber of Commerce. PulJla<.' Helallons Socll'ly of Ameru:a. Rotary president and Paul Harns fellow. Orange Council Boy Seouts of America. and as an associate d1rcc· tor of the Orange County Press Club HE ALSO SERVED as president or the He~1stcr Camf><'r'>h1p Fund and 1s a member of lhl' L'C I rvinc Public Helat1ons Council lr\'inc plans lo remain in Orange County in an advisory capacity on public <.1nd governmental relations for various oq;am1at1ons Tax Publications Might Help Now By The Associated Press T here's less than a month left before income lax day, 'io if you've been putting 1l off. tame is s hort. Tax forms can seem more complex every year and if you need some help, the Internal Revenue Service has a variety of explanatory male rials. The "Index of Federal Tax Publications" lists more than 90 up- to-date materials. It can be obtained without c harge by writing the Consumer Information Center. Dept. 6791", Pueblo, Colo, 81009 ·GET THE FACTS BEFORE YOU LEASE OR BUY' Fare Cut To LA ,. }The luxury car that ~more people buy. .. more ~-people lease than any ·comparable American · ·!luxury car in California! Wtry follow the leadef when you can drtve It yourself? Whether you tart or tease the magnificent Continental Mark V, you SWllf enm the distinction af driVlng ooe of the most successful luxury cars 001lt In Amef'1ea. Traditionally, :evidenoe of their Olf9Mihelmino paputarity. OJr Marks • t19'J9 rvtumed ~of their priglnal sticker ~Ice than Cadillac Eldorado Coupe. Hore In the Goldon State. the Continental Mark Vis the undisputed teader in its fletd of Amerlc:an-made P81'90NI luxury cara Based on R L A:>lk registration data. ~ COllfomlans bUY and, I thO Conti11er1ta1 Mark v than other cotnparable • Ametic;an luxury an Thoie ate good r6asonS for such pcput 1ty. Nowhere wlll they be more otMoua than dunng a personal test-driwt at the Wheel of a Miik v. Let us errengo It tor you et ycur eat11-1 convenience. LEASE OR BUY AT THE SIGN OF THE CATI ' Allowed WASHINGTON (AP> The Civil Aeronautics Board has g iven Western and National Airlines approval to cul all fares by 35 percent on flights between Miami and U>s Angeles. The reduction will ap- ply lo first class, coach, night coach and deluxe ni~ht coach fares. Under the plan, the price of a regular day coach ticket will drop from $204 to $133. Western originally filed for the reaucUon. saying it would drop promotional. economy and milllary turfough fares on the rottte. Na- tional matched the pro- posa l, but said it would retain promotJonaJ rares. Tho board Oil Thurs- day also rejected a pro- po it a I by Eastern Airlines to permit it to pay stockholders in travel vouchers ln5lead of dividends. ~nl•ft•lnment H•ppenJng1 ... Fllma Th .... , Dance T•fevtalon In the DAILY PILOT I.be premises than ».n Australian touriat. JUST THE WAY be talks makes him a more ouUandlsh creature t.o the avera1e New Zealander than the kiwi bird, the fUgblleas retarded cousin of the dodo that is the sort of national emblem here. "Do you knOw what the dif- ference is between a bisoa and a buffalo in Auat.l'alia?" asked the taxi driver who had just dropped off a group of Aussies at the airport. Before we could even buard a guess, be was slapping bis knee with a resoundin1 smack, because of his short pants, and laughing up a storm at bts own answer: .. IN AUSTRAUA, a bison is something you wash your bands in." The joke here being that such is the manner in wbJcb an Australian would pronounce the word basin. The New Zealan- ders, whose delivery of the mother tongue would bring tears of anguish to Sir John Gielgud, can't get over the way the Australians massacre the Queen's English. Whakarewarewa, sensibly bet· ler known as Whaka, is a hotel- filled suburb of Rotorua, a city of 50,000 people that is New Zealand's biggest tourist attrac- tion, because of scalding plumes of steam and hissing geysers that bring in a half a million tourists a year, many or them Australians. The natives claim "the dig· gers," which is even more im- polite than calhng them Aussies, come to this spectacular therm al display lo get their suits dry cleaned for rree. SINCE ALMOST everyone, especially the men. goes about town in short pants, the locals will advise you that the way )'OU can tell an Australian from a New Zealander IS by looking ror the two-inch whale hne around •Gr.