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1978-03-27 - Orange Coast Pilot
l I l 17 i • ' f l ' Estranged Wife Held ' r; Town Policy Heist Black's Beaeh A Sure Bet for 'Nude Sunday' Mexiean Hustle? Draws 200 Fans DAILY PILOT e uke Base * * * 1oc * * * MONDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 27, 1978 VOL. 11, NO 16, l SICT l°"S, 16 P'AOH Foun • ID a? QUARTER HORSE CHAMP, TOWN POLICY, GO!!S HOME On Both Sides of Border, Intrigue and High Stakes MochoPesos Town Policy Caper Sure Bet? By GARY GllANVJLLE Ol Ille o.11, ..... Miff Irvine Girl, 14, Raped A 14-year-old Irvine girl was raped Saturday by one of three men who picked her up bitchhik· ing in Newport Beach, Irvine police said today. They said the girl, a student at University High School, was picked up in a red sedan at about 2·30 p.m. Saturday and asked to be taken to Irvine. Instead, the police said, the men said they had to stop by a friend's and drove to an isolated location in an industrial area believed to be in Anaheim or Riverside. There one of the men raped her but a second who at- tempted to was discouraged by the girl's struggles. She was dropped off at a service station, police said. They said the girl's father reported the crime. Police said the girl told them the men called each other by the names Tony, Randy and David. David, the alleged rapist, described as 5 feet 11 inches tall and about 23 years old. Randy was said lo be about six feet, two inches tall and 18 years old, while Tony wA.s described as about five feet, eight inches tall and 19 years old. · Irvine police said they are working with Anaheim and Rivetside police to try to track down the suspects. Oil Cleanup Costs High Park Erupts 4,000 Asked w Leave Melee LAKESIDE <AP> -Twenty people are nursing injuries after a m elee in which baseball bats, horseshoes and bottles were wielded at El Monte Park. Sheriff's Lt. Walt Kendrick saad at leas t 4,000 people were ordered to leave Sunday night after an unlawful assembly was declared at the park for the <;econd time in a month. The brawJers included members of an outlaw motorcycle group, Kendrick said. One man was ar- rested for investigation of carrying a concealed .38-caliber p1slol. The injured included one with severe head injuries. • There was no explanation for the fi ght. Wife Reid LB Woman Slain In Lover's Bed A 29-year-old Laguna Beach woman was fatally shot while in bed with her boyfriend early Sunday morning. Police said she was slain by his estranged wife. Police identified the victim as Patricia Ann Proferes, an X-ray techn ician at San Clemente General Hospital. Police arrested Anya Ann Shelton, 31. or Los Angeles, shortly after the 1:30 a.m. shoot· Ing at 2553 GleMeyre St. She was being held today in tbe UCI Medical Center Jail Ward. Police said today Mrs. Shelton's e1ttranged husband, Donald Joaquin Shelton. 38, was livin1 with Mrs. Proferes. The shooting occurred j"5t hours aCter a confrontation between Mrs. Shelton and the Laguna Beach couple at the Glenneyre Street horne, police said. Mrs. Shelton left the bOm•. and pouce belleve lhe .returned at. about 1:30 a.m., walkin( up to • bedroom window and flrint a sln1te lbot \hrOQch the aia .. ttrlklnl Mra.; Proferes in th cheat. lnve aton saul today tbe woman appart screea e111 the ow. w eh awakened ttie coupl Inside. Sheltoa told offlcen be drtw Qld• Lbo cultains after hearlna the noi&t, and saw th woman ~ l the vol r lhrouch wh2doV1 and fire, atrlltinl Mrs. Prof er u IM 1at kn Unt on lb bed. SheUon aa•d b• reached throuah th Wt.DdOw r tbe 1bot ..... fired ad grappt ror th •eaim wttAMn Sbelwa. J After subduing the woman Shelton called pohce who ar· raved and found the murder weapon outside the home. Mrs. Shelton was rushed lo South Coast Community Hospital an a semi-conscious state following the struggle with her former (Sff SLAYING, Pace A!) Nude Bathers Retwn to Black's Beach LA JOLLA <AP) -Easter S unday was nude Sunday, despite a city ordinance less · than a year old banning nudity on t.be 1hlnY·white sands or Blact•s Beach. ~n estimated 200 naked bathers pulled on their sWlm auU b urrledly when three Callfornln park rangers ap- peared. A whisUe blast alerted the sun bathers, basking in 90-dell'ff weathtr. After three years as the na- tion 'a only municipal nude beach . the 900-foot s trip secluded by ocean Inlets and clltr1 ak>r\i Torrey Pines State ach bu been naJC'd ofr limits to nudity bi tb San Dieio City Coundl. Police also have bt o warning baUlen to cover up, rather than issue $3S clla ons. But the 1lun· ny diPl>inl la report.id on lh in· ereaM aialn. # Reports Denied By U.S. LONDON (A P> -The Soviet Union is building a nuclear sub- marine bast• in Cuba and may have shipped strategic m1ssilr-s to th at country, the Daily Tele- graph said today. The author, Robert Noss. who specializes m Communist af- fairs, cited "senior Western military observers" as has source and said American aenal surveillance uncovered the de- velopmenL'i. In Washington. the Defense Department denied the report. Moss said the facility 1s at Cienfuegos on Cuba 's soulh coast, about 140 miles southeast of Havana. lie said the Soviets started the base m 1971 but were warned to stop in a tough note from former President Nixon. "This time round, things are rather different. According to reliable sources in Washington. the Carter administration has 80 far made no attempt to warn off the Russians," Moss said. He did not say where the So- viet missiles are located an Cuba. Jn 1962, a crisis occurred when <See CUBA, Page A%) Weather Nigbt and momma low clouds and local dense fog with huy sunshine Tues- day afternoon. Lows tonigbt in sos. Sli1ht1y cooler Tuesday with highs 1n mid-ms to low 10s. INSIDE TODAY Ralph DroWnon of Balboa i1 a big name in UCLA btuketboll. But ~ly tlM! young man turned down a JfOQ,000 pro/n310flGl contract tn pro ball to cont1~ to P'ov for Athl~ttl ut Achon. o bro,.ch of the Campus Crusade. S.. Feotunng, P~ Cl lade JC A2 DAIL y PILOT s Monday Match 27. 1979 Most U.S. ers Go Back to Work By Tbe A.ssocl1ted Preas Most of the nation's son coal miners put on hard bats switched on headlamps and beaded back down into lbe pii. and shafts ror the midnight and 8 a .m. abift.s U>day for the rll'St lime 10 3~ months. Moat mines reopened }>eacerully alter s ettlement oC · lhe strike by 160,000 United Mine Workers members, but not all the mines could operate. Some remam.ed shut while J0,000 con· struct1on workers sought a separate agr~ment with coal operators. Mines in Illinois. Indiana, l<entucky, Otuo, Pennsylvania and West Virg101a remamed struck as mine construction workers set up picket lines that miners refused to cross. Contract talks in Washington b e tween the construction workers, who build the tunnels und above.ground facihties, and the Association ot Bituminous <'ontractors, resumed today in Washington. The negotiations r ecessed Sunday night when hoth sides said they were too ex· haustcd to <·ontinue A s pokesman for the wc .... tmoreland <.:oat Company ID V1q~mia said the turnout for thE! 8 a m. sh1fl wa~ "very much bet ter than usual · lie said absen- teeism on a Monday normally ran about t:1ghL percent, but aJJ hut t percent of the workers sho\.\ed up toch1} dent or construction Local 18.10. Bryan Moak, a spokesman for lllinois' largest cons truction local, said Sunday bis men were refusing to allow reeular miners to enter the pita. He warned against the consequences should re&ular miners try to cross picket lines! ''Our people are hostile." Consolidation Coal Co.. with headquarters in Pittaburib, aaid picket.a at 11 of its 51 mines in West Virginia, Pennsylvania. and Ohio kept some 2.SOO miners otl the job. Service at Center Court , CG Probes Boal Sinking SAN DIEGO (AP> -The Cout Guard la investigat- ing the aln)1n1 or a 43-loot powerboat from wbicb eight people were rescued by tbe c:ew of a passing boat. The powerboat, the Carolina, was registered to Butler Construction Co. of SaltLakeCity, Utah. No one was reported hurt as it caqbt fire Saturda¥ and sank off Sao Diego. · Thcr<' was a very J:ood turnout l;.1st night and again thu5 morning, '!'laid a spokesman for l S. Steel Corp , operator of mines m Pennsylva01a , Virguua a nd Kentucky. Bethlehem Steel reported a ~oo :.howing al Jts 28 mines. three mines owned by Helvetica Coal rn Western Pennsylvarua "ere shut; three mines in Indiana fa 1 led to open and a Ii ke number m Alabama. An e s timated 1,200 worshippers atll'nded sunrise services Easter Sunday a t this un usual location -center court ..tt the.• .John Wayne Tennis Club 111 Nt•wpnrt Bl'Jt'h They \H'rl' ;1mon g thC' thou~ancb of C:hri.s· ti au-. ''ho celebrated Easter m reltgiou::- scrnn•s a long the Orange Coast. The in- tcrdenominal1onal service at the tennis dub \\as ('Onductcd l>y Manners Church nf '.': cv;port BP at h Jn Homer City, Pa .• several hundrclf min<•rs were hailed by four ~nm fa<:cd pickets carrymg small cardboard signs at the llelv<'lia Coal Co 's Lucerne "lo fl portal Wallenda Funeral Held 11wusands Mourn High Wire Daredevil Angry al losing a day's pay and the $100 return-to-work bonus, ~roups or miners !;tom ped their boots on the ;ssphalt roadway at the mme • J,:ate and s houted al the pickets Two pickets outside an Island Crc•ck Coal Company mine m Kentucky made miners "tum around," a company spokesman .S:l Id \\'£' don 't hav<' a contract. and that's the way it's got to lw, ·• said John Simpson, pres1- CB Cusser Sent to Jail ALAMOGORDO. N.M. (API An Alamogordo man wa<; frned $300 and sentenced to 24 ~ours m jail .for usmg languagt> ~ ou wouldn l be able to pnnt" o\'er his C1t11cn's Dand radio a m u01c1pal Judge said. ' Judge Robert Bradley said Kenneth W. Swarm was direct rng his abusive la nguage ;1t public ofricials and at pohce m ~eneral SARASOTA, Fla CA P 1 Karl Wallenda, patriarch or a death defying family of high wire performers, was eulogized today as a deeply relJgious man who believed he walked the wire with God "As long as \,od lets me. I will walk the wire,·· the Re\ Luther Willer quoted Wallenda dunng funeral st>rv1ces at tbe large arena where the 73-year·old star used to perform for neighbors 1n this circus town Wallenda, who challt'nged fatt> and gravity 58 years, fell 123 feet to his death from a wind whipped high wire str etched between two hotels in San Juan Puerto Rico, on Wednesday. · .. This past week, God said ·Karl, the lime has come for you to enter the Krngdom of Heaven and JOm your other loved ones'," Willf'r told a crowd estimated at -100 1n th<' 4,200-seat Robarts Sports Arena An estimated 1.500 fan!'> and friends filed past Wallcnda·s bronze coffin Easter Sunday. rt" mmded of his years on tht> high "'ire by the shadow or a 24 root balance pole hung O\ erhead 10 tribute The body was on public view Swdrm, who told police thl'Y for s ix h ours. drE.'sst>d in ~ouldn't be able to catch hrni. performing costumt• and th<' wa.s arrested at his home after neck scarf Wallenda alwa~s orficers traced the signals or his 1 ~ore when be walked the wire. CB radio. lie pleaded no contest 1 he pole hanging O\ er the to a c harge or disorderly con casket was like the one h(' duct. clutched when he plummeted 10 Nuke Blast Told STOCKHOLM, Sweden CAP l Russia detonated an under ground nuclear expJosion Sun- day in the Semlpalatinsk reg1on of western Siberia, the second blast an that area in a week. Sweden's Uppsala Seismological Jnstitule reported. 09'ANOI COAST ~ DAILY PILOT ... . ... s tories to his death. Hts body was brought back to Sarasota -the winter home or many circus performers. Four months ago, the sports arena was the site for the re·creation of the Wallenda family's famed seven-man pyramid, filmed for a television movie In 1962, two 0£,UTS 'WASHlllGTOll .. ,,(_ 21 uf th<.• lrOUJX' were killed and Wallenda s adopted son Mano wac; paratyzC'd when the p~ ram1d collapsed. C irc us performers rrom around the world sent flowers to adorn Wallenda's c-asket. The natl\(' or Magdt.>burg , now in East Germany, was praised b., peers as the ~realest of the high "1 re walkl'rs But most of the J .500 who filed past the body Sunday were fans who wanted to say their own i!C>Odbyt·~ . "When l was m St Louis I saw him perform a h1gh-w1re feat and donut<.· the money to the Hindus Mark Pleasure Day N1':W DELHI. India <AP> I hndu~ forgot their troubles for a day and en~aged 1n spirited mer rym;ikmg to celebrate Hou a holiday dedicated to Kama, the ~od or pleasure. Neighbors daubed each other "1th bright chalk dust or colored water Al home. family members E."<changed traditional sweets "E,cryone smiles durini:- lloh. · · said a candy shop owner who .did a brisk business Satur day in burt1, a sticky sweet con fcction made of condensed mtlk, sugar and p1stach10 nuts. Fatalities Tallied MEXICO CITY (AP> -A total of 153 persons were killed and 783 were injured in 879 traf- fic accidents during East Week 1n Mexico. the national highway patrol reportt'd. I Shriner·~ hospital. · ~aid Carl Lochmer. a resident of nearby Bradenton who wait<'d an hour lo get into the arena. "He's donated so much to the public ond he was a brilliant performer. there was oobodv else hkc him " · Cigarettes Hazardous to His Freedom S moking turned out to he dangerous to the fr(•edom of a Seal Beach man who was arrest· <'d Sunday in Costa Mesa afte,. allegedly trying to purchase four ca rtons or cigarettes with a stolen credit card. Police said a t'ashi er at Sunshm<' l.1quor, 724 W. 18th St., hecame susp1c1ous Sunday eve ning when the man and his 15 )ear-old fomale companion asked for the cigarettes A check of the Master Charge hotline revealed the credit card had been stolen Poli ce were summoned and arrested J an Thomas Van Amersfort. 27 The Sl'lf-employed t'arpet layer was booked on 'iuspi cion of ("O mmercial hurglary and possession of stolen pro pert v The girl was turned over t~ authorities at Juvenile hall In searching Van A me rs fort's auto, investigators found 37 cartons of cigarettes und one book of matches That'll Do It Every Time UN ION GROVE.NC. CAP) - The youn g man's fri e nds brought him to the temporary hospital at the Old Time F1dJers' Convention here and told the doctor he had taken some sort of drug. ~ He rambled continuously about going to college A doctor. trying to determine what aubstances had been Ingested, asked the young man what ·he had taken. "Mostly business education," came the reply f',..,_ Page Al CUBA ••• President Kennedy ordered So· vlet premier Nikita Kh""hchev to talrce Soviet miaallea out ol Cuba and blockaded the it land .. The Soviet leader tave in. Mo11 commented that "American falluro lo reslJt 1uch iron J>"OY•lJon aa a new So- viet bid to Install nuct ar mWlles ju1t ofr th co •l of rtorlda wo* amount to • d1mnm, d· mi.d1on. ot wubna .•• J Murder, Suiride Last Rites Set For MVVictims G raveslde services ere scheduled Tuesday for a 34-year- old Mission Viejo man and lus 1l·year-old mother, victims of a Good Friday murdef'osuicide ahooting. Laguon Hills Mortuary is handling Tuesday's 2 p.m. graveside services at El Toro Cemetery. Survivors include Mrs. Carr's son. Robert A. oC Mission Viejo, and two grandchildren. • James Carr abot bis mother three times with an tutomalic platol, then turned the gun on bimselC iD their three-bedroom home at 21850Z El Mar Dnve, aberift's deputiet reported. ,,.... PIJflf' Al SLAYING ••• Mary Elizabeth Carr left a trail of blood from her home to that of a neighbor, where she knocked on the door, collapsed and died. deputies said. husband, and was later transported to UCl Medical Center. Carr. a Vietnam veteran, had been Jiving with his mother since his father <tied last year, deputies said. Carr had quit his job at Hughes Tool In Culver Ci- ty. investigators said. She is being held today without bail, according to Police Capt. Neil Purcell. He said the two women and Shelton have known each other for several years, and were once involve d in half-way house operations in Oregon. In vestigators ~aid Ca rr seldom left the home, spendtnl{ much of his time reading in his bedroom. They said there is no apparent motive for the shoot- ing, other than a possible me.otal problem. Mrs. Proferes has lived in Laguna Beach for about a year. She bad a ~year-old daught« who was in an adjacent apart.· m enl staying with friends at the time of the shooting Sunday. Neighbors told officers the Carr home was always quiet and there apparently were no prob- lems. lnvesll~ators are seeking a firm motive 10 the shooting to- day. ''We can only speculate on the mohve, ·· said a sheriff's m - vestigator ... We don't know what sparked the incident. The only t"o people who would know are dead." Lightning Kills I MORGANTON, N.C. (AP> - Harry Vernon Anderson Jr .• mayor of Lexington, N.C., was killed and four persons were in- JUred when lightning struck a campsite where members of three families were spending the night. Investigators said Mrs. Carr, a r el ired school teacher . was shot in the service area or garage portion of her home. Her son apparently walked into a bathroom and shot himself in tbe tempi~. , F.-...PageAI TOWN POLICY ••• beat anything Oft four legs. That is the way the scheme was to work. The heavy part of the chore had been done. the un- beatable horse -a great champion -was m the hands of those seeking to gam their fortunE!~ on the money-nch but anonymous Mexican bus h tracks Th~ pnce? horse came from about 2.000 miles away, stolen m the rught from a stable in Orange County. IF EVER A HORSE was made to order for the wiMer· take-all assignment south o{ the border, it was Town Policy. A handsome bay gelding, Town Polley had won nine o( 10 races again.'il the toughest competibon in America. In less than a year of racing bis earnings totaled $336,000. • And while thundering to his championship 2·year.ald season, Town Policy had set a world record for quarter hors':s of all aies by covering ~00 yards in just 19.Z seconds. STANTON VOLICE BELIEVE those credentials tempted those who stole the horse to follow him from Fresno to Los Alamitos Race Course. From there Town Policy was tracked to a stable In Stan~on where he had been sent for a brief rest before starting the tough \\'inter campaign. . Two horse thieves had htUe trouble spiriting Town Pohcy from the stable. While stable workers slept not 50 feel away from the quarter horse champion, the rustlers entered his stall h;altered him. led him out a driveway, crossed an ope~ field and loaded him into a wruting van. That was five months ago. _ TODAY, TOWN POLICY is on the last leg or his Journey home, a return journey that began on a well-kept ranch outside Durango. And the key figure in the safe recovery or the horse is U.S. Department of Agriculture hvestock inspector Tom McCall. • ~cCall works out or Presidio, Tex . a fanning com- m.unity of a~ut 3,000 people nestled along the Rio Grande River 250 miles southeast of EJ Paso. . Like others. involved in the case, McCall says he's been instructed by higher ups not lo discuss its details. CONS~Q~ENTLY, FOR THE time being. much or Town Policy s adventure m Mexico remains a clouded mystery. But from information pieced tol{ether £rom McCall Duran.go state police chief JaJme del Toro and others thi~ much 1s known ~ ' -To"".n Policy's theft was somehow related to heavy drug dealing south of the border, an indication the thieves may have been paid for their services in drugs. --Wittun hours of bemg stolen the horse was spirfted across. the border, probably al San Ysidro, and within days of his meft was at the Durango ranch -BASED ON AN INFORMANT'S tip, McCall had reason to believe as early as December that Town Policy was somewhere in the Dur an go ranch. -"The safety or human hvM was al stake" in the· ensuing "delicate invest1gat1on and negotiations" that led' to the horse's safe recovery. -While McCall praises the work of de! Toro and hi s pohce. it wasn't until three days after Town Policy owner Ivan Ashment agreed to pay them a $15,000 reward that the horse was found -No arrests have been made in connection with the case. -THOUGH ALL AGREE IT was planned to race the great quarter horse on the Mexican bush circuit. be ap- parently bad not been raced and was being held "unlll things cooled down." -No attempt had been made to disimse the horse or to blot out the telltale reg1stcat1on number tattoo be car- ries on his inside Lip. Owner Ashment and trainer Blane Schvaneveldt JO days ago Oew to Chihuahua and then on lo Durango to negotiate for the return of Town Pohcv. Schvaneveldl, on~ of the nation's ieading quarter hor11e trainerK, dt1scnbed Town Pohc~·s condition :ts •·rough real rough." · WIBLE HE DID NOT rule out the possibility or Town Pohcy racing again, he said the hone will be rested and returned to Up-top physical shape as the fll'sl matter of buitln s. Others who inspected the> honie while it was quaran· tined ln PreeidJo 11td his lep were sound and. except for an •PJ>VCM we(Jht IO!'a due to a change 10 diets and altitude, appeued to be in 1ood condition Friday eveninR, Town Polley wu cleared trom quaranUne and Joaded into • horse van headed lor Calltomla. Beblnd blm left a m1stery. AndahQdofhlmwerebopeathal~wills.omedayretum to the raclna fonn that carried him as a two-year-old to peab ol ireatoesa.. ~"' ' /' Orange Coast T o d a y's Clo In ,. N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 71, NO. 86, 3 SECTIONS, 2.6 PAGES QUARTER HORSE CHAMP, TOWN POLICY, GOES HOME On Both Sides of Border, Intrigue and High Stakes ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MARCH 27, 1978 C TEN CENTS Horse Heist Sure Bet? By GARY GRANVILLE °' ... o.ilf rl• 5Uff Pesos, lots or pesos, change hands when horse owners around Durango and other states In Mexico gather at primitive bush tracks to race their swiftest in winner-take· all match races. Jn addition to the winner's stake, there are side bets to be made among the so-ca.Iled railbirds who invariably back the local favorite against an upstart invader. Had things continued going to according to plan, in the next few months those Mexican horse owners and their railbird followers would have been taken to the cleaners - but good. SOMEWHERE A STAKE would be posted and the local champion would be heavily backed by bettors as it lined up to race 400 yards or so against a cross-bred newcomer. Then, in the 20 or so seconds it takes a great American quarter horse to cover 400 yards the money issues would be decided. The sporting horse owner who posted his share or the winner-lake-au purse would be out his slake. The unwary caballeros who backed their favorite would have lost their bets. And before anyone could say "nnger" or "ringolero," the winning horse would be loaded into a waiting van and bouncing over rough roads in time to arnve at a new bush track ahead of his reputation BY THE TIME HE got there, front runners would have lined up another match race for him, probably with a cantina patron who boasted of owning a horse that can beat anything on four legs. That is the way the scheme was to work. The heavy part of the chore had been done, the un- beatable hon;e -a great champion -was in the hands of those seeking to gain their fortunes oo the money·ricb bUt anonymous Mexican bush tracks. The priced horse came from about 2,000 miles away. stolen in the night from a stable in Orange <.;ounty. IF EVER A HORSE was made to order for the winner· take-all assignment south of the border, lt was Town Policy. A handsome bay gelding, Town Polley had won nine of 10 races against the toughest competition in America. In less than a year of racing his earnincs totaled $336,000. And while thundering to his championship 2-year-old season, Town Policy had set a world record for quarter horses of all ages by covering 400 yards in just 19.2 seconds. STANTON POLICE BELIEVE those credentials tempted those who stole the horse to follow him frolJl Fresno to Los Alamitos Race Course. From there Town Policy was tracked to a stable in Stanton where he had been sent for a brief rest before starting the tough winter campaign. Two horse thieves had little trouble spiriting Town Policy from the stable. While stable workers slept not 50 feet away from the quarter horse champion, the rustlers entered his stall, haltered him, led him out a driveway, crossed an open field and loaded him into a waiting van. That was five months ago. TODAY, TOWN POLICY is on the last leg of bis journey home, a return journey that began on a well-kept ranch outside Durango. And the key figure in the safe recovery of the horse is U.S. Department of Agriculture livestock Inspector Tom (See TOWN POLICY, Page A2) LB Mistress Slain Boyfrie n d's Wife Held A 29 y(•ar-old Liigund D<•<.ich woman was fatally shot while in bed w 1th her boyfriend earl> Sundav morning. Police said she was slam by his estranged wife. Police 1dent1f1ed the victim as Patricia Ann Proferes. an X ray technician at Sun Clemente General llosp1tal Police arrested Anya Ann Shelton, 31, of Los Angeles, shortly after the 1: 30 a. m shoot- 7 ' ing at 2553 Glenneyre St She was being held today in the UCI Medical Center Jail Ward. Police said today Mrs Shelton's estranged husband. Donald Joaquin Shelton, 38, was living with Mrs. Prof('res The shooting occurred JUSl hours after a confrontation between Mrs Shelton and the Laguna H('ach couple at the Glenne}Tc Street home. police said. Mrs Shelton left the home, and police belteve she returned at about 1·30 a m . walking up to a bedroom window and firin~ a ..,ingle ... hot through the glass, striking Mrs Profercs 1n the che::.t Jnvesllgators said today the woman apparentl y removed a screen on the window, which awakened the t:ouple inside. Shelton told officers he drew aside the curtains after hearing the noise, and saw the woman point the revolver through the window and fire, striking Mrs. Proferf'S as she sat kneeling on the bed. Shelton said he reached through the wrndow after the ~htning Kills 1 MORGANTON , N.C <AP> - Harry Vernon Anders"on Jr .. mayor of Lexington, N.C., was killed and four personi. were in· jured when lightning struck a campsite where members of thrN' families were spending the night • Killing in shot was fired and grappled for the v. eapon with Mrs Shelton. After subduing the woman. Shelton called police who ar- rived and found the murder weapon outside the home. Mrs Shelton was rushed to South Coast Community Hospital in a sem i-consc1ous state following the struggle with her former husband, and wa s later transported to UCI Medical Center. She 1s being held today without bail, accordmg lo Police Capt. Neil Purcell. He said the two women and Shelton have known each other for several years, and were once involved in half way bouse operations in Oregon. Mrs. Proferes has lived in Laguna Beach for about a year. She had a 9-year-old daughter who was in an adjacent apart- ment staying with friends at the time of the shooting Sunday. Investigators are seeking a firm motive in the shooting to- day. Service at Center Court An estimated 1.200 worshippers attended sunrise services Easler Sunday at this un- usual local ion -center cQurt at the John Wayne Tennis Club in Newport Beach. They were among the thousands of Chrb- tians who celebrated Easter in religious services along the Orange Coast. The m terdenominational service at the tenni:- club was conducted by Mariners Church of Newport Beach. Councihnan Eyes SA River Marina By MICHAEL PASKEVICH OI lllt O..lly .. lie« S~tf Costa Mesa City Councilman Dom Raciti wants lo revive the possiblity of a public boat marina along the Santa Ana River. And despite a lack of progress on the idea, which is at least 20 years old, city officials in Newport Beach and Costa Mesa say they're still interested in a new gateway to the sea. Raciti has called for the formation of a committee made up of Newport Beach, Costa Mesa, Huntington Beach and county officials to renew dis- cussion of the plan. "The possibilities are still there if we would pursue them," he said. Last fall the county purchased 120 arres of land along the Santa River between 19tb and Victoria Streets and some wut side Costa Mesans have asked if the land might be used for the marina. It remains one of three options on the land designated as an ex- tension of the Fairview-Talbert Regional Park, county officials said. Other options would be to leave the land m its natural state or develop it as a park ex- tension. Dick Hogan, Newport Beach's director or community develop· ment, says the marina is still in the city's general plan. "It's now within the county's No Meeting Plans jurisdiction as far as a local coastal program and we are hoping for input lo have them consider the marina as a possibility," he said. However, ttogan aomttted that any public demand for a marina could be overcome by environmentalist opposition and questions over who would foot the bill for construction. Discussion of the notion waned in 1974 when the State Coastal Comm iss1on opposed the marina. Plans for the waterway were proposed 111 the early 1960s, but a private development nrm's pursuit of lh<'m bog~ed down. An independent research re- port in 1.974 questioned the finan· Brown Mum OQ Freeway Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. has no plans to meet wlth representatlvea of a Costa Men cltizens group urging completion of the Costa Mesa Freeway, a 1pokeaman at the governor's Los Anales offko 11ld today. Sta'lf Secretary Dick Sil rman added that Brown b llevea lt "would bo lnap PfOp iia ". for him to corn nt tither W"Y on the status of the I WQ. e reuoo, Jaid Uberanan, ls that mown dotll not *ant'° ln· rf ere Ua the function r the newly otmed CaJUornla Tr cam Jaioa. Assemblyman Ron Cordova, D· El Toro, vowed last week to ask the stalo Legislature to or· du an environmental impact re- port on tho tredtlay project. The EU\ m t be lncluded in the state budtet no later than June 1, Ir any proareaa on freewtly co tructlon i• to be mado for tho next f\Jcal year, aeeordlng to a cltliens group pelitionmg for action on the proJect. Jeff Overstreet, press secretary for the Cili.acns for Completion of Route SS, said a petition drive baa 1enerated about 2,000 slinaturea. A big push is slat~ lo began ln April, he added. The Jr'OU"P claims the freeway must be completed into the downto•n ere• to eUminate d•n•erous tram conditions on N port Boulevard (Hlpway 65) and tio muo way for the ~ d veloprnent of Costa Mesa '1 downtowi ... , n. cial reasibihty of the marina. then estimated to cost $39 million. Costa Mesa City Manager Fred Sorsabal figurl'~ the price tag now probably has doubled. Also in 1974, former con- ~ressman Andrew Hinshaw con- vinced the federal government <See MARINA, Page A2) Coa st We athe r Night and morning low clouds and local dense fog with hazy sunshine Tues· day afternoon. Lows tonight in 50s. Sli~htly cooler Tuesday with highs in mid-605 lo low 70s. INSIDE TODAY Ralph DroUinger of Balboa b o big name "' UCl,A b<ulcetboll But r«ently the yowg man tunw'd down a $400 .000 profnrional contract an pro ball to cont1ft~ to ploy for Athletes in Achon. a branch of the Campus Cniaod4'. Stt F'ftllunng, Poge Cl •••• • :t DAILY P~ILQO!.T __ _.£_ ___ -'~~~~~~~- Peacef ul Reopening Most lJ.S. Miners Go Back to Work ByTheA18odated Prta1 Thousunds of miners ripped t·ou l out of the curth today tor lhc f1r:.t time in 112 days, bring- ani:: an t!ntl to the nationwide soft coal :.trike for mo:.l of the in· du:-.lry. Hcports from acroi.s the coal fields showed that operations were beginnin.: to return to normal as Umted Mine Workers donned th eir hurdhats, :.bouldered lHlks, boarded heavy t•qu1pmcnt and \\ent back to v. ork for their f1rsl payday since the stnke by 160.000 umon mcm bers bel(an Dec 6 But for others it was a dlr- f<>rent story. Some miners. who w:.tnlt•d to i::et buck to work and found mine <.'onstruct1on "orkt>rs pu:kt•tmg, followed the I trn(' honored coal country tradl- tinn of ob.s('rvinf!: picket lines. · 1 was on my way up the Lions Set Pancake Breakfast ~kuteboanl nnd disco dancing dcmon:-.trallons \\ill be featured along v.ith food at the Costa l\1 (':>d Orange Coast Lions Club pctncake breakfast Sunday. Tht• hn·ah.fast. which raises :-.1:hofarsh1p funds I or Orange Coast College, w1U run from 7 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Lions Park in Costa Mesa. The price of $1..50 in- dudes pancakes. sauage, eggs and or ange JUiee. Tickets cnn be purchased in :idvance at Orange Coast College's ticket orrice in the ad· ministration building weekdays from 8 a .m . to 10 p .m . and Saturdays from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m .• or at the park on Sunday. The Hobie amateur skateboard team will perform at 9 a .m., 10:30 a.m. and noon. Disco-dancing and acrobatics also will be demonstrated. Bicycle safely informatloQ and bike trail maps wUl be dlstribul· ed free by the Automobile Club of Southern California and bicycle registration for Co6ta Mesa resi· dent6 wiH be available.. Jnfonnotion is available by calling 556-5765. TONIGJIT COSTA MESA PLANNING 1..'0MMISSTON -Regular meet- 1nJ!, City Hall. 6 :30 p.m OCC LECTURE -"Divorce. ) our Options, .. Fine Arts 119, 7 30 Jl m .. TUESDAY, MARCH 28 °" EWPORT-M ESA SCHOOL UOA H n -Regular meeting. Cost <I \tcsa city council cham- hl·rs, 7 :lO p m ··nfo:llIND THE llEADLtNES" -Dr. Gales T. Brown lecturer, OCC Forum, 7 30 p.m. .. VOLPONE" -South Coast Repertory Theater, Tuesday. Sunday through April 23, 8 p .m. Landmark Burns SAN PEDRO (AP) -A his· toric landmark in his harbor community ii uffered an estlmat- (?d $30,000 aft.er names from a s econd-floor kitchen stove spread to an attic, Los Angeles city fire officials report. OftANGE COAST c DAILY PILOT ~~...:rr.:i:::=:;..::;. CMll-...°""'""" '--.. -.... ---.. ""°""' ~ ~~·~="= -· -......... -,,.,.,.0.. ................... . ,_ .. .,...._~,.""'~"'" .... -. ~ ......... ., .. --... ~ ..... ~c.·----... -... _,_.....,_ J11et• c-tPf ~ ... -..------~·-...... n:;.t;:=- o-t"14·'--'"~"··· ,. ......... , ........... -. .. hollow when the pickets turned me back," said James Darby, an electrician for the Valley Camp Coal Company in West Virginia. Mines also remalned closed in Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio, and Pennsylvttnia. Meanwhile, negotiations for a new contract for the 10,000 mine construction workers were going on in Washington, where both sides reported they were closing an on an agreemenL "We are ma.king good prog- ress," an industry representative said. The workers, who build m1.11e shafts and other raclllUes, are believed to be seeking a contract similar to the one approved by the miners. The majority of the nation's mines were open by the 8 a.m. shift. Eastern Assoclaled Coal Com· pany said only one or its 17 West Virginia mines was shut Consolidated Coal Company said 38 or its 51 mines across the country were open. U.S. Steel and Bethlehem Steel both re- ported that the morning turnout was good at the total of 46 mines an three states that they operate. "We're back to work," A U.S. Steel spokesman sald. "It's been a very smooth operation so rar." Despite the scattered shut- downs, most areas said they ex- pected some shipments of coal would start heading to coal-short ut1ht1es by the end or the day. It will take an estimated two weeks 01· three weeks, though, before normal production and 1>h1pping resume. This could be slowed if the construction workers widen their picketing efforts. Fro.Page Al TOWN POLICY ..• McCall. McCall works out of Presidio, Tex., a farming com- munity of about 3,000 people nestled along the Rio Grande River 2SO miles southeast of El Paso. Like othet"S involved in the case, McCall says he's been instructed by higher ups not to dJ.SCuss its details. CONSEQUENTLY, FOR THE time being, much of Town Policy's adventure in Mexico remains a clouded mystery. But from information pi~ed together from McCall, Durango state police chief Jaime del Toro and others, this much is known: -Town Policy's theft was somehow related to heavy d111g dealing south Of the border. an indication the thieves may have been paid tor thelr services in drogs. -Within hours of being stolen the horse was spirited across the border, probably al San Ysidro. and wit.bin days of his theft was at the Duranl(o ranch. -BASED ON AN INFORMANTS tip, McCall had reason to believe as early as December that Town Policy was somewhere in the Durango ranch. -•"fhe safety of human lives was at stake" in the ensuing "delicate invesUgaUon and negoti.aUons" that Jed to the bone's safe recovery. -While McCall pralses the work of del Toro .and his poilce. it wasn't unW three days after Town Polley owner Ivan Asbment agreed to pay them a $15,000 reward that the hone was found. -No airesU have been made tn connection with the cue. -TBOOGR ALL AGREE IT was planned to race the great qaarter horse on the Mexican bush circuit, he ap· parenUy had not been raced and was being beld "until things cooled down.'' -No attempt bad been made to disguise the horse or to blot out the telltale registratJon number tattoo he car- ries on his inside lip. Owner Asbment and tralne.r Blane Schvaneveldt 10 days· ago flew to Chihuahua and then on to Durango to negotiate far the return of Town Policy. · Schvaneveldl, one of the nation's leading quarter horse trainers, described Town Policy's condition as "rough, real rough." WHILE HE DID NOT rule out the possibillty of Town Policy racing again, he said the horse will be rested and returned to Up-top physical shape as the first matter of business. Others who inspected the bone while it was quaran· lined in Presidio said his legs were sound and, except for an apparent weight loss due to a change in diets and altitude, appeared to be ln good condition. Friday evening, Town Policy was cleared from . quarantine and loaded into a horse van headed for California. Behind him be Jen a mystery. Andaheadofhlmwerebopeethathmllsomedayretum to the racing form that carried b!m aa a two-year~ld lo peaks of greatness. Mesa Projeet 8_ege~troms Give $25,(JOO to Theater A donattoa of ~,000 rrom the Segerstrom family puts the funds raised so far for the con· structlon of a new South Coast Crash Kills 2Mesa Teens In Arizona Two t~ye&r~d eo.ta Mesans were killed Sund•f out•lde Parker. Arts., wbm • pickup . truck etaaed tbe eeater"IJ.De CID a curve and smashed into t.bo pickup belne driven by the vicUma, the hlah••Y patrol aatd. Linda Jean Qu1n.D died at a Pboetlix hospllal about seven houn after the accident on Arit;ODa 95 ~bout 10 mUea north of Parker. a Colorado Rlver commmal~. aut.boritle1 aakl. Iler compaton, G.or1• W. Quelette, dled at a Parker bolpli.l abcMrt n1n& boun after th collllkJn. The ,i.ro oceaputa of tbe MeObd cct::.~ t.nll:) LDJolft4 ln tbe • 'J:'bolP• 'l. ~. 24.; aDd F~ II. ~~.& JS, ~ol WblW &nawca for cuta but wermi PU11JP11oa&M~ enlhozi&iMM!d: t Repertory theeter In Costa Mesa at more than $2 million. ao SCR building campaign spokesman said. The goal is $3 million. Harriette Wit.mer of tbe SCR '1'00P said total funds donated by the Seaerstroms. developers of S(>uth Cout Plaza, now toL&I about~OOO. The ~g site, part of the Seaertln>m docaUon, is located adjacent to tbe South Coast PJau Hotel, oo Town Cent.er Drive. Completion ta scheduled late thlf 1ummer. wtt.b u open • lDI date~ N~ber 11. The 8CR Benefec:ton Comalll· tee, b ded ·by Carl Karch«. baa r-eeetved aeveraJ large gtn.s. Donora and Che amounta ,ivcn are: Bank ol America. $15,000, John and Kittie Rau. '25.000. Richard ad MU'llyn Hausman. $5,000; Ladd, Kelsey and Woodard. arct.Utect1\ $.25,000 ; and Rockwell International, '1t500• The JS.)'9V-cld tboater, cur· renttr housed at 1827 Newport Blvd. In a 200·1eat renled tbeat&r, a. mare lbaa 90 percent sold out throuah sublcrlpUon." fOf' all J)el"formances. South Coast Repertory b a aoa·pront. prof..,lonal com· ~1. It malnta!nl a company tn retldeace and al.lo opeT"atel an acUaa oomenatory. 1 ' I Surfing Returns For Vote Newport Buch city coun· ca lmen Wlll tackle controversial changes an the city's surfing regulations which would set up beaches for board surfing only and anolher strand for exclusive use of body surf ens and swimmers at their meeting tonight. Recommended by the city's P>rks, Beaches and Recreation C'o"llmisslon, lbe new regula· Uons call for board surfin& only at the Santa Ana River mouth and between 52od aod 56tb ~lreets. Body surfers and swimmers, Including swimmers with Boogie boards, will have exclusive use or the beaches from 40t.b to 44th streets, tbe Wedge and LiUle Corona. The city'• remaining ocean beaches will continue to operate on the black ball system that has been In use in recent years. Thal system, which is in effect from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. during the summer, requires board surfers to leave the water when body surfers and swimmers are present. The revisions were sought by both body surfers and board surf· ers who told PB and R com- missioners that It e((ectively prevents board surfing in the summertime and leaves body surfers with no place to go in winter, when the black ball system isn't used and board s urfers dominate the waters. Wired for Conf usia11 Tbe proposal is racing opposi- tion from residents of the board surfing areas who say they want to be able lo swim at the beaches near their homes and from body surfers who protest the loss of what one described as .i prime body surfing beach. Ele<:trir1an Bill Hughes sorts through some of wiring m · \ olved Ul <.·urrt•nl rl'hab1htal1on of auditorium al Ne\\ port llarhor Hi t.;!h S<.'hool. About 25 percent of the r emodehng pro1ed 1mol \'Cs new t•lcctncal systems for the 729-seal auditorium. Jccording to school officials. The Sl.7 m1lhon rcmo<lcllng Job, rmanced by a lederaJ grant, is scheduled for completion before the start of school next fall. Councilmen "'1i11 take the issue up during their meeting which opcru; a l 1 :00 p.m.. al. city ball. From Page A J Mexiean Squatters MARINA ... to allocate $280,000 for an Army Corps of Engineers' study of the m arina plan. Howe•er. Sorsabel said the money was never allocated and Army Corps spokes man Perry Davis says his department was never asked to conduct the sur- vey. Costa Mesa Councilwoman Norm a H£'f'1.7.og JXJts the marina in the ··ruce to have category." but said she was told it would take aU of the county's recrea- tion funds for the next 13 years to build 1t · Sbe !-.a1d !IOme private money would be n<.'Cded. but she doesn't support totally a private facility. Both Sorsabal and Hogan say funding of such a project re- mains in doubt. Sorsabal sug- ~ested that somoooe would have to buy out tho leases on the oil producing Hanning property that could be involved. Councilman Raciti figure9 the county purchase of river lowland<> lo lbc north of the Ban- ning parcel opens the door for some sort of funding ai:rcement hetwe<!n the three c1t1cs, the county and, posSlbly, the federal govenuncnt. Ho ~ tbe manna n· tending nortlt to B ~U ton Stre<'t.. Giraffe Down, Faces Death TEL A VIV, Israel (J\P) Nobody knows what's wrong with SllJomo.. a giraffe at the Tel Avi'O' Zoo. He has collapsed. and 11nlees hti kcepet-s get him back on his feet. be may die. The eight-year-old, bappiJy me.rried glra(fe £ell down Swi- day, poBBibly because he suf· feted an iojury last wuk. Zoo workers spent several hour~ today trying to boisl the ~ guafte wlth a makeshift crane. f.beo gave up uolil Tues· day. Resettlement Effort Meets Resistance TIJUANA. Mexico CAP> - Mexico·s 20-year effort to move an estimated 25 ,000 riverbed squatters to safer ground is meeting resistance. As many as half the 2,350 peo- ple taken to makeshift govern ment housing are refusing to pay rent there. The Mexican government has tried since the 1950s to resettle familie5 wtLch fled the Mexican interior ln poverty, staking claims in the federally own<'tl Tia Juana riverbed. Torreotial rains hit in recent weeks and the government sent bulldozers, leveling cardboard houses and moving families to higher ground. An earth-fill dam at the bead of the valley leading to the Pacific Ocean ls holding back its most water in 30 years. ~lartin Herna ndez Murillo said he, his wife and their HI C'haldren have lrted lo acccol th1· JolmWayne &ck Home, 'Fee/,s Fine' Movie actor John Wayne has b een in and out of Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach. under going tests for bronchitis but was home today and feeling fine, spokeswomen for the 70-year-old a<Mt said W ayoe bas been an outpatient al the hoepital for rc.sp1ratory problems for some time. a spokeswoman at his home saitf. A spokeswoman al ha s office in Los Angeles said Wayne has gone to Hoag from time to Um<> for checkups ••oot he's at homt.' now and he's fine. There's no problem.•· Officials at tho hos pital declined comment. brightly painted. concrete:block house to which they were moved • behind the airport on Olay Mesa But. he said "the re&etUemeat has become more of a problem. They promised us a whole house. Wlth two bedrooms. They gave us half -the kitchen, the living room and a bathroom.•• "l have not paid them a cent." Hernandez Murillo said, and others .. can't pay for their homes and they can't pay lbeJ.T laxes " Fifty-four families have re· rused to pay the $20 a m-0nlb asked by the federal govern- m ent for their tiny homes of Centro Urbano. A not her, Pedro Luzano Garcia. said "the homes 8.J'ld property simply are not worth it. Bt•s1des, we have no money. The roof leaks and the walls are <:ral'h.ed .. Luis Carlos Ibarra, director of internal relation:. for the city of T1Juana, :r;aid of the people: "'It wa1> wrong of them not to pay - lhl'Y were livini: like rats in lhat l!arba)!e dump before. To make room for the flood-mntrol chan· nl'I, they had t.o be moved ... By mad· week. at least hair the 5,000 famJIJes are expected to be on higher ground. Along with th()6(' already in army tents and the concrete- hlock houses, they will be reset· lied pNmanently m a colony un- d er construction nearby. Gov. Roberto de la Madrid said last week that "the resettle· ment plan 1s working. "The refug<?<'s will be on much safer ground," be said in an in- ter vi cw. "They will ha\'e services, and they will have tiUe to the land which the state "'ill gave them." Where Were To11rists? NB Officials Call £.ast,er Week Quiet Newport Bencb police and Hfeguards qreed today that Easter Week just Lsn't what 1t u.aed to be in their town. "It was .o quiet," commentrd one veuno poUoe ol!lcer recall· ing the days of Bal Week, "I forgot il wa" EMter vacation." Lifeguard Lt. Logan Lockabey said hooch attendance wu ll&h~ all week, but m1~roomt'd up t~ 100,000 on Saturday and 90,000 on Sunday He said there were few prob I ma even though city beaches from 5.2Dd Street to lb• Sant 1 Ana River remained under quar1n~ fTOm t~ rfecu ot • sewaae apil1 th.It oecurted two woeka a.co. • I Robet-1 Stone, dit"fftor of en- \ iron mental be1lth for the Orange County Health Dcput- menl, eaid the quaT"antine will remain in effect until at least Tuesday. He sald the daily walt'r sample.4' of lhe quarantined area are sWl showing elevated levels ot bacteria. Lockabcy said guards nnd police had no problems keeping people off the closed ~aches The only lncldent to Ix-report· ed oe<:W'Ttd Sunday al\emoon when utoauards and Orange Count1 harbor patrolmen were called on to rescue nine people from a cabln cruber off Corona dcl &Ur ma.In beach. Loctabey said the craft"s owner, Roger Rouch of 2cm Bin- ces~a St., El Toro, radioed a may day to the Newport Coast Guard station, telling Uiem tus 24 foot boat was sinking. Lifegaurds and patrolmen. who were already in the Area. responded and took off six adults a nd thrcc.-children. without further problems Harbor patrolmen were abl~ lo plug the boles that had caused thr lealdn~ t•nd the boal was pumPf'(I out end towed to their he dquarters. LockabOJ uld 111 of lhr paneniel'll, except Rouch, were from Pomona. Monday, March 27. 19711 t DAILY PILOT A3 Crash Sur1'i1'ors· Can't Forget Tragedy Jumbo Jet Bit One Year Ago By The Auociated Preas March 27, wn, ls a date many Orange County residents will never be able t.o forget. On that day, exactly one year ago today, 27 residents of Leisure World in Laguna Hills died in the worst accident in aviation history, the crash of two jumbo jets at Tenerife in the Canary Islands. Although the collision oc- curred on the ground, the result· ang fires claimed 600 lives There were 70 survivors Ten of them were from Leisure World. All were on a Pan Am jet. all those on a KLM Royal Dutch Airlines 747 perished. Retired machine shop employee Paul Heck, 65, of Leisure World is still emaciated from a bout with hepatitis wruch he attributes to the pain killers he took for months to relieve the agony of burns he suffered in the crash ·'It was like something out or a nightmare," he recalled "Here was the plane going down the tubes, and au those people were sitting there immovable, like figures m a wax museum .. 1 knew that life on that plane was going to be measured in ~econds." Unlike Heck, who talks freely of the crash by thinking of it as something he witnessed as an onlooker, other Leisure World survivors are reluctant to dis cuss their ordeal "It's a lousy "'ay to get publicity." said Byron El· Ierbrock. Ellerbrock, who suf fered pelvis fractures, a broken wrist and an eye injury, said he has a stock reply to people who ask him if he will ever fly again "I say I've flown hundreds of thousands of miles, but l never got hurt flying 1ust 1umpang off of wings," he said Another survivor, Dav1d Wiley of Palo Alto. has taken a bold step to conquer has fear of flying that developed after the crash PAUL ANO FLOY HECK OF LEISURE WORLD DISCUSS THEIR TERRIFYING EXPERIENCE 'It WH Like Something Out of a Nightmare,' Says Retired Mechlnl1t Heck, who leaped off lhe wing of the burning Pan Am jet he and his wife were taking as the first leg of a Mediterranean hoh· day, remembers vividly the hor· ror on the faces of his fellow passengers as columns of burn mg jet fuel descended into the compartment. On Saturday. the 30-year·old microwave technician left on tht• same Pan Am "Mediterranean Highlights" tour package that was so tragically interrupted a year ago. His first stop was to be m thr $4,000 Turkey City Eruls Wild Goose Chase GLADSTONE, Ore (AP> - City officials are taking a gander al the $.1 ,000 they have spent prosecuting lhe case of Charlie lhc ~oose while CharlJe's owner starts to look for a home where the fowl won 't l>e harassed Ted Winslow. owner of the pel, has had two trials on eharges in volvmg Charhc The city finally abandoned a third charge against Winslow because of the mounting expenses and told him to get his goose out of town 'I trunk 1l's been very foolish of the r1ty of Gladstone," Winslow, 23, said "But it's been we 11 worth 1t to us lo keep Charlie He's like one of my Nude Bathers Return to Blnck's Beach LA JOLLA I AP> Easter Sunday was nude Sunday, despite a c·1ty ordinance less than a year olcl banning nudlty on the shiny white s ands of Black s RC'ach An estimated 200 naked bathers pulled on their swim 5u1ts hurriedly when three California park rangers ap· pea red. A whistle blast alerted the sun bathers, basking m 90 degree weather children and he's got more personality than any animal I've ever seen.'' lie said his wife, Judy, and their three children have had trouble sleeping since Charlie was put in the county pond The large gray goose used to patrol the yard lo keep prowlers and other animals away. ·'People are afraid of Charlle because he 's different," Winslow said. "But he's not a fearful goose unless he doesn't know you. He couldn't hurt you but he could scare the hell out of you" The city began its wild goose chase rn December when an Animal Control officer picked up Charlie for loitering in city streets. The 2-year-old goose was seized a second lime Jan. 23 and Winslow was charged wilh keeping a goose without a permit and in unsanitary cond1• lions. Since then, the case has led to an arraignment, two day-long trials and a hearing with costs chmbmg as juries were select ed. witnesses subpoenaed. lawyers hired and the goose kept at the county pound for a holdmg fee o( $165. City officials said the fmal cost for the proceedings may come t-0 more than $4,000. Winslow won the first charge when he convinced the Jury that the gander was a household pet and not subject to city livestock and poultry ordinances. But he was found guilty of keeping Charlie without a permit and was fined $75. TIEGS HUTT OM .. IUHCEH GllACE A,.WI,_,..._ Harper's Bazaar magazine has named its choices for America's 10 most beautiful women -not one younger than 30. Alphabetically, they are Candice Bergen, 31. Diahann Carroll. 42 ; Faye Dunaway, 37: Princess Grace of ~lonaco. 48 : Lt>na Horne, 60; Lauren Hutton, 33; Farrah Fawcett-Majors. 31. Ali MacGraY.. 39: Elizabeth Taylor. 46. and Cher)l Ttegs, 30. Arab Thieves WseHands NICOSIA, Cyprus <AP> -The right hando; of two Saudi Arabian burglars were chopped off in Riyadh, the Saudi capital, after they were convicted of burglariz- ing houses and stealing cars. Riyadh radio reported. Visitor to Park Shot from Ambush . A 17-year-old Santa Ana youth 1s reported in good condition at Saddleback Community Hospital after being shot in the right shoulder at O'Neill Park Sun day with friend s a Mexi c an American group mostly from the Delhi area of Santa Ana ·Wallenda Funeral Held Sheriff's deputies scaled off El Toro Road with roadbloc ks following the 2 · 30 p m shooting Depulles said Randy Sebreros. 203 E Cubbon St.. was sitting on a fence at the edge of the park just off Live Oak Canyon Road when he was shot from a passmJ! car. The youth told officers he was spendrng Easter at the park A s heriff's department s pokes man said th~t \\ h1le roadblocks and se a r c h pro· cedures failed lo turn up a small caliber gun, seven Santa Ana vouths wNe arrest ed when a sawed-of( shotgun and s evera l clubs and blackjacks were dis· covered m two automobiles at an El Toro Road checkpoint south of the park Thousands Mourn High Wire Daredevil SARASOTA, Fla <AP) -Karl Wallenda, patriarch of a death· defying family of high wire performers, was eulogized today as a deeply religious man who believed he walked the wire with God. "As long as God lets me, I will walk the wire," lhe Rev. Luther Willer quoted WaUenda during funeral services al the large arena where the 73-year-old star used to perform for neighbors In this circus town. Wallenda, who challenged fate and gravity 58 years, fell 123 feet to his death from a wind· whipped high wire stretched between two hotels in San Juan, Puerto Rico, on Wednesday. ·'Th 1s past week, God said 'Karl, lhe time has come for you to enter the Kinizdom of Heaven and Join your other loved ones'." Willer told a crowd estimated at 400 In the 4,200-seat Robarts Sports Arena. An estimated 1.500 fans and friends filed past Wallenda's bronze coffin Easter Sunday. re· minded of his years on the high wire by the shadow of a 24-foot balance pole hung overhead ln tribute The body was on public view for six hours, dressed in performing costume and the neck scarf Wallenda always wore when he walked the wire The pole hanging over the casket was like the one he clutched when he plummeted 10 stor ies to his death. Hls body was brought back to Sarasota -the winter home of many circus performers. Four months ago, the sports arena was the site for the re-creation of the Wallenda family's famed seven-man pyramid, filmed for a television movie. In 1962', lwo ot the lroupe were kllled and Wallenda 's adopted son Mario waa paralyzed when the pyramid collapsed A s henlf's spokesman said the O'Neill Park: s hooting was the only :;erious incident reported. Canary Islands. "I wanted lo go tast year because oI the many diICerent cultures we'd be vuntme." he said. "So ln spite of wbal hap- pened, I want to do it." Wiley said he has more~ less recovered from eye and back in· JUrtes be sustained but also wants to fully conquer his fear of flylng. He said bis refund on the onginal trip will pay for this tr1 p Wiley has settled his damage swt against Pan Am out of court for a sum be won't dis· close The legal, hscal and in- vestigative aftermath of last year's disaster still drags on Airline officials are tight· mouthed about the 'number of lawsuits pending or any setUe· ments with survivors and famihes or victims. A Pan Am spokesman in New York said all legal action is in Ii m bo pending the outcome of the Spanish government's in- vestigation into the crash. Spanish officials are to brief American and Dutch aviation of- f1c1als an Madrid next month on their preliminary findings A final report is expected after lhe mc~ting last Rites Slated for · MV Victiins Graveside services a r e scheduled Tuesday for a 34-year- old Mission Viejo man and his 71 year-old mother, victims of a Good Friday murder-suicide shooting. James Carr shot his mother three times with an automatic pistol, then turned the gun on himself in their Lhree·bedroom home at 26502 El Mar Drive, sheriff's deputies reported. Mary Elizabeth Carr left a trail of blood from her home to that or a neighbor, where she knocked on lhe door, collapsed and died. deputies said. Carr, a Vietnam veteran, had been living with bi~other since his father died last year, deputil'S said. Carr bad quit his 1ob at Hughes Tool In Culver Ci- ty. investigators said. Jn vestigalors said Carr seldom left the home, spending much of his time reacting an his bedroom. They said there 1s no apparent motive for the shoot 10~. other than a possible mental problem Neighbors told officerS' the <'arr home was always quiet and tht•rc apparently were no prob· I ems · W c can only speculate on the motivt•," s aid a s heriff's in vestigator "We don't know whal sparked thl' incident The only two people who would know are dt•ad " lnvc•stigators said Mrs. Carr. :.i retired s chool teacher. was shot in the service area or gara~e portion of her home Her son apparently walked into a bathroom and shot himself in thf.' tempi<'. Laguna Hills Mortuary I' handling Tuesday 's 2 p m. graveside ~ervices at El Toro \eme terv Survivors mclud1· Mrs. Carr's son. Robert A of Mi s sion \'1eJO, and two grandc•hilcln•n 1uxuryof cashmere .. .+i> ..... ,,,. ~~'O .. -.. z. 's-Qr>,~o· truly thz,. Pi ntZSt you'll (.\fer see. made exclusively for us tn 1-BM'.;k ,Scd.land. our Haw1ck 9\lA'.aUtrs re present uncompro- m ising qµal\ty end valt..£ na a.Uainabil. any wh<lre. tl"llZ. card~ has real leather buUons. e colors. Clrcu1 performers from around the world sent flowers t.o adorn Wallen4a '• casket. The native of Ma1de~ur1, oow In Eaat Germany, wu praised by pe~n u the rreatest of the hllh· wire walkerl. 44 f_.,n island, newport center 844-5070 FRIENDI, WELL-WISHERS PAY LAIT fllSPECTa~.....,.. MDumel9 . Pellc:uketlnlaraeotaaunday. . . . But most of tbo 11500 who ftled paat the body SUnday were fans wbo w.nt to IQ tbelr own ·coodbyes. • I • r A4 OAil.Y PILOT Monday, MlltCh 'Z7, 1'11 f:J · & T!!!@ . Marphine The Show Most Go On AVAST, LANDLUBBERS DEPl'.-Golfen have a rep-. utation ~ being so grimly addicted to the. sPort that; they'd crawl to tbe greem while expiring to play the final round 1D a Uumderstonn.. · l am.oat certain that the same tenacity applies to yacht J"acing people. But I suspect it. I certainly know this addlctloo is true wbeo it comes to boat•nc editors. You take Almon Loctabey, for example, who is the long-time boating editor on this sterling journal. Lockabey 15 clearly a fanatic. Al bas been slightly under the weather in recent times. Thus it was be became scheduled for some surgery at, Hoag Memorial lbpitaJ in Newport Beach. . AS FOB ~· just being scheduled to go under the knife. as headline writers say in the newspaper dodge. woul<f:beeooug.btoreducemetoapuddleofbuttermilk. _ Listen, rm suffering one of these summer colds Last ru~ht.. my wife had to administer anesthetic before I'd sub· mil to nosedrops. I was terrified. Lockabey, however, ts made of stronger stuff when the lure <!f a boat race is at band. Facing the threat of surgery, he still covered the Bushmll.ls power boat race and the Congressional Cup for wind sailors on the same day. THEN BE WENT under the knife where surgeons ~stowed upon him four different operations at the same time. /I-; -?• 1'• I \ I .,_ ......... Ownna of Racing Yachta Art Very Popular Rumor has it that this is a record al Hoag Hospital. If at isn't a record, it must be a ghastly second place. It's a long way from nosedrops, in any event. All of this happened to our esteemed boating person late last week. Yacht racing this weekend went on as usual. You would assume our boating edit.or would be out of it But oo. He fled the hospital Sunday. His lovely wife, Virginia, was busy on the telephone, gathering yacht rac· ing results. Meanwhile, Lock abandoned bis bed and took up his typewriter. ripping off race stories about the Newport Harbor Yacht Club's Ocean Racing Series, the Al Adams & Son cb.allenge trophy, the Pritilrin Trophy and the Winter Hibacbi Series. These are baffling names and events to the landlub- bers among us. TO A BOATING EDITOR, however, these contests are enough to cause instant recovery from surgery. Virginia delivered bis stories to my hous~ at dawn today. You can read all about it tonight. I'd give you all the exciting details on Lockabey's sur gcry but that would destroy all the tall tales he's going to spin when be makes his rounds or the various yacht clubs. Al the rate of his recovery, be may be doing that tomorrow. Illegal Sex to Draw Symbolic Whipping KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP> -Moslems convicted in Ke~ah state of illicit intercourse will be given symbolic public whippings, the chairman of a committee revising the state's Islamic laws says. "The carung under the proposed law will be humane and wlll not be ~~m.Uar to tbe one meted out for criminal offenses by prison authonties," Ahmad Fa1ruz said. .''The caning will not hurt physically or cause any harm to the bodies of those convicted." Non·Moslems convicted of illicit intercourse with MosJems will get the same punishment - , lapan Ai,.P.rt -·Police Take .Foes' Building . TOKYO (AP) -Police using a crane boom captured today a tower built by protesters on private land to block the fllaht path to Japan's new airport. It was the third day ot violence at the airport. by · Japanese who oppose its opening. The airport at Narita, 41 miles oort.beut ot here, was built to take the load ol international air traf- fic off Tokyo's Haneda Airport. Foes of the airport include en vironmentalists, farmers who were forced to sell their land for the field and radicals who claim the airport might be used for military purposes. THE •FOOT tower and the four·story block.house on which it was built were constructed to block the long.delayed opening of the &rfield, which may be postponed agatn. Today about two dozen police backed by fire hoses climbed the boom or a large crane and plucked four radicals from the tower. Then they cut a hole m the blockhouse wall and arrest ed six more. Police said there may be a tunnel system under the blockhouse through which others escaped. The blockhouse has no win- dows or doors except on the roof The police had attacked it with tear gas and water cannon but were kept at bay by the occu· pants, who threw firebombs. rocks and lengths of pipe. POLICE HAD NOT started to lake down the tower as of late today. They demolished a s1m1lar tower last month after a 40·hour battle Demonstrators occupied and • wrecked the airport's control tower in bloody figbtl.Jll Sunday and vowed to continue their at- tacks on the $1 billion field, which had been scheduled to open Thursday. The Japanese cabinet will decide Tuesday on whether to delay the opening. "We'll employ everything we can. We'll fight until we see the· airport abolished." said lsaalru Tomura, the leader of the Anti- Airport League. AIRPORT OFFICIALS said the attackers smashed radar, co mmunications and meteorology equipment in the control room Demonstrations, riots, attacks and other blocking tactics have already delayed the opening of the airport for six years, and five people have been killed in battles there. At least 20 per were tnJured Sunday when some 6,SQO mili· tants clashed repeatedly with some of the 13,000 riot police guarding the airport whtle 8,000 more demonstrated in the town o( N anta, three miles away Police said 115 people were ar· rested Paris Cops Confirm Victiin's Mutilation PARIS (AP) -The kidnappers of Edouard.Jean Empain kept the Belgian industrialist hooded, ill·fed and chained to a bed during nine weeks m capitivily and cut off the tip of his little ringer to send to .R11thoriti~s as proof he was being held. French police said today. Empa10, chairman of the Empain Schneider industrial group, one of Europe's largest, was released on the outskirts or Paris Sunday night He was in seclusion al his Paris apartment today. Police Director J ean Ducret told a news conference that three days after he was abducted , Empaan ·s kidnappers sliced o(f the tap of hts little fingeT an-ct sent 1t to police to con- v 1 n c e au th 0 r it i es EMPAIN they had the 40·year·old Belgian nobleman There had been unconfirmed reports of such a mutilation The wound was left lo heal by itself, Ducret said. He said Em pain was kept chained lo a small bed in such a way that he could not stretch out. "He suffered greatly." Ducret said .. "Happily Baron Empain is a very solid man and he endured these awful conditions " AFTER IDS RELEASE, Em· pain looked exhausted bl.It said he was in good health. according to Police Commissioner Pierre Ottavioli. He was freed two days after police ambushed five of the kid nappers as they were about to pick up an $8.6·million ransom payment. Three of the pickup gang escaped without the money, one was killed, another was wounded and captured. The cap live. 36·year·old Alain Caillol, telephoned other members of the gang Sunday night to urge them to free Empam, the police said. POLICE COMMISSIONER Pierre Ottaviolt said as many as 10 men are believed to have participated an the kidnapping and that Empain was moved several times durtng bis captivi- ty He told the police he didn't know where he had been held 2State Rulings Upheld WASHINGTON (AP) The U.S. Supreme Court Jet stand today two rulings dealing with police handling of criminal suspects. One is a ruling that Massachusetts authorities claim great· Jy expands the protec· lion criminal s uspects receive under the so· called Miranda doctrine. THE JUSTICES turned down an appeal by state prosecutors aimed at overturning a suppression·Of·evidence order by Massachusetta' highest court Rain Dampens East The other is a decision by Pennsylvania's highest court signHicantly curtailing the power o( police to stop and detain persons. The justices refused to hear an attempt by law enforcement officials to overturn the Penn· sylvania Supremel Court's ruling. Travelers W amed of Snow, Flaah Floods AllMlll' Atl411111 aattlmor• alsmarcti Boston •llff•lo Ollc ... CIMl,.,..tl a.wt""" Del-~t.~ Dtoftr Det'91t ~alfllllfth H..-tter• "-*"'" ..... ~an. IC_.tCI~ UttJelteQ M!Mtl8MO Ml ..... ............ ........ --Off-..... Ym ~QI)' OIMM O..llMe • jlllll~ =-· 9t.LGU11 t Ml LI f'ft u 26 .111 45 '4 .QI s. » 2.S> 'l 2' ,. :M .u 31 31 .0'2 • Jl JI .16 ... J7 ... 52 » .D u ... MD u » ·" » • D 2' .2J G ... U 67 • •JIM ... 2:11 " ,. 79 n DaAS . n 24 Jt • .. 47 27 i4 ... ,, la D » . .. 41IS1.• ,,. J7 ... JS ,. .n a•,., .... M 29 .n .. II 49 • , ... , .,, CAU..,..,A ,. " " s.s 11 M '"" Tl\al Incl-llalf • million •I uw S.nt• Monie. i.ac11e• lo enJoy 11141 62·deor•• w•t•r, wl\lle another 171,000 swarmed to south bay 1Mac11e1 and •n eutm•ted •S,000 "'°"' lammed h t.ono Beaclt area "--•len Mid co.s1a11-c-• Mlf loul -"'9 In llW coe1ta1 .,... and -,,_....,, anas .. ,. t~ lo C'-IO l\azy _,"',,...I~ cs.,. TN"*"""'"' Md dfterts-. C. IMIW 1UN1Y •1et wUh Varil!Ole l\ltfl Cl...,._ .... l«.i Wlftlb. •vt ttmpwllturwt -•-led to c.eot lleftlflcMU' In IN co.slat eflCI • vtll.., ---IN Miit fww da~, ...._ten .... d. Alonit U. c-t from MM1119 to Ntwp•rl ... cti, OYUlllel\l , ••• wlll lie 111 IN .. wtlll 1119111 Tuttdey ·~ te,.. f.-i""' mfd.40a IO .... ,... ' . THE CASE IN the : first decision involved the killing of Carlton Bausch in a Holyoke, Mass., tavern during the early·morning hours of April 17, 1976. Later that day, police arrested • Daniel L. Dustin in COD· nection with Bausch's death. According to court records, Dustin lnJtiated a conversation with a policeofftcer,ulrlng: "U I tell you something about the incident, wiU I be admlttinl my eullt?" Tbe offlcier rep11ea, .. You ore not on the stand and you are not under oath." IN TUE SECOND case, the oepbew of a murder victim wa1 ar· rested on a atoten-1u.n warrant and later char1ed with ht. aunt'• murder. Tbe rullnJ 11 that evlden~ arillq out of that 1top. becauae of lack of "probabl• CIUle," la not coastilu• tionaU7 ad ibl• ill the pendtoc mu.rdtr trial . • I I ............ RADAR, COMMUNICATIONS EQUIPMENT SMASHED Protffter Look• Through Jegged Tower Window Freme $8.3 Billion Eyed To Beef Vp Cities WASHINGTON (AP> -President Carter announced today an $8.3·billion urban strategy designed to assist distressed cities and aid healthier communities to manage sturdy and efficient growth. The urban plan involves efCorts to stimulate investment and create Jobs in economically troubled areas, programs to revitalize urban neighborhoods and a commit- ment to improve "10 existing pro- grams. In a policy message prepared for delivery to state and local leaders, Carter asked Congress to create a National Develop- ment Banlt to provide invest· ment subsidies for companies that build or expand in dis- tressed areas HE ALSO SEEKS tax credits to reward businesses that hire the hard-core unemployed and firms that locate or expand in decaying areas. The urban plan, if approved by Congress, would include $2.7 billion in additional spending for urban programs; $1 billion over 30 years for interest subsidies, and $2.2 billion for loan guaran· tees, not a budget item. In addi· t.ion, three tax proposals wouJd cost the Treasury about $2.4 billion. rafael Carter's plan involves most of his Cabinet departments along with independent agencies such as the Environmental Protection Agency and ACTION. the federal organization handling volunteer programs. MUCH OF CARTER'S urban blueprint is designed to cost no new money. An estimated $85 billion already goes from the federal Treasury to state and ·local governments. administra· tion officials say. An attempt to improve exist· ing programs is a large element in the Carter plan, said Stuart Eizenstat, the president's chief domestic adviser. "We turned the government upside down to find everyUu.ng that is having an adverse 1mpact on urban . areas," he said, pointiq to 160 changes in 40 federal programs. • I • I Very European, very spring, very Bullocks Wiishire, where the devotee can find Newport's greatest selecllon rafael. another great name behind the great name • Focus. Shop 6 U llOC~5 'W1 tsU rn [ Fashion Island, Ntwpon 8eldl . . -t CALIFORNIA J Ma Booked I Nude Girl, 16 l 1 Found Stabbed YUCCA VALLEY <AP> -A 31-year·old ~teran was booked for investigation or murder after the nude body of a 16-year-old girl was found 15tabbed, wrapped in a sbeet and lied to the bumper of his car, San Bernardino County sheriff's deputies report. Dep. Harvey Walker said the body or Kimber- ly Michele Keichline was discovered tied to the bumper ol a car that had apparently dragged the Jirl several hundred yards before gelling trapped 111 wet sand. The car was registered to Richard Joseph Shupe of Yucca Valley, who was later arrested in connection with the girl's death, Walker said. LONG BEACH (AP> -An autopsy was set for today on the body or a Norwalk teenager re· covered from the San Gabriel River. a Los Angeles County Coroner's official said. Jimmy Ferraiuolo. 14, had been missing since Wednesday when he toppled into a flood control channel in Bellflower while playing catch with his .Younger brother, Los Angeles sheriff's deputies ,-,aid The boy apparently -~· ) tripped over his .cleated STATE shoes as he scramhled down the concrete em- -----------' bankment to relneve the ball, which rolled into the rainswollen channel He was swept away m the rapid current, officials said. His body was found by a passer-by Saturday Pair Fourtd Sl•fn LOS ANGELES <AP> -Police refuse to speculate whether the fatal shootings of a Woodland Hills man and his 17·year-old girlfriend were related to the man's pornography business. The body or Malinda Colgin, daughter of Beverly Hills psychologist Or. Russell W. Colgin, was found on a downstairs couch in the luxurious home of her bovfr1ed, Paul Lewis, 29. Lewis' body was found m an upstairs bedroom. Both had been shot in the head, police said. Lewis' roommate, Stephen Reina, discovered the bodies, both fully clothed. when he returned to the split-level homt· Friday night. Neither victim was bound or gagged. ~aonald' lnj11red LOS ANGELES <APl -"Ronald McDonald," the Jdvert1smg clown for the Ml'Donald's fast food restaurant chain, suffered a broken fin ger when nvenealous children rushed an Easter parnde flr1Jt m which he w;is riding. .. Ronald ... whose real name 1s Edward Allerman, was riding on a small train Sunday in the annual Gilbert Lindsay Parade in South Cen- trnl Los Angeles when the enthusiastic children ac- cidentally tipped the train over, said city hre of· ficials. t f · /. um~(: ~ ~ I GRO-POWER All purpose rerti- lizer for spring lawn feeding . Brings back that lush green look every- one enjoys. 40 lb. bag feeds to 2.5-00sq. ft. $7.95 INDOOR Pl.ANTS A fantastic selection of unusual indoor Oowering plants. African Violets, Glox- inia. Orchids. Mums, Cyclamen. Azaleas. Reiger Begonias, Easter Ulies and Oxygen Plus to prevent overwater- ing whUe promoting growth. BEGONIAS . FtbtOUI varieties including the popu- lar Rlchmondenslt type. Deep recb, bright ptnka and white. Grow. bat tn our i:oastel are . 4• regular 95e through 3/31/78 only69e Uml~ to stock on hand. Nighty Night A,.~ r'rccld) lets out a gorilla·stzed yawn and his t') ehds droop as he nods off to sleep after hl'ing tranquilizt>d at Roeding Park Zou in Fn•sno Fre<Jd.. was inoculated against \ alle~ 1e \ e r ·a fungus-caused respiratory 1llnl.'ss Not Peanuts Bil( Battle Breuing LOS A"-GEl.ES IA P ; Like many ('Ouµles getting divorces, Judy and Paul Kaye arc fighting a custody battle. Judy has had v1sitat1on nghts since the couµle broke up tbeir marriage and circus act 15 months ago But now she wants to take baby Judy, 4. Peggy, Dolly, and Dumbo, the oldest at age 30. to Canada for a show Paul says he needs the four elephants for appearances in New Orleans The decision on who will get to keep the four !wasts 1s nol expected to come until a tri<il this surnml'r But the Kayes were in court haggling oH'r as~·l'ls of the custody arrangement .. The elephant <·1n·us 1s a way of hfe with us, not JUSt a joh," said Mrs Kaye, 33. Both she and her 47 year -old el.I ranged husband say the) need the elephants to earn a living DAILY GARDEN SEMINARS Educational lectures on various plant/ garden topics. Weekdays llam l pm 3pm Weekends Hourly llam-3pm 1REESALE Arbor Day Speclal-5-15 gallon trees. any variety we can get HA1F PRICE. 18"-42'" Boxed Specimen trees. any variety we can get 303 OFF through 3/31/78. Only Roger'• Florist can d gn ~ terfuJ c:re.adons your frlendi will f\eveY' forget. For partla, wedding•. holt- dayl, a thoughtful gtft or sJmply tome· thing beautiful for Vf>JU,telf call 64();6n4. .. .. Monday, Maren 27, lll78 DAILY PILOT J\ .S Oat of This World Sci Fi Fans Hold Fest LOS ANGELES CAP) -The "Star Wars' crowd tended to keep its distance from the "Star Trekkies," who in turn stayed away lrom thE Sandmen, those dedicated elite law enforcers from the television series "Logan's Run." Qul ln spite ot -or perhaps because of -su1.. family feuds, the Fourih Science Fiction. Horror and Fantasy Convention this weekend proved a lively &athering complete with otherworldly panel discussions, impromptu musicales and painstak 1ngly prepared costumes. ONE MAN IN AN elaborate "Star Wars" stormtrooper getup got the wind taken out of his sails by a youngster who approached him in the middle of the Marriott Hotel convention floor. The 10-year-old gave the trooper a once-over. rested his eyes on his belt and asked: ''Isn't that a Band-Aid box?" The soldier stiffly nodded. UNDERNEATH THE COSl'UME, which was complete with a "Star Wars" blaster weapon, wa::. one of three Santa Maria men who had spent near ly a year working on fiberglass replicas of the body armor worn by act.ors In the movie. "We're the only ones crazy enough to do this," claimed Phillip Norwood. "Afterwards we're Adult Bookstore • Out of Business VISTA (AP> -After a year of mounting hassles. the only adult bookstore m this rural city or 30,000 people is closed. Townspeople picketed, set up an ant1pomog- raphy committee, and rocks were thrown through the window twice. THE OWNER, Thomas Connor, turned his business license back to the city last week, report- ing his life had been threatened. "He's scared, and he has good reason to be scared." said Brian Sesko, chairman of the ··citizens for Decency " ALTHOUGH SESKO didn't elaborate on the threats. he said Connor was staying with a member or Sesko's group and staying ''under- ground during this present crisis." Connor, 26. told the city attorney's office that he had been converted to the anl1-pornography movement. T HE PICKETS struck up a fr1endsh1p with him over the months while trying to close his store and even offered to help him start another busi- ness, Sesko said in an interview Among the pic keters was City Councilwoman Gloria McClellan. CoMor paid rent on the building to the owner or a massage parlor in Oceanside and has been liv mg in an apartment behind the mal>sage parlor. SPECTRACIDE All purpose Insecticide to effectively control a wide range or garden pests. ~ WESTERN GARDEN BOOK Everything every gardener here in the West needs to know. This book can make anyone an expert. Reg. SS.95 through 3/31/78 only $4.95. 20% OFF PRIMROSE AND VIOi.A BASKETS Put some briJJlant color in your home with our lntemattonal)y famous hang· Ing batkett. The recent rains have really made the Prtmrose and VioJa bask.it spictacularlv colorf\11, now l!i the bat tiJQe jO buy them. ' going to walk up and down the main drae of S.. ta M1ri1& UI co.tume." I NORWOOD WAS NOT the only one benefitlnt from the three-day opportumty to dliJpl~ aclence f1ct1on finery. Four-year convention veteran Brian Hill sport· ed five rows of science fiction buttons on bis shltt and pants and clanked when he walkeiit. 'Tm weird," Hill said candidly. "In tbeae circles. that complements the fun or the cooven· hon At home with friends, 1 can't discuss sclenct fiction because they say 'science facdon' in the same tone as ldddie's sbows." THERE WERE THOSE who cast aspersions on the gathering's authenticity. · · Moi,t people here are not science fiction fans," complained one man. "They're here for 'Star Wars' or 'Star Trek.' Hard-core science fie.. tion rans won't come here." BUT THE GRUMBLERS were far or.utnum- bered by the enthusiasts. Even as the con\I ention drew to its official close at midnight Saturday, a few convention veterans gathered for their own in· formal rite, a "filksing" hootenanny. "Filksrngs," explained Evelyn Turner, 'Z'T, are folksongs wtth science fictionaliud lyrics. The Los Angeles County Clerk and science fiction buff pulled oul a few sheets of music from her (\Illar rase Among them was tne lllksmg vers.ioo or --oh . dear, what can the matter be?'' which started out: "Oh , dear. where can lhe matter be, when it's oon· verted to energy " $}0,000 for only 'Mlether yoo need S3.~ Of S25.CXX> get 11 from the peo- ple v.M lend ml- hons Cornref c1al Credit. l'v'althly pay- $155.26 ~~~I loan. for 120 a month .. ~~;~t~ · 14~b. Totalpaytnent $18.631 20 M) RJINTS. 00 PRE· PAYMENT PENALTY 'We find ways co help. COMMEf\.CIAL CR.EDIT CORf01'_ATJON @. Homeowner Loc\n'> •<"D<" A lua11 nl S~ IX)() .111d nvt.r 11111>1 he ~~lJl~d bf'' UIHllHllJltOll of l~dl dOd per'>Onal f,lfOl>f'IY Costa Mesa • 370 E 17th S~t • M.5--8700 • 1111 Town & Country Rd. • 547~8'11 Orange Suite 26 Cndlt L•rt lftauran•" Anilabk> l.t• Eli~ eon.w...., at G.-., Rale PUBlJC NOTICE PUBlJC NOTICE NOTICI'. TO CallOITOtlS PIC'T1TIOUS .ustMaM W"Eat<MlC:OUa TOl'THll ..-nAnMSllT STATll<WCAUl'OaNIA l'Oa TM fot-..V piw-K .......... , THllC:OUNTYCWOaANOll MUH. -A-NEWPOllT •EDOING COAA £•1•1• of MAHLON MI LTON PANY, ls.IA N"'pon ••"'41 .. Colt• tEAD. •k• MAHLON MILTON -.c.u-mv 1EAD, SR .... MAJOR MAHLON M Tllom•• AUllJo SCebffras. 740 ~EAD. DecP•Wd Vlst• Noblere. H••-l •••<II NOTICE IS HEAE8Y GIVEN lo tM Galllorft .. ,_ crtdlton al t,,. llbovP ,,.~ de<-..t Tllh ---11 QllftdUct.d by• lft.. trwl •II per'IO<I• n•vh19 <letml .t0•fn1t fvlcN•I t,,._ W ld oe<edtnl •re r~ulr.O lo Ill• Tllotnes~ tn.m. wllll t"<' M<HWrl' wou<l'41". Tiiis ai.at-t we llled wllll ti.. to ·~ u-. .. OMO •• GUSTAVE s County Cl-of ~ Gounly -CHA8RE l l H2 M•t ArtlllHMarclll0,1'1'1 e oul•v•rd. Sult~ HS. Irvine, l'tl1M C.llfornl•. wlllch I• tne pl.ce of Du•I Publl•lled Orenoit ())Mt o.irv Pilot. neu of trw lnlel"i9Md In •ii m•nen March u , JO, 27 -.t.Nll J, !tit per1•fnlno lo t,,. utat• ol Y•d ""'" 9SS.IW oent, wltlMn four "'°"tns •lie< t"'111,.t put>lltetlon of this notice D•t4td ~ ... ,., 18. 1918 MAHLON M. READ JR PUBlJC NeTIC& Adnllno\lrlllorol the Wiii NOTICE TOCltEQIT'OltS of tr• --d Ol!U del'lt su,.EalOlt COURT 01' THE OUSTAVES.CHAlall STATE Ol'CAUfOttNIA l'Oll t&JUM•<Ar1_11.,..,Stott••1' THIE C:OUNTY01'04lAHOll lrtl ... CMl!enllafUU Est•te of ~U~HA WYATT Tel •U-I Deceu•d ::~~r. :_~rllMr NOTICE IS HEREBY Gf'VEN to ti. Publl•IWd OrM9 COH1 °" ,., Pilot tre<lltoo of ti•_,,.,,,.,.,..., clK-n• ~"" • 13 20_ 11 1971 ' l1f.lt that •11 P*rllOll\ M¥1ng <l•l•'IS ~nn ' • • tno SAfd OK-we .-Ind lo f1~ PUBLIC NOTICE them, w lll't the ~HlWY -i.rs. In th4J olllc• al the tlt'f'a of tlw ab0¥• •"' -----------titled court. or to prHent !hem. wltto NOTICE TO CaEOITOflS llW ne<HWrY vou<twn, to trw un SU,.llfllOll COUaTOI' THE c!enl9ned at tn. office of 9ntm.,.. STATE Off CAUFOllNIA "°" Davi•, c_,,.,a ~. 71'WH•r110r THE COUNTY OF oa.11NOE BIVCI., Cotti Ml'wi. c.i11orn••. '"'k" ·~ ,.. A·Mlit7 the pl•<• ol butln•ss ol t"" un E\l•tt ol DAVIDE R ING, der.S9ned ln•llmllll"'per1e1•lnoto Otcu\f'd IM estatt ol ... d clK-l'll w1tnln lour NOT ICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to ttoe month\ •'"" tlW' tont fllUOllC .. Oft of cr•dlto" ol tne -• N-d detf'dent thl• notice. tl>at ... IM'"'°"' nevlng Clattn< ~·ntt D•ted "•~Y n . 1973 ,._ H id OK-nt MW requrrf'd to Ill• MARY COOK 1rwm, with the MCHWl'Y W>Uthfrl. ln E -utn• of ltlP Woll tlW ofllu Of tne ct"'k of tM •bo"•...., of ""'-w MfM<l de<....,t ltlled court or to Pf'f'Wflt 11\@m, with EASTMAN, DAVIS, IM .,..oswry ¥oucMr\, lo tM un COOOflHO& auaESN .,.,.,_., at 11'4 Olittl' of Roy E J-V,. ... ..._ -. Slolt• JU 1'170 H•rl>or Blvd , Sullt 7~. CO\t• C:.SU Meta, Cal-• flll» ~ ... Celllornle m~. which r, the Tel: S*- place of b<Jsl""'' ol 1,,. undenlQMd In Anen.y IW E-lllr1a •II m•tt@rs PH1•1nl"O to the estate of P11 .. hhld Or-Cootst Deily ""°'· H id deudMt. wllhll'I lour mont"' Marcll 4. ll.10. 11. 1'19 llO t! •lier the lir\t pwbllutlon of 11'11• not1ce P UBLIC NOTICE 0•14td FtbruarY 77. 1'71 MARIAN W RING Ex«Ulri• of '"" Wiii ot llW -named 0.Ud<!nl flOY I .JUNE m0Ha..-e1,,...,sw.206 c.tta M9M, CMlfw>N tMM Tel·-- Atter .. y fer E019Clllr1J< Publhhed 0r•n9" Cootsi Oa.ty Piiot, ~rcll6, 1J.?Q 11 1911 lll·ll PUBlJC NOTICE ' ": Al ,, .. .. o.._Cae&t o.11vPno1 Editorial P!!fJ..e .......... onday •••• M.-cl\ •• 'ZT •• •1•'7•'•••••••R•o•be•rt•~···w•eee1•"•~•:•u•~~.":.~.'.:.d.1tor•T•~•'•P•eoe•s .~.:.;.,:.1•E·d'.'°'. 11 Are Supervisors .. ' Ready for Truce? Orange County's five supervisors have for good reason become noted for antics that !requently ranee ~ from ridiculous to something less than ridiculous. ' They did that reputation justice last week when they selected Chief Probation Officer Margaret Grier to head the county's bumbling new super agency, the Human Services Agency. It's not that there is any quarrel with Miss Grier's selection. Other than a question mark beside her ability to be a team player, she bas been a top flight administrator in a difficult and trying job for more than a decade. What gives Miss Grier's appointment a touch of the spectacular was the supervisors' ongoing war with her right up to the time of her promotion and $12,000 a year salary hike. Only eight months ago they refused to give her any pay raise when other d epartment heads were receiving theirs. A year earlier they asked county lawyers to decide if lhey could fire her. And since 1974 when Miss Grier wanted the money to build a second juvenile hall, there has been constant warfare about the handling of Juvenile offenders. All that strife somehow was forgotten when supervisors selected Miss Grier to take over the super agency hot potato. That's fine. She will no doubt do a fine job. But next thing you know the county s upervisors will be promoting District Atty. Cecil Hicks and giving him a hefty pay raise. Help frolll Uncle Som e conser vative Orange Countians still are inl'Uned to look askance at the injection of "federal" money to boost the local economy. The "we'd rather do it ourselves" bunch seem to feel that 1£ the feds would just stop taking so much of our own money in taxes and keep their sticky fingers out or our .1ffa1rs, we could manage very nicely. Some statistics recently turned up by conservative Congressman Robert Badham, R-Newport Beach, shed a ... omewhat different light on the economic picture. The figures indicate that in fiscal 1977, the federal ~o\'crnmcnt spent about twice as much money in Orange '01111 t y as it extracted in taxes. The government mvestment here amounted to S3 lH I liirn. I ncomc taxes handed over to the Internal l{l'\ E'nuc Scr\'ice added up to $790 million and other 1.-.snrterl t.1xPs brought the tax tab up to about $1.5 billion. \\'hill' <di this taxin~ '"as going on, the Department of l>d1·nst· ;.tlonc spent $1.5 billion in the county, about half or military pa)rolls and pensions and the ba lance for 1111l1tary eonlracts, research and development. The Department of Health, Education and Welfare .pend $814 million on grants and federal progra ms in the ·ounty, while the National Aeronautics and Space \dministrat1on spent $118 million and the Veterans \dministrallonhanded out $lll million. It's all very well to sneer at federal money and the 'strings" allegedly attached thereto, but these figures ndicate a sudden removal or Uncle Sam's local nvestinents could be quite a blow. Wordy Debate Tlw FC'dl'ral Trade Commission, ever-conscious or 1u1 '"cll-ucmg, 1s about to unleash a 289-page report, 'IHH'OC'lerl over the past four years, on use of the terms ·organic·,· ·natural," and "health food" in advertising uods. As thin~s look now. it will be okay to ref er to foods as '01 gan.ic" or "natural" but "health food'' will be out. Back an 1974 the FTC staff began ponde ring this ~·eighty situation. The staff decided all the terms should w disallowed because they might imply a superior >roduct. But the presiding officer in the rules debate now 1llows that "organic," usually refe rring lo foods grown >. ll hout the use o r pesticides and or commercial crl 1hzers, is a legitimate term, even though the product nay not be superior. And "natural," ind1catin~ a n absence of artifical 1ddit1ves, ts also okay with him. However, he'll stand p at 'or a ban on advertising anything as a "health food." Concerned readers will be glad to know that the full !H!l·page report will be given a full public airing before he FTC makes its final ruling on the wordy matter. • >pinions expressed In the space above are those of the Dally Pilot. )thPr views expressed on this page are those of their authort and 1r11sts. Reader comment Is Invited. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O. Jox 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321 . Boyd I Noggin BVL.M.BOYD Q . "Where'd we eet the word •noggin' to mean llead?'' A. Debate continue• over that one. But most word gamesters think it came from the fact that early drinking cups looked roughly tlke human bead,a because lhey were decorated with grotesque caricatures of races. Those cups, for the drJn k call~d nog, were Dear Gloomy Gus 1. 'After 1ean of llnq rat and al ping late the obese bu:ruucra.ta are )dcklnl and 9QU alioti .. Dr. Janll triee to • put them cm a •uaar· free diet. R.A.O. therefore known not only a~ mugs but as noggins, and so it came about that the bead, too •.. Am told the first writer to use "noggin .. as head in print was so1qebody who bylined himself Phudge Ph um ble ln an 1885 publica- tion called "Greenhorn." Maine's town of Rocltport used to be called Camaen, and lt'1 there Uuilt a bronze plaque commemoratta the great Capt. JiaMOn Greaory. inventor or the dousbnut hole. Early, bla doupnuta were ao called because they were doughy. Jn tbe middle, too doup1, even aummy 1:»omeUDMe or rubbery. U10u cut out tho middle, it'll fbt tbat, he ctlcul.uid, neely. Q ... Ia t.b81ame or 'Monopo- ly' played ln tbo SoYlet union?" A. Y•. slJl1)lillng1,Y. But lt'a called "Dlreewra." Pd the plafer accuinUta pres· tta J>Olntl for th procpenty ofbt1 plAj.yer'tltctar)'. Q ... Wbo created Ul fli'lt· Barbie Doll?" . A. Zea Zia 01bor'1 llilti butbaOd lack Ry~ Jack Anderson. X-r&y Warnings Don't R~gister WASHINGTON -Scl~ntl.sts have been aoundlng tbe alarm for aeveral years now lhat too much ex - posure to X· rays can be hazardous to your health. But many doc· tors and den· lists ap- parently are nol gettina the message. This is the conclusion of Food and Drug Ad· ministration officials who have been investigating X-ray dangers for over a year. Medical and den· tal patients, they round, are far too frequently exposed t<> poten. tially harmful levels of radiation. More than 130 mllllon Americans ate aubJected to at least one X·ray examination ever)' year. Doctors. de nu.ti. and hospital technlclana filpped the switches on their X-ray machines an astoundlnf total ot 240 million times in 1977 alone, at a C06t o! over $6 billion to their paUents. About one·third of 1ucb examinations, the federal offtctala concluded, are totally WlDeces.sary and cost consumers a waated$2billlonayear. The cumulative effect of too much exposure to X-rays can cause cancer and birth defects. The latter haiard is especially worrisome to scientists. "The developing embryo is particular· ly sensitive to the carcinogeruc effect of radiation," warns one Rowland Evans / Robert Novak FDA document. A one·lhitd re- duction ln X·ray test.a tor preg- nant women .. would avoid ap- pro x l mat el y 90 cases o! ehlldhood cancer annually,•• lt concludes. DURING lbeir intensive pro- be, the FDA inspectors came up with some st.artllng statistics. Tblrty percent of all new X·ray equipment, they fdund, is defec· tlve and emits too much radia- tion. They checked only IO per· cent of the older equipment, but this was enough to suggest that the equipment may be leaking too much radiation. Some doctors also use faulty techniques. The physicians set the X-ray levels too high, and re· peat one X-ray test in 10, thus s ubject.int the patient lo twu.-e- the amount of radiulioo h " would get 111 a normal exam. There ls an underlying flnao cial benellt, aay our SOW'ces, for some doctors who order need· less X-ray test.a. "'Many doctors with their own X·ray machines recommend tests for their pa. tients because it means more money," one official told our as- sociate Howie Kurtz. •'The x~ ray profits are much higher for doctors who have their own X· ray equipment." OTHER DOCTORS order X · · ray e)l:ams merely to protect themselves against future malpractice suits in case they fail to spot an injury. Thls is known in the profession as "de- fensive medicme." The FDA has launched a 28· state program that will attempt to reduce the public's exposure to X-rays. Federal authorities are focus ing their efforts primanly on four types of X-ray tests: -Skull X-rays. By limiting them only to those cases where they were clearly needed, of- ficials in one Seattle hospital cut s kull X-rays by 40 percent. -Chest X-rays. Alternative techniques have precluded the need for routine chest X·rays for tuberculosis and other ailments. Nevertheless, the federal gov- ernment and some businesses still require job applicants to take such examinations. -Dental X-rays. FDA inspec. tors say some dentists are "very sloppy" and shoot too many pie· lures or a patient's mouth dunng checkups . -Breast X-rays. Many such tests for cancer detection are unproductive and can bl· eliminated, ofhcials believe. The FDA investigators will re· veal their findings during hear· ings soon to be held by Rep. Paul Rogers, D.·Fla , chairman of the House subcommittee on health. Soviet-Cuban Pressure Moves to Yemen WASHING TON -A high-level mission from the militant Marx· ist state of South Yemen quietly slipped out-<>f Moscow last month with enough new pledges or Soviet mllltary aid to alarm its neighbor, the kingdom of Saudi Arabia tht-major source or 011 for the in dustnahzcd democracies What makes this particularly s1gn1ficant, folll'lwine the new Soviet-Cuban strang}('hold on Ethiopia and the I lorn of Africa, is th e future prospect of Soviet·Cuban direct pres sure on the vast Arabian Peninsula. Real concern over such pressure would have been laughable a few short years ago, but 1t 1s laughable no longer in view of U.S. failure to know how to stop the Soviel·Cuban march through Africa. THE SEEMING impotence or the U.S. to deal with Soviet· Cuba, Inc., in Africa becomes a natural invitation for the Soviet· Cuban marauders to experiment elsewhere. Although there may be no immediate threat to Saudi Arabia or other oU-ricb Arabian states on the Persian Gulf, the new Sovtet military package for South Yemen is a portent of things to come. It c·o·nsists of what might be called Moscow's economy· . Charles McCabe sized package: 50 Ml<J.21!, of which ~ are believed already delivered; SA (surface to air missiles) 2's, J's and 7's; plus an unknown number or modern T 62 tanks. Even if only the Grade B package, these weapons will dwarf what Moscow has pre· viously sent to South Yemen - MiG -17s. T-54 and T·SS tanks. These earlier weapons have now been dispatched to Ethiopia for the Soviet-Cuba, Inc., war against Somalia. WITH 5eo to 900 Cubans now 1n South Yemen (mostly in the capital, the deepwater port of Aden) this tightening Soviet con· t rol increases the serious strategic threat to the Western democracies that use oil from the Persian Gulf. Most of that oil goes by lanker from the gulf to the Red Sea. On one side of the entrance to the Red Sea (which is the gateway to the Suez Canal} is the Soviet-dominated Horn of Africa ; on the other, just 35 miles across the Red Sea en tr a nee, Soviet -controlled South Yemen. Si gns of Soviet -inspired political tightening in South Yemen ue now too obvious to be in question. The titular head of the country bas recently lost his preeminent position because he a tte mpted to negotiate a political compromise with Saudi Arabia last summer. Since then he has been slowly eased out of power by the general secretary of the Communist party, a hard line, pro-Soviet loyalist. For example, when the rulioe politburo asked the pres1· dent what he and the Saudis had discussed after his experimental trip to Riyadh, he refused to respond on grounds that the talks were confidential and that "I am the president." He began lo lose authority immediately and was replaced at the meeting of the anli·Egyptian r ejecllorust Arab states in Tripoli, following President Anwar Sadat's peace mission to Jerusalem, by the party boss. The Soviet-Cuban Jock on the oil passage into the Red Sea will not be complete until the Ethio- pians put down the revolt 10 lhe Ethiopian province of Eritrea, a military operation that had to wait until the Somalis had been SAUll AIAllA : ··~ taken care of. In that civil war. South Yemen is now a clan- destine combatant under Cuban tutelage. It is believed -though not publicized -that a MiG-17 flown by a South Yemeni was shot down over Eritrea and the pilot's body recovered. Anti· Soviet Arabs further claim that this incident indicates that a full squadron of MiG·l7s flown by South Yemeni pilots has prob- ably been aclt\'e in the conflict between Ethiopia and Eritrea. SlJCH intervention by Soviet "proxy forces" in local conflicts was a major target of President Carter's March 17 warning at )Yinston-Sa lem against Moscow's free-wheeling military policies and the steady growth of Soviet power. He warned for the first ttme of what actually became apparent long ago -an er osion of support for U.S.- Soviet detente unless Moscow shows "restraint •.. in the pro- jection of Soviet or proxy forces into other lands and continents." Judgin g from the new weapons program Moscow has just agreed to for South Yemen, it is doubtful that Mr. Carter's warning will impose much res traint on the Russians. Rather, the U.S. may have to take more direct action. The buildup of a Soviet-Cuban, Inc. military force at the base of the oil-rich Arabian Perunsula and athwart the entrance to the Red Sea cannot be lightly regarded. A few years ago it. would not have been tolerated. Skilled Fakers Threaten Balance of Art Market I once read an interesting book by a raker about a faker. The author was CU!ford Irving, who also wrote a fake autobio- graphy about Howard Huches t.bal aln:at eot . publl4hed. His aubJeet wns a fellow resident of the Balearic island of Ibisa, ElmerdeHory. De Rory was e painter who was of n o particular lltDlfiCIDCe, except that be could palnt fake Pica1101 . De Hory '1 -Plcnsso, wcro so 100<1 that It 11 said Tb~ Muter hJmH1/ could not tell lbe dl!rerence. Not 10 loaf •IO • tchman aam Vsn Mee re Jaj.Dted Venn Ci caUr \ ever y expert and museum in the world. One of those fooled was Herman Goering, who paid his own good marks to buy "Christ at Emmaus." Now there ls a great hoo-haw afoot ln Great BriUan about a rascally fellow named Tom Keal· iog. Tom is a former house painter whose specialty Is flk.ing the pictures of Samuel Palmer, the 19th century Brlthh landacmpe painter who worked In tbe mannerof WUUam Blue KEATING has painted UP· ward of 2,000 rakes. His ranf(c of fakery over twenty yean is tremendous and catholic: Rem· brandt, Goya, Constable, SJ1tey, Degu, Mod.lallanl. It. ls JCeal· Illa's claim tllat he on.lJ attft thole fakel to h1s friendt, .and that h.11 YIOl't 1a aU i.Q the in· &erat ol ~ &IP tbt •ba.btll· neu or London art eaJ n, hlch 11 • Hi. an. ' dor has made him something of a TV celebrity. Keating claims Palmer gwded his hand. "I'd start to doodle and look at the moon," he said. "Diok, donk, tick, tick -it would start to happe n." The Palmer visitations usually oc- curred after he had bad a spot of brandy. He was also vistted by WUson, Ga.insborouab, Tu.mer. Gtrtln, Constable -"all the boys." Keatiog's fakery was expo!Md by Oualdme Norman, the art correspondent or the London Times. The London art dealers, some or whom doubtless knew they were dealing in fa.kes, were 1n an uproar. The whole arL world wu ln a tiuy. KeaUng Jnd da ffory and Van Meeaeru. and a wbolo bOlt ot practJdng art torser• who bave 7et to be ca ratae a of lJl r t1.aa ctoost19QS. U de Uciy tan palnl a' P1cwo that Pl .• f couldn't detect. where tho hell does that reave Picasso? WHERE, in lact. does it leave art? Photographic reproduction of palntings has now reached the point. accordlng lo experts, where copies are barely dis- tinguishable from origtnai., at least from tbe distance where pictures are customarily lOOkc<l at. 1n England you can e.en bor- row superb Rembrandt copi~ from your public library and bang them on ,.our walls for a few eeks. The c:otninc at tbe fOTger is anotbl'r matter. It bas already disturbed the d.eUcate balance ol tbe art~ world. .Not only is no ce quite certain that be I~ b1ql.Df an orl&inat ~ niore: a lot o li ue wondering 'W ~ Af'IV di(• f ce. -. , CALIFORNIA I CONSUMER 'Life Theme' Anything Goes at Funerals LOS ANGELES CAP> -Shirt aleevea, dogs and tap dancing. Anytbini goes at a funeral today, as long as it reflects what professional eulogy writer Jules Maitland calls the "theme" of the deceased's life. Maitland, a former newsman and writer, runs Personal Worda, a Los Angeles firm that offers personalized euloaies, or "life celebr&tlons." for $1~. MAITLAND, 55, SAYS he's been involved with death since he was a child, when he sat in on funerals on the way home rrom school -to hear the music Through interviews with family and frieocb, MaiUand searches for the unique aspect of a person's life. "Some people feel funerals are hypocritical," M a1tla nd sa id , because a per5.on who never went to church 1s mourned in a religious at- mosphere. "We try lo style these eulogies to the people's hie-style and sWl giv~ them hope," he said "WE TRY TO SHOW them that there's a purpose, whether they know it or not." Maitland said. "We bwld a theme or love love makes the whole thing work whether people know it or not There 1s no, what l call, 'breaking of the thread.· EveryUung goes on " Customers arc rcrcrred by funeral parlors, he said. Most clients have no church affilia· Uon, be said, and some want to avoid any religious reference at all 1n the eulogy DONN McKNIGHT, owner of A M. Gamby Mortuary 1n suburban Lomita, called the euloaies "an answer many people are looltln& for, are needing. A lot of ministers aren't doing anything personul There II.Te a number of good rninistera around, but they are rare." Ma1Uand said the eulogies, read by actors, stress the person's goals and accomplishments. After one service, Maitland said, rnends and relaUves o( the deceased rimshed a cabin the man had worked on in bis spare lime. "Even though he was 1one,'' M ailland said, · they finished the cab&n for the wife and children, because that wa!> hb dream " SERVICES OFTEN ARE conduct- ed before mourners in casual dress. Once a prur of Great Danes stood beside the casket. Another serVlce featured a lap-dancing grand· daughter. Maitland, who has been writing eulogies proress1onally for about 1 ~ years. said he does about five services a week But he would like to expand the business to 50 a week and offer the service outside Los Angeles. ALTHOUGH McKNIGHT said Maitland's eulogies may be more ex- pensive than the average, he saJd Maitland puts more research and thought into the services than some ministers "He helps people put the pieces back together and go on . . . gel over the first hurdle and get back into the mainstream." McKnight said. 'No-naine' Products Considerably Cheaper By STEPHEN FOX LOS ANGELES <AP) It's hard to find a product these days that isn't ·•new and improved," but shoppers at one supermarket chain are finding some that are "plainer" -and con· siderably cheaper. By eliminating fancy packaging and offering "standard" quality tn· stead of "first-grade," Ralphs Grocery Co. has been able to sharply cut prices on 31 high· volume items. FOR EXAMPLE, A QUART jar of Best Foods mayonnaise sells for Sl 21 at Ralphs while the same amount of "plain wrap" is 91 cents. rr you believe mayo is mayo, that's a sav· ings of 2:s percent. Other price savings are more dramatic. A large bottle of Joy detergent sells for $1.39 while an equal amount of "plain wrap" detergent is 47 cents. OVERALL, RALPHS "plain wrap" productJS cost about 28 percent less than comparable national brands, ac· C!Ordlng to a study by Vector En· terprises, a private rese•ch firm specialWng in supermarket pricing. "Generic" or "no-name" products were fmt introduced in Chicago by Jewel Food Stores and are also of- fered by Boston's Star Markets. i.son...iaw C. Armholt Smith, former San Dieao financier, lost bis fmal bid for dlsmlssnl of criminal charges af a inst him, and after 26 months o leaal maneuvering, bu been ordered to stand trial June 1. Ralphs is the first to try them in California and industry sources say other chains are watching the experl· ment. Ralphs makes a point or telling shoppe~ what they're buying under the "plain wrap," says Alfred A. Marasca, senior .., ice president for marketmg. "WE HAVE BEEN very upfront," says Marasca "We tell them the peas arc a vl'ry good pea, JU.St as nutnt1onaJ as national brands, but that all the peas may not be the same siie. We've eliminated cherries and pineapples from our fruit coclrtall because they're high-cost, but we say so on the label and we caJl it 'fruit mix."' Marasca says Ralphs has cut costs by "redesigning containers, re- formulating packaging, llgbtenin1 containers, putting less expensive caps on bottles and taking the handles ofl." ANOTHER VIEW COMES from Leon Dillenburg or the California Grocers AssodaUon "Somethlng's got to elve," says Dillenburg. "A can is going to be the same cost and maybe there's some money to be saved on a aingle color label rather than varloua colors But alter that, the only thin& lelt la the quality level." Ralphs eventually will expand lhe "plain wrap" line to about 50 items but won't go beyond that, says Marasca. One reuoo, be says, la that staples such as nour or 1uaar are already inexpensively packaged anti priced while other product.a are not sold in enough volume to warrant a switch over. LIKE MOST SUPERMAltKETS, Ralphs has for years offered "private label" brands which are leas expensive than naUonal brands. The point of the "plain wrap" Une, saya Maruca, la to offer still another choice to coat-conscious sboppera since the Vector survey 1howed "plain wrap" products to be about 14 percent cbeapel' than "prlvate brands." Four From Coast To Get Degrees Four Orana• Coast realdenta will receive vocatlcimal nunlng decrees · April 13 lrom Santa Ana CoUece. Graduates from Fount.aln Vallery will be Delene Brown and Karen Sbaoken. Laura Rupp of Weatmlnster will also receive her de,ree. u 1'tll Aiko Kawahara of HunUnstoo BeaCJL -·-··-.---,-t-, ', , . . •·. ·. . DAI LY PILOT I HHll I: .. ' I ' DAIL y P1LOT A 1 QUEENIE Bv Phil lnterlandl CoWrado Holding ·Dignified Event HUMMEL CENTRAL CITY. Colo. <AP) -Tho fiflb an· oual lnternataonal Sp1ttin', Belcrun' & Cuss~· Triathlon on April 1 a.t the Belvedere Theater here ls golni formal. Men will be required to wear tuJCedos and women will wear evening gowns to compete dur- ing an "elegant afternoon or great e)(pectorations. eructations and villlfications." The spitting contest, a dlstance event, will al· low only ''chaws or natural juic~" for ammuni· lion. Watermelon seeds, BBs and other materials are disallowed. IS supported IY RESIDENTS NOT developels Pro(essional mus1c1ans wuJ JUdge the belc:hers I --------for tonal quality and volume Newspaper wnters Calt 642-5671. Put a few worda "There's some joker here to aee you · will judge cussers on the basis of "freshness, to work for ou. originality and aptness of oath " • (NOW THAT'S A CAPITAL IDEA!) ALAMEDA INDIO PUENTEllJLLS SA."JTA MARIA 1526 \\l:b~erStm:t KI· 790 I ltgh\1 J) 111 ·ff\ Pucntr H d I-, :\I 111 f 2 s \\'. C} pros St. ALBANY LA JOLLA SHORl-.S RANCHO PARK SARAT<XJA L'\77 Solano Avcnur 21 SI A\ l'llhl.l Jc: IJ Pl I\ I !OSI 50 \\: P1rn BlvJ. 12948 ~rar•:iga-Sunnyvalc RJ. APT OS LA VER~E at \ \i:-.twc xi (t\rg•m3ut ~hopping Center) 7827 Soqud Drivt 1487 ti• •lh1ll Bh ,f, RES EDA SEASIDE BANNING (I ..'.I \'erill ~hnpp11•g c ... nr··1) 181611 Sherman W:iy 1516 Canyon Del Rey 1118 \\". Ram~y St LANCASTER RICHMOND SHERMAN OAKS BELMONT 4 H35 N. 10th~. \\' 16.14 :\la1.Dooald Avenue 1~110 Riverside De at Hazcltint: 11101 Alameda de: las PulgJl> LONG BEACH ROWLAND HEIGHTS SUNNYVALE (Carlmoot \'1llagc 4H J>Jl1fo: Ave:. at 5th 18R47 l· Colima RJ. JJn! .:... '.\lary Ave. Shopping Cent<:r) LOS ANGELES SALINAS (De Anza Cc:ntt:r) BRENTWOOD MOO \\'ilsh1rc Blvd. ar Flo\\t:r 4811 S. '.\lain Stred TEMPLE CITY 11911 \\'ilsh1n: Blvd. MARTINEZ SAN CLE~f ENTE Q51l3 Las lunas Dr. CANYON COUNTRY 901 ~a1n Street 1Jl I S. 1:-J Camino Heal TUSTIN 19!00 \\: Soledad Can~·on Hood MIRA LOMA (Alpha Bc:ta Shopping Cl!nter) 13552 Newport Ave. CHATSWORTH 699 Portola Dr: SAN DIEGO UNION CITY 111224 :\lason Ave. NEWPORT BEACH 6325 !-2 F.I Cajon Blvd. IOJ Union Sc1uan: ;\'tall at Devonshire 120 Newport Center Dr. (Campus Shopping CC!tlttr) VANNUYS CHICO Suite 138 Univer.;ity Tc>wnc Center* 67 50 Van Nuys Blvd. JS \.1a1n at First NORTH HOLLYWOOD (Opening Soon) at \~ncmen COVINA 51177 Lankershim Blvd. SAN FRANCISCO VENTURA 1350 N AzUSl Ave NORTH 2J9 Grant Ave. 94J2 1Clcphonc Rd. OOWNE'\' LONG BEACH SANJOSE VISTA 8764 ~. F1n:stone Blvd 5901 Atlantic Ave. 28Jll Alum Rock Ave. HO\\: Bnxdway al Lakewood OAKLAND 1J78 Bl1is_'il1m Hill Road ( BmaJwar Vista EL CAJON 22511 Broadway 285 S. Fi~ StTcrt Shopping.Center) 396 N. ~1agn<~ia ORCU1T 3 510 Leigh Avenue at Cam<km WEST COVINA EN Cl NO l 157 l'~ Clark Ave. IOJ6 \\:Covina Park\\ a)· \\C:st 15840 \enrura Blvd. at Glona (Oak Knolls Shopping Center) 623J Santl Tcrt:Sa Blvd. at Cottle WEST HOLLYWOOD ESCONDIDO OXNARD U04 Saratoga Av!!. at Payne 8730 Sun."t'f Blvd. 612 N. E.~condido Blvd. 560 S. A St 6009 Snell Ave. at Santa Tt:re.~ WESTCHESTER (Escondido Sc1uarc) PACIFICA SAN LORENZO 88110 ~ &pulvuia Blvd. FELTON 482 :vlanor Plaza 429 l~1 Grande at I.a Ti1crJ 6265 Highway 9 PACOIMA/ARLh'TA SAN MARCOS WESTLAKE FULLERTON 9100 \\fiodman Ave:. 205 $.Rancho Santa Fe RJ.. 97~ \\C:stlakc: Blvd. 1107 S. Harbor Blvd at Nordhoff SAN MATEO WESTMINSTER/ GLENDALE PALOS VERDES 18.W S. Grant St. HUNTINGfON 43 6 \ \: C oluradn St. ESTATES SANTAANA BEACH GOLETA Ill Mal~ Cove Plaza 1200 \\: 17th St Edwards St. ar Bol$i Ave. 5880 Calk Rc:al PARADISE 144-4 S. ~Jain St WOODLAND HILLS GRANADA HILLS 6930 Sk)"''2Y 62/IJ ll~nga Canyon BlvJ. 170f 7 Dtvomhin: St PORTER RANCH SANTA CLARA at Jo:rnin 2500 Pruncridgc Ave. YUBA CITY HEMET-19346 Rinaldi SANTA FE SPRINGS IOOS Scafford \\"ay (Opening Soon) POWAY l UJO 1'~ Trlegraph Rd YUCCA VALLEY HeRMOSA BBACH Jj6J6 Poway Rd. (On the Scan parking Int) 567111\\"Cntynine J~ms 81 Pict Ave. at Hc:rtnr(Q Highway HOLLYWOOD 937 N. \\Cmn Ave . SAVIN OS A Capital Idea. • ) • • • OAIL Y PILOT Monday, Mateh 27, 1078 Deatlu Elsewhere LONDON <AP> Jack HaJbert, ~. one of Brtlain's best known cocnedians in a career lbat spanned a hair t•entury. died Saturday Hulbert and his wife. Oame Cicely Ceurt.neidge, who sur \lites, formed a team th•t began in the theater befor~ World War 1 and ~AT•ICk RHOOl!RIC K. PATRICW., !PAT). •Mldent ... ~ llH<l'I for llw P•" > ve•r•, ronnenv o1 p,,11w1m, ~u . --._,. Merell 2• """ to lnJuroto •«•1"9d 111 fin -ecctoent In LaouN 8e•<ll on eo..1 Hlghw•y H~ WH • 9•.cluale of Cltntr.t HIOl'I Scl\ool. -<11!14 •lleftdecl Ball 5 .. te Unh'"''°'' Unl,...nlty ol Al-nw, •nd lncll•n• Unl11ersltv where he wM a ln4tmber of Kappa Slgnwi "'•lernltr He w•s " Me•ttr M•'IO'I. Slwlne.--,.....,ber ot IM ScottlM\ Rite. "'1non9 Im m.,,y lov •• ••• t"'4f o1 llrtllO. -,.,. .,,..,. .... •• • Clvlllan ln>truuor Ourlno WWII and h.od loooe<! over ... 000 • ., llOl.I,. H• ,. \ur•tved by ,_Ii \Ofh Af\odertc K P•lrltk Jr of Wah1•-.e H"w•11. •n.cl fhOfnu IC Patrick ol Prtnolon, N J I orandclllldren. brolh., ( l•y>On PatrfUt of Mun'••. Ind Mamort•I \otrv1cu I PM T.,.\do ~rch 71 al Pac Ilk View OWlpel In, .. ., of llowu• l•mlly >~U mtmo<l•I conlrlbu ''°"' to ,,,." IO<•I PllOC • A>>O< let1<1n or U''-lr ••YOf'l•e Cf\lrily P.c1t1t Vlt'W Mor1,..rv dlro<tor' NICHOLS MICHAEL J NICHOLS. "ill' Ill>. ro•I· denl ol Hunttnoton 8e.oc11, c.a P••W<I •••r on Marth 26, 1918 Beloved hU>Nnd of ~ry I( NIChol>. also ..... VIVed by ..... ""' John "" NtChol\ of Fullerton, C•. d•uohl•• V1r111nt• Mo1ol• ol 6raw1ey. C• $ <1r<1nC1tllildren <Jnd S ore•I 9ranC1cl'tlldren Mr NtcholJ w•• • m•ml>er ol 51 Wlltreo \ EPl\<OP•I Churth He .... •l'\O • P4Hf Com tn<lncler ol 1114t "'"''"'can U• Q•on Pas1 ;: Ill, ••so Vite Comm•ndt'• ot 11"' World War I Vete.-..,,, IN\! me"'°"' of 1"9 'O & I. elso <Kiin In '"" Boy 'Kou!\ ol Am•ric• H• -""'"'" tmPIOy•d Dy '""' Hunllnoton S.<Kll '>chool Oo\lro<I continued through to the lclE.•v11ion aee LA JDLLA <AP > Pbarlc O.IL Honeyman. 83, of La Jolla. a retired Arizona copper com pany president and former bank director, died Wednesday. He had been president or Inspiration Consolidalt!d Copper Co HOCA RATON, Flu. <AP> --Sydney C. Wragge, 70, founder and first president of the Council of Fashion Designers or America . and president of B.H Wragge Co . died Thur:. day NEW YORK lAP1 Ida Trt-at, 89, a writer \\ho taughl English at Vassar and contributed articles and stones lo maJor American and 1''rent'h publications. d1t•d Saturday. Her first success was "Pearls. Arms and llashish." a 1931 account of big-time smuggling based on her experiences aboard the smuggler's ship. AEVERLY HlLLS !AP> -Van Cou Niven, 87. a senior partner in the Los Angeles law firm or Gibson, Dunn and Crutcher. died Sulurda)' at his home ... <•roen1 .. •or m.ny vu"•"" h..a I>.....! _0 0 Term bul1t tr.e 11on>9 11w1 ,,. onc1 "" ,.,,. £ Cll!t t1v("d In funt-r•t Soff'V•C•\ ""'"bf" c.on dueled •I 1100 AM un Tu•"ldf SAN FRANCISCO March 11. 1978 w1lh ffr• D• J6m•• C <•lay olllco•uno f,,onch m•v <•II ( A P ) -A (or mer 1rom • oo PM lot oo PM on Monur graduate student at San M•rc h U 1971 •t P1..,co Bro111tr1 Spring Program Trips Slated By SJC Unit A number of trips wtll be reatured in San Juan Capistrano recreation department's spring pro- eram. A trip to the Santa An\la races 1s scheduled April 9 featuring the $200,000 San Juan Caplstrano Handicap. A bus wlll leave the city offices, 32400 Paseo Adelanto at 11 a.m. and return at 8 p .m . - A FEE OF $12 INCLUDES bus fare, admission and reserved seats. Registration and payment of ree must be made prior to s p .m. April 3. San Juan Capistrano, Tijuana, the chambers of commerce of both cities and the Tourist and Convention Bureau of Tijuana are to co-sponsor a trip to Tijuana on April 29. A fee of $25 includes round-tnp transportation via Amtrak, a tour of Ti.Juana's new develop- ments, 'cocktail reception, a luncheon served by Fred Harvey International and entrance to the Agua Cahenle races THE TRAIN WILL LEAVE from the Capistrano Depot, 26701 Verdugo, at approximate· ly 9 a m and return al approximately 9 p.m. Reg1strallon can be made at the city offices, 32400 Paseo Adelanto, or the Chamber of Com· merce. 31882 Camino Capistrano, by Apnl 25. A tnp to Hemet is scheduled April 22 for the 51St performance of the Ramona Festival, a play based on the novel by Helen Hunt Jacpon. A FEE OF $11 l~CLUDES seating, deluxe bus tunsportalion and a no-host picnic at Hemet Park. Last day to register 1s April 7. In cooperation with the Orange County En· vironmenlal Management Agency, exploration of the natural wonders of the Dana Point Harbor lidepools has been planned May 7. Registration fee of Sl must be made at the City offices by May 10. SJC Seniors Seeking Drivers Sm1111, Moriu•rr 1n Hun11no1on Francisco State ha~ 11.,.," 1n1er,...n1 w111 .,. 1n Good been senteticed to five '>n•1>11•rd c.. .... iery P·~rce 8ro1"'" years to life in· pPi•""' for T h e S a n J u a n tnd1\1duaJ needs through s .. ,.,n,· Mor1_.y dlre<lor• ._... .. w1NYA110 an 11-hour siege at his Ca pis tr an o Senior it:> communit) O\,\treacb OONALD C.EORGE WINYARO ,.. t t b ·1~:-l Center IS seeking volun-pro1i:ram, •·O~nf of W"'tmhut•r Ca P•\\•O apar men W UUJg aSt Punch I $2,500 How much will do it for you? Conniercral Csecht l> been helpirYJ ~e for more thill sixty years So iMldtever you need A few hundred Or even as rruc11 as s.5.CXX> Just Cdil us about d I Odil We find W"_y') to help COMMER._CIAL C~EDIT PLAN. INC. •• I I ' l.Clit)Ot.11•0H rerson.11 I oc111~ Coata Mesa • 370 F. 17th Strrrt • 1111 'Jnwn & Country Rd. Oranae Suit .. ::!r. • 645.8700 • 547-5871 PtJBUC NOTICE ..... yon 'Mr<ll 14, 1911 •• ll'te age of spring Hugh Stan~bi leers t 0 pr 0 v Ide "' surv1wa l>Y his'""" Ann W•n••rd, N ahuel 36 was convict transportation for older Interested persons can NOTICE '"YITllfG aios ~.~w:::·;.~.~le~~:. ~:d1ll~~m1"0 d f • • I . persons In the area b) l' a 11 a senior c:i ti zen NOTICE IS HE~Eav GIVt:N 111•1 on ~•dn~,,.;;;: ~r<h l'I. 1978 ~I ·,-00 e 0 assaulting po ice d' h . \Uled PrOP<>>•I• lor lurnl>hlf'Q all PL'BUC NOTICE "M .. , 5,,,,1~ Tuiniu L<tmD w;,1•1,11 off1c·ers April 19 when he ~~~~,~~1~~~~~c~1 volunteer ~~;:~e~~a~~~-l~~1 tu~· ~~~ ::.~~~.t=•~·~·~,, ~.~:~:.~~!~ l"h•oel •11 E 11111 ~1 . ,,,,,. M•,. fired at two patrol cars 1 0 .,11 ( f 2 ... .., •• b· ••Qulreo tor ,., '~ '"''" Rt¥ 0on.1a \tu•Q<'on o• during an eviction al· The center a so ilro t·t'nler al°"" J.I )(J a ler IMPROVEMENTS AT tAllern••• ·;1 '"·~•·nq C••nldlton OO(I """~' ... "A \ 1de:. aid lo sc·nmr:,, With p m no WILSON STREET, tis.I MAPLE ,., lollow ~m1tn Tulhlll lom•b ln\I• tempt STREET ano 101~ PLACENTI" MHJMOrlu.1rydl•~<1o" """~ --....;..--------------------------------------------------------------iAVENUE •nO IAll••n•I• Ill th• BOHO prect<Jlng projKho with CONGRESS HAlCL "YVONNE;" 80ND, r••• STREI:. r O> dll •ddlllon wlll be <1•01 ol 8e1n.1 Tower" ""''• M~••. recelv•d by Ille Cllv of Cotl• MeH •I '". l>it•Wld •wd~ on March 14. 1911 •I lllt offlo of '"" City Cieri<. 11 F•lr ll•e •11e ot 7 7 B•loved molher ol Drove. C0>la Mn•, C.lllornla, unlll "\ldrey H•rr>Oon of C:O,ta Mt ... C• . Ille hour of 11 00 a m. on Al>f'll f, 1'11, .... ayne I; Smllh ol W1Kon>in. Iovino di wlli<h llmt lhoY will be -d ""e' of Wilma O'Neill ol Ohio Jo~pfl public Iv and ,..., aloud In 11111 CollftCll c~ .. •os• of Otlto, 0111 C.•rfou ot Ohio, c11a"'b<I". s.:a1.o or-.t• sh•ll bHr ro"' Cur1a.s ol Cl....,.,ra, C• •ncl tl'IP 1111• of 1"" worl< dnO the n•m• of C.11y 81••-• ol s.n DI~. Ca, VI• '' the bldoer but no ofhllr dl•ttnou.1111119 .. 1,0 <urv1...i by • Qrandchlldr"' marh Any bid recel..., 111..-the C.r•vo•oe \erV1Ce• Wiii cw MIO on KMdUllld clo.tno """' '°' Ille nKel .. t Monoey ~rcll 21. 1911 •I 11 00 A M of 0101 sh•ll tw relurrw<t to tl'te bl-r. •I Fatr•1ow ""'"-'•I P•rk in !>Ml• u"OPPned It •hall bp the tol• ...... C• Witt! tr. Or<lff Of IN E••lern rescionSlbtllty ol in. bl-• to -tll•I t•• Cll•otor •Jtt olllc1a11no Inter ""bid1Hec:elvedlnpr-llmco mont w111 lie el Felri,.v.., -1•1 A ut of 114MS.. Sp•cl•I Provltloft$ P.,k S.nl•Ana.Ca and •dOllto,,• to Ille Gen•r•I •t•o•-CM Provhloftt of Ill• 5Und•rd PAUL BIEOE8ACH, •~S•d•nt 01 SM<lfi<•t-""'Y tw obt•lrtfd at Ille Hunt1n111on ~«II. C. Pu..., •way olflc" of tr. C11v 1:.nei-. 11 "''' on M•«ll 21. f'11 and wu born Oflvt Cost• ~ (.allfornl•. upon O.cemoer 11. frts 1n P•-•, C. "°"·rtfundable ~vment of J5 oo An Survl••d by hi\ wile EllUD•lt\ •dd11tona1u,.rQf'olSIOOwilltw...-ll••d•bac11. tl•uOhl•• EIHnor Ad• 1f h•ndted by m•ll. Pl•ns, .&Ok•ni ol S•n J.r•nc1\\.0 C•. \On 1P•CUtC•t1ons •nd other contr•c• (,1 l~rl F IC>yd 81-.. ch of Hunhnolon Oo<U..,..,11 ,..., •lso btt e .. mliwd et Pt.JllUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE lfOTIC• TO CltllOtT'OttS SUP'elltJott COUll1' Of' TM a STAT• Of'CAUl'OttlftA ll'Olt TM E COUlfTT OI' OtlANGI:.. ............. Est• .. ol M.£XAH0£R 01! GltAW, 0.CHMd NOTICE IS HEREBY 04VEN tD t._ creel Ito~ of Utt..,.,_._,.. dlUOlnt llwlt •II ...,_, Nlvlng Ciel~ -..inst IN s.t,ld clKtdtnt -re..utl"ld to tile ll'te"'· WI!'\ Ille MCeSSMy -IWn,. IN tn. office ol hcl-ollN...,w- lltl<td court, Off to prnent hm, witlt the nKHIMY ~NN., to U. W>• OeolQMCI illf l"9 office et Artflur D. Guy, 110 pt,."-· LAlf'I a.-. C.llforr1I•, Whlcll I$ U. pgc. °' .llwtl- nU\ ol the """"''9MCI In au -· ~n•lnln9 to llle .. ._,Of said dllQ-Oent, wlllw" four_,.., .. tt.. llrst pvbllcetlon <JI this notkle. 0 .. ed Mlll"Cl't H, It/I Frtderlclt ~-~-... of the Wilt ttf tllNeow _..., o.c...t A It T IUi It 0. OVY ,,. ...... A_, ~"" .._ .. .O.~·Tet: ltlll CD-6N1 Att_., fw: E.-cWr PVblkftM Or ... Cone Delly Ptlo\. Merell 20, 21 encl ApnU, to. lfJ'I H••<h (•. CleuQhl~r B••n•<• the olllu of the Clly Clerk of Ott1 City l ••••Delh Stwua of Hunllr>Qlon a...:11. of Co•••~• r.. •nd d•"llflt•• ""'"•"""" M•ri• Eacll bid U.•11 be m•d• on Ille SUP•IUotl c:o4iltTOt' TitS 11•k•• of C•m•t1llo C• 4 Pr-lfonn,M\HUP·llhroU9fl P·7 STATl!Of<C4U"°41MIA~ 'l••ndtlllldr.., -1 Q•f'el ll'•nOchllO, provided In lite contract ooc-~ THE C:OUlfTYOl'OL\NN PUBLIC NOTICE IHon1t r M••• Bl•Otboch 01 Lps •lid &11•11 be ecco..,penled by • NO.~ "'l•m•lo•. C. ..,a •l\ler Ruth Hartley ~ertllled or"""'.,. •• c:heck or• bid NOT •c• OF MEA•lltO OfO nl l'•••d..,•. C. Fvner•I ,.rvkH will bond lor not less th•n to~ or IN P•TITl6fll "°" .-.o.An Ott WtU. l>f' <onducled on Tuetda'f M<lrch "· amount of tlw bid, """"9 ~yllble to Ille AND "Olt LnTllltS TllSTAM••· 1Y78 af 10 JO A.M •I Pec:lllc View CJty of Cost• Motu. No Pr~ -II TAltY AND AUTMOltllAftOlt TO Morlu•ry CNiO<'I with ll'te Rev, Ohld be considered unlns «CGn>Paf'llld by A 0 MIN IS TE It U It 0 E It Ttt I! J Copp olllcl•ll"Q lnl•rmenl •t such CHl'tl ... ·1 CNclt ""'or bfclcler's INOl~a .. D•"T AOMHISTltATIOtf Po<ollt V1tw Me,_.lal Perl<, Nrwport bond. ' OP ESTATES ACT ll~ach, Ce P•clllc View Mortu•ry No bid -..Cl be considered ..,,lets 11 E sle te ol SYLVAN WOLF, "''"' lof\ Is m•d• on • bl.,.. form tun-it1•C1 by O.cus.d. CAltlULLO .... City ol 0.1• Mes. aNI I• me• In NOTICE IS HERESY GJWH .,.... ALOE RT RIVAS CARRILLO, rttl· aqorclen<e With Irie pntvlt'-9 of !tie ISA8ELLA WOLF Ma rlell...,..., • o~n• Of s. .... AN. c. P .. HCI •wey Or\ Propels.I reQUltw-.,b. """°" lor "'-te .. Wiii ....... M•rch 14, 1911 •I th• •oe ol lS 1!•<11 bidder mutt .. ll~l!Wd .net lU.n<e of L•llw'I T•t~ ..., Beloved'°" of Ac•nll• •ncl Len. <Ar-•ISOPf'e<jUAll"ed~r..,i,.1>v1ew. AlltllorlHtlafl lo "*"lnls*ar ...-h rollo lovlr>Q bro~ of Frltd <Arrlllo, TIMI City Couricll of tN City of Coat• llldepenclenC Admlnl.str9"anef Estalee Roh re Rlvu, Georo• H•o•rede. -.. ,._,the right to relect .,., A<I. relereftCe lo Wftlcl> h ,.,,_. IW Jo.,.plune C-Mrlllo. Rosi. <Arrlflo -or •II bids lur1her P¥Ucul.,.._ - -.. .,_ M•rr Aguirre Funerel M"'I<•• Wiii EILEEN P PHINNEY •nd Pf•ce ol ~ llot ,_ Ms 11 Id T-1U C;ty 0-oft~ bean Mt lor Al>rll ~. t'1t, tit It...._, ht c... t on Y rcll lt, 1'71 •I Cily ~ ,._,. ~. Ille court!Wft ol O.WllrMit ..._' ttf t~ 00 A M <ti Ille Ullin Amerl~ l"rM "'._._ ....,_ 100 Cl ~ ort... Melltodhl 0-ch. ~I• AM, c:. willl Pobllsl14td Ol'1n99 Coast Oell'f Pilot Mid court, et lite Ro Vtclor R~1 111 offlcl•tl-Merell 21 21 1971 West, In ,.,. City ., S.ote A9' • -w-' ' ttO). _ C:.1tfor11l a. lnlermt,,1 wlll be •I l"•lrll•vtr1 •• O.teclMarcl\tS,l'11 Mtmorl•I Par-. S•nt• An•. Ca WIWAMa.SlM>Mtl, F fltnd• ""° whn to ~Y tlMtr r-tt PUBUC NOTICE c-., o.rtt "'•Y <•II •t the uo11 .. AmerkM Fr• ltlCMAlt 0 c. ICUll'n Methodist 011irch on -•Y March .., c.et_., ,._. ..,._ 11 1'11lrom1 00 PM. lot 00 PM et 5"' .. I ... Wfll Myrtle. s.tl• A .... c:. Stnltto LM A ...... ~ Tulhlll L-Cosi. -.a Mortuary • ......., ... ,........_ directors _... PubllMled or.._ a... o.tty ,..._., llLL llOADW A Y MOnuAIY 110 Broadway Costa Mesa e•2-91 so 5MfTK.~I WUTC&Jff CKAPll. 427 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa • &48-4888 Santa Ana Ch&Qel 518 N. Broadway Santa Ana• 547...C131 Plact llOTKDS SMITN$' MOWTUARY 627 Matn St Huntlogtoo Beach 536-6539 P191•AMll.Y COLONIAL~ HOMI 7801 Bolaa Avw Westm1nat•r 8tn-3S25 PACINC YllW WINOllAL PAU Cemetert Mortuarv Chapel 3500 PilelflC Vl•w Oflve NeWl)Ort California 844·2700 ....coawtee ..OllTVAllll 1..touna Seacn 404-~15 Laguna Hiiis 788-0933 S.n Juan C.pt1tr1no 49&-1779 ), She's crying for help. Are you listening? skilled counselors help people sort out their own lives. Here people gain new resources to handle the problems they thought were too big to handle. If you know somoooe who t5 experiencing an emotional crisis. call the Problem Talk Shop. A trained coun!ielor will be at the other end of the line. Ready to he\p. Ready tc answer any questions you may have Please make the call that will .;how hE'r '>omebodv cares enou~h to Usten . -Ch 2t, 11, 21, lf7I PUBUCNOftCE Al YOUR SERVICE I NATIONAL &1S W@llill? ~®rrwD©® · G .E .• c.ost.a lltesa • c RP ' law M'll j '-• •• any v__.-.. m en ....... ~ 2 •-.e.,P'""'q~ • U.-•••?' ..,._,aeube9eeeby a a c 7 • ..,~.,.......of&blalawis .J&l«:s .. ._ .. ...,__. ... lftbename ls · d > Mk.,_ ... ,,,, to pnvide It &o yoa, or =~ •Ille~ Qnmty Office of Couumer Br.ad Fft!Jfftag ._, tor Ba"8 DE4lt PU: I reail tbat many infants between 9 ~2C •mt>ws• aee&&1'1erfnND iron deficiency a._..... 18 ~hue Cw Nta breast. and formula {~ • 2 0 ! F• (D'.)19H because I'm pre1Dant a.od plaa www.,.nlty. . s:r .• Huntington Jileach • ·---.._ ..... tW 5' petceel ol the ...... J ............... by lalllDU ee>m· ................... ..,,.milk. 8 WU felt .,.... .... 11111'•11 •r.ec , a11 c.Jut iroa I ......... I m ..... ....., ....... fed . w'S • .. 'r -.--tael.Y&o -.eto.,flon ••• q us' _._,......,.._.... ... up, p' 2 '.at1111L~-.ratw1iWL ," of., .. 7 Aon' 5 d J.llrllWrl .. ~ " I Q / 4 6illl , ' f• a& d91k of Iron tlefi..· cm.9' -p... Sta ° F ngpSememed wt~· 1-. ....... ....,,. ' , ll'd'a wm be the best sonee .. sus a ws! •• , .... w,howner. DFAK ~~Do die PllllQlrbus lmes have any dU:c I pwcaw b ~ peopl~ I 'd a&.., ............. if bo.s termilulls r on , • _. M&l waw sr...g a pmt;. 'a-bu& ~are*' a 4 Wea&Y uedby a peaaD with a llbJ .... a ,.,, .. SeiPi Low l.aglil Fee THOSE WHO CARE VOTE FOR .. SenatOr · Flays NY, ~I ING,,_ -.._ tM llelW "'*'I ............. ...... ,... -•• 'ft4'F .,,.._ .... 11 0 ) 9=1.,..,, ...... ..,.,., ----~ ........... . ........ ttl ........... .... ...... a.s • f ........... lelllt _...._ \hWWPt t c:.'D at of :: 1 ; ;,:. !Mime of the 8 MIL 'Blewus. 1# ..... ....,; .... YAHKD DYllMn' .81& ........... 5 I IUOADllD Yll&lii = :J =-i.. ..... ~:-~ ... J ---.~--·Clllll•'I-• Scamcy Paci.£i.c Bank P\'O.m~' a c.bedcing acmunt free ~ a moncilly seivice ~ MLll l opened a Grand ACCOlmt. And, I get.pgid silc8'mk's leggl maximnm sa~~~-up to 7M3 annually in a Prchted ~ ~ SaYffi:s Accomit-after I select the 11\Qturity I want. It's so easy and00&vecient . to have my check.me crul saviaes aCCOUJlt.S at Security Pase &m~ I hardly CVC'J\ tJ.ink abC19t it. I ~ d.at's why I • Secmitv P~ I jill6t don't b.a.o '' to think~ beelcin: anymaoe. A..,_i.8'19't.S-...._.it ..... dJ1 '-J ~-~*eff::6••.,.. ..... ~ ........ d 1of.i.eiw_.. ... ..... ~~ 111on-,,...-1&1~._111t,.-eo......mry . . Monmy, Men:itl 77. 19/8 DAIL y PIL01' AO t ' -~~w-,,,-·-'-·· _- A.JeoAILY PILOT Monday. March 27. 1171 What's in Name? BJ JAaDE BYMAN ... OMtr l'UM l&aff Wben mystery writer John J\ou Jlllcdonald -• pseudonym ror Santa Barbara ICholar Kenneth Millar - WU wrltinc ODO ol hlJ thrillers, be re- jected a number of titles before aetU· JDC on "The Gallon Case.'' o.11, ~ .... S&aft ,_ COLLECTIONS LIBRARIAN UCl's Roger Berry CM Nurse Gets 3-year Term In Drug Rap A reglStered nurse who was arrest· ed at a Newport Beach drug store after she forged prescriptions to ob· lain narcot.Jcs has been sentenced to three years in state prison. Orange County Superior Court Judge James H. Walsworth ordered the prison term for Marilyn Helen Wilk, 25, of 459 Lenwood Circle, Costa Mesa, after she pleaded guilty to the drug charges. He recommended her commitment to the California Rehabilitation Center at Norco so that she can un· dergo drug add1cl1on therapy. A1 a series of m~uacripll and r. viaiona ol the book at UC Irvine UbraJ'1'• 1peclal colleetlona depart-ment reveal, amon1 tbe rejected name. were ''The Great l>etoUr,'' "Tbe Skull Beneath the Skin," ''The Decapitated Man" and .. The Price ol Blood.•• The collection. which Includes both manuscripts and completed boob by Millar. also reveal• that, while Millar ma.y have made his choice, bis book sWl goes by many names. Among them are .. Gallon·saken1 • <Norwegian), "El Caso GaUoa." <Spanish). "Un Mortel Air de Famm~·~ (French). "Eln Scbwanea Schaf verscbwindet" (German) and "Vem var John Brown" (Swedish). They can be found on the covers of some of the many foreign tranala· Lions of "The Galton Case." More than 300 volumes make up UC Irvine's collection of works by Millar and bis wife, Margaret Millar. who writes suspense novels. Roger Bert;', bead of the depart· ment of special collections, said the Millar collection began in the late 1960s and grew out of a fnendsbip between the Millars and John E. Smith, UCI bead librarian. In fact, "Tbe Gatton Case" is de· dicaled to Smith, formerly head of Santa Barbara's public library. The collection, as Berry sees it, is a gold mine of source material for re· search on topics ranging from how a mystery novel is conslrucled from first draft to printing, lo how cover pictures change from edition to edi· tion. •·I suppose you could make a popular culture study just on the way this kind of thlng addresses itself to the consumer," said Berry. For example, an early paperback edition of one novel depicts a roman· tic scene, a later one shows a gun pointed at a man's head and a woman in the background wrapped in a s heet, and a more recent one shows a woman in a very skimpy bikini. Millar. who chose the pseudonym John Ross Macdonald in 1949 and has g radually dropped the first name John, has published 25 detective nov· els since 1944 based on the central character, Lew Archer The rough drafts, with neat handwriting covering the pages of spiral notebooks. reveal something of what Millar 'believes is needed to create a good suspense work. Success Berry, who appears to take a great deal of pleasure in analyzing the Mlllar collection. noted that the author frequently sends 1n new cople1 of editions, including fll'St edi· lions and roreip translations. He hllDIM!lf carefully cata101s each work and notes where and when ll waa first printed. In one case, the author of a bibliography or Mlllar's wt>rks discovered that one of the books in the UCI collection er· roneously lists the magazine in which a story first appeared. Millar, who received· a Ph.D. in Enaliah after writing a dissertation on Coleridge, "takes tbe mystery novel very seriously as a genre lbal has literary sianificance," Berry said. He seems cheerful enough about such onerous tasks connected wllb the collection as Xeroxing all the notebooks and manuscripts of "The Gallon Case," which fill a file box, for a college library in Ohio. Berry also seemed undiscouraged by the fact that the creator of the Lew Archer novels has never dropped by to view the carefully in· dexed and cataloged collection. ''I've never met Millar," Berry said. "He's never been down here. He always promises to." He himself bas ventured to read some of the Macdonald novels and found them well written, Berry said. But, he 110ted, when it comes to whal kind of book a dedicated special collections librarian likes to curl up with in bed, well, he'll take a good bibliography any time. r---------~--~----1 ADVERTISING • wnnen. designed. produced ond placed 8 rho! exploins enl19hlens ond sells • rhot puts your product 0t ~Mee 1n me best pos.i.1ble hght • that s torgered direoly 10 the proper oudoence • us1r19 the right medoo. wt101ever rhey moy be pnm elecrooic. l:Mllboords brochures.. soi.s 01ds pomr·of·pYrcho~ -S11'19ly OI m coml:Mno11on • rhOf con be olfOfded by A SMALL DUSINESS becovse small bvs1neut-s need profess1onolty produced odvemsin9 Of on olf0tdoble pnc• Con I help yOAJ• small bo.Jsineu? Give me o coll and l•I s see Norurolly 1here s no obl19011on (714) 842-9032 ORANGE COUNT'J WHO CAN PUT THE ~m~ili:flm® INTO YOUR SAVINGS? California Can•dlan Bank can ... with seven innovative Sunshine Savings Plans ... to make your financial future a htlle brighter. We offet special incentives to help you save money successfully. For example, a Certificate of Deposit that pays you Instant Interest In cash and in advance. Take your Instant Interest home with you or put it back in the bank to earn more interest on your interest. When you open a Head Start Savings Account for $100 or more, we'll put the first $5 00 in your account (Limited to $5 per customer). Why not come in today and viart our Sunshine Savings Center for complete details. We'll give you a free personalized coffee cup just for coming in and talking tt over '"'CALIFORNIA ~~ CANADIAN BANK Newport Beach 4699 Jamboree Road 752-6042 Copy11ght 1978 The Savings Bank Orange 501 South Main Street 558-3741 ..... FDIC Arresting officers who booked Miss Wilk last Jan. 9 said she forged pre- scriptions that enabled her to obtain quantities of Demerol, Dilaudid, Percodan and cocaine. Officers said she had been dis· missed from her nursing post at two hos pitals after being questioned about the disappearance of drugs. One notebook for "The Blue Ham· mer" includes pages of notes on Watergate, but Millar finally reject· ed the milieu of government scandal, noting, ''Too many heroes, too many villains and they are the same peo· pie." bill ~Aon ( ART HOPPE J L-----------------..J ------------ Two week bdroclu.ctury effective ways to get in hape. And to get ftWMWltnt.:: AaL-that~ yoo1l work out on some of the r• -iw:.~ v....,.-finell exerQ9e f!QuiPt:1l«lt available. -~ Buttbere•amorctoHolidaySpa- are -.1,.._ 9 , likt~Bl'.'dswimmingatkeylocations. auu • Plu.s_.~~tics for women-fw\ group ... And a calf, a ~ 11 hip. Whatever shapeyourbodyism, Holiday Spacanhetp IOU lllin down and firm up. Our Program Directon afW you a systttn ct oenonal· i1.Qd exercise in truction that Will CXJndltion every_ jndl d you.: .Our . 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INSIDE: •Stocks •Movies By HOWARD L. HANDY OI t1W Dally ...... Molff ONTARIO-Danny Ongais of Costa Mesa captured the 200· mile USAC championship car race at Ontario Motor Speedway Sunday. bis second in a brief career that saw him eain rookie or the year hooors last season. A. J . Foyt, lhe peerless Texan, was the winner in the 200·mlle stock car race to get lhe twin·200 program under way, then finished fourth in the cham· p1onship car event. Ongais' victory in Newport Beach resident Ted Field's In· Lerscope·Pamelli was disputed by last year's USAC national champion, Tom Soeva, who tned to make a formal protest, then withdrew bis objection. Oogais set an average speed track reeord of 162.810, breaking the previous mark by almost nine miles per hour. He finished 6.69 seconds in front of Sneva and led the race for 37 of the i.> laps including the final 14. Sneva, the No. 1 qualifier with a blazing speed of 202.384·mph , bad a hectic race. He dropped back at the start when be missed #4A a gearstuft and was almost last when be corrected the error. Later, he was assessed a penalty of 32 seconds ror passing the pace car during a caution period. The pace car was just entering the track when Sneva roared past. too fast to stop. Of. ricials realized this gave him a rull lap on everybody and he was called in and held until the cars he bad passed went by. By this time he was out of the top five and by the time he re· gained speed, he could never catch Ongais again. When Ongais won in Michigan ptesq ';: in July last year, he also started fourth on the grid, the same place he began competition Sun· day "At the beginning or the race, we couldn't run the way we wanted to," Ongais said after the race. "But we knew that all we had to do was keep the leaders in sight for 15·20 laps and we could stop and make the necessary adjustments. "l told them to change the car and make it comfortable and that's what they did. I don't know what they did, though. "They don't ask me how I do COSTA MESA'S DANNY ONGAIS ROUNDS A TURN ON HIS WAY TO THE ONTARIO 200 CHAMPIONSHIP SUNDAY. Simon Happy With Performance By A Daily Pilot Writer ONTl\HfO While Danny On~ab of Costa Mesa was the "inner. Dick Simon of Dana Point fini shed sixth and was the first four.cylinder car to reach the finish hoe in Sunday's USAC championship car race at On· tario Motor Speedway Steve Krisiloff. also of Dana Point. was forced out of the race with a burned piston after a creditable early showing includ mg the !rad on lap 24 He com pkted 41 laps. Bobby Unser, driving for Dan Gurney of Corona del Mar. also Gerulaitis No Match For Bor~ LAS VEGAS CAP> Bjorn Borg continued bis tennis mas tery over ViLas Gerulaitis Sunday, winning the $200,000 Tournament of Champions 6·5, 5·6. 6-4. 6·5 The close victory gave Borg his sixth consecutive lriumph over Gerulaitis, who was visibly upset lollowing the loss. "Vitas played very well," Borg said after he had collected the $60,000 winner's check. ''One or two points the other way •ould have made a differenc• in eoutcome." Borg said he was not l>•rtieularty pleased with bis lay and that he had sorne dif· •culty keeping hi& abola on the court. "I hit a lot of balls long," aid, "because balls tend to n049t at the aJUtude here• 2,300 feet abon sea level. But.ll'lY passln1 shots were very good.'' Borg's passing shots wero the difference in tbe m•tcb es Gerulaitlt played well at lh ne when be could get to the ball. went out with mechanical prob lcms Krisiloff was 14th and Unser 16th in the final standings Unser finished only 25 laps Simon, obviously pleased with his car's performance. says he will not race agam until In· dianapohs in May "Car owner Rolla Vollstedt doesn't have a sponsor so we will pass the next two races and concentrate on Indy." he said "We had problems in the pits today and lost at least three positions on the first slop, .. Simon said. "We couldn't get the nozzle of the fuel can into the tank or the t'Jr because there was sand and oil around th(' nozzle and it had to be cleaned first "We lost prt.•c1ous time at that stop and for a guy with the fastest pit stop of seven sttonds. 1t was a long time ·· Simon drove to a fourth placE> finish in Phoenix a week ago and was s ixth Sunday "We re starting to gel the car teroed in and 1 lecl we have worked out most of the bugs " Does he figure the f:!roup will go to the larger V-8 engine? "No, I don't think so This om: 1s reliable and 1l was the first four-cylinder car to finish today Our problems came in the pits. not w 1th the running or the car · We had the leaders in sight "hen we blew a piston." Krisiloff said "We know what happened and will have 1l fixed The c.