HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-04-13 - Orange Coast Pilot'\
&lla to. Start At Least One
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•mpoe ·Prison· Killed in · AF ...
· :T.enn Frida .Jet Collision
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enne y
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-to Bi
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Cella to Enter
Prison Friday
Former Oranae Counly
political ldngmaker Dr. Louis J .
Cella Jr. is scheduled lo enter
federal prison at Lompoc at
noon Friday to begin serving a
five-year federal sentence.
An hour later, he ia scheduled
to begin serving a concurrent
one-to-10-year state sentence im·
posed Wednesday along with a
$50,000 fine by S an Diefo
Superior Court Judge William A.
Yale.
Cella, 52, pleaded guilty last
month to state charges of grand
theft and submitting false Medi-
cal claims lD connection with
two Orange County hospitals ..
The earlier federal sentence was
imposed after Cella was convict-
ed in 19'16 of income tax evasion,
filing falJe tax returns and filing
falte Medicare claims.
J\ld&e Yale handed down the
state. sentence aft.el' rejecting a
plea by Cella'a attorneys that
thelr client be ~llowed to
perform community service in
lieu of prison.
"It would be a travesty to
have him serve as a town physi-
cian," commented Mlcbael R.
\::aplui, assittant Ol'~e Coun·
ty district attorney. "lf he is
within touchinA distance of 11.
he will steal it.
Yale cited Cell•'• deeds u
0 creat1Dc a cancer·lite effect
statewide.
Cella reportedey burat into
tears just before sentence was
P1'9nouneed. "lily life bu been
deaiccatfKl 8Dd disaeeted by the media;• be aatd. "I bave been
subjectecJ to uery humiliation
poia.lble."
Cella was ctiaue.d with
"attmmln&'~ as mu~b as S3
mUUon from two hoapttab ot
wbtch he was part owner. Mercy
General iD santa Ana 8Dd Mis·
aion Coaunun1\y in MluioJl
VJtJo.
llaeh or tbat mooey f,uad way lrito tbe campal1n1 of •
numerous local and stale
political candidates, including
the successful campaign of stale
Controller Kenneth Cory. In·
vestiealions have cleared Cory
of any wrongdoing.
Cella Wednesday repeated his
assertion that the donations to
win political influente were
necessary to the survival of the
two hospitals because of a
"war" between proprietary and
non-proprietary hospitals in the
county.
_,,.....,....
A RUN IN 1980?
Sen. Edward Kennedy
Two Ejeet Safely
AF Jets Collide; . . .
At-LeMt 1 Killed
JACKSONVILLE, N.C. CAP>
-Two Air Force F-4£ Phantom
jet !ilhters apparently collided
1 in. fltgbt and ·crashed Into a
wooded area of OnsloVt' County
west ol here today, killina at
leut one ol the rour crewmen,
authorities said. ·
Muter sat. William Barnhill
at Seymour JO~ Air Force
Baae near Goldsboro aald the
jets apparently collided du'rina a
cllmbine maneuver. He said the
planes were baled at Seymour
JohblOb; attached to the' 4th
Tactical n.ihW-Wma.
A Federal Aviation Ad·
mlnbtratloa apokesma.a lo Was~. John Leyden, said
th'e jets were part of a tour-plane
group. and the crash apparenUy
occurred as they were climbing
from 8,000 feet to 20,000.
Two crewmen apparently
ejected a.Cely and were taken to
Onslow CoUnty Rospitel. One
was found dead near one of the downed aircraft. The fate of the
fourth wu not immediately
kDOWjl.
The two crewmen Yt'bo e;.cted
and parachuted to · 1af et,y came
down near N .c. 258 west. of
J ack1onville. As they were
taken to the ~on• bad bis
eye and beadf>andaged.
A nearby resident, Bobby
Gureuus. s.Jd ho be•rd an ex·
plos!on "Uk4; thunder or a sonic
boom," and 1tepped into his
ba~yanl to inv•U1ate. ••1 saw the flames and 1 lioew •
there was a pl•ne Ol'ub," be
nld.
(See.JETS, Pa1e Al>
.Paper.·
Quotes
Friends
BOSTON <AP> -Sen. Edward
M. Kennedy bas told friends and
colleagues that he is seriously
considering running for the pres
idency "in f98Cr, the Cbrisnan
Science Monitor reported today.
The news~aper said the
M aS'sachusetts Democrat
believes President Carter may
be vulnerable, and that 1980 may
be Kennedy's "last chance," as
one Kennedy friend put it.
But in Washington, Kennedy'•
administrative assistant, Ken
Feinberg, called the report
"pure conjecture'' and said the
senator has not been consideriag
a White House race in 1980.
Kennedy is said to be resigned
to haVing the issue of Chappa-
quiddick brought up again if be
does nm, but is also said to b&
taking lbe position that .. °'*" paquiddick will ne\ler get any
better than it is now,'' tbe
newspaper said.
A car Kennedy was driving
went off a bridge .on Chappa·
quiddict Js1and in .JJl69, and a
woman passebger drowned in a
tidal pool. Kennedy~ the Kennedy •P-
peal and fame receding etch
year, and realizes that ii he is to
capitalize on lhe family name be <See KENNEDY, Pa1e AZ)
Weather
Mostly cloudy throG1b
Friday with some J>&ttlal
clearing In afternoons.
Chance of drizile or Ulbt
showers early Friday
momirtg. U>wa tollijbt 50
to 55. Hlih,s Friday GO to
~----. , ·---
I SIDE TOD,..~
-.u s -thl:!f!d!r, Apol 13, 1911
. ... -. .. NB Slaying Told
.. . . .. .• . • · . •
Sus~t's. Wife Describes lnc~nl
.. • BJWILLIAllHODGE . --............. -rwo wit.no.lea -tncludln• Uw
di1endant's wtre -jmpUcat.ed
m•rder suspeet Jlarlr J. Baktt
'1edneaday in the Feb. 11 beat·
inl deoth or Orange Coast
College student Karl Marcus
Chancellor
Suzanne Baker of ,Newport
Pie in the Ege
Beacb described a late m&hl
dnve Feb. 11 to Niguel Beach
Park with her hus band and
Chancellor.
"We traveled to Laguna
Niguel Beach and got there
around 11." she told South
Orange County Municipal Court
Judie John Griffin. who la con·
ductin& a preliminary hearing
on the mllrder charaes.
M ra. Baker said her husband
and Chancellor got out of lhe
couple'• parked car and went for
a walk toward the beach.
"He <Baker) c ame back
alone," she said. "He told me
Mark Chancellor had pulled a ~un on him. he said 'Did you
hear the shots?' "
The body or Chancellor. 3>. of
1848 Port _filleffleld Place,
Newport 1Jii'Cb, was found later
that night behind a deserted
s nack bar in the beach park.
Mrs. Baker said her husband
told her Chancellor "weot fall·
mg backwards down a cliff onto
some rocks" after he <Baker)
knocked the gun out of Chan·
cellor's hand and kicked him in
the chest
That s ame story was related
in earlier testimony from a
mutual friend of Baker's and
Chancellor's.
M lchael Jacobs of Newport
Beach detailed a conversation
he had with Baker one week
after Chancellor's death.
"He <Baker > told me that he
killed Mark Chancellor." Jacobs
told the court. "He said Mark
Chancellor pulled a gun on him
and he knocked it out of his hand
and kicked him in the chest.
"He said he <Chancellor) fell
over a cliff and that's how he
died."
Defense Attorney Alfonso Sepe
of Miami, Fla .. objected to
Deputy District Attorney Ted
Millard's probing of Mrs.
Baker's recollection of her
hus band's movements on the
nieht of the murder
Sepe cited legal protections or
conversations between husband
and wife and asserted such con-
versations are protected from
disclosure whether verbal or
non-verbal.
But Judge Griffin overruled
Sepe and allowed Millard to con-
tinue questioning Mrs. Baker
about her husband's movements
following the drive back from
the south coast beach park.
Mrs Baker said she and her
husband arrived back at their
Park Newport residence at 12:30
p.m .
It's plain to see that Guy Carrozzo. a student teacher
and freshman football coach at Fountain Valley Hi gh
School. 1s loved and admired by hls students. Carrozzo
found out just how far that love and admiration extends
Wednesday during fun and frolic of school's "Almost
Anything Goes" compelit1on that was part of sprinW
fling week on the Baron campus. Pie was made of shav
ing cream
She said Baker earned her
coat, which appeared lo have
something inside it. As they
went into the apartment, she
noticed the barrel of a shotgun
protruding from the coat.
She said Baker carried the
shotgun into the bathroom and
she observed "waler running in
the bathtub and washing."
A few days later, Mrs. Baker
said, her husband took the gun
around to some businesses to
have work done on 1t but even-
tually threw the weapon into a
swamp m Garden Grove.
FromP~AI
JETS •••
Garganus said he drove to one
or the crash sites. about 300
yards from his home. and found
a military jet in flames. He saw
another column or smoke about
half a mile away and found the
second plane.
· He said he saw a dead pilot
about 200 yards from the plane.
The plane nearest Gurganus'
house was spread over about a
five-acre area. he said, but the
main wreckage was all in one
spot
F,...PageAJ
KENNEDY. •
must move quickly, the Monitor
aaid.
Ir California Gov. Edmund G
Brown Jr. enters the race for the
1980 Democratic presldenllal
nomination. Kennedy would def·
lnitely move closer to jumping
i;. the Monitor said.
Cafeteria Closed
EL CAJON (AP) -Gross·
lhont COiiege's careterla has
been closed temporarily' follow-
irl& a fire in a ldt.cben storeroom
that caused about $20,000
damaQe, an El Cajon Fire
Oepart.menl spokesman says.
'
Rain Forecast
For Northern
Arna Friday
By Tbe A.s$0Cla&ed Preas
A low pressure system moving
south off the coast of British
Columbia today was expected to
spread showers through
Northern California by Fricay.
the National Weather Service
said. ..
On Wednesday, much of
California was blanketed by
hlgb clouds and a few areas had
strong winds, including Crescent
City, where gusts reached 40
mph.
The forecast for the San Fran·
cisco Bay area calls for mostly
fair skies with variable high
c loudiness this afternoon, in·
creasing Friday with a 30 per·
cent chance of showers
Temperatures will range from
the mid-408 to the low 60s with
westerly winds of 10-20 mph.
In the Sacramento Valley,
skies will be fair with variable
high clouds, increasing from the
north tonight and leading to a
chance of showers on Friday.
Temperatures will range from
the mid-408 to the upper 60s with
wif)ds becoming southerly at 15
mph.
U.tumeWork
'Inside Job'
PURDY, Wash. CAP ) -The
cast of ~ula Hi&h School's
sta1e production of "My Fair
Lady" next month will wear cos-
tumes sewn by inmates at the
state Women'• Treatment
Center at Purdy.
Five inmetes, paid from 2S to
68 cents an hour, plus lS cents
bonus if they attend all the sew-
ing classes, are maklnc the 129
costumes.
The only auaa in the atlt.ch·ln·
time program ortanlzed by Bob-
bie Chapman, sewing Instructor
at tbe prison, is the flWn1. It I.a
difficult lo 1et students into
prbo&. and 10me \nmatea aren't
aµowed outalde.
Authorities allege the shotgun
was used to beat Chancellor to
death on Feb. 11.
In earlier testimony, a friend
of Chancellor's testified that the
deceased student carried about
$4 ,000 in cash on the day of the
murder.
The hearing will determine if
Baker should be bound over for
trial in Orange County Superior
Court on lhe murder charges.
Baker. 22, ls being ht>ld in
Orange County Jail.
f',....PageAJ
FIRE ...
with the same street address,"
he added.
He said the original caller also
reported the blaze appeared to
be at the rear or the five-home
townhouse structure. leading the
rorce of 25 firemen to attack it
from that direction.
·•we base our firefighting tac-
tics on th.is,•• Capt. Hosmer ex-
plained. adding that it appeared
Mrs. Hansen was probably dead
by the time firemen received the
initial call.
"We could have gotten there
sooner," Capt. Hosmer added In
reference to the initial report in-
volving a wrong address. "When
we first got there we were also
instructed there was a woman
trapped inside."
He explained tbal io such
cases all efforts are first devot-
ed to aavin.8 llfe before property,
dependinl upon how many fire
fighters are on the scene.
"Tbe problem ls. the building
has a common aUtc and the fire
quickly spread," said Capt.
Hosmer who added that as IOOll
as firemen learned they were
deallni with a common attic
they Issued a second alram,
bringing Fountain Valley unita
also.
lnveetlgatora found Mrs.
Hansen's body Jyin1 in her bed
wl\h only minor burns, bKllcal·
ln• 1b probably dled of smoke
lnf\alation.
They aald It appean the blue
Tride • ---Led be1an ln the llvtna room, but no DI .l.AIUJM;D adual CAUll bu yet been de·
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla .• letmlned.
<AP) -1b& Navy conducted a Seven ol the 2S men amciaa • t~ ru,bt tell of• Trtc1eot nine flre ftabUq teams wbo mwllo W a,, lta llUl toOd re1pooded suffered varlout
teat In a dne:n tries. Tho 14.foot minor lnjuriel lDcludlu buml
ml11ll1 wu launch froin a amok• lah&latlon, 1t.ralna a;t
llbd pad , C.pe ftral 1pHI"'-
SUNNY MOMENT Sharing a moment with President
Carter on an unscheduled stroll around the Tidal Basin
sn Washington are, left to right. Vanessa. l. Ahlia. 5,
and Julie Stepanek. 8. •
Spring Stroll
Wrter SnwllA the Flmoon
WASffiNGTON <AP> -President Carter is proving the
pleasures of spnng can overcome the pressures or work.
Carter ten the Oval omce OD Wednesday for a stroll among
Washington's famed cherry blossom trees. He look along his
wife, Rosalynn, daughter, Amy, and daughter-in-law Annette.
THE FIRST FAMILY SPENT an hour on the walk, duri~e
which they posed for photographs and talked with other strollers '
in 70·degree weather
Carter shed his suit jacket at the start of the stroll around
the Tidal Basin while Amy later took off her blue, rubber-soled
shoes and walked in her bare feet.
THE PRESIDENT SPOTTED MAl\Y Flowers Qf
W ashmgton fishing in the bas in with a cane pole "1d bobber ri&.
She had a bucketrull of fish.
Carter asked the woman if she bad used oUn.nowa as bait
and she replied, "minnows and worms."
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• ...... lfc ... AM ......
'Killing'
Tape
Offered
LOS ANGELl!:S <AP> -A
Masuchwtetts prison escapee
say• a btpe be wanted to sell to a
newspaper wu made during the
murder of Kathleen Robinson.
one of the 13 Hillside Straogler
victlm11, the newspaper reported
today.
The Los Ancetes HeraJd Ex-
aminer re~ in a copyright·
ed story that George Shamshak told the paper in 1 collect pbone
call from prison Saturday that
the tape was made ln a van
while Mias Robinson. 17. was be·
iDI straqled Nov. 16.
Shamshak said the tape C9D· ~
tamed "the background sounds
or what's happerung ...
Shamsbak S81d be possessf$
five tapes relating to the
murders and piat their con~
show three persons were ln-
volved in the stayings -one f)f
them a woman who later
became a strangler victim
herself. the paper said.
Shamahak, who was servirte a
prison ~rm .for armed robbery
in Massach~tts at the time of
his escape. has been questioned
by Los Angeles police in at least
two strangler murders. PoU~
say his interrogation showed' be
had "special knowledge" in the
case.
Shamshak contended in bis
talk wlth rt!porter• that t6e
tapes he offered would clear him
or mvolvemenl in the murders.
"1 b1ve never tilled llJlYOD8 in
my lite. I J\lll ba~ tq be a
witll_fl8 dupe -a pavto.
Somebody held somethlnl ~tt
my bead." be is qooted as NY·
ing.
The curly haired copvlct said
be offered the tapes to the police
but "the police clid.Q't WNSt to of.
fer me the dea.l l wpted. I want·
ed tmpumlty, but U.y want to
prosecute me DC}W, from w~~ I
understand. for two murders.
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By lllOIA£l.. PAS&EVIOI ... °""' .......... Costa Mesa Uleumen m«
wlth M~or Ed McFal'land and
vice ,Mayor Mary Smallwood
Wednead13 to txpreu thelr COD·
Hrna about tho t'urrent bu:si· neu-~Y:bisineu crackdOwn on
.-dv1111si.n1 alpj tbat con't ton·
. form to a 197' city ordinance.
Werner Escher, president of
the Costa Mesa Chamber of
Commette, said there as a feel·
lng among businessmen lhat tbe businessmen he doubts there
city ordinance "is more restric· will be any change in the city's
tlve than most ciUes in the •hln law.
a~•-". i•our aim ls to improve the
AltboUgb admittinl • need to general look or Costa Mesa."
reduce .. visual· pollution," added Vice Mayor Smallwood.
chamber membeo w)lo at· (""We are not a second rate town
tended Wednesday's meetlns and we don't want to look like
said the city sbould worry fim one.••
•
about slgns that have been Two sisn inspectors hired with
erected without city permits federal ftmds currently are can· ~
But Mayor McFarland told the • vaasing the cU,y. looking ftlr
Deity ""' .... ., l>Wtdl 0'~11
FIRE INVESTIGATORS TOUR BURNED-OUT RESIDENCE IN HUNTINGTON BEACH
This Waa View "l'.'fvough Uvfn9 Roon" Window After Fatal Fire Early Today
By AR111Ut B. VINSEL Of .. C»lty ........
Fire swept. through a Hunt
ington Beach townhouse early
today, ~illlng one eldea:,ly tenant
and causing an estimated
$325,000 damage.
Seven firemen were inJured
f1ghtin1 the blaze. One or live
townhouses was destroyed.
A number of iral~ neighbors
complained today tnat. the fire
department response to the
blaze.was.slow
Fire officials said that initially
they had beeh gi~en a wrong ad·
dress /or the blaze. They said
the 1nat1ai alarm was received at
12 :30 a .m. and the first units ar·
rived on the scene 10 minutes
later
In veat11ators ldentlried thP
victim at. the Land.mark Homes
condominiums near the lntersec·
lion of Newland Street and
Atlanta Awaue as Mrs. Lillian
Hansen TI> She bad moved into
the development. four months
ago and lived alone.
She apparenUy died of smoke
inhalation before the fire spread
thro~ the ceilioJ' into a com-mon attic shared by lhe five
units. thus awakeni.ng other
sleeping tenants.
Investigators said Mrs.
Hansen Uved in Building 409, at
8777 Tulare Lane, in the complex
featuring a wide variety of
recreational facilities and a
guarded front gate.
&>me residents today were
vehemently angry about the
time it took for firemen to arrive
at the scene.
.. We could have gotten there
sooner," says Deputy Fire
Marshal Roger Hosmer. "But
the original call reporting lhe
fire involved an incorrect ad·
dress. "And there are several dif·
ferent bull~ on Tulare Lane
with the same street address,"
be added
Fund Fattened
Mesa Man Aids Mexican Boy
Reg~Fans
Greet Homer
I!
With Candy
NEW YORK CAP> -Reggie
Jackson picked up where be left
off in the 197'1 World Series with
a first-inning home run in the
New York Yankees' home opener today -a blow that
unleashed a rain of Reggie! can·
dy bars.
M Jack.son, whose three home
runs in the sixth and final game
beat the Los Angeles Dodgers
for baseball's championship last
year, rounded the bases, rans
began ttfngmg unwrapped candy
bars Into the Oeld.
The confection. Reggie! was
launched by a candy company
last winter.
Hundreds of the chocolate
bars landed near home plate and
s prayed the outfiel'd grass.
Shortly afterward, about 25
youngsters jumped out of the
left fleld stands and began
retrieving the delicacies.
Groundskeepers gathered up
the rest of the bars from the
playing area in a few moments
but others lay untouched. out or
reach on the screen protecting
fans behind home plate.
Jackson's bome run, a blast
that sailed over the center field
fence near the 385-foot sign,
scored Willie Randolph and
Mickey Rivera ahead of him.
signs that don't meet city stand·
ards.
City Plannin1 Dlre~lor
Charles Roberta said about :.xi
sign ordinance violations
already have been detected
along Newport Boulevard
Oependine on the value of the
sign, businessmen bavP
¥\YWbere from 30 daY11 to six
$ears to erect new slans that
comply with the city ordlnanee
approved in 1974
The ordinance eltows one
square foot or sign for each foot
or business rronta.&_e. Jn the case
of multiple tenants, each tenant
is allowed to use a percentaae of
the total space available, under
the law.
·'I shudder when I drive
through Santa Ana," McFarland
<'Ommented Wednesday in sup-
porting the amortization
cichedule.
Frank Bianchini, chairman or
the chamber's sign committee
and the owner or five Orange
County car washes, noted that a
sign that cost $17,000 when first
erected would cost twice that
much now
I le 'lrud the added cost would
be a burden to local busi·
ness men and stressed lhat the
~1ly should crack down on signs
without permits. a move he
claims would cut clutter sub-
stantially.
But owners of signs without
permits can simply apply ror the
permits retroactively If the signs
fall with.In the terms or the or·
dinance. Roberts noted.
So far. the city inspectors
have covered most of the north
section of the city, Newport
Boulevard. and Harbor
Boulevard south to Adams
Street.
Si&n owners receive a city let-
ter of approval Lr they are in
compliance with the code.
Violators recelv.e a re1istered
letter to set an ipolnt.Ment with
city planner to esta~Hsh
deadline for of nding signs to be
removed. The o ce calls for all clty
sips to be accordance wttb
the code by 1984, 10 yean after
lhe city ordaaence was ap·
.,... .......... ~~
CAN YOU PICK OUT STREET SIGN IN THtS PttOTO?
Costa Mesa Offlclala Push Anti-clutter Sign Law -
proved. Tbe more expensive-the
alp, the loqw the amorttatilon
pertocl, city officials explalned.
For e.iample. if a •!CD ~
$4,000 exceeds the maximum
area allowable. the ~Ip must be
replaced. by April 19'19 said
planntna• 1Wfer Perry Valen·
tine.
Owners or signs worth more
than SS.000 would have until
Aprll U. to replue them
Debris Clogs Harbor
Cause, Ckanup Eyet!-_ by Newport OfficialA
' Bv ALMON LOCKABEY 0.11, ..................
Newport Harbor is virtually
clogged with debris after a ma·
jor storm or series or storms
such as have plagued tbe
Orange Coast ln recent months.
That visible fact is recognized
by every government agency
from the local to the federal
level.
In an effort to find out how the
problem can be prevented and
who is responsible ror cleaning
up nature's occasional mesa, the
Marine Division .or the Newport
Harbor Chamber of Commerce invl~agency heads to a break t meeting to answer
somepo· tedq~tions.
Most. ol tbe panelists ap-eed
that the debris, sediment and
pollution originated in the back
country and ended up 1n
Newport Harbor by way or
creeks and flood control chan·
nets. But. there was little agreement
on what could be done about at or
who is responsible for cleanin1
up the mess.
Most encouraging solution dis·
cussed was a series of catch
basins along flood control chan-
nels and in the Upper Bay, but the
panelists agreed that such
measures would take three to six
years onnore and costs tuindreds
oftbousand.sof dollars.
As for the responsibility for
cleanup:
Jake Mynders~. 1eneral
services director for the City of
Newport Beach. told the group
that h is department 's
responsibility was cleaning up
the beaches after the debris had
washed ashore on high Udes.
"We are not responsible for
anything that floats,•' be said.
Mynderse said his department
bas already removed hundreds
of torus ol debris from bay and
ocean beaches, "and we are not
tbrou1b yet."
More Coverage
Additional Newport Beach-
Costa Mesa coverage appears
today on Page All.
He said the solution to the
problem seemed to be some sort
of control between Newport
Harbor and where the debris
originates
Lanfty Eberling, a ·ret>re&en·
talive of the Newport Irvine
Waste Management Planning
Agency CNIWA>. explained that
his organization and member \
agencies were involved in study
ing the sources of pollution. NIWA
1s a joint powers entity consisting
or several agencies.
Stale and city members 10·
elude the cities of Newport
Beach. Irvine. Orange and Costa
Mesa and the california Depart.
ment of Fish and Game. Ooumy
agencies include the Harf10r
Beaches and Parks Dastrlet,
Flood Control District and tbe-
County of Orange.
Most controversial questaoo
discussed at the meeting was the
removal of the county "scooper ·
from service in the bay because
or an alleged contract confU.ct
between the city or Newport
Beach and the Environmental <See DEBRIS, Pa1e A%)
The f\Dld for holpltal care for
llttle Toma~ Dom101uez, the
burn-scarred Tijuana bo)
befriended by a Huntington
Beach housewife, has been fat·
teaed by .. beyond tbe m,ooo
needed for plastic surgery.
Student Slaging ..
NIC1t Fodera~ owner of Nick's
Pizza. 2300 Harbor Blvd., Costa
Mesa, 1ta1ed. a benefft piua
iunch to help n1M fUnds to cov-
er the child'• bospltal expenses.
Since the story or Tomas, 8,
hOrribly diafigured when a can
or paint thinner exploded in his
face 14 months aco was printed,
tbousarids have responded to the
campallJl be&\lD by Vir1inla
Cutillo Tbe briabl little boy ls a pa
Pair Implicate Suspect
By WJLUAll ROOGF °' .. .,...., ......... Two witnesses -including the
defendant's wife -implicated
murder SUfpect Mark J, Balter
Wednesday lil the Feb. 11 beat·
lna death of Oranf e Coast Collete student Kar Marcus
Cbancelkli'. Suunne Baker of NeWl)Olt
Beach deacrll*i a late r'nlaht
drive f'eb, 11 to Nlpet BiaCh
Park with btr buaband and
Chancellor.
Weather
Mostly cloudy tbrou1b
Friday With some partial
clearing in afternoons.
Chance of drlUle or lisht.
ahowers early Friday
morning. LOWI toni&ht '° to 5:5. Hiaha Friday fO to
SS.
INSIDE TODAY
SUNNY MOMENT -Sharing a moment with President
I Carter on an unscheduled stroll around the T1d.&J Basin
in Washington are. left to right, Vanessa. 1, Ahha. 5.
and Julie Stepanek. 8. 4
Spring Stroll
<Arter Smelh the Flman
W ASHThlGTON <AP> -President Carter Is proving the
pleasures or spring can overcome the pressures or work.
Carter left the Oval Office on Wednesday for a stroll among
Wasblniton's famed cherry blossom trees. He toot along bls
wlfe. Rou.lynn, dau1hter, Amy, and daughter-in-Jaw Annette.
THE FlasT FA.1110.V SPENT an hour on the wallr{ during
which they posed for photographs and talked with other strollers in 70-desree weather
Carter shed bla suit jacket at the st.art or the stroll around
the Tidal Ba.sin while Amy later took off her blue, rubber-soled
shoes and walked In her bare feel
THE PRESIDENT SPOTTED MARY Flowers or
Washington fishing in the basin with a cane pole and bobber rig.
She hada bucketful offish
Cart.er asked the woman if she had used minnows as bail
and she replied, "minnows and worms."
•
~MayBuy
Sycanwre H i l/,s Area
By STEVE MITCBELL OI .. Delly ,.... SIMI
The four.year batlle over
Sycamore Hills in the Laguna
Beach Greenbelt took a surprise
tum Wednesday night when City
Council members announced a
tentative agreement to purchase
the 522 acres for $6. 75 million
The agreement would
terminate lawsuits seeking $37
million from the city by land
oo;..ner Rancho Palos Verdes Corp.
The City Council did not ~cify the source or the ftmds
or detailed use or the land other
t,Jl•n open space and recrea-
tional use. A golf course Is one Probability.
The Wednesday night an-
nouncement came after three
grueling negotiating sessions
1$etween city officials and at-
torneys for Rancho Palos
Verdes Corp., owners of the hilly
land located at the Y formed by
the intersection of Laguna Can-
Yon and El Toro Roads.
: Mayor Jack McDowell, Coun-
cilman Howard Dawson, City Atto~y George Loeao and City
Phoning Director Doug
Sohmiu, comprised the city's negotiating team.
The tentative settlement
means an end to lhe S37 million
Cliemical Banned
SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -~Iler years or use, a state agen-
Of bas banned in California a
cJtemlcal used in making
polyurethane foam after studies
Hoked it to impotence and
UJ!lnarylll.sorders in workers.
DA ILY PILOT
• 'I
asked In lawsuits filed against
the city four years ago. The
landowner charged Laguna
Beach was not allowing Rancho
reasonable use or its land, once zoned for 2,000 units.
Wednesday night councilmen
to1a a large audience they can-
not reveal precise uses the city
WI II make or the land until
further negotiations are com
pleted.
l",.._PGflf!Al
TOMAS ••.
is In the hospital before and
after surgery, however, must be
met In the meanUme.
The $504 raised by Fodera's
pizza benefit in Costa Meaa goes
pretty well beyond the surn now
needed for Tomas' new face and
new life It promises.
''He wouldn't even keep a
cent. not even for the cost or the
ingredients," says Mrs. Castillo.
She ls already assisting in the
cases of two other Spanish-
speaking children, one from
Honduras and the other from
Ecuador. both of them terribly
dlaflgured.
And she has located a little
girl in Rosarito Beach, below Ti· juana, with a congenital racial
defecl that lnterplast doctors
and nurses can repair
Her mission to help children
from underdeveloped countries
who suffer physlcal deformities
and scars, says Mrs. Castillo,
was inspired last year on a visit
to the Holy Land with her
husband Ricardo, an alrcrart
engineer.
She says she asked the Lord ~i meditating what she mlaht
do thank Him for her bless-
l s and beard a voice tell her.
Ten Me88118 Seek
Pia • D • • n n1ng c081t1on
Teo Costa Mesans who have
applied for appointment to the
Planning Commlnlon seat
vacated by new Councllwoman
Arlene Schafer will be in-
terviewed for lhe post Saturday.
The interviews to be conduc:t-
ed by the City Council wlll begin
at 8:30 un. ln tbe ruth noor con-
ference room at Ctcy Rall. The
interviews are open to the
public.
Murder Trial Set
SAN FRANCISCO (AP>
Curtis Pot Tam. 18, waa ordenld
Wednetdl,y to stand trill aa an adult on charaes of murdertna tlvt penons and ~, 11 ln
tbo Golden Di'aaon reateW'ant mauaue in O\lna.town tut Sep. tember.
'
l Dead
As Jets
Collide
JACKSONVl~E. N.C. <AP>
Two Air Force F·4E Phantom
jet righters apparently collided
in flieht and crashed into a
wooded area of Onslow County
weat of here today. killing at
leut one of the four crewmen,
authorities said.
Master Sgt. William Barnhill
ut Seymour Johnaon Air Force
Base near Goldsboro said the
Jets apparently collided during a
climbing maneuver He said t.he
planes were based al Seymour
Johnson, attached to the 4th
Tactical Fighter Wing.
A Federal Aviation Ad -
m1nistrahon spokesman an
Washington, John Leyden, said
the Jets were part of a four-plane
eroup, and the crash apparently
occurred as they were climbing
from 8,000 feet to 20,000.
Two crewmen apparently
eJected safely and were taken to
Onslow County Hospital. One
was round dead near one or the
downed aircraft. The fate of the
fourth was not immediately
known.
The two crewmen who ejected
and parachuted to safely came
down near N.C. 258 west of
Jack son vi lie. As they were
taken to the hospital, one had hls
eye and head bandaged.
F,....P~AJ
DEBRIS .•.
Management Agency of the county
The "scooper" was taken out
or service because it supposedly
confllcted with the private con-
tract the city and county had
with Greg ~ton and Associates for cleaning up the city and
county tidelands of the bay~
The "scooper" was taken out
or service at a time that placed
heavy responsibility on Boston,
a private contractor. whose con·
tract calls for cleaning up only
the periphery of the bay.
Ken Smith, a representative of
the County Environmental
Management Agency, assured
the Chamber group that the con-
tract is being renegotiated with
the city and that the "scooper"
would be back in service in a short lime.
Others on the panel included
Robert D. Montgomery, inland
regional manaeer for Southern
California tor the Department of
Fish and Game ; John
Zasadzi.nski, California Regional
Water Quality Control Board
engineer. and Carl Nelson or the
Orange County Flood Control District
TONIGHT
OCC LECTURE -"Cruis-ing," Fine Art8 119, 7:30 p.m.
"VOLPONE" -South Coast
Repertory Theater, Tuesday.
Sunday throuih April 23, 8 p.m .
FRIDAY APRIL 14
OCC SCIENCE FICTION
SERIES -A.E. Vanvogt, lec-
turer, Science Hall, 8 p.m. $1.50
OCC PLANETARIUM -
"Time and Tide," Fri. and Sat.
7:30 and 9 p.m .
OCC CONCERT -Symphonic
Band and Student Dancers.
Auditorium, 8 p.m
FRIDAY NIGHT FILMS -
.. Enter the Dragon.'• OCC
Forum, 7 15 p.m.
OCC LECTURE-5 -"You and
Your Home," Science Lecture 1;
"Remarriage and the Instant
Family," Science Lecture 2 ;
"Gestalt Approach," Fine Arts
119, all 7:30 p.m.
I",.... Page Al
SLAYING .••
night or the murder.
Sepe cited legal prot.ections of
conversations between husband
and wife and asserted such con-
versall<>M are protected from
disclosure whether verbal or
non·verbal.
But Judge Griffin overruled
Sepe and allowed Millard to coo-
tln ue questionina Mrs. Baker
about her husband's movements
rouowlng the drive back from
the south coast beach park.
Mrs. Baker aald ahe and her
husband arrived baclt at their
Park Newport resl~nee at 1.2:30 p.m.
She said Bater carried her
coal, which appeared to have
somethin1 tnatde It. Al they
went Into the apertment, she
noticed tho barrel of a abotlUD
prolrudlnt trom the coat.
She aafd Balter carrted the
1hot1un into the bathroom and
•he oblened ••water runnlq ln
lbe bathtub and wuhlnf."
A few days later, Mn. Baker
1atd, b r btaband toO tb.e sun
arouod tO min bualoet to
have work dolio on ll b even·
tu&Uy lhreW the ftlpon into • •••mp Ui Garden Grove.
,
Roses for tlae R~kettes
Members of the audience. including a
man in a white top hat. hand out flowers
to the Rockettes at Radio City Music Hall
Wednesday night after the famol)S high
steppers had performed what they 'thought,
would be their last show. But just after
midnight, an agreement was announc47d
that will keep the New York landmark in
business for at least another year. ·
Ri/,ey Appeals Ruling
lb KA111Y CLANCY
OI .. Deity ...... Malf
Orange County Supervisor
Thomas Riley Is appealing a
County Planning Commission
nuline that would allow 400
homes in a La1una Hills area
some contend is impacted by El
Toro jet noise.
Riley said today bls appeal to
fellow supervisors doesn't mean
he either opposes or supports the
location of the 400-unlt Laeuna
Village, lnc • development.
"But the very tortuous route
that it took the commission to
gel here this time means that
the board should look at il,"
Riley said.
Riley was referring to conflict-
ing noise reports concerning the
Santa Vittoria Drive property
li>ny Trinlll'Cl'I Wor TV
with remote control. 21 "·
19"· 17" • 15 .. diqonal.
And • all ui llocll
KV-8000 Sony Trtnltron.
Sony's newest AC-DC.
Talke anywhere ponable. a
Inch dla1onal.
rv-ue sonr Black • Whitt . 11 • 1qr .. n
DltllUrtd dlqona1J.y ·
filed by a Laguna· Village noise
consultant, a consult.ant hired by
the county and officials of the
county Health Department.
When the Planning Com·
mission made its ~pril 3 rulina,
county health officials warned
that residents of the new homes
would be exposed to a noise
health hazard.
And echoing the Health
Department's objection to the
project were members of the
county Subdivision Committee.
However. both the county.
hired and developer-hired noise
consultants contended their
studies showed the area to be
outside the high noise impact
zone .
Sony
Headquarters for
the Harbor Areq
T. V .·locDo-SIWto
Tapelecorder ......
HP250 /SS250. Tbl1 COIJlpact entertainment center deUvert u,,. hl·n
aound. lncluda AM/Pll
stereo receiver. a.1peed automaUc turn&ablt, and
two 2·••1 1p1aktr s11tem1, I
lllCW.
'16000
The new homes would be built
within sllbt of El Toro Marine
Corps Air Statlon and near the
base's main runway approach.
_Riley, a formet Marine 1eoeraJ, said I.hat ~ could be
more heavily impacted by noise
durin1 touch and ao landing
operations and 1ald he fears the
nolse levels aould be higher de-
pendln• upon the training .or state of trainine of the
sq~adrona.
ln his letter of appeal, the
Newport Beach supervisor aaid
he wants to make sure the data
u.sed by the commiasion to de-
term lne the noise-impact area is
valid and thiat county policies
aren't beina vfqtat~.
