HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-04-05 - Orange Coast PilotI
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Chula Vista E~S
·'Porno' Bihle· Ban
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 5, 1978
Vot.. 1', MO. ts, 4 HC'flOffS. • l"AOWI I
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Hinshaw Released ·From OC Jail
'Arti.Bt' CuUi
A Van Gogh
In Holland
AMSTERDAM, Netherlands
(AP)·-A Dutchman clalminl
to be an artist pulled a khife aod
aliced three lone gasbel in Vin-
cent -..an Go81J'a "La ~"
paintinc at Amsterdam's
Mtmicipal Museum today, ·or-
ftclals laid.
The can•as. a portrait of
French model Aucustine Roulin,
waa painted ln 1889. A museum
•J>Oketman estimated its value
at $425,000 and said it would take montba to repair the 28-by-3S
inch canvas.
The usallant. who enlem the
IDUHWD as a spectator, was oyerpowered by 1uard1 and
handed to police al'W' tbe at-
tack, museum officials sald.
They aald be was about ao.
Police mused t6 JdenUI)' the
uaallant, who was held pending
inveaU&atloa. The aaapect re.
fused to make any statement.
Serves
8-month
Sentence
Former Cangresaman Andrew
J. Hinshaw walked out of Orange~ ;.Jail a free man
today ' elPt moDtbs ~biodbaia. Hinshaw was releued from
jail shortly after 6 a.m. and only
bas to complete three years pro-
ba\ion to settle accounts in full.
The 53-year-old former
con&ressman was convicted in
two separate 1976 trials of
bribery-related and mlsuse of of.
lice charges.
Both convictions stemmed
from bis activities as Orange
Coun!1 aasestor in. the early
1910s as well as his successful
1972 campaign for Congress.
It wasn't until early 19'15 that a
county grand jury indicted then·
Congressman Hinshaw.
And it wasn't Wttil the close or
two trials in 1976 that be was
sentenced to state priloo from
one to 14 years.
The first four months or
Hlnshaw's stay behind bars was
spent in tbe Men'• Correctional
In.sUtutionatCbino. .
In early December, the
former Republican
Congressman was transferred to
Orange County J all and spent
the final four months of his term
on a work furloueh proiram.
That program allowed him to
spend bis days work.int 1n a
brother's furniture plant in Loa
Angeles wbile chec~n1 back in·
to jail nipt.s and weekends.
Hinshaw was POt available for
comment today.
Route Reopening?
QUINCY (AP) -State
highway C(e'ft worked today to
reopen Califora.ia Route 70, but
said they don't expect to clear a
300-foot wide mudslide before
Friday. 'lbe slide occurred MOD·
day three miles east of Caribou.
Bi61e ·BanBid
Mourning the Dead 'Sam' Set ..
To Plead
Gunty? .,.., .
NBW YORK <AP) -Da.-icl
Berkowlt1, the pudgy f onuu
Pottii.l cler~ charged as tbe Son
of Sam killer, bas decided~
plead ,uilty to tbe murdus
without atanding trial. t,.o
newapapen said today. : Newsday, a Long Island-b~
newspaper, and the New York
Post said Berkowitz told rel•
atlves, his attorneys and psycblatrists that he want.a to
_plead £Uilly to the murders iflie
is declared competent to stand
trial.
If be pleaded euiJty, Berko,.ltz
would have to serve at least 25
years before being eligible for
parole. IC be pleaded guilty to
more than one murder, be coii1d
be sentenced to consecutive ~
1 • year terms.
Berkowitz, 25, arrested Aut.
10 outaide bis suburban Yonk-.
apartment, was declared cozp-
petent to stand trial once. A
second competency hearinc is
scheduJ~ before state Su]>l'eme Paul LOiig. 15, sits with bead in bands and
cries after failinat to rescue the victims of
an f!arly momJn~ trailer fire at the Mobile
Trailer Village near Jackson. Mich., to-
day. Five ~ple, including four children,
.,..,...,..
were burned to-Oeath. Long, a neighbor of
the victims, tieard the fire report on his
police radio and tried to get them out of
the blazing home.
Ba~by.One
3 Youths Attack ·
B_rre1Jtio,nt 'W.ofttan·
Court Judge Joseph. COrso cm
Tuesday in Brooklyn.
His attorneys ~d relatiftll
want Berkowitz to stand trial,,
believ!Di a jury mi&ht accept a
defense contention that he was
mentally 11\COmpetent. over tlte
year'• Ume when be ls accaaecl
of killing a\J JOUDI pel'S9l1S aDll
woundlni seven othere1 However, i! Bertowit& is j\ldiflCI
competeDt to stand trial, Jae
would also be competent to
a 1u11ty plea if he wiih~ Ufa' 1ources said. i': ...
(SM &&II. PICOAl> · ... ,...
•
WaddiU Trial School Haa
'PotlhiU'
APWL st' I
'DE MANY . DAVIS.~ IWIKI Hl!R 70Tit 9URTHDAY TODAY
From Left, "Jezebel," .. .All About Eve," ''Now Voya~r" and .. Baby Jane''
~tte at 70: No Eetup·
Ugendary A.ctrea lmmened in Her Work
llOLLYWOOD (AP) -Bette Davis
c1oem't hide her age, but doesn't dwell on it
either. "It's just another birthday," she says or
her 7oth today. ''A big one. I'll admit, but l
doll 't belleve in blrthdays ...
AM DPECl'ABLE RESPONSE from an
aetreu who, unlike some others, has never
been reluctant to reveal ber aee: She wu
b611l Apdl 5, 1i08. 1D Lowell, Mass.
At '10, Bette Dam exhibits no slackening
d her llDOl1DOUI ener1Pes. She dediDed a re-cent btlthday interview -"I'm mucb too
busy with the Academy Awards and all
that.••
She bas spent 41 years in mms and dur·
fng the past year appeared in three~: Disney·~ "Return from Wilch Mountain," the
television f"ll.m. "Harvest Home" and the all-
star Agatha Christie mystery •'Death on the
Nile," her 8SUl movie.
•'TBAT'S THE BEST TBING for me.
baving my work," she said et tbe "Egyptian
location in October. "I would never get mar-
ried agaJn: that Just wouldn't s ucceed. When
your children grow up and leave you, it can
be very lonely. Luckily for me, l've got my
work to fill the gap."
When she is not working ln films, she
jtoes <>n the road with her one-woman show,
..screening highli&hts Jrom h er film career
and commflllling on her life and work.
Miss Davis has always been free and
e>pen in her comments, and these are some of
her remarb tn recent times:
-"rvB ALWAYS KNOWN 'mE value of
the press. They're just as valuable as the
per(ol'JDaDCel you lflve; you can't exist
'Without them. That la aomethlnc that is lack·
ing today. Young ~'le 40n't realize the value of publicity. They re f ooll."
-••1t took me a lonl tlme to learn to
flgbt. ID U.. bellmdnl I wasn't that way at
all. It wam't tn my nature, but I reallied that
you bave to force yourself to fl8ht for what
you w •they 11mp}1 won't respect )'OU. I
never 1llOUl4 have bad tbe tame career if I
had.n 't Caught."
-'"Jbe ooly thing I worry about ls dying
wilho~el1arette in my mouth •. People bave s gested that I eive up smoling, to
whichl wer, 'Whatever for?' .. \
-"OF RUMAN BONDAGE' WAS my
first step up the ladder, tbe first time I was
~onsidered possibly a really good actress.
The ebaractM 1 played was the fint bitch
heroine on the screen, and none of tbe well·
known actresses would play it."
-"Nuts to growing old. Don't you ever
believe that life begins a t 40 or that it's won·
derful to be 70. I'd give anythjne to be 30
again. Every so oft.en somebody uu me it
I've had my face lllted. I always tell them,
·wouldUooklikethisiridid?' "
-"I think the key to life ls to neverltop ac-
ceptlng it.I challenges. As far as I'm con-
cerned, once someone stops accepting
challenges, he's dead."
Royal-Ultimatum· Given-
1 Queen Tells Pri:nceu to End Relationildp
LONDON (AP) -Queen
Elizabeth tt bas told her
y ounger sister, Princess
:Margaret, to end her much-
publicized relationsbip with
brewery helr Roddy Llewellyn'
~r withdraw from public life, the
Son"Dewspeper reported today.
Buckingham Palace declined
tommeut on the tabloid's front·
pace report of a royal ul-timatum to the bead-strong prin· cess. ••J wauldn't clream of contact-
ing tbe royal family about
priYate eonversations," a palace spokesman said.
T8e Sun, quollng "a close
friend ol. the royal famUy," aaid
the queen was .. deeplt QPHt"
by criticism levelled at tbe royal
famUJ became of tbe 4.1·.,ear·
old MU'llftl'• friendship with
LleweltJD. 11 ,eant her Junlbr
and 11a asplrlnc nicht club amce11.
Tbe tmldentifled royal eohfi·
d~t wu quoted as saying! .. The
prlnceas ls being forced lo
choose where her first Joyalt,y
ties. It'• sad but Inevitable.
••Everybody in the royal faml·
ly bu to a«ept that they cannot live u others do • • • • Whether tt'• fair ot not, Mqaret bu to
Miele whether to behave IC•
eordln1 to royal traditions or opt
ouhmd please herself." · ·
The report came one day after
.royal QOIDesmen announced the
princess bad the nu and had
~anceled public enpaements.
Mariam was atJll bed-ridden
today ill Windsor Castle west ol
41fWIQI COMT a
DAILY PILOT
I• •
1.ondoll. A medf cal ~ulletin
Tuesday said, "her cond.iUon la
improving."
Lewellyn, a socialite who
once described 'himself u "mi-
e mp lo ya bl e," has been
Margaret's frequent companion
since her legal separation from
Lord SoowcPi -society pb<Jto. ~rapber Antbony Armslrona· Jones-twoyearaago. Tbaywere
married In 1960 and hHe t• children who llvo wltta thelr
mother.
Margaret defied ro7al wnven-
San Pranelseo
. . ' tfons by openly IOi.Dt on vua-
tton with LleweUrn several
times in lbe Caribbean. The
trips angered left-wing Laborite
legislaton and a.nt.1-monarcbists
and set oft fierce criUci.sm of the
princess in parliament.
One letlllator, Dennis
Canavan, called Mar1aret "a
parulte" llvina off the state.
She pt.a a tu·tree allowance
of "5.000 a JHI' for performiDa pu~Uc cereinoales. Overall, the
royal famlly receives an al· lowance of $t.51 mU}lon..
Gay Rights Law
Awaits Signal;um.
SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -An
ordinance banning diacl'imin•·
lion against homosexuals in
employment. housing and pUbllc
accomodations needs only the
mayor's signature before it
takes effect in this city where an
estimated cme in seven raidents
is gay.
The Boanl or Supervlson fave
final approval to the ordinance
on a 10.1 vote with no discusaion,
addinJl San Francisco to a li1t of
more than -40 citles that have 1ucll
ordinances.
.
Ori&tnallr, the ordlllaDce ,..
quired cou.rta to award attorney
fees to successful plainti.f.&, but
an amendment adopted Jut
week by the supel"rilon made
payment optional with the
Judge.
Tbete has been no Indication
that abY i-epeal effort wt!l be
launched against the SJn Fran·
cisco ordinance. Attempts tO re-
pe•l similar oi'diapca are un··
der Wa:'/ ln MJeral clt,iea, lPclud·
Ing St. PJul, Kinn., Wlc.hlta.
Kan. and Eugene, Ore.
Endo/Pact
Deba!e ~pglit
WA!SHlNGTON (AP) -Senate AN meltlne With
f 011 of Ui• Panama Canal treaU.S to ... ll • ft&1j1 tote qn
be tatm at liialt a ..u·DriOl'.to
the apeed·upon deacWiie of
April-.
Salitie Baliies · .. ..
Records Open
FA YETI'£ VILLE, Ga •
(AP> -Police sealed off
Vayttt• CouAlY lll•b
School -~ c~ qff
t.b• ··-~ -two dOP ~ .tbe ICboal
for mari.luana. BJ TOM BARLEY --~ ............ A.ft Oru&e County Superior
CoWt Juq learned today that it
wUl how be allowed lo h~ar
te5llmony related to the physical
and m ental condlllon or two
babies who 1w-vived saline abor·
UoDI. '?ha\ teatlmony will be repeat·
ed to tbetn today by a specialist
summoned by tbe prosecution u
a rebuttal witness in the murder
trial of Dr. WWlam Baxter Wad·
dill o( Huntlngtoo Harbour.
Waddill, 42, is accused by the
prosecution of strangling a
newborn baby &irl to death in
the WeatlJllaater Community
Boepital Dune17 qo Mardi 2,
19T1 after learnlng that his at·
tempt to abort the lnfant by in·
Jectinl aallm into tbe mother
bad failed..
Prosecutors alle&• that Wad-
dill panicked when be learned
that he had a live birth on hls
hands and choked the child to
death after predicting that it
must bave suUered massive
brain damage durinc its im·
mersion in saline.
Dr. Glenn Fowler, a pediatric
neuroloatat. spent moat of Tues-
day on t.be witneu atand in a
NB· Police
Seek Pair
In Assaults
Newport Beach police are
aeeking a man and a woman in
connection with two apparently
related noonlime altercations at
the El Torito restaurant, near
the Orange County Airport.
The man, described as five
feet, 10 lnches tall and weighine
about 3lO pounds, is sought for
questioning in connection with
an assault with a deadly weapon
on David Dorsey. 22.
Dorsey, of 132 Lisa Lane,
Costa Mesa, suffered a cul near ~eye.in the inddent.
According to police reports.
Dorsey had just entered the bar
o( the eatery at 4221 Dolphin
Striker Way and wu talkina to
two women acquaintances.
He said the suspect and be got
Into a verbal debat41 about an in·
·=a~ f:ncUDiY ~ susped pominl water down the
back of :l>«aey's pants, tossb1g a
drink at bis chest and flnally
·heavlnt a beavy water glass at
his (ace.
Police said the suspect fied
wblle Dorsey went to the
manaeer t.o 1ummoo help and
apparendy in the interim, one of
the woaim at the table, Marie
Lavin, '8. of mas Fozborou&b, El Tol'O, became lnvolYed in
anotbet 1boutlng match with an
unldenWled woman eu.stomer.
Tbat dispute edded when Mias
Lavin left the restauraat but abe
reported to omcers that once
outalde. the ether woman bit her
ID the bead wtth ber purae. Po~.., they do not mo. If
the two millina ~lo were ill the restaurant toJet!Mr.
liearinc bol4 out ol tbe presmce
of the Juey.
La'f)'en deftDCll.of Dt. Wa~ dU1 declded at tbf ed ol the aeulon aot to oppoe• Dr.
Fowler'a testimOQ1 J>ef~
Jurytod.IU'. • Jud&o James K. Tianter made
lt clear before tbe aes:slon start-
ed Tuesday that tbe Fowler
evidence would not be admitted
if the defense opposed it.
PrOHCUtor Robert Chatterton,
obviously deligbtecl at. lbe do-
C!iaioa to introch1ee lbe Fowler
testiJJloay, admitted that be was ~urprbecl by the defense de-claloQ.
.. ••But so be it," he commented.
.. I'm certainly not going to look
a 1lft horse in the mouth."
Waddill has testified 1n biJ
own defense that he doa not
believe the infant he aUepdly
murdered ever knew any mean-
ingful form or life.
He has also testified that be
does not believe it possible that
any infant can survive the kind
of saline abortion be frequently
performs at the Westminster
hospital.
Dr. Fowler's repeated
testimony will include
videotapes depictln1 two babies
who aurvlved aaline abortl<>M:
"Maraot Hobbll," au auumed name, and .. Tlf(any,'' the real
first name of the second infant
examined by the witness.
The screening of Margot's ex-
amination by tr-ained personnel
depicted an apparently normal,
healthy, 1-year-old infant who
appeared to react in an absolute·
ly normal way to a series of de-
velopmental tests.
Dr. Fowler testified, however,
that the child's development had
been arrested in several areas ol
mental comprehension and reac·
lion.
But he said those slight de~
fects were not caused by the at-
tempt to abort the child by
saline intrusion but by the fact
that she was a prematurely born
infant, who was 31 weeks from
conception when delivered.
He said many prematurely
born babies display similar de·
reels and almost always over-
come such handicaps as they
grow older.
Dt. Fowler said be cannot be
quite a5 poSltive abbut TifflJlY in
terms of the ecrect saline had on
her mental processes. The infant.
was 22 weeks from conception
when delivered.
The specialist testified,
however; tbat be-Wgllb ~ll pre-
m an,rity and not saline was
responsible for the more marked
defects exhibited by Tiffany.
"Again, these may welt be
overcome at a later age," be
said. "I don't think saline was
responsible but I have to admit
that I can't rule it out as a factor
in those defects."
Weizman Welcome
CAIRO, Egypt (AP) -Presi·
dent Anwar Sadat declared to-
day that Israeli Defense
Minister Ezer Weisman is
welcome in Cairo bot that Prime
Minister Menacbem Begin
"ahould be snore Oexible" in
Mideast peace neeotiations.
Sadat a1ao said be wu aatiafied
with U.S. participation ill Mlddle
East diplolllJCf.
Tl\• do11 1n.llf1d the
1,700 atudenta, locbrs aad
other possible bidlnc.t
places TUesday and towid
an undetermined amount
of th• dttii, ••most of it
Ju1t ln jolat•
<ci•arett.),•• aa1( Police
Cblet Charlel OUbelt.
0 We bad the water cut
off, and.all the commodes
flushed," said the chief,
whose men also guarded
doors.
E....,PflfleA.I
SAM. j ·.
Newsday q~ an unnamed
relative u •.Ying Berkowitz
"'doesn't want to put everyone
throqb the CU"CUI of a trial He
feela that if all the people be
wounded and lbe relatives of
those be killed are called to
testify, people will bate him all over aaaln. And he does not.. want people to hate him, only to
understand that be ba4 to do
what he did. 0
In psycblatric transcripts l"e•
leased last year, Bukowih:
claimed demons drove bhn to.
cl al m bll Ylc:ti ms with a .44-
caliber pistol He said be re-
ceived messages Croll) another
Yonkers resident, S6m Carr.
transmitted through Carr's dog.
The Post said today that
Berkowitz wants to plead guilty
for a "rational reason," but the
newspaper said it could no'
learn what that reason might. be.
Quoting a law enforceD:Jent
source, Newaday said that if
Berkowitz were fe>und incompe-
tent to atand trial, he would be
sent to the Marcy correction
facility for the criminally insane
near Rochester. Newsday also
said Berkowitz reportedly re-
newed his convenioo to the Bap.
Ust (alth while in the Army and
••now wishes to devote the rest
o( bis life to a prison ~try."
r The Son of Sam killer first
struck July 29, 1976, when Donna
Lauria, 18, was killed in Tbtt
Bronx as she was getting out of
a friend's automobile.
The killer struck for the last
time July 31, 1977, alOQ• a loftrs Jan-e in Brooklyn. Stacy
Moskowitz, 20, was killed and
her date. Robert Violante., 20.
was aerlously wounded, loslDI
algbt ill CDS eye.
rmitP9~J-
RAPE •••
hambureer takeout restaurant
about 150 yards away from the
freeway overpass where the
11:45 p.m. rape occurred.
.. She aot a pretty fair descrlp.
tion of the guy who raped ber,
altbou1b 'fair' is a rather
generous term for him," Detec-
tive Coleman continued.
He said the principal suspect.
is 16 to 17, thln, with dark.
stringy hair, •bout five feet six
to eight inches tall and may bear
scars from the plucky young
· married M>man's battle. His partners in the sexual as-
sault would also face related
charges ii arrested for their al-
leged 8Sliatance.
RUlring Shorts
$3.20 to $9.95
Running SMrts $?.95
Gym Shorts
Basketbal ti1s
c.olortd BoHbal Slen'lll
IGlebcllPartll
Softbal ti1s
..... $ae .. tfox ........
Batebal Mitta & Glcrvll
BoHbalt ,C.S
, ....,.. Sett $t9.9S
Dumbell Sets $19.95
a....Ma
JumpRCP.11
Duekhitflnl
OuRlllRnl ..........
lid'-*
• ..
Today's a big · •
N.Y.S'8eks
I VOL. 71, NO. 9S,4SECTIONS.~ PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, APRILS, 1978 C TEN CENTS
Van~ssft Skewered lJy ·JJritish Press
LONDON <AP> ...:. Lo"naon
new.papen cblded Britllb ae--tress Vanessa Redgrave today
for her Oscar acceptance speech
ln which she called Jewish dem-
onatrators at the Hollywood
ceremony "Zioot.t.boodlwns."
"U she couldn't accept her
Oscar in the s~t or show busi·
Riley
Says Not
Partisan
~ Orange County Supervisor
Thomas Riley denied today that.
be bas introduced partisan
p01itics into his campaign for re-
election.
Riley drew barbs from elec·
tion opponent Tom Rogers when
be announced Tuesday that he'll
be hosting "a pleasant special
social aatheriog of our dedicated
Orange County Republican civic
leaders."
Purpose or the April 13 gel·
toeetber at Riley's Newport
Beach bome is lo witness Riley's
ligning or the SO •called
Republican 11th commandment,
a pledge not to speak badly of
other Republican candidates.
In response· to the announce-
bl en t , Rogers said, "I can't
apeculate why they would try to
drag our Republican Party into
a non-partisan election which
will be on the November ballot.··
Riley said be did not Intend to
make the election a partisan is·
sue and could not II be wanted to
because Rocers also Ls a life-
time Republican.
The Newport Beach
supervisor said his interest In
citing the GOP 11th command·
ment is h.is way or attemptin& to
, lift. th• campatsn ••to a .Point
where 1.sauel, not pertOD&llUes . are diacuased. ..
Rlley said be covered the l.asue
with Democrats l)y discusalng
hls upeomini Republlcan social
' hour with an aide to Supervisor
Ralph Clark. stanle:Y Otlelle.
"Stan seemed to think it was a
pretty good idea. And I think
he's a Democrat," Riley said to
indicate he had touched base
with both major political
parties.
Rape Seminar
Scheduled
In Costa Mesa
"The Myths and Realities or
Rape," a Cree symposium deal·
ing wtlb the many aspects or
rape, will be presented Wednes·
day at. 8:30 p.m. at Costa M~a
Council Chambers, 17 Fair
Dtive.
Tbe prolfam, co-sponsored by
the Costa Mesa Police Depart·
ment and its Youth Service Pro-~am, will olCer guest speakeB
wbo will dlscua! tbe
psychological, social and leeal
contexts ol rape.
Amone the speakers wlll be
UC Jrvine profe11or John
J'Jowers, Dr. Ctalre
Wflidermeier of Costa Mesa
Uesnorial Hoapit.al, Jan
Cuuupoll of the district at-
torney"s omce and police offictt
Jlicbard Bell.
All interested people are invlt· ,
't ed to attend. For more mform•
• tion phone .Janet Bardell at
--~
nen ruzmatau, which ls all it
ii, t.ben she should have stayed
away. as Marlon Brando and
Georee C. Scott have done in the
past," .the Daily Mirror said in
an editorial. (Related story, 81)
Under tbe headline "Silly Fil-
ly.'' the pro-Labor Party
newspaper said. "As a politi·
clan, Vanessa Redcrave ii a fine
actl"eSa wbo fully deserves her
Oscar. As an actress she ls a
lousy politician •••• "
Mias Redgrav• won the
Academy Award for belt sup-
porting actress in the film
.. Julia," in which abe played an
anti·Nui undercround fl&bter.
Deity,. .............
JIM SCHALOW MODELS SECURITY GUARD UNIFORM
MeM Police Sey They're Too Clo" for Comfort
Blue Blazes· .
Mesa UnifomU CtJW1e Fl,ap
By MICHAEL PASUVICB °' .. Dellr " ... "-" Both groups could be called "Costa Mesa's men in
blue." And that'• the problem.
THE COSTA Mesa Police Department claims. it has
been seeing too much blue -in lbe (uni)form of security
officers working for capa Security Service or Costa Mesa.
"They look Just like Costa Mesa officers -eight point
hal, same uniform-and we don't want that,'' police Capt.
Edward Glasgow said Tuesday.
As or tb1s Friday, said Captain Glasgow, citation.swill
be issued against the security guards Wlder a law destined
to prevent confusion over police uniforms.
BUT BRIAN Smith, who beads Capa Security's local
branch at 7ll W. 17th St., claims police officials "are a little
bit hyper about i~wt've been here two yeara and we never
bad any problems," be said.
Smith says the badge worn by his private security of·
ficers is "diametrically opposed" to the shield worn by
Costa Mesa police officers, as are the shoulder patches and
the logo oo Ca pa Security mobile units.
''There really is no similarity and I can't see why one
city is trying to push u5 out," said Smltb.
CAPl'AIN GLASGOW counters that a simple switch to
a U1ht blue or white shirt would· solve the problem, but
Smllh contends a uniform switch for his !SO or more ol·
ficers cou.ld <.'OS' him as much a.s $5,000. Captain Glasgow says he can't see bow a shirt awitcll
"woul4 be that expensive."
Capa Sectlrlty has only two guards in Costa Mesa, but
Smith says be bas a stockpile qf 150 to 200 uniforms. that
1J1i8bt. be affected if the city rorces a switch. Smith said be
pays fortbe untrorms birmelf.
.. I
. RE M. YS there bas been no friction over tbe Uniforms
worn by capa pards in HunilnC\C>D Beach, f'ountaln
Valley and Westminster.
Pollco ol'Clcera in Huntioiton Beach wear khaki uni·
forms, but officers in Westminster and Fountain Valley
sport the same type of navy· blue tap worn by Capa
guards and Costa Mesa Police..
ConlJ'essmao Hinshaw.
A od it wan 't unW the close ol
two trial.a IA 1978 that be WU
sentenced to atato prison from
one to H year11.
••1t feels .,._ to be out. to be
w&lklnf out and not bavine to go
back,• Hinshaw said as be
· ended bis ~experience.
"It'• eo to be areat to be
able to do tbinp tblt free ~ple t'all do," be added.
The film starred Jane Fonda u
playwricht I.Jlllan Hellman.
In her acceptance speech,
Mias Redgrave denounced
Jewish demonstrators at t.be
Hollywood Music Center who
were protestine her financin1
and narratina of a documentary
called ''The Palestinian."
The actress, made a Com-
mander of the Order or the
Brltitb Empire by Queen
Ell•abetb II in 1967 for her
services to the theater, la a
leader ol Britain'• Uny left-wing
Workfn"I Revolutionary Party.
The eonservative Dally Ex·
preaa 1aid iD an editorial that.
American Jen, protesUn& Miss
Redgrave•s support tor the
Paleatlnian cause. would be
"very ill·advtsed to take the
divine Vanessa aerioualy. ·•
••some actre11es are
beauUIUl, some can act, some
like Mi.U Redgrave bave both
attributes, but they a.re not cut
out for Politics, .. the ~
said.
ueen's Orders
Princess to EnJ, · Relatiomhip?
LONDON (A'P) -Queen
Elhabeth II has told her
younger sister, Princess
Margaret, to end her much·
publicized relationship with
brewery belr Roddy Llewellyn
or withdraw from public lire, the
Sun newspaper reported today.
l:Jucldngham Palace declined
comment on the tabloid·s front
paee report of a royal ul·
timatum to the bead·strong prin-
cess.
"I wouldn't dream or contact·
ing the royal family about
private conversations," a palace
spokesman aaid.
The Sun, quoting "a close
'Sain' Says
He'll File
Guilty Plea
NEW YORK CAP) -David
Berkowitz, the pudgy former
poatal clerk charged as the Son
of Sam killer, has decided to
plead guilty to the murders
wit.bout au lnC trial. iwo
newspapers 1aidtoc1ay.
Newsday, a Long Isl.and-based
newspaper, and the New York
J>ost said Berkowitz told rel·
atives, hts attorneys and
_psychiatrists 1bat he wants to
plead guilt,y to the murders it be
is de(lared competent. to stand
trial.
If he pleaded guilty, Berkowitz
would have to serve at least 25
years before being eligible for
parole. If he pleaded guilty to
more than one murder, be could
be sentenced to consecutive 25·
year terms.
Berkowitz, 25, arrested Aug.
10 outside bis suburban Yonkers
apartment. was declared com·
petent to stand trial once. A
second competency bearing is
scheduled before stale Supreme
Court Judge Joseph Corso on
Tuesday in Brooklyn.
Inmate Falls
Two Stories
An occupant of the Jail ward at
UC Irvine Medical Center fell
two stories 1\tesday night while
appanmtly attempUng to escape
from the facility.
OranJe County Sberifrs of·
ficers tdenllfied the man as
Ernest Campolla, 32, or Tustin.
They aald be suffered minor ln·
juriea in the fall and was re·
turned to the jail ward fbr
further treatment. ~
Depulie1 Hid they found a
rope made out of bedsheets close
to a Window which they believe
was broken by Campolla when
he fled from the jail ward.
friend of the royal family,•• said
the queen was ••deeply upset"
by criUcism levelled at the royal
family because or the 41·year-
old Margaret's friendship with
Llewellyn, 17 years her junior
and an aspiring night club
singer
The unidentified royal confi-
dant was quoted as saying, "The
princess is being forced to
choose where her first loyalty
lies. U's sad but inevitable.
.. Everybody in the royal fami·.
ly baa to accept that they cannot
live as others do •••• Whether
it's fair or not, Margaret has to
decide whether to behave ac·
cording to royal tradiUons o~ .«>pt
out and please herself.••
The report came one 4ay after
royal spokesmen announced the
princess bad t.be flu and hacl
canceled public engaeements.
Margaret was still bed-ridden
today in Windsor Castle west of
Loodon. A medical bulletin
Tuesday said, .. her condition is
improving."
Lewellyn, a socialite who
once described himself as ••un-
e mp lo ya bl e , • • has been
Margaret's frequent companion.
since her legal separation from
Lord Snowdon -society pbot.o-<See QUEEN, Page AZ)
Bible Ban Bid
Sclwols Hear 'Porn' Charge
CHULA VISTA (AP) -Banning the Bible as
pornographic is under consideration by Chula Vista
public schools. The Old Testament .. contains rape, incest,
murder, vivisection and other heinous, even sexual,
crimes," trustees were told by one citizen Tuesday
night.
"There are portions of the Bible that I would be
embarrassed to read to you,'' aald .I. Michael ·
Straczynski, a writer.
But another person. Noelle Battrick, said she
has read the Bible. . . "I was not disturbed by it," adding HWhere does 1t
stop? Are we to ban Shakespeare and other classics?"
The trustees voted unanimously to tum the issue
of curbing the Bible over to a committee.
Raped by One
3 Youths Atttick
Pregnant Woman
By ARTRUll R. VINSEL °' ... Deity" ... MMf
"She told them she was 4~
months pregnant but they didn't
believe her," Detective Coleman
said today.
The victim, overpowered as
she strolled oo Magnolia Awnue
just north or Warner Avenue,
fai~ed to convince the trio,
Detective Coleman said. ••when she started figbUng,
the guy said he'd kill her and
her baby both. That's kind or a
cold abot from a 11·Ye•r·old
kid,·• he added.
Investigators say. the suspect
trio were definitely identified as
being seen loitering around a
hamburger takeout restaurant
about 150 yards away from the
freeway overpass where the
11:45 p.m. rape occurred.
"She got a pretty fair descrip.
Uon of the guy who raped her,
although •fair' is a rather
generous ~ ror bim, .. Detec·
Uve Coleman COlltinued.
He tald the prtndpat sU$peclf
is H to 17, thin. with dark,
strinCY hair, about five feet six
to ei9bt inches tall and may bear
scars from the plucky youn1
married woman'• batUe.
His partners in the sexual as· sault would also face related
charges if arrested for thelr ai·
leted uslstMlce.
Fo utalla Valley pallce aro
aecklnf tlLree youth who •1·
Je1edl1 thff• a 4 '4t months
pre1nut bouaewtr• clown a ~ d-rapecl
tier ... &be pleitded, lbrieked, bit
and •cratdMd her assallanta. e ~cti.m ,... aemalty .,...
11ulled by oao Of tho you Pri·
d&J nllbt lie tbo teeond beJd
bU p'liuMld \o tbe ~d and the
UiJr4 •tood Jookou\ on the • t overpap above. ~Uce 1ald
... ~ 1aia the dim, 20. a O.,,,_ Grove r I t
•llnlnd tH ordeai wllbout anen -l,QJUI)'. ner cS-ama--. dalld wu a~
)y unbanned.
.. She put up a real fight. She
slapped one repeatedly and bil
the other," says Detective Pat
Coleman, who bas been check·
ing out leads along with his
partner, Detective Bill Parker.
Weizman Welcome
CAIRO, Egypt (AP) -Presi4
dent Anwar Sadat declared to-
day that. Israeli Defense
Minitter Ezer Weizmal:t ls
welcome in Cairo ))Qt lh-.t_Prlme
Minister Menacbem Begin
•'should be more flexible" in
Mideast peace neaotiatlons.
Weather
tncreasibl cloudinH1
tonleht becominl mostly
cloudy with 30 percent.
c:baqce of showers
Tburiday. Lows tonight 50
to $5. Hi,Jhs Tbunday In
Jow to mld-60s. .
INSIDE TODAY
Ar• llNr• loo mOft1'
.ecncdor·oaHrrala. 1 pator-
coloub end c:onor•umu-
eolorWb fn ~· Coftgresa~ SlorJ/ POQi;tlO.
1
I
..
2Sought
'# ~4fte!_-..
*8saUlts
Newport Buch pQUce are
seeking a man~ a •man in
:.. mim~ ·•~ two &PParenUy ~ r tea d&btlme altercations at
., tht SI Tonto restaurant, near
tbe Oran1e County Airport.
The man, described as five
feet. 10 incbo,1 tall ·and weipj.ng
about 200 pounds, is sought for
questioning in ·corme<:~on with
an auault l'itb a doadly weapon
on David DorMy. 22.
Dorsey, of 132 Li.sa Lane,
Cost.a Mesa, suffered a cat near
b.1a eye in the incident.
According to police reports,
Dorsey bad Just emend the bar
of tbe eatery at '2:21 Dotpb.ln
Striker Way and WU WkiDI to
two women acquaintances.
He said the suspect and be got
into a verbal debate about an in·
troduclioo to the' women. a de-
bate t.bat was puoctuated by the
• peel pouring water down tbe
baek ot Dorsey's panta, tosstai a
drink at bis ehest and finally
heaving a heavy water &1ua at
bis face.
•
£%ploring Expressions
Cheryl Fried (left), Lisa Llska (center) Club one of many ca mpus organiz~ions ·
and Chris Smith show their skills in acting t h a l g ave d e m o n s l r a ti on s a n d !
without words as part of Coast Week at performances in the OCC quadrangle [
Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa. The Tuesday and today. ~
I •
three are members of the OCC Mime 1. Police said the suspect fled . ~· _:::::.:..=.:...:==:::::.:....=.-=:..:......:...::..:_-=.:.::.:...:.._ _________________ I
while Doney ,ivent to tile ~ HISTORIC FIREBOAT GOES ON BLOCK
In Newport Har.bor, a Dream fade• Aw•y. · manager t.o isqmmon help and Marin B dshi .._1o•.a D.-:-a.pparenUy in the interim, one of • e ar ps lrJ..4 • ~ ~f, ' the women at the table, Marie r
Lavin. 46, ot 22736 Fox~ -.1 D Bre·am. ~Fades El l»ro, became involved in Jriay OUSe
another shout1ng match with all T Id t SJC Club •. -..
~:Newport FiTebOat lo Be Sold
unidenunec1 woman customer. o o . ·North State
That dispute ended w.hen Miss
Lavin left the restaurant but she
rep0rted to officers that once
outside, the other .Oman liil.her ~ the bead with her purse.
J
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of .. °"'"' ..... SUft
Harbor Area industrialist John Rao•s nine-year dream
dies on the auction block April 1S when be sells hlJ 1919-
vintage fire boat, the Archibald J, Eley. T~e date seems a,n appropriate one tor Rau to sell the
Jx>at which led the Los Angeles City f"lreboat neet in the
flnl hlllf of the century. She was named for 1.be Los
Angeles fire chief who organiud the barbor•s fire fleet.
RAU ES1111ATED ONCE that restoration of the boat
would consume nearly $50,000 over three years.
Today be said he gave up bis dream of cruislni
Newport Harbor in the fireboat because be couldn't get the
city of Los Angeles to seU him the customized fittin&i that
once belonged on the vessel.
He said he's tried without success to buy the old equip.
ment since he acquired the boat.
.. I JUST FOUND OUT recently that some blockhead
ap ther~ sold an the stuff f.o a jUnk dealer," be saUL ·
Without that equipment, ~u says restoration he'd
pl~hlf~ is impossib~. So he's going to sell the boat.
He bad the Eley ~pved to·the 1locb of yac)Jt b= ' Rol!erlnoxham who wil)·condul't the aoetion. T!Jeoo1d •
tiecf.t<Hhe dQc:b:ot. 22'.i'"!is\,st.,·~ described bf•Blo: m• " u "'alSfaut.itflUY tiulltlbdfttlibg."' ~ •. · .. •' · , · '
The vessel spent much of the last year tn and out of
boatyanh doe to a penchant she ,llad for sin.king at the
Balboa Peninsula dock where Rau kept ber, pending start of
rtmlorattoo. • '
.,, ~·fll JtJgr ~ WAIT and ~what~~ ~ ~ ·1
the wwy of bids~,. be commented. "f'bive r f\e1"1 •bat •
sbe would have been worth to me as a fireboat but I don't
b-ave a fixed bid in mina." : .... i. .1.. : ••
Rau said he l1ad once envisionecMdmse11 pi~'blk •
fireboat in the harbOr's character boat parade and func-
tioning as a one-boat welcoming committee, much u other
Port~· tire boats welcome arriving'ocean linen with jets of
wa~r.
"IT WOULD RA VE BEEN nice to be able to do it. '!be
boat has a tremendous history," be sighed.
San Francisco
:"Gay Rights Law
. ·Awaits· Signature
Police say they Clo not know if
the two m1sstng l>90ple were in
the restaurant toðer.
SA Jewelers
Robbed by
2ArmedMeil
Two armed robbers ransacked
a downtown Santa Ana jewelry
store Tuesday afternoon and
mad• thelr getaway· after Jeav·
leg the store manaser and a
female clerk bound and gagged
in· a • cellar· storeroom, police .. aid. .,, ... .
They were still trytn1 to tally
the loss today as tbe bandits
made off wtth the contents of
two J.arge ~'~ cUaPla.1 cues as well u \~ cUh rep~.
The two robbers entered
Karl's Jewelers, 100 W. 4tb St.,
Santa Ana, shortly bef Me 4
p.m., police said.
After handcuffing the
manaeer and forcing him down
a cellar stairway, they forced
the female clerk to open the
cash reeJ,aters and jewelry d.ia.
play cues.
Police said the bandits' took
the woman to the cellar
storeroom and bound and
aaued her before mutnc their aetawa,.
F,....P ... AI
QlJEEN •••
..sA}tf FRANCISCO (AP)' -An alnger Anita Bry~t led a-s~ _grapber Anthony Armstro_ng-
«dinaliee bannJne .di4crimiDa-ce•i>ful ,repeal campalc~ U>at Jone1-two1eanaeo. They were tton aiaiut homOJexula iq brought gay rilbts to ~ n,a. martiecl in IM> anCf ba•e two emplo~t, housing ~d public liop's..at,t.enUon. "\children who live with their
at!comod.aUOns needs '>Db'> the ~ Francisco bu lqp1 been m!)tber. m•yor~, JJ1nature be~e it cp.osldered •haven for .bomOMs· Marcattt defied royal eon'8>-
illes effect in this cl(y wh.e~ an ~ and Ole clty !Mt fall elected tiona by ~ ~ on vaca-
estjmated, ooe in seveiUesldents .JU first e>pen1y PY aupeolaor. tlon with Llewellyn aneral
js gay. Harvey Milk. who uraed s\Jp\:! Umes lD the Caribbean. The n:..~e a'Boardp....,.valof.&lpttvtsoto the ....... ~_fanHcee of tbe ordinance to "brinl nto tripa ~ left·s..a-= ·~ ... .. "'Ulll socl~tJ' tbose people who are leflalatora and an Oil • to-1 wte with no 4isfUssion, ._ lO(bA. OU\.'' { ' ~nd .-et di fiel'ee ctttlcla Of the ~dlnf( San Fr.-clsc0 to' a Bit "f4 .T.b~·..bolrd 1ave tentaUve a~ i iij.nce11 ln parlUment.
ntore than 40 cn.tes tl\.rhavesucb provaltot.be.1ay ~ordinance • •
ordinances. • 'laatmo.qth.. . One legls~or. •Denn is
•,Mayor Geol-se 'M~ la ~· , . ...AU this 1~1 fl that l•Y peo.. .. ~lt.D*ftllt call . • ?«•rcaret "a
pfcted to sign ~ or<Jlaan.c:e. . ple 'are Qtr ., 8 • .--...... Gordon l?&r~l~ llvtna ~. a~te • • . The ban ls .ljmUU" tp OD~ te· ...., .. .,_,....... Sb ts ~~ ..:..aled last ~ in Miami after lAH~. e ge a ce -. J.,._ ' • · { Of $95,000 a }'iaPfor • ~h-e,1-1 d111,e'1ter was public ceremon1ea verall the ORnMp&COAIT c ~~'1,~-:! =~eW~ ~ royal fam!U !'ec:.elvu an al· l•J!1 flQJ(e)I dinance to be wama and "tbe1 low~olU.51mJ'¥~·
• h~ve very valldfeel$bll." =-==-~':' ... ·~~ ~.;:.=.t.~~e"'.::o..=~~=·~ • ....-..... -~ .. .,.·:::3"".-.n. T1'e .....-.. ....................... ~. ..,..c.aa,,...,.,~-· . ........... _ ........ ,. ~ .. .;..., ; °"""' ' .,.. ................ -.............
•
By WILLIAM HODGE o...--~ ...... M.lff
Financial hardships often are
the cause of Marine Corps
personnel invol.emeat in crimes
in civilian coqimunities sur·
rounding milltary installaUom,
a Marine Corps law enforcement
.representatlye said Tuesday.
"It's extremely expensive to
live on the out.side (off base),"
Slaff Sgt. Glen Rodiera of the El
Toro Marine Cofl>S Air Station
told a Caplatrano Valley Ex-
change Club meeting in San
Juan Capiatrano.
"When you're new. to Ufe and
a private first class making $400
to $500 a monlli, yo\1 can have
problems acljusUng," he said.
"Usually they don't have sense
enough and they get married
and start having children.
"Tbat'a when the financial
pressures start to build."
Rodgers also insisted that
crimes comm1tted by military
personnel usually reflect prob-
1 ems in the civiliJlu com·
munity. 1 "U you baw a fllgih bime n~
in the civilian community,
you're ~ing to have a propor-
tionate -One in the military com·
munity ," be said.
The deputy provost marshal~s
administrative assistant cited
crime statistics for the El Toro
base indicating petty larceny is
the crime most frequently com-
mitted.
Auto thefts, aggravated as·
saults and burglaries were also
high OD the lisL
But Rod1ers also cited dif·
ferences between civilian and
military installation police
authorities.
"The military is a much more
structured society," he pointed
out. "We're much more dis-
ciplined.
"The El Toro base 'crime rate ·
is about one-third whaL any
equivalent civilian community
would be."
Rodgers said military
authorities often rely on base
community involvement to deter
specific crime problems.
"If we intend lo slop a specific
crime probably the best way is
to talk t,o JileQl>le aboPt it," he el,·
plained: '"This fs im excellent
way of discussing what some of
the problems are and gett.in&
feedback from the community.
By The Associated Press ,
The cold front which brough~
moderate lo h eavy rain tOi
much of Northern California:
bas moved eastward and out of.
the state, but a similar front W8.Sl
expected to bring more ~bowers:
today and toni'1it. :
Snow accumulation in th~
Sierra from Tuesday's storn\
was generally lighL Yosemite:
reported two inches on the floor
of the Central Valley, the Nai
t.ional Weather Service said. ,
Rainfall amounts iit ··the 24
hours ending at 5 a.m. todaY.
also were light. Fresno reporte~
the most precipitation with .54 ofi
an inch and Eureka had .OS. l
• The forecast for the San Fran1
d sco Bay area calls for increas•
ing cloudiness and a 60 percen6
chance of rain tonight, decre•
ing to 30 percent on Thursday.
In the Sacramento Va1ley.
skies will be cloµdy with a
chance of showers tonight but
some clearinl{ on Tb~rsday.
A 30 p e rcent chance of
showers for tonight and Thurs-
day has been forecast for the
San Joaquin Valley.
Wife Drops Lawsuit Boy Trampled
During Raid Blind entertainer Jose Feli·
ciano's estranged wife bas
dropped an Oranae County
Superior Court lawsuit in which
she attempted to compel him to
band over all his entertainment
revenues to tbe corporation they
founded.
Her lawyers advised Janna
Feliciano to drop the action
after Judge Richard Hamilton
refused lo atgn an Injunction
that would have compelled Feli-
ciano to comply with her de·
mand pendin1 trial of the iasue.
Her Jawyers explained that
the issue or Fellciano's alleged
refusal to honor bis contract
with Feliciano Enterprises may
be renewed" when tbe lime
comes to try the divorce action he
filed laatJan. 9 in Superior Court. Court.
Mrs. Feliciano unsuccessfully
alleged tbat Feliciano, 32,
aereed to .band over all his tak·
ing• to the company in return
for a guaranteed income of
$100,000 a ,ear and 50 percent oC
the company proftts .
KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia
(AP)-· A 17-year-old student.
who said he was jogging and
stopped to watch was trampled
to death by a crowd of gamblers
and onlookers when the police
raided lhem, police sourct$.
said.
The gamblers escaped and the
Police found the 10jured youth on
the ground.
He died in the hospital after
telllng the police his story.
Running Shorts
$3.20 to $9.95
Running Shirts $7. 95
Gym Shor11
BoskttbaD SMts
f,olcnd lotebal Slelvn
8ClsebGll Pants
Softball SNrts
Baubal Sanitary Sox
BoHbollHole
Bo1tbal Mitts & Gloves
Baubals .-Cops
BarW Seti "9.95
bW Sets S19.95
OM1tMs
Jumpltapa
Duck '"' fins • ~hlRns
Boogie 80ards
ltCk loanh
.. ...
.~ .........
THE MANY AGES OF BETTE DAVIS, WHO MARKS tiER 70TH BIRTHDAY TODAY
From Left, "Jezebel," "All ~bout Eve," "Now Voyager" end "Beby Jene''
~ette at 70: No Letup
Legendary Actress Immersed in Her Work
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Bette Davis
doesn't bide her age, but doesn't dwell on it
either
"It's JUSt another birthday:· she says of
her 7oth today. "A big one, I'll admit, but l
don't believe in birthdays "
AN EXPECl'ABLE RESPONSE Crom an
actress who, unlike some others, bas never
been reluctant to reveal her age: She was
born April S, 1908, in Lowell, Mass.
At 70, Bette Davis exhibits no slackening
or her enormous energies. She declined a re-
cent birthday interview -"I'm much too
busy with the Academy Awards and all
tbat."
She has spent 47 years m films and dur-
ing the past year appeared in three movies
Disney's "Return from Witch Mountain," the
television film "Harvest Home" and the all-
star Agatha Christie mystery "Death on the
Nile." her 8Sth movie.
"THAT'S THE BEST TIDNG for me,
having my work," she said at the Egyptian
location in October. "l would never get mar-
ried again; that just wouldn't succeed. When
your children grow up and leave you, it can
be very lonely. Luckily for me, I've got my
work to fill the gap." .
When she is not working in films, she
goes on the road with her one-woman show.
screening highlights Crom her Cilm career
and commenting on her life and work.
Miss Davis bas always been free and
open in her comments, and these are some or
her remarks 10 recent times:
-"I'VE ALWAYS KNOWN THE value of
lhe press. They're just as valuable as the
performances you give; you can't exist
without them. That is something that is lack·
tog today. Young people don't realize the
value of publicity. They're fools.''
-"It took me a long time to learn to
fighL In the beginning 1 wasn't that way at
all. It wasn'tin my nature, but I HaUzed that
you have to force yourself to fight for what
you want or they simply won't respect you. I
never would have bad the same career if I
hadn't fought."
-"The only thing I worry about is eying
without a cigarette in my mouth. People
have suggested that I give up smokin1, to
which I answer, 'Whatever for?' "
-"'OF HUMAN BONDAGE' WAS my
first step up the ladder, the first time I was
considered possibly a really good actress.
The character I played was the first bitch
heroine on lhe screen, and none of the well·
known actresses would play it."
"Nuts to growing old. Don't you ever
believe that life begins al 40 or that ifs won-
derful to be 70. I'd give anything to be 30
again. Every so often somebody asks me if
I've had my face lifted. I always tell them,
'Would l looklikelhisifl did?' "
· ·1 think the key to life is to never slop ac-
cepting its challenges. As far as I'm con-
cerned, once someone stops accepting
challenges, he's dead "
U.S. 'Blocks'
'l ---... ~--.....-:... .
Israeli's Rabin TellA Countialia of Goah
By KATHY CLANCY
OI Illa 0.11, ~ ... 51..i
The Uruted States in recent
months has undermined, not
helped , Israel's eff.ort to
negotiate peace an the Middle
East. former Israeli Prime
Minister Yitzhak Rabin said in
Orange County Tuesday.
"When the president of the
United States says publicly that
Jsrael has to wilhdraw with
uiioor modifications lo the boun-
daries belore the Six Day War it
undermines Israel in the
negotiation for defensible boWl·
daries," Rabin said.
The former prime minister
and present opposition party
Israeli congressman was speak-
ing before 21,000 nrembers oft.he
National 6cbool Boards Assbcla-
tion et the close of their
i\l)aheim convention.
0 Peace cannot be imported,·•
Jtabin aaid, quoting the late
Pte•ldent Lyndon B. Johnson.
... Real peace can be evolved only
from the parties themselves.
"Real peace can be achieved
only when the parties decide to
put an end to the war and
eatabtish relations of peace ..
He called the Carter ad-
Jb(nistralion ·s stance a "de·
J»arture" from U.S. policy in
past years, sayin& the country's
tole sbould be brldllng }>al't.les
tofetber without orterin1 1
"'blueprint" for seUlement.
Tbe Israeli fteedom fiebter
•nd past ambassador lo the U.S.
~aid efforts to achieve peace
· ce WOTld War II have been
ampered by the attitude of
ab nei&hbors thal Israel as a
atlon wu "of temporary
ture.··
The vlsll to Iarael last fall by
O.lly f'li.t tl.lff Plleit•
CRmCIZES U.S •
Israel's Rabin
Egyptian Prime Minister Anwar
Sadat marked a beginning in
change of that attitudebat least
OD Enpt's part, Ra ln COD•
Unued.
And he said he 14 hopeful now
that the Jordanian governinent
wtll Join the peate negollationl
between Israel and Egypt.
Peace in the Middle East will
mean open boundaries, ct.lltural
exchanges and ttiplomattc rela-
tions, said the man who served
as Israel's prime minister from
1974 to1977.
Peace will be achieved, Rabin
continued. "only when someone
who lives in Cairo can cet in
th r tar and dttve to Tel Avi•
and only when someone who
lives in Tel Aviv can drive to
Cairo.
"Only then will everyone in
the areas realize that peace bas
come t.o our part of the world,"
Rabin said.
Rabin repeated his country's
contention that In order for
1 peace to come lhe country must
have boundaries lt fan defend.
And lhat doesn't mean, he
said, a boundary that places
larael's largest city, Tel Aviv,
only to miles from the country's
border where the city can be
shelled during battle.
Ra bin called tenorist ac·
livlties an effort to prevent a
negotiated peace and an effort to
make already difficult talks
even more so.
Ot the current Lebanon eon-
rnct, llabln said Israel bu tried
to achieve t.be same pledge from
that govenun&nt as Utat in force
the past tour years from
neighboring Eeypt, Jordan and
Syrla.
The pledse is that terrorist ac-
ti vlties not originate ln t.hose
three nations and ool be carried
across Israeli borders.
Israel wants the same pledge
from Leban<>n, Rabin said.
"Uotortanately we are a.-.re
that in Lebanon there is no cezt.>
tral 1overnmeot ancl ttiat ter-rorist ol'pniUtiOb.S that are \In•
der the coat.rot or the PLO
(Palestinian Liberation
OreanbaUon) brought about ~
destruC?lion of this central gov·
emment," Rabln continued.
The former prime minister
said t.be question or self-rule for
Palestine can be &0lved once the
Arab nations •IP'ff to recognise
and reconclle differences with
llratl.
..
• w~. Apttr 5. 1a11
Wadmll Trial
'Sftlin.e' Surriv:0P
VieWed by J11rorS
BJ TOM BARLEY °'"" Oeltf,..... ..... A young woman Whe> delivered
ber own baby shortly after tht
doctor altempted t.o abort the in·
fant by i.Qjecting her wilh saline
showed the happy baby to an
Orange County Superior Cowt
JUI')' today.
Dr. Glenn Fowler, a pfdlalric
neurologist, spent me>1t of Tues·
4~ on lhe witness stand in a
hearina held out of the presenc~
of the jury.
Dr. Wadd.IU'a lawyers decided
at the end Qf the apeclal MSJion
not to oppose Dr. Fowler"• tesU-
f yin& befOTe the jury
Jodee James K. Tuoie.r had
made it clear before the speelal
hearlna started that tile evlden~ would not be admitt$5 it the defense opposed lt.
Chatterton, obviously delllht·
ed at the introduction of th~
Fowler testimony, admitted tbat
be was surprised by the defense
decisioo. l
"But so be it." he commented '
''l'm certainly not ioin& 1o look J
a it.rt ~e In the mouth." I
'
Using the assumed name of
"Mias Hobbs,'' the wllness
testified that she was 1 T in April
of 1977 when she agreed to have
the abortion performed at
Avalon Memorial Hospital on
Catalina Wand. Thanks Well Wisllen . . 1
i Trying to bold her struggling
and apparently healthy baby
girl on her lap, the witness
testified lbat she realized she
was actually delivering the child
shortly alter sbe drank her 50tb
elass of water in a lhree-bour
period.
,
j • ·Wa~ Recoveiing . ,
She testified as a rebuttal wit·
ness in the murder trial or Dr.
William Baxter Waddill, that
she pulled the baby from ber
bead first and already was try.
ing to soot.be the crying infant
when nurses reached her
hospital room.
With TherapY Aid l
"Miss JIQbbs" is the first or a
series o( prosecution witnesses
m an Uth hour bid by the pros-
ecution to prove that an infant
in the womb can survive saline
abortions or the type often
performed by Dr. Waddill. w addill, 42, of Huntington
Harbour. is accused by the
prosecution of strangling a
newborn baby to death in the
Westminster Community
Hospital nursery on March 2,
1977.
It is alleged that he throttled
the child arler learning that his
attempt to abort the Infant by in·
jecting saline into lhe mother
had failed.
It is also alleged by the pros-
ecution that Waddill panicked
when he teamed that he bad a
live birth on bla bands and
choked the child to death after
predicting that it mu.st have suf-
fered massive brain damage as
a result of immersion in saline.
The testimony of Miss Hobbs
was immediately attacked by
lhe defense today with attorney
Malbour Watson contendinc that
a fl;l~ dllj:har&ed bf the Witneea
sbottlY tiler .. Ule d~tOr lQJfcted
her with saline Wat the 1'1.lde
llseU.
She laid both Wati!Oft and PfQS·
iecutor Robert Chatterton that
she had no Idea what the nuld
was or why it bad been expelled
in the period between injection
and delivery of her baby.
"Yes, but you fell when you
delivered your baby rigbt there
in the bed that tbe abortion
h~dn't worked, didn't you?"
Watson asked her.
"Yes, I did," tbe witness
replied.
She t.esUfied that she was one
of 14 "young women in the Avalon
hospital that day, all of whom
had saline abortions performed.
But "Miss Hobbs" made it
clear that she was the only pa-
tient who delivered a live baby
following the injection or saline.
The jury in the Waddill trial
learned today that it will now be
allowed to heJr lutther
testimoay relate4 to the physical
and mental concUUon of two
babies wtio survived saline abor· tlons. ·
M ucb of that testimony will be
offered by a specialist sum-
moned by the orosecution.
Gem
Talk
811 J.C. HUMPHRIES•
Gl!tnf)IOQ_lat
A QUEEN'S RANSOM
m Jl"'1 ond other pqlua~
BOSTON <AP> -Doctors
eave John Wayne frequent
respiratory therapy today to
ease hls cbroftic broncbit:i.9, and
the veteran actor thanked the
thousands who have wished him
a speedy recovery from open-
heart .,~eery.
The well-wishers have in·
eluded President Carter and Bob
Hope.
Wayne was operated on Mon-
day for replacement of a defec-
tive mltral valve in his heart.
A statement lhis momin1 by
Massachusetts General Hospital
said, "Because of his chronic
bronchitis, the medical team is
taking the usual precaution to
prevent the accumulation of
lung secretions. He requir~ fre-
quent respiret:ory therapy and
the induction of vigorous
coughioa. This can be quite
fatiguing to the patient. His
heart is functioning very well.
"Mr. Wayne thanks all the
thousands of people from all
over the world wbo have aent
messacea, cards. flowers and
gifts."
Marlin Bander, spokesman
for Maasachusetts Genna\
Hosp,tal, sei.S Tuetd•)' that
President Carter had telephoned
Michael Wayne, the 70.year-old
actor's son, to say he was pray.
iHtJudges
Award Voted
To Kneeland
Superior Court Judie Robert
P. Kneeland of Newport Beach
bas been named the first redp~
ient of the Orange County Trial
Lawyers Asaociatlon's Stephen
K. Tamura Award for Judicial
Couraee.
The award, named after
Justice Tamura of the Fourth
District Court of Appeals in San
Bernardino, will be presented
April 13 during the associa\ion's
meeting at the Saddleback IM.
Santa Ana.
Judge Kneeland was appolnl-
ed to the Superior Court in 1957
by then Governor Goodwin J .
Kni1ht after serving for two
years as Orange County's dis·
trict attorney.
He and bis wife, Esther, live
in Corona del Mar. The}' have
five children and nine
grandchildren.
Sliver ISt of c.®r•, the tradltA:lnal
gift for anyone celebratltta a 25th 1n-,,1versarv. When QI.teen Elrzabtth ti of England recently marked the Slt11'9r
Jubilee of her relgc,, thousal\ds of gifts of silver poured Unto Buckingham Pelact. The tributes came from al
over the world. Last month, an t)thfbt· tlon of 800 of the most Interesting of
these gifts ~ tdlsplay In Britain.
They ·lncluded, no only sllvtr. ~t Items of other uotlc matert.ls, toe.
;fh• dlspf •y Mis. among otMr thfngs:
ing ror him.
Bander also quoted the pres1-:
dent at uytng: '
"JoKn Wayne is a ~eat na-t
Uonal asset. If there's anyUllng I
can do lor him, please let me
know. He surprlsea all of )II with,
his ability to recover. ftll him
be is in my tbougbte and
prayers."
During the Academy Awards
Monday nieht, Wayne was paid
tribute by master ol ceremonies
Bob Hope.
"We want you to know. Duke.
we miss you tonight.'' Hope
said. "We expect to see you am·
ble out here in person next
year 'cause no one else can
walk in John Wayne's boots." Bander said the hospital
switchboard was swamped with
calls from well-wishers from
around lbe world.
Altho~p be remains in in·
tensive care, Wayne could be out
oC the hospital in about two
weeks and could be working
again by miclsummer, doctors
said.
The actor,_ wf)o won Uae best
actor Oscar In 1989 for •'True
Grit," 0 ia conUnuing to have a
~outine ~<>nvalescence.,'' saidf ~d . "Hi.tWood ~sure and
puhe are normal. His .:
pulmonary problezns have not
posed any "C1ifficutues."
In the operatlon1 doctors cut t
out t . .llllb'tl val In Wayne's
heart and replaced it with a
sin)llar valv~ from a pia. The 1
val•e separates the Jell atrium
rrom the left ventricle. ,
Wanse's valve had ruptured,,
allowloc blood to leak from his
heart Into his Junes. Doctors
said this made Wayne weak and
short or breath
Second Cycle
Victim Dies
A Monday night motorcycle
accident in Anaheim claimed a
second victim Tuesday when
Robert Austin l,Jndsey, 23, of
·Anaheim, died·h\ Stanton Com·
munity Hospital.
PoUce said Lindsey was fatal
ly injured about 12 hours earlier
when the motorcycle on which
be wa111a passenger collided with
a truck at Ball Road ad~
Mapolia A~nue. '
The motorcycl~'s driver, Den-
nis James Hagee, 22, also of
Anaheim, died a few boura .«et
the 10:29p.m. accident.
I I .
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• w
DOGGCW8 DOGS G : Our mii..,borlne Orao1e Couo.t.Y 'mdropol» Gar Grove bas oow laid bare the lie that everytb.ln1 In gonmment ~oes up and never
comes down.
Wrong thinkers have long chm& to this theory. The1. al· leee if taxes rlae, they shall remtin riHD. If bulldlnl fee1s ~&late, the t..b will never again ebb to a lower level.
But Garden Grove City Hall, by 1olly. bas exploded
·the escalation myth.
News dispatches out of the garden city today divulge
that dof license fee.s have been slashed back.
Last year, In «der to 1et a cao.iDe officially ta11ed 10
Garden Grove, you had to fork over Dine bucka lnto tbe ci-
ty cof!ers.
TODAY. GAaDEN GllOVE citizens may cet tMlr
pooches legally tagged for only $7 -a Whopping two buck
reduction.
According to Use news reports, this dramatic whack
back in a govenunenl fee came about because Garden
Grove Shakers-and-Move"' learned that the higher the fees
go, the fewer canines get licensed.
As .\,11 all of our communities. in order to buy a do&
Beach cuu DogcateMf'• Foce Srnprile Pmls
license, you have to get your mutt inoculated against
rabies. This means you have to pay the tab for Old Spot's
shot as well as pony up the license fee.
A CONCERTED STUDY of records ind1cated that
back in 1973, Garden Grove City Hall gathered four bucks
for a dog license. That year. more than 11,900 dogs showed
up and got licenses.
Then over the years, the license cost gradually
escalated. By 1976, it was up to the aforementioned $'9.
Then, only 9,400 dogs came around to get dog tap.
Garden Grove ofCic!als fretted OYel' this, fearln& that it
meant each•year, fewer dogs were being protected from
rabies, thereby increufng threat of the dlleue to the
bum an -populace.
So tbal'1"\vby the fee got &lubed. in the effort to J~
more can:inel to come in for &bots an4do.« tao. Yoo ha.a to r.uppoM ~'\bat it failed to occur to
Garden Grow dty'kiu Oiat tbe CIOa populaUo4 m11hl
have actually clecftued between wmud 1976.
Maybe the 2,500 dop that were do-shows for tags ac-
tually fled the city. .. ·' MAYBE ALL moved to .Laauna or Ne1'JllC)ri
Beach. where ~ (a~ run altd play upon the shoreline
and where the dog Clltohenr, over the years, have proven to
have a ghastly time-trytni to catch lbexq.
Dog catchers \n Garden Grove get to chase dogs down
streets and sidewalks. Do& catchers in beach cities must
pursue lbe bounds through the sand.
It is the plain truth that even • mutt with a limp can
run through the aand fast.r than a do& catcher.
Ir you don't believe lt, try cbaatn& one some Ume.
Nixons
'Avoid
"' Media'
ALKER CAY. Bahamas
l AP) -Former President
Richard M. Nixon and his wife
Pat, on a rare venture outside
their California retreat. took
part in a friend's &e~luded birth·
day party on a lush tropical
island Tuesday night.
The dinner In honor oC Robert
Abplanalp's -46th birthday was
flrat scheduled at the public
Walker Cay Club, but then was
changed to the seclusion or
Abplanalp's private Grand Cay
Island, about five miles away.
BESIDES THE NJXONS,
those invited included Mr. and
Mrs. Charles "Bebe .. Rebozo
and Abplanalp's daughter,
Marie. Rebozo Is a Key Bis-
cayne banker and Nixon confi
dant.
Abplanalp, a millionaire m-
dustrialist and longtime sup-
porter of Nixon, reportedly was
willing to have the birthday par-
ty on the public Island. But
sources said Rebo~ persuaded
Nixon to atay away from the
press.
THE SWITCH TO THE
private island was made a few
hours after reporters and
televisioo crews began arriving
at Walker Cay.
The two amaH iUands are
located at the northern tip of the
Abaco chalA at the top of the
Bahamas. Abplalfalp's Precision
Valve Corp. o{ Yonkers, N. Y .,
operates Walker Cay.
The trip is only the third Ume
Nixon is known to have left
California since he sought ref-
uge at his San ClemenLe est.ate after resigning the presidency,
IT IS MRS. NIXON'S first
known trip outside California
since she suffered a stroke in Ju-
ly, 1976.
When the Nixons arrived here
Monday after a brief flight ffarp
Miami, there were cheers and
handclapping from about 30 peo-
ple who had gathered.
The Nixons took a short cruise
Tuesday aboard Abplanalp's
65-!oot yacht Sea Lion, passing
~ near Walkef Cay, but they did
not leave the boat. The Nixons
plan to leaye for home today.
cre'Ul§ cteamng
Bay Area Spill
MARTIN.l!Z IAP> Cleanup
crews were called in today for a
two-mile-long oil slick in Car·
quinez Straits between San
Francisco Bay and the
Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta.
The Co.ut Guard said the oil
spilled from a barge being
loaded al the LYon Oil Co. facili·
ty here early this morning.
5 Men Killed in Mine
DUTY, Va. (AP> -fJve men died in a coal
, mine near tbia tiny south-.st Virginia mountain r town Wbeo t.bey apparently were ove.rc<ime by"' I carbon monoxide, 0Ulclal1 satd.
The victims included three miners, a Min~ En-! forceroent Safety Ad.miniatraUon <MESA> officlial
<aetUnc off dynamite charges), but they hit some
black damp, stale air, and it can kill you in a
mlnut.e or two. It doesn't take any time at all." a
sheriff's deputy sald.
, and a ~ eervi~comparur employee. · •
.
I • I •
CLINCHFIELD COAL CO. spokeswoman
Susan Conte laid tho five were 280 feet into the
mountain 'J'Qesct.y when they apparently broke in-
to a mined-out chamber t,flat was fllled wilb what
miners call "black damp:• or "s~e air." that
contains no oxygen.
"I don't Jmow if they were drillinc or sbootlnc
...... .... Pc..,; ,. ,. .
0 " .cs 2' IJ .,
a • .., "' . .,
,. 11 •• 4 •. u .. ,.
" » -M .. is
10 ., ·" 12 J1 SI ~ " .. . . • , JI ,,
.. l~ n ,. u •. 01 • SJ • u
.. • •• 11 ,. . .. " 61 •• u .. , . " • • • .M
ONE MINER MADE his Wll)' to the mine en·
p-ance. where be round the MESA oCficial, another
miner and the misslng service employee. The trio
entered the mine to save the four other miners.
Two of the mlners reached. ftt.eb air, two others
and the three rescuers died inside the motUltain.
The deaths came just eight days alter
Cllncbfield resumed operations following settle-
ment of the nationwide United. Mine Workers
alrilte .
Mrs. Coretta Scott King.
widow of Dr. Martin Luther
Kin g Jr., listens to the
prayer of the Rev. Martin
Luther King Sr .. during
me moria l wreath-laying
.. en ice at the King Center
m Atlanta Tuesday. Her
husband was assassinated
in Memphis 10 years ago.
FBI Enters
Case in Hunt
For Slayer
COLUMBUS, Ga. t AP)
Federal lnvesticators have been
drawn into a grisly guessing
game 0"8r the identity or a let
ter writer who says be executed
two women in order to pressure
police into solving six strangula-
tions.
The body of one woman was
discovered on t.be Fort Benning
military base near here Mon-
day. The body of another had
been found near the base four
days earlier. Both victims were
discovered after anonymous
telephone tips.
The FBI and the U.S. Army
Criminal Investigation Division
were called into the case
because the second body was on
federal property.
That body was identified Tues-
day as 32-year-old Irene
Thirk1eld. The body found last
Thursday near Fort Benning has
been idenllfied as that of Brenda
Gall Faison, 21.
3 K.illed . .
1nC.opter
Accident
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -A
helicopter carryinl 1ix people to
an offshore oil drillln& veaael hit
the water and flipped over In t.be
Gulf of Mulco today, klllln1
three oil workera who were
trapped inside. the Cout Guard
said.
The pilot and co-plJot and one
of four oil workers manapd to
escape from lbe bellcopter and
were rescued. They suffered
minor Utjuries, aut.bortUes said.
ll'o9IG• Str-~
WICHITA, Kan. <AP> -The
death of a 65-year-old woman at
her home here bears some re-
sem tilance to the city's "BTK
Strangler" killings , In-
vestigators say.
NATION/WORLD
Air Force Gen. David C.
Jones has been nanled by
President Carter to become
chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff. Jones, 56, is The woman, found with her
[ JN SHORT J ~~!r?.ntly Air Force Chief of
h--..nds bound and ciothln, titd Panel Backs
around her neck, was identified
as Marian O'Leary. p U C The BTK St.rangier. who says &yrO Ul
his initials stand for Bind,
Torture and Kill, bas WTit•n let-In SS Taxes lera claiming responsibility for
the killings or seven people in
Wichita during the put four
years.
Worlciers llet•rtt
WASHINGTON (AP) -Mme
construction workers are retum-
10g to their job6 fOI' the firat lime
in 121 days after ratifyina a con-
tract that puts a final end to one
of the longest national sUikf.11!1 in
t.be coalfields in five decades.
''It's great to get all our peo.
pie back to work. They've been
through a lot," United Mine
Workers Vice President Sam
Church said ••
1'1.U 6ofag lljt"t
WASHINGTON <AP> -Uthe
Postal Rate Commission goes
along wilb it, large and oddly
shaped mail will cost an extra 13
cents by summer.
The Postal Service Board ap-
proved the surcharge Tuesday
and sent it to the commiasJon for
authorization. The surcharge is
expecLed to have its areatest ef-
fect on greeting cards, many of
which come in unusual sizes.
WASHINGTON (AP) -House
Democrat.s who want to cut
Social Security taxes are en-
couraged by budget committee
approval of their plan and are
lining up supPS>rt among fellow
m ajorily members for the
rollback that could save some
taxpayers as much as $292 next
year.
The Democrats set a special
caucus today to take the first
steps in gathering that support
by examining ways of using
general Treasury revenue to
partially fmance the troubled
system. That would take some o~
the sting out. or payroll tax in
creases approved by the
Congress just last December.
That legislation calls for S227
billion in increases over the next
10 years.
On Tuesday, the House Budget
Committee approved the plan
that calls for a $7.S billion cut in
Social Security payroll taxes. It
WU proposed by Rep. Robert N.
Giaimo, D-Conn .• the committee
chairman.
PAID .. OLITICAL ADVltRTISCMt'NT
Each of usr as indiYldual1;'are: ..
------Aware of and participating in Newport Beach
City activities.-
------Vitally concemed whh Improving the ruldentfal
characterlatlca of our City.
------VOTING FOR:
\ EVELYN PAUL DON
HARTIKI HUMMELIXJ .STRAUSS~ -
f'AIQ 9Y"
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• '"t Wat Newport Bacll lmprowmtnl Aun. )f
' I
:w~. Apfil 6. 1ve • DAJ&.Y PtU>T I If.IS
~
WidOw Vanislles at Sea-::·
Bill Eyed
By Sena:te
SAN FRANCISCO <AP>
Several hours before the ilJnt
oceanUner Queen Elliabelb 2
w11 to dock in Hawall, an tlOer·
Jy woman whom c utlous
passengers had nkknamed "The
Duchess" vanished without a
trace.
Carla lria Bodmer, a 70-year-
old widow fr()m Switzerland, is.
believed to have fallen or
Jumped overboard the night of
March 215 as the 1hip a~proached
Honolulu durin1 a 90-day world
cruise.
''There is no indication of foul
play," Othmar Hutter, lbe Swiss
vice consul in San Franclaco,
said Tuesday "I wouldn't make
a mystery out of it "
BUT A DJSAPPE.\B.ANCE at
sea is always myslerlous.
"It's the kmd of thine that
haunts every one." said
Frederick Flemming, a
passenger from Houston. "It.
seems so terribJe and Jon
st.ep otr that railln1 in the
die of the nl&ht. •· Nra . .Bodmer bad catn
nickname because sbe
floor·lenith aownlf and
almost ~gal entr•cet
dininl room.a and ballroo
lbeluxuriowahip. SACRAMENTO (AP> -A
.. ahleld law" to proteet re·
porters who refuM to name con-
fidential aourc• would be writ.
ten into the slate Constitution,
under a measure now on the
state Senate floor.
Tbe proposed amendment,
ACA 4 by .AJsemblyman Jerry
Lewis, R·Hlehland, won a 6·2
vote Tuesday of tbe Senate
Judiciary Committee. 1t bas
already passed the Auembly.
Amputee Found Starving
A.FTEa SHE vanished, a
tailed 5"1'Ch was made of
giant liner. but D<> trace or
was found,
lb Geneva, a Spokesman
the Swiss Foreign Ministry s
"It must be uaumed that e
fell overboard. We don't hbe
any backgJ'OWld on her, but lie
certainly is not well known ... r
Lewis aald the meuure would
protect "a free flow of Informa-
tion between the public and lta
governcnent . . . a government
that can at times become quite
arrogant.''
IF APPROVED by the ~nate,
it will ao on the November
ballot.
The measure was prompted
by the cases of William Farr
and the Fresno Four, who were
jailed by judges for refusing to
idenUfy sources.
Calltomla bas a shield Jaw
that saya reporters need not
name sources. But the judges
wbo ordered the jallln1a ruled
that the law ls outweighed by the
constitutional rleht to a falr trial
and tbeir power over court pro·
ceedines.
SAID LEWIS: "The court's
root in the d9C)r could very well
lead to the destroying or the
shield law in Callfornia."
He said judges could not over-
rule the shield law If it were in
the Constitution.
A representative of the state
Judicial Council, which
supervises the court system,
said ACA 4 would make It
harder for judges to keep grand
jury transcripts and other con-
fidential matters secret.
C!alldldate Wed
Mike Curb, a recording in-
dustry executive and
Re publican candidate for
li eutenant governor , mar-
ried Linda Dunphy ,
da ughter of televis ion
newscaster Jerry Dunphy.
in private rites Tuesday in
t he Bev e rl y Hill s
Pr~byterian Church.
CWAsic Film
Show Decision
Reversed Again
RIVERSIDE (AP> -The City
Council has decided that D W
Griffith's "Birth of a Nation"
film classic will not be shown at
the city museum after all.
The council decided 5·2 Tues·
day that the film -which many
members of the black communi-
ty round objectionable -should
be screened publicly at St .
Catherine's Catholic Church
with private funds lnatead of
taxpayer monies.
THE COUNCIL adopted a
COmprOmiae a (eW WffltS ago
that would bave allowed the film
to be presented at the museum
along with commenta from a
black peraon or sociolo1lst. The
com promise followed the coun.
cil's cancellation of a March 9
showing.
Some people objected to the
council's Tuesday decision as
censorship
SAN DIEGO (AP) -An elder-
1 y double amputee is
hospitalized alter stle waa found
sprawled unconscious and atarv-
inC on the floor or t.be home she shared with her husband, pollce
s aid. Her husband apparently
died five or six days earlier.
. Mabel and Orville B. P;1ulloo,
both in their 80s, were known
around their neighborhood as
s tubborn, independent people.
For their love of independence,
nurtured during their SS-year
marriage, they paid a. dear
price.
Paulson's wife was in very
critical condition at Mission Bay
Memorial Hospital today, suffer-
ing from the ertects of starva-
tion, said hospital spokeswoman
Lois Haselton. The woman,
whose legs were amputated
because of diabetes, lay helpless
on the noor for several days
after her husband apparently
died of n11tural causes, the cor·
oner's office said.
Marine Sentenred
VISTA <AP) A 25-year-old
Camp Pendleton Marine has
been sentenced to life m prison.
for the fatal shooting last Sep.
tem ber or the teen-aged wife of
another Marine.
Superior Court Judge F.V.
Leopardo s~ntenced Jackie
Robinson on Tuesday following
his jury conviction last month
tor the murder, kidnap, rape
and robbery of Sophia Ann
M artlnez. 19.
l.Vlfrftf Ma• 'Stobie'
LOS ANGELES (AP > -A
Nazi-uniformed man, Injured in
a scuffle with members of the
Jewish Defense League dunng
Academy Awards ceremonies
Monday night, underwent sur-
gery for a possible skull frac-
ture.
Nursing supervisor Beverly
Pratt at the County-USC
Medical center said early today
Richard Roget's, 40, Is In stable
and fair condition.
Ute Terra Gieen
I. E. "IACKIE" HEATHER -&atrm~. Newpott Pk:lnnlnq Commlaelon x Col. Fred Tschopp bas
assumed command or
the 12th Start Group,
M arlne Coros ReMrve ,
in Loa Anceles •.
Tacbopp lives in Foun-
tain Valley with bls wife ..
Dale, and two sons. .Molr:t• ~' kit Qty Coundl, 1501) Dorotf'ly lane. Ne'tJPOft leach, CA 92660
PUBUC NOTICE PtJBUC NOTICE PlJBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE
•
.I
•
SI ATE malice.'' ( l Dehnel was "full of hatred and
_ _ Belar BIU Claalf.fmged
planning the murder of the
Jewish Defense League's West
Coast director has been sen·
tenced to life in prison despite a report recommending proba·
Uon.
LOS ANGELES CAP) -The
Behr property tax bill should be
declaref,f unconstitutional because rt is tied to a ballot
proposition that bas yet to bf
passed, a retired attorney says.
The disappearance fltst
became public knowledge w
some passengers mentioned 1
newsmen during a nlne-b r
layover here last wMtend.
Superior Court Judge Jack B.
Tso said Tuesday alter sentenc·
Ing Robert Dehnel of North
Hollywood that the 33-year-old
I
Ardy V. B6rton, SS, of Santa
Barbara has filed a petition with
the stale Supreme Court urcing
that the blll be declared un-
constitutional.
ACCORDING TO Cun
Lines, owner ot the ship: "
was last seen at 10 p.m.~ March 216. At 10 a .m. March ,
the bedroom steward repo
that her bed was untouched. . extensive search of the 5lf P
proved negative." t
This· beautiful book,
• • ' : .
i
t
' !
TUl1\NKHAM
The last )ouln~:.·
FREE front Mutu~ Savings.
Actual size: 81sxt1"'t
To celebrate the visit of Tutankhamun's treasures to Southern California we
are pleased to offer Tutankhamun-The Last Journey, free for the asking.
All you have to do is stop by in person. ask for it. and its yours.
'•
It is a stunning book; a marvelous portfolio of color photo~raphs of the artifact
of ancient Egypt. The accompanying text tells the.tragic·story o{ the bciy king, ..
Tutankhamun. who lived and r'eigned over thirty-three centuries ago; 4-
the political and religious turmoil that preceeded him and with which he had to
deal. his death, the elaborate preparations for his burial, thi3 religious and
mystical significance of his tomb and the treasure that was entombed with him.
It was the only tomb of all the Kings of Egypt that was not completely looted.
The search for it and the.discovery are also described by the author,
William MacQultty, an internationally honored photographer, world traveler,
and fllm producer (A Night to Remember). This is one of the most up-to-date
books about Tutankhamun, and one of the most popular. Pµbllshed to sell at
S4.95, it quickly went to a second printing. We were able to obtain a limited • !
number of copies, so first come, first served, until our supply Is exhausted. .. i:~ .. One book to a family, please. Sorry. we cannot honor mail reQuests. ·• . "•
..
l
J
I
l
"
AlsO at M utoal Savings, The Treasures of TutankhJQ1un. ·; ~ .
Thia continuous presentation of full·cotor slide$ from the Lo~ Angeles County.;,.:
Museum Is now appearing in our lobby. It gives you a close, intimate lool< it :~"
the golden glories of the Tutankhamun exhibit Last day for this presentation "'
ls Ar>fll 1 Sth.
'
Cooperation ~ay
End Cycle Debate
Cooler heads and some firm facts about noise from
Friday niiht motorcycle races at the Orange County Falrgroun<ls pparenUy ha\le brought about a resolution
lhat residents in the adjoining Mesa del Mar tract can llve with.
:fhe situation bad threateqed to break down into
eontinued h~rd feelings and legal bickering between city
officials and homeowners on one side, and fair officials
an<lrace track supporters on the other.
However, results of independent $Ound tests by firms
co!ltracted by both the city and the fair board have
revealed that noise has been reduced by new mµfflers
and loudspeakers. The crowd itself is now the Higgest nois~ l•ctor, according to sound analysts.
• While it remains to be seen if the noise reduction
collt1nues during the regular race season Cbiggef crowds,
m<)re motorcycles), the council and the_ fail: board have-
taken worthy steps lo monitor the situation with random
noise tests.
'The tests will force continded vigilance by race track
officials. They also will keep homeowners fully informed
of any chan~es m noise levels.
Both the city and the fair board have promised to
cooperate in making certain the noise reductions remain.
That should be reassuring lo the Mesa del Mar
llO'lneowners Association, which, incidentally, should be ........
commended for its calm and forthright attitude during
neaotiations.
It goes to show that cooperation can still be a factor
in eliminating counterproduclive e~otionalism.
Freeway Inches Ahead
Perhaps it's a bit early for Costa Mesans to start
jurnping for joy over the impending completion of the
Costa Mes~ Freeway <Route 551 intQ the downto~11 area.
but any progress in the long-ddayed_project is worthy of 1
note.
Orange County Transportation Commission officials
announced last week that a $59,4 million extension of the
freeway to downtown Costa Mesa is among their top
priority it.ems.
· Final word as to how much money CalTrans Is willing
to kick into Orange County freeway proj~cts probably
won't be available until November. But at least it's a
start. . -
Now, more than ever. local residents should show
their visible and vocal support for the badly needed
extension. A local petition drive is under way and
continued pressure on Sacramento is a must.
Even with the support of local Assembly men Dennis
:\langers and Ronald Cordova (among others>. veteran
residents arc well aware of the tendency of the project
plans to vanish in mid·air.
Zone Change D~l~y
Costa Mesa property owners.and.ileteloper:; Illa
projects that might contradict llti» g~al
zoning designation on their pro r shou ak611ote.
As of June 1 of this year, the city will move into a
one-year moratorium on general_ plan amendment
applications. The plan suggest · pla er w
approved unanimously Monday ou
Whtie city officials maintdt rri«atorium i!'rtot a
building ban, it will serve as such for many property
0\\ n('rS
For example, if you live on, or own property that is
now zoned medium-density, you can simply forget plans
for high density or commercial development if your
application isn't in by June 1.
The moratorium ~ill allow you to increase density or
seek rezoning, so long as it falls within city guidelines for
the current general plan ioning on the parcel.
1f all this sounds confusing or inappropriate, you may
just be right. But the planning staffers who made the '
recommendation also are right when they point out that
the c urrent general plan system is flawed and doesn't
provide a good picture of the city's development future.
The one.year layoff could help sort the r;ituation out
:.and make things clearer.
Pnor to the start of the moratori\lm, local residents
should contact the planning department to learn the
specific guidelines concerning their property, The
planning department can be reached at 556-5245.
• Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Dally Piiot.
Olher views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader comment Is invited Address The Daily Pilot, P O.
Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone(714) 642-"321.
Boyd/Recognition
By L.M. BOYD
In Worcester. England, a
nian named A. Hancock,
~o'd been self-employed
IJlost or his lire, bought a
w,atch when M retired and
h~ it Inscribed : ''Presented
to, myself by myJelf. ln rec-
ocn ition of the 55 years
rirk I have done while work-irlt for myself. Tlylnkln1 me,
I lm: A Hancock, 1904-.59."
''the Image aald to be most
frfahtenins to youngstert ls
ut~t or a green snake with
faf'1s bared. For this reason,
.some authorities want to
replace the tradlttonal skull-
and·crossbones on toxlc
medicine bottles with lbe
snak.e picture.
Would you go to a movie
called "The Modern
Prometheus"? Neither would
I. It's noteworthy, is it not,
that tM full title of the book
that bu gdraled d<>zena ol
films was "Frankenatein, or
The ModemPrometbeus"t
Was none other lhan Gen.
Maxwell Taylor who once~
ferred to a peacetime army
u ••a chimney in the sutn·
mer."
Q . "'What's a
•bindlestift?"
A. That wu hobo slang for
a man who carried his bedroll with him. ,
•
Robert N. WMd/PubUwr Thomn tceevH~ :r.
Wedneectty, ~rU 5, 1178 · Bart»ra Krelbkh/Edltorlal Pege Editor
Jaek Anderson ...
.,
I
Vet Job Priorities -Ta rgeted
WASHINGTON -Al
considerable risk to bis political
neck, President Carter hopes to
limit the preferential treatment
veterans receive in applying for
•overoment
Jobs. Aides
bave per-
suaded the
president that
veterans
priority has
beeo squeez-
ing out
women and
minorities
lrom federal
employment. > The proposed reduction in
veterans benefit.s, of course, has
brought an almighty howl from
the powerful veterans lobby. But
a confidential White House
memo. which recently reactled
the president's desk, convinced
him that giving job preferences
to ex-servicemeo1 aome of whoQ'l
left the military decades ago, ls
blocking nearly everyone else
from the federal payroll.
By law, the me"lo explained,
veterans are Jiven a five.point
bonus on the Civil Service test
scores on the theory that ·'those
who served in tlmes of war
deserve special assistance in
readjusting to civilian life." In
reality, even those veterans who
served dunng peacetime are
gnnte_d a "llletlroe benefit."
CONSEQUENTLY, the memo
declared, veterans ''block the
top or most Civil Service
registers. This often creates
severe problems ... for
non-veteran but qualified
candidates, especially women."
In Dallas, for example, a
~M(R{~~~
AN EXACT REPLICA!
woman wtK> ac~ 100-on an air
trafflc controllet's lest was
ranked 147tb behind veterans
with pteference.. U veterans aot.
no special break. she would have
ranked seventh.
A female l•wyer In
Washington recentlJ applied for
a civilian job with Ute Defense
Department. Although she bad
more experien~ than most or
the male prospects, her
application was promptly
returned. She was, told ahe
couldn't be considered without
veterans preference.
"'In some areas, such as San
Diego," the White Rouse memo
said, "retired military personnel
ore often the only lndlvlduab
e ligible for federal
employment." There are about
140,000 such "double dippers" -
retired servicemen who are
collecting a military pension in
~AR~Jle'"
addition lo their eovernment
sala'tles -iD tbo federal bureaucracy. Yet they g~ first
dibs on govemrnebt Jobi, even it
they left the mlUtary before
World War II.
THE CURRENT law also
hampers efforts to streamline
the 1overnment, Carter was
advised. When a military base S.
closed, for example, .. th•
veteran'• preference is absolute
and allows him to 'bump'
non.veterans, including t.bOse
with greater seniority," the
memo explained. Many offidals
avoid ordering needed cutbacks.
therefore, "because of the
ad verse impact on equal
opportunity and affirmative
action gains."
The president bas
re com mended that ''elerans,
who now comprise half the
federal work force, be given
preference for only 10 years t
arter discharge. This would help t
Vietnam veterans and would I accomplish the original purpose
of the law by limiting assistance l
to the period of adjustment. An •
exception would ~ made for
disabled veterans, 'Who would
retain a lifetime job advantage.
Another confidential briefing paper suggested ways for the
president to sell the proposal
and thwart the carping, which •
has already begun on Capitol I
llill. "l-'rom some quarter. we •
are beginning to receive tbe
expected criticism on our ,
proposed changes.·• the
document stated. "Somebow we
do not seem to be getting across
the fact that .•• our proposals
help those veterans groups that
need it the most, the d.isabl~ ,
veteran and the Vietnam
veteran."
FOOTNOTE: A spokesman ror
the Veterans of Foreign Wars
told m,y associate Howle Kurtz
that "the White Hpuse is using
~eterans preference as a
scapegoat. They haven't been
getting enough women and
minorilies in government, so
they've got lo blame it on
something." He added that he
expects Congress to kill the
prru>osal.
1
Don't Need a Middle-aged Army
To the Editor:
Your editorial "Fix Military
Retirement" (Daily Pilot 26
March) showed a lack of objec·
ti vity. The author apparently
looked only at the cost, ignoring
what it was buying. Assuming
that the plan CA 30·year pro-
gram with a minimum retire-
ment age of 55) was in opera-
tion, we would have a military
force with an average age of
between 33 and 37 years.
Wouldn't it make you feel secure
to have thls "mature-seasoned"
force defending you?
NOW, Let's look at the other
sid& • moment. Take an 18-year-
old inid·west.ern boy who joins
th• Army, serves his 30 years
and reUres. He'Jl be 48 years old
and not eliefble for his retire-
ment pay for another 7 years!
The endorsed plan disapproves Ma taking a civilian job, so he
has to go on relief .until he is 55
years old. Al age 55 be will bave
to continue on relief, because,
unless he retired as a colonel or
better, he cannot support his
family on hls retired pay.
An armed force is just like
anything el!ie one gels these
days, ydu'll tel about what you
pay lot. Install the 30·year/5$.
year rf:tiremcnt plan and you'll
buy an army of middle-aged
stalwarta' who d011't know how to
get on relief and ean't fight their
way out of a w~r bag. NOR I. FRENCH
....._Ktea0
To the Editor:
I have been following the con-
troversy regarding the military
retlreb:lent. policy for some
montba now. However, your
March 28 editorial made me re-
aliHJ that the entire theory or
early retirement of milltary
personnel ls not property un-
deratood by those debating IL
The fact ls that when a man
reaches the age or 40 he begins
to slow down. Thi.a b a fact and an of the "second halfl" and
Jack I.a J.;ar1Ji art onty eit~P
Uou to tb\9 fact.
Combat Ls a aruelln1, pindlni
test of a man's atrenlth ~ana
I.min ~cl
oro
I •
The story goes that this was to
ieanforcc the younfler men and
to give them counsel and con-
fidence durin~ a right. The real
reason, however, was that those
older soldiers could no longer be
counted upon to stand up to the
rigors of the front rank.
War is a young man's "game"
and when you keep your old men
in ranks you are not only clog-
ging up the promotlon process
for the young men on the way
up, you are also jeopardizing
your Cront ranks.
It is far better to send the ofd
soldier home on hall pay and
cle..ar some room al the top for a
young "bard charger•• than to
keep him around because it may
cost a litUe more money.
In c:ombat there are only two
kinds of men -the quick and
the dead -and you need all ot
the young quick ones you can cet
to win wars.
R. E . WYMAN·
Federal spe.dbeg
To the Editor:
Is someone asleep at the typewriter? Joanne Reynolds'
article, "Tax Investment Pays
Off" in the March 23 Pilot re·
ports Congressman .8aqham as
claiming that we In Orange County benefit. from taxation.
"Cooaidering all t-.xes sent to
Washington !rom Orange County
in 1977, the eounty got back
about twice 'as much as it paid to
the federal 1overnment.." Thi&
was based on the noUon that 52.5
percent of all Washington's rev·
enue comes from Income tax, and then e.xtrapolaUng from our
income tax payment.s to a grand
total or revenue from the county,
At least tbat'1 what Badham's
assistant, Howard Seelye, was
reported as doing .
other citizens' money flowing in
our direction, let's not complain
when they keep moving in here
to share some of the ~ailed
"Tax Investment" they made
and never got back.
ROBERT JORDAN ROSS
El Mo rro Bbt•rt1
To the Editor:
Do you remember El Morro
Mobile Home Park? Ir yoa don't,
let me refresh your memory.
Remember driving aoutb on
Coast Highway from Newport,..
.Corona del Mar t~ugh three
miles or uncuJtivited. t60eed.
Irvine Rancll land and co g
upon a crescent of oeearitraD~
where the surr ls 1edeed bj
ttailers. That is El Morro.
If I were addressing someone
older I'd say, "Remember when
lhi.s same coastline was edged
wlth teots?" Probably some of
the first trailers built moved in
here to replace those tents. And.
in time, the little colony grew to
spread up El MolTO Canyon and
become a leasehold in the Irvine
Ranch.
Some or El Morro'& first.resi·
dents were weekending sur1
fishermen, a number or whom re-
tired here, an.d a few of whom
have died here.
JOINING the ftShermen '+'8l9
refugees from the hot inland
valleys of San Bernardino and
Riverside counties wh<> came, a
lhey do today. to spel\d boUQ,
overnights, weekends and vaca-
tions refreshing themselves.
Not a few of these were ~l
le1e professors. In 1982 ~hen we
bouaht our first El ¥orro trailer
it was from an admired pro-
fessor of sculpture at a Clare-
mont college. Other teacbera, es
well as buslaessmen.
transferred to olhec pans of lhe
world, retained the.fr lralltra at
El Morrou tbdr home we.
By now many chUdr WhO
ummered toielher have ~wn
up and mmied MO another. I
seems determlned to acquire us. This in spite of miles or vacant
land to the north.
MARY AND PAUL SULLIVAN
8 1 ... e Mbplaeed
To the Editor:
Jn the March 22 Mailbox Ruth
Frankel blatantly stated that let-
ters against the use of the de·
compre1Jsion chambers at the
Orange County AnJmal Facility
are false, misleading and unfair
to that faclllty.
Mjss Frankel states that such •
falae and misleading statements
preYen\ linden of lost pets from "
brlneing them to the pound and •
many heartbroken owners and
pets will never find each other •
as a result;
r,rsoul
'521
bom& tear~
SI 436
hoh & S11J111tu sm
Public S3.054
..
h1tit1 & hu
U.HI
looks l Supplies
\222
Private \5.110
..............
COSTS OF ATTENDINOCOLLEOE
For Student• Uvlngon Campua
Al sail•-R•ta Spedal C•re ·
DEAR PAT: What's the best way to clean a
large aluminum sliding·door screen? The frame
on ours got very gritty th~ winter and the screen
is .soiled. I'd also like to know bow to get dirty
pamted aluminum siding clean without banning
the finish.
L.L., Huntington Beach
Aluminum exposed to the elements cu be
cleaned with a mild soap or detergent, followed by
a thorough rlnsiag and wlplag. Remove med.lam
grime deposits by using an abrasive wu applied
with a clean, tolt rag or pad. Screeal.ag sboaJd be
~leaned by rubbing with a stiff bruh and waablng
down with a bCNJe and detergent. Solvents and st.ronfel' ~leanbll' q-eal1 doufd not be "li9eE ee·
palated alaminam aldla&. Clean with water alone
or wlth water ud mUd aoap.
Never clean alamlaum that la bot to the
&oacb or whea the tem~reh.re b below 51 F
Cleaaen work ,_ aitRlsl~ •bd. •i !lo&~
very poorly wbal lt't cold. -
N.-lelltll S.•• • Dllft'• Ell.n
DEAR PAT: I read that March 3 was the 47tb
anniversary of "The Star Spangled Banner" being
designated as the national anthem. There's no
doubt Francia Scott Key provided inspiring words
but I've always wondered where he dug up that
impossible melody?
T.C., Dana Point
He didn't dig up the music; Ida brodter·la·law
did. Franda Seott Key wrote one ata.ua of '"ne Star
Spangled Banner" on the back ti an envelepe u be
wltaeaaed 'be ZS-boar bombardmeat of Fon
Mcffeuy oa Sept. 13, 1814. Ke llalabed tlM poem the
loUowla& day at ladtaa Qaeee bit, Bal&lmore, ud
1avetttolllabn6er·la·law,JadgeJ.H.NltMI ... It
wH NkW.soa who aaaeated tile tw, Auereoe la •
Heaven,udbactthepoemprtmtedoa b,.. ... des,ol
wllkla t .. Rnl•e. Oii Sept. 21, It appeared la &be
Baltimore Amertcaa. Key's ortglaal co117 stayn la •
the Nlcbolaoa ram Uy lorn yean.
JU S.•etlmla 'J'mra Cre41Mllt•
DEAR PAT: How reliable is tax lllformation
when it comes from the Internal Revenue Service?
Do IRS people ever make mistakes when they give
inforruatioo over the phone?
N.E., San Clemente
Indeed theJ do, bat tlleir record seems to be lmproYbti. The Gaeral AeeoaaUq Office aays
tupa1,n DOW ltave HarlJ alDe dl&act19 Iii It 6f
1etdu die dpt llllenDatloll whetl tMJ call the
IRS toll·tiee asAttaace aemee. Lu& year ud t .. 1ean .,., ~ .~ of fou ~en reeelftd
cornet .-s~. ,..,., ten lDYOl~ m telepM,De
ealb to • IRS laformaUoa te11'4tn aboat H tu
law a:aauert, lltS wu eorred oal)' • ~· ot the ••aae amwerta1 a qaestha oa ded11etlblBty of
movlt& e~, Rt a q1lilllUoe oa aflmOD)' was
aaawend ~ eve11 Ume. Teti Of tile 14 qGel&ioial
were ~ eorredi)' from •to lM pereat of
Ute time.
-EXPENSES AT PRIVATE
four.year colleges will average $5,llO
for on·campus students, up 6.1 per-
cent from this year. and $4,577 for
commuters, up S. 7 percent. The me-
di:'an family income for 1976, the
latest year for which figures are
avall•ble, was $14,960.