-ar was working well today and we plan on running the en t 1 re c 1rcu1t " We arc going to have to wait and sec what happened, .. Gurney said. "The car did well in early runs on Friday, hilling 199 6 mph Then Saturday it Set' Simon, Page 8 ·2 Green Conquers Wind Iroine's Tapie Wins $7, 794 in Herita~e Golf HILTON HEAD ISLAND, SC CA P> -Hale lrwm, one of a number of self-destructing challengers, may have summed it up best in the wmd·blown windup of the Heritage Golf Classic "l would like to thank my fellow competitors," Irwin said. straight·faced as could be, "for falllng on their butts and allow- ing me to finish second. I don't feel that I deserve it, but I 'II ac· cept it." Winner Hubert Green was a little more diplomatic about one of the great mass collapses in rec1'~~ got! history. ••sotne One. quality golfers had their troubles out there," Green laid after be'd successful· ly bored his low, µne·drive shots throu&h a fickle, chapging wind that destroyed the confidence and composure of some of golf's greatest names. Green came f(Om five shots off tbe pace Sunday with a eolid, f..unc!er·par 67 and won by three strokes. He made u~ ntne strokes on third round le der Larry Nelson Ile won with room and lime to spare. standing as a wrnner by the 18th green while the final groups straggled in during heavy rain lhs wanning score was 277. seven under par on the 6.655 yard Harbor Town Golf Links, rapidly gaining a reputation as one of the nallon 's best It was worth $45,000 from the total purse of $225,000 and sent Green past the $1 million milestone, making him only the 16th golfer in history to reach that figure. Former USC standout Alan Tapie, an Irvine resident, col· lected his biggest paycheck on the pro tour -S7,794. Tapie finished in a four·way tie for fifth place with a 282 total. He had rounds of 71·69·72·70. Green, now the winner of 14 career titles, pushed his season's earnings to $117,t99 and Joined Jack Nicklaus and Tom Wall'on as the only multiple win· nera of the year. He moved put Watson into 1econd place on the ye!r'• money list v reen, well an front of the other challengers, plaved his back nine m 32 and let the pres sure, the wind off Calibogue Sound and the decepti ve dif· ficulties or the mini·monster links tak(' care of the others Hu~rt Green, ~s.ooo H•it lrwln, US.UO Lury Ne1-.. Sll.17~ Orville_., SIJ 7/S Cre10 Sloldlt<, V .lt' Al•n T•pte, Sl,1 .. Grel\em Mani\, '7,7'M Mee Mc L.-., $1,7" Howard TwlllJ ~ ... I BOii Gll<Mr, ~ ... 7 c;.oro• BurM, M,911 Gibby Gllbef't, M.911 Alldy Nerti!. $4, •1 kb WyM, '4 •1 Oevld GreNm. S.UOO ll•n c,....n.... '3.MIO LOU Gr•Mnl, Sl,.00 Bruce Lieu .... U.6CM 011 Mor ..... SUOI D•MY Eowwm.u~ JM 111men. sucw Tom Wal~ U...CW Rey Floyd,"·"°" Freel Mart!, 11.711 YMy W-IM, Sl,711 Tom Wal..,., 11,111 LJn LOii, $1,711 Boo Zend«. tt.m IColltl l'ar914, '1,711 G•ry MCCGN, Sl.371 1...-i HIMli., Sl.271 """ Ha1>cock. Sl.371 Ed Sn-. l1,l71 t.eon.,cl T~. $1,11'1 DW~t Ha>lll. SU11 10·10·10-61-111 •UI IJ.70-180 ,,..._ .... ,._1111 7J.70 .. "71-1tll 10.1<>-4nS-m 71·6 .. IHO-:tll ,,.,, M-10-m 111~m •' "10.n-m 12 .... 10.n-XI n .. ~1•11-m 6f.717171-11J 11·12-71-213 7HM..-..XJ 11 ..... 1-11-~ 71 ....... 73--Jl.I .,.,,.,,., ..... JI.I ... 10 11·1$-2&S ,,., ,., J.i.-Jlf ,,.,,.,,..._. 1' ... ,...._. 70-IJ.70-71-alS n .... 70.U-MS 1i..1 .... 11-• 70 .. ,.,,.,, __ • ..,,.11.1s-• •• 7) 11-1$-• 11 .. '1-JS.M-- H IH,.._,.. 7,._.IH'-217 IHJ 7J.7J-31 ... ,4 ,. 71-317 11-10-n 1r-m 10-IJ.71 1$-111 IJ.11-1111-211 It's a Eaughe:r for Lake~ who had 1S point.a and 1.2 re- bounds after corntna orr the bench. . "He liV UI I bli, stront person inside "1bo can alao put the ball ln th• basket," Hid Weit. -- my job and I don't bother them." Did he know where Sneva was all the time? "No, but 1 watched the leader board from time to Ume and I hoped they were ricbt." was the ·race Sunday easier than the Callfornla 500 in Sep. temberwben be finished eighth? "I don't think It was any easier," he said. "Maybe I have a little more experience and that helps. In the six to eight months See Ongals, Page B·Z In NCAA Finale I t I Duke Teenagers l ·I Battle Kentucky I ST LOUIS CAP> -Kentucky. with its stoical seruors and'pres sure.ridden coach, squares off with young, loosey.goosey Duke, paced by teen·agers Mike Gminski and Gene Hanks, tonight in the NCAA basketball champ1onsh1p game al the Checkerdome. For Kentucky. victory is a must "The only way we can succeed ttus year is to win the NCAA Championship." said Wildcats coach Joe Hall. "This has been a season without celebration for us because so much was expected of this team. On T" Tonight Channel 4 af 6 \l's strange in an academic situation to have this pressure.'' But that's the way 1l 1s at Ken lucky, particularly this season with a veteran ballclub that in eludes seniors Jack Givens . Hick Robey, Mike Phillips and James Lee. This quartet made 1t to the NCAA finals three years ago. won the National Invitation Tournament two years ago and got as far as the regional finals last year But none of that mat ters in the eyes of the rabid Wildcats boosters. "Sure, we've had a lot of pres sure at Kentucky," admitted Robey "It's been a hard gnnd But we've dcdicate<i ourselves to winning the big title this year We've saved up our good limes We 'll have tht.·m next week " Hall, who knows he's under the gun and doesn't much like 1t, was asked Sunday if he was thanking about resigning after the playoffs. .. l couldn't poss1 bly answer that now." h<' said. Pressed for a clariftc.-ation Hall added · "l don't know .. J just don't know.'' Duke. on the other hand. "asn 't even suppQsed to make the tournament. But the Blue Devils won the Atlantic Coast Conference post·season tourney and the rest has been gravy Young -Duke will start two freshmen. two sophomores and a senior -and fearless . the Blue Devils are having a ball "Ir you don't enJOY the spQrt, you might as well quit playing." said junior guard Jim Spanarkel. "Sometimes on the day of a game we're so loose we don't even realize there is a game that day." "Not being able to relax my se If," added coach Bill Foster, "these guys have re· laxed me" Kentucky heads into the UUe game with a 29·2 record and a 12·game winning streak. A barometer of the Wildcats' over· all talent 1s that they have not really put 1t all together lately and have been able to win anyway Sophomorl' guard Kyle Macy got them through the regionals with his heady play , outside shooting and clutch foul shoLo; Givens and sixth man Lee took over Saturday 1n the 64 ·59 win over Arkansas. Givens hit 23 Points and had nine re bounds and Lee. a fullback at heart who enjoys nothing mere than plowing through bodiel'\ toward the hoop. collected 1' points and t>i~hl rebounds To win tonight, Kentucky ...,,u have to ~cl more producllof' from their fi-fool·IO goal posts. Robey and Phillips. who had just 13 points between them agai08t Arkansas Kentucky also will have to shut down the Duke fast hreak, either by controlling tbe boards or hy beating the Blue Dl•v1ls down court Surf Outlasts Stompers, 2-1 1 FRESNO The California Surf tuned Ufl for its NASL opener Friday night at Anaheim Stadium against Portland with a 2·1 exhibition victory over the Oakland Stompers Sunday her'e at McLane Stadium The Surf upped its exh1b1llon socc.-cr record to 3 4 as Reinaldo B1lches scor ed 1n the 40th minute off assists from Geoff Gravett and S\eve Moyers, then put H away in the 6lst minute on Dan Counc.-e s rebound shot off the Portland goalie Portland cut the lead in half lo the 85th minute on a score by Anrly Ategbu a2 DAILY PILOT Angels, Dodgers Triumph TUCSON (AP> -Laat season waa a huge disappointment for Bobby Grieb, who hurt his back lifting an air condiUoner In the aprinc and played in Juat 52 eamea for the CaWornla An.iels. But Grieb, signed to a rich contract u a free agent in 1978, underwent surgery lut year and aeema to be completely re- covered from bis back aliment. The 29-year-old infielder lashed three hita in four at-bats Sunday to lead the Angeb to a 6-S vie· tory over Cleveland and boost his battln& averaee this spring to .405. His final hit in the contest was a run-scoring single in the 10th inning that provided the California victory. "I'm really pleased with our hitting and particularly with Grich," said Angels manager Dave Garcia. "U I didn't know he had a back operation last year, I sure couldn't tell it now." California, which had 15 hats Sunday agamst the Indians and met them here again today, has now had 36 runs and 62 hits this exhibition season They have an 11·6 record and could finish with their best exh1b1tion season ever. Their best previous mark was 18-10 in 1963. Lfuorda B appfl VERO BEACH, Fla. <AP> - Los Angeles Dodgers' manager Tom Lasorda as normally ex- uberant, but the recent play of has defendmg National League champions has made him even more cheerful than usual. "'We're hitting the ball like we did last year," said a snuling ~asorda Sunday after the Dorl~C'rs buried the Houston Astros 12·1 in an exhibition game. ··we were a little s loppy earlier in the spring and I guess that's to be expected. Our pitching has been tremendous ttle last week and Burt Hooton was very sharp against the Astros." The Dodgers have scored 63 runs in their last seven games whale giving up just 15 Their on- ly loss in that span was a 9·8 set- back to Baltimore. Steve Garvey, 21-for-40 10 ex· hiblllon play, drove in four runs w!th a pair or singles Sunday and Teddy Martinez doubled twice and singled as Los Angeles bettered 1L') record to 9· 7. Hooton pitched sax strong in· nings for the Dodgers. ONGAIS ... Continued From Page B·l hetween. maybe 1 l earned somethinJ! " Ongais wall try to qualify for t he Long Beach Grand Prix next weekend in a Formula 1 car ··We are going to contest all rounds on the USAC cham· pionship trail, then when dates don't conflict. we'll race in Pormula 1. After that if there ar e no dates for these two, I will race in IMSA sports car events. "I haven't seen the car I will be driVlng in Long Beach an.d about the only thing 1 can say is that it will be an lnterscope." fo'oyl led all but eight of the 80 laps around the 2'h-mile oval in the stock car race driving a Chevrolet Camaro. He averaged 122.938 mph for his 34th career USAC stock car win. The unoffklll order ol ltnls" In $unct1y's *' Mii• 1ndl1n1e-olls ur r1ce at Ontario Motor 5pttOw1y, with lype of car, llPJ C<)MDl•led Mid WINMr"S eYWIQe ICM*!: I, OIMY °"911t, Pemelll, IO lljlt, 162.tlOtnpfl; t. TOM SMv•, f'9Mke. IO; I. Al U-. Loll, IO; ~-A.J .... Yt. Otyot1. eo:s. LlffY Dickson. l"eftslc .. 1'; .. Oldl Simon, Vtllsltelt, 7'; 1. Torn 81gel-. Wll«M, 7': t, INldoft Kl-, WIUOn, 1'; t. Willy o.I~. Mcl..lnin, JS; 10. 8ol*'( Ollwero, L.111"1111110, 75; H . Sitt W•llNr. jljlCUINft, 11; 12. Gery .. ~ Oreoen, Jl, U. Jo!IMY ltlltllerlerd. Mc I.AA!!. '1: 14 549"'8 ICrtsllaff, Wllcklt, ~I; u, ~ Alldr•U. ,.._., as: '" 8otby ""-· Lltftt!\1119. U; 11. Tom "'91ey, E_,.., 14; It. """1rt ~-. Llgltlni"" I I It. G«9f\ ~ Wll•.t, 1: to. AOlll" McCl.,.._y, e..vie. S; !'. MfY IC•"• V•llllllcll, •; .. ao. H-..,, J!aele, t; U. a,lke Oelt.._, ...... 2; 2'. Ollldl OllrMy, IE ..... 0. Monday, March 27, 1978 MISCELLANY Cinderella Story Astros S~gn Slo-pitch Player SAN DIEGO (AP> -Tbe Hou1ton Astrot are taktns 1 chance on a 110-pitch softball player from El Cajon wbo says he hasn't played hard ball aince he was a kid. He's 22-year-old Jeff Pleb and his story read8 llke Cinderella's. ''I'm kind ol the A5lrol tpeelal project this spring," said Pleb In a telephone interview from the Astros sprtna trainlna camp at Cocoa Beach, Fla. "They feel I have the potentlal to become a good player, even though I don't have that much of a background in baseball." What Picib bas ls talent. He ex· eels in aoftball, that game wttb the fat ball played at office pic- nics and local parka enry- where. • The 6-foot-2, 207-pound switch hitter was in a Mission Valley slo·pitch league in Sao ~o less than two mooths a10, • ing as a mechanic In a 1emee station, when be was spotted by Bob Cluck, area scout for the National League baseball ch,ab. never played hl1h achool or col· leae b8"ball, ever aince be was a kid. "I guess thla shows you it's never too late to meet your dreams," he said. "It was dream of my dad's, too. But hf' wa~ killed in an accident when r waa In the eighth vade." College Stars To Face AIA Thursday Freeman Wllllams or Portland State and Duck Williams of Notre Dame have been added to the lut ot college All-Americana wbo will face the Athletes in Ac-tion basketball team Thursday at Anaheim Convention Center. Tipoff 14 scheduled for 8 p.m. TAKING TWO -San Dlcgo's Oscar Gam- ble slides in head first for a double as Chicago Cubs shortstop Mick Kelleher .......... takes the late throw in an exhibition baseball game Sunday in Scottsdale, Ariz. Chicago won, 3-0. Cluck liked what be saw of the brawny outfielder and after a couple of private workouts, he signed Pich to an Astros' COD· tract. "I quit my job and came down here when spring tralnlng start· ed," said Pich, who got married six months ago. "I didn't get any kind of bonus to alp .•• - Just the rookie league salary. Freeman is the NCAA Division I leading scorer with a SS.9 average and bas led the na· tlon tn scoring for two straieht seasons. The M senJ9r finlsbed with 3,249 points, second only to Pete Maravicb on the all-time NCAA scoring lisL He PQU?ed in 81 points In a game against Rocky Mountain to place b1a name second on the all-time ainale aame scoring ledger. ------------------------~ Sports in Brief SIMON. • • Evert Stops King; Kings Test Toronto Continued From Page B· l started slowing down and there a re stall some problems we haven't located "With an unknown engine and handling problems, we were checking the car out. We will go through the chassis and sus- pension to see 1r anything is cracked or is flexing and until that time, we won't know what happened. "I had no guarantees from the Astros, they just paid my way down here and told me I would have to make it on my own." Pich, who is working out with the rest of the minor lea1uera at Houston's training complex which is shared by all its clubs, has already passed his fll'St ma- JOr hurdle. The other Williams, a 6·3 guard, led the Flgbttng Irish to a 23·7 record and a berth In the NCAA semiflnals. He averaged 13.1 points per game and was selected AP honorable mention All-American. Duck is the fourth All· American to play for Notre Dame aince Digger Phelps took over as bead coach for the 1971-12 aeason. The others were John Shumate, Gary Brokaw and Adrian Dantley. Phelps coaches the college team. PHILADELPHIA -U.S. Open champion Chris Evert won her first tournament or 1978 in just over an hour with a 6-0, 6-4 triumph over Billie Jean King Sunday to garner the $20,000 first prize of th e Sl00,000 women's pro Lennis tournament, here It was the second week in a row Evert has topped King. Last week, in her first appearance after a four-month layoff, Evert d efeated King in the semifinals in Boston before losing to Evonne Goolagong m the finals. KillfJS at Toronto TORONTO -Marcel Dionne, cWTenUy rtdlnlJ • hot scoring streak, leads the Los Angeles Kings against Toronto tonight <Channel 9 at 6> in a Na- tional Hockey League game Dionne has scored four goals in Los Angeles' last two outings, including two tallies in the 4.3 victory over Cleveland Saturday night. &st.,93-87 ST. LOUIS -Marquette's Butch Lee went on an 18-point scoring spree in the last 11 ~ minutes and propelled the East oast the West 93-87 despite a rassed performance in the 16th Coaches' All-star basketball game Sunday. WEST 1111 -A l.e 11, JUOtl"I •. IC-4 .. 10. T-nMncl •. Wllllam• 11. Ev1M 7, Aobe"-1 •• f>M91.., U, R-1 IS, S..ta. • TolAl1 l6 IS-1717. EAST ('ll) -~lffln 4, JoMtofl 11, __ _, 5. 8 . LM 1', Aeotonl 1, ,.,_IOI\ l, M vmfy t, Auqwstu~ 12, Corzine 1, arr~•· Tot•IS i. 21-n •l H•llllnw -EM! "· W•l ll. Tolet fouls -WUI 20, E•~ 11.A-4.VS. Coac~ Honored ST. LOUIS -Duke's Bill Foster and Abe Lemons or Tex- as were selected co·coaches or· the year by the National As· sociation of Basketball Coaches Sunday. Foster led the Blue Devils to the Atlantic Coast Conference champion.ship and into the flnals of the NCAA playoffs thls year. Lemons' Texas team won the National Invitation Tournament last week: Bhtef'ltted SUN CITY, Artz. -Pitcher Vlda Blue ls being fined SSOO a day for bia absence from the San Franci.aco Giants tralnint camp, a Giants spokesman said Sun· day ··1 made the cut the otber day when they let 30 players go," he said. "This means I wlll be play- ing for the Saratoga Astros In the Gulf Coast Rookie League." The fine was imposed Satur· day after the ace left-hander did not tum up for practice Blue has worked out with the Giants only once since he was acquired from the Oakland A's 10 days ago. Giants officials have no idea where he is. Angt9b to More? "It isn't the fault of the car and we will be back at the next race." The black Acrographite Lightning blew an engine before qualifying and the team had to draw into the race on Sunday without benefit of a tiple trial after installing a new engine Saturday night He says he's gotten a lot of at- tention this spring because "some of them still can't believe I came here from a softball field." Pich says he has dreamed about being a professional baseball pl<1yer. even though he The Williams boys join four other All-Americans already chosen for the all-star team to face the AlA. The quartet ln· eludes Raymond Townsend of UCLA, Dave Corzine of DePaul, Marty Byrnes of Syracuse and Roger Phegley. INDIO Officials of the Californla Angels and the city or Indio were Lo meet today lo dis- cuss a shift of a portion of the American League club's train· ing and minor league head- quarters here. The Angels h ave trained in Holtville until the start of the ex- h1bit1on season for the past 12 year~ Grid Reunion Set At Rancho SJ MD Plans Golf Event The Mater Dei High Instead or footballs flying through the air as School (Santa Ana) they did 50 years ago for the Hollywood High athletic department and champ1onsh1p team, 1t wall be goll balls at Rancho boosters will stage the San Joaquin Golf Course in Irvine on Thursday, eighth annual golf April 6. tournament at Irvine TENNIS MEMBERSHIPS $150 Annual Limited number. CAPISTRANO RACQUET CLUB 493·7676 The An~els have two years re· maining on their contract with the city of Holtville. Members of the lloltv1lle City Council voted 3·2 recently to ask the Angels to leave after a number of players n1ticized the city on a Los Angeles lelevasion program. Oranl(e Coast area residents who were mem· Coast Counlry Club in bers or the only city championstup football team Newport Beach Monday, ever at Hollywood High a re getting together for a April 10, with the public ----------------reunion on that date with a harbor cruise and din-invited to participate. Area Sports Calendar ner to follow golf The golf tournament The get-together is being put together by will get under way with George Griffin of Newport Beach and Harry Kelso a noon shotgun start or Corona del Mar, both members of the squad followed by dinner and that was coached by Vic Kelley, the father of the orize awards in the current UCLA golf coach and director of publicity. evening (7). Rod Dedeaux, the head baseball coach at USC, Entry fee ls $100 for was in attendance at the school in 1927 when the golfers and includes football title was won but he limited his participa-green fees, electric cart, tion to baseball. He is also being invited to attend. tee prizes, cocktails, T....,, 1M8rc11 n1 For further information, contact George Grif· dinner and prize draw-111!:.~~0:::11~111•115151· Powe R•••·o. c.i. fin al 675 7746 or Allan Kelly at 646-0445 ing. For non-golfers, a Tennts-"-t•ln v .. cev 11 Newport Hartior. $75 donation includes Marini •I Hunt1n111on 8•1<h, Edison et d 1 · l Ne>lml"'tw(111et2JO).S..n1eAnee1Es1...c.. Car p ay1ng, Seam () U ). t ... ,,. Hl9h II C..pnlr-V1lley 11: .. 1; Gauchos, Rams v· room, cocktails, dinner "'t s.n "'*""°Coll• .. °'"'119 Coetl c.1._. 1e and prtze drawing. CYP••u Coll-•1 Goldonwni eoi._, P•-For add1· t1· on al In· 11 s.cldl-11 C.011-. c..nao.. C.011-et UC irv1ne ce11111> formalioo and reserva. 8aMbell-MMlna"' H ... llftgtoft hie." .. Blair Members or the Saddlebac~ College basket· t1• on s. contact.· Wally Field 111 '"-' H-r vs FOUtlleln \/'111..., et Mii• Sea...,. P.,11 m : wntminst ... at Ec11_, ball team will tangle with a group of Los Angeles Burgess (752-2844), u ISi, Elta'l<la ~ Sattll An.a •I Hert p-(7), Rams playf'rs in a benefit basketball game al Sad· c .. :ck Clarke (7Sl ""10) vuua V•ll•y 1t C•Plstreno Vell•y ll: IJI. •u -..v Hesoar11 Cllri.11.., vs Lli..r1y Chrl•U•n •• dleback College Tuesday night (7:30). or Jerry Tardie, Bob cos11 M•MPm u:u>.c.p1s1r-v111rro.r1s-Included in the group of players from coach Gon'"alea and Lenore llen 11 MlcM::Ulft S.ptl'l 13 IS); Sovt....,.stern et B 1 · o G .. S80cl1e1>acll CA111-u.JO>: Rio H...-11 Ooldon il Mulligan s squad are Artie reen, Tim O'Hara at the school, A VOTE FOR HUMMEL IS A VOTE AGAINST HIGH DENSITY wast c:oc._ 12,JO>: 0r-. c.o.s1 eoi1-e1 Knight, Rennie Watts, Marty Heim and Rodney 754-7722. Fullarton 12:30>, c..1 St•I• <Fu11er1on) 11 uc Mi'ller. =-;:;::::;:;::;::;;:;::::;:;:===========:; 1,.,,1,,. U •JO); SoYl~•n Clllloml1 Coll991 It Cel I S.tAtt• <H•-r-d> 1 JO. They wlll be going against Rams players Voll•Yl»lt Cororia dtl ,,,., II l..80Unl 8Hc,,, L B k M t J k n.. F Cod Mluton v1e10 11 s-. c1_.e, vn1 ... rs11., 1t arry roo 11, on e ac son, ·~ug ranz, y 01n• Hiiis. t!Ho•o•t Cott• Mew 1111 et n; s.n Jones, Jack Reynolds and Charle Young among Marcos 11 Fount1ln V111ey 16>. h Girts b8SMllMlll Unlwhll'f It Mlalon Vlctjo, Ot ers. c°''' ,,., .. a1 oan1 Hiiis, san c...._ .. 11 Joining the varsity players will be former Sad· Coron1 del MM, El Toro at~ h.c,,, ,,__ dl b k t RI ... B Erl Ch . t D 11111 va11 • ., •• Eo11on, Ntwe-or1 H.,..,, •t e ac s ars Cl\ auer, c n s ensen, ave wa.1m1nstw. ""-•lne at Hunt1n910ft llMc" <11111t Maze, Mike Neiswinder and former coach Roy •:u>; l!.•t-11 •' Tuolln 11:»1; -tt~ ow-i. stevens. llM 11 c.tpltlr-Velley Hlglt (J:U); ltlftdto A1em11out0t-v1-1uo1. Proceeds from the game will go to the Steve 01r11 •wlmml119-Hunt1not ... ._,. et SM Swearinoen Fund, designated to be used lo build a C'-le m. Tuo11n et Edi-m, C8pltar-B v111e,eto..ieH1111n·m scoreboard at the coUeae's future football stadium 01n1 wtta.1t-MJ•1ott "",. .c .,._ u:•: in honor or the memory of the Saddleback football twun •t UNwnllY U>, El&Mcl• ........, et hw1ftl1• P-'""""""'*' .._.,,,.. eo.t.-.. coach's son who was killed ln an automobile acci-•1 a: ,__.,, v111ey ~ 1rv1"" Hltill .. >: o... dent in December. HUit Y9 ~ .C S; U QulMa Y'I C.-.... c .. ,......,.. ..... Aif'. 714/14a-2121 ZIJ/592·1461 IUJl .... ~Hwl .. •leedt U.S. Falls to Hu~gary Mer•• s1. Tickets for the 1ame are priced at $2 for C:11: ~=-~~t..:: = _ad __ ul_ts ___ and ___ Sl ___ fo_r __ c_h_l_Jdr __ en ___ un_d_er ___ u __ . -------f 121; ........_. c.ouaoo • I"•-c....., (2 '""·'· $7,000. for only $}35.07 a month. 'Mle~ yru need S3.!:.00 or S25.00l Qel 11 fran the peo. pie v.tlo lef1l m I· hons. Comreretal Credit. Walthly pay- nmt based oo a SHOO toreOwner toai. lor 84 rmnths. at C11 il1lJ3I per· cent• rate of 15~. Total~ EDMONTON, Alberta-The United Statet wrapped up its eompetltioo ln tbe flnt Can·Am· ex water polo 1eriea Sunday as cbampicn ffunpry bung on to po1i a 7-6 deelalon over tho Amert cam. Tbe U.S. Cot balanced •corlnc from Its ottaae and wu wlthln n.up of vld.ol'Y from the outset, but lOlt out to Jfwlaary•a depth And 11axperloaee. tn other action Su11d1j, Yucotlavla aurpriaed Hunaary. 7 _., u the latter, the 1976 Mon· treal Olympics champion, auf· fered 1 rare tournament defeal. -------"'"... .... I I I i-. H\Hlell'Y • 1 ' 1-J UnltM s ..... ..-.1 SM!Wla. ~. DkMteM, ltlll'lllft, llllltdll8, "~ -~ VUllll.wla 1,........, 4 Y11891(11Y$e 1._ Mtlck:lt• Mt1dct1. CINll9. CUNJ,Wllll...,_,6 1V Sports Menu TonJght • Televtdoa 8 p.m. (4) -NCAA BASIET. BALL -The championship, gamt ln the NCAA buketball1 tournament from St. Louis. <&>1 -NHL HOCKEY -The KJnp meet tho Maple Leal• In a game pla)'ed earlier tonleht in Toronto. UNLIMITED SOFT WAnR '""' ... . ,_.... ..... ....... CALL 750·22J3 flOl....,mftCI WE LEASE ANYTHING ON WHEELS 2•138 Month Mlif'\ttnll"Oe Plant AVlllable Free loan cars to lease customer~ THEODORE ROBIN LUSINI CO. ZOl6 Harl* Bhd. Citt• ll•aa. CMtJ~11 or u1~ $11.345.88. 00 PClNTs. t«) PRE- PA'NENT PeW. TY. 'Ne find ways to help. CO~IAL CRi-OIT C~TION ~ tfQmeowner Loans ;r..,. Alelft flU.000 and mr .. st ... ~eel br 1 •Okillllo11 tJ ""ri pdlllll ~· ,, Olilla -110 s. 1 8trw • MM'700 Ol"Dlta • l~t. Tg" • Oocmtl7 Rd. • 5'T·•n ..... -... o.... .. .. • • TRACK I HARNESS RACING f BOATING Goodell Gets Award Mission ViCJO resident Brian Goodell, a UCLA freshman, receives an award for winning the 1,650 free style in the NCAA swimming finals Saturday night at Long Beach. Goodell also won the 500 free and the 400 individual medley. Also on the victory stand are Bob Hackett of llarvurd <center> and Bob Martin of Tennessee ~ppel Tops Mlle List Tuv Ot™!r Barons Rank in Top Five Hibachi Se,-ies Sailed South Shore Yacht Club bas announced the winners of its four-race Winter Hibachi Series: PHRA-A -1 Mystere, Don Barta: SSYC; 2, Vantage, Dan Seward. SSYC. PHRF-B-1, Tay-21, Tom O'Brian, SSYC; Winsome, Lyle Willets, SSYC; 3, Gordo, Don Prict, SSYC. SANTANA-20 -1, Cordon Bleu, Jeff Allen, SSYC; 2, Mighty Mouse, Clint Ching, SSYC. LtD0· 14 -l, Jim LitOQS, SSYC, 2, Chris Bon1ra, SSYC. WOMEN'S SABOT - 1, Phyllis Willets, SSYC; 2, Marilyn LeBas, SSYC. MEN 'S SABOT - Dexter Jackson, SSYC; 2, Gil Knudsen. SSYC. JUNIOR SABOT - Debbie Willits, SSYC. \l insome ":ins Adams Trophy - Mono.y March 27, 1978 DAILY PILOT 83 Scandalous Tops MRanila ace Pas=~=!:E~ap~F-~~~=~1:;,e~~s Deci<kd Dll••,. ... ._...wri"' derson, BYC; 2, Vamanoa, Bob MANILA (AP) -With BUI Pascoe's 51.foot Sparkman & Wallerstedt, BYC. half the fleet still at sea, Stephens sloop, Scandalous! won MORA-A -l, Bacchanal, George organizers have official-• overall and Class A honors n the Kaneko, PMYC; 2, Starg•zer, Dick ly declared Hector Ross' Newport HJrbor Yacht Club's Ocean Deaver, BYC; 3, Seduction, Gene 42-foot sloop Uin-Na· Racing Series. WilliJ!.ms. BYC. Mara the winner of the The series is normally six races. M 0 RA· B -1 • B 1it1 • U l l · 600-mlle China Sea race but stormy weather knocked out two man/McClalret Harris, BYC: 2• Red from Hong Kong to of the races and the NHYC race com-Onion, Steve Schock, NHYC; 3, Manila. mittee decided not to reschedule Wildcat ... Pete Schoonmaker. BCYC. The 46·year-old Hong MORr·A -1, Bad News. Stan them. Sorenson,ABYC. Kong civil servant, The final race was Saturday's ,.. ORF 8 c l y h B b fourth across the finish 19-mile Huntrngton Tidelands race "1 • -av · ac t, o around the offshore drilling ~lands. Albert. HHYC, 2, Falcon, James line with an actual SCANDALOUS WON the lnterna· Ure, SSYC. clocking of 9S hours, SO tional Offshore Rule ({OR> division Overall series stand10gs, four minutes, emerged the which was sailed for lbe Ahmanson races: winner with a corrected Trophy. Two other groups sailing IOR -l, Scandalous; 2, Ruffian; time of 98·47·03, three 3, Dog Patch. hours ahead of another concurrently were the Performance MORF -1, Bad News; 2, Cavt crown colony yacht, Handicap Racing Fleet for the Yacht; 3, Falcon William Jeffrey's 37-foot Corkett Trophy and the Midget Ocean Racing Aasociatlon for the PHRF -l, Scotch Mist, 2, Pak Ling, which took Dickson Trophy. Hidalgo; 3, Ghost II. second place with a cor- Overall series winner In PHRF reeled lame of 101:42:33. was Scotch Mist, sailed by Don An· T -R T ken Japan's Togo V, skip- derson, Balboa Yacht Club. The ~g ace ,i Q pered by Togo Yamada, MORF winner was Bad News, skip-C k S was third in 102:06:55. pered by Stan Sorenson, Alamitos By Ori Y ue I n C l a s s I • · Bay Yacht Club. Mamamouchi took top Trophy winners in Saturday's Hun· Corky Sue, skippered by Mel Lune, honors, ahead of Hong tington Tidelands race: Marina Yacht Club, won the Pritikin Kong's Lady Jim and JOR·A -l, Scandalous; 2, Dog Predicted Log race out of Marina del Kialoa of the Uniterl Patch, Don Ayres, NHYC; 3, Blue Rey Sunday with a 1.122 percent of States. Kialoa, skip· Norther, Bill Sullivan, LA YC. error over the 37-mile course. pered by Los Angeles IOR-B -1, Dawn Treader, Hartley The race for the Pritikln Trophy business executive Jim W i n s o m e , a Turpin, NHYC; 2, Allheris, Ray also counts toward points for the K I l r o y • b r o k e Peterson-33 sloop sailed Booth, BYC, 3, Stars, Ed Ju.ssen, Southern California championship m Mamamouchi's 1972 rec- by Dick Brown of the LBYC. predictedlogracing.Summaryofre-ord Hong Kong-tO· Cabrillo Beach Yacht IOR·C 1. Ruffian, Earl Dexter, sulta: Manila passage of 86'1il Club, won tbe Al Adams VYC; 2, Stress Breaker, Jack and 1. Corkv Sue, Mel Lurie, MYC. h 0 u rs b y clocking and Son challenge Bruce Larson, BCYC. 1.122; 2, Shipmates, Dexter Wood, 83.45 24. Kialoa. at 79 trophy Saturday in the PHRF·A _ 1, Hidalgo, Rod Lip-LBYC. 1 224; 3. Careve, Henry feet, is the race's big- second contest for the oold. NHYC. 2 Ghost 11. John Snyder, DRYC, 1,395; 4, JJ JU, Jack gest entry and was list- Brian Appel or Foun- tain Valley has run the lastest mile in the CIF C'anks this season wh1le two of his Barons team- mates also have marks that rank in the top five. Estancia <Costa Mesa) High who ran 4 :20.8 coveted cup in five Reynolds, NHYC; 3, Sidewinder, Honey, SIYC, 1558. 5, Ln-Ly-Lou, ed al 13th place on cor· Frank Venclik and Chris months. Dick Bluel BCYC. Whit Shaffer, CYC, 1.567 rected lime. Corum rank 4-5 in tbe~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~~~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiili ........ 440 (50.3 and SO 4) while Appel turned in his leading 4: 19.6 mile in a season opening tri-meel victory over No. 2 ranked Mike McCaa of Troy Blevins of Foun- tain Valley is tied for third in the 330 low hurdles (38.4) and is fourth in the long jump (22·11) while the Barons' Dennis Cowans is second in the triple JUIDp (45-7 ). Newport Harbor's Los Alamitos Race Entries , ........ , MarMU l:Mttft l'lnt .... tTU f'l ltU ltACE· -0... mlle Pete. <l•lm•"9 P\wM\2,100 S.1191 Hll~ IVo11ll-lngheml The 'O• .. nnt A IS.rn•ll; -r CrHO .,Marawelll; M•1ter Cloud l(;regoryl; Mldnlglll Byro I RllClliel; Flea Slep ISllMO, Bosco Fr•n~ tC-..llr). 80IO LHdtr (TOdO). SECONO AACE One mlle Tr01 Cle•mlnQ IWlnell<•P Pur)4 ~.IOO F renc•\ S"°"'don I Retclllar•I 'K•llY s Kelrnuc:ll (Sll«U, Yem Stllr Hano•'' tWl\lletOI. 01•• NHd IC.rundyl, J M Eddie lll«tlllchl, Abe ' Chefl' IL0n901, Bold Stru~ 10.M>merl, Duk• ~WI (Hetll4lrl THlllO llACI! One mll•. Peet. S vur old' & ..-r Put\<' U 700 Hlllarloos Br-IRetchlord), 819 Oen< er ( p.,,.,,. OcHn Bird (Bev· IU\I, Wlillt Won~• CMuell••I ; FIAv•n 01r..:t CRllcnl•I. Andy\ S~lo (>fr C8t .. <..,rn•nl . •r•n•'' K•no 11;oodre•ul. f'OUltTH ltACE Ont mu, "•<-e. Cl•lml119 ~lup PutM '2.700 p,.Pf'r Caum C'>hflrr"11; My Oou9f\ CWhttl•t1, t:aw Vt1w1 <l•<~evl. Andy' (HAn ITOOdl, TOl>a\CO (8en- n~tt' 01arnonlt St.tr C HolU, Ac qul\l•oau IL•Cl•or Jrl, Polnl Purdu• (LA<C>Ol~I l'I ''™ RAa °"* mll• Pa<• s yur olds a. uno.r Purw U.6o00 ~tud Poker I Herp•rl, !o•wmlll 5•111• I Lacolltl Jau l'ull••I lltatcMero), Sory Sa"' IAu1>1nl. ICttP Hones• ICiordcw>I. a.,. •v• Vic lor (SllOt11; si .. py Bve • .,. 10vn- n19e111, Caro H""°""r I GWdo'N<ll. SIXTH llAC5 -°"" mu •. Pac• Exhibition Baseball AMlltlCAH LIAOUlf W L ~t. O.lroll IJ s .1n T•ll•• ti s .. MlmMs.ota 11 6 .641 C..llfOrnl• ti • .647 Chlui90 10 I .55' 1111tlmor• • 7 .5» 8"10ft • I .m IClllMI City • I .»t S.allll • t .SOD Mlhlrl~.. 7 t A31 HtW Yorlt • 10 .J7S Clelmlnv ~CAP P\lt'M ~.600 ~Y Rodney lLA<leirJ•I, Oun- ''"" A ICr•MI LA<IYb,rO L Ber IK ... ble<); A40ttt Boy IRA1ct110<dl. lu..,bu Pao IHalll, One on One IGouaruu1 l.uoy .._ (Au«Mt1J; Tanneu.e OYIS 1-1 ... 1. SEVENTH llACE -Ono mil• P•<• Pur~ ll.SOO Supu Strike I Dennis I N•••llle Jam•• M fSor•~' • Total Frfl9"1 I Goudreau) JC Heel IWtlllem\I, A Hurrlc•n• SamptOll 1-1~1, l'tlP. pl•t10 Colan•I (Retcllford); c.si .. 11-!Baylosl. ~IGHT14 llACE -One mite. Pace Put\e $l,?00 Gold RilnQOJ (Blkltm.111; Heswl (8dYIOs\I; Mr Bo!lndll (Oaullon). e·~ SprlnQ ICrognanl Bald Ool9• 4 AubtnJ Sue Foyle (Goudr~•u>, lullo B•ono"' (W•sherdl; Kin~ Lumber f "9rryl. NINTH ltACil -~ mll•. Pact Clalmlno ,._,c ... Puri. M,400 WIM -A llUlchl'' • Flamlnvc Miu (Crane)· No Cltl (Gordon); 81~ Bt11der ILaco1t•); Oe<lt H•nc I Goudreau); Donovan A f Aublnl, s~noa 8099y (Gregory); Golcr•• (8Mr). Saddleback' s Kerwin Signs Cindy Kerwin, the mosl valuable player for Saddleback College's women's volleyball team that finished second in the stale tourna- ment, has signed a letter of intent to attend the University of Arizona in thefaU. A graduate of Dana Hills High School, Kerwin ls a sophomore at Saddleback and was the leading setter on the team that posted an 18·1 record. She is being of· fered a full volleyball scholarship al Arizona. the Sailors boast the fourth best male relay team <3 25 0). Vince Brown of Mater Dei <Santa Ana> High as second in the shot put (60-0t1.) T .. CI .. TrecUllattl• IAI .. ~rclHll 100 l Clf,..1-(Pe~) t S: l Brittan (Cl.,emonll t '· J I tlel W Curren I Crttl)ll C.r-( El•l-•I, H009t IMU<rl t 1 no t w c...-r ... fCr•woll 11 •; :i. 111•1 Be•n•nv tFonlAn•I, Jo~n•o• (!o•nle AIW Vall•VI 21 t • Cit ... 1""4 CPeud•nel U 0 S HIPI Powell (Sant• Ana Vall..,), n Sill (Tro'fl Ul '40 1 ,,_, Cs.<lte An.I Vell..,I 4' 4, J WfllS (Muir) •t 4• J Fatltf' IMonravlal )0 O 4. VeMllll (~ H•r•erl St J, S llltl Cer•OI llOw•a.I H~), C••<k IRolhOO Hills) SO 4 .._I Stormo (A-re) 1 S. '· t Ce119•ICKI (Ville Perk) t H l , J eenar • I H•rll t S1 s. • Snlrltt (Notre 0•,.,. al Sherman 0•~•1 t S7 '. s. Alley ( ltoyel) t SfJI' Otners t Dllff IH~ ltMdl) 1·S9 0 Mlllt 1 A-' I~ VallWoPI t :lt •• 1 M<CM 1•1\afl<I•) 4;29 ... ; 3. K.uter IArlol•I ' " OJ • C•f19elO\i (VIII• "•'"' ' 11 •• s. Slllr1•y INalrt 0.me SOI 4 ll ' 1·mll• I N•llan (Burll•ll 9 16 S; 1 Spllm.n fS1m1 Valty) t ... 7 ) HMt1"91on (Santa Mol'l<•I t• 17 tn • l(UtM' I .. r1<KI•) t lOJ, S C:.n9"1MI !VIiie PM'll) 9 11 S llOHH I Wlml>O!rlY (Muir I 1'0, 1 Elgen (C•rplnl.,lal 14 S J A~ CLB Poly I 14 •w, 4. SC-•rt (W.\I Co .. nel •• •, S. Oe•\011 !Sen 8ern.rdlnQ) 14 1 l:IOLH l W Curr.,. (Cr~'f)I) 31 S. , Solomon (C.iitlllo) » t. >. cci.1 a1evlft1 (!•-tel" Vellrrl, 611eltr (Monro•l•I, Weill (Mutrl 31 4 OtllU~ I l(U••tell (N .. terl Mar-I HO 440 rel•v ·I COml>Can '' >. l 5"" I• An• Valley '1 s. ) Otntonnl.ll 42 7 • Muir 41 I S Hlel Pe.-na Oerty '3 t OtMn l.~H-&U M iit relay-I Ult! CtnlHnlal, Muir J 22 0 J 1'ont.w1e J19, I , .,. _ _. H...-r J:lU, S lt9tll,,. Hlll,J a I HJ 1 Cli•l C.•to••Y l~•vall. Morel<K IW.tlnutl .... > ~· IS..n- ny Hlllll M\oo, 4. Ille! B•rt (LB Wilton), e.i.er (L8 Jorden) ~t 4 PV-t lllel A CAHr.,. lC•ucill Er1111 IEI Oor-1 U~ J Tully (MllllllAftl tµ 4 Hiii (LB Wiiton) t~O. S K.enwthy(Crt'IOU tot U -t. Be<ver (~IM Canyon) U.7Yt; 1. Pith !Sent• ""' V•ll•yl U.J\lt; J ""°'"' (Mlillll ... I 1) 1, 4. 11..,lllt ,.._..,,. Valley) ll-11; S &.Mell 10..lfeyl 12 10 TJ-1. J<lnft IPl,..,.._.I., II, 1. Cnla ... 4"-\elR Yell.,.) 4S.7; J AnClrHI IMllllk.,.l 0 -J "• 4+0, 4 Cl•YIOtl (P~I U S\oit S ~I (Sunny Hlllil ..... Otnen t H- caO CS.11 Cle-11te) •·t\.'t: 1'. OW,..I,.. ( llTere) ..... 51'-t. F""' (Well C.ovl"91 ~·. l. .,. ... ,....,., °'"' ... •. >. a,..,...,, (Anltl-Valley) SH~; 4 Sc>flltn (R-tMCll SM; S. NtwrfM IVl<IO< Vell..,) SHV.. OT-1. BrvMI (Mlelollf Valley) llS·t : 2. Kreyclllr (SH Jeclntal 164~•; ). ArtliAftO (Seole y,.91) 1St·O; 4. RhM l°"'rU HRll t»-4; S. Wlttlam1 (PaJmdettl tU4. Otllen. 7. ltnclt_.,...(N~H.Wl llM. CleWland 6 11 .au ()Alll•nd • ,, .m TffOlllO S 11 ,111 MATIOMAL &.aAOU• .. ,. l'r1..u.co 11 • M1 Pro Cage, Hockey Ollcaoo 11 • _...1 UIS Angela 9 7 .912 """•delpN• • 7 .m -trell •• .52' Atltllla a I .JOO Houttoft 7 • _..., 5'. I.Owl• 7 • ... CIMlllMll 1 t Al Ntw Ym 7 t ..at sa .. 01... • 11 .41 f'IC~ 4tl .m ....,..ac.w ............ Pl~t ~S.T--• -.. .. v ... wt. ..... vnoo• ··-ott"' ..... _... Ml,,.,... t, ~I (tl ltllllftll) Tt.dll,~2 .... "' 4. OtlQfl IA> I a.. '4l'llltltll IL..__ t 5', UUIS I. De4f'llt I CU lllntllllt llllft ''~'-1. Mliw.tbe I tlllc"' '"'' ._. 0-.. o oaklll!MI .. $Mtllt. 01...,,.. •• ~ ' "' .... 1111119~ .,._, Mllw1141Mt QllC. .. Dltl1'91t ic-cu,. ,,.._ THINK FASTI Discount Ticket Packages to t~• Long Beach Grand e Prix, April 2-avallable only from participating Toyota dealers. But yqu'll have to think fast to get 'em. because the big Grand Pnx weekend is almost here. The race-a genuine Grand Prix. raced through the streets of Long Beach en the tradition of Monaco The cars-Formula I. the fastest. 500 horsepower. 200 mph. speed machines. Zero to 60 to zero 1n 4 seconds flal The drivers-the best there are World champions past and present The stakeS' SAVEUPTO -valuable points toward the coveted ·worlds Driving Championship Experience it all-three full days of glamour. celebrities. thrills and excitement-for a lot less than you might think $10 ON TICKETS TO THE ::~rd:~::~~:: Toyota dealer. WORLD 'S FASTEST !~~i~rsa~~~~i~~~:E w~~:~~:r~ Theres no purchase necessary to quaflty. All four include admission to S'REET RACE three full days of racing Plus some special race events you won't want to miss. • Like Formula One qualifying tor pole pos1t1on A Formula Atlantic Chamo1onsh1p Race A Toyota Cellca-Celebrity Match Race Even a 10,000 meter loot race. The action starts early Friday morning, Marqh 31. and keeps right on going through Sunday afternoon. April 2. when the checkered flag falls to signal the end of the Grand Prix Toyota Cellca OT Llftback-Offlclal Pac• Car of the L.B.O.P. The fourth consecutive year Cehca has held thcs prest1g1ous honor And why not? Cellca has been mos I every- body s pnx race favorite since its first 1ntroduct1on and the applause for the new 1978 model hasn t subsided yet Drop by your part1c paling Toyota dealer and see all the street Cel1cas including the GT and ST Sport Coupes You II fend a little bit of the Grand Prix in every Celica To sa11sfy that hltle bit of the Grand Prix driver in each of us YOU ASKED FOR IT. OFFER ~EG. BOX OFFICE COST YOUR COST YOU SAVE INCLUDES 1. $37.50 $27.50 $10.00 • S26 A8591'11Pd G11nc1Cltlnd s .. 111 llnclude~ Aacen1y Genl Adn1 ) • 2 Dey<:/ 1'11'1'111 Trlll& Gt"nl A<lm • 3 Day Formula Ono Gnrl\ge Tour P11u 2. $27.50 $19.00 $ 8.50 • s 15 AeteMld Grandtllnd Seat (lnclude1 Raced11y G&nl Adm I· 2 O.vst TimfJ Tr1111 Genl Adm. • 3 Dav Form11l1 OM Garage Tour Paa1 3. $22.50 $14.50 $ 8.00 • RICtd&6 GenPrll Admission· 2 Days/Time Trills Oenl Mm. • 3 Dav Formula 11e G1rag11 Tour Pl'l9 . 1. 4. $15.00 $12.00 $ 3.00 • AiCedeY General Ad1111nlon • 2 D1ys/T1mt Trial• Gonl Adm ' ~ j I . JllJ o.+.ll Y PtlOT H Monday'M Closing Price~ NYSE COMPOSI!JJE TRANSACTIONS STOCKS /BUSINESS We Own It Gnunman fushes Tomcat:: .-' By MILTON M~KOWITZ Did you krtow Uttt you are the owner or a vecy : .sopbl!tlcated Oghter plane, one thut can ny at 2.5 Ui:nes: the tptoed ol aound and launch alx missiles a1alnst alx • tarcet.s at ranges or more than 100 miles? ' Ab yes, f t.houeht you m11tbl not realize that you bad ; acqa1red t.his fancy plece of war equipment. ltoown aa th• • F·H Tomcat But U' you're payina your income t.n today, ' you will he maklni another installment. I DIDN'T aEA.UZ MYSELJo' that yuu and J and all: tht" other American tu.payers own thll 1wlnc·win1 • uircrart untaJ J ~potted an adve.rtilement a couple of : months ago from the Grumman Corp., tbe Bethpaae. N.Y., builder ol the F·l4. Tbe ad s.&ld "1WI" tu doUan are buy-. ina the world's finest filbter," altd It extended to one and • au this invitation: ''send for your F-14 owner's manual." • So I dld -and you can too by a.ending a postcard to · Grumman, Bethpage 11714. Just ask for Your free copy of: the F -14 owtli!r's manual. : What you will get back Is not quite a manual. ll's more · like the sales literature you receive wben you visit an automobile sbow room · a 16-pa&e g'lossy booklet filled with pictures ahd worm extolling the virtues of the F 14 Money Tree This ownt:r's manual opens with the statement, "You, lhe Amencan people, have acquired the world's forernosl fighter /interceptor." It goes on to depict the F-14 as having "greater maneuverability and performance" and "a greater mixed arsenal than any other fighter " WE, THE OWNERS, ARE also told that the F ·l4 "1s a 11roven mulll mission fighter" and boasts a radar coverage c'(ceeding "that of any other fighter " Our manual concludes with these words: "There you have it, the Grumman F-14 Tomcat. It's the best fighter in the world and it belongs to you." Of course, due to space limitations, some information had to be left out WE'RE NOT JN .. 'ORMED, FOR example, that of .the 270 F-14s bu.ill so far for the U.S. Navy, 2S have crashed, killingsevenU S. pilots Nor does our manual have anyUung to say about pnce, even though 1t could cite another first-place finish here. The 1'' 14 is the most expensive righter plane in the world,· with the Grumman pricetag for each one now topping $20 million Whal Grumman would like us "owners" lo do is peti. t1on our con~ressm<'1'1 to tell lhe Pentagon to buy m()('e I-' 14S THE Ni\VV PREVIOUSLY PLANNED to buy 36 t.· 14s in fiscal 1979. But Defense Secretary Harold Brown recently reduC"ed lbe order to 24. And Secretary Br~!\ became so incensed at the lobbying Grumman was doing on bchaU of the 1'~ 14 that he ordered an investigation to df· term ine whether contractors were using goverome•t money to lobby • In other words. are we paying for the lobbying as well as the hardware·1 Sllll, you have to hand 1t to Grumman. At least it has the courtesy to acknowledge that 1lS revenues come from taxpayers and that its products are therefore owned by the American people When has Lockht.>f'd ever produced :in owner's manual for us" Market Off Son1e As Report Au,aited NBW \'OHK l/\1'1 The st0<.•k market pulled back a lllt toda~ as \\'all Street Jookt'd ahead wanly to the lalo!il government statistics on inflation The Dow Jones average or 30 industrials was off J.29 powts to 753.21. Losers outnumbered gamers by a 4.3 margin amoni: New York Stock E"change-listed issues Trading .,.. as quiet I 'P• a11d Do1ctH NEW YOlllC IAP) l~ loltow1t19 11\I >tlo,.y the N•~Y. 1'. Stock E.cl\an90 ••och '""' ••• fflal ,..,_. .,.-. "" .... "'~' -"'-"'"' -"" ~re •nl ol <"""9e re~rcl!Ht ol volum. tor fhU•.0.~ ~ ~~':':.!-., ;.~~.:~c::,,'J,:~~~~ dlllHt~• toel-11 '"* Pft•IW• ( l<7tlfl0 Dfl<• •nd 19dolv"t • p m llfltt u~s l a\11 ,ChO Pct ~ Vo 11 S n • • t t. uo u • u1 ... 11 t Up ue J' • • "' Up UO DowJoHP•. t•erag~• N~., Yor> IAPI J'lllal Dow·~-~· STOCI" Otoon H19h l -Clo>e C~ 10 1"'1 HSlll 1~ 14 l'l:l}l 7U11 J,. 1f' 1 • n 101 .. 709 ~ m st '°' ., ' 01 IS Ull !OS 1' 10!> ~•OS 11 IOS 71• 0 07 &S Stk 166 ~1 :1M 00 ,..., 17 166 OS O-. tnclu\ J l)t,i Tran U0,1 Viii\ 34'. ·~ Silo. 3. 12S, Mhat Stork11 Did NEW YOAlt IAPI Anv•1'(ed O.d1,..a Unt~AnQM Tot•f 1\\UI \ Nrw nlOn' ,..,..., tow\ NEW YORK .Aopro• f1M• Ptt¥10U\ c:Ny W•~lt •QO MQnlh •Vo v ... , •GO 'WO Yf'•tS 4IOt) JI" 1 IOl\dllle '"' to <l•I• ltl• lo <l•lt WHAT All'f• 010 NEW YOAIC IAP• "'O••,.c•d Ofocll!Wd UllC,,.1194'0 Tole/ In ... , Now hlOhl NO• IOWt fMd Lot• Nl'W YORK lAP• Th9 ~ 'l'oO s-' Er<l\<1119« ftopelf10<1 ~ .. ...,.. ltl ,,._ • Uon1 l>r prl~lpaf .,..,.,,tor F•~y Pur<"••H ol llj IH •hero• ••ttt .t 13'.111' ~,_,.,~ '"""°'"111 1H ah••et \OIO tho rt • 1'• • t.,, Utt tO.J t----------------"-,.. '> Up •• 1·1 • Up t J I~... • ,... Up t 0 ''" "' Up It •., • .. Up 11 -... • " u-eo 1· • .. Vo It l 1"t '• Uo I 1 1"'-• 1 • Vp 1 4 • • '• uo • 1 8 • '' Up t 1 1'•!\ • '"• Up • 4 ··~ .. v. •• l\o '• Ve> t.> 10 .. • '°' Up ., ,,~ .. .. VII • I '"-• \~ Up j • U .. • .... Up St )4~ ,,.,VP )I 1 I ~ Up U DOWtO u;~. c."t. Off~1io, 1n.. 1•·1 '°' u • 1'• •• u... • ,.. ,,. ·~ "' I " ~ -II,\ f: U ,~ . ,.. .. ,... • • .,,. t • j '" -.. t •• ~H• -JI" ()ti tf Jlt'\ -1-. gff H ,,, '• ' ~ .. 1... -~ ' • , T' ~ E u "~ . '-i H u•, .,. • t It~ ' '•' 'J: -I ) ;; ! J n • 41 1, H ·~ - ----- .. TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS Tele1'ision \111\.1 1 \, EVE.NINO 4.eo. Cl) OM llllWI • •I, • NCAA M8QT'8AU. ~ ft. l(~y for IN MtleNI llU• from SI, •• Lollis. • • • 8ffMIHOV Offl!. , ., Engine Co. 51 mall• It to the ftnllle of th• Flr• [)epertrMnl ba•lletb•ll l:::S HOa<!Y loe ~ Klng9 Ya. "TOfOntO MllCM LMIL • THE BRADY 9UNCH Jen ._,. 1 P'ctute of ,.., Aunt J«wr/ Wf*1 aM WU the -• lll1d dlec:oY--~ -look-allt ... • "°°°° • "T wry lt9 to ftnd °"' .ny In * fTteNt llunCMd • -•9'1 Mf'99IMa •ttllCk on • po1ce offloet. I E1.ECTNC COMPANY HISTORY Of MElOCO "New Spalr\'a Nonhetn Frontier'" 9 A8CNEW8 B appy Birthday D fRENCH CMEF "OUtlc:N Lonllne ~ Co." (At Cl) t100,000 NAM! ntAT 1'\M l1I WILD, WILD WOAL.D OlfANIMAUt "Biid Eagle" The Ille and nt11-IOoilOOd tlmM ol our netlonal 1ymbol are e1u1mln<tc:1. 1:00 II()) GOOD TlME.8 "Writ• On, Thelma" Thel- 11\A la acJtatlC wt.en her flrlt play la OhoMn f()f procluC1tlon, until llM dla- -. wtly. D UTTLE HOU8E ON THE ll'RAIAll "Tiie Hand)'man" c.,-o11ne ~ • hwldymetl'• (011 Qer.,-d) otter to ~· tllelr unllnllMd kMcnen In •114hanoe for room and tiowd. but soon ""'11 he<- Mlf the topic ol local goealp (R) D MOVIE • * * "Tile Big Sl9ep" ( te.e) Humphf"ey eog.,1, UOf) MOW **'~"KIM Them FOf Me" (1957) Cary Grent, Jayne " M-'leld. Th9 enllca end romantic eacapadff of ~llY alt omc:.r. Oii • lour· day INw In San Franclaco 1r1 Mpicted. ( 1 hr , 30 min.) Mary Tyler Moore and Walter Cronkite co· host CBS' self-given 91 :i·hour birthday party, lo be aired in segments. Second show will be at 10 tonight on Channel 2 Airings continue through Saturday. Ltureti Becall. A prlvate detective. hired by • -tthy family, Un<:OY9r9 9 mutder CAM Ind llnda romance (2 hr9 ) G O LUCAN "Parlllh"' Lucan, 1av1ng the Ille or a young boy, discov- ers he hu now lmi>«tled llWI lllltlll Of the youth'a enllrl!l !amity. Robert Reed, Ellen Weston, Robbie Alat, Frank Carnp9netlll, Sheli.y Fabares gueat star • KWITCH!D ID OtMEN8ION8 IN\ CULTUAE.8 "Ethnology" over the ownwshlp of 11 winning "bonut buck" Cl) AOAM-12 The ~ Hepzjbllll'• cleClllon lhat wltchw and mortal• don't mill 11 ;i;-w.. EASY (I) UN"T AM&.D WORLD "SIOfka" 9 MliAV GAIFFlN Guella Jaclf w~. Roger Miklos. Gordon ~ A drunk's anllca 1ppe11r to ~ harmless and comical, unUI he wlnda up In 111 accoc>ent G) CAROL BURNETT ANOFRIEHOS Guests: Steve Lawrence, LltyTomHn Cl) MOVIE Mitch Miiar d~ hia •" t~ ~ geronto- loglem r.Hldl; ec:tuca- tlonal po11lbll1ti.1 tor IWlloB; --.lul grmnd· S>Wlflllng I!) MACNBL I LEHRER UPORT • • '"' "Tne Mlracle" ( 1959) CerrOll Biik•. Rog- er Moore. A young Spani.h po11ul1nt 11tugglea bet--. her love tor • man and her reltgK>n (2 hrs ) m THE PRISONER 7 00 I LIARS CLUB ABC NEWS I LOVE LUCY Lucy and Ethel c:11tagree ID SIX 8EI0~8ECKE MEMORIAL F£STIVAL "Memphll Nighthawks '1) JOt<EA'S WILD Channpf Lbting• 8 KNXT (CBS) Los Angele~ 7:30 0 NEWL VWEO GAME 0 THAT'SHOLLYWOOD '"lnttant lmagJNUon '"II s Your fu~af' Th• Prtaoner la trlelled Into d1sco-1ng"' an asaaaa1- n1111011 plOl . . G KNBC (NBCl Los Angele~ e KTLA (Ind l Los Angeles 8 KABC·TV (ABC) Los Angeles ()) KFMB (CBS) San Diego CD THE BRADY BUNCH Orag d1acover1 he hQ made a blO m11t•k• when ne tnes out a ,_ hair ton. IC 111• kkl brOlher nu sold Nm ~ OUE PASA, U.S.A? The younger Penas· otter to INCll Englleh to their gr11ndp1ten11 backllrH, causing Joe to seel< 1 more wortnwhile project. ti) AOAM-12 0 KHJ· TV (Ind I LO!. Anqeh!S Q1I KCST (ABCl S.rn 011•go CD KTTV (Ind l Lo~ Angt!IP'i GD KCoP-TV (lnrl I Los Anqetes St KCET TV (PBSI Lo5 Angel~ A 1«H11 ol attack• on teenage gtr11 call• 1n Sgt G1or111 Tyler 10 March tor the culprlt 8;30 IJ (I) BA8Y, l'M BACK Ray Ellie lncor11 the wrath 01 Illa ectranged wlle when ne takee their cnlldren 10 th• racetrllci< and young Im KOCE TV (PBS) Huntington Beath fD LA INTERCHANGE "Platform 29 · ... Star 'Hooked on Opera' Cariaga Says 'The Cons ul' Appeals to All By JAY SHARBUTI' LOS ANGELES CAP> M arvellee Cariaaa. meuo· soprano by trade, wasn't dis· mayed that her v1s1tor knew naught of opera, that he thinks opera is where a guy In a beard gets stabbed and then sings about It. "Sometimes you can't find the knife," mused Miss C., who's starring on pubhc TV Wednes· day in Gian Carlo Menotti 's "The Consul," airing as part of the• "Great Performances" series. <Channel 28, 9 p.m.l SHE REGALED HER visitor with a tale of one ·'Tosca" effort in which the soprano was sup posed to stab a certam party. couldn't find the weapon and re· sembled a desperate diva in dire need of a dirk. 'Tm told she grabbed a bowl of fruit on stage and finally had to kill him with a banana," sb~ sighed in sympathy Miss Cariaga won 't be in the same fix in "The Consul," as It doesn't call for a stabbrng. The two-hour show was taped last May at the much-publicized 'One LHe' Studio Enjoys Longevity NEW YORK CAP> -"Want me to just walk over and sit down?" the actress inquired into the depths of the cavernous buUd· Ing. "Any way you want," came the squawked reply. "Just flop down on the sofa, OK? •."Now let's try it again." THE SECOND WALK-THaOUGH took maybe a few seconds aJ1d the noor manager, bas headset buzzing, strode toward the op- posite end of the building. There was plenty of activity around a nghted set there. The scene was a huge converted armory, and rehearsal for ABC's popular soap opera, "One Life to Live," was in progress It ~a. just before noon and the hour-loni episode would be taped ,tpund 5 that evening, after ano,Uler run-through and a full dress r,ebeanal. ; And that would be it. Into the can Cor airing two weeks hence, :.find on t.o the next epl..sode. ~ TV PEOPLE CALL IT "LIVE" because scenes are taped only once u ti on the ataie. quite unlike movies which are shot and re- abot to the director's pleasure. ~ The studio that bas been home for "One Life to Live" the past !.few months was built ln 1901 for the Army's 102nd Medical Bat- jalloo. ABC boqht the bulldlnf oo Wat 6Stb Street at auction in June Jf76 for $800,000, and spent more than $3 million converting the lortress-like structure into a IOUtld studio exclusively for ·'One Life tt> Live.'' wblcb la ln iu lotb seuon. Norman Hall, who a lternates with two others as director or •'One We to IJve.'' calls the converted armory "the beat studio of its type ln New York today. I've been doing soaps for 20 yeara," be • 1ay1, "and I've never been lD a place that's so 111f .conta1Md." Spoleto Festival in Charleston. SC SHE SAYS IT 'S about a woman who tries to rejoin her husband who has fled his native land for political reasons and runs afoul of bureaucrats and secret police while pleadini for an exit visa. "For me, it's the kind of story that would r e ach anybody whether they know opera or not,·' she said, adding the show as done in English. Mi ss Cariaga , a fifth - generation Californian who lives in Long Beach with her muslc- crltlc husband and their two kids, disputes the notion that op er a only ls for delegates from the highbrow set. "PEOPLE DON'T REALLY have to know much to ap- preciate opera, especially if it's in English," she said~ "You just have to keep an open mind.'' The singer, who taagbt herself to play piano while still a tyke, said she got hooked on opera at age 12 when her mother took her to a production of "Madam But· terfly" in San Francisco. Soon afterwards, she added, s he began studyini singing, studies that still continue even though she's a professional and has sung with professionals since she was 15. .. READ THE WORDS u they're 1un1,'' abe added. "That'• all you baalca.lly b•ve to do. You don't have t~ know anytblns ebout volce. You'll know when t0a1eooe'a 1tra1ning, when aomethine lan't 1ood. ''The eara tell you. It's not tbat. compllcated. For the leneral public, the less they know, 1ometlmea the better crlUca they are." TUBE TOPPERS KOCE ~ 8 .30-0ver ·Easy. Mitch Miller discusses his televf,sion career; gerontological research, education possibilities for seniors. NBC D 9:00 It Couldn't Be Done. Actor Lee Marvin narrates special highlighting the stories of man's con- quest of the impossible. KCET@ 9:00 -Meeting of Minds. Steve Allen discusses capital punish· ment, revolution, criminal justice and effects of slavery. Jordan coinee nome • blQ wlflner. CD 1121,oooouESTlOH G!) OV£A EASY Mitch Miiler dlacu-NI televllion cat-. geronto- logocal .-en. ectuc. llonal ponlblllll.. for MnlOrl; 1UOC41Uful grand perentlng. 9":008(1) M•.A•&•H WTllt> Chartea manegea to toe> Colonel Potier' a lngen- loul remedy tor • mor· phlne thortage, Hawkeye tnd B J hew had It with hla brand of on.-upm•n· ahlp Mean'Wtille. Klinger dltcovera a corporal wl\oee blzatr• behavior thrMtena 10 ourdo hi• own 0 IT COULDN'T BE DONE ActM Lee Marwin narrates lhla 8')eeial hlg/l/lgfltlng I he ttorlet of man'• c:onquett of tile lmpc>Nlble. with rnullc by the Fifth 01men· 11on and lolk 11noet SteY9 Ml* 0 @) ABC MOVIE 1t * * "Uttle Ladlet 01 The Night ( 11177) Linda Purl, David Soul Shunned by her parent• end uneble 10 get help rrom tile poUce, • la.iege run1way ltnd• herMlf drawn into the h11rd wono ol p1mp1 and pro111. tut• (Network advlaea vie-dlecrelion) (R) 0 THEIAJNT ''The People Importer•"' CD MERV GRIFFIN Gues11 Jeck Wneeler. Roger Mll!,loa. Gordo11 Cooper, Webtl Chllea, Lao Lebon. fJD ManNG OF MIND8 Stew Allel\ d'--c.p- llal punllllment, revoMlon, cr1mln&I )uttlce and the etfec11 of alavery on human belngt with Fredw- k* DouglUI (Aotcoe lAe BrOWN). Tz'u-MI (Beulah Quo), C.-e S.CCef'a (Robert Carrtcatt). and the Marqula de Sade (Slelan Olerud!~ fl!) DAVID ~O "Feeling Oepfeued -How To Overcome It" end "Seoood Lady Al The Wntte HOUM -Midge Costanza" 9:30 f) (I) ONE DAY AT A TIME "Julte'a Big Move" Julle't nnt a1epa Into the wor1d of the lodepellCMnt woman IM<I her to 1 moat IU(Jlfia- lng pl-. when the invh• A11n and Berblnl over to her new epertmenl for dlnn« (Pan 2 of 2) 10:00 IJ ()) CU: ON THE AIR Fifty ye.,. of comedy on CBS WI-be pr-led G..-1 II "'1hur Godlr9y George Burne, l.dle Ball end Beatrtoe Anhuf per- fOfm 1 bllggy pents dance number D GRANO PRIX OF L.08 V£GAS GUflta: Raquel Welch, Oennla WMwr, LHlle Uggama end Frank Oofthltl. 811 NEWS Cl) HONEVMOONEM 0..-Ralph'• objectlona. Allol ltdop1-. • puppy, Wiit! Ole '-* thllt Ralpfl "'* ~ teedl doO fOod to hie bola. • MtCHA.11.. JACKeON Gumt: Loe AngelM Col.wily Dllrtttct AttomtY Jotwi van de~. 10-.30 •• NIWI MAONU. I L84N'.R NJIORT 11:001 • 8 ()) 9 NIWI LOYI, AMf:AICAH ITYLI "low And The DootOt'• Hol...,oon" K9\lin flndl tNt b9lno "*'*' to • doot« oen be fNltramg • G MOW * * ._. "The Hard Aide" (1171) Robert fuller, Shet- ry Bain. A dtlCMrged M.,..,,_ r~ ~om Viet- nam end lnllerttt Ill• friand'• 11iper<yde and ~.(2 Ive.) •nt1000COUPLE Felllt plen• • -i>rlM ..,hdey patty fOf o.c. - who lotthH birthday ~ I LETS MAKE A DeAL OtCKCAVUT Gueet Aleunc:tre Denllo- VL Ci) MACHaL I LE.HAER REPORT 11:30 8 ()) C88 LAT! MOVIE ** "AUid! On The tta. CoMt" ( 1961) Uoyd Brldf- "· A~ Keir A Yltel Gefmll' tortlflcatlon on the Franch cout becomM the target Of I OOtl\IMndO rllld. (Al D TONJGHT 0.-t hoet: 8ol> ~ o_..ta: .Antnony Newtey. Heten Hayu, Killy Monteith 9 LOW. AMl!AICAN 8TY\.E "Berefoot In The Park" PW agreee to help °'-'I et ff' POUCf: IT~Y "The Vlolenl .._ lng''A~ pollce ••rgee11t. re· aAlgl'9d to hit orlgiNI ~hood. ettwnpta to heed off I geng Wll (R) fD THATOIN. "Peper Htta And Every· thing" Cl) GET SMART fD CAPTIONED A8C HEWS MORNING 12.-00 9 TWIUOHT l.ONE ~-·~ --lll"1o OM IMlp a .,....,.. .... Olli., ... ·~ ..... ~~ (1061).Mff~ lyn l<ew-. A cflwW ..... ' to loc* tor...__.,. he Inda out tie'• ....... to loee .. li009 ... clMl1G ~t.(lhr,aC>mln.) U:tO.MCMI •• "Red "'-v...,.. ( 1931) 6-19 Autry. A CICJW'o boy _..,. romilftoe and adventure In 1111 tr......,(11w.) • AlAE> Hl'TOtCOOK ''The Creeper" 11:11 • 8T ""'1MR "To si.ep, Pera-To Scream" Ricardo Moft\8'- ban. Pel Hlngle. A daCeo- tlw Ill• out IO ftnd 1he ~derw o4 a f9llow deteo- tM wtlo -inv.tigllllng ltl9 caM o4 • '"_,.. extracting lnformetlon from a drugged linllW:lar. 9 IAONld lronalcfe calla on lftlPeOIOf A9Me fOf help In crac:tilng a ring of Cf9dlt ewo thi...a. t:OO D TOMOMOW Rlcherd Scammon, a Wuhlngton-bued p<>IN- cal entlyll, dltCUHff PrMldent Carter'• d\anoa of r...i.ctlon. u 18PY "Tonia" 1:30 II Ill Cl) NEWI U71 NEWS ~ NEW8 ~ MOVIE .. • .,. ''The LOftgMt ~ encl ..._ .. Ctte7) Oouo McQure, Kat!IMM ~ 4:0451 Nawaa.w<m'IS 4:35 ITEVI! EDWARD6 Tll4!sday'• Daytl•e /tlol'les MORNING 11:30 8) • • • "Gu11man'a Wallt" ( t9N) Van Heffln, Tab Hunt« AFTERNOON UIO@) * * • • "Hts Gtrl Friday" ( 1a.40) Cary Grant, RoMllnd Autaell. l:IO 8 ••~"A Mlll'I Called Sledge" (11171) Jamea Garner, Dennis Weave<. Lucan Becomes the Bero Kevin Brophy, star of ABC's series 'Lucan.'' the story of a young man raised in the wild and no\\-learning to cope with MATINEES SATURDAY & SUNDAY "ClOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE THIRD KIND" (PGl WID ~N-f 00.. 4~7 30-tO·HI MOH ·TUES 7 30 & 10;16 "SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER" (A) W1D «.fl -1 20-3:~ :io.1ClllO lllONITIJU -~41 Ka ......... ., ...... u ... "RETURN 'TO WITCH MOUNTAIN" "NEVER A DUU. MOMENT" (G) "SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER"(R) "LIP:EQUARO" civilization. saves the life of a boy \\-hose family is threatened by mobsters in ''The Pariah," at 8 tonight, Channel 7. 11311113 113A\~l[) JIA\ZZ A\lr MONDAY NIGHTS March 27 April 1 O April 24 The Sensational 17-Plece Orange County Rhythm Machine Starting at 8 : 30 P.M. JJJ .,., .. ore .... Newpt11 .._. 673-2733 . ,,.,_ .... " ... . -.. -.. -....... f .... • - - • -DAILY PILOT Monday, March 77. 1978 ENTERTAINMENT I MOVIES I POP MUSIC ---~ Craze Brings C ~ Film 'Skateboard' Light, Looae By ROBERT OSBORNE fte ............. ~ Universal could make some money with "Skateboard," the rlnl major stud1o release t.o cash in on the cur- rent skateboarding craze around the country. Exploitation possibilities are ex· celleot, the only problem would seem to be convincing potential ticket buyers that there's more here than just an endless montage of stunts, as the title might imply. ( RaUn& PG) THE FILM -LIGHT, loose and wholly entertaining -Is actually more a tour de force for chunky A.lien Garfield than a showoff for those wheeled slices of wood. Directed by George Gage, Garfield plays a harassed and fumbling manager of a skateboard team, and he's terrific. It's not easy to steal scenes from ragamuffm kids or flashy stunta, but Garfield constantly does, a credit to his abilities as a superb character ac- tor. One sour note is the abundance or strong language, maybe lifelike, but unnecessary to tell the story. ( REnEW • being rubbed out by a hood <Anthony Carbone) over a pasl·due .money loan. In order t.o save hiS sl1n, he or· gapiies a pack of aeveo nel&hborbood skateboarders Cages 10-18) into a pro team for profit. Wlth henchmen breathlng down bis neck. Garfield packs the skat.en mt.o a ramshackle bus and ~eada for tom· petlllons. facing otbel' headaches along the w•Y: cqllabltat1on pro· blems between boY"sirl teammates, dwindling finances, the defection of a star performer, prof)lems wlth parents and an offer to throw the big finale race The ending is upbeat, but not pat N arnath in /ti ovie The script by Gage and Richard A. ............ Wolf (who c~produc~ with Harry N. Joe Namath, retired quarterbac:k of the LA Blum) has JUSt the nght .amount of RarJ\S_;md former NY Jets star, is all smiles bounc~ to keep the story airy and in· on the set of "Avalanche Express" being teresting, plus enough ~k~tebo8:fdmg filmed in Munich and starring Lee Marvin to keep the buffs satisfltd wittout ___________________ __, .... boring the unconvinced. UNIVERSAL FILM 'SKATEBOARD' CASHES IN ON CRAZE Leif Garrett Speeds to Finish Line In Downhill Race IN THE STORY, Garfield is a loser, constantly mWlching, close to ACTUAL STUNTS shown, most of them performed by teen-age pros, are more awesome than spectacular. LIMA WERTMULLER'S 11NIGHT FULL OF RAIN .. Ill "AMHICAH HOT WAX-lrGI A "THE OHE ... OHL Y" INt V, "I.-. of rlt* r•ttt.r" "Worid'1 Grecrtnt Lonr" ~ "LASH ILASr' lrGol I CKU8 -.r,flOHSt THI GOOOeYI Otll l'°I hM-a 4M:IM1»t•O MB i:{ffoo J ··n~~:· c•1 WAUP MAfTMAU "WIYS JHAOOW' ''°' P\UI --...;;.:...;..;;;..;.;;.;~ "YOU LIGHT Ull' MY llfl" tl'O I OICAI -TIOHI nu OOOOHI otll 1'°1 111)9 • 1 >O • 4 ., •• 41 •• 00 P\UI I Ml Ptl & Uf DUlTIN-MAH • ~':'"" STRAIGHT TIMI 1•1 1tl1~3t t~IO 111>0 • ) 00 • S:OO • ' J • 9 >0 .. , let "., .. lotCA.1--"fHI GOODIH Gll.L" ll"GI ,._,," ... " Ul +'f--t:ll-1:11-111-1'.H-.. M .-.. ----·· "OH GOD" lrGI LASH ILAST" lrG-1 I WAUll MAnMAV e Alllll s.rnc ~ i~°ii J "CASIYS ~u~DOW't'°I l "YOU LIGHT Ull' MY Liii" 1'°: WAUU MAnllAll "CUIYl IMAOOW" !NI -'"'-"YOU UONf W llT Uft" 1~1 f ,9'(Aa NOMINAflOMI tlOll. 1111 Of '"' IN l I .,,.,.... -UOICfMNo• .. Tops in Pops By 1be Associated Press The following are Billboard's hot record hits for the week end- ing Apnl 1 as they appear m next week's issue of Billboard magazine. HOT SINGLES 1. "Night Fever" Bee Gees 1RSO > 2 "Slayin' Alive" Bee Gees IHSO > 3. "Lay Down Sally" Enc Clapton ( RSO> 4. "Can't Smile Without You" Barry Marulow (Arista) 5. "Emotion" Samantha Sang (Private St.ock> TOP LPs l ·"Saturday Night Fever' Soundtrack" CRSO) 2. "Slowhand" Eric Clapton <RSO) 3. "The Stranger" Billy Joel <Columbia) 4 . "Even Now" Barry Manilow <Arista> 5. "Aja" Steely Dan <ABC> COUNTRY SINGLES 1 "Ready For The Times To Get Better" Crystal Gayle CUA> 2. "Someone Loves You Honey'' Charley Pride CRCAJ 3 "It Don't Feel Like Smnin' To Me" The Kendalls (Ovation) 4. "Walk Right Back" Anne Murray <Capitol> S. "A Lover's Question" Jacky Ward C Mercury> EASY LISTENING l "We'll Never Have To Say Goodbye Again" England Dan & John Ford Coley (Big Tree> 2. "I Can't Smile Without You'' Barry Manilow <Arista) 3 "Before My Heart Finds Out" Gene Collon (Ariola Amenca) 4. "The Circle Is Small'• Gordon Lightfoot (Warner Bros > 5. "Wonderful World" Art Garfunkel <Columbia) SOUL SINGLES I "The Closer I Get To You" Roberta Flack With Donny Hathaway (Atlantic> 2. "Flash Light" Parliament !Casablanca> 3. "Bootzilla" Boot~y·s Rub- ber Band (Warner Bros l 4 "ll'it You Thal 1 Need" Enchantment <Sky Tower) 5. "Too Much. Too Little, Too Late" Johnny Mathis & Deniece Williams CColumbial A moving story. A romantic s19ry. MA.HM 'THUT'US ,,...,.... ut.JJJt EDWAIDS THUT'US Cl-• YJeto tJMttO Cl11-• w_. H1·44tl Hert.er a.-64MS7J ,_ .• y.., 13'·1500 ALSO St..U.. Driore.. 6lt07HO lroola-.t 711·6446 l!t~U~~ p~'!r a JO day ad in lhl' DA.IL Y PILOT SERVICE DIRECTORY OOITNOW! 642-5678 lMEATAEl-ORAHGE CO SENIOR OTIZENS $2.00 SO. COAST PLAZA l411 lris1tl St. ,...1111 1110.-.... "CASIY'S SHADOWS" 1Af~l'4Mc»4111• _.,,_.._,....,..,. "UGKf UP MY UN" SAf~M .. ~IMI ~....- SO . COAST PLAZA ,.11lrtllllSLwm1 nu ra1111e ...... _. ____ .,.rorh "SATUllDAY HIGHT NYB"lll --somTMO PAlllS-- IAl~lt»W~M .... 11 -nlll-11,._l'l.....,N SO. COAST PLAZA .... ,..,_ "AMERICAN HOT WAX" tPGI ··--··· ....... ......_, .. ,_ _.__.., .. ,,._ .. CINEMALAND mu ....... b*illm.1 .. 1 llUP- "~HALL"INJ ... ,~,_. ... ,,.. ... ,__...., .... 'ISUHDS IN 'THI ~THAM IAf/91 1111111 flJ.1 MOM--.... •• CINEMALANO t • INIVER&AL STUDIOS TOUR ..... A'f MCAIXl~Allr QPtt;IOCO:.•' LA~i!OuAJJOPM "'House Calls' has an incurable case of infectious laughter!" WALHR MATIHAU GI.ENDA JACKSON • ART CARNEY Rlq.IARD BENJAMIN DAILY PILOT ......... . .,.. -,,.. _ .. A story o( envy, hatred, friendship. t.riumph, and love. "FOR PURE EXCITEMENT 'THE FURY' IS RELENTLESS:' G<MJA-~SWM• ·~ BRISTOL CINEMAS ..,,10 ~e o CINEDOME Crongv 'i40 1.a.ia oJ.:i 2553 STADIUM OlllVf·IN Crorig., 0 <;, .. ,..,.., &-;:INIV&RBAL STUDIOS TOUR ~A'f MCA O •.' ... '\' I • ,. .. .. "A thoroughly infectious comedy ... You don't have to know a nose wheelie ' \ from a tail spinner 'lit-to enjoy 'Skateboard.'" -... ~ - -.. -I * Including t"j~ .. * Best SClrHnpl9Y ~tllloll (PGJ "OH GOO'' '"• '0"'"'n'f'1 -\ \\ '"'''· t '"THEONE AND ONLY ... • -.. -....... -1 ~------ INSIDE: •Ann Landers •Comics •Horoscope •ClaJslfltd Mondlly, ~h 'Z7. 1978 DAILY Pll. i Ralph · Drollinger I '/ came to UCLA vety materialistically minded. My goal ! was to be a mi/lionaire, ·says the basketball player. Now, he says, '/want to Jay up trea sures in heaven.' By JUDITH OLSON Of U. CHllJ ,..._. ,_ The basketball hoop outside the Balboa apartment is the first hint that a former UCLA star lives here. When Ralph Drollinger answers the door, there is no doubt, as his 7-foot-2-inch frame towers above you, that this is the place. Drollinger, a center ror the legendary coach John Wooden, is playing for a different team and a different leader now. He recently turned down a $400,000 contract to play pro basketball but he believes his life is much richer than any sum of money could bring. Ralph Drollinger is playing for Athletes in Action, a branch of Campus Crusade, and his goal is to win people for Christ. .. It was an easy decision," Drollinger said of the rejected $400,000 proposal. "I came into UCLA very materialistically minded. My goal was to become a millionaire. But J began to attend a God-centered church and learn the Bible. My life began to change. My philosophy also began to change very much. I want to lay up treasures in heaven." AS A FRESHMAN Drollinger was a busi· ness administration major. since he planned to make a lot of money, but when his philosophy changed he switched to environmental studies. His main goal now is to enter seminary and become an interdenominational evangelist, perhaps another Billy Graham. Though his life is centered on bis religious faith, Drollinger is far from a dull athlete who does nothing but shoot baskets and recite scrip· lure verses. He is a polite man who listens patiently to questions he probably has answered hundreds of llmes before. He willingly shares glimpses or his life but doesn't try to push his beliefs. His apartment, which be shares with four other members of Athletes in Action, is simply furnished and filled with books and stereo equipment. Drolhnger is a gracious host, offering his guest a comfortable chair and a glass of refreshing water. his freshman year at Grossmont High School. "A close friend who played a lot of basket- ball challenged me to go out for the freshman team," he recalled. "I was kind of timid. But I was playing on the varsity team by the end of my sophomore year." Drollinger. whose father is 6 feel 8 inches, and bis mother 6-foot, grew a fool m two years and reached his present height al the end of bis first year at UCLA. His early years were spent in Boy Scout and Explorer activities and he did a lot of mountain climbing with his father. When il came time to choose a college DrollinJl!er had no problem with variety. He was recruited by 200 schools and chose UCLA because of its venerable basketball leader, John Wooden. "Coach Wooden was a big factor," Droll· inger said. "I thought he had a lot of character in his life." HE ALSO CHOSE UCLA because of its location. "There is good air in Westwood. Thal meant a lot to me." Al UCLA Drollinger said he realized for the first tlme what real stress was "I was naive at first about how popular lhe Bruins were," he explained. "There was a lot of pressure (lo win). There were a lot of spoiled fans." Drollinger also said he lost copfidence at UCLA after "playing behind Bill (Walton) for two years. I found myself comparing myself lo him after be left and coming up short, rather than accepting myself for what I was." It has taken him several years of playing with Athletes in Action lo get his perspective back, he said. "Though I encountered a lot of trials at UCLA I learned a lot. God used those years to build things in my hfe. I have a peace that Sur· passes all human comprehension now." DROu.JNGER also learned a lot about win- ning from Coach Wooden, whose halftime talks often brought UCLA from behind to win. ' • • HE STRETCHES his 7-foot-2-incb frame on the couch while he talks, comfortable in sports attire. Wooden emphasized "the proper execution of fundamentals," Drollinger said. "When we were behind he would appeal to our confidence. He would assume we had the capabilities and make corrections from the physical angle. Wooden had a lot of confidence on the bench." Ralph Drollinger: Playing for a different team now. Drollinger, born and raised in La Mesa, where bis father designed mountaineering ~utpment, didn't start playing basketball until Having confidence and WlMing is still an important part of Drollinger's life in AIA. "To make what you 're saying at halftime count, you have to win." he stressed. "We concentrate on 'total release.• on our total best effort." When he's not concentrating on basketball, Drollinger climbs mountains and enjoys an ac- tive social life. Delly l"fle4 ....... " ....... .,... Fashions by Andrea Odlclni: Exquisite fabrics, multi-faceted pieces to put together Oscar Wants Yoo The amuaJ national pastime of trying to guess which movies will win Oscars at the Academy Awards ceremony April 3 is un- derway. It was a big year for romantic comedies, sdence fidian and, after a long dey spell, mov· ies about women. But regardless of who or what eams the bardware on Oscar night, the Dally Pilot would like to know who its readers feel deserves the golden statuette. To cast your~ you are ulted to fill out the eontest form and return it to the Dally PUot no later than Wednesday. M~29. Entries should be addtaaed to Oscar Raee., DailY Pilot, P.O. Box 1580, Cocta Mesa, 921821. Reault• will be publl1bed lbe da1 ol the Acadamy Awards ceremony, MondQ.ApriJ3. BESI' PH.TUBE O .. AIDlie Hall." O ""!be Goodbye Girl 0 O •·Julla" 0 UStar wars. U D "The Turning Potnt. .. SUPPORTING ACTOR. 0 Mikhall Baryshnikov, "The r.Nmlita Point." . O Peter Firth, "Equus. •• D Ale Guinness. ··Starwan ... Q J Robar as ... JullL" D Maximilian Schell, "Juli " SUPPORTING ACTRESS 0 Leslie Browne, .. The Turning Point." 0 Quinn Cummings, "The Goodbye Girl. .. 0 Melinda Dillon, "Close Encounters of the Third Kmd." 0 Vanessa Redgrave, ••Julia." 0 Tuesday Weld, ''Looking for Mr. Goodbar." BEsTACTOR 0 Woody Allen, ''Annie Hall.'' 0 Richard Burton, .. Equus." 