SL-8200 Sony Bt1.811\U lets
~u recc>rd you fevorlta
p-oirams and w1tdt them
'Af>eJ'I you pleaee ·New low
p-ice loo I
CF-580. A superb stereo c1saette system with
Fii/Aii bullt ta • pbooo input. Four speakers few
sound Ulat has body and depth. AC or baUery
operation.
s...,. Sony Speclah!
'
ape
Offered
, LO ANGELES (AP-> -A
• Ul*cbJJlieltl priloo Me
..,_ at..,. lie WllMed to NU to a
~-made d--tbe murdu'-4 Of ltaUlie.D Rotilalcm.
OQe ol u. u Hlllllde StrUOer \'ldlJm.&M~~ ~. r
Tbe Loe Aalele9 ~ !!JI.
amtner l'ePOl't«l m a eos>Yrilbt· ed ·~·tfa8t .O«qe Sba1111hak
told u.-. 'paper In • eoUeet phone
Wl fl'Clln PrilaD Saturday tbat t.be tape wa !Dado lD a van ~ 11111 RotliltaOG, 17, WU be-iDl~No'f.11.
Sh&msbak &aid t.be i.pe COD-
t&UMd ''tbe ~d IOUDdl ot •bat'• bappenj..Dc •••
Sbamahat said be poesesaes
five tapea relatto1 to the murden and that lbelr contents
sbow three persona were in-
volved in the slaying.a -one of
them a woman who later
became a strangler victim
beraell. the paper said.
Sbamab.ak, who was servin1 a
prison term for armed robbery
ln M usacbueetta at the time of
bia ea~. baa been questioned
by Loe Aneeles police in at least
two strangler murders. Police
say his lntenoeatioo showed be
bad .. special lmowled1e" lo the
case
Sbamshak contended in his
talk wltb reportets that the
tapes be offered would clear him
of involvelllent in t.bemW"den.
"I have never killed anyone ib
my life. I just happened to ~ a
willing dupe -a pawn .
Somebody held something over
my bead," he ls quoted as say-ing.
The curly haired convict said
be offered the tapes to the police
but "the police didn't want to of.
fer me the deal I wanted. I want-
ed immunity, but t.hey want to
proaecute me now. from what I
unffrstand, for two murders.''
Co1D1ty Clerk
Aide TID8
Ballot Case
Co~ty aen WIUJain l:. St
Jo()n's administrator was suc-
cessM Wednesday ln hla bid to
have hia ballot deslpation of
··.county Clerk Administrator"
> recognized as his legal descrip-
tion.
Systems Analyst Truman
Trowbridie Legg was 1ranted
that designation alter a bearlDi
lnto lepl action filed aiatnst
him by Actlns County Recorder
Lee Branch.
Both are among tM Ii.a COD· tenders for the Job of county
clerk and recorder. The two of.
fices are being combined u ot
January and incumbent Cleric St
John baa announced that be
won't nm.
But Branch. altboup unsuc-
cessful in b1a bid to deny Lea
the title, won a victory of sorts.
Superior Corurt Juqe James <>. Perez ruled that Branch can
use the title "Appoln~ County
Recorder" oa the June ballot.
Branch was restricted. before
the hearin1, to Identifying
himself as Aaaistant County
Recorder ob the t>aUot. His recent
bid to have the t>aJJot description
altered to read "County
Recorder" wu rejected by the
ReglatrarofVoten.
Branch bas been acting as
county recorder since the retire-
ment tut month of J. Wylie
Carlyle. Leu. who baa risen rapidly
from the ranb ID the last three
yean, ls re1pon1lble for the
computerlsaUoa of lbe county.
clerk's office. He baa St John's
endonemmt for the Job of coun·
ty elerk.
~--FRJEM>S SAY GOODBYE TO KJMBERLY LEACH
Eulogy Wrttte" by 12-y.ar~ld Qaaamate
Kids' Farewell
Slain Cla..mate Eulo~sed
LAKE CITY, Fla. <AP) -Tean fiowed freely at lhe funeral
of Kimberly Diane Leach. especially at the reading of a poetic
essay written by a schoolmate.
The Rev. J.R. Hite read these words compe>Sed by Lisa Lit-
tle at services Wednesday for the 12-year-old girl slain and sex-
ually assaulted after she disappeared Feb. 9:
"OB, HOW LONELY TO be the ooe left behind.
"It's hard to smile, hard not to cry," the minister read to
the crowded Park view Baptist Church.
··But Kim and I talked of death one day
"She said not to cry, only to say she was here, now she's
gone.
"I'll love her for so long.
"Where she is. she's happy, not sad
"Try not to reel so really bad.
"Her quiet way of being happy, the loving smile on her face.
"Her laugh, her wit, her open trust in people.
"The special way we loved each other, sisters in our own way.
"Our shared beliefs and love for our parents,
"Our brothers and sisters, our rnends, and most or all our love of God.•'
THE MINISTER HAD TO break off in the middle and wipe
his eyes.
An honor guard of more than 3S Florida Highway Patrol
troopers attended the service along with about 200 Lake City Junior Hlgb School pupils.
Col. Eldriqe Beach, commander of the state patrol, said all
the officers in the honor 1uard participrated in the long search.
for Miss Leach. It ended Friday at an abandoned bog pen 30
miles west of here near Suwannee River State Park.
AN AUTOPSY REPORT BY Dr. Peter Lipkovic, the
Jacksonville medical examiner. satd Miu Leach "died t1Y
bomlcldal violence to the neck, type undetennined," aad she
was sexually abused.
1 Lipkovlc said she had been dead about t
~illed shortly after ber disappearance '"'.,_.,...,..':':",
SJ9,508 Allocated
County to Press
For Bond Status
Orange County supervisors de-draw up a prospectus that will
cldecj Wednesday that $19,500 convince Moody's In.vestors'
isn't too much to spend to save Service or the county s sound
an eatimated $150,000 in inter~t credit status in hopes of raising
charges on ftmds county go'f«!!r1lv the bond rat.mg.
ment borrows each year. The consultant also is to sub-
Tb•t's why supervisors hired mit data to the U.S. Comptroller
White, Weld and Company. Inc. of or the Currency to make the
Los Angeles in an effort to raise county eligible for loans from
the county's AA bond rattn1 to a national banks. AAA status. ·
For the $19,500 the firm ls to
Television Taken
By Irvine Burglar
An Irvine housewife only left
be r home for 10 m ln utes
Wednesday, but that was time
enough for a burglar to twist
open her Jocked front door knob
and steal a coloc' televlaion set,
Police reported. •
Corrine Barnes, 42, of 17902
Glllman St.. said the television
aet was worth $476. ·
The comptroller's permission
now ls required for loans from
national banks because of
changes in fed,ral regulations
spurred by New York's financial
woes.
County Tax Collector-
Treasurer Robert Citron said
the AAA ratl.ng could save the
county ~.ooo ln interest when
it borrows an estimated $30
million 1,ter tbla yea.r.
The ft.a'lda are borrowed an-
nuallY in varyln1 amounts to
finance county services through
.a so-ealled dry pel'lod before
property tax payments arrive.
Waddill Defense Rests
ti Jury Recesses; Final Argument8 set Tuesday
lention tbal Waddill was in dire
financial straits when he al·
l•ledlJ murdered the baby.
Polnei told tlle Jury that the
medical eorporatJo:i ~beaded b)'
W addlll "1>Uecf SS42,803 ln the
ftacal ·~ tbat mded ta 1876. Ile
uJd Waddill'• peraonal •bare Wll'118,a."'
Th aecOuDtaQt aak1 W&ddlll'i
riooaJ Income for tbe ellht
monthl erid.lftl ln March, i.m
totaled mare than fJ00',000. He • ., not. Uked to commtnt
on aUepUona tbat Waddill'1.r.
ported financ:tal problem• tn·
eluded hi.I owtnc isus mtWon to • Hunllt\jtoit ti corporatk>G.
Polner said he Ma no nowlodf
of Waddill'• penoaal ft.oanClaJ
art a in.
Final araument• r 1cbeduled for 1:30 a.m. ~
ln Ju 'J'Uiber1a Depai'tm.at IQofS~or~
I
•
Conrad's
Plea Bid
Rejected
LOS ANGELES CAP) -A
federal Judge rejected Orance
County loan broker Gene
Conrad's bid to withdraw bis
pllly plea and sentenced t.M
'3·year-Old A.nabe.lm resident to
3~ yeara ln prilon for hi.a role ln
a aobeme ln which bi.I clients
were bilked of $1.' million.
Judge Robert Flrtb rejected
Conrad'• laat-mlnute effort
Wednesday to withdraw b1a plea
of guilt}' to a charge that be Uled a
Jan. 2, Im. telephone call from
HawaU to bia office ln Irvine to
help defraud a clienL
In pre-sentenctn1 remark.a,
Firth disclosed be bad lbouebt
at one lime of reJectine the plea-
bargaln reached with Conrad
because be considered the penal-
ty -DO mote than 42 months in
prison and a fine of $1,000 -ln·
adequat~.
In bia plea for leniency ,
Conrad said he never intended to
defraud anyone through the
operationa of his firm, Pen.stoo
Funds of America Inc. ..
Rain Forecast
For Northern
AmaFriJay
By The A.nocta&ed Preis
A low pressure a~tem moving
south off the coast of British
Columbia today was expected to
spread showers through
Northern California by Friday,
the National Weather Service
!iaid.
On Wednesday, much of
California was blanketed by
high clouds and a few areas had
strong winds, including Crescent
City, where aust.s reached 40
mph. ·
The forecast for the San Fran-
cisco Bay area calls for mostly
fair skies with variable high
cloudiness thls aflemoon, in·
creuin1 Friday with a 30 per·
cent chance or showers.
AP ........
ARUN IN 1980?
S.n. Edwllrd Kennedy
Kennedy
Eyes Bid .
In 1"980
OM.Yr!DT ,ti
.. ..
I
I t
J11n:allYQJU18SN ... ..., .......
If ll '1 pou1ble for aoc.lalllsm;
and anarchy lo ••la
1lm ultaneoua&J, ~~-ia wU\
provide bioth -to the cfetrimeai
of South Oranae OoWlty -eoun ..
ty Tax Colleclor-Treaa11re1'
Robert Cttraa Mid W.a..day. I
Spealdna before the Lacuna
Hilla RoWy Club, Citron ~
dieted thal lodallian will aweep
C.utornla lt YOten approve tbe
controvenlal Jarvta-Oann ~ erty tax UmltatlClll lnitlat1ve oa
Calltornla'• June ballot.
CJtroo said that 10verament
services takm awQ by llmit.lnl
property taation will· be pro.
vided tbrou&b other sources,•
such u income and Sales tu •
bikes. Beeauae the state will col·
led Uae tues, 1t will place
controla oa their expenditure at
local levela, be wamed.
The county otftclal aald ~
country la movtas steadil1
toward soctallsm anyway.
"Prop. 13 ta lo.lnl to let UI thert
BOSTON <AP) -Se1>. Edward in t~~i:~rians as the •
M. Kennedy haa told friends and l t ffl lat h h•" colleagues that be is seriously on Y COWi Y 0 c w 0 ..., considering running for the pres-decreased bis departmental
ldency in 1980, tbe Christian budget annually for the put ail(
Science Monitor reported today. years, Citron admitted go\'em•
The newspaper said the ment spending can be cwta.iled.
Massachusetts Democrat But he touted Prop. 1• appear-lni ob the same JWM 4 ballot, u believes President Carter may the real way to trim soverament be vulnerable. and that 1980 may spending. ,
be Kennedy's "last chance," as Prop. 8, be said, would one Kennedy friend put it. i d But in Washington, Kennedy's absolutely I mil spen log in·
administrative assiatant. Ken creases to 8.5 percent annually. Prop. 13 will only sbJft taxes Feinberg, called the report from real estate to another "pure conjecture'' and said the senator has not been considering source, be claimed, and speod-inl could continue to rise. a White House race in 1!180. He said Prop. 8 would cut prop. Kennedy i.s said to be resigned to having the issue or Chappa-·erty taxes to homeowners and would return more tax money to quiddlck brought up again if he renters without the requirement does nm, but is also said to be taking the position that "Chap-of taxing other sources.
paquiddick will never get any * * * better than it ls l)OW," the 1;
newspaper said. Jarvis to Appear A car Kennedy was driving ,
went off a bridge on Chappa-~a CM ~ • _.1
quiddlck Island in 1969, and a a& rinrgrouDU8 ,
woman passenger drowned in a Howard Jarvis, co-sponsor of
Rail Plan Aired tidal pool. a controversial state ballo\
Kennedy sees Ute Kennedy~ measure that would sllc•
LOS ANGELES <AP) -Calm-peal and 'fame receding eac homeowner property taxes lf
Year, and realizes t.hat if he ta to d b vote tL.•-June wl1l ty Supervisor Baxter Ward has pasae Y n rue • called for construction of a 57. capitalize on the family name he dlscuas \be iniUaUve in a Sa~
mile, $3.8 billion rail system. muet move qUicldy, the Monitor day appearance al the Oranat
sa•.-tng It Is needed to keep the said. County Fairgrounds in COii.
J If California Gov. Edmund G. Mesa city from grinding to a standstill Brown Jr. enters the race ror the The free program, sponsored
by\ the year 2000. Ward's plan 1980 Democratic presidential by the n-.. .... e Coun•0 ebapter of unveiled Wednesday allo calls uld d_. ·"'&.... ..., for a massive expansion or nomination, Kennedy wo -· U.nJted Or1aQlzaUoa or Tu·
S h C lif j R ld lnltely move closer to Jwnpt.nr pa;yen, begins at i:ao p.*1. out ern a orn a ap in, the Monitor said. lb• fair..._._.._, am"'"tiMater!. Transit District's 2,400-busfi :.:.:.eel:.:;_. ________________ .. _.,_....._ __ .,.... ___ _
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Ponishm.ent Fits Criine
LA~AND 1umcE DEPI'. -Amtd the croascut of
1aumanitY that shuffled into Harbor Judicial Dlltrlct lrafflc
court the other morning, one ftiur"e clearly stood out.
There she was, waiting for Judie Robert J. Polls, the
traffic comm.tsatoner, to convene hJs court tor speedy
justice amol18 alleeed stop sip nmnen, Jaywalkers, hot rodden and illegal turners.
Sbe a.at amone sulking Jong-haired
youths, fr.hly scrubbed coeds, jittery
boulewives and impatient middle-aged
bulinesamentwiddlln1 ballpoint pens or
adjustiq Uea.
ALL OF llUMANlTY was there.
But the eJderly lady stood out. She was
attired in Sunday's best. Her coiffure
was impeccable. And she was nervous.
The balllff, an Orange County JUOM ,_,1 manhaJ arrived to begin briefing the
reluctant guests on rules and proceedings of the court.
"You have the right to a lrlaJ ... you may plead gull·
ty or guilty with an explanation . . . you may take traffic
school on a flnit offense; take it; it's the only way to go
Then the bailiff spotted the elderly lady.
·•Are you nervous,·' he inquired.
"Yes l am "she admitted. "I've been going over what
J want to say to the judge. I've been lrying to figure out
how to shorten It."
"Well you don't fret," the balli.11 soothed. "Judie Polls
11> a very understanding man. He'll U!ty t.o you.''
ALAS YOU FEA.llED, here 1s an elderly lady in real
trouble "1th the law. Maybe it is a hit·and-nm cue.
Horrors, maybe even manslaughter.
Judge Polls arrived, all stood, and he began to preside
m that sofl, aJmost sing-song voice of his.
The elderly lady was called before the bar of Justice
early in the proceed.lngs. Polis listened lntenUy as she
spoke clearly and with earnest determination.
You see. she'd been given this parking meter ticket out
.at Orao1e County Airport.
She'd put her quarter in the meter and It shot up to a
lulJ hour and then back down to halt an hour. Anybody
would figure that meant she had an hour and a halt, right~
The plane was late. She had to help two elderly people off the plane.
"Well now, t think we can solve this if you want to
enter a plea of no contest,•· the Judge interrupted softly.
BUT NO. THERE WAS MORE. She'd fed another
quarter into the meter before seeing the ticket on her
windshield. And the meter had done its up-and-down thing
"Bgain. She oomplalned to an airport deputy. He shrugged
her off. Said he had nothing to do with parting meters.
"Now I understand bow these meters fall," Judge
Polia told her. "I think we can solve all ~There seems to be 50 cents Involved here.
"We'll make your fine 50 cents."
The elderly lady left the court.room with head held
high 10 triumph.
Justice prevails again
India Demands U.S.
Trace Nuke Device
NEW DELHI, Jndla (AP) -India demanded today that the
United States promptly check out reports of a CIA nuclear device
lost in the Himalayas 13 years ago and ln!orm lt ol the potenUal
hazard.I. ___ .. to lnd1 • U.S. Ambassador Robert G. Gobeea wu summvn~ a•
External Affairs Minlatry and told that news stories of 1o1t nuclear
material that could poison the Gqes Blver bad caused "peat
concern to the Indian government. the Indian Parliament and tbe
Indian people," a mlnUtry spokesman aald. ..
J agat Mehta secretary o( external aflain. asked Goheen to
ascertain the ~ as early as poaall>le" about the report to
Outside magazine, which waa carrle11 Thursday in Indian
newspapers, the spokHman said.
Tbe magazine st.ory •aid the device was lost by a CIA expecl.l·
lion t.ryins to set up a tracking station to monitor Cblneae ac-
tivities ..
'
Aid BIU Defeated
Angry Farmers
Flay Democrats
WASHJNGTON CAP> -Protelt1na lanMl'I wbo mUMd tbollaDdl
strong outalde the White House to dee~ ffOQM njeeUoD ol ID
emergency farm-aid bill say tbey are be QI bome to WG1t for tbe
defeat of tbelr enemies on Capitol Hill.
The farmers -brought here by the Amertcan Aptculture mov.
ment -had Jammed the House they have lobblecl tn IO bta.U,
1aUery for Wednesday 's 2168-150 for almost four month•, d•·
vote defeating the farm bill. termm.d, aaya one, to "coot"
THEY BAD LINED the White
Home fence -3$0 ot them -
teWnc President Carter tbroueh
a bullhorn directed at tbe Ex·
ecuUve Mansion that they want-
ed to talk to him.
Now they are leaving the city
RevUion
Threaten.s
Canal Pa,ct
WASIUNGTON (AP) -With
five days remaining before a
final vote, the Carter ad-
ministration has not persuaded
a key senator to back down on a
Panama Canal treaty revision
that bas angered the Panaman-
ians and threatened SeJ1ate ap-
prov al ot the pacts.
Despite eeveral days of del·
lcate negotiations, Sen. Dennis
DeConclnl, 0-Arlz., said
Wednesday be has rejected pro-
posals to &Often Ule impact of bis
reservation to the ft.rst of the two
treaties.
The reservation would
1ive the United Stat.ea the right
to keep the canal open after the
year 2000, whether its operations
were threatened by a third COUil·
try or internal problems in
Panama.
tbe 193 Democrat. wbo voted
agalnat the bill
"In two year1• time, tbe
American peoplf will reiret this day ever happened," Bobbf
Jack.on ot LeffllaDd, THU,
said OtUide the White House.
.. IT WJLt. BE amazinc what
this will do for the Democrats in
the next elec:tioa. This'll cook
'em."be481d.
"Come on out, Jimmy, we
want to talk to you,'' 1elled
fellow Geordan Oliver Odom.
pressing bl.a bullbom against the
White House fence.
Carter, who was lnalde enter·
atinin1 vllltlnc Romanian Pres!·
dent Nicola Ceausestu at a state
diftner. a.aid later be bad not been
aware of the protest.
CARTE& HAD repeatedl)'
threatened to veto the bill ll lt
bad reached his desk. He said it
would have sent the country's In·
nation rate skyrocketing while
raiaioe farmers' feed grain
costs.
He said the defeat of the bill,
which bad narrowly paued the
Senate earlier this week, was
"good for the farmers or the
United States and ... very good
for consumers."
The dlaaldent farmers did not
agree.
·'Thia ls goint to cause a lot of
bankruptcies th.la year ln rural
America." said Texan ~raid
McCathem.
life-support Girl
Succ11mbs in Coma
MICIDGAN CITY, Ind. <AP) -Andra Rubi.Delli, tbe comatose
girl whose parents had aouittt a cowt order to t.alce ber oil a respirator, bas died, a hospital official aaid toda,r.
Donald Muhlenthaler, admlniltrator at Walters Rotpltal. coo.
firmed that the 15-year-old daupter ol Joan and Peter Rublnelli
died Wednesday night. The
cause was not revealed im· mediately.
Ml.SS BUBINELU suffered
from a rare blood disease called
thrombocytopenic purpura, in
which a deficiency or platelets in
the blood causes bleeding in the
head. She bad lapsed into a
coma March 26.
child 'a inlerelQ lD the matter,
Fox had continued the bearinl
until lat.er in the month
'
NATION I WORLD
Lea1'hlg Beme
Frank L. Ebertowski was evacuated from his farm
home ·Wednesday as the Red River in North Dakota
flooded the area. Amphibious craft and boats searched
for rural residents forced to flee the rising waters whtch
extended 20 miles long and five miles wide. creeping in·
exorably across the rich farmlands north of Grand
Forks.
Defector Demands
Money, Protection
UNITED NATIONS CAP> -Artady Sbevcbellko, tbe Soviet
1ovemment's renegade at the United NaUoo.s, is reported demand-
ing money and U.S protection to get Secretary-General Kurt
Waldheim offtbe Russian hook.
U.N. spokesman Francois Giuliani said the top Soviet U.N
employee wanted "a mixed bag of money and personal security'' to resign from his S76,000-a-year job. ·
Greela, T.,.,,. te T.UC'!
WASHINGTON <AP> -Turk.lib Cypriots today proposed a
federation government for the bitterly divided Island nation and
suggested their proposal could be the basis of new ta1b between it. Greek and Turkish factions.
The Tur.kiab Embassy J here, which released the pro-(
posal, said it was being pre-,~SHORT seated to U .N . Secretary-1 'f
General Kurt Waldheim in "'"-----------Vienna, Austria.
S.• .... •••uer Bftrtd
BEIRUT. Lebanon CAP) -Syrian tanks and rocket& ham-
mered ChrisW.n mtlitiamen in southeastern Beirut for the fifth
day today as President Elias Sarkis negotiated with the Syrians for a cease-fire agreement.
Doctors adminlltered three
electroencephalograms, which
measure brain impulses, and
failed to detect any activity. Her
parents, who are Jehovah's Wit-
nesses, asked the hospital to dis-
connect the machinery. but of.
TO PROFESSIONALS IN REAL ESTATE
COMING Wednesday, Aprll 19, 1978
In· the Dally Piiot and Piiot Advertiser flciala refUled, because Indiana aw doea not recoantze brain
death.
UNDD STATE LAW, ii a patient I• breatbJog and bis
heart Is beating, he ls con-
sidered to be alive. Hospital
macblnery bad artificially main
tained tbOle functioos. Tbe RublneW., who already
had made all the arrangements
for their dau1bter'1 funeral.
went to court on Tuelday to ask
LaPorte Superior Court Judge
Raymond Fox to declare ber
legally dead. After appointing
two attorneys to repretent the
A
PRIVATE
PROPERTY
WEEK
TRIBUTE
TO THE
~,..
.. Red River Still Rises ORANGE
COAST'S
SUCCESSFUL
REAL ESTATE
PROFESSIONALS
-'
Fandlie• Emcutded in Dakota Flooda
CAU....,a
r
11 q
.. "J.19 11 .. ,. ,,
.a •
" 71 N 41 ., " 71 '° 52 ,,
'2 ..
st tJ ,. " .. ,. " . .. u .. M S1 • n ,. . .. ,. ,.
.. . u• q ..
" fl ft • ., .
'
•
., S1 ., . ,. ..
'1 D .. f1 u ..
'
R•ln end~ ltlwidl+*'Mi
C'OfttlfMllill..,, .._. ._ ""o..tf tlll ......... lellt""1t Allallk <-. .... .......
.. ell .. -• .... --......... -tfle ~ ........ OtMt ........... ""'"'"' ......... .,_ ...., ... .,.,.o...,,.~
s..MMI, Nrty,,..,..... NkNt 91
... """" ...... "" '9tlfk QIMl.
~ ... .,.. "'*4fY dNr ,_ ..
Ml-I ¥.....,_,Ille ~ te U.~KHkCllll&
••rly ~1119 tem...-etv'9t
.,... lllt,..... ·i:.:r: • Ill Ol•tet•. """-· .... ..... . .. l'ala IC.IY'w..&. ,i.,
• •
·.-··~ . ...,,.,,... -...:.--.-
On Wednffday, Apfit 19, 1m, the Dally PUot wUI publlah a apectal tribute to the
prof•..,... of the ,.., fftlte lnctuetry -the men and women who dally make •
major coedlft)udon to tM .,....., Orange Coatt economy •
Tit•H ll)edal 1>999• wm honor Pltvat• Pfoperty Weo and wm be delivered ta Ovet
18,000 home• ¥18 the D~ Pilot and Piiot Advertlaer. Notice• will be one c:olumn by
fOUr lricMa Nett, •ttowf"9 room for• i*Oto and deecrtpttve copy. Cotlt of each
nouce le~ s11. with•~ YoU provide.
Titla .._ to Real Ettate PrcMatlonalt It an exoeptlonJI opportuntty to Introduce
new or ~ HIOCletff tO the people ot the Or•noe Coal!, or to Mnot' I outata,... ..... or MrVloe actWwementa •
oo., mlla...,. P1f1 of tNI.,... ectvent.ane oppottuntty. Deadlne for ntMM"-9
IP8• II • p.m., Apfll 11, «:.-tod.Q1
Or, rou m11""" rour PhiDeo Hcl •biter erttc:le of •bout 78 worcla deecftblng rour
back~, ed6'0lltl0n, PfafHllonal tralntng, •wardl or other hon~ Mall your
atory Ind~ to tM C&alllfled Dept., Dally PllOt, UO W. l•Y ltreet. Ben 1MO,
C01ta ..... , CA nae. .
'-or ,h~ ~ rovr •llut• notice,
caN t4Nt7I end • Meftely tdovfeer
...... fcMl.
,..
'
Despite Objeetions
• Fonner California Gov. a.ald Rea1u. ask·
ing for questions from the audience al the NaUonal
AssoclaUoo of Broadcaster1 convention in Las
~.~113.1178
. .
'Dd laads Royalties
College Fund
'Drying Up'
DAILY PILOT Ji$
..
..
SACRAMENTO CAP) -Federal prlce con· •
trots are dryln1 up the now or oil from state
tldelands in Lorie Beach that fundl public collete •
construction 1n Callfomla, sa.ys 1tat.e Controller-~ HERB . :
Ken Cory. •
He told an Aaaembly aubeommlttee Wednes· • FRIEDLASDER:
day the fund, which contained QJ.S mllllon leu • JS MAKING • •
than two years a10. will nm out of money ln five : GREAT DEALS • .
years at current trends. : FREE , :
ROYAL11ES no• TBE TIDELANDS IQ lo· ..
to a tund that pays tor water pc:lieeta and for con-it 50 GALS :
struction at the Unlveralty ol fornia. the state • OFGAS •
University and College system, and community .... , ..... ~ .... -........... _._,.. •
colle~:'r}r said oil companies have been dis· : .. '!!:!?~l!1l~~ !
couraged from clrl1llq ln Lon2 Beach by federal • ........ ,.._,_~... • •
pricing pollcie. that lax domes6c oil and subsidize • e HONDA e: •
foreign oil. 1t 1J1• ...... \'4. •
.. We've allowed the f~eral government to die-• U1"" ..... · ' -..ltJ c
tat.e whose oU is bougbl and refined, and lbe next •* * * * * * * * * * * * •
vlcllm may well be higher education in • MG·TRIUMP~ •
Callfornia," Oory said. • e JAGUAR 9: • • • • GOV. EDMt1NO BROWN JR.'8 Finance • FIAT-LANCIA, •
Department ~cted the conatruction fund .tould • .., ,ri~··~'!:.::11·~ •
have $11.8 million left June 30 and have deficit& or "'* * •• * * • * * • * ••
$6.4 million a year later and •.2 million two years • e TOYOTA e •
later, i! ail currently budgeted projects are built. • 1•10•-."""•••• _. •
The colleges could turn to the state 1enera1 ::':"•'** * * * * * * .! fund for money. but property tax relief pro1rama ...,.
are expected lo use up virtually all of the state sur· • MOTORHO~ F. •
plus. A $155 million UC health sciences construe· ! SAi.ES & RF.STAI.$•
tion fund is almost used up, and the last proposed • RESER\'t: SOW •
community college construction bond wue was re· • 537.7777 Ext. 500 :
jected by state voters. ,.. * • * * * * * * * * ~ • e LEASING e • COBY SAID CALIFORNIA OIL, like other it "• ..... _,_.,. ~ •
Assembly Gets
No-/ ault Bill ALPINE remained the domestic oil from wells long in use, is taxed heavi· • "•s377717t .. tGOO •
''Will yau translate or can somebody translate ly by the.federal government, and some of the tax •• * * * * * * ~ * * * ••
for him?" asked Rea1an who said be cannot un· county wlth the lowest revenue is used to lower the price of rorelp oil
Ve&as. tot a len&thy one -in Spanish.
SACRAMENTO CAP) -Despite objections of
trial lawyers and some insurance companies, a no·
fault amomoblle insurance bill is heading for the
Aaaembly floor.
derstand Spanish. tax rate -$4.98. Other used to beat homes in the Northeast. ---------
A conventioneer who said low tax counties were He said Calltornia oil that sells for $4.36 a bar· ca11 so-sen.
be knew Spanish got up and ex· Plumas $5.87, Mariposa rel is t.axed another $8.70 wtUle $14·a·barrtl Saudi
plained to Reagan, "All he said $5.98. Colusa $6.33 •nd Arabian oil &ets a $2 subsidy and as a result ls a
Put • ••• word• to work for ou. Tbe bW by Assernblyman Alister McAllsler,
D-San Joee, I.A the lat.est or more than two dozen at-
t.empta since 1988 to adopt the no-fault system lo
CaliforniL
was, 'Governor, you're a lot San Benito $7. better buy. • older than you look.' " ..----------;..:_~~;..:_----------------------
"Well I really don't know
bow to lake that," grinned
Reagan, 67. but thanked the UMl>D McAUSTER '8 AB ZZSS, lnjurte1 or
deaths from an auto accident are paid for by a
person's own insurance company, no matter wbo
caused the accident. Twenty-four other states
have some form of no·fawt.
man anyway.
•IAU. *
Unlvenlt>' of Rhode Island
officials put a halt to a student's effort to gel his
name ln the Guinness Book or World Records by
takin• a 210-hour shower.
McAllister said Wednesday he thought the bUl
-would win usembly passage. But its prospect& are
doubtful in the Senate, where another no.fault bill
died in its first committee this year.
The bill would establish maximum benefits of
$100,000 per person for medical expenses and
$36,000 for lost wages. It would not set up what is
known as a "pure" no.fault system because it
tkmior Gre1ory Martln had hoped to top the
202-hour shower mark of Michael Speed of Sydney,
Australia.
• would allow lawsuit.a in cues inv~l ving death or
serious i.r\jury.
THE BILL WOULD NOT APPLY to collWon
insurance. wtUcb would be handled as under the
present system. YcA.ll.lter did not forecast a major reduction
in premiuma under bis bill But be said the system
delivers insurance benefits more efficiently
because It. avoids the costa of investigations or
trials to determine fault.
Aerosp~e Workers
Strikers Vote
On Contract
LOS ANGELES <AP> -More than 8,000 slJik·
lng aerosptce workers In three states were voting
today whether to accept a once-rejected contract
offer and end a three-month walkout that baa
slowed production al McDonnell I>ouclas Aircraft
Corp.
United Auto Workers members decided at a
mass meetlni ln Loni Beach Wednesday to submit
the proposal to a second vote after the union's na·
tlonal president, Douglas Fraser, assured them
the offer was "accept4·
--------ble and better than the
( )
one received by Boeing." ST ATE The proposed con-
--------' tract was narrowly re· jected April 1 despite a
recommendation by union leaden that it be ac·
cepled, but the company refused to sweeten ita of·
fer in ~ ln Sl. Louis last Friday.
SACRAMENTO (AP> -The Assembly's
enerty subeommittee recommended Wednesday
tbe death of a blll that would allow the Sundeaert
nuclear plant to be built.
The subcommittee vote wu S-2 on its reeom·
meodation, which moved to the full Resources,
Land Uae arid Ener1Y Committee for a vote today
on SB 1015 by Sen. Newton Russell, R·Glendale.
£1¥6 S* ftreatelled
Martin said be arranged to have bis meals
brou1ht to him and hoped to keep bis bid for the
record quiet, but word leaked out and university
omclab stepped tn. Manin 'a stay ln the abower
wu cut abort at• boun.
• United Mine Workers President Anold 1l1Uet'
suffered a mlld heart attack. lbOltb' before M was
due to be Nl.....S ftCJat MGUDt SIDal 11e4llcal
Center, a bo9pital 1pobswc>llW) ~· in M1&m1
Beac~.
The bolpltal Hated Miller in stable condltloD.
Mlller, ·M, bad been at the bolpltal alnce be
suffered a slight 1troke March
28 while resting after conclud·
~ negotiations for a new COG·
trad between the 160 ,000·
member UMW and the soft coal
industry. • Former Mluourl s,n.
Rtaart 8ymln1toa and ,(DD
"Na•cJ" Hemingway Wataon.
the widow of a founder of IBM.
are to be married June 14 in
New Canaan, Conn.
Symlnaton, who served 24 yeara ln the Senate
before retiring ln December 1978, wtll be 77 yeart
old 12' days after the wedding,
He met Mrs. Wat.son, 59, last
year· in california, where both
wet4! visiting Bob Hope during a
IOlf toumamenL 'itra. Wataon la the widow ol
Artbar Wataoa, a founder of
IBM and former chairman of
one of lta subsidiaries. Watson,
who. died ln 1974, had been ap-
pe>tnted ambauador to France
by President IUdlard Nlxoe lo
1970'and served two yean.
Symlniton 's first wife, Evel111 Wadawortb
Symlnston. died in December 1'12.
PORT HUENEME <AP> -Two eroupa have
threatened to sue ll Deer Canyon in Ventura Coun·
ty ls selected for the site or caurornia's flrll •'-·""'"'
liquefied natural au terminal.
The site, one of five under consideration by the
atate Ooutal commi11loo, drew little if any sup.
port at a hearin& held by the commtssiOn here
Wednesday.
l•flttetaee Teld
ANGELF.S CAP) -Un4a Kuablan eon·
tJUnt day of testimon)' Wedneldl.1 at
retrlal of Lellie Van Hout.n b1 •&Yin• memben of lbe lllDIOD "famlly0 were tauabt
that DIOPlt lii aoclety were ·-...,,,.. 10metb1Da
leA tha1\tmman."
Mn. KPablan't toetln>OGY centered on tM tn•
flaance Mauon b.cl over Mila Van Hoatta, •bo ""Ii member of bll '.,amUy,1
• lo tbe 1ummer at !Ml .-Leno and Roeemary LaBlnca
• , " killed.
LIMITED TIME ONLY!
'
A Better Choice
For the Elderly
·One d. traged1 ol old aie ls the accompanying
infirmity Ui t often forces senior citizens to leave their
own homes end perhaps loved ones to live the rest of their
days in ~·term convalescent tacilltles.
Orange County 1upel'Vison set out tbia week to find
alternatives that could keep some ot these senior citizens
out of nursing homes.
They created a 15-member advlsor:y council to work
the next five months on plans for a n~f work of adult day
.care centers where the elderly could receive health.
mental health and rehabllltaUon help while still living at
home.
The only completf> such program now operating iri
Orange Cowrty ls at Saddlebacflt Commu:aity Hospital. a
program that bas received accolades from many of the
se,niors it serves.
The Adult Day Health Care Planning Council is to be
, composed of a majority of senior citizens, along with
citizens iJ) the medic'al, mental health and senior citizen
service fields.
One council member is to be someone involved in
se11ior citizen transportatioo and should help the council
address ways to carry the a'ging citizens to and from care
centers.
The new council may be able to off er Orange County s~iors alternatives to convalescent home care, options
that would maintain some degree of independence for the
infirm and keep elderly coupl~ at home together.
·Hinshaw Has a Point
Former Congressman Andrew Hinshaw had some
things to say about the state prison system and county
jails when be was released from custody last week.
Much of what Hinshaw said makes,sense, especially
his comments about the state's apparent interest in
Orange County's apparent lack of interest in keeping
short-term inmates in touch with their families.
The severe impact of a f amiJy breadwinner being in
prison is frequently the cause off amily disintegration.
