Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-04-12 - Orange Coast PilotI I 17 I I ~ • 1 I • untm QD 0 ent ......... cu efeate • ID DAILY PILOT * * * 1oc * * * WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 12, 1978 VOi.. "-llO. • • UC110M,. a....., Ugllt Turnollt Newport Elects 4 C~allengers BJ JOANNE UYNOLD8 ... ...., ........ :Paul Rummel, Donelcl Strauau!rt.aie Heatlaer u4 EYel71t won Mata GD the Newport Beacll Clt1 Counell TDesd-m.lii • e1eetloe tbat .... ODe of Ua1rtest turnoatl • ,.,_ t t1JDel. CltJ aert Daria Georse Mid 10,m baDotl were caat out of 40,582 ~ yoten ellllble. tor a 27~ turnout. Tbe t;*l'Sld. Dlatriet coun- ell race waa the ~tat where challeqer Humm defeated ID- · cumbebt LucWe Kuelm bf 835 votes. All of the otbet w\Antn, Strauss lD the Flnt Diotrict. Hart in tbe 1b1rd Diltriet and Heather in the Fourth Diltrtct. were ruanlna for seata belnl vacated by tbe iDcumbmta. It wu early today Won ftnal results wen tallied. altboqb all ol tbe "lnnen est1bltllhed urlJ leads OD the Wa.J to tbe1r vie- torln. Tbe d~·· YOttftl mactim., Accu.ate, rented from tbe Loe An1elea firm of llartln and Cbapmm provided a ltumbllnl block to countln1 retarna bec!aue the ~bed bJ the mac:ldJa did = ~ erbwitbtbecounttna ce. While campetp wOrken and C.as& Weadler ·~ doudJ tmouab TbundaJ monlq, wtUa 10 percent cbaace of meuanble pndpttatlon ::,3' ~O::.:li. Lowa cudldatel wldted Impatiently, citJ eJectklft wwbrs had to stft ~ .n Of the ballOU to ... UtdlbMbeen~ ca=~ tbt appeaNd to ~ were re-puncbed ballots. T~ wa not compW-ed l :IOa.m. Tallies posted at that time are: . na8' DIS'ralCI' -Donald Strausa,4,818 Peg Forllt, 3,3S6 S.H. BJeJ'I ~ Bill Von Elie , 514 John TUcter, GO La Verne de la Cierva, 55. TllJaD DIS'DICI' -Evelyn Hart. 5,100 Michael Gering, 3,'107 Frank Ivens, 122 Paul Caldwell, 50C l'OUllTll DIS'DICI' -Jackie Heather, 7,3fl7 Charles Larson, 2,50C SIXTH DIST&ICT -Paul (lee NBWPO&T, Paae AZ) ArtideSays NukBDeDiee Wt by CIA. 'Many Infants Die By Doct~r'S Decision' .......... l'ealfles Actor Comet Wilde, deserib- ing the death of a friend from throat cancer. testified in favor of a bill to ban free distribution of promotional cigarettes during a Senate Judiciary Committee bear· ing. 'Gay Rights' OK'din SF SAN FRANCISCO CAP> Mayor George Moscone baa signed lnto law a gay rights or· dinance that prohibits dis· crlmlnatioo ln employment and housing because of sexual orien-tatlon. "This la a very substantial and progreasive move for civil rights," Moscone said u be signed the ordinance Tuesday with gay Sucviaor Harvey Milk standing ide him. BB Attorney Voters Elect Gail Hutton Gall HatlGD 9COl"8d a landdde •ictor.v over Incumbent Don Bollfa ud ~ballea.~rry Bame la~·•:· f.or the Bllllltiiiataa" !leach clt,r at· tol"De1 job. Mn. Hdltm. 41. 11 tbe ftnt woman to be elected HantiQtoo Beach City attorney. Bonfa 6eld the pc»t fOf' the put 10 yean without a 1ln1le election cballenae. Here are the unofficial dt,y at- torney race results= Gall....,.•, l,380 <elected) Jerry Bame, S.117 Don Bonfa, 1.514 (Incumbent> A deput.y city attornq In San- ta Ana fOf' the past four years, Mn. Hutton lashed out at Bon- fa'a record in office from tbo start of her campaip. Mn. Hutt.G:l aceused Bonfa al lDconalatmt declsiom and a poor track reeord on cttr lawsuits. She a1ao attacked the coats of outside lepl senicea charced to tbe city. OUTMUSCLES OPPONENTS "I can cut thoM outside fees," N rttu Attome H Mrs. Hutton stated after tbe ew -·~ 'I utton election. Mrs. Hutton criticised bold future fund-ralsen to.,_, challen1er Bame'• lack or back loans for her campaip. municipal el[J)erieoce. Mrs. Hutton said the over· The attarney post winner col· whelming defeat of l.Dcumbe:nt lected about M0,000 lD campalcn Bonfa meant "the people ol this funds and loaned herself an community are desirous of a estimated $21,000 of tbat change -the voters have amount spoken." . Her campalan :r;,ndlna Is Mra. Hutton sald ahe plans to believed to be the eat by a start her new Job next Monday. . single candS4ate in the cl~'• bis-B•m~!~~_waa endorsed by tory. the Bunungwn Beach Chamber Mn. HutWi Mid she plans to <See BtJTl'ON, faae AJ> * * * * * * 4 Elected to HB Council Mandie, ThoUU¥, Bai~, Mac.4lliat,er Win · By &AYMOND EST&ADA IL ••Dlllfr ......... Huntlncton Beach voten picked four new City Council members and ousted ~ lDcum· bents ln Tuesday's municipal election. · Auto repair shop, owner BOb Mandie, 88, outpollid IS ottier City~ bopielul9. Johll~ Tbomu. •, a crane Od ti'Ucll· ln1 nrm owner, placecl MCOGd in tberac .. Commqnlty acU•l•t Ratti Ball•Ye.. 51, and Huntlnaton Beach uDlc!e mp Stb001 ·IKS- trtct Tnilt.ee Dao MacAIUlter, 45, nntibed third and lourtb; .... Peetl•tlJ, tl'9tAft4~perc:illl\ OI' 15,tos ol U. clt1' 1 17, toa reatttend .. vottn Call baJJab tn lbe eaiC· tton. ...d Cll1 Clerk Alicia Wtatwcrtb. offtclal re-council member, and att.ornl7 Al Coen, wbo WU aeettq a fourth consecutive coancll term, failed in tbelr ~ bldl. Former mayors Norma Olbbl and Hamett Wieder did not leek ...-.lecUcmtbiayear. Flred deputy clty atto:n.Mt1 .Jobn O'Coobor wbo plMed Mb In the couneil race, ou~ bOtb meumblftt.a. Waddill Jurists Informed -TOllBULE'f .............. A defenae wltAeas tn the murder trial ol Dr. Wllllam Bu· ter W addUJ testUled Tuescla1 tJa.at mta:1 t8faatl ... an..w.t to ctie WtMn tM doCtol' beJJnes maaai•• bra.ln dam•1• mn have blielJ IUltlfned before or dUiinl bUtb. Dr. lohA R . llentes, a pediatrto nemolol1tt down here from IJ!Ddon to testify for Wad· dlll, told the Oranae County Superior Court Jury of "a clulic situation" be recently witneiaed in Londaa. Tbe apedaliat said a braln- damqed baby wttb a diseased spinal cord was allowed to die by attendina docton who ma no effort to aave I.be alliDC cbild. "Tbe doctors decided. SolQe-one bu to do it alDee the paraa can't," Mentee lald. Tbe lsaue Of .life or death for infants that could face life u lit· tie more than human vegetables bu filled many paaes lD tbe transcripts a trial that bepn more than two months aio. It aroee ap1n Tuesday when Menke• appeared to defend Waddlll'a eonduct when the ac· cuaed pbyaldan cleared bo8pital staff out of the Westmlmter Community Hospital nursery with the reported comment: "Don't anyone do a God damn thing for that baby." It la alleged by tbe proeeeulion that Wacldlll. 42, of Runtlngtoo Harbour, then 1tran1led a newbom infant ID lta crib after pndlctlnl tbat lt must ba.e auf· lered massive brain damqe from lll long lmmenlon in aallne. W addlll lQJeeted aallne into tbe J.8.year-old mother lD a bid to abort tbe lnfmt ria an abor· Uon procedun tbat bad never prevtoUil:J baetf"ded oa blm. llenbl told the l111'1 tbat be ml1bt have aeted in tbe same way lf be Uri been faced with a nanel)' tun ol nunea at RCb a critical moment. ••tt'• tbe kind of declslclll that cs. DOCIO&, .... AJ) ... evel Released Daredevil CycliAt Out Early LOS A.NGELD CAP> -S"1 l..Dievel w ~ oa& fJI Jail toda7 lDI ht. wUe allCl wu driven book Saltman wrote after work· ••a7· ln• u a promoter oa K.alevel'• te • ~ ot ftlwldal ud -. leeal JIRtlilMM BG& JQbbellt aa1• Wap wl u be Jumpln1 a1aln soon for tbe daredevil bl~ K.nJnet a served a little lea Wlauecasful rocket-cycle leap than OH maatba ol a llx·montb over the Snake River Gorse ln Jail term ilPPoHd after be r Idaho, .. , pleaded 1uUty to aasaulUDC "I feel that the ma,Jorl~ of televl1lon execuUve Sheldon society have understood tbe DteliNd ID a 1191 sport ault. the aelf·atylild .. Jll'Vfeaaloaal life risker•• stepped lnto ·a late model sedan reportedly contain· Saltman with a baseball bat. reaaom for my action,'' ltnle~el Knie.el Hid be a11aulted said. .. Saltman because of alle1edly He contended his incareera- libeloua material contained in a tlol\ would not serve "aa a deter· rent to otben." A•ny Sees Idol 'Rock Star Geta New Fan WASHINGTON (AP) -Shaun Cassidy, the new pop-rock idol of the teen set, has a new fan -10- year-old Amy Carter. President Carter 's daughter and 11-year-old Kathleen O'Keeffe, daughter of a White House aide, went together to a Cassidy concert Tuesday night at the suburban Capital Centre. - Their outing followed by a few hours a White House visit by Cassidy, star of television's "The Hardy Boys" program, during which be met both the president and Mrs. Carter. Cassidy also ate lunch in the Navy-operated White House mess where he created far more stir than woU.ld a Cabinet officer. ttne secretary who ate wtth him aald the ac~r­ singer was besieged by men and women seekmg a utographs, ostensibly for their.,.children. Nixon Back& 'Wegal' Acts As President F,....P.,.eAJ COUNCIL.~ •• going to buy it," Mandie said. Knievel's early release was due to his good behavior, said Sheriff's Lt. Joseph Race. Publicist Stan Rosenfield said one of the fl!"lt problems KDlevel will have to face ia a civil suit flied by Saltman for an un- disclosed sum. Rolenfleld noted, however, that Knievel hu filed a $210 million libel suit against Saltman and bis publishers . "Evel's going to have a lot of expenses in attorneys' fees," Rosenfield s-.ld. "He does not have money to pay attorneys' feea unless he sells some proper- ty. And if the judgment goes against him, be eoing to have to dip Into his pockets. ''But, as of tomorrow he will start generating income 8'aln and I've never seen anyone who can generate inaome faster than he can," Rosenfield said Tues- day. In addition, Rosenfield said, Knievel owes about $800,000 in back taxes. And Knievel no longer baa money coming in from Eve! Knievel toys, after the Ideal Toy Company dlscon- tibued tM line due to tbe nature of his crime. Knievel bas announced plans to jump into a haystack without a parachute from an airplane at 40,000 feet on an unspecified date. ' UNSEATSINCUMB!NT Sixth Dt~'• Hummel FIRST DISTRICT WINNER New Counctlm•n StrauH MOYES UP TO COUNCIL Fourth Otatrtct'• Huther ...... THIRD DISTRICT WINNER New Councilwoman Hert NEW YORK <AP> -Richard Nixon defends in his memolra hia actions just before the W atereate break-lo and re- iterates that an otherwise illegal act becomes legal U done by a president, according to the Soho News. Five developers and a real estate agent contributed a total of $27 ,000 to four chamber of commerce-endorsed council candidates. But MacAlllster was the only chamber-endorsed candidate to win a City Council seat. Bartlett, Coen and Dr. Frank Hoffman also were endorsed by the Chamber. Knievel may not be allowed to perform the feat lo tbe United States, but backers in the Dominican Republic have ex- pressed interest in funding the event, Rosenfield said. F,.._PageAJ . LJ The Soho News, a weekly newspaper here, said it obtained five random ealleys of the former president 's book this week and is satisfied they are authentic. According to the newspaper: -Nixon cited the "Huston Plan," drawn up by aide Tom Huston, as "jmtlfted and le,aJ because be aaw a hlaber obliga- tion," even though it called for • widespread domestic sur- veillance and intellleence eatherinl, includlne buralaries. -Nixon compares bia •P· proval ol the Huston Plan to President Rooeevelt'a order in· ca re eratin• J apaneae in America at the start of World War 11, and to President Un- coin's suspension of tome civil libf:rties during the Civil War. -In a paraarapb apparently edited out on the ealleys, Nixon says be wanted to get a "leaked" document at the Brookings Instilutlon, a W ashlngton thlnk tank, even lf it had to be done 1urrept1Uo\1Sly. -Nixon says that be penonal- ·1ll sou&ht a thoroulh lnveatiaa· lion of the personal lile ot Daniel Ellsberg, who leaked the Pen· tagon Papen to the New York Times. Nixon saya the Soviet Union had ~ed a set of the Pentaeoo Papen prior to their publlcation, and, "if a con· splracy ex.lated, I wanted to know and I wanted the full re- sources of the eovernment broueht tO bear ln order to find out." The Nlxaa book, "Memoirs," ls scbectuled for publicatlon ln May. No SbeIJr19hing CO MPTON (AP) Shellfi1bin1 waa halted at ComptGD CNek after state of. ficlala Aid ~ found the water contamlDated bJ exceaaive amounta ol banntul chemicals UHcl by a nearby chrome platlnl company. • DAILY PILOT "The campaign funds spent an this election were out of sight,'' said winner Mrs. Balley who spent about $3,500 on her own ef· fort. ''The voters showed they want to give govement back to the people and that they are turned off to big money buying elec· tions," Mrs. Bailey added. But Thomas, also a winner, said his succeaa was due larply to the 2.3)0 red, white and black campaitn ai1na be posted throuibout the city at a COil of about $4.000. "I think the tmnlnt point was when we 1ot a court order a1alnat the city to keep them from tearing down my slim," said Thomas after the election. Thomas, Mandie and Mrs. Bailey all said that, for the moet part, they used their own funds to finance their campaisns. M acAllister said be spent about $10,000 on bis campaien. * * * F.,..PegeAJ BUTfON. • • of Commerce, fl.nlabed a poor HCODd to Mn. Hutton. And Bame's law firm partner, Al Coen. allo a Chamber en· donee, wu defeated in bis bid for a fourth term on tbe Hunt-instcm Beach City Council. p,....p-A.J DOCTOR'S TRIAL. • • In preparation, Knievel says he will have his spleen removed because a frequent cause of death in impact situations is a ruptured spleen. Knievel says be will also have a mlasile-guidance device sewn into bia chest so be will not miss one of 13 target haystacks in the leap. Peacekeepers Fire Rockets BEIRUT, Lebanon <AP> Arab League peacekeepers ft.red tank cannons and rocket.a today In a bid to crush four days of sectarian clashes ln adjacent Moslem and Christian alums of Beirut. 'Ibere were reports the Christians were taltine the brunt or the firing. •·Rockets are raining on us, .. screamed a woman resident of the ChrisUan quarter, reached by telephone. Residents ol the Moslem district aald the Syrian· domlnatejl peacekeepers were not almida their wa1. A Syrian officer said bia men were "abow- ln• no favoritism." Police ln the capital said 21 persons bad been killed and more than IO wounded by dawn today in the fiabtln& between an1pen in the Chrt.atlan d.Wtrict, El~ Rummaneb, and tbe Moelem neiehborhood of Cbiyab. All but \t7 of the wounded were dilcharsed from bospitala. Carter Pu.II& Energy 'ilt WASHINGTON (AP) -Presi· dent Cart.er, eager to break the lone lm~ on hla ueru bill, promised today to support near· ly any natural 1u compromise that can be neeotiated by coa- 1re11lonal confereea, a eroup of Republican energy ne1otiators aaid. all doctors must make at some time in their careers," he said. And the witness made it clear tbat ti Waddill bad allowed a baby that appeared to be losing its battle for life to die he would have no criticism of that de- cision. "This isn't talked about openly and It's not talked about as much as it should be," be told the jury. "It's the iasue or whether someone abould orahould notllve. It is a dedaioo that la frausht with dan1er and it la fraqht with dan•er because of the arroaance wedoctonhve." Menkes assured the jury that lt Is common practice lor many docton to stand aside when they are certain that a braln-damq d infant will know no meaningful form of life. "An infant who ls almost cer- tain to have severe brain damage- la allowed to die," hesald. Menkes' testimony appeared to shock many of the observers who have been fllUne Judge James K. Turner's courtroom since the trial be1ao. Many of thoH observers are supporters of. rilht to life move- ments whose lntereat ln the trial is focused equally on the murder charge and the fact that Waddill is one of a number of docton who perform a great number of abortions in Orange County hospltals. Carter met with GOP House members ol the House-senate conference committee on ener1y. "Re said be would IUP- port, in effect, anything that came out ot the conference," Rep. CW..C. Brown, R-Oblo. 0 said aft.et the meetlne. Brown aa1d Carter lDdlc.ated he could even support • com- promlM fawnd by Republieana ca1Un1 for dere1alaUon or natural 1aa prte11 ID five years, if that'• what Jt took to 1et bll etaero bill lnO'ftni aa.atn.. Dr. Malbour Watson, one of WaddiU's two lawyers, defended the testimony of Dr. Menkes im- mediately after the court session ended for the day. Watson commented outside the courtroom that the baby girl allegedly murdered by W addlll wquld have been a vegetable and that her chances of surviv- ing without massive brain damage were "'very slender in- deed." Prosecutor Robert Cbattertoo areues tbat the iasue ralaed b7 the defense Tuesday ls lrrele- vant to the trtaJ. Judge Turner will bold a bearing behind cto.ed doors on that areument before the trial resumes today. '•Are we to be left at the bands of doctors playing God or ia the law going to take a stand?" Chatterton asked. "What doctors say among themselves in such situations is irrelevant ii we have the law to go by," the deputy district at- torney said. Synanon Warned SAN RAFAEL CAP) -React- ing to a grand jury report, Marin Colmty supervisors Tues- day told Synanon to become a "good neighbor" or fac~ the prospect of being run out of the county. E'...,.P ... AJ NEWPORT •• • Hummel.~,m Lucille KUetm, 4,700 William Dohr, 581 Dobr dropped out of the cam- palen and -the Kuehn-Hummel race was the most body contest- ed of the f°"1"'dlltrtct contests. Jubilant Hummel aup~rters cheered each pNc1net tal.11 tbat gave their candldate u edee- Hummel, who did DO& apoear at clly ball UDtl1 the lut pncinct was po&St«I, deC!land that '"the citizens have spoken. TIMJ want someone to serve their mt.est& on the city couocil and that's wbat I'm pr~.to~. ''.. -· . There were also cbeen for bl.a • campaign manaaer, Jean Watt, leader of two of the dl.1'• en- vironmental 1fOUP1 moet active· ln opposina develapment.' Mn. W.tt, who tllid 1be wu at a la. to expla!A tbe low ~ turnout. dncribed HwnmeJ'a rictorJ u "buicall.J an acrou- tbe-board resldenUal kind of thing. I think the voters latched onto our crusade. "Soth candidates in this dia· trict raised more money and spent more than they probably should have," abe added. Strauss, alto identified with environmental groups, is a fqrmer member of the Newport. Mesa Unlfted School District botard and be attributed bis vie· tory to hard work and bis record of past community service. Mrs. Hart, a former member of the clty'a Parka, Beaches and Recreation Commission and a 25-year resident of the city, also credited her roots ln the "citJ" for produclna a core of bard·worttns supporters she aald were responaibleforbervlctory. Sbels also viewed aa a supporter ol en- vjronmentattsta. The only winninJ candidate seen u unalllDed with tM alow 1rowtb element la Mn. Heather, currently aeninl u chairman of the planniq commiuion. 'lhief Steal.s Picas8oArt ROCHESTER, N . Y . (AP) -A Picasso watercolor valued at about $150,000 has been stolen from the Memorial Art Galler)' at the University of Rochester, officials there said today: A gallery s pokesman said the painting, tiUed "Flowen in a Blue Vue," disappeared from the wall near the callery aadlaoitum 'l'uesdQr eve- nin1. The paintinc was donat· ed to the 1allery in 19U. Jury Hean Testimony LOS ANGELES <P> -The de- fense strategy of "diminbbed capacity" came under attack when former Charles Manson cult member Unda Kuabian testified Lest.le Van Houten "ap- peared to be ~n control of herselr• tbe n1gbt of tbe La Bianca munlen ln 1989. Mn. Kasabian a1ao testlfJed TUeaday that Mias Van Hou&.eo was not under the lnlluence of dru1s on the nleht of the murders of. Leno and Rosemary La Blanca. I ' . \ I ' : Cella Gets 2 SAN DIBGO CAP> -Dr. Louis .J. Cella, tanner Orallle Cant)' politleal kln.IJ)in. WU MDtueed toda)' • to two to lS J'ear9 la lllte prUcG OD chutes of 11'-1 theft and rum, false daima f« Medi.Cal payments. SQpedar-Court Jodee WWlam A. Yale a1dtlled lbe prisoo term. .•.,tac CeDa'a •'mtadeeda 1n tbe . flaaaclal and polJUcal arena created a cancer·llke effect atatewlde ... Cella ~ guilty llUch 15 to HVeD eounta ol IJ'and theft Yale rejected a augiestlcn by Celia's attorney that Cella be al· lowed to provide commuaity se?Yice lo lieu of prison. His attorney, Roger Hanson. said "it. would certail)ly be bet· Ti day'• Closbig . N•Y. fiteekll. ,. I But Aal.stant Orange . c.otDllJ' District AUOrntJ Jlichael L Caplail aald, .. It wouJ4 bo a travesty 'for him to 1erve N a. town physician. .. Caplal Bald d Cella: ••ue toot IOmewbere in the D~ghbortaood of $3 mllllon fro111 thoae hOIP1tall over a period of Ume." .. U he was in touehlnc dis- tance ol St. be weuld atul it, .. the prosecutor .,,ued. I\' additJ<Jq ~ the prtso11 term, Judp Y.ale Onlered Cella to pa,y a $50.000 fine to Ora.nae County. BIQe IS You If You Look Like _,~ e• . . ,. . -) BJ JllCBAn:ltASDVJm for a court test of a city or· gray uniform would do the trick. the police helicopter bu been was wearing sra1 pants but was Costa llesa:• but addtd tht.t ••Dllllr ....... dinance that prohibits uniforms CapL Glugow said Tuesday. hovering over the l>ulld.lng coo-cited aD71ftJ, Police officlala Capa parda ~ other dtles A private security collQ)IUlY that could confuse local resi· So far. seven citations ·have stantly. couldn'teonfirm tb1a. wlU be cited it tbey drive bu tbe 0 blues" today after cit.a· dents. . beeq issued against Capa Sec\lri· However, police denied that Capa Security operates ln four tbrou1b Costa lleaa wearing tlona were issued to aom~ of its Costa Mesa police Capt. ty guards, and company presl· "tbef are harassin1 ·Capa other Orange County cities and WlitonosthatCOD.O.lctwlththeci· guards for weartne uruforms Edward GlaJgow believes the dent Brian Smith says bis employees and pointed out that Smith says the Costa Mesa tydrdl:f8. that, In the eyes of local police, situation could be resolved if employees are beln1 barassed six of the teTen citations were Police Department is trJiJll to He a Smith will soon be re. look too much liie those worn by Ca pa Security guards would for no good reason. issued Friday night when Smith force him to switch uniforms for ceivin1 notillcatlon of court Costa Mesa police officers. simply alter their navy blue out-"They've been out looking for bro""bt bis officers to the police all his private guarda (about dates at Harbor Municipal The oaiOtDg battle between fita. my officers," says Smith who department. to test the or· 100). Court.. City Attorney Robert Ca~a Sectu:itY and Costa Mesa A switch to light blue or white claims bis office at 711 w'. 17th dinance. CapL GlasJOW counters that Campa1na '!!_11 aodle tho police officials appears headed shirts. or perhaps a completely St. is beinc staked out and that Smith says one of bis l\Ulfds .. we are only worried about proeecutloa. KllOleledge GrotDs . Support for Jarvis Drops, Poll Says SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -percent say they favor the in- llore Californians have beard ol itiatiye while 2S percent say they the Jania-Gann initiative than oppose it. to February but I.be ratio of SQP-Six weeks aeo when only 30 JOrt for tbe eaatrovenial tax· 'pereent ol the electorate bad an :u~:::~~Pc& op~~arvi::.-..:= (Relitild .-,,~ ---It. TM IU,1WJ. uctecl Mardi ~U Prupwltlca 11 pasaet, an- 2'1·Aiaril I " Po'1N.er Menin maal ll'OP&b tuee ~ Field•~ lbOWe4 about four: of tlMa 8tata woUJ4 be eut tit' i ...,., 89* ,... ... ~. cir:1't " ...... J.l tWft4jl:Jfot percent. 187 they are awai.hi ot .JGD!l!:ballot when~ l>roposltlon 13, while la aatber•4 u lmpmu•• '1.s February cml7 56 percent lmew mlllloo lioatarea lut Y9tr 1n a I about it. · relatlTeqaborttimepenoca. About half the atate•1 elec· Some '13 ,.rcent asreect With torate, 52 percent, aclmowl~es · the Proposition 13 &rl\llllenl that an opinion oo tbe iuue. Some 21 ·"local JCMlnllDenle can get by OD lot lesa IDGlleJ',. and 70 pet'• Nuke DerUe loatin1%5, Magazine Saya NEW YORK (AP) -An arti· cle lo• new mqazlne publisbed bJ Rallin& Stone alle1es that a nuclear-powered device waa lost in 1965 on a Himalayan moun· tainside by a Central lntelligen· cy Agf!lltey expedition trylo1 to set up a tractin1 station to monitor Cblnese activities. Accordln1 to the story in Oatalde. the CIA group was try. Jns to 1eale a 2S~foot moun· tain called Nan•a Devi and code-named mue Mountain, but wu forced by bad weather to live up tbe attempt about a.ooo leet below tbe summit. • The climbers, hoping to return wbea the weather Improved, stored tbe nuclear SNAP 1eaerator, wblch was to power tbe traeldng station, among isome rocb and it wu burled in an an•mcbe. N18 tbe artldein the MQtsauedthe map.line. The atqry, bt Howard Kohn, ..,, the crA ma an attempt in 1911 to ~e the pnerator, but ... ~ ltA11 tbe fuel rocll in ~ aenetator can- tatne4 ~um-231 ••wbicti re- mains ~ radloadive for aoo to GOO ,e.an and even if the SNAP leDG'ator bad sur- vived the a••••M.M t.Dtaet. lta ovler 1hell would eventualb' (8ii~ • .,. Al) ceat fel\ that the lnitiaUv• ••is the ~ WQ to send a strong me11a1• to 1overnment t.hat ~pl• are fed up with blO tax· ea and too much IO'Hrnment speucliJlC," ' The poll ,. baaed OD 1.252 telepbone intenlews with men and women. who formed a ''representative cros1·sectlon of CaUCornla adult 'Public" Field Hid. His poll has operated con· tlnuousJy since 19'7 as an in· dependent ~:partisan media· sponsored public opinion news service. -Opposltlon to Proposition ls eomlo« mainly from establish· ment interests such u state and local governnienl$. and school districts which depend heavily on property taxes for their funcU. Peacekeepers Fire Rockets BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) Arab Leque peacekeepers fired tut cannom w rocket.a todQ' hl a bid to crush lour d811 ol sectarian clashes ln adjacent Moslem and Cbristlaa alwna ol Beirut. There were reports the CbrisUam ... tUiPi the bnm\ of th firfnl. ·~ are ralnini CID Us," 1aeamed a woman nsldent of the Cbrtltlaa quarter, reacbed by ~ Jlt11deD1' of the Mo&lem dlstrict aalAl tU Syrlan· damJnated peacekeepeta were not almtq tbe1r way. ,,,,.,.... SUN PHOTO SHOWS SOI.AR Ft.ARE (AR,.OW) Wldespre~ Radio 81~ a Po•blff.tl , it Solar Snafu , RadUl/Bkreko~ Threatsled BOULDI$. Colo. (AP) -Tbe molt nolent solar flare in nearly four years could cause radio alpal blackouts, telephone circuit outa1es and displays of the nol1hem li&hta in the world's northern llatitudes this week, the National Oceanic 'and At.· ·mospberie Administration aaid. ... A sp$esman for American Telephone and Teleirapb Com· pany. botll!tver, said U.S. ~ustomen probably will 11ot aiotioe ~ lapse in ttlephooe circuits. Tbe Gare was detected Tuesday by NOAA •atelUies orbltini 22,300 miles above the Earth, the aaency •'1d· Carl Posey. a spokesman for NOAA•s Environmental Researth Laboratory here, aaid the ftare will produce a atAlrm in the Earth's magnetic fi~d.,. resqJUJlg ha radio alpals belnc absorbed rather than refiecU!Cl, bednnlJll ~un&a1. IH predicted widespread telepbone clrcUit .-.,ea aDct aald aurora borealis displays -the northerQ lilbis -would be Yi.sl· ble lt many areas north of aA eut-west 11¥ that would pass tht~g~ Chicago and even in some places IO~ of that line. LONG BEACH (AP) - Former First i.ady Betty Ford decided to enter an Alcobollc and Drug Rebabtutatioo Center here because a combination ol dru1• taken to treat acute arthritis and a pinched nene ln her neck made her constant)f dro••Y. a family apokuman says. ••Sbo was troobled by drowsi· JJght Tllrnout · . .r. • • . . 4 Chall.e,,gei-s Win NB Council Seats BJ JOANNE aEYNOLD8 Ot .. Dlifr ......... Paul Hummel, Donald Strauaa, Jackie Heather and Evel.Ju Bart won seals CIO lbe Newpo~ Beaell City Co ell T1lttd •f -• electiOQ ... one of U. Jllhtar4 turaouta Ii re- cent times. CitJ Cla1t Dorta Geoq'e iltd ::m ~ ., ror a %7 ~turnout. The dt1•s sfirt.b Dist.rid c:o,D- cll race wu tM Ughtest wtMN cballen1er Rm:nmel defuted tn. ~~nt Lucille 1t~ b7 • Mib Gives UP. All of tile other wlnaen. • ~~u~: :he ~Fitanfm.t~ After Holding Heather ln the Fourth Diatrtet. . ::::tedra:= i!:1:unS::: •. belD& 8 Hostages It WU earlJ today before ftna1 ' . retulta were tauled, altbaulh ell BVUETIN of tbe wlonen eltabll.sbed ~ LAS VEGAS CAP> -Anra leads an the WQ to the1r 'tie> pare•& robber, attempt Ula tortes. tUMd flito a •~·boar llqe !fbe eti,-1 ..,,uni machlnel. d•J at a Laa Vegu bar e Accuvote, ~ Crom the Los wttll &be wnender of a mu Ansetes firm of Martln and • after be released &Jae el11a& Chapman provided a atumblinc pe~ lie bad Hid bol&ll1e. block to counting returns Tbe IQU, w11o wu not tm- because the boles punched bJ 1ie4llatel1 tclen&llled, save 9P tbe ma~ did not alien prop-alter leactll1 HCOUatlon1 wl&la etly•iththecountingdevio. II d t.. a • . While campalen w0rten and po ee a11 •• eY •.• eaae candidates waited impattentb'. WHl•J of Bethel BapUat dtT election worU?s bad toslft awda. through all ol the balloW to Me tha~ the cards had been prciperly ~thed. TboM that appea.Nd to be Improperly aligned .er. re. punched on unused ballots. The ~ •u not coJ;Dplet- ed unW 1:~a.m. Tatlles posted at that Upie are: ~AS VECAS <AP) .... Two men hela eight people hostage bl a bar near the tamed stnp to-day, whlW two do1en police waited outside and netotlat.ors tried to ~vi.nee the pair to •~ render. Th• dNma befan about 7:30 Lm., police said, when they respon4ed to a report of a robo CSee GVNllAl('Pa1e A2) - I ... ·Witness A friend of a .22-year-otd Newport Beach man accua.S qi the murder Of Mart Darid Chan• ceUor claimed today in 8puth ..o~anse County MunJclpaJ Coyn t he defendant admitted r esponsibility in the deatb to him. The defendant, Mark Baker, repOrtedly told tbe Witness U..t Chancellor died when he fell over a cliff after bein& kick~ in thecb~. · .. lie told me be killed Mark ChaneeUor. He said Mark Chan· ceUor pulled a IUD on him and he hocked it out~ bll hand Jnd lttcked blm in the chest ,'• Michael Jacobs or Newport Beech told the court. Jacobs testlfled today in the court.room of Judp John Grtmn DllllY ...... IUff ..... TakaGa1'el Attorney Donald Smallwood of Costa Mesa was elected president of the Newport- Mesa school board Tuesd~ nigh t. He replaces Rod Mac Millian. Hi s fe llow board me mbe r s chose Smallwood to serve for the coming year. Police Seek Witnesses in Dog Shooting Orange County sherlrr's of- fice rs are s~kJng possible wit- nesses to an incident in which two dogs owned by a Newport Beach fireman were peppered wi th birdshol. Deputies said the shooting oc- c u r r ed shortly afte r two Siberian huskies owned by Jerry K. Strom, 34, escaped from the aaraee at their home at 20211 Spruce St .• Sant.a Ana Helahts. Officers said the dogs were shot in the back legs as they ran loose in th~ Baclt Bay area. They required treatment by a veterinary sureeon and are ex· pected to recover. Claudine Sues Over Loan ASPEN, Colo. (AP) -Enter- tainer Claudine Looget 1oe1 to ~urt ln Aspen thla week -but QOt as a defendanL Miss L<lnget, found l\dlty 15 months ago of criminally ne11l1ent homicide in the ahbot- iDg or pro alder Spider Sabicb. la suinc another Aspen ruldent for the alleged DOn·p~ment of a loan she aaya ahe made in December, 1178. DAILY PILOT 'lfho Is conductln& a preliminary hearing in the c .... C h a ncellor. 20, ah~·:of Newport Beach, waa found mad Feb. 11 next to a snack bet at Niguel Beach Park. Authorltles said be bad been beaten. F,....P"fl"AJ NEWPORT •• was polted, declared that "the clUzem have apolten. They want soineooe to serve their inte~ on the city council and that's wbJt I'm prePA!ed.to®.''.. --· . There were also cbeera for bla campaip manager, Jean Wau. leader of two of the city's en· vironmental groups most active in opposing development. Mrs. Walt, who said abe waa at a loss to explain the low voter turnoflt, described Hummel's victory as .. bulcally an acroa.!· the·board residential 9'lnd of thing. I think the voters latched onto our crusade. "Both candidates in this clis- trl ct raised more monet and spent more than they probably should have," she added. Strauss, elso idenWled 'With environmental groups, is a former member of the Newport- M esa Unilied School Di strict board and he attributed his vic- tory to bard work and his record of past community service. Mrs. Hart, a former member of the city's Parks, Beaches and Recreation Commission and a 25-year resident of the city, also credi t.ed her roots in the "clty" t'or producing a core of hard·worklng . supporters she s aid were reiponsible for her victory. She is alto viewed as a supporter of en-.vironmentalists. The only winning candidate seen as mtallgned with the slow growth element is Mrs. Heather, currently serving as chairman of the planning commission. Mrs. Heather, who won by the largest margin, defeated her lone opponent by nearly 5,000 votes. She said she believes she was elected because she was "prepared ancl qualified. I've been involved in the ure ot this community for a long lime," she said. TONIGHT COAST COMMUNITY COLLEGE BOARD -Rqular meeUng, 1310 Adami, 8 p.m. "VOLPONE'' -South Cout Repertory Theater, Tueaaay- Sunday throulh April 23, 8 p.m. T~AY,AP&0.11 OCC LECTURES -"Eneoun· tera with Nature," Science Lec- ture 2, 2:30 p.m. "CruialnJ," Fine Arta 119, 7:30 p.m. County Dump Areas Viewed By WmnUtt,ee Oran1e Coun\ians are toulng out an estimated 7 .5 pounds of trash per person per day, or about 2.4 million tons' al'lft\lally. And' if county plans go as ex- peeted. there will be enoul)l dumping space ID the eounb' to bury the industrial, te1ldenUal and business refuse throqb at least the year 2010. An 11-member committee composed of ctuaena, goven- ment olfidall and tr:as.b haulers gave those statlltlcs in a report lo supervU.on Tuesday. They hued their 32-year traah clispos:al projection on coW\ty plans to replace two refuse land.filJa Mt to cbe Within the next three years. The Ccl&Ote canton Janctnu In the Irvine area is to close ln 1981 and eouney official.I are prepar- 101 W1Virc:moetUJ impact ..... port for Jta replae.ment ln BW and R~ Cuiou DOttbeut Cl El Toro. In addition, tM Olinda landftll tn \be BNa area wt11 be ruted lD abowt 11 months, tbe report ul4. 8il4 lt t.o be npilftd with a MW al&4 .oa iidJacent land.; • "I't:re 11-memi>er commtttH 1 .. p~ "91lbl• lmllf'O\' mema Iii HrVlol' at the eowd.i'• thtee trm truder 1tatl0m.'.ln, effOrtl to bOJd doWJi COit.i t.o COIDm~ baule:rt. Smeetl6? p,...p-AJ GUNMAN ••• be,Y ln pl'OIJ"al. • "Police can were at the aeene ID ten than a mlnate, 0 olftctr Tom McQuade aald ... One man walked out, saw two paUce cars, and ran Wet lnslde. • Lale ID tbe mQr1itoi, • l:-i man •net a woman abOlat A left the bulldln1, and •ere belnl ques- tioned by police. Three more peraont were permttqd co leave •~,er. At POllce crouebed b4Jblnd thelr CUI, a 1tr1eant talked to the people lnllde the Nut House bar by loudsl)euu. urdnc the au.aped.a to aurnnder. Jfe prom- ised them they '""1lda't be bu.rt. They bad a .85'1 mapum. A Roman CatboUc priest, Father Casaller Kicltmal, spoke throulb a wiDdow Jlrit.b a man ID the bar. .. I talked to bim Just brief'IJ - be waa astint lt they eou1d bue a black Protestant cleraman rather than a Roman Catholic priest," be Aid. Father Kiclunal aaid &he man &ffmed .. rather cool and eo.l· lected ... A motorist a pproaching thjs curve at Myford Road and Walnut Avenue ln Irvine oouldn't be blamed for wondering why the sign suggests the odd speed of 16 miles per hour. The reason, city officials say, is simple: to catch the driver's atten- tlon. They explain that the 90-degree curve's danger is increase<! by the fact that it occurs at a place In tbe road where a motorist wouldn't expect lt. The sign, they said, seems to be eff ecUve. A abort time later, th• Bev. J eue We1ley arri ved from Bethel Baptqt ebureh. Ho ad a white mlnlatu, Tbe Rev. Intng Phillips of the First Pretbyt.ertan C'burcb, Ulen began negoUatlq with the men insfde. talJti.nl to them through a win· . dow 1n the front of the concrete block buUdlng. Board Wants 2 Judg~s Police bJd blocked orr Desert Inn Road, where the bar la locat- ed, and were rerouUnc traffic around the bar. The site is about one-half mile from the Lu Ve&ia!~· The California Judicial Coun -c 1 l be lteves Orange County ~uperior Court needs 10 new Judges. Assemblyman Richard Robinsonf D-Santa Ana, bu authored esiaJ&Uoo that would add five. And Oran1e County supervisors have offered ten- t.alive support to the addiUon ol two Superior Court jlJdies. Even with that, however , Supervisor Ralpb Clark said Tuesday be oppoHd lnereaaine the 40-Judae court at all unless A•ny Sees Idol Rock Star GetJJ New F mi, WASHINGTON (AP) -Shaun Cassidy, the new pop-rock idol of the teen set, has a new fan -10- year-old Amy Carter. 1 President Carter's daughter and 11-year-old Kathleen O'Keeffe, daughter of a White House aide, went together to a Cassidy concert Tuesday nllbt at the suburban Capital Centre. Their outing followed by a few boors a White House visit by Cassidy. star of television's "The Hardy Boys'' program, during wbicb he met both the pre!ident and Mrs. Carter. Cassidy also ate lunch in the Navy-operated White House mess where he created far more stir than woi.tld a Cabinet officer. One secretary who ate with him said the aetor- singer was besieg_ed by men and wotnen seeking autographs, ostensibly for their children. Speeds Limited Anaheim Police Chalknge Policy Tl\e Anaheim Police Assocta: lion is challenging a 50 mph speed limit huposed on emereency drlvinc on city atraets by Police Chief Harold Dastrup, association offjcials aaidTuesd*Y. • Jack Jansen, association pres- idellt, aaid the policy rntaioo -wblcb abo limits emerpnc;y 1peed.s on freeways to 70 mph - amounts tO' a limitation on the Judgment of officers. The new rules al80 prohibit elt- tended high-speed pursuits and blocking or ramming suspects' vehicles. "We could probably live with 1#!!..e new policy w~cJJ li~ts our 11~ to 15 m-ofer tM posted limit tn most normal emeraency situations but not if it applies to · the pursuit of .a dancerous Celon," Jansen sald. ~be policy cban1e was prompted, BaatrUJI> aald, by several tratfte accidents lnwlv· Ing police cars. He s~d the strict rules aim to prevent acci- dents that lnjure ci villans and poll~ otflc:en. J amen. requeatlnl ·a looseninC of the new policy, aaid "I think we can Uve with many of the chaoses like the rammiui. I don't want to ban to ram a cv ' myaelf. n .. danfUOUB , It I "But" be added "I don't want to Ue the hands ~ the otncer ta the field eltber." Los AnJela Police Depart- ment CIDcJr. Wllllam Booth l&ld purauJta µ. Loa Aniet.1 ~ limited to two vehlcl61. He added that there are DO apeed Urn.tta tmpoled oo omeen but hitb-speed eb .. ea tbrougb reatdenUal net1bborhoodl are diacour,,,.,1ed=·----- the state legislature plcka ap all of the $250,000 per year county officl.als esUmate it coata to finance cne new courtroom. And Clark's fellow board members said they mi&ht withdraw their aupport or a two- judge addition depenclina upco the outcome of property &ax Umltation meuurea OD the June eleetion ballot. A Speclat Weapons And Ta~ llca unit WM at the scene and a police helicopter boYVed over- bead as tbe ~ ccmtlnu.ed. ,,....P-.eAJ Superviaors. have lon1 con- tended that the It.ate contributes CIA too little -$80,000 a year for • • • each judldal pt. · But coun•i .... the cost of added corrode and release lta po.laonOU& ...... core." bailiff, clerks and other ex- penses needed to support each tftThe story sav. that the -....inr1 new judge, county offlclala place ,,_ .. ,. .. • the annual cost per court at aw on the southern slope of the about $250,000. m o u n ta I n -w b ere t b e Supetviaora Cb airman generatQr was bmied-is a ma-Tbomu Riley nld Tuesday it jor source of water for the wu hl.s understanc:Uq that Gov-Oanaces River and says that if emor JCdmmMI Bl'O'lfQ Jr. also the radloacthe mate rial aupported addition of two ~:~~anthe Oaninps ••Jt c.6ould Judea. cer anyone •bo •Even if le.llllatlon entl&lna . drank even 1Dlcr1>scopic \be new pe>ata la pHaed, amo~ta or ate contamtnatecl aupervi.son have to approve a Caah. resolutlon calllq upon tbe eov- ernor to make juclicial appoint- ments before the new court posi· lions would be filled. 'Gay Rights' OK'din 'SF SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Mayor Georce Moacooe has 1l1ned lntQ law a 181 ri&hts or-dinance tbat prohlblta dla- crtmlnatkln in employment and bou11ng because ol sexual orleo- tation. "This ii a vet)' aubltanUal and progreaalv. move for civil ri&bta," Moacone ad u be siped the ordinanc Tuesday wltb cay Supervia Harvey Kil.It •tand!al bai' m. ROCHESTER. N.Y. (AP) -A Plca110 • watercolor valued at. about $150,000 blls been atolen frQm the Memorial Art Gallery at the University of Rochester pf(icialt lhere •a!cl tod•y: • A gallery spokeiman said lhe paintina, tiUed "Flowen 1n a Blue Vue," disappeared from the wall near the iallery auditorium Tuesday eve-ning. . The painting wu donat· ed to the gallery ln 1131. . \ RB Adds t.Faces Eo Board · ~H•atlD1ton Beacb •oten ~end tour new CltJ CouDcU members aid OUlte4 two mc.m- ~ 'heedQ'• m~dpal Auto npalr &bop owner Bab llandlc. a. outpolled u Cltlaer' CltJ C9UDCll bopefull. JobD A. l'boma.. • a crane and treck· in& ftrm oner, pl~ lec:ond ln Uaerace. Community actlviat Rutb Batley, u, and Huntlbaton Beaeb Union Hilb Scbool Dlt-trict 'hwtee Doa MacAUllter, 4.5, fta•1bed tb1rd and fou.rtb, respectift!y. • Twenty percent or 15,905 ot the city'~ 77,703 re1istered v~ c.-t baUota ln tbe eloc-- llon. aald City Clerk Alida Wentworth. Here are the unotflcial re· turns: • Bob llandle, 6,'T70 (elected) Jolla A. Tbomu, 6,388 (elect· ed) Rath Balley, 6,141 (elected) Do• MacAllllter, 5,88S (elected) John O'Connor, S,252 Ted Bartlett, 5,203 <incum- bent) Al Coen, 4,53S (incumbent) Dr. P'rmk Holfman, 4,406 Blll TlDard, 2,418 Chuck Ost.erhmd, 2,4.52 Steve "Qti.leo" Kane. 1.942 Shirley Halkyard, l,'89 Ed Zlchocbe, 1,395 Gordoo Offateln, 1,224 Don F. Brown, l,UB Andrew Chandler, 5N Service station owner Ted Bartlett, 76, a 20-year veteran ~uncil member, and attorney Al -Coen, who was seeking a fourth consecutive council t.enn, failed 1n their re-election bids. Former mayon Norma Gibbs and Harriett Wieder did not leek re-eledioD tbla,ear. Fired deputy city attorney Job.a O'Ooanar, who placed Mh • to th• eoancll race, outpolled both lncumbenta. "I'm dtealnJ.u," Hid top Tate ).> 1.uer Mfnctic, Wbo 1'U born and iaiaedlnllmatlnatm Beada. · Inventor Asks 811 Million :. In NBC Suit I .. I Damaaes tota11n1 '11 mlWon were demanded Tuesday from the National Broadcaatl.q Com· pany and veteran newacuter David Brinkley br the Inventor of a rat co11tro device who claims be was slandered 1n a re- cent Channel 4 broadcut. . Tbe Onn&e County Superior Court la"'ult filed by Solara Electronlca Inc. names newsman Georee Lewl1 of NBC'1 radlo network and radlo station KNBC as codefendants. The comp•ny claims that Brinkley made comments ad- vene to tbeir eleetronlc rodent control deYtce by telllnC viewers dwin& a Cba.nDeJ 4 newacast: "It'• a nice Idea but the covern- meotA11ltdota'hrort.." It ls alle&ed that Lewta told listeners to the rad.lo station newscast that private industry and a aovemment agency in Houston bad ~rimented with the Solara device and found it to be unsattaraetory. Spoke.men for tbe televtsloa and redlo ouUeta of NBC are dedlnln• comment on tbe lawsuit mJdl tbell' lawyers bave bad a ebanee to eumtne the complalnt.. ~. Ap!!I 12, t178 DAILY Pft..OT .JI. ymo11r Mayor·· ~Plaeld ErB' •18l'SV1S ld'riBSU· ........... TwentJ-nlne-7ear..old David El1enbower 1a.ld TMadQ la Laa••• Nt1u•l tllat bl1 ...... l&blr'. tmD u ....... wun't tbe ~ ~ tt.•1 ntt..~ .... ~"It waa an emotianal t1.mit:• YOUD& !heDbowa' told about eo me IQ bera of lb• South Lapna/Nipel Rogry Club. "J..rifne back OG thole years, I have foulid that lt wu not tbe placid. calm decade that people noetallically remember today," be aald. Tbe CulatraDo Beacll real· dent aprfnkled bla balf-bour pretenlatioe on the Dwttbt D. Eisenhower admlnistraUoa with names. dates and CCllltronniesof thoseyean. Tbe former Philadelphia Bulletin aportawrlter is now writin& a bk>IP'apby about his arandlather. a taak that be says bas required moatbs of research and soul Ral"Chlng. "Originally I thought I would be ma.kine a statement of m,y own in the book -perhaps about the quest:loa of power - its proper boundaries, its \lfflS." But, be said. the biOIJ'apby bas become more objeeUve, and, Jadelnl from tM pneeala· tlon T'ae9daJ, ElMnbower baa done bia tdatorlcal bomewoft. He lpieDda 10 boun a day on the bloerapby. be laid. worti.na .. DeHJPtllltUft ..... 'NO PEACERJL 11ME' D•vld EJaenhower I ~ ot a aliDpae life led b)' rt can• du rl n I the bent Qty Coa.ndJman e ~•-aie-tieslQ.Qlno Seymour became ...... ._.. -elm'116eond dlreeU, ~ erican tnwl;vement ~~.,,.,.ed~·m~.,.... ed tt.e top-.,... am c:cantd to 1'5'. aayi.q tn a 17-eandidate contest for \ISllOIMllCl luld to balance .tlat Uaree .-a Tuesday in <>nnae ·m cqpJct_~~... Count1'• Llrcest city. taJ'UT ... vlNWIU'V Voten allo marched to tbe e said the 1iSOs were a polls Tueeday 1n tbe inland dtiel t "where we lived in the of Placentia and Loe AlamJtm to a le qe -a Ume when UM select five new council memben w e world could be destroyed and a c...., clerll. in inute." .. .,, e talk.34 about the Korean Jn Anaheim, with 13,0lt of c fllct when President •soi eligible voters eastlnc nhower ·-'d be would not ballots, Se)'mour tallied '1,t'rl .. ., votes for coundbnan and 1.m out atomic weapom to end votes for mayor. incident. He NJ)laces Mayor WlWam H e d l s c u I • e d b l a Thom who dld not seek re· dlatber'a effort.I to &aln de· elec:Uoo. with the Soviets 1n 1955 "on Inculllbeat Anaheim council rma." member Miriam Kaywood, He described um ........ _ II. ~ elected 1.om-yean ago as the of Sputnik, briqing oa the cit)''s flrat woman council ce race and the iuue of in· member, 8"° won re-election aUooal presUJe." i•"" s....,. ·--~ ~· t l w I.II • .~"""" • -n e men one d Attorney E. lewellyn artbylsm, the U-2 •PY plane Overholt Jr., an Aoabelm City ident... the Red Cblnese split Elementary School District th tbe Rusaiana, Khrushchev's • .-.-.. ... _ .... _ ·-- out of his Beach Row home in it to the United &a•---..1 bis trustee, c~--w.IU ... -.. ,._ AIN With 3,854 VCJt-. Capistrano Beach. andfather'a trip around the voters a..lao ovenrhelmtnalY "I work from 1 in,the morning orldtbesameyeu. passed Seymour's proposed city to 1 p.m .. then I tee up on tbe "It wu not tbe easy era tblt charter amendment that clamrw golf COW'le," the avid golfer meric:ana Nmember todaJ.'' - joked . He's back at th Isenhower aald. ••A11lllllin& :e;!!U::i~~W~~~~ typewriter at 7 p.m. and --~~here was an Ellenbower era. it The amendment freaea dt;y unUI 11 p.m. as when bl1 pertonal and property tax revenue at the Tbe reeulta of his research political life aet an eumple for 1977-78 level a..-. for c ..... _ writing have led him to re the country." -to reflect popui;'J;s and ";d ll viq mcreaaee. Babies 'Allowe ·to Die' Seymour. a real estate broker, had to win the counell seat lD or~ der to be elected mayor. He was running unoppoaed for tbe mayor's t>QSt. The only other Anabel~ can- didates receivio& more than 1,000 votes were stock broker Fred Brown at 3,484; bu1l· nesamu Pbil Seltz, an· unsuc- ceutw 1979 auembl)' ca.Ddldat., with 3,254; and Mary DtnDctorf, who had 1bJor Tbom'I mdol• mellt, wltb i.m. Policy Described in ·~1?~ A clefeae wttae11 in tbe murder trlal ol Dr. WWlam Bu· ter Weddill ~ Tuelday that maa;y lDfanta are auow.d to die when tbe doctor bell•ves ma11lve braia 4a•ac• ••Y hue belD ._..,Md blfoft or durin& birUL Dr. Jobn H. Menku, a pediatric uemoloelat flown bere from London to teltlly for Wad- dill, told the Oranee County Superior Court jury ot "a classic situation" be recently witneued 1n London. Tbe speeialilt aald • bnln- damaied baby wttb a dileued spinal cord wu al.lawed to die by attending docton wbo mede no effort to save tbe aDIDa cb1l4. • 'Tbe doctors deddect. Some- one bu to do it lince the parent.a can't," Menkes said. The issue of life or death for infants that could face Ille as u~ Ue more than human veaetables has filled many pq• in the transcript.I a trial tbat bepn more than two months AIO. It aroee .. aln Tuesday when llenkes appeared to def.ad W addlll's eoodaet when the ac· cused .. eta cleared bo9ptta1 staff out Gt tbe Wettmlnater Communlt7 Hotpltal DUl'Ml'1 with the nportjd eommeat: ··0oa·t ~do. Goel damD thing for tbat bebJ." l Murder Trial aince tbe trial began. Manr ol. U.. oblen ... u-e ·~., rtPt to Ill• IDOfte menta whole interest ln the trial is focused equally cm tbe murder char&• and the fact that Waddill La one ti a ._blr ot doeb 1 wbo perform a Dal number ol. abortlau lD Oru1• Countt bo-pitala. Dr. Malbour w.aoa, one ot Waddill'• two lawyers, defended the tutimony of Dr. Menkee im· medlateb' after the court MSlloo ended for the clay. Wataon commented outaJde llle courtroom that t:be baby ,irt allegedly murdered by Waddill would have been a veaetable and that. her cbaDc9a of aurviv- lna wltbout maaalve brain damao were "very st.Deter ln· deed.'T- Prweculor Robert Chatterton argues tbat the lsaue ralaed ~ tbe defense Tuesday ii irre&e- vant to the trial. Judie Turner will bold a beari.nl behind cklMd doon on that arpmeut before the trial reaumee todQ. '•Are we to M left at &bft bands of doctors plaJtDa Ood or ii the law 1otnc to take a stand!" CbattMtcn Mad.. "Wbat docton aay amoa• Ulemael\lel ID 1.acb 1ltulUODI la t.rrele.ut tf we haft tbe law to "fO by," the deplt1 dlltttet at· torney laid. In Placenua. BeU1_!'_ former edHm Gt tbe Plaemtla Courier , and Norll)an Ec.U~. a lales l\IP'l@vllor, woa two eOancfl eeata ~ and 1,218-..ndpeetivel,f. Yorm« 11.aior and iDc:1lmbent councUman Loren10 Jack Gomez ftDlsbed Jut in tbe ltx· person race with 741 vota. Placeutla votera alao el~ Dorla Black to the city clerk's post and turned down a ballot measure to raise council mem- bers' pay to Sl.50 per month and the pa.rt-Ume cleft'• pay to $75 monthly. Los Alamitos voters elected lncumbcpnt Kenneth ZODlmlck and newtomerl nm Bunner ud David Lander to clty council term1. Th• top vote ptten tallied 770. 888 and 601 votes respective- ))' at~ ol the city's 5,084 voters turned out at the . Hotel Fire Probed ~N J'RANasco (A.P) -An an0n lqUd la lnvestlcatiu • flre lD tbe San PraDdlco Bl&o wlalcb camed szs.aoo dmaa&e and TOUSed doaene of p•b from tbe top noon ol tbe 45- story tdel tower. ( HB Voters Oust Bon/a In Election Gall Huttoo Sc:ored a landlllde victory over incumbent Don Bonfa and challenaer Jerry Bame in Tuesday's election fM the ~ Beach city at,. tome)' job. lln. Hutton. 41, is the ftnt woman to be elected Bunttngton S.acb atr attorney. Bonfa belcl the DOat. for the pad 10 ,..,. wtt6out a slnale election cballenp. Here are tbe unofflclal city at- torney nee reaulta: Gall Rauc., 8.380 <elected> Jerry Bame, 5,317 Don Boofa, 1,514 <incumbent) A deputy· city atton1ey 1n San-t• Ana for the put four years, Mn. Huttcxl lubed out at Boo· fa '1 record ID oftlce from tho 1tartolber~ Mn. llattoa ~ Bollfa ~ lnconlittent detlatoDI aoc1 a poor track recard OD clt1 lawaultl. Sbe a1lo 1u.:bd tbe ea.ta ~ outside l$l aenie. cbarled to the cltJ. ••1 can cut time oat.tdl fees,•• Mn. Hutton 1tated after the electl l Mr . HuttCS-a erU~thed cballenaer Bame'• Jack of municipal apertenee. The attorney post trlJmer col- lected about $40,000 ln campaip funds and loaned benelt in es ti mated $21,000 of that amount. Her campaign ~~nd.ln« is believed to M the blfheat by a ainele candidat. in the city's his· tory. Mrs. HuUon said she plaDs to boJ.cl future fund·ralaen to pay back loans for Iler campaign. Mrs. Hutton said the over- wbelmln& clelat ol. lneumbent: Boni• meant •'tbe people ol this community· are deslroaa ol a cbaaae -tbe voters bave spoken." Mra. Hutton said she plans to stert ber aew job oat l(OIMky. Bame, wbo was endorsed by the HuntlnltOO Beach Chamber ot Commerce, ftnlaJred a poor second to Kn. Hutton. And Bame's law fJnb DIJ'tDer, Al Coen. allo a Qwn\er m- dorsee1 WU defuted lD bll bid for a roartb ta"ID OD tbe Raat- lnaton Beacb QtJ CCJuneiL It i.s allel~ bf &be DNMCUdaD that w addUli a, ot llUDdaitaa Harbour. tben 1traa11ea • newborn lnfaat ln ttl crib llfter predicting that lt muat hav. auf. County Re Gem Talk \ It's aprll rJ'k))~~ Totals $3 ................. ..... b .. • - - - -- ---~=--~-~--- -_. ,\ . ~· -~ ~1-. .,.. •• ·~·~\ ll":... _ _.uag. ~ ..... ~. ~, ... ~;.. --~L 1 WlaD I 'Jo• .. Marphine PA.8BING fAllADBt Yacbtamea and other dUnns of our co-.a rej1oD wbo tiaft a pencbut for retwar com· muttna to,Rawall weN aaddened to learn that one of the uny ellaracten ~the blincll ii eone. Blab School Harl)' .Lt dead. JU_,. Se= Ham. wboM real name wu RUTJ Glnm, presl Oftr a place eaDe4 tbe WlDdlock Louna• , at tbe ~ Alntrlp, above 14Nlna OD tbe ialaDdOI Maw. · DUTY •• budl1 Jour mine nm of barkeep. P'or OD4t tbJ.DI, be operated what ii pnibably tbe world'• tlnleat tavern. Located above the operatlona abaet at tbe kaaapall alrfte1d. you bad to climb a spiral ataln:ue and mate a trap door-like entrance into Harry's waterinc bole. ONCE TBBSE. YOU found yQIU'lelf J~med Udo a place wltb no mare than aix bar stools and a.boot ftve tables, each no 1a.r,et than a pte platter. The ctaeed4n ••I.la are covced wltb ~ of Harry's former life u a Hollywood bit actor, Ferrari race car driver from tbe 1950s unW 1960, and bis Umes rubblne elbows with the famous and infamous. Tbe walls alao carry stapled up bus1Desa cards from people all over the world, attestine to mp School Harry'• international reputation u creator of the world's beat Bloody Marys. He actually bated to mate them. Harry bad seeret ingredlents for the drink. When a patron ordered one, It was a painstaking process u be blended the concoction. Sometimes a shaky process, too. Harry had a wide reputation for samplina his own prod- ucts. Sometimes, u be painfully constructed a Bloody .Mary, be woutd comment, "I wish to 11 we'd become tamo~ bourbon and water ... " RIGO SCBOOL BADY also had anot.h,r claim to fame. He had a reputation of'never foreetUnc tho Qame of a pat.nm. You mltbt have Vlslt.ed once briefly and then returned two years lat.er. Barry would call you by name. It WU almCllt c:rteP)'. ~ I A Jl"OduCt of Hollywood and Falrfu biP eebools in IM Aqeles, Gln:aa woo .bla Dlctaame .. Hlib... School Hury" from his AmoroG1 adventures as an n.tb"'lnder. He claimed to bave been marrled 12 Umes. Bal the nickname stuek for bla Uletime. · -• Harry Given.a suffered a fall at bis home OD Good Fri· day. lapled into • coma and died Easter Sunday. ma ubes were acattered at sea off Labaina the followlnc TUesdAJ. · HewuS2. And me of the colorful characters of Hawall ls 1oae. 'Vulgarity'NiXed In School .Drama TREN'l'ON, N.J . (AP) -A Princeton HlCh School prtnctMl bas the rllbt to censor vulaar referen~ to senal in\el'COUl'lt and bodily wute in the acrlpt of a drama chm play. a Supedot Court judge bu ruled. Judie Georee Y. Schoeb said Tuesday that Prindpal Oeorse Petrillo did not violate the drama students• coastttutlooal ripta to free speech b7 ordering tbe vu!pr words deleted from a produc· Uon of ''Mooochlldnm." Nuclear Test Rocks Desert LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP> - Baek-to-back iwelear teat• rocked tht Nenda deMlt Tuea- da7 u two WM.pons-related de- vices -eada pae1t1n1 at least • Jeers WASHINGTON (AP) - palSJI, peaed to another aroused UW. entlnaaium pie be ~to eet ao na .. Sllly atinbollam," • American Fedelatioa of Count1 aad Munlc Employea Book Ban Brings Sui ByTeacM' .\&TEil .USO laid ... would t ie aeeuUve nlu1e1 ID the •tnm41Slt. v.to lAOaUGDarr la&D, Nduce aovmuoent re latloba that add to lll· d al coltl, ad to hold doWD BOISE, tdabo CAP) - A tb!,~ lmftber bl boUltnC acbool teacher who wu p co~-.i::· puab ~Uaa to !i';~:.u: ~.::!~~!~to ::, ad':Tr.::u;: ~-~ Over tbe Cuckoo'• Nett" lleriitary to curb splnllnl oU !µa ED&lilb coune bu flied imports. .. to try to aet the book retnata Carter aame4 llobert $. 'the teacher. Jobn 1"09a Stra-.11, bia apeelal trade St AnthoQy aaJd 'I'ue14ay repreaentaUvt, aa a 1peelal the' suit fllfd in U.S. COUDMlor OG lnflatloca. Court names as defe3d But in a speech before the South Fremont ff1Ch Scbool American Soclet;J of Newspaper clpal Clifton Parker, Joi Edltort and at a followup news School Dlstrict 215 and eooference, the prealdent tendent Duane Handy. warned th8t it,. .. a mJ'tb tbait the eovermneat alone -by tbla TB E INCIDENT bel an I and other meaare1 -could bait December when a parent com atioli. plained of "obleene" .. Let me be bhmt about tb1a in the best-seller by Ken • int," be aald. "I am uldq wblcb wu later made iDto an erlcan wortera to follow tbe Academy Award-winnlq ft1m ampi. cl federal workers and atarriq Jack Nlcbolloa. eept a lower rate ol wqe ln-School officials ordered tbe ase. book removed from the "ID return, they have a rUbt claaaroom after objedloal were espeet a comparable natr8lnt raised. Focarty complied, but rlee Jncreues for the loodl objected and wu later put CID Hnleel they buf." probatlan by the school board. IMI. announced previous- Fosarty allqes in bl.I suit that 6il ~mic mtsaqe in his rlebta of free speech were ary, ll for lnduatry and violated by the probation and, to hold price, w11e and the book banning. He also says iDcreuea "aipiflcanUy in the l'Uit that acbool offidall b " the avera1e rate of imposed ceasonbip. Four Men . ... In Baron's ANTWERP, Milam CAP) - Four mm have been arrested in eonaecUon with tbe kidnap- murder of m11ltimllllonaire Baron Cbarlea -Victor. Bracbt. pGilice reported today. The Dollce aa1cl the four bad been takm into custod)' for ques- tlon Ins and bad not been ~harcedJC. S.l'leU,,,,,, CIA UNlTED NAT{ONS (AP) - '"1e Soviet &O'fe!Qmeat ac=cmed _r~;:=:j Sbevebelib under duress, de- manded be be banded over and today uld tbe American pnss la eovertnc up U.S. involvement In the dtaappearanee of the top Soviet U.N. employee. ..... BIU A ..... PALIO:lt. ~ <AP> -A sfzonl ~e WU reccirded off \be ...... c:Oaltd Kodltt lslapd in tbe Gwt gl ~·-­lt w aa not. atr0n1 eaoap to Snow Due in Minnesota ..... fl ONMt ., .............. .. .tt ........ • ............ ~ .. .. ...... Ore. ~ ......... ....... • IL,..t._ .. lllltl.Aae .. ... .,.... .. ... ,.. ..... :t ...... ..... ,.... MOm Drugs 2 Kids, Stabs Son to Death· FLINT, 1llch. <AP> -A woman accmed of drualna then fa~ ltabbln1 her 5-year-old soo ·~ bellnecf be-. .. a child of Satan and trying to tm ber1~ceord!Di to a eoart afftdavtt. Pb1llil Taylor. 31, a GeDen1 •oton Coi'J> • .......-eh ebemJst. wu arn1ped Tuesday in Oeneaee Councy l>tstriet. Coan cm an open count ol murder in tbe SundaJ a1ayiq of IMI' ICla. Stepbm. and tbe attempted murderolber ~year-olddaupter, TD DA.UGM'D, who was not named, told police her brother was killed after her mother bad forced each child to take 20 pUla ol an unidentified prescription and then stabbed tbe family dos to death. Jira. Taylor wu ordered held tn tbe eouni, Jail wttbout bOad pendlnc a beari.na· Kn. Ta,lor wu ehantlna ... Re must die, be must die' .. as lbe stab~·---.on "1tb a butcher bllfe, a r'elaUve wbo arrt"4 at tlMt home ertna 1tie liicldeat told Pofke, aeeordlnl to tbe dldaftt. . TD#lmlATIYB, Merittfted cm1J u a wOlllU. ~.ti.. tnlf• fJ'Olii ..... ~·band. the~ Aid. but~ Tmot smlW....._.laUfefl'om a~----ud...UmMid ~ tbedllkl. • Homldde dlteeUftl said an at.OllQ Uon4 ~ ·dllid fJbm U·womds IDtbe back adcbest. . ,,. dngbter, lllJl)aNDtlJ IUfferlD& from tbe aDepd MOVN•ndole11mt of medicatim, ... -fisted in aatilfaetory condltkm at JlclMa Hospital In Flint Tmeda . = .. ..,Not faiaid .... ... -..... ID ... ... WH'.....,.,..., .............. . 80DRll ........... . . . STUDY THI ADI. Tiie D1111J ... . ...... .,.taod ............ .. llillllWUUIMltflod ... .... ........ ~~ ........ .... ............... ·::~·~· .. .................... .... "--.................. . ................. ,... ...... _ .. _...., ..... .. ....... .... ,... .... __,. CUPTHlcou;o.. c:a._, ... .. " .... ~ ., ..... __ ,...., .., ................... ..................... .................. _,.. ..... .,. '==F ........ ~ ClllllO . .. Pfl • 1nllMI Ill..., .,...,... ......,.. ..... ...... ID ........ .,._ ~ n. 4llet dHllJ1a ID IMdf ..-,. You'll lftll IWlf .......... wt ....... ..,. ........ ,.,..., l ....... I ' Citizem Boo ~G Terminal, "Did you know pid\n wif'fdows cost S800? · That's what IN. Ferrell says his will cost." ~ 'Airpert 77' SAN DIEGO CAP) -The&m Dleao Presbytery bu voted to publicly C>PPoH ordlnaUon or conferrtna o1 any bolf orden OD bomoeemall. The ~ vote came ~ d:arina a two boUi .... bate raDClg over Blblieal--. ants. falnil1 example and \be QueaUon ot a ministrJ to the homosexual commQDtty. Herb Christ, paator of the College Part Presbyterian Church. asked to go on record as dinentina from the m-.Jorlty voi. to oppose ordination of bomoeexual minl.stea. • Passenger, Describes Panic on Bus Crash LOS ANGELES (AP> -"It felt like it wq one ol those movies -like 'Airport rr ," said one passenger in· Jured when a packed transit bus col· tided with a car during moml.DI rush boar. "There WU pan.le." aald another. "Thef9 .,... ii.di ID there. •. Vfrl crowde41 Everyboc17 wu aeream1U and banliDI m to each otbel' aCl .. ~ the -wtndow--• • .and I JmnPecf out. .. Hid Deldle 1'1dero of Slmta Konica. ..... Sb• .WU one of eo . p~1en er;t1med Into tbe •wtl'U1·IDO'rilll' Ra d Ttanllt Dlatr1ct bus when the ec ent ocew ted. About_, paonenpn were reported injured, but all bat a fw were re- leased shortly after hospital visits. The most serious injury wu a frac· 'ured leg, oftlctals said. Pt@d«u ..._••fl SACBAKENTO <AP) -Two of Gov. F.clmand Brown Jr}• pet proj- ects, a wood cblp-bun:Unl plant to fuel the ~·s central beatinl and SmogStanJanla Met fora Year EL MONTE (AP> -Southern California baa 1one a full year without 'riolat1n1 one of the state's automobile pollution standards. tbe bead of the Air Resources Board .. ,.. "Tbla la the ftl"lt Ume since amoe became a~ problem in Southern Callfomia that we bave actuallJ met tbe carbon monoxide standard.'• ARB Cbalrman Tom Qu1nD aald • Taelda.J. HJt la a m.tor' milestone and pi'O'Vt9 that our automollile antl- amoa precram la starUnc to Pll1 off." Quln.n said tbe number of dQs ln wblcb the GM·bour standard wu violated bad decreased from 11 In tm to two in 1971. He cndlted the latest aa1m to 1811 model can which be u.ld emit cmly 10 pen:enl u mucb carbon monoxide •• previous tQOdelL I ( -Sl'.4TE J coollna plant. a.ad a utellit.e com· manlcattona 111tem. have woo budaet 1ubcommlUff •IUrmllh• Tmed.ly, Mt not wltboal a 1 .. tart -=~·wlll now be~ bJ tllle lull '\Ve,ya md llllaD Onmmta, tee. '1° ................. SAN DIEGO <AP> -GoY. Edllnmd G. Brown Jr. l'WW'e4 Ida campalp againlt tbe eoatrOTenlal Jaf\U tu inltiatlve Ill two pu.bllc fonum arp- lng that prom1aed relief would 10 to business, not bomeownera and rent· ep. The pemor noted that Frtda.Y be will alp a bW sranUDI a~ milUoo tu lneebtive to tMMJneu and in that Ugbt "I dall't believe tlult.,. lbau.ld ban a lllCll*tf ~ bW that PYel ~ percent of tbe bmlftta to OOI pmt ~ aoelety that just 1ot Pl• tqseat breatewr ... 0-*0.A .... RIVERSIDE (AP) -Tbe on-qaln off·•lain planned lhowtnsr of the _ elaulc .. Bbth..al a N-U~ tum at Riverside Qty llmeam was Yot.ecl back OD .,.in 1'ueada.y Didt. '" • The Hftll·member Cfty · OcMmeU · voted un1nlmo-b to permit a public abowinC of t.be film at tM mUleWD despite objectiom by members of the black COIQ.IDUDity that the film wu racist. ,......~ SAN DIEGO • (AP) :-A ClOUll&)i arand mu. ntmoed a tkoalll .. lndlct.meQt qatMt 11 members ol • i IYPSJ bend m chars .. of blnlarY• J eon1ptrac1 and r.eQelvlaa j\oleo · propaV. The lDdlctmeot TueedQ came oa the eve ot a pTe).lmlnary lleartna scheduled today lQ ltl Cajon Munlelpal ~. The •:.; cbargea the IYD&les with .t of 1torH In ·llr•wle1. Borr•I SprtnpandJullOoa llartb2'1 .. • I "IT 114 JIA.Tl'Q of poliey of tlae churdl/' Cbrbt ~d. ..I don\t fh.lnk .. aboWd cba&e tM apt.m ol PresbJtedea declctba; Wbom to ontafn. Ii .ha pa&N'JI to do db ~~ i&-~:· .Judy Rowe, 4n elder at CoUes• Part, coneurred .. •'I have .frie-61 wbo are homosexual," a~ said, .. and I don't find them any 1esa humall or able to lead tban anyobe else." Tiie United Presbyterian Churob General A.aaembly wUl receive in May a m~ty and .. ,. I 0on•t disbw&sh justithe · drinks. Wait tBLdinner is~ minority report from a divided It-member task force that bas been atuctylnt the laaue of bo.moau.aal ordlnaUpo for almoet ~JUR· U' TD llAIOurY repolt ls adopted at the cpurch'• nau..1 convention bent. lt would ~ the United Pre$yterian Cburdl the nation'• mqst liberal major denomimltion iD extending full rights or membership and JDln.iat.ry to avowed practlclq homosexuals. The mlnority report brands bomoeemal1t:r as a sin. ,,.. »01lliOns cheap llDd eceeulble ID Cll'dll' to 1M people addicted. .. But Deanls Loper. director of tbe Callfcnla AMoclaUGD ol ~ and Tobeeco DffUI ...... aald &be bW CClldllcUd wWI fedlral I.awl. 8JBaOTY SAID TR&. LAW •ANNING atveawaya to m1non wu ~ u aoaa • vudon were allowed to atve e1pnUel a~ to anyone. l(•mmmn ftnel under Ida bill WJIUld ba" belD $100forvendon aodt.s.OOOtortbecompaDJ. The '"'Dud atlclr .. blD SBt.9 ~ &m. o-11 Carpenter, R•Ne•pert Beacb · wUald baft aUff. ened · penalUea on ~e niow.-tepa GI tM TUU•Ddmartfmmaplat. Capt. Bill Sader8ClD of tbe la~ Pollet Departmell&'a D.-cotiC8 divlaian testifted tbat Tbal 1tlcu are increal1nC ID me and bave a bfCb eon-ceotratkn ol me, the active lqNdMnt m mari- juana. t1NDD 1'BB 8114 POl8B88ION 01' mart· Juana with a THC content ol 1 ~or blDer would be ll'OUDdl for anest aDd ptmidunen'\ u either a mlldemeuor or a felav wltb a poealble prilon i.rm. A lm Callfornia law made po11111ioD al a:p to an ounce ol marijuana nbject to a m•'dmam Gae of tlOO with DO arrest or booMnl. PaM Wdom ol tarser amounts la a mlademeaar. Sale or ea!lift. tiOD remaiaa a feloaJ. 8ANDBllSON CONCEDED 'IBAT 8llOKiNG TJ:aal atku doesn't cause any more ertmlnal belaaviar th.a ordinary marijuana and that people tend to smote less ol lt for the aame effect. Ao oppositioa witness, Dr. Ropr Tlt&lln, di.rector ol tbe Areet ~ anal,ys1a laboratory at L0a Angeles QUlty Botpftall_~d the UH of 'l'IW atlcb 'nl betni ~uraged uy the aprQtna ol tbe berbldde Paraquatoo arijuanalD llnleo. Your open door policy can rost you. See the dolJaB drip ~? You\"e' in hot water-in more~ than one. .. -., /. 0 N eooa,Jng piecemeal a>sta as much aa a whole meal ... / - -~ ' • , j ., l .. - Otange eo.1 Da ly Pilot .:t .. lt .... ~ .... , ....... ,_e _______________ ·_·R·obet··rt·N·.Wetd-·/Pub_l.~lhe_r_T_homl __ ._lC.•.Yl.1/£.dftot-..ICI.. .,.-.-.... ..-:u. W~.AprU 12.1t7t Battwa Krwlblch/EdUorlel P199 Editor Homeowner Voice Needed on Suits Two lawsuits have been flied against the city or Costa Mesa in the aftermath of the Marcb 7 municipal elecUon that led to the rezoning of 63.$ JlOrth city acres for single-family homes only. It ts not surprising to have the city attorney characterize the situation as "unique ... Because the majority of the city council opposed the rezone plan. there are many legal points oo which the city ls ln agreement with the very developers who filed the suits. The third party that started the latest chapter of the ongoing legal fray, the North Costa Mesa Homeowners Association and more tlaan 4,0GO city voters •. 8:P.P•~ntly have little interest or funds to defend the 1rut1ative ln court. While voters who favore<j the rezone can expect the city to defend at least some points of the new city law, it appears vital thpt the homeowners enter tbe picture lo support all points or the initiative. The city attorney's office backs this concept, and full \ defense or the initiative would be in the best interests or the city. It will be a long fight, with many legal observers of the impression that the zoning issue eventually may be settled by the California Supreme Court. If the remn~ ls overturned, it ls likely that claims would be made tha&, th~ city did not push hard enough to • deten4 lt. The intervention or the homeowners would eras€this po8slblllty. !'i Uniform Confusion it It is getting so you can't tell the rent-a-cop from the real thing in Costa Mesa. At least that's the case in the eyes or the gun-toting, badge-wearing, God-fearing members of the Costa. Mesa Police Department, They say the navy blue ururorms worn ~ Capa Security guards ~re iden.t~cal to their o~. If not identical, so close an ordinary c1t1zen could easily confuse members of the private security force with real policemen. Capa says that may be true, but the uniforms worn by its forces are the same throughout Orange County and jt would be too expensive a proposition to alter the garb just to make it different from ~e regalia adopted by Costa Mesa•s finest. There are two ways of looking at it. Some citizens may worry that if they a re in real trouble and hail a Capa guard for assistance they'll I ind thcv have a less than adequately trained police officer responding. On the other hartd, spreading more blue uniforms around would help ease that hoary complaint ... "How come there is never a policeman a.round when you need one? " Ne~eworks Law ~ A new law approved by the City Council wtll prohlb1t the sale or fireworks to Costa Mesans under 16 years old. City councilmen as well as fire officials admit the new ordinance is close to unenforceable, but the fire department's request for its passage was granted anyway. The fire department would just as soon ban the sale of safe and sane fireworks m the city altogether, and this would seem to be a more realistic approach than to place pellv provisions on the present code. Tbe new code is arbitrary. diserlml~ates against t hose who enjoy fireworks the most, and will do nothing to encourage increased parental supervision. At any rate, the kids will find a way to get around the age limit. • I Opinions expressed In the space above '" thoae of the OaJly Piiot: Other views expressed on this page are those of their 1uth0t1 and artists. Reader comment 1s invited. Addrna The Dally Piiot. P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642~1. Boyd/Divo-rce ByLM.BOYD The financial st.atus of <' divorced man tendl to im· prove aomewb.at after th• marital breakup. But tbat's- not true or a divorced woman, evidently. Researchers studied 133 such divorced couples. In lhe four years after their separations, the men picked up a little momentum in that matter or money, but the women lost ground. What Ame rican woman alive today bas bad her pie· lure reproduced more than any other? Elizabeth Taylor? Jackie Onassis? Farrah Fawc:ett·Majore'? Or bGW a bout Mn. Anne Turner Cook, the chairman of the En1lish Department at Hillsborough Hiah School in Tampa, FJa.? ll's aaid it was her likeness that was so widely distributed as the ori1inal Gerber baby. Dear Gloomy Cal .. Oay Jeana Day•• at UCI mu t have been cooked up by the ,pJothln1 Industry. All Jb.e alral&ht.a struullaa throuah achool with nothi..61 but jeam will bate to nco out d ~-10methln1 elle. V.R.A, Q. "On 'Jl•A..U.' wbat'a Klin1er'a ftnt name?'' A. Maxwell. "He wtm bu a wbJ' to·Uft for eu bear almost allJ how... So 1tated Frledricb Nletuche. You remember him. He wu tbe ftUow wbo sald. ••Where I.here is neither love nor hatred ln the 1ame. woman's play It medJocre." Hardly anybody mall:e1 more money now than the mualeal reeordin1 it.an. But sueb wa1 not alwaya tbe cue. Se8IOMd ClUaem wUl remember• lOWll lad.Y ol 41 Ylll'I aao.. EYelyn N'tllo9a, who called hnM1t VIM 8cm· nit BU.. Sbe _~ a UUle "ditty Ant.wed ''Oft._ Jolulv. ~obnny, Oh:' It eold a milllon and a ball dilka la its· first year. Ber earDta11 therefrom la their entirety: a Oat fee of SlO and a Ml of matched lucgage. Tho two trfcb to tbe wrtl· tnc of a ~ advtrtlM-ment Co m ake It moat etr~ tlve are : 1. Avoid abbN .. aUou. Alad I.. UM com,W. teatencet~ Or '° 1111 u ~GI o0a1ldl,_. bit•~­~ Rowland EvBDf / Robert Novak. AU-bus Deal a Blow to Trade WASHING TON -Eastern Airlines' purchase •greement for 23 -European wide-bodied alrllnen ls a deal that Pot only delivers~ atu.anln1 blow to the poor old AJqerican do&lar but rallla aerioua quesUonl of U.S. Industrial survival la the world ol aubsidlzed totelgn eJt- pona. Tho A-300 Airbus ii an ex- c•llent plane, but tbat'1 not Why E11tern la buying it. Airbus lo· dustrie, a W es t ern European combine, made an offer that Eastern chairman F r a n k Bormann could not refuse. The price wu ri&bt became Airbus lnduatrie ii aubaldlzed by the French eov· ernment. one of it.a principal owners. Allhoulh the Europeans can- not match the Americans in cost· eHlclenl production or com· mercial airliners, they are spoon.red government fwids lo compete In the world market. In the case of the Eastern Airlines deal, the French taxpayer enables planes to be sold far below costs. Whal makes this dangerous for the U.S. -and the dollar -is its threat to aerospace exports, one or the last places where Uncle Sam slHI keeps his head above waler in international trade. THIS IS NOT the ancient con· met between free trade and pro- tectionism. Rather. the model or Japan. Inc., is being duplicated 1n Western Europe <France, Inc .. in the Airbus deal). Here is a neo·mercantilist system against which American com- panies are helpless playing by Adam Smith's rules. Typically, this over_powerln& problem has not been addressed at _policymaking levels of the Carter administration. But almoat by accident, tt.. ls eomlq to tbe attention of worried Coogr,amen. A warning sltnal was sounded at a House Banking subcommittee bearing March 17 by J . 8 . L. Pierce, treasurer of lhe Boeing Co.: .. We can com· pete with Airbus and the Olher European aircraft. man"fac· turera on cost and tecbaical merit.I. but we cannot compete with lbe national treuurle1 ol France and ~rmany and otbu' European countries ... aEP. JOI LEACH of Iowa, a 35·year-old freebman Republican with no aerospace Interests in his district. took notice. That very day, Leach wrote the s ubcom m lttee chairman, Rep. Stephen Neal or North Carolina, urging a close look at Ea.stem's French con- nection: "We could be watneas· lhg the etnergence or a kind of International trade warfare that has nothing to do with economic competition, but rather with the skill of individual 1overnmen11 to establish reverse trade bar· rier1." Leach, Neal and other Con1r~men want to see the fine print ol the Ea.stem deal - a closely 8Uanled aecret up to thls point Apart from details. however, the subsidy for each A·300 ln the Eaatern packa1e l1 eaUmated at $10 mllllon. Tbe Frelch aubeldy ayitem ii reYealed by a 1978 French parliamentary report. Tbe aov· emment 0 Joan" of $366 milUQn covers ball ol Airbus production, with repayment indefinitely halted at $2.S million, or 0.7 per· cent. The report viaorously argues that France's aircraft in· dustry "must be supported by lhe g<>vemment." WHILE BOEING fired the warning signal oo ~ltol Hill, Lockheed Corp. lace. mbre Im- 'Hq Sam, I'm back! H<YW1 tht old do-it·)OUrNlf diet fOin°'' mediate damaie. Eastern'• new A·300 wlU repl•ce Lockheed L-1011 Jetliners, whh:h will then go on the used plane market. But the Airbus abo competes with the Boeinl 7•7 and MeDoa· neJl-Douslu J>C.10. These tb.rw companies can and do offer 1ub- 1idy plums to buyers. but cannot afford tbe French IOHl"DID4llt'a Juicy levelt Those A.300s for Eu&em are just the befinnlng. Similar sub- sidized deals with Allegheny and PSA (Pacific Southwest Air Ii n es) are in lhe talking stage. What's more, Airbus sales to U.S. carriers are the breakthrough for cutthroat com- petition against the Americans with Japan the next t.arget. "'The Europeans are pullia-1 out all the atops to win sales in Ja_pan," Aerospace Daily reponed last week. "Aside from normal com· merclal representaUon, ~ eov· ernment,, inYOlved are apply- 101 strong pressure OD tbe Japanese aovemment.1' THE STAKES are hip. Last year's 8 .S. aerospace UPorts totalled $7.6 blllion against $732 million in Imports. For com- mercial aircraft, the export _sur- s was $2.S billion in 1977 down from $3.1 bilijon in 1976). onsidenng the record U.S. trade deficit and ill ruinous im· pact on the dollar, tbil bul1e in commercial aircraft is one the u .S. cannot afford to sunender. Unlike textiles, elettroaks or even steel, this ls not a case ol foreign produclivit)' and ln· eeouily out.slrippin& the aluaish Yankees. The Americans can still make jetliners .more em. ciently than anybody else. The difference is France, Inc., aligned aaalnsl three printe American producers. While the French emulate the Japanese hurd·sell subsidies, U .S policymakers are occupied in loftier pursuits. At the middle level, officials here say they wa nt to study the Eastern transaction more closely before doing anything rash. But the role of Adam Smlth doea not fit the hard world of neo- mercantllists, threatenl~g to cloud a rare American bl'lCbt spot In world economlc.S. Have Our Planners Lost Their Senses? To the Editor: We were noored when we read that Supervilor Thomas Riley's Planninc Commission appointee, Mr. MacDouaall, and bis sheep, had voted to permit 400 houses to be built ln the badly noise impact- ed area of El Toro. Tbl1 Hvot'S ot inhumane treat· mant ot fellow Americans: in fact ltaofardevlatesrrom aproperde- c l1ton aa to be probably criminal lrnlponaibllity. HOW CAN A Few com · mltaloners and some aupervlaora make a decision tbat commits 400 families to the mental and physical stresses from noUe that have now been reco1nized u cause for many bealth problemt? Hae UdJ commlulon simply taken leave ol lll senaest Are they not able to read or hear th• aplendld teatlmony preHDted a111nat their decision? There la _poHlbly here an opening tor el.au action Jaw with adequate reuom ror consider· lng improper and' irresponsible acts In the conduct or their public ornce. I do not bave mucb hope. With the background ot Orange Coon· ty wheelln1 and dealing and the unaa vory relaUonsftla of the de· velopera out then "Cfth the car· rot on tbe atick perhaps there is nobope. I've bet.rd no evidence that any plamilill commi11lonen, nor any awent.aon wlU mot.cl Into thla no&e Impacted uea! H.M. WEBBEll, M.D. as an active participant and an observer, and plan lo conUnue them. Whal Ms. Joseph apparently did not realize is that most peo- ple wouldn't be able to conUaue with whatever area they cbo<*e. Team and competitive 1port1, for example; and private lessons and tutoring In music happen to be v'ry expensive. People with -lot of talent may miss out on dareen in theae fields someday. It ls unfair foT people who apparently do not know what they are lalkin& about to ruin it ror the rest of us. DIANE DIETZEL LaborBIU To the Edit.or: Your editorial or Feb. 3 ln op- potlUoa to t.be so-called LabOr Law Reform Bill was rt&bt cm the mark= The American publl~ does not want compubory un- ionism. The Senate ls expected lo consider this self·servtn1, u,n.. jon oreanmn1 ball (8. 2467) within lhe next 30 daya. I hope you wlJI continue to speak out against this bill and lo en· courage your readers to do the same. You are being heard oo Capitol Hill. JOSEPH A. BURTON, President. Aatociated BuiJders and Contractors, Inc. Waabin~, D.C. 1-. .. Mtlse ... a. To the F.dltor: The American peopl• don•t want forced bmln1. Chicano nei1hborhobd1 don't want it; Black nellbborboods don't want lt; white neighborhood• don't want It. It wun't mentioned in the orl&lnal ComtitutJon. In borderllDe oeichborhoodl. complete lnt11ratlon m1k11 MOH. ~aUfO Uae nellbborbood II lntqtatea. ID a.nu in the eeotn of Dellhborboodl o1 ~ race there is no need for hauling puplla many miles Ju.st for inle· gr a lion. Sucb lone-range buslne deatroyi the idea of local P .T.A., the •ports t.eama and olber such Jchool-related •cUvlU•. When the track team. the buketball team, the football team, etc. should be pracUclnc, their mem- bent will be on buses traveling miles~e. A 1UDGE can make a ruling lhat all of the _people are op- posed to. It will coat millions, bankrupt a aehool dlatrict or a col!lmunlty. The Judie wm be exempt from an)' financial rapomihtllty. A Judie bu recot11 ruled that a Judie cunot be sued, eveu if be mak• a wron1 or dama,s.n, dedalon. You mlebt 09• UW • JUda• would rule ln lbat way. I would •uiteat that Jadin be made an elective tJI. flee. u eome are. Tb1a •ould not *>Ive the sltuaUon but It mlaht help. I certainly think that la a democracy a Juqe should be reaponslve to m~orlty rule. Schoola were orlalnally the reaponalblllt)' ol lbe communib'. Colle•es were orlalQated by r.. lialou otsanlzatlona and later by states. The rederaJ aovem· ment bad ootlllng to do with them. J~ W. BOLDING ........ " ..... To the EdJt.or= Tbe lnlUaUve to outlaw the UM Of decompresrlon chamben for kilUnJ dogs and cats rot more than 300,000 slgnaturee, but not ovlb to qualify for the ballot. Therefore, Senator Allred Sona bu llllroduced SB 1481 which would outlaw these thamben. ' The bill will be beard ln tile Sta~te Aerieultu.N CommiU. oa Ap~ 18 at t :ao a.m. Thole 1no terested should write or wire Senator Song, State Capitol, Sacramento, California 95814. CHARLENE DRENNON Director, WestCoutRegton Humane SoCiety of the United States Pet RaponaMDt11 To the FAit.or: I was interested to read Mrs. Hastings' viewpoint aa ex- pressed in her letter of April 2. as It gives me an opportunity to re-emphasize the importance ol · not letting emotions cloud our j udcment -especially with re· gard to this unpleasant subject or animal euthanasia. For instance, it has been am. ply demonstrated that in • prop. erly operated chamber, death occurs in seconds. It aervea no good purpote to keep reiterating ataliatica that apply only ill poor· ly run facilities. ~ L.A. shelters tbat u.ae lnj_ectJon atnhl5e.__ the chamber u backup. emotional s the claim that many dogs killed by mistake. Every e iDcludJng shelter staff, d res auch an occurrence, but of 80,000 animals impounded t the past year, this has happended four Umes. Each time. sheller staff baa re-worked procedure1 to make aure that particular nils- taltes ~d not happen aealn. And Kfll\Ml au.I Edwards bu on rile, so commeodations from c1Usens ~ to the cJeanli· ness of the physical faeilities and the courteoua help they re· ceived with their particular prob- lem. flow can anyona oPPOle 18" which would put the responsibili· ty for the traiic pet aurplus where IL be.loop -on the pet owner? bh an ordinance can't be .. ld to be _timed tt responsi· ble breeders llnce they already have kennel If~. R•11>0nall•l• breeder• are workln• wlth oar humane 1roups; tbey also want to help pr.vent the ~llleraUon of tm· wanted pets an.d lo put the blame where It belcmcs Instead of on tho sheller. ' BUTH FRANKEL • , • I ., " " ' ~ I .I ... r 'Duek :Mother' Off Book Vista Area Favored . NB )'ORK (AP)-A.1"llDIDI facl.n.tl ,•• lbl rwpUtd. Ourtq the trial, 1even wttnes ... crtmtul dmles of ''hlU'borial ~ .. .. were uked to deflne "built.up." All dlf. pt Off tbe'bdtik wben a Crim.lnal Court JudtAe ~'re a _,..,.._ UiMt fered on the definition, ao Parn•a "s s,;te jllidle 4fam&eef tbe cue a1atnat ber. · toaed tbe cue out. .1:1. &! ..... \'lppee!" aald Roi al yo Benedict, It, ,. 11• wbo wWa her daqbter, Edie&, tees-PA&NBSI W I ON tbe Macb llOTll Ma& SSNBDICT and btt n" tbrM dacta named Squawk)', Annabella beeame Jadb Jolm BJl"QI, c.tl1nallY cla~ testlfted that t.belr 17-by~ .• ~ and Taft • their home ta the Blventaie uslped tO lie matter, ~ded fie bad • foot c:;rty near the borur ·of -to duck the llaUe. B:yrm ~ lfter , .. area of the 8!'ClllL be dl•COTered that bl1 ll·Jear-old w..ae County includes a fiower da~, Unda, wu bua1 can--'•• ~ tome trees, two wadinc pools &L'J'BOVGB COUNCILJIAN J~ Criaplno. •bo defended Ml"I. Bened.l aaid the matter was lerioua in view ! CM criminal chareea. laughter fllled tbe -eoartaoom repeatedly. When llra. Bealdlct took the stand. rr Judie Stanley Parness uked ber what : t abe dJd for a Uviq. . ' .. --..... fwitM blnta and• daek bome were tbe nms Dli&bborbood with petltionl Scaaawb. Annwhel .. and Taft l'ellde. in 1uppart ~the ducb. T6e ducb did Jiit appear iD cowt. Jodie .Panaem cranted a defense mo- tion for dilmlual, qreelq that a re-••(•ve watched tile area srow and I've culatioia bamtfnc the barborin& ol wild tried to keel> it u comtrifted u poul· peta tA .. buJlt-up areaa" waa not ble, •• Jin. Beoedlct testlfled. "U they apeclllc IDOUCb to be applied. ban to to. I'll just mcwe." SAN DIEGO (AP> - Ao offtdal ot San Dleto State aa11 Vista ii favored O'NI' ElcoDdldo or Oeeaa1lde aa a· brancb campa1 in northern San Dleco County. rrom • OLD TOWNE TUSTIN 14 Fabulous Shops to Serve You Tobacco Advertising Dr. William Locke. dean of the CoUece ol Extended Stucli•. aald a 1upplemental approprta. tioo will be souaht from Ule atate eolle,e chan· eellor to launch the cam-ljiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii" pus in September. .. :· 'I; T•e NetD Claer Following the s uccess of her recent TV sp~cial which showed her glamorous aspects, Cher Allman decided to change her most famous trademark-her hair. Designer Eric Serena makes final touches. :1 ---------------------------------- An eatlmated 4,000 'Aimed at Chiltlren' :!r~t=1~:ol!il 65' TUG/FmEBOAT ARCIDBALD J. ~LEY Sealed Bid Aactlon Saturday, April 15 • 1% Noon WASHINGTON CAP> -HEW Secretary Joeepb A. Califano Jr. bu charsed Ulat t.b6 tobacco lndmtry uaes "slnilter" adverU.stni to entice 4,000 cblldren and teeD·aeen a da,y to take up smoking. "All you have to do is look at the llandaome Marlboro man, look al the clamorous women," said Calllano, himself a onetime heavy smoker. "You'll see it's tareeted at the children." Sailor's Love Story Filled With Woes SAN DIEGO CAP> -Al a U-year- old sailor, James Graham, fell in love but the Navy transferred him to the carrier Kennedy in the AUaaUc. His baby was born ln October tm. Graham, in an Interview, says that's why he went abeent wit.bout leave and married bis baby's mother. at LuVecae. IN EASLY llT7, he turned himself ln, UktDa that be be reasalped to San Diego, be says, but instead was ordered back to NOl'folk, Va. There. Graham slipped away from h1a sb1p tut ~ with aix months left OD b1a four-~ear tour ot duty and wu deelared a delerter. SVCB ADVE&TISING de-San DleaoCoant.J •. mo111tratieJ the need for a new sao About 350 or 400 stu· mtWon government aoU·1mokin1 denta would be admitted campaign, Califano told tbe to the new CADlpus at American Society of Newspaper first . Editors here Tue9day. He aaid it wu a "minuscule invest· meat." A spokesman for the Tobacco Institute lnc.. denied that the In- dustry is aimln1 advertisln1 at children. "Clearette advertisioe does not make smokers out of non·amokera," but rather Is intended to attract loyalty to specific brands, spokesman Walker Merryman aaid in a telephone interview. CALIFANO 8AID 15 percent of amoken take up the bablt belore age 21. and 100,000 chUdren 13 or youqer are •mokinl a pack of ctcarettes dally. "This is not a decision made by adults 30 to 35 years old" wbo are aware of all the beaJtb problem.a, be said. "The tobacco industry baa mounted a very aiDlater campaiin designed to encourage tffn·agera to smoke." Although Locke said that a survey shows heaviest preference for an Escondido or Oceanside site, V'11ta is a likely compromise as accesalble "to coastal areas as well as Camp Pendleton," be said. Preschool Sets Sale A rummage sale ia planned in San Clemente on Tbunda.y and Friday to raise money for equipment at the Serra Parent Part1c4patlon · Preschool. The sale is scheduled from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in tbe auditori'1m at the Roger Bloxham, Broker ztl 21st Street, Newport Beach 675-2001 BuiU 1972 by Fellows & Stewart He said the planned $30 million an· ti-smoking campaieo Is "nothlna" eompared with the $174 mllllon the go.ernment spends on antl·alcobol programs and the $275 million it spenda to eombat drq abuse. The uti-amottng money would be spent larsety oo research prosrama. San Diego Gas and Elec· -----~----------­tric Company. 101 W. El Portal. , ~Halt of NOW f; Boycott Urged Graham was walkine f~ hia ter'Vice station job to hia family's apartment when two police cftlcen approached, pattoWa1 ror traaat y~ in tbe Ocean Beaeb area. NEITHE& ALCOHOL nor drut abuse ''cOsta this country ~-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;=;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;~~;;;;;.;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiii~ remotely near what 1moldn1 COIU,' ~ ATLANTA CAPl -A boycott of Atlanta's con- vention facWtlea led by the Natlonal OrsanluUoD tor Women must be stopped before other 1fOaP9 with other causes try the same tactic, u.ya an of. ficial of the city 'a convention lndustrJ. In an effort to win raUficatJon of the pr'OpOSal Equal Rigbta Amendment, NOW has aated IJ'OUPI 1iolding conventiona to sb&m Geor-'a and other '· states that have not approved the amendment. ' -: NOW tlAS ASKED THE CONVENTION in· duatrlea In those states to pre11ure their letialaturea to ratify the ERA. ··u th1a would by any stretch ot the imqina- Uon work . . . ll any eroup could blackmail our iD· G&AHAM, oaozaED TO atop. ran toward hia apartment, but dropped the keys In the dark and tried to cllmb a fence. A police bullet hit Gr.Jwn, 23. HI.a lung collapsed and be wu listed in stable COQCUtloo in Naval HospltaL Tbe officer, idenUfted as Lawr~ Slmmooa, wu relieved temporariq from duty pending a bearlnc. Chief ol Police William Kolender said the shooting appeared to be a vtolatJon of policy. . ,..CaJlfaoo Nk1. t&NiM ~ ~ llealtb coeta ol ~-nil&ted um.. were 15 bWioo to $7 b1lUoa a li~ and loll productivlty wu •~ to $17 billioo.. Califano announced the anti· •moking campaip in January, say· inl it would Deer!)' clou~ federal re- search and other activities aimed at mak.lng DOn·smokers out of smokers. Some $6 million would be added to the government's current $1 m.Ullon effort to distribute anti·smoking materials to schools and the general public. Jarvis Affects Bonds •A• ...... Made from our Honey Bak.cl Ham M-.. O.UQou9-5andwlchn or Evenln Sn.ck ·1~ JJIO L Co.AST tf\lltf • "--.. ..._. • PMOMI 67J.ftlt Otlw locall0t'9 • . • MehtJlm. B Toro (How Open). ~· Petn Sprlttga. IA Habra • duatry. it could be a continuous lciDd of thlnl," aaid llar1e McDonald, president and executlve ~ director ol the Georaia HospitalltJ and Traft1 Aa· • *>ClaUon. "We can'tlet it work." · Altboqb the economic impact of the ERA LOS ANGELES (AP) -N.-vous. neN 1enerated by the Janta-Oann ballot meaun llmitine p~ tax· ea ll blamed for Moody'• lnftltor Service refusing to using a raUnc to a $t0 million bond issue of the Irwindale Community RedevelopmentAceney. ot Smi~ Barney Harria Upham and p;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii::;;::iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;.;;;;iiiiiiiiii:;:;;;;i-Co., noted in a study that tlle Jarvis· Gann measure .. baa alJ"eady had a aipificant impact upon market.a for California municipal bonds" and is· suen are beln& required to oUer buyers a substantial risk premium . ~cott haan't been fully meaaared, Atlanta's COD· ventlon bureau estimates a bl ol more than $50 1Dllllon from conventions ~ c~led and $UO million more from convedioneen wbo aay • , tbey will not consider Atlanta for their meetinp. r aATBEa TRAN CAPITULATE TO demanda for support of the ERA, Kn. McDoaald favors a different tactic. "I've been thinking about bow you stop bladtmaU, and what you do is stop payment,•• she said. "Maybe we abould see that the lec11laUon doesn't even come up lo the next lelialature unUl they atop tbe boycott." 1be poaiblllt.y of a suit aeainst NOW bu been diacounted by many city officiala wbo IQ the group ts only rallying support for the boYcott and is not tak1na direct action to hurt buaineu. Tbe lleDC>' u a reH.lt b..S to offer the boods at a much hither interest rate. MOODY'S REFVSAL ~ in· dicated that aovenunent.al aceociea In Callfornia are flnd1na l* Jncreasint· ly difficult to sell bonda. lr-wlodale aaeocy'a extra coats becauseottbe hlper ~r=r•te are expected to reacli $8.5 overtbe 30-ye~ life ot the bonda. Georae D. Fried.lander, am~ bonde anaJ;yat for tba btokerqe firm BVT O'l'llEB INVESTMENT firm officials DOCed IOllle Calllornla bond issues have escaped the adverse ef. feet of tbetnttiathe. Enrett WUllams of the San Fran· clsco-baaed firm of Stone .. d Youn1ber1 said Mood7's recenUy gave an Al ratipl to Sunnyvale par1t. tn1 revenue boeds. Williams uplained Sunnyvale's re- venues come from many IOUJ'cel and the city la not as dependent on proper. ty taxes asothereonimunltles. Trapper Bells SIC Group .PlanJJ Tour of Pt1JJ~na Lobater Man Feet. the Pi:ndi HARWICH, Mau. <AP> -But -Sbartey'a fellow townspeople 111 be cu no loncer store '100 lobster poll " bebhld !d8 bome. Harwich realdenta attendin a ~ · toWi m..tlna voted 2'0-211 to t llY permlu.ton to ttore tbe IH~""" ... ca propert,y not ioDed for b,UllD$J 4201 CAMPUS DRIVE MIMI TOWN c... IAalOSI MOM KG MOM..WllAm.IN TUIS.-nmt.. , .. SAT.IN VISION EYE CARE FOR YOU & YOUR FAMILY PIOllSSIOtW. •YICI a 9UAUfY LENSES: GI.a and Plllltc. Photo Senattlve OI ltnted. Single vtlk>n - BiFoc:af -Trifocal ...... WW.._ •••. '"-IUlfll: ._. ........... JJM,,. FRAMES: Hundred• of frames on dltplay lnctuctn9 Designer Framea SUNGLASSES: PIMO and RX CONTACTS: Hird and Soft. M0~1T.-.1An ft.Mlle.ALL 833-2887 ................. ,,. ..... c ......... '"-HMpr. Alo,l~u·sfllliN ,,, ·. -- Financing Cut Studied Critical Courity Servi£ea Mighl Get Funtb By &A'tlft' CLANCY OtM...,"99 ..... There mQ be fewer federal re- venue aba.rtnc dollara ln Orance County government tills next year to help finance social p~ ,.ll'ams. And ii the Jarvil-Gann proper- ty tax lnitiatlve passes al the polls in June, supervisors might use those dollars to finance critical county services. Supervisors Tuesday ordered lbat -wucauoas tor tbe DJa.'JI revenue abarln« allocation be accepted oo1y Crom Ot>f'r•ton ol programa now receiving county rev1111ue .Jharlna fuoda. IN ADDITION, operaton of pro1rams financed last year on a so-called one-time buls were told they can't submit an ep- plic a l~on for another year of flnancmg. Supervisors made it clear lbal if the county's financial picture looks healthy after the June election, they migbt open the ap- plication process to other a1eo- cles and new programs. OC Agency Seeking Volunteer Families Volunteer families willing to care temporarily ror )'Ounplen in dan.,eN>f abUse are being sought by the Orange County Department ol Social servicea. The department's Respite Care Program offers potentially abusive parents a chance to place their thildreJl in another home for up to three days before serious abuse takes place. . "They strike their children otst Often abusive mothers and of frustration, not malice, but fathe.rs are .overwhelmed by the injury they cause is real," emollonal, financial or other said respite care coordinator -stresses, i:Oun1y officials ex-Carole Cooper. plained. The county program offers the THE PROBLEMS build unUl parent an alternative to child abuse by removing the the parent explodes. youngster from a potenUally ex- plosive situation. Newport Man Manager of QC Red Cross George M. ChJtly bas been named manager of the Orange County chapter of the American Red Cross. Chitty, who lives in Newport Beach, replaces Ed Colburn who recently retired as chapter manager. Chitty previously was ex- ecutive dire<:tor of a Red Cross chapter in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. He has been with the Red Cross since 1982 workin8 With chapters in Ohio. North Carolina and South Carolina. He bas bad a series of a.sslgnmeots with the American National Red Cross "DURING THE child's absence, the parents can devote theiJ' lull time to problem solv- ing," officials said. They noted families Willing to volunteer for the program are Ucensed as foster homes and placements of children are authorized by parents. Youngsters are placed in the home for a maximum of three days. SBAllON EASTE&LEY of the Department of Social Services said the county now bas two respit~ care homes and two ad- ditional homes are being pro-cessed. As lb1ngs st.and now, she ex- plained, there are too few homes to meet the need, and ctiildren must remain in their own homes iC a proper respite care facility isn't available. But they also reserved the rl1bt to cut off the revenue Nw'· inf allocaUoo.a eomplfteb U the dollars are needed for "ot.ber county priorities." LAST YEAR, aupervison al· located $4.6 million in the COlm· ly '1 share ol revenue sbarinl dollars to finance youth, senior citizen, mental health and other social service prop-ams. Supervilor Tbomu Riley said it appears the county tbla year may have about $957,000 in car- ry-over dollars plua an estimat- ed $3 million available for IOCial programs from the new year's federal allocation. StJPEaVJSOas normallY ,. ceive $12 million annually under the federal program and set aside one-quarter of the a~ount for social service projects. A citizens committee is to be appointed by supervisors later this month to make recommen- dations about which programs should receive county grants. Supervisors will make a (inal decision late this summer. Citizem Can File For Disaster Aid Orange Coast residents may still file for disaster assistance under the Individual and Family Grant Program for damage caused by storms within the county between Feb . .S and March 13. Applications are being accept· ed at the Department of Public Services, 1016 N. Broadway, Santa Ana. Residents who already have filed an lFGP ap- plication can receive informa· lion on the status of their ap- plic atlon by phoning 834-4598. Youth Plan Eyed • and served as public affairs director of the lndo-Cblna Refugee Center in Arkansas dur- ing un.s. Potential volunteer families may obtain addiUonal informa- tion about the county program by calling 834-4703. The Orange County Youth Task Force has scheduled four weekly meetings beginning Thursday at 9 a.m . in the criminal Justice council hearing room. 623 N. Broadway, San- ta Ana. to ctevelop a com- prehensive overall county plan for youth programs and services. .. • For the Record /flarriage LI~ LAS VllOAS -MWri-oe lie.en-PIUUTQ.MA"R -J-" Ari~. l.....c! ...... tnchldlt: U, •1111 Alel.I ~. 2S. boCll Of MA".M Wtstmlrww SMITH-LAFLAMME -Tll•mH Gurll1, ». -Thw-. Mn. al, loll\ .. LA9W... ......... f}-....;,;;.::1:c:z:.s:=az:::ai::~ OEWOOOV·JONU -Kellll ..... ...... ,, 15, Mid IAd9 JN "-• i., llOlll Of w. ....... . 8ALL·91NT\.•V -OeMld, 11. 1M .. tty Letl.~llllltl .. ~ .... MAit. ii KNOWLtE~CASTNIR -M•rvl11 •verv. •l..,. Lei• M., .ia. """' .. Cnl•llMU Deatlu B"IOGl~IT-........... at, o1 ~ H1111,..,. a.re Mllrl•, SAN FRANCJ SCO •.OfO.ltlwy,S.C. (AP> -"---e C r-a1too11-1t1NKl1t -...._. ,.,,,, 11. ~. • -·?• _,'-"Y"-J1',11et11.,1-. SS, who wrote the musac u.11ru.HA1101s -'"""'" o. ... for "l Left My Heart in n. of ,.......,,. veu~. -~ S F j ,. Jewen,11.o1s.-.01ttit an ranc aco, waa LUIGK·l'EIW.ES -...... lllldltfd, found dead ln h1a home ;:.~~ ::----· _, i1r11i,. "·., Tuesday, of a drug over- PA LOMA1tU·He.1tNAN ou -dose, the city eorooer's ~ AMNfly, 22, .... Lyl!M. 22, -offi•"'e _ _.-a olHUllt~llMdl. -·~­tl11001Nl·SN4CHIZ -llfl• Scott, 10, of Hunttf1911111 lleecll. 9fld TWMI• LOS ANGELES (AP) l", 1', Of WMlm!MI«. STOKES.HOSl<IN~ -a..rti. o.. -Singer ~ Perlfft, "· °' W•ln'llMtw, -~Mn. 83, hl~y acclaimed lo U,OfSam•~ ----------Amer ca and England ~•on.s SMITMS' MOITUAIY ~27 Main St Hun~each ,_,AMllT Cot.OMii\&. fVMUAL HO Mt 7801 Bolsa Ave. Wfttmlns191' 893-3525 PAC1fllM: ..W ...,...L,411 Cemetery Mortuary Chapel 3500 Pltctnc View Dnw Newport, C.hfoml• 844-2700 during the 1920s and 1930s, died of an ap- parent heart attack in a Hollywood nursin1 home. She starred ln tour editions of the Geor1e White Scandals in the 1920s and was a theater beadlin'r in New York and Hollywood. CAMA.RllU) CAP~ - M11r. James Doaald o•aew,, 61, profeeaor of do(lllatic theoloo and former IPlritual adviser at St. John's Seminary. died Monda1 at the seminary. He waa a tru1t~ ol Mt. St. Mar:y'1 Collece. PUBLIC NOTICE University Given Thomas' Estate From AP Dllpakhes Autbor and news commentator Lowell Tbomaa cSonated b1s 850-aere estate lo New York state to the Unlventty of Denver, where be ~eived bacbelol"a and mu*'' degrees. Univeni y officials say revenue from the eventual 1ale ot the estate ln Pawling will be used to finance a propmed addition to the un1ven.it1'1 law school. A pol'tra1t of Thomas that will h8DI ln the Lo•ell 'l'bomaa Law Center wu unveiled at the school. Thomas quipped: "I'm 1lad to be bft'e at this unvellinl ol the portrait of llGIU &artoa.,. • "Do you definitely plan to run (or re· election'" PraScletat Caner wu asked at hb ques- Uoa-ancl·&DIW'er session with the American Society of Newspaper Editors in w~. "There answer .. .is no," said Carter. "I don't definitely plan to run for re-electloo. I've not ad· dressed that quest.ion al all." White Hou.ae press secretary Jody Po .. u, asked later Wbetl'ler the president was serious ( about his 1180 plans, ornoLE .J replied, "1 don't know," .-c..vr then went to question ________ .... Carter. "He Just said he bad not made up bla mind," Powell reported subsequently. "Re Just bu not thou1bt about it." • &obel1 IS. &ewu, pl"O\'Olt at Tulane Univeni- ty la New Orleans, will ~me the president ol Haverford College on July 1. the Pelmsylvanla col· le1e announeod • Stevens, 44, a native ol Great Britain and a former Yale University law profaeor. replaeea S&eplte• G. Cary, wbo bu been actJ..oa president ol theQuakerlCbool a1nce Jwieao. Stevens hu beetl provOlt at Tulane ~ July ma. • ORANGE COUNTY I BOATING I 08rTUARIES OWEN MINNEY CELEBRATES VICTORY With A-eatt• Queen htn LJM" ..... '"" ... CDlllrT °" nt• ITA H CW CAUPCMttflA Htt TN•~W-....01 ... ..- ~TICI 01' M ........ 01' NnT .... ,.. ~q OI' wtU. .... "" unw•t n1TAM••· TAaY ... ..0. AVTMOllllATlON TO AOMl•llT8a U•H• TMI "'"""°9"' ....,..srunoee OP H~ATDACT. PUBLIC NOftCI ~u.te .. ~ IOftA l<ltVI 1---------~1& •II• •LIAHOlt IONA OOClON l'ltYI,~ PUBLIC NOTICB MOTl<:a IS Hl .. llV OWtN tMt t--,,,111,...N""""'Rl,...•""'"°COUft""'°'~"!!"fW~'"'8,,,...-- 00MAt.OJUU,,... OOC:U,.. llte lllM STAT•WCMJ ..... A ..... llff'llft • _......, ..,...... ., Wiii nt•----·- ........ ._ .. LAttt'9 T----··--fMy •IHI .... """*'IUU.. .. A41o ........., Mllll*' _., o. ,.,... .... ,,.. otlHa 'IOIMOWCA!ft9 "'"'"''*",, ..... Act.~ '" tM =";,'::; =~ .. M le wlll<ll ". m•M 1" fvrtll., ll'ITE II OAVIO WILDE• .,.. O Wle ...... IC"t.,._ .,_. ..... llM '""-_.,.. '"AltON LUC:llll WILOla I<« . •nney ins ec~1~-:.-=~~= a-ee...... .. ., _ _._ ~-.... .. ..... ~....... WHIE8'1AS, "9tl....,.., l'ITlll c_,. .. ~_..._,11* .... •,...-OA\110 WllOlllt _... tHAlllON <Ollrt, .. M OIOIC °"""' Ot1.,.. Wftt. LUCILltE WIU>E• Mw-..... • _._ llllMQfytl .... AAI,~. ..., •-_.r R tta O.IM'*J.,",..mlL•JOW.. ll1111w1111e.O-etW.Olw'ltw ... WiU. Of'Cl•t <IWlnol"I IM -el N« egia l>utel Wiider ..... Tiit DAVID laNH~-=-lt KELLIWAV, tor M .,..., ~ ,-"" -Ill~ Luc:l!M. ....... to • .... ...._ ..... IJ1't ~AltOH LUCILll Kl.~EWA\',_. Bridge ......... ~.. lOi'•ll-~IM-ef Owen Minney, wilh his brother Joe u crew, :=~': • , , 111e1r ,,,,_ c1111c1, Kelty,_..,..,.., won the McCullough Trophy in the London Bri"' .. e ,._,..,... -c;adt'o..1-.,,...... io KILLY SHARON KEU.EWA• i '"-•-_._ • ...., ITISO .. l>ElltEO-Ml..,....I~ Regatta at Lake Havasu City Sunday. ....,irn.tt.'l.•m UtJ.1t "'"'" ,,. nw ~ enllt!M _.. The Minney brothers won the Pacific :".:V~m:':.iC::~":t Catamaran Class agalnal 27 competitors and bad PUBUC NOTICE OeN~ .... > .. 111it Olw'I ..._ the lowest cumulative score ol all the catamaran •-----°"-.,.-----r..~.~""l:,....~~O:: classes entered in the regatta. •nca TOcalDITOtH ...... c.t11t.,..... "'°'· _. .... _. It was the 11th time Minney bas com .... led in svNalOllaM1nwn.• ifM•.Wfl'lnw••'*'•~• .,.. u·--,···-· _ . ....,...,.. .. tr...._ the famed desert reaatta and the fourth time M ,.,,._._..__APOlt IT 15'1Utm4eltetl~HO-.. e has won bls class. but the first Ume be bas come TMaciou.:"..:.OtWtO• : .. ""• ar-.. ,._ c:-• Up with the coveted McCull-· .... Cup. 1st••• •• oeoitGE "0•11tT ~ ,,. n. Or-.. CleMit o.uv "~ ltAULIN ~ GIOftOI "09ElllT l'I ... ,•.........., ......... ~ The eldlt other catamaran cluses al the ••wL1id.~ u ..... ,,,.t .. 111 °" ..... C.-11ty, regatta were the Hobie-16, Alpba-l8, NACRA ... 2 NOT1u 1sH111t1avGCwN ..... c.n...,.,..., -• ..-•..., -· ,, cndttors., ............... etc:MIM '"" ... ....u,,.. ....... -.. 18-square meter. Sol Cat-18, Sol Cal-20, and the !Mt e11,.,._...-.<._._..,....,.t "-lfttM .. ....._ Dart. The event drew 136 boats in all cl"··-. ... .... --~ .. 11i. o.i..,~v.1"8. ~ IM!ft,••ltl .. ~__,,,.., ·~--~ This year there was plenty of wind for the re-..,. 011'" o1 111e ci.R .. 1M .....,. J.,... • .,.. lta Id al t ta aili all . eM'ltlff <wrt.., "°...-.ow. . .it11 5-HW<llurt ga -e 1or ca maran s ng -owing 111• "•<nHry ,,0"'"•"· 10 1.,. svu•tott,...,,nt• the race committee to get in four races. The win· .... o ... 1,"ee1 •• 111. e111u of ...,."_.._ ed lb be t •a.~ 8UXIAUM &. CHAKMAK e 'lt•N-..,C49MM ner was seor on e s wu_.. ..,....0•1~ ~ eor-.t.... i401 T.t1 um ""tm.m-~ Do"9 SC..t. W•..o. ~ e.-. A~ W : .... ..._... Bushmills Champ Heads for Florida C.lllon>l• tlWI, wflidl I• tM plec• Of PllOlllMO Or .... GM•I o.llY Pl ... , bvllMll of Ille '"'""".,.. lft •II llA¥<111', A4Wll S, 12, tt, 1'79 metlltn ,..,...ntno to Ille t1tll41 of wld 1230-79 de<ldenl, wllfll11 tour "*1111$ •flff Ille llrtl PllOlluilksl of INI notl« Dtleel M.Vctl Ii, 1'79 PVBUC NOTICE NAOMI l .. IOCSOtf Admlfll1tr.trl• o11111 ..stet• NOTtca TO C1t•otTOll5 o1 lfll a111W ftM'lled _. SUHllllOlt CIOUlt'T M ntl IUJ18AUM&CM•KMAK, IMC STAT•MCAU"°'"'"Al'Oll Br: 0.""9A. .....,_. TNECDUNTYOPOllMGa Mf1 Deft.......... .... ....,,. Joey Ippolito, winner ot the Bushmills Grand ....._.. ...... CA.... ht•I• of HELEN KEMP AM- Prix offshore power boat race at Newport Beach ::=........._1• ~~~i~;-::-uev GIWH>t"' March 18, will race bis Scarab-SB Outrageous. \lD· ....... .,.,, Or-OMll o.;ry Piiot, crldllon "'I ....... _.... __ der a new name ln the second race of the c•-t IMr<ll n. 1'. ""'" s, 11, 1978 1"-1 •11 --.......,. t'I-....,._, _....... 11 ... 71 u. ---.....,.. ...... season, the Swift Classic, at St. PetersbUJ'I, Fla., ----------1u.m.w1111fle~WlllCl!en.fll next Sunday PUBLIC NOTICE .... o111ce "' .... aen "' .. -.. - Since wlaDing the Bushmllls event, Ippolito 1-----------:!.lld ,.:~ ~ ::':i.-,: bas taken OD a snnn ... r, Anheuser-Busch Brewing l'ICTITMIUSBUM•IU ~-4 .. ~ WlllNtt --..... •• ,....._ NAMllSTAnMllWT Sul .. .U•, I.AK...,...... CA, ...-.0 b Company, for whom be raced another boat. The '°''-'"' ..,._ .. •1111 11vs1-,.,. P••u •• "'"'""• ot ..,. .rfl· Anheuser-Bush Natural Light, to a second place in ,.u~,1~ '""" ALUT co .. ,.. ~_:::;,:.::::...~ \he national standings last year. s Her-tw..i . 5'14te 1• . ...,...,..,.,, "*'"'' .. ._ "-flrll Pl*ie.,191\ .t c... nees 1t111 Nik•. LAST YEAR IPPOLITO, rookie in the bi•, J-o. .. i. w1111-""· tee» o.i..i MMd>JO, "11. P! C-11• St .• "'-*· c. "104 0.Yld ~ ,_ open class boats. was named to drive Bemie Llt· n1i.~1H0111111CMd1rt.n•ft· E~et .. wmof lle's Natural Light, a 35-foot Cigarette Hull. After 111".._.J_o wm....._ auTn~~i:;:'~ barely miMing the national championship, be an-lllb ~· •• flied wlt!I , ... .,.., ............ Ult nounced bis --''-ement from the sport, sellino c.vn1r oer• of °'M09 county on LAIA ... te,CA,.., I~"'-' & /Mr<ll IP, 1t1' T.t: C2UI U7·JM1 most of bis equipment and losing bis cockpit team ,..,... attw .. " 1w •~ to Roe~ AokJ PllOllJlleel °'..,._ c.o.st o.i1y Puot Pubthllecl 0r-. eo.st 0e41y "''°'· . /Mr U, !t, Af;1f S, It, 1978 IOIM I Aptlt S, 11, It,», 1978 He ater changed bis mind and decided to race 1.tu.11 a brand new Kevlar constructed Scarab-38 un- sponsored lo the Bu.sbmJll.s. MEANWHILE, Ll'tTLE SWITCHED bis Anheuser-Buach Natural 1.J1ht sponsorship to Preston Henn who was pressing Ippolito in tbe BuabmWa unW he spun out in tbe latter staaes of the race becA\lle of tteerin1 problems. B«ll boats will be run at St. Petersbur1. Beginnins wttll the Bacardi raee in Miami Jut May 14, Ippolito baa won two and flnilbed second iD three ol bls etaht racea -a l'ffOrd lecond only to Betty Cook, world cbamploo from N~ Beach. ~de Contender To Try Cup Again GOTEBORG, Sweden CAP) -Sveri1e, the Swediah en.tty in the America's~ lut year, will attempt anot:ber 1bot at the worlds most coveted )'&Chtlng trophy ln 1.MO, lt WU &DDOUDced here Monday. • Pelle Pettenon, «, skipper and desiper ol the yacht, aald the Swedlab cballenae bu been de- livered by the Goteborg Royal Yacht Club to tbe New York YacbtClub. Sverie-e beat the Freneh entry, l'ruct, in tbe first round o( the J.m cup oil Newport, JU., but then lost to Australia. "With imPJ"OVements ot tbe sails and ril I think we will come out slronJ. We allud)' bave the experience, Wb.lcb is ao tmportant lD matcb racln1," Petterson sald. Coura•eou1 succeufully defended the America's cup -which has been won by American boata aJ.nce the lint nee lo 1851 -by wblpplol Australia in the flntla. PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE CP-aM NOTta TOC1t9otl'OAI SUNltlOtt CIOUtlT Of' nttE STATI Ol'CAUl"CNlNIA l'O• TN• ClOUtfn' OP OllAlileC .. .. " .•. • . ; . ), DAILY PtlOT A 9 Some . Heatt Patients A .ide·d · by AkOhol i1,ooo,ooo WORTH OP aUDLiY llJ ELGIN NOVlln TIMIPIECIS HURRY FOR BtST SlllCTIONI WI IOUGHt ntl bmtl STOCl- S 1. 000 ,0ot wom OF "NAM(" aoas FOR lYllY MUD, IVIRY ROOM, IVllYOtU • AT FANTASTIC SAYINGS! IVllJ1NING f'OM Ultll MOOllN 10 AN119UI • 5'11NG ~\Lii~ WOUND UUNDHS. NOYU· STONEWOOD iONDED BOURBON 1US & DROP lW DIGnALS ••• OlPINOAIU a ACQIUn. 99 OltGllWJYMMI fOSIUflt 9.9S to 13.95 oatGllWl.Y IADt TtMLL,_ 13.9~ to I ~.9S 99 •ll•e 'tbat med le al oplnloo cban1ea frOli\ ~&r to year. For a gruter pvt of my p,rac· lice I bell that modeute drlnkinc 11ru btlptul for an1lna pectorl1 patleQtl. ADd even for tl\ose wbo did Dot bave heart d11-ease. l 8ECAU. ONE In particular: a mlnlster who baa tieen tafdng quite a few nitroglycerine tablet. d .. ty for hit chest 1>4ins. I prescribed a tablespoonful of liquor to be taken every fQW" 'boun or eo during ~da)'. • At first be healtat.e<1' on moral ft!lllD. I -f(B~C) -,,.~40 IF YOU IOUGftT 12 'INS AT OUI llG .. 39t'l , •.... , .... PAaOf , wmu~wt ,~,-~ BIC SUPER BlCl POINI WITH HANDY POCKET CllP ..... _,..., .......... _ ...... ,_.s..., .. ,..,.. .............. """ ............ , ...., ,... .............................. ...., ..... ..... DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE 1rounds. At last he agrttd. He felt so well that hJs uaual dally consumption of nltroJlycerine was cut down from a dozen tablets to one or two. Some days, none. Jn hundreds of other patient.I I prwscrlbed liquor. The results were 1lmllar. I believe that alcobol waa helpful in heart pa-tients. But then came a chana& Some studies rahed doubts about alcohol. Perhaps It was bad for the heart m~cle Itself. So. like many doctors, I hesitated to prescribe liquor for EVERY heart patient. And 1 warned drinkers -especially those who were Immoderate - that alcohol might be harmful for the heart as well a& for the llver. .. OW EVER, &BCENTftndinp beaded by researchen reportina to the National Institutes of Health indleat.e that in -,,..., !.-•• ·-..................... ............. •t." C0011.,.i. ···" ... SQUAil CAii rAll •l.tt IGaJITrAN • I , •ta Yi -IOUllD CAUrAlt •l ...... .,,., ... modeNttion may be ~ood tor the coronaries. There 11 a lower death rate from bu.rt dlleue than in teetotalers. ALCOHOL SEEMS TO dttrease the cholesterol buildup in artery walls. The reason: drinkers have more HDL (hleh density Upoprotelns) whlcb tend to remove cholesterol from the blood and save arteries from bttoming obstructed. 1t•1 the LDL <low density llpoprotelns) that cause roost of the trouble. Mind you, I'm not suuest.ing that ooo-drinkers take to drink. 616-n. 1x6-n. REG. 1.99 RIG. 10.99 FLEX·O· TRIM ~f'Weltlllt, lny·t•UM EDGER· TRIMMER 112 H.P . MOTOR 119 DURACELL ALKALINE BATIERllS ......... , ... , ~EPSODENT FABeRG~ Brut 33 Deodorant Spray Glwes last1n1 11 1 protection. 1oz. • REVLON Milk ~elus & · ,- sHAMPOo ==;OL 1.39 White Rain HAIRSPRAY 7 .S oz. Aerosol or a oz. NaD-Atrotot. 9gc YOUR CH8JCE EA. ~Sta::. 2 99 BO'rTLE a PAK OP 3 2.98 FAST& FINE GRASS SEED MIXTillE ~~GOLDEN . \\iilll»fl ~IGORO LAWN _;.,-_ FERllUZER -o:~ 4.99 ----- RIGHT GUARD DEODORANT 7gc STICK 2.s oz. . TRAC)[ . SHAVE CREAM I gc Asst.-Fcmdll • 11 oz. PUREX LIQUID BLEACH All.T....,...... Effect Ivel STAR WARS alMICBOOKS b1 IKITIAll • . . :::.= ·age =wtl PAK OF 3 • SLIME WORMS by MATTEL Wluly'e squirmy woms burled II slhne compound. K~nm t49 .,TQIYTOYS =:1e waddllni. wlod•~iob. 1. 9 g Wonderful · Waterfuls •1T01Y t t • •• ... • ,. ~111. 1171 • i , ... .. I'm Trying to K~p My Sanity••Postoe Tanana Bids For Second Win Tonight By a DaD7 PUo& Wrtter The California Angela' visit to first place ID the American Lea1ue West was just that-a visit. ToaiOt. as they meet the Minnesota Twins in game three of tbe four-game series. the Anaels are back with the pack at 3-2. Frank Tanana (1.0) will try to ,put California on the ript track as be oppose9 Pete Redfern (0-1) et 7:30. On Tuesday night the An1e.ls' Don Aue was chased by back· to-b• .. k homers 1n the liltb in· nine and ab&orbed an 8-J defeat. Mhloesota's Mike Cubbage and Roy Smalley belted the home runs on consecutive pitches to highlight a five-run inning. "Aase bam't pitched in 10 days and, conslderini tbat, he didn't A•••sr.te ,.. __ llCMPC .... (191 • .-...n~•c.i..,.. 7:2'P-c"'--..n• .. ..._.. .. ....._ ta.IS•"'- ...-.. ~-~ 1:is...- do too badlY," Angela manager Dave Ga:n:la ·~ "Beine the ftfth miter. be•• eomlq la a lit.. tle na,e\y ... Aue sailed alona smoothly ln· to the llfth 1nnln1, baviq al· lowed Just ooe nm which scored Oil' a bad-bop slnale by Glenn Adams in tbtl fourth. But in the dlautrous filth,' Aa_!le surrendered a sinlle to Butch Wyoegar and a double to Hosken Powell, got Bob Randall to ground out. then Cubbaae and Smalley took hlm out of the game with their blaata to rilbt field. Paul Hartzell finished up for Aaae, allowing three more runs while the Angels were dazzled by Twins rookie burler Roeer Erickacm, DOW 2.0. "Erickson la a slick young pile her," says Minnesota manager Gene Mauch. "He won't overpower yoa like a Ryan, but be doesn't mate the mlstakea that you expect or someone bis age." A 21-year-old wbo came to sprinl training u a non-roster player, Erickson woo his job by pltchlng a atrina of 21 scoreless lnnin1s durtn1 tbe exhlbltion slate. "When we went to sprint trahrlng I WU puplne. I knew we needed belp lD the pitcbin& department," Mauch says. "I was impreued with Erickson from the first day be threw in batUne practice. He's smooth and controlled." The only Angels action was a solo home nm by Don Baylor in the fifth, a repeat of bis performance ln battlna practice, See ANGEL& Pace m SJ DAVE CVNNINGllAll ... ..., ...... Tbe tut time LJman Bo1toek bad a alomp tb.ls bad be wanted to qu.lt buebUI. 1l1a modler talked blm oat ot lL ... •llDid out ot Utllel• and lD my flnt ,.,..-ot ptd..mm.al MU I had an 0.for.15 alumph" tbe Calllonda Aapll eater elder Hya, .. I wrote a letter bome and told mJ mother I WU.&Ohll to quit. She told me to .uek· tt Out. I'm 1lad I did, because I even· tually had • pretty aood season ... Another reason he's 1lad be didn't quit la that ID November the Angell cleetded he wu worth a m ultl-year, mulU-mllllon dollar contract and they lured him away from the ll1noesota Twin•. 38,016 View Peru's Victory LOS ANGELES (AP) -Raul Garriti scored the 1ame's only goal to give Peru a 1.0 victory over Mateo ln an ahibitioo SOC· cer match before a record crowd of 38,016 at the Coll.seam Tues-day n.lgbt,. _ The game was marred when a Peruvian substitute was bit ln the bead by a bottle thrown from the crowd late lo the eame. The tm.ldentilled player struck by the bottle was carried from the field on a stretcher. Peru. after tbreatenin~:s;11 ita team from the field, f agreed to conUnue but play was stopped again for about 10 minutes when more debris wu thrown at the South American t.eam 's bench. The frustrated crowd, cheer· int wildly for Mnteo, turned an· ery after Garritl scored b1a 1oat. Mexico bad dominated tbe game· until Rojas toot a corner kick that WU defiected by &Oalle Jose Reyes. 1be ball was barely cleared when Garriti took it back in with a header. One minute later, Peru's Jose Navarro wu taken down by a tick from behind and was jeered by tbe crowd when be failed to rise. It was while Peru players were gathering arouncHta fallen de/ender that one of the team'• reserves was bit by the bottle. l,akers Duel Sonics • NIU Playoff• lAiuneh ' But Bostoc~' a career .111 bit· ter wbo flDlabed at .aae Jut HUCID, Js ~ .052 after ftve 1amea. 'l1lii aeaon 11 atW wry )'OUDI, but Boatoet la truUc. "rm Just trJinC to a.p 1n.1: unlty, '' be told Ule DailY Pllot "~ I IQt 1111 ftnt bit tht other nlabt lt felt deUlhUul. tf l can keep my bead tocetbw I can comeoatottt. "l"m maktn4 contac~ but I'm not pleued wtth my httttq at all,•• Bostock aava in lroA UD· dentatement. "rm bopefaJ that in another week ru: 68 in lull 11dng." 1'be Twinl' vlait to AnabetiD Stadlwn this week 1avt .ao.toek a cbaDce to renew acqualn· tancea with bis fonDer ~ matea. but be bolda no allimos1t;y thlni ... w NY'I. ... tlil1* every P1u-. bu a 1upel"ltitlon aomewbse doWD the llne." It wasn't auperstltion. but· a IOrl ol tribute, Wbeo Bmtoc:k fol&.Dd a trail ol white toweb leMUq to bll •ter llomdaJ Dl-1lt. It WU Ida te•mmatee' veniOD ot tbe reel carpet trea~ men.t for a man wbo bad jlllt sottaD bis ftnt bit • an Ancel. Bostock Isn't accllltomed to people maklna fun of hls troublell at the plate. Re simply hasn't bad any troublee at the plate umtlnow. The ICID al a torrid-hitting first baseman in the Metro Leaiues (Lyman Boltock, Sr.), Bostock in Ju.st three seasons bu been pe11ed as a buddlnt superstar. "He'1 the aeeond best blU.er ttve seen In either leape •. behind Rod carew. •• ..,, llJ.n... neaota manqer Gene Jlaucb. "Witbout a doubt. he'll lead tbe leque la b1Uina IOOD. .. ID uch ol bla .._ m• leqoe 1111 llN, Boaock bu im- proyed Ida marb iD .,., of. femivt departmmt. Lat ~~ his ..... MCODd in tM ....... beblncl Cwew'• amntn1 .a Bo1toet also cot 90 rbl, 14 bomen. • doubJee and 18 stolen bHea. promptin& Anpla ex· ecutlve Red Patterson to eom- ment, "He was the tey In tbe Bobby 8oftda deal. We don't think we're livtni up aDYtbina by bavlnl him in the lineup in- stead of llonds. We feel LJmm • Bostock ts golof to be a aupentar." Could Richard Beat '27 Yanks? HOUSTON CAP> -Los Angeles manaeer Tom Laaonla put it best -"Toni&bt be could have beaten the·~ Yankees." Lasorda referred to Houston ace J . R. Richard, who bad Just two-hlt the defending NaUooal Leaeue champions 1.0 Tueaclay ni&bt for tbe A.stro,' first victory of the aeaaoo and tbe Dodaers' first defeat. .. You won't see better stuff than be bad tooipt," Luorda said. "J hope be pitches as well this weekend." The Aatroa. who bad lost their first five games of the season, meet Cincinnati this weekend in hopes ol redeemlng themselves after losinl their season-opening four-game aeries in Cincinnati. The Dod&en may not have been the um Y aJlltees but they bad pounded out 53 hlta in tbe:lr' fint four sames o1 the MUOD for a .m team batting •vera&e before tbey •ncoabtered Richard. ' Richard allowed only a doable to St.eve Ganey in tbe fourth ln· nm, and a &eMlaff iiqle to .. gie Smttb 1n tbe alxtb wlli(e Itri.ting out eilbl. Aatros centerfielder Cesar Cedeno wu Rlcb.arcl'1 princ:tpal cohort in banding tbe Dodpn their flnt loss ol the season. Cedeno. wbo earlier thil ,_, al.peel a contract termed the biggest in bHeball history. earned bla salary by slamming home the loDe run with a lbll1e D .... era81aee M._•llAK .... (111> A¥11ttu.~......... ,.lt."\-.,,, ........ LM....... U:tl ...... ... ,, .--.. .. &M....... •:a...- 1n the first bmlnc and pr...,...: lng Richard'• two-bitter with .. diving catch 1n the ellhtb ~ ''Of eoune I tboqbl I coul6 1et lt, .. Cedeno aald of b1a belb'· flop eatdl 1n tbe !dptb • a link-iq f1J' ...,_. by Doey ~ .. t J~Ub.to ta1aa ma ..... • , · Ila I« Jlidlaid'• ~oan--..:. Cedeno Hid. "He i e•Me fC wlnn1ng-30 pmea .,. u w.t= don't ~et b1m a lot "' nmL' It he's 11ot already. he 1laould become the belt pitcher in~ National League." Richard, who regj.tered bis fourth career shutout over the Dod1era, aald be nner once thought about pitchlnc a no- hitte1:. "My Job ls just to 10 out aQd: get tbem out and piteb the best I can," the towerin& l·foot·B pitcher said. Lee ..... UIS •raM Uclnzt> aooo ltuuell II • 0 0 0 lt11Mtlll rf •• 1 0 c.r,a at•• o.rv..,,. •• 1. e.i.r1t 4100 MoeMycf J •• 0 Y...,.rc Jiit -OftP 0000 L,.Kypfl '0. 0 ~ ...... Plllltlf ., •• CIM!t• a o o o ~c 1011 J.~rt a o oo wai-111 •• 'o .....,_, 1100 ..... a aoe o It. ........ 20•0 Rlc:Mnl P J t 1 0 Hwtfl• Otto Tet .. s at J 0 TetMI » 1 S 1 LM~ .. ..... Houtlon 100 -..... 1 e -ltllUllL LOe-ue .,..._ 6, ....... ~ Ja-GMwy, w._. ~I. C1Mi111e. S- HoolOft. ... " ...... ........... HootoftU.,•1> • 4 1 1 I ..._ J 1 ••• ' tlOUITOlt • 0 -OM.Vfl&DT ~EBALL/BASKET~ Suruet Ba.eball Oilers, Barons, ·~. Vikes Tri11mph ' R•ntln1ton Beach Hl1h•a Ollera bave retaken aole .,....... ol tbt &ma9' Lupe buebaD lee4 fQUowiq tbeil' 1H ' walloplq ol Newport Barbor Hlab·• fWJon ~ nJcbt at T.wbdil Put. Tbe Oli.. bluted ••er wlt.b a J.5.blt llttack. and it dldn 't take tlaem ... to ,. started, rolliq up H'ftll l'UDI in the ftnt inD1q. Jn oUm-actloa 'l\a.day, Foun- tain ValleJ moved into coateo- -lion wltb a W triumph over Edlaon (ffuntin1ton Beach) lliah'• Cb..iqen, wbo went down "OI' the foartb ltraicbt same. llod Davia provided Marina witb the wlDIUDI marsln with b1a buea-loaded stnate in tbe ellhtb lDDIQI to plate • pa1r ol runners. ' Ertc Irwin bad a homer onr tbe left-center fence In the fourth iDnlq for Marina and Mark Dapello scored lo the aixtb inninc when be doubled and scored on Rick Mielke'a linlle. " ...... ,II) . , .... '"-"-· a l I 2 I -n...,.., • J I ' • tlaro,a It 0 0 OMI.• 411t Cl9c:8,rl Siii ~'·" 4111 Giii, c 4 I JI SMU.» Sltl aMl!et.» I 0 It y.,,•Wldl. a I 2 I 0 S.L',....,d 1111 1euc111e1, ct 2 o o • 'O'~p •••• TM91s PIJUl:I ........... ., ... s-wey, • I 1 I I ~-!Ott OMll!s,.. > • •• ~ ... Ol tO ~......i.as22 1 ........ ,. 2012 -.Cti,rl ltlt aett... I •• 0 Nel-,1111 I Io 0 ,..._...,. IO 0 o L'lld-,a. ltlt ""'"'·. 1 0 0 • M llftt1oot, H 3 o o o Sfor\1111, ct I 0 0 0 w..1co11. a t o o o In a daytime tiff at Westmln1ter, meanwhile, Marina (Buntin1ton Beach) Hi&b '• Vik.ioaa helped Huot· ington Beach witb a 4.3 victory over the boata ID etabt lnnlnp, knoeldn& Weatminlter out of fint .place and into a tie wttb Marina a pme off Huntinltoo ........... 211 1000 ... ._,p 1000 T.t.la tt i • J ABaadlromA~ ._..,, ....... Beach's pace. .._,119!.,.~ r • • 703 020 .-u IS l 002 001 2-J • 4 • H~ Beach'• euy win .--'...-w '• wu pacted with bl& hJta, lnelud-...._ ,,....., 16»i m .... inl a three-nm triple by Jim 56<1im .... a •:: ~ Hiii," •:: ;9: Tbomu and a two-run triple by LIH>L a 2 ' o o Fwr1a. ""'"" > o , , Chet Lemon of the Chicago White Sox is tagged by the glove of Toronto's John Mayberry while diving back to first base. Mayberry took the pickoff throw from pitcher Jesse Jeffenon during Tuesday's American League game. won by Chicago, '9·5. Tcim Samperi in the first inning, ,._,,., d > 2 ' o .,_,.r, .,..... • o o o J • a two-run double b1 Steve :i.:,:i,:.c ~ ~ ~; ::"~.a ; : ; ~ ~ Lawrence. and doubles by Mike =~~. ! : ~ ~ =-=·" : : : : Balliet and Samperi. 11-." ' 1 , ' ..... ic. • ..,. o o o o Jeff Piukowald bad a solo 01rv1 ... " 2 • o o E,...,,, 1 • o o ho tt-N-C-.P 0001 ~ct 1000 mer aw ,.._,...... ~·., o • • o Slc*U. cf , o o, Oilers Down Foe, 77-57 Fountain Valley Jumped on c-...," o o" GMNn.,..... u 1 ' Ecllaon ptteta•na for four nma in Tot• 11 ' 1 s ~ : ~ ~ : , the fint 1nniq with lhota off tbe L'-111. .-' • • o • bats of lillte Em-a .... (two-nm v_.._.a t 1 '• HB to Face Lo'IB Beach Poly in SemU ......... ,,.,.. .. p •••• single>. Dave Brackley (one-nm TNI• v s • s By DOWUD L. BANDY °' .. ......, ......... sln8le> and Man Reese Cane-san..,....._ r II o #1 OOI 0-4 1 4 Ill Oii 0-S t I Debbie Burrows and Kelll Lockhart spwnd tandem scor- ing performances ln the first two periods to lead the Hunlin&tOD Beach Jnab Oilers to a convinc-ing 77 -51 quarterfinal round victory over Alhambra High Tuesday o.lgbt in CIF 4-A girls basketball playoff action on the winner's floor. nm atn,se). ,._ .. ,, v....., Charlie Sickman added an rbl ~ double tn the t.bird iDninC and the Barcns ol Fountain Valley got the decider when Kevin Romine 1in1led. advanced to third oo Stuart Miles' 1lngle and a bobbled ball in the outfield, then scored oo a passed ball. Don llllJ bad three singles for Edison and Dou& Mittendorf bad a couple of alngles and two sacrifice f1ys for two rbl. But tbe Cbargen let it get away by Bt!'a.nding 10 runners <Fountain ...,..,4l .. ,.,.. ~.N StlO Goy, cf • 0 1 0 o.pello, !II , ' I 0 lrwl11,Jb 4 I 1 1 Mlotllo, rl 4 o 1 I Mo11Mf\, di l I 0 0 A'dllld, 1111 I 0 t 0 ...._,Ml' 1110 Pontll.< 2000 CnKI,..,. I 00 0 Oo•la..11 J 0 I 2 Bors,p 0000 F-.P 0000 TNI• JS 4 I 4 IJ)Wa•ll .. , .. ,.. OemfM,cf • 1 1 0 lloelr .... l, " l ' 2 0 A ..... lo,211 2 0 0 I Morris, Ill> 4 0 1 0 Geylonl, dh ' 0 l l llMAM. "'ii • 0 0 0 Ak !lof'fl, rl 2 0 0 0 Ctou<ll, rl I 0 0 0 ~.II> )010 KreuM.< I 0 I 0 e.u,c 20 00 Woch~P 0000 ToUM& JO I e J Valley left lS runners aboard, Men,,. , . . -WI 02-t • t IOO tot Ol-1 I I Burrows and Kathy Doyle put tbe Oilers in front with 17 points lo the fll'lt period, then Lockhart and Cheryl Cady added H OD their own in tbe second stanza and the Oilers were off and win&ing their way to victory. too) Wtilm!Malr ANGEIS F AJ,J,. •• Hunlinlton Beach will play Lone Beach Poly Hi1h lo Friday's semif'mal round action. The game ls a home affair for HB and will be played at a district CV.' • Fro• Paae Bl ' when be awaued two into the seats ...• "I was jmt plcld.ng a 1pot and be threw a fastball into the spot I picked. But it WU kind ol a wuted Dlgbl." Baylor said as be scboolotherthantheOilers gym. rumbled off to the showers. Poly upset aecood·aeeded Mater Garcia. however, refuaed to be Del Tuesday night, 70-64. dismayed. Tuesday's decision was an "You know these boys are euy one for coach Joanne gonna bit. It's Just a matter of Kel1011's defendinl CIF 4-A t l m e , •' G arc i a a a Y s . champions. Despite the fact 0 Somewbere rilht now there's Doyle wu in foul trouble much Exhaueted Player an American Leaaue pitcher of the way and s.i o• better who's IOOD8 be a victim. Tbeae than ball the 1ame, the Oilers . _ Tnna T of C Field boys areeoonastart blttlq." were never se rlo ualy . . -r--Ml.....,,A CAU_,..A threatened. '·· CARLSBAD (AP> -A bone-CWMlll• ~~\~ "-Mlll•uf ~~·.-: It was all Doyle and B\IJTO'ttl -eary emoU .... ally exha .. •ted !!!'!'...'".. a 1 ' ' Otkll • 4 • 1 o lo the ICOrina column ID the ftrst ... • .... • ---'-s a 1 1 ..._ .. cf 4 o o o perlod. BU?l'OWI bit U of ber 17 Gary Player made a promise. u.m.• s •, t ":Yi 4 o 1 o poln'• in .... _ .......... and ~·le "1·11 be all ri .... t b Tb °" .. " • • 2 1 .. c111 4 1'' .... Wilt"'--&IV~ day." be --'cl. ... Y Uri· "°"9ct 4 • 1 • "' ny 1111 4 o a o added alx. Nelther scored in the 11&1 ...... c 4'10 Ololk• ,,,, d .. _th blood B Tbunday perbaif: be wW ""'""rt 4 ' ' ' Mulllfllk•. J • 0 0 MCOn I quarter Wucu e e-y • ~z L'_ .. ..: ,..,,...... •' t • o.-1"'c a•'• thatched d'IM> ol Lockhart and But now tbe toulh we ..,.,_. T•• 11 •ii• '"•" • 1 1 1 Cady took over. African la IUfferllll the after· = : : ~ Lockhart bit elpt of ber 1ame effects~ b1a spectacular victorf D~-MIMWHI• '· LOl-Ml•MMt• •• blab 20~ts lo that ltama and in the _.. M---onlf toarna· Cetllllnlle S. ta ""'"· .. ...._ .. Ol'IAV _.. _ ..... •-'""~ u 1 111, ._..., m, ..,. CJ>. M-Cady six. That was the m~~~ abeolut.11 dral.Ded,'' be °'"'' •~ .. • •• .. '° ftnt half ICOri.DC· said Tumday after arrlviq for ~cw ... •~A, 1 , 1 4 Bunows, the 5-10 center for the $225,000 Tournament of CAU"'°'""" the Oilers, not oa1J aeored well Cbamplam which atarta Thurs-=.'i~u !: ; : ~ ~ ~ but wu the leadinl rebounder day.tLa,__cc •~T~11.A-•·-. wlth u and bad five Ullata. all ·;~#::;:..:::.~---.:.:.::.:.:..~·--~~~~~~~~~~~-~"~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- ·!~# .... '"!!'"''"!!'"' ... ---------. lo the llnst ball, to key team- mates scoring. It waa an a1rressive Hunt· ington Beach team and despite a 19·6 diaadvanta1e lo personal fouls. Alhambra never was in the game after the tint baaket. After the tand e m performances in the first two periods, the en.tire starting lineup contributed to a bot- shooting third period that saw tbe Oilers bit 12 of 17 attempts. Thi• wu a 10.e percenta1e naure. Far the leeODd ball. the Oilers bit a.t percent and for the 1ame lt wu si.a pereenL Doyle CoOy L.oc~rt ~ W&llOfl "°"-'•• ....... e.mtm ....... so•11...-.-1t11 1 0 IM ~eilMlw1 2 t t 4 10 I J • T""9t 0 t I 0 t I J 11 T-..M t I I 0 404t lt.-lft tOtO 1 0 t 2 Teult • I It n ~.., ........ Allle..,ltro M 12 1t U-S1 Hllftllftllt• 9Mdl 11 M M 22-n Girls Basketball CdM, Mater Dei, Diablos Tumble Three~ Cout area girls basketball teams-Corona del Mar, Mlssioa Vlejo and Mater Del <Santa Ana> Hlah, bit the dust Tuesday night in tbe quarterftnala of.CIF playoffs ac· Uon. · Corona del Mar WU a 49--42 victim at Uplar:\d. mah and Mis- sion Viejo lolt • ~_.... clecilloa at RlchetU (Santa"·Marla> Hilb lD 3·A action, while Mater Dei dropped a 4-A verdlct to lnvad- inl ~ Beaeh Poly, 10-&C. , Coach Mike WlWam1' Corooa del Mar quin~"}Qed well. but tbe overall de and talent of Upland proY too much with 8-1~ Kim Kupferer JlDd 5·9 Carol MG9el'"pavin& tbe :WU·.for U land. · • ;.·.·. ·• ~pland, • fi.Dallat ID CJF 3-A act.ton ill J.m, bad the upper band tbrou1hout the same, althou.ab the Sea KinCI made a run at the~ twice. Near the end <JI the fint half the Cdll quintet· ed1ed to within one point. only to see it wasted OD turnovers. · The pressing def ease WU used the entire game by the t>o.t Rithetti team and forced numerous Mission Viejo turnovers. ...... lttote( .. , ....... ...,...,...1 S 4 1 HldlS t 0 t t Sol-2 t J 4 ltlllnff t 0 I 0 ~., t71tt 11..vMo ltOt can.II S 2 • 12 Tot&lt U M It .. ..... .., ......... MIUklft VltiO ' It 7 ~ 11'9Mltl 10 tt M 11-M c.-...... ,.., '°""" Twns f • 4 ' 1Ck1t t J t S Ooenel S a t U Mell... I 1 I I OWN Otto._.... lt4 1 "-ll 4 s t ta fote11 U 1' IS &t .............. Ow-. WI #M S II ti n-4 UP46M I U M .,.._.. ........ , .. , ' fl.,• Mliwor S & ti WI~ 4tll0.. .. .,.,o..r t ' s ' 4 ' • • I t I I , • J ' 1416DM 4 t s • 'fotall ............ II • II .,_... 111111~ SportsfRB.WI Pirates, Rustlers Nip ;Foes Golden Welt Coll•A:a~ Ruatlen and tbe OnllP Collep PlratM --I-run bueNll 'flctGIW ~. but Bacld)eback 0oUese 1fU I 4-1 loMralQtrulCGUce. The Rmtkn ICONd tile wiD-l!lnl nm lD a N Soutben cal Conference cl4dllOD at Sant.a Monica wbm at.ft Nemtt!a tot Matt Palmer acroa tbe plate wltb a 11crlflce flJ I• tbe H'fellth frame . Oran1e Coaat rallied with three nlD:I lD tbe ....u. and won lt in the Dlatb. t-3, wltb ~ by Smlth11 clutch rbi alMle ~ Vidint the wina1q maram at San Dleao11 ... Saddleback CoUeee acond in the second lnni.na on lteltb Vraneah'1 sinlle and .,. ln the ninth when Vranelh'• fielder'• choice plated tbe na. Citrus, however, aeored tour times on 10 bits to 1ubdue the Gauchos. Golden West bad seven aacrlf~'5 in its vlclc)ry and Steve Slafoo was the bi& stopper on the mound, pltcbiq four ln· nln11 o( bill.ea ball to preHrVe the victory. Golden West baa now won eight of its last nine 1ames and is 11·8 for tbe aeuon. Earlier tbe Rustlen lcond in the second iDniDa OD Ruaa .._.. fold'• rbl An&le and in tbe ftftb wben Dou1 llanaollno blt a aacrlflce fly to aeore Palmer. Rick Woolard went tbe dls- ta9ce for OCC ln its third 1tratlht South Cout Confenmce trtampb, strlldna out seven and walkln1 CJlle batter. Smith bad a tw~run homer in the seventh for OCC and Mike Sodden unloaded an eye· poppln1 solo homer in the same innln1 to knot the score at 3--3. In the· wlnn.lng ninth, Larey Dotaon sinlled With one out and moved into scoring position on Tom Barnett'• base bit. or .... a....ct1 .. ,",.. s " J SOdlon, • 4 0.. Dobtn." I 0 0 I --ai. II> 4 t 0 I Krlbrloft, a 4 I I t 9MMtt. a & It O TllCM& & 1 2 I ) I I 0 3000 I .0 0 0 2' I 0 » 4 •• .... .., ....... ~ . . ......... , ....... , t ...... .... "' .,.,.. ....,...... M9M&,d •• , ............. ~· \ttl ....._,. ~·-a • t t 1 E--.c MKN.rl Jiit ~.It o.n.1111 ata• ..._,, .. _.,,,,.. .... , ..... ._...., ....... . . I. •t11 lllt ,,,. •••• ttOO • J', r • • ...... ..._,,) •no-....zs1 ............. ,., ., .... aot• v~.d 4t 12 •• ,. wous,c 4100 0011 c.Molerta.• 1000 •• '0 cern11.-. I. 0 0 ,,,, .._..... 1100 I I 11 ~-OtOO '"' ....... ttOO 4 0 I 0 'foe.la 14 I t t ._...., ...... r • • "' -00~ ' 2 •tot ........ 111 Stanford Gets Jezek ST ANPORD -Linda Jesek, wbo set two American •wlm· mini reciorda in Last week'• MU abort course national cham- pJon&bl ... wtll enroll at Stanford UDivenlb' next fall. AUrO I EASING TIEWAY IT AUTO BEi Baseball Standings AllDICAN LEAGUE Eu& Dlvlaloe W L Pd. GB Milwaukee 4 o 1.000 Detroit a 1 :rso 1 Clevet.nd 2 l .881 l~ Ne• York 1 3 .250 s NA'ftONAL LEAGUE EutDlvbtoa W L Pet.. GB New Yon 4 2 .881 Pblladelpbla 2 l .867 ~ S&. Loull 2 2 .500 1 Pittaburp 2 2 .500 l Alain the Sea K1np narrowed the marlin .to one polnt ln the tbJrd quart8{"' but then tbree- sbots from tbe:·eerimeter by Upland put the boilta back on top with. seven-point maram. Llnda Goe11el scored 13 points for Corona del Mar and limited Moeer, a standout lo 3-A circles, to 10 points. Spinks, Ali Sign; Austin, Evert Win Toronto 1 3 .250 3 iso.ton 1 s .250 3 Baltlmcn o 4 .000 4 W•DIYilkm Cbicaco 3 1 .'ISO Kansas QtJ 2 1 .fl8'7 ~ Aa&elll 3 2 .eoo IA Oailand 3 2 .eoo ~ MIADelClta 4 s .sn ~ TeHI 2 2 .:i(IO 1 Seattle 2 5 .288 JIA .,....,..._ =t.::ru' .............. \'-'>~ ~ .. ,.__,.. Ollll1Mlt. ..... . Oftl ....... ....... ,,...,... ..... ~ ......... ., llClll ....... (T-....... ...._ CT-M II°""'"" C..,_..N ., ....... T.,...u.o1aocots•o ·~ ClllMM ..... Y• ,,....._Mt a MllWll tr o-. ... ..... ,...,.. .............. ., .. "-Qty U • .-.H•t>,• =, ........... ~ ..... · .... ,.._._...... . ........ .. :=-.... =-==:- Cbica10 2 3 .400 l\t Moot.real l 3 .2&0 2 W•DIYllloa Dodpn 4 l .800 ClDclnnatl 4 1 .800 San Frandlco 3 1 • 750 ~ San Dteao z s .400 2 Atlanta l 4 .200 a Houatoa 1 5 .18'7 3\t~ .,....,..._ --........ , .............. . ...... , ...... OftclftMll t Olk49' ...... YnJ -~S,Alllfllat .......,.... .. ..,.. .... .,r.,. CM!•---~ T....,.,.,_. U& MeiM Cluttllll 14t • ......._ (J, ..... •11.11 Otiuelt 181inta M M .... Yn IS--. Ml • ......... ,.., .................. ·~ ...,, .. lell ~Cl'WrYNI 11.....,,_.(,...... .. tl, II k11 tttMCIK• ctl• Ml at CIMiAMU {..._Ml,• ,.......,_ c~ 1• • ta. u. ca. ...... , .... S.-ttt9ICIDTl"a-•=::,.---..... .............. Oftl•..,_~ Olll•--~ l"r~~~--------------------------~ LEASING ••• ALL MAKES ALLMOD!LS MEW 0 USID Krlatie ftCnvell 1cored all of ber ta couna.n lf!1the second baU for Corolla del mar. ltuoterer commanded the ID· side for RI~ u4 w.&1 the key to tbe vidol'Y"1th.ber 16 points. Mater Del, after racinf to a 41·23 ba!ft1me lead, f•ll vlctlm to foul tl'oQblee ID the MCOnd ball and bowed out to Loris Beach Po~ tt. aeuon at D·I. a '• full-court preaalDJ defen.ae and the~ .pow« ol eopbomcn ((endee EuJert (31) proved the undolnl of M1ll1on VteJo . ATLANTA -The San Dtqo Padree eucuted a trtDht pl91 in tbe ffC!ODd lnn1nl ol Tuesdar nlsbt'1 pme aaalmt tbo Atlant. Braves, tbe second trtple plQ of the )'OUlll bueball MalOD. Atlant. had the buel loeded when Pb11 Nlekro t.beQ bOwaced • arouader bet1"eft abort and third that WU fielded by Pidiea third b.,.,.,,•n BU1 Almoe. Be ta.aced out Bod GlltnatJa ca tbe ~ 1« UMt nnt out· to Hcoad buemao·:Derrel 'lbomu to fOfte P BoCbt dd Ute "111 throw to flnt t tekro to complete tbe trt plaJ. NEW ORLEANS - Heavywei1ht champion Leon Spinka and former champ Muhammad All alped Tuelday to fight aaaln for tbe title on Sept.16. However. Ute title bout wW not be for tbe wbole crown u lt wu when they tut met. Splnb was stripped ot tlUe recopltion by the World Boxin1 Council because It uld be f alled to meet a commitment to make bla ftnl defense apJnat Ken Norton, who DOW la recocnlMd U cbam· pion b1 lbe WBC. Spinb MW ts champ in the eyes ol the World BoXinj M- aoclaUon. A•tla.4.,.•ea HILTON HBAD ISLAND. SC-Tracy AUlt1n, ..... 11-JNI'" old from ftoWnl ' Hille!, .. ottr- powered Curie ~llejW • .-.. f.O. ln fint round JU1 OI a~·· teed• ~ at sea PlDel Plantaticxlben~. In ~ mateea, Laura Du- Pont JtunDed GNll' &. , t-3 e. 1; aoeeaa..,. cua11 w•ai*i Lesley Hunt, N, 1 ... W; Quta Evert tOODed Beth Notton, .. 1, M; Pam" Sbn WoiD onr hm Teecuar4ea. S·t, 1·~1 •·1: Jeana• Duvall beat Jaue AD· thoD~.M ... 1. ••11aa M•nUto"• ltoPPed Naac1 Rlcbtt t T-5. M • .r Val Zle1enfau •al_pptd 4'tnda Lle11, •-e. T·I. •-•; Janet N..,,. 11 M led Mona 0 rant, &-2. M ; Renee Richards ol Newport Beach stopped Renata Tomanova, a.o. 6-S; and Ill.ma J au1ovec won over M arcle Louie, M, 6-2. &1da11u1t'llu MONTE CARLO -Vltas Gerulaltl• bad the tou1best match of the seeds ln flrlt-J'OtlDd play in 1 World Champlomhip Tennll tournament Tuesday. • Playtni qalnat Jalme FUJol, GerulaiUs wu taken to a thlrd set before wlJ:l.niDI u. &-a, M. In other reault1: Jose Hlfueru beat um Pinner, "'· a.o. S.2i AntGnloZQtarelll oasted Tom Leonard. t -O, •·•: Ille N aataH, 11topped Z•ljko J'ranuloVi~! ·~EJ"2: Cornclo Barauuttl aer· PtUr rliilD· ~~ s.1. M dd Glamd Ocltppo elfmln.wd Dlck cre.11. H. .,. M . , ....... CL&VE~ND -Former Cl.veW tNnmt P'tdter Bob Feller baa fU9d a ta mUJJon lawsuit a1aln1t a Cl•••land pb.J1lclan who bad FelMr uftlt. ed lor allec-dlJ mlnshll~ wttbo~kmtnJa_..,. Th• dwael •''* r.uer bJ Di'. llldw'cl All ... were later' Clroppecl, but ~• former ~~=-=~ IDCID P1lm OINlt; tMt tM .... caat•I llim ·~••lll•U••• rtdl kmof .. 1 ...... feme." . . I 1 t .f I I l J • .. BASEBALL/VOLLEYBALL/M Mulligan Rejected Long Beach Job JC, Prep F.staneia's Rally Falls Baseball La~ Taira Yoll,eyball Lead BW llalllla c:oald be the Cal State <Lcinc Beacll) bead buket- ball cOllCb today -if be bad wanted tbe job. M alll1an. Saddleback Colle1e'1 eoacb for the put three IWOGI, WU offered the 49era po1t, but rejected ll because Lcac Beach would only live a one-year cmtract. "That wu buically it.'' says Mullican. "There WU DO prob- lem with the money • . . it would have been about the same aa l'm matina at Saddleback. But I Just couldn't deal with a one-year contract I bad to have UluraDCet from them . • • and I dldn~~.f,et tbem." M an WU interviewed by a -CRAIG SHEFF - six·maa committee Tuesday, April 4 and wu uted back the following day. "They asked me if I would accept the job, and I said no J couldn't at that time. They wanted an answer by 7:30 Thursday mornlng, but I told them I couldn't commit myself at that time." Then. after mulling it over for four hours, Mulligan called Loog Heacb to tell them be dldn1. want the job. That same afternoon IA>ng Beach announced that Tex Winter would be the new Gers coach. "If they bad offered me a long-term contract I probably would have taken It. But I couldn't deal with a one.year contract ... not, at my age (48). ''I got to thinking of Mo Rado\tich (former Fullerton College coach) who accepted a three-year contract at Wyoming. The first year be eot in too late to recruit and be felt be wu turning it around when they fired him two years later. He .. told ·me if be bad bad a four or flve-year eootraet be could have mad• tt."..,. Mull11an. "But tbe c:me-year coatract la a ntle a.moq ltate coUeaea ID Callfonlla, and there waaa't mJWna Lcac Beach coald do about IL They told me it would be for man than a year. but I wun•t ~to ao lDto a •ltua· Uoo like that. Another welfb\y problem, says llulllpn, wu hll preaent job at Saddleback. .. I think I bad over 100 l\IY1 call me and ult about the Sad· dleback job -and a lot of them were guya at four-year S(:booll. That helped my declaloa. too. "And anotbtft' th1DC Lombardi <Bob> and Kelly <Bili> are tm· believable guys to work for." <Lombardi ls the colle1e prea1. dent and Kelly. the Dean of Stu- d en t1. ls the athletic ad- mlniatrator.> 11ull1pn doesn't niure to be bl line for any more foar·year jobs. and be readily admits it - although the door ls always open. "I'm not looking for a job, but the Long Beach job ls the plum position in the PCAA. Loni Beach la my home town, they've got a great arena and I know a lot of people in Long Beach. U I was going to accept any job, it would have been at Long Beach. But I have to have a job with some type of assurances that I had more than just a ooe·)•ear contract." Mulligan, who bas a 275-108 record in 12 years as a JC coach, bas to completely rebuild for next season.. or bis top 11 players last season, only one -8-6 Ben Bacon fi~ to return. But Mulligan bas already begun to build. He bas two....good ones already m school in 6-7 Mike Howard and 8·1 Dan Sollar. Howard played at UC Riverside last season and SoUar is a transfer from Fresno State. And Doug Calvin, a S.11 guard from Banning High In LA and the brother of pro star Mack Calvin, will play for Mulll&an next season. "I've eot more guys lined up, but I don't want to eo into them yet,•' says Mull1gan. Cougars Ramble Estancia Nine Bma, 6-2 Bil tnn1np decided baseball games for Estancia (Costa Mesa) lllgb and Capistrano Valley 'lbunday afternoon. An eiebt·nm outburst in the tblr-d inning propelled Capistrano Valley's Cougars to an 11·7 noo-league verdict over visiting Huntington Valley ~Christian (Newport Beach) -·while a five-run splurge in the third Inning sent Foothill <Tua tin) High to a 6-2 Century League decision over visiting Estancia. Chip Hayes paced the Cougars to their MVenth win in 15 outings by driving in three runs with three hit.a. He and Matt Calley both drilled two-nm doubles in the big third tnnine, during which Capistrano Valley com· blned fi.e bits with one walk and three errors. Clint Brown's aacrtfice in the fourth lnnl.ng capped Eatancia'a scoring. .......(!) •rll_.,. ~· tltO Sent~ a • • 1 • ~. e1 a o 1 o 11........_la JllO a-,rf 1001 Wllllams, If 2 0 t t a.-tt. ft 2 t 1 0 JoMIM, N 1 o t I F"'*"°"",' 0 0 0 0 ~--1.< 4 t 2 I o.-lly,, t 0 0 0 f'ey..,, II> J I 0 t TeW11 2t 2 11 SC...., ....... Esl.IHl<lt ,,_.,.Ill ..... ,,....,CJL Ol .. , . ..,. Thwpe,c • 1 11 0.Wdefl,11 31 I 0 Kl .. .t> • 0 1 2 "~·" •1•• -m.11> •I• o 5'•-r,a a o o o Ooftof M, a 1 I t I lltttlf!flelcl. rt 2 1 I 0 llelrtltn,d J 1 1 1 Tott11 2' 71 S , .. 001100 .... 175 00$100•-4SJ m>C..I _,,..._. .. , . ..,. Fo1ter, II ' I I 0 Ovftl•lfl, If ' 0 0 0 ... I.cl t I 0 C '8181,cl 1100 ... ,.ff. c • 2 1 0 """"""'· ...... 1 I 1 Gol'•. rf a 1 1 I ....,._,,.. ''a> c.t1ey,a • 121 Wlltllfl-.• , ••• CMirtel.... 2 1 1 1 CUllnw,, o O o • Tolell J1 11 11 t ._...., ........ ,, . . "' 010 ...., • 4 Oll 002 a-11 11 1 BIU. MULLIGAN Anteaters In 10.0Win OverSoCal UC Irvine's Anteaters ex· ploded for 10 runs on 16 bits ruesday to bury host Southern California Colleee in non· conference baseball, 10.0. The big blast was a grand slam homer by Jim Dawson, who also had an rbi single in a three·bit performance. But the way tbe Anteaters were spraying the ball around Tuesday, Dawson's four-bagger was just frosting on the cake as they jumped on Southern Cal pitching for three runs in the fifth inning and two more in the sixth to take a s.o lead. Among the assaull were Doug Cb ard 's four safeties <two doubles and two singles); Keo Washington's double and two singles; Eric Frolander's three singles; and Lindsay Barto's lwo base raps. Freshman Lee Belan1er, a freshman, went the dislance on the mowid for the Anteaters, striking out four and walking two. SCC's Kent Miyashiro was the only Vanguard to advance as far as third baBe, doing it in the ft.rst and sixth innings . The victory leaves UCJ's over· all record at 9-19. UCI met visiting Cal Poly (Pomona) today. SoCal travels to Pepperdine Thursday . •• * * UC 1""91'9) .. ,.,.. ---·" •101 .......... tlll ., ..... -.,. s 1 J J .o.w-... 4 'J s -...,... so 10 Fn>l~.111 JI JO K-,c JOOO (;Mrd,>11 s 14 0 a.no.ct s 11 0 ~.p OtOO T .... , llt10 It tO Ill leCl«lill 111 ........... Ml!l-"l,.,cf T'llolnH,llt w•-·• ScMetz,c S!mWMllle,lf "-·· Qwml,rf "'9terl,Jt» Melftl,P '-"""·P GMtello. p .. ,.,.. TCll81\ lcwo..,, ...... 4020 lOIO 4000 1000 • 0 t 0 4001 4 0 1 0 3010 a 0 I 0 0000 eooo 0000 J2 0. 0 UClrvlM Se. C.IH. OllMlll r II • IOO ID2 O»-IO 1' I IOO 000 .._O t 0 Bienek., Springman Lead 22-7 Victory STILLWATER, Okla.-Vince Bienek and Bill Springman, a pair of former Orange Coast area baseball stars, led Oral Roberts Uoiversitf to a 22-7 rout of host Oklahoma State Tuesday. Bienek stroked a double and two sln&les. scored three times and batted In four runs. Sprtneman also scored three times and had a single as Oral Roberts moved to a 20-9 overall record. Standings Patr .. AVUIMVlf W Lea MevMll• s 2 -Tl"Oy S I -~II 4 St s........ • J ' Calley flni.shed witb two hits and three rbl wbUe Ron Van- PeUJ"SetD picked up the mound victory with relief help from Robin Charles. Estancia saw its Century League record dip to HJ despite the fact that the Eagles out-bit Foothill by a 7-5 margin. Marina to Meet Grid Coach ·-f'8fll J • 1 AMl!elm l 4 2 5-yHll~ J • 1 But the host Kn1cJrts took ad· vantage of five Estancia errors in the third lnnln8 to mate two bits and a walk 10 a Iona way. The Eaalet wuteG an ex· # cellent aeor1.nli opDOrt1mlty in their half ol lbe OUrd bminl. k>adinl tbe buel only to be beld to one rm. that on a ain&le by DavldPlwlkl. Players, parents and boosters will get a ehance to meet new Marina High <Huntlngton Beach) football coach Dave Thompson Tbunday nilht when Thompson convenes a 1et- acquainted meeting at 7 :30 in the school cafeteria. Princlpal Charlie Weaver will introduce 'lbompeoa. wbo com• from L;yuwood H1lb to replace Mite Heldean. who reslped. Thompson will discuss his philosophy of football and some specific plans for the Marina program. ''The ingredients of a suc· ceasful program are here," Thompson said arter bis fmt few days on campus. ..I see a need to imWl a politlve attitude and a desire on the part of the players to improve. But I'm ex- cited by tbe foundation I see here." W.llenl 1 •• ~·lcer'el l'NellOll• s. ...... J AMMllll I, Sl.twty Hlll1 I S...t!IM 4. l.OwMI I Troy J, .._ Pwtl 1 uaOCMeMWll L-...u• W LT ea lltMlle .-........ S t t -uQwtnta •101 Sefttlaeo I I 1 1\l'f aoi .. ~.. I I 0 t ~0.-2 I IM hcfflea 1 A 0 J LwAnMta 1 St• .............. .......... 1,0.-.ei-• ,,_lllC.tO. U QlllMI ~s. .... ,..,.... , ~--------------~------~~--------~~------------~~__.. Differences Settled ,~---75fl, c..AllntvettsaJty In Olyinpic Hassle AH•tl_.._~ Deep~~ leather, cush.oti inlole built to fit right into the hollo'# of 'f04' foot. Eatancla <Costa Mesa> Hltb'a Ea'Jlet nllled all n11bt, but in the en came up abort in their Oraqe County Leque volleyball abowdown wtth La Qui.nu (Westminster) 1nab Tuesday u the latter captured a ftve- ae t match to take over sole poaesakm ol ftnt place in the teque atandtnp. The nit ot the even1q's aeti'flty throuihout tbe Oraqe Coast area went about as apected wttb South Coaat Leape ie.der Laiuna Beach and its nearest rivals-San Clemente and Corona del Mar-rolllq to vic-tories. Irvine mp and Ocean View <Hunt· ID&ton Beach) also collected to even their Orqe County League ma.rim at 2·2. John Goseco and Fred Ven.Wes stood out for Irvine mp. La Quinta's team effort proved 1111-IOOrl ~-e&.cmtl A.I.MOST"•• a•• AT 14MHM '9CBI ~Rll .... _ IOMT.__ SM& ........ " ........ ••ACAWM OUI LIA .. EIPB1S • Joe HD1•111 t 9'· .,,.., ....... -.... ... - Women's Athletics Servite D C aJ ~-· Hurler r or oast area Shines . lbs II ...... u ..... aocu ..... ...,or. <••• .. CCN tllf * .. T-MIMi.._. V..._., ~- --M.M; ........... fOf... r.~~ ~~t'...tt:''=:: tl. , , I ... •I, .... ..,.,.. .........__ ...... __.. -~.._.. &.. - ,.._CO>• Ully 81 , .. ..._.,. ;;;:· .. MM; K:°' t;;:;,~ ..w: .. .... _.. ~ ........... Cf .... , o-;.;;e, rf ··-1 ...... ; "· ~ ••..... : J • .. _.,, rf .... ; TetM111•1.a.. ............. , ... I.A...,.._ •m .._., " • ttlllll.V~Or. • ~ J t oc.evt1wcwnn..,...,... OcMlt ,,_ ""'"*· ~ ..... ;-T ........ , .. , ...... : LtlttreU, C, ~ .......... -. .... : ........ . ......... ; ............... , ... . • c1.1~c-........ :..-. 1 ... ..U; ...._,._I, ... ,,..., 1 IC-."· MM;.._., rt,._._., W...1,, tf, .... ;Tt4e11 , .. .._ ..... ..., ...... r II • e>c.•V._ -.... I ! Ge<Wfl Onw Dt --11 u ··---U) Ct)...._.. lll*M:I• -811~. Ml, 1+1.0; °'"""· .... 1 ...... 0-1 ....... >1 ... 1; Nl9et, a, 1 .... ~. ct, 4·1·2·1, HYMI, If, 2 I 0·1; C-l'eft, "· 1·1 ..... Mcc.oll\IM, rf, ........ "-'·-. 2·1·1.0. ~ • .. 4-1·1.0, ......,, ... ·~. ,., •. IH+S. ........... , .. . . ........ . -Dn •-t I J 8d••••• ,,,,... .... ~ .... -- -~ rel9Y-I. lrvlN Hiii! 2:~. 200 frft-1. O'._..lly IGGI 2. 11.4; t. ~ 111 2:».o; i. e .. 11m 111 J:U.42 • .. ,,,._,, ....,....,.. Ill 1:4U; I. Oree¥H tOOI J:U.O; J O•rOMf' COOIJ:-..e. JI tr.e--1. c.l*' 1001 211 •• 2. O'o.tt Ill JU; J. a-. 111 -..s. . ~os Alamitos IOI t1,-1, ......., II) 1:1•.6; I. =~ ISi 1:11.S; 2. H ...... 1111 ....._1. CW'-ll>'l:tS.•. t. _,....,.,._ CDt 1:11.ts; a. K...._ COOi 1:1UL Melt I st er IV ...... ..-.> n--us Al• , ... -~ l!W ........... ~Hat1. ......... ,. HelCrMcNt SOI ,,..._,, MllNre Ill •:JU; t. WllMm IGOI 1· M..W, J. ~ COG> 1:1&.A. MO 1N<-.-1. Clll'9ll I GOI I : la.11, l. O'D•ll (II 1:11.6, J. ~ Ill '.21.SJ. 1ff llrHU-1, O'lt•lll'I' 1001 l:MA; 2. l(ftllW coe1 1.ZU1, .. 9"flW Ill I: JS.I. .,:..~ f.fH rel•,-1. lnlft9 Hlfll V.rtl" C*i& Cltl OIUMr ... ,.........,,.....,_1 OIMJ.OtO -.,__I. o.n-1 .... tel 2:1L6; 2 W.Ulmelllr IMI 2·21 0, l Orll .. (0 2:22.•. IOO ,,._, llMr.tt IMI 2 ll •. t Leflr (Cl 2::111.J, J a.rm.di <Ml 2:M.1, 5f trw-1 Wll'lf,., !Ml 2t.1, 2. Hollewe, (0 21..•; l Valefttllle 10 .... 01w1"9-1. Ant (CJ 2 CAlllM IMI J. Andt'-IMI. ltO tty-I. Mlc:N91t CCI I· 11 1. 2. ~ IMI 1:11.7; S lAflr CO 1:17.S. Ml fne-1. lerntt IMI 1:tU; t. Wetlwllefler CM> 1:f:U; a. H-"lftt CQ1:GIU. -tr.-1. o.ntMn CCI •·su; I. VelefttlM 10 6:&0, a. ,....,_ CM> 7:9.0. 100 bedl-1 ........ CO l :IS.1; J . SdlN+w tMI t:W ; a. 0.-CO 1:1' ... 111 ......_.,, WIN"9Y CM> M7.S; t . ._,..,,. UW 1:t1 .. ; I. IMnt ICI l:D.1. • trw ...,_, M«\M ft I. ........ ~ lklKIMl•,u Strlltl" It Plrrunllo,c $Nmlllflla61,Jt> ... ,,..11, 1 .. Dey,,, Sy"'"""· dll l'ltmlorTls. d ,,_..,. ... 20 WIH,p Tot•ll .. , • I , , 2 0 J I J 0 3 I 3 0 3 • , . 0 0 17 • MIMeroetlO .. , Jollu, t"t J I Hood. HI 3 0 Scl\H&Mr, f. l 0 M9rllfl, lib , 0 MM<!Mrn, as 2 o 54.,.,,,,, , • ~.w 2 o arow11,11 2 o ~p J 0 D•""-. t9 I O ,..... 22 1 M9ter0.I $«YIM ----....... For Colleges, Preps Net S11mmaries Rusders' Miller Continues to lead ADclY llWer of Go&dm W.t Oollele c:oellnu. to be UM Calllornia leader lD the l}M»O·yard ll'wtJle wllile ranklq in the top five in roar other wenta. Ill.Der*• time in the t.ooo &ee ol t :47.IO la men than a leCIDI fut.er tban the mark ol nmner-up MCurtUJ Adami ol Modesto (t:41. '1S). ID addition, er nib tb1rd lD the JOO lDdlwtdual medley U:S7.'75), Udnt lD tbe _, lllN8stltlob (2:12.IO) fourth in tbe 500 free < 4 :48.50) and ftftb LD the ioO free (47.50). * * * * * * II 1 t 1 1 1 1 0 0 1 • I Baseball GIRLS' SPORTS I TENNIS I BASEBALL A PVBUC NOl'ICB l't1ltUC NOTICE .............. S1Urdltl~.M.. • .:;.m!..~".:::.~=~=-===a:=:-~Mt •••L•t-l .. ~ ........ C---lll o.teflf ............. ,.,. HARNESS RACING I TRACK Los Alamiws Ra£ing Entries ............ I S..Cllt ._ L•t•lt•N<W' f&twl ... )J Cootlle CCI-""'91 Olly ... ,.. tW..1et1: _.., tl'W'ryt • ....... ~ lutMIVlll: .. ...,,1,.. Ht_.t ....,_.,IS-. C•li cCretMllt. -lllnM~-0..llllle.~ ~etmlftf ~ ,..,, .. lllOI. Clel-4119ll'tml~ "*rt J W (Mll'clflll), GW l[rlll- tAlllMt->: LL Ht! l~l 1 MM Oll9' 9-C .. .-1; liw• OMM• ( llude.11 T-* H (Onlftdyl; s.ndr ,.le.IL IA'*NI ~-...,,.. .. CMltMtla. ••"•Mnt •Ac• -One "'"'· .. _.°""""~,_ .. Cit " ,.,c.M. ...,. ..,.. OIMlfll9 sinc-llJ----'"" llK'"'9 ~: lelw 1!11JrtH c-.r9"11I; Suri 11 .. rCI tfleltrHa Jrll Gto(tlt11 8ay (l.Ac.w); ....... hit~ ,..,....,, C•••11ccl•• CL•111•>.: J Jt ..... .,.. llACa -One mile. ,._ s '"' ..-w Wldlf, wlnMn .. -_,,.._.._,,_11,.forMOO ,.,., -· ~ eNI fNll'ft, • ·-....,.51111Q, Trk"tl °*"'"' tAd9ml>; It ... HonHt (V84~; lieePY .... .. .,. ( 0111,llllja•" I Scotc." OoUlll• (Lecll.eyl; floyat A'l't-IShOrtl; Vi¥• urCI (QoWreaul; ,.._,_ fttlC"lfte1t•>; fltCILIHI ••• (t.e()Nltl. COSTA MESA Calendar FUL~RTON SPECIAL VALUES FOR TODAY THRU SUNDAY 2946 BRISTOL ST. 1530 S. HARBOR BLVD. SO. OF SAN DIEGO FWY. PHONE: 870-0700 PHONE: 549-1533 Se hob/a Espanol SANTAANA 120 E. FIRST ST. AT CYPRESS PHONE: 547·74n MA1DUllY AOV811SS> VALVOLlllE lfftAa mm Alt Fl1DS HOWi HEAVY DUTY MOTOR OIL Me.to -_..,,. ~..., ""' hlGh erode oil .,. ,. '°" '°""• low prlc9. ONI QUAIT CANS 49'155c AIR FILTERS • JOI MOST • IUll cm y .. CllOICI' Al!!!~!'! 1~ OAIJ..YPtLOT U WESTMINSTER 15221 BEACH BLVD. PHONE: 893·8544 TRIPLI! ACTION GAS TREATMENT 4 PLIES IN TREAD AREAi 2 F1BERGLA5S BEL TS OVER 2 PLIES POL YEST ER CORDI $ 89 6 PLIES STRONG IN THE TREAD AREA! 2 FIBERGLASS BELTS OVER 4 PLIES POLYESTER CORO! $ 99 A.,.ll<obl. for --w••· ..ow.:°" c ........... EASY TO USE ii 79c MOTOR STARTING. SPRAY /olo\ .. oil •••olirte ...,4 c11e .. 1 ·~·"•' ttOf't fettff. ldeol f• ovtboo1ch & , ••• , fttOwtu S....bott..., IJ!Y 69' .... DEODORIZER & AIR FRESHUB PrtOlcet ....,, .... -,. ell fllter, C s.-...... ., 10 pier<• < 0,... CONCENTRATE Removes resldufi & deposits. lubricates, cleans upper cyliod« orto & «<buretor tlwottle plofes. · Cleans; ShinH and Relish Surface Rust. I!~~ KIT PIE-SOFTEliD PASTE I 59 WAX llll 12..oz. t • • I -QM.V OT w rwdl!W· Apnl 11, 11'7& p Business Uniiel Sniffs 0,t Trouble NEW YORK tAP> -There'• And today, because tbey Grn11rinH 'E.-~ ..... ~me' £a--'-.. .. lr'Oubleintheboardroom.Jntbe 1ometlme1 ODl•lt in UD · ·-----e ~· ._,~.., rar~fied atmosp ere, aomeone dercover work and don't waot to amelll a rat but doan't know be Identified, their facu are X -D I. C ~lo D .~ how to set. tn,p. ed out in pbotoenpbs. oor J or o. ,.,. --e~ .... vea Or a ftDancler wooden it the money be la borrowtne for a BECAVSB OF TBEI& ex- Florlda condominium deal pertlle and ablllty to tap experts milbt be com.iol from or1a.ni%ed around the world, the men from crime. Unitel are virtu.lly alone in the Or a company auspecta that a comprehensive probe of wblte- lrusted credit manaeer might be collar crime. getting kickbacks to finance bis The Joint Committee of hi b llviq Congress and the UDlted States I Chamber of Commerce estimate IN 'I'll.DE CASES and others, companies have called on the three men from Unitel -United Intelligence, Inc. -a firm that investigates the booming busi· neas of white-collar crime. They call it "execu-crime." They attended Forest Hills High School in Queena and went their separtlte ways : One became a Justice Department lawyer, another a New York police detective, the third a busi· nessman and consultant. • Last October, lawyer William P Callahan, 43, his detective brother Edwin J . Callahan, 49, and businessman John T. Er· rett, 47, joined forces and launched Unit.el, based in New York. .. that wblte-eol.lar crime costa $44 billion a year. ''White-collar or execuUve crime ls fiourubini today as never before," said Unitel Presi· dent William P. Callahan, once with former President Nixon's law firm. He was a regional counsel in the Justice Depart· ment 's criminal division, speclaliDng in narcotics cues, and a senior trial attorney in tbe antitrust division. CALLAHAN SAID "execu- crime" ls erowing because law enforcement agencies are over· burdened fiebting crimes against aoclety. They alao are handicapped by jurisdictional restrictions, abort.age of funds and lack ol manpower. Ano&her reaaon for the success of wbl~ crime ls tbe te- luctanc:e ol maQy compuiel to call attmtioa to ~ internal problem.s.·So, many of them~ move but do not pl"Oleeute the otfendera a former aupervilor of detec- U vea in the New York City Police Departmmt and former aenlor financial fraud tn- veatiJator for the National Bank of North America. Errett, Tice prealdent for marketlnl, la a former busl· nesaman and consultant lD in· aurance and tranaportation. Unitel, Callahab o.ld, was created solely to combat scheJDea and frauda against bus~esa victims. Jta 15 clients Include five from Fortune'a list BE SAID BUNOaEDS of of the 500 biggest firms and private detective aaenctes 1et range from banks, manufac-bits and pieces of routine cor- turers and insurance companies porate investigations. A few big to individual buslneumen. companies aupply armed &uards IAR.d physical security. The only THE llEN no• Unltel in-~pany like Uoitel ii Intertel. veatigate a credit manager who a forenmner. a1ao beaded by a diverts accounts to a collectlon lawyer, wbicb worb tarceJy lD aeency in which be has an in-the caainolndustry. terest. They IDlff out oil money. "The problem," Errett Rid. They tract down sabotace or in-"ls th~people do not have duatrial espionage. They have lbe-ex to structure and been asked by the com· cond a delicate, wide-ranatng monwealth of Pennsylvania bow investigation into complicated to structure • Medicaid an· matters." tifraudunit. Unitel conducts com· Edwin J. Callahan, Unitel's preberuiive investigationa into vice president for operations, is complex fmancial affain and probes anything from Uckbacb Sundesert Order Held and mlasine inventory to tbe scent of Arab oU money and in· cursions by qanhed crime. ITS FINDINGS, which coat t&O to t100 all'. hour, are reported to thefr client's leial counsel. If Passed, Role Woold,,C:ripple Financing SAN FRANCSICO (AP) -1be California Public Utilities Com- mission has held over tor at least five weeks an order that would cripple financing for the Sundesert power pJant alter it failed lo get the required three votes necessary for passage. Commissioner Claire Dedrick said she couldn't vote for the or· -Oer on Tuesday because she believe it failed to provide suffi· cient ~ata and evidence on alternatives lo Sundesert plant· that would be built near Bl>1be in Riverside County. 1ft as. DEDRICK HAD said earlier in the day that she wouldn't participate in the vote because she felt it was pre· mature. •'The situation is very fluid and there are many alternatives around," Mrs. Dedrick said in the ·sundesert project at the pre- sent time. "The actions of the com- mission are not political," she * * said. "At leut mine are not. We don't p1-y political games with the life ol a company that bas thousands of cwstomers. '' .. * * * SDG&E Approved For Rate Increases SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-San Diego Gu & EJeetrlc Co. has been granted $29.1 million in rate increases by the Califomia Public Utilities Commlssion. The increases will provide the firm with emereency rate relief of $5.2 million in gu and electric rates and ener1Y cost adjustment increase ol $3.i million in electric rates. Unitel taps former govern- ment attorneys, FBI and IBS -a1ents around the world and specialists in insurance losses, SEC and customs matters and computer frauds. Its advisory board includes former Treasury Secretary William E. Simon; M. Fred Rayne, former director of Burns International Investigation Bureau, and Thomas J . Cahill, former chief of police in San Francisco. · an interview. The PUC said TUesday that the emereency relief abould be enough to raise SDG&E's 1978 overall rate of return to about 9.81 percent and allow It to maintain a 13 percent return on common equity. Of the emergency relief $3.4 million will be recovered in pa rates and some $1.7 million in electric rates. There will be no in· crease in steam rates. ·'The matter ls too important to be dealt with piecemeal." She said SDG&E "simply can· not afford this major capital in· vestment at this time." OTHER SOUllCES of eneray should be explored more fuUy, 'Mrs. Dedrick said. The charge for establishing gas service was raised from $1.lS to $6.50. The rate increases will be applied to all aas schedules, in· eluding lifeline. Mrs. Dedrick, appointed to the commission by Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. last year, said she 1!1dn 'l see her position in conflict with tbe governor'• opposition to Electric rat.es will go up .16 of a cent per ltilowatt hour except for lifeline sales. Establishment of electric service also Will be in· creased to $6.50. None of the $3.9 million semi·annual energy cost acijuatment will be applied to lifeline rates. * * * * * .. ~ ' ;. -~ ., . c ~ .:-f. •, ........ w ....... .... ::-=.. ,. .. _r .. ... pwall- C:.pwaluA ... et .. al , ........ ~c ••1 .._.Lldatp• Mhlwr•LMr ~ c..lified ~ kCINMarl t.4M IT CICllion) Malt• of u,.... (TOIOIQI) Plof.io of T cs I.aw la..d befare US Tes~ cn:t us Supt9M COllt .. .__. ........ ...... ~CA- llJ.llM ~ 'Soft' Energy Sources To Be Costly, -Study P ALll SPB.INQS <AP) -The atate of California could provide its energy needs from solar power• wtndmlf& and other .. renewable" energy sources by the year 2025 but ODJy ·with tbe help ol autistantiai enero conservatbl apd the resolatlon of serious problems, according to an in-terim study • alteroative ener1y 1y1tema, ttaose whlcb their supporters say could replace petroleum, coal and nuclear power. ........... . "The Great American Foot Exhlbit," due to Qpen Mon· day at New York City's Museum of Contemporary Crafts, is no secret to passers·by. A pair of 30·foot-long legs dangle from the four-story building to call attention to the show. Over The Counter .. HASDU.....P I !