0 Richard Dreyfuss, .. The Goodbye Girl." 0 Marcello Mastroianni. "A Special Day.'' 0 John Travolta. ''Saturday Night Fever." BEST ACTRESS D "-nne Btncroft. ''The Turning Point:• D Jane Foqda, .. Julia.'' O Diane ~.aton, "Annie Han:• O Shirley MacLaine, ''The T\lmlng ~t." [] Marihri Mason. "The QoodJ>ye i;1r1 ... i ( Weleome, Bienvenue A new business helps executive wives overcome the problems of moving. By JUDITH OLSON Of ... CHlly "'~ SWf It wasn't a "light bulb idea" but It has bri•btened the lives of many people. · Lynn Wallace, creator of Bienvenue, a new welcome seniee tor corporate wives, said the idea arew slowly over several years "then blouomed." The aim ol the ne.. business whoee name meana .. welcome" in French, ls Sln\Pte: to help newly tramfernd executive wtvea owreome tb 1oriellDeu and frustration tbey mcounter Wb movtns. It'a Cl penooalb1ed service, Mn. Wallace noted. "We make contact on a one-to-o110 . ball•." Mrs. Wallace, a former Junior blah and hltb sebool teacher, and her partner. Carol Put.oH, aro hired bJ loc-1 compani• to meet wtvta of tbelr newl.Y transferred executives and help them •et SOUied. They Uke to call the wo cm the l)bone before the move to introduce tbemselv ao that. tht transition wtU be 1moothel'. Once the wom•n are ln the are.a Mn. Wallac or Mn. Putore lnvttes them for coffee (&M WELCOME, Pqe Q) .. --I He dates and bas a circle of friends but con· siders his roommates the key people m his life. "We're a family," he said. ''We all room (See RALPH. Pate C2> Odi •• CIDI The sumptuous, sleek clothing and ac· cessories by Italian designer Andree Odicini have come from his palaizo in Genoa to the couture salon in Fashion Island's Neiman· Marcus. A recent formal showing of the opslent and sensual collection included both Od.ielni's alta moda (or haute couture as it is known in Italy) as well as his ready-to-wear line. An originator of fabric and clothing 4iesigns, Odicini is also a successful interior designer H"is palazzo in Genoa is both home and place of work for the young Italian, who also sapet'Vises the manufacture of his designs himself. He uses only the finest of Italian silk prints. crepe de chines, faconne and matellasts for his collection, which includes evening pajamas with tunics, evening dresses, long dresses (which are equally appropriate for an elegant party or a comfortable evening at home), short dinner- dresses and short daytime dresses. Typical of his glamorous looks are wide leg evening pajamas with deep cuffs, accessorized with silk threaded sashes. Fringed belts and scarves add an element of surpnse; large, generous squares of fabric (some have tassels> can be used as head or body shawls or fanny wraps; side slits on tunics, skirts and sleeves flirt with a bare arm or leg. Colors range from black, red. khaki, eream, turquoise, yellow and beige. A tasteful use of gold lends an attitude of sophistication, while geometric prints, border pnnls, jacquards and intriguing florals add another dimension to Odicini's clothing. -Marcia Forsberg Lynn Wallace: A way to say hello. I ~ .. -$ ..... ----.. -....... -... ..... ... -- (2 CAIL Y PILOT Monday, Mateh 27 11118 A · Look at the Stars •• .Ralph l>EAR ANN LAJIJD"8S: .. JOU tC IS la •N+'Cl'1 I u..a..tr ..... ~ L I, .... ...... ........ &llaii9 ... lt .......... ~ bit 1a .... ._.a a.t et ..,._ l ~••e • ...,. very lDt •• a Hwds wlao W\l1Ct 't ..U..a 80¥8 -· 1 • .. g tWr ••t...-Ce1"8. Tbeae .,.... ._'t ' ••. Tlaey are a.aat pr ea•• cal•. lawJ••· doc41M'a ._.. •.-en ex bC a &. Plmm itve me,._.flomk~ A.an.. .. CllMe ...--... um ..._ ... 8lblff? -GS?RD DE.&.& GEii: I laan •eHr .._.. a pu& deal ef aUeetba to my •oroaeape bll& wlMta yoar lee&u a.t.ed I decided .. die* I& Mt. .......... ,..,. .&&II. I am a Caacls. My boAM ape 11 MJC for todaywu•,..._~ CANCRK (J•ae %Waly Zl): Y-are s7mpa&laetle ••41 uadersta.._c ab«HK odaer ...,... pm" ms. T"9F Ualak 1• an a Reker.~ ....... .,s pa'UAC Mipf/11. 'l'U&'a wlty y09'll aoiter make ·~.,,...ell. Me9&~nalflw• are OlpceJ' peop&e. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Ke. a IUY ol J 1 wr:1iDC to )'OU. I ~·t belfJire lt. Bat I've beea ttit rib • s-oblem I caa't handle aad maybe )t(N can help. I am ia lowe with a ~--------------------------------~ girl wi.o ts 14-!Ile b [ ] . great to be wUh and l ju"t caa't see mysel! gomg wn ..,._,, e1se. n.e~:5*ehas -had 9e.I( beiore -with .._--------------------.------------~ fiye other l•YS to be By SYDNEY OMA.RR T UES'DA Y • MARCH ZS ARIES <March 21-AprU 19): Emphasis on long -range projectiooa. perreption, feelings about future. Exp.and horizon.a, see beyond the inunediate. Elecnenta or luct., timing ride with )IO'J -stick wit ti number 3 Deal conli4'dly with Gemini. Sagittarim penons. TAURUS (April 20-Mey 20): Being tboro11gh will pay dividends. Check leases, legal requirements, arrangements atrectiDg partner or mate. Money 1s in plcture -protect valuables. Study fine print. Aquari.os, Leo, Scorpio could be in picture. GEMINI <May 21-June 20): Accent on rights, permissions, legal obligallons . .Spot light on public relations, marital ~tatu s. Virgo, 5ag1ttarius and another Gemini figure prominently. This is time for change -based on analysis, careful planung. Time is on yolw ~Kie Uefuse lo be rushed into hasty acllon. Mamtam balance and exact -a ad bas humor. admitted sbe was SCORPl9 <Oct. "loose" with a few 23·Nov .. 2~): You earn others. I've been m.o~e 1f 1odependent, invoh·ed with several w1lhng '-? take a chance chicks befo!-e this ooe, on original concepts. 50 1 should be ~e to Leo. Aquari~ persons forgive her and forget c o ~ I d f 1 g u r e about her Jast. But prominenUy .. In mat~s somehow I just can't. o~ speculat1en, s~1ct Tbis is tbe first time I with number 1. SpoUi~bt bave ever been la love on valuables. protect~ng and I know it's the same po.ness1CJM an4 locaung with her, but I can't lost arUcles. erase ~ other guys SAGITfAIUUS <Nov. from my mind. If I 22-Dec. 21): Follow break oCf I'm gol.ng t.o be through . on bunch: heartMck. but I think I answers will .~~-from have to do it. Please within. !a..ke inJt1aLiv_e m help me. -HAUNTED teaching, lea.rnine BY THE PAST p_rocesses. M1ss1ng DEAR HAUNTED: pieces . fall ~nto _place; De wbat you hne to do Y?U wall gam Vlew oi an1t 5~ how It 1oee. picture as a whole. Mayhe you'll meet Cycle is high -be someone yoa like• well confident. direct,_ or beUer. If not. yoa independent. You gain ju 1 t m 11 b t get a added recognition. ' dlUerent perspective CAPRICORN (Dec and decide yoa want tbls 22·J ao. 19): What had glrl after all. My advice been an obJect of fear ii. to split and 84."e where c o u 1 d n o w c a u s e it goes from there. ~aughter. Yes. press ure D Jt: A R A N N as removed -you solve LANDERS· J married a a mrstery. Shadows, man I knew only two dancing lights can bl' weeks It was the second viewed with an eye to marriage for us both. art and beauty. not w1th Talk about love at first s us p 1 c ion. Gem in 1 . sight thl.s dude Docked Sa~1ttari us persons me ~ut from the word figure inecenarlo. go AQUA RIUS <Jan Now that Joe a.ml I are C A N C E R < J u n e 20· Feb. 18): Accent en man and wife I'd like to 1 21-July 22): Low key fulfillment, romanti c know more about bis d1plo111ahc approach 1s interl~. frie~hip -past. but he rel\a!Jee to necessary . Domestic you will be active anc discuss it. Ria pet adjustment ngures creative. Scorpio, Lee phrase JS, "Some day promrneolly Line up a_nd Taurus persons I'll tell you everything services, get aecessary figure prominently. but I'm m no sh.ape to rPpa1rs on schedule Relalionshil> is getting talk about it now." Maintain slE>ady pace. serious Know tl and 1 wonder lf he's biding ad here to diet-health don'~ be caught by sometblog -like a rrso lutions. Taurus. surprise. prison record or a Libra and Scorpio <.'OUld P IS C ES < F e b . couple of wives. Aay play rol~. 19·March 29): You get advice? -PAGING LEO <July 23-Aug . notification which SHER.LOCK.HOLMES 221:Ideassparkk!,click causes you lo assume DEAR PAGING: ::.-..=c ,=~ _ ................ ..... •&.Ul &1M~S: Tim la a-. PIMH a... ....... Allll6elf....., Wied • 'SMeMa•• flnt •lt· pca4 la tJm e ' in 19". The r.....-wile aeat It ••• lul w t• R••r1a watd• ~-.... -.-.t-).y •• ,... a !Ml • a..e.-s fNmpooplo .......... I WNle it.•• or .. my "-itater•• •r ••my ~WllllllDtt.,ek. The -8 ~no ,...,....,...,..,. ee of Ute tl'lle 'I 3•p wae ,._..e Artmlr J . Staaley. Jr. •f LeeT••• ... K s. HJ.a --.er. l!lllllie lm.- d-filt='•· et -Lin-coill. Ir-cs, mt~ W-. tile tllllllW • re-~ -......, -el$2Se from tbe Caerce Liv-~ m. ...... Com- pany « B: ' t 1be re- SMttb aad ...... ta- ttoa was preiiri"-1& by Forrest R. BlackMmn of the Kansas State His· toricalSodety. Judge Stanley alae in- formed me that tbe poem, as it •P9t3 se4, wae '"gwb8r --, at a 1.-er date, I ~ .flrlnl the poem as it w11& writ· ten by Beeli.e AndelrMo Staaley, and ,..a c• ~ sure tt will be property cretlit.ed. DEAR ANN LANDERS: rve.~lleen goiai with Mr. n.. fer three years. He ~r rowed $2,0te from me aft« our sua .w.e and promieed to pay Jt tteck wlaen the inlleritance from his aunt came through. He g.t the money last. ~. said he was sorry. but be laad other debts that were more pressing a..t I'd have to wait a while for my money. Yesterday, Mr. H. asked me lo loan him another $1,000. I said I was sorry but his credit waso'l all that good wilh me and he'd have te look elsewhere. He became very upeet.. said I was "no frieod" aruA now that be sees my "true colera'' b.e is auce I wouldJl't make a very good wife. So it was "Goodbye -I'll see you llr<Mlnd.'' Did I mate a wus take! Sboule I have taken a chaace and loaned him the $1..000., 1 am. sell~ enfl not rich. -SOL VENT BUT NOT LOADED DEAR 80L'fENT: Ne• l doa"t think 'YOU m ai.e a lllAildeke. This ••• ~......, 88' ....... ..,. .. « ~..., .... Meul tille aree. Ka. ,,.,.._ • c.r..a .. _. r......,tt. is a MPS' •' I t• fw 0 M -. -" lbe HAliNr Area. .. We &I')' ... ..-e -.e .. Mn; 1c• •w Cs 'J a ..-I--. .. she said. .. We try te pt .-e e 0 "'...-.c. We say. •r&aai.ere. T~'re .._ .. sake tt'." ~ laas·C!llflee wida Mlle--.. .... s tbem wber<e llllortl'a« oeM«s aalid••••1BS are. helps thea fiall ....,-eitter's., ,.ma. ltM9l • elll()lo.y- ment ~eies and bas n.wers St!llt Crom the compaey. M.-t ei 8'l sJa. takes time t. llste.n. "TIM Ls .&e• Che f...-t.11 cir fit1'a traosler." Mrs. ~ .-ec. "l luwe ~a*>&. ol ao:ate- ~Y ~==~~:~·aad She.. M1 a1n*M-"ldlb the "lene· ly wil.e ~=..-was tea-?· ea Jmsois. New st~ woUI .._ cem1e .... ""baw>t' and aft.er ~ ..,dt llS -..s te tMef' thera up, Mrs.. W..See IMi8i:la l• ~ '3lef were just refle<!tilie the att-.ses « their &6et:s. "T• mcOms were ._ cmes ~ were un- happy. 'Ille fa6elog IAted tWr )Ms taut the molhec'I we.e akane." • Wba6hetried .. 99l ~ isa.Uved an the clwoom.. she lea.Jaetl part .i Uae "'8IS4D for theird~ ·''nae wtf e doesn't catTY her clledentials along with Iller.~ Mrs. Wall.aces~ "Sbe may bAn"e jast wedted knell ap to being presi- dent of PTA CW' lltiel-ehllt m4I she baste et.art all OVe!" agaill " Mrs. Wat.Lace tQes to show •mpallies that her senri<.•e is ~al lo tbem faancially because oC the ping·pang elled ol tile wife's at- titude "If a CDBB oumes to work happy b.is pro· ductiv1tr level will ge yp," sbe said. She emplustzes that hers is not "DOt a re· location service, but a weklNne serYice." "It's easy f« me to raake meruh. It's a gift," sbe assented. "My life has been enricbed by ll." Hew does a ~· learn to make friefMis easily? "•y eet · c eut of y-.elf and.lliftae to somecme else," Mn WaHaoe •wae.t. . ''I .40AMJwoes Ml tlile IDOl5t t'M I prGblem. Y4Ml abmltd 9lert lay .,uag 1io.-a:1..e else, if it's just b hs'r'W :mu t. ao-· at L" Wo.11111 w'9 .,_.& moftl4 a illt .. y M t.il'f!d of mekile ta.e 6r9' aw:ctllii e, MJl6. Wdace 8111- ndt.Led, W tt1tte Sl6i Mr-1-y is tbere lo take over • M liliet. :Ura w~ M6 WJll'ed oe.enl times nentti-110t nrp , e wMe. IMMle • e1. smce sbe tnet her ••uyi -a t-* cowt in Newpott,.Bw). boa sb.e ~ ~ ge- m g to neiw Jia,oe6. Her secret• to ")Get am.., as a el&C.it· m~ ~adoc ~· mad ~e ~ makewta·'tJ'~~ .. ''It'& ~IC ~ ta e Vf!lr7 toy. tog waer;· slse aeeene.4. "It's ~g new hontlo9 ... .e ... way yoa are only eat ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- U.-lDMeed ., $3,000 or m Q'be men. Mr. R. bu ....... his trDe celon. u lte .... ... break off wltla 100 beoaue yoa 1efwe4 to Joaa hJm ••1 aore m•ey, a barcata be wan't. member of opposite r o 1 e o f g r e a t e r Asklog quel&loos 4ilarlag sex pays meaningful responslbi.lity. Room is l'Ottrtshlp ls called c-ompliment. Morale madeforyouattop. You "socto&oglcal reeean:b." soars you're going can neglect opporturuty After marrlace lt'a places and yeu are to outline plans, caUed''nal&i•«·" aware of il Change, concepts -or take Pamj)l:Dg Joe DOW wUJ tr ave I. variety, adv~nta~e of it. The m a k e b Im m 0 r • aeativtty are featured. choice 1s your own . relactaa& &o ulk. Lay S treamline m~thods, Superior is willing lo off for _., -be •&1 techniques. Get rid of listen aad give you open ap ,.._, be feels dead weight. Seek beoefiloCanydeubl. more aecare. If be happmess,notwtrigue ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22>. Build oo sold base, ~et down to basiness, maintain seU-esteem. refuse to be intimidated by one wbo as sanclimon*s· Older persoas play a.gnlficant roles. Learn from experience, taut 4on't be mired in traditlen. YOU can create your own tradi*>os. f'd--A VOTE FOR UM MEL SCartBelng TheWxnanlbu WantCDBel ~t PERS()tjAL OMl.OPMfHT & MOOEUNG SO-.S OltAMM •-a CIOl .. 181' Does your group need to rais funds 1. llllplBlalf 2.-.... ....... ,,. 3. Easy ....,.,,, .. ~""" ~ MEW Cl.AS51!5 R>• IHG $.WE $7..00 PLUS l!GIM YOua 9IR wmt A saMDA.! OM US! lfyWr""°"'"* w---·v FEE ""WIY Sl oo org111'11hn..... liiillaU. ~ • ca11== SleDder Spoon Restuaaanf andaku.teme.11 7tl2 ~. llazlillgl• le.dt ~-= C411 IM »Z2 fw ct..llMws GIUHa. BR"'*l THIS AD R)R VOUJll FREE SUNDAE ANN LANDERS / HOROSCOPE * TftREE MONTHS MEMBERSHIP $34.00 *REGULAR PRICE $68.00 LIZ CHILDRESS L..,.1 :>umtTI'" l:lz -n.qfl MOOO P••-e. sne "'"'"''M 111t 1i.&twne. her ~nuf\ an(1 ~ -a .... in •n l'lur syet•m 10 ••41n walk ~ WQll& h6wy &nlOll ... an(J h9f •IXAO< u~ n-. 10 ~ '"*""9· Sile, ••. i.w.ct .. ~-l>ot .... .,..., 81>1 n S ' 01 .. 1 lhe-.e.&w...--" ~-IW• .._. . __ ..,. .. oew.tt ........... F'INillr ... a OSI • ,.,._h M1 I ................ .,. .... ere A C $ .. 'c' ,.,.__..,v--..---1111111 n ........... ...-.---. _, 1 ..... .....,.,. • 2 _ ........... . ~ """1 pa I JI ...... otlellg9d. rro•o to cs • ..._._..""' ,_.,. ... II ...._,...._, .. _ -~ ... '" •:;~11 411et.' •v_...... 1u:•1M1et""or1N1l new ~u.uiy..,,._ IJtitend-ng .. 11----,.u .._......_..Lil 9QOf8 """' W.•of -· '~ •.. I "'"""'• 21\ ,, .... 4.). •l,,J..~ , Gitt Ollrflllolttea. •I ,..,......,.. ,,.. (..,/""" ~ l»-1 JWM~ • ~, .... "9fit,..,......r, ,,, ............... ,,,,. ... ,...,_. +lol • ....._,..._.......,_ .,,.,,,....J..,..._.. __ .. -1._,-,_. 6 \ &104' '9tAJ 9'erius de c./Vlilo l. ~r. ~1·cl11t:t11G ;i:id F• 1u1.• S;1lon MAGNOLIA PLAZA '°"...,..... ... ,,' ... ,.......,C&~ f"NIOMe '714t 900IDZ OTl*ft ,, •• -.."011&---A1• ,;a S.. 8 .......... Yuma Pl C.--C..1904a, C-.....,.,.,. ~ ..... ..--. ~-.... ~ ... den 4l-. ....... ---· L.._,~,P'.,,.~~~ ....... F• ..._ .... !Wl...,.~e~e ........ Her~WieottMe. vctonll• f-lllln .....,...,~.._ UBllA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Aoceot OD iAleea, movement, •lalts. telegram which p,..'t'Wes verifieelon for acUoas, views. Finiah what yeu start. Bull4 on acblevements. not specuJatieo. Arles ls In pletvre. ADlltber Libra ceuld slag tbe blues. ., .. IOClll ---n--253131 ~ 4.,llM/78 r11••••-v• ._ __________________________________ ~ L~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-- PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NO'JICE PUBUC NO'llCE PUBLIC Ne"MC E PUBUC N9TICE ~ .. ,. F .._ ...... ._ ....... "" -"' ....... .. I .... -MARMADUKE " " ..>1 ~ ... ~j":::.'4.t.. -. ~JM ~.J~" ~"' • I.µ-_·' ~ . . ,. _,,.,v ~ 3·27 lo 1911\HlllMf-t~ lot ~.t..ct~J ''How was I to know the dues were changed to dog biscuits?" FUNKY WIN KERBEAN CASEY MOON MULLINS \ GERIATRIX SV,WHAT ~ur 't.Jl,..l~~N'f~ f='O~ $E:NID'Z$? ----- MISS PEACH A~THv'2- ~EVllW!, f -rhe • MOVtes I ~ > 1 -------.. ~,. 0 ~J.D! ~ . 11 WI(, i J05f l WwA1' • ( l l'IE~OiD.1 I '.l 1 FOuNO ~~ MDflr ~ote· ~UI.. 5PO'r. AWAYF~ f.vE.~fJOO'T', Wlf H ~01U1NG IO DO. ANO NO Pt.AC~ 1'0 GO! "P!Ti'' O~AGON " I~ PLAY INGJ AllOl.ANP 1'1-4E CO~N!lt F'"OM ME ... by Tom Batiuk DOOLEY'S WORLD by Charles Rodrigues DR. SMOCK by Ferd and Tom Johnson GORDO .IT1SA LOT CHS-APER 10 Do '"THE 'TENANTS IHANTHE ATTIC l/KE, HERE-A SPACE6111P J.At.J~, A Hi:EAKY LIT'TLIE- ALIEN ALIGJ.IT~ ~L.t'SUP TOAGUV Of./ THE STl<EET AAIO.s.4~1 by Mell Moncllly. Mlrcll fr. 1971 PEANUTS ALL Rl~ff, BEFORE UIE 60 ~OUR MIKE, l'M 60IN6 TO CALL THE ROLL A ume REMINDER ... ltMEN I CAU.1MEROLL, TME COAAECT ANSWER 15, ''HERE!" veRY (f;IOOP .1 vou weRe RIGHI A<SAI N .' DAil Y PILOT' ('3 by Chnles M. Schur~ I ., t I~ by Roger Bradfield by George Lemont by Gus Arriola TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE • TAKE ME10 VOt.R WAFF=1.Ef(f' . ACROSS dome or n1u1 I Collection of 63 Spe1k pepers pubtlcly 5 Serpents 64 Entert1lnment UNITED Feature Syndlcale , Saturday's Puulll Solved. 9 Perslln 66 Anxloua ,_.,., .......... _ ............ ._..... guellH 67 lmpeluo1l1y 14 Labr1dor 68 Within ore Prefix 15 Small creft 69 Shrlvelt 16 Lauo 70 Delight t7 Ina Siano pe1ceful 71 Holy one1 manner Fr abbr. 19"·--· Gen try 20Scoff DOWN JUDGE PARKE R by Harold Le Doux 21 Alrcrett future 2 r W1nnino -lKA.m-L---1 SAM WA5 EXHAUSTED! HE SAID WHEN A&&EY SPENCER Rf P£ATEOlY CALLS 5AM DRIV£R'S APARTMENT WITHOUT GITTING AN ANSWER 5HE 6E<OME5 CONCERNED! HE WAS GOING 5TRA16HT HOME! IT'S f'OS5161.£ THAT HE WOOLO HAVE TVRNED DOWN HIS PHONE OOT THAn NOT LIKE HIM! ~I CXXJt.P USE: A MAN 10 FW1E: N16Hr HE:RP.. words 23 lntenee teer 25 Singer Delli •Pol 2Glf1'1n1me 3 Afao.ran 41nHfted 26 Utter 5 Bebylonlan 28 :~:;;outh 6 ~I I VIII-27 Be Inclined 4 7 Traverses dor 29 Ankle 49 DMcended 32 Rower 7 LIH colof· Prehx 52 Neap ind raisers ful 30 At 1 epecrhc spring 37 Cut vlolently 8 OealQn time 2 53 EXl>l'HI •P· 38 Reeentment 9 Ridges word• prov11 39Reglonof lOPetroltum 31Vehicle 55F1xed leo• eoorce· 2 32 E11ence amount of 41 Maun•·-·· W'Ofdt · 33 Struclurel duty Haw. 11 Brenchea device 56E1t1way 42 ::':in 12 Sun dlak. 34 The but· 57 Forbidden ~5 ...___ ..... of Ver tocks th1no1. In-~ .._.m, · 35 SandQlper form1I llme 13 Femou1 36 R1l1Qlou1 58 Neg1t1ve 48 Excite ~-llfOUP .afdS 60gr~~~of t8 "Et~n 40 Levantln. 59"Dlea-• O • ..,.... ketch D1y ot ... ,. Wharton •3 Smoke(a Wrath 5t Pace1 nowl 1cce1sory eocr~ 54 Selected 22 Bandleader 44 Clllmlng Slang 56 Dulk to ·-Lewis horMI 61 Welah1n1n'a dawn 24 CUrllno sut· 48 Hungar11n 92 Pr9'lx tor face compoeer ' I 42 & 't I' oks ·<kl ilh •r /( .11 I .. 076 •••• oih 0101! ever an' fC h I y '-4121 di'< schl •~I m ann-t ' ft 3 rm Hll-. . :-un 1r3)!•• s il I 11111 ne '" Can ide of '· re id1atc RY R-4121 1078 •••••• -•• 4<il u a n .rd.a bk n con ns .. 1 •., '· win uilt·ins. • paUo. •· thru • c: •II :'1 Sun p, call \ J J \ . ~ C4 DAILY PILOT PUBIJC NOTtCE '90TICS TOCAHDITOlll IUfle•101t COUU Of' TMe IT A Ta Of' CAUllOtlNIA '0• nea CDVWn' Of'~· ........ _ 4hullt" l'IVlftCU M. 'OU~ll) '*-. NOTICI IS Hr:11r:ev GIVEN " I <-'-' .. "" ...... ,.. ..... --ttlet Ml ,..._...,,."II cleima eHi"• U. Ml4 _..... We requlr .. to Ill tllen., wfltt .. _, _.,.,_. I .. •fttu • h u-at .,. .ii. .. .,, tit ... <-'. flt to lit~ -. wll tJ>e -•UMy -"'""' Ml Ille 11n d9nll-• h Ollie. of Vfrt .. a S<l\ec;k, Inc; .• 210 NtWMrt C:.fttt Or'he, fl. o. ... mo, ...._, 8Mcfl Call"'"''• tlMQ, Wl\ldl .. -,. ... NI~ "' .. undw19'ff '" e l1 m11 eer. penelnlng tom. 11>tet• of w1d de < ..... ,. •flNI\ ~ .... 11 .... ,., first publka!IOI\ oA INt noflt.e O•ttd I'..,,_.., a. me EcllarR.l'olktrl AdmlNtlretor of the Wiii of the libOW Mmed ~ 'tl•Tu• ANOICH•CK, INC. "" .... ,.... c..-onw fl.O. h•"91 N--111Md1,CA._.. AttwMfl Hr AMllNlb.t• l"ubfllhed or-. c....1 o.u., f'11o1 Mart11J1-Acw'llJ,IG,t1,lt71 , ,,,., PUBIJC NOTICE fllCTITIOVI IVSINIU NAM• STATEMINT T ... IOll-lf\11 perllOl'la er• 0011\0 ~1 ..... ~ l.l l'E· REALllA TION BOOl<S. 40 Ee$! 1111\ Sl'"I. ~llt I, C:O.le Mn.o C.lltorn1a tzt21 Tl\• Y-Unltr •nd !.PHllu•I Wotld Society • c:..111...-.. ,. "'"" f'•ollt Co<PO<•lMln, ~ Eas1 11th si....-. ~·•• I, Cotta~ c.11100>1• UU7 Tiii Gvt\I o4 N Y-c.<llH 41\0 5-!'1t11e1 WOrld $oc'*IY. • COf'llO'•Uon Solt, US E .. 1 11th Sltttl, S.Ult t, C-W. Mew. C:..lllo<l\1a U"17 This buslneu Is conouc tt<I Dy ' "'lner'111p Oft-corpcw•llo1>$ Tile Y~ c.<ltur &. St>lrltwl World Society. • C:..lllornl• C«POr•hon T W BM'ton Viet Pre>loent r1111 "•t.,,,..,t ... , 1111c1 .. un ,,.,. toullly Cltrk ol Or•n11t County on March ll, lt78 ,,,, .. , Publhllt<f Or•noe Coa>t Dally Poot Marchll-Apf1IJ, 10.11, 1971 . 121•·71 PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS IUSINISS NAAlltr STATlMl!NT Tnt 10110 .. 1"0 ,,.,..,,,, ••• doing bus1neu ., TOTAL CDNCEPT. 6'0 Glt""'IY•« StrMI. L•llliN BH<ft, Celtlornl• tM.>I Phil Llghluy 00 Glenneyr• StrMt. l-llu ch C...lllorn1•9~St J•Y 0.Y .. t., 1t14 ~ltlO A11e,,ue Lona e .. cn, c:..1110<n1• Kevin Si.Y"e, l.lOtl S11v1t Untern • 10j O•n• ~nt. C.l1f0tn•d Trth Ouilnes~ 1, con<Ncttct by • flmlled R#•IN""IP PM LIQ!ltlty Ti'l1\ \l•t.......,C W4'1i t1lf'd w•th IM County Clerk of Orangot Counly on M•rcn tO. 1911. "'"• Publl\rwd Or-'°4•1 Ob1ly Ptlol Mer<t\ ll, 10, llano Apr11 l. It/I 1007 ,. PUBLIC NOTICE f'ICTITIOUS I USINl!U NAAlll ITATl!MINT Tnt loll-Ing --. I• doing 1111•1 n•)S •• GREAT SOUTHWEST REALTY AHO INVESTMENTS, 72"1 Sti•de TrH l•ne, El Toro. C.fllornl• 9M.JO Sllp,_ G F-y 12141 S,,_ TrH L•nt, El Toro, C:..lltornl• tll6JO Tl\f\ b11>1..ss II <onclu< t~d Dy •n '" <ll•IOu•I Sl•~GF-y Thi\ "at-..1 w•• l1led will\ 1 ... County Clerk of Or•noe Counly on M•rcn I, ltlL l'tott• PuDllsl'>NI Or-C.O.st 0•1ly Pilot llA.lrcn u, 10. JI -"4>r•I J ttll ' 100..11 PUBLIC NOTICE flCTITIOUS IUSINESS HAMl!STATIMENT Tr.. loll-'119 PHton II 00.ng busl· M-~~ ., AMBIANCE RESIDENTIAL ANO COMMERCIAL DESIGN, nn E Co.st Hl-•Y. Su•lt Ul Coront oe1 ,,,,. , C. I llonli• nus Maur"" ~ Ptttr•on. 20 St•r lnl>llt. 1,,,1,.. calll0<n•e•11u Thi. l>lnlneu la conducted Dy .,, In· dlVldv•I _,,..,.,..,.. Tl\ls •l•tarnent w.n 111"" .. 11n tllt t ountr Clerk 01 Orenoe Counly on Much to. tf71. ,. ..... Publls~ Or-Coa•t 0.lly Piiot. M•teh U.10,21-A4>f'!ll, 1911 PUBLIC NOTICE PlCTITIOUS IUSINIH l'IAM• STATIMl!HT WM I011.,..1119 penon Is OolnQ bv•I MU as APR DATA SYSTEMS, 1'2t1 P•rlUldt L•t>t, Hunll"OIOI\ 8HCh. C•lllornla '2M1 Richard P•trKk JOl\Mton, "211 P.,lltld• L-. H11nU119ton lla•Cll Catflornl• ""'1 lnts "'4119U ll c;ond\Kltd Dy an In divldu•I. lllldw'dP.~ton Tiiis &tet-t ,..., lllrd w ti\ I ... Counlr Cl~•' of O••noa County on '' .. "" 10, t'11 l'tltOI PuD11.i•..o 0r•llO" Coe•t 0..1ly Piiot ~rcn u , JD. 21 ano Apr11 J, u11 100.·1• PUBIJC NOTICE Pl CTI TI~ IUllNISS NAMSITATl!MINT The loflowl1111 119'"°"' ••• dol"O llll•IMU as: GOLDEN STATe l<l!Y f'UHCH SERVICES,~ e. OWlpmen Ann .. Full••lol\, catlloml• •:at.31 B•rrv w. Burl\ham, •4' G11m Place, BrM, Olllloml• •:iu1 Ed••rd Wnlcott, l.S..S E. 0..p. man Avent.le, Sutt• 8, ~ullerlon, c:..111orn1a '1IU1 Plus J Vall•, 254>S E O..pm•n Awn.,., Sulit I. Fullerton, C.lltotlnl• .,.,, This blnlMH 16 <OnclUtl•<I by a 09Mral Nl1NnNt1 e ... "a..r-rhls •te'-1 .. -. !lltd with tri. C011nlv Clerto of Or•nQlt Coilftty °" MMcl\t .. tm. ...,,., P111111..-Or ... 0.11 0.lly flllot -<"27Mll¥'HJ,I0.17,1t7' . 11n-ra PUBIJC NOTICE ' . ' •• Mond!y, Mwoh 2', 1978 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D· 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 n. • .,.,,~°"die O...•Coat DAILY · PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS YoU Can Sell ft . Find It, [ a ..-2 5678 ) One Cal I Service Tflldt tt With a Wrtm Ad v-. • F1tst o.ct!t ApprCMllll :::J"at•··-····1000.2'tt t .. 1 • fevrtd -~····C ~:::-···· IOOO'°" • •••••.•••• ..,...,, 1erv1c .. a ~ ~'°" .................. & 1,..-, ..... & Aiit~ ., .. "'-1111 • . .. ... 500().~ *' . . . .. 1000-"" r,. .... "~""" EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY ,... ......... Motlu: All real t!SlDttt ad- vert Is e d In this newspaper ls '>UhJecl lo Ule Federal F.rn· Hous itlg Act of 1968 wh1rh makes it illegal lo ad verUse "any preference. limitation, or dis cnm10atton based on race. color, religion. se~. OI' naUooal origin, or an 10teot1on to make any ::.uch preference, hmttn uon, or discnmmauon " Tb.is newtspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which i! in viola· tioo or the law. ERRORS: Advertl..,-s should chedl tMir ach daily and ~ er- rors lrnmeclat.ty. The DAIL y PILOT GISUIMI U.Wty fOf' th• flrst lncornct hturtlon tidy. ~forSaf~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1002 ..•..••.•.............. DU,LEX IALIOA ISLAND Slepes to beach. 2 BR l BA each urut Older. but weU cared for $185,000 206Gamet FOR MORE HOUSE FOR YOUR MONEY Try our WestchCf &-au· ty. 4 BR + den or 5 BR. 4 BA. 2 fplc:'s, cozy fam1· ly home. 1436 F.stelle Ln. Sl.85,000. ~~ Bcllboa Island Really \\1H\\l°'l~L"<T~""-Yr 673-8700 NEWPORT IEA.CH Highly upgraded, 3 bdrm, family & dining rooms, new brown pluah carpets, sparkling pool and lots of extras. Of. fered al only $128,500. Call 540--1151 ._~ HERITAGE ' -• REALTORS MIMl-«AHCH 48R. POOL-$66,400 YA.NO DOWN • Circular drive. Large family sized living room. Counlry kitchen. Dine. Wall of ~lass view of covered pav1lloo & lush grounds s urround Ing H&F 1''reeform pool. Separate wing for hide away Master Suite & children 's quarters. Hurry for this umque bargam' 963-7881 C~'tN ~.. 1urw AtNJ<I• [®IR&!UI 2 HEW LISTIMGS FHA·YA. TERMS Both are 3 bdrm bom• in nice residential areae • One 1s $57,950 w /btfl Palos Verdes frplc, fresh pamt inside. The other is only $52,950 on a quiet tree lined ell'eet also w/frpl c. These can't last. Call now I 545-9491. c::3 Walkr.r 1; ltm Real &tale HA.HOYMAM'S DRIAM Garage fully insulated. Built in work bench. Large lot with RV ac· ceas. Newly painted. paneling and wallpaper. Four Bedroom Home ln Mesa North. Truly • Great Buy for $78,000. 546-ZW OlfN ltt 9 •II llU!lt 10111 NIU (!llltdl ONE ... OCI TOllACH J'rom tblt dell1htful beach tttreat decorated w/creaUvlty to pnwide a homey, wooct.y feel· tna. I bd, 2 ba w /open beam cellln1s Ii ex· tentt .. use of mltt'Ol'S II peneUlng. Two btl1 p1t10 ....... Short walk to lea· nt. <OUJt Is public park. Pttced alubed *3,llOO. e>ns amdoQs.141J.nu. ~ Walkr.r t: l 1~1! ~:.~.~··"···I~.'::.~ ...... . GwroJ I 002 General I 002 ................................................ WANT YOUR: PROPERTY SOLD? We, at Bay & Beach Realty mu.st be doing something right, as we have been for the past 28 years right in this harbor area, because we have practically exhausted our inventory through an xlnt sales program. We would like you to visit our modern Newport Center office, meet our profess1onals & see our computerized operation at work. We believe we can help you. 759-0811 'fiuf 6fN.t C7'ul Wulttut 'BUg. ~!'! .••..•.... ~~~~,~~ .•........ !~~~ -~COATS & WALLACE ~REAL ESTATE. INC. A LOCALLY OWNED COMPANY SERVING THE SOUTH COAST AREA SINCE 1963 WAIT TILL SUMMa7 -Even if you're not thinking "Pool" right now, summer wlll be here sooner than you think. Buy this fine custom pool with decking and patio and start swimming by mid May A neat little 6 yr. old home m lrvine goes with it! Only $74,900. Cal 546-4141 **COZY HIDEAWAY WJPOOf.** Snug" 3 Bedroom home in delightful neighborhood. Live like a millionaire for only $135,000. Call 640--6161 Serving Costa Mesa-Irvine Huntington Beach-Newport Beach G.-ral I 002. GeMraa 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO. REALTORS si11ce 1H4U CAMIO SHOUS -$310,000 A most thrilling ocean & sunset view from this lovely unusual home with 3 spacious bdrms, den, formal dining. room & 4 baths. Beautiful private pool & patio, 3-car garage. Extra large step-down living room. Wet bar. WESLEY M. TAYLOR CO., RIEALTOAS . 2111 S-J ........ load NEWroRT CBnB. M.I. 644-49 I 0 Gen.rat 1002 IG.Mrol 1002 .........••...••.•..... ~·········· .. ·········· $59,900 WOW!! Deluxe Townhome! 3 SpaCltJUS bedrooms I Soft c arpets! Sun patio! Choice gret'nbell loca- bonl Close lo shoppm•. Owner anxious! Can't l&M at this pnce! Call &450303 FORESTE OLSON ·~ .,_.,.,,., .. , ... MESA DB.MAR Popular 4 bedroom, Z bath model with a separate master suite & kitchen with more cabine\ space then you will ever use. Lavish use of C!el'amic We bl entry, kllebeo & maatet bath. Full price '91.AIQO. CALL 566-2680 «;:SELECT T' PROPERTIES MllDHB.r? Help younelf to a Heaplnc aeledlon of Qualified Hopefuls tn tbe DAILY PlLOl' HELP WANTED ADS ChMral I 002 DESBTED EAST SIDE Sharp family bome, tree lined eul-de-sac. nei1hborbood. Submit ofters 1 Ca ll t oday 64e-nn Oflfl'./ 111 9 • • r s rutv JO EJr N•'fl [~'1111111 CUSTOMR2 FAstside-3BR.-3 car ~ garafe + potential. Act! Cal 646-1171 OPrlV Ill O •II S IVIV 10 91 NICI t THE REAL l ESTATE RS --____) You Woo't Bellffe Thia! Move now lo lhil luxury twnhse ror $3000 down + closing costs. Near h'eeway & occ. Fully decor, 2 bd 2 ba, end unit w/attacbecl 2 car gar. $71,000. 646·5145. Owner/Bm. WOODSY MnHGTS $9J,500 4 apacioull bdnn1, 2ba. cvrd patio, lge fncd yrd. Read.)' to move m. CaU Roy 631·2248 Bkr ...... 1002 Coldw8l lianlcar AfSIPENTIAl BAQC~ ~ ONE • OF· A· KIND IA YRtOMT Charming 2 bedroom condominium w /lovely bay view. Gracious double-door entry. Encl. private patio. Large living rooui, dlnlna area & country kitchen. Master 1uite w/atrium patio. ~~ous bayside deck. ~500 incl the land. ~· ...... ~:!.~~~~ ....... !~:::.~.~~ ...... . G...-at I 002 GHerel I OOJ •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• PRICED TO SELL FAST! Three bedroom condo ... Irvine Two bedroom condo .. .Irvine Four bedroon sOLlhe ... Santa Ana Tb.ree bedroom condo ... Fullerton Three bedroasoU>,me ... Anaheim Three bedroom bomtt .. Anaheim Three bedroom home ... FoWltain Valley Three bedroom home ... Brea Four bedroom home ... Anaheim Three bedroom home ... Yorba Linda Four bedroom home .. .Anaheim QUAIL (D. PLACE PROPERTIES. -752-1920 Inc. 1400 QUAIL ST.NEWPORT BEACH OPEN TILL l:JO ~~!! .':>:. ~ ••••••• j!!4!:!:! .'::. !'.'!: ••• _ ••• Cl .. ral I 002 Gte•NI t 002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• -°" IHDl.AM SPltMGS LAME Im presslve 4 bedroom, 2 story overlooking the entire Back Bay witb a v1ew of mountains and nilht lights. This fine home has 3 fireplaces, 2 family rooms, vaulted beam ceWngs and formal dining room. Tb.ls is a home for the f.amily tbat lives and thinks for themselves. Presented a L $275,000. U~l()UI: ti()Ml:S REAL TORS'. 546 5990. 1526 Mesa Verde Drive. East, Costa Mescr also in Corona dt!I Mar. at 675-6000 G....,.al I 002 GeMrol I 002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• G.Mral t 0021G1rAraf t 002 GREE:NBROOK llR + DEM •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 bdrm. 2 ba Extremelv popular CAMELOT mdi This lovely homl' local~ on a cul de i.ac "1thtn easy walking di.stance to So Coai.t Pla1a , thealr8 & re-staurants Many outs t11nd1n g features mclude Custom Draperies Covered pal.lo Decorator Wallpapert throughout Outdoor gas BBQ Auto Gar Door Opener Sl<yUght in Fam. Rm. BY OWNER 979 8123 Pnn. Only $109.900. '°Ol + HORSES Gorgeous a, acre horse property! Huge living room ~ den-with rireplace in each' Enormous family room. Wet bar. Rambling ranch kitchen. Spacious bedroom. Sparkhng blue pool. Barn. Tack Room & corrals. This one has 1t all for only S170,000! Don't delay-<:a 11 now ~. °"'"'II[ v. II s FUN rosf MCf. [ei lRlll llG CAMYOM 4 BR, fam. rm., 3 baths. Beautifully decorated family home with patio views from each room. $335,000 LIDO ISLE Newly remodeled 4 bdrm., den, 4 baths, li vmg rm. w /cathedral ceiling. Lge. master bdrm. suite. IAYFROMT Several fine bayfront homes with pier & slips BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Buy~1d1•011v•• N 8 615·6161 CHALUNGIMG! South of Hi...._ IAYFRONT w/rtER Corona cte1't4;ay G~ I 002 GeMrol 1002 .............................................. You have to see and Newly remodeled. Split lhen-;:1ve some thoughl level, 4 bdnns. 3 baths . about the exciting thmgs Oversized lot w1lh polen MEW-HEW IACIC IA Y you can do w1lh 1t' 5 al dd ,....._ b 1 bd Bdnns. family room. l 'n ~~o !i~tl: ~~~e s~1~: b~t~'.11fa~\1 ; r~m ~ HU TED POOL kitchen, large living rm. ming pool to boot' flreplare. Fully ln.sulat· $81.900 garaee w/chandeher S167,500.&t4-7270 ed. double gararre. Three bedroom N__....._ and some other interest· .. ..,_.,... • ing ··nooks ·-Terrific Easts 1de Costa Mesa. Riviera two story. Huge lO<'alion on the WATER u.iUH S-.id SBB.500. <P.S. Beller hop dllllog room or family with VIEW Also 8 large ,;. on over•) room. Gl1antic patio. front pat.Jo for eOJOY•ng '7~ Roy McC.-.. Walk to private tennis the outdoors A real op· REALTORS lllOHewporlle.d.. eourts.Call&t&-4477. porturuty for a creative .:;;;;;;; ____ ;;;;;;;;: Cosio MHa 541·7729 As K€Y person '"9 000 includes --------~~~~~~~~ ~ P.€ALTOP.S h land. BEST IUY ..,_ ______ _ YA HO DOWH! COMPLETB. y ~uli!lhttr!J l\•\l.HOA i<.,L,\:'\ I> • 673·'900 • Buy one-get the other Yes, 00 down payment one as part of the deal. required to buy this REMOOELB> Duplex-each with 2 beautiful 3 bedroom New Ya" pegged oak bedrooms. 1 bath, 1 car home. gourmet kitchen. floor _in kitchen. New garage. Prime Eastside large living room , d 1 s b area. $96 ,000. Call fireplace. and covered washer &trash compac- 546-2313. paUo. Located near the tor. Large ramily room 0111• '11 9 "' s "'~' '" 1·' ., 1 • Harbor and Huntington p I u s b i g d e n . 3 FABULOUS VIEW [®If~~ Ii ti! Marina ! One mile to Bedrooms. Sparklin g POOL Ir PRESTIGE : :i '°., beach. Priced ror quirk pool with 720 sq. ft. deck· 1 _ sale $69,900. Take ad 1ne. Cool cabana for Delightfully open and vantage. Call 96:H767 summer fun. Don't wait fres hly decorated 4,._ _________ N»Nl119 ·••\IVN''Hutv· ,. for' summer. get in tht- bedroom home with'" [ I wlm fo nl $98500 2~Hf£.:~;~~~J,~; ~;~;~:"N~:Wllff!J( ~~~~.'?.:.,.;, :"ttr;~~·.~;rig:lr:• ~4·~?.?1.C~t ~ [ ~ lff !ltl eludes the land. VISTA" m mce area' 2MD - Assume low Interest VA. Owner anxious-make WAll.RfRONT s ubmit your offer! offer. Excellent Ch ff HOME<, ~.Sin) open eves. Haven ne1~hhorhood REALESTA ... E lnt1 RE Ndworic Bdrm, family r oom, ~~~~6~31~-1~4~00~ POOL. ADULTS ONLY Beautirully upgraded one year old townhome in a country settan~. Bnck fireplace. air con· chuooed. earth tones. An outstanding value at $76.000. CALL 751-3191. -INVESTOR'S PETE BARREn DESIGHB> SPECIAL-$47,950 -REALTY-FOA EXECUTIVE Guarded gateway pro· LIVING tects lavish ground with 642-5200 t;:SELECT This beautifully up-pool. Secluded entry to ~ graded Buccola Home! executlve living room . -------~---- I PROPERTIES Spacious Living Room Sunshine gourmet ASSUME WOW!!-$77,77' with big 1''lreplace. ti~chen overlooks SS0,000-FOUR IB>ROOM Large Master Bedroom. private courtyard. ~579 900 Quick start is all you highly upgraded with Sweepmg master bdrm b ' need to take advanta~e private entrance to & child's retreat. Owner 3 edrooms. Located of lhis super starter garden area. Slump IS awoous. Submit any next lo central park and hc>me for the large fam1· stooe planters highlight offer! 847-6010 be~Uful lake, great for ly. Tastefully decorated. the room backyard. r"'"''' O•t1SfvNr.,..,11..,t<t• fishing and sailing, s ur-Parquet.tile entry. LovE>- Mesa Verde Living at Its [~ , I rounded by SlOO .OOO ly wallpaper, near new ;:~!~0~~:~9,::~:~r::.11 ~~ IUllU}f ::&':u~~~.~~:~ ~!:t 1r~~e~:i~!e~: [ -nf'fN'"9 '' SIUN• ,,,,.,,.,. spot.less lntcbeo. Won l -•~•l~ljll1{1J TAK::~v~~~SE [{Of lfl!llill1 ':,',;,:?.~~';'.",~ V..lli~~~z:.~% ~--:.-=-J !~rlfllllil NEWPORT HEIGHTS CHAIM ER Highly upgraded beauty w/lou of eye appeal.ulg wood p_an e lltn g. Spacious 3 bdrm 2 ba. fmly home w/modern ldtcbeo for the ladies de· ll1ht. Pool sized yrd w/rm for boat or trailer. New on market. 848-Tlll. CUE COD SSS,000/$2,500 TOTAL.DOWN Winding roadw•y to soaring z nory retreo t 1 Private O'OUDd protect secluded entn to lavish living room. Gourmet kltcben overloou sun· ab1ne courtyard I Wind· lna stairway leads to •weei>lnl mnter bdrm plua chlld 'a retreat! HurTY I Seller La anxlOQI. M7-tol0 C1'11< "' 9. ti s II.JN 101t M(f• [tURPJHI $56,900 8b•1'.P. 1paclou11 fmly eondo wttb chHrful trplo • xtra la.rl• room Miea thruout. Xlnl loca· b. autlf\11 iroundt crute park like aettln•. ltlll \"14 CID market. bet· tar td4 a loot I MG-Tnt. ~ Walkur r. lee lntm'l R.E. Network $78,900. SPANISH VILLA 11> ACRE-$71, 900 Red tile roof over Sparush arches leads to secluded entry. Oak beamed ceilings highlite liv. rm. Cantina kitchen plus sweeping master bedroom plus 2 bedrooms. Sprawling lot. Seller anxious. Try $7,190 Total down. Call Qwck 84Hi010 ()P(IV Ill 9•tiSll!N108/Mtf• l•:IRIU;I lla + IOHUS SlOlWO.-PA YS AU! Need more room? Tranafer your present equity here & assume V.A. loan-7 percent in tereat-$303 mo. pays all. Bil Uvln.g room Brick fireplace. Huge kitchen-family room. Giaanuc f.lnlabed bonua room! Priced reduced $2SC)O tool Taite advaa· tage of super price, terms & apace I Call now 752-1700. CJP(N ril 9•IISflJN10~1 lll>CI • [~lfilll lPYOU haw a Ml"flce to offer or r:oods to M.11. placs an ad ~_!!'~D~ P_'l,o~ Pbane IC-S878. For the discri minat1n1 RXBt,.UrPEll couple. Large master NEWPORT llEACH suite, formal dining, guest bdrm & bath. Gourmet kitchen. lnvlt· ing large living room with great fi replace grouping. Seduded and quiet, inside security gates. Pool & rec. hall. FoT appt. call 3 Units on 25xl02 lot. Owner will e-xcbange fnr Arizona property . $179,SOO 673-3663 833-0SZJ Eves associated COOLll" 1t\J.l! C.M.t'Wtz BAO~ ERS-11£11 LTOR5 l0 1~ W Solboe e--•1 ic•' GetMNI 100% ••••••••••••••••••••••• mecnab I lrvtna reeltg HAllOI VIEW HOMES MEW OM MA.um Terrific 3BR Carmel model w /lg. family rm. Excellent street in Phase 11 -near part & school. $148,$00 fee. (S.95) PALBMOI 2-story view home w/t luxurious BRs -new cpt.c;, lg. tam.Uy rm. w /fireplace. $178,900. (8-96) JOYCE EDLUND 6'2-8235 Ml-1135 644-6200 «11 Oooter Orlw Harb« Vltw tenw .,. lrvlfle •t C..M.-US V•lley (an_,. 752·1'14 I J; I' I ) l g r I• t ,. 111 llt J n. c . Ill ~·· I& '" n 11£ ~ lu lZl ••• -It I n •1·· Qin , .. ·ln -~. Un. 1ru 111 tn .. u - t ~ I I ~:.~.~ ....... ,~.~.~ ....... ~~!4!'! ....... ~!.~.~ ....... ~.~.~ ....... ~:::.~~....... Monc!ay.Mateh27, 1971 DAILY PILOT G,.,.. t 002 G....... I OOZ G ..... rtll I 002 Coda Mno I 024 Cotto Mete I 024 .,..._ f 044 Houw1 For U. Hou.et For 5* HouMt For S. •······•••············· .........•..•..................•.•.••••.........•.•..•......•.................••.......•..•. ·······••4••••········· .......•.• , •...........•.......•.•........••......................... blQgO OCEAN VIEW NEWPORT ftluallty con1tnactlon, 2 II, I IA, w /f rplc. Expu1he wallpaper1 =-~~-:.-:.;.;;:.: ~ . + 119 in kitchen. ..... c ............ saw•~ tt.~. Frwll doon •"l'"J to ~ ~k. Steps fr'Olll yot1r d~ to IMoch. $21 S,000 CANNERY VILLAGE IHVESTMEHT opportunity, Hc .. ltttt spedatty ahop location. Wood trhingled 'Ingle bulldlng °" fH Imel. $100,000. ·CAMEO HIGHLANDS CORONA DEL MAR .._,.,...,.a 1007 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Nk• 3 Br, 2 ba on Mon- tero. $1115,000 ManhAll RJty 67~ LOWIST PllCI ATllACH 2 BR 1 Ba. nr best bay Swimal!ni beach. Quiet street. pleasant neighborhood, Sll0,000. Kurr Whit~ l~~alt~r :?!IO I Newport Ol•d N D ( /141675·4b10 IY OWHU MUST SB.L HOW IY OWNER WOOOBRJD<a; PLAC"£ Lagiim.-... 1048 s.a...... 107' Sot c...... 1076 Coll~ae Park 3 br" dln Open daily. 3 BR + tum Specl•I of(erlne 3·5 •••••••-•••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• In& rm, covttr~ patio rm. Gale for boat ot lrlr. bdrm. Coli'-rnporary d•· 1---------------------------Terms to awt. Slt0.500. 186.500. 229 Princeton tached tamlly bomes In , LAGUNA IEACH 8SHI081 Dr MM67• OJH!n, woodsy dHi&n. CHAAMB Just abort walk to laJte & Oc.an viow from every parka In Village of room of this Laguna &>.Mt P• I 026 Woodbrtdae From ch.arnkr! Very private IEST PRICE Meta Verde 3 bedtoom, 2 bath witb shake roof, flreplace. & a great loca- tion at only $82,500. Alt ~1-3191 . •••••••••••••• ••••••••• Sll5,000. 5S2-<4101 pool, outdoor h v la e. walk-In bar, cathedral MUST 58.L HOW Melia del Mar 3 br, 2 ba, garaae dr opnr. Terms tu 1uite. $79,800. 831-9081 MIAR SAHT A AMA Sfl•"-M-loR Unique Dana Polnt land.lnart converted to 3 unlt.s. Perfect for owner occupaUoo plua Income. Ocean view. Impressive facade & immaculatelr remodeled interior NORINS REALTY * 494-8057 * COUNTRY CLUI Cute excitlne 3 bdrm cottage on a quiet cul- de-sar st. Great starter --·n-·o·w-u•Ra•--hom e By adding a "U\ picket fence & daisies Newer ocean view out In front, It can be Duplex, quality con your dream home' Huge atruction. 3 Bdrmll and 2 bk yrd w/lge shade tree Bdrms. $142,000. Agent/ RV access Better Owner. 67l-3620 Hurry• Phone today! -----------Only $7000. Submit VA offer ~9491 1032 &Toro ••••••••••••••••••••••• CHAMPAGNE TASTE BEER POCKETBOOK! Wt! h1&vc a Plan 2 and Plan 3 an Oransetree Both located ON THE WATER. Totally UP· graded with many addi· Uonal featurea. T~nn1s. gym, pool, 11pu and sauna. Under $53,000 ceillnp. '179,000 C:J Coldwel! Bank~r SAM CLEMENTE 3 Monarch Bay Ploia C.._ tw.. ......_ .._ wttt. ~ 496-~rzia ~fi~u6 wood ,_.. ...,.or • l·J lot. OW Woe• ~~~~~~~~ . to '" ''::t... Kl9oel. fow Moch to bHcla. Good ....._, nllu :ut ..._ or I 052 lavH ..... -$7l,OOO 499-4551 Laguna ...... ••••••••••••••••••••••• MOlrTHYIEW High oo a blcdf, over· looking valley & Sad· dleback Mtns. newer 3 BR w/lots of pnvacy on LAGUNA NIGUEL 495-1720 DANA POINT 493-8812 LAGUNA BEACH Wl-3331 ~uiet cul-de.sac. Seller Mlwpcri l.adl I 069 Newport leedt I 0'9 IS niovi.ng & must sell. •••••••••••••••• ••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• • caIJ toda,y ... $119,800. Duplex, two I br furn nr L.c.a-o"'9-1Rfffty ocean 29th St, NB 493-9494 496-2413 S 1 3 9, 5 0 0 . 0 w n er 495-SUO U0.5050 ~17!, 492-6172 ----------By Owner, 3 Br. fam rm. llG CANYON BeautilulJy decorated 3 br 2i,, ba home w /pool & lovely view. $315.000 Owner. 640-1841 Thia lnnoc:. l IR, 2 IA + deft, not oefy has room for poof, IMlt ia •wy near pY+. beach. R.-ed to S 169.900. 40' From back door lo beach. pres t1g1ous Peninsula PoLnt. NeWI> remodeled 5 Bdrm, 2 bath Fee land Sl8S,OOO Agt/Owner, 873·3620 New Condoe, 2 Br, 2""1 Ba, --''---------2 frplc's, ~eramic tile SPACIOUS CONDO Up&raded, 2 BR, 11'a ba Mountain views. quiet area. Owner wall help finance. tso.000 ZAGRODZKY RLTRS RANCH IEALTY 551°2000 JUST LISTED! l ba. Nwpt Hghts Pnnc. •--------- 3 Bdrm., n~ bath home, Only. SllS.OOO 642•9644 LIDO ISLE FERHANDo•s kitchens & baLh. Pool & HIDEA WA y spa. 67~12 Broker t.AGUNA BEACH CHARMER 2 IR, I BA. Walk to beach. Mnicm frplc., oc* floors, ..,_ced ycrd. Perlect home for artist, wrtt..., studeftt, cotipie, week.enders and anyOM who ..,.-.clahs Laguna chcrm. Only SI I 0,000. EMERALD IA. Y Spectacular •lew hom~ of fWtt quality o•erlooldftc) Emerald lay. rtrlKt family home for "-c>M desiring this great pY+. commiftty. HOJ darta oom. sep. 1t.dy + storage. 4 IR, 2 IA. $495,000. 644-7020 2123 SAH JOAQUIN HIUS ROAD NEWPORT BEACH I 002 Gt>Mral 1002 ....................••.•..••.••..••.•..•.••... HEW HOME Eastsi• C. M. Builder just t'Ompleted this 2 story 4 bdrm home Features inrlude: 3 Bdrm, 1 bath house on qwet Perunaula St ht time on market in 17 yea.rs. Agt MZ-3338 Capstrmo leach I 0 18 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Spectacular Bluffs. ocn harbor view, 3 Br 2' a Ba, pool. jac, sauna, ten· DIS. $235,000 OMNI 714-661 1001 CoroftO •I Mar 1022 ..•.....•..•.••......•• C~de1Mor 2 Bdrm., l bath homl· wtth two rear umts Well estabbsbed area & wull cared for $175,000. HORIHS REALTY * 494-8057 * JOG TO THE lliCH OCEANFRONT Charmin~ 2 BH honw , 2 f•ar ~ara.:e U.•i<t !'iWlm ming & h sh1n.: arca close to stores & r~IJurant.s '-'75.000' Bofboa Bay Prop. Rfllltors • 675-7060 • vaulted ceilings. 3 car s~=~~=-=-=..., garage & RV storage cozy 3br, 2ba + guest Hurry. choose your own house. Frpl, 2 patios, R 2 carpet:. Call 546-5880. lot Prin only $157,000 PEACEFUL PALACE A secluded p<JtlO wraps half wu\· around•th1s de '1rab1e· Trina Modl•I. ,,_,h1ch 51ts on a knoll rivt•rlookin~ Hack Ba~ bird sanctuary & ml~ 1\ real belol buv 10 Thl• BI u ff s, n f fl· r <• d at $100,500 C. F. Colesworthv ~HERITAGE REALTORS S&S QUALITY Seller moving & must ~l'll hLS 3 BR plus den. I '• BA S&S beauty. Wanb an offer this Owner. 640.7030 SUNSET PREVIEW Open Howe Daily 1 6 424 Mendoza Terrace. 3 BR. view $329,000 lachenmyer Rf'dty Inc. 646-Jnt S4S·l48l \\t>ekend & pnced at on· ---------ly $75,000 540-3666 IESTFORWS 3 Bdrm Condo $60,000 liSTSIDE NEAR NEWPORT FANTASTIC AREA Inves tors attention. Walk to Ralphs & all shopping. Creal fmly home. Jge Jot. New cpts thruout bemg installed. 3 bdrm bargain al only $86,000. Cull now for appt. S45·949l, GREEHIROOK 4 bdrm. 2 ba Extremel> popular CAMELOT mdl. Th.is lo' ely home located on a cul de sac wilh1.11 easy walking di.stance to So Coast Plaza , theatres & restaurants Many outstanding features Include. Custom Drapenea Covered patio Detorator Wallpapers throughout Outdoor gas BBQ Auto Gar Door Opener SkyUght In Fam. Rm. BY OWNER 979-8123 PT1n Only $109,900. Rf:DUCE:D $7,000 1 Yr old East Costa Mesa triple"<. deluxe un· its. ea w 2 bdrms . 2 ba . d1rung area, laun dq & frplc . Now $178.000 EVB. YN COPEl..t.ND REALTOR 552-0434 2617 REDLANDS Roomy 3 BR, 2 Ba , <'Ul- de·soc St Bat'k Bay area Sll~.~00 . Agl 675.ffiOO Reattors 640.00f o SUPER DUPLEX BARGAIN PRICED at $00,000 Nf'wport BPurh, Balboa Pcnin sulJ Cherk out thi-. supn bu~ with bay \.ll'W from up pl'r unit. Hurry, call 540·1151 llf ltelc'111 REAL ESTATE U p g r a d e rl , Wcstsid!'. 1300 sq.ft soundproofed, paneled, house + zoned for 2 papered. Lath & plaster, mor!' Park like area. ceramic llll', privatf' $74,950. Pnnt' Onlv. Agt. patio, pn vale court f't42·9666 • ~HERITA~E REALTORS TRIPLEX $70,000 All unit'I remodeled. nt.'" 11lumb1n~. panehn)!, t 111' & paint in & out 754-7800 yard Pool. sauna . BEACH VALUES PRICE REOUCE:D QUIET. Close to So --------- 5 Bdrm Peninsula Pt. Steps to beach. $189.000. 5 Bdr~ pn' ate beach Corona Highlands SIS!l ,0110 World Wide Brol.ers 673-4545 Coast Pla.2.a IYOWHfR Beautiful large corner lot. Corona Highlands 4 bdrms. 2 batlui, frnccd NEWPORT HEIGHTS yard. fixer t-e<' land $155.000. Agl Owner 3 BR·F \M RM + dining 673-3620 bnrk frplr. range, oven ---- & dishwasher 1n cl'd l•--------\er.v rustic. \ery dif rerent on 3 Je, eols $145,000 ••THIS IS IT++ IY OWNER 4 br 2 ba, cstm drapery & crpts Brick frpl & slate entry Van Lull walh:O\ ermg!_; Stained i:lass windows Kitchen prof remodeled w I rrucrowave oven, btchr blk & stalnle.,s steel Elec. g<1r w icedar paneling & work bench. Lo" malnt ~·rd w/sprlnklers Fruit & !!had~ trees Quiet st. nr !'lchools & OCC By Appl S57 43118 644 .37 !)4 $111 '000 494-8611 MESA VERDE WOOD e R r D G E e Y close to school & lake; GOIMG OVEISEAS OWNER. 3 Bdrm, 2 ba, new paint & carpeta plus Mootego HVH, 4 Br. 2 Broadmoor "Wildwood" a large yard· with ba, fam rm, near ne,,_, Und kl t$97900 mature fruit trees ...... r .. d oodd k Jmmac 3 Br+ w/shake er mar e a ' Pn ed h c • ..,... . ..,. Y • w cc . rool beauty m xlnt loca SS9 0092 c rig tat S9l,500 BY OWNER, 759-~ lion & perfect cond. Ask-Smoketree Twnhm. 3 Br, mA "~ WHldff llR/Den ing $109,000. Agt 21,'2 Ba, 2 frplcs, beaut il~tk:IU'~ 645-1103 decora"··•. Pool, Jacuzzi, Il3©filll'Cl""' Truly a showplat•e, """' ¢1 custom in every detai( . fomtainValley 1034 clbhse.OwnerS59SS73. 499·2eoo Better see this one ••••••••••••••••••••••• Transferred must i;ell View Condo on golf before it's gone. 1312 ONE OF Woodbridge2 BR &den, rourse, West Nine 2br, Dover Dr ,, Agent. THI IEST or 3 BR F'orm dm'g rm, 2ba, many xtras. $83,500. _6'2_07_58 __ Pnced 4 bdrm 1.11 Foun atrium. upgraded, Ownr4942248 LIDO ISLE t&l·n Valley Only rz7 950 lndscpd,. $99,950/best · •• ' ofr 551 ~ * • • • • • Newly remodeled, 2 lge 968-33'7l -----LlASE OPTION Br. 2 Ba. beaut oak •VA Sl75K• I ,,_,ork with Orange Co Vets onh. llomcs to HuRtingtOft leach I 040 Sl75,000 For info call: ••••••••••••••••••••••• Vet Agt. :>41-0800 S&S Resale Specialists ~ 3,4 or 5 bdrm model5 avail. some w/pools Turtlerodc \"lew lot. Real Estate 968--4602 brand new. choose nu Penrungton Properties crpls, t>ler fixtures 1 -bll)', 3br, fam rm, din EAGY SELLER rm Slti6.tl00 213 962 2111 Offer executn·e pool home w1secluded liv in 4 br for $134,900. 968 3371. HO PAYMENTS panehn1(. beam clgs By owner. $238,500 117 Via OH EQUITY! Vella Opn Dally 1 6. Th.as 1s one of the most 673-0022 tasteful and imag1.nat1ve homes in the area 1---------Grac1ous laving as of rered in this beautiful executive home. Extra large master suitc 2 pleasant bdrms, 2Ba. den frplc, gourmet kitchen and maoy ex· tras. The patio & pool areas are ideal for en. tertaining with an out door gas BBQ and lush landscaping. $139,000 BAL WEEK is thi s week f or thousands who would hke to Jive on beautiful Balboa l!!land It t'ould be every week for you & your family Call about this pre1.tlg1ous .f bedroom h om e Just steps from the beach Ex lg 4 brm 3 ba, mod lot, H:i lot, pat.lo, nr ten· nis & priv. beach . $249,500 Owner 675-~ CANALFRONT Rumpus rm. + family rm. w/pool table: 4 BR, 2b ba. Walk to beach. pools. tennis. A rt'1tl charmer. only $155,900 CAYWOOD REALTY INC 548-1290 IWE WHITE GEM Privacy reign ., supreme! Gracious family home> i n prt< st1g1ous We s tcliff Formal living room w /v1ew of garde n atnum' Formal din in~ room overlooks lav1.,h ground!>! 2 Fireplace~' Elegant laving at af fon!dble price! Hurn' Call 6'5·0303 FORESTE OLSON .,.., '-' h \.lll'*"' Owner, 3 BR, custom, elegant, i.pac. Huge Fam Rm. vacant Must sell, $11 2,950/ofr I 714•894 5641 STANALAND MEGARGEE REALTY 1714) 497·1744 ,....~. CUSTOM BUILT \J'I llU~21 Newport Hts hnm11 ASSUME VA LOAM Savt> thousands without having 20'.~· dowh. No qualifying, no credit, check. no closing costs Two day escrow. close to beach, $73,SOO Prine only. 893-5479 ap:t PRlCED for .~wck sale $67,950 FHA or VA terms Jbr. 2ba. gd loc Bkr ownr Cll 11 751 7760 or968-6894 JUST LISTED IB.OW MARk£r! WOODBRIDGE 3 BR dramatic EASTON, prof lndscpd & upgrd, pvt loc. 7 Clea rwater . $ l J 9 . 9 5 0 TURTLEROCK, charm· mg 3 BR. w/atnum & xtras 31 Bethany. $119.900. GREENTREE. 4 BR HAMPTON w /sun deck, 4331 Brook11de, 1104,995. For preview, Patnck Tenore. Agl. SSZ-4414 Immaculate 3 br I'• ba .. _______ _ ho m e. fam kitchen, move-in conditlon Close lo golf course & beach S&i.900 Tiffany Real Estate 846-e621, 5~·3393 ..............•........ WATERFRONT BY OWNER SEAGATE Custom llle nr & patio frplc, 30' slip water \ lew rrnt & btk. 3br. 3ba. 3 dHl<s. pool. Jacuzzi. lenni!>. dhl 1t.1r S23<t,OOO 714 846-'1829 213, 597-SSSJ SPA I HG HAS SPRUNG And you'll delight In this t'olorful and expanded Plan 43 In Culverdale A great location . a 5uperbly upgraded home, all add up to good hvang at a modest price. Take a look al th1"' one CaJI for details red hill~:.: .. 552-7500 JUST IMAGINE tht' room you'll havt with 3 bdrms . 21 2 ba . spread over 2200 sq fl , 2 Cireplaces. one In fam rm. & the other In mast bdrm. fo'ast l'~t'ro,,_, possible *****'* ~ r Cheerfully decorated :1 ~ J( ,. Dr. 2ba. View. Fullv Dream Houser. Marlett Real Estate beam ceil's, used bnd, frplc. 222 La Jolla t.n New. Spanish style 3 640.5357 642 9740 for appl BR. cer. tile entry, mstri--------- swte w/sunJcen tub; wet --UV Homes, Carmel 3 Bl! bar, large llv nn., frplc REDUCED SI 0,000! + Fam Rm. pvt yarct & conversation p1l, Mus t sell this week! $139.900 752 ·061 7 views & more' Only Beaut rondo-hrdwd flrs. ownr1agt. 1227.5001!>4l 2 br 2~ ba, den, +slud10 --------& ltbrary. Side ocean Npl Shores. By Owner. view. Owner Now 4br, 2ba. 2 car gar U)" $119,500 642 1242 or 9730375. evs 631 5483 H•·.11 f ,,.,,~ l11c 3 M1111,urt1 U.1\1 P l,u ,1 6 6 \ \ 161 831·3888 1055 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Up1traded Laguna Village Condo, 3br, 2ba, view Rec far. Owner 497-1426 MitsiOft Viejo I 06 7 .....•...............•. * * IEST * * llG HOUSI! IUY 4 Bedroooms and formal dining & clubroom+ bonus room. Great lora· t1on. nr La Paz & Mar~uerite RIGHT REALTY 979-8533 1069 . .............••....... BOAT SLIP +VIEW From Uus eleJ?anl 2 BR condo. So cln, you'll thank its new ! A ~l 5564175 BLUFFS? &t26706 LOOK!!! Westchff family horn~ 3 Lg. BR, J a.2 baths Huge den + fam rm Separate laundry rm 2 Bnck frplr.s Children's playhoui.c $170.000 NEWPORT IEACH REALTY 675-1642 545-3261 LIDO $240,000 Super 3 + den, rt>- modeled kitchen, dbl car p,ar. acrO!ls from tennis rru 1l blk from clubbse & bch. BathhousP & 1acuzz1 Call for appl I UllOU.llTS O~H MOUit llfl\L TV l7630r•"9• Co ... 1. Mt"9 __ __;645-9161 SUPER IUY $127.500 OLDIE IUT GOODIE I Blk to ocean: I bdrna home. offered at 1111 value, S98.000' NEWPORT BUCH REALTY 675-1642 BLUFFS '"V" PLAN 3 bedrooms. 2~ bath. A. fireplat'e, SeparJt\' family room ovcrlO(>l..s hangmg gardens. MOllPI home atmosphere w11h professional decorato1 ' tOU<.'h. Jus t l1St('(i /(, pnmr for fast sule ,11 $123,500 64.'i-7221 Omu~ ,ffD .. ~21. w Mtcliff Realty SCllt Cleme• I 076 ..•.•.....•............ VIEW+ POOL • GARAGE SALE ads 111 the Dally Pilot brinit JACOBS REAL TY 675-6670 SO. OF HIGHWAY An absolutely charming 2 bedroom c.'Ollage with gleaming hard,,_,11nrl floors and two sept>ralt' garagM Rt"<luced to on ly $134,500 •SELLERS* l..avmg in Nevada now In e~crow an Nevada Tenant moving out now 3 RR. 2 ha Cul de sac Mesa Verde. $85,000 ClwtstfCllMI lay Wohrlr0t1t DO YOU LIKE OaJc Parquet F1oor~? Used Bnck Fireplace? Ught Camel Carpet? Uover Shores Ar<>a, t br l. ba. compl redccor, & relandscaped FUrt for all the fam1h Spa<.'1ous 4 BR. danin~· rm & fam rm ,,_,,forev1·r ocean \'le,,_, Owner an' 1ous. has hclught anothrr, SJ 56.SOO f c " happy results To plan! Trarle your old stuff for your drawinp: card. new goodies °"'1th a phone 642·567R today Classified ad. 642·5678 IWwpott leach t 069 IWwport •och A Johnson Bkr 979·4964 Lee 4 BR 3 lie condo. $250.000 Pvt Ply. Call 7·9:30AM, 213·592-5889 No Exterior Main\? Owner will ftnanrc Dnve by. 1900 Oover Or Ownr I J\f!1 673 44'1 l HARIOR VIEW . BERTHA HENRY RF:ALTORS •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ..................................... ~iillOlllMllrOIOI •EASTSIDI llR + Very cln. lge crnr lot. Won't Last. 646-8025 Prime Water Location. Beautiful custom home 3 Large Bedrooms" Earthquake Ins? Sl36,900w/10"~ Dn? We've Got The Answer! VALLEY 640.9900 MONT EGO 21.5 Del Mar 492-41:'1 cae: 110181 BLllNS CD. OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE FROMT •ow IA.Y VIEW "Bluff!;" R Plan 2Br + Fam. Room. This Home Shows Llk9' A Model & Has A lSO-Bay Vlew. Huse Mstr. Bdrm. Suite. All·Elec. Kitchen, Formal Dining. On A Cul-de-sac. With Nothin1 To Obscure Its Great View. A "Joy Of Newport" Li.sting $175,000 aEDUCm SIOOO '· Owner Has D.raatlcnlly Reduced The Price Ot Thls "Bluffs" Townhouse $8000. ()ur Oln>ortunlty To Purchase A Lovely Home W /Spacious Bedrins, 3Ba. + Fam. Rm. Patlo Overlook• Pool at Ramada. $1'9,500. Owner Wlll ·Consider uue/Optlon, lllDOY8~ •NEW USTTNG • 2 sty, remodeled, upgrd exec borne. 3 BR 2 Ba, den, & deck w /v1ew towards Catalina In old CdM. $214,900. Brkr 759-12.111 1024 WOOOSTR EA M CONDO Nr Bk Flay, spit level. 3 Rr, 2 81, 3 car ~ar, 11uper decor. $94 ,900. Owner/agt. 548-7933. overlookina breathtak· lng Christiana Bay. 4 br & all the extras you can imagine. Price $335,000. Tiffany Real E:,tate IWM621, 59'l·3393 LUXURY WATERFRONT Spacious 3 br custom 2 DEERF1ELD 2 BR, 21"2 ba, 2 sty twnhse. Dbl ear. pool. $72.900 Ownr. 995-3591 •1VRTLEROCK• BY OWNER Spacious Exec.'uti ve homeo. 5 Bdrm. 4 bath w/v1ew in prestigious Dover Shores on Galaxy Dr. 846·2332 Prof. decorate<! 4 BR. 3br home. wlking d1<>- fsmily rm. lot11 of wood lance to beach, schl & brick. Spanish tile park 492·~ kitchen. Sl49.500 ------Call 640.S I I Z San Clemente Cusl m n c fl\'YLOU ( (JNtlU•"''Y nr~/\1 'rn11• cu v 1 'l)Pr ...,,. Jlil.IJllde homeo. Neanni.: ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ulre Chlckft Soup sty home. den. lrpl, hu1c . lt couldn't hurt to call liv rm, 'l"et bar. 40' boat E/Slde Custofb homt Chuck Nash about • re. dock. Entert.ainer'1 de· 3Br, huge fam. rm , 3 WIJ"dtng~IU'ffr in real( lite 1349.000. car 1ar .• on R-2 lot Agt est.11te. "ree tra.initlg i Tif(any Real Elute 3 BR 2 Ba Broadmoor, wtfam rm, dm rm, up grds Avl immed . Sll2,900, Lsebld Ownr/ ait. 7~1288 Newport Crest Twnh'le, W. Oceanfront 4 BR walk to beach. ten crts. beach house-. $295,000 pool, jacuui Agl MarshaU Rlty 67S-4600 646-7171 completion 2.000 sq. fl J bdrm, 2 ba, fam rm. breakfast nook fireplace, wet bar. sun deck, 2~ car garal!•' ll.U.000 No agenL<1 711 53H974 or 714 960-4180 Hr FasWo1t lslartd YIP Lagma leach I 04' "BLUFFS" Twnhse, 4 br, "3 BR W/SPA" 4 BR famU,y home in t46-nn you quallly. 540-5101. 848-6621. 592·3393 ~~~i~=:::~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~ ............ !~.~! ••••••••••••••••••••••• flmrm,ldntcond,qwet Deror•ted thruout, prestigious ''Can Coiy Capt Cod street. Act 646-7171 . htaut yard & RUnllhlnt' tamar" A real pnde of Tb1a la what Lacun• is bnitht. ownersbip home. H all about! BeauUrully .. ILUffS "S BR, LARGE" duced for immed1ulc JUST REDUCm!! restored charmtr. 3 J Bdfm ''Donita" plan F.leg•ntly det'or'd uletoS149.900. Bdrms., den. library, All one level. new cpu, lhruollt. for movie star BERTH.A HENRY A Chancellor• bedroom formal dlolnf room. floorlnJ " shutters. entertainin« & livlna. REAL'(ORS home lo Unlverttty •kYUt eowitty ldtchen" $145,000 Own/ Ast "3 BR CONDO" %1.5De.Ufar 492 .. 121 Park. Highly motlttltd MP&r•te arti1t'1 atlldlo. 833-1551or844·2148 evet. Exec home. European r_ L-and uxloua sellers have F.uy waUt to beach 4t deror'd I I Fe\ .--tu 1 t red u c • d t bl a uc-elJtnt ocean vkwa. t41W • mpreu vo. r ec.,&stw UiO I 078 •• ut•fu' ~ btdl'oom .... 500.. details: Property House, ••••••••••••••••••••• •· • , -a.ctary Sea View home Patrick Te~. 5Sa..,..l, .._ _______ _ ho'n,. .. u 'P• to HOIUMS l~n $15,000 OH qent •· $101,000. Tl\11 la \h• * 49.._~9"57 * 'brm 3 ba. afrplt, pool ----------· * * * * * * * lowest priced Wte bom• ~• jacuu' tennta, 1rd S!AVJEW Port Rcyal .2 IM CHUMIMC. ln the area. Newly _____ .....,.___ :;J.RY ri VAC ~....... R • 8 ..__. e&"""led~alnt--e '"d OWM YOUll OWM iata. v.r; P v. . ._,.,, • r, .. •·· .... ut. o I d Sa n J u a n dra• !::A. no--1 '' 1 ---· 2 84nn a bjlb O Owner" lO c~ bat No view, landscapin,, nnMt CaplatraM. ANordablt! """' "'" .,__.., " ' crtdU. Fu 11 prl ee upiradee. &e:.t bu,· By ·-atra/down.ortaln con ~~:.~.ion!~~~ UU,000. '7Sl·87U; Owner. 071,000. dr~n1um.a Bclrma., 1•., .... IAHCHUALTY 111·2000 1at •"allablt. MD-T778 -~---·------ballla, carpeUn1, win· NOllMS llALf' ~ IAYYllW dow C'O•erlno. built-ins. JUU•ft y • two tar carace • paUll. * 4f4..a057 * ....-~* Lf l br 2 be mobile 81 owuer. Mon. thru I wort With Or-anc• CO. home 1n exclu a.,.1tte Tbun. Cd11al, c 11 11 to UJe Ma~1 ' lift Vet1 Oll!Y. Hom ea to VilL Ch1bbN. pool, ,Jae., MWlJI; FrL thnl Sun + Jo(\ • ln>l• •• .,,. cn1.ooo. Far Into call: .,riv. beb, pou. boat (d&ya) • ~. call ....... .wdlo. kin• v.-tUt. 54)..-,0 aUp. $ST,SOO. t'll-1801 m•> aJo-Wllll. si.. ,4fUl12 871-18e ·-------------- \ \ •• ... . . . . ' e 0 (, 0 rr lt :h () es ia 1d cold vic- c:h tus El Jler Jnts 317 clrh o In· ~to who raid l~ Oion dhi!l W-.. r. ct biM ..._.. ~•MWthed Houtn Unfft... Houtft Uafuniblwd -'fie lw.,._ ,_.J.d ........................ ....................... ~····················· ·····~················ ········•······••••••·· IWLYPILOT Monc!!y. M1ret) 27, 1971 A.,a 1u:aHh Uidw1L ••••••••••••••••••••••• M1m&hrS. • Olilr .... llWe bi.......... . ... ,.,..._. 31,t Co.taMna 3JH ....,._ 3244 MlwpartlNdt U4t L.J-1Nc6 374' . ....................... ....................... ........................ ....................... •······•·•·····•······ .................................................................... . ....................... Ja%4 I s..a-............. "' ..._" ;rn, 2000 YJtt.Y a BR. patio. c.J, '!~..:.Eo•K• UJS mo. ti 21'a, fotan din rd>. FOR LI! .._SE LAGUNA BEACH MTR.•.-""C• ... -a.-.. -....... •c•-'. C .. htuac 1071 ..... I luO ....................... all the com(orta of g ..... ~ · Poplar mod. in Wood· s;A INN. ta/Wk• up. Maid --A-" -i -.................... _ ............................ i:ad Siii bome, 1 Blktrom beach. $48-3183 brid&e. (,'rt'eUlde Avail Lov«IY 2 bdrm, z ba up ler'V. C'Olor' TV, hcatC'd locll. a ...... Now 11 1"e...... One• BR 6 LbrM 2 BR, ~mo. CoU~e Park 3 BR 2 Ba, 2 amm9d. Walk to pool, per Apt. for rent at~ pool. (714) ~·lZN, 9IS All vtii. pd., cpg, ctrpwf' r The Encless room for more unit• m-441'7cw832·3d4 fplc'5, blt.ns. xtra Pam tenna~. pult, •chit le mo. located al 428h N.eo.t.Hwy. • pool, bidrJ t C"'1, Adult. I • ~ _, s.y.. ~ ~~ ~ LIDO ISLE. 3 Br, d~h. Rm. rover'd pllliO, dbl 8PlakMe! l~ ~~· Call aft ~BdrgODIL , . I .... ,. • ..... 37H over 3$, 00 r•h or i MmUaCGpe ll llano 87 The Sea. cc.a...... ....... ....... .,..Uo,.,.. blk to sar.$t50mu MG.4156 • ._......_. ., m, am rm vew ................. •-••• chlldreii. Ca• Sue:- T--..t..-• r th Hop Into th1a bHuWw _,._ _..,... -home, located in 11 $$1·7707 or Henry: t .. Wu.AA JOU see rom e boma by lbf beach with beach. 900 mo Lse. Lve DEERFIELD TWNHSE 2 private guarded area --------•I 1142•m ..C:.~~!~deirn2 t'~! aeaeaptlchmeta.Kida P'IJDIOF mscw/IPR6'7US20 O..PoW 3126 Br, den, 2 ba, wood withmanyameniUe.ror IAYRONT ~~~~~~~~~ ..,.,,._ ar pell wekome to eQjoy ••••••N•••••••.,.•••••• ~k. plush crpt, elec lease at $950 mo. %'125 3 BR, 2 bliths. Yrly,SSSO mua above SJC'a has UU. 2Br + bonus rm OWMEISHJ,. Mo..U.fwalllllld WfflTEWATER VJEW, 2 &ar opnr, nr pools, YacbtRadlaot. A.DULTCOMDO New 3 br, Z ba, E· t.ariC'al vau,y. Eotenom w/pnvate beach. 4·Plex in HuoUoiton ••••••••••••••••••••••• Br: 2\41 Ba b d k parb, schls Sorry no 3 Bdrm, den botnt>, 2 BR. 2 ba, yrly. Sf.ZS 5lde, deluxe, encl. 1ar. your frteodt by lbe CALIFORNIA PACIFIC Beach. Located In rapid· G • ertl 1202 frPf, gar, 5 :0 ° wl:c t~ pett. $465 mo. ~s713, located in Spyglass. S900 STIPS TO IEACH ~·yard. apartllo1 pool, aerve Mobile Home Realty ly apprecialln~ area ••••••••••••••••••••••• bcb & harbor, S48S. nu M0-7<112. mo. 36 Drakes Bay. 38R, 2ba, bay vu $1~ Mgmt MZ-ltf«t ~cti~roo~. ~~ 2706 Harbor, Ste 208 Moment.a to Fr~way & California Ranch. Sharp, pets please. 714-881-6581, Lease '595. Carc:lmer m· 2 BR. 2 Ba .. yrly. '400 New,~ Br, 2 ba, all blw. aatber lo the a.rcbitec 54().S83T beacb. Priced to aell. vacant, clean, larae 4 aflS. eluded. 4 BR, 2~ Ba. air frpk, encl. iarage. tural WJ'~ ot the l iving call S58-332'1 Broker. bedroom a SOS per BR d cond, 2 sty. Avail. now. petio, lndry rm, $125. room. We are offering _._ &--ir...i-I 200 month. Cati 962·7788 or 3 . • en, 2~ Ba, ocean Neow boa:1e.WQOdbrldge. TSL Mlmt 6'2·160.1 ...... t "-b , ... _ -.._,... .._.. ~ S4.9-95$J Vlew. Pool, Jacu:r.zl. $625 Comm. pool & lake. Kids ......, II Ywo Tiii w:uca ut ... •••••••••••••••••••• New 11 unit.a & older 7 un· mo. Omni, 7H-e61·1002._ Is pet OK. <>wner/Agt. Almost new ~ br. 2 bw $139.too. its on •dJoin!ne lots ln HOMEFINOERS S»m twobse w /encl. gac-. c.,. c ..... Riiy HORSE RANCHES CM. TakEe eithher one or Thousanda of Rentals ,...... v..n-1234 -_l_ -On theti BaDy. 2 lBr. 2 ~·· ~~~~~~~1~$325~.:_'!6'5~"'-'~S~Uf!_!;~&TP~·~~-,74-4700 11 both. xc ante or AllareaaaUprlces _..., Lo1J11Ma.oc. 3248 pa o. up ex. o:..: _________ ,Large ones, ama e r owner will carry. 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• garage. Yrly. $475. 223 R-&...&..a...i~i.t Lari~ :J Br town.bouae ones. new ooes, llligbtly Samp e: Must see to beUev.: ! 19th St. Ph 67J.2'106 ...,..., _..... •DIALFA.MILY used ones & fixer up· Sil0-7766 '140 Bach fumutil pd ffuge 4+2,btdpool,$395 Ocean vu home, 3br, Vie have lOOO 's of apt, 2 ba, .rrpJc. pauo, ffOMI pen. We have them all. 'I U C?I002brfncdyard 2 cuear or all (9ti23) 2~ba, in preatig1ou1 HVHoma, carmel. 3 BR houaes, dpw, apta now, 1arqd 1.~ Quiet :m~~ \n Jllasloo Park. 3 BR + BKR. '2115 IBr pet.I reoced ' Portafma $750. 49'.M820 + Fam Rm, pvt yurd all areas. a 11 pra ces u ...,, no pe · Yam1ly room hom e <7l•)6'76-5717 Best Clll area-1lelhn1 LJFETIMESERVICE $450family 5ue 4+2 ssso mo. 7S2·0817 Saveonree. ~or6'75.S949 _ w/v1"1 or billa. WaUc to OR szz..2080 foe lesa than com para· 557.0122 Carace. fncd yard, pool LACiUHA RENT AL <Wmr/agt. 645-4900 Afl New decor 2Br, lBa, + ireeabelt & st.ables ---------ble. Alenle45-U03 ti Olarnung older 2 bdrm --w s·d 1112.000. n.•VESTORS SM•U. w-2br Iba by airport Mial ~I 631 ~8953655> home. Located an cen BLUFFS beaut. 3 br. 2"2 2 BR. monthly thru June sgcahra151e.5 bo.p·' es2• 7°0r 1 " _,_ be animal Jover $350 -• _, tr al section or the ba, bay view. SllOO Mo 15 or weekly l hse fr • ... • ANCHORAGE flew hstangs. Large Long Beach area mo 6'73-WI a... vilJaae, 4 BLKS FROM Agent&U-1133 bch 213·446-HSO, 548·9'0 ____ _ parcw-$100 per acre. Call for•-•-·"~ . ....iiWJi• leach 1240 B"''"CH •· SHOPPING .. ...., """""' .auvESTM~S B""n ........... ...,.. ""' • . 3 Br 2 bath house. 1 bl.. --~u_ ---"''""""'IDE near new 2. "'"" ~• nn. ain..rrc:-.a ·.~~~9~1"""1 1c6oa I~ 3206 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. """"'>'•~ ..,...,~""" • " Liv. rm. w/fareplace. · b ~51 . 1 BR 1 s., fplc, enclosed 17141 4''-7711 (714) 677-Stlll Reatton AT LAST Separate dining rm. U> be . ~·. mo me ten· z BR w/pallo. steps lo auage. S32S per-mo. OR 522 0530 ••••••••••••••• • •• • •••• Lge. la\.cben Is separate rus le aWlm club. Cu II beach. monthly ~r week-Ownr /aet. 67S-l1Bl SClllla ha I DIO I & U~ITS NEW 3 BR, den 3 BA. "" a~ ct-le• servlce porch Just com· 631·3098, Rers req. ly 111 •5th St. NB. _ * " * country charmer • _ .. __...-y"' pletelyredecorated. Ex· NEWPORTTERRACEJ 546-SQM Br. l~Batownbouse., S,110 Loacls 1600 6MONTHSNEW• w /beams & leaded YouCmtfe.f cellent rental at $475 Br 2.,.. Ba Fam Rm Bcblmt,lBr,$330 garage, patio, poor. FULLY OCCUPIED glass. ~Cl\ mo. yrly lse. ""tu~ Ull.l.L th. ' ' . Ad It I Under $41,000 per urut 67c: c:"' • ,,__ """ moo $C75 8'15-0745 or SS7·1°'6 New plllloh carpets, R/S Jacun.1. u s on 'I· MEDICAL ILDG STUART FIHIE _,,._.-..___ WE GUARANTEE MISSlON REALTY · Bay wmdow view-(9630 $375 mo 646-201~ Rli\L TOR 631-5454 Aunu:tave 3br. 2ba, den, •Widest selection JIOti5 4'9'-073l BIG CANYON BA~GAIN Rentals Galorell of Extras <Dntwn San Clemente) Sale-Lease-Trade 7 Rm Dental SUites 6 Rm Medical Suiles C.Ovington 4-plex, 1 Jert an Oceanside. $165,000. By Owner/Bkr 968-3270 f 1 di u25 I •In house com.puter sys. Man say's "Get it rent· Btful 2 Br on the bcb .• rp . 11 ls . ..-yr y. Chean .... Ocee View ed!" $500. mo. till Sept. K.uisOk, pnv gar We have lOOO's of 67_~_3624_ <21_3_> 367_·0_17_7_ :~~!at~cei~~~:~m~d 2 BR. Cum w/personal 15 •• then $700. mo. 1 yr. 2 Avail now (546S) houses, dplxs, apts now, COf"OftCI def Mar 3222 daily Posuaaions, in North Bdrm, 2 ba condo I over· • ......_,, 631-4555 all areas, all prices. Wood accenu thru out, lots of storage an this .super 3 bedroom home with dining a n d fireplace. Large lot with Jcry W. Yeah Co 498-0660 499-2237 fnlit trees. Bkr, 54()..1720 9IXX> Sq n bldg on 22,500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •Full st.af'f or counselors Lagu.na. Walk to beach, looking golf course. Save oo ree. UNITS Spotless. Walk to bch. •Free to aged 6S & over garage + 2 car apron BARRETT REAL TV. Promo..tory poiftt 645-4900 A!f Sm & large '1ruts. Very 4Br 3Ba Fm rm 2100sqCt •Free rental counseling and u&ed bnck &arden 642·5200 18r, ocn view. $5.50/mo. l---------=- sq ft C·l land. XJnt trar. '!l'Aftlll!I I fie count. $160,000. Agent I IUUK..._ StS-9673 largA i'nv"ntory. Long Vrly, 509 Acacia 645-7048 .n..-7 d'"'S &·00-8·00 area. Ready to move in Adlts no pe•d 673 5206 br, lba. $265. New paint.. ~ ~ -"".,.... _,, · Apnl 1. 5 mo leaae, $660 3 BR, 2Yt ba townhse. • ""· · • lndry fac, no pets. 269·8 Beach & Orange County 38r, 2ba Dplx. Oceanside RENTIMES per mo. Super place, for Ocean vu, all recrea· 833-0200. E.16tb Pl. 644-04.52 Pnn only Agt 639 9070 oC Hwy. Gar $450 mo a super person llonal racil. Newport On ocean, bach.. I -ls htld uh · 1 BR new apt, all bltns, •2 Tri""'"'•"* lie. 64.S-_11_03 _____ , For Professional Service MAY 0 c K Ten-ace. $450 e. 1 c p&ld $250 .i~ -•-t loc r "'#I 111 Calfornia .. °i::s~ 4Br, i!ba, ~ncl gar Townhouse, greenbelt. 3 CXJOls, nr S Coast Plaza. List. price $63,500, r enl tor $450/mo. OWC. Make olr751~ 1800 r _.. ~ It. M t OK. 642-2184 . 968·l:i58. crpt, ......... ......, a IOD. Near ~e ar an ° Costa Mesa 3224 Call 631 jr::55 , ., .... ~ ..... ~ _ 1767 Orange. Avail Apn1 bcb. 1_.,.BR. 3 ba, 1 3 ....................... ~ J&OGt.fl'oNfYRE llG CANYON ~ln•nts 1 $260. 646-7993. MZ·llSS ••••••••••••••••••••••• BR. 2"'1 ba. 1 3 BR. 2 ba. New 2 br condo Pool, OR STOP BY LAGUNA BEACH 2 Story U>wnbome, 2 Br, Ulrfwftished 5 garages. frplcs 5pa From $375. l{jds & 1936 Harbor llvd • (714)494•2148 2"'i Ba. den w /bar, ••••••n••••••••••••••• 1 Br w/ stove, refng. Close to buses, stores. Sl85.000 each 1709 1713 pets OK 675-4912 Bkr (i.