-There will be $12.3 biruon in
public ud private financial aid for
students during the coming academic
year. That does not count possible
benefits from congressional and ad-
ministration proposals to help mid·
die-income families burdened by
high education bills.
"Rising costs should not dis·
courage students from considering
college attendance, for financial aid
is available to help defray costs,"
-DOI.JAR AMOUNTS FOR items
other than tuition and fees are fairly
similar from one college to another.
As an average, the College Board
says students should plan on budget·
ing $245 for transportation -includ·
ing trips home durini the year, $210
for books and supplies, $470 for
personal expenses and either $890 or
$1,440 for r"90m and board, depending
on whether they live at home or on
campus.
Fine Levied
On RestauranJ,
'W8i-tUo, give -.y~u .·
~Pe~d, d,_11y.'.;;', • .. .. •
Consider this. If you deposit Sl.000 or
more with us for six years or more, you
can get 7-3/4%' interest at an annual
yield of 8.06°0, with interest com-
pounded daily and maintained for one
year. Perpetual gives you your bread. daily.
\\b offer interest rates as high as the
biggest banks and savings and loan
institutions in the country. Thats very
good news for your mone\:
What else do you 9e1 fro.m us? for one
thing, many free and valuable sel'\iccs.
Convenient, time-saving sen ices to
make life a httle bit easier.
For another. friendly people \\ho go out of
their way to make your transactions as pleasant
and as efficient as possible. After all, we
exist to sene you, and we never forget it
Come get your bread. dally. Open an
account \\1th us that compounds }Our
interest daily.
·'. . 'ti
·ny Federal law, early withdrawals on
term accounts are subject to substantial
interest penalties.
Main Office 9720
Wilshire Blvd. Beverly Hills, CA 90212
Phone 274·6066 or 272-5656 · West·
wood Office 10866 Wilshire Blvd. Los
Angeles, CA 90024 Phone 474·3503 •
Larchmont Office 250 No. Larchmont
Bl\'d. Los Angeles, CA 90004 Phone
462·6'163 · Northrldge Office 18540
Devonshire St. Northridge, CA 91324 Phone
360·2326 · Canoga Park Office Victory Blvd.
-at Platt Ave. Canoga Park. CA 9 1304 Phone
348·414 J • Fulle rton Office 3334 Yorba
_ Linda Blvd. Fullerton .• CA 92631 P;ne
{714) 99J.1200 ·Newport Beach 0 ce
. 1634 San Miguel Drive Newport B ch,
CA 92660 Phone (714) 640·1 34
•
•••• ,, ·~
, L . ' ,,j ~~j
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•
............ , • MOTHER CONFINED TO BED SINCE 1954
Dorothy Gruber Prepares Own Meals
~Boy, 14,
Accused
In Rapes
OAKLAND <AP) -A
14-year-oid boy has been
accused of sexual at-
.. :tacks againsl seven girls
and one boy.
Alameda County
authorities said the at-
tacks occurred during
February and March
during the day at
Oakland public parks
and school grounds
Honors Won
Dilwyn E. Symes,
Fountain Valley. has
been named to the
dean's list for academic
excellence during lhe
fall semester aC Ilhno1s
Wesleyan University
••DOROTHY GRUBER IS one of
the most unusual people I've ever
met," she says. "I don't think I've
ever seen such spirit. Sometimes.
when I have a tew extra minutes, I
go lo her house just to visit.••
Mrs. Gruber, however, sees
nothing remarkable in the fact that
she cooks, sews and cans food from
her bed.
''The good Lord never promised us
an easy life," she says.
SHE ALSO CLAIMS no special
credit for rearing her children
despite her handicap.
"I brought them into the world and
I was re.sponslble for them ··
A ROT PIATE AND a small elec-
tric oven are under the bed, along I
with a touter and assorted cookinl
utensils. A small refrigerator stands
beside the bed. aa do a small utlllty
cabinet and an electric sewing
machine.
Last summer, she canned 2C pints
of apple butter. And she makes
quilts, operating the sewing machine
with a hand control. ,
Mrs. Gruber says when she is ·
frustrated or depressed she remem-1
bers these words from her Bible:
"'The Lord said he'd never put more ;
on us than we could bear." .,,
. ...-NATIONAL /CALIFORNIA
Perhape you will never be a
movie star winning an Oscar, but
you wlll always be treated Ilka a
stat and a winner by Dr. Flanzer.
For healthy Photogenic teeth see.
Dr. Flanzer. He knows how critical
close-ups are,
Dr. Arnold H_. Flamer, DDS
• • ,..._,.. ... ,.J'"'"''1;-~;.oi.'9hl,;~:::.~ 370 L 17" Street
Costa Mesa·
642-0112
The boy, whose name
'~as withheld because of
his a~c. 1s accused of 27
C"rimes seven counts
or rape, eight counts of
child molestin~. four
counts of battery, three
counts or assault with a
deadly weapon, two
counts or robbery, one
count of assault with in-
tent to commit rape,
kidnapping and sodomy
SPRING WHITE SALE· SfARTS MONDAY
Two attacks occurred
while the boy was on
leave from a 1uven1le
detenlton facility where
he was serving a term
for grand theft,
authorities said
The v1chms ranged in
age from 7 to 1-t
Project
Nearly
Complete
CORONADO CAP) -A row of 15-story con-
dom mium buildings sits along the Silver Strand,
the la st of the
skysc rapers nearing
com pletlon.
The 10th and final one
in the Sl20-million pro-
1ect begun by Jerome H.
Snyder and Loew's
Theaters Inc. a decade
ago will be topped out
this month and open in
August, developers say.
A total of 1,463 units
was bwlt. They overlook
the Pacific Ocean, San
Diego Bay and tustoric
Hotel del Coronado.
The M. Jl. Golden Co.
of San Diego was
builder.
Lecture Slated
On Astronomy
A slide illustrated lec-
ture on Egyptian
astronomy is being
sponsored by lbe Orange
County Astronomers at 8
p . m. April 15 at the
Chapman College
Memorial Auditorium,
Ora nee.
Dr. E. C. Krupp,
director or Griffith
Observatory wlll pre-
sent the lecture. Tickets
will be avallable at the
door at a cost of $3 ror
non-members, $2 for
memben.
NeEO A UWVl!R?
1 Low&..O• , ..
' •Divorce * Benki'\!Pt<V •Crimin.I • Wllls-Probatt
• tncorpor•tlon • Accldtnt-tnJury •Eviction
• Colltctlons
Vellux® back
comforter.
Twin Special purchase from
Martex. A whole stack of festive
pattems. All backed with Vellux-.
a soft, luxurious nylon flocked to
polyurethane. That makes them comfy
warm,.washable and very durable.
COmfy prices, too: Twin. $26
Full. $35 OueenlJ<lng. ~5
·S.99 Missy sheets. 5 gg Royal Velvet
• Stnpe.
Bath. Orig. 11.50. What a
thick. thirsty towel it Isl Cotton/
p0lyester loop tony In big,
bO&d stripes of cerulean/navy!
twillght; pineapple/canary/melon
or sltverlwhlte(sable combinations.
Bath towel. Orig. 11.501-6.99
H8lid towol. Ong. $6, 2.99
wa&hcloth.. Orig. 2.60, 1.•9
A~p. Orig. 2 60, 1.69
Bath sbeeL Orig. $20, 9.99
Bath~
'
l
ORANGE COUNTY I OB!TUARIES
~hway Projects OK'd
Wast Road l~ruvemenu Total $1. 7 Million
A t mlllian liAt of tuebwu
Jecll cludl.o1 $1. 7 miWoa
rth •Jore the Orpae C.oast,
I approved Tuesday by coun-
51,JPft'Vbors.
T h e proJects are to be
anced durt-.g the 1978-79.fiscaJ ear with the county's share of
soUqe tax revenue and will re-
C Bar Offers f Se min.an on .
I ~~'~:.,~~~, •h•
j
l ' i
Orange County Uar Ai.soc1at1on
has schedult'd ~e m1nars on
'\\'tlls, Taxes. and Trust, al
three county locattons on Thurs
day. April 11 and April 20 All are
open to the public free of charge
Panelists at the semmars WlU
provide 1nformal1on on
California's nt;ow community
property Jaws, new inheritance
tax laws, probate fees. and other
probate related top1t'S
l ~,THE TllURSDA V seminar 1s
scheduled at 7 p m at La Paz
Intermediate School, 25151
Pradera. M1ss1on V1l'jO
quire an equal share oC city
dollars.
Another $4.f million In 1m
provements requested by city of
f1cials was deleted because of in·
:Jufficient funds , a report to
supervlaon said.
Orange Coast improvement
projects 1n the 1978-79 county
Arterial Highway Frnancing
Program include:
Costa Mesa: 17th Street near
Newport Boulevard, $180,000, and
Paularino Avenue and Balter
Street near the Santa Ana-Delhi
Channel, $70,000.
Huntiog&on Beach : Y.orktown
A venue from Main to Delaware
Streets. $260.000, and Edinger
Classes Build
Tots' Skills
Confidence skill building ac
tivities such as crossing high
balance beams and jumping
from heights onto a mattress are
part of the Orange Coast YMCA
Flying Squirrels program for
4-6-year·oM children on Monday
and Wednesday mornings.
Other pro,grams include
classes for children 2·4 years
old. 1·2 years old and three months to one year old
Avenue from Bolaa Chica Street
to the west city limits, $365,000.
l rvlae: Walnut Avenue near
Kazan Street, $26,000: Univers1-
t.v Drive ·neu Campus Drive,
$90,000; Booita Canyon Road
from Culver Road to Sunnyhill
Drive, $160,000, and new Santa
Ana 1''reeway ramps southbound
on Jeffrey Road to Walnut
Avenue, $67,000
Newpo r t Bearh : Coast
Hl&hway from Jamboree Road t.o Avocado Avenue, $70,000, and
Coast Highway near 57lh Street.
~:IO. 000.
San Juu Capistrano: Camino
Capistrano from Del Obispo
Street to Aven1da Padre. s 105,000
t'olllltain \I alley: Brookhursl
Street from Garfield to Talbert
A venues, S78,000.
The list of street projects also
allocates $165,000 for improving
the f''ord Road /MacArthur
Boulevard intersection in the
Newport Beach area
Supervisors also approved a
S2.4 million list of br idge pro-
jects for 1978-79 which are lo be
financed entirely with county
dollars.
Orange Coast bndee projects
for 1978· 79 include $100,000 for
the Peters Canyon bridge on
Waln ut Avenue in the I rvine
area and fl0,000 Tor bridge im-
provements on Pacific Coast
~·--·····~·--.. ----·~ ~ Wedne9day, Apnl 6, 1918 OAILYP'!LOT A• I
Crlmlaal Justiee ,. ~
~
Program· Bllcked
A $70,000 'P('Ogram aimed at im·
proving the crinunal conviction rate,
restitution to crime victims and
citizen involvement in the justice
system was endorsed T uesday by
Orange Cowlty Supervisors.
The year·long program would be
financed chiefly with federal fundi.
and would be based at West Orange
County Municipal Court
Supervisors Tuesday approved ap.
plication for the federal money.
ln addJtion, tbey would assut vfr·
ltms an recovering property held as
~vldence and encourage sentences '1
volving restitution.
Operators also would attempt to re
duc:e the number of cases dismissed
in the Westminster court because bf
failure of cnme witnesses and vk
ti ms to appear in trials.
COUNTY OFFICIALS said addi
ttonal data concerning the proposed
procram and operational details are
still being prepared. Nee C.•••a11tl A REPORT to the board sru.d pro-A report to supervisors sai4 ...:ln
gram opecators would identify fac-many areas public conridence in 1'e
Lt. Col. Glt.>nn J. tors contributing to the delay time criminal Justice system is low aid
Shaver will take between arrest and the beginning c:1 t1zens participation minil\bl
c 0 mm and 0 t th c of trial, now more than 60 days for a because oC fear, ignorance or W
\far me Corps A 11 felony case and JO days for misde-v1ous callous treatment by cri~I
meanors justice officials ~· 1r Station. Santa Ana,
~~~m~ ~~m~r~:7t~ f RiGHTNOW-oRAi'N-Si:RVK:E-:~
Thursday. Shaver I ~nc:taSnow.Owner ~.
currently serves as
MC AS executive I Old Fashioned Ouahty Service-Using MOdern Techn1Ques
.....;o:.:.ff;.:..ic:;.:e_;_:r ·-----I 24 HOUR SRYICl>-FREI ESnMA TES
P S I Clear 1 Drain at Regular Price rogram et I .
A Martin Luther !Cing I Clear 2nd Drain on same job -1/2 PRICE Jr Me m or i al 4' Observance ts scheduled I OFFER GOOD WITH COUPON UNTIL A P RI L 30, 1970
Thursday at 11 :45 a m.1 in the Little Theatre at CALL: -N~a;.;.;m""'e------------------
Cal State Fullerton. I 558•7380 Address
Ca ll 6•2-5678.
Phone
I
I
l, The Ap.nl 11 sesi.ion 1s al the
Campus Theatre, Fullerton
Community College. at 7 pm
The Corona del Mar High l School Theatre 1s the !>Ile of
LJ\prU 20 discussion at 7 p m
For information on limes and
registration. call 642·9990 Highway al the Santa Ana • ll
River ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~--~---~---~---~-... ~~~-... ~---~-... ~-... ~~--~-... ~-... ~-... ~~ ... ~-... ~---~-... ~-... ~~ ... ~-... ~~-
1558-7385 Put • few words
to work for ou.
I For the Record Db•olutlon•
01 Marrlag~ ' I
f
'II• -rc1111
SHORT,-., P •nd Vtr"Of' [
DECl(MANN. Sllirley -ro•rel -
t4a11\1 A~I HVGHES. Sl\<t1lf AM
•nd Howud S•mu•ll 8A TOON
P•lrl<1• M .,. .. Eln•ll\•n V
HADLEY All• •nd Wiiii.om 11.ISSt
Pob•n -""" •nd T~m•t lll'rov HAVLAlV ~r-tncl' l Mwt P1tlt1d
C WOOD am0> II ~ncl Jucl•I"
HARPISON T•Od; H ""rl • .i1nto .. n
M , LAY8DUHNF lr•l1" C. .,,d
A.11<• M4"'t
ALVARE-.Z Al1<i• ~ 4'nd Auqu;,tu'I,
SUCH~ R H Vo<IO" Jr ,,no l "• J
ttetn•n 1-N(H '-"'~ An<i !...•tt!t y t' Jr EA Rl y v.-'""" l 111•tw tti 4ntl
Ml<l\.,.I E.,I FADEN lone!• '>""
•nd Sltp/>tn ~n<tr. (ILA'>lC•~ Fr•n~ Jo\.l'pt\ •nd Fr•nc:H (Ollf'«'n
PANCOE, N•n<1 J•ne •ncl Tt>Om••
CM•lf> STEPHENS 9•wrtv •no
Ottm•r M Tf JCOA P•ul• •nd
Lui\ Q PEAVY '>ut•nnt' ""d C•rl
L MOR ROW l•NI• S •nd Slotn I.A•• !>TERN[R,()w...,M -W•n u E • WOLDUM, Mltry J -Roy
Merlyn, llECLEY, ROC>erl M •"'d
WeNlv DONOVAN J•-' R •nd
N•oml A 8LA(tf (f'CHI• •nd
Jo••P"' /4
F11.a Marct-i lO
HC:A Th ~""1"" A MtiC1 0on •en "ell' \LI~ ( c:1 Mt<'-'" A 11"'1 ... ,,.,
l IC Rll~SIO T"Om4\ M 41r.d
J.0fll'll'ff'fl WlfU'Lf Att\OJd ann
Patri<•• Al\,_. HOWARD l•"''-"" M
•nd Wllll•m £ ~Al!Cl O"
M•rgut-rH,. .lnO A9111tl •fo
(HAMl!C 1'1lAIN Ann •nd R•,monc1
Pl\• •I> RU'>HI N(, J•<• R ..,,d ... ,,
dr• • C.t DCJf '>. D•I• '> .;nd
ROO.rir 0 lllAlLf v Ellt•.,..lh l
•nd JOM R 0
TRINKLf Ml!Mft 41..,•no An•I•
LOUl\f" I POWf. R\ w .. ndv l •"0
Ju•n•ld V (,UT 1 l RQf l Su"n Jll
af'tO F-r•nti [trw\t. M<.INtlAC , W•r ,,,. C. •nd Mitrlano D ~TllA•N
M.cM•I ~ •no l1noa L rooK
.. ,Iron DI-•n<I ""'" M GRADY
Ci•ntvlf'Vf' Jind Cdwttrd lf' Aov
BIRk INSHAW <•pro l •n •nd
Robt'•I K•lll\ HOl SI NC.E R \nM
non •nO £ ltf"'I l l E [ J-1f1 PO\f' and
.A.t•• MOt\rfW"
FlllC.EH~ll\ l•rftJOAnO
lyf\l\fll' M•r..., l.l IMf ~,,,.tu-.tnd
Cf\•rft-\ T M-IC f' ~1,.vr kU\Ull •nd
(lll•t'lt-1" ,.._.,j .. [Jl(~S J•<OV"'ll,,.
•nn J ..... , ~H AE'.W~llVAV
L•¥J'l'"I'"'• '.ii Mid JI\ Anl'\ ,f.f'e. ORI(, GE~!. Jo•"" t:on.--•nd W•Or
H•molon ltATTlNH(IAN Cvnth"
01l nt-•fld AtlhMr (lmtr PAD
00( ,,. Oot""9 ~""•AO w1t11\ lou1"
TOTrl:N Sllforrv IC -Edwore D Jr H IL TOt; l\l""r .-.o 811ty J DtCK~ ,..1,..r1M S •M JOf' C.
OC. L £ Keri Sh•wn •nd Goort•
O•v•d ARAUN v101 ,,._.,. ~ Joet
C,,eoror It A PLAN~~ ~~,., J•"'"'
SMrmTVTHIU .UMI
WISTCUH' CHA,.\.
427 E 17th SI
Costa Mesa • 646·4888
Santa Ana Chapel
518 N Broadway
Santa Ana • 547-4131
'lllCI HOTHIH
SMITHS' MORTUAH 627 Main St
Hunhngton Beach
536-8539
,...,AMtl.Y
Cot.OHIAI. RMUI.
HOME
7801 Botsa Ave
Westminster
893-3525
'AClffC YllW
MIMOllAL ,AH
Cemetery l'.4ortuarv
eti.pel
3500 Pacific View Dnve
Newi><>n
car1 rQf'nia
6'44--2700
McCOllMI~
MOITUARllS
Laguna Beac:ll
•IM-IM15
Laguna Hiiis
768-0933
San Juan Cliplatrano
496-1178
•"4 Dl•n• _,,• BEARY, Ac11 .. r1
Wolll•m Jr -Etlr.Oetll Sll¥on
"'EH DO IA, John •nd M•rl•
Ne'.WPOllT l(rl•U• M .... ,,. •no
ROfl.id Dun. C IWOFF, LoSlle Lou
-J~llfl. 0.LEUSOMME, Deni•
M ano NM• M • C.ONZALEZ. c ......
J .. n •1141 Geuld
CRING, TrffOn •no OoNlld l ·
w HITT I NC. TON Judllh An"" •no
O•rr•ll C.ordon SEMRAU, Ooe"" •no 0•••0 0 80SLE Y, JH'1<'11e II •nd lhom.t\ W . BUTLER Colem;on
F •nd S-Ot• Lw, DUNCOMBE
E I II• b • t" W • n d Dev Id S
ltOCIN(KI P61JI 8 dnd BMl>.>t• A
llECICEA B•llv J and H•nry
MA(HIJ'NESS, D•lr~t Y •nd
Ml<h.atf H
,ll..,_rclll1
ACIERNO, H•r••• 8•b••n .. ,..,
Au<lolllf\ L , WOODRUFF, ~bo<•h
Jun .no w., ... Alo.rt, ALAYAA,
Urrd• •nd B•v•ne Fefna~do
BRDWt;, EW•r L ...a ~·~ W FOWLER. _.,.. II II .,,., F•MKH
Enid, GAYNES, J~,,... Oft ....,
K•1ln Elberl. DORAIS, S.nctr• Lou
•nd Byron J.,,,. •. PAYNE, NII• R
•nd Dtnnt> J WEBER. -rllyn J
•nd Robtrl A ORENAN Jonn A
and El•·-A SAN(HEI JoH PllM
•no T~r1w
VllLECAS ._.,v_ v.1....._,. -
K•INffn ,.,..r.,. ClEVEU.ND H•..,.
IP11 o nd Bll•y lhyp MOORE
DorotP\y •f'ttt Gtry S.MI TH, Roy A
•r.d Oo,.t>thy F-•yie 8UAM.S, P•lrtCt•
Ann ••d ROl>erl UI,,.,, AESTOR C•ro1yn Marie-~ Robtf"l Halt.ti,.1on
ALIBAANOI Thoma. •nd Lun<•n•
A IRWIN, Rl(,..rd C. -Glori•
M••v. LEOERCEABER ,.,..rldHn
K •nd Ptltr J . SCHWEIGERT
D•on• Et•I .... '""" JIKk Ren.
NIEMCZYK. lltO L -Vlc-1 l;
QUEYREL, E•etvn M -AllMrt,
BOLAND, "'"nett G. •no Arlnur H ,
CHIPMAN, P•m•I• Je•nn• •"d
Phtllo Euoene, REDFEARN,
Auoro s ano RoOert F • ODAM,
P•ull,,. Ro.. ""'° Robl!rl Fran-lln,
WILLIAMS. M.ir1ell<1 •nd Fr~~ J ,
TV RES, Mllrlln A tr1CI D'Al\n M ,
S(IARAOnA, Franc:tt E •nd loul•
f-KE AV~ O•ef"lfll' Lou1~~ •nd
Mttl\•t• W•Yn.t
THOMPSON RoNtld 8rCMll•v •nd
Rou Lind JONES Ronald L~· •nd
Dtbr• l ynn ROORICUEZ. Jot'I •nd
Donn• NEW!.TATER. ~" G•vw
•"4 Ron•ld L•t C.AVGH. M1tr11uet
H •nO I ,>yl0< L PANGLE, IC um
'>u" •no Cl\••'•' Ron.tld JONES
Bobl>y I Jr •"O CrY\C.I E
ROBIDOU'I, AlfliS and Oorolh'I'
MU5t(t' V1•9•n•• MH •"'3' Ah't" t-4•nry
l(ELLEY PtulhD -C..rolyn •.
REED. l'r.tneos 0. •NI Lou Etv•
MIC KOOL EOW•rd J end SN•I• C
Wl1tTi YvonM C•rol ..,d Oav1d
I•'"-'" REN\/Etrr.Uft VtrQ1n1~ 8
af\d 8erUM'f't11'\ 8
"""IMrOtt •uS,Ell. Lynn Morc:i•n and
G eoro• Cul•lon SCHWART l .
IC•llwro,.. J and Mo<lon S • KEAN Tl~trn• M -W•lter B AICEltS
(l'o•rlu R•v •ncl Sh•ron Suran""
HAl.L, Sl\lrl•Y Jt•n ,.nd Le,.
Shtrr'li.n. OUFFI ELO, B•rb•re
AMt •nd JoY>"" H..,,Y, YOUNG,
WAL.Mt
EST•LLE IOI.A WALSH, aoe 11.
Ptu.4 -lfY °" Aorll 4, lf11 In tfllllt•
lnotol\ It.en. Ca. Survlv•• by
de111lll•r Mrs Je•n T ert, 4
gr•,.d<hlldren and J tr•at-
,,..,d<h!ldren. Arr.,.91.....,l\ bot N""°
It.MW So<ltlY. burl•t at wa
Pl'BUC NOTICE
Y•onr.o (•rot •"" Ao.., Lt• !.CHUF'
FE II T. wm ..... A .,.., Vlroon .. I
SH£FLIN Fr•nll. Leroy •nd
EllHbetn o.ri .. ,. UWACOT C~n
lhl• L •net RlcMrCI J
BUR KS, P•lrl<I• Ann •nd Mi iien
Tlmollly. SIMMON~ l 1nci. JHn •nd
G•rf Ktllh; HAYES, Edw•rcl W •ftd
L!Nle II KELLY M•rl•rw S •nd
John F . SHAFF R. J•me\ A •nd
-vii, WtEL.ANO, Torri<' MM •NI
Ge,.ld Alan, SCHROEDER Vvonrw
and O•voCI A ERNY. K•1"4>ron• •nd
RoOerl NICHOLS, D•vld H •f'ld
Sl\trrvll A MORC AN W•vn~
HOwltd Ind P1trt<14'
GARZA (yntho.t l vnn .ond Je>ua
SIGGER!., V.et .. 141 A .tNI Rkt..rd
L DAWLUO. ChrlUIN -W•lltr DOLL. M•ry Ann and Jo•tl>ll G
OoME LLO, "''<NII N Ind 0.•nn•
TRYHORN Mlch•tl ROdno •nd
C•lhy U•. NEYMAN SN>ro l. end
H•ro4d G 8CRlllAND. fdwar• L
ano L•ncl• t.ov. RUSH. Norm• J -
Sttvt1' G kOVOS. --· •nd l.\Ol
CREY. Lt...S. Je.-.,,_ IE1>9ef't
Jol«Ofl Jr . PEU!•s. •lcttar• -BolllMe' l'LAOG, TOftl• ~ .....
t;orrn•n Er,.SI CROTti. PHI II
...... Paule c VILLIARD. IC•lhl ....
.. •nd llo ... rt H FREEMAN,
Ml•r°" Lto •AO ~'" Clorenu: PETERSON B•••rly K•lll\ ... a
Mui• AoOr~ 01.WN Yo•-·
J tnd Ronald R SEARCY,
MAurfll'•" •tUI l(ffl!neth Oven•
MONTESINO'> C""lhl• l •NI l'rllft
( i'\CO flt
FREDERICK L•u•• Jolln •nd
!.levtn I-F'ALLON, TMlm• I
•NI Evoene L • BEADLES, Errn• IE.
•ncl Melvin L., BONUER, P•trlO B
•nd Sh•ren Lorr•lnt. HAR DI"'· Mary E. o>nd Alvin, MOON. J._, 1.
""d J•t1lce M • CCUCtil, H•rry T
Jr, and Kothl"n J • ETHRIDGE,
M•r y G •nd Rodney l
COUllTNEV, uyr.o R •l\d lobby
G ; CtiAPl(O, Sonia •NI J•mo M
SALDANA, Ct•ucll• •r1CI Ron•ld L .•
CRAVENS, RONOIO E •nd V•r• A •
COltOO\IA, J ... n• •NI D•nltl Crut,
THOMAS. ""'lllp 0 ...,., M•ro•r.e
Ann McCOY, Linc!• R •"" °'""'~ M l PEltltEAVL l S.lly l.O<I end
Ro••rt Allrtd SMITH J\ldV
Pelrkl• •nd J-• MonrM Jr
l'l,_..M.,cl\1J
TllUJILLO. R-rl L •nd D•n•
l(•llllH n, CAl.IC.IURI Ltt •nO
Poter I . THOM.AS. B•llY Ell..-..,,d
Aol>ll\ &ia.c• O\JINN, 0..ryt AM
-Eu-Jotin MAURT1!. Frx
rut E •nt Ellwl M MORENO
Censvete 5at11ar '"d Aa•oh
~-l SHELTON l•no• C •nd
Robert A MATA Auro,. R •nd
Carle>\ 0 NIENDO/A Yvoti~ M
•..O R1Cll•rd J RAMIREZ l\<MMI 8
•~ T111ord T
8ANGSTON 0•••0 •nO Lo,.11•
Ltt, BROWN, Sll.,on M .. •nd
W•vne llidlMO '.iCHUl TZ, Bonni•
Cnr"llne •nd J•m•• A
GONZALIZ. Row Merle -Mt!llH
Mo ....... CHRISTMAS, J•mH -Lwren ,..._, llllAWOZtlC. J•mtl
C .,... Linde Ann, P'l~I~. _,_
Arlnt •nd Donato Preston, NASH
Lori LYM elld RlcM"" K•rl, RON
DINI . Ch•rvt A~n •nd Jeffrey ,
S.WAI N, Merle C.r""n •rid Cr•n•il•• ThomH
TUDOR, Oi-L •lid O.n11I H ,
BUTT•CAWl.1, Conll•n<• Jun •r1CI
JO''P" Al\ll>onY, OOVE, P .. rlcl•
Ann •nd &fy R•y; CONLEY, 0.vld
II. u .. Kal.lll•n M . COl"ER Jo
"""' a NI o.ugi .. J-. HOlllST t>l11<10 J •M 0....ld F
Get the inside story
before you put out cold cash.
H<we you been thinkin~ ahout
huying a nev. refrigerator-freezprJ
It·~ nnt only " ..,j7,.,1blc purch<lSt'
Jt 'c:; ;l Jong-tem1 lllH~tnwnt.
So beforl' you conurnt ~ouht•ll.
it \\ill pay y11u to get a mp) Pl
.. r~. Id F ...... u> aCL!'I.
This nt'.'w st ra1ght ·talk bookl<'t
bring~ out facts many people
overlook. That a refri gerntor-
freezer is one appliance thal
runs around the dock And that
the price you pay in the beginning
may be the Jea t part of your
mv t ent The "~rgam·· t lrnt
snves vou ctol1Ars m tht: beginmn~
mtt)· ;aste energy and cost you
lit rally hundreds extrn in t'le<:h 1<.:
hills o\.er the years you Uhl' 1t .
\Jayne mnre than v11u nngmally
p:1icl for 1t~
Th:1t 's "h\ we· \'e develnprd
i>rict• PILI'-It':-.1 method for
r:1tin}.! brands and model" on t lw
bas1.., of pnce. Nus the co~t
of operntion. As explain~d m
··cold Facts;· it helps you make a
sound judgment betore you put
out any money.
For your free copy of
"Cold Facts"mail the coupon
todtt~
:SCE
Southern C•ll'forn'• Edlaon
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W• 11Ill,AplttI.1171 NA r10NAfi~1
~~e to Get Con~esS Off Pentagon Pajir.oll:/
ASHINGTON <AP> -The
ederal Co"emment HY5 11 IJHl.Dlbef"S
f Cousress are disabled and It sends
hem checks every month to com-DHte for their disabilities.
At Jeut another 14 senators and
OflfessJDeo 1et a monthly military
eninon check or Veterans Ad-
. litralion payment in addlUon to
ir $57,SOO-a-year salary, their
r yel allowances and other benefits.
i.ECJPl~NTS OF TOE extra
ks 111clude such ~lJ known and
erful members as Sens. John H.
I Jr., Strom Thurmond and Bob
aftd Reps. Olin Teague, John Fl~· l, J ohn Young and Al Ullman. e extra checks range from $41 a
tb to ll.109 a month. And the
a ents are quite legal.
• • hen people ask if it is right that
tet it. I say, 'Under present i~umstances, clearly yes,"' says
ULLMAN, WUO HEADS the House
Ways and Meana Committee, eets
$506 a month lo regular military
pension. An lJUman spokesman said
the Oreeon Democrat oppo1es the
current two-check situation and
would support a chJnge.
Flynt, the Georgia Democrat who
heads the House Ethics Committee,
receives $669 a month from his re-
gular mlllt.ary pension. Youne, D-
Texas, eeta $5&9 a month in military
disabtuty pension.
which are based on rank, pay at time Besides Bennett, three others don't
or retirement and percentage of dis-keep their second checks.
ability. Fourteen others receive Sen. Barry Goldwater, R-Arii.,
Veterans Administration pensions, donates bis $86t recutar military
which are based on the percentase of pension check each month to charity. service-connected disability. And 13
others receive non-disabillty related "HE JUST FELT rather than be
military pensions. engaged an-double·dipping,. he de-
Leader John Rhodes, returns bis
'monthly SSCS regula1-...milltary
penalon check to the U.S. treasury,
earm,rked for reducing the national
debt. .
Peotagon records show that Rep.
Keith Sibelius does not draw his r6'
Rular military pension. But the
Kansas Republlcan says he is ~JV·
ing a $423 a month pension and is put·
ting the money into a Cwid for a
charitable founda.tion he is setting up
ALSO AMONG THE 15 highest
two.check recipients is Glenn, an
Ohio Democrat who gels $848 a
month in regular military pension for
ser,..ice that included America's first
manned orbital space flight ·
"His feeling is that his pension·
represents deferred income for his 23
years in the Marine Corps," said
Steve Avakian; Glenn's press
secretary
'DEFERRED INCOME'
Sen. John Glenn
AP• I'
WOUNDED IN WAR
Sen. Bob Doi•
Four or the congressmen do not cided lo give it to charity," said
keep their checks. Two send the Gbtd~ater si>okesmari Tony Smith.
checks back to lhe government, one Another Republican member or
turns his over to a charity, and one Congr ess Crom Arizona, Minority
says he is P\ltUng b1s into a char1la· ----------------------------------------------------v
ble fund he is f$etting up.
"LYHT
Rep James Lloyd. D·Calif., who
draws $618 a month lo military
pe$1on for h1s 21 years in the Navy
"BOt is it morally right'> No. We need
to rbake a change in the system."
... IE SECOND CHECKS have been
sev',rely criticized by those who say
Co~ress should change federal re-
t 1 r9 men t systems to limit or
cli~inate the second checks.
"!l's high time we got Congress oH
the Pentagon payroll," said Sid
Taylor. the research director of the
Naltonal Taxpayers Union. a grass-
roots lobbying group. "We have too
many senator.generals, senator·
colonels and congressman-colonels in
today's U.S. Congress.
"Uow can members of Congress
'ote objectively on defense ap·
pro.nations. military pay or pension
increases "lule they are officers on
the pentagon payroll or pension rolls
Jl the samt: tame'"' Taylor .asked.
FOUR MEMBERS OF Congress
rccei\·e miLitary d.t:;abihly pensions.
Laguna Eyes
Grandfather
Building Law
The directors of the Laguna Beach
('hamber of Commt•rce and Civic As·
'oclat1on have asked the planning
t•omm1ss1on and City Council to ex-
111.:ditc approval nf a grandfather
bu1ld1og ordinance in the Art Colony
A rcsolullon pushing the socalled
~randfalher law was approved by
directors last week. and a recom-
mendation sent to the City Council by
Chamber president Michael O'Steen.
The grandfathering ordinance, if
:.approved, would allow all legal non-
conforming structures in Laguna
Beach to be rebuilt as they now stand
m t.lle event or a disaster, such as
Cl~ing, a Cire or earthquake.
~ the law reads now, such struc-
tures would have to conform with
~urrent standards before they could
be reconstructed.
Water Talk Set
For Women Voters
The Capistrano Bay Area
Leag-ue of Women Voters will
hold a meeting lo cover
·'California's Lifeline Water,"
April 11 at 9:30 a.m. at the home
of Joan Sidell, 25886 Dnna Bluffs Wesl, Capistrano Beach.
A similar meeting will be held
April 13 at 7:30 p.m. at the home
of Mary Carhart. 30286 Grande ·
Vista. Laguna Niguel
Further information may be
obtained by calling 496-5131
t •
The biggest two-check income goes
to Sen. Howard Cannon, who gels
$1,072·a-morrth in regular military
pension plus bis congressional
salary, making the Nevada
Democrat's annual income from the
government $70.369. Cannon was a
major general in the Air Force re·
serve.
"HE FEELS THAT he earned his
pension regardless or how rauch he
makes. that what you do for a living
should not affect your pension," said
. Cannon press aide Mike Vernetti.
The largest second check eoes to
Rep. Charles Bennett, D-F1a., wbo
receives $1 ,109 a month Crom the
Veterans Administration. However,
Bennett, who contracted Polio while
fighting in the Philippines and now
walks with a brace and a cane, re-
turns the money to the government.
"I don't feel I need it. I'm drawing
such a bag income from the govern-
ment that I don't want lo be greedy."
Bennett said. "Now, I don't think
\lelcrans compensation should be any
different 1C your income is high or
low I JUSl think Congress ·is paid too
much"
REP. WILLIAM I',. Nichols, D-
Ala .. gets a monthly VA pension oC
$983. lie stepped on a land mme in
Europe during World War II, costing
ham the lower part or his left leg, half
a lung and paralyzing bis right foot.
"All veterans who suCfered severe
mental or physical disability -the
congressman Ceels the government
owes them something. I'm sure the
c6ngressman would give back twice
as much as he has gotten <in
pensions) if it would restor• his leg,"
said Nichols' press secretary Thomas
Eiland.
Teague. a Texas Democrat. gels
$951 a month in military disability
pension for the \tar wound which
eventually cost him his le~
DOLE, TllE KAl'\SAS Republican
who was Gerald Ford's running mate
in 1976, gets $704 a month. or $8,458 a
Yl'ar. lk was critically wounded by a
shell fragmc•nt m Italy His right
hand and arm are still crippled and
he has no feeling in his lert hand.
Also drawing $8,458 annually in
military disability pension is Sen.
Daniel K. Inouye, D-Hawaii, who lost
his right arm when he fought as a
major in the Nisei 442nd Regimental
Combat Team in Italy.
Thurmond, a strong supporter of
the military, gets $765 a month in re·
gular military pension.
Wife-beating
Victims Aided
By New Program
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The State
Department or Health says lt will dis-
burse $124,998 to six pilot projects to
provide and SUPPorl for victims of
wife beating.
The announcement said the six pro-
jects. to receive $20,833 each in flrst-
year funding, are:
P roj~ct Sanctuary, Ukiah;
Stanislaus Women '1 Refu&e Center,
Oakdale; Ba~ered Women's Sheller
Project, Aplos; Riverside County
Coa lition (or Allernatlvea io
Domestic V-M>lence, Riverside: Ocean
Park Community Center Women's
Shelter Project, Santa Monica, and
Casa De Paz. San Dle'o YMCA·
Battered Women's Coalition Shelter
Project, San Diego.
4201 CAMPUS DRIVE
llYtMI TOWH CIMTB
IAClOSS .. OM ucn
MOtl·W8..flll. .... l'UIS.·ntUK•·• IAf. l .. Z
f VISION EYE CARE fOR YOU Ir YOUR FAMILY , NOFUSIOtW. mv1c1' 9UAUrY
lENSEB: Qt.,. and Pl•tlc. Photo
nslllve °' tinted. Slngle vltk>n
Poc:at -TftFoc:al
' RAMES: Hundred• of fr1met on
ifPftt lnduC6na Oetioner Fr11M1
..O~rJMICUIAIT ~c.w.
833-2778
'
Altlt Yw. ........ ,,_ 16.lt fl".
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... C...e.b •... "-HM P"•
Present Planning Commissioner
Past President -_Corona del Mar Civic Association
Paul Hummel has proven his concern
Your vote on April 11 can help those of us
who continually work to preserve
CHAIRMAN
JEAN WATT
Bill Agoe
Margaret Ryckoff
Mr. and Mrs. John Stuart
Marthafl Duffield
Ear1 and lreM Hardage em Morris
Ann Hutchinson
Sue L. Ficker
Dr. and Mrs. Donald Powers
Atllltl Beek
Georgt and Mary Ingles
Bob SPNen
Helen E. Weiss
Mat~ Skilling
Dr. and Mrs. Alan Andrews
Paul J. and Ollvt Gruber
Rogtrt Guggenheim
Dr. and Mrs\ Maclyn Somers
John 8. Kingsley
Fcank and Frances Robenson
Or. George Mc:Cann
Clrol G. Bl1nchard
ft1argaret J. Sindalr
Fred and Marilyn Arnold
Sue Hitchman
Robert Sattler
Robert S. Clark
Pamela Rush
F. Boyd Stillings
Daniel and Jeanne W11tbrook
France• Bury
Edwin and Anne Lent
Mary Katheryn Russell
Anne M. MeAdams
Richard C. Hunsaker
John and Mildred Rou
Peggy Cook
Clayton K. Gorrie
June L. Prichard
Balley B. Bernlfd
Mr. and Mrs. 0 .8. John1on
Jane H. Hunter
Emma Torian
Liiiian Dodd
Mathew C. Skl~er
MtrJOn F. Felton
Mary Barrett
Thomas Patrick Dougan
I
Newport~s residential quality.
PAUL HUMMEL ELECTION COMMITTEE
TREASURER
HELEN McLAUGHLIN
Carroll Beek
Dr. and Mrs. John Skinner
Devid Shores
Dan Emory
Roy and Jeanne GiOfdano
Mr. end Mn. Robert Millar
John T. Chiu, M.O.
Lee and Pat Harkless
Ruth Moore
Marie and Harold Buckey
Walter and Donell Koch
Barbare and Gerard Van Hoven
Beatrice Russell
James Y. Watt, M.D.
Rod Calderhead
Jamer Emmi
Walter and Marilyn Heeley
Angele Ficker White
Elaine Linhoff
Dorothy Beek
Ted Carpenter
J. Grant and Ph'(llls Florin
Arcttlbeld Scott Ill
Brian R. Carter & Margaret
Linda Hart
Mr. and Mrs. Don Winton
Jean E. Cohen
Mr. and Mn. Frank Taylor
Edwlt'd Wagner
Edvnrcl Maloney ....,
Muriel P. Griffith
Richard E. May
KathlHn T11ch
C.thy Anderson
Merll L. Graham
Chrl1tlne Tarr
Margaret and GrHme Doane
Marie Hiebsch
Margaret Ad1ms T eylor
Renff Carr
Donn Comte
Susan Mindes
Marcia F. Sauerbre'(
Lea N. Gibbs
Grac:hen D. Sames
Mr. and Mra. Cur111 A Herberu
Eleanore l. Hastings
Jim Behen
Rtcherd and Caroltne Clucas
Jean Wegener
John and Mandy Cole
Tom end Cindy HouHon
George Hall
Dr. C.lvin McU.Ughli"
Jim 8lak1more
Roy J . Kunkfe
Jun and Coalson Morris
Ed Gazsi
Dr. Eugene Melinkoff
Pat Strang
Esther Puant
John Shea
Dave Brant
Dr. and Mrs. Frank Herman
Mr. end"Mrs. ~dward H. Kelly
Dr. and Mn. Richard Simpson
Claude S. Moran
Shirley Knutsen
Stanley and Dons Sunderland
Claudia Hirsch
Bernice Shuler
Darrell and Deborah Ebert
Harry Kamph
Louis end Anna Arcangelo
Jett Engle
C.rolyn Stratton
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Toon
ff.A. Aodtrson
Mr. and. Mn. Leslie J. Harrison
1-avonoe Si:nlth
Mrs. Ann1bel S. Montgomery
Patricia H. Brackenridge
Dorothy and Glenn Hamrntr
Margaret H. Wilson
Nancy Grah1m
Mary Ann Klinger
Judith Wagner
Jean and Charles Fljckwtr
Jack P. Berman
Leonard MC>fgan
Virg1ni1 C. Clark
Wayne E. Heck
John Butler
Vivlin Mclean
fflnk M Htrlem, .Jr
Emtly Ogden
( •
Au1t1n .ind Shirley Mah•
John and Marit Sto'r
Mary Burton
Roland Landriga~
Joseph Maruca•
Derek and Cynthia Ntblo
Leon East
Ronald Kennedy
Hal Thomas
Catherine and Oliver Eaton
Betty Storch
Scott Whitehouse
Ellen Borchsenius
Ed and Vivh1n Thorpe
Lars De Jounge
Lois M. Halligan
Lloyd and Jackie Lokka
Margaret Armstrong
Carrie Slayback
Mr. and Mn. Mclaren Stewart
William Sangster
Truman Lattin
C. Edward Wolfe
Vincent Fennelly
Kay Osborne
Janice Del F 1acco
Peggy Hillis
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Wassall
Michael Vail
Seymour Beek
Patricia A. Hunter
Joan F. Wren
Patricia H. Porto
Lois Brockmeyer
Dottle Lewis
Helen and Geoffroy Collins
Mt. and Mrs. Frederick Hooper
Marff'• Larson
Veronica A. Kitchen
Mathew R. Kenney
Margaret Marv Butt
Martha Lou Thomas
Alberta S. Tackaberrv
Louise S. Scofield
Ann Gilman
Stndre Bach
Alan Hirasuna
Jim" J. Hodge, MD.
I
1
l ·TUCI
TAPES
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PRICE
DAILY Pa.Of J J . .
Keep Hubby.Alive .!Jy ~n:forcing Ru~-0 1 r •
• ,... cmw COMME»T: Many fema16 • 'tlelp prevent emphysema and and undetncaUonJ.n1 ud )'OU
Dear Dr. lleblcnilaa: Ttd.na to tHders ot the column wril.6 DOCTiOR IN 1 u o I canc er. Tr yi o • to have reaons sulftdent to u · worey aboatl I U.p lblnktna ukioc, "Why do you keep atreu-' ·I ~ neu\raD.Je his pcepwes iii.~· plam wb)' IDJD'I Ute upectucy
· tbat •eeol"dlnt to stattatJca J'U m1 •AYS tbe man ol tbe famll,y THE HOUS.:!1 neu an.d bot:D. . life m~ · p la about wten ,.eara lower tbaJl be a wldDw IOUl• day. 1n 4ther' can live loft&er? Ia lt Oftly the ~ prevent aulclde. woman~. -· h:.11
• Ira my bmbud wtte't job to ~ her busband Ou ..Uma~ la that atleaal 40 To keep YoUI' bmband allTif l•"I
WUldleMiiinlio. !> aUv•Ufowaboutwayatoke.p• port.1,aboutC11»Ullrdofthela ;pertea ofthdaexcUtfeten(ein loncer, Mn. F., leep the1.,<H
llatt lblallta1 about lt aJ1Ye1" d.Wereuce ln mcrtalit,y ls d~ to mortalllt 11 due to eotona.ry th1np In mind -and do ~:J'{ ~ depru .. 1 me. 1 don't look Y~-~~l Ifni. 1"., &h'es me the foUowlnt: meo have a beart dlaeaae. Tbe l"USOQ man darndest to help neutralise tbd•
forwud to lt'tin~tboat b1m. the oppunU111ty to answer: It's .llleher nt.e of l\lldtle. clrrbosb. ia mQNJmJDI t. heart aUacb la bebnior patterna that threetdO 1
What can l do to b.lna allve because, u )'OQ say, man la lo of th• Unr, acelclenta, em· • his eo ary-pl'olle behi*vior t· him. 'jq Sonrer thaa bJa aYWap hie es· 1reater daneer ot dYtna than ls pbyeema and luq cancer. ~: teosiao·fillllld. a ve, m ~cyt h11 wlte. And there Ja much Speclflcally, Uten, how can ~ve. btd·wor I way '
We are only tn our 40IJ but I worn.a can do to try to keep her you help JOW' buabaod? Cuttinl oi life.
hope we can sWl be toptber ln man lllve longer. down 00 alcohol intake wUl pre-
our 70I. Or, am I asldn1 for too vent clrrbosls Jnd ioad acct· ADD TBJS TO b&blt.1 of bard
mucb? -Mn. I'. dents; cutilJll out ~I wW drinki.n&. smoldne. overeaUne
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RICOIO RUM
o'fiiif i GiN
DillilW L-. .., ..
HARIOFF VODKA
OIMEI I · Til TV
lr.'ftl!llll!!l'~.,.R.ECORD ALBUMS
3~
FASHION KNIT
4-Pl Y ACRYLIC
KNlnlNG YARN
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I 1fl MAJOR LABEL LP RECORDS , , ,
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REG. 73« t I
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WIND EX
GLASS CLEANER
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PVIWC NOTICE PUBUC N01'1CE PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE
,,,.."
PUBLIC NOTICE
\
I
I
ROMANCE TAKEN ON 1,000-MJLE WALK
Kenney KlnMt, Judy F91Zln, rf9ht. and Daughter
'11 MICl(.!t! ..... ~·~!f ING 00 I i
•
BECAUSE 1'tlKE IS AGAINST ANY FURTHER •
EXPANSION =1 OF THE AIRPORT •
~' PLEASE JOIN THEM •
• Michael C. Gering for City Council Committee II
•
270 Newport Center Drive, Newport Be.ch, C811fomla 92660 •
Hugh Grant. Treasurer
.. 11111111111111111111111111111•
' DAILY Pl.DI' AJ3 .
Love His DeStinlltion Crackdown
Urged by
Kennedy Suitor's Wooing 'Taken a Step at a Time
l)ALY CITY CAP) -Ef.lbteen bllstert. '850
mileJ and 3Z cans of tbOt ~wder later. Kenney
Kmtoer ..,. notbi.t• wru st,.op tilm trom biking
1,000 m.Uee to'"° t.M woman be low.. Not~ buvy competWon.
Klnlner, 60, tu.med bla back cm bJ8 au station
In the Loa Angel•• County community of
Calabuu and let out March 10 lot Medford, Ore., to win tbe band of Judy Fay Zin. ·
"'l'M IN LO~wrru TUE woman. l 'm me.k·
Ing tbla walk to impress on her bow much 1 want
her to marry me,'' Kinaner said durtn1 a rest ~P
in lhlJ San Francisco suburb.
He said he met his 31).year~ld name at a
singles party in Medford about a year ago and
courted ber several months. Both are di voreed.
Kinaner bas six children, and she has one.
"She uid she wanted a litUe time to t.h1nk
about rna.nyin1 me," be aaid
Granting her wish, be flew home and promised
he'd be back.
••1 WANTED MY RET1JRN TO be very
special. I believe in love, and chivalry, ud
romance . • • l imagine no ot&er woman ln the
country can aay that her man would walk a
lhouaand mllels to show his love."
Klnsner baahad lo deal with bothfootache and
heartache in lugging lais 32·pouod backpack, with
seven pounds of roadmaps, about 18 miles a day.
One other tblng he's also going to have lo deal
with is-Cluck.
· "J'm Chuck Nelaon. I'm Judy'• flance.'' said
J
l{onor Set For Floor
J. Robert Floor of Fluor, recipient of the
Corona del Mar, ptesi-asaociatioo'a Asa V. Call
dent of the Fluor Corporation, will be Achievement Award,
honored April 16 at the bas served u cha.tfman
annual award.II luncheon of the USC Board of of the USC Alumni As-aoctation. t.rusteessixyean.
PAID POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT
"the man wbo ~l"ed the pbo~ when a reporter
rang Ms. Zin'• bO~. ·
· NELSON, & i1-YQ&·OLD Ore100 ·•late emplo~ aald Khuner WW find wbeD t.. leta lo
Medfont tbat Ms. Zin ha said het bOuae an plans to take ber U.year...old clauebter ud leue town
wtt.b b1m lOl>I before the lcmillck. •al.ker ateps
ACJ'Oll the border. •
· And the much·soatht-afler Ma. Zin bad Udt to
say: "l'm not t.ota11y certain Just what's aotn1 lo
happen. But I t.h1nk when Kenney &eta heft. it 'a
sate to aay lhlngJ aren't goina to be quite the
same."
But Kinsner faid be 'a ready to deal with the
terrain. the 1,000 mlles and even a love triancle.
He plans to s,lroll Into Medford abOut April 22.
"I heard about lbia guy named Chuck," be
said. "But I'm dot giving up my walk. As far as
I'm coocemed, Judy bas promised to wait for
me ... I plan to keep my faith, and on}y hope
Judy will keep her word."
WASHINGTON
(AP) -Seo. Edward •
.Kennedy W1lD1a tbe IO•·
ernment to It.op )>usi-neaamen from taldnc
tax deductiom for ualD&
corporJte plane• on
"luxury apoitlnf event
trips" like the Masters
Golf tournament and tbe
Kentucky Derby.
The Maaaacbuaetta
Democrat aeot a letter
to Internal Revenue
Servlce CommlJaloner
Jerome Kurtz asking
him to crack down on
"blgblJit visible abuaes of
the tax system . • • that
have highly adverse ef-
fects on tbe morale of
ordioary taxpayers."
•Spiral sliced for easy serving
• • Honey 'n Splce Glaze •Cooked 30 hours · tl 11 Olt·gr• () • Nationwide shipping serv1ce H L lt; (; u10~ • • · , Full service Delicatessen · 6'DJey • 01d world cneese Shop . WI'; ~ •Sandwiches to go.
tAg!!5'~"!~~s .............
. Made from 041r Hon.y e.~ Hal"n Ma~ De41ck>u9 Sa~ or Event Snack·
1 1u
• 1700 .. CO.UT INrY • c..r-......... PMOAI 67).ffOO•
• , · Other locatJons • • •
·~ EJ Toro (Now p.>enJ. Orange, Palm Springs, L• Habra
POSITIVE PEOPLE ARE VOTING FOR
LUCILLE KUEHN FOR CITY COUNCIL
In Welt New~ .. ""I
friend• •"4 I •r• poaftlve that Luc:ua.
ku9"n Me.doM-her
ho••••tk. W•'t• tortunale t6 beve Mt.
SUZANNE RUDO
Hai.el L Jones
Soencw E. Covert. Jr ...
Aio.tf lwer
Florence Amott
Timothy L Strader
T. Phillips Morgan
.... Tom & Betsy Tweddefl
Wllltam C. Ring
Jane a Ch8'1e6 Mosmann
Harvey & Peggy Tafe
Stuart~
Rlchatd Othmet
Ann & Mlle. Mo!Jt'ld
Agnet BlomQuilt
Willlam 0. LUlk
Qr. and Mrs. e. H. Kr8UM
M.non.Neal Anabel I John Konwiaer
Sara G. Ramsey
Barney LMtcl
OtMd H. Stehnetz
Tom Pec:Mnl*lgh
Don C. HamlJton
Betty DotltJa
Jaci( JakCltcy
Sharon & Jelrv Klno
ht« Ven Schultze
Ruth M. l<ahn ~aney Zlnltl'l8YW Otting
Barbara & Hsry G8f'tler
Tony a Ginger Allen
David Emmet
TomC-.V e.,,,.,.a 0urtcee John J. F.-mer
Nigel & a.tty Baltev
Taft>/ COlfow Fl'llnk a tMly Jlw\k
J8ne & lYINft Feulkntt' Don•~-~t:::,-=--IAu.W. a....o.:~J:..._ v &c.-~ ·Pttao.1.....-... ZldaTawr .
ClydeZAMlh NonnanC.WlllMr
8#tMlrl AJ.tNt
Ann 8loen Fi.tcher
Guy I<. Clal,. ~E.Johnaon Giana W1U1 Seelye
Mrt. ai.tile Ultnwn
Aobert w . .,." w. D. HWIOock Mtc.bMt :.l awtltllreoft 8.~
•John 1 u•-•••• Una Jim Woad Hlf'lf.C & Ill 9tMNI ·e-1:-a.Me a O\lclmln
Nathalie MdltUd
Jamee P. Felton
Marge Andenon
Same.,,..
Cht1sH~ Sata I Don Regan
JeanLeelle Jamet M. ,,.,.
Molly' Lee Lyon Mr. i Mtl.AAMrt Kelch
M.,pret 8"fn WlllWWlde
Ralph 0 . Arneeon ~~~Devine Werner 8ctnm ~
~.tvtna • 9cJt; Mllllld M.VlQcent~ .... Mr.&~~8'911e
Mr. I Mr& 8ruce E. Nott
Ubby Totlln ·• Adelfe Z. MMel1 Thomat P. Walker
Beth Koch
Dlek SPoCMI"
John R. Payne
Mr. l Mrs. Richard
McFar1and Marian I .Md< Shea
Herman Kimmel
Norm Axene Jane & Wiii Berta
Michael Get1no
George 8111911
Kalman & Merge SpenClcb
George CD6<m
Mary Beff JonnlOn
Thomas A. BlatGlfy
Mel Grau
John J. Elllott
Judith Bland
Sally JoMIOn
Richard E. Handv
Florence L Co*rg
Jane R. Bord Georde a Edl1tt Friedl Bob' Ruth AIV' ~ Frank l Atlol'f'emer ~nO I~ Eba'llno Mra. R. P .. ShM
Lloyd I.A""' Mlf'lffold
Clara ludltl.• TomT.&.w
Bill a Edna Blurod<
My trfendt elid I In
Westefttl look fOf._d
to ¥OtaCll tor ......
t(Mltft *9UM aM
I• fair, rMlonal •nd •••
On The Balboa Pen-
nln•ula, the poUtlv.
people pick Lltdllet
She haa wortced to ,...
duce ..... Md Ulat'•
.fotpo.Wv..
Poaltlw people on
B•tboa l•t•nd
reapec:t tM COUf•t•
of Lucille ICM•"n.
W•'r• urgln1 •vet·
yohe to VOC.toiftW.
Dick Spooner
Elizlbettl T. Wlncitler
QIMd and Ger1 Sandor
M-. s1d Mrs. Robert Hilchey
NMcy and John Curci
Phil and Bette Tozer
Or. Gerald S. Slur .
Km, w. Brown .•
.$11n>n and Bill Haz-lnk.el ~ s. )!tleelfr: PWieerOobtia
Nta Wld Robel't M. Wolff ~Kelly
BAnbt<Mhl • • ..
LI -K ' ~fem c:1gden '"'! ~ ..... ,.,..."-nd eon-••n•bh ,. . • ..... ,._ and Pat Ren-. a.,. Kiimer
~Shafer
Glenn Mertin
Mary L. Rk:hmond
Hf.I Pinchlo Pt. & Mra. Norman Shr1fter
A. James Clin~
8tveffy Murc:hlaon ~· Ken8nokie Robert f..~l 09".Y'•u.e
Kathy Miiier
Georo-wtr'dtlf'
Robet't E. l:itn1I • Jane I Olnton ~I eruce A. oe.o,,
Richard Wlllarnl
• Oon Cl.tc. Paula M. Gllarnln
Harry I.~
·Alan W. Pwttla
Mr.and ....
.-,,., Stwt>IUOlf °'· endMrl. • • Robert lmbemtno
... end~' &lftN.~ ~end •.
W..Bicll* .....
..
Bna ~ WllllaMe • •
o.td ErioKu.hn .
Poaltlve People In
Shorecllff• reapect
Luclll• Kuehn'• ••·
pertence. We'll vote
for her egajn.
• HARRIETT WITMl!R
If I
The Potlftlve People I
know .. an wtlng
for LucJll• Kuehn
becau•• aft• get•
\hlnp ciof?e·
GRANT HOWALD
R. F. Stoessel
Bob Milum
0. W. (01ck} Richard
PerTrebl•
RudY Baron
Jane & Dick Croul
E W Dakin
Gordon H. West
M-. and Mrs.
A L Zlmmann1n
Bob and
Doris Underwood
Eugene and
~Chambers
M-. and Mrs.
J. Mathew Osborne Sherry Lopez
8111 Johnson
Henren Basmaclyan
Patl<rolle Jeff Marks
Donald 0 . Harwood
Jean L l<ftne
.Margaret H. Gibson
Betty F. Gildea
Doroth .. Sheely
MaryP...an
Mr. & Mrs. C. M. Gepfett c
Nancy L. Phelps
cartet McDonald
Ruth & Dick Nelaon
Jeanne l Kent Wanlass
Mrs. Henry M. Ullman
Jim & Bun<e Hemngton
Barbara Brock
J
II~
I •1
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I
t ,
•'Tbat's bids 09el' there;• a
middle-a.Jed ma aald to bis
teen-aee son, pointlnf. •'That's
ogan. lie WU the en.test."
Word spread over the Aupt.a
alio.olll "COUl'H llke a brD&b
fire.
Edge Milmmkee
Lakers Clinch
Playoff Berth
MILWAUKEE <AP> -The
emotional frenzy justified coach
Don Nelson's billing that this
-would be bis Milwaukee Bucks'.
most important game or the
se as()n . but the chief
benefic1ar1es were the Los
Angeles Lakers.
And th e Golden Stale
W arriora, still ch,asing the Bucks
for the ai:'xth and final National
askctbaU Association Western
Conference playoff spot, didn't
~o badly either Tuesday night.
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, in bis
first game here since he
achteved national notoriety ror
having flattened Bucks rookie
Kent Benson with a sucker
punch an the s eason opener,
blunted a Milwaukee comeback
by scoring nme of his 27 polOts
m lhe fourth QUfirter.
Adrian Danlley sank one of
l WO rrce throws With eight
seconds left, assuring a 103·102
Los An geles victory as the
J.,akers clinched a playoff berth
"In some respects, it was
bigger ror us," Lakers coach
Jerry West srud. "We had not
t>een playing well in our last two
games. The Bucks hadn't been
plafing well, but they had been
'win"nlng. That's• si,n of a lood
team. We're good and we had
be.en playing hard, but we hadn't
been wtnnin&. 1'bat ~ould J>e a
refiection oo lbe c9a:cb . • •
Congress
~ M111ls 1V
s 'Blackouts
' WASHINGTON <AP> -Pro
football fans have been assured they wl11 have an opportunity to
•·atch their local heroes on
television if the stadium 1s a
sellout -at lt!ast for the next
two years
Con~s has been mformed
by National Foo~all League
Commissioner Pele R~elle that
the NFL will oontinue its policy or t.elevJSiog home gam\'S locally
during the 1978 and 19'79 season
1f there is a sellout 72 hours
before kickoff
Despite the assurances, the
chairmen of the Senate and
H o u se commun ic ation s
subcommittees said Tuesday
that they mtend to proceed with
legislation to ena<!t. the blackout
ban into law and not rely on
voluntary action.
St!n Ernest F . Hollings,
D·S C.. said his subcommntee "will almost certalnlY conduct
hearings on the and·blackout
legislation in the near future
wilb a view toward resolvin1 the
issue for all sports.
"I 'm happy the NFL bas
J&reed to continue lbe
.anti-blackout plan, but lhis is an
issue ta.dog all sports, and
obvioully C.aresa ls got.ne to Jine to begin examining so.,e of
the legislaUve propqsals and
come Up with a blll every()Oe
.can JtVc with,·• Hollin&S sald
Blg as the victory was for the
Lakers, the defeat undeniably
was cosUy to the Buclts, who by
winning would have moved
ahead of Los Angeles in the
running for the conference's
fifth playoff spot
Both teams would have had
4~·36 records, but the Bucks
would have had a better record
within the c:onference, and hence
a possible playoff advantage
should the teams wind up wilh
identical records.
And the Warriors, who beat
Kansas City 130-119, moved to
within ooe game of the Bucks in
the race for the final playoff
berth. Both teams have three
games left. and a complicated
tie-breaking formula would
apply should they tie.
Abdul·Jabbar and Benson
insisted they held no animosity,
and Abdul-Jabbar received a
surprisingly mild reception from
the rans who had cheered him
when he led the Bucks to their
only NBA championship 10 1971
There were no temper flareups
during the game, and
Abdul-Jabbar was accorded
.almost as many cheers as boos
durihg pregame introductions.
"The fans Here ;ilways have
been very fair to me,··
Abdul-Jabbar saul. ..They're
probably better d~i hero
than any other because they're
more C'tmlpasslonate. They know
about the beatlnp I take."
BeDIOtl played Abdat-.Jabbar
with abandon, although th41
Lale.er 11uperstar bad a marked
.statistical advantage for the
only period when they were
matched headon -tbe last 19:36
of the game. Abdul·J abbar
scored 13 pointa in that stretch,
while Benson had but six for the
nicht.
LOS uou.•~ I 1GJ) -o.ntley 14, Ftlrd 2. Al>-
""' .J•)Oar t1, HWMn 1', MIWOft 20, Scott • w11u<u , c:.rr s, Rotitx11i r-.1. o t.17 lOJ
MILWAute•• 11021 -.,..._ 17, Meyen 1S Gl<tNlll 10, 8UCJ17w 10, il'llntert14, llf'l•l'Nn 17'
S.nlOll •. Enall•> Toi.ls41•11102.
Los ""9e•• n J1 u 11-•a:J MllWMIU• 23 lS 31 23-'°1
"oulfll OU'I -,._,_ Tottt IOulS -loft ""9tiM
II, Mllw•11• .. 1' A -10,'31
.
as Ev.er With. Eans
Geae Serasen. the amaiing
Mptde arlall who scored a
double eagle in wllltliAC tile
lla1ters isl 1935. ·~ Jaet . Nicklaus bas a c.b.IDce. ••
T~ ii the ailht of tbe t.ra.d.tt.lonal MINn Cbempions dlnner. Winners of this
preaU1loua tournament ha\ll
tbeh' &reen coats out of tDDth
balls aM toalt each other in
beadY wlne. Saraim. 78, was there in abort
pants, bouncier than the
rei1nla1 champion, Tom
Wateon, 28. Nlc~aus bad to
thumb tbrougl\ five ja.:kets,
Ttnaiq from f2 lat t.o fas allm.
Arllie Palmer picktd tbe
roomlelt one ct his 'four. Sam
Snead and Jiuuny Demaret
found it hard t.o get a eOOCl fit
from any ot their Uiree.
llut most of the attention centered oo .. Tbe Man." It wu
the tint appearance at the
dinner for Hopn since bis
dramatic third-round 66 in 1967,
altbou#l he new tn briefly in
1972 to receive a writers' award.
Accompanied by bis Texas
buddies. Demaret and Jack
9\lrke Jr., Uo1an went to the
wblt• tourit.ament house to get
hi.I credeDUals, ate lunch With
chairman 8lll Lane, then took a
cart on il tour of the coune he
muteredin ~land 1953 after a 11ear·fataJ aut.o accident.
lh •till limps from the
ravaaes of shattered bones and
sblewa ii\ his left knee.
"This cranky knee -1 can't
throw myself into the ball any
more," beapoloaized.
He insists be is not playing
well, repeats that he will not
See Hogan, Pat• B·J
A~ l'ttelo
BEN HOGAN (LEFT) TALKS WITH GENE SARAZEN (CENTER) AND JACK 8UR1<E , JR.
S~attle, Minnesota Open
Ma j~r lt~ague Seaso~
S.f;ATTL <4P> ~
Minnesot.a'I I>~ Goltz asnd
Glenn Abbott ol Seattle wiU be
the •tarting pltebera and Hall of
Famer Joe DiMaggio is
scheduled to throw out the first
ball tonight when the Twins fa~ the Mariners in the openJnit
game of the 1978 major league
baseball season.
Houston and Cincinnati open
the National Leaaue season
Thunday with J . R . Richard
starting for the Aatros and Tom
Seaver working fol' the Reds.
Seaver bas won six e>pen.\ng-day
usignments in the. last seven
years, all of them for the New
York Mets. Richard won 18
games last season, four of them
agalost the Reds.
Tbe relt)aintng National
&ue &.eams open OD ... FJi<!!Y wt }\ ~r American lAUtfOe
ope11et5 scheduled throughout
the weekend.
Goltz, 3)..11 in 1!117, was one of
only thTeO 20-game winners in
the American League last
season and Abbott, 12·13 last
year, emerged as the ace of the
expansionist Seattle pitching
staff.
Cincinnati, the oldest
franchise in the major leagues,
haa traditionally hosted the
opening ga me but the
Seattle-Minnesota contest will
beat the Reds \o the runch. Dick
Wagner, exe-c u ive vice
president and general manager
of the club, says he really
doesn't mind.
"We're the c lub that
traditionally opens the National
League season," s aid Wagrier
"They (the AL) could · open at
Christmas and it wouldn't
bother me one btl. · ·
There are ma)or personnel
changes in both leagues.
Boston, pursuing the World
Champion Yankees in the
American L eagu e East.
strengthened its pitching staff
with the acquis ition of
free-agent Mike Torrez from the
Yanks and Dennis Eckersley.
who came over in a six-player
trade with Cleveland last week.
The Yankees added free-agent
relievers Rieb Goss.age and
Rawly' East.wick, Detroit 1s
introducing a rookie double-play
combinaUon of second baseman
Lou Whitaker and shortstop )illU TUN~ll. Cleveltmd
acquired rookie phenom Tex
Cbx and pitchers Rick Wl,!ie and
Mike Paxton in the Eckersley
trade and veteran desianated
hiller Willie Horton.
Defending AL West champion
Kansas City has three exciting
rookies, first baseman-outfielder
Clint Hurdle, infielder U. L.
W asbingt.on and ouUlelder Willie
Wilson. Texas added free-agent
s lugger Richie Zisk as
designated hitter and acqWred
outfielder Al Oliver and pitcher
Jon Matlack in an 11-player,
four.club winter trade
The Chicago White Sox lost
Zisk and Oscar Gamble. who
signed with San Diego. via free
agency but replaced them with
outfielder Bobby Bonds and OH
Ron Blomberg.
Jn the National League, the
major new faces include
Ga mble at San J)ieeo.
ex-Baltimore pitchers Rudy
May and Ross Grimsley at
Montreal, first baseinan Willie
Montanez and outfielders Ken
Henderson and Elliott Maddox
with the New York Mets .
reliever Terry Forster with the
champion Los Angeles Dodgers,
pitcher Berl Blyleven with
Pittsburgh, and pitcher Vida
Blue with San Francisco
Th e r e are thre e n ew
managers with Roger Craig at
San Diego, Bobby Cox in Atlanta
and Georae Bamberger with
Milwaukee. I
l
'Phillies'
Pap-oll
Is No. I
CLEARWATER, J'l&. <AP> -
When 141ke Scbinlch pcaJls OD his
new double.lmtt uniform Fstw
night. be will be playtngtlu!ftnt ot 162 games worth $3,'58.79
eacb. ·
That is what the Phlllles•Wnt
baseman and newly •.PPOmt.d
captaln eanis for each nplar
seaaon 1ame. Thal ts what he
got lut year and what be will
get for the next ftve leUGlll.
Schmidt ia the highest paid
Phillies player and one of the
highest paid platen in baseball
Outfielder Gre1 Lusinati, by
comparison, earns $1,851.85 per
eame. Pitc.hel' Ste~e. 'Carlton
gets $1,234.57 !or every pme the
team plays, but only works
every fourth O'r fifth day.
Accordinc to Major League
Baseball Players Association
records obtained by the
Wilmington Evening Journal.
Schmidt ea.ms $560,000 per year.
Luzinski receives $300,000 and
Carlt.on $200,000.
By comparison, rookies Randy
Lerch and Warren Brusstar
each earned th& m inimum
, major league salary of $19,000
last year.
TOP FIGURE IN NL
The Phillies paid the players
, on their 25-man rotter $3,390,250
an average of $135,810 per
player an 1977, the top Cigure
an the National Lea1ue.
For the NL playoffs, each
player received about $9,000.
Schmidt signed a six-year
contract last spring, for S560,000
each year through 1982. He is
guaranteed the salary.
There 1s a no-trade provision
for the first four years, and
Si'?;0,000 is deferred each year
with interest.
Luzinski signed a five·year
l'Ontract in the winter of 1977, for
S300,000 each yeor. He also has
the salary guarantee provision
and there is a no-trade clause
through 1979.
Carlton, the NL's Cy Young
Award winner in 1977 ,
renegotiated la.st year, signing a
five-year agreement at $200,000
through 1981. He ~ ~uaranteed
the salaty.
OTHE.ll SAL.\RIES
ller"'s a st of other top
1 Pblllie,, aod their salaries:
Bob Boone -catcher. signed
a three-year contract through
1979, for $150,000 in 1977 and
1978, and $160,000 in 1979.
Larry Bowa -shortstop, a
six·year contract, 1977·1982. He
earned $120,000 in urn. will get
$150,000 each of the next five
years. He is 1uaranteed the
s alary and $15,000 will be
deferred each year.
Larry Christenson -pitcher,
three-year agreement, for
$80,000 m 1977, $1.00,000 in 1978
and $120,000 in 1919. He has the
salary guarailt.ee provision.
Barry Foote -catcher.
Cive-year eontract, 1977·1981. He
earned $120,000 last year~ wlll
get Sl40,000 this year, $160,000 in
1978 ($180,000 10 1979) and
S200,000 in 1981 and is
guaranteed the salary.
Gelle Garber -reliever,
three-year contract. 1977·1979 -
$150,000 in 1B77, $140,000 in 1978
and 1919. Is guaranteed the
salary.
Richie Hebner -When the
See PhllUn, Page B·3
Mayberry Traded
KANSAS CITY. Mo. -The
Kansas City Royals traded first
baseman John Mayberry to the
Tol'ortlo Blue Jay& for a player
to be selected later 1 team
officials confirmed Tuesaay.
NtidadoreS Seek 'Team ·Title
"
-. .
• .
bM.VN.OT
BJ BBNIE CASTILLO ... ..., .... ~-
For a matcb bltW'MD two ot
tbo top.~ team.1 ID CIP,
t.pna Jtacb'1 four.tam• m;.
to?1 ~ mpt ewer tbe bait Triton• of San Clement. wu leis tlaan an artistic aucceu.
"We wwe tenae and they were flat." mmed eoacb 11th Dun-.
can of Uae Art.lits, wbo 1a1Ded
tole~ of th8 South Coast ·League lead with the J.8.14, .. 15.
J.5.11, J.5.2 verdict before a crowd
of o•er500 . .. The ftnt game wu ane ...-or
after aDGCher. There were five
points scored be!ore the first
Saddleback
Thompson's Bat
Leads Oile-rs, 10-3
Beats SD,
'Bain, 4-2
SAii DISGC>-Tony Nlcro
came from the })aDpen to Dbl out
a flte and enable Saddleback
College to Jog • ._2 victory over
host San Diego Qty TQesdu in
Jliaaton Conlennce b.,.ball
play.
ANYONE'S BALL -Lori Salmon ( 14)
stniggles to control the ball for Mission
Viejo, under resistance from Mary
Warhop (30) of Rubidoux. In the wings
Dtllr ......... .., .... ,..,.
aro Mlsslan Viejo's Renee Redfern <43>
and Jeanne Be au prey < 32). who
spearheaded the DiabJfls' victory by con-tributing 28 points.
Diahlos Collect, 45-39
By HOWARD L. HANDY
Of ... OIWfy PltM ""' Jeanne Beauprey scored 28
points, had five steals and
played an outstanding game on
defense to lead Mission Viejo
Hlgh t.o a 45-39 flnst round vic-
torv over vi<ing Rubidoux Wgn
<Riverside) in first round CIF
3-A girls basketball playoff ac-
ftion Tuesda,)l night.
Mission Viejo's Diablos (22-1>.
..-inners of the Soutfl Coast League championship, will play
Artesia lngb (17-.C) Friday in a
second round pla:votr tilt. The
game will be at Arteala Friday.
Beauprey, Mission Viejo's
leading scorer with a 21.6
averaee going into the playoffs,
was the key tQ the victory. She
received help on two key steals
late in the act.ion when Rubidoux
pulled to within three polnta with
30 seconds remaining.
Kim Cam>U took the first and
was fouled but missed at the
free throw line. Then Lori
Salmon gr~bbed tht: ball from the bandS of ux player
and was f e with six secoods to play.
Rubidoux entered the game
with an 18-2 season re«lrd but a
borreftdous first ball sbooUng
percentage (\l,~~,!Plnst. the
tleht Mlsstb'ri v1ejo zone
defense proved the difference in
the end.
Wbeo..tori Leos started bitting
ID the comer late in the tblrd
period and eonttnued into the
fourth stanza, lt appeared
Rubidoux might pull It out. But
the closest the Falcons could
come was three points, the first
time at 40-37 with 3:27 lef\.
Mission Viejo shot 34.8 percent
for the game while Rubidoux
improved its mark to 25 pettent
afttr the ~ half. In the matter or turnovers, Mission Viejo corn-
mttted 21 to 24 for the Fak·ons.
Girls' Baskethall
CtlM, Mater Dei,
' Ocean .J'iew Roll
Ocean V1ew Ht1b School
<Ru:ntlqton Beach)· MU'Prlsed
host La B.abra, Corona del Mar
toppled Ml.raleste and Mater Dei
<Santa Aba) defeated San
Bern ardlno in girls CIF
baaketball playof( action
TUH'1'1 night.
Ocean View, a i.am composed
of four aopbomorH and one
b'eshmaa, won on a free thtow
by Norma Lelbfrltd wlth 15
seconds to play over the more
experienced Lii Habra quintet.
Ocean View will draw a home
assignment Friday nt1&..1 agai,nst
Righetti (Santa Maria) In I-A
second round play.
'.
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J ean Hershberger had four
steals for the Diabloa but only
hit slx point.a, well below her
season average of 12.9 per Ult.
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Huatln1toD Beach Hlgb's
Ollen p1Ded anotber half game
in the &met Leal\le bueball
standlnp over their nearett
rlvab 1'amda1 night with a lo-3
romp over Fountain Valley at
Mlle Sq~. Park.
The OUeu, with Rico
Tbompeon supplying most Of the
firepower, lluised out 11 blta, ln
addiUon to rec:etvtna n1De tree
puses.
l"ouataln Valley'• defense
coughed up tour erron and two
of tboae accounted for
HunUngton Beach talllea.
Huntmatm Beach jumped on
Fountain Valley pltcbtn& in tbe
fl.nit lanln& with the aid of three
walb, a sacrtllce fiy by Tom
Samperi, an rbl 1ln1le from
Shawn Gill and one of Fountain
Valley's miscues.
ThomptOll drilled an rbi single
in the fourth lnning and laced a
two-run triple in the fifth frame
to put the game out of hand.
Rod Stultz added an rbi sln&fe
and the Oilers picked up another
t.aUy with the help Of a Fountain
Valley error.
Steve Vandenbusch adde<l a
two-run single in the sixth frame
for the Oilers.
FountalD VaUey's offense
mustered alngle taWes ln the
first two l.oninp on an rbi single
Corona del ¥ar, down at
halftime by 31-19. rallle<l In the
second baJC to poet a 54·46
decision over bost Miraleate
<Pa.JOI Verdes). Llada Goeael did an outatandll}g Job on
defense and the CdM scoring
trio of GoeegeJ, Robbie Torres
and KriaUe Jtcnttell came on
It.reel lD tile Mcoftd half, Cd• &oats Santa Marla FridQ'bilbt (3-A) ln a aecond
round p,ale.
Katb1 aw acorec1 u points
and did an outatandln1 Job on
deleDH to lead Mater :o.111 No.
I affded llon.arcba (._A)to a
72-51 victory over vlaltln1 San
Bernardlllo.
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TAKINQ AIM -Kim Carroll (51) goes up for a shot
against opposition from Rubldoux's Donna Hammond
(32) and Orleatta Walker (23). Milalon VJejo held off a
late rally to win the CIF flrat.-rou.nd playOU. ~a
Lori tlnntda and elm W11mot
did a IOOd Job oa U.e lnslde controlllna the bo&rda. Mater
Det Pla1I at San Marcoe CSanta
Bartiara> 1l'rlda.1 r.dlbt tn eecond round acdaD. •
Marl•• IJ11b'1 Vlltln11
(Runtautm BMcb), dn>pped a
41·41 cleclelon to boat San
Gabri ID tbelr ~r tn 4·A
competltlon and wnre
" I
Oilers . Erupt . In 80·23 VII'
•••D 't ':,,~eetec1 1lnee MOCll'fMa t a .. 11 MMOQ
record and • lmk>r ... ICIUd '° do baWe wttb coaoh Joaan.e
Kell9n'• »-aOUen.
Wflat waa unoxpeated wefl the
earl1 put tll tbe 1ame wbtch uw the lnftd1q Wilde• ltap
lntoaNAud. • '
At tbat Juncture t1"t "f'OJctno cametoute.
With l w.._, .
lhlm>Wt Qe.,t c.tP ad Kelli Locnat lli'nlcDDI the paints
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Anteaters,
SC Netters
Vie Tonight
Two of the flneat collegiate
tennis teams in Southern
California club today u UC
Irvine (8-2) hosts USC (S-0) in a
com blaation indoor·outdoor
match.
The acUon began this after-
noon with outdoor matcbee, and
moves btdoon at 6:30 for the top
two singles matcbel and 1be No.
1 doubles d\lel.
An l:ndoor tennis surface wl1l
be lnstalle<l speclflcall)' for the
match inside Crawford Hall.
The doubles confrontation
should be a hishllgbt, since each
team bouta a returning NCAA champion.
UC Irvine has Division II
doubles champ Jeff Williams, who won hJs tiUe last season
with CWt &lalder. Stalder has
been botberiMI by injuries this
season and UCI coach Myron
McNamara says be may place
Matt Wooldridge la the top
doubles aPot today. •
Wooldridge already plays No.
1 slngtea tor the AnteaW!ra. USC's returning champ is
Cbria Lew, wbo t.eamed with
Bruce Manscm, last season to win
the Division l doubles crown. Man.son bas since turned pro.
The game wa lllterTaJMct ft~
tJmet due to rain, but t6e storm
wasn't ,...._t and the lut In·
nlnt .,41 pla1ed ln sumtdne
The ~alttng GaucbQs were
nuralq a 1-1 lead in tbe llzth ln·
ntn1 aa.l 6an Dle&O' manaaed to
put ~ on aecoad acf third
with none out wben Nlll'O got his call.
Tbe rel.lner tot bl.a flrst bat· ter to pop out, then mtenttoa•lly
walked the next to set up a l*Si· ble doUble pt.y. lastead, Nigro
struck out the th1rd b.uer and sot the next to fly out to right,
ending tbe threat without
dam ace.
Saddlebeck picked up a little
breathing room in the seventh
inning when Ruben Candelaria
hit a drive to center that eot past
a diving outfielder, enabling
Candelaria to circle the bases.
The homer came with Kellh
Vranesb aboard and staked Sad-
dleback to a 4-1 lead. San Diego
City added an unearne<l run ln
tbe elahth.
Howie Houk scored Sad·
dleback's first nm wbea a wild
pitch a1Jpwd bho to come in
from third, and Brad Hester
tallied lbe second run a couple of
Janlags later. Hester aiocled.
moved to tb1rd on a sac:rillce
and wild pitch, th~n came home on Hugh Austin's fly out to
center.
Olher games lnvolvio& Oranee
Coast area comntunlty colleges
were rained out. Golden West
College's Southern Cal Con-
ference tltf at Los Angeles City
College was reset for Friday.
And Orange Coast College and
Mt. San Antonio College will try
again Monday. at OCC in South
Coast Conference play:
......... 21»
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Padres Top Angels;
.nqe~s Fall Again
YUMA (AP) -Daff Wlnfte1d
19Cked a thne-nm homer. a.car Gamble added a N1r of eo1o
sbota and the ~ Dleto Padres
1ta1ecl a late rlllY to Dip U.e
Callloraia An.cell t-7 tn an ex-
hibition buebirl1ame Tuesday.
CallfOrn.l• pltcber Don Aue. in bla flnal tuneup of the sptt~.
allowed five runs, cave up ftve
blts;"walked seven and s~k
out five. Aaee, obtained bom Bolten
for Jerry Re1111 ln a deal ebat
also involved ouUlelder Rick
Miller. bu been a dlnppolnt·
ment tbia •IlriDS. la ftve aamee.
be bu yielded 2S hlta ln 22 ln·
nin11, 1S rum -11 of them
earned -13 walk.a aod bas
ltnlct out 18. Ht threw a ltrlbl and a
balla ln Just ftve lnntn9 ~
day antf pitcher coacb Marv
Grlliom bad A ... wott tor 10
mlnutel an tbe aldellnea after bo
LBaghen
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t
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l ;
' l •
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(
• JUST SHORT -Mission Viejo's Renee
Redfern <43> comes do'wn with a handful
of nothing as Rubidoux's Mary Warhop
< 30 > snares rebound during girls basket-
°"'"~,.... ~all olavoff at MV Tuesdar night. At left
1s the Diablos' Kim Carroll !Sll. See addi-
tiona l photos. story, page B-2.
Sports i n Brie f
Lutz Ousts Fiba k ;
Race Debt Sliced
ROTTERDAM, Netherla11ds
-Jimmy Connors and Bjorn
Bore opened with Impressive
victories In Tuesday's first
round of an international tennis
tournament.
Compton Municipal Court
Judge John H. Leahy set bail fur
Mrs. Brown at $15,000 and
sche duled an April 14 pre-
liminary bearing.
HOGAN •••
Continued From Page B·l
compete in the L e gends
Tournament later this month at
Austin. Texas. doubts that he
will play competitive golf again.
Don't bet on it. He s hot his age
64 -at Shady Oaks last June.
Hogan was surprised at the
atte ntion that his presence
provoked.
"Why would any body care
about an old codger like me?"
he said. obviously pleased that
s o many s hould s eek bis
autograph.
Connors wbJpped Dick' Crea!y.
• 1-1. l ·I and Sora beat Loek
' Sandeta, 6-2, 6-t.
S-8•Uela Traded
MESA, Ariz. -The Oakland
A's have reduced their top-
beavy catchinl staff by one.
sendi ng veteran Ma"bny
Sangulllen back to the Pitts-
burgh Pint.es in a four.player de-
al.
Ho1an. dUbbed the ... Wee Jee
Mon·' by adl>rln& Scola, made a
sweep over ~ Aucusta course
in a cart. t.ating special note of
hotes h~o. 15 and 18 where
changes are contemplated.
Tbe only seeded player to lose wu Wojtek Fibak. ffe was
eliminated by Bob Luu ot San
Clemente. M , 6-2.
In other firat·round matches:
Vilas Gerulaitis ousted S1an
Smith 6-2, 6-4; Jaime FUlol beat
Cbris Lewis, 7-5, 0·8, 7-8 ;
Vladimir 7.edn1t defeated Ken
. Rosewall, 7-6, 6-2 ; Sandy Mayer
downed Tom Leonard, &-7, 7~
6-2 ; Raul Ramirez topped
Tomaz Smid, 6-2, 7-6, and Ille
Nastase trounced Sherwood
Stewart, 6-1, 6-1.
DefJC Tri•med
LONG BEACH -Organizers
of tbe Loog Beach Grand Prix
motor race trimmed their debt
to the city in half by deliverinl a
check for $20,000 to city offici&ls.
Race promoter Christopher
Pook delivered the check Tues·
day and noted the balance will
be repaid Crom profits from the
1979 race. About 100,000 spec-
tators watched the race last
weekend.
Pook estimated racing fans
drawn to Long Beach by the lure
of the grand prix race spent
about $2.5 mllllon in the city.
.,..,. A rralpd
COMPrON -Former Olym-
pic shot putter Earlene Brown
was arraigned Tuesday on
charges or possessing a drug for
sale .
Brown, a member of th~ Unit·
ed States Olympic team ln 1J60
and 1914. wu arrested last week
at her home aloat with Sheldon
Delores Brown, 28, who ts no re-
lation to Mn. Brown, and Cyrus
Thompsoo. 34.
Sangulllen went to the Pirates
on Tuesday in exchange for re-
lief pitcher Elias Sosa, young
outfielder Miguel DUone and a
playe'r to be .elected later.
E»rplafler IHn
ALAMEDA -Raymond
Edward French, a major league
shortstop in the early 1920s, died
Monday at 81.
French, a native of Alameda,
played ln two games for the New
York Yankees in 1920, was with
the 8rooklyn Dodgers for 43
1ames in 1923 and played with
the Cblcago White Sox for 37
gamea ln 1924. He had a .193 bat·
ting average in the majors.
Later French starred m the
Pacific Coast Leag ue with
Sacramento and Oakland.
f1flltt IJp tor Bid
NEW ORLEANS -The man
who bolds the key to any re-
match between Leon Spinks and
Muhammad All sars he's put·
ting the heavyweight title fight
up for bids from four cities.
Bob Arum, president of Top
Rank Inc., said Tuesday that
he's talked to a New Orleans
group wb1ch wants to put the
fight in the Superdome
"There's a group iD St. Louis
backed by Anheuser-Busch
that's very interested! there ls a
eroup in Montreal and a lfOUP
In Mexico City," Arum said.
"We have meetlncs in each of
those cities later in tbe week."
• •
~etter T1m Krobnreldt and
blotker·hiUen Jeff Gasper and
Kirt Stafford led the way.
Capistrano Valley got 1ood play
from bitters Tom Braun and
Dave Ketterman but ltlll loct a four~1ame verdict to lDvadlq
North Torrance tn non·leaaue
action.
"The course isn't the same,"
he' commented. "The greens are
not as fast. They used to be as
bard as a table. They would
crack your spikes. You always
had to place your second shot
below the hole. Otherwise, no
chance to get down in two."
As meticulous a businessman
a s be was golfer, one who
oversees production in bis club
manufacturing plant ll'ke a
mother hen, Hogan s aid be
continues to keep abreast ol the
golf tour through television.
.. AU of these kids are good
these days," be said. "I am very
impressed wltb this young
fellow, Hubert Green. I have
never seen anyone &enerate so
much speed through the ball.
And be is a marvelous putter."
w~. Aprtt s. 1m
.. .
Girls' Cage Women's Athletics 8eores
Pro ~res ............... ~ ...
Cleftlend 114, tklffelo 10S
New Jer.y ltt, •NII-m
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CMttH ft) J1.1tJ.. .. tlrfflt-r.
w.tat m cu•: -.... ~. Huntlfltttll e.ma: .. .a.
...... da
C%11 !.~CJU> C•o"D;.,.lr* Vevtt~I. ~ COHI t .11 t.
MenMll(OHIU;S. ........ IDtfl ....
Ufl9W" --·· ........ CDHI 1.t; J. ~ .. CDtO LI; L ... lllc119
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ccv1u . ,_ ~I. MllllM CoHI
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COtOU. All~t. MMll*I CDMI IU; 2 ...,._ COHI IU; I. ,..._(Ct/I
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HllMI~ 9Ndl ... ~ AM v .. ,..,,
THOSE WHO RAND PRIX
Alt COftd~-.....-C ••a I a 11. OUR LEASING EXPEllTS
KNOW
VI en91M -. "" -· s 1221 a =.~r;r..~ .. =
('"71*1IQlll).,. -~ -.._ °" ....,._ .,_ T--
"6$0 .a """t150C1 c.., ,_...,,"' •-A MOKnf Cep -· • .,.., "-""'"'Dia ... , ..
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
VOTE FOR .-.Ew '78 FIREBIRD ~",~-::: ~"...! =::, $ l 29 17 ..... Oft liPC)fcw.d Ct9Cht tot.• d" HUMMEL---t440~1 7 rt••O~wet SHOO-enn wet
l'AIO FO ft BV
PAUL HUMMEL
EL ECTION COMMITTEE teeo,.. .-...o.-...... .. .-.~~~
, ___ .::::.:•lit _.._••1S AWOMIM
MIW'78
'
• JoeHaldtt• ••· •Jay Mmfii-MIJt".
I
67&9840 •
. .
. . . . I
·---·~"·'"' HARNESS RACING I BOATING I BUSINESS
Race Results .Seminars, Counes, .
MeetinJis· ScMduZ,d
Alamitos
Racing
Entries .,__.,_ .....
AIMl"'M01• ~HUT aACa -Ona "Ilk. P9Ce. Cl.tm1,., ll'Vo'w UOOO. ~ lO-·
cenl. Clel"""9 price.-..
S.<11• HlllU (Vellendl~I;
Fr"m•M Mio. (Torentol; l!•i'f ..,.,,,., llAClortl; 0. Ettl (Ung91;
R11sly River IUQflt11llllj,.=ltll T-ls-ti, S.. l.Jtlht I rl;
G•too IEIWIMI.
~IECOHO a.t.c• -Ona mite. hc.e. SyHr..,..&~.~-of
... lw.t "'°""' Olla. """-WCI. 8etMft'I' "'-1141 IUtMNtll; E D P•k" 1~11 J II McrM ITe<ldl. AM:lent ~rlner llC!lftlerl; .. ,,
oi.nul• 1w10911, A1ns ll•t•n ~>; A.rmtxo Troy ca.y~>.
s..Mes v"""" t5'1ot11.
'"'•o llACW -Ona mlN Ton. Clelm lf19 "-lui,. ~ JO ,..,.
U flt. PIWM DIOO.. Clelml .. .-left ~~
Henry•a Return cw 111 1am11; """'' .... ~ ,~,; ~·llCI ,..., H..e....,'°"I, l!.er1 o..-t IT-I; CM-
clY Le11e IJellnMfll; w,..nt ICey
IGowdreeul, l!d .. -H•""°8ra C llar10 .. e ); Ver11 Star Haney.,
CWl-1.
,.OU"'" ltAQ -Ona ml,. l"au.
C8t llr-S \'Nt 01<b & ....... Nofl-wfnf'er 16000 llrU mon•y twice • PvrM $.JlOO
S<lu•reolrG Gall,,..."Gf\llml; Hal·
cyon Hero l 1Callftmar1n1, Trlc~el C1>ar1er IWllll.,,,s) S.n AllclrOH
I t.1911 111 111), Ntwporl Flow tr
IWlllla m1I; And'f' Merl"-CT-I·
Andn Rtt..r IMarohnl , Fueo•
Gr •lld• C !Mnrwtll.
.. l .. TH llACE Ona mitt PocP
NOn·wlnner 11SOO n 11 or S race• Ille
IOf' l.oG "°'' mone y. Also ell9llM• "° .......... , \5000 ,. l1'et ...... 11¥1.0
10 or mo,. limes In 110. PvrM M9()0.
Gol .. Rlfl9lt 19lack"'en): E-••d
E dan (LIDlllllllll; Swe F oyla
CGoilrdruvl; First Esc-CO.ti·
nlsl; 54NCl.tl Event <Cnolw Jr.I: On-
ly Love Qlleelerl, Herlem Cherie COt~I.
SUlTM CUC• -ON mlk. P.tc:. Clelmlnt llaf\41c~. P\lrH $UGO.
Clalml119 1Wket U)IX).S500
Sw•"•K Luci! l~I; LL
Hat I Lecost•I: Miit• M• lloy CW llll•mtl ; Howdy Sport
1 Oesom•rl, St e r Dusi II••" C6eyl•h), Gf'u11trl; TomOfllO N
IGrun<lyl; Gus Ertu.i IMOH-l. -$IE'llaNT" llACE -OM "'lie.
f'oc.. C1elm"'v ~""' -10 ~·<•"'· ""'"91"00 Claiming Pf kH • U.000. 14,000
M issy "-9e 18aYIH'I GYP'Y Sam 1w 1..._1 9or91a C-11-11,
M•ster F.ilecy 1-nl. Tl1t._ SI.,.
I llglll~ltl). V's Pel IGovrO.avl.
O."'oni Orpl\an .. by l 0.MISI, P-wa8ay(IC.-erl.
alOftTM AAC:a -0.. rNN. l"ace. s .,.., ..... """"'· ~· ... -""1 ,.., .,.,. ~ 3 rocn Ill• lef MOO
11ru -v. cai •-& -.... -. ,-.Pww~
lllocttlfts Aed IL.ec•wl; ,,...._
Cllllcllmo11dl; Menterey D•• IMa,....,nl; Pklllc l>Mlbar Cl.Muri;
l(eep H-al (Wllllemtl; 4'oYll
.11.-.1w1 cllwtl:-.~ cer-1; Vive L.anf IOMlllrHul.
NINTM llACa -OM Mlle. Pace.
Clal111.""9 ~ Mw'ft10 ~9<11 purao UtoO, CleCmln1 trlcu ..........
llloyel Yec.tlell (C.te11I; M•llo Olartev N ,....,.., : L.N1t MIMlef'
1'*"*-11 T.-(Cr-I; IClwl
Am ... , (Wllllemsl; Rdt•• .... ~ .... 1 .. (Mefa:-111; L.uc•y ...._
(Awalftl; Mita lthDftde (l(.,..._I,
PtnM ltACll -OM Mlle. l"oce. C.lltonoi. ~ ......... 11 •
..,.., e1c11. ~•1uw. • .,. • .,. V1eNWf'
ll.'11tttlllll)
Tell-IPWryl St"" ...._ ,,....,,....
T'--UM/S
UD J.00 2 IO
1.60 f .OD uo
AIM raced -HolCll!Or, Jim n..
lloor .... l<~Hert.~,._.
Ko•rAkNI
\IXTM llAa -One l'tlle. l"oce. 001,,.1111 Nlllllce. ......,. AOOI
~olOfl N
CLIDfl"'llll tUO t.41t 2 IO ~ "~ Cllllkl!iel "21 • 20 Armlw• Trlco C~I S.lO
Tlfl\O -JAISl/S
Alto t~ -Nltllm, 0.tme Tl .....
N-e L-. Snoopy lledllrt, s.ocly Goin
Seto!<--lt«lng CoMl'I, lilllte #tt8oy
U IEude ...,..._ • & t.a.er llkllar-d,1" .... M~
HYaNTII aAC°i -0"9 mlle.
l"ece. C-llOflff CCD-S>. ~rH suoo
C..voll.rN
(Kuetllerl ... s.-UO
0.110 Contnt..-1Wllllomsl6.f0 ).fO
Ttmo s1 ... m COoudrNul 120
Tlfl\O -1.llM/S
AIH recM -Wlm...-1011, Ille
Sprint, TM Ill W, New Water,
A<IUll!leH-Ne t<rlll<llH
EIO"T" IUCIE -ON Mil•. Pao. CtetmU... PlrNt4,IOO
Geortlal'la.y
ILO<OllOI Pro1-'ts,irtt CTl.,,.,1
IO AO 6 00 f.60
s..... (.otbylOou*.w)
Tlmo-1 IXlllS
AIM r--Vic a Ter, ..,_.. °''"' •'-'I sc. 4. ve1•·• LA4 lleyel Rkll~W.-,
S<retc...S -""-* W\clt........., Gmy
IS EllO<U ......,.__ .. ., & I· ..... _.. ................ ..
NCNT" aaa -One "'~ .....
C .. Cmt111 Nrdcec> ,,....... U,.00
S...f lloard
( f>elOfWfl) S.IO l IO l 00
Llberellfd L.tdJ (Wllll..,sl 1 00 S.20
S<otllall CNef N CGtllndy) •.IO
'Tlme-JmtS
Al•o ran d -1(11lght CM nct,
Jame• R~'(I-. H T llr-, Multt Te•. RovalYorkH
ScralCl>.o -9otd DHl9"
U E•Hl.t l ·Slltl Beard A 1·
Ulloffal .. ~.Paid $».ti
AUenct.tnc.e -','21
Baseball
·Standings
MISSIC* CIONPa••MCa ~o..,. ....