~·""" ................. ~ CAPITOLIZE The study la an updated version of • prellminary report rrepared for the u.s. Department o Enero and publlcb:ed recent11 by consumer ad· voe ate Ralph Nader. Paul Ccalg of UC Davis told the conference 1ucb new e:nero aources could provide Calltomla's enero needs in the long nm, but perhaps not as easily aa Its advocates, including the well-known Amory Lovins, who spoke only minutes earlier at the con· ference, migbt auppose. Lovins, representative ol Great Britain lw the environmental ~ Friends of the Earth, ls the author of artJcles and boob arrulDI that the United States must aoon chooee betw,en 10 called "bard" tec.bnologle1, Wee nuclNr aad coal power, a.ad aucb .. loft .. tee.bno&oll• ea aolar, wind power. enerp from plant maderlal and other aoarcea tba.t will not be depleted by use. MUTUAL FUNDS .. .. " . . · WITH CAPITOL rRITillZATI~ t.IANS TO OOMRT r»IHl TO CASH • ..,._t10001oaoooo--'°"-·-°'-r= -.., • l'OI °"' ~T°'-MCW LOAN .,.,..,.. .. ~ yow ~"*'•cmfllCmfl_ ... _ .._, __ . . ... THE aEVISION. aenerally similar to the earlier text, is to be Issued in .Wa.ab.lnitcn nut week. but • sum· m ary was releaecl by one of lta autbora at a conference here on Regulations Add To Prices of H~oses, Autos LOVINS TOlJ> TD coaferenc& that interest in his proposal ot adosJt· In• the ''left" approach WU spract. lni taster than he bad expected. When be be1an preacbina It aboat hJo years aeo. He iald be wu ~· optlmllUc about the prospecta . STOCKS I BUSINESS Wedneaday' Cl ing Price• -------- NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS ~ .... ~ .... elllllNfwv.rl.~t.h<lfk,HIW, ........ Ot""-'CIMI~ ..__.. .. ,.,... .............. "'*"'l«wltles~ ..... Nllfttt. Wedl.-18y. Aprll 12, 1978 OAaL Y PlLOT • 7 Labels mt Clothea May Suffer By SYLVIA POJlTU Clotbel eare labellq Is a dlaarace. TM labela often an too .utcb1. ml&leadlna er loaceurate. TM labela a.re eosUY. lo the form ol ruined clotbes. ~ a re1ul:t, revlled care labelinl rul• are about to be INoed bY tbe Federal Trade Commlaalon. Tb.II 1prtnc, tbe FTC will take the lat m.i<w atep before lt1 rdorm ot e~ care labellni. placlq oa the neol'd a 500-plJll.pqe doeumfJGt on labela for pneraJ public eomment. AlllCIQ8tbe PTC'1 ke7 ftndinlf.'Jl: -llANY CLOl'BIN0.11.AKEU 118£ tbe can labela to tell tbelr lJ")dueta rather tbaD to delcrlbe can for 1ar· menta. -Many manufacturers 1peclly machlne wublq wMIJ drycleanlna mllbt be better, or they specify drycleanlq without po{Dttnc out the 1peda.l proeedurel required, tn or· der to make the clotba seem easy to care for. Cleanlnt methodl listed on can label• ol wbat are called "problem 1armenta•• bave been test.cl by tbe ln· tematioaal Fabricare Institute, a trade group rep.reMlltina launderers and drycleaners. 1be recommended metbocl "often actually damages the clothiDC, ·• reports the executive vice president, Charles R. Riuott. and tbe re- search administrator, Bill Fla.her. Rle&otl and Ft.sher Money's Worth say that many manutacturers do no testiq. Amoq top problema: ( 1) SYNTHETICS LABELED .. P&OFESSIONA.IL Y dryclean ooly" too often shrink. Laminates oftell IUffen and peel when cleaned by tbe procedures mOlt pro- fessional drycleaners use. (2) Water spills and perspiratioo will bleed colon on aome designer knit dresses, and labels carry no warnine lhat steam, a procesa that causes more color bleeding, should not be used. (3) Some drapes have heat-sensitive yams woven into the fabric. Yet the drapes carry oo care label warnlq. (4) Clothes labeled ••wash bot" wub well in home washing machle.ns but are damaged ln the batter wash cycles of commercial waablng machines. (5) llANY MAMJFACl'UltE&S ARE reluctant to put more words of warn.ln1 on care labels to provide clearer instructions. On the other band, some manulaetueren are overly cautious about the information they put oa their ctotbes labels. A 1arpient with a "dryclean only" tas may be machine washable. People may diatrusl care labels, ignore the lnatruc· lions and damage clothes in waablnC. the institute fean. It has asked the FI'C and manufacturers to use more com- prehensive la\)eli.Dg stat.ementa, and the FTC obviously agrees. In bis rePort after Fl'C bearings in Waahlncton and Los Angeles last year, presiding officer John A. Gary aa.id: "THE RECORD IS REPLETE WlTB evidence of widespread inaccurate and fa.Lse care labellne which, lf continued, could undermine the consumer's trust lD and reliance upon the entire care labelln& procram. To remedy the practice of inaccW'ate OI' false care labellnl, tbe pro- posed revised rule abould be amended tp require labelen to have a 'reasonable buia' to aw.1.antiate the accuracy of care maintenance lnatructions. " 'Reasonable basla' would mean subjecting a representative pn>duct to the same care and maintenaDce instructions required by the rule. for a reasonable numbe? of times." Market CautiolUI Over Carter's Plan NEW YORK CAP) -Tbe stock market wu mixed to-day in a continuation of lt.s subdued response ~ to President Carter's economic mesaaae. 1be Dow Jone.a average of 30 Industrials wu off 3.89 points to'768.29. But 1ainera held a 4-3 ed&e on Josen amona New York Stock Excbaqe-Usted iasues. In bi.I address to newspaper publl.sben and eclitora Tuesday, Cuter outlined an anti-lntlatloo strateo that put empbaaia on voluntary waee and price restraint by busl· nesaea and labor Wlions. S1~ul11 'l'lw Spotllglat Doee,lo11nA r.,..,,.• .=:r-cAI') AMI 0..-,_._.... NEW YC>ttK <A~· Selft. 4 P.fl'I. prk» JO 1~ Olleft_ Hltlll" ~ Qote 9'° -... l ( .... o4 .. flflNfl rnMt Kllwe ,_ ,.._ J?U 1t6..Jf.-JM ,.._ Y«tl -s_.. ~ 1---. lD Trn ~-111DUIS _,,..._~ ~~77"'"1i5~:: t/4~ .:·::f~·~·tt:i l'edNet M........ 271;.100 l~ + \lo Uuta ...... -............... , CJtlcot'p • • . • • • • 290.-~ + ~ '5 Sta -..................... . '--~-t~···· t.M.1'I .... +1'-------------l!Mrlfl "-·.... m.-2S +211. aoe1t1Q ...... _,._ 211.-~ • ~ Whal S10«-la Old Coftl D•te .. ._.... I 11'-., .. Soultlem CD...... 17 + ~ ·~--~····· t.M -"" ArllPllt> ..... ..._ .... _ Tr•..... '--··· 1 1~ + _., UM. lllC,. • ..... 112..D fl"' + ~ ~ Inc..... m;• 1-. + "' I t.Aa..•s """'· T.., .... 70 ... 63' ,. ;: = .. ~ tS 71 =.-= r=~ .. ~~ .. ~~·1 w ... a:.~.:::::::::_·:::::::. ~.,.. ................... . f.y= ,:.-..-·:::::·::::::::: ~ 1 .................. !.... 16 .................... • .. .. ···-~........ ..,,. .Pt WMATAM•X OtD NIW YC*K CA~ =-1 m '" 64 JJ t • w * ,,,..,..,ti. 1978 Telerision TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS '\• ~· •. ~ ' •.. • # # , '· ~. -. . ., ~ . ,. ; r •' • "' ~ ..... Joe Don Baker stars as a gambler seek· ing revenge on the people who sent him to prison for a crime he didn't commit in the movie drama "Framed" tonight at 9 on CBS, Channel 2. the ""'' time. ., AOAM-12 All·~ wenta to oo I>** ''hame'' to pt1eOn 8nd 11161• the offlcwl to helphltn m MACNEIL I 1..EHAEA A£PORT Q!i) OREATIVE 8TTTCH£RY The bullon hOle, INlher, lltalgnt IMthe<, •Ingle leather. and llented ... th- • llllGi-.,. domof). 11rated ()) JOKEA'8 WILD J!IO fJ 8ETW&N THE WARS .. The LMgU9 Of Nltlena; Return To llotetionlent .. Fllllrlg IO .... eong.-.. lloNI appfOV.. for the l.-gue of Natlona, Wllllon tlkM 1111 <:Me to the peo. pie In a grueling. and ....,. C1aaa11t-I ~l•tl•fl• D KNXT (CBS) LO\ Angeles D KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles I KTLA (Ind) Los Angeles KABC-TV (ABC) Los Angeles ()) KFMB (CBS) San Diego G ICHJ. TV (Ind.) Los Angeles 9 KCST (ABC) San Diego m KTTV (Ind) Los Angeles ti) KCOP·TV (Ind) Los Angeles • KCET· TV (PBS) Los Angeles G KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntington Beach tuelly IWll, 1,000 mile ~op ClfnPllSln 8 IHANANA l~..=u,~ MATCH OAMli ,. ..... JOKEA'8 WllO THE BRADY BUNCH Or.g appe1n to ti. lk:tl, but Alice ~ a lo"9 i l'l6tl ~=-Olen 10 I AMENOA 2MGKT LA. INTERCHANGE Southern C1lllornl1'1 court-ordarad achoot deMgregltion ~ .,.. llXMllned. (Part 3) • STAWMN> ''8cw1ng Canyon'' I •12UD0 QUl!8TION ,Ntll.Ym.IO l:OO Cl) 8fllDEJMWf A lrlntlc Mlfdl for I miM- lilg contllMr of potentldy lethal plutonklm lead• Spider-Man to Hollywood In • ,_ to fol an 8111«· tlOn ptot and ~ tne ..._.netlon of Ille Pfael· dent. (Plrt 2 of 2) D CARIBOU .. me •~ec11111e Journey" The annual 2.000-mll• migration, ~ Ille caMng, leeding and meting, of ttlowMda of ceribou from Ille Oglvy Mountlllna to Ille Arctic ac..n and blclt. Mlclleel Lindon IWT8tM . • MO't1I • ·~ "Tiiie And Gui" (lm) w.c. ........ Allbrl ~ 'T-.o·OI"'~ prwi.nd to be~ In an ltternc:it to .... ~ ""' ~nleoe.(1 IW) eo 110HT• INOUGH "I 0utt•• T 011t lfadfotd ~-1.-dofltt houMtlold .... ,. dlll- .... ..,_..1111'11 al.,....,. dlcWOr. YMmrtl 8cJolrt. w-.-Doi* ~ -· (A) .CNQ....-J NG,..... Oueall: Ken Berry, E'tdle Oomle. • MOYIE * * ·~ "The Wondertul Country" ( 11159) Rotlerl Mltdlum, .kille London. Two u s. ettldnl WOtt! tor (lC)f)Olll• aldM during • Merxlc:an upMevel. (2 ,_, Ill MOVA .. Still wa1-." AppMlinQ .. a plldd "'-'· Ille llte and lt!yUwTI of • pond .. In reaUty the aceM of ClOIWlant. frwdc drM'IL • 11X ll:IDIFll ICKR ~RlmVAL "The Jezz Minon" I:*). CROl8.l#ITI D OYERfMY AoOert end T Otf'/ Aide I*· lorrn and dleolm If*' non-comc>ethlve rllatloo- lhtp; aenlot cit~ orven- lutlons; upd11ed lltuM on sglr'Q; mobile homM t:OO fJ C88 MOVIE • ..... ..Framed" ( 11174) Joe Don 814<«. Conny Van Oylle Attll' IOUf ~ of bfutal pr1aon ttMtment, a gambler .......... ~ on the thUgl. crooked COP9 and polltlelaN whO arTlf'IOICI"" ~ . D NBCMOVIS * * * "Wllo la Herry Kellerman Attd Mfll ..... 81ylng ThoN Tarrlble Things About..._., .. (111711 Dl.lltln Hottman. ~ Han19. A ~ IUOQlllllfUI rod! oompoeer beoomM ob.-1 with flndlnO • "'¥9111'10ua flgut'e whO .. ~ dlrneglng .... lbou1 him. 9 MOVIE • * ~ .. Man °" The Flytng Trapeze.. ( 18361 W C. Flelds. Miry Brian. A deugtlter llllpl '* unnap. PY f lthlr ltand up fOf 1111 ~(tllr.) 89 CHARUE'S ANGEL.a TUBE TOPPERS CBS 9 7:30 -Between the Wars - The period followina tbe tailure to jom the League of Natioll8 and Woodrow WUson's ill-fated whistle stop campaign ls covered. NBC · 8 9: 00 -.. Who is Harry Kellerman and Why Is He Saying Those Terrible 1blng.s About Me?" Dustin Hoff- ~an stars as a Paranoiac rock music . composer ln this 1971 movie with Barbara Harris. KCET D 9 :00 -Great Pert ormances. Man's relationship to death is emlored in Edward Albee's play "All Over.', "Mb Fright" followlnv I gunman'• near mlaa. ~ Jaf Vanoe (Linde Dino)~ the MQ918' help In IOcetlng tM ~ tery man who la ttwMNn- lng hlr on IM ~11 and tollowing up with ~onherllte(R) • MIJlfl GIWflN Ount1: Rllptl Nedlf, NcNrd ~Joe at.. don. Alllpt'I aw.I. eMMT '9l'OMIAHCa "Th .. ter In AMerlea: f.dwerd Alb91'• All Oller'' Albee explOrm the Ullme of man's rtolmllon to dMtll. lndlldltlg the emotiOnl, llypoc:ridM end wtgstt ... wtlldl .-Tound dllth, .. well 11 man '1 lnlblflty to ttufy abaort> Ila IMMing. ; AUSTIN Ct1'Y UMIT8 .. John H1rtfcwd I The Dllllfda'' Banjo I**• I fiddler Hartford 119'fotma "The Wart," "Don'I L.aY1 YClUf Rlcofde In The Sun" end "Roll In My SWMI Baby·• Arma." The Dlla'dl' .-.etlonl Include ''W~.·· ''C)e6.. ~ WM A Mover'' and MOUellng~" ()) NCH MAN.~ MAN TOl'll ~ 1M syndicate Ind Rudy .. bleckmailed, 10;00 io ~ dlugllter. 0 STAAISKYl HUTCH "Manchlld On The StrHta" Slaraky and Hutch I-Ille dtfflcult tUk of helping I youth OVWOOIM the deep blttll'· 11111 ceueed by ..... 11th«'• deelh In • pollce lflootout (R) CD L!T'I MAKE A DEA1. G 80UN08TAGE "Al Gre.\" The "~ Sound" of the blues . (Detroit. Chicago 1nd Memc:ll*) la Oln'IOOltrlted In perl~ of "Love ...,_ I "1n. Come And T•e Me" Md ''HOw can You Mend A Broken ...., ... =11na NEWS LOVE. AMERIOAN 8TY\.! "Lwl And The Walt.op Olr1'' Phi INll• • dale with Ann, • girl hi'• ,_ ...,. "Low And l.D¥er'• Lane" Dora Ind "91• plll'I to Cllebtat• their anniwr- .-y 1J MOYIE ** •·one Aunlan 8-'' (11173) OllVll' Reed, John Mdnry Pes- alon Ind vlolenoe erupt during a IUmmer In mod· em~.(2tn.) • .lHl 000 COUPLE FalOt dat• a -With a ~~ • MONTY PYTMON'S Fl. YING CIACU8 • ..cttMJ. JACKSON onctor of the Callloml• Department of ConlUmer Att.n. Ak;haord Sp00n ~ ....... --01 im.r.t to CIOf\IUmlr'8 ID MM:NEll.1 LEHMR ~ 11!IO 8 ()) HAWAI FIVE-0 McO#T9tt llndt hlmMll With only .a hcMI 10 pre- wnt the murder of an unknown victim end the only due II e lc9Y INI the Mll-ptodalmecl ......in 1'1111 _,t to him. (R) Q TOMIWfT Hoit: Johnny Carson 0-ta: Gore Vldat, Paul W\lllem1. Nancy ShlCM • LOVE. AM£NCAN 8TYLE "Love And T1k1 Me Along" AllY. Plckll1 tnea to do a good deed, but II .... ftnll.. .. l..OYe And The BIO o.te'' 811 and Het1k vie tor 1 dale with the 11m1 Q!!t on • geme lhow. • 9 POLICE STORY .. "' Deftoltoua AQI" Aid\ TatWl'I IE~ Alnetl, I V9tWll'I Gdp ~ rlll•• ment. Ill llll'Md up wllh I l'IMdlerong young rookie ; THATGIRL "The~Story .. • GET 8MAftT ~ end Aoent " llWI• contact with I ....._.n .,, the coemetlC dioper1· mtnt • CAPTIOHED A8C H£W8 MORNING ~-TWIUGHT ZONE ••IJncloe SlnlOn .• • MOW! * * "Web Of VIOience" ( 1IHllll Bl-" HlllMy, Mar· garet L .. A men wit,,..._ .. tne lcldnlPPlno of Illa 111-fianoee end srarta hta OWfl lnwaug&UOn (2 hrl I Cl) MOVIE * * · B1ll1d Of A Gunhgllllf" (1883) Marty Robbin•. Bob Barron. A allent feud be~ two ouu.wa brelk:I wide-open ~ both -attrec:ted 10 the -git!. ( 1 "' • 30 min.) ID MACHEl I LE.HAER AEPORT 12:30 8 MOVIE • ** ••Cleopetra" (tll:M) a.udett• Col'*1. ~ Wb11on. Marc Ant110ny'1 love tor tile Egypllll\ ~. Cleopetra, IMda to 1111 deatl\ICtlOn. ( 1 "" • ~ min i • ID DICK CAV£TT Ou11ta S1mmy Cann. Alan Jay llf,,.... At1hul Schwlftt (Pitt 1 of 21 t2:a7 U (II ABC MYSTERY MOVIE * • Too Easy To l<lll t 11175) Imogene Coe•. Pelet' COffield. A nuree'1 1n11ol11ement with the OCQllt ludt lier onto a blurr1 11u.atlon when ane 1s Nalgned to catw ror • polloeman wllO n.. bMt'I wounded 1n a lflootout (RI ~-Cl) KOJAK "The Nlc.1 Guys On The Block" Detective 011 w-di.:o-1 lhll a rormer Claaamtte ts now 1nvotvec1 1n ,.,. 1enc1no °' SI m1lllon 1n atolen dlllmOndt (RI 1:00 Q TOMOAAOW 8 ISPY Copa And Robt>er' ' 1:30'2) NEWS 1:501 NEWS 2:1)0 D NEWS MOVIE *~ 'The V.aienl Onea ( 11197) FemandO ~. Aldo Ray. Murder -oectl. In danger of '*'19 ~. ---fly the tNrtlf, (t IW., «I min.) •uova • • ·-n. vouno Oan't Or(' (tte7) .--WM-"'°"' Ill Mineo. IMOOlrtt- ly invoMd In I prtlONr"I '9clpe.. ~boy ... • beltlno ""* thM ,...... Ille OOfMCt dlld Ola bullet .ound. 12 In.) l:I08 MCN1I * -~ 'POllfftaB ,M o.rtgw'' ( ltM) ~ Beelty, Terry Moor9. ....... *'° Yant attipl ~ -.i a woman la floufld ~...., '*cs IJlul'Cll9 0-. • --(I rw . 35mln.) 1:2:11 NIW8 l!IO MCMI! * 11t t,t "Tiie S p1ftl11t OercHiMf" ( tt6 7) DWti eog.td•, Cyril ~. BMld on the A.J. Cfo'*I nowel, a ''"* ,...,... '* eon'• O.VOtlon IOW*d tnw gardlnet. (1 IW., 16 min I 3::408 MOYe * •. _. ''We ONe At Dllwn" ( 1942) &le Portnw\, JoM Miii s:111 STEW 1DWM1D1 4:00 MOVIE •• "Let'• Do"~ ... (19631 Jana ~ ._ Miiiand. Tlaund••'• Daytl•r lllenes MORNtNG 11:SO tD * * * "The corn ts Grean" (11MS) Bette°"*. JOMOell A~ 1n • Wellh ""'*'Cl IOMI la touched by Olll al .. studentl. (2 In., 20 "*'-t IFTERNOON ~ D *** .. AW<*•••• With Denger'' (1161) ,,_, Ladd, ~ c:.-t. T'Wo -eld • SIC* oflloe ln~or In cndllng • mall robbery ptot ( 1 "' .. 30 tftln) S:OO 9 * * ~ "The YOIWIO Lovera.. ( tll6') Petlf Fonda. Sharon ~ Alter Illa glrllrlend become• pr9gnent, • conluled 11\Jdent tllgllll to tall OOUfMI and~ Indifferent. ( 1 hr .. 30 "*'·I 3:aO •••• ''The Whel6lr Oeelerl.. (1M:I) .i-°*""'· i.. A9mldt. A rictl T-~to .... Yortl to l'ftl6c• IOft'9 .... ......,. ( 1 hr.. 30 "*'-I ... ·~·~---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------' f .. .. . A 1'engers, Escapade :... .. i Two New Spy •• '• .. . -.. •' • Series Slated By 1EJlRY BUCK • LOS ANGELES <AP) -It •' wasn't that English writer Brtao : Clemens was so anxious to do an :-American TV series that be ar· ·: rived bere script in band. Clemens, invited here to dis· cuas the possibility of creatinl a :.. s how in the image of bis :. "Avengers," bad sometb.lng else ;: in mind. Uke a fall accompll. :,i: "I bad ooty been asked for an •" ouWne," be said. "But if you eet ~ into lota ol discussions with Iota new show, MacNee throws inilis bowler with Joanna Lumley. Altbougb "Escapade" strives for the toogue-bH:beek flavor of "Tbe Avengers," and despite other similariUes, Clemens in· siat.s they are not alike. He said, "ll'a Wee 'Phyllis' and 'Rhoda.' Both were comedJw, both came out of "nae Mary Tyler Moore Sbow,' yet they were .entirely different." · · Oscars A.id ABC Return · To Top Slot NEW YORK <AP> -ABC re- gained first place in the networks' battle for the prime time television audience the week ending April 9 . The network claimed the week'• five most-watched shows. At the top of the A.C. n1el5en Company's ntlnp was the ao- nual Academy Awarda show, which ABC.said drew an audience of more than 70 million, greater than for any previous Oscars telecasL ot people, you eod up with a :i: ·show like a camel. That's a .. : horse "491ipecl by a committee. Clemens' only previous ex· perlence wUh American televlai<Jo wu ~ck In the 19SOa when be wrote an award· winnlnl show for "Tbe United States Steel Hoar .•• . -~ .. ..,,..... HERVE VIUECHAIZE AND FRIEND IN SCENE FROM "FANTASY ISLAND' SEAll:S ABC'S RA11NG for tbe week was 20.8, followed by~ at 18.7 and NBC at 17.9. NBC now bu finished third tbe last six ween. The networlts calculate the Oftr· all ratings to me'° In an average prime time min~. ... •• ;.. •'J 8£11: ft'ONLY one way and ~.: tbal'• the wq I write ll I'm not I! be1Qa U'ftlPllL It it troes off in a ~~~ directka i-cbl't see, I say let someoaeellewrite it." Not tO Worry. 'lbe script wu ftlmed 81 a plJot in San Fran· :' claco with few changes by Qui.on ... Martin ProducUons and may ~-sbow up on the CBS schedule ... I .. next all as "Escapade." "' It stats Granville Van Dusen ~ and Morgan Fairchild as two •• American secret agents, Joshua ...... Rand and Susie, who take their : orders from a computer named .. Oz. The computer bas a mind ol its own and is basically a third ~ star ; IF 11E8CAPADE" does mate it to the air. tt couJd find itself Oil lhe CBS ac:hedule with Clemens• "The New Aveniera," the latest incarnatkm of the perennially popular IP1 spoof. 1 .Je version ~:: of the En1li•h series moat ramillar in tbil country •tarred •" Patrick MacNee and black • • leath~r-clad Diana ruu. In the .. :· •• ... •• •• ... •• ~ '30 Minutes' • Kitl SllDll1 Set W>S ANGELES (AP> -CBS Will a4d a new cbUdren'I abow ca.Ded "30 Minutes" tn September, patterned after • '80 11.hnrta.0 ... Mlnutel" will p .... sent teaturea for youn1 people, auch u the pro- bleru of tA9oo-ap dr1Jltln1 and dnul abuM, CCJQflltta with aul.borit1 and ln- tervlew1 wlth 10•01 brttlea. .. I llAD NO attezQpt to cap- ture the American ldlcnn.'' be said. "U I bad I would have 1ieen off by five years. It'• like American werltera who still have Enalilhme:n aaytn1 'gov- ernor.' "What I dtd was simply write it in good Engliab and let lbe ac· tors supply the idioms." Clemens, a dapper man whole longlab. hair, mustache and Van Dyke· beard are streaked with gra1~;~11 a proliftc writer. He saJd··u ~ he could turn ouC a · script 1n one day, alt.boulb a week ls averaae. Besides creatln1 "Tiie Ave1uren.," be wnu the piloCa for ·TSecret A1ent," atarrln1 Patrick McGoohan, and "The Perauaders," starrtn1 Ro1er Moore and Tony Curtis. He's also written plays and mones. He wrote 18 of tbe 28 scripts for "The New Aven1en," wbicb be'•·•1' productna in London - alon1 with anotber ·ahow, "The Orofeulonala ... CLEMENS WA.I uted wby tbe Enallab aeem to have a knack tor dohl IUCh toqu&;b> ebeek, Jamee Bondlan lbowL "Every Ume we"ft clOGe 'Tbe A.aad ft•ft .. abtOad ad made lt be!on ieUlD& tt to a netwoTt." be laid. •'Tb.at wrq It doeen't pt cOauniU.M-1.ud oat of llltpe. All tit D4tworb, hen an4 In £Nl•nd, want to pi., ~t aale l.Dd not tan ebaQt!OI. "The trouble la everytbtq ls seared to the Top 10:';8BC WUI ~kl a cMnee wtth a dll'fwmt kind of. procram, .. tMy dJd Mtb '11D 0eaUJ Do U1 . Pai't,' which blame 'All U.. hlnf· I)' la Amerlea. 8o wbH a ~ doel ta. • CJumee ·em h9 • • 'llClriillD. ~ • From Unknown andunem,loyedllldgettoc.tebrtty In 8'1ot10rder Finding His 'Fantasy' Persistence Pays Off for Pin"81ized Perfonner 8y BOB TROMA.8 HOU.YWOOD (AP) -A year and a ball a10 , Herve VHl.ecbalze WU bitterly poor, yet ... be was denied uaemp1o7. ment compensation. "I mean l wp Without food and •leePnl ID cars became I t!auldn't afford a room," be r. calls •. ~'So I wrote the unemploy. ment office telllDc them ol giy condition an4 warnlnl tbem 'If I do an)'tblna ctesn-ate, JOU will be respooslble!'r- Villechalse adds wiUl a crin: .. Tiie. check came tbroulh risbt awat." '°;\,ADllDTEDLY, BE WU oat WI most readU1 emploJable of men.,. Herve <the name 11 an1llelud to Her-•a7 Vl1la· cbue> a.di tllrM ftel. u Jn. cibH, and be la an actor • Mdaoua bl lr.tdl about Ida ... be refuaed joba tlaat m....a, capltdled OG lt. Theo he was cast in a major role in Cart Rei.Der's comedy film, "'l'lie One and Only.'• starring Renty Wbikler. WITB ·,iPANTASY bland" now a weekll Mrloa and a rat- lDga winner, Ilene baa beeome aa · ln.ltat celebrity. When be flew. to PblbdetpbJa to appear on the Mite Doqlu Show last month, tbe crowds fOtted bim to seek retu1e In tbe airport's men's room. "l like people," be observed, "but It ~ &et too clOle, I'm alrald I mllbt.•et burl" N1artn1 35, (April 23), Vllleobalse ba1 learned to lllblloeos>bbe about hlt life and bis. Use. Bona lD Parts to a Fnnclt lll400D and an Sn,Uab mother, be recolD!led early tber9 ... tbblp be could Gd could nut do- ':'¥7 penntl wanted JIM to blec>CRe m artlat. aDd I hectime lood M. lt,'' 1M laid. "Good ousit to ha" two tbowl a~ from the .,. o1· 1e. They .,._ u1uall1 11mt-tmpre1ilcml1Uc patiiUDP. and J sold moat ot tbea'l at enry abow. couraged. But Herve persisted, ta~ ag lesaoos and landing a few plays and small films. Hia.1'ig break came as tbe de- vilish Nick-Nack in the James Bond. Olm, .. The Man With The Golden Gun." He decided to purl\le aetini fuUUme In bis native Paris -and st arved. "After:ntne )'NI'S as an actor, I still haven't played a role in Fren~b," be commented. The hUJlll'Y days ct>ntinued in Hollywood until bis career start· ed to accelerate. Now be can af. ford· to )DOVe out of a tacky sec· llon near downtown Los Angeles and lnto his own house. Not Bel·Alr -he Ju.st wantl a boJDe where be can grow bis own ve,etables In the Freocb tradition. BBa~E 18 NEITBEa de- fensive nor un.reallltlc about hil lile. "'lbere are a lot of tb1qs I can't -do. l can't drive. 1 can't 1urf, bocause I can't awim. "Butt can learn to do tblngs that m1"1t teem lmpo1alble. Ltte c*8mlcs. You need a loq f\0101' .to mold with, and mine' are abort and don't bend. But a tlieod bu shown me bow to do IL ''Sbe al.lo work.I with c1u1· c~ and• It teaeblnf me a lim.Paale. SU tokt me, 'I 00 • pa"IQD ,;ttb three ntuPtarilll, to I tan ~ teach 20.8 percent ol the homes in• country with televlaioa were watching ABC. Reruns or three of ABC'a bit· gest hits, "Laverne and Shirley," •'Three's Company" and .. Happy Days" were No. 2, 3 and 4 for the week, and tbe network's .. Cher •.. Special," a lead-in to the Oscars Monday evening, was fifth. NBC's best was a Sunday night movte, ''A Family Upside Down'' starring Fred Astaire and Helen Hayes. It finilbed sixth. CBS' best WU the debut episode of .. A.ma1in1 Spider Man,"No.8. Here are the week'• Top 10 show s: ··HTB ANNUAL Acaclem1 Award.a Show," with a ratlq of 36.3 representin1 26.5 mUDon homes, "Laverne and Sbirlllly," 31.l or 22.7 milllon, .. Three's Company,'' 28.5 or 20.8 mllllon, "Happy Days," 27.5 or ao mil lloo, and "Cher .•. Special," 28.8 or 19.5 ~on. all ABC: Movie, "FamllJ Upside Down," 2'. T or 11 mlllloa. and ••Project u~..i:: 21.a or 1T million, both r.JR;; "Am•h., Spider llan," 22.1 aad 11.S million, OBS, aod "M·A-&11." CBS, "llan'eY Korma 1111ow:• ABC, and .. a.arue•a Anlell," ABC, all 22.5 and 1M nilllloD, both CBS The next 10 ehows: "Love Boat," ABC; "tO Mlnut•" and ·'The lncrdbl Hulk,'' both CBS; "little Bou:N OD tbe Prairie," NBC: CBS Tue1da1 Nt1bt llo•ll , "Moo CcMm17 ~,'' and .. Black ~ 8Qudnll," NBC, tie; "llow U...Wtmt wa1 Won.'' ABC: .. Barbara W S&>ee.lat ., ABC, aad ·~. M..s .... kBC, tie. I . . • . . . '· ENTERTAINMENT I MUSIC Chorale • in If this writer bad the mooey to match bis dreams be would have arranged last weekend for a top quality taping of the "Eveoiog with Beethoven" concert offered by the 1.rvine Muter Chorale ln the Santll Ana IDlh Scbool audltorium. He t.bet1 would have provided the funds which would have enabled teachers ol voice throuO>out our 1tate to preseot each student with a copy of the tape u a vital addition to their musical education. Students would be told, In effect: "1.f you bear a chorale sing better than this, then the occulons wlll be indeed memorable and of international consequence. In any event, model yourselves oo the Irvine Muter Chorale lf you seek perfectioc." FOR THAT IS INDEED what we were given Saturday night as the chorale. in soaring, joyous mood, 1ave ua the etoriea of the Mass In C major and the infectious, malestic "Ode to Jov." One aeosed, from the first bars of the Mus. that the lrv1.De orcanlution was, indeed, "up" for tbia 011H . one. "RETURN TO W1TCH MOUNTAIN" Director John Alexander was at his most de· "NEVER A DULL MOMENT (0) oan...a clsive ln both worb """' he bad with blm four >-----------------it 1oloiats who splendidly answered every "SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER" (R) MUFEGUARD" challenge posed by two maaaive scores. "ANNIEHALL-Aus . A· . >----·-SL-EEP•ER-" (•PG•) ---Ill{ 8le8JmJDg "HOUSE CAUS" "SHAM!OO~<R> At Movie Prizes 'THE FUF\Y" "THE REINCARNATION OF PETER<PROtJD• "THE FURY" (R) -111e RSNCARNA TION OF PETER PA<>UD" ALLDR1Vll·INSO~£N l ;JOP ....... tfnY ~1.-Ultcler I I ~,.. U"tes' • K\cldle ~nround WINNER 3 ACADEMY AWARDS tlEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS Y•n•H• Aedgrev• BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR Jeeon Roberde aEST SCREENPLAY ADAPTATION Alvin S.rvent 1 · WINNER OF · .. .ACADEMY AWARDS lltCludlng Best Or1glnal Score BeetFUm~ne Beet Coetume Dfflln Beat Art OtNCtlon Beat Ylaual Effecta I ••I' 60 • • o I 1 . .,,.., . '• . NEWPORT. · (~tlO\O ~ . . . . ' . . . . '. . . . ~ SYDNEY, Australia (AP> -Australia, whuch claims to have made the world's fint feature- lengtb movie ln 1906, hopes to capture audiences and profits at tbia year's Cannes Film Festival. The rum industry says ij's revitalized after a two-year push and will show l&-movies at Canoes, tnrtiJdlng two features with plob built around the aboriliJ>es .• A IDOYlng ~A romandc...., A st(r)' ~ eDVY1 hatred. hiendshlp. triumph, and love. 'IIETmmng ~mt ''Wortb the wait. Fonda paints an unforgettable portrait. VoIP& dominates 4tbe film with bis finest performance a1ace 'MJdnlght Cowboy.' ,, w.oi..say, Aptil 12, 1178 TOM BARLEY Music Box HARDLY FAIR TO SINGLE oat any one sololat on such an occaaion but thla tniter felt that soprano Lynn Cole-Adcock richly deserved an ad· diUonal tribute. Her sweet. clear voice wu especially to the forefront ln that ma1nlflceot Mass and the Metropolitan ~ra Aud.ltiooa winner 1ave us clear ootlce that she ls deaUned for ireat thines ln the world of music. Alexander chose well when be chose her. mezzo.IOpl'ano Janet Smith, tenor Paul Harms and baas Michael Gallup to fonn the spearhead or hls interpretation of these two comer atones of the Beethoven edifice . "All. Btrr WAIT UNTIL June," one Is told. "we're doing works by Botto and Berlioz and it's goln1 to be a great concert." UnW June. we shall revel in the memory of that superb Beethoven. "An Evening of Beethoven" was an evening that will l.lncer In the memorias of many mu.sic lovers for a lon1 time to come. WINNER ACADEMY AWARD BEST ACTOR RICHARD DREYFUSS '' ... Nell Simon makes fae1lng good legal ... GENE SHAUT. NBC· TV AMERIC.A 'S No. 1 COMEDY HIT! ..... .-c10e ""1'MI eoooen ..... ,,.. ...... .......,,. .... .. ... ,,__ ti11. a11. ••&. Nt.ue ____ ""I.._ ..... , .. ._.. ...... laa.TTDT.,,_ ~· , .... ''"ftF1 Ill \'JI\' I •I 1 tHt\11 ,., .. .... CMN:ICIM a...aa .... --·~ ...... ... ur•--IDU" -••MCAIMI -.:u ... .. _, .. ,.. J. T Shakespeare In Comeback? STRATFORD, Conn. (AP> -After a 1ummtr without Sbakelpean. American Shakespeare Theater bu enli.._.. • DtSW artlltie director in hopes ol iettinl tbe Bard back. Gerald FNedman, former utlstic d.lreetor tor the' New York Sbakespeare Peltlval, bu li.necl on to lead what the manqement calla a "modest" plan to restore tbe plays that pve tbe-tbeater its name nearly 23 yean qo: . A tentative schedule staould be releued within a week or two, Richard Pbeneger, publlc relatlom director, aid. After berdharu, Erk.A aot to know some pretty Interesting people ... 1nc1uc11ns herself. --·--· ~, .... ·-. 1#" ----P"'"~··, ... """ ;;~.J!'I L:~·. ..~.; ... DAILY PILOT " • .. Got a problem~ Tlwn writ~ to Pot Dwm. Pot all cut rftl ,., getdftg the Omwttf end adlOll you flttd to solw tntq\ldie• *" 9-<Jt>munnt and buameu. Mail your qunfaon$ lo Pat Dunn. At Your ~e. ~ Cocut Dmlt/ PaLot. P 0. Boz 1560. C1»to Mao. CA ~. A.a fl'>mlJI letter• ca pomble well be aniwnt'd. ~t .phoned inqu1m1 or lettnr not 1nclwting the reader's /1dl name. address and ~u hours' phone num~cannot be conwered. This column OpJ)eQTS dw· ly ezcqit Salllrda111 . · · 81 a1 e s-. lllee'•I for our kitcben, usin" laminated plastic abeeta to DEAR PAT: 1 recall reldin« ln your column covert tbeutpresed 11ntthw~_!urface. What la the beat that lt'1 letal for beads of bauseboklS to make up way 0 c an t e p ... tlc? to 200 c:-ol wine a year -lf lt ii not sold. A Y8 MUeel ad•lle ,!2.o !.':u~:ra:~ Wbat a bouiemade beer? cardboard template or patten. W.. naaa1 Ute W.K., Newport Beacb lalllbla&e &o u.e paUenl 11eep die deeon&be dde et - ENTERTAINMENT I AT YOUR SERVICE Theater Sues 20th Over Film NEW YC~K CAP> -Radio City Music Hall, which is sc)leduled to close next month because of financial troubles, says the movie "Mr. Billion" is part of its prot>lem. It is suing 20t.b Century· Fox for $107.123 in con-nection with a abowiq a year qo. The Music Hall ownenshlp claims Fox wu to pick up the advertialn& costs. The tllm company entered a aenerat denial in Manhattan ·s st.ate Supreme Court. M...., Mer M ..._e wldi1m &M reqtllred tal~ a.e pluUc llP. ata1 a n.;;c..o.ed saw wl C9Ula• per yearllc:we la• alademe111r ...... ,.,As·• oalY •Ute •waatroke Allow~ of aa semblyaa Te• Ba&ee <D-OUlaad) laue la· lacla oftrbaq, wlalcla w be llJed off la&er. WMa ----------------- trocl.ced a bW (AB Z7t7) wfdeAI ...act allow makill1 eaned cm. ue a te1Mle saw. .... aellMllda wltll 99 adalt to make ., te ZN 1at1eu el beer per 1ear aad tMle ~ t .. or •on edldl9 to •ake •P co 4lt 1.U.U. Bates dahpLtM Pft9Ml govenmemt lkwla1 reqalre· l'•rt.,. a11tcla 9ise•I•• .,,_ mnt •'flle9 la the faee of tM A.meltea.a do-It· y09nelf e&hle:• bat lte .._, qy wlaa& klad ol nape tM -.cane. l1oadielden ..W be ID after dowal.Dg &belr 1eart1 qaota ol AMII. Jle•ew a.II C..elced1 DEAR PAT: Do you know anything about the $109,000 Club: I recenlly read one ol lts malled ad· vertlaemmt brochures which stated. amm1 other thlnas, that after payment ol the sao membership• fee, the member "may becoale thousands of dollars l 2cber.:' Is this a lelitimate operation? G.P .. Newport Beach Not la tbe oplalcm of tlae l&a&e Departmeet ol Corporatlcas. Tbe commlulwr If COll*'a&lOU baa laaued a desist and refralD order ~the $1•,IM Cl•b and H. Moaaco S. of Wladlor, 0.tarlo, Caaada. Tiie Ol'der was lasaed became, ID tbe opt. nloa of the comm.lsaioDer, aeamtttea, la &be form of membenb.lperla tbe clo, were eftered for sale Ill Callfonda wt&boat lln& laaytq:~ca· &loa from tile Departmnt el mder tlleCor,orateSeewWaLawolllll. Pfltterta Pl•re. Pi..cfe P~ D~ PAT: I plan to make a new counter top WXXJ( Al UN ()NI.£ KLAT{)IJ ~ms ~ ·-. FJ!U. ....._ S1MCN --~ DEAR PAT: I received a new set of aluminum cookware for my birthday. I've never used aluminum for cooldng, but 1 know that some foods can cause discoloration. What are they, and bow should I clean this cookware if it becomes stained? P.E., Costa Mesa • ..\Jamlmam eookware takes • a black dll· coloraUGD wbea add fndta GI' ve,e&ablee, Ada u toma&oe., rbabarb or 1aaerballl, are eoobd lat&. BoWac water ID thla eeotware also cu uue dis· colora....., ll cu be removed by WJbaa a....._ of two talll111q 1 ms el cream ti tutar t.o eada quit of water tbe ateulJ llolds. To rest.ore tbe poUaJa. nab wltb a steel-wool pad. Avoid plttfac of alamlD.. poU aad pus bJ not leariq feoda, especially &bole that are lllClitY aeuoe.ed, bl tbem for loag periods. Remember &bat evea If alumhnun cookware become. dlaeolored or plUed, I.Illa does not barm the food itself. ---NOW SHOWING --- 11t1stoL f:iNlMAS C0$10 Mesa CINEDOME Orange !)40.7444 634·2553 STADIUM DtltVf-IN OraQB ~ "'House Calls' flasan incurable case of infectious laughter!" . &YI -Al\tl . PRIME \Pb • t»'b _ RIB -Cene Sha ht. NBC· TV Includes homemade Soup or Garden Salad, homemade bread, potato and vegetable. ALSO: FRI. & SAT. $595 $695 RED SNAPPER VERA attJZ SPEOAI. UlllllUJl·aRCDamM·IWM.lmlM --·-·---'ANNIE HALl' WMCH ·DIMMER ENTERTAINMENT MIGHn Y Mon-Thurs: Anxiety 7:00, 10:25, Ann ....... :45 Fri: AnJdety-7:45, 11:05, ~ 8:00, 9:30 Sat: Anxiety 1:00,4:20, 7:50, 11:10, Annle-2:40, S:OS, 9:35 Sun: Anxte :45 7:10 10:35, Annie-2:00, 5:25, 8:55 edwards NEWPORT edwards HUNTINGTON NU•COAST HWY.&MACART'HUI HW#Old 0 OlDl'l'llll 644-07 6 llACH 4 T IL.US, KA 141-0lll ''THAT OBSQJ OBECTOF DESIRE" {R) ••USM SUI-mus Banquet Facilities for 1~100 NOW PLAYING 1617 Westcliff Dr. Open Daily From 11 :30 A.M. IT ............ C..-rt Orange 13H710 Orange 634·~ Saturday from 5 P.M. IRMllc.IM C.11 Mtu $46·3102 I INSIDl!i-·~a ring, .. •Club cat ndar •511 m Gour.met •Special Diets: • w.diieedey. Aptil 12. 1971 OM.YPILOT Perrier, Please - 'Delicate ga.ses trapped in the volcanic eruptions of the Cretaceous Era are release by nature,' says· its bottler about the · water. And it's also vety chic. By JUDITH OLSON OI IN O.llr Pllet $1Mt It's eood with a twiat of lemon or lime and should always be served chilled. Those Who Know never order it. on the rocks. WbUe some people say lbat Perrier water tastes like Alka-Seluer, there are a growing number wbo clrink it and love it. own ... It can't be duplicated chemically," he 1 said. ''There Is only one source in the world.'' 1 It is rich in calcium, hydro~ carbona- tion and ''there is no limit lo the amount. )'OU can drink," Nevins said. · · He admitted there is snob appeal, "in a way.'' lo drtnlung il, though be said "peopfe won 't ad.nut il. ·"There are a lot or status elements there. ,~ 1: U ·s additive-tree, calorie-free and sodlum- free. ll's llabt, retresbinl and "absolutely natural.·· And it's also very chic. When you see a person ordering Perrier you thiok he's more aware, more traveled." PERRIER 1s "a very i.ocially acceptable alternali\'e to cockla1 ls," he iadded. "It's not as mundane as a Coke or waler." I f I "It's a tittle Continental to drink it," ad- mitted a spokesman for Hi-Time Liquor. Costa Mesa. Many become acquainted with it on tnps to Europe. But he added that people have been going to Europe for years so something else must ac· count for the recent popularity of the French mineral water. A poll of Perrier drinkers revealed lbat many people are afraid of the addiijvesJn low- calorle soil drinks but that they w~jotneWng low in calories and sugar content anc:l150Q)ething ref reshlna. , Eleanor Berman, the account exec1Uive who handles the Perrier account' f01t Ri>bert Marston and Associates, New York, ~s the water la popular because of "the whole. fitness kick we're on tn lbe U.S. - "You can't drlnt and play tennis," she said. "This is probably the happiest trend we have bad. ··And people are becommg concerned about food additives. Perrier believes this ii; the com· iog thing." .... .. -......... "11 "Brl.Jci* Nevlrtl of f'..errler U.S. I ~ bar.tier to wide ~'1>Jic acceptance of Per1'"1'_ hal bee(i\.']>ric!¢ It:bd':51t available io lllef\1, s. siDqtlfie1tl.trn..~t t!~f· ntury but has 'beeb. costly C!Om~tM·with othet' ttl4d waters. )l·"llSO bu been hatd lo.ftlul, oatded only b~ sp'°'alty stores and «.®r!llet 'Shdps. Bruce S. N,~r tt\e' 3t·Yef.U'·Old. president of Pemei; u. S. ,;.u.e J\mbtf can.§\lbsid1ary of the Freoeh ~anyt saii athtba~ changing now because of an,extentive marketing campaign here. · Pal Docherty, beverage manager for ~e Chanllcia1r restaurant. Newport Beach, said drinking Perrier 1s part of what Jle sees as a· general Lrend to non·alcholic beverages. "We serve 10 cases a week," he said. Whatever the reason people are drinking Perrier, the mystique of how it comes out of lbe ground in a carbonated slate is fascinating. • IT IS BO'JTLED from a sprine at Vergeze, in the south of France, which is said to have begun producin& the waler over 140 million years ago. In 218 B. C. the spring supposedly was the resting place or llanmbal and his troops, an.d later in the C1rsl century it was the site of Rnm:in baths In the mid 1700s the spnng became lhe property or Lord Gaude, ruler of Vergeze, and it remained open lo the public until the ea~y 19th century when 1l was given lo a religious group called lhe congregation of the Ursulines. In approximately 1800 they sold it to a M. KEmt NIX, public relations director lor .. IT'S BEING PUT in the beVcerace aisles or Granier, who added a hotel and spa. Napoleon Neiman-Marcus, Dallas, said Perrier became supermarkets, which is bri,glng tlie price 111 gave this o-Nner the right te "develop the popular in New York two years ago when it down," he saiddUring-a t.elephoOe-interview. spring as a source for bottled. water 'for the became "in" to order something other than a His marketinl figures beatlhi.5 out. Three good of f'rance. "' . soft drtnk. . years ago as million bottles of the mineral . His company failed in 1887 and that year the "It seems to have caught on all over the water were sold in the U. S. aQd last year the spring was bought by a Carmer, M. Rouviere, I U .s .. " be added. total was 14 million. Nevins" expects sales to who sought the help of a Dr. Perrier in revitaliz· : Nix believes people like it because it quadruple in 1978. • mg the spa "separates the 'knowledgeable' people from lie said many Americans don't like il ·1 therest."Butbesaidit "servesnopurposewhen because "we haven't developed a taste for BUT PERRIER was more taken by the you get down tolt. waler. We're conditioned to a sugar taste." springs than the spa. lie helped the farmer until t ''It's Uke knowing tan watch bands are in, Many people have compared Perrier to club or straight leg jeans instead of flared-:'-.-soda but Nevins stressed that It has a taste of its (~ PERRIER, Page C6) '----------------------------------------------------------- Best Bo:fS Continued rain storms have interrupt· ed plantings and pickings of produce, while affecting the quality of many items. Mex· ican production is ending causing gaps in supplies Wttil other areas pick up produc- tion. Time and good weather are the solu- tions to these problems. · VEGETABLES Carrots and asparagus continue to be good buys with cabbage joining the list. The cabbage is coming from Northern California where rain damage was minimal. Asparagus supplies from Lodi and Stockton are good. Quality is fair and will continue to improve. With Mexican production finishing, tomatoes, beans, squash and peppers are in short supply. A few tomatoes continue to arrive from Mexico, but most are from Florida. The tomato crop there is small, resulting in shortages, high prices and only fair quality. Beans and bell peppers are ar· riving from Florida, but not enough to fill the demand. Quality is fair. A small supply of squash is commg from the Imperial Valley, but again, not enoµgh to fill the de· mand. This situation will conlinue until California production picks up. .· There is plenty of iceberg lettuce com- ing from several areas, but the quality is only marginal due to rain damage. Prices are high. Romaine prices are down but quality is only marginal. Butter and salad bowl varieties are also marginal in quality. The rain has severely damaged the celery crop. Prices are high and supplies short. The brown onion situation does not look good. The rain in Texas flooded the fields resulting in crop damage. Predictions on improvement vary. It is possible Texas ·won't ship onions th.ls season. The white onion continues to be a good substitute with prices low and quality excellent. For the most part. the artichoke .season I.I over. ore1 will continu to carry~•'", bat prtces WW p· p. ',. :·The J\lorlda corn 1ltuatl0n remall\s the same. Kitchen Ideas By ANDY LANG ._._.._ Year after year, more money is spent on kitchen remodeling than on any other type ol home improvement. • It rnieht appeu-that lbia ls simply because ldtehen remodeling, when undet.aken on a lar1e scale, is expensive, especially when no do- lt-yourself activities are involved. Not so. Ac· cordln& to the National Home Improvement Council, lt is also the leader numerically; that is, It ls the most altered room in the house .. Since the kitchen, traditionally the busiest room in the house, is the location of many acci- dents, the homeowner planning to have a . kitchen remodeled should give considerable at- tention to the elimination ol hazards that sooner or later cause accidents. Some of you undoub- tedly have heard of the work triangle, formed by lines connectini the center fronts of the sink, range and refrigerator. The sum of the sides ol the triangle should not exceed 23 feet, engineers tell l\s, If maximum efficteney Is to be achieved. Often neelecled, however, is the safety factor. When the work triangle Is in the path or most traffic through the room lo adja~nt areas, 1l becomes a danier section of the house. Combine hot dishes. appliances, kitchen utensils and traf- fic and you have the potential for accidents. Good planning before the remodeling begins can keep traffic out of the work area and pro- vide adequate clearance between fixtures and . appliances. When a cabinet and an appliance are opposite each other, there should be a space of at least 48 inches between them. Safety specialists say further that when such fixtures are placed at right angles to each other ~tnd separaLed by a passageway, they should be spaced a minimum of 30 inches apart. In an l.r or U·shaped kitchen, the in.lnlmum edge dis· " lance between an appliance and aq adjacent corner should be 9 inches frotn the edge of a sink, 16 inches from the refrigerator and 14 in· ches from the center of the nearest range burner. ft may sound like carrying matters a little far to worry about precise measurements, <See KITCHEN, Pa&e C3) I I .. 1---··----1 ' ,..... ---- ' PUeblo Bread The subject of ethnic foods 1s a lively one across the land. Dozens of recent cookbooks ehronlcle menus and recipes served by hostesses from Mame to California. But there's one ethnic group consistently missing in most. food lore. WhatdoAmericanlndianseat? There are of course, several geographic centers of Indian life. Undoubtedly there are re- gional differences and it's quite posaible lbat. •early influences from chuck wagon cooks, Melr- ican migrants and the fort,y·niners contributed to the American Indian cuisine. Bread waa a mainstay -baked on the open fire or outdoor oven. The accompanying recipe for Pueblo. Bread originates from New Mexico where wheat Is an important crop. This is a sturdy bread that lends itself lo baking outdoors. rt almost seems designed to serve at an open pit barbecue 2"'1 CUPfi warm water (105 -US F .) 2 packages active dry yea.st 1,. cup margarine 2 teasp()ODS sail 611.a-7 cups unsllted now Measure 2'AI cups warm water lDto larae warm bowl Sprinkle in active di')' yeut. Stir until diuolved. Add °'atg.,.tne and aalL SUr Jn 3 cups flour; beat untll smooth. Stir in enoup addiUonal nour lo form a atifl doulh. Tum out onto a llehtb' noured 1urlac:e and knead Ul smooth and elutlc, 6-8 minutes. Shape Into a ball. Pia tn ereued bowl, turn.int to sreue top. Cover; let rise ln a warm place, lreo from dra!l, until do\lblM in bulk, about 1 hour. Punch doo1h down. Knead 3 minutes. Cov.r and lel r l 10 mlnutn. Divide dough In ' equ I plecH Roll each ple.ce oul to a lOXS Inch ret· tan1te. Makt a crease •bout a~ incba from one narrow l.'hd. Fold 1m1lltr portlon over l•Tte portJon,~lhln l '-' locbes rrom the op end of . Place OD fr ued bektnt a eetj. Cut tti a ~hes croaawtse oo top fold of douP. J cover: let rue ln warm pl • "'-from drl.lt •• ualll doubled ln ~ abOut l • Baka at 3:50"1' ror ~ mlnutes. Cool on wt ... rub • • ,• (2 DAA.Y OT 'Nednesday,Apnl 12, 1~ FOOD Put a Little 'Mussel' Into Your Diet~g Cheap thrill for bud1•t·wise calorie· counters ... try muaaelsl Few Cooda are leu fatt.eftln1 <about 150 calories a serving> yet they're relatively economlcal (SO cents a pound in some areas). SH• Gourneet By Barbara Gibbons dieot5 except mussels and parsley in a covered skillet (for one or two bervin~> or a large pot. Each serving about 27~ calories. .... watchers know auch foods and sauces are ·off. limits, calor1cally, but most mistakenly think that it's the flour that puts them on the no·n<> list Actually, flour ac_- counls for only 58 cal· orles in a SOO·calorie cupful or wrute sauce <or •·cream" sauce). HalC of it comes from fat . . . about 250 calories' worth. most "white sauce .. directions call for stir- ring nour lnlo fat, you can elimi'nate the rat altogether and make a fat-free while sauce in a shake. Here's how. SKINNYSHAKE SKIM MILK WIDTE SAUCE I 1 cup skim milk 2 tabl~poooa easy- blending flo(&r White pepper or coarsely ground black pepper l>inch or nutmeg. da'h of paprika, minced parsley, herbs, etc. ·Despite their ·•gourmet'' hna'e they're easy to fix, and eook 1n a matter of mlnutea. You can have muaaeb on the ta· ble ln far lea Ume than it takes to make meat loaf. mussels parsley 1 tablespoon minced Combine all ingre· Cover and simmer for 20 minutes or more, un- til sauce is thick. Meanwhile, rinse mussels according to preceding recipe. Lay the mussels and parsley on top of the sauce in a ahallow layer. Cover and simmer only until open (add a little water if sauce ls too thick). One of the basic re· cipes sure to be round in nearly every cookbook is white sauce, that milk·fal ·flour amalgamation that's the foundation for so many other sauces, souffles, seafood dishes, creamed vegetables, casseroles and leftover make- overs. Moat waht· And fat isn't really neceuar~. Although Seasoninp lo taste: salt <or butter.flavoAd sail, or butter navoring) to taste Com b1ne ingredients in a large covered jar and shake well. Heat gently in a non-stick saucepan over low flame, stirring frequent· ly, untll mixture sim· mers and thickens. Makes one cup, 150 calories. If you like oysters or clams, you'll probably love mussels! Yet, home coots often steer clear or them becau.se they 're "difficult to _ ,lean." Not so. It takes :~ only a few minutes to ttnse and brush off a few s osen mussels. The tough-to-clean" reputa· Uon comes from the ••beard" ... not hair at • all but perfectly harm· .. less seaweed. The mussels have a habit of chomping down tightly on seaweed, end :-these bits or marine • salad are hard to pull .. :.-out when the mussels : at• raw. But why strut· ~ ~?The seaweed won't bdrl you and whatever !:garnish" of seaweed 41ou've missed can be picked off easily aller the m usseb are steamed open. Don't forget, ln some cultures people eat seaweed. On restaurant menus, mussels are generally listed as an appeUzer, but, of course, I.bey bave enough protein and ap- petite satlsfocllon to -~rve as your main ~ -eourse. A pound or mussels -about a dozen -have as much tiroteln as a serving or steak. 2 grams, but a lot less rat and calories. M usst!'t$ are only 3 per- cent fat -steak can be 30 percent to 40 percent fat or more. Why wait for special occasions lo enjoy mussels when you can • pick up a dozen (or two) : for yourself (and dining : companion)? ; MUSSELS IN WHITE : WINE .. -For each serving: • • 1 pound (10-12) raw • mussels Y.i cup chablls or ·other dry white wine lh small onion, thi.o- Jy sliced Optional: small clove garlic, halved 1 small bay lea! 1 tablespoon minced parsley Keep mu sse ls refrigerated until ready to prepare. Discard any that are open. Wash m ussela under cold run- ning water, removinc· any loose debris. If you are preparing only one or two se"· ings. arrange the mussels in a aio&le layer In a large covered skllleL Ot.berwise use a large pot. Add all re- snalnlng lngredlenll ex- cept parsley. Cover and simmer Oil• ;-ly until the shella open, .i.o longer. Pick off any ~ :seaweedy debris: re- 10ove bay leaf and 1artlc halves. Sprinkle with parsley and empty • • . . • . ... -into large shallow bowls. •rve with a soup spoon (for the broth), cocktail fork and an extra plate to collect the shells. Each serving, about 195 calories. CREAM OP MUS81L STEW Follow precedlne re-cipe. Remove bot, opened mu11ell to shallow 1oop plates. Heat wine broth to aim· ·lnerln1. 'lben, for eacb sentne. combine three- quarter1 cup low·faJ milk with 1 ta~ .ift1tant-blendln1 flour. Stir into simmering broth unUl tblctened. our bot creamed broth over mussels and 'lprtnkle liberally wilb araley and p1prika. erve wltb spoon, c:octiall tort and a.a ex· tra plate for the abellt. Eacb ...nn, about 290 c&lorta 11ussn.s rrAUA.HO l'or each Ml"Ytnl: ~can .tend tom atoea, broken up well ~ bell pspper, thin· •l11Uced 1 aqiall onion, halved and thln1Y 1Uoed l elove 1arlfc, ft l1 mtnced Mi cup drf whit• wtne ...... t twpaaa....,.. ' S&1t Ind~ lb tut. 1 ~ (lt).U) raw ltllllaft . Wishbone ~5 Dresslng ·~-I.Riii 0.. ....... °"' ~ ~ c ...... · c...........,. Alwl •Wlfl tt. tm SUPER COUPON :~-Uo!ll 0... """'n 0,. C.,... "'c-.... ' C ....... Hlldhie A-' ,,..,,.. It. tWI. SUPER COUPON 1-' "ound-BOM-ln RCUld Steak per lb. Arrr Ila Plltbge Ground Beef per II lb. 48 ...-cut lamb Shouldlr Roast s: II Cudlftfa.-1-Mfftftlll-' Extral.mll Frns 1 lb. pkg. 39 Be SUNtoplclJ.IQltlle neao~ HllllllJel'.Olle Qdl Scnllftaa.Boofll 11e111elldilngdl..,idland~ ·~:~::t!!f:; ·Iii • JackLaLWl I .-=:.:r: ,. """""' Healtblpu ·ru\'Lol....,...,. ~~ ..... ~....... ~. ,........... ·--·····~~ I...... ---· This week's ... , .......... 49· SpecialCCM,Hlli VJDn : 011er on 2A oz. • i btL ........ 1 LRION--0.0allpM .... ~. I C..-..._ ltJt. ,,_, 11.... I f'-t_ ...... _,,__ .. _.. ...... OlltCllitC:... i "······-··C ... H••••••••••" • t 11 n .. asu a nm• •IDaA. uma 111S s ,_,... ............... n• ......... ap..1 ...... .., .. , ....... ...., Our famly is growing . \ \ \/ BecaU1e cl JOlW requests for more Plain Wrap Productl, Wfire MldqJ 4 New M.,._. to cu 11owtng family ... nt there'I more coming Thousands of Shoppers have discovered the quality and Savings of "Plain Wrap" HM you met our family yet? ..... CNclleflerT.-, Mmton From1 MeatPles loz. pkg. 11oz. .. , Golden Premium Meals ~ .... , "'I ·.~ Bolom ACMnl Roast JAT'e>P·Fi:,.,~ Steak ........... hll ji Aot1111rle Roast ..... ~,__ ~c~~ Rib Stelk ~M~'Mc•c· S~mer Deli Super Bakery :: 2 .. •1 :::-.99 , .... 85 .... Mlllllltt.IAllll """ Apr11t. ma ......................... .. ........... f • THERE'S PLENTY of PLAINWRAP'V Due to the overwhelming oemand !of" Plain Wrap, we have been temporarily out ol stoclt on some Items but don I worry Ah o4 ~ lawwtte lliems are now 1n plen· t1ful supply. and we will be bringing you more new l1ltmS as 900fl aa triey beclOme a\40ilat>la. 0.....0fCNft Wlit8 Grapefruit Bt:• RalpM-11 Oz. !gg 8eNme Olyfl1llc Meal Bread 2Cor. lo1f Pantry Fillers Super Produce :nu. 48 bl\.. 11.Sea.65 ..... :~.83 ,~.88 ': .19 s:.25 :' .10 -" 111 iscn t ••••. m1•1m ST91 ms. ~ti-.. .., If FOOD Wedn•d•y. Al)fil 12, 1978 DAILY PILOT c:J Pros and .Cons of Raising Your Own Garden . •1 DOaOllll' .... :-:.'I: ......... it~ere ~ Soul= Callf or1Ua aDd backyard fannen are re-rin• up tbetr plans for tbl• aeked a 1rot1p of ........ IDN wYork. tblt 4u·e1tlo •Dd le.l'Ded thlll: Tbre.fourt.bl of the 1.IOO people wbo replied ( QAA ) becau.se we need to uae mon water to ln11a~ our veaetable 1ardens. If 1ardeoe~ bad to buy new toola, boaea. and other equipment, t.b.la would add another 33t a quart to can tomatoes or beans, lC new jars and lids bad to be purchased. veeetabl.es and added la the cost of your time, you'd have to conclude that lt'1 probably better to 11rden for fim rather than praftt -especlally if you just do it for one year and then give up. taste better. Q. J • .Ut, uact17, I• an "orcaalc .. food! S.rely &llere ls ao aacb tlll•I u aa laorcaalc food! or as a food rqulatloo. so at the DrMeDt tlme, the terms 01or1anic" and "orcanically grown" might be used on labela and ~eantn1les1. year'• vesetable 1rew ve1etablea at earden. home because they V e1etable irowlQI hoped to save money; bat beell the "la thin•" · • Just over batf of to do iD the last eeveral t b e m c o n s I d • re d years, and tbe question eardening a bobby; "free" compared to bu,y- lng it ln the store. But the truth or the matter la that lt costs money, a.a well as a areat deal of time, to crow food and preserve It. that keeps beinl uked • About 46 percent ii "wbal motivates peo-cardened in order to pie to want to return to have fresher food. home food production • Most said they pre- wben all the veptables Hl'Vl'd at lea.st some of are readily available in the tood they grew. There are no general statistics which tell you exactly bow m uch ll coa- t.a, on the aven1e, to grow a CiYen QM>Wlt of fresh prodUce. Thia l• i>ecauae there are too many varlablet -cost the marketa'!" People often have the Some researchers at notion that if they grow Cornell University food at-home it will be ••• Kitehen . <From Pase cu but these recommended minimum distances allow people to pass each other safely while usin& the fixtures, carryin1 hot food and opening and closinc cabinet and appliance doors and drawers. There isn't much that can be done in some cases involving safety if the kitchen is not being remodeled, but many times changes can be made lo minimize the number or haiards. For instance, changing the locatlop or a refrigerator not only might prevent at» open r frOCJI interfering with traffic ow, It might be a major step ver. A big safety hazard is hav· g a hodgepodge or eledrical · ng emanating from a sinele out· let. just aa it is In any other room in · the house. Addine another outlet or two at more convenient locations ls an expense well worth lt. Kitchen lighting should be planned if re- modeling or changed if not remodel· ing to provide bright coverage for the entire room and adequate lighting with a minimum or shadows for specific task areas or work surfaces. How often have you seen a person working at a sink that Is fairly dark because the person's body la shield- ing the light from the overhead fix· ture In the center or the room' A light over the sink will solve the pro- blem. But nobody is going to do anythjng about it unless it 1s re- cognized as a problem Olympia Gold Light Beer has a small announcement to make. I - of water. seed. fertilizer. tools ; differences in weather. soil, and skill of the grower. Jo one study in Mlcbl1an, the actual coat or growing ve1eubles under home 1ardening cona\Uons was found to be ~ for arowlng the 2 to 3 pot1nds of tomatoes needed for 1 quart. canned, and Sot for a almllar amount ol green beans. Costs would be higher 10 California, however, LAIHH CALIF. Add th1I all up, and the prtce per quart for home -grown, home· canned tomatoes can range from 39 to m and for beans froin 57-88t. Store prices range from 6S to 90cc a quart for tomatoes and 62-70t for beans. If you kept track or bow much time it takes to grow and can these Vegetables erown for fresh use only could of· fer more of a saving, compared to buying fresh produce. but most gardeners end up with a surplus which they want to preserve. Gardening does have other nonmonetary benefits however: it's good eurcile and gives you a reason for work· ing outdoors ; your fresh-p icked, vine· ripened vegetables may SW&T '4 JUICY ' CAD OS KRUSE ,_l lOW£Sl PR\US A. You're rtpt! By definition all foods are organic because they contain the element, carbon. However, the word "organic" as lt pertains to rood has taken on special mean· iog for certain 1roups or people wbo believe that the terms "organic" or .. organically grown'' mean no chemical fertilizers or pesticides have been used in grow- mg the food . However. this definition never has been established legally. A was recently ' submitted in lhe state leeis l ature by u - sem blyman Vic Faa1o ( D-SacramentoJ which would require that foods could not be labeled as "organic." or "o r - ganically erowa." ·'natural.·· or "naturally g r own," unless l be packaemg label states that no chemical fertilizers or pesticides have beeo used and that no chemical has been added during production or processing. LOWER PRICES! U.S. Mo. I IUSSETT POTATOES IOU.: CB.LOIA• 6tc SMOKED HAMS WISCONSIN CHEESE SALE · Longhom Cheddar •••••••••••• 139 Monterey Jack •••••••••••••••• 1.& Mild Cheddar ••••••••••••••• _ • WHOLI oa JIUtL SHANK HAI# ..._ __________________________ ~ FRESH FROZEN 39c FOSJB FAaMS TURKEY DRUMSDCKS u . ZACKYFilMS BARM BULK ·sMOKED BACON 1~~ IAIM WIENERS BAR M EASTERN WHOLE PORK LOlll FRYING CHICKEN PARTS BREAST LEGS& THIGHS -=C:...::6:;..;i===il=-=UAM=---S-fYU ___ 'e_' f.._z.._29_~c iACiiiii liiil·-·~ 29c HUNTS SOLID PACK 160Z. 99! I U. PICG. TOMATOES 14'12 OZ. CAM 4~5 1 ke 'n' Bake 79c r Napkins • 49c ""Kleena-bls anc1 ~ d eo = 69C Mott'• ia aood for you! 32 oz bottle P-nut Butter ••• s14• Skippy Creamy or Cnmcby-28 oz Baked Beans • • • 45c • $.6 M N .. BnsJand atcYJ.-18 oa Margarine·.. • • • • 59c :CbUfoo Soft 1preeda euflyl 1 lb ' .·-.. :TOMAT049c 'JUICE J,Jbby'a-quality you prefer! 46 oa Corton's Clams 79c Chopped or Minced-6~ 01 can .Anderson Soup 35c • You ~an be sure! ... The Better Way to more sati,sfaction is to ~~ --.........._~ Legs & Thighs .ua .•••• 89~ Hand cut flom plump kfni-tiied Grad• 0 A" ttyen ••• c.nder and JuJcy! • =~ ,,,,,,, Compart the quality, and you'll cbooae the bet-Ii tit ~ to ae1ect flyer put.al Pl\lmp meaty b~ band cut from 0 Jdnr..tud'' Gl*M "A" &tab tryin1 chicken . • • a tnat.--Cor thl family, and the budptl llE IET1D UY -D llTClll -BICl ••• • ,....._ • .......... • llmlrl .............. ..,. ........... ... ..W the cemt.r, .... It Int ,_ ••• tit lettlr 111,t I Fryer Wqs · •.••• 59~ Chicken Livers ••• 89f Freeh! Hand cut from Grade "A" hyera Freahneae makea for more gooc1n .. 1 Co/fled lief :r .......... ~ ........... II! U.S.D.A. Choiee beet briaket ••• aeleded for qUauty and cured to that special eoodnaea you favor! Point half or whole Ground Beef ~S13! Lean-doee not aceed 22% fat :~1:' $13! ~ and meetyf Eutem port · WE FEATURE MILK-FED VEAL The real thine ••• compare the dl.lrerence · CHOPPED S 149 STEAK • LNn pound beef-3 per lb. Doea not ucaed 16% lat conunt Meat Balls •••••• Sl4! El Rancho's own ... and oven ready :,D 39~ Oruund chicken backs and necka, beef trim, fat and liver. 2 lb. roll. Silver Salmon •• s29i Fine for bakinc • whole or half Salmon Steak ••• Sl5! Center cut from fine Silver Salmon = s1s! Whole ••• cleaned and pan • ...ty Fresh Cod ••••• s24t Fillet.a of True Cod for value Cocktail Claws •• sr. Snow crab, for taaty hon d'oeuw. SMOKED PICES Wbut s24! They'll en;oY the change ol pece Gallo Trio -~~1 Vll!Rtse, ~ : ,. '.53 :.. s239 \,..i._j 1.5 liter Los Hermanos • 5299 Burgundy, Chablia, Vin Roee-1.5 ltr Colombard Blancs211 Souverain'e delightful tute! ra!t.b a..n. Potato, Split Pn. Tomato No 303 Mushrooms • • • • 49c liJp liPIDiD lliBBk BrMJ ..... 11.4/l The Best of Spirits . Bnndywine sum. • Pi.,......... os Cranapple ...... age n.lt.ciou.aty Ocean Sprayl "8 oz ai.u ' ·u.S.D.A. Cboke beet, offered to JOU by our old·Cuhioned butcben, to be aure you get what you want! Loin cut Top Sirloin :r .. s329• 7 Bone Roast ... s1 1? Sausage rrAUAN STYll •• s15? tom cut d U.8.D.A. Choice beet Chuck cut U.S.D.A. Choice beef We make it authentically Italian Sliced Bacon •••• Sl 5! 0 Bone Roast •• SJ 2! Brabust a uacrs • Sl 5! REDlJCD) 1.00! R RANCHO'S s499 Tequlla Quart Cbooee White or Gold and aa¥9! TOILET 79 TISSUE c El Racho'a thicbr .. ranch atyt." Chuck cu& U.S.D.A. Cboice beef Pork, veal and eeuoning-no nitrite. Teacher's ••••• s1499 Colon, White-M D ' roll pack Seven Up • • • • • • 39c ResuJar or Supr Free-28 oz NR Coca Cola • • • • • • ggc Men p&..n ln the 2 lit.at bottle Detergent • • • • • • ggc P\fln H.97 Duty-st pq Cl• tft) Purex Bleach • : 59c Li4iPt for whiter whJtee--pllon BEEF LIVER 89! IAIAllA 1~( SQUASH ~. ~ m.ted • KOiden, flmJrC\d Frozen Food Oran-Juice 12oz ••• 1sc saaw ... concentn*I foodD-hlD Nida orcharda ••• delic.i~ bealthtul Vegetables ••••• &9c later Tots ••••• 79c Birdaqa Americaa-.U ~ 10 Cl90 Bostcm tnm1Pies1cr Mm 8mWa mabl ft for you! 34 oa BONELESS iOASi s2°! _CHUCK 99c. STEAK Chuck cut ••. Choice ahould•r clod U.S.D.A. Choice beef, to be aure Super Fresh Produce A cre•t nam• in Scotch! 1.76 liur Vodka or Gin •• s399 Our own "Holiday Timee"-Qua.rt POPOV $849 , VODKA Mon value in tba 1. 76 liter Old Crow •••••• s499 StraJ,ht wh.lakey-.ave 80e fifth They'll love the bright flavor of Texaa Ruby Reda &Jl,Ytime -but especially for breakfast Canadian Club . s391 Sippln' whiakey reduced 1.00 Quart HONEY-29c DEWS • Sweet and mellow melona Prica in tff~t Thun. April 13 throuih Wed. April 19 . Opm daily 9 to 9 SundQY 10 to 1 No 1ala to deakrs .... t ' CHINA PEAS 98! Fnah--to be tender, tasty Stralsht Wbiakey ••• 1.7& liter Delicatessen Buddig' s Meats ... 69c Choice of varietiet in the 6 oz. family 1l:ie packqe (l • PU ... Ue) Danish Ham •••• s1 39 Horseradish ,mova 39c Danola-7 aliCM ol lean meat! 8 os Beaver'.-Wbi&a or R.cl ••• 4 oa .U. Orange Juice ••• s1 25 M1nu&a Maki-reedy to pom-oe4 OS Pickle Chips • • • 59c Vlulc'....alicioml,y Koebert 82 oa = 79~ Simi" ,.'50AI( •••••••••••• Ito 8laoU\ °"' dh\ l&&lMl 11 • .. , . • fOOD Eggs ·in a ·naSket . ~ . When the group, gathers for brunch serve this · high-rise pancake fl1/ed with sour cream eggs. Next time the eroup eathers at your place for brunch«» it ap D tch. Serve this unusually deUe hilb riae pancake fUled with sour cream scrambled eus. It's a lovely ottef'iN ror a aprlnattme menu. Made like a oant popover, , the pancake batter is a wholesome team of milk, butter, e&es and flour. Whir the ingre- dient. to amoothneu in a blender. Bake the bat- ter in your prettiest skillet so it can go from oven to table. Aa the pancake bakes, it will rise higb and handlora1ly formlnJ a beautllul golden shell. It's fun to watch this if your oven bu a aeethrough door. The scrambled. e11s, of course should be prepared at the very last minute. Sour cream. chives and butter give them excellent flavor. Stir in some shredded jack or cheddar cheese and aprlntle a lltUe more on top before present- ing it at the table. Contlouing the menu in the Dutch mood, serve bot cocoa for the beverage. Dutch cocoa ls world renowned for its rich flavor and makes a rully .special bot milk drink . . • • if you want to splurge a bit. Otherwise make the' cocoa with milk. and your favorite mix. DV'l'CH P~Cll.E WITH SOUR CREAM EGGS Jeggs ~cupmilk Eggs in a high- rise pancake. I .· ~cupOour Mi teupooo salt 2 tablespoons melted butt.er . Special Sour Cream Eggs ~ cup erated cheese, monterey jack or cheddar 2 tablespoons Dlinced freeze dried chives Combine egp, milk, flour and salt in elec- tric blender. Whir to blend. Melt butter in 9 or 10.inch akillet. Whir into batter in blender. Pour into skillet. Place in •~ oven and bake 2S minuta or unW pulled and Solden brown. Spoon Special Sour ~am Eggs into center. Garnish with cheese and chives. Top with bacon curb, it desired. Makes 4 or s servinp. SPEOAL soua CREAM EGGS 1 tablespoon butter 9eggs 1 tea.spoon salt IA teaspoon pepper 2 tablespoons minced freeze dried chives · 1 cup dairy sour cream % cup shredded monterey jack cheese or· cheddar cheese Melt butter in large skillet. Beat eggs with salt, pepper, chives and sour cream. Cook, over' medium beat, stirring as lltUe u possible while eggs cook. When almost set sprinkle wltb cheese and mis. in lighUy. ,, Kina-size· Double Take. Save 30C with two coupons from Nestle. Mmm. NestU! Crunch• Nesti~'" M111< Olooolate. Nest~• Milk Olooola~ with Almonds Nest1A• Chocolite.• King-sae bars made with real milk chocolate. . ___ ._. __ _ ~ I 1 1 z I~ 15 ., u I~ I~ I "' . I I Save15c · oo N8Stl6 CtunCh~ DAILY Pll.OT • Q'; Pear Breakfast Cake also features sausage. Breakfast Pears Us& canned pears, biscuit mix and pre-cooked sausage for this leisure breakfast cake. • . . . , ~I' . ., ·~ ' ! ,, s ; ~ .. \. • Brine a new look to callln& the lamily to the pear halves and the 29 · Drain pear halves ~ weekend breakfasts with table. ounce can about 7 to 9. set'Ving 2/3 cup s~ tbla attractive Pear Pacific eout canned Be sure to save the pear Set aside. Melt butter lit breakfast cake. Made in B a r t 1 et t s h a v e a syrup if not used, for ad-bottom or 9-incb rowfd an upside-down manner. refresbin& sweet flavor ding to gelatin desserts. cake pan. Sprinkle~· the cake combines juicy that adcb a apeclal touch ·puddings and fruit brown sugar. Alte Bartlett pears, pork to menus all through the · drinks. pear ha 1 v es a a uusage links and a cin-day. For a luncheon sausa1es over bottoln' of namon-flavored coffee salad, top tbe p e ar PEAR BREAKFAST pan in pinwheel fashion. cake in one dish. All that bal ves with chicke n CAKE Brown any remaUihi~ is needed to complete salad flavored with 1 can ( 16 oz.) sausages to serve ~2 the n:~u is a plate of curry. For anack time, BartleU pear halves accompaniment to .. n scrambled eggs. • make up a wholesome 2 tablespoons each cake. Combine rem.tn1 One ol the advantages· pear not bread. And for butter and brown supr inc cake ingredient.i i.ic• or the cake is its conve· dinner, spread the pear 1 packa1e (10 oz.) cept jam or jelly. SCif"ir:f nience. By using ready-halves with butter and pre-cooked aausa1e · reserved pear syrup; to-eat canned pears, a honey and broil until Jinks mix Ing jus t u o-tU biscuit mis. and pre-bubbly; serve with ham 2 cups buttermilk blended. Po ur ovet cooked sausages the ortopwithi~creamfor biscuitmix pears. Bake at dJ cake fits right in with' dessert. . legg,beaten degrees for 20 ·to '!s the leisure mood or the Each can of Bartlett 2 tablespoons sugar minutes or until c:lontr. morning. Within pears is packed with· 1 tablespoon oil Tum out onto plate.; mlnutea,thelngredleots plomp sweet pear ~teaspoon cin-,pearcenterswithjae can be pul together. And halves in a flavorful namoa · ,-jelly. Serve bot, cut 1 • soon the spicy aroma of• syrup.. 'lbe 16 ounce can Jam or lelly of wedges. Makes 6 aut- the cake baking will be contains about S to 'l choice ings. MJBtastes good when it.should! :• . . ... ' FOOD Fight Wheat Allergies A Grape Salad GRAPE SOUFFLE SALAD 1 cup coarsely chopped walnuts Mmt 1*Pe Mftl" nan.._,. dlttlcult it 9"14 a. to wbeat eomDl:etelY from diet. WM&l b.11 a &Jut. fader that aiaka It a wonder Jll'Oduct tor b~ n·s med in most '1'1• b.rMdl. con mu.film. cakes, uc:t pastry do~ide9 lbt obvlout wbeat breada. i a cook to do with • celiac cbild who flu • ma1apearptlon lfftdroaie to wbut, °" with an atler&lc person wbo reacta with deep deprealoo or sleepiness at the mere blte of a piece ol brudf The eookinl problem multiplies when the sutrerer bu poor tolerance to other lluteD Dl'OClucta U well -thole COD~ rye. oatmeal. abd barley. to;' 1 Start 1w eliminatlna the use ol all wheat i.o;: produets, bran products. pancakes. wattlel. moet lar'uds, eooldes. cracken. cakes, breaded fooda, pasta. and even some candy. Read laMla ol food carefully as wheat can turn up in the atransest places. In restaurants, don't order fried fooda that may have been dipped in a wbeat·baed batter. or any fried items that may have been submer1ed in oil used to cook wheat- coated foods. . You can beat the baking by finding rec· ipes that make good use of rice flour. potato flour. cornstarch, and millet flour. YOW' recuJar flour·based recipes may be converted into slut.en-free recipes sometimes by makine aub- stitutioas. U )'Our own recipe calls for less tbu 2 cups ~ recular flour in a bak1nJ recipe, add 1 es1 more to the batter and try the followtna aubatitailma for each cup of resular flour ln the recipe: 1 cup com flour ~ cup coarse cornmeal 1 scant cup fine cornmeal % cup potato flour ~ cup rice flour 1 cup soybean flour plus v, cup potato flour Since the gluten factor contributes greatly to the texture of baked goods, you may find that a combination of several substitute flours will give you a better producL Here are some re- cipes that work quite well. RAISIN RICE MUFFINS 1 ~ cups rice flour % cup bot water 2 tableapoou vegetable shortening IA cup 1u1ar 3 tablespoorus bating powder IA teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon vani Ila 1 teaspoon grated lemon rind 'h cup seedless raisins Preheat oven to 375 F . Combine half the t'ice flour with hot water; set aside. Beat together shortening and sugar until light and fluffy ; add flour mixture and beat well. Stir together the remaining r ice flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt; add to batter. Add vanilla and grated lemon rind. Stir in raisins. Spoon into a greased muffin tin and bake 20 minutes, or until lightly browned, Makes 8 muffins. ••• Perrier (From Page CU _that company failed too, and was sold to a young Enellshman named Slr St. John Harmsworth, wbo was the heir to the London Daily Mail. Harmsworth began bottling and marketing the water on a large scale and built a Victorian house and formal garden there, which is still open to the public today. He named the water after the doctor who in- troduced him to the spring and designed the dts- tinctive green bottle after the Jndian clubs he used in bis exercises. The company becarne relatively inactive during World War II and now, owned by a group headed by Gustave Leyen, it employs 1,500 peo- ple and has a modern bottling plant. The magic of the natural carbonation is perhaps the most fascinating thing about the water, which has been dubbed "the champagne of bottled waters," ••DELICATE GASES trapped in the volcanic eruptions of the Cretaceous Era are re· leased by nature," the bottler explains. "They travel up toward the surface through the cracks and fissures of porous limestone and the cracked marls above it. •• Aa they rlae, they meet and mingle with icy. crystalline mineral waters of exceptional purity and clarity. "There, underground and out of sieht of Man, the natural phenomenon of Perrler's carbonation takes place. "And from there. the now sparkling waters continue their ascent to break the surface at a sine le sprtne: "Source Perrier." Introduce your taste buds to Schlrmer's eleganf Bavarian Braunschwelger with Pistachio nuts, but be generous. This brawny Braunschweiger ls created the 5fow, old-lime way from delicately smoked liver, combined with the tush goodness of Pistachio nuts, then stuffed in a colorful casing to preserve all that soodness. Ideal for appetizers, snacks and dips. Try It today! Special Diets By June Roth ' WHEAT-FREE SPONGE CAKE e eas. separated t wboleeu 1 ~ cupa sugar 2 tabkiapoona lemon juice Grated rind of 1 lemon 1 cup sifted potato flour ~ teaspoon salt 'h tea.spoon nutmeg Preheat oven to 3SO F. Beat egg xolks and whole •II together until lemon-oolored. Beat in s ugar and add lemon juice and rind, Sift together potato flour and salt; add to egg yolk baller. Add nutmeg. Beat egg whites in a separate bowl, until stiff peaks form. Fold egg whites into yolk batter. Grease bottom of 10- inch sprlngform pan and pour batter into pan. Bake 3S minutes, or until cake is firm in center and UehtlY browned. Cool upside down on a cake rack before removing side of springform pan. Dust with confectioners• sup.r, ii desired. Kakea 10 aervtno. Grape Souffle Salad. 3 pac1'a1es (3 ounces each> lemon flavor 1elalin 2 cups boiling water 2~ cups cold water 1 cup dairy sour cream l~ cups California· grapes. halved ~nd seeded 1 orange, peeled and sectioned 1 apple, cored and diced Dissolve 1elatln lo boilinl water. Add cold water ; cbill until partially set. Pour l'h cups gelatin into 3 quart mold. Chill. Add sour cream to remaininc gelatin: whip with elec- tric mixer untll fiuffy. Chill until aligbtly thickened; fold in fruit and nuta ·i pour into mold. Chil until Orm. Makes 8 servings. HIGH PROTEIN LOW CALORIE -- P1UClS lfflCTIVl WlD., APR. 12 THIU TUIS., APR. 11, 1971. UTO OI A&lmltCMm ....... All OI ~~Al VSI. WE AT MARKET BASKO ARE SO SURE OF OUR LOW PRICES, QUALITY & VALUE THAT ••• WE'RE MAKING THIS TRIPLE GUARANTEE! ---· I I I .. FOO CJ Meal ·stars Lima OrlOnallt;y la e:rpress- 1n1 ltaelt more than ever today. from money mana1ement to meal pl•nntna. IA fact, Just manac:Lnc the bouaehold bad1et brln1s out the creative bent in both the homemaker and the handyman.· Do-il- yourself remodellini or repairs cut the costs of home ownership, and main dishes combining economical eata with protein·ricb vegetables keep the food costa within reason. Frozen Ford.hoot lima beans provide the cost- conscious homemaker wilb nutritious and economical solutions to hearty meals for the family. Rich in high quality vegetable pro- tein and fiber, they are a good source of Vitamins A and C. calcium and potassium . When they're combined im - aginatively with ground beef and chopped ·chicken livers, two meats high on the list or today's bargains, frozen Fordhook llma beans make a robust supper dish. Fast-lo·fix Llmas Italian style goes together in minutes, pro· viding you and the fami- ly with a hearty meal after a busy day around the house. UMAS IT ALI.AN STYLE 2 package (10 ounces each) frozen Fordhook lima beans ~ cup chopped onion ~ pound ground lean beef ~ pound chicken livers, chopped l clove garlic, minced 1 t.ableapoon oil 1 (8 ounce) can tomato sauce l (6 ounce) can tomato paste 1 teaspoon Italian herb seasoning Grated Parmesan cheese Cook lima beans as package directs. Meanwhile, brown onion, beef, chicken livers and garlic in oil. Add tomato sauce, tomato paste, salt, sug· ar and herb seasoning, and simmer 5 minutes. Drain limas and com- bine with sauce. Simmer to1etber a minute. Serve • with crated Parmesan cheese. 'Makes 4 to S servings (tot.al 5% cups -sauce makes 2~ cups). Teenagers, assistin& the do-it-yourself pro· jects, can take time out to create these Saucy Lima Cups for lunch. A snap to make, cooked frozen Fordbook lima beans are sauced with canned pizza sauce and mounded on slices or bolonga which have been broiled until the edges curl up. They'll want lots of these. With some celery and carrot sticks already prepared in the refrigerator and tall glasses ol milk, they will have a .. good-for- you" meal lD no time at all. SAUCYUBACUPS 1 package (10 ounces) frozen Ford.hook lima beans 1 (6 ounce) can pizza sauce 6 thick slices bologna (8-ounce) package ~ cup shredded Cheddar cheese Cook lllll• beans ac- cord l n C to packaee dlttctiou. Drain well. Combine llmaa a net piua sauce. Arru1• bologna allcet on fiat bakinc pan, and place under bnJller about 5 ln· ~b•• ttoin hea~ until llolopa curia Into a cop shape <about ~ ml.Dea). Remo.Cl from tiroUU, a fUl O&cli cup wltb about "9 cup llJnas and Ht.tee. SptiDkle witb theeae. Place low or broiler until tbOro'10l7 heated and cb•••• melts. Slrie at oace. Makes e ack oenlDP. ar a ~ p>tUao.s. VartaUoo: J teacl of bol_c._1aa, ••• fried t.anlDu. • Add ~ ~ Jlmaa and •••::,. r.fltl»l~ • w.cti ieedlly, Apt! I 12, 1m DAILY PILOT C11 I Limas /ta/lsn Style, left, and Saucy Lima Cups. •T OMPSON • 90% PROTEIN POWDER Instant, no prnerva!lvea. no sugar, no cholesterol leg.S.'5 "•' sA&.13.95 '~ • VAUEY COVE• VALENCIA ORGANIC ORANGES 29c: .. rou A1WAYS SAVI'! WITH STATER BROS. LOW•LOW PRICES ~ CHECK St ATER BAOS. W• ....... WEEKl V CERTlflEO I-SI•"'•' BEEF Sl>£CIAlS FOR •• •• BIG SAVINGS• s ..... r SU1a1Hl._.,l&CIC " muAll'rll • .uun -..rs A19CR1W9- t~YNC-lO# Mbt IS ~90MAU.'f GUAllUJi'tnD .. .... CHUCK ROAST BLADE.CUT KltUU SM OK ID HAM BUTT PORTION OR WHOLE HAM S1 .09 LB. • SHANK PORTION ~}e0Ne-1N 79c 99c J LB. LB. 2 9 CiiiPPiD STBiiF MEATS WIENERS ASSORTED 3-0Z. PKG. 12-0Z. PKO. EA. LB. 39~ ··~ "" ,~~c~ .. = ... ~ I i .. -·--------~l icMTlis11H ... lL s1 3' I I •ACOll EllDS ........ UI. 59 -d. lllf:•C>tUal•'OT .--------((f ta Alill •OAST LI • 1" ~~ ~~ " • Rt•· .. llOlltCl· .. llOtlt• ST u •1 2 •;:.ao.a.oasT l• •1 1• ciiUciCusnAK '" 99c "' .. '!~ """'fllO'°' $ 49 llU A --TURBOT Fllln .... 1 OOl.#U • -''°""''o • i •• "" • l AAIH -$ I 59 eu, • l•~r.l • Hn VIAL SnAK l• •la •OAST l8 ••• SUAK ITATUllNIOS ••VOIHlU •IUClD 98"' PNM4'100Zl:N•CUAll.,_ U. $1 '' LUNCHEON MEATS U-Ol ~ llO•llONlLHI •1s• tlUF•CHUCIC•-llESS $1•• lfH•Ct<VC~·-llC\\ $17• ro.a .. lA TIOUT l~l.l'l<D snw lllAT ltl. SllOULmll .... ST LI UOULDIR ............ lt -l-rAMtS•SM0~£0.•l'OllSH, $15' ,llH'1f()IU(N•ICtl.A-C UI s1 •• BH SA SAG£ -• llOUNO. -HUS • 17• llflf. MllAU. [NO • 1 •• M.ll'. ~OIJNO. BONfllS& • 1 •• F u "°'·°"· ........... coo Fii.UT . n• •oasT ..... LI ••• •oasT . .\A. Tiit snAK ........... L• l'10W80AT $14' .LA. $229 IWlF'T.l•lOOHT&OAIUl t•n llU.F s 1 ff lllf•IMAllfHO • 1 ff suao ucoN , ....... cs. ...... u. nun 10An Ka, ••• u. .,.. cu•• snAK ..... L.. ••• snAK ....... L .. i I I I • ' oGJWll~.Apdlll.11171 Curry Bice .Rice ls tbe staple food pepper for about half of the lcup1llcedcelery world's population. How 2 medium •J>P1et, does It appeal to so peeled, cored and all~ many, of ditterinf back-1-4 cup •Uc ed when Fr e 0 ch til 1mooth. Cook over 1round1, in varying almonds peasants stormed the medium-low heat until climates? Probably '3cupseookedrice palace demandlne thickened. aUrring con-because lt adapta to so Mell butter, aUr Sa bread, Marie Antoinette alantly. Bemove from many flavors and lex-curry powder and pep. sneered, ''Let them eat-beat. Cream butter and lures. Calcutta Rice is a per. Add celery, apples, eue." LltUe did abe suf ar until light and perfect example. and almonds; aaute un· know! fluffy. Beat in lemon , CALCV'ITA RICE til tender crisp. Stir in Oar Marie Antoinette juice and extr~ci . 2 tablespoons butter r l c e and heat. ~orte, named in her Gradually beat in cooled or margarine · thoroughly. Mates 6 clubious bonor, not ooly nour mixture. U filling 1 to 2 teaspoons servings. Good with le&· lea you eat cake, but ls too thin to spread. curry powder of lamb, Bombay Duck. .cake made Crom bread. chill until thickened. 1 teaspoon seasoned or Tandoori Chicken. ~4."?lt~;~iE ·-=c~-o_m_e _r_o_a-st--=th-e~b-e-ef~tli_a_t_m_e.;.