-.t blk No. or 19th.St > 3 BR 3 ba rantastic view separate dinang room, Gu11ral 3802 Alabama. llunt Bch. A Calif. Corp Sm Fee home, n'ew s695 No beauU!ul upgraded crpts ••••••••••••••••••••••• Adlts, nopet.s. ~l7l80wner Rftltds GaloN!! ~-S29-57SS, 529-7897 & draperies. Spec· 12621 Flower Street - We have lOOO 's oC l Bedroom coodomiruum. tacular view, swimming (Garden Grove) Large 1 $240 l br, refr1g, stv, 548-6518 SMALL MOTEL s-th LCICJlllftCI 1086 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beautiful whale water ocean view Condo, 3 br. den, 2Y. Ba, tughly up· graded. $165,000. Ask for June Royall Turner As· soc. 49!MS91 Tlllffn 1090 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 br, J ~ ba Laurel wood t ownhome. Fully up· graded, air cond. By owoer $68 ,900 Call 832~ or833-3918 Other Real Esta+. ....................... EASTSIDE Long Beach area COSTA MIESA Call for informal1on JUST G l VE IT A BENTSON & BROWN moumrr· A DUPLEX Realtors 833-9781 with all t.he extras, ----- usually included in a FOUR PLEX home. Woodburning Xlnt cond Growing In fireplaces, built-in come $13,500 Ltst price kitchen, 3 bedroom., 1 $1S9,SOO Near college an lung-size upper unit 2 good rental area Owner Bedroom lower , anx.lous enclosed pnvate patio m TM &tot. Makers yard. Will exchange for 1714, 751•6063 &8 units. Call us for ap· --------- pointment. Loh fOf' Sell. 2200 COLE OF NEWPORT ••••••••••••••••••••••• REALTORS 675-551 I OFFICE ILDG SITE MabileHCNl.s For W. I I 00 lftlCOIM Property 2000 Huntmgtoo Beach 27,000 sq rt lot near Pacifica Hospital, S Pofots Shop Cntr & Civic Center SllS,000 .............................................. FallityPn if~.;;'o INCOME PROPERTY /LOTS David Bourke Rltr S4e-9950 2Br , 1967 Magnoha 20x40, just listed. Hurry oo tb1s ooe. SN FN3122·3 CdMViewLot . .$335,000 WE PAY CASH FOR 2 Units + Hse CM ORANGE COUNTY $23,700 $137 ,000 L<YrS. Call 640-5112 2 Units C.M .. $225,000 2Br. 28a, 1973 New Moon 2Ax44. (l8LS8X·U). s • Park, just listed. Lots Costa Mesa 60' OCEAH FRMT $750,000 2 rare adJoining 30' tots PACIFJCOO~ RESALES rNC. QUAIL. ca R-2 zooe, exclusive area. PLACE $210,000 (or both. Ober· #. P'J'\OPJCRTDCS. ing IUty, Oceanside CA _ -752-1920 lno 1 · '122-0604 1tOOOUAllST.HnrPOfn'8EA01 Anaheim 991--8660 Huntington Sch 963-0991 o,..iTII 1:10 o.t ot eomtty ~~~~~~~I hoperty 2550 ---------= ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mobile Holm UYilMJ 2 HOUSES At lhfiMst T We have numerous & ON A LO beautiful mobile homes 3 Bedroom, 2 bath and <! tor sale in established bedroom, 1 bath, two parts in CM Nwpt Bch bJoclts Crom Back Bay. Huntin gton Bcb : Reduced to $107,000 LagUDa, El Toro, Fln CALL 556-2660. VI y , An ab e 1 m & t=: SELECT Westminster .. 10 price T PROPERTIES r anges t.o r1t most ---------people'• pocketbooks, $10,000 to$40,000. We are as near as your phone. CALIFORNlA PACIFIC CASHR.OW .... ~. 2 &3BEDROOM VA-FHA GARDEN TOWNHOM E. 2 car garages. Ens 1-757-1623 CAPTIVE RENTAL MAUET 54 tJNITS.all rented houses, dplxs, apts now, pool, lenrus, super loca· logima Hiiis 3250 & tenms, etc, etc. $850. bedroom, apts, close to e&D. patao. Adlls, no all areas, all prices tioo. $2SO.CaU646-4477 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 644--0509. shopping. Laundry pets 724 C James, Saveonfee Hu NT 1 NG To N •POOLHO.ME• ElegaotJBr,2 Ba.pool facilities,no!~ddren,~o 6'13-_778'1_p~ _ 645-4900 A'JI HARBOUR brand new SematlooaJ ... 4 BR 2 Ba. Huge stone fireplace pets .. si95 t __, / monl 1920 Meyer Pl • or new --------~i end 1st.ory3 Bdrm. 2 ba, w/au cood, Cplc, D/W, Must see! $600 (6'23) Utililid paid. Call Deb· twnhse apt. 2 BR mi Ba, 3BRhouae. beaut ocean all built-in, jaa, pool, super area, SOS l»eat(714)636-7M3 __ med palao, aar, SJ2s . & canyon view yard, 961l-451r7, aceot. no fee • giant mstr bdrm, $395 etc Privacy. $550. BeauU!ul2Br,2Ba • ...,.DNEW• 6"S"'655 _____ _ mo. +utaJ ~3000 ~. c.ondo, 3br, lo/•ba. 2 car Htdpool.n.rshops,$425 Cherry Creek Adult 2 BR 1 b<> encl gar & ----•ar view $375 mo Greatlocal1 (6733) • ... New·e~gant.-Z b edroom 8sJ.2.13 aft 4 Apts l & 2 BR, !pie's, patio, $245 mo. 2210 118. $500 4 br. 2'h ba, F.R .. pool, tennis, gardener Owner,640-0008 2 Bdrm bowie Fireplace. Double garage $345/mo. 873-2058 Agent. ($51JO) or 2 bedroom + Reldimts 631-4555 we have lakes. sauna, Rutgers. Call 846-7l29 den (1.575~. Cedar & wan La. Fonst 3255 b b · l rd jacui:r.i & pool. Located -·------5 r 3 a marunon, g Y • at 2701 S. F'a·~·1·ew. Just 2 Br. 2 Ba, pool, adlts. no dow hotne. 5 Blocks to ••••••••••••••••••••••• many extras, pets OK. u • beach. Private 2·car 3 b r t w n b s e. a I I ~mo 979-699'l S. oC Warner, N. or S.D. pets. n r shops. $250. garage. Fully main· amerilhes, temporary · Fwy, 556-1991. No pets. 673-tll84, 646-7319 tained yard. Adults. No rental ~ price. S275 . Newport Heights, 3 Br, 2 310 pets. lnqui.re 525 18th St. ~ -ea Ilse alley access & lcAoa Island 6 JBr. 2ba. Mesa Verde 3 Br, 2 ba, frplc, 2 car (714} 960-6.131 -----storage't+. ga.r. $600/mo ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sl50/mo. Call 751·8888 or gar Encl yd Kids ok . (Oaks) 3 br new home, 531-1549. Brand new 1 br w/frpl.1_m.as.33 _______ _ $435. IWS-2274 Lovely 3 br 2 ba home. nr frpl, club-temporary S-Jum --parking, bit-ins, I~. $425 New decor 2 BR, 1 Ba. m beach . Super yrd rental li'z price. $325 t"'-.J-'---3278 lse.213/36().q1'73 qwetcomplex,stv,garb Nwpt Hgts 2 br duplex. w/gardnr. $500 mo (213) Details 546--0469 _...,.......--J I ..a~. r Fncd yd. adults. NO 489-lll4, 968-6961 -· --••••••••••••••••••••••• COf'GllO del Mer 3122 dsPl> • n .... ~ ac, xtra P&l'S. ~ Gu & wtr ---"-------l' .. wport ~ 3269 OUTRAGEOUS 2 Br l ........................ pkng. 1970 Wallace pd 173-2256 CLOSE TO IEACH ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ba, Cplc, D/W. Super Adlts ooly, 00 pets. $290. 2 BR. rorrnal Din Rm, l NO FEE' HoU9e!!, con are~. $385. 963-4567 64&18SO, ~1.SS Eaataide extra sbarr 3 sly, patio hme. fpk, wet· dos, duplexes Rental .\lent, DO fee. re "' • I BR E/S1de, end gar. ~~cro~a~!.' :e~ Pbacr: ~· =~ ~:X,& ~~2 Pa~EWoo,~~Vll2EWBkr -s.toAM 3280 '[}.. Jl.~!9~-. SZ30 mo. No children or elec. garaee dr opnr. Verde Mar <Brookhurst " ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• . ~ pets 642-1894 ___ _ Gardener incl ~75 mo Hamilton) 545-3359 3 Br 2 Ba. pool, tennis, 4 Br, 2ba. encl 2 car gar GARDEN APTS l Bdrm, 2 bath, dis· 548-0063 jac, S8'5 yrly. 675--0562 Towobouse on greenbelt CORONA DEL MAR hwa!>her, crpts, drps. •Westside Costa Mesa. 3 Br hse. btke to bch Lrg 3 comm pools. nr S 2 BT Townhouse, Crplc encl. gar, pn\'ate fenced 2br. J ba,. encl gar, yd. $395. 1st, last at SEAVlEW. 3 Br popular Coast Plaza. Rent S450 Pool, tenms. Some ocean yard Eastside. Agent, h/d cleaning. 55'7-3089 altn Bar Harbor pnme ocn List price $63,500. Offer. & CatalJna vae~ Close "'"ci. 548·.,...,.. or "~"7083 pat.Jo, was ryer area, vu $950 547-7044. owe 751 <Y><:"> ... ., JJI.. fie.<> ,,..,.. nu carp/drps, rreshly DYNAMITE 4 BR 2 Ba, 83:hl2LS · ...,....., to Fasluon Jsland & Cane paint.ed. Move an cond. rp)C', f)/W, eonvenaent -Tmtin 3290 beach . Also 1 Br. $325 ./mo No pets . arn. $4 35. 963·4567 4br. 3ba pool home. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 644·2611 646-1246 Agent DO fee. Gardening, pool serv IB-Tustin condo. 3 BR, I '-'.a --------- lbr patiobome. Nu crpts, $350. 3 Br. 1 ba, huge kit, cl'd. "°°· 549-0655 ba, patio, reereational Magnl(icent View• Uno & drps. No dogs, no immac. Nr Beach & El BIG CANYON. Luxurious facal. nu paint. Nr by Super deluxe large up· kids. $300 mo. Ph Us. 8121 La Palma Cr, 2 Br. 2 bath con -schls & shop'g. 830-1000. per duplex, S. of hwy, 1 &4&-TI75 Sorry no doggies~ do m 1 n i um home. ~3004 br. extras. 673 60M cbu.EGE PARK 3 Bedroom, dining room, built-ins, dishwasher, fireplace, freshly paint· ed. $425/month. CA LL 556-2660. «;::SELECT I PROPERTIES Geniini Realty 839~6623 New/never laved an. Wet ~ Costa Mna 3824 b a r I Cr p I c . S 6 7 5 • u..fwonished 3425 ••••••••••••• •••••• •• •• Large 2 Br family home Near schools and shops Salisbury R. E. 8'13-6900 $325 steals! (8480) 1--------· Mansioo-slzed 4 Br, 2 Ba Enclosed patio and yard Huge frplc SS25 '4315) Rewta.1 631-4555 •••••• •••••••• •• •• • ••• • Adult 2 bedroom. super lrvo of Orange Coonty s Hwit. Harbour area. 2 br, Io cat 1 on No pets most beOU11tul oponmenl fuJl·si.ze patio, nr beach, $225/month. 568 W. communlheS AreloXlflQ shops, schls, avail .Apnl Walson, anqwre apt. E 1 ~-og w--earns . 1 $325/mo. 96J..5228 --~'" """" · --'---------E ISide, airy 3 Ar. 2 na, wotertollS. ono mOjeS11C 4 bdrm 2 ba condo. pool, 2 bltns, npw cpts. drp!'I, I !Tees Feo!Unng pOOIS, car gar $425. Owner pa ant $350 552 4201 . JOCUlll. souno. blhoros. MobUe Home Realty 270ll Harbor, Ste 208 540-SB37 Is possible on this ten unit. Asking $290,000. GS1 guaranteed to he $!8,500. 968-3371. 46 Furn+ 8 rented garages. Most units have new paint. and carpets. All have new 2 sty condo, 3 BR, 21,lJ ha, u ,._ Fr c r p t s , d r p s , REAL FIND, 4 BR 2 Ba, cpts, D/W, fncd yard $415. 963-4567. agt, no OH LIDO ISLE Owner wall lease FURNISHED OR UN· FURNISHED· MAKE AN OFFER: You have a choice; Large 2 Br +den and patio. $750. mo. or 2 Br 2 Ba. large dock and VIEW. S650 mo. Both un· 1lS are freshly painted and carpeted DRIVE BY 751-1163 Before 10 A M 551 l.241 1 oruj excmng clubtiouse or All 8:30 P.M. --MESA PINIES ~SOCIO! evell1S Tenms. roofs. Ca """'· ey al wasbr/dryer, refrig, l _:_..,.._..,.,.~.,._,. 542-3456 ..a-L."""'r, aa·r cond,. Pvt ---·-BY OWNER. 2t'x64' -BENlUNKLE RE ....,.,_., fee. Great Lakes. J 974 · patio +atnum, 2·car gar Spacloua 3 Br, 2 ba IHI Estate w I d o or o Pe n e r . charmer. Located 'THE 7 UMfTS C.M. Wcmted 2900 Clubhouses, pools. MEADOWS", Irvine Beautiful brand new 4·1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• J&Clllzl's, tennis crts. Beaut .S• ad.It, no pet, b', loft, f /p. 3-2 br, l~ Wanted: bouae or duplex, $t50 lse. Adib. no pets. park. 559.0229 eves & ba townhouae. au bltns. owner fin .• faxer-upper. _7_54-_1300 ______ _ wlmdl. crpta, drps. Hurry, buy 631....ao Pvt Ply ---------1 n ow. Tom Lee, Rltr, · · · 2 Br Duplex w/gar, PAIUC llMT $97..50 6'2-lllOl. Be.achfront, duplex. ~~~~ii°~~·1~~ HuntTFon Bcb adult 5__. DU-rvcs triplex, urgent. Nwpt to 532 5839 pet Thia beautlful ....,_.. ..-~ San CI em. 0 m n i, --·--·------ dou le •Ide luxury SAN CLEMENrE TIU61·1001 bc)me. 2Br, 2Ba w/hot A Ocean views, all 2 BR, cold running Easter 1~ BA. Lesa then 1 yr. R1wtaft Bwlolm can be ~· old. Walk to state beach ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sedq ii bellevin1, but It part. Asktna only Ha.Ns FWwltMd be ame to bring your SUS,-000 each. Offer on •-••••••••••• •• ••••. •• Eaater Bonnet. allorpart. (Ml'~) BER'111A HENRY COlf9 Mee4I J 124 CALll'ORNlA PACIFIC REALTORS ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jlol6t Home Realty 215 Del Mar; 4S'l-4121 2111 Barbor. &e 208 ~ Oeean •lew, lBr, ne• •nd. cabana, utll. slmect. llJ.,500. 4M-88M .. UC.$7000! VlldDI ODacb lD lntne'1 flDHl p,•rk, .. The M t•1 '. 2 BR, 1 BA, -!!~~~~~--den. EuJ flaucln1. 8'd IUD BM.lt;J U2-1500 1171 st1llne Mobile Rom• lh:U . On• J»aclroom, low rat ln COtt• MeH. fll-.11t14 dlr'a:• :ti 'l'ln:7 trall • qlHMID• a bed, lhld7 epot in C.M. park. ·tao0. Aft •:M5t'5m J,' ' ll'f llela11 '<lHE~TAH 3244 ••••••••••••••••••••••• nnnuAOCK GI.EH TOWNHOUSE View, four bedrooms. 2.200 square feet. Im maculately upgraded thru-out. Pool, tennis. S650/mQnth. Ask for JOHN SHEA. AV A'l LAB L E I M · MEDIATELY! A~ ~ 7Q.,_ mo ,_ ..... 81'...-..oiwr 9AQt ~TWl:30 PM UMTALS 2 BR, 2 Ba ........ $'3S 3 Bil, 2 Ba. .. .. • . . . $550 I BR, 2~ ba ..••. SGS/S2S 4 BR, 21,; ba .••. , .•• $750 . <. To.-allM Bach, S230 Some gvm,on<holeybol(J) Unfunist.d 3525 w garages Pool. TheV~IOge MoreOI ••••••••••••••••••••• •• Jacuzzi Adults, no pets. everflltng '(OU re 1Qok1ng BIG CANYON Open dady 2.650 Harl a fOf FumlfUre IS ovolob~ 111 Via Lido Nord and call Watetf10ftt HOIMs.. 631-1400 2 br. den, 2~ ba. lse or Ave C M CMt"Sa Verde lae option. $750. 644-5702 Dr E ~ff Harbor Blvd). One on<J lrvo Bedroom o.pieHS U....... 3600 549-2447 AOul LMng. ••••••••••••••••••••••• HEW E-SIDE Otttees open 9 00 to 6 00. 2 BR 2 BA. D/W. dapsl Now ren!lng BIG CANY~N San 3br. 2ba, Townhous~. ,_ _______ __, $275 mo. Wtr pd. ta Upgraded. Lge pataa. Ana area. ~ aft Children ok. 645·9543 TOWNHSE New 2 BR, 2 ba, crpt'd & drp'd, spectacular Goir 5PM eves. 646-"262 days. Coone & lake view. Sep Fwwistt.d oar .• tennis & pool AparflMfth ~ .....•................. l.M/option. 644·2416 ...,_ ,...... 3707 a.tds Galore!! •••••••••••••••••• ••••• We have 1ooo'11 or $225. Vacant Studio, nr houses, dplu, apt., now, bcb, shops, restaurants. all areas, all prices Adlt. 833-3307: 67S-7077 S.ve on fee. Costa Mfta 3124 '4M900 Afl ••••••••••••••••••••••• CAMEO SHORES $50WISC & UP Studio. 1 bedroom Maid service, pool 3Br, It <XJr'Mr Jot. OCHll view. S12IOO mo. 6'73-a.64 auffSCOMDQ Z376 Newport Bl, C. M. 548-STISS or 845-!967 1 Story a bdrm. Close to SUS CASITA.S achoot " aboppln1. No Nicely rumisbed 1 bdrm. pm .•. Act-644-7270 -Closed gar . .,.so. up. A Ata HOME Adulu, no pets. 2110 THI l&.UffS Newport Blvd. 0oq.,., full bay Ylow; ...... l.!....._lt prime "frolrt row" IOCa· _.. tloD.J:)rquittteJBR,z~ We have lOOO 's of La ..... h•~I -· _ __. .. _.. boules, dplxa.. apb DOW, 1119 ........ eva -...._ all areas. au pricea. wUb cated ClOQJ'ty~ eQ• I try • apacloua, prlv. Save 00 .ee. pttio. lmmac. tbruout •,_'4_M_toO ____ ~::... trU11 iruloua. An ex· , .... 119• le«lt 3710 oept!cnal value at $750 ......... •-••••• •••• •• pee mo .. unW 1211ns, STUDIO =-ftt" * 8*5S80 --,Vttldw .......- ........ - PUU kitchen Ii TV Unen.s • uuuuea MIU 1'0 OCEAN ........ Mottt m Y•b:rwo Blfd 8eec1t "•t Ycniown l~\I .,. Cadillacs to Go-Carts What.ever the 1''ad Roll 'em ofl the market With a Clauified Ad Call Now I 642·5e78 Jl24 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. told YiC• Leh. I h.is El lfter ~ts 317 etch q ln- ll to .-ho aid QlC on 4hb I f I l 1 1 .. A.p a 1a .. ha.ww,.. ~,..,u.tw., OHlullWhlt 4400 ......._ ••••• •• • •• • • •• ••••• ..... •• • • • • • • •• •• • • • ••• ••••• • •••••• ..... •• •• ••••••• ~o, ... ,w.. .. M.J..11.,~, 1001 ~~ ....... !!~~ .~.=. .... ?~.~~ "OM'" w.,.... . .................... .. ~.~.~ ..... !?~~ ~~~~ ..•.• ?~~~ =Mo~n4'~~·~M.r~af.fl~t1;·~';9;78;;;;:;;;;;;;;:m::~O;Al~L.~V~Pl~l.~O=T;;~n=,·~ t.oat or Found 11 p.u Call Acctot Bkl ·-Http W ..ttd 7100 -~ - QWet 2 br lbc lo 1.11plx, A SIGHT 'ro SEE Gntl& omceapace. llOO to $700 WEB Animal A11111tance TIMPOllAaY PQI ••••0 ••••••••!•••••••• Clttlca.l Luiue 53'1.z2'13, no lee. RA!~ Today to work ATfENTJON ! I l - Reward. Siber1an HWJky on vanous accounli'!f! ~ t t Ott OVBt ·~ .nsp, adlt.1 no pet$ Non R I l B 1000 aq ft. All 1t&es Ir •mkr $?50' 646-' • · ent l 1 • 2 R •Pt ab apes, aom• w /Wet FuJI Ti----· __ . :l323 w/cor~eou1 ocean vu, ban fr h'ple. Ir terrific """ New lrs a BR opt, bltns, pvt bch. OCt'an 111de of vlows. Very competitive $250 WEEK erpt'd, 2-c:ar 11ar. beaul est llwy. 9'$0. •99-4644 rat• In Lldo Village. red & wbt. Vic G11tfleld/ bookkec-plna aao1gn· Magnolla. Nds 111001ca· ments. Work close to Ho • .,.... MC•H f or $426. 558 -UO l , or-.11&1 You've •ot to sff it to Pert Tltne oon002 l410. your home. Figure Work ~newoffice Clerk!! to Sr. Accoun Opening in Cocst.i Mesa Gl..:11538 Af*ill•llts ,.,.shed believe It! Call Su11i~ rohatfal STUNNING tac 3br or u..fwW.-..cl 3900 ZaWl at m4>87M662 for ard 1> 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• an appl., or 11top by I en apt .-oo , rec • • Mon·'f'ri 8:30 to 5:30 <tl area. $.US. 7l0 W. 18th THl!:.li:XCITlNG Lido Matin• Village, St. r AL.M MESA ArTS. 3476 Vta Oporto, Suite Mesa Venle 2 bd, nu crpt. *8pes & paint. Qt. cul de•ac, water l>Q. $290 mo. 4918--1936 MlNUTES TO NPT 205, N.B. BCH. 1~--------Bacb, 1&2 BR. Single to 3 room 11ulte lrom $220. & up. avail in tu1l M!J"Vke big, Adult.a, No Pets nr 0 .C. Airport, start.in& FAMOUS IRAMDS lait: Cockatlel. grey /wht yt1llow huad peach face Mesa Verde. Reward 546-378S LOST: Friendly Albino Cocltateel, 19th St. Nwpt Bdi. (714>&21·5840 dy11; Sf7-0819 tanb needed thruout Ornu).?e> Co. Robert Hatr•s AccowitemJ>8 500 S. Main, Ste 501 No. Tower, Union Bunk In The City of Orange 7l4/8M-410S 1561 Mesa Dr. at S16S. Call 833-3640. air. Iba, crpt.s, drps, stv, ts lllks East.of Newport IEECH-MUTGUM IUllLIYUM UN SAVERS TIC TAC"S l.ost · Prescription Classes. Btwn Victoria Accounting Mitn or woman. Work w/youo1 peopl~. l!:n joyitble & lntereatint"C work w/rapld advanc~· ment oppor In our educational products division. Age no barrier If 18 or over. Must have pleasing personality. Call betwn 9am It 2Pl1l ..relrig, lndry rm, patio, Blvd.> EXECUTIVE & & Alden's on Placentia, A/P CLERK CM. 5'8·9661 Reward. Exper'd indiv needed 645--6514 "S32:5 yrly. 745 W. 18th. 548-9860 SUITES _673-627 ___ 5 ______ ROOlnl 4000 Luxuric>us omcel>, t!X OTHER IRAMD HAMES _L_O_S_T_s_m_l_b_lu_e_p_o_i_n_t, w/gen'I accounting or, ________ ... A/P exper. EDP back AUTOl'tlOTJVE 2Br, l Ba, c/d, bit.ins, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ecut1vt! secretary. C&r, $'2S()/mo. Agt. Room W/ kitchenette personal phone COY· Dispensed through ultra modem equipment, re· cords ind!cate in a com· petitive market that Bubble Yum out sells Wrigley's, Spearmint, Doublemint and Juicy Fruit combined. Siamese Cat grey mark· ground belp(ul, but will ing, cream body. right train bright indiv. Req's IMC TKhnldCIM 838-8081. 150 week & up. erage, recept1001st, con· eye tears. Mon 3/20 in I · & k We havP. immediafe Eastbluff. Fam. franu·c. lte typing lO ey f r E 11 548·9755 rerence room. xerox, JOBS T'hurit9 notary. Leai;e or month Brand new 2 Br, 2 Ba. Ambassador Inn tn Costa to month. Near So. Coast frp!. l>tV patio or bale, Mesa, '2277 Harbor, Cen Plaza, 0 .C. Airport & adulta. ao pets, xlnt Joe, \ r a 11 y Io c ate d , 2 3 5 Freeways. Call 979·2161. akJ.lls. X1nt working con· open ngs. xce ent we Io 11 e be r . Ca 11 ds & benefits. Apply Na· working conditions & 640·6414 or 558-8666. tional Systems Corp, fwl company benefits. _R_e_w_ard _____ ~-r 4361 Birch S t , N .B We also need Lincoln- Found: 3/20/78, Marina <Near OC Airport> EOE. Mercury technicians & ~673-4852. rooms. MANY with tutchen, phone & TV. D e I u x e . o f f i c e s Hi mote, Curry. beige ---------Joe.men (front & rear>. Apply to Bill Light or OanaPoiRt 3826 Swimming pool jacuzzi w/secretanal serv. Nr ••••••••••••••••••••••• and rec. room.' Daily & O.C. Airport. 752·5626 Duplex, ocean vi~w. New weekly rates starting "WAT£RFROMT" 1550 sq.ft. 2 br, 2YJ ba. from $48 a week. ~. mo. 759-0700 645-4840 3 _br, panoramic ocean Sunny room. Eastbluffs, view, new, rrpl, lg deck. $150. 1500 mo. IREN 496-5600 640·2810 2 BR, 2 ba. ()Cean vu, .Attrat'tive room. ·~ mi gar., $50. rrom beach. $28 wk, 640-7309 H.B. 960-3531 aft 4pm. New office s pace from 300 sq ft . Most com- petitive rates in area. Fantastic Views. patios. 1n the CANNERY VILLAGE-Parking incl. F o r a p p t ,. a I I ('; d 673-1003, 2808 Lafuyell~ Ave .. N.B. llwttiatgton hach 3840 Pvt r~m-w/Kit priv -;; ••••••••••••••••••••••• tract bme, nr occ. $100 Dix Office Space SHARP, beach, 2 & 3 BR, mo 546·3937 Call 8., I 9950 l rpl, ~ishwasher, · -~ - garage. patios, 960-2358. Vocation Rentals 4250 Office space for rent in ••••••••••••••••••••••• Corona del Mar. Call Wr, children welcome, *ALOHA * 644-8494. no pets, starting at $245 WE HAVE CONDOS ---------mo. 846-0007 __ IN HAWAII 8R.AND HEW lntrn'I R. E. Network THE SHIPYAttD 3 BR studio apt.s, huge Newport Heights Rily Custom space now back yard, children OK. 645-5044 available in the newly r e fu r bished Lido $425. Dys, 848-2655; evs Beaut.. immac. Ar-Shlpyard area. Unique SJ6...4873 rowhead home, 3 br 2 manne setting. Ample HEAR IEACH ba, ant. decor . l blk parking. Lake. $25 wkdys, $90 & CIVIC CEMTER wknd. 559.0242 6 73-4400 BRAND NEW. Spacious R--'al t S'"-4 H!MI deluxe 2, 3 & 4 Br. All onn 5 0 ~ 300 bltns, frplcs, gar, lgc yd •••••••••••••••••••••• • 502 Yorktown . Just Roomma.te wanted, West of Beach Blvd. Laguna Hills, $175/mo. Y 536-171.8 Aft 6, 581-3104, Bob. A 01\-t~llWI ol ------llarhnr lnvt'.,lrnt•nt Co NEW 2 & 3 BDRM F, ~ yrs needs same lo share 2 bdrm apt m CM . DOM'T FORGET 19202 Flonda St, HB. Non-Smoker $125./mo YOTE ·APRIL I Ith 968-8396 or 963·4238 ---------1 plus "la ulil. Call 645-3373 ---------2 BR l' i BA, dbl gar, After 5 twnhse • ~ mi to beach ------Nwprt Be oLfice space .sec gate, t>OOI. Jacua1. M/F. 2lyrs +. rellablc. 500 sq rt, $265 1ncl. No investment required. wht 8-10 wk male pup, NOC. affiliated with Life _hs_b_rk_n_._892_·984_7 ___ _ Savers, Inc. Applicant Found: Cocker Spaniel, ~ust be a ~rmanent re· yng blk male. Vic: San· s1dent, avwlable to start ta Ana Hts 963.£880 business immediately. · Lost gold nng Lag Bch Compuny furn i shes Heisler Park Beach area direct outlet Cor gum 3/22 eve . Reward. and mint. industries 1-686-7852, 1·684·7291 finest dispensing equip· . ment, high traffic Joca-Lost: Chocolate Siamese, tions and company female, reward. Vic. capital Cor expansion Hunt Bch. 962-7854 purposes FOUND· DALMATIAN, Applicant mu~t be of ~lale . Chain, no lie. sound character and Newport Bch. 548-2381 to have sincere desire to _i_de_n_t_ir_Y _____ _ succeed in business. In-LOST: German Short vestment ava~Jable upon hair pomter, male 2 yrs request. Applicant must old. White/Jiver. Lag hav~ adequate work m g Bch. 494-9956 capital. In Santa Ana Call Mr. F. Sands Mon, Tues, Wed. Only 17 t 4J 835-3051 Phase II Corporation 1 Gulf Western Plaza. New York. N.Y., 10023 LOST: Fem . Collie, German Shep mix. Tan & black, r ecently clipped. Trabuco Rd. El Toro. 770-0559 or 768-6043 5350 ...•.••..••...........• Spiritual Reader 1815 So. El Camino Real AdMffes Di~or Howard McACee. Certified. rttime. Mesa RAY Ft.ADHOE Verde Conv. Hosp, 661 Uncoln-Mercwy Center St, CM 54.8-5585 Hondcf & IMC Air National If you're 16-18 Auto Center Dr. havtng a bard lime find · IRVINE ing work and are in· 830.7000 t.erested in a career in --------- electronics, weather •AUTO LOTMAN (or e c a s t i n g , o r Full or part-time. Learn telephone/teletype in· the auto business fro:n stallation and repair. the ground up! Op· see your Air National portunity for advance. Guard Recruiter. We ment. See Mr. O'Neill or need men and women Mr. Pierce. HOWARD aged 17·27 interested in Otevrolet. Dove & Quail gett.mg ahead in today's Sts .. Newport Beach. competitive job market. Closed Easter Sunday. You can get free voca- tional training with ex· cellent pay plus free medical coverage and travel. For more in· formation on openings and qualificallons call Sargeant Arrollo 714.979.7363 or apply at 2651 Newport Blvd, Costa Mesa. Aloe Vera non-surgical race lifts, distributors & sales positions availa· ble. 771·3999, 996.s.>48 AVON TAKE AVON TO LUNCH Sell to friends and co- workers in your orCice; make about $40 on every SIOO you sell. You'll have your own business without giving up your regular job. To find out more, call 540-7041 or Zenith 7·1.359. Avon Proct.:ts. Inc SAM CLEMENTE San Clemente. Fully lie. Grooming & Pet Shop. __ F_or_a..:p~p_t._4_92_·_7296 ___ 1 Ambitious Couple Wanted Retiring after 7 good RELAXING MASSAGE to manage a small busi-1 ________ _ years, fine location & Bob James-Lie Masseur ness p/lime. Will not in· . . li t I $68 500 terfere w / your present B a b Y s I t .t e r • I 1 t e c e~Ei:THA,HE.NRY Outcall 9-9, 494·5111 job. Must be willing to ho~sekeep1ng •. baby. 9 REALTORS MASSAGE learn. Mr Hall 642-1634 mo s old. Rel s req <f. 215 Del Mar 492·4121 FIGURE MODELS A 1· • . . . 642-6100 Judi pp 1ance re pairman, Money to Loon 5025 ESCORTS Washers. dryers. stoves, IAIYSITIER ••••••••••••••••••••••• refrig's, dishwashers. for 2 yr old. Live in d~· fplc, $395. 675~161, art 5, ~~ + 1,3 util. HB utilities. 675-3471 536-9949 Office space al O.C. ht, 2nd & 3rd T.D.'s C do LOANS AVAlLABLE OUTCALL ONLY Top pay to right man. sired. Rers req. CdM 631-381 I 494-BOro area. 64~5885 2br, l'hba, Condo ut wn Airport, apx. 2400 sq it Credit no problem. Pool, adults only Livll'ICJ Expenses! to be compl. about Junoe Broker. 752-5903 * SA~DY'S * $310. 955-3097 Share a home Dr apt· I. Can build to suit at _________ 1""111 menl modest cost. Designer's Speculators, investors & Outcall Massage Apt M~r. couple pref .. ex-BABYSITTER, f /lime. p"d only, 1n maint. & bk· needed immediately! kpg, 55 unit complex. Mature, exper. sitter C.M. (213)865-3851 pref'd. NB. 644-8071 Oiarrrung 2Br, den. $260 _W_es_t_M_a..::g_az.i_._ne_._S40-__ 3222 __ , owners sh rt term $$ ____ 97_3--0329 _____ 1 Partutilspd,kidsOK ~E-CVJ\nsUNl.w1T£D Prime N .B. offices •vail. fast. Bill Daven-•SHERlLEE• APT MANAGER Babysitter/hsekeeper, O/wsher, gar (4381) tU.e ~ ~ COl.it"dJ*"-w/common recept. area. port 54~·9803 Certified Masseuse 32 Unit complex. 1 blk to live out/in. mature, nn· -·> ·•u..'!~ >,, ... ,un Pvt try' 3 (" H C II B l smkr 1 1·ntant A99 4415 BfUul $2151 Br Dplx .,. ~ "'---·· ._, en s, 0 a ices + ouse a s · Yapp · bch. Prime H.B. loca· · · · .. · Walk to the beach! rorover6 yrs. 832-4134 kitchen , $700 mo . ____ 838_·_6838 _____ 1 lion. Apt. +salary. Call ,_ev_es_. ------- Enclosed yard <5363) AVOID INCOMPATIBLE Airport area. 752'6282• WHEN YOU for info :>40·3535. Banking Progressive, in· R...tiftws 631-4555 ROOMMATES! 552-45!8 E S FOXY LADY dependent bank, seeking Laguna hach 3848 +1ouse-tv\otes 832-4134 -· s Rental 4450 .. ED £A H, Outcall Mossoge Architectwal bank exper'd -•••••••• •••••••••-•• Takes The Guesswork •••••••••••••••• • •• ••• • ___ 7_3_1_-_3_5_6_1 ___ 1 S~l~~~~~!:°:C. tr.ch Secretary , ,. Out of Finding <4 DB.UXE oFC•s COMTACT . o.c. Airport ore. Xlnt. uuE 2 BR upper, view, 'THAT RIGIIT PERSON PREGNANT? Caring, f1ce, NB. Perm. pos i-benef. Call or apply new cpts, d ... 15 .. t•~ blks Conf. rm .. seat 25, all UMIOM n f"d t· t 1· lion. Shopping centers, 5•.......,, "'GO I ...•. u1 to bnh .. tw' 'n, lf"'1·s1er Sa•e $$by Sharing paneled, sm. whse m re· HOME LO ... ""S .on 1 en ia counse ing b nk .,.,. • •• •""'" .. ~· """"' & referral. Abartion, a s, apts. residential S3SEFirstSt,TusUn Park, ~00. No children/· F. to share 2Br, 2Ba Pk ar. 1 or 2 yr. lease. Lake Union Home Loans ar-adoption & keepi.ng. projects. Im med open-832-5200 pets4973109 Fores t area . Kent rangeloansforhomeor APCARE 5472563 mg.640-8161. · · Nwpt Apt, nicely furn, H.arluns. property owners of · Equal Opport Employer Blful 1 Bdr Dplx, $290 $19:> + Y.z util 640-5342 714·581·9393 $1,000 to $100,000 or LINDA & VICKI ARCHITECTURAL JR. All utils pd, reCngtst •BE SELECTIV£• more. And t h rough Oukall Moss:?ie ORAFTSM AN Young Oen vu <4945) IARIER OR Union Home Loans you growing H.B fi rm, re. Gain a reliable 9EAUTY SHOP For the Nt of t! side n ti a I t y p e V 1 B · t h ed l roommate get Homeowner Terms, Serving all Orange <..:o. 536-8832, 3-5PM r, pauo ap, t poo 645 64 • Successful location in which are generally 835-7313 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ~/C~nc ~· d/w,a58sher) •SHARE::: HOME• Costa Mesa. $600 Month much better t han 1----------1• rs. P8 ~ 16 Broker 675-6700 finance company terms. •SUSIE'S• Rentimes 4 31-4555 F 22 ods same to share 2 . . Choow The THms New rt leach 3869 bdrm 2 ba Furn apt. on LEASE Prime business that flt your 'pol Balboa Penn.,,"" mo lst rental, Beach Blvd, H.B. •••••••••••••• .. •••••••• ..,.,.,., 1650' 847-2547 budcJef. SefKt PARK NEWPORT &last675-2058673·2999 --·------ Bachelors, 1 or 2 Male roommate wanted, Industrial Rental 4500 JUUY AMORTIZED B e d r o o m s & 2 BR home. blk from ••••••••••••••••••••••• PARn y AMORTIZED Townhouses bch. Yrly . Alt 5pm: BUILD TO SUIT IMTEREST ONLY From$289.50 675-2604 5,000-20,000 Sq . ft . Spectacular spa, total Placentia Ave. C.M recreation program, Cls to bch 2 br/00~0• shr WESLEY TAYLOR CO. social program. 7 pools, M/J;I, $150 + ~ util. Ph: REALTORS 6444910 fl tennis ~ourts. At llam-9pm, 964-2064. . Fashion Island Jam· F p k N b :.JOO sq ft, 2034 Placentia, • . em. ar ewport 3 r C M Xlnt loc ti?ree. & San Joaquin Twnhse $157. Cherie, · · 646.7512 1Jills Road. 833-2900 or 640-1673 i7 I •J 644-1900 G t t d 4. omce, 12.000', fenced ay rmm wan e . to yard. All or part of. Udo l&le Bayfront 2 Br. Bhare N.8 . home, with 2 Irvine. 631.2440 frplc. $600. cau btwn 3·6 ifl,IYS. 752-1100 Mi pm, 673-(1170 ~mmate wanted, seek· R'!..t~ -4650 Retltals Galorelt !ng clean, mature work-•••••••••••••• •• 0 •• • ••. We have lOOO's o f mg yng lad~ to share 2 Space avail ror sm houses, dplxa, 21Pt.s now, fiR overl.ooking Crescent mtrhm, camper shell, .all a reas, alr prices. Bay, •n La~una. boat/trlr up to 12'. E· Save on fee. Michael, 494•2109 side C.M. Pb: 645-0873. "PGY'ftlnt pfaM in CK• cordaftu with •tate law. IC ror any reason we can· not arrange a loan for you there will be no cost or obligation UNION HOME (J)LOANS Outcall Massage 10AM·2AM 731·4462 DANCE OF FUN Beaut. nude gtrls dance & rap session. lOAM to 3AM Mon-Sat. 12PM to 8PM Sun. 625 N Euclid, Anah. 559-6150 FREE SES.510N W / AD lall room DcmteirtCJ Partner needed for Singles Dances 646-2598 •TOUCH OF CLASS• ESCORT & MODEL SERVICE Outcalt by Appointment 646· 7118 Social Clubs 5400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• The Single's Solution Date by Choice Not Chance. Call lntroview 752-5411 4'4M900 Aqt Oceanfront NB, ahr lge •--t-.......·fl t/ Nation's Largest Home hse, pvt bdrm & bath. -nvn Loan Brok F " ~""~ Parle Newport furn. bacb. C!50 + . 673-0378 FinmlCe erage irm ----ati .... ASSEMBLERS 50 Trainee Assemblers Needed Immediately Long & Short Term Assignments 3 Shifts Available Must have own Lransp. Call Today 556-8520 Free Top Pay Vac Pay Victor T~ory Services Div Walter Kidde & Co 2(m S. E. Bnstol Ste 10 Newport Beach <Comer of Bristol & Campus behind Carl's Jr) ASSEMILERS (30) Needed for graveyard. No exp nee. Long Term & FREE Vlctd-Temporary 5-rYlces 2(g? S. E. Bristol Suite 10 Newport Bch 5564520 WW us1gn hie at re ••••••••••••••••••••••• B Toro 770-3031 . Ger •--1--..... lch ... 2225 ....................... ---------_duc_ecl_ra_le_. _640-_1001 ___ 1 fol-°t!..t 4350 ~......,, 11:oos ~ Help W..t.ct 71 oo "B0 2B Studi pt ~ ~ v ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,, a a. o a , ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ T fplc. mt cood. 315 E. Av a i 1 ab I e now, .a r Newport. 2 existing ocean ~ rust 5035 ..B.ay. $395 yrly rental. Newport Blvd, C.M. $35 front tak~t. ait·down Accounting 1162-8811 1Sin&1e It $60 dbl 631-3273 restaurants. Owner will •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• PAYROLL CLK ASSEMILERS We wlll train. MacGregor Yacht Corp, 1631 Placentia. CM f " A J h LOWEST Exper'd iodiv. needed 2 BR. l ba. crpts & drps, Office ll..td ..f400 anance. · 0 naon, Cor multi·st ate com· ASSEMBLERS 1ar .• steps to bch, yrly. Bkr. VI-p · J) 9 140•5650 • .Eves ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9711.(1164 ,......._.Rahs puterized.payroll. Req's Amt oppor. ro1ress1ve uys • THE EFFICl~T ht T.D:a. also 10 key by touch & lite medical device manut. ~ ~ ONE IN A JcflLLlON. A typing. Must enjoy de· located nr 0C Airport ,OCEAN VIEW, yrty 2 BR ALTERNATIVE classic, to cool, clean 2..t T.D. Loma. tail & busy atmosphere. bas openings for U · t BA. dp1x. $£50 mo. Mo. to mo. rent Incl: Crestline. 5 acres, 4 Fairest Terms eince 1949 Xlnt working conds & semblers of light plastic Banking TEU.ER r /TIME Branch ofc seeks bonda· ble p/time teller. Exper. prer'd. Contact Hilda Terranove (714 ) 644-12.55. Western Federal Savings 2744 E Coast Hwy, CdM E.qual Oppor Employer Banking TELLER. EXPER'D Lite typing. Neat• ap. pear Conlacl Doris Mitchell UNION IANM 610 Newport Center D1 Newport Beacta. 558·~ Equal Oppor Employer BANK Immediate opportunity for an individual with previous experience as a teller preferrably in new acCOW1ls. Duties include training tellers, handl· ing customer transac· tiOOB, new accounts and collections in addition tc assisting savings manager. Qualified ap· plicants call (714) 7fl8.7771. GletMlciH ,... al 2'221 Call~:fa Louisa Laeuna HUii~ CA ...... __ '""".......,. R ec e p t r -11-'M's ol pines or s.ttler' Mf9. Co. bens. Applv "'a•ional parts. Xlnt benefits It _.,,...,or-. a e v. • .... ...,, ,.~ • • " •1 • working conds. Apply, ' ...--.. ·•opportumnf"t penanaliud phone CCV· cbard, 7 lovely rental•, 64Z..217t 54$-0611 Sy~tema Corp .• 4861 1, ...,.. .... 'l'wo2BB•a, stove. retrig, B a1e, cool. rm, mail stables for 20 horses, Jlin'h St, N.B. (~ear OC Medical Dev ce employer M/F dean.~t.l bUt fr t«V., underground prkai bar.reel b lt ar ound Re tired couple bas All"port) EOE. Laboratories ~!"'•, _.."!!'°', 1 ~~· ,~ A more in Newport. ewtnnnlnJ pool. 1 ml ~tey to lend. 1'i It 2nd ~~~rt 11:~ Bartender. yng, attract ""' -""'... u THE EXECUTIVE from Lake Gregor1, 8 • ., 1 .......... 1 E I f bNcll. $C50 mo. SUITE, &t0-5"'70 m 1 f r o m L • k e Alelll, 1.a37~44 ""'I ..... Oppor mp Oyer em. Exper, good salary ~1 OI'832-3884 Silverwood just. olt Hwy AC~..!!"eoHGiCUS A&gSTANT MA.NAG~~ :.~n· ~~ :u0~i~0e llirvtews thuea. $130 OtOce Space avail, pvt 139, J6f-~ f38-l01L By A;MK•••/ Tho l n u.., . a cur· COUPLE Pu1twa,. Mla$1on Viejo. A/C,'*"11t..J!dpool «ltlWea'lt.~clst.lilftesf i,,,.reesr •. Nl82'7B. Owner. r .!?aa"ti{.d ~ ~ account,· for 14'7 w\lt complex in eJS.•• u -inl t 10'b .... 1upport o Sant a Ana. Husband Beeutid.m wanted w/ex· aJ..(JllQO TRA va AGIMCY ." .... ,. •••• -...... •• our lf!D'l accountlot aec-mu. t le n 0 w m al D. .,.. in neweat bairatyles ..... CHt~• • 11iiwY11'~.... 1t 100 tlon. Jteq'a \lJ> to 2 )'J'I Of tenance. Mature middl• lot Cbilllrea'a 8-ir •tYI· IXPAMDIMG 717 ......... ,.._... .,..,,.. ..... ;: .... -; ...... ~ .... cen'l ofe e-per. ln either aiect couple Cllllf. Rer1 ,tqaaka!n M.V. lmrnect 1'\a1l1 aerv. ofc apace utV QCW Waf "Y own • • iecelvablea or PQ•blta tequlred. flOO/mo + 1 toQ earnJn1a. For ln. Mairtll at 1¥ 8CI A in pie lnl•t.I •cency. Tra vel Clau. aultar leHona, &!Okey by toucb. U Br apt. Call btWQ 9 & s. tervlew call CarmttQ dJnamlC N.B. airpOrt Network. Slart your mvatc tdueator, ~1.. We ()(fer a COQ)P«! ve 54W880. 781.n bm. area. Space avail: oq. Exp. JIO&. ,,.qulred. Im. ad¥. 19':!178 Hlary, eoinpr flenalve •-------- 800·11.000 aq fl & Oompl•au;part•~ SCRAM·LETS '' bcocftll pq It an out· AU'l'ORENTAL AOZNT 8u&M ab.llJU)OO uaist. trareb.N sp. » sq fl. term senlce Pto¥ldecf: at andlnf worlln• en· EsPert~. Apply. needed b1 procrealve PrQP. Jiit Judy Clartf, Ct 11 M r. Cf\ ar l o vf,ronment. 2mt Quall St, Nwpt !Sch Newport baircUUAsr. Call 13N1U ~ •tos> b)' OMn· •iw:iMQq t ANSWERS Ple.uc cau ~ tor•Pl'l •.,..,. · merce Park, '100 Pireb. Ji£ALm'rooJ> SI'ORE~ I Olltiib -aoatc ,.J TMtlain,.~!1co A~~. p~ tt~C::k 1"1'U: '· .... STOU. 1MOFBDJU:NT ~Jundt rounter. C.M. Piaoo-Booln1p-,, .. '" • totnln ritht pettQQJP\lil AHl•t , lhoa1er for BarboT Blvd/Bahr •h<>PPUll . c nl r looa. CHOP 550 ~~~":' Dr comp. benefit.a. APlt Sc wiOD deal1r. Sal C. M.~aq. ft. JTt.llOQ. Xlrll ~m ln· CD CID t arate •~Moe: ... _.. South Cout Auto 1pi>J.Y''~ Kmt have prior • aq, (\. Ga'Wncl noar. vet CID • l\o1 Cot ·-come tn t.Pd ~·11 \alt Equal ()ppot £mpJOJC:r HI B•hr St . CliC1 ~ bamc ...-. Ip amtparklriif~Z200 ,, detilW.at-qt!tf ~-Ql()P!' ' t • _ • • XHtQl!Jlm Walter • lfa~m.t:m _ .... , -. . 100% FREE ••"'9 We have a nwnber of poeltlons •vatlable 111 ba.nk• If S&L'• such a:1 full le p/Ume Villen. vault tellus. new aCC()Wlla. credll cbecken., proof mac:hine opera&ora, audit cler.._, trllvti ucr ctary, bnnc:b ucretuy. utility 1>ecretary. Ce1 C.,,., 140-40H ExK. s.cntwv to St I 00 1'his lop 11pot b ror penion with outatandln& a'kUlll. Super lnteresUna. much variety. Accaullay St t 00 Up Unusuaf intertistin• & •xcltina position wblch could tntaU worldwide travel. Thi• line company needs de1ree in acoountlna Ir some experience In cosl accountlna. Excellent career opportunity. C .. lhl4MOH ...... ,.,....$100- Llte work experience. dratting cla15e6 <>« 4' a mechanical aptitude. This can work into ar excellent position. Large company wlfh super benefits a must if you are career mi.oded. C .. U.14MOH COIHlpl ltt 0,.1 ator $950 One or OW' line lrvlne companies needs an operator with multl·parUciai> experience. Houn 3·11:30 with $60 shift dilferentlaJ. Benefits are excellent. Cel U. 54CMOSS '""°"Friday to $750 Brighl pemll'l who likes to learn will enjo)I this position with small Investment company. There may be some travel &it will always be interesting. C .. U.54M055 ,.,....... s.u.tcrr $150. 1 Year experience in personnel dept. is sufficient for this well established company in their beautifw new offices. Moderate sh & typing. Excellent benefits. C .. U.HM055 ~Desk to $150 Lovely offices, interesting position, friendly co-workers. Some experience & moderate typing will land this position in beautiful Irvine omce. C .. U.HCM05S s.cntary to $160 Opportunity to land a position with one or the finest companies in our area. Reasonable skills & tact are prime requirements. Much advancement possibilities. C91U.U0.60H Secnt.y $700. IC you still have good skills & want back into the work force this is a great opening just available. CtlU.UMOH I M CllarcJe lookJ&"r.t" $900. Interesting position wit h well known company. Excellent ben efits & good advancement potential. <:91 llttt 54M055 Mcriaflrlg Assistaa.t to $1515 Fantastic: opportunily Cor tremendqusly interesting job with well known borne builder. Must have experience with advertising layouts & familiar ity with interior decorating package for model homes. Lots of public relations. Cel Sely S4CM055 s.cm.y to $I 000 Growing real esta te developer has opportunity for experienced secretary with good skills. Reil estate or construction background preferred. Small pleasant office, good potential. C .. Sely UCMOH Accomh ltec. Clwk to S62S Know keyboard on adding machine & typewriter. Enjoy working with figures. Ii you have had some experience or aC<.'OWlting classes in school you can be trained. Top company in lovely location. Super benefits. Clll Selr 540.6015 Euc:. Secretary la.u....f Get in on ground floor. French executives starling new restaurant chain require good skills & bi-lingual French. Fascinating job with plenty oC potential. C .. Sely 54MOl5 ACCCMMts Payable Clk to $625 Use or adding machine & accurate typing needed. Either accounting courses Ol" some- experience wUI help to win position with one or our best companies in Fashion Isle. Top benefits. , C4 Sely 54MOH Escrow s.u.tc.y $150 Good typing & escrow experience preferred by r eal estate development co. May consider training person who has had legal or escrow related background. Extremely congenial atmosphere. You'll love this company. Fantastic potential. C9I Sely 54M055 . Acc-"'"J CJ9rtl to $750 No typing, super company will train to interesting duties iC you bave some general office/ accounting experience or schooling: Must know adding machine. Good raises & benefits. Cel Sely 14Mo&• La9lli SecnWy SI 000 To .cflief council of leading real estate developer. Need good skills. corporala. experience & professional attitude. Lovely lrvine localioo & =potential. C.. 54CMOH Clertl TJPist f,,.. to $575 No experience required for good opportunity to get started with lbis top company. Moderate typing & knowledge of adding machine. Nice variety, pleasant co-workers & good benefits. Clll S.-, 14MOS5 - lee.,.._.. to $700 No more ho-hum days ln this Cun spot . Moderate typing & happy peniooalit,y could secure this growth opportunity, Ex~ellenL benefits & very nice co-workers. Ctll Cllrk MCMOll Offlca ~ ¥1sor to SI OOCJ This is an outs ndibg opportW1ll)' wilh rapidly expanding company for person with good secretarial background & s~pervbory abilities. No sh requlred. A step UP in your- career plans . C4ll Cllrh 14NOH s.nice htlr to $700 This top compa.ay otleds perlOb wilh flood ofllce background to handle their intmsll!l1 service departmeot. Excellent benenta '5 good saluy reviews. C. arit MNHI Dk:t .. •111 Secn4wy to $IOQ A11lst prffldeot ol outatandln.C local company. Great opportwlity lot penon witb dlct.pbone Ir manulactllrinf bacJltrou.nd lit th~ people ~ented company. . Ctll Cllrtt 14MGll """"' ......... to ••• 00 ()De of U. Mdsa IA tnaurance rteld needs person wUh commercial llil• bacqrolind. ~ceUent potential. C4ll a.ta 14NOll ttml A FEE COASTAL Pemnnellpacy 2790 Ha'1oillld. Coitll ..... '~ ~ .,., ... . -" -\. . I \ .... f l I • - -r -..,,. ..... -----• ' I \ -. . . 40• . r -~ - \ ; ' ~ . ) [ , [ l l g • 1- Id C· •• is ~· er t.tt l7 lh 1 r DAILY PILOT Ardllwlw al C.,.t Ser¥1n c .... ucM .....••....•.••..................... _. ..................••••••••..••. Ga...... Hading ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~... ,~,.,.,.IMJ NHllag/1'..,t'"I looftnig • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Dr.tllna, architectural, Carpel Mao will lay Room Addltlon1, PlUlapaneae Land.8cap· OCC Student. l Tun LANt>SCAPINO. fETERSPAINTlNC Father It Son. Consclen· ROOFS lnatalled factory atdnt draftsman exp YOW'S or mme. Repalr11 Remodel, New cuuatr. inl Is 1ardenlni. Maint. truck. Trub, trte trim. n.uonable prices. bcpr'd. Reaa Rates ttous. sa tis. a u ar. direct; estab SS yn. Call xvaU.Cal1751·962i ' & cleaning too! Guar Ll..-'d. Call Spiro. tac:l.mowirti,trimmlna, Roo6'2..5703,9'71Ml4111f 9118-f1Uortw7-5846 Free FAt. Call Gene 675-8336 evea or leave HaroldGunnS49-2961 ....... lepaln =: ~avinp.,_~--------spraying, we«llna. Free Ho.NclffMtg Matot AS2-o'58 meaa. RMOOF FOR LESS ...................... -• Dale W. Phiillps Cement. estimates. 5'5-?072 ............................. ~l ............... All PROFESSIONAL Bob f'oad P aintlng Comp. shingle &hot HU rain dama1cd your Shampoo & steam clean. No, Job too small. CLEAN·UPS!HAUUNG Wanta REALLY CLEAN Prlcllwork. Small Jobs. Painting. Inter/Exler. Coaun1, iodm., •res. Freemt. Call894-042l :aaphalt? Call 631"2440. ColOC' brighteners; wht Uc d tBonded. M2·2162 Pnmini·PlanUne HOUSE? C1lll Gln1tham Newport Cotta Men & Reas. work guar 642-0386 Jot/Ext, bo~ded, full•-------- Bonded, Uc., insured. cpts 10 min bleach. _aft_s_._______ Free est. 6'2·9901 Girl. Fhe est M.S-11123 lrvlne mW175 eves llab. 891-1001Lie3'S218 Huniry r oofers need aean liv, din rm, hall Electrical ---------· · Painllna. Extr/lntr. Ex· work. Speclallzing In Awmncp $l.5. Avg rm $7.50, couch ••••••••••••••••••••••• JOHN THE GARDENER ••Hou1ecleanln1 done Moving pr'd, booest, neat, reas. ,._...;a.pair wooct. shake • compu. ••••••••••••••••••••••• $10, cbr $5. Guar ellm ELECTRICAL SERVICE For Prof. arounds care by reliable couple. Refs ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lic'd 864·1°'5 Dave ••••••••••••••••••••••• ahingle.. Dave, 673-4790 A & E S)'lltema.. Auto roll pet odor. Cpt repair. 15 CALLS Sl.5 hr, & SMALL call John. 2S yn exp. 2 M0-1793 "Two Meo wm Move Fine Exter. Palntinl by Ne.at patches & textures Tree S..ice ~:rw:~!i': ~o[r:vhe~ ~~.x:~~~~l~~rk JOBS842-8233 =~ Uo~:e~a~~~eer~ Income Tu ~o:r :: ::n:}~l~r: ~ R Sinor. St. lie., ina. Try fUI m . 193-1439 ••••••••••••••••••••••• trlr. All colora "t1lze$. LL..&..1..-...I e--&...I Penionalserv ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• hn h ldv DI & me.~M552'hrs. PATCHPLASTERlNG Removah, trimmini,:, hnmed. tree home in· Contrwctor ~ .,. .. nc; · Wouldn't you ratht!r hitvt: ouse 0 • stanc.e A 11 types, Free pruning. Free est. Lic'tl, stallation. 8·10AM &•n•••••••••••••••••••• Lic32T136 MS~• VERYLOWPRlCES a certified public ar· local, also packina. rhrol palnt'g ~paper estimates.Callst0-41825 lnsured.642·282.c ELECTRICIAN .p ... --.. On Gardening Main· count•nt prepare your Lowest l ~gal rute. onglng, wor .. auar., __________ , _________ _ 5-7PM( R.J.Hullman & Son. Gen """"' tenance George S49·20U income tax return? For, l,.i.o/msrd. Cal T 111·944. Free eat. 536·080, Patclling, int/ext.I found. Tree Service. T"'8 prun-213)5112·5020 Contr. Custom All & right-free estimate on h !'Ph 847·7278 536-4383 rpr. Bonded, lic'd 140607. ing, removal, topprng. -.......~ Add, patios, cabinets, large or small jobs. A.. al r-lc an appt in your ome· Li •-.,.,. ..... -,-.... ~ fonnlca. New Const. Res u-.. ·ed 673-""u"' ... ... ;n'l"'T ff call 968-al82 Prof. urv. w/AUaa coats ,-I..£ Y-c-tl• 892•3846 c. U». -·1 ·-•••••••••••••••••••• & comm'l. •u5.4a"4 or .......... .....,., ••••••••••••••• •• •••••• ....., -•• Will ba'--it 3 moe-4 yrs, '" "" HANDYMAN. Homes & Riley 's Tax Service no more. Free est. lor Specializing in realden-DRYWALL WMdow C~ Ada mu:a & Bushard. 548-4541. Lie & bonded. aECTal-SEIVE apt s. Conscie nlious 28 Years Experience local & lng dist. Or. Cty. tial homes. int. & ext. Hang tape spr11y. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 968-3987 ••More than electricians Craftsman. Call 645·0302 Ca~ 642·6"42 Van & Storage. PUC Llc Please check our re· Richard. 960-1787 Windows tleaned, re-REMODB.IHG 979°496] Tlll,Ol5. 537·31110 or t re ces Lie # 320881 asonable, businesst'!>, ,._._nte. Cuslom Room Adds Gr-...._ Able service & reason. 537-3161 Ge n .' d f t Plumbl"IJ -r-· Cabin ls C t rt RoorsWWWiCJ uar., msr , ree es . •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• homes & apts. 847-4461 ••••••••••••••••••••••• e oun e ops ••••••••••••••••••••••• rates. Se Uabla Espanol. P""'-"-/P-"-g Ted. 636-7~ HOM"'"AV"".RS. Plumb· Apt Office Comm Alt ••••••••••••••••••••••• M I J M 11 _.. .... ~ -r-· ....... ~ T°• Carpenter & Cabinet wrk ~m Ho;,,es &Unit~ Floors: Wood, ~eram1c, Haul, skiploader dump 1S:.~~orr ... 645-~ o . ••••••••••••••••••••••• YOUNG MAN 5 yrs expr Ill&• Heatmg. Fr~ est, l'°:::::S~e~.11~~-~~ QualltynotQuantity vinyl & cpt11 . 27 yrs :::inowJ::~tc~::i~-~~~· ---lSyrs. Painting O.C. in wallcoverln&. Free..,.SlO~.Honest&rebable Alvin Wm B . Anderson licensed contractor.----------PeoplewhoneedPeople Res/Comm Apt lo rates. est.645·8S76Anltv-----·service. BofA, MIC OK. Builder Cameo I nteriors . Have something you want Ttu&t's what the Lic/ina 839·l886 /4W.290l ~ 979-8065 or 847·0383 Carpenter. Free Free Est. 631·0361 531-8440 to sell? Classified ads do DAILY PILOT Try a Dai I y P 11 o t Trade your old iltidf for estimates,Anysizejobs. ----------It well -Call NOW, SERVICE DIRECTORY Classif1edAdtobuy,sell new goodies -Wlth a Have something to sell? Tony, 646-9866 Classified Ads 642-5678 Sell idle items 642·5678 642·5678. is all about! or rent something. Claa.si!ied ad. 642-5""78 Classified ads do it well. Boats CLERK TYPIST i.ot man wanted for Sal~ Dept. Electronic cleaning boats. Call Lou maauf. needs person ,;Jl-2547 wtsales & marketing ex· ---------•per. Customer phone BOOKKEEPER Familiar W/A/R , A/P, billing, payroll. Must be accur. typist. Min exper l ·2 yrs. Fast expanding electronics mfg. offers J?ood pa,y, benefits, con· l(enial atmosphere. EOE. Call for mtervw OECC contact. Type 60 wpm el!K'tric typewriter. Dic- taphone & TWX. Xlnt growth oppty. Call for appointment Industrial Relations 714/833-3300 lerilNy Controls IRVINE Equal Oppor Employer Irvine 54&-4731 t----------- BOOKKEEPER-Moulton Plaza Pharmac y. Laguna Hill s, Mr. Dreyfus 768-3784 Donut Shop-G raveyard girl p/time. Apply, 135 E. 17th St, CM. DRILL PRESS OPR l·S yrs exper for small Electronics Co Friendly atmosphere, apply GLG Systems, lllS2 Condor Ave., Fountain VJy 549.4777 ---------- OFRCE TRAINEE ST ART $625 MO. MOR.E WlTH EX.PER. Qwck pay raises Advanremenl potential Variety of activities Full company benefits In Newport Bearh 646-2123 ---------- Painters, 3 yrs min. ex- penencc Call 891·1001 HHDHB.n Help yourself to a Heaping selection of Qualified Hopefuls in the DAILY PlLOl' HELP WANTED ADS Real Estate SalH LUSK RJty, a John D. Lusk Company is now taking interviews for lirensed real estate sales peoplf'. Call for appt 963-4361 I ........ I -REAL ESTATE S.ALESPERSOt-l We're expanding again & looking for top cali her salespersons with high performance records & PA.PER CUTTER exper. in local area. Cati for appt.. Steve 675-231'1 Cashiers/counter help. Ftr time position avail. 9.5 Mon-Fri. Also p/t day position. Apply in person btwn 2-4PM Long John Silver 's Restaurant. 3095 Harbor Blvd. CM. Across stceetfrom Fedco. Cooks, experienced Apply in person 340S. Cst Hwy, L n. COOKWAMTED Xlnl benents Sal open Apply, Jolly Roger, 203 Marine Ave, Bal Island. COUNSELORS See our ad for Hous~ Counselors wanted. Oak Tree Homes, 540-4754. Escrow SKrflalry ------- Maid. live-in. lovely N.B. home w/private room. 5 days, wknds off. Eng. speaking p referred. Housekeeping. cooking. need own trans. Non- smkr. 644-0595 MECHANIC Auto. MacGregor Yacht Corp, 1631 Placentia CM MECHANIC Retired m an part to r /time Newport ~al·h GoH Course, 751 -4344 , 3100 lrvine, NB MECHANIC Exper. in small engines and Pickup trucks. For landscape malntainance -finn. Call 546-7843. En- vtronmental Care Inc. 1920 So. Yale, S . A. Equal Opport . Employer. MB>ICAL/RKept for allergist's office. Salary according to ex- pr. 530-5690 Medical FROMT OFFICE Need r es p. person w/some exper In 1 dor· tor ofc. F/time in H B. 842-8941 Mail Department M E O 1 C .. L COLLATOR/PACI< ER .,. Mature ind1v. needed for SECRET ARY It g ht p a c k a g i n ~ 0 f For orthopedic office m Exper. pref'd on com· ROC)H''I Realty puterized cutter. Will d .,.,37 E. Coast Hwy consider other ruttf'r ex-.. , pee. 4 Day work wk. In · orona del Mar, Ca house pnnt shop. Xlnt1 ____ 90025 ____ _ work i n 1'! <'on d s & Real &late Sales Peopll! benefits. Apply Nal1onal wanted. Up to 90/lO'·;. Systems Corp, 4361 romm. split. Nwpt Bch Birch St. N B. <Near 0C 631-0900 Airport > E 0 E. ------- PARALEGAi.. co n veyancing assrt. in· surance benef1c1ary and owner ship changes. Knowledge of trusts. Deal with clients. Steno· graphic skills. Airport area, Newport Beach. sa.J.9982 PART TIME EVENINGS Adults with ouut,nding, attractive personalities who enjoy working with kids. Start at SJ.50 per hr. Phone 642-4321 #250, between 3:00·S:OOP M. Ask for Jim Equal Opportuntly RECEIVING INSPECTOR Islander Yachts 1s seek- ing a receiving inspector who is capable of read- ing blueprint.!, taking m- v en tor y in th e stockroom & is able to identify good usuablc parts. Exper pref 'cl Good starting sal & employee benefit pkg Apply 19"!2 Barranca Rd, Irvine. QCEPT. TO $700 Pebple pleaser w/good typing skills for th10., variety pos. X l nl benefits ioclud. profit sharing. Call Mary Ann, 770·2732. Contempo Personnel Service. 22001 Employer _ Lambe.rt St, Ste 503, El PART-TIME Toro. Chauffeurs wanted for ll!rowin,g 1i mousine service Mus t be mature. responsible, clean·cut, able to work days on part time & on nu basis. 770..2689 bwtn 10..3, Mon· Fri. --MARINERS SA VIN GS COUMTER PERSON Is seeking a qualified Busy printing company, EJicrow Secy for its N.R light paper work. PIP, ofc. Min 6 mo'.s escrow l''ull·time positions at Orange Co. Airport & Costa Mesa locations. Equipment & uniforms rum. Must have rnr & telephone. Call or apply in person educatl·onal mat 'Is in Nwpt Beach, full time J 't P it' d m s t b Counter woman to wnte 1----------ant or eves. ime our Santa Ana facility. a Y s . u e HWlt. Bch or Q.-rrilos. Xlnl benefits & working knowledgeable in taking contracts 10 rental 1----------642-0621 secretarial exper. req'd, ----------• ---Xlnt sal. working conds CHEMICAL OPR DELI & benefits including den· $3.50 per hr w/periodic Manager worker. Salary tal. Apply at maln ore. BURHS IMT'L SECURITY 1775 E. Center St Anaheim 635-4630 Call Alan (1) 526·5511 . -conds. Apply National medical history, rapid center. Must have neat RECEPTIONIST Systems Corp, 4361 typing & transcribing. handwriting & be able to JANITORIAL OC Salary rommensurate deal w/public. No exper. reviews. H.S. ~hem. or +. 548-7863 1515 WestcUff Or NB P /time 4.5 hrs night 5 Birch St, N.R. (Near w/ability. Exper'd only n e c. App I y. 19 3 0 Days wk 171 8 2 Airport) EOE. need apply. 644-7840 uk Newport Blvd, CM w o r k e x P e r . ---------Or call Personnel for w/chemicals pref'd. ---------appolntment642-4000 GUARDS 7am·3:30pm. E .O E . DENl'ALTRHE F.qualOp-porEmployer p . d Armstrong, Irvine. CorMary •---------- 549-3281. If you have gen'l ore /time ays, perm. ---------• akll1s thia dentist is will-EXEC. SECRET AR y, Mature. reUable men. JanlloriaJ company needs 540-7813. MAtMTEHAHCE MAH ----------i Ing to tram you for his for Irvine Advertising F acl Ii t Y i 0 I rv In e experienced or qualified Cleric.al ofc. Call Mary Ann, Agency, Agency exper Complex. Car ~hone people. Will train. Top Must have exper. in R f 'd s I req'd Call 0 "" ext w t 0 e ma1·nta1·ning restaurant *JR. CLE K 770·2732, Contempo pre . a ary com· l9t lla. .,.,. ...,... pay. an men, w m n Penoonel Service. 22891 mensurate w /ex per. m-.... m. & coupl~. Call 631-0723 & related equipment & cau M T PM 673-4356, or a5,P~ly at 83J h a v e a w o r k i n g *SR. CLERK Lambert St, Ste 503, El on· ue, 3:30-5 • HOST~. mature, over W h c M knowledge of the elec· Toro 557-0ml 30 ta l s . 1 7 t • • • Ct.ERINL ASST . d ·res ~ant ;,:~~O 9AM·l2:00. trical & plumbin g * llR D t I I I ~MasttFood d Its u ~ru~:~0Restaurant ---trades. Apply at, Oran~e Medical Ass't Must be ex· perienced in drawing blood. 6:30AM·l0:30 AM . CalJ for appt. Ask !or Debby. 640-0140 Morchandis. Mgr. Receiving. Beach area drugstore. F /time, perm. Retail exper nee. 675-0150 Mr. Elwood varl•d jobs witb " e n a r ecept on at a urea u • re r~. 3333 s. Bristol, Costa JOI County Restaurant ...ttbout aper. 1n good Mature, eitper. ~r. citizens! Apphca-Mesa 2 DlY3 per wk. Perm. ServiC'8. 2601 Daimler. MOTOR ROUTE PAYROLL CLK Exper'd indlv. needed for multi-state com- puterized payroll. Req's 10 key by touch &. lite typing. Must enjoy de· t< & busy atmosphere. Xlnt working conds & bens. Apply National Systems Cor p ., 4361 Birch St, N.B. <Near OC Airport) EOE. With the following r ... quirements: Sharp Person Pleasant appearance Good telephone personality Good typing skilla "°" Staollft' Call Mn;. White for 111 terview appointment. Paul Dosier Assoc. Inc. ofc aUJ'J'Oundlngs. Call 844·1405 tionll now being accept· ---·-------Car. r~fs. ovr 60. 673·2289 Santa Ana. 8am-5pm Today! ed for Ml Ir P rr PoSi· Hosteu, exp'd, p tr. App. Moo thru Fri. Large Daily Pilot route PBX Ans , Servi COSTA MESA 1714)556-7075 Eqlal 0,,0.. r.ployer HO FllS Dlfttd Assistant tJcoB on day & evenlnjt ly in person, Beach Lady Nlaht Manager, in South Laguna·Laguna wenng -; ce ~8~ ffi Ortbooflc.842·TI75 1lhifta at Naualea Dnve-Houae Inn, 619 Sleepy ~l~pe'afbB0u~~erN ~~1-M_atn_t_en_a_nce __ m_an_._fo_r-55 Niguel. Monday through ~·. :r~e~d~~~~ 1-REC--B'-,~---,-fT--A-L 0 ~ e ~ DmLt.I Ql&iraide A111illt. ~ ~:;ab'!u~OO: Hollow LD, Lag. Bch 6"75-298l ukfor Mike. unit apt complex m C.M. ~;t1:r~!/ !~~;r~i~~:Y ,_v_ari_a_b_le_b_n_. a._o._1_11_0_ ~-time Ena/Wknds over oa In N.B. Pleasant lf'OUl> vacatloo be~cfit1, OP· • (2l3)865-38Sl mornings. Approximate-PIX OPERATOR Ple111Mt. matu.-e. ar- -· 557' "061 tra.~ E~per. nsec. portUDity for advanct· HOST/HO~S ~to w~7rak-in :~n:! MALE MODELS-age ly $450 per month itross No t;yptna. Woman ovr curate. Receptlon, LJp "" 1oc1-• tcmato at. meoL Al>PlY In person Jl'ull /~art·Thne -,,. ....... ' lam ..... P 19·25 for sports wear earnings. s.50 00 CHh de· 40. to receive & 1111 In&, admission."· nned 37218trd1St.NS Alf'a.M0-1122. Mon·Frlt.t.M·llAM, Need lndtvldualft G,uroeld • AP8PiYllh~~.o, cataJ«>aue call for •Pl't· p0glt required. Phone c1Utomer orders by duties. Good worki111t DISHW~HYS 2PM·$PM. 7PM·UPM. w/pleatant appe•rance J~41 ~ .... o~1 d ~B '2 ~3840 ' 642-4321, ask for circula· phone. Servle. orcaniu. l"ODd. a.max. Accounta Rec. P'"''--11 .. ...,._ ,,,_ 11295 Brookbortt Ave, Ir personallty to wotk ... a .. ~· v • ' 1__;_..;;.________ lion. Leave nomn and t.lon. WUI traJn. '° Hr Appty In penon, JlMUO· __,._ .. """•· FV Ml Ir p/time lnclmllni mb No. of Talbert. number and make of wk. -·-tw"-.. -. Start Oro~eirove p=~n bua~U Home.ICN505. weckondslnoorHl .. of· L d A 1 MAMAGBTaHI,. outotobeusedandyo1.1r S3 b;~Cat'l"84s -4071 ~babtfogp ~lat tore. 19 ' Dockmaaltr's AHlstant Good~~ Gen'l !!:i !.': •=• a«tvo ~er!:C:.~. :,~~e Ambltioua 10-1etter Is call will be ~lumed morns or eves. U3320=!no°ro~~e Bl ,..., 'l:'llll'J>8U08 GU\t • WIJUCSA F /ttmo. Open ofc apeu.,q'd. e.o.8850 PleaMcall~ 7:80-U:30Alf. &73-l~, southt bt Santa Ana ...-Altf CIMTER ~rt" CO..._..OL l l.llk eutof Harbor Bl ~Bx ~ • Mlmy.c.Ilm-3515. i tam'UJNoon 8'1&o033ol. area firm for tholr ,_,...,...., r~• nift ~:_e~rer 4. DONUT SHOP, p/Umo. tlla,ppt. • THI IRVlMICO L!XiALSECRETAJlY mGr1ematt ltrrno!..propo1~:~: OfRCIS S,; R v ICE MAN. E.Q.E. -" .... Oltdener: up d for SS .,,.h Glrl FrldlY. attracttvt, Jl'/Ume. So. Oranae Co. Rec:ept1oni1t, for bur;y ---ml!l--·--·.1 ..u .nan It ue ah_. imlt1ptCom,l)lU1nc11 550NewportCeotctDr Esparloncod. P•rti1 w/xlnt co. benetlte. pononable, artlcul1te. ana.495-4411orl31·1~ awttcbboard. Exp. r•• _.....~.. av.U. Woman al(e 25 or, -·~ · · Nt'#POl't&oJcl1 pa!'.'l•tJme, so. La1W1a 770·UU, Conttmpo Ute tn>in.f c1u·eer op u1~ ~ ,,. ow. Apply In penon, ,, -., Equal ()ppor &m9l0ytr ote. Send rHume to ~ ~rvt~. 22691 ~ lrit.h dY!Jam1c PET l TI 0 N E R 8 ~ q nou. Ute typlnc & bk· Eatl7 lM pot Dlppity Donut!J 1154 Gaa• Oll:ll!.ICI P..0 .801t sae-;' So. tamW;,VSt; Sto !.03, El irowtb compuiy. Salary Pull/part Ume. Good ks>'Jl. Beneftta. N.B for p•raon W/lJPlnll Nnport Blvd. CM A"t • m ~CA, t2871 4 1•Toro;: ~ ~Call M arllyn ~ daUy. S..7TU IOC'a. App1y tn peraon. ~I.II. Good IJ'O'lfth po. Good tn1111 sklllt 1'HOl.JSE00UNSBLOBS ,....... ,, . _ ~~=~~~~~ b,,, a lo· 4. s& o l tent. mim. c.om.mawi I oeeded, '° Qm, 10 kt)' II.amt~ cpl C>D~. no ....... SIC'Y I-~ ;i ' • 1..;;:~;;;;...-----PIZZA MacArthurm St• 211 or ~l Senlc.. 221!~,~~ . .f" 111P cl&Jwt 1•,t~~ by JoUtb. llutt bt 11w1> Jdda. . lJ,.ln. Su lie 1,...,. p.. _ 'd. ~ Dall't .,,Pu.. ball! Get a ~boN'TtalyU~,?. M .. i.t .... = " on ~ call Elliot ·111'0 LamlJCft. ~ • ~ ..... 0 u• ·-· m detail&. A.PPUe•U9na 1,, l..nu. lirla. + ~ :p. alary JobWtth 1 low-coltDallr ~ ... ..,. ·•' _..,. Toro. 1 ~ ..-, 1 &lllp .to abo,. renJt.I 1, t&Ua,, •aut or ..at. Oa"k 'l'i;.~;_.ttOll\N, pOf;~ Mra. Ttiomu, l>llol Cl11tUSed A~" See clam:t.tleal.lc)n I080 oveos. per nudedA m..t. ~ ~ wtlb a toa'll. •' SSM12$Alktor<ll.tra'· MM'TN., ~-'·ti ... ·~.-'"'--~-.~ ;,i:.: _., • Pb6r'HtlOllTL .,, ,, Jleuboarabt..11 •Tiil °*117PUolawuhldAd. .---r -' .... • .... J ·~ ' ) l J 1 r - •, j ... . ..... 1 ....,., Wa.t.4 1' DO Hflp W Oll'tH 7100 HMp W..t.ct 7100 twp Wtltfed 7 I 00 Help Welfthd 7t 00 .,....._................... ....................... . ................................................................... . Alslt.... 1005 Mondey, Maret\ 27, 1978 OAILV PILOT ......................... · .... iiOMlST 11'4/LVH ~a.tlady oeeded. rull SEClJ1U1'Y PF.RSON Tf'le. sales adv. t\rll or _____ .... __ Gcltag. Wo r:t06 ~ Furnfhre & 'l'CN•/ ~ ~ for te--Full time, 11 1 ahllt \Id, exper tn Ullant.s or capable ol assunung & pit. Some 11alea.. $3 hr + .... -................ Eqll,....t UIS Scoo.... 9 I SO "'9to o.u.ea lnc4ude Beaulll•l 99 be4l c b lHtren's wear. Mecutlng swing 11h1ft t.'(>mm 835-9m2,835-3861 ~~~E Moooal Smttb/cor•a ·---·-•••-• --.1 .. t!•··~ .. ···•• 9'11111dbboar4. Telex, physical reba~ boBpttal Younaland.. 2300 Harbor &/or eraveyard shltt TB.L•n typewriter SlS. Push ad 74 "OHDA· ----_.., ..._ -•·ung Pleasant eorit'oomeot, ~ C.M. c.u 1«0. dutie8 2 eves per wknd. s:a NOW QP£N 1_.n mower s·1. New Oak pfan lilea, deslr Cl 100 -. ~ • --.-.-"-'' u EW CCO · & · #--Boor mat.a Sl5, wooden • 1 tlsdad -.H. Exper good compensation. \AUi M2-t783. After Spm " A UMTS ~away tire run "" desks ~ draftin& U>Js Never v:IC-d.. :ioo mlll•11, .....,.., .,. oot .c. Sal Apply in person SALES-UNUSUAL OP 554-3216or962-2344. Exp'd, perm .. xlnt TB PUBLIC AMC m Ha tack !!llaler _ .. _ • r·1 "1'1 Uke nl'W. Wlnd1'1h!dd. Or PORT '( b f t ,. II J ».nil cuulluo" oomn .. nnd .....,woases, l es, a U , It & < • W"llltew/expec angegrovt! . you are en Sec'y/Bkkpr, Real iine 111 . ..,a oun o ,,...,_. sl%es executive & ro dllr, rc:ur rue Ol9 IG4Dl A ult for Rehab fl~ tbU6iasuc, amb1tiou~. "'-t/const """'Pr""". Mml Marselle 03-56S l. OPF.N7 DAYS $1. eacb. 4 new 4 k.&g _; d h C'\!Shion $550 962-3437 -• ....., .. G--•··-"'-·· Bl .. _,.e i " ~"'I! & "'° """ ~.. ... M al Sa · A W"'I'.:" 0 G. rims, lits uc, P1•t.o. aecr""ary woo c .rs.. · · ,.._ ~ ... uoxi '.:nvve ..,.. ve n .,our.... resume to 2845 E . Coast utu vangs & Loan, r. •n" ... .. c E Wbol aJ Off Garden Grov~ your ability Uttll could ~ 570 Camino de Estre.Jla, --.... AntlquH Ud Capri $15. set 74 GMC · · es e ace '49 Panbe-itc.I. Xlot run- IECl!P110HIST 1 blk K of Harbor'BI. ill Sell mot1vatJon pro Hwy, Cd.M 92625 San Clemente. E O.E 15292 Bol5a C hko udio $5. '74 Chu Jl_'urniture 2644 Plaeen-rung cood. Stroku kit, tor ·f!le wp•t Yacht -;;;;;;;;;;;;;E;; •. ;;o;;.E;;.;;;;;;;; grams. •Sub6tantlal In· Sec'y, ror H.B. law o!fc H.a. l7 141 l93-?S09 Steeraoe whe~I $_.. na, CM. 631·2771 or tots of chrome. Dy:; BN:kwace. Sat/Sun.• come. •lmmed advance· Legal &xper pref 'd. T~ller, some exper pre &c2-3.179 6312510. lf13.0075,evs6.1l·M83 Lille tn*g. cull Mrs SALES AGENT IDeDl OJ>gfrt. -Career OP· Salary commensurate f d, South West Bank, M JI p • 1017 '16 Hooda 400-4 Super --~-_ _. wt u!l.aruut'd future. w/evper. '-'-nd r .. sume Laguna Beach Ask for Sft:n&IART ROTH wst se ersu1n r•g -·• .. ••••••••••••••••• Q,,.,.-n-. •'13·8511 for WA.MTS> .....,. .... ~ " J n 497 1771 "'" pillows. mod fum. & PIC· . • ...,...... ... xlnt. cond. 11500 -Cull Mr. Harvey to Classified ad ~182, oa · · ANnQUES tur ..... ,n-·chclo'"·~-n~ Yredtailboa,5\1\ ml, $8~0. 4~3-9491 1 ----=--------"We net:d a sales oriented 6CZ-57S4 ...., ~ ~ --loo man or woman to sell . Daily Pllot. P .O Box Tow Truck Dnvers ex· La~t selection ro<.•k LP's Lots Plaats g w/aquanum. $100. 496-5002 IKIDCJB<:KEN SOUP _ _. cmkba't bvt to call a.dt NMll about a r~ ·--~in real -... Aat trainioe if ) • ,... 541-5101 our exclUS1ve calendars Sandwich Maker p1ume. Box lS60. Cost.a Mesa. per'd. Top pay. Apply, uf Amencan Oak 673-~ 640-58 a.ft 8 Hood and an extensive line ol Hrs. 11am-2pm Mon thru _Cal. 92l62'1 _ G & W Tow 1 ng , I 000 ill Or~e County & OrcJc-s 8090 2 SL. ll 1~• 1973 CU & advert;~•ng a""""1alt1·n~1 Fri. Call '--1 11 or a't Irvine Ave, NB 642.1252 7st E:. Dyer Rd. S.A u-~ SALA a>Oea. ~... .,.,..~ ~ UO!'l ' (at Nw"' F"-"') 751-8922 .--~ vvv -·--••-•••••••• 640-0010 bu.sin~s gifts. 1f you ~. 545-4867. Secy SplJt Fee TOW TRUCK DRIVEJtS ,,.. _:_·; ---·-• .. •••••••••• ... -•• ley Spll9ef $600 ...... --. have a pa.st history ~ LEG~ SE_C. TRME Must have towing ex per, Horses boarded. Stalls * ~18Ml • R..tfSS6ol wWe/l 6 0 sales success or. WlSb le SAANDWbIC1 H &5SAAMLAtDI Entbus1ast1c, person must lrve C.M . area •DOftOl'HY E.MERSCW awul. 2029'l Birch St. _ ....... ;?; ........ .. begID a career m aaleis, ssem ers. 1 w/basic sec y skills 646-96J8. 8.5 Mon·Frl It DON HOLAN SAH. ~. 646-2l8t yoo can benefit from one SAM, Mon-Fri. $3 00 hr needed \o grow winew ------· -PrffeDt the of lhe most lucrative I.mi's Kltchen, 979-0747 Orange Co. l11w firm. TYPIST /RECEPT ---------commisslOn structure~ alt lOAM for appoint· Call Gennl!er, 770-2732. Front ofc appear. 24 hrs B .... in our mdustry. What we menl. Con tempo Personnel week min. Tues/Fri/Sat. BIB'S ltto-OtTIM llgloy) !1 • t e eipellliog9 in _......., restaurallU a ...... locelioos. We ~ • previous ex-..-......_ our friendly --. 0-.ee • leday ~~~ 23951Z A'Nllllda de J a Outotta Lapaa Hills fll(U Opp Emplyr m tr ~eed is an iodividual Service, 22691 Lambert $3.75 hr start. (714 • r-;.ea:nistrell&les, exp' d for ' who can deal diTectly nu bus. in summer wear. St. Ste 503. El Toro. 549-0377 Mesa Verde with busioosso1en whe CaR Mindy, 631_4796 Coontry Club. use calendars ans ·-'------- specialty it~ms to pr& Seamstress wanted for *y/Supenisor Typist mote their owa bus~s sail I.oft.. For luan or1 gination Accurate typist for real This is an excellent op-Call 548.3467 de pt. of mortgage est ate loan dept. SO porturuty for "YOO to ~----------broker firm. Loan baek· WPM minimum, 10-key soci.ate yourselr-wit~•--------ground req 'd . In touch. Apply an person. The Thos. D. M«PhY *SecretarfeS* Newport Ctr 644-8824 Bank or California l~l Co., a pioneer in the ad· ---Dove St NB. E.0 E vertising field -since Ge>1 ()(fice & Legals Sec'y to SI 0,000 1888. Your initiative ans Employers Pay All Fees 1 girl otc. Type 80 wpm planning will determinE' Liz Reinders'Ageney Shthnd 100 wpm. Near ~our growth and succes~ 4020 81.Tch, Ste 104 OC airport. 640.1271 TYPIST /CUC 60 wpm, 10 key helpful for gen'! ofc & A/Pay u:-. sistance Xlnt loc. & with our establishei Newport Beach 833-8190 company Your accoun~ C8ll for Appt/Estab '6.5 Service Station Allen· bt'nehl'i. 644-8824. dant. exper'd. Day & -TYPIST WANTED~ ....................... ORA.NOE COUNTY'S UllGEST & MOST COMPLETE SHOW Qa 1)% raatt. & box ~ 3 '74 -*"' Ima. alps 6, st·LC oak dreeers S220 for a8 .__ _______ _. _. -~ A p~ma ef the world o.ild's Capt. trundle he<! :::'""~. :· ~ 5 many of ~•es in Oraa~e w 4 • .._. 9resser, ..&....-3 ~-..... ...,.,.,.. Couaty'i; first Giaot f'>K,. ru ... ..., "-·· 1... •~-..,, $250 2 pr dr.i.!)t.'s • .lmed. 1977 DREAMER pa. v,...,r ..., Si'""'-""" 811-line• i.ok. lt c<.dor 6Gll84 Marille Li411"e cea.lers prt16ettt 560 f • r .a 11. 2 o.a k Cn*w..t 9030 M94I MOTORHOMe ~ot eichilMI; a( ~ Cl~~UT"' c•net'tioas for 1 he beokcases 6~ 'x:N" -.. ••••·--•-•••• ""~ ... soph:tsOcated & I.ht> OC' "15ttlOke ~iass shekes W AMTEi>!!! J le4 Lo choo6e casMIN1.l Mllertor ahke. $M15ea. 1':verythiog ex-A pMOer windJess for as For infoerslahon ru 1 I On.ge County ccllent. 831·1769 fl. power boat. Call Dale Wen<MlJ Rich or li1U Fairgra.nds Jew'e4ry .. 10 at 498-2799. Pieroe oaly at are prole<1.cd and repeat1 ________ _ Rest ai-.nt orders make money Corl•-------- u & ..,. "'GER tyou. Write Richard E Eves. Full & p/tame. Ap· . ply Shell Station 17th & Flume pos. m our typ Irvine. NB. ' ing dept. Xlnt working ~r~~~ ~";1 ~n g~ ~~._~ ····--··••• ••• ........ 1-Lr-g-porta--bk!--co-m_pr_et;!!_·_or_. f'Hll7~::'RD Mesa CS.. West of in-WANTED ui.ed eoigi:ne & elec· -------- tesseC'Jl!i• ef S. Diego I< TOP CASH 001,LA.Jt tre1tlc~ gear, steel Po r S a I e 2 u Newpeirt f'rwy.) M.i.n-ll PA I D FOR YOUa fasteo ta ~s. d esks, W il l iamst'rafl SECRETARY ~ F'tsher, Sales Manager 'The~ R~t.aurant The Thos o. Murphy The Irvine Co. 1s cur- F : )" I restAMNuat Co., uo s. 2nd Street. re.otly seeking a secy t.o ~-nee4 .t trainees Red Oak, Iowa 51566 woric in our comm'l/in- wt..e ~ve, peo. ---------1 dust1 div. Background ,.'8 eriellted and are i9 real estate develop- Service Sta. Night Attend 2 Or 5 mtes a wk. Apply, Shell, 17th & Jrvme, NB conds & co. benefit:.. Must be reasonably f<J.9t & accur Apply 1n pers<>n. Pennys .. ver, 1660 Placentia Ave , Service Dept now hiring. c .. M ~ thiru Apnl :!ad. JEWiilLRY. WATCH~ :i:~t~!\= mcAabwae 00 ~ l •'Pbarstlay, 1''riduy & ART OBJECTS. GOLO, bl'tllletl power tools r'llS-Too fr"ame. Good ..,d Sa.Nr4iay l l11 It It.Ill• SILVER SF.RVlCE, W ch. et.c. See '0oag BekJw Wue bk. Wkdys Suntby, 12 n!>41n lo ti FINE FURN & AN· or Pat, Lido Shipya"1, =ll63.. evies Wllllds wil!lllag a l!OW)d and ex-Saln-DeliYery m e n t , e s c r o w & celllllt fulure. -Positions It you have a definite decumentation helpful. .,_ ill Orange County need for a '1>/time job Must be selC start.er & Factory service center --------- seeking personnel exper WAITRESSES p.m. TIQUftS. 645-2200 -.1212 , __ _:_ ____ _ ~ fw appt.. Moo after S-9pm & are seriously in-well organized. Typing , • <2!3')693.3749 terested an worklllg, call 6.S wpm. in 110 & 112 electrical Apply in person to systems, plumbing, Stavro's, 5930 W. Cwst carpentry, fibergl~:-. re· Hwy, N.B. --,mOP-ENED Diamood ring & wea<lilag T~ Trani 9170 band· l 83 karats· anti· Power 9040 ·---•••••••-•••••• • ~!l~~.i:;t~n~J:~!' que eold band & ~ling; ·-•••••••••• •••••••• •• 22'_ Road Liaer TT\11 trlr. us oow 531-0842. Xlnt co. beoefits & work-pair & painting. Top pay --=-'-------- for qualified person. AP· WARD CLERK 642-4703 cert. appraisal of $2200; GREAT Air, SIC. $ll2 mo. Perm 40' ceot111ner just ar ma&st sen $2000 or M6t FISHIMG IOAT!! Lae trlr space. $4¥011 Resaeram J.P. MACS ls !tow lftring For A Day Hostn.s Applt' betwn 3 & 5pm M~ Start $2.75 hr llll42 Ad.am& Ave. H.B. F 'time~t,!rt Sht'f'ri 's Bakery. 24642 La Plaza Irdlla Pt. No phone calls SALES-JR. Women's Fashions. Exper. pref'd. Ulg environmenL Please Ca II 644-3389 9am 'til Noon THE lRYlME CO SSO Newport Ctr Dr Newport Beach Equal Oppor Employer ply at Landau Molor Exper'd, fuU-time. Mesa Homes. 1650 Sunflower. Verde Coov. Hosp, 66l nnd. s~ pn~·s offer. Russ at 644-2071 ~-4)4.M36. C.M. betwn lOam & 3pm Center St, CM 548·5585 Appli.-on 80 I 0 ~ 8080 ---............................................. . Service Slalion Attend WAREHOUSEMEN WANTED 1977 Terry 25', ti.Ire "ew. 0'4fl\ltF, air. eteir-. mo n y extras. .,_ ~ Mio Srric.. Parts •Advcmce·ment possib&e.1 _______ _ ~11 ~aaagement, Apply in person. T~~------- f'/time days. Light Respons1blt' person for mech'I knowled(te. Nttal fabric warebouso. Geod appear & handwntmg oppty w/growing com· Apply. 2590 Newport pany. Salary com - 1'' R G RT D A M A G I': D HOTPOl'NT SALi:•; n\8 W. Wa.J'rler nr Harbe1-, Samtlt Aaa \1~2!12 1 TOP CASH DOLL.AR PA I D fo~O R YOUR JEW8LR Y. W ATC'HHi, AK'1 OBJ F.X:f'S. GOLD, SILVER SBILVICE. PINI<.: FURN . & AN· TIQll ~. 662200 28Ft. CHAMPION C'FS417 B 8 . Fly bri d g~ saagle screw. galley. he&d, bait tank. Skle-pb 4. 61agine aompletely re- built. Electroak-gear a.. & AconlOri• 9400 S.-C.S crielted, to grow $e(:ond Glanct', 2122 W W/'1'fRJD« company. Oc an! t N n Rel's 1ieebed. 675-9102 e ron • · -- ~'for Hob. Sales, pt-hme Mature. friendly woman. Tb.e *•R.H.** Coffee !Wan. So. Coast Operatia g room. ex· Plaza. 549·1766 ,...a-.e ~.out ~ &irgecy, d.ayt< You don't need a gun t ...... Ne call. alghts "draw fut'' when yeu •·ee~u :Is. o.tpetient piece an ad ill the D 3'W<l7 Ce.ter. Hil Pilot Wallt Ads! Call ~ DOW -642-5618. Sectttarfol/Clericol Blvd, CM mensurat e w I ex per --------- 'the lrvine Co. '8 seeking Service Sta AltcndanL<; _556-_' 79_is______ Washers & Drytt-s f ull •· p/t cl r · •·al Oh< ~t'l'i, eomplet.efy "" 1me e ".. p/llme. eve/wknds 20·30 WE ARE help W/ · g sk II rebk, refinished , yr varyin 1 hrs wk. Apply 1n pcr,.,on E·X·P·A·N·D·I·N·G )-·els g~ Your ehoi.ct-"" · 6 am· 4 p m , see J oh n . BOOKI( EEPER $1Je. Free delh-ery · Rt<./Clk Typist Shell Station. 3131 Ability to prepare P&L Gr<VMl.()penin~Sale 1 yr gen ·1 ore ex per. Harbor Bl, CM. 11 Man.