W L Ga
Sovttl-stem 1 t
Polomar S • 2\.'t
S-taba<ll • • ' S.11 OloOO J 1 5''> ,.._.Olvt-S.n llernerGlno • l -
Cnrvs S l • 7
Riverside J s 2\J
, ... ,,., l • J T__,.tta.w
Sfful_., $aft~ 2
O..H..., al Oln4 lllld., rein
Seul-alenl et •t..arllde PH .. rehl
l'otomer et SM .........,..,. -~ "''" T ...... aO-
Soll111Wff4«'11 llil SM D1et19
SWRTLUGVa
w " •• H11Mlfl9\lft lleecft J 1 -
EflMfl J I IV. ~rl,,_ J I l"lt
w.11 ... 11tnw l t •~ .. _. .. ,,Volley 3 f l
.... "" Hertler 0 J '"' ~.,..,_..
H1111tcfll(9" lffcll If, l'OCM161ft 'll•Cloyl ,....,., ....
.. ....,. ~al WO.llNMW' ():ISi
£di-Ill MllrtM .. ._ ffleld In
P CATS BEING READfED FOR LONOON BRIDGE REGATTA
Owen Minney, John Langton, Shown Winning Laat Year'• Event
Cats Dead Inland
Paclric Catamarans from
throughout the Southwest are being
trailered to Lake Havas u City, Ariz.
on the Colorado River for the London
Brldge ~gatta which s tarts Friday
with a "fun race " around the island
and under the famed bridge.
This year the r egatta is co-
sponsored by the Lake Havasu Yacht
Club and Westport Pacific Boats of
Newport Beach. builders of the 22·
foot twin·hulled craft.
~andaloau Wins
Early entries indicate more than $0
boata will be oq hand for tbe re1au.a,
known as the world's largest inland
sailing regatta.
After the "fun race" Friday the
fleet will be divided into classes for
the serious racing on the lake Satur-day and Sunday.
Anyone Interested ln rartJclpaUnc ln the regatta may cal Owen Min-
ney, 64:>-~, or Ned Geary, (602) ~~.
Winds Whip Race
Brisk 20-2S knot winds made for a
fast Santa Barbara Is land race
S.turday and Sunday when the Los
Angeles Yacht Club sent a fleet ol ln-
tern a t1 onal Offs hor e Rule and
Performance Handicap Racing Fleet
yachts on the 87-mile c1rcwt.
The IOR yachts were racing in tbe
Whitney Serles and the PHRF group
are arter the Los Angeles Times
Trophy.
THE nasr YACHT to finish was
Bllt Pascoe's Sl·foot sloop Scan·
dalous from Newport Harbor Yacht
Club with an elaps ed time of 13 hours
and 50 minutes.
Also competing out of LA YC on
Saturday were a fleet of Midget
Ocean Racing Association (MORA>
yachts in the Little Whitney Series
and a group of Midget Ocean Racing
Fleet <MORF> yachts ln the
Koolman Series. Both groups race
around Ship Rock off the Catalina
Isthmus and back to Los Angeles
Harbor.
Handicap results:
WbJt.ney Series IOR
CLASS A -l , Fiver, Dennis
Choate. LBYC; 2, Scud, George Grif·
fllh, LAYC. 3, Dog Patch, Don Ayres
Jr., NHYC
CLASS B -1, Decision, Paul
Berger, DRYC; 2, Whippet, Dick
Pennington, LBYC; 3 , Dawn
Treader, Hartley Turpin, NHYC.
CLASS C -1, Ruffian, Earl Dex-
ter, VYC; 2, Insatiable. Tom Armstrong, CYC.
IA 11mes Series PHRF
CLASS A -1, Catherine, B.J .
Lavins, SSYC; 2, Windhover. Bill
Hoskins, LA YC . 3, Psyche, Don
Salisbury, LAYC.
CLASS B -1, Shawnlgan, Craig
Norton, LA YC: 2, Wind Mistress,
Ron Hill, LBYC; 3, Vixen, Morgan
Cox, LAYC.
Little Whitney Series MORA
CLASS A -1 , Inflection,
Goelz/Cable, LA YC; 2, Winsome,
Richard Brown, CBYC; 8, Zap,
Busch/Gri!fi. PVYC.
CLASS B. -1, Jabbed Again,
CBYC Syndicate; 2, Wildcat, Schoon-
maker/Mason. BCYC; 3, SpaJTOw
Haw.It, Copeland/Desenberg, BYC.
Koolman Series MO
CLASS A -1, Siren, Grover/Mack,
PMYC; 2, Mallhini, Ed Zimmerman,
CBYC; 3, Bad News, Stan Sorenson,
ABYC.
CLASS B -l, Dusty, Tony Ried·
tyk, Sl BYC; 2, Lupe Tai, Dale Kind,
CBYC.
The followtns tratln ... related Hm~~1 elUMI aod ID ...... .,.. 1checnuea ta Oranp Oou:a&j. ...... ~ .....
••Jrtaanclal Plarinlna for StaiJea ...
a four·part weekl11ectUN urtea
aponaored by Coutllne Community
Collese, wW be preHDtAld from 1:30 to t :ao p.m. W9dbeed&J•, ..,,,Ming,
tonight at Golden Vtew EJemen.taey
School in HuntlDstoo Beadl.
Lecturer Ronald C. Gable, certllled
financial planner, wtll eowr weatt.b
through tax deducllou. lQvaUna
without 1peeu1ation and aaow to be
financially IO\md.
The lectures wtU be beld ln tbe
1cbool'• "Toad Hall, 0 1'7Ul Golden
View Lane, ancl are tne to t.be
public.
More lnlormaUoa may be obtained
by callln1 Coa1tUnt Commun..il7
Collece at 9S3-0l11, ec. 254.
8-dfrnNlee.-
North and Donahoe, ma1;1a.cement
conaulllng endneen of Newport
Beach, will concluct a lfemln.u on bow
to do butlnesl ift Saudi Arabia for
South em California execuUvea Tbura·
day at the Newport Beach Marriott
Hotel. lnlormatlon ii available at
752·1134.
Luncheon speaker will be llmall
Nazer, barrister-at-law. of Al·
Kbobar, Saudi
Arabia, wbo wtJl
·describe present
and future busl·
neas opportunities
for U .S. firms.
N uer specializes
in corporate an<l
tax law and
represents a group or Fortune 500
c ompanies, in-
cluding several
major California
corporations.
The day-long seminar, co·
sponsored by the U.S.·Arab Chamber
of Commerce <Pacific), 'will cover a
geographic review of Saudi Arabia;
the Arab character compared to the
American character; Arab manage.
ment concepts and practices; busi·
ness·social practices and negotiation
techniques.
An Dbrllafow D11e
Art directors and designers from
Orange County will bold a round-
table discussion at 3:30 p.m. Friday
at Nordenhok Design, 901 Dove St.,
Newport Beach.
The topic will be •'Pricing Art
Services," wtth future workshops re-
lating tootber top1cs in the desicn field
being planned.
The group hopes to eatabllah an ex-
change of knowledge and talents of
art direct.ors and designers through
the sharing of individual portfollol.
More information is available from
Lynn Smith Spitalny at the
Mechanical Artist, 1S2~9.
S.-~atleta Stlldletl
Coastline C<_?mmunlty College will
Fast Prop Boa"8
•
Slated for S~
occ Wins PREPARATION OF
TAX RETURNS
Southern ::~
Some of the world's fastest pt'Op-clriva race
boats plus blown-fuel hydros and ooe.of·•·klnd
trailer vehicle and boat combinaUons wUl be
shown at the Speed. Ski and CUstom Boat Sbow
April 12-18 at Ole Los Angel• Memorial Sports Arena.
Martin I. Sctwieyer Series Cop Attog:~~Law
C-tedP\lllllc ~ M9A(T-)
Orange Cout College ~W:V.:.l'!:'' topped a field of 1.3 en• ~lle!Or9US11oco..rt trlea in the Southern _ui.._c:i-t
Serles No. 4 tailing re· ":.° .~..!:,~=
1atta at Lake Cachuma. Hl-1164
near Santa Barbara, -i:=:=:=:==::=:=:=:=~
lpOQtof' • cmHA1 warbhop -NA) .. tale •YncDcaUon ttocD t:IO Lm. to s p.m. April 15 at &be N~ Ima 1n
Newport Beach •
Lecturer GU7 ~ WUl dlacass
formln1 pa.rtnerablpe, acqaldAI ucl
1e1Jin1 property and property
mana1em«lt. A '10 r.~ fee
lncludee luncbeoa aD4 mat.IWL
Pre-reptratloo la reqQlriMt ud
muat be completed by Fri~.
Uore lrlformaltoD may be obaalned
by eallln1 CoutUne Community
9olle1e at.-..oatl, ext. 258.
&c.,_ U. lie St_,fefl
A ''" aemtna:r, •'Ectate ad Gift Tu PJannlq .. will be beld from 1 to
t p.m. Tuesday at State Mutual Sav·
lnp and Loan A1toel1Uca, Newport
Beach.
Tb• main apeaktt will be Jetflq
R. Kataea, a Newport Beach at·
tomey. Topics to be covered laclude
wllla. Dvln1 truata, t..tamatary
trusts, Cift·maklnl and abort term tn-
co me and tax aawin•• trusts.
Reaervaliona mQ be made b1 call·
ln1 "3.W311.
1...-..ee Beu e,,., .
An ln1urance aemlaar for the
public wW be held April lS at Glen·
dale Federal Savings and Loan >...
aoclatlor\, Newport Beach.
A panel wt.ll diacuu 1eneral and
1peclllc problems lo obtalnln1 com-
mon-area, multl-family property.
liability and covera1e for boards ol
direct.on. In addition, tbe seminar
wlll addresa the factors looked at by
insurance tompaniea when raling
property.
The session will go Crom 9 a.m. uo-
Ul noon. Attendees will be accom-
modated OD a first come -first
served bul.9. Fee is $2.50 for mem·
hers of CAI organizations and $S for
non-members.
Reservations may be made by call·
ing a:n·:G2.
Lawyers Clash
As Farrah Suit
Goes to Court
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Actress
Farrah Fawcett-Majors• breach of
contract trial bu begun with a fiurry
of arguments pitting Hollywood
customs against written agreements.
M lss Fawcett-Majors, who is
married to actor Lee Majors, was
present Tuesday as attorneys argued
for two hours in the first day ot the
Superior Court trial.
Spelling-Goldberg Productions, the
producer of television's .. Charlie's
Angels," contends the actress failed
to fulfill ~r obligations by quitting
the sbow alter it.a fint eeaSQn.
Attorney Barry Langberg argued it
is a common practice for performers
lo work based on a interim
agreement before a Ciaal contract is
s igned.
Sports Calendar
Record·boldinc craft such u Jim Noteboom's
blown-fUeJ hydro, Bottom Dollar, lbe unblown
CrucJfier and the world champloosbip El Ea.Ile
<wblch reaemblea a water-bound Star Wars
fighter> are but a few of the aquaUc ractnc
inacbinery that will be on display durin& the five-day 1bow.
Saturday. -
The 1eriea Is being
sailed in Flying Jr.
dinghies. OCC's "A"
team was composed of
skipper Kurt Miller and
crewman Tom Devllo.
Skipper ol the "B" team
WU Peter l)rasoln with
crewman Tat Kincaid.
Summary:
CAPITOLIZE
WITH
CAPITOL
~ lleaee.11-s.n ...,_.,._ .c ~
dleMcll Calleat Cl:•, Ool-.t -Col .... ot lA S.Ut-'1 lt:MI; ~ OllN.,t .. a.... c-
COIC-(J··· Tr .. .._.....,_ 9Nct1 M C.W-
-llt\of', Dene Hiii• .. Ml--v-... o.ata Mose• ~ty. El nt-e et s-c ........... htM<le .. SeMa"""
VeCCey, MAI.er Otl at 91111•1" -._.,, Serr-M CllPlttr-
Va4..., Can eU; IS..
o.,mnastJc.l-MOl'I ..... S'.flMfl,
f'o1111te1,. Volley .at Mu11t111ot•n 8•acll, SOI\ Ct-le at HH•-1 .. .,_ ,.11.1 11.
VoCCeyball-Meter Oel at CAph tr-Vothry Cll.
T•Mls.-.Or .... ~ CofWee .. s... Dl090 Mew (21, Gotdlln Mi«
Ce1ll990 el LA Har1lor UI; llaclencls •I UC lrvlrw 121.
OlrlS l•.ocll-H\lfttl"'Jlon llooch at
Wulmln11..-, M«IN at '"""''•In V•ll..,, Edi-et~ H_.._,
(I Toro et $an c'°'"""''· OaM Hiiia et MIHl9'1 Vlelo, Costa .Moaa .ti
Uftllre.-.lty, u.-heel! .. c:..._
feC M•r. M&Ju 0.1 ., Al•llop
.Meftt.........Vlllll etJ:U>.
Volleyball
Standings
•
Girls ......,~West Cof1-
•t S...t• -co Coll ... (t); s.n
DI ... Meta lit Or .... CoMt ~
(1).
Glrl1 1wfmml~rftlmoftt et
Or ..... COell C81199f U :JOI; ~II
et -IM fll; UlllwnitY et Mltaleft
Vlelo IJI; San ~ lit ~
•1 II.¥ 121; c:.a. Mna .. 0-Hlll• Ill: El Tere al U00-9eadl
(J: ISi; I.Alie .._,, Wll-lit ,_ taln Valley Clt,
Glr1• soflbelC-G.wdeft oro ... ot H""41"91en IMdl. T111tlf'I ot EfllOft,
F-11111 M MtriN (811 ot J); MC•lon
Vl•lo •• Fo .... lolrl Vall.., U :JO) I
University et UI Qulni• (t:JO)
G I r 1• 1ymnes11u-c aptura110
Vlllley at El Ton UI.
Pl'fiMr
Swlmm1919-Mt, San Antonio
Collooe •t. OrenQO Coeit c;ou ...
U·JO>; ~ WMt Cell ... et LA
Herbor II>: Sout-•terr1 at Sed-
dl-.cll CelM9tC2tt.m.l.
11.aMb.tll-Coro"e del Mar al
Unlwnlty, u.-Beecll lit c.ta
Mfta, M'9lltll Vleje M El Tote, Oona
Hilts et S.. OllNMe (ell at J: 111;
Wfftm!N*9r "" Hllo!llftlliell 9Hch .. MIC• Squer9 ...._ (7:al; IMN Hltft •t GaplSI,_ Valtoy CJ :ISI; Twlft
n l!sUKla at ToWINlle ,._ 1n:
81.,_. _,,.....,....., al Metoer Del u :m ; ...,......_ v.iter Ortlllerl
.t Me~ U:ISI; llllMf Olrls-
llM n u...y Owk!laPt et C.0
Mew PM11 12.-1; Or...,. Coest
C.OCI ... el LA_., Ct ""'-II CM· rt'°S at~ o.ci.., 12 -....1;
UClrvlnoel......,...,..12·)01
Velltv ... 1-c;a.-o "91 Mer al
u.t•wnHY. -.1111 Vie• ae u r ...... ~.,_,.al Ca"•~ Del.a
Hllll et S.. 0..-.CO Cotc at 11; .. •••••t Har•er at Ettu11. WfttMlnt• at *"'I; ... 9Mcll, ,......_.n ve11.., 14 MetlM 1a11at711
Et ..... Clt 01 Glft'l'OI\, OclOfl V-e
INIM Hltfl, La QllCnte • Mattr ~
Coll el ti; We« LA .. <kl• Wt'1t
Call ... 1•:•>1 ..,,... Mlflka Call-.. e>nnve Ole.II Golleea '7!JQ).
UCITenni•
Many of the top racing plJoU will allO be oa.
hand with their craft, according to Jlm Boston,
show producer.
"ID addiUon, we'll have a wide display of tbe
latest ln family boats by top manufacturers and
dealers. These include water aid boata and equip.
ment as well as many privately owned and
modified custom boats," said Boston.
The show ls the first of it.a type ever held In
SouU;iem California. Hours are from 3 to 10 p.m.
weekdays, noon to 10 p.m . Saturday and noon to 1
p. m. Sunday. Admlss1on ia $3 for adults. Children
under 12 are admitted free wbea accompanied by
an adult.
Coast Finn Set
For Bahama Yacht
Grand Bahama Yachts Ltd., ou of tbe newest
boat firms in Newport Beach, has been established
for the coostrucUon. Import and dlstribuUon of the
38·foot OybridJe sedan cnliaen of &be aame name. r rlncipals of the new firm, whose bead· quarters are '25 Promontory Drive Em. are Dell
rWolfensparger, prnldtnt, aad JttQ Hortnesa,
i market.l"8 vice pnaldent.
The Gradd Bahama Sport Sedan ls bclnc bu.llt
·at the Dally Plymer )'&rd ln Taiwan mMSer tbt
direction ot naval architect Gay Brtgs. The boatl
are of ha.nd·laid nbe.ralu1 comtrucUcin. Feature1 ,,.,..,_c11couc1,.... ,._,. V·•haped unde.rbody with a lon1 keel ~·
WIWIM m ;,r. ... m., L ,n1ur1Uon, dalpocl to 8lve tho boat atebtllty as
1: .. .,.,.. w: ~co.,,. \well u bJp perfonnance charadert1t1ca. The fh"lt =:,..~ M.~~ 'f.:: i~uc:UoD boata are und r COOltl'ucUan ud are .__,. w. •• 1 .,.,, t~ "' :eipected to be dellvtred iD Nt~ Beach lD ..... MtM. .. .,..._.. CP> ftf _April. ............ ..,. ..
wi11 ... w-:-= 4n •,..... c The boillts are Po"9'°ed bJ nrtn U:S 1' as4 MOT
OtwrW.NJ .... I ..... ,,., IPerkiDI wtlh • 2·1 --'·---·--..., .... ... "= .. .., ~ H; c. • ·-.. "--· ~--.... .....,. c•• '• ..,.. .l'PQdJ are Nld to be 11 tmca •a» rpm, With a ._.....,.~t-4 ~el comumptloQ !JI 15 &allcm aboar.
•
11 occ, 21 polnta; 2,
USC, 22 polnta; 3, UC
Irvine, 32 points; '•
UCLA, 38 polnta; $, use, 42: s. UCLA,"' 1.
Loa& Beach State,''·
BB Boating
ClauSet
..
<:N'ITll.IZATIOf MEANS TO
~RT r.APITCl TO ~
e
Capitol
Home Loan
Ga't"""'--.--..MOC •zr loc_...._ .... _
We'd
RP.ally like to halil
008TAME8A ...........
714/64C)o..W 1t
ANAHEIM ., .. .._"" 7141~
Top Interest on your
money
from Western ThrlfL
8°/o •10,000 TWO YllAR C•r1lfloah~
Interest pakS monthly. Matures end of 24th calendar
month. May be withdrawn at the end of any calendar
month thereafter without penalty. If placed In a
6 Y2 % peseboolc account and lef., for one year,
annual yleld Is ~. Maximum 3 ~ths interest penalty for earlywTffiCJrawel,
71/a O/o S7,IOO 81X MONTH Cet11ftoate~
Interest paid quarterly, Matures end of second
ca.lefidar quarter-maximum elx months. May be
withdrawn at end of any calendar quarter there-
after without penalty. If placed In a 6YJ~ ~
book aC()(X.lnt and left f~ one year, yield le~.
7 °/o ... ooo 90 DAY Certiflo~ May be
Withdrawn at end of any calendar quarter with·
out penalty. If placed In a 6 Y2 % passbool( aooount
and left for one year, yiekj Is 7. t 7% •
~la 0/o DAILY nmuaT~n. day-oot. no minimum pesaboolt aceounta, compounded and
credited ~rterly (thua annual yield Is ~. No
penalty for w1thdtawal.
THRIFT BY MAIL. TOOi Wt pay PoStage both ways.
Comptote !nfonnatlon tutnlahed upon request.
•Ceftlflca1ee purchand on°' befort Aprll 12.
1978 wlU oern from the nrat.
tOetat.wldeefft111 .. MneP9•
A._bl• 10 Cdlomle Rttldtnta On/if.
WEBBH119la~~
a 1Nta ol aatYlce to oa11toml"'1•
' I o....-.m1111m.-....a.("4...,. . Ltil---.;.ot ..... 0....1 ... 24,CAJllll•tStt
..
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•
• Business
Cm·ter Ret11rns to More Heat
Angry, lmpatienl Critks
Cite Trads &dance, Taxes I
American buslaes.s executiye
and PJ.adent caner.··
CLEAaLY, ONE Of' the great
trustratiam of many criUca is
tbei.r view that the federal eov-
ernmeot it.elf b spattering
1rease ·on the lafiation fires
wbUe blaming private lbduatry.
Tbey feel the co•emment is
!lot credible. While taW.ni about
tbe dangers of inflation,
Congress backs a blgher
minimum wace. hi1ber farm
price supports and reslrictims
OD lower-priced lmporta.
And so they drop their
estimates of anticipated arc>wth
and raiae the odds on bJgber
pricee and perbapa recession.
TYPICAL OF THAT posWon
is M errlll Lynch Economics.
After llstlnf actions that ean
only exert moro pressure on
pricea, lncludinc tbe bud&et ..
ficit and an exceaslvely loase
monetary policy, U comma.ti:
"Thm we ooawuae lO expect
an underl.YiDi uptrend bl IJaOa. tion and Interest rates, to U.
point where growth slows eba.rp-l y. or receaslon begln1.
sometime earty nm 1ear or late
t.bia yeer."
In short. IJri•ate ~ b ringinc the fnnation alarm, but
it lean the fire teparlment
either will not respond or wUl
come and put out tbe ~
alona Tdtb tbe are.
,.,......,... Lockheed Gets Boost
THE IA'ITEll COULD be •e-
complisbed with controls. bull-
ness executives feel. and a poll
of 1,100 chief executives by tbe
National Chamber of Commerce
found that nearly balf expect
them lO be imposed.
One explanation for the fear ls
the belief of maay critics tbal
the admlnistratica ls ln sucb a
bind, partly because of ita own
lack ol a proiram. that aJ.read1
it bas no other way ouL
Radial Clae~k
Samples of polyester cord are bathed .by solvent vapors
at the Goodyear laboratory at Aler~. Ohio, in one of the
tests to determine if the cords are suitable for use in re-inforcing radial tires.
Pan American Orders 26 Long-range TriStars
Conceding that artlflcl•l
restraints on private markets
have a bad reputation, and
wishing we were not in such an
inflatiou.ry bind, the Girard
Bank trust department bil tbe
bullet and observed: Jobs May Increase
In Cyclical p ·attern
LOS ANGELES <AP>-The job market In the Los Angeles att•
should pick up during tbe next three months, according to a survey
of business hiring plans by a temporary help employment firm.
The Manpower. Inc. survey also said there should be some lm·
provement.s on the national job scene becawse employers are more
confident about the coming
quarter than they were three
months earlier.
The Milwaukee-based firm
began the quarterly surveys two
years aio and polb a statistical·
Jy representative sample of 6,000
large public and private
employers aatioowide.
JN TllE IATEST survey, 36
percent or Los Aneeles
employers forec•st a pickup in
hiring, 50 percent anticipated no
change from current employ-
ment levels and three per~t.
projected b1rtq cutbacks.
Last quarter, only 1B percent
foresaw hiring increases, 13 per-
cent expected some reductions
and 69 percent said there would
be no changes.
Manpo"er noted that an-
ticipated caina for the next
quarter were largely due to the
seasonal cyclH in such J..D.
duslries u constructioll.
There were a.lao the uaual
post-winter inettaaes in employ-
ment among wholesalers. re-
tailer• anck mU\l.Cacrturers of durable~
~epublic
IS good
fo:fthe . economy ...
Yours ·
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Pan
American World Airways bas
announced a billion·dollar
agreement to purchase 26 lorlg-
r an g e Lockheed TriStars ln
what a Lockheed spokesman
called "the order of the century
for us."
Tbe announcement was made
in Now York by Pan Am
Chairman Willlam T. Seawall.
who said the LlOU Dash 500, a
shortened Ul-seat version of the
TriStar, won out over the
DC-10.30 made by McDonnell
Douglas and the H7-SP
manufactured by Boeing
Aircraft Co.
32,500 Recalled
By TM Auodatecl Prest
The Natiaaal Hipway Traffic
Safety Ad..mlniJtratlon reports
that about 32,500 1971 and 1978
BMW automobiles are being re-
called.
The aetion Involves moclela
:ra>l and 3201A manufactured
before Feb. 28 and Ls to correct a
vapor lock problem th•t cao re-
suh Ill .tallfui.
How would you Ike to double
your money In nine years? It clln be
done safely and surely et R"publlc
federal Savings. A good way to a
sound economy for yourself regardless
of business or stock market cycles.
~bnc Fedenil hes similar
certificate savings plans ror shorter
terms -from 90 days to 4 years -
with effect.Ive onnuol yields from 5.92%
to 7.79,,
Here's the kind of nest egg you
can build with a Republic 7-3/4%,
$1,000 minimum deposit. 6to10 year
term cer11ncate, whlcl'i compounds
dally lot an annual yield of 8.06S.
AftoaOllf • ~ G;ani..-.w ...,, ..,.. ..
~ 1 ~treta f••r1J7'Mf _.•et
$ 1.000 7·3/41, 9 ~'l t 2,008.~9
$ 5.000
s10.ooo
7-3/4'f.
7·3/4'1.
6.06S $J0.043 45
8.06S ~20,066 ()()
I',..., '""'' -........ Oft ~PoaltlllO lhe lundt ,., a 9 ... , tum.
federal regulotions permit early
withdrawals. suiject to substt1ntlal
reductions in lnttre$t earnings.
However, in the event that you need
Immediate cash. you may •void the-se
penolties by using your account r°' a
90S loan at Ohly IS abovt tbe rete
pdld by the mtilk:ate.
Drop b~ or phone one of our
~ repreMitatives for mote
fnfonnatJon.
"*'***** Every Ume the Aooster Crows your Money Gruwa
RFS REPUBLIG ~~,!?~~L SAVl~GS
11111111 ~--=-~ t~ ~-of ~~t114) 541·5286
AJ"WIElM 202 Anah.efm Plaza, 500 rt t~lld St. (714) ~·
LAOONA N1QCJEL 30232 Crown VaQey Per~ (714) .. 95-065<>
'WESTMlNSTER 134 Wettmmter MllfVBolla f, San otego Fwy.
(714) 5'.,347
f
TBE INITIAL increment of
the sale was for 12 planes at a cost of $500 mll.Uon, with an op-
tion t.o buy the remaining 14 Jets
at an undetermined price.
Lockheed spokesmen said the
total packace would come to
more than $1 billion.
The announcement was a ma·
jor boost for Lockheed, wbicb
baa suffered continuing losses on
the LlOll program. Pan Am cur·
rently rues ooly Boeing planes,
meaning that Lockheed bas
opened up a new cust.omer at a
lime when another, Esstern
Airlines, reportedly is about to
ttpla ce its fleet with the Euro-
pean Airbus.
,.THIS HAS GIVEN us the big-
gest shot in the arm we could
have," said Greg Waskul of
Lockheed-California Co.. the
division building tbe TriSt.ar.
.. It's the Ol'der of the century for us ...
Lockheed has delivered 149
TriStan and bas 239 on order. Of
those, lBl are flJ'lD buys and 58
are options, Waskul said. There
are firm orders for 20 Dash SOOs
and options for 23 more, he said.
, Over The Counter-
HASDUdtngl
"PEIUIAPS THE next beat
thing to undoing LaflaUonary
legislat.ioa is to trot out every
conceivable weapon in the
ecooomic·menagement arsenal.
Ergo, an incomes policy."
An incomes policy is anot.ber
way of saying wa11e-price COO·
trols, generally of the type
whose big teeth leave no choice
but to comply.
1t ID
"' S'h ..... u
llllt 11'• NEW YOltlC (AP) - T .. ..,._.,,. ... ,. .... " _, tM °"9t' • ti. • ~ ~ g: •l0<k1 end ••l'WID Wlet hew o--""
IM Mii'> u. most - -U. motl ll&M Off 0~ ~~tetdlMl!t,....,.....,.°'.._. tor T.,..,..,,
ID Jiii'> No mcurlde tl'8lllnO .,_SI .. IMJ. .. ·,~-.... ·--~~-.. ,.... -dl"-9 .. -u. _..... <tciM1l = ~ 11tc1 rwtce Md IAIOay's i..1 .iot rwlc&.
S4 5' Ul"S Jl\l't Ull'> Neme U SI Ola ff~
I'"' 1' f M~ 1 ' .-tl4 !$ '" n"' u .-N"....,kl ,,. + ~ !t.4 .. ,. 4.J J PMi.IC 1V. • t'-ti.A
• • va E• 2~ • lt i 11.6 J4Vt UVt i ~N 27Vt + 4 11• ~ ~ ,... ' • lit .... '~ ,..,. •miM'et ,..., • ,. u.a
'"' 1411. 1 1ntrm«1 ~ + "' tt ua 1llMlo 10111 t Etb\.mb n. + t p u.a
-1'14 10 ft•.,.llQ» 2 + 16 Up 14.l l''I 1-If IEM SA J + ... Up U.l ~ 11Vt 12 Wetnl8 '111. + l'lo. Up 11.l
4llt S"9 IJ 9elr<IC4> "" + " Up 11.l t ~,. MrldAty -+ ... Up 11.1 20 ... Jiii. IS Ool11Mlll 5111 + II'> Up .0.1
If"" a~ lt ~"tT ~ ! : ~~ :~ 1•\oli 11" 11 Olomtr ~ + Ito Up to.O ) 1-. It Del•..... Slit + l"t Up to.a 7"11 .-. 20 Te<core ,,,., + II'> Op to a
4''1 4 ... 21 Wn0115n 2'\oo + 14 Up 10.0 l '• 3 ... l2 Sc..,0.1 1\\ +>I• Up t.1 l3'41 J4 1l ~rt< 111 3 + '6 Up 9 I t. 1'-. 4 111,,.ndP J + ._ Up 'P. I 54»<C-3 + Yo Up t.I
DOWtl$ u~ -°" Olf~U ln't -~ Off 11.s 4 \I) Off 11.1
• "" Off 11.1
2 "' Off 11.t 211o "' Ofl to.C> 4:\o4 y, Off •.s 21'1 -~ Off 1.7 Jlll -Ito Off I.) ~ -"" Ofl 1.0 J"> -\lo Off ... ,
"' -3-14 Off ... , 3'-• ... Off .., 7 h Off ... , l''t ... Off ,_,
11. "" Off ..., ~ ''• Off u ,.,, .,,, Off •.J
~ "" Off t..) ... llt Off 5 • .. ... Off 59 , 'Al Off ,_,
111~ looOffU
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MUTUAL FUNDS
' OT
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
STOCKS I BUSINESS
Here's How·
New Books Tell All
B1 11.D.TON llOS&OW'm
How·t£>.do-lt pobllahinC la alive and ftii ta A.merioa. u
you want to do aometbint -dance, cook, build, repair,
work. alecp, make moaey, make love, you oamo U -
there'• a book that wUl tell you bow to dolt.
The 1prl.og llats ot pubUshinJ house& are aroaninl Wl·
der the wdabl of lbese manuals. •
ARE YOU A PAaENT CONCE•NED about ~rtm1!
Don't despair. Follett bu for you a $S.85 volwno. "How to
Protect\'°"" Cblld Acainat Crime."
Does )'OW' kid wear braces? Gd him or bu "How to Be
Sexy with Bup in Your Teeth" a Contempe>.tary Boon edl·
tlon avallableal$'9.95 ln cloth, $S.951n pa~.
How about baton twirling? Doubleda.y will be out tb1I
month with "The Complete Book of BaLOn Twltlln1"
($9.95).
Every yur we're inundated with bookl exP)alol.n&
bow easy it is to
become as rich as
Croesu1. Comtn1i up
th.is season are "Think
Rich'' <Delacorte
Press, •es>, "Planting
Your Money Tree"
<Chatham Square
Money
Tree
Press, $7.95), "Don't Ole Broke" CDuttoo, $3.95) and, U·
suming all else fails, "How to Make a Mllllon at the
Track" <Greatlaltes Livin1i Pres5, $4.95).
ABE YOU WORRIED ABOUT your looks? There's
plenty ol reading matter for you. Bein& lsaued tb1a mooth
la "'Your Face After Thirty" CA&W PubUsh,n, $10.95), a
"total guide to skin care and makeup for lb• rea.llaUc
woman." From Rawson Associates, at $11.95, we bave
"Adrien Arpel's Three Week Crub Makeover/Shapeover
Beauty Program." And if that doesn't work, Simon &
Schuster will be out next month with "Instant Beauty," a
$9.95 book written by Pablo of EUi.abeth Arden.
Want to trace your roots? Vintage will publish "Your
Family Hbtory" ($3.95) next month. Want to dance? John·
Monte, national dance director of the Fred Aatalre Dance
Studios, bu written "The Fred Astaire Dance Book," to be
published in July <Simon & Schuster, $9.95). Want to
sleep? Stein & Day is publishing "Euy Sleep" ($8.95)
which it calls "a doctor's proven technique for conquering
insomnia."
Are you having trouble with your marriage? Try
"How to Be Your Own Maniage Counselor" (Atheneum
$8.95 ). Or "Belter Sex, Better Marriaee" (Morrow'.
S14.95). Or "Every Other Man" (Thomas Congdon Books
$7.95). a guide to coping with infideUty. Or "Other Men'
Other Women" (Grosset & Dunlap, S8.9S), psycholodst
Joel Block's guide to "understanding and coping with ex·
tramarital affairs."
ON mE OTHER RAND, IF you have given up, Mac-
millan bas "Getting Custody" ($9.95), wbicb shows you
bow le> "win the last battle of the marital war." And t.be
New York Times ls pubUsbin1 "Getting Yours" ($8.95)
described as "a combat manual for the divorcing male." '
If you want something more mundane, Random House
bas "Carving and Boning Like an Expert" ($8.95 in cloth,
$4.95 in paper).
The From And/Or Press in Berkeley is issuing, at
$4.95, "The Stash Book," a guide to hiding your valuables.
This last book explores "the philosophy of biding in a
positive light with a realistic attitude loward living in
today's world. 11
Finally, iI none of these books turns you on, maybe
Bobbs·Merrill bas the antidote. It's oul this month with
"Get~1 Even: Grippin.g Tales of Revenee" ($8.95).
Market's Adva11Ce
Picks Up More Steam
NEW YORK <AP I -The stock market headed lugber
for the second straight session today In an advance that
gathered force as the day passed.
The Dow Jones averue of 30 industrials. uo 4.33 points
on Tuesday, climbed anolher7. 71 lo763.08today ..
Advances outnumbered declines by about an a.s
spread among New York Stock Exchange-listed isaues.
St~lu In Th~
Spotlight
NEW YOfllC CAll'I· s.les, 4 11.111. tll'l<t end Ml <Mn9f Of iM flf-_, Ktlw t:J Ytril Slocll EllitflMle 1-, k;.'~.~~~~ 11 ~ t!.lr" t:'4. .....
A...n Prod, 4'2:ii0 tm -.. Loe~...... ...... il ··~ Merll'tf Mid.. • , 121• +I
Do.,,Jon_.•A r~ra~•
~w VO"'(AP) P'IMI ~-ollOK
I Gelll Hlafl IAw 00. Olm
IO tlWI °f:'.u 761.d)D.21 i.J .. OU t1.11 20 Trn lOU• JOU$ »4.12 *-21 t' ,71 IS I.Ill tOi.JI !OS ... !CM.ti JCIJ,Jl + t1 U Siie M .«I BUJ ...U2 2'7.l'+ ,,17 r.~· :·::.:·.::::::.:·:.:·.:.:· 1-m:= Ullls ................... •• .•H;.Gm lS Slk •• .................... 2;61(taD
. • ..
'
.. ·
Sffr•R-• •••.. tll,000 ._ + loll
us llldUR.. • tD..-"' + ~ ---------------SolltflCel Eel.. 2n.60I u ... + " ""Net M19...... ")Of:Af IS + ~ '411~11•• lft(.,.. -.; .. ,. -~
FOM!Mot •••••••• "°'! 4' + \'\ ..... .,.,id_.,..... ,,., 21"" +11'1
Eest IC-.. .• u· ~ + 1 Tr-w Alf. • 10 IM!t --. F ... tw Ent....... , 11\'J + YI ·~ lftc.... . .._., + Iii
NEW VOfllC CAP>
ULIS
.:Jo": 7=~ .. ~~~! .. ~.:.~ .. "~ ""YIDld ety • , • , .... •• .• ••• • • Jl,IJl!IAl!ll
Week ........................ U,4 .... Mo..t11 ... • .. .. • • .. . . . . • • • • • • n.o>t.'9t v .. , ....................... ,.~-1 .. , .. ,, -............. 14,17t ...
• ,. .. -... • • • • ... •• • • I.JS. ........ "" i. di!•............... 1.as.uo,-1tt• 10 oe11t... . . . 1,ns,.s."''
w.IAT A"llrX 0 10
NEW YORK 01PI
I
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ENTERTAINMENT I MOVIES ' : w~. Apr11s,1e1e DAILY PILOT 87 '
.. St?rm Brews Over Redgrave Blast ..
'l'M THAT ZIONIST'
Alan KJng
8J BOIS THOMAS ,
HOLLYWOOD CAP> -Tbe 11'\UDbUnc con-
t.anues over Vu.aa Redvave's pollUcal outbunt.
While the Brililh star's award for aupportinf
actreu in ''Julia" wu applauded, part of ber ac-
ceptance 1peecb at tbe Academy Awards
ceremony Monday night was booed. The jeerint
came when sbe referred to 10me of tbo8e who op-
pose her politics u "Zionist boodlums."
"She insulted the Academr; we voled for her
performance, not her politics,• snapped an actreu
wbo declined to be identified.
''When you in vile a revolutiqnary lo dinner,
you're going lo 1et a speech,'' reasoned a pro-
ducer.
MOST OFFI~ DECUNED to enter the
controversy. Howard W. Koch, president or the
Academy, refused to comment, preferrint lo cite
". . .Scene• of etaggerlng power. Great
perfo tmfncea .•• " :o~.··~~·~ .
-Walter Spencer WOR RadlO
edwards CINEMA CENTER
HARBOR AT ADAMS, COST A MESA
MESA VERDE CENTER 979-4141
.. • r.i• ........... .
''THAT OBSCURE
OBJECT OF
DESIRE" (R)
....USH
SUI-TITUS
A "JHI OMI • OM.Y" 1,...
"f "Uf'l•UAD"
\'KY"Oi'
I\! I '•
.11\f $
I'( AU lN
l ·N'r f-d)('l 1a::.-
V.k ~ l·~»
-I ~• ·oe,-... ~ .... 1..0~
..... ·;i.~111 (
• CU\NI
lWWIKAH•·ct~~llAl·IWMYmM 'ANNIE HALL' -~· ...... ·--Mon-'thura: Anxiety 7:00, 10:25, Annl~:49 '
Fri: AnxJety-7:45, 11 :OS, Annle,6:00, 9:30
Sat: Arudety-1:00,4:20, 7:50, 11:10,.Annle-2:40. &:05, 9:35
Sun: Anlde -3:45 7:10 10:35, Anni~ ·oo, $:25, 8:55
edwards NEWPORT edwards HUNTINGTON HIAlCOA.ST HWY.&MA.CAlTHUl NACH 4t lLW.tu.
HWl'Oltt. mDmlll 644-07 60 141-0lll
audience ratings -"the bluest m Academy b.15·
tory." Emcee Bob Hope ducked out after the lelecut
and d.ldn't attend the ball
An informal poll at a $150-a-platl! &ala later
Monday night indicated support for writer Paddy
Chay efsky's on-camera riposte to MiH Red·
·srave:
"I'm lick and tired of people exploltln1 the oc-
casion d the Academy awards applause for the
propacatJoo of their own personal poUtical pro-
paganda (appaluse). I would like to 1u11est to Mias
Redgrave that her winning an Acedemy award is
not a pivotal moment in history -does not require
a proclamation. A simple 'thank you' would have
sufficed."
THE NEW YORK Post quoted Chayefsky
Tuesday as eaying: "She tried to speak to me af.
terward and I cut her dead. I wanled to say more
, to the worldwide audience, but t.be bell with it, why
make her the martyr she wants to be?"
And, the Post quote4 comedian Alan King as
s aying, "I am that Zionist hoodlum she wu talk·
ing about. It's just a pity I wun't on the plat·
form ... I would have gone for the jugular."
Expeclably for a golden anniversary, the
telecast or the Oscars was long -just under three
hours. But the film crowd seemed to think that it
was one of the best. The glamorous look wu back,
alone with Hollywood's good old boy, Bob Hope.
Judging from the ratings. the home audience liked
the show.
ABC, WHICH TELEVISED the show na-
tionwide, said Tuesday that preliminary research
from New York, Chicago and Los An1eles indicat-
ed that about 70 million people watched the pro-
gram -the largest audience in the history of the
Oscar programs. The show ended shortly before 10
p.m.
The Redgrave imbroglio almost overshadowed
the other awards, but not quite. While Woody Allen
was tooting a clarinet 1n a Manhattan pub, he won
Oscars for writing and directing "Annie Hall"
but not for his starring role Richard Dreyfuss.
who portrayed an actor on the rise In ·'The Good
bye Girl." was chosen best act.or instead of Allen.
Diane Keaton was best actress for playing an
aspiring actress in "Annie Hall," and AUen's com·
edy was declared best picture or 1977. Jason
Robards, as Dashiell Hammell in "Julia," won has
second straight supporting-actor Oscar.
MISS REDGRAVE'S AWARD WU the first of
the Monday night telecast. She pushed the awards
_ _... 4th SMASH WEEK .,....__
"FOR PURE EXCITEMENT 'THE FURY'
IS RELENTLESS." ..CO•>d~. ~ Mooo,,,.,.
off to a controvenial start by consratulaUn• the
votl!rs for ''refusing to be iDUmldated by the ac-
tions or a small bunch of Zlonlat hoodlums."
She re/erred to protests ol the Jewish Defense
Leal\le over her pro-Palestinian ftlm documentary
which teat.urea an interview with Yuser Arafat,
chief of the Palestine Liberation Or1anbaUon.
Jane Fonda was quoted Tuesday in Dally
Variety aa havinc-refused Jrlisa RedJrave'a invita-
tion to join her iD filminC the documentary, ''The
P al~atiniana."
MISS FONDA, WHO won a best actress Oscar
in 1971 for the movie "Klute," told Variety: "l aaid
It was a mistake for her to be in it. I think her
Mideast views are highly unrealistic and can lead
only to more turmoU."
The poliUciJ.ation of the awards in recent
years concerns Academy leaden, but they have
found no way lo combat it .. .
.. ~ ........... ,
1UNREAUSTIC'
Jane Fonda
ACADEMY AWARD
\WINNER
BEST ACTOR
RICHARD
DREYFUSS
"'The Goodbye Girl' is a joyous
comedy j ust what the doctor
ordered. Neil Simon m akes ·
feelln~ ~ood le~al .
. GENE Sli~LIT, NB~·TV "
. I
A RAY STARK PROOUCTlON OF A HERBERT ROSS FILM
NFIL SIMON S
"THE GOODBYE GIR[
RICHARD DREYFUSS· MARSHA MASON
and mtmdunng QUINN QJMMINGS a'> Lucy
Wnuen by NEIL SIMON • Pmcluccd by RAY STARK• D1n'tk.'d by HERBERT ROs.5 •
Ml61C Scored and Adapted by CV\VE GRUSrN • Soog • Goocliye Girl"
Wntten and F\!rfonned by CV\VlD GATES• t1 RASTAR h •at\llt' • Pnnts by MGlvt Labs
ll'C~-.. -=::I [.~110. .. 1'lt.M.il onl~~ (Now~w.11'.~Ft<wn~~ ~--•-•":'!..___ I .... .--..._......_....._._ -----~~
I I
• •
.TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS
t
&'0011:. ....
a.MSC\'Ote I·' A .......... u._
...... 4 ~Old 9lfld.
._. lllMlll ---"*" ........ QW ..... l~IUNCtf
...-... ~aft andent
.... to .. ~&*Oe.U.
ban -~ by "" arohaeologlat (Vincent
Prioel •
• ROOKe
Ryker talln an une•·
pllllMd J*llOllal lnterHl In
finding the vlc1Jm of •
t:: ;~COMPAi« ~ HISTORY OF MEXICO
"The Con1tltut10" Of
1824"
:?rs "Wu•h•''"' .TUBE TOPPERS ~~c:r:,"
H411Qh1 ... (19311 Laurenoe ear
OIMar, Mar1e OOen1n. A CBS fJ 7:30 -Between the· Wars. en GET8MAAT
young WOll*I ~ °"' The events following the end of World fD cwrnoHIDMO
1CNa of• MMtnno many War I are depicted in Versailles: the. NEW& := =; rw1lned.., Lost Peace. Narrator is Eric Sevareid. MORNING •o EOHT• KTLA 0 8:00 -"Wutbering 12'009 lWIUOHTZONf! ~And n. ~ Heights." The original 1939 romantic ~=~
JollwJle w1rw.,. 1ea11 .,, • drama with Laurence Olivier and Merle Mc:hhtk• on Cha 1o.cs
rnoc1am lhU<..-rMft Oberon. a!IMd .
s>toctuct1on but doaen't ABC fJ 11:30 -Police Story, a> MOVIE
_. "" r.uw to lulOW ••Rocky'' star Sylvester Stallone stars ** "Stat1onw..r(iQ48l Iha mutt plll)' a d:ll'tng b DIC* Powell, J9" Greer. A
-Jamee ~ uuac Wit Chuck Conners in this repeat n army otttcar.1n d11gu11e,
et-.(R) episode about a detective who has di!-•uentioaor....t11emyatary ~.~0 Commit ,. ficulty adjusting to the techniques of his ~~ :!f .. Md mutdeta.
Mur~r" (1970) Louie DeW partner. Cl) M<Me
JOUl'd8n. Santa B«get, A * * ~ •'Tha Gal Thet T oolt
wt1 two le atwn a llcer-. 'rha Waet" ( tMt) Yvonne.
10 k• ...., ,. .. ...... nec.m. 8oott er.ty. Two
···~ .. 81anoM ~ c1e.a1 Stawati 0ranow.
Volarie HobaOll. A ,.unv
~ pr<Me to be IN
undoing ot th<• men Md.
un.mataly, ~ --dMtNction. ( 1 IW .. 31111111.1
• MOVlt! ··~ Ms.raooo .. (1161) Hurncifny lloglw1. ,_.
TCW9n A. totdler'1 eai... tor
• aiperlOr'• wlte ~ .,
ba i. dowNd. ca M.l
~-M0\111! '**"' 'Jedi And The ea-1.lllt' (1962) Abbott
and eo.tallo, Buddy Bier.
Whlle bebyttltlng. lou tllll ..._ Md ..,.,. he'•
Jlol(. ( 1 tw .. 30 ialll.)
s:00I NIW8 3:86 . MOV1ll
" • ' 0 MIC NEWS ... •·'° e uovu:
to wald'I a adantl9t and to parbm we: Mlnnl9 at.bonda PIM to tool tw «*"'-"9 IOr the an-
1><-i hia ~ (2 ....i. 'The Oak Ridge huablnd. "low And The MOt1 °' the Mme~
hrl..) Boys. The l<Mdalla, Roy SWlflO Pn8otopt!y" AM-alnglr.(1 hr.,30mln.)
• • "Cott11ge n, UC'" .
(1941) Aleltalr SWI, JoM
Miiia. The aa.ttttofltlM
aNld'I for ... ~
nng lrl Bttuift, ~ bra., 25
min)
, ? (: * * * ".va.i1c And Old .., '--A (Pao1 :1) ( 19.W) Caty WelJIJed Wonder • MOW! Acll1I and Lwry Getltl\. band anc1 wife iry to oet tB MACN!R. / LEHN!ft * * * ''CIOM To M'I 8 9 CHAAL.1£'8 Job9 an a ~ m1119-REPORT
S:MU N£W9
4.-00 0 MOVIE
, ,. Grant, JosepNne Hun Two The Amazing Spider Man, a series of
five hour-long adventure dramas with
Nicholas Hammond in the title role.
premieres tonight at 8 on CBS, Channel
Heart"' (1ff1) Ray Milland, AN8ELI zl-. '2:30 0 M0\111! ** "Thi Sil Men" (1951)
Harold Warrenbar, Olga
Edwardl. London 11 tenof•
tad try a geng or lilt men.
( 111< .. 30 min.)
,. old 11die11 poison 6-'Tlal'My, A dllldlaee •Pr91ty Mgefa All ,,, A 8 MOVI! **~ "The Bleclc Ca,-
I fl
unsuspecting gentlemen
and bury them 1n their
~asement. ( 1 hr ) 0 CONCENTRATION
«D BEWITCHED
Ashley Flynn, a warlock,
1roe11 to aweep Samaot.110
~-
coupla allow tMt crtmlMI RoW" When aomeona goea * • "Fllgllt Of The to.t ( 1834) Borla Karloff, Bela
betlaVlot may not be inn.-to any length to have the Balloon" ( 1960) MIVlhall LugOll. Two 111CIHlnemlM
lled wtlll'I th9y edopt the daughtet of • Tana Thornpton, Mala Powws. battle eacll 0111«. endan·
Q) MOVIE child of an amoral ltlller. (2 tycoon win • beauty A young el(plorer aeta out garlng a atranded
m..) ~t. Ketty end Krla go ec:roatheJungS.of Africa ~OQU919.(1 lv.,:1~
Aactt..r Two Jewllh chll· ID UV1! FROM 1HE under-ea conteetante In • hydrogen g• balloon min )
dren ara lall alone to METAOPOUT.tH whlla Sabrina and Boeley to rNCUa a leflow explorer a;! DICK CAV!TT ., '° OM he<' feet , ED OVEREASY
Four youths steal a car
loaded with gun• and
ammunlhon eecape the NazH>ocupled M11eagnl'1 •·cav111erl1 poee ea dooUmantary film lmprl•onad by vlcloua GUMt: To Be Announced.
* •~ "The Etomal ~ (1954) Sterq Hayden,
AlexllJ Smith. A 0..0'*2
NllV)' atfloW ~ lo
rameln In ICtM <My aft#
lolling a lmb In World W•
U. (2 twa.)
Wetaaw ghetto and try to AUslJcana" ~ PlecJ. produoera. (R) Hlndua (2 hra ) f2:37 0 9 ABO MYSTERY
I I
P1anLS1 I singer Hazel Scott
r.1ngs and d•SCU-her
long and 8CtMI career-;
OaVld Horowitz on beeom-
lng an educated consumer;
ED MACNEIL / LEHRER
REPORT rMdl 11-unde In Ameo-do ~ and Vant • MERV 0""'1N CD THE 000 COUPl.E MOVIE
ca. Shlnall. laonoavallo'a Gu•tt•: Gary Frank, All• bUmtng a hOle In • *'"' "Damon, Demott'" .. {Ii) alEATf\IE
STITCHERY
Mlat/lnstructor Eleanor
11an da WatlM' dll'l10fl.
lfratee the Henif\gbone,
closed Marrlngbone
alltches end chevron
stitch.
It NEWLYWEDGAME "Pagllac:rc:r ~ f'l9cj. ~ ~. 1<41)'9 Fallx'abed,Oecarde.pan (11i175) ~d Dillman, Q MATCHGAMI! P.M. do Oomlngo and 6narnll Ballard, JlmGlovaml,Jud• of railing Ula 8'IOney lof a Jullel Miiis. A married ,..._ .JI-, Q JOKEft'S WILD Mlln11. JM'IH Levine hh Knlntz. ,_one. cou~. caught up In a VW1-• nMrsuu fl •
Q) MYSTEAIESOFTME conducta.(R) 6!> AumNaTYUMrrs • MOHTYPnW8 •tv of c1er11ono•o111 thct Daflfliae /tlo.,ln OAfAT PYRAMID "1iJ BIX lleJOeRaECKE ~Johnny Rodriguez I Linda Ft.YING aACU8 tranecend1 rM90r1 and ..
1•
conttnulng education; e
hOIM fOf' a«ilor Citizens In
Evanaton, 1lllnol1
Et!) DIMENSIONS IN
CULTURES
Holt Omar Sharif leelca MEMORW.FaTIVAL Hargrove" Select1on1 fm M9CHAELJAQ<80N loglc. tece d91truc:Uon,(R) MORNING
11n-. lo wny and how "Tom Saunder'• I Bob lnc:lude "Rl<Hn' My Thumb Guell: Parap9)'0hologl1t 12:.-0 IJ (I) KOJAK 1t:30 a> * * * .. M,._ Mlke ..
,,
"Cultural Ecology"
(J) UHTAMEDWORLO
"Wheels In Alrlca"
lfO) MERV GRIFflN
7:00 0 NBC HEWS 0 LIARS CLUB
Q ABCNEWS 0 BOWUHGFOR
DOLLARS
«D I LOVE LUCY
Burning With a dealre to
act, Lucy tl1M to ctas/1
Ricky'a nlghlCIUb Show.
«IJ AOAM-12
()) JOKER'S WILD
7:30 8 BETWEEN THE WARS
"Veraalllea: The Lost
Peete" The dash be'-'
Pre11dent Woodrow
Wrlaon's kleallsuc hopes
fOf' world paaca and the
harsh, Old world rMI poltUc
of poet-W• &ope are
pr-tad. D YOUNO flmfllE'8
8~
"Nlghlmllr9: The Immigra-
tion Of Joachim And
Iha Great Pyramid was Hltactl All Stara" To Mftlco" and ''Blue Thelma Mou.. "A KHISlg 1" The Second
built. 8:30«D CAROL8URNETT Jawl~." '1l) MACHEIL/l.etAER HOUM'' A tomw po1ic. (lM8)0lokPowafl,~
Q) ADAM-12 ANOFRIEND8 10:000 8 NEWS AEPOAT cletactllle turned pri\late =· I~ ~at:;
Reed 1Mtn1 that hie part· GUMts· Halen Reddy, John Q ~ 8TARSKY & 11:30 IJ (I) HAWAU FlVE-0 1nvHtlgator (Martin Car\aoa, bftngt Illa Cfly.
ner. Malloy, hu been kid· ~ HllTCH McOarratt find• too many BalSMn). attan1pt1 to m•k• bred wile 'With him. (2 Iva..
napped try a raectlonary W OVER EASY "The Collector" lnve.llgat-ltnpfObabllltlee wnen a ter· a client 1 aulclda lootc u ...
Q!..C>UP Planlst / llnger Hazel Scott Ing a loen lherklng oper... min ally Ill pallent murder IO cotlacl on the 20 min.) m LA INTEACHANOE llnga and d*"-her hon becomes • daedty con'--to Iha murder of 1nsuranc. poClc:y (R) .AFTERNOON
.. Snape110t1" IOng and actlw ~: game when HU1ch's g;n. hll doctor'• (Jackie 1:00 0 TOMORROW t2:00 G ••wReeumOflha
Cl) STARBOARD OrJldHOf'owltzont>ecom-friend Is Ulld u bait to Cooper)wtte (R} Jadl vai.nu. head of the Tuan" (1852) Dale
.. y~ And Cola" Ing an aduca1ed coneumer; trap a ruthlesa collector. CJ TONIGHT Mollon PlcUn A11oc1at1ori RobartlOI\, Joanne Dru. A ()) •ta.OOO QUE8T10N oonllnulno aducetlon; a (R) Hoat: Johnny Caraon. of America, dl1cuHH xoung Tllt.M ettampta to
@) FAMILY FEUO hOme fOf' ~Citizens In fl) L.ET8 MAKE A DEAL Gu.ta: Frid Aatarite, Joen OhlfVl9 of oomiptjon '" k_,, PMIU•M of Ille
•:00 fj Cl) 8PIOEA-MAH Evans1on, 1n1no11. 61) SOUND8T AOE RJ\Wa. the tum lndultry; David horneltllld. ( 1 hr~ 30 "*I,)
(Premiere) Bitten by a 9:00 IJ (I) C88 MOVIE "David Amram And Hts " LOVE. AMERICAN Rorlllk talk• about. "In HI• 3:00 (fl ••• "Kung Fu'•
radloactllla apldat and * *~ "~ With The Ftlenda" Mualcal virtuoso STYle Im•, The Cloning Of A (1871) Oii/id Camwllna.
endowed with auperhuman Oe\111" ( 1975) Petet Fonda. David Amram I• Joined by "LoV9 And The Wlehlng Man." Barry Sullfvan. When a Ch I l.,i ii ~a young pllyllct11 Warran Oatee. When a Jau trumpateer Dizzy Star" Palvaco I• vllltld by O I SPY llett·Anlartoan luddlllat a Oftfte" • ftfJ• llndt he lll'ld hll alter ego vacationing louraome Giiiespie, IOlk singer Steve e tally godfel'*. "L<Mt "Get TllM To A Nunnaty'• ITIOllll dlSCOllel'S ttier. la a
!~ : ~~1«~~~l~~~~~g9e~~~ ::=, H~~:~ :':r,loaw~;':t~ ~.:x';:~:d"'s:,t;:;n~'. ~~:_;.heVlc1:,•r:,~: ~~=· = ~~on::.=·:..~
O KTLA (Ind) Los Angeles theft Robar1 Alda. JoAnna worlhlppara. I.hey flea In performing "Trlple sle19 In I bad 2.-00 0 0 NEWS the 1870.. (1hr .. 30 min.)
Q KABC· lV (ABC) Los Angitle!> Cameron QIHlll 5tar (Part tenor (Rt Conceno,' "In Memory Ot 0 CfO POLICE STORY 0 MOVIE 3:30 Q ** * ·My Qetsha" 1l KFMB(CBS) San Diego 1 of:!) 0 INOOORCOUNTRY Chino Pozo" and "Sum-'The Cutting Edge' Sgt • •'• 'Top Banana' (19621 Shirley Mact.a.na, G KHJ·lV (Ind l Los An•1l•les 0 GRIZZLY ADAMS MUSIC mer Ntghll W1111er Rain.. E.ddle Peebles (Chuc::k 118~1 Phil SllYlltl, Danny Yve• Montand A dlfec>
111) KCST (ABC) San Orego .. The Stranger" Adams Kenny Rogers and Dottie 10:30 CD(!) NEWS Connors! hllS a dllflCUlt SC'holl A lelavtSion llar 1s tors Mle t>ec::omes 11pMt m KnV (Ind) Los Angeles and Mad Jack befriend Weal c<Hl<>St "The World's 11:00 I) 0 Q (J) ~ NEWS llma &<11u1t1ng to the mves-d1s11aught OVtlt the posu-wheo Iha diKOVen 11ar
"
~' -----Cl>---K--CO-P--TV--(-ln-d ..... )-Lo_s __ A_n -ge_t_e_s ---------------------A-r--my_Ca __ p_1e-1n---Utysaes----S• ................ l_~_gu __ l ..... tnd __ OOl' ___ C_oun __ t_~ .................... U __ L_OVE. _____ AM_ERICAH _____________ t_~_·_11v_• __ tec:h ..... n-1q_UM ___ ~ ..... h-1s ______ b_il_11y--ol-~-~-ng __ h_l1•1-pon __ ao __ r ______ h_u_~_a_lld __ ~_o<>l __ ng __ t~o-mllla ..... .-
8l) KCET· TV (PBS) Los Angeles Grant (Mark Slade) and MUlle Show" al the Sl'-'· STYLE new partner (Sylvetter afld hll 01r1trlend t'1 hr, 55 • fllrn In Japan with a gal-e:> KOCE·TV (PBS) Hunhngton Beach oMer to asSlat him in an dome In Pontiac, Mlc:ht· "LOYtl And The Know·ll· Stallone), rMUltlnQ In a min.) Iha In the lead role. (111r ..
omclal turwy of wlldllfe In gan. Ainong the lop nemea AU" Eatelle concoct1 111 confrontation w•tl'I hi• 0 MOVIE 30 min.)
CBS Takes 'Its Week'
~ NEW YORK <AP) -With 13
•f the week's 20 most-watched
.. 1evision programs, CBS
nocked ABC out of first place in
~ he networks' ratings race for
he first time in 10 weeks.
CBS scored with six nights of
)'A pecial program ming com-
ncmorating its 50th anniversary
n radio and television. A. C
, 'lielsen Company ranked five of i he six "CBS: On The Air''
pecials among the top 26 pro-,-t !rams for the week ending April i·l . The Saturday night show was
• 4th.
, CBS finished the week with a
~rating of 21, followed by ABC
., with 18. 7 and NBC with 16.5. The
networks say the figures mean
n an average prime time
fllinute, 21 percent of the homes
n the country with TV were uned to CBS.
IT WAS mE first time since
lhe week of Jan. 15 that a
network other than ABC was
first in the standings. ABC ha&
been first all but four weeks this
season.
CBS listed the week's most·
watched program, "M·A·S·H,"
and the network's "One Day at a
Time" was fourth. CBS, in addi·
lion, had "The Waltons," the
Thursday night "CBS: On the
Air" special, "Alice" and "60
Minutes" in the Top 10.
The rating for "M·A·S-H" was
30.3, which Nielsen says means
at least 30.3 percent of the
homes in the country with
television watched at least part
of the show.
RERUNS OF ABC's three top shows, 11Three's Company,"
11Laverne and Shirley .. and
"Happy Days," were second,
third and flflb. One or the three
has been first in the ratinp 19
weeks this season.
Here are tbe week's Top
lOsbows:
"M-A-S-H," with a 30.3 rating
representing 22.1 million hob,les,
CBS: "Three's Company," 29.9
or 21.8 million, and "Laverne
and Shirley." 29.5 or 21.5
million, both ABC; "One Day at
a Time," 28.8 or 21 million, CBS;
"Happy Days," 27 or 19.7
million, ABC; "The Waltons,"
CBS, and "CBS: On the Air,"
Thursday, both 25.1 or 18.3
million; "Alice," 24.9 or 18.2
million, CBS; "Soap," 24.7 or 18
million, ABC; and "60 Minutes,"
24.6 or 17.9 million, CBS.
THE NEXT 11 shows;
"CBS: On the Air," Monday;
"Carol Burnett Special," CBS;
"CBS: On the Air," Tuesday;
"All in the Family" and
"Ha wall Five-0," both CBS;
"CBS: On the Air," Wednesday;
"Project UFO," NBC; "Little
House on the Prairie,'" NBC.
and .. I)allas," CBS, tie; and
ABC Sanday Movie, ••mib
Plains Drlfter. n
TJae Debll You Sag
Loretta Swit Oen> and Lara Parker, on
vacation with their husbands, read a note
left by a Satanist band in .. Race With the
Devil" tonight at 9 on <:BS, Ch~onel 2.
She laughs, she cries, she feels angry•·
she feels lonely, she feels guilty,
WINNER JWINNER ·.
she makes breakfast, she makes ~,
she makes do, she ls strong, she Is weak,
she Is brave, she ls scared, she Is, ..
OPENS FRIDAY
..
ACADEMY
AWARDS
ACADEMY AWARDS
Including
Beat Vlaual Effects Best Art Direction
Best Orlglnal SCore Best Costume Design
Best Sound Beat Rim Editing
AND S eclal Award for Creation of Allen Creatures
-
' ,
l
1 ENTERT te/MOV1ES. w.,,_.,, Ap111 a, 1e1e OM.VPILOT
Chorale Plans Encore Togetherness
A'::;.~~d~:~~':'!::u.1
BVT THEaE CAN BE no complabitl about
• the quality of music 1erved to us thus tar in th1I
memorable aeuoo and it la clear to eee hom the
calendar of collling events that there are more d•
llghtful offertnp In the offlDg.
We need look no further than tbil comln.s
Saturday for an lndlcatloo of the top fUpt con-
certa that will bring joy to our April daya.
Jobo Alexander will brina bil IrvilMl Master
Chorale back to Oranee County.for a program that
includes Beethoven's Masa ln C major and the
stunning Ode to Joy, the finale ot Beethoven's
Ninth.
THE CONCERT JS SCHEDULED for 8:30
p .m. ln the Santa Ana Hilb School audltotlum -
by far the county's best fn terms of aooUIUCI -
and the chorale's many admirers are l'lll"t to be
eut in strength for this one.
Rehearsals, we are assured, have bind the choraleinfinevoice.
Another eagerly awaited musical e-... la the
visit April 17 of the Los Angeles '(:ha~~er
Orchestra lDlder that superb conductor. Nmtle
TOMBARl.Ev+j}
Music Box ·
Marrinerolst.Mtutln'•lntheP1eldsfame.
They wU1 perform at 8~tm. In the Orauge Coast College auditorium, Mesa, and their
protram will fnclOde three works by Mosvt: &ym. ·
phony No. at In D m~or. the "Puts/' Slnfcmla
Concertante in Ult m.tor and S~ Na. •1 in C major.
VIOUNJST CIA YTON llF.SU>P and violist Myra Kestenbavm will be soloistl in the Slnfonla.
If you w.nl tickets, eet theal now: tbta writer is
assured that they are IQing lib hotcakes ad little
wonder. OCC la to be ~for ........,
the Marriner organlzatioa bee.
Tbe columa learned UlM &111 sne lmmedlateb' ~poulble '°' brtul.Dg lM Lal~ Cbainbllr ' to <>ranae Oou6t1 Ta iDatltro JClli&lh PMrSma;
JrboH 0n:ap 0out 6)1.Jep Ooi!i'llDU:f ,,._
~Y Orcbeitra bu~ 111 • Oftm fa the • same audltorham.
No one Jn oar a. baa dme.: ... b the
ciMae ol maatc than Jo. Pear~ lfmte I0"8fS Who flock to tbo OCO on April 11 ow WI: c\Ulllmt
Gd diatingulabed ma ti must.ca~ NaDd of apPlause.
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Why do ooly for a few weeb," he s.td. " Ellen Burstyn and Alan Alda wist on 'think that would bave helped m
beins lntervtewed tocether.? more explore the boob and crannl
.. Because we botD bate to do in· of the cbaracter."
tervtews," explains the a~ ... At The plot of ••same Time Ne
least it we do them totetber, .e can Year" aound9 llke the concoct.loo of
entertain each other dmin•. tho PIO-televl1lon comedy 'niter, whic cess. Besides, there la ao llttle time. 1 Bemlo St• bu beell. A New Jene
leave my hotel at •lx 1n the iDomlnC accountant and. an Oaklan
and a nerally I don'l l•ve tb9 •tudio houaelttfe·meet onee a year for 2'
until 7:30 in the evenm,. I'm in bed yeart at a ~orU.ern California inn for b>:.'rJi~;, 8 dlttereat lmprealoa on a weeken4ofnx andself·sea.rchin1.,
wby we do Joint m\enttws, ,. added Jt could bave been merely a splct
the actor. "ll's jmt that we're work· comedy about long·run adultery, bu~ lng 10 hard on becomtnc two Slade 1ave it much more. Tbe cor»-
cbaractera we're playing ~t " ver1atloll nflects the ahilt.1n1 morals
want to stay t\D'led in to each other. and the national tracedies of the
By interviews together we can COil· yean lS51 to 19TT. Produced in ms tinue thatproeaa." by Mortop Gotlleib, who is co.
producing the film, the play is sUll
A.N INTDVIEW om not eeem runniDCJn New York.
hllh on lbeir l1at of tun tb1ngs to do, but Burs~ and Alda submitted TPE PLAY BAD only the tw•
dutllully durtna a lunch break at Jeada onstace. Other people will be
UDiversal Stadlo. They are vlrtually seen in tho movie.
the total cut ol ''Same Time Next "We do• outdoors for a walk and
Year" wblch Wahr Mirtach ("'West we 10 to the dining room, where we
SJ de Story:• TIM Aputment ") ts r.ro-say &ood ~ening to the waiters,"
duclng and Robert Mulllgan ( 'To IBuntyn eZl)laioed. "Also, we see
· Kill A Moclrinibird .. ·~ of Chalmers, be is sort of the manaeer
'.Q") ls ~ ' of the inn. But otherwiae it is just · Oscars Bear OddS in Vegas =~~~:=:i.=~ .A•:;:d:: movies ... not ..
attempts. Bat JU.ebard Dr-wbo bad ..__ ._ for nlno mmUMt. unusual," Alda added. "There was LAS VEGAS CAP>-Bettors at Gile raee aiad·
sports book here should have stuck to the borses
this year and left the Oscar selectk1121 to members
of the Academy of Motion Pld.ure A.rt& and
Sciences. They missed on three of ~ major
winners ahtle 50th annual Atlldemy' Awards show.
"We finally booked a wlaner," Jtm B!'ann
publicity director for tbe Union PJua Hotel bwe:
s;lld Tuesday. The hotel's race, and •Porte book
• made ~Y on two of ~ ftve categort• it had
t.akeo bets on.
• . .
In the two previoua ~ that the botel made
·book on the Oscar aw~. 0'8 bettors, Who Ht the
final odds by the amOUDt waaered, wen wrong
only once.
THIS Y&U, BB'ITORS at the sports boot had
made Richard BurtoG a •tlcOI 1-2 favorite -a $2
bet wins $1 -to wbl b1a .first Oscar in e1&ht
MATINEES SATURDAY & SUNDAY
·CLOSE ENCOUNY~S 'rHE THtlU>toNO
~-10:1• ~T-1 d011•~1'1· •
.. .,._, Uuall JU • "Sleuth.' and "!be Fourposter' and second ~at e.s, walked ell wttb the coveted .,...._. 'It'• aa .-tural thing to play the that one about the two eays living
atatuette llon~ nllbt. Oddi of w mean that a P~er same role every night for nine .toaether ('Staircase')." Also "Hell in bet of $5 wt. $6. . · monthl," &be adntJtted. "How you
" The betton abo mbled the boet wheo "Annie Complete with black · manaee tt depends on the actor's de· the Pacific" with Lee Marvin and
.nail" wu Qamed ~t picture. They bad made -Ue, "Star Wars " dicaUoa. Some care. and th~ mates Toshlro Mifune.
..Julia" and "Tb41 Turning ~ .. the favoritM. robot CP30 showed the work easier. FortunatetY, I was ••sut do you mow something,"
wttb odds Qf&-5 and IJ..S respectively. . up to present an dolne the play with Charles Grodin. said Burstyn. "Many'J)e<>ple who saw Aod~~essa Rednave'a best supportln• Oscar for special ef· wbo cared.'' the play told me they didn't think or actred ~ for 14Julla" weat agalmt the odds lt as having only two characters. It
becaUM 1'Mlday Weld bad beeii made a strong 3-5 feet.a at the 50tb an-• ALDA HAD '1'11.E opportunlt;J to wa1 more like ah~ characters,
f•vorit. for ber role in "LooJdn1 For Mr. Goodbar. J\ \I a 1 AC ad e my• appear In ''Same Time Next Year,·• because of bow .. tta.e two people
., Aw a rd s Monda Y but cPui4zl•t ac~ because of bia changed in different periods of their IN a&ENCB TBl8 ,,.. the,flnt year Ulat night. • televiaJaodutiesln 'Bl·A.S-H." Uves and of our bistory."
tbe public wu wroa.c. with Barta and the picture ·-=========:;:=========.-------------------and the IUllDOrtin« actress;• aald Brann. "All tbie ffr·---------. IUebarO Burton fana are crytq ID their beer.•• •
The ldel lost In the belt actre. and tidst
supporting act. cateeortes. Bettors bad made
Jason Robards a strong 4·5 favorite for his role in
"Julia," while Diane Keaton had been favored -
also at 4·5 -to win the be&t actress Oscar. Both won .
•A thoroughly
Wectlot.ts comedy ...
You don't have to
know a nose wheelie
from a tail spinner to
enjoy 'Skateboard.' ..
-K""" Tho.,..., 1.-Antelft Ttrnn
NOW PLAYING '6 cm 1 · 01W1C11 MW. H
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-Gene Shalit. NBC-TV
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UTMOOOONmlOUfNl
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Ah, cream puffs. TDvertYiOJ'ds conj\1t9 up
visions of lhat perfect dessert -ricb; yet
refreshing, sumptuous yet lleht as a cloud. Go
ahead, succumb to sweet temptation ... a.Qd if
you've always thought these luscious treats are
difficult lo make, think again!
Follow the basic pastry recipe below -il 's
wonderfully quick and simple. Then be creative
with these heavenly fillings and sauces -tbat'..s
the fun part.. All three are easy as well as de-
licious since eacb start.a wllh sweetened con·
densed milk
CREAM PUFFS
<Makes 12 puffs>
1 cup water
V2 cup butter or margarine
1 cup unsifted flour v.. teaspoon salt
4eggs
Preheat oven to .oo·. In medium saucepan,
combine water and butter. Cook over medium
heat until butter is m._tted and mixture comes
to a boil. Lower heat; stir in flour and salt all at
once. Cook and stir about 1 minute or untll mix-
ture forms a ball. Remove from heat; add eggs,
1 at a time. beating well until mixture is smooth. Drop by heaping tablespoonfuls, 3
inches apart, on ungreased baking sheet. Bake 35
to 40 minutes. Cool. Cut off tops and remove soft
dough from inside of puffs. Fill with desired fill·
mas.
milk
OIOCOLATE CREME PUFFS
DELUXE
<Makes 12 aervtngs>
1 <14·ounce> can sweetened condensed
2 (1-ounce) squares unsweetened
chocolate
·~ teaspoon salt
v. CuP hot water
1 2 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 cup ( 1-!i plnt) whipping cream, whipped
12 cream puffs
Confectioners· sugar
In top of double boiler, over boiling watet '
combine swe~tened condensed milk, ch<><:olal•
and salt. Cook, stirring constantly, until mill·
lure is a very thick pudding consistency (about
8 to 10 minutes>. Stir In water; continue So cook
2 to s minutes, stirring frequently until "1xture
thickens again. Remove from beat; stir in
• vanilla. Cool to room temperature; fOld ijl •
whipped cream. Chill. Spoon into cream paffs. -'," --~-...--.. ...
(See PUFFS, P•&e C5)
., Food
Nutrition iD SChool·
At a Costa Mesa school, students are .learning about
nutrition, while the lunchroom trash can is topic for a
study.
By JACKIE HYMAN
O.ltyl'lletMAIHWl'tW
The nutrition director for the Newport·Mesa
Unified Scbool District bad better be carerut.
Her menus are coln1 to be subjected to.
expert 1cruUny -by the students at Victoria
School id Costa Mesa. Cr1Uquin1 the lunches they eat at school ls
only one or the acUvilies atudenta take part in
uader a sta~ Chlld NulriUon Facillties Act or
iins grant. Victoria SC.boo) ls the only school in Orange
County to have such a erant, said school
nutritloni.st Sus• Strahs. The three-year proeram, which began las\
ratt, will includtt-. before-and·al'ter comparlaon
on lundu'oom aUna habits. ~ c:heck ot the lunchroom trash cart a1
Victoria and, for comparisoo~. P()~ona
School turned up uno1>4:ned cartoos ol tnllk.
"10\s&mpled 1tpples aod full Poi'tloos ol other·
fooda, uneaten. •
''What aurpriiled me is that many Qf the cblldr~ ne~ tasted the food1" • Ms. SU-aha
said. Sbe hopes to aee a chapp when the check
ia repe•ted in May.
Another ~t.t asked cbildml Which of
two 1nacka they would 'cho<>ff. All)onf the
choices were Kool·AJd venua oran1e Julee,
How many times have you gooe into your
supermarket and admired the produce section's sprin~h'ne arra1 of color and freshness? Bright
yellow lemons rest alongside the rettuce,
spinach, and othel' ereens. Fresh asparagus,
carrots, radishes, and green on1ons add to the
colorful produce display.
Fresh veJetables should be a part of the
famtly'a regular diet. They supply needed
minerals and vitamins. It your gang are not
vegetable fanciers, convert them by prepa~g
them in exciting new ways. Fresh lemons do
wonderful things lo ve1etables I Let the f amlly
tcy these new deUcloua ways lo eat asparaeus,
eaulif tower and C'1'rota. And se"e them a h.i
()( fresh vesetablcs for spicy dlppln1 and snack·
ing .
Twlnkies versua apples, and tarrota venu.s
potato dUpe.
Teachers didn't just take the cb1lc1No'•
word for tt, though, Ms. Strahl aald. Under 'the
1uiae of bein& rewarded for t.Ulng ~ test,
children were actually 1iven tboH c:bolcel and
didn't always pick what the,,' Uldtbe)' Would.
A follow-up test in May ls planned;
The nutrttioo pro1ram includee teachers
and interested paren~ u well~ students, Ms.
Strahl said.
A tA:ltal ol 10 hours of prolJ'arns for parents
have been planned, pd at least 40 plus 2S
teachers and auests turned up ~ently to hear
consumer conswtant Barbara Erickson speak on
"The Consumer Food Game."
· Upeoming topics include whether or not to
use vitamin aupplementa, 'ffhll teachers have
also tackled a CO\ll'SO in microwave cooking for
children. State arant funCla. purchased a
microwave tor the nutrition classroom.
All gr leveb, incluctioa pre-school, take
•nutriUCft Classes ftoom teacher Marcia Hannifin
and pa.ttlclpate 1n field tripe planned by acbool
nune Joan SemeuJuk. Mn. s,mtnluk tald jaunts bave included
<See SCHOOL. Paae C5)
Less
Lobster?
PLYMOUTH, Mass. CAP)°".:. Lobster lovers
unite! Eat less lobster I
That may be the simplest answer for a
simple problem: lobsters are being caught.
faster than lhcy can reproduce.
The federal government is working on a
lobster fishery management plan for the New
England Regional Fishery Management
Council, the federally·appointed panel that
administers fish quotas and helps monitor lhe
200-mile offshore fishing llmiL
The plan was drafted by Thomas Morrissey
of lhe National Marine Fisheries Service, who
says he is alarmed by depletion of lobsters in
New England waters.
Morrissey won 't be specific about the pro~sal, but said. "At the moment, I don't anttcipat.e quotas being proposed for lobsters."
some lobster industry spokesmen say it
may already be too late to safeguard the New
England lobster.
"OverflShlni is so bad lhe industry C()uld be
in real trouble in rive years," said Edward
Blackmore of Stonington, Maine, president of
his state's lobstermen 's association.
"We increased oar fi.shing effort 21h times
since 1957, but over the years the catch has
gradually declined by 30 percent," said
Blackmore.
In Massachus etts, Robert Barlow,
executive director or the state Lobster111en 's
Association, said, "It's a known fact we harvest
90 percent of lobsters as they reach legal size
and we're heavily overfished.''
Lobstermen In Rhode Island reported a "25
percent drop in pounds landed in 1977,
compared to 1976." according to Allan
Guimond of the Atlantic Offshore Fish and
Lobster Association.
r
. . . . . . . . .
Pineapple Molasses Cru'J!J' cake.
The next tl'me you bakes together into an plan an oven dinner, imaginative dessert. .
bake a pineapple cake· dessert at the same
time. It's a good way to
help save energy and
please your family with
a special dessert.
PINEAPPLE
MOLASSES
CRUMB CAKE
% cup s hortening (part butter)
layer over bottom of
greased 8-inch square
baking pan. Combine
undr alned pineapple,
molasses and soda. Stir
llehtly and apoon half
(~ cup) over crumb
crust . Sp.rlnkle with half
the r emaining mixture
...
A Lobster 6u:nd>0
Over the years gumbo
bas come to mean, to
most people, a certain
kind of soup. One that
baa Its origins amone
the c reole cooks of
Louisiana and combilles
'o kra and other
vegetables in a chicken
or beef broth.
Fact ls, the word gum·
bo simply means a mix-
ture. A gumbo can be a
melange of cultures,
people or viewpoints
JUsl as easily as It can
be a mixture of tngre.
dients in somethblg ·we
eat.
The mixture in the lat·
ter can be what.ever you
choose.
&O CK LOB8Y Ba pepper. sa'ute for S
GUMBO mtilui.t lild thaa sttr ln
1 lb: fro a Soutb tJou.r,fOl'edual.lY ltlr in
AfrlcaD roclt lobtter toD)atoH• Jiilce and t.lla • 10up. Stlr over low btat
\6 cu is 1>utt•r >or imtll 1 uce bu.bbltii &lid tnarcano. thicltena •llahtl;. W.1tb
1 Gld•, chopped 1cl11ors cut away Wl·
1 elov• 1arllc. deratde membraQe of
chopped South African rock
1 lblall areen ~ lobtter talla and pull out
per, chopped meat in one piece. Cut
~ cupnour raw meat, Into 1 lnch·
1 c 1 n ( 1 I b .) cro11wiae .Ucea. Add
tomatoea. undrained rock lobster to sauce
and chopped and cook for 5 to I
1 cup tomato Julee minutes or qntU rock
1 can Cl~ 01.) COD· &obiter meat ls opaque.
demed chicken pmbo Seuon, ii neceuary, to
aoup. undlluted tHte with salt. Spoob Tbaw rock lobster rock lobster mixture tall1. In a aaucepan, over bot cooked rice or
melt butter and aaute saffron rice. Yield: 6 aDtOD, prllo end green .. .aentncl-
U.S. Ho. I RUSSETT
POTATOES
FOOD
LOWER
PRICES!
I LL
CB.LOIA~
"Pineappl e Molasses
Crumb Cake" Is quack
and easy to make. lnex·
pl'ns i ve, t oo. yet
handsome and good tast·
ing enough to serve for
<·ompany. You 'll find It
delicious eaten plain,
e legant topped with
m olasses fla vore d
whipped cream.
._, cup broWn sugar
(packed)
2 cups sifted
purpose flour
C about % cup). Spoon '--..::::!!~:_~~~--'~~~~------L-.::::::!! all · remaining pineapple
First, make a rich
crum·cooky mixture and.
pal half the bottOm ol an
S·inch l!JQua.re/an. Then layer canne crushed
pineapple mixed with
golden molaSHI .arid a
bat of le~ening with the
remainiftl crumbs. It aU
'·• teaspoon salt
mixture over, and top
with remaining crumbs.
Bake In moderate oven
1 (8'4 ounce) can <350 degrees F> about 40
crushed pineapple minutes, until cake tests
lh c u p 1 i g h t done. Cool in pan. Cut
molasses into squares or, rec· ~ teaspoon soda tangles and aerv& with
Molasses Cream Molasses Cream. Makes
1 (~Inch) qake. <.6 MlY·
Cream sbort.enlng and. in••) sugar tocetber well. Add . flour and sa1t, and mix MofaHea Creanf:
unttl finely crumbled. Beat 1. caip whlppine
LtghUy measure half the cream until Stiff wit.h 2
mixture (about H:S t a b I Upoons 1i g ht,
cups> and press in even molaues,
140 separate print.cf Hems,
ptua addtttonal sp•e•• you c1n flll In yourHlf.
34 Stapl,.
21 Vegel aat.s t• Ft'Ulta • ""
t •kert Item•
• " S Beverage• 11 ....... nd
ftSh *"'"•• 11 oewy ftema
20 llillsceflaMOU•
~t lOWESl PR\CES
LARGE LOIN END
NU.SHiil FAIMS 99c BRAUNSCHWEIGER u
1601. KER MS
STRAWBERRY.
CAM
. .., .
PRESERVES
I I
I
l
I 1
I
A Hearty Ham Bake
~
i
l,
' •
• • l
I • I ..
I
I 6
~
~ J
Hearty Ham Bake is a fascinatinc main
dish wbicb can be baked aod served lo an old·
fashioned cast iron skillet tor a bit of country
charm. Or your favorite casserole dtsb will
work equally well. Either way you'll serve a
meal as welcome as sprin1.
A savory ham filling is topped with a
popover-like batter, which puffs slightly when
baked. The colorful and nutritious filling is
quickly made from a package of frozen peas
and carrots, chunks or ham, and a smooth
flavorful chicken gravy.
The gravy is made the easy way with an en-
velope of chicken gravy mix. Then mayonnaise
is stirred in for an extra creamy sauce .
Ham and Cheese Pina will provide a
change of pace from lbe ham and cheese-
sandwich rQUtine. Two packages of refrigerator
crescent rolls, which can be patted quickly into
a pizza crust, are topped wltb ham and sliced
bard-cooked eggs. Finally a sunny cheese sauce
Italian Hero
Whether you call that
monumental sandwld
• of Italian-American
creation a "torpedo," a
salami (about I2 slices)
"4 pound sliced pro-
volone cheese (about 8
slices)
• "aubmarlne," a
' "frinder," a "po' boy" (down South) or most
familiarly a "hero," it
: gets to be 10methlng ex·
tra special when you
give it some real It.alian
flavor touches.
CONQUEIUNG HERO
lh cup mayonnaise
1 teaspoon onion
powder
1 1 teaspoon oregano
leaves, crumbled
1 / 16 te, a s p o o n
ground black pepper
4 individual ( 4 ot.
' each) hero breads ,
warmed
"4 pound sliced
cooked ham (about 8
slices)
y, pound sliced hard
2 medium tomatoes,
sliced
8 Tuscan peppers,
split in half lengthwise
1 jar (7V• oz.) roast·
ed red peppers, drained
Combine mayonnaise,
onion powder. oregano
and black pepper. Cut
breads lengthwise ;
spread both sides with
mayonnalse mixture. On
bottom half of each loaf
arrange 2 slices ham,· 3
slices salami, 2 slices
cheese, 2 slices tomato,
4 Tuscan pepper halves
and a layer of red pep-
pers. Cover ~itb top
loaves. Serve illl·
mediately. YIELD: 4
portions.
Introduce your taste buds to Schltmer's
elepnf Bavarian Braunschweiger with
Pfst.1Ch1o nuts, but be generous. This
brawny Braunschweiger is created the
SloW, old-time way from delicately smoked
Uver, combined with the lush goodness of
Pistachio nuts, then stuffed In a colorful castna ,/'
to preserve all that goodnen. Ideal for
appe i2crs, snacks and dips. Try It tOday!
with the tang of prepared yellow mustard
replaces the traditional tomato sauce. This
casual supper idea is bound to brighten every-
one's ouUook on leftovers.
A crisp green salad, milk or coffee, and a
piece of spice cake will complete a bot and
hearty early spring supper when served with
either main dish recipe.
HEARTY HAM BAKE
Savory Ham FUllng:
1 envelope ( ~ oz.) chicken gravy mix
H4 cups water
114 cup mayonnaise
2 cups diced cooked h-.,m
1 package (10 Oz.) fr9ten peas and car·
rots, partially thawed
Topping:
2eggs
1 cup milk
1 t.able.poon oU
1 cup all-purpose Dour
~teaspoon salt "41cup grated parmesan cheese
Combine· contents of ,ravy mix eu•elope,
water. and mayonnaise n large ov~proof
slt£Det. • Add ham pJua peat and carrota. Sim-
mer ~ minutes, st.lrrlng occaslon.µ7 • .Lllh"1l
beat together eegs, milk, and oU. Aqa_nour a1'd
salt: beat with rotary beater just unW amooth.
Pour over hot filling. Sprinkle with cheese.
Bake in 400 df?p>ee oven 30 to 40 minutes, 'until
puffed and deep golden brown. 4 to 8 servincs. •rr preferred, prepare ham mixture in
skillet, then transfer to shallow 2-quart baking
dish or 13 x 9-lnch pan. Place in 400 degree oven
while preparing topping.
HAM AND CHEESE PIZZA
2 packages refrigerator crescent dinner
rolls
l 'f.i cups diced cooked ham
2 or 3 hard·cooked eggs, sliced
•,~ cup evaporated milk, undiluted
6 slices process American cheese, finely
diced v. cup prepared yellow mustard
Paprika
Unroll crescent roll dough and place on
greased cookie sheet, pressipg perforations
tocether to make one large crust. Arrange ham
and eggs over douib. Combine evaporated milk,
cheese, and mustard ln small saucepan; heal
.and stir just unlil cheese melLI into a smooth
sauce. Spoon over pizza. Sprinkle with paprika.
Bake in 450 degree oven 10 to lS minutes, unW
crust is brown. 6 to 8 servings.
•
•
SIVOIY~
fllllng Is
topped with
popover..fike-
batter.
I
•Thompson•·
8-Complex
"50".
Buy100~·· lize It Reg prio.
ofl7.~ ....
IOc .. 1 .. 11be
FREE
DAil Y PLOT tJS
• EVERFRESH •
ALL
0CCASa0H MIX
NATURAL SNACW. OF
DRlt!O ,RVtT8 'l ... SEEDS ~.
REG. S1.75
SALE I .39uo1
··-LINDBERG MUTRITIOH SERVICE
SOU1M COAST P\AIA '-.--c.... ........
Wu lhn_.w.I~ 117-'161 ·
.TUNE IN TO
KELLOGG'S 5™ ANNUAL
ST.ICK UP FOR BREAKFAST
CONTE st
2000 kldS Wiii win a sears cartr 1e1ge TI*-came5"SVStem.
Vour children can ~nter Kellogg'S
new Sttck Up For Breakfast contest.
They couti W1n a sear'S cartridge
~-cames™ System. Hook It up
easily to your TV and they can play
Pong~ Super Pong• and 22 other
tele-games. Vou can save 1oc. Just
cNp the coupon below. Redeem It
on any one of the Kellogg cereals
picture(! on the coupon. each
specially mar!Ced paekage contains
an entry t>lank and complete con·
test details. The contest Is open to
children 14 and under. It ends
september 15, 1978. Start your
children on the contest today. And
Sttck Up For Breakfast every day.
contest void where prohibited.
..,~~,,,.,,.,~(ff SNf"\ Rol-hU<tr 4'f'd Co
.,_.ontt ~ Suoet-~ .,. ''~"""at Air• tr..;. • ~-eomo.n. 0 I '171111.i -a c-......... r-----------------------------~,
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ON 1 SUPER SIZE
(11 ounce IOllon. 1 ounc:t IUM)
OR 2 FAMILY SIZE
(7 ounce lo4lon, 4 ouru tUbe,
•ounceJar)
OR 3 REGULAR SIZE
(4 ouric:. lo4lon, 2.5 OUnQe
lube, 2.5 ounc. Jar)
(Aleo good on ~ 4 Pe...onal Size
1.7ounc.tube)
tlead&
Shoulders
LOTION, TUBE OR JAR
LIMIT ONE COUPON 'PER PURCtfASE "'""-· ~ .. , ___ ., .......... ____ .. _____ _
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. " . .. . ... . .. .. . .
Tiie nidpes here for Stir toc«ther auger, ef 1 whites t to
bi c k ea Supreme. cornstvcb and rwn until chocolate mixture.
reen Bean Caa1trote 1n i • e d . St tr I n to Into 2 (8 en> aouffle di.I·
eod Cbocolale Soutne chocolate. ln small bo\ri hea or 2 (10 oi) 11
ere all created H · with mixer al 1'1th speed c u s t a r d c u p 1 .
IPressly &o aerve two. beat eec wh.itet end salt Microwave with full
Each b quick and ..,Y. until stt11 peaks f0tm. In power 1 to l~ Jnlnutee.
to prepare. amall bowl with mixer <Soutne will be putted
CHICKEN SUP&EME • at high 1peed beat •SIC when microwave la °"'
(. 1 whole chick• yolks unUI thick an(t wUl tau Immediately ... n lemon colored; add when microwave tul'll$
t>reaat, halved chocolate mixture and off. Top wlll look Uft·
1"' teaapooo aalt be a\ until blend~ Fold cooked.) Serves 2. Pepr,r to taste ""'ii. iiiiii
3 ablespoon& """
·maraarine
1 cup sliced
• 1 mushrooms
lcupmllk
I tablespoon corn-'
starch
2 tablespoons dry
sherry
Sprinkle chicken with
salt and pepper. Jn 8·
mcb baking dish or 2 in·
d1vidual baking dishes,
place chicken skin aide
down . Dot with
margarine Ba lee in
350 F oven 20 minutes.
Add mushrooms. Ba>:e 5
minutes. In small
saucepan stir mtlk into
cornstarch until
smooth. Stirring con·
~lanlly, bring to boil
over medium heat and
•boil 1 minute. Stir In
sherry. Pour over
chicken; stlr well to in·
corporate pan juicu and
mushrooms. Bake 5
minutes or until hot and
bubbly. Serves 2.
Microwave Method :
Sprinkle chicken with
salt and pepper. In 8·
inch earthenware bak-
ing dish or 2 individual baking di.shes, place
chicken skin side down.
Dot with margarine
Mic rowave with hi gh
power S minutes. Turn
chicken and microwave
an additional S minutes.
Add mushrooms .
. Microwave 2 minutes. In
s mall saucepan stlr mUk
rnto cornstarch u)t til
smooth. Stirring con·
slantly, brine to boll
over medium heat and
boll 1 minute. Stir in
s herry . Pour over
chicken ; stir well to in·
corporate pan juices and
mushrooms. Microwave
1 minute. Serves 2. GREEN BEAN
CASSEROLE
2 cups ereen beans.
cut ia l·inch lengths
! can (3 oz) sliced
mushrooms, drained
1 tablespoon corn
sta~h
\2 teaspoon dry
mustard
1 1.4 cups chicken
bouitlop
1 tablespoon
margarine
1 cup French.fried
onion rings
Jn 11 2-quart casserole
dish toss together green
beans and mushrooms.
1 n small bowl stlr
together c:Omstarch and
mustard. Stir in bouillon
until smooth. Pour over
vegetables. Dot with
margarine. Cover and
bake in 400"P' oven 2S
minutes. Sprinkle top
with oalaa iiDga. Bake
an addlUooal 5 mtnutes
or until aauce b bubbly.
Serves 2.
Microwave Method:
I n 1 \.~ · q u a r t
earthenware casserole
dish tosa together green
beans and mushrooms.
In small bowl stir together cornstarch and
mustard. Stir in bouillon
until smooth. Pour over
vegetables. Dot with
margarine. Cover and
microwave wilb blah
power 12 minutes.
Sprinkle"'~ with ofilon
rinfl&. Microwave an ad·
dit1onal 3 minutes, or
until sauce is bubbly
Serves2. CHOCOLATE
SOUFFLE a squares ( 1 oz
each) aemisweeL
docolate
2 tablespoons sugar 1 tablespoon corn·
atarcb
1 tablespoon darlt rum
2 eus, separated
Dubaalt
In small 1aucepan,
melt c~late over lC>w
beat. ~tO er •UC· ~ ar c · and rum
until ed. Stir Into
ehocolate.iln 1mall bowl
.ttb mb at hlib
beat eu • tel and salt
until AUf ~au form. In
1mall bowl with mi•er at hltb· IPiMd beat eatr 1•11t1 u.nut tblck aDd Jemon color•d. Add
tbocoJate mhtun and
at until bltnded. Fold
•• whit•• lnto thocolile . 1\itD
2 (8 OI) IOUtllo dfj •.
ea or a (10 os> custard
tUi>L Bab In.," OYen 2 to 15 mlftm. or UAUl
lf In Cllltet aut cJtila Sen
~TAtl~lllOS • lliUClD--··~ LDllCI MIA IS ::l ...... (A.
'°' . CMUCll • "°' A .. HAST
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mm.s ............... " .. ··"" ,,., i.iilc.s .............. ,. ....... •1" . ,,.,
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.... .,..... ., •• IU7•CMUCll•ec.uu •1•• ..... enAK .... 1& • .... ...._ AUil .. LL •
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'1
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f t
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f
,ffOOD
••• <,._.._cu
tbe A ..-_, La Hibn. •
p plaat. a alUI·~ ;tDa racillt.J.
In tbe clusroom, lea ar. cl1vlde4
b«wHO food preparatiop and nutritloo lessc:los,
iD wbldt 1tudcnt1 leana abcMal tM four food
O"OUP9 and why nutrients are neeeuary. The
state provides a curriculum outllne, wbJch
encoura1es comblnine nutrition learn·
in1wilbsucb11dllsumatband~adin1.
One Coal, for lmtane:e, ta to teach chlldren
that watchin1 television requl.rea 1eaa enera tbao exerdte.
Other &oals Include learnini abo\rt careers ln the food industry and learaloc about
1anitatioo in p~paring food, plus stadylng bow
advertisinc influences choices lo crocery
•hopping. .
Mra. Semenbak pointed out that on a "•bool survey. parents indicated thelt' n\ainber one
concern for their children wu ~ hM.lth,
includln1 nutriUon.
"I tbink beeau.se of fast foods, ao many
families aren't eatinc properly," abe said.
Already there ba ve been some changes, she
•aid.
.. We've had p.rents tell us that if their children ., to the IJ"C)Cery with them, they'll
•ay, 'Oh, you shouldn't buy that,"' Mra.
SemenJuk u.td. Ma . Hannifin related a grocery store
incident about a preschooler. "Her mother said-
ahe jumped out or the basket-at the supermarket
to get some pineapple a.Iler she'd tasted it at
school."
Encouraaia,g children to tute new foods
seem• to work v.iell. Ma. .Hannifin said. addinc that both boy1 and &irl.s often display more
interest in (C)Oklng at home atterwvds. They
are glfen mimeographed recipes to take home
after a dish ls ptepared at school.
One surprise hit was sliced bananas dipped
in wheat germ. "Kids have told me they love
Y1heat germ now and they bring it in lbe1r
lunch," Ms.·ltannifin said.
Pineappl• was also a saccess, as wertt
pinas on flour tC>rtillas and a drink ualng
yogurt.