__e_ts~~.;.;..;,;._._ the secret. Best of all, it calls for dry bre ad h d d ~ f th c d I ~;~~~:~;iF:.: t e · stan ar s-, --'c e or on B eu. made from crumbs -\\. ~ , bread, cake anfl nut -~ . , to name a few. Marie ....:c ~ Antoinette Torte uses ~--bread and nut crumbs. ~ y" Make your crumbs in ., .J the blender. Or, place several slices of dry, bread in a plastic bag and crush it to crumbs with a rolling pin. Both enriched bread crumbs and ground nuts may be purchased ready-made. Tortes are really just as easy to make a s cakes. Paper line the pans. After baking, al· low the torte layers to cool in the pan for about JS minutes. To cut layers in half evenly, measure the height, divide with wooden picks and use them as a cuttin_g guide. IC need be, Marie An· toinette Torte freezes beautifully -either a s· s embl e d or Un· assembled. MARIE ANTOINETTE TORTE 2 cups enriched fine dry bread crumbs 1 c up g round walnuts 1 tablespoon baking powder 6 eggs, separated 6 tablespoons water 2 teaspoons vanilla extract 1 1~ cups sugar French Butter Cream <see belpw) Stir together bread crumbs, nuts and bakin& powder. Beat egg yolks, water and vanllla until frothy. Add l cup sugar and beat Wltil thick and lemon-colored. Blend in bread crumb mixture; mix thoroughly. Beat e gg whites until foamy ; gradually add lf.t c up s ugar, beating until stiff. Fold egg whites in· to batter. Pour into two greased and wax-paper lined 8 x l lf.i-inch deep round pans. Bake in pre- heated 350., oven 30 to 35 minutes, or until cake s prings back when light· Jy pressed. Cook cake 15 minutes in pans; re· move. Cool completely, then split each layer in half. Assemble torte on serving plate, spreading i," French Butter Cream between each layer and on top. Store in refrieerator. FRENCH BUTTER 1· CREAM • l cup milk •/• cup enrich ed fl our 1 cup bO\ter, soft- ened 1 cup sugar 1 tablespoon lemon juice 1 teaspoon lemon ex· tract In s111-all saucepan, blend milk and fiour un- Special totte: Entertainment H1ppenlnp ... - . FHm• Thuter r We got the word. The telephone rang. Pciris, France calling. The Cordon Bleu, the most famous French cooking school for chefs. liked our bee£. A shout of glee went up Jn our office. We knew Mme. Brassart and her staff had tested it extensively - taking three days to cook up 100 lbs. of Lucky Bonded Beef. Jn fact, her staff was so enthusiastic about the quality. that she agreed to develop a dozen different recipes, JUSt for us. The Cordon Bleu has always been too exclusive to publish any of their But, start with recipes, even though they've been in operation since our Bonded Beef. before the tum of the century. Only chefs willing to We're making it easy for travel to France, chefs dedicated to learning Cordon you. In our meat case this Bleu techniques, have been privileged enough to learn week, our standing rib roast has a their secrets. But now anyone, everyone -you, dear special sticker. It says that this ls the cut you use for customer -can get a new Cordon Bleu recipe card the Cordon Bleu recipe of the week. The recipe this each week without charge, without any other p urchase, week is called Cote de Boeuf Rotl (COAT DE BUFF If you wish . ROWTEA is as d o5e as we can come to the sound of This week, 1f s Roast Beef and Spinach. the French w ords). Jn English, Its simply called Roast Our second recipe (to serve four) calls for a shooping list .Beef. While you're there, notice our G uara ntee sign that includes a standing rib roast. a yellow onion, p osted proudly for all to see. It tells you that If our meat a good sized carrot, 2 lbs. of fresh spinach leaves, 11z lb. d oesn't live up to yo ur satisfaction, we'll give you a full of butter (if you want the proper flavor, there's no refund. But we. don't think you'll be disappointed. After s ubstitute for real butter). and 1/2 cup of cooking oil. all, ours is the beef that meets the high standards of the T here are no spices other than salt a nd pepper in this Cordon Bleu. And below Is a listing of some of our Jow recipe. The vegetables and butter provide all the flavor prices. And, dear chefs, hig h quality and lower prices enhancement you could ask for, to the~ro o f the overall are what we're all about. Come In and see for meal, the roast beef. yourself, won't you? ------------------------------------------Fresh Meats Fresh Meats Canned & Packaged Delicatessen STANDING POP.I< SHOULDEP-P.OAST ,,..,.. l't(lllCm'I,( •••• • ••••••••• ll. • 79 Come in now for your free copy of our exclusive Cordon Bleu recipe of the week. (Build a IDllMtof JZ. FJnd th"" only at ow -•t~.) -. .. ~if'rU io -"'· ~llMll .__, ~141 ~ ~ CJM:lilu • • Liquor & Wine .PLADYLEE 6~~.~-~-~2~U!~ 4f09 P OP.ANGE Dl'.IHKMIX CUDAHY WHOLE HAM !BOB'S · DRESSING 79 1()9015LAND ........ 160Z.Dn.. e I~~~~~~11.99 LUCKY VODKA eol'IOOf ...... , ......... Cl II\. 3.99 CP.IBAP.I WIMES RIO ROAST . 148 lA.f\G( END. 00N0£0(1(£f •.• • ••• LO. STANDING fl.ID ROAST 118 ~MALL[NO 00>;0£0 ()([F ......... l O CROSS RID ROAST 158 OONnru oo ... oro onF CHUCtl. ••.•••••••••••• \0. BONELESS RUMP ROAST 168 OONOCODHF. 511\l.OIN CUI • • .. . .. .. lO ooimm TIP ROAST llOl«DllllF llOU~O. .. ... ,1(1, 1. 7 8 O~DE CUT CHUCK STEAK OCJl'OIDNll • • • •••• U\ ,88 TOP SIP.LOIN STEAK ~ 2.J8 TOP P.OUHD STEAK ~· 'tllWOOHOlD l(U UI 1 , 9 8 DOTTOM ROUND STEAK 1 86 OO-.!ll'IOONClfDorrr • 10 • OONRm TIP 5TEAK 0. .,DCDOllf POo''<O Ill 1. 98 LAP.GE END fl.ID STEAK 1 68 llCJOC)Q) llUF I IL • OONEUSS STEWING OEEF ~lat •.••• , .... LI. 1.58 CHICKEN DP.EAST QUAATEP.S r~-OI\ !lGQllAatru l'OU\'f-.••••• IA. • 7 8 •IUl)IA ,An IN1 LA PAI.MA AVIMUI CEHTEP. CUT HAM SUCB • " ~I HC"OOIO • ••• IA 2, 98 SLICED OACOH 1'•"4 il,A(IY<A'•lll Cl<\ lt()ffY H O l'l<G. 1, 58 Canned&Packaged b HAP.VEST DAY DELUXE DREAD 43 \\IH11E 01\ WHEAT ....... 24 OZ. LOAF e ! DELMONTE TOMATOES .STE'*'EO .160Z. CAN e 3 7 A APfl.ICOT NECTAR LA:tll•U • • • •~Ol CAM • 59 l HAP.VEST D~Y c.t:TS~~z •IL _28 A MESTEA TEA MIX MtAMl... • •••• 30.LIM 1, 99 L POTATO DUDS wmaioc"°' . . . muoa 1 . 39 L DP.EAM WHIP MIX 'lt3'N..:i .. • • • • • • • • • .. ••••• oz.~ • 99 l TP.WwrET JUICE N GAAllflllMt, ........... Ql.c;.t.lt .5 6 WIUU.. • • ..•• l10l IAA 1.29 l ~~N~~~~~)Ol ~ .65 ! ~-~~SALAD Ol~60L &!\. • 79 1 ~,!~~~~~~~ . .aor oil. , 99 I~! GMIH.~ICE~Ul 114<> 1 _69 b ~~-~-SA-~~~1)ot CAN .25 l' NIOLETS COP.H b GOIDOl WOll 11W11L. .... i 2 oz. CAN , 25 L ~Ji~~~-~.~-~~~OOl .61 .. l ~~~~~-~~~~IAA 1.27 1 ~~:!1~.1~ .,t70l ~ .J9 I ~:~~A~UI~~ ~OZ.CAN .55 L ~~~~-~~~~c-~~~OlWI 1.49 P ANTHONY HOOOlES 6 ~W!Ol rx W)( •• tOOt.fllQ.. ,55 L P.OY AL CROWN COLA 1 19 OllOICl~!\COV. ••• 6/1101 V.l<S • Dairy & Frozen Health & Beauty Aids A ~~~~.~~l~~oz.m .97 p TMC II SHAVE CREAM b NGIMllOAUME ....... ti OL CAN 1. 09 p THE 011.TLOOK .,.. b AloonllA•O.ll'MV .... &OZ.CAN 1.u7 L P.JGHT GUAP.D PUMP ~a>~~'.~~ ..... ,oz nt 1.47 ULTMMAX SHAMPOO ~·OllY. OU • • .••••• 1 Ol. Gii. 1 • 1 9 Household & Pet ~~~~~-oow-:o . :11111.11'\. 3.99 Uciio-·---u...o~ Produce LOOSE CAP.ROTS f 11\M (, mL~ .. ... to .• iO WHITE GRAPEFRUIT ~ 5 COACHCUA SFINESf • EA. e -. VALENCIA ~~~~~ .. lO .19 BLOOMING ~~~ ...... £ACH .49 'Q,:::::=:-.::..:-.,;o,~r ....,..,.~ .. , ... ,.,.,. ~ 1t1•~--kM""31111~ ,...., ______ ,._...... __ -&-."'81*--~Solft. I by Brad And non BOOMER MISS PEACH "I'll bet the owners never knew these things were collectables!" FUNKY WINKER BEAN EEOWWE.ER! EEEE"! AwwRRR l 5HRieEE~! WHAT ARE t.ro WAT011NG .~ WILD Kl~GOOM ~ ' by Tom Batluk lWJi~~~iiail~L.l.~;ll]i~;;k;;;:l;;~!!!!l!!I~~ CASEY MOON MULLINS . by Ferd and Tom Johnson -- "THE GOVE~NMENT SHOULD PRINT DoU,ARS WITH INFLATION IN MIND~· THINK OF 11-'E SAVIN<iS fN P.A __.;~-=-~~=:...> DENNIS THE MENACE IF T~E DOLLAR IS ~TH /031.ESS THAN L,AST '/'E~, IT SHOULD BE 103 SMAJ.LE~· OF coLJRSE', IN A FeW YEARS, IT'D LOOK LIKE: ~VEl<YDNE'S 7HROWIN6 CONFE'TTI . .,..._ __ TUMBLEWEEDS HUS•AHP HUNTIR'S HANP900K Been courting Him far }'8ar8 but still no nearer the altar, Future Bride? LeS\18 Him t.o arother; he's not for you. l/·12 . NANCY IT~ TIME TO PRACTICE YOUA MU&IC LESSON I by Mell DOOLEY'S WORLD '/-11. 0 ,__ ______ _ DR. SMOCK SOLARIUM MOTLEY'S CREW WHA1TA )'OU Ml:AN YOU ~INK OUR . ~7r J by Gus Arriola by Harold Le Doux by Tom K. Ryan w.dt....,, Aptll 12. 1978 DAil. Y PILOT a PEANUTS '{OU JUST FOJR If INTO THE BOWL, ADt' A UTTLE~TER ANO STIR rr UP! by Charles M. Scbulz ~OAA~SE~ A ume TROUBlf by Roger Brldfleld by George Lemont by Templeton and Forman TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS colnt 43 OB'1 t1roet 44 Revolve 46Bllnd111 1 CauMtO halt 5 N1rro-chlnn111 48 E.rtra e Former Gt1· 48 Meal cu1 man Slale 52 Grievous 1 4 Not fain trouble US 56EJ(ISI 15 ece court 57 Flnnlah t6Solpptent ~ma 17 Cereal 58 osy grass 5e GoddeH ol 18 Fleece· discord Slang 60 Throw out 19 Arnves 81 "Bua S1op·· 20 Toupee 1 82 ~ft~renx retettve 21 Squande,., 83 Leiter• 23 Bent over 64 Gu lor 25 Observed • lighting 28 Falsify 115 Guy llne 27 MQlf--M: lJSage novel DOWN UNITED F11lU1'e s,ndlc1te Tuelday'a Puzzle Solved: ... ,...,.....,,_ l\~ •' I H l "' • 0 " . •;;;; ~~ • 0 , , . "i j f ... ,.!!!..... I II •• 0 ,, a I T l A 4 Cll "la . ' Ir a . ' lo • . ' (I . . ' a o •I I l I I • a 'tS ... a A . , t • • l 'l at'llft l SI In l f . .... l 0 $ ~ 0 It ' . '"' , 0 •• II I 0 v s I o II . L I l a l I • l ... ( Is 1 . ,, f I I A a II • !l l 0 l • s I T • 1111 • '~.!. ! •Ir••• a rc ·• o I<,!!,! i It I H •I~ f o 0 II f A I l i IA A II 1 ll 4 • I O i :! rt 1111 A 19' f IA :!.:! :! :! 11 Canadl Ind 2 WOfda Au11rall1, 35 lnltriof once 36Fale 12 Hebrew 38 M"clleaa tn0nth 42 Pang 13 lneect col· 44 Salls on orry credit 21 Br11dth 48 &Malled 29 Posaeaalve word 321nltlale 1 Putt llNY 22 RuHlan 47 Flnhy neatly leaders: ' 48 Gembllng 3& Polter l'IOld- ll'lQ 311Hurtlng 37 Megnello me1•1 38Anlmal ahellera 390fug 2 Ch&raclerlatlc Var. gam. 3 EJtpendtt\lfH 24 Think 49 .iew.let'I 4 Foolllk• pert 27 Wand unit 5 ExprHHd 28 Wining: liO Helttl IUl'PflH ArCl\llo glnUI ti !>owed the 30 Duo plus 51 Touchy oueatlon one 52 Canad• 1L11n 3t lecofllM blfotl.• o. 8 Forward llXed 53 Floor CCMW-amount 40 Stele 41 Cupola 42 Mulcan 8 LIVll by a2 8naclt lflOs , one1111 33Whlf• &O•atu·-10 Love, In lkllaat 11 65 SM; ltaha 34£1 Dofedot: 19 locrit RR• • I• • '· .. .. ... IP "' ... J • ... -.L S · ~ . .., IM .... ,,. '"'' ,... \ lf'A• ... I ... . CJe a.a. Y PILOT ~ ..... 12. ten ClulJ Calendar CUPPED WINGS: Offt.cen will be elected at T:38 p.m. 'nlu.nda.Y. April Jl, ill t.be lrviDo home~ KrL Bobbl lluritL •lllA UAa.90& CLUB: Marylou Gaudet will five the pcosra.m at 10:30 a .m. Tburaday, Aprl 13. io t.be Croasroads Reataurant oo Broot.bunt m Fountain Valley. MISSION VIE.JO WOMEN'S CLUB: Tbe public is invited to the free fashion show at 7 · 30 .. p.m. Thursday Arpil 13, in the Deane Swim and llaequet Club. NEWPO&'t BEACH TRUltSDAY MO&NJNG CLUB: Former MGM designer Helen Rose will speak at the meetlnc at 11: 30 a.m. Thursday April 13, in the Bal.boa Bay Club. NEWPORT BARBOR PANHELLENIC: Ann Randall from IJppe. Weren Fine Crystal will speak at 10:30 a.m. Wednesday April 19, in Glendale Federal Savings, Newport Center. ORANGE COUNTY HISTORICAL SOCIETY: Ken Crocker will show slides of the Santa Ana mountains at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, April 13, m Bowers Museum, Santa Ana. USC Pl BETA PIU MOTHER'S CLUB: A benefit fashion show and luncheon will be held Friday, April 14, in the Pi Beta Phi house, USC. NEWPORT HARBOR EMBLEM CLUB: A co-ed fashion show and luncheon will be held at noon Saturday, April 15, in the Elks Lodge. Reservations and information: Mrs. D.E . Wade, 6T.J.6796 or Chris Corbari, 894·9594. LAGUNA NIGUEL WOMEN'S CLUB: A benefit fashion show and champagne brunch will be held at 9:15 a.m. Saturday Apnl 15, in Bullock's Department Store, South Coast Plaza. Information: 831·9899. NEWPORT llABBOR PANJIELLENIC: A mother-daughter College Sorority information party will be ehld at 2 p.m. Saturday, April 15, in the Big Canyon home of Mrs. Will Higgin. In formation : Mrs. Raydean Mahler, 833-3487. MESA VERDE UNITED METHODIST CfflJBCH: The public is invited to the 15th birthday luncheon at noon Satttrday April 15, in the Costa Mesa church. Ticket reservations F'aye Taylor, 6'.5-1898. soum COAST REPERTORY FRIENDS: The Costa Mesa Guild;iit,Ul sponsor a Las Vegas Night at 8 p.m. Saturcflry, April 15, in the Jewel Court. South Coast Plaza. Reservations Mrs. Joo McKJbben. 540.8583 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF RETIRED PERSONS: The Huntington Beach chapter 857 will meet Wednesday, April 19, in Murdy Park Center. The program will be on crime preven· lion. AMERICAN HANDWRITING ANALYSIS FOUNDATION: Handwriting expert Robert Stettler of the Orange County Sheriff's Depart· ment will speak al 9:30 a.m. Saturday, April 15, in the Slate Mutual Savings building, Newport Beach. Information: 544·9603. HUNTINGTON BEACH MORNING CLUB: A fashion show will be held at 10 :30 a.m. Mon- day. April 17, in theiiuntington Inn. NATIONAL ~lATION OF RETIRED F.EDERAL EMPLOYEES: Chapter 816 will meet at 1:30 p.m . Tuesday, April 18, in the Laguna Federal building, San Clemente. , EXECUTIVE WOMEN INTERNATIONAL: The Orange County chapter will hold a Night at the Races at 6 p.m . Tuesday, April 18, at Los Alamitos Race Track. Reservation information: Marti Wllliams, 778-6600, extension 1239. RANCHO VIEJO WOMAN'S CLUB: A meeting will be held at 10 a.m. Tuesday, April 18. in Peoples Federal Savings, Saddleback Valley Plaza, El Toro. SOUTH COAST LITERACY COUNCIL: ,..:Jwo new tutor training programs will be held at 7 p .m. Tuesday, April 18, in the San Juan Elementary School, and at 10 a.m. Thursday. April 20, in the Dana Niguel Library, Laguna Niguel. Information: Mrs. Bowes, Capistrano Beach. SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO WOMAN'S CLUB: Harpist Wanda Crocket Jones will enter· tain at the meeting at 12:30 p.m. Tuesday, April 18, in the clubhouse. OFFICERS' WIVES LEAGUE: New of· ficers will be installed at the ltmcheon·meeting at 11:30 a.m. Wednesday, Aprll 19, in the Irvine Coast Country Club. ARTHRITIS FOUNDATION: The Orange County branch will hold its annual fund-raismg luncheon.fashion show at 11 a.m. Wednesday, April 19, in the Newporter Inn. ERA DEBATE: The Episcopal Church Women will sponsor an ERA debate at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, April 19, in St. Michael and All Angels Church. Debating will be Susanne Tep. per aod Mrs. John G. Schmitz. InfonnaUon: Dorothy Lazier, 644-2933 KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA: The Saddleback· Capistrano Valley alumnae club will meet at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday. April 19, in the Mission Viejo home of Mrs. Robert C. Nlbecker, who will speak on Stained and Etched Glass Window Design. Information: Mrs. Garry Campbell, 581-0946 or Mrs. Nibecker, 83(M916. NEWPORT BEACH CHRISTIAN WOMEN'S CLVB: Chris Stevens will present watercolor and oil artistry at tbe luncheon meetiaa at 11:45 a.m. Weclne8day April 19, in the Airporter Inn Hotel. Information: Mrs. Vic Sbernltt, 873.eNO or .Mn. Walter Tyler, CD-8m. llBSA VE&DB aEPVBUCAN WOllEN FEDERATED: A silver annlYWhl')' luncheon and cud_partf will be held at 10:80 a.m. Tues· day, Aprtl 'JI. lD tbe Costa Mea hOme of Mn. James Andrele. Reservations:~ A Special Sale Mrs. John Miller. seated, and Mrs. William Lee Wood, ad· mire the antique rosewood melodian which bas been donated to · the Women's Fellowship Rummage Sale of St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church. It will beheld rrom9:30a.m. toSp.m. Thurs· day, April 13, and from 9:30 a .m. to 2 p.m. Friday, April 14, in Dierenfield Hall at the church in Newport Beach. Proceeds will go to mission projects. There will be a silent auction as well as a rum· mage sale. The public is invited. Disco Dinner Bob and Barbara Davenport Verde Country Club. Proceeds practice for the 'Rags to go lo support youth concerts. Riches' Disco Dinner Dance music enrichment programs sponsored by the Mesa Verde and the music mobile. Cost is Committee of the Orange $30 per couple. For informa· County Philharmonic Society .lion. call Mrs. Schweitzer. It will be held at 7 p.m. Satur· 557-7630, or Mrs. Fuerbringer. day. April 15. at the Mesa 751-8447. ~l . = 41t"'9T . COAITMW'f. ~ ""°' '4t'J70 "Call•for life imuruce." ~.-... -.. -.•• -Liia. pd neipbor, A sc.r. Finn 1sctwe. -1 .. IAI-~ •••¥•••(.. ....°""' ................ fRANGI~~ORR fire statiOnerY .. Bon Voyage From left, Dorothy Belknap, Cindy Cirar and Carmela Sac· chitello look over door·pnze literature for the 'Voyage Boutique' fashion show and luncheon to be heldJ by the women's council of the St. Bonaventure Catholic Churcn. Huntington Beach. The event will take place at the Registry Hotel, Irvine, with social hour at 11 a.m. and lunch at noon. For information call 846-0841 or 846·4753. Fashion Ball From left. Marion M . Shea .. Jackie Kilbourne, JoAnne Mix and Patricia Giddings plan the In· ternational Fashion Design er Ball sponsored by the ac· qu1sit1on council of the Newport Harbor Art Museum. The event will be held with cocktails at i p.m. and dinner at 8 p.m., m the Newport Beach Marriott Hotel. Desig n e r fashions will be Tea Time Betty Keefe, left, and Dori 1 de Krwf will be among those attending the champagne tea honoring patronesses of the Adoptton Guild of Southern Orange County. The tea will be held Monday, April 17, at the home of Mrs, Jay Reed, Linda Isle. The Adoption Guild, through patroness support at the tea and from proceeds from its tennis tournament in May. is able to contribute to the Holy Family Services of Orange County. The service provides he lp for children and their natural or adopllvl.' parents shown and there will-------------------be dancing in the Grand Ballroom. For ticket information, call the museum at 759· 1122. Funds raised by the ball will be matched by an NEA grant to purchase works of art for the museum's permanent collection. l!i!~~! !~Yor • 30 day ad in the DAILY PILOT SBVICI DlllCTORY DO IT NOW! MJ..U71 La-Z-Boy® r ·SOFEI IE® EXPECTING SUMMER GUESTS? MISSION V11JO .... _.,..,.. ianJ........,.•"Y· _ .... _ .. ...._ _,.. __ 49Mt02 __ ........... , ... GRAND OPENING Saturday, April 15 Refreshments 5er"8d Register Now For COOKING CLASSES aasaes St.t April 18 Free Oemooslnllllon Every S&t. Afternoon In Our Kitchen FASSERO'S ?tit E. Collll !iwF. c:o.-....... ttN::MS -tTo"'°"n... C..S.Or FINI SELECTION of i t.A-z-eove sOFEnES I 111 uu•d in I,. I HI.I UI I .I\ I .IC' ... . I ANN LANDERS I HOROSCOPE Mom Finds a Letter DEA LANDDI: put- Unt aa)' IOO'I 1mmdn lo his bureau dra .... um atternoao. I ran auou a letter ... had .nu. to yoa. ln tM lttlel' be COD· fesaea be la gay and wuta to come out ol th.A - clofft. I felt u if my Ii· T "---------------" aides bad drepped out. I left the l.uet-Ju.at wbere I found It but )'m 110 terrified that be will mail it I can't thlnk \traigbL I've been a fa!t.bful reader ~ 10UI' column since J'OQ ftnt ltart.d to write lt ID the JDld·'50I. While I don't alwaya agree with YoW' advice, I believe )'OU t.ry to be fair and decent -and above all, helpful. Please, Ann, do not print my aon'a Jetter if be de- cides to mail it He seem.a to think it would make blm feel better lo c.w:J.feaa publicly and he asks that you print bis name. I am beggin1 you not to do this. It might make b1m feel better but it would destroy the rest of the family . -STILL REELING AND TRYING TO HANG ON D~A& PKIEND: Rue • fear. I wocald aenr aDow my eohun• to be ..SM an lateru· doaal Mil~ for ia11 wt.o wu& to 10 pabllc. I MMe a peat deal of Hdety 1D you le&ter aad a real Deed for emo- &loaal 1app0rt. I bope yoa wW set profesakmal coanteUai to belp yoa dHI with the altaatJoa wben yoar aoa makes dlt unoanttmeat. For &boee la my read· IDI aadlnce wbo will aalt, "Wily abotllcl 8BE set coameu:t., wlilea BE b tJae-. • llu die problem!" I say - becaue SHE la the one wbo luaftering. DEAR ANN · A friend of mine makes a prac- tice ·of lntroduclng her domestic help to every guest she entertains in her borne. 1 happen to A Fruity Tropicale Cook for two <or fewer)? You're part of the tread to smaller households in thia coun- try . Many married couples are remaining childless today; even more have grown children who have left home. And, acrording to the U.S. Census Bureau, the number or people living alone bas now topped tbe 15 mllllon mark. Preparine food for Eounelf or for one other non need.n 't be an dlea round ol heat· and·Hrve dinners or ~ore-bou1ht snacks. Nor doe• it have t.o qaean WHtlng food tiougbt ln quanUUes that .ooe or two people ean 't flnl.ab. FNlb fruJta and ,regetablea offer a natural. autrtuoua and ci>nvenlent way for the tmall family or ain&le person to eat well. F&ESBraun S U E R 8 E T T&OPICALE 1 medium size, ripe banana, peeled 'la large fresh pineapple, Pffled, cored and cut in pieces V.. cup fresh orange Juice 2 teaspoons grated : orange rind v. cup sugar f1uffy. In small bowl. beat egg white with salt until stiff; fold into fruit mixture. Pour Into refrigerator tray. loaf pan. or 4-cup mold. Freeze until firm, 3 to 4 hours. Makes: About 3~ cups sherbet. FR ESH TOMATO· SPINACH SURPRISE 2 lari;te firm tomatoes 2 cups chorped fresh spinach ( \.2 o 10-ounce ba1> 2 tablespoooa finely chopped onion 2 tablespoons packaged, dry bread crumbe ~ teaspoon salt ~ teapoon pepper 2eep Cut a tb1D ance from stem end of tomatoes . Scoop out pulp leaving out.er shell. Combine aplnaob. .oniom, bTead crumbs and seuooings, mix well. Place 2 table-spoons spinach mixture In bottom of each shell. Break 1 ea into each shell. ~ remaining aplnacb mixture over ens. Place tomatoes in small shallow baking diab; add water to depth of 'h·lncb. Bake In 350 F. oven 40 minutes. Serve with Parmesan Cheese Sauce.• Makes 2 serv· in~s. PARMESAN CHEESE SAUCE 2 tablespoons butt.er know Bertie, ber housekeeper, because I've been goloe there for H years. I do not mlod if Bertie speaks to me. Last. week I brouibt. my motber-Ln·law to t.bla friend'• home Cshe la a rather new mot.her-in· law -my -aecond mar- riage) and thls friend in- troduced Bertie u if she was a social equal. My mother-in-law was civU and said. "How do you do,.. but I could •~ sbe was annoyed. I believe t.b1a practice la ill PoOr lute. What ls your opinion? - ALBANY.NY. DEAR NEW YOU: The boetesa commJued no social error. Sbe merely acknowledged Bertie's preeeoce, wldtla demoaacrated 1ood maaaera -phu a degree of aelf·aaauraace wblcb you obviously lack. I le&J"Ded tbla leaon weU over 2ll yean ago ( Horoscope THU&SDA. Y. APIUL ll By SYDNEY OMAIUl ) 1UUE8 (March 2.1-April 19): Real estate or property appraisals command attention. Obtain realutic picture. Steer clear of schemes, sub- stitutes; adhere to factual infonnatioo and in- sist on quality. TAVllUS (April 20-May 20): Your inquiries, messages 1et results. One ln position of authori- ty sides with you. Capricorn, Cancer peraon.s figure prominently. GEMINI (May 21-June 2'1): Money, possessions, the fin.lsb of a project -tbele are spotlighted. You'll be rid of burden. You'll perceive potential and be able to do 90metblq about lL Aries, l.Jbra fi1ure In ~o. CANCE& <June 21-July 22): Strive for new starts, independence; find outlet for creative talenta. Lunar cycle indicates you'll be at ri•bt place at. ri1bt time. Leo, Aquaria fitUre promlDently. You 1et to btartof matten. LEO (July 23-Aq. 22): Yoa ba.e mOf'e lmowlqe than la apparent on IW'faff. Tb.ii 1lvea yoo a real advanta1e. One )'OU admire provides data. vmoo <Aq. 23-Sept. 22>: Bmpbula on frleodahlp. wiab fulfillment, 90Clal aetlYltJ. Plan ahead for travel. vacaUoa, writ.tne. ad· vertlaine or publl.shing programs. LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Blocltbust.er news ls due. Be prepared for more responalbiUty, promotion. Superior gives you detlnlte vote of confidence. SCOllPIO (Ocl 23·Nov. 21): Good lunar aspect ool.Dcldes now with travel, higher educ•· lion, phllosopbical concept.a. Gemini, Virgo and Sagittarius persons figure In your personal scenario. · v. cup light corn syrup or margarine 2 tablespoons flour 1 cup milk SAGl'ITABIUS (Nov. 22·Dec. 21): Cut through red tape. Member of opposite sex tallta money. Cheek insurance policy. Oet aipaturea on dotted U.ne. One you are drawn to retW'D.I the compliment. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19): IJe low, play waiting game, be t..boroulh concernln1 legal rlabta and permissions. Steer away from self-deception. If aJ.ngle, there ls talk of mar· riage. U married. you rediscover mate in moat unusual way. . , .. . , ., I :s l egg white i,-. teaspoon salt Combine first 4 ingre- dJenta ln blender con· talner; process untll mixture is smooth. Turn into large bowl; stir in sugar and corn syrup. Pour into shallow pan; freeae until almost firm. Transfer mixture to chllled bowl; beat with electric mixer or rotary beater untU light and 3 tablespoom grated Parmesan cheese In small saucepan, melt butter or margarine over medium heat. Remove from heat; blend in Dour. Add milk gradually, stirring constantly. Return to beat; add cheese, stlr- ring until sauce thickens and comes to boiling. Makes: 1 cup sauce. AQ\JA.BIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Remember family as well as friends. See that people u- sume responslbWtlesi and pay their debts. YOG get credit due, possibly ln form of promotion. PlSCES <Feb. 19-March 20): Ftnl.ab rather than begin -create, Imprint style, enlarae scope of ac:tivtUes. Aries, Libra rtcure prom· lnently. . IF IT'SA~UESTION OF PROBLEM SKIN. Let's Clear it Upl· 6~ SKIN CARE CENTERS ... Clearing The Way I. ( • Cl4m 111onca TO ca•oeTOttS SU "atttem CIOUllT Of' nta ITATI Of'CAUPOltNIA flOa nta ~°" OttMO• .... ......, Esl•I• of ElllN FANCHON DANI EU. C.C...S. HOTIC• IS H•11aeY OIVUt lo .... croclllorl of llW...,... -..~­ tt.et •II .,._ MvlnQ cl.imt ete'"ll , ... Miki dllC-4 .,. '""4•.., '°Ille ttwm, "'"" .,. ~_., _ _..,, In ""' oft1co " e. u.r\ "' 111e .i.ow .... Ullecl '-"• _, lo -t !Mm, wtlll IM M<HIMY -""'1, lo ti .. -oer1l9ned el tlle I•• office ot RONALD !>TEEl.MNC, Ill AWftkle Gren•de, Sen cr-nt•, C.llfontl• mn. wMdl 11 en. OMce of llMl....s of Ille~ lf'l•ll INlltws,.n.1 ... lno to the est .. • of Mid O.C..-t. wllhlll I-"10ft01l eltor ti. flBl pullltutlon ti dlls ftCKiee. OatMAltllS. 1'11 JOHN a. OMCteLS .--. ......... ... ----~ aow.u.o snaLMAM tDA ..... ~ ~CA"'11 ,,. ........ ---.......... er.._ C-. OMly ftl!Ot, ... 11, ... ~,..,a."" • DAILY Pll.OT €JJ PVBUC NOTICE ...,,,. Publl1-Or ... Coe\I Delly Piiot Mer :n, it. Acw. S, 11. lfll tll1·71 PUBLIC NOTICE t I / ' ·-·... .. ' ~ FRESH PORK PRICES REDUCED! Whole-or Half Pork Loiri'·~;~F·'~$1 35 Boneless Pork Leg Roast Far~~5~ohn -:.s1 69 Center Cut POrk Chopsf~;;;:·L~~~"~$1 78 Sl·r101·n Pork Chops or Blade Chops ~ s121 Farmer John Pork Loin lb. lb. . P•••JOllN PORK STEAKS or Roast Butt Shoulder Blade. lb. 1 II 'AR••RdOllll PICNIC ROAST Fresh Whole Arm Pork Roast P•••• efo1111 PORK SPARERIBS Frozen and Defrosted lb. 3 Pork Sausage F~~~~r 1a;::s~ Buttertish Fiiiet O:~~;:.~d 111. •11• Thin Sllced Meats sarewav ~· 39c . Fresh Beel Brisket ~o~~:ec~~ 1b. * 149 Sllced Bologna 0Ja~:.!:a~1 ~: •1 11 Rib Eye Steak uso~0~~~~~!seet lb. •219 Sliced Bacon~a~k~l~~nm': ~:: • 1 •• Arm Pot Roast ui~~ 8~~~~e 1b. •1°• MINUTE MAID ora~~,~~~ice 64-oLggc ff ClrtDa ·····························································································~··············································································· ·' ~ocoFF i --! .,-:,0°0FF&--1 . Taw.a t111 Purchue ot (1J I I Towns tfte Plnllln at (1) One loltll of 100 1 One 101111af100, 4001.U. I SAFEWAY No.ASPIRIN i 'I . SAFEWAY VITA~·· E I l -e::=:.;s:.:a-....:-1 I -::e=::-=:..~---I ·-------------------------· ·-------------------:..1 Variety Department , • ..._._ __ EM TOOTHPASTE With Fluoride 88 C 7-oz. - T ... WEBCHAIRS I Foldln:.. $ 4 99 PRICES EFFECTIVE 7 DAYSI PlfllllftiCINIW ......... 11 ... , .......... , .. 1•1• la I trnC..-•l~Clllt ............... CILlllJ Bottle Shop Buys! Prices EtfectlV. In Llc9nsed SalewlY9 .. ··~·GIN or VODKA Additional Saving& At Your Safeway #l9CIAl Palmo· 1·1ve Uquld 12·az. 410 Dish Detergent Batlle ·Large ~AA' Eggs Lucerne 1c:~9° Margarine .Coldbrook cubes c~n 39c Chunk Light Tuna T~a~~( 81~ 59° Mixed Fruits TOM\ HCQ9$,39 11&._. OCADOS c· ( WllO•O•O•O•l•E~·E·E COME IN AND DRIVE . . . IUROPIS MOST SUCCESSFUL NIW C•R IN HISTORY ~I YOU'LLLOv11n -~~ ---~Choose Your Mini Car ancl Sawel PICKANYNIW FIESTA OR PINTO IN OUR HUGE · lllYINTORllSI PAY. ONLY oo OYIR FACTORY INVOICE NO CARS HELD BACK! FACTORY INVOICES IMCWDE PREPARATION, FREIGHT, AND FACTORY HOLDBACKS SE HABLA ESPANOL THE ORANGE COASrs USED TRUCK HEADQUARTERS W e'Ye got over 25 fully ncmditionecl plcbps. vans. =~s. ccaup«s. and 4 wheel drives. If you're for a used truck we've got it! 174AUSTIM ~4DOOll 4 cyt., 4 speed, radio, heater tlnlld glen. Less than 22.000 orlQinal mla.. A oollllc· 8ofa Item Llc.18381..WC. SL teWI. · $1496 6 cyl •• 3 speed, r~lo. hNter, camper mir- rors, c lHft truck. Lie. # .C3874V St k. #3277AT. s2752 · 169 FORD CWIWAM>M v.a, ..eo. trans .• power bnlk.ee. radio, heater, euatom 1 ton 10 paaeuger. &JD. t ZLJ370. 8lk. ,.80GAT. ElitM Nlo9l! s2294 ROllN5-R&ADY USIDq.us hwy.,.... Ctr"'· w ................ n.. ..... , ....... • PllFOIMAMCE •SAFETY AMD • REL•¥1UTY I• 0. 0-. tiD .. • I.lea l tl nl ; O.,e I 11t a.fus· I I h, .. ,...,.s,..._ Hr .... Spt.i .( ELECTRICAL Honl.~lglltloa md Poww s,.t••• y' FRONT END ~Sllocb., _.S ..... Spl.- ./ POWER TRAIN. ,,_,. .......... llactr-* Sc.- bgllle IM r• Rk ./ LUIRICATIOH a... 011Cllr11, ...aMewOI .... 21/2 ACRES OF TOP CARS BACKED BY OVER 56 YEARS OF SERVICE TO ORANGE CO~NTY IF YOU'RE LOOKING FOR A NICE MUSTANG WE'VE GOT IT! We ha.e a dozen bemtiful Mustmgs. Fastbacks, Ghias. 2 + 2's. coapes & of course Moch l's. . '75 TOYOTA &.o.-llD PICIUP 4 eyl .. 4 ICl88d ..., .... ., coftdltlonlng. mag wneets. custcn strfping, redlo. "8eter. UC. 154512Y Stk. t1882AT. '76 PL YMOUTHc. ADOW HATCHIACK &.1. 4 cyt., l5 apeed tralllmisslon. sport~. AM/FM radio, heater, rallve wheels. Uc. f477POU Stk. t986A s3311 • evt .. eutometic tran9r'Nelion. tinted 0i.s. radial tirea, heeter. Low Miies! Lie. 1038NIA Sttc. 1971A. 174 FORD PINTO IUM.UOUT 4 C)1.. 4 IPMd. AM rmto with 8 trd, .Cnyt roof, llnted Ql-. wt'9eC OOWl"I, r9dill tir.. Uc. f<M5MOE. Stk. t3209. s1n3 I I I I I I ,. 1 Y...al' The Bluest Marketplace on the Orance Coait DAILY p1101 CLASSIFIED ADS .. mna. I flnanclal .•..•••••• SQ00..50C9 Employment • Preparation . . . • • . 7000-7199 Metchondtse ., .... 8000-8099 Boots & MCllirit Announct ....... ,.. ...... lo1t & feund •••••• 5050-SC99 Services & ~"' ~ You Con Sell It, Find It, ( 642 S&7S] One Call Service Trade It With a Want Ad • Fast Credit Approval Equipment ••.•..•. 9000-9099 Automobiles & other Tronsportcmon .... 9100-9999 ~.~ ............ ~-~~ ••••.. ~.':':'.~ ••••••• ~.':":'.~ ....... ~.~!':!':. •.•••.. ~.":.:.~ ....... ,~~~ •.••••. ~.~~ ..••••• ~-~~ ....•.• G1•1NI 1002 la I.. • 1002 •••ral 1002 Ge .... al 1002 GtMral 1002 GtMral 1002 GtMral IOOZ G1Mrol 1001 ................................................................................................................... , .................................................................... . wxm'f llCi FIVE TOWMfOUSE ~ s bedroom, 3 bath $55,000 home lo impeccable Lovely oae story Spanish shape. listed yesterday style townhouse located to sell today at SU0,000 ln excellent area. The CALL~2860 rooms are aeoerous C SELECT EQUAL HOUStNG ll}roulhout! Bag livma T'PROPERTIES OPPORTUNITY room, 1ourmel ldlchen, ---""-·---- ki.naalu . be~room 1. NOl"lll•MJFYIHGI pnvate patio with unique 'TW wood dedd.na Won't last EHlside •Br . wttb tll.~!'1 estate lldvertiled at UU. price. Call now for wa1on wbe~l chum. ... h-'1Motke: ....... newspaper la Ill~ detaillt ~Z:Ul 2,000 sq. ft. M happy Ject to tbe Federal Fair QlfNr119•11H1JNtc11tN<t lamllylivtni. Callforde- lloualn1 Act of lHt [ 0 talla. e.&-nn ~.~~u:oo·~~}oa!:tlll~ftlllll [;&9:!'1/N<:::il ~~=. reli~ sex, . =• ~1= -~tlftlllW or national ongin. or an DfY~ intention to make any FOICIS S .... • auch preference. limita· -tion.orcliscnmmaUoo." Large 2 story, 4 bdrm, Thia newspaper will not knowanfly accept any adverl sine for real estate wblch ls la vaola- tloo ol the law 2~ bath, formal dining, family room, kltcheo eat.In& area Aut.Omation but.ed " filtered pool. New c&rlJetS. drapes & floor coverinas. Super family bome AaJuoa on- ly $138.000. C.all 5'0-1151 s.c.tfyfor Mott.er MOllUHOMI SIS,000. Exchulve llstioe. 1 Bdrm, nearly new with additional porch. lo xlnt C06ta Mesa area. Jm- maculate adull park. Pool. clubhouse, BINGO & laundry near by. All BaOIS: AdwrffNn for SllO. mo Close to ... ~.~~:-·HERITAGE ..._.. cMdl....... shopping cen t er 6 clailr md nport _.. markel. ran a-clahly. ,_ii-------400E.lre RJIUU REALTORS DAILY PILOT .-1 ~~.M~.~~!~~~..w~ lcSlfJ for tt. first._ HAHDYMAN"S ""!!1i> «rnd W.a t1ae Ollt· DHAM Garate fully lnaulated. Built in work beocb. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...... 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• COVINGTON Larp lot with RV ac- cess . Newly painted, panelina and wallpaper . Four Bedroom Home ln Mesa North. Truly a Great Buy for $76,000. 54&-2313 OlfN 1119• •IS IUN 1081N<I ~per pride o{ ownersbtp lour-plex. All units with • washer, dryer book up & ~~~~!ill aba.lte roof. 3 Bedroom. 2 bath owners unit orll=~~~~~~~ coune. Will exchange! 1: 1188,000. Owner motlval· llllll_..._.. ... _...., ... _..., ed. See our ad wider in· CDM DUPLEX 4trooertv SOUTHOFJUGHWAY ';;:~b~ m ' Yean okl. a Bdnna, 2 PROPll:Rrnce batbs downstairs. 2 - -752-1920 1no Bdrma, 2 baths upstairs. ,_OUAll.sr MtWP<>RTMACtt Larae kitchens w1lh ___ 0i-__ 1i1_1 e_:io-'p'-m ___ , buUWDI. 4 Car ..,.. .. ..wH>RT wU.b lollda ot •torue. SHORES SlN,500. See DOW! Fii LAND PETE BARRETT Walk to beach from lhis -REALTY- llighly upgraded 2 story, a•• 5200 3 BR home ln desirable~~~~·~£~·~~~~ area. Newly papered & r: carpeted. Loaded with country charm. Com- munity poola 6 lenn.is court. A must 1ee ! 1155,900. WISTCUFF lilEl Y HAS IT SOGOODI Tllla quality lath • piasta' ~ la pafed for a larp famll)'. 4 BR, dllb• tarp familF l'OOCD, diabll room. make WI lp:ne lvable u. well ., hmaUlal. Pdaed rtatit al $115.000. ;.Jfi.P.. Balboa Island Realty ~"''''"'"" .... ~ 673-1700 SIEIC & llN ESKIK>S CSIORi~NUMPHGM.URAO WtOMCOOCUZARDlOLJOW JEJOAODRABERLBAQPYI AKYTPSDATRUKIWWRDRJ Y ,l D R C E E T R M I R X 0 A H A N H ~~ARLRUNOBABOHACN E RHAABltAAOCADOLAU E E D L N J N H H B W l N U I A l C E I R C R A C 0 E E G T P N LILLEURURCELU YKE HTSSKPSKIRIE Ulll. R R 6 M 0 H E H G T L B I Y H 0 SAOOH RWCIAD 6WRAC8 U K D I S S Q 0 D D L 8 R A D 0 R E W E H l A D L S E Q E 0 8 0 A 0 S H E lnltl'UCt ons ~ ~ • -d. up, down°' dlagnnllly. flnd Nd! end box 11 111. e ....... Diii.. c.1 ...... -' Y... ....... DtwaD-,. = ==. == ~ c:.... ..,,,, .......... T_:,.....TV .... v1 _ ~ lj~ Starting a New Bualneu Accc9rdln1 to Callfornla lluslnen and ProfHliona Coda (Sec. 17100 to 178'0) all peraona doing bualneH under a llclltlo4il n1m• mull Ill• a atatement with the CovMy Qefk llld ha... It publl•h•d lo11r ti"'•• In• newepaper Mrvlng the are• I n which th• .......... locetN. n1, 1tet•"'•11t 11 Nqlihd .,, ·-Mid .. -•HrY In ~Ing your busl11111 n•-· Moel b•11ll• require proo.I of flllng to open C419-aal llC(;Ountl. The DAILY PILOT PfOVlde• both t1n119 and P11llflcetion ~1. We "9 H .ti "'9 -•Hry form• end 111Sln1.in • dally Hrvlce to ,.,. Or•1111• Cownty co,.nn-. Ettller etop by oft• of our convenient ontce1 or phone the LEGAL ~·~~. E•t. Ill for "'ore Information and tonna. Lingo Rul&wt IEACH CHAIM& 2 BR. 1 BA, walk to beach. Mexican fireplace, oak floors, fenced yard. Perfect .home for artist, writer, student, -~le. weekenders &i anyone wbo appreciates Laguna charm. Only · $ll0,000. JACUZZI flME! This very nice CdM duplex-w.ith pool & jacuzzi would consider excbatlging for small home, Newport Beach to Laguna Beach. 2 & 3 BR wtits w /1 Ba each. Priced low at $189,500. OCIAN VllW-STEPS TO SAHD Q~ality co.Mtruction. 2 Br, I BA. w /Crplc ... F;?tpensive wallpapers thru~out, sunkeh tub, ·new carpeting, 4 skylights. All new bltn appliances. + BBQ in kitchen. French doors opening' .to enclosed deck. Steps from your door to the beach. $215,000. EMERALD IAY Spectacular Views from the Chris Abel designed wood & glass 3 BR + family room or 4 BR borne. Freshly painted & new carpeting thru-out. You'll feel the warmth & charm of a mountain retreat, ~·enjoy the sight & sound of the pounding Pacific surl. $4.50,000. HOITH LACiUNA ESTA TE Two acres w/ocean view. 6 BR. 4'h BA, + 3 BR guest house. Pool, 5 car "arage, pvt. driv~, nothing in the area like th1S ooe. $1.000,000. WALX TO THE IEACH Just a short walk to the beaeh. This 2 BR, oceaoview home io Laguna Bea~h iS · lo;cated ~a large park-like lot m WoodS Cove. Pvt. backyard including gas BBQ & potting she<i. $163,900. MOllLI HOME WITH VIEW Situated in a pvt. centraUy located Newport Beach mobile home park w /pool. 'Ibis 2 BR, 2 BA. bay view mobile home is close to shopping & transportation. Shop &c compare. Best buy in the area. Motivated seller. $42,000. 644-7020 2123 SAM JOA'iMIM taLS ROAD MIWPORT llACH PETE BARRETT -REAU'Y- 642·5200 CitMaal IOOZ ....................... ~HTS One or a kind •ith secluded tree lined en lry. Completely re- modeled wilh large rooms, pot bellied stove i>1u1 oat ptaating noon binln, room, family room, a.rte bclrms. aod private pallos. Call ~ OPEN SUNDAY 1·5 2918 Clay St. .. ~ ... HERITAGE ' • REALTORS \V ES I. t·: Y :'\. TAYLOR CO. H Jo: 1\ LT< ) I\ S ~d Ill. I." I ! J • 11 ; LMA ISLl-$571.000 Fantastic one of a kind ONE story (rare on Linda Isle). 11S Feet. on water side with pier & slip plus beautiful green lawn. Luxurioa.a 3 ~rooms, d~ formal dining, huge livmg room. l'lllest quality & detail, custom built by one of best builders in Newport Beach. Lots of Charm! WESLIY M. TAnOll CO .. llALTOIS Ziii S.Jo+p+-Hmaloed MEWrolT Can&. M.I. 644-49 I 0 1002 Gw1al IOOJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• MIHl~H41L POOL-S'6.400 ....................... L VL Y Sourt.-oaT HOME VA TBMSl RENTALS WAmROMT Channing 2 bdrm. home in a privato ...: community, with slip for 38 ft. boat & private beach. $700 Month. llAU'TIAJL.l&.WM 3 8~ .• family rm .. formal dining rm. & 2~ baths -community pool. $650. 759-0811 VAMODOWH Circular drive. Large family ailed living room Country kitchen. Dt0e Wall ol glass view ol .:ov- ered pavilion & lus b arounds surroundlne R&F Freeform pool. Separate wing for hide- away Master Sulle & chaldren·s quarters. Hurry for this unique barlain! 963-7881 Motivated aeller bu Jusl lnstalJed new upgraded Cwa.. 1002 G1Mral IOOl e¥J"lht.one cpt.s .-" is ap-••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• plyuig fresh pamt lnaade •LL 500 y A &outfocyou. Ve.ryaharp Slllllt*OCH1 _.. & cl 3 b Frml d1n • Sellet must move " has areae:f ua fmlY rm bome. MOeODY ICMO~S the lowest p~ce ln the About 1 mile to beach . . .. this ftM estate Sl%e lot area. Look1n1 for a ql.tet cul ... ac. ottered bi San Juan Captstraoo beaLA. 3 BR STEAL! al $83.950. Just reduced Ms De'fel' been for sale 754-7100 Ol'fltil 111 ? • • r. ltll ,, I !'811;111 Cllarle Brown and his new partner Bob Bent.son have an empty desk in the office. Give us a call & let's talk about the advaotaies of aelling real estate with IEKTSOH & IROWH 1401 DOVE Sf. Sl.SSO & VA t.erms added. before; now that you ~9491 know. you better act Q\ickly. s + Acres. with an ocean view. Pnvacy SeclUSlOO $350.000 DESIGMID FOR EXICUTIVE UVIMG This beautifully up· A Ol\1s1on of graded BUC'cola Home! llurbor lnve.,tml'nl C'u Spacious Uvin& Room DGMT FORGET! with big Fireplace VORAPRJL I Itta Large Muter Bedroom, 1~~~~~~~~~ hlahly upgraded with 1- VA APPRAJSID , ATS61.000 Shbp 4 bdrm, fmly rm home 1n a aood neighborilood. New cstm drapenes Near Wmdsor Par\. Xlnt starter home. Good inves tment VA t.erms, too• Pn ced &o eell quaclcly ! Hurry!! 545-~l ~Walker & lee Saite220 N'pt. Beach IEALTC>aS lll-'781 pri v ate enlrance to ,Classified ads sell big garden area. Slump items, smaU items or stone plentel:a bighlilbl any Item . Jut ca II the room-backyard. 642-5678 R-I "'-u•-Mesa Verde Living at ats --------• ___ .. _ • .,.., __ ..... __ _ DovaSHOUS ~$129,000. Call1, ..................................... . OKN r119 • ors 1~ •Ollf IWCI • SZZl,000 lmmeculate home! Tiles entry. Massive stone fireplace. Formal din· iog. Parquet family room. Enormous master wing! Laundry room too! EXTRA BONUSES: Re!rt1erator, washer. dryer, freezer, softener le built.to alarm system included! Call today. 7~1'1'00 Ol'fN llf 9• II~ lllN 10111 •l'fl' ICIMI [.,1111 VETERANS Orao1e County's best blzy. 3Br, 2 car garage. lg yard lo ereal area. 158..000. !IM-2260, 2il hrs VA housing aet. MUD FLATS are beautiful! ' bedroom and family room with Back Bay View! Come and see the view for )'OUJ'lelf ! RED CARPET 75'-120Z 1002 Gt•ral •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~II. macnab /Irvine ~ realty MEAi SO. COAST PLAZA Don't miss this at $87.90'01 Detightlul, immac. 3 BR, 2'h bath pool home w/lg. bonus rm for family fun. Brick fplc. Covered patio. . Bit-in gas BBQ. Pool alide. Lois Egan 644-6200. (U-119) 642-8235 '44-6200 901 Dover Drlw Harbor Vl•w Centtr Irvine at CMnpus Vali.y <:enwr 752-1414 A CXliMl(Nl[HT ~ ltHO SlW1...c CUI()( FOR TH£ CAL ON f)ll CO. Hmock and Pet! Total Wriobe! HUNTINGTON llACH FOURUMITS rour tuxuDoua un1u wttb 1pecJoua onera unit AllllOlt cant.._. Owner will trade. Fot profit pro- jecUoo lncludlna lax abeiter bloeftta, pleue ••ROOMS I 8eauUfull decorated G...,... 1002 G1•r4' 1002 oneleveJ.,5~, 2 bath; ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••: oe cpta, atone fireplace COftf-1 patio; att gar . quiet St. cloee to schools lrabopp\nl. 18'J.500 Ruth lAwie,Bkr~ cab'°' 1111, I • KE:Y 1 "EALTOt\Sft Try • Dally Pilot aa.lt'led Ad to b\lY ... u Ot1-t 10mttllla1. IUUTIRIL WA,_,.qMT w /YllWS FAIULOUS two lt•droo• .. d dH condr ;'' .._ wlttl .... of,.... to ,... i1i1i1 MfoJ 11*t OM THI WAT& ~-1, "'*' ..... wtHI ........ - CMf I ••d leMt. pt cut•• d 11* a _.. = ..... ,. ••1111. ¥1IWS tif TWO :: .. ~ _,lj~·::;::r: .:-.:;; ...... ma.ooo. ' . . ~ • ~ .. :J ~ . . . ... ... • ' ... ... ' ' " ' " " ' ' ' ~ f f " f l ........... s. ~ ...... ..,. w. ...... ,_. 5-For We ............................................... •·••···•·······•······· ..................... . GwrtA too ., .. ,., too ••••II IOOJ o, .. ,., 1002 ...................... . .••.•..•.....•......•••.•.••.....................•...........•...... CA.Pl COD OaJGltW. Complete with majestic weepina willow tree. Huge open •hearth fireplace, family room with parquet flooring, country kitchen with its own brick fireplace, brick floors and counter tops, heavy shingle roof with dormer windows and a used brick and shiplap exterior, plus an oversized pooJ and golf course location in Mesa Verde. Oh so nice' Presented at S225,000 U~IC)Uf" ti()Ml:S REAL TORS". 546·5990 1575 Mesa Verdi' Drive, East, Costa Mesa also 111 Corona del Mar, ar 675 6000 ~COATS & WALLACE Cc:Jl REAL ESTATE I INC. ,, I 01'.IU I Y OWNfO COMPANY SlHVING I II( SOUi CUASI ARI ll SIN Cf l'l61 $55,000. Lowest priced property we have for sale. Exquisite Leisure World Condominium with view and privacy behind guarded gate. Call for all details. 640-616 I. JUST IBUCID StOOO -Priced - $10,000 under market for quick sale. This newly decorated 4 Bdrm., 2 bath home with separate front room and 3 car garage. Vacant and ready to move into. One of Costa Mesa's finest areas. Ctl 546-4141. Serving Cos ta Mcs'c.1·lr.vine · · Huntingto n Beach -Newport Be ach 100 ~ 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• HELP! Wedneeday Apffl t2, 1978 * DAil. y PILQT ••••••••••••••••••••••• Q,,..,.. IOOl HcMIMa For S. HcMIMs for S. HCMtMt For S. HowMs for Sde •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• C.-.. Mar tOZJ .. ._... IOJJ C....M9M , IOJ4 ~ 1044 411 + lot4t.IS ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• JOG TO llACH L\$TSIDI WOODBJUDC E PLACE JC>i t.o U.. undy beech' Slt.910 Specie! offerln1 3 s Lovely Park Piece ex· 701 Fel •at Q\aet tree lined street bdnn. C.OOUrnporary dt> e<:utive home Loads ol A beautifully updated 2 bedroom with f'ormel hv rm wllb t.ached femlly bomes 111 r:n~~i:,.~>r!afdffi!~ room to add 2nd wtil for ooly $135,500 creen house window ~::'~O:S~ t!r!~~n& room, apaciOU!J kitchen-Huie aeperete fem ily s-tb ln Vllle&e cl Wood fatnUy room. 4 spacious 400 1...._ 1 __ room hoat1 crecklin1 briqe. From $11.5,000 bedroom• Glaentic I Tops ..... .,.... used bnct nreplace. 3 553--00l Bonus Room• BeeuUful A custonlized 5 bdrm, sinale story ktni siled bdnru. pool 1~.;;...;.::.;;.:_ ____ _ covered patio Pn~ re with lovely courtyard entry and a 3 Wed lot too! Act now 1 .., UNIT duced ~· Seller says car garage PLUS panOl'amic ocean ~.?17~1-,, , ,, ,. •o.i ,,. , OHL Y $15.500 submit all offers' Terms d rollin bill · Red ed r Wood ..... ""A be t VERY flexible! Call an green g s vaew. uc [tJMI -l!IJI ~~~~i':'d '~:,;~~~,~~ •c. 1 •• to $274,500 FEE. ~<l~l)A :'~~~~~~:::. rt.: [WlllHI ~--,211 --~-~.:.:-:~ ... ~";[' . BEACH Lvly~~~= rm (~IW!11N§lflrnfi -, ... COME borne Oft e lge lot. 1.5x.3S Real Eltete ,... pool W/Dl!W diVl.D& brd "L;iiiiii;;iiii--iiiiijjiiiiiijiiiiiiiii-Ju1l listed. Newport lllbooP I 1.ea 1007 CostaMesa 1024 oewfilter Sharp•cleeo Duplf'x only steps from ... •••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• exblb1l1n1 pride of the aO<L Unll ed own e rs b I p . Q u I e t s mit tn· 3BR.2ba .• ~blk l.obay VA·fHA neighborhood Only come 4' investment NowS1?9.SOO' $15,i~. Today'a best potmrtial. Use aa e vaca· Marahall Rlty 67~ .,.~. Call now for • ..-. tlOO retreet or 1ocome ____ ::.____ """1' .... , producin& beach re IAYRlOMTCOMDO $67,500 ~NU sidence. lnqwre today. lBR. view. pool, sec. N~w carpets. copper r--. ...... -~-a 648-7711 • bldg, under1r parkn1. plumbing, new roof 3 BR Sl OS. 000. 645 ·1103, on quiet tree hoed street 64S-4203. Call· Won't last' •VA $1751(• J work with <>ranee Co Vets only Homes tu $115,000. For into tall: VetAgt. 541~ UPGRADED CONDOS ~~~!'! .......... !~~ ~~ .......... !!!~ IHCOME!!l Balboe Perun Just re· duc:ed' 6 Unlls. five 2 bdrms. &one l·bdrm, on 2 Iota Just steps lo bea c h Owner motlveted! Ne. Condol, 2 Br. 2,,.. Be. 2 IR $64,750 2 frpk'a, ceramic tile l IR $64,750 Owner bu painted in & P1nlu.ea Pollet out. installed NEW --_.._....----.... ...--.-5 Newly remodeled s IACI IAY Fine 4 bdrm .• 211'.l ba. fanuly home on quiet cul de sac. Oversized pool, playhouse, extra storage. $189,500 UDO ISU Newly remodeled 4 bdrm., den, 4 baths. IJving rm. w /cathedral ceiling. Lge. master bdrm. suite IAYFIOMT Several fiile bayfront homes with pier & slips BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR J 4 1 Buy\1d.: D'"'" N B o7S 6161 673-3663 642·2253 Eves associated · llRO"ERS-IHll L TORS l1J1•. ~ bolboo t 7t lb•l carpetlnc lhru-out AND ""'_,_,._ Bdrm. 2 bath ~ E reduced to S69.950'' Va DBJGHT Ocuo Blvd $18S,OOO cant 4 Bdrm "SOL There are so many A#J,./Ownt:r. VISTA"' in nice aree! As· reetures of thlS beautiful 673-3620 !~~m:~wy~~~C:tu~~; !::! ~!'m U:r.5~~~ C•'•h'moa.oct.1011 531 5800openeves on e qwet circle wath •••••••••••••••••~••••• W1 II Metwortr lush green lawns. Enter 5 II + OCM VU ~~~~~~~~!a huge LIVlng room with Cat.m 2500 sq n bm just cathedral ceilings and 11 mm from bch Span arch TRIP\.IX crackling f1 r eplece entry wey, spac Liv 'g. t Yr. old East Costa Family room wilh wet 18ll.20 DR Grae en! Wd .Ullo bar. Gourmet kalcbeo, decks Mesa. deluxe unila. ea d 1 o i o g r o o m , t h e w ALL STRUT DREAM HOUSE w/2 bdrms .• 2 ba., duung backyard 1s e~ormous REAL """"ATE area. leundry &i f11>k with hl pool """'• WALK TO IEACH NowS178.ooo Jac u~:1. m:!dndnl~bali lll-l750 493--2202 This vacantland is reedy EY8. YM Cora.AND cowt, three paUos, etc eorc.a .. Mer I 022 for you. Build your w11y REAL.TOI 552-0434 etc Woo'l last at thts ••••••••••••••••••••••• oo two 25' by 117' lots in pnce. CaJlnow546-2313 _...Wortd ,.L- latcbens Ir bath. Ped & 'lbese beautiful A Ir 8 •u11011T• spa. 675-481.2Broker Plen Walnut Square o NltOUSlllV•\r'f -=--------1 homes are pnced below 11.:J0re,....eo--. I•-------• market ror ql.Dclt salt> ~5-9161 . U.ca.kbt9 S-. Steps to pool -shakt> ... It couldn't hurt to cell roots Spacious With tt• Mo 9'1aifvt.Q Chuck Nash about a re· nant.sorwit.hout Assumable 8\'1% VA wardini career in real ~ QUAIL. m loan. on mass1ve (2000 estate Free training .ti PLACI!: sq.ft.) 3 BR + Cam Rm, you qualify. 540-5101. PROP1tRT1n:< ~ 2 f I ' Loe led S -752·1'20 101 -,. pc s. a nr 1409 QUAil. iT HE~T H.4C>4 Cst Plaza Pml $568 mo E/Slde Custom home. Open1111e30p,,, 1nclds everyUung. Full J8r hncre ram rm 3 car 1..... l pnce$79900 · -.. view, .,..., ee, lop 7S4-?IOO ger , on R·2 lot. Act floor. Rancho San Joa· ~7171 QUID Plen 2 & den. Set? to E /Side Custom home. 3Br, buge ram rm .. 3 car aer . on R·2 lot. Agt ~7171 apprec. Open SUn. I 5. 31 La Serena. 544--8258 PWSHCOMDO Huntlngton Beach Call Ol'I,.. "' ~· '"· 1u•no~1 ,..., · ""9111 -- us now; the Orange 4-PLU $165,000 [ I Corooe del Mar 2 Bdrm 1--------• County Specialists unusual Income Proper-• ,Jll~:H'll home ls worth the pnce 0 ty & Room for additaonat£iijH1fJ alone. SUpplement your SPANISH Ge.et-al I 00 I 02 ~ QUAI t.. CD wuta with Deluxe Master _ _ ___ , ;u:::"·~· w deductions wtth rear •••••••••••••••••••••• PLACIC SUlte Call for Personal urut.s WeJtang for the 2 BR luxurious Cov Fantastic condo. end unit, lngton model. in the pre very quiet. 6 yr old 2br stJgious Arbor Leke dt> $62.000 FHA·VA. Bob velopment Seller anx Mart'el, 7S4·1.202 agt lows. Will coruuder all LOVE COUNTRYUVIHG __ ~5~.?~u:RT\~ Preview.646-7171 , $56,900 nghtmvestoral$l6S.OOO PRIVACY 4 Bedroom. 3 bath home 14MOUA11.1T ~reua. ,....,,, '' 0 • '' '"' •M• ' 1 MORIHS REALTY Ill aree ol rolling hills" er,....i~••30om [• 11~~·11!tl! ~~i~~~~9u1~~11~ * 494-8057 * panoramic views. Full 1be fastest draw 1n the' ' & xtra large room sizes --------HORSES 7 pnce Sl49,SOO. CALL West ... e Datly Pilot l~~ ... J~~~~·~·~~:~~I thruoul Xlnt location •NEWUSTING• 751·3191 Claasi.fied Ad. 642·5678 '::: Beautt!ul grounds crtoate 2 sty, remodeled, upgrd • !p SELECT park IJke setUog Just exec home J BR 2 Ba, Almost i,, ecre near C.llQ~ li\'11.. '-f»C ~C:. • put on market· better den. & deck w /v1ew Newport'&Baclt Bay! No PROPERTIES \J\!;o 1-'"U ~._ ~ J:.;<rv t.akealook'64&-77ll towards Cala.lina lD old ~~~~[ ~1111 That lntri9uin9 Word Gome with o Chudc/e f:.~$214,900 Brkr REDCARPET7541.202 ~USTIHG!! WeWfUSell ltForASC*) Waterfront, beautifully 0'..,.,,,r-oe ~· ol 11.e decorated BALBOA 1...,.. ,...,,.-bled WO'd• t• COVES 2·story home; a-•0 ,,,..., '°"' ~""''-"'°'"" HeWHOME Archway entry' Roman tic gardens' Beamed ceilinas' Mexican oles' 8 Spacious rooms 1 Reduced lbousends 1 Ter nllc buy! Call &iU-0003 FORESTE OLSON .... , flf A 0 t)I,., + $14,000. Th.t.s happy 3 bdrm + bonus room rm, 2~ beth. Pool home on lovely Eas~de street. ENTERTAIN royelly i D E R D E G from the huge recreation --__...,;~_.,.;_......_,~~ ~ ." w:.~;,.'= '--,_!' _._r _IL-.JIL-.Jll.-.J ly 12"75,0001 I 0 0 "' u L I ~ C. M. Duplex. Lovely 3br. re· BIJlldeT ju.al completed ~led home + t yr ~~~~~~~~ this 2 st.ory 4 bdrm home. Df'W 2br urut. Fpkea & 2 Features uiclude. vault car parking for both 607 ed ceillng.I, 3 car garage Larbpur. Pnn. only. By 362Meanoua StopbySatorSUn 1;4 .30. 4GOLll" ~ Riii All Cll sd!J&'t uw lcAoa..::..,... i-.L-. :.r-=..1-.-L~r~1.: • "'-7060 * --M-1 _l_E_C__,I ! Wh9fl we_.. ltldt we llad I' I r r I ~ '"ry ,., .. Now, klde ~ ,.,. LOT$ Of ltOOM '----'-· -"'----'---"·~· • tam• thing, U09PI th9y'r• . for leas money ! 3 ------...... catNd -. Bdrms.. family rm.. 2 ' S A C I 0 N I frt>lcs.. beeutifW s uper I I" 111 I 1 I O C""'o"',. ,,,. c~uc••• q.......i .,..._belt·. m .... , mraa; . . . bv t.11."9"' "'---v _.d -~-·· ~ '--...__...___,_ __ __._ __ .,.,.. -· ,,_ -No 3 IMlow garden palJo. Exciting People who need People priBl~ e~~~;:.,.. well • =-r r r I' r r r r r r r I That's what the sER~i~i~iJ~oRY C. f. ColesWll'tllY e; I I I I I I I I I I I I __ .::is-=al:.:.l.:;..abou:..:..;:..t_!_-t bdton 640-0010 SCIAM-U'TS AR&wen hi Classlflcaffo9 1080 & RV .storage. Hurry, owoer.~lMO choose your own carpels. Call546-SB80. OCEAN VIEW. spec· "~:..HERITAGE . • REALTORS tacu.lar ocean & Newport Harbor view. Ped. wood decb. 4 bdrms.. 2 ba , skylight.a t.bruout. Comp. ~~~~~~~~J remodeled " updated Easy meintenaoce ! $224 ,SOO. Interested & qua.lifted buyers onJy. By owner ~Courtesy GREENIROOIC to realt.on. ............. Corona Higblends 4 Bdrm.s, 2 baths, fenced yard. fixer. $155.000. A#J,./~r 673-3620 SPYGLASS HIU 4 bdrm. 2 ba. Extremely Southport. By owner 6 popular CAMELOT mdl. Br, 5 ba, fam·rm, bv·rp>, 'nus lovely home located billiard rm, CUl-de·HC It on a cul-de•Hc within Faawtic rear chldrns easy walking distance lo yard. Open Sal 4& Sun. So. Coe.st Plue. theatres l~Call~64~4 ~48~32~----1 &c restaurants. Many out· standing futures &n· OCIAN VU.OWMEll GREENIROOIC , .. olfers. Price reduced to I 026 Sll.5.000. •••••••••••••• ••••••••• VALLEY 640-9 0 OLE!!! Sp8Dl3h marusaon newly remodeled Unique lendmark with ocean views. coove~ to 3 un its Perfect for owner OC· cupetton + income Pride of ownership a:. well as a sound mvesl mmt. $21.5.000. HOIUMS REAL TY * 494-8057 * IYOWMEll Newer ocean view Duplex. quehly con· strucboo 3 Bdrms and 2 Bdrms. $142,000. Agent/ Owner.673-3820 Toro 1032 .................... SELL.a WILL PAY IUYBS CLOSING COSTS Exc~elly cleen & weU ated SUnwood 3 BR. 1 ~ BA completely fenced yerd, lush & creen landscepang. Located on a quiet cul· de-sac. Price reduced to -A BRENTWOOD in GREENTREE Excitingly ettrectlve J bedroom home w ilh larie country lulchen Cloae to park. pool and scbools. Aslruig $84.950 Call foc details llAMCH RlilTY 551-2000 PRICED RIGHT! Upgraded "8" Plan an Uruv. Park 1'ownhome.s 2 Bdrms .• 2 baths PLU!-. den. End urut wath view olthe bills elude· 2 fantastic buys, Harbor ~ CUilom Drepenes Vu, 3 b r, frpl. mU5t see. ~acmociales tlmllillafo. Covered patio 644·2641. 6'4-8722 1114 Decorator Wallpapers Wblte Sails. Open 1·5, ••••••••••••••••••••••• PRICE A PRIVATE PROPERTY WEEK TRIBUTE TO THE ORANGE COAST'S SUCCESSFUL REAL ESTATE PROFESSIONALS _..\ .. ~---~ ~ ~\ ..-\ I I \ I \ _\,,~\ \ I_,_\~~~ On Wednffday, Af)IU ·9, 1171, the Deify Piiot wtlt pubH1h • apeclel trtbute to the proteUlonets of the real •IC.et• lndu1try -the men and women who dally m1k• • maJOt oontJtbutlon to the hedlty Oran t CoHt economy • TheN epedel pegea honor PrlYate Ptopeny Wffk and will be d•tlvet'ed to over ' ..,000 homM WI the Detty Mt and Piiot AdvtrtlHt. Nodce• wlll be one column by tour lncMe ueh, aUowlng room fof a s»Mto and ditacrlpttv• copy. Coat ot Heh notice la Oltly *11, with a photo you provkM. Thi• • .,.,.. to Real htatt '"""81onat1 It an noeptlOnel oppottunlty to lntroctuee new °' tongttme •NOClatff to tM pec:>pte of "'• Or.,,ge Co11t, or to honor out1tardtg ..... or MMo9 ICHentMnta. Oonl cNN being pert of IN1 lpelef1I adwrtlllftl opoonun«y. DetdNne for reHl'Vfng spaee It I p.m., Aprtt 17. Cll IDdayl Or, you may man your photo and a tlirt., antcte Of about 71 word• d"°'1blftt your baclcgrouftd, educttton, prot.llloftll trelnlfto. awaTdl °' other honora. M fl '°"' tto,y and pttOto to the CluetnM Otpt., ~ l'ltot, S30 W. hy Street, lo 1HO, Colt• Mne, CA t2al. For .... OO"'f Gtllng JOW ftOUoe, caQ ~ Ind a ftte~y ~ ... t .... JOU; DAILY PIL,OT throughout Sat/SUD. ~~~~~~~ Outdoor gaa BBQ = Auto Gar Door Opener Skyliibt In Fem. Rm BY OWNER 979-8123 Prin Only $109,900. OCEAN VIEW 4PLEX $149•500 COUIGIPAU Our Poi.osettie ls fresh on JBr. l~. frplc, 24Xl4 the market. Single story rec rm. call for eppt bouae w /2 BR unit over _s.&_3934 ______ _ dbl aarace +guest room & beth. Soutblaoders R. E. 631·2133 JACUZ%1 Plus all other amenities. 3 br. l1niahed boous rm for mot.ber·in·lew or??" Less than $130.000. Call SAM·lOPM. 968-3371 ~ Walktn t; lee SHOPPING? Need 4 BR, 3 BA., Jn the exciting village of Wood bridee. we have two Broadmoor Homes that are ready for 1mmed1atc occupancy Both have upgraded carpets ceramic eol.ry9 and good loceuoos. Both pnced below market v•lue. Call todey for details red hill ~·. . 552-7500 - I • ~-~~ ......... ~ ... !!.~~-.• ~!~~ .... -··--..,,:a ................ _. ______________ _ "s11nllws.t ~IWS. ..._..,_.._ .._. INt •61wport.._. 1069 ..... .._. O..-a.4&1atw ..... ... ....................... ..................... ....................... ................... ....................... ,_~ 1100 ....................... w ..... .......... I ... ... ..... '"' llARBORVIEWBOlll ES --·-··-·-·-· ............ rty 2000 .............. . ·---............... -·-··· .. -....... IAILY.;,;;s···· Baell Pad ~~·.~:.~4:·nf:: rlM'IASJICAL -···--· ,_~.:':.... ..... sU4 .................... i •• AICH llACH HEltiHTS --f 'sh Ara ........... ._ ...... ,, ............... "-~ Two lt•tlro•••· Z lt•lltt, treet ..... • • • $112.000. LAGUNA NIGUEL '95-1720 499-4551 DANA POINT 493-1812 LAGUNA BEACH 497-3331 ONLY Slit.too .... _ n...... Sl42.SOO.M4-0US. owner. •r11n I IV ~ ~~ .:J:r ........ 1'c&.aU1 upsraded. lovely ftael UMitiO OPPORTUNITY lO buy Famil & p.-& erndooa. Sl&'SOOO Prine SConUALTY ........ bla bdrm.I, 3 into a partoersb.ip and es ... onl1~--l1'N4a'Z s~6-11~~ ba, d.iA rm. plus buuUful awn a percentaae of 6 • • • · ~ •• crtt•Jt vlew. Newly PriHle location' Stt!p rellAl units Lo the Blttfs. l ... W•ldl OCEA.NFaOl'CT DP LX offered, won't lut. d own liviac room ! 8u:y1S"'-oltbe deallna Lf] ~loc.S!9,«IO.Goo.A ..... '19-UC>l Cl'acklia• frplc:I Hide-2br, 2 stry towabse, ~.:~~ &wm.--.173-iaao ................. _ • ..., ;:;:b:'C::tpe~r!~!,t:i Z~ba. fft'pk:-~ ~tio 11 ury home tn' aor~eou~ F.astalde Costa Mesa 2 ...._,_,wli•id yours or v...., •1.000. r---'•• .... ~ A ble • ••••••·-·--·•-·• liUrry!ICallSU-0303 OwnerM0-7509 ..... ..,. ..-.. v a aeperate wut&. 1 new . .,.._....._.~ Jill fw lmmed occupaacy. Good income. Ca rry _ _.. __ Real ~t.at. OPB4 WID • THUR ~ ror an aet.ive aome ~· Prin. only. -··•••••· .. ---·-· HIWPORT IM ram l 11 . -, w I 111mI a 1, $139,.500. Alters, 49iM044 Walk to bch. SUper 3br, ~ Walker & ler. COTl'AGE Quamt &: Co&)' l Br WI Pd! 1210 (5414> ....... 611-4551 DoDor aaJ. credit eatdl cJoan 1 BR r.ous.. l1e fncd yard, t rdor rum. $280 mo. &6Mll7 WATEllROMT .......... v ,,. ... recreation al a r e 11, frplc, gar. Adll&. oo peta. ........,.A, ~ matnificentclub bouse& la• .... sCllake $flS.87s-z793 ~pelnted~ZBa, $355,000 ... ~-~ 12221.&AUOAIL mucb, mucb morealH or 23 one 1tor7 anita, ....._ 3144 ram rm.Jear or • Cantwyputc:ba.rin.Liv PIUMIWATllFllOMT $15.000. CNF2670> Tultill.$.'SZS.000. ••••·•-••• .. -•••-••• ~ H1dl ~ :.. rm .r~~ '1:m-= 8Y Owner Newport Crest IEAUTY c.lfol ... Padflc 2 Br on R-2 lot, &side Woodbridee w /lake pvt mo. lat la +dip. lll.oTm kitchen. • kine 11&.ct Coado Ocean/Coa1tel ~J~Steh~ badt, etc. Euton 'i llB POol, Jaeum. 3 Br. 2 bl, bdrms plus balcooy off view 1 a.., 3 ba, end unit. ••-~. "-C.M. Room to build. Fam Rm, Din Rm. Liv fq>l. dbl pr. q . r.ced maat.er. For penonal excel cood. Ga. frpl. wet 540-5937 Owner/brobr, sta-9950 Rm. den, patio, 21'8 1ard. $C7!. Kida a pett previewcaU646-7171. bar, retreat. Tennis *FIU* POSI'I1VECASH FLOW aq.ft. Prof up1rda, • olL a5-l"lllorl"l'5oS10. ""'"' "' 0. I /IJllj ro ~IN<'. courts, pool, Jacuua. S.plex ror aa.te. totally re-lndlcpd air cood. Plushly lnille I 044 1 -D a y s 6 8 3 2 9 o 6 6 Moathl Park Rent furbi.ahed. m &ood area, tum., 9mO mo. to mo. be. F'ot' leue • U . f11>lc • ...,......_. 1048 [®-· I ..... _ .. _/ev-"Ao·...,..., Ba nk Mobile Hom e n ...,., ...... "-lt (orT.-vor (Uafurn a e1otlable). prqedoorOpeaar,fam ~-LO···us····PU····R·D··u·E·· ·····MA···GM····FfC····ENT······· . . .... .,UWlllG c ....... .,...,Y·OH·-. Repo11e11loa1 fro m ~ ....... n4-8804W or 5.'§i3.W4 rm. W.a Verde. $(15. r, . : Sl2.,.500 co sss.ooo. As low 2lU1NS1. Priaonly. • .. ..-rt•-.. 3169 St6-63lo. 7SZ-079 u 103 down. EZ Hou.a· r ·r--Alovely 3 bedroom home OCIAH Beaut. upgraded Plan J S inc. 1 .. W. Bro.dway, INVESTMENT •• .. ••••0 ••••••0 ••••• East.side. 2BR, USA, enc that ilentlreb' uparaded & CAMYOH ILUFFS br 3 ba, fam rm, -mpl. SLe F .. __ .. _,m (11•) LIDO lS2.E->J BT, 3 Ba, 1 a r. re m od ele d . aad Ideally located on YllWS 3 Bdrm "Bonita" plan. remodeled co ~~try ~=======~-asG nu&AI"" • • DELIGHT or. Genoa Bcb. New $375/m o. U l ·UH/ buae corner lot w1tb Hottesthomebuytoday! AlJootdenl,aewcpts, ldtcbea,stained&leaded S.C9-.te 1076 Twobou.se1plustnplez lut.cben " Ba. Decrt'd _oo-o7D. _______ _ glamorou1 lite enlry. NesUedoaquiet,pnvate floorinc " 1huttera alass, imported t iles, ...................... Na.~ Bch. nr ocean. wtlb each u.rut bavmg fum.$1.2110lyrlseor coo·3 er.l\.tba.(rplc,covrd LiYed m by adults only. street to the hills of $139,900. Own /Agt hrdwd Cloors. Shutter:. FIX& SAVE ~~. Zbt, 2ba, wallio ~r own private yard mder mo. Call 87~. pebo. Cpt/drps, l>ltlu. P r o I es s t on a l I y Laauna Beach. 2 Levels. 833-8S5lor6'4-2148 eves lhruout, view location, do.et, S llar park, lo &le car earaae. 8fJ.. IDcdJWClSST·1811f~ landscaped, central air 3 bedrooms • 3 baths· 2 ------~ beaut. decor, amerulles $89,500 NllL,...m7,~ our ad in the Income and cloee to park, pool kltcbens. Lower level w~-.r--ca.lore. Open Sat/Sun l ·S. View of ocean " bills .kn-fw S-. 1200 Property Section for E/Blulf beaut rum, OCA Vll Bac:kbay area ... for~. aod shoppi111. Call to· may be rented. Only * JUMIO VA* 60 Roya.I St Georee. By Great fixer witb a 3 BR, •••••;:;••••••••••••"• ~ ~ propertiesAft .'f. bome. l& ~~~:!,.to July 4bt, 3be. 2 ear prage, day. Sl.M,000 I wort witb Orange Co. Owner.640-0488 ~ BA 1 d · ....... on ....... one er-..... 1.SIOOmo.-tenniaerta,JKaDi.,,.,1. Vela only. Home, to :a~lly' r!!~ w'iJ~f 2'12ACIES weanithebe$t! Available May 1. $S50 Lacuna Niguel 49~7.222 13 I ·0836 $17S,000. Ff)r Info call · fireplace, +secluded Country Uvtn1. S,000 S!i· mo. No pets. 54+Wll. VetAct . ./ Ml~ tmbybwlder,Corever den, study or 4th BR. ft. near new bome. tn d QUA.IL [B ...... ~ 521·5711,utlZ.l ~ Back Bay view, 4 BR. Pricedt.osell. beaut1ful area. Owner ~ ............ -........ . I "'YYllMI $lfa;;,900rm.' 233 lb7ai.l!erpAtc;es.. BERR11iAEALTHOENRSR v arudous<n:)K67R•5717 PROPJllH11Milk G....... .. • 1101 B Toro J2J2 " .,.... I ...-u1 V" -'J'Sl...1121 J:m,. ............................ .,. ................ . Lc2br 2ba mobile home Terms-Trade.631-3624 21SBelMar 492-4121 OR m.2()80 '•GUlll!-~......,IMCM HOMEFlNDERS NEW 38t', 28a, air cond, in excJu. Bayaide VIII.•---------~-· -'-blw llANCHREALTY ArcbBeacbHgts Area Clubbse,pool.Jac.,priv 51RP00l S-Jaan PLANSFORDELUXE LohfwS. 2200 Tboosa.ndsOfRentaJ.s • .. ..-.... _ • C t h · $10000 OW ,..~ 1.071 44UN1T PROJECT AlJ•• ...... allp......... avem-31119 551-2000 ua om ome, now in bch, poss. boat slip. ' D N _....,.tn.o ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. .,... ......... complehon stage. Ap· SS7.500. S75-7'9036l3-'7848 2 stry home. 2600 sq rt ....................... Two + acres R·3 in ~ Sample fn t• ,.., J.234 SUPER prox 3000sq ft. xlnt view Owner wilJ carry bal or Hemet. 9\.D.ldin& permit ~E ILDCi SITE $160 Bach furn uW pd --••••••••••••••••••• of canyon & ocean. Call Open Daily $200,000at $1,595 mo Im---------•I & more. $275,000. Owor: Huntinat-Beach $23528rluda/pelsyd YOW'Owa TenniaCt! DEBFRD 836-Q5l4,832-l987 H bo VI H rd * * * * * * * aat. (Brian>. 114-729-9263 27,000, sq. ft. lot near Pl53Brtlch/petsaar I _.,._••"-HT ar r e w omea. mac. Huie rear Y · No IN CHARMING-days, 729-S37Jeves. Paci flea Hoa pit al, 5 LIFETIME SERVICE p \II Htd Pool. Frpk ..-"""--'".. former model, 11M7 Port qua II f y 1 n g needed. n..:._. Shop Cn IL"'-.(Br 2Ba ~ ('336) Sbarpsin&lestory ranch •--Hits IOSO Sheffield. 759-0448 oldSanJu.aoCap&atrano l....vESTORS ;;~ta · t.r.'Avic H7.ol21 ' bbomelb. 3 1b1g1 bdfrm1s, 2 ru11 ~••••••••••••••••••• $154,900 840-19 Afford ab 1 e up • "..-va1.t.er. $13$,000. LUXUIUOOSSBRIBA a s, v y my r m stairs/downstairs eon· New listings. Large David Bourte JUtr ..... ,.._. 3206 Walk to schools. parks &c Upgraded Mtll Vu coodo. Npt Hat• by owner. 3 NEWPORT domulium. 3 Bd.rms .• I t,; pareels--ClOO per acre. M&-885() -••••••-•••--•••••• ..::re~~) community pool.$. 2 yrs Laguna Village 3br, 2ba. l~be. fam rm, lge... 9e•cH baths, carpeting, window BKR. PRIME R-1 LOT IN Palm Attraalve 3br, 2ba, den, l1.tl•1 631-4555 new. 759-l.SOl. A/C, tennis, pool, clbbse. $1.3t,900. Opn Thurs-Sun s;A coveringa, built·~. two <n•> 677·591 Desert. Xlnt view. WtU frpl, adlu. $IS2S Jrb'. HooormaJ CTeditcards m.soo.Ownr.'97-1(26 12-S. SJS Tustin Ave. WATERFRONT car aarqe" patio. By OR~ accom teorus crt/pool. ~67:.:.:~::::m.==-(2~13~)~367~·0:'..!1:..:.77:___1·----'----::--- CA.5A LINDA CO-OP ~. 548-:a«l HOME owner. )(on. lhru Tburs. CottdOllllal ... s/T OW ft• $1&5,000. <m) 75&-0130. c••-leedl 3211 -..... 3240 mr. 2Ba, newty decorat-Open House, Sun 1 6, Fr<d~Y~J.:.. cSuall 64d6.2158· .._...for .. 1700 -••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••-••••••••-••• ..,.. $250 000 1 uuu n. C ays) & ATI'ENTION BUILDERS ..... mirrored d.inioa rm, Harbor View, 2 sty, 4 br, Nol a condo, but a real 3 e venings , call (714 ) ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 wuaa. + build +-more 3 b~ 2 ba, credlt ref. re· n-ee util. $I.ZS. IOds. pets •.... ""TLEROCK• patio, ~.750toloan, ~ pool/Jae .• many extras .......... -m. 3 bath home 493--06118. FOR SALllY OWHB uruts W/var1ence. 1916 ~~·no pets, $485. Nr oil. 1000. more avail. 'un mo. owner S4().:W91 19S7 Prt Albans P l. u••urnu non d %131891 3839 MS-4900 Alt 1mfee.. 3 BR 2 Ba Broadmoor, 644-4952 with 40• slip al your front ~~~~~~~~~I Dix super l&e 2 br 2~ ba Wallace, Costa Meaa. ...._. · ' w/fam rm. din rm, up----------1 door. Parquet floors. OH A.PPIOX llJ ACRE nhB condo Xtot loc. C.M. Sl39,SOO. 64S-S126 o r 1 BR. Oc-ean'Vtew, fenced ew-elegant-2 bedroom i:trds. Avl immcd . ...,.......... 1052 THEILUFfS OwoerleeVU111the area. Call 875·1924 d a ys . 637-s895 yard.S325mo. CSSSO> or a bedroom + .,12 900 '··bid Ownr/ Truly gracious adult 4 ,....t.JAIL m in lovely ML!lsion CT'ffk 673-2.l.84eves. ......__ t-'-D--"' ~-,.._ den <~15). Cedat" win· ·~ ' • &A... • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~Acl!: u.s 3 BR, 1 ~• BA home. --.._.... ...,.....,. agt. 759-1288 --------•I home of uncompromised Highly upgraded with de· VACANT a.iort • 2400 NEW l BR 2 Ba d I• dow home. 5 Wocks to R&AX•ENJOY quality. Dr amatic 3 PROP1!:1"'IES 4Brlwnhm,2ml'stobch, ••••••••••••••••••••••• autog d. • .Pe·· beach. P rivate a-car bdrm. end unit ..... A'ly -1s2.1920 xn. cor. $125,000. _ ar, r, ocean v1 w, gar age. Folly main· patio home w/2 BR, 2 A/C. Tranquil view. Op.r,,.11s10.,m ANCHORAGE ..___, 2000 ~hr frm Co!oradoRiver I~" .. -..... St lagiwta leoch I 048 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beautifully land1caped • ..,.... ••OOOOl'll.ST NfWPOllT81!ACH ~ ....,,400. Agt546-7739. Beaut. 10 ac Near lot 10, ltedeck. $35(),498-3389 taioed vanL Ad.Wta. No BA, + many upgrades. Spacious patio; 00 detail1--------• INVESTMENTS ~ roperiy Ill 000 firm 20% dn P /P Corw dM M• 3222 peU. "'i-re _.. -• OWH YOUR OWN Custom patios. Com· overlooked! $179,000 GO FOR IT 1714J 49._7711 ••••••••••••••••••••••• wiu fine. P.O. 2785 NB ••••••••••••••••••••••• m4>98CM331 Laree 2 Bdrm .. 2 bath Q. munity pool & jacuzzi. AGENT 6'0-SS60 You can ·t miss with lhis 7 UNITS C..M. 92663 CdM 3 Mo rental furn or REAL FIND! 3 BR, 2 Ba. Y·Oooly ~block to Main Enjoy the outstanding invit 2 bd 1 Beautiful brand new 4-1 unfum. 1 Br, lrg patio. w/cpCa, fJJCd yard. Only Beach. Bright " clean. viewof tbe mountaios& w.11.•u•WOOOY :i~mhome":! a {0'e~iy we·vegrowninsize br,ldt,flp.J.2br,1'2 ba Palm Desert condo. 3br, S27S . Aull imm ed . $'10.96a-'567,aat.no fee. Finaocin1 available. countr ys ide. Mus t """"'• &needalargerhome townbouu, all bltns. 2ba.pvtpatio. Exclw11ve 487·1727or49S-2228 189,500. see/calltoday ... $89.SOO. Uyau'•eseent.beothen , :fer~et 10 rfN e ~po rt Nice ~tory. 3BR, 28A crpta. drp&. Hurry, buy Deep Canyon. Tennis Small beacb cottage, 2 NORINS REALTY a..g.a..,_. INffy now see WestcbfC's best. li r~d &ac;o~le~r 0~,'e; garden home. Quiet sur· now. Tom Lee, Rltr, club. Pools, lited crt.a. Story book charm. a Br a BB, clean • lo good * .. '~•os7 * 49L 2413 49•949 .. lmmac. 3 BR+ den. h .11 r rouodi.ngs,closet.oever· 8421.803 $76,950.831-1.807 Ba. old CdM , 'l09 cood. Sep yard, $325 • ....,. -.-"' country ltltcben. pe1 starter ome Ca or )'lhmg, comm pool & RV Larkspur. 1600 mo. ~ • Three __ An:_b_Ba_J_. 3-b-r.-2-ba-· .... 9_5-_5_2_2_0_•.1.o-.s.o.s_o noon, bay Wllldow, 13l2 app't $1:?5,000 access. CaJl493-7682 12 UNITS ~~,:;-tr 2550 673-8941 Bike to beacb h'om this Id Dover Dr. $1811,SOO. Aet. ~___. "'--1010 1 . -·•-•-.._ h. T...__- home. WiU carry 2nd. Exec condo, in pnv. area---------~··-,!IJ•••O··.···•••••••••• won't last at oolyi--------· Fam Rm. MOO mo. 48 2bacoodo. Tennis/poof. & lndry. 9 yr o v~w ---------6G<J758 Ii: _.a -.,.. lll&'9 ., -ac ~ ·-••••••••••••••••••• &lau Hilla, view, 3 8r lovely 2 br + den.« i br Musl sell. Pran only. w/full beaJtb spa facll. 2 UDO ISLE 5320.000 Great iooome P..tc Plec..-Ot•-1• Drakes Bay Dr.,673"8941 Jae. ~ A&f,. a..zlZl. 49'>-3933 br2ba3blksfrombeach. -ft fi _. aJ tra de-up from your 84.5-3009 Brand new, 496-4812. ~sq ' 10"""~ qu · 4 duplex or 4 plex Watch 2-lc lBEDROOM LootingBy'MleBeacb? S.Lag.,panoralIUCOCeao $:JT5. ~~~~b!i.~ifch:~b.go~; OOREXTY Reduc~! empire arow. Call DOW VA-FHA Save.Ume,ps&l11oney $Z7S.Diceabr.Larsefncd vu coodo. 2 br 2ba, den. ---------• Cormorelnfo GARDENTOWNHOME. CallTbeE.xpertsToday yd. Muat see. M5-4i900 ~-= ule. $150&1. FAMILYDB.IGHT ~~·P:t!,!~I&~~· serv 67J.T300 Must Sell! 540-3666 2 ear~,~924 A&eit.smfee. _________ , 3 Bdrm., 2~ bath home, szso ooo 67S-6259 ·-..... --Don't wait to see UUa PVT BEACH HOME •DD-...... ,,_-"-"-REAL ISTATE cloRe to school " lake; ...=::::.:.•:.=:.:..:...· ---=::...::::.:.:·1--------super 3 bedroom home EY" 1·757-16%3 • Stuonln&3Bronly $495 .t.UD ... _. --u•a l'v tu SA.LESPEISOM new paint & carpets plus W ATHAlOMT I OO I Q.IFF DRIVE featuri11g wood accents Cmy Flreplaoe <6460> twb. s:· an• a large yard with mawre Newport Sborw, 3 BR. and &ota or stDraae. Din· 0 _. YOUR OWN ........ 6l I "'4555 • We are looting for two fruit tree.. Priced right owner w/c&r'f1 tst TD Cbarainc traditiona l m, room and fireplace. '"" Honor maJ. credit ~ardl GBRREATI • BR i BA, ex p er I e n cCfe d atWl ,500 w/20% down. $15•.soo. home lna aylvao aetting. Large lot.witbfruittreea. --------CASINO br ,._ " -1 dJ w/rww cpta. ftacd yanf, ~~i.~~~ ~~i ..,_,....,_ .. _ Schwo r er R e altor, ~~b~~o~:~:i'!,f:~ BKRM0-1720 N •2Trfplun• +commercial land. 450 00 ~~$5~;.,~Porns:: lrid1 tlr pet OK. M25. for app't. 497·3388 :.0: ,_S4.5-_'1983 _______ 1 from upstalr!! master ear Lake Park. Min. to R-1 Iota, service stations. tia, CDK 67>5218 96J.4567, aat, aofee. ,..._ Udo ., _ __._ bo b C 11 TIRIEU. bch. 1-4 BR, 3 ba; l.J BR, rancb, motel, mioio& w•• •roTHE BEA ..... ! DUPLEX -•·'"""" . ~ me, 1 lit ste. $179.SOO. a 2i,.;. be ; 1·3 BR, 2 ba. 5 claims & warehouse. IC ~ """ Bdrm ba f I d k from beacb, re.dy for oc-641M333. garages, frplcs. $189,000 you have the "--w ....._, SC251+1 Avail May 1st 1 , l • rp c, ec •-----"---=----cupan c:y b y .... •Y 1. -1 e.c~--· h.17091713Al .. _ a.uv ...,.. H•"'e.,.-'•-6• (5t67) '\IPPd aad 1 Bdrm, 1 ba, "' " --.. eac · a ..... ma. you can make millions. -..... ~-~. deck down. $159,ooo. Best Value! ~-=· By ownr/ail. --------1 Hunt. Deb. 536·1718 A1J this "more can be RENTT01ft.JY $10,000 down, l ake over Tblslbdnn.,2 ba.patio --------• •IYOWMER* Owner. )'OW"S foronlYS2,940,000. Beaut3Br28aw/Patio paymentt. WORLD home 1how1 like a Wat« view bome wanted $59,SOO, for 3 BdJ'-1\.t ~toa..M•I Terms avail.Call 32Z4 FlxdYard$U.S (3116) WI DE BR 0 K ER S model, wilb vaulted ceil· to $300,0IO, any si, cond -~-~-RT-H-E-IG_HTS__ Ba, -bute F am Rm, ..._, ••7 1 6l I 3 • ,_....,~ Uruts lo Los Aafeles. -•• -·•••••••••••-••••••• ...,._s 6 1-4555 _.,,_3-454S ________ • !irp!~~':'::~':'b ~K. J:::~ ~~~ 'h ~0;e; Exc:lalive CU ff Haveo. 2 ~ ~UC~~0!j Several Just listed. Xlnt Land DiYiaion tor info. Free uut. sm. 2 w. t1ds Honor maj. CTedi1 cuds Beach front home wanted more. Comm . pool , w / p 0 0 1 . o "n r , It)' C.pe Cod, 2 frplcs, 4 extras, move in a ow. cash Oow. 6xGl"Ola. Call BENHINKLE R.E. lNC. ok. ~~eat. amaU to $300,000, any sz, cood jacuzzi '87.500 (28) 213/821-&500. BR. dbL gar., ab6olutely Low down, or auume VA _<_213_) 328-84 __ 1_0_. Mik __ e-_A_at---1. CM of state fee. ~13 b~~I~ b: ~rr.~ OK. Trade equity In lov& princ only. $178,000. loan. Call536-0757 ,,.._.., 2600 . ma c 1 -· ly Weatwood h ome HARB o a v J B w 75WmOOwa/at!. ---------·--5·EM-•l•NAR---1111 -...... .:: ...... -.... ~tJ:t~~e~~2::;:!~ M4.S-~~ ~JJn~ · O w n r ' !1i~~i =:u:ir'!i: --------SOUTH COAST R·l IHYISTMENTS HA.WA.HAM CONDO home in lovely area. 3 BR 2 Ba, ~am Rm. pool estatemeculde1aclot SUVIEW IEAUTY '38.SOO S 5 5 o . A g t ~ Jacu uJ, preatlee M!Jiutes to entire lrvine Learn about the fantutl lUlt "-1!SO down. rum., 64M646~ nbrbd. ~ per D?O· Call 5 UNITS w/•O lrees. Room for Port BoJal 4 Br, 3 ba, 2 returo betn1 realize , .. limple. On ocean 968·46~2 Peon1ng&oo pool " court games. story . Beaut. view, :':1'c.~b:,~ ~ Ps:~r. lhru R1 property as in with pool. Oa Koo a Hldeawaylnllus vmecov-Properties Deluxe ocn views. 1 blk -=Ml=.=.1_=Vlal..======-Bamwood panelina. tile Wld.acaplng. drps, etc. vestmcnta orcering xln Coat. Hawall. Call B.F. ered country setting -1 ._...--~--------to bch " two. Super -.... r" 1067 entry, lutcb •Fam Rm, 8Y owner. $279,000. 1911 'Ibis beaut. 3 BR, 2 BA leveraae thru creatlv home 3 8 2 b $495 --"!"'!l'-owner'• unit. 5 Gar.••••• .................. nrcomm parlr,pool,rec Yacht.~mJlla..64()..6111() faml.lybomebasOrange r111ancmawit.hasllWe Nic:bolsoo.R.E.499-4.l6S ~1~:3009 •· · Hsttolr 324Z M00,000. 4Br, 3Ba, Znd 1tory ctr , day nur1ery, County's best locaUoo. $6000cash. lt.cMs....,._. ••-•••••••-••••••-•• ZA.GaODIXYRLTit llbrar7 . Central air. IChoola, churches, shop· IEACHTllASURE Beat t.be increase In Calf'2·24H Gro.ft 2700 E/side 2 br l ba redec PreaUaioua Weatherly 4fM61 I $112,7()1 • ..,_ plnC. $230,000, By owner. Cozy solid home, near prices lb1I tum mer, buy CURTIS ••• .. •-••••••••••••••• child/pet OK $3SO. 3U Bay 1'lmble. •11:5 Br. All •.--a.a-..a.t..--a....sc• Prine ooly pleaae. oceanon30lh.2BR 1Ba. itnow!Onlyf76,llOO. 1 .... YESTM ...... S ~':::. Rocbester S40-9S37afl 5 amenlU., pool, Ceanis, Spectacular oceall view. 2 fir &J>t. Xlnt 11.«aae. Nr kb, I.rt pool. Adult.a. -.SOO, 71~ZON nts Olde House B E L O NGS T O A JlYOONE ERA. Located lo primo NORTH END Mdion ol Laauna, l'* • rew blks. FROM BEACH 6 VILLAGE. Archaic 2-ltOl'J arc hitecture. •m uted oa corner lot, M&!a a VIEW OF TilE SEA --..-rn 644-4275 or 644.DU for h a rdw ood floo r s . 540-3666 " _.., ,_ club. boat &lips. From ~i:~t.1 :r_e1~-.. Lu:;::~ _a_ppo1n __ tm_eo_1_.____ SLM,ooo. -r<>R-·u-sa_v•A•T•l•O•N•s., EstablilJbecl In.come pro-=· Aat. 84&-0in or 131-1328 8£SJ BUY ----------4 duclo1 boysenberry SUNI 5.ft.IX farm in San Juaquio •--------'"'-3144 IN NEWPORT 3 br, lrpl, owner'• unlt. + Valley. I parcels a•alla· br, new crpt.s, new drps, •••• ... -.......... _. *wport a.«11 I Ht ....................... ILUFFS $99,500 3 BR. 9lld unit. Frplc, patio. nice 4-pls SlU.000'. Call ble -to to 126 acr e1. ~ ~4-No dop. $290. •--•• e Wat I l1tl 1091 --· --·-' BR, matr b drm ..... .,.1w _965-_2280 __ .<>woei-__ l_A-=ll'-·--t lncJud•1 boroe, baru, JBlt,JBa ........... E ctwmtaJ.n, loU of DOW -"' H•••••H•••••••••••••• c:orra t . $72,000 lo Kids,....,._ ok. Nice. aJQ\,28a. •••••••••• $10.000DOWM USTSIU. 8UN1TS-ANAHEIM $31.S.OOO --items.communJtypoola& M Xlot CIODd. bread & but· · Patlo, eood a rea. farSBR.lbe. ...... tennil.$115,ooo.eari· N4lw 2 •'7 •bl' a ba. 2 THIS WEEK ,_ -'-'-.. _000 NORJMSREALTY MS-4llOOA&t.smfee. Owaer/astl3US51 ~ Ev•'"-210 - IYOWMEI ~ ~MALTY Montee<> HVH. 4 br 2 ba, ~ •193o-.e.c..ca.._ frplc. tennla/jac., priv. 3 Bdrm, 2 ba1Jt in xlnt -c.;~v:&m.nt, * 494-1057 1t comm. Assume balaMe loc. Btt tot. Askl.oa only Call Ni-Jess. of 1243,000. Owner anx· Off off iout & will finance. No '87,000. en, eta, ---------• qu.a.11tytng needed. 20<M please! Two 2 Br ~ on 1 lot Yacht Vigilant. By SConUALTY Each baa encl. garaae 5.02 Ae&AMCH SIHS FULL Pafel SI ti DoWlt P.,_.t Bdr 2 bath house. Near &tanciaS400. ~10 tam nn. nu czpt.1. LI 645·9161 yrd, l.ndscpd, Wood deck. <>wner.~1'111 ll6-7Sll ~=u: ::;o~~ ()pea S.t /Sua 1-s. 186$ .,...,,......_. 106' IMdt 106' Ollilr...,.,. PortNelloe.lSt-Ollf ........................................................ _ ......... . & t boppln1. P rivate. IN,800. Own«' will COD· lidel' Ind TD. Kake of. ........... ... w. , ... 'TSl-41118 ,._. 1100 ----~-- NIWPOIT llACH Immaculate 8 B r Den Condominium Wltb View Of Ocean From 2nd Floor. Close ~o Pool, Jacuzd. Sauna And TenllJj Courts. Call Us For Mo • 1nrorm1Uon. Priced At $229.SOO. ....................... Vlkhll o..11 in JMM't flDH t o•l'k, .. Tbe ==--~~ am 8-JtJ m.1100 24 ' Sportsmen Motor --tullJ colli'd, s.!Dt caDll IW&AOl •IYOwte• Double wlde adlt pet ft•Ht.v~r.v. 91W5ll. Rect..-4Sttoo. I Udt on RA lot. Prf me !ut.llde Cotti• K..a. $1..2S, $129.800. Won't last then1> nit • RED rARPeT'" 845-3474 • $7' ... MOMnt -- • I .,_.._.h u.fwA. ~ u.tw.. S....r ..... 4200 W~y. Aprtl 12. 1978 OAJL. v P1LOT DS ...................... , ..................................... .,....... ---------------------~!'"!-.._..~ .... tcuhPwwlWd eo.toMeM 3'24 ,........_ ....... 3'40 Offtul...,... 4400 ......_ lti.1 ru ' ·----Mii--•"•-• .. ••• ••••:•-• •••••• ........ ••••--••••••••••••••• ...... 7 .... •••••••••••• Gl.A.llOROUS 2 bdrm 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 0,, I lwillt 5001 Off a ~ 1011 tkmwsrtlMc* U6' I° t f•IMQ 3740 ba ln Promontory Poin\ •••••••••••• .... ·.·.··.·.·.··.·.·.··.·.·.·.~.··.·-·· ... _ ... _ ••••• -_ ...... 11!11 • ...-••-•• .. ••••••••••••• E..&ldt 2br, l~ba lo trl· llA..,,..MIW with forever VIEW JSGo.500 mq. ft. d.Juxe ol· --·--•••••••-1 N I t f 1-..._ • •-W '""'" SL C M VI o o D 8 a lllUJ..LIJ:ACHHorEL P ••· u pa 0 • rpu;, J Br Uudlo aJ)ta. huae Decorator furol1bed. ~ • ~ · · ID 0 ~ty. Li's 3'r, 2ba. W. ROOMSS.U.SOW.ell ape:s, drpl, bltu, 1ar. beck yard, dilldr«t OK. Pool. Jacuui, ••una aAcl from SUO. mo. Tom, "1 ~ ~ a.l\llBA.Ullliat Np&. 1 ba oc.aa. 1ar. Av. ll501mo. Sll-"IOll l.ndry. W&rJPI pd. Older $425. Dys, N-a.5S: ev•, teus.ia. $150/Wk. ~l AA• _540G>0 _______ -1 ~ ·-# frpk. no ,.... 1171 per daUd °"' No peU. ssso. wltndl ~--~ •t ... • sav·~· lllldlll-..._ mo.~ ~Je.S0-33&1 WAT~PRON1'HOMES .._ IJ'V5 'tfoo6l'A-,.__ ........... J741 3 Br, 1~ Ba, d1 to schl. 63H.OO DILUXIOfACIS -· ., .... , fvt ....................... a br, 2 b. up~r. No .. pet.a. $BJ.Simo. Call Pcnooa1 telephoae/ re-~ ~m~ J~ FOi LIASI LAGUNA BEACH MTR = o<fci.~sl~t, 7fl8.1764 ...,. to 5'ln 4300 cepUonllt, 1ecretary. Rm. Deo, patlo, llU 3 Bdrm fam·rm view INN. 1115/Wk. ~ up. MaJd • ' · One &Two BR See al 1407 ••••••••••••••••••••••• conftt't.Me room, coif ff aq.ft. Prof up1rda 41 home, 'touted In a eerv. rotor TV. beated 2BR.2be.crpt,drpa,1ar. Delawue· Hunt'I •llSB.ICTJ'tl• & boq>ltallt.¥ 14!rVlc4!s. IDdRpd. air ~. private 1uarded uea PoOl (710 •M-s»l. • WfD hook·up. Pat., oo Beadl. pbone°~sm Gahurellablo Excellem location, near mo. &o mo. lie. (J'1uahl,y wtt.b mall)' amesutla for N. Coast Hw7. pet.a, 2 ldda. $310. w Del · l"OOalmate. freeways. fumnecotiaba...552'4.H tu.. at 1a$O. mo. 2m MartH.~~. 64S-7441f. IAk.HCEMTB Y-*aadlant Studio apt, marvelous L 91Mleadt 3148 •SHAREAHOME• (714)979-2161 N4rwelel&nlffaitqe Prk. 1 Bdrm funl&bed apt ocean view. 1paclous $325. 1 BR 2 Ba, carport, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ------------------• ~. a br + den, 2\1\ u 7 6 • m 0 • a 0 s ~ w/frplc. 49'HJ0a no pets. 1021 Valeocla. LGE 2 BR upper, view, Beaut. home in Irvine to Dix Office Space tie, A/C, pedo, 2car w . llarluertte ~ leadt 37 69 Avail 11., L 546-8l8S new Cpt.s, d.r\», 1"' bl.ks shr, 2 rmuvail., ipa, aJI SJC 831 9950 "50mow/opt.toa f01t!!i!1 JBdrm.deohomtt. locat· .... ·.:;;·••••••••••••••• ,.. .. .,.....~DB .. B•"' Ba ao to bch, two. Hel1ler coaveuleaces, lrwy • Tr at same pnce or-· ed m Spyt)ua. ~. mo. ~·s;. .. • • ' Putt. "to. No cbJJdreD cl~ Day 131M007, eves alder lie w /option Lo as Drakes Bav i•v-o..,.. peta. ~~~:f &.. °'pm. G'f..:llat Ml-01J8. Bill Two ,.,!.~me spot .... ~flceslot ,Pure••••· No pet1, 1 ,. ra "' ............... w,,,,_ own pa•ILUJI · cbJldren OK:. Owner. 2 B Jl condo, Yr 1 y • Bach. apt, crpta & drapes, Meed a l~te7 3020 Newport Blvd, NB. &i5l·19ll~or~ S700mo. 2 arN::r=!ios,drp9 nr beach, utll pd. DO ToProfessioullyFlnd ~r ::;,~~ :~U!c!Ti 1W# 1 br condo fot lie. B B!Dt'L:C·6N~~ ~-MS-2%74 ktclm. Sl70. '94~ • ~~= :;:.:,.:, _67s._3S5_1 ____ _ SUS/mo. Teanl1 eta, ..._, HCNlg H ..... al 2 Br·3 Br 2 ba t.ownhoube 2 BR, 3 bib to bch, bltns. mt-~ PIUMI C. M. pOOI, broolt off patio. 2 BR ab yrly. k2S patio, y~ frplc end' crpta, drpe, Adlts, no ~~ "' A/C. Adult comm. cau Bluffs 4 . BR,. Uke new! sn;s TO IEACH gar launclrY rm • Fro~ peta, $330. lit, Jut + sec. °' ~ ~ LOCATION owoer, SSl-012.$ Lovely View . S750 38R. 2ba, b .. v vu.,_,. S32S. · 842-4.904 832_.1.34Slnce1971 De I u x e oft t c e & Agent 644 1133 ...,, .. ......, TSL M t ,,A., ware b o u s e 1 pace . a..g..•act. 1241 · 2BR,2Ba.,yrly.$400 gm ....,.-1603 Lovel,y2BrHtdPool TwoFwantmaletoabare 1100·8000 sq fl. Full -•••••••• .. ••••••••••• 3 BR, 2 ba, nu paint, crpts, L.ar&e E·slde 2 br, 1 ba, Enckleed Patio '320 Bcb house Call 673-1903 secura ty. 642·4483 ur fbr' IM 2br, 2ba condo. • drps. $550 mo. 648-2848 natural wood cabinet.I & Avadable D()W! (5816) for into. 6'2--760i. IUSIMESS OPPOITUMITllS -Gift S••• 5r.1pp"'9 .. ..._ .. ~ ...... ....., .... tnHlc. 11.500 .......... ., -H•lr S•IH-Mottla Le9_. eree. s ...... alllw locotioa. Loh of ,. ... SJo:oocf -Heir Serio•-Dew••••• L•tH•. lsh*I* d 2t,...... SZl,000. -c..._., _. M••••r Sllop-SMltt Cent .... ••r• ...,_. le.di. $2.000 ... ... ......,. "-A.ti ... a Gift Slllop-Art C..tw Sh"lr t Ana.. $.ell Cocnt Hwy. Sii.JOO · .......... ,. -Heir Soln-All HW fldwe1 wcl • •t1•lp .. •t. F••orcrblt IH••· O•·•lt• ,......,. $54,000 497-3331 ~beaCb,tennla. evet,da""S48-9341 beam .... IJtng Pvt F R --.aed o ---------I -.3084 .,. .. "' · Ckean Vu l Br Duplex em mml. n~ . wn Nr. 0.C. Airport. Deluxe ·~~ • AL FRON!s._3 ~R. balcony. UtJI pd. AduJta, UtilitiesPaid$290 bdrm & bath Non· omces wJ1ecretarJal SOUTH LAGUNA .....--..-3211) walltlobe.cb,la!DlnO. .ao~.$32S.7Jl-600l R6SMuftSeel '4945) amok.er. JI.SO/mo + ~II serv.752-5626 LAGUNA )lllG,U.EL • £~..,. _ _ ... ".............. ~or 642·3361 a..tf•s 631-4555 _u_ill_._6'5_·2.556______ 4~ '9S 1720 . • 2~1~~.:J:.·~· NeWpOrt Hgts-3 BR 2 1&2 Br. Adults, not pet.a. LACASAILAHCA Honormaj.ettditcards. Free room & board. in a ...-..~ 4450 ml!