In terms of social cost, that CCVl be expensive.
Shattered families orten are forced then to depend upon
welfare and other forms of public assistance.
Hinshaw suggested some family torment might
eas ily be aV6ided in the coWJly's minimum security Theo
Lacy facility.
He suggested that controlled phone contact among
family members be permitted al Theo Lacy.
JJinshaw also suggested that family members be
allowed more visitation rights than a two·at·a-lime.
once·a·week visit in a crowded and noisy visitors' room.
Why not allow wives and children to picnic with an
uimate for a few hours in the ample grass areas at Tbeo
Lacy? Hinshaw asked.
He may have a good point. .
After all. inmates at Theo Lacy are minimum
security risk, short-term prisoners .. who will quickly
return to what can be hoped are productive roles in
sOCiety.
Keep the Door Open
In this election year, many communities along the
orange Coast will find themselves with changes in the
elected and appointed bodies that run local government
a(ld school districts.
The changes may range from a whole new majority
oC) a city council. or new appointments to a flanning
C9t11mission, to a reshuffling of offices on a schoo board.
With these changes, it might be a good time to
tiJ·explore the state law requiring open meetings of
J)Qolic bodies.
The Local Government Open Meeting Law, generally
\tttown as the Ralph M. Brown Act, applies to all
legislative bodies, including advisory commJsslons or
c(tmmittees of local agencies that conduct the public
business.
It states that such bodies may not hold meetings
\fithout prior notification of the public. And that such
~sions must be held in public.
The only exceptions are mee.Ungs held to diseuss
ific personnel matters or specific litigation. And. if ~otion is ta.ken, a public announcement must be made.
!Png with a report of bow each member voted.
' Most city councils, s~l boards and other agencies
a(e careful to adhere \0 the law. But the temptation to
1'9tire behind closed doors. usually in the interest or speed
d efficiency rather th-.n secrecy~ is aln)ng.
As is the temptation'lo Wander off into other areas of ~cussian durin' • legal cloSed door session.
This is agamst the l•w. New members of public
aiencies should be awar,. of it. So should
g vernment-watchers in the public, whose affairs -end
dollars -can be affected. • • ollinlona expreued In the apace abO~ •r• those of the Dally Piiot. O'lt'8f view, exprneed on this page are tho .. of their authota and
Reader comment It Invited. Addr ... The Dally 'Piiot, P.O.
1580, Costa ~esa. CA 92628. Phone (714) 642-4321.
Bo1:d/Blof!dhounds
( -
• • . .. ,
1
Nick Thimmeaeh I \
Carter's Conflict With Reality
W ASIDNGTON -President
Carter~ acoohed decUlon to de-lay prOductlon of the neutron
boll\ b -that devtc~ advertlaed to make nuclear war a bit mGr'e
clvtllzed -dramaUie1 .bow
~nonal convicUon can COQfllct with the realltlea of wo~Jd
Power.
Can Jimmy Carter. the
Georgia Baptlat who became
President, re-ly OD bis own
morality to
make a de-
cision affect·
Ing the
strateeic
East-West
balance,
when the
other side,
the Soviet
Union, always makes such de·
ciaions amorally? The answer,
unfortunately, ls no.
In atJiaallng with bis COD·
science, the l>'realdent suspended
bis earlier announced declstoo to produce and deploy the in·
novatlve, defensive w'aPon. and
thus caused damage in several
critical areas.
THE nBST ls Western Europe.
where ban-the-bomb has been-a
fervent cry for decades. and
where government leaders must use every last political skill to
work for European security and
stay in office at the same time.
It's no fun for West
Earl Waters
German Cballcellor Helmut.
Scbmidt to follow Carter'• urt· illl and bulld aradual support for the bomb when hla party's
left·wlng opposes It. only to have
Carter cbanae posttlons and
make Schmidt look loollab. To-
day. any EuropeaQ leader risks
enormous pollticaJ dam.,. by
•Ulf&estlna that the Americans might be correct in uJdna for deployment cl the neutron bomb
in the European NATO arsenal.
THE SOVIETS get the best ol
it ln the West when It comes to laauea b.ke lh.l.s one. Hoscow can.
through the European Com·
munlst parties, inspire huae pr<>-
paganda demonatratiOOI a&alnlt
the "evil" bomb by students and
other activista. These same de·
monstraton would never think
or marcbina against tbe Soviet
Unlon for it.a huae proanms of
buHding conventional military supetlority over the West.
Tbe Soviet leaders can
cb\'Ckle ov~ their advant.aae in
being able to exploit Western
"ce>nsclence" while..tbey develop
tbetr own weapoarf,o a lare-thee-
well. For this reason. Carter's
decision makes him only weaker · in the Kremlin's estimate.
Only recently, on his
African trip, Carter was ex-
pressing great tolerance for lbe
revolutionary guerrilla forces supplied. and advised by the So-
vleta and Cubans while frettinl
about the Soviet·CUban presence
.
lD Africa. What a IOfty, the So-
viet.a mustbesuiDI.
Carter'• fflp-llop on the
neutron bomb m~a~ cUsmay
tbe senior offlclall m ti1a aovem· meat WhO bad helped develop
the polley for product.ion and
deployment of the weapon. It cer:tatnlY exu_perates thole
Coa(rtlflouJ leaden Who IUC·
cetafUlly fought for Carter lut
summer-In cetUna Concresa to
paaa, by a 6ealthY m&rlln. an
autbortz.tloG bW for developing
and produclD& tbe neutron
bomb.
i"lna.llY. Carter's decls.ion to
be lndeclsive hurts him political-
ly <Republican leaders Jwnped
all ovet" him>. and ultimately
with voters beeause It gives
credence to the accusation that
Carter i8 a waffler.
TBEll£'S NO question that
Mr. Carter, like any t.boQibtfuJ
person, ls agbut with the poten.
tial bonora of nuclear war. It's
trite to otllerve that. the world can euUy blow itself up. Mr.
Carter can't be critlcl~ed for vowing that be would do every.
thing pouible as President to stop lbe arms race. and reduce
the world's inventory ol nuclear weapon&. . Meanwhile, the Soviets have
developed such a superiority in
conventional weapons -tanb. infantry and field equipment -
that they could overrun the
West•s conventional forces. Tbe
aole deterrent t1 the West's
alight edie in nuclear ..-eapons.
but even lie~ there Is no surety that nuclear neld weapona could "kill" Soviet tanks.
So a1ona comes the neutron bomb whose Intense radiation, after bolng detonated as an
elabt-incb artillery sbell. would
disable or kill tank crews and in-
fantry wttbout demollsblng the
aurroundln& areas. It's not a
very appeUzlo& weapon, but
given the reality of nuclear
warfare it's less ugly than what
else Is a.round.
WkEN THE neutron bomb
was first announced, there was
immediate revulsion. As the re-
alities of Soviet strategy. and capablllty or ovettunnln& the
Weit became clear, there were
second thoughts among many
concerned people in the West. Many ol t.bo8e who originally
opposed it. Including tbe New
York Times and Washington
Post came round to backing its
production and deployment in
order to reduce tbe Soviet threat. It can still be argued that
We1tem JeaderS might use the
neutron bomb sooner than they
would the big stufr. and thereby
increase the risk of nuclear war.
Anyway. Carter first decided
for the ~ bomb, and now
be de~ides to hOld off. He says
lbat be hopes the Soviets will
show similar restraint. sup·
posedly next week when
Secretary of State Cyrus Vance
goes to Moscow for SALT talks. There is reason to conclude that
Mr. Carter is being naive.
THE PRESIDENT might be
further shaken U Congreu, in ef-
fect, rammed tlle ne~tron bomb
down his throat by voU.ag more
money for its development and
production this session. The
votes are there to do this.
Sen. Henry M. Jackson <D·
Wash .) believes Carter is an in·
credible bungler on the neutron
issue. Sen. Sam Nunn <D·Ga.l. representing Jimmy Carter's
Georgia, is kinder in his charac·
terizatioo, but is dead-set
against the President's deciSion.
Sens. Howard Baker <R-Teon.>.
Pat Moynihan <D-N.Y.>, and Dewey Bartlett <R-Okla.> will combine ln an effort. to get the
President to co back to bis orilinal decision.
Let's hope that President
Carter is only nominally
vu&Mrable to the affiictioo all
Pruldents 1uffer from, namely. being substantially influenced
by tbe last person he talks with
on an issue. Let's hope that it
w aJn 't Andy Young over
Carter's conscience on this one.
Do We Really Need All These ldbraries?
Everybody IOVff the public
library. rtaht? Playing upon that
sentiment. profe11Sonal
librarians wheedle substantial
federal, state and local tu
dollan annually to malJltain
central, branch and mobile
library semces.
Ih addition to fbnds provtded
at local levels in every
community
tbrou1bout
the st.ate, thia
year's state
bud1et pro·
poses $11
mllllon for
the Statewide
Llbtaey Sup-
p o~t and
DevelOpment
proaram, an
Jncreaae of
$4.3 mllllon over last year. 'Ibe
bu<ftiet also proposes $5.1 miWon of general fund money for lOC!aJ
library aul.stance and reflects
another $4 mtwon in federal
fu11da to be tunnelled to tlM bomo town llbrafles.
'
Next to cull in police and fire services, nothing is more ce.rtaln
to arouse tbe ire cl the public
than for the town fathers to •Ul-geat curtailment.a In library
funds.
general public me tbe public
libraries for ~-pqs:pose bue
been kept CarefUllJ' bJddeA. SUcb
fieures would bard1Y be =~ to tbe libf'arians when 1
tax dollars.
YET &ECENT studies ln-THOSE who believe •udl an dJcate such reactions may be estimate of library ._,. la
only a facade on the part cl the absurdl)' low aboulct •tart aUlag
cltbenl. Libraries are.neceaury tbelr friends and nel&bbor•
to atve evidence ol a cultural when last they set foot ta the
aoc•ety. lt'a like the opera and town library. F\lrtber credetlce
symphony. EveryJ>ody lives Up .. to tbe repol'U of the small
service tO their deal.rabWty, bat patronage of libraries ls •a&·
only a •mall aecment of tbe aested by tbe tread of the
community attend ~ances II bra rt es ~o ~xpaad their
and a ltW smaller number coo-services far beyODd simply pro.
tribute financlally. vtdJna boob for research and 1.endln£ One may now borrow
Public llbrarfes as lbey bave record.a ud tapes and even
Opt#rated over the yean; provtd· works cl art auch aa oil paint· tn1 boob oo loan, may be an tnp.
anacbranllm. Tbe need for free circula!:~ llbrariea may no tonier , ll Ulete atudie1 ue
riabt.
Ma.ay llbnrles bave also pe into special services for the ban·
dlcapped, partic\llarb' the blind
and deaf.
Rel)(Jrtedly, statlBtJca •bowlna Perhaps tb• advent of that leas than 10 percent of the teteviaioo, alon1 wltb otbtr
Ufe1tyle changes, have been
responsible for a diminishing
public ardor for reading but a
study done by the University of
Illinois suggests the libraries have oootributed to their own
decline ol patronace.
THAT STUDY Included a sur·
vey or 86 "well supported"
libraries. Of 500 newly publl.shed
boob. ooly 30 were possessed by
the 66 libraries. Only a bandful-
of those were to be found on the
ahelves. With that record of
service it Is easy to understand
buw even those m01t inclined t&
use the library w~d quickly
become discouraged. Few would question the need
for some basic research
libraries 1trat.ectcalb sprinkled. throughout the state but in view
of tbe demands for R!ductions in·
the cost ol .iovernmeot the lux·
ury of malmalmnc a prolifera·
tlon of circulat.lna libraries
wblch serve onb' a amall percen-
taae of tbe populac. would seem
to call for IOIDe bard review.
for the devaatatlni winter
weather wblcb bu shatten!d all
prevloU1 records for wet and
cold tbao plat two years?
LlvlriPtoM QYS, ••J>ecUnln&
aoltt temperaturetr1Dean less
be1t reacb!Df Earll\. AlPloat eertalnly tb 1 would etfect
chu1es 1D our dimate. At the
1aiu tJme, NlDI aunsJJQt ac:Uvt-
l1 meam more ultfa•lOi.t ll&b\ and X • ....,. wW ltrlb t.be OUter
bOundan of tM Eartb •a at·
motl'beN, anaer1n1 Chane ol their owa••
fTUARIES
( ..
Thur9dly,Apf1113.1971 ONLY PILOT Af,
HEW Clamps I~~n:iits
On Medicare Cosf8 , .,
And be 11ald Medicare reCU)aUons
will be revised to encourqe DOD· -+-M--+t1--tir+1~-+--
proflt hospitals "to pool their ,.. -t~~HH'""""4-sources and to share 1ervlces1 from
laundry and bl~ semee to bulc -t-i~H-11.1,.._~.::_
&,y Tore/ms ~
To A.voUl Exams
TOKYO (AP) -Police bave arrest..s • •
year-old 'boy w1'0 tOld Uiem 49 Mt n,. co tft
scbool ~uma la an attempt to eauae tM cur.
cell.aUoo ol aprtnc examlnattom.
Tbe bcJ1 Nld be wu afrald he would fall' the
exams. ., ...
WASHINGTON (AP> -Tbe
federal_ ~t. trylnc to bold
d9Wll rlS1q mecUcal eo1t.a. is clamp-lrlf llmltl on bow rnucb Medicar. 11Vfll pat for laboratory teats, Wbetf~ Udholpltal beds. medical progama. • ' .. . Asked by reportera whether lenlol" Fear of f "11UN on vnlventty entra.ne. eu~a. : HEW Sec~ Joeepb A. c.Jlfano
Jr., ntd WedMlda1 be WM talctni
tbe acrt!on Ud other adrolnlatratlve steps •io control tbe preclpltoUI and
corrosive rise in the cost ol medical
care lo America."
citizens would be forced to pay more ~~~tl::M~lM.~.i.. bave driven more than 100 bleb·ecbool 1tudeot1 to
out of thelr pocketa for tbe lab tests, eulclde every )ear ln reeeot yeJ.n. •• ,-:
Califano said be believed there wu
• ·en o u1 b com pell tlon am on~ ~:ii;;iii&m\-~~ The police aald no cbarps would k tueCt'. laboratories that Uiat won't happen.' • agalo.sttbetetil·•I• anon.lat.. • , , ..
THE (X)6'l'8 OF medical services
rose 9.5 percent annually from 19'75 to
1977, outatripplnc the a.1 percent
overall rise lD consumer prices by
more than 1SO percent, Califano aaid.
.. WE WILL OBVIOUSL'Y. be __:__.;._ ____ ...;.. __ ~--._.,,...-..;-~--...:.....~---:--,
"The fellow upataln just &ot • terrifte new bl-0 ouUlL"
For the Record
MAaaa
M<IC~ZIE·HEIGIS -Dllnl .. M,
4.S, ... llM1lafa S.., 11 ..... of H.-11•
...... llNcll. HANSHAW·PUltlN -Wllllem
L"'''· 22. ... ~ 22. llolll of WHtml111'9f'.
MAlt.M
LEE·VOUNG -...... k Jemft, n.
MAil. Jt GOIUSER·DtlUEL -Tllomu
Mk-I, II. .. 5en ClenlMM. Mid
ltol>erta Edllll, JO. of Hftlenda
HtlOflh.
MAit. a
~VIS.BAICElt -Devtcl J--. U.
anc1 Jo-Ke AMt ... 22, DOttt o1 Costa -· .nc1 ~.., ~. ••. t1o111 of s.n ~•:&..1lmm:mmm=-,,.
J\Hlll c:.w•-· "' GEltNER..SUZUICI -Ge«o-R • tJ,
Mid IC eyo«o. 13, llotll Of Colt• Meta.
MAa.tJ
YOUNG·OlAISTIAN Jeffrey
Gwinn. 11, -P•rkl• L.t•-· 17, 110111 of H ....Ungton BMcll
MAit.• SOGLU IZZO OTTING -Oanlel
S.lv•IM•, 22, -L.alif• l(atlll<tf'n,
11, 11o111 ol Bal-
Death&
Within 30 days~ be aald, the Depa.rt·
ment of Health, Education and
Welfare will limit M~icare pay-
ments for some lab tests and medical
equipment ''to the lowest price lbat
ls widely available for the :same
quality in a particular community."
The eovemment currenUy reim·
buraes hospitals and labs "oo the
basis of average charges or even
higher ones," he said.
WHILE THE UMIT lnlUally will
apply to a dozen common lab teats,
wheelchairs and beds, it will be ex-
tended to other tests, supplies and
equipment within six months,
Califano said. ,
sensitive to the problems of senior
citizens in tb1s area," be said.
But be acknowledaed that HEW
could not block labl or: bospllals from
making Medicare pat.lent. pay the
difference.
Califano also disclosed that he or-
dered HEW lawyen to eonduct "a
very thorough investigation and
anaWsis of the entire relationship
between Blue Shield and doctors."
THE FIH>ERAL TRADE Com-
mission already ls conductinc a ma-
jor probe of doctors' domination of
the boards of directors of Blue Shteld
oraaoizations. •
Blue Shield Is the insurance plan'
that pays doctor bUJs. Blue Cross
covers hospital bills.
Aussie Stripper
Pays $75 Fine
He tilso announced that HEW will
use •'new and tlgbler computer
screening techniques like those used
Mo NT p ELL IE R, by the Internal Revenue Service to
France <AP) _ Joeeph nae health care services that should
Deltell, 84, an award be audited to determine if they were BRISBANE, Australia CAP) medically necessary." winning poet and nov-Sandra Marie Purcell, a 30-year-old
ellst and a forerunner of HEW and professional standards part-time model seotenc:ed to 14 days
... .,. the French surrealist review organlzatlona, wblcb are lq,jail for stripping naked at a pa'1y. .;~!~ ;~:;":!':.: ~ movement between the local, phfalcian-run groups required bas wrloo belber court appeal aga.l.nst the
P.s..c1 -• .. .,,. u. 1m .. 111e two world wars. dled by law to review services rendered seve ty of sentence.
H11ntln9lon V•ll•'I' Cenvaluunl T u e s d a y . A m 0 n g Medicare and Medicaid hospital pa-~=·:.!:.=:_~:;.:== Delleil's works were tlenta, wtll set spedflc 1oals for District Court Chairman Judge
Prouctr of Nor1Nlelcl, ltllftOI•. -&Oft •• c 0 e u r Gr e c.. 0 r I h r t.~ ital d f Grant Taylor instead fined Mrs. engt o uvop stays an use o p U .,S Wedn d warnn 8 "'-of~'•°"...... ''Greek Heart," bis first ts urce •• es ay. C• • ""° or•ndclllldren Carlton tes . F.-rlck~•nclWarrenHolrM collection of poems Shefras convicted or indecent PrOudy,OM Of"llC-9'~ ... C:-· hi h h1 th ,.. Ann ..._,., au °' Hon1111e1c1. 11-w c won m e CALIFANO SAID HEW was ae-behavi r after she stripped Jan. 8 in
11nois Frl911ds may can •• Piere• F r e n c b A c a de m Y celerating its program to get second view of police and spectators at a
l!rOI"•" Smllh1' Mortuary from literature prl·,.,,., and bis • • ( ed h ( d , •PM on T1111r10av April u. me -.... opm1oru1 on surgery per orm on party to promote l e cause o nu e
• ESTATE JEWELRY • CHI~ • RUGS • SILVER
• FINE PORCELAINS • BRONZES • FURNITURE • OILS, Etc.
.J
116 Million Dollars Worth
Fri., Set. & Sun • lmpect,lon
Fri., Sat. ft ...... Aprll 14, 15 & 18
8:00 pm 2-1 pm & 7-8 pm
Don't miss this important sale!
Fine crystal, china sets, European furniture, bronzes, rugs, oils and
many other i:~ms.
Lots ot diamond solitaire1 and clusters. Fine men's and ladles watches
rings, earrings, bracelets, necklaces, etc .. set with diamonds, emeralds,
rubies, sapphires. Several important large eme,.lds and sapphires.
Property of several prominent leisure World raldtnts, together with
inventory of well-known L.A. jeweter In flMndel trouble.
TERMS: BankAmer
PorlOflal chock Cath Somll e1e
ProPllrty trl0'4d for con
nevvport galleries, ltd.
2452 West Coast Highway. Newport Beach. CA
(714) 645-2200
CONSIGNMENTS ACCEPTED 'TIL 5 P.M. FRIDAY
Art Lavine · Aucllonter
t
...
. •
lrom n -•o •PM on Frl.S.y Aprll novel "Joan or Arc... Medicare and Medicaid patients. bathing on Australia's Gold Coast.
"· 1'71 MAH Of Olrlsllan 8'1rtal wlll ~:..:..:~==-~~::_ __ ..:=:::::='.:..:=:::=~==:_--==~=-===::~=-==::_ __ _:~==========================~~~~=--be C•l•br•led on s..1 .... c1av Aprll IS. -
1•11 al I 00 AM al SI. Bona,,.nh;re
C•ll>ollc °""'"· Hunl1119ton 8HCll, Ca. lnterm•nl wlll be al Good
~1)1:1..-cl Olmelerf Ple<'<e Brot"9rs SmllN' Mor11.111rycllrectors. ~.
SCMAtaL.a
LUCIEN A. $04Al&Le. rMldent of
UV-9Ndl,. c.. p-..... ., °"
Aprtt II. mt In ~ lleecll, C..
Survl-IP( ll4s wife OOlttW Llnou su.lllM ., L..-...... ca. ..... _,,,_, .., ~ .... ....,.. Of
Paris. France. Private f11nere1 •
•Nket wlll 119 lleid Ofl s.turdfy Atlr'll
-n. 1'71 at Peclllc VI"' --••• Perk c;i..pe1. Interment wllt be In p.,.._ Frence. P9cllk View~
dit'K'-......
FRED J. WEa&Elt, re&IOe1U Of
Costa -u. C. PaSNCI -Ofl ~II n. ma. '°""',... "' "" wtte 9'nolc.e, .,.,,.,.., ~Mlle.,. --4ft.I•
Fr-ls OMAMy If~*' Mar, c. .. -..,._ WllllMI MtiMr .. ...WMU, t ti""'.._~., N .... Hb .,., Al .. Lo.-ef °"'9e11, J
or•ndclllt4ren, Mlk• Delaney af ~ llNd<. Ca., T_.,., _. ~
O.LaMy fl a.r-de! MM. C.., -orHt11'~ Erin O.L.tney of
N9'fPCWI 9Mdl, C.. F-fl Nnlcn
Tllwsda'I' Allfll U, .. J:OO P.M. at llell
......,. •• ~ Olellel. oftk .. m An. Olal'MI D. Cl«ll qf .,,. Ftm
UnllM INthodlst a.urc11, C.U MHa. Interment wlll lie 111 Stenlorll, ........ ,... ..... .....,.,.., Met't'*"i!
c.o.t.,f Mfta dlnctln. ..... ,.,
FltANCQ a. HltltV, resldtM of
Laona ""''-ea. P""'* -•r on
""'" 12, ..,., llorn •" 2. 1t01 "' Mllweutl ... Wl-lft. suntwd bf ,_., cio. frtenllL I~ win M
el FerHI L.-In 0 .. ndale, Ca. ,.111cv_.,_.,.,...._
MATMws
(. OOffALO MATWEWS, ""'*"' ef Ne.,.,i 11MC11. ca. PatMll _., 9ft ,..,.y A!lrl t , lt7t .. Hoet MlmerYI .....,tat, "'-' 9Mcfl, Gt.. ..... MarCll U, UU In Pe.Mdefta, CA. 5,.,.,,., •• 11, 1111 wlfa Merlan •f
...._. llMdl. ea., -Mk:Mel .. ........ c.a.. ....... c:-w ~ .....
.. EI S.""9r, Clllltnf Arnefka. AA»
aur•I••• llY ,_ o••ndtllllllren, __. ............ ,... ...... 1. .. , •n W. 1VI • ,,. P.M. et st.
An•rew•a Preat>yttrlen Cllurtll, ........ ~Gt...._... .. _,,,
llw of 11-1 temllY ,...,... ...,...
.... .. "' ...... MWkan c:-car S.Clety.
wa~
MIMS' Mqtl'l'UA&Y 827 Main Sl
Huntington Beach
53M539 ._,.....,
CWA&. flUMIHL
~ NOMI 1801 8otsa Ave.
W.tmlnster . 893-3525
'
Pfaltigraff
dnne,..,.
lpca.
$5.25
,FORMAL
.
You can meet th. ocanlon with
Confidence
illl fofmal attire 'Mm
our outstanding
Nlection •
,.. ......
BEL DOLCA
Hali• Style Shcrp
and
KASSERI
Greek Style Sharp
31\CtOFF u-.... ~
Ett.ctl~ ttw ~-18-78 •
licktr7 rarmz
WISTCUFP PLAZA 111t••·• ... uz:rt ..... •ottn Mon . .frt. 'TII ' 'Tl&. Son.1110
,.
I•
· · Patte1• .. "9 tlae Ba"
This is a sight you won't see often -emp-
ty boat slips in Newport Harbor. These
are at Bayside Marina off Bayside Drlye,
acros~ the channel from Balboa Island.
They 're empty because of repair work be·
ing conducted on bullchead. Where did all
the boats go? Wherever temporary moor··
ings could be found. according to a spokesman for the Calilomla Recreation
Co., the Irvine Co. subsidiary that
operates the marina. Work on bulkhead is
to be completed this week, the spokesman
sald.
. . Coast Students Cited
. . · Seven Win Foor-year·Merit Scholarships
,.
Seven Oranje Cout high school aenion have
been named as winnen ol corporate-sponsored
four.year Merit Scholarships for academic ex·
cellence. More than one million high school students
throughout the nation competed in the scholarship
program through participation in a qualifying test
In October 1976. The winners are those who scored
in the top half or 1 percent or those tak'8g.the test.
Winners also met separate qualifications for in·
dividual scholarships.
ELIE CANETTI, CORONA del Mar High
School, received a scholarship from Rockwell In·
temationaL Canetti is a drum major for the school
and a member of the jau. band, orchestra and
J sympbonlc band.
. •.
El Toro High School senior James Hughes also
received a scholarship from Rockwell Intema-
. tional. Hughes plans to major in finance and ia a
member of the Math Club, Film Club and the Prin-
cipal's Honor Roll
Joseph Mulligan. member of the Princlpal's
Honor Roll at El Toro High School, won a
:.cholarship from Uniroyal. Mulligan plana to
study pre-medicine and was on the school's varsity
soccer and track teams
CalTrans Aids
Metric Switch
Orange County freeways will soon be do1n8
their part to aid in the conversion to the metric
. system, according to Al Mayfield of CalTrans.
Freeway guide signs needing replacement
•• because of damage will be substituted With allftl ·:· listing diatance in miles and metric kilometers, '
Mayfield said. The metric conversion ta being im-
plemented throulb<>ut the state
~· "WE DON'T ANTICIPATE a great amount of ~-confusion," Mayfield aald. "'lbe signs will list both ~ measuring units clearly. This way the driver ac-
.. ~ cuatomed to measurlnt ID miles won't be i stranded." • ~ Adriana Glanturco: state transportation di.rec· ~ tor, said CalTrana ts movin1 toward metric con-
~ version "slowly but deUberat.ly." ~.. "CQIDplete converaloo wUl tab many years ~ because replacing all of the signs at once would be
~ very costly," Ms. Giantureoaaid. ~ COST IS A LAllGE PACR>a tn the conversion ~ of the green-enameled alp, Mayfield unecS .
.. For th.ta reuon, we're Just replactna the already ~, damaged sip."
~ The newer signs requlrlna the postlnc of dil-
: tancea in both miles and ldlometers must be lat1er ~··by about 40 percent, Mayfield said. Tbla accounts
• .tor the Increase in cost. Orange Coast commuters probably won't see
• any or the metric/mile 111111 ror a few more
,. months, Mayfield added.
,... "A.LmotJGH WE ASE Nctnntna tbe pro-
,,. aram lmmedlmly, replacements for dama1ed slam have to be ordered. And this takes eo to*>
• days at least. ..
,, The new signs have been orderecl tor aipa
Cla111aaed in recent storms on Interstate 5 near the
Rids• Reale, Mayfield aald.
Cal'l'ranl also ls requlrt.DJ all new blpttay •. eon•truction projects to bave tbe dual •lens.
~2 Ninth G~rs
Horwredfor A.ii
PAUL NELSON. FOUNTAIN Valley Hilb School, hopes to study music and orsan eomposi·
tion through his scholarablp from Manb.all Field·
World Boot Year Book. Nelson ls a student aov-emm~nt offtcer and a member Of the Latin Club.
Huntington Beach High School senior Barbara
Pape js the winner of a Rockwell Corp.
scholarship. She plans to major In physical
sciences and is German Club president.
Randall Voigt, voted "Most Spirited Senior" at
University Hieb School, received a scbola1'8blp
from Rockwell Intemttional. He hopes to·major in
physical science.
Lamartine McGavock, a senior at Laguna
Beach Hlgb School~ received a scholarship from
Bristol-Myers. She ls a member of the Or.ange
County Academic Decathloo Team and plans to
major in pre-veterinary medicine.
ORANGE COUNTY
A simple interest Homeowners Equity Loan from The Bank
of California is a lot easier than you may think. And it's a great way
to take advantage of the equity you've built up in your home.
You may qualify to borrow from $3,000 to $30,000 at a 12%
Annual Percentage Rate and that money could be used for travel,
your children's education-almost any purpose you can name.
What's so easy about a simple interest loan?
1. Interest is calculated daily and paid only on the balance remaining
after youi last monthly payment.
2. You decide when you want to make paymen~s. Pay early and
you'll reduce your interest expense. If you pay a few days late, you'll
merely be ch~rged the daily simple interest rate for the extra days
you had use of the money.
3. There's no prepayment penalty. In fact, the faster you pay us
back, the less interest you pay.
A Homeowners Equity Loan from The Bank of California can be as
easy as one-two-three. Apply for your loan or one of our multi-
purpose credit accounts today.
®THE BANK OF CALIFORNIA
Newport Beach Offlce
1401 Dove Street
~ESTMINSTER
113JlhilCll ....
...... ~ ....... II
89);.7546
Newport Beach 92663
(714) 833-3.511
.. ,.
..
-
...
ftmUCNOIW:•
PtCTITtout 1Mnt1t••
NAMelT&Ta ... llfT
TM ... __.. ..,_ I•~ MAl-
M••t: suite.uioc HOMU. M ~ u lieMe. '-91 U.-. CA. ftNI, ,,_ MMie a--. 11 Noni\ Lt s--. Seucl\ ~.CA. '2V1' Tiii• lull-i. ~.., ... i....
OlvlcN.al
~~·~ ™·-.. filed ...... tr. C-ty a.ti .. Or-. ~., .n Aprll 7, 1'11. ......
f'vllll"*' Or-. CNlt 0.llY Pllol.
A«H U, ». V, Mitt 4, mt
UIJ.71
PUBUC NOTICE
'
PUBLIC NOTIC&
f.
~. Apf11 13, 1978 A•
Board Endorses Jarvis
Schools Unit IJacks Move Despite Cut lnoome
CUPERTINO (AP) -Elementary school
trustees in th.ls afflutnt Sen JOM suburb bave
Ye>ted 3-2 to e.ndone the controvemal Jarvta-Oann
property tax lnlUaUve. even tboQah It would cut
district lncome lo ball. •'The state hu reserves to draw on while they
determine bow to nspond to Jarvis-Gann," tnlltee
Claire Hobbes aald Wed.nelday in esplalnlnt ber
Tueaday nlpt vote supporting the lnlUative which
has: been OPPOSed by the vut majodb' of state and
local offlclils. 1
.... tBU91'BE &OBB•T BAU.. WHO a.llo voted
endotsement, added, "The ConaUtutlon or
Callfomla aays the flrll call OD public funds is for
the public scboola. ll would be political auiclcle for
the Lqialature not to act to keep tbe acboola
open."
The lhlrd ye1 vote was caal by David Cayton,
who said that lt homeowners didn't have to pay so
much property tax, they could bolster Ute eeono1111
by speodi.n& more for cooaumer products.
THE BOARD OPEaATES T8B Cupertino
Unlon School Dlstrlct, which has some 20.000 stu-
dents in IJ'ades kindergarten lhrou&b eltbL
Adminlslrators estimated that puaage of the
iniUaUve In the June 6 elocUon would trlm district
income from $30 million to W mlllloo.
Board president Rodter Halatead, • bi1h
school teacher who voted aialnst endorsement.
said, "I am not wtlllnc to keep my children out of school for a year." which he predicted would be a
result oC Jarvis-Gann.
fttJSTEE SEVERENE BYLIN opposed
endorsement, saying passage of the lnltlative
."'would create a great deal of turmoil" and was
"not ln the best interests of the chUdren."
The initiative. which will be Proposition 13 on
the ballot. would cut all property taxes by an
average ot 57 percent. ll makes DO provt.alon for
replaceing the estimated $1 billion ln revenue lost to
local governments.
Arco Aids Plan
To Buy Island
\
•
NATIONAl/OUTDOORS/LOCAl.J
ureyev Show Opens
•
SkiiJw
Reports
Listed
Col~eForua
Heroes Lecture Sl&ted
It'• Not Rouaing,
But It Haa Momenls
' -NEW YORK CAP) -Tbe fourth Rudolf
Nureyev and &lends •how on Broadway bas
opened TueldQ at tbe Mlnak()ff Theater, and
lf one wanta every Nureyev performance to
top an previous ones, tbl1 one doesn't. It
wasn't l"OUlint but did have its moments.
Jn previous years, for Broadway,
Nureyev chose a few individuals from ballet
and modem dance to appear on a mixed·
eenre pro1ram with him. This time be
opened with the Murray Louis Dance Com-
pany, wh.lcb is nine modern dancers and one
choreoerapber.
THE PERSONNEL CONTINUES • throup Sunday. Then, from April 18-30, it'll
be Nureyev and the Dutch Natiooat Ballet.
Choreoerapber Louis can insert cute
humor into a work -as If he doesn't trust a
1 viewer to sit tbrougb a stralgbt-abead, plot·
less. modem dance -and ruin the architec·
lure of the whole thine. He displayed aome of
that Tuesday nlebt.
But the fourth and last of bis dances.
"The Canarsle Venus," was a total joke-story
and it was ftm. Cole Porter music wu well used in the 40-minute premiere.
IT BEGINS AMUSINGLY camp, with
t1llhouetted dancers carryinc In beach eear,
Jncludlnc a post with a bird perched on top.
Nurerev wallcs on carrying a chair, a real
square. Four couples cavort, sunbathe,
playfully pull each other across the sta1e on
beach towels.
Then ln swims Anne McLeod, as Venus
blown off course and washed up on a beach.
She dances charmingly in front of Nureyev,
to "You'd Be So Easy To Love," then lifts off
his sunglasses and motions him to join her.
To "I Concentrate on You," a "shy .. Nureyev
is inspired to dance.
NUREYEV DANCED another premiere,
a 10-mlnute solo to Bach music, "Vlvace,"
with intensity. Bal the choreography lacked
yariety and kept him earthbound. He starTed
DANC£R AT MINIKOF'FTHEATER
Rudolf Nureyev QPena on 8rotldWlly
• I
ln the open.log dance. "Moments," with four ~a That work looked sluectab.
r .. Sebubert," for ei1bt dancers, which
Nureyev sat out, was enjoyable. This dance,
which Louis created tut fall, bas cbaracte~ · and vitality. There are lots ol brief duets
with fast sweeps and spins. For a few dazzl:
lng moment.$, tbe .. womeo cootinually lift orie
leg parallel to the stage and start to fall ·
back. Men always race up at the r1ibt mo-
ment to catch them around tbe waiat and un·
der the lilted knee. The dance concluded to bravos.
The 21 performances at the Mlnskoff are
being presented by Ja mes M. Nederlander
and S.A. Gorlinsk:y.
Here are Sierra
Nevada slliine condi·
ttona as rePorted Wed·
nesday by the Callfomla
State Automobile As·
sociation:
MOUNT SHASTA -.,.,. on Mellencts INYlllllll ACM'" M. LASSIHPMK-d..S. IOfteAL _.,_ ... to'°,_ wltll tPr .... C ... ._, I..,_ dleln.
()()jfNlllllt(I ltAHCH -C"ll9M.
SOOA S'°"IHOS-a..& SVGAlll 90W\. -be1e 12 lo 1S tool, .n,. coMlllonl, llw cNlf't. •~-. TAWOI OOHNIElll -clMM. H01tTI4 STAlll -MM tlWto to Wi ~ IP'lfte cOltClllNN, 11 NII&, II• c~J,.. ALPINE MeADOWS -__. 111119
eo tl\lt toot. "'"" c-n.n.. -Mlrl«• ltfl. 111"9 <Mlf'L HOMEWOOO -.._. 1.,._ toei. .....