The Obly rallure was a carrot and rai.ain
salad, in wblcb Ms. Hannifin bell•VH
mayonnaln wu what turned orr the studeats.
"If I use that recipe-again. I'd subsUtute
pineapple J.Uce," she said.
••• Lemon
<From Pa1e Cl)
lemon peel, JUiee, egg and horseracdlsh: heat.
Serve over cooked asparagus. Makes 6 servings
(about 1~ cups sauce).
ZESTY 2·BEAN SALAD
Grated peel and juice of~ fresh lemon
·~cup prepared Italian dressinc
1 can (16 ounces) cut. green beans.
drained
1 can (about 15 ouncea) red kl~ beam, drain-4 .
~ 1 small on.ion, tllced. separatect lllto rinp -
t Ill bowl, combine lemon ~i; JUiee .tnd
tta lap, dressing. stir 1D rematnta1_~-.;
chill. Gam.lab witb lemon eartwbetl \'triat.s ll cte.
sired. MlkM 4 servings (about 4 CQlil).
GREEN BEANS 'N LEMON OOllPIJNGS
1 package (9 oun~) fro~ eut iremi • beans
v.i cup bolllftg water
1 package (about 1~ ounces) cheese
sauce mix
lcupplus ~cupmllk
4 slices bacon, cooked, crumbled
1 can (2 to 4 ounces> whole or sliced
mushrooms. drained
Grated peel or 1 fresh lemon
1 1~ cups biscuit mlx
Paprika
In saucepan, cook green beans in boiling
water until tender (about 5 minutes); reserve li·
quid. Prepare cheese sauce with 1 cup milk
following package directions. Add green beans
with cooking liquid, bacon, mushrooms and ~
grated lemon peel; simmer. In bowl, combine
biscuit mix, remaining lemon peel and
tAl cup milk to form soft dough. Pour hot vegeta-
ble mixture in shallow 1 "2 quart or 8x8x2-lnch
baking dish; drop dough on ve1etable mixture
to form 6 dumplings. Sprinkle with paprika.
Bake at 400 degrees for 10 to 12 minutes. Makes
4 servings.
• •• Puffery
<From Pa1e Cl)
Replace tope; sp:rinkJe with conlectlonen' sug.
ar. Refri«erate leftovers.
ROTFtJDGE
ICE CREAat PUFFS
1 (6-0lmce) package semisweet choeolate.
morsels
2 tablespoons butter or mar11rtne
1 (14-ounce) can sweetened eoadenHcl
mllk
•
Wtdneeday, April 5, 1971 ONLY PllOT CJ
Dressy Salads
After a hearty main • ~ cup cholesterol· cboleateroJ.rr.e eq 1ub-
course, a fruit salad ls a free eu substitute 1tltute. Pour a steady
refreshing chance of l container (8 oz.) stream of ea aubltitute
pace. It is also delicious lowf at yogurt into the bot mixture. as a flnt course, 1alad Combine aucar, com: stlrrint constantly. Cook
course or dessert. Select starch, pineapple Juice. 3 more minutes untll
a few of the following oranae Julee, lemon thickened. Cool to
and serve in a lettuce Juice and vinegar In a lukewarm.
lea! cup or small bowl -small saucepan. Cook Fohl lukewarm mix·
diced, pared apples, over mediUtn heat, stir· ture lnto yogurt. Chill
canned peach or pear ring constantly, until thoroughly. Refrieerate
halves, Blnc eberries, thickene_~, about 3 unused drelsin& up to• r~d or green grapes, minutes. 1:>Ur 1 tables· day1.
gr•pefrult or oran1e poon of bot mixture Into Maka 2 cups.
sections, atrawberTtes r---Ji-l_G_H_P_R_O..;.._rf~E-l_N_ and melons in season,
banana slices or plneap.
pie chunks.
CREAMY nvrr
SALAD DRESSING
~cupsugar
1 tablespoon com·
starch
~ cup pineapple
juice
~ cup orange juice
3 tablespoons lemon
juice
l teaspoon white
vinegar
Pl1CtS lffKTIVE WED., AH. 5 THIU
TUES., API. 11, 1 t71 •
WE AT MARKET BASKET ARE SO SURE OF OUR LOW PRICES, QUALITY & YALU! THAT •••
WE'RE MAKING THIS TRIPLE GUARANTEE! . .
AD,,f:SID ~· 2• SAt~\~\an ~· 3••• THE~:r.'lENCE ••••
GUARAllHEI ~. I ~. I ~ , IUARAl(IEEI ... I 1. . IUARA•IEEI I
.uca Of JP n• es tttllaP TO ii. I · •: I I wnr ~ nis TWl.l nea •mG cim1. " 'ou ca. ""'° ttwU I ~ t>t MAllif .. ...,.,..... tn M MAIW WMt .. ..a ftlUU llllS W• AT AllT ffllll SUP'IUAIUT'. wt'U TllN lll :r,:'Jc:/ AS~~ ... 1 ... ·1 I wwlfTUJ ... '°"' '°'~l SATl5fACTioM I ~erutesawt•w.z;,g1an,DtWTunn1ATTCM111&tun I nis -..,. ··ououH:m' OfOf • /fl/Ii i •••• ..,. of JW!t•AmlllJ. If YOU AU WT IT ...... MAll&t I • _, .... Sol, ..... "'*" IASlll wtU .ISIUO I ~"'...~ma; • • I , I TM "°' wa "'' SA* ....o ot a I ar 11......, mm~~ MOa AT MAlllT wm. co.An I N<1ieOTiftWUsA,_Oi A ' . · CO#MAUll¥6 OI ~ TOii M · =::.::x~~nUliD"~rtO::USI~~~
I llfTttWIG TOU TO PUIOl.Ul '* AOVuTtslD I I OWUtl<l. • I I ~·' i Peas'° &ullT IASUT MO .. WIU:fiH TllPU '111 I mM Af '* ~ Pbct Wll9 H 9AT$. • • U1!!i
·-·------· ··-----·-·· ·---------. iiiiil ~ SH~NK PORTION 7
SMDKEDHAM
~
·STRAWBERRIES
•
t
J
l
I
'
······ii•••••••lll
CRA&MONT
UART POP
In Refreshing
Flavors.
LUCERNE
CANNED MILK
~~ ~1:J1
Check The Savings At Your Safeway!
l+)!!!~~ .. !~~ .. 4 . .: 65° '
'
' A Balanced
Pet Ration.
TRULY · INE
)l· . -!!!~~--~~~ ...................... ~t~ 79° -PAPER
OWELS ·
,,
rr J ... -'"
ae
:J .. ... o
2:J
..-·-
.
·t' -
.,,.,
f
I I ' Solt and
Abaorbent
OEIAL Potato Chips ....
L:::.:~11" Party Pride •.. . . ... .. . ... .... .. . . ..... ..... ..... .. • pq .
.
. •PRIAL Drink Mixes 281,kz.
Cragmont Fruit Flavors. Powdered ..... . CM
Large Ill AA" .Eggs 1: 990
l.llcerne Fresh ......................................... .
MANOR HOUSE
MEAT PIES
Frozen, Heat
And Eat!
~At. 4all Pk gs.
BEL·AIR FROZEN
GOLDEN CORN
Whole Kernel
Prices Effective In Ucented Safeways.
GINorVODKA
·'"""i·~ Winner's Cup $ 311 Dlstilled
80-Proof 2$ 7ICHll.
~SmurllaT~ ,3•
....., 80-Proof ........... 7ICMll.
~Scotch 1.71.,IMI ~ MacNalr's, 86-Proof Ur. ' -
~~1!t ~~~.~ .............. nfth •zo•
Sure Winner ••• Safeway Meats
Safe
FR
Grade A
Whole
Body
s=.~ Smoked
Picnics c·
Porterhouse · forT.-Bone
Steaks
U.S.O.A.,
Choice
Beef
Loin
orSteaks8 USDA
Chotce
Beet
Crot1
lb Shoulder
ChUQk UL
:19 .
OLDBROO
ARIARIN c· = = ............... ,..., .
... •· ~n. 1111 ae ,,,., ......., ......... Callar-
_ ............ ..
................ Comdlli).
TOWN HOUSE CUT
GREEN BEANS
Mr1.
Wright'•
•Regular
•Sour oouah
:t
. . . .. ....
GRAPEFRUIT
JUICE
Town House Pink
1=•1
THOUSANDS F Dua.1.JMnil
STILL AVAILABl.E IN
SAFEWAY'S
•500,000 BINGO
OVER '265,000 AWARDED TO DATE. '235,000 STILL AVAILABLE. CHECK YOUR CARDS ••• YOU MAY HAVE A BINGO WORTH '2,000, '1,000, '100 or '10.
llMI ll-22 GOOS t:ulT EfftCTlftMUCMZI. 1171 ._ .. www t • ·a ........................ 1 ---............................ _ .. -I U M .................... .,.., .. ,m ........ .. ..... 1-T ,..,. -_ ......... .._.,.., .. .,.. .. ,f7& ._ • ..., ................ ...,. _ _. .. ,m• ....................... _.. ...
O·lb. Bag
·Dried~cots
Coachella • Orapefrun White or Pink. lb.19'
or Cor-8-lncb P.othoa datumadl*I"
I • 1'•
I 1:
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OOD
Great Grapes!
Meals tMt are low la tll ttd udamooth. 1 teupoan almond
ct.lt1 ftl'Oducta cu be SUr lemoo peel and ntraet ~ala11ced by D•ttln1 plAeaPJ,le. Save cooled, . Sw·•eet11t:1ea1MM1CIG4 whipped
milk. lee cream, yocwt overple. cream ~~~!>~ 1'0GvaT D&WX& ~.,:~ e::.u..
eel here are delierta that Juice Va cup coocorcl lf•I"' 1k, atlnlq, over low
do Juat that. 1 tablespoon ua. beat, UDW ielatlD la d.Liooi'
GRAPE BUNTZS8 ftaYOred ceJatlD 10lved. Stir ID srape pre-2 pa c k • I• a ( 3 1 CQPI coocord srape aervea, yosurt, leaion
ounces, eacb> cream PreHtveforjam peel and almo11d ••· cheese.softened. 2 t ( tract. au.LI unW aU1bUy 1 cootalner <8 conalnera 8 tblckened.Beatoverlce
' W-..dar. April S. 1971 OAILV Al.OT Cf
Grap•B~
are a
dessettto
remember.
ounces) small curd cot· ounce•, each) µn. unUl cna.my. 5pooa lnto
ta1• cheese flavored )"OIUl't deaaert dbbel. Chlll UD•
1 e11. slightly I 1 teatpooD 1rated tll eet. Garolab wltb
beaten ~em~oo_:_peel~~~~~~·~h~l~pped~~cream~~-~~---~:'.::::~~~~~~:::~::::::=::::;::::,::::=:::=:~=::::t::=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~-'A ~ golden raisins
2 teupoona grated
lemon peel
"'teaspoon aalt
1 cup sifted fi.our v. teaspoon salt
~cup milk
2 eQI, well beaten
2 tablespoons butter ormarprine
Sour cream
Concord grape jelly
Finely chopped
,Pecans or walnuts
For filling, combine
cream cheese, cottaae
cheese, egg, raisins,
lemon peel and "' teas-poon salt.
For batter, sift
together flour and ~
teaspoon salt. Stir in
milk and egp; beat un·
tU smooth.
Heat buttered crepe
pan or 7-inch skiUel.
Pour enough batter into
pan to cover bottom.
Cook until golden brown.
Remove from pan and
keep warm. Repeat
making 8 pancakes.
Divide filling among
pancakes. Roll up Cold· ins in sides to make neat
package.
Heat 2 tablespoons
butter in large skillet.
Add blintzes and brown
on all sides. Serve bot
lopped with sour cream.
grape jelly and
sprinkled with nuts.
CONCORD CUSTARD
PIE
4 eggs
:t3 cup sugar
"'2 teaspoon salt
21,; cups mllk
I teaspoon vanilla
. ~ cup shredded
coconut
1 unbaked 9·incb
pastry shell
1 can (8 ounces)
frozen concord grape
drink or juice concen-
tr ale, undiluted
1 tablespoon corn· istarch
2 tablespoons
slivered lemon peel
"• cup drained
crushed pineapple
Beat eggs lightly with
rotary beater. Add au.g-
ar and salt and beat UD·
tU thick and lemon col·
ored. Gradually beat in
milk and vanllla. Strain
through fine sieve. Add
coconut. Pour Into pre· pared pastry shell. Bake
at 425 degrees for 15
minutes. Reduce heat to
3SO degrees and bake 12
to 15 minutes longer un,.
tll knife Inserted
midway between center
and rim comes out
clean. (Center will set
upon standing.) Do not
overbake. Cool on wire
rack to roo m tem -perature.
Meanwhile, CODJblne
grape drink and com·
starch in saucepan.
Brtne to boil, stirrine. un-
Cocoa
Rolls
MeatorBHf
Fanner John or Oscar Mayer
':..
A mlaturw of OrCMlnd Bfff
end Soy Protein Cone9ntret.
3 Lb. Pechv•
Su~ Blend TM
':II
Frams
11b.. pkg.
Beef Chudl·Blede Cut
Chucl
Steak
For Number One Club
members only
Diis week's Pbu nert weell's
Special Coupon Offer =:,,coupon
r-NUMiiii-+O.Oa:w-1 11aa """~,,.."IP"' tut ~ eoupons 1.ow '"'u Sund~• • RalP"t
l<>d "°" "' WYe LivhtChllnll·lnOI IS-.... °"'911 39 ~~ ~.~~ -Starkist 8\i OL ~1111 ~UT >\UK.
T111a c•n
1
w1TH eou~ON • Clorox ~
LwM One 1t1m Ind ON Co141M""' C\tllllftW. UlalCIW I
c..., Bd¥e""' '""' •. ,2, 1t11 •Light Bu'bs lMC...-v*OHlY-~-IWplio-ONCa..Cerd I
"-----------COUPON---------..J •Ralphs lemonade
If you haven't joined yet. .. lf• easy, jutt Ilk u1 how. Detlill It your nearnt Altphl
Golden Premium Meats Super Deli
e..tCMk ~.~~,~ RCMRI Bone Roast
m helCllUO-7-Bone Steak
ufo•l'"'..._. :c•o1t1 Top ROll1d Steak
~ .... Cllucll Flanken Ribs ................... ~Cube Staaka
~ St.:l,;g"Beef
Frozen Foods
,..
•••
10• ~o.ear .. .,..-... .. Beef Bologna
e98~i;cheese ,., ... ,., 2"~Mlllutlll#C .... .. Orange Juice ,., .. 131 ~A~.Chlele 111 ~ MlwlMM....._..,~ ,.. .. c .. mHam
,.. ..
Wines & Spirits
59 n*-.».l ...... OMw
I '!:. ~Sandi• Vodka
730.~·~~-·-=-• Ten Hlp1 Boun>on . e9 D UMllMn..tiM• 1:.: .u Kamchllkil VOdka
39 Ol ...... ""'4MeAI '::'. . EIJ~
..
OkfF•hlon
Creamy or Super Crunch
Skippy
Peanut Butter
1·9
12oz. II baaket
'"'·Chicken Of Turtey
Morton Frozen
Meat Pies
101.11 pkg.
Another U&PHI IXCLUllVI
iM
= 28% lower than national brands and • :~1 , .,y., l , . l~~ 14o/o lower than private label brands
' ' · llrrn:~rwon r~ [ 0 J .~i: .. ~. ~.':;.~,.'.''.:,:': ~.C:~ '"
' 1 ·-·• IS UYe 1~ ~~W•11> 11> •"'O<t.,dylo•eou..• 1)1.rr' . Q IC ;fhPOWlt\'SI .~ 11o11. -·-t>e• 1ieva<1aCl4<""Y11Rap~s 1oh•10•",,
1 .J - --• ~ "'"'' '>" P .. a<e ca~ me J"'9 G••r~ "''".,...,,co''"''"~ , ~i .1. -L . . ~ wggetf>Olll II I &o0·2fk ll>OO.
""--· -· ..__,.., ___ ,.,_._...,... .... __ .,IM...,_.,.__,..,._,.. __ .., ____ ..
::::::.::.:--·---....... -·-----...-.------
V1lue where it counta....ln the product not the package
~A;;~
~ o';.; Cabbage
Pantry Fillers
Super Produce .
5 ... 59 n '*'· \"11111 s.i.. :;. ~lemons
,., 10 [']1 "fileric411-C~~~ -. .L .. e ~ AHalfa :»prOUm
Super Balcery
45 ~ ................. .,......
',:-e ~English Mulllna
,:: e28 ~Wtd.iWheatBread
,::" .39 ~Cin~ Rois
n.., .. e89
":.49
'::-.93
:: .18
•ecll .10
~:e39
!:'a 3'°:99
2:.:-e69
~.89
u.,r.93 "---~----------...... ~-.-....;;;.;;;;;;..1
-
.. -~~1.1m
'€aj11n Rice and Beans
.
)'OUI' fam.lly ck>e:sn't ln • HUCep•D ~et tnca. Good with baked &•\ e1.clt.d wll you Jow heat melt butter. cbickCG, broilod aiw.
u r • • rt ee. m • Y be Add flour and pepper; or broU lleh.
're not 'lftPUinl it 1Ur unW blende4. Slow· C&SdY I.ICE AND
1 U• • way they Dh ly add cbJcken broth, COB • BA&S
Mal. Next Ume trJ a 1 o u r c r •a m • a n d i ~. beaten
n · e uuc:e or gravy. mushroom liquid, stir· 1 cup ball-&nd·b.alf
$it.nle lt MPU•tely, tor rtnc conatanlly to avoid (cream and milt)
s190Dh1&overlbericeat lumps. Add cbeese. Scupacookedrlce Ure table. Jt can be u mushrooms, and pi-~ teupooo salt
simple as beetln1 up a mientos. Cook, sUrrlng. ~ leupoon onlon
M-a.nan. 1au~ or a can until thickened. Keep .powder ot +thite clam sauce. warm. Toa parsley with ~ teaspoon dry
Or try CIQun Rice and rlce. Serve aa~ over muatard
Beans. The sauce ls a paraJey rice, Makes 2 'I• teaspoon pepper
1 ~ arated Sw or c~ c:beeae
2 tableapooas
c.boppect parsley
Combll)e all lngre-
dtent• and !Dix well. Turn into a buttered
htzZ.IMh baking dish.
Bake at. 350 degrees for
20 minutes or unW fl.rm near center <Do not
overcook.) Makes 6
servln11. Serve wltb
baited chicken. broiled
steak. or broiled center
ham all~.
..
•
I
Cajunrlco
end beans
fDrsn
informal
dinner.
f
FOOQ.
dllUiousJy seasoned cups sauce or I aerv-Duh of red pepper
bl.ft mixture. Rlceaad r-~~~--~~~--------------~---------:-~--~~---=--=---~----------~---------------!..:----------------------------------~~~€?;;:::~~;, Buy the beef that meets
~~$ the standard of the COrdon Bleu.
1t1 • C.uvN RICE
-. AND BEA.NS
• 1 cup chopped
ons
1 cup chopped green
peppers
r. 1 clove garlic,
a:idnced
2 tablespoons bacon
drippings or on
1 can (1 oz.) tomato
uuce 1 can .(15 oz.) pinto
beans or pinto bean&
~i,c'e~ed with Jalapeno
~., 1 teaspoon ult
3 cups hot cooked
rice
Saute onions. green
peppers, and garlic iD
j.ppings Ulftil lender
crisp. Stir in tomato
$AUce. beaus, and salt; tfmmer for 10 minutes.
Serve over beds of fluffy
nee. Makes 6 servings.
Serve with barbecued
J!.lrlsket, ribs, or ham·
f
~rger steak.
RICEWITH
t SAUCE SUPREME
3 tablespoons butter
r margarine
H cup unsifted flour
"• teaspoon white
e'f Per 1 cup chicken broth
~ cup sour cream
1 can (4 oz.) sliced
ushrooms with liquid
1 cup grated Swiss
heese
1 can (2 oz.)
lfQPped pimientos ( Y•
up)
,... 2 t a b 1 es p o o JI s
hbt)ped tresh parsley
3 cups hot cooked
IC~
--, t
Put to the test. Recently, we took our courage m
fCarrot
our hands, swallowed that lump in our throats, and whispered an -. -'
outrageous idea. Sure our beef Is good. Sure lots of people know 1t
... and eat it week after week. BtJt what about the doubting Thomases ~,
who've never tried it? Could we prove our quality by having one of the ~1
best authorities in the 'world check it out? We had In mind none other ~ ~
~~-the Oavor of the wine sauce.
~~ __ ==:..::. --.: Come get your recipe • fre!e. ~' --~ --You don't have lo purchase a thing to ,
I. l ~.~~~st rate ~eat germ carrot cake
ipe in your tiles is
bavina money ln the
nk. With this delicious
en1on you're ready ror
nything!
WHEATGERM
CARROT CAKE
l 'h cups cooking oil
2 cups brown sugar
attted)
4 eggs
1 tablespoon grated angepeel
1 \oil teaspoons pure
anilla extract
3 cups grated carrot
1 YJ cups vacuum
acked wheat germ, re·
ular or sugar & honey
2cupsflour
3 teupoons baking
wder ·1~ teaspoons salt
~ teaspoons cin·
DlOO
~ teaspooo nutmei
L~up raisins
~ cup chopped
pecans Cream Cheese
Sauce ·
than the famous Cordon Bleu Cooking School of Paris, France. Training .
ground for the best French chefs since before the tum of the century. •
They tried It. They liked tt. They tested over 100 lb.$. of our beef.
Cooking it in a variety of j41ays. they really put It through Its paces. And the
result was that Madame Srassart and her staff became so enthusiastic that
they created a dozen different recipes. just for us ... just for our Bonded Beef. '
.. ' get the FA!cipe for "Entrecote Marchand de Vin"
-(pronounce It "Entre·coat Marshan d' van .. ) •
steak with wine sauce. You don't even have to
be able to pronounce it. But if the description
sounds good just from this printed page, try to
imagine what our Bonded Beef will taste like
This week, starring porterhou1e. The flrst recipe takes mere minutes top·of·
the·stove to prepare. But when you put It on the table, It exhibits that unmistakable ~ ~ _, .............. ~,,,,.
Cordon Bleu Oair. A bit of red wine, a dash of minced onions, butter, a touch of olive oil, ~
after you've prepared this exciting
recipe for your family. Your comptete
satisfaction or your money batk. O.K. Now
look below at our prices. Cordon Bleu recipes.
quality Bonded Beef ... and savings. Yes. Indeed:
that's what discount Is all about.
salt and a sprinkle of ~pper. That's all It takes to transform a tender porterhouse Into e thing s::~,__ '""'"'
of beauty and joy. The Cordon Bleu suggests serving steamed potatoes rolled In butter and parsley to
accompany the steaks. You might want to add a green salad, but please! no vinegar In the dressing. It fights
Fresh Meats Fresh Meats Canned & Packaged
PORTERHOUSE "a URGEENO~DSTEAK !DELMONTE .
STEAK 2\,1" ~~NDSTUK .. ta
1
'78 SAUCE 25
OOHt>tOlllCHOIN ... lO. tOMC\mlONOUl•a... . • t.o 1.98 TOMATO 150l.CAH e
CP.OSS RID RO.MT TOP SIP.LOIN IOllUIUO•C'ICDllUf~ ...... lG 1.58
T·DONE
STEAK
OON0£0 OE£fl01N •.. l D
22&
BLADE CUT £~~~!J~.~l0 .88
CORNISH GAME HEH~
motl.200l,c.l\AOlA MOW•" l.t 1.39
11.0MTING CHICKEN~
'1ll3" Z,.CKY GMO( A ~ 6 LO~. • • • • • I 0 , 7 6
Gl\OUND OEEF PATTIES
JllOl(lf DCJOH()l()l(f:tl)JO'IUAf 10 2.94
GP.OUHO D£Ef'
~~mu~"~' ......... \II. .79
OOM tEAH GROUND OEU bOolfOl~t07Z'IHAl. ..... ll. i .'8
POP.K LOfN 040PS ~()all,o()((Vf.. .. •• 1.39
PORK SPAP.lAIOS ('OUllMT~ ~'°'"~'"'° ,. 1.39
SUCED DEEF UV£P. ~.. ..... •• t• .ea
OSCAA MAYta DACOH ~(l191t1.0Z t7&1 .•• •la •C.1 1. 76
UDY LEE ~ctD DACON
... 1'114. 1.48
URGE DID 1'10 1'0AST
OOloOO>Kl' .................. 1.66
DONEL£SS TIP P.0.MT IOM)(OO~ ............. 10 1.76 ootmns TIP STEAK
IOHOCDOGJN:>UM> ............... l&. 1. 96
Canned & Packaged
b HARVEST DAY -
DELUXE DREAD 43 . "-'HITE Of\ WH£Af
....... 2• OZ. LOAF •
I OltT£~ RfillEO DEANS
ll[G\&M °"""" ....... JOOl CNf • 4 9 b MOOOt..ES P.OMAMOff'
DCllYCAOCIUll • .. • • • • ~" Ol 00-' , 4 9 b MIHUTE RIC£ M\XES 14¥~.. .... , •OLOOl .3.S L ~UHDEAHS ~Sl°"YCUT .......... l&Ol.(NI .27 ! W>YLEETOMATOES
"'"' .... ., , .2101 (AN .45 b HARVEST DAY PEAS
.......... .... .. .. • 1101.~ll .22 .t UDY LEE SPINACH . .................. nor.ci.i. .41
.t ~~~~~~~ .... 60Lll0l .34
A ~~~c~~~~~.~!~1 r.14, • 99
1~.~~c.~~~s ..• oz.ooa .55 1 A.6 'ti ROOT 0££1'.
OlV(llA6( ....... ,6/tiOLCAH\ 1,:)5
Dairy & F. rozen
Delicatessen
r VLASIC PtCKl..£5 I> ll(WO \/MOUOAHAl.YO •• 1'ot.I~ ,89
L !!'!~/.~~ . IOOl. "'6 1 • 19
r St.ICED CHEESE 0 "llGO<l "AIO<llU... . t007 ,.G • 99
L~~'!~~~~ ... '60l.~ .99
r DRIOGFORO HAM I> (()()I<(!) • • •• 2 ... 0l..111\G. .65
L ~~-~~· ... &Ol.OIW 1.59
Health (le Beauty Aids
p smE UlTRA HOU> 0 HOll.Mll()IWl\~'I' ...... Qt. !Ill • 99
l ~2:!.~ .• or.d. 99
l ~~.~~~~ ... ,,Ol.(.f.'t .87
l ~~-~ ... l~OU!\ ~69
L ~~HA!o5!~ ... CL(.ta .89
Household & Pet
liquor
OLD SMUGGLEA SCOTCH i O 99 .,__., eo"'°°' '7)l11\ o~ •
, CANADIAN auo WHISKY8 99 & (IJUQl.,.60 OllllOOf 01 Cl'l •
Lua<Y VODKA • m•,1111.. 7.22
Produce
ROMAINE
~~.~~~.otmc~ .29'
RED
POTATOES .i8 ~
U.S.NO t.
flOf\IOA ........... LO,
DROWN
ONIONS .19 U.S.NO. t. MEDIU'A SIZE • • • • • • lO.
CALIFORNIA ~29 AVOCADOS
fUO\Jt. t.AAGE •••• ,, tA.
FRESH
LEMONS
ll.A'.IOWIJ.. l\EFAESHING ................... EA.
o._,__,._,,__Cl"l"
·""~--..,,.~ ~IURdap .. ttlll.t97 ...
ll
I
.
\
•
•
ANN LANDERS I HOROSCOPE
IS Televisi Ba Leader or a ·Follewer?
., MAaaA PO~~~ .............
Televl1loa a.u beea c1tlled a •aat
land. • lo babn\tter .-ldlot boa, boob tube •Dd pro ably a -, •• oUler UD· compllmealu1iWties.
Nev rihele11. tbe tubi 11 part of lbe
Amslcu wa.J. •
So, the ~t of TV-1 1lplllcaoce to
popular cu1tuto if Qq(ewortby -taevlaion ls a
reflec:tlm ol ua, teferisloo is a tidl\aenee on us.
It follows us. lt leads us. lt m.llTQEt, "!'\edlk
.JESS MAllLOW, KNBC news -.ncbOl'alao,
repeall, "Whet.her we lead or foUO., I'm not sure. Maybe lt'a aome of each. ..
He went on to cite examples ol both •peda in a recent speech titled .. How T41Uevtal0o
Influences Popular Culture" for the Com.munlly
l'«UDl.IP""'°l'Ald by CoaatliDe CDUeae.
. JllA&LOW DEFINED popular culture as ''the
way people view their culture, their society, their
perceptions of us and our institution
<television>.•• So' is TV up to date? Is it ihead of culwral
mores, or does It lag behind in P"'5eDling a nlid
picture ot OW' aoclety? lt depen(is, according to
Marlow. Brieny touching on violence <naming such
programs as "St.arsky and Hutch" and "Police
Woman") and heavily examining news cov·
erage or the Vietnam war, Marlow concluded
that the viewing public "still makes distinctions
between real and fictional violence."
He believes that audien~ aren't develop·
ing emotional callousness, that viewers are not
immune to the pain and anguish or war.
HE NOTED THAT "our friends in print had
told us about the horror or war, but news from
the Batlle of the Bulge was two weeks old. Even
a picture (of that war) was sterile. one
dimensional, black an<l white. I could turn the page if it bothered me.
"Then along came TV, and Vietnam. It was
live, in living color, with pictures or the dyine.
Some people probably were very offended.
"If we <TV) had listened <to the offended>.
we probably wouldn't have shown some of the
grossness or war.
"To what extent should we have softened
our coverage because there were children in the
audience? We rightly decided to sbow as much
as possible, to show exactly what occwred.
.. THE AUDIENCE needed to see it to get
the full impact of the ugliness of war.
'"Thanks m part lo TV, war is <seen as)
vulgar. In the seeurity and comfort of our own
homes, we saw that innocent civilians were in-
volved in the war." Murlow recalled the lftUe
girl who ran down the road wilb her clothina
burned away.
He added that one possible reason why Viet-
nam didn't erupt into global war Is because.
"by laking a good, hard look at war as a way of
setlllng international gnevances, we now know
the price or war.
"TV has covered war: We do influence
popular culture lo that extent," Marlow said.
ANOTHER WAY television has perhaps
helped affect public opinion is in the struggle
for civil rights, he said.
Agajn, "our friends in print told us about
Selma and Binningham. but maybe that wasn't
believable enough." lie says ~at one prlncipl:e
tool -the camera -helped make~ hlcldent.6
believable."
"Let the camera tell you the story rather
than bavine me tell i.t. TV was there, in the '50s.
( Horoscope
By SYDNEY OMARR
TJIURSDA Y, APRIL I
]
,
You sat in your own living room and saw
something (that made you) ~plze that we had a long way to go to achieve equality. We
saw man's inhumanity to man:•
He noted lb.at we may still have far to go,
mentionine the lees than enthusiastic reaction
to the program "Kine."
"It was too recent. The euilt and pain are
ours. People didn't want t.o be reminded. 'Root.a'
was easier !or us to look aL •• S
CONSIDERING THE other side of the
follow-lead concept. Marlow said. "TV would
not exist as it does today if it were not an enter·
tainment medium. In entertainment. we are
really followers-not leaders.
"Norman Lear has said that the audience is
'so far ahead of us.' We are timid."
For example, one ''All in the Family"
episode dealt with a transvestite who savtid
Archie Bunker by using mouth to mouth re-
suscitation. Archie, true to form, was horrified
that the person he thought was a woman turned out to be a man
"IT WAS THE censors -who Johnny
Carson ~fers to as Priscilla Goodbody -who
were concemed. An of the comptaints came
from TV executives. not from the tludlence. ••
The censors a11in "couldn't tolerate It"
when Arcllle was to diaper his new crandson in
a recent J>l(>AJD. -ttab was a squirming, wig-
gling male b6by, and .th Cen.s<Jfl-~r~ th.at
no more eoald be ~wu 1.han in a Pam.pet's com merclal. .
"Lear was angry, ln.si~ on lt and won.·
Tbe audience was dell&hted at bavins this~.
Archie Bunker, respond to an infant with arrec·
tion. It was a hell or a nice st.ory ," recalled
Marlow.
SEX ON TV? Marlow glossed over the
topic, saying, "We don't deal with sex if you de-
fine it as the sexual act," however, "popular
culture dictates to us, especially in terms of en-
tertainment."
Jn terms of sexual equality In television
newscasts -the introduction of women-in
broadcut journalism -"We bad to be dra11ed
Jess Marlow, .
news anohotman:
We ate but one
medium of the
media.~
"Call• far rl lifeiamlce."'~ .
~.-.... -.-... "'-U.18'0d ..... .a. ......... ....,./.
...... Ult ........ .,.. , ....... ,\ ........ ....._.
...,, ...
Paid PollUcal Adv.
HUMMEL
H~S ''"'~
NOBODY'S. AX . 11·
~ ... TO
GRINfJ'
PAID FOR BY ., •I" PAUL HUMMEL
ELECTION COMMITTEE
2900~~a.a...-~ i )1,1
---~a--
kicking and screaminc into the 20th century;•---------~========~ cracked Marlow.
In the past, he said, TV executives assumed.-----------------""""'
lhat since audiences bad been conditioned to
hearine m~n read the news, viewers wouldn't
tolerate a female newscaster.
But lately, "You seem lo have shown a dis·
gusting preference for it," he quipped. ~s & ~ ,,
SARCASM ABIDE, Marlow said, ''I'm de-ACCESSORIES .,
lighted to have a woman oo·anchor. We have a BONNIE CASH marvelous variety in our. sta!f, but it's only HANDBAG~.
L. • DON LOPER WALLETS-TANO been in the past three qi-four y~ars that we've SUPREME HANDBAGS-OESIGu EXPRESS bad thls kind of equaUtW.1 . .....-'"
•'I'm not sure wo l~d -we proba\>ly --
followed," he admitted: . , 4TLAMTIC LUGGAGE ''"
Newswise, "we wo1'JC) Ji~ to aay that W'J .... ttililt • -r.. Yni1J s.-
can lead. We~ not molders and &.haP6l'll • • • OM SALE! ' '" but. we carr pl'Ovld.e yo" Wit.ti ~ inlofaaaiion
which alloM you to ma1ce Ui~ desic.'isian&•
"We (newscuters) are n:ios.L. valid When we
..just bold the mhTor up. vi eootese theJnadtqllacies of TV. We ar~
but Goe medium of the media. You need to use
us au If you are golns tq be iAC{lrme4"
~' .
Hormon~ Crea~ ~fRANCI&-OR~,
Help Hairless? ~fine staticrery corma del mar ,
DEAR ANN
LANDERS: I am a 31·
year-old male, well·bullt
and considered fairly
good·looking. For the
last two yean my hair
has been eettlng thinner
and thinner. r have
spent a lot of money on
hair creams, pomades,
scalp stlmulalors and
every kind of treatment
I 've seen advertised.
Nothing seems to help.
I'm afraid I'll be bald
wit.bin a couple of years.
Aaa.,
Laaders
·,Can You Spare 60 Minute~>
. ' • ACNE t! WRIN~LES '
Watdl ... w dlsap,... .•••
Last week a friend
told me about a
hormone cream his
cousin is puttJng on the
market. It makes sense
to me but l'd like to
know what you think.
It's a well-known fact
that very few women gel
bald because of their
hOl'monal structure. The
cream I'm in~rested in
is made from Lhe female
hormones of monkeys,
not humans. This means
there is no danger that a
man who uses It will
suddenly get limp in the
wrist aod end up with a
higher voice -If you get
what I mean
I'd like to know if you
think this cream wlll
help. -MR. NO NAME
WHO LIVES IN
MEDICINE HAT
OBA.It NO NAllE: Yet, tile ettam ..W Itel;
.
r
My next-door neighbor
told me il is bad for a
car to remain idle. Shi!
works downtown and of·
fered to drive my car
two days a week to blow
S..llllewa~ • I'* ..
Trained therapTsts specializing in skin problems for men
& wpmen of all ~ges are available at a FAMILY SKtN1
CARE CENTER near you.
... natts c• start today!"
'
out the carbon -or c• For. l"forwlatloll Today ,,
somd such thing. I AHAHltM--77M7M HIWroftJllACH--.e• .. ••--77A
agreed. CYPUSS .aJl.fttO MISStoM YllJO 76MJn For the past three SAf'TA AMA • 111 .. no TUSTIH-OtlAH4N -6H.JUl11
months the-woman has POUMTAtM YAWY0-lf4·71U SAM DlllGO 62-4f10
been driving herself to~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~~~~=~ work and bac~. Monday -
throu ati Frlday. St\e
charges the aaaoline and
oU to my aeeoont at the
neighborhood station
(just •• my husband
did) and .keeps teUlng
me she'• dofnl me a hlc
favor. Any •dvlce1 -
LITTLE ROCK
DEAR ROCK: Learn
to drl ve or sell &tle car.
Tbe J)rnent arr••••· men& makes no letale~
Yoa are belag taken lot
• iide.
L-a-Z-Boy®
. SOFEtTE®
c
• • • iL. • • •• . ~ .
•
OT W~.~ I, 1971 , Club Calendar
1av1 CO•MtJNITY NtJ&SE• y
SCHOOL: Tbe aaaual sprin& "Las Ve1as
t-fi1ht" will becin at I p.m. Saturday, April 8, al
the llanard At.h.letic Ball Pa.rk Clubhouse in
Jr vine.
Pf'OCftds "'"'" 10 to the ooo·profit parent participaUoo school. Tickell may be purcbued
by contact.J.ni Rita Carpenter, 551-3421.
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF
UNIVEllSrl"Y WOMEN: Five Orang& County
branches will host a meeting beginning at 11 : 30
a.m. Saturday, April 8, at the Newporter Inn,
Newport Beach. Judge Joan Dempsy Klein will
be ttJe guest speaker. For information, contact
Barbara OeJblal. 846-2152.
MONDAY MORNING CLUB: The Laguna
aroup will meet for lunch at 10:45 a.m. Monday,
April 10, at the Neighborhood Congregational
Church, 340 St. Ann's Drive, Laguna Beach.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA ALPHA XI
l>ELTA: An annual Founder's Day is scheduled
for 11 am Saturday, April 8, at the Balboa Bay
Club in Newport Beach
HOAG HOSPITAL AUXILIARY: A new
slate or officers wall be installed at 11:30 a m.
Thursday, April 6, an the hospital's conference
center
RIVIERA CLUB: Veteran radio and
Celevision broadcaster, Tom Frandsen, will en·
tertam members and guests at 11 :30 a.m.
Wednesday, April 12, at the Balboa Bay Club,
~ewport Beach.
BALBOA YACHT CLUB: A personal ap-
proach to looking great will be the topic Of a lec·
lure given by Patricia Yates. a former model.
al a spring luncheon at 11 :30 a.m .. Thursday.
April 6.
SPRING CHAMPAGNE BRIDGE
BRUNCH: Sponsored by the South Coast
Chapter of the Orange County Music Center. it
will begin ~l 11 a m . Saturday, April 8, al the
San Clemente Community Clubhouse.
TickeL<t may be obtained by calling Doris
Decker at 492-7399
l,l'TllERAN CHURCH WOMEN: The
group wall meet at lhe home of Effie Johnson al
10.15 am Wednesday, April 12. Linda Deason
or the Rape Crisis Network unit will speak. For
mformataon, contact Frieda Stephan at 644-1974.
SADDLF.BACK COMMUNITIES
CHRISTIAN WOMEN: Barbara Deets of
American Airlines will give a packing dem·
onstration at a noon luncheon on Monday.
April 10. at the El Adobe Restaurant in San
Juan Capistrano
RANCHO VIEJO JUNIOR WOMEN'S
CLUB: A Bridal Fashion Show is planned for 3
p.m. Sunday. April 9, at the Los Alisos In-
termediate School. Muarlands Boulevard at
Moor Avenue, Mission Viejo. Call 581·9073 for
te.scrvat1ons.
DAUGHTERS OF THE AMERICAN
ltEVOLUTION : The Katuktu Chapter has
•cheduled a new meeting place for its 7:30 p.m.
Jhursday, April 6, meeting. It will take place at
the home of Mr~ Philip L. Hughes of Costa
r1esa
Prospective members are invited and in·
formation may be obtained by contacting Ruth
Christiansen at 5'12·0472
"'0~1EN'S AR!'1Y CORPS: The Veterans
Assoc1at1on Queen City Chapter No. 57 will meet
at 1 p.m. Saturday, April 8, at Mariner's Sav·
mgs and Loan. 13820 Seal Beach Blvd., Seal
Beach For information, call Alice Clark al
(213> 429 1662after6p.m
WOMEN'S CLUB OF LAGUNA BEACH: A
prol(ram featuring the choir of the Joplin Boys
Ranch will be held at 12 :30 p.m. Friday, ApriJ 7,
at the Clubhouse, 286 St. Ann's Drive, Laguna
Beach.
Those interested in membership should call
Betty Westwood at 499-2639.
WOMEN'S CLUB OF HUNTINGTON
BEACH: Faye Lieberman of the American·
Cancer Society will present slides and films on
cancer detection beginning at noon Tuesday.
.\pral 11. al lhe club house. 420 Tenth Street.
llunlmgton Beach
Mrs. Elmer Addison is accepting reserva-
tions at 536-7118
Club Calt'Tldar run.s each Wednesday an the Daily
Piiot and c-onto11t$ notices of women's and service club
mt'rtmqs and events for the follOUlUlQ ~ek -Thurs-
da11 throuqh Wedru>sdoy ~ nofns to Club Colen·
dar. f)ruly Pilot, P 0 Box 1560. Costa Me"1, CA 92626
Br sure to mcluM JIOUr name a1ld phone numbrT.
NollC't>S must be in our hands two weeks modvance.
To reque!lt o picture. wnte or coll the Features
Ot>parlmlmf. 642-4321 P1cture:i OTe ltmated lo /t.md·
raMtn open 10 the public
I \
Wedding and engage,
ment CJ11110W1Cements rvn
on Sunday m the Dally
Pilot Forms are auaalabk
nt all Daily Pilot of/ices or
h11 calling the Features
Deparlmrnt. 642-4321
To ouo1d duoppoinl·
ment. prospect11~ bn<Us
nre rnmnded lo hal)t their
u•eddmg stones. with a
black-ond-wh1te glossy of
the bride or of the couple.
to the Features Depart
ment one week before the
-wedding
Engagemrnt onnouncf'
111 en ts, with block-and
1ch1te gloB!lfl of the future
lmde or the couple, must
be received by the
Features ~rtrnent su
weeks before thr wedding
date.
..
. . .
t
\
Fashion Time
The past blends with modern day
fashions as Linda Walz, in picture left.
skims down the strps at the Newland
House. a Huntington Beach historical
landmark. Miss Walz is one of the models for a
Fashion Show al 12:30 p.m. Saturday, April
8. at the Newporter Inn m Newport Beach.
The show will f<.oaturc men's and women's
fashions anct 1s sponsored by the St. John
the Baptist Catholic School Auxiliary
Donation for the event is Sl2.50 per
person with proceeds to be used for creat·
ing a learning center at the school.
Reservations may be made b~· contacting
the school al ~5 2712. Dcadhne for re·
servat1ons 1s today
Above. Jan Logan, left and Jean
:\longe model fashions for The Orange
County Lawyer's Wives fashion show-
lunchcon. lo be held Thursday, April 6, at
the South Coast Plaza Hotel.
Chairwoman 1s Mrs. Alex Logan of
Huntington Beach. Co-chatrwoman is :\lrs.
Thomas Edwards of Newport Beach.
The Lawyer's \\'ives of Orange County
is a scrvic<' organization that prondes
funds .and volunteers for the Legal Aid
Society. the Orange County Juvenile
Education Program. and a court tour pro·
gram for childn•n in local :-.chools.
Spring Fiesta
Adrienne \\'hit<.'. lC'ft. Pours wine for
Pam Reese and H1chard Gesch for the first
maJor event of the fledgling USC South
Orange Count) Alumni Club. a dtn ·
ner dance on Salurda~. Apnl 29 at the El
Adobe Restaurant m San Juan Capistrano.
Billed as "CSC Spring Fiesta." the
e\ en mg will include a social hour at 7, din·
ner al 8. and dancing at 9.30
The USC South Orange County Alumni
Club was formed m September to serve lhe
more than 1.200 alum111 in the San
Clemente, Dana Point , San Juan
Capistrano. Capistrano Beach, Mission
Viejo, Laguna 1 lills, South Laguna, and El
Toro area.
Scholarships will be awarded by the
club to outstanding students who will enter
USC from lhe South County area.
The USC South Orange County Alumni
Club will also hold a reception for all stu·
dents interested m attending USC on April
11 at 7:30 p.m . at the Seascape Townhouse
Club House in San Clemente
For information, call Pat O'Donnell at
496-7502 in Dana Point or Ed Jordan,
581-5926 rn ~1Jss1on V1eJo
A Spring Eve
From left, Jim Jodat, Fred Dryer, Mrs.
.Joseph Wagner, and Mrs. Glenn Graves
show some of the items lo be auctioned off
al a benefit dinner auction SPonsored by
the St. .Jean de> Lastonnac Guild to raise
funds for a clinic for underprivileged
children. The event will begin at 6:30 p.m.
Saturday. April 8, at the Santa Ana Sad-
dleback Inn.
Los Angeles Rams team members are
expected 'to attend. For information, call
541-2557.
,.. . ...., ...
. -
I .
COMICS/CROSSWORD
MARMADUKE BOOMER
'~Q'1~u
'M.4>11 JA()S'f
1>l """'· ' A0bt.Pt
MISS PEACH
-. EO•~
"Slnoe when dO WI own a meat locker?" O~tCf ... ~.
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
CASEY
MOON MULLINS
Ofo4~51R·· COULC>
YOO DIRECT ME
iO,A NICIS REST.AU~,.\ :r?
HOW 00 VOU L.tl<e ™S
NEW G\.t>."E5 WI™ NO &\FOCAL. \.-IN~ 'f
__ ......
~ Hr!AVENS, SIR··
IT IS CHlLt.Y IN HS"RE,
BUT THA1 IS ,._..___~
Rll>ICU1.0IJS.
t.
by Tom Batluk s
by Ferd and Tom Johnson
by Wm. F. Brown 1nd Mel Casson
'fO 96 ~6At,'1}l6t, 1"Meo'6 "00 MOC~ W~A1-i~l61Z A>Jp Q).lP£'1'1Tt°"' I~
'M~ ~M Llfa. Vol).
DOOLEY'S WORLD
DR. SMOCK
. "fHA"T'" NE!W CHIE!F OP Si"AFP
HAS US HUSl"l-1 N' t?>USINess L.IKS! A i"AXICAe /
WHA-r we:Re HIS
I NSIRUCl"I ONS
A.SAIN?'
MOTLEY 'S CREW
by Mell
by Gus Arriola
by Harold Le Doux
by Tom K. Ryan
\Yednllldly,April5, 1878
PEANUTS
I I
WE WON A~ VICTOfN,~,
OION'T IJ.e?
I HATE IT WHEN we DON'T EVEN WIN
A M<Yi.AJ.. VIC'lt)RC(
by Roger Bradfield
-IA6URED
OUI AWA"(
1?> KEEP
AW~e~ ....... ,...._
by George Lemont
FOL..t..OW
OL.PeR .;oc:seeRS
AN P HOPE! FOR. THE! ees,..
..:··
......
by :rempleton and F~rrNn
TGDAY'S CRDSSWDID PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 Ac treas····
Danie ls
5 Spice
9 "···-· Bulba":
Gogol novtl
14-··•v•n
kHI
breakera
64011he forearm
68 Alrllne for
Ne plea
60Edll0r'a
WOfd
61 On the horn•···
UNITED Feeture Syndicate
Tuead1y'a Puzzle Solved. ----~~! J:.! .!!.! J:.~ S I II l D
~~ ..!. !. ..2.~ ..!..!!. , l A II (
y D ' f l I IOI II II I H S l
( 0 I I '. . , 0 l I A T l 0
S il II I
0 ·-·'
• .. 0
U II I I • l S T . , • l
II 1-s A I l 15 Ending for e3 Metric . ' 0 • I , II 0 '. 0 u ,. s ~ I N ~ Het Of Rub weight
16 MhSeut ~The Hunter II 0 , (
Arab 65 Secular 0 II ' 0 •• U II f T H I II 0 I
' 0 l I "' [ •• II ( A p
Al-& l,. I H C 1 7 Augme!lll se Collar type
M 0 II
I l I ' 0 Ii
18 Restriction e7 Q1ngatef'1
l I Ill 0 II • 0 C I
r 11 10 II 4 I II 20 Divan gata A 111 -2.!. !.~ ll l 1"£ 21 Bad···· 68-· CIP •• I T It !.~ !! ro 'f l 0 Famed •Pl 69 Phlloaophef
22 ComPoaltlone
23 Gcod faith.
Arch. 25 Qeogrll)hy
boolc
27 Sc>ool
29 Knock 30 Afr vlttage
34 Aatern
3e Gtv. oppos-
tng evl·
di nee
38Combtne
39 TV worker:
2worda
42Combrtads 43 Take II· legally
44 Snoop
45 Fret
46 PortUOlleH ~n 47Qr.le~r •tinotn• 151 Rldtl the
' . II ( II ~~.!.~
DeaeertM
DOWN tr.i1nd
11 Sleae
1 Speal< wtth 12 -bominl
pride 13 Poaea
2 ~lblleal 19 Ambu1h
wttch'e 24 Anlm1I
holnt groups
3 Poor luck. 2 2e Mechlne
worda tOOI
4 Sword· 28 l.eaae lhaped 30 Part ot 1n 6 Mickey end hf.
41 Arrest
46 ' Plano ··· 8tues~
48Wlldboer
lorone
49Condutte
50Flullka
fiber
52 Murderer 53Gem
54 Space
M·-Cuben Minnie 31 Hiving 8 New MU· · three parta reythmJ 1011' tndlan 32 Seaweed 58 lrlah 190,1. 7 Builder: a 33 Dlaivow teture
word• 3"4 Snikea 57 Heethen
8 Eaaentlal 35 Length unit .. 9 Mdelty belnt 37 Haraas ~ ••~by 9~,_.: 38Actress •ltP• Var. Ve11 ••••• 82 Venllon
10 lellnd near 40 Untried aource
'
..... . .
MA YOlllAISE 9gc
Tomato Sauce ... 29c
Hunt'• -rich It thick! 15 oz. can
Beef, Chicken or Pork -2 • oz pkg
Salad Dressiig •.• ggc
Seven Seas Green Goddet1S-l6 oz btle
le"J Croc:br
Strtpnoff, Almondine.
... ff-51h OI
Vtva Napkins ..... 55c
( olon or Derorated package ol 140
~ ........ s119
For more than JU'-l biticuit1>! 60 o:t
Root Beer SIX PACK • • s129
\ & W Reg or :-.uicur Frel'-1:! oz cam•
COTTA(I
CHEESE
Springfield Smull or Large Curd or
Low Fnt . . Pint carton
Wesson Oil •.... 5149
Tho big 48 ounce 111ze for more value
T.ter's Choice . s2'9
T ve nunc·1• c·nni.
TOILET
TISSUE
:lee's Nice 'n' Soft an Accents or a11-~rted colnr11-4 roll pack
Apple Sauce ••••• 49e
.\-1ott's "('hunky" 111 different' 20 oz
Cake Mix •..••.•• &sc
< 'ho1cu nl Duncan Hines ln}'tlr varieties
Safflower Oil ••• s1 69
Hollywood-for gOOdness' sake! 32 oz
Detergent for au111matica-J6 oz
Dij Cat Food ••• '169
Purina ·11 \at Chow 4 lb bag •
lvOry Soap •••••• 19C
Hig bath size bar . . (ilc. 2c 1ff)
· Aiu Cleanser •• ; • 37c
, ..
I ''/' ... -·
'/
..
Lean-does not exceed 22',, lat
Sliced Bacon •••• s1 s~
El Rancho'eo. thicker "ranch style"
Salisbury
STEAK 39~
We make "em pan ready! Net wt 5 oz.
FRESH LEMONS
lll'lt sin to
tffw lllOl"I juice, ..,., .. , lie.
.. . ,,. . . . . .
'
fmh, ...,.,. po"'6I, .. die fintst of fm111 ..._ nave centfha 1tlinst .. "*'-... S.•r s1n,,1n -... .. tlle... -tt,.., .... 0 ._."' tlle .__..., ... "°*f Ynty ... _, .... nt
a.tttr WIYI
Fresh Trout mAHo •••••• 69~
Frona tbe famous Sun Valley in Idaho conietheM little beauties!
Avera1e net wt-5 ounces of 1eoodness!
Clams amvsTOll 79i
Freah!Ruehed hen from new Ensland
Salver salmon, for broiler or barbecue
Silver Sanon ... s29t
~hole or half . fine for bakanic
FRESH' FILLETS!
PACIFIC RED
Snapper
Always welcome on the menu! •
Catfish Fillets .•• s1 1t
Best way yet to !erve catfish!
Mali Mahi .•••.• s1 2\
Recniate Hawaiian memories!
FreshRexSole ••• s24~
With the mild ta1te you appreciate
Halhlt
STEAK
Center cut from firm Northern fish
Looi! for the dlffereaco! leok for tho •• that u1s it's U.U.l CMice quality
• • • look for tho ..tlli1C 4Mt prVlllisel w ftavor • • • llld tOlk for tbe trln1 that
you know 1ffords '*' , ... Wiien you find these -plus old-fashioned Butcher
Shop Service, you'ft t• the ltttlr Wey.
...
Spencer Steak ..... s32~
'
Rib out. .,r U.S.D.A. Choice beef .•. naturally ·~ for flavorful goodness!
Ranchero Steak. s24t
Select small end of Chn1c-e heef rib
Chuck Steak .•.. ggc.
l".S.D.A. Choice bl'cl to be Hure!
7 Bone Roast ... s 11\
Chuck cut of U.S.O.A. Choice beeC
0 Bone Roast .. 512\
('hu<"k cut of U.S.D.A. Choice beef
Sausage rrAUANsTYll • s1 s~
Authentically Old World no nitr1le11
GENUINE MILK-FED VEAL
Featured every day al all markets
CHICKEN 59c LIVERS •
foster Farm11, for frying! Grade
''A "'-frozen. defrosted (5 lJ UC 2.45)
Super Fresh Produce
Arat:adas
('hul·k cut -Choice i.houlder clod
London Broil .... s21 ~
Hrb cut of U.S.D.A. Choice beef
Beef Short Ribs s 1 si
Boneless! Rib cut of Choice beef
Beef RI> Bones • 99e.
Meaty! Choice! Hake or barbecue
looll to (J bndlo fOf the myriad tf itetns that
mike menu ~ 1 pleasure, rltber tt.an a
chore! Fron1 breakfast ti banqaets, 0 bncho of·
fers JOI! v llut . . . vlritty . . . llld satisfaction!
That's tM letter Way!
Bratwarst RIWICllO'S • $1 S\
Pork, veal, seasoning -no nitrites
Ham Loaf OVOI UY •• s 14\
I lam, ix>rk, bread crumbs-our own mix
I.ARCE FR£Sfl
Chicken 39~
Why not with dumplin11, thia week!
,
FUERTE •••
EXTRA LARGE II!
California's finest ... buttery amooth for a treat in ulada ... gnat on to&at, too.
PlllEAPPLE
llecW sweet .. .
.... fnit
frOlll Hawaii 15~
Delicatessen
BROCCOLI
MEDllM SHARP
CH££SE
21~
.
W1"4' ton traru.{IJf'm cn or·
d1nan mtol intQ a t•erv
~~' 10/ cx:ccuion • • • mokr ~tXJr dltl/Wr'I 1/N<IUl1
llT TM r&Vlllt ml
" 111 aa • 111e 1KI
Blue Danube licht white wane • . • fifth
Liebfr8llnilch, ••• s399
Lanpnbacb offers it in the lit.er aize
~ UVAlll • • • s329
Burgundy, Chablw, Ro&o-1.5 liter
The Bes t of Spirits
El RANCHO'S
Whiskey 54"
Six years old ... 86 proof! Quart
7 Crown • • • . • • • • s549
(I • 1
. A;;;·1g;·· :·'.·:d'. ~'·;s99 I
'-'lro1ght Whiskey redUl·ed ~IOc qu11rt 1
J
Gtlbey's s99a
VODKA
The 1. 75 ht.er sire tor value~
Scotch ........ '1199
...,nvl' I 00 on l 'i.her'<. 1 ifi liter
Sherry 111tv saa( • • • • • sg45
..,a,,. I Ill un \\ & 11' :r;-_ nz >.11e
faladian
MIST
Sm1K1th Cannd1nn Whiskey' Quart.
Frozero Food .
ORANGE 35 JUICE c
!'>unkr~t. lro111 Florida! 6 oz can
Egg Beater ...... ggc
Fle1achmann 's sub11htut1.>-Pint
Ravioli IUtTOll'S •••••• 79c
Your choice ot Meat or Cheese-15 oz
CHEESE $ 1· 49 CAKE f~u
Cream (17 ..,, or Cherry Cream Ut ti}
.
Fried Chaen ... s229
.Ju1t heat.~t and enfoy Banquet!~ lbs
Juice CW0111T ••••••• 29c
Tree11wcet col"lcentrate-4> oz can ,
Green Ciant's
.., M'lbbltts
Pac:bet of 6
/'rumi in. t•{fect TJwr. April 6
01mugl1 Wed. April 12
<Jpen daily 9 to 9 Su1tda.Y JO to 7
No aolc1 to deakrs
. • • . • t
.. ,.
t
~7
•
LAST MONTH WAS ONE OF THE BIGGEST IN OUR 57 YEAR HISTORY
Ill
TMIS OFFER MUST END SUNDAY APRIL 9th ..
PAY MLY
... . .
THE OllNGE COASrs
USED TRUCK HEADQUARTERS
We've got over 25 fully reconcliHonecl pickups,
vans, nMl-P,ckups, campers. and 4 wheel drives. If
you're looldRg for a iased truck we've got It!
17.4 AUSTIN
MAllMA 4 DOOi
4 cyl., 4 speed, radio, heater, tinted glass.
Less than 22,000 original miles. A collec·
tora Item. Lie. f838LWC..SL f897A.
SJ496
'cvis .. alPlld rec11o,......,. cempw "*'" r~L. clMft truek. Lie. #4Blfl4V 9lk. #~FIAT.
''2752
SJ.392
.. o..ow .. 1ad11•
RfCOllClllolUg Dapas lwww1d
.(
BRAKES
LWngs. Power SphMs
Hyclr.Uc Sp,_
.(
ELECTRICAL
Hon.U..,..'9lftl•
.... Powtt-s,.t••
.(
FRONT END
0 ER
CIORY
OICE
We have a dozem bec:adfful Mustcmgs. Fastbacks,
Ghlas..~+2's. coupes & of course Mach l's.
'75 TOYOTA
LOMG IED PICIUP
4 oyt., 4 flP8ed tran. .. air conditioning, mag
wheels. custom striping. radio, lileater. Lie.
t5"612Y Stk. t1682AT.
s2712
176 PLYMOUTH
AD## HAJCNIACIC e.r.
4 e,l, autonWJc lrao.,....llion,, tirwd glass.
radial tires, heater. Low Mllesl Uc.
toNNIA Stk. t971A.
s3u5
.• ,,,
1'bls bWSpapor will not ~a1ly accept an)
tih ertialng for real
CO OMA .OEL MAR
Esceptlooally attractive 2 bdrm.
home, reeentl1 refurblabcd tbruout -
PLUS Deat 1·bdrm. unit ovw lar1e. 2
ear ·1-raae. Great tax shelter, ID:flatldl bed~ & fine apprecaaUon
poalbWtles. PRICE REDUCI'ION OF ~000-NOW ONLY t,168.500.
759-0811
ftiut W....
Glut Wulliuc '8'49.
4~0 NEWl'OHl CENTHI OHl\IE 7~!> OS I I
est.ale which b in viola I 002 G...,.. t 002
_Uon;..;__ol_t.be_la_w_. ___ •• ••. • • ••• .......... ••• • • ••• •• • • ••• ••• •••• •• ••
9lae>llS: Adnrtlsen
..._...checktt.it-ods
• .., mid ...,... ....
,... 1-.cllaNfy. The
DAILY "ILOT as.-1
lllfllllty fw the first I•
carnet ....,...Oft only.
.......................
SILi .. 1002 .......................
HA.DOil VIEW CottOMA D& MAI
EXCLUSIVI ... AMCI
First t1me offered. er.tbt.ald.fta vtew of the
Del11htful Monaco oeean and c•nYoD, this Model , 2 bdrms., den, aecant 3 bedroom and
formal diniq; many up· den must be aeen to luUy
grades. C.oncret• drive, appnclate. Tranquility
u11ed brick plaaters. for SIU 000. Call for
Adult occupied. Not &Dat..~ leased land. $1.11.500 Oifio#/11••11 t llJl'f 'o""' n • ~i.h~:~101~ ,amta
UST SIDI
COSTAMISA MAKE
LUXURY 2 B d r m, d i n l n I •
TOWMHOUSE fireplace, built·im, neat us SSS,OOO & sbarp. Priced ri1ht at $69 SOO. Hur ry call 1.ovely one i1lory Spanish s.40-1151 an o Cr er o n t h 1 !'o 1
style lownhou.w locllled bedroom M esa \ crdl•
in excellenl art'a The North home ' Only 7
roomi; arc j.lCn1•rou:. yeara old ' Call now'
thr.oughoul' B1R h ving REDCARPET'1~ 1202.
room. eourmel kitchen, ~~~~~~~~ klngs1ze b edrooms. V.A.NODOWN!
jlrivate patio with unique Yea, no down payment
wood decking. Wont last requJred lo buy this
aurusprice.eaunowror WHATA.BUY! beautiful 3 bedroom details' 546-2313 home, gourmet kitchen. ""'"''9.,, ,.,,,,<,.,..,.,. Hlgh.ly upgraded4 bdrm, large living room, 2 ba lmly home w /lge [~·~ •• ' ~ fenced in rear yrd & fireplace, covered paUo. , Loealed near the barbor cov 'd patio. Best and Huntington marina!
East.side location. New 1 mile lo beacb. Priced
cpts, drps, wallpaper. for quick s ale $69,900.
ASSUME $50,000 Pnced lo sell rast. New Take advantage. Call LOAM on the rnarkeL Call now! 963-676?
646-7711. ~-I I J • I •1 f"'HI f
,
•
LOOI fllC)I ~I um.I ~S
•••• 1n t.b1s big bomet A S bdrm
wood and glass two s tory featuring
brand new construction with old world
craftsmanship. Incredible views from
a ll 3790 sq ft of living, but really, it 's
the little things that count: solid oak
cabinets, circulating bot wa ter
system, wide hallways and floor safe
in master suite. This is an exciting
home with subtle quality. Open daily
at 460 Mendoza terrace in
Corona del Mar. Presented al $375,000.
U~l()UI: fif)MI:§
REAL TORS', 675-6000
2443 East Coast Highway. Corona del Mar
al5Q 1n Me~ .• v .. 111i· a1 54h !>WO -
I
GeMrol 1002 G.Mrol 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
PRICED TO SE .. L FAST!
Three bedroom condo ... Irvine
Two bedroom condo ... lrvine
Four bedroom home ... Santa Ana
Three bedroom condo ... Fullerton
Three bedrooS()l.J>.)me ... Anaheim
Three bedroom home ... Anabeim
Three bedroom home ..
Fountain Valley
Three bedroom home ... Brea
Four bedroom home ... Anaheim
Three bedroom home ... Yorba Linda
Four bedroom home ... Anaheim
QUAIL [ll
P L ACE
PRO PERT TFS.
-752-1920 Ina.
1400 QUAIL ST.NEWPORT BEACH
OPEH TILL 8:30
1002 GetMr .. 1002 ..........•.................•.......•.........
3 Bl'drooms Loc·11 lcd
next to central park and (~t\'m !i\Ji}llJj [ ~ lf~~'li ti IHYESTOIS FOUR PLEX beauufuJ lake. i:rcat rorl i IUILDERS DREAM R.EDUCED $10,000
ftahtng, and s1.11ltng, sur Reill Estate ·;y i Thia piece of property Owner eager lo sell or
round1ed by $100,000 ------bu potential for making trade for property In
homes. Make thts home a Lu a.aoyu"' a.a•s IT'S Or Coun ' --ted l'"U'U"'I .-.Aro someone a lot of money. ange ty . .,.,.;ll
great buy• Won't la.st DREAM Three separate houses close to Hoag llo'lp ,
long. Call 963-67G7 Garage fu.lJ,y insulated. each on 1ls own lol plu.s schools, shopping & only
Built In work bench. A BEAUTY one vacant lot. The minutes to be.ch. Ideal
Large lot with RV ac· bouss are definltei,. fix· quarters for owner occu·
ceaa. Newly paiqted , Pool & jacu.zzt, 4 BR, en aod can be purcbued pant. Bet\er b1&rry on
paQtll..., aoct, ~per Fam Rm, 2 baths. la• a.eparately or J>tvchued this oael ~Ntl. k~~~~~~~~l l'but ~ lfOme In Jard. kJtl ot extru. Bila u one packa10 and re-[ fi -·cEFUL ll•aa Norlb. Truly • BBQ. Spaluab stone tile buill. The locahon .1110I Jlillaz11t11g .--Great Bo, fqr fll,000. inctry, ldtcben •dining perfect for resldent11l _ IALIOA ISUHD7 546-2313 rm. new cpts, stained unLL.s or Possible bus•· ___ R_e_al_Ee_ta_te_
The West tnd of Balboa c-(NNl9•1T"Sll-"'JOMNICf' glass windows etc. Must ness Earh property ti' ~x~~;~f~:r :~! [~Hiii ,.., Ef:ilfu'.18~'i~~:~~~
charm w out the crowds l. ~~~· -~-~-~-~ .. ·~-~-~~~· for all details 546-23 LJ W/2 BR wul.a tbLS bm .:: 1u111<A«T"1 ()11N 11 9. rs 11 ~, ro~ ,
5631900 ~ O..NHOl*llUUV ='!,t~t..:mt the r~ i~"'! w:~to,~T; . .:-.~-;.-;.-;.-.'-1&3.6 __ 0re_4;;s.-_9;;;6;;·1.-_.1! !f1;1~~IUll
WALKTOllACH home offered at thia alJ••
mgblJ upgraded 2 sly. 3 time lo-.. price. All new I YEAR HEW
BR hm In desirable Npt. cstm drpe rlea, ideal Custom built-abdrm, 2
Shorel.Newlypapered& locaUon our park.site. bath, family room,
carpet ed . Loaded Prop e r t.y will 10 fireplace. Fully iru1ulat·
w/cbarm. Comm. pools VA/FHA! Call today. ed. double earage.
& tennla crt. A muat ae. 64&-TIU. Eaalaide Costa Meaa.
.at ~.900. $82,900.
WISJCLIFF Roy McCwch
.... • Da.IEat.Ue lllOMtwport ..... .. tt So 9ood1 t----•-___;....;......;_ __ , Costa 541.7129
Thll qualtl 7 lath & DISIQte
plater bm ls perfect ror FOil IXICUTIVI!
• Ira. family 4 BR, den, UVIMG q . (am.rm, dining rm make tht.S hm livable as Tbla beautifully up·
well as Juxunous Priced srad9d Buccola Home! ltJhl al $185.000. Spac10\llJ Living Room with blJ Fir e p lace. Lari• M..t« Bedroom, highly up1raded with
private entrance to
aardan .rea. Slump
llooe planters highlight
tbe room-backyard.
Meaa Vude LlYlll& at lts
Beau $1H,OOO, Call
~ Ol'f N ' • II S n.tf 10 llf NICI •
GREEMBROOK
4 bdrm, 2 ba. Extremely
popular CAMELOT mdl. Tb.is lovely home localed
on a cul·de-aac within
easy walking dlalance to
So. Coast Plaza, theatres
fa reelaurants. Many oul-
alandi ng f eat1&res In-
clude; eu.tom Dnpenes
C:0Ve1'ecl patio
Decorator Wallpapers
throuibout ~pa8BQ
Auto Oar Door {)penl.'r Slo~lnFaat. Rm. BY' OWNER 971-8123 PM. Oo11 $109,900.
lll<ETOHACH
BEAUTIFUL HOME
Fantastic floor plan.
Soaring cathedral cell·
\Dga. Motlvated seller ls
1n5t.allin1 new earthtone
crpta le applYin« fresh paint just for you ! 3
bdrms, den, Cmly rm &
(nnl din rm area Cov'd
patio. SUbmlt your offer
today! Call oow for appt.
545-8'91.
SIOl.000
CCM1W1•dal properly iir. omm & bCly. T•
•Wll ............... DG.'t ... 111111 1,.:1., ............
NEWPORT IA.CK IA Y
qlMlllty a.It ..... Lyttle ..-.. featwf*J: 4
II, 3 b. tpac.,..... weed..._ cel•ap, ........ ...ad'•~.,... ... ..... ••wt;t I I ..._ .. .i ...... IPg. lot.
w /r 4 I Ir p1h•r· $141.000. ·
OLD CORONA D MAii
n 11 •• u ......... d z •• .... +
gM•t .... " ....., ~ a., .... ..tgillal
OWINt'. ,.,... of OU ... .Wp ~ • C-
Sft tM $174-IOO.
IESTIUY IH
CAt•O HIGHLANDS
1-. 3 ... 2 IA + .. W/rootl for.
pooL Mr.,.t. ~ $1'9,too.
· OCltiM fEW..s-..S 10 MMD
Qwlltr c 0 acted 2 n .... • .. re.
.......... Clldar' • -~ ... ._. ••
••ll,•pers, •-••• t ' ,e..a. Hw Caf1Mlllg. to.. .,.,.. Al ............
appllcacu. HQ h1 Hte kitclNtl, IMua
c ....... Fntttdl doon to etKl..ct _..
$215,000.
644-7020!
2123 SAM JOA.fiMNH taLS aoAO
NEWPORT HACH
(......... 1002,Ge.wal · 1002 ..............................................
WESLEY N .
TAYLOR CO
IU~A LTOHS sincu HM
If~ CANYON
"4EW TOWMHOME $140,000
Leisure livmg m this deHgblful new
townhome. Expansive living rm with
fireplc, formal dining with wet bar. 2
Bedrms, 2 beths, wide balcm;r makes
cbarmh1.g outdoor sit.tint na. Pool.
tennis courts, security gate.
WESLEY M. TAYLOR CO.. llALTC>aS
21 1 l S-J~ ... l.ood
NEWPORT CIHTB. M.I. 644-ftlO
StJ.OOO. -You. can sWl 0'1'11 a
beauUful 2 story, ' bdrin beach bome
for under $100,000. call for lufther
information 640-616 t
MESA YIUI ~HT -YOW' wife
will like the big island cook center
kitchen, the children will lite the
short walk to school, and Dad will like
the •·Room Away" for his study or ·
hobby place. See this 2600 sq. fl. home
with 4 bdrms, priced at $133,500. Use
your VA loan too. c• 546-4141
Serving Costa M esa-Irvine
Huntington Beac h-Newport Beach
lfG CAMYON
·l BR, fam. rm .. 3 baths. Be~utifully
decorated family home with patio
~1ews from each room. $D5,000
LIDO ISLE
Newly remodeled 4 bdrm., den, -I
baths, l.tving rm. w /cathedral ceiling.
Lge. master bdrm. suite.
IAYFRONT
Several fine bayfront homes
with pier & slips
BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR
341 R11y~1d1• Oro111 · NB bl'J "ll61
.
GeMt"Gf I 002 G.-r.. I 001 •····•·•···•····•••···· ••..•................ ,.
DOVER SHORES FUMK1 HOUSE
$225,ooo OM TWO LOTS
lmmaNlatt home 1 Ttlei. $50 000 entry Massive stonl' • ft.n!plnce Formal dtn· N o t m u c. h o r a
1ng Parquel lamll house .. but 1t can be Eno Y bou&hllor lot value only. :'n~ ! Laru~dr5Y m::!: =e;.·;~! .?r~~~ too' EXTRA BONUSES: ,.,...06 -r· .._._ • .,,
Refngerator. washer, pl.euecaU962-T788..
dryer, freezer, softener i.Q.. K€Y
& buill·in alarm system 4Q P.€Al TORS A
lncludedl Call today i----------
7~;~,7f<J •. ,. ' ·~I "' , • ..WPORT HEIGHTS
[ 1
3 BR, FAM RM+ dmin1, ~ lft~Ht\1 e~:!s~~~~~yr:~;~f~!
ferenl on 3 levels.
BOAT SLIP $I 4s,ooo
attached to a sml'le story JACOBS REAL TY
rondo that's only 2 years 675-6670
old with a bwll·m kitchen --
& fireplace. Tennia FORMER MODEL
courts. swimmtnit pools, One year old, 3 bedroom,
Jacu.ui & a low pnce of a balb io ttxecullve
$10ll,SOO. Thi.a ooe will ~ wti.b a Jong
tell !Mt CALL 1551-~ Uat al. at.ru • CJPfl'edes· t;; S ELECT Unobalructed view of '
T'PROPERTIES ='s~~·arr1~:.~
BAY CALL 751·3191.
t;::SEL ECT
T'PROPERTIES
General I 001 ~al I 002
·;;;iiiUMG0HOME ... ···-··-·······-··· VIEW
Pool and spa, one look Charie Brown 4 Bedroom + family
MO QUALIFYSHG!
Easlslde 4Br., with
wagon wheal char m.
2.000 sq. ft. of happy
family U vina. Call for de--
taJls. ~7171
and you wtll appreciate and ha new partner Bob room on "Newport's"
th111 4 bedroom, extra 8euUoD Mft 10 empty B a c lie B a y I
largl.' hmlly room, de&k in 1M office. Give _!tEDCARPET7M-1202
ma681ve 1tooe ftreplace.
Ol'fN 111 •• H ~ lt'"W IO"' Wtl [M!lii~Hjl Stairs leadl n 1 to us a call" let's talk .--.....~
separate maater aulta abc>ut lhe adn nta1ee of Harbor Hlghl-.dt
a n d 2 fl rep la c e a . aellina real est.ale with Y So hi U U
Numerous amerutlea-llHTSOH 'IAOWH r:!&nt~lry ~a~I;~ wC::;
prestigious aree. Oll.U for =:~1 OO'fj?~ST Be~h woods, sky !I «bta, Im· appt.90-'1881 TOIS I ~t7ea anaculatc ln11dc and out.-HEWUSTING! uo·tNllC 9•1fSftJNIO•Mrf• __________ , Charm&appeal in every c ouece Park; choice
[. 11111 :=~-5·!f~f*? ~ifrl~~
mrut. .Ar&lDllUc enter· PETE BARRETT .._ S., Prop. fH4.YAIUYERS
RX&SAVE$S
Very nJce 4 bdrm, ! be
home. N~ oaJy a lllUt
TLC to have I Hper
home. Good area.1 b*lc
Crom Wi ndsor Pnk.
Priced below other
h<>mes ln the area. Doa'l
heslla&a. ~9491. = Walker G lr.e
ftln.EX
1 Yr. old FAst Coal•
Mesa. cWuae un1tactlnra•· W/1. bdi:'mL, 3 bL, I area, launclr)' Ir frplc.
Now $lTl.000 EYB. YM COPB.AMD
UAL.TOR 552-0414
taiDlllra Uvlng room. Ex--REALTY-.....
tra larle ldt.chen. ktng IU·r..,• * 67.,7".a.O *
liled master smte and ;ii&.. ~~~~-~-~~~~ aeparate cbUdreDs WlftJ. !llll!!!!!!!!~~~ll!!!!!!!!il!!~.-Wall ot 1lasl to enclc»ed Ge•r1I 1002 .~,.. 1_.,
patio. A s&onea throw to -the be•ch. J!lasy flnanC· •••••••••••••--... ••••••••••••M••-•••
101. Owaer anxious
tm,500. Call~ 7881
SOCUMITS ,
In alm,....~ln
N. Cotta lleu. BUI luout With Ip pool u
added •ttractioo. C10M to major aboppiq It ....
lines.&*M.1.
~ Walk m C ler.
lleal F.lltate
. ~IL macnab/ lrvtna ?-raaltg
** HAllOR YllW HOMIS **
COMFOaf AIU. ••
2 BR & den home convenient to
schools & shopping. Comm. pool.
j acuzzi & tennis c ts. Lynne
ValenUne 6"-8200. <T·H2)
I PAI aMO -Sl6t.tOI ..
Owner wants to move & priced
home Lo .anUciPat.e abort elCl'OW'.
Escellent ' BR on qu.let l&reet. 2 !pies ; bar; oear acboola,. pam ..
pool•. $189,900.• J07ce :Edlqn4
6'2-CZ. <T·H3)
eaATP~Yttoee
In lhe great family neighborhood! S
BR, 3 bath redecorated lD beautiful
earth tones. Lf. J::l-slze yard
w /wood dectlnr. t11Uc buy l
Owner will CQDSldcr Joni escrow.
$180,000. Appt;. O(lly. HoU,y Markaa
644·6200. CT414')
j
'
' Hointt for $4* Ho.Mt fl.of' Sele DAILY PILOr •:r .
............. 5"' ..... Stir ~ ....... ,_.. S... ....... For 5-'-I ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
• ••• ••••••-·-••••• •••• •• •••. •• •••••••• ••. •• •• ••••••. •••••••••••• ••• • • • • • • • •• •• ••••••••• C-.. ~ I 0%4 eo.te Me.a I 024 Ho.laes Fw S-. ~ For $4* Hovw• For Sdlt
Wedneeday, Aprll 5. 1978
._,.. t002 ~ .. ..._. 1022 C-.:...detMw 1022 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
• ._ .... •••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• E ·sade Cui.tom home. Cost•~ 1024 ....,... 1044 lrffelle 1044
IASTSfOl COST .A MESA
Hot Dog! Highly desirable Eastside 4
bedrooms on a large lot with new
carpet t.hrougbout, new tile entryway,
remodeled kitchen and an enclosed
cabana. Cul de sac location affords
spacious side yards for gardening and
privacy. Also. you're close to schools.
shopping and business. Presented at
$110,500.
U,_.IC>UI: t1()MI:§
REAL TORS•. 546·5990
1525 Mc·sa Verde Orive, East. Costa Mesa
..,lso '" Corond del MJr. c1t 675 GOOO
1002 .........•....•.•....• •••••••••••••••••••••••
DIVOtlCI
I OJJ WWte S Woy_
Spacious 4 bdrm, tam1ly rm home in
orig.mat Harbor Vi<·w with formal din·
ing, pool, j acuu 1 AND gorgeous
ocean. harbor. tsland and n1ghl L~ht view. Rt.'<luccd to $259,500.
400 I Topalde Lane
A c ustomized 5 bdrm, s ingle story
with lovely courtyard 1.mtry and a 3
car garage PLUS panoramic ocean
and green rolling hills view. Redu<·ed
to ~4,500 FEE.
c~ 644-721 ' for detail•
1002 Cor.adefM• 1022
•••••••••••••••••••••••
ADULTSOHLY
Only $8.000 can move you
into this 1200 ~q Ct.
NEWPORT 0 EACll
rnobtle home 2 Bdrmi. + 2 balbs. with enclo:.t'Cl
pauo & a carport All
bu1lt·IOS. Jo'ull prtl'e
$39,900
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Otd Worid Charm
Corona del Mar 2 Hdrm
homl• i.-. worth the pnl'e
alon1• Supplemenl ) our
lax deducuoru. with rear
unal!>. Wa1tin~ for lhe
nght investor al SltiS ooo
MORJHS REAL TY
* 494-8057 *
38r,, huge fapl rn1 .• 3 car SPA>aSH ¥ILL.Al ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
gar. oo R-2 lot. A ~t Splctd wuh romitoce! ASSUMAIULO.AM t1'1 •£Y(l WILLOWS
646-7171 Red Ule roof! Vruquc Huge t2000Sq.Ft. Home> "t.
archway entry! Wrouabt W'custom family rm, 2 POOL AND Sl'A, Ci:N 4 Ddrm., I ba.: nr
iron abutter!>,.! Rugaed fplc ·a, and oversized TRAI. AJR. All th" >1nd 4 Hrntaio Pk. • lrvuat!
GREENIROOK
4 bdrm, 2 ba. Extremely
popular CAMELOT mdl nus lovely home located
oo a cuJ-de·11ac w1tti10
easy walking dustance to
So Coast Plaza, thealrC?s
& rest.aurant.s. Many out
standing features in
tlude
Cw.tom Drapene11
Covered patio
!Mcorator Wllllpapcrs
throughout
Outdoor gai-. 1:18Q
Auto Gar Door Opener
Sltyl.aght in Fam Rm
BY OWNER 979·8123
Pnn. Only SlO!l,900 ---
2617 REDLANDS
Roomy 3 BR. 2 Ha. l'ul
de-sac Sl Back. Bay
area. $1$9 ,SOO Ar:t
675-6900
WOODSTRE1\\t CONUO
beam ce 1lin&1>' 4 }ard. Only ~69 mo bedrooms too. In a KldLSlf,OOO
Bedrooms• f.11v1i.h Buyer may assume n bea\ll1fuJVale10Collc1" ti.alb.~. colorful l!les. nch Isling VA 8''1'v loan Parle Pnced under cur SANT'AANA
wuod:. everywhere! $79,900fullpnee. rent m arkt'l beulul>l' N o'171.h;3bd.rma.,2ba
Brcothlak1ng ground:.! 75 .. 7800 owner ai. rcul.a:.l.lc and an adult condo; lae. fam
Don'twiul!Cllll6'.60303 1 hurry. Ai.king only rm. w1rrpl, overlook:.
FORESTE
OLSON
,..._~ Nt4\.''-•t••
6 ASTRll ~ le .. 1(,1a1w,I"'
RURAL LIVING
C&.OSllM
3 HR on lrg. lot. Heated &
filtered pool burrounded
by lush greenery. Lovely
tree-lined cu 1-de·sa c
street near upper Back
Bay. $115,000.
VAU.EY 640.9900
-
$l1A ~ p.1t10. Sbllrp cuod. Only
' 1ti4,SOO
RANCH REALTY
551-2000
rva YH COPEL»4D
UALTOR 552-004
Turtle Rock home, by
owner. 3 BR, 2 ba, fordm
rml fam rm, pool & j11t•.
$134,500 Pnn only. Ah.
ei>m: ~2-8259
WOODBRll>CE
BROADMOOR
3 Br. •t r1u m.
landscaped, sprinkl~r11,
quaet cul-de -s a c
$1.02,000 Own r S59·0092
$3900 Down
Nr Bk Ba). :.pit level, J ---------, _________ _
Br. 2 Ba, J car gar. :.upt'r CUSTOM CHALET
Brand new 2 Bdrm• N~,·er llved 10 Lownhomt·
has everything' Pool,
1enn1s, Jacua11, saunu'
Carefree h111ng 1 i:nJOY
t.'QWlY bu1ld·UP " ta-'
t.helter watho ul maan· IYOWMER
decor. 'S !14 . 9 o o OHLY $79,900. ~~r a~ 5411 71133 Lodge hke h\ ang undl•r
VILUGE CREEK
Real F..statc
FORCESS~E
Large 2 story, 4 bdrm.
21'.I bath, formal dmmg,
family room, kitchen
eating area. Automauon
healed & Clltered pool.
New carpets. dral)(!s &
floor covenngi.. Super
family home. Asklnic on-
ly $l38.000. CaU 540.1151
WE HAVE
A WINNER! ---------•I Open daily 3 BR + fam rm.. Gate for boat or trlr
bold &: rugged lx'am"'
<.:oiy frplc accent:. uni'.
11ue wall or brick! Hol.Jby
room or 140rkshop ' Reu
ruon Mle covered patao
OH'rlook~ family or-
chard'' Owner anx1ou~ l
Hurry, call 645 O:J03
townhouse, beaut. decor
Nearly new 3 BR tn-
level. 1700 sq. ft f1owtng
creek next to rear patio &
master BR. Rtlcreataon
facilities 1ocludc
clubhoose. pool. ga1.ebo,
& lake. Call for del1uls.
[ll'TERNER'S tcnance worries! Why Uli.J wart. take a smart step &
~HERITAGE
REALTORS
IHCOMEl!I
Balboe Perun. Ju,l rt'·
duce<l! 6 Uwts, five 2
bdrm.s. & one l·bdrm., on
2 Ioli. Jui.t s tep., to
beach. Owner
motl voted !
673-3663 642 2253 Eve~
associated
'llROK EA S--A E Al TORS
l OH "" lolboo • 1' JU l
Tht• (a..,tt"!>l draw an ttte
West ti Daily Pilot
Cla.-.~1ficd Ad Call Todd}
642 5678 .•
$14,000. SO. OF HIGHW A. Y
An absolutely charming
2 bedroom cottai:c wath
S86.SOO 229 Pnnceton Or
5.56'8674 A spacious 3 bdrm, 21,
bath pool home in ex-
cellent Eastsade location.
Appointment only. gleamin g h a rdwood ---------• noori. and two seperatr COST A MESA
~illl"ltli'~ "~
\ 111, 1~1or1 or
11.Hlmr lll"'"lm1·11I <"o. garages. Reduced to only CO .... DOS SI. 34 ,500. lj44 • 7211 ..... amn ...... 1• DOH"T fORGET!
MEW HOME
Eostside c. M..
VOTE APRIL I I th
Sp o ,';4!·!~0 ' R ,~
Swider JUSl completed
Uus 2 story 4 bdrm home
Features 1.ndude; vault
ed ceilings. 3 C31' garaJ(e
& RV ~lorage H urry,
cboo6e YOW' own cupet.s
Call 546-5880.
~HERITAGE .~. REALTORS
1'ownhome. located JU~t
a few rrunul~ dr1 ve from
S Coa!!t Pl.ua S<•ller
want:. to move quickly
754-7100
lc6oo PeNMllta I 007 ~~~~~~~~~~ ...................... .
•NEW LISTING•
2 :.l.), remodeled. upgrd
ellcc home. 3 BR :? lfa
dl•n. & deck ~ '1 .. w
towards Catalina in old
Cd \t S2L-l,!IOO ilrk.r
758-1288
OCEAN&:
CA'\YO'J VIEW
Jl:lr . 2ba, fam $215 000
Op llw 1-'n-Sun l 5pm
7Cfl Rockford Rd
Nire 3 Br. 2 ba nn Mon 5-er Ocean View!! etero $18.5.000 ~La Jolla Drive Marshall Rily 67~·4600
6i5 4858
Duplt'X Lovely Jbr re
mocll'led home + I > r new 2br unat. 1-·pll'e:. & l
(•ar parking ror b11th
P nn. only By owni-r
b10-lf.t0
()pen EVER 'i Afternoon
Ca 11 CI e o t her t' a t 3 BR, 2 ha . ', l.Jlk to ba}
646 · 5369 or l ' n 1 t e d Now Sl79.SOO'
Brokers. 646 7414 Marshall Rlty 675-4600 --
Capistrano hoch I 0 t 8 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WA.HT A. VIEW:>
UYOWNJ,;R
Old Barbor V1r", lwo
bc:it buys on same t.lod,,
panoramic ClC'ean '1ews,
J br. fam rm, torm. din
rm, frpl.s, beam ce1hn~s.
beaut pn\• patios & nace
yard!> Musl :.ell one'.
759 9448 or 644 2641 If no
answer 644·8722 Op<'n
hou5c 1·5, Sat /Su.a. 1114
White Sails Way
Breathtakan11 pnnoru m1c
whtwate r & Dana Pt
Marina view On the
bluffs abov1.• the brh 4
Br. 21, Ba, spac condo 3
Car gar. c mpltl 'y re
d~rt'd, incd R new appl
crtp'g & drp:. Dis
uncti\'e amemlll'~. P' t
rec area in Capo Bch
$189.500 by owner Call
(714} 496·4601 dys,
~J 189 e \'S !wk ends Reduced to SI 95,000
ConMllO def Mar I 022 Owner must sell' I mma c
•••••••• ••• ••••• ••••••• J BR 2 Ba hme w \ ww of ocn & pvt bch J<'t t""•
CHARMI'llG 3hr. 2ba Open Sun 1 -~P~t 516
+guest bou ... e Frpl, 2 Dt-Anza \J!1 675·231 t
palloc.. R-2 lot Pnn onl)
Sl57,000 Owner &10 70311 Nrw dplx. 1-'ront houi.e :!
Make your i.hopp1n~
easier by usrng the Uual)
Pilot Cla11'11(1ed Ads
br 2 ba Kear, i::ar aµt J
car i:ara&e Come s<'c
Open hsc Sat Son 12·-I
6lfi Goldenrod, COM
..
Resene Youn How!
8 Min. to BEACH REAL TV INC.
Be<&ut.Cul 2Br. 2bu. 2
slory townhomes nl'ar ---------•I 714/846-1371 'AC.io-• ....... c........,
mg completion, with u ---------Ion~ lti.t of amcnJl•l'll m r-il.'w <.:ondO!t, :! Br. 21
1 Ba, .---------• clud10g fareplacei. a nd 2 frplc 's, ceram1<' tale
gardge door ol)(!neri., 111 lutchens & bath. Pool &
lcrcom FM. ell'. l'll spa 67~912 Broker
Si6,900. HY , do~ n On\ I.'
by 2184 Canyon Ur
then call ~tal I \i..'ll for• Ry owner. W-s1de3 Bl< 2
111formal1on and re::.en J ba. cul de-i.ac Clo~e to
lion 751 2223 i.hop& & schb. $69.00o
By Owner. Mt::.;a del Mar S
br , 2 ~ty, healed pool
l.ots of extra:. S110.000
2788 Mendoza Dr
~2142 No agt~
20'" down, no quahryin~.
~mo mortgage + tax
& 1n~urance, 10'" loan
~3()(1()
COLLEGE PARK
FIXER
EASYGOING
EUGAMCE
Sew carpet, fresh paint,
huge l.a\.1ng room and 1l 's
<'omfort able? A good
l'o~ta Mesa location
that ·s convenient for
schools and shopping :J
BR. 2 BA and pnced al
$84.950
red hill~:.:.
552-7500 MUSTSaL!!!
St!Uers buying home 1n
Nevada Make ofrt·r . J
BR. 2 ba . rul ell• ~ar.
Mesa Vt-rdt• 91-5,000
3 BR. 2 BA. with enclosed ---------pauo Needs a little TLC
·\ .Johnson Bkr !179 4!>1;1
but offered al a :.tedl at
$7:-i.ooo Call no"•
540-3666
Wflelc-.11
REAL ESTATE
Uk. Chicken Soup
It couldn't hurl to rall
Chuck Nash about a n·
warding career in real
ei.tate. Free trammg 1(
you quaUfy. 540·5 lOl
Fcudafft V all.y I 0 34 .....•...•.............
RYE IB>ROOMS
AND.A
SWIMMING POOL!
TO PROFESSIONALS IN REAL ESTATE
COMING Wednesday, Aprll 19, 1978
in the Daily Pilot and Pilot Advertiser
Just the ticket for the
family I.bat needs room
Es tabli shed
neighborhood, close to
everything. par klike·
grounds, With cbvered
pllllO, Sunset swim pool,
underpnC'ed at $102.900
Owner moving out oJ
area.
red hill~:.:.
. 552-7500
A
PRIVATE
PROPERTY
WE~K
TRIBUTE
TO THE
.na.11Ptl~ ~f~P~ .... -.a .
\ ~ \ ~ \ ~-. -: \ --·-.... -. \ __. ~ ....,..-\ ~-\nf£\\~~~\~,9.,~
---• I \ -1 -~
.. \ ..!..;-~r. I-:::-\·~.;. ·~·\·-'1 \ p \ He ti win l'Vervbody'' heart
w1lh tw. rai.1\h appeal'
By Owner. spacious 3 + 3,
fam, dirung, lrg bonw; Ce
qual 2 bdrms I. Office sp
Jacuui. !rpk. softener
Lo ma1nt yd. Nr Miles i.q
prk SS-1-4442
SecludH SettincJ
r.reenbrook home ha:.
4hr. 2 12ba, form drn.
garden vu fam rm +
hl)J'le rec rm Sl28.SOO
Try HY" down contract
or lse opt.Ion. No quahfy
mg or loan cosb Agt
9b'8·5880 --HwdiRgl011 leadt I 040 •••••••••••••••••••••••
S&.S Resule Specialists
3,4 or S bdrm model!>
DELIGHT r ail the Personal Servacu
People now•
Can be found an the 1011£" Royal ProperflH
ly Ranch area in I rvinl' 642-1630
Tree lined and bhaded • greenbelts, bag loll!, bag Wo()dbndae Sycamore 2
homeii with and without. 11tory how.e. Owner. 4br.
pools and spa. Many with 2' 'ba, llv rm. din rm, up-
!i car gar•i'-"· Lot·uh.'<i 1n ~rade:;, lndry, kit-fa~.
the fantas ti c Irv ine auto i:ar door. Ln<bcp d
school dlslrt<'l. No as· $110,000. 27 Songspar
llOClation dues a nd y11u ro~ S51 ·~ __
own the land Call tod1n
for a per1-0nal tour or lhe
homes a11a1lable Pnl'l'~
ranJ:r Crom S!H,500
$144 900.
RAHCH REALTY
551-2000
Elegant Woodbnd~e. only
Sl29.500 Wa ~hlnglon
model. 4 lge bdrms, dcn.
bii: ram rm. -.unded .. orr
m.istcr bdr m Prof
lndscpd. \\1th bnl·k dt-t·k
& open f1rt• p1l 75!! 1~1 us W. Yale Loop.
Real 1-:-.tatc
BEST BUY
IN
IRVINE GROVES
An S&S rommunaty
features Uus 3 bed.room
beauty lhJt ha:. been re
duced dr1&.sl 1cally
beC'ause owner mu!>l
leave the area Thi"
Sycamore ha-. t·cnlral :11r
and loods of upJl:r.1dt•-.
Aslung only ~5.~K.I .
' RAMCH REAL TY
551-2000
WOODBRIDGE PLACE
Sper1a l off.-rln g ;i s
bdrm. Contempurary de·
I.ached family homes 1n
open, woodsy design
Just short walk lo hike &
parks rn Vall.A~e of Wood
bnd.-:e t'rom $115,000
S52-4101
SINGLE STORY
ORANGEWOOO
Don t rruss ~C'cing th 1s
lnvely 2 bedroom homf•
with a d<'n It 1s upgradt'<f
throughout, has renlrnl
air and loL~ of bnrkwork
LAKEFaOMT
Bec;t loc, best '1ew 1n
\\dbr~. lull l+ den. All
upgrttde!>. New. D~
OWJlt'f 675-579-i
IUllLIHG
llOOtc
Adults · upgraded 2 BR.
rondo. 164.950
IEHTSOH & IROWH
REALTORS lll-9711
·level. 4 BR, 2!"2 ba, lrg
fam rm, corner lot
<.:ov·d cuslm pal., auto
11prnklr:.. brick Crplc,
pnme lex'. walk to 1>Chl,
park & pools As:.umabl<'
7'. ant('rc:.t for lo
pymnt:.. $112,900
55214/i8
HURRY!!
1'lu.s llamplon Model 1n
Greentree w on't la'<t
lonl(. 4 To 5 bdrms .• 2 ·,
baths, fam. rm & kit.
l'Omb1natwn. formal din
area. Redr yard has co\
ered patio and
greenhouse. Call Cor an
appointment today!
lf523 CAMPtlSDt·/RVIPIE
WOODBRIDGE Branrl
ll<'W Aspenwood Lowe~t
pnt•e 4 br hou:.c an Wood
hnctg1.· Owner must ~t·ll
1mml'<hatcl) Turn l<'fl
off \';tic al Woodhollow 7
Elmwood. $102,000
752-~iB after 5 PM
4841 Lo1i Ann Ln.
:.! fir. prof lndscpd, nrw-
1) painted 1n 1ou1.
:;prnklr-; frnl & bk, patio,
upgrad1..'<I cpl:; & drps.
1·t'ram1c lilt• counter:..
1mmac. sn.ooo. Call
broker, !155-0605
LagiMa a.acll 1048 .................•.....
RIYIHA
EXCLUSIVES
5 BDR~IS . 31 , bath~.
Chn~ Ah<'I de~1gnl'd
home with wlllle }l"Jter
111e1.11s. S375.000
Sure to ~el l f a-.1 at 4 BOR\fS. 4 i,., baths. an
$&-t.950 pnvate oceanfront com
munaty. $3.50.000
R.AMCH RE.ALTY
551-2000
I
J RDR MS., 21 z bath~
tiie yard w /malurt•
trc:>es ~l .500
R 2 LOT, ocean view.
dose to hig h school
~.000
ORANGE
COAST'S
SUCCESSFUL
REAL ESTATE
PROFESSIONALS
·~--"--'d t.i' 9iJ\ n \ ~ \ _'..! \ :~.-\ -o J9 ~ \$J\ ~-\" -· \ 1
... I \ ·::~
\ -I \ I \ .. -~::-\ ·:::::-l, -~
Tots. tttns 01 th, coll,ge
1eam will adopt this circus
clown tie's tun to make ol
'crap\ and rrmn~nts \tut! for
toy °' ma\COI Pa1tm1 7189 L . -rrr "di pattern p1ec~ d1rrcttons
"'( '"""';,,_. fl(t.....""ti... Sl.50 lor ta(h paltt1n -'<Id
avail. some w /pools.,..... --.-:-.-.-..-968-4602 ~......._
TWO R-2 lots. heart or
Dana Point. Both for ses.ooo
On Wednetday, April 19, 1978. tne D•lly Pilot wHI publlah a 1pec.l•I tribute to th•
proteaalonate of the real Htate Industry -th• "'en and women who d•llY make a
major contribution to th• hHhhy Orange CoHt economy.