-h 15 Jl Typing so wpm. Must be ----------statements, payro , poised. personable & Serv. Sta Help needed A/P, bank stmt recon· So Cttast Applaanl·e~ ed cil newest store (714) able to handle extremely imm · 1'\111 or p/t. App-·• 531·3864 or 537·:!542 buly phones. ly, 990 E. Cst Hwy, Nwpt SECRETARY =:::::::::::::::::::=:::-:=: Secy-On Call Bch. G;;.t>d skills, ple~ant --- d . depth fi9der & bra.cl AtrrO PARTS: '59 ,__.vy new, m-..ed 2-way FM ""'. radio & R.DF. $6809 oc radiator $20. lleba:i\da best c:ff~. Call eves " ble 289 Pord Ee gm<' wtcnds. G«;-9376 bk>ck $51). Garage work o-----------• bench $5. ca II 642-3319 ~~~~:Eb~~~~~ 1978 ~-.-.-_-!«---.~.!. ••••••.• card. Send one card Cor SEA RAY ca.ell ta~ plus one spare. We return per-ma.elldy 30' S__. fi-L--seale4 attractive tag & r-• ~ strap, .,eeting air•e Outriggers-VHF radio 1 D ~re.nenl:3. Pie-Bail tanll-depth souader 9S20 ....................... 58 M'C A CLASSIC mot FIRM.. AS IS 7U413-4\19 'lo work as needed. 1·3 SHEET METAL personality, desire for ................................... --Ylsokexper.Typmg60 advancement 10 the wpm & dictaphooe. MECH. 11A11 Real Es tate field. Frici4aire dry~r. free we.sher, ereat cond, $7t . 54&4l2t verit m; " theft 1 For a and Jluch More per.ioadaed tag eac:"'6e 0.... Boat. I Only Crocbet-38/ 48 !· .. 7393 t,~~ Please call 644-3389 RECS'TfOHIST 9am 'tiJ Noon We are en1arf(ing our Pleasant, attractive ap- THE IRV.._.E CO S/M dept. & currenUy pearance for F'ash1on '" have openings on our t""'N-Ce t D Island Executive Of-.,.,., ..-..,,_~ n er r 2nd shift ror exp'd SIM Newport Beach mecb. aides. Must be ~~:s1fall Mrs. Garo. BqualOpporEmployer able to use all S /M m;ichines & equip. Will WENDY'S ·--- Kea .. re Modt'I 8t ft washer $135. NorRe g.as dcytt $86. Signature 21 cu ft SIS rdrig. bottom f\Jeer.er $195. Guaranteed & 4ei.ettd. S46-8672 wau,apt!r, cabne •r Special Pra·ce .. OQ,y mo-pa per le we will taad< &. trim y.ur $39,95(). lags. Or try two card6 Ll•-•so~oe: b&dttoback. ~ "~ PRICF.'i SEA RA y ~5~ii~ea 31DtCo.stHwy,N.B. GE W116111er, dryer, like 619 ~SJ 50 <'a 631-2547 9540 ....................... •AMX •n ao.ic Olep'ly n*lrtwshed m ouL N8lt' e.ag.. U uiit St·t' to believe! '42-.2.!89 or 646-n56 4 Wiie-ei DriffS 9 55 0 SECRET ARY/ Adm. •Ith bus1oess back· flllOWld to as.sis t v 1 ce- ~dent. in Ol1{anizing, coordinating of sales <JPtl'"Blion. Secretarial dllties: 10 key, typinl'( ~ SIB helpful but not nee. Salary open. de- peadi ng upon exper 800-?AZl or 531·1725. Ask tr Darleen. do own setups & layouts Old f-L?---~ using prints, drawings. -~ specs. etc. We require Hamburc)er"S nu COlld. $'006. Wul oon· to ---e ~ 40 ~trade for 19' re<ng. or~· •• E'a 16· Fant.y lfydrocraft ·-··---··-· •• n. i'ost111 like oomd. Cull Sales Tax lnduded s k I boa l. 7 5 Hp COSTA MES.L AMC-JEEP #I In Calif. Secretary /Sales Typing, shorthand. call~ ror appt. J.S yrs previous exp Now hiring smiling Salary to $6.25 + 103 faces. Days. P /time or shift premium. F/time. Applieaticw; be We are a growing racili· mg accepted between ty & have an xlnt benefit the hrs oC 3-Spm pkg. If you are interest· 2640 S. Bristol, S.A. ed in our position, please WOMAN OVR 40 apply at: SUNDSTRAND HEO Sub. Sundstrand Corp. 1601 E. Orangetborpe, Willing to learn. Will train. PBX exper helpful. 40 Hr wk Eves/wknds. Start $3 hr. Call morns /eves 646-4071 ail El>M, 548-U.16G NO CARD"' ~c. elec sruft, P-.."' Dr-your own or ~ ttft, tacb., hour maer, nu Bicycles 8020 name. address phone & cover, trlr $1250 ...... ••••••••••••••••• w<>'ll mak<> one card per 7514007 811...., & MO_.,.S tag. ruki ~ eoch. -------~ rg, Send dlec.k or moaey.,. 16' HOR12'0N JETTE o15;, New & -.ed. bu.v. sell. derto: ~Berkler jet, 8 track trade. C~k & Co. 24~ PILOT PR1MTIMG tapa. Less than 100 hrs Ne.p•rt Blvd, C M p 0 Box 1560 on boot & engine. New 642-'791.!._ _ eo.t.t Mesa, Ca. 92tW Nin tanks. Cherry oond. Cab 80 35 . . induding trailer. $425() •••-••••••••••••• ••••• LEA YING Area. Lilliaa or be9t. Ask i:Jr lbck. Hi~"" k'4tats CFA Ballant membcrsrup •b 968--8S34 or646-6300 p n ee Includes t.30. . .r.~r.-.&ny Rieadoro/M1n.it Chia traasfer fee SlSO . 2S' FairliDer. eompletely ---..ouu' ****** line, reserve now 6<f.6·SlBli art GPM or reu.ovated. Gray Nwpt Ctr. Outstanding SHOE SALES WOMEN & MEN 540-Wet aft 5pm. ~ manne, s:.BJO. Dana Pt. Fullerton 879-1211, E.O.E . Fll!!CY aeeded for busy person for beaut new Earn $3400 a mo or more n-8040 S4S:2000; "94-8435. FREE AM-Cmditioae,. oe new 1977 & 19 7~ Jeep;. Ooeri not indud1• Wagcmeer limited er.; or CJ7. Offer good only on factMy atr eqmp~d Yebicl.e&. ()(fer e i<p1 "-'S March 31. ms. OVERSTOCKED WITH JEEPS 1 a w o f c · shoe dept io Fashion selling mobile homes. .,_,. BARS1'00l..S Super nice s;a,1/cn4l/Bln. Prac.) Island. Must be expr, Will train. Call Paul, ••••••••••••••n••••••• UIOE·A-BED . '7& 18' t ri..._.ll bowrider 252.tHARBOR BLV l:> Mat be iot.eiligent. well call for appL 644-4411 635-<&2 Anaheim. DOG TllAf1UNG '6!·1597 1/0. W /trtr & ski equip. cosrA MESA 549-8023 organized. xlnt typist. Y.ur PLM-e er Ml1'\(' -----50 ythm on eng. Like nu. -------- Weft vwied & interest-7·ll STORE._ Full & pit WOODWORKER 1_J_otm_Y_artilt_· __ 548 __ -1 Books & rPCOrds to keda $4200/ofr. 548-1686 '74. GMC Jimmy. Whl ing. bemJt, ~ sal com-~&erk for DJghts.. Apply Must be ,......,,.d aod able ..., ......... _ u---~ ,,.,,.... ~ by vowels aJ8t -......... .r....a. 9060 SllU1Y xtrais. $45M/b!>.t. -uraC.e -/ab1'llty. m person. 28933 Crown ~.... ...,,._ _.._........,. .. -..... o-$100 new <>-• ....._ -_. __._ .,_.,......,. =-........ .. Valley Prkwy, Lairuoa to read and understand ~ 2f61"1H; AXC . •u .,.,., ..,. .... _ ........ - • ._ •• •nr. ~-~ ..........,.,.,. N!g. blueprint s . Work al Malo.s ~ fema l es $«).i<t.2-33'19 r-*5 9~0 SECaETARY liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim ben c h w/mioi••11> ~ Wainlt. ~on 09*. FUJI· YAMAHA. 'l'ypea>wpm., sh helpful. 7elepbooeSales supervision. Gd eoad, ______ _. w/ret•rn, $125. E.xec DIAlBtS. Sal c ommensorate SPRMJG H"'S pay & benefit.'!. cau for c Id~ Au z Ea s. cl11111r $50. Kea••re r-=--~~ '""" " appt or apply in pel600. M'TNA"rUB.E, AKC, • W/0, S» ea. lge ock t& wlelq>er. 543-65.13. SPRUNG GORDON'S DESIGN UNUSUAL ble, tHO. tr73-4119 S lllrn•terw &'BCRETARY rart-time THE GR.ASS 2SO Fisher Ave.. Cl\{. I.Aft ILACltS Yodlt ScilH enis, : Soda Servi~ Ph: 540-2860 9 w4u\, ~. 3 meJ5. ~~ =:;: 2616 Newpm-1 Blvd. A«eocy. E.O.E. <714) HAS RIZ Would m.. ~-~'1ihow. i4&ef'1 Newport Beach 8S&-OOZ3 you .... e a uu...nEl98 1----------• ift colors -free est (Tl.() 673-92U WEU TBJ. U of your own? You don't 1 y r •Id A I a at a a ~or 838M9'1 SECRETARY WHERE THE need an office to start. Mal a9\t1te. female. .. ..,_ _ _. .,._ .. ,_ lllltare person. Good Begin at home. full or ~ papers ~ 2.5 .. -.--. • ..........,r ell&:, typist. Non-smoker. MONEY IS part/time. Ideal for •oe. 6'B.lU4 attn · liker.-~u 6ood oompa.ny beneftts. husband & wife teea. Blc: Lab . W ClaP ll WU•,.,._ 9art:lag aalary $600 mo $ $ $ $ 646-4533 ~. pare CARFM' R.J!MNAN'l'S, neod ecJlllL C<lata~ Bad K.O.K.644-G42 YARDMAN llaliNlsi...~ bech11 "~ dens. bNM. Seb.&U a t We&tmcet 'y for sml office-BIG MONEY ~al center has •pe& $a.el$ie pa.pt;, AIC. re-&~-~e Q:. ~a Barlrar a. req11ires sbortba nd, lhdtvl~desfls a n gs !o r 2 me n . asOW<atile. 9 mo. old 2660A,,..KB.~ .-cl crumnand ol Eng. Loeg Dist. U... Mecbaotcat koow!Mge ma~ $7~. M-36ii aft ---------"-mm• pwumar. xln.l \1Pln1, & Howty Woge belpful, neat handwrtt-6PM 'h. PRICt aen1ol&eesp.673-!W72 '--" ing nee. Weekday fJlf CLOTHJNGSALE Will t rain. Apply. 1968 IWnih n 8050 TICJCTOCKER Sl:CltUAllY ~ Newport Bl.CM ......... •-•0 -·0 -• raiFl'SflOP .., ot 5 yn eomtruc. Nat, Prodlct -----St ,...... ~-Sb ao, typlng 10. l...tfful0tc **I BUY** -M:i.~pr·L 1111111& b&t81111nar w/oon-Cla915\fied ad• sell Mg GMd ~ P'G"*w+ • ts19et It ebaQle order items, 5 IDJIJ.1 ._ or Ad..,......()ll I wW\ UOYJWO SALZ •'S? ~dorea. Sa lary Worfl P,/tilM any item . Just eall Mlr•8D..LlorY011. a..,...., Bet Ai r e. ·111 .......................... RJU. SEUCTIO .. OF 1978 GMC MODELS HOW Plclliipe. v;in-;, 4X4 '· S.burbans & J 1m•l' . prieel& •low a" $4358 •7 9 GMC h ton pick\ap-liJ.5889). ..,. can J..S,, (714} OrF~.. ~. M.ASl'SSAUCTIOM ~tl'eek·bod.Y .... ._... __ ......;. __ _ 1.:•~--~~----J Sbd9ata U. ftnd. it an Mlftll• dlMt 6 4 6 • a 6 I 6 & m.eoe w a.llber " r:! HOlll 16 1'11.A ~ .. ar-, Ptr N. Fllh ktealjob. • ............ ---··-~ dry e~·.,~~.:...!.!.e - wraeoey ald pro· 133-8095 .w11111 ltOS :"iii.WWW. --·---------..,a. _Newport Harbor TIM&-UFI •••-••••••••·---•• CAS11 PA.ID ...... ,.,,,, ~I o£ Cburcbea. ~ w lw. Inc. FCll' Jiii ased ..._ Cl"ftllr Of&» fwuAu • & DDlla .,. _______ _ • .,. baa:)'# tU-S0$0, Eqml ()pp '!tJaptYl" mlf MUSIC 1oxac. .... 6elr~ tsr•m ldJ '°" I... . a a -IPORI> .... CLOCIS ._ aM& •Wnet. lh11Ut .=:...! =,; •• I ·--......,., Sl_p llrr 35' ,..,., II'*> .:.:-m:.·~ SIC:lm'AIY T & L & p B o N E Slot 11~. Nl rll• ...._ 9' ftt6k w.'118p eld: MillO ,._. ...-oat, '111 ...._ Call _.. WJd. Pora -.r .. ae-w 11iEWfOa'l".B£ACR soucnoa. ~ ..... t deon1, pboaoa.ra1)b• ................ ti r .... s A•coold~tJ .... tire&. mietl C18811Jet'. ••Jn~ t1Pt ..n;.*-' ~=~: W«ld'J l araeet ~ L w toM -. ::_. =-~--~' ,.~"""~·~=1:.;;;~~;~;;.-.. -.----._•._-... • __ s._.,.,;__ __ _ •1 ;h--. ....... Slit..,.,... Ne tle>n. A b o •U h. :i.--· _..... • olA,ee ..,.. .. ..,.;ii;..;=------t"6totop..-~JJ"l(1 turrittn•. ••U• o c'•• ...,..., .-ofl>OCU •11. Hrs. ~CU\~ a... • .-..I ~ .............. • _.3a. .. -. Qlllm.12 ~ lloo-Tbor. 180Z ltcU«liic; .,...., ,.~ cm1Hoe. 8oet pOw PtlsNip-Btwilll ~~~~~~~-~~!!.?"ti~ •75'-~l~m~·~()peij~~-~~~~t.;~ -.aa ........ ml I .... OS-~--..,..~---Oall m. ,,._qoa&D. -~. ~ ... ~. Pte 122$ hau~, s.,rtn,°"9••:~ ~ Hll ubtnct llu. Plaa e1•• • =?•C-.Cellalt~ « SS'f.1721 aft.Ir DOOD. off &II ao<lues, lt.tl'Uq; Twte l.tdtnK kc! lilh QW'.9 lit I .. .. 1-=.=..::IMIS=.::-=:._---·t-------- pUf.TIMI ~~~~ ~'::4:'1k'*tbl =n•G ..... tf~/ 9150 :~~ No «i4'lll'ft7 CIOJY pellltlAi•. clwor-. -.-~ ee.ellw -• ... ••·--.._ *«ll-llM3 ~ Jl4I hr ~ bonus. Pd Ite m• • .U·f daU1. ._.. m. Xlnt for chu la • H • S WICIJ, cbJ Um C.N. ol· O•llttJ Ono, mo N • ._,. .. d. a_...)Oft. . .,:{ « 19 en • S50 ·4 8 ltlld P.U. Good '-dy fl u. •O·lllt •r· Cotll Bw1, Lt J. 91 v ~ pUid. p JM. ~bl. or b .,.... 11DmdQl lei, H•1 be.t. Miit ..... .-odi:m.WOT Doward ~ -.atil 'JM.HG • ..: ~all 54$ nea ~~II CJ, oao4. ~ ~ -w ... St., • ) '· 0 T n •· v If 1. .t ·h 0- !S la d· old •ic· :h his £1 tter 1nts 317 Itch dn- l to who r aid q,c • ' ' f uto tho lhe 1 11 \ --__,---= ---- -~--- CJ• DAILY PILOT Monday March 27, 1978 Autos, lmporhd Autos, Import.cl Autos, Import.ct Autos, Us•d A.atlot, UHd AMtot, UHd ......................................................................................................................................... TNr:b ... W ......... laporled MlrcHet .._ 9740 'ortdae 9750 Vollsw09" 9770 C •u tt 15 Ferd tt40 ........................................................................................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ···················~· ......... tt52 '57 FORD PICKUP ..... '-o 9701 Dlf.. f720'TJ , mustseUOow, MOV1NC 1 MU~'1'S~L.L! '6S Bua?. Nu en1,brks "12 Cad Eldo, blue, wbt~ -••••••••••••••••••••••• Sbortbed. Sbarpl •• .. -•-•••••••••••• •••••••-••••••••••••••lo ~oaded very "1291',blue/bllt,App. pa.int "Xlnt mechan1car tap.xlntc:ood...bestol-I PHIL '7G Mustane u Ghia, Eft.rytblq new. ma 'IS Alfa, HOO Veloce DCEllEMT dean. Uncser w.,;ty, pp Group. ~l-4497 ~dSt ~ 0819 585 w. rer. 813-47'3 LONG $3100 4 (,'yl, 4 1pd. VlD Oean "l3 Chevy ~ ton Sprckr. Prof "'3toreci, ~eves '68 9115 5 1pd 340 MMJ . '77CpedeVWe FORD ~.~~!.:.':~e Ptdn.I). 4' 10~' Camper, ::.I.:tru 536·63381 SBICTIOH New pa.int new br11kes '73 SUPER BUG, orange, Beaut. salfroo color, wht loaded. A/C new llres, IH STOCK FOR •Mil 74 4SOSL Excel cond. UlOO $1800/bett olfu. Hurry! top, perfect coad., fully ·~Mustang, great cood. mutt see to apprec. Ad 9707 IMMEDIATE Must sell. immac cond. 586-3392 Pvt P\y 548-6490 equipped, lo mi, t92SO 4apd 2.89, AM-FM cua. 6'S-8T85 DELIVERY U&bt blue w/oavy lnt. Ivan's Fore ig6 Car v~ 9771. ~-:=after Sun-t)422J678bef 2PM y-9570 udl, '72, lOOLS Auto, SALES.SERVICE Eva/wlmda 833-9284, dy1 Repatrs now has Mr. ••••••••••••••••"••••• ----------1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• xlnt cood S20TS. m-2845 PARTS-LEASING S.2300 Bill Keith to work on l&ORE YOU IUY 1969 CADILLAC °74 CUstom Chevy Van al\51)m. '7t MB300D, sun roof, your 911 & 9l4. l99S A USED VOLVO B. DOR.ADO l ............ ~.,....··••••• '68 CLASSIC Cuatom paint, Gold '74 Audi FOx. Coco Bro AM/FM, Icon eold pnt, Harbor 1)1, CM. 645-l!l82 See us at South;rn Gold witb white top & ,..., __ e-.. ,_ Velvet interior . Wide 4'Clr, 37,000 mi. ~00. aui tank, xlnt cond. 070 914.6, yellow w/blk Orange County's Volvo tan interior. A real nice 289 I::ng. Reblt. A/C. sitm.830-3111 cragen "950. 642-3379 7!!9-0988 284SHARBOR BLVD '14,000. 645-9530 int. Alloys, beaut cond. Headquartcni car 1 n side & out ' •ee Ford Van. It.hr tufted 9712 540-64 I 0 540.01. ll '69 280SE, COM mi nu. Muslllell. 640-5327 MAR9UIS VOLVO t276NWS). ?4 LTD SD 65 Mustang, new tires, p B. & P.S., AM/FM new pruot, must see to stereo. with 8 track tapt:. ~pprec. Bst ofr over IDler •• 10" t/wheel, 302• .. ••••••••• .. ••••••••• Elegant cond. PS/PB, '72 914 64,000 mi 's, MISSION VIEJO ONLY $2175 tJD1,8-spd.49'f.~lO tpe dck, A/C etc $6750. AM/FM, $3500/ofr. 831-2180 495-1210 air cood. (786KYI > s:z;n>. 54_0-48 __ 19 ___ _ "'Tl C2ievy Van, 6 cyl, PS, ?Bt custom, cash or U"808 TOP 980-2666 aft 6PM 536-9993 Ml -2736 ORANGE COUMTY VOLVO EXCLUSIVELY VOLVO Larl(est Volvo Dealt!r tn Orange County 1 RUY or LEASE DIRECT pu oewporter II mtrs .,., inch screened logo $2 2 7 5 adlnmbiJ• 9955 Autos Wmted 9590 ....................... WEWIUIUY YOUR DATSUN PAID FOR OR NOT TOP DOLLAR fOITOPCARS BARWICK DATSUN '~••• l 11.1r1 ''.qn,lrJnn 831 -1375 493.3375 WEIUY <LUM CARS &TRUCKS 1978 BMW's HERE NOW! COMPLETE IOOY SHOP HOWOPEH For Sale 1974 Dal.sun 8 210 Best orrer Call 979-2046 '76 280Z 2+2, cop per/beige ml., all ex tras Lo ma. $6400 9681132 ____ _ MG 9742 ....................... UCB.LENT SB.ECTION OF ..WW RESALES We may have your next Fiat 9725 MGI 9744 car 10 our inventory. •••••••• ••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••• ••• •• call us today! i4 1.28, grn, new clutch & 831-2040 495-4949 valves, lo m1. $1000. (ON NELL tHEYROLET -----------548-0069 72 MGI Roadster Ready for SunvMr 2828 Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA 546-1200 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR TOP USED CARS FOREIGN, DOMESTIC or CLASSICS If your car is extra clean :.oous fU"SL UUER IUICK 2925 Harbor Blvd Costa Mesa 979.2500 TOP DOI.UR PAID fo'ORCLEAN IMPORT CARS AUMODElS WE BUY USED CARS CALL GARTH Used Cir Mgr 540-5630 IOll~SOX & SOX • LINCOLN·MERCURY ORANGE COUNTY'S & Sales-Service-Leasing Rov CarYer,lnc. &I.ls ltoyce BMW ·n X19. loaded, atr, AM/FM, xlnt cond1hon 759-0364 '74 Ftal 128 2 dr Sedan. A M I "' M s t e r co . G d cond, new tires. $1200/bst 494 4635 Honda 9727 A rare find with low miles. (Lic.IJ218NPf') $2599 .JOHNSON & SON Auto Sal•s--1..asilMJ 600 W. Cos.st Hwy Newport Beach 646-0262 lS40 Jamboree Newport Beach 640-6444 ....................... ---- D~ ..._. • ,78 ·77 MGB. Xlnt cond Still ~ .... ew u n d e r w a r r CREVIER Ho~DA Cars s:m+T o .P. Ph 979-2500 1"111 work, 894·3Sl7 home 0 I ST .. IROAOWAY SANTA AHA 835·3171 'THE ULTIMATE OlllVING MACHINE MANY To Choos. From! UNIVERSITY Oldsmobil. Honda Ccrs • GMC Trucks 2850 Harbor Blvd Costa Mesa MO 9640 9747 ••••••••••••••••••••••• "74 L. Orange, 1 owner. 9200 m1. s uper clean fl y. 1ng machine. eqwpped w/muny xtra good1es- Call days <714 1 975 706S Eve (i14 l 637 -8014 •USED BMWs• '71 2002 4 spd (753141 '73 Bavana 4 spd 49"1J FS '73 2002 4spd ~KBV '7S 5301 Auto. t283MCV) '75 2002 A. Ser.2236 '76 530lA Allm·s 452PQN '76 2002 4s pd S1 R orsdw 9750 '75 Honda Ct\.'ll'. 26,000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• mi. xlnt cond Must sell ' ·70 Porsche 911T, factory $2800/&l ofr S86 S069 mags, nice, $6900/Best 220PQD ·n CIVIC. S spd. radials, '77320tAS/R l77RSK str rro 8 trk tape. xlnt C•--~ On ~-·nd cond. ukin~ $4000 IVM:'U ""' _a~~ 492-4377 MW MINT COND 1973 Accord '77-. s-11-v-cr on blk, 2002 4 ·SP D. Al R . 5 spd. 3,000 mi, $5.400 AM/F M. (5S5UMX ) 548·91>11 S86-4I<Y7. Mus t sell '75 C VCC '715 htchbk. 40MPG, excel cond. 963-4816 '73 M«cwy Capri The Sexy Ew opeGi Jaguar 9730 ••••••••••••••••••••••• offer 639-3787 •LEASE• BRAND MEW '78 911 PORSCHE SC 5 .s p e ed . leather . AM/FM stereo C'asselte, air cond., electric slid mg roof, Bil shocks, pwr windows, alloy wheels, leather steering wheel, blackout tnm & center console (200506) 4 speed. AM/FM radio, 2626 HARBOR BLVD. cassette, beater- COSTA MESA <:mHSX> XK 140, M C RoadMer, Mml. Expensive 714-M-1-4147 af\ 6PM $339 WEIUY USED CARS! We're the new Chevrolet dealership In the lrvme Aulo Center We need your used car! $2795 JOHNSON & SON Jwlo Sales-basiftCJ 600 W_ Coast Hw y Newport Beach 646-0262 '73 Jag XJ 12, yellow. very d ean . Jo w m1 $6800. Must s ell. P ;P 545-8952 KarmamGhla 9735 ....................... MONTH JOE MACPHERSON CHEVROLET 9720 1973 Ghia. 38,000 m1 CO<'O • ••. ••................. brn, Im mac. $2850 ofr And 89 cents plus tax. cap cost $21 ,604.36. least! t'nd value·Sl2,807 88: total of p e ri o di c payments-$17,293 44 . t o tal d o wn payment-$1243.28. 48 month open end lease IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ~t Auto Center Drive IRVINE 768-7222 WANTED!!! Good, de• low mileage can!!! Call Dern Skiff. RAY FLADEBOE LINCOLN-MERCURY JRVINE 830..7000 *DRIVE A* *LITTLE ... * SAVE A LOT SHOP & COMPARE BARWICK DATSlJ.M :-;,111 .I u.u1 l '.qH,tr .ir111 831-1375 493-3375 76 Datsun 8210, lo mi. xlnt cond. $3100. Best of fer over $3100. 540-4819 Classified Ads sell big items, small items or any item. 6'2·5678. 644-3291 , &t.2-5376 '71 KarmDnn Ghia con v er t • A M I r· M 8 t r k stereo. Nu valves, nu c 1 ut c h , n u e x h a u s l sys tem. Bes t ofrer. 495-2968 9738 ••••••••••••••••••••••• miracle mazda .()T) Approved Crcdil LAHD•SEA•AIR LEA SI MG 1600 Dove St. Ste. 415 NEWPORT BEACH 975-0440 '64 Porsche SC. while on blk, nol cheap Mus t 5ee I I 639 3787 SELL idle 1lems with a 1.1 SO Harbor llYd. Daily Pilot Classified Costa Mesa 64S-5700 Ad .Autos, N•w , N•w 9800 Autos, Hew 9100 Autos, H•w 9800 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• INTRODUCING THE BMW733i. BMWWILLNEVER · BUILD A CONVENTIONAL WXURY SEDAt:LBEC8lLSE NO QNE AT BMW CQUlQ BEAR TO DRIVE ONE. If the thought of owning a luxury sedan that's as exciting to dnve as 1t is to sit 1n intrigues you, call us and we'll ar- range a thorough test dnve for you at your convenience. 1111uuuun Dllv. ua• .. Bdvaroo Molor~. Munch Germany IN STOCK CREVIER MOTORS BMW SALES, SERVICE, & LEASING . 1 ST.& BROA0WAY, SANY:A ANA 835'."'3171 '72 914, 35-40 mpg, AM/FM cass. all factury customized inte r & pamt. $3395, ~t offer. &»3773 aft 6. '76 TARGA Loadl'd. Warranty, xlnt l'und A':> sum e $2 5 8 / mo 1 s e m .soo. Ph 968 lltl72 -----'73 PorscM 9 I 4 White with blar k top & custom magi.. Super sharp!' 1 Pn\ate pJrty U78HSC>. $3995 or best offt•r 975-0453 '69 912 lmmal' r ond Must sell $6650. 832-t.266 dys, 586-9538 ev:. '77TARGA for $538 take over lse at $338 mo or purchase 1f you wish. f'ully loaded Jeff Bnery, 6759111 Renautt 9755 ••••••••••••••••••••••• TEST DRIVE OUR 'UC.AR OF THE YEAR" Good mventory in sto<•k Hurry while they lasl! MIRACLE MAZDA/REHAUL T 2150 Harbor Bh d cosr A M fo:SA 645-5700 Rois Roye~ 9756 ••...••••....•..•..•... CLOSED ~UNOAYS XLNT BUY ~arp '66 Silver Shadow. white R.R HIJ.:ht h.1nd dr Xlnt cond. $14.000 CaJI Patnck. ~2-4-114 Toyota 9765 ...•.......•........... BEFORE YOU Sal YOUR TOYOTA, SEE US! MAR9UIS TOYOTA MISSION VIEJO 831-2880 495-1210 ·74 Cellca A C. vm}l top, mags. tape clll .. \Ira clean S269S. ti45·191!:.!. 754-0402 Dir '71 Volvo 14S wgn. Xlnt cond Durk green $2200 ~14906 "Tl Volvo Wgn. auto. air, only S0.000 m1. 1 owner. Ut!.tuhfull> kept Book $371S Dr Riley 499 3509 han's 1o·ure1gn Car Rt>pu1r!i now ha1> Mr. Mike Stuben to work on your Volvo. 1995 Harbor Bl, CM 645-19112 1973 4 dr, 164E, 6 cyl, leather, PS $2995 or $600 & TOP. 494 2146 ----Autos, Used ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~County's Snille Cent~ • OVER 100 CADILLACS TO CHOOSE FROM AT ALL TIMES Nabers Cadillac lt.(JO I t.11 b. II Bl\ d ('"I.I \k\,I 51() l)I()(} 1976 Cad Seville top l'<>nd , ~•r e ~heels. t'U.'>lOm gnll. lo m1. local rar. Rich. dark brown, Wpc deck. all xtras 1 owner $97~. 499 1625 ·w El Uurado. showroom l'Und. lo m1 ::.. $2195 497 37 10 ·72 EL DORADO Convt Choe 1 Rus<;ctt >. bone mt & top \II special op· tum.,. &tS 326!1 aft 6P M & wt't!kcndi. ·neorolla SRS lftbckun ·75 CdV . mint gr een. der wrty, nu cond, $3950 plaid mt, lo m1·s. xlnt 640-0010 cond All xtras. $6000 494 1959 9'17 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ''Low Prices!'• LEA SI HG 49,..:.1131 546-9967 540-5630 IOll~SO~ & SOX • LINCOLN· MEHCURY ••••••••••••••••••••••• '!iii Olds Cutlruis 4-dr. Cull power, 57,000 orig m1·s • Tues 3 wks old, expert run'g cond $1060. ~0822 ------ ••••••••••••••••••••••• IOll~SOX & SOX • LINCOLN·MERCURY 1971 Pinto, good condi· 2626 HARBOR BLVD. tJon, pvt~~l ~OSTAMESA '76 MARK IV HAS ALL!! Cool light blue metulhl· '72 Runabout. Xlnt cond. Re<'ent ovrbl. 1 owner R.td hlr. slereo, CB, trlr hitch, mag whle. w/ w 1th I e at he 1 nt>ar nu t ires, sway ---------1 (Llc ll~NXN> hJrs, hdrs . $1,7SO. '68 El Camino Malibu w shell. xlnt cond Sl650 or best offer. 751-4688 $7899 '~-·~~~- JOH ... so ... & so... ·77 Runabout, P s. P /B, " " " htr FM. rear window AMto Sain-leasing defogger Extend. warr., '75 Chevy Monza 2 + 2 600 W Coas t Hwy Gd cond, $1210. 631--0941, htchtxk. Wbt/red inter Newport Beach 54SO'JIJR 25.000 mL Ong Lessee 646 0262 -----Xlnt cond Serv records • Ptymovttt 9960 avail. Good 2nd. 3rd or Mcrveri k--994] ••••••••••••••••••••••• student car. 30 mpg •••••••~••••••••••••••• 1974 Ply. Satellite Sta. $2650 firm 673-4466 -·73 slvr gray Grabbt•r, Wai! 9 pass .• l'lS. P IB. 'ID Chevy Malibu, 2-dr. V-8, vinyl top, new tires. ~ir. Gd tires . trans. auto trans. R tH. 350 stereo l'ass Xlnt contl Cool e r .. air s hocks , $750 or best offe r . $2200. 496 6860 traik•r hitch, CB RadJo 673-3575 ---incl . Good Cond. $1.800----------Mercury 9950 !121 S Orange, S.A- • CORVAlRS • •••••••••••••••••••••• • • 9965 CLASSIC CONVERT'S ORANGE COUNTY s Pontiac $700-$2500 536-9993 HEWEST ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,. __ t 9927 LINCOLN MERCURY \1uc;t sell. •73 Le Mans -.. Deal h OPF!'ll (,I. 3 :.pd stick. 3SO cc, ••••••••••••••••••••••• eni 1p ts now .. A'1 FM ts Irk. xlnt cond_ '62 Sta. Wag .. auto, 6·C)'l, gas .saver. P P 7Sl-1256 RAY FLADEIOE Can be see n at 518 LINCOLN MEHCURY !:iturg1.'0n, C.M. 644-6489 16-18 Auto Centt-r Dr. ·70 F1reb1rd Formula. SDFwy Lake Jo'ore:.t exit 9932 IRVINE P S. P B. a.tr. $1700/bsL 759 0059 ------.•.....•.•...•..••..... •CORVETTES 19781 NlCE SELECTION! 830-7000 '76 IOICAT WAGON 4 cyl., 4 speed, radio. heater. !l38PCD > $2795 ·761 • Trans Am Spee Ed. blk w .:old tnm. every opt. 20\J m i, babied \h1,1 .,,.11 SS.200. PI P ~ ------HOWARD Chenold DOVE & QUAIL STS. (Near MacArthur. Jam 540-5630 tJI f'trf'h1rrl 350. auto, rs. boree & Bnstol 1 l'B AC, rlt>an $1000. NEWPORT BEACH I W,!~~~?trt!~ Veqa 962-'11>79 9974 076 T top. 211 ·000 mi 's, 2626 HARBOR BLVD loaded Ask 10~ S8000. · ••••••••••••••••••••••• 7141496-1089. 496·6953 COST A MESA ·11 Ve~a. •·spd, reblt en~. --------------new tires &. battery, VolluwCIC¥f' 9770 ~~~~·.~.e•~•••••••!~~~ ~~·.~:.": ••••••• !~.~~ ~~~·.~~."! .•..... !~.~~ S7~. 640 Sl.30 •..............•.....•. WE BUY & SELL VOLKSWAGENS Lar~est Scle<·t1on In The Area''' '68 BUG $699 COSSDLL 1 '70 BUG $899 C021BF.J 1 S45 per month Borrows SI.QI 01. 0 \ <' . A P R 23 76 perl'ent . pay back-SI~ 00 tn 24 moolhs WEST GERM.AN IMPORTS 198.5 Harbor Blvd , C M 714/645-6120 '74 XJ12L. Xlnt condition Best ofr over $7500. 673-2464 eves '73 VW Squareback, xlnt cond_ Newly rebuilt eng., steel belted radial tires $2,500 497.3984 '68 VW Bug. Good cond. Nu int, tires. $1100. 64().1209 '76 VW Convert. Like nu 19M m1 , air. stereo. xtras. Must sell. 494·3271 '74 VW SUPER BU~ Lo mi's• $2300 ·~· '73 VW So~r Beatie, xlnt cond $2350 832· 7189 or 1134-1006. Paul '69 Bug. Complete nu mtr. map, good cond. $1200 firm. 494-2130 --- 1965VW Bua. Rama well. ~75. G42·29'78 '75 VW DASHER WGH Auto. traru1.. air condJ· Uoftlna, stereo, beater. Lota o f room It ecooocnyl (8118MV!) $3295 JOHMSOH a SOM Mio W..-4.emlag eoo w. Cout H•1 Newport Beach 646-0262 ••• VW, n•" paint, chrome •hi•. mm lnt., 1ltta tbarp ••• '7$4~ lt7' DAT'IUH U II . ._.....,_,., ... -' llHP'Ct!I • '2677 I '71 DATSUN J40Z ~llO. ....... aonll. •• ......... lt'9EI~ '3477 00 OVER INVOICE 1971 OA TSUH Z40X liil•lllllC .._ -< ... -.............. -,...._,~•4477 1974 18W,ll.f I 24. • ..... ~. lootlyl (ltOl..lf') 12877 1971 M!RCUIY CAN8 Automalo<;. .,, -. & --IMIH(Hl '1177 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:""'!":~ s I r 5 7 b 1 1 i 17 Huntington Beaeh Fo1•ntaln Valley EDITION VOL. 71, NO. 86, 3 SECTIONS# 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MARCH 271 1918 Afte rnoon N.Y. S•oek9 Horse Heist Sure Bet? QUARTER HORSE CHAMP, TOWN POLICY, GOES HOME On Both Sides of Border, Intrigue and High Stakes By GARY GRANVILLE OltlleOel..,,.. ........ Pesos, lots or pesos, change hands when horse owners around Durango and other states in Mexico gather at primitive bush tracks to race their swiftest in winner-take- all match races. In addition to the winner's stake. there are side bets to be made among the so-called railbirds who invariably back the local favorite against an upstart invader. Had things continued going to according to plan, in the next rew months those Mexican horse owners and their railbird followers woukl have been taken to the cleaners but J(ood SOMEWHERE A STAKE would be posted and the local champion would be heavily backed by bettors as 1t ltned up to race 400 yards or so against a cross bred newcomer. Then. m the 20 or so seconds it takes a great American quarter horse to cover 400 yards the money issues would be decided. The sporting horse owner who posted his share of the winner-take-all purse would be out his stake. The unwary caballeros who backed their favorite would have lost their bets And before anyone could say "ringer" or ''l'ingolero," the winning horse would be loaded into a waiting van and bouncing over rough roads m llme to arnve at a new bush track ahead of has reputation BY THF. TIME HE got there, front runners would have hned up another match race for him, probably with a cantina patron who boasted of owmng a horse that can beat an) thing on four legs That is the way the scheme "as to work The hca' y part of the chore had been done, the un beatable horse a great champion -was an the hands of Russ Nuke Suh Base those seeking to gain their fortunes on the money-rich but anonymous Mexican bush tracks. The priced horse came from about 2,000 miles away. ~tolcn in the night from a stable in Orange County. IF EVER A HORSE was made to order ror the wiMer- take all assignment south or the border, at was Town Pohl') A handsome bay gelding, Town Policy had won nine of 10 races against the toughest competition in America. ln less than a year of racmg bis earnings totaled $336,000 And while thundering to his championship 2-year-old season , Town Pohcy had set a world record for quarter horses of aU ages by covenng 400 yards in just 19.2 seconds STANTON POLICE BELIEVE those credentials tempted those who stole the horse to follow him from Fresno to Los Alamitos Race Course. From there Town Policy was tracked to a stable in Stanton where he had been sent for a brief rest before starting the tough winter campaign. Two horse thieves had htUe trouble spiriting Town Policy from the stable Whale stable workers slept not SO feet away Crom the quarlt!r horse champion, lhe rustlers entered his stall, haltered him. led him out a driveway, crossed an open field and load«>d him into a waiting van. That was fi ve months ago. TODAY, TOWN POLICY is on the last leg of his 1ourney home. a rtturn Journey that began on a well-kept ranch outside l>uranao And the key figure in the safe recovery of the horse is l S Dt'partmPnl of Agriculture li vestock inspector Tom !See TOWN POLICY, Page A2) • Ill Cuba?· ~ Marital Strift> Reports Denied By U.S. I t I Laguna Woman Shot to Death A 29-year-old Laguna Beach woman was fatally shot while in bed "1th her boyfriend early Sunday morning. Police said she was slain by his estranged wife. Police identified the victim as Patricia Ann Proferes, an X ray t echnician at San Clemente General Hospital. Police arre~ted Anya Ann Shelton, 3 1, of Los Angeles, shortly after lhe 1:30 a.m s hoot- ing at 2553 Glenneyrc St. She was being held today m the UCI Medical Center Jail Ward Police s aid today Mrs . S helton's estranged husband. Donald Joaquin Shelton, 38. was living with Mrs Proferes The shooting occurred just hours after a confrontation between Mrs. Shelton and the Laguna Beach couple at the GJenneyre Street home, police said . Mrs. Shelton left the home, and police believe she returned at about 1 :30 a.m .• walking up to a bedroom window and firing a single shot through the glass, striking Mrs. Proferes in the chest. Investigators said today the woman apparently removed a screen on the window, which awakened the couple inside. Co ast W e athe r Night and morning low clouds and local dense fog with hazy sunshine T\Jes. day arternoon. Lows tonight in sos. Slightly cooler. Tuesday with highs m mid:fiOI to low 70s. I SIDE TODA 't' Bolpll DrollfnOn of Balboa ft a bfg namt .fn UCLA baalcttball. Bui rttt11tl11 ,,.. JIOtlJll7. man tum«I douill o l«Jl)JJOO profeutonol c:ontroct in pro boll to~ to play /or Athltt11 in Aciion, o branch o/ tis• Compua Cnuodl. li'tOWn.ng, l"og. CJ. Shelton told officers he drew aside the curtains after hearing the noise, and saw the woman point the rt>volver through the window and fire. striking Mrs. Proferes as s he sat kneeling on the bed. Shelton said he reached through the wmdow after the shot was fired and grappled for the weapon with Mrs . Shelton. After s ubduing the woman Shelton called police who ar- rived and found the murder weapon outside the home. Mrs. Shelton was rus}:lcd to South Coast Community Hos pital in a semi-conscious state followaqe the struggle with her former hu s band , and wa s later trans ported to UCI Medical Center. She is being h eld tod ay without bail, according to Police Capt. Neil Purcell. He sa1d the two women and Shelton have known each other for several years, and were once involved in half way house operations in Oregon. Investigators are seeking a firm motive in the shootrng to- day. Mr. Nichols Rites Tuesday In Huntington Service at Center Court An estimated 1,200 worshippers attended ~unnse scrvict•s Easter Sunday at this un- usual location -center court at the .John Wayne Tennis Club in NC\\pOrl Beach They wen' :.1mong the thousands of Chris- ti ans ''ho cclehraterl Easter in religious services <.tlong the Orange Coasl. The in tcrrlenommataonal :--erncc al the tennis club was conducted h\' :\Tanners Church of N e\\1)()rt fipac h 'Walking With God' Wallenda's Eulogy wore when he walked the wire. The pole hanging over the casket was like the one he clutched when he plummeted 10 stories to his death. His body was brought back to Sarasota -the winter home of many circus performers Four months ago, the sports arena was the site for the re-creation of the Wallenda family's famed seven-man pyramid, filmed for a television movie. In 1962, two or the troupe were killed and. Walleoda's adopted son Mano w•• paralyaed when the pyramid collapsed Circus p e rformer s from around the world sent flowers to adorn Wallenda's casket. The native or Magdeburg. now in (See FUNERAL, Page A2> Htmtington Sands Attract 80,000 Most of U.S . Coal Mirwrs Back to Work By Thf' Associated Press Mo~t or the nation's soft coal miners put o n hard hats, s witched on headlamps and headed bat'k down into the pile; and shafts for the midnight and 8 a m. shifts today for the first tamt> in 31 ~ months Most mines reopened peacefully after settlement of the strike by 160,000 United Mine Workers members, but not all the mines could operate. Some remained stiut while 10,000 con- s truction workers sought a separate agreement with coal operators. Mines in Illinois. Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio, Pennsylvania and West Virginia remained struck as mine construction workers set up picket llnes that miners re(used to cross. Contract talks in Washintton bet ween the constructlon workers, who build the tunnels and above.ground facihtle~. and the Association ot Bltumlnous Contractors, re~umcd today ln Wasl\in1ton. The fteeotlatlon! recessed Sunday niebt when both aid said I.bey were too CX· hausted to conUnuo. A spokesman lor the WeaLmo~land Co•I Compaay ln Vlr1ini1 said the turnout for the <See MINERS, Pa1e Al) LONDON CAP) -The Soviet. Union is building a nuclear sub- marine base in Cuba and may have shipped strategic missiles to that country, the Daily Tele- graph said today. The author, Robert Noss, who spet'1alitl'S an Communist af- fairs , cited "senior Western military observers" as his source and said American aerial !'urveillance uncovered the dc- vt'lopments. In Washington, the DcCense- Dl'partmcnt demed the report. · Moss said the facility 1s at Cienfuegos on Cuba 's south coast, about 140 miles southeast of Havana. lie said the Soviets . started the base in 1971 but were warned to stop m a tough note from former President Nixon. "This time roond1 things are rather different According to reliable sources in Washington. the Carter administration has so far made no attempt to warn off the Russians." Moss said. He did not say where the.So-- v1et missiles are located in Cuba. In 1962, a crisis occurred when President Kennedy ordered So- viet premier Nikita Khrushchev to take Soviet missiles out of Cuba and blockaded the island. The Soviet leader gave in. M oss commented that "American failure to resist such gross provallon as a new So- .-.·if't bid to install nuclear missiles 1ust off the coast of Florida would amount to a damning ad· mission of weakness." Wrong Car; Patron Takes A Taxi Home A Huntington Beach man told police Sunday night he is th4l vic- tim of an accidental auto switch. Fred I Krausse told police his emerald green Cadillac El Dorado sedan was missing after he asked parking tot attendants at Maxwell's Restaurant, 317 Pacific Coast Highway, to fetch it at 10 p.m. Police said Krausse's auto ln- adverlenUy had been &i"tn to another restaurant patron who had drtven an identical emerald 1reen Cadillac El Dorado to t}te restaurant lot. Ku~ and his companion look a t axi home. Police aald his auto ha not y t been found. Police believe Krauue'a auto WIS driven olf by mt take tit~ 1lrlfrlcnd of tho owner OI the identical auto. U DAILY PILOT HJF .. MMdt f7. '"' ,.,....PflPAJ TOWN POLICY •.• McCall. McCall worki; out of Presidio. To., a fannlns com- m unity of about 3,000 people nestled a.too1 the IUo Grande River 250 mil~ southeast of El Paso. Like others mvolved in the case, McCall says he's been instructed by higher ups not to discuss its delatls CONSEQUENTt. Y • FOR TIIE time being, much of Town Policy's adventure 1n Mexico remains a clouded mys tery. But from informatJon pitted together Crom .McCall. Durango slate pohce chief Jaime del Toro and others, lh1s much 1s known: -Town Policy's theft was somehow related to heavy drug dealing south of the border. an indication the thievei. may have been paid ror their services in drugs. -Within hours of bemg stolen the horse was spirited across the border, probably at San Ysidro, and within day~ of his theft was at the Durango ranch. -BASED ON AN INFORMANT'S lip, McCall had reason to believe as early as December that Town Policy was somewhere m the Durango ranch "The safe ty of human lives was at stake" In the e nsuing "delicate investigation and negotiations" that led to the hor.se's safe recovery. While McCall praises the work of del Toro and ha s police, 1t wu:-.n't until three days after Town Policy owner tvan Ashmt>nt ugreed to pay them a $15,000 reward that the horse was found. No arrests have been made in connection with the (,•use -THOt:GH ALL AGREE IT was planned to race the great quarter horse on the Me:ocan bush circuit, he ap· parently had not been raced and was being held "until tbmgs cooh.'<1 down '· No attempt had been made to disgwse lhe horse or l o blot out the Lt>lllale registration number tattoo be car· r1es on hlb m:-.ide hp. Owner Ashmt!nl and trainer Blane Schvaneveldt 10 days ago flew to Chihuahua and then on lo Durango to negotiate for the n:turn of Town Policy. Schvanevcldt, one of the nation's leading quarter horse trainers. dl'scn~tl Town Policy's condition as "rough. real rough WlllLF. llE DID NOT rule out the poss1bihty or Town Polu:y racing again. he said the horse will be rested and returned lo tip top ph) ~teal shape a11 the first matter or bUl>lnl'S::t Others who inspected the horse while it was quaran· tined m Prcs1d10 <.aid his legs were sound and. except for ~n apparent weight loss due to a change in d1et.s and ult1 tude, appeared to be m g()()d condition. Friday evening, Town Policy was cleared from <JUJra nlane and loaded into a horse van headed for Cal1fom1a He hind him he left a mystery And ahead of h1 m were hopes that he will someday re turn to the racing Corm that earned him as al wo.year-old to peaki. or greatnes~ Newport Officials View Quiet Easter Newport Reach police and lifeguards agreed today thal Easter Week JU~t isn't what 1t ust•d to lw an th<•1r t<i\\ n ·it was so quwt," comment('(! one veteran police officer recall· mg the days of Bal Weck . I forgot it was E3'itrr vacation " L1f<·guard LL Logan Lockabcy said beal'h attendance "as light all WP<'k. but mushroomed up to 100,000 on Saturday and 90,000 on Sund a; Nude Batliers Return, to Black's Beach LA JOLLA I API Easter Sunday ~as nude Sunday, rle~pite a city ordinance les'i than a ~car old hanning nud1ly on the shiny white sands of Bl ark's Beach. An estamatrd 200 nake d b.ithers pulled on their swim ~111ts hurriedlv when three Ca l1forn1a park rangers ap pea red r\ wh1<,lle bla:-.t alerted the sun bathcri.. basking in 00 -degree \\ cather After three y<:ars as the na· lion ·s only munic ipal nude bt'ach, lhe 900-foot slr1p sec luded by ocean inlets and l'hffs along Torrey Pines State Beach has been ruled off limits to nudily by lhc San Diego City Council Police also have been warning balhers to rover up, rather than 1~sue SJ.5 citations But lhe skin· nv d1pp10~ 1s reported on the in crease aJ?am. ORANGE COAST H F DAILY PILOT ,.,.()r.,_ (M\t 0 •11¥ POot whl't~'""i\(o-f\ .. ,...,, ttw H•w, Pf'"' t~ Wbl1"""4 tJt\' tN 0..~ (.N\f f'Vtl1Q ,.,...", ~····"''"""' .,., =~ .:~~--,=~~~~~· 01,.. v.-.11,., ''"'1~~ \.tid<jt"'* • V•ll•• •l"d ~ ::.~~,'::!'.:::-;:,'"';: ... ,"'.,... .... ~ ...... t\. .. \» Wlt\.t ... , ""'"' (Mtt*W (oh_t.,.1' 11-li-~ .... tOfllltt ."'. """"···· M04'C. .... V)(•....., , .. ,.,,.,...Gt""'"' .... ~ ~···-....... ~,A_,,... ............... _ a... ... .._ --"-"'""~' ................ ~.""' ·-·-"'"'°'-c-....... ttltnt!Mren .. .,.Ofltoe .... ,..,, .. _......,.. •tu"t A!MN1t: , 0. -1'1, - Offtee• ...,..._ ....... .....,._ c-»•~ ,. ......... ...... .--.v.ney IJaltU""t-tl~Oi.,.r- Tet~(Tt4) ...... a.. ...... u. .... ..,...,. _,.. .,.. .... °"""'~"" M0-112' ~:::.°=cc:-=-~~ ,...11., .• , ......... -.. "-"'"-"'" .. ,.,.._ ---ltl .,_ .. ......... -. .,__, CIHJ -··r. ,. .. al C.• Ml"'-(.t~l· ............. (_._ u. .. =.L!.'l. ;:::,..::: -YI •llUrt ' He said there were few prob- lems even though city beaches from 52nd Street to the Santa Ana River remained under quarantine from the effects of a sewage s pill that occurred two weeks a~o. Robert Stone. director of en· v 1 ron mental health for the Orange County Health Depart- ment, said the quarantme will remain U\ effed until al least Tuesday II e said the dally water samples of the quarantined area are still showing elevated levels of bacteria Locknbey said guards anct. police had no proble ms keeping people off the closed beaches. The only incident to be report- t·d occurred Sunday afternoon when lafeguards and Orange County harbor pairolmen were called on to rescue nme people from a cabin cruiser off Corona de! Mar mam beach Lockabey s:nd the craft's 0\\ ner' RoKer Rouch or 24772 Hin C<•ssa St., El Toro, radioed a may day to the Newport Coast c;uard station. telling them his 2·1 root boat was sinkmg l.1fcs:llurds and patrolmen. "ho were already in the area, respomlt•d and took riff six adulLc; ,1nd three children, without further problem~ Harbor patrolmen were able to plug the holes that had caused the leaking and lhe boat was pumped out and towed to their headquarter:; Lockabey said alT of the passengers. except Rouch, were from Pomona Reunify Ranks Aim of Arabs CAIRO, Egypt (AP> -Arab diplomats gathered In Cairo to- day to try to reun1Cy Arab ranks now that President Anwar Sadat's peace talks with Israel have stalled. But the five nations taking the toughest line against Egypt's peace oYertures boycotted the Arab League meeting. Jn larael, the Cabloet closed rankl behind Primo Minister Menachem Begin and a1atn unanimously endorsed bts pl"C>- posal1 for puce 'ftilh Lhe Ara~. deaplte U.S. r,....ure to soften lb at atand tn onte-r to revl ve t.bo Esyptbn:hr•tllt•lkl . Nuke Blast Told STOCKHOLM, S-.tdtn CAP) -Jlu.sal1 cletAliiat.td an t.t.nde,.. around nucle uplo&lon Sun- day lD UM 6ell\lpalatmak oo ol • t '*11. tbt ~ blut .. ow ...... • ..et. S•ed ~ U~a Stilmolo•ical In1UW.t. repon.ct. • last Rite Set for Victims Graveside services are scheduled Tuesday for a 34-year· old Mission Vie10 man and his 71-year-old mother, victims of a Good Friday murder-suicide ahoollne. James Carr shot his mot.her three times with an automaUc pistol. then turned the gun on himself in their three-bedroom home at 26502 El Mar Drive, s heriff's deputtes reported. Mary Elizabeth Carr Jett a trail of blood from her home to that of a neighbor. where she knocked on the door, collapsed and died. deputies said. Carr. a Vietnam veteran. had been living with his mother :-mce his father died last year, deputies said. Carr had quit his JOb at Hughes Tool In Culver Cl· I). anvesti~ators said. Inves tigators said Carr seldo m left the home, spending much of his time reading in his bedroom. Thev said there Is no apparent motive for the s hoot· mg, other than a possible mental problem. Neighbors told officers the Carr home was always quiet and there apparently were no prob· I ems "We can only speculate on the motive," said a s herif('s an· vestigator. "We don't know what o;parkE'd the incident The only two peoplt.> "ho would know are dt>ad " ln\'estigators saili Mrs. Carr , a n•t 1rcd s~hool teacher, was ~hot tn the serv1re area or garage port1<1n of her home Her son a ppar('ntl y "al ked into a bathroom and shot himself in the lt•mple L~q;una l11lls Mortuary is h::indl1n~ Tuesday's 2 pm graveside services al El Toro Cemete ry Sunl\·ors Inc lude :'ti rs Carr's son. Robert A of Mission VieJO, and two grandchildren County Teen Shot to Death During Fight A J7·year·old Santa Ana boy was s hot to death during an altercation outside a local liquor store Sunday evening, police said today A If redo Gonzales was pro· nounced dead at VCI. Medical Center at 10 p m .. about an hour after being struck in the head and abdomen by two of !>IX rounds fired in his direction, of- ficers said. Investigators said the young man's assailants haven't been 1dent1fied. Police said Gonzales was with some friends in a car that had Just pulled mto the store parkmg lot at 811 N Fairview St. Another rar pulled in next to them. police said. and one of 1Lc; occupants began firing toward Gonzales with a small caliber handgun One Killed, 2 Injured In Coast Crash One man \\as killed and two others Injured Sunday when their car failed to negotiate a curve and flipped· o ver, Seal Bear h police said today. The dead man was identified as Daniel Galindo, 26, and the injured were listed as f'rank Munson, 24, and John Dickerson, 25. Addre:o;ses of the victims were not available. Both Munson and Dickerson were being treated at Los Alamitos General Hospital for what poli ce de sc ribe a s numerous mjurles. The crash occurred at 3: 10 a m. on Haynes Road one half mile north of Pacific Coast Highway, omcers said. In· vesllgallon Into the accident ls continuing. police said. -~-......... CE>AL MINERS LEAVE WORK AFTER FIRST SHIFT In Appalachia. Va .• Things Are Back to Normal Segerstroms Cive $25,000 To Repertory A donation of $25,000 from tht• Segerstrom family puts lhe funds raised so far for the con ~truction of a new South Coast Repe rtory theater in Co~ta Mesa at more than $2 million, an SCR building campaign s pokesman said The ~oal 1s $3 milhon Harriette Witmer of the SCR group said total funds donated by the Segerstroms developers o( South Coast Plc;za, now total about $550,000 The building site, part of the St>gcrstrom donation. i~ located ad 1acent to the South Coast Pll11a Hotel. on To~n Center Dn ve Completion 1s scheduled late this summer, with an open- ing date of November 11 The SCR Benefactors Commit· tee, headed by Carl Karcher, has received sever al large gifts. Donors and the amounts given are: Bank of America, $15,000 , .John and Kittie Rau, $25,000, Richard and Marilyn ll1tusman, S5,000; Ladd, Kelsey and Woodard. architects. $25,000, and Rockwell International, $7.500. The 13-year-old theater, cur- rently housed al 1827 Newport Blvd . in a 200-seat rented theater, is more than 90 percent sold out through subscriptions for all performances. South Coast Repertory is a non.profit, profess ional com· pany It maintains a company in residence and also operates an acting conservatory. Cigarettes Hazardous to His Freedom Smoking turned out to he dangerous to the freedom of a Seal Beach man who was arrest ed Sunday an Costa Mesa after allegedly lf) mg to purchase four cartons of c 1ga rettec; with a :-.tolen crerl1t card P olice said a cashier at Sunshine Liquor, 724 W . 18th St , became suspicious Sunday eve ning when the man and his 15 year-old female companion usked for the cigarettes A check of the Master Charge hotline revealed the credit card had been stolen. Polit'e were summoned and arres ted Jan Thomas Van Amersfort, 27. The self-employed carpet layer was booked on suspicion of commercial burglary and possession of stolen property. The girl was turned over to authorities at juventle hall In searching Van Amersfort's auto, investigators found 37 cartons of cigarettes and one book of matches. f'rom1 P~ Al MINERS ... 8 a .m . shift wa.~ "very much bet· ter than usual " He said absen- teeism on a Monday normally ran about eight percent. but all but 1 percent of the workers sho"' ed up loda) ·'There was a very good turnout last nj ght and again Uus morning," said a spokesman for U .S Steel Corp . operator of mmes in Pennsylvania, Virgirua and Kentucky Bethlehem Steel reported a goo showing at its 28 mines: three mines owned by He! vellca Coal in Western Pennsylvania were shut. three mines in Indiana fa a led to open and a hke numberm Alabama In Homer C'1t v, Pa , several hundred mmers wt'rc haltt.od by four gnm faced p1ckel'> carrying s mall cardboard signs al the Helvetia Coal Co. 's Lucerne No 6 portal. Angry at losing a day's pay and the $100 return lo·work bonus, groups of miners stomped their boots on the asphalt roadway at the mme gate and shouted at the pickets Two packets outside an Island Creek Coal Company mine in K<>ntucky made mmers "turn around." a company spokesman s.11d ''We don't have a contract. and that's the way it's got lo be." said John Simpson, presi- dent of construction Local 1830. Rryan Moak, a spokesman for Illinois' larJ:tcsl construction local, scud Sunday his men were refusin,IOl to allow regular miners to enter the pils. He warned against the consequences should r egular miner., try to cross picket lines· ' Our people arc hostile." Consolidation Coal Co.. with headquart<>rs In Pltt.c;burgh, said pickets at 11 of its 51 mines m Wes t Virg1n1a, P ennsylvania and Ohio kept some 2,500 miners off the job CB Cusser Sent to Jail ALAMOGORDO, N.M CA P > An Alamogordo man was fined $300 and sentenced lo 24 hours in Jail for using language "you wouldn't be able to prin\" over hie; Citizen's Band radio, u municipal judge said. Jud~e Robert Bradley c;aid K<'nneth W Swarm was direct 1ng his abusive laniuage at publir officials and at police in general Swarm. who told police they wouldn't be able to catch him. was arrested at his home after officers traced the signals or his CB radio He pleaded no coolest lo a charge of disorderly con· duct. Victim's Re maim Located 1\A.CllA ENTO (AP> -A chtl(l'a body discovered behind a rhuwtl ttas tM~ Identified as a 22-nM>~·old murder victlrn mlashM oeai1Y two months, ac- cordlnc so die 6bulff'a Depart- ment. Tbe WT _.. idt11tJl1N u Davtd Ferreira., 1herlff's apokesmq 8Dl · r aald. Richard a.... %'1. WU indict- ed I ast mC9lllll cie tlx murder char1es, ~ IM kllllnc ot tbe child. wt. •M 11&.Q{og with one of the oUar yieCJ.m& dunng the January al~. Mlller said z jaJut.« at the Arcade WesleyM Cbu:rcb dis- covered a gate to an unused area ~nd the ctaarcb ajar a nd then fOWld a cardboard bos with a body ln it on the <Jtbe:r side ol the fence. The church 1s a~t half 3 mUe from the scenes of the other slayings. Miller declined to diseuss any wounm. but said ~ bQdy "as badly decomposed and aJ'Peared to have been behind the ciiurcn two months. Several of the other victkns' bodies were mutilated. The other victims w e l"~ Theresa Wallin, a 22-year old pregnant woman whose ab- domen was slashed ; E\·elyn &1iroth. 36. whose abdomen was slashed; her son, Jason. 6; <Jnd Daniel Meredith, 52, who v. as \'1s1ting them Mrs. Mn'Olh was babys1l11ng for the Ferreira boy EmplO):l'es al the ~anit anum where Chase previously was confined deiscribed hJm ui pn•.ss accounLo.; as "Dracula" and "the vampire" and described scenes "here he bit off tht' heads or t~o birds and drank their blood p,...r.~Al FUNERAL. • East Cit•rmam, wa!> prabc·ti by pt•er::. as the ~reall'::.I of thl' high· wire walkers Hut most of the 1,500 who filed past lht• bcxly ~nday were fans who v.anted to sa\ their own goodbyes "When J was in St Louis J saw ham perform a tn.J!h wire real and donate the fTlj')OCY \O the Shrinl'r., hospital ., said Carl Lochmer. a rcs1dl·ne of nearby Bradenton who wa1tod an hour to ~et into the arena "He's donalt•d so much lo tllc public and ht• wa ' a brill11tnl performer, there was nobod.> else hke him " Valley Youth Arrested on Burglary Rap A Fountain Valle) youth wa.s arrested on susp1non of burglary Sunciay aflc·r an Irvine man surprised two intruders m his home. lrvm<: police said lo· d .iy They said Mark Louis Miller, lit of 10300 Cardinal A' e . Foun- tain Valley, 1s bern~ held in Orange Count) Jail with b1t1I set al $10,000 The mc1dmt occurred aboU1 :\ .1 m . Sund av ~hen Mr anrl Mrs l harll's s· Elardt of 1 Cool Urook were nwaken<>d by their doorbell. police said They saHl Mrs. Elardi we.nt to the door and saw two men out side. Fnghtened, she awakened h<'r husband. who lh<'n heard a noise in the kitchen area. Polire said Elard1. S.f. saw ™-n m c•n in111de thr house and .!>hout t>d at them Apparently frightl•nt>d, the men ran orr Police said ln\•est1gation rE' vraled that a window srrN'n had hePn removed Following up tl description of a truck seen In front of the Elardi house, they later arrested MHler in a nearby park. Goose Steps Prove Costly GLADSTONE. O~. <AP) - City offtcitls are taking • gander at the $4,000 they hlVe ~pent prosecuting the case Of Charlie the goost while Chatlle'q own.-r st.arta to look for a home wbere the fowl won't be harasaed. Ted Winstow, owntr of the pet, hu bad two triab on charrea ln- volvlns Cbarlle. Tbe city f\nalb •bandonec1 • third char1e aiaum Winslow because ot I.be mouoUna and t4Jd him to &•l b.ls eooae ~t of town. "I think tt•• beien nry loalllh of tbe city of Glad1tone, •• Winslow, 231 Nld. 1'8ut. it'• been well TtOrth It to u1 lo lreep Charlie-. He's like one of my cblldren and bc'a ROl more personaltt.y than any animal I've •vtr seen." He said his wife, Judy. and lhelr three children have had lroub1e 1reepin1 Rlnce Charlie wu put ln t~ county pond. The larR• gray 100H used lo patrol the yard to kfoep prowlers and other anJmala away. "People art" afraid of Charlie becauae he's dlffetent. •• Wln1low 111d. ''But h.e'a oot a fearful IOOH unlns h• doesn't know you. Ho cou!dn't hurt·you but b• could IUl"e the bell at )'OU." Tb• dll be1an fll wUd OOM C'hue ln December when an Animal Control officer plrked up Charlie for loitering in city streets The 2·year-old goose was seized a M'COnd time Jan. 23 and Winslow was char1ed with tceptn1 a goose without a permit and ln unaanit.ry condi· lions. Since then, tho case hH lt!d tC"> an arrtutnm4!nt. two day.fon6t trlals and a heartn1 with cosu 0Umbtn1 u Jurles were s loct· ed. witnesH subpoenaed. lawyen b.lri!d and t.bt aoose kept at Ute CGUntY pound !or a boldine '" of $1AS. Qi,y oftlclalJ aald lb final eoll for the ~s may como lo more Ui&n $C.OOO . Winslow won the flr!lit <'hftr(e when he ronvinced the Jury that the gander was a bousebold pet and not subject to city livestock and poultry ordinances. But he was round ttuilty of keeplni Charlie wttbout a permit and v. :t!> fined S'TS Meanwhile, Mrs. Wlnslo\t lQ.'Cf her job when abe missed work to "o to court and the family ls ac tivdy lookin1 for a home In thf' country where tht•y con mo\""e w1lh Charll~ The st.rllln al'IO hu h~d Jts cf· feet nn Charlle. "llt's not the unse," saJd Wln~low . ''He's a nervous wttck. It's Juat terrible wb.al'• been done to him." 1 17 Today' Closlag N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 71, NO. 86, 3 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MARCH 21, 1978 TEN CENTS Red Nuke Suh Base In Cuba? LONOON <AP) ···The SovM l 'nion is bu1ld1ng a nuclear sub marmt• base m C'uba and may have !.h1ppt-il strategic missiles to that country, the Daily Tele· graph said today. The author, Rohf'rt Noss, who !-.p<'cializes in Communist ar fairs, cited •·senior Western militan· ohservcrs" as h1!> Mllrce and said Ameri('an aerial .sun·eillance unc-o\'ered the de· velopment-. In W1tshin~ton, the Uf'ff'nse Department <len1t•d the report.. Moss saul tht• fac1hlv 1s at Cienfuegos on Cuba's ~outh <:uast. about 140 mill's southeast of Havana. He said the !/o\·1ets started the base in 1971 but were warned to stop in a tough note from formt•r President Nixon. •'This t1mc.> round. things an rather difft•rent .'\C'cnrdmg t•> n•hahlc sourt·f's in Washington. the Carter admimstrat11m has so far made no attempt tu warn off llw Russian-.." Moss said. He did not sa.) where the So v 1et missiles are located in Cuba. In 1962. a t•risis occurred when President Kennedy ordered So- ' 1t't premier Nikita Khrushche\ to take Soviet missiles out or l "uba and blockaded the island The Snv1l'l leader ga Vf' in. M oss commented that •· ,\ mcnl·an failur<• to resist such ,.:ross provution ;is a new So· 'it·t bHl to in:.tall nuclear m1ss1les 111st off the coast of Florida "'ould amounl to a tlamnin~ ad m1ss10n of \H•aknl''>S. Giraffe Down, Faces Death After Injury i TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) - Nobody knows what's wrong with Shlomo, a giraffe at the Tel Av 1v zoo. He has collapsed, and unless h1s keepers get him back on his feet. he may dif'. The eight yrar old, happily marrit•d giraffe fell down Sun· da v. possibly berausc he suf. frred an m1ury last week. Zoo workers spent several hours today trying to hoist the one-ton giraffe with a makeshift t•rane, lhen gave up until Tues- day. · ' Wt• d n 11 'l know what· s "'rong." sa1rt zookeeper Moshe Avram, who is supervising the opNat1on. "He'~ not resisting us. He "'ants lo help himself, but he's llred." Shlomo's plight is reminisrent of Victor, a 15-year-old giraffe "'ho collapsed m England last St•ptember, <1pparenlly while trying to mate. Victor died of a heart atlaC'k C'aused by s hock "'hen "hP. was raised in a canvas sling. Dr. Avram said Shlomo's prob· lems hegan Tuesday when he s lipped and fell off a three-foot e mbankment in the f Pnced-m area where he Jives with his mate and two female offspring. "He got up and....didn't show any signs of pain," Avram added. "Then something hap· pcned and on Sunday morning <SeeGIRAFFF., Page AZ) Coast Weather Night and morning tow clouds and local dense fog with hazy sunshine Tue.s- d a y afternoon Lows tonight in 50s. Slightly coqler Tuesday with highs in mid-608 to low 70S. INSIDE TODA V Rolph DrolhnQn' of Balboa b a big nomt '" UCLA balbtbaU. But NCCnlfM Ow uc>U"9 man tllf"INd docon a $400,000 profrufcmol COftfruct .,. pro boll to ~rtw.t to ploJI for AthlttH h• Action, a branch of the Compu Cnm1dt. ~ /i'eolarinQ, Pa11t Cl. QUARTER HORSE CHAMP, TOWN POLICY. GOES HOME On Both Sides of Border. Intrigue and High Stakes Mueho Pesos .Toun PoliC')· Caper .. ~rue Ret? By (;AR\' GRANVll.U : Ot ,,. O•llY ~llol Stefl Pc•sos, lots of pesos. rhCJn~c· hands \\ hf'n horse ''" nc•r.., around Durango and otht.'r stall's an :\f Pxw<i gather at pram1t1ve hush tracks t11 raC"e tht'ir sw1fle"t m "inner takt> all match raC'cs. Jn addition to th1' winnn's stake then· are side bets to he made among the so 1 ailed ra1lh1rd-; whn mvariahl~ back the local favoritf' against an upstart im•ad<•r. Had things continued going to aC'rord1ng to pl<in. in the next few months those Mexican horse owners anrl their railbird followers would ha,·e been taken to the deaners but~ood. SOMEWHERE i\ STAKE would be posted and the local champion would be heavily backed by bettors as it lined up to race 400 yards or so IClllnst a cross-bred newcomer. Then. in the 20 or c;o seconds it lakes a great American quarter horse lo cover 400 yards the money issues would be decided. The sporting horse owner who poc;ted his share or the winner·take·all purse would be out his stake. The unwary caballeros who backed their favorite would have lost their bets. And before anyone could say "ringer" or "ringolero,'' the wmnin~ horse would be loaded into a "'aiting 'an and bouncing over rough roads in time to arrive at a new bush track ahead or his reputation. <See HORSE HEIS'f, Page A2) County Youth Held Iii Irvine Burglary A Founlatn Valley youth was arrested on suspicion of burglary Sunday after an Irvine man surprised two intruders m his home, Irvine police smd to dav. They said Mark Louis Miller. 18. of 10300 Cardinal Ave . J<'oun· tain Valley, is being held an Orange County Jail with hail set at $10.000. The incident occurred about 3 a.m. Sunday when Mr. and Mrs Charles S. Elardi of 1 Cool Rrook wrr<> awakt'nNl hy their doorhl'll, police said. Thl"Y saul Mr-;. Elardi wt>nl to the door and sow two mC'n out· ~Hie . Fri~htem·c1 . sht> awakened her husband. who then hearrl a nots<' in thC' kilC'hen area. Police ~sud Jo:lard1 . 54. saw two men inside the house and shout t• d a t t h e m . A p p a r c· n t I y fn~htened, the men ran off Polire said investigation rc- vealecl that a window !iC'reen had been rrmo\'ed. f'ollowinR up a description of a truck seen m front of the F.lardi house, they later arrested Miller in a nearby park. Peaceful Reopening -· Most U.S. Go Back to Work By The Associated Press Most of the nation's soft coal. miners put o n hard hats, i;wilched on headlamps and headed back down into the pits and shafts for the midnight and K a.m. shifts today for lbe first time m 3\".! months. Mo st mines reopened peacefully after settlement or the strike by 160,000 United Mine Workers members. but not all the mines could operate. Some remained shut while 10.000 con- struction workers sought a s1•parate agreement with coal operators. Mines 111 lllino1s, Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio. Pennsylvania ~ind West Virginia remained o;truck as mme construction workers set up picket lines that miners refused to cross. Contract talks in Washington between the con struction workers. who build the tunnels and above-ground facilities, and the Association of Bituminous Contractors, resumed today in Washington. The negotiations recessed Sunday night when both sides said they were too ex- hausted to continue. A spo kes man for the Westmoreland Coal Company in Virg1ma said the turnout for the 8 a.m. shift was ''very much bet· ter than usual " He said absen· treism on a Monday normally ran about eight percent, but all City Center Plan Eyed For Irvine Irvine City Council members will consider Tuesday whether "to approve a conceptual design plan for University Town Center Lhat has been rejected by the ci· ty planning commission. The meeting will begin at 1:30 p.m. lnCityCouncilChambers. Assistant City Manager Paul Brady said dispute bas centered on a change in the original con- cept for the area. He said the Irvine Company proposal that will be before the City Council is to build res- idences on the circumference of the property across from UC lrvine and to leave the central cort> open for future develop- m ent. Brady said original plans called for commercial develop- ment in the center of the com- J>lex. He said planning com· missioners expressed concern that the residents would not have sufficient support services such as grocery stores but that once they had moved in they might oppose plans to later put rommerclal buildings near their homes. The Town Center site is local· ed in the area bounded by llniversity Drive. Campus Drive and Culver Drive, excluding William R. Mason Regional Park and the existing com- mercial development on Cam- pus Drive. The site designated for additional commercial de- velopment is also on Campus Drive. .... ..,........ HE'S HAPPY NOW Miner Ed Jessee but 1 percent of the workers showed up today. "There was a very good turnout last night and again this morning," said a spokesman for U.S. Steel Corp., operator of mines in Pennsylvania, Virginia and Kentucky. Bethlehem Steel reported a good showing at its 28. mines; three mines owned by Helvetica Coal m Western Pennsylvania were shut; three mines in lndJana railed t.o open and a like number ill Alabiuna. In Homer City, Pa .• several hundred miners were hailed by four grim-faced pickets carrying small cardboard signs at the Helvetia Coal Co.'a Lucerne No. 6 portal. Anl?Y at losing a day's pay and the $100 return-to-work: bonus, groups of miners stomped their boots on the asphalt roadway at the miae gate and shouted at the pickets. Two pickets outside an Island Creek Coal Compan1 mine in Kentucky made miners ••tum around," a company spokesman said. "'We don't have a contrart. and that's the way it's got to be," said "John Simpson, presi• dent of construction Local 1830. Bryan Moak, a spokesman for Illinois' largest construction local, said Sunday his men were refusing t.o allow regular miners to enter the pits. He warned against the consequences should regular miners try to cross picket lines: "Our people are hostile." ConsolidJilion Coal Co., with headquarters in Pittsburgh, said pickets at 11 or its 51 mines in West· Virginia, Pennsylvania and Ohio kept some 2,500 miners of( the job. Irvine Teen Girl Raped A 14-year-otd Irvine girl was raped Saturday by one or three men who picked her up hitchhik· ing in Newport Beach, Irvine police said today. They said the girl, a student at University High School, was picked up in a red sedan at about 2:30 p.m. Saturday and asked t.o be taken to Irvine. Instead, the police said, the men said they had to stop by a friend's and drove to an isolated location in an industrial area believed to be in Anaheim or Riverside. There one of the men raped her but a second who at- tempted to was discouraged by the girl's struggles. She was dropped off at a service station. police said. They said the girl's father reported tho crime. Police said the girl told them the men called each other by the names Tony, Randy and David. David, the alleged rapist. described as 5 feet 11 inches tall and about 23 years old. Randy . was said to be about six feet, tw,o inches tall and 18 years old, while Tony was described as about five feet. eight inches tall and 19 years old, Irvine police said they are workin~ with Anaheim and • Riverside police to try t.o track down the suspects. LB Woman Slain In Lover's Bed A 29-year-old Laguna Beach woman was fatally shot while in bed with her boyfriend early Sunday morning. Police said she was slain by his estranged wife. Police identified the victim as Patricia Ann Proferes, an X-ray technician at San Clemente General Hospital. . Police arrested Anya Ann Shelt.on, 31, of Los Angeles, shortly arter the 1:30 a.m. shoot· ing at 2553 Glenneyre St. She was being held today in the UCI Medical Center Jail Ward. Police said today Mrs. Shelton's estranged husband, Donald Joaquin Shelton, 38, was living with Mrs. Proferes. The shooting occurred just hours after a confrontation between Mrs. Shelton and the Laguna Beach couple at the Glenneyre Street home, police said. Mrs. Shelton Jen the home, and po11ce believe she retumect at about 1:30 a.m., walking up to a bedroom window and firing a single shot through the glass. striking Mrs. Proferes in the chest. Hearing Set On Coast Area Zoning Plan A public hearing is scheduled toni&ht in Irvine on a proposed coastal planning program for the undeveloped land bet ween Laguna Beach and Corona del Mar. Son of Banjo Great Different Strummer · Investigators saJd today the woman apparently removed a screen on the window, which awakened the couple inside. Shelton told officers he drew aside the curtains alter bearing the noise, and saw the woman point the revolver through the window and Cire. striking Mrs. Proferes as she sat kneeling oo the bed. The Orange County Environ mental Mana1ement Agency wlll hold the hearing beginning st 7 p.m. ln Irvine City Council Chamben. A sp()kesman uid public com- mellt la sc>uabt on which policies should be in th domain of the tl..W, which or the county and whlcb of other apnclea. For Ntance, he aaJd, develop- ment aff 9(Una Cout Highway through the pro~rty would pr®ably f•ll within Lbe 1tate's Jw1adidlcft Uod r proviSlooJJ of lhe atato Coaat.l Ac1, the 1poke1man tald, t.118 county requited to d \ltlop Polld covtmln1 land alN the eout that conrorm to th lllPU1 of lhe act. By JACKrt: HYMAN Ol IM O.lly f'lt .. tttft Eddie Peabody Jr. grew up around JnUSic -his father was a well-known banjo player ·-but hf' <tidn 't reaUie when he joined the rity of lrvine as it~ com- m uni ly development director thnt he was going to be sur· rounded by musicians aaaln. Jim Harrtnaton, director of admtnlstratlve services, playtd 1n th brass ' rlion or • bf'R band whi1o he waa tn college. Jamta Ertckaon, the city attorney, sant with the fian ranclaco <>i>e:ra Compaoy od wtth Th•• f"'our Lads. Peabody aaya. An6 CU.ltural Arta Dl•l1loft bead a p II I .,. . Wllb. el\ that. talent P1ua. Peabody's guitar and banjo~ playing on the side, you'd expect city ball to sound like an ongoing jam session. But, says Peabody, he has always kept his musiclanabip at home. "I enjoy playing when I've had a glau ot wine and there's a fir ln tho fireplace." he •tid. Ho ••Y• ho never considered a performlna career for himself. "Everyone b ahrays u).l.na i.t you're olng to foll.ow Ii your rather'• loobteps, u Peabody a id. "I was never lnte ~ With musiCal t.ateat. you bavo It or you dOn t.... . Th• elder Pe1bod.Y perf'onned Iii •• ~'" ;tb.-1.8208.lt.'!' t.bo <W l'BABODY. Pa• &1) S helton said he reached through the window afler the shot was ftred and grappled ror Lhe weapon with Mrs. Sbelt.on. · Arter subduing the woman. Shelton called police who ar• rived and found the murdet" weapon outside the home. Mn. Shelton was rushed .lo South Coast Community Hospital ln a semi·COMC:ioua state following the stnasgle with her former husband, and wa1 lat.er transport.ed to UCl Medlc:il Center. She ts belns held today wltbout bail, aceOrdina to Portee Capt. Neil PU.rcell. He tald tbo two WO nd <See l'ING, P e Al) 1 A z DAIL y PILOT ! $1.8 Biiiion Fro•PapAJ . ffiWD · Studies GIRAFFE •.. be reu again ... When Sblomo would not gel up. workmen buJll a metal plat- rorm. suspended a pulley and litrapped chains to Jus underbel ly, but their determtned tuggl.na was of no avail. Bond .Election The giraffe's mate watched from hl'r paddock, •trainme her lone, graceful nea for • belt.er vlew. Irvine Ranch Water District directors wall discuss tonight whether lo call an el<'cllon on a $1 6 billion bond issue The issue, which would be one of the largest in Orange County h1~lory, would cover the district's share of a major l'lpeline from Yorba Linda and would also provic!t' for future !>l'Wer and water serv1ct.•S to undeveloped land through the year 2<>10. The city of In int· wh1rh aloOR "1th part of Tustin and some unincorporated land st•rved by the IRWO, ha:o1 e1sked the board to postpom• 1b dec1s1on City Council mt>mbcrs said they believe l H WD directors should wait until «1ftl'r the June 6 tt•neral election It hac; been charged that water district board members are seeking a Segerstroms Give $25,000 To Repertory A donation of $25,000 from the Se~erstrom family puts the funds raa~ed so far for the con· strul'lion of a new South Coast Hl'pt•rtory theater an C11sta Mesa at mun~ th;.in $2 malhon, an SCR building campd1gn spokesman said The goal is $3 m1lhon llarnetle Witmer of the SCR group said total funds donated l>) the Scgerstroms. developers of South Coast Plaza. now total about $550,000 The building site. part of the ~cgNslrom donation, 1s located ad;acent lo lhc South Coast l'laza llolel, on Town Center nra \ (' Compll'l111n IS ~cheduled lall' this summer, w1lh an open· mg date of November 11 The SCR Bl·nefactors Commit- teC'. headed by Carl Karcher. h;is n•ceaved several lari::e girts. Donor-; and the amounts given ~ire Bank of J\meraea. Sl5,000, John and K1tlll' Hau. $25,000; R1c•hard and Marilyn Hausman, S5,llOO. Ladd, Kelsey and Woodard, architects, $25,000, and Hock"ell lnternallonal, S7 500 The 13 year-old theater, cur· n·nlly housed at 1827 Newport Blvd. rn a 200 seat rented theater. 