1119 condlllotll, -wf°'* lltt, two <"-'"· POWDEllllOWL-C-...
SQUAW Y.\U..eY -.... otoot•
tlllt, MIO Is Ulo't f90I. lflrl"' C_,•
tlolU. -Uilltt CM, ............ 12 clMIMo<Mif'Sl ............. ia... .. ·=-'"'ii·'= =-loM. two T= Sl(l IOWt.-c...._
HEAVENLY YALLeY -bu•
-.. ·-P«Ucl """"" OOfl ., .. ,.11, ..
SICl INQ.INt! -clolM..
MOUNT lllO$E -NM lovr lo IO"en loot. ...... COftlllt~. two lllb.
Sll DIE MOVWTA!N -.. '-911. SIElllltA Sltl lllANCtt -NH ...,..., leot, ~ Ul'llllO... ,_
llftl.
ICl lllCWOOO Mf!AOOWI -beM 1J
Ifft. tinned pecMf Nml111 ""' ..... lifts. 81EAJll YAU.&Y-MOUNT 11118A -
I eo 10 feet, ....... mlldltlolts. 11~ ~•cM!n. DODOE llllOOE-.c'-4. 8ADGElt P~ -._ tlQltt foei. aprl .. c_.~ ... ~ Illa. MAMMOTH ""'1UHTAIN -" WM ti ... •• PK9*I ,....,.,, •Int ~ liens, tlllly OllW•klMI.
JtnlE MDUHTAIH -blM II• to olgftt ,_ 111""9 condlllOM, Ulrw cll.wa. CHINA PEAK -blM flwo lo 10
Ifft, 11>'1,.~-.. -cNlr -l·llOr, -,.. _,
Mat l,.emet', author, profeaor and
syndicated columnist, will be the
speaker at a PQpular Culture Com·
munlty Forum Jecture entitled
.. Heroes and Power ln American
Culture," from 7:30 to 9 :30 p.m.
April 26 at tbe Fountain Valley
Recreation and Cultural Center.
Sl>Ol\50red by CouWne Community
Colleee. the lecture ls lbe second ol a
series. There 11 no char1e fort.ho lec-1.
tu.res. wblcb are open to t.ba pUbllc •
I '
LERNER 18 THE author of eueb 1
books as "American u a 1Ctvt.Usa· 1
lion," "The A~e of Overldlt," "Ideas • ' ·
are Weap;ons.' and "The Unflni.sbed
Country.• , NB 188Uell ltiO
Bui,lding Penniu
A total of 160 building permits were
issued by the building division of
Newport Beach during March.
The Community Forums pfOIJ'8JDM
is a project of the American Aslocl• ''
tlon ot Community and Jaqlor ~
Colleges and is supported by • stant .;
from the National Endowment for I'
the Humanities. ...
Estimated valuation or the permits
is SS,387 ,191, alighUy below the 10-year
averagefortbemonth.
THE RECREATION and Culturu
Center is located at l&fOO B~unt
St. in Fount.aln Valley.
The largest comntetttal permit was
l!lsued to the Ketchum Company for an
$486.000 building at 4101 MacArthur.
Further information is available by
calling Coastline Community College
al 963-0811 . ext. 256.
occ U.ts
Smnmer ·
Classes
UBL'S
~~MO
"IATIMG Al• COHO w"k.T~'t:~'~'v-o.OJ 1C~I Stitt HHrftl YOU< AIHI
COSTAMUA'42· 17S3
,,.__.~
ti111utot1 v1uo4t5-0401 aemc.-..c.1W-
More than 500 classes~:!!::!:!!:::=:· •=A==~~I w l 11 be offered at;;
Orange Coast College ,,...N_E_ED __ A_LA_WY_EA_?-.
dU.ring its lB18 summer
session, and registraUon
materials are avallable I.ow Legit'"
ln OCC's Ad.missions Of. ~ Divorce
fice. • Bankruptcy •Criminal
...
The sesaloo will run • Wills-Probate Antt<iue
J
June 19. Aug. 11. • Incorporation •Slot ldadunes
OCc Se • Accldent·lr\jury Pl b 11 M .. , __
•0 Penons not enrolled • Eviction • n • ac.~ "'° t OCC i &. • Co •Brass cash Repst.era a may P Ca up regi· • llectlons •Antique Arcade EQwpmeat istratlon materials at W orbhon the Admissions Office 840-2507 ZlllN. Mala St. r t l\ rough M a y 2 4 . ~HR. CONall TATI~O 8.-U Au. CA t21M o r a n g e c 0 as l Re1lstration appoint· C7H) m.tt• r
College's Consumer ments will be malled-=~=;;~;;~~~~;;;;;;;;==.;==::==~~~ Resource Center will June 2, and registration
bol'1 its 5eC()Dd weekly will be coodueted on an workshop t1Ued "Travel appointment basls June
Opportonitiea for Stu· 12·14.
dents" on April 25. The office ls open
Meeting in room 111 of M d t h b
DIA/flONDS • GE!llSl'ONES
I .. .
Student Retreat Set Occ's Co ..... elln~ and on ays roug T H red """° Thursdays from 8 a.m. WO ODO Admi§sions Bui Cling, to 10 p.m. and Fridays
Reeves Deckert and the selsion will begin at fro 8 to s Jo Ann Suker, Costa noon. Admission ls free m a.m. p.m.
Jewels by 1osephs Is searching for diamonds and
gemstones from private lndlvlduafs and estates, Careful
examination and evalua11on by our e1tperta. Highest
prices paid. Call 540-9066 1()..9 dally. Saturday 1°'6,
Sunday cioeed. Aslc f~ Betty Grace or Frank VanderWall
.·
Mesa have been named and the public ls Invited. Persons enrolled at iewels by joseph · · lJnderstandJng between Christian
aad Jewish students ls the goal or an
interfaith retreat that will by
sponsored this weekend by group& at
UC Irvine and Cal State Loni Bea.,_b.
to the Dean's List for Peggy CoboJan, OCC's OCC will receive sum·
through &mday event is sponsored academic excellence at s t u d e n t t r a v e I m e r re g i s t r a t I o n
by the Interfaith Center of UCJ and Chapman College in coordinator, will be con-materials in tbe mall in•
the United Campus MinlstrJ of cO~r!ah~g~e~. ------~du~e~ti~n,~tbe~worqbo~~~P~·~~l._~te:_:A!p~rU::· __ --=---f-~~!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!~ CSU LB. -
Included in the retreat will be two
Jewish sabbath services and a Chris-
tian service along with discussions.
Information is available by calling
·• Jewish-christian Dialogues'' will
be tbe theme ol the retreat at Acom
Lodge in Wrilhtwood. The Friday 833..()891.
SAT-N-HUE 8!!.
"WMITF
CASUAL AND
CONTEMPORARY
AS YOUR Utt· STYLE
A soft, plush RI ~Mgnec:l-and·made elght foot 1ofa up·
hotlteMd to the~ tor a~ ftntlhed took and f.., that II
equally at hom9 • o tamUy or flYlhQ room .. mng. n.. muted
W90Ye ii toot. olefin. o ''9"0 w.qrtng fabric wtth a comfoda-.
IOft to tne touch feel, In your chotce of cok>rl onc:t pottemt.
Decotattng aervtce, deHv9tY Oftd CM ~ '!J a fomow wananty ot qUQftty at no extra •
COit. 1he auperbty detalitd deelgn la
alto GYOUoble oa a to¥eMot, $399. • •
'·
'I.,
•f " . •• , . .,
LOCAL I NAT10NAL ~. Aprtl 11. ,.,.
~eMnkle Kids Miss Out on Bison
But They Learned About Catalina Sealife on Trip
.
TllAT'8 WHY THE el&~\: ltl~ ""'•ta lrona TeW lllddle School In Coet.a M•a m-
titled their oveml&bt oceaoo-INPhle expedition to Santa
Catalina Jaiand "Don't Let a
Wild Bilm 11ptoe Tbrouab Your Tulips.".
Str1n1e experiences and
learnina about aea life and
wUcWt. .... all ~ al the tdp tut .... takeA • ltudeata.
ln the If eatally lfted ·111.lDof
pro1ram.
Tbey ...,. a~companMd by
ubool Prlnclp~I Werner
Carl.Ion, science teacher Fhnll
· Va!uao. tbnt faculty memben
and two colle'9-•I• older ailten
of student.a.
TBE TDUa.SDA Y morninl-to Friday night trip was
aboard the Fury u. a a.root fiP. tn1 boat staffed and operated
aa a floating oceanoarap.bic
school by the Orange County
Department of Educ:atlon.
Carlloa Nld. On CetalltLa, atudenll slept at
Camp Qmry Valley. Tbe trip
wu paid for by MGM fu:Ddl,
CarlaOG N1d.
IT BEGAN from Daoa Point
Harbor wltb a flve-bour sea
voyace. IDc:ludlDI a atop at Sea
Mount., wh•H an undenea
mountain neart but dciean't
break tbe aurface ol the water.
There, atlMltnll ud at.arr wed
some ol the shlp's equipment t.o rneuure the des'th ot lbe water.
The Journey alao aave
p.tarking Projected
J
~ewport to Study Feasibility Report
A pertpberal parklnl lot with
altuUle bul service, a residential
ptrk\ftl permit. plan and the con-
s trucUon ()f 1,000 addltlonal
apec:ea by i.o are amona the re-
com mendattcma In a parkin& pro1ram f111lblllty study fol-
cerrtral Newport Beach.
The "Rud)' will be the topic of u AprUIOwbllc bearin& ber0!'9 ~ city ~I CommiJalon,
cinnina at 7 p.m. in City Coun·
chambers
THE STUDY, PREPAaBD by
t~e firm or Wbur Sllllth and,...
sociat., evaluatee CW"Teftt and
future partdni needs and aua·
cests • variety ot aolutiona and rneana of flnancing them.
The area under consideration
. i~ on tbe Balboa Peninsula,
bounded on the west by 37tb
Street and eJftendh'I several bloc kl east of tbe Newport Pier.
Included are the ·Via Lido
area. the Lido Peninsula, Can· .,ery Vlllage, Ocean Front,
Bayfront, McFadden Square.
11lewport-Balboa and several re-
sidential areas in which the traf-
fic problem is caused by heav>
beach and commercial use com·
blned with limited park.lq.
mE 811JDY LOOKS at each in.dividual area and makes
a~clflc recommendations.
StronsJy recommended ia the acquisition of the undeveloped
-parcel on West Coast Highway
between SuperiOr Avenue and
Newport Boulevard for an 80(). apac, peripheral parklnl facW-
t.y wltb shuttle baa aentce. The
land be&onp to the Callfomla
Department or TranaportaUon.
Under the shutUe bus system
proposed, all Orange County
Transit Diltrict buses serving
th• peninaula would converse at
the perlpheral lot with all but three llnea ending there.
IT 18 ALSO recommended
that all curb meter rates be ln·
creased t.o 25 cents per hour ex-
cept on Balboa Boulevard
between l9'b and 21st Streets,
where the SO cent-per-hour sum-
mer rate would be extended
year-round.
Tbe lnatallation of curbside
meters where none ex.lit la alto
su11ut.ed in t.be study. alona.
with a proposal to extend the
hours of meter operation from 5
or 6 p.m. t.o lOp.m. or midnlghL
The study advocates permit·
tln1 Parkin& validation in com· merclal area at public IOtJI and
future parking structures to en·
courage economic growth, with
c omme r c ial enterprises
purchasing validation lt.amPI al
a 60 percent discount rate.
IN RESIDENTIAL AREAS,
where a one-hour time llmlt for
parking would ~ posted dudrll
the day, residents could buy an-
nual corb ~ktllg stickers for
$10 per vehicle and park beyond tbe one-hour limit.
The study cltee a recent U.S.
Supreme Court rulln& that re-
sidential parldn& permits are
c:omtltntJontll, enn tboqh they
may be a nulaance to com-
muters.
According to tbe study. by ll80
there wW be a aeed for about
Amy Carter, daughter of the presidetit. Cetl an auto-
graph from popular singer Shaun Cassidy, wbo gave a
concert Tuesday ln Waablngton, D.C.
1,000 addiUosial parklnl 1paces
in central Newport.
IT IS aBQ> .. ENDED that a
360·space parting faclUty be
buUt tu the Cannery Village area
and that, by 1990, the JuocUon oC
Newport and Balboa Boulevards
be rede1i1ned to a T · interaectlon. The McFadden
Square area, it ia su11ated,
would be developed to co~e
ground-floor commercial activi-
ty, aecond·fioor parldn1 and
thlrd·level restaurants and pert-tni.
Conat.ruct.kla of public parting f acWtl• could be funded b)t a
bond llsue and by nvenu. from
increased parking fees, the
study augesta.
Additional information is
available by calling Fred
Talarico, senior planner, at
840-2281.
.CtJM High PTA.
Plana Co/fee
A netgbborb900 evenln1 coffee
for rarenta ol studenta at f'orona
de Mar High Scbool is
scheduled at 7:30 p.m. Ma, 3 at
3408 Sausalito, Harbor View
Hilla, Corona del Mv. Tbe cof-
fee is apomored by the 1cbool's
PTA.
A potluck luncheon will be
featured at the lut meeting of
the school's PTA on May 4 at
10: 80 a.m. in t.be bome of Mrs.
Walter G~ggel. New board
members will be lnatalled dur-
in& the meeting. For Curtber in-
formation call 644-2460.
School Plans
· Social, Sale
"A Breath of Spring" is the
theme of the open bouae/ice
cream aoclal planned from 6:30
t.o 8:30 p.m. AprtJ,a'J at Eut.blutt
Elementary School ln Newport
Beach.
A bake sale, two raffles and
the introduction of the 1978-79
Parent Faculty Organization of-
ficers are scheduled.
The public ls invited to at.tend
and parents are encouraged t.o
visit the claetrooma from 1t.o8
p.m.
Co~~Plans
)'
April24Tour
Sout.bena Callfomla College of
Costa lleaa will pr .. ept "College Day in April.'
High scboOl seniors, colleee
transfen, youtb pnton and p~r_enta are lnvlted t.o tour the sec campus April 24 for a loot
at tll' CbrlaUan ~ucation pro-
1ram1.
Recl1tratt9n will be&ln at 8:30 a.m. ID lbe courtyll"d of the
adminiWation buildln1. 55 Fair
Drive. 1be proeram will include
a free lunch. Por more lnformaUon call
Vlrstnla Evans at 556-3610.
atudeut photccrapben a chance
t.o snap cololfW plcturea of eome
of their seboolmatea l1ln1
around ln vlr)'tn• ata1ea of mil
de mer. Carllon aald.
Once at Camp Cherry Valley on the Catalina isthmus, the atu·
dentl aet up lean-t.os and un-loaded' tbelr par. Half went on
an oceanosrapblc excunion and baU OD a wlldllte and Udepool
t.our. with the lfOUpe a witched
the n!P momiq, Carlson laid.
Teaeber Valuao admitted a
few nerwua momenta wonder·
ln1 it there would be a reeur·
rence of the previous year's
' blloDa~ce.
BE UPLAINBD THAT ta
b1loD llerm. tbe older mal• are ott.raclled and it wu apparently one of tbeae lonen u._.t b.aC1 turned up ID camp.
Tbat year's st.ude~u.
meanwhile, were expectina not
biloo "'4 wUd piJs. They had
been 10 concerned about tbe
poaaibWties of pip raldlnc the
camp and eat.lq their au~
that they bad enUtled tbelr trip
•'t>an't Let • Wild Pig Eat Yow
Cand ."
So ft was lmderatandable that
..., ...........
DONALD DRAKE, 8£AT!D, STUDIES STARFISH
From Left: ~ Krnttz. ........ Buocetta, Cindy Troua
BaU.OaPler
()peraton Sought
For 'Fackle Stand
Ne'WJIC)rt Beach city councilmen are look.in& for aomeoae t.o reopen lbe oonceulon stand on tbe Balboa Pier.
The stand; which used t.o sell bait, snacks and tackle to ftshermen.
was clo.ed ln September 1976, when the former eoaeeaioa operaton
got. tnt.o a cflapute with city officials over lease of the itand.
· THE CONC~ON on tbe before the council Monday and
Newport Pier, operal.ed by the. t.old them she is m loaaer in-
aame people, waa eloaed at the tereated. She described tbe
same time. The Newport Pier stand as a et( sty and 1a1d abe
st.and was reopened ln October, bellaves tbe city ought t.o brlal It
1977. ·.when new operaton were up to usable atanaardl before
found. any opel'lldon goes in there.
At the ti.mt. city councilmeD ~
dtclded t.o fttcb tbe Newport WYNN ~E elty bu
Pier operation for• year before eaned tllgh~lf more tban deci~ wbat to do witb tbe $13,000 ln the ~t moat.bl tbat
.
8= ... ~aifentutodil-=~~=i::!t': repair. and -..-ea, s~t $14,000 lala IO ahead wit.Ir plw to
fixing up tbe Newport Pier ltand up1rade tbe Balboa stand and
t.o attract a new tODcelllooalre. teek bkia from operators.
IN A aSPditr t.o cl_ty coun-
clhnen Ws wffk. City ttanacer
Robfti.W¥J1D aald the new COD•
ceasionAltes, Mr. and Mrs. W.
Mtrttng epenl another $3tl,OOO
renovaiin1 tbe Newport Pier
•tand. Interest in the Balboa pierwas
aenerated two weeks ago by a
Balboa NsldeBt. Kary Jane San· bony wbo told ~cllmen abe'd
be m~ hi l'\UUllq 101De
IOrt of lntlrim concesalon on tbe
Balboa Pier -unW the cltJ pts
around t.o awardi:DI a new eon-ceaalon ccmtract. However, lbe qaln aPPMl!ld
Councilmen ureed but Coun·
ellman Ray W1lllams warned
that It may be necessary for the
city to spend more money on the
Balboa l>ler than on the Newport
Pier.
He noted tbat the Balboa Pier
attracts amaller crowd.I, tbat
fishing isn't u good, that Dart·
ing is more expem.lve ancf that
there ls no aeatiq for flail·
ermen. · ••we mQ need &o conalder
1pendlo1 ai.ore on renovatioll. a.wnc loftl' fees on tbe leue or
In some way subaldialn1 tbe operatloo tbeN," be llld.
TreeH8881e
Hrinp Suit -.
InN~rt'
after the bboo ebarsed tbrouP camp -wttbout. by the wa,.
knock~ a slqle tent -one frtsiaaed llrl DOted ber
Mad out and aald to Valme>, ''Boy. tbat wu-. beck ol a Mc P'I!" •
TRIS YEA&, NO bbon ran
Uaroqah camp b.a tbeN wu an
lni.n'IJltl<ln p*8bb eveo leu
welcome. And lt occurre4 wblle tbe
camp director wu retalln& the
students wtth leaencla of the
llland.
"Just U the .\11 WU leWDI lnt.o hia tall tale. about Bil Foot
on Cat.allna ud the blsoo, tbe
raina came," Carl.loo iaid.
The campers 1rabbed their
sear and ac:ramblecl Into the
m .. ball, wbere t.ber s t.be
nl&bt, be Wes;
WAS TRESS BVBR reallr a
Bl• Foot CID CatallDa? n It's a pod at.or')'.'' Carllon
said wUli a amlle.
But tbe real b.lPlilhta of the
trip werw tbe espedltlona oo land
and sea made while they were
camped, be Nld.
The three-hour sea trip in·
volved mini ablp equipment to
take samples from the ocean
floor and t.o dlemlcallY analyse
sea water et various levels for
oxycen content, salinity and
denslt.y, CarllGD laid.
f A•ONG THE Ut"E brougbt
up from tbe ocean's bottom were i
aeveral aea cucumbers. This t
aluc·llke animal, Carlson plalned, operates like a vacuum ,
cleUler, lladdDI up dirt, a~
inl tbe nutr'lelU and 1pewing ,
oat tbe dirt beblDd It. WbeQ eauabt. tt bu a curious ;
habit ol 11qairtlnl out fts Insides, •
wblcb It tbln ....,.. beck. •
Also bnMa6t up. recalled atu-;
dent Maurem Boccella. was a '
aea bare, a black fiuld cruture ·
the size of a bowllbl ball that ;
"looked like Uftr. ••
ON SROaE, STUDENTS
t.oured the Udepools and were In· :
troduced t.o some little-known l
edible ve1etaUoa, lncludinl • ; plant known as miner's lettuce 1
that several students sald they
enjoyed.
Orie ~rillnJ lirl. CinclY Troutt, i>bo&olrapb.ecf the edible
ve1etaUOo ana .. preparln1 a re-
port on It, Valuao 1alcl. ·
The fOU1'-bouJ' trtp home In-
volved some drama. Carlson
said. Tbe skipper of the Fury n ·
man:=:.. to ~ between and Just of atarma all tbe way.
The raiQa e~ • tbe atu· • dents were their bus at
Dana Paint. And, OD the retal"D trip, IW-
denta and at.aft eaa•bt •nd • coNed flab. n WU tbe llrat time
one of die atudala bad ever
eeten Lt. Cait.oa Uld.:
'4Sbe liked It, .. be added.
NB Anorneys -~
fl To Discuss ~
Wills, Trusts ·
Donors to F. ~,\
PersonaJN .......
, .
.... DAl.V .... OT LOCAL I NATtONAL
Chickens Destroyed
·-~· Former Georifa
.Cuning Ruled OK .
But Hol,d, IWJults Meal in Warehouse Fire Gov . Lester Maddox ow~s
abbut SlS0,000
from bis 1974
quest for a
second term.
Supporters have
raised about $18.000. A fund·
raising dinner is
set May2.
WASHINGTON <AP> -The Food and Drus
Ad lnlltnUcm •a.ra t.boulandl ol chickens ba ve
'9ea destro1'*t muy more may be because a
Ralston Purina 1ubsldluy been d:latrlbutiDS
contaminated animal meal tbe past year.
Tbe feed wu contamtila&ed by pobtchlortnated
blpbenyll dunna a wsreboule tlre in Puerto Rico a
year ago, Nancy Glick, a tPGkeswoman for the
FDA, said Wednesday. But the FDA teamed of it
only recenUy.
SHE SAID THE CONTAJllNATED fiah meal
may have been mixed ln awtne or other animal
feeda i.n addition to poultry feed, and the FDA does ~ not know lf any pet food ls lnvolved.
Most of the cootamlnaled feed appean to have
been 1bipped to Texas, al~ at least some has
tumed up ln Idaho and Arltansu, Ms. Glick said.
• • .
'
"We don't know bow many chickens or eggs
were sold before it was discovered," she said. "We
know several hundred thousand chickens cootai.n·
in1-:-uceas1ve PCB levels have bad to be
destroyed. and esp from conta.min•led laying
hens are betng destroyed dally." '
POLYCHLO&INATED BIPHENYLS are
bi&bly sta~e chemicals that were used exteuively
for many yean ln i.n.sulators and other electrical
equipment. As a result of t.beir heavy indmlrlal
UM/-tbe)t have become persiltent environmental
contaminant.I that get lnto the food cbain and tW'll
up in the fat t..laues of many animall, especla.Uy
flsb.
Consumption of lar&e doses by humans can cau,a~ acne-like akin eruptions, darken.lni of the
skttr •nd nails, exceuive diacharge from the eyes
and swell1n1 of the eyelids, the FDA spokeswoman
said. But. such symptoms
)
. abould not be ex ·
·( perienced by people who ECOLOCYI have comwned lbe con· taminantJ in the quan·
---------tllles ftf'1Dd in poultry
and egp so far. she said.
The FDA sars 1t is impossible to eliminate
PCBs from al foods because they occur
throuabout lbe environment, but it bas aet max·
imum tolerance levelB at varlom points in lbe food
·cbaln.. ·
EVERYBODY
PROVIDENCE, JU, <AP> -The Rbode
Island Supreme Court 1aya It's OK to en1age In
.. profane aweartna and cursinl." However, there's
a catch.
Tbe court said that u..lt.y lancuase is 1Ue1aJ
when It lncludes "flabtlns words" addresaed to a
putlcular lndivtdual
The declalon reversed the conviction or
Michael E. Authelet for comments made to police
after a Warwick.1t.reet comer dlaturblDee Sept. 3,
1974.
Violation of the Rhode Isl&nd law ia puniabable
by a fine ol Ddl miore than ~.
IN THE WORLD
THE FAMILY CIRCUS . FJNiSBED ANIMAL FEED MAY not contai.n By Bil Keane mote··than 0.2 parts per millioo of the contami· LOVES
• . ,
. .
.. ... .. :.,
-. •• •• ~ . . . . · , ! :.• . . . •"' ...
" '
•
"We better start bein' good 'cause if we
don't, I think Mommy might resign.''
UC Irvine Lisu
Open Activities
The following schedule of activitle! open to the
public bas been announced by the UC Irvine Ex·
tension program:
nanl, while animal feed compooent.s may contai.n
up to two parta per mUllon.
FDA lnvestiaaton said aJ'Wysis of some of the
feed.showed level.a up to 62 parts per million. more
than 30 times the permissible level. FD~ investiaaton learned from • poultry
comP&N'· lo Texas on Jan. 6 lbat lt found e~cesaive
PCB.· .~otaminaOon lo tbe fat tiH'1e of its
chlcken8. · \
BY TRACING THE VARIOUS ingre.<Uents of
the poultry teed liven to the c.bJckena, FDA in· vesU1atars were able to pinpoUit the *Ource of .lbe
contamination.
LA PAZ
MIXES.
ALL RIGHT,
..A family
of popular
cocktail mixes
for home
entertainment
They said that durinc the warehouse fire in
April tm, two electrical transformers exploded,
aprayln1 2,000 pounds of eoolanl made with PCBs
over 400 toos of tuna meal stored in baas in lbe
watebo~: · · ALMOST
TM ·n>A 1atd the m•al wu manufactured by
lbe Van Camp Dtvlsioa of·Natlooal PackinJ Co., a
subsidiary ol the St. Louia·bued Ralat.on Purina
Co. EVERYBODY
3423 V1• Lido
VI• Udo Pl•H -87&-0321
~ CkJssic by Gant.
·;~k.
BIDTIQUE
Gant' s Authentic Town Colla in our
classic flt of 651 doaon, 351 cotton.
Available in blue or white. SIB.SO.
-/iec-h.1s
~INS .STOHS
3467 VIA LOO, ~T 8EAOi
Have a fit!
Beautiful bfktnla told .r.~ for a
perfect ftt. Manv Pttnta eoHd colcn In
a vartetv of •tYlee. frotn 11e. w, 11ao have a M>nderiul aelection of the n.w.t
on"*'8aulta.
Jog tnto Summer tn ~ ~ runntno
ahortat Many fabrtca and cakltl. frOm •1 s.
t
Tuned to the te-.o
of Newport •••
(Art S~ow. Sala claJ, April 15 )
•••••• . . .
llott..A,,,..U.~ ............. l.IJ•rlr 11Cvw1s ..
Jloa-. ._,,a. C...... CNIJ 11 ........ J5. ff It F ...
Class time: 7:30 p.m. $10 per person for tntt:lal class attended. SS per
person. each sua:eedfng c:lass. Advance payment -.ns reservauons.
M4J W. IMe • Nir•JNirl 8•c6 CA 'MfU • '75-Jfa
{ Prescrip&lons
~ Jav.,,.1tt a Cosmetiea )\l~ . 1"~~~ • Photo Supplies
VIA·~DRUGS Gifts & Cards
Beach & Sun
Dell very
' Free Parting
ID TM New Via Ude Plua Open Dalb'
MG Via Udo, Newpon { Blood PreuUre
' CGasult.U.
u
PUBLIC NOl'ICE
PIC'nnovt eust ... 11
llMM ITATaMaNT TM .......... _.,_. .,. Niftl
bus!-•: Wl!STUtN WtU!O AllATEMl!HT, ~~·-.c.-... -.
Slet!Mll ..... .......,, H7"' Aeacle
Av-. o... *' -· CA. •uu Gvr11fee Sllltll ICIUllU, 511\o')
=I• A-. Q9r1IN --· CA
Tllla ........ I• <--..CIM lly e ...-r .. perb .. ...... ~,..e.nv
T1IK ,.....,_ -11 ... wit.It h
C..-ty o.ni .. 0r-. C:-.tw Oft
Aprll7 "71. ....... ,..,..I.,.. Or ... CoeA DMty ~lot.
Apr111),Jl,Z7,,,,..., •• ,,,. ·~ .. ,.
PUBUC NOTICE
P ICTITIOUS e USIN ..
MAMll ITATllM8MT
~9!.~ --.... del119
MOLD ,.OLISHING
Tl!CHNOl.OGV, n• Airport "-
Ori ... , ""'' "· o.e. ....... (.illwftl• tl62'
.Mtf'ry w. SllMMllMll, !ID l..IKMI,
ttew""18Mdl, (.ilfwllM nMO
•""• H. Hal•, •1 Maonoll•, l• ...... c.t ..... '271•
Oetwll• ~. !210 ... ~. Santa AN, CMffornle '27U
T"lt 11\Dlneu la cenclueted 11y a ---··~ O.WSM.i.-
""' _...,_.. -Rltlll Wllll IN c-tr Cleftt .. Oranee c-ty Oft ~··"" ...,.., ,.......,.. arw. CIDMt Delly .......
Mardi n. ._.April'-u. tm
11i.n
PUBUC NOTICE
Ptc:nnOUI euMNU6 NAMa rMTUUMT n.e ..,_.. """"' I' tklllll ....... neasn· LA M I RADA F ORKLIFT
WHOLESALERS, t dOO F lrHIOM
IM .... La MM'..._ CA. .a
A,.~-
lt'ec&Agcdll
Singer Aretha
Franklin a nd Actor
Glynn Turman were
married in Detroit at
New Bethel Baptist
Church, with the
ceremony performed
by the Rev. Clarence
Franklin, the bride's father and church
pastor.
R enters'
Talk Set
Orange Coast
College's Consumer
Resource Center in·
aueurates its weekly
workshop series with a
Tuesday session titled
"Renter's Rights and
ResponslbilWes."
Meeting in room 111 of
OCC's Counseling and
Admis.sloo Building, the
works.bop will begin at
noon. Admission ls free
and the public 1s invited.
Norman L. Berrey of
the Orange County Of·
fice of Consumer Affairs
will lead the discussion.
PUBlJC NOTICE JoM C. ltoeflllna, 1 IOSJ '--41 Cir·
cle, HVfttlntlon 9H<ll CA ~ 1---------Tlllt --II condU<ted..., ... I~ PICTlTIOUI •ust•ass oMO..el MAMIE ITATSMllMT .>o11n C. A-lll'IO Tt.e IM'-11111 per-. IS _.,. 111$
Tlllt Slel-1 wa• 111.0 w1lll the ,,.U U C.-1¥ Cl.,ll o1 Ora1191 County on PACIF IC CONDOMINIUM
AIW'll 1, 1971 llACATIONS. !I'm c;.11.,,1 Or. Hunt·
F-7 1nQton 8~ac:PI. CA '2M6
Pul>lllhecl °'*'Of Coe~I Dally Piiot, Judllll A Pn•slon m2 Gallant
Al>(ll 13, 10, 21, M.ay •. 1'79 Or , HunUngton BHcll, CA '2M6
1.U0-11 This l>UMnfts Is Concl<lct9d l>Y an In·
---------dlvldual
: PVBUC NOTICE "''• ;:::.!;, ":!"':'11.., wttt1 111e
I -----------l COllnlW Cl-OI Or•• c-•Y on f • L.aeAL MOnC• Aprll 1, 1'71 l tfllWPOllT-MUA "'IM UlllPl•D ~ OISTIUCT P11t111..-Or .... ~ Delly Piiot I I
\ ................ Ap'lllJ,20.V,-.,4,1'71 .
NOTIC• IS Hl!fltl!ev GIVEN !Ml ICZ3·11
Ill• •••rd al Ed11c•tl•n el ,,,. ---------:-=..~ :-.., ot.!'!J PUBLIC NOTICE
_..., 1a 11•~M.ena.--.ca..,o1 ---------.,,.. ... 1'11 ..... e"1c» flt MN Sc'-PICTITIOUI ltUSINRSI
-i Ohtrlcl, IOCA19d •t 1157 Placenll• ltAMI: STA'TaMSMT
6trHt. Coste Mna, C.lllor11le, el Tioe tot.._ J1W9n la doing busJ..
-"" u--...,. "'" ... "'*ldr --: _,,....,,.... ,_, 9fltl!NNAN-,.AVLEY ELECTRIC.
TtMetrl<M l .... llllQ at N""*1 7111'.,edSt.,OM&a,._,CAm27 Me.-HIGlll~-.....,_ E.._. Br--. 2'I I(,_ St..
All bMls .. la lie lft ~Ma-Olll'9 -·CA t11.a:1 Cooullllons, lnttrucll•n•, •nd TII .. tM,t&inna la~ "Y .. i..
Soecllk.atlanl...., - -en file In • .,..,.., IMOfllUOfll!e~~ t-.i~
Gt .. 1c1 ~ Dltll'tct. 1157 fll ~ SI._,. -,.._ ....... &lreet, c.ia Meta. Celltwnl• ftU7. Co<#lty Oar11 of Oranet c-ity Oii ... e......,,,.,,.,...,..._.,.. ... ,... ~'·""-
• llffled of ....,...... ... *Yt C~I M\'& ~
_.ter Ille .S.te Ml '°" Ille .,...N"9 Pllllll.-Orenge C.oe~ Delly Plloe
... ,... AIWll U, 20, 27, MllJ •. 1'71 • Tll• 9Mr~ of Ed11<•tlon of IN UJ0.71 ~-~ VnlflH 5Ctlool Ofstrkt _______ _.;.;.;..,;._,;.1
PUBU C NOTICE re•r~ .,,. r""' to re1«1 ..,., o~ all
°1114' -not -•Iv ~cept , ...
IO•OI Bid, and lo welve any In· --P-ICT.....,l'"""TI_OU.._S_l_U_Sl_NE_S_S--1 ~.:.Illy cw ,..._...,lty In .,y Bid re NAM• ITATllMSNT ,
NEWPOflT·MESA TM IOllowl119 ...,._ Is ClolflO llusl-
UNll'IEOSCHOOL DISTRICT neu ~~-ENGINEERING. 33'21 w.
olOr-c.o..ntw.CA W ·~ "E" r -•· .. _. ,. .. Ooowtlly........., Fl~. C,.M, erner, ~·t • _., ....... ....-. ~"" Director 977°' TM: (7M> Si.II*> NHICW Luis Perone. Ul2 Forcl!>em
Plll>ffllwd'OrMgt ~ Delly f'ltot DI'., Wte Nine, CA. m2' Aprll 1J, 21, 1'1L . '"I'.....,_. 1$ c.ondU<tecl by ... , ...
_______ __;..• ... ~n .iwl4aMM. .._.Luis Perone
Thi• ti...,,.,. _, f 11«1 ... ,,., .,,. PUBUC NOl'ICE C-IY Clet1I .. Clt'enoe c:o.incv on
---------•1111.1m -"""*' '"'*I.,., Or-ClDlnt Deity Pilot,
,....11 ia. 20, Z1. ,,,..., " ..,.
PVBlJC NOTICE
,.,...,
....,.,.,,.. Orante a.st Delly PllOt,
~ 2J, JO Md Allrll •, U, 1'11 llSMI
PUBLIC NOTICE
Repairs N ot '10IM!
Educator Sets
SeH Ablaze
NIENBURG, West Gennany <AP> -A vlllqe 1cbool priDcJpal, lo deSJ)a.lr at delays la repalrinc
b1t dllapldaled buUdin1. burned himself to death
wltb guoline at the 1eb0ol 1ates. police aald.
Two pa.55ers·by fo1111d the st1ll·bu.n:llnt body of
Werner Haute, 54, Tuesday nllht at the entrance to
the secondary school In Syke, 1n tbe Lower Saxony
district. 50 miles northwestol Hanover, poUceaaid.
POLICE QUENoiEO THE PLAllES with a
fire extinguisher, but Haufewasdead.
Inside the school and ln Haule's home, were
three copies or a aulclde note beaded "resolution of.
a school principal wbo bas reached the end after 10
years," POlice said.
Haule wrote that be b•~..:Jet his school re-l)alred. but state education ties ln Hanover
kept noae ol their promiaes.
Part of the achool was closed re«:nUy after
authorities declared it unsafe.
HOURS BEFORE POUIUNG GASOLINE over himself and setting 1t all&bt, Haute attended a
school committee session w6ere bia pleas for school
repairs again received no support, police said.
I
I
•
Thlndly, April 13, 1m DAILY PtlOT A JS
~CA .
1411 ~ lroadw~, 5.ta Alia
Pr•••I• a Spjelal
BINGO NIGHT
TUESDAY, APRIL 25, 1978 AT 7:30 P.M.