-rt AM1ff'O~ Alv(om AW .. ldnq Amt•r,-,. Af\dd•t., Ant\t-u,a A"l•Co A'dM4y Ari< WC.\ A\CICOI• AtlC.Hll ::~~~ 8UmRI e.stcRs easwuF OayhMI< a.e11ne 8&1ll•I> Bll>tlCo OlrdSon 81rtcllr 810HitlP 8on•nt• Br-tf'llk\ BroollS 8rwTom Bn•tiino 8u0btt bis left ankle and observing a eU1bt l'-t t.o port u be amble& down the ltreet. '-That'• wbere the ball and chain used to be," t.bey'll lau,h, a reminder that the nelgbborlnl naUoo and chief rival in cricket, soccer, nJ&b)', beer drinJdnc and all other cultural purauila was colonized to a significant extent by emptying out his majesty's prisons. An Australian historian doinF, a down under version of "Roots. · I was told here, wollld begin by searching the guest boob of the Old Bailey and New1ate prison. This hereditary aspersion on the neighbortna commonwealth is remarkable in a land where Jock Mackenzie, a world class sheep stealer, bas a whole valley named for him. NEW ZEALAND IS the only country in the world I bave VlSit- ed where tbe hotels put thia singular accusatory noUce in your bathroom: ··For our guests· comfort we have equipped all our rooms with the highest quality or towelling. To allow us to main- f aln thia standard the manage- ment would be graleful if guests would appreciate that these items are not souvenirs of the hotel." The chambermaid, a charm- ing Maori girl, told me it was necessary to remind the guests not to swipe the towels "because we get so many Australians ~~:-) comiD• here." Bot a spokealQan for the tourist botel cwporatloo. the government a1ency that owns 13 of the luxury botei. dis. pla)'lDI lbla extraordinary notice, aald the home folta were more to blame than the out- ialanders, since the occupancy rate was runnioa "IO perttnt New Zealanders a.ad 20 percent from oveneu." TOWUB ARE NOT the only souvenirs taken away by the guests. 'Ibe Mon Desir Hotel re- ported that thieves one nlght stole six color television sets, the house cat and the parrot from the downstairs bar. No boles have been rePorted missing, however, at Arikikapuapa, the golf course in Wbakarewarewa, probably because the course does some stealing on its own from both Au1trallans and locals. It gob· bles up aolf balls and digests lhem in Its 240-degree mud craters, called dongas, on the sixth and ninth holes. The ruJes at this unique New Zealand club require a one-stroke penalty for landing in one of these steaming hell boles lest too many· foursomes boil down to instant threesomes or less. And that's no joke. IUNK SIVCKllOWERS REWARDED FOR WADING THROUGH REPORT SALISBURY. N.c. (AP) -It will pay the stockholders of Security Bank and Trust Co. to read the annual report. Enclosed in each copy of the· 2,000 reports printed by the Salisbury bank is a crisp one dollar bill. .. The bank officer who stayed up nights preparing the official report said if you could wade through all those numben, you de- serve a dollar," said Ed Clement, Security Bank's marketing d irector. Over The Counter MASO UstiftCJI MUTUAL FUNDS DOWMS Le~•.,, -°"., .,,, -\) ~ -1 3 -.... )'h -"" 2 -.... 71't -..,. 1t -,, .. 1:.~ -'• ·-_ , .. l • 3 -'"' ,, .. -'J .... -.... l '• -"' 1' 'I -I'~ , / 16 -J-16 '"" -'J J+-, -'• 31, -'• 4'-t -s-1• J... ... l'-... 