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Ml-Nn · BA. NEW modeni kitcb, f'\im or uof -yrl,y. 1225 loch. I IR·A"' Mow Lagime MkJMel 3'52 luxury Ckeans1de home -•••••••••••••••••• .. • = ---------• lie yard +gar. Alley ac· & $250. MZl E. tllh. N All utils pd • cpta, drpe, ••••••••••••••••••••••• for a lady ill exchange 4 DELUXI OFC'S ...,...._. 3252 ceu.'600mo.S.U·l.549or Hts.646-1801 opoolve"rlndey35, oraoc'af.eAdlsuJotsr 2 BR 2 e.., bltns, cpt.s, roclitebskpog.CaJJKen, ,.._, 11 -••-"••;~......... ~168 ,.~ U rt 1-433-3902 ""'""· rm., seat 25, a lmmae.Zbr2 ba,£.econ. "ON THE B'ACH," children. Ca I Sue: ... .,..,pa o,carpo · peneled,am.wbaelnre· do oe the ._ A/C, 2 3 BR. 2 ba:· lam rm. re· ti.ch. W\Dter, $22.5 mo, 556· 7707 or Henry : 831·90'19 Resp fem over 21lo i;hare ar. 1 or 2 yr. lease. Lake car iar .• j';;.--',/pool, lae modeled ldtcb., Avall lm· utilpd. eea.3558 642-9137 2 BR, 2 ba duplexi.n N.8 Forest are a. Kent med $79S 75.!}.0905 Mtwport leodt 3''9 1 blk from sand. Avail Harkins. tmmo-Call~ · · Oceanfront 2 br, 2 ba, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5/16.Sl86.SOmo+\.liuUI. 714·581·9393 MoMy to a.oc. 5025 • ..., ..............•••.•.... ,~; lat,W&lntT.D.'1 La.ta,._. LOANSAVAll.ABLE ••••••••••••••••••••••• Credllnoproblem. .-.NK1•• 1100 ....... 75~5903 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...._Yltfo 3267 3Bdrm, 2BA. A frame. wub/dryr, cable TV. 2 BR 1 Ba, lndry facil, no PA.JU( HEWl'ORT 1 yrlse 67S..Jl40aft4pm MA.AIME CENTER Frool~orcbfrozenyo1urt ••••••••••••••••••••••• Walk to bch, pool & ten· gar AdJts, no pets. $500. pet.S. S26S mo. 1st & la.st 8 1 QUICK CASH 283 t: 17th CM Brina 10 F I ,,._ tlU A BR nis yrly SSS(). Avail 6·1. 673~78. + $100. 200 E . 16th Place. ache ors· 1 ° r 2 Av&1I May bt. $150/mo Coa!t Hwy, Newport Bch ad tor sample + lrl bonus rm. 3 ba. · ~nts FromS28950 Fa1rv1ew.Re&poosib prkng. Manne related lst n Trust e Lost&Found 5300 or ea.se-..... s e.. 63l..J686 --644..(MS2.Avl4/22. Hedroonus&Townhouses House blwn Newport & Leue 840 Sq fl. Ample g 2 d D cd fam rm, din rm. Huae Y$1 2 Bdrm House, Newport ~.a..d B R A N O N E W & S~ctacular s pa, total le.~8. keep trying. bus preCd. All ullJ & lax· arranged for any ••••••••••••••••••••••JI w/panoramlc vu. Xtra Beach horse property. ••••••••••••••••••••••• BEAtmFUL Six 2 BR 2 reneatio n program, es paid. Call K. Witzel, ~= Bo';:~~n"ili:~~ Lost.or Found a ~t! Call ==~~'786loclA/C. Bigyard S400.55f>..0810 CMMral 3102 Ba opts +1 BR lofl & =~~.n;:t1~~0~ Gfo..°t!nt 4350 ~ creased value of your Animal Aulstance -.,. • .,... FF b b • • • •• • den. All Adlts. no pets. ----------ho Calltod r I t League537·2273,ootee. ---------·~· BLU • 3 r 2 a, 2 • ••••••••••• • • ••• Xlnt toe. 2085 Thunn Island, Jamboree "San .......... ••••••••••••• TOP LOCATION me. ay or a.s • MllilpOttleodt 116' paUo, 2'1'l car gar, auto AT LAST (btwnBay&Hamllton). JoaquinHlllaRoad. Garages for stora&l'. East 17thS...... C'OW"leousmformauoo. I~Qrey ti1er male •-••••••••••••••••••• G/O, wshr/dryr/ref 673-2058or613-452 (714J,44-1900 10x17' $30. 9x24' $-40. 2,000 Sq. ft sbop/ofc. ' :;tt.-·approx 1 yr, btful NO FEEi HouAI, CIOGCSos, lllOO. 213/-.SOZl Shown by appointment t2x1JI' 155. mo Safe & G-·-" floor _,_ _.. f.\A\.A iax CO mark,nfs, vie Copper du pl t & ea. Re D t. A ltftlltd Senfc• 2 BR., 1 ba, crpts & drps, secure. Days 64M262 .......... : au~o....... ~n..... • Lantern, D.P. Eod or Pavilloa,67).C81.28kr. ln11eed.Occupancy YouC•Ftet Last desirable apt, grdn, gar, steps to bch, yrty. willspUtlnb~ ~t~tATll.OIHS Man:!L Call 661.63111 aft ---------NearDoverShoreatnone At Ho.. Wfftt trees. patio, ceramic Dys6tO{i6.5(),eve642·5225 •Sio&le. Mesa Verde. $600Eacb kr67W'JOO Ucenaed Home Loan Spm or Debra 64.2-5878 MEWSIAVllW ~ Nwpt Beach's finest nrs. DtW bltn. $350 Harbor-Adams, CM. $30. Shops, ofc's, bobby & Brokers 1erv1n1 So. dys 3 Br z e.., pool, tennis, llftU. 3 Br, 2 ba, frplc, WE GUARANTEE 64.5-4266 ~CMlt/Udo Isle SWrageonly 833-8974 ideal !or photo lab. Calif. for 17 yrc. Call our -"--·------.-jac.IMSyrl,y. 675-0562 (rm I din rm . A •Wldeatselectioa poss. 2 BR w Jfplc. Sandy E /Sld CM Fr $85 near est or f Ice• Lost 4/2, 4 envelopes, pie· --------------HorucuJtunst's delight. •lo bOUJe computer sys 3 br & 1 br apts, crpl!!, beach. $600 673·0700 Office Rntal 4400 548·724: . . 714-837·3744 tures, Nr White House SBAvtl!:W, 3 Br popula Cov'dpallo,veenhouse, •Oail,ytelephoneservict> drapes, fenced yrd, gar bt..-n~Mor~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------·--------i rest, Lq. Bcb. Call col· Barllarborprimeocnvu courtyard, gardener. •Vacanclesvenfleddaily & carport. S350 & S2Z5 OFftCESPACE Cd\I Cst Hwy, retail or lecl, 714·282-8857, S950.S47·7°'4;833-321S WJD & refrtc incl New •FUUstalfofcounselors 2522 Santa Ana Ave. 2 BR, 2 ba, lower duplex, SingleRoomsorupto ofr Lots of frontage, WHEN YOU 'UH82·1326Reward. BJG CANYON Luxuriou cpts & paint S'T90Jmo lie. •Free to aged GS & over 646-3192 walk to bch, credit ref 's 8 Room Suite. htory good prk'g $1200 mo. 2 Br. 2 bath con · Owner644-4227 •FreerentalrounscUng I Br. new crpts. clran. $330 mo y rl). Agt, La~eparkangarea. _7_S9_92W _______ '"NEED c•"H, dominlum home •Open?days8·00..8:00 kids ok. No pet& S235 ~'89l2 J-W.Y.-.-£-Co. IW -1 .. ~ Top locallon . Beaul. BLACI( RAIMCOAT If you attended the March 30 Co1ta MO!ia Chamber of Commerce banquet honoring Jack Hammett-tr you bad a black London Fog rain· coat, size 42 Loni lo tbe cloaluoom-.lf 1ou len early and picked up the coat wit.bout cheeldna it carefully-well, try lt on· -ch aocea are L~e slenes will fall midway between your wrist and }'oUr elbow, for you are • m possession of my 42 Regular black raincoat- ·lta sleeves fall Just on my fingertips-· you·11 New/never lived in. We S..CM.flh 3276 RENJIMES ~2274 OM UDO ISLE 4'9-2237 498·06'0 showroom & otrice. barJtrplc. $600/orlseopt. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Will-·--· f hed B-L B . tot cu 2 br Pnv Patio Bit Ins 1 '"""' ease unus ... er or. ns • m . Sallst>cary R.E. 6'73-6900 New view 2 br condo For Professional Service enc gar, no c~ldJ pets'. New ln/out 2 Br, 2 ba Koll·lrvioe Center 1120 &q. ft. All improve- BIGCANVONTOWNHSE w/patio, teools, 1>001. Call &ll jCSS S295. 1110 Victoria CM wJlge deck & view. ExecutiveSuites menta incl. elec. &1go, New 2 BR, 2 ba, crpt'd MS> mo, ut 41 tut mo+ ...._, 646-3197 $850/mo Orlve by 111 All size swtes now avail. A/C,&sraqft.~3325 drp'd, spectacular G SlOOdep. Ev•St4·1992or ORSI'OP BY Via Udo Nord and make (182-400 sq. ft.) Rent in· oaar.e It lake riew. Se lvmess.al731-0:MS 1936 M.,._ltYd $300Stealathls2+2 anolr. cl: Recept., phone ana., ,.., tanla fr pool Bout Suony Patio utll., jaaltorlal, mall & DMo.~ll · Ocean Hilla ec.do. view, (~blkNo.oflJthSt.> P«aOK <494.Sl SWtalACHaOR coaee serv., coat. tm. ---------1 a5r, 2ba, bltnl, dahwlhr. ACallf. Corl>. Sm Fee at Balboa Bay Club Short lowl&e, kitch prlvg1 & ..... ~!! =-~~~a:':~: •IUMDHEW• Rt'Til5~:~~~~GE ~~~~;~hcd :~~~A.~~~~5on .. WebavelOOGaotbouses. Act •99·4271. (213) Cberry Creek ~dult HugeYard$270 <s.484 > Wol-rfr01ntu--. ~~!.'·aii!~~.o~~e ~~ 331~ Apg. J & 2 BR. fplc s, we Rentf ... a U 1-4555 ... .-.-.-., THE EFftCllEMT hl!Clmtrial R...tal 450 •••••••••••••••••••••• I' IU>TOSUrT 5.000·20,000 Sq. ft. Placentia Ave. C.M. WESLEY TAYLOR CO . REAL TORS 644-4910 --.,.. have lakes , sauna, H j edit ,,_ Cal6:Jl-1400 .., VE fee. • W1a Granada best. 2 Bl\, jacuui • pool. Localed onor ma . er ca "" AL TER"ATI 1000 sq. ft. bide on 9600 sq '4M900 /49 den. 2 ba, iecur, dfx. atZ701S f'alrview.JustE.SIDE. 2 BR w /encl Delun2br,2ba.blkfrom Mo. to mo. rent incl: ft.ofland,M·lzoningon adltl, Sf15 mo. 498-'6?.5 S. ol Warner, N. or S.D. yard, " gar. S300 mo. bctt $435 mo. 631·4256 aft Rec e Pt . l> er v . ' Placeolia Ave, Cos ta CONTACT UHION HOME LOAMS Unlon Home Loans ar· range loam for home or property OWMl'I ot $1.000 to $100,000 or more. And throqb Uolon Home Loana 7ou 1et Homeowner Terms . wblcb are generally much better than linance company t.errns. ChooM n.. Tft'lllS tltat flt yow ...... Stltct SSOO. 4 br, 2~ ba, F.R., • Fwy,556-1991.Nopeta. Adults. Now avail. 6J>tn. penonallted phone cov-Mesa.646-0568days. pool. tennis. 1ardener. ...... lc6oal.a..d 180' ~7522 1 Br w1lon. frplc, gar. erage, cool. rm, moil FUUY AMORTl%S> "OWfter,84()..0009 ~str.o 3278 ••••••••••••••••••••••• _E_Sl_d--8----.-Ocean view. Blk from ~o-~e~~r:~~ prkg Stofoge 4550 PARTLY AMORTIU:D c aJ I 842-4321 • Ext. z:a 1 J 'd be happy to arrange an exchange that would make us both more p~­ sentable abou.ld it ram again. TERRACETWNHSE3Br ••••••••••••••••••••••• . · . e·l r apt, quirt. '-'-Util lncld •UAO mo. "' w -..... l.....,,..ESTO ... LY Br __ ,. oew quality l Br b '"''L ~ THE EXEClJTJV"' ••••• • • •• •• •••••••••• •• "' I09' "' 2~ e., Fam Rm, $475. 2tr, 2ba.. IQIStaln peolhse. 111"' clean, pvt, or• ops, $260 631""256 an. 6pm. "' lfS.-074SorSSMIM6 PooJ, carare. lmmac. w/garden patio Yrly mo.&&2-0346 •---------___ s_u_1_T_E_.64_0._S4_7_o __ New storage garages. 1425 Prkng 67~9850 Get d ..1 ,..._ bookk clase to beach, ju.st off $325. Vacant. No pet.a. · · ewport Hei&hts..,..()ne n UI .... ..,.,e eei>· "'WATERFRONT" Newport BL RV & boat NEWPORT HEIGHTS 581-4582. 768-lJOl -..00 PttllnAllo 3107 block to aboppiat and mg blues. Expr'd con· New office snac:e from Wilt avail, all uW paid. Spic 'n Span, read)' for ••••••••••••••••••••••• On beCr" trailer will trade p/time ,.. Ph OCC\IPUCY. 2 br •den, 2 5-tt AM 3210 ' ,, 2 br 1 b• upatn "J1un ~h dueplex =· ~~ accountmg &ervtces for 300~.l~q ft. t Mo~t com. , __ S0._3878 _____ _ ba 2 car ce frpk ._ I nice apt. ln Newport or sve ra es lD ar:ea. WAREHOUSE SPACE' bai-dwooct . drapes'. ••••••••••••••••••••••• porch. car. & ~uh fac; I. ( e o c e d backyard lrvioe. Refs avail Call tasUc Views, patios, · Lae or mo to mo 142-1334 $Z25. 2 br. Kida ok. 1000s S350 pr mo. Quiet & relia· Mature adulta only for 548.2538 l n lb e CANNERY l~ sq ft, $400/mo. lse r~nt plaM in oc-Found : Silver Charm corct.ce wM atat• Bracelet. Fto. Valley. law. Call t.o Identity. M.2-5786 U for any reason we can· LOST! Male Doberman, 1 DOl arrange • loan for yr, vie C&nada St, San you ~ere will be no cost Clem. 661.Q61aft8. orobllgallon. dQs.~ev~. more nail. 6•S·4900 ble. Call aft 8 PM. this lovely country set·•---------VILLAGE-Parking incl. or month Lo month. -----------• A&eot, am fee. 175-8213 ting. Call 'BARBARA OR Beautiful 2 Br $275 For appt call Ed 673-1003, _s.56-_1_60_1_.______ SREWARDS KeJS loet vtc ~ ::.:~2~a~p~ T..etn 3290 Cor'OIMl---.. --M-cr--31-2-2 :1:n~,a;m~u:~1 (~If~~ Co~8}~~~~:Beaf~k) ~LalayetteAve.,N.B. ~!~~ ••• !~.~~ UNION k~s.~l~Y~oro:CSr~:~ blttns, frpl. w /w crpt, 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,.·.··.·.·.··.·.·.··.·.·.··.·.·.·.··.·.·.· ,_1:.:52::.=1846::.:.::;·:..______ OFFfCE SPACE June l~Oet ts. CdM area. HOME :::11~¥/~~ c II P. crprt. Adlt.1. No pets. •4 Br, 2 Ba, $575. Lovely t.rrILITJES PAID! for lease. 220Chq Cl. 1h blk furn, no ste~. for retired or · Open Fri ·Su 0 • 213 J yard, patios, 2 frplcs. DCMG Point 3826 Elegant 1 Br on Beach off S.D. Frwy on Crown g e 0 t 1 e m a 0 • (:) ~OANS FOneUNylanOd: bSlaigd.es8u.sin .~,,!?i3st· '798-43S6; 794·7176 1133-8974 or 838·5259 • ••••••••••••••••••••••• FP Pool $280 (6731 > Valley Parkway. M1ss1on ?S9-l?S2/l·J28.?2.f2. .,_., 3 Br. fam rm, din rm. COftdoiNnllllftS T1(6J!~r~s,~ l BR, clean, freshly paint· Rentlmu 631 ... 555 _Vi_1-'ej_o_.83_1-_286_1 ____ 1 Easlgate & San Miguel. Ja•-'AeC ....... k,•-•ate, 1&..&.--1.L-....1 ?425 t,., ~" ed, gar. No ~ts. fl85. HooormaJ.creditcards Harbor Vu Homes. _,_. ·~ ~.. _.__ 8J0.932Saft6pm HunL Sch Prime office 640-185? tennla, pool inc, WOO/mo ••••••••••••••••••••••• GARDEN APTS Promontory Pt lbr & lolt, space $300 util pd. Good lkalftlHS/l••Ht/ Nation's Largest Home ---·------ Avail May L ~2866 Or38r, 28a, Hunt Landmark CORON A DEL MAR I lllallwcJoa leach 3140 ocean vu. $450 mo. Dys parking. 536-930.'5 RINlrKe Loan Brokerage Flrm Found: Toolbox w /mlsc. M0-21868aA6pm. l445mo . 962·4454, 2 61' Townhouse, Crplc. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 64G-aiql>,eV1i673-3091 •••••••••••0 •••••••••• BToro 770.3031 tools. Owner Identify by ~~~:r~ Ba, :031:.l·:-;~ gar, :~l~t~=·J°e:~~= ~~· ~~c::.:.~~:~: S..Cle•• ll76 K~1:J~~~lEx •=lwtfty SOOS Hllltldt 148-2225 f~~~·d:~a~ n~~~~~ -..&... ,._ f 1 ""·· 1 t.o Fashion Island & fine prage,paUos.~2358. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Office space • full ••••••••••••••••••••••• E . f CallH B.P.D.~5121 ........., wtwet bar, u.,I. rp . '1Uper oc, oo pets. ON BEACH, 1 BR, utll service. 120·600 sq rt SAHCLl!MEHTE Short term R .. $$$ s ast, -------- New/ne .. r Und In. Tennis,atlpool. $39S/mo. beach. Alsol Br. 1144·2611 LIVENearTbeBeach! pc1.. 1 .:.,.~,.6$350. Yrb' tse. fr 0 02 $ 1 5 0 m 0 . Grooming " Pet Shop any reason. Blll Daven· Found; Lbua Apeo, vtc. '600/moor..abmitl.Nop. 4IM-«ll2 5. c .... Sol ....,, . .,,,,., 4)?M-4?60 Retiring after 7 good port,549-9803 ~~~urst/Ellis, FY. lion.WATERFRONT Dllplnn&Jllfw. 3600 Spac. aptw/fantastlc bay BeG~~Wula'!~rulPtaAipdt&. ~fthFwnlthed 2..,., ol vt t years. fine location & ---·------••••••••••••••••••••••• view. Call 673-3893 or .... "' ""' •LL-L...._ ... 3900 ....,. CB, P en . approx cllentele S68 SOO LOST Set ot .. s -"th HOMIS &&G-1232 21661 Brookhunt, HB or_..__ 8x33'. $350/mo. 1827 · ' · : ..ey • wi 631·1400. 2U-HWPTICH 96J.6653 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Westclilf,NB631-0900 BERTHAHENRY /NEED Aries tnsl1nia. Reward. a-to bay' •'-r ,..._...._ 213·183-3589.Dys/eves. 2 Bdrm, bit-an kitchen. TIIEEXCITlNG ..,._._, 21SDerME:..LT0~92-4121 /MONEY _548_·3900 ______ _ ........, • · ..., ""'"""""' adult.&/ no pet.I $350 mo. 2B hit.a--I •'"•.._.MIS• '""S rtUIOll; IA"'• w/24 boat sUp, z patios. Dana Polnt .. uper ocean 1st & last 640-?S62 r, c: unm we come, no ,........, ,. ~ • Lost. Gucci wallet 4/9. ttplc,blw.2car1an1e. v1ew.NewWOsq.f .2br, · ~tartingatfMSmo MINUT8~TONPT ~~~e~°!:f0~8J~i'l:~:L TRAVEL AGENCY • l'tr. Ralphs, HarbOrCtr. Nu palnt 6 shutters 2"'ba l450. 759-0706 Cotto Mesa Jl24 · While it lasts we're offer FRANCHISE CM. Sentimental nlue. lhtuout. rroo roo. l30-m? ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bach, llt.2 BR. CREDIT NO Reward. &u...S40, ext all IPM ..._.. 1 ....... F -i ... ~ • ,. ...., .. .....,.H,.. ·-s from $220. & up. tng Cree rent on beaut. of The new way to own a PROl&.EM 618. ~---11 Wahvu -""""""' "',,,.,. • Adults, No Peta race space overlooking travel acency. Travel -.~ • ~----------Hartiar Vftw home 4 BR ••••••••••••••••••••••• Large 2&3 bedroom 1:161 Meaa Dr. the Bay. Space from 290 Network. Start your own. ._,. M'W TDlocms Lost man'• rlng, 1old 1 ba, tam rm.' Aoto .... P1d1111 3707 1arden apt.a. D11bwhr, (5BlbEaalolNewport to900sq. ft. incl. crpta, Exp. nol required. 75~5903 band, claw MtllnlJ. \4'' apttnlllert, iar·door -..................... bltna, eocl. gsr, PB bbq. Blvd.) drP.•, A JC, 5 day Complete auPport It loQJ Arranced by red st.one, iniUaJ "\iA to ..,..... f7SO mo leue. 2 Br, atept &o beach, pool, Pool. Gas Pd. 778 Scott sc&-9860 Janitorial serv. •all uUI term 1ervlce provided. Comf tt.. I.oms DB' • • ~a 1 l co 11. tM-19t ~· pr mo. 'Ul June Pl 64.i-~ .. 000 pd. Take advantage of Call Mr . Cb a r 1 ea ---------714-48'2-IG:leva. ~8'54721 ,. our spring fever ... & free 714-..Bae2 CONFIDENTIAL 1---------~e,,2·=.:! ;~n~e::,: Coet.MeM l7Z4 Et!!~·~ !P':!: ~.:: ~:,=·tov::;.1~ ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-.-.-.-~.-.-., Prtva=:.~5315 ~~ .. T=· t~ lam na • dtn.. Walk &o ••-••••••••••• .. •••••• palol. $3SO. 5SZ·•20l ; by 1ummer. Call or atop PfZZA/SUIS Brookhunt/Ham,ltoa llQ 6 OCBAN. Open It SS1·12'1 by uy weekda1 bwto Seller bu big job ofr. DOYOUNUDCASH? HB. 96U4JI ...... .,,E I -o-. ·-. ao•c: 30 c •t , c t l. t. 2 D d & 3rd WA'J'!:IU!'ROa:r;ro-MES -'"-•vr HIWl-SIDI Ambaasador Inn in Costa 0 • .. : ' an re use. 08 a homeowner loans ar· Found: Doberman ln>e G1·1'00 Studto. l bedroom 3br, 2ba. Townhouse. Up-Jdesa, %Z11 Harbor. Ceo· u:7~~no;:~lt Mesa Ideal tor cpl. Lo raoced fast. Borrow female do&. Nr Adams "' Maidaervic.,pool araded. Lie patlo trall,ylocated.235rooms. (atN~achBlvd) ft11~~ terms . Agt. SlOOO . $100.000 . flexible Mesa Verde, CM. C.11 to ml Newport Bl. C.M. Children ok. 84S.9S43 MANY with kitcbu. Cti~675-1662 terms. past credit no pro descrlbeS4M4.15 WM'7»or8'5·31N1'7 eves,6'6-4262d-.Y&. ~•'IV. Swimming ---------1 blern. Call us · noobU1a· LOSTI ~bala aa• on SUS C •4!:tf'"4!: . pool, j11cu1&i, and rec. Office 1pace 1000.1100 sq FamlJy Restaurant for Uan bt _ ........... ,_ ,_ room. Dally • wukl,y ft. Bal pen. a&le. c.o.ta Mesa. Mi.ot srERuNG FIN. SVCS. lrvint!, "° ...,_ • lnn, Nlcel1tun.I.abed 1 bdrm. rates startJnl h'om $41 a m.lSU orm-eotO cond. Modern new 1bop-714/115S-1'10 (bllr) CM. RSWA.llD. ~. week. * srY sums* pin• center locatloo. Found: Fem. otrm Qe.p. Be.auL lnt«ior. S.ta so. M9rfllD4Dd Trwt blk/go!d. la ~•eat AIWfW ~ t.::fioo~ .,....'" 1135 CollPrklot....., ..... 110.... --·--· tA qll&lllled ....................... FOUND:,.-...... 11111 Bank of Amertta 8alld· _,...., --"' ~ ..... .,.. la1. 10 atorl .. of ~.llaiDSt...~a.lUlt. lOWlmJ aru. A.Dabeim'• n.-omo. CUeJ, n•~ JW •--------- •1*9· Eu1 P'wYaec.ra. Gourmet, 1iftl.movm1. Wwirtlllllri· Lo1t lacU••• 1l .. n1 covtrtd partla1. All mmt ..u. JCx.celJ. beach htT.0.'.... ... bltool•, Coeta IC•• eehlce lncluded. Prtm• ane..Vak• aU. owner. WT.D.&.Mt& Rward1'7M8U46-tz:ll loc:aUoG • competiUH D)'llQ.IOfT ..... ---...."'""'----•-,,..,. rat• from aoc 1q n. . · .. ~-muco.~ l.AJ6T: B• ta. wtit r-. located In ...... • 7 ~11.·ft.1.I 1 otanae COilar, Oi111eo _...,.I I --Hlt)\WMS. ITS.UTL • • • l ' .., . • 'tf!&s .~ Cu 'as c-•fCw:rlh •drtail ttmllfl;• HI I •~h , I Un UJ , I 1 "'""... la ..... -....-. ··~~ .... .-...:a .................. , .............................................................................................................................................................. . 861A.....,..SWT. C•r•••tu. Pree Pad&~ Lotr ~ ILl!CTltt-•¥1 PalDUn1. wallpaper, Career Penou-Hom E:lqllr. matomY Ir COD· Prof~lr~.,f: IM!Oa.~USS ftJP-aL\&OB o ,._._ NIYlbe . .-.. ~· ..... J.-1 _,_ .._., .. __ _.__._.___ ctl1 l .,,,, l'ID'l •lnt.. Cleaaiac s.n-tee. Ca crtte. Pree estimate.. ~-pedal a.I . Oallap.llQalelrbR -Mala.I.A ,:;;,.._--••11 ·~-· ·-";;;.,ffii·~ Ir repair. J . Waqb. eveulU11a1.-.cica ,..T1Jlar54M79 DM1iD.~ l'ree.._OllllM.om --:m 1151 1all'a Home Bepain, CEMENT WORK. All MM>IOl ~·a lloulecW1111-... ,... IJ'S PADmNG. Great AIRftRDOOr. All • J• 4•• I Jnap. Doan. trbadon. lliQds. Reaonabk. rr.. Custom Electric. Ind., I' I la&. Refs, ,..... Owu _ .... --........ ~aireatprtcea. t 1Pe•.•b1 DI I ea. , ........ ;; .. ,;;.: ....... Plidaaetc:.551-2054 s .call75CM1825 comm ..... •maintava. _ ... J ................ trw.IG-1._,MS-Mal •-r.o Meo Wlll llo•t 5iSMCMl ~bbUea-eompo-U.r. &Ml ._,..Dri•ewQ9 Hooml • rellable. P'tee \'ou" We baDdle lrs • ,.....mt.5'1-alO Parkl•I Jot Hpalra • R-. repalnt, coven Ir ClilW C... est. m.a OCC student. 1 Tua truck. Bach., homes, apt.a. wWa • a ml movet·offl ce • PAINTING Ir JlEPAIJt.1-..;;;..---.....;..--- • Haleoat, Lie.NB.CM decks. Jolln ~oberta ........................ Pwalc• ~~m, Roa ~~~WT=. bouaehola. Dlltanc. • JS yn, werkmauhlp SMAaplwalt......-rl.. IMl-753S.morn .• ev•. Relax and eaJ01 your ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• lffal, 1110 packln1. paa.r. ~n::•u ol Da1 •••-·-·-• .. ••-• na c:.,.tSarftc:e vacation. Eacellent PnnnicaComderTop~bl· aIEAPEST hauUn1 ln HouaeclHoln1 Nut, Lowut leJal nte. aper. · CTJLE.Sp9cial- S. lcri ...................... ~J:e ::!:.~~ood ltaDed to yovr apedllca-town. Fr. -.. CHEAP! Drpeodab&e, Coat.a lleaa ~ T W-tU. Qual. work. Setia ~·Lo :~ ~=~ ~ n'. .. _ .. !. ......... Carpetllaowillla)'youn tiona.Latestc:Uonlrde-eoa95or8'$-1J90 Newpart~761-2Sl2 • prlcef. Loca ufa. m.lllS JaeoatHted Dhorea or mln~ Repairs CNll.tot atcm. Freeest.6'1Wlll CoveredPlckUp u In dally. Honest. P 1 II lll'•tkt ~~~~~~~~18.~:.!bla~·--1---:=--:-=:---:::-:-- l'rom tll1ni to ftnal $50 c;..atn1tool Guarwort ....................... a.a••! SlOaload liahle.owntrw.HB/FV _ .................. Boi....,.tntto1 Exper. Ir CDAIOCTILE. Ot'9•r l•&•l trplna .al bli&w nYinp. R.J.Ruffman •SoG. Gen ....................... ~ ua.mw. PETERSPAINTING ct.ap.Befa•HlLPlellM ~ apert. Call m ... ' ••It& U.O avail. M· est.~ Coatr.CuatomAlU~Add, IANDSCAPINGICLEAN· Eapr'd. ReH Rate1. catl-.o90 apm.Pal Uoo L•l•l Typint.SN.....,...•ateamc&ean patloa , cablneta, UPS lflllldl p I .._,_ Free Eat. Call Gene._.._ ~ ~bri·~-· whi formlca. New coast. Res lfabdeoance immediate .............................................. 551MM9 .._ -·· • comm'I ~ or ' RileJ'aTuService ----------·--·-• .. ...... I ~lOminbleach.Clean ~Uc•boaded. Nl'Ylc:iq.IG-9ll0'7 Waal•f\EALLYCLEAN 21Yeant;aperteoce All PROFESSIONAL Deeb, eovera laWceu....;.;;;._ _______ ..;..._ --·--· ... -... Jiv, din rm, ball $15. Av1 VERY LOW PRICES HOtJSE. Call Glqbam Call~ Palotiq. later/Exler. woft.brk:kfsWe. Senlce ~bJ'llWna . Nr So. C.L rm S'J~. ::Xb $10, c Room Add l t lo n a• On Gardenio1 Main· Gtrl. Freeest8'5-6123 . 8-.workl1Ull'~ Bob 873-TIGI --••••--• .. •••••• PL 11 mo to' yn. Full 115. Guar m pet odor. Remodel, New conatr. tenanceGeorae 5'9-201!1 ••llouwlMntngdooeby UNDA'STAXSERVI~ ~ ... --/IDtl' •-llemovala trlmmlaa lime.IWa 55'1.-s& Cllt repair. 1S YT'I eapr. Ue'dCallSplro.S48-82SO llbl el Personal and Bua · ·~ -· .,.,. ........ ,,..,.... • , • . • Do work m)'Mlf. Ref1 Prof J LaDdlc re • e couple. R s. co me T •a pre P pr d, booelt. neat. reaa. •--•••••••••••••••••• pn,mln&. rr. ell. Llc d, ' ' •• s.ntce m.oiot. Dale W. Phillips Cement. lne fl a.=-nln&. ~ !i40-1193 Eve/wllend appoint Uc'dllM-JOODave Neaitpmtdla91rlGtllna lmurecl. M2-21DC ...................... D-" bl Cl . No Job too small. incl mowing trimmln1 available. tn•~ ... _En.er lht•H-• b ... EST nJ.14 Tr. Service. Tree pnm , ~Uc typinC TyptQa nowa e Carpet earung. Uc'd/Bonded. Ma-2162 · .~.... ~1 .... Fr • THI ~•-&a..aa "'-· .. -Y • · ofd~eateoriiuiallet-Q-.iallty work, call for att5. ~I:;~ ee -"~'"'" l•~1c .. l11 R.Slnor.St.lic.,IDa.Tr)' Pat.cbl.DI lDt/at,/fOWMl ~·J!:=ntoppln&. l l b free eat. 559-3333. · GtlLS ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• me.1114555Jt bn. ...._:.._.. 11 ... d 1.,-:--'-' -·------er• n m y om e. l)lft .... & Dft'9t Houaecleaninl • office 1 .....t.a...a.... n._ tri J'PI'. -· " -· • llea1onable rates. c.;119 ••• :••••••••••• .. •••••• GARDENING lpecialilta :r, ooa""• -=:::--,...... m-PallltYo.-Castle -.... ................. removals, trim-~ "' ~163 '°'" ... •••••••••••••••••••• Free lance deal-•-11 SERVICE a. R E ~ ·.,_..., .-.7 --...a. FClean·!P·t 8 )'l"I ~1Hdn1 ID ___...__ Pl I' I min1, prunin1. Free • .... quo&e CABAN •uu.o S48-m5 • · · .. · ~. •· exp. ree c.I . Jay -·-n .. • .timatee.t'i'0-1'51 · A draftiq, reliable quail· daya wk. Bonded, lo· Noboru. 848-4043 or bomes, Int. I& ext. --•-•• ........... _....;.;.....;.;.......;.;......;.;.. ___ _ •okkeeplot for in· Fine utertni. all oc-ly. 6'5·'307/HS-7207 G111 .. Senfcet sured.54CMl62S .,-3162 Pleue cheek our re-BOMESAVERS. Pham Cle I I dividuala « amall bual-CMions. ~. eves. ....................... fenmcea. lJc I 320ll8l inl • Jleef!DI P'tee eat. ......... _ ..... .. nea. ID)'taeaper., A-P. C•••/Cn el• Bectrtc.al HANDYMAN. Hom•• 'lbe llOllPfU uw·a our M•a•r Our., lnlrd, free est. Honut • relhbl Wladowa cleaned, re- A-R. type Invoices, but --••••-••••••-.. ••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• apta. Consclentloua name ~ 11 our ·--••• .. •••••••••••• Ted.caTm 81!n'iee. BolA. llJC OK. aaoaable, buine•a .. , ~=al balance. All pbuea co.ncrete .... hrdllectrfc Craftamao.Call~ pme:Call5*2393 Brickwork. Small jobs. Bob Foad PaloUD& i'l'M06SorM7-G313 bocnmlrapta.KJ...at bikwrtl. Qrtm brlnrort. Uc~ &45-8t74 A-_._ Newpofi. eo.ta Mesa• Comm'l, lndua .• 6 res. I ,. Lic•dtBonded.6'2-681N .. ......,, floors, carpets, batba, Irvtoe.8'1S-3175evea. Int/Eat. boaded, full 4H... GARAGE SALE adl tn PeoplewboneedPeople ELECTRICIAN-Priced -••••••••• .. •••••••••• walls, patio9, windows. llab.•l-UI01UeMS218 .............. •••••••• tbaDallYPllotbda&bap- ahould always check the FouodaUona, retaining nebt·free estimate 00 Haul, sklJ.>loader dump ~· price IOI' vacant re-Brickwork. Small Joba. ~PS lmtalled factory py reaa&a.. To place YOW" SerriceDirectorylntbe ••ll•, blocka, patios. W&eorsmalljobe. tit.. gradi.Jll, tne wrk. aidences. Newport. Costa M•a 4c SelJthipofutwttbDally dired;estab3Syn.Call dl'lwlDI card, phone DAILYPJLOT :il'i&Ql.Lic'd. Ucensed m..o359 demolltklnsetc.at-1257 TboaeGQ;JSt7UlllO Irvioe.6'75-317Seva. Pilp&ltamAda. HaroldGllDOS.-2811 1G4171toda)'. ?w II .. I w ..... 7075 ....................... ':.,~~c~~ ..... ~~•••••••••! OutcaU 9-9, OWlll ACCOUNT ANTS MASSAGE OVERLOAD FIGURE MODELS 0trers top pay, a variety UCORTS or tnterest1n1 a1111n· OUTCAU. OHl y menu, aervee the enUre H I ·311 I Oraqe County area and I illlilll-iiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil _________ , needaexpeneoee«I --------• lociedr •• ,.,.a ~SEMBLERS •SANDY'S* Acea l .... Pana••1 SOTraineeAssemblera Outcall Maua1e at all levels. Call today Needed Immediately ~ and let ua tell you bow to --------~ become a bmy, well ~aid Long "Short Term •SHERILEE• A •· 0 d Aaaipmenta certified llasseuae ccouola.D.. ver oa 3Shift.s Available. Houle Calla proleuiooal. Must have own tranap. ~ appt. 547-7631 CalTodft 556-1520 11MN=~itel016 Free.TopPay. VacPay Notapublicacctncr11'1D VktorTa '~1 •r s.r.tcn Dlv Waher Kidde & Co FOXY LADY o .. , ....... . 731-35'1 B.Baklriqe E.O.E.11/P 2IQ82 S. E. Bristol PREGNANT? Carina. ~ Btkpog Ste 10 Newport Beach --------i .._M..__.,_1 liD 41 TIMPOIARY <ConierofBrtatol &: Qllll.....,.. ... coanse I Reelster Today to work Campus behind rderral. l\bon.ioo, adop-on various accountina & Carl's Jr) m~ra-S4'7·~ bookkeeping USiln· Equal ()pportwuly menta. Work close to Employer M/F UM:>A&YICIU your home. Fi1ure1--------•I ---M Ciera to Sr. Aceoun·l•••-•lliii-miiiil -••• tants needed tbruout Aaaembly ,_ ... ,_of II! Orange Co. ServiDI .U Oruae Co. Robert Half's TRAINEE 835-73U Aceouotemps DANCE OP nJN 500S. Main. Ste 5Ql ~DBI.EIS 8laul. Dude llrla dance No. Tower. Unloo Bank ~rap...-. Pvt mtr-1nThecttyo10raoae & PAllERS rond rooma. 1QA)I '1~~~n~c~!m-tl~~oa~~~ JAii MoD&t, 12Pll Ml NEEDED IPll Sm. m N. Euclid. Accounting Fee Paid DOIEDIATELYI I Au1L.m.6m G..Ofcto$700 TOPPAYlll P'llD USBION WI AD All ahifta.. day, awing & Variety of duties for 1rave7ard ioclucles OU'l'CAU.MASSA•I n1ure oriented lndlv. wkoda. Long & abort •7Jl.etll• ~~aml ... c,~.F~UJKo!!·. term aulp.menta. Holl-.......... ,_ """"' ...., .,. day & vacation pay Pbyaleal llaaaaae b Dennis"' Denn1a Person· Hospi.tallution plan Tben.PlsL AppoiDtmen == t .lrvine, D2 avall. 3:»tf>ll. Steve, 548-Z!17 ---------• •Swltchboard w-m5• ANSWER SERV S2W MAIL ADDRESS SI Palm Sildno couple look .n.. bou8e oc apt pl.mta. JuJ7, A"'i, s..t keferencea. Colt M•••-beaeh u>m...,. s.wca. no SlDIJe'• Solution ·om. by Odee NatOMaoce. CaD lalroriew 75Z-$4ll ""'91 541 ...................... ACCTS PAY AIU SUPllYtSOll CAU.711-7343 aEQUESTTAPE510 <24 Hours A Day) VOLT Ii: l'>AP~ llrl,.. •t'> ~ .1 llVll t '• 64M514 If you enjoy workin1 with people 4t would like to be conaidered for our teller-training class startina next Monday 4/17, please pbooe for an interview. Excellent atarUng salary and benefit.a. lllalfied Pe~e IAccounta Paya-. b&e .. $7800 Prepare roe input. Ca~ out lnvoi~es . Exten vo11cbers. COMPAN WlLL TRAIN. Gooq banaftta (3183) ./Bookteeper .. lll800 Randle PQahles • r&- ceivablea for beach area service comp•JlY· D~ journal entries, •poet ~ the aeneral ledaer. (llM) Qerical •Jl CLERK •SR.Cl.ERi •Cl.OICAI. BST a.teal 111% FREE UIS llUeClerb ter beJp. eaper'd Stat CJeb hlbiaa lalaod. 'f' /time =·:~=-.n ... ._ta_P_Jtlme. __ ..._ ____ _ aipmenta. lllallday Ir 1irt f« dr7 cleu-v a c at lo a pa 1 . ln& pf a al. Mature. r..,..i111e penon. ms Warner, Ave, BB . 1 I ' i - I ' I . . :r :~ "' .. ;• .. .. "' .. <; . . , "' ,,. "' • ~ -.. ; .. -. 1 ~ .. ~ l ... =!l :: .. --:: •.,i .... ~, ·"' . .. ... ... . .. .. .. .. ' ~ Driven Now ~I appllu· Uoot.tot.,IT AM It Pll rautes. aead drlvial re-cord. nsat appeaance, aae 19 or older. Nprt Bch/CM areas. Call 548-2353 between 8-S. IMDfftMDIEMT LOAMAGIMT EJper'd Loan A1ent neecw to &eoerati ldaDI batMCoastal Onnp co. NURSES AIDES All JACI IM lhlfta. fWl or part llm.e. M IOI WlU traln. Park Lido ~ c...ey Office Convalescent Hoe})ttal. -from SMl Beida to Su Clem. Re.al estate Ile. '*I'd. Ccmlad Nell Boanan. (211) 8I0-4IS77 or (714) 131-4ml. 16162....... ,_6C-80W;;.;;:..;=----- ISCtOW ftAjMEE F\&11-time llCiltioaa, an-lf or ms t•atabed, fJ00 ............ Nun1q sa:n /bour~ Partin& • eicelle benefits pactap. Of' apply in LOS ANGELES FEDDAL SA VIN GS F.qua1 Opp Empt.Yr m/f penon. Marlaera SaYln11 la seeklnl an escrow trainee for l1s N.B. olc. Dudee wl1l lncl\llk office receptiODlll, typist & Secy~trYlMr <Su Dleco rwy, Be~ Blvd, exit south one bli>dl) openln1. process in& & d mort&:f= ft.rm. elerical assistance lo w.!}!S For k>an artpaatioo dept Openlnp .e in Oranie County area, IAeluding Haatinatoo Beach,----='----- Garden Grove, Buena Park, Colt.a MfJIA. Santa Au. ls ll\ll.la1oo. cloaiD& escrow1. Min 1 yr Lou ba req 'd. &en'l ofc Ul»U· req'd. s.c.tty IDNewportC&r.6'Ml3t. Tn>lDI 50 wpm. Xlnl ~conda&benefita ............ LotAllr 1 rt includ. den'81. Apply at: 11'15.E. c;tter Street Kust be 11. "11l II Part- Martnen Anaheim &l5-tll30 ttme.Call557-4m0 Savtnaa ltLoan = EqualOpporEmpk>yer lB +. Frt, no exper. MatT ...... ,. .......... MAY lttl lltlt -~1515;;;~W~111tc~Wf~Dr~,~NB~. :..l~~Em~~~~al~e~/F~e~ma~Ie~I] COi' car rental. ,_.1 m.noo. For addWoaal ID.fonna- Exper woman to work lD wv 1--------1 tioa, pleueMDdnawne OFFlCE smliuestbmeln Laaun• P\lll & p/ ovln1, reapoo•lble, or 1.ue. oauu:nJik!· Wort la Nipel.4915-5553;"98-Sm Unl.fonm person oded for oc-perieoce. and q . w:T:_rt,..-- or over. Retired culonal baby sitting &a.to .--FACTORY HELP we l co ~ e . A pp l y ev•. Three Attb Bay · NOW 0 : Ute. Will train. 7AM to Unlveralt Protectlon._41J9._J.179_______ Penannellllanapr SICllTAllY 3.30 PM. Full-time. Service. t26 w. 5th St LVM JACllM Wltlll0Matills-_557~-IM4..;,..;..;.. _____ 1 =1~~~ bra 1-Jor 11-7. MedlcatJom It tME IOX FILE CLERK, P /T,1-----------treatments. Foll or 483Sft'WUudAve .mornln11. lite typial, Haintyllsla Exp. with p/time. Meu Verde Vernoe,CAtollll .pbon•. uper pleue. followl~ CM area Conv. Hoep., 1161 Cent.er (Jl3) .. 1U 944-21122. Part Newport 645-19f~ict. Sl,Cll54M585 F.qul~ Apt.I. BAIR 8'l'\UsT needed. llACHINlSTS, Class A, f;mploJer M/P' Gu Station Attendant, propaai'9 NB salon, requlres exper w/jli " rull It pt-time. No uper with or 'Cttbout follow-nsture, tooliDt • abort 11.aa&9'Trldnee nee, will train. 4200 Blrch tac. Alao. lease staUoo nm ~t" ability SfOll R• eooD$ St,N.B.Applylnpenoo. uall. ~ll for Ju towiJdr from uetc!bes • Top o1 the UGe retal* --------t l7MIOZ;~ prints. Must have own leebc....-artentedJ.n. 1 _ .... ______ 1 tools. Good salary • div Ofell to~ benefits. Apply ln rel~•tlon. Call Bill, person . OPTI · G.rJOO DmmJasDen- SYSTEMS, INC. 18551 Dia p..iaanet Service ol OfRCIJ•Jt 11 if APPLYToDAY I WOBKTOllORROWI SICllT ... S FUC:LlllS "'"'' OYPUMCH Top Wa&•Pd SollclaJS Sbart at Loq Tenn No Fees to You w..-.. , ... PIXO,.ratwa Exper'd or lnnper'd, Plkt tralnbil. Type 35 wpm. Co bentfita. Varia· ble bu. Equal Op· P /thne Attendant for Danlned JOUDI woman. Sat/Sun 10·1, Balboa la1aDd. f15.5BS2. Voo ~n. lrVlne. rrvtne, ..aMicbel9qo. MACHINIST M.anapr Tnlnee. Above N.I. co. needa Clua A aurate people to supervl•• aalea force. llAQYTra!Dee PQlttJou .,.._.T....,.ry 2112DUPONT,Ste14 IRVINE. (f'W)ISl-JJll5 ~ I \I ' I ' \ : W11r l11•1&tf'O' ii.t,utrri * RlllllSONS Newport ...... WUf J.at.wvlew AJlpUeanta ror: SICuam OPllA11VI P/tlme pOltUoPI avail. P1exlble avaUabtllty oeoem. ~ Securi\l' SICUTAllY Blautiful otc lo Publon IaLand needs sharp lndiv to start now! $725 up. lllcbele Kuhn 540-5001 SDeU 1111 • Snel.linc ot New(lcc't Beacb A&ency 4MOC&lllPWI Ddve Fee Paid AJtCHnlCT Creative euc. aroup aeell1 personable or-saoiter ror coord pos. Qall Wllla~~oo. Abo FeeJQbe. •Den-ni.I Penoonel Servtce ol Irvine, 20IZ M.lchelaon. ap1r.pref'd. ~..------Apply Penoanel 2-4~m Moo thru Fri Zf u•w.d F,qual Opp EmplyT m/t •Secretaries* Bllkpr B. E. S15lt A.nDual Employen Pay All Fees UJ ReiOden A&ency ltOUh SALIS «m> BlrcbSt. Ste 10t Up to~ wt to start. NewportBeacb 83:Mll0 -all ,..__ 'd CallforAppt/Elu.b'65 P/time av . ~ req • ~~~~~~~ Fuller Brush Co. r: 15MCT1. SICllTMYftU. Exper'd, SoOd aid.Us. 2 Person ofc. S700+. M4-41SJ.3. SICRITARY Good t)1>lDI It ab allllls. Neat apj>ear. Xlnt worlt-lnacooda. .. I •• .,. SM. 1055 Mhc•--lotO IMh. St1 9060 ....................... ....................... •.••••••••.•........... 4 Wlleel Drf•a 9110 1Wioa W.ted 95'0 ._..._I•~ • ._w.... 7100 W.... 71 •pdw IOZO New 19 pc 1 s ~ FUJl-YAMMfA -ou•-•·----• ·-0 -0 •·--•0 • ___ .......... y.,.s Sa'9 S.L. w-.r1 c:hroaM/l'lo nickel St1na DIALBS ................................ _. ....••••.. ·•··•·•••··•·•········• s.nw, . Tf?IST~ -.S & MCh WS cSrytir szoo. For111 din aet, atl wat.rS. COClkWare. Yi:atht .,.,W~~e1 WSPAYTOPDOLLAR IMW , t7lZ f01l TOP USED CARS •••••• .. •••••••H•--Ptr.-.12. ftll lUM. s.. H .• "-" ..... buy, ..... de. n1 HeJioUolpe, Lltetlm• 1uat. SUS. ...._ -....... \J'pta& Nd lll lrMe.. Cyde • Co au CDll 5SWd "'"'-" ,.... to llr. ,.__a& J'lewport 8h4, C.M . ""-n---G YtlC.llt Wet S.nia a&at.lea Attu l\Gtlert Bein wuuam ea.1111 1L~--ama • ua ~=•• attftlewportBl•d. ~~ t!!..'i.~'!!. ~==Qul!Jc.,........ IOJO Bae~P:~.~~·, .................. ~!!~ Nm~~ -._, • Oranaetborpe /Knotl N • • d 0 0 • u 1 e d Sl.mt .. lat.m.mt T 1pl1 t, pl · l l me ....... :·-•-••••••••-Ave. $1.'Ti w/ad. Info ttfrtserat« lmm~i. &per boat. YeJY. clean, Serrin 6t.aUoo Atten flomemlll:er"' .tude11l. Waated aHd llllaolta 2J.J/sse.2Ul lJ, cbtap. but mU1t work lllancler •:fi ll. Pvt ... --• Jr:'d. D • WPllt. SUS hr. C.111. 1.-alDI • taJepbato ...._... ha ....___ Call ...._ -IOO ·-...,..._ ea •J aRa.55&-mt Call Al 8H·JU1 or Honn 1060 -ve .. _._. '""""'r..;;.._''----''--· ---~-- Eva P\a 6.p/tbne. A ssr.aa ••••••••••••••••••••••• -..oMevet. "15 Hobie, la'. W/traJler. ply, a.11 S&aUoQ. 17th Typist, Xero• 800 .dual Shetland pony .. L-J-~ $1600. lntne,NB. card. Must be U · Maml,.. C·S prolesaJooal S50toaoodbome. ~-••••• IOll 492-S740/'93-49T7. Service Sta. NIP& Attm perienced. Pleuant or. ca1DUa, 2\b2V., w/50 l4S.o81I -· --_....._ New! '78JEEP l'OREIGN. DOMESTIC twCLAMICS If 10'U cu-ll t1111ra clean ...uannt . ..J IAUBIUICll mskatbor Blvd. Oastalll•a 979·~ WE BUY USEDCAtlS CALLOARTlt VsedCarM1r '540-5630 1978 BMW.'s HERENOWI COMPUTE IOOYSHOP MOWOPIM 2 Or 5 nits a wll. A~ fice near O.C. airport. mm Jena " alamly a .__._ 1070 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -9 ... / Goldeo Eatile Pl Sbel1 nth Ir Jntne. NB Divertlfied dut.lea. Flex!· Secor leo.s, 180 mm, 1 ;._$ _.,..._., Vlolln. Stnd copy, 10011"11 Deeb t070 Uat·91M78 • ble tara or full time. 673-6685 ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• old $e5 nrm. C.ll until ....................... Reduced to ST87 IXC&LIMT Serv.SlalletpMededtm '152-zm """-1040 WANTED y00reachme.e75-IOCO. N.B.-Doek,upto~'pr ~~~=D~te~ !I SB.1Ct10MOI' med. PUU ar_p/t. Apply --.-only. '3.50ft . .o!Jl\Dlty, _,_ 2829 HARBOR BLVD. IMWltlS .. t •c. tllO E. c.t Hw1 N 'l"ypst. Need full time Ir ....................... TOP CASH DOLLAR NB 175-Cl auto. traDL, au p·OSTA MESA • r BdL ' part tlme. Xero~ 800, DOG TB.AINJ.NG PA 1 D F 0 R Y 0 UR Office FMllllw• & · · · V8, Ult 41 every _ _.;..,;_.. ______ 1 We may have your next --------dual tape operators. Yoar~orlllae JEW.EI.dlY, WATCHES, ........ IOIS Sia; Ude for 4C).50' uU beavyduty. (06$ll2). WllUY carlnourlimmtory. C.U Mull be apert • fast Ir Jatm Martin 5C8-0059 ART OBJECl'S, GOLD, ••••••••••••••••••••••• boat, Newport Harbor &.m lodayt ShJppin1 "recelYln1. accurate. Variety. SILVER SERVICE. USED m.a> COSTAMISA US9CilSl •l1·20404tMt4t Hard·wortln1 1oun1 Airport area. Aak for YorkahJ:re terrier pups. FINE FURN It AN· --. c--.. & AMC-JE&t We're \be new Chevrolet JllS'l(Dllilededtodoahlti Jeuie, Tbe Office, Cl:laJnp bloodlinN. lJny, TIQUES.645-1.200 BUT IN --..,..-tolO z:saUlarborBJvd. deaJerahlp lD tho lrvine OIAM6ICOUMTY"S =~•~c!.~es SG-219 ~sec:. lb nud 1erv1ce. Mc U '' 1071 SUPER SHAPE ••~•••••••••••••••••• C06TAMESA ===·I We need OLDHT warebou:se.Call~. ValetPartdn.IAttend. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 511Jl4Y 117 549-IOZ3 JOE & Prlv. country club , lrish Setter, 6 mo's old. Lathe Le-Blood 1Tx35", Good secretary c'bra JOL-11 IRc.lfonle SHJPPING a.ERK. F(f, 11:30Alll-3:00PM, Mon· Papera.Aaldn1Sl7S. taper altacbmt, $3,200. $10.$'5. Wooden dHll:s ~--MAC PHERSON permanent, uper de-Frt. Call btwn HAM· 675-5250 Colcbuter 17xS4" ns. Exec dealt " All poulble optiona, on l.968Scout. v-8, big tires, CHEVROLET llJ'ed. ~-2PM rorappt..644-540t &eared bead, 3" spindle c red en za. s tor a 1 e th1a Ol*l valve luxury tDIJ8, creat ab.ape. Ii• Salel-Service-Leaslng ---~----1 Boston Terriers, AKC. 6 b •3 000 ( 2 3 ) cablnets, lateral g sheU apeed boat. f1645/ofr. 41116-14M 21 AutoCeoler Drive I C •-- S H I P P 1 N C & VJ.vi lftst6r wks, male & female, ~~~ • • · 1 rues, 6' draftinl lbiJI ~ .,..._ort»1'11T -..... ------9-5-6-1 IRVINE :le: .-.er,~ =~-~!:~ J00RNEYMAN 893-6738 <714> cbrl. C.E. '#lf~~'ii~ Ta 1 p I ltdt• ...................... \---7_6_1-_7_2_2_2 __ 1 Rolls uJC:.mbafteBKW pref Appty at Balboa MMC71ar556-12t5 MiJJi,.bach, male, red. I Mind rom IOIO OFfiCE . C II ••••••••••••••••••••••• '63Intem'l PU. Short box Newport Beach 64l).M44 u-...i--Hard 200 mo'a old. Plq)el'I. CaU ••••••• .......... •••••• 2044 Placentia, .. ...._ ......... tl40 ......... ~ b1a '-kn<>..._~._ .. _...,.d ... ...., •are, Watt.er oeedecl prefer ex· •Aut1 1526 ai,m7orA1·2570 ~ -.,.. ... a...-ew .... -Paularino.CM. E.O.E. per. waller: but will ._, .. me,831· WANTED . ••••••••••••••••••••••• blea, 4-cyl eng. Ofr .... ••••••••••••••••••• '77 5301 Lu•as, loaded SPICIAl.Offlll train. Penooable, able FnetoY• 1045 TOP CASH DOLLAR lllcb. contemp. office '18yespaBravoZ4pd,IOO 11'1'Mll13or75'-0141 9701 w /extraa, Topaz to deal wWl members.••••••• .. •••••••••••••• PAID FOR YOUR deall, exec. awlvel snla, like new.~ or '12 FORD ~Ton P.U. w/leatber, maga. Will ..=.i~OU:lh Callf~~~~oo 4Terrter,..p1H JEWELRY, WA'roHES, ~~=mall. beltC)(r.6'13-3875 New auto trans, mtr. in 76 Lucia Scorpion consider 911 lo trade. 81\Y dired aalea uper. CowUr)' • •,SO·llilZS • ART OBIECTS. GOLD, ..._.wdet/ aJ.nt cood. Four 11 .• new nbcll cpe, dual over· ~~ Loman. 753·8500 We bave a Job for youl Waits npertenced only SILVER SERVICE, hh 1087 Scrthn 9150 Urea. Shell camper. cam, 4 cyl en114s-,_ ... ..;;...;:~::__··------c.n 11ute Ellaoa for in· rorPirfctcomltryclub. F:••~.:~s FlNE FURN. Is AN-.... , .................... ._ .................. $1,100.~ k ~=~·oZ,M·~ak: '74BlrlWBavarlan,45,000 t.emew to obtain more S:Jl-1550 eatl~u • 11QUES. 94$-2200 s Amason Parrot.t can 1111 y AJIA.HA •OO En· 71 Clevy cleu ~ Ton v e r P 1 y in t 1 anl'a, snrf AM/FM, nu info. 5C7·'73M, e&i 2'J03. AITllSSES · LUGGAGE T ACiS . SJG.e747 duro. Good condition. ptup & ~ampet', loaded. C·S48-9361. uk for Jim · trans, e;;d ~nd. Best of· STOl.lc&.BKS W ............ 1050 AtlerCpleue Newtopend. '55(1. Even· air new Urea must see rer.75-91Zldays. . Eltperience. 833-0427 -••••••••••••••••••••• trom 'JOU!' business card. "'--• n.--1090 inp.4.IM-47'1. to 'apprec NS·8'786 or · lDOLS &OM Clean, &ood . M' b 1• K " Cashiers. noor clerks, Send ooe card for each ·--~ · nd. $1750. 642·5504, 69, ac e ins. 0•1s, stock clerka. Good Waltn!91 •hostess wanl· **I BUY** t.q plus one spare. We ••••••••••••••••••••••• Honda 180 aL bike, Sood m.3919 7033 AM/FM. apt sll whls, future. XlDl benefits. ed, over n. llitta Mex· Good uaed f\lrniture & rel urn permanently ... 5cliMt $600 trans., dependable $125. '74 Chev. pickup~ too, 8' 4-sp, cmplt'gauges, xlnt Over 18. Appty at: Pie N 1cao Restaurant, S4'1 Vf· Appliances-OR 1 wilJ aeaJed attractlve tag & ••ll&O• IW.5-Xll bed, 3-spd. new clutch, ao-o 9705 cood. $2900.645-5507 aft4. Save, 17S E. 17th St, 19tb, CM. Apply 10 seUorSELLf<11You. at.rap, meet.Ina aJrllne "15 Yam Mooo ahock mx perf. runnlne cond. • ••••••••••••••••••• 9720 ca.a.a Meta. tam.$i>m penon. tMitwn21r5. ....,.,._ ••-no... LD. reqt&remeat.s. Pre-PianoSale-Uprl1bt.1 _ or ... _1l ofr ,._11 aean. no d.inp, no body · Spyder. Mint cond. DatSllll . SWiii MING POOL waiu.aea wanted. F MWW&UJ..96JI ~~~~ ~~=.1~ --""" -work needed. $2700. seUJ:_~olier. •••••••••••••••••••.,•• LABORER Newport Ptr. all ah!ftS· No a wallpaper, fabric or Paul'aPianoSboppe ..;-..sns;;;;.;:..;.;..:;:_ _____ ,_.,.._ ______ _ Pooa, Fashion le land nee. Mr. D •· 3050 E. C Brown Jard.an IOll.O'' oval "O., Glo .. paper Ir we 121 W.19tb CM 5ta-72'12 ..,, Bcmd.a 380, l3K ml. 'Tl El Camino auto trans 9707 6H.QlN _H_rt...:..;..'..;..Cdll_. ____ -4 table, 6 cbait'a. ht~--'" ... __ .. " lri v..... clean, $'71. Firm. PIS radio 'new -·•A•' •• •••••••••••••••••• tat M0"2IOI .,..... ....,.. m ,_. Everett conaole plano 98Z.-r9 • ' _...,.. Switchboard Opn, will Wareboule Trainee es. · tap. Or U7 two carda like nu. $750. ' new radials, air acbocb, "'75 udl 1001.S. 8m w /tall train. Apply al, Superior Dti•tr to $4 Hr 5-pi.ee Medlterraneao ba.cll to bacPRlll.C_,. 640-106( li'1' y amaba yz, :llnt 51K actual mi, :llnt ccad. ,000 mi, radio, A/C, lll!ll~iillll! Amwertni Serrice, 2SO Safety minded pera llYinf room furniture. .,,.... ccmd. $350. SZJ50.«mllofr. 551-1349 · Xlntcond. ~ E. 17th, C.M. Ste I. w/c·-drive for buay Callaft..&llt'I~ S2eaara/~ S,C.tlllgGoock 1094 l*Oall ··-~pU .. ~ooo l --~1"'•·-.., ....... -·• ,..... m . (Upstairs>~l.117 co. Call Van 833-2100. .. .,_ ... _.._ •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• '76 Honda K MODEL tee1 wbla AM M._.t141.-i1¥ Dennis• Denni.I Person· Affn Rentals 6/11tap $1.50:. Bl& Buena Park Gun 9.200 mt'a ori1 owner' Fii ste'r!o. XlDt· 'coni ••• TEACHE.RS nelSentceollrvble, AuortedFumm-4646 10ar~$L ·~ed Show Apdl 15-.lB. Buy, $1450 v.,Y clean raat' '2600.IG-~ Dailysut.Wutaneeded M.lcheboo. Salel altlncl sell trade . 6900 must aelll 834:0423; ...:.;..----------J foe Secondary Art, Bus. Pr Jacquard iold cir NOCARD? Orangetborfe/ Knott 631~ R9Y Oldie but goodle, 1960 Ed, Jnduatrlal Arts, Would you like a buelness drapes ne backs & all Dnw ~_!.?orb "°: $1 . 7 5 w lb ad . '' Chevy PU VI /lumber --+------- Math & Science. Req'a of your own? You don' hardw~ in. cl•" k>n& nai;ne ...... _..,Pone Z13/$5&.Z12l Molol'ttoa.s.Sde/ rack.'900.call;:;l.3. IM 9712 EXCELL.EMT-! SELECTIOtf: IM STOCK fOt IMMEDIATE! valJd eaur. credenllal. need an office to start. $70 /ofrS59-6S47 well ma~ one card per a..t/Storop f 160 call Laauoa Beach Belin at bome, fuU or · tag.Add25"each. TY,Roclo. •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• '74 Muda R PU.••••• Unified School Diatrict, part/time. Ideal for Waterbed, Queen-11, mat· Send check or moaet er-HIR. ""-1091 ~nl a 1917 EucuUve XJnt coad. A/C, .tereo. ll!! ... 119'11~•11111 ·194-8546. huaband It wile team. tress. liner & beater. derto: ·~· .. ••• .. ••••••••••••• llot6rbome ot' lllnl· cmpr 1bell. $2fOO. DELIVERY ·; SALES-SERVICJf PARfS.LEASIN<S 646-4.531 Sll.5. Dys;eu.ms. PtL01'PIJMTI~ SiUroDh 10UD, modJfted. motorboaM from Herb 64N01I ,lli.liilllllliiilM Teacher, Junior High P.O. Box15IO "15. Friedlander. Call any <A •• a.ny -ton. Dual . ~1t~~ $1.50/hr. Mel c•••M ~soi! =' a!'d!: a.ta ..... ca.... M2-US1. tbeauuaben blSt.. • tlnD. 1G&1u s •••• .. •-••••-•••••• $299 mas. t11·1519; t.acunaPaceaat·Kln1Tut Medlt maboc (aolld) ffMm ply tire. •11' tabover Technical AlllliflU 1005 s-imallSPM n.r., Aus 17 Ir M, 1'ri stseo cabinet $15 cub IJ1•7777 cmprw/ISrU.IC'J.1018 nJJHEESI0..244 ••••-.. -·-•••••• ~ Tklleta S15 ea. oaly. Pb aft 6pm, ....... ._ 9l7D Electro-mecb baslca AMERICAN OAK at the VU.la 1805 NS-7151. • ................ •••••• aousbt. for entry poa. IArpltSelectkla GIGANTIC 6t, Sant.a Ana. Re9lrTe for aprtQi/aum· w/nat1 corp. Call Ray, lnOraoceCouoty ll2'101 lloo • Wed, S-7 P~ stereo turnteble, mer ren~. 23' motor FUU.SELICT10H 833-2700. De'l1D1I I& Den· StewartRatbAnUques PM. Cbarttable fund ::~laatic wrap $220. ~-:...•!pa e. $175 wk. OF lt71YANS ms PenomeU)ervice al 150 E. Dyer Bel. S.A. raialnl-Mall orders &e· -IN STOCIC lrvme, 2(112 Mkbelaoa. (at Nwpt Fwy) 751~ SALE cepted while tickets last. 22To Choose From KING TUT TICKETS RCA 21'' Color Camole •Window Vans TELEPHONE SALES llUSlC 80~1 Player ENTIRE STOCK Four for Prt. April 28. 10 * SL50 • •Van CooveraiODI No EXP .._.EC pianos! Nickelodeons ! OF FINE FURNITURE AM. $ZOeach. S3H.14' or CallaAa; 96S-3l39 ~:..earUSgToODVa~vr. " Pbooosrapbs! World's 880-911 11ea1saw.tee _... ~· lar1eat aelection. DRASTICALLY Walk·ln Refa·Wlnecooler, z,•p •• That's lt, no ex per. necess. We will train you if you're a positlve thinker W/UJ auressive 1ttitude " a good phone voice. U you fit the above qualification.a you wtll earn a guaranteed brly salary + comm " bonuses. FULL TRAINING &EXCELLENT EARNINGS YOUR JOI! Time·l..lle customua It potential customers ln eaur. " Anaooa. SOUND GOOD? CALL 833-8095 11MMIFI Ubrwfn.IK. Equal Oppor Employer nu.a Level beaded Ir cheerful Catalogue $3; nm 6 I.a· Rrnlll"(8 a a n e w $ a 5 O . ••••••••••••••••••••••• aues $15. Also cash re-~ Ms-2020/~tlUPM. oaten. mechanical anU· MIW & USB> t qt.aea. V1a1t ua I See tbe 75 I a I I a I t w ,a e r huee ornate "Taj FURNITURE aquarium, SUS 500 Mahal" au&omatlc organ pow• telescope w Tcue ~atured In Loe Angeles CUDIT OK S15Q. 6'1N6'15 "Tlmn" and "SUnaet lla1aatne." American SELLlPIECEOR lnternatlonal; lle2·D Repossession Ketterin1; lrviAe, CA Cetnf-l'llU. Tel. ('714) 75'-lTn ~ Open Wed. tlarolalb Sat. At 619 I. 41t St. SClllhAM 147-5721 SCRAMUJS ANSWERS Dredi•-llloukl -Clime -Caslno- COll.llERCIALS When we were klda we --------1 had fairy taJea. Now, kid• ba•e tbe um• Spac.. for rent 8&30, W91klJ /moDUl11. Adulta, _..,:;i,.;__;?!!~~---1 no....-.594111 "T2 Ford Cbateau Van. '17Reinell.55brw.deepV, Alntream TwlJl ll·foot V-t, Yery clG. new tires, s.ta' 11111 2. '8)0. Pb 1t 70 X tr a cl .. D • air, $211150. C.ll '9C-0039. 487461..-SaaUle9 arm.oo Call "710evy 1 ton, auto, post· '77SeaRQa.Ddanc:era&' &tt.-traction. Paneled A w /t.rlr. All xtru. t trailer, ltardtop, c:rpt'cl. Xlnl cond. One $U,l50/of.r. 11"'1.oo71 aleeP' 1, coot area lo· own.r. $218150.MM519 1"' • '" .. I b l 2 aldeloutsid•. Slnk, stove, _,, Dodie, V-t, 311, P /S, ... u 1 u a~ .. ~ 0 a ' Icebox. tbl/bOOtb. SlJOO, p /B, ln1ulaled. $2995. J~..:,:;.;,e•· -4M-11& Call until you reach me, Allto s.,.tce, ,... _m.IO&O. _______ _ ________ , & .Acce11.tn 9400 78 Ford Van, Econo 150, \'& S£A RAY ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• T, AM/P'M. 8 ltk stereo, Auatln America, ltut, air, PS, PB, compl con· SPECIALS tram 6 bod.Y oarta avail. venioo + TV. MovtJJg I&' Cuddy :zaa BP trlr Vsy reu. l!ard to flftd mutt aeU. Call al\ IPM, kleded 1 OD1t aa.m. a:a· pu1.I. Jlm. 980-6NI _Tu._ea __ ._u._12 ___ _ Ovemt~ter ZZ88P, trlr. 4 llolt Dataan Rlma f« ......... I lots of Jllta1 1 onlJ. aaJe. 1100. Bn.llld De•· ......... •••••••••••••• ~SON'S \ Call--. ....., • ....., SIARAY ..._..,... ..,....,::' •arw sim CouUlw1, N.9. •• 4 CAU. me S40.711t 6l1~4J _ ................... •---------~~~~~~~ · .._Wmihcl tl90 1...::;;;:;.;:;;~;:;..;:;.;.;;.;;;;;;,;;..-.,..__, """""' ...... , ...,.. ..... -........... . ~·~ ~~;b b~ ;:..•.,-::.•,]I ~? ~~ WIWU.IUY lltte Crulaer. K.B. •-• .. A-JI f YC)mDATSUM 140-l'lle 4"' 144•0.&t. ---PAIDroRORHOT "500-TOP DOLL.Al 9120 llOI TOf CARS 8ARWIC I< O A TW~ I I" ' q ' 8 )1 tJF.49l-JJ1S COSTA MESA DA TSU,... 2S4S HAR BOB BLVDw 54M4 I 0 540-q2tl IT HURTS. .. • • • To •ti thee& new VWs at the ptfcn we do but we haw a lot of care to move'° yoo're In the driver's seat at .•• HAR I OUR YOUCSW .AGIN All modOla &colore · avellable • ... ,. ~ • $ .. 81a11il •• '78 H•DA . 4 SPIED CYCC IAICllACK • .. 1488d: H~ CVCC 4 cyflnder engine. 4 Wheel Independent .JUepension. • speed ayncromesh trans., rack & pinion steering, bumper guWds. f nalde hood release, wood grain dash, hinged rear side wtndowa. fold down rear seat, white sidewall tires, • arm r8SIB. day & night mirror, AM radl9, rear Window detro.ter. (8801) (10013) (10009) (10098) (9880) (SGE4000829) (SGE400832n !SGE4005377) (SGE40053'MJ (SGE4001504!_ ... Red Yellow Red Red Red (10004) (9999) . (9Q70) (9900) (9975) (SGE400t53&e) (8GE4005338) (SGE4004S81) '5GE~9) CSGE4004639) Red Red Red Red Red IMMEDIATE DELIVERY • "12x.lll. alt ml. a1Dt CODd. ... lorw 9756 ~ E'ftl~ ...................... . : Ka -. 9735 •1 DEALER IN U.S.A. ~ ;·~·~;~·;;: ~ ~Tav11 " eq. ci;:., brb, pat. ROUS·ROYC£ QMlrJ. ...aJO , .... ,,. ....... .... .,. =='._. m1 r,,c1e -n,a zdcl . , . ._ ... ~COMMONWEALTH MOTORS.LTD. ..... ' ~ "' f,. : .. ,-4 ( •• HR Wqon, All/1'11, alr. radlala, rack, b1 ml'•• 1reat cood, $2200 . ...,.. ,5 SPEED CYCC IAICllACK 1488cc Honda CVCC four cyt. engine. 4 wheel Independent IUIP8ftlk>n, 5 IPeed syncromeeh trlna., rack I pinion steering, bumper gUllds, lnlide hood rete111. wood grain ~. hinged rear side wtndowt. fold down ,...,. seat. arm reet. day/night mtrror, AM radio. rear windOW defroster, black 11eeented wheels a chrome trtm nnga, Jachometer. on gauge, hllt glUge, Wbod tteenng wheel a lhltt knob. eporta fabrtc upholat8ry. black ICClnted wtndshleld wlpera. ctgarette tighter. (1983) (8GC4004324') Whit. I =) (SGC4003152) ~ ('940 (SG04003118) WNt• 10029) (SGC40ma04) Red (8938f (SGC4003150) White 8989) (SGC4000785) Red {881'8) CSGc4oo3711) Whtt• (100028) (8004005294) Red (9935) (SGC40031~) Y'hlte (978') (SGC4001'11) Red IMMEDIATE DELIVERY· 77PIMTO RUNABOUT. Low miles, v~ .mo. power ateertng. atr cond., AM /FM . (JIJSWW). Gr nlll C ht'Holf'I I, JI , ft..f''>t" 11•<1 ~ ...... '°'"'_, l•rH trl B·P h087 549.]J)I $3199 ?4PtNl'O 4 1pct., radio. beater Grat eeoaomy! Super Sbup! C41SKSY l. ''"' GroHt Chl'vroll'I · 18211 ·~"'" l l•d Hu"hrvif"" •~a<h 84 7 -6087 549.3 3J I ft60 •• NEW 1978 CHRYSLER 1.E BARON 2 DOOi COUPE r. NEW 1978 PLYMOUTH HORIZON ,_ ~""' ................... 4_..lta MA 1100 • .,.._ rad lal llrae. ler. • •MJMA101- .. adlo. V~ engine, llU...-C .. *llillk>n, W1W t'9Cfltl tire-. Ser. tl'M!2H8G23704r · OUTSTANDING V~LUES ON FINE USEDC~S 178 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER 440 v.a. eutometic. * condltlonlne, power ttMrtng, power dlec bnlk... POMf' windows, AM/FM stereo t'9Cflo, 8 h'lck, Mat«, whltewlll tlree, vinyl roof, dUlll epllt POWW .... leether, tilt whMI, eleot.rtc door locks. erutse ~. CC643TaC132849). . ._695 '74 PONTIAC VENTURA COUPE • •3295 •j7 PLYMOUTH fwty WAGON '77 PLYMOUTH VOLAR! SEl>AN v.a. automellc. lir oondlttontne, power atMrtng, po.., bnMI. t'9Cflo, hellW, 'Whitewml tW.. ~roof. CN&RZZ>. •3995 '76 PLYMOUTH SATEWTE An.As CNtTSLIR P&.lMOUTH IR'9CI HOUIS: MONDAY n9U ... AT 7:0t A.M. TO 6'00 P.M. SATUIDA'f aoo AM. ro "°' P.M. y.e, IUtcrnlllC. ~ steering. rldfo. hNt«, '#hlt...il U,., ~ roof.(~ •1295 '76 FORD GRANADA SEDAN •2995 •3395 •75 CHEVROLET LUY PICKUP 4 ~. 4 ..,... pow9I' ....... ~ MOOft roof. IMgl. (94108't'). , , I .... tbJlton Beaeh Fo•nUdli ~!.~0~y '- VOL 71, NO. ~02, ~ SE , 42 PAGES Incumbents Omted WEDNESDAY, APRIL 12, 1978 \ Afte--• ' N.Y. Stoeke TEN CEN • Mandie, omas ·Get MOst Votes * * * * * * * * Bonfa. Trounced Hutton Landslide Attorney Winner 8IGN OPvtCTORY ARER a.EctioN :;-..~,.... A New Fece In the 01tJ AnDl• .. J'• Olllce \ Three Ho'ld BHostages In Vegas · . OUTMUSCI ES OPPONENTS New Cltr Attorney Hutton Gan Hutton scored a landslide victory over incumbent Don Bonfa and challenger Jerry Bame in Tuesday's elecUoo for the Huntinltoo Beach city at- torney job. Mrs. Hutton, 41, ia the first woman to be elected Huntlqton Beach City attorney. Bonfa held the post for the put 10 years wltb"Oul a 1in1le election challenge. Here are the unofficial city al· torney race results: Gall Rm&on. 8,380 (elected) Jerry Bame, 5,317 Don Bcmfa, 1,514 (incumbent) A deputy city attorney in San- ta Ana for the past four years, Mrs. Hutton lubed out at Bon· fa's record in office from tho 1tart of her campaign. Mrs. Hutton accused Bonfa ol inconsistent declaioas and a poor tract record on city lawsuits. She also attacked the coeta of outalde letal services charted to the city. .. , can cut thole ~de reee:• Mn. Hutton atated aft.er tbe eleeUon. Mrs. Hutton crltlciled cballen1er Bame's lack of ..1 munt cl pal eqertence. ne •ttorne7 Pott ~ co1-1ectict al1out tt0,000 ID camJ>alln funda and loaned benelf .in eathnated '21,000 of tbat amount Her campalcn ~pendlnt ls belleocUo ba 1ha hllbelt b:Y a sin1le candidate in the city's his-tory. Mn. Hutton aald abe plam to bold future fund-ralsera to pay back loans for her eampalllJ. Mra. Hutton aald the over- wbelmlne del8*t ol Incumbent Bon.fa meant ''the people of tb1a community are deslroua ol a cbange -the voters have apoken." Mrs. Hutton uid she plans to start her new job next Monet.)'. Bame, who waa endol"ffd by the HUDUntton Beach Cbamber of Com~. f1n1sbed a poor second to Mn. Hutton. And Baine'a lsw firm partner, Al Coen, also a Cbamber en- donee, was defeated In bis bid for a fourth term on the H\mt· lngton Beach City Council. Betty's Nerve Cited LONG BEACH <AP) - Former F1rst Lady Betty Ford declded to enter an Alcoholic and Drug RebabllltaUon Center bete became a combination of dru11 taken to treat acute arthritis and a pinched nene in her neck made her coostanUy drowsy, a fanilt)' 1potesman aays. "Sbe .as tJ'oohlecl by drowll· neaa, but abe'• a fllbter and abe didn't like that at all," uid Bob Barrett, ex.ecutlve asa1ataDt to former President Ford. "Sbe can't really raise bell ID that condition." Barrett said a "subtle COID· blnatlon of tbloo" waa ,..pom1. ble tor the eoodit1oa rather than a •LDale cfrua. TOP VOTE GE 11 ER Hunllngton'a M•ndlc "SIGN CHAMP' ELECTED New Councilman Thomff -' WINS COUNCIL SEAT \chool Truatff MacAlDlter -Doctors 'Allow' Death-Witness By TOM BAm.EY °' .. Dllllf."" ..... A defense witness In tbe murder trial of Dr. William Bax· ter Waddill testified Tuesday that mGJ infanta ve allowed to die wben the doctor believes mualve brain dama1e may bave been amrtaloert belon or durinl bilth. Dr. John H. Menkes, a pediatric neurololilt flown here from Loodon to testify for Wad- dUI, told the Orange County Superior Coult Jary ol "a elauic aituatlOD'' be recenUy witnessed in London.. Tbe apedaliat said a brain- damafed baby with a diseased spinal cont waa allowed to die by att«vttna docton who made no effort to u.e the alllnt child. .. Tbe doctors decided. Some- one bu to do it since the parents cu't." Menkessald. The lMue of life or death ror tnfanta Uaat could face life u Ut- Ue mON than litlinan ftlelables bu fllled may paces in the transcripts a trial that bepn more than two mootba aco. ·It arose qain Tuesday when Menkes appeared to defend Waddlll's conduct wben the ac- cused pbysician cleared hospital staff out of the Westminlter Community Hospital DW'Hry with the reported comdlnt: ··Don't an.yone do a God damn thing for that baby." \ It ls : by the pro1eeutloa that W · , 42, of Huntmetoo Harbour, then stran1led a newborn Infant in ill crib after predicting that it must have suf. fered massive brain damqe from Ila long immersion in saline. Waddill lnjected saline into the 18-year~d mother in a bid to abort the infant via an abor· lion procedure that bad never previously backfired on him. Menkes told the Jury that be miabt have acted In the same way if be bad been faeed with a narseJT-ful.H>f nun. at aocb a (See DOCTOR, hie AZ) t Bailey, · ! Trustee Also Win BJ llAYllOND anADA Ja. ... ..., ......... Hant1n1ton 'eaeb voters picked four new Ctt.1 Council members and OUlted two lncum· bents ID 1'1eaclay'a mun.iclpal election. Auto repair abop owner Bob Mandie, 38, outpolled LS «ber City Council hopefuls. John A. Thomas, 38, a crane and truck· Ing firm owner, placed secood in the race. Community actlvllt Ruth Balley, S2 , and Huntin1ton Beach Union Hltb School Dis- trict Trustee Don llacAW.ater, 45, flnlabed tbird and fourth, respectively. Twenty percent or 15,905 of the city's 77,703 re1istered vot.en cast ballota in the elec- tion, said City Clerk Alicia • Wentworth. Here are the unofficial ~~ turns: Bob Mndk, 6,170 <elected> Job A. 'l'bomu. 6.388 <elect ed> a9'1l BalleJ, 6,141 (elected> Dea •acAllhter. 5,885' (elected) Jolm O'Connor, 5.252 Ted Bartlett, S,203 (lneum• beat) Al Coen.·-(lncwnbent) °"· l'nDk IW'fln.a, ··-BW 'lb:l.arcl. l.• Cbuek o.terhmd, 2.452 Steve ''OtbeD" ltane, 1,MZ ShiPley Halk)'arcl, 1.• Ed z.cbocbe, 1.395 Gordon OIMttn. 1.224 Don~. 8IWD. I.la Andrft Candler ... Ser.tee s:t.aUoo owner Ted Bartlett. 'II. a »Jear veteran council member. and attonaey Al Coen, who wu aeetJq a fourth celmel:tatin council term. failed In lbeir ~Jection bids. Former mayors Norma Gibbs and Harrie Wieder did not aeet re-electlantb!s year. Fired deputy clt1 attorne1 John O'Ccmnor, wbo placed fifth in the council race, oatpolled both l.Deumbents. "I'm dreamlq," said top vote getter llmdie, Who waa bom and raiaedinHunUn&ton Beach. "I t.hlDk DlY good name in tbeci· ty l• what won th.ls for me," Man-diesaid. Most winners agreed cam- paign spending wu the bla illue in tbil electi<m. "The money scared me -t ·tbollPt they (deftlopers> were aoma to bqylt, •• Mandie aalcl. Five developers and a real estate aient contributed a total of $21,000 to four chamber ol commerce-endorsed cou.ncll candldata. But MacAUister was the oaJy chamber-endoned candidate to win a Clt;y Council Hal Bartlett, Coen and Dr. Frank Hoffman also were endorsed by the Chamber. (See OOt1NaJ.-. Pap Al) Coast Wea&ller MNUr cbadJi ttiiOqb Tbunda1 morn•n1, wltb 20 percent ebanee of meuurable Pl'll!Cf P!tattciQ ::,~3 Tha!ft.:la. Low1 t ID H11U Tbunday from JOw eo. near the c:out to mJ.cMQa lllland. INSIDE TODA'W -.. ,... ,.,.,, ,,.,..... bt ,,. boof'd room. *" .. ~ cr&rif'' ~ o ·~. mG11J1 bufll J i coll ~ UMSd tor ~ dddOll ,.. .,.,Oii .. .. YN.OT Police brvestilaton are leek· inl 17 aeparate c:ounta ol anon acaln.at a commercial atti.lt ar- rested GO suspldon ol MWq a wave ol blues ln welt On.nee County. Seal Beach Po11ce Ollef Ed CibbareW said 'heldQ. · Facial the anon claar,.., wblcb include tbe tarchinl fl bl.a own aputmeat boaM. II Obllter Ordway llontl, •. ol 211 Seal " Beach Bhd:, StaJ BUeb. ,• .. A utbortties said they believe Morril 9et that $5,000 fire a week a'o and that they became 1111- pacioua after q~ tiim a a ••;:.:s. then c-klnf his back · Morris was scheduled to be ar· raiened today or TburadQ in court .. He II betN beld at Oraqe County Jail 1n lieu of $25,000 ball, police said. Morris wu described u an olf-and-on resi· dent of Seal Be.eb wbo bu also lived in Califonlia desert COM· munlties. A tuk force of iDve1t11aton probln1 a aeries ol suspicious west county flJ'el datbll back u far u three years kept Morris under almoat conatant aur· veUlance tor a w.,k before bi.a arrest. He WU arrested about 3: 20 a.m. Mooda.y a bloek from the scene <l' a '8,000 ftre lo the 300 block of 17lb Street in Seal Beach which destroyed a small boat and damaged a trailer reaidence. Virtually all the ftres the IUS· peel alJecedly set were in the Old TC>WD area ol Seal Beach, bounded by Ocean Avenue, Pacific Coast ffilbway, Electric Avenue &Del 12tb Street. Chief Clbbarelll aaid Tuesday that counts 1ou1bt a1alost Morris include 10 ftres ln Sea.I Beach and alx othen in unin· coq><>rat.ed county territory and one In Htmtlnitoo Beach. Police say that when they con- fronted the artist after he was spotted loitering about a block away from Tuesday's fire watching it and took him into custody be seemed reaiped to the action. One Officer quoted Morris as saying be "bad a problem." The series of f'irea for wbicb authorities plan to proaecute him have ranaed from trash cans to torcbed yacht.I, but in- veatt1aton decUne to reveal _ preclH)y bow they wen set ablaze. "There la a deftnite pattern," Seal Beach Ptre Chief Ron Adams GJ>laiaed lut week ... Chief dbba.relll 1aid ln an in- terview that it IJt believed Monu is reapomlble for buncb-eda ~ thousands ol doUan in property dama1e although DO lives have been lost Firemen say a few of them have suffered mioor injuries such as minor ~ and amoke tnbalaUon in bluea t.bey allese Morris ML Four Escape Injury in ' 118 Rollover A Garden Grove teen-aaer mci bis three $F. escaped In-jury Tuetd.Q wben their station wqon all out of CCIGtr'ol and rolled eeveral tlm• OD a Hunt!qtoa State Beach l'Old. Jeffrey Paul Freeman. 18, told CalUorDia IDlbw•Y Patrol ~­ ficen bla i-. auto struck a eoo- crete \.umaJ'ound clttle at tbe end of tbe beach aeceaa road. A witneu told CHP offices,. be beard tins aldMi~ and ••• the station wqon aU I sidew.,a toward the road dlvl~er that ntpped it over several times. Inve.U,aton said it waa 1ur- prt11ln1 none of the four teens In the car were burl. DAILY PILOT //#---SUN PHOTO SHOWS SOLAR FLARI (ARROW) Wkte1Pr9ad Recio Blackouta a PoulbfUty Solar Saafu Radio Blaekouta Threat.ened BOULDER, Colo. <AP> -Tbe most violent aoJar nare in nearly four yean could cau.se radio alpal blackouta, telephone circuit outacea and d.iapJays ~ the northel'D U,bla In Ule world's northern latsWdes thlS week, the NaUonal Oceul'= and At- mospberle Adm1nlatraUon said. A apokeeman for American Telephone and Telecrapb Com· pany, however, 1ald U.S. cuatomen probably will not notice all)' lapse in telephone drcuJta. The nare ... detecled Tuesday by NOAA aateWtel orbitlq 22,300 mllea above the Earth, tbe qeney u.ld. Carl PONY, a a pokes man for NOAA 's En.tronmental Research Laboratory here, said the Oire will pl"Oduce a storm ln the Earth's mapetic field, resulUq lo radio aipals being absorbed rather thD reflected, becJonln1 Thursday. He c:;:icted widespread telephone circuit out.qes &Del aaid aurora al1a dl.aplays -tbe northern U,hla -would be viii· ble ID many areaa nortb of an eut-,.est llne that would pua t.brou~ Chlcaco and even in some p1acea aou1h of that llDe. p,....Pa,,eAJ ,DOCTOR ••• critical moment. "lt'• the kind of decision that all doctors must make at some Ume in their careers," be •aid. And the witness made It clear that it Waddill bad allowed a 'baby tbat appeared to be losing lta baWe for life to die lw would have no criticlam ol that de· claioD. ''Tbla isn't talked about openly and it'• not talked about as mucb as it. Oou1d be,'' be told tbejw'y. "1t•1 the lsaoe of wbeUter someooeabouldor abouJct notllve. It la a decilion that ls frauJht with daa1er and it ls fraUlbt with danaer because of the arrogance we doctors hve." Menkes assured the jury that it is common practice for many doctora to stand aside when they are certain that. a braln-damq d infant will know DO meanlnlful form of life. "An infant who la almost cer- tain to have severe brain damqe- ia allowed todie," hesaid. Menkes' leltimony appeaftd to 1hock many of the observ,,... wbo bave been fllllDI Judie Jama K. Turner'• courtroom since the trial befan. M~ ol thole obaerven are aupporten ol rt.pt to llfe move- ments wbose Interest In the trtal la focused equally oo the murder cbarse and the fact that Waddill la one ol a number ol doeton who perfqrm a .out number ~ abortions in Oran1e County bospttal& .. Dr. llalbour Wataoo, one ~ WaddlU'a two lawyen, defended the Cfttimony ol Dr. Menkes lm· mediately after tbe court aessioo mded for the day. Wat.loo commented outside the courtroom that the baby lfrl alle1edly murdered by Waddill' would have been a ve1etable and that her chaneea of 1urvtv- tn1 without masalve brain damaee were "very •lender in· deed." Prosecutor Robert Cbattertoo araues that the lasue ralMd by the defeme Tuelday la irrele- vant to the trial. Judte Turner will hold a bearing behind closed doors on that &rl\lment before the trial resumes today • .. Are we to be left at the bands ot doctGn plQtu God or le tbe law 101n& to~ take a stand?" Chatterton asked . .. What doeton H)' amon1 tbemadYm In ncb altuaUooa la ln'el•nnt lt we a.. .. tbe law to 10 by," tbe ~ dllaiet at- torney •aid. ~ Article Saya Nuke Device I.DBi by CIA NEW YORK (AP) -AD arti· cle in a new maautne publlabed by Rolllnl Stone alleges that a nuclear-pow es ed devtee wu lost ln 1965 on a Hlmalayan IDOWl· tallillde by a Central lntelllgen- cy A1eney expedition try1q to set up a tracldn1 atatt.on to monitor Chinese activities. Accordint to the atory in Outalde, t.be CIA IJ"OU.P waa try. int to seal• • 25,"5-loot IDOQD• talo called Nanda Devi and code-named Blue Mountain, but was forced by bad weather to give up the attempt about 2,000 feet below the summit. The climbers, hoping to return when the we•ther improved, stored the nuclear SNAP eenerator, which wu to power the tracking station, among some rocks and it was buried in an avalanche, 1ay1 the article ln the II( ay iuue ol th& maauine. . The story, by Howard Kohn, aaya the CIA made an attempt in 1966 to retrieve tbe aenerator, but was msuccesatul. It aaya tbe fuel roda ln the leoerator COD· talned plutoalum.m "wblch re. maim. daneeroua1Y radioactive for aoo to soo years and even if the SNAP 1enerator bad •ur· vived the avalacbe Intact, It.a outer abell would neDtualJy corrode and release Ila pot.aonous core." Tbe story says that the sprtna thaw on the aoutbern 11ope ~the mountain -where tbe generator wu burled -ia a ma- jor aource of water for the Ganaes River and aaya that if the radioactive materi&J reached the Ganges "it could cause cancer in anyone who drank even raicroeeoptc amounla or ate contaminated fl.lb." Accordln1 to ibe article, another CIA expedition to a nei1bbortna mount.Un 1D 1IS7 waa more succHtlul and a nuclear.t><JWered trackln1 ata-. Uon wu establllbed. p,.._p-AJ COUNCIL ••• Member Quits FV Planiiers Fountain Valley Planaln1 Commlaalon alternate member Walt Hammond bu reaiped in protest to tbe appointment.a ol two new comm..luloners that be claim• are politically notlvat.ed. Hammond, a commlaaion member since laat October, cbarfed that the new appointeie8 are • • dole neiabbor bouMwUe and eanqN1lp won.. for a.,. elected councUmu <llayor Pro Tem Roser Stant.oo) and ... a total unknown. l ' Hammond said new com· mwlonen Barbara Brown and Richard Christman, appointed lut week, "have no record ~ community service to the cit7 ol Fountain Valley and exhibit no apparent quall.ficaUons for this necessary functioo." Mn. Brown, a housewife. wu active ln a community drive to prevent milllar)' boualn& C«l· st.ruction ln Mlle Square Part 1ut fall. Christman, a property bl"Oker. bas several univenity dee:reea in plannlni and baa been active lo youth ba.aeball in Fountain Valley. Stanton aod newly elected Councilman Ben Nielsen de- fended the new commission ap- pointees' qualifications. Stanloo called Hammond's at- tack aplnat him "imipld" and declined further comment. lfammond wu one of 18 appli· cant.a f« the two planninc Com· miaalon poets. The vacancies were created by the real1J18Uoo of former planner John.~lht and former planner NUl'ben's election to the City Council. Hammond, a Chamber of Commerce vice president, said the recent commial1oa appotnt- menta amack of political patronage." He added, "I feel there is no way I can lend my name, time and eneqies to this political maneuverinJ." Hammond ran an unsuc- cessful bid for City Council in March. Aa an altenaate commiaaion member, Hammond only voted when one ~the five memben of Ure pJannitag unit wu absent Hammond's appointment to the commiaslon waa due to ex· plre in June since be wu fU1ing the u.DGPired term or former planiter Ka.isht uoolnt9cl to • full-time poat oo Uie panel lad year. Christman aald today be felt the char1ea were UQjuaWled. Cbrtatman aaid be ae"ed u Nlellen•1 campalp treuurer. Jira. BrO'{i could not be reacbedtoda)'i : co~enl Jory Hean Testimony LOS ANGELES (AP) -'lbe defense strategy of "dimlnilhed capacity" came under attack when (ormer CbadH MM.IOO cult member lJnda Kuablan teatifled LeaUe Van Houten "ap- peared to be ln control of heraelr • the nJaht of u.t La Blanca murders ln JJ88. t Mn. K.ual:UD al8o testifted Tuesday that Mils Van HOQ&en wu not under the influence ~ drucs on the nt1bt of the murders ol 1.-o and ROMmary La Blanca. Thief StealA Piamoht ROCllJ:STBR, N .Y. CAP) -A Plca110 watercolOt' valued at about $1!0,000 bas been stolen from the Memorial Art Gallery at the Untnnlty of Rochester, offlciala there said today: A 1allery spokesman ••id tbe paintln1. titled ··riowen In a Blue Vue." diaappemed from lite wall near the eallery auditorium Tuesday eve- Dln1. The pairrtiq Wal donat· ed to the gallery ln 11:11. NB CoU11£il Gets4New Members By IOANNB &EYNOLD8 Ol .. Dmfr,.... .... Paul Hummel, Donald Strau11, Jackie Heather and Evelyn Hart woo seat.a on the Newport Beach City Council Tueaday in an election that drew one of the li&hteat turnouts lo re- cent times. City Clerk Doris Geor1e said 10,976 balloU were c~ out ol 40.582 reg1atered voters ell&ible, for a 27 percent turnout. Tbe city'• Sixth District coun- cil race was the Upteat where challenaer Hummel defeated ln· cumbent Lucille Kuehn by 635 votes. All of tbe other wlnnen, Strauss in the First District, Hart in tbe Tbird District and Heather in the Fourtb Diltrict, were nmnlnl for aeata beinl vacated by the incumbents. It WU early today before final result.a were taJlled. aitboueh all of the winnera establlabed early leads on the way to their vie· tortes. Tbe city's votinc machines, Accuvote, rented from the Los Anaeles firm of Martia _~nd Chapman provided • 1tum1>11n1 block to countin1 return• because the boles punched by the machines did not a1ilD prop- erly with thecountlnt ~evlce. While campalp worten and candidates waited impatJently, city eledion workers bad to alft through an ol tbe ballota to see that the cards bad been properly punched. Tboee that appeared to be Improperly aliped were re- punehed GD med ballota. Tbe P'OCl!lll ·wu not complet- ed unW 1:30a.m. Tallies posted at that time are: nan DlftaJCI' -Donald Strauss, 4,818 Peg Foqit, 3,356 S.H. Byers 1.290 Blll VGD Eich, 514 John Tucker. 43() La Verne de la Cierva, 55-. TIDaD DISTalCI' -Evelyn Hart, 5,100 Michael Gerinl, 3,707 Frank Ivens, m Paul Caldwell, SOC f'OVllTB DISl'lllcr -Jactie Heather, 7.atl Cbarlea I.anon. 2.SM SISTB DIST .. CT -Paul Hummet,s..m Lucille Kuebn, 4, 700 William Dob.r. 581 BB Park Heariqg. Slated A abowdoirn between propo-nent.a ol a propoeed 1J,acre Hun- ttn1ton Beach altateboard perk and an an1ry 1roup of homeowners ls expected ~t wben the Huntlntton Beach Parks and Recreation Com· mtuioo condueta a public bear· lng oo tbe skateboard part's en- vironmental impect report. Universal Skate Parks Inc. bopea to build tbe f aellity in HunUQlton Cmtral Partr near Golden West Street and Talbert Avenue. Homeowners who reside nortb of the site say they are opposed to the city'• Jeue ol public land to a private ftrm ln tbe Ceatnl Park. Retideat.a al.lo fear increued traffic. crime, litter and noise as a result of the proposed facility. Capt. Mike Burkenfield, a Huotlaaton Beacb policeman. has apearbeaded the drive aealost tbe propoeed skateboard park. Burkeofield said be and at least 30 resident• in bil nel1bborbood close to the park are up In arms over tbe skateboard plan. Burtenfteld aatd Tuesa.ay be expect.a the park's developers "to try and pack the audience with Yoiunt akateboarden .. at the 7 o'clock bearint tonlPt • .._ _;.. Burkenfteld uaerted that me annual &Del inlUai costs ol de- velopiq and maintal.n.lnl the park would IJUtly exceed tbe amount ~ revenues broueht into city coffers by the facllit.J. But developer Morton Wedner attacked Burkenfleld'• charses OD COiia and problems leDenteci by the part. w edDer laid tbe partr would brinl in $55,000 per year In rev· enuea to the cltJ and cost little in the way ~ pollciq and public worn malnten•""· Wedner aaid the only obltaele to the park'• development is tbe nearby residents' opposition.. Burkenfteld laid be and bis nel1bbon plan to continue tbeir ncht a1atnst the park. He noted that hi.a IJ'OUP la not opposed to aitateboard parts per se, just the location ol the pro- posed facility. OFFICI4 QUns <WEil LOW FINE BOOTLE, En1••nd <AP> -Ma,i.tnte ·Vera Bray baa, re- signed aft.er 21 yean on the bench became Princess Anne's huaband, Mart Phillips, was fined oa1Y $28.50 after his llecood speeding conviction in 13 months. "It seems there'• one law for the rich and one for the poor," said Mrs. Bray, a former m.- of Bootle. "I would have faned him between 100 and 150 pounds ($190 and $285) ... l.ibya Bacb IRA MILAN, Italy CAP) -IJbya's leader Col. Moammar Khadafy sakt ln an ltal1an teleYiaion In· terview Tuelday that bia COUil· try is giving "'moral and political support" to the out- lawed lriab Republican Army. . . . . ' . • . Orange Coast .. Editorial Pge ... ........................................................ ... ...... Wedne.day,AprtJ 12.1'71 R~ N. Weed/Pubtlshel' Thomea KMVll/Edltor S.tbw• Krelblch/Edltorlal P.,ge l!Gltor I!! School Le11ders Must Help Public Four West Oran1e County school boards have named new presidents to Jeod them throuth the next year. Zit.a Weua has been named to head the Huntington Beach Union High ~hool District board. Jay Rivera now leads the Ocean View (elementary> School District trustees. Dave Sonksen lead.a the Huntington Beach (City) School District panel. And Dick Plum now beads the Foun· tai.o Valley <elementary) SchOol District board. It ls the responsibility ol these new leaders to see that the public is best served by their ~pectl ve elected units. Although few residents ever attend school board meet- ings, a large share of property taxes is spent under the eyes of Jocalschoolboard members. And pollc~ that directly affects most of our young people today is determined at local school board hear· rngs. The school board president is charged with seeing that meetings are made open and understandable for the public. If the average tax(>11yer cannot understand what is going on at a school board meeting something is wrong. It is the school board president's duty to see that this does not happen. The Fountain Valley City Cquncil has C\lt the normal length of city commission members' terms from four tot wo years. But to do this, the council had ~ut the term or one cur- rent commissioner by bhe year~ ~ appoint two new Planning Commission members to 14-month terms. Councilmen said the \l.DUSUal move was necessary to })ring the terms in line with the new two-year policy. Since the Planning Commission, and to some degree the Parks and Recreation Commission, have suffered considerable turnover of members in the past year, it ap- pears wise that terms were cut to two years. Two-year commission terms provide the council with more flexibility even though in any general law city a com· ntission memberseryes at thepleasureof the City Council. The.only thing to be questioned in the City Council's most recent move is the timing. In June, the terms of two other Planning Commission members will expire. Two vacancies were created by a res1~nation and another member's election to the Citv Council. · lt appe .. rs the council was anxious after the March 7 municipal election to appoint Planning Commissioners to study upcoming industrial developments lnthe city. SDJBll Miracle Slowly and painfully, a miracle with origins. in the Holy Land, Huntington Beach and a Tijuana shantytown is reshaping Tomas Dominguez' face and life. By now most people have heard of the bum-scarred little boy befriended bY. Huntington Beach housewife Virginia Castillo, who?~ single-handed efforts have written the story. lnterplast Inc., a worldwide non.proflt grqup whose member doctors and nurses donate professional akills on their own time to help mutilated children, already existed at Stanford University Medical Center. T~ere. tragically marred boys and girls of underdeveloped nations are given new faces and Jives free through plastic surgery. But costs ol their in-hospital care time must be paid. They live with foster families on the outside, often for a year or more. Meditating on a vacation to the Holy Land last year, Mrs. Castillo pondered what she might do in gratitude for her own family's ble5sings in life. Since she speaks two languages, she decided her duty lay somewhere south of the border. She found Tomas in Tijuana. lier efforts -she had never undertaken fund-raising and organizing before -led Southern Californians from wealthy industrialists to indigent prison inmates to open up their hearts and wallets. So Tomas shall have a new, $15,000 face and a new life, though much time and pain lie ahead for the bright, stoic little boy. "1 am just a housewife ... I am nobody," says Mrs. Castillo. We think she is somebody. the'kind of lady t.bis world needs more or. • Opinions expressed 1n the space above are thOM of the Dally Piiot. Other views expressed on this page are thote of their authors 91\d artists. Reader comment is Invited. Addreaa The Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) &4M321. Boyd/Divorce ., ByLM.BOYD The rmanctal status of a divorced man tends to im· prove somewhat after the marlW breakup. But that's not true of a divorced woman, evidently. Researchers studied 133 such divorced couples. In lbe four years after their separations, lbe men picked up a lllUe momentum in that matter of 'ft•t ~ Beech dt1 attoney candidate w1'o w to tile troablt of obtalDIDI my uaUat•d bomo phone 1utmbU to can dunn1 Mer end be1 tor a TOta money, but the women IOllt around. Wbat Am1rl~1D womao allve todQ ba bad her pie· ture reproduced more \hill any other? Elizabeth Taylor? Jackie OnasalaT Farrah Fawcett-llaJorat Or bow about Mri. Anne Turner Cook the chalrmln of \be Enshsh Deparunent at Hlllaboroup ~ Scbool ln T-.mpa, Fla.? It I IJid lt WU her llkeatH that wa1 10 widely dl1trlbuted u tbe oritlnal Oetbtr baby • Q ... On 'M-4\-s-Jr.• what'• Kllll1er•1 rust namt1 '' A~¥nwe1L:. II edlca1 doctou int newam an Ole WOfl\ lD- aurance rlaltl. Tbat'I lb ~l lm of a Soulh Al ln· uruce br6tir. Ha blam• Lbe ~ .. Of_ thtSt wot ( Rowland Evans / Robert Novak Airbus Deal a Blow to Trade WASHING TON -Eastern Airlines' purchase aereement tor 23 European wlde·bodled alrllnen la a dul that. not only delivers another stunning blow to the poor old American dollar but raiaea Hrious' queaUooa of U.S. il>duslrlal survival in the world ol aub&idiJed /oreign ex· ports. Tbe A·300 Airbus ls an ex· eellent plane, but that's not why Ea1tern Is buying lt. Airbus In· dustrie , a Western European combine, made an orrer that Eastern chairman F r a n k Bormann could not refuse. The price was right because Air~ Industrle is subsidized by the French aov- ernment, one of Its principal ownen. Although the Europeans can- not match the Americans in cost- efficient production or cam- m erc lal airliners, they are spoon-fed government funds to compete in the world market. In the case ol the Eastern Airlines deal. the French taxpayer enables planes to be sold far below C06la. What makes this dangerous for the U.S. -and the dollar -is its threat to aerospaei! exports, one of the last places where Uncle Sam still keeps his head above water in mtemational trade. THIS IS NOT the ancient con· flict between free trade and pro- tectionism. Rather. the model of Japan, Inc .. is being duplicated in Western Europe (France, Inc., in the Airbus deal). Here 1s a neo-mercanlllist system against which American com- panies are helpless playing by Adam Smith's rules. Typically, this overpowering problem has not been addressed at policymaking levels of. the Carter administration. But altnoat by accident, lt Is coming to the attention of worried Congressmen. A warnina signal was sounded at a House Banking subcommJtl~ hearing March 17 by J . B. Li Pierce, treasurer of the Boeing Co.: "We can com- pete with Airbus and Ute other European aircraft manufac· turers on cost and technical merits, but we cannot compete w1lh the national treasuries of France and Germany and other European counlrlu." BEP. JOI LEACH ol Iowa, a 35-year·old freshman Republican witb no aeroapace interests in bis district. took notice. That very day, Leach wrote the subcommittee chairman, Rep. Stephen Neal of North Carolina, urging a close look at Ea.stem's French con- necUon: "We could be witneas- fng the emergence of a-. kind of· international trade warfare that bas nothing to do with economic competition, but rather with the skill of individual government.a to establish reverse trade bar· rien." Leach , Neal and other Congressmen want to see the line print of the Eastern deal - a closely guarded secret up to this point. Apart from details, however, the subsidy tor each A·300 in the Eastern pactqe la estimated at $10 million. Tbe French subsidy system ls revealed by a 1976 French parliamentary report. The gov· emmenl ''loan" of $366 million covers half ol Airbus production, with repayment indefinitely halted at $2.5 million, or 0.7 per· cent. The report vigorously argues that f'rance's aircraft in- dustry "must be supported by the government." WHILE BOEING fired the warning signal on Capitol Hill, Lockheed Corp. faces more im· 'Hey Sam, I'm bad! How's the old do-it-yourself diet ioin"!' mediate dam•••· EHtern's new A-300 wiU replace Lockheed L-1011 jelllnen, which wlll then go on the used plane market. But the Airbus also competes with the Boeint 747 and McDon- nell-Douglas DC·lO. Thf:.le three companies can and do ofter sub- sidy plums to buyers, bQt cannot afford the Frencb 1ovequnent'a Juicy level. Those A300s for Ea•tera are just the beginnlng. Similar aub- sidlzed deals with Alle1beny and PSA (Pacific Southwest Airlines) are Jn the talkin& stage. What's more, Airbus sales to U.S. carriers are the breakthrough for cutthroat com· petition against th"e Americans with Japan the next target. "The Europeana are pulllnt out all the stops to win sales in Japan," Aer01paoe Daily reported last week. "Aside from normal com· mercial representation, tbe cov· ernments involved are. apply- ing strong presaare on tbe Japanese 1ovemment." THE STA.KES are •igb. Last year's U.S. aero3pace exports totalled $7.6 billion against $732 million in imports. For r:>m· _ mercial aircraft, the export: sur- plus was S2.5 billion la 1977 (down from $3.1 billion in 1976). Considering the record U.S. trade deficit and it.a ruinous im· pa cl on the dollar, this bulge In commercial aircraft is one the U.S. cannot afford to surrender. Unlike textiles, electro"ftles or even steel. this ls not a case of foreign productivity and in· tenuity outstrippin1 the •butlish Yankees. Tbe Americans can still make jetliners more effl· ciently than anybody else. The difference is France, lbc., alianed a1ainst three private American producers. While the French emulate the Japanese hard-sell subsidies, U .S polic)'makel'6 are occupied in Jottier pursuits. At the middle level, oCflcials here say they want to study the Eastern transaction more closely before doing anything rash. But the role of Adam Smith does not fit the hard world of neo· mercantilists, threateniog to cloud a rJre American. bright spot in world economlcs. • I Have Our PlannerS Lost Their Sellses? Tr.