EVEN DOZEN -PLUS S SPECIAL EV-MT ,,_3 '
•• '11' '
........ Seuloc 12 ;z111•1250 Mdl .-e ~e ... wleedJ
MllllS..-111 a.tSIOO ... .-ele_.m1 .. dJ
Y•recehe 12HsdC..lo ... medfw~ 12r ... _....._._.,LY•
rHelft 2 ....... -....... c.Glll ... 54a1d ....... ,_ ......
2-4-ced ..... forHdl I I JI I l o
Tohl COit szs ,.. p1r•• •••• , ....... hrcl _.,., I I I of s2s. No
spllttt.J of c .... Pie•• .... , ,. ,_. c_. IN A.DYAMCI bf at...., tlf
titeYWCA.1411 N.lre.-.,.S-.AM.•-r .. MlglitlT .... _.Fri.
after 6 pal or• S•..,. from I pa. to 6 p.a IMo ,._. lnc1 v.tlont.
EVEN DOZEN PLUS 5 -TUESDAY, APRIL 25, 1978
DoonO,...t6pa.-••11Stwtt17:JOp.a.
\
f ..
811 ............. .4 .... 1'-•.
D!!AB PAT: I've been told that aome canned
tuna -producta eoatalD bonito. a tlsb vtuJ mucb like
tuna. How can you tell the dlffennce? h lbla eub-
stitudoo a ciommoo practice?
_.......... N.S.,LagmiaBeach
• Boalo II almllar to tuna, ba& the can label .-S.s AaC mat .., •'boalto .. If that la wit.a& U CODtalu. Be a
Model Cheryl Tiegs label reader·~ yoa lhop ud yoa'U mow exaet-
h . ly wlla& yoa're .,_,. .. ,. Albaeore II the only kind of as signed a con-tana daa& can be labeled "white meaL" "Upt
tract with ABC that · me(&" tuaa comes from the yellow fin skip Jack calls for a ·role on ud bl11e na. '
"Good Mornin g •
America" to discuss 'Falce Taa' Prodtld'• Safe
health, beauty and
f asbion news. She
also will participate
in .. Battle of the
DEAR PAT! How do tanning preparations
work, and can they be dangerous? My daughter
used one of these prodocta \o speed up her spring vacation tan.
Network Stars" ·and P.W .• Newport Beach will make guest ap-.. Fake" sun tan products are perfamed pearances. aleobol·waier aolatlona wUh d)'llydn>zyacetone ---------.and a small amoant of ace&Gae. The former tn1re·
( UaLW-'TEaS )
COVERS
SACRAMENTO
In the DAILY PILOT
dleat ls aappo&ed to give a browaln& effect without
uposare &o &be san by ralslac the dead ~U. of the
oater sldL Tolddty tests coodacted by a eonsalt·
lag firm for one manufacta.rer and the Food and Drag Admlnlstralion did no& abow any llkellbood
of 1-jary from appUcaUoa to lldD. A few com-
plaln&a It.ave beeo received aboa& tile developmeRt
at
750 ml. (25., ft. oz.)
•
' AT YOUR SERVICE
ERVYN'
these Items awllable In our Anahel~ Cypress.
Fullerton, HuntingtOn Beach and Tustin atorea Only
shoe specials!
of a 1poUy appearanee wbell Ute tu stan. te wear
off. MoWecl areas may ~ from mna •>·
plkatloe and fade after a few d.,a. o.e daqer el
these produda la &ha& ataee die &u II antftdaJ, tile
oa&er •kla baa Dot t.hlckued u M ....W wWl a
natu~I tan, ud therefore ll .._., pntld 1•
from &heaun. t-------------------------1
l1ta•I• Deesa't DfJl9Clerke '
DEAR PAT: Is there any truth to~ dalm
that vitamin E is effective for wse u or tD a de-
odorant? How much vitamin E should a penon 1et
each day just for general good bealtb.
J .G., lllaalon Viejo
Tiie Food and Drq Ad~_,. tt lau
bad no evldeace praea&ed or medkal llteratue
docameatatlon &o suppert U. dalm &Ital ttlaala B
11 effective u a deodorant. 8IDce ttlamlD B II a
aa&lo.ddam, &he uapron11 &heory la that It wfJI a.
blblt bacteria lrom aslng u.JPD to keu-..
penplration.
Tbe U.S. -commeaded Dietary Allowa11ee
<RDA) of vitamin E -the ama8D& a PftMa aeeda
to stay healthy -ls baaed on &be 1Saal dalJ:r la.
take, plus • marctn for safety, nlber &baa Oii •
clinically t$bbllsltecl reqairemeat. 1'llle aDA la
five International Ualta (l.U.) for lafaa&a, Zit to 2S
men's nylon sport shoes
Blue nylon uppn with metching bNahed
leather trim, contrasting yeflow atrlpe9,
pedded ankle collar and ecoop wedge.
Action waffle treed lolea.
~
11.97
I.U. for adult women and 31 LU. for preput or .,_-~------...;..---------------1 nuralag women. All LU. 11 roqblJ .. tdY&ln& lo a
mlW1ram.
Wolfsehmiclt
Vodka80°
$9.99
1.7-' L (59.2 fl. oz.)
M.P. Pros basketball oxford
For 119' end boy8 ••• eturdy black
or blue cenvea ""*8 with 8trfpe
trfm and grounct.-grtpping basket·
ban~ Men's and boys' sizes.
3.50
CLEARANCE
Saucony~ leather sport shoe
Styled with white leather uppers,
blue trim. padded ankle collar
end sport shoe 90les.
ORIG.21.99
12.97
., Arrow" sole casuals for men
Styled wtth rust cafor, bruahed
leather uppers with contrast
athchfng trim ... Arrow" BOies
for .,,..footed freedom.
ORIG.18.19 ,.
9.97
Women's and children's
sandal clearance
Chooee from comfortable 11ndals for
women, boys and girte. Not an
aizea Jn fNflfY ltYle.
a. Otto. &.-.9.99. Shown,. a
r8prelenta11ve gkfe '8l1CfM
from our eelectto1t for
boya and girt9.
b. Orig. 9.89. Shown, •
repf818n1atfve atyte in
women's sandals
4.91
YOUR CHOICE
l
r
IN ID•: •St • .. •Business
,.,;......
RICK MILLER IS -GREETED BY JOHtj McNAMARA.
-.
•
t
' e.wne1
Mille~ En. LOng DrOught
Gm~ Sla~ Ignites A~els, 9.-5
By DA~E CUNNINGHAM OfelltDellY .........
It's been nearly four years
since RJck Miller hit a home
run. He almost forgot what it
feels like.
But he qncorked a grand slam
and led the California Angels to
a 9-5 victory over the Minnesota Twina Wednesday night at
Anaheim Stadium.
"It's nice that the drought is
over.'· Miller says. •'Other home
runs are just. you know. home
runs But this is the best one I've
ever hit"
Miller's blast capped an eight-
r un opening innitlg by the
Angels, more than they bad
scored in any full ga~ince
Sept. 13 of last year. The Angels
did It with just three hits, assist·
ed by four walks and an error.
Eleven batters came to the
plate for California and Miller
scored twice in the inning, draw·
ing a walk to lead off the game.
It was a rewarding night for the
forgotten free agent.
Signed from Boston in the
shadow or what seemed to be a
more important acquisition
(Lyman Bostock from Min·
nesota). Miller. bad gotten off to
a .222 start before his 380-foot
slam to right field.
"All J needed was a little more
playln1 Ume, which I'll fet now
that I'm out of Boston,• Mlller
says. "M~be I ean bit a few
more home runs oow."
With the Red SOx, Miller •as tra ppe d behind Carl
Yastnemald, Fred Lynn, Jtm
Rice and Dwt&bt Evans ln the
ou~fleld. He aaw limited ·~
A ... 8 .. te
M-•U.C .... Cnlt .
Allftl ISM ....... lllOlllfenU tt:•-."'-
Aprll 14~ .. 0MMM 11•~ ~1uc.1--. .. ~ ,,., ......
and hadn't bit one out of tbe
park slnce bl1 mea1er flve-
bomer sellOD in 1974. The vietory made a propbe.t of
Angela manager Dave Garcia,
w ho commented 24 hours
earlier: ''Somewhere ln the
American League rl1bt now
there's a pitcher who's gonna be
a victim. These boys are gonna
start bitting."
The victim was Pete Redfern,
who couldn't make lt out of the
first frame. In his % of an in· ning, Redfern allowed seven
runs. four walks and two hits.
Frank Tanana. who notched
his second victory without a de-
f eat. waan'l particularly effec-
tive, either. He gave up 12 bits
and four funs, including two
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Dodgers Return Home Rangers'
Pitcher
In Trance IA Suffers 11-10 Loss; Faces Atlanta Friday
HOUSTON CAP> -Despite
the multiple personalities his
team 'has shown since opening
the season, Houston manager
Bill Virdon figures Wednesday
night's ex ba~llng s lugfest
triumph over e Los Angeles Dodgers comes losest to depict·
ing the true nat e of his team.
The Astros lost four In a row to
-Cincinnati and the first game of
the -series .against the Dodgers
They beat the Dodgers Tuesday
night on J .R. Richard's two-
hitter and Wednesday finally
-\ook an 11·10 decision on Jesus
Alou's infield grounder ln the
bottom of the ninth.
"We've got a pretty good club
-Out it was just a matter of get
trng things together:· Virdon
said after the second Astros vie·
tory 10 as many ni ghts against
Dodgen Slate
All 0.0.. .. ICAK ..... Ottl
"'""" 1•At1-atLosAnoetes n ·SSpm April U 1111 .. 1.a .. Los Anoeles • is p.m.
AIWll 16 Atl-.t.a .. Los ""9e1e. 12 SS p.m
the defending Na lion al League
champions.
"Now we have the feeling that
we can play well with the good
clubs," Virdon said.
Dodgers manager Tom
Lasorda, whose Dodgers opened
with a three-game sweep or
Kings Host Leafs;
~aDJs Get Gabriel
I I
INGLEWOOD -The Los
Angeles Kings hope the Toronto
Maple Leafs don't check them
out of the National Hockey
League playoffs -literally -
when the clubs continue their
playoff series toniJlhl at the
Forum. It's on radio (KRLA ,
nto)ata
'l'oronto holds a 1-0 lead in its
National Hockey League pre-
liminary-round best-or -three
match with the Kings, and thus
rap up the seMes with a
al the Forum.
Maple Leafs. skating ag-
gressively and bodychecklng at
every opportunity, woo tbe open-
ing game. 7-3, Tuesday in
Toronto.
Gcdffiel ~ .......
LOS ANGELES Rams'
coach George Allen, known for
using veteran players, has
added Roman Gabriel to the Los Angelesquarterbacktng corps.
The signing of free agent
Gabriel on Wednesday marked a
reunlon for the coac.h and
quarterback. Gabriel had played
ror Allen at Los Angeles in the late
1960s.
N9eratl...,o 1t'I ...
HILTON HEAD \~'LAND,
SC-Martlna Navratilova
whipped Vlrginia Ru&icl, 6-2, 6-4,
iD Wednesday's second round of
a women's pro tennis tourna-
ment here.
In other singles matches
• Wednnd1y, Wendy Turnbull cle'-
featecl Caroline Stoll, 6-4, 8-1,
Ken-y add beat F>orema llibai,
M, 8·1 and Kathy May downed
Mbna Jausovec. e-2. 6-2. ,..
I IBC~•··· ..
• , -
ci. 6·1. 7-6; Ille Nastase defeated
Antonio Zubarelli, 6-1. 6-3; and
Manual Orantes downed Wojtek
Fibak, 6-1, 6·1.
Tomas Smid topped Kim
Warwick, 6-4, 6-3, Adriano
.. Panatta eliminated Gianni
Qcleppo, 6-3, 6-3, Raul Ramirez
beat Jurgen Fassbender, 6-4, 6-1
and Patrick Proisy downed Ion
Tiriac,6-4,6-2.
~Tldrd
TOWSON, Md.-Butch Soper
of Santa Ana is in third place go-
ing into today's third round of
the Fatr Lanes Open bowling
tournament here with a pinfall
of 2,529, some 49 pins behind
leader Steve Westberg.
Atlanta, said. "Maybe going
home will help us. lt was just
one or t~e games ...
The Dodgers meet the Braves
Friday afternoon at 1 o'clock in
the season opener in Los Angeles. The series continues
through Sunday, then the Cincin·
nati Reds come in for three games beginning Monday night.
Houston broke from a 3-3
deadlock in the fourth inning on
Howe's three-nm borne run and
Bob Watson's two-run double. Los
Angeles scored three runs in the
fifth on doubles by Steve Garvey
and Rtck Monday and Dusty
Baker's sacrifice fly.
The A.stroe added two in the
fifth on a double by Cesar
Cedeno and single by JOff Cruz.
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ARLINGTON, Texas <AP) -
It was shortly before 6 Wednes-
day night when visitors to the
Texas Ranger• locker room
were startled by a bizan-e scene.
Relief pitcher Roger Moret
stood frozen like a statue before
his locker, holdlng a shower
shoe in his extended ri1hi band
and not uttering a word.
He remained in that position
almost an hour before he
snapped out of the trance-like
state.
At 9:35 p.m .. be walked to an
ambulance and was taken to the
Arlington Neuropsychiatric
Hospital with Ran1era owner
Brad Corbett and executive vice
president F.dd.le RobiD500 hold·
ing up their coals to screen
curious oalooken. Team pbyalclan Dr. B.J .
Mycoslde said Moret bad 1one
into "a definite catatonic state.
You don't see them very often,"
he said. ..
The 28-year-old Moret bad
threatened to Jump the team. last
week because of arguments with
several pl~ers.
He said last Friday, "I'll be
gone in 24 hours."
However. Moret stayed and
turned in four innings of btilllant
relief Monday night when Texas
defeated the New York Yankees.
Moret gained a save in that
game and said later. "I'm very happy."
He told a reporter Wednesday
niebt before be climbed into the
ambulance, "I want to be traded
. . . you tell them that "
Ro blnaon sald he tboucbt
Moret was possibly aufferiftl a
nervous breakdown .
AP,_
KAREEM ABDUL.JABBAA DRIVES TOWARD BASKET.
Lakers Tumble
Sonics Confident
After 102-90 Win
"Jabbar had to work for every·
thine be got ."
LOS A .... L•s c•1 -o.nue., v. A111111•· ~ ........ U. NI-12, Wll-1., 5coCl • c.t"r6, .....,.4. T...U«l.,.tO.
HATTLa t•> -.J. ~ 10, SlllnW tJ, ....... "· o....._ w. WIHa-sn • ._ "· S....•.T ..... G~1CIL
LMA""91• n 24 21 22--* SNttle n U 2• 9'-tt? Tot.ti ...,., -U. ~ 22, SMttle J'O, A ......
Punch Decks
JC Player
HB'S JOE DIPIETRO (LEFT), DAN MOORHOUSE (1) BLOCK A NEWPORT SHOT.
Sailors Roll Past Oilers
Newport Harbor Undiaputed Sunset Leader
Newport Harbor Hl1b's
Sailors cleared up the Sunaet
League volleyball race Wednes-
day nleht with a convincing
four-set victory over visiting
Huntington Beach.
The Sailors of coach Charlie
Brande kissed away a 9-1 lead In
the first set, but roared back
with three straight wins to put
Huntington Beach away.
The Oilers or Huntington
Beach rallied with 14 straight
points to capture the first set,
15·9, but then the Sailors settled
down behind the play or Greg
Hart (off the be~b), sophomore
middle-blocker Bruce Caldwell
and Ted Cox ln the back row
ranks ot the unbeaten in leque
play.
In other Sunset League action
It was Fountain Valley staying
within a game of Newport
Harbor with a triumph at Edlaon
<Huntington Beach>, and
Westminster took Marina <Hunt-
ington Beach) in four sets.
Dan Haskell led a Fountain
Valley surge in the final same
as the Barons battled back from a 13-7 deficit to post a winning
17-15 in the fifth set.
record to 17-4 with an easy win
over visiting Citrus College and
Golden West dumped invading
Santa Barbara in four sets.
MIOH ICHOCM.
Yanity
'4lllMIL.a .... N9wl>Ort ~ ... HurtllllgtOll heel\ .. u. IS.S, IS.ll, U-n
Wntml111terd9f. MwlN IS.II. IS.1, t-IS. tk
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lrvlna Hllfl.i. ODl!tll 15·2. t», IS.I. ,_..,Venlty ~I.Hiiie HeWl*t ...,_, .... ltllnjlftgl°" llNal !HS. IS.S. MarlM.C.~•Mo.ll·IS. l'-lillllV .. ...., ... Edi .... ls-4, IS.IO.
-with bis puaing and defense. to
belt Huntington Beach out of the
Irvine High's JeU Cruz
sparkled in the backcourt as the
Vaqueros claimed a three-set
victory over visiting Colton in
non-league action.
On the Jutllor college scene.
Orange Coast ColJeae upped its ""' '' trvl,. Mltllldltf °"""IS.IQ, IS.IJ.
. \
Ml-stars Pf eked
FJ"s Gittens Tops
South Grid Roster
Willie Gittens, the CIF foot
ball player of the year who
led Fountain Valley Hlgh's
l4arons to a 10-1 record and the
Sunset League championablp,
heads the South roster an-
nounced by Rebels coach Jim
Bratten for the 19th Orance
County AU-star football game
July 6 at Santa Ana Bowl.
Gittens scored 52 touchdowns
in his career at Fountain Valley
and is beaded for Arizona State
io the rau. or Bratten's 35-man roster, 21
are from the Oranae Coaat area,
10cludlna South Coast Leacue
player ol the year Bill Gompf of
Laguoa Beach and Sun1et
League lineman of the year
8ry an Caldwell <Fountain Valley).
Among the North squad,
11tbicb leads in the aeries, 1'-4,
are Brea running back Steve
Selvig, Savanna <Anaheim>
High quarterback Grant Parker
and Los Alamitos linebacker
Rick Senteno.
"We've aot g_uality kids with
talent," says 4Jratten, who re-
a.nlly reai1ned bis post at
Estancia <Colla Mesa) Htlh to
assume a coaching rofe in
Colorado.
"I don 1 think the •mJ>buls
will be necaaarlly on Gittens.
We have aome excellent
quarterbadts and 10me fine re-
... ~avera. And I wouldn't diacount
Et Modena m1h'1 Bob Vert>urg w Marina'• Greg Kannan as
rannen.
game and basically it'll be a lot
or work on Urning.
·•tt won't be fun and games.
but It won't be a two-a·day slave camp, either. A real bonus for us
is Norm Johnson of Pacifica
<Garden Grove) High. He's the
ftoeet kicker l 've ever seen on
the prep level. r saw blm kick
five straight into the end zone on
the klclcoff. He has field goal
ranee. ol 45 yarda and bis punt-
ing average ls 42 yards a kick.
"Everyone I.a 1oln1 to play
and probably vtry few wtll see
duty on offeme and defense."
Practice bealn.I June 19 al
Estancia High.
No school can be represented
by more than three players and
amon1 t.bo&e witb the Umit are
Fountain Valley, Eatancla,
Newport Harbor, Paclflca,
Mater Dei <Santa Ana>. Marina
<Huntington Beach), Santiago
(Garden Grove> and Santa Ana
Valley. ..... ~ e.c1111-w111i. OllMM (l'llwlltalft v111...,1, em
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~EBALL/VOLLEYBALL/TRACK
Laguna Hi11s Tabs Gallo
BJ &OOER CULSON ••DlillY"*IUilf C"nuck , a •year-old pro-
duct ol W Point, has *n
chosen to 1 La1una Hilla
Hi1h 's Joott>.ll ram follow-
in• Wednesday ni t's confirma-
tion by the Sad eback Unified
School Diafrict board.
Gallo, whose coaching ability
came into focus when he turned
Servile <Anaheim) Hlgb's foot-
ball propam around seemlhgly
overnil!ll,. says tbe goals aet for
bis first-year and aenlorleaa
Hawks will be ot a tooc ranee
nature.
"We're !M'fl•ns to put tosetber
a pro1ram that will be "8s>ected
tbrou1hout Ore nae County,•'
"YtGallo.
G 1110 uys hlt thou1hts
with wlnnlng football are ( U a
pa11lng aame (2) motivaUoo.
"I left aa an aaslatant at Cal
State <Fullerton> because I
didn't see any paaaina In
Fullerton's future and I believe
ln mot1vatloo, not ln1lmld1tklll.
•'In tumlng things around at
Servile we created a famlly en·
vlronmeat where everyone cared
and beU.eved.6aoeveryone else.
"l consider myself •n of-
fensive-oriented ooach, but real·
ly the essence of succeaa ls ln
havin1 .0-50 klds who care about
each other and their school and
are motivated to accomplish
team goal.a."
Gallo was a three-sport athlete
See GALLO, P11e BS
South Coaat Btueba/,l T~pMarks
Diahlos Grab Expected
T · L d Atlagama wo-game ea . .::1:'.!~~~"tT!lt.~.=
Mlaslon Viejo High's Olablos
moved back lnto a commanding
two-game cushion in the South
Coast League baseball race
Wednesday with a 5·2 conquest
of visiting Laguna Beach wath a
four·run second inn.lna blghlllhl·
inf the victory. n other action Wednesday,
Dana Hilla pulled into a tie with
Costa Mesa in second place with
a 6-4 win over invadina Corona
del Mar; Coeta Mesa wu a 2·1
loser at University High
(Irvine); and San Clemente and
El Toro frustrated each other
with a 3-3 tie in 10 innings at San Clemente.
Bruce Katz bad the biggest
bat for Mlsaion Viejo with h1a
two-run triple in the second in·
nlng. Jeff Newton, who con-
tinued bis batting prowess at
.500 with a 1·2 performance at
the plate. was relieved by Bob Mackell in the fourth inning and
the latter extended his scoreless
innioes string to 13 with four
frames of shutout ball.
Dana Hilla got all it needed In
the first inning when the
Dolphins scored five times with
the aid of four walks. clutch
singles by Pete Strong and
Wayne Johnson and a two-run
double by Gree Bums.
Sparkplug Dick Jeffers got it
started with a free pass and
before Strong and Johnson came
through with rbi singles, there
were frtt puses to John Hunn,
Mitch McGregor and Tom
Cbampieux.
San Clement.e's Dave Law and
El Toro's Mark Kacbeleln re-
fused the opposition anyone put
first base once the score reached 3.
San Clemente scored three
times in the fifth IMing on an
rbl double by Chris Russick,
Wes Welsh's aacritlce fiy and
Steve Wychrs-nn-acoring single.
Then Kacheleln took over and
allowed no bits in the final four
frames.
Joe Mutt went the distance for
University, strikin1 out eight
batters. The Trojans took advan-
tage or only two hits orr Mesa's
Jeff Sutterfield lo grab the wm.
ue-.8MdlUI .. ,II,..
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all aeaaon long but it will take a
fiood to cancel this weekend's
Laguna Beach Trophy Meet.
"The track will have to be a
lake for us to call the m•."
says Art.ilta coach Tom Barnett,
who baa spent the last week pre-
parin1 the track facility for the
39tb edition of the lnvitaUonal.
Field event finals on the
freabman and sophomore levels
be1ln Friday afternoon at 3,
along wtth quallfying races in
all events but the mile and two-
m 11 e . Saturday's itinerary,
which Barnett says was de-
stined around the smoothly-run
Beach Cities Invitational, bas
field events kicking off the pro-
gram at 9 a.m .
The first running final, the
varsity two-mile, as expected to
get under way at 11 a. m. with
the last event, the mile relay
scheduled for 3
A total of 32 t.eams. boys and
girls. have signed up for the
event Including several sprin-
ters from Centennial <Compton>
High the distance corps from
Valencia <Placentia) High and a
team from Boulder City,
Nevada.
Area teams include the host
Artists. Capistrano Valley.
• " • University Hlgh <Irvine> and the :J o': ~-~ ~ ~ El Toro girls contingent.
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' .. ' •o•o
J2 J. l
The top field event should be
the pole vault, headed by a trio
of area athletes.
Bucky Baker of Laguna Beach, who appears to be re-
covered from an injury that bas
hampered him all year, won the
Beach Cities varsity title at ~
and is ready to craek the 14-foot
barrier, according to Barnett.
He should be challenged by
Jim Fairclough and Robert
, II • Jackson or Capistrano Valley,
100 ooo 100 o--a • 1 who have both cleared 13 feet. Et Ton s.nc.......,..
c..adltfMwl41
allrllrtll
~"'"-cf 1 2 1 0
WlllN.lf I 0 I I
Cr JltOfl, " l 0 I 0 O..JtlOfl,rl •• 1 2 ~IM<I. 1b 4 • 0 0
SllolUn, ti> l I I 0 c.i..dll 4021
L .. llO,u..p 4 0 0 0 H..,.s,Jlt 1I00
si..r-,c Joo O
Sturm, IMS 0 0 0 0 ,..... 30 •••
CM'OOla de! #M
0-Hllls
O.MiMtum ... 11 ... .,,., __ • J 0 J 0
Moore. c 3 0 I 0
IAf'ece, " J I 0 1 ,....,,Ml J 0 I 0 er1-.. ,., i o 1 o ....,..,. JOit
P.U.nf,i. 2101 ~tier... I. I. •• _._ •• 2080 ,,.....Cf JI 10
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OIO 030 000 .,_, I i
161 OeM Miiis
allrll,..
Jetton. If J 11 o )-
-• rt 0 0 00 ic1-..u 2 o o o
-... 1100 M<G,_,cf I Io o
Stnllfl. If I I I 0
(:llamf>I...._ 491 1 0 I 1
JoflMoll, 211 l 1 I I
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at"00111,c lOOO
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JI I 0 ?IOI 1 I 0 0
2000
2. I I
0100
2000 2too
IOtO
1000 11 2 2 2
' II e 000 001 ... , • 0
000 * •-2 2 1
In lhe sprints, Laguna Beach's
Norm Anderson, who ran a 22.5
220 on Wednesday and bad a 9.9
non-winning 100 early In the
season, challenges Sarstow·s
junior flash Mike Fields, who
bas run 9.8 already thia season..
Uolverslty's John Ortman
looms as the favorite ln the dJs.
cu s. The South Coast
frosh-sopb league champ· a
year ago, Ortman baa a season
beat or 153-7. He should expect
tough competition from Laauna
Beach's John Miller.
UCI Crews Row
WILMINGTON-UC Irvine's
four end eigbt·man crews will
meet the University or Southern
California here Friday aftemooo
(4:30).
The Anteaters swept all four
races against Loyola last week
and coach Bob Newman is
hopeful UCI can duplicate the
feat against the Trojans.
118 Girls, Poly Five
To Claih at Marina
Huntlnttoft Beach Hilb School
wlll plQ its semiftnal round CJ F
4-A 1irt. baaketbaU playoff
game •l Marina H11h Friday
ni1bt <7:30) llalntt Lona Beach
Poly Hieh's Jackrabbit.I .
ceeds earmarked to finance the
Laguna Beach Volleyball Club's
achievement award, given each
year to a La1UDa Beach Hilb
student wbo excells acbolut.lca..1-
ly and ln volleyball. For rQilU'a·
Uon informaUoo phone '94..aoa. ........ ._.,.
.. We're Solnl lnto lhta wttb the ~ ldta we'n pr1cUctn1 for one
OHeMM .... ,,.. .._...... ........ ,.
•1tt1...._...1-..-1a1, lelll CMar Cltnt\atfl ltlcw-flllml JilwlMll C"8clflc.ll.
TARI' MIKE FLYNN (I) BLOa<S A RANDY SMITH SPIKE.
It will be a home same for
Huntlnst.oa Beacb'a defend.lne
CIF champions on a neutral
court.
lnllle &lrf 8 ....
LONG BEACH-Tom and
Marlene Meyer of Mluiod Viejo
have qualilled fo.r re1tonaJ com·
petition ln a mixed doubl• -. nil tournament th1t weekend at
lleer.auoa Park In Loaf Beacb. A.readia Lures Area Splkers
ARCADIA-Tb• dl1tanee1
have been chanpd from yards
to meten but the trad1Uoa will
remain the 1am• &\ ll'rtday'a
11th nmnlnf of tbe Arcadia
track and fteld tnvttational.
8Ul9d ai the top hll"h aehooJ m .. t oo the welt ~t. t.be coed
alfalr tbould lift up to opecta.
tJona wtth the 1t1ce leaden m l5
of 11 boys• evenw aJ>d .. ven ot
11 1lrla •venb entered. .,.Id
eftftll bq1D at I p. m. wtua nm-
alPI nmta A.UtiDI It 1. ~~A J1r11 of On.nee
COut area e-.. an compet..
la.1. b¥d•4 bJ Newport
H&rbor'I ma reJ.17 toanome
of Chrta Corum, Frank Vencllt,
Steve Dawaoa and Wayne
Kasparek. Tbe quartet rank•
HCOD.d ln CJ1' Uld ftftb ln the
mle In tbe mue relay <1:21.1> and ta ftft.b tn ClJ' ln tb• ..0 re· lay (0.8).
Venclllt la 1c1Mduled for a
busy Iv.nine ltnce IM wW com-
pete to the 400 and IOO. Vencllk
ba:Jbe fourth belt time tn cir to Use • (1:18.1) and tourtb Ml ta tbe4'0 <•1>.
Vtneeat Bron ol Mater Det
<Santa A.u• mp II UM ctF
Ludtr lD tbt .... -<11.-) but will melt tM m• .1..,.111,IP..t
abud ol CID lM
1
)••• Poratb of Atwater ('34~).
rountaln V•lt•1'1 Troy
BllYIDI Ind Ne.port'. Hirbor'&
Kuparek .,.. both enteNd tn
the S30 low butdlle, When &hldr
beatl ot 17.1 ruk f1ftb ID OJ'
and • v.th tn UM state. The trtple Jump fteJd Ce&tl.tiW
D•nnl1 Cowan of rountaln
Valier <O·lO"'> and San
Clemente'• Dave Haneoek
(4$.t .. ). n .... of Uwt .,...., top
tan~ nlDDll"I are tn the 1.SOO.
Fowitalo VallU'1 8rtU A#JeU
end Ill.kt lfcCU OI Zltancla
<Colla Mela) l'IU M tit CIP '.
(4: lt.8 and 4:20.1) wbll• Cotta
MeH '1 John Gerhardt bu a aea1on beat of 4: H.1.
Trecy Hanlon &ftd Laura Held
of Jtdlaon <Huntlnaton Beach> mitt and u. canon or rountaln
Val&.Y' ant' enteNd to the llrla
110 Jow burdJee. Sharon If ulae
and Alida K.lrkhom of Ediaon and Marl Olbba of Marina
(K\lOttnaton Beach> art In ~dl.t· t.liltenenta. •
OtbW ..... orll loc1udt hlib
Jumpu· ADn E,,,.nbeck and
1pttnter Vl.Dl!MA Deftn11toa of
HuotinltioiD Beecb and MlllJoa ~I J1aiper Sabrloa
1
lrvloe Aquatlca awlmmer Uaa
Dahl ta competln1 ln U\e 1'11
Jwilor N.Uoatla at HuntsvtUe.
Ala. ln a four-day meet this
... k.
Dahl wW be eompM.101 in the
100-mew ~ and 200 t.J>.
dlYldual medMy wttb qua.lltytQs
Umea ol 18.1andt:10.&
...... , •• 111111 • ....,
Entrlel are now belq taken
tor the HCODd anaual two·
penon bUch volleyball Ooublee tournament tn Lalwla B.acb,
ICbtdulecl AprU U·l3 al
Emerald h)-. *"
CompttltlqD wW be dlvkW tn-
to men'• and women'• caieaort•. lind a Umlt of ao ttam• wtll be reatat.ered fOl'
eacb dlvllian.
tr7 ~ II '10. With lftd·
\; ..
The Meyen earned tbelr berth
by def eattn& Pat Canon and
Elmer Fllllt. M, T.S, N, bl the
tlnala o( I pnUmlnuy tourney
ln MlNlaD Viejo April 2.
lo th• aemltlnalt of U1•t
tourna.mont Canon ud 11Ws toD.,.CS Dan and Georg.la Psi')'
I·'· 1-11 M wblle lbe Heyen ..,c
past Pe,o l.Aumer and Rudy
Amaya. 1-e, 4-t, 6-2.
61re.n.t.dlTMN
TORRANCE-The Oran1e Count1 Volleyball Club llrla
team flnl1bt4 tblrcl la tbe
SouUltrD Cillf onl• rqJoaal tounameat recentl1 at. ltl
Camino Oollet• In an eYe.ot that
mvolrid 11 of the top team1 tn
th area.
'SPORTS BASEBALL TEN I
...,,., .... After carnerin1 tbree nrat place. and a aeccad in a SoUth
Coaat Leaaue trl!Ck and n Id
dual meet on II~. El Toro ..
Art Gourdine might bave been
wondertna what be could do for
UeDC01-.
$1"-'te' Ill ~;a. ........ CQ .... ,, 00fl4.
crr-1. co .. 11 a. MM1M CIJ ,,.,;
........ (.0~ ..... """"' .. f.,..ltt.ICIU~ ....
So ln a 11nnday meet aplnst
vtaltinc ea.ta Meta, Gourdine
went out and won fCMJr events-
tbe 100 lo 10.6, the 220 lo !3.5, the
120 high hurdles ln "·9 and the
triple Jump al 4.2·10"il.
1tt-t. IC-. CE It.I; __ , ic... CID IM;
..... 1 ,,..,_ CO "'7; --t . ....._. (l!I 1:1U; Ml~t. Mcl<.INIO C•I JtW•; ~I
....... CO 11:U; -~·Toro.a.A: MllO
r•llW-1!1 T-1:'1.t; 1 . ....+-t, llkller CCI
11.11 l.Ml.H-1. Hflft~ Cal O .t; HJ-1. • , ...... CEI .. , U-1. Holllkll co tMVI;
TJ-f, lwlft CO *1-U;sl'-1. W..S•t Cl!I JM; OT-1. l'lllw CO aM. .......... "'T_ (.., (01 c:.11-.
Gourdine 's efforts over-
1 had owed the distance
atrencth of Costa Mesa. Joe
Young took the 880 in 1:$7.8, a
tenth of a seeood ahead of El
Toro's Shawn Flynn, while lbe
M uatanas' John Gerhardt
doubl~ ln the mile (4:32.4) and
two-mlle (9;36.S).
1._1. ~ 11!111.t; t . IHI CCI; a.~
ce1. Ut-1. McKmllle Cl!I 2'U; I. •ldf1llee Ill; J McL.eod(O.
441-1. -'-' <•I S7.S; t. ltlr...-11!1; J SCN .... IEI.
ll0-1. Horrwe IQ 1:11.6: I. ltll\I .. Ca>; >. °"" .. ' c I!). Mll-1. Horrw• 10 • • ..U; 1. G*M faJ: t ucr-10. ..
CoaWmed From Pase m
2-fnll-1. ~ 0.w (Cl 18.Q .. ; t OKile CCI; at Wut Point. playing
liahtwelght football and
baseball, in addition lo beinc a
boxer. Re was a quarterback in
his high school days in White
Plains, New York. Latuna Beacb'I Norman An·
derson turned ln the leaeue's
futeat 23) (22.S > In a dual meet
at Dana mua
* * * Venlty
Ill T-. 1 .. 1 CUI C-C.-..
lot-I. Gowdne IEl 1U, 2. 9tket' 1£1 IOt, l.
'"""" IEI II 0 nt-1 GourdiM 1e1 n.s. 2. w .. wr 1•1 nA, l. il\l<llltfon:I (Cl u.o
'40-1. tllectlMllord CCI SU; 2 Avll• tEI SU,
J. Conc:•r I l!I SU ---1. Yount IC) l:SU; 2. FIYM CEI 1:51.t, l G9f~nlt CO n..L Mti-t. GHtllWdt CCI 4 JU; I. 'VOi.Wiii CCI
•:J7.J; a. _.......1£1 •:tt 0
f<fllll-1. Otftwlrllt co t au, 2. o....mou 1c1
It: 11.S; I. LM• le.I '°' 11 ._ 441 ..ief-l!t Two.u.•. Miio rei.Y-()Dat. ~ J. JO t
l ... H-1. ~"' llV U.t; 2. Ir-IEI .. _,; J. Motte 10 .....
mt.H-1. 8oMft 11!1 4U, t 8'-(El 41.0; 3 t_.ttolClll.L .. J-1. ~ 11!1 M ; 2. Hugllet (Cl ~tO; 3.
HOll lEl~tO U-1 ~ Cll 1MVt; 1 Ir-Ill .._th,
J Steele I El IM
TJ-1. Gollnll• I l!l 42· 10\i't; 2. H ""'91 tel
»-"; > ·-Cl!l S1 .. PV-f 0..._.. I EI ll•; t flynot CEl fQ.4, l
SCC T11mbles.