Th .. • apedal pagaa will honor Private Property WHk and will be denvered to over
H ,000 hom .. vi• th• Dally Piiot and Pilot A4ftertlaer. NotlcH will be one column by
four lnchH each, allowtng room for • pfloto and dHcrfptlve copy. Coat of Heh
notice la only 111, with a phOto you provide.
Thla aakl~• to RHI Eatat• ProfHalon1l1 la an eaceptlonal opportunity to Introduce
new or lol'\gtlrne euoclaW. to the people of th• 0Hng• Coaat, or to tionor
ou.talandlng UIH or "rvlce achlevementa.
Oon'I mlaa being part ol thl• special adyertl•lna opportunity. Dt1dllne tor rH•rvlng
apace la I p.m., Apr111 '7, C1ll today I
DAILY PILOT
I he drest has 1one lOOSC son. FLUIOI Looks and Ifft\
marvelous on 1n 50 11\a"Y f1bm:1
-Jt'~ lmllt c1epe, ~'' S..w
•I '°' SllJlrntrl P11nttc1 P1ttt1n 9U4 Mis~
Sim 8 10 tl 14 16 18. 20
S•ze 12 (bust 3"4) t1k~ 2a. yards
60 incl\ tabrl(
S.041 Sl.50 r. Ndl ,.tttR-AM 35' tat Q(h pttteni ter
tint-dais llrlMll. Nn41l•nt s.H to:
aw1u um11
J)t ea,h palte1n l0t 111,l elm
airmail and h~ndhne Stnd tt:
allu Bn*s
Needlecraft Dept 105
Dally Piiot
11o11'3. Old CMtMI St.a.. lltw
YIK\, llY~OOll. l'nnt II.me,
Mdns:s. • r1ttem ltumbtf.
VAIUC 1> c ~ 11178 NUDl.E
C'RAfl ~11110" C:tiOCM ham z;; dtS•tn\ lrtt insld~ M
crafls lo.not Croctir1 Sef\O 75t
Elsy Glttl 'n' Oma111fllt:a Sl:.50
Mow Shtw-Ofh Sl.50
Stutt 'A' Pu" Qlilb SUS
Sbtcll 'n' l'atdl Qli•lts. • SlJS
Ctoditt .nth S.art11. lUJO
Pattern Dept 4~, Clocllft 1 W11.,. ...... Sl.00
Daily Pilot Nifty flf11 ()ullb • • SUO
232 West ll1h St. .... '"'-II~ Crodltt ....... jl.00 '" lOOll hltlt 'uL Ai>-s.w a llnlt w ..... _ .. 1.n DIE.SS. Ztr, SU1 IM tnLl ""4Slte0tnt W ... .$1.00
llUMltR. new. t:Mhtt let*; . · 1l.OO
LOOK Rial YOUNG. SMART ~11 CtodMt W ... • l.00 on 1 blHllftl Sew new soft lutaat Cl'odlft W .. ' ·: · l.OO 4 wtS. lops sk rt nts llNM lltcrame .... " l.OO ',11 111 NtW 5'Rt.G ~M 11111.11at ...., w ...... st.oo
MlR P•m~N r.Af ALQG frM c.m,iew C.lfl W · · · ·••• Sl.00
111111 t Stnd ™ ColllpMtt ~-114 • Sl.00 r01 ~ .... r:· 121'118\m'u ..... .J~ ......... ,...... .... .oo lethflt '"* 11.. ..... 75-1-... .. c.w... • ...,.... .... 12.. ... rs.
lJS.hriftJ n.. W l ISQwih T.._,ll . 75' .. ..-II K Jif9r I p ....... .1Sf
Pennington Properties *VA. SI 7 SK*
CUTE COTT.AGE
2 Bdrm plus family
room, large lot, close to
~acb. Only $61.500.
lf G!M#ci~lljfjlQ 962"'44 (l:" 546·8103
3 Br. din-rm. Cam rm. 2
bit. swim pool & J11r u1-1i
$139,.600. J.i'Ji Do, no clos
1n1 C06t, ownr will oarry
oontrad. Ci ll for :.pp\
sa-8455.
STONES THROW
To ~. shopping, all
I W'Orlt with Oran•<' Co. ~ Vets only. Homes to l1wbt:Ptn
$115,C»O. Forlnfocall· ~1lt7
Vet.All. 541 0800 499-~tOO _.;.==-..o;:
SHCTACUU.lt
OCEA.MV•W LO't
18.000 Sq. ft. uuble, 290
de• O<'Hn. c•nJOD • cl
I)' views above white
water break $2~0.000.
4D4·52'72
TIYTMSU
En.Jot ot'CIUI br•teS tn
tht1 11Url)' oft Dana
Point hilltop ~on
domln.lun\ Jt '• • l•rse 3 Hdroom,· 2~ balh, :l· •tory DI04tl Wltll wet bar, nrepl•ct tr lfJCluded
SpllnJsb patio. OWnf'r 111
movlna " waott t.o ~U. •.soo
l
c
'• r
tl
r
r •
1a
l.
le
) .
m
J ,
... , .......... s. ....... ,...54. , ...... ~w. Hous.1For W. ..
....................... . ..................... ·•••·•·•••············· •················•····· ··········•·•·•········ ·······••••••••······•· D.I DAIL V PILOr *
...._.._.. 10 a -····~ •••• !.'!.a. Mt ,.,.._. 10" ~:!.'!'.~~ ... !!~! ~~ ........ !~~~ ~.'°" .... su .•••• •.2 •• ~o. ~~~~~~!!+*, ....... ~~~~!4!!~ ...... ~:!.~~!.*.~! ... . .......... ~......... . ..................... .
------1rmnno .... rr.,., 2000 a.-c-.,.,.._ c:-.Mese 1124 ..
SIA TallACI ~., ' ........ (i .......... s..
• l nrec•. V _,ted ulU•tt -4 c.st•• WM.t-.m ..• $1Z7,SOO..
l.AGUNA
.. NIGUEL
" 49S-l7ao
493-1112
SOUTH
LAGUNA
499-4551
LAGUNA
•BEACH
497-3331
....,....._. I 048 Mltsloll Ylefo I 067 ..............................................
.,.,.i,'1V INVESTORS ••••••••••••• •• •••••••• 0..... 2700 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SIA v w Loads of Doft'l mlae this! Great 4 w Ide, UOOaq.ft. house ....................... t 8r 1\.\ Ba. fpJr D/W.
SI 0,000 00¥1)1 BR. 21,, BA home. Barn, + IOUd tor 2 more •• ., ,.... 11tove, mnc. loveiy 1''am N..-2 RY 4 br 3 ba, 2 Extras lret;t. fenced . Just re· 'Part.like area. S7'~ n.et.wch hme.~. 1.\28
t.rplc, t.eQ.Qb/jac., pnv WMA.T"I Youi LIME? Wood accents lhru out, duc~BdKueR to sellers Ill· Prine (bly. A,gt. l&U6o6 ~lllbhM>ed tncome pro-•FLOWER
comm. Aaume balance lota or storage in th13 1*111. duc1n1 boy1~nberr1 ol $341.000 Owner &JU• u Y1XI·~. fixer upper or :iuper 3 bedroom hOmt! mo 876 ~717 SEMINAR farm 1n Sao Ja.quln z br, 2 ba. laundry •
.._ " will Ounce No oetd • lax shelter rn w J l h d 1 n in g .ind _OR~-2080 Vlllley 3 parcelli a•a.Ha· ~orlubop. S390
qualilylna needed. aoo. pri ~:S : re,j • 8 f • rweplace. Large lot wilh c--.rclal Le~ ~t!e~tic ble ·80 to 128 ac:rea,. cws • 00 peta m.a72
Yacbl V•ca•ant. By Cibeo a!~a~ ::::· r:i· ln.uttrees. Bkr, 540-1720 ~ 1600 return bein&' realt:wd lnchM!es home. bani1, --------Owner.~"1"778 +~'p00l&roomt~add ············"'········· thru Jll property aa 1n corrah. $72,000 to abr.oewc:rpts,new~. ILUFFS on. si.s ooo fA8111!LL MEDICAL ILDG ve:;tm~nts o!teriJI.& x1ot s:us.ooo kids ok. No doas. $290. Macy Lou Manon 1""9 IL>ntwoSaoClernente) leverage thru creative NORINS REALTY ~2274 _____ _
$99,500 '42-1215 .. '#I hlCalfornla" Sate-Lease-Tradt• ~~c'!.'Jg ... withasUtlleu ; 494-1017 * "'--p...t...a
3 Bil, tnd. unit. YrJ>lc. ~~~~~~~-~I 7 RmDentaJSu1tei. _.,.,,.,, GA.IL --
paUo. 8 Rm Medical Suites C .. 962-2416 Re.tcllt •••••••••••••••••••••••
Owner /a.¥t 833-8551 THE ILUFFS Tustin I 090 J-W. y-~ Co CURTIS ••••••••o••••••••••••• WHITEWATER VIEW, 2 Truly gracious adult ••••••••••••••••••••••• -, lllnlTa llJV9STM-s HoaMs......,lhed lb', 2~ Ba, patio deck.
ITSl&NllEDUCED! homeotun~ompromlsed J br, I\.'> ba Laurelwood 49M660 4tt-22l7 ""Iii ...... , ••••••••••••••••••••••• frpl,la.r• $min wllt to
qu ality. Dramal1c 3 townbome Fully up PROFESSIONAL FORUSIRVA.TIONS eost.W... llZ4 bch bubor.'4'75.no bdrm. end uml, totally graded. air c:ond. By '~~~~~~~~~ pets please. f14"'61·6581. /l./C. Tr11nqu1l view . owner $68,900 Cull BUlLDJNG, •tore. & of. I-••••••••••••••••••••••• aftS.
Spacious patio, no detail 832-0897 or833-3918 ficea.. 2 sty. '650,000. 414 15 UNITS a.t.ls Galore!! --------
overlool<ed ! $180,000 down, IHbo.ld. COST A MESA We hate lOOO'a ol houaea, B TOf'O l132
3226
~Macnab· Irvine
I I 11 I \
I lt\11 \ '\'
AGl'.:NT 640·SS60 Broiler &40'74.SG Xlftt(!On(iindUdlt11PoOI. dplxs, apts now, all •••••••••••••••••.••••••
CIMTRA&.UGUMA BVOWNER,Sa.n Martine - ---SERIOUS ABOUT o.ltaa/ Income 10.38 ti mei; areas, au pnces. Save on NEW 3Br. 2Ba. air cond.
0-Y -0 apartment h exec hme, 2.000 sq ft, SEA VIEW Onita Sde 1100 gross. Aski.na $3SO,OOO. fee. IJ'l)lc, cptl, drp;. bit.Al.
block from beat'h & shop-AtC. Pool-size yd, all up· Port Royal 4 Br. 3 ba, 2 COUNTRY LIVING?. •••••••••••••••• ••• •• •• Subm4t 645-4900 •• DW'tOWIVe 171·31189
PlJl&.2Bdrma.lc2balhs. grds & many xtras. story. Beaut view, .d LOIJ'INlleoch ll4I F-t•Vthy 3234
Newly redecorated, G R E A T f' O R landacapine, drps, etc See tlus m1m-ei.tale 1n 6 UHITSjEcutside ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• clean. airy & sunny ENTERTAINING ! By owner $279,000. 1911 l.kmoo Heights. Circulu j/j/ __ ) Bread & t>utter Xlnl t.ovety Parkaide Estates 4
Sll9..SOO SI 14,500. Call 586-6433. Yacht Camilla. 64~ dnve. panorarruc view. "/' _ _. .__.,,Rn br • ..._ "-le bl•-m: ~~~~~~~;J l'uou. ""'~ 5195.000 CHA.IMIMG •"..., U¥ ' ...._. •NOR.IMS REAL TY r a o ch house. & u u l c.ti1 a.vest.t.ta ~ 2 bdr 2 graded. Nr. shops. M1 e 4'~ •057 ... ...,.... leoch I 06' "DON'T SWEAR, house. pooj Mature tr~:. "I">" Vlew, ma Sq p k. coll ~ *' ..,... * ••••••••••••••••••••••• S E COMPARE" on a large lot s:H.5.000. EAST SIDE Cal '62-2456 baths, 2 car carport. i.~o-1;::;, ar • ·
S LIDO I L decks an center ol Tem-_..;._ ____ _
• LAGUNA IEACH SHE' IM. BAYFROLiT NEWPORT ~ COST. MISA. 94 Units, '<Int area pie llllla. ssas. lease. 48r, 3biJ, Crplc, lncd yd IS A. HURRY n HEIGHTS JUST G 1 VE IT \ Pl\U,MA RLTY Ready to move into now. Olid.n\ ok, 00 peu. ~
" to sell Uus beaut.. 3 Br. 2 sq.ft. quality home, wilhalltheextras, usual person W •y OF UF£ New and beautiful. 4.000 ~ $9 I •500 nmumrr. A DUPLEX S36 9305 Super •eUlnC tor auper mcls girdn'r. '751.QaO.
1 , WA'm'f.i~E> sty coodo. in the Bluffs. W1wide N. Bay view & WOO . 4br, 2ba, t'ov-ly lncluded In• home E BALBOA MA y QC K u~~p~!ce
'1. UP AT A VILLA ; f'eatunn& oak parquet dock for SO' boat. One or a cn.'Ci patio. Perfect for Mart.ft Red &tote Woodbu.rnln& Oreplaces, DUPLEX ............ UTIOH • ._.,. __ ,_ '-"' .. ) Located high up on flrs, camel color cstm kind on lee land. Only pvt parties & BBQ. 64()..5357 bu11t-1n k1lcheo . 3 3&0Gl£NoffVJlE $&5() • ._.....! ,,_
Laauna •s famed RIVI era cpt., gas bltn appliances, $ 6 SO • 0 O o. P a r l I Y TERMS. Call Roy Ken-1~~~~~~~~-bedroom, J lcin&·sue up Best value locaUon near LAGUNA IUOt
µo astli· n" Deta1' lcd CO'.IY USed brick frp(c. & furnished. dall, Bkr , 631 ·2246 Corl-per un1l. 2 Bedroom "PAVILION". Alley ac-(714)494•2140 Mediterr.;;~an architC<.'· much more. Call today Roger lrown R. E. chrecllons. It's hard to BY OWNER, Custom 2200 lower, enclosed private <.'ess. Covered parkmg. ~~~~~~~~~
ture w /chalk white $132.900. 673-1020 find. Sq. ft. 3 bdrm, 2~2 ba, patio in yard. Will ex Eai;ytorcnt.Ownersays -C ~~·t•r,redt1'leroo"'nes YAUEY 640-9900 ~-~...-.-. -r mr di I chungeforll-8unlls.Spr-:.ubm1t offers! Call s:ns. 2 BR •em.I Cum, 100
CaD,YOll Acres Dr.,
2U..399-2S01
-~ ,,_. ::"'!!!!!"' -IEA.CH TREASURE a · m, n·rm. poo · ing sale price reduced '""'7221. • iron grill gates. 2 ~ Xlnt area. $129,900. ...., Bdrm. OUTSTANDlNG ~ IY OWNER C1ny solid home, near 731-0.564 $142,500. Century 21 Weatchll
VALUEATSJ.99,500 ooo\ E~ Mont.ego JMt, 4 br 2 ba, ocean on 30th. 2BR 1 Ba, COUOfMIWPORl'.
2. STANDING ON THE ~ fam rm, nu crpt.1. Lg ~~.1.ooodwood Cloori> otherReal&tah REALTORS 4DLX.UMITS Mewpcwt •aclt 31" •••••••••••••••••••••••
· TENNISCOURT!
GlantSized4+2 Ht.d Pool 1'3S (6336)
......_. 6'Jl-45SS
Hoftor ~J-Credi& urda
CORNER; in pri mel'==~======. yrd, lndscpd, wood deck ... ..., •••••••••••••••••••••••
1
___ 6_7_5-_5_5_1_1_ Xlnt condition; aarages. North Laguna locauon. Newport Crest Twnhse, Open Sat/Suo l ·S 19SS Mobi&.....,._, llhakerool. ONETHREE
Older 2 i;tory home walk lo beach, ten crts, _Port __ N_eLson __ ._7_59_-0634_ ForW. 1100 ~~!:.T.:!'! .. ~~.~~ :o~~~~1iJfE~H~
Bedroom, I story, Faun·
t.aiJl Valley. 5'9$. Sbrp.
clean. vacant.~ or .....~!! 1162-1'188.
>A/LGE. BAY WINDOWS pool . jacuui. Agl. ---------1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·--------BDRM 2 BAT'IS & SCENI C OCEAN 646-7171 ~"'IEftTOSB.L C M .• ,. •. • • VJEW. Jiv. rm. w/red ---·------""9'-osta esa. J 2x44 INCOME $185,000!
We have 1000'11 ol houiies, ---------
dplxs apta now all HllAA .... •leecJI 3240
areas, 1all pnces. Sa~c on ••••••••-•••••• .. ••••• fee. ew-elegant-2 bedroom OWNER UQUlDATJNG ----,..-----Skyline, 112 yrs old. PYRAMID bnck flteplace 2 Bdrms "BLUFFS" Twnhse, 4 br, ALL PROPERTY. In CLIFFDRIYE cabana, like new, Lo PROPERTYJLOTS & dJJUng rm. noor plan. lam rm, xlnt cond, quiet E fl . EXCHAHGOIS !SCf'VlCed by 2 balhs. "AN street. Alt 646-71?1. ve.lagainst inflation... xclting new 0Her1ng. rent. SlS,000, nanctn1:. CdM VlewLot .. ~.000. 833-1768
64r .. tOO _"'""'-($Seo) or 2 bed.nM>m + _... ""' den ($S75). Cedar •win-
dow home. S Bloeks to
beach. Private 2-car ••••••••••••••••••••••• garage. Pally main-o L o E L A G u N A $10,000 DWM Ultra-charm1n1t. 3 BR, 548·7891 2 Uruts + Ilse CM •
CHARMER"for$129,SOO ILUffS A.aa-sWot: 2"'.t BA tradluona! home.Vi --,k.i-_n_g_Coa--ch_m_l_rv_1_n_e-·s '$137,000
•3 WOODED .,.....,ATE 3 Bdrm Bo . " I • High beam ceilings, 2Urut.sC.M ... S22S,OOO . ~· ; " wta pan. oceanviewfromupstairs finest park. "Th e Lot.sC M $750000 NESTLED BENEATH AU ooe level, new cpts, Sbr, pool. 2 bt.ry $200,000 mastt'r s te w /frplc. Meadows". 2 BR. 1 BA. . . '
1--------• G_r.. 3202 ta.tned yJrd. Adults. No Co""'91•....,... ....................... pet.a. Jnqulre = .l8tb St.
TALL SHADE TREES. flooring" shutters. bal.$lS50mo.NptBcb. Formal dine -rm. den.Easyfina.ncing.Red J ~UA.tt... Cil sn •secluded section or $145,000. Own /Agt ••• 79 lfillRealtySS2-7500 PLA C E
the V1Uage. Deta.iled all 833-&Sl or 644-2148 eves. 3br " den, pool. SlSS.000 .,. 'PROPB:RTt1!:S.
wood exterior w /ex baJ. SHOO mo. NplBch Dollhouse. com pl furn, 752·1920 tnc• tensive use or gla:.s i-.,,,. .......... .-.... .-............ ••• lOx.55 Panornma. 1963. t~OU4ILIT HlWflOllT~
4-pex In tt.ff-ttott HOMEFINDERS (n4)96H.131
leach locatec( In 'IboosandsolReot.als ,.cly appreclcdlCHJ AU areas all prices Sample: area. Mo•••h to S140Bachfumutilpd
Ir, 2 ba, IJe yard.
=~· lail+clean
Spacious 3 BDRM. & *JUMIO VA* 3br. lmmac:. Uubor $48-6333 ICZ6490 l G1braltnr, OpnTUll:30
DEN floor plan Ex I work with Orange Co. View home. $1SS,000 bul. -----Willit', !">49-9480. 531·5067 ~~~~~~-~~
frwyt & beacJL Priced $2002br toed yard
to MIL Call lrol&er, $29S3Brpetsfenced Why pay more? Your
family will love this 3
bdrm, 2 ba in nice
neighborhood. Only $395
ll'nb1ve use of Fran Vets only. Homes to $1.lOOmo
ctscan ule floors. cedar $175,000. For info call: *** Ii Owrwr Quahtv 3 Br ~per sharp, 12x56, 197l ~e. lm'mac. Room for ~1ngs lon < H W6!190 l
pool. 1501 Lincoln Lo. (,1braltar, Jud_:. M9·9480
558 3127 UFETIMESERVICE
7 UNITS C.M. I~~· ~~· ~~~ 557-0122 p01neled walls. wood VetAgt. 541-0800 bt>amed rcllin~s w /C'I<·
posed timbers. JUST
U!>IED AT Sl77,000
4br, den. bonus rm
New Lake l"or rl'SI
SJS0.000 baJ. $1150 mo.
Bcauttful brand now 4 l COM.ING UP SOON! 3 & 4
br,lol\,f/p 3-2br,l'2 ha l"-"'EST.._._ BR homes all over Lovely2Br,w/frplc,clean
963-4561 Agt. No fee.
MISSIOM RliLTY
9tlS S. Cst. Hwy, Laguna
...... 494-0731
•l.l TRADE-SELL
IA.YVIEW
Lg 2 br 2 ba mobile home
m exclu. Bayside ViU.
Clubhse, pool, jac .• priv.
bcb. poss . boat s lip.
r>7 .500. 675-'1903 673-7848
••• 4br & bonus & pool 2
stry, 3 car garage, 1'.V.
$140,000 bal. $1075 mo
No qualifying nct>dt.'<i.
Owner will finance
759-0448 • .Upgraded 2.BR condo, El LIDO ISLE . Tero for Laguna Beach Ex·la 4 brm 3 ba, mod ---------1 1iin or income. $30,000 lut, H' lot., pali.o, or ten-
lftwty, $1110,000 FP. ols & pri v: beach.
ZAGttOOJXY RLTR 13'9.SOO Owner 675-QS9
, ___ 4_9_..,.._6_1_1 ___ 1Npt Shores, By Owner,
4br, 2ba. 2 car gar. Dys Jbree Arch Bay, 3br, 2ba 973-0375, evs 631·5483
& lndry. 9 yr old \'1ew ---------home. Will carry 2nd
Mui.l sell. Prin only
~99
1050 •••••••••••••••••••••••
liltn Vu condo. Upgraded
Laguna ViUage 3br, 2ba.
IEACHHOUSE
1 Blk. to ()('ean; J bdrm.
home, o(lered at Jot
value, Pl.000!
NEWPORT llEA.CH
RIEA.LTY 675-1642
BFSTO'THECREST
PriceredlJ('ed! Vu condo
Newport Crest 3Brs
Stained-glass t'rench
doors open to Jge de<'k
w 'mln vu Enter Uv rm
w /m1r r ored w e t
bar /frplc tboolcsht"lve~
Stepuptoformal dto rm.
kitchen w dmette area.
powder rm. Cloi.ets
galore. Inside garage ac
l't!SS. Near pool & tennis
A super value.
Opl..'n Sat l 5 t>i! 27~ LIDO AREA.
s..ca. ....... Private beach, 2 bdrm, l 1076 ba. Evetwknd673-2931 ••••••••••••••••••••••• VIEW+ POOL t2'x44 . Skyline Mobil ....
Home m excellent condJ· F\tn for all the family. tion. Light panel walls
Sc>aclous4 BR. dining rm molded bath tub, lrobt'.
& fam . rm w /fore" er Cree refngeralor. gas
?Cean vtew. Owner am:· raage. aWtl.ln&. skirting
1ous, has bought another & shed Pnced to sell.
$1.56 soo • ~ ted · · r BERTHA HENRY '"""'a an mce area o Costa Mesa sn a low rent REALTORS • Park. Call alter S .lO or
21S0e1Mar 492-4121 week-ends631·3474
VIP Trailer space for n ·nt 4 BR. family home in Will hold s· or 10' wide
prest1g1 o u s ·can · 35' to 40' long Old
tamar" .\ real pndc or establ'd park. $235 +
ownership homl.' rP· uul.642-9193after6
duced for 1mmcd1ate saii~fif~ENRY •FANTASTICAL REALTORS
215De1Mar 492·4121
townhouse, all bltns. "" ,..ii:;ro, Or II crpt.o;, d.rps. flurr}. buy CommerciaJ building m ange Co area Ca quiet ne1ghborbood, nr
now. Tom Lee, Rltr, ()('ean area with secure 963-4567,agent,nofee elementary scbl, immeu
642 1603 leas_, from Government a...l"-d --u 06 occupancy $350mo .
SEVEN DUPLEXES
SAN CLEMENTE
<kean views. all 2 BR,
11.At BA Less theo 1 yr
old. Walk to state beach
4c park. Askina only
Sl18,000 each Offer on all
or part
BERTHA HJ::NR\'
REALTORS ru Del Mar. 492 .. 121
Agency !or sale. Equity •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• 67J.4162or673-4798~ve .
build up and cash on cash Attractive 3br 2ba den Br. 2 ba, family home.
return for $50,000. down frpl, adH.s. '$625 'yr1y: Crpts. drps. bltru
payment. Call for de· 675-31124 (Zl3)367-0ln Corner lot w /brick
la11s court.yard. Near acllools M A Y 0 C K C... .. W. 3222 &park. $4.25. mo.--..m
CUll•O•ATlft" ••••••••••••••••••••••• wkdaya; 149·03'19
l80 GlE,.....ME 1 Bllt to bcb 2 Br, lYI ba. • .... _ ... _
LAGUNA BE.-c>i """""'""" ,__n Adults only. No pets. $t7S l--------v -i494-2Me mo. Phone '714/673·1853 •LOOK•
or213/244-1653 Jmmac 3Br + fam rm, 2
car gar, avail immed Industrial/ 3 Br. ram rm, din rm, $&25 mo. Leslie or Make 12 UNITS Property 2100 Jasmine Creek. sec gat.e, 8'7-602S
l • rrule lo beach These ••••••••••••••••••••••• tennis. pool me. tllOO/mo. --------
won ·l last at only 7111 ..t.CRES Avail May 1. 640.2666 or VACANT 2 Bdrm, ent'ld 1 · "" 640-2668afl6pm yrd, xlnt H.B. Loe. S32S S320.000 Great lllcome m H.B $3perfoot. As" 1 L· h B .. tt d f "'-· .. U--3224 O'IO. " ior nelt • ,.r. a c-up rom your Agt 963·9086 ...__ ....,.... 968-l317or96244'71
d plex or 4-plex. Watch ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------
empire grow. Call now Loh for We 2200 R...tals Goaion!I $Z?S 1 BR COTJ'AGE
for .more info ••••••••••••••••••••••• We have 1000'1 of hou.sest Walk To Beach
HARIORVIEW Families & Pet 540..3666 OFRCEIU>GSITE dplxs. apta now, all P'encedYard (5360) =~ .... !?!.~ &.1~~~~~ ~.,·:::!~h::r ~~~!i~ :.:.~~~\~! iit:Sil af t;iii:J:: ~::::"'" ... :: ~~·:::if .. ~
--------•I kilcben.$149,!iOO. $Ul9,SOO. Prin only -..JLOT ~~0~!r~n l~~l~i~: DaYldBourkeRltr 3~~(~2~=: Honor-1.credttcards
Chrla Harwood 83.l·382 l
Ferguson Realtors A C, tenrus, pool. $73,SOO
Ownr. 497·1426
SHIMGIS c.11640-5112 p)eue.MH616.64H033 Walking distance to for immed Occupancy. New lluni~&older7un· 546-9950 GG-2274 1----"'-----
IWIVIMG! pt Hats by owner. 3br, beach. tOOO Sq. n. loc nr EverrtJllni for an active ~ 0~a'k~0e~ !:: ~~ • ......._ Detert. Eastsldeextrubarpa br, WANTED
• Sharp 2 BR, 2 BA lYJba. fam rm, lge lot. Pla.zaParkS:S0,000. family, s wimming, both Excban eorowner Rnort 2400 2 ba. lrplc, mJcrowave, llr .... dpl c ...
t, o v e 12·5. SSS Tu1Un Ave. rMVEST magnUlceiitclubhouse& - -Big Bear. by ownr, nu opnr. Gardener 1ncl cfoar'lgapt. Marf•a Foothill town home. $11A.900. 0pn Thun·Sun J; ANCHORAGE recreational area5 , wtllcarry.54J'.77es ••••••• .. ••••••••••••••• wet bar, eJee. garafe dr '.la X.
ly mountain views from w. Oceanfront 4 BR beach 8'J3.G91, 5C8·2''1 MEHTS much, much more all for * z TripiMxff • custm chalel. 2900 sq ft, $550. mo. 543-0083 Sclll area. Appr••
living, dining. _Patio house. S29S.OOO -----"------C714t 496-77.11 onlySJ.S,'150. <NF2670> Near Lake Park. Min. to 1 I ac. 280 deg mnt vu, S 3 0 0 • o. 'It.
.treab. Total pra\.acy MarsballRJly 675-4600 .... V.WHOMI '"-========== CctlifonMaPadfic l><·h l-4BR.Jba;I-aBR. cedarmt.plushcrplg,2 •West.side Cosla Mesa, 1.._,57tHn.
awa.its you. Recreation rott'TOffti40 Sen Clemeole Cu s t m Mobile Home Reath 2'> ba. 13 BR, 2 ba. 5 frpk:'a &i pool tbl. rn.soo. 2br, l ba .. encl gar. pntio, ---------
(actllties Include swim * T .. IWFFS * 2501 Port Whitby pt Hillside home nearing 2706 llarbor, Ste 208 eurll,ltes. frplcs. Slll9,000 631-0174 wash/dryer area, nu AVAJL SOON 2 BR l BA.
nung pool. jacu.ui. etc Popular Q-plan · 3 BR. 2 completJon 2,000 sq. ft 3 540-5937 t'ath 1709 J11.3 Alabama, Qit of,.__... c:arp/drp&, freshly paint· w Jfncd yard, convenient Pnced&.cueU .•• $11,950. ba,-· , .... ::--~pltw1tb Uniqueenl.r)'toyourown bdrm 2 ba lam rm --Hunt Bcb 536 1718 ~·1 ed. Moye in cond. a rea. 1375. 963·4567, ,,,_.venaum apacioua kingdom ' • · · • ~cp1rfr 2550 $325./mo No pets. a"ent noree ':::=~~-;:,3 ~~~c~;rec~11 ~ ~~!:: w/aunnse, sun.set" city ~-~~~~\ia~~::.; d~~k~ •FANTASTICAL Owner ••••••••••••••••••••••• 641-13S6 ;..__..;..• ___ . ----
$145 ooo lite Yll!'W'I Crom Newport 2~ car garage $115,000 20 UNIT MOTEL Col.leg Park 3 B -2 -b-LI 2 Bil, less than 2 mi to
4'5-5220 IJ0-5050 CAYWOOD REALTY to Palos Verdea. No agent. C714 > ~6974 Costa Mesa Cost a Mes a. Pr 1 me Partr rtoc..oce-'de frplc,e(ncd y~. ~pet!: bch. P5 :i$m
JNC. 548-1290 Malter home featurt>!I 3 or (714)16().4180 Harbor Blvd loc. Income 2 &3JAEDFHAROOM "50/mo. Ph: 5'5-'7318.
bdr, 3 ba, atq dwn liv s-..... Adulf..Pef Park $'55,000. A 1real buY at · ,......_ PACUITTllt
Beaut. 4 BR, I BA bome.
Open Sat Is Suo J .5
SO CALIFORNIA
REALTY
• 646ai05; ownr <t!IS-4285
Convenience
•l.ove1Y J BR located on
laf'ie corner lot. room for PoOI. Near schoola, shop-
ping & freeway. Nice
~lbborhood, great for kicli I 189,500 '26)
0,.. D.Hy rm, form. dln rm. c:atm 11'"-'stra.o 1071 Estate Sn le, beautiful $t00,000. Owner Broker GARDENTOWNHOME. Grab lhil 3 bdrm. 1 ba Ntwh'ur 1242 Harbor View Homes, drar_:ea, m 1-rr o r Ad -.... 2.xGO 28r 283 Villa will finance with 15,..o 2cargarages. w/crpta, fed yrd. Coove-••••••••••••••••••••••• fonn-model, 1847 Port "" ••••••••••••••••••••• • • " ' d P t I I .. l"ff 24 nient ·-a . ....,... . 963-4 "' wrdr • varuly, dressmg ·--------· West, romer lot In 4• own. rospec ve ., """ _,.. ~ Prestta1ous Weatherly Sheffield. rm. vaulted celllnes & park. Part renl only purchasers only please. Eves 1·757·1623 Agt. No fee Bay t-.oble. Slip, s Br, 3
$1.S4.900 640-90l9 !!pltal stalrcue. * * * * * * * it32.50. This excellent Bier. 1714 > 543·9793 Hideaway in this vine cov· ba. (rpJc. ~ balcooy.
SllWARD$ IN CHARMING home available ror: im· IMCOMI UNITS .,. __ Bernardino, 2 br frpl, ered country setting g~ crtyd entr. =· Lo Cl b d r • b a & old San Juan Capa'strano med occupancy. 1-.nJOY ""'' ho 3 B 2 ba ..-95 •--'-1, dhJ4-· Lse 5 lfyou're t ired o f doWT11tairssittingrmset Atrordable up -theflnestallyearround 12 uruts,good0r.Cty newcrpt,nicelydecor, ~ r, .... · ~~· · • ~KlNGt r~h the rg:~ olfadjacenlsepqtrs. stairs/downstairs con-smog free weather in location. $260,000 good area. Conv, terms
ome a e r g dominl 3 Bd lv.t Or'.lnge County, swim· , or cash to loan. 883-2101 Rustle seclW1ion awa~ '""'9 3244
PRICE-0.Ume.,lknow GrouDdlndscpdforCallC. baths.~~tlng~~dow 1ng, jacuzzi, social ac· 20 Or. Cty unllll OC'll75-ml89.Agt. )'0Uatthls3Br,2bapool •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• ;~e-Mt~l ~1No~i living. Cloee lo shopping, covennas, built-ins, two ti vi ties g a I o re . 8·~fross $UO,OOO Rmtehes. ,..,._ home In lovely are11. u.tv. Park. (Terrace), 2· "RealtorbyProfe:oi~ion-comm. pooUtlennla. See car aarage 4' patio. By (KC2SS1·2> 38 prime Covington \IO· GroYes 2700 $.Agt00.-3009 , • BJU aa. Walk to sbopa.
not Hobby... this! Open House Sun. owner. Mon. lhru Thurs. C4fonlia P«ific ita, all 2 bt 2 be, good Or. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 BR. 1 ba hse. Pvt yard, ldllol, ~clean. "40 twlOia V8EW l·S. $214,000. HamJ)8hlre <days), call 646-2158, Mobile Home Realty Cly. loe11Llon. Prin Oft),y. S.OZ Ac.aAHCH IN crw. drpa " palot. MO. "4;fS!Ofes.
UA.l....o!H Mgmt. Nancy Vauahn. Ftt. thru Sun. (daya) Ii Z706 Harbor, Ste~ Sea Country Propert.aes. '138 Weelo colt Pomou ~ ~540-42SB evenln1s. call ('114 ) 54" •937 ""'"' ....-. A .J ...... , F .... MONTEGO-BeauUful 4 _., ...,.. ~ $19t5 FULL PllCE w , IO"' ......,, • .....
Br. pool-size huae yard, ~edAds M2·54t7I ~. ~fwS. 1200 12 UMITS ltlut+fGoNe •
ONLY '1•e,to0. FH! ....................... .....,, • .,,.. s1ts0o-.r.,_at =======;;..1 C8ARM!:L--Cb1 a.rming 3 Mtwport .._. I 069 IHch I 069 AVE ACUS U.wr.adfd, ~ Clmvn. 100 r w / p r v a p a . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••• ••••• • "·-" to find .. _. ran.... .,,.. ,.,__ ,.,.. ,. ~ SOllERSET-Elepnt 5 nai" 0""'"' "0 El to beacb. vwutt•Bkr ., -r. ...""'"'" Br l U ....1 with fixer uppc1" houe will flna11 ce. s.43·11793 ---'""' ft lta:ti • •fie. A P•voeu. Pric"'d below market. ot.... -·-. -...., • land.sc:p + decorated CE "' .-. ~~ceklt. Ca BK.R. ~.Bob J1c:obeen '1SZ·SUJ .Rluaoceanvubo~. (7}4)m·Sell HOM1 +INCOME
d)'s; s.1.-r •Vl/Wlmds 3 Br ~~J!!..ted + OR 5.22-0530 Uve-ln Ulla 1arge 4Bt
~~IST ~zuo0:.•:!.·~~i 110111 IL11•s "D. l+ acre. Outataodlne :n:~o~)~':t~ •• • _,' ATlllCK TENORE II U SJC. 1.ooed Ira estate. botne!'. Lol n fl0x300
Prine. ool)'. •12rf Room to ~ld tnw. UG• cJ4 BR, saS Lanon. ~AIL OVER 60 YEARS OF SERVICE IU, aood C.al. locatlon .
.Bu.at. tt.ep.dn ram.rm POUQ.OSUU SAU -------• Real l'll~t• Qmaoctlon t 1•J1Pft>alo. VeroH at.one VlewotBackBq,2br,2 NIWPOIT IEACH <nOI0-1065,ev•. ('714> *' tt. ftt ~ ~t· ba. "7,.500. rrtn. only. 5.16-0074 :it;)~~ maii>lcf:A 'a, a ea: CoWitr1' "Pr'Opri.,., Im mac u la i e 3 Br Den con • ~ for Ail ACtiOn •'----,--t.MTS--""'--'--t &af, C!Htral A JC • ___ ZIJO_______ dominium Wltb View Of o~can Call
TotmaJ dloe-rm. $1000 <>Pen HOUH, &ID 1-6, From 2nd Floor. Close To Pool, a
--l>nP•l'1 •llo••llto. HarborVlew, Z1t1, 4 br, Jocuui, Sauna A·•d Tenn.ls Courts. Daily Pilot lief' will 11••0U1tc p(d/JH., many traa. ""~ , ..;:::;:.•at•• ~rl Al•u• Pl. ~~~eJI:,fi~.~r• Information. ~VISOR .ua.n 64o;;ttoo•--------iiliia\1Hav• you read &od.iy'a 642·U71 Cl Hied Adi' J' not, .,., .,.. m.llahla tho besl
IDtown! • --------· --
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Wedneeday. Aprils. 1978 * RI DAILV PILOT t' 1 ..._.. u.rw hwd I Af ...,,... ....,sMd .,.,......h u.tw.. .,,... t1wefth u..t..m. Apartme1th u..tunt. -.~······. . ...... "'·,.·.·· .. ·-.::::... .... ····· ........................................................................................... .
,.,. _ ''" ..... ,, • 1• n o1 eonw... 3124 D...r.w HH ... .,.,. leech 316' ...._.. lhha .. to a... ... ...
5025 ............................ ••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• °"'" tWty 5005 o,,.-wty SOOS ~· aar.~tobeAch,POC>l, LAMAHCHAAPTS View, beauWul, new, 2 'AIJCHIWPORT ••11••••••1•••••1111•••11••••••••••••11 •••••••
.......................
t .wawT.o:.
LOANS AVAILABLE CNdil ftO problem.
lfoobr,752-ltOJ
a.tAA AJ WT 1325 pr mo. 'tll )une L1rae 2"3 bedroom Br,:? bu, $350. Clos~ to Bacht!lora 1 or 2
..,_... 30lh.IS4.507Zl jlarden apts Uabwhr. bhoP5 67s-4174.~1I08 Bedroonu&TOwnhuwu.~•
TOWNHOUSI A ...... ,_..k• eo.ti.Me'la 372 bltns,eocl ~ar,gasbe:i f'roml289SO
VMw. four btdroOau. Y•C. Fett ...................... ~ ~ool. Cu d. 778 Sro l ...,..McJ• a..ct. 3140 Spertacuh1r apa, lotol
2.M lq\lllh I~ Jin· At..._ Wfft. 1 6'2-5013 11••••••••••••••••••••• recreation pru•ru rn . QUICKCASH I
&au lately up1radcd MllC GU ............. ££ $50 WEB( .. ur E/Sade, airy 3 Br. 2 Ba. SHARP, beach, 2 "3 DR. social proeram. 7 pool$ II lhrU-out Pool. tenn1a. .... AAA" 1 bltnl, new cpl~. drps, f rp I , di ab was be r , tennis courts. Al Fashluu
$4$0 month. Aat for •WldesUded.iou J'Oll• Studio. l bedroom paint '350. 552·4201, &&rage, paUos, 9'().~ uJand, Jamboree I< S,,m
lsl & 2nd Trust D~~ I
loans arranied for any
reuon. CrMit no pro·
blesn. BoJTOW oo the in-
creued value of 1011r
home. Call today foe fa.st,
C()WteOWI Ulforrn.tUon
' o ff N s H Jo: A • •IJ:abouMcompuU!ray11 Milid1ervlc~. pool 551 ~l Joaqwn Htlh1 Hoad. AV A IL ABLE l M . •Dallytele(lhoMserv1«-2376Newport 81.C.M. . UVENearTbe Beach I 17141644-1900
111.t:OlATE.LV ! ·V~ancibttri.fledda1ly 548-9'7S.Sor845·3967 MEWE .. SIDE C91C1del Sol
•F\ill 11l.lt.ft ol cou.o."IOlots SUS CASIT AS Jbr, 2ba, Townhouse. Up· Beautiful Adult Apt.a Rental1 GaAor9!! IUStHESS O,PORTUMmES
-Gift !Mp-Shppbg _. ...... b
Lagma leac:h. Hff"Y foot trcrHlc.. $7,IOO
plus ....... ,
QP~~,!:. Ill ·•'r~toaaedM"ovcr graded Lae patio Gas&WaterPalct _"_o=-·~c:erenlalcounschn~ Nicely furnished 1 bdrm. Children ok. 645·9543 21661 Brooth11r11t, JIB ,. .-~·-.()pcn7days8·00-8·00 Closed ear. $230. up.
We have lOOO's of houses.
dplxa, npts now, all
areas, all pncesA>ave on
Cee
t
-J'U.t.. tno · · Adults, 00 p4'll. 2110 eves, 646~days. 962·6653 , .. =;;·~~ RENTIMES Newport Blvd. New, 2 Br, 2 ba, all bltn1, 2Br, children welcome, no -Hair Salon-Morth LaCJH• er•ll·
Shopping cettter loccrtlon. Loh of ~ $30~000-
~~r~ 64>4900
R__.._..G__. ___ 1! frplc, encl. garage, peU, sta.rtina at $245 mo.
Rtio.l'I' ... LS For Proteqlooal S.rvice .......-.. _.. p uo t·"-rm r>?.. .. • ., -IA"•"' We have 1000'• of houses, .1:1 · , .... 1 • _.,. "'"'"""'' Near ocean & tennis Yr
2BR,2Ba .......... $W &all 631-4555 dplu, apta now, all TSLMimt _642·1603 • -ly, 2 Bdrm, l bu,~. -Holr Salo1t-Dow1ttowa Le9111ta.
Est~ 21 ~ $25,000.
--Chllche'1 and Matvt Ritt Shop-s..tll
Coad tlqtrway, LaglllMI IHc.lt.. S2.000 ....
Llcenmed Home Lo~n
Brokers serving So.
Calif. for 17 yra. can our
nearest off&o •.
714-83'7 ·37 44 3 BR. 2 Ba · · · · · · · • • · $M0 areas, all pnct'S Save on La.rge3 Br townhouse apt, Seawind VillK8 mo. Rdareq. l /337 l106 3 BR, 2'<J ba •... '49'1525 OR STOP BY f 2 ... 1~i u 11& 4 BR 211! b rKJ\ 1936 ............. ~ •• d ee. "'"' .. ., c, pe o, garaae. New 1&2 bdrm luxury r-"''-..&• 3176
' a ........ •'"" (~2blk ~,;;l.) _6_4~900 A.gt Quiet complex. Adults. adult apt.s In 14 plan• ==::••••••••••• /NEED
./MONEY A"-lif Co S L• no pets. $375. 645·3381 or from. $270 + pools, ten·, l Br, w-•1. •A beach ...,00 ht•"'°'Y· "" . rp. mrce i; ~p~ ba~. all~ b7S-5&(!j rus, waterfalls, pondi. mo.J32En;;noLn ..,
• 0 FEE! Houses. condos, · · osta csa, 2 a 1 Ba t wnh From San Diego l''rwy 92 dupleus Renl.1:11 mo.545-060l,54S·0724 ga~'aK~. pat~o. ;~~t driveNort.honBeachto 4 ~~r 334_·_l_.t24 -Antique & Giff Shop-Art Ceeter
5-.0ppilg Area. 5°""' Cocnt Hwy. $11,500
pin hlln:ftf• t· • Pavilioo,67~12 Bkr. HiwttlM)ton s..ch 1740 J.1:1cuzu. Adults only McFadden l.beo West on ~Rh ,_.shed
o...arw S"'"' VIEW ••••••••••••••••••••••• $375 mo 646-20lO McFadden to Seaw1nd Oii' u.fwwlslMd 3900
"'" 5"' STUDIO Village. cn4>893·5198 •••••••••••••••••••••••
3 Br 2 Ba, pool, tenrus, R...tals Galon!! nu: EXCITING
-Hair SaJoa-All new flalllr9• ud
•tt•lpme11t. Fa•orabl• laaH. On-alt• pan1B9 '54,000
CUDfTMO
PROILEM
Jae, $MS yrly. 675-0562 "Weetdv Rat.s" We have 1ooo·s of houses. Hlill HACH rALM MESA APTS.
'f523CAMPU5n....Jnv1"'E SEAVlEW, 3 Br popular f'\.IUIUtc~en&TV dplxs, apts now, nil ltCIVICCEHTH MINUTESTONPT UIL: ,.,. " Llnem & UUbties areas, all pnces. Save oo BRAND NEW. Spacious BCH BarHArborpnmeocnvu MILETOOCE N DEERF!ELO 2 br. 2h ba, ~-547.7044: 833-3215 A Cee. dehue Z, 3 & 4 Br. All Bach, 1&2 BR SOUTH
LAGUNA
4~9 1551
497-lll 1
I.AGL:\\
NIGUl-:L
1951WI
DANA
POINT
493·88l2
z.d la 3rd TD locas
75Z.590l
Arranged by
Coott ..0.. Lo9ts
I db
l RoyaA Wes Mot.C 645-4900 Agf bltns. frplcs, &:ar, lie yd rrom $220. & up.
t.wnh.se, frp • gar, BIG CANYON. Luxurious 7Z1 Yorlctown Blvd 502 Yorlctown ·Just We:.t \d I N p ......... $425 99S-359l B r . ol 0 -acb Blvd. "'""'1718 t u b, ° Cb
MuiWy Wanhd 5030 •••••••••••••••••••••••
.....,.. · 2 Br. 2 bath ton-BeachBlvdatYorktown l rw/stove,re ng. """' ~ 15tllMei.aDr
1 _leach 3241 do m 1 n 1 u ~ h
1
o mwe 536-0411 Close to buses. !ilOres. 2b 1 ~ b C d (5 BUui East of Newport Const. farm w /f!/4 million ...,...... New/never lived n et ------Adlt.s. no J>i!l.s. r. 'a a, on ° 81 d ) backlog. Nda 2.4 million .
... ••••••••••••••••••" bar/frpk. ~/or Lc;e opt SMAIJ.. BEACH HOTEi. 548·6518 Pool, aduJl.5 only 546v9860 Offtu Retltcll 4400 Rental1 Wanted 4600 Paya 20% lotere$t 6
Ocean v.u home: 3br, Salisbury R.E. 673-6900 ROOMS SJ2 50 Week S295 955-3097 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• months 642·6454 or ~Yt~aJ. to presllg1oul> Apt$1SO /mo 536-7056 $240 lbr,refng,stv,C&O, ..,CJ\ 2 Br l'tll ba bltns ROClf'M 4000 LOWCOST M a t u r e a e u 645-9919 .t'Or'Wtna $750. 499-4820 BIG CANYON TOWNHSE . pauo. Adlls, no pets. 724 _,.,t h • h • ' •••••••••••••••••••• ••• look g f l or 2 BR ---------
N 2 BR 2 b t 'd ~-• --•--... 1748 CJ 673 TIS7 ras mu er. 1mmac. FUU SERVICE s, . n or Molt-· Tnnt ew , a, crp <>< .....,..-.._.. ames, · pm Pool, jacuul & lighted Room w /kitchenette DELUXE OFFICES hou,,e, gut!sl l\ouse. or ~.. 5035 Coat.line view, 2 BR, 2
BA. frplc, on qwel cul·
de-sac. ~-Avail 4/15
Ew494-TT95
drp'd, spectacular Golf "•••••••••••••••••••.. 1920 Meyer Pl.. nr new tennis cts. Many extras. ~Woo.It & up. Personal telephone/ re-opt. '" Laituna, CdM · ••~••••• .. ••••••• •
Course & lake view. Sep LAGUNA BEACH MTR twnhse apt, 2 BR l'h Ba, Near Hunt. Harbour. 5411·97M cepllonist, secretary, Nwpt. I.kb. Oceanside of
gar., tennis & pool. Lse INN. '65/wk & up. Maid fncd pal10, gar• $32S. Gemini Really 839-66Zl Am-b"'•"ador Inn in co~. ta conference room, cofree p C JI Pre re r u b I Y $700. Mo. 644-2416 st!rv. color TV, healed 645--4655 ...... " & hospitality t1erviees 752-0340, ll!lk for Hendy
Rentals Galore" pool l714) 494·5294, 985 -----2 br condo, end unit, pool. Mesa, 2277 Harbor. Cen Excellent locallon. near Fom~y
•• N. Coast Hwy 2Br, 2ba. dishwal!her kids OK. $32S mo. Avail trally located, 235 rooms freeways. West side or WehavelOOO'sofhouses, Meu Verde. $350/mo. immed.D62~ MANY with kitchen, 0 Matureadult.s,loolungfor
LOWEST
1.....-.st Rain
htT.D.'s.abo
2Rd T .D. Lo.a. dplxs, apts now. all Beachcombe", Treasure Call 751-8888or979-8533 phone & TV Swimming .C. A.r.rport 1 or 2 BR house, guest
2br. 2 blks from Crescent areas, all pnces. Save on Island trailer, com pl -----IRAHD MEW pool, JUCUZZJ, and rer BAKER CENTER house, or apt m Laguna.
Bey, sunny breakfast ree. furn Queen·sz bed+ col· 2 Br. t &, c/d, bltlns, 2 dlx condo style apt. Jbr room Daily & weekly <714)979-2161 Cd M • N w Pt B ch
For ae 2br, 2bu condo
Pool, beach, teruus.
4.99-3084 evs Fairest Terms &Ince 1949
Sattlet' Mf9. Co.
642~2 I 71 545-06 I I nn.. l&e IJv rm w /~a med 645-4900 Afjt or cable TV No children gar, $25()/mo. Agt. 2, '> ba $385. 2 br 1 a ba rate\ start.mg from $48 a 1-1--Bch Pn rn Oceanside of PCH pre· crilln& & lrplc. f'renc;h ---------or pets, S300 mo. Come 83!1-8081. $32.'i, ~7 ~eek unt. me 0 ce rerably 752 00.10, a!>k for
blue crpt'g, sbady yard $.'500. 4 br, 2'a ba. FR • by 30801 So. Coasl llwy, 645-4340 l>pac~ S300 utJI pd Good Randy 1-·omey _ Ret.tred couple has money
w/brick JM1tlo ~mo pool, tennis, gardener. Lag Bch , A :.k Cor 2015Thurin Block from beach, 2 parldna S36-9305 lend &2ndTO' indds stY. ref rig, wshr Owner. 640-0008 Strecker. Avl 4 10 6 ·10 Br:md new 2 Br. 2 Ba, bdrm, Jba. 6th & Olive. Room for rent m Mes a Need 3Br house, dpb or IR t.o ·1st
5
f I I """,...,., Verdchom OC AIRPORT apt. 1n H 8 . MJrina Agent,J-837·3744
chyr, trash PU & wtr.
1
________ ,1,.,.....,,W"l'PO'IJOl'frtleodt 3769 rp , prv paUo or ba c, ,,.,,,,.~ e.
Ad\l}U. Must have rers ••••••••••••••••••••••• adults. no pets, xlnt toe, Hrbr H•· Twn"'·e. 2Br, :WS200S___ KOLL IRV.COMPLEX School area Approx $300 LOANS.LOANS.LOANS 494-11825 FOR LEASE $350 673-2058 673-4852 ..... '"' Of!ice space -Cull mo 84&8579eves. We can arrange a
CHARMJMG
Open view, 2 bdrm, 2
bath. 2 car carports, sun·
declts. ~-lease. Ready to move into now. Super
setting for auper person.
MAYO CK
· ' · patio. swim'g pool. Lrg Sunny room, Eastbluffs. service. 120-600 sq Ct ho---Joan for j t. Love.., 2 bdrm. 2 ba UP· I"' VRBO.._.. grnbelt. Cl1 to lluot ...,Cit/· .. ·' me .....a. • •• ...., .... er w; Apt. f t t '"""" ~ •"' "• $19151 Br, incl. util. Crpts, ..,,,., u..... f r o m $ 1 5 o m o . -SC ••o• about any pur pose •
per °" ren a _... 2 BR condo, yrly, drps, patio, quiet adu1Ls, Urbr. $295/mo. Call evs 64().2810. (714)751-4760 a.tali 4650 home improvement, ball
mo. located al 428\.) OOm pets .. u """a n4-7578. Beg
001
a. $7 °· ~ · _...,,.,_ ,.,,..., Sw111wr R ... ds 4200 ....................... consolidation o r you
3 n .. rm, fam·rm vi·ew 3 BR. 2baths, yrly, $.'I.SO R ••••••••••••••••••••••• Of8fi1 ced SCpaMce onPvtNewpot rt Easulde C.M. Parking name It. Borrow $1000 to
17, "'DULTCO ..... DO E.s1de 2br, l~ba in lri· 3 B lh Ba, no pets, v , . . en ry. apace avail for cmpr _ ....
home, located 1n a ~ " pJex. Nu paint, Crplc, chlldrenwelcome. GLAMOROUS 2 bdrm, 2 parlting,Agt.646-3928 shell sm mtrbm 12._15• ~·~l-e~~l Q':i'~~~
private guarded area 2~2ba,yrly.$425 crpts, drpa, bltns, gar, 768-8764 ba lo Promontory Point boat'•-trt l a'•soe73 \filhmaoyamenltiesfor S1....-STOIEACH lndry.Wtr/gaspd.Older with forever VIEW 2 Bay view offic es "' r,ec'" · courteous ser vice. hi,
lease at $950 mo. 2125 3BR,2ba,bnyvu SJ.050 cluld OK. No pets. $315. Managers ·unit. 3br, Decorator furnished. NewportBeach,550 sqft: Avallnow,renbl 2nd & 3rd real estate
Yacht Radiant. 2 BR, 2 Ba., yrly. s.ioo 200 Ogle. 548-3281 2.,..ba, frplc & dbl gar. Pool, jacuzzi, sauna and $350/mo. 642·2255. financing. Call now!
JBdrm,den bome.locat------$425 mo. Mr. Gorbetl, t.enni .->eittwk C llA -luslee.sf11t•nt/ Sterling Financial
edinSpygluss. $00Qmo. t:-Side2Brw/enclyard& 897·251S,9-6wkdys nettes~t..,.... · a D· 2adJ.ofcs,pvtent.appro~ Rftani• Svc's., 714/9M-2Al3, Mt.
J6DrakesBay. gar. $310 mo. Adults. Beaut.$25SStudioApl WATERFRONTHOMES 8x33'. $350/m o 1827 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 6;21.3tm7-8270bkr.
Now avail. 645-7522.__ Enclosed Pauo-631.1400 Westcllff, NB 631·~ l4llieess
Logl&MtHilb 3250 NEWBREEDAPTS Flreplat:c VocationRettlaAa 425-0 FREEREMT! Opparhftty 5005 Anna.ci•fth/
associated
••••••••••••••••••••••• Studw, 1 Br /loft. Pool, Ht.d Pool,'+! (8481) ••••••••••••••••••••••• We'vt! got spnng fever al ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~
4 Bdrm .. 2 bath view Jacuu.1, encl. garage. Lake •-.. head Rental Lado Marin a V11lafie. SAM CLEMBnE
~
I l " "-ti It I \ l I "I
BROKERS-REALTORS
l 0 2S 1111 8nllu•n Al1·JUI
... __ Ai d'U ed G d R c . I ..... "Ste~t .... 2Br IUIVW un..I I G . •. p Sh ••••••••••••••••••••••• ........ e. r con 1 on . R .... Galon!! as pa1 . e ng JDC . _.., .. Suits HomeJbr view.Summer nrweit astswe'reof er· rootn1ni ... et op.
fln!Place, 2 car ~arage, WebavelOOO'sofhouse<1. S22A> • $290. 645-4411. 393 J(jdsok.Cent.J-alA1r reservations now avail. lngfreerentonbeaut.of· Rellnof after 7 good Anll-=•••h 5100 nice yard & waalllu and NEWPORT TERRACE 3 dplxs, apls now, all Jl.amlltoo. Large Patio <5365> Eves. (7l4)493-6235 fice space overJooking yeara1 ine localJon & ••••••••••••••· ... ~-.··
-. , . ' \ ' . ~'~ [ ~Hit "'" r11o~J d•I M11
dryer avallable. Ex· Br 2Yt Ba, F am· Rm, areas, all pnces Save on Lo ly b bl Rtdth9s 631-4555 the Bay. Space Crom 290 chen~le. t68,SOO. SPECIAL MOTIC~
cellentlocatlon;closeto $C75.615--0745orS57·1046 cee vc 1 r, t.ns,crpt, Honormajcredltcanis ~toShan 4300 to900sq.ft.1ocl crpt.S, BERTHA Hl!.~RY ToFomt•VallH
freeways & shopptng 645-4900 Agf drp6, gar. Mature adlts. •••••••••••••••••• .. ••• d rps. A I C , 5 d a> REALTORS l.ttHtlfth
centers. S450/month SEAVIEW. 3 br, + fam No peta. 19848 Anaheim $12SStudloApt' •IES&ECTIVI• Jarutonal serv. & all uul ZlSDelMar 4.92·4121
lease. Call owoer at rm . Ocea.n view, BR w/pat10 steps lt> Ave.~·3229,6463160. AllUtiUUesPaid Calnarellable pd. Take advantage of Doy~~;, the~oun
714/M2-()l.38. pool /tennis. $875. beach,monthlyorwcek· THE DYLAN. Nice lbr. R&S,EnclYd (!Mm) roommate ourspringfever .&free TRAVRAGEMCY ~~ ~ p~ed~~
213/Ul-3629 ly. 111 4Sth St. NB. frplc, adults, oo pets. 381 &&s-7464 rent offer. We'll pro FRANCHISE clll music personnel by
3liBkRe 'prt2 vbaacyc.0~5· lpe!~~-S.. C.a•.... 3276 ~5684 Hamilton. $2.SO. 642·5251 1 ~a•~ePmoo. $2501 •SHARE A HOME• bably come to our senses ..... c-.... 78". Remem"'·•r -· ,.... ,,.,, ...,98 ""' """ -----by summer. Call or s top The new way to own a ,..,. """'Y' "" No,....,~,....,, ••••••••••••••••••••••• med orooov .. , n•~More'. c••73) trav .. I a"ency. Trav .. I we lost 4"'1 m u sic ,,..~ """" Im . occupancy, 2 Br, _, '" Cut do by any weekday b,.tn "' " ~ ,_....__. 3252 l'WnbsBa ~vu poo,13teBnnr.,_2 nrbch&shpei. Large 3 br, 2 ba upper. R..IHfMI 611-4555 U•·'-~-' 8;30&5:30. NEetW'>rk.Slartt yourowdn. steaaycdh!_.rsliru2n~enr3gool.lm1'h,.enyl
_,.... • ....,.... · w ' • "'· SS.2·1539 New cpts,drnc, paanl, Honormaj.creditcards '"'JI~_.... LldoMarinaVillage xp. no require · ~ "' ~ ....................... gar, adJts, .-ais. ~1268. rw Share a bomeor aptmenl Complete support & Ion& IS the reason. yet in·
lmmac. 2 br 2 ba. on the . 1&2 Br. Adults, not pets. nearOC:C. ~-751·3696 laglmoleach 3141 ""-·r OJ UNlJM: (at~~;,~~~Wivd) term service provided. strumental enrollm~nt
green.A/C.2cargar.,BeautiluJ.SanClemente. Fumorun!-yrlv $225 s375 2 br, l'h ba ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~f-/\JU rm (7l4)675-8662 Call Mr Charles ha.sbeenmcreasang.not
jac.,rpool, lse $425 mo. ~~co~. $375. mo. & $250. 2421 E. 16th N townhouse. Patio, frplc. l..rg studio. nr bch, shops Uie.,.~q:i,,""8 ~~-. 714-838-9242 decreasing. H )'()u
Call 4~ ' enrus. ocean view. tn,, &*1801 2car encl. gar. E·side. Stv, relrlg, $245 mo ancl c.• ~ ~ui-1--i Office space 1000-1700 l>q believe music is a ·basil· <TI4)498·589'7 . TSLM t 6421603 Forover7yrs 832 4134 ft Bal HEALTH FOOD STORE subject which should be
MisslonV&.fo 3267 Oceanv\ewlbr,nllncw, gm · util 494•2797,493·7137. ·--"67i~~r 673.8Mo $74,500·$131KGroM avail lo our students
••••••••••••••••••••••• New view 2 br condo SUN 0 ECK . Yr I y . Eastslde 2 bdr, dsh w&hr, $290Spacious l Bdrm Beaut. near beach & NB Call Roy. 631·22A6, Bkr write the School Board, l
New2 Br + den. 2 Ba. din w /patio. tennis, pool. 675·9344 aar, cvrd deck, adolts AU Ut1liti-P"·d'. transp. 18-25. neat. Pref ..... EWPORT l"'"'CH U"'"th La F
{ I
.... CJ\ mo 1st & last mo + • """ ... I I "" 5"' Space for 11ourmet deli' 10 ... ouse, ne, 01ifn· area, rpl, m cr<>-oven, ....,., • --$275. 645-7554 Vi ........ the sea (4"t5) gr · SJ.2.S. 962-4379 calif l B k Bid "' lain Valley, ca 9271\0"'or dshwhr atrium A/C 2 $l00dep. Eves 544-1992 or ON TI-IE BEACH, hach, "'-0
"" 1501 oli~fcwr Drg ·'ca tab lls h ed '' b1 g attend the board m~ing
ear gar' w/opener. No'yd Iv mess. at 731·0345 winter, $250mo. utll pd. 2Br, 2Ba, 4·Plex garden Unlque l Br w/Patio Roommate needed apt. qn f>fF / ft 963-7626 market. 6<15-0032 Mr . ~t 7 .30pm on April 6m &
work. 770.~ Sm Juan 968-3558 apt. new cpts, drps, Men· Htd Pool, Central Air lsbeta~~811~:rlsJ165·1mo sq Camp=---------1 April 20th &SPEAKUP!
, r-a....___ 3278 ..__
1 _ _._. do:i:a Dr . $280 mo. Only~! (5SIS) · BusinessR...taA 4450 H althfood l .. ..
t"' rtleodl 1269 _..... • ....--~--nn 54!Ml.32or5511690 ~ e . sore space LostltFo.d 5300 WpeP ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• u..fwWahed · lctdt•1 631.4555 NBM /Ftosbarelrghomc ........ ••••••••••••••• in b 1 g market., ............ •••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••0 • DYNAMITE 4br 2ba •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• 2BR..2ba,crpt,drps,gar, Honormaj.credltcards nrbch$22A>/moplusut1l. 4DELUXEOFC'S "establilbed"64S-0032. Loslor Foundapet?Call NEWPOR'l'~JGJITS w/\he works. Super area G"'* aA 3802 W /0 hook-up. Pat.. no 6451010evcs Conf. rm., seal 25, all Spic 'n Span, TUdY for $450 ••••••••••••••••••••••• pets, 2 ltfds. $310. 181 Del Bachelor. crpt.s, dflJS, nr . paneled, sm. whse In re-MuiWy to LOCM 5025 A
01
m •I Ass
15
tJa n c e OttUpancy 2 br & den, 2 963-4567 Agt. no fee •I",,, .....
0
..... EW• Mar #H, 645.9455 bch. Ubl pd. No kitchen 2 Br Home 1 n CM . ar. 1 or 2 yr. lease. Lake ........ ••••••••••••••• League537·2273, no ree.
ba, 2 car garage. l'rplc, """" " $170.494-4154 SISO/mo,lst&lal>t.Greg, F'oresl area . Kent b
hardwood floors. drapes. s-taAlta 1210 Cherry Creek Adult New2br lba.nrSo.Coast 3869 ].91h&Pomona 644-8393 Harkins. WHEN YOU ~t?::dTwt~'Kja~ ~or mo to mo. 642-1334 ....................... Apts. l "2 BR, fplc's, we Plua, bit· ms. gar, patio. Mtwpcwf leach Fem over 25, share hse, .__ 114·581·9393 214·75. Call Jan 644-"""'"
da)"S .642-i57Seve11. Sharp 3Br. & den, 2Ba have lakes. sauna. Jmmed. occupancy. 3022 ••••••••••••••••••11
••• """'' ------Condo. dto rm, dbl at: jacuui & pool Located Jeffrey Or, CM. Call a.ytrCMWtAJdo Ill• E CM. $2lO + utll CdM, Cst Hwy, appro" NEED CASH Reward. N~wport Cr eal Condo. tached garage w/opnr, at 2701 S. Fairview. Ju!>t 752-8653,955-1830 2 Br w /frplc . Sandy 842·6959 eves. days 1500 sq ft. ample park ' LOS'I"· Green Finches Fanta.~c ocean 'u. Lge patio commty pool luds s_ d Warner N. of S D beach. $600. 673-0770 sw-2575 ing, 759-!r.!m. Amar.on Parrot, Vic. 60th
2 br, 2YJ. ba, 2 car aar ov ~mo a"7·""..;,, Fwy,556-1991, No pets. Small cute apt. Stove & .......... "pm. ""--.1 M"'Rl ..... EC~ER COMTACT St NB R ard c:•a "".,., Pool, ten1\l.I eta. Must --.... ~ Refng. $220. p/mo. No ~-.. ......, ~ll...t 435 • ...., g,1 UMION · · · ew ,.,_.........,
s ee. $600. Call Dick Tmtia 3290 lcAoalllaRd 3806 pets/chlld.Agt.751·9999 Dix Separ ate Apt ....................... CoastHwy,NewportBch HOMILOAMS Reward: Lo&l 3~tmlo
962-8847; eves 554.3423 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 BR 1 tio 1 Privacy. Block to beach. Sift"1e garage $40 Sare Lea&e 840 Sq ft. Ample Union Home Loans ar· med si brown blk & v.ht
YWl.y
1 3
bt b blk •4 Br, 2 Ba, SS7S. Lovely Brand new quality 1 Br · c ~an, pa • aun-2Br, 2ba, en~l gar, blUns, ~. 731 W. l8tb, C.M. prkng. Manne related range loans for homo or Collie Shep mix. Ans to • g 2 a, 1 yard, paUos, 2 frplcs. w/garden p1Uo. Yrly dry f1cal, no pets. $275. beam ce1l 1. walk In 673-7787eves buspre.f'd. Allutil&tax-propertyowoersol$1,000 R 1 c II: Y • V i c
oedft, 1sr, trpl, no pet.s. m«J74or838-52Sl9 "25· Prkng. 675-9850 Sf&.9950. 546-3418 lighted closets. UUUtles es paid. Call K. Witzel, to $100,000 or more. And Magnolia/Slater, P. Vly M~ 1675 mo. 64$-5842, • ........__,-i--_.
0 1107 E/sJde 2 br 1 ba rede<: pald, adults, NO ~ts. OffkeR...tal 440 ~o through Union Home ,_847_-4838 ______ _ ~ COlldacaiaiUIS --chtld/ t OK _..,,. 313 West.N~ Avail ap· ••••••••••••••••••••••• --------L ,----------.........,llllecl 3425 ••••••••••••••••••••••• pe ....,.,. TOP LOCATION ° a 0
• Y 0 u A el Sml m a le d og, mixed Seav1ew 3br, 2ba. Beaut. , .. 2br1 ba U"""l-w/•un Rochester~9537 aft 5 Pf'OX Aprl toth. ~/mo THE ll!~c1~T Homeown er Terms, b view. 'All xtras. Comm. ••••••••••••"••••••••••...., .,.. '"' " yrlylease.C81153&·77ll ........., ~ East 17th5trfft whrch are eenerally breed, lk/brn/wtll.
pool, Jae + 2 llmnis crU 381', 2e.. Hunt Landmark ~b, gar, Q& was~ fa,~il $32.'i. 3 BR 2 Ba. carport, ALTERNATIVE 2,000 Sq. ft. shop/ore. much better lban Clnaoce belie collar.548-68119
w/guardedgateprivacy. t 445 mo. 962·4454, _,..prmo. wet ... rc1u no i,>els. 1021 Valencia. 2BR,lba,crpt..~&drps, Mo. to mo. rent lnrl· Ground floor: alr-cond., comp&l\Ylerms. Found :blackCemale~p
tuOC>mo.640-032'1 842-0163,l·'n2·2m5. ble. Call alt 6 P M . Ava11May l.546-fl985 gar,stepstobch,yrly. Reccpl . aerv •• willsplltin half ChooMTlwTermt py, vie. Fair Dr. &
6'75-8213 EASTSII;>E 3 B 2 Ba DysM0-MSO,eve642-5225 personalized phone cov S600Each Bkr 615·6700 tWflt Columbia, Costa Mesa
CoroMdelM• 3822 pet.s.$390.1842~at St.' no 1BR.1t.epetobeach,yrly. era1e, cont. rm, ma1t 1nc1111hialRelltaA 4500 l::. S57-2737eve
••••••••••••••••••••••• 546-6985 $275. Gar age parking, 8ef'Y., underground prkg •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• ....... P'ound Collie on Briat.ol Sl
SM-61199 &morTHEe~~~~v· E IUILDTOSUIT FULLY Olr--Nlee Bach •pt, E.stde. r.A"""'"u AM 1..-~/Cost.a MMa. To .,,. UW pd. $200 mo. u t, last 3 BR, 2 ba. f\"plc, nr U do SUITE. 84().5470 s.000.20,000 Sq. fl. PARTl y AMOITD'.ID fdontlfy,m.1au .
I
... •' + aec. 642-1555 W laise. $49S mo, yrly P1acentla A.Ye. C.M. IHTBIST OML Y Pound T\ck u .... -f .. m. 'Tl 1se.-.l18118 82.IJ.1921!1 De lu xe_ o ff t c e 1 WESLEY TAYLOR CO. .._,... "' .. l~rt11. Nice 2 b rt aara ge, ' w/eecretartal aerv. Nr REALTORS 544-4910 Brn. No lde nt~ ic
-dabftbr, no pet.I. 1785 Deluxe 2 BR w11ar. blk O.C.AirlJort.. 7S2-!628 Np&Jmlll ....... K• Beach/J)Olla.IM ~
GARDEN APTS An a h eim SL. $295. from beach, monthly, 3lm sq ft, 2034 Placentia, ~· wltll stat• Found: Beaut. 7:J.~"·
CORONA DEL MAR 1142-1906 eve, 754 o&33 dys ~· Aftfpm; Pl~ Dix Offlc. Space C.M. Xlntloc. a.w. blk W/Wht prt 1f1&11 ~. /\r ~!:t~~!c~~n 2br apt. New cpU, paint. C .. 831·9950 646-7512 Uforanyru10nwecan· Bolsa Cb1c1/McF84dfn.
I ard ·-5 w 11 SpaA ...... •• 2 B Bit De 1 u x e o rr t c e ir fir not arran«• a ~ for IQ.1...4280 • l"OR. L£A8g: Weit &:CaLallnav1ewa.Clo.e enc .y ,,., a ace, ....,_ r. ru1 ,_,,, ___ O.._..,, yo·•'" .. r'"'will'--no ....... t ~ R1 A • ------------1 y ..... _ •• ... t'-AptA S!2S Near'I'heBeachl "'•'ER"" "' "' a r e h o u s e ""'"'.. """ "'~ -.......1 u aJ •. i-.ew"Port. ver "'· " to _....,,, .. land .. we . . -Woo'tLastS300' ($22) Nw otncc 'P"~ from apace.'1100.8000 ~q . ft oroblltraUon .. ........,·"' e .. rem. m an
!It', 2 Ba, ""°/mo. No beach. A1IO 1 Br. 8"·2611 2 Br hie, sml fnro yd, 300 eq It Mo.t com· •\Ill aecunty. M2-4463 or Poodles. 5 or e pde ~ ... tlll·'45 ·8~68 / l'i;~~~~~5iii;~ okWr dlild, •ml pt-t ok. Beaut. tBrBeechfront pet.IUv• rel.ell to Orea SC.1ll04 UNION Go&d<'ftwat/Hetl t4T4J90 liii NoAJnglee. $300. mo. 35\ AJIU\JliUCllPald Fantastt~ Vien. patJo"• Lost: Blk Lab 'W /wht
PRIME Locl'ION ''C"Avocado.~7 '280! <mt> ln lb• C AN NERY i~~ .... ~~~p-~.n"ar HOME cheat 6' yaws, nam.-~· 631-4511 VIU.AG&.llartd_oi-lnd. • ............ -• ..-.. "' ''Cb a r l e'•. N r 2 Br apt, tie bdrau, well -FOf •PP' u.U Ed m 1003 Altp0rt, 4800 sq ft ottlcca ............... "' =~.:!~i.z.t~ 1:=.::.~ew· Hcaor inaj.credltcard.t aDUAfa.J'at•Ave.,N.B: +12.000&qft~ house. ~ LlQANS ~unl Is AUa~ta ~A&m~nof•. 1 ~ Sl\.5. mo. lsot ~BoomeupaceJOO WW dlvtde. "'•11,. call tij.I ~~~!!!~:___.J .. ~~~~~!m~*2 8r K eaa Verde. Rave PL M all. 5/t I Ml ft, • locl. uWlUea.•-5IS&.c>T10_ ........ _. _____ , -Low•. szso. Oat. av&ll.. Mo.J .... ~ '71-N'1l cr'1Sl.ai:m Now lie'• M·l industrial NJt,lm'al.arltttlfo1M UDita 1080 llct ft fl up. Loan........-. rtrm DLXOFnCl!:UfC.M. Slldllled-dritt In doort. •T..e 77NOJI
Nr. a Fwy, $125 mo. PbDMU:3 a......;...a•-a.. a••'••21 ....,_o;.;.;.;.;.,.;.;,:.;..i.;.;.;;..;;;;..;.;.;..~1AC.utllpd.TSl-8UZA ~..;.,;;~....;;;;;;;.;,..._ ___ ~-1.~ ....... ~~~~~~......_~~~l,Uin=;-'(J;jd;~j;iji;;; •------~~---OFACI SPACI OC AllPORTi 1: ~..o..;;.;.;.;..;.;;;...;;;-....---....--1 = -.... n, , ... bllc KOLL IRV £0MPLWX Short *1ft R,£, $U'slut, ..,... --... Ioduati1al .odult •2"400 &n¥ realOft, BW Daven• S.I>. l'nrJ ori Crown .q, ft. w /800 sq. ft, of d · p0c1, 541-8")J v.u.y Park-~. MJulOn hu• ()f C ap ace. <'11•) .-.-'----------4
eTMlln V)rJo a1 i '1M"7to
1 • l ba. , ttt;,1, ere Rtal ~ 1 bib Iii bchl anu • ..,, roo. 1111· ~ .. NM. -mo.
•'31-d .....
I f l '
~ If 'g ·~····················· ...................... . Hcwred1mdcu; ¥=~ ry ;~ ....................... ............... , .............................. .
Jiomet, •JIU, bach. WllU Brlekwork. Small joba. YOUNG MAN 5 yn e•pr ltMOOF FOl LASS
wttb a penenal toucb Newport, COsla McH & lA wallcovcrin1. Free Com •hlnalo •hot
S3M'12I. ~24.JO. Refs trvtoe. fU.317$ eves. at. M$.8571 Andy • nee ~L cau ~
*-Tax ~ Bob Foad Palntlna Tiit
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cocnm'l, lndus .• • res. • T I Jot/Ext, bonded, full •••-••••••••••••••••• Woukln't you rather have ' wo Meo Wll. Move "-... -1·100'' IJc """"18 ER AM JC Tl LE• a certified public ac-You" We handle Ire It ..... ._ '& -oountaot prepare your aml moves-offlce & SP• cl a It Y: B n
iocome tax retum! For household. Distance & PAPlltHAHGIMG tnes/floon. 2S yrtJ up.
an •PS>t lA your home local. also packing. 20 yrs exp. Anywhere in Sml repairs. 9&2·1883
call968-3182 Lowest legal rate. Co.. +palnUng.6'5-2!'1 CERAM!CTJLE.
Riley's Tu Service M::Pi'~ C.l T lll-944· Prof NinUnc Is paperlnR. by upc'l"t. Call 551-8280
28 Years Experience · Spr(ng ext. s pecial. alt3 pm. Paul
Call 6'2-64142 Prof. serv. w/Allu costs Rels. S36-C'110, 536-4383 Trw 5erYke
no more. Free est. for JJ 'S PAINTJNG. Great ••••••••••••••••••••••• Able service~ reuon. loca.l&lngdisl.Or.Cly workatcreatprices Removals, t rimming. rates. Se Habla Eapaool. Van 4c SWrage. PUC Lie · u '"' Manuel J. Murillo. Tlll,OlS. SS7-3160 or MHOU prwu.ng. Free est. c ...
7S&-2709olf .• ~ 537-3161 ,......,tlepalr lmured.6'2~
Lmtdlc~ P9eft.g/P•""9 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Trft Service. Tree pnan·
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Neat patches .tc textures i!\I. removal, topping •
Fr• la.ate carpenter, U .H«t tf Son, Cfl1 •·orm.1ca Counter Tope u,. OCC Student. 1 Ton CIOlllat1. ,..,, Ho Job too Conlr. CuJtorn All 41 ltalled to your •Pedflc•· ttuck. Trash, lrM trim,
imeJI. Jalla.131.aGIZ Add, palloa, ublneta, llml utest colors. d&-Ron 6'2-5703, m.&cU
. formka. New n>nst. Res lliJlS. Pree et 875-3118 Lou• Homo ltepain •. 30 " comm'I 145-4644 or Roon CHEAPEST baullng in
Jn up. Doors, Wln-54M.541 u ' & boodf'd town. Fr. esls. CHEAP! ~ petioa de. 551-2056 • c ••••••••••••••• .. •••••• 642-29195 or~l.3llO
HM ram damaaed you RIMOOILING Fioon Wood, ceramic.
upball? Call 131-2440 c.,.t Sentce vinyl " cpta. 27 yrs jttllim41dt191llMJ
Booded, Uc., wur-1. -•••-•••••••••••••••• Custom Room Adds hcen1ed contractor. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----__;.---~c t u 111 1 Cabinets Cowltertops .,_ arpe an• ay Apt·Offic .. ·Comm-Alt. Cameo lnterlors. antaR.EALLVCLEAN •.-ve MoneJ•Driveways YOW'I or mme. Repairs ,. 631-8440 HOUSE' Call Gin ham
Parkln1 lo& np11ra, Is cleanln& tool Guar Cuslo';'Q Homes Is Units Glrl ~eat~& aulco.t, Lie.NB.CM 'M>rk at bigger savings. Quality oot Quantaty GardlnllMJ 1--·-------
S"5 Aapbalt MB-4811. ~ eet, MS-3646 Wm B ·8iSi:J de r 5 0 n · ••••••••••••••••••••••• • • Housecleanln1 done ~ ,: 1 Free )!',;.,L er 631 0361 Ptot Japanese Landscap. by reliable couple.. Refs. •••••••••••••••••••••• c!k:~ ~.:Steam ~ eahn. lng & gardening. M~int. 5'0-1193 r n.,.teners, w t Dale w Phllll Cement Ulcl. mowing, trimming, Babys.lltina • Nr So. Cat. cpts 10 min bleach. No Job to~ small spray1na. weeding. Freel ________ _ r.1'rn1!.ina~t! Y::.;a7l ~ hv, du1 ~m. ha~ Llc'd/Booded. 542.21a2 estimates. s.s.1_111_2 ___ • THE :'~HIME
SS7.-s&. . iio: c~~ ';. ~uar c.:'lim alt 5 tLEAN-UPS/HAULlNG Housecleaning & omce ....,---S.-,-ic-es----4 pet odor. Cpl repair. 15 Bectricd Pturung PlantJog specialists. Spec: 00 apls
Fl& IST. 193-1419 Uc. lDS. 64M81l •••••••••••••••••••••• yrs ex pr Do work ••••••••••••••••••••••• Free est. 642-9907 & R.E. work. Serv. 1
myself. Ref1 531.0101. ELECTRICAL SERVICE days wk. Bonded, tn· LANDSCAPING PETERS PAINTING Stop nail bil1og & . VERYLOWPRICES lteasonablepriceis Eitpr'd. Reas Rates. p T.....-g etm:unate abort, broken, Reliable Carpet Cleanmg CALLS S15 hr, & SMAl..L On Gardening M a1n · sured.~ 9&8-1783 Free Esl. Call Gene ATCH PLASTERING ••••••-•••••••••••••••
& brittle finferna11!>. Quality worlt, ull for JOBS 842-8233 tenance G~rae~54~9~-20~1sq;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ----• ssz °'58 A 11 t Y Pe s • Free ls )'OUT child having dil· ~ .. 1-~ artJficaal You free est 55&-8333. LL..L..L...-...1 .,._............ Landscaping. Tree tnm--estun.ates. Qlll 540~ n-·"'-·-_ ..... or -ad·
·-....... · .._.-u ~c GeMral W.lcn ~-....uo. ........ -.... <>wn na.als will be strong ,.__..llC __..._ Li ...,.,,136 Mlyako Ho~ecleanmg mma. Clean-up. 8 yrs All PROFESSIONAL Patclung mt/ext I round in"? For--'. help call & 1oo.c. Call Sylvia r _._, OftCnrnl:' .....!:...:'• __ ~6874 ••••••••••••••••••••••• exp Free Est Jay Paintlflg lntert Exter ' ' • .--free c001ultallon l\iov ••••••••••••••••••••••• lf.A.1'\JDVMAN Homes & Senrice, houses, yachti., Nob.oru. 848·4043 o r Reas.""~ guar64.2-0386 892J"Pf:,!'!nded, Uc'd 140607 _~_MS_7_. _____ _ ~au HairCo.M85S67 All phases concrete & ELECTRICIAN Pnccd apts ConH1ent1ous apt.s & part.ies. Sl6.00 Hr. 897-2862 ---. -.-Wl.dow C~
b!kWTk Cstm brkwork. nght-!ree esumate on Craft!.n\3n Catt 645·0302 631-~70 . Pamung. Extrtlnlr. Ex· r.s .W..g ••••••••••••••••••••••• ''fl'd Bonded ""'.,....,, large or small job!. - -, _________ Lawn Servtce Low rates pr d hon,..,. ne l e -• ~~ ""'""'._.... La ed ,.. _ __._ • ' • .,.,... a . r ~. ••••••••••••••••••••••• WI d I d ...-U 5-rYJce . cens 673035.9 wr'"'"""i include mowing, edemg. Lac'd 964-1045 l>ave , n ow5 c eane • re· •••••••••••••••••••••••Foundations. retaining El.EC ••••••••••••••••••••••• HOUSECLEANING Like tnmrrung, ralung. Also . l~OMESAVERS. Plumb· asonable, businesses.
A.·"'--U t T 1 walls, blocks, patios. TIU·SEllV~ flaul, skaploader dump your house to shine, avail weed.ing. ferhlJz. Fine. Ext.er. Palnung by 1ng & lleaun1. Free est. homes" apt.s. 847-t4il .. .., .... c yptng. YP ne s.56-82AJ Llc'd ••More than ele-ctric1ans trk, grad.mg. tree wrk, We'll do 1t in ball the ing. Free estimate R. Sinor. St. Uc:. Ins. Try Hon est " re 11 ab I e ~~~P~C:temony g~n:~~t· p-r--~ Con. t Lo 979-4961 demoliuons etc 831-12S7 lime!!! Barb or Pat. Pele's Special Care. me. 8J6.SSSS 24 hrs. aervace. norA. M IC OK. . acu1c ere e. w ~'.! --~2304 eves ~5804 979-8065 or 841-0383 Reuonable rates. day & {ult day rates. Custom Electric. Ind , ~ · Paint YOW" Castle l!t!2.l8! !!r 54&-2644 or 968-5163 for 861·2'23. or 64.>3257 comm. res, & malnt svs. ••••••••••••••••••••••• The Moppets, that's our Maid W.lce Speclalliln.g ln reslden·
quote. Cout oclor Haneel" reliieble. Jo'ree Painting, wallpaper, name. Cleaning is our ....................... ~ homes. int. & ext. 5 esl 979-8542 C"""'ntry, gen'I ma1'nt. 0 ame. Call 546-2393 Yng Colombian lady will b i.
PLUMBING • drains.
HANDYMAN . Good service. QIU 646·5167 a 30 day ad ln Jbe
,._,let ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------.":"'r,,..epai·r . J . Wauoh. _,'!"...._________ ease c ec .. our re· -',.--· .,. " F1oors, carpets, baths, clean your home, speaks ferences. Lie # 320881 R.oofillg
•••••••••••••••••• ••• • • Ro o m A d d i t i o n s WOULDN'T YOU &l2..()6()l waJls, paUO&. windows. Eng. Maria. 640-4949 Guar., iosrd, free est. •••••••••••••••••••••••
DAILY PILOT
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
OOITNOW! 64Z..~671
Carpenter . l''re" Remodel. New constr: ralherbesaibng" ~ake_y_o_u_r_s_h_o_p_p_i_n_g Spec. pnce for vacant Sellw1thEASE! Ted.636-1085 ROOFS iut&tled factory
eetimates. Any siU!job.-s. Lie 'd Ca 11 Sp1 ro . Seeclassificalion0060 easier by using Lhe Daily res1dences. lt'sa BREEZE direct; estab 3S yrs. Call
Tooy • 64&-9866 ___ S48-8250_ -------• lt can be a ~ahty ! Piiot Cla\s1ned Ads. Th06e G1&ys 974-0810 Classt!ied Ads 642.5678 Sell idle items 642-5671 Harold Gunn 549·2961
•SANDY'S*
Outcalt Massage
978-0329
FOXY LADY
OukallMOSSOCJ9
731-3561
DANCE OF FUN
Beaut. nUde girls dance
& rap session. lOAM to
JAM Moo-Sat. l2PM to 8PM Sun 62S N. Eucl!d,
Anah. 5:1$.5363
FREE SESSION W 'AD
• \ 'l
DEi.i
Maoa1er 1W0Tll1er.
SAiary +. Ml-7913 •
,,
GEHR.AL SHOP
Mature resourceful
person with general shop
experience to carry
responsibility in produc-
Electronic:o; Lion & product develop·
Ele-ctronic technician. ment projects. Must
Nat'I medlcal electronics have good work back·
firm has opening for field ground in wood, met.al or
service representatives. plastics. Apply In person
Must have good elec· Kingsley Mrg. Co., 1984to'
tronlc background. Will P1acenua Ave, CM.
tram qualified appli-•--------cants. Company car, eJC· 1---,.,_-_"_C __ --... --
pen.se account, r.aid den· ._... --tal &r medica . Profit Malntet1ec:e
slw'lng retirement pro· Plt"SONMf
gram. Con ta ct Ed Pvt country club. CalHor
Parker, Coulter Elec · appt. 644-5404 ext 31.
tronics Inc .• 714/963·5628, t-'-'---------
GROOMll tAM ·4 PM, Moo-FrL
E.0.E. Animal Hosp, To $750. ~~ .Exper'd bather, no chp-
.rlscrowSecy toS12K pmc. N.B.644-546(),,
Records Cllt to~ uards
Recept.JSecy 9800
F /Chi BlckJ)r to $12K Irvine Personnel Agency
488 E 17th Costa Mesa
Slile 234 ~2-1470
EXlC SICIET ART
Nat'I corp oeeds uper'd
SECURITY
*AGENTS*
AIRLINE
penoa for our pcesUge Immediate full "p/time. pos. To $1000. poeiUooa open at Orange
Q)rtsC.mpbeU 540-5001 Co. Airport. $!.71 Per
Soellil'lg&SneWncof bour to start. Uniforms
Newport Beach Agency 1upplled. Free parking.
4340Campua Drive Must have auto & pbooe.
FACTORY HB.P eau or ·:~~rraoo
Steady employment In INT'\ SECURITY warehouse & assembly
operation. Must have x:;~~= iood attendance record. . Apply at Clecoo, Inc. F.qual Opp Emplyr m /f
lSSSl del Amo Ave. llAI RDRESSER, I d
1\llltin. '731-4855 balrcutter. F\111 « pat·
Ume. CdM area. Cell
Q5.1957 • .............
u•catst ••••Lt StaUon ror leue, top
~7
~~~.·~ ..... ?!~ ••• !!~_. ... ?!~ ~?~: ..... ?!!~!~!!~ .... .?!~ ~.Apnl6, 197i *
1ea1 flltm Sal•people. Sal ' .....,W..W 71 ... W..eM 71 WllllllM 7100
7100 t:W1. V PILOT
,,._ _________ l1ait 11110-2 Mallar• ~90'9ol es •••••••••••••••••• .. •• •••••••••••••--••••••••--•· ~~t f~b',! ~ lnnewolc . .J:o ~ JRAJN(( S:~•t~7;1h)':W ~~ TELEPJ«M;SALJ'.S Dla:.!J~'!r or •• r:fi , •• MINIDWIE
p.i.ar. lln. owa ,,....., &Kl'
alat ...... ..-.Mu. -..111111911
:=1 ... ~.'l,1:.-~~ .. r'· ..._.T,_ 5700 ~ 1n Meod.112aecy, 3 ... 0 EXP ... EC voclltioaal tra1n1n1 rtrm _ .. ~;:=.{1 Plulla .u,·a olc la ••it· A way for a hJgh 1cbool 1P"aduate atW R.B. nrm. Non " " hara opeDl.DI for tn a · ~•equip 1«viclna. 101 for Jour alncne lo enter th~ newspaper business sx:aokeroalt . .._1400 ~~ ~!·.wo.,:r,!; per-4 IDdlv. DG&ia in·
C.alil. drtven Uc req'd. touch. C. JlnAISQ.1700. DAILY PILOT ~!ICR.ETARY lf you 're a poalthe ~~~m':~ T ll S SUNS BI N & ._ N ql.ldtled Ln two _a_aa_LLS _____ ~&MraU9wiaa .,..:
...-..--•n.PJCTR.tC WEl.D.ING ..___ •ELl'Cl1UCA1.
C.w. ».Y aJilll. llA1N'('&NANCE le
CaU ,....,5l 9am-4pm. ~ ~~~ Bua1 Newport Beach law thtnktir w/an apnalve 11.ftiq.. hdllty located
Ut ...... I VN Mic.be.laon T h i s h i a h I y s u c c e SS r u l l 0 c a I otnce. II.. cud II • altitud • a aOOd phone ln Cott.a Meta. ApplY.
Wlll Lrato. S&abl• INSTALl.ATlON ~ Xlm beoe. •HYDRAULIC
"--h · f lel&l taper ~ary Vo6ce lfYoUnttheabov• p 1 N tl 1 P ttlme IM country llCIPTIOMIST newspaper as an openine or a Excellent aktlla 6 des~ quaJJlicaUOQ you wlll eraonne • • on• ~~Con v Home Local co. aeecb eqer trainee in the circulation department. toacceptrespooslbWly a um a l\W'&nteed hrlY 5~if°">N.ust~~ Apply Park Superior MECRANlC
Conv Ho1p. 1H5 •PlP!f1TITNG.
Superi« Ave, N. 8. srEAM ll
K 0 U S E K E E p E R HYDRAULIC
mature. T-3 ahift la au•l .Ptua Wlth the abtlily to
hm. C.11. CaU&46-8718 read e I e ctr i ca I
INSTAUR TRME aebemalics and ability to
For 1ldndow Unlin& Over rwa eoaine lat bes for
21. lall 6 neat, u .... r. macbinlna of main· ..-t.enaace parta. Must have _bel_pf.;;__w_._~ __ . ___ 1 own basic too.la. Apply
INSURANCE Personal to.
MURSQAIDIS
Ex)Mr'd 7-3 fs 1\.7. Cou.n·
t.ry Club ~onv Home.
549-3061.
NUftee
Rlfs & LVN's
NllSES AIDES
beClnocf ror variety of Selected applicant wUl receive a must . Contact Pal ulary + comm il ~·>ioi. ear
duties. Golden oppor. liberal starlinJ salary. regularly 8"-BW boousee. · AREHOUSE~AN .
IMO up. EOE. scheduled raises. bon~s oppartunities. m:RETARY P/f,small. FULL TRAIMIMG
Michele Kuhn 54()-5001 and many fringe benefits such as paid ~antencmeenne olc & DCB.LINT Wanted. Pickwick Paper
Snelll.n& & Snelling of ,; 'd . d ·Fri. 1.spm. Must be Produce.. ~11.57 NewportBeachAgency vacawons, pai group msurance an a good EARNINGS
"140Campua Drive credit. Wlion. He will also be provided typist.~ YOUR JOI! * *****
UCIPTIOMIST. a new model company car with SICUTAAY WlU conslll o1 calllna WOMEN•MB4 · persmal use privileges. toS..M••l'f Tl me . L 1 re e o o k Earn s:MOO• moor more ~;:r~s :~~~an~ec:~t ::v!8'a h~:h a s~~e:; ~.~;5:*: ~~==~ r:i 'C°:~1~1~ 5li~t0P.~t
otc duties. Prole$$iona1 diploma. Hodrs are generally 11 A. M. otlc npertence pref'd Arilooa. women aenoua about sup· llnes. ~ 6 casualty un· derwriter. Expertence
req'd . 875 ·0562
Robert.soo Insurance.
U.S. DIVERS
3323 W Warner
Santa Ana, CA 92702
(714)~10
\depbolle maDMr "xlot to 9 P.M. with some optional Saturday Xlnt compensation " SOUND plernentln&Ulefamlly In·
• '-YOtW O.. lo.sl typln\t~'\:·bl~~ln 60 overtime. benefits. GOOD? come thna concentrated :ec1 "sell ~:fv:· lf you are qualified and are interested Teualostn&menblnc work wfPeOpl• p/t. Call
tmurance
Uoderwnter Tra1nee5
Larae expand1n1 in
surance agency ha&
trau:aee postllons ava1la
Equal Opporturuty
tmployer M tF
ble ln Or C1y Company ---------
benefits 1ncludmg sick MAIMTB4ANCE MAH
leave, " paid vacal1ons Mature, responsible Pvt Slattlnc salary $550 pr club Benefits 613-3515
mo . ..tth rapid advance-
ment av&.1lable Call Judi MAINTENANCE Light,
In Fullerton, 7141871 7722 apply in person. Newport
or Wada in l''ountain Dune$, 1131 B.aclt Bay
Valley, 714/549 8161 _Dri_v_e_. N_B ____ _
lNSURANCE
UCEl'T fTYPIST
needed for beauUful N.B
alfi~. Accurate ty;>1ng,
pboaet & invoicing
ln..<1uran.ce expr helpful
f\sU time '625 to shirt
with rapid increa.'e to
nahl pen.on Aviulabl~
511
McDonaJd &Assoc
75~6282 fer ~·
Manager Trainees
UTOTEM
Food Stores
Are Seeking Career
Minded People For·
MA.MAGER TRAINEES
Have openmgs for r /Lime
& p/Ume cleru on 2nd &
3rd shUts. U mlerei.ted.
contact our neares t markel or go t.o
1.2442Lampson G Grv
Mon lhru Fri 9am 5pm
for informal.Jon phone
Tell US when • where
you want lo work " leave lbe rat t-0 US'
Plw. lop pay cbeeka
DAILY.
No Fee' Umform
Allow Mal prac & all
other insur pd by US
A bonus referral plan
MB>ICAL
PClt"'IOnMI Pool
134-0405
A Nat 'I NUl'liq Service
NURSES AIDES
7·3 :30 or 3-11 :30 Full or p /tlme Prder exper
but Wlll lraln. Pa~k Lido
Conv Center . 466
Flagship Rd. N n.
6428044
NURSES AIDES
&ORDSWES
Needt'd to five TLC to
elderly fa 1ents Will train Al shHls Park
Supenor Conv H011p1l1d,
642-3410
ec1.-·Sal ~IS50. Call in leanung more about where this E.O.E. ' CAU forappt.41M-5168.