7 ,, 2 -"" Pct. Up 114 Vo 20 0 Vo 11 ~ VP 14 • Up Ul VP 11 \ VP 11 & Up 11 \ Vo II Up II Up 11 l Up 10 l Up 100 Uo 10.0 Up 9.1 Up tS Up •• Up •I \)ti " Up '' Up 1.8 Up l.t Up t.1 Up I 7 Up l.Z Pd. °" 14 ()fl 1l I Off ,. • Oii I•) Oii 12 0 Off 11 I ()fl 10 \ Otl IO 7 Off 100 Oii I I Oii 1 I ()fl 1 I Off , , OH 1' Oii 1 I Off 7 I Off 1 I OU •• Off • , C)lf ., Off ' 1 Off •:J Off 6J Off s. Off s. I 0 Monlll •• 24 U.S. ()pin 2. ''· Inv lndlc ·~ NL B •.n 10, ' ""' .u .... S.ln Gt • 71 \.ti COMPANIES NIWS too ... T•Fr• 32' NL '""' 801 ~ t.J? Mallien 146J NI. P,lc• F""'1t. =, In 10.TJ ll.73 NEW YOfll( (API NV l/n I\."' l2.j6 Fldellty °"""'" '"" COUl>MI: --"'" Lyncr.: Gnltlll t ,Sl NL tr• F s 01 Nl -TIM lottawlnOS COF11ncl '°' U7 AQfH 10.09 NL C..pm -ell ~1c uo 10 IMom t ... NL ale 8aonc!G<: l•ll-. _..., ~ln(m • II • .. Bond 1.$4 NL Capll 5 ......... Cap I 12 JI 17 'O N Er• ,... NL COtll F us 4.10 I"* NellciNl '111hM I 00 HI. Capll 7 ... 111 lnwe1.l0f'' Gr'Oup: EQ1118 f l"l 10,IJ N Horii 1.12 NL Div Fd (.St 4.'3 el\OI\ of S.0.H\ft Pres 1.00 NL Cofttld •.31 NL 105 lld S.7' S." M11nl tM 10 ot. T•Fre 10.33 NL Proq F 3.111 4.1$ Dealers, Inc., .,. C..,ISllT 10 21 11.0t Dally I I 00 NL IOS Ort s.10.... ltdAal I 00 NL Pro l'vnd ... NL 541'rm GI S.U NL Ille prices Al wtllcll Cl\ellnv •1110.7' Ollny I.SI..... IDS ncll •.61 501 MICI AM S.01 "j.14 Prolnc 10.ll"..,NL SFrm 9• t.Jt NL these -urll~ CNarlFd 11t0 IS 1t eq Inc IS6% NL M11ll 1 ... 9.19 Mof'I MU I GO NL Pro" 0111 -.. , Stile SI «>." 401S <OlllO ..... ...... CNae Gr eot· M~I ~.. .. Proti l .01 l.lJ MOHY F 1.IJ 1 ... Pni SIP 1.311 t.G1 SINdman FIMllS: SOid INet es\M Fund S.tl t• Mllfl ... IO.S7 NL Tu~• S.04 Ut MSa Fd IJCW NL Pvtnarn F-: Am Incl 1.11 Nl value I « bauQflt FrCHlt 3 1' 4 ti Fldel U.29 IS.• Slo<lt 1' fl 17.9' Miit .... I 40 t. 11 COflw II.Mo n .31) Auo F US NL !value '1!111 Niet $11 .. e tM 1A HI Yid ls.Gil NL S.IKt t .16 9.15 MIF llcl 1~ 1.t1 l!Qllll 10'1 11.4' ll'IYHI 1.lf I'll <11•~1 T"'"4Ny. Scie<I S.00 S.tO LIMvn '·" NL II•• p, 6.0S ..,. Mii' Glfl 311 ,.,. ~ u.• 1)(1 OcMft uo NL S.11 lkly 1ClleepO 10 '1 NL Pwltn 10 Of 10.tl Inv Ae5'1 U1 SAO Mlltuelof Ornal\a. Grwlfl t.t1 'IO.tO SI .. ,. R• Fcla: AGl!Fd HI Ht CllemFd t..C 1111 !.etem .... SJl1 )ftel Jl.21 19.IS ,,,,,., ""' ,, II:) HI Yid "" •• 1... IS... NL -.c.orftF IS 11 NL CHA M9' F.. TMlll lt.11 NL lyy S.4' NL Otwlll ) 10 4 02 I Morn 1,• LJf '8P 0 LIS Hl AdYftllW t .12 NL Ll~l\I >-• US T,_ tt.S it.Al JP Ortll t ... Jo.JI lll<om t 14 tt:I ,,..,.,, tc> Hll Stcicll Ill.• NL Al11l11r• t t4 NL Menllal 2 Sf 2.M l'lt'9ftdll ~: , J-F 117) HL T1Fre U 4' 16'.14 Ootn ll.H 1'.'1 e•IOlfl M..10 NL Allttefa l.Ot NL SclHlil I~ •• 11 D11N S.0 NL -""""-«le: M<1i Sflrs J061 NL T•hl 2UJ2S.M F .... 1.tt Al,,..F 10.21 NL Colt111lel F-lndull 4 °' NL _.IM l."3 t.16 HaA Mui 1 54 NL VI"• 10 II II IS ~ Gt M.11 IS 1' Aelnt1T •.63 10-$2 Cftvrt I.ft t 21 lf'C-1 2t HL ~ le.IJ 20.'7 Nall Incl 10 1t HL Voyao 11 ll 12 4' T""ll l11w IM 'NL A .... f ketl I'-; """" • u 9.Q ,.,, In""*-"· Onottl • 95 s.a ... , Skur Ser llelllbw 1 22 Hl TrM C•P t"' 1.:11 1141M 1M 140 Orwlfl 417 U6 OltCO S.4 S.ft ~fl ti.ti NL &atwn 901 f.11 11_.ve lllO NL Tn11 I""' t7 t1S Arncp ••• " l'ICOfTI ..,,, •.n Grwtfl 6.Jt ,~ It-,,,..,.: --. " 4.t5 11 .... ,. s 01 NL Tr ... Eq '·" ,.,., Mlltl us IO 22 Optn IO J1 II,. I Mom .,. ' IMm 10.U 11.12 Dlvld • OS 4.l7 s.te< l!GC .. ,. ... ''"* H4 1s..IS NL 8-,. ~ U..61 .. Giii u_. NL Stec:ll ,,., .. G,_ , .. 7.1• Gnwtll s II UI Salee: Gth 'a IQ n TW'llC 01 .... NL C...11 Ut 1.ll wftll Al 9T I CW l'tlMll A 1.0 HL HI Yl4 11.t7 ll.t4 l"f Siil 105 JM SlPt:.p 1.» I 04 TWf\C IM J,i HL On.111 SM •n "" c I a u• FtMllDt 10.• NL ~ 1.00 NL lncom s.u s .. $tPGwl 1.S2 a.n U$.AA 01 7.1 NL I Mom 1 ,. • .. td • JO ... ., " Well ".. NL ........ 10.71 IUI Sloe la 1 q • 01 S<-sa.-· USAA IM II Hl ICA ll.OI 1'.JO p I'd 1 tJ 111 Ffld C.111 U2 l... ~" IU2 tJ 1' NELlle '""" COM SI • • NL US Gov US '-" NPers IS.1' 11.M C-ont 1261 NL l'-oe" ~· hmm 11IJ12.tl EQllll u .. 1705 IM..., 1>17 NL Ufllf Mut ~ W'11MI ,, \I • IS Ce<ll l11v ~'1 t U G,..,,, 4 D 4 62 Teel\ •IS 1.4' Grwttl t..o •.SJ Intl I'd ll.D Nl Uf> .... SVC Gi'P' ,.,,.,,... 