-the Editor: We were noored when we read that Supervisor Thomas Riley's Planning Commission appointee, Mr. Macl>ougall, and his sheep, had voted to permit 400 houses to be bllllt in the badly noise impact- ed area of El Toro. Thls lavon of Inhumane treat- ment ortellow Americans; ln fact it so r ar deviates Crom a proper de· cl1lon aa to be probably criminal irresponsibility. ROW CAN A few com- missioners and ~ome supervisors make a decision that commits 400 families to the mental and physical stresses from noise lbat have now been recognized as call.!e for many health problems? Has this commission simply taken leave of its senses? Are they not able to read or hear the splendid testimony presented a1ainat their decision? There t. possibly here an opening for class action law with adequate reuon.s~tor consider- inc Improper and irresponsible acts in the conduct of their public oft\ce. 1 do not bave much hope. With the bac:Qround or Orange Coun- ty wbeellne and dealing and the unaavoey relatlonshlp of the de· velopen out there with the car· rot on the sUck perhaps there ls no ho~. "'11.'ve bard no 6vldence tbat an~ plannlnl commlulonera! nor any supervlson will movee1 into lhil noise Impacted area! H.M. WEBBER, M.D. , more than a quarter or a billion dollars IS being Spent just LO reed school children. something that was once considered the parent's responsibility. AMONG the non-ba•lc pro- 1rams budgeted are such things as environmental education, educationally disadvantaged youth. special assistance for the handicapped, Indian education, programs for students speaking little or no English. survey and research work In connection with AB 65 <the school finance bill passed last year by lbe state legislature), bilincual and bicultural education and rarm vehicle instruction. Other special procrams in· elude those for pregnant minors, drug dependent minors, educa· tionally retarded, emotionally disturbed and those with behavior disorders. These programs were state mandated. That mean.a local teachers, parents and ad- ministrators had little to say when these programs came down. These programs bring with them thousands of rules, each requiring school \?rnployees at all levels. to plan. oreantze, implement and then report re- sults back to the originating agency. They all take the time of the teachers and administrators, drawing them away from their primary responsibility -the classroom Mtucatlon of children. Those who support the Jarvis· Gann Initiative are in effect pushing for another way to finance local government and education. Assumlng the Legislature wi U generate the rev· enue to reP..lace the $7.5 billion ror local governmental ac• livlties, counties, citiu, schoQl districts and s~clal dl1lnct1 wlll t>. massively ~Mlden lo the '1Bi1 Dnddy" state. What would happen to our cherished local control? ll '• time that teachera parents, admlnlatratora and other rnemberl of tho communl· ty make an effort to wort toiether. Public education hU bffn 1lven a lot of ,..lMWlblU· ty. If tt ts aoln& to mtet theM responsiblUti • lt II 'OiDI io have to chant• In many ...,.., To make certain that tb8'1• dlan1es are for the better Will require vl1llant, h~formed, couraaeous advoc1tu. .. MARTHA KJ\S ZKE concern that certain individuals were not given an opportunity to speak to the Board of Trustees at the Feb. 2.8 meeting. As president or the Huntington Beach Union High School Dis- trict Board of Tn.lsttea, I wouJd like to at.ate that no cllizen from our district baa been denied the right to addren the board at any meeting. Aa president it is my responaibillf)t to maintain order and decorum at board meetings. IT IS ALSO my task to eliminate redundancy and not provide a forum for varylne political philosophies, partlcWarly to people who are not residents of our high school district. Based upon the tenor of the meeting, plus the fact that tbe lndividuab requesUog to ad· dress the board were not resl· dent.! of the high school district, I denied their request to speak. The Hu..tineton Beach Union HJeh School District Board of Trustees has been in Ute past, and 1 am certain, will continue to be In the future1 very recep- ti ve to concerns or Its citizens. Thal i• our elected duty. But the board also has a responslblllty to conduct its publicly .stated business in an orderly, pro· fesslooal manner and, u presi- dent, I intend to make all efforts in that direction, · DON MacALLISTER, President Board of Tn.llc.I& HuµUneton Beach Unioa Web School Dlltric:t ~reafott To the F.ditor: ta. Thi lnJUaUve to ou"llaw the use of decompression chambers for kltung dogs and cats cot more than aoo,ooo alpatures, but not enou1h to qualify for the bal~. Therefore. Senator Allred Son& hu lntl'oduced SB 1411 which would outlaw these ebal!lbetl. The bill wUI ~ heard In the S...:.at A1rtcultur Commltt.. OCl Aprll 13 at eiao a.m. Tboae m. . terested t1hould write or wire Senator Song, State Capitol, Sacramento. California 95814. CHARLENE DRENNON Director, West Coast Region Humane Society of the United Slates Pet llespon.dbll!tfl To the Editor: I was interested to n!ad Mrs. Hastings' viewpoint H ex- pressed in her leU.er of April 2, as it gives me an opportunity to re-emphasize the lmportance or not letting emotions cloud our judgment -especially with re- gard to this wipleasant subject of animal euthanasia. For instance, it bas been amA ply demonstrated that In a prop- erly operated chamber, death occurs in seconds. It serves no good purpose to keep reiterating statistics that apply only In poor· ly run facilities. Even the L.A. shelters that use injection sWl use the chamber as backup. ALSO evidencing an emo6onal lack of perspe-ctive is the claim that many dogs are killed by mistake. Everyone lneludlne shelter staff, deplores such an occurrence, but out of 6(),000 animals impounded in the put year, this has happended four limes. Each time, shelter staft bas re·worked procedures to make aure tbat partlcular mls-t~kes could not happen aealn. And Kennel Chief Edwards bas on file, 50 commendations trom clUztot perta.in1.ni to the cleanll· ness or the physical facllitiea and the coun.ous belp they re- cel ved with t.helrputl.cularprobo lem. llow can anyone oppose laws which would put th• responalbW· ty tor the tra•ic pel aurplus where it belonp -on tl\e pet owner? Such en ordlnanee can't be said to be aimed at respoml· blo breed rt sloce tbey already have kennel U«nset· ResponalbJe broedtt• are workln• wlth our bumaae lfOUPSi thct ahiO want to help pt-event the prollfeNUon of UD· wanted pet and tb put tb blame *MN lt belonp lead of on abelter. l-Rtrm FBANKEL ~ i By BU Ke•ne ills . 04 Citizem Boo £NG Terminal Gi11emmya, Thai Strek l•ueB I . SANTA BAlUWlA CAP> -SuppocUn olbUUd· • U4Ui6idnatiaral , ... tenolnal at Point~ IDS.... 8litMara ~bavencelved a boetJJe r«~tro. ,_,.,ttben. 0 l•C• ol ~JOO 'l"UmdQ booed propo. ol U. Pol.a~ a1te, wblch 11 one ol n.. bclnl 9tudled at hearlnp held by the at.ate ~n.mt•ion. 1"1C!k'• beartnP were to tcmllDu. ~ ID P«t~. Both bWa were killed by M YOU9, needln1 five yes votes few lpproTal. Th• bill that would have Dl'Oldbtted ~ firm• from llvt.Da out aamples. SB1m tiy Sen. Alan SieroCJ, J>..Loe Anjele., died delplte a plea from~ Comtl Wilde. 1"llS caowD Bllll!D wm.:N DITB Mclt!n· ne,,;( ........ of Weiltem U.G TermlDal Aa-aoetatel. preeeated a »minute allele presentation .... tleelaNd ·-~elite emers• .. preferable to Nblto.mr.on . • • W.._. G LI a Paclftc Ga 6 Eleebie Co. n~ that bopee to baUd and operate tbe lm· Pol'Wttim tcmlna1. WILDE MID SBVEUL O• BIS ftlEND8 had d.led of d&arette-related cancer. Tbe bUl be said "tries to proteet tbe dtlama of California from belnc inchaeed to UM a product tbat by DOW LI d k · ·ndo t $800? • certalnly known to be 1Djurloul to tbelr bealtb. •• "Di yCN now picture w1 wi cos That'$ what Mr FerreU says his wilt cost." SlercJC;.y likened livtna a1"'Y ell~ to "tbe Aad tbe audience cheered reeommendatioaa by the San&a ~ County Board"' Superv1aon to 1PPGl't an Aaembly bW that would delay loea· lion Of a LNG terminal lD Califoniia for One year. TRB OOASTAL co•lll88ION .. conductiq public bearbtp at each ol the nve sites under con- 11deratioa -RaWesnake canyon, Point Concep. Uon. Deer Canyon. Camp Peoclleton and Laa Varu -to detennlne wbich site ll best suited for termluJ comtruetioo. Gay Ordin,;;u;;;N;;~d- JlcKJnney laid tbe environmental impact at Point ~ would be lea than at U1 ol. tbe olbet liteS, but an attorney foe nearby Holliatet' Rueb laid the California Fi.ab and Game Depart- meqt ranked Poi.at Conception u least favorable in terms ol. the impact on flab and wUdllfe. OTB.Sa OPPONENTS INCLUDED marine blololilta ccaces Ded about a rare mail Sl*ies In tbe area. abalone diven, and those «meerned about safety aspects. The few people who favored the location cited the creatioa of jobll and the need for au to protect ui1tin1 jobs. Projeetlom show the plant would provide about 1.650 jobs during construction peats. SAN DIEGO (AP> -The San Dle10 Presbytery bu voted to publicly oppose ordination or conlerriq ol uy bob* orders on homo1pu1J1. The ove:rwbe1mlnc vote came Tuesday duriDI a two hour de- bate nnllD8 over Blbllcal stand· ards, famlly -:::r:· and the question ol a try to the homosexual community. Herb Christ, pastor of the College Park Presbyterian Cburcb, asked to go on record as dlaaent.ing from the majority vote to oppose ordiaaUon of homosexual ministers. Ulle 'Airport. 77' Passenger Describes Panic on Bos Crash LOS ANGELES (AP> -"It feh lilre tt wu ooe ol those moTtee -like •Airport Tr,,. said one puseftler in· jared when a packed transit bus col· Oded with a car dart.q morning rush bour. .. There was panic;• said another. "There were kids in there. . . very Cl'OWded. Everybody Wal aeream1q an4 haDllnl on to each other ana u.en ~ the windoW • • .and ) out ... laid Dealle Th1ero of Santa lloalca. • She wu one of IG _p~ncen crammed Into tile ••ifU1·mcmq · Rapid Tranllt District bua when the accident occurred. About«> puaeQCen were reported uuured. but all but a few were re- leaaed abort11 after hospital vi.sits. The most serious JJ)jury was a frac· turect tee. ollldala said. Prejeeu 1'111 11-4 SACRAMENTO (AP) -Two or Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.'1 pet proj· ecta, a wood cbip.burniDC plant to fuel the 1t4te's central beatinc and SmogStandanla Met/or a Year EL MONTE (AP> -Southern California bu aone a full year without vk>latiDI one of tbe state'• automobile pollutioo atandards, tbe bead of the Air Resources Board say1. "Thia ll the lint timt llnee 1m<>1 became • m.i« problem ln SoutberD CallfOO!i&Jbat we have actually met tbe carbon~onoxid• standard," ARB Chairman 7om Quinn aald ( J cool1D1 plant. and • aateWte com- m unl c atlon1 ay1tem, have w9n bud1et 1ubcommittee akirmubes Tueaday, but not wit.bout a few tart words ol crttlcllm. Both proposall wilJ DOW be beard by the fuD Ways and Mean Commit· tee. ................... SAN DIEGO (AP) -Gov. ~ G. Bl"OWD Jr. renewed bis canu>a!P a1aa.i tbe controvel'llal JarVIS tU biltJalive at two public forums arp. log that promlaed relief would 10 to business, not homeowners and rent· era. The eovernor noted that Friday be will •llD a bU1 ll'Gtlna a $4.50 million , tax incentive to bualnesa and in that li1ht "I don't believe that we abould have a pn>perty tu bill that pvea 80 percent of the benefit.a to one part pl soclety that Juat cot the biu•t ,, break eyer.•• • 0.1.teO.A .... RIVEBSIDE <AP> -The oo-apln off ·acaln planned abowln. of tJw c:laaalc "Birth ol. a NationtT ftlm It Riverside Qty Museum wu~ back on Main Tuesday Dllht. "fbe HVea-member C{ty voted 1nantmooa17 to permit a publl~ aho•lna ol the mm at tbe musewo despite objectiooa by members ol the black communtt.y that the film wu racist. ........ ...aa. un IS A JIATTBa of policy ol the cb\lf'Cb," Cbrilt aald. "I don't ~we abould chante the system ol. Presbyteries decidlq whom to Cll"daln. It baa notbl.nc to do with the homosexual is- sue." JudJ. Rowe, an elder at Colle1e Park, coo.curred. "I have friends who are homosexual," she said, "and I don't fl.od them any lesa human or able to lead than anyone else." The United Preabyterian Churc}) General Assembly will receive in May a majorit.y and Don't dishwash just the drinks. Wait till dinner is over. minority report from a dbided 19-member task force that bu been 1tudyln1 the issue of homoaexual ordination for almost two yean. IF THE M.UORITY report la adopted at the church's national convention here, it would make the United Presbyterian Church the nation's most liberal major denominatioo in extendini fu.11 riJ'btl of members hip and ministry to avowed practidnl bomosexuala. The mlno · report brands bomosexuall as a sia. • Tuesday. ••it LI a major mllestcae and prowa tba1 our automobile anti· amo1 procram LI ltartlna to PQ off.•• Quinn aid the nwnber ol daya ID wbicb the one-bow' standard wu vtolatad bad decreued from 11 ln im to two ln tm. He credited tbe lat.at Calm to 19'71 IDOdel can wblch be ..W emit only 10 percent a much carbon monoxide aa preYloua SAN DIEGO CAP> -A county grand J\11'1 hu returnee! a 14-count Indictment aplnst 13 members ol a DPl1 band OD charpe of bur8larY. eon1plracy ud recelvln& i\oten property. Half loads ~ve JOU a good sock-nght m the pocketbook. models. The .lndlctment Tuelday came oo the eve of a P!'9llminary bearinl 1cbeduted today ln El Cajon Munlclpal Court. Tb• indlctmeut cbarrea the IYPliel with bur&lari• of a ore1 ID Brawley, Borre10 Sprin,. aoctJullancm M b 27. ' Your lights should go out when you do. . "' poilonl cheap and lleeeUlble tn order to -~ ·-: addicted... •• , But Dennll Loper. d1r.etor ol the Ca1l!oitila ·~ AsaociaUoll of Candy and Tobaeeo Dlltftbatan, :i aald the bill confllctecl wttb federal law. SIEaOTY SAID TBS LAW BANNING ., ' &iveawQ'I to m1non wu m:aeaforeeable a loQs 8!l \ ~ vendon were allowed to li..a clp.nU.9 ••ar to ~ anyone. ~ llalmlDD ft.Des under bis bill woulctba"We been I $100 for veDdon andSS.OOOfor .. COIDpaQ. I ' I The "'lbal stick.. bW SBl.581 by Sen. Dlula ~ Carpenter. R-Ne1t'pOl't Beach would bave tdtt· f ened penalUes on th• nowered topa of tile S Thailand mutjuaa plant. ' Capt. BW Sandenoll of tbe lAe Anaelt9,Pdce ~ Department's narcotlca dlvlllca telttftid .. i fta1 ' stick.a are lncreulu in uae and bave a b1lh con-! centration of THC. the active l.np'edlent In inart· : juana. : VNDEll THE BILL, P08U88ION OP mart· Juana with a me content of • ~t cw b.hdMr Would be pouncls for arrest uid pUDlabmtnl U either a miademeanor or a felaa,y w11b a pouible pmonteno.. A 1175 California law made poe1nllon ol uP to an ounce o( marijuana subject to a maximum ftDe of $100 wttb no arrest or hookint. Poaeuloa ol lar&er amomh la a mlademeanor. Sale cw cWliva· lion relDlllna-a feloay. • -t i • • l ' i i ' • • SANDEllSON CONCEDED TllAT SllO&ING f Thal stlcu doesn't cause any more crtminal ~ behavior than ordinary marijuana and that people ' tend to smoke less of it for the same effecL ~ An opposition witn.eaa, Dr. Rofer 'nblln, i director ol the street dnag ~al.YJis laboratoey at ! Los Angeles County HospUal, aald the UH of Thal sticlra wu bein8 encoura&ed by tbe aprayl.q of the \ berbicidePanquatoa marijuana in Kaico. • I r . r t Your open door policy can rost you. .. See the dollars drip away? You're in bot water-in more ways than one. - ,.. .., I Cooking~ ooets as much as a whole meal. I . . \ ' ... l (. J NBW YORK <AP> -An a'rtl· ele IJi a eew um. publllbed by 80lltq Staoe ~ ~ • nuelieu-powes ell Mice wu liolt in 1Je5 cm • mmaJeyan moun· taluldt b)' • Central lDtellltm-cr AcwY ~tioa lrYiD& to set up a tractin1 ataUon to monltCJrO>lnete adivlUes. Aceord.la1 to the story ln Oatslde, tbe CIA IJ'OUP was try. iq to aca1e a 25,615-foot moan- tain tailed Nanda De•l and code-named Blae Mountain, but wu forced by bad weatber to live up the attempt about 2,000 feet below the summit. The cllmben, bopinB to retum ,.beo Ute weather improved, 1tored U1e nudear SNAP 1eaentor, wblch wu to power the trackln1 station, among aome rocks and 1t was burled in an avalanche, 1ay1 tbe article in the May Issue of the mqaline. The story, by Howard Kolm. 1a71 tbe CIA aade an attempt lo 19M to retrieve tbe aenerator. but wu masucceuful. It says the ruel rods lo the aenerator con- tained plutonium·238 "which .re-maiQs dsngerously radioactive !or 300 to 500 years and even lr the SNAP 9enerator bad sur· vlved tbe avalanebe intact, its outer shell would eventually I Steeet 161 t f A motorist approaching this curve at Myford Road and Walnut Avenue in Irvine couldn't be blamed for wondering wby the sign suggests the odd speed of 16 miles per hour. The reason, city officials say, 14 simple: to catch the driver's atten- lion. They explain that the 90·degree curve's danger is increased by the fact that it occurs at a place in the road Where a motorist wouldn't expect it. The sign, they said. seems to be effective. I I Irvine School DaredeiJil K.nie»el . Board Naming · • -N~ Officers Released From Jail The annual eledion or officers or the Irvine Unified School Dis- trict Board of Trustees is • adleduled at tonight's 7 o'clock meeting at district olfices, 29'1 Alton Ave. Current board president is R. Dean Olson. Trustee Franklin S. Hurd la clerk. Also on tbe board a1enda ls approval ol an application for about $2 million in state school buUdin9 funds for the construe· lion or Santiago lfills Elemen· lary School in the Northwood Area. The school was ortetnally scheduled to open next ran. Dis· trict offtdala said ll now will be at lea.st spriJll ot lm before the school can be opened. 2 Held in Raid TRACY (AJ>)-Danlel Ray Willia, 66, and Thomas R. Bl'Own, 31. .both ol Brentwood, were atl'elted and $250,000 in eoanterfelt bllla were aeiJed in a raid on a T·abirt sbop, the U.S. Secret Service reported. Coast LOS ANGELES CAP> -Evel Khlevel walked out or jail today into a talllle of f10anclal and le.aaJ problem.a. But hia publicist says tbinp will be )\Imping a&ain SOOD for the daredevil motorcycllst. Dressed in a gray sport suit, the self.styled "professional lire risker" stepped into a latJ? model sedan reportedly contain· ing bis wife and was driven away. Knievel, 38, served a little less than five months of a six·month Jail ~erm imposed after he pleaded guilty to assaulting television executive Sheldon Saltman with a baseball bat. Knievel said be aaaaulted Saltman because or alle1edly libelous material contained in a book Saltman wrote after wort· inl u a J>l'Omotel' on Knievel's unsuccessful roeket·cycle leap over tbe Snake River Goree in Idaho. "I feel that the m~ority or society have undentood the reasons tor DlY action," Knievel said. He contended his tnearcera! tioo would not serve •• u a deter· rent to others." &rineEyes Traffic I ,ight ·Installation Knievel's early release was due to his good behavior, said Sheriff's Lt. Joseph Race. Publlclat St.an Rosenfield sald one or the first problems Knievel will have to face is a civil auit filed by Saltman ror an UD· disclosed sum. Roeenfleld noted, however, that Knievel bas filed a $210 million libel suit against Saltman and bis publishers. ''Evel's going to have a lot of expenses in attorneys' rees," Rosenfield said. "He does not have money to S>•Y attorneys• rees unless be sells some proper- ty. And ii the judgment goes against him, be going to have to dip into his pockets. "But, as of tomorrow be will start generating income a1ain and I've never seen anyone wbo can generate income laster than he can," Rosenfield said Tues· day. ln addition, Rosenfield said, Knievel owes about $800,000 in back taxes. And Knievel no longer has money comin1 in from Evel Knievel toys, after (See KNIEVEL. Pase AZ) corrode and rele.ee lta pollODOt» core." The *1lJ IQI tbat the •swtnl thaw on U. IO'rtbml elope ol tbe mountala -where the 1enerat« wu buried -ia a ma· jor source of water tor &.be GaDJles Rlwr and aaya that ii the radioactive material reached tbe Gaqes "it eoulCI cause ca.neer lD anyone wbo drank even microseople amounts or ate """t•.naoateid ftsb,'' -~ Accor41Df to tbe artlel•• uotia•r CI eQed!Uon to • nel1bboria1 mountain in 1J8'1 waa more succeaaful, and a nucleu-powered tract.lq m~ Uon wu -a1bUsbed. Tbe story U1S tbe CIA'a ID· dlan counterpart, the Central Bureau of lnveatttaUon, wu aware ~ t.be ~ llii:lt wa Irvine Approves Tentative Plans •1 ftllLIP &0811AJUN °' ................ The Irvine City Council bas approved preliminary plans for the University Town Center, a project IOIDe !ell only a miracle could &et started. The council tied development of proposed apartments and a senior citizen health care faclll· ty to the dea1cn and buildinl ol a commercial center which ia to be the eon ol tbe project. Since approval ol the &00.i.ng ordbaance lor &be town center in 1972, tbe Irvine Company never baa indicated wb.at sort or com· Suppo,rters Of Jarvis Drop-Poll SAN FRANCl,SCO CAP> - JIOM ~~!Jave~ ol tbe 1~-ta&U.u &MD lD re~ bat tM raUo ~sup. pOrt tor the eontroversial tax· relief meuure bu dropped, ac· cordfna to UM Oalltomla Poll. <Relat.tcUtor'j, M> The nNb. ~iacted KUcb 2'1·APTil 3 by pollster ¥enin .Field" aho•ed ·•"ut foW' of ne.ry ftve poteatlal vot.era. or '19 percent, say tbe,y are aware ol Proposition U. while in February only 58 percent tneW about il About half the state's elec· torate, 52 pereent. aeknowledps ao opinion oa tbe luue. Some Z1 percent say they ravor the in· iUaUve wbUe 25 percent say~ oppose it. Six weeks ago when only 30 percent ol tbe electorate bad an opinion oo Jarvis-Gann, 20 per· cent lavored it and 10 percent opposedlL • H Propolltion 13 paues, an- nual property taxes t.b.rouihout the state would be cut by abcM $7 billion. tt quali.fted for tbe June s bta1lot when oraan.i&era · <see JARVIS, Pa1e AZ> mercial development lt plans ror tbe center. PresHd b1mou• uman Arthur Aatboa)r to ea- plain bis "vision" town center, an Irvine Company vice pruident, Dick Cannon, wu va1ue about tho orieinal ~ of the proJeet. located ap. Campus Drive acroufrom UC lrviDe. That concept was of a Greenwich V1D.ace-t:ype complex of arttaan. craftsman and artllt abopa and i.Dexpenslve apa.rt- m enta with tbe flavor of a unlvemtytawri. • CaDDCJn aald be now can see a ' combination of bl1b~density reaideatlal (apartments), offtce developmen end a eombinatiaG o( null \1111 lnclDd.lili finuclal tn1t1tutloas, apparel atorea, bookstores, meat markets, a rour- ac:reen movie theater and the like. Ke pceclicted a mix of 40 per- cent retail utivltiel, 20 percat apartments and 40 percent oa. flees. ADtboa;f and the council plan Ut get a clearer idea about wb'1 that means, with tbe conditions they placed on the plan ap-rs:!~WN CENTEa, Pase AZ) tion eampal1n of state Coo. troller Keanetb Cory. In sentencing Cella, Y~or· dered tbe priloD term to concu.rreo,Uy with a flv9-ye lederal prison sentence which ---Cella 11 to be8in servin& Friday in connectloo wltb hls June me coDvlctioa ol lneome tax "· evaalon, ftllng fraudulent tu re- tu.n11 and fllinl fals6 Medi~ claims. -Y ai. rejected a auieestion by Celia's attorney that Cella be aJ.. lowed to _provide community service in Jieu of prison. His attorMY, Rocer HalllClll1 uid ''It WOUid certainly be bet· ter for IOCJ.ety for blm to do what he coo.ld ror bis prof elf on." Tbe nelgbbOrin& mountain town of Julian Ula badly in need Of a plijadu." said the lawyer. "C~ be ts not a soan ~ violence. The chancle of nacldlikoi ii nonexistent. He bu ff" • ot.nteiJ medlul UW. , and ~e M a ten pbyll-< ~ .. AJ) YN.OT 17 -Thief Steala . <'t Pil!aMoht ROCHESTER, N . \'. (AP) -A Pica110 _, watercolor valued at about SlS0,000 bas been stolen from lbe Memorial Art Gallery al the University of Rocbeater, officlala there u:td today: A 1allery apokeaman Hid the paint.Ult, t!Ued "Flowers in a Woe Vue," disappesred from the wall near the gallery auditorium Tuesday eve- nln1. The paiotinl WU clonal· ed lo the gallery in 1931. M 'lf• ulld lo be ar- ralc,aed toda)' or TbundaJ ln eowt .. He la ~ bold at OraQ1 County Jail la lieu ol -.ooo baU, oollee aaJd. llorria was deacrlbect u an off·and-oo l"eli· dent of Seel Bed wbo bu also ll•ed ln CaUlomia de5ert c:GID· mWllde.. A tuk force of invesU1aton pa>blq a one. er auaplcious west county fires dattn1 back a far aa ~ yean kept Monts wader almost con•tant 1ur· velUance fOT a week before bis arrest. He was arrested about 3:20 1.m. II~ a block from the p,...p-,tJ TOWN CENTER ••• An Irvine Company proposal ror development. or the com- mercial core must be filed with the city before buildina permits for the first two residentJal project& are issued. Those projects are 100 federal- ly aubsidhed low-income apart· ments, proposed by Sbapell In· du1tries, and a retirement health c~ complex rroposed by Soutbern Cal fornia Presbyterian Homes. These would be built east ol California Avenue, and woald abut the future commercial core. A f artber condlUon ,M Ute council approval wu that befote building permits are issued for any other residential develop- ment, the council must have ap- proved the Irvine Company com· mercial con1 proposal. 3 Hostages Hel,d By Two in Vegas Further, before issuing build- ing permits for the second phase of town center deYelopment - basically tbe area west of California Avenue -half the commerclaJ core must have been developed and ready for buslnesse9 to occupy it. Tbe council vote on the condi· Uons was unanimous. Although Irvine Company repre1entatives pre1ent Tueeday said they had no authority lo ap- prove or the conditions, they said the compromise lo get tbe project started appeared lo be something "we can live with." LAS VEGAS <AP> -Two men held three people boetqe ln a bar near the famed Strip to- day, while two doaen pollce waited outside and neeotiaf,on tried lo convince the pair to sur-render. · The drama ~m afMMat T:ao a.m ., police aafd, when they resPonded to a report of a ~ bery in Pl'OIJ"9SS. ··Police can were at the scene in less than a minute,·• officer Tom McQuade said. "One man walked out, saw two Police can, and ran back inside.' Lale in the momins, a young man and a woman about 50, left the building, and were being ques- tioned by Police. Three more P~keepen Fire Rockets BEIRUT, Lebanon <AP> Arab Leaeue peacelteepen fired tank cannoos and rockell today in a bid lo crush four days ol sectarian clashes In adjacent Moslem and airistian slUllUI of Beirut. There were reporta the Christians were ta.kine the brunt of tbe firing. "Rockets are rain.in& on m," screamed .a woman resident ol the Christian quvter, reached by telepbooe. Residents ol the Moslem district said tbe Syrian· dominated peacekeepers were not aiming their way. A Syrian omcer said bis men were "show· lng no favoriU.m." ,,,.... P-.e.AJ JARVIS ••• aalh~red an impresahe 1.5 million liiut.ures lut yqr in a relatively abort time perlOd. Some 73 percent .,...... wltb the Pn>politlon 13 arpment that "local eovermnents can 1et by on lot leu money" and 70 per· cent felt that the lntUative "ta the onb' Wa.J lo send a atraag mesaae• to 1overnment that people are fed up with blab lu· es and too mucb 1ovemment spendi.na." The Poll ls bued on 1,m telephone lntervlews wttb men and women who formed a "representative crou·aeetlon ol California adult public" Field aaJd. DAILY PILOT persons were permitted lo leave later. As police er-quelled behind their cars, a sergeant lalted to the people inside the Nut House bar by loudspeaker, urtina the suspects lo surrender. He prom· tsed tbem they '#bUldn't be hurt. They bad a .357 magnum. A Roman Catholic priest, Father Casalle.r Kicltmal, epote through a window with a man in th~ bar. "I talked lo him just briefly - he was askirul tf they could have a black Protestant clergyman rather than a Roman Catholic priest," be said. Father Kickmai said the man seemed "rather cool and col· lect.ed." A sboJt time later, the Rev. Jeaae Wesley arrived from Bethel Baptilt Cbureb. He and a white minister, The Rev. Irving Phillipa of the First Presbyterian Ch~b, then be1an negotiating with the men Inside, talking to lbem throulh a win- dow in the froat ol the concrete block baildiq. Police bad bloclled otr Desert Jon Road. where the bar la locat· ed, and were reroutiq traffic around the bar. 'lbe si"' l1 about one-half mile from the Las Vegas Strip. A Speciai Weapons And Tac- tics unit was at the scene and a police bellcopter bovered over- head u the ta1b conUnued. N°9JXOD Backs 'IDegal' Act8 As President In previous meetings, Irvine Company ortici1ls said they were certain a plan for the com· mercial center would be com· plete by lbe end of lbls year. Anthony's conditions would appe1r lo have the effect of movin1 up the Irvine Company timetable to September, wben start of home building bas been predicted. Other conditions for develop- ment of tbe center were that: -The city hillside trading or- dinance, which was adopted last year to diacourate mus grading of slopes, will be applied, despite city planninUis alf recommendatlm 11aimtlt. Anthony Hid he was n· cemed by Irvine Company laas lo "level" moet of the acre property, and said natural land conloUl'I ought lo be preserved as much u possible. -Plans for a possible pedestrian/bicycle crossing of Campus Drive be included in the commercial core develoJ>ment plan. Tri-party funding, by the city, the Irvine Company and UCI would be studied. -Apartment buildings along Campus Drive, proposed at three stories, will set back from the sidewalk 30 feet rather than the lrvtne Company propoul ol 18 feet. Ant.bony aaid the nearer di1tapce would eive molorilts the feeling ol driYinl throuCb a tunnel. Cal:IBr PuahBB Energy Bill WASHINGTON (AP>-Presi· dent Carter, easer to break the Iona Impasse on bl.I enero bill, promtaed today lo npport DUI'· ly any natural 1as compromise that can be necotiated bJ COD· gressional canferees, • l1"0UP ol Republlcan•energy nesotiators said. Carter met with GOP House memben ol tM Houae-Senate conference committee on ener1y. 0 He aa1d be ,irould .. port, ln eff eC~z . anythla1 that came out of me CGllference," Rep. Clff. Brown, R-Obio, aaid after eetmc. Brown a Carter lbdlcated be could aupport a eom· promlle fa•ored by RepubUcam caJ11n1 for dere1ulatlon or natural pa prices in ftve yeuw, 11 that's what It took to &et bll ener11 llill movtna .,atn. ,.._.P••eAJ c~ 1111 .... ed reliped to tbe•~ One aoted llorrtl u •~QI be "bad a problem." 'l'bt Rriea of n.rw· for wblcb autborltl• plaa to proaecut• blm have ranted from trub can1 to t.orebed )'aehta, but in· veatieaton decline to reveal preclHly bow they were aet ablaae. "Tben la a defln.lte pattem," Seal Beach Fire Chief Ron Adams =alned lut week. Chief lli uid ln an in· tervtew Ura lt la believed Morris la ""powdble for bundredl of tbous&Ddl of dollan ln property dama1e aJtbou1b no Uvt1 i.ave been Jolt. Firemen 1ay a few ot tbem have auffered minor llQurles IUC~ U mJ.nor bums nd a.mote Inhalation 1D blues tbey allece llorrla let. ln.-est11aton say fr~nt tarseta ol whomever bu 't. ed the aeries ol fires have boats, s\lCh u the two destroyed Monday In Seal Beach and tbe previoUI Tuaday in Huntlqton Harbour. Establllbment ol an lncreas· ln1ly f1mlllar patteru ln the flrea led lo formallon of... the Oran1e County Arson Taak Force wltb Ill mlaslon lo take the firebua out~ clrculatloa. The Oran1e County Fire Department; Oran1e County Sheriff's Office; Seal Beach police and Hunttn1"°n Beach police and tire departments were all Involved. Pl••P.,,eAJ CELLA ••• clan." But Auiltant Oranee County Dlatricl Attorney Michael R. Capiul said, "It would be a travesty for him lo serve u a town pbyaiclan." C1plui said ol Cella: "He toot somewhere in tbe neiebborbood or S3 million from those bolpitala over a period of Ume." "II be was in touching dis· lance ol $1, be would steal It," the prosecutor arped. In addition to the prison term. Judge Yaie ordered Cella lo pay a U0,000 fine lo Orange County. Van Houten Jory Hean Testimony LOS ANGELES <AP) -The defense ltrate1Y ol "dlmlnh1bed capacity" came under attack when former Charles Manson cult member Linda Kaaabian tesUfied Leslie Van Houten "ap. peared to be in control of herself" the night of the La Blanca murders in 1989. Mrs. Kuabian also testified Tuesday that MUI Van Houten was' not under lbe lnllueoce ol dru11 on the nl1bt of the mutdera ol Leno ud Roffmary La Blanca. Hol..ever, under ero11 ex- amlnatiob by defense attorney Maxwell Keith, Mn. Kuablan conceded th.at M8DIOO, curnnt- ty servtni We lmprllOIUDent, dominated life at the Spahn Ranch where be and bll followen lived durinl the sum· merof 1988. ,.,.,,.... SUN PHOTO SHOWS SOLAR FLARE (ARROW) WldeipNed Rlldlo Btecbuta a PoalblUty Solar Snafw BOULDER, Colo. <AP> -'lbe moat violent solar flare in nearly four yean could cause radio •ilnal blacltoub, telephone circuit ~es and dilplays ol tbe northern llabta in the wwld's northern latitudes this week, the Natlonal Oceanle and At· mospheric Administration 11ld. · A spokesman for American Telephone and Telesraph Com· pany, however, said U.S. customen probably will not notice uY lapse in~ circuits. The flare wu detected TUeadlf by NOAA 1atelll• onttinl 22,300 miiel above tbe Earth, the qency uid. Carl Posey, a apokesman for NOAA'• Envlronm.atal Research Laboratory. here, said the flare will produce• atcrm in the Earth's mapet.ic field, resultlq 1n radio llpala be1Jll absorbed rather than reflected, =• TbundQ. He predicted widespread teie cl.reult outaaes and aald aurora borealll dlaplQI -the nortberD Uahtl -would be ¥ill· ble in many areu north of ab east-west line that would pus tbro. Cbicqo and even 1n some places south of that line. 4 Challengers Win NB Council Seats By JOANNE REYNOLDS OI •Detty "9t sun Paul Hummel, Donald Strauss, Jackie Heather and Evelyn Hart won seata on the Newport Beach City Council Tuesday ln 8J'l election that drew one of t.be lightest turnouts in re- cent times. City Clerk Doris George said 10,976 ballota were cut out of 40,512 reciltend voten eU.alble, for a 27 percent turnout. Tbe city's Sixth District COUD· cil race was the tlabtest wbere cballeqer Hummel defeated in· cumbent Lucille Kuehn by e3S votes. All of the other winners, Strauss in the First District, Hart in the Tb11'd District and Heather ln the Fourth District, were nmning for seats beln& vacated by the incumbents. It was early toda, before ftnal results were tallied, altbouP all of. the ~ establlahed early leads on tbe way to lbe1r vie· tories. Tbe cl4-'s votlnl machinea, Accuvot.e, rented from the Los Angeles ftrm of Martin and Chapman provided a atumbllna block to countin1 returns because the holes punched by the macbinefi did not align prop-erly with the counting device. While campaign workers and candidates waited impatiently. city election workers had lo sift through all of the ballots to see that the cards had been properly punched. Those that appeared to be improperly aligned were re- puncbed on unUHd ballq&.t. The process WU not &mplet· ed until 1:30 a.m. Tallies ~ted at that Ume are: FIRST DISTRICT -Don~ Strauss, 4,818 Peg Forpt, 3,356 S.H. Byers 1,290 Blll Von Esch, 514 John Tucker, 430 La Veme de la Cierva, 55. TRUlD DISTRJcr -Evelyn Hart, 5,100 Michael Gering, 3,701 Frank Ivens, 922 Paul CeldweU, 50f FOU1l111 DISTBJcr -Jackie Heather, 7,3ffl Charles Larson, 2.504 SIXTH DISTRICT -PauJ Hummel, 5,3.15 LucWe Kuelu)A, 700 William Dobr. 561 T .. ay' ~Jnl~ • 8teek8 I~~----------~~~~~~~~ ' NBW Y01Ut (AP) -An artl· ele LDra new mquioe puNlibed by Jlo~ Stone .Uecet that • nue~powend dwlee wu Jost in USS cm a Rlmaluan moan- taluld4l by • Central IJsteW&en· cy AleDCY apeditloa tryinl to set up a trackin& ataUoo to monl.tot Qdneee aetlvlties. Aceor41n1 to the story in Outside, tbe CIA poup WU try- illl to .cale • 25,MS-foot moan- I Su:Jeet 18? t taln called Nanda J>evl and code·named Bb• Mountain. but wu forcoed by bad weather to pve up~ attempt aboul 2,000 feet below tbe awnmlt. • The climbers, bopinc to retum ,.ben the weatlaff Improved, atored the nuclear SNAP aenerator. which wu to power tbe track.ins atatlon, among aome rocks and it was burled in an avel•ncllle, 1-.ys the article in tbe May '8sue of the maiutne. Tbe story, by Boward ltobn. HY• the CIA made Ul attemllt lo 1* to retrieve the generator, but wu unsucC*laful. It says the fuel rods in the generator con- talned plutoolwn·238 ''which re- mains dsingerous1y radioactive for 300 to 500 years and even 11 ~ SNAP 1enerator bad aur~ vfved the avalanebe intact, its outer shell would eventually eottodo IDllreleMO lt.a ~ eon." . The ~ iaya tlit the Qrtnl thaw oa the aout.taera elope ol the mountaia -where the generator wu bdned -la a ma- jor aoure• of water for &.be GanJes River and ..,. that 11 the radioactive material reached tbe GUI• "it coul4 cause caneer in anyone wbo drank even mlcroacoplc . . • Irvine Approves i'entative Plans 87 PIDUP aOSllA&IN Of .. _.. ........ The Irvine Cib' Council bas approved preliminary plans for the Unlveral\y Town Center, a project 110me felt Oll1y a miracle could get started. The COUDCil tied development of pro()Oled apartments and a aemor dtben health can fadll· t¥ to tbe deaien and build1n8 ol a commerd&l cmter which ls to be the eoreofthe project. , Since approval ol the zoning ordinance Jew the town center in ma. &be lrviDe Com.PU>' never has indicated what aort of com· mercial development lt plaDa for' the center. _ P reHed ~1 Cou•cWmao Arthur Aatbody Tueeday to ex· plain Ilia "vtslon" of the town center, an Jrvtne Company vice prealdent, Dick Cannon, was vaeue about tboAl"ilu.l = of the proMct. ioc.ted ~ ~ Drive acro&Sfrom UC IniDe. That concept was of a Gn!eDwlch Village.type comptez of artl&an. craftsman and artlll abopa aDd taexpenalve apart- m en ta with ihe flavor of a uni versit;ytown. Cannon Wd be now can see· a . . comblnation of hlcb-denaity ...Udelltlal (apartments). omee denlopment and a eombinatiaft of f9tJill ... includlna financial lnttltuttons, apparel •tores, bookstores, meat markets, a fOUl'o screen movie theater and tbelite. th predicted • mix ol 40 per. eat rd.ail activities, 20 ~ apartments and -40 pere«tt al- ftces. Antboa1 and the council plaa to get a clearer idea about what that means, with the conditions they placed on the plan ap- proval. (Set TCJIWNCZNTE•. Pap AZJ Rocle Star Ge'8 NeuJ Fan 17 ~ A motorist approaching this curve at Myford Road and Walnut Avenue in Irvine couldn't be blamed for wondering why the sign suggests the odd speed of 16 miles per hour. The reason, city officials say, is simple: to catch tbe driver's atten- tion. They explain that the 90-degree curve's danger is increa&ed by the fact that it occurs at a~place in the road where a motorist wouldn't expect it. The sign,. they said. seems to be e(fective. Sup po.rte rs Oji Jarvis Drop-Poll ' f ; I I.nine School Board Naming New Officers The annual election of officers of the Irvine Unified School Dis· trict Board of Trustees is acheduled at tonight's 7 o'clock meeting at district offices, 2941 Alton Ave. Current board president is R. Dean Olson. Tru,,tee Franklin S. Hurd la clerk. Also on the board aeenda is approval of an application for about S2 million ln state school buUdlnt fUnds for the construc- tion of Santiago Hills Elemen- tary School in the Northwood Area. The school was originally scheduled to open next fall. Dis· lrict offtdals said lt now will be at lea.at sprin• ol 1979 before the school can be opened. 2 Held in Raid TRACY (AJ>)-Danlel Ray Willia, 86, and Thomas R. Brown, 31, both of Brentwood, were arrested and $250,000 in eounterfeit bllll were aebed in a raid .on a T-~-~J tbe U.S. Secret Service repunea. Coast Weat•er llo.tb eioudy throufb Thund.Q monallll, with JO percent c~ance of measurable predpitatlo.. =~t. Tbarada7. Lowa iD IDld-609. mpa ftartday from low IOs aear tbe Coat to m.ld..eoa Re.leased From Jail LOS ANGELES (AP) -Evel Knievel walked out of jail today into a lan8Je of f~anclal and legaJ problem.a. But bb publicist says thinss will be j\lmping asain soon for the daredevil motorcyclist. Dressed in a gray sl?Ort suit, the self-styled "professional life risker" stepped into a late model sedan reportedly contain- ing hls wife and was driven away. Knievel, 38, served a little less than five mon1ba of a six-month jail term imposed after he pleaded guilty to assaulting television executive Sheldon Saltman with a baseball bat. Knievel said he assaulted Saltman because of allegedly libelous material contained in a boot Saltman wrote after work· inl as a promoter on Knievel '1 unsuccessful rocket-cycle leap over the Snake River Goree in Idaho. "I feel that tbe majority of society have understood the reasons for iny acUoa," Knievel said. He eontended his lncarcer• tion would not serve "as a deter· rent to others." Irvine Eyes Traffic l.igbt Installation Knievel's early release wu due to bis good behavior, said Sbetlff's U . Joseph Race. Publicist Stan Rosenfield said one or the first problems Knievel will have to face ls a civU suit filed by Saltman for an un- disclosed sum. Rosenfield noted, however. that Kriievel bu filed a $210 million libel suit against Saltman and bis pub1isbers. ''Evel's going to have a lot of expenses in attorneys' fees," Rosenfield said. "He does not have IUOGe'Y to pay attorneys' fees unless be sells some proper- ty. And if tbe judgment goes against him, he going to have to dip into bis pockets. "But, as of tomorrow be will start generating income again • -----------and I've never seen anyone wbo can eenerate income faster than he can," Rosenfield said Tues· day. Io addition, Rosenfield said. Knievel owes about $800,000 in back taxes. And Knievel no longer baa money coming in from Evel Knievel toys, after (See KNIEVEL, Page AZ) tion campal1n of state Con. troller Kemetb Cory. In sentendag Cella, Yale or· dered the prlsoo term to run concarreoJb' with a five-year federal pri9on sentence which Cd.la .. to beCiD serv1ni Friday in cOnDect.lon wtth bis June 1'18 convletlon ot income tax evul~ flllng fraudulent tax re- tunas and fl1inl false Medicut claims. \'ale reJected a augsestion I>! Cella'• atfomey that Cella be al- lowed to provide community service m lieu of e_rt.son. HlS •ttomeY, KOCer H8DSOll tald "it ."40Uld eertaln1y be bet· ter tor IOCietJ for b1.m to do what M could f« bja profession." Tb• nel1Hbortna mountain ton of Juliali u1s badly in need of a sUr:;1*"•" l8ld the lawyer. uce hie Is not a man of vloleoce. The chance of rescldlfttin ii nonexistent. lie bu dee•_... medical stWa ID4 ~t. t.wn pbJli-<M hptAJ) I I , OT 17 PoU riltlcaton .,.. .... 1n1 17 tepaTate co&ID1I ot U'IGll aaalna a cocnmen:lal arUst •· nasted on J)6doe ol leWal a wave d blA1ea in west 0r..,. Cowtt~ 8eedl PoUce QW ,Sd Ci laid TUllday. • Faci111 the ancm cbar1 • blcb include the torcblq ol hi.a wn aputrnimt boule,·1ll a... Ordway Mania, 31. tJl m Set.I ach Blvd., Seal'9eaeb. Authorities said thoy litUeve orris set that '5.000 fire a week .,o and t.bat tbey became aua· -Thief Steala Pttxmohi II •• taltaed tod.81 court. . He lJ beini held at Oruaie County Jail lo lieu ol -000 bail, Police aa1d. Morri1 wu dcsertbed as an oft·aod-oa retl· dent of SMl Beach Wbo bu Ullo lived In CNlfomia desert eom- munitlea. A tuk force of lnvesU1aton probiq a aeriel of auspicloua west county fires datin1 back u far aa three years kept Morris under almost coastant sur· velllance for a week before his arrest. He wu arrestA!d about 3:20 a.m. Monday a block from the • ti a •.ooo ftN ta tbt lock bl 11th St.rMt lo 6M1 Beaeb wtdeb deldro.red a amall boat and damacea a trailer raid nee. vtnuall)' an the nns the •• pect allefedly aet were in the Old Town area d Seal Beach, bounded by Ocean A venue, PacUlc Coaat Jlilbway, Electric Avenue and mil Banet. Cblef Cibbanlll 1ald Tu.c1Q that counts sou1bt aaainst Morris include 10 flres in Seal Beach and m othen in unin· corporated county territory and one in Huntlnltoo Beach. Police aay that wben theJ C'OO· fronted the arti.at der ho wu spotted loitertna about a block awar_ from Tuesday'• fire watchill& il and took him Into F ..... P-AJ c~ be Me:med nillcned to tlMi · actlon. One d!leel' qUoted llorria ea nyln1 be "hlld a problem." n. ..._ ol ftrw for wblcb Htborttln plaa to proHcvto hlm have ran1ed from trub cau to torched yacht.a. but in· vesti1aton d.cllne to reveal preclaeb' bow they were aet ablue. '"nMre ii a deftalte pattern," Seal Beach Fire Chief Ron Aclama ezelaloed last week. Chief Clbbarelll laid ln u ln· tenlew tbat lt II bell~ llortia Is "8Poblibl• tor bUD<lredl d thousands ol dollan lD Pl'OPll'tY dama1e a1tboqb no llve1 "have been lost. Firemen ny a few ol them have suffered minor Injuries aqcb u minor bums and amolte inhalation ID bluea tbeJ alllce lloniaaet. ROCHESTER, N .\'. <AP> -A Picasso watercolor valued at about Sl.50,000 baa been stolen from the Memorial Art Gallery at the University of Rochester, officialJ there said today: TOWN CENTER ••• ' Jnve1ti1ator1 aay freEuent tar1eta ct whomever bas t- ed the aeries d ftrel have boats, such u the two deltroyed llondQ ln Seal Beach and the previous Tueacl.ay in HunUqtan Harbour. A aallery_ IJ>Okeaman Hid tbe patntlDI, titled "Flowers in a Blue Vue," disappeared from the wall near the gallery auditorium Tuesday eve. nine. The paintiq wu dcmat· ed to the gallery in 1931. An Irvine Company proposal for development of the com· merclal core muat be filed with the city before bulldinc penn.lts for the first two residential proje~ll a.reissued. Those projects are 100 federal· ly subsidized low·income apart- ments, proposed by Sbapell In· d&astries, and a retirement health care complex rropoled by Southern Cal fornia Presbyterian Homes. 3 Hostage~ Held By Tiro in Yegas LAS VEGAS CAP) -Two men held three people 00.tage in a bar near the famed Strip to- day, while two dozen police waited outside and oeeotiators tried to convince the pair to sur- render. The drama beean about 7:30 a m., police said, when they responded to a report of a ~ bery in proeress. ··Police can were at the scene in less than a minute," officer Tom McQuade said. "Ooe man walked out, saw two p<>lice cars, and ran back inside.' Lale in the morning, a young man and a woman about 50, left the building, and were being ques· tioned by police. Three more Peacekeepen Fire Rockets BEIRUT, Lebanon <AP) Arab Leacue peaeekeepen fired tank cannons and rockets today in a bid to crush four days of s ectarian cluhes in adjacent Moslem and Christian slums of Beirut. There were reports the Christians were taldnc the bnmt of the finng. "Rockets are raining on m ," screamed a woman reaideat of the Christian quarter, reached by telephone. Residents ot the Moslem district said tbe Syrian- dominated peacekeepers were not aimine their way. A Syrian officer said bis men were "show· Ing no favoritism." F ..... P-.AJ JARVIS ••• 1athered an lmpreaahe 1.5 million alinatures lut ~tr in a relatively short tlmepenoa. Some '73 percent acreed with the Proposition 13 arsument that "local governments can 1et by on lot leu money" and 70 per. cent felt that the illlUative "is the Ollly way to send a strong mnsa1• to 1ovemment that people are fed up with hiab tu· ea and too mucb aovernment spendlna." The poll ls baaed OD 1,252 telepbone lntenlews with men and women who formed a •'representative crosa·aection d California adult public" Field aald .. ,· DAILY PILOT persons were permlltA!d to leave later. As Police crouclaed behind their can, a sergeant talked to the people inside t.he Nut House bar by ~peaker, urim. the suspects to surrender. He prom· ised them they wouldn't be hurt. They bad a .3S7 magnum. A Roman Catholic priest, Father Casal1et Kickmal. spoke through a window with a man. in the bar. ••I talked to him juat briefly - he was asking ti they could have a black Protestant clergyman rather than a Roman Catholic priest," be said. Father Kickmal said the man seemed "rather cool and col· lected." A sbc>rt Um• later, the Rev. Jene Wesley arrived from Bethel B9pt1at Cburcb. He and a white mln1ater, The Rev. Irving Phillipa of the First Presbyterian Cbwch, then be&an negotiating with the men In.aide, talkinc to them through a win· dow in the froat ct the concrete block buildift8. Police bad blocked ot1 Desert Inn Road, where the bar is local· ed, and were rerouting traffic around the bar. The si~ is about one·balf mile from the Laa Vegas Strip. A Special Weapons And Tac- tics unil was at' the scene and a police helicopter hovered over- head u Olle ta1b continued. Nixon Backs 'IDegal' Acts As President These would be built eut of California Avenue, and would abut the future commercial core. A further condition of the councU approval waa that before bulldine permits are l.asued for any other residential develop- ment, the council mast have ap- proved the lrvine Compa.Q1 com· merciai core propolal.. Further, before ilauinc build· ing permits for the MCODd phase of town center denlopment -basically the area west of California Avenue -half the commercial core must ha•e been developed and ready ror businesaee to occupy It. The council vote OD tbe coodi· Uons was unanimous. Although Irvine Company representatives present Tuelday said they had no authority to ap- prove of the conditions, they said the compromise to get the project started appeared to be something "we can live with." In previous meetln11, I~ Company officials aaid they were certain a plan for Uie com· mercial center would be com· plete by the end of this year. Anthony's conditions would appear to have the effect of movin1 up the Irvine Company hmetable to September, wben start of home bWldina bu been predicted. Other conditions for develop- ment of the center were that: -The city blllside 1radin1 or- dinance, which was adopted last year to diacou.rqe mus arading of slopes, will be applied, despite c1ty planntne staff recom mendaUon qainstlt. Anthony aald be was con· cerned by Irvine Company plus to "level" most of the 237·atre property, and said natural land contours ought to be preserved as much u possible. -Plans for a possible pedestrian/bicycle crossing of Campus Drive be included In tbe commercial core development plan. Trt·party funding, by the city, the Irvine Company and UCI would be studied. -Apartment build1np along Campus Drive, proposed at three atortes, will set back from the side"Nalk 30 feet rather than the Irvine Company proposal d 18 feet. Ant.bony said the nearer distance would give motorists the feeling ct drivtn1 tbrouP a tunnel. CanerPuaha Energy Bill W ASRINGTON <AP> ~ Pn!si· dent Carter, eaaer to break the long lmpaae Oil btl enera bill, promllecl today to 1upport ntar· ly any natural gas compromise that can be neptiated by fOD· grepional confen., a ll'OUP °' Republican · energy neioUators sald. Cartel' met wttb GOP House members of the ~ conference committee on energy. "Hertbe •ould sup-port, ln eff anythln1 that came out ol CGllfennce,'' Rep. Clarence Brown, R·Ob.lo, Hid after the ineetiJll, Brown aaid Carter lbdlcated be could even support a com- promlM fal'Ofed by Repu'bllcam cantnr for dere1ulatlon of natural aas prtce1 ld llve yean, if that's whit lt took to 1et b1I enerp bill IDlrfiDI a,ain. ,.....P. ... AJ CIA. • • llleb., dbd PllDltlilt eutWtn a letttt todaJ to ••mffltiiate· t!lil matter and laform ua fu1l1 ol your ftncBnp; 1f t.be UUde II iD ftct accurm, •• ~ Urll tbat tbJI QJtiOll t wbat•Yel' 1t•»• mar • ~to ..... tbll MHMil ud ~m~ iltuJUoe." Establlahment ol an increas-in1ly famillar pattem 1D the fires led to formation of the Oran1e County Araon Task Force with lte mluion to take the flntbul out ol circulat1oD. Tbe Oran1e County Fire Department; Oran1e County Sheriff'• Office; Seal Beach police and Huntintton Beach pollce and fire departments were all involved. ,.,.... P.,,e .4J CEJ,I,A ••• clan." But Assistant Orance County District Attorney .Michael R. Capinl said, "It would be a· travesty for blm to serve as a town pbyslcJao. ·• . Capisd aald d Cella: "He took 10me.-. in &be Deiehborbood of S3 million from those boeplt.ala over a period of time." "If be was in toacbint dis· tance ct $1, be would steal it," the p.rosecutor arlued. In addition to the prison term. Judge Yale ordered Cella to pay a U0,000 fme to Orange County. Van Hooten Jory Hears Testimony LOS ANGELES <AP) -1be defense atrateo ct 0 diminllbed capacity" came under attack when former Charles Manson cult membeT Llnda Kaaabian tesUfled Lealie Van Houten"• peared to be lo control of herselr' the ni1ht of the La Bianca murders in 1969. Mn. Kaaabian a1ao testified TUeadQ that Mias Van Houten was' not under the lnflueoce ot druaa on tbe nlcht of the murden ct Leno and Rosemary La Blanca. However, under cro11 ex· amlnation by defense 8Ucll'Dly Maxwell Xeitb. lln. Kuablan conceded that Mamon, cunent· lY aervtn1 life imprbomnent, dominated life at the Spahn Ranch where be and bis followen lived durtna the sum· mer ol lS&. _.._.... SUN PHOTO SHOWS SOt.AR FLARE (ARROW) WldetpN•d AHio Bleckouta a PoaalblUty Solar Snafu Rtidio Bl,aekouta Threatened BOULDER, Colo. (AP> -The moet violent 10lar flare nearly four years could cause rad.lo sJ.enal blackouts, telepboo circuit outqes and dlaplaya d tbe northern lltbta in tbe WCl'ld' nortbem laUtudes tbls week. the NaUonal Oceanic and At· mospbertc Admioi•aUon said. A spokesman for American Telepboae and Telearapb Com· paoy. however, said U.S. customers probably will not not!c. U1 lapse in telephone circulta. The flare WU detected Tuesday by NOAA aatellliea orbttlDa 22,800 miles above tbe Earth, tbe acenc1 said. Carl PON)', a s_pokesman for NOAA•• Environmental Research Lahoratoey here, said tbe flare will produce a storm in the EMb's mqnetlc field, resu!tinl in radio aipall bet.DI absorbed rather than ...Oected, beciDDiDI Thu.ndaY. He pndlcted widespread telepboM circuit out.aps and said aurora boreaUa dlapl.,a -tbe northern lllbte -would be vial· ble ln many areu north ol ab east-west line that would pass throu~ Chlcaco and ·even in some places south of that line. 4 Challengers Win NB Council Seats BJ JOANNE REYNOLDS °' .. .,...., ........... Paul Hummel, Donald Strauss, Jackie Heather and Evelyn Hart won seals on the Newport Beach City Council Tuesday in an election that drew one of the lightest turnouts in re- cent Umes. City Clerk Doris Georae aaid 10,W76 ballots were cast out of -'0,512 l'eliltend voten ellaible, for a rT percent turnout. The city's Sixth District coun- cil race was the tilbtest where cballeD1er Hummel defeated in· cumbent Lucille Kuehn by 835 votes. All of the other winners, Strauss ln the First Dlstricl, Hart in the 1billd District and Heather in the Fourth Disbict, were nmninl for seata being vac-~ted by the incumbents. It was early tod.a.J before ftnal resuJts were tallied, aJtboueb all of. the wtnnen establlabed earty leads on tbe way to tbeJr vie· toriet. Tb• city's votinc machinea, Accuvote, rented from the Los Ancelea ftrm or Martin and Chapman provided a atumbllna block to count1n1 returns because the boles punched by lbe machines did not align prop- erly with the counting device. While campaign workers and candidates waited impatiently, city election workers had to sift through all of the ballots to aee thal the cards bad been properly punched. 1bose that appeared to be improperly aligned were re· punched on unUled ballots. The proceu wu not complet· ed until 1:30 a.m. Tallies posted at that time are: FIRST DISJ'RIC? -Dooaid Strauss, 4,818 Peg Foreit, 3,356 S.H. Byers 1,290 Bill Von Esch, 51' John Tucker. 430 La Verne de la Cierva, 55. THIRD Dl8TBJCT -Evelyn Hart, 5,100 Michael Gering, 3,701 Frank Ivens, 922 Paul Ce.ldwell, 50f FOU1l111 DISTBJcr -Jackie Heather, 7,3f17 Charles Larson, 2.504 SIXTH DISTRICT -Paul Hummel. 5,335 Lucille Kuehn, 4,700 William Dohr. 561 i I r J • : I VOL 71, NO •. 102,. SECTIONS, 42 PAGl!S PlanneFs Yean ol ~ended T~ wbeD the <nanae COunty Pl-. Dini~ mdoned pi.. for a It-mi.le open apace _.. recreaticn <:Ol'ridor aloq AU*o Creek. ,- The IO-called forest to the tea corridor will ~ rram Coat"I eomet' . 1'or'o and Laguna lllUs to lkfacb • Pan in Soatti ?.aiuna· Plana call for about 20 miles of bicycle tralll u well • 18.5 miles or horse traUs to be buUt aJcnai tbe eorrtdor. And spaced alOlllt what .bas aJread1 been~ a ~ty open 1J>8()8 P1ai:udna area wlll be a aeries al toeal and reaicna1 parka. /# ........ SUN PHOTO SHOW$ SOLAR FLARE (ARROW) Widespread R•dlo Bl.ckout1 • Po1alb1Uty Solar Snafu Radio Bl.aekouta Threalened BOULDER, Colo. (AP) -Tbe most vloltnt solar 11.are in OMrly four~ ceu.ld came nldlo~ckoata, telepboae drftk •r ..... dbJkn cl the uaw-..u. wodcl'• northern latltacMs t.bll ...-. the N l!-~·:iizid At- mospbertc Administration said. A spokesman for AmmcaztTll~ and TeJecrapb eom. panJ. buww:f'81', Hid U.S.. tustomen Probably will no\ aotloe Qf lapse in telephone ciRulb. • The flare was detec:ted ~by NOAA aatellitel 01'bl- 22,300 miles above the Earth, the qlllCY •&¥!· Carl Posey, a spokesman for NOAA'• Envlronment.i Research Laboratory here, said ibe ftare will produce a atonn in the Earth's matnetlc field, re1ultlna ID radio •tcnalS be1J1I absorbed rather than nflected, bectnntnl Thunday. He ~cted widespread telepboDe circuit outaaes and said aurora alia di~Jays -the northern 118hta -would be Tial· ble in many areas north of an. east-west Ube that would pass through Chicago and evt!n in some places south ot that line. Doeto~s 'Allow' Deaths~ Witness BJ TOii BAU.EV °' ................ A defense witness In tbe murder trial of Dr. WUllam Bu· ter Waddill testified Tuesday that many infants are allowed to die wben the doctor believes maaaive brain damace may have been sustained before or during birth. Dr. John H. Men~ea. a pediatric neurologist Oown here from Lcmdon to tesWy for Wad- dill, told tbe Oran1e County Superior Court juty of ... ctusic 1ltuatiCXl" he recently witnessed iaLondon. IBWoman Trapped in Shower OK The specialist said a brain- damaged baby with a diseased spinal cord was allowed to die by atteGding doctor. wbo made no effort to save the alllna cbild. "The dodora decided. Some- one baa to do it since the parents can't ,•• Menkes said. Tbe lsaue of llfe or death for lafaDts that could face Ute u lit· tle more than human veaetablel bas filled many pagea in the transcripts a trial that becan more than l~ o mmitba qo. • I BJ ANNE COOPBS °' .. ...., ........ San Clemente city eq\UlCllmen and commiasioners wbo took spouses on out-of·town city bmlness trips at taxpayers' ex· pense were not guilty of criminal wroogdoina, the county distrlcl attorney's office bu ruled. In letters to Councilman Howard Mushett and City At· torney MacKenzie Brown, Depu. ty District Attomey William Evans said that altboqll expen- diture al public funds la restrict· ed to public purposes, wbicb would not include spouses' ex- State Park Bill Wins Panel OK 81 91'EVE IUK11ELL ... a..r ........ A:nemb~ •• .-:eansov.~ polltlclllJi1 patd•ott. Toeactb wbeD tbe Aaem'1r•• CommlU. on ••le!i ~ad wl1dllfe • proved ms J.aieDded blU to pr. vent~ ~camp. lag OD a DaH POliit blufftbp earmarked for 9'aet purchue. Cordova Aid bis bill Wal ap- proved on a +-t vote In the com· mittee in l&• a.mended form, wb1cb will allow state purebue or about 35 acres at Lantern a., for a park 1lte -without facilltiel for ovemicht par~. "I'm 101na to have a flOor fipt, for aure." c.ordova warned in a ~ interview T\8-day afteroooo. The usemblyman's orismat bill. A.B121. .ued that $t mWicn in state pub funds aet uide for purchase <:A the blufftop land be withdrawn because OI obJectl(Jm to overnlgbt campln&' use ez. pressed by South Coast resi· dents. But Cordova convinced a ma· Jority of the Auembly commit· tee to retain the S. mllli<Xl as well as exclude recreational vehicle UH for the put. "The amended bill remoYe1 the request to repeal the ap- propriations, and it also Q1I that no portion of the Dana foint bluffs ah.all be used for reerea· • tJonaJ vehicles or campalt4il.'• Cordova laid. Re said bis oriit.naJ request to delete tbe funds for purchue. "wu t'fttreat position. I'd real· ly lite to see the state acquire that land." But -the El Toro Democrat. sapported by homeowner IJ'OUPI and cbambera of eemmeree ID the South count7. aareed Jt would be better to leaff tbe Lind to developers tbaD to haft tbe state create ov.,qbt facilltiel atthealte. Alex McGeary, president cl the Dana Point Cbamber of commerce, ~ied •Ul'DdH ftlee llL ~ .... Ai) peme9 ~to \u law, tbe estabr:: practiee .. m.itilatel a1ain1 tbe Dollibillty that lbele acts,, erlmfnal." · Evus recommended that ~ district .._,, evaluatioa ol San Cl"*1te ezpeme praetka be cleeed llDd that UY further actlon be taken at the local lenL San Clemente eUl'NDtlJ ti. DO ezpeue ,))Oll..:ro:;, councilmen and eon»nl • Oldtimera at city ball npoct. however. tbat 1poUM1 ba'N travelecl at cit;y u- penM tiw .t lelllt 14 years. Tb• practice of charitn1 1poa1et • expemes to the dty Sotdfi Laguna WU brouot to l"l'bUc att.ucm by llUlbeU; •bo undertook -lnveflillltioD ol citJ speedlaf,. porta shortly aft.et> ht.I eleotka to the City Ooancll in Mareb. "I don't Uaink San C~ taxpay .. knew they were foot. ing tbe bW for these ~-! s for city official• an their wi vea, •• lai411111bett. ··1 daa't tblDk &bey knew abaat It, and DOW that tbeJ know aa.. It. I don't t.tW:* tbeJ 1'lll llke ~" heaald. Lut moatb llUlbett ubd tbe District Attomey to ID\'eWpte out·of ·t01!fD buainesa ezpen· Aliso Rock 8C)use (JK'd by Planners .. ·r·~Is~•e . . ~'Q>mmunity C,enter :·Frind Del.ay Asked A I.qua Beacll mu bu ••ked Cou ty ~;::irvhor nomu Riley to wt d eoun- l.Y' fDDdl eannarted or renova- tioD ol a coaunUDlb cealel" in ~ aQiDa UM city UOW4 in· stead, ildJi.lt {ta own recreation enter fullJ. dltures bf: ,....., ab Coundl mem.bera lla1or WHUam W &Iker ud Donna Wllki!U!Oft and by Plannlnc Com· mlulonen, Cba1nnan Kelford llor1aa.1. .James Chase and WlWuHireeowall. fro~~~~.,,._,.-Wl= for three ccmference trips: -An annual Lea1ae of CaUfomla at;tes meettq in Su Dteao <>et. tf to 20, ms, wbere Mrs. \Yll'tmon NpOlted IDIDd· .iDa $224, W.iter *7 ID adclWan to a S2IJO reslatntl.oD fee each paid. BGCh were .aompanlod by <Sie atJLING, Pqe AJ> Supporters ~ OfJanH,s 1 IJrop~ P-oU~ Coast tbeir 0c1111111 .. _ ...... ~ '1 cOillea au Sacra...-.. 119 It &o It, wtlileh co.t sm tw 11n. m IZ8' for Walker and~ wtfe. -Aaotlll•r aooual l••I meetiDL t.bts °'"' in Su ,..... ca.CO. Sepl. 2S to a , when Mn. Wllkimon repcmoted ~ ol 125'1 ln .sdltloD to a $234 .,.,... bill Walbr Md apenae1 ot S18I aad ... bate& bill. After "M'9btltt'1 hmtstlcatlon wu mede public tn Ma.n:b, lbs. Wiltlnson repaid the city .. ol a S350 advance for the September trip to San Francisco. Walker repaid tbe city $ZZZ. which was to cover bi. wife's round-ttlp airfare and the balance between bl1 upemes and the $350 advance. Air fare and bot.el expemes <including room aerviee, driDb, phone calls and valet 1erviee charsed at the hotel) were billed directly to the city. PlaDDing commissioners who atteDded a February conference in Oakland char&ed their OWD and their wives' expenses to tbe city, except for Commlukmer ClilfOrd Gellatly, who paid bis wife's expenses himself. Chairman Melford Morgan's eJLpensea were $293, Com- missioner Jam• Chue't '30t and CommiHloner WllllSIQ Greenwall's S28S -all including their wives' expenses. GellaUy's expenses to the city were $122. The City Council establlabed a five-member expense policy re- view committee last week, charged with recommendina cl· ty policy for council and com- mission members expeose prac- tices. The commJttee will make its first report to the Cit.y CouD· Cil OD Mmy 17 Sooth County Airport Unit Sets Meeting South <>ranee County Airport Com mlttee members have called a meeting for 7:30 p.m. Thursday in San Juan Capistrabo to discuss a challenge to the June 1 closure of Capistrano Airport. Tbe meeting wW take place at Capistrano Unified School Dis· trict offices , 32972 Calle Perfecto. Tbe aiJ1)0l't advocacy eroui> plam to eba»Q&e clollun plans approwd Lut week by tbe San Joan City Cound.l. Tbe croup la trytna to bold olJ closure ol the facillt.y until a new aiJ'port can be cteYeloped in the south oQa.nb' aeee. CoQIU ltudl• VW under 1fay to detennfne ud deftlop other general aviation airport attes In the area. Judging Set For San Juan BeaulyTitk Judging for the Miu San Juan Capistrano "Belles of San Juan" · contest will take place at 7:30 p.m . ~y at llaJ'ClO Forster Junior Hlgb School. 25601 Camino del Avion. The prolJ"UD includes entert.alDment, talent participation and a raabioo show. Contesf aata include Marprlta Aguilar, Cheryl Cluck, Ki.mberle Jun Wilaon, Claudia llarle Levotch. lll1 Renee Niel. Diane Julleanne Baymmd, Sylvia San· dra Reid. Rebecca Rios, Marie Thereaa Sanford, Llaa H . Schmick and Della Selllo. Tickets are $2 for adults and S1 for cblldreo under 12 aod are available now at tbe chamber ol commerce, the City Hall and financial lnatltutlons. Free Movie Set A free vlewin1 of the film ela11ic "Nl1ht. lu Fof' by Renals wUl be abown tonipt lo the Laruna Beach ff1lh Scbool cafeteria,,..,.,, .. at 7:30. CMIAMll! COMf UM: DAILY PILOT ...., ............... USE INT'INSITY OF LAGUNA 8EACtt RECREATION ceNTER ASSAILED BY CIV10 CRmc Could More H11pptn? City Spokeaman S.ya PllCe la Buay Durtng Key P•rioda Bonfa Ousted in BB Municipal Election Gail Hutton scored a landallde Mrs. Hutton said the over- victory over incumbent Don whelming defeat ol incumbent Bonfa and challenger Jerry Bonfa meant "lbe people of this Bame in Tuesda.Y's electien for community are desirous ot a the Htmtingtoo Beaeh city al· chanae -the votera have tomey job. spoken.•· Mrs. Hutton, 41, is the first Mrs. Hutton said she plans to woman to be elected Huntlnstoo start her new job next Monday. Beach City aUomey. Bonfa held Bame, wbo was endorMd by the post for the paat 10 years the Hwdinltoo Beacb Ch~ber without a aingJe election of Commerce, finisbed a ,poor challenge. second to Mn. HuUon. Here are the unofficial city al· And Bame'a law firm partner, tomey race results: Al Coen, also a Chamber eo- Gall ....._,8,380 (elected) dorsee, was defeated in bis bid Jerry Ba.me, 5,317 ..-..-~··.:-~term oo lbe Hunt· Don Boafa, 1,514 (incumbent) ington Beach Cit.y Council. A deputy city attorney in San· * * * ta Ana for the past four years, Mrs. Hutton lashed out at Boo· fa's record in office from tho start of ber campaign. ~D re -••.,.Ml Mn. Hutton accused Bonfa of l ~D ~ ... "-'., inconsistent decisions and a poor tuck record on city lawsuits. re -l•a ~our She alao attacked the coats of ~..., I' 1 outside legal eervicea charged to the city. ~ a.6 mbe "I can cut tbo6e outside fees," l ~euJ Jrie f"S Mrs. Hutton atated after the election. II re. Hutton erltlclaed cballen1er Bame's lack or municipal experience. Tbe attomey post winner col· lee~ about "°·ooo In eamPalcn funda and loaned benelf an estimated .Ul,000 or that amounL Her campaign spendtn1 is believed to be the bipesl by a sin1le candidate in the city's bis· tory. Mrs. Hutt.oo said she plans to hold future fund-raisers to pay back_ loans for her campaign. * * * Challengers Picked.for RB Council BJ JOANNE aKYNOLDS °' • ..., ......... Paul Hummel, Donald Slrausa, Jackie Heatber and Eyelyn JI.art Wdl eeata oe the Newport &each City Council Tuetday in an eleetion that drew one of lbe Upwt tumouta in re- cent Umes. City Clerk Doris Georse said 10,97& ballots were cast out of 40,582 registered voters elieible, for a Z1 pettebt turnout. The city's Sixth DiatriC!& coun- cil race was the Utbteat where challenger Hummel defeated in· cumbenl Lucille Kuehn by S35 votes. A 11 of the other wlaners, Strauss in the First Dlltrict, Hart In the Tblrd Dist.ri~ and Heather lP the Fourth District, were runnlq for aeata being vacated by the incumbents. It was early today before final results wre talliedbaltboUCb all ol the winners eat.a llabed early leads on tile way to tJlelr vic- tories. The city's voting macbines, Accuvote, rented from tbe Los Aneelee firm of Martin and Cbepman pnmded a ltwnblilll block to countine returns became tbe boles puntbecl by tbe mechlnee did not auoi prop-erly witbtbecountlntdevice. College Gets County Grant Saddlebu~ Conu;nunlty Collete Dl1trlc< of~clals re- ceived a $2,&oo (raOt from Oran1e Count.1 •up•niaors Tueeday to belp fiqance a d'rlvera' educalloo film Wltb Spanish and VletnameH IOUDd tracu. S~enlaor Ralph Dledrl~ Hid eollele olftcla.ls requested tbe ,-rant to Uallt In teachlQI the state YeblcJe code to DOD-EDaliablp"~ ~. The ~ 4oanced With a portion ol the county'• feda'al revenue &hlttllC alloeadan. wt11 be made ..t~ m@iple IOllD4 tracts. Of'FICUL QU11S OP.ER. l:OW FINE p,....p-AJ CEN'fER ••• Tuesday's activities total five boun and the center la used for classes alx boul"I cm Wednesday, The 1mall brldce eroup bas exclusive use ol the center for two hOW'S on Thursday, and tbe room ii used for five and a ha.II hours on Fridays durio& April. Fowler notes most activities are closely packed between 10 a.m . and 2:30 p.m . dw'inl the week. "Tbat'a prime time for senior citbena," be said. "They go home by 2:30, and they never schedule anything between 8 and 9:30-.m." . He said another problem with acheduli.QI LI trytna to keep ac· tiviUes eeparated. "You can't have noisy folk dancing when the meeting roo,JJls i.n the back are in use for conferences," Fowler said, add· ing. that seniors use the con· ference rooms a good deal of the time. "I'm not den)'inl use of the building to anyone," he said. "It's fllled up during the key times and there are reservation forms In the Human Affairs Building for people who want to use the cent.er." Coastal Meet Scheduled in . San Clemente California Coastal Com- mission staff will be in San Clemente tonight lo listen to local residents specify what they. want to see in the city's coast program. Each local Jurisdiction ls re- quired by the state Coastal Act of 1976 to prepare a local coastal program to b,its policies into conformance sta~ law. San Clemen bu '"uested that the eoaatal commlllion pre- pare the clty'a cout pJ'OIJ'am- an alternative provided by the coastal act. Toniaht's meetini ls scheduled to bea:tn at 7:90 in council chambers at clt.y ball, 100 A 9enida Presidio. r . Gains Support Sao Clemente parts and replacina It wttb a mulU·parpose reereaUon commillloners were volleyball-basketball eourt. told Tuesd.aJ lb.It a pettticla wt· -Demoli1bla1 . the praent lDf t.be city to put the munlclPal pool, wblcb would be replaced beaeb club pool in~ crier with a 40 a »foot belf.naln' bu coUec:ted t00 slpatune in pool and multi·UM court. the week it bM been circulated. -ConverUne the pool into an Shella Parkftr of 224 Calle outdoor eommunlt.y playboule, Cones, a apokeeman for the creatlq a cultural center for the p • tl U one r1 , 1 a I d more city in ~unction wtUa • nearby 1lpatures wi11 be ICJUl!lt before clln.ner theater. the petitka la preMOted to tbe Coste for tbe repaln ud con- Clt.y CoundJ Dest Wednelday. veralooa were eeUmated as 1'be city bu hi.red camultant.s foUowa: ICeiaker-Jobnaon of San -Re.,.U ol tbe exiltlnc pool, Clemente to make a 114,000 deseribed u euectlally puWnc study ol alternative mes for the a new pool i.nllde tbe old one: beach club property, includinl $81,ooo..teo,ooo. the 50-year-old clubbiniiM ucl -Repair ol the clubboule fer pool. ~ CODtlDued UH ln eonjunction ''Tbere S. DO qUest:IOD of re-1ritll the poal: $105,000.SUl.OOO. babllltadon Cl( tbt <ehlbbome> -Bemodel•nc ol the ehabbot.-bcalldlna." p.rb eommlsPoner tntstw. U not med for drela1lll Joe C.. said 'l'Uelldq. ••JM U room1 ad pool aAJIP)rt equip- •• ltMp the-60ol, tome of tbe meat: $108,(JM.$1D,000. bulldiq woUld'be med fora.. -DelQOlitloo ol pool, ft1l in inl ~ and other pool-relaUd "' and NIUl'faclnl for aualtl-uae UHll. 1be primary lhlnl to be eOGrt: -.-..ooo. con1lclere4 la W'bether we re--CcmtructlGn of a beel..,....s habllltate tbe pool.•• pool: $IO,CJ00.$11,000. Four alterDative UHS for tbe Breat Daa1ett, ol Ket1ker· bHCb club property, all of JohDIOD COllluJtantl, aaJd DO wbicb include refurbl1lt1n1 the estimate bad beeo made oa the clubhouse, were presented by coet of ~tint a communi- tbe conaultanta on Tuelda1. ty pla1hame. Propoeala IDcloded: -R~ ol tbe awimmtn1 pool, ' 1'blcb hu been closed since 19'76 for repaln. so that lt could be used tor both com· petlUve and be&tnntn1 awtm- ~elocatlq the municipal pool to aaother location aDd 'n•P-AJ BLUFFS ••• today at the news ol the commit· tee vote. He and several chamber of. ficlals new to Sacramento laat month to speak before the com- mittee, returnln1 home with doubts their trtp accompllsbed anything. "We took letters from tbe Dana Point Citizens for Action group and other civic oreanba· tiooa aaying we don't want to aee the state acquire the land for recreational vehicle use." McGeary said. ..It didn't loot too Sood while we were up there. and Cordova •••D 't too enco11ra.1ed lHt I Week." He said the~ ol a re- Sional park for tbe land. owned by the Smyth 8~ develop. ment ftnn of Newport Beach, appeals to many Dana Point residents. "It's a gioc>d concept. It leta us use the part as well as vtaitors." McGeary believes private de- veloptnem ot the blufftop land, "might have spurred more economic development in Dana Point," but added be doesn't mind the state buyin8 the bluffs qr day use. Cordova sakt the amended bill faces a tough filibt on the Ooor of the Assembly before it 1oes to the Senate for lpprovat The S4 mil1ioD fund was set aside last September u a por- tion Of a $53 million state parts blll approved by Governor ,Brown. Commlalooen toot DO action oa tbe beach club property Tues· day. but. Chairman Carol Carbon aaid • recommendation to City CoancU will be made witbln the next moatb. South. Coast Dogs Fa~ Rabies Shots County animal control officers will be ping door to door in eeveral South Coast com· munitiea tb1a mouth to-Uceme dogs and vaccinate them against rabiee. Offlclala from the county Public Health and Medical Services department will can- •ass homes in Dana Point, Capl1trano Beach, San Juan Capiatnmo and unh\Cbrporated ...... ol 1..,-una Beaeb dmiDI April, aeoordiDC to Dr. William Dleterleh, public bealtb •et.ert.narlan for tbe county. lJCmM feea ranee fl'om • for peta up to six moatba old to $10 lor unnmtenc1 dop a year or more old. Neut.ed pets may be licmsed for '3 U under six months, and $S for those a year old or more. For more information, call Walt Farley at 834-7650. U.Mine&e Oppoeed STANFORD (AP>-Truatees of Stanford University have op- posed tbe apa.natoa of U.S. eor· poratlona In apartheid South Africa. In votes Tuelday the board ol the school allo opposed loans to the Soutb African eov· emmeDt.. ~ . t J l I ? .... • I • I ' Orange Coast 0 ly Pilot fl ~..:.~t~~.._1 P'l/9~.~ ....................................... A.obe .. rt•N•.•W•eed .. /•Pu•b•11•1~ .. r .. •T•tw>mA .. •1•K•tt•v•l•l/•E•dJ .. tw .m!I... .....-... ~D. Wedne141y, Apftl 12., 1978 a.~r• Krelblch/Edltorlal P~ Editor n Use of Recall Not Justified The at~mpted recall ot San Clement$ Mayor William Walker and Councilwoman Donna Wl.lkln1on from the City C0W1cll is a no-win proposition which could do the com· rnunity real harm. The recall process ls an extreme measure to be uaed , when an elected ottielal has shown such gross violation or public trust that he cannot be tolerated in office for the duration ot bis term. Twolears ago Mrs. Willd.MOD was elected with 2,642 votes. an Walker with 2,352 vat.es. Tb.e third-place wiDDer lagged behind with just 11316 votes. • Tbe two council mem6ers have. obvious . s\u)port among city voters, dating back no farther than.two years. The reasons backers give for the attempted recall amount to charges of questionable judgment -·or laxlt)', at the worst -on the part of Walker and Mrs. Wilkinson. If San Clemente voters want Walker and Mrs. ~ Wilkinson off the City Council. they will v~te them out of ~ office in two years, when the two seruor cot111cllmen face re-election. But sufficient reason just does not exist for a painful and emoUonal recall action. {· <Jaution Advisable ~ Laguna Be•cb is in desperate n~ parks, especially of the flat variety to aerve the growing popula· lion of softball and soccer enthusiasts. I(' But a proposal last week by the city's P~r~ and Recreation Committee to spend more than $1 malllon for a park was wisely not endorsed by the City Council. Councilmen unanimously decided to take a "go-slow" approach to the parks proposal. which would include purchase of three acres of land adjacent to school district ~ property.,in the Top of the World community. ' The five-member panel was pressed to move now on Jhe Land purchase by a half dozen commiqee members and sports enthusiasts. " But the cost·conscious council cho.:;e instead to ap. proach the school district on possible use of its six-acre site, and to seek county and sfate funds for purchase and development of another proposal from the parks commit· tee one that appears more practical and economical. 'And that committee should be lauded for its year· long efforts to develop the park plan. . . . . But in the face of the Jarv1s·Gann tax aruttahve and possible cutbacks in municipal spending, members of the panel should await results or the council recommendation before throwing up their hands in dismay. ~The Price of om~ Sad.dleback College Trustee Donna Berry threatned last week to quit rather than me an economic dUcJoaure of her fdlily•s tnnstments and income. Tbe disclosure ls req a1.red under a recently approved district conflld Of in· teresl code. · Mrt. Berry contends that her and her f amlly's busi- ness are private matters and should not be opened up tor public display. She argues that anyone can come in "off the street" and take up college war.kers' time asking to look at her personal records. Mrs. Berry calls tbat a waste of Clx· payers' money nnd an invasion of her privacy. While privacy is becoming more of a legally rec- ognized right in this age of vast. computerized stockpiles or information, we believe public o!flclab fall into a special category. When a person has voluntarily sought an office that allows him or her lo conduct the public's business -·ln this case, a multi-million dollar business -the.public has a right to know of possible conflicts of interest. Not that the filing or an economic dlaclosure state· ment automatically guarantees that an elected official will operate as a paragon. There are plenty of examples of misconduct in Orange County politics. But the statement does allow the public to know just < what an officeholder's personal interest is. Especially • when that interest s tands lo gain by an action of the of- t ficeholder. While we sympathize with Mrs. Berry's desii:e for privacy. she should understand one of the prices one must pay for holding public office. • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Piiot. ~ Other vlevn expressed on this page are those of their author1 and artists. Reader comment Is Invited. Addras The Deify Piiot. P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mua, CA 92626. Phone {714) 142-4321. s l f f Boyd/Divorce f 1 ByL.M.BOYD I The financial status of a divorced man lends to im· prove somewhat arter lbe ' marital breakup. But thal'1 \ not true of a divorced woman. evidently. Researchers stud.led 133 such divolftd coupld. la tbe !bur • years ~ tbelr separatiou, t the men picked up a little momentum lD that matter ot r mone7,,_$women Jost crouna. Wbat Amerfc n woman . • . ' alive today bas bad her ple- ture reproduced more than any other? Elisabeth Ta,.aor! Jackie Ona11l1? J'a1rab Faweett-Majora! Or how a bout Mn. .