1s more than 90 percent sold out through subscraptJons for a II performances. South Coast Repertory is a non profit. profes~uonal com- pany IL maintain!> a company an '""1cit•ncC' and also operates an ael1ng conservator} Van Crashed Into Auto; Two Injured Two women were injured Saturday in Irvine when a van t'arrvirlSl 13 pt>Oplc colladed with th<' rear or a c.:ar, polite said to· da} The} said Sharon J Lash. 24, of Honolulu, the driver of the c·ar. was treated Etl th<' scene bv p.1ramedu·s but not hosp1talizeft ;ifter the '8 20 p m accident at Jamboree Road 8 nd the 405 Frl'cWay Maria Elena Garcia, 15, of Long Beach, a passenger in the v<.in, was taken to Tustin Com· munity Hospital complaining of head pains but was treated and sent home. police said. The driver of the van was identified as Maximo Jerry Gallegos. 18. of Long Desch. Also in the van, police said, were 11 other passengers. all of Long Beach. Most were related to the driver, they said. ('ause of the accident Is under investigation OHNOICOAtl' DAILY PILOT ::..°'.:t.~~~·:r:::.:::::':~= ea.'' ~1\1\•ftf t"""°•""' ~ ..... ,*""~'• ~~..=-..~~~:'V:11·~--!c9; ~ \atn V•tNy ""''"• S..~11: vet .. , ~ ~ .... 111llwt~Coe" ,. _ _.HI -" -·-,., ............. ,.,,.." , ... ;'.:.'-&..:ei:.:t:.:,::,,~~ Wnl 14f __ .... _ .. , ..... ~,-~·-, .... c...., YIU-*"'•"' __ ,_._ ,_ ........ feller . , May bond election to circumvent the effects of Proposition 13. The Jarvi~ amendment, Proposition 13 on the June 6 ballot, would cut property taxes Lo one percent of cash value. The City Council also asked a delay until the a\ate attorney general can reply lo a council allegation that the IRWO board 1s unconstitutional in its l'Om position Five of 1ls "even members are appointed. IRWD d.Jrectors say that under stale law 1eneral t'lection of water board members isn't required until the c1tv 1s more than half urbanized. The five members are appointed by the district's major landowners. chiefly lhe Irvine Company The bond issue would also be \•oted on by landowners. The IRWD hearing will begin at 6 p .m . at district headquarters in Irvine Town Center across from the UC Irvine campus. Service at Center Court An est1matttd 1,200 \\Orsh1ppers attended ~unrise serv1res Easter Sunda\ at this un usual locatmn -center <:ourt ·at the John Wayne Tennis Club in J\ewport Beal·h Tlwy were among the thousands of Chril- tians who celebrated Easler in religious services along the Orange Coast. The in- terdenominational service at the tennis club was conducted by Mariners Church of Newport Beach. Actually, Shlomo did not have a name unlit misfortune berell him . A rescuer decided op Shlo1110. which is Solomon ln English, as he comforted the animal, telling him: "You'll be okay, Shlomo. You'll eat again and mak• love aeain." "If he lies on bis side too long. it's not good for his heart," Avram srud. "Giraffes get weak and can't stand up, and they die " County Teen Shot to Death During Fight College Considering Computers A 17 year-old Santa Ana boy was shot lo death during an altercation outside a local liquor store Sunday evening, pohce said today. Alfredo Gonules was pro- nounced dead at UCI Medical Center at 10 p.m., about an hour after being struck in the head and abdomen by two or six rounds fired in his direction, of. f1cers said. Sa ddleback Comm unity College District trustees will consider purchasing one com- puter for their business office and accepting the donation or anothe r for class instruction tonight. A committee which has been studying lhe district's need for a new computer has recom- mended that trustees authonze the purchase of an $82,262 com· puter from National Cash Register Roy Barletta, assistant superintendent for business. said the district currently has a small computer which isn't capable or doing all the reports required of his office. "It was like using a little Pinto and ex· peeling and needing a Lincoln," he sau.l. lie said lhe proposed new equipment stall as a mini computer but 1t will be used on accounting, purchase order. bill· ing, inventory and some person nel procedures Trustees also will be asked to pay one dollar to Crager In dustrie~ of Compton for an eight year old computer the firm is nu longer using W11l1am Jay, dean of instruc: hon, !>aid the computer ongmal ly cost $200,000. He said National Cash Register's central office an Ohio also has offered to donate another $150,000 worth of equip ment to make the computer operational. Jay said the only stipulation in the offer as that the college use lhe manch1ncry only for educa- lrnnal purposes The trustees are due to con- l>lder the offer after their reg- ular meeting begins al approx- 1mc1tl'ly 7 45 pm Irvine Campus They are scheduled to begin meeting in a closed executive session Lo discuss a personnel matter at 7 p.m. Then, they W111 convene the meeting publicly to hear a committee's report on a plan for handicapped students at the college. College Appeals Signal Ordinance Investigators said the young man's assailants haven't been identified. Police said Gonzales was with some friends in a car that had 1ust pulled inlo the store parking lot at 811 N. Fairview St. Another car pulled in nexl to them. police said, and one of its occupants began firing toward Gonzales with a small caliber handgun. Fro. Page A I PEABODY. • Newport Officials View Quiet Easter A plan by the Saddleback Comm unity College District to o\·c rr1dt.• an Irvine city ordinance when it constructs its north <.'ampus in Irvine will come before the Irvine City Council Tuesday The meeting will begin at 7:30 p m at City Council Chambers. Three options are expected to be considered by the City Council, Brady said. One is to concur with the Saddleback District's resolution of intent. Another is lo recommend that the district board reconsider its action not. to construct the improvements. Foit and Orpheum Theater circuit. dunng the '30s, he played in Europe and served in the Navy in both world wars. His contribution in World War JI was to organize bands and send them to the Pacific to en· terta1n Lhe troops, Peabody says. Newport Beach police and lifeguards agreed today that Easter Week JUSt isn't what it used to be in their town. "It was so quiet," commented one veteran police officer recall- ing the days of Bal Week, "I forgot il was Easler vacation." Lifeguard Lt. Logan Lockabey said beach attendance was light all week. but mushroomed up to 100,000 on Saturday and 90,000 on Sunday He said there were few prob- lems even though city beaches from 52nd Street to the Santa Ana River remained under quarantine from the effects oC a sewage spill that occurred two weeks ago. Robert Stone, director of en· vironmental health for the Orange County Health Depart- ment, said the quarantine wall remain in effect untll at least Tuesday. He said the dally waler samples of the quarantined area are still showing elevated levels or bacteria. Lockabey said guards and police had no problems keeping people off the closed beaches The only incident to be rePOrt Dog Training Classes Set In Irvine Area A 10-week course ln obedience traininll for do.:a six months to seven years old wlll be offered this spring by lhe City or Irvine Community Services Division. A Wednesday class that meets from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. will start April 12 and a Saturday class that meets from 11 a.m. to noon will start Aprll 15. Botb classes will be held al University Community Park. The first meeth11 wlll be an orientatioo IClllOD without clop preaent. Fee ii $20 fot adults and •1~ for youths U and under . Reclltratioo wlll be btld from 8 to 1 :30 p.m. Thursday and '1 a.m. to & p.m. Friday at the rtcreaUon department. Information l1 available by caUlnl ™'*'· ed occurred Sunday afternoon when lifeguards and Orange County harbor patrolmen were called on to rescue nine people from a cabin cruiser off Corona del Mar main beach Lock a bey 5a1d the craft's owner, Roger Rouch of 24772 810 cessa St , El Toro, radioed a may day to the Newport Coast Guard station. telling them his 24·foot boat was sinking Lifegaurds and patrolmen, who were already in the area. responded and took off six adults and three children, without further problPms Harbor patrolmen were able to plug the holes that had caused the leaking and the boat was pumped out and towed to their headquarters. Lockabey said all of the passengers, except Rouch, wer<' from Pomona ' Paul Brady, assistant city mana~er, said a city zoning ordinance requires that the sc·hool district put in a traffic signal al !nine Center Drive and .Jeffrey Hoad plus road improvements adJacenl lo the proposC'd campus near that in le' ri.cl'l1on Jlnwever, he said. the Orange I ounl' Counsel has issued an op1n10.n that th<' colleg<' d1stnct uol·:-.11 t hJ\l' to 1•omply wall the or ch nano· Nukt> Blast ToJd . . STCH'KllOLM Sweden <AP> • H us:.ia dt'tonated an under-~round 11u<'lear (•xplos1on $un- <IJ v an tht• S<"m1palat1nsk region of western S1b.-ria. the second blast in that area 1n a w~ek, ~"eden 'c; lppsala Seu;molog1cal I nsl 11 ut1· n·~1ortt•d A third proposed City Council action would be to sue in Superior Court seeking to re verse the district's determination lo override the city ordinance. Fro•P~AJ SLAYING .•. Shelton have known each other for severaJ years, and were once involved in half-way house operations in Oregon. Mrs. Proferes has lived in Laguna Beach for about a year. She had a 9 year-old daughter who was in an adjacent apart- ment staying with friends at the time of the shooting Sunday. Investigators are seeking a firm motive in the shooting to· day EASTER EGG ROLL ALTERED WASHINGTON' CAP> -The track was too wet and sloppy to- day for the big race at the White House, so youngsters who showed up for the Easter Egg roll had to be content with a handshake from the Easter bun~ ny and a tour of the mansion. Pouring rain Sunday turned the While House South Lawn, where the party is held annual- ly. into a soggy backyard. Last year's egg roll, held on a warm and sunny day in April. attracted approximately 16,000 youngsters and their parents. Horse Heist Sure Bet? Continued From Page A 1 BY THE TIME HE got there front runners would have lined up another match race for him, probably with ct cantina patron who boasted of owning c1 horse that can beat anythin~ on four legs. That as the wa) the scheme was to work The heavy part of the chore had been done, the un- beatable horse ·· a great champion was in the hands ol those seeking to gain their fortunes on the money.rich but anonymous Mexican bush tracks The priced horse came from about 2,000 miles away, stolen in the night from a stable in Orange <.;ounty. IF EVER A HORSE was made to order for the winner- tnke-alJ assignment south or the border, it was Town Policy. A handsome bay geldin.it. Town Policy had won nine ef to races against the toughest <.'o mpelit1on in America • In less than a }ear of racing has earnings totaled $336,000. And while thundering to has championship 2·year-old 111eason, Town Policy had set a world record for quarter horses of all ages by covering 400 yurds ln just 19 2 seconds STANTON POLICE BELIEVE those cred~otlals tempted those who stole the horse to follow him from Fresno lo Los Alamitos Race Course . From there Town Pohey was tracked to a stable in Stanton where he had been sent for a brief rest beforo starting the tough winter campaign. Two horse thieves had little trouble aplritlnr Town Policy from the stable. While stable workers slept not :SO feet away from the quarter horse champion, the rustlers entered h1a 1tall haltered him. led him out a driveway, crossed tn ope~ field and loadf'd him into a waittne van. That was rive months ago. TODAY, TOWN POLICY is on the lalt lee of bi1 journpy home, a return journey that beean on a well·ktipt ranch outside Ounngo. And the key rtaure in the sale re<:overy of the borse la U.S. Department ot Africulture livestock lnapeetor Tom McCall. McCall works out of Presidio, Tex., • ranntni com· munlt.y of about 3,000 people nesUed aJona the R1o Grande River 250 mllea southeast ot El Paso Like others involved In the CAM, McCall 1.,a be'1 beea l.nJLructed by blab r up1 not to diacuu ill CS.Lalla. CO EQUENTL Y. FOil 111E Umt belnJ, mvch. of Town Policy'• adventur ln Mexico remain.a a clouded mvstery ' . •• • • .. • But from information pieced together from McCall. Durango stale police chief Jaime del Toro and others, this much is known -Town PoJicy's theft was somehow related to heavy dr!g dealing south of the border, an indication the thie\'e~ may have been paid ror their services m drugs Within hours of being stolen the horse was spirited across the border, probably al San Ysidro, and within days of his lpefl was at the DuranJlo ranch. -BASED ON AN INFORMANT'S tip, McCall had reason to believe as early as December that Town Policy was somewhere in the Durango ranch. -"The safety of human lives was at stake" in the ensuing "deli cate Investigation 1i1nd neaotiations" that led to the horse's safe recovery. -Wh.lle McCall praises the work or del Toro and his police. It wasn't until three days after Town Policy owner Ivan Ashment agreed to pay them a $15.000 reward that the horse was found. -No arrests have been made in connection with the ease -THOUGH ALL AGREE rr was planned to race the great quarter horse on the Mexican bush circuit. he ap- parently had not been raced and was bein& beld "unhl things cooled down." -No attempt had been made to dis11tuise the horse or to blot out the telltale registration number tattoo be car· ries on bis inside lip. Owner A.sbmenl and trainer Blane Schvaneveldt 10 days ago new to Chihuahua ind then on to Durango to negotiate for lhe return of Town Policy Schvaneveldl, one or the nation's leading quarter horse trainers, described Town Policy's condition as "rough, real rough." WHILE HE DID NOT rule out the possibility or Town Policy racing a1aln, he said the horse will be rested and returned to tlp-top physical shape Q t.be first matter or buainess. Othtr"I who lna~ctcd the horso while lt was quaran· Uned In Presidio 1atd hls le11 we~ IOW\d and, ex~pt ror an apparent wel•ht loss due to a c:han1e in diets and alUtude, appe~ to be In p>d conditlclll. Friday evenln1. Town Polley was cleared from quarantine and loaded lnlo a b~e •a.n btadtd tor CalUomla. Behlndhlmhel ftamyslery. AodabeadofhlmwerebopeatbatbewtU~artttum to the raclne form lb.al carried hlm as a two-year-old to peaks .of IJnt&tnC!U. ...- Laguna/South Coast Afternoon N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 71, NO. 86, 3 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A MONDAY, MARCH 27, 1978 TEN CENTS 3,000 Units Eyed on Visbeek Ranch By ANNE COOPER °' 11111 O.lty f'llM ..... The new owners or the 2,000- acre Visbeek Ranch in northeast San Clemente plan about 3,000 new homes there, but they say they also are testing ranch soils to determine whether farming would be a feasible use for a portion of the land. agriculture could be .conducted there, .. said John Balda, project director for Nu-West Develop. ment Corp., Ltd.. of Calgary, Alberta. The Canadian firm recently purchased the sprawling Vis- beek Ranch for $16 million. "Farming can be a very prof· itable enterprise under the right conditions,'' said Balda. "But it can also contribute "We are currently doing soil surveys lo determine whether QUARTER HORSE CHAMP, TOWN POLICY, GOES HOME On Both Sides of Border, lntrtgue and Hlg1' Stakes j Macho Pesos 1 17 ~ Town Policy Caper Sure Bet? I By GARV GRANVILLE Ot .... Daily ...... Slaft Pesos. lots of pesos, change hands when horse owners around Durango and other states in Mexico gather at prim1t1vc bush tracks lo race their swiftest in wanner-take· all match races. In addition to the winner's slake, there are side bets to be made among the so-called railbirds who invariably back the local favorite against an upstart invader. Had things continued going to according to plan. m the next rew months those Mexican horse owners and their railbird followers would have been taken to the cleaners - but good. SOMEWHERE A STAKE would be posted and the local champion would be heavily backed by bettors as it lined up to race 400 yards or so against a cross-bred newcomer Then, in the 20 or so seconds it takes a great American quarter horse to cover 400 yards the money issues would be decided. . The sporting horse owner who posted bis share or the winner-take-all pune would be out his stake. The unwary caballeros who backed their ravonte would have lost their bets And before anyone could say "ringer" or "ringolero," the winning horse would be loaded into a waiting van and bouncing over rough roads in time to arrive at a new bush track ahead of his reputation. BV THE TIME llE got there. rront runners would have hned up another match race for him, probably with a cantina patron wtlo boasted or owning a horse that can beat anything on rour legs. That is the way the scheme was to work. The heavy part of the chore had been done, U\e un· beatable horse -a great champion -was In the bands of lbou seeking to gain their fortunes on lbe money-rich but anonymous Mexican bush tracks. The priced horse came from about 2,000 miles away, <See HORSE HEIST, Page A%) Hanson School Fire ' ·I Caused by Short? . A possible elec\rl.c-1 lbock in • t,,ypewnter cord hat been ten· C.Uvety ideDUfied ., the cause or a fire Friday at. San Clemente'• Ole'ffanson Elemen· ary School, whi(t) caused -.n tlmated $i0,000 ii" damage to •dminlltt U~• orfic.-es. greatly lo a sense or community among the people who will live on the ranch." Balda said Nu-West represen• tatives have met with de· velopers of two adjacent San Clemente properties -Forster and Reeves Ranches - "because we are interested in working together tor mutual benefit." Development plans for the three sprawling San Clemente ranches indicate that inhabited portions of the city will double in the next decade, with the con- struction of about 6,500 new homes on the ranch properties. One project on which the three developers would have to cooperate is a commercial· industrial center proposed on 380 acres where the ranches come together. The prop()Sed location is a ref· atively level piece of land. north of A venlda Pico and about half a mile inland of the San Diego Freeway. The commercial-industrial center proposal is currently un- der consideration by the city planning commission. "We have taken no position on the center," said Nu-West proJ· eel director Balda. ..We rec- ognize the need in San Clemente tor a stenuacant employment source. •·we agree with the city that. the need exists and thllt the ranch juncture is a loelcal toca. tion," he said. "We plan an ex· tensive market analysis. however. lo determine what re. search firms. corporate offices and others would be interested <See RANCH, Page A2) La a Wonmn Slain; Boyfriend's Wife Held Motive Sought By Police~ A 29-year-old Laguna Beach woman was fatally shot while in bed with her boyfriend early Sunday morning. Police said she was slain by his estranged wire. Police identified the victim as Patricia Ann Proferes. an X-ray technician at San Cle mente General Hospital. Police 3rrested Anya Ann Shelton, 31, of Los Angeles. shortly after the 1:30 a.m. shoot· ine at 25.S3 Glenneyre St. She was being held today in the UCI Medical Center Jail Ward. Police said today Mrs. Sheltoir anged husband, Donald JQ,acailln Shelton, 38, was living with Mrs. Proferes. The shooting occurred just hours after a confrontation between Mrs. Shelton and the Laguna Beach couple at the Glenneyre Street home, police said. Mfs. Shelton left the home. and pouce belleve she returned at about 1 :30 a .m., walking up to a bedroom window and firing a single shot through the glass, striking Mrs. Proferes in the chest. Innstigators said today the woman apparently removed a screen on the window, which awakened the couple inside. Shelton told officers he drew aside the curtains after hearing <See SLAYING, Page A2) Woman Badly Hurt in Fall From SC Pier A 38-year-old woman was badly cut in a fall from the San Clemente pier Sunday mornmg Gwynn Stanley. of Miami, Fla . was treated for a deep cut on the right side of her back at San Clemente General Hospital and released. "She was apparently putting a leg upontberailin1, perhapstos1t on the railing, wben she fell,'' said Lt. Lynn Hughes, of the San Clemente Marine Safety Depart· meot. "I don't recall anylbjng like it.'· be said. "The only other fall from lbe pier I know oC involved a smaU child." The falling woman apparently cut her back on a large bolt pro· trudlng from the pier's pilings about 10 yanh above the Yialer, H u1hes said. E4SI'ER EGG ROU ALTERED Eager for Eggs Overcast skies apparently cast no cloud over San Clemente'5 traditional Easter egg hunt Sunday in Plaza Park. where sharp· eyed youngsters cleaned the park of 300 dozen eggs within minutes. The Easter Bunny made his first appearance at the hunt Sunday, apparently surprising some' youngsters. "Is he the guy who brought mv basket?" one child asked of the six-foot rahbit. ··1 kind of thought he was smaller.·· The hunt is sponsored by the city's parks and recreation department. Most of U.S. UJa1 Miners &ckto Work By The Associated Press Most of the nation's soft coal. miners put on hard hats. switched on headlamps and headed back down into the pits and shafts for the midnight and 8 a. m. shifts today for the first lime in 31.c.i months. Mo st mine s reopened peacefully after settlement of the strike by 160,000 United Mine Workers members, but not all the mines could operate. Some remained shut while 10,000 con· struction workers sought a separate agreement with coal operators. Min es in Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio, Pennsylvania and West Virginia remained struck as mine construction workers set up picket. lines that miners refused to cross. Contract talks in Washington (See MINEBS, Page AZ> Death May Strike Falling Giraffe TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) - Nobody knows what's wrong with Shlomo, a giraffe at the Tel Aviv Zoo. He has collapsed, and unless his keepers get him back on his reet, he may die. The eight-year-old, happily married giraffe fell down Sun· day, possibly because he suf. fered an injury last week. Zoo workers spent several hours today trying to hoist the one-ton giraffe with a makeshift crane, then gave up until Tues- day. Nude Bathers Return to BIDck's Beach LA JOLLA (AP) -Easter Sunday was nude Sunday, despite a city ordinance less than a year old banning nudity on I.he shiny-white sands or Black's Beach. An estimated 200 naked bathers pulled on their mm aulls hurriedly when t.bree California park rangers ap· pea red. A whlslle blast alerted the sun bothers, basklna in 90-dcsne weather. After t.bne Yea.I'll u tho DI• t1011•1 only municipal aude beach, tho tOO•foot atrlp • clud by oe an tnlot1 and cWt1 1Wlls Torrey Pine Slate S.Hb bu been rated ort Umltl to nudity by I.he San Dieio City Cou ell. Pol\ce allO have been wa'mt,q balben to <OWi' up, rather than t ue citatropa. But the akln· 01 llpPina la reported OQ &.bO In .. CHUO aa&1Ji. "We don't know what•s wrong," said zookeeper Moshe Avram, who is supervising the operation. "He's not resisting us. He wants to help himself, but he's tired." Sblomo's plight is reminiscent of Victor, a J.S.year-old giraffe who collapsed in England last September. apparently while trying to mate. Victor died of a heart attack caused by shock when he was raised in a canvas (See GIRAFFE, Pace-'Z> Coast Weather Night and morning low clouds and local dense fog with hazy sunshine Tues· day afternoon. Lows tonieht in sos. Slightly cooler Tuesday with highs in mld-8>5 to low 70s. INSIDE TODAY Ralp" DroUingcr of Balboa i• a big name in UCLA bolkttboll. 8Mt r~y the 11oung man tUT1V'd down a 1«JO ,000 ~ssionol cOftlroct fn pro boil to c:ontim&a to ploy Jor AtlalcC•• in AcUon, a branch of the Campus CrulQde. See Femuring. Page Cl. 1 ..1.2 DAILY PILOT USC Mond!X, Ulfd\ 'Z7. 107I Red Nuke Binged on ~arvis Laguna Bench Unified School District trustees are offering a total of $131 ,758 to members of the dtslnct's three bargaining wuts nexl year, contingent on the out· come of the Jarvis-Gann tax in- 1t1..ttiveJune6 CG Probes Boat, Sinking SAN DIEGO (AP) The Coast Guard 1s investigat· ing the sinking of a 43-foot powerboat from which t"1ghl people wt•re rescued by th(' rn•w or a pas:.ang boat Thl' powerboat, the Carolina, was regastcrt•d to Huller Construction Co. of Salt Lake City, Utah. No one was reported hurt as it caught fire Saturday .ind sank off San Diego Front Pa.-Al GIRAFFE ... :-.Ian~. Or Avram said Shlomo's prob ll•ms began Tuesday whc:n he -;lipped and fell off a three-fool 1·mbankment in the fenced-in .irea where he lives with his milte and two female offspring .. He got up and dsdn 't show any signs of pain." Avram added. "Then something hap- pened and on Sunday morrung hi.! fell again." When Shlomo would not gel up. workmen built a metal plat· form, suspended a pulley and ~trapped chains to his underbcl Iv, but their determined tugging was of no avail The ~iraffc's mate watched t rom her paddock, straining her Ion~. graceful neck for a better \'ICW. Actually, Shlomo did not have a name unltl misfortune befell ham. A rescuer decided on Shlomo, which is Solomon in English, as he comforted the •tnimal. telling him: •·You'll be okay, Shlomo. You'll eat again and make love again " "If he lies on his side too long, 1t 's not good for hss heart," J\vram said. "Giraffes get weak .ind can't stand up, and they die." Laguna Taxi Firm Loses Salary Suit J\ stale agency has upheld a La~una Beach woman's claim that she was not paid the wa~es ~h<' was cntslled to while .!>he worked for a local taxi com pany. A hearing officer appointed by t ht• Department of Industrial Relations has ruled that cla1m- ~·nl Pally G. Yirka must n·· t·l'1ve SI.054 from the defen- dants, Checker Cab Company and Ronald Kaufman. The dec1s1on fHt'd in Orange County Superior Court states that the award represents the underpayment of the claimant for a 17-week period m wtuch she worked for Checker Cab as a supervisor and dispatcher. The hearing officer's ruling notes lhat the "circumstances or this case indicate that there may have been wage discrimination based on sex." Gunman Gets $245 SAN FRANCISCO <AP) - Police say a tough-talking man toting a aawed-off shotgun held up 30 pel"&Ons in a San Francisco ber and escaped with $245. ORANOtl COoWf' use DAILY PILOT But dLSlrict officials said all oots are orr iI lhe property tax re form measure passes in June and if student enrollments continue to drop in lhe five-campus district. The district is proposing a $7,245 increase for Personnel and Guidance Association members, comprised of 11 counselors, a psychologist, school nurse and speech specialist. Trustees are also offering the 154 members of the Cahfonua School Employees' Association a total of $36,458 for salary hskcc;, health and dental benefst.5, or both. Last month trustees approved lJn $88,055 increase for the da'>· trict's 152 teachers, interns and long term substitutes The teachers. members or the Laguna Beach Unified F..icult) Association. have !>tnce (·uun tered with a$600,000 request. Bi II Barnes. district educa- tional services direclor, said, "Our salary proposals to the thrc<' bargaining units are based upon the amount of money available lo opcratethed1slrictarterJune6 If no money is available, then the of. fers are no longer vahd. '' He said the bargaining unsL" will have a choice In how they want to use the increases -either for increased salaric•s or to main tum current health and dental Ll·nefiLs. He said health and dental in- surance costs have increased by 15 percent inthe past year, adding that it will take more money to maintain the current level of benefat.5. ··They can use the money to in- crease their salaries, maintain th ear other benefits, or a combina- tion of both." Barnes said. District business manager Clyde Lovelady said negotiations with the three bargaining groups will begin in early April. Serui~e at Center Court i\ n t.•sllmated 1.200 worshippers attended ~unrisc scrvil'l'S Easter Sunday at this un- usual location -center court at the John Wa) nc Tennis Club in Newport Beach. Tht.'' w1.·r<.· timong the thousands of Chris· t 1ans \\ho celebrated Easter in religious services along the Orange Coast. The in- terdenominational servic~ at the tennis c lub was conducted by Mariners Church of Newport Beach Funeral Set Tuesday Viejo Murder-Suicide ·victims to Be Buried Gravt.•s1d<' services are scheduled Tuesday for a 34-year· old Mission Viejo man and his 71 year-old mother, victims of a Good Friday murder-suicide shooting James Carr shot has mother three times with an automatic pistol, then turned the gun on himself an their three-~droom home at 26502 El Mar Drive, sheriff's deputies reported. Mary Elizabeth Carr left a trail of blood from her home to that or a neighbor, where she knocked on the door, collapsed and died. deputies said. Carr. a V1eLnam veteran, had been ltvang with his mother sinc•e has father dted last year. depulws said. Carr had quit hi s JOb al Hughes Tool an Culver Ci- t}. anvesttgators said ln\estigators said Carr seldom left the home. spending much of his time reading In tu s bedroom. Thl'y said there 1s no apparent motive for the shoot- ing, other than a possible mental problem. Neighbors told officers the Carr home was always quiet and there apparently were no prob- lems. ''We can only speculate on the motive," said a sheriff's in· vestigator. "We don't know what sparked lhe incident. The only two people who would know are dead." Investigators said M rs. Carr, a retired school teacher, was s hot in the service area or garage port.loo of her home. Her son apparently walked into a bathroom and shot him1elf in the temple. Laguna Hills Mortuary is handling Tuesday's 2 p.m. graveside services at El Toro Cemetery. Survivors include Mrs. Carr 's son, Robert A.-or Mission Viejo, and {wo grandchildren. Sub Base In Cuba? LONDON (AP) -The &>Viel Union is building a nuclear sub- marine bab~ in Cuba and may have stupped straleglc missiles lo tbal country, the Daily Tele· graph said today. TJle author, Robert Noss, who specializes in Communist af fairs. cited ··senior Western military observers" as his source and said American aenal surveillance uncovered the de velopments. In Washington. the Derense Department denied the report Moss said the facility is at Cienfuegos o n Cuba's south coast, about 140 miles southeast or llavana. He said the Soviets !>tarted the base sn 1971 but were warned to stop sn a tough note from forml'r President Nixon .. This time round, things are rather different. According to reliable sources in Washington. the Carter administration has so far made no attempt to warn off the Russians," Mosa said. He did not say where the So vi et m lssiles are located in Cuba. In 1962, a crisis occurred when Preaident KeMedy ordered So- viet premier Nikita Khrushchev lo lake Soviet missiles out of Cuba and blockaded the island The Soviet leader gave in. Moss commented that ••American failure to resist such gross provation as a new So :viet bid to install nuclear missiles just off the coast of Florida would amount to a damning ad m lss&onoC weakness.'' f1ro91PageAJ RANCH ••• in localing in San Clemente.·· Balda said be expects con- structioo to be under way by mid 1979, with completion or the development project six or seven years later. He said he expects the Capistrano Umfied School Dis- trict to request donation of a school site on Nu-West property. College Considering Computers "And I expect we'll go along with their request ," he said. Nu-West will not build out the entire ranch, but the corporation will probably build some of the homes, he S&Jd. The majority of the property will be sold to other developers~ with Nu-West ret.am- ing architectural controls. Saddleback Comm unity College District trustees will consider purchasing one com- puter for their business office and accepting the donation of anothe r for class instruction tonight. A committee which has been studying the district's need for a new computer has recom· mended that trustees authorize the purchase or an $82,262 com- puter from National Cash Register Roy Barletta. assistant superintendent for business. Fro• Pag~ A I SLAYING IN LAGUNA. • • the noise, and saw the woman point the revolver through the window and fire. s tnking Mrs. Proferes as she sat kneeling on the bed. S helton said he r eached through the window after the shot was fired and grappled for the weapon with Mrs. Shelton. After subduing the woman. Shelton have known each olher for several years. and were once involved in half-way house operations m Oregon. Mrs. Proferes has lived in Laguna &ach for about a year. She had a 9-year-old daughter who was in an adjacent apart- ment slayin~ with friends at the time of the shooting Sunday. Investigators arc seeking a farm motive sn the shooting to- day said the district currently bas a small computer which isn't capable of doing all the reports required of tus office. "It was like using a little Pinto and ex- pecting and needing a Lincoln," he said. He said the proposed new equipment still is a mini· computer but it will be used on accounting, purchase order, b1U- ing, inventory and some person- nel procedures. Trustees also will be ask~ to pay one dollar to Cr ager:In· Officer Injured B U R BAN K ( A p') -. A California Hig hway Patrol motorcycle officer Greg Hig- ~ins, 31, was reported in serious but stable condition at a Burbank Hospital today after he was sideswiped by one car and run over by a second. duslries o( Compton for an eight· year-old computer the firm is no longer using. William Jay, dean of instnic- tion. said the computer original- ly cost $200,000. He said National Cash Register's central office in Ohio also has offered to donate another $150,000 worth of equip. ment lo make the computer operational. J ay said the only stipulation in the offer is that the college use the manchinery only for educa· t1onal purposes. The trustees a re due to con· sider the offer after their reg- ular meeting begins at approx- imately 7:45 p .m . They are scheduled to begin meeting in a closed executive session to discuss a personnel matter at 7 p.m. Then, they will convene the meeting publicly to hear a committee's report on a plan for handicapped students at the college. ·•we hope to encourage diversity of arcbit«ture." he said. Moderately priced housing will receive high priority an Nu· West building plans for the ranch, said Balda. ..There is a responsibility on anyone doing development lo provide something other than $200.000 homes;• he said. "That kind or balance contributes lo the sense or community we hope lo foster in this proJect. ·• PCP Bost Mad_. LOS ANGELES <AP• -The s m ell of elher and its flam m abll ity led to two arrests and the seizure of an estimated S12 mtlhon worth of PCP sn t""-o separate durg manufacturan~ operations. authorities said Shelton called Police who ar- rived a nd found the murder \\ eapon outside the home. Mrs Shelton was rushed lo South Coast Community Hos pital in a semi-conscious slate following the struggle with her formt'r husband, and wa s later transported to UCJ Medical Center. She is being held today without bail, according to Police Capt. Neil Purcell. Horse Heist Sure Bet? He said the two women and E'ro81P~Al MINERS ••. between the cons truction workers, who build the tunnels and above-ground facilities, and the Association of Bituminous Contractors, resumed today in Washington. The negoUallons recessed Sunday night when both sides said lbey were too ex- hausted to continue. · A spokesDlan for the Westmoreland Coal Company in Virginia safd the turnout ror lhe 8 a.m. ahlft was "very much bet· ter than usual.·• He said absen· teelsm on a Monday normally ran about eight percent, but all but 1 percent of the workers allowed up today. ••There was a very 1ood' tumout last nlgbt and a1aln thl1 mornlng." ea.id a spokesman for U.S. Steel Corp., operator of mines ln Pennsylvania, Vita.Loia and Kentucky. Bethlehem Steel reported a 100 abowi.nl at tta Ill mlMI; tbree m1na O'tt'Md bJ HeJvot.loa Coal ln Western PenD1ylvanla were abut; th.l'ee mlnea ln lndlana failed lOOJJGD and a Uke number 1D Alabama. • la llomlr at,, Pa.. enwaJ tu&n4red m1Derit Alt.d b)' four.&riaa.faeedlif c~ •JDall-~ aJ,am at the Belfttla ~ eo.•a ~No. lfQIUJ. Continued From Page Al l'\t.olen in the night from a stable in Orange County. 1 •· EVER A HORSE was made to order for the Winner- take-a ll assignment south or the border, it was Town Policy. A handsome bay gelding, Town Polley had won nine of 10 races against the toughest competition ln America. In less than a year of racing his earnings totaled $336.000. And while thundering to his championship 2-year-old season, Town Policy had set a world record for quarter horses of all ages by covering 400 yards in Just 19.2 seconds. . STANTON POLICE BELIEVE those credentials tern pted those who stole the horse to follow him from Fresno to Los Alamitos Race Course. From there Town Polley wu tracked to a stable In Stanton where he had been sent ror a brief rest before starting the tough winter campaign. Two horse thieves bad little trouble spiritin& Town Polley from the stable. While st.able workers slept not SO feet away from the quarter horse champion, the rusUers entered his stall, haltered him, led him out a driveway, crosaed ao open field and loaded bi.ID into a waiting van. That was flve months a10. TODAY. TOWN POUCY is on the last Jet or· hl:t journey home, a return Journey lhat be&an on a well-kept ranch outalde Durango. • And the key nsure ln the safe recovery of th bone is U.S. Department ol .Agriculture llveatoct inspeelo1' Tom McCall. McCall works out or Phmdlo. Tu .• a farmllll eom- m\llllty of about 3,000 people nestled aloq the R1o Grande River 2:50 mllea eoutheast ot El Puo. Llb olben lnvolwd tn the case, MeCall 11)'1 be'• been lDatricted by blahet UP'S Dal to d1K\lll lta deta.IJs. co ENTLY, woa nm Um• betn1, much of Towa Nlcy'• adventure in MUS.co reml.lnl a c&ouded lllf ery. • B from lnformatlan placed from llc:Call. DUraor;o ~ ~ thlel Jalmedel Toro ud .,.._ Wa mucb II mo.re: .. -roe~· tMft,,. ....... ftllalal! .. bii&Q'. • dl"'1g dealing south of the border, an indicabon the thse~ may have been paid for their services in drugs. -Within hours of ~mg stolen the horse was spirited across the bordt'r, probably at San Ys idro, and within da!t s of his theft was at the Duran"o ranch. -BASED ON AN INFORMANT'S tsp, McCall had reason to believe as early as l>eeember that Town Policy -.vas somewhere in the Durango ranch. -•'The safety or human lives was at stake" in lhe ensuing "delicate investigation and negotiations" that led to the horse's sare recovery. -While McCall praises the work or det Toro and his Police. it wasn't until three days after Town Policy owner Ivan Ashment agreed to pay them a $15,000 reward that the horse was found. -No arrests have been made in connechon with the &ase. -111()UGB ALL &GREE IT was planned to race the great quarter horse on the Mexican bush circuit, he ap- parently had not been raced and was being held "until thinp cooled down." -No attempt bad been made to dis1uise the horse or to blot out I.be telltale reJistration number tattoo be ur- riu on his inside Up. Owner Ashment and trainer Blane Schvaneveldt 10 da75 ago new to Chihuahua and then on to Duranco to neeotiate for the return of Town PoUc:y. SchV81Je¥ ldt, one of the natJon 's lead in& quartu hon~ trainers, described Town PoUcy's coodltion as ··l"Ollltt. ,..al rouih." WHILE RE DJD NOT rule out the poaibili\J olT°"" Polley rac:tna apln, be said the horse will ~ ~led and retuned to Up-top physical 1bape u the flrat malltt ol butness. Ot.ben who lnspoetf'd tbe bone white It wu cauaran· lined 1D Pr81dlo 1ald bil 1ep were sound and, except f« an •Pparut Wti&bl lou due to a ebanae In dieu and altltudo, appeared to .,_ ln «ood condiUon. l"rldal' evenln1, Town PoUcy waa deared rrom qaarantlne and loadOd lnto a horse vu beadf'd for calllornia. • • Behlndblm be lef'ta IQJlteT')'. ADdabeedotbhn wer.~tbat bewRJIOIDedayrltw"a toUloridi&ICDnDUaatcuriedbimuatwo-~to PMb olll'eatn f I • 17 I Orange £oast ~. day's Closhlg N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 7f, NO. 86, 3 SECTfONS, 26 PAGES QUARTER HORSE CHAMP, TOWN POLICY, GOES HOME On Both Sides of Border, lmrtgue and High Stakes ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MARCH 27, 1978 N TEN CENTS ~ Horse Heist Sure Bet~ By GARY GRANVILLE ot .. Dlllt, ........... Pesos, lots of pesos, change hands when horse owners around Durango and other states in Mexico gather al primitive bush tracks lo race their swiftest in winner-take· all match races. In addition to the winner's stake. there are side bell; to be made among the so-called railbirds who invariably back the local favorite against an upstart invader. Had thing!' continued going to according to plan, in the next few months those Mexican horse owners and their railbird followers would have been taken to the cleaners . but ~ood. SOMEWHERE A STAK}; would be posted and the local champion would be heavily backed by bettors as it lined up to race 400 yards or so against a cross-bred newcomer. Then, in the 20 or so seeonds it takes a great American quarter horse to cover 400 yards the money issues would be decided. The sporting horse owner who posted his share of the winner-take-all purse would be out his stake. The unwary caballeros who backed their favorite weuld have lost their bets. And ~fore anyone could say ''r.inger" or "ringolero," the wmnmg horse would be loaded tnlo a waiting van and bouncing over rough roads in lime to arrive al a new bush track ahead of his reputation BY THE TIME HE got there, front runners would have hned up another match race for him, probably with a C'antma patron who boasted of owning a horse that can beat anythmg on four legs. That is the way the scheme was to work. The heavy part of the chore had been done, the un- beatable hon;e -a great champion -was in the hands of those seeking to gain their fortunes on the money-rich but anonymous Mexican bush tracks. The priced horse came from about 2,000 miles away, stolen in the night from a stable in Orange (.;ount,y. IF EVER A HOllSE was made to order for the winner- take-all assitrunent south o! the border, it was Town Policy. A handsome bay gelding, Town Policy had won nine or 10 races against the toughest competition in America. In less than a year of racing bis earnings totaled $336,000. And while thundering to his championship 2·year-old season, Town Policy had set a world record for quarter horses of all ages by covering 400 yards in just 19.2 seconds. STANTON POLICE BELIEVE those credentials tempted those who stole the horse to follow him from Fresno to Los Alamitos Race Course. From there Town Policy was tracked to a stable in Stanton where he had been sent for a brief rest before starting the tough winter campaign. Two horse thieves had little trouble spiriting Town Policy from the stable. While stable workers slept not 50 feet away from the quarter horse champion, the rustlers entered his st.all. haltered him, led him out a driveway, crossed an open field and loaded him into a waiting van. That was five months ago. TODAY, TOWN POLICY is on the last leg of hrs Journey home, a return journey that began on a well-kept ranch outside Durango. And the key figure in the safe recovery of the horse is U.S. Department of Agriculture livestock inspector Tom (See TOWN POLICY, Page AZ) LB Mistress Slain Boyfriend's Wife Held A 2J rear olrl Laguna Beach woman "as fatallv shot while m bed v. 1th ht·r b1)yfriend early Sunday morning Police said she was slain by his estranged wife. Police 1denufled the victim as Palri<'1a Ann Proferes. an X·ray technician at San Clemente General Hospital. Pol1l'e arrt.•sted Anva Ann Shelton. :Jl of Los Ani:eles, 1 !-horlly after the 1:30 a.m. shoot- tng at 2.'>53 Glenneyrt! St She ".1s bt•mg ht•ld today 1n the lJCI :\h·d11 JI l'cnll·r .rail Ward Pol1re :;a1tl today Mrs ~helton's <'slranged husband. Dnn ald Jo<1qu111 Shelton, 38, was h\ in g with Mrs Proferes. rht• shoollllg ll('CUrred JUSl hours afle1 a confront ation bl'l" l't'n Mrs She 1 ton and the Laguna B1•ach l'O Uple at the C: lt.•nnf·yrt' StrPct home, police ~aid !\1 rs Shelton lt'ft the home. and pol1C'e bellt'\ 1• she returned at ahout 1 30 a m . walking up lo a ht>dronm "111<1ow and firing a smgl<' shot through the ~lass, stnkmg .'.\1rs Proferes m the chest Investigators said today the woman apparently removed a screen Oft the window, which awakened the couple inside. Shelton told officers he drew aside the curta10)) after hearing the noise, and saw the woman point the revolver through the window and fire. slrikmg Mrs. Proferes as s he sat kneeling on the bed. Sh<'lton s aid he reached throu~h the wmdow after the li~tnin~ Kills 1 MORGANTON, N.C. CAPl ·· Harry Vernon Anderson Jr . m<1yor of Lexmgton, N.C .• was killed and four persons were in JUrC'cl when hghlnmg struck a t.·amps1te wher<' members of tlirrt• families wen• spending thl' m.:ht. • Killing in shot was fired and grappled for the weapon with Mrs. Shelton. After subduing the woman. Shelton called police who ar· rived and found the murder weapon outsi'de the home. Mrs. Shelton was rushed to South Coast Community Hospital in a semi-conscious state rollowing the s with her former husb , and wa s late r transported to UCI Medical Center. She is being h eld today without ball. according to Police Capt. Nell Purcell He said the two women and Shelton have known each other for several years, and were once in.'-'olved 10 half-way house o~rations m Oregon. Mrs Proferes has lived in Laguna Deach for about a year. She had a 9·year·old daughter wbo was in an adjacent apart- mt?nt staying with friends at the lime of the shooting Sunday. Investigators are seeking a firm motive in lht• shooting to· day Servi«.·e at Center Court .\n estimalPd 1,200 wor!->hsppcr~ attended sunn!>e :-.erv1<·cs Easter Sunda\ at this un· u~ua l lcwat111n ··ente r l'OUtt "at the John ',\ .1~ nt' ·1 t•nr11 s ''luh in ~t:>wport Bt•ach. The~· \\Crl' arnong the thous1rncb of <'hns- tians who celebrated Easter in religious :c;ervices aJong the Orange' Coast. The in· tcrdenommational service at the tennis tlub was conducted by Mariners Church of Newport Beach. Councihnan Eyes SA River Marina .----------... --·1 -1 I )\)• MIC. 'flAEL l'ASK•:v1nr OI C,_ O.lly l'tlet Slllf l osta Mesa \:it} < 'ounc1ln11u. flom Ra1·1t1 wants h • rcv1vt tht· J.>OSSiblity Of b puhlic• bc,a• marina alon~ tht: S<1ntc. .\n .. River r\nd despite a lack or progres~ on the idea. which 1s at least 2f years nld, <'ily 11ff1c1als 10 Newport Beach and Costa Mesa say they're still interested fr. a new gateway to the sea Haciti has called for the formation of a committee made up of Newport Beach, Costa Mesa, Jluntin1'lon Reach 1And county officials lo renew dis· 1·ussion of the plan. ''The possibilities are still there 1f we would pursue them." : ast fall tht' d1 unl v 1mrcha~e<l • ~I· •u'rt'~ of :;rnc! <11011~ the Santa H 1 \'t'r llt"t wt•t•n l!Jlh anrl Vitt.in a .SI rr•t't~ and ~ome wei>t side ost~ :Mt>san!. have 11sked If thl· ,a 11d might lw used fur the marina It remains ont' nf three options 1111 the land des1g11ated as an ex- tensio~of the Fairview Talbert Hegiorta'I ~ark. county officials !>aid Other options would be to leave the land in its natural stat~ or develo1> it \s a park ex· tension. Dick Hogan, NewPQrt Beach's director of community develop· menl, says the marina is sllll in the city's general plan "It's now within the county's JUrt'.'l d1 C'llon as far as a local ,·oastal program and we are f10pmg for mput to have them consider the marina as a pm1sih1lity." he said . However, Hogan aam1tted that any public demand for a marina could be overcome by env1 ronmentalist opposition and questions over who would foot the bill for construction. Discussion of the notion waned in 1974 when the State Coastal Commission opposed the marina. Plans for the waterway were proposed in the early 1960s, but a private development firm's pursuit of them bogged down. An independent research re· port in 1974 questioned the finan· Where Were Tot•rists? • NB Officials Call Easter Week Qliiet l , Lockabey said the craft's owner. Roeer Rouch of 24772 Bin· cessa.. St., El Toro, radioed a may day to the Newport Coast Gul\rd staUoo, telling them bis 24-foot boat was sinking. Lifegaurda and patrolmen. who were alread.t in the area. respon&!d and took off abt adult.I and, thTce children, wltbout fur r p lcms. Harbor patrolm n ftre able · tb plu the holos that bed caOk'd tbe l aklnf arid tho bOat. was pumped out and t«>wed to tbeir headq ua.rten. t,;ockabey aatd all or the P.useng except Rouch, were Uom Pomona. • ) cial feasibility of the marina. then estimated to cost $39 million. Cos ta Mesa City Manager Fred Sorsabal figures the price tag now probably has doubled. A !so in 1974. former con· gressman Andrew Hins haw con- vinced the federal governmenl <See MARINA, Page AZ) Coast Weather Night and morrung low clouds and local dense fog with hazy sunshine Tues- day afternoon. Lows tonight in sos. Slightly cooler Tuesday with highs in mid~ to low 70s • INSIDE TODAY Ralph ~r o/ Balboa is a big name in UCLA basketball. Bvt recenUy the UoUng man ha"Md down a $400,000 pro/eufOnol contract in pro ball to COlltinw to play for Athlete• i?l Achon. a branch o/ the Campus C""od•. SH Featunrig. Page Cl. • • ' • AZ DAIL y PILOT N Mond!t· ~ 17, 19'1'1, Peaceful Reopeni!ag· Most U.S. ers Go Back to Work 8 y The A.ssocla&ed Preu Thousands of miners ripped coal out of the earth today for the first time m 112 days, bring.· ing ao end lo the nationwide soft coal strike for most of the in- dustry. Reports from acr06s the coal fields showed that operations were bcgmnrng to r~luro to normal as United Mine Workers donned their hardhats, shouldered picks. boarded heavy equipment and went back to work for their first payday since the stnke bv 160.000 union mem bers began bee G But for others it was a dif- ferent story. Some miners, who .... anted lo get back to work and found mine construction Y.orkcrs pu:keting, followed the time-honored coal country tradi· lion of observing picket lines. "l Y.aS on my way up the NB Controversy hollow when the ptctceta t.umed' me back," aaJd Jamee Darby. a o electrician for the Valley Camp Coal Company in We$t Virginia. Mines also remained closed in Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio, and Pennsylvania. Meanwhile, negotiations for a new contract for the 10,000 mJne construction worken5 were going on in Washington, where both sides reported they were closing in on an agreemenL ··we are making good prog· ress.'' an industry representative said. The workers, wbo build mine shafts and other CaclliUes, are believed to be seeking a contract similar to the one approved by the miners. The majority ol the nation's mines were open by the 8 a.m. shtfL Council to Tackle Surfing Changes :'\c·wporl neach caly coun- (.'tlmen will tackle• t·untrovers1al changes 111 the c ny'<1 ~urfing regulat1om> wh1C'h would set up beaches fnr bnard surfing only and another strand for exclusive USl' of body surfers and swimmers at theirmeetingtorughl. Recommended by the city's Parks, JWarhes and Recreation Comm1s!l1on, the new rt>gula· t ions call for hoard i;urflng only al thl' Santa Ana River mouth and bC'lWPt·n !'i2ncl and 56lh o,lre<'ls Jolm Jr'a'lne • Back llon1e, 'Feel,s l/inR' Movie art11r John Wayne has been 1n and "u•. of Hoag Memona: ll11sv1tal in Newport Beach. undi>rf,!<Jtni: tests for bronch1t1!\ but Y.l:IS home today and feehnJ? fine, i;pokcswomen for the 7\l 't'ar.old <Jrt.1r sa1rt \\> avnp ha:-hl'f'n ;ii. oulpal1cnt at the ho!->p1tal for resp1n1lor) problems fo1 :w111" tame, a spokcswu11u111 at his home sa1ti. A Sptlkl•swumaH at hl~ nfflct> in Lo:. A11i.:1•l1·:-said Wei' IH! has i:nnt· to 1111.i g frotn l111w tu llmf' f11r d1t·l kup-, "l111t lw's <•t homl' nnw anrl lw's rint>. 'l'l1nt>'s n<1 prohl1>m." Body surfers and swimmers. including swimmers with Boogie boards, will have exclusive u.-;e of the beaches from 40t.b to ,..lb streets, the Wedge and LltUe Corona. The city's remaining ocean beaches will continue to operate on the black ball system that baa been in me in recent years. That system, which is in effect from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. during the sum mer, requires board surfers to leave the waler when body surfers and swimmers are present. The revisions were sought t?Y both boey surfers and board surf. ers who told PB a.ad R com· missioners that it effectively prevents board surfing ln the summertime and leaves body surfers with no place to go ln winter. when the black ball system isn't used and board surfers dominate the waters. The proposal is (acing oppogl· lion from residents of the board surfing areas who say they want to be able to swim at lbe ~aches near their homes and from body surfers who protest the loss of what one described as a prime body surfmg beach. Councilmen will lake the issue 111 clurinl{ their meeting which opens at i :30 p.m. at city hall. Fourth Distriet Euta-11 Anoclated Ooal Com- puy aald only one of. Ill 17 West Virginia mines waa shut. Consolidated Coal Company said 38 or its Sl mines acroa the country were open. tJ .S. Steel and Bethlehem Steel both re. ported that the morn.inc turnout w aa good at the total of 41 miQes in three states th.at theJ operate. "We're back to work, .. A U.S. Steel spokesman aaid. .. It's been a very smooth operation ao far.·• Despite the scattered shut- downs, most areu said they ex· · pected 1t0n>e shipments of coal would start heading lo coal-short uhhlJes by the eod of the day. It wiU talte an estimated two wee ks or three wee Its, thoQgb, before normal production aod shipping rennne. This could be slowed if the constracUon workers widen their picketing efforts. F,....P11geAJ MARINA .•• to allocate '2s>.ooo for an Army Corps of Engineers' study of the marina plan. However, Sorsabal said the money was never allocated and Army Corps spokesman Perry Davis says his department was never ~ked to cooduct Lbe SW'· vey. Costa Mesa Councilwoman Norma Hertz.og puts the marina in the "nice to have category," but aaJd she was told it would take all of the county's reerea· tion funds tor the next 13 years to build tL She said some private money would be needed, but abe doean 't support totally a private facility. Both Sorsabal and Hogan say funding ol auch a project re- mains U\ doubt. Sorsabal sug- gested that someone would have to buy out the leaaes on the oil producing Banning property that could be lnvo.l ved. Councilman Raciti figW'es the county purchase of river lowlands to the north ol the Ban- ning parcel opens the door for some IOrt ol funding agreement between tbe three cities, Lbe county and, possibly. the federal government.. He envisions the marina ex- t.endlng north to Ham.lltoo Street. Landmark Borns SAN PEDRO CAP> -A his- toric landmark in bis harbor community suffered an estimat- ed $30,000 after name:s from 8 second-floor kitchen stove spread to an attlc, Los Angele6 city fire officials report. Wired for Confusian Electrician Bill Hughes sorts through some of wiring iJ>. ''olved m currC'nl rebabihtallon of auditorium at Newport Harbor High Scbool. About 25 percent of the remodeling proJ('C'l imohcs new electrical systems for the 729-seat aud1lorium. according to school officials. The Sl.7 million remodeling Job, financed by a federal grant, is scheduled for completion before the slart of school next fall. 6Foru1'u Set/or Hopeful.s Candidates for the Newport Beach C1ty Council wW discuss their Yiews aL nx forums tbis week. Tbe !Int wtJI be at noon Tuada1 ID the Newport Cent.er ofllcea of Glendale l'ederal Sa•in11. Tbe meetlDI is epou1ored by the Newport Center Kiwanis Qub and ia open to the public. Tueada7 nlebt. uae Newport Helabts lmpro•ement Auoclation will boat tbe candldaLfa durln& a forum at the Newl)Ort HelJbt.a Elemeotary ScbooL 1bat meet.ing. also open to tbe public. bellns at 7:30 p..m. Wednesday, tbe candidates will gather at Corooa del Mar Elementary School lo air their views at a meeting of the Corona del Mar C\ric Allocialioo... Th.al meeUng allo beglm at 7:30 p.m.. u. too. is ope.n to the public. Tharaad1 at DOOD, the N•wport Harbor Exchange Club wlll hear from candidates in Districts Three and Six at the Bahia Corlat.him Yacht Club. Tbe meeting ls open to club members and their euests. Tbunday night, the Mariners Homeowoen Association is going to ataee a press-conference style forum in the multipul"pOSe room of tbe'?darlners Library. A panel ol newspaper reporters will ask candidatts questions perta.irung lo city Lssues. The meeting. open to the public. beginsa17:.30p.m. Sunday, tbe candidates will again discuss their ideas and opimon.s at a meeting sponsored by Park Newport. The session is slated for 7:30 p.m. in the complex Spa. It. is opeo to the public. * * * Hummel Explains Stand NB Candidate 'Not for Another Freeu:ay' Newport Beech City Council candidate Paul Hummel s.Ud U>- day he didn't intend that a freeway should be built 1n New port Beach lo handle Pacific Coast Jligbway traffic problems. Last Thursday Hummel told an audience at a candidates' forum that I.ht' b.i~bway ''oughl to be done <.iway wilh" aod replaced by a freeway "close enough to Lbe coast t.ha1 people would use 1l " lo an mLerview today he &aid he has r eceived several telephone cnllcal of that remA!rk and be stressed that "I never in- tended that there be anol.ber freeway built in Newport Beach. There is no place to build one." lie said bis remarks were1n- lended as a generalized dls- * * * cussioo ol -rreewa:r grld plan- ning" and that he doesn't sup- port coostrud.ian o! a coastal freeway .. _ In a p1 epe:red statement de- h ve red to t.be Daily Pilot today. llt.mmel said be opposes cocr struction ol any "major road .. not listed in the city's master plan with the exception of tbe Bonita Canyoo bypass. "l fully support the continua- tion or t.be current and proposed 1 use of the Pacific Coast I Jlighway in Newport .Beach,'• I his statement read. ! In the interview, he said. ·"Whal I was trying to address ·was the fact that we rely on the highway as our main street and that Ll also carries the beach traffic as well. "There are some places in this stale where beach traffic is rout- ed on a !reeway and the town traffic is on the surface roads. n Coast Highway) were dead and buried. IL ought to be done away with. .. What we really need is a freeway close enough to the coast Lbat people going to the beach would use iL The San Diego F)-eeway doesn't make it. It's too far away and it's on the bias to tbe coast. We need something I.bat wo11ld be parallel" Hoose Named Postmaster Robert J. Hoase has been ap- pointed postmaster of Newport Beach, replacing Glen Goodrich who retired a year ago. House was formerly manager of stations and branches in the Long Beach post office. 0 f f i r 1 J h a • l h c· h o s p 1 I ii l rlt•clint•rl •·omnw111 Perot.its l J p In Newport NB Candidates Profiled Hummel, who is a candidate for the Sixth District seat cur- rently held by Lucille Kuehn, made his statement about the freeway in response lo a que5- l10n about beach traffic. House. who joined the J)Ol'!t:al . servict> m 1950, took office Fri· day. He wiU earn $25,000 a year in salary and benefits in pres:id- 10 g over the staff of 186 employees who work in the Newport .Beach post offi<"es. \ n~·v. oHwr buiklin~ for th.- ;11 rport an•a lc•d the: h~t of bwld· ing pPrm1ts hSued during February by the City of Newport Beoach Bob }>'owler, city building director. said the permit with the large!it valuation was $3.8 m1lhon for a building al 4545 MacArthur Blvd. which is to bf' butlt by the Bay Colony Proper l) Company. The 127 permits issued in February had a total valuation of $5, 710,840. Fowler Tf.'ported J le noted that in February. 1m the city issued 190 permits with a valuation or $5.181,113. DAILY PILOT ·-··-_.._, __ _ , .... ~ Y••"""•"t•"4C-...... .. ~ "-"·-, ..... '-··--................ ~"~ ........ , ..... ...... , ... , .............. ,.._ .... N There are 13 active candidates for four seats on the Newport Reach City Council. The el~tioo 1s April IL In Newport Beach, candidates for the ~ven-member council must reside in the councilmanic district they hope to represent Voters throughout the city cast ballots (or one candidate in each district and the top vole eetter In each district is elected. FoJlowing are brteC profiles of the two candidates in the Fourth District, together with their answers to questions about some of the issues. Jatkle Heather, 1500 Dorothy Lane, ls 49, has lived ln Newport Beach for 20 years and bolm u BA in journalism from thtt University of ClnclMati. She la suving her second term as chairman of the ctlta Plan- n Io~ Com· minion. She i · ha• been a member of the com- m 1saion for ~even years. She is presi- dent or the Plannin1 Department or the state .... ,,. •• Leaaue ol C\lles, a member of the Revenue and TuatJon Com· mlltee fA the •late 14"1\it of Citles, a member of the board ot dtre(\tol'9 of St. J~h Jfoepllal, vice president ot tbe Florence CrtUendQn Home and prestd~t of the Newport Harbor ~bUcan Women. ~ .... 1" .. aDllM fw the Newoart Beadl ~1 COUdJf .. ,rve had uperteQce tenina tn almost ••UJ c.apaclt.T ta thl• dly iacludln' the plaftrtln.c eotn· mlHlOA, the Frit.nd1 Of tho Libr•rf. the PTA and .P,uh o~..:f SAYDI . lo the ft _. UNI q\Wjt.J off d 58.. ~--i-., me for the job .. How will yoa vote oa the- Janla-Oan.n lnJU•tlve and wbat woald yoa do as a coancil m~mbeT ll It pas~~ "I can't support the-Jan·is- Gann ln1tiallve because of what it ill going to do lo our schools. "Howevtt, It's more impor- tant to talk about how t would work for the city once the citizens have said. through that bill, to cut back spending. We need lo relate services to costs and present those to the citizens so they can decide wh.al to spend on." A• a coaacU member. bow woald roa V8'e U another baild· lng IDOratorlum were propoeed? "I voted tn opposltton to ll morat.ortam CthJs summer> ~ a pla"ntna commlsaioner. I have tried to bring opposing views to the barpining table, but 1 don't Wnk Jl s fair to the community to 10 tnt.o a moratorium without examining every baraatnlng poatUon" Chari~ LarHn~ 2312 Holiday Road, ii 4.9, has llvtd In Newport Poison Death . Said Suicide Newport Be•ch police have bJi.4 ., a 1ulcldo the death ol a Centnl Newport man who was dl1covered by ht.a wtfe Friday mornln1. tnv..Usatora Hid ttabdotpb WUHam Bannu, 11, "" found bln1 oear tied ln blS home at !9609 llamzs .. wheri hla 1rife r1t•rJ1ed f r-o.m a t.rlp to the laur\atoauL Detidl .. Hid tod~ I le ap.- U7 ~ mM1f -41tnk· a nutm ~ C1tmde. Reach for SC\'en ye8". re<'eil'ed a BS in general en~tneef1ng from the U. S Naval Academy; spent 20 year<; on active duty w1ththel S Na,yandcurrent· ly 1s Y...Ork1ng 1n real estate sales. why .,.... )'OID qaallfted rot' lM N~wport Beach city Council! .-.In my rrulilary background, I worked in a v a nely or •Mi min1~lrat1vt• positions. I worked ~ an advanced planner In Washington n . c _ 1 worked with House and Senate com uu•~ mittees and wilb the Johnson and Nixon White Houses ln pre- paring budgets. ( am not un- f amlliar with the 1tovernmental •nd pohUcal prl)('ess •• How •Ill voo vote on the Jarvi.Gann iniUatlve aad what •oald yoa d• H a council member ii It pa.s.~Hf · 'J' m not sure how I ' II vote in liebt of the Behr bill. hut I'd like lo read lhe Rchr hlll before I make up my mind ''Frankly 1 don't think it will be poMible to balance lbe clly budget lC Jarvis·Gann pu.set. At present.. S3 percenl of lbe c:lt7 budget goe3 into ealarles and benefita. I don't think tho c.\ty'll been over extrava3ant in lta Alaffing, but It loon Ullo It ~ll t:.ke somo bli cul.I In penonoeJ. We'll Just have to take lt one de- partment al a tlrne ... A• a coaDC'll membeT -.OW woald 7ou vote If adotlltr •onu..t.m •ere propoe.ed! ·'I'd \'Ole no on an1 moralorlurn. A moratorium would be UDDt?CIDISaf'7 if JOU bad I.be rl•hl &> 08 dty coundl. and I w.nt I could plJUlait .. ' lie said "I think we'd all be a lot belLer off if 101 (Pac1hc E'ro91 Pag~AI TOWN POLICY ••• ContJnued From Page A 1 McCall. McCall works out or Presidio. Tex., a fanning com. munity of about 3,000 people nestled along the Rio Gnlnde River 250 miles southeast ol El Paso. Like others involved lo the case, McCall says he's been instructed by btgher ups not to discuss its deta.ils. OONSF..QUENTL Y, FOR THE Ume being, much or Town Policy'ft adventure in Mexico remains a clouded mystery. • But from information p)eoed together from McCall. Durango state police chief Jaime del Toro and o&.bel"ll. Lb.is much b known: -Town Policy's theft was somehow ~lated to heavy d[11g dealing south ol the border. an indication the thieves may have been paid for their services in dntp. -Within hours or being stolen the horse was spirited across the border, probably at San Ysidro, and within days of his theft. was at the DuraDRO ranch. -BASED ON AN INFORMANT"S tip~ Mccan bad rea90n to believe as early as December that Town Policy was somewhere in the Durango ranch. -''The aafety or human Uves WU at stake" in the ensuing "delicate iovesUgation and necoti.aUon.s" that led to lhe bone's safe recovery. -While McCall praises tbe 1"ll"k d deJ Toro and bis police. il wun 't until three days aft.er Town PoUcy owoor Jvan Al.bment qreed to pu them• SU,000 rewant that ttM bone WU tOCIDd.. -No &U'1'el91.a have been ma tn COl1Ded.ioD wt1b the -TROUGH ALL AG'llE'E IT was planned to raoe tbe great qnerter hone on the Mexican bush clroun. be ap.o parutly had oot been raced and wu belq held ''UDUI thinl{B cooled down. " -No attempt bad been made to disguise the horse or to blot out the teltt tt;1strat.1oo number tattoo he car- r1 oa bls inside lip. Qwn« A.t1b.ment and trainer Blane S<thvaneveldt 10 da1• aeo new to Chi~hua aod tben on to Duruao to MIO'i-. for tho Nbri ot 1'Wn Polley. . Scbvannetdt. ono of LbD nalioo'• lead.lnc quarter krio tnltnm'L· -..U.S·'J'on JIQUq°a omidm U .. l'OQlh, real • ' /'i 7 Saddlehack Afternoon N.Y.Stoeks VOL. 71, NO. 86. 3 SECTIONS. 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA. MONDAY, MARCH 27, 1978 TEN CENTS Red Nuke - Suh Base In Cuba? LONDON (AP) -The Soviet Union is building a nuclear sub- marine base in Cuba and may have shipped strategic missiles to tbat country. the Daily Tele. graph satd today. The author, Robert Noss, who specializes in Comm1,mist af. fairs , cited "senior Wes tern military observers" as his source and said American aeriaJ s urveillance uncovered the de· velopments. In Washington, the Defense Department denied the report. Moss said the facility is at Cienfuegos on Cuba's south coast, about 140 miles southeast of Havana. He said the Soviets s tarted the base m 1971 but were warned to stop in a tough note from former President Nixon. "This time round, things are rather different. According to r eliable sources in Washington, the Carter administration has so far made no attempt to warn off the Russians," Moss said. He did not say where the So· \'1et missiles are located in Cuba In 1962, a crisis occurred when President Kennedy ordered So- viet premier Nikita Khrushchev to take Soviet missiles out or Cuba and blockaded the island. The Soviet leader gave in. Moss commented that "American failure to resist such ~ross provation as a new So- viet bid to install nuclear missiles ( JUS t off the coast of Florida i would amount to a damning ad· mission of weakness " • Giraffe Down, · Faces Death After Injury 1 TEL AVIV, Israel <AP> ' Nobody knows what's wrong ~ with Shlomo, a giraffe al the Tel Aviv Zoo. He bas collapsed. and unless his keepers get him back on his feet. he may die. The eight-year-old, happily married giraffe fell down Sun- day. possibly because he suf. fered an in)ury last week. Zoo workers spent several hours today trying to hoist the one-ton giraffe with a makeshift crane, then gave up until Tues- day. ··w e don 't know what's wrong," said zookeeper Moshe Avram, who is supervising the operation. "He's not resisting us. He wants to help himself, but he's tired." Shlomo's plight is reminiscent of Victor, a 15-year·old giraffe who collapsed tn England last September, appa renlly while trying to mate. Victor dled oC a heart attack caused by shock when he was raised in a canvas sling. Dr. Avram said Shlomo's prob· lems began Tuesday when he slipped and fell off a three-foot embankment in the fenced-in area where he lives with his mate and two remale offspring. .. He got up and didn't show any signs of pain," Avram added. "Then something hap- ~ned and on Sunday morning <SeeGIBAFJ'E, Page AU Coast Weather Night and morning low clouds and local dinse fog with buy IU.OSblne Tue11-d a y afternoon. Lowa tonight ln 50s. Slightly cooler Tuesd., with bicba Jn mid;OOI to '°-: 10$. INSIDE TOD.4 Y Ralph~ of Bo!boo f• Cl big "°"'* In UCL.A ba.t~ lJvt ~. ~ ~.manJ~.dotms a lf(J0/)00 prof~ contf1U't tn pro boll ~ eoiattnus to i>loll for .AthUtu fn ~dta., cs brattch of th• Cotnput C~. Feld~, Pog. Cl. QUARTER HORSE CHAMP, TOWN POLICY. GOES HOME On Both Sides of Border. Intrigue and High Stake's Mueho Pesos Tou:n Policy Caper Sure Bet? By GARY GRANVILLE 01 11• ~lly 1'1'9t Slafl Pesos, lots of pt•sos. change hands when hors<> owners around Duran~o ;rnd other state-. 