0-et. , ... G s" NL 11\Com 11.M l:t.n Totlt , .. 10-'6 11'1<-1:Ul 14.lt M•n It 1000 Nl ••CIH to.All!,.,.. CePlkl 1.71 fJI Cenl Miit UI NL Mui.. 7ltl '"It~ F4#ldl. 1t1IE4 tl,71 UA1 MMe IOfS NL N•I '"" U6 .. 10 ~Ill J.l:z'-~ t1"' C.. -all SM<t t.7710M e1 11.41 ~ ~ ....,,.. "'*I 2S 41 NL UC.... U.1111.'9 lnc;Fd ..,. • 'fNoM 1.1111 NL Frwll1t .,_, .. II! 1tA ti.Jt .,.,.'r 114 ML S.Curlly ,_ UftlOFI H.W ll. .. V.lr 1U. .._ _,. 0...: ~" U4 ... Ull t., GI*-• JS.• H\. ~ t" IO.O. UnltM l'IMa: EQIO"-.... I.ft el II.II tU1 DNfC .... l Kf Utt Ml l"MW •• HL EQwrr '1 ... Accm 1• 6.U Fd/llm • 1"'-h -\0.63 11 62 Grw"' $ Jlt •• ' ' 10 ... , UI .... Wld 10 11 HI.. ,,.,,.., U2 ,... --1. Us Prowld i,19 •Ot ICll '22 IO• VIII• • 1' $.IJ '" ti i..ot 11 •• HtwlGI 11,U HI.. Ultre ~ l0.'5 '9ft Or U1 tt.GI AOlllFcl UI •it l•Fre tJI 1003 11\Um l.n I.ti ~ 1.U e.zs N..w1 lftC t.4 NI.. Selec: .... f'-: Con IM 1.11 .. Allltlft_,. ••S.2' Otlle S.14 HI ~US r ii ... ~ W •AW 4.4t ,,. lf.1t NL .lll'llSl\t ... ,. HL !,.11<om1 .!,11, J·!! AlftW.. UO NL Dir~ t.tr 4-t. &... I# S.1' i"1 • \111111.M '"5111 t1AI ~ ,....., "" ....,. Al1tvlnc U.JI .. L ii. It• """ .~ 3.Jt '-•1•*' or.: t 14 • HL $eol!l"-' ..... : Sc.left U1 U0 ~~ ::: 11 •• ~ ~':t.·~ =t ~;r.M J ""; fr. L= ;it n:t: 11""" ••. '~l! v::\" '~ J:R ~ni~. t~ ti~ A~hW °'"91111!1 car.: . C-m '1} .".!:' ~ '" '°-10 I!·~ I'll tt.7t NL s.MINI °'?S' v~'7 ti,. 17,: l 8-~11 !-: , ... ~ •• =· l~r :n ti; ,,: 't.:I tit ""'1'1""i.. ::::. ,AJ rn I~-. s.:~ I~ ... .. la ....... rt. ,.'jT.i' H\. 1$~: ...... 11 c-s 11.0• "" UvOI 1~1UI ~" •.IJ .t1i. W:I... --~-s .... l N\. • , GO Nl S...t•f F 11.111) 11MSl1Hi 4.t1 w.::i" ... ,, .: IM -Kil lee NL ~ 1t, NL ~~ U.11 tU'J ifl9rtflo""" Go. YeMe l ,..7 ~ ~~'", =' ,rr:: ,,,.. .. "'"1rl!1 '.ft 1~"' 'f tf ,:.~ ~~ I t: := .. ·~ r:'o: J': a.l~u te,.t'~:...... ~8.'" it,, ;·14 ~· ·n; 'L'IJ 1e-t.c itl ,t-f: r::a t ti! f lJ:.,, st9ct _,, ~~ 1-t!, e.M r~... t. . '°' ...,I..,.,. ere Nf11 M US .... I'«• I tMf Y °"""" ~~ .'•' · ~;. '.-u ~· :i::i ~ = .~.Jll g = =. rn At~ ',...~. :t:i u =t .... ~ HJ =i: •~ t.. ~--"·a·..:.I M!lllt-t' "' 1a lj •-"'9' • ,..... 'f:I ~ ~ ... HL m:I ii '"'fr 1fJ u:t usfto.. 1" C# 1.)4 '"":'t hi I T U.G liil &;t.;."c ..,. m. "' "'" •• ~ 1Jc:a; ,.. u• '· lioD ... Iii :s:.'"'I' N\. .~~: II nt I ....., ·= , ;~ , ~ _,. ~ ,.,., Wltl1a Ct "'J: a.:J.a~ r.l ~, i!~ ~~ ::JI ~ tul I.. U! 'Ut 't 1-: ~· . =~ II .a.n 1; ;.'ffV •. tt i~ ... -I MIT 1 ft fit. rn Ha t".:\ U ¥1r e US t t tJ .. ,. rt tr"9MI ~I!> ,_. Veftt 1~ -.1 ._. 'IFfll . ~ A:,J;* 1 !:::' f I • MioD IS.It ~ ti f~er, 1tj · ..._ Nt " 1i !rrU.:• ~ .... ·u:i. ,::. '= ' :d ~ " ,,.,, ill UV ~,J. 1t.I' '~ ~ .... ·. -~-·~-Lv-~o-r ..... ---'~-·~-~-~._m•---------------------S .... iJ.!()19'U Scott Confident of Breaking Mile Mark B1 DNIE CASTILLO .,..~ ............ Six mllera who have broken the lour-minute bar· rler are entered 1n Saturday's Meet of Cham· pions at UC lrvtne but one of them, UCl's Steve Scott, figures on running alone. Jn fact, barring inclement weather, both Scott and UCI coach Len Miller are expect· '"tng a record-breaking run at the fifth annual track and field invitational whlch gets under way ul noon. "I •m shootlng for a personal reeord but a.nythjnf on top or that would be great," ScoU says matter-of- facur. •·I the weather is rl1ht there will be no excuses," adds the red-beaded senior. "My confidence fs high, I'm feeling good and the workouts have been going good. It's a matter of how I feel that day-and th e weather" Miller, a man known for bold predictions, echoes the same sentiments. "l would say at the very least, if the Rival Coaches Phelps' Success Aided by Foster ST. LOUIS (AP) -A fast friendship exists between two riival coaches in Saturday's NCAA basketball semifinals that no outcome on the court is likely to affect. That's because Richard "Dig J:cr' · Phelps, the coach of Notre Dame, allribules