Barbie Fulmer. trainiltj{ leads. come to the DAILY CallMickJ.7l'~7311 83., 0095 Woodworkers• a~-
114/640-2822 PILOT ol'fice. 330 West Bay StreeU-SICuatTY .,.. aemblers. Immediate
Recept GeneraJ ofc Re· Costa Mesa and ask for Mtlan Leavitt We arecWTently seelnn1 1 ,~Fl1_ employment Gladney
q's al least 3 ~ ofc exp th c· u1 •· D art ent a secunty olficer to be ..__... ..... -Bros. 929 W. Baker. Good lypmg skills Capa· 10 e ire 8 "00 ep· m · hired on a tempe>rary F.qwtl Oppor Employer Costa Mesa
ble of handling busy An Equal Opportuntl> Employer. basis Experience ., I~~~~~~~~~ """--,some Ute bk.kp'a. knowledge ol laws pre· Would you llke a busines:. .....--• f---' al your own') You don't ~2332 Hetp W•hd 710 Help W.ted 7100 .,..,Apply9am·noon row T~k Dnvers ex need an office t.o start
R.ecepllonist·Gtrl Friday •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mon·Frl. PersoMel per'd Top pay Apply, Begin at home. fuU or
Telephone, clerical ROUTESALES ::-a•-~· •arn up to MAJtllOlTHOTEL a.iwTowmc,1000lrvlne part/lime. ldfeal for .. etc 8-4 30 M F Up •-...,,,.. .. •-_._ "' Ave. NBMZ-1252 husband ck wi e team wor... : · · · "' ..,"" w.. "' start $100 a ay selling new 900 Newport Ctr Dr 64&-4533 Slart immed. Call Pttlme avail. Car r-'d N·-Beach ---------
7 1 8 9 8 8 S 5 -... process art prints ck mir· "-I""· TRAVElAG&ICY 4 · 4 or Fuller Brush Co. EquaJOppEmplyrm/f X-RayTech 21.J.572·1786 754-647l. rw prtnta Commt11s1on & Fly Into fuc1natin1 bonuses 645-0743 , _________ world of adventure Female. must have CRT
RECEPTIONIST iales SECUDrTY w/fun group seeking & ARRT. Private
Excellent opportunity uaHTOP MONEY ~ ~ careerist Call Willa. radiology office, S day
with environmental Need self·starters who )andwich &r Salad as· GUARD 833-2700 Offnis & Oen week.54S-9441
mana&!'menl Qr&anixa· are financially mollval !4'mblers 5AM 9 30AM Top pay, top benefits. nls Personnel SerV1ce or ~L.-..11 ...
lion wllb main office edforoolJildea.aleswork Must be neal, clean & Nat'I co Male or fem lrvine.z<mM1chelsoo ~-...
located In f'ountain Must have valid dnvcr's dextetoua S3 Per hr, N.B. area. t213l 645-3950
Valley f\sll time PoSi· Ltcense lo dnve company 979·0747 ror appt art CoUert for iat.erv1ew in
•••••••••••••••••••••••
t 1 on w 1th a 3 day vans. Unllmited earning IOAM Lon's KJtchen your area weekend every other potenUal Sales exp pr(' 1 ________ _
week Excell fringe Cerred but will accept iec'y Bkkpr. Real beneOl!. Reqwres front Se<-retanes alfice ap""&Tllnce ablsls· sllles onented lramf>eS Elsticonst exp req Mail ..-Call 642·6090 between TYPISTS resume to 2845 E Coast ly to t,ype 40WPM with 8 .JOam 10 JOam & Hwy.CdM92625
clencal expenence Op· 4 30pm-6·30pm for 10 & ~l'f'D(llDIES porturuty for advance tervlew oK.1111 M
ment. Call 714/~2910 ---------
......... 8005 ....................... rruck Dnver <diesel I
W/C 1 Lie to operate 118"
uane Will tram right i---------ma.n Steady employ
ment. beoerlts Top
wages Appl) Netll Neon.
Inc S A 5.'1 3374
MUSICIOXIS
CLOCKS
Janitor. exp 'd , ror
~ran malnt t'dcllsly
at Ora. CO aJrpc>rt' Must
have valid Ca!Jf dnvers
!Jc Apply tn person Mis
s1on Beechcrafl, 18741
No Airport Way, SA
(714) 537--4840
F.qual Oppor Employer :-i!WHS Aide.for paralyzed for appt ).ALES
YOW\& wosnan Sat Sun Receptionist r N lridal SalOR
Do you need extra money
&t eJlJOY v anety Let the
iec'y1Recep. Holiday
lnn. Laguna Hills.
586-5000 Ext. 1'2
TYPIST MEIDED
f\sU ume, Mon thru Fri
Pleasant worlu.ng cond's ,
moden eqwp. Apply 1n
persoo. 1660 Placentia,
Slot Mactunes. Nlckelo·
deons. phonographs
World's largest selec
t1on Also gihs .
furniture. antiques
Amencan lnlernatJonal.
1802 Kettering; Irvine 754-rm. o,en Wed.-Sat
t.adles. Local business MANAGEMENT-women
woman has operun1s lo interested in eammg ad·
earn xtra income thru diuonal income! f\sll or
pleasant profitable part time avall. Call
p /ti me work . Ca 11 CreaUve Concepts for 1n
1°'3. Bal lale. 615-56S2 r-1 r. or Tewport Prefer experience In '-'CUter aw atrm ypsng SOWPM 759--04Jl bridal sales. but will CM
freedom ~ nexibality of :iervlce Stahon Atten-
wwkin& temporary U · danl. exper'd Day ck
sJgrunents ol your choice Eves. Full & pltlme Ap 1---------
E W.C 962-3181 terv1ew. 979·9157.
IA.ndilcape Arch MAMAGEMEMT Project coordinator w1landscape arch1tec Rel1 able person to
tural firm in CM. Only manage home distr. con· sultmg business. Oppe>r exp'd, malure 1nd1v1dual to start spare time
need apply. 3 yr min without investment &
exp Call~161. ask for build secure future LiJida or Pete 631 ·SOOI. ---------
• NURSH AIDES
7.3 Exper'd or tra1nttS ~ptJomst wtth tx:auly
fUll or r>lt Studenltl on salon image Opporturu
wlmds Mei.a Verde Conv ly for lhe rii!bl ~r::;on to
Hoi.p, 661.Center St, CM work as recpl. ~ ~.:;t
OFACEASSIST.
Progressive co. net.'<is to
increase their staH!
Im.med. Hire Up to $800
Michele Kubn 540-5001
Snelling & Snelling or
Newport Beacb Agency
4340Campus Drive
Ing our manager 1n a
leading dept. store beau·
ty salon m the Nwprt Bch
area This job ofh!rs
sala ry . compa ny
benefits, generous swre
discount For iotervlew
please call Ms. Robblna,
213 /488-59:17
tram. Part to full ume
Costa Mesa. w&-1821
SALF.S CLERKS Full &
part time Apply The
Tobacconist Inc Hunt
mgtoo Center. HB
worlt ror you. Call 1m-ply, 9leU Stauoa. l?th & fyptst1Jlttept, exp'd for i---------medJately Irvine NB Landscape Arctutectural ~o~ 0 ff ice • . nrm tn CM .. hr. Call WHOLESALE ~tee Station Man ager ~5161. ask for Unda TO THE TRADE
0 overload & Manager Trainee. ex NOW OPEN
per'd Lie pre!'d All TYPIST /SECY
557-0061 benefits Apply. 2590 P'uU time. Stronit S If TQ PUBLIC ~·-3123 Otrt'h St, NB Newport Blvd. CM typuig reqw red Apply in
-· ' ~~~~~~~~~ person to Mr Fuentes at OPEN 7 DAYS tr you have a delmlle .:. 3erVJce Sla. N1gbt Attend Roberl Bein, Wiiiiam A WEEK 9-6.
need for a p/time job 2 Or Snit.es a wk Apply. Frost &r Assoc 1401 Quail _.,_,.. .a...a&-Ltd ~9pm & are senously In Secretary Shell, 17th & lrvine. NB Sl. Newport Beach. _.,..... ..
terested In working. call EXIC. SICRET ARY 7 I 52'1 lolM C:Wco
us now 531-08'2. The J..i10 R,..,er Inc bas lervlce Station Attend. Voe.HoMI ldllcatto.. H.I. 1714) 193-75M
_,,, ¥9 P ttsme evest wknds. ~~~~~~~~~ SALES L :~~C:ri. ~~:.K~0~ Managemsue°l ..... .-
conv. bosp. Beverly IN ~E
Office help, p/t, l girl ore
Typtng, Invoicing, Ile sh
helpful but not nee
751-4222
an opening for an ex· Light mecb'l knowledge T~ Coou dlu .. ors r:
per"d sec'y lo repe>rt to Neat appear le bandwnl If you poaeas a min of 5 liq, Elephant Trofl
the V. Pr• m CbaJ"le of · ~1u _,,,, N yrs r /time occupalional f lndl ~ the Building Bestan tng. 11'......., ewport ........... In ooe of th-e rom a._..,.
RESTAU•UNT Ground Fir Opport Fan ~·· lastic comm1ss1on1 Manor. 340 V\ctona. CM
M:l·U397 ISN'T IT ABOUT TINE
TO BUILD FOR
COOKS&COUMTER Slim·Gym la back Co
PERSONNIL tram'g. TV lead& No dr·
Blvd, . ,.._,._. "'0 Call 613-4388 Dl\'Won. Outatandmii sh attaa..banlt.ln[$. boat eon· 1---------
LAUM>aY SHIRT 'c'OlmSELF"
PRE$ER Apply 1548 PART TIME
Ad.ams.CM 549-1917 National Co. w1tb
Legal I dynamic new concepts EVENINGS
Mow acceptla9 ap-tz>.door' MtJ" Ptror Ftr c::.~-1-S-..-r Pou 150+per day ,... .... ..... _8'2-_5261_. ________ __
& l.YPldt skills are tl'q'd 5ervlce Slat19n Atten· 1tructlon. attvml1lng1 t.ry Fl'90Cb armoire
l<>t tbla pos1t1on Xlnl dant. exper onlY $m1t· commuolcaUOM. hHltb, CU"Ca 1800. SLaOO. 644-2145 "'°'*1nl ccnda & betient ty's Uo.ioo Service, 2248 automotl ve. hotel I eves. & Sonday pkl which Includes HarborBlvd.C.11. ~.restaurant. PBX 1-----'-"----
variOllS IJ'OUP insurance recept, lravel/ to.nsm &r AMERICAN OAX
PA RA L E G A L . c o n · has an outst.andtna op. Adults with outstand 1ng. veyanc1n1 asaet, In-portuntty for persons attractive personahl1es surance beneficiary and wtlh a capacity to lead who enjoy working w1lh
hi b others. Must have stroog '-ds "'"-""' at .... ,. per owners p c a naes. personal tr k rd of .., .xai• ... JV Koowled11e of trusts l I t aJc reco(S 1 hr Pbone 642 4321 1250, Deal wrth clients. Steno-a eas Yrs a · between 3 00-5 OOP M comm.> For personal &t grapluc ~kllls Airpe>rl c<>ntidenlial interview. Ask 1-JtM LAMM)
area, Newport Beach phone collecl Jerry Equal Opportunity
833-9882 Darnell Tit /640-6262, Employer
LIFEGUARDS needed. 8AM-4PM PBX
.... Delp .... McJMs. AWfbt,.....to:
CAIL-SA
2092 S. E. Brialol
SantaAna .
<eetwn Jamboree &
Campus on Bristol>
F.qual Opp Emplyr M tF
fuU ck Ptr, 18 +ONLY. Manufacturing.general Answering service Restaurant
Apply al Newport Dunes. factory work for sport mg operator Cull & P tr. Call Cano'a Seafoods of Mex
1131 Back Bay Drive. goods firm. 7:304 OOPM, m.35et 1co, hu opening for a
NB. 540-61'2. . . , smart, attractive hostess
Liquor Clerk, over 25, pl
ume tor 2 nit~.
---------Pediatrician back office. or hollt forda,y shift. App.
Manne hardware. Oen Ptr,exper.notreqwrcd. ly at Cano's. 2241 W.
warehse&custserv. Resume t.o Box 116. ·~ Coast Hwy, Mon-Fri, &42-4800 Daily Pilot, P .O. Box J.SPM E.O E.
1560, Coeta Mesa. Ca.
8'2·M.1'7
Uquor Store Clerk
Part·nme MATURE WOMAN 9311216
Ca II S.S. 7863 p /llme to welcome ---------
newcomers & contact Pest Control Operator
merchants. Flexible ltrs. Res P . Person for
Loam Need car. lite .lyping. pesticide •pray applica s.cy /SllpierYlsor Ml-3095 'Uon:s Lite mtctwucal &
Fodoanori&lnallon dept , .. equipment operation
al rnor1C ~broker rirm 'Mery I Help U7 knowledge Good oppor
i.o..n ba:f:rwnct 'd Meet ck greet for lovely w1expandini co Sal &
ln Newportbr 644~ new engineering ofc beoents commensurate --~-------! Some lypmg, To $'100 w texper Ca II 763 475 I
LUNCH HOSTESS ~eO'Bnen 540-5001 _9_am_ ... .:;..p_m _____ _
P lime. Approx 3 hours Sr>e.lb.01 & Snelling of
day 67S-1726 Newi>Ol't Be,lcll Agency
LVN 7-l
Full or p lhCQe. Mesa
Verde Conv. Holp, 661
Cmte.rSt, CM~.
MACHl"41SHOP
TRAIN&
Sm electrooka Co mov
m1 to SJC seekmg capa·
ble lndlvrduaJ willing to
learn.
4340Campus Dnve
MECHANICAL
EHGIMIB
Anressive small in·
dusl'I instrument t'O.
needs growth oriented
engineer who wants ex·
per. ln manuf product de·
velopmeot marketing.
Salary based on capabUi·
ty Equal Oppor .
Em.ployer. 89il-S351.
MICHAMIC
URK ENGINEERING
• W. Ul&Js St, NB
642-~ YARDMAN Maid; ~In. lovely N.B. WENE£DHELPNOW!
t.oaie w /llrtvate room. 5 E:q>er'ct or will traiD. Ap-dA)is. •'nets off. Eva. rl J. ao at ..,..,5 u __ .__ =!a preferred. ~: • -· ~ ...... ..._ _..,_ ,C.M. Pm&. c ...... wc,1--'---------
need own lrans.
"*"••.,.. PAD·TIMI
Ex..perientt needed mak
I.I\& PLZU & on the ovens
5411-7863
PWMIUS
& Dratnmen wanled
Must have own truck
WUl train. Apply, 1337 S
Bristol, St. Santa Ana
PRE SCHOOL Tencher.
P/T. H.B area Cnll
8'2·2948 betwn 7 6
Restaurant
HOSTISS
F/l'ime. Mon thru Sat
days Nice appear ck
eood attitude.
6ordaU•
900BaysldeDr. NB
Betwn4pm-6pm
llST.MNGMMT
Colony ~ Is oow ac-
ceptin& appllcaUon.s ror
ma.naaement trainees &ate restaurant exper.
helpful We offer lncen·
uve comp. vacatJons. ck
medical benefits. For an
Interview apply In
per'IGO at Colony Kitchen
3211 Harbor 81 , Costa
Mesa. Fri. April 7 .
9-5PM
Retail
SALISNOPLE
We'reGrowing'
Another apanlcing new
mark« will be opening
on Valley View IGarden
Grove> mid April. lf you
are really sbarp Ii
mature & have ba4
J100f8Y or liquor salea ~· ,.. would llkt the
<JAIOI". w me« YOO" dlt-aa. the poAJ.bWty ~ •
future w tour co. Must be
ovr 21 " bondable.
Pl1JIM openl.np. avail.
Please call (114J M0-%'111 ror an appt. ____ _
R08aJE'S RAG• MOP
Women D~eded tor
honeoleantur1 aerv
J60'1J7
benetit.s & profit shanng ler'v. Sta Help needed tm· bave a desire to traUI Largest Selection 5ales
IHSUlAMCE Ai>P1.J In person. 8-Spm med. F\all or p/t-Apply. younc people, we may in Orange County
ISN'T IT ABOUT TIME M<lil Fri 17042 Gillette 9llO E. Cst Hwy, Nwpt bave an oppor for you Stewart Rdh Antiques
T 0 B U l L D F 0 R Ave, Irvine. Bch. We offer xlot workme 750 E. Dyer Rd. S A
YOURSELF? ~ t l ~5 60 conds. nex. hrs & lOP (•l Nwpt Fwyl 751-8922 :>ecre ary. ype., · salaries based on
National Co h Ma-•t.., $12,000 WPM , shorthand or qualllicauons&exper Antique character spooru. w st Challenging pos just 'SpeedwritJng. lo 90. die Int-=._.. inclijj'g Qwntuplets. 2
dynamlc new concepts waJtJog for you iri lovely t a p b o n e e x p e r ... -.nrui spoon racks S46-1921
bas an outataodina op VJew ofc ot local mimt wary Muat be sell Contact Ron Guyer
pe>rtunity for persona fl.rm Call Kay, m.27oo. at.trter. Salary com ~~~truslsnetrRaOU>Pr Solid walnut ro!I top
with a capacity to lead Demus & Denrua Person· mensurate with ability .....,.... desk. Ori11inal /perfect
olhen.Mu8tbave1troog nelServtceoflrvme,2082 Eltcell. fringe benefits. 3303Karbor.BldgC with chair. 1st SHOO
peniooaltrackrecordof Michelson. Contact Ed Parker. Coet&Mesa 979·19SS l&kes.640-8208 at least 3 yrs <Sal Coult.er Electrorucs Inc. F.qual Opp0r Employer
comm.). For personal" SECRETARY 714/963-5628 9AM .. PM. Wailer needed, prefer ex· Exclusively Wholesale
confidential interview. Leadingfirmhasxlntop· Mon·Frt. E.O.E. per. waiter. but will I o 1 phone collect Jerry f Tc Ant que ea er opens Darnell. 71'1640·6262, por or resp. person. 0 5hoe Sales. oppe>r for ex· tr8lf1. Pe~able. able his doors w the general
8AM-4PM =rcbele Kuhn $40.SOOI per'd male/fem. Good w deal Wlth members. public for sale. Public hn. No Son. Xlnl bens Call for appt. Big Canyon adnutted Sal Apr. 9 for a SAllSMAM Snelline &Snelllngof Sal & comm. Top grade Country Club. &44·54t>1 preview 8·9AM. Sale ' Newport Beach Agency Marine Hardware 4340Campus Dnve footwear Westclirf Wait.resa exper'd needed begins 9-4 & Sun Apr 9. ~marine hardware Shoes, Mr. Marow1tz l\R>l.Y 1~ person betwn 9-1 MC & BofA accept
store. beach location. 548-8684 uam~m. ll70 Balcer St ed. Buckley Wbeeler An
seeks er.per. sales *Secf8•..Res* 5peciaJServicesAgenll QlstaMesa. l l q u es 3 4 O 3 W .
penoo. National co . full Miii For Preshgioua N B ---------MacArthur Blvd. Santu
benefits. Some weekend atnorctLeeala si•K hotel Various shifts Waitress., Apply 1n Ana. 751·74.54. won. Call 8 Momson. Emplorers Pay All Fees Good benefits Apply in penon, Sid s Blue Beet. ~~~~~~~~ MS-171lforlntervtew uz Reinden Aaen.:y ........... N__:_er IM. 10721st Pl. N,8af\3pm ..-.·~ "'_...,.. •rrfmcft 1010 "a'es Ua.n•a•m-t 4020Blrt'h,SU1()4 U07 Jamboree Rd, N B w-··--·-. f/llm• da""'. ..,... ,.,Woul,.d ..... Ii .. "'" Newport Buch 833-8190 EOE '"'"''~ "" 1~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• you .. e to move C.llforAppt/!iat&b'6S Cochail exper Tray FRGHT DAMAGED to Santa Barbara or servit'e ror dJMer house HOTPOlNT SALE. 3308
Beverly Hills' We have SlodllrDelY«Y 2 Yrs nun exper Apply w. warner a.r Harbor.
openings ln our stores in Good dnVUlg rec Apply Amelia's, 3300 Pacific Sanl.t Ana. 911-2921
these & other areas for t'l'ftb£TARJ/ in person, 15216 Newport Cst Hwy. N e •~_;__ ____ _ sales " executive type ~ Blvd. Costa Mesa. CASH PAID
people. Opportunity for W.AJlDCUlllC For Wabr/Dryrs/Refrii advan~menl. Beat pay STENO Exper'd, lull Ume. M~a wortdng or not 957-8133
in the market for TIU SBVICE Verde Conv. Koep. 661 •---------qualified people with ""-'ll_.. ln dicta•·-n. typ-Sal CenlerSl.CMS48558S w.-.a.-• "--potential. Send resume ..,.. ...v uv 5 Day wk + comm -.. • .... , ... • or apply ln person. No Inc. comPoeltlon of cor· Apply, 3000 E. Cst Hwy Warehouse Dix modela, completely
....,,.. -"-Ba k "'~l respond enc• & CdM ~T-'--to $121 reblt & refinbbed, 1 yr .,. ..... e c...... c ""'~ knowled&e of general or ---------.....,,. ..._ m•arantee. Your choice SMBSt.TusUn.92680 f ' d E Expanding nat'I •-ice proce urea. x· Tel~"8 Sales showroom chain ae~ks Sl30. Free Delivery. i A L E s· P E R S 0 N cellent opportunity tn lifRl~I s u p e r v 1 11 0 r c 0 r Grand Opening Sale.-
NEEDED, Avail lo work stlleS department for seµ P /time 9·2pm Wages diveralfied reap. Call Ends the 15th.
10am·4pm . Smarty motJva\edindlvld11al. \ +c:-ommisalon. Call for van 833-2700. Dennis & So. Coast Appliance&
Pants, 2407A So. Bristol. details. Dennis Perso.inel m•>S31-JllMC>Y531·2542
S.A. C91'1tact Mn. Wblte 540.010 I Service of Irvine, 2082
SAL ESP &RSON • Good For Interview Appt. LA TIMES Mlchdaon Washer dryer and Dis·
opportunity for assertive b~asber A•l condition
showroom aaJesperaon Paul "--'Bf HelpW.ted 7100 .W,W_.., 710 rzs.eadNS-5148
with m eye for decor at ~ ••••••• ••• • •••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••
Ins. Good company ~I 2 Relric«aton. l for $100 beoeftta. PJeaae call for ~ II l f« 17$. ba&.b very ad
appointment. Wood ft1 rnuoNE Sllft' caJd 67W60I U1htln1 Fhture Co H ... 7071 IU.U-D W F R I 0 l D A I R E
.-.2801-Mint' ROEBUCK & CO Refriaeratoc roe sale ~ 1 F/ll J Equal Oppor Empk>yar KAR~ • Coppertooe. f'rcR Free. ,..peraoo me. r. ~~~~~~~~~ boUom freezer. LI· alze clolbea. retail at ore --Movln& out ot it.al• ~.
ST5-1030CdM t-------• '4iU157 SICUTAIY
Busy 6 dJvtnlf\ed poal
tion ln .aJea dept R.q '1 a
loOd n1W"ll al)(itude. t11>: fnc ~+ wpm, pNfd.
lDd!v. mmt be oraanlied
• IQ)cjy dtt.all • blll~ ,.... ·Apply 'NatloDu
s,.teuw Ootp, 4illl Blteb
S\, J(,8. CN~er OC
Airport> £0~.
'
-DM.Y W .~l,t9JI t030 ~=-/ ttlO ~~!:: ... !~!~ ~!:=~.!?!' • .,...... ...... •••• led ............................................ .
t720 .......__ t740 ................... ..
I 7 S I t 1 It 1 .... S. II 1010 ....................... ....................... ...,_ i. V.._ ove.rdrl", •
-·---·--· ----· .. •••••••• •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• 7 HP nu wtau can 117~ lt76 YAMAHA 400 En· '1tod eond .• UtOO. wt'IUY IDil .. • ~~ ~'1111 -•( BID -ae1111n tm eaat Pamll1 Tenqla mem· ~~,lu~~':laflt. ~Uto;~~ !~dEltlon l5Z1 e"ftll, .,_ CAASI
-• ...,. '' n ~hallv. COWJ bt .. 30 •-lO ...,. ....-. -· ven· 'a, Jetp W .. ooeet' 4 wd We're tbe DIW Chevrolet m-. -. a. "'9lia. fJJi/ aiove c1Ub /Um1&ed o1J wn ... · pm... p.m. lnp,4tM74T. Nelda t..a Best dealenhlp le tbe lrvt 1or aa ,..._ eombo .. oew. A.Ito old VS' • I -"°* _. tit Auto c.atu w __;,;..;..;;.;;..;....;:;;..;..;.;.=...;;.;.;;;.;;._~ faallloaed pot b elly priv. '1 .....sa Metaeler 4 mao lollala· '1S Honda D>, XL. atreet atf•takelUHr14 • • ~ ~ ~ a .. __ • ._.,, ble. never u.ed, $525 .._ dlrt •-ml'a -180 .__._ ycm-uaed ear! -··:= _,..,....._.. P -IU Cwamic Kilo. IT cu ft, ALSO 1 Baricnt No 10 • • "' • -· ,.._ 9160 JOE !i e!! IOJ = . m.lsc. 174 w. ml&lral IU updraft; wench. $15. G49·!S831 Gd c:ond. ~7165' _" .............. .
si.ulf&. •••••:; S&.Cll."5-llll ~ eves. UPO-ltT'7 Kawaaakl '13 lNcra'l PU. Short MACPHERSON
50mm w~ a3Sm:' 4 bl" ~ full of qual c.tom made trestle l•· JOOO. Call 9'1'M200, Roa ~ ·~ •blao,lrl CHEVROLl'I'
2X e~teodor' flub'. furn Waaher /dryer. ~ I& 2 bencbel. l with IMh. Pow.t-9040 Hayward. 9'11M)ta • T~-0::,' r. 2.1 Auto Center Drtve
WUlder cuea Ir 1ad1et rreeur. Ice-maker, com-beck. 1125. Xlnt cood. ••••••••••••••••••••••• '11Honda750X. Lo ml or UlVINE
baa, sac at S$OO WT-37119 pact or Lota more. ~ Sl300. · 'T7 Dataun P.U. Sllnroot, 768-72.ZJ
------840-lllSS m.1.IMI aft 5 mat llrel, eustm inter. Diop ICMO ~ack~fieldDtlwscoUec· 1978 All/FM alereo. Call •••••••••••••••••••••••= ~quariu~$200. uon.Sincel964Malte()( '74 CZ 175 Lo lllleace Chri s or Harrlet
OOGTRAINlNG ~CDM ·~~~ fer~l-31139 ~rl RAY Good Tram. Street Bike 919-5345, or eves &
Your Place or Mine .1 ... or~ · M.etal detector $lOO Obi ~ $'Z25. MS-1997 wtmda 6'1'3-05Zl Jobn Martin !Mll--0059 ..., Jov .. _,_ Aft0 3 ttar.. 1060 ~....,. $l!i0. er 6· 0' $poft Fisher 1.!:°~ ...... W.Ji160 '82 FORD ~ Ton P .U.
Aflh•n puppy, 8 mo.,....................... Oulrluers-VHF radio•f191 Nn auto tram, mtr. in
bNcb blonde & sUvu, HOISIS llOI SALi Bdrm furn. 3·PC $35 Bait tank-depth sounder ••••• ••••••••••••••••• xlnt cond. Four i, .. MW
male, champ linea Skateboard us. Ice and Much More ~t a 1.9T'J Executive tlrH. Shell camper. w/papen $350. 673-43118 l flu. AQllA daqhter allatea worn one sis .,_loaf. I n..v Motorbome or Mlel· Sl.100. 5$4-4Cn'7
ol Mister Alert Ir Clab-5f.9.3tlO e · -1 mttorbome from Herb ---------Re11atered Golden ber blood line. Also ball Cwial Price Friedlander. Call any of '7<4 Toyota PU. looka &
Retriever, l yr old. Arab Geldine. Show or Heavy Duty Ward'• elec ~ tbesenwnben runs lib oew. Aakln&
femaJe, will ucnf1ce ndinc. 1-7'7·8'49 washer " dryer 1275 $38, 950 19M777 $2200. ~
WANTED!!!
Chod. ... low
•acpC9'$111
~ ... Sldff.
RAY HA0£80[
LINCOLN-MER CURY
JRVINE-
130.7000
*°DIUYIA * * unu.:.. * SAVE A LOT :'.'1,,.
BA.RWICI( OATWN
' '
831·137S -19 l.Jl7S
llCILLIMT
SB.ICTIOM
IM STOCK FOR
IMMEDIATE
DB.IYBY
SALES-SERVICE PARTS-LEASING
COSTA MESA
DATSUN
2.IMSHARBORBLVD
S4M4 IO 140-021 l
M.8Z-'72. 2SOC. I ~
cpl. ... leeded. IODta
01.1, P .P. 11400/B.Q. ....,., .
'7S.-c. auarf • .-0. •
ml, o• bru ..... z:a, --.
1'76 4508£. pyt party. ae.ooo mi. Ltaht blue.
•Int cood. su.H~.
714·549·1111 evef,
M4-li91
'7S 280118 Mdua. Excej>-
UCmal.11 cln ram. car. J.o
ml. All pwr. $7900.
~
?IDOC
Darll blue, lo ml'..s .
cndH control, A /(;,
tt.ueo. AM/f'M. P/W,
A.ot. etc.
GREAT Cond. $10.200.
Call llQ.8DM:30
831-1196 alUpm. . S12S. 548-8300 Jew.fry I070 Baby crtb po s.:>1-0108 HARRISON~ 537.n71 ?I c..vy -------,.,_to Yo. 1045 ....................... Scubataok•reg Jensen SIA RAY IZMlll B.CAMIMO Amlee. ... uted "73. 2200 • .Uct shift. 1tt ••••••••••••••••••••••• WANTED 6x9 lriaxle car stereo JlOl Coast Hwy, N 8. _ CONQUISTA ••••••••••••••••••••••• FMt 97JS !!, ~ 2.!. coo d ·
2yroktSbellle,moving, speakerabstolr87>3344 631-2547 6000 AM / ........ t .,,.,~,__.. can't keep. Eves TOP CASH DOLLAR · au. rm, ape, •-••••••••••••••••••••
7Sl9847 dys~ PAID FOR YOUR MOVl .... HORTH' ntr :--------VB. auto., power st.eer-81,_ll 9701 '76 Xl/9, mint cond., --· JEWELRY WATCHES · ___ _:wwuwwaaZVJt .........---..;..A. inc. air cond • 2-tooe ....................... map. 1 owner, AM/FM '72 MBZ 250. 4-dr, a"1o,
like new cond, SS.SOO.
979-33» FREE 5 fem a I e ART OBJECTS GOLD, Furn. anuques. crystal, --..-...--p&IJll. (STKP83 ). stereo. $4150 or ofr.
Shepherd puppies left SILVER SERVICE. bnc-a-brac. palntJo&i.. 2'1'Power.l\Ybndge. Sea .. Sun · S'3" DON'TIUYACA.11 MO-OC7&orM&-1.8119
Good watchdogs, love FINE FURN & AN : xtra lrames. exe~ $3115().orlrade. • ~lodl b ....,. 9744
lu.... ...... ....... TIQU.,.... """ _,,. t,!f ~}. 1 le r , M 0 RE 496-3523 .--G_.'.... w eo you can own a Erilla•1ft ... must sell 'T1 ..... ......--.... .,... ....... """"' .............. SubaruaRV's ----prtme~ "r harboubor F\at ... X'l9, very 10 ~.·s. ~····················,.· Free lo &ood h ome ouunllftd rin & edd GRAND IAMK~36 View .,...,_ •• y or a t 1'lnt cond, $50(10. 492-8197 M, must aell. 43,000 odg tered & i w lDg Kng sz wtr bed com Twin Otesel·F /B & toi> '6t DOOGI ,_.. the avera&e monthly att-m mi ·a, Runs xlnt. B<s t neu cat Lrg gray b&nd; 1.03 karats; aoll· plete xl.nt cond $250 A Radar. fuUy eqwp. motor hom.8 car payment·Chet ..,, ofr. U2-HSO evet>.
huy Call SS9 71M que gold band & setting; swa~p type air cooler. 6 Under 300 hrs. cherry our apedalty ~u~~ ~~:!·s~::. Saliabuey II. 640-87~ 124 wagon. 1973, lo ml. 614-7480 dya. ask for
01t11tlllt1an pup, M .. lov. cert. appuisal 01 S2200 ; Mos old. SlOO. cond. Single owner air cond. 1 MM AC.! stereo. very good cond., John 1ng beauty pedigreed must sell $1750 or best ~or 752·2529. sro,ooo !>49-8307 •75 $l!i00. 751-0093 ---------~ Z)Sl, 645·3180 •• · olfer Russ at 644-2071 <282SG<:>Sl7tt Alfa a-ca 9705 --------Fr~ kitten, pl~" or lh" Beautiful one carat round ~ '77 Remell, 55 hrs. deep EL DORADO ....................... Pmihra 9747 "~ ~• " till d II I V, Seals 6. sips 2. $4900. MJnH11ot0< llq ..... lully ••ti Money l4ldl '"If ,7 GTV C ...... 9727 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1Jtter,5 mosold 646-0161 cer e aw es& W..e.d 8011 Ph49'7-42Aleves contatft•d •uto,.,allc ,,.~.. G..-mt.. " a 4 • A / ' ....................... '73 Pantera, bri1ht
t.'Vl'S Diamond worth Sl2.000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -· .. _,.. l'ldlo • .,....., AM/FM cass, pvt ply. •~ ..,._W ,78 orange, IS,OOO mi's. Im· --sac $5950640-6188 WANTED Boetoo Whaler 13'. Xlnt f8t1Mico1 $ll50Joffer. 1(772-3337 ....,.... nw 000 ,,.""
Free to You' s7999 H~o· Cars mac 114. .~1-_,, •. Custom Emerald & UsedAftswet"PhoM. rood. 40 hp Mere. All """ A ~:~ DlltDOnd Dumer nng. 65 1·737-6449 ~~-~ 213-799•2215· Ml t707 MAMY ~••••••••••!?.~~
N-eeds--,-a-m-1ly Shepherd ri e~~!:t..si:~~;· WANTED Large btrd 17555 ....................... To Ce.aDM Fro.! 77 TARGA ~hortha1r . fe male, Sl.950. Will sell $1400 caae for Cockateel 16' Glasspar, oew mt. Xlnl '74 Fox. yeU. snrf. UNIVERSITY for~lakeover lseat fneodly, trained 673 _4148 3-tl.OIJS8 Please call 646-8413 cover, 65HP Mercury. Huntington Beach "74 Raochero, p JS. p 18 , 4-dr, FM /stereo tape. tl38 mo or purchase ,r
eves completely overhauled 842-0675 A/C, blk. offer Call Jeff, $33SO. 896·4600 dys. Oldl•ble you wtsh-Fully loaded . .,,,... al wtnew lower urut. + lrlr ________ _, eves, 548·9'34. Lv Msg 752~1 evs .__ Cws • GMC Jeff Bnery, 675"11111
English Spnnger Spaniel Mo+ ti l'J 8078 .. 'it .. .ts 1013 11.fiOO Firm 893·2834 --------1 T...U
wllb paper~ Male 4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 '67 Dodae "' Ton, 4 '70 Audi Super 90• clean '7S, 911S. Pena red. '63 Sportsman F11hlng wheet drtve Crew C.bs. body. good OODd, $1295. 2850 Harbor Blvd. SlS 000 Years Good watchdog Lathe Colcbedst!f 17XS4 .. Pender VIUaaer l2 slrulg. To 11 Y c r a fl $6 :I 0 0 . low m.iJes. SI ,875 eacb. 2 67~ c.o.ta Mesa ~9640 ~7a. 847-6220 geared head, 3 spi.ndle w/cu. $190. Super re-Balanc:e BofA $367S .....,..,,.. ~ bore $3.000 Le-Blond vert>Tradef ml L09dedseeoat Yachting ---Dod&e 2'AI Ton Crew IMW 9712 MUST SELL! '7S CVCC
Lge blk An&ora cat. 18x33 geared head s. How dorS:1 ~mp Auoc. Don Koers Owner Sea " Sun Cabt. 3 axle\ no bed, ••••••••••••••••••••••• balcbbaclt. Xlot cond, ~PorseWblhe 1111/bs; .. Pl;lflect spayed, 1hots, to aood $2.200. 'C21.3> 961-3'34 + ar · · mo ~166 • fl,450 each, l · 67Cbev, l 40MJ1G szeootB o pp "'""'" w ... I.DI er,
home (Sooty> 67~784 Instrument• for sale Too slant bed, lo miles, _,...15 · · · · AM /FM, 8·t rk ater-eo.
Y h ·~· ..... & Olds '76 20' Mako. equlp. for Subaru .. RV's $2.150; '67 Chev. '611 . Wayne; 731·3911 dys, or .,.em flr'Y kitty, spayed, Mtcd r om 1010 n:ti!; n"':-55i-4427 orr shore r1sbing_ 175 • Chev. 'M Ford, ~ Ton '78 Hooda CVCC. blue. •2284 eves.
gentle, to good home ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mere otb, radio, trlr, Wltb utihty boxes. all very clean. '76 914 2 o litres AM /FM ---~9018 WAl!..ITED Hammond MJ 9800. RMI etc, etc. $8S00 /ofCer. motor horn.• low miles. $1750 or less. • IJ73.5811 • · f · . "1 elect piano $400 147 67>4884 eves 1-4,000lb. diesel fork lift cass atereo, ac. &1r, 5 fw nltwe 105 TOP CASH OOLLA R Leslie SZ50 A1m11 tube our •peclalty $3.850 . 1 electric fork '76 Hatchback, xlnl cond, 1 Pd • 1 7 • O O O m 1 ·
•••••••••••••••••••••• PAID FOR YOUR amp/6-10 S2SO l''ender loah, Sall 9060 '73 lift, needs work, Sl.650; 1978 BMW's $2750. Blk /sllver. f1 ,000./be5t
JEWELRY, WATCHES, solid state/4 12 $250. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Tl"'-& Call Buck or Joe -531·3661 alt2pm olfer. Comp. maint. re-
ART OBJECTS. GOLD. 968-~1. 530-9637 AUi-YAMAHA -.A 213:321·1822 8 ·5PM. HERE MOW! a-9730 ronts. 556-8330or~9-5. Good used Furniture & S ILVER SERVICE Fully-"-.,.,._ 714;493-9178aft8PM ...,..._. al 31118-C Airway Ave,
**I BUY**
Appliances---OR r will F F · DEALERS =no~":"' tw'::.; = c~ r.e •••••••••••••-•••••••• C.M. Prioc. only. sellorSELLforYou JNE URN-" AN· Office,..,....& YachtBrokeraae '-"r811to.-.c:n.6tecan1ro1 v., 9570 ~-111; '78 XJ12L, 11,000 mi 's, MASTERS AUCTION TIQUES. 845-220Q. lmll,.... 8015 Llst.bip Wanted! 1itanyr1ooa-1•1HAn ....................... IOOY SHOP very c lean. 111,950. 'T6 Targa. loaded. warr·
6 4 6 • I 6 I 6 & ~AGE TAGS •• ;.-r. ..... •••••••••••••• Sosettwettent $6288 FULL SIUCTIOM MOW OPEN _998-_N34 _______ 1 ~ss~~~ crs~~· ~~i~o~
133.-9625 rrom your bu1iness HEYER Yodlt Sdet OP lt71 VAMS EXCBI...., 'SI XKE 2+e. ltbr Int. 968-0872. ------1 cant. Sead one card ror 3516 Newport Blvd. 17555 IM ST()Q( ---.... , auto. faL'tOr)' air, nHds ---------
CASH PAID each lag plus one spare. DUPLICATOR Newport Beach 22ToCbOOM From SIUCTIOM OF body wk & glass. S220(). ~;s;:,.•· bllt, xlnl
For !!d used rum. anlt· We ~ permanenUy Model 70 rompl«ely re· 1714 > 673-9211 Huntington Beach •W'lOdow Vans IMW RESALES ~ 675-9084 ques &clrTV_'_s_. 95_7_.a133 sealed attncllve lag & buill, uud 1 time. 16' Cab10 sleep aboard 842-0675 •VanCooven1ons We may have your next ...._.. 97311-----. ----
Brown Nagabyde sot a strap, meetmg airline Includes cberoacal & w/lr&.1ler. many access.~=======:::!! ..C.rgo Vant car in our inventory. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'T1 9115, 11lv, AM fFM
Loveseat Gold & glass ~! r:.ul~=~·F::~ paper. $200. 1·737·6449 Sl995. 714-586-0449. 1970 Ford Econollne SEE US TOOAY! Call uatoday! cast, air. -11oys, snrf'.
colfeeuble ltendtables I 1 In 111·2040495-4949 15 K mi 's, $17,450. Call afte 6 64S--3334 persooahzed tag enclose Sweda cash registers FAMOUS SCHOONER Shasta. 18.SOO m. s t ~1478
r -----~~~a0p1e.~, rabri!'. or Per for rest .• bar etc La pnce reductiom. top cood.675-9937or.832·9661 ~COUNTY'S
Breakfast nook tables & vw., o paper "' we Nearly new machines. cood., 675-1~ Brkr. Ol.DlST benches, wbt wtorange will back & tnm your slJU under warr Lse or Reserve for spn!'g /sum·
914 '76 2.0. Wht/Blk.
111!~ ... llil!!llil• Sharp 17500 /ofr. Must vmyl 18S 64(}oa27 tags. Or try two cards rent Mr, Job nson. Hob 1 e 1 2 w I t r I r mer rental. 23 motor $ back to back. 644-3385 Sacnf1ce. $400. home. sips 6. S175 wk
OAK d1n1ng table & PRJCES: 6'4·1344 aft. S 645-4659
chairs (6) S290. Oak cof. S2 ea or 3/$5 hh 1017 ---------
fee table 199 Ph 415, ..... $1.60ea ••••••••••••••••••••••• "Guppy" 13' w/cabin. Trailers. Tr'G\'t4 9170
21 ..,._ at. sell. PP. 675-1817
COiia Mela '45-5700 73 • 9)4, 2.0, bl.k/blk. new
paint, 5 spd. AM /l''M.
6'4 9186 6/9 t;g; $1.50 ea. FOR SALE York21h1re fitted cushions . Also •••••••••••••••••••••••
10 or more Sl.40 ea puppies. champ. sired. .. WI nds u rr e r .. New '13 Skamper pop.up tent
Sales Tax Included Zeb r a r I n c h es . cond. *-5665 trailer, sips 6.
Oc 498-1518 N ARD? 496-2.494 /496-8279. Super boat, very clean, ---------
Draw your own or send Islander 30 Mk IJ. Pvt Small travel trailer.
'74 Custorn Chevy Van
Custom paint, Gold
Velvet Interior Wide
cragers M55(). 642-33711
MOVING
ACROSS COUNTRY
Mu s l Sell -Antique
1800's chestnut table
38x43 with ext.entions for
leaves. together with 4
matching bentwood
chairs $350. Very Good Cond
name, address. phone & F Alaskan Malamute pt.y S22 900 MHS36 Sx20' $400
we'll make one card per l>UPPf 5 mo old AKC reg ' · · · oo.9193 '17 Dodae Tradesman
lag. Add 250 eacb. Good home Call Carol Prindle caumarlltl!I new 100, must sacrifice. wm-
Send check or money or-540-49309-S PM & used Free Demo Rides Aato Sentu, ,.... ly, 4 1pd, 10,000 ml,
der to: ,._ & Orgc.t 1090 Newport Bay 675-3255 & ~ 9400 25MPG, M6-I~ aft 8pm
PILOT NINTIMG H••••••••••••••••••••• Catalina 27, VHF, elec ••-••••••••••••••••••• '74 Ch ev, P /S, P /B,
M2-1790 P.O. Bo" 1560 a.,,._. $600 start Outbd. xlnt cond, Auto body repair. AM /FM, c1.11tm later &
Beaut r White Couch, c.o.ta Mesa. Ca. 92626 * .1860 * $13,000. 830-508S. Call ~asdays paint. Daya 543-8225,
lndum Cotton (Bullocks) BARSfOOLS. Super nice. 2• S bl d SJOO · · Eves 5'3-2180 S275 Drexel formal din HIDE-A-BED Iola. love OLD nme Player Piano. 1 now r • or Datsun en 11 D e Ai -m table. 6 chrs cane seat. • O~ts1de needs r e · oearestoffer. Phone traosmlslioa Make of-.._ Wa.tecl 9590
backs ( Big&ars j' $500, 9S2·1Sn f~,. Inside works 675-5685 fer-. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ headbrd $20. Harbor &reat. · · suoo SJ&.364S Hobie cat with trlr, 3.5 754-0833 betwn s.s WI WIU. IVY
\.iew Hllls &M-001 ~ &r records to teach Antiq. Upri1ht Plano. meter 1100 or OFFER . YOUI DATSUM
Brown Jordan 60•40• · reedina by vow~~Ucosf l tllO lnclud. needlepoint Mu1t sell. Also Sabot "t= !~ ~ll • bood, PAID J"OR Oil NOT
A over sioo. new ~ or beneh. 64<MXM8 szso 642_2073 • -••. '15. or ~DOI.LAI oval table, 6 cbalra. tat $15 642-3379 · best 213 Chevy englne ~.lakes.~. S,O.tlwcJ Goods 1094 32 Ericson, '77, cstm, $.'i0orbest~4 Phil POI TOf' CAIS
ei.tom de u ~ IOY TYPE ••··~··•••••••••••••••• loeded. Nwprt slip. You BARWICK 0 4TSUN ma lres e ta· POOL 12 x 4, heavy duty 12 ga Delll•n pre·war mu,,t see lhas one. P.P. ~for We
ble &r 2 benches. l liner, filler, etc. $7S. or Double barr•J •h"'&un Alt6 PM,~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• w/back. $l.2S. Xlnt cood make olfer. 1·73'7-$149 ~-... c.> 63"' l-0';: AMt-•/
SS9-al79 r•:m:u -· ..-16' sloop flberalass. xlnl ca--.a 9520
Duncan Phyfe table w / II P~ MACHINE. Sundancera or Orange cond. w /trlr & cover ••••••••••••••••••••••• ctuun. mahogany desk. =1c. Xlnt cond. County. For more LDfo ~. 548·1817 ti23 Chevy 1 too, repalra-
"~win11 mach cablnet PboQe 645-3500 ask for •73 ble. good en1 .. best offer
lild.5 dryer 675 SW FILMS Sylria Kulm over $750. 874 W. 19th,
Hvy Wlllht Iron tbl, rec· GlmS48·0211l aft.Spm Swaps 1096 Col .... ia 34 ,_CM_. _____ _
I.angular, frost iJl5 top, 4 19" port. WesUnihouse ••••••••••••••••••••••• Like new co11d . Dix UNO Ford 8edan .Dellvety.
chra, xlnt cond $250 color TV SlOO Penn din Sale or trade mtrcycl. custm lntr. 7• headroom Like nu, Waahtngton
675-7396. rm set. tbl & 1 leaf, 4 a IP s 3. $6 O O. S " S main salon, diesel auxl. Blue. brn Int. Run1 perl. ---------1 cane beck ch.rs $300. 2 AlphaJL Van. 646-4871 aul-0 pilot. dln!IY, furl 111295/bSt ofr. 494-0135
chest of draw8!'5 $20 -:a. 1Y Recio. jib, xtras. Sact'lflce •54 Chevy 2.dr aedan
or 2/$30. Upngbl vie· MR, Stw'90 1091 $27,500. 114/531-~ $100.0 * 64Z.3105
"" 111 'I II ' .qit f Ill t
831·1375 493.1375
WE BUY
CUAMCAltS
&TIUCICS
CON Nill
CHEVROLET
2828 llltbor Blvd.
COSTA MESA
146-t200
Sales·Service-Leasing "13 M~a 4 dr RX2. auto air. mags. Konis. xlnt Rov CcrYer,lnc. tr~n ~ r adio. new cond $4800/0Cr. 673-5371
Rolls koyce BMW rad.iaJC ortg ownr. xlnt aft 8PM twknds cond. $1375. 6'8-Sm --
1540 Jamboree 1977 Porsche 911S, air. Newport Beach 640-6444 GLC Mazda '78 Delux. 4 sunroof leather only
--mo's old. auto. Best of. 4500 mi~. perfect'. Must
fer· 714/968-4320 sell! Lst $18.SOO. takei.' CREVIER
&I ST • HOADWAY
SAMlA AMA
835-3171
TNe Ul.'l"IMAft MY!NO lllACMINm
~ ... 9740 -~------••••••••••••••••••••••• '86 912, rblt eng. & trans
"12 _, SE. 4.5. Sunroof. $5000.
pwr wibdowstdr locks. 640-7044
Sllver/bl.k iotr. Like new ---------
cond. Well maintained '70 911T. 5 apd, olive gm.
72.000 miles. S19SO firm. reblt ena " trans. xtras
498.Q222 ~7409 or 646-8178 .......... 9 .......... HOO
•USEDIMWs•
'712002 4 apd (15314,
'73 Bavaria 4 spd 4IMJ FS
'73 2002 4epd •KBV
'TS 530I Auto. <2.83MCV ). 111·.•.••.•.•.•.••.·.·.•.••.•.••.·.·.·•.•-·.•.••.•.•.••.•.•.•.••.•.•.••.•.•.·•.· • '7S 2002 A. Ser .2236
'76 2002 4spd Air CMOREV
'17 320IA SIR 117RSK
CloMd 0. Sam d 11•
BMW IUNT COND 1973
2002 .C·SPD. AIR.
AM /FM. <55SU MX > 588-41ar.
2002, 1974, air, sunroof,
AM/FM stereo. $5,000
AT HAllOUR YOLISWA&Bf
WI IUN SMALL ADS
AND PASS THI
SAYINGS
ONTO YOU.
firm. 673-7586 •vs Is Sun ... ----------------~ 9715 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'i4 Capri, 4-spd, beaut,
yelle>W blk , $2200.
648-7840, 645-7633
74 Capri V-6 A.T., snrf,
xtru.. lmmac. SRl&M.
$2850/beat. 67~.
New '78 Rabbit
Including fuel lntectlon, OH engine.
front disc brakes & hatchback.
(03783). Madel 1701.
'•MOW'3995 GIGANTIC
SALE
ENTlR ESTOCK
OF flNE FURNITURE
DRASI'ICALLY
REDUCED!
Mew&Used
lsola '200. Old gas ••••••••••••••••••••••• Q.I 30 1 t 1 ded
heater&968-2356 Beaut. Medlt. Mahot •11.soo~ ~~~799~;63s: ........_ ..
Movina: must sell TV. stereo cabinet '6S cash 2131570.2049 VtWdel 9130
diamond rni, tbl1, • farm. See at 22'7·22nd St. •••••••••••••••••••••••
Colt 9717
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR ••••••• .. ••••••••••• .. • FOR TOP USED CARS '7l Doct,. Colt Wp 32 FOR!GrcsESTIC MPG. l1llt CGQd, nlakt
II )'Otlf ear Lt en... clean dt 41M!188, '71Mm
CLEARANCE SALE
,• I I ' t I " . . ' '
,. •.. cae1To..
SELL 1 PIECE OR
A HOUSEFUL
Repossession
Wm-ehouse ,
At 61t L .... St.
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• • I
VOL 71, NO. 95, 4 SECTIONS, 46 ·PAGES O~ANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • WEONcSOAY, APRll '3, 1979
1~fternoon
N.Y. Stoek8
TEN CENTS
.. .
--~~~~~~~~--------~~--~~--~------------Anlnt~retll'e~rt~~_;..----..;....;~--~----~------~~--~----~~~--"
Big Spending in HB for $175 Joli
By ROBERT BABIER
Ot191e0.tlr ............
Considering the job J)ays $1'75 per month plus ex·
pensea, it would seem an inordinate amount of money bas
been pumped into lhe Huntington Beach City Council cam·
patgn.
One candidate already had spent more than $12,000
when the election· campaip still had aearly two wee.kl \o
go.
Some other candidates either had approached or e~;
ceeded the $10,000 mark in money raised lo finance their
run for the roses.
4nd a candidate for city attorney had spent morf) than
$15,000.
Pregna.nt
Waddill Trial
J11ry Views
Saline Baby
By TOM BARLEY OfU.DMIJ ...........
A young woman who delivered
her own baby shortly after the
doctor attempted to abort the in-
fant by injecting her with saline
showed the happy: baby to an
Orange County Superior Court
jury today.
Using the assumed name of
•1Mia1 Hobbs," the witness
OlllY .......... ENDS JAIL TERM
£x.Congrneman Hln"'8w
llimiham Out
A.ffe.r Serving
Eight Momh&
But some campaign observen Jay the voten probably
haven't seen anything yet.
STD...L TO BE RECKONED with is the political war
chest of the Community Political Action Committee
(CPAC) of the Huntington Beacb <llamber of Commerce.
THE CHAMBER POLITICAL 1roup also is supporting
city attorney candidate Jerry Bame and bas mailed a
broch~ on his behalf to voters.
Bob Terry. chairman of the CPAC, said that another •
malling urging the election of lhe entire slate is planned
The group, which is getting into the buamess of financ-
ing local candidates for the first Ume, reportedly iii plan-
ning to spend more than $20.000 as the campaign enters Its
final days.
And CPAC-sponsored advertisements are scheduled to
h1t local newspapers next Monday
Terry declined lo disclose how much, the chaqiber has
raised, or intends lo spend for its political activities. He
.says thal he fears that ll will be presented out or context. The money will provide letters and brochures and
newspiper advertising for a slate of candidates that ln·
c ludes incutnbents Ted Bartlett arid Al Coen and
challengers Don MacAllisler and Frank Hoffman.
The chamber's polltical expenditures will have to be
disclosed eventually, undw stale law. However, the dis-
<See POLITICAL FINANCING, Page AZ>
Wife J;le&fen, . . ..... -Raped
THE MANY AGES OF BETTE DAVI
From Left, .. Jeiebel,0 "All A
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Bette Davis
doe1n't hide her age, but doesn't d~ll on it
either.
.. lt'I just another birthday, .. s~ says or
her 70lb today~ "A big one, I'll admit_ but l
don •t believe in birthdays.·'
AN EXPECl'ABLE RESPONSE from an
actress who, unlike some others, bas nev~r
been reluctant to reveal her age: She w .. born April 5, 1908, 'in Lowell, Mass.
. At 'lO, Bette Davis exhibits no slack-nine
of her enormous .energies. She declined a re-
cent birtbtlay interview -"l'in much too
b~sy with the Academy Awards and all that ...
She has spent 47 years in films and dur·
Ing the past year appeared in three movies:
Disney's "Return from Wilch Mountain," the
telev1-loo film "Harvest Home" and the alJ.
atar Agatha Christie mystery "Death on the
Nile," ber 8Stb movie.
''THAT'S THE BEST THING for me,
ltavlng m.y work. .. she ea.id at the Egyptian
locaUon ln October ... 1 would never get mar-
ried again; that Just wouldn't succeed. When
your children crow up and leave you, it can
be •ery Jor>dy. Luckily tor me, I've eot my work to ftll-tbe eap."
When the is not working in films, she
foes on the road with her one-woman abo•.
acreeninl highH&hts from her flhn career anc11commenting on ber ttfe and wor1C.
MIU Davis has always · been tree artd
open In b.er comnienta • .and tMse ~ aome of
# • A,.WI,...,.._
HO MARKS HER 70TH BIRTHDAY TODAY
••" ''Now Vor•aei0
• •aby J•M'' .
her remarks in recent times:
-.,l'VE ALWAYS KNOWN 'nlE value of
the press. They're just as valuable as the
perrormances you give; you can't exist
without them. That is something ttrat is-lack-
ing l<MlaY. Youne people don't realize the
value of publicit.y. They're fools.••
• figh~ ~I:betoot!;:!i!g ~n:;;:.: ~ti~~ ~
all. It wasn't in my nature, but I re.lized that
you have lo force yourself to fight for what
you want or they simply won't respect you. I
never would have had the same career if 1
badn 'l fought."
-"The only thing I worry about is dylng
without a cigarette in my mouth. People
have suggested that I give up smo~. to
which I answer, 'Whatever fot?' "
-• 'OF llUMAN BONDAGE' WAS my
first step up the ladder, tbe first time I was
considered possibly a really good actress.
The character I playe(I was the first bitch
heroine on the screen~.and nooe ol the well-
known actresses would play it.••
-"Nuts to erowtn1 old. Don't you ever
believe that life begins at 40 or that it's-won·
derfuf lo be '18. I'd Cive a.aythlog lo be 30
•J•ln. J:very so often somebody asks me if
I've bad my face lifted. I always tell tbeui .. "WouJdnO<>klllie~lftdlcJ?' ••
-0lthinkthe.ke1toH(ets~nevent91>ac·
ceptlnf its cballenaes. As tar • I'~ con· c~rrred, once someone stop" ac~eUng
cnau,,nps,he'sdead.'' .
-....
Victim
Fights
3 Youths
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of .. Delly ...... suet
Fountain Valley police are
seeking three youths who al-legedly threw a 4~2 months
pregnant housewife down a
freeway embankment and rajlled
her as she pleaded. shrieked'; btt
and scratched her assailants.
The victim was sexually as~
saulted by one of the youths Fri-
day night. while the secom:t held
her pinned lo the ground and the
third stood lookout on the street
overpass above. police aald.
"Investigators said the victim,
20, a Garden Grove resident.
survived th~ ordeal witboul
severe physical inJury. Her inid~
term WJbom child was apparent-
ly unharmed.
"She put up a real fight. She
slapped one repeatedly and bit
the other," says Detective Pat
Coleman, who has been check-
ing out leads along with his
partner, Detedive Bill Parker .
''She told them she was 4\12 months pregnant but they didn't
believe her," Detective Coleman
·said today.
The victim, overpowel'ed as
she strolled on Magnolia Avenue
just north of Warner Avenue.
failed to convince the trfo.
Detective Coleman said. ·
"When she started fighting.
the guy said he'd kill her and
her baby both. That's kind of a
cold shot from a 17-year-old
kid," he added.
Investigators say the suspect
trio were definitely identified as
being seen loitering around a
ham burger takeout restaurant
about 150 yards away from the
freeway overpass where the
11:45 p.m. rape occurred.
"She got a pretty fair descrlp.
tion of the g1tY who raped her ..
althou1h 'lair' is a rather
generous term for him:• Detec·
live Coleman continued.
He said the principal RSped-
ts 18 to lT, thin, with dark.
stringy hair, about five feet siic
to eicbt inches tall and 111ay bear
scars from the plucky )'OUDg
niarrled \Wn:ian's battle. t. His partners in the senal 1111-
sault would also face related
charges if UTeStecl for their at.
leged assistance.
DellYPl•Si.tf ...
JOINS PLANNERS
Richard Chrtatman
3-Car Crash
Cau8es Snarl
On NB Span
Police said three drivers In-
volved in a chain reacUon crash
on the Pacific Coast Highway
bridge over Upper Newport Bay
Tuesday rughl escaped iajuries
in the miahap that tied up lraffic
lor a hall-hour.
Police booked one driver, Jac-
queline Cobb, 43, of 9932 Debiois
Ave., Fountain Valley on a mis-
demeanor drunken driving
~harge following the 7;30 p.m. accident.
Police said Mr-9. Cobb was
driving her 1975 Corvette east-
bound on the bridge when she
crashed int.o the concrete railing
nnd ricocheted into on-coming
&.raffic~ .
Her e-ar crashed Into tbe
Porsche driven by Franca I.
Grfham, 37, of 1338 W. Balboa
!Jlvd. and that car, lo tum, col-
lided with the auto driven by
Jtobert Kboary, 31, ot 320 Lindo
Ave., Balboa.
ta au uat meve 'l'Ueldl1.
tile Pountaln Valley ctty Couddt
• appolntecl two new Planntn1
-Commission meinbers to special
-1'·mont.b tams and cut the term ... ~ a curielt comml..ssioner b)' "'~year.
1'.he councn toot the acUoa
after approvittlr an ordinance
tbat would cot commissioner term. f!om four to two years
be,:autn1 with commluion ap.
polotmcats lo luoe.
Bouaewlte Barbara Brown, 35. of lntD Mt. Nimbus St., and
property broker Richard
Cbriltman. 39, of 10950 San Leon
Ave., were selected to serve on
tbe colDJl1lulDD until June. im.
And Planning CommlHioner.
Dale Edwards' term wu cut by
one year. It will now expire in
June, 1979. Edwards was ap-
pointed in 1976 under the old
tour-year format.
But councilmen decided to
cbanae the four-year term
0.
Fountain Valley resident
Zita w-.,a, '4, was elected
president of the Huntingtao
Beach Union High School
District Board of Trustees
Tuesday night. Mrs. Wesea
ha1 served on the bojll'd
since 1976. .
•
format because they felt it was &I D •ed too lengthy. Council membel'I e A .....
Hid'* was difficu1t:to ~nt , ~ replacements wf)t6 •adnctea· • * .1-• .. ,
occurred under the old format. B Bil
.Chriotaian and .11'"9. Brown fill iV ey vacen~jes opened' 07 tx· ·J
comn:atsstoner Ben NteJ1~"1
electtoa to the City Council lat
month and by the reatgnation tn
January of ex-commluloner
John Knieht who moved from
Uie city.
Alternate Plannf of Com•
missioner Walt Hammond wu
passed up u a replacement for
Knight. The ahenlate plannlnl
commlJ.aioner bu usually been
a shoo-in to fill a vacancy, ol·
ficial.I said.
The terms of Hammond and
regular Plannlng Commlaslon
memben Mike Capizzi and John
McKnight will expire lo June.
The Plannine Commiaalon is
composed of five members and·
one alternate.
Under the new law okayed
Tuesday, the terms for these ap-
pointments would be lor two
years.
Mayor Marv .<c11er 1aid 18 res·
identa, including form~r city
fire chief Al IJole and former
police chief C. W. ·M~aella, ape
plied for the Plan.Dini Com•
mission posts.
Adler said councilmea will
consider the appllcaUoos apin
when C'Ul'l'eot planniD& COJn· mbaiC)JM!IS' tcma upb-e UkJa;e. ,,
Orange County Supervisor
'lbomaa Riley deD.led today that
he has introduced partisan
polltlct into bis campaign for re-
election.
Riley drew barbs from elec·
tion opponent Tom Rogers when
be announced Tuesday that he'll
be bOltlna ... pleasant special
social gatberint ot our dedicated
Orange County Republican civic
leaden."
Purpme of tbe April 13 cet· together at Rlley•1 Newport
Beach home ls to witness Riley's
alanlng of the ao-ealled
Republican llth commandment.
a pledge not to speak badly of
other RepubUcan candidates.
In response to the announce..
ment, Rogers said, .. I can't
.speculate why they would try to
drag our Republican Party into
a non-partllan election Which
will be on the November ballot.••
Jliley said be did not intend to
make the eJectiou ~artilaa is-sue and d not if Wanted to l>etatise cr:gei;t. a . & a .. lfte.
time Republican.
p,....pagep.
The Newport Beach
supervisor 1ald bis interest in
dUng the GOP 11th com~ m t ls ru. ft)I of ptt ptinJ. utr1 dae cimpalgn .. fo° a poin
wbere isaue:I, not personalities
are discussed.••
WADDILL TRIAL. • •
Riley said he covered the issue
with Democrats by discussing
bis UPCOmin5t Republican social
hoar with an aide to Supervisor
Ralph Clark, Stanley Oftelle.
made it clear before the special
hearing started that the
evidence would not be admitted
if the defense opposed it.
Chatterton, obvioualy dellJmt-
l'd · at the introduction of the
Jt~owler testimony, admitted that
he was surprised by the defense
decision.
•·eut so be it," he commented.
''I'm certainly not going to look
a gift bone in the mouth.'"
Dr. Fowler'• repeated
testimony will Include
videotapes depicting two babies
who survived saline abort.ioos:
•'Margot Hobbs," the assumed
name of the infaat wbo wu
brought to the courtroom toct.,
and "TiUany," the real first
name. or the seeoad infant ex-
amined by Dr. Fowler.
The aeremin,g of Mar1ot•1 ex·
amillatioo b7 trained penaanet
depicted an apparently normal.
healthy 1-year-old infant who ap-
peared to react in an abeol\Qty
normal ,qy to • leriea of do-
nlopmental tests.
Dr. Fowler testlllec1. however.
Man Dies in Fall
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Pollee
say Henry A. Tobolt. 80, 'WU
seen crying minutes before be
plunged to h1a deat.b from the
sixth floor of tbe Bank of
America Building.
DAILY PILOT
•
that the child's development hai
been arrested in several areas of
mental comprebenaion and reac·
lion.
But, he said. thoae alight de-
f ects are not caused by the at•
tempt to abort. the child by
saline intrusion but by the fact
that ahe iJS a prematurely born
infant who was 31 weeks from
conception when delivered.
Dr. Fowler Hid man1 pre-
maturely born babies display
similar defects and almost
always overcome tbem as tbeJ
mature.
Dr. Fowler said be la not qutte
as positive about Tiffany in
terms ol the effect aallne may
have bad on b& mental proc·
esse1. Tilfanf wu 22 weeu
from cooceptioG when dellftftd.
He testified, however, that be
again felt that prematurity and
not sallne wu responsible for
the more marted defects ex·
biblted durinl tbe eumlnatioa
of'1'ilfab7.
• ••Again, these m&J well be
overcome at• lat.er a.ae,'" Dr.
Fowler Hid. "I don •t tblnk
aallne wu rapo.nslble but I
have to admit that I can't enttre.
Jy rule 11 out.••
''Stan seemed te think it was a
pretty good idea. And I think
he's a Democrat," Riley said to
hldicate be bad touched base
with both Jnajor political
parties.
However, Rlley Indicated ht!I
does not plan to have a
Democratic gathering at his
home to match the upcoming
Republlca.n social hour.
Meeting Set
For Crusade
A special meeting of the
Oranee County United Crusade
'Will be held Thunday morning 1n G"arden Grove.
A spokesman saJcl that the
rhlritable organlution will ex·
plore poafble legal action to get
1t.s "fair Iba.re" of doqa'i-.s,
r Be Hld that tbe West"Orante Cowib' group bu mlued ~ OQ nbtCantial amounts of ~
becauH of paYl'Oll cJeductlans
outaJde the commQ.(t;r boun-
dariea. • •
Fre•PageAI
POLl'DCAL FINANCING ••
NEW YORI( CAP) -David
Berkowltll tho pudu former postal cleu: charted 111 the Son
ol Sam klller, hu doc1Ud to
plead auJlty to th• murders
without 1taadln1 trial, two
newapaptta Hld today. •
NeWldaJ, a Lona 11lalld-bued
new1papet, aac1 the N•• ~ork
Poat said Bfrkowlb tol4 rol·
allv•as bis attorney• and paycbia LI that be wW>ta lo
plead ~f to tho murdora ll h~
ls dee ared competent to atand
trial.
Ube l)luded culltY, kkowllz
would 6ave to Nrvo at Jeut 25
years bdor. beiDI elilible for
parole. u be pleaded aumy lt>
more t.bu one murder, be could
be 1enteneed to comec:ullve 25-
)'Hr lerma.
Berkowitz. ~. arratod Au1.
10 outllde bls 1uburban Yonkers
apartment, wu declared com-
petent to stand trial once. A
second competency hearine t.
scheduled before state Supreme
Court Juctae Josepb Cono 011
Tuesday in Brooklyn.
Hia attorneys and relatlves
want Berkowltl to stud trial,
believtn1 a ju~ight accept a
defenae Centien -that he wu
mentaUy incompetent over the
year's time when he is accused
of killing six )'oune persona and
woundinc seven otber1.
Howev~. lf Berkowita ls judged
competent to atand trial, he
would also be competent to enter
a guilty plea lf he wlahed, legal
sources aald.
Newsday quoted an unnamed
relative aa aaylng Berkowitz
"doesn't want to put everyone
through the circus of a trial. He
feela that lf all the people be
wounded and the relatives of
those be killed are caned to
teaU!y, people wtU bate him all
over again. And he does not
want people to bate him, only lo
understand that he bad to do
what he did."
In psychiatric transcripts re-
leased last year, Berkowitz
claimed demons drove him to
claim his victims with a .44-
.caliber pistol. He said be re·
ceived messages from another
Yonkers resident, Sam Carr,
transmiUed throu~ Carr's do(.
Valley Gives
Approy~ to , ,.
Arinex Pl&n
FounW.n Valley City Council
·members gave tentative ap-
proval Tuesday to tbe annexa-
tion of an 18-?lcre parcel of land
in the northeast sector of the
city.
The council will consider final
approval of the annexation plan
April 18.
The land is located between
Harbor Boulevard and the Santa
Ana River and east of Heil
Avenue.
The area, located near the
Santa Ana city limits, la zoned
for light industrial use.
No one JpOke against the an·
nesatlon or submitted any writ-
ten protest.a iD opposition to the
plan, city officials said.
•
Bible Ban Bid
ClWLA VISTA (~ -Bonning-lh4' Bible as
pornographic is under tonsider:ation by Chula Vista
public schools.
The Old Testament ''contains rape, incest,
murder1 vivi&ec:Uon and other heinous. even sexual,
crimea,' truateea were told by one citiun Tuesday
nlaht. •'There are portions of the Bible that l would be
einbarrassed to read to you," said J. Michael
Straczynski, a writer.
But another penon, Noelle Batlrick, said 1ho
h s •ead the Blble. 1'1 was not disturbed by It," adding "Where does It
elop? Are we to ban Shakespeare and other classics?"
The trustees voted unanimously to tum the issue
of curbizli the Bible over to a committee.
Princess:M:argaret
Given Ultimatum?
J,ONDON <AP) -Queen
EHzabelb 11 hu t old her
younrer slater, Princess
Margaret, to end her much·
publtcized relataonshlp with
brewery heir Roddy Llewellyn·
or withdraw from public life, tho
Sun n.wapaper reported today.
Bucklnpam Pa.lace decDned
comment on the tabloid's fronl-
p.age report or a royal ul·
Umatum to the bead-strona prin·
cesa.
.. I wouldn't dream of contact·
Ing the royal family about
private conversations," a palace
spokesman said.
The Sun, quoting "a close
friend of the royal family," srud
the queen was "deeply upset''
by criticism levelled at the royal
family because of the 47-year-
old Margaret's friendship with
Llewellyn, 17 years her Junior
and an aspiring nigbt club
E',.....PageAJ
illNSHAW. •
T he first four months of
Hinshaw's stay behind bars was
spent in the Men's Correctional
Institution at Chino.
In early December, the
former Republican
Congressman was transferred to
Or'41nge County Jail and spent
the f~~ lo\.\l" ~tbs q~ ~l• &e.rm on a work furlough pro1ram.
That program allowed him to
spend his days working in a
brother'• furniture plant lo Los
An1ele9 While cbetting baet ~·
to jail nights and weekends.
Hinshaw was not available tor
comment today.
Radioactivity
Uncertain
singer.
The unidentified royal confi-
dant was quoted as saying, "The
princess is being forced to
choose where her firat loyalty
lies. It's sad but inevitable.
••Everybody In the royal lami·
Jy bas to accept t.bllt they cannot
live aa others do • • • • Wbetber
It's fair or not, Margaret bas to
decide whether to behave ac·
cording Lo royal tradilioa.s ~-opt
out and please berseU."
The report came one day after
royal spokesmen 8l1DOWlCed the
princess had the nu and bad
canceled public engagements.
Margaret was still bed-ridden
today in Windsor Castle west of
London. A medical bulletin
Tuesday said, "her condition is
improving."
Lewellyn, a socialite who
-0nce described bimseU as "uo-
e m p Joy able," bas bet:n
Mariaret's frequent companion
since her legal separation from
Lord Snowdon -society photo-
gr a p her Anthony Armstrong-
Jones-lwoyearsago. They were
married in 1960 and have two
children who live with their
mother.
Drown Victim
Identity Due
From County ·
Orange County Coroner's Of.
flee 4feguties said today they
were hitly COGfideDt tbq ~
soon confl.Tlll the identity ol a drowning victim whose body
wu retrieved from the sea &m.
day off the Santa Ana River
mouth.
A spokesman said In·
vesUgators are relatively cer-
tain wbo the victim' is, but bis
name mus t be confirmed
0 TT AW A ( AP ) -The through comparison of dental
Defense Department said Tues· records due to the body'~ condi·
day it bas recovered a baaketlull tion.
of debris from a nuclear-Friends reported the 'Victim
powered Soviet satellite that fell mlsalng 12 days ago when be
in the Northwest Territories but va.nilbed alter last being seen
it is not sure all health hazards walk.lnc toward the surf at Hunt-
have been eli*inated. ln1ton State Beach, clad in
The goverbment bas spent cutoff blue jeans.
more than f8 million and two • The OoaUng body first spotted
months search.i.ng for fra1ments Saturday cturing a boat race, by
from the Cosmos satellite, said the crew of the Newport Beach
Defense .Minister Barney yacht Pretty Lady, was re·
Danson. covered &mday.
'
I
•• lyP1lot
Four Stand Out
In Council Race
Sbrteen candidates are seeking lour city council ~ata
n the April 11 Huntington Beach mwilcipal elections.
The Daily Pilot bas interviewed all candidates, has
ieard them at candidate forums and has watched maay
n action in their various comm\11\ity functi~.
Four candidates. in our view, offer the ~t-rounded
1ualific~tions for office. They ate!':
-Ruth ""Bailey
-John O'Connor
-Al Coen
-Dor\· MacAlllster
Mrs. Bailey is president of the Huntington Beach
Public Facilities Corp. and chairman of the city's Human
RE:sources Council.
lier record indicates she is independent, fair and
-nakes her deciSions based on facts, not emotion or
')()liti cs.
John O'Connor offers a wealth of practical ex-
lerience. and city hall insight. He has served for five
vcars as a deputy city attorney and was a special legal
·ounsel to the planning commission.
We would implore O'Connor, however. not to allow
us controversy with the incumbent city attorney to in-
crf ere with his council performance.
Al Coen. on the whoie, has performed well in his 12
\'ears in Office. Although we normally would feel that four
.crms are tdO many, we believe that Coen is an exception.
He offers st~bility and an unflappable, analytical mind to
the council.
We would hope that, if electCd. h&.Would devote aH of
his abilities to the job through the full four yeers.
Don MacAllister is president of the Huntington Be~h
J ligh School board of trustees.
He has shown himself to be clear-thinking, honestt
i·ap.ible of doing hard work and making sound decisions.
Several other candidates seem to be well qualified -
l'cd Bartlett, Frank Hoffman, Bob Mandie and Bill
T1izara.
On balance -and with-imPortant declsions at stake
-we believe that the interests of Huntington Beach
\\OUld be best served by electing Bailey, O'Connor, Coen
and M acAlltster.
Enough Controversy
For too long now, the city attorney's office in Hunt-
ington Beach has been embroiled in turmoil, strife and
l'OnlrO\'Cr5\"
These deficiencies ha\'e put a strain on good working
rdalions and i;norale within the department and caused
bad feelings outside it.
City leaders have looked on the department with em-
ha rrassmcnt and chagrin. The city council has J~t c_Q..n·
fidence m the incumbent, Don Ba.Jira _ •
We believe that it is a maj t;.d the uci.,
to provide legal advice and the
<.'Ouncil and department heads.
It should be delivered in a spirit of cooperation and
willingness. This has not always een th~cas.e "1dln t
leaders have been alienated by ' IClnd
A change is in order.
We believe that attorney Jerey lfame is fhe person
"ho can put things back on arT even keel and do it
quickly.
While he has had no experience workinJ for a city,
name is an experienced, well·rounded attornty.
I le has served his community conscienUbusly -and
, .. 1thoul turmoil -for 16 years. He h thorough
knowledge of Huntington Beach affairs and ne~dS.
Bame can restore order and sagging morale and
good relations in city hall. He will bring acceptable com-
r>orlment to a department that has been lactiJlg in man-
ners
For these reasons, we believe that Bame should be
(•l1'ctcd city attorney when voters go to the polls April lL
• Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Piiot.
OthP.r views expressed on this page are those of their authors and
artists Reader comment 1s Invited. Address The Daily Piiot, P.O.
8011 1560. Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (71'4) &42-4321 .
Boyd/Recognition
ByL.M.BOYD
In Worcester, England, a
man named A. f{ancock,
who'd been self-employed
most or his lire, bougbt a
watch when he retired and
had it inscribed: "Presented
tn myself by myself ln rec·
ognition or the 55 years
work I have done while work·
ing for myself. Thanking me,
l ~m: A Hancock, 1904·5.9."
• 'l'he image said to be most
ft1ghtening to youngsters is
that or a green snake with
fangs bared. For this reason,
scSme authorities want to
replace the traditional akull-
a O d ·cross bones OD toxic
medicine bottles wltb the
sf!Ske picture.
Dear
' \ Would you go to a movie
called "The Modern
Prometheus"? N6ither would
J. ll 's noteworthy, is it not,
that the full title of the book
that has generat2d dozens of
films was "Frankenstein, or
The Modem Promettleua'~?
Was none other than Gen.
Maxwell Taylor who once re·
!erred to a peacetime army
as •·a chimney in the sum-
mer."
Q. ••what's a
'btndlestlfr?"
A. That was hobo slang for
a man who carrlod bis
bedroll with him.
Q. ..Why ls Ule Adriatic
Sea called that?"
A. Was named alter •he
town of Adria. It used to be a
port. Po River floodin1
chanaed that. Adrta la now 14
xnlles inlab.d.
•
Wiid~, April 5, 19'71 s.ttlrilwa Krelbkh/Edl IPegtEdltor
Jack Anderson
1
Vet Joh Prioriti~s Targeted
' WASHINGTON -At
considerable risk to his political
Jieck. PresldeDl Carter hopes io
limtt the pn!fe:renu.l treatment
veterans reedve ill applying for
1overnment
joba. Alclea
have per· sua~ed the
presldmt that
veteran•
priority baa
been squeez-
ing out
women and
minoritlea
from federal
employment..
The proposed nduction 1n
veterans benefits. of course, bas
brought an almighty howl from
the powerful veterans lobby. But a confidential White House
memo, which recently reached
the president'• desk, convinced
To the Editor:
Your editorial "Fix Military
Retirement" <Daily Pilot 26
March) slt>wed a lack of objec-
tivity. The author apparently
looked only at the cost. ignoring
what ll wa1 buying. Assuming
that the plan (A JO.year pro.
gram with a minimum retire·
ment age of SS) was in opera-
tion, we would have a military
force with ui average age of
between 33 and 37 years.
Wouldn't it make you feel secure
to bave this' "mature-seasoned''
force defending you?
NOW, Let's look at the other
sicje a momettt. Take an 18-yeat·
old mid-"'~ boy who joins
the Army. &erves his 30 years
and retird. Ue'll be 48 years old
·and not eUOble for his retire-
ment pay for another 7 years I
The endorsed plan disapproves
his taking a eivillan job, so be
bas to go on relief unUl he is SS
years old. At age 56 he will have
to c<>nlinue on reU,f, ~cause,
unless he retkff u a colonel or
better. he cannot support bis
family on.his reUred pay.
Ap armed fo,rce Ja just like
llnythine dse' one gets these
days, >'O'l'll &et about wbat )'OU
pay for . .Jp;st.al.I the 30-yeatJJS-
year retirement plan and y<>U'U
buy an army of middle•aged
stalwarts wbc>don't know bow to
get on rellef and can1t fight their
way out of a wet paper bag.
NORMAN l . FRENCH
hhn that giving job preterences
to ex-servicemen. some o! Whom
l.eft the military decades ago, ls
blockln1 nearly everyone elae
f.tom the federal payroll.
By Jaw. the memo elCJ)llUned,
veterans are given a five-point
bonus on the Civil Service test
scores on the theory that • 'lbose
who served in times or war
deserve apecial assistance in
readjusting to civilian life." In
·reality. even those veterans who
served during peacetime are
granted a "lifetime benefit."
CONSEQUENTLY, the memo
declared, veterans "block the
top of most Cl vil Service
registers. This often creates
severe problems ... for
non-veteran but qualified
candidates, especially women."
In Dallas, for example, a
The story goes that this was to
reinforce the younger men and
to give them counsel and con·
fidence during a fight. The real
reason. however, was that those
older soldiers could DO longer be
counted upon to stand up to the
rigors or the front rank.
War is a young man's "game"
and when you keep your old men
in ranks you are not only c&og·
ging up the promotion process
for the young men on the way
up, you ar, also jeoparcJiting
your front ranks.
IL is far better lo send the old
soldier home on hall pay and
clear &ome roo,. at the top for a
youne "hard charger" than to
keep him around because it may
cost a little more money.
Jn combat there are only two
kinds of men -the quick and
the dead -and you need all of
the young quick ones you can get
to win wars.
R. E. WYMAN
11e....ta&aeGoai.
wom~ who acbred 100 on an air
traffic controller's test was
ranked 147tb beb.ldd veterans
wUJl prtference. U \'eterans got
no apeelal break, ah would have
ranked seventh.
A fero~fe la•yer in
Waablngtog tecenti, applied for
a civlllan }ob +Mth 'fle Defense
Departmeot. Althouth she bad
more experience than most or
the inale proape~ts, ber
application was promptly
returned. She waa told she
couldn't be considered wit.bout
veterans preference.
"In some areas, such as San
Diego," the Wblte House memo
said, "retired mllitary personnel
are often the only individuals
·e ligible for federal
employment." There are about
140,000 such "double dippers" -
retired servicemen who are
collecting a military pension in
Education, has recognized the
need to look at the. persons
closest to the problem, tbe
teachers, and he states that the
chance that the holder oC a
teacher's credential will have
the license revoked or sus-
pended in a given year is 1 In
18,000 for the whole teacher
population, and only 1 In 4,500
for the "active teacher popula·
lion." while for doctors and
lawyers it ls about 1 in 6001 It is
5 to 10 limes less commOQ for
teachers than any other pro.
fesslon checked to experience
this type of discipline."
The Jarvis lniUaUve Is not
magic, bul it is constitutional
protection that removes proper·
ty tax relief from a whim of the
Legislature, and it wiil force a
review or structures. Simply
funding the present system will
not do it. And, Martha, the
HBUHSD has a $3 lo SS million
surplus! And many professional
teachers themselves have a dis-
daln for the system.
MRS. M.L. ALVES
Blame HU,,la~ed
To the Editor:
In the March 22 Mailbox Ruth
Frankel blatantly stated that let·
ters against the use of the de-
com presslon chambers at the
Orange County Animal FacUlty
are false, misleading and unfair
to that facility.
Miss Frankel 1tates that such
false and misleading statements
prevent finders or Josl pets from
bringing them to the pound and
many heartbroken owners and
pets wiU never find eacb other
a.s a result.
addltion to tbeir aovernment
salaries -lll the federal
bureaucracy. Yet ~y 1et flrst di~ on govttql:DG)t jObl. even if
they left lb• mw~r1 before
WorldWarlL
TBE CURRENT law also
harapers effort.I to streamline
the eoyernment, Carter wu
advi.ed.. When a military base is
closed, for example, •'the
veteran's preference is abmlute
and allows him to 'bump'
non·veterans, includin1 those
with greater seniority," the
memo explained. Many officials
avoid ordering needed cutbacks.
therefore, "because of the
adverse impact on equal
opportunity and affirmative'
action gains.••
The president bas
recommended that veterans.
who now comprise half the
federal work force, be &iven
preference for only 10 yeau'S
after discharge. This would help
Vietnam veterans and would
accomplish the original purpose
o( the law by limiting L'ISi.stance
to the period of adjustment. An
exception would be made for
disabled veterans, who would
retain a lifeUme job advantage.
Another confidential briefing
paper suggested ways for the
president lo sell the prO)>OSal
and thwart the carping, wrucb
has already begun on Capitol
Hill. "From some quarte~ we
are beginning to receive the
expected criticism on our
proposed changes," the
document stated. "Somehow we
do not seem to be getting acr06S
the fact tbal •.• our proposals
help those veterans groups that
need it the most, the disabled
veteran and the Vietnam
veteran."
FOOTNITTE: A spokesman ror
the Veterans of Forei~n Wars
told my associate Howie Kwu
that "the While House is using
velerans preference as a
scapegm . They haven't been
getting enough women and
minorities in government, so
they've got to blame it on
something." lie added that he
expects Congress to klll the
proposal.
.. ·-
'I >
conctrned citizens shun what
some call a shelter?
Could we, as Miss Frankel
suggests, all work together!
Could we but close our eyes and
pretend that these atrocities do
not exist! But 26,000 plus or us
here in Orange County cannot
and will not go along with what
we believe to be heinous policies
perpetrated by man against'
man's best friends.
To date from among the fi\•e
Orange County Supervisors who
formulate the policies carried
out at the Orange County
Animal Facility, Supervisor
· Philip Anthony is the only one
who has come forward and ac-
tively extended himself al great
length pertinent to the decom-
pression chamber issue by view·
ing at the OCAF and at a Los
Angeles animal control facility
both the decompression
chamber and injection methods
Jn action. His written findings
and numbered conclusions favor
the inject.ion method as the more
humane and at least com-
parably-economic alternative.
M . C. JONFS
Belau& Pollq
To the Editor:
The Huntlngton Harbour
Republican Women's Club bas
been criticized In the Daily Pilot
for inviting orUy Republican can·
didates for city office to speak at
a public forum. The public was
informed that only Republicans
would appear.
Jn defense ot UUs policy. I
would like to ••Y that
Republicanism is a philosophy
or government. Every.one who
holds public office baa some
baste phlloeophtut back.around
upon which to base ht decisions.
..
A rule could have bMn bro ~.
all 19 candidates Uslened to. and
from ~~t reroaru deteno.Jned th ir buk atiltPde toward gov-
ernment. A 1hnpter wa1 •u t.o •
uk the Re&latrar of Votert for • \heir political a1nuauon.
It l• my ~lief that a can.
d date' ~.pollUc:al littllletlon un-
d rtl h1s attlb• toward aotv-iaf coven:unenl .~ • tDd 1D luencu hl9 thllk!Dt • proc· esn • It Ii Hl"tltan «
non-partJuft. elec:tion.
HARRtgrB, LINN
Wectn.day, April 5, 19711 DAIL V P1LOT A;.'j'
Widow Vanishes at Sea~
SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -
Several hours betore the Chlllt
oceanllner Queen Elizabeth 2
was to dock 1n Hawaii, an elder·
lY woman whom cur ious
passengers had nick.named "The
quchess" vanishe.d without a
trace.
Catla lrlJ Bodmer, a 70-year·
old wldow from Switzerland, is
believed lo have fallen or
jumped overboard the night of
March 218 8" the &tup approached
Honolulu durma a 90-day world
cruise.
"There is no indication or foul
play," Othmar Huller. lhe Swiss
vice consul in San Francisco,
said Tuesday. "I wouldn't make
a mystery out of tl. ·
BUT A DISAPPEARANCE at
sea is always mysterious
··It's the kind of thing that
haunts everyone ," said
Frederick Flemming, a
passenger from Houston. "It
s~ems so terrible aad lone1' to
:;lep orr lhal railln&: m the Jl\id
dlt• or tht• night .. ••
Mrs. Bodmer had gained jier
nickname because sbe '4f1S>re
rtoor lenRth gowns ane! lr(.)de
almost regal entrances 1n the
dining rooms and ballroom~ or
the luxunouss.h1p " SACRAllltNTO <AP> -A
.. ahleld law" to protect re-
porters who refute to name con·
fldentlal sources would be writ·
ten lnto the state Col')ltituUon,
under a measure now on the
state Senate noor. •
The proposed amendment,
ACA 4 by Aasemblyman Jerry
Lewis, R-HJ&hland, won a 6·2
vote Tuesday ot the Senate
J udiciary Coaunlllee. It has
already passed the Assembly.
Amputee Found Starving
AFTER SHE vanished, a~de
tailed search was made of -,the
giant liner, but no trace or her
was found
l n Gon\!va, a spokesman for
the Swiss Foreign Ministry ~id.
"It mu.st be assumed that .she
frll overboard. We don't have
any barkground on her, but she
certainly ts not well known."
Lewis said lhe measure would
protect "a free flow of infonna·
lion between the public and lls
government . . . a government
that can at limes become quite
arrogant."
I F APPROVED by the Senate,
it will go on the November
ballot.
The measure was prompted
by the cases or Wilham Farr
and the Fresno Four, ~·ho were
Jailed by judges for refusing to
identify sources.
California has a shield law
tha t says reporters need not
name sources. But the judges
who ordered the jailings ruled
that the law 1s outweighed by the
constitutional right lo a fair trial ~ and tbelr power over court pro·
ceedin~.
SAID LEWIS: "The court's
root m the door could very well
lead to the destroying of the
shield law in California "
He said jud~es could not over-
rule the shield law 1! it were in
the Constitution
A representative of the state
Judicial Council, which
supervises the court system,
said ACA 4 would make 1t
harder for judges to keep grand
jury transcripts and other con·
fidential matters secret.
ADD E D S T E PH EN
Birdlebough, · · (1'' we want lo pro·
tect that conf1dent1a1tty. then the
rourt need~ the power to enforce
its orders."
lie said the mc>asure is "an
open invitation·· to grand jury
members "lo divulge proceed·
ings and know there will be no
penalty."
The committee chairman,
Sen. Alfred Song, D·Monterey
Park, endorsed the measure
despite h is criticism of "ir· ;responsible" reporters, a ref·
erence to stories he contends
have unfrurly portrayed his in·
volvement In an FB{ iovestiga.
tton of the Legislature
€culdld•te Wed
Mike Curb, a recording in·
dustry executive and
Republican candidate for
lieutenant governor, mar·
ried Linda Dunphy,
daughter of television
newscaster Jerry Dunphy,
in private rites Tuesday in
the Beverly Hills
Presbyterian Church.
Classic Film
Show Decision ..
"Reversed A.gain
RIVERSIDE (AP) -The City
Council has decided that D. W.
Griffith's "Birth of a Nation"
rtlm classic will not be shown at
the city museum after all.
The council decided 5·2 Tues-
day that the film -which many
members of the black communi
ty found objed1onable -should
be screened publicly at St.
Catherine's Catholic Church
With private funds instead Of
taxpayer monies.
T H E COU NCIL adopted a
compromise a few weeks ago
that would have allowed the r11m
to be presented at the m useum
along with comments from a
black person or sociologist. The
compromise followed the coun
cil's cancellation of a March 9
showing.
Some people objected to the
council's Tuesday decision as
censorship.
''WHERE IS it going to stop?"
asked Ernest Pintor, a Mex.lean
American councilman. "Here 1s
the black community that Is say·
ing, 'Don't show thts mm.' Let's
say next week it's the brown
commuruty ... saying 'Don't
show the "Alamo" • because it
SAN DIEGO <AP> -An elder-1 y double amputee is
hospitalized aft.er she was found
.sprawled unconscious and starv·
Ing on the floor of the home she
shared with her husband, police
said. Her husband apparently
died five or six days earlier.
· Mabel and Orville B. Paulson,
both m their 80s, were known
around their neighborhood as
stubborn, independent people.
For their love of independence,
nurtured during their 5S-year
marriage, they paid a dear
price.
Paulson's wife was in very
cr itical condition at Mission Bay
Memorial Hospital today, suffer-
ing from the effects of slarva·
lion, said hospital spokeswoman
Lois Haselton . The woman,
whose legs were amputated
because of diabetes. lay helpless
on the floor for sever al days
after her hus~nd apparently
died of natural causes, the cor-
oner's office said.
Mari~ ~tewced
VISTA CAPl -A 25-year--0ld
Camp Pendleton Marine has
been sentenced to life m prison.
for the fatal shooting last Sep-
tem ber of the teen-aged wife of
another Marine.
Superior Court Judge F.V.
Leopardo s~ntenced J ackie
Robinson on Tuesday following
his jury conviction last month
for the murder, kidnap, rape
and robbery of Sophia Ann
Martinez, 19.
Injured Ma11 'Stall~
LOS ANGELES (AP> -A
Nazi-uniformed man, inJured in
a scuffle with members of the
Jewish Defense League dunng
Academy Awar ds ceremonies
Monday night, underwent sur-
gery for a possible skull frac-
ture.
Nursing supervisor Beverly
Pratt at the County-USC
Medical Center said early today
Richard Rogers, 40, is in stabta
and fair cond.Jt1on. -
Lite Ten. Gt.,en
depicts the Mexican Americans LOS ANGELES (AP> -A Ku
in a very bad light." Klux Klan member convlcld:l of
I. E. ~'IACKIE" HEATHER i::halrmo~. Newport Plonnlng CommlMk>Q x Col. Fred Tschopp has
assumed command of
the 12th St aff Group,
Marine Corps Reserve ,
in Los Angeles .
Tschopp lives in Foun-
tain Valley with his wlCe,
Dale. and two sons. Jaokl• Heather for City Council, t&OO Dorothy Lone, Newpotf leoch, CA 92660
PUBUC NOTICE PtJ BUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
,
STA.TE mallce." ( l Dehnel was "full or hatred and
_ Behr Bill Challeng~d Th c disappear a nee firs l
became public knowledge when
some passengers mentioned it to
new~mcn during a nine·tu>ur
la) over here last weekend
LOS ANGELES <AP> The
planninc the murder of the
Jewish Defense League's West
Coast director bas been sen·
tenced to llfe in prison despite a report recommending proba·
ti on.
Superior Court Judge Jack B
Tso said Tuesday after senlenc·
ing Robert Dehne! of North
Hollywood that the 33-year-0ld
Hehr property tax bill should be
declared unconsl1tut1onal because 1t 1s tied to a ballot
proposition that has yet to be
passed, a retired attorney says.
I
Ardy V. Barton. SS. or Santa
Barbara has filed a pet1llon with
lhc state Supreme Court urging
that the bill be declared un·
l'Onslitutional.
ACCORDI NG TO Cunfrd
Lines. owner of the ship. ''She
"as last Sl'en at 10 p m .: on
March 26 At 10 am. Maret} 'Zl.
the bedroom steward reported
that her bed ~as untouched_ An extensive search of the ship
provednegat1ve "
This· beautiful book,
~ • t
~ • TUTANKHAMUN The last Journe~:-
•• Iii •
FREE from Mutual Savings.
Actual size. S'H11\
To celebrate the visit of Tutankhamun's treasures to Southern California we
are pleased to offer Tutankhamun-The Last Journey. free for the asking.
All you have to do 1s stop by in person. ask for 1t, and 1t s yours
It Is a stunning book; a marvelous portfolio of color photographs of the artifacts
o f ancient Egypt. Tt'le accompanying text tells the tragic story of the boy king.
Tutankhamun, who lived and reigned over thirty-three.centuries ago;
the political and religious turmoil that preceeded him and with which he had to
deal, his death, the elaborate preparations for his burial, the religious and
mystical significance of his tomb and the treasure that was entombed with him.
It was the only tomb of all the Kings of Egypt that was not completely looted.
The search for it and the discovery are also described by the author.
Wtlliam MacQuitty, an internationally honored photographer, world traveler.
and fllm)producer (A Night to Remember). This is one of the most up-to-date
books about Tutankhamun. and one of the most popular. Published to sell at
$4.95, it Quickly went to a second printing. We were able to obtain a limited
number of copies, so first come. first served, unttl our supply is exhausted
One book to a family, please. Sorry. we cannot honor mail requests.
Also at Mutual Savings, The Treasures of Tutankhamun.
Thia continuous presentation of full-color slides from the Los Angeles County
Museum Is now appeanng In our lobby. It gives you a close. intimate took at
the golden glories of the Tutankhamun exhibit. Last day for this presentation
is April 15th.
:
~ •
I
7
..
.
VOL 71, NO. 95, ~ SECTIONS, ~ PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, APRILS, 1978 TEN CEN1$
Vanessa Skewered by British Pres
LONDON (AP) -London
newspapers chided British ac-
tress Vanessa Redgrave today
for her.Oscar acceptance speech
in which she called Jewb dem-
onatr ators at the Hollywood
ceremOll)' "Zionist hoodlums.··
•'If she couldn't accept her
Oscar in the spirit of show busi-
ne1111 raumatau, which 1r._ all lt
is, then she should have stayed
away, llS Marlon Brando and
George C. Scott have done ln the
past," the Daily Mirror said in
an editorial. <Related story, 87)
Under the headline "Silly Fil-
J y." the pro-Labor Party
newsi;>aper said, "As a poUU-
cian, Vanessa Rederave ls a fine
actress who fully deserves her
Oscar. As an actress she is a
lousy politician ••• :·
Miss Redgra!! won the
Academy Award !?r best sup-
porting actress in the film
.. Julia," in which stle play_ed an
anli·Nazl widerground fighter.
Director Sought
Irvine Se ices Panel Viewed
By PIDLIP ROSMARIN Manager William Woollett Jr.
Of t11e o.11y " ... staff Recruitment of the new direc-
T he Irvine communit ""tor should emphasize
services department, under fire managerial ability, the council
from several resident groups, directed, a quality it consid·
will be bolstered by a City CoWl· ered weak in Washington.
cil decision Tuesday to hire a As proposed by Counctlman
new director. David Sills, the new committee
The council also voled to draft would concentrate on sports and
a resolution which, if approved recreation matters.
at a later meetine, would create His suggestion came after the
a committee to field citizen com-couocil and c1ty staff erappled
ments and complaints. for two months with a loose
The former director of the de· litany of complaints about
partment, Jesse Washington. re· purported unres ponsiveness to
signed last year under pressure citizens of staff members or the
from the council and City department, and about the un
,,,..., .......