To Foe, 5-4
MALIBU-A grand slam home
run U1 the seventh inning was all
Pepperdine needed to dereat vis·
iting Southern California College
of Costa Mesa, 5·4, here Wednes-
• day in a non-conference col·
lef late baseball game.
twas the se<'Ond loss In a row
for the Vanguards, who are now
19·10 on the season.
Mlke Peters had two hits, in-
-<-ludlna a double. for sec while Kenl Mlyuhlro pitched well in a
loaing effort.
Pl.,,k,U
Hovle,cl
TllllmH, 111
Wll_.,lb
Sc ... u.~
Seeel~C•I
•rll,.. S.-1.U.ll s t o o lteno. ,.~
' 1 1 o Gvorre, rf 4010 Pet-,11> l 0 0 I MlyMMfo, p
J 000 Town "_..,,....,...
• 1 '0
• 1 I 0
• 0' 1
J I 2 0
0000
)4. 7 2
r II e
toO -I02-I 7 • 100 -..,._, • 2
l H...,...•ICI.
£40 '91ey-EI Toro S1 .l.
Mlle~MoMJ:&2.
HJ-I. Tully UQ H o I. QIN 11!1. J. T9mPM IC).
U-1. U.C.. IE t•M; 2. HMTWIM le.I, 3. ~co.
TJ-1. U.C. CEI .. ,, 2. CIMIMY CCI; >. W.ewr CEI.
"'V-1. l"IYM CEI M : 2. SlenlmM CCI. I. 1 .. 1 ~,Mcl"-YIU.
S-1. Tilompeoft IEI .._11; t • .H<o0o Ill. 3. P.t,....Cll.
DT-1. P.c:os !El 11S-t; 2. $mllll Cl!I; 3.
JollMIOl'I ( IEI. V9nlty
0-HllblMICUl~a.-tt
10!>-I. OllOfl I Dl 10.J; t. ~'" I DI 1G.7, 3. M•<11le ILi IO.•. 2lt-1. Mdtno11 IL) U.$; 2. 5* IOI IA.2; 1
M•rple I LI 24.2.
.._1 . ..._.._CL) SU; t. t>1S011 101 SU; 3.
OriCLliU.
110-1 llru11•men ID> I Ol.t , t .
Westrnor•I-COi 2:10; l P•rrlth ILi t 1S.O
Mlle-I. Bru11ema" IOI 4 ·H •. 2
O.molr1.-S I LI 4:4U; 1. ,._II I DI • ... o.
2-mii.-1. Oefnelri.dn ILi 1o·ou ; 2. Plell (DI
lO:OLI; 1. 9'.-IU ll:Ol.O
'41 ffiey-()eN Hiii• .._2
Mlle rel..,-Done Hiits J:«I e
lttHK-1. Miiiet IU ... t; 2. ~IOI 11.4, J.
.. ""'scu•1. J:JOLH-1. LMt11er9 IOI CU, 2. ~IOI Q4,
1 He11Ctl( U 4'.0.
MJ-1. Smr111101 M . t.~ 101 ~10, l ,...
ll••Y CLI Joi. U -1. ~COl •Wi; 2.1oW91t ([)) tM;
I Hef\"°"'9 C Ol lt-S TJ-1 H~ IOI '1~\'i, 2 Sntyt~ (DI J7 2,
J ~-ncl>>~lll'I PY-I. l..lllt119t9 IOI 11-4. 2 McG..,,oo cu
11..0. 1. """'-101 IO.o
SP-1 Mlli. CU '14, 2 EIHs ILi 4U; J .. ,....., 10 4MYl.
OT-I. Mlli. ILi 1»4, 2. o.tk ILi I~, l
8l11toy ILi ISM.
~V.Uly
0.. ltllll WI 1111 U111Me IHcll 100-1 111.,..i (DI II e; e.-1 OUvMM COi
1 U.O, Mlle-I H--1 CU S·tU; 24111.._1
CH IOI 12:2'.J, MH• r••ev-L ....... S..Cll •.OO.O; 330t.H-t. llQIMI COi ... 0, HJ-1 Jones
IOI S..O. TJ-1. Jones 101 ll-J, PV-1 Wimer IOI
10-4, SP-1. l>l!Anwell IOI J.l-0, ,......,....
o.M Hiib (Ml 1,.1 &..llli9M 9Ncll
100-1. ~IOI II.I; 2. MMOM CU; l
GWmMllDI. 210-1 ~(LI H.O; 2. Edeltber19r IDl. l
Gurm•11101.
U0-1. Eele1slleroer IOI ,..1. 2 Jolwlton IOI: J. Cenecly (L).
--1. ~ ILi 2:2:5.4; 2. T-r ILi, J. KlrwMrlLI.
Mlt.-1. HMglMd ILi •:se..O; 2. Oon&elff IOI:
J. Tlll'ftWCU.
2-mlle-1. 19tu (DI ll:OU; 2. H...-.1 (Ll, J.
HenMf'ylU. MO rei.to-GIN Hiits 50.1.
Mllere~llMCll•·ot-o.
120ttH-1. Cowf'1 101 20.0; 2. TIM>elS CLI, ne
third.
JIM.H-f. Honan IOI 47.J ; 2. 0<.eMm ILi. J
Me ... IU.
HJ-t • ......,_CLl.W; M~W Ullr&
U-t,......,_COI .... ;M"9C8Nwtlllrd.
TJ-1. ,,__CU~; 2.t ..... _ 101,1.
TliMbCLI.
PY-I . ......,.... (LI 10-4; "° MCOftd W tlllnL
SP-I, Jc"-ILi 6-6; t . ~ IU; I R~(OI.
OT-I.~ ILi 1U·7'h; 2.........., COi; I. Olene• (0)
~=~-:.i:.1:.:g IK~:!.~':~~:. ..
Cal Poly Pomona pitching for a ' Wt!itstock all :J\eec1ed with a
dozen safeties, including two two-run homer lD the flnt lnnlot
home runs, and combined wtth and Jesse Moore added a solo freshm~n Dirk Weltatock's shot lD the seventh frame.
three-hit pitching, It produced a uc1,,,...ct111
10· l rout in non-conference col-Mo«•, 11 •;: ~ 6:;~;. • ~ ! : :
leglate basebaJ) action on the ""'°• 211 , , , • Htr-. cf i o 1 t
winner's dlamond. t~°'.'111rt : : : : ::1:0:11.. p : ~ : :
Weltstock struck out four and
walked four while scattering
three alngles.
M61ftll<lt', r.s • O I I Tot_. t JIS 10 U t ._.....,, ......
C.IPoly~
UC lnolN
r II o
OtO ODO 00.-1 J I 200 m .,,._,. tt 1
Alter a three-year tour with the
Army. Gallo served bitches at
Holy Cross lUgh 1n Flusblng,
N. Y., Tustin High and Mission
Viejo High before taking the sag-
aing reins at Servile in urn.
What had been three years of
losing football at Servlte turned
lnto 7-3 and 8·?·1 .9ampaigns in
the surf est or co~Utlon.
Next came a tour with Cal State C Fullerton>, but Gallo
round his niche was on lbe prep
level, left Fullerton and took a
teachLng Job at Mlsalon Viejo
High to await a s)iot at an open-
ing in the South Coast area
Gallo acknowledges the possi-
ble pitfalls that may be ahead
with bls Hawks competing
wltbout seniors and acainst
schools with larger enrollments.
But be says, "Latuna Hills ls a
growing area and a new school
allows you the capability of
perhaps putting together a staff
of your own choosing to a "ertain
extent.
··And it is a chance to build a
tradition from the ground up. I
believe in Che scliolar-athlete
and right now, my highest priori-
ty is getUng some asslslants.' ·
Gauchos Stop
Tigers, 13-7
Saddleback College came up
with both tbt, de(ense and good
pffenae lo throttle visiting
Riverside, 13-7. in a Mission
Conference baseball game Wed-
nesday.
Bruce Welz and Brad Rester
each collected tbnle base hita to
pace a 17·blt Sad4Jebaclt attack.
The Gaacboe also helped their
cause tn tbe fteld by turnm, four
double plays. .Ruben Candelaria drove in
three runs wltb a pair or
doubles. lneludlns a two-run drive ln tbe leC!OOd 1.nnint that snapped a 3-3 tie. When
Rivenlde eame back ror three
more f\Dll ln the top of the third,
relier pitcher Mark Engff came
lD to put out the fire. hf•••cacn' II> r It rtll Sto,ifoll, lb ' I 2 I I J 0 0 'Vr-.11, cf • a 2 o
•11a w.tz.c 5211 4 0 I t CaMefwle, • S J 2 J
S t ~ 1 O'SoHlvllft, • i t O O * ltl ~.P 0000 I I 1 I ToQ!a 411IJ17 If ac.o-. .......
r II e
_, IOO __,II ' 051 011 tllr-TJ 17 t
AUTO
LEASING
T WAY
IT
Baseball Standings
AUTO BE!
In• Ille __.flc ... Die•••• F•ltll•• c ....... ., ..... '· .. ••r ••• or •••ti .............. ,...
,.. .......... we ... ... ,..., ....... ,.. ,..,,
•Friendly
•Fair
•Efficient
•Economical
AMElllCAN LEAGU~
East Dlvisloa
W L Pd. GB
Milwaukee 5 o 1.000
Detroit 4 1 .667 1
Cleveland 2 2 .500 2Ya
Boston 2 3 .400 3
New York 1 4 .200 4
Toronto 1 4 .200 4
Baltimore o 5 .000 s
WeltDlrillota
Cblcago 4 1 .800
3 1 .750 ~
4 2 .867 "" 4 2 .887 Ya
· Kanaas City An1eb
Oakland
Minnesota
Texas
SeatUe
• 4 .500 1Ya
-2 3 .400 2
2 6 .250 3"il
...... , ... $ ............ ........ ~.
Ch~S,T ..... 4
Ml ... ..._S. .... Vwt.J
1(-0t( s. Mt!-' Ootf'Olt J. T9-2 Oltlll .. 4, ...... J
c..llforlll• '· ..--. •
CMc.ato f ........ ~-=\'of11 Co.MrTNI Mt--. m.11~ Ml et CltlfilrlH
(ltr•MI
Mllffttle CP. Mltdllll •n .. 0. .... C~ °"" ........... ow.It.~-................. T_, .. ...._
s..ttMet ....... ~-~OtY.• Cllli ......... °'*'-'"
N.\110NAL-LEAGUE
Eut Dlvtsloa W L Pct. GB
St. LoUll 3 2 .fie»
New York 4 3 .571
Chicago 3 3 .500 1At
Philadelphia 2 2 .500 ~
Mootnal 2 3 .400 J
Plttaburlh 2 3 .400 1
West DIYlaloll Cincinnati 5 1 .833
Dodsen 4 2 .661 1
San Franclaco 3 2 .600 l~
San Dleso 2 3 .400 2~
Houston 2 5 .218 31At
Atlanta 1 4 .200 31At
••• 11•11'1 ...... ~ .. .....,Yortll Mol!tAlll' ,,.......,... , ~~-~-..r.in CltlclllMM 11. IM .... __. I ......... ,,.&.-....... ..
IL L.Ns S. lllltllllnlt 1
11111 l'rWlw ~':..,et Ollcfwltt ,...,..._ ... ,..,
~htt•11rt11 fllYl ..... 11 t ·t l et St. Lellls CR•--•11 OlllY.-.~ .............. ~, .......... OikAea ..... ~ ....... .
Allfft .... IM ... • ,.,.. ...... UU!f.11 0-...-....... .. .... ,.,_.... ..... Dl90t. ..
'
~. Apnl 13, 1971 DAil. Y PILOT U
For lJoaatal, Area
.~
,~ ............ ........ .,,.
PllUT ltM:8'-0111 m!AI. .._ .. Otiflt ....... -. .,. ., Wt#
.,. ......... J '""' .,.....,.. J ,,.. ............ ~twq .....
l<ell " ... , C~I; c:.ttloi. ....... ., c~.,, lt111tr ltlwer
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ltll prl~ .. Ull»-J600 AcQlll~ CLo(IMlf' Jrl, Chief
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10.Mlsl.
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GIMdell Jim CO.Ml; J J 'I Peltoll IB•YIHSI; IMIO!lt11Yie. (INnllltll.
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tUMTM ltACa -OM mlle. Pae.
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oldi 1S llOl"COfll. f'w'M MSllO. Cl•lm· 1,. price Stll.000,
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G•m• C L•Coatol ; IC•m•lll I K•1m•l•rl ; HO•<IY Olly 10otom<lt'), ............. Jim ILo"90I.
College, Prep
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EJaSeball Stamli111J8
l.ANCIAHPE
ESTATE ..
WAGON
I
Business
Money, Publicity Lead· St~ to Commercials
WAYNE ROUTS RUSTI.ERS, HARASSES HEADACHES
Celluloid Royalty Heed Lure of Publfdty, Money
By 11lle Atlodated Preu
And now, a wont from our
1pouor ...
And U's c:omJ.ai from, of all ~pie, John Wayn.. uln1 tbe
gruff voice that used to rout
nastlen to barus beadacbes. lor
Datrll, or to promote Great
Western Savtnp and Loan M·
11oclatloo. Or lt's Oresory Peck
for Traveler's J.Psurance -bow
could you NOT UJten?
Swamp\ng the bome 11creien
like a parade of Saturday mom·
ing cartoons. celebrltles and
superstars are turning
television's wasteland into a eor·
nucopla ot old familiar faces.
EVERYONE P&OM
Muhammad All to Sir Laurmce
Olivier la toutin1 everytbi.Qg
from popcorn poppen to mat·
tressses to automobiles. Even
James Longley, the "ind~·
dent governor ol Maine," ap-
pears on the tube to sell
America the Maine potato.
And why are superstars,
who years ago saw TV ads as
demeaning, sandwiched
between programs Instead of ap-
pearing on them? Advertisinl
experts say the lure ls daily
publicity and big money.
Even super·superst~ even· tually need cash to pay tax.es.
furnish $1 million homes and
otherwise keep themselves
· clothed. fed and pampered in a
manner befitting celluloid
royalty.
THE CONTUCl'S involved
often are substantial. FarTab
Fawcett-M-.jors, for example,
reportedly signed a multi·
million dollar deal with Faberge
for hair products bearing her
name. It is rumored that 0. J .
Investment Series S e t
Five Lectures to Be Offered at O CC
'An Investment Program to
Beat Inflation" is the title of a
five-part lecture series that will
be offered at Orange Coast
College this spring.
Meeting on five successive
Monday evenings, beginning
o\prll 24, the lectures will be held
10 OCC's Fine Arts Hall 119. Ad·
mission tot.he 7:30 p.m. lectures
is free.
LECl'URF.S WILL be conduct·
ed by Edward McNary, a
member or Uie Financial Ex·
ecuthes Jnstltute of America
Jnd the American Society of
Corporate Secretaries.
"Inflation and a St~k Market
Jverview," the first lecture, will
·over inflation, what it is, where
t came from and where it's go.
ng
••stocks. Bonds aRd Retire-
ment Plans," t.he May 1 topic,
wUI cover the New York Stock
Exchange, buyin& and selling
opllOM, "selling short" and re-
tirement.
"WILIS AND TllVSTS" will
be examined durln1 the May 8
lecture. ••AJtemaUve Invest·
ment Plans" will be the subject
of the May 15 seminar. Tax
s helters. tax wrlteoffa, real
esute investments throuab syn. dicalion and leasin_g proeram.s
will be ctiacussed.
"Gold, Silver a.od Your Swiss
BQk Account" la the May 22
lecture, coverins Swiss bank ac·
counts, the U.S. .. new dollar"
and foreign currencies.
( TAKING J
__ S_TO_CK_
More information ls available
at 556-58>0.
•..u.easi_,1et1
A day-long seminar designed
for new and prospective small
business men and women wlU be
held April 22 at Orange Coast
College, Costa Mesa, under the
joint sporuiorsblp of the college
and the U.S. Small Business Ad·
ministration.
Tbe program, which will last
from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m .. bas
been designed to provid~ an un·
deratanding or the factors in·
volved in plannine and
establishing a successful bust·
ness.
Discussion topics wlll Include
site selection, insurance, Ucens·
Ing, Inventory control and
management. Also featured will
be a special segment devoted to
women ln business.
According to SBA officials, the
day-long program also will pre-
pare participants for future
business problems by supplying
professional management
knowledge and expanding busi-
neu techniques.
Advanced registration for the
meeting ls necesary with a $10
fee, which will include lunch and special materials. On the day of
the program, the fee is $12.50.
Reservations may be made by
conuctlng Orange Coast Conti·
nuing Education at 2701
Fairview Road, Costa Mesa, or
by calling 556-5880.
'Ope11l•V Det•lftl
Leo ••Buck" Newsome,
Walker & Lee, Inc. 's vlce presi-
dent of training, will conduct a
half-day seminar. "The First
Five Minutes," beginning at 9
a.m. Saturday at Orange Coast
College. Costa Mesa.
Desiined to help people han·
die initial business and social
contacts. the seminar will be a
"how to" session to develop and
improve techniques ror
establishing and strengthening
relationships.
"Tbe first five minutes of any
relationship have a great impact
on future dealings, be it a client·
salesperson relationship, or
one's 'first encounter with a
member of the oppoalte sex,"
said Newsome.
Walker & Lee is a San~ Ana·
based real estate services firm.
The seminar will meet in the
college's ~ne Arts building,
room 119. Sjudents may ~iiater
by mall for $2.50 or at t.he door
for $3.50 beginning at 8:30 a.m ..
on a first-come, lint-served
basis. More information Is
available at 556-5880. Cl•• te 11eec 1
The charter group of the
Irvine chapter of the Business
and Professional Womens Club
wlll meet at the Gat.epoat, UC
Irvine. at 5:30 p.m. Wednesday.
Women withing to Join the
chapter may call Susan Lee
Sills, 833-6437, or Sarah Lonkey,
833-5495.
CAPITOLIZE
WITH
CAPITOL
SNEEZE, SCRATCH
SNIFfLE, COUGH (;heap Seat
Exchange CostJJ 25c
r.APITll.IZATI~ MEANS TO
C(JMRT CN>IT(l JO r.ASH
~itol
Home Loan
Olli .. Olll .. "-u. ........ ,..
..
Yes sir, ll's In the •Ir.
T-llat time of year so dreaded by so man, aJ.
Jeri)' eulleren ls once
again here. But, take heart friends. It's not nearly so bad as It once
was. Not too many ~an
aao. there was nothlna to do but suffer miserably
tbrou1h the season. Now a
pbyatclan who has cartfulJy analyied a
apeelfic aller1Y problem
cu usually prescribe a
hell)(ul medlcatloo to con·
trol the uncomfortable
mp toms:
£njoy 1pril\ltlme more
lhl• year. ConSWt your
s>fly•Sclan and then eloeely
try to folloW tbe ildvic:e be· ISv yw.
'YOU OR YOUR
.DOCTOR CAN PHONI US wh•n you netd a dtllvery. Pick up your
prncrlitlon lf ahopj>Jn1
n•trby. or we Wiil
deliver promptly wltlaou\
utra <bar1e. A •rtat •many pooplo eotNlt ws ,..0\ tbelr preacri
ll•Y we compou'Dd
10\lr'I! ..-...ruoo l'tWlllACY ........ , ......... .............
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -A seat on the
Pacific Stock Exchange here bu been soJd for the
price of a seal on a San Francisco bua -25 cents.
After that sale Tuesday and another one for 75
cents last week, E~change Chairman Lee Wilson
said, "I'm embarrassed by it."
He has offered to buy back seats at $100 each.
The man who 1ot his for a quarter la James
Burke. a market maker on the optlont Door who
bad been renting a seat from a member aocj P•Y·
ing the $290 a mont.h dues on It.
Ten years ago, when the stock market was
thrivin1. the folna price for a seat on the-exchanae
WU about $70,0()0.
Air-Fare H ike
Wins Appryval,
I
$4 MIWON FEE?
Steve McQueen
Simpson got between $100,000
and $250,000 for nmnina around
an airport advertising Hertz;
John Wayne got $450,000 for
Dalril, and Gregory Peck took
home $1 million for travelers.'
Insurance.
"Everyone wants to be in
television now and they're kid· ding you if they say they don't
want the exposure." says
Carolyn Jones. vice president
and creative director of the
Mingo, Jones & Gilmenot ad·
vertislng agency.
"Whether or not a celebrity
can convince someone to use the
product is another considera·
tion. It can't be denied that Avts
was doing very well with Its
'Number Two' campaign until
Hertz came out with 0 . J .
Simpson." THOSE IN THE advertising
industry were willing to spend
$115 million on talent last year.
although not all or at was for
stars. says Lloyd Kolmer. a
celebrity headhunter:
"The celebrity gives the
commercial added Impetus and
it grabs you a little sooner just
CAN'T BE IGNORED •
Gregory Peck
by virtue of the fact
she is recogniza
Walter Kaprieli ,
vice presiden of creative
services or t e Keenan,
McLaughlin & Ket um agency.
"You could take a model
and make her Catherine
Deneuve. But it would take her a
long time before she could
become what Deneuve waa on
the first day she did the Chanel
ad."
MANY PERFORMERS still
look down on commercials.
Othe~ say they simply do not
need the money. But many con·
sider the filmed messages just
another form of their era.ft.
"I'm an actor, but before
that I was a door-to·door
salesman." said Robert. Morley.
actor and spokesman for Britlsh
Airways. "And I learned more
about acting doing t.hat job than
I have since. I'm the sort of man
people would buy a secondhand
car from -provided it was my
car. It's important for actors to
be plausible."
Though growing thinner. the
Over The Counter
HASl>Ustiftc)s
Hat of "vir1lns" -Madi.loo
Avenue for people who've never
ventured into commercials -is
stlll lmpreuive. Barbra
Strel1and, Paul Newman,
Sidney Poitier, Liza Mlnoelll
and Mary Tyler Moore are
amoo1 the holdout.a.
CAROL BURNETI' ~
down a $1·m1lllon contract from
Jello. Steve McQueen reportedly
won't do a commercial for under
" mlllioo, puttin1 himself out-side the market. Eliaabeth
Taylor was offered S7~.ooo from
Lincoin·Mettury. but the deal
never materialized. And does all that money pay
off for sponsors? Hertz did a na-
tionwide poll of its car renters
earlier this year, and Tbomas
EIUott of the car rental firm re-
ports: 0 '1be customers perceive
0 . J. as standing for fast
service. Sales were up 7 percent
last year. Profits were up 42 per-
cent corporately. It 'a partially
due to the 0 . J. ad."
Not all star ads are as sue·
cessful. Some stars simply do
not come across. Others, such as
8111 Cosby and Catherine
Deneuve, may become identified
with too many products and
strain their credibility. And
some have enough stature to
simply overwhelm the product.
ROBERT BLAKE, star of
television's "Barella," did a
spot for the STP gasoline ad·
dillve, and slnaer Petula Clark
did one ror Burlington Mills.
Tom Westbrook of t.he audience
response firm Tell-Back Inc.
says tests of public attitudes
toward STP and Burlington
showed the two stars were less than super salespeople.=-
"No matter bQw many times
we ran the test or where we ran
1t in the country. the attitude
people had about Burlington and
STP was lower after the test
than lt was going Into the test,"
be said.
Blake had been paid a
rumored $400,000 for the Sf P
commercial.
Pct. Up ,, 1
Up D-1 Up 20.4 Up 192
IJp 19.2 Up , ... IJp 11 • IJp 11 I
Up 16.7
Up 11 s Up 12 S
IJp 12.0
Up "' Up 11.1 Up 111
Up 10.6 Up .. VP 9.s Up t .1 Up l.J
Up l.J Up l .J Up u UP 1.1 Up 1.0
UP 1.0
MUTUAL FUNDS
•
\,
•
STOCKS/ BUS~
Thllrada)' '• c1oe1,.. Pri NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS Clothes Care
Steps Help Now
llJ BU.VIA fOftD ,u a t of ~ c:ompJ&Lo&a rroro eastomm
ud tbe ~ l"abrkare lmth.ute. tbe tr..S. IJ'OC_ll>
repreMnliot launderen aDd :lu.Dten· tM Federal Trade Commlukln be1an ~ p ln Jana.ary im
revise ha c.,. l1bellq roJ .
After IDQ)' pbuee ol hearlD11, ltudiee, alYHI. prq.: potall and eounterJ)ropo1a1*' t.be ruJos are at the last m
Jor ataae befCN"e they are placed on lbe public .-ord. I>'
viewed once more and the put into etf ect.
STU'FE& aEOULATION OP clotbea care labelln11.~ giant IWs> forward in consumer p.rotectlon, will be Ul·
eluded ln the ~rw1t1ona.
At least tbele two key cbanl are probable: \
M aoufacturcn will be required to lnchldl oa ciothel
care labels 1ttemaUve ways of ckanln1. Though FTC
rules now say items labeled "washable" mat l>e
drycleanable unlets •
warnine agains t
dryclearung ls added.
mos t people aren 't
aware ol this artificial
definltlon. A Purdue
Univers ity atudy dis-
clos ed that three·
fourths ol polled homemakers thou1ht that "wubablea'1
couldn't be drycleaned and would like labels to aay eo U
either method could be used.
Clothes makers will be liable for much touCIM,t ..
penalties lr they violate tM FTC recuiations. ThoUlh tbl
FTC would have to take each violator to rourt, flnel or
to $10,000 per violation could be imposed on manwacturers
not complying with lbe rules.
In the meantime <and also aft.er the new rules are ltl.
e(/ect) keep care labels attached to clotbes.
KEEP TAGS THAT ARB ONLY temporarily attached
to clot.bes. Clothing makers often put lmportaDt tnforma:.
lion on these lap, but not on the tewn-ln label.
When buytnc fabric, ult COf' care labels to sew la.
Fabric manulacturers ate required to provide lheM
labels.
IC clothes are damaged even when the label's lnslruC!
lions are followed, relLlm the clothes and sales receipt to
the store. A reputable store should refund the money and
return lbe outfit to the manwact~.
Look for details on the label ll when buylne a stretch
fabric <comfort stretch for everyday use, action stretch for
exercise clothes. etc.). The label won't say how much
stretch to expect in a stretch rabric and, while a test at the
store will help, it can't guarantee lhat changes won't occur
later
The best safeguard Is to buy from • reputable retailer
and clothing manufacturer. both of whom will heed com·
plaints and, if justified, will give refunds or orrer ex-
changes.
WhirlwinJ, Trading
Aids Stock Prices
Whal Sla«'lar Did
HEW YORK (AP)
N(W ~IC IAP) -NV 5*11 S-. ~· '"* . .. . . . .. . . . "·--"'"·-· .., . • .. . .. • . .. • 2'.210.D Weff ....................... 21,. ... --................... 2'= r:: ... ~"·•·::::::::::::::: n .....
Jefl 1 10 -.. • • • • • .. • .. • 1.m.-.1• 1'71 '° Cl.ti• • • • • • .. .. • • • .. • , ... ,.. 110.000 1'7' IO................... 1;.M1,*'1;nf
WMAT AMUI IMD NEW YOllllC CAPI
BUSINESS
County B~inesses Report Gains
/ .. ••re•91rc.lllir••••
0&0e0. u ~ oll and
1u produter, baa UDomtoed rn..-for i.m
ro1e to '2A!l.1M ucl eenmp,.... "7.cm. or
J a alaare. cornpar.d l9'1J N1'e0ut1 ot
12. •• with a o incoDle al SIM.•. or 4 cent.a a1b1re Sb~dera: egulty lncruled,by· 28 Qercent dunn1 tbit .~ Helen'ei ua· Increased urtng
the year by• percent to about 11.5 billion cubic
lee& ud lta proveo oil reHrW!I bad Increased by
about 18 pereent to too,• barrels.
Oxoco aald about tbne billion cubic feet of
natural pa that prevloualy bad been attributed to
proven 1u reaervea from forel1n offshore
reservoln were recluaifled u probable reserves
In line wttb newly determined para.meters.
Oxoco coocurrenUy announced it bad r.eenUy
ftnaliud a ftnanciDt agreement with the Allied
Bank al Texas, Jlouston, providing for a new
four-year muter note in the amount of $15 million.
Initially, about 13.S mWioo will be used to
repay preeent bank loans and an additiooal $1
million will be used In Oxoco's natural gas
development drillinl program under way in tbe
Texas Panhandle.
The balance of the hmds are to be committed, from time to Ume, to complete corporate projects
that are desirable to further the future growth of the company.
Oxoco's annual meeting for 1978 baa been
scheduled for June 2, at lbe Marriott Hotel,
Newport. Beach, for shareholders of record as or
April 4.
Paeflle ,..,._, Gal ..
Pacific Mutual Newport Beach. has reported
that assets al yearend 1977 reached $1.958 billion, a
15 percent lnC'l'eaae over 1976.
Pacific Mutual's Ji!e insurance in force ln 1977 lopped the $11 billion mark, reaching $11.35 billion
at yearend, a 12 percent increase over 1976.
The face amount or life insurance issued
during 1977 totaled $1.39 billion up 19 percent over
1976
The 1977 investment yield reached a company
record or 7. 75 pefcent. New investment
commitments totaled a record $534.4 million
during urn. a 66 percoent increase over the $321
mlllion we committed In 1976. Of the $534.4 million.
S321 millioo was invested in mortgage loans. $172.9
million in fixed income securities and $40.S million
in real estate.
Income from all sources in urn totaled S'TlS
million, a 4.6 percent increase ov~r the record
results of $683.9 million ln 1976. Income Crom
insurance and annuity lines or business reached
$593 5 million. up 6 7 percent from our record 1976
levels and an increase of 42 percent in the last two
years
Pacific Mutual markets individual and group
hfe, health and pension prbducts nationally. It also
provides administrative and investment counsel
services to qualified employee benefit programs
through subsidiary companies
Batlle Adds DiNtaa
Boyle En&ineerina Corp., Newport Beach, has
added an agricultural services division. It began
operatioo in February and is staffed by individuals
formerly with the aericulture division °' the Irvine Co.
John W. Brown, former chief engineer and
manager of Irvine's engineering and water
department and registered
professional engineer with
experien ce in agricultural
development. is manager.
John R Thornton .
registered agricultural engineer
with experience in drip
irrigation, is proJeet manager.
David Beholeguy. also
~xperienced in drip irrigation
and irrigation systems design,
1s a~s1stant enaineer, and u "
Lorraine Uribe is division secretary. William J.
Williams. retired vice president and general
manager oC the Irvlne Co 's agriculture division, is senior consultant
Tbe .. division will provide such aaricultural
service1 as planning, design, construction
supervision and maintenance and operation or
agricultural racillties. FeaslblllLy studies can be
made cover1na proauctaon, procesa1ns and
marketing, followed by planned development for
clients. Other services Include land preparation
ror agricultural field developments, maintenance
and surveillance of dams. and engineering
reasibility and cost systems.
~SeU.St~lc
California Computer Produc&a, Inc .. Anaheim,
has allDOWlced that It bas sold its approximately 19
percent common stock interest in Teleflle
Computer Corp. of Irvine to the Lionel Corp. in a
private transacbon.
DI n 1 e•d £%~ ... age Opeiu
The Pacific Coast Diamond Exchanae. Inc ..
has announced the formal opeolng or the trading
noor for high·erade investment quality diamonds.
The trading racilitea are in Newport Financial
Center , Newport Beach. Only loose diamonds,
certified by the Gemological Institue or America
or the United States Gemologi~al Service, Inc., to
C · Filed .ases
The followlOI have flied petitions of
bankruptcy in Santa Ana Federal Court:
be D throup J ln color. F to Sl In clarity and
between .• to 5.00N carat wei-1lt are ellclble for
liaUn.. -
Trade9 must be placed through a member of
the exchallle and two hundred .. founder ... w"
are belnt ottered at U,500 per membership ~ ·
Robert F. McCa land. pcwtdenl and foundei\,
aaya the prime purpo1e for founcil.u tlMl. excbao1e was to provtd a sreater dearee ol lfqoidlty to bOtb
profeulonal and private partl• in aellinl their
mvestment quality diamonds. .
Red Barrel a.er Arnt1a
W atneya Red Barrel Beer. a premium
imported English brew, la avaUable 'tO American
beer drinkers throu&bout the 14 western at.at.ea.
---=-
Tbe beer. represented In this country by
Wladom Import Sales Co.. lnc., Irvine. bas been
abeent from the U S. market for two years.
Direr,.... Seele Sieela
Directors or Symbolic Dis plays, Inc.,
lrvln~based aircraft electronics company, have
announced a teDder offer to purchase up to 30.000
sb.aree ~ It.a 80 cents par value common stock at $( a share.
The lender would give shareholders ao
opportunity to obtain a price 3'-percent higher
than the current bid price for the sl.ciclc.
The company said an Independent appraisal
bad valued the sh~s at $2.90 each. and that the
offer would remain open until May 15.
Exec:utlv• Offices 7812 Edmger A~ ..
Hunhngton Beach, CA 92647
StW/hf}tn Ca/l/01ni11 RP91on1I Oll•CilS 8955 Valley View SI Buena Parle. CA 90620
20715 S Avalon Blvd. Carson. CA 907•8 Gl
22821 lake Forest Or. (lake FOfe51). Et Toro. CA 92630 • J001 ( tmpetoll Hwy , La Hobflt CA 90631
4140 long Beach Siva • Long BMch CA 90807 J:t~ 1095 lrvme Blvd Tustin CA 92680 u11oc1 .?35 N C11ru1 Ave . Wes1 C0V1na, CA 91793
no more
bending
with the spill'
~
laStlng finish
In ny1ng colors
Painter's Caddy on wheels. 15"x20-1/2" top, 24··
high. Top surface cut.out to hold standard size roller
tray that's Included. Folds compactly Reg. 5.89
one coat
can do It
Glidden Spred Gel·Flo 011
t>ase house paint Extra thick
tor one c<>at coverage Flows
on easily. Reg 16 95 gallon
tantastleallJ
spreadable
Gltdden Acrylic Latex Spre<i
House Paint goes on easy.
dries last and loOks hke a
m1lllon1 Lasts a long. tong
time. Reg. 12.95 gallon
Glidden Spred Satin Latex
Wall Paint goes on smootn
and easy and stays beauutut
longer Easy water clean-up
Loll of colors available
Reg 9 99 gallon
&~ 10:ln 9~
241
r
talles no rains
to clean out drains
It 1u1t takes new Clear
Une' drain opener by Ox-
ford JuS1 the thing lo s.ve
you aa.tty plur lber 1 bills
and a at~d-;.ip 11n11
Ng.599 3••
feed your
vegetables
then eat lllaml
Vlgofo's v~t>te Food '*Pe promote plumper.
bigger, better tasting
~bhla #VF20 2••
..
,.
""'-...:::..:,
the great
gobbler
ln..Slnk-Erator made tn1s
garbage disposer for
trouble-tree aervlce
Qui et. vibration-tree
operatlOn. 112-h p. motor #333 Reg ..... 95 3411
get rid Of '
wbal 'bugs' you
0-Con four/Gone
automatl<: room fe>ggef.
k11i. 17 kinda ot bugs '" 4
hours The profeulonal
way Single 71h-01. 11ze
Reg. 2.89 1•• .
~ .. ,~.~~ ........ 3"
Cholee of• • ROM food
• CltrUI food • Aiatea
Food • All ·Purpose
•Tomato
......
Yoaoannot ~heel on old souf/Le.
-81U Ballance
Problem: .. .
Retreads
Relationships are so easy to fall into and so
very bard to climb out of. So what happens
yeara later, when the candle has finally cooled
and sputtered into a puddle of wax -and then
you meet again?
I saw "Annie Hall" three times. A friend
ealled the movie "proof that neurosis can be an at form." For me, seeing Annie and Alvy go
through the trauma of a deteriorating rela·
lion.ship and still like each other proved that
former lovers can indeed become friends.
Lately I have contracted what I refer to as a rare virus -Diarrhea or the Retread.
Solo
By Cheryl Romo
Recently I've been bumping into a lot of
people I'd rather not bump into. The first sign of
Retread is a panicky feeling when you're decid·
ing whether lo dash into the nearest restroom or
hallway to avoid a confrontation with an ex.
The only other choice you have is to suck in
your stomach, smile and extend your band in
friendship. Unfortunately in my case, the ex
usually bas a new relationship dangling on his
ot.ber arm -which is just plain embarrass-·
ing.
The other day while I was working and try-
ing to recover from my last bout ol Bet.read, e
switchboard operator callecl to MY there was
<See SOLO, J>ace a>
......... ~-~-··
~e IJife
And Loves
Of OUvia
Her gentle sense of humor
kept the audience chuck-
ling and she offerea
glimpses into her private
life.
By JUDITH OLSON
OI IN Dell~ ~lol Staff
When she was a girl growinc up in
Saratoga, California, she nurtured "twin
dreams of academic excellence and creative ex-
pression."