much of tus success to a boost along the way from Bill Foster, whose charges are the Duke University Blue Devils. "It goes back to 1966, when I was coaching at St. Gabriel's in Hazelton. Pa. He gave me an op- portunity to work his camp in the Pocono Mountains for four weeks," Phelps recall1> "That four we.?ks 1 spent a lot or time learnin~ a lol of basket· ball from different coaches Jround the counln . anrl I have to thank him for the opporluruty to be part of 1t," Phelps adds. "We've been close friends l 've lectured at his camp and r think he's always been first class, when he was at Rutgers or at Ulab or at Duke, where be is now. You meet certain people in the game thal you like, and he's one of the peoplt' that's always been good lo me." Foster, a veteran of 19 col- legiate coaching seasons. guided S4N FR4.NCISCO TO IAND O.J.? BUFFALO (A P ) The Buffalo Evening News said today that st<.1r running back OJ. Simpson of the Bulfalo Bills will be traded to the San Francisco 49ers in exchange for several dr&U choices - provided he passes a physical examination. Simpson, according to the newspaper, was to take the physical in San f'rancisco today. The Bills, the story said, reportedly would receive five or :.ix National f'ootball League drart picks over the next three years. The Evenlng News quoted Bills' owner Ralph C Wilson as saying he couldn't discuss the latest report on Simpson. Rutgers to two National lnvita tion Tournament bids and utah lo one before arriving on the Duke campus in 1974. His progress there included last year's 14-13 campaign, th~ :-chool 's first on the plus side in frve years, followed by this year's 26·6 leap lo the NCAA elite with the tournament's youngest team. Why the sudden nse or the Blue Devils, who finished run- nersup in the Atlantic Coast Con- ference and then won the ACC postseason tourney? "Well, a couple of things We're playing above our years, hopefully. as far as freshmen and sophomores a re con cerned." Foster explains "We don 't look al oursel vcs as being a young team We feel that we play wrlh maturity and I'm JUSl very hope-fut that we'll continue lo play that\\ ay '· 1 think that there arc c1 lot of reasons," Foster says furlher of the Duke turnaround with a starting lineup which Lists two 6·fOOl·7 freshmen, Gene Banks and Kenny Dennard, at forwards. "One is that we do have ex- perienced players back and im provement of each player lhat we had on our team last year I think the freshmen that we have . their enthusiasm and their interest in team basketball play . the improvement, as I men- tioned, of our veterans -for the most part Jim Spanarkel, our Junior, and Mike Gminski at center.·• Spanarkel, Duke's caplarn, boasts a 20.8 scoring average, tops in the field for the NCAA final f our, and Gminsk1, 6 11 sophomore, a 19. 7 pace that ranks second. The other Blue Devils starter is 6-foot sophomore John Harrell, a hall-handling guard. Sophomore Bob Bender, a transfer from In· diana, is the No. 6player. Reserve guard Bob&IJ islbeonlysenior. "HI were to look back on the season. I th.ink probably the most significant game for us would have been our first league game away from home at the Universi- ty or Maryland," says Foster. Baylor Accepts Role Angels' Star Rejected Trade PALM SPRINGS <AP) -"I was in Jell field when Baltimore was winning pennants," says Don Baylor. who accepts but doesn't feel quite at home with the California Angela' plan to use him as a desi1nated hitter again this baseball season. KMpi.ng Baylor in the DH spot is Joe Rudi of the Angels. Rudi was in Jett field when OakllOd was winning pennants -beating BaJtJmore for American Leaeue tilles -and winning World Serie• crowns. In lhal DH role in that second half of the season Baylor balled 281. hit 16 hom e runs and produced 45 RBI. His first. half statistics were .233, nine homers and 30 RBI. '·He's in a great frame or