QUEEN COMING BETWEEN MARGARET AND LOVER?
Brttlah Bumng Over Royal Romantic Rift
Queen's Ord.er
Princess Gets Ultimatwn
LONDON <AP> -Queen
Elizabeth II has told her
younger sister, Princess
,Mar,aret, lo end her much·
publicized r~lallohshlJL wltll
brewery heir Roday Llewellyn
·or withdraw from public life, the
Surt newspai.Ser reported today. "'
Buckingham Palace declined
comment on the tabloid's front·
page report of a royal ul-
timatum to the bead-strong prin-
cess.
"I wouldn't dream o( contact·
ing the royal family about
private conversations," a palace
spokesman said.
The Sun, quotine "a close
friend ol the royal family," said
the queen was "deeply upset ..
, by criticism levelled at the royal
family because or the 47·year-
old Margaret's friendship with
Llewellyn, 17 years her junior
and an aspiring night club
singer.
The unidentified royal confl·
dant W(ls quoted as saying, "The
princ~.s.h beine_fQrced to
choose where her first loyalty
lies. It's sad but iQeVitable.
''Everybody in the royal fami-
ly has to accept that they cannot·
live as others do .... Whether
it's fair or not, Marearet has to
decide whether to behave ac·
cording lo royal tradiUons or opt
out and please herself."
The report came one day alter
royal spokesmen announced the
princess had the nu and had
canceled public engagements.
Margaret was still bed·ridden
today in Windsor Castle west or
London. A medical bulletin
Tuesday said, "her condition Is
improving."
CSee QUEEN, Page AZ>
Equestrian Center
Sought in Irvine
An J.rvtne eciuestrlan eommt~
tee was formed Tuesday by the
City Council. It will atudy sites
for a proposed equestrian center
and design a city equestrian
trail 1ystem.
Tbe commlttee will bne eight
members: five recidenta ~th
availability o! city recreation
facilities.
Sills said a sport:S and recrea-
tion committee would provide a
forum for "an orderly transmit·
tat of concerns," rather than the
grapevine of rumor and allega-
tion 'fhich the council has been
trying to untangle.
The five·member committee
would report to the community
services commission. recom·
mend uses and scheduling for existing recreation facilities and
suggest athletic programs to be
sponsored by the city.
CSee PANEL, Page A2 l
Hinshaw
Out After
8Months
Former Congressman Andrew
J . Hinshaw walked out of
Orange County Jail a free man
today after servin& eight months
behind bars.
Hinshaw was released from
jail shortly after 6 a.m. and only bas lo complete three years pro-
baUott to settle accounts in full.
The U-year-old former
congressman was convicted in
two separate 1976 trials of
bribery-related and misuse of of.
rice charges. .
Both convictions s•.emmed
from his activities as Orange
County assessor in the early
19705 as welt as b~ soccessful
1972 campaign for Congress.
It wasn't until early 1975 that a
county grand jury indicted tben-
Congressman Hinshaw.
And it wasn't until the close of
two trials in 1976 that he was
sentenced to state prison from
one to 14 years.
The first four months of
Hlnshaw's stay behind bars was
spent in the Men's Correctional
Institution at Chino.
In early December, the
former Republican congressman was transferred lo
Orange County Jail and spent
the final four months or bis term
on a work Curlough program.
That program allowed him to
spend his days work.in1 in a
brother's fumlture plant in Los
An1eles while checking back in·
to jail nights and weekends.
"It feels cteat to be out, to be
walking out.and not having to go
back." Hlnabaw said as he
ended his Jail experience.
"It's aoing to be great to be
able lo do the things that tree
people can do," be added.
The one time Oranae County
assessqr sai~ be plans to work
wlth his brother fo e lamp
manufacturin1 bu.sine•• in Los
Angel,a. •
"Life goes on and I plan to do
a lot more living," Hinshaw
said.
The film starred Jane Fonda as
playwright Lillian Hellman.
In her acceptance speech,
Miss Redgrave denounced
Jewish demonstrators at the
Hollywood Music Center who
were protesting her financing
and narratin& or a documentary
called "The Palestinian."
The actress, made a Com-
mander of he Order of the
British Empire by Queen
Elizabeth JI in 1967 for her
services to the theater, is a
leader oC Britain's tiny left-wing
Workers Revolutionary Party.
The con.aervative Daily Ex-
press said in an editorial that
American Jewa, protestinc Miss
Pattern of Peppers
Redgrave's support for the
Palestinian cause. would be
"very ill-advised to take tbo
divine Vanessa seriously." L
•'Some actresses are
beautiful, some can act, somo
like Miss Redgrave have both
attributes. but they are not cut
out !or: politics," the E.xpl'elS
said.
Resembling a Ku Klux Klan meeting, or
perhaps a settlement of tiny teepees. belJ
peppers poke up their headS under protec-
l1vc coverings in a San Juan Capistrano
field . Spotted in a field at Kinoshita
Farms on Alipaz Street, the peppers ap-
pear to be doing well shielded frotn "1e ~f
f e c t s of occas ionally nas ty spring
weather
'Partisanship' Denied
.,
Riley Defends GOP~ Functwn.
Orange County Supervisor
Thom as Riley denied today that
he bas introduced partisan
politics into his campaign for re-
election
Riley drew barbs from elec·
lion opponent Tom Rogers when
he announced Tues(lay that he'll
be hosting ··a pleasant special
social gathering or our dedicated
Orange County RepublJcan civic
leaders."
Purpose of the April 13 set·
together at Riley's Newport
Beach home is Lo witness Riley's
signing of the so-called
Republican 11th commandment,
Senior Committee
Bla,sted in Irvine
Establishment of the Irvine
Senior Cituens Committee as an
official committee of the City
Council drew thundering
criticism Tuesday by the cur-
rent chairman of the informal
committee, Isadore Schnelder.
Fearing he and four other
committee members, who did
unofficial volunteer work for
three years, would be replaced
and put out to pasture.
Schnelder, a retired lawyer in
his mld-708, said:
"To lay us aside at this time is
giving us a kick in the teeth I
"To kick us in the teeth at this
Urne, ls a little below the belt!!"
After considering his plea. the
council voted 5·0 to retain
Schneider a nd his commit·
teemen, at least until the
Rancho San Joaquin Senior
Citizens Building, pet project of
the committee, is completed.
"We want to see it go up,"
Schneider had argued.
The building is scheduled to
open in four months.
Council committees normally
are composed of members
selected by each of the coun-
cilmen. Schneider worked in-
dependently to round up bis
committee oC volunteers, all or
whom live in the tJniversily
Park housing tract.
Some or the councilmen took
umbrage at Schneider's dn-
sistence the current committee
be retained, and at hi• assump-
<See SENIORS, Pace At)
Sincere Thanks
W Oiamber 'Awar.d' Auaikd
a pledge not to speak badly of
other Republican candidates.
In response to the announce-
ment, Rogers said, "I can'L
speculate why they would try to
drag our Republican Party into
a non-partisan election wblcil
will be on the November ballot."
Riley said he did not inten4 to
make lhe election a partisan is-
sue and could not if he wanted to
because Rogers also is a life-
time Republican.
The Newport Beach
supervisor said his interest in
citing the GOP 11th command-
ment is his way of attempting to
lift the campaign ••to a point
where issues. not personalities are discussed.··
Riley said he covered the issue
with Democrats by discussing
his upcomin~ Republican social
hour with an aide to Supervisor
Ralph Clark, Stanley onelie.
"Stan seemed to think it was a
pretty good idea. And I think
he's a Democrat," Riley said to
indicate he had touched bue
with both major polltiol
parties.
However, Riley indicated he
does not plan to 4bave a
Democratic gathering at .his
home to match the \U)comi.oi
Republican social hour.
Weather
Increasing cloudiness
toniebt becoming mostly
cloudy with 30 perc.ist. ·
cb1nce of sbowefs
Tbursd-.y. l.o'IVS tOniebt 50 . ,
to SS. Jlighj Thw:eday in
Jow to mid-GOI. ·
INSIDE TOD~ Y
A TR fPa•Te too TftOftJ,'
.1e11ator-gcncral1. Hnalor-1
cohiuLt and congre11mcm-
t:Oloncla fn tadcJJI'• Congrcu'
Sto111 p._ AJO.
Omiacle Course
Debbie Poettgen 20, of Mission Viejo, was one of a
number of able-bOme~ ~pie who got a taste of the
world o! the h.an,dicapped during Handicapped Aware-. ness Day Tuesday at Sadd.leback College. She ta~kled a
wheelchair course,· which was offered along with dis-
plays, talks, demonstrations and a wheelchair mini-tour
of the campus.
F,.._P.,,eAJ
PANEL PLANNED. • •
Sills said sports and recrea-
tion enthusiasts comprise the
Ja,gest single group of people in
the city. City youth participating
in municipal sports activities
alone amount to 6,000, he was
told by acting community
services d"partmenl Direclo(
Harry Ehrlich.
Si~ wmted oqt thfll ttte city
al,:eady has committees for far
:smaller eroups, includin& "does
agd cat.a and horses." <Coun·
cilmen •ter were ~ debate a
SignificMlM'ree CommUtee. >
Although the COllneil voted 5 lo
O to bring the committee concept
to a future council debate, not
alJ members expressed oon-
f1dence in it.
And, in the audience Tuesday,
an five members of the com-
munity services commission
shook their beads al the idea. Councilman Larry Agran itaid
of the proposed committee'sfunc-
tion, "Ian't this supposed to be
what the cbmmunity services
commission is all about?" Sharon Sircello, a c:om-
milsioner, said there already la a·
ptoblem 9ettin1 information to l~e residents that the com-'.
miasloo exiat..s to hear about.
problems. ·· u people don't Jmow lbere is
a community service• com· ft\~Sion," she uked1 "how are
tb,ey toinl to know there ·a a
committee?" ~n C)threr action taken during
the council aaseument of the
community aervice• depart·
m ent, tbe council voted
uoanhnousb t.o: -~ a needs &s$esament
survey lo determine what ac·
tivltieaiaterest residents.
-aenew atatt oraanbaUon of
the department. Review will be
by lbe city m,na1er.
While conceding tbete are
probJe1115 in the deeartment,
countil members vealed their
criticisms in pustng a series ol
••1oals" ~by Mayor Bill
Vardoulls.
.. We sbou.ld do everything we
can not to turn people orf,"
DAILY PILOT
Vardoulis said. "Turning people
off" was a commonly heard
complaint.
Vardoulis suggested depart-
ment members be less blunt in
responding to questions about
why certain facilities might not
be available for public use, at
\he tlnie the public wants t.o use
th'e·m .
natber than flat statements
that "it's closed," Vardoulis
said , employees should offer
alternatives.
··we sllouf. 9'1+ up tq tht public. ·t.et •t\H;m know tha
we're human, too, and want to
serve them," he said.
Sills, however, took a darker
view. He recounted his own ex-
perience to get the Irvine High
School track-used jointly by the
school district and the city-
open to public use when lt was
not being used by the track
team.
He said it took him 90 days to
persuade officialdom lo take the
loeks off the fence.
Said Sills, "I shudder at what
a citizen who is not a member of
this council must go through just
to get us&of a f8cility."
Councilwoman Mary Ann
Gaido was conciliatory.
"People being people are not
going to be efficient,·• she aald.
"We have to work with people as
they are. We're not working with
computer cards."
Inmate Falls
Two Stories ·
An occupant of the jail ward at
UC Irvine Medical Center fell
two stories Tuesday ni&bt while
apparently attemptinJ t.o escape
from the facility.
Orange County "Sheriff's of·
fic~rs identified the man as
Ernest Campolla, 32, of Tustin.
They said he suffered minor in-
juries in the fall and was re-
turned to the jail ward for
furtl\er treatment.
Deputies· said the)"' found a
rope made out of bedsheets close
to a window which they believe
was broken by CampoUa when
be fled from the jail ward.
..... P ... AJ .
SENIORS.~.
tion th. councll Intend.Id to re-
lieve tbe t&ndiDf committee.
"Wby doa't you WK we can
:-et llv• ~· ~ultabl.1t0
.. 11ke4 Cowaellmu Arthur AA·
thony.
Schnelder said the council
· seleclton would politicize the
committee.
• Councilman David Stlls voted
• '"reluctantly" tQ retaiq the com-
mltt~e, at least...temporarily, lo
iDJure "orderly transition." .
But. be said, though the cur-rent committee has done "a
tremendous job," the city has
grown and there are pockets of-
senior citizens "which have no
representation at all. ..
"Here we have a committee,"
Sills said, "that bas all of its
members from one small com-munity."
Mayor BUI Vardoulis acted the
role of compromiser. and de-veloped the accepted plan re-
taining Scbneider and company.
and providing additional mem-
bership if councilmen want t.o
appoint their own members.
None, bowever, aeemed lo want
t.o do that.
The committee will be restruc-
tured when the Senion building la opened.
resldenUal projects belnc built
in the Northwood area ex-
pressed concern about tbe com-
mercial center. and businesa
uses.
"The concept of free en-
terprise," be wrote, "does not
permit one to open an all-night
restaurant Jn a quiet residential
area.
"For an organl~tion such as
yours, which bolds the protec-
tion of property values in hiib
esteem, I would think we would
have been more deservine or · your award if we bad permitted'
such a use, to the econGmic
detriment of lbe surrounding
homeowners."
Sllls, who sent his letter last
Thursday. said be haan 't beard
from Baron.
Irvine SELF
School Plans
Antique Sale·
SELF High School, the alternative school in Irvine,
plans a "SELF Country Affair,"
first of a proposed annual sale of
antique and handcrafted gift
itemt to help raise funds to
operate the education program.
The school will profit from
rental of space to exhibitors and
from food concessions.
The May 6 fair will be held 9
a.m. to 6 p.m . at the school
grounds. 16841 Milliken Ave.
Len Casey, assistant prin-
cipal, said local dealers lo an-
tiques or handicrafts may apply.
as exhibitors.
More than 65 exhibitors are ex·
pected lo participate. .
"We're really trying t.o make
a quality affair of lt, ·• Casey
said.
QUEEN •••
Lewellyn, a socialite who·
once described himult as ''un·
employable," baa been
Margaret's frequent companion
aince her leaal separation from
Lord Snowdon -society photo-:
erapber Anthony Armatrong-
J on ea -two years aeo. They were
married in 1960 and have two
children who live with their mother. •
Margaret defied royal conven·
tiona by openly goin1 on nca-
tlon with Llewellfn •everal times In the C~tibbean.· The•
trips angered le(l.wirlg La~rife
legislators and ailti·tnonarehists
and set off fierc•criliciam ol the
princess in parllah)ent.
One leghlator, Dennis
Canavan, calletl Margar'lt "a
parasite" livinl iJtt the atate.
She geta a tax-free allowance
of $95,000 a year for performing
public ~remonies. Overall. the
royal family receina u al·
Jowance ot $4.Sl million.
Bible Ban Bid
•
· Schoo"la Hear 'Pam' C~e
• .
'frustee to
By WILLIAM HODGE
Ot•IMllf ..... SUlt
· Saddlebacit Collece Trustee
Donna Berry said Tuesday she
may resl&n rather than file an
economic d.lacloeure atatemenl
required under a rlkently adopt.
ed dlatrlct confllct of lhterest
code.
"I am terribly upset about lt,'1
Mrs. Beny aald. "I didn't re-
alize until yeaterd'-Y (Monday)
that anyone could come in off the street and look at those
records."
The Mission Viejo trustee said
her attorney would go over the
code lo make sure that ber
privacy riaht.a were protected.
She vowed to resign ii she ls
required lo file a statement and
her husband is opposed lo 1t.
"I don't want to resign," she
said, "but if 1 don't feel I can
sign it, I will resiill."
The economic disclosure law ·at issue requires trustees and
major college officials to list
EYES RE SIG NATION
Trustee Donne Berry
financial interest in real proper-
ty or businesses within the geo-
graphical area of their jurisdic·
--·----~-
I
tion. .
Jn thia case, th•t •eoirapbteaJ 1
1 atea would b9 tbe Saddleback
College Dlalrict, covertnc '8 per·;
cent 9f Oranae County. '
The law also requires officials•
to l11t aure1ate ~· over: USO annualJy earned by,
themselves or 1Qembera of their:
lmmedlate family and tbe.
aources of such income.
Saddleback Trustees and ol·:
ftc1als are required lo rue the '
dlaclosure form1 by April 2IL :
Mrs. Berry's objection. ts !
based on prl vacy con.slderati<Jm. •
''My husband certainly has bis ;
work and investments but that's :
our privacy," she said.
"I think Uus code is going to :
preclude a lot. of very fine people:
from doin1 the job be.re beuuse •
they 're concerned about;
privacy," abe added. • "ll'• basically their penooaI :
business being made public and•
that's not good." :
'Sam' to Plead Guilty? • ' I NEW YORK (AP) -David
Berkowitz, the pudgy former
postal clerk chareed as the Son
of Sam killer, bas decided lo
plead guilty to the murders
without standing trial, two
newspapers said today.
News~y. a Long Island-based newspa~.-. and the New York
Post sai'Ct Berkowitz told rel-
atives, his attorneys and
psychiatrists that be wants to
plead guilty t.o the murders if he
is declared competent to stand trial.
If he pleaded guilty, Berkowitz
would have lo serve at least 25
years before being eligible for·
parole. If be pleaded guilty to
more than one murder, he could
be sentenced to consecutive Z. year tenna.
Berkowitz, 25, arrested Aug.
10 outside his suburban Yonkers
apartment, was declared com-
petent to stand trial once. A
second competency bearinc is
scheduled before stale Supreme
Court Judge Joseph Corso on
Tuesday in Brooklyn.
Art Slqshed
Dutchman RiJ18 Van Gogh
AMSTERDAM, Netherlands
(AP) -A Dutchman claiming
to be an artist pulled a knife and
sliced three long gashes in Vin -
cent van Gogh's "La Berceuse"
pa in tine at Amsterdam's
Municipal Museum today, Of·
ficials said.
The canvas, a portraU of
French model Augustine Roulin,
was painted in 1889. A museum
spokesman estimated its valwe
at $(2:5,000 and said it would lake months to repair the 28-by-36
inch canvas.
The assailant, who entered the
museum as a spectator, was
overpowered by 1uards and
handed t.o police after the at-
tack, museum officials said.
They said be waa about 30.
Police refused t.o identify the
assailant, who was held pending
. investigation. The suspect re-
fuaed t.o make any statement.
The attack wu the second in
three days on European
Missile Launched
VANDENBERG AIR FORCE
BASE (AP> -A research and
development re·entry vehicle
was launched early today at the
Air Force Space and Misllile
Test Center In tbls central
California coast.at bue.
masterpieces. On Monday, a
man used a knife to slash
Nicolas Poussin's 17-century
painting "Adoration of the
Golden Calf" at London's Na-
tional Gallery.
Officials t,bere said the paint·
ing, valued at '925,000 could be
res'4)red. Salvatore Boni, a ~
year-old Italian resident of the
London area, was cltarged with
causing criminal damage lo the
artwork.
Pair Sollght
In Fights at
NB Restaurant
Newport Beach police are
seeking a man and a woman in
connection with two apparenUy
related noontime altercations at
the El l'orito restaurant, near
the Orange County Airport.
The iu.., described as five
feet. to iilchea tall and wei&bing
about 200 pounds, is sought for
que1Uonin& in .connection 1'lth
an auault With a deadly weapon
OD D•vidl>oney, 22. .
Dorse,, Qf 132 Lisa I.alle,
Cos'a Mesa, suffered a cut near
hlaeye_intbe •nddent. ·
His attorneys and relatives:
want Berkowitz to stand trial,!
bellevinl a jury mleht accept a:
defense contention that he wu:
mentally incompetent over the•
year's time when be is accused}'
of killing six young persona and
wounding seven others.:
However, if Berkowib is judged•
competent to stand trial, be:
would also be competent to enter:
a guilty plea if be wbed. legal•f
sourcea said. • Newsday quoted an unnamed'
relative as sayine Berkowitz!
''doesn'l want to put everyone~
.tbroueb the circus of a trial. He,
feels that ii all the people be'
wounded and the relaUves or:
those be ld,lled al'e called to:
testify, people will hate him all•
over again. And be does not :
want people lo bate him, only to:
understand that he had lo do ;
what be did."
More Rain
May Douse
'North State
By Tbe Auoclated Preu
The cold front which brought
moderate to beav1 rain to
much of Northern California
has moved eastward and out or
the state, but a similar front was
expected to bring more showers today and tonight.
Snow accumulation in the
Sierra from Tuesday's storm
was generally light. Yosemite
reported two inches on the flOOl'
of the Central Valley, the Na-
tional Weather &ervlce said.
Rainfall amounts in the 24'
hours ending al S a.m. today
alao were light. Fresno reported
the moat precipitation with .54 ot
. an inch and Eureka bad .OS. •
The forecut for the San Fran·
cisco Bay area calls for increu-
in1 cloudinesa and a 60 percent
chance of rain ton18ht, decreu-
inC t.o 30 percent on 1bunday.
Lynn Hart HART'S John Hart
SPORTING GOODS
538 CENTER ST.• COSTA MESA• 646-1919
Acldo1 Track Shou
$18.95 & 'D.95
Acldcal a T1g1r
~ '.l!tglng Shoe1
St9.95 to SM.95
Al ""'°"Shoes Socc• Shon S1.95 to $26.95
8oMbal Shoes S13.95 to SM.95
lakMtbal Shon Con••• & Alldas . $14.95 ti $35.95
~
Bancwdtifftd PwtY
T ... Sliolt $tS.'5 to $'U.9S
I '
•
Running~
$3.20 to $9.95
Running Shirt• fl. 95
Gym Shorta
Boslcetbal Sl*ta
•
VOL. 71, NO. 95, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEONC:SDAY, APRIL 5, 1978
rnoon
N.Y. Stoeks
i ...
TEN CENTS
$1 Million Park Sought at La gun~
A city committee will ap·
proacb Laguna Beach City
Council members tonight with a
proposal to develop a nine-acre·
park at Top of the World !or
nearly S1 mlllion.
Dick Toomey, chairman of the
•arks and recreation commit·
tee, will bring plans for a Top of
the World Park when the council
meeta at 6 p.m. in council cham·
be rs.
The committee's proposal
comes at the end of a year-long
study of more than a half dozen
potential park sates in Laguna
Beach to support a commun1ty
ew1mming pool, softball fields,
tennis courts and basketball courts. ·
The land, between Alla
Laguna Boulevard and Tyrol
Road In the hillside co01murut~
is partly owned by the Lagwra
Beach Unified ScbOQl District.
But the owner or an adjacent
three acres is planrune to seek a
zone change from neighborhood
commercial to residential on his
P,roperty, park committee mem-
bers warn.
They would like to see the City
Council enter necoUations with
that property owner for
purchase of the three-acre site
to add to six acres belonging to the school district.
A preliminary plan for the
proposed park site includes two
softball fields. three soccer
fields and a joggmg course
around the perimeter on the
school property.
T~ committee is recommend-
ing four tennis courts, a 25
meter swimming pool, basket-
ball courts. a recreation center,
rest rooms and indoor recrea-
tion areas on the three-acre
parcel.
Figures presented by a local
architect to the committee show
probable costs of developing the
park at '972.500.
The committee ~11 ask the Ci·
ty Council to begin neeotiabofts
with the owner of the three-aea:e
site and discuss development Qt
the school district slu with
trustees. ....
Funding for the park couf d
come through city, school dis·
trict, county. state and federal
sources. the commlttee •"11-
gests. ~ ..
Removal of 4
Planners Asked
By ANNE COOPER
OI tN 0.Uf l'llee ll.lltf
Four San Clemente planning
com missioners are expected to
come under fire at tonight's City
Council meellng when new coun-
cil members Howard Mushett
and Myrtis Wagner call lor their
ouster.
Tonight's meeting win begin
at 7:30 in council chambers at
city hall, 100 Ave. Presidio.
Targeted by the two freshman
council members are Planning
Commission Chairman Melford
Morgan and commissioners
James Chase, William
Greenwall and Allan Wulfeck.
MN!. Wagner charged the four
commissioners w1lh conflict or
interest at the March 15 City
Council meeting, saying the four
should not be voting on building
projects in the city so long as
they tbemsel ves work· in build·
ing related trades.
Morgan and Chase are
architects, Greenwall a plumb·
ing contractor and Wulfeck a
general contractor.
At the Man:h 15 meeting, Mrs.
Wagner's motion to dismiss the
four commissioners was defeat-
ed 3-2, with Mushett voting with
Art Slashed
Dutchman Ri,ps Van lJogh
AMSTERDAM, Netherlands
(AP> -A Dutchman claiming
to be an artist pulled a knltt an~
sliced t.bree Jang I• ll'l VlD-
ceD1 •an Go •a ••1.a ~ " paintlag at Anist•r4am s
Municipal Mu.seu111 t~. of-
ficials said.
The canvas. a port.,.it of
French model Augustine Roulin,
was painted in 1189. A museum
spokesman estimated it.I value at $425,000 and said it would take
months to repair the 28-b.y-36
inch canvas.
The assailan~ who entered the museum as a spectator, was
overpowered by guards and
handed to police alter the at·
tack, museum ollicials_ said.
They said he was about 30.
Police refused to Identify tbe
assailant. wbo \f'a.S held pendlne
innstlgatioo.. Tho Hspeet r~ td to mde any statemeot.
The alt*ck was the second ln
three days on European
masterpieces. On Monday, a
man used a knife to slash
Nicolas Poussin's 17-century
painting .. Adoration of the
Golden Call" at London's Na-
tional Gallery.
Olficiak there said the paint-
ing, valued at $925,000 could be
restored. Salvatore Borzi, a Z7·
year-old ltaliab. resident of the
London area, was chareed with
causing criminal·damage to the
_artwor~-
Vanessa Scorched
By British Press
LONDON <AP) -London
ne"pa_pers chided Briti!h ac· tress Vanessa Redgave today
foz: ber Oscar aceeptanc:e-speeclt
in •hlcb sbe called Jewi$h dem-
onstraton at tbe Holl1wood
c:crnnoay''Zionistboodlums.' •
"U ahe COUidn't accept her
1 <>tear tn the s,Pltit of alt.ow busi·
ae.s9 ruama~ whlcb (s all it
Ss, then abe sbiWcl ha" 1tayed away, aa Marlon Brando and
Gearn C. :;;catt bave done in the put.». the Daily Minw aald ill
p editorial. (RelatedstmT.ltt>
tJQder; the headline ··~ )lJ. Jy.•• tbe pro-Labot' Party
»e"'Paper ta.id. .. .Aa a poliU·
cian, Vanessa Redgrave is a fine
•ctress who fully deserves her
01car. M an actress she is a
lqu11y politician ......
Miss Redgrave won the
Academy Award !or best sup-
porting actress in the film
.. Julia," 1n which she played an
antl-Nad underlJ'OWld fl1bter.
The film starred Juie Fonda u
playwright LlU1an Hellman.
In her acceptance speech.
:Miu Redgr.ave denounced J~wish demonstrators at the
Ho11Ywoocl Musi~ Center who
were protestlnc ller flnanclnt and narrating of a doc:\lmentary
(See VAN~ Page 41)
Woman, 20,
:Assaulted
OnFree~ay
Mrs. Wagner and William
Walker, Donna Wilkinson and
Roy Hamm opposed.
Mrs. Wagner reiterated her
charges against t.h.e_com-
missioners Tuesday at a press
conference she called al city
hall. She said M_Qf~.Q.n. Chase. Greenwall and Wulfeck have
"consistently shown that they
care more for the interests of
the developers than for the good
of the city that appointed them.··
Mushett called for the resigna-
tion of Mor~an, Greenwall and
Chase at bis own press con-
<See OUSTER SOUGHT, Page AZ>
Bluff top
Land Bill
Doomed?
i.ifift1ifiiriW~LL
QI .. ~ ..... ,... •
Assetnblftllan Ron Cordova
says his efforts to s\op state ac-
quisitioa of 35 acres of blufftop
land above Oae Dana Point
marina appeu destined for
failure next week.
Delf'I flllll lblfl .......
But Che El Toro assemblyman
saya he already la planning to
amend AB2l28 should the bill
fail next Wednesday. The
leg1slatioll uks the Assembly
committee on water, parks and
wildlife t.o rescind a $4 million
stale parks appropriation for a<:-
q utai Uon af 1he Dana Point
palisades land.
WORK CREWS PREPARE TO INSTALL BEAMS TO SUPPORT PACIFIC COAST HIGHWAY
CafTrens Workers With Crane at Emerald Bay Site of Se~age ~reak:
"I've amended the bill to keep
the ($4 millioo) appropriation,
but on the condition that no
recreaUonaJ •ehicles or camp-
ing be allowed on the park site,••
Cordova s-aid in a telephone in·
terview Tuesday.
Crews Fixing~ Slippage
The state parks department
has earmarked more than $4
million for acquisition of about
3S acres of Laatem Bay btuff\op
land owned by the Smyth
Brothen development fll'ID. o(
Steel Beams lmttil'led in Emendd Bay Area
Newport Beach. '
State officials claim no de.
(Se BLUFFS, Pase AZ)
'
Road crews rrom the
California Department of
Transportation are installing
huge steel beams on the south
side of Pacific Coast Highway at
Emeraid Ba)' today to correct a
major slippage.
lt was found as the result of an
investigation by Laguna Beach
city crews into a raw sewage
spill tJi the area two weeks ago.
Terry Brandt, Laguna's assis·
tant cily manager and dire<ltor
of municipal services, said a
~endlpy Actress lmmened in Her Work
HOLLYWOOD CAP) -Bette Davis doesn't bide .ber aae. but doesn't dwell on it
either.
"It's Just another birthday,•• she QYS ot
Jler 10th loday. "A big one. I'll admit, but I don•t believe ln birthdays." ·
resident or the walled enclave
called to report untreated .sewage flowing do,,_n an 1-iy~
covered embankment into the
community.
An inspector found two seMt"
lines that serve the adjaceJlt
commun(ty. Irvine Cove, h'acl
cracked along a SO.foot stretch
of the highway, due to slip 1e
in fill dirt Under the road.
Emerald Bay is not part o(
I,.aguna Beach but Irvine 0We
is.
•
J
Pattern of Peppers
Resembling a Ku Klux Klan meeting, or
perhaps a settlement of tiny tepees, bell
peppers poke up thejr peads under protec·
tive coverings in a San Juan Capistrano
field. Spotted in a field at Kinoshita
Farms on Alipaz Street, the peppers ape
pear to be doing well shielded from lbe ef-
fects of occasionally nasty spring
weather.
F,....PageAJ ·
VANESSA. • •
called "The Palestinian."
The actress, made a Com·
m ander of the Order or the
British Empire by Queen
Elizabeth ll in 1987 for her
services to the theater, is a
leader of Britam's llny left-wing
Workers Revolutionary Party.
The conservative Dally Ex-
press said in an editorial that
ADW!rioan Jews, protesting Miss
Redgrave's support for the
Palestrniao cause, would be
··very ill-advised to take the
divine Vanessa seriously."
.. Some actresses are
beautiful, some can act, some
lik'e Miss Redgrave have both
attributes, but they are not cut
out for politics," the Express
Hid.
Pilot,s Plan
Pl.ea to Save
<Apo Airport
:A group of area pilots plan to
lodge a plea tonight before San
Juan Capl.Slrano councilmen to
save Capistrano Airport from the bulldozers.
"We're gomg lo don presenta-
tion asluni them to keep the
airport open," a spokesman for
the pilots said today. "The situa-
tion doesn't look good but we're
going ahead with the presenla·
tion."
The spokesman, Dennis Shat-
tuck, said members of a south
Orange County airport advocacy
~roup had informally talked
with councilmen and determined
they would probably vote lo
close the airport June 1.
"'l'hey seem lo feel there isn't
sufficient concrete progress
toward developing an
alternative airport in the area,"
Shattuck said.
And a report to councilmen
from City Manager J•mes
?.tocalis spells out the tame in-
volved in developing another
airport.
"From all knowo indications
at this time, it appears that such
actions (developing another airport) will require at least
three more years.'' Mocalis says
in the report.
When councilmen last year
voted for a June 1 closure, they
included a loophole to allow the
afrport's life lo be e~ended if
serious action was under way to
develop another airport.
County supervisors last month
ordered General Services Agen-
<'Y officials to search for county
airport sites that couJd be de--
veloped for: general aviation
purposes.
~ANOE COAST L/SC:
DAILY PILOT
Marine Hardships
•
Told to SJC Club
By WIIJ.JAM HODGE OI .... DAllr ...... Matt
Fmanciai hardships often are
the cause o{ Marine Corps
personnel involvement in crimes
in civilian communities sur•
rottndi,og military installations. 1 ~Martire Corps law enforcement
representative said Tuesday.
-"lt's extremeJy expensive to
live on the outside (off base), ..
Staff Sgt. Glen Rodgers of the El.
Toro Marine Corps Air Station
told a Capistrano Valley Ex-
change Club meeting in Sao
Juan Capistrano.
"When you're new lo life and
a private first class making $400
to $500 a month, you can have
problems adjusting," he said.
··usually they don't have sense
enough and they get married
and start having children.
"That's when the financial
pressures start to build..,
Rodgers also insisted that
crimes committed by military
pers~ usualJj retlfft prob-
le ms JD the civilian com· munity.
"If you have a higb crime rate
in the civilian community,
you're going to have a propor.
tionate one in the military com-
munity," he said.
Laguna Vets'
UaderBack
From Hospital
Retired Veterans Administra-
tion official 0 . W. Price has re-
turned tO his Laguna Beach.
home after more than two
months in the hospital, his wife
confirmed this week.
Price, 82, suffered compile ..
lions from a bout with the nu.
and was transferred in mid·
February from South Coast
Community Hospital to the
Veterans Hospital in Long
Beach.
The tong.time Laguoan is rest-
tn g at home now, his wtre,
Elizabeth, said.
Price moved to Laguna Beach
in 1961 and has been an officer in
American Legion Post 222 for
many years. He retired from the
VA in 1961 after 42 years
service.
The deputy provost marshal's
administrative assistant cited
crime stali$tics for the El Toro
base indicating petty larceny is
the crime most lrequenU, com• m.itted.
Auto thefts, aggrav'ated as-
~1&ults and burglaries were also
high on the list.
But Rodgers also cited dil~
!ereoces between civilian and
military installation police
authorities.
"The military is a much more
structured society," he pointed
out. "We're much more dis-
ciplined.
"The El Toro base crime rate
1s ·about one-third what any
equivalent civilian comJnunity
would be.".
Rodgers said miTitary
aut!tonties often t"ely on base
community involvement lo deter
specific crime problems.
1'Jf we intend to stop a spedfic
crime probably the best way is
lo talk to people about it." be ex-
plained. 'This is an excellent
way or discussing what some or
the problems are and getting
feedback from the community.
"Most people are resasonable:
most people will stop and
listen," he continued. "You can
get the point across that we're
one community -we've all got
the same problems."
Rodgers conceded that
m•mas:y autborities could have
more impact on base crime
problems than civilian police
could on civilian problems.
"If a particular urtit oo base ls
havln& certain kinds of proi).
lems •. we can go to the com·
mander and say 'maybe you
should talk lo your people about
thta'.'' Rogers said. "We have
some advantages over civil
authorities in that (peer pres-
sure) sense."
Rodgers said police should
avoid what be termed the "us
and them syndrome."
.. That's where you think
'we·re the iood euys and you're
the bad guys' -that's bad," be
said. "That kind of attitude can
come across in eveeyUUDa an of.
ficer says and does.
''Cooperation between the
police and the community yo\l
serve i.s what yoll .. fe after."
FroatP"flf!AI
OUSTER SOUGH'f. • •
-·-
ISJTOMBARLEY
OI U. {»llY ...... Malt
A young wolQan who delivered
her own baby shortly alter the
doctor attempted lo abort the in-
fant by ifUectlng ber wtth saline
showed itio happy baby to an
Orange County SuperiQr Court.
jury today,
Using the assumed name of
"Miss Hobbs," the witness
testified that lbe was 17 in April
of 1977 When sbe aareed to have
the abortion performed at
Avalon Memorial Hospital on
Catalina Island.
Trytna to bold her struggling
and apparently healthy baby
girl on her lap, the witness
testified that she realized she
was actually 4elivering lhe child
shortly after she drank her 50t.h
glass of water in a three-hour
period.
She t.alfied as a rebuttal wit.
ness in the tnurder trial or Dr.
William Baxter WaddW, that
she pulled the baby from her
head first and already was try.
ing to soothe the crying infant
when nurses reached ber
hospital room.
•'Miss Hobbs" is the first or a
series of proSecuUon witnesses In an 11th hour bid by the proes.
ecution lo prove that an infant
in the womb can survive saline
abortions of the type often
performed by Dr. WadcliU.
F,....PageAJ
BLUFFS •••
cision has been made as to
whether campsites or recrea-
tional vehicle camping will be
allowed atop the bluffs.
But Dana Point officials, and
Assemblyman Cordova want
firm assurances that such uses
Will not become a reality. They
favor a park that can be used by
local citizens as well as visitors,
and claim recreational vehicles
have no place on the land.
Citizen groups and the Dana
Point Chamber of Commerce
say they wouldn't mind seeing
the Smyth Brothers develop the
entire 76--aere parcel atop the
bluffs, including the land that
bas caught the state's interest.
The Newport BeaC'h firm bas •
plans for about 250 co.n-
dominiums, a motel, a large
park a.n4.t~"1t111id01t~i UlC
bluff .M~l~ N'"o~ (o
the public.
Cordova said be thinks be has
three votea for the amended bill,
which would eliminate the
possiblility or RVs or campsites
• on the land. He needs one more
vote.
"I have lo convince the com-
mittee members that It is their
responsibility to review the
purposes for acquisition before
approving the purchase," he
said. "They have never con·
cerned themselves with the final
use question."
Cordova said he has met with
the director of Parks and
Recreation, "to explore other
solutions if the legislative move
fails."
•• 1 think what the people down
there (in Dana Point) are s~
ing is, they don't want misuse or
the bluffs area for recreational
vehicles."
Bible Baa Bid
C VISTA (AP} -Bonning the ble as
pornographic 1S under consideration by Chula Vista public schools. ·
The Old Testament "contains rape, Incest,
murder, vivisection and other heinous, e~n sexual,
crimes:• trustees were told by one citizen Tuesday
night.
.. There are Portions or the Bible that I would be
embarrassed to read to you," said J. Michael
Straczynskl, a writer,
But another person, Noelle Battrick, said she has read the Bible.
"I was not disturbed by it," adding ''Where does it
stop? Are we to ban Shakespeare and other classics?••
The trustees voted unanimously to turn lbe issue
of curbing the Bible over to a committee.
~Franeiseo
··Gay Rights Law
Awaits. Signature
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -An
ordinance banning cliscrimina-
tlon against homosexuals in
employment, housing and public
accomodations needs only the
Riley Says
Partisan
Role Untrue
Orange County Supervisor
Thomas Riley denied today that
be has introduced partisan
politics into his campaign for re-
election.
Riley drew barbs from elec·
tion opponent Tom Rogers when
he announced Tuesday that he'U
be hosting "a ·pleasant special
social gathering or our dedicated
Orange County Republican civic
leaders."
Purpose of the April 13 get-
together at Riley's Newport
Beach home is to witness Riley's
signing of the so-ca lled
Republican 11th commandrqent,
a pledge not to speak badly o(
other Republican candidates.
ln response to the announce-ment, Rogers said, ••1 can't
speculate why they would try to
drag our Republican Party into
a noo·parti.san election which
wHl be OD the November ballot."
Riley said he did not intend lo
make the election a partisan is-
sue and could'.notil be wanted to
because Rogers also .is a lile-
time Republican.
The Newport Beach
supervisor said his interest in
citing the GOP 11th command-
ment is his way of attempting to
lirt the campaign .. to a point
where issues, not personalities
are discussed."
Riley said be covered the issue
with Democrats by discussing
bis upcoming Republican social
hour with an aide ,to Supervisor
Ralph Clark, Stanley Oftelie.
•'Stan seemed to think it was a
pretty good idea. And I think
he's a Democrat," Riley said to
indicate he had touched base
with both major political parties.
However, Riley indicated be
does not plan to have a
Democratic eatherioa at bis
home to match the upcomln&
Republican social hour.
mayor's sigqature before it
takes effect in this city where an
estimated one in seven residents
is gay.
The Board of Supervisors gave
final approval to the ordinance
on a 10-1 vote with no discussion,
adding San Francisco to a list or
more than.O cities thathavesuch
ordtJlances .
Mayor George Moscone is ex•
peeled to sign the ordinance.
The ban is similar to one re-
pealed last year in Miam1 after
singer Anita Bryant led a suc-
cessful repeal campaign that
brought eay rights to the na·
tion 's attention.
San Francisco has long been
considered a haven for homosex-
uals and the city last fall elected
its first openly gay supervisor.
Harvey Milk, who urged support
or the ordinance to "bring into
society those people who are
locked out."
The board gave tentative ap.
prov a l to the gay rights ordinance
Jast month.
"All this says is that gay peo.
ple are OK." Supervisor Gordon
Lau explained.
The only dissenter was
Supervisor Dan White, who said
.i lot of people believe the or~
dmancc to be wrong and "they
have very valid feelings." .
School Has
'Pot Drill'
FAYETTEVILLE, Ga.
(AP> -Police sealed off
Fayette County High
School -even cutting off
the water supply -as two
dogs searched the school
for manJuana.
The dogs sniffetl the
l, 700 students, lockers and
other possible hidin g
places Tuesday and found
an undetermined amount
of the drug, "most of it
just in joints
(cigarettes)," said Police
Chier Charles Gilbert. •
"We had the water cut
off, and all the commodes
flushed," said the chief.
whose men also guarded
doors.
Mdas Trock Shoe$
$18.95 & 'D.95
Running Shorts
$1.20 to $9.95
Running Shirts $7.95 •
Gym Shorts
Basketball Shltts
(.olond BGMbal Sletvts
BoMbcil fanta
Softbdltifs
losebcil Sanitary Sox
Adidas & llglt-
Runnm,g & Joggil. Shots
$19.95 to $34.95
Al Purpose Shon
5ciCCji ShOii ST.95 to $26.9$
..... Shoes $13.95 to $14.95
...... Shots c.an.... & Adidas . ..
S14.95 to $35.95
~
Banc~~
TmsShons1atSto$34.9S ,
l
•
8aHboll Hose
los•bal Nitti & Glans
Boslldt Capt
larW Sib $t9.95
~unW W'I $19.95
Cheat Ms
Jumprtopel
Dlahltftnl 'ti
ChitfehlAJll
~ .... ~
llcilMrdl
+ •
t\
•
J
'
•
It's Time to Get
Back to Business
San Clemente City COlDlcitman Howard Mushett ap-
parently didn't have to look tar to find evidence of the
foibles of certain fellow city officials.
Mushell's probe into city reimbursements made to
councilmen and planning commissioners seems lo in•
dicate a need to review city reimbursement policies.
Mayor William Walker and Councilwoman Donna
Wil"inson turned in expense reports which were late and
· easil~ misinterpreted. Three c ity planning com-
mi~ioners took their wives along to an Oakland conference
at City expense.
The city officials involved claim they broke no rules
beet1use the city has no rules on expense reporting.
Mushett's report has been a service to city taxpayers.
It pointed up some weak spots in expense reimbursement
practices. Unfortunately, it has also unleashed a barrage
of 'Tlas t y name-calling and undocumente d counter
charges. which can only dilrrupt the city and alienate
(•itizens.
It is lime now for San Clemente officials to get back
to the business of governing the city. High on their bst of
priorities s hould be est ablishing a policy which sets well·.
defined limits on how free they and their successors may
be with city funds.
Cmi Be Habit-f or111ing
Laguna Beach's three freshmen council members
need to be brought up to date on many affairs within the
city_. including pending litigation and personnel matters.
Executive sessions -which ~elude the press and
the public -are the avenue through which such
disoussions can be carried out.
The new City Council in Luuna Beach has met in
dosed-door sessions a half d~n times in just three
weeks.
E xecutive sessions s hould be called~autiously. They
arc taking place at an average oI two per council meeting
s ince the new paneJ was &worn into l>{fice March 14. The
mayor has called for anolhet closed·d~r session tonight
and-there will be at least one roote next Wednesday.
Admittedly, tbe new council me mbers face a very
tomplcx issue tn the s.17 million lawsuit filed against the
e1ty by H.ancho Palos Ver~es Corp. over Sycamore Hills.
And there are personnel matters that fall under the
Halph M. llrown Act which provides strict outhnes of
'"hat may be discussed behind closed doors.
.}3ut the council s hould not fall into the habit of
making such meetings a regular feature.
1'finority View Needed
Tonight, San Jua n Capistrano's four city councilmen
''Ill appoint a fifth member to replace Councilman
H1d1:.ircl i\kDowcll, who rcsign~d inl!Jrly ~arch.
\\'1t h the f.our sitting councf,lrnen committed to a sbw
growth. 3gricultural preserval iJOsoph~ e ~.P· -
pointmenl of a fifth member w e(Jly 11i e 1iRle·-
1mpact on decision-makin~ votes at the council level.
But that fifth m ember could have g ~t impact
lcring an a lternative point v t) the'~<~rtn
mainstream. ,
While San Juart Ma~ r Kenneth Friess and Coun·
t·1lman .James Thorpe U'Sist thex are looking for a n ap·
poinlet• who will be t1ble to gel along with other coun -
ttlmt'n. pro-growth a~vocates should not be rejected on
lhat basis.
Yes. city voters s upported the s low-gr owth
philosophy in the March 7 election. And that emphasis
"ill oh\'iously not be cbtn&ed by appointing a minority
'"'<'"to the open position.
But a minority voice could express concerns that
might not occur to others in their zeal to protect San
.Juan's open, rural character.
The council should be broad-minded enough to con-
:-.1cler <;omeone who can represent the city's minority
point of view. That tould help heal some or the divisive-
1wss that rt•s ulted from previous council votes and tssues.
" .
Oprntons e•pressed tn the space above are those of the Darty Piiot
Other 111ews expressed on thrs page are those of their authors and
anrsts Reader comment i$ invited Address The Daily Prlot, P.O.
Bo• 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321.
Boyd/Recognition
ByL.M. BOYD
In Worcester. England, a
tn a n named A Hancock.
who'd been self-employed
most of his life, bbughl a
watch when he retired and
had it inscribed: "Presented
to myself by myself in rec·
ogoltion of the 55 years work I have done while work·
Ing f~r myself. Thanking me,
I acn: A Hancock, 1904·59."
The image said to be most
fr&ghtenlng to youngsters is
that of a ereen snake with
fals bared. For this reason, so e authorities •ant lo
re ace the traditional skull·
.an4-croubones on toxic; m~lclne boutes wltb tho
ndke picture.
Would you go to a movie
ca lle,d "The M ode rn
Prometheus"? Neither would
J. ll's noteworthy, is It not.
that the full title or the book
\nat has generated dozens of
tUms was "Frankenstein, or
The Modem Prometheus"?
Was none olhtt than Gen.
Maxwell Taylor who once re·
fer~ to a peacetime army
as "a chimney in the sum·
mer.''
Q. ''What's a
'blndlestlff'!" ·
A. That was hobo slane for
a man who carried his
bedroll with him.
Q. "Why ls the Adriatic
~. called thatl"
A. Was named af\,er the
town or Adria. Jl used to be a
port. Po Rlvtr floodtns
cbaneed that • .ldrta 11 now 14 miles Wand . .
•
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Vet Joli Priorities tfargeted
W ASRINGTON -At
considerable rill to hls poUUcal
neck. Preaideot Carter hopes to
Umlt the preferential treatment
veteraos receive In aPPb'lD& for
to•ernment
obs. AictH ·
ave per·
•uaded the president that
Yeterans
priority bas
been squeea·
l n I out
women and
minorltlea
from federal
employment.
The propoHCI reduction ln
veterans benefita, of course, has
brought an almipty howl from
the powerful veterans lobby. But
a conrldenUal White House
memo, which rttenUy reached
the president'• desk, convinced
blm that &iv1n1 job preCeren~
to ex·aenieemen, some of wbom
Jett the military decades ago, ts
b~klnl nearly everyone else
from the federal payrolL
8y !aw, thO m o explained,
veterans are Jiveo a five-point
bonus on the ctvil Service test
HOl'ft on the theqry that ".those
who leTVed in limes o( war
deserve special usiatance In
readjust.i.q to civilian life." In
reality, even thole veterans who
sened during peacetime are
eranted a "llfetJme benefit."
CONSEQUENTLY, the memo
declared. veterans "block the
top of most Clvll Service
regl1ten. This off.en creates
aevere problems •.•. for
non-veteran but qualified
candidates, especially women."
In Dallas. for example, a
EUREKA!
AN EXACT REPLICA!
To the Editor.
Your editorial "Fix Military
Retirement" <Daily Pilot 26
March) showed a lack or ObJee·
tivity. The author apparently
looked only at the cost. ignoring
what it was buying. Assuming
that the plan <A 30-year pro-
gram with a minimum retire·
ment age of SS> was in opera·
lion, we would have a military
force with an average age of
~etweeo ;J3 and 37 years.
Wouldn't it make you ree1 secure
to have this ''mature.seasoned "
force defending you?
NOW, Let's look at the other
Ide a moment. Take an 18-year·
old mid-west m boy who joins
the Army, erves his 30 years
and retires. He'll be 48 years old
~d not eUslble for his retin;-ment pay for another 7 years!
The endorsed plan disapproves
his taking a civilian job. so he
has to go on relier until he Is s5
years old. Al age SS he will have
to continue on relier, because,
unless he retired. as a colonel or
better, he cannot support his
family on his retked pay.
An armed force is just like
anything else one gets thesl!
days, you'll ,et about what you
pay for. lnstaU the 30-year/SS·
year retirement plJn and you'll
buy an army ol middle-aeed
stalwarts who don't know how to
gel on relier and can't fleht their way out of a wet paper bag.
NORMAN I. FRENCH
The story goes that this was to
reinforce the younau men and
to give them counsel and con·
fldence durirtg a fight. The real
reuon. however. was lbat those
older s<>ld.iers could no longer be
counted upon to lllhand up to the
rigors of the front rank.
War is a youne man's "game''
and when you keep your old men
in ranks you are not only clog-
ging up the promotion process
for l he young men on the way
up , you are also jeopardizing
your front ranks.
It 1s rar better to send the o1d
soldier home on hall pay and
clear some room a~ the top for a young "hard charger" than lo
keep him around because it may
cost a little more money.
In combat there are only twp
kinds of men -the qui.ck and
the dead -and you need au of
the youn1 quick ones you tan ftt
to win wans.
R. E.WYMAN
woman who KONd 100 OD an air traffic controU r•a teal was
ranked 147tb hllln veterans .,.-lth p cie. U v ns got
no apeclll b • IM bave
ranked .eventh.
A t • m a I e I a W.J • r I n
Washin8ton recent~ appbtd for
a civilian Job with tha Defense
Department. Alf.bouO atte bad
more experience than moet of the male pro1pe•t•. her
application waa promptly
returned. She was told 1he
couldn ·i be considered without
veterans preference.
"ln some areas, 1ucb as San
Diego." the White Hquse memo
said, "retired military penonnel
are often the only hadlvidua.ls
elletble for federal
employment." There.. are about
140,000 such "double dippers" -
retired servicemen who are
collectin& a mllit.ary penaloo ln
up and married one another. I
know of a third generation baby
whose grandparents, aunt and
uncle live in the park.
It's a place for old people to
retire lo security among
longtime friends, a place for
fatherless children lo be raised
in familiar surroundings, for
scared widows and widowers, tor young marrieds to establish
a r1 rst home, and for colleae stu·
dents on their own for the Unn
time. .
The Irvine Con'lp '-oUtl'$ us
for sale within tb~ thr~"MUes ot
coastline belween Corona del
'Mar and Irvine Cove (a
moneyed comm tt~ half El
Morro's age~ A the stfte
seems deterauned to acquire us. This in spite or mUes of vacant
land to.the north.
MA Rt AND PAUL SULLIVAN
addition to their aonrnment
salaries -la tbe federal
bureaucracy. Yet tbff 1et lint
dibs on eovenuueat jobe, ev lf
they left the Q:lWtary before
World War 11. • '
TUS CURRENT law also
hasnpen effortl to atreamD.ne
tbe •overnment, Carter wu
•dvised. When a m.llltary baii91s
cl.osed1 for example. "the
veterans preference ls ablGlute
and aHows him to 'bump'
non-veterans, includin1 those
with ereater seniority,•• the
memo explained. Many officials
avoid ordering needed cutbacts.
therefore, "because of tbe
adverse impact on equal
opstortunlty and affirmative
action 1ains."
The president hes
recommended that veterans,
who no.-comprise half tbe
federal wotk force, be gl\len
preference for only 10 years
after discharge. Tttis woulc! help
Vietnam veterans and would
llceomplish the original purpose
of the law by limiting assistance
to the period of a<l,lustment. An
exception would be made for
disabled veterans, who would
retain a lifetime Job advanta~.
Another confidential briefing
paper suggested ways for the
president to sell the proposal
and thwart the carping, which
has already begun on Capitol
Hill. ''From some quarters we
are beginning to receive the
expected criticlam on our
proposed changes,'' the
document slated. "Somehow we
do not seem to be getting across
the fact that .•. our propo.!lals
help those veterans groups that t
need lt the most, the disabled
vet eran and the Vietnam
veteran."
FOOTNOTE: A spokesman ror
the \(eterans of Foreign Wars
told my associate Howie Kurtz
that "the White House is using
veterans prererence as a
scapegoat. They haven't been
getting enough women and
minorities in government, so
they've got to blame it on
something." He added that he
expects Congress to kill the
proposal.
representatives will again plead
al the City Council.
Cooperation, open minds and
ears and time are needed, on the
part of the pilots, community
and government leaders. An-
taeonism. lack of communlca·
lion and private Interest have
led to a June 1 funeral for the
airport that need not take place.
P,rsonally, l don't like funerals
of any sort.
A.H. DURON
,.~ ... -· To the Editor:
Often we as individuals pick
up our newspapers and read
about fine things thal happen in
other towns -ab<Jut their civic
pride, their community spirit;
their concern for their children.
May I take this opportunity to
boast a little about our town,
Laguna Beach?
Several weeks ago, wb~ our
or1anlzatlol\,4be La1una Beach
Booster's Club, undertook to put
to(elher Las Ve1as Night, an
annual fW1d·ralsing project fM
Laguna Beacb Hlgb School, we
found that enormous numbent of
our fellow cltben.s turned out to
lend a hand.
..
h ,,,
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i
l
CALIFORNIA
elil
Bill Eyed
By Senate
SACRAMENTO <AP> -A
••shield law" to protect re·
porters who refuse to name con-
fidential sources would be writ·
ten into the slate Constitution,
under a measure now on the
state Senate floor
The proposed amendment,
ACA 4 by Assemblyman Jerry
Lewis, R-Highland, won a 6·2
vote Tuesday of the Senate
Judiciary Commlttee. ll has
already passed the Assembly.
Lewis said the measure would
protect "a free flow of inform•·
tion between the public and its
government . . . a government
that can at bmes become quite
arrogant."
IF APPROVED by tbe Senate.
it will go on the November
ballot.
The measure was prompted
by the cases of William Farr
and the Fresno Four, who were
jailed by judges for refusing to
identify sources
California has a shield law
that says reporters need not
name sources. But the judges
who ordered the jailings ruled
that the law is outweighed by the
constitutional right to a fair trial
and their power over court pro·
ceedings.
SAID LEWIS: "The court's
fool in the door could very well
lead to the destroying of the
shield law m California."
He said judges could not over·
rule the shield law if it were in
the Cons titution
A representative of the state
Judicial Cou n cil, which
s upervises the court system,
said ACA 4 would make 1t
harder for judges to keep grand
Jury transcripts and other con-
fidential matters secret.
J
Calld&date Wed
.............
Mike Curb, a recording in-
dustry executive and
Republican candidate for
lieutenant governor, mar-
r i c d Linda Dunphy,
daughter of tel ev ision
newscaster Jerry Dunphy.
in private riles Tuesday in
lhe Beverly Hills
Presbyterian Church.
Cfussic~
Show Decision
Reversed A.gain
RlVERSrDE CAPl -The City
Council has decided that D. W.
Griffith's "Birth of a Nation"
r1tm classic wtll not be shown at
the city museum after all.
The council decided 5·2 Tues-
day that the film -which many
members of the black communi·
ty found obJectlonable -should
be screened publicly at St.
Catherine's Catholic Church
with private funds instead of
taxpayer monies.
TH E COUNCIL adopted a
compromise a few weeks ago
that would have allowed the film
to be presented at the. ..museum
along with commenta from a
black person or socioloeist. The
compromise followed the coun-
cil's cancellation of a March 9
l>howing.
Some people objected to the
council's Tuesday decision as
c.·ensorship.
r DAILY PILOT A$
Widow
SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -
Several hours before tbe~Jnt oceanliner Queen Ellla h 2 wu to dock tn Hawaii, an der·
ly w oman whom cu.-t ou s
passenttel"I had nicknamed "The
Duchess" vanished without a
trace.
Carla Iris Bodmer. a TO·Ye&r·
old widow from Switzerland, is
belleved to have fallen or
Jum ped overboard the night of
March 2IG .. 'the sblp approached
Honolulu during a 90-day world
cruise. "There lS no lnd1cat1on of foul
play," othmar Hutter, the Swiss
vice comul 1n San Francisco,
" said Tuesday. ''l wouldn't mate seems so terrible and Jon to
a mystery out of lt." step otr that railing tn th• Id·
BUT A DISAPP~AftANCE at
sea is always mysterious.
"ll 's the kind or thing that
haunts everyone," s aid
1'' re.de r l ck FI em ming, a
paaseneer from Houaton. ''It
die of the mght ..
Mrs Bodmer had aaain~)ler
nickname because she re
floor length gowns and de
almost regal entrances '" ,the dining rooms and ballrooms of
the luxurious ship
AFTER SHE vanished. a de . d s • tailed search was made of the A I;J ta . giant liner. but no trace of her mputee i: oun rving :1~:E~;:;.~~~.~!:':;~:.d·
SAN DIEGO (AP> -An elder· ly d oub le a m putee ls
ho1pltallud after ahe wu found
sprawled uncomcloua and 1tarv-
ing on the floor of the home she shared with her husband, pollce
said. Her husband apparently
died five or six days earlier.
· Mabel and Orville B. Paulson,
both In their 80s, were known
around lheir nelsbborhood as
stubborn, independent peop~
For their love of lndependen~
nurtured durine their ~S-year
marriaee, they pald a dear
price.
Paulson's wife was in very
critical condition al Mission Bay
Memorial Hospital today, suffer·
ing from the effects of starva-
tion. said hospital spokeswoman
Lois Haselton. The woman.
whose legs were amputated
because of diabetes, lay helpless
on the noor for several days
after her husband apparently
died of natural causes, the cor-
oner· s office said.
Maril•~ Sfteteneed
VISTA (AP) -A 25-year..old
Camp Pendleton Marine has
been sentenced lo life in prison.
for the fatal shooting last Sep.
tember of tbe/teen·aged wile of
another Manne.
Superior Court J udge F. V.
Leopardo s~ntenced Jackie
Robinson on Tuesday following
his jury conviction last month
for the murder. kidnap, rape
and robbery of Sophia Ann
Martinez. 19.
IJtjured "°" •StalJ~
LOS ANGELES <AP) -A
Nazi-uniformed man, injured in
a scuffle with members of the
Jewish Df'fense League during
Acad emy Awards ceremonies
Monday night, underwent sur-
gery for a possible skull frac·
lure.
Nursine supervisor Beverly
Pratt al the County-USC
Medical Center said. early today Richard Rogera, 40, is in stable
and fair condition.
Ute T~,... Gl.,e11
"It must be assumed that ~he
( l Dehne! was ''full or· hatred and fell overboard. We don't nave
malice." any background on her, but 'She SJ' A.TE certainly is not well known." Belar BUI Challntged The disappearance n.rst
-----------became public knowledge w!\en
planninl the murder or the
Jewish Defense League·s West
Coast director has been sen-
tenced to life in prlton despite a
report recommending proba·
Uon.
Superior Court Judge Jack B.
Tso said Tuesday after sentenc·
lng Robert Oehnel of North
Hollywood that the J3.year-0ld
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The some passengers mentioned it to
Behr properly tax bill should be newsmen during a nine-hour
declared unconstitutional la)over here last weekend. because it 1s tied to a ballot
proposition that has yet to tx ACCOR DING TO Cun.rd
passed.areuredattorneysays. Lmes. owner of the ship: "She
• '48S last seen at 10 p.m.• on
Ardy V Barton, 55, or Santa March 26. At 10 a.m. Marci\ 27.
Barbara has filed a petition with the bedroom steward repotied
the state Supreme Court urging that her bed was untouched. An that the bill be declared un· extensive search or the ~hip
constitutional. proved negat1 ve "
' I
>
This· beautiful .book,
TU KHAMUN
.The last )ourne~:
FREE from Mutual Savings.
•
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Actual size . 8\SxHl.l
To celebrate the v1s1t of Tutankhamun s tre asures to Southern California we
are pleased to offer Tutankhamun-The Last Journey. tree for the asking.
All you have to do is stop by in person. ask for 1t. and 1t s yours
It Is a stunning book; a marvelous portfolio of color photogr;:iphs of the artifacts
of ancient Egypt. The accompanying text tells the tragic story of the boy king.
Tutankhamun. who lived and reigned over thirty-three centuries ago:
I
t i
I. E. "IACKJE" HEATHER 'f5halrma~. N•wJ)Off Planning Cotnmllllon
Col. Fred Tschopp has
assumed command or
the 12th Starr Group,
Marine Corps Reserve •
in Los Angeles .
Tschopp lives in Foun·
lain Valley with his wife,
Dale. and two sons. JackJ• HHther fOf City Coundl, 1500 DOrothy loM. tlewpOtt ttaoh, CA 92660
the political and religious turmoil that preceeded him and with which he had to
deal. his death, the elaborate preparations for his burial. the religious and
mystical significance of his tomb and the treasure that was entombed with him
It was the only tomb of all the Kings of Egypt that was not completely looted.
The search for it and the dlsco\rery are also described by the author.
William MacQuitty, an internationally honored photographer, world traveler.
and film producer (A Night to Remember). This is one of the most up-to-date
books about Tutankhamun. and one of the most popular. Published to sell at
$4.95, it quickly went to a second printing. We were able to obtain a limited
number of copies, so first come, first served, until our supply 1s exhausted.
One book to a family; please. SotTY. we cannot honor mail requests.
PVBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE
Also af Mutual Savings, The Treasures of Tutankhamun .
This continuous-presentation of full-color slides from the Los Angeles County
Museum Is now appearing In our lobby. It gtves you a clo$e, intimate look at
the golden glortes of the Tutankhamun exhibit. Last day for this presentation
is April 15th.
ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A I VOL 71, NO. 95, 4 SECTIONS, <16 PAGES
Politics Rears Head at
Newport Beach developers,
who were to be given a brlefina
on the proposed tramc phasing
initiative, got a lecture on cam-
paign contributions first Tues-
day night.
They were flayed for getting
involved in city politics by
Calvin McLaughlin, a member
or the environmentalist groups
backing the initiative.
McLaughlin himself is a former
Newport Forum
financial backer of municipal
campaigns.
The developers, representing
virtually every major company
and landowner in the city, bad
gathered for the weekly session
conducted as part or the city's
general plan review.
McLaughlin is a molecular
biology and biochemistry pro-
f essor at UC Irvine. He is a
member of the city council-
Views Aired
By Candidates
By MICHAEL PASKEVJCH °' .... o.u, '1194 5Mlff
A proposed initiative that
would tie future development in
Newport Beach to the solving of
traffic problems came under
fire Tuesday night from City
Council candidates Jackie
Heather, Bill Von Esch, John
Tucker and Lucille Kuehn.
Partisan
Role Denied
By Riley
Orange County Supervisor
Thomas Riley denied today that
he bas introduced partisan
politica into his campaign for re-
election.
'\.) Riley drew barbs from elec-...J f' tion opponent Tom Roaers when
he announced Tuesday that he'll
be hosting "a pleasant special
'
soclal gatherina of our dedicated
Orange County RepubUcan civic
· leaders."
Purpose of the April 13 &tt·
together al Riley's Newport
Beach home is t.o witness Rlley·s
signing of the so-called
Republlcan 11th commandment,
a pledge not to speak badly or '~ other Republican candidates.
Jn response to the announce-
ment. Rogen said, "I can't
Jpeculate wby they would try to
drag our Republican Party lnto
a non-partisan election which
will be Oh the November ballot."
Riley said he did not intend lo
make the election a partisan is-
sue and could not if he wanted to beca~se Roliters also is' a llCe-
(See RILEY. Page A2)
Speaking before a gathering of
about 35 Balboa Island resi-
dents, incumbent Councilwoman
Kuehn said she is "~omplet.ely,
unalterably opposed" to the ln-
1l1ative sponsored by the Le~al
Environmental Analysis Fund
1LEAF).
"It ignores the regional im-
pact of traffic on Newport
Beach," Mrs. Kuehn said. "We
would still have traffic problems
and they would grow each
year ," even if the initiative is a
success, she claimed.
Planning Commissioner Paul
Hummel , Mrs . Kuehn's
challenger in District Six, said
he views the LEAF initiative an·
nounced last week with a "wait-
i,ng and watching" attitude.
"Hopefully, a revised general
plan will cancel the need for the
initiative," Ht:ammel said.
Planning Commissioner
Jackie Heather, one of two can-
didates in District Four, said she
believes the LEAF initiative
isn't a proper solution to city
tramc problems.
Drawing from a field of seven
queatlona, candidates in the
April 11 election for four council
seats aired their views on sub-
jects ranging from the LEAF in-
itiative to litter problems, the
Jarvis-Gann tax initiative and
low-income housine.
Here's bow the candidates
responded to their questions:
"Hap" Byert, DistHc:t One,
called city traffic problems• "a
disgrace" and said there ls a
need for a bactk route out of
Corona del Mar.
"I'm not a traffic specialist
but I will be open·• (to sugges-
tions), said Byers.
· Dtstrt~t "Oht <!'anditta~~ ·Peg
Forgil and Donald Strauss both
drew questions Oh the J arvls-
G a nn tax initiative.
"It may be bad, it may be
<See HOPEFULS, Page AU
Unsigned Letter
NB Author Denies
Slate Intention
The author of an unsigned
campaign letter advocaU01 a
bloc vote for three Newport
Beach City Council candidates
denied today that she intended
to form a slate.
Nancy Skinner. a Bay crest housewife, also said she clidn't
Jntend the letter to be dlstrtbut·
ed UDSilJled.
Howctver, she acknowled1ed
that she is a member of the
campaip committee of ooe ot
the candidates .sbe listed, Paul
Hummel.
Her unsigned lett~. which ad-
'VOCates a bloc vote.for Finl Dis-
rl ct candidate Don Straaas, ~lnl Dlstrict cand\clate Evel)tn
Hart and Sixth District can-
•dJdate Hummel, tie1an appear·
I OD doorsteps and in mallbo.x-
tbia WMk:end.
ID it, she •afS Uiolo Uiree can-
ctldatea should be eltct.d to
work with Councllmell atal
llycko!f and R~ Wllllalllt ln , their efforts to •stow don de-
yelopm t and.phase aroWth ...
RyclrofC lftcl' WllUams. 1be
apJ>Olnted Transportation Plan
CiUiena Adviaory Commlttee.
Tuesday niabt be was in-
troduced by Jean Watt, leader oI
Stop Polluting Our Newport
<SPON) and the Legal Environ-
mental Analyais Fund (LEAF>,
the croups 1ponsortng the in-
itiative. She described hirn as
one or the three traffic experts
who will be discussing the
measure tbrougbopt the com-
munaty.
McLau&hlin earlier in the
meeting had been declared out
of order by other audience mem-
bers when he praised one de-
veloper, Tom Mornssey.
Morrissey represents Ford
Aerospace and Communication
Corp. 's Aeronutronic Division
which is preparing development
plans for about 100 acres of the
Jamboree Road property it
Dallyl'lletMMI,_
HISTORIC FIREBOAT GOES ON BLOCK In~ Harbor. a Dr••m Fade• Awey
. .
By JOANNE RE~NOLDS
OI .. Dellt Plt.l 5Wf
Harbor Area industrialist J!)hn Rau's nine·year dream
dies on the auction block April 15 when he sells his 1919-
vintage fire boat, the Archibald J . Eley.
The date seems an appropriate one for Rau to sell the
boat which led the Los Angeles City fireboat fleet in the
flrst half of the century. She was named for the Los
A!'geles rire chief who organized the harbor's fire fleet.
RAU ESTIMATED ONCE that reStoration of the boat
wQuld consume nearly $50,000 over three years.
Today be said he gave up his dream of cruising
Newp()rt Harbor in the fireboat because he couldn't get the
city of Los Anaeles to sell him the customized fittings that
ohce belonged on the vessel.
·He said he's tried without success to buy the old equip-
ment since be acquired the boat.
"I JUST FOUND OUT recently that some blockhead
UP there sold all the stuff to a junk dealer," he Said.
Without. that equipment, Rau says restoration he'd
planned la lm~ible. So he ·s going to sell the boat.
He bad the Eley moved lo the docks of yacht broker
Roger Bloxham who wfll conduct the auction. The old boat,
tied to lb&!! docb at 223 21st St., was described by Bloxham
H "a beautifully built old thing.·'
Tt\e vessel spent much of the last year in and out of
boatyatdl 4ue t.o a penchant she had for sinking at the
Bal~a Perlil\$Ula dock where Rau kept her. pending start of
reatoratlon. • . .
"l'M J\JST GONNA WAIT and see what comes in in
the way ~ bids," he commented. "I have a feel of what
1he would have been worth to ii:ie as a fireboat but I don't
have a.flud bld in mlnd."
Rau aaid be b"ad once envisioned himself pllotina his
fireboat In the harbor'a character boat parade and func-
tionJnr as a one-bOat welcomlng committee, much as other
ports' f\re boats welcome artivin& ocean liners with jet.a of
water.
'"IT WOULD RA VE BEEN nice to be able to do It. The
boat ~as a tremendous history," he si&hed. ..
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 1978 N TEN CENT6
Plan
leases from the Irvine Company.
"I'd like to compliment Mr.
Morrissey," McLaughlin said,
••tor being the one major de-
veloper who doesn 'l fiddle ·in a
larae way in the clly election by
making campaign contribu·
tk>ns."
When be was introduced later
to discuss the initiative,
McLaugblln again launched an
attack on developers' campaign
Meet
contributions.
One candidate, Paul Humlllie),
who ,is trying to unseat Sixth
Dls(rict incumbent Lucille
Kuehn, has criticlud her accept-
. ance of funds from developers.
Two years ago, both
McLaughlin and his wile were contributors to the compaign.s of
Councilmen Paul Ryckoff and
Ray Williams.
<See LECTURE, Page A2)
'End Relationship'
Prfucess Gets
An Ultimatum
LONDON <AP) -Queen
Elizabeth II has told her
younger sister, Princess
Margaret, to end her much-
pu blicized relationship with
brewery heir Roddy Llewellyn
or withdraw from public life, the
Sun newspaper reported today.
Buckingham Palace declined
comment on the tabloid's front-
pa ge report of a royal ul-
timatum to the head-strong prin-
cess.
..1 wouldn't dream of contact·
ing the royal family about
private conversations," a palace
spokesman said.
The Sun, quoting "a close
friend of the royal family," said
the queen was "deeply upset"
by criticism levelled at the royal
family because or the 47 -year-
old Margaret's friendship with
Llewellyn. 17 years her junior
and an aspiring night club
singer.
The unidentified royal confi-
dant was quoted as saying, "The
princess is being forced to
choose-where her first loyalty
fies. Jt's sad bui inevitable.
"Everybody in the royal fami-
ly has t.o accept that they cannot
live as others do • • • • Whether
it'a fair or not, Margaret bas to
decide whether to behave ac-
cording to-royal traditions oi: ,opt
out and please herself.''
The report came one day after
royal spokesmen ·announced the
princess had the flu and had
canceled public engagements.
Margaret was still bed-ridden
today in Windsor Castle west of
London. A medical bulletin
Tuesday said, "her condition is
improving."
Lewellyn. a socialite who
Mesa Defuses
Fireirorla
For Minon
Fireworks are banned in
Newport Beach, but it's no big
secret that a lot of kids simply
cross city lines into Costa Mesa
to buy their Fourth of July sup·
plies.
This year it's going to be a bit
tougher. at least for youngsters
under 16 years of age.
The Costa Mesa City Council
bas approved a new ordinance
Uiat prohibits the sale or
fireworks to anyone under 16. A
vendor who sells to underage
patrons faces a possible $500
fine.
Fire officials, in requesting
approval or the fire code, said
they would just as soon have the
sale of fireworks banned
altogether, but figure the 18·
year limit should encourage
more parental supervision.
once described himself as ··un-
employable," has been
Margaret's frequent companion
since her legal separation from
Lord Snowdon -society photo-
. grapher Anthony Armstrong.
Jones -two years ago.
Hinshaw
Out After
BMontfu
Former Congressman Andrew
J. H ins haw walked out of
Orange County Jail a free man
today after serving eight months
behind bars.
Hinshaw was released from
jail shortly after 6 a.m. and only
has to complete three years pro-
bation to settle accounts in full.
The 53-year-old former
congressman was convicted in
two separate 1976 trials of
bribery-related and misuse of of·
lice charges. .
Both convictions s•.emmed
from his activities as Orange
County assessor in the early
1970s as well as his successful
1972 campaign for Congress.
It wasn't until early 1975 that a
county grand jury indicted then·
Congressman Hinshaw.
And it wasn't until the close of
two trials in 1976 that he was
sentenced to state prison from
one to 14 years.
T~ first -four -months -0£
Hinshaw's stay behind bars was
spent in the Men's Correctional
Institution at Chino.
In early December, the
former Republican
congressman was transferred to
Orange County Jail and spent
the final four months of his term
on a work furlough program.
That program allowed him to
spend bis days working in a
brother's furniture plant in Los
Angeles while checking back in-
to jail nights and weekends.
"It feels great to be out, to be
walking out and not having to go
back," Hinshaw said as he
ended his jail experience.
"lt's going lo be great to be
able lo do the things that free
people can do," he added. ·
The one time Orange County
assessor said he plane to work
with his brother tn a lamp
manufacturing business in Los
Angeles.
• 'Llfe goes on and I plan to do
a lot more living,•• Hinshaw
said.
Coast
Weather
Increasing cloudiness
tonight becominc m09Uy
cloudy with 30 percent
chance or showers
Thun'day. Lows t.on1 ht 60
to 55. Hilths Thursday in
low lo .rqld-«>t.
INSIDE TODAY .. r• there too moiau
.Hncator·~rol•, •na.tor·
colonei. and c0flgrfuma1t-
colo121l.I m todaJI'• Congr.u'
~"l/~AJO •
••• JC
•
Expwring Expresrioris
Cher) I Fried (left), Lisa Llska (center>
and CJms Smith show their skills in acting
without words a~ part of Coast Week at.
Orange Coast CoIJege in Costa Mesa. The
three are members of the OCC Mime
Club. one of many campus organizations
that gave demonstrations and
performances in the OCC quadrangle
Tuesday and today.
.
Vanessa Scorched p,..,.. Pflfl'! Al
LECTURE. .
By British Press ..
• He told the assembled builders
and landowners he felt their
campaian contributions were
improper in that they seemed to
be an attempt to influence coun-
cil votes on buildinC projects. ' LONDON CAP> -London
nc!wspapers chidA!d British ac-
tress Vanessa Redgrave today.
tor her Oscar acceptance speech
m wh1ch she called Jewish dem-
onstrators at the Hollywood
ceremony" Zionist hoodlums."
.. lf she couldn't accept her
Oscar m the spirit of show busi-
ness razzmatazz, which is all it
is. lhen she should have stayed
away, as Marlon Brando and
George C. Scott have done in the
past," the Daily Mirror said in
an ediLonal. (Related story, B'l>
Under the headline ''Silly Fil-
l'y," the pro-Labor Party
D6wspaper said, "As a politi-
cian, Vanessa Redgrave is a fine
a(?tress who fully deserves her
Oscar. As an actress she is a
Jbusy politician ••• :·
Miss Redgrave won the
Academy A ward !or best sup·
:vorting actress in the film
• .. Julia," in wh.ich she played an
anti-Nazi underground fighter.
The film starred Jane Fonda as
playwright Lillian Hel.1.man.
In her acceptance speech, M,as Redgrave denounced
~ewport Sets
·Story Hours
A pajama story hour and two
other story hour sessions are
scheduled at Newport B.each
libr~ries this week in honor of
National Library Week.
A paj_ama story .h,our J9r pte.
sc:hoolers 1s scheduled f6r 7:30
p.m~ tonight at the Balboa
Brancb Libtary, 100 E. Balboa
Blvd.
• Two eicbt-week sessions of
story hour will begin at 10:90
a.m. Thursday and Friday at the
Coron~ del Mar Branch Library,
420 !hrieold Ave., Corona del 1'tar~ .Registration for those
sessions is being accepted at the
J1brary.
F....,PageAI
LETTER •••
Michael Gerfnc in the Third Dis·
t'hct, .Jackie Heather in the
Fourth District and incumbent
Lucille Kuehn in the Sixth Dis.'
1rict.
Like Salata, Mn. Skinner
et.fessed that her efforts are her
CJ'Wn and do not represent. a joint
strategy of the candidates
backed in the letters.
OtlANQI! qoAl'T 11
DAILY PILOT
............... ,.,......., __ _
-•11.~ Vlclt"'9*"1-0.--ll ......
n-o .. K...t .....
"'C.a::ttt:-\ .
~·.laA ....... , .. _"_, ....... ...
Jewish demonstrators at the
Hollywood Music Center who
were protesting her financing
and narrating of a documentary
called 0 The Palestinian."
The actress, made a Com-
mander of the Order of the
British Empire by Queen
Elizabeth II in 1967 for her
services to the theater, is a
leader of Britain's tiny left.wing
Workers Revolutionary Party.
The conservative Daily Ex-
press said in an editorial that'
American Jews, protestln'K Miss Redgrave's support for the
Palestinian cause, would be
.. very ill-advised to take the
divine Vanessa seriously."
"Some actresses are
beautiful, some can act, some
like Mlss Redgrave have both
attributes, but they are not cut
out for politics," the Express
said.
Realty firm owner Lyman
Faulkner, a member of Mrs.
Kuehn's campalen committee.
an1rily demanded equal time to
refute the "political message"
but be did not apeak at the close
of the meeting.
Developers bad no comment
about McLau&hlin'a attack aod
they had little tQ say about the
initiative which la desiened to tie
future bulldin& lo improvements
in the road system. •
City Manager Robert Wynn. •
who bu presided.over the Tues-
day evening sessions, said the
initiative would be discussed at
next week's meeting in order to
give audience members lime to
study the proposal and ask ques-•
lions of Mrs. Watt, McLauehlln
and the other backers of the
measure.
Equestrian Center
Sought~in lroine
An Irvine equestrian commit·
tee was formed Tuesday by the
City Council. It will study sites
for a proposed equestrian center
and design a city equestrian
trail system.
The committee will have eieht
members: five residents with
equestrian interests, and one
representative each from the
Irvine Co., Orange County En-
vironmental Management Agen-
cy (EMA) and the city Com-
'1TJT' FILM SET
•'Tut, the Boy King," a
film tour through the King
Tut exhibit, will be shown
free of charge at 7 o'clock
tonight at Mariners
Elementary School
Cafetorium, noo Mariners
Drive, Newport Beach.
The showing is spoD$ored
by the Newport Beach
library.
munity Development Depart·
ment.
Residents named to the
committee were Bill Culbertson.
Pam Davis, Jan Fix, Betty
McMullen and Martha Wetzel.
Advisory members named
were Pam Sheldon of the com-
munity development depart-
ment, Gordon Oetcbel of the Irvine Company and Bob Rushy
or the county's EMA.
Ooly the residents will have
voling powers, though an
original proposal eave votes to
all ei&ht.
Councilman David Sills had
objected to the lrvine Company
bavinf a voting member on the
committee because any
equestrian center site chosen
would affect the compaoy
economically. ·
The lrvine Company ls the
likely developer of the project. It
ls seeking an alternative site to
its coastal equestrian center
along Pacific Coast Hipway.
near Corona del Mar. which 4
plana lo close this year.
E',....PageAI
HOPEFlJLs SPEAK oui'. • •
On the airi)ort lss~oe Mrs. Hart said the city s d µse
some of ita $250:000 atu fund to
hire 4 lawyer ~ause 67 percent
of the city's NSidenta .art ad·
versely affected by airport
noiae. ·
Ivens supports fines !or noise
viol•tlons at the airport and said
the city 1bouJd ftgbt renewal of
NEW YORK CAP> -David
Berkowitz, the pud1y former
postal clerk charged u the Son
of Sam killer, has decided to
plead guilty to the murders
without atand1ng trial, two
newspapers said today.
Newaday, a Long laland·bMed
newspaper, and the New York
Post said Berkowitz told rel-
.at iv ea, his attorneys and psychiatrists that he wants to
plead gullty to the murders lf he
is declared competent to at.and
trial.
lroine Ready
ToCND:~e?
Afle.r v~t to forin a
city eq~an committee
Tuesday, Jrvine City
Councilman David Siils re-
c a Ile d past efforts to
secure a coaatal area
witbin lbe IrviDe apbere of
municipal tnflumce.
He predicted a new try
for the valuable coast
land• between Laguna
Beach and Newpori Beach.
''I've always said we're
going to take the Irvine
Coast," Sills beamed.
.. Now we've aot cavalry 1"
NB Police If he pleaded guilty, Berkowitz:
would have to serve at least 25
years before beinc eligible for
parole. If he pleaded guJlty to
more than one murder, he could
be sentenced lo consecutive 25.-
year terms.
Berkowitz, 2S, arrested Aug.
10 outside his suburban Yonkers
apartment, was declared com-
petent to stand trial once. A
second competency hearing is
scheduled before state Supreme
Court Judge Joseph Corso on
Tuesday in Brooklyn.
Seek Pair
.In Assaults
His attorneys and relatives
want Berkowitz to stand trial,
believin& a jury mi&ht accept a
defense contenlion that he was
mentally incompetent over the
year's time when be la accused
of killing slx young persons and
woundina seven others.
However, if Berkowitz ia judged
competent to stand trial, be
would also be competent to enter
a guilty plea if be wished, legal
sources said.
Newsday quoted an unnamed
relative as saying Berkowit~
"doesn't want to put everyone
through the circus of a trial. He
feels that if all the people he
wounded and the relatives of
those he killed are called to
testify, people will bate hirn all
over again. And be does not
"want people to bate him, only to
understand that he had to do
what he did." ..
·Alley Repair
Work Begins
In Newport
Work has begun on a $59,000
alley repair project in central
Newport and on Balboa Island.
• Project sites include the alleys
off Balboa Boulevard between
4Sth and 46tb streets, between
43rd and 44th streets, between
4lat and 42nd streets and the al-
ley linking Balboa to River
.A venue between 4lst and 40th
streets.
Also slated for repairs are the
Balboa Island alleys off Park
A venue and Emerald A venue,
the north Bay Front alley off ...
Apolena Avenue, the alley
between Amethyst and Apolena
avenues off Balboa Avenue and
the alley off Park Avenue
between Abalone and Crystal
avenues.
A city spokesman said east·
bound traffic on Park A venue
between Crystal and Abalone
will be,.s:losed While the work is under Vlay.
The work ls slat.ed for comple-
tion by mid June.
Newport Beach police are
seeking a man and a woman in
connection with two apparenUy
related ooontime altercations at
the El Torito restaurant, near
the Orange County Airport.
The man, described as five
feet, 10 inches tall and weighing
about 000 pounds, is sought for .
questioning in connection with
an assault with a deadly weapon on David Dorsey, 22.
Dorsey, of 132 Lisa Lane,
Costa Mesa, suffered a cut near
hls eye in the incident. ·
· According to police reports,
'Dorsey bad just entered the bar
of the eatery at 4221 Dolphin
Striker Way and was talking to
two women acquaintances.
He said the suspect and be got
into a verbal debate about an in-
troduction to the women, a de-
bate that was punctuated by the
suspect pouring water down the
back of Dorsey's pants, tossing a
drink at bis chest and finally
heaving a heavy water glass at
his face.
Police said the suspect fled
while Dorsey went to the
manager to summon help and
apparently in the interim, one of•
. the women at the table, Marie
Lavin, 46, of 22736 Foxborough,
El Toro, became involved in
another shouting match with BJ1
unidentified woman customer.
That dispute ended when Miss
Lavin left the restaurant but she
reported to officers that once
outside, the other woman hit her
in the head with her purse.
Police say they do not know iC
the two mi.ssin& people were in
the restaurant together.
FroaPageAI
filLEY .•.
time Republican.
. The Newport Beach
• supetvisor said his interest in
citing the GQP llth command-
ment is bis way of attempting to
mt the campaian "lo a point
where issues, not personaliUes
are discussed."
Riley said he covered the issue
with Democrats by discussing
bis upco~ Republican social
hour with an aide to Supervisor
Ralph Clark, Stanley Oftelie.
.. Stan seemed to think it was a
pretty good idea. And I think
he's a Democrat," Riley said to
indicate he had touched base
with both major political
parties.
Beaches m Newport Beach
and Huntiniton Beach originally
closed by the County Health
Department after a sewage li1*
broke In the Santa Ana Rivdr-
last month are likely to remaip
quarantined C9f' a Ions time tor
other rea:wms', a health offlci-1 said today. .
Richard Robison, assistant
director of environmental healt!i
for Orange County, expla1ned
that the contamination of
beaches stretching from 52nd
Street m Newport to Huntingtoc:i
Beach's Brookburst Street is th!!
result of the storm runoff stiJl
llowine down the river.
"Anytime you have a lot of
rain hke we've had and the
Pratio Dam is kept open an~
flowing, then you get contamina-
tion on these beaches,.. be ex-
plained.
The river above the Pradp
Dam in Santa Ana Canyon flows
through farm land in San
Bernardino and Riverside COUll-
lles. Robison said the river \IS
become contaminated by anillM
wastes and fertlhzers which it iS
carrying to the beaches.
The beaches were c losed
March 13, the day aCter a sewer
main broke in Garden Grove.
Nearly 20 million gallons ot
sewage were carrie~
downstream before the break
was repalJ'ed a week later.
Robison said the elevated bac-
teria counts now being recorded
at the beaches are the result ~
the dirty water flowing down~
river from lhe Prado Dam.
Robison said 1t is bis un-
derstanding that the dam is be--
mg kept at a low Jevel so that it
will have capacity to handle the
runoff from the melting snow
which '4111 come when the rains
stop and the weather warms up.
. rm alrwd lhose beaches are
going to stay of( limits until the
ram stops and the dam stopt>
llowmg," he added.
Newport Kids
Horwredin
Basketball
Twenty-five young basketball
players were honored Tuesday
night for outstancting participa-
tion in the program sponsored
by the Newport Beach Parks.
Beaches and Recreation Depart-
mene
Athletes from seven parks re-
ceived commendations from the
PJtrks, Beaches and Recreallon
Commission.
Award winners are:
Buffalo Hills Park: Jacqueline
Heap, Brandice Rigter, Chris
Burns, Brian Skibby and Ken
Yonkers,
Community Youth Center:
Chris MacDonald. Michelle
McKeever, Christopher Finch
and Christopher McLaughlin.
Eastbluf! Park: Beth Merry,
Sandra Spas, Barry Smith, Bob
Taylor and Eric Taylor.
Mariners Park: Sean Head-
ington and Erika Krumins.
Newport Elementary: Traci
• M arinovich, Kelly Oates, Heidi
Schmidt, Kirk Hassen, John
Myers and Scott Scidmore.
Newport Heights: Scott Craig.
Paul Rlchley and Jay Wilkerson.
Lynn Hart HART'S John Hart
SPORTING GOODS
53 8 CENTER ST.• COSTA MESA• 646-1919
Adidas Trodc Shoes
$18.95 & 27.95
Adidas Ir Tigec'
~&~Shoes
$19.95 to S:W.95
Al Purpose Shon
Socc« ShoeJ f/.95 to $26.95
8clllbal Shoes Sl 3.95 to $34. 9S
WHtbal Shots
Canvwse I Addas
• $14,95 to $35.95
Aadal~
Bancroft~~
Tma Shcit1S13~95 to $34.95
dr
warm .. Sdts
$25.95 to 164. 95
Wan11 "P. Jcictits S14.9S
5WiGt Shl;t1 a PUnta $5.95
Running Shot11
$3.20 to $9.95
Running Shirts $7 .95
Gym Shotis
Basketball Shirts
Color.cl BaHbal Sleeffs
BoHball Pants
Softball Shirts
Baseball Sanitary Sox
8aMball Hose
Bostbal Mitts & Gloves
lcntballt Caps
8arWI Stt• $49.95
Dumbell Set• $19.95
Chest Puls
JUmpR.-
DudchltRna
a.ri .. Finl
BoOglt loards
Kkkloardl
'
... DAfl. V P1t.OT .4 ..
Shield Widow Vanishes· at Sea:~
Bill Eyed ,
By Sentite
SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -
Several hours t>.Core tbe ll•nt
ocHnltner QuHn Ellzabelb 2
WU to ~k lD Ha•ail, ••
ly woman whom cut u1
passen1ers had nicknamed 'The
Duchess" vanished withou\ a
trace.
Carla ltll Bodmtr, • 70-ytar·
old widow from Swltzerlaod, ls
believed to have Cajlen or Jwnped ovttbo&rd the night of
March 38 a the ,allp approached
Honolulu cttirlftg a 90·day world
cruise.
"There ls no indlcatlon. of foul
play,'' Ot.bmar Huttar, the Swiss
vice consul ln San Franciaco,
.,
said Tuesday. "I wouldn't make seems so terrible and lonelt to ~ mystery out of 1t. · · step off that ralltne in the ld·
BUT A DISAPPSAaANCE at
sea la atwaya myat.eriou1.
"It's the kind of thJn1 that
haunts everyone," said
Frederick Flemming, a
passen1er from Houston. "It
die of U>e niaht" •
M ra. Bodmer bad 11lne~~er
nickname btcauae 1be Wore
floor·length gowns and ~de
almost regal entrances lq .the
dlnln1 room1 and ballr~ ol lhe luxurtoua ahlp.
AFTER SHE vanlthed, a de·
SACMllENTO <AP) -A
"ableld law" to protect re·
portera wbo roluae to name con·
tldential aourcea would b9 writ·
ten lnto the atate Comtlt.LtUon,
under a measure now on the
~late Senate floor.
Tbe propoaed amendinent,
ACA 4 by Auemblyman Jerry
Lewla R·Hithland, w<>n a e-2
vote Tuesday of the Senate
Judiciary Committee. It baa
already passed the Assembly.
Amputee R d S . tailed search waa made of the t · giant Uner, but no trace of her oun arving w~~fc':n~v •• a 1pokt1man for
• the Swlss FOreljJn Mlnlatry sllid,
"It must be aasumed that she
Lewfa ·~ the measure would protect ... free now ot ln!orma·
Uon between the pubUc and ita
government . . . a eovernment
that can at times become qui~
arroaant."
II" APPROVED by the Senate,
it will go on the November ballot.
The measure Wat prompted
by the c;asea of William Farr
and the Fresno Four, who were
jailed by judges for refusin1 to
identify sources.
Callfomla bH a sbltld law
that says reporters need not
name sources. But the judges
who ordered the jailln1s ruled
that the law is outweighed by the
constltutiona1 right to a fair trial
and their power over court pro·
ceedinp.
SAID LEWIS: "The court's
root ln the door could very well
lead lo the deatroylnf of the
shield law in California. '
He said jud1es could not over·
rule the shield law if it were in
the Constitution.
A representative of the state
Judicial Council, which
supervises the court system,
aaid ACA 4 would make it
harder for judsea to keep grand
jury transcripts and other con·
f!denl1al matters secret.
ADDED STEPHEN Birdlebough, "U•' we want to pro-
tect that confidential.tty, then t.be
court needs the power to enforce
its orders."
He sald the measure ls "an
open invitation" to 1rand jury
members "to divulee proceed-
ings and know there will be no
penalty."
The committee chairman,
Sen. AUred Song, D·Monterey
Park, endorsed the mea&ure
despite his criticism or "ir· t"espons1ble" N!porters, a ref.
erence to stories he contends
have unfairly portrayed his in·
volvemenl in an FBI investiga.
lion of the Legislature.
~ ··~ Ccaedldate Wed -
Mike Curb, a recording in·
dustry executive and
Republican candidate for
lieutenant governor, mar·
ried Linda Dunf hy , daughter ot telev slon
,newscaster Jerry Dunphy,
In private rites Tuesday in
the Beverly Hills
Presbyterian Church.
Classic Film
Show Decision
Reversed Again
RIVERSIDE (AP) -The City
Council has decided that D. W.
Griffith's "Birth or a Nation"
film classic will not be shown at
the city museum alter all.
The council decided 5-3 Tues-
day that the film -wblcb many
members of the black communi·
ty found objectionable -ahould
be screened publicly at St.
Catherine's Cathollc Church
with private funds inltead of
taxpayer monies.
THE COUNCIL adopted a
comprom'-e a few weeks ago
that would have allowed the film
. to be presented at the mu1eum
alon1 with commenll tr~m a
black peraon or sociolo1i1t. The
compromlae followed the eowt·
cil's cancellation of a March 9
showing,
Some people objected to the
council's Tuesday decision as
censorship.
SAN DIEGO (AP) -An elder·
ly double amputee ls
ho1pltallied after abe was found
sprawled uncon1ctoU1 and 1tarv·
tn1 on the noor of tho home she
shared Yt'Stb btr huaband, police
said. Her buaband apparently
died five 0r 1ht days earlier. • ftf abel and Orville B. Paulaon,
both In their 808, were known
around their nei1hborhood as
stubborn, independent people.
For tbelr love of independence,
nurtured durine their S5·ytar
marrlaae, tbey paid a dear
price.
Paulson's wlfe was ln very
critical condition at Mlsslon Bay
Memorial Hospital today, suffer·
Ing from the eflects of starva-
tion, said hospital apokffwoman
Lois Haselton. Tbe wo•an,
whose 1111 were amputated
because of dlabelu, lay belplea,
on the noor for several dll)'S after her husband apparently
died of natural causes, the cor·
oner· s office said.
/tfarltte Senieneed
VISTA (AP) -A 25-year-0ld
Camp Pendleton Marine has
been sentenced to ure in prison.
for the fatal shooting last Sep.
tem ber or the teen-aged wlfe of
another Marine.
Superior Court Judge F.V.
Leopardo s~ntenced Jackie
Robinson on Tuesday followin1
hls jury conviction last month
for the murder. kidnap, rape
and robbery or Sophia Ann
Martinez, 19 .
lrtjured Maft 'StafJ~
LOS ANGELES (AP > -A
Nazi-uniformed man: injured in
a scuffle with memoers of the
Jewish Defense 'Leaeue during
Academy Awards ceremonies
Monday night, underwent Sur·
gery for a possible skull frac-
ture.
Nursing superviaor Beverly
Pratt at the County-USC
Medical Center said early today
Richard Rogers, 40, ls in stable
and fair condition.
Ute Te,... Gf.,en
''WHERE IS it 1oln1 to atop?"
asked Ernest Pintor, a Mexican
American councilman. "Here is
the bla~ community that ii say· ing, 'Don't show this Cllm.' Let's
say next week il's the brown
commwuty ... saying 'Don't
show the "Alamo" ' because..:il
depicts the Mexican Amerloana LOS ANGELES (AP> -A Ku
ln a very bad lliht." Klux KJan member convicted of
I. E. "IACKIE" HEATHER €hQlrma~. NewPort Planning Commluton x Col. Fred Tschopp has
assumed command of
the 12th Staff Group,
Marine Corps Reserve ,
In Los An1ele1 ..
Tschopp lives in Foun-
tain Valley with hit wtte ..
Dale, and two sons. Joolde """'* for City ~II. ilOO Dotothy LaM, Newpoft leach, CA '26'0
PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PUBUCN&l'ICE PUBUC NOTICE
['--_sr._:4_TE_)
•p lannin1 the murder of the
Jewish Defense Lea1ue's Weal
Coast director haa been sen·
tenced to Ute ln pruon deaplte a report. recommendina proba·
tion.
Superior Court Judie Jack B.
Tao said Tuesday after aentenc·
lnat Robert Dehpel of North
Hollywood that th& 33-year·old
Actual alze: 811x11 't
Dehnel waa "full oC hatred and fell overboard. We don't have mahce" any back1round on her, but the
· certainly is not well known.·•
Behr BHI Claal'leteged The disappearance f~at became public lmowledce n LOS ANGELES CAP> -The some pu11en1era mentioned i to
Behr property tax bill should be newsmen durtnc a nlne·l\our
de c I a'red uncons tit u lion al layover here last weekend. because it is \led to a ballot
proposition that ha1 yet to be ACCORDING TO Cunard
passed, a retired attorney says. Lines. owner or the ship; ''She
1 was last seen at 10 p.m. on
Ardy V. Barton, 55, of Santa March 26. At 10 a.m . March 27.