She won a scholarship to Mills College but
before she could enroll, the "city of stars"
beckoned and Olivia de Havilland was on her
way to a brilliant film career.
Miss de Havilland, perhaps best remem-
bered for her portrayal of Melanie in "Gone
With the Wind," talked about her life and loves
for Assistance Leaeue Town Hall this week.
She mesmerized ber audience with her lilt-
ing voice as she listed her leading men and the
other great names she knew in her career:
Charles Chaplin, Joan Crawford, Jean Harlow,
Bette Davis, Dick Powell and Clark Gable, and
"the best of all leading men," Errol Flynn.
She met Flynn in their first picture
together. "Like me, he was a newcomer, seven
years older than me. He was tall, maktletic and
charming. He was the most beautiful man in the
whole wide world," she said. "I fell secretly,
shyly, in love with him."
BY THEIJl. SECOND picture, FlyM had de-
veloped "a certain feeling for me," Miss de
Havllland revealed. "But be bad a strange way of showing it."
This rather different expression of love once
took the form of a long. dead snake wblcb Flynn
hid in her pantaloon. When she found it she went
shrieking into the lake that was near their set, bor·
rified at the discovery.
''Behind me I heard the muffled laughter of
Errol Flynn," she said with a smile. "That
snake was a token of burgeoning Irish love."
Flynn was not to be her leading man for
many more pictures. In one, there was a
farewell scene and Miss de Havilland sensed that this was also her good-bye lo Flynn. "We
never made another picture together," she said.
It was not easy for the young actress to
make her way lo Hollywood. She was playipg a
part in a local production ol "Midsummer
Night's Dream" and ltarned that t.be famed
director Max Reinhardt planned to do the same
play in the Hollywood Bowl lat.er that summer.
Her director a.rranged an introduction to
Reinhardt's assistant, who asked Mr to read
some lines then eave her the part of understudy
to Hermia.
WHEN SHE ~RIVED in Hollywood she
• • • CJ
0...,............ .......
Olivia de Ha vii/and: 'So awed I could barely say 'Good Morning, Mr. Gable.'
found that the man had subsequenUy given the
job of understudy to another girLso she was of-
fered the post or understudy to the understudy.
Five days before the opening date Miss de
Havilland was informed that since both the
principal and understudy bad bad to leave the
cast, she was to play the part of Hermia.
On Sept. 27, 1934, with 26,000 people crowd-
ing the Hollywood Bowl, 100 torchbearen came
(See OLIVIA, Pagd C3)
His trademark: Swirling, moving lineil, straight angles or facets.
A Gem Aniong Jewels
Henry Dunay is not a household word, but he
is an Yves St. Laurent of the jewelry world.
By IUDITH OLSON Of-..,...., ...... SUit
-
a OM. v flQ.OT
••
(........ Cl)
tlile w.bJ to.. 1 bonmced down w~mi1 to ... BUmk mm •a:Ul1ot at
It ..._ tour ,..,. our dramatic
• 81-k 81 bkmde cd bl~ b
&WI • be eoWd • wMtlcbair to a
kml·dlatmce rqrmer. To bt a...t. Blank Blank·
la tlte .._... I bad to stop ,.m, to Robert Red·
tontmcm .
There be 1tood, boldlna 1om• OCTD
brocb ud auaaunc 1 try rtcllnC the bus
for awhile. Tb.tt'• Bt.nk Blank. he never for1et1
how to make you Jauch. So we went out to lunch. 5'ttine oa tbe bay, wat.chinc Ule boat.a aall
by. we drank quick Mar1arit.u and ate nervous
test.add aod d1acuaHd bow lt med to be and
what bad happened and why we bad written all
those bitter parU.na thinp to each other. "You
didn't write letten," aaid Blank Blank. "You
wrote books."
Then we started laqghing because we re-
alized we were no loa&er thole aame youo1 and
crqy people -we were a part of each other's crowtna up and tbe chemistry wu gotre..»fank
Blank and I bad beclome almost nothing more
lban old acquaintances who discussed other old
rrienda like two former blab school classmates,
1otn1 throu&h a yearbook.
Aa we left the restaurant to return to our
respective new lives, Blank Blank turned to me
ud said: "Will you ever write about ua?"
I am.
I
Soloizing
ACLU SINGLES: A discussion on current
civil liberties lssues and a soclaJ hour wll1 begin
at 8 p.m. Thursday, April 20, at 1951 Port
Edward Place, Newport Beach. Admission a
$1.
WE CARE: A non·sectarian support and
social group for single persons. Meetings belin
at 7: 30 p.m. each Sunday evening at the
Newport Harbor Lutheran Church. corner of
Dover and 16th Street, Newport Beach.
NEWPORT JEWISH SINGLES: Dinner and
d•ncing. beaioning at 6 p,m. tonight at the
Phoenix Club, 1S66 S. Dou1la.ss Road, Anaheim
Danctne ls $2.75 and dinner ls your choice and
price. Call Sarah at SSS-8291 for more informa-
tion.
INGLE'8 DANCE CLUB: Frid-., nlPt'a
dance wlll btllD at t p.m. with Uve muatc ud
OG Suoda. y ~ danclna will at.art at 8:30 p.m. at
the Dlaneylud Hotel 1n Anabtim. Adrnlu.loo ls sz.so .
BEING SJNOLB AGAIN: Tbe Latu.DI
S.aeb Unified School Dtstrie\ ll preeent!nl a
four MU1oo Mriel devot4'd to men and women
who nnct themselves llvlns alJ>M after a mv·
rla1e or alplflcant N laUonsblp. Call Adult
Educauoo at 4~ for detalla.
SINGLE SAPA&l'S: The ll"OUP lt open to
all stogies over 40 and the next meetlni will
be&ln at 7 p.m. Friday. April 21, at t.be Uoivers!·
ty Park Community Club House in Irvine. Din·
ner will be served and Dr. Richard Jonas will
abow slides of bis trip to the Nile. Call Leaore
Scott at~ for lnformatlon.
SINGLES PROG&AM: Spoa.aol'ed °by the
Deanery 10 cburthel and open to all at111le
persons. "Commitment: The Wbole Person"
wlll be the topic of a lecture by Jim May. a
licensed family COUDHlor, at tbls week's meet·
ing bea:tnnina at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Aprll 19
at St. John the Divine Church 1n Costa Mesa.
Call RosaJea Wllcox at 998-MOf for addl·
tional lnformation.
ORANGE COAST SINGLES: A aeneral
meeting a scheduled to begin at 8 p.m. Friday,
April 14, al Allee Forney's home In Costa Mesa.
Call Ailee at 751-1580 for directions.
MY'nl OF MASCULINE PRIVILEGE: A
one-day workshop offered through Coaatllne
College will feature Dr. Herb Goldberg, author
of "The Hazards or ~lng Male." The workshop
will begin at 9:30 a.m . Saturday, Aprll 15 at the
Fountain Valley Recreation and Cultural
Center Social Halls A and B, 16400 Brookhurst
Street.' Fountain Valley. No fee and register at
the door.
CRISIS OF WOMEN: Sexuality will be the
topic or an all-day seminar sponsored by Golden
West College bealnning at 8 a.m. Saturday,
April 15. Call Dr. Grayce Roessler, 892·'17ll ext.
504. for information.
• An open meeting to plan activities ~II
begin at 7 :30 p.m . Sunday, April 16. Call Ruth in
Newport Beach at 645-2317.
BENEFIT DANCE CONCEllT: A benefit
dance for the Youth Problems Cent.er ln Costa
Mesa ls beinl sponsored by the OCC Women's
Center and will begin at 8 p.m. Saturday, April
22, in the student center at OCC. 0 City" will be
appearing and Uckets are $2 per person and
available through the Women's and Youth
Probletn8 Centers.
SINGLES ONLY: Anger management will
be the topic or this week's discussion group for
singles between 2S and 40 al the Huntington
Beach Community Clmlc. Call the clinic at
Call 646-804~ for additional lnlormation.
• 536·8333 for details
Solomng for Singles calendar runi NCh Thur1-
da11 rn the Dail11 Pilot and contauu noticta of OC·
11u1hea for nngi.1 for the /ollowmg ll>eek -1'rldo11
through Thurtda11 Send nohcea to Cheri/I Romo,
Dody Pilot. P.0 Bo.r 1560, Coata Meaa. 92626.
_. .. ,
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY
W...Y .. W..t ......
1922 ...... .....
e.... .... -Ml-0219
COMPLETE
DECORATING
SERVICE
lei ua hetp you trMt• • ITIOfe beaut1tul nome Our lr.,nt!Cl
a.toretor1 1Mrcn our ftbrlC
•nd cteecgn hbrert lo nol onty
..-.. yc:>ur hme bul 10 ollet' lhe very !>Mt tOIOt Ofld f8brlC
coord1n•t>Ofl1 Thefe '' no llddll~ charge tOf lhos
MINICe You ~ only for Ille
IMtChancltM you Mlect
• Orepet11t1
• Carpehf19
• w111 CoYerino
• 'urn1ture • Upl'C)ll18flM(l • Dedfoom en""'bln
Come •fl or C•ll lod•V tor 1n
appom1m11nt 1n your homo
2 Locations
23 Fashion l1l1nd
N-port Beech 144 ... 60
ENDERLE CENTER
Newport Fwy. •t E. 11th St.
Tustin 544-tQO
11 •••Gem
(From Page CU
It a all done by hand and all 18-karat gold.
He tends to use diamonds more extensively than
colored stones.
Dunay signs all his pieces and makes some
in limited, numbered editions.
He makes what he likes and believes his
work appeals to several types of women
"One is lhe young doctor, lawyer or ex·
ecutive's wife, in her late 30s or early 40s, who
wants to start off with one or two pieces that say
to the rest of the group that he's doing well It's
another extension or her.
''THE OTHER is the executive woman who
knows her thing, who moves rut."
Dunay bas not always succeeded so well ln
pleasing women's tastes ... I was very idealistic
when I fll'lt started. I made what 1 thought was
100 percent me," he sald with a smile. "But 1
-couldn't aell lt. I bad to melt it and start over." He says that "maybe" he's mellowed but at
least he baa learned what sells.
Over the years Dunay bu sharpened bia
talent.a and refined his work until today each
piece is like a s mall sculpture. Some of the
parts fit to1ether ao the collection, which ran1es
from $2:50 on up, la versaWe.
He likes the philosophy of "one and 1ood." U a woman can alford to buy only one piece at a
time, abe should buy the best abe can, which of
course, in bis opinion, is bis work.
His worst problem la that be ls too prolific.
"I never give a r,iece a chance to settle and
start selling well, ' he said, obviously relishing
the thought of new ldeaa yet to come.
BECAUSE OF BIS hlah productivity Dunay
works very hard, almost too bard f« b1s own
good. He admits be needs to take time off but
can't seem to find the opporbmJty.
"I have no other life oulllde this business.
Sometimes I get acgravated at myself because
I think I beCome dull," be lamented.
Though be has achieved a great deal ol s uc-
cess in hL"I business, Dunar still has a drum.
which ls what keeps hlm goang on bis seven-day:
a-week schedule.
"I would like to get to a point as a designer
where my thlnes would be accepted because
they are done by me."
~----75t~ t.J\ntllvehSM9 -------.
-
CALVIN KLEIN
St1'8ppy ~Sandate
The fosnon shoe of the season
in Novy Calf with H1 Stocked Heel.
Wedding and engage·
ment announcements run
on Sunday m the Datly
Pilot Fonm are available
at all Dmly Pilot of/ices or
by calling the Features
Department. 642-4321.
To avoid d1sappo1nt-
mt'11t prospective bndes
are rnnmded to have their
wedding stones. with a
bla.ck-Ond·wlute gLOS81J of
the ~ or of the couple.
to the Features {Hpart-
ment one i«tk before the
wedding.
Engagement announce-
m enh. with black-and·
white gl.ouy of tM future
bride or the covp~. must
be received by the
F'tature1 Deparlment 8ix
weeks before the wedding
do.le.
Club Calendar nms ~h
W ednetday fn tM Dally
Pilot and cofttoina noffces
of women'.• and 1ennce
club meetings and ewnrs
for the f ollowiRg WHk -
Thursday throtlQh WedMs·
day. Se1l1 nott«s to Club
Calendar. Daily Pilot. P.O.
Box lSQJ, COlta Mete, CA
92626. & M'e to in.elude
your l'lame and phone
numbt'!'. Notice• must be
m OW' hand.a two wnka in
advonce.
To request a ptctairt,
writt' or call the F'eotures
Department. 6.f2..f321 . Pic-
tures are limited to fund-
ra1$e'3 open to the pubhc.
Edwme Beher: 'In some ways old
people play better. They understand
more.·
A Recital
•
At Age 94
By CYNTHIA STEVENS
NEW YORK <AP> -Only the magic
wand was missing as the silver-slippered
pianist dressed in lilac appeared at the
Carnegie Recital Hall to play Beethoven
from a memory that is the very essence of
her 94·year-0ld life.
Ed wine Behre. who helped found a
music school in Adamant, Vt .. 40 years
ago as a ·•refuge for oppressed people,··
bent her tiny frame over a Steinway grand
and steered her fore arms over the
keyboard. •
Muscular hands, fueled by veins in
bas-relief. played a magnif'icent "Largo e
mesto, Sonata Op. 10 No. 3," a slow piece
technically within the rang~ of aged
fingers.
.. In some ways old people play better
than young musicians." she explains to the
incredulous. "They understand more. It's a
feeling. Other old people tell me they feel
they really get the innards of music more
than they did.
" 'Course they don't have the facility,"
she adds. her fingertips gliding through a
soft white nest of angel hair.
· "Memory? Oh, I've always played
from memory-I just prefer it that way.
but I don't think one has to play from
memory to be good." Miss Behre says with
a humility rare in the artistic.
Offstage, Miss Behre's concentration
turns to a hearty good humor «Tfd she
laughs often. She grows serious only when
the conversation turns to music or the
"terrible period" of Adolf Hitler's dic-
tatorship in Germany.
German by ancestry, Miss Bebre and
her writer friend, Allee Mary Kimball.
were shocked and ashamed at the Nazis'
treatment of the Jews. They founded their
school in a small quarry town where they
could afford to buy an old building and fix
it up, to protect Jews, whom they felt were
also being oppressed in the United States. The school. now an expanded faclllty,
trains music. teachers in the summertime
and gives a recital here each year. Mi.ss Behl-e's devotion to the piano is
unquestioned, but she admits having had
"a lot of interests. Actl:i one, f always wanted to be an opera er. But I have
such a llWe voice. If I h been an opera
singer, where would l be now? At 94 there
are no opera singers, I think."
you can be
ANN LANDERS I ERMA BOMBECt(
('-_· B_o_r_•_•_e_op_e __ )
F&ID.\Y, APlllL 14
By SYDNEY OllA.U
AaJ£8 <March 21·AprU lt>: You l•l
lowdown on coats. motives, tenith ol Ume, in-
tentions of family member. Welcome t.rutb.
whether or not it comes with a •mlllllt face.
Plan accord1Qlly. _
TAU&\18 <April 20-litaY 20): Travel, move-
ment, letters and calla rerAted to vacadoo, ~·
ervations and relatives are featured. In mat-
ters ot speculation, stick with number t . FiD1q
what you start.
GEMINI <May 21-June 20): Acceat on
transforminl bright ldeu into money. You &et
fresh opportunity, a cb.ance to revene rb,ytbm
or deleat. CANCE• (June 21.July 22): Intuition lt
sharply honed -follow t.hrouch on bunch. Heed
instincts. Wear brieht colors. make personal ap-
pearances. Aquarian teacher is on your side,
despite disagreements.
LEO <July 23 -Aug. 22): You should
celebrate ability to commurucate, deap{te one
who sings the blues. Temporary delay or COi\•
flnemeot will be followed by excltlni
poss a blllties.
VIRGO <Aug. 23·Sepl. 22): Check detalla:
be aware or fine print, read between the llnM.
Accent on rrteods, wisbes, romance, result "'
business investment .
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct. 22): Be analytical.
Obtain hint from Virgo message. Don't be
J,&tisfied to know merely that somet.hl.U hap·
pened -find out why lt occurred. Member of
opposite sex ls ln picture.
SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Make adjust·
ment within family circle. Win rather than
force your way. Look beyond the immediate.
Long.range projection proves valid. Open lln4!$
of communication.
SAGrrtA.llJVS <Nov. 22·Dec. 21): Mystery
s hould not be feared. You get chance to delve
beneath surface indications. Financial situalion
m connection with partner or mite ls accented.
CAPIUCOllN <Dec. 22·Jan. 19): Get rein·
forcementa. Legal ally ls needed in your comer.
Emphasis on contracts, cemenU.ng of a rela-
tionship, partne~tup, marriage.
AQVAIUUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 11>: Peek around
~omers -deal with Aries, Ubra persona. Flbd
ways to negotiate differences: don't buckle QD·
der to threat.a, hysterical otltbunta.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): SpeculaUve
ventures. change, variety and the number l
figure prominently. Imprint your own style.
Streu originality, Independence and I
pas8ionate belief in penonal pnnciples.
Jr April 14 Is your birthday you are
analytical, ·creative, able to express concepts,
ideas in a poetic manner. You are a reporter, a
recorder of pictures, trends, cycles -and your
perception often is aided by some extrasensory
perception. Gemini, Virgo and Sagittarius play
important roles in your life.
"NneOOo'I fUnbef one~ Reccfdlng W'°
ANDRAI CROUCH
,.,.. 21, 1911 8:00 p,m.
Gorden GrcW Comroonlty Ouch
Comer 01QPl'liC1'1 and Lewla,
GClnilf'I GIOM, CdlbTtlo AIHM:ltlont-$6.00
fOf "*-"'°"°" CCII 714750-7000
4tXt 297
.. ·
SENSA TIONALJ
\
Classy
Sophisticated
<:ontemporary
Fshions
•Tops 'N Bottoms
• Swimwecir
• Gowns
•Dresses
..
\NeOring the "IN"
top label dress
or govvn, or a
"One-Of-A-Kind"
DESIGNER
ORIGINAL
AJways perfect ...
and at
FACTORY DIRECT.
prices tool
OPEN DAILY
1~7-Sun.11-5
OUR LUNCHEON 'AIH10N 8HOW AT 1HE HUNT1NCITON INN, ~PAIL toth
LANDERS I ERMA BOMBECI< DAILY PILOT (13
Filling Potholes -· ·-· o-,-!!-·!:1-c.~--T-Shirt Letterings
Tbe wtnter of '18 ia
slowly becolnlq a bad
memory but the
, cballencea are still
there. Thouaanda of
them. They're called
potholes and make
every outinl as adven·
tW'ous as riding in an
open convertible
throu&h a mine field.
A network newscaster
the other night quoted a
rather impressive
statistic richt down to
the number of how
m.any potholes there are
in the eountry. I don't
know a pothole-counter
personally, but I suspeet
they're a lot like bird
watchers who call in
their sightings on a day.
to:day basis. ("Harvey
Gravel here, reporting a
two-footer on U.S. 1 that
would make your back
teeth rattle!")
The blg problem is
what do we do now.
Llgbt a caution Ught on
them each evening and
h<>pe God thinks it's a
candle• Plant trees in
them and make the en·
vironmentalists happy?
Or tum them into test·
ing grounds tor shock
absorbers?
One very imaginative
judge in a small Ohio
town Is trying one solu·
Uoo. For every drunk
who appears before him.
be sentences him to fill·
ing in pot holes. Aa be
observed, "They bave
somet.biog in common.
One potfed condition
deserves another.••
It's probably over·
sim pllflcation. but I
think I have the perfect
solution to the 1aping
holes dotting the roada
and street.a ol our na·
tion.
If it were up to me, I'd
assemble every two·
year-old in the country
and announce, "I want
all of you to take a nap.
Under no condlUoo are
you to go out Into the
traffic and play. No
one . . . repeat • . . no
one is to take a bucket
and shovel and fill up
the holes in the street.
Your mommy likes the
holes just the way they
are. She does not want
you to shovel 4iJt into
them, or stamp on them
with your good shoes on.
If you want to dig new
ones, fine, but under no
circumstances are you
THE ROMANTIC
COLLECTIO
c,,,.,,,1-f t~ S1v1tn~ at'l<1 Ar'MolVSll
W•!h '"'' Mct'l~ Mt''"'
Pff>t1.< 1ru 1nch.1dinq Cui,
Sh.vripoo lrtKt AnHct'"'
1:11r....,r Sm 11),00
cfLWc C/Ll!~ ...... _=·-~ HUNTINGTON BEACH
1011tA'-...... ~ NEWPORT BEACH 1820 MKA111u...._~ IRVINE
6311 u~ Drt-.-1162.-,a
•S-M , .. C••· C<J 1971 MM tnc:.
Sky-hi heeled sizzler
is sleek and sexy.
Tapered toe, bare sides
herald spring '78.
Black patent, bone
·or white calf.
26.99
to fill up the boles. u~
dent.and''•
Wftbin ·two days ~~
iJ no doubt in my mQldl
that every aingle potholej
in the country would be
firmly packed with a
com pound tha.t would
handle tnJck route traf.
fie.
Generally. the nation
is inclined to un -
derestimate the power
of twe>-year-olds. Actual·
ly, they're a vital force
who could eliminate
war, save the forests,
and uneartb aourcee of
new energy u oven the
chance.
There's no doubt in
my mind that when•
Noah built bis Ark,
somewhere in tbe
neighborhood was a two-
year·old who bad been
told. "Don't you dare
tum on that garden hose
and get everything
wet!"
Wedding and engage·
ment announc~• nm
on Sunday an the Daily
Pilot. Fotm& att cwailab~
at all Daily PUot of fices or
b11 calling the Femurea
Dqanment, 642-4321.
To avoid disappoint·
ment, proapecti~ brides
an rftninded to ha~ tl&eiT
wedding itones. with o
black.and-white gW.sy of
the bnde or oJ the couple.
Engagemmt announce·
ments. with black·and·
white gkmy of the future
bride or the couple, muat
be received by the
Features ~Ttment .rtr
weeks before the wedding
date.
over the bill. ... company of courtiers and D E A R A N N · natural mother, who 53 ...
ladles took their places, the 1taae wu set and LANDERS: l'd like to yeara aao, for reasona
the play betan. respond to the person known only to her, relln•
"But Hermia had completely forgotten who saw a teen·aae girl qulabed her rt1bta to ber
every Uoe," Miss de Havilland contesaecl. "At in a restaurant wearing newly born aon. How
bereueHermiabadtobepuabedoaatqe." a T -ahlrt with the luckylwutobavebeen
When the German dlredor aplt o~r bet message, ••rn case of adopted by the world'•
shoulder as she went on stage she was horrified, rape, tb1s aide up." The greatest couple.
but abe later teamed it was a German iood·luck writ.er sald the world is My adoptive parent.a
custom. . goin1 uuy and people Aaa were not people of
Aft.er ber triumph as Hermia, Mias de will produce anything •an.a-wealth or soeial posi-
Havilland waa offered a seven·year contract for money. &1 ~ lion. Our home waa
with Warner Brothers, wblcb she promptly I am in the business of small and~t, but it
turned down, reconsidered and immediately ac· selling T·shl,ts and abounded . Dis·
cepted ... I put the dream of Milli College printing messages on With Myself." So she's cipUne u strict. but
aside," she said. them. It's a living but glad she's not one of this. t®. embraced their
I'll never be rich. t b o s e "crazy· clean special kind of earing. MISS~"!: RA VILLANO was sure she Letters and wording nuts·· and is relaxed The practice of adopt;.
would be cast in a series of pictures of equal areonlyhalfthejob. We with her "casual " ing children waa not
magnitude after "Midsummer Ni&bt's Dream," also transfer decals onto housekeeping. Well widely practiced at that but sbe was put into a baseball picture with Joe T-shirts and some peo-bully for her. And lt time and family and
E. Brown. pie brin« their own. I've didn't bother her one blt friends were not very re-
Wben she was 22, in 1938, the actress came refusea to transfer that a guest found a ceptiv~ in viewing my
into a period when she felt ''restless and several because they stale biscuit under the parents' claim to parent· despairing" because sbe was "not doing the were so ftlthy. sofa cushion that had hood. work" she wanted to do. y d th r l A ... "Then came Melanie and 'Gone With the ester ay two high been ere " or at east n n , m a y ~ e
th tbr h h school girls were in a month." somewhere in your vast Wind,'" she said. She got e part oug er here. They couldn't have I'll bet the slob not on· audience there is a
sister, Joan Fontaine, who bad been asked to been more than 15. They ly has stale biscuits in woman who, S3 yea.rs
read the part but refused, suggesting Miss de both wanted to have her sofa but cockroaches ago, made this unselfish HavUland. "The part was not mine yet, though, since I printed on their T·sbirta In her ki~hen and mice sacrifice. Perhaps my
was still under contract to Warner Brothers. I -"I love your mind but In her basement. Please letter will help dispel
was let out on parole." 1 want your body." I re· print this letter. I have a any reservations she
Playing Melanie and meeting Clark Gable fuaed to do it. few friends and rel· may have had regardin&
was probably the high point of her career. When My partner said 1 was attves who might profit her decision.
she finally met the legendary actor she was "so crazy. He claims it's a from it. -N.W. Thank you for the
awed I could barely say 'Good morning,' Mr. free colDltry and people DEAR N.W.: Wba&'U privilege of expressing
Gable," she said. should be allowed to pat · you bet? The sloppy my innermost feelings
The part of Melanie brought new in.sights. anything they want on housekeepers never rec· concerning the three
"I came to understand that the core of her their T·sbirts. He also ognhe themselves. persons who have
character and the source of her strength was says when a commercial They are relaxed" and directed my llfe. God
love. place refuses. the people "casaat.•• Remember! bless them. -A LUCKY
go home and do it D E A R A N N ONE 1
''MELANIE WAS A perfectly happy
woman, the woman I wanted to be, the woman I
am not yet, the woman I may never be.''
The film premiered in Atlanta in December
of 1939. MJ.s5 de Havilland said there were a
million people lining the stteets to welcome the
stars, ~ Marearet Mitchell herself was there,
the author of the epic. "There we met the tiny
woman whose dream of a ~ gone by bad
given us so much."
Miss de Havilland left film.s when televialon began to make inroads into the motion picture
industry. Driving up the California coast in the
spring of 1950 she felt "a chill of foreboding. I
saw spiders' webs of TV. More and more people
stayed home to watch their sets.
''Studios cut back their productions and a
whole civilization was passing out of ex·
istence."
A new chapter opened for Miss deHavilland
when she bought a "narrow house" in Paris and
moved permanently to the City of Llghl There,
she met and married Pierre Galonte, executive
director ol Paris Match and began a new life as a "patriotic expatriate."
SHE NOW DIVIDES her time between the City of Light and the City of Stars and enjoys
the best ol the two worlds.
And Miss de-Havllland said she will never
forget the lessons of "Gone With the Wind,"
which is "the story of people the world over who
have strualed."
FolloWing the Town Hall lecture Miss de
Havilland answered questions informally dur·
ing a luncheon at the BAbia Corintbian Yacht
Club.
Her gentle sense of humor kept the audience
chuckliq as she offered a few glimpses lnto ber
private file.
Sbe was asked if she tbou&bt Chad Everett
would play Rhett Butler in a proJ)osed sequel to.
"Gone With th• Wind." ·
She said she didµ't know but !il)eCulated tha•
Rhett and Scarlett did cet i.etber q.ain. Slip
ping into her Southern "Melanie drawl," she
described a whole scene where the two made up
over a mint julep.
Miss de Havillapd was asked what her two
ct\ildren are doing now. Her son, Benjamin, she
said, was turned off by the tbeater when, as a
child, be was chosen to play the Virgin Mary in
a Christmas play al bis French boarding
sebool. Today he ls stu<IYinR for his M.A. in
statistical mathematics in 'texas.
HEB DAUOllTER Giselle, iJ 21 ud lives
at home. She i.s a f~.yur law ltadent at the
University of Paris. but bas ab iaterest in the
theater.
The next question was whether she is still
married. She replied, very tersely, "yes and
no."
Is she on good terms with her sister, Joan
Fontaine? "There are times when we will be on
and there are1times when we will be off. At the present we'reoff."
One woman in the audience told the actress
that abe was "one hundred percent more f asclnating" than her sister.
The comment caused a fturry and Miss de
Havilland sinlled, "Thank you very mucb for
the compliment. I will nottellJoan."
themselves. LANDERS: After read· DEAR LUCKY: What
What are your views ing "Something To Live a beaatllul tribute. I'm
on this subject? -MR. For" I feel compelled to sure yoar letter made
A V E R A G E write. 1. too, was the many people happy to.
BUSINESSMAN child of an unselfish day.
DEAR MR.
Nina
AVEBAGE: I've seen
some pretty 1.aancby
measa1es on 'T·shlrta
and mo.& of them look
like eommerdal jobs lo
me. If YoU don't want lo
contrlbate lo a world
that already bu too
much pollatlon, I say
&baaks. Let somebody
elae make a buck off the
garbage. 'Ibey won't 1e&
rich either -ud you
will at least bave )Our
self· respect.
De Rosa
Specializing in stylized
perms and geometric cuts a.,A~~
t'ret• ('onMullatloa -~.,
DEAR ANN
LANDERS: I did a slow
burn when I read the let·
ter signed .. Pleased
MIW WHIYMIY SJltMIT PIAMO IY
KIMBALL
5899
KIMBALL
&RAND PIANO
52495
1120 Irvine Blvd .. Newport Beach
642-8~
capeziq
'
Biacic, Navy, Mtlte. Red
SIZES: Narrow
Medium
5¥1to10
tie -•
#54 ,...._....., ....,......._ ..... m
'T' AJM
#27 W. St .. All••• ., 121 JI JD.NH
1 '
J
I
I 1!, tf71
"Look, Marmaduke, he's a new man. I have
no part in this!"
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
CASEY
~FlNAU..Y
~1'ieACH
Me "THE: VAL.Lie or;.
fl. 001.-1..A~ .....
aOOMIR
·-~•"n
by Tom Batiuk
by Ferd and Tom Johnson
BUT IT /S NJ INSPIRATION
to <:JET ME our OF ,-We HOUSC
,ANC>iOWORK
Q'JTIME.
----
DOOLEY'S WORLD
DR.SMOCK
NOW :J;.'M NO,..
SORe! THA-r" HSc..Ml!i-WI t..t-Pl!Fi...ec-r A P:At..t-1Nc9 SA"T'e!&..t..l"re!,
i:>OG"T'OR FAE! IP
MOTLEY'S CREW
61Rtk'E ~REE!
--)t>LfRc OUT.'
[
by Gus Arriola
.....
PEANUTS
AUTHENTIC? Haw
00 1 KNOW IT'S A~ENTIC?
~ ~o• so utttcect 1tructure 1 Alptet 62 "YCMl'Ve got
• CfOwnt °' to be hildt -r 10 Talkut a. Trav..-Md lellfll\ 5e Fabric
COMICS I CROSSWORD
by Charles M. Schulz
rVE M006HT~
SOt\\E AVTM£NTIC
6lR0'5-NE5T SOUP!
by Roger Bradfield
. .· ' .. . • -~
by Templeton and Forman
~ITEO FNture Syndlcatt
Tll~fl Puzzle Solved: a---l']Ji I• I I ~ ~~.!! 10 •I l A I I I A I , . O I T 'II I I T "' 0 I ' ' . , II I f . " ' I I t4 ~ 6t Not taut 15 AMIQttloe eo , ..._.lltftlble
11 Turttle... MM
I I ". . ' I 0 I •• t II l • I I 0. L l •
rrc. 82 Otcula'9d
11 FIOd 15 Ptcullatlty:
ti a.HatlnO Prtfilc ,.~ 91~
20 °'91* 99 lnevitlble
COlllPOUndl 70 T tmpor1ry 22~ CfllH ~ 710tthe veuel *"' clltU 1 0 46Fllt-topped 2.4 Untollnd 72 Old 1 net l'llOf9 hlt1
25 6tulo Oft Olymplc 12 Al IDno" 48 °""" ol
27 JobWlrntt 111• 13-·•· lhtgods
2tt>me111 730rtlultoua ·~· 51 Grewtobe 32 Aurs11nce 7' Oolef• Dlnino room 53 F1li.d to •I· 33 Roman 75 Chilly ind 21 Herveat lain tutetuy wet 23 Terry 54 SIHP rock
deity DOWN 26 Tredtt tece
34 COlof , 1111trum•nt 28 :::·~r'· 55 o.1~11ng
38 Gematone 2 Fusau 29 Fruit'"" , dtvte• 40 SllOlllOnttn 3 ·-····up: 30 Fiji clltici\ut 156 Chemical
lndlan1 Mt11y 3~ A•prlmand compound
42 Plum-Ilk• 4 Conaer 35 lnhtrltore 67 Poatpontment fruit• ca tellers e 1 Che t 44 Blut Jta!ll• 5 Cooklora 37 Qupe or 1
crtator 6 Mr. Uneoltl •• Flotlda es to8rlund I le 4S F•llllnlne ti-7 Ivan-: oo Engtllll rfwf 11111 1 .,. Movie-39 Vim 8-4 OllY-
47 O.OllMI: Miker 41 Cuttlfta ee En<1int tor
tnltJrlnl 8 Proctamatlon tOOI• =or
40Ntoattve 18panlllltltlt 43;:;'c:" ea-and '"1fx 10 Eanhef\111111 9*I VIP1 lealher
•• l IO c'" I l I 1 A
I I
0 ·-'" "'" ·-· • 0 I •u II I 0 • I I I l l I I . ' A . ,. D I 1 I •• ID
T II ' ' I I f c' 01
M I ' ' .. -' '~ ' . ' " I D f II c l D • l 'i' • I • l AO!_I MILlll r .! If! 1 l! T fl • o D t
' l .,. . TelevfsiOn
..
,. !'
..
TONIGHTS LATEST LISTINGS
£YENNO .. ,icm ....
a -=IC'fQle .......... ......, ....... °' ........ .... to~ tot Mn\.
...... DQ A-., .....-0 .... ._ .. ......,.,_. .. ........ _ .. .......,..
tQOMl~o# .. ......
• '"'tlWJ't M"°4 .. ,._., become• ....,.,
11npopular when fl•
dlddal 10 be tM bl9C
~ monllor M ldlool
• N»M-11
,...,, --"-d ~ to ...,. two amal ¥tc:tlma
of narooclc plla
• ONCE Ull'ON A
ClMl8IC
··i..ome Ooefte" Mra. Aldd
end Uftde Aeubart _,,,
plan Jcll'tn •• lo¥e "'9;
Loma'• ~ llflde glYW
hie bl...ing to lllf rel.tloft.
M1p "'"" Jolw\. (P-1 4 of
~)(R) Sniper Virtl•
• NMONA&.. lllNAHCE
i"U:-:."-. Typea And
MC~
UO MOVIE
11r * °" ''Onol Upon A Deed Man" (1971) Rodi HudlOn,
S.-Saint J-.. A
polce oommilelol•'• ....
... Niii to .,..... • pelr of
murder'I end Ill ., tbeft.
Angie Dickinson shows police officers
where a sni per~ bullet. which wounded
her partner < ~d Bernard) was fired
from on Police Woman, tonight at 10 on
NBC, Channel 4.
MIDWGAfflN
7:00 N8C HEWS I AMEAICA 2MGHT
~"'~
The Good f lit'y IUml out
to bl bed -for Darrin end Samantll&.
•• N>OKlf.11
A coltege girl """"-a
murdlf and Tarry 11 ...... prot.,,,.,.,.
• OV...IASY
~~endlhCIW writer, Abe Burrowa,
~ "" '°"O and actlll9 care.: .-lior com-
penionlhiC> program, being
• --QOmPel lion • •
•-dltlQ expertenoe. ID ntl! GAOW1NO
YUM
"Soda!~".>
UAMCUJI
A8CNEW8
~'°" .., Dl8CO FEVl1'
Jotwt TravOlla along with
the Bee 0-, Wayland
and Madam•, Cindy
Wllllam1. John Ritter.
Suzanne 8ornrnere.
Yvonne Elllman and Ar""t
Olbb9 ca19brata Ille ~
let'• ol ''Satlll'd.y Night
Fevflf"
Cl) AOAM-12
Tha oftlcllf"I of Adam-'2
-~ In • lllgh-apeed c:MM, a murder
caM and 1 family dllj)ute. &JI MACHE.ll /LEHRER
AEPOAT
· C'llc11eJ1 .. I Lbf lng•
8 KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles e KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles
B l('TLA (Ind ) Los Angeles
KABC-TV (ABC) Loa Angeles
Cl) KFMB (CBS) San Diego 0 KHJ. TV (Ind) Los Angeles 9 KCST (ABCI San Diego · 1 KTTV (Ind) Los Angeles KCOP· TV (Ind.) Lot Angeles
KCEl'· TV (PBS) Los Angeles
• KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntington Beach
• HOMIE GAfllDEHUI
"Shrubt A/Id Vlne9"
Cl) JC>t<LA'8 WllD
7:30 8 I t00.000 NAME THAT
TVNE
I HEW\. vwm GAMt
TiiE GONG SHOW
JOKPnWll.O
AMERICA IHOHT
Gueeta st-Allen, AM'f
w1111em1. Miiion Berl•.