1n Mexico ~athf'r at pnm1llve bush tra«k'> lo rate their s\.\1ftest in winner-take all match races In addition lo tht' winner's stake, there are side bets to be made among the -.o called railbirds who invanably back the local ravonle against an upstart invader Had things continued going to according to plan, in the next few rnoqths those MeXlcan horse owners and their nrilbir.d foUowers would have been taken to the cleaners but good. SOMEWHERE A STAKE would be posted and the local champion would be hea\"ily backed by bettors as 1l hned up to race 400 yards or so against a cross-bred newcomer Then, in the 20 or so seconds 1t takes a great American quarter horse to cover 400 }ards the money issues would be decided. The sporting horse o\\ n('r who posted hi s share of the winner-lake-all purse would be oul his stake The unwary caballeros who backed their favorite would have lost their bets. And before anyone could say "nnger" or "ringolero," the wmrun~ horse would be loaded into a waiting van and bouncing over rough roads rn time to arnve at a new bush track ahead of his reputation BY THE TIME HE got there, front runners would have lined up another match race for him. probably with a cantina patron who boasted of owning a horse that can CS« HORSE HEIST, Page A2) Santa Ana Youth Shot from Ambush A 17-year-old Santa Ana youth is reported in good condition at Saddleback Community Hospital arter being s hol in the right shoulder at O'Neill Park Sun day. Sheriff's deputies sealed off El Toro Road with roadblocks following the 2'.30 p.m. shooting Deputies said R11ndy Sebreros. 203 E . Cubbon St., was sitting on a fence at the edge of the park just off Live Oak Canyon Road County Teen . Shot to Death ~gFight I whl'n h<' was shot from a passing car The youth told officers he was spending Easter al the park with friend s, a Mexican AmE'rican ~roup mostly from the l>elh1 area of Santa Ana A sherifC's department spokesman said th at while roadblocks and search pro- cedures failed to turn up a small caliber gun, seven Santa Ana youths were arrested when a sawed-off shotgun and several dubs and blackjacks were dis- covered m two autom9biles at an El Toro Road checkpoint south of the park. A sheriff's spokesman said the O'Neill Park shooting was the only serious incident reported during the day as large crowds converged on the county's four major parks for Easter outings. An estimated 10.000 people filled O'Neill to overflowing. Deputies eventually closed ac- cess to Featherly Regional Park because of crowds and traffic coneesUon. Several fiehts and other lnci· dents were reported at Irvine Patk, deputies said, and traffic there was backed up for miles. Mlle Square Park m Fountain Valley also was filled lo near capacity. deputies said. Stor,. Lo es Cash Ao intruder who may bav• bad • key to the p~mtses took Jn coh and checks from a Laauna Hllb M •H stor•. Oranre UIU1'1l1 1b rf11 otnceo aaJd the bi'Hk·in and lb~t Mr report by o ratol'9 of th MoU\orhoo<l at rntty Sbop, 242U Le1una Hilla all, ReopenJ'eacefully Most U.S. Miners Go Back to Work By 'lbe Associated Press Most of the nation's soft coal. miners put on hard hats , switched on headlamps and headed back down into the pits and shafts for the midnight and 8 a .m. shifts today for the first lime in 3"2 months. Most mines reopened peacefully after settlement or the strike by 160,000 United Mine Workers members. but not all the mines could operate. Some rematned shut while 10,000 con· s tructton workers sought a separate agreement with coal operators. Mines in Illino1s, Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio. Pennsylvania and West Virginia remained struck as mine construction workers set up picket Imes that mmers refused to cross. Contract talks in Washington bet ween the construction workers. who build the tunnels and above-ground facilities, and lhe Association of Bituminous Contractors, resumed today in Washington. The negotiations recessed Sunday night when both sides said they were too ex· hausted to continue. A spokes man for th e Wes tmoreland Coal Company in Virginia said the turnout for the 8 a.m. shift was "very much bet ll'r than usual." He said absen· tec1sm on a Monday normally ··There was a very good Mistress Murdered; Wife Held A 29-year-old Laguna Beach woman was fatally shot while in bed with her boyfriend early Sunday morning. Police said she was slam by his estranged wife Police identified the victim as Patricia Ann Proferes, an X-ray technician at San Clemente General Hospital. Police arrested Anya Ann Shelton, 31, of Los Angeles, shortlv after the 1:30 a.m. shoot mg ai 255.1 Glenneyrc St. She was being held today in the UCI Medical Center Jail Ward. Police said t oday Mrs. Shelton's estranged husband, Donald Joaquin Shelton, 38, was hving with Mrs Proferes. The shooting occurred just hours after a confrontation between Mrs. Shelton and the Laguna Beach couple al the Glenneyre Street home, police said. Mrs. Shelton left the home. and police believe she returned al about l ·30 a.m .. walking up to a bedroom window and firing a single shot through the glass, striking Mrs. Proferes in the chest. (See SLAYING, Page A2) HE'S HAPPY NOW Miner Ed Jessee turnout last night and again this morning," said a spokesman for U.S. Steel Corp., operator of mines in Pennsylvania, Virginia and Kentucky. Bethlehem Steel r eported a goo showrng at its 28 mines; three mines owned by Helvetica Coal in Western Pennsylvania ran about eight percent, but all but 1 percent of the workers showed up today. were sbuL; three mines in Indiana failed toopenaod alike number in Alabama. In Homer City, Pa., several hundred miners were halted by four grim·faced pickets carryin( s mall cardboard signs at the Helvetia C.Oal Co.'s Lucerne No. 6portaL • Angry at losing a day's pay and the $100 return·to-work bonus, groups of miners s tomped their boots on the asphalt roadway at the mine gate and shouted at the pickets. Two pickets outside an Island Creek Coal Company mine in Kentucky made mmers 41tum around.'' a company spokesman said. ''We don't have a contract, and that's the way it's got to be,'' said John Simpson, presi- dent of c:onstruclton Local 1830. .Bryan Moak, a spokesman for Illinois' largest construction local, said Sunday his men were refusing to allow regular miners to enter the pits. He warned against the consequences should reg ular miners try to cross picket lines: •·our people are hostile." Consolidation Coal Co., with headquarters in Pittsburgh, said pickets at J 1 of its 51 mines in Wes t Virginia, Pennsylvania and Ohio kept some 2,500 miners off the Job. Murde..-S ui~ide Final Rites Set For Viejo Victims Gravl'side services are scheduled Tuesday for a 34-year- old Mission Viejo man and his 71-year-old mother. victims of a Good Friday murder-suicide shooting. James Carr shot his mother three times with an automatic pistol, then turned the gun on himself in their three-bedroom home al 26502 El Mar Drive, sheriff's deputies reported. Mary Elizabeth Carr left a trail or blood Crom her home to that of a neighbor, where she knocked on the door, collapsed and died. deputies said. Carr. a Vietnam veteran, had been li vi ng w1lh his mother s ince his father died last year, deputies said. Carr had quit his JOb al Hughes Tool in Culver C1- Gunman Gets $245 SAN FRANCISCO <AP> - Police say a tou~h-talking man toting a sawed-off shotgun held up 30 persons in a San Francisco bar and escaped with $245. ty, investigators said. Investigator s said Carr seldom left the home, spending much of his time reading in his bedroom. They said there is no apparent motive for the shoot- ing, other than a possible mental problem. Neighbors told officers the Carr home was always quiet and. there apparently were no prob· lems. "We can only speculate' on the m otive," said a sheriff"s in· vestigator. "We don't know what . sparked the incident. The only two people who would know are dead." Investigators said Mrs. Carr, a retired school teacher, wa$ shot in the SNVice area or garage portion of her home. Her son apparently walked into a bathroom and shot himself in the temple. Laguna Hills Mortuary is- h a ndling Tuesday's 2 p.m. graveside services at El Toro Cemetery. Survivors include Mrs. Carr's son. Robert A of M1 ss1on Vi eJo, and two ~randch1ldren. .1\2 DAILY PILOT SB On PulJHf! l'•ew 1,500 A~end Walle:rida Rites Irvine Girl, 14, Raped SARASOTA, l''la. (AP) -Karl Wallenda, patriarch of a death· defying family o( high wire pt•rformers, was eulog1.ted today J:> a dl·c1>lv religious man who believed he w;,ilkcd lhe wire Wlth God. .. As Ion~ as Cod lets me, 1 will walk the ware," the Rev. Luther W&lkr quoted Wallenda during funt'ral services at the large art-na where the 73·year-old star u~ed lo perform for neighbor,,, m Lh1:-. Cll't'US Lown Wallenda who challenged Cate and gravity 58 years, fell 123 feet to his death from a wind · "hipped high ware stretched between two hotels 1n San Juan, Puerto R1c11. on Wedne.!iday "This past week, God said 'Karl, the time has come for you to enter the Kingdom of Heaven and 1om your other loved ones'," W1lkr told a C'ro\\d estimated at 400 tn the 4,200-seat Robarts Sports Arena An estimated 1,500 fans and friends filed past Wallenda's bronze coffin Easter Sunday, re- mindt>d or tus years on the high wire bv the shadow of a 24-foot balan('c pole hung overhead in tribute The body "as on public view for six hours. dressed in performing c:oslume and the neck scarf Wallenda always wore when he walked the wire. The pole hanging over the casket was ltke the one he l'lukh(.>cl when he plummeted 10 stories to his death. H 1s body was brought back to .Sarasota -lhe wanter home of many circus performers Four months ago, the sports arena was the site for the re creation of the Wallenda family's famed seven-man pyramid, filmed for a telev1s1on movie. Jn 1962, two of the troupe were killed and Nude Bathers Return to Black's Beach LA JOLLA <AP) -Easter Sunduy was nude Sunday, despite a city ordinance less lhan a year old banning nudity on the shiny-white sands or Black's Beach. An est1malert 200 naked bathers pulled on their swim suits hurriedly wheo three California park rangers ap- peared. A whistle blast alerted the sun bathers , basking in OO·degree weather. After three years as the na- tion 's only mun1c1pal nude beach, the 900·foot strip secluded by ocean inlets and cliffs <Jlong Torrey Pines State Beach has been ruled off limits to nudity by the San Diego City Council. Police also have been warning bathers to cover up, rather than issue $35 citations. But the ikin- ny dipping 1s reported on the in- crease 8Jlain. EASTER EGC ROLL ALTERED WASHlNGTON CAP> -The track was too wet and sloppy to- day for the big race at the White House, so youngsters who showed up for the Easter Egg roll had to be content with a handshake from the Easter bun- ny and a tour or the mansion. Pounng rain Sunday turned the White J louse South Lawn. where the party is held aMual· Jy, into a soggy backyard. Last year's egg roll, held on a w~nn and sunny day In April, attracted approximately 16.000 youngsters and their parents. DAILY PILOT ' Wallenda's adopted son M1r10 was paralyzed when the pyramid collapsed. Circus performers frorn around the world sent flowers to adorn Wallenda's casket. The native of :Magdeburg, now in East Germany. was pral1ed by peers as the greatest or the hiah· wire walkers. But most or the 1,500 who riled past the body Sunday were fans who wanted to say their own goodbyes. "When I was in St. Louis I saw him perform a high-wire feat and donate the money to the Shriner's hospital," said Carl Lochiner, a resident of nearby Bradenton who waited an hour to get into the arena. "He's donated so much to the public and he was a brilliant performer, there was nobody else like rum ... Anaerira's Most Beautiful Harper's Bawar magazine has named its choices for Amenta ~ 10 most beautiful women not one ) ounger than 30. Alphabetically. they an• Candice Bergen. 31. Diahann Carroll, .ii. Faye Dunaway. 37: Princess Grace of Monaco. 48: Lena Horne. 60; Lauren ttutton, 33; Farrah Fawcett-Majors. 31; Ali MacGraw, 39, Eliiabeth Taylor, 46, and Cheryl Tiegs, 30. A U-year-old Irvine girl was ruped Saturday by one of three men who picked her up hltchhlk· ang in Newport Beach, lrYine pollcesaldtoday. They sald the girl. a student at University High School, was picked up in a red sedan at about 2:30 p,m. Saturday and aslced Lo be taken to Irvine. Instead, the police said, the men said they had lo stop by a friend's and drove lo an i~lated location in an industrial area believed to be in Anaheim or Riverside. There one of the men raped her but a second who at- tempted to was discouraeed by the girl's struggles. She was dropped off at a service station, police said. They said the girl's lather reported the crime. Police said tbe girl told them the men called each other by the names Tony, Randy and David. College Considering Computers David, the alleged rapist, described as S feet 11 inches tall and about 23 years old-Randy was said to be about she feet. two inches tall and 18 years old, while Tony was described as about fi ve feet, eight inches tall and 19 years old. Saddle back Comm unity College District trustees will consider purchasing one com- puter for their business office and accepting the donation of a nother ror class instruction tonight. A committee which has been studying the district's need for a new computer has recom· mended that trustees authorize the purchase of an $82,262 com- puter from National Cash Re~1ster Roy Barletta. ass1:.tant superintendent for busines::.. said the d1str1ct currently has a s m a 11 t<ompuler which 1sn 't capable of doing all the reports required of his offiC'e. "It was like using a lJttle Pinto and ex- pecting and needing a Lincoln." he said He said the proposed new equipment still 1s a m1n1 computer but at will be used on accounting, purchase order, bill mg, inventor:. and some person net procedures Trustees also will be asked to pay one dollar to Crager In· dustries of Compton for an elght- year-old computer the firm is no lonj?er using. William Jay, dean of instruc· taon, said the computer original· ly cost $200,000 He said National Cash Register's central office in Ohio also has offered to donate another $150,000 worth of equip- men t to make the computer operational Ja\ said the only stipulation in tht• offer IS that the COilege USe the manchinery only for educa· tlonal purposes. The trustees are due lo con sider the offer aner their reg- ular meeting begins at approx- imately 7:45 p.m. They are scheduled to began meeting in a closed executive session to discwss a persormel matter at 7 p.m. Then, they Wlll convene the meeting publicly to hear a committee's report on a plan for handicapped students at the college. Irvine police said they are working with Anaheim and Riverside police to Lry lo track down the suspects. Wild Goose Chase Proves Too Expensive F,.._P~Al Mesa Project GLADSTONE, Ore. (AP> - City omcials are taking a gander at the $4,000 they have spent prosecuting the case of Charlie the goose while Charlie's owner starts to look for a home where tbe fowl won 't b e harassed. SLAYING IN LAGUNA. • • Segerstroms Give $25,000 to Theater Tnvestjgators said today the woman apparently removed a screen on the window. which awakened the couple inside. Shelton told officers he drew aside the curtains after hearing CG Probes Boat Sinking SAN DIEGO CAP> -The Coast Guard is investigat- ing the sinking of a "3·foot powerboat from which eight people were rescued by the crew of a passing boat. The powerboat, the Carolina. was registered to Butler Construction Co. of Sall Lake City, Utah. No one was reported hurt as 1t caught fire Saturday and sank off San Diego. F,....PageAl GIRAFFE ••. he fell again.•• When Shlomo would not get up. workmen bulll a metal plat- form, suspended a pulley and strapped chains to his underbel· ly, but their determined lugging was of no avail. The giraffe's mate watched from her paddock. straining her Jong, graceful neck for a better view. Actually, Shlomo did not have a name until mi&fortune befell him. A rescuer decided on Shlomo. which is Solomon in English, as he comforted the animal, telling him: .. You'll be okay, Shlomo. You'll eat again and make love again.•• "U be lies on his side too lonf. it's not good for his heart." Avram said ... Giraffes get wea1t and can't atand up, and they die." I Mail Delivery Pka.Denied WASHINGTON <AP) -TM Supreme Court ~ toda1 to review an appeal challenllaa the u.s. Poat.arSentce'• rtaht to run a monopoly on letter ct.- livery. Tho J.tte. Jet stand the eal'I• vtcUon ol a Kansu mu found to have Weaally compeUd with the 1overament'1 mall delivery •1•tem In the towns ot Pi~U, and Frontenac, Kan. Robert Eugene Blact, p.t. dent of Alternate &Jst•m• Inc., uted tbo hl&b eowt to ovmuna .Ids COIMctloa OD lroundl tht &OYermneot'I ~ monopolJ ii ~tutloftal. the noise, and saw the woman point the revolver through the window and fire. striking Mrs Proreres as she sat kneeling on the bed. Sh elton said he reached through the window after the shot was hred and grappled for the weapon with Mrs. Shelton After subduing the woman. Shelton called police who ar- rived and found the murder weapon outside the home. Mrs. Shelton was rushed to South Coast Community Hospital in a semi-conscious stale following the struggle with her former husband . and wa s lat e r transported to UCI Medical Center. She is being held today without bail, according to f'olicc Capt. Netl Purcell He said the two women and Shelton have known each other for several years, and were once involved in half-way hou:-.e operations in Oregon. Mrs. Proferes has lived in Laguna Beach for about a year. She had a 9-year-old daughter who was in an adjacent apart- ment staying with friends at the time or the shooting Sunday Investigators are seeking a firm motive in the shooting to- day. A donation of $25,000 from the Sl'ger:-.trom family puts the funds raised so far for the con· struct1on or a new South Coast Repertory theater in Costa Mesa at more than $2 million. an SCR building campaign spokesman said. The goal is $3 million. Barnette Witmer of the SCR ~roup :.aid total funds donated hy the &>gerc;troms, developers of South Coast Plaza, now total 'Spoon River' Set At El Toro High Spoon River Anthology" is to hl' presented by the El Toro l11gh School Production Com- pany April 14 and 15 at 8 p.m. m thl' sC'hool's Charger Halt. The cas t includes Bruce AC'ac10, C'arl Binder. Tammy Holmes, Kelley McBride, Kitty f\h·Ca ll. Kathi Merkel, Chris Myers. Lupe Ramirez and Lori Varnado Din·clor is Barbara CO\ m~ton. Adm1ss1on is $2 for adults and $1 for students about $550,000 The building site, part of the Segerstrom donation, is localed adjacent to the South Coast Plaza Hotel. on Town Center Drive. Completion is scheduled late this summer, with an open- ing date of November 11. The SCR Benefactors Commit- tee, headed by Carl Karcher, has received several large gifts. Donors and the amounts given are: Bank of America, $15,000. John and Kittie Rau, $25,000; Richard and Marilyn Hausman, $5,000 ; Ladd, Kelsey and Woodard, architects, $25,000; and Rockwell International, $7.500. The 13-year-old theater, cur- rently housed al 1827 Newport Blvd. in a 200-seat rented theater, is more than 90 percent sold out through subscriptions for all performances. South Coast Repertory is a non-profit, professional l'Om - pany. It maintains u company in residence and also operates an acting conservatory. Ted Winslow, owner or the pet, has had two trials on charges in- vol v m~ Charlie. The city finally aba ndoned a third charge against WU1Slow because of the mounting expemes and told him to get his goose out of town. "l think it's been very foolish o r the city or Gladstone," Winslow, 23, said. ••But it•s been well worth it to us to keep Charlie. &'.s like one of my' children and he•s got m ore personality than any animal I've ever seen.0 He said bis wife, Judy, and their three children have had trouble steeping since Charhe was put in the county pond. The large gray goose used to patrol the yard to keep prowlers and other animals away. "People are afraid of Charlie because he•s different.·· Winslow said. "But he's not a fearful goose unJess be doesn't know you. He couldn't hurt you but he could scare the hell out oC you." The city began Its wild goose chase tn December when an Animal Control officer picked up Charlie for loitering in c1tv :.tree ts. Horse Heist Sure Bet? Continued From Page A 1 beat anything on four ICJ!S. That is the way the scheme was lo work The heavy part of the chore had been done, the un- beatable horse -a great champion -was in the hands of those seeking to gain thetr fortunes on the money·rich but anonymous Mexican bush tracks. The priced horse came from about 2,000 miles away, stolen in the night from a stable in Orange t:ounty. IF EVER A HORSE was made to order for the winner· take-all as5ignment south of the border, It was Town Polley. A handsome bay gelding, Town Policy had won nine of 10 races against the toughest competition in America. In less tban a year or racing his earnings t.otaled $336,000. And while thundering to his championship 2·Ye•r-old season~ Town Policy had set a world record for quarter horses of all ages by covering 400 yards in ju.st 19.2 seconds. STANTON POLICE BELIEVE those credentials tempted tboee who stole the horse to follow him from Fresno toLosAlamitosRaceCourse. From there Town Policy was tracked to a stable in Stanton where he bad been sent for a brief real before atartin& the tough winter campaign. Two horse thieves had little trouble 11plrttla1 Town Polley from the liable. I Whlle atable workers slept oat so feet away fr'Om the quarter bor'le champion, the rustlers entered bla atall, haltered him. led blm out a drinwa.y. Cl'O$lled an open (leld and loaded him Into a waJUne van. That wu flve months ago. TODAY, TOWN POLICY ts on l~ last lea: of Ms journey home. a return journey that be1an on a well-kept ranch out.aide Duranao. AD4 the key 8-ure in the sale recovery of the horse la U.S. DcP&rtment ol A1riculture livestock inlpector Tom McCall McCall worts out of Presidio, T&x •• • fannlnt com· munlty ol about 3.000 people MStled aJ0111 the IUo Grando Jllver 2SO mlles southutt al El Puo. Ltkeothen involved ln the caao, Mc:Call aa71 .,.., been lmtTuc:ted by h:labor ull8 not to dlac:uu tta detail.I. CO BQUBNTLV, FOR TRB Ume beinl, mucli ol Town Polley'• advulu.,. ln Mtxlcio remaJna a clouded n:lnter)t. \ But from information pieced together from McCall, Durango state police chief Jaime del Toro and others, this m ucb is known: -Town Policy's theft was somehow related to heavy dfl1g dealing south or tbe border, an mdication the thieves may have been paid for their services m drugs. -Within hours of being stolen the horse was spirited across the border, probably at San Ysidro. and within days of his theft was at the Durango ranch. -BASED ON AN INFORMAN'l .. S tip, McCall had reason to believe as ear Jy as December that Town Policy was somewhere in the Durango ranch. -."The safety of human Uves was at stake" in the ensuing "delicate investigation and negotiations'' that led to the horse's safe recovery. -While McCall praises the work of del Toro and his police, it wasn't until three days after Town Policy owner Ivan Ashment agreed to pay them a $15,000 reward that the horse was found. -No atTCSts have been made in connec:tlon with the case. -THOUGH ALL AGREE IT was planned to race the great quarter horse on the Melticao buab circuit, he ap- parently had not been raced and was being held ''until things cooled down." -No attempt bad been made to dlscube the horse or to blot out the telltale registrallon number tattoo be car- ries on his inside llp. Owner Asbment end trainer Blane Scbvaneftldt 10 daya ago new to Chihuahua and then on to Duranco to negotiate for lhe return of Town Policy. · Scbvaneveldt, one of tM nation's Jeadlnrquarter hone trainers. described Town Policy's condiUon as ''J'oU&h. real rough." WIBLE RE DID NOT rule out the pouiblll\,f ot Town Polley racing aeaio, be said the hono will be resled and returned to tl~lop physical ahape as the first maUer or business. Others who Inspected the bone while It was quuan· tfnad tn ~ldlo aald Ida le11 were sound 8Dd, except for an apparent weicht loss due to a chance in dleta and alUtude, 1ppeattd to be in good condlUon. Friday evenln1. Town Policy was cleued from quarantine and loaded lnlO a ban• van beadfd for Calltomla. Behind him ?to left a mystery. Ami ehead othtm were hOI* that bewtDICllDed.qNtam to the radq form that carried him u a two-JUt-ald to pub of areatoess. , .. ' Mond!y, Match 27. 1978 5 DAILY P1LOT A3 .. Crash Survivors ·can't Forget Trage~y · PAUL AND FLOY HECK OF LEISURE WORLD DISCUSS THEIR TERRIFYING EXPERIENCE 'It Was Like Something Out of a Nightmare,•· Say a Retired Mechlnlat ~ _,,_ I A,.WI,..,.... THIS WAS THE SCENE A YEAR AGO TODAY AFTER DUTCH PLANE RAMMED PAN AM 747 Tall SecUon of KLM Jumbo Jet Stands as Grim Monument to 600 Who lost lives Irvine's Peabody Jr. A 'Different Drummer' By JACKIE HYMAN Of"" 0.llf ,.OOI SI.Ill Eddie Peabody Jr grew up · around music --his rather was a well-known bal\)o player but he didn't realize when he joined the city of Irvine as its com. m unity development director that he was going to be sur- " rounded by musicians again. Jim Harrington, director of administrative services, played in the brass section of a big band J while he was in college. James " Erickson, the city attorney, sang ~ "'ilb the San Francisco Opera Company and with The Four · Lads, Peabody says. And Cultural Arts Di vision head Donna Scbep 1s a singer. • With all that talent plus • Peabody's guitar and banjo playing on the side, you'd expect city ball to sound like an ongoing jam session. . But, says Peabody, he bas .. always kept his musicianship at It bome. ~ "I enjoy playing when I've ·~ had a &lass of wine and lhere.'s a j fire in the fireplace," he said. , He says be never considered a ·1 perfonriiOg career for himself. DmllyPI .... _ ..... MUSIC 'ONLY HOBBY' lrvlne's Eddie Peabody . With musical talent, you have St or you don't." The elder Peabody performed in vaudeville in the 19208 in the Fox and Orpbeum Theater circuit. during the '30s,. he • "Everyone is always asking if ~ you're &oing to follow in your ' father's footstepa," Peabody I Hid. "I was never Interested. ~No 'Resurrection' REEDSSPRING, Mo. <AP)- U Artansu preacher returned to tbe freectr that held his mother'• body to pray for bet' to rile on East.er Sunday. Sbe did aot. • Daniel Aaron Rotert went holfte to neart>y Hani.loa, Ark., after t.bree houri ol pr&)'er ancs' pl~1ed. to CODtlnue h 1 effort. until Wedoaday. He bas promlted health of· ftclala he will procffd wltb )>tans· to bury hit m~er ti she hu not rlJetl by Wedoriday. ao1e.fl and b1a wUe conducted t1.e prtvale aervico Sunday at ibe funeral home In lbh 1out.bwwt Mhsourt viUge. rn 1 , t.leJ)hooe int•tvi•"· Rogus1 •1, a.id tbe Eater 1e"l was not 1 dJacoura.girig. "W• feel, ln fact, more en- oourafed than betor , " be Hid. .. w, IOCUd through erythln and p~ m to h.a•e llfl· fd our a ta uo and naaaul'9d ol '•JO\i 1r1 Nationwide attention was focused on the funeral home two weeks ago when about SOO persons gathered lo watch Rogers and three e.van1ellst col- lea1ues attempt to brin1 his mother, Gladys Rogers, back from the dead. Mn. Rogers died Feb. 2 in llarrtson at the a1e of 81. Ro1ers packed her body In dry Jee for slx days, then had lt. placed in a freezer. State olficllla took tbe freeter and the body away, but after a moJ>th·lona battle wltb comu and health ottlclala Ro1u. ••• allowed to take 1t to ltffda Spdnc few the cererpony. .Roaers .. ,. u hb ntot.Pler does not rlae, lt Will be because he did not hav. e4ough faltb. "l wOuldn't bavi •llYbody to blame 6'11 m11eU, •• ho Hid. "It would make me try harder to have perfect faith. l've 1 n too many miracles in •nawer to pr1711." played in Europe and served in the Navy ln both world wars. Jlis contribution in World War II was to organize bands and send them to the Pacific to en- terLa in the troops, Peabody says. Later, the elder Peabody formed a mghtclub act with a bac kup group and played at Radio City Music Hall, on TV and on records Peabody Jr. says he sort of took his father's show busmess success for granted. • · r met a lot o( show business people. I don't mean to be blase but when you grow up in that en- vironment, 1t 's no big deal," Peabody said. "My father was my father as well. It was kind of two different lives," he said. Peabody said his brother, aJso a talented amateur musician, is an electrical engineer in Tucson. lils mother, who stayed home with the family, was a Uruted Airlines stewardess when she met his father in 1940. And Peabody himself decided lo get into urban planning and was one of the early graduates in the fleld. And so as it turns out, except for the quJet occasions at home when be strums a little sometblng for the wife and kids, the only sharps and flats in the life of F.ddy Peabody Jr. come in the voices of developers. Arab Thieves Lose Hands ~ICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) -The iiCht ba.oda of two Saudi Arabian burglars were chopped off in Riyadb. the Saudl capital, a&r they were convicted ot bur&Jariz· lnJ )1ou.ea and atea).h)1 cars, J\lyadb radlo ~ported. T'h rlldlo aald "J~Uce wu meted oot" to Awwad Amm&ab Otelbl after nooo prayer1 at Rlyadll'• JuaUc:e Square. '11le other bUral~r. l'altb al·Muteirl, WH J)un.l.slaiiit 1JI tbt nmo pJu. a wee~urUer. "Thli l f ato of t.boae who comtemplat. 1ucb ctlaOTderb' actl," tbe radto aald ... .,., God tMter t..beli' lte.': • . Jumbo Jet ~it One Year Ago By 'fte Auoela~ JI-teas March 21, 117'1, la a date many Oranee County residents wtll never be able \o /or1eL On thit day, exacUy one year ago today, 27 reeld,nts or Leisure World In Lagun~ Hilla dled in tbe -worst accld'ent in aviation history, the crash of two jumbo jets at Tenerife ln the Canary Islands. Although the colllsion oc- curred an the 1round, the result- ing fires claimed 600 lives. I'bere were 70 survivors. Ten of them were from Leisure World. All were on a Pan Am jet; all those on a KLM Royal Dutch Airlines 747 perished. Retired machine shop employee Paul Heck, 65, of Leisure World is sUU emaciated from a bout with hepatitis whkh be attributes to the pain killers he look for months to relieve the agony ol burns he suffered in the crash. Heck, who leaped off the wing of the burning Pan Am jet he and bis wife were laking as the first leg ol a Mediterranean holi- day, remembers vividly the hor· ror on the faces of his fellow passengers as columns of burn- ing jet fue.J descended into the compartment. H1D1tington :Easter Rite Disrupted A man who allegedly disrupt ed Easter sunrise services at Huntington Beach State Park and then pulled a knife on a member or the congregation was jailed Sunday by Orange County Sheriff's olficers. Deputies said Donald Shawn Adachi, 22, of 2SSS Cudahy St., Huntington Beach, was booked on charges of assault with a deadly weapon and disrupting religious services when he was arrested about a mile from the location of the 5 :30 a.m. worship service. Members of the First Baptist Church of Huntington Beach told officers theil" Easter service was · under way when Adachi strolled up lo the site and leaned on the cross, apparently listening to the service. They said the Easter message appeared to anger Adachi for he then uprooted the cross from the sand, threw it down and pulled what officers described as a four-inch buck knife from his pocket. Ofr1cers said Adachi was challenged by congregation member Ivan Lin Narragon, a 23-year-old student who stepped back when Adachi made several threatening gestures towards him with the knife. Congregation members said Adachi then ten the service and they immediately summoned sheriff's officers. Arresting officers said Adachi told them: "They were doing some kind or religious thing that I didn't understand." Debris Search CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla CAP) -Aircraft may be sent to search for debris from the Titan IIIC rocket that failed JUSt as two communkalions satellites were about to be parked in orbit, the Air Force says. "It was like aomethlnf out of a nicbtmare," be recalled ... Here waa the plane going down J.be tubel, and all t.bose people were altUna there immovable. Ji.Ice fi1ures io a wax museum ... l knew that life on that plane waa going to be measured in seconds." Unlike Heck, who talks freely or the crash by thinking of it a~ something he wJtnessed as an onlooker, other Leisure World survivors are reluctant to dis- cuss their ordeal. "ll 's a lousy way to get publicity," said Byron El- lerbrock. Ellerbrock, who suf. fered peJVls fractures, a broken wriat and an eye injury, said he has • stock reply to people who ask him if be will ever fly again. "I say I've flown hundreds of thousands of miles. but I never got hurt flying -just jumping off of wings," he said. Another survivor, David Wiley of Palo Alto, has taken a bold step to conquer his tear of flying that developed after the crash. On Saturday, the 30-year old microwave technician left on the same Pan Am "Mediterranean Highlights" tour package that was so tragically interrupted a year ago. His first stop was to be in the Canary Wands. '"I wanted t.o go last )'ear because or the mao,y dilferent cuJtures we'd be v1sitlng," he said. ''So ln spile of what hap.. pened, I want to do it " Wiley said be has more or Jess recovered from eye and back in- J uri es be sustained but also wants to fully conquer h.is fear of flying. He said his refund on the original trip will pay for this trip. WiJey bas settled his damage swt agatnSt Pan Am out of court for a sum he won't dis- close. The legal, fiscal and in- vestigali ve aftermath of last year's disaster still drags on. AirJioe officials are Ught- mouthed about the number of lawsuits pending or any settle- ments with survivors and fam1lie.s of victims A Pan Am spokesman in New '-lork said all legal action 1s 1n hmbo pending the outcome of the Sparush government ·s in- vestigation into the crash. Spanish officials are to brief American and Dutch aviation of fic1als in Madrid next month on their preliminary findings. A final report is expected after the meeting Mexiean Squatters Resettlement Effort Meets Resistance TIJUANA, Mexico CAP > Mexico's 20-year effort to move an estimated ·25 ,000 riverbed squatters to safer ground is meeting resistance. As many as half the 2,350 peo- ple taken to makeshift govern - ment housing are refusing to pay rent there. The Mexican government has tried since the 1950s to resettJe families which fled the Mexican interior in poverty, staking claims in the federally owned Tia Juana riverbed. Torrential rains hit in recent weeks and the government sent bulldozers, leveling cardboard houses and moving families to higher ground. An earth-flll dam at the head of the valley leading lo the Pacific Ocean is holding back its most water in 30 years. Marlin Hernandez Murillo said he, his wife and their 10 children have tried to accept the brightly painted. concrete-block house to which they were moved behind the airport on Olay Mesa. But, be said "the resettlement Jail Inmate Hangs Self A La Habra city Jail inmate was found dead io his cell Satur day after he apparently hanged himself with a strip of blankel, La Habra police said today. Identity of the 27-year-old transient was bemg withheld lo day pending notification of rel - atives, police said. The man had been arrested at 5:30 p.m. Saturday on a charge of public drunkenness. pol~e said. He was found hanging m the cell at 7:15 pm , officers re· ported has become more of a problem. They promised us a whole house, with two bedrooms. They gave us half -the kitchen, the living room and a bathroom." "I have not paid them a cent,•· Hernandez Murillo said, and others ·•can't pay (or their homes and they can't pay their taxes." Fifty.four families have rC' fused to pay the $20 a month . asked by the federal gove~ ment for their tiny homes of Centro Urbano Another, Pedro Luzano Garcia, said "the homes and property simply are not worth it. Besides, we have no money. The roof leaks and the walls are cracked.'' Luis Carlos Ibarra, director of internal relations for the city of TiJuana, said or the people. "IL was wrong of them not to pay - they were liv1ng like rats 10 that garbage dump before To make room for the flood-control chan- nel, they had to be moved ·· By mid '4'eelc, at least half the 5,000 fam1hrc; are expected Lo be on h1(!her ground Alon~ with those already in army Lents anrl th" concrl'le· block houses, tht•y v.111 be reset lied permanently "in a colony un der construction nearby Gov . Roberto de la Madrid s aid last week that "lh<' resettle .. ment plan 1s working ·'The refugtts will be on mu"h safer grOU11d," he said in an in l Cr\'1(.'W "They will ha\C services, and thc•y will ha\" title to the land wh1rh th<' stale \\ 111 gi ve them · Cross Missing l'i lAGARA FALLS. II\ Y. CA P ) • A 12 foot hewn wood en cross mt <'nded to rlay a role 10 F.aster s erv1res h<•rt• "as reported stolen 1uxuryof ca.9hmere .. _., .. , • '> ~ ~~~ .. ~. ·seo.,;o· t.:-ul y t)')IZ. r; ne.st y;:i'U I\\ ~r se./l.. ma.diz. exc.lusiw.ly for U3 in Hawck ,Scdland our Haw1ck sweat.em n!preee.nt vncompro· m1smg q,uality end valu e, not a ttai.nab)lz. anywhere. 01~. c&rdi~ has 1Y81 le.aLhe.r buUons. 6c.o1or s . @)~o@@J .~@ · 44 f89hlon island, newport center 644· 5070 mm ar m t ror ct'V)'tt'S to UROnf a o oed &ubtldlary of Dayton Hudson. ,, ' A4 DA.IL ... PILOT -. -~ wldl~~ Tom~~~\' MllrplWae The Show Must Go On AVMJr, IANDL1JUEaS DEPT.-Golfen bave a np... utation of belq ao criml;y addicted to the. ·~ that; they'd crawl to tbe areena Whlle ez:p.riq to play the final round 1n a thuadentorm. · . I am not certain that the same tenacity appllee to yacht. racing people. But I suapect it. J certainly know ttu. addiction as true when it comes to boatine edltora. You take Al.moo Lockabey, for example, wbo ta the long-lime boating editor on tbia aterllng journal Loctabey. is clearly a fanaUc. Al bas been slightly under the weather in recent times. Thus it was be became scheduled for some aureery atr Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach. . AS FOil ~E. just being scheduled to iO under the knife. as headline writers say in the newspaper dodie. would;be~gbtoreduce metoapuddleolbultermll.k. . Listen, I m IUf:fering one of these summer colds. Last night, my wife bad to administer a.nestbetic before I'd sub· mil to nosed.rops. J was t.enified. Lockabey, however, is made of stronger stuff when the lure of a boat race is at hand. Facing the threat of surgery he still covered the Bu.shrnilla power boat race and th~ Congressiooal CUp for wind sailors on the same day. THEN BE WENT under the knife where suraeons ~stowed upon him four different operations at the same lime. Otonen of Racing Yacht• Are Very Popular ·Rumor has it that this is a record at Hoag Hospital. If it isn't a record, it must be a ghastly second place. It's a Jong way from nosedrops, in any event. All of this happened to our esteemed boating person Jate last week. Yacht racing this weekend went on as usual. You would assume our boating editor would be out of it. But no. He fled the hospital Sunday. His lovely wife, V1rgirua, was busy on the telephone, gathering yacht rac· ing results. Meanwhile, Lock abandoned his bed and took up his typewriter, ripping off race stories about the Newport Harbor Yacht Club's Ocean Racing Serles, the Al Adams & Son challenge trophy. the Pritikin Trophy and the Winter Hibachi Series. These are bafning names and events to the landlub· bers among us. TO A BOATING EDITOR, however, these contests are enough to cause instant recovery from surgery. Virginia delivered bis stories to my bouae at dawn today. You can read all about it tonight. I'd give you all the exciting details on Lockabey's sur· gery but that. would destroy all the tall tales be'a eoin1 to spin when be makes his rounds of the various yacht clubs. At the rate of his recovery, be may be dc>4n& that tomorrow. Illegal Sex tp Draw Symbolic Whipping KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia CAP) -Moslema convicted in Kedah state of illicit intercourse wm be given symbolic public whippings, the chairman of a committee revising tbe at.at.e's Islamic laws says. ·'The caning under lbe proposed law will be humane and will not be similar to the one meted out for criminal offenaea by prison authorities," Ahmad Fairuz said. .. The caning wlll not hurt physically or cause any harm to the bodies of those convicted." Non·Moslems convicted of illicit intercourse with Moslems will get the same punishment ~•aaAl;.p...t .·Police -Take .Foes' Building . TOKYO CAP) -Police using a crane boom captured toQy a tower built by protest.era on private land to block tbe fllaht path to Japan'• new airport. It waa the third day oJ violence at the airport by · Japanese who oppose its openine. · The airport at Narita, 41 miles oortbeut of Mr-e. wu built to tate the load of International air traf· • fie off Tokyo's Haoeda Airport. Foes or the airport include en- vironmentalists, farmers who were forced to sell their land for the field and radicals who claim : the airport mJght be used for military purposes. THE ... FOOT tower and the four-story blockhouse on which it was built were constructed to block the. long-delayed opening of the airfield, which may be postponed again. Today about two dozen police backed by fire hoses climbed the boom of a large crane and plucked four radicals from the tower. Then they cut a bole in the blockhouse wall and arrest- ed six more. Police said there may be a tunnel system under the blockhouse through which others escaped. The blockhouse has no win· dows or doors except on the roof. The police had attacked it with tear gas and water cannon but were kept at bay by the occu- pants, who threw firebombs, rocks and lengths of pipe. PO~CE HAD NOT started to take down the tower as of late today. They demolished a · similar tower last. month after a 40·hour battle Deqioostraton occupied and ' wreelled the airport's control tower in bloody fllbtln& Sunday and vowed to continue tbelr at- tacks on the $1 billion field, which bad been 1cheduled to open Thursday. The Japanese cabinet will deeide Tuesday oa whether to delay the openil)g. · "We'll employ everything we can. We'll fiibt Witil we see the · airport abolished," said Iaaaku Tomura, the leader of the Anti· Airport League. Al&PO&T OFFICIALS said the attackers smashed radar, communications and meteorology equipment in the control room. Demoostratiqna, riou, attacks and other blocking tactics have already delayed the opening of the airport for six years, and five people have been killed in battles there. At least 20 per were injured Sunday when some 6,500 mili· tanls clashed repeatedly with some of the 13,000 riot police guarding the airport while 8,000 more demoMtrated in the town of Narita, three miles away. Police said 115 people were ar- rested Paris Cops Confirm Victim's Mutilation PARIS (AP) -The kidnappers of Edouard-Jean Empain kept the Belgian industrialist hooded, ill-fed and chained to a bed during nine weeks in capitivity and cut off the hp of bis little finger to send to :rnthoriti~s as pr09f he was being held, French police said today. Empam, chairman of the Empain-Scbneider industrial group, one of Europe's largest. w a~ released on the outskirts of Paris Sunday night. He was in seclusion at bis Paris apartment today. Police Director Jean Ducret told a news conference that three days after he was abducted, Em pain's kidnappers sliced off the tip of his little finger and sent 1t to police to con· v 1 n c e author 1 ties • ._,. ... ," they had the 40-year-old Belgian nobleman There had been unconfirmed reports of such a mutilation. The wound was left to heal by itself, Ducret :;aid. He said Em- paln was kept chained to a small bed in such a way that he could not stretch out. "He suffered greatly," Ducret said, "Happily Baron Empain is a very solid man and he endured these awful conditions." AFTER IUS RELEASE, Em· pain looked exhausted but said be was in good health, according to Police Commissioner Pierre Ottavioli. He was freed two days after pohce ambushed five of the ltid· nappers as they were about to pick up an $8.6-million ransom payment. Three of the pickup gang escaped witboul the money, one was killed, another was wounded and captured. The cap. live, 36-year-old Alain Caillol, telephoned other members of the gang Sunday night to urge them to free Empain, the police said. POLICE COMMISSIONER Pierre Ottavioli said as many as 10 men are believed to have participated in the kidnapping and that Empain was moved several times during bis caJ>tlvi· ty. He told the police he didn't know where he had been held. 2State Rulings Upheld Rain Dampens East Travelers W amed of Snow, Fbh Fk>oth T~peraturn Albeny .Atlent• Belllmor• 81smerck lloslott . ..,, ... Clllc-o- Clncll!Mtr OWolllfld Oot-.. 1.W- Do-r Doltell .. ....._,. Hertford ............ .._t .. ~ .. ., .. lteftua Qty UW.lleck ,,.....,,...,. MllWMlla -.S.•St . ...,. """'""'• .... °"-. llMwY-Ok~O~ OIMfle on.Mt . ...w .......... =-S..WUI• "' ... Pft lS ~ .11 4S "4 .GI ,. • :LI:I u 2' ,, 34 ·" ,, 11 .OJ D :n· ·'• • S1 ·" SJ » ,2J ., ... ... » U ZI .tt l) • J:J » ,n u ... n ., ... • JI ... .. D ... ~ ,. n l;) ... • ,, S4 :it " .. 0 S1 ~ ... " a " » .. .. a IS 1.10 • S1 ... • " .111 •• .Al • NATION I WORLC AP.._... RADAR, COMMUNICATIONS EQUIPMENT SMASHED Proteaer Looks Thrpugh Jagged Tower Window Fram. $8.3 Billion Eyed To Beef Up CitieS WASHINGTON CAP) -President Carter announced today an $8.3-billion urban strategy designed to assist distressed cities and aid healthier communities to manage sturdy and efftclent growth. The urban plan involves efforts to stimulate investment and create jobs in economically troubled areas, proerams to revitalize urban neighborhoods and a commit· ment to improve 40 existing pro- grams. In a policy message prepared for delivery to state and local leaders, Caner asked Congress to create a National Develop- ment Bank to provide invest· menl subsidies for companies that build or expand in dis· tressed areas.' HE ALSO SEEKS tax credits to reward businesses that hire the hard-core unemployed and firms that locate or expand in decaying areas. The urban plan. if approved by Congress, would include $2.7 billion in additional spending for urban programs; $1 billion over 30 years for interest subsidies. and $2.2 billion !or loan guaran. tees, not a budget item. In addJ- tion, three tax proposals would cost the Treasury about $2.4 billion. rafaef Carter's plan involves most of bis Cabinet departments along with independent agencies such as the Environmental Protection Agency and ACTION, the federal organization band.ling volunteer programs. MUCH OF CARTER·s urban blueprint is designed to cost no new mooey. An estimated $85 billion already goes froiii the federal Treasury to state and ·local governments, administrh- tion officials say. An attempt to improve· exist- ing programs is a large element m the Carter plan, said Stuart Eizenstat, the president's chief domestic adviser. "We turned the government upside down to find everything that is having an ad verse impact on urban . areas," he said, pointing to 160 changes in 40 federal programs. Very European, very spr~ng. very Bullocks Wilshire, where the devotee can find Newport's greatest selection. rafael, another great name bel'lind the great aame. _ . Focus Shop BUllOC~5 ~lS~fR( . • F Ion Island, Newport BeaCh -f Jf4 DAILY PILOT Mon do~ 2 p.m. (EDT) s Moncsey. March '27. 1111 P . ·NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSA:CTIONS rices 0....1-lftckldlttr-•M IN .._Yllfll, M~I, f'~lllc, f'aW, ~ 0.tNllW c;l~~l llM'-e~s~~ Illy.,.,,..,.._, A4~1•l..,. .. S«llflh .. Oe•lert-litill•t. Study: Change UnlJkely ANN ARBOR, Mich. <AP> Consumers do not expect bu1>lness conditions to gel mucb better In I.he near future, but tlley don't expect them to get much worse either. a UnJ versity of Michigan sutvcy sbowa. The unlver,;fty's Sutvey ot Conaumer ~tutudes, based on a na· Uonwlde sample of t ,276 lnten'lewt, round that 54 percenL or the respc>n denta c1pected btl'lln~s cond.iU004 to rem1\n the same ror lb next 12 mooth1. A modesL rebound ln OP· ttmlsm ..,as l1r&ell confined to ramlUa with lnoom o( $10,000 or more. according to lhC!' survey STOCKS I BUSINESS B7e Own It Pushes To,,,ci'! B)' MILTON MOSKOWJ'n )'OU kncr.-lb.al you are the owner ot • very ~ cated flgh~r pl1ne. one that can fiy at 2.5 tJmes • ol sound and launch six mwilu aialnst llx : at ranees of rnore than 100 miles! : y , J thought you might not reallie that you bad : this fancy piece of war equipment, known u tbe • omcat. But if you're paying your income tu tod~.! 11 be mak.mg another installment. " • I IDN'T REAlJZE MYSELF that you and land all: thcr American taxp•yers owo lhts 1w1rtc·winc; t unlit I spotted an advertilenleat a cou.plo of : s ago from the Grumman Corp., tb9 Bethpa10, N. Y .• • ot the F-14. The ad said "you.r tax dollan are buy-: world's finest figbter," and ll extended to one and : invitation: "send tor your F·l4 owner's manual." I did -and you can too by sending a postcard to · man, Bethpage 11714. Just uk for your lrff copy oC ! 14 owner's manual. ! bat you will get back is not qwte a manual. It's more: e sales literature • you eceive when you ~ vasi an automobile ~ Money sho oom: a 16·page ·., ~ , glos y booklet filled ._ f ,.,., Tree with iclures and words exto ing the virtues of the 14. is owner's manual opens with the statement, "You, , merican people, have acquired the world's foremost~ r/mlerceptor " , goes on to depict the F·l4 as having "greater• man uverabilily and performance" and "a greater mixed, arse al than any other fighter.·· • E. THE OWNERS, ARE also told that the F·l4 ''is a multi m1ss1on fighter" and boasts a radar coverage ·ng "that of any other fighter." r manual concludes with these words· here you have it, the Grumman F·l4 Tomcat. It's the ghter in the world and it belongs to you." course, due to space limitations, some information had t be len out. E'RE NOT INFORMED, FOR example, that of U1e • 270 14s built so far for the US. Navy, 2S have crasheti,: killin seven U S pilots r does our manual have anything to say about pnce, · e.v.enlthough 1l could cite another rirst-place (inish bert.: The -14 1s the most expensive fighter plane ln the world,· with he Grumman pricetait for each one now topping $?() milll n ; \hat Grumman would like us "owners" lo do 1s pet1-: uon ur con~rl!ssmen to tell the Pentagon to buy more: F-141 1nE ~A\·y PREVIOUSLY PLANNED lo buy 3S. ~-14~tn fiscal 1979. But Defense Secretary Harold Brown rece Jy reduced the order to 24 And Secretary Browll beca e so incensed at the lobbying Grumman was do~ on b aU of the f'· 14 that he ordered an investigation t()'..(!e .• termjne whether contractors were using government· mon~ to lobby I~ other word!>, are \H~ pavtnJ: for the lobbying as well S!"\ th~ hardware" ~111, you have to hand 1t to Grumman Al least it has the cpurtesy to arknowledge that its revenues come from taxp~yers and that its products are therefore owned by the Ametican people Vhen ha!. Lockheed f'ver produced an <1wner's manual• for ul'• Business Seminar Slated in Viejo A seminar entitled "Start Your Own Business." spon$ored by Saddleback College Forums for Learning and the Service Corps or Retired Executives, IS scheduled for Tuesday and April 4 from G.45 to 10 p.m. The workshops are to be held in mulli·purpo!-c room C. Mission Viejo High School. 25025 Chr1santa Drive tre-registration fee is $15 a person or S2S per couple Regiatralton at the door 1s $17 pt'r person and S34 per cou-ple. Coordinator Lee Eckert said lop1rs to be covered m dud• "Why Small Business tn Orange County,·· "Why SmaU Businesses Fall, .. "Market aesearch and Marketing Techniques." "How lo Buy. Raising Capital" and others. legistralion may be made in building Q on the Mission Viej(j campus or by mailing a cht>ck with the forum title to Community Services. Saddlchack College, 28000 Marauer1te Park\\ay, Misl>1on \'w10 92615 C f!!htn-Work t o Start f)roundbreakmg fo1 Gothard Business Center at the ~outhwesl corner of Gothard Street and Heil Avenue, Hunt· ln~too Beach, 1s expected in early April. according to Ray Olmscheid, Coldwell Banker Commercial Brokerage Co .. Newport Beach, sales representaltve Olmscheid, who negotiated the $1 56 m11l10n sale or the 17 .JS.acre site lo the Stewart Development Co , TusUn; said Phase I of the center will contain more than 200,000 square feet of frce-standmg Industrial bu1ld1ngs, m\1\ti· TAKING STOCK tenant commercial buildings, a mini- storago area and recreational vehicle storage. Mercury Sav· 1ngs is moving Hs 25.000-square root ad· m 1nislral1on service facility into the center. thase II of th<' park will contain an additional 99;ooo 15quarc feet of multi-tenant e<>mmercial space and mlnl· ston1ge facility Stewart Development Co purchased the land fretn Central Baptist Temple, Jnc . Huntington Beach. f:._t ., Ff,... Rqerta ~rfl Flrst American Fln1nciaJ Corp • Santa Ana, has l"t-; ported revenues ror 1977 of a record $92,"47.207, a 1aln ov~r lhc previous record of $67,390,358 reported toe the y.ar ended Dec. 31, 1978. For 1977, ln •ddition to estabhshing reserv rot t.llle l0$HI and other chums based on open claim• and cult&~ a erve wu provided for losr> tncurred bl.It not reporteo. Net income. before th~ change In accoununr principle. ttarhtd a record hhlh of $8,921,2'15. or $6.96 a share, ln 1977, compared with SS,235,591, or Sf J3 a ahare, to 1976. The aceowtUna chanJte requires that a cumulative eltttL o.D prtor year• mWJt be l'f!iporttd on the lncome sut•ment ror the year lo wblch the chanae l'l made 1'htJ added rtacrve of $2,$34,189 afW' till, or 12.21 a share, rcdu tm opert.lltl.I eanµnis to ss.oe&.488, ot .15 ~ ahare. n la antlclpa th.a"' ovtr a pu!Od or Unit: thb accounUn1 chance wlU not malerlaUY affect ea.nit..UUi;s. 1lnce yearly chanaea will be counterbal dng. The firm's princlpal aut.ldtary ls f'l3l Am r!tan TiUe lntur~ce Co. •~"""'•Plwfte•...- Darton II i Corp. and Mervyn'a, a Call!Oriila·bii~ aon.1tne ~lalty retailer bave announced the ll la OC.a dffiJ:llUve •1reemerit lor trvyn •• to becom • " otly ' Ownt ubtidiary of Dayton Hu~. . TRACK I HARNESS RACING I BOATltJG Goodell Gets A ward Mission Viejo resident Brian Goodell. a UCW freshman, receives an award for winning the 1,650 free style in lhe NCAA swimming finals Saturday night at Long Beach. Goodell also won the 500 free and the 400 individual medley. Also o n the '4.ctory stand are Bob Hackett of Harvard !center> and Bob Martin ff Tennessee. ~ppeJ Tops Mbe IJst Tuv Othe r Barons Ra~ in Top Five Hibachi Series Sailed South Shore Yacht Club baa announced the wlnners ot its four.race Winter Hibachi Series: PHRA-A -1. Mystere, Don Bartz, SSYC; 2, Vantage, Dan Seward. SSYC. PHRF-8 -1, Tay-21, Tom O'Brlan, SSYC; Winsome. Lyle Willets, SSYC; 3, Gordo, Don Price, SSYC. SANTANA-20 -1, Cordon Bleu, Jeer Allen, SSYC; 2, Mighty Mouse, Clint Ching, SSYC. LID0·14 -l, Jim Lyons, SSYC; 2, Chris Bonura, SSYC. WOMEN'S SABOT - 1, Phylbs Willets. SSYC; 2, Marilyn LeBas. SSYC. MEN'S SABOT - Dexter Jackson. SSYC; 2, Gil Knudsen, SSYC. JUNIOR SABOT - Debbie Willits, SSYC. \l insom e \l. ins Adams Trophy .· Monday.~ 21. 1m DAil Y PtlOT fl3 Manila Scandalous Tops Race Pl1$roe Sloop Captures HarlJor Series D · J _d By ALMON LOCUBEY PHRF·B -1, Scotch Mist, Don An· 'eCf,~ Delly,.........,.,._ deraon. BYC; 2, Vamanoa, Bob MANILA CAP> -Wlth Blll Pascoe'a 51-foot Sparkman & Wallerstedt, BYC. half the Oeet still at sea, Stephens sloop Scandalo\U won MORA-A -1• Bacchanal, Geor1e organizers have official· overall and Cius A honon in the Kaneko, PMYC; 2, Star1uer, Dick ly declared Hector Ross•' Newport Harbor Yacht Club's Ocean Deaver, BYC; 3, Seduction, Gene 42·fool sloop Uin-Na· Seri Wi11h1m". BYC. th · Racing es. M o RA. B _ 1 B 11t1 u l l · Mara e winner of the The series ls normally six races, man/McClaire/Harria BYC; '2, Red 600·mlle China Sea race but stormy weather knocked out two . ' from Hong Kong to ot the races and the NJIYC race com· Onion, St eve Schock. NHYC; 3, Manila. mlttee decided not to reschedule Wildcat, Pete Schoonmaker. BCYC. Th 46 Id II MORF·A -l, Bad News. Stan e ·year-o ong them. . Sorenson, ABYC. Kong cl vii servant, Th~ final _race wa.s Saturdays MORF-B _ Cavl-Yacht, Bob fourth across the finish 19·mtle Huntington Tidelands race Albert. HHYC; 2, Falcon. James line with an actual around the otfshore drilling lslands. Ure, SSYC clocking or 9S hours, so . SCANDALOUS WON the Inlf7111a· Overall series standings, four minutes, emerged the ttonal Offshore Rule <lOR> divulon races: winner with a corrected wtuch was sailed for the Ahmanson IOR -t. Scandalous; 2, Ruman; lime of 98:47:03, three Trophy. Two other groups Salling 3, Dog Patch. hours ahead of another concu~renUy were the .. Performance MORF -1. Bad News; 2, Cavl crown colony yacht, Handicap Racing F leel for the Yacht; 3, Falcon. William Jeffrey's 37-foot Corkett Trophy and the Midget pH RF -1. Scotch Mist, 2, Pak Ling, which took Ocean Raclng Association for the Hidalgo· 3 Ghost II second place Wllh a cor-Dlckson Trophy. · ' d · f . . Overall series winner in PHRF recte ti.me o 101.42.3_3. was Scotch Mist, sailed by Don An· T -ig Rrs~e Taken Japans Togo V, skip· derson, Balboa Yacht Club. The LA.I~ ~· i 1 pered by T~go Yamada, MORF winner was Bad News, skip-By Co•ky Sue was third m 102:06:55. pered by Stan Sorenson, Alamitos • 1 I n C 1 a s s I , • Bay Yacht Club. Mamamouch1 look top Trophy wiMers In Saturday's Hun· Corky Sue, skippered by Mel Lurie, honor~. ahead of Hong tington Tidelands race: Marina Yacht Club, won the Pritikin Kong s Lady Jim and JOR·A _ 1, scandalous; 2, Dog Predicted Log raee out of Marina del Kialoa of the Unit.ed Patch, Don Ayres, NHYC; 3, Blue Rey Sunday with'a 1.122 percent of States. Klaloa, skip·_ Norther, Bill Sullivan, LA YC. error over the 37-mile course. pered by Los ~ngel_es IOR·B 1, Dawn Treader, Hartley The race for the Pritikin Trophy business executive Jam W i n s o m e • a Turpin, NHYC; 2, Allheris, Ray also counts toward points for the K I l r o y •. , bro k e Peterson-33 sloop sailed Booth, BYC; 3. Stars, Ed Jussen, Southern California championship In Mamamouch1 s 1972 rec- by Dick Brown of the LBYC. predicledlogracing.Summaryofre· ord Hong Kong -tO· Cabrillo Beach Yacht lOR·C -1. Ruman. Earl Dexter. suits: Manila passage of ~i,~ Club, won the Al Adams VYC; 2. Stress Breaker, Jack and 1, Corky Sue, Mel Lurie, MYC, hours by clocking and Son challenge Bruce Larson, BCYC. 1.122; 2, Shipmates, Dexter Wood, 83:45 :24. Klaloa, at 79 trophy Saturday in the PHRF·A _ 1 Hidalgo Rod Lip· LB YC, 1 224 : 3. Careve, Henry feel, Is the race's big· second contest for the oold , NHYC '2. Ghost 11. John Snyder, DRYC. l.39S; 4, JJ Ill. Jack gest entry and was list· Brian Appel of Foun· lain Valley has run the lastest mile m the CI F .. anks this season while two of his Barons team- mates also have marks that rank in the top five. Estancia <Costa Mesa) High who ran 4:20.8. coveted cup in five Reynolds, NilYC; 3, Sidewinder, Honey, SIYC, 1.558: 5. Ln·LY·LoU, ed al 13th place on cor· Frank Venclik and Chns months Dick Bluel, BCYC. Whit Shaffer, CYC. 1.567. reeled time Corum rank 4·S In the'":;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiii~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil .......... 440 (50 3 and 50 4) wtule Appel turned an his leading 4 :19.6 milP In a season opening tri-meet victory over No. 2 ranked Mike Mccaa or Troy Blevins of Foun· tain Valley is tied for third in the 330 low hurdles (38.4) and is fourth in the long jump (22·11) whlle the Barons' Dennls Cowans is second in the triple JU mp ( 45-7 ). N ewporl Harbor's Los A lamitos Race Entries T•n•t111'1 Ha,,.u (Ml,.1 "1nl1'1Ktl.O 'llUT •ACE--0rw mllt' P•o <l••m•"il P\lrw\a,200 S.rov• HI~ IV41t1.tndj~ml' T~ C>•rw•nl A CBt'rn•t> M .. r t.1 .. d ,Merkw•lll; M•U•r Cloud tGr•90ryl, Mt$\lghl Byrd (R•IChl•I. F in !.!to IShorll; 80'1<0 Funk tt.or\Mll~l. Bold u .. r n-1 SECOND RACE 0.W mil•. Trot. Cl••m'"9 "-'<l•<.oo """" ~.eoo Fr•ntf\ !>nowck>ft (Relthlord); tCtllY • tCelmuck ISlo-11: Vern "•• H •nOYf'r (Wt\herO) Dir~ N1t1tO CGrundyl J M Edd•• !Btlflh nl. AIM• Ct>tt< IL.,._I, Bold Struk (0.W>morl °""• ~•u• IH•rJ>*rl, THl•O tlAC:. 0... mllt PIK• S .,.,., otd., & ~r PurV" J2.100 Hlllu1ou• 8r4'W I RetchlOt'<ll R•Q DAf"<er t P .. uyl. Oc:~•n Aird ( B•v le\~}. Wtll•r Won•• (Mu•ll•rl Raven Olrt<I (R1lcn1.i, AndV\ S••J> ptr IBl•ckm•nl Irene'• K lnQ (C.oudr ... ul 'OURTH •ACE O.W mlt~. P.c•. Clalm1"9 l>Mldlc•o Pur~ U,100 Pall<'• Counl (Sfttotr.,.1. My Oou9h hllll•~lt•I. l::a•y Vtlwl (L1Kk•yl, >or>dy'\ C>ell<I !Todd), TONKO (Ben- n.HI O•d"-'' .St•• I Holt). "' auhldDact I Lee I.air Jr I, Point Purdu• ( L~<~ltl '"TH RACI. Onf mtle Pa<t ) y .. , otds & u-Purw IJ,.00 Slud Pot.tr (H••~•I. Sa•mott $alll• I Lacoste I. Jau Full"•' <R•tchlordl; Spry !>am IAublnl. ICUO H-st (Go<-.1. 8rt B~ Ilic !or I Short I; SIMPY 9¥9 By• (o.Jn. nlganl, (Mo H""°wr IGoudr .. ul. SIXTM aaCl -ONI milt P•ce Exhibitio n Baseball AMlalCAH LIAOUIC W L "='-0.lrott IJ s .12~ Toe1 It S .. MlnMIOla H 6 M7 C.lllornla 11 • .Ml Ollc-.c> !O I ..SS6 a1U1mo,.. a 1 .m &ollOn t I .51' Kans.es City • a .s2• S.alU• q q .SOO MllwaukM 1 • Alt New Yori. • 10 .JIS Cto1m1ftQ -Cle> Purw SJ.600 !)noooy ROdney (L.a<lair JrJ, Quo· lion A ICrarwl; Ladybyrcl L lier tKuebterl; Addles Boy (flatchlordt; Lumber Pop Oiolll, o,... on One I c:;.o..orHU). Lucky Hondo IAUblnl; hnneuee o.r1, IWllMltfl. SEVENTH aAC£ -OM mil•. Pit<•. Pur .. $7.SOO C:.uoer StrtU I Otnnl•I, Newlll• JAmn M ISQ.-1911'), Tol•I f'r•'llhl IC.Ou<lrt•ul. Jc. Hffl (WllllamO. A· 11u,,IC-s..._ (WltHlo<), Rip. piing Colon•• (lla lehlord); C.ol•\ll•OOw IS..ylenl ~IGHTH RAC£ 0-m1lo P.a<e Pur\4 H.200 C.010 R-CBlacknwnl Ha>sel IO•yltnl. Mr 84ondil 10.ullonl. Bl' !>onno ICroQhanl, Bolo o .. 19r (AuD•ol s.,. Fovl• IGouoreaul. 1 u110 81ouom CWl\'1a,d•, 1(1nc Lumber C ~"Y) HIHTH RACE -°"" mllfo Pac. CIAlml1t9 l\endl~ Pu,,,. SA,.G> Wlw Mow A !Rltclllel: FlamlllQt Miu (Cr-I, Ho Oii !Gonion!; 81( B•ndtr !Leco•t•l; Ot<k Hant t C.ouclruul, Oonov•n " (Aubl"l, '>•n9a Bo11tv !Gr•90ryl; Gotcre< '""'' Saddleback 's Kerwin Signs Candy Kerwin, t h e most valuable player for Saddleback College's women's volleyball lea m that finished second in the slate tourna· ment, has signed a letter of intent to attend the University of Arizona in the fall. A graduate of Dana Hills High School, Kerwin i.s a sophomore al Saddleback and was the leading setter on the team that posted an 18·1 record. She Is being of· fered a full volleyball scholarship al Arizona. the Sailors boast. the fourth best mile relay team (J·2S.0). Vince Brown of Maler Dei (Santa Ana> High is second in the shot put (60·01·•). T• Cl, T..nt Mffll1 (Al .. Mwclll!I 10<>-t Clewf-IPe-.1 t .S, 2. Brlllon 1c1..._o t •. J 111•1 w Curran CCres9(1, Gf'-(l!.1•1.-.1, ~CMutr)t7 210-1. w ""'., (cruoll l! I. 1 Wei Bt!ll•nv <Fonten.I, John•on (!Mini• Ane Vallovl 21 '·' Cl• .. 1411\d I Pu•cl•nal U 0, S. llltl Pow•ll IS•nl• A,,. V•lltVI. n, Sill c Tro,1 22.2 u0-1 JOflmotl IS.nla Ana Valltyl 4' '· 2 Woll\ (Muir) ., •. 3 Fo\ltr tMonrovl•I SO.O; 4. V-lltl (Nt'W-1 lhrb.,I H.J; S. Cl1el c.,.,,. (N••-1 H-), Cl•r• (llolllnQ Hilltl S0.4 --1 SIDf'MO (,,_eJ 1 S. 4, 1 C•nootosl IVlll• Per1>.I 1 S7 2, J B•hera (Hartl I S7 S; 4 SMrl•Y (Notre Dame o! Sltermen OO•I I SI .f ; S. Alley ( •oyall I 5a.2n Otllen '· Ollfl (Hwttl ........ , LS•.O- Mll .. 1. A-4 (-al" Vellrt) 4:1tA; I. M<CM CE"-lal 4.» M; J Kestor fAr!ula l 4 2' O 4 C•"9•lo\I (VIiia Par~) • 21 ' ) 5nlrtey I Nol,.. o.-SOI 4 1 t • 2-mllt I Htl•on I llurbank I t '6 s. l SDl•m•n <Simi ll•lloyl t 1t 7; ) Herr1nql.OI\ (Saftle Mol\tUI •.11 ..... • tCnl.,. tArles111 t l'O o s C-.los• (VIII• Per11J. 21 s UOHH -t Wlmbffly (Muir) "o.) Et9e" (C...ri>onl.,.iel 14.S, J All•n ILB Poly) U ... , 4 51...,.,t (WHI Covll\el 1' •. S Oaw•on ISa" Ber,,.rdl,..,1 u 1 UOLH I W Curr_, IC<Ml>ll 31 S. 2. SolomOfl IC.orlllol • t. 3 ttt.I 81_,,I,., l'-lal" Yafleyl, GMlff !Monro.,leJ, Well• (Muir) 11 • O!ller1· I. Ku ,arek (Nnt,.,1 Herl!IW)M.I. uo nt•y-1. Campion 42.3. 1 Sen· ta NM Vellty 42.S, 3 Cen!-lat 0 1, 4 Muir 42 I, S. !Uel PeU<lt,,., Gar•y U .!.OIMMl.*--'Ha.-u.t. Mii• •tl•Y· I. (lie) C.ntennlel, M11lr 3 12 O; l Fon1ene J1 t. 4, H•w-t N..-. J:IS.1; s. AolllftQ Hllll 3.11 I HJ-1 Ulel Cellowey IRoyell. MOOIH (WlllllUll ~·. ' .Uaml IS.... "Y Hiiis! 6 ..... ; •. Iii.I 8ufl IL8 w11-.1, e..i.er Cl.8 __ , ... , 4 PV I Wei A Curren ICrtte>ll, Er1111 CEI Dor-) l•-O; l Tully !Mllllkenl I~ 4 Hiii Ill Wlltcl<'I 1S-O. S K•-11'rv(Cr.soll 1• • 1.J-1 Btt91< (AMtlelm C:-yonl U·7Y>; 2 PHI> IStn!e NII> Vall~! ,,_,.,,, l E"*•n 1.Wlltunl 13 1. • 8 .... IM (~" Vell..,l IJ.11, ) lle""ell 10..Hey) tt·!O TJ-1 -IP~J 4711, l. C.we11' I.._...,,. Valley) U.1; J Andrtts l.Wlllk.,.I •~l "'· ....o. • Cley!on <P.-..1 "s-,, s A.,.,,,1 '"'""Y Hiiis) ~ Ot .. n '· Heft• CM• IS•IO C•·-···· .... \',; " ~M(l!IT-1-. SP-1. Faul IWnt Comal~; L .,... 1-.r o.11 .... •. l er-; ... 1 tAn!et-Vllltyl n .. .,,. • Solll•• Cll-lendl 571. S. '"-(Vf<IO< va11.,1 ss.s.,,_ OT-!. B,,..m <An1e1ope \l•ll•v> 1U·•; 2. IC.reyclllr (S.n Jacln!ol tt•·•; J Artlleno tS.nt• v,..zl Ut-0; 4 R ... (Oller1% Hllll I~; S. Wiiiiam• (Pllmcklel US4. Oll'lers 1. 8recllm•Yff0U~M•,_I 11>1. c.i.wlat1d • 11 .JS3 Oellland • 11 ..JU T-to S 1J .211 NATIOttlA&. &.aAOUa SM Frllndtca 11 6 ..... , Pro Cage, Hockey Clllce90 11 • ...,., Los A1>gel• t 1 ..511 l'bllldelptU • 1 ,Sl) Melllr .. I t I ..Slt Att.ma a I .JOO w..itlon 1 I .A1 Sl.L8'11l 1 t .411 GltlC lion.ti 1 • """ .... Yof'tt 1 t .All 5"1> OI~ I 11 Al l'lllllMI,.,. .. is .225 s.i.My"• ._.. ""lladelflNI >. l'lltMlwtJll I ~IS. Tonwllt4 ,._ Ytl'll IA> t, ....... Y.-1t 00 • ~Qtyta.~• ~ 1,AI..,_.. • (11 lftlllftaa) Toast, o.cttwlle12 e.tefl .. ~(All ""' ........ '" ......... ' ll. ....... Ottf'elt t Cl 1 lmlfltl) '-" l'r9Mltcil ,, Mllwl!llMe ' oic.e. t~ a. • Ole99 o Otll~" 19.Mtll 4 C&lltwftle •• CllMi.-J (10 '"" "'""' ~et Trail Natl ..... .._..llA_,.._ EASTERN CX>N,_•INCa A-....uc04YIUell w 1. f'c1. o• •·~lade!,,_ .n " .tu -H•• Yort. Tl 11 .JOO 1~ .... ,... ,. 0 Al) ""' 8utta1e ,. a .a » Ntw Jtr•r tt S4 .-'1~ c:.tllr1ll Dl\ttlMll Sl!l AlllOlllo 4' 27 All> - Wt lN"91M • N .JO "°' Otvtlattd lS • .m 11 Hew Ori-» • .04 11\.'J AU...ta a • A'I 12 HOvJ• as • .m tt Ot!Wtf Mllwtlll .. ~~ l(enMtCJly tlldl- THINK ~ ASft Discount Ticket Packages to the Long Beaoh Grand rM I I ; Prix, April 2 -availa ble only from p a rticipating Toyota dealers. But you'll have to think fast to get 'em. because the big Grand Prix weekend is almost here. The race-a genuine Grand Prix. raced through the streets of Long Beach in the trad1t1on of Monaco. The cars-Formula. I. the fastest. 500 horsepower, 200 m.p h speed machines. Zero to 60 to zero in 4 seconds flat The drivers-the best there are World champions. past and present The stakes- SAVEUPTO valuable points toward the coveted ·worlds Driving Champ1onsh 1 p · Experience 1t all-three full days of glamour. celebnt1es. thrills and excitement-for a lot less than you might think $10 ON TICKETS TO THE ~=~rd:~::;::: Torota de ale r . WORLD'S FASTEST ~~~·~;a~~~~;~~~:~ w~~:~~~r There's no purchase necessary to Qualify. All four include adm1ss1on to STREET RACE. three full days of racing Plus some special race events you won t want to miss Like Formula One Qualifying for pole pos1t1on A Formula Atlantic Champ1onsh1p Race A Toyota Cel1ca-Celebnty Match Race C:ven a 10.000 meter foot race The action starts early Friday morning, March 31. and keeps rig hi on going through Sunday afternoon. April 2. when the checkered flag falls to signal the end of the Grand Pnx Torota Cellca GT Llftback-Offlcla l Pace Car of the L.8 .G.P. The fourth consecutive year Cellca has held this prest1g1ous honor And why not? Cel1ca has been most every- body s prix race favorite since its first 1ntroduct1on. and the applause for the new 1978 model hasn't subsided yet Drop by your participating Toyota dealer and see all the street Ceficas. 1nclud1ng the GT and ST Sport Coupes You II find a ltttle bit of the Grand Prix in every Celtca To satisfy that ltttle bit of the Grand Pnx dnver 1n each of us YOU ASKED FOR 11 REG BOX YOU OFFER OFFICE COST YOUR COST SAVE INCLUDES 1. $37.50 $27.50 $10.00 • 52!1 R8H!'V8d Grlndllllnd Seel flncludf?I R.teeda'/Gtnl Aclm I• 2 °"~' T1mtt Trtala Genl. Adm • S Dav Formuta One 0111g1• Tour Pll~l 2. $27.50 $19.00 $ 8.50 • I 15 Reserved Orll'ldst11n<:1Seat111\Cludea Raeeday O•"' Adm l • 2 0.1ys/ T;me Trials Genl Adm • 3 Orf rormula One Garage lour rau 3. $22.50 $14.50 $ 8.00 • R1coda~ Genl)(tl AdmlHlon • 2 Daya/Time Trlalt G.nl Adm • 3 Oay formula ne Gara~ lour P.ut . 4. ,I' 15.00 $12.00 $ 3.00 • Rec.d•y Oene,.1 Admlulon • 2 DIYlmme Tt-1811 Gent Adm '\'1