mind," manager Dave Garcia says or Baylor, "He's accepted being a DH." But accepting doesn't cancel out hoping for ·the 28-year-old whose best season was 1975 lo Baltimore. Thal year be batted .282 with 25 homers and 76 RBI. ''I don't wish anybody an in· jury, but it someone gets hurt I'll be ready," Baylor said. weather ls aood. he'll break the meet record." The current meet mark is 3:51.8 whlcb Scott ran laat year when be emerged as America's top miler. Though he has yet to run a mlle Otlt· doors this aeason, he did turn in a 3:51.1 in an indoor meet Feb. 17 at San Diego. His lltellme best or 3:55.1 came al the 1977 Penn Relays. Miller had been trying, like most meet promoters, to line up a dream race between the world's top milers. Like the San Diego meet, however, in· juries sidelined the lop names: New Zealand's John Walker, Kenya '1 Wilson Waigwa and Ireland's Eam- mon Coghlan. And though Saturday's field will be among the best assembled in the U.S. this year, Scott Will be mamly running against himself. ''The competlllon ts good but Steve's going to have to make his own race," Miller said. "He's going lo have to go out and run a good pace. He ran alone last year and tbat•s one of his strenl(ths H~'s not locked into any speciflc 1tratecy. He c~n lead or be uo follow. It doesn't matter." Scott hlmsell likes to run aaainst the best but HYI do- ing so doesn't always lead to a record run. "I delinlt~ly prefer competition but jf there ls a lot, you're not always guaranteed a f ast race because of the strategy," be says. "On a. thing like this, you know you have to go out and you can SeeScoU, Page B·S Dally Pltel ~ _., l.M l'•Y•· WINNER BRIAN GOODELL (LEFT) OF UCLA IS CONGRATULATED BY TIM SHAW. Goodell Shakes Error, Outswims Shaw in 500 By HOWARD L. HAND\' OI lM O.Hy l'li.t 11•11 LONG BEACH -Brian Goodell 1s a two·time Olympic gold medal winner and the holder of two world swimming records but Thursday night at the first turn in the 500-yard freestyle finals of the NCAA c hampionships al Belmont Plaza Olympic pool here, he panicked. Goodell. a resident of Mission VieJo and s wimming for the UCLA Bruins in this meet, was the winner of the event after finishing the first 50 yards in fourth position "l was out of control at the first turn," Goodell said after the race "I didn't have a set race plan when I went out there and when I hit the wall at the firs t turn. I slipped and lost ground. Andi panicked. ''It was a case of catching up and I swam the first 100 pretty hard and held on the rest of the way" After the first SO, Bobby Hackett or Harvard was in the lead with Charles Sharpe of In· diana and Tim Shaw of Cal State (Loni Beach) also ahead of Goodell. Goodell still trailed Hackett and Shaw alter 150 yards, then pulled even with Shaw at 200 and went ahead at the halfway mark. Shaw regained the lead at 300 yards with Goodell taking over for iood at 350 and going oo to win In 4: 18.05. His mark is a pool r~ord for the 25-yard short course. "When I saw il was just Shaw and myself, I stretched out my stroke and went on.'' Goodell added "He's always tough to beat 1n any race a nd he's tougher here at home in Long Beach. He has more NCAA ex perience than I have but 1 think I'm used to U11s pool." Was he nervous before the finals with defending champion Shaw having the fastest qualify. mg time? "No, I'm familiar with the set ting here because J've competed here a number of limes," he said "If the meet had been held somewhere else. l might have been more nervous "But I was n 'l really satisfied tonight. I swam the race the way the other guys wanted to swim instead of havm~ my own plan ' How does Uus meet, his first NCAA champ1onsh1p event as a UCLA freshman. compare to the Olympic Games? "I would have to say at this ltme that thts is a much tougher field and it is harder to make the finals and win." he said. Goodell will swim the 400 in· dividual