\Jlne Tunier Cook the cbalrmaD of Ula En1h1b De,J?~_?tment at Hllllbocwtb ~ 8cbOal ID Tampa, Pia. t Jt •WC lt lfU her llkenHS that WH 10 widely distributed aa tbo original Gerber baby. Q. "On 'M•A~-H,' whi.1•1 Klinger'• ftrst nan\e! .. A. Maxwell. J i y ·I I ~ ; 1 ~ar Jeana Day .. at t1CI IDUlt bav• beta eooted up by the clolbtna lndutlt"J. All tt>o 1tral&ht1 atn10Un1·, tbrou1h 1C!bool wlth notblftt bu Jeau lri\I bavo to race out and · bqy tomet.blnc eJJe. V.ft.A. j RowLlnd Evans /Robert Novak Airbus Deal a Blow to Trade WASHING TON -Eastern Alrllnes· purchase aareement for 23 European wlde·~ed airliners ls a deal that not only dellvera another atwmlng blow lo the poor old American dollar but ralaea serious questJoos of U.S. industrial survival ln the world of aubsidiaed foreign ex· pona. The A.-0 Airbus ta an ex· ceUent ptane. bul that'• not why EuterA II ba)'illl it. Airbus ID· dustrie, a Western European combine, made an offer that Eastern chairman F r a n k Bormann could not refuse. The price wu rtdlt because Airbus lndustrle ls subsldlied by the French JOY· ernment; one of lts principal owners. Although the EW"Opeans can- not match the Americans hi cost- elflclent production of com- mercial airliners, they are spoon.fed government funds to compete in the world market. ln the case of the Eastern Airlines deal, tbe French taxpayer enables planes to be sold far below costs. What males this da.n1erous for the U.S. -and the dollar -ls its threat to aerospace exports, one of the last places where Uncle Sam still keeps his head above water in loleruaUonal trade. --. TRIS IS NOT the ancient con· ruct between free trade and pro- tectionism. Rather, the ~odel of Jape, Inc., is being duptieated in Western Europe (France. Inc .. in the Airbus deal). Here is a neo·mercantilist system against which American com· panies are helpless piaylng by Adam Smlth's n&les. Typically, this overpowering problem has not been addresaed at policymaking levels of the Carter admlnittratlon. But allJloat by accident. tt 1t cosnlna to tb• atteotlo"D of worrlea Conpe11men. A 1'8C'Dlne sipaI WU IO\IDded .ta House Banking subcommittee hearinc March 17 by J . B. L. Pie~. treasure?" of the Boeing Co.= "We can com· pete with Alrbus and the other European aircraft manufac· turers on cost and tecbnJcal merits, but we cannot compete with the national treuuriea of France and Germany and OCbet European countries." aEP. Jiii LEACH of Iowa. a 35-year-old fre1bman Republican wilb no aeroepace interest.a in hi• dlatrtct, took noUce. That very day, Leach wrote the subcommittee chairman, Rep. Stephen Neal of North Carolina, ur&.1n1 a clooe took at Eastem'a French con· nectton; •·we could be witness· In& the emer1ence or a kind ol international trade warfare that bas nothiq lo do with economic compeUUoo, but rather with the akill of individual covernment.s to establish reverse trade bar- riers.'' Leach. Neal and other Congressmen want to see lhe fine print of the Eutem deal - a closely 1uarded secret up to tbia point. Apart from details. however, the subsidy for each A·300 in the Eaatero pacU&e ii estimated at $10 million. The French subsidy system ls revealed by • 19'18 French parliamentary report. Tbe gov- ernment "loan" of $386 million covers half ol Airbus producUon, with repayment Indefinitely halted at $2.S million1 or 0.7 pet· cent. The report vigorously argues that France's aircraft in· du.stry "must be supported by the government,'• WHILE BOEING fired the warning signal oo Capitol Hut, Lockheed Corp. faca more im· mediate dama1e. Eaatern's new A·300 will replace Lockheed L·lOll jetliners, whfch will then go on the used plane markeL But the Airbus ul!o competes with the Boeing 747 and McDon- nell· Douglas 00-10. These three companies can and do orter sub- sidy plums to buyers, but cannot afford the Fftncb eovenunebt's juicy level. Those A300s for Eastern are just the beginning. Similar lub- sidbed deals witb Allegheny met PSA <Pacific Southwest Airlines) are ln the talking s tage. What's more, Airbus sales to U.S. ~rrters are the breakth.rou~h ror cutthroat t0m· petition against the Americll\S with Japan the next target. ''The Europe~ are pulling out all the stops lo win sales in Japan," Aerospace Daily reported last ·week. "Aside from normal com- mercial representaUon, tbe gov· ernments involved are apply. Ing strong pressure OQ the Japanese government." THE STAKES are lUth. Last year's U.S. aeros~ce exports totalled $7.6 billion against '732 million ln imports. For com· merclal aircraft, the export sur- pl ua was $2.5 billion in 1977 (down from $3.1 bUUon in 1976) Considering the record U.S. trade deficit and its nlinous im· pact on the dollar, this bulge in commercial aircraft is one the U.S. cannot atrord to surrender. Unlike te1'tlles, electronlct or even steel, this ls not a cue of foreign productivity and in· genuity outstripping the slllutsh Y ankea. Tbe Americans can still make jetliners mon effi- ciently than anybody els~ The difference is France, Inc .• aligned against-ti..~ private American producers. While the French emulate the Japanese hard·sell subsidies, U .S policymakers are occupied in loftier pursuits. At the middle level, orticials here say they want to study the Eastern transaction more closely before doing anything rash. But the role of Adam Smith does not fit the hard world of neo· mercantilists, tbreatenlns to cloud a rare American ~t apot ln world economics. --------------------------------1111!'11111--------~~--~----~~ Have Our Planners Lost Their Senses? To the Editor: We were noorert when we read that Supervisor Thomas Riley's Planning Commission appointee, Mr. MacDoucaU, and his sheep, had voted to permit 400 bot.tses to be bulll in the badly noiae hppact- ed areaof El Toro. Thia savors of lnhumane treat· memtoffellowAmericans; lnfact ltsofardeviatesfromaproperde- cision as to be probably crlmlnal irreq>onslbillty. HOW CAN A few com- m ls 1 loners and some aupervisora make a decision that commits 400 families to the mental and physical stresses from nolse that have now been recogolzed as cause for many health problems? J:lu thlJ commission simply taken \eave of ita senses? Are they not able to read or heal" the aplendld teatlmony presented a1a.lnat tbelr declsion? Tbere ls poaaibly here an opening for clus acUon law with adequate reasons for consi\ler- ing improper and irrespollSible acts in the conduct of t1'eir public office. I do ~have much hope. With the background of Orange Coun- ty wbeellna and dealing and the UDUVOI')' relaUoaablp of the de-velopers.out tbere·wllh the car· rot on tbt atlck perhaps there ls no hope. l'•e beard no evidence that any plannlns. commiasionen! nor any 1upenilon will movea 'into thlt aolJe lmpaeted amt H.M. WEBBER. M.D. ... ,, PaClellt To Ute EdltoT: Reccrtly I spent seven days ill San Clementt Gcmeral Hospital . I had not been ln a bospU.al iD 7eah and all 1'81 a Nvelatli~ Startln1 from •Dl•r1eac1 ~the Mnict aad alven me waa ~u.nt -aoeton ·.....i; :tJtiil nones -.i eo IDod mMf the foGCt dtlldOUI. Aa4 tbe voluntttra. the on.,. i..dill IDd youth from Sa C141 ate RJ&h School, went alltoll.Dd. Beaut1luJ folbl EDWIN D. WALE!lll as an active participant and an observer, and plan to continue them. What Ms. Joseph apparenUy did not realize ls that most peo- ple wouldn't be able to continue with whatever area they choose. Team and competitive sports, for example; and private lessons and tuloring ln music happen to be very expensive. People with a lot or talent may rniss out on careers ln these fields aomeday. It Is unfair for people who apparently do not know what they are talking about to ruin it for the rest of us. DIANE DIETZEL LaborBIU To the Edilor: Your edilorial of Feb. 3 in op- position to tbe so-called Labor Law Reform Bill was right on the mark: The American public does not want compulsory UD· lonism. The Senate is expected to consider this self·aerving, un-ion organmns ball (S. 24117) within the next 30 days. 1 hope you will continue to speak out against thla bill and to en· courage your readers to do the same. You are beinl heard Cll Capitol Hill. JOSEPH A. BURTON. President, Aasociat.d Builders and Contract.Qrs, Inc. Waablnetoa, D.C. l..._....ise1too& To tbe Editor: Tbe American people dclo't W11nt forced busing. Clllcano net1hborboodl don't w•nt lt; Black ~borhoodt don't want it; white net1hborbood1 don't w.ant It. It wua't menUOGed in the ortglnal ConsUtuUon. In bon!erll.ne nelgbborboodl, complete inte1ration · 1Dake1 aenae bllc:auae tM ndpbOmood Is laielJ'ated. ta areu IA thi ~ta et Mtlhbomc>oa ot oae race there ls no need for hauling terested ahould write or wire pupils many miles just for inte· • Senator Song, State Capitol, gration. Sacramento, California 95814. Suell long.range busing CHARLENEDRENNON destroys the Idea Of local P.T.A., Director, WestCoutRe~on the aports teams and other auch HumaneSoc1ety 1cbool-related actiYitJt'I. When oftheUnitedStates tho track team, the &asketball team, the football team, etc. should be practict.q, tbelJ' mem- bers will be Oil buaes traveling miles home. A roDGE can make • ruling that all ot the. people are op- posed to. It will cost millions, bankrupt a school district or a community. Tbe judge will be exempt from any financial responsibility. A judge bu recently ruled that a judge cannot be sued, even it he makes a wrong or damaeinl' decislon. You might know that a Jude• would rule ln that w.,. I would suggest that Judcea be made an elective of. flee. u some are.1.bls would not aolve the situation t>ut lt milht help. I certainly tb.lnt that In a democracy a judge should be respoutve to ma,Jorily rule. ScMc>ls were orielnally the respon&iblllty of the community. Colleges were originated by re- ~out organisations and later by atates. Tbt federal covem- menf llacl lio0iln1 to do with them. JAMF.s W. BOLDING ............ To the &U&or: The 1n1tiat1ve to outlaw tbt a.e ot decompression cbamben for klllln1 dogs and cata sot more 1tJan 300,000 slpatures, but not enough to qual.lly for tbe ballot. Tbetefore. Senatol' Alf red SoDJ ha• tntl'Oduced SB 1'Sl whkb would ouUaw Uacs. chambers. The bill wm be heard tn the Senate Agriculture Comm.ttt.eia OD Al)iil 11at1::1> •.m; Tbos4 ln· Pet RnpondMDtw To the Editor: I was interested to read Mrs. Hastings' viewpoint as ex· pressed in her letter of April 2, as it tives me an opportunity to re·emphasize the importance or · not letting emotions cloud our judgment -especially with re· gard to this unpleasant subject of animal euthanasia. For instance, it has been am. ply demoostrated that in a prop- erly operated chamber. death occurs ln secorub. It serves no good purpose to keep mteraUng statlstics that apply only In J>C>Or· ty run facilities. Even the L.A. shelters that usei.njecUon still use the chamber u backup. ALSO evidencing an emotional tack of perspective is the claim that many dogs are killed by mistake. Everyone including shelter staff, deplores such an occurrence, but out of 60,000 animals impounded in the past year, this bas bappended four times. Eoch time, shelter staff has re-worked procedures to make sure that partleular mis· takes could not happen again. And Kennel Chief Edwards bas on file. SO commendations rrom ciUzena pertalnlq tA> the cleanll· net• of the PllY•lcal f•cWties and the courteous help they re- cei ved with their parU.cular prob- lem. • How can anyone oppose laws which would put lbe resp0ns1bilJ.' ty for the tractc pet aurplus where It betonp -on the pet owner? Such en otdlnai>ce can't bo said to be aim~ at raponsl· ble breeder1 llnCe tblJ already hue ken.oel Uceues. Respon•"le breeden are workln• wltb ottr bumane .iroups; lhfi7 also want to help prevent t.bO proUferaUon of UD• wanted .1et1 and to put tbe blamo witu. il belonp in.Uead ot 011lhe11helter. 1UJTH FRANKBL • I • • • ,, Citizens Boo £NG f'erminaJ SANTABAJlBARA (~albm~ tiooala~=='=baftr:.~= nttPtkletromrelkleD.tlbere. --·An~ ol a~ aoo 'l\mdaJ booed Pl'OPO" aeota o1 u. Poblt CClaffptioD ate, wblch II one ol fin ~ Mudied at beadap held bT the mt. ' Co9ai.&l Om~ Tbe ...... beartnp ..... to c:ontin•....,. tn • Porte.....,. 'l'B8 CllOWD Bl88BD W11EN un8 Mc:Km· ..., • prealdeut "' w--. LNG TermJn.al >..-~-s-111nted. »mbAU .Ude pteNDtatioa. aDcl dedMid ~~ate emeraes u pnt•able to.Polat ea.cm·' We:stsn G la a Pacilk Ga 6 Electrte Co. subeldla.rJ tbat hope. to build ud. operate the lm· pOi1atiCID WmlnaL --· "Oid you know picture windows cost S800? · That's whot Mr. Ferrel soys his wiU (()St." And tM audimce cheered recommendations by tbe ~ lart>ara CoUDb' Board ol SapervilGn to •uppgrt an A.lle:&Dbly blU Uaat would del.a1 loca· Uoo Olm LNG term1na1 ill Callfonda for one,...,. TBE OOASTAL COMJDSSION la cooduc:tinl publle bearilaO at eaeb o( tbe five attea under c:on- aideratioo -~ttleanat• Canyoa. ~ Coaeep-tloa, Deer Cuyon, Camp Pendleton and Lu Varu -to determ1De wbleb lite la best suited for tenniaal comtruetioo. Gay O~alnatii>n Nixed . . McKbme)' laid tbe eavtroamema1 impact at Point ~ would be leu than at any Of the other at:,l u attorney for nearby HoW.ater Ranch the Callfomla Flab and Game Depart• ment ranked Polnt Conception u 1eut fa~able in terma ol the ltnpact OD flab and wi1dllfe. SAN DIEGO CAP> -'Ille San Dieto Presbytery bu Toted to publicly oppose ordin.at.lon or eoa.fentac ol QJ Mb' .... OD bomoeexuall. OTBE& OPPONENTS 1Na.UDBD marine biologists concerned about a rare ana11 species lD the area, abalone d.iven, and thole coniyoed about safety upecta. Tbe overwbelmJ.ni vote came Tuetdq durtnf ' two. boat ... bate ranslnl over Blblical.ltand- ards, famlly e~pl•· and tbe queaUOD Of a mlDJ.ltry to the bomOHXUal commanlty. The few people who favored the location cited the creation of jobs ancl the need for 1u to p~t exllllnl Jobs. Pntjectloaa show the plant would provide about 1,8'0 Jot. duri.q comtructioD peab. Herb Christ, pastor of the College Park P~Hb)'teriian Church, asked to 10 OD reeorst u diaaentiDa from the J:Q-.jority Tote:-to oppose ordlnatioa of bomcilenal minlsi... · ~ IMle 'Airport 77' Passenger Describes Panic on Bus Crash LOS ANGELES (AP) -"It felt ( ) Ute it was one of those movies -like 'Airport 77'," said one puaenaer in-, STATE jured wben a packed transit bus col· • lided wlth a car during momtna rush · -i .... • _ _.. • hour. cooliDC .,...... -a Satellite ~· "'l'Mre wu panic," said another. munlcatlone ay1t,m, bave won "There were kidl ill there ... very budget ~ID.lttte 1tlrmls._es crt>wdecl EverJ~ wu acreamlDa 1 TuacltJ, but aGt wiG!ioul a few~ aa4 b....,"' Oil to each otbel' aaa words ol criticism. . Ulell ~ the window Both Pl'(IDOlall wUl DOW be beard . • .and I Jalli dm," u1c1 Den11e bJ tbe 6dl -• .,. and Kean Commit· Tb.lero al Santa llonlca. tee. -Sbe WU ODe or IO~en CJ»Jl ldl ..... r.J•e• crammect Into the • -mcmn, Rapid Tramlt Dlltrfc:t. bU1 when the SAN DD!XJO :.:. 1~. ~ ' ,.. accident occm'Nd. -. G. Brown Jr. rwwecl c;:r•sn "- About 40 paasenaea were reported afalmt tbe J ta injured, but all but a few were re-lDltiatl?e at two public fbruma arp. leased abortly after hospital vislt.s. lng that promised relief would l'O to The most serious iajW')' wu a frac-bu.llnesa. not bomeownera and rent· tured leg, of6ctala laid. era. ___, __ ..,._ ~ The eovernor noted that FridQ be • ·-1~-..,... will alp a bill ll'an.tin& "'*'50.mlllioo SAORAMENTO <A > -Two of tu iDcenU.-to bul1ned and bl that Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.'a pet proJ-lleht "1 cba't believe tUt we lllould ecta, a wood ehlp-burnlnl plant to have a Pl'Ol*'tY tu bl11 Chat cl.,. eo fuel the state's central heattna and percent Of tbe beneftta to one ~ ol society that iPl 1ot the bi&leat break ever.'' · . SmogStandarda Met/or a Year EL MONTE <AP> -Southern California baa 1one • full year without vlolatinl one ot tbe state's automobile pollution 1tandarda, the bead al the Air Resoureee Board aals. ·nm 11 the fint tim• atnee •mot became a m->or problem in Southern Callfomla that we have aetua1ly met lb• carbon monoxide 1tandard," ABB Cbalnllan Tom Quhm said . TuesclaJ. ..It la a major mlltstoDe f. tllat-·--... u. I I prGlram la itart1Da to pay off.'' laid tbe number ol days in cb the oae-bour st4ndard wu olated bad decreued from 11 in to two tn 1'18. He credited the latat lalDs to tm model can whlda he aa.hl emlW>nlY 10 percent u much carbon dll>boxide aa previous models. 0.11le0..4 .... RIVERSIDE (AP) -The oo:apln ~f!:f~~n:,~ ~::s ::,,,~ Riveralde City llusnm .,. vP4ed ' back on 81ain 1\telda:)' nilbt. The seven-member Clty O>uncU voted nnn!manarif: permit a PQbUc abowinl ol tbe at the m~ despite C>bJeetkm by members of tbe black commmdcy that ~ fllm WU racist. filtnMlesl....._, SAN DIEGO CAP) -A COtlllty I srand jQl"J b8I ntQtDeid • lkoaD& lnd.i~ 81a1Alt D memBen ol a IYPSJ bod 4lll Charfes cl bmalarY, eonaplraey ancl reeelTlDI l~lin propertt. The lndlC!tmfm TuetldQ came an the e~ of a J1re)lmlnary beartna scheduled toda)' iD El Cajon Munlell>-1 CoJirt. Tbe l~d.i~~~ cbar1ee tbe OJISI• with ~ of stores tn Brawle1, '°''"_., Sprin&t.t.JaUuOllllarch2T.. ~ .. I un JS A llA'ITBll of policy of the oelnlttb," Christ e,td. "I • don 'l think we abouJd clutnl• the .,...,. of Pmsb~ deeldinl wbom to ordmn. It bu 1nothin& to do wttb the bomOIUUal la· ....... ........,. • I Ju41 Bowe, an .eJder at Colle1•Parlt, cone~., "I laave friends who are homosexual," she ~d, "and I don't find them any leas human or able to lead thJil ianyone else.'' The United Presbyterian Church General Assembly wW niuin. in May r majority and : . Don't.diahwas~just the drinks. Wait till dinner is •. minority report f:rom a divided 19-member task lorce that bas been studylna the issue of homoaex"-1 ordination for almoet tin> years. II' TBE llA.IOltlTY report ls adopted at tbe church's aatklaal coovenUcm here, it would mate the Unltecl Presbyterian Cburob the oatloa's ID08t liberal major denomination in extend.iq full rights of inemberahip and miolatry to avowed praetlclng homosexuals. The minority report. brands bomOIGUlity u a am. J OM.YN.Of A5 • poilou cheap and aceeAlble ID order' to&S ~ adcllctcid." I ._ BU\ Denoia ~. dlndar of tbe Callf_... ~-=~~f~~~ SIBaOTY SAID TBB LAW BANNING aivea...,a to minors wu unedareeaba. u loftl aa vendon were allowed to clft ~ away to anyone. Mui.mum fines under h1s bW woaJd ba'9...., $100 fon•danandlS.OOOfortMeompa,J. ~ The •-nw stick" bill SBl.518 by Sm. ~ Carpenter, R·Newport Beach would baYe .un.: eneet penalties on the nowered topa of the Tb1H•ndmarijumplaat. 1 , I Capt. BW SaDdenloD of the Loe AD11h1 fWllee Department'• un:oUcs dlrilkln t.flfted tit.at nw: stick.a are iDcreu1nl ID UM aDd ba" a bllb eon! wtratian ol THC, tbti acUw tncrecUea1 lD marl~ JUlna. UNDE& TBE mu.. P088E88ION or mari- juana with a me content al a ~l.:"~ would be grounds for anelt aDd u either a mildemeanor or a feloay with a pouible prison term. A 1975 Callforu.la law made P1l 1r1daa of .., t. an ounoe ol martJuaaa aabject to a mntmim llDe of $100 with no arreet or bookini. Poaeukm cl larger amoanta la a mlldemema-. Sale w nltin· *° remalnl a febly. SANDDSON CONCEDBD TBAT SllOIDNG Thai sUcu, doesn't cauae any more crlmiDal • behavior than ordinary marijuana and dlat people tend to smote less of lt for tbe ~ effeet. An opposiUon witness, Dr. Roter Titalin, dlrectot ol tbe ltroet dru ~ laboratory at Los AQCela County llolpftal, said the uae ol 'l1W .UCu wu beiDI eocouraaect by the spraylae o1 tbe herblctde Paraqultoo marlju.anaiD llexico. I d y Your open door policy can cost you. .. See the dollars drip away? YOlfre in hot water-in more ways than one. .. -~ /. Cooking piect.meai CXJGta as much as a whele meal. ~. • I ' ORANGE COUNrr, CALIFORNIA .r <#' Today's Closlag f N.Y. Stoe WEDNESDAY, APRIL 12, 1978 N TEN CENT --------------------~---~~•lnterpredWJB.epori----~----~-------------. ·-~lo~·th~gr~wth Viiew _Wins in NB 87 .JOANNE anNOLDS •• ...,.-·11iiii1FT;::-. TUelday'a ladDicipaJ eleeticlQ WU a C ~ TietOl'J for f acUW oppO«•na crowtb ln NtwPort Beacb. · Of tbe four MW coancUmea tleded, tln8 are tupect with ea~tmtalllta and received campmo Qpport from tboee ll"OUPI· TBDB .,...BE SVCCESSFVL candidates -Don Strauss, Evelyn Hart and Paul Hummel -could CC1Utitute a stanlftcant forq_on the seven-member couadl where two incumbent.a, Pauntyckoff and by Wllliama, abo have been camistent backers of tbe antl-deveJopmwit ea.-. The ca)y wtnnln1 candidate Mell u ~­wa1 Jadde HatJaer, currently dWrman ~ tbt dtJ'• J>m. Dln1Cmnmllflm, , Tbe elf~ of the emtraameftlelllt Tietorles ii IDOlt likely to be felt ID the Upeominl WC'e OD tbe dt,'I &enen) plan. Tb.t plan lJI under review in a IDOft implred 1ut fall in an attempt to bead off a buikllq mcntorhull. At tbe time, tbe pou~ tueh u Stop-~ Our Newport (SPON) aad LeSal EnTironmental Au1Yslt PuM (LEAF> that backed Strauaa, Hart and Hummid, ladleated the review would have to produir;e drUtic red1ldiom in future building and a plan wbicb would restrict that build· iq to lmprovemeou 1n the city's tra!llc system. UU, "8068 O&GANIZD lJI Jean Watt, Hummel's campaiJD manaaer, baa bePll to clrculate an i.DlUative petition aimed at makinl 1uch a plan m~al law. The = plan review lJI currently *°' conducted by ~ P Commission and tbe city staff in a series of weekly public meetlnp with developers. Another campalp luue voiced by Strausa, Hart and Hummel ia the citJ'• fUture as a residential community as <See NO-Gaownt VIEW, Pqe Al> Council. GetS 4 .:Newcomers ~ ~ Yoti.Dg Hit~hes Pnz~ling Citywide Madiins Probl,ema ·Delay Tallia She 1ald ·the probfem w., citywide and she discomlted the theory that the problems were the result,! wort of someone trying to acredlt tbe ntlng machines vote counten. Martin. a partner of the £mn of Martin and Chapman. said tbe macbines were used in the 19'14 a.nd 1971 Newport Beach municipal elections. The city paid $2~300 for use of the machinel and counter tbil year. "The ooJ.y thlna I caa tb1nk of," be said, "la \bat tbe voters <See IDTQIES, Pqe Al) Witness: Ne'!J)ort ·Mall Admits Death A friend of a Z2·Y•ar-old Chancellor. He aaid Mart Cban· Newport Beall man accused cl cellor pulled a pn on him and be knocked it out ol bis band and ltlckec\ him la th• cbeat," Michael Jacobs of Newport Beach told the court. J•eobs telW'led today in tbe courtroom of ;1uc1p John Orunn who it Cllilductlq a preffmln..,. baarldf iD the cue. Chancellor. 10, alto ot NewPort Beuh, Wd f~ detld Feb. 11 nut tO • snaet bar at Ni1vel 8Udl P•t. A'UtboriUe1 aald be bid beeD beaten. IAghtest Turnout Recorded Paul Hammel, Doaald Strauss, Jackie Heather and Evelyn Hart won Rall on tbe Newport Beacb City Council Tuesday ln an election that drew one of the llgbteist tumouta ln re- cent times. City Clert Doria ~r1e aaid 10,871 ballots were cut out ol 40,582 ~ voters elliible, for a r1 percent turnout . .., Tbe dty'1 Slatb Diatrlct coun-cil race wu the u,btest where thaUenpr 8'anmel defeated in- cumbent Ludlle Kuebn by as votes. AU of ~ ·0Ul4r •lllllefl. StraUQ Iii ~;;ti' t Diltrld. Hart In tbe 'lfmd Dlatrict ..s Heatber in tbe 1'oUrih ptatrict, were l'UIUlh1I for aeata ~ vented bJ' u. ~bcntl. It ,,., MriJ t04iY Won flllal resultl '""9 tamed. 9lth0Uib all of the wtmen ~ early leads Gil tbe way to their Ylc- totles. Tbe clt.)''1 votma ma~blnea. Accuvote, ~ from the Los An1elea firm of Martin and Chapman provided a ltumbllnc block to countlns returns bec:auae tbe bola ~~heel by the macldnes did aot allp ~ er)J wlthtbecountlal ctevlce. Wblle campalp .Oran od candidael waited bp~. city eledloD worten bad to lift tbroulh all ol tbe ballots to Me that t6e can:la ~ beea properly punched. Tboe'e~t a to be lmpn>perly all were re. punched Gil ua: ballota. The proceu WM not complet· ed 11DW l:ao a .m, Tallies posted at that time are: Pa8T DISTalCI' -Donald straoaa. 4,811 Pea Fcqlt, a.- S.ff. BJeft 1,JIO BUl Von Eleh, 51' John 'l'Ucker, 430 La VernedelaClerva, 515, TBl&D DISftlCI' -EvelJn H~S.100 Mlcbael Gednl, 3,'101 Pralvem,sm Paul~toe ntJaTB Dlftalcr -.Jadde' Heather, 1.-. Charlel Lanon. 2,SO. 81XTB DlaTaJCT -Paul Hummel,~ LueW.-KOibi. 4,100 Wlllfam Dobr. al Dobr drODiMd out of the cam· PA1ia and-tile, ltllebn·Sam.mel race wu the llicllt ~ eootest- (8ee Nl:WP.ORl', .... Al) UNIEATS INCUMBENT 8hdlt Dlatrtc:t'• Hummel " FIRST DISTRICT WINNER _,. •• Coundlman Straua MOVES UP TO COUNCIL Fourth Otstrtct'• Heather Sup,port for Jarvis Dropping, Poll Says es and too much eovernment spending." Weather llo•UY cloUdY tbrOugb Tbunctq mormn1, with 20 percent chance of mea1urabti precipitation earty Tbunday. Lowa tontPt tn aild-50I. mau Thursday from low 60t near the cout to mid-toe lnlaod. INSIDE TO•AY """ Uwr.'• ""*'* in Ow boa1'd room; .,.,,. ··~ crbM"~o~, mar hMl UNI Ci:lll VfdUI /t1r C"""1f'OU ddadion. SH """Oil AIDf. ' CH ., ............ ....... ,_ .. TM I"*-QtJ Owil -. appn>..S pnllml.aar7 plMa ... I.be Ural"'*r 1Wa cm. .• llfOJec:t -I ODl7 a mlndl eowd· -l&alted. TtM oGw:D tied dev-...-~ =-=-~~ '1 to tbe delllD aDd tNl.\11:-\ al • commerdal Cllilal' wtaldl to be tbe ecire ol tbe lll'Oject. SI.nee iiiJJPWO•al of the .mas ordinance far tbl towo cater' ID 1"11, the lrviDe CoalPQY D1YW bu lDdicated wt.at tort ol tlOlll· merelal development It pl for ~ecemer. P re•Hd by Cou11eUmaD Arthur AntboQJ TUmdQ to a- plain bis ·~"of tbe town ceater. an Irvtne Oompa111 9'ee preaideet, Dick CUDOD, WU vape about UM ortllnal eoaNIA of tbe ~ Joc.ted oacampm Drive acl'Oll from UC Imm. Tb at concept wa1 of a Greenwich Vlll ... t;ype complex or artiun. craftlman and artist sbop1 and inexpensive apart· 1' th• fiaYOr ot • ................ C•r•IMdMMW ..... comblutloO OJ bt1b·den1lt1 ntldentlat (aputmenta). cftlce denlolJaMnt ucl 1 combtDaltoo ~ retal1 u.e. lncludloa flDudal ln1tltut.lon1, apparel stores, boobtares, meatmarteta a four· sereen mcmetheater and the Ute. Re predleted a mix ol 40 per. cent r«al1 aetlvitl•, 20 peftlllllt apartmema and «> pereent ol· ftces. Ant.baay and the eound1 plan to set a eJearw Idea about wbat • that means, with the condlt¥>m they placed on tbe plan ap-prcwal. An ll'¥ine Compa117 propou1 for development of tbe com- merdal eon malt be filed witb the clty befcn batJdinC permits for the flnt two r .. ldeotial proJeetaareblued. Thoee proJeeta ue 1IO federal· '1 sublidblel low-tncome apart· mentl, pnJpOled by Sbapell In· du1t1'111, and a retirement health care complex fropoeed by Southern Cal fornta .Presbyterian Home1. . ( p...,.p .. AJ NO-GROWTH VIEW; • • opposed to a tourilt community. All three aaid they oppose coQltructiml ol more bo&e1a on five poulble hotel attes re- maininl lo the dt:y. . Mn. Heather.• 1111Ueip.ied, took a lloa"t ahare of tbt vote for the Fourth Dlltrict teal, ptberiq '7 JJl11 out of 9,901 CMt city ..tde. In tbe trlnt Diltrlct, Stratlla eouted to an euy 1,500-vote wln Oftl" bil prtncifMll ""•l,.._, Pee FoJ'llt, an ad•ocate of property ritbts. IN TBB TlllaO Ol8ft.ICT, ~ lllcbael Geriq, who bad atrooc hacklna from tbe t.njness commUDit:y, mt to llrs. Hart by nioarty 1,400 votea. Tbe hotly ecmt.ted race between Sixth Distrlct lncwn- bent Lucille Kuehn and Hummel pn>dueed the narrowest mareln of victory. as votes. ANALftlB SBBllS TO SUOGWST that tn the 27 per· cent turnout of voters, tbe criramnentaUttl .turned ont to vote wblleotber voters atayed.bomelDdrovel. Backff'I of Hummel, StraUlt ad Illa. Hart explalned that a sinttnct-by.prectnct effort wu mounted ~ the cltJ, specially for Mn. Hart and HU1D1Del. TlMre were aome oddities lo tbe votlq. . Three ol the candidates dropped out of the race. One, La Verne de la Cierva, quit almcst immediately aft.er ftl- ing aa a candidate, yet the Udo Isle bouaewUe pqlled 55" votes. Two other dropouts, Paul Caldwell ol the Third Di.I· trict and WWlam Dohr or the $xtb Dlatrlct. polled 50t and 561 votes, reepectlvely. They both ou\dfew active Flnt Dlltri~t candidate John ~ter who Sot only 430 votes. And Dohr, who dropped cM ID ml4-llarcb, oalllOllecl active Flnt Dlstrlct candidate Bll1 Von ltleb who aat 5lA TOtea. Daredevil Knievel Released From Jail LOS ANGELES <AP> -Evel Knievel walked out ol Jail toda,y "'to a tlm8le of financial and le1al problems. But bis publlcllt says thlnas wm be Jwnpln1 a1aln toOD for tbe daredevil motorcycu.t. Dreued ID a t;r11 sport suit, tbe aell·lltYled ''prafeUlonal life risker" stepped into a late model sedan reportedly contain· ln1 bl• wife and wu driven away. KnleY'el, a. aerved a llWe lea tban five months of a siJMnooth Jail term Imposed after be pleaded. fQllty to assaultln1 television esecutlH Sheldon Saltman with a baseball bat. Knievel said be auawted Saltman became of alle1edly libelous materlal cootaloed in a book Saltman wrote alter wort· ing as a promoter OD ltn1eftl's uosucceaf\ll rocket-cycle leap over the Snake R.lver Gorp In Idaho. CnahKilJ.11 MEXICO CITY UP) -A bus ptunsecl tram a mountam road into a ravine near the Padflc re- tort clt.y of lla19t1an, ldlliDI 11 and lnjurln1 more tban 20 others, llulcan televlaton re- ported. The br'Olldcast said tbe bul mlued a cune. DAILY PILOT "I feel tbat the majorlt.y. ol a lety ban understood the re for my action," Knievel said. He MDtendecl bll lncareera· t1on wauld not serve "u a det.s· rent to otben." Ealevel'• early releue was due to bla aood bebavtor. laid Shmff'1 U. IOMDb Baee. Publidli Stan 'Rolenfteld laid one of the ftnt problema Knievel . will bave to faee 1a a cinl suit flied by Saltman for an VD· dllclOMd sum. BGNnfteld noted, however, that Knlenl bu ftled a SZIO million libel suit atalnst Saltman and bis publllben. "Evel'a loin& to have a lot of espenaes In attorneys. f .... " Roeen&.td said. .. He doel not have money to pay attorneJa' rees unlels be aeUa AOGle proper· t.y. And u the Judlmelll IOel aaainlt blm. be '°'°' to have to dip into ldl pocbb. "But, u of tomorrow be will start pneratinc tneome qaln and I'" Deftll' teen anyone who can 1eoe111te 1Dcome fuw than be can," Bmmfteld laid Tms- dey. Jn addltion, llolenfteld uld, Knlevel ow.-about $800,000 in bact tuet. And Knievel no lon1er baa money eomin1 In from Evel Klllenl toJa. after' tbe Ideal Toy Oompa.ay clllean· Unued tbe l1De due to the nature ol b1a crime. Knleftl bu ..,,,,,.ced plans to Jump tnto a baJstack without a paradna from an llll'plaM at 40,000 feet on an unapedfled elate. muet.acan~. Nrtblr laaulnl bulJd. ... ....... leCOOd .... ol town emtel' development - batlcall1 tbe area west of Calllornla AftlllM -ball tbe commerclal core mu1t ban been deYe)Oped and ready for bualQeaea to OCC"PJ It. Tbe cound1 vote OD tbe condl· tlOlll WU LllanimOUI. AIU•ou1b Irvine Company repreMldadves present Toeeclay aald t.beJ bad DO autborl\J to. pron el. tbe CODd.ltlom, tbe1 •ald tbe comprom.IM to 1et u. project started appeared to be tometldDI "we can llve with." In prwvious mee&lDtl, lnine Compau officials aald tbey were cenatn a plan ff1' tbe com- mercial center would be com· plete by the end ol th1a year. ,, ....... Anthon.J's condiUou would appear to have the elf ed or mo•lna up the lniDe Compeny tlmetallk to =mber, when start ol home DI bu been J)f9dlcted. SUN PHOTO SHOWS 80l.AR Fl.ARI! (ARROW) WldHpned Recio 818ckouta a Po ... blllty , .... _.41 W'I'CHES ••• Solar Saafu Radio Bl,ackouu ThreatenBd o.llY ............. r.-.6-eel eit.ber didn't take the time to vote properly or weren't ID· mucted properly In the me Of tbe devices." In a aurvey of top wte Cetten today, none lndkated they TtOQ1d contest the elect1oo reaultl or uk for a recount. BOULDER, Colo. (AP) -'!be mott violent IOlar flare ln nearly four yean could cause radio st111al blacauts, telephone circuit outaaes and cllaplays of the northern U1bta In the world's northern latitudes tbla week, the NaUonal Oceallle-and At- moapheric AdmlniatraUon said. A spokesman for American Te1epboDe and Telelnpb Com· pan7. lwwe'Nl", aald U .s. cuatomen probably wtll not DOtke _, Attorney Donald Smallwood of Costa Mesa was elected president of the Newport· Mesa school board Tuesday night. He replace. Rod Mac'Millian. Hts fellow bo ard m embers chose Smallwood to serve for the coming year. lapse in telepboae circuits. 1 Tbe flan WU detected 'helda,y bJ NOAA utemt. orllltbal 22.JOO mllel abovetbe Earth, tbe qeocy laid. However, John Tucker, the candidate who ftn1lbed ftftb out ol six candldalel In tbe l'b'A. Dlltrict laid be will contest tbe results. Cari Posey, a 1pokesman for NOAA'• En'liroilmental Research LaboratorJ befe, laid tbe flare will Dl'Od'uee a 8'ol1D in the Earth'• mqnetlc fttld, reau1tiDI in nidlo slpala "9lni abllorbed rather than nftected~na Tbunday. He predicted wldeltptud • clttult -., .. and said aurora borealla dllplays .,...the oortbern u.htl -woQkt be viii· ble In mmv areas ~ of an eut-weat line that woald waaa throUlb Cbicqo and even in aome placel IOUlb of that llne. p,...p-AJ NEWPORT •• ed of tbe four-district contests. Jubilant Hummel supporters Tucker, who polled 430 votes, ll a fonner areoapace worker wbo delC'J"ibee blmseU u a com· puter expert. Monday, prior to tbe electlian, be tndfcated dia- utlaf actioo with tbe use ol vot· inl machtnea and laid then be would probably protest the eliec· tioa results. Article Says Nuke cheered each precinct tally that {n a letter that WU to be de-o · e gave their candidate an qe. livered today to Mn. Georae.' evice Hummel, who did not a~ Tucker aalted that the election -at city ball until tbe last pree ct be reacbeduled and that Martin Lost by CIA was posted, declared that " e -and Chapman be sued ror NEW YORK (AP> -An artl· citizens have spoken. They want damages. cle in a new maaulne publllbed someone to serve their interests by Rolling Stone alleses that a on the city council and that's what He said be would take bis peti· nuclear-po"'8Nd device wu lost l'mprep8}"9d.todo,''.. -·· . ~ tloo to·0rana1 County Superior in 1985 on a Hlmalayan moun· There were alao cheers for bis Court if the city falll to act. taimide by a Central lnteJllceD- campaip manqer, Jean Watt, ey Aaeoey expedllloD \rYtDI to , leader ol two Ol the citra en-AcCCll'dinl to ~\J! least set up a tractin1 atatioil to vtnmmeatal IJ'OUP9 most acti.e 30 percent of the cut monitor Cbineee acUvttiea. In oppostnc development. were re-punched by tbe •ote Accordln1 to the story in Mn. Watt, wbo said sbe was COUDtlq commlUM. The COID· Outa!ae, tbe CIA poup WU try. at a Joa to explain the low YOtel' mfttee was fGl'ced to hand in& to leale a 25 945-foot moun- turnout, described Hummel'• ·acr;e.;dU:,: UM 10b: ~ tain called Nuda Deri and victory as "basically an across.. to pmc ncor-~e-named Bl• Mountain. but the-board residential kind or reeUy · wH foreed bJ bad weather to tblna. I think the voters latched The baDota on wbi~ boles give up the attempt about 2,000 onto our crusade. were not properly were feet below the aammJt. "Both. candidates in this dis· re-puncbed on extra ota. Tbe climbers, bopln.g to return trict raised more money and when the weather improved, spent more~ they probably Tucker also charged that ~ stored the nuclear SNAP should have, ~added. votes were lost in the countinl generator, which was to power Strauss, also identified with procesa. the trackina station, amon1 environmental 1roap1, ls a Mn. <Hiorse said tb1a morning some rocb end it was buried in former member of the Newport. tbat there are two avenues for al b .... __ .... act In Mesa Unified Sc.I Diatrict protestine the election results. an av anc e, says MIO •na e boatd an4 be attrtbUted bJa vie· One la to file a petition wi\b the the May issue of the m~ulne. tory to bard won-and bis reeord Superior Court to have tbe elec-Tbe lt«:f, by Howard Kohn, of past eommunity Hl"lice. Uon declared invalid beeadle ~ aat• tbeCIA made an attempt In Mn. Hart, a form• member such acts u malconduct of eJec. 1966 to retrieve the 1enerat.or, or the city's Para, Beach• and tion oftlclala, dllQualiftcaUCID ol but wu maucceuhtl. It aays tbe llecreatioa Commission and a a candidate, bribery, UJ91al fuel rods In tbe renerator CGD· 21-year rel1deDt of the city, alao votes cast or error in YOU count. taiDed plutoofum-m .. which re- outer shell would eventually corrode and release lta pollonous core." Tbe atory aaJ'I that tbe sp'iq thaw on the eoutbem slope ol the mountain -where the 1enerator was ba:rted -ta a ma- jor source of water foT tbe Ganaea R.lver and AJS tbat if tbe radloacthe material reaebed the Gaape .. it eoald cause cancer lD an1on. wbo drank even mlcroacopic amounts or ate contaminated fish." College ReP8 Doe At CdM Meeting More than 40 representaUves• of public and private uni· versities and coIJeaes will be on band at the California College and University Nl&bt at Corona del Mar lngh School Thursday at 1 p.m. The meet.in1 will be held in the Boys' Gym. Orange Coast parents and stu- denta are invited to JUeDd the eve nt to talt witlf campus representaUves. Refreshments will be served. creditedberroota lntbe "citT'for She Aid tbe only other method maim ~ radioactive producqaeoreofbard-wortsnc would be for a candidate to ult for aoo to 500 yean and evm if supporters she said were for a recount, which that tan-the SNAP cenerator bad IW"· re1pomlblefor bervlctory. She is didate would have to PQ for.; vived the avalanche iatact. its a1Jo viewed u a supporterof m-------------------------------------vironmenlallatl. Tbe only winDiDI candidate seen u uoaliped wUb the slow crowth element la Mn. Heather, currently Mnln& p chairman of the plannlq COlllmluioa. Mn. Heather, who won bJ the laraest marlin, defeated her lone opponent by nearly 5,000 votes. She said she belieftl she wu elected became tbe was "prepared -4 qualllltld. I've been Involved In tile Ute fll tb1a communlt.y for • liDDa time." she said. -------~- By Bil Keane "Did you know picture-windows cost $800? · Thqt's what Mr. FetteU says his wiU cost." ) Committee. Snuffs Bills. ' Civeauuys, Thai Sirek l•uea Killed WILDE &\ID SBVEUL OP BIS FalBND8 bad died cl dp.rette-rela~ cancer. Tbe blll be said ''triel to protect tbe clu.m cl Cal1fornla from beiae induced to me a~ tbat ~DOW ia certalnl1 Down to be ~urioul to tbelr .•• SleraQ' likened livtna .way ctcarett. to ''tlle practice of bard drui dealers who make tbelr - p;oJlou cheap and aecealble crier to -,.... liddkttd.'' t But Dennis Loper, d1reetor cl the Cal1fonda AlloclMIOD cl Candy ud Tobeceo Dlatrtbalen. aald the bW coadicted with federal Ian. - SIBROTY 8~10 TUB LAW aANNING slveaw.,. to mtnon wu UDeDf'orieable • lcmf u vendon were allowed to live dpNUea awar to UJ'ODe. Kulmum fines under b1I bill would baYe ~ $100 forvmdon andSS.OOOfortiaieeomPQ1. The •'Thal stick" bW SBU8I .!tt Sm. Deonia Carpent«, R-Newport Bed bave IUtt· ened penaltlea on tbe nowend tops of tbe Tballand marijuana plant. Capt. Bill Sandel'IOll ol tbe LG9 Aqelea bllce l>epa.rtmmt'a Dattatiea dlWlian teltHled tbat Tba1 atlcb are IDereuiDI ID me Uld bave a blCb con- centraUon ol THC, the actift iqredlent ln mari· Gay OrdinatiOn Nixed ~~.:.S~~ · -'"'either a mlsdemeaor or a feklQJ Wltb a pautble SAN DIEGO <AP> -Tbe Su Dleco Presbytery bu Y°'9d to publicly oppose onUDatlon or eonferrtna "' aQY bol1 order-. OD homoaexuala. The ownrbelm.ln& vote came TMlday duriDC a two bow ... bate nnallll over Blbllcal ltaod- ardl, family ·:::&le and tbe question ol a try to the homoaaual comllUllty. Herb Christ. pastor of the Colleee Park Presbyterian Cbureb. asked to .., OD rwcord U dluenting from tbe maJoritJ Tote to oppose ordJnaUon of bomOHXUal minlltera. Ulce 'Af'l'Ort 77' Passenger Describes Panic on BOs Crash LOS ANGELES <AP> -"It felt Uke 1l wu one cl tboH movies -like ·Airport n • :• said oae paaaenger m. jured when • packed transit bus col· llded with a car during morn:tna nab hour. "There WU panic," said another. u'l'bere were i:lda lD there. • • "" crowded. EverybodY waa acreamtna ud banclnl cid to-each other ana . tbeD ~ OJ*l8d tbe-.nndow • . .ud J Jumped out." Aid Dmlae Tblero cl Santa llOGlca. Sbe wu one of 60 -~naera. crammed Into the •Wiftl1·movtna Rapid Tramlt Dbtrtet bUI --tbe accldml occm red. A.boat. palMlller& ... lepot'ted lnJurecJ. bt.ll au tM& a few wen -. leued sbOltb' after hospital vlaita. Tbe mOlt Mdous IDJUl'J' wu a frac· tured tee. oftlclala said. ... , .......... _. SACRAllENTO (AP) -Two cl Gov. Edmund 8ro'tt'D Jr. •a pet pro)- ecta, a wood cblp-burnlDC plant to tuel the state's central beatlna and SmogStandarda Met/or a Year BL MONTE (AP> -Southern -O•llfornla bu 1ooe a full year wttW TWatfnc one of the state's c::iollile Pollution atandards, tbe ol tbe Air Reeourees Board --r.,;u. • tbe flnt ttme aince •moc became a~ problem lD Soutbem Callfonla tba1 we bave actually met tb• carboD monoxide standard," ARB Chairman Tom QUinn said • ~. ''It ia a major mlleatme aDd ,,...,. tbat car aatomobile uti· lllloC procram ia ltartiq to pay off .•• QQiU takl tbe number of dQS lD wblcb tbe ODe-bour ataDclard was .;otated Ud dllcreued from 11 ID tm to two lD 1'11. He credited tbe latest P1m to 1971 model can wldcb be aalcf emit cmb' 10 percent a mucb carbon monoxide as previous models. ( J c:oolin1 Dlant. ad a utelllte com· muoicaliona ay1tem, bave won bud1et 1.ibeomm1ttee 1kirmlabea Tueaday. but llOt wttbout a few tart WOid.a ol crttlclam. Both Pl'ODOQla w01 DOW be beard b1 UM tau Yt.,. ad Kean Commit· tee. ............. , ... SAN DIBGO <AP> -GoY. r.dmu:nd G. ~ Ir. NMWed b1a c=-:: aplut tbe ~··mi " -lDiU..Uve a& two publle forums VIU· Joi t.bat proml8ed relief would eo to buatneu. not. bomeownera and rent· era. T1le pemor noted that Fridar 1- wtll alp a bill srentin& a S4So mllllQ6 tu i.Dc:emhe to bmlnen qd ln tQt li&bt 0 1 doD't belle.e that we lbou1d have a pniperbo tu bill that Ile• percent of the benetlta to toelety that just 1ot tbT I break ner.•• • - 0.1rlehA .... RIVERSIDE <AP> -Tbe oo-qaln off·•Caln planned ahWlnf of the claaalc .. Bh1b ol a Matton• ftJ=t.=, ~ Rlvtnkle Qty llOleGm was back OD apla TUMday night. . The -.Vea-member City Co\&Gclt voted W\M\ftWll11 to penntt a 1*1>k i abowial of the film at the na~ despite~ by members d bJacJr ~mdliJ iut the mm • racist. • -..~, Sn••• lrtMe,., SAN OIEOO (AP) - A ccnmb grand J'*7 bu returned a lkOUDt lndlc:tmelt acatmt lJ membln cl a OP81 bMd CID eJmses of bunlal'1. con1ptra1y anct recelvlni. i\olen propeav. The MetineM TwdQ came m tbe e.e ol a DNllm1DarY beal'iq acbedulect today, tlA El CaJoia llunlclpel c::oa.rt. Tile lncllctmeut cmaraea u. Dlllill ww. burl)artll of atoreit bi lh·awle1. JJorr••• SprtnpUill&dlacmMseb2f. 0 1T ISA-llA'ITEll of pollq cl the cburcb," Cbdat said. .. I don't think we should chance the IYIWm "' Presbyteries deddtnc whom to ordain. It bu DOtbiDg to do with tbe homosexual is-1ue.·· J\ld)' J\owe, an elder at Collete Pm. COQCQJT'ed. "I have friends who are. Jsomosexual," she laid. "and t apn 't find them any leas bwnan or able to lead, than anyone etae." Tbe United Presbyterian ChW'cb General A.aaembly will receive lD May a majority and .. Dcn't dishwaShjUst the drinks. Wait till diDner is over. Half loads B]ve JOU a gocxJ sock-nght Jn the . pocketbook. • minority report from a d.t-rided prtaon term. It-member task force tbat baa been studying the Issue of A UJ75 Calltornia law made poaee1'°'1 ol QI» to homosexual ordination for an ounce cl martluana aubjeet to a mulmum ft.De a1m t two of SlOO wltb no arrest or bookln1. PoAeuloa ot 08 )'ears. lar1er amount& la a mlademeanor. Sale or culU•• Ii' TBE llA.IO&ITY repon la lion remmm a felony. adopted a1 the church's national convention ,here, It would make the United Presbyterian Church the nation's most liberal m.tor denomination In extending full rlibts of membership and mtn.lstry ·to avowed practicina homosexuals. The minority report brand.a bom01eXJ•Jity u a alD. SANDDSON CONCEDED THAT SllOIDNG Tbal lticb doean't cause any more crtmiDal behavior than ordlDary marijuana and tbat people tend to lmob less cl it for tbe same effect. An opposition wttwa, Dr. R=-a=tn. dlrector cl the au.et~~ at Loa A.aples County Rospl laid tbe UH ol Tlaal sticks was being encourqed the SPnYm. Of tbe herbiddeParaquatoomarijuanalDICaiCo. - ' Your open door policy can rost you. .• See the dollars drip away? You're in hot water-in more ways than one. -... ' v i Cookini Piec;emeal ooets as much as a whole QieaL ... \ AeN Profit Inspires New Pier Project Encouraged by th"e SIJ.000 the clv hai earned !rom the new operation ot the Newport Pier, Newport Beach city councilmen have decided to re-open the Jong-closed Balboa Pier ~cession stand a couple of miles down th& Peninsula. That should be good news to pler visitors and fishermen who have been without a source of snacks, bait and tackle since the stand closed 1n September, 1976. Councilmen originally wanted to keep the o~ratlon closed until at least this fall so th~y could have a full year to watch the new NewPort Pier operation, but because or the money· coming in h'om that operation and some interest expressed by Balboa residents, they've decided to go ahead with the Balboa Pier .. We tend to agree with Councilman Ray Williams, however~ that re-<>penlng the Balboa Pier cone.ion isn't going to be the same as the Newport Pier concession. Balboa Pier, colorful as it is, attracts fewer fishermen than the Newport Pier because it is more expensive to park there, Mte fishing reportedly isn't as ~ood and there are no bullf.!n seats for fishermen to use. If the council really wants to 'open that facility, its members are going to have to be prepared to take a smaller share of the profits or 5pend more money re!urbishlng lhe dilapidated stand, * land Poses ftoblems A great deal of interesting and useful Jnf onnatlon bas been generated in the weekly ses..ions held in Newport Beach as part or the clty's review of its general plan. One of the more interesting bits of lnf ormation to emerge has been the problems that face the I"ine Co. In trying to develop a 2'6·acre piece of l&l}d c-1led Freeway Reservation East. . It's a mile-long strip running along the east side or MacArthur Boulevanl that was earmarked -although never purchased -for the right of way for the Corona del Mar Freeway. Company officials concede the narrowness of the strip, and the fact that tt•s Pocked by deep drainage swales and nearzy inaccess.lble makes its future as a housing tract a difficult proposal. Based on those consideratiornt. perhaps there b something else that could be done with that land. · It would be a good idea if J,he company, the city and CalTrans got together and worked out a plan which could turn the area from its current condition into a scenic entrance to the city. • CalTrans is going to need some of the land to widen the highway. PeJ'haps the city could buy or swap for the remaining rand. It seems like a better Idea than struggling to put houses on the property. . c&ndidate Fonuns Again this year, as in past municipal election years, NewPort Beach was outstanding among other cities in Orange County. Nowhere else that we know of do voters bav~ the opportunity to meet the candidates that they have in Newport. By conservative estimate, nearly 25 public forums were staged during this campaign. The homeowner groups. merchant organizations and othe rs who went to the effort to staae these meetings should be commended. Even if few of the· city's 40,000 vote rs too k advantage of the chance to meet the candidates, their efforts deserve a hearty thanks from all Newport residents. There are a few points that could be remembered in 1980 when the next city election is held. First, some eff or1 could be made, perhaps through c\ty hall, to set up ·a coordinating office so forums won't be scheduled in conflict with one another. In addition, there sboukl be more or the type of meetings where organizers give candidates a series of questions or stage press conference-llke sessions. It's nice to hear the candidates talk about themselves once or twice, but it wears thin and more voters mi.ibt be attracted if they knew the candidates would be facing questions on the issues. One final note: The practioe will probably remain, but we'd like to see fewer or the shills in the audience tryibg to discredit opposing candidates. It just cheapens the campaign.. • ' Opinions expressed In the space abow &N tho9e of the Dally Piiot. Other views expressed on this page ar& thOM of their. authora and artists. Reader comment Is Invited. Addr ... The Dally Piiot. P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone(71.,.)642-4321. ) -.---------------------------------------------- 1 Boyd/Divorce ByL.11.BOYD The financial status of a divorced man lends to im· prove aomewJJat after the ma't\tal .bteanp. But tbal'• not true •f a dlYorcod woman, evidently. Reseattben studied 131 such divorced couples. In the four r years after their aeparaUoas, the men pldted up a little momentum in that matter of ll'lone1J but tbe women lost arouna. What American womaai Rowland Evam / Robert Novak Airbus Deal a Blow to Trade WASHING TON -Eastern AirUn .. • purchase acreemeQt (or 23 European wide-bodied •lrllnen ls a deal that not only delivers anotber •tunning blow to the poor old American dollar but ralael serious' questions of U.S. industrial aurvival In the world of subsldlz.ed foreign ex· ports. Tbe A-300 Alrbws ls an ex- cellent plane, but that's not why Eastern ls buying it. Airbus ln- duatrie , a Western European combine, l"l)ade an offer that Eastern chairman F r a n k Bormann could not refuse. The price was rieht becal&.$e Airbus lndustrie la subsidized by the French gov- ernment, one of iU principal owners. Although the Europeans can· not match the Americans iri cost ... efficient production of com- mercial airliners, they are spoon-fed government funds to compete In the world market. In the case of tbe Eutem Alrline.s deal, the French taxpayer enables planes to be sold tar below costs. What makes this dangef'OU.1 for the U.S. -and the dollar -is its threat lo aerospace exports, one of the last places where Uncle Sam still keeps his bead above water in international trade. · THIS IS NOT the ancient con· flict between free lrade and pro- tectionism. Rather, the model or Japan. Inc., is being duplicated in Western Europe (France, Inc., in the Airbus deal). Here is a neo-mercanlllist system against which American com- panies are helpless pla)'lng by Adam Smith's rules. Typically, thJs overpowerin& problem has not been addressed at policymaking levels of the Carter adminlatration. But almost by accident, it ia eomlng lo tbe attention of worried Conpasmen. A warning signal was sounded at a House Banking subcommittee bearing March 17 by J . B. L. Pierce, treasurer of the Boeing Co.: "We can com· pete with Airbus and the other European aircraft man'lfac· turers on coal and technical merits, but w• cannot compete wilb the national treuuries ol France and Germany and other European countries." BEP. JIM LEACH ol Iowa, a 35 ·year·old freshman Republican with no aerospace interests in bis district, took notice. That very day, Leach wrote tbe subcommittee chairman, Rep. Stt;Phen Neal of North Carolina, urging a close look at Easlern's French con - nection: .. We could be witness- in& the emeraence of a kind of international trade warfare that bas nothing to do with etonomlc competition, bill rather with I.he skill of individual government.a to establish reverse trade bar-riers." ·, Leach, Neal and other Congressmen want to see the fine print of the Eastern deal - a closely guarded secret up lo this point. Apart from details, however, the subsidy for each A·300 in the Eastern packace la fftimaled at $10 million. The French subsidy system is revealed by a 1976 French parliamentary report. The gov- ernment "loan'' of $386 million covers half ol Airbua production, with repayment indefinitely halted at $2.5 mllllon, ol' 0.7 per- cent. The report vl1orously argues that France's aircraft in· dustry "must be supported by the government." WHILE BOEING fired the warning signal on Capltbl Bill, Lockheed Corp. faces more im· 'Hey Sam, J'm bad! How'a tbe old do-it-youtst1lldletgoin'?' .... mediate damaco. E11tern'• new A-300 will replace Lockheed L-1011 Jetllners, which wllJ then eo on the used plane market. But the Airbus allO competes with the Boeing 747 and McDon- neU-Douclas DC·lO. Tbe$e three com panles can and do C)rter sub- sidy plums to b\lyen, but cannot afford the Fl'ench 1overnment•1 Juicy level. Those A300s for Eut.em are Just the beainn.lng. Similar sub- sidized deals with Alltlbeny and PSA (Pacific Southwest Airlines) are lo tbe talkini stage. What's more, Airbus sales to U.S. carriers are the breakthrouib for cutthl'Oat com· petition ag-1nst the Amerkana with Japln the next tartet. ''The Europeau are pulling out all the slops l"o wm sales in Japan," Aerospace DtJly reported last week. "Aside from normal com· mercial representation, the gov• ernmenta involved ~ apply· Jng strong pressure on the Japanese government." THE sr.uo;s are blab. Last year's U.S. aerospace uporta totalled $'7 .8 billion aaainat $732 rnlllion in imports. For com- mercial aircraft, the export sur- plus was $2.S billion in 1977 <down from $3.1 billion In 1976). Con&iderlnc the record U.S. trade defiqt and its rulnous im· pacl on the dollar, this bul&e in commercfa1 aircraft ls one the U.S. cannot afford to surrender. UnliJce teltlles, electronics or even steel, this is not a case ol foreign productivity and in· genuity outstripping the sluggish Yankees. The Americans can tUll male• jetliners more effi. ciently lhan anybody else. ni. difference ls France, Inc., aligned against. three private American ])tOducers. While the French emulate the Japanese bard-sell subsidies, U.S policymakers are occupied in loftier purswts. At the middle level, officials here say they want lo study the Eastern transaction more closely before doing anything rash. But the role of Adam Smith does not fil the hard world of neo· m e rcantilists, tbreatenine to cloud a rare American bright spot in world economics. Haye Our Planners Lost Their Senses? To tbe EdifD~J conducted on a level so high that For instance, it has been am-shall limit and control the dis· We were rl~~ when we read very few other campaigns com-ply demonstrated that in a prop-tribution, character, and intensi· that Supervisor Thomas Riley's pare, and the 6th District race erly operated chamber, death ty of all land uses wbich would Planning Commission appointee, does not even come close. occurs in seconds. It serves no .generate increased levels of Mr. MacDougall, and his sheep, I feel it a detriment that the good purpose to keep reileraUng traffic beyond the capacity ol bad voted to permit 400 houses to 6th District race has been, statistics that apply only in poor-the exlst.i.ng or planned street be built in the badly noise impact-described as •• ... high sthool... •• ly run facilities. Even the L.A. sysiem. edareaofElToro. This campaign does not belong sbeltersthatuseinjectionstilluse Tbls uvon of inbumane treat· in a kindergarten class.· the chamber aa backup. mentoffellow Americans; In fact CHARLES D. LARSON JR. itsofardeviatafromaproperde-Mr.. 11-<ftAltU attentkd N-,...,...t claion aa to be probably ...... ,, . .., ....... ,,.,,. criminalirnsponsibillty. Hor!>or High School Editor. ROW CAN A few com- m Issi on er s and some supervisors make a decision that commits 400 ramUJes to the mental and physical stresses from noi5e that have now been recosnlzed aa cause for many health problems? Has this commission simply taken leave o( its senses? Are they not able lo read or hear the splendid testimony pruented aealnst their decialon7 There is possibly here an openina for class action law with adequate reasona for constder- inJ improper and irresponilble acts ln the conduct of their public office. I do bOt bave much hope. With the back~ ol Oran1e Coun· lJ whedlne and deallng and the uaanor,-,elaUOJ:Mtl'Up or the de- nlopen out tMte With the Ur· rot on jbe •tick perhaps there ls no hope. I've hen no evid4=tlce that any P1all.bi4tf commtaslonera, nor any supeivlsora will D'\oved into tb.1.1 DOi.se lmp~cted area! H.M. WE!JBE1\, Jif.'D. ... rc..p•rk•• To tbe Edltol': 1 .,., ahbettd and dismayed , to 11.nd a vcy po0r compartscG I.ft an article that appeared In the April 8 J>aJ.11 ~lot enUUed ... Hot .Race lD. Ne"PO't.'" Tbe article wu abouttbeet.b Dtlbict ~tor ~~Mada Qty Council an4 one statem.ent read: ... "'fJioillili. kl.ads of effotta, mote remln~cent or a hltb ~cbool ei.ctl~ doo•t teem to beve lm-pr..,ed t.tio total ... College C...petl•fo11 To the Editor: Maybe Coastline C~Jege•s public information officer Jack R. Chappell should take J clus al Orange Coast or Golden West College in understanding the ob- vious as it Is written or said by the City of Newport Beach. The Cit.y of Newport Beach's concern about Coastline Collese is the tax-subsidized duplication of existing programs offered by the six cities that the college serves and by non-profit agen· cies <YMCA 's, Boys Clubs, churches, etc.} and tupayinJ business (who end up 1-.pportlne Coastline's free classes alon1 with every other disl~ tax- payer) who have been offeriDI the same quality programs for many years. WHILE Chappell . indicates thal CouWne bas in the past at- temp tod coordlnatlon (it"s worked lb some cues, i.e. CPR lnatrucU~) i the clty says tax· payers snowdn't have to pay for tree tennl.a leaaons, yop or fit· neaa clus for Mr. and Mrs. Jones who would Pll1 tbt f'1ll cost for the same dasa If \her enrolled throuJh one of the ot!Mr entltln. If Coutllne wanta to co.npete In an open market place with ot!Kr venunent acencles nan pl'Otlt or1an1JatJou and bust· , Jet. them compete on oq"al tenns, dlareinS the oon.µmv the direct 8.ftd lildJrect coatl for all setytcea and not depend on tb• taxpay r for tbe advanta:e for .. tree" cluae.. COASTLlNET&ACHEB. ALSO evidencrin(J an emotional lack of perspective is the claim that many dogs are killed by mistake. Everyone including shelter staff, deplores such an occurrence, but out of 60,000 anJmals impounded in the past year. this has happended four times. Eacb tJme, shelter staff has re-worked procedures lo mate Sant tbllt particular ml.a· takes couJd not happen again. And Kennel Chier Edwards has on rue, 50 commendations from citizens pertalnlng to the cleanll· nesa of the physical facilities and the courteous help they re- ceived with their parUcular prob- lem. . How can anyone oppose laws wbicb would put the responsibiU· ty for the tragic pet surplus where It belongs -on the pet owner? Such an o""-nance can't be said to be aimed at respom\. ble breeders since Ufey already have kennel licenses. Reaponaiblt breeders are working with our humane groups; th4'.Y also want to help prevent the proliferation of un- wanted pet~ and to put the blame whetf lt belon11 \nstead of on the shcJ~. RUTH RANKEL THESE TWO statements hap- pen to appear on paees 1 and a respectively of the General Plan Policies for the City of Newport Beach. I defy anyone to !ind a conflict between these at.ate· ments and the wording and in· . tent of the initiative. As a matter of ract. the initiative neither ex- pands nor contracts the •cope and intent of these two General Plan Policies. Ir it can be shown otherwise, I will withdraw my support for the inlUatlve. On the other hand, U such cannot be shown, then thoee who oppose the inlUaUve must, b1 definltion. also oppose those two state· ments Jn the existiog General Plan. U the city bad *n living up to these two policy require- ments, there would haw~ no need for an initiative. DANIEL W. DORY Stlldellt'• '1elo' To the EditDr: l n reference to Goldie Joseph's letter (March 29), maybe il would hurt Amy l.Jtzel it the Jarvis-Gann initiative were passed ln June. I will be 1oiae to Costa Mesa Hlth School nm fall, and in the past have en)Oyed aucb tJUnes as mute aDd athJetJc events, both as an active participa.nl and an observer, and. plan to continue tbem . What lib. Joseph apparently dJd not realile I.I that moat peo- ple wobJttn•t be able to continue with whatever area Oley choolte. Team and competitive aporta, for cx~le; end private leaaons tutor!lnt ln muslc hal)pen to be ttry ~~ns1ve. Peopi. Wllh'1 it IOt Of talent may , mlas out on c n 1n tbeae Oelds aornedi(. It ia unf aJr for Pf:Ople ~bo ap~rcnl.lj ·do not •now what lb i are talttns abC>ut to rW.o Jt for tho r t OI ua. DIANE DIETZEL 'f - Saddlebaek I FFeeway .,.,., "'9 IWI ....... LITTERED LAND NEAR FREEWAY AT ALICIA PARKWAY In Seddleback Valley, the Weeda Hide the Tralh Article Says Nuke '" Device· Lost by GIA I NEW YORK <APl -An arti-cle In a Dltr mapllne ~ by Rolllna Stone allei-that a nuclear~ered device wu lost ln ~on a lnmalayan moun- -tainslde by a Central lntellfeen-cy Agency expeditlon trying to set up a tl'aoldng station to monitor Odnese activities. Af'cording to the story in Out.aide, the CIA eroup was try- ing to scale a 25,MS-root moon· tain called Nanda Devi and code-named Blue Mountain, but was forced by bed weather to live usHbe attempt about 2,000 feet below the summit. The cllmben, hoping to return when the weather improved, stored the nuclear SNAP 1enerator, which was to power tbe tracking station, among some roeb and it was buried in an avalanche, says the article In the May bsUe cl the ma1uine. Tbe atory. by Howard Kiibn, •8'• tile CIA made an attempt ln 19'1 to retrieve the eenerator, but was unsuccessfUJ. It sa)"ll the ruel rods in the generator con- tained ptutooium-238 "which re- mains dangerously radioactive ror 300 to 500 years and even lf the SNAP generator had sur-vt•~ the avalanche in!act, it.a outer shell would eventually corrode and release its poisonous core." The .story says that the spring thaw on the soutbetn slope of the mobnlain -where the generator was buried -is a ma- jor source of Vtater for the Ganges River and aays that if the radioactive material <See CIA, Page A?> Daredevil Knievel Released From Jail LOS ANGELES (AP) -Evel lt.nievel walked out of jail today into a tanale ol financial and le&al problems. But bis publicist says thiqs will be jumpinc qaln soon for t.be daredevil C:oast Wea1•er lloatly eloucly tb.routh TbundaJ' mornine, with 20 percent ebance of meuurable precipltatiod" early TbUradaJ. Low1 tontabt ill mt~. Blab. n"raday rrom low sos near the ·eout to Plid-GOI 1riWad. IN IDE T8D~Y motorcyclist. Dressed in a aray •Port 1uit, the self-styled "professi6nal life risker" stepped into a late model aedan reportedly contain- ing hi• wife and Wll dri'HD away. Knievel, 38, served a UWe less than five months of a slx·moath jail term imposed after be pleaded guilty to auaulttna telnllion executive Sbldon Saltman '#ith a baseball bat. Jtnlevel said be assaulted Saltmu because or ~r.dl1 llbelo material con~-~· book Saltman wrote after wort· inl U a Jm)mOter OG Knievel's wiaucceaful roctet-e7ele leap over the Silake B.tv• Gorp ln tclabo. • .. I feel that the .iortb ol • clety have und9r•t~, the reuom tot 011 action,•• AWevel Pld. He obfJtended h1I lDCaraeta• cs.. &NIEVELJ p Al) 88ddlebiclr Valley restd ti are tbenkful {Of' tM weeds aloN the Sdh Ana fl'ree-U that blsectl the pl.inried aftd '"11- kept commmdties Ill El ns:o. Mlulon Viejo and La&Un• Rllla. The weeds, one eommulli\y or- 1anbat!Ofl spokesman pointed out thll week, are creen -and tbey bide the years of ac- cumulated trash alone on and orf ramps. • m Saddleback Area Coordinating Couneil (SACO> and Saddlebact Valley Cbamber ol Commerce eucuilve boards report they are fed up with rreeway care in the south coulity. The chamber board recently ordered it.a mana1er, Sharon Figeria, to write to county supervllon Ralph Diedrich and Thomas Riley and state As- semblyman Ron Cordova, D-El Toro, to (et somethtnf done about the piles oftraab. . On Monday, the SACC board ordered lta loaa-raaie plaa:nlna committee to lnvesttaa~ bow to protest the lack of state f~ planting and roadside main- tenance in the area. The SACC acUon f.oUowed a r eport by executive board member Harold Beck who re- cently retumec1 ftom an ~ TEN CENT tri~ ud reportAtd bow beautil\d· ly planted and kept the freewa1I are nordl d Loe An&elu . 0 LaDdsapiac (locall:y) b 10 bad," aald Beck, .. you don•t notice the papen aloq aide the freewa,s anymore." Chamber mana1er Fi1erta said, "R'a a clla,race. Plumed comnumlty malntenace m8ba the comnumttla trcwseom. bat <See urru. .... AJ) Corridor Endorsed Ali.so Creek Route Wins Planners' Blessing Years of study ended Tuesday when the Orange County Plan- ning Commission endorsed plans for a 19-mile open space and recreation corridor along Aliso Creek. The so-called rorest to the sea corridor will run 11>ughly from Cook's Comer through El Toro and Laguna Hills to Aliso Beach Park in South Laguna. Plans call for about 20 miles of bicycle trails as well as Ul.5 miles of horse tram to be built along the corridor. " Supporters Of Jarvis -Drop~Poll SAN FRANCISCO CAP ) - More Californians have heard ol the Jarvis-Ganu initiative than iD February but Lbe ,..iic> ol sup- port tor tbe eartro9enlal &es· relief measunt ha dropped, ac· cor~ to tile California Poll. (.Related story I A 1) TIM ~. cmduCt.ed March n-Aprtl .~1'JIJ pollster Memn Fleld, 1b9'ffed about four of every ftve.pOtedUal voters, or '19 percent, 181 tbeJ are aware ol f ropo1itjob 13, 1'hlle ln Febl'uary onlY S6 perc4'nt knew about ll About baU the state'$ elec- torate, 52 percent. acknowleclees an opinion on the issue. Some 27 percent say they favor the ln- itiatlve while 25 percent say• they opposeil SiX weeks ago when only 30 perc~nt or the electorate bad an oplblon on Jarvis-Gann, 20 per- cent ravored lt and 10 percent opposedlt. U Proposition 13 passes, an· naal property lazes throughout the state would be cut by about $7 billion. It quallfied for the June 6 ballot when organizers g athered an impressive 1.5 million si1n1atures last year in a relatively short time period. Some 73 percent agreed with the Proposition 13 areument that "local aovernments can get by on lot leu money" and 70 per- cent felt that the initiative "is the only way to send a stronc mess11e to eovernment that people are fed up with high tax· es and too much government spending." The poll is based on 1,252 telephone interviews with men and women who formed a "repl'eSelltative crou-sectloo ol California adult public" Field said •. And ~ along what bas already been declared a priority open space planning area will be a series ol local and regional parks. Before any of those plans move to reality, however, the County Board of Supervisors must follow the Planning Com· mission's unanimous recom- mendation that the concept plan be adopted. If and when that approval comes, 1)tannen will becin workini oo more precise plans for turning the creek area into a usable open space and recrea- tion corridor. Much of the concept plan en· dorsed by the commission is the handiwork of two study groups, a special UC Irvine atucly team a nd the Saddlebaclt Area Coordinating Council. When endorsing the plan in a r~olulion that will go to the B~ard oC Supervisors, the Plan- ning ComrniasiOP concluded U. Aliso Creek strategy will: 1#---SUN PHOTO SHOWS SOLAR FLARE (ARROW) , Widespread R•dfo Blackout•• PoutblUty Solar SDafu Radio BlackoubJ Threatened BOUL1>ER, Colo. <AP> -The most violent solar flare in nearly four yean could cause radio signal blackouts, telepbooe circuit outaaes and displays ol the northern lleht.a in the world's northern latitudes tb1s week, the National Oceanic and Al· mospbertc Ad.mlnistraUon said. A sPokesman for American Telephone and Telegraph Com- pany, however, said U.S. customers probably will not notice any lapse iD telephone circuita. The Oare wu detected Tuesday by NOAA satellites orbltint 22,SOO miles above the Earth, the agency said. Carl Posey, a 1poteaman ror NOAA'• EnviromDental Research Laboratocy bere, said the ntre will produce a storm ln the Earth's mapetlc field, resultin1 ln radio sienala beiDI abeorbed tatherthan refiected. belfrmlng TbUJ'Sday. He predicted widespread telephone cireult outacea and 1ald aurora borealis displays -the northern Uibta -would be Yial· ble in many areas north of an east-west Jlne that would pau tbrouih Qdcago and even in some places llOUtb ol that llne. , .. Ana:heim Elects Mayor Seymour, Top Vote Getter, Fuu Seat , -"Promote the preservatian and enhancement" ot the natw-a.l character ol Aliso Creek. -Coordinate the etrorta of nrious public and p11vate i. tereats ln the corridor area. --Provide the means to furnish altemative methods ol transportation, including bicycle and horse trials, along the creek route. -Encourage use of Aliso Creek as a regional recrea· tlon faeJlity. YiejoMan Cleared iR Fraud Trial A Milsi°" Viejo man wu ac-QUittecl Tuelday by a San Dleeo Federal c.ourt Jury on ebarps eont.a.iDed bl a 22-eoaDt federal arPd J1117 a.uctmeet bwol'Villa alle,ed land aalea fraud in Mbona a Okl•bmna. Emmmel 8lqer' 52, ol 2111821 Caotllaa Drive, Md Robert Oan· -..00, 15, iild AlriD llcColl•nn, 58, ~~Pboemx, were all fowid t cl the cbaraes tollo1rias jury dellberatiom tba& began Saturday, All are former executives ol Consolidated Mortaaae Corp., a Pboen.ix-bMed land sales com- pan). A 22-eount rederal grand jury indictment returned in Sep- tember, 19'1'1, accused the three and others of takinl part ln an $18 millloo swindle. William Nathan, 41, of ,Houston, also a Consolidated of. fleer, pleaded guilty to mail fraud midway tbrouih tbe trial and will be sentenced Monday iD Phoenix. Another defendant, confessed land fraud fipre Ned Warren Sr., 84, fleaded IUilty to one count o mail fraud weeks before the trial began. He was aentenced to five years in federal prisoo. Warren is in Arizona State Prison sentng a 50 to 84--year aenteace after plead.Ing fu.ilty to 20 counts ol land fraud and two count.I ol bribery In connect•oo with bla involvement with a firm that 1old Arizona land to tetvlcemen stationed tn the Far ·Eut. Tu~'• acquittal of stn&er, ll~Uwn and G•mnlson came after a li.s-week trial that was moved from the Pboenix area becauae of potentially pteJ· udiclal pre-trial publicl&y. • •I SpltS~ STUDIO CITY (AP> -A •icuture drive bu be11111 in IUP~ ti a petition to le~ the San Fei"Dando Vtiley troin t.be dtY ti Loe ADcfiel, •• I • __ ed to Die' By TOii aA.al,O .. ..., ..... A defense wllneH l• lite murder trial ol Dr. Willlam Bu· ter W add.lll -..Ufled Tuaday dial m.., tof~ af9 aUowtid ta d.i• when tM ~r beUeYe. manlve brain d&11llle may bave been austahled before or durlnl birth. Dr. John H . llenkH, a pediatric neurololist flown._. O'om I .CJDdoa to W1U11 for Wed· 4111. told the OraDI• Coun\)' Superior Court jUlJ fll "a clMlic situation" be niceotly witn•ed ln London The apecta.l.lst aald a bniD- cSamllfld babJ 9itb a d1M1aed aplDal Cord waa ~ to di• '1 au.d1nl dodon wbo made oo effort to aave tbe t1ltna child. ''Tb• doeton dedded. Some-one b• t.c>4D ttllDee tbepreota ean'\.••..-.Nld. Tbe tll• ot Jile or death for lDf anta that could face life u lit- tle more than human vecetablef ho filled many pa1et lD the tr8'DIC!rlpta a trial that beau more than two IDCll1tu .. o. It anJM ... ~ when lleokea appeared to defend Waddill'• eoaduct wben the et· cuaed pb;Jsldan cleared bospltal ataff out of the Weatmlnlter 1'1ny-Sees Idol Rock Star Geta New Fan WASlDNGTON <AP) -Shaun Cassidy, the new pop-rock idol of the teen set, has a new ran -10- year-old Amy Carter. President Carter's daughter and 11-year-old Kathleen O'Keeffe, daughter of a White House aide, went together to a Cassidy concert Tuesday night at the suburban Capital Centre. Their outing followed by a few ttours a White House visit by Cassidy, star of television's "The Hardy Boys" program, during which he met both the president and Mrs. Carter. .Cassidy also ate lunch in the Navy-operated White House mess where be created far more stir than woUld a Cabinet officer. One secretary who ate with him said the actor- singer was besieged by men and women seeking autographs, ostensibly for their children. Bonfa Ousted in HB Municipal Election Gail Hutton scored a landslide victory over incumbent Don Bonra and cballen1er Jerry Bame in Tueaday'a election for the Hunttnaton Beacb city at- torney job. Mra. Hutton. 41, la the ftnt woman to be elected Hun~ Beacb Clty attorney. Bonfa be1d the post for the put 10 years without a aln1le election cbaUenae. Here AN the anoftlclal city at- torney raee rmulta: Gall IWI•, 1,380 (elected) Jerry Bame, 5.317 Don Bania, 1,514 (incumbent) A deputy city attorney in San- ta Ana for tbe put four years, Mrs. Hutton lashed out at Bon· fa's record ln otftce from tho start of her campaign. Mn. Hutton accused Bonfa ol inconsiateot declalooa and a poor track record on city lawsuits. * * * Challengers Picked for HD Council Huntlnwton Beacb voters picked four new City Councll memben and ousted two incmn· beota in Tuesday's municipal election. Auto repair abop owner Bob Mandie, 38. outpoUecl 1S other City Q>uncU bopefull. John A. Tbomu, 38, a crane and truck- inl firm owner. placed MCODd lD tber-.ce. Community ac:tl•l•t Ruth Bailey, 52, and Huotlnaton Beach UnkJD Hl&b School Dis· trict TnJStM Don MacAlllater, 45, flnllbed tblrd and fourth, respeetlvely. Twenty .. per-een~t or 15,805 ol tbe ~lty'a 77,703 re1t1tered voten cut b81.lota lD the elec- tion. aald Clty Clerk Allcla Wentwol1h. DAILY PILOT She allo attacked the costs ol outside lqal aervic:e1 cbaraed to the elty. "I can cut those outside fees " Jira. RUtton atated after the electloa. · Mra. Hutton criticized cballen1er Bame's lack of municipal experience. The altGmey post winner col· lected lbcJUt Sf0,000 lD campaip fa.ads &.Dd loaoed herself in eatt•at•d $11,000 of tbat amount. Her campal1n ~~ndlDI la believed to be tbe billMSt by a slllile ctndlclate in the clly'a &ia- tory. Jin. HuUm nid abe ptana to bold futm'e fund-ralsen to pay bac-loam for her campatan. ¥r1. Hutton said the over- wbelmlna defeat of lncambent Boafl meat ••the people ol tbll community are dalroua ol a cban•e -tbe voters have spOked.-'' Mn. Hutton said she plarus to start her new job next Monday. Bame, who wu endorsed by the Huntmaton Beach Chamber of Cosmneree, flDlabed a poor second to Mn. Hutton. And Dame's law firm partner, Al Coen, also a Chamber en-donee, ,,.. defeated lD hla bid for a fourth term on the Hunt· inlton Bnch Clty Council. 4NBCouncil Seats Won by Chal,'lengen By JOANNE UYNOLDI °' • ...., .......... Paul Hummel, Donald Strau11. lackle Heather and Evelyn Hart won aeata on the Newport Beach City Councll Tuelcfay in an election that drew one of the liptest turnouts in re- cent times. Community Hoepltal nunery wltb tbe reported comment: "Don't anyone do a God damn tblnl for tbat baby." 1t la alleted by the p~ution tb1t Waddill, 42. of H~ Harbour, tben 1trao1led a newborn i.nfant lD lta crib after' predlcllnl that it muat have auf · fered muaive brain damate from lta Iona lmmefllon 10 saline. W addlU inJected aallne into tbe 11-year-old mother lD a bid to abort &.be infant 'Vla an abor- tion procedure that bad never previously bactftred on blm. Menkea told the Jury that be mipt have act.eel in the aame way lf be bad been faced with a nunery full of nuraea at aucb a crlUcal momenl "It's the kind of decision that all doctors must make at some time in their careers," be said. And tbe witness made It clear that if Waddlll bad allowed a baby tMt appeued to be losinl it.a battle for Ule to die be would have no criticism of that de- cision. Heavy El Toro resident.9 would rather pay higher sewage-disposal bWs on a schedule favoring those wbo use large amounts of water rather than t.boM wbo conserve the commodity. a recent poll bas revealed. Los AliS09 Water I>Utrict of- ficials' study to determine pre-fe r r ed methods of raising sewa1e reea based on water usa1e shows that more than ball the sewer usen returning a poll· ing card prefer Plan B, one of three options offered. A public beariq on proposed aewer rate bikes la seMduled by dlatrtct dlrettora at 7 o'clock tonl1bt in the Lake Forest Beach and TeDDil Club. 22921 Ridge Route Drive, J!!l Toro. A similar bearlna on Feb. 9 re- sulted in the emotional rejection of both metboda proposed for rate hikes at that time. Those proposals, Plan A and B, were included u options in the pOl.l malled to 5,300 sewer oaen last month. Added to the lilt wu a comprombe rate pro- posal known .. Plan c. A district apobsmu aald to. day that 1,.218 of the poll cards were marked and returned, about a~ ol thole mailed out. About 218 ~t ol the people votln1 preferred Plan A, one that would raise the averal(e Van Hooten Jory Hean Testimony LOS ANGEL~ (AP) -The defense strateo of "diminished capacity" came under attack when former Charles Mamon cult member Lindi Kasabiao testified Leslie Van Houten "ap. peared to be In contJ'ol of beraelr' the DJ.abt of the La Blanca murders in 11169. llra. Kuabian also testified Tuead1Y tbat llbs Van Houten wu not mder the influence of dru11 on the ni1bt of the murden of Leno and Rotemary La Blanca. However. under croas ex- amination by defense attorney Maxwell Keith, Jira. Kaaabian conceded that Mahlon, current- ly aervt.ng life Imprisonment, domlnated Ute at the Spahn Ranch where be and bis followen lived du.rlnl tbe aum- mer of 1188. p,....p ... AJ MAYOR ••• montblJ. Loa Alamltoa Toten elected Incumbent Kenneth Zommlck and newcomers nm Bunner and David Lander to elty COUDd1 terms. Tbe top vote leUerl tallied 1'70, -and IDJ voa.. rwtectl,. ly .. • perceat ot the cii;J'• 5.0ll en,ible vaten tll1Md out at the pioUa. . ,..... .... A.J UTl'EB ••• Sweetl6? A m otorist approaching this curve at Myford Road and Walnut Avenue in Irvine couldn't be blamed ror wondering why the sign suggests the odd speed of 16 miles per hour. The reason, clty officials say, is simple: to catch the driver's atten- tion. They explain that the 90-de&tM curve's danger is increased by the fact that it occurs at a place in the road where a motorist wouldn't expect it. The sip, they said, seems to be effective. Water Usage Favored water user's sewer bill about 50 cents enry two monlha but which would mean even bluer bikes ror persons who use less water than average. More than 21 percent or those relurning the poll card prefer Plan C. the compromise plan that would bike the average rate 50 cents every two months but would pena1Ue tboae wbo use more water than normal at even hlgher rates. Plan B, the one most pre- ferred, would raise the average F,....PflfleAJ CIA ••• reached the Ganges "it could cause cancer in anyone who drank even microscopi c amounts or ate cootammated fish." According to the article. another CIA expedition to a nel&bborlna mountain lD 1967 was more aucceuful and a nuclear-powered tracklna sla· tion wu establl.ahed. The story aays the CIA'• In- dian counterpart, the Central Bureau of lnve~atlon, was aware <A the expedition but was asked not to inform the eovem· ment of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi It says.President Johnson was given a "general outline" of the eiu>edltion, but says the White Houae W-5 not told of the CIA's decision to abandon the search fol' the loet generator. Reps. Ric bard Ottinger, D· N. Y., and John DlngeU, D· Micb., ask,,cl President Carttr in a letter today to "tnveaftiate· this matter and inform us fully of your ftodinp. If the article is in fact accurate, we stron1ly uree that this nation take whatever atepa may be necessary to resolve this serious and embarrassinl situation.•• user's water rate only 21 cent.. Sixteen cards were repon.ectJ.y returned sbcnvlnl that none of the proposed rate structures are acceptable. "Six came back with nasty eomments," a spokesman said. "Ei&ht wanted 'the cheapest' rate," the spokesman added. Currently, the avera1e El Toro area homeowner ii billed about $21.58 for water uae and s ew aae disposal every two months. District officiall claim, however, that current aew .. e rates are not paytq for aewqe operations. Toro MmU:al, 'South Pad/ic' Set for May El Toro fllgb School's produc· tion of "South Paclflc" is sebeduled for I p .m. May 3 through May 8 and at 2:30 p.m. on May 7 in the school's Charger hall. Ti ctets, which can be parcbued at the door, are t3 for adults and $1.50 for El Toro stu· dents and children a1ea 4 through 14.. The Rogers and Hammerstein musical is the story <A two )'OW'lg Americans from different back· grounds who have been transported in defenae of their country to a new environment, Melanie Harrie and John Krueuer star in the leading roles. Supporting roles are portrayed by Brent Coviqton, Norma Soto and Barbara Co· vineton. Others in the cast are Tom . McKee, Scott Schell and Kelly McBride. The production is being coordinated by Ruth Mader. At the Feb. 9 beariq, former Aliso Valley Homeownen >..