Barbara has filed a peUtion with the bedroom steward reported
the state Supreme Court urlini that her bed was untouc:hed. An that the bill be declared un· extensive search of tbe $hip
constitutional. proved negaU ve. '•
To celebrate the visit of Tutankhamun's treasures to Southern California we
are pleased to offer Tutankhamun-The Last Journey, free for the asking.
All you have to do is stop by in person. ask for It, and It's yours
It Is a stunning book: a riiarvelous portfolio of color photographs of the artifacts
of ancient Egypt.The accompanying text tell9 the tragic story of the boy klng,
Tutankhamun, who lived and reigned over thirty-three centuries ago;
the political and religious turmoil that precaeded him and with which he had to
deal , his death, the elaborate preparations for his burial, the religious and
mystical significance of his tomb and the treasure that was entombed with him
It was the only tomb of all the Kings of Egypt that was not completely looted.
The search for it and the discovery are also described by the author,
Wiiiiam MacQuitty, an internationally honored photographer, world traveler,
and flln:i producer (A Night to Remember). This is one of the most up-to-date
booke about Tutankhamun. and one of the most popular. Publ ished to sell at
S4.95, It quickly went to a second printing. We were able to obtain a limited
number of copies, so first come, flret served, until our supply Is exhausted.
One book to a family, please. Sorry, we eannot honor mail reQuests .
Also at Mutual Savings, The Treasures of Tutahkhamun.
This continuous presentation of f ull-color slides from the Los Angeles County
Museum Is now appearing in our lobby. It gives you a close, Intimate look at
the golden glories <'f the Tutankhamun exhibit. last day for this presentation
Is April 15th..
I I
f
l
' •
'
Let's take a cool look at next Tuesday's City Council
el cUon in Newport Beach. . ,
No matter how steamed up the campaign rhetoric
has gotten, it is unlikely that any one of the 12 remaining
eand.idates aould cause the city to slide into the ocean or tie
paved over with construction, or make the city's complex
traffic problems go away.
But since four of the city's seven district seats are up
for grab.9, the election is important. Eacb candidate
should be analyzed for personal qualifications and for
what balance and talents he or she would Qff er to other
co"ncil ~mbers.
The Daily Pilot's analysis ~f these standards leads to
these recommendations: ·
-District 6 -Lucille Kuehn, incumbent.
-District 4 -Jackie·. Heather, planning commis·
sioner.
-Di.strict 3 -Mike Gering, attorney.
-Di.strict 1-Don Strauss, busineas executive.
Here are some thoughts and observations about the
c~paiins and candidates:
Lucille Kuehn is running on her record and it's a good
one. Despite her weakness for launehing into complex
lectures on the city's planning and economic problems,
her lour years on the council have been studded with
activity and accomplishments.
Her singular drive to get the senior citizens' center in
Corona del Mar under way could be reason enough to
warrant her re·eleclion. But she's offered miwh more and
in addition has been a studious and well-preyared council
member. She has exhibited more constructiv~ concern
about the lbng-range needs of t city than most of her
council colleagues.
Ber primary opponent, no-growth advocate Paul
Hummell, has claimed Mrs. Kuehn is obligated t<>
builders and developers, but we've seen no evidence she
has ever voted anything but her conviotiQ_ns. In fact her
votes on items involving growth or dev~pment have
reflected the clear majority sentiment of the council on
most occasions.
Jackie Heather is a good choice to represent the 4th
District.
In serving seven years as a planning commissioner,
~lrs. Ueather has worked successfully on some of the
C'1ly"s toughest problems. lnquisifive and fair, she has
displayed knowledge, energy and perspective -enough
to earn her two successive ~er.ms as commiesion
chairman and recent election lo bead the state League or
Cities Planning Department.
Mike Gering has struck a ~asonab!'e and intelligent
image in his campaign to represent the 3rd District.
He has shown he learned Newport Beas:K's i~sues
during two yeers monitoring the City Council for th'9
Chamber of Commer~e. Tbat position led to hi9
appointment to the county Citizens' Direction Finding
Commission, an advisory group servinc the Board Of
Supervisors. ·
The word balance seems to describe Gering. More
than his primary O(>ponent, Evelyn Hart, he seems to
offer an open-mindedness about approaching solutions to
the city's problems,
Two candidates ertterge as top runne~ in the 1st
District: Don StratJSs and Peg Forgit.
Strauss appears to be the belter cboiee if selection is
made on the basis of experience in ,pubUc lire. Ar:, a
personnel expert in private industry, and ~ a 10-year
tnember of the local school board, he ha5 qua1ificatioos
that could serve the city well.
Unfortunately, he has been equivocal and difficult to
pin down on issues that he -as the first candidate to
announce he Was running -should have be.en able to.
answer directly.
Newport merchant Peg Porgit has a long-standing
loyalty .and love for her city. tr she does not measure \lP
to ~trauss in qualifications, she would be a more ste•dy
.choice. ·
Her views may be more !ftmple than Strauss', but
they would be more dependable.
After noting candidate Stra~· equivocation, we
would suggest with some ambivalence ourselves that he
appears to have the potential to be the better council
member and the better candidate in this close race.
We can find no great hope for the philosophy that
Newport Beach can cope with the future and retain its
basic lifestyle with the "stop the world" approach
advocated by some of the candidates as their main stock
in trade.
The theory that Newpart is an island that can Ignore
or rence out the world ·around it simply will not work. It
wil~ be destructive in the long run.
.Newport needs to be in a position to lead and to earn
the' friendship, cooperation an~ confidence of its
nei1bbors, and that of state and county government.
Otherwise, crucial decisions will be made1for it, but not
necessarily in Newport's best interests.
ln summary: Lucille Kuehn in District 6, Jackie
Heather in District 4, Mike Gering in District 3, an~ otl a
clo!e call, Don Strauss ln District 1.
**** , 'A final note: N~wport City Counclt elections
ca~paigns traditionally wind up with a nurr.y or eleventh
hour accusations and claims too late to be refuted be/ore
eJc~ion day. It th matcrtal in your mailbox or on your
doorknob isn't signed or otberWlSe identified, toss it out. Al'4 look with a skeptical ~ye atr whatever allegaUo
have been saved up for a last.minute smear.
• Opfnions expra in 1he space b0"9 are thoM of the Olltf PllOt.
Other views e~pr..,.d on thla page •r• those of their authON .,,d
wtlsts. Read« comment Is Invited. Addreu The Daily Pilot. P.O.
lo• 1560, Coala Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714') &42--4321.
.
Robert N. Weed/Publlsher 11WftH k.MVll/Edltor V:
\Vedneeday.AprilS,1978 a.,.,.,. krwlblch/Edltorlal Peoe Editor
, • Jack Anderson 4
V~t Job Priorities Targeted
WASHINGTON -At
conslderable rilk to bis political
neck, President. Carter hopes to
Umlt. lhe preferential treatment
nterans receive 1n applJing !or
11overnment
3ob1. Aides
have per•
auaded the
preaM:lent that
veterans
priority bas
been squeez·
l n g o u t
women and
minorities
from federal
employment.
Tbe proposed reduction in
veteram benefits, of coune, has
brought an almighty bowl from
the powerful veterans lobby. But
a confidential White House memo, which recenUy reached
the presideol•s desk, convinced
him tbat llvlnl job preferences
to ex-servicemen, some of whom
left the military decades ago, is
blocking nearly everyone else
from the federal payroll.
By law, the memo explained,
veterans are given a five·point
bonus on the Civil Service test
scores on the theory that "those
who served in times or war
deserve special assistance in
readjust.in& to civilian life." In
reality, even those veterans who
served during peacetime are
arante.d a "lifetime beneflt ...
CONSEQUENTL ~ the memo
declared, veterans "brock the
top or· most Civil Service
registers. This often creates
severe problems •.. for
non·veteran bu~ qualified
candidates, especially women."
In Dallas, for example, a
woman who scored 10Qi.an an air
traffic controller's teat was
nked 141\h behind veterans
with pttft:rence. If veterans aot
no special break. sbe would bavc
ranked seventh.
A female lawier In
Washincton recently appl ed !or
a civilian job with the De!en.se
Department. ~lthougb ahe had
more experience than ftlOSt of
the male prospects. her
application was promptly
returned. She was told she
couldn't be considered wilboUt
veterans preference.
"In some areas, such as San
Diego," the While House memo
said, "retired military personnel
are often the only individuals
eligible for federal
employment." There are about
140,000 such "double dip~rs" -
retired servicemen who are
collecting a military pension in
addition to their 1overnment
salaries -ln the federal
bureaucracy. Yet they get flnt
dibs oo government jobs, even if
they lert the mtlitary before
World War 11.
THJ; CURRENT law also
hampers efforts to streamline
the government, Carter was
advls..ed. When a mllltary base is
closed, for example. "ttle
veteran's preference is absolute
•nd allows him to 'bump•
non.veterans, including those
with treater seniority,•• tbe
memo explained. Many officials
avoid ordering needed cutbacks,
the refore, ''because or the
adverse impact on equal
opportunity and affirmative
action ga.ins."
1'he president has
recommended that veterans.
who now comprise half the
federal work force, be given
prefertnce for only 10 years
after discharge. This would help
Vietnam veterans and would
accomplish the original purpose
of the law by limiting assistance
to the period o~djustment. An exception woul be ma for
disabled veteran who would
retain a lifetime job advantage.
Another confidential briefing
paper suggested ways for the
president to sell the proposal
and thwart the carping, which
has already begun on Capitol
Hill. "From some quarters we
are beginning to receive the
expected criticism on our
proposed changes," tbJ!
document staled. "Somehow we
do not seem to be getting across
the fact that ..• our proposals
help those veterans groups that
need 1t the most, the disabled
veteran and the Vietnam
vtleran."
•'OOTN<Yl'E: A spokesman for
the Veterans of Foreign Wars
told my associate Howie Kurtz
that "the White House is using
veterans preference as a
scapegoat. They haven't been
getting enough women and
minorities in government, so
they've got to blame it on
something." He added that he
expects Congress to kill the
proposal.
.
We Don't Need a Middle-aged Army
To the Editor:
Your editorial "Fix Military
Retirement" (Daily Pilot 26
March) showed a lack of objee·
tivity. The author apparently
looked only at lhe cost, ignoring
what it was buying. Assuming
that the plan (A 30-year pro-
gram with a minimum retire-
ment age of SS> was in opera·
lion, we would have a military
force with an average age of
between 33 and 37 years.
Wouldn't it make you feel secure
to have this "mature.seasoned"
force defending you?
NOW, Let's look at the other
slde a mom-="'t. Take an 18·year·
old mld·weslem boy who joins
the Anny, atrves his 30 years
and retires. He'll be 48 years old
Olld nol eligible for his retire-
ment pay for Jtiother 7 years!
The endorsed plan disapproves
his taking a civilian job, so he
has to go on relief until he is 55
years old. At age 55 he will have
to continue on relief, beca~¥s
unless he retired as a colonel
better, be cannot support h s
family on his retired pay.
An armed force is just like
•nything else one gets these •
days, you'll aet about what you
pay ror. ;au the 30-year/SS. year reti ent plan llJld you'll
buy an ar y of middle·aged
stalwarts-*ho don't know how to
get on ~er and can't fight their
way out of a wet paper bag.
NORMAN I. FRENCH
...._.KlletC
To the Edit.or:
I have been following the con· troveny regardint the mllitart
reUtement pollcy for some
months now. However. yo\lr
March aJ editori.al made me re-alize that lhe entire theory ol
early retirement o( miUtary
personnel is not prpperly un·
deratood by those debating it. -The fact is that when a man
tf'actiea the .,. or 40 he besins
to slow down. Thil is a fad and
oll of lb "cccond balfl" ancl
Jack La L&im arezly c:eP; Uons to this fact.
The story goes that this was tn
reinforce the youneer men and
·lo give them counsel and ®D·
fsdence during a fight. The real
reason, however, w•s that those
older soldiers could no longer be
counted upon w stand up to the
rigors of the front rank.
War is a young man's "game"
and when )'()U keep your old men
in ranks yoh, are not only clog·
ging up the promotion Pl'®KS
for the yoUnJ men on. the way
up, Y.OU ~\also jeopardi~ing
your ttont rarucs. ,
It is far better to send the old
soldier boroe on half pay Jllld
clear aoipe room al tl\e top for a
young "ha.rd charger'' than to
keep him around beccu1e it may
cost a little mor.e money.
In combat thbre are only two
kinds of men -the quick and
the dead -and you need lilll of
the young quicJc ones you~ get
to win wars.
R. S . WYMAN .
A Dreoaa?
To the Editor:
After reading about the
"Irvine Co. pledges" and your
''State Remembers Freeway," I
dozed off and seemed lo awaken
June 7. It was a wild scene in Newport
City Hall. People were pouring
in to congratulate Bob Wynne on
tbe way he handled the final
housing forum meet.Ing.
Bob said the meeting had gone
according to plan after he
alised that all lbe people of
Newport needed was an op-
portunity to clear the air or past
animosiU~. Allan BeeJt aald lt began on
March 21 when he had been al·
lowed to fault the city for not
producin& traffic data. After
thinking ll over that night be re-
alised that bad been known
before the meetin bad begun,
Marso Sklllinf had really
started the ball rolllng when abe
suue1ted a straw vote on an la·
sue 10 that the conferees could
tbow ~ment risht th n and
convince the people at Cal·
Trans that Ne\VJ)Ort'a quarftls
were over aod th.al JlrlCSle tund· • Combat ll a~ , 1Tln4inl
teat ot a m1n's alreneth and . a ina -r1"tlt .. r""!
vf OUI topo
ing could be expedited.
GLEN 'MARTIN said that his
praise o{ the Irvine Co. plans
had been a bit fulsome In the
hopes or causing them to go
back up a bit so that the laxes
generated by the improvements
would b& able to make a mean·
ingful contribution to city cof.
fers and possibly counter infla·
lion.
Dan Emory, in a jovial mood.
said that after the '"eetlng be
had restudied his position on
University Drive and realised
that it would relieve the pres·
sure on Bristol. He bad also
found a wildlife treatise on adap.
tabllily which gave him hopes that the birds in the bay would
be able to adjust to lhe construe·
lion and traffic noise particular·
ly sioce the planes overhead
didn't seem to bother them.
Mr. H. indicated that he wu
glad to ICiU be on the pli.nnin«
commiseion because when be
neard of the March 21 accords
be bad reviewed his voting rec·
ord and noted that he ~ad sup.
ported the same Jasmine Creek
developments and others for
which he had attacked Lucille
Kuehn. Thi• had caused him not only to wttbcJraw from the race
but also lo drop support of
Jarvis.
All or this triggered a wave of
good feeling which seemed to
sweep the state. Jarvis con·
gratulated Sen. Behr for his
leadership in winning approval
for the alternative Prop. 8 which
would allow the Legislature to
carry out the wishes of tbe pea.
ple. Behr responded by tbanltlnl
Jarvis !or arousing aufficlent lo·
terest in taxes and governroent
to make SaC1"amento aware of
the plight of the property owner
and renter.
Was I really dreamint!
-LYMAN S. F4\ULKNER
El M•rr. ~-....
To the Edit.or:
Do you remember El Morro
Mobile Hom P rk! If you dcia't,
let me relrellh your memory.
Remember diivln1 1outh oil'
Coast Highway from Newport-
Corona del Mar through three
miles of uncultivated, fenced,
Irvj.ne Ranch land and coming
upon a crescent of oceanfront
where the s urf is edged by
trailers. That is El Morro. If I were addressing -.o~ne
older I'd say, "Remember when
this same coastline was edged
with tents?" Probably some of
the first trailers built moved in
here to replace those tents. And,
in lime, the little colony grew to
spread up El Morro Canyon and
become a leasehold in the Irvine
Ranch. Some of El Morro's first resi·
dents were weekending surt
fishermen, a number of whom re-
tired here, and a few of wbom
.have died here.
JOINING the fishermen were
refugees from the hot inland
valleys of San Bernardino and
Hiverslde counties who came, as
they do today, to spend hours,
overnights, weekends and vaca-
tions refrestupg themselves.
Not a few of these were col·
tege professors. Jn 1962 when we
bought our first El Morro trailer
1t was from an admired pro.
res or of sculpture at a Clare·
mont college. Other teachen, as
well as businessmen.
transferred to ~r J)arts or the
world, ret11ined their trailers at
El Morro as their home base.
By now many chUdren who
summered together have grown
up and married one another. I
'know of a third generation baby
whose grandparents, aunt and
uncle live in the park.
It's a place !or old people fD
re ti re in security among
longtime friends, a place for
fatherless children lo be raised
in familiar surroundings, for
1cared widows and widowers,
for youn, marri~ to establish
a nm home, an<I for collep stu-
dent.a on thclr oW'I\ for the fir.st Ume.
The Irvine Compan1 i>ffers us for Hle within thethreo miles ol
coastline between Corona del
Mar anCl Irvine Cove <•
moneyed community ball EJ
Morro's a1e>. And the st•te
items determined tq aQQulr• us. Thll in spite ot mu or vacant.
land to tho north.:
MAil'\' AND'PAU.t; SUtLIVAN
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•
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 1978 TEN CENTS
Van~ssa Skemered by B~itish Press
LONDON CAP) -London
Jlewapapers chided Brltllh ae-tren Vanesaa Redgrave today
for her Oscar acceptance speech ill which she called Jewiab dem-
onatratora at the BollywOod.
ccnm~ "Z&onlstboodlums.••
neat nmnatUi. which ts all it
11, then sbe should have stayed
away. u Marlon Bnndo and
George c. Scott have done 1n the
paat," the Dally Mirror said lo
an editorial. (Related story, B7)
daa, Vaness• Rectirave ts a fine
aclreu who fully deserves ber
Oscar. M an actrea abe is a
JO\dy-pollticlan ••• :•
)(tu Redgrave won tlle
Academy Award for best. sup-
porting actress in the film
"Julia," in which abe played an
anU-N.-it undercroamt fighter. • 'U abe cou.ldn •t accept her "
Oscar in the spirit. ol a w busi·
Under 0ie headllne .. Silly FU-
1)'. ·• the pro-Labor Party
newspaper :said, "M a polili-
-~ ............. THE MANY AGES OF BETTE DAVIS, WHO MARKS HER 70TH BIRTHDAY TODAY
From Left, "Jezebel," "All About Eve," "Now Voyager" and "Baby Jane"
Bette at 70: No Letup
Legendar;r Actress Immersed in Her Work_
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Bette Davis
doesn't rude her age, but doesn't dwell on it
either. ,
"It's just another birthday," she says of
her 70th today. ''A big one, I'll admit, but I
don't believe in birthdays."
AN EXPECTABU: RESPONSE from an
actress •· unlike some pt.hers, has never been rell,ldant to reveal her age: She wu
born April 5, 1908. lo Lowell, Mass.
At 70, Bette Davis exhibits no slackening
or'her enormous ener&Ies. She declined a re-
cent birthday Interview -"I'm much too
busy with the .Acade~ Awards u.d all
that.''
She hu 1pent 41 yean in Cllma and d~ in« \be put year appeared in three movies:
Disney's "Return from Witch Mountain." the
television film "Harvest.Home" and the all·
star Agatha Chrtstle mys\ery "Death on the
Nile," her 85th movie.
"THAT'S THE BEST TBING for me,
having my work," she said at the Egyptian
location in October. 0 1 would never get mar-
ried again; that.ju.st wouldn't s~cceed. When
your children gtow up and leave.. you. it can
be very lonely. Luckily for me, I've got my
work to<tiU the gap." ,
When she is not working in f.i.Jms, she
goes on the road with her one-woman show,
screening highlights from ber film career
and commenting on her life and work.
Miss Davis has always ~ free and
open in her comments, and these are some ol
her remarks in recent times:
-"•'VE ALWAYS ltNOWNTHE value of
the press. They're just as valuable as the
performances you give; you can't exist
without them. That is something that is lack-
ing today. Young people don't realize the
value of publicity. They're fools.''
-"It took me a long time to learn to
fieht. ~the beginninl J wasn't that wa.Y at
all. It wasn't in my nature, but I realiJ.ed that
you have to force yourself to fight for what
you want or they simply won't respect you. I
never would have had the aame career if I
hadn't fought.''
-"The only lhinl I WCJTI'7 about is dYinc
without a cigarette 1n my mouth. People
have sueaested that I 1ive up smoking, to
which I answer, 'Whatever for?' "
-.. •OF HUMAN BONDAGE' WAS my
first step up the ladder, the first time I was
considered possibly a really good actress.
The character I played was the first bitch
heroine on the screen1 and none of the well-
known actresses woula play it."
-••Nuts to growing old. Don't you ever
believ.e that life beelrul at 40 or that it's won·
derful to be 70. I'd give anytlUng to be 30
again. Every so often somebody asks me if
I've had my face lifted. I always tell them.
'Would Ilook likethlslf I did?• "
-"I think the key to life ts to never stop ac·
cepting its challenges. As far as I'm con-·
cerned, once someone stops accepting
challenges, he's dead."
".l'he ftJm starred Jane Fonda u
pla1'tn'llht LUBan Hellman.
In her acceptance apeecb,
llilise Redgrave denounced
.Jewish demonstrators at the
Hollywood Mwiic Center who
were protesting her financing
and narrating of a documentary
called "'l'bo Palostin1aJl.••
The actress, made a Com•
mander of the Order of the
B•ltlsb Empire by Qdeen
Elisabeth II in 1961 for her
services to the theater, ls a
leader of Britain's tiny left-wing
Workers Revolutionary Party.
The conservative Daily Ex•
press· said in an editorial that
American Jews. protestin& llllss
Redgrave's aopl)ort for tile
Paleatlnian cause, would bo .. very ill-advised to take the
di tine Vanessa seriously... • ••some actrosaea are:
beauUful. SOlOe can act. some
lite ltlias Redgrave have both
attributes. but they ue nqt cat .
out for poUUcs.,•• tbo Expn:ss
aald.
·'S.aline' Baby
Mother Tells of Baby's Survival
By TOM BARLEY cw l .. .,..,., Pllet Malt
A young woman who delivered
her own baby shortly after the
doctor attempted to abort the in-
fant by injecting her with saline
showed the happy baby to an
Orange County Superior Court
jur y today. •
Using the assumed name of
''Miss Hobbs," the witness
testified that she was 17 in April
of 1977 when she agreed to have
the abortion performed at
Avalon Memorial Hospital on
Catalina Island.
Trying to hold her struggling
and apparently healthy baby
girl on her lap, the witness
testified that she realized she
was actu~lly delivering the child
2MenRob
El Toro
Norserynmn
An El Toro nurseryman was
robbed at gunpoint Tuesday
night by two men who forced
their way into his home while he
was en.tert.a.i.nini 1uests.
Orange County Sherllrs ot-
fi ce rs said Michae l Steven
Cooke, 24, operator of Sooth
· ~res Nt.asery and Landscap-n San Clemente, was robbed
o more than $1,000 in cash by
two men wearing ski masks.
Cooke told offlcer11 that he
answered the door Tuesday
nigbt and was immediately
shoved back into biB home at
22551 Claude Circle by two men
who immediately demanded to
know where he kept his cash.
Cooke aaid be banded over a
total of $1,015 in $5 and $10 bills
but failed to satisly the robbers.
He· said they ransacked the
house, saying, "There's got to be
more, there'• got to be more,"
before they ftnally decided to
leave the premises.
shortly after she drank her 50th
glass of water in a three-hour
period.
She testified as a rebuttal wit-
ness in the murder trial of Dr.
William Baxter Waddill, tbat
she pulled the baby from her
head first and already was try.
ing to soothe the crying infant
when nurses reached her
hospital room.
"Miss Hobbs" is the f"U"St of a
series of prosecution witnesses
in an 11th hour bid by the pros·
ecution to prove lbat 8ll in!ant
in the womb can survive saline
abortions of the type often
performed by Dr. Waddill.
W adclill. 42, of Huntington
Harbour, is accused by the
prosecution of strangling a
r
newbom baby to death in tbe
Westminster Communlty
Hospital nursery Oil March 2, 1977. •
It ls alleged that he throttled
the child after learning that~
attempt to abort the infant by iJl..
jecting saline into the mother
had failed.
It is also alleged ?;y Uie pros.
ecution that Waddill panicked
wben be learned that be bad a
live birth on his hands and
choked the child to death aftet'
predicting that it must have suf.
fered massive brain damage as
a r esult of immersion in saline.
The testimony of Miss Hobbs
was immediately attacked by
the defense today with attbt'nq
<See WADDILL, Pace AZ)
Bible Ban Bid
Schools Hear 'Porn' Charge
CHULA' VISTA <AP) -Banning the Bible as
pornographic is under consideration by Chula Vis\a
public schools. •
The Old Testament '·contains rape, incest.
murder, vivisection and other heinous, even sexual,
cr1Jnes;• trustees were told by o)Vt citizen Tuesday
night. .
.. There are portions or the Bible that I would be
embarrassed to read to you." said J. Michael
Straczynski, a writer.
But another person, Noelle Battrick, said she
h as read the Bible. • "I was not tlisturbed by it,'• adding "Where does it.
stop? Are we to ban Shakespeare and other classics'!••
The trustees voted unanimously to tum the issue
of curbing the Bible over to a committee.
Dutchman Sl"8hes
Van Gogh Painting
--'Sani'.to File Guilty Plea?
AMSTERDAM, Netherlands
(AP) -A Dutchman claiming
to be an artist pulled a knife and
sliced three long gashes in Vin-
cent van Gogh's "La Berceuse"
painting at Ams terdam's
Municipal Museum today, of·
ficials said.
Police refused to identify °"'
assailant, who was hefd pendlug
investigation. Tbe suspect n>
fused to make any statement.
The attack was the second in
three days on European
masterpieces. On Monday, a
man used a knife to sluh
Nicolas Poussin's 17-centwy
painting .. Adoration of the
Golden Calf" at. London's Na-
tional Gallery.
feels that if all the people be
wounded end the relatives oC
those be tilled are caJJed to
testify. people will bate him all
over again. And he does not want pec)ltle to bate him, only to
understaod that )le had to do
wbat be did."
lo psychiatric transcripi. !'&-
leased last year, Berkowltt
clatmed demons drove htm to
c1-im .bis vtctb:oa with a .44·
caliber pistol. He said he re-
ceived messages from another
Yonkers resident. Sam Can-.
transmitted throu&h Carr's doe.
A parking ticket lssued the
night. ol the last sbootin1 led
police. to Berkowlu 10 days
later.
Berkowitz would be tried ttrst
for tbe Moskowits murder.
However, Newsday quQted a Jaw
enforcement source as sayin& be
planned to also plead gull'->' to
the three murder6 wl)icli oc-
curred in The Bronx.
The Poat said today that
Berkowi\z wants \.0 plead guUty
lot a "uti()l)3t reason, .. but the
new•paper said it could not
learn what that reason might be.
Quot.ln1 .a Jaw enforcement
source, Nfft'aday aald that 1 if
. BerkoWitz were found incompe-
tent to atand trial. be would be
1ent to the ?&arcy correcUon
facilicy for the criminally imaDe
near Rochester. Newsday also
said Berkowitz reportedly re-
newed bis conversion to the Bap-
tist faith while in the Army and
"now wishes to devote the reat.
of bis life to a prison ministry."
The $on of Sam Jrille~ first
struck JUiy 29, 1976, when Donna
Lauria, 18, waa killed in The
Bronx as she was getting out 0£
a friend's automobile.
The killer struck for the last
time July Ill. lI117, along a lovers
lane in Brooklyn . Stacy
Moskowitz, 20. was killed and
her date, Robert Violante.. ~.
was seriously wounded, losing
11.&bt in ono eye.
The canvas, a portTatt ot
French model Augustine Roulln,
was painted in 1889. A .museum
spokesman estimated it.a value
at $425,000 and said it would take
months to repair the 28-by-36
inch canvas.
The assailant, who entered the
museum as a spectator, was
overpowered by guards and
handed to police a.Iler the at·
tack, museum officials said.
They said he was about 30.
Mesa Firm
Hired for
Viejo Park
Officials there said tbe paint-
ing, valued at $925,000 could be
restored. Salvatore BorU, a Zl·
year-old Jtalian resident of tbe
London area, was charged with
"Causing eritninal damage to the
artwork.
Weather
Increaslng ·cJoadiness
loDlght bttominC mostly
cloudy with 30 ~rcent
chance of abower•
Tbursda)'. Lowa tonight 50
to ss. HIPs Tbunda1 In
low to mi~
IN IDETO A.Y
,9range County Supervisc>r
-r![oma.s Riley denied today that
be has introduced partisan
politics into bis campaign for re-
election. • .
Riley dre,.. barb& from elee·
tion opponent Tom Ro1era 'f'ben
he an~ced Tuesday that be·u
be hosting "a pleasant special
social gathering of our dedicated
Oranee County Republican civic
leaden." PW1>0Se ot the April 13 get-
to getber at Riley's Newport
Beach home la to witness Riley's
signing of the 10-called
Republican 11th commandment,
a pledge not to s~ak badly of
othtr Republican candidates.
In respoose to the announce-
ment, Roeera 1aid, "I can't
s peculate why they would try to
drag our Republican Party into
a non-parti.aan election which
will be on the November ballot ...
Riley aaid he did not intend to
make the el•ction a partlaan is·
sue and could not if be wanted to
because Rogers also ls a life-
time Republican.
The Newport Beach
supervisor said bis Interest in
citinS the GOP 11th command-
ment la his way of altemptlne to
lift the campaign "to a point
where Issues, not personalities
are tiiscussed."
ftiley said he covered the Issue
wUh Democrats 'by discussing
his upeominl( Republican aocial
hour with an aide to Supervllor
Jlalph Clarli:, Stanley Oftelle.
"Stan seemed to lhink it was a
pretty eood idea. And I think
he's a Democrat." Riley said to
indicate he had touched base
with both major political
parties.
However, Riley indlcate4 he
does not plan to have a
Democratic eatbering at his
bolne to match the upcomiD•
Republican social hour.
FrotaPageA1
HOSPITAL ••
the· expanded urut•s ability to
support itself.
The hearing scheduled !or
10:30 a.m. in Hotel Lacuna's
Capri Room ls open to the
public, de Paul said.
....... ----4 '~ .. . ---. -~ -.... -( _.. . . '
Marine Ha.i-dsbips . .
)1old tO SJC Club.
By WILLIAM DODGE
OI .. ~l't l'MltM.Mt
Financial hardships often are
the cause or Marine Corps
personnel involvement in crim•
in civilian' communities aut•
rounding a:nil1tary lnstaDaUom.
a Marine Corps law enforcemeot
representative said Tuesday.
"It's extremely ~xpenaive to
live ·oo the outside <off base).''
Staff Sgt. Glen Rodgers of the El
Toro Marine Cojpa Air StaUon
told ·• Capistrano V.Uey Ex·
cbang.e Club meetin& in San.
Juan Capistrano.
"When you're new to life and
a private .first class makine $tOO
to ~ a month. you can have
problems adjusting," he said.
"Usually they don't have sense
enou&h · and they set married
and start haviq children.
"That'• when the financial
pressures start to build. ..
3Meetings
Postponed
By Trustees
Three meetings scheduled for
today by the Saddleback Valley
Unified School District board of
trustees have been postponed
until next Wednesday.
The meetinp are being set
back a week, sald board presi-
dent Loa Youn&, becauae trustee
Carole Neustadt wu jus( re-
leased from a hospital Tuesday
after suffering an illness and
t.nistee Mary Phillipa ii resting
following a trip to Europe.
Scheduled for today were a 10
a.m. closed executive meeting
for personnel matters, a 3 p.m.
meeting with varioU5 schools•
student council representalivt!S
and an 8 p.m. organlzatlonal
session for election of new of·
ficers and regular board busi-
nesa.
A school spokesman said next
week·s meetings are scheduled
at the same hours as those
planned for today.
Rod1ers also ln•lated that
crime• colDJlliUed by military personnel usually reflttt prob-
1 ems in the civilian com•
munity.
''If you hue a h11b crime rate
ln the civllian community.
you•re going to have a propor-
tionate one in the military com-
munity," he •aid.
The deputy provost marshal's
administrative aasiatant cited
crime atatiatica for the El Toro
bue indicating petty larceny is
the crime most frequenUy com·
milted.
Auto thefts, aggravated as-
saults and burglaries were also
high on the lisL
But Rod&ers also cited dif-
ferenca. between civilian and
military installation police
authorities.
''The military is a much more
structured society.'' he pointed
out. "We're mucb more dis-
ciplined.
''The El Toro base crime rate
is about one-third what any
equivalent civilian community
would be."
Rodgers said military
authorities often rely. on base
community involvement to deter
specific crime problems.
·'If we intend to stop a specific
crime probably the best way ls
to talk to people about it," he ex-
plained. "This is an excellent
way of discussin& what some of
the problems are and eettini
feedback from lhe community.
. "Moet people are reasonable;
most people will stop and
listen.' be continued. "You can
get the point across that we're
one community -we've all got
the same problems."
Pilots Plan
Pl,ea to Save
Uipo Airport
Pattern of Peppers
Resembling a Ku Klux Klan meeting, or
perhaps a settlement of tiny teepees, bell
peppers poke up their heads under protec-
tive coverings in a San Juan Capistrano
field. Spotted in a field at Kinoshita
Farms on Allpaz Street, the peppers ap.
pear to be doing well shielded from the ef·
fects of occasionally nasty spring
weather.
Pregnant Wo~n Raped~
By ARTHUR R . VINSEL Detective Coleman aald. about 1lSO yards awa1 from the}
,. .. e»1,,Pt1ettutt "When she atarted ftabUnf, freeway overpass where the
"She told them she was 4~ the guy said he'd kill her and 11:45 p.m. rape occurred. .
rnonths pregnant but they didn't her baby both. That's klnd of a ''She 1ot a pretty fair descnp..
beheve her," Detective Coleman cold shot from a lT-year-olcl tton of the guy who raped her.
said today. kid "he added. althou1h 'fatr• is a rather
The victim, overpowered as I~vesUgators say the suspect generous term for him," Det.ec·
she strolled on Maanolia Avenue tno were definitely identified as tive Coleman continued.
just north or Warner Avenue, being seen '8itering around a He aaid the principal suspect.
!ailed to convince the trio, hamburger takeout restaurant ts 18 to 17, thin. with dark. stringy hair, about five feet si.lc
to eight Inches tall and may bear
acara from the plucQ young
married woman•s battle.
l'rom Page Al
WADDILL TRIAL. • •
Malbour Watson contending that
a fluid discharged by the witness
shortly after the doctor injected
her with saline was the sahne
itself.
She told both Walson and pros-~cutor Robert Chatterton that.
she had no Idea what the fluid
was or why it had been expelled
in the pepod between Injection
and delivery of her baby.
"Yes, but you felt when you
delivered your baby right there
in the bed that the abortion
hadn't worked, didn't you?"
Watson asked her.
"Yes, I did," the witness
replied.
She testified lhat she wn one
of 14 young women in the Avalon
·hospital that day, all of whom
had saline abortions performed.
But "Miss Hobbs" made il
clear that she was the only pa-
tient who delivered a live baby
following the htjectlon of saline.
of the jury.
Dr. Wadditrs lawyers dectdM
at the end of the special session
not to oppose Dr. Fowler's testi-
fying before the jury.
Jud~e James K . Turner had
made it clear before the special
hearing started lhat the
evidence would not be admitted
if the defense opposed it.
Chatterton, obviously delhlht·
ed al the introduction of th~
Fowler testimony, admitted that
he was surprised by tne defense
decision. .
"But so be it," he comtnented.
"I'm certainly not going to loolt
a gift horse in the mouth ...
Dr. Fowler's repeated
testimony will include
videotapes depicting two babies
who survived saline abortions:
"Margot Hobbs," the assumed
name of Lhe infant who was
brought to the courtroom today
and "Tiffany," the real first
name of the second infant ex·
amlned by Dr. Fowler.
His partners in the sexual as•
saull would also face related
charges if arrested for their ai..
leaed aaslata.nce.
Fountain Valley police are
seeking three youths who al-
legedly threw a 4~ months
pregnant housewife down a
freeway embankment and raped
ber as she pleaded, shrieked, bit
and scratched her assailants.
The victim was sexually as•
saulted by one of the youths Fri·
day night, while the second held. •
her pinned to the ground and the.
third stood lookout on the street.
overpass above, police aaid.
InvesUeaton said the victim.
20, a Garden Grove reaidenti
survived the ordeal witho~~ severe physical injury, Her mid·
term unborn child wu apparent.
ly unbanned. '-
"She put up a real fight. She
slapped one repeatedly and bi~
the other," says Detective Pat
Coleman, who has been check·
ing out leads along with his
partner, Detective Bill Parker.
Sentencing Set
Camp Signups Set
For··Saddleback Y
A group of area pilots plan t.o
lod&e a plea tonight before San
Juan Capistrano councilmen to
save Caplatrano Airport from
the bulldozers.
"We•re iolni to do a pretenta·
tlon ukin1 them to keep the airport open,•• a spokesman for
the pllota said today ... The aitua·
tion doesn't look good but we're
going ahead with the presenta-
tion."
The jury 1n the Waddill trial
learned today that it will now be
allowed to hear further
testimony related to the physical
and mental condition of two
babies who survived saline abor-
tions.
Much orthat testimony will be
orfered by a specialist sum-
moned by the prosecution.
Dr. Glenn Fowler, a pediatric
neurologist, spent most of Tues-
day on lhe witness stand in a
hearing held out of the presence
The screening of Margot•s ex·
amination by trained personnel
depicted an apparently normal,
healthy 1-year-old infant who ap-
peared to react in an absolutely
normal way to a aeries of de·
velopmental tests.
Dr. Fowler testified, however,
that the child's development has
been arrested in several areas of
mental comprehension and reac-tion.
LONG BEACH CAP) -Sen·
tenclng ls set May 8 for Edward
• W. Adams, 51, former bead of
the l.JUllty Workers Union of•.
America, Local 246, in Lon'
Beach, who pleaded guilty to
embeuling more than $5,000
from the union.
Ap.U 15 ii the ldckorr date for
sumll}er camp reliltraUona for
the Saddleback Valley YMCA.
Representatives from the Y will
be HaUable for ai&DUJ> at the El
Toro Hilb School swap meet.
2io2S$ Toledo Way, from 9 a.m. to
6p.m.
Day camp for •younptera 5
throuah 12 years of a1e beaina
July 11. from 9 a.m. to a p.m .•
Monday throu1b Friday for
sevep weelm. A ftriety of ac-o
tlvlties lndudlnl pmes1 craftl,
toura and neld tripe unaer 8tatt
euperviaion are to be otrend.
Extended day and transport&·
tion services are avallable.
Also scheduled are three ooe-
1"ek sealonl at YMCA Camp
ORANGl.COAIT ..
DAILY PILOT
Bluff Lake, Bit Bear, for boy8
and 1lrls 3 throup 6.
Boys and elrla in erades three
throu&b eilht can chooie from
three sports th15 aummer. soc-
cer, gymnuU~ or .elf-defense,
taught at Camp Tabqultz
Meadows, a sports resident
camp.
Boy• and l}rla erades seven
throu&b 1D can swim. boat, aaU.
water aki, Uin-dl•• or Just relax
ln th• 'WU'lll Catalina •un for one week at Camp Fox, Catalina
Jaland. Available to the junlor and
hlah tchool youlhl .ll a variety of
caravan camps ran1ln1 ln
leosth from four to u daya.
Trips include the blah Sierra na-
hing caravan, Sierra backpacks,
surfing caravans, Hawall
caravan, and Yonmlte.
All camps are 4eslped to live
younc people an opportunity to
learn new sJd.lla. develop an ap.
preclation of the ~-4ocln.
meet new friends and lllcreue
their owu self.lma1e, said Tosn
.Julian,~ d1rector.
Art Judged
By Rotarians
The spokesman, Dennis Shat-
tuck, aaid members of a south
Oran1e County airport advocacy
group had inforlbally talked
with councilmen and determined
they would probably vote to
close the airport June L
"They seem to feel there tm•t
sufflcient concrete progress
toward de-Yeloplng an
alteruatlve airport in tM area."
Shattuck aald.
And • report to eouncllmen
from City Maaacer James
Mocall.a apella out tho ·Ume in-
volved 1n developln1 another
alr~rt.
• From all ~ lncllo•tlons
at this Ume, lt appears that such
acltobl (developlna another
airport) will !!f WH at leut three man ynn, • Mocalla 1.,s ·
1n the report.
When councllmen Jut 1ear voted for a Jmie 1 dolure, they
Included a loophole to allow the
airport'• lite to be extended if
eerlou.s ac:Uoo w.-mider w., to
develop &DOtMr airport.
County aupenisoi'a Jut IDOllth
ordered General Servicu A&en· =Uldals to search for~ rt ll&ee &hat could tit .....
ve opet for aeneral amtlon
purpol&
Adidas Track Shoes
$18.95 & 'Zl.95
Adidos & Tiger
Running a Jogg111g Shon
$19.95 to S:W.95
All PvfpoM Shon
Soccer Shoe• $7.95 to $26. 95
BoMha'1 Shots $13.95 to $34.95
Bc*MtbGI ShDea
Convei'M & Addas
114,95 to $35.95
ACldos;.(onverM-
Bancroft .fnd Pwry
T.nnli Shiou $13.95 to $34.95
>
I ..
'
•
to Quit?
Berry Upset OVer Financial Statement
BJ WD..LIAK RODGE , ..................
• Saddlebaclt' Colle1e Trustee
Donna Berry u.ld Tuesday abe
y resign rather than me an
etonoDllc dlsdoaure statement.
nqulred under a recenUy adopt-
ed district coollict of interest
cOde.
.. I am terribly upset about it,··
rs. Berry said. "I didn't re-
alize uoW yesterday (Monday)
that anyone could come in off
the street anel look at those
records.''
Tbe Mission Viejo trustee said
her attorney would eo over the
code to make sure that her
privacy rights were protected.
She vowed to resign if she is
required to file a statement and
her husband is opposed to it.
.. I don't want to resign," she
said, ''but if I don't feel I can
sign it, 1 will resign."
The eeonom1c disclosure law
at issue requires trustees and
major college officials to list
2MenHeld
In Assault
On Wo:man
Orange County sheriff's of·
!leers raced to a South Laguna
intersection Tuesday night and
arrested two men who allegedly
were beating a woman in the
back seat oI a 1978 Cadillac.
Deputies said witnesses who
saw the attack after hearing the
woman screaming for help
c:brected them to the car parked
at a service station near the in-
tersect 1on of Pacific Coast
lllghway and Third Street.
They later jailed Victor Dante,
47 , and Gerardo DiDiego, 45,
both of Miami, Fla .• on charges
of assault and kidnapping.
Officers said they learned
after they lodged the pair in the
county jail that they are wanted
by Los Angeles County
authorities on kidnapping
c:harges.
They said the woman, 21, was
treated for cuts and bruises al-
legedly inflicted by the two men
and was later allowed to return
home. The incident 1s under in·
vest i gallon
Cripple Held
lnRoblJery
OMAHA, Neb. (AP> -A dis-
abled man who uses a four-
pronged walker to get about and
has a severe speech impediment
has been arrested after a rob-
bery al the downtown office of
the Omaha National Bank.
Donald R. Peterson, a bank
vice president, told police that
the man approached a woman
tfller Tuesday, acted as if be
had a iun in his pocket and
handed her-a note demanding
money.
The teller handed the swiped
aj>out $500, police said, and the
man began walking out with the
mone)'" In his pocket. Peterson
S!lid a bank alarm was sounded.
aad police arrived In tim• to
capture the man in front of the
bank.
Vendor Slain;
Youth Held
VENICE <AP> -Nineteen-
yeat-old Vernon Works was
booked for investigation of
Jtlurder today in the fatal sboot-
illg or an ice cream vendor driv-
iog his newly acquired Venice
route for only the third day.
Authorities said Amilkar P.
nu4'_la, 42, of Inglewood was
in the chest by one of two
ots fired while be was stand-
f by the side of his lee cream
Tuesday.
Authorities alleged Works was
e or five youths lined up
Ide the van, apparently wait-
g lo buy lee cream.
EYES RESIGNATION
Trustee Donna Berry
hnanc1al interest in real proper·
ty or businesses within the geo-
graphical area of their jurisdk·
Uon.
Io tbls case, that aeoerapbical
area would be the Saddleback
Colle10 District, cdYertnc 48 per·
cent of Orao1e County.
Tbe law also requires officials
to list aggreeate income over
$250 annually earned by
themselves or members of their
immediate family and the
sources of such income.
Saddleback Trustees and of.
ficlala are required to file the
disclosure forms by April 26.
Mrs. Berry's objection is
based oo privacy considerations.
"My husband certainly has his
work and investments but that'&
our privacy," she said.
"I think this code is going lo
preclude a lot or very fine people
from doing the job here beeause
they're concerned about
privacy," she added.
··it's basically their personal
business being made public and
that's not good."
Thanks Well Wishers
Wayne Recoverin&
With Therapy Aid
BOSTON <AP> Doctors
gave John Wayne frequent
respiratory therapy today to
ease bis chronic bronchitis, and
the veteran actor thanked the
thousands who have wished tum
a speedy recovery from open·
heart surgery
The well wish~rs have 10-
cluded President Carter and Bob
Hope.
Wayne was operated on Mon-
day for replacement of a defec-
t1 ve m1tral valve in his heart.
A statement this morning by
Massachusetts General Hospital
said, "Because of his chronic
bronchitis, the medical team is
taking the usual precaution to
prevent the accumulation of
lung secretions. He requires fre·
quent respiratory therapy and
the induction of vigorous
coughing. This can be quite
fatiguing to the patient. His
heart is functioning very well
"Mr. Wayne thanks all the
thousands of people from all
over the world who have sent.
messages, cards. flowers and
girls."
Martin Bander, spokesman
for M assachuselts General
Hospital, said Tuesday that
President Carter had telephoned
Michael Wayne, the 70-year-old
actor's son, to say he was pray-
ing for him.
Bander also quoted the presi-
dent as saying:
''John Wayne is a great na-
tional asset. If there's anything I
can do for him, please let me
know. He surprises all of us with
his ablbty to recover. Tell him
he is in my thoughts and
prayers."
Durint the Academy A wards
Monday night, Wayne was paid
tribute by master of ceremorues
Bob Hope.
"We want you to know, Duke,
we miss you tonieht,' · Hope
said. "We expect to see you am·
ble out here ip person next
year 'cause no one else can
walk in John Wayne's boots."
Bander said the hospital
switchboard WllS swamped with
calls from well-wishers from
around the world.
Boy Trampled
During Raid
KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia
<AP) -A 17-yeal"-Old student
who said he was Joggin1 and
stopped to watch was trampled
to de~th by a crowd of gamblers
and onlookers when the police
raided them, police sources
said.
The gamblers escaped and the
police found the injured youth on
the ground.
He died In the hos,Pilal after
tellin1 the pollce bis atoty.
Although he remains 10 in·
tensive care, Wayne could be out
of the hospital 10 about two
weeks and could be working
again by midsummer, doctors
said.
The actor, who won the best
actor Oscar in 1969 for "True
Grit," "is continuing to have a
routine convalescence," said
Bander. "Hls blood pressure and
pulse are normal. His
pulmonary problems have not
posed any difficulties."
In the operation, doctors cut
out the mitral valve in Wayne's
heart and replaced it with a
si milar valve from a pig. The
valve separates the left atrium
from the left ventncle.
Wayne's valve had ruptured,
allowing blood to leak from his
heart mto his lungs. Doctors
said this made Wayne weak and
short of breath
First Judges
Award Voted
To Kneeland
Superior Court Judge Robert
P. Kneeland of Newport Beach
has been named the first recip-
ient of the Orange County Trial
Lawyen Association's Stephen
K. Tamura Award for Judicial
Courage.
The award, named after
Justice Tamura of tl'\e Fourth
District Court of Appeals in San
Bernardino, will be presented
April 13 during the association's
meeting at the Saddleback Inn,
Santa Ana.
Judge Kneeland was appoint·
ed to the Superior Court in 1957
by then Governor Goodwin J.
Knight after serving for two
years as Orange County's dis·
trict attorney.
He and his wife, Esther, li\'e
in Corona del Mar. They have
five children and nine
grandchildren
Second Cycle
Victim Dies
A Monday night motorcycle
accident in An.iteim claimed a
second victim Tuesday when
Robert Austil) Lindsey, 23, ol
Anaheim, died in Stanton Com·
munity Uolpttal.
Pollce said Lindsey was fai.t.
ly injured about 12 hours earlier
when the motorcycle on whi<!h
he was a passenger collided with
a truck at Ball Road and
&f agnolia Avenue.
The motorcycle's driver,~·
nis James Hagee, 22, als9 or
Anaheim, died a few hours after
the 10:29 p.m accident.
Tuition Charge Mulled.
Golden W. and CoaaUln
The Jarvt1·Gann lnltlattve
would abarply cut property tax-
es and cost the ~liege dlatrtct
aooul $13.5 mllllon ,a J ar,
citild a $3 I mllllon .
• '
Ni%;:s on l'a«!ation
For er president Richard Nixon and his
wif at are vacationing al Walkers Cay
in e Bahamas, their hrst vacation
together smce leaving the White House.
Joining them are old friends ~obert
Abplanalp (left) and "Bebe" Rebozo.
U.S. 'Blocks' Peace ..
I
Israeli's Rabin TellA Countians of Goah
By KATHY CLANCY
OI U. Delly ~lel StMt
The United Slates in recent
months has undermined, not
helped, Israel's eCCort to
negotiate peace in the Middle
East, former Israeli Prime
M i01ster Yitihak Rabin said in
Orange County Tuesday.
"When the president or the
United Stales says publicly that
Is rael has to v.ithdraw with
minor modifications to the boun·
darics before the Six Day War it
undermines Is rael in the
negotiation for defensible boun·
daries," Rabin said.
The former prime minister
and present opposition party
Israeli congressman was speak-
ing before 21,000 members of the
National School Boards Associa-
tion at the close of their
Anaheim convention.
"Peace cannot be imported,"
Rabin sajd, quoting the late
President Lyndon B. Johnson.
"Real peace can be evolved only
Crom the parties themselves.
"Real peace can be achieved
only when the parties decide to
put an end lo the war and
establish relations of peace."
lle called the Carter ad·
ministration's stance a "de·
parture" from U.S. policy m
past years, saying the country's
role should be bringing parties
together without offering a
"blueprint" for setllemenl.
. The Israeli freedom fighter
and past ambassador to the U.S.
said efforts to achieve peace
since World War JI have been
hampered by the attitude of
Arab neighbors that Israel as a
Da111rt1111~ .....
CRITICIZES U.S.
Israel's Rabin
nation was 'of temporary
nature."
The visit to Israel litst fall by
Egyptian Prime M1nister Anwar
Sadat marked a beginning ih
change of that attitude, at least
on Egypt's part, Rabin con-
tinued.
And he said he is hopeful now
that the Jordanian government
will join the peace negotiations
bet ween Israel and Egypt.
Peace in the Middle East will
mean open boundaries, cultural
exchanges and diplomatic rela-
Wife Drops Lawsuit
Blind entertainer Jose Feli·
ciano's estranged wile bas
dropped an Orange County
Superior Court lawsuit in which
she attempted to compel him to
hand over all his entertainment
revenues to the corporation they
founded.
Her lawyers ad\•ised Janna
Feliciano to drop the action
after Judge Richard Hamilton
refused lb sign an injunction
that would hav~ compelled Feli·
ciano to comply with her de-
mand pending trial of the issue.
Gem
Talk
8yJ. C. JIUMPllR.IES
c~molog1st
A QUEEN'S RANSOiW
in silwr and ocher ooluablet
Her lawyers explained that
the issue of Feliciano's alleged
refusal to honor his contraot
with Feliciano Enterprises may
be renewed · when the time
comes to try the divorce action he
filed last Jan. 9 in Superior Court.
Court.
Mrs. Feliciano unsuccessfully
alleged that Feliciano, 32,
agreed to hand ov.er all his tak-
ings to the company in return
for a guaranteed inc9me or
$100,000 a year and SO percent of
the company profits.
~
lions, said lhe man who served
as Israel's prime minister from
1974 to 1!177.
Peace will be achlev~d, Rabm.
continued, "only when someo~
who lives in Cairo can get in
their <;ar and drive to Tel Aviv
and only when 1<>meone who
lives in Tel Aviv can drive lo
Cairo.
"Only then will everyone tn
the areas realize that peace has
come to our part of the world,"
Rabin said.
Rabin repeated his country's
contention that in order for
peace to come the country mus\.
have boundaries it can defend.
And that doesn't mean, hw
said, a boundary that places
Israel's largest city, Tel Aviv.
only 10 miles from the country's.·
border where the ciw,i cen be . •
shelled during battle.
Ra bin called terrorist ac
tivilies an effort to prevent a
negotiated peace and an effort to '
make already difficult talks
even more so.
Of the current Lebanon con·
met, Rabin said Israel'has tried
to achieve the same pledge from
that government as that in force ·
the . past four years from
ne1ghborine Egypt, Jordan and
Syria
The pledge IS that terrorist a~
tivities not originate In those
three nations and not be earned
across Israeli borders.
Israel wants the same pledgl!
from Lebanon, Rabin said. •
"Unfortunately we are aware
that In Lebanon there is no cen .
tral government and that ler
rorlst organizations that are un
der the control of the PLO
<Palestinian Liberatioll
Organization) brought about the
destruction of this central gov-
ernment," Rabin continued.
The former prime minister.
. said the question of sj!lf-rule for-
Palestine can be solved once the·
Arab nations agree to recognixc
· and reconcile differences witb
Israel.
Vance Trip Told
WASHINGTON (AP) -
Secretary of State Cyrus R
Vance will travel to .Mrlca thts
month to meet leaden of the
Rhodesian guerrilla mov-eraeot.
and to Moscow, for important
nuclear arms talks.
Silver Is, of cours., the traditional
gift for anyone cel~ratlng a 2Sth an·
nlvttrsary. When Q<.leeo Elizabeth II of
EnoJand rec.ntly marked the Sliver
Jubllff' of n.r rel9n< thoUsands of oifts of silver poured into Buckinoham
Palace. The tributes came from ell
over the wortd. Last month, an e)(hlbl-
tlon of 800 of the most lnterestlno of
tt\•se Qlfts went on dlspJay In Britain.
Th•Y\ Included, not ontv sll11er, but Item~ d other exotlt matwlats, too.
The display has, emong other tblngs: HEARTS AND FLOWERS .L
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with~ Tom~~'i.'
Mlll'phioe
DOGGO DOG8 GONE: OW' nei1hborln1 Oranae
Cont)' mctropolb of Garden Grove h.U now laid bare the
Ile U.at. eTerythlql in overnment 80f:S up and oettr
comes down. Wronc tbillMtl have Ion& clun1 to Ulla theory. They al·
'Jes• U taJtel riM, they aball remain rlaen. lf bulldln1·feea escalate, tbe tab .tit aever again ebb to a lo•er level.
But Garden Grove City Hall, by 1olly. bu exploded
9" ... tion myth.
News dilpatches out of the 1arden city today divulae
that do1 licenM feet have been 1lubed back. Lut Jelr. In order to get a canine officially taued m
Garden Grove, you had to fork over nine bucks Into the c1
ty corfera.
TODAY, GAJU>EN GROVE clUzem may aet their
pooches le1ally ta1&ed for only fT-a wboppinl two buck
reductioo.
According to the news reports, this dramatic whack
back in a government fee came about becau5e Garden.
Grove Shakers-and-Movers learned that the hiaher the fees
go, thefewercanlnes get licensed.
As in all of our communities, in order to buy a doi
Beach Cil11 Dogcatchers Face S&l1J)f'IN Pmu
license. you have to eet your mutt inoculated against
rabies. This means you have to pay the tab for Old Spot's
:;hot as well as pony up the liceDiM fee.
A CONCERTED STUDY of records indicated that
back in 1973, Garden Grove City Hall pthered four bucka
for a dog license. That year. more than 11,900 dop showed
up and got licenses. ·
Theo over tbe years, the license cost 1raduaJly
escalated. By 1976, it was up to the aforementioned $1.
Then, only 9,400 dogs came around to 1et dol tap.
Garden Grove otricials fretted over thia, fearing that it
meant each year, fewer dogs were being protected from
rabies, thereby increasing threat of the cllseue to the
human populace.
So that's why the fee got slaabed, in the effort to lure
more canines to come in for shots and do« tao.
You have to suppose here that it tailed to occur to
Garden Grove dty bFau that the dog population mlaht
have actually decreued between 1973and1918 •
Maybe the 2,!500 dogs that were no-shows for tags ac-
tually fled the city.
MA VBE TREY ALL moved to Laguna or Newport
Beach, when they can run and play upon the shoreline
and where the doc catchers, over the years, have proven to
have a ghastly time tryin1 to catch them.
Doe catchers in Garden Grove gel to chase does down
~lreels and sidewalks. Dog catchers in beach cities must
pursue lbe bounds throu&b the sand.
It ls the plain truth that even a mutt with a limp can
run through the sand faster than a dog catcher.
Jr you don't believe it, try cbaaing one some lime.
Nixons
'A.void
Media'
WALKER CA y. B1ham11
<AP) Former Pruldent
Rlchard M Nixon and hi• wile
Pat, on a rare venture outalde
their Caltfornla r•trut, took
part ln a frlend'a aecluded birth·
day /arty on a Juab troptcal
islan Tuesday nlaht.
Tht' dinner In honor of Robert
Abplanalp'• 46th birthday WU
flnt 1cheduled ut the publk
Walker Coy Club, but then wu
changed to the HclUllOn Of
Abplanalp'• private Grand C.y
l1land, about five mllea away.
BESIDES THE NIXON!
those invtt.ed lncludod Mr. and
Mrs Charles "Bebe'' Reboao
and Abplan1tlp'1 dauthltr.
M arle. Roboio 11 a Key Bla
cayne banlter and Nixon confl
dant. Abplanalp, a mllllonalro in
duatrlallat and lonitlmo uup-
portt'r ol Nixon. reportedly wu
wilhnl( to h1tvo the birthday pur
ty on tho /uhllc llland. But
sources sat Rebozo persuaded
Nixon to stay away from tht·
pr NI~
TllE SWITCH TO TJU;
private island was made u few
hours after reporters and
television crews be&an arriving
at WalkerCay.
The two small islands ue
located at the northern tip of the
Abaco chain at the top of the
Bahamas. Abplanalp's Precision
Valve Corp. of Yonkers, N. Y ..
operates Walker Cay.
The trip is only the third time
Nixon is known to have left
Cahforn.ia since he sought ref-
uge at his San Clemente est.ate
after resigning the presidency.
IT JS MRS. NIXON'S first.
known trip outside California
since she suffered a stroke in Ju.
Jy, 1976.
When the Nixons arrived here
Monday aft.er a brier flight from
Miami, there were cheers and
handclapping from about 30 peo-
ple who had gathered.
The Nixons took a short cruise
Tuesday aboard Abplanalp's
6$-foot yacht Sea Lion, passing
near Walker Cay, but they did
not leave the boat. The Nlxons
plan to leave for home today.
Creuw Ckani~
Bay Area.Spill
MARTINEZ <AP) -Cleanup
crews were called in today for a
two-mile-long oil slick in Car-
qui nu Straits between San
Francisco Bay and the
Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta.
The Coast Guard said the oil
s pilled from a barge beint
loaded at the Lyon Oil Co. facili-
ty here early this morning .
5 Men Killed in Mine
DUTY, Ve. (AP) -Five men died in a coal
mine near th1a tiny southwest Virginia mountain
town when they apparently were overcome by
carbon monoxide, official• said.
The victims included three miners, a Mine En·
forcement Safety Administration <MESA) offlclal.
and a mining service company employee.
CUNQIFIELD COAL CO. spokeswoman
Susan Con~ aaid the five were 280 feet into the
mountain Tuesday when they apparenUy broke in-
to a mined-out chamber that was filled with what
miners call "black damp," or "stale air.'' that
cont.aim no oxyeen.
"I don't know if they were drilling or shooting
........... ~ .. ,, 319 a ., "' ,. u 41
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(setting off dynamite charges), but they hit some
black damp, stale air, and it can kill you in a
minute or two. It doem't take any lime at all, .. a
sheriff's deputy said .
ONE MINER MADE his way to the mine en-
trance, where he found the MESA official, another
mmer and the missing service employee. The trio
entered the mme to save the four other miners.
Two or the miners reached fresh air. two others
and the three rescuers died inside the mountain.
The deaths came just eight days after
Clinchfield resumed operations following settle·
ment or the nationwide United Mino Workers
tilrike .
•
Inn .... .,,
Mu. Corella. St·otl Kina.
widow or Dr. Mortin Luth~r
Kln& Jr .• ll l'l len1 lo the· prayer or Uw ftev. Mnrun
Luthor Klnat Hr., durinJ(
memorlul wruulh·luylng
~orv1c:o ul th" KmK Center
in Atlanta TuudMy. Her
huxbund woH ltHUHilnat.ed
in Memphl~ 10 yeara aao.
FBI Emen
CaaeinHwit
lorSlayer
COLUMBUS, Ga (AP >
Federal tnve1U1ators have been
drawn into a grisly guea11ing
game over the Identity of a let
ter writer who says he executed
two women in order to pressure
police into solv111& blJt straniUla-
lions.
The body of one woman was
discovered on the Fort Benning
military base near here Mon·
day. The body of another had
been found near the bue four
days earlier. Both victims were
discovered after anonymous
t.elepbone Upe.
The FBI and the U.S. Army
Criminal lnvesligaUon Division
were called into the case
becau1e the second body wu on
federal property.
That body was identified Tues-
day as 32-year-old Irene
ThirkieJd. The body found last
Thursday near Fort Bennine has
been identified as that of Brenda
Gail Faison, 21.
3Killed
In Copter
Accitknt
NEW ORLEANS <AP) -A
helicopter ca.rryina •lx people to
an otf1hore oU drllllq ve&ael bit
the water and Olpped over ln the
Gulf of Me,qco today, .ldlllna
three oil workers wbo were
trapped inside, the Coast Guard
Hid.
The pilot an4 co-pUot and one
ol four oil workers manaaed to
e1cape from the helicopter and
were rescued. They suffered
minor injuries, authorlUea said.
..... ,. Stra"9lefl
WICfDTA, Kan. CAP) -'Ibe
death of a SS-year-old woman at
her home here bean some n!·
Hmblance to the clty'a "BTK
Strantler" killln11. ln-
vestltaton say.
The woman. found with her
( INSHORT J
hands boU.nd and clothing tied
around her neck, was identified
as Marian O'Leary.
The BTK Stran11er, wbo says
his initials stand for Bind,
Torture and Kill, has written let-
lera clalmiog reaporusibUlty for
the kllllnp or seven people in
Wichita during the past lour
yeau.
Worfcen R.eturw
WASHINGTON (AP) -Mme
construction workers are return·
mg to their jobs for the first time
in 121 days after ratifyioe a con-
tract that puts a final end to one
of tbe longest national strikes in
the coalfields in five decades.
.. It's ereat to eet all our peo..
pie back to work. They've been
through a lot," United Mine
Workers Vice President Sam
Church said ••
Mail Goiltfl l!p~
WASlUNGTON (AP) -If the
Postal Rate Commission goes
along wilh it, large and oddly
shaped mail will cost an extra 13
cents by summer.
The Postal Service Board ap-
proved the surcharge Tuesday
and sent it to the commission for
authorization. The surcharae is
expected to have its irealest ef·
feet on greeting cards, many or
which come in 3usual sizes.
Each of us, as Individuals, ·are:
NATION/WORLD
Appollded
Air Force Gen. David C.
Jones has been named by
President Carter to become
c hairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff. Jones, 56, is
currently Air Force Chief of
'5laff
Panel Backs
Payroll Cut
In SS Taxes
WASHINGTON CAP) -House
Democrats who want to cut
Social Secwity taxes are en-
couraged by budget committee
approval of their plan and are
lining up support among fellow
majority members for the
rollback that could save some
taxpayers as much as $292 next.
year.
The Democrats set a special
caucus today to take the first
steps in gathering that support
by exammlng ways of using
general Treasury revenue to
partially finance the troubled
system. '!bat would take some of
the sting out of payroll tax in-
c reases approved hy the
Congress just last December.
That legislalJon calls for $Z21
billion in increases over the next
10 years.
On Tuesday, the Hou.se Bud~
Committee approved the plan
thaL calls for a tr.s billion cut in
Social Security payroll taxes. It
was proposed by Rep. Robert N.
G1aimo, D-Conn., the committee
chairman .
------Aware of and participating In Newport Beach
City actlvltlea.-
-·----Vitally concerned with Improving the residential
charecteriatlca of our City.
------VOTING FOR:
EVELYN PAUL DON
HART~ HUMMEL~ STRAUSS~
Vote with us to keep a fine realdenti .. community! _____________________________________________ _..... ____ ...,., ______ ~--------------.....
THE ELECTION APRIL 11TH IS CRITICAL!
•
College· Should
Share Road Cost
Trustees of the Saddleback Commwiity College Dis·
tricl uppiu-enlly have decad d tbey want the benefits of an
lr\'loe campus they propose to build, but not the
responsibilities tflal go with its development.
Opening of the campus is certain to increase highway
traffic in the vicinity of Jeffrey Road and Irvine Center
Drive, yet the trustees have decided they don't want to
pay for the road improvements required to handle that
traflic.
If it were a private developer building the project,
there would be no question that the developer would have
to f 111ancetbe up-to$220,000in improvements.
Trustees apparently believe a loophole in the law
dealing with the fiscal responsibilities of public entities,
ho~ever, allows them to evade their responsibility to pay
thear fair share. A lawsuit by the city of Irvine would cost
both bodies considerable public expenditure, perhaps more
than the road improvements are worth •
Unless Saddleback trustees are convinced their new
cam pus will not attract enough students to increase traffic,
they -and not the city of Irvine -should h'elp pay for these
inroads to education.
Town Center Vision
For six years. the Irvine Co. has been promising the city
of Irvine that if it is allowed to build homes at the
University Town Center across from UC Irvine, a com-
mercial core of developmen't-the town center itself-will
follow naturally.
The company never has indicated., however, what
that commercial core will be lik~.
Past city councils, and the current one, have hedged
on approving residential building until they see a plan for
the center that matches an old dream for it.
The town center was envisioned ~ far back as 16
years ago as a unique development of Greenwich Village.
type shops to house artisans, craftsmen and artists in
some sort of symbiotic relationship to the UC campus.
It was lo be a celrter unlike traditional centers of
professional or corporate buildings, with the special
flavor of a campus orientation.
The Irvine Co, has no trouble conjuring a vision of
homes and the dotJats that development will bring; why
not an equal vision ~bout what kind of commercial ven·
ture may be mutually beneficial to the community and
the developer? • ·
Time to s~ Out
Some Saddle.back reSident.c • e grumbling about the
proposed super highway -the San Joaquin TransJ)Ortation
Corridor scheduled to stretch.. bet.ween Newport Beach
and San Diego Freeway near Sa eback College.,
.. J Most comment suggests that dents are i~ tn,t
corridor will generate urtwieldf traffic, b\llldlng an4
population problems. • ,
Yet, public mMtings with county officials result in lit·
lie outcry
The highway may never come. The county
s upervisors who have authorited the corridor area might
be re placed by slow-growth p nepts, mass transit
syste ms might .replace the a Construction funds
might never be allocated.
But those who object had l)etter speak out. And they
should marshal their facts, their alternatives, and their
forces to be beard while the corridor is in its current
phase -fin:il route selection in preparation for right-of ·way purchases. .
• Opinions expressed In the apace •bclive are those of the Dally Pilot:
Other views expressed on th'ls page are those of their authors and
artists. Reader c;ommenl Is lnvited. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O.
Box 1560, Cos14 Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 64i·4321. • .
Boyd/Recognition
ByLM. BOYD
ln Worcester, England, a
man named A. Hancock,
who'd been self·employed
most of his life, bought a
watch wben he retired and
had it in4cribed: "Presented
to myself by myself in rec-
ognition of the 55 years
wo<Jt I have done while work-ing lfor myself. Thanking me,
I am: A Hancock, 1904·S9."
The image said to be most
fri6t)ltening to youngsters ls
that of a green snake wllb
fanw bared. For lbis reason,
so e autborltiea want to
re ce the traditional skull·
an•·crosabones on toxic
mealclne bottles "1th tbe
~nake plcture.
I. It's noteworthy, is it not.
that the full title of the book
that has generated dozens of
films was "Frankenstein, or
The Modem Prometheus·•?
Was none other than Gen.
Maxwell Taylor who once re-
ferred to a peacetime army
as "a chimney in the sum·
mer."
Q. "What's a
'bindlest.iff'?"
A. That was hobo slan1 for
a man who <:arried his
bedroll with him.
RoW't N. Weed/Publlsher Thon\at K .. vll/EdJtor A!-1
S.rMre Krelblch/Edltorlel Peige Editor
Jack AnClerson ...
Vet J~.h Prioritie~ Targeted '
WASHINGTON -At
considerable risk to bis political
neck, President Carter hopes to
limit the preferential treatment
veterans reeeive in applying for
iov•rn.mpt Job•. Aiaea
have per·
suaded the president that.
veterans
priority baa
been squeez-
i n I o u t
women and
minorities
from federal
him that giving Job preferences
to ex-servicemen, some of whom
left 'tbe military decades ago, is
blocking qearly everyone else
from the federal payroll
By law, the memo explained,
veterans are aiven a five-point
bonus on the Civil Service lest
scores on the theory that "those
who served in times of war
deserve special assistance in
readjusting lo civJlian life." In
reallty, even those veterans who
served during peacetime are
aranteda "lifetime benefit ...
employment. CONSEQUENTLY, the memo
The propo1ed reduction~·n declared, veterans "block the
"eterans bendits, of course, h top of most Civil Service
brought an almighty bowl f registers. This often creates
the powerful veterans lobby. But severe problems ... for a confidential White House non-veteran but qualified
memo, which recently reached candidates, especially women."
the president's desk, convinced In Dallas, for example, a
.
woman who scored 00 on an air
traffic controller'• test was
ranked 1.47th behind vetrrans
watb preference. U veteran1 got
no apeclal break, she wOWd ave
ranked seventh.
A femaJe lawfer in Washin~ recently applied for
a civilian Job with the Defense
Department,. Althoueh sbe had
more experience Uaan m0&t of
the male proApech, her
application was promptly
returned. Sbe was told sbe
couldn't be considered without
veterans preference.
"In some areas, such as San
Diego," the White House memo
said, "retired military personnel
are often tbe only Individuals
eligible for federal
employment." there are about
140,000 such "double dippers" -
retired serviceme& who are
collecting a military pensioo in
addltlon to th•\r aovernment
salaries -In the federal
bureaucracy. Yet tt;ey 1et first
dib1s on aovemlrumt jobs, even if
they left the mltltary before
Worl4 War II.
THE CURRENT law also
hampers tff6rt.s to streamline
the· 1overnment, Carter was
advised. W't\en a military b11S4t is
closed, for example "tbe
veteran's pref~rence ls absoiate
and allows him to ~bump'
non-veterans, including those
with greater seniority," the
memo explained. Many officials
avoid ordering needed cutbacks,
therefore, "because of the
adverse impact on equal
opportunity and affirmative
action gainJ."
The president bas
recommended that veterans.
who now comprise half the
federal work force, be given
preference for only 10 years 1 after discharge. This would help I
Vietnam veterans and would
accomplish lbe original purpose J
of tbe J.aw by limiting ass.is.lance •
to the period of adjustment. An
eJS.Qeption would be made for
disabled veterans. who would
retain a lifetime job advantage.
Another confidential briefing
paper suggested ways for the
president lo seJI the proposal
and thwart the carping, w)Jtch l
has already begun on Capltol I
Hilt. "From soµte quarters we
are beginning to receive the I
expected criticism oo our I
proposed c hanges," the 11
document stated. "Somehow we :
do not seem to be getting across
the fact that ... our proposals
help those veterans groups that
need it lbe most, the disabled :
veteran and the Vi~tnam
veteran." •.I
FOOTNOTE: A s~kesman for , 0 the Veterans of Foreign Wars .,
told my associate Howie Kurtz q
that "lhe White House is using '·di
veterans preference as a
scapegoat. They haven't been
getting enough women and ,r.,
minorltles in government, so . .,
they've sot to blame it on
something." He added that he .'.~
expects Congress lo kill the •h
proposal ..
...
.. We Don't NCOO. a Middle-aged Army
.... ~
.; .
#
To the F.d.itor;
Your editorial "Fax Military
Retirement" CDaily Pilot 26
March) showed a lack or objec-
tivity. The author apparently
looke4 only at the cost\ ignoring
what lt was buying. Asswning
that the plan CA 30-year pro-
gram with a minimum retire-
ment age of 55) was ln opera-
tion, we would have a military
force wlllt an average age of
between 33 and 37 years.
Wouldn't lt make you feel secure
to have this "roature-seasoned"
force defending you?
NOW. Let's look at the other
aide a mY>ment. Take an 18-year·
old mld·westem boy who joins
the Army, serves his 30 years
and retireJS. He'll be 48 years old
and not digible for his retire-
ment pay for another 7 years I
The endorsed plan disapprcwea
his taking a civilian job, so he
bu to go oo relief until he is SS
years old At age 55 he will have
to continue on relier. because,
unlesa be retired as a colonel ol'
better, he cannot support his
family on his retired pay.
Ao armed force is just like
anything else one gets these
days, you'll get about what you
pay for. Inst.U the 30-year/~
year retirement plan and you'll
buy an army or middle·aged
stalwarts who don't know bow to
set on rellef and can't fight their
way out of a wet paper bag.
NORMAN J. FRENCH
....... .Klletl'
The story goes that this was to
reinforce the youneer men and
to aive them counsel and con· fidence during a fight. The real
reason, however. was that those
older soldiers could no longer be
cc>Unted upon to stand up to the
rigors of the front rank.
War is a young man's "game"
and when you keep your old men
in tanks you are not only cloa·.
gi ng ut> the promotion process
for the young men on tho way
up, you are also jeopardizing
your Cront ranks.
It is far better to send the old
soldier home on hall pay and
clear some room at the top for a
young "hard charger" than to
keep him around because it may
cost a little more money.
In combat there are only two
kinds of men the quick and
the dead -and you need all of
the young quick ones you can get
to win wars.
R.E.WYMAN
Federal Spet1dl•9
To the Editor:
Is someone asleep at the
typewriter? Joanne Reynolds'
article, "Tax Investment Pays
Otr" in the March 23 Pilot re-
ports Coqteuman 8-dham as
claiming that we In Orange
County benefit from taxauon.
"Considerl0« all taxes sent to
Waabingtcm from Orange County
in 1977, the county got back
about twice~ much as it paid to
the tedcral 1ovcr11mont •· Tbls
WH based on the notion thot S2.$
percent or all Washington's l'OV·
enue comes from lncome tax,
d then extrapolating from our
me tax ~ymenta to a cra~ ~enue from the cowi\y.
lea t'• what Badham's
assistant, ltowatd Seelye, was
reported as doing.
other citizens' money nowing in
our diredfon, let's not complain
when they keep mov~ 1n here
to share some oC the so-called
"Tax Investment" they made
and never got back.
ROBERT JORDAN ROSS
El Morro Buterr1
To the Editor:
Do you remember El M~rro
Mobile Home Park? I! yoq don't,
let me refresh your ~ory.
Remember driving &outh on
Coast Highway from NewPQrt·
Corona del Mar through three
miles of uncultivated, fenced,
Irvine Ranch land and coming
upon a crescent of ~eJJlfront
where the surf JS' edaed by
trailers. Tbal is El Morro.
If I were addressing someone
older I'd aay, "Remember when
this same coastline was 4'dged
with tents?" Probably some of
the first trailef'I built moved in here to replace those tents. And,
In time, the little coloay gew to
spread up El Morro Canyon and
become a leasehold in the Irvine
Ranch.
Some or El Morro's first resi-
dents were weekending $Ur&
fishenQen, a number ot whom re.
tired here, and a few of wbom
havediedhert.
seems determined to a'C<tuire us. •" This in spite of miles of vacant
land to the north. :MARY AND PAUL SULLIVAN ,. . ,,
C'..adl'lle .... •'
To the Editor: ·'.
Last week a slx·month-old in-
faot was killed when the car in
which she was riding was hit by 111{;
an Amtrak train at Avenida ,1..-
Aero puerto in San Juan .,,.
Capistrano. ...~
Earlier this' year a Marine
was killed less than a mile away
by,a. sh11.ilar train.
ft'll
t,
'hf
'
•
CALIFO : w~. April&. 19n DAILY "LOT .4$
Widow Vanish.es at Se .
..
Bill Eyed
By&nate
SAN FRANCISCO CAP)
Several houra before the gi{lnt
oceanllntt Queen Ell&abetb 2
waa to dock ln Hawaii, an elder·
ly woman whom curiou•
passengers had nicknamed "The
Duchess" vanished without a
uace
Carla Irla Bodmer, a 70.year·
old widow from Swil1erland, is
believed to have\ fallen or
jumped overboard lne ni1ht of
March 2llJ Ill the ahip approached
Honolulu dunn1 a 90-day world
cruise.
"There is no indication of foul
play,•· Othmar Hutter, the Swiis
vice consul In San Francllco,
said Tuesday. "I Wo.Jtdn•t tnake seems so terrible and 1 • lo
a mystery out o! 1t." step off that railing in U(e IJ\ld-
BUT A DISAPPEARANCE at
sea is always tn)'llertous.
"ll's the kind of thln1 that
haunts everyone,·• said
Frederick Flemmtna. a
passenger rtom Houston. "It
dle of the nisht."
rt. Hoeper bad &&ln her
"lckname because •h• ore floor-length gowns and ade
almost re1at entrances I the
dinln1 rooms "and ballrooau of
the luxurious shlp. •
AFTER SHE vanished, a de·
~ACRAM £NTO CAP) -A
••1hleld Jaw" to protect re·
porten who rd~ to name coo·
OdenUal IOUrCH would be wnt· ten lnLo the st.ate Cooalll1Alion,
under a measure now on the
state Senale floor,
The proposed amendment,
ACA ' by Aasemblyman Jerry
Lewis, R·Hi&h.land, won a 6·2
vote Tuesday ot the Senate
Juditlary Commlllee. It has
already passed the Assembly.
Amputee R d S . tailed aearch was made ot the
t · elanl liner, bul no tl'ace o{ her oun arving w~~ '~':!;va, a spokesmal\ for
• the Swiss Foretan Ministry faid,
-. "It must be assumed that she
Lewis said the measure would
protect "a free now of inform•·
lion between the public and its
1overnrnent . . . a 1overnment
that can at times become quite
arrogant"
IF APPROVED by the Senate,
it will go on the November
ballot.
The measure was prompted
by the cases or Wllllam Farr
and the Fresno Four, who were
jailed by judges for refusmg to
identify sources
California has a shield law
that says reporters need not
name sources. But the judges
who ordered the Jalllngs ruled
that the law is outweighed by the
constitutional right to a fair lrlaJ
and their power over court p_ro-
ceedings.
SAID LEWIS: "The court·s
foot in the door could very well
lead to the destroying of the
shield law in California."
He said judges could not over-
rule the shJeld law if it were 1n
the Constitution.
A representative of the slate
Judicial Council, which
supervises the court system,
said ACA 4 would make it
harder for judges to keep grand
jury transcripts and other con· f1denhal matters secret.
Candldat~ Wed
Mike Curb, a recording in·
dustry executive and
Republican candidate for
lieutenant governor, mar-
ried Linda Dunph y,
daughter of television
newscaster Jerry Dunphy,
m private rites Tuesday in
the Beverly Hill s
Presbyterian Church.
Classic Film
Show Decision
Reversed A.gain
RIVERSIDE (AP) -The City
Council has decided that D.W.
Griffith's "Birth of a Nation"
ntm classic will not be shown at
the city museum after all.
The council decided 5·2 Tues·
day that the tilm -which many
members of the black communi-
ty found objectionable -should
be screened publicly at St.
Catherine's Catholic Church
with private fwids Instead of
taxpayer monies.
THE COUNCIL adopted a
compromise a few weeks ago
that would have allowed the film
to be presented at the museum
alone with comments from a
black person or sociologist. The
compromise followed the coun-
cil's cancellation of a March 9
showing.
Seme people objected to the
council's :ruesday decision as
t:ensorship.
SAN DIEOO (AP) -An elder·
ly double amputee is
bospltallzed afte.r she was found
sprawled unconscious and 1tarv-
ln1 on the floor of the home she
shared with her husband, police
said. Her husband apparently
died five or six days earlier.
· Mabel and Orville B. Paulson,
both in their 80s, were known
around their neighborhood as
stubborn, independent people.
l''or their love of Independence,
nurtured during their 55-year
marriage, they paid a dear
price.
Paulson's wile was in very
critical condition at Mission Bay
Memorial Hospital today, suffer-
ing from the effects of starva-
tion, said hospital apokeawoman
Lois Haselton. The woman,
whose legs were amputated
because of diabetes, lay helpless
on the floor for several days
after her husband apparently
dted of natural causes, the cor-
oner's office said.
Jtlarine Senteeaeed
VISTA (AP) ~ A 25-year-old
Camp Pendleton Marine baa
been sentenced to life in prison.
for the fatal shooting last Sep-
tem ber or the teen-aged wife of
another Manne.
Superior Court Judge F. V.
Leopardo sentenced Jackie
Robmson on Tuesday following
has jury conviction last month
for the murder. kidnap, rape
and robbery of Sophia Ann
M artlnez, 19.
Injured Ma• •.staflle'
LOS ANGELES CAP) -A
Nazi-uniformed man, injured m
a scuffle with members of the
Jewish Defense League during
Academy Awards ceremonies
Monday night, underwent sur-
gery for a possible skull frac-
ture.
Nursing supervisor Beverly
Pratt at the County-USC
Medical Center said early today
Richard Rogers, 40, is in stable
and fair condition.
Ute Te,.. Given
L E. "JACKIE" HEATH ER
&airman, Newport Planning Commission x Col. Fred Tschopp has
assumed command of
the 12th Staff Group,
Marine Corps Reserve •
in Los Angeles .
T11chopp lives In Foun-
tain Valley with bts wlfe,
Dale. and two aons. Jaotcle HeatMr for City Councll, t500 Dorothy Lane, Newport -.OC:h, CA 92660
PUBUCNOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
I I I
PUBLIC NOTICE
(_sr._:4_TE_l Dehne! was "full of hatred and fell overboard. We don't laave
malice." any backvcund on tier, bu• she certainly ls not well known. •t
plannlnc the murder of tbe
Jewish Defense Lea1Ue'1 West
Coast director haa been sen·
tenced to nee ln prison despite a
report. recommeodln1 proba·
lion.
.,.,. BUI Cltalleaged
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
Behr property lax blll should be
declared unconstitutional because it is tied lo a ballot
proposition that baa yet to be
passed, a retired attorney sa.ya.
The 'disappearance (lrst
became public knowledge when
some passengers rnentJoned~it to
newsmen during a oine·uour layover here last weekend.
Superior Court Judge Jactc B.
Tso said Tuesday alter sentenc·
ing Robert Dehnel of North
Hollywood that the 33-year-old
I
Ardy V. Barton, SS, of Santa
Barbara bas filed a petition with
the state Supreme Court urong
that the bill be declared un-
con11tltutional.
ACCORDING TO Cunard
Lines, owner of the shU>: "She
was last seen at 10 p.m. on
March 216. At t(} a.m. March 27,
the bedroom steward reported
that her bed w•s untouched. An extensive search of the 11liP
proved negati\oe."
f
Actual aiza: 8\i x11Jt
To celebrate the visit of Tutankhamun's treasures to Southern California we
are pleased to offer Tutankhamun-The Last Journey. free for the asking
All you have to do is stop by in person, ask for 1t. and 1t s yours
It is a stunning book; a marvelous portfolio of color photographs of the artifacts
of ancient Egypt. The accompanying text tells the tragic story of the boy king.
Tutankh amun, who lived and reigned over thlrty~three centuries ago;
the Political and religious turmoil that preceeded him and with which he had to
deal, his death, the elaborate preparations for his burial, the religious and
mystical significance of his tomb and the treasure that was entombed with him.
It was the only tomb of all the Kings of Egypt that was not completely looted.
The ~earch for it and \he discovery are also described by the author.
William MacQuitty, an internationally honored photographer, world traveler.
\,
and film producer (A Night to Remember). This is one of the most up-to-~Je \. _.
books about Tutankham un, and one of the most PoPular. Published to sell at
$4.g5, it quickly went to a second printing. We we1e able to obtain a limited
number of copies, so first come, first served, until our supply is exhausted
One book to a famil y, please. Sorry, we cannot honor mail requests
Also at Mutual Savings, The Treasures of Tutankhamun.
This continuous presentation of full-color slides from the Los Angeles County
Museum Is now appear'Tng lh our lobby. It gives you a close. intimate look.at
the golden glories of the Tutankhamun exhJbrt Last day for this presentation
is April 15th. •
' ) '
' -ST'OCKS /BUSINE~
ARB YOU A PAUNT q>HCEaHED •tiaot mm•
Don't despair. Follett bu for you a lo\.8$ Tahune., ''Bow ti Prot~t Ypur Child Al t Ctime."
DGel your kid W.ar ract1? Get him. &t. .:aow to BO
Sexy wUb Bup .ln Your Teetb" a CootemP:Qll'V7 Booka edl•
tlouavallablea.t$8.9S1nelotb.'195.lnpape.r.
How tbout baton twitllAfP Dou~lt;: .h out uaonlb 'tri1b ''Tbo CcmpM&e Rftnik Gt ~liAc" ($t.9$).. .~
Every yeai-.-re·mmidated wllh boob G»Jatn•aa bow euy lt la to t
become at rlcb a11
Crot•u1. Comlnc vp thls aeuon aro ''Thlnk Rlcti~' <t>elacorte
Press, •.95), "PlaDttna
Your lloney Tree"
(Chatham Square ·
Preas, $7.ts), ••Don't Dle Broken <Duttoa, "-9:5> and, ai-~
1um1D1 all else fai:"'1 ''How to Mlle a MUMon at tbo
• Track'' (Greallakel uvina Pna, $&.II). :.
ABE mu WOIUllED ABOUI' )'our Joob? There'• •
plenty "'?"eading matter for )'OU. aem. itluecl um rnoa.Lb •.
11 .. Your Face After Thirty,. (A&W Publl.sben, $10.95), a
••total guide to akin care and makeup toe-the reallaUc ·
woman." From Rawson Assoclates, at. lll.95, we have
"Adrien Arpel'a Three Week Cruh Makeover/Sbapeover
Beauty Program." And lf thllt doesn't work. Simon ac
S<:buater wU1 be out next month with "Instant Beauty." a :·
$9.95 book written by Pablo of Elisabeth Arden.
Want to trace your roota! Vlnla&e will publlsb "Your
Family History .. ($3.95) next montb. Want to dance? John
Monte. national dance director ol the Fred Asta1re Dance
Studioa, has written .. The Fred Astaire Dance Boot," to be
published in July (Simon & Scb\&Ster, $9.95). Want to
sleep? stein It Day 11 p\lblilhinl "Easy Sleep" ($1.95),
whlcb it calls "a doctor'• proven tecbDique lot conquerin&
lnaomnia.''
Are you having trouble with your marrlaee? Try
"Hqw to Be Your Own Man'l,lae Counselor" (Atheoeum,
$8.95'}. Or "Better Sex, Better Marria1e" (Mqrrow,
$14.95). Or "Every Other Man" (Tbomu Congdoa Books.
$7.95), a guide to eoptng with infidelity. Or "Other M~
Other Women" (Grosset & Dunlap, $8.95), psycbolOfi,at
Joel Block's guide to "understanding and copin' with ex·
tramarttal affalrs."
ON 11IE OTHER HAND, IF you have given up, Mac·
millan bas "Getting Custody" ($9.95), which al)owa you
how to "win the Jut battle of the marital war." And the
New York Times ls publish.in& "Getting Youn" (SIU5>.
desert bed u "a comba4 manual for the divorcing male.·~
If you wan&. something more rnundane, Random Hous•
has "Carving and Booing Like an Expert" ($8,95 in cloth,
$4.95 ln paper). ·
The From And/Or Preas tn Berkeley ls lssulbc, at
$4.95, "The St.ash Book.'' a guide to hiding your valuables.
This last book explores "tbe philosophy of hid.inc in a
poslUve lilht with a reaU.Uc aW\ude toward llvin1 in
today's world."
· Finally, if none of these books tarns you on, maybe
Bobbs·Merrill has the antidote. Jl's out this month with
"Gettin& Even: Gripping Tales ot Rennie,. ($8.95).
Institute Offers
Seniors' Classes
Courses gearetl to help ienmr ciUJens condud their bus!·
ne1s affairs are belns offutd throulh Sad~b9ck Colle1e's
Emeritus lnltltute.
A pel"IOrull bi,Wqtn counso Is offered on Mondays trom
9 to 11 a.m. in ~ JJa•un' lfills Presbyterla,p Church.
Taught by lax consutta11t Sbtrley Laskin, lba .class pro-
vides ad'vice on consumer responsibiliUet and rilbts.
credit and soci81 securlty.
SHE ALSO TEACHES A COURSE called uBUsinesa
Vocabulary You Can Use," oo Mondays from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the cburcb.
Addi\ioqally, Ms. Lukin teachet a coune on uun.
derstanding that Corporate Statement" from 1:30 to 3:30
p.m . Mooday• ln the BapUs\ Church in Laguna Hilll.
Each ol these tounes is imder 1¥&)'.
"INVESTMENT COORDINATION," TAUGHT by
financial planner"Ronald Gable, ii desip9d to teacb
seniors how to evaluate l ... estmenta. lt Is ottered
Tuesdays from 9:30ta11:30 a.m. al the Methodist Cb~b.
244-42 Moult.on Parkwa1, Laeuna llll1s.
Attarney David Brown wlD Instruct a class called
"Estate Planning" on Mondays from 1:30 to 11:30 a.m.
bestnning April 10 at the Methodist Church.
The tultton.free classes are available to senior cltlzena
ln the area, aai~ spokesman Harry Wandlina.
More lnformaUon is available at (9!-49&01 ext. 207.
Callfonda'IJ bulldinf pmnlt vaJuatiob totaled .,_ ~mllllon in February, r.porta Seeorily P•c1flc Bank, up S
percent kom January'• $837·mlllion ma?~ ~· ~
The ~·· mont.b~ report aQS that, delpJt• Jn~lement weather, tho 1tate'1 realdenUal Cohat.ruc:tton aector poslea.-w .
•
l
1 Radial Oaeek
\
l
Samples of polyester cord are bathed· by 1olvent vapors
at the Goodyear laboratqry at Akron, Ohio, tn one of the
tests to determine if the cords are sultable fOI' use in re-
inforcing radial tires.
Jobs May Increase . .,
In Cyclical PJl"tern
LOS ANGELES CAP>-The job market ln the Los Anaelea area
should pick up durinl the next three months, according to a survey
of business hiring plans by a temporary help employment firm.
The Manpower. Inc. survey also said there should be some lm·
provemeota on the national job aceoe because emp~ers are more
conlideot about the coming
quarter than they were three
monlhl earlier. Last quarter. onty 18 percent
foresaw hiring increases, 13 per-
c-ent expected 'I~ reduct.ioDs
and 69 percent 1.Ud there would
be no cbanaes.
The Mllwaukee·baaed firm
began the quarterly surveys two
yeara ago and poll• a statistical·
ly representative sample of 6,000
large public and private
employers nationwide.
IN THE IATF.8'1' survey, 38
percent of Los Anseles
employers forecut a pickup 1n
blrinS. ~ percent anticipated no
change from cuneni e1PpJoy.
ment levels and three percent.
projected birinC cutbacks.
Manpower noted that an~
ti~ipatecl galna for the next
quarter were laraely due io the
seasonal cycles in 1uch in·
dustrles as comtnlcµe>n.
l
..
There were alao the us~
post·winter lncreues iD employ·
m•nt IUDOlll wttoJeHlen, ~
tailer& and manufacturers of
durable goods. ·
. , -
•
Repuhti<! e ... \ lS ~
good
for the
econo~ .. ~ Your$ .
How would you lk• to .-Ouble
yoU1' money In nine yeart? It c:.an be
done safely end turely at Republic:
Federel Savings. A good wwy to a
sound economy for yourself regardless
of business or stoc:k m~t cycles. Here's the k1nd of nest tQg )'OU
cen bulld Wfth a Republle 7-3/'4~,,
$t,OOQ mlnl~m deposit. 6 to 10 yeor ~rm certificate. which cotn~uhds
dlDy '°'en 6nnuat ytetd d e.oes .
• 1.000
• ~.oOO
•tt>,000
4ngry,. Impatient Critica
Cite Trade BaWnce, Taxes
I
Amerlcu buslaeu eucuU•e
-' Pre&ldeD1 Cuter.••
CLBABLY. ONB o• tbe areat
frt<ratlcms of maJl1 erltlca II tbclr view that tbe federal p-
•nameni lt••lf la 1patterina
IHIH oa tbe lnflaJlon flrea
Whlle tJaemlq private lnduatry.
Tb•Y feel the eovemment la
not credible. Wblle taltlnl about
the dan1eu of lntlatlon,
Coner••• backs a bl1ber mla.lmwn waae, blper farm
price sUppOrta and reltrictkms
on &ow~eed lmpona.
And 10 the"ctJ:t!l their
estlmatea "' alltl srowtb and raise the od QB blPer'
priees and perhaps receulon.
TYPICAL OF THAT posltlon
la Merrill Lynch EcooomJca.
,.,
After U.Unc acU0.01 ti.tat u:n
only exert more preuun GD
prices, lncludlnl the bad&e' de-
ficit and an euealt6ly Joo.
monetary polley, lt eommeataf: •'Tbus we canttnue to aptd
an uadert:Ytna uptnod ID lafta.
tlon and lnterat rates. to tlle
point where O"Owt.b slows atwp.
ly, or receulon be1lo1.
sometime early oat 1ear ar lale
tbll Jear."
ID abort, private lnduatr7 Is
riDfiDI the Inflation alarm, but
It ean the flre depart.meat
ellber will not nBPODd or will
come and pm out tho eoi•""'1 ~
alont with tbe f1re.
Lockheed Gets ·Boost
TOE IA1TE& 00t1LI> be ~
compliabed with controls, ball·
nesa eucutl•• feel, and a pall
of 1,100 chld ezecuti•• bf the National Oaamber of Com~
found that nearly haU expec\,
tbem to be Imposed.
One explanatioo for the fur la
the belief ol man.y crftlcs tblt
the edmlrdwt.ratlon ii ID auda a
bind, partly becauae ot lta owa
lack or a progrUQ, that ~
ll bas DO other way out. Pan American lliders 26 Long-range TriStars
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Pan
American Wodd Airways bu
announced a bllllon-dollu
aJl'eemmt to purcbue 21 k>d,.
ranee Lockheed TrlStara ln
what a Lockheed spokesman
called "tbe order of the century
for ua."
The announcement wu made
in New York by Pan Am
Cbairman William T. Seawall,
who said tbe LlOll Duh 500, a
shortened Xl·teat veralon of the
TrlStar, won out over tbe
DC-10-30 made bJ McDonnell
Douslu and the 741-SP
manufactured by Boeln&
Aircraft Co.
32,500 Recalled
BJ 'l'lae Aaodated Pren
The National IUghway Traffic
Safety Adminiltratlon reports
that about 82,500 19T1 and 1978
BMW automobiles are being re-
called.
The action involves models ~1 and 3201A manufactured
before Peb. 28 and ii to correct a
vapor lock probllm that can re-
s"'t tn llalllna.
' TUE INn'IAL Increment of
the aale wu for 12 planes at a
cost of $500 million, with an op-
tion to buy the nmalnins H Jeta at an uodetermlned price.
IJoekheed spokesmen aaid the
total .t~~ka1e weuld come to more $1 b1Won. .
The announcement was a ma-
jor boost for Lockheed, wblcb
bu suffered coatlnuini losses on
Ule L1011 proaram. Pan Am cur·
rently rues only Boeinl planes,
meanin& that Lockbeed baa
opened up a new customer at a
tlme when another, Eastern
Airlines, reportedly i1 about to
replace Its fieet "1th tbe Euro-
pean Airbus.
,.,.BIS BAS GIVEN ua the bi&·
1•t shot in the ann we could
have," aaid Orea Waakul of
Lockbeed-Calilornla Co., the
di vlalon buildiDS the TriStar.
"'It's the order of the century for us ...
Lockheed bas delivered 149
TriStan and baa 239 OD order. Of
those, 181 are -rmn buy-and 58
are optloos, Waskul aald. There
are firm orden for~ Dash 5005
and options for 23 more, be said.
Over The Counter
MASDUst9p
Concedln1 that artlflclal
reatralDU on private marbb
have a bad reputation, .. d
wt.shins '"' were not in aucb m inflationary bind, the Gtnnl
Bank trust department bit t11e
bullet and observed:
"PE&llAPS THE next ~
thing to undoina iJlflatloury
leplatica ii to trot out 8'WY
conceivable weapon in tbe
economlc·management uwma1.
Ergo, an lncomes policy."
An incomes policy is • .,._.
way of IQing waie-price ma·
trol1, 1enerally of the tJ"PO
whose bis teeth leave no cbolc:e
but to comply.