medley m today's ac- tion, the second of three days of competition He will go m the 1.650 on Saturday and perhaps swim on a relay team or two. Casey Converse. a teammate of Goodell 's al Mission Viejo during the summer and swim· ming for the University of Alabama in the NCAA meet, placed 10th in the 500. He was fourth a year ago USC's Scott Findorff. after failing lo make the finals in the 50·yard fre<>style , blazed to the fastest clocking in the nrght finals tn wmmng the consolation race in 19 94. Andrew Coan of Tennessee was a r epeat winner m the event in 20 29 as Ten- nessee took four of the top rive places. Placmg four swimmers from one school in the top six for the finals. is undoubtedly a first in SttGoodell, PageB-s Poloists Blitz Mexico EDMONTON. Alberta-With Jack Dickmann scoring two goals, the United Stales water polo team defeated Mexico, 6·1, in opening round action of the final phase of the Can-Am-Mex tournament here Thursday The U.S. squad. a mixture of juniors and members of the na· tional team, wUJ play Cuba and Yugoslavia today. Caoada and West Germany are on the slat~ Saturday with Yuaoslavia the flnal roe on SUoday The national team from the U S. is in Brazil to play tbat country's squad. The winner in Brazil will go to the World Games and the t.op six from the World Games will be invited to the Olympic Games in 1980 Unl!H Ste!es 1 1 I 1-4 M.txlce 0 0 1 • I u S. uorlttQ-Olchm•nn l. Allclll•. M•t ler•MllP, Sii-, Sclw-. Ot-~ CuMS,C-• Wet I 0-,,_., S, YUllOSl.,,la \ Cube S,Mnla.S H-ry•. W..t c;..-..-y 4 .. I wish it wasn't cut and dried," .Baylor said Thursday after hJ1 bases-loaded sin1le drove In two insurance runs in tbe Angels' 5--2 exhibition victory over the San Franclsco Giants Both teams have 9·S Cactus Leasue ~rds. Wantins lo play with 1 winner wu men important this year than pl.,tq ln &be field, and Ba1lor turned down a chance to be traded to the Cleiveland ID· cUau for Budcly Bell. Graham Almost Missed Tee Time .. Tbe Aqela are a better team the lbe lndJaos;• Baylor hid, "l'm bOt IQ1n1. '"I'd llk• to have • chance to win a job. J'd 11.ke to play left fleld, but •e have tho beat left fielder 1n baseball out th , " Baylor Hld al. Rudi. They were teammata for oa• aeuon al Oakland b fore l>Otb became ftM a,• Sn th fall of 1978. B.,k.r IOt liW• playina tJmo Jn tbt IWd · lut year, ••• w .Rudi halt the • esoe. Widl • brat boot 1D h1I baud. HILTON llEAD ISLAND, S.C. <AP) -Lou Graham, breathiest from a hard run to the flrtt tee, rffovered hiJ composure for • 4·under-par 67 that ttalctd hlm lo a sharo ot tho ftnl·rountl lead Tbursday In the Heritage Goll Claulc. Graham, a l·ltrok• loeer that week. almost loet two ttrok Th11r1d•Y morntoa wben be came wlthh1 ~d• of inlumc bJa tee-time, Wblcb was deJl)'ed for an hour by a fo1 that blank-.d thii ruort 1tl&J1d. ·~b1t'.1 the clost1t I Her cam to mmlq m1 ie. llm6.." Uld Or~. who faced a 2· I I 1troke penalt)t had he been late. "I knew we'd been delayed ror an hour and l Wat on the prac-Uce &ec when som• Of the other, 1uy1 started yelUna at me, 'You're on the tee.' J dldn't know they'd played tbrou1b the starten' times and made up aome Usne. .. I ran aU tho way to tbe tee and it wu my abot when l cot th ... •. I jlAt irted to catch my breatb, •aid 'Lel me aet out o( thb Wltb a par and we1l 80 OQ from t •." Gr•h&m ma • hl• nnt.bolo par •nd blrd.Jtd un11 Jate.r hOt • a uce • 17th that lifted him Into a Ue tor the top wtt.b Bobby Walzel, • •cramblln.1 non·winner who holed out ~m • marsb on tbe 18th, and bl1 Howvd Twitty. ''There's a bunch or ra1r to mlddlln' 80od 1corea," 1ald Graham. a rormer U.S. Open champion who waa aecond to Jack Nicklaus lut week. "but I'm 1urprlMd lb re are aome really~ l<:Ol'ft out there. It's one of the best days to play ioU I've ever twn-•um, au.any, oo wind -and the eoQJ'le t1 la srut CoDdlUC. and &be,,.... .... put. ZyUjUal~ 11 Ju.It '"' t:' '''"'' r_., 1..