- sociatlon preaideot Bill llillan char1ed that-the boerd mi&ht be aubsldlzinl admilllatraUon of aewa1e and water fac:Wt;y eon- atruction at the expense ot resi- dents and 1u11eated tbat homeownen aeev.re an attorney for leaal advice. ,, .......... ) KNIEVEL ••• tion would not lel'Ve .. u a deter- rent to others." Knievel's early release was due to bis &ood behavior, said Sheriff's U . Joseph Race. Publlci.at Stan Rosenfield said one of the first problems Knievel will bave to face la a civil suit flied by Saltman for an UD· d.lacloaed aum: Roeenfield'noted, however, that Knievel bas filed a $210 million libel suit ap1.mt Saltman and bi9publiahers. "Evel'1 ~ to have a lot ol expenses In attorneys' fees/' Rosenfield said. "He does not have money to pay attorDeya' fees unleu be aella aome proper- t.¥. And lf the judament ~ a1ainst him. be eoial w baft to dip Into bis pockets. "But, aa ol tomorrow be will start aeneratin& income qain and I've never seen anyone wbo can 1eo«ate income faster than be can," Rosenfield said Tues· day. In addition, Rosenfield aaid, Knievel owes about $800,000 in back taxes. And Knievel no loneer baa money coming in from Evel Knievel toys, after lbe Ideal Toy Company diacon· linued tbe line due to the nature of his crime. Knievel bas IDDOUDced plans to jump into a haystack without a parachute from an airplane at 40 .ooo feet on an unspecified date. • • ' l I 97 il&iS lll!l'CQU ............. Twe JeV.Ol Davld Bl•• 1at• n4.,-lD La 1u•a .Nlcu•l tb.at bl• sradldlilr• term u P"'ldmt WUD •t Ule peaeetu) period lt'I often Nmlllll1-ed ... .. It was an emotliaa1I time, .. JOUJll J:IMahower told abl>ut to m•mben of tb• Soutb Laa~ Rotary Club. •:•Looi"'nf t>.ek 00 tboM yan. I ..... fOUDll that lt WU not tbe placid. eatm decade tb1t people nottalslull7 remember today.'' be 1m.4. Tb• Ca~1tnno Beacb real· deut •prlntled hll balf·bout ~ «t the Dwiiht D. ~lleilboWer admiolstratlon with aames,dates&Ddcootrovenles~ tbol•,..,.. Tbe former Philadelphia Bulletlu a~rtawrlter i1 now writlnl a btoCnphy about bl.a IJ'andfalber. a talk that be say> hu required months of research and soul searching. "OrlctnaJ.ly I thought I would be maldnt a statement of my own ln the book -perhaps about the question of power - its proper boundaries. its uaes." But, be said, the biography haa become more objective, and, Judging from the presenta- tion Tueeday. Ebenhower has done his hUtorical homework. He spends 10 hours a day on the biosrapby, be said, workin& ...................... 1NO PEACEFUL TIME• David a .. nhower out of his Beach Row home in Capistrano Beach. "I work from 1 ln the mornln to 1 p.m., then I tee up on th folf course," the avid 101le oked . He's back at th typewriter at 7 p.m. and wor until 11 p.m. Tbe results of bis research writing have led him to re tbe notloa ol a &lmpto Ute led ~ Amerlcan1 durln1 tbe Ellen.bower years. -He palD&od *° tbe be1iiui•: of ~merlcan lnvolveaieat In ~etnam tooftlct 1n U$, 1Qt.ol ' Orandd.14 b..s to balabce what the U .s. t'OUld afford financially and mlliUUilYworldwtde " -He Hid" the 1.taOa were a Um• "where we Uv'4 µi the at.omlc ap -a time wbeJl the wbole world coWd be destroyed lo a minute.•• -He talked about the Korun eonUlct when Prealdeot EiHDbower aald be we>tild not rule out atomic weapons to end that lncideot. -Ue discu ssed bis srandJalber'• efforts to 1a1n de-tente with the Sovlell in 1955 "oo OU.I" terms.'' -He described 1957 u "tbe year of Sputnik, brlngln1 on tbe space nee and tbe luue ~ ln· ternatJooal prestiJe." -He mentioned McCartbJism, tbe U-2 spy plane incident, the Red Chlneae split with the Russians, Khrushchev's visit to the United States and his grandfather's trip around the world the same year. "It was not the easy era that Amerl'ca.na remember today," Eisenhower said. "Assuming there wu an Eisenhower era, It was when his personal and political life set an example for the country." ----------------r --------~ ~~ w NBC Sued Sopervis' rs Back By Inventor For Slander Damaiee totaling $11 million were demanded Tuesday from the N aUonal Broadcasting Co{ll· pany and veteran neWicuter David Brinltley by the Inventor of a rat control device who claims be wm, slandered in a re- cent Channel 4 broadcast. The <>ranee County Superior Court lanuit filed by Solara Electronics Inc . names new1man George Lewis of NBC'• radio network and radio _ station KNBC as codefendanta. The company claims that Brinkley made comments ad· verse to their electronic rodent control device by tellln& viewers during a Channel 4 newscast: "It's a nice idea but the govem- mentaayaitdoesn't work." It ls allesed that Lewis told llatenen to the radio 1tation new1cut that private industry and a 1overnment acency ln Houston had experimented with the Solara device and found it to be unsatisfactory. Spokesmen for tbe televL!ion and radio ouUeta of NBC are declining comment on the lawsuit unW their lawyers have bad a chance to examine the complaJnL Cycle Bandit Robs Market A gunman who roared up oo a dirt bike motorcycle and yanked a lady•a nylon 1tockln1 mask over hll face ~ a Hunt· instoa Beach comer market of $55 late '1\lesclay and aped away. Police Hid clerk Toni Mase was confronted about 10:20 p.m. in the 7-Eleven Market at Bu1bard Street and Hamilton Avenue by t.be bandit, who bran-· dbbed a .22 callber revolver. She wu fOl'Ced to place the me>MY ID a brown paper IJ'OCeJ'Y bat by the armed robber, who then s)lli.Dted to bi.I motorcycle and roared away into the night. I Adding The California Judicial cil believes Orange Cou Superior Court needs 10 n jud1es. Assemblyman Ricba d Robinson{ D-Santa Ana, s authored egislation that w d add five. And Orange Coun y .superviaors have offered talive suppdrt to tbe additl two Superior Court judges. Even with that, howe Supervisor Ralph Clark Tuesday be opposed incre the 40-judge court at all the state legislature picks u of tbe $250,000 per year aty officials estimate it cot to flnance one new courtroom. And Clark's fellow b rd 2 Carpenter Bills Killed SACRAMENTO <AP> Assembly committee has two law-and-order bills b ked by Attorney General E Younger. The two bills sponsor Sen. Dennis Carpente R· Newport Beach, failed to et a motion tor~ pusage Mon y In the Assembly Criminal ce Committee. One of the bllls woul have restricted tbe pracUce o Jea. bargainina ln which proe4ulton accept a guilty plea to a charge rather than 10 long and uncertaln bial original cbar&e. The would have prohibited people previoull)' convi crimes such u murder. Carpenter sponsored for fellow Republican who is seeldn1 hls gubernatorial oomlnatl woJodges members said they might withdraw their support of a two- judee addition depending upon the outcome of property tax limitation measure8'Wl the June election ballot. Supervisors have long con· tended that the state contributes too little -$60,000 a year tor each judicial post. But eowtting the cost of added bailiff, clerks and other ex- penses needed to support each new judp, county olficials place the annual coet per court at about $250,000. Supervisors Chairman Thom as Riley said Tuesday it waa hll undentanding that Gov· emor Edmund Brown Jr. also s upported addition of two judges. · Even U Je1Ialation crealin& the new posts ls passed, aupervtaors have to approve a resolution calling upon the gov· ernor to make judicial appoint· me1'LI belote the bew court posi· tlona would be ftlled. Aili,ng Seal Saved in SF SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -A painfully sick 400-pound northern elephant seal which crawled ashore on a boat· launching ramp has been rescued and boepltallzed at the Callfomia Marine Mammal Center. Marc Webber. curator of animals at tbe center. said the seal bad open aoree covering its body and wee patcbel of fur mlasln1 -the symptoms of a potentially fatal yeut lnfectioo called "candida." Bob..Reed • aecurlty officer at Sao 'Y'ranciaco's Bethlehem Steel Sblpyard, said be aaw the 1eal 1tru11le onto the ramp Monday. prompted, Butrup 1ald. by M'feral tramc aecldatl tnvol•· 'Ln• police can. He aid the 1tricl rulim a1m to pl'e'itnt acc:l· denll that ~ure ct.Wans and pollc•~ Janam. ncawtinl a~ of tbe ... pc>1.lcy, said "I tb1nJc • ean live with many of tbe cben111 like ~ rammru1. l don't wilit to have to ram a car l:D1ielt. It ia danaerous. '.' "But "hit lidded "I dOn't wasit tO tie ti.. b.aDdl of the omccr In the fteld 4iltbei'.'' Lo1 !:Zele. Police Dti>att· ment C . WUllam Booth-Mild puraulta tn Los An1ele1 ate limited to two vtblclH. lie adclod that cber. are DO ~ Uralta lmpoeed on offlcera .,.. bllh·•P••4 cha••• tbrouab rnlden lielabborboodl an Assessed Oraace eowiuana are toalnl out an esUmated 7 .$ pounds ol U'utt per persoo per ~~!ii, or about 2.4 mlllloa toa.s ann . And lf county plana so u ex- P-ected. there will be enou,h dumpln1 apace ln the county to bury the Industrial, resldeDtlal and b-1neu refuse tbn>uih at least tbe year 2010. An ll·member committee composed of clUaens. 1ovem· ment offtciall and trash baulen gave tbole ltatistica in a report to supen1.aon Tuesday. They based their 32-year trash disposal projection on county plans to replace two refuae landfills set to clOM wtthln the next three years. The Coyote Canyon laodflll in the Irvine area b to close In 1911 and county officials are prepar- inc an envtromnental impact re- port for Its replacement ln Bee and Round Canyons northeut ol El Toro. In addition, the OliJid• lJDdftll in the Brea area will be filled ln about 18 months, the report said, and ls to be replaced with a new alte on acij1cent land. The 11-member committee also propoeecl possible improve- ments in aervlce at the county's three traah transfer stations in efforts to bold down coats to commercial haulers. But supervisors said they would wait before considering increased services unUl leamlng the outcome of the Jarvis-Oann property tax limitatlon lnltJative before voters in June. The board also asked a com- mittee~ county administrators to review the county's traah dis· posal pro1ram with an eye toward levytna fees lf necessary to offset a reduction in property toes if the initiative succeeds. Refuse haulers now pay nothint to use county landfills or trash transfer ataUon.s. The county-operated transter stations allow haulers to unload their smaller trucks into county tractor-trailer nes for carrying to the landfills. Energy Forum Set Thursday In l.ag11na The Alliance for Suntval is hostin1 an enerc forum Thurs-day at 7:30 p.m. in the Laauna Beach Jngh School auditorium, with guest speaken from gov- ernment and nuclear enero in· dustry. Assemblyman Roa Cordova, D-El Toro, will be joined by Mar1aret Hobble ~ Southern California Edison Company and Don Mmy, former president of the Sierra Club and current state di.rector of Friends of the Earth al the forum JDeetin&. Other 1uests include Tom Carr, ~ Bechtel Corp., Pegy Gardell, California coordinator of Solar Cal, and Lynn Harris Hicks. director of Group United Against Radiation Danser <GUARD>. For more informaUoo about tbe forum, call 499-3190. Tbe 1ponsorlo1 1roup opposes nuclear power plants. Gem Talk 811 J.C. HUMPHRIES ~t Be'sN0Buaa11 Bruce Edgar. 18, ·bas been tumed. iioWn as a Playboy bunny. The University of Milwaukee freshman, an engineer at the campus radio staUon, may sue the Milwaukee Playboy Club on charges of sex discrimina- tion. His mother is executive director of the Wisconsin Civil Liberties Union. County Repair Bill Totals $3.5 Million ~ Winter rains caused an estimated $ 3.5 million damue to Orange County parks, roadways and flood control facilities, supervisors were told Tuesday. Tbe board aathorized county offictala to begin drawint up plans for repair work, some of which can be financed tb.rou&h federal disaster assistance fundl. Supervisors also approved an estimated $1.8 million worth of erosion control work needed along the Santa Ana Riverbed south of Katella Avenue. The river work will include structures to alow the water'• flow during flooding to prwent eroslon which could jeopardize bridge foundations, uUlity over· crossinp and ~ protection faclllties. Georae Osborne. director ~ the county Environmental Management Agency, said an area of putlcular concern ls t.be severe vertical erosion ln the PotCaaght At M(lllJli,on PALM CITY, Fla. <AP> -A JO.man raiding party converged oo a mansion. arrested 11 people and seiied eight to 10 tons of marijuana, an 8l·fool yacbt, five vehicle. and $17 .600 tn $100 bll11, authorities said. The raid Tuesday came alter round-t,H.elock sur- veillance at tbe 15-room mansion on a seven·f.o.10. acre estate in t.bh Uny clty ln Martin County, said Drug Enforcement Ad· mlolstraUon spokesman Ted Swift. Those arreated were charged with pouessioo of more than 100 pounds ol pot. riverbed between Orangewood Avenue and Garden Grove Boulevard In the Orange areL Osborne noted it was in tbal area that the County Sanitatioo Diatrlcll' trunk aewer was uo- de rm ined and broken last atontb, pumptaa raw sewage ID- to the riverMd and forclns closure ol some beaches. County government 'a most ex- penai v• atorm dama1e thft 'Winter occurred at Caspers Regional Park where rain-swollen creek waters erodecf some areas and washed out the park'• entrance road. Osborne Hid park damage: estimated at Sl.5 million. e noted the damaga may be s ject to future Jqal actlon by tbe county a1ain1t a sand and 1ravel minla1 operator clowutream, wbo la blamed for caualq tbe eroalon. Damqe to o&ber counu parka totaled about '250.000. Osborne said. ...,,. Storm-related damase to COUD· ty flood control cbanne1.s totaled an ear.mated $1.2 million while road amqes were estimated at another $530,000. *' • "'1lf · William Zaun . county manager of road and flood con- trol programs, said tbe flsures IO far are rou8h eatlmates which ma1 be subject to ebange pend- ing study and discussion witb federal disaster authorities. Claudine Sues Over Loan ASPEN. Colo. <AP> -~ talner Claudine Loaget aoes to court in Aspen t.bh week -but not as a defendant. Miu Longet, found IUilty 15 montba a10 of criminally negligent homicide ln the aboot· log ol pro alder Spider Sabich, is suing another Alpea resident for the aUepd non-payment ~ a Joan ahe 11y1 abe made in December, 1976. \ It's aprll I r IMIJtimt#~~ & . . , . ... ';, PAl!IBING fAllADB: Yacbtlmm and other dtiJena GI CJU.r coatal s:ejlob wbo bave a penchant for reautar com· muUD1 . to Hawall were aaddened to team that one al the Wl1' ehan.ctan ol the Jala.nda la pe. HlCh School Harry ii dead. Hi&h School Harry, wbole real name wu HarrJ GlffDI, pnllWiid over a place called the Wlndaoek Lounse . at the KuMpall Aintrtp, above Labeina on the laland o1 Maul. HAn7 wu bardlJ your mine nm ol barlteep. FM one thins be operated what ii probabl7 the world'• t.inlest tne.:O. Located above the operatloua aback at the Kauapall abileld, JOU bad to climb a aplraJ ata.lrcue and mate a trap dool'·llke entrance into Harry's waterin& boi.. ONCB TllBaE, YOU fOUDd yourself Jammed Into a place with no more than six bar stools and about five tables, each no larger than a pie platter. The cloled·ln walls are covered with photos of Harry's former life as a Hollywood bit actor, Ferrari race car lntnpi(I Aviator H~ for High School HCJfT'Jl'I drlver from the 1950s until 1960, and b.ia times rubbin1 elbow• with the famous and infamous. The walls also carry stapled up business cards from people all over the world, attesting to Hip School Harry's lntematiodal reputation as creator of the world's beat Bloody Marys. He actually hated to make them. Harry bad secret ingredients for the drink. When a patron ordered ooe, ll was a painstaking process u be blended the concoction. Sometimes a shaky process, too. Harry bad a wide reputation for sampling b.ia own P~· ucts. Sometimes, as be painfully constructed a Bloody ..Mary, be would comment, "I wish to bell we'd become famous for bourbon and water ... " HIGH 8CBOOL HARRY also bad another claim to fame. He had a reputation of never forgetting the name of a patron. You might have vUited once briefly and then returned two years later. Harry would call you by name. It WU almost creepy. A produet of Hollywood and Fairfax high schools in Los Anples, Givens won bis nickname "High School Harry'' from bis amorous adventures as an lltb grader. He claimed to have been married 12 times. But the nickname stuck for bis lifetime. Rarey Givens suffered a fall at bis home on Good Fri- day, lapeed into a coma and died Easter Sunday. Hb aabea were acattered at sea off Labalna the following Tuesday. · He was~. And ooe of the colorful characters of Hawaii is 1one. ~vulgarity' Nixed In Sch,ool Drama TRENTON, N.J . (AP) - A Princeton Hilb School principal bas the right to censor vulgar re.fe~ces to sexual lnteJ'coqne and bodily waste ln the script of a drama class play, a Sapedor Court judge bu ruled. Judge George Y. Schoch said Tuesday that Principal Georp Petrillo did not violate tbe drama students' constitutional ri&bta to free speech by orderin& the vulgar words deleted from a produc· lion of '"Mooncbildren." Nuclear Test Rocks Desert LAS VEGAS, Nev. <AP> -Baclr·lO·back nuclear teats rocked the Nevada delert Tues· day u two weapons-related de- vices -each pacltlnl at least the destructive force of tlae bombs that devut.ated Japan in World War D -were detonaled deep beneath Pabute Mesa at the Nevada Test Site. • A11tMallatioll Carter's Plan Brings Jeem · Book Ban Brings Suit By Teacher • BOISE, Idaho (AP) -A blah acbool teacher wbo was put on probation for objectlq to re- moval of the novel "One Flew OTer the Cuckoo's Nest" from b1a Eng.llah course bu filed suit to try to 1et the book reinstated. The teacher John Fogarty of St. Anthony, said Tuesday that the suit filed in U.S. DI.strict C~uut names as def end ants S6utb Fremont Rl&b School prin· clpal Clifton Parker, Joint School District 2U and Superin· tendent Duane Handy. THE INCIDENT be&an in December when a pa.rent com- plained of "obscene" lanauqe in the best·eeller by Ken Kesey, which was later made into an Academy Award·wlnnln& fllnl starring Jack Nicholson. School officials ordered the book removed from the clauroom after ob,Jectiom were raised. P'olarty complied. bat objected and was later put on probation by tbe school board. Fo&arty allqes in bis a~t that bis rlpta of free speech were violated by tbe probation and the book banninc. He also says ln the suit that school Qfficiala imposed cemonbip. With lnflatlon already tbreatenlu to beat up · ~ Carter aid tM edmlnlitnb WQUld take the Jud 1D "°1....,, restralnt bY leeldnl t.o bold tbe Dat rouDd ot • .,. Incre.... tor federal ..-.. tQ.. 5.$ petteat In October. CA&TD AJ..80 aaid be would freeze executive aalart• ln the .• ove. emment, \leto lnflaUooary te&ill•tioo.. reduce 1overmnent re1ulatlons tbat add to In· ctuatrtaJ COila, act to bold down tbe price d lumblr 1D ~ conatructtoo, push klialaUoa to contain bolpltaJ care COIU, and take admlndtrative •ctlcm II neceaaary CO curb 1plralln1 ail Imports. Carter named Robert S. Strau11, bl• apeclal trade repr~entative, aa a apeclal couuelor on inflation. But in a speecl\ before the American SocietY al Newspaper Editors and at a followup newa conference, tbe prtaldent warned that lt was 1 myth that the 1ovemment alone -by tblJ and other measures -could bait lnflation. "Let me be bhmt about tblJ point," be laid. "I am ukine American workers to follow the example al federal workers and accept a lower rate of wqe ln- creue. "ID returD, they have a riatJt to expect a comparable reltra1at tn price tnaease1 for the loods and aervkel they buy .•• Hla eoal. umounced previous- ly in bil eeooomlc meaqe ln January. la for lnduatry and labor to bo&d price, ;..1e and aalarJ lDcreases • ... canUy below" the averaae rate of 1976·77. Four Men Queried In Baron's Death ANTWERP, Beleium <AP> - Four men have been arrested ln connection with the kidnap- murder of mult.imillloaalre Baron Charles -Victor. Bracbt, police reported today. The police said the four bad been taken Into custody for ques- U on t n1 and bad not been char1ed yet. .s.nei.,...aA UNITED NATIONS (AP> - The Soviet aove:rnment aceUled the CIA of botdiaa Arkad;J N. f IN SllOBr ) Sbevcbenko under duress, de- manded be be bancled over and today aaid the American preu la covertna up U.S. involvement in tbe dilappearance of the top Soviet U.N. employee. 'ltr•hellft•A .. .,_ PALMER, Alaska (AP) - A stron1 earthquake was recorded olf tu aoutheaat coat of Kodiak lsland in tbe Gulf ol Alaska. bat it waa not atrons ea~u1h to create a tidal waft and U.. were no reporta ol damqe ar lD- jmtea. HOW TO T05lfl.E Snow Due in Minnesota · Freeze a Blessing /or Red Ri-ver r alley ~- '" LO PllC I "*' -,s 41 "*'-"• . • • .n ... ._.. .. 4S .OS .... • • ..... S4 Cl ,,. ....... .. J7 .17 ~-= .. t.I .M ~.,,., • Cl .. ·~ S1 • n • M a.... .. ,. • ..11 O.llMP'L .... .. ., ~ " • Deer.II .. • ,...,.,.... St • ...... • .. ...... • .. ... ........ " • ... ..._... • • ._ocr .. • ~ .. f1 L.-Veellll • 11 on..-.. " ~--.. • ptM ...... .. 6t .n Lea ...... fl 11 ..... 11 n ..,..,.. .. .. .. ... • ., ·===--.. at .. • • =· ..... : • .M -~ .. .. .. • ... .... car-. ,.. # .Ill ........ .. • ... Y_. • • ·" lt.P.T ..... • .. .... • • ·" == .. M Oll ........ O., ., " " 61 .. ,.,_.. .. • ...... 11 ., ...... • .. Tll99 • .. CAM ..... A ., .. .. n • .. ta l • 1· James Thomas, 21, left, escorted by Charles VanGorden of Highland Park, Mich., police, was arraigned Tuesday in tbe slaying of Patricia Cowan, 20, who was blu(lgeoned as she acted a scene from a play tiUcld "Hammer." He was also charged with assault with ln· tenf to murder Ms. Cowan's son, Dequan, 4. Police said Thomas apparently killed the woman ''tor thrills." om Drugs 2 Kids, 'tabs Son to Death FLINT, Mich. (AP) -A woman accused of ctruainl then atally stabbiug ber $-year-old son apparently belleftd be wa a d of s.tan and tl'Ytna to kill her .i.~ccord!DI to a COUit dlcSavit. Pb1il? Ta;ylor, n, a General aoton Corp. research ebemlat, aa an'alped Tnesday In Geaeaee CoulltJ l>iltrtct. QJart GD an n count ol murder in the Sund.aJ alQins of ber aaD. Stepla. the 8Uempted lll1ll'der ol her 10-year-old daqbtet. TBB DAUGB'l'Ea, who wu not named, told police ber brother u ld1led after her ~r bad forced each child to tab 20 pWa ol unideotifled prescription and then atabbed the famUJ doe to ath. Mrs. Taylor WU ordered held in the county Jail wHbout bmcl ndlng a beartq. Mn. Taylot' was cbantiq, "He must die, be muat die" u lhe bbed her son with a butcher knife, a relative who arrtYed at the me during tbe lneldeDt told police, aceordlq to the aflldarit. TBB a.Bl.A111VE, lclentifted only u a woman, wmlOed tbe e from Mn. Taylor'• hand, the documet uld, but Mn. TaPw another mite from a kiteben drawv and CGDU11md at8*n• child. ,,., Homldde det.edlves aaid an aldopsJ aboncl Stt(lllea died u woanda in the back mid chest. Tbe dlQlbter, ~ nfteriq from the aJlepd OHl&ee mecUcaticm. WM -listed ID atisfaet.ary eondtUOD at lleWrin ospltal In Film Tuesda • = ... DlllJ Plat tDad 11 I ,,__ ........... . ,...,.....,.,..., ............ . . ............. -· tTUDY ,,. ADI. ,,.. ...., Niii .... ......,food ......... .. .. .......... food ... ..... ........ ...,, .... .,., .... -.......................... .......................... .... Keep ......... __ ..... .................. ~ .. ... .... .................. . .............. ,.. .... ,, .•. cu,,..~cap .. , ... :cenc. fM" H8'••· '-.., ................... lllclcel .................. .. ............... _,.. Mop. .... ,..~ ............ ... = .. =··••dlll .. OlllYPlll llr~dlllll ..................... ,.,, ... ,,.... dllll c11111na a. ,. ,..,. You'W lftCI __, ln•e••• _. ............... ,......., ...... u. l I 0ra"98 Coast Daily Pilot Editorial P!MJ.e : ...... 1111!111 ........ llllllil .................................. . ..... Wedhledly ... 112, 1871 Robett N. w..d/Publllhff ~I Keevll/EelltOf ~ra Krelbtch/EdltDrlel Page E~tor Opell Space Gifts Can Be Expensive M~oo Viejo Munldpal Advltory Council members unanimously recommended Monday that the county refrain from accepUng gifts ot slopes, road medians or park sites from the Mission Viejo Company from now Wt· iil next September. The practice of dedicalinC such land to the county for maintenance and upkeep is common in the south county area. The MAC's concern sf.ems from unc~ty over the impact of the Jarvis-Gann property tax limitatioo in· itialive if it passes next June. As MAC member John Noble argues, if the initiaUve passes, county o!fldals say they will not be able to main· tain existing slopes, road medians and parks. But the MAC's action raises some interesting ques- tions about the impact of Jarvis-Gann on private en- terprise. If the initiative passes and the county is unable to ac· cept any more open space, park-use t ypea of land, would that driv~ the Mission Viejo Company, for example, to re- consider the design of the planned community? Obviomly, economi~s could force a change in plans for sweeping slopes or vast parks if the cou.oty is unable to assume maintenance and upkeep expenses. The company itself is still investigating the potential Impacts of the J~is-Gann initiative. But one thing is c:l,ar: The implications of the prop. erty tax limitation imt.iative go much deeper than tax ,reductions or a lowering of county, school and city &ervices. Why -Pass the Buck? It would be a mistake if the Irvine City Council, after .a floundering effort to resolve complaints about the city 'community services department. creates a new commit- tee to do the same thlng. It would be like a drowning man saving himself by passing a weight ta the next man. The council already has a community services com· mission to oversee the activities and administration of the department. Assessment of the department has been ragged ..since it was formed earlier thi$ year in response to numerous, mostly vague, complaints from residents about the scheduling and availability of city recreation facilities. It seems the commission could, with the help of the city staff -including the city manager-act as its own commit· tee to solve these administrative problems. They don't seem to be of consuming proportion. That, coupled with the examples of competthUy rwi programs of neighboring cities, should sort things out without an added layer of bureaucratic back-passing. The Price of· Office, Saddlcback College Trustee Donna Berry threatened last week to quit rather than file an econmruc disclosurie of her family's investments and income. The disclosure is required under a recently approved district conflict of in· terest code. Mrs. Berry contends that her and her famiJy's busl· ness are private matters and should not be opened up for public display. She argues that anyone can come in "off tbe street" and take up college workers' time asking to look at her personal records. Mrs. Berry calls that a waste of tax· payers' money and an invasion of her privacy. While privacy is becoming more of a legally rec· ognizcd right in this age of vast, computerized stockpiles of information, we believe public officials ran into a special category. When a person has voluntarily sought an office that allows him or her to conduct the public's business -in this case, a multi-million dollar business -the public has a right to know of possible conflicts of interest. Not that the filin g of an economic disclosure state- ment automatically guarantees that an elected official will operate as a paragon. There are plenty of examples of misconduct in Orange County politics. But the statement does allow the public to know just what an officeholder's personal interest ls. Especially when that interest stands to gain by an action of the of. ficehoJder. While we sympathize with Mrs. Berry's desire for -privacy, she should understand one of the prices one must pay for holding public office. • Opinions expressed in the space abo~ are thOM of the Dalty Piiot Other views expressed on this page are those of their 1uthors and artists. Reader comment Is Invited. Addreas The Dally Pilot. P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 842-<4321 . , Boyd/Divorce ByL.M. BOYD The rmanclal atatus or a divorced man tends to Im· prove somewhat arter the marital breakup. But that'a not true of a divorced woman, evidently. Researcben studied 133 aucb divorced couples. In the four years after their separation•. the men picked up a litUe momentmn in that matter of Dear Gloomy Gus "Oar Jeans Da1" at UCI muat hue been cookod up by the clot.bln1 lnduatry. All &.he atnlChta sttuallnt tbrou1b achool wU.& JIOlhlaC but Ju,hs wUI !lave to ra out alltl ~ tomethinl iv:~A. money, bQt the women lost ground. Wbat Am•rlcan woman alive tocS.y bas had her plc· ture reproduced moN' than any other? Elisabeth T1ylor? Jackie Onaaais? Farreb Fawcelt·Major1t Or bow abo-.L Mra. Anu Turner Cook the ·Chairman of the En1h1b De¥ment at Hillabcnqb Sebool ID Tampa. l"la.? ft • *'Id I WU her lit.nest tha1 ,Wiit so . wl4aly dlltrlbuted •• ~ orl al Gerber babJ. . ' ,....,,, Rowland Evans /Robert Novak Airh11s Deal a Blow to Trade WASHING TON -E11tern Alrlloes' purcb.ue aareement for Z3 European wlde·bodJed airliners is a deal that not Ol)}y delivers anocher 1umn1n1 blow to tlle poor old American dollar but ra11e1 aerioua · questlou of U.S. lnclustrtal aurvival lo the world ol 1ubsidlied forelp ex· ports. .. The A-300 Airbus II ao ex· ceUent plane. but that'• not why Eastern ls buylng lt. Airbus ID• dustrle, a Western European combln e, made an offer- tbat Eastern chairman F r a n k Bormann could not reruse. Tbe prtce was ri1bt because Air4us Industrie ls subsidized by the French gov- ernment, one of Its principal own era. · Altbough the Europeans can· not tn atcb the Americans in cost .. efficient production of com· mercial airhneu, they are apoon-fed government funds to compete in the world market. In the case of the Eutem Airlines deal, the French taxpayer enables planes to be sold far below costs. What makes this dan1erous for the U.S. -and the dollar -is its threat to aerospace exPQrts, one of the last places where Uncle Sam still keeps his head above water in international trade. THIS IS NOT the ancient con· ruct between free trade and pro- tectionis m. Rather , the model ol Japa n . lnc., is being duplicated in Western Europe (France. Inc., in the Airbus deal). Here is a neo-mercantilist system · against which American com- panies a.re helpless playin& by Adam Smith's rules. Tnlcally. this overpowerm, problem has not been addressed at policymakin& levels of the Carter administration. But almost by accident, it Is comiq to the ·attention of worded . Congressmen. A wamlng signal was sounded at a House Banking • aubcomm.llt.M beartna March 17 by J. B. L. PlerH, \reuurer of the B~ Co.: "'We can com· pete with Alrbua and the other European aircraft manufae· turers on coat and technical merits, but we cannot compete with the national tnasuriee of France and Germ&QJ and other European countries." &EP. JllW LEACll of I.wa, a 35·1ear-old freabman Republican with no aerotpace lnteretts in bl• diatrtct. took notice. Tbat very day. Leach wrote the subcommittee chairman., Rep. Stephen Neal ol North Carolina, urainJ a close look at Eutem's Freoch con- aectlan: •·we cou14 be wiLnesa· Lng the eroscuce of • ldod ol. international trade warfare that has nothins to do with economic competition, but rather with UJe skW of iodividual aovernmeata to eatab&b reverse trade bar-riers ... Leach, Neal and otber Con11'Uoien want to tee the llne print ot the Eutern deal - a closely parded secret up to thi.I point. Apart from details. however. the 1ub6ldy for each A-300 in the Eastern padcqe ii esUJDated at $10 mJ.lllon. The French subsldy ayatem ls revealed by a 1978 French parliamentary report. Tbe 1ov· •rnment "loan" C'4 $3M mtlllOll covers half d Alrbu. product.ton. with repayment indefinitely halted at $2.sm.llllon. or o:r per- cent. The report "lsoroualy arcues that France'• a.lreraft I.ft. duatry 0 must be l\Q>portecl by the government..•• WHILE BOEING fired the wamlng sl1nat on CapUoloftW; Lockheed Corp. faces 111ore lm· 'Hty Sam, I'm back! Howl the old do-it•yout'Nlf diet goin'?' • . m•dlate dam •t· Eastern'• new A-300 will replace 1.Mkbeed L-1011 jetliners, wbkb wm UMm 10 on the used pla.oo mark«. But the Airbus also competes with the Boelnf 74rand NcDan- nell·Doualu J>C..10. These three ~D>panJes can and do otter au.b- aldy plums to buyers, but cannot afford the French covernmeni'a juicy level. Those A300s for Eastem are ju.t the belinnins. Similar s\Jb. sldlzed dealS with Alleab«ny and PSA (Pacific Southwest Alrllnes) are in lbe talklne ataee. What's more, Airbus •ales to U.S. camera are the breakth.rouch for cutthroat Com· petition acalnst the. Americans wltb Japan the n,xt tiraet. '"!be Europeans are p1Ulln1 out all the stops '° win aaJes in Japan," Aeroapeee Dally reported last week. •1Aaide from normal eo&n· merclal representatiop, the eov- emmeota involved are apply- tn• strong pressure oo the Japanese 1ovemmen.t ... THE STAKES are bl.ch. Last ye•r's U.S. aerospace eJCport.s totalled $7.8 bllllon a1atnst $732 million In imports. For corn- merclal aircraft, the export •ur· plus was $2.$ billion In 1977 <down from $3.1 btlllon Jn 1978). Considering the record U.S. trade deficit and its ruinous Im· pact" on the dollar, this bul1e in commercial aircraft ls oue the U.S. cannot afford to surrender. Unlike texWe., electronics or even steel. th.ls is not a caft of forelan productivity and In- genuity outstripping the s.luuJ.sh Yankees. The Ame.rlc-. ~n aUll make jetliners more eUi· ciently than anybody else. 1Jae difference is France, Jw:., aliened against thrn JH'lvate American producers. While the French emu-nle the Japanese hard-sell aubaldiH. U .S policymakers are occupled in loftier pursuila. At the middle level, orricials here uy they want to study the Eastern transaction more closely before doinc anylhlns rash. But the role or Adam Smllh doea not fit the hard world of neo· mercantllists, lhreatenlne lo cloud a rare American b~t spot in world ionomics. Have Our Planners LOst Their Senses? To the Edltor: as an active participant and an We were fiooN!d when we read observer, and plan to continue that Supervbor Thomas Riley's them. Planning Commission appointee, What Ms. Joseph apparenUy Mr. MacDoueaU, and his sheep, did not realize is that most peo- &lad voted to permlt 400 houses to pie wouldn't be able to continue be built in the badly noise impact-with whatever area they choose. edareaofElToro. Team and competitive sports, Thisaavorsofinbumanetftat· for example; and private mentotrellowAmericans; infact lessons and tutoring in music ltsofardeviatesfrom a properde-happen to be very expenBive. clslon as to be probably Peoplewith\Blotortalentmay crlminalirresponsibility. miss out on careers ln these race there ls no need fOT hauling pupils many miles just for inle· gration. Such long-renee busing deslro)ll the Idea of local P.T.A., the sports teams and other such scbool·related actlviUes. When the truk team, the basketball team, ~ football team, etc. should be pracUcl.og, their mem· be~ will be on bU1ea traveling miles home. fields someday. It is unfair for: -' JUDGE can make a nillng HOW CAN A few com· people who apparently do not that all of the people a.re op- m i a a ion er s and so me know what they are talking poaed to. It will cost mUllona, supervisors make • decision about to ruin it for the real or us. bantrupt a school district or a that commit& .fOO families to the DIANE DIE'J;ZEL community. Tbe Judie wUl be mental and physical stresses ex em pt from any linanciaJ from noise that have now been ir -L-B•ll responstbllity. recoenized as cause for many \ aJUVVr A . Judee has recently ruled health problems? To the Editor; · that a judge cannot be aued, HH this commission simply Your editorial or Feb. 3 ln op. even if be makea a wron1 or taken leave or ill senses? Are position to the .so-called_ Labor-damaatng decl.slon. You misht they not able to read or hear the Law ltetorm BUI was right on know &hat a jud1e would rule in 1plendid testimony presented th• mark: The lnnerican public that way. 1 would sua1e1t that aaalnat their decision? ~foes not want com~ulsory un-judtn be made an elec:Uve of • ionlsm. The Senate JS expected fice H aome are Thia would not Tb.ere ls possibly here an ~ consider-this self·serving, un· so1vrtbe attuattiJn but lt might openme for class acUon law _with Jo.n .organizing 1>111 (S. 2487) help. 1 certainly th1nk that ln a adequate reasons for consider--within _ the next 30 days. I hope\ democracy a Judie should be lng improper and irresponsible you . will continue to speak out ~res nalve to m·'orlt rule. acts ht the conduct of their agunst this bill and to en-po /11\1 Y public office. . courage your readers to do the Schools were orlilnelly the I do not have much hope. With same. You are being hurtl on respon1lbility of the community. the back~ ot Or:ange Coun· Capitol Hill. Colleges were originated by re- ly wheell.oa and dealine and the JOSEPH A. BURTON, Ugioua cqanluUons and later unsavory relationahlp of the de-President Associated Builders by states. Tbe federal 1ovem· v•lopers out there With the car-~d Contracton Inc ment bad not.bing to do with rot oo the stick perhaps there is Wuhiniton 'o.c: them. nobope. • I've beard ftO mdcnce that any plannlil&. commlasJonent nor any IUDVVlson will mewed fnto this nofae Impacted area! H.M. WEBBER,M.D. St .... t'• l'ieao To tht't:dltor: In reference to Ooldle Jo1tj>b's letter (March 29), inaytit It WoUJd butt Amy 1Jtsel ll the Jarvi.a-Gan• lDiUaUve wero passed In June. J wlU be iOlne to Cotta M•a BJtb Scbool Qext. fall. aod iQ tbe put hue eQJoyed such thlnp as mutle aiDcl athletic ~enta. both Qliotes l_,ge. aaif Se! ..... & To the .Edit.or: The American people doa't want forced bualng. Cblcaao neltbborhoods don't want ltj Black netahborboods don't want It; wblte nel~borboocll don't w1nUt.1twun tmenUOMdlntM orillnal Constitution. ln borderllne neifbbod>ooda. complete inte1ration make1 hDH beeauae tbe oe.tpborhood 11 low,rated. In .,... lri the cent.rot MlOborboodl Gt ca. JAMJ:.S W. BOLDING ~~ To the Edltat: The lniUaUv• to outlaw the me or decompression chambers for k1Uln1 doas and ca\a 'ot more t.b&D aoo,ooo •ltnaluret, but not enou1h to quallfy ror the baUot. ~erefol'9, Senator Alftecl Sona h.. lotroduced SB 1481 which W-Ould outlaw thete cbambcw. The blll wUJ be be~ iD t.be Seaate ~cUlture COmmtttee on l\prU 18 at t i 30 L m. 'lbalO J:ri. tereated should write or wire Senator Song, State Capitol, Sacramento, California 95814. CHARLENE DRENNON Director, WestCoutRegton Humane Soelety of the United States Pn R.apotuiWUc11 To the Editor; I was interested to read Mrs. Hastings' viewpoint as ex- pressed in her letter of April 2, as lt gives me an opportunity to re-emphasize the importance of · not letting emotions cloud our judgment -especially with re- gard to this unpleasant subject or anl mal euthanasia. For instance, It has been am· ply de monstrated thal in a prop- -erly operated chamber, death occurs in seconds. It serves no eood purpose to keep reiterating statistics that apply only in poor. ly run faclllties. Even the L.A. shelters that use injection still use r lbe chamber u backup. · ALSO evidencing an emotional laclk,of perspective Is the claim that many doJs are killed by mistake. Everyone lncludln1 shelter staff, deplores such an occurrence, but out of 80,000 animals impounded in the past year, this baa happended four times. Each time, shelter sWf has re-worked proce dures to mate sure that particular mil· takes could not happen again. And Kennel Chief Edwards has on file, 50 commendaUon.s from clUzens pertainin1 to the cleanll· OelS ol the pbysJcal f aelllU• and t.he courteous help they re- ceived with their particular pf'Ob. lem. How can anyone oppoH la'lfl which would put the reaponslbUi· ty for the tra1lc pet aurphl." wher. It belonp -on the ptt owner? Such an OTdlnance can't be Hid to be aimed -1 ~~.l 1·· ble breeders 11nce CM'-~ bave kennel u~ Respon1iblo bre,_d,r.!....1.!_• workln& wl oiir KYDan-. groQ.P•; tMJ l1'0 waat to IMlp pHvenl tbe prollleratl ot wanted pota and to put tbe blame where lt belcmp lnstMd ol OD the ahelt.it'. RUTH FRANKEL Citizem Boo Ml: Terminal .. - SANTABA.RBAJlA <AP)-&lpporten ol bulld· • :=uwnl tennlDa1 at"PoiDt Ccloce>. u.&a Barbin bawncelvtidabOltile neelltiaiDbomr-fdents ..... · --Ait •rs• ee f1' aboat aoo Tumda1 booed lll'OI»' MiDta ol diit PdDt CAJDceptian lite, wblcb II cio. ol ftv• IM!ID_l ttJwUed at bOariDp bdd bJ tM state • C..ill'l~ 'ftie ..eek'1 ~~to conUD1» ~ID PottHaeneme. TD'caowo ED WREN &Ul'B llCKln· ney. ~t ol West.em LNG Terminal At,.. ~1•tes. praented a 20-mlDate slide pr111ataUon Ud d9dared • ._, 11q1e ute emers• u preferable to POlDt Ccmceptioa, •• Western LNG la a Padtie Gu 6j£lectrlc Co. Hbildimy tbat hopes to balJd and operat. tbe Im· Jlcit't.t.tloll tennlnal. "Did you lcnow picture windowt cCKt $800? · That's what Mr. Ferrell soys his wiU cost." A1id tbe audience cheered recomme'l'datlou by u.-. Sat& Barbara Coan~ Board ol ~ to •uppoi't u Auembly bill tbat would dllaJ loca· tJoa of m LNG tenn1Aal in Callforn1a loit OM 7ear. TD OOASTAL COllllJSSION la coaduc:tlnl pu.blle bearinp at each ol the five aites undw coa. 1ld atlon -RattleanQe Can.yon, PoUlt Concep- Uqn, Deer Canyon, Camp Pendleton and Lu Varas -to determine wbicb aite la bat 1uited for terminal CODltnactioo. Gay Ordillatioli Nixed, ' I • McKlaney uld tbe environmenlal impact at Point CCIDCeptioD would be lesa than at any of the other lites. but U\ attorne7 for nearby Hollister Ranch said the Callfornla F1ab and Game Deput- ment ranked Point Conception u Wast favorable In terms ol the impact on flab and wild.Ule. SAN DIEGO (AP) -The San Dlefo Presbytery bu voted to publicly oppose ordlna"on or conferrtaa ol aQY bal1 Ordlra on bomoeuuala. The overwbelmin& vote came Tuesdq, ~ a two ~ de-bate raQibll over Biblical 1tlnd- anls, famlly example and the question of a mlniatry to tbe homosexual community. OTBElt OPPONENTS INCLUDED marine btoloalats concerned about a rare snail 1pecles la the area. abalone divers, and those concerned about safety aspects. Herb Christ, putor of the- College Park Preab7terlall Church, asked to 10 on record aa dissenting from the m.tority vote to oppose ordlnatlbn of bomoeexual mlnisten. The few people who favored the locaUon ~ted the creation of jobs and the need for pa to protect exlaUoa jobs. Projections lhow the plant would provide .about 1,850 Jobi duriJll comtructloo peats. ~~Airport 77' Passenger Describes ·Panic on Bus Cra8h LQS ANGEL£$ (AP> -"It felt like it was me ol those movies -like •Airport .,, .. " said one passenger in- jured when a packed transit bus col· llded with a car durinl momine rush hour. "There was panic," said another. "There were kids la there. . . Vf!l'J crowded. Everybody was acreamtn1 and bangina on to each other and then aomebody opened the window ... and I Jumpecf out," laid Denile Tblero of Sula Monica. Sbe wu one of IO paaaen1er1 crammed into the 'swUUy-movln1 Rapid Transit District bus when the accident occurred. About «> pasenaien were reported Injured. bat all but a few were re- leased shortly after hospital visits. The most &erioua injury was a frac- tured lee. officials aaid. Pt9jeeutna~ SACRAJlENTO (AP> -Two of Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.'s pet proJ· eels, a wood chip-burning plant to fuel the state's central beating ud Smog Standards Met for a Year . EL MONTE <AP) -Southern California has 1one a full year without 'riolatiq ooe of tbe state's automo&lle pollution standarda, the head of tbe Air Resources Board .. ,.s. 'This II tbe first time s1Dce smoe became a major problem la Southern California that we have actually met the earbon monoxide standard," ARB Cbalrman Tom Quinn said ( STA.TE ) cooling plant. and a n.telllte com· munlcaUona 1y1tem. have won bad1et subcommittee sklrmlsbea Tuesday, but not without a few tart words of crlti,dam. Both propilals will now be beard by the full Ways and llean Commit· tee. ................. SAN DIEGO (AP) -Gov. F.dmund G. Brown Jr~';~ campalp a1a1..ut the Jarvll tax initiative at two public tarums U"lrU- ing that promise(I relief would IO to buainess, not homeowners and rent-ers. Tbe governor noted that Friday be will sl1D a bill aranttni, *'50 mllllop tax incentive to bus'~ and In tbat ll&bt "I doa't believe that we abou1tt have a property tu bill that lives eQ percent ol the beneftta to one part of. society that Just 1ot the blllelt. break ever." OnuleO.A .... RIVERSIDE (AP> -The on-.. ain off-a1aln planned lbowing of. the clasaic "Birth of a Nation" ftJm at Riverside Qty Museum was vpC'e4 back on qala Tuelday m,bt. "' Tbe aeveo·member City Coantll voted tmanlDWMly to permit a publle sbowiq of tbe film at the museum despite objections by °'embers ol the ./ black communl~ that the ftlm .,.. racist. ,...., .. 1.aecet1 ... • Tueld.aJ. "It ls a major mllestoae and proYeS that our automobile utf· amot program la ltartlng to pay oil.•• QulnJl aald the number ol days in wblcb the one-hour standard wu violated bad decreased from n in 1J'1S to two la 19'18. He credited tbe latelt 1a1a1 to 11'71 model can wblcb be aaht emit oa1J 10 percent as muc:b carbon monoxide as previous model.a. SAN DIEGO (AP) -A coun1, gruel jury bas retu'*9d a 1~ indictment qaiDst 1S ,members ol a 11P11 blDd on ~-ol buralu'Y, consptrae1 and r•delvina i\oleD property. The lndlctmerit 'l'Uesday cmne on tbe eve of a preliminary bearfnl scheduled today \n El Cajon Municipal Court. Tbe lndief,m91lt chars• ti» IJllSi• .uh bualarlel or atorea in Braw'le-y, B0rre10 SprinpandJulianon March zr. "IT IS.A llATl'B& of policy of the oburcll,'' Christ aald. "I don't tb1Dk we sboqld chance the ·~ ol PNlbytertes decldlng whom to ordain. lt bu DOtblng to do wtth t,be bom01Uoal ~ aue." ludr Bowe, an elder at Colle1e Part, concurred. "I have friends who are homosexual," she said, "and I don't find them any less bum.an or able to lead Ulan anyone elle .• , Tb• United Presbyterian ~e.b GeaeraJ Auembly will ve in Nay a majority and Don't dishwash_ just the drinks. Wait till dinner is over. Half loads Jive 10u a good sock-nght m the pocketbook. .. .. Your lijt}ts should go out whenyoodo. mlaortty ~ from a divided 19-me~ wk force lbat bu been 1tudyfn1 the iuue of homosexual ordination for almoet two years. IP TBS llAJOIUTY repott II adopted at the ~h's natloaal convention here, lt would make the United Presbyterian Cburcb the naUon'• most liberal mlQor denomination In extendinl full rl1bt1 of melQbersbip and mln.latry to avowed Practlcinl bomosauall. Tbe minority report bruds bomOlellUlity as a aln. ' 1tpo9ooa me.P md aecealble in crier' to .. -IUA~. ad4lct.d." ,. But DeQnla Loper• dlrec:tar ol the Calif and • AllOC.llti ot C8* &Dd Tobeceo J>tltrl,DUlcl~' 1a1d u. bUl coametea wtu. rederal ...... BR&OTY SAID TBB LAW BANNING stveaW*YS to m.laon WU una.forc:eabae al _, U •eDdon wesoe alJond to Sift ~ awa, to .,... .. Mutmum ftnea under bla bW would baTe beelt SlOOfor ftndot'landlS,OOOf'ortbeCGl!lpeQJ. , The ''Thal .Uct .. bill SBua .,,, Demda' C~. R-~ a.Ida WOQJd haft atUf. eAed ~aJUea on th• nowued a.o..-ot the TllailudniarQuaapl_ant. Capt. BUL&andellGG of U. La Anplee Pdee Departmd'a nareotiel dlttlkm t.ws.d tbat '!'Ml ~ 1tick1 are lacreuilla in me ad baft a ldlb eon· centration cl THC, llM active lapedleat in marl· Juana. UNDE• TBB llQ.L. l'08BB88ION or mui· Juana with a me eoetat o1 • ~t.r~ would be ll'OQDdl for ureat aDd u either a mildemeanor or a felaar with a poealble t prilon term. A 1975 California law made pblse1don of ap to an ounce of marijuana •ubJect to a mulmam ftM , C)f '100 with DO arrelt or bo«+fnl. PGl1enkla of lar1er amounts II a mltdemeanor. SaJe oit cultln. tiOG remalna a feJoa.J. • I SANDEltSON CONCEDED TllAT SJIODNG Thai 1ticta doesn't cause any more criminal bebaviot tban ordinary marijuana and. that pqlei tend to smoke lesa ol It for the auie effect. An opposition witness. Dr. Roter Tltdln, dlrector of the street drq anal)'lltl labora~ !:'ct~~~no:1:1b,'= ==:'ottbel berbicldeParaquatonmarijuanablllalco. i \ Your open door policy can cost yotL See the dollars drip away? You're in bot water-in more ways than one. -0# /, Cooking pieceme.al costs 88 much as a whole tneal. • .. .. .... . Orange Coast Daity Pik>t . .,,,,.,4-~......1-1 . .. RobM N. WHCl/Pubtl"'-r K'hofNt k•vll/Edltor .El .. .,....---.-!!9.e••••••••w•ect1•-•!Mdly .. 111J1,• .. ~··1•2,•1••n ........... a..~.r.••t<•re•1•bl•'h•1•e•d•Jtsw.1••'•P•age••e•d1•'°'••• Opell SpaCe Gifts Can Be Expensive · on Vl~jo ltfunlclpa) Advisory Council members unanimously recommended J4oilday that the county refrain from acceptln1 gifts of slopes, road medians or park sites from the .M..iaion Viejo Company from now un· tll next September. The practice of dedicaUni such land to the county for maint.enance and upkeep is common in the south county area. The MAC's concern stems from unce,rtainty over the impact of the Jarvis-Gann property tax limitation in· itiatlve if it passes next June: As MAC member John Noble argues, if the initiaUve passes. county officials say they will not be able to main· tain existing slopes, road medians and parks. But the MAC'a action raises some interesting ques· Uons abou1 the impact oC Jarvis-Gann on private en· terprise. If the initiative passes and the county ls unable to ac- cept any more open space, park-use types of land, would that drive the Mission Viejo Company, for example, to re- consider the design of the planned community? Obviously, economics could force a change in plans for sweeping slopes or vast parks if the cowity is unable to assume maintenance and upkeep expenses. The company itself is still investigating the potential impacts ol the Jarvis·Gann initiative. But one thing is ~lear : The implications of the prop. erty tax limitation inlUative go much deeper than tax ireductions or a lowering of county, school and city 6ervices. ~Why .Pass the Bock? It would be a mistake if the Irvine City Council, after a floundering eUort to resolve complaints about the city ·community sentic~s department, creates a new commit· tee to do the same thing. It would be like a drowning man saving himself by passing a weight to the next man. The council already has a community services com· mission to oversee the activities and administration of the department. Assessment of the department has been ragged since it was formed earlier this year in response to numerous, mostly vague, complaints fronl residents about the scheduling and availability of city recreation facilities. • IL seems the commission could, with the help of the city staff -including the city manager -act as its own commit· tee to solve these administrative problems. They don't seem to be of consuming proportion. That, coupled with the examples or competdntly run programs of neighboring cities, should sort things out without an added layer of bureaucratic buck-passing. The Price of.Office Sp.ddleback College Trustee Donna Berry threatened Jast week to quit rather than file an economic disclosu11e of her family's investments and income. The disclosure is required under a recently approved district conflict of in· terest code. Mrs. Berry contends that her and her family's busi· ness are private matters and should 119t be opened up for public display. She argues that anyone can come in "off the street'' and take up college workers' time asking to look at her pe rsonal records. Mrs. Berry calls that a waste or tax- payers' money and an invasion of her privacy. While privacy is becoming more or a legally rec· og nized right in this age of vast, computerized stockpiles of information, we believe public officials fall into a special category. When a person has voluntarily sought an office that allows him or her to conduct the public's business -in this case, a multi-million dollar business -the public bas a right t-0 know of possible conflicts of interest. Not that the filin g of an economic disclosure state- ment automatically guarantees that an elected official will operate as a paragon. There are plenty of examples or misconduct in Orange County politics. But the statement does allow the public to know just what an officeholder's personal interest is. Especially when that interest stands to gain by an action of the ol· ficeholder. While we sympathize with Mrs. Berry's desire for privacy, she should understand one of the prices one muSt pay for holding public office. • Opinions expressed in the space above are thoM of the Dally Piiot. Other views expressed on this page are those of their authora and artists. Reader comment Is Invited. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) M2'-4321. Boyd/Divo-rce ByL.M.BOYD The ftnanclal status of a divorced man tends to Im· prove aomewbat after lhe marital breakup. But that's not true of a divorced woman , evidently. Researchers studied 133 such divorced couples. In the four years after their separations, the mm picked up a Utt.le momentum in that matter of Dear Gloomy Gu "Car Jeans Day" at UCI muJl have been cooked up by the clothlna Industry. All the 1lrallhts •truulln1· tbrou1h achool wl\.b DOthins but Jeant will Jaaya to r CM4 &Dd bu1 IOmethlllg e.lM. V.R.A. Gl-Y--~t1 ... .... . ,., ..... , ,._,. ..... .. --:",, ....... ... r:=,-r;:,~ .... - money, but the women lost ground. What Amerlun woman alive todQ bu bad bet pic- ture reproduced mON lbaa any other? Eliubeth Taylor? Jackie Onassis? Farrah Fawcett·Majonf Or bow about Mrs. Ana• Turner Cook, the cbalnnan of the English DeJ>_artm~nt at Hillaboroudt HlP School in Tam.pa. Fla.? lt'I iald l1 WU hfr llkeneu ~ na ao wldely d.btrlbutecl u lbo orlOnal Gerber babJ. Q. ~'On 'M•A~ ,rhal .. KlJaaer't 8nt OUief ': A. Maxwett. Rowland Evw /Robert Novak Airbus Deal a Blow to Trade WASmNOTON -EH ern Alrll.Dea' p&acchu• aireement for 2S European wlde·bodJed alrllnera ls a deal that not OQly dellven anochet' 1twmlnt blow to tbe poor old American dollar but rai .. aerioua' queatiom of U.S . induttrial sorvlval ln the wqrld ol .•ubsidiJed forelcn ex· porta. The A-300 Airbus h an ex· eeUent plane, but that's not wby Eastern ls buy l n i It.I A1rbua In· duatrie, a Western European combine, made an ofter that Eutem chairman F r a n k Bormann could not refuse. The price was riaht because Airbus Industrie ls aubsldhed by the French iov· ernment, one ot its principal owners. Allbougb the Europeans can· not match the Americana lri cost- efflclent production of com· merclal airliners, they are apoon.fed government funds to compete ln the world market. In the case ol the Eastern Airlines deal, the French taxpayer enables planes to be sold far 'below costs. What makes this dangerous /or the U.S. -and the dollar -Is its threat to aerospace exports, one of the last places where Uncle Sam still keeps his head above water in international trade. • THIS IS NOT the ancient con· met between free trade and pro- tectionism. Rather, the model ol Japan, Loe .• is being duplicated in Western Europe <France, Inc., in the Airbus deal). Here is a neo-mercantilis t system against which American com· panies are halpless playing by Adam Smith's tul•. Typically, this overp0weri.na problem has not been addfessed at policymaking levels of the Carter administration. But almott by accident, lt ls eoJDina to the attention of worrleCl Congressmen. A wamlng alpal was sounded at a House Banking subcommittee hearinc March 17 by J . B. L. Pleree, treuurer ol the Boelne Co.: "We can com· pete wiUi Alrtx. and the other European aircraft manulac· turers on cost and tecbnlcal merits, but we can.not comp«e Jwitb the national tnuurJet ol France and Germ!l?f and otba' European countries.' SEP. JIM LEACH of lowa,,a 35·1ear-old rreabman Republican witb no aerospace lntereata la h1I dlltrlct, took notice. That very day, Leach wrote tbe subcommittee chairman, Rep. Stephen Neal of North Carolina, ur&inl a close look at Eastem's French con- necUQJ1: "We ~ be witness· Uig the emergence of a kind t)f international trade warfare that has nothinc to do with economic competition, but rather with the skill of iodlvldual 1ovenunenta to establlsb revene trade bar-riers." Leach, Neal and othtr Con1~en want to see the fine prlnt ot the Eutun deal - a elosdy IWU'ded secret up to th'-point. Apart from dttalls, ~wever. the subsidy for each A·300 ln the Eastern packqe ii estimated at $10 milllon. The French subsidy system Is revl!aled by a 1978 French parliamentary report. The 1ov· eroment "loan" ~ $3SS mUlloo coven half of Alrbua production, wltb repayd\ent indefinltely halted at $2.S million, or 0.1 per. cent. The report vi1oroualy ar1ues that France's alreraft in- dustry "must be 1uppozted by tbe government." WHILE BOEING fired the warning signal on Capitol Hill, Lockheed Corp. faces mare im· 'Hey &m, I'm back! How'a tM old do-it-yourNJI diet goin '?' mediate dama1e. Eaatern's new A·300 will replace Lockheed L-1011 jetll~n. which will tbeo go on the uftd plane market. But the Alrb\W also competes with the Boeln1 74'1 and Kel>oft. nell·DOUilU DC·lOI These three c<>mpanies can and do offer sub- sidy plums to buyers, but cannot afford the French 1overnment's juicy level. Those A300s for Eastern U9 jusl the beirtnntn1. SimUu a\lb- sldlzed dealS with AJlepeby and PSA {PacUlc Southwest Airlines) are in the talking staee. What's more, Altbus sales to U.S. carriers aro the breakthrough for cutthroat com· petlUon qalnst the Americans with Ja~ the next tar1et. ''11le Europeans are pulling out all the stops to win sales ln Japan." Aerospace Dally reported last w"k. ''Aside from normal com- mercial representation, the aov· ernments involved are apply. lnJ stron1 pressure on tbe Japanese aovernment:• THE STAKES are bteh. Last year's U.S. aerospace exports totalled $7.G billlon a1atnst $732 milllon In imports. For com- mercial aircraft, the export 1ur- plua was $2.S billion In 197'1 ·(down from $3.1 billion In 1976). Considering the record U.S. tr«de deficit and its ruinous lm- p'lct"' on the dollar, this bulee in commercial aircraft is one the U.S. caMOt afford to surrender. Unlike texWes, electronics or even steel, thJ s Is not a cue of foreign productivity and ln· genulty outstrlpplnc the sluc;gish Yankees. The Amerlcap .e-n aUll make Jelllners more effi. ciently than anybody elae1 11\e dlfCerence is France, lat .. all&ned against three prlvate American producen. While the French emulate the Japanese bard-sell aubsidies, U.S policymakers are occupied in loftier pursuits. At the middle level, officials here say tbey want to study the Eastern transaction more closely before doin1 anythlna rash. But the role of Adam Smith does not fit the bard world of neo· mercantilisls, threatening to cloud a rare American bO,ht spot in world ~onomics. Have Our Planners LOst Their Senses? To the EdJtor: Wt were fioored when we read that Supervisor Thomas Riley's Plaonioe Commission appointee, Mr. MacDoutall, and his sheep, had voted to permit 400 houses to be built ln the badly noise impact· ed area of El Toro. Thia aavon of inhumane lrut· mentoffellow Americans; lnfacl lt so far deviates from a proper de· clllon as to be probably crhnlnallrresponslbllity. HOW CAN A few com· mi11loners and some supervisora make a decision that commits 400 families lo the mental and physical stresses from noise that have now been recoenized as cause for many health problems! Has th.ii comm.iss1on simply taken leave of ill senses? Are they not able to read or hear the splendid testimony presented a1aln1t their decision? Tbere ls ~slbly here an opening fOl' c action law with adequate reuoos for consider· ine improper and irresponsible acts In the conduct or their public office. I do not have much hope. With the backll"OWld of Orange Coun· ty wbeelinl and dealing and the unsavory telaUonabJp or the de- v .. opers out tbete with the car· rot OD the atlck perb~ there is oohope. I've beard no evidence that any planntn1. commlsstonera, nor any auperylsora will moved I fnto this noue Impacted areal H.M. WEBBEll, M.D. Stt.leei'• l'lftD To~· Editor: In reference to Goldie :-tJoaepb'• letter (March 29), maybe lt WOUld hurt Am.y Utzel U the lan11·Garua initiative •ue passed bl June. I will be iolnt to costa .... Hiib School ,QUt fall. Ille\ In the pUt blft e.ijb,ed loch~ u mutlc IDd aUIJ botb f as an active pat'!tclpant and an observer, and plan to continue them. What Ms. Joseph apparently did not realize Is that most peo- ple wouldn't be able to continue with whatever area they choose. Team and competitive sports, for example; and private lessons and tutoring In music happen to be very expensive. People with a lot of talent may miss out on careers in these fields someday. It is unfait for people who apparently do not know what they are trllklhg about to ruin it for the rest of us. DIANE DIETZEL IAJIJor Biii To the Editor: . Your editorial or Feb. 3 fh op- position to the so-called Labor Law Jterorm Bill was riaht on the mark: The American public does not want compulsory UD· ionism. The Senate is exped.ed ~o consider this self·serviftl, un-Jon organmng bill (S. 2487) within the next 30 days. I hope you wlU continue to speak out against this bill and to en. courage your readers to do the same. You are belng heard on Capitol Hill. JOSEPH A. BURTON, President, Associated BuUders and Contract.on, Inc. Washln1ton, D.C. lwl9•mulSelteo& To the Editor: The American people doll'& want forced bualnf. Cbleano net1hborhood1 don't want It; Black odlbborhood.I don•t want it; white nelpborbooda doft•t wantll ltwun'tmenUoaedlntbe ortstnal Cooatitutioo. lll borderllne nelthborf:lOodao complete 1nte1ratlon makea MAie because the ne.t1llaborboo4 . ll ln~ted. la areu in the center of ndlhborboodl ot ooe race there ls no need fOT baullng pupils many miles just for inte- gration. Such long-ranee buslnr destroys the idea of local P.T.A., the sports teams and other such school-related activities. When the track team, the basketball team, the football team, etc. should be practicing, their mem· be~ will be OD buses traveling miles home. .\ JUDGE can make 1 niling that aJl of the people are OP· posed to. It will cost millions, bankrupt a school district or a community. The Jud(e will be exempt from any financial respoo.slbility. A judae has recently ruled that a judge cannot be sued, even if he makes a wrone or damalinr declslon. You might know that a Judie would rule ln that way. I would suacest that judees be made an elective of. fice, as some are. Thia would not solve tbe sltuaUon but it might help. I certainly tb1nt that in a democracy a Jodee should be responsive to majority rule. Schools were orl«inally tbe reapon.aibillty of tbe community. CoUeees were originated by re- llalous or1anbations and later by states. The federal 1ovem· ment bad nothing to do with them. JAMU W. BOLDING Deeomp~ To tbe Editor: The initiali ve to outlaw tbo ue of decompression cbamben for klllln1 dogs and call aot more lban I00,000 slsnaturea, but nOt enoulb to quallfy for the ballot. Therer0re, Senator AlfNd bi bu Introduced SB 1"81 which woWd outlaw these cbalD-.. Tbe bUJ will be beard lo t!ai Saiiati Agriculture Commtttee oa AP1U 18 at 1~30 Lm. '1bOio bl· terested should write or wire Senator Song, State Capitol. Sacramento, California 85814. CHARLENE DRENNON Director, WestCoastRe2ion Humane Soclety of the United States Pet R.nporulfriU ty To the Editor: I was lntereeted to read Mns. Hastings' viewpoint as ex- pressed in her letter of April 2, as it gives me an opportunity to re-emphasize the importance or · not letting emotions cloud our judgment -especially with re· gard to this unpleasant subject of animal euthanasia. For Instance, it has been am- ply demonstrated that in a prop- erly operated chamber, death occurs in seconds. It serves no food purpose to keep reiterating statistics that apply only ln poor- ly run facilities. Even the L.A. ~betters that use injection aUU use the chamber as backup. ALSO evidencing an emotlanal lack of perspective is the claim that many dots are killed by mistake. Everyone loch.1dinc shelter stafr, deplores such an occurrence, but out of 60,000 animals impounded in the past year, this bas hap pended four times. Each time, shelter staff has re-worked procedures to make sure that particular mJ.s.. takes cou.Id not happen again. And KeMel Chief Edwards has on me, 50 commendations from clUaem pertainin1 to the cleanll· neaa ol the physical raellltles and the courteous help they re- cel Yed with their particular prob- lem. How can anyone oppose laWI whkb would put a.he reapoJ\Slblll· ty for the tra1lc pet surplus where Jt belonfs -on tbe pet owner? Such an ordiriance can't bt said to be lirilL'd at. rHJ>ObSl· ble breederw 1lrice ~ alrqdy bave kennel Uc Beaponalble brted'ra are worklnc wltti our tium.•~• 1roup1: theJ .iao •qt to help prevent the proliferation ot un- wanted pe\1 and to put tile blan\e where it belonp instead or on tho ahelter. atml FRANKEL . • ,, . . ' ~--.April t2.1f71 s ~abets llit 81 In.TIA ioaTD ~ can label~ 11t 4lscna. 'l'bit laball oft.a an too -...,., mJale • tmoeva •· Tbe labels .,.. ~1 _ln tbt fi• of ndDed dathes. Ma rellllt. reviled c.,.. la.belbli rules are about to be llllued by tbe redenl Tradlf-Oommluloo. Tb.ii •P"'lna. the rrc Will tale the tut ~ step before us refonn OI ctoth«J. nre labellna. otacma oa tht recqr4 a 000-l)lo.J>&i• document oo lal>ela for CenetaJ public eommeot. .\mOaa the FTC'a key ftndln,0: -lllANY ahmJNG-•UEBS VSE the care labels to tell their proctUctl rather &Mo to desciibe car. for car· menu.· -M-m acturen specify machine wuhinl ~ drycleaillnC mtiirt be better, or they speclty dryclu.nlnt without polntla.I out tbe apedaJ procedur. required. In or· der to mate U.O clotbel seem easy to ~re tor Clunina :methods llat.ed oa can label.I of wbat att ~ailed "problem 11rment.s" have been teated by the ln· temaUOoal Fabrlcare tn.a~tuw ... lraf:le IJ'OUP rePt1MDtma launderers and drycleanen. 'Ibe ·recommended m~ ••o ften actually damages the clothlnc," reports the executive vice president. Charles R. Rlgeott. and the re- atarcb adminlatrator. Bill ll'ilber. / Money's Worth Rlaott and Flsber 1 say that many manufacturers do no testiJ11. Amoaa top problems: < U SYNTHETICS IA.BEi.ED "PROFESSIONAU Y dryclean only" too often shrink. Laminates ~ atiffen and peel when cleaned by the procedures moat pro- feuional drycteaners use. (2) Water spills and perspiration will bleed colon on some designer mtt dresses. and labels carry no warninl that steam. a process that causes more color bleedlna. should not be used. (3) Some drapes have beat·.ensitive yarns woven lnto the fabric. Y~t.be drapes carry~ care label·~· (4) Clothes labeled "wub bot~' wub. well ln bome washing maehiens but are damaged ln t!ae botter wash cycle5 ol commercial. w ... b.tnl machines. (5) MANY lLuroFA.C'l'1Jll£BS. AltE reluci.it to put more ..-ords of wamine on care labels to provide clearer instructions. On the other band, eome manulactueren are overly cautious about the information they put on their clothes labels. A 1arment with a "dryclean onty·· lei m~ be macblneJ't'ashable. . People may distrust cant labels. lpore the lnatruc· lions and damage clothes ln wubinc. tbe institute fears. It has asked the FrC and manufact\Jftrs to use more com· prehenslve labetine statements, and the FTC obviously aJreeS. lo bis report after FTC heartnp in Wubioston and Los Angeles last year, presidia& officer John A. Gary said. "THE aE~aD IS &EPLETE WITH evidence ol widesptead inaccurate and false care labelinl which, ii continued, ccmld '1Jldermlne the consumer's trust in and reliance upon the entire care labeling program. To remedy the practice or inaccurate or false care labellnt. the pro· posed revised rule should be amended ~o require labelers to have a 're.QOD$ble baaia' to"substanU.te the accuracy of care i:naintenance lnatrucrt.ions. • " 'Reasonable basis' would mean subjecUnc • representative product to the same care and maintenaoc:e instructions required by the rule. for a reuonable number of times." Probate Forum Scheduled Mar 4 . The t:rmt department of TiUe lnsuranee and Trull will conduct a one-day tax and probate forum at l:J.S p.m. MQ 4 at the Santa Ana Elb Club Lodle Hall. The program will include "How to Handle Section I06 Steck in IJgbt of Carryover Bula,·· by Pbillp D. Jrwin, Loi Aneeles attorney; "To Keep! To Give! To SeJl! .. : Tbe Ef· feet of Carryover Buis on Pre-death DiapoeiUoo ol M · seq,•• Jtailokl Weinstock, LQa Anteles attorney ; "Recap- tved Gifts -Possible Indian Giving." Floyd Wil.kiDI .. Sao Dleg() attorpey. and "How Some of tbe V.S. t>resldeotl Planned Estates:• Fred Leydorf. Loi Aqeles·attorn.y. ' Also scheduled are "Throwback of Trust Income Under the Reform Act." Tbomu L C.pe, Loe An1eles at-tbrney~ ··~wm eoatesta," James. B. Tuctd, Santa Ana aUomey: "Invasion of Principal -General Powers of Appointment and Ascertainable Standards.'' Carl lliltheU. Newport Beach attorney. and "Buy.S.U Agreements: ~ ~emptiOQ vs. Croa ~ ... C TRA '76," WlWam 8 ; ,Lyncb, IM Anceles attomey. The fonam Is ~ to attorneys, CPA ·a, accountants, truat ~cen, CLtl-s, underwrilen and law atudenta. Nb ~rvatiom are beln1 ttlken and there is no admiuioO obarae. Association opens . 1 San Cleinente Office I the ftnt time.. • N»»-11 ' An «-«In ~ to 00 I bedl ''llome'' to pr1aon f and ... Iha omc.. lo ~him. • MACNIJL I lEHN!R REPORT CID CAMtM lm'OHERY .• , , The bunon llolil. '-""'· 11ralghl fMIMr. alngle ~ , , ' faelller. end lllfl1ed ....,.. .. •lllcllee .. domon- •trated. ~ Cl) JQQJf8 WILD ... .. If 7:318 KTWl!Bt THI! WNll "The L.Mgue Of "8tlone: " Retvm To llolallcMlilm" F lilllrlg to Ml eong,... lioflel approwl tor the League °' N9tl0ne. Wllon tell• tu -to the peo- pte In. grueling. and ........ Oaa•Hf ......... . ~ ~· v.. '• ~ •• ~ ... ... •• .. 8 KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles a l<NBC (NBC) Los Angeles I KTlA (Ind ) Los Angeles KABC-TV (ABC) Los Angeles (J) KFMB (CBS) San Diego e ~TV(lnd.)LosAngeles 8 l<CST(ABC} San Diego '• ~ I KTTV (Ind.) Los Angeles KCOP·TV (Ind.) Lo• Angeles KCET·TV (PBS) Los Angeles • KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntington Beach • •• :t ~· ·~ ;.: ... •• •• A.,~ Eseapade :· -. ~ ~ :· ·: • ... ... •• •' •> Two New Spy· Series Slated .~ •• ·= B)' JmY BUCll : .. •. LOS ANGELES <AP> -It • wasn't tbat En111ah writ.er Brian : • ClemeDI WU IO amdoua to do an '1 American TV series tbat be ar-· L rived here script in band. ~ Clemens, invited here to di.I· ! cuu the poulbllit:y of creatlq a • sbow la tbe imaae of bla :: .. A V9D1ent," bad something else ;1 in mbad. Like a fa1t aeeompll. :· "I bad only been •keel for an outline," be said. "But if you aet t • into Iota ol discusalona witb Iota :• of people, you end up with a •: show like • camel. That'• a .•• bone desiped by a commlU.. ... ·.: ... :· • ... , sn n ONLY one way and tbat'a t.be way I write it. I'm not beilll anopot. U It Roes off in a direCUoo I don't aee, I say let , someoneellewritelL" ·.~ Not to Wwt7. The script wu • • ftlmed .. • plJot bl San Fran- .,: clsco with few chaqea by Quinn M art1D Product.ions and may .• sbow up on the CBS schedule nest f ID • "Blcapade." -; It ._. Granvllle Van DuHD • a.Dd llarpn Faircblld u two •• American aeent qents, Joshua • • Rand and SUsle, wbo take tbelr :· ol'den from a computer named ;~ Os. The computer bu a mind~ • it.s own and la bultally a thlrd ~ star. ~ D' M1£8CAPADB" doee Diab •" lt to tba air. it COUid find ltlelf GD ~ the CBS vbedn1e wttb CJ.nams' ~'~A~,;;.:::: •• papa••• IP7 spool. 1..e •enlaD of tile Balllsb Hrln moet famlB.r in tbls COUD1rJ ltaned Patrick MacNee and black leather.a.ct Diana a.au. la ~ new abow, MacNee throws in bis bowler with JC>aDDa' Lumley. Altbouab .. E8capade" strives for tbe toque.in-ebeet OaYOr ol "The Avqen," and despite other lim.ilaritlel, Clemens in· sllta t.beJ are not alike. He aa1d, "'It's like •Pbyw.a' and 'Rhoda.' Both ~_..c.omediea, both came out of '1be Mary Tyler Moore Show,• yet they were .entirely different. .. ' · ·· Clemens' on!y previous ez. perlence with American television wu back tn the UGOs when be wrote an award· .m.niJll show for "The United States Steel Hoar ... "I llAD NO attempt to cap- ture the American ldlom:• be said ... If I bad I would bHe been off by five years. It's like American werlten who sUll have En&ffshmen aaytni 'IOY· emor.· • llD'll • •\t "Tiit """' Que" ,.,,, w.c. ~ "*°" ........ ""° ..,.,... ....... '° beWlliltlfln • ...... '° ... inaner""' .. ._CUii'.) :&..llllHf• ... <Mt" Tom llNdfoed ............ °' .. 11oJ I lhclld ...... 1119 Ciflll. "'eoa..""" -....... ..,. w.... 9ogeft. w.nOolllr.-..... (R) .... ..u~ ~at .... • CWQ..,...,,. NIOMENDe ~ "*' Blrry, ~ oorme. -~ • • .... "The Wond9tful COlnty'' (1859) ~ ~ Julie London. ,.._ u.a. dltzilnl worti ror ~ llcMI dUl'lnO • ~~(2tn.) .NOVA "SUI w ...... ~ ••pl.ad,_.,, ..... end~of aPond laln rHllty tlle •"'1• of oonmra. tr...ao ... • IGClmL lll:*'E t•tOM'\t. PUT'IYAL ''Tiie Jc:a ..,,_ .. UO. c:RCl 11 WIT'8 f1D OYl1' Pit Robert and T OtfY AASll S-- fonn and cllac&m their ~ 191atton- llllp; Mnlor cltlnnl OfO*'- lzatloN; updated --Oft aging: mobile llOmaa. HO. Cll8 MOYIE **\4 "FrwMd" (1974) Joe Don 881t•. Conny y., ~·· AIW low ,._. of bnltll priaon lt'e9tlMnt. • gMlbllr ..... ,.....,. Oft "" \1iuge. CfOOMd cops end polltld9na .no .-r.,.o ,. hrnalp. e lleDMCNW *** "Who la Hwry K...,._,, And '#tfl/ la He 8eyl119 ThoM Twrlble l1*lga About Mer (1971) Dualln HoftWwl. a..a HlrrtL A wry •• 5 I I t'JI ~~ with llndlnO • ... ""'° .. ~~ ... aboutlllm. • MOVIE * * \4 "MM On The Flying Trapez.e" (1935) W.C. Aeld1, Mery Bfllon. A dalgtlW helpa her untiap. PY fetMr 1tend up fOr Illa ~(111r.) Dal CHAAUE'I ANGE.a TUBE TdePERS =7:~ -·Between the Wars - Tbe · followtna tbe f allure to Join the ague of Nailona and Woodrow Wilson'• ill·fated whlsUe stop campaign ls covered. ' NBC 8 9:00 -"who ls Harry Kellerman and WhY Js He SayinR Those Terrible ThlQ&8 About Me?" J)ustln Hoff . ~~ atara as f paranoiac rock music. composer ht this 1971 movie with Barbara Hanis. KCET 9 9 :00 -Great Performances. Jaan 's relationship to death is emlored in Edward Albee's play .. Anover:•-r . (Detroit. Chicago end Memotlllll•---~ Ill pertol111e1icae of ''l.cNa Hare I Atn, Come And Tlb Me" and "How Cen Yov Mend A Broken Hair\." =llGoNEWS t.OYI. AMENCAH snu ··&..owe And The w....up Olrf' ,.. INtl• • d8te wlttl Ann •• girt lie'• - -· "Lme And l.owr'• I.JIM" Dore end ,..., plen to oelltlrate ltlW ...WV.· llfY· • lllO\lte •• "011• Ruselan Sumlt*" ( 1973) Oflver AMd, Jof\n McEnty. Pu- llon and Ylolerlce erupt cklrlnO • --In mod· em RUMIL (2 llra.I • ml 000 OOUP\.E fallX detel a WOIMfl With • jMlol'8 "'**'d. • MONTY PmtON'8 f\.VMC#OJI • tCHAE1. JACK80N Dlt9etor of Iha Celdomle Dlpel1n191•1 of Colw Allelra.. ~d Sponn ~----of lnlereet to~ • MACHa I LEHAER N!POftT 11:3d 8 (J) HAWAII AVE.o McOanel1 find• htmMll with oN/ 41 11oun to ~ *It Iha murder of an ....,_, YICtlm and the Mtt due la a kll)' thet Ille -~-"" '-1M1 to 111m. (R) II TOHIOHT Hott; Johnny Cat1on au.ts: Gore Vldel, Paul WNRaml. Heney Shade. 8 LOVE, AMERICAN 8n'LI "Love And Take Me Along" All¥. Pk:ker1 tries 10 do • good deed. but n bdflr-. "Low And The Big Date" BUI and Henk vie TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS '°' a dat9 ...... ..,,. ~Oft •o--lllOW. • 0 P'O&atTOIW "A~Aqe"Atdl TalUfll (EOwlrd Aener). a ..,.,. cdo nMl1nO ,...., IMnt. .. lewned \IP .... 1...-0111 young rootile. ; TMATOA. "T,......_..8toty" •OD.w.T Max and ~ .. mike contaot wltl • ..i..oinan In "" CI09IWllC dapir1· "*It . • CA"10NEDA80 NIEW8 MORNING 1l:OO. 1Wll,IGHT ZOf4t ''Uncle Slmol\'' • MOVll • • ''Web Of Vlolanoa" (1"91 lt9l1 Halaey, M.,· ~ Lea. A man wltne.- " "" kldntfpplng °' "" •·llanoM Ind lltam "" own Uhelllgdoll (2 In.I • MOVI! •• "Belled 01 A Gunllgt!W'' ( 1983) Mlll1y Aobblne, Bob e.rGn. A ~ ...i .,._two OUllewa br-"9 ~· ..._. botll -attracted to "" ume g1r1. c 1 11r • ao min) •• • MACHEi. i t..IHlllP AIPOflT 11:11). MOVE *** ''Cleopatra" (1934) ~ Colbert. Henry WllcoxOI\. Maro AnthOnY• love fOf Ille Egyptian ~.~laadato '* deltnlcUon. ( 1 hr .• 55 min.) fD DO< CAVETT auea11: Sammy Cann. Alen Jrt Lerner. Mhur Sdlwartz. (Pllrt 1 of 2) 1UF. dJ ABC MY8TPY MOVIE * * "Too Easy To KUI" ( 1975) Imogene Coe•. Pet• Coffilld. A llUl'M'I Involvement wllll Illa oQcult leada "" Into a baWT'9 lltultJon when aha II ~ to car• fOf a polloeman MIO ha ~ wounded In a lllootout. (RI ~&Cl> kOJM< ''The Nie. GuY9 On Tiie Block" Oetecllv• 011 w...... ....,._. lllal • IOt"IMf o-n.te II now lrNoMd In Ille lerlClng °' $1 mllllon In 1101e11 dlamoode. (RI 1:00 8 TOMORROW . I SP't' ,.,"~Robben" 1:50 NEWS 2:00 • NEW8 MOVIE *'Ar "Tiie Vlolent 1C>Ma" I 19671 Fernando L1mU. Aldo Rey. Murder eueoecta. In dengtr of T••nd••'• •• ,, ....... ne. MOANING U:IO. * * * "TlleCGm la 0.-" ( 19461 .... o..11.. Jofln Diii. A~ In • w ..... "**19 town .. louefled by Ofte of ... eludan4L (2 ""'· 20 ~ N=TERNOON tl:OO 0 ••• "'/tofttcllllltJllllllllll ... IN1191111111t W1ttt DMoar" ( 1M 1) ,,_. L..od. Ph,-Cahert. two -a6d a poet ofllce ~illcnddllg• m91 r000ery ptoe c 111r ~ ao "*'-I a:G0 0 * *~ ''Tiie YCUll Lovera" ( 1"4) ,_t., Fonda. a.on H19*'Y. AMar hll glrtlrlend 1>9C0"'91 Pfeiln&l'lt. • oonMlad RidanC ... to ... _.. ......... lltdlf'•••L f1 llr •• IOINft.) ....... 'Thew...... Dealera" (1113) ........ oar-. LM ,.._._ At4ctl Texan tNYllla to .._ YO!il IOINIU-f-.t~. (1 Iv., 30 mill.) OscarsAUI ABC Return · ToTopSWt NEW YORK <AP> -ABC re- gained first place ln the networb' battle for tbe prime time t.elevlaioo audience tbe week endin1 Aprll t . Tbe network clalmed the week'• ftve most-watched sbowl. At tbe top ol the A.C. niellen Company's ratlnp WU the ·an- nual Academy Awards show, whlcb ABC'aald drew an audience of more th.an '10 miWoa. sreater tban for any previous Oscars t.elecut. fERVE vtLLEettA.zE AND FRIEND IN ICENE FROM 'FANTASY ISLAND' SERJES,...,._ From Unknown and Unemployed Mldgettocelebfttyln Srtort Order ABC'S U11NG for tbe week was 20.S. followed by CBS at 18. 7 and NBC at 17.t. NBC now bas finished third the last lilt ween. The networlas calculate tbe Oftr· all ratings to mean lo an av.,rase prime time minat.e, 20.8 percent ol tbe homes in tbe country with t.ele•laloa were watcbinl ABC. Finding IDs 'Fantasy' Penu1'enee Pays Off for Pini.aized Performer .J 9J BOB ftlOllAS .HOLLYWOOD (AP) -A~ and a ball aio, Herve VHlecbalze was bitterly IJC)Of, ~4\lt:.be wu deniM unemploJ· meot eOIDpensatlon. 0 1 mean I w• wltbcMA food and 1leepq ln can because I ~dn't afford a room," be re- call.I •. ~·So I wrote the aemJ>lw. ment tialc:e teWnc them Ol-"liit ~di~ &lid wand.n8 theJQ 'II I g: :_~~ate, J'OQ wW Tbeo be was cut in a major role in .cart RelDer'• comedy mm. ••Tfie ORI and Only," StaniD1 Hent1 Winkler. WITH '-'PANT.AST Island" now a weetl;f aertes and a rat- lnp wtnner, Herve hu became a• lDltant . eetebrt\y. Wbeo he fleW. to ~ to •J>PW' on the K1ke Douc1u Show lut moath. tbie erowdl forced blm to uek retuc• lo the airport'• men's roam. ''I 11te ptiaple." be obMned, 0 but lf \bl>' ,_too eloH, I'm afraid I ~pt bart." couraged. But Herve. perslSted, ta> 41 lessons and landing a few plays and small films. Hta· 11ig breaktcame as the de- vWab Nlc.k-Nack in the James Bond._fll~, ... The Mail With 'Ibe Golden Gun." He decided to purne actine fulltlme in bla natlve Paris -and ata"ed. "Aftet:ntne '88.!'S u an actor, I still haven't played a role tn Fren~b. '.' be commented. The hungry da)"a continued in Ho~ until bls career start-ed to aecelerale. Now he can af. ford'toJDOVe out ot a~ Mc· Uon near downtown Los An1eles and into own boale. Not· Bel-Air -be just wanta a boJDe wbere be can pow b.ls owu veeetabla tn tile Freacb traelitlon. Reruns al three ol ABC's bit· gest bits, "Laverne and Shirley," "Three's Compa.ay" and "Happy D~" were No. 2, 3 and 4 for the week, and the network's "Cher ... Special," a lead·ln to tbe Oscars Monday evening, was fifth. NBC'a beat was a Sanday ni1bt IDO'fte, "A Family Upside Down•' starring Fred Astaire and llelen Hayes. It flalabed sixth. CBS' beat wu the debut episode of •• Amaaln& Spider Man,''No.8. Here are the week's Top 10 abows: "stTD ANNVAL Academy Awards ShoW." with a radQ ol 36.3 reOlcentlu 21.s mUBon homes,-.. ~-and Sbirley.'' 31.1 or 22.'7 millloa, •'ftree'• Comp..,,," as. or 20.1 m•mm. "Happ7 Da11," 2T.5 or 20 million. and .. Claer ••• ~lal,'' 2l.I or UU. mUllC!ft. all AlSC: Movi .. ''F--'11 Upelde ~ ... au or 11 mnuon, ms "Project ur~: u .a or 1T mllJJo , bcida ,..,.,; ; 0 Amafnl Spider Man," 22.1 a1i4 U .t mlllloil, CSS-and °K·A+B." CBS, ••11ane7 ·Kanaan Sbaw,'' ABC. and ''Cbirlle'1 ~· ABC, all 22.5 met ta.•-~. bOt.b CBS. T!I• oat to abowl :