-n ~ 111 -Htr1 .... o." Clnslc .., ow •~rero • ...,.~n. H•rMll•T-OolfUllU: l .WalHI S..~1 C SINllM' L.~el!AI'! ~1 D.l•••nb M, Twllly lS-Jl-41 R .'9\,""991e 11.Cuf'I ,....,.._.. "·'""'.'" P.Henc:oc• ,..,.__.. l..Hl111lle T w.IUIO,-~· 0.Mo,..., t. ......... ~ , ....... H.lrwl11 ~-P' 1 .. 11.r G.011 .. rt ~ I .le'""' y ........ ...,,_.. D.Gr•"""' l .LMUll• ~ A.N•flll T.W•IMll li>#-7' I( lerlo H Gl'ffll ..,.._.,. I Hldloll M llel• ~ A. ht"• M HeYtt .11.#-11 J.Sl- 0.l"MI.., ...,._,. '·'-• 1.1oetn<t a.»-ro a.w.-.,,. 8.ltettn aNt-1' 0.lwM L.Wdlllftll »a-7' .... ~ t.,,~ ...a-N M.Mc'-'"-M...,,_ INJ-11 •vi.,. CC.It .................. ,..., .l.c.laf• ......,. a.c.te ~ ,..,,-11 >Nt-11 asa-11 3441-11 ~11 JS.._,, ~1 »-»-11 ,,.,. 11 :M-11 11 ~,. JJ•)ol 11 U.»-11 ~,, .,..._,, •..a.-11 ,,....,, .,....,, ~-n ....,, »-at-II ~J A's Not Mo Wig --Fniley DENVER -Charle& O. Finley hat withdrawn his offer lo aell the OaJdapd A 'a m.UO.. league baseball team to Denver oilman Marvin Davi.a. Davia' lawyer said tod~. Lawyer Ben Stapletoa banded out a terac statement from Davis. who Is ncatiooblg iA CaJlfon:Ua, which IDd.lcated the negotiations to move t.be A•a Crom Oakland to Denver are dead. The statement said: "Charles Finley has withdrawn bis offer t.o sell his Oakland franchiae to Deaver. .. It ls a sad day for baseball, a sad day for Denver. and a a.cl day ror me. I wu detennlned to bring m~or lea1ue baseball lo Denver thls year. II Pinley would recomider bla decision. even at this extremely late date, we atill have the capabWtlee to complete the transfer." Storld.,. flpRt Tony Roche upset Dick Stockton. 6-7, 6-4, 7·8, aad Vita GerulaiUs defeated John Alex· ander, 6-3, 6-3, to complete the first round or the Tournament of Champions tennis tourney Thursday night. King, It' ab R'h1 PHILADELPHIA -Billie Jean King, Virginia Wade, Betty Stove and all other seeded players advanced Tbaraday night to the quarterfinal round of a women's pro t.emUa toarna. ment here. King eliminated Renata Tomanova, 6-1, 6-2, Stove topped Yvonne Vermaak, 6-7, 6·1, 6-l. Wade downed Glyrus Coles. 6-2, 6·3 and Tracy Austin prevailed over Kathy May, 6-3, 7·6. In other matches, Kerry Reid outlasted Rosie Casals, 3-6, 7~. 7 5, Wendy Turnbull downed Dianne Fromholtz, 7-6, 6-2 and Virginia Ru•ici ousted Ilic.belle Tyler, 4-6, 6·3, 6·4. ~·~t·•~ ST. PETERSBURG. Fla. Ron Cey belted a firsl-ilminc home run and followed up witta two doubles to lead the Las Angeles Dodgers t.o a J.2..1 eDillioo lion victory over the New Yortt Mets Thursday. Steve Yeager also 11.t a big day for Los Angeles. tnocting in three nms with a sacrifiee ny. a single and a triple. The Dodgers hammered out a total ol 19 hits. ..., .. Get• •• ,,,, TUCSON -The Cleveland In- dians. apparenUy conceding f.be sbortslop job lo either Larvell Blanks or Tom Veryzer. ha¥e traded veteran sbortst.op Frank Duffy to the Boston Red Sox Cot minor league pitcher Rick Kreuger. llrabe•kfl Seu.res ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. The St. Louis Cardinals an- nounced Thursday a $5,000 set- tlement with former Cardinal pitcher Al H.rabosky. Hrabosky had filed a Ul0,000 grievance in an attempt to coJ . lect bonuses contained in bis contract for achievements such as winning the Cy Young Award and making the All-star team. The proJected bonuses amounted to $55.000 for the years 1978 and 1979. K.i1tp Tri-pit BLOOMTNGTON, Minn. Marcel Dionne's second goal at 9:09 or the third period triggered the Los Angeles Kings to a 3· l N alional Hockey League vict.ory over the Minnesota North Stars Thursday night. Dionne'• 29th goal of the season broke a 1·1 tie and start- ed the Kings to their first victory in M inriesola since March 18, 1975, a span of five straight losses. lf~Traft4 Infielder Bud Harrelson of the Now York Mets wa~ traded Thur1day to thE Pblladelpbia PbJIUes lot minor leaguo inlleJder Fred AndreM and cash.