Mellua MllllCn.ltr, P9t•
Frampton. Harvey
Konnen, ..PM/A Lynde and
84JC1 t.ancater. flD LA IH'mCHANOE
SctlOOI CllMgrlgallon In
Southern Calllornla 11
uamtned (Part 4) e NEW9CHfa<
Topical a.-lie~·
ed on. about and from
Ofange COylty
Cl) IN 8EAAcH °"·-" H 1 un I •d C11llH ..
Hlohllgllta of thle NglT*lt.
lllmed antlrely In Greet
Brttllin, Include an ec1Ull
llldeot~ recording ot a
~t
MATCH GAME P .M.
l:OO Cl) TMEWAlTONS
Both Mary Ellen and Erin
IUltef wMtl Mary Ellen'a
hu&Oand. Cuf1. 1a Orel19d
and Erin s lormer
boyfriend, G W . en11111 1n
theArmy (R) D HAW'/ HO\J9'
(Premier.I A H-.Bal·
bera comedY-Ylriety --IM1"'1ng two *'°91 111.-
1119 adult puppets. "°"9Y
and 811. • no.ta. ~· Anaon Wllllam•. Leif
Oarreu. Charo. Oa¥tn
MacLaod and Vogl leer
• MCMI , • * * • "Poppy" ( 113e) W.C. Aalcl&. A .._,.,enct-
out bum trtM to P'O¥e 1tllll .. _,.,..., ..........
l!. lw .. 30 qn l • 9 wm..coe. MOK. K~
''The IQll" a.bl'• ~
Ing __. II on 1111 tine
~--~°" INIUtll ~.uott '° • girl wt10 lelnted and Mr.
Woodman mlalnt~et•
ttll Kt • Ill -"· G MCMI •
• • .. Callan.. ( 1174)
EdwWd WOOOWerd, Eric Poft•. All .. ~ mutt
prO'll Ila la ltlll ctipeble of
being • eyndlcl• k.. (2
lwa.I • c.wx.....,,.
N#D......,. au.ta: Devld Hartman,
Pue Kelly.
• MOYll
•• ~ ''The Viall" 1 '"41
lngttd e.r,,nan. Antnony
Quinn. A wealthy woman
tuma on 1'91identa of her
l!Olne town wMrl tlley
agree to murder lier lot·
-IOver tor a price. (2 hfl.)
• THE PM11D1!N'r1
IC*IN'NT
• AN\'OH( "°" T8Wt90N? "Poetry Of The Occ:ult ••
The Fltll Poetry °'*1•1
nordeel en 1'111 eplrtt
ttirough Ille pow. of poet·
ry Selectlona by Wiiier OI
la Mare. Klngllly Amit,
Edger Allerl Poe, ~
S1eg94 and J IUl T olllten
-lnetuded
a:to D 9 W*rt
HAPfll:NINGll
"Shirley Tall .. Over" Alter
-~ of lligtl ldloOI
Alrvn .. uodedOed " he wwit• to grldUate. and "-I'. dlt«minatton that ,.,. wt•. leecl• to trouble that
~'=-• AMllANO
llMB.J8
"The Golen" The dlec>ule
~ Syria and I.,_, le
examined G ow:AEMV
Broadwey eong and lhOw
writer, Ab• Burrow1.
di-hlS '°"G and
actM earMf; Mtllor oom-
paniONlllp program. being
• ~ companiOn •• a ._.,ding expenanoe
9':00 8 Cl) HAWAII AW-0
When the Wiie of en e.-
r
Thundlly. Aptl 13. 1978
.
TUBE' TOPPERS
KOOP II 7:30 -America 2Ntgbt . Host Martin Mull welcomes an array of
celebrity auests lncludina Steve Allen.
Milton berle, Peter Frampton. Harvey
Korman. Paul Lynde and Burt Lan·
caster.
NBC 8 8:00 -Happy Hour. The
premiere of a new comedy-variety
series headed by two lite-size puppeta.
<See photo below>.
KITV • 7:00 -Disco Fever. John
Travolta and the Bee Gees are featured
along ('{Ith premiere festivities for their movte ns&turday Nlgbt Fever ...
em~•~ ............ ~.
---by In ...... tour· NllllC Mio Olft prOYldl lllrll
.mi c:ruclal Info! ••lltion.
but dlOOlll IO wltMOld k.
.. aAC*lte:P ~
"W'A'S'P0 S" Whan
Women'1 All S.W. Pllot1
#rive '° laryY ~ P8'1C')' and 1111 boY9 find
they're llgfltlng not orwt
WMd Ww II but MC> the
battle Of the MJta. (RI
•o~ "Bunal" Capt Mllllr and
.. delectl\lel -etymled when a mortlden repona a
1tolln body, unlM retired
OlleCtlYe Plllt Flall .,..,. In
IO land I lland In Illa ir-
~ (R)
• MERV OM'f'IN
Guest hoet· St8Y8 Alleo
Queste; Bob Hope, Jldt Cat1•. Jayne MMdow9.
Elke Sommer, Elliot
~E ADVOCATES
.. ~ Olplomaey·
Sl10Uld The U S. Abandon
Detente Aa lta Strategy In
DMllng With The Soviet
Union?" GD THIADAMS
a4ftOHICt.IS
"John Quincy Adami.
Prealdent (1125 • 1429)"
Adame' lil'lgla *"I •
Preaidlnt .. tnlttled by
fNattdoft and oont~·
rt Hie appointment of
Henry Cler .. s.ct.tary of
Stmte provot<• """°" Of a polltleal .. dMI" for tfle
PtaeldllhCf
MO I 8E8T °' GAOUCHO «IA.a.a.~
8'fll&T
''Dtegnoala • Deed. Proo-
noeie • GOQCI'' A deoMMd
patlenC i1PMQ1 ti-* to Ille
and Dr. MerlDee tacea !tie
111111 of bl'Mlltng Ille -
10 1111 not·•o·grlev1ng
"widow" 1HO. Cl) aAANA8V .JOND
Wtl9\ lier """-ur-. ~~~ .,.. being • 1111-anck\ln
vlGttm.. a pet.,...ed Peggy
Olrola (lM Purcell) enliltt BamaW•• 8 .-olJCEWOMAN
''OUM'' ~·· candid dlecloaufM and nafM.
dfoCJplng befor'I a eon.
gwlllloillt tlltl !Otoe .....
lr'Q Of\ gun~ plaC:.a
Mt Ide In~. Morlt•
Mal1lllMI, N~ ~I.
Adan! W•t. 09lle Clark
lfltar..:.
LET't MAQA DCM.
..cHAIL JACt<aON
Paul Brodeur, radiation
hlPrdt 9lq)lr1 end author.
dltculNI th• current
hMlth dlflOl"I of IOw fr•
r~
Topkal UU. -~t· ~ on. ~ and from
Orange County. 111 BAMTTA
"It's Herd But 1t'1 Falt"
When a fight owner It
llaln, Tony OOM ll'ldlfCCN·
., • the "*"-of a tor·
mar champion (Audy
c.nnona1 to ftrTet out tfle
kllllr and • poalbll drug
~. Bobby en_,
stan.(RI
10:IO • NlW8 MACNEL. I LDtMR
~ 11:001~0 NIW8 LOY!. AMfJICAH
ITVlE
"Lov• And Carmen
Looez'' Mr. Muncey llrM
Alejandro. and Clrmen
complall\I.
o~
••"Guns Of The Revolu·
tlon" 1111121 ~ B«o·
'*'-·Padre ~o The
llMd Cit • IVtl'llala ~
ment and a lloteJdcan prlffl
contllct Cl'* tti. ~ of
human r1gtit1 and justice.
(2hn.)
.. THIOOO~ ...... knowiedOt .. opera ,.,. o.c. • t '* In • radk>QUIL
• • MONTY P'mtON'8 fl YING CIADUI
• l)Q( CAVETf
o.-ts: Sel'llfl'IY c:etin • Alen Jly l9Mlt, ,.,...
8cflwMr. ~I Of 2)
GMM*D.I~ ~
1':30.CI) M•A .. •H
Alder ~ • 'IPO't
Of\ lhe -"• of IN
4011tll """ wtllctl .....
In entrnpt by Mel 8ume
and Hot Upe to ,,...,
Kllnglr GM '* l)9yd!o dllCllerge. end ........
~ romMOI wltll.
,_,....(A)
• TOHIQHT
Hoel: Joflrtny C1...on. au.a.: Bob Hope, Loll
falanl. JoHPh
Wll'llblugl\.
• LOYI., MaNCAH
smi
''eon.'• AMr Wll!doW'°
Cone~ INt the -• munter. e Ill Sf/tle!CY a
HUTCH
"l.OflO w• On A Short
Dir1 Aolld" A country ""9-
• (L~ Andlftont .. pi.. "'* by ltlfMleMog ...
pllOM Olla "°'" • , llPY'" voiced etranger
._dng money. <Al
• THATGIRL
"l'MOood8ka ....
• GETIMART
Smar1 """' guild • ~· Ing ScandlN'lllln pr.-
when a number of bMlflde
women ~ ~ dilaP-
pearing from Wllhlngton,
DC. • CAPTIONE> MC
HIEW8
MORNING U:OO. "rMUOKT ~
A~. Ql\09fl .. a~
dey ~. ,_. "18ngl
~ OWf ltloM wtlO ....
ten to It.
• TMITHOfl
COHMQUEHCa .MOVE *** "Camlv81 Story" (111541 ~ BaicW. 81-
Coctwen. Aomanol .-.ult•
In tragedy for a young Cit·
....... ~· (1 tit .. 30
12:01 e<I> c.. w:a M0\111
••• "Some Ceme RunnlnO" ( tll60) Franll
Slne1ra. Dael\ Mertln. A
llard-drtnlllng, WOfld!Y·
wlll AnrrJ ~ rwtuma
to hll lfldllM· llOml alter
World W• 11 and~
dlllllul!oned by the ltt>-
ludel of the~ "*9. 12:308 MOVIE
• • • 'h "Daughters
Courageaua" (11m) TM
·~
DAIL V PflOT l"
Lana 81et•r•~.t lln Oerftllld. ,...,.. 9ry
to eotve "'* . ~own~(1 -~ ! ...... "Thi u.. ........ "
(1168) ~ T=KY· ~ ......... NI
meyclf la deilMMd I
fwO.fought end fllGnllly
~~(2
tn., 30 lllln.) t ~•Ill TOMA "~" A Oltllle C2llr
.... TOIN up to tllcl ttle rtPforlN_ ..... _..
1!!11 of. hoodlUm (R) •
t.00 B TOMOMOW
au.t: DMd Wal=, a \Jnlvolrllty of kM9
-· .. dllQ.a 1111 on ralncetMllon. • G tlPY I
"Oedlpua Al Conol'tu9t !:1= : I*) • NIW9
MCME
• •.,. "Thlt Lady from
Petting" (1911) Nancy
l<W8n, c.I e.u. 2:111 HIW8 • 2::IO MOWS * * "The M8111...-n"
( 1963) Weyiw Mofri8. a,..
,. Vt«Ngo. • "
2:318 MOYE •"' • • ... "Compall!on41 In
Nlgt!lmtra" ( 1987) ~
DouglM, Anne ~. uo• MOV1E-•. uni. f ece Behind The MM*.. ( 1963) .,.., &#re.
E\41yn Keyea.
l:MO MOYE * * * "TM Big °'*'flor" (195111 Mtoaey Rooney,
Mamie Van Dorwl. a:eea NlWI ( 4:00 MOVIE
•• "Mercy !eland" ( '9411
Ray Middleton. Gloria
OldllOtl.
~-MOVIE • • 'h .. Tiii Brlpton
Strangler" ( 111451 John
Lod«, .--0upr.;._
f'rfda1•• •• ,. ·~ •• .,w.
MORNING
n:ao • • •.,. .. Air1ation . W•" (1934) Dick,.,....,
RubyK .....
AFTERNOON
t2:00G •• ~Dllll04a~"
(1954) Dale ~'°"·
Lind• Demel. •
S:OO 9 * * ... "Happy Blt'fldey Wanda ..._.. ( 1171( Rod
Stelgar, ~ )'ork.
a;ao 8 * * •.; ''Where W•e
Vou When The Ughtl w.nt
Out?" (19MI Dorla Day,
Patndl O'Neal.
CHiPs No Longer a 'Come dy'
By .JERRY BUCK
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Doing
an acllon·adventure police
series in which no one draws a
gun. let alone fires one, 1s quite
a chore.
That's the problem racing
NBC's "CHiPs," the story or two
motorcycle off1cers for the
California Highway Patrol.
The series, which bas been
hovering around 4Sth place in
the ratings. hardly qualifies aa a
hlL But the ract that it's one of
the rew fall series to have sur-
vived ls a triumph of sorts ror its
non·violent approach to police
werk. ll recently moved to
Saturday night at 8 on Channel
4.
"IT"S EASY TO lnjed humor
into a police show," said Cy
Chermak, who took over u ex·
eeutive producer after about 10
episodes.
•'The word to describe the
show before I came was com-
edy. I moved it toward humor.
'CHlP1' Is not comedy. It's ac·
tion-adventure with humorous
overtones and to do it as a com-
edy was a m.ist.ake. ••
Most of the action involving
"CHiPs" has been behind the
scenes, involvi.nc MGM studios,
NBC and Rick Rosner. Rosner
created the show and produced
il untll Chermak was brought in.
Rosner was dropped from the
show, either by MGM or NBC,
or both.
''IT WAS JUST a question ot
manaiement wanUoa to 10 with
somebody else," said Rosner.
.. There was some d.iaagreement
with manqemenl and they felt tb~y wanted a~eone else. I
A,. ........
GETTING SERIOUS
Emed8 and Wiicox
don't want to 10 into the de.
tails.''
Rosner said he was not bitter.
"I still have a sizable interest. in
the show and will be Involved, at
least on a story level."
"CHlPs" la the first series ror
Rosner, who 1s a reserve deputy
In the Loa An1eles County
Sheriff's DepartmenL He wrote
a pilot about the s~erirr·s aero
bureau, called "Sky Heist," but
It was not picked up as a aeries.
Atter-herdhorce, Erb got to know
some pretty lnteresttns people ...
lncludlnghenelf.
He got interested in the
hitbway patrol because it works
ck>tely with the abertff'a depart•
ment. "CHiPs" is the first show
since "Hlahway Patrol" 23
years ago authorized to use the
CHP badge and seal.
THE SERIES STABS Larry
Wilcox as the by-lhe·book young
veteran and Erik Estrada u hia
partner. who's always on• step
ahead of suspension. Robert
Pine plays their long·sulferina_
sereeanL
"The real difficulty is that
they 're basically traffic cops,"
said Chermak, who produced
"Ironside" and other series.
''Their job la to insure the or·
derly now or traffic. They're DOt
lnveatiaators. They don't gel ln·
voived ln murders or kidnap-
pings."
What they do get involved ln
are runaway truck.a and bUHS,
car thefts, loet children, a varle·
ty or traffic violators and such
thlnas as finding a babY who
may have eaten contaminated rood.
It's not exactly 'Police Story.'
yet the producers have managed
to inject some excitement Into
the show.
CHERMAK ~AID one of th~ first tblnga be did was
change the level of maturity dia·
played by Wilcox and Estrada.
"I wanted tbem to start
behaving like responsible
adults," he said. "They had
been comina. on like Boy Scouts
with 1un1 strapped to their
waists. They were acting silly,
but when they went out' to
behave as adult poUce officers
they lost credlbWty.
•
•'This ls not 'The Four
Musketeers.• You can't go from
slapstick to a dramatic se· quence. They went too rar In the
search for humor."
Chermak. who has produced
590 hours of television, said, "I
have a reputation as a show doc·
tor. I went into 'The VirginJan'
in its first year as story editor
and stayed to produce it for six.
years.
"NEXT. I WENT to 'Convoy'
and it lasted only 13 Wffks. So it
doesn't always work. I was
brou1ht into 'lronside' •hen It 1ot into trouble and produced it
for a number of years."
He a1ao waa brought ln to save
.. Nlght Stalker" and "Barbary
Coast," two other terminal pa·
~ents he was Wlable to revive.
He said, "This ls the rifth
show that's gotte.n into trouble
and I've come in. It now looks
like I've put out the fire and
'CHIPs' should be picked up for
next season."
Rosner aald since the show
premiered in September, ap.
pllcatlons for the hiehway patrol
are 10 times higher than before.
The blghway patrol bu no con·
trol over the stories, lhoutb re-
1ular patrolmen are used for all
shots showing the offtcers weav·
in1 tbrouah trafrtc. Scenes
filmed on closed sections or
freeway use the series' stars or
stuntmen dreased aa officers.
\ .. !,t'i~'t I
·, ......,, .. I ' •' •• ..... ' ....
"THAT OiSCURE
OUCTOF
DESIRE" {R) ••USH IUl-nn.B
---
1Jn1!(.'d Art1\I~ 1 heotr~'>
DAILY PILOT
•
Great Grina en
"Love Boat .. star Gavin MacLeod can't grin quite as
wide as Sis. the star of a new variety series called the
Hanna·Barbera Happy Hour. which premieres tonight at
8 on NBC. ChaMel 4.
I '
Guy Lombanla
Sound Stayed •
' Tbouib won cold fftOrdl for eome ol hil ,...
"61P'd•.d Dl , lt WU the sblnlnl allver tropbi .. be
woe for br'Mkinc racln&·boal reconk that Guy
Lam bardo cberiabed most.
-• How eome tte aeleded "Auld Lant Syne" u
t11s theme soq1 "ID our particular part of Western
Ontario," Guy e~lained to us, "there'• • J1r1e
Scottllh popalat.loa and it wu lraditlooal for all
'Glad You Asked That'
by Mriy• md Hy G..-r
bands to end every dance with 'Auld Lana Syne.'
When we left Canada to try our luck ln the U.S., we
dido 't realize the soo1 was known here. And never
expected to ever play it again. However, when we
performed for the ftnt New Year's Eve at New
York's Roosevelt Hotel on Dec. 31, 1929, we bad so
many requests from the floor to greet 1930 with
that sone that we adopted it as our them~."
Though millions of fans embraced the relaxed
Lombardo style, be gave credit to contemporaries
such u Glenn Miller, Hal Kemp, Tommy and Jim-
my Doraey. "They really believed in dance music,
each creating bis own style that was different and
great. 1beir deaths," he told a critic, "was one of
the things that closed up all the ballrooms in
America. A great loss to the de.nee-band in-
d\lslry."
Because bis style remained the same through
HE WAS •MR. NEW Yl!AA'8 EVE'
Guy Lombardo Conducting Orcheara
decades, he wu asked how come bi.a band didn't
bow to the tastes of the bebopper la the mld·'40s.
He replied: "I play for people in love, not for
acrobata. Perhaps we lose .some of them la their
teens, but we catch 'em later on!"
The Royal Canadians played for the same
couples for so many New Year's Eves, Guy often
smiled when he observed the guests graying as the
years passed. He'd talk small talk with them from
the bandstand and once observed: "I can't tell you
how many hundreds of times I bad to laugh when
-------------------they asked, 'Guy, where are you IOiJla New Year's
Eve?''
A moving story. A romantic st.or)t
A story rJ en~ hatred. friendship, triumph. and love.
MATINEES DAILY: LA MIRADA I l.MEWOOO CElfTO I 13
-1~-;)P\W~~~
Mll~J~:f!:: mm at MllftN ......
•mlTAC-"THI 900Dln ..... INI
-.~1••~t1 .. ,~ 1111.1111.1111.NI. ...
Q: We bow It's a UUle late to ull, bat wut
enctly ls Mae West'• p~ ol ~' -llr. and Mn. M. 11erney, Plttabar Pa.
A: It's pretty well summed up in a new
paperback•called "The Wit and Wlldom of Mae
West." Here are some of her sassy aayinga: "I
don't believe in such things as compan1onate mar-
riage . . . I tbi.ok it is nothing more than contract-
,., ed prostitution. Marriage, love and home should
be kept sacred . . . I believe in the stnile standard
for men and women" . . . Her curtain apeec:h after
each performance of "Catherine the Great": "I'm
glad you like my Catherine. I like her too." Aa for
Catherine's ruling 30 million people and having
3,000 lovers: "I do the beat I can in two hours" ...
Wheo "I'm No Angel" opened at Grau.man's
Chinese Tbeater, Mae commented: "It's rather
nice to be in a place where they take your foot-
prints instead of your fingerprints" . . . "I al•ays
say, 'Keep a diary and som~ it'll keep you' "
... About today's manners: "It's got so that if a
man opens a door for a lady to go through first,
he's the doorman" ... When she ftr'Sl learned that
inflatable life jackets issued to airmen during
World War II were called "Mae Wests," she said:
"I've been in 'Who's Who' and I know what's what,
but this will be the first time I ever made the dic-
tionary" ... Sparks that flamed her famous feud
with W.C. Fields: "Fields is a ereat performer.
My only doubts about him come in bottles" ...
Asked what kind of men sbe prefers: "Persooauy,
I like two types of men -domesUc and foreign."
Said pr ~ to H11 Gardlwr, "Glad Yov
Atked That," care of this ~. P.O. Boz 11141,
Chkcgo, Ill. tl06ll. Marllfl" mid H11 CardneT 1DiU OftNe1'
as mona1 quatimll as they con in tlwtr column, but the
volume of mail makes ptrlOftOl ~ impouf~.
Angela Radiant
In 'King--and I'
By WILLIAM GLOVER
NEW YORK CAP) -"The King and I" now
belonaa, radiantly though briefly, to that
Broadway musical queen, Angela Lanblbury.
With llll.ini charm and folksy eue, Mias
Lansbury premiered Tuesday nl&bt at the Uris Theater ln a Joog-nm.nning production ol the lu:ably
melodic Rodgers-Hammerstein opus.
Her ~arance Ls the top trump in a shrewdly
diplomatic ploy by the manqement to keep public
interest high during a three-week vacation of the
lhow'a stars, Yul Brynner and Constance Towers.
BaYNNER'S REGULAR underltDdy, Michael
Kermoyan, takes over, and at.ellar attention ls
shifted to the plot's heroine.
Ml.ls Lanabury, the winner of three Tony
Awarda for "Mame," "Gypay," and "Dear
World," limply by her presence alters aome of the
relatlonsblp between the imperious ruler of Slam
and the English schoolmarm be has hired to teach
his three-score offspring. But the essenUal stqry
remains undamaged.
For hll part, Kermoyan avoids carbon replica
of Brynner, displays a lusty, IOOOl'OUS baritone in
"Puzzlement" and after some apparent early
nervousness became a convincing oriental despot.
The couple's big number, "Shall We Dance?"
could improve with a bit more practice and finer
timina.
AU OP THE OTBEB principal playen are
still present, and the productlon remalm brllbt
and crisp. Brynner and lliM Towers reWrll X., 1.
to celebrate the show's ftnt annlvenary.
UnW tben Miu Lanabury will be an ~
tnidelilbt. .....
"Unfo,,..Uably vivid 1toryt•Dlnt full ot
paaalon, ptlln and power. ~acted."
-eobL.lplWAIC-TY ~/ ~
......... IH1rr.1,t
• ..........,, ,l•'l/11"'.
~
..
ENTERTAINMENT / INTERMISSION I HY GARONER
'Noah' ~usical ·Closing
The 40 day1 and '° nll'.btl eome to ID end W.. weekend when the w .. tm1n.ater Commwlit)'
Tbeater riDp down lta cwUtn on the Onna•
County premiere of .. Two By Two," the mualcal
atory of Noeb and the ark.
One ~the most impressive Pl'OductklDI oo UM
1W1'7·78 theatrical schedule, tbe Richard &oqen
musical la direet.ed by Kent JobDloo tnd featuna
Rlcbard Rowland ln the role ol Noab and Pat
Bunoo. u bis wife. Othen la the comPQJ are
David Qumcller, Jim Flynn, Dlaoa Llacoln, Dan
Aneel, Iqond.a Towler and Linda Waite.
Final perfonnances of ''TwO Bj 1-o" will be
given Friday and Saturday a •~~ JA the theater,
7272 Maple St., Westminster. Reaervatlona
8$3-8626.
TO WBSTIONSTE& musical will be the only community theater production oo ataae tbJ1
weekend alon• the Oranp Coaat. Three prc>-
f essional theater groupa are contiDulnC thetr
reapectlve attractions.
Intermission
Tom Titus
at Ba~c Cent.er Clormerly Balearic School> in
the lleu Verde area. Information niay be ob-
talned by cal.li.nc the cJ}.y'a Department o( Letaunr
Se1'Ylcea at G5W300.
* 8Ac&STAG£ -UC Irvine wlll boat the
Callfornia Cluaical Playen from UCLA far a
eerformaace of "lphteenia In Taurla" by
Eurlpldea Satu.rd.ay at 8 p.m. in the Fine Arts
VU1a1e Concert Hall.... Tlaet information is
avi.llable 1t m-a78 .....
CAUiBOUD -Auditions have been an-
nounced for tbe otilinal cbildreo'a musical fantuy "Sona of the Unicom" by the Civic Youth IJ&bt
Opera ol Garden Grove ..... tryouta for tbe play,
written by Jackie Hyman, will be held Saturda1 at
9 a.m. and Monday at 7 p.m. in the city's Lake
School at Orangewood and Euclid ..... youtba from 8
to 21 are sougbt. ....
South Coast Repertory is presenUna Ben
Johnson'• clalslc comedy "VolpoM" with llicbael
Keenan in tbe t1Ue role and Oaarles Lanyer u bis
crafty servant. Performances continue Tuesdaya
through Sundaya at 8 p.m. with weekend matinees
at 3 in the Third step Theater, 1127 Newport Blvd.,
Costa Mesa. Reservations 646-13113. -------------------.. Fiddler on the Roof" cootiruaes lta leqtby.
transplanted engagement at Sebastian's West Din·
ner Pl-.ybouse, 140 A veoida Pico, San Clemente.
Performances are given nightly except Monday
with a Sunday brunch matillee. Reaenations
492-9950.
Also on the dinner theater atqe ls the comedy
"Goodbye Charlie" at the Harlequin Dinner
Playhouse on Harbor Boulevard, just north of
Costa Mesa. 'Ibe theater's first anniversary show
pl a ya ni&bUY, except Monday, through April 23.
Reservations 9'19-5511 • TBE COSTA MESA Civic Playhouse bas
scheduled a weekend class in mime, movement
and ~reative techniques for three weekends in
May.
The class instructor La Antooln Hodek, former-
ly a premier dancer with Yugoslavia's National
Ballet, who bas performed the "speechless art"
for 25 years on stage, screen and television. He bas
taught at several California collqes including UC
Irvine.
The worbbop will be held May 6, 13, 20 and 21
THUl'REl-ORANGE CO
SENIOR 011lENS S2.00
SO COAST PLAZA
......... MN71 .......
'"CAiin SHADOW-INt .... ,;.ii .....
... ,_1 ... 1 .......
....... I.Aft SHOW'" ..... .,_..... .. ,........,...,..
SO COAST PLAZA
SO COAST Pl fllA
'"House Calls'
has an
incurable case
of infectious laughter!"
-Gt'nf' Sh.tl11. NBC.1 V
~ I
WW&MATTHAU
CHINMWXSON
AUCAl..-r
llCHAIDWMMIN
I ~1U 'llll llJIQll" H -=-=--=------~
NOW PLAYING
tT .... ~C--11 Or .qt 839 8170 Or olllgl 634 ~~
DMIMICIMllA ~ .. Mall S46·3102
JACK ANQERSON
REVEALS In the
DAILY PILOT
c:1neoame 6 scAEEn
634 2553 (OffiPLEX
MATINEES SATURDAY & SUNDAY
. . • .
l
Wt en wortillg hsd
to gin yo• a WW.
new way to bay a
c., CllMI wt'vt 90' a
co111plehly new
policy ill our Mrrict
dept .... fut,
co11rt1ou Hrvlct
you can dtpend on.
eo.. ..... '". dd!f°' be 9acl ,.
WE NEED
YOUR "
USED CAR
NOW
HIGHEST SSS
PAID
SE HAii.A
-ESPANOL
. 1977 VOLVO
264 GLA
Auto .• PIS. P/B. $)in atripe9. (~~ "'cond.. QJltom
WAS $10,190
IKE'S SALE PRICE
s1479
'77TOYOTA
P.U. LOMe ~ 'IASI ~ti:; ,,.._, AM/FM atereo
11 FeS=•· Very lo mites.
'72TOYOTA
CILICA
4 speed. llr conditioning ~:l~Vou ·11 Ilk• u '.
12399
173YOLYO
Auto 141WAeOM ang,;..~~
S]i99
CIUCA •l.unaACll
Auto . tr9'n conditioning. •AM/~I r
stereo radio with t M :: ~~~· suv!fr,; s 8~.
'7J OPEL
4 ., -•~eed. radio. hHtM
•••7• wtM8ls. lo ml ' Drive lt todayl IMQe.S to7n7MC3174349 er.
12999
MEW 1971 TOYOYA
COIOHA 4 DOOi
Power ateert AM/FM/MPX ng, luxury edition.
stnpes. CUltom radio, OUltom pin
c u a t 0 m wt'88I well mdgl (RT105-071~~).ker P•ne11:;
MIW 1971 TOYOTA
airom. PICKUP e.=·ael
(RN23-07..a20)
s43450o
1977 VOLVO
264&1.A
Auto •• PIS. PIB lir .uwool(VQ2&Ce6ti1~tl'.'~ CUID'n T«>P
WAS$10,HO
IKE'S SALE PRICE
'8778
52299
?3TOYOTA
COIOMA WAee*
4' 8PMd. AM r9dio. time for Jultln (297GVS). vacation .
52399 .
NEW 1971 TOYOTA
ooaO&U 2 DOoa lmAM
Custom side mdgl d atrlpes. CTE31314Hm: an pin
WAS $3690.06
llrS~PllCI $325650~ .,,.a. ..........
,MEW 1971 TOY OT'•
COIOLLAl&ol -AM/FM st UPTIACIC I S.-
w Ind ow ::?o atyted.ateel wtleele. rw (TE51-611"96). gger and much more.
WAS$4tU.SO
ID'S SALi NICa ..
s457650
•11 To Q111a '""1f'"
1977 VOLVO
264GLA
Auto •• P/8 P/B al (VC20486H1.0.0Nh. r, custom pin atrlpH.
WAS $10 290
IKE'S SALE PRICE
s9579
'73DATSUM 76FIAT
IZOOCOWI
Auto. trana. rad" Ex t r a • '°· heater. t550288nlce car. Ser.
5
IZ4SflDla
trac~ stereo racho. a Sprtnv1&~>~" ttme tor
-~'I 999
172VOLVO
4
WA~
llPMd. AM ndo heater Vou'IHUce It (8&2aAz). ·
'2999
?IVW
4' apeedlCaOCCO .r8dlo , AM/FM atereo
from Vw~~~ one
'3899
s5j99 ,
72VOLVO
4
WAeOM
AM'f*td, lir oondlttonlng. r8dio with t1P9 hMt luggage rlCk. ce78EvP> ., •
'3199
••
.. ,.
•• .
,
. . .... 1
~-~~.-:.. ...... ,~.~!-: ....... ~.~~ ....... ~.~~-·····1~.~~-···-....... IOOI ... till 19'1 •-ulll 1002 811 I Ill IOOl •-NI 1001 ....................... ....................... ....................... ....................... . ..................... ..
LW. y IOUl't9IOIT
~~116
Former 1Amk Co. Vlce Prelident and
General Manaaer opens beautiful
prestigious new Real Estate oftlce ln
Newport Beach. acrou from Bll
Canyoo. Specl.alidng lD tbe resale ol
fme quality homes and eltatel. We
are now lntervlewln1 prof esaional
salespersons. for an exciting and
rewarding future call Mr. Rall.
6'0-9'20. Excellent company benefits.
*OPEN HOUSE*
NJ,ISAT/SUM-1·5 615 VISTA IOMITA
(if necessary, call for directions>
Exquisite Bluffs Franciscan Model
with a choice, view location of the
Upper Bay, Dover Shores & the
islands. Features Dictograph alarm
s ystem proteclion & a custom.
enclosed bayside terrace for
entertaining. $189.500
759-0811
LMtA di.I .. AMCI
Spectacular water vtew from most
rooms. 'fip of the island with U3' f rootage on the blg bay. Approx. 6,900
sq. n. offers the ultimate ln luxury
living. Impressive entrance wltb
dramatic pool & jacuzzi. Abundant
tile. marble & hand carved woods. 4
Bdrm sulta + maids qtrs, formal
dining rm, f amity rm, billiard rm,
den, elevator, sawia + slip for tie
yacht. $1,375,000 includlDg the land.
WISUY M. TAYLOI co .. UAL~
JlllS..Juq I .......
MIWPOIT CINTB. M.I. 644-4910 .... , .. 1002e ...... 1002
IACK IAY
Fine 4 bdrm .• 2in ba. family home on
quiet cul de sac. Oversized pool,
playhouse, extra storage. $189,SOO
UDOISU
Newly remodeled 4 bdrm., den, 4
baths, living rm. w/cat.bedral ceilina.
Lge. master bdrm. aulte. IAYRONI'
SeYeraJ fine bayfroot bomel
with pier & allpa
BILL GRUNDY; REALTOR
j.\) boy\od• Or'"' '• ll f,,", 6161
1002a ... r .. 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
DtYoaca
FOaCISSALI
Lanie 2 story, 4 bdrm,
._. .. ..,. ChMrlll 1002 21,; bath. formal dintD1,
·-·····-·-······· ....................... ramlly room, ltltcben
4'•0 N£WPOll T CENT E:~ OHIVE MlwtOlrr HI'S
One of a klnd with
88Clulled tree lined en·
tl'J. CompJatel1 re-
modeled witb larse
roam&. pat blllied a&oftl ••.,, • ...,noon. bialns room, ramla, room. larl• bdrma, and private patloa. Call ...,
eatial area. Aatoaaatina ..... • ftllend pool
New carpeta. drapes • Garate ru.111 lmulated.. floor covertn11. Super Built in work bench. family home. Aaldna CJD·
IAr'la lot wwa av ac-... catlMl).1151 ceu. Ne~ palated, =-~~iiWilll
EQUAL HOUSING Great Bu:J for $76,000.
OPEN SUNDAY 1-6
2RIQQSL
. • ~ I-HERITAGE
NOti9VA111Mll
IWaQWd ..... bu Just 1111t1Ded .... .aaded ~ cpta ,_-la ap-Pb'tlll fnsb palut b:Llide ·-(Or~ v.., thal1> .. dean' bt. Frml dia _. Dlua f.mJr no bome.
Aboal 1 mile to beach • .Pet cul.-...C. <rfered
at --. .I• reduced
Sl.MO •VA tsma added. ...
~ Walkt:r t; Lr.t:
CAPICOO
•uoo111100 TOl'ALDOWM
Wladlol road•ay t o IOliiDa •t«r retreat! Nv• cr'OUDib protect
-.eluded atry to laYiaib llvilll room. OOurmet
ltttdMm overloob •wt· lldnit '°'211JU'd I WlDd·
inl atalrwa1 leada to
noeep&oa master bdraa
phat cbUd'a retruU
llln7 ! s.u-" UlUoul. aa.emo Ol'tN Ill 9 •1f \IUl'I 1091 fl'CI'
11'•·:.~.. THE REAL ,, J
·ilh· ESTATERS ____ )
Nl'l'.AUA
DIC.NOMI
A !Wq11e opportu.nhy l
a fmb' to move Into
Newport area A MC
pa)'{D1 an outra1
P.rtce. Live In a btf
'hceoJa Built" bom lmown for apadoua rm .U. lsqe wardrobe
at.orqe apace. ODJy a
f• llkd:t from CllfDr. Albe Blrbor. J• llated. •Tnl
C:: WiJlkl!r t; lee
•1ADDOMR
Giant four t.drm home located In well eatabllabed ~Bllllvm1 room wltb crackUn1
finplaee, INI• add-on lam. rm. Separate utlllty
room. ' Bdrm.a or 3 Br • Formal dlnin1. Blt in
BBQ. Comer lot with block wall. All E-Z ac·
c.sa tocm for R. V. CaU
now for info: 546-2313
CWH Ill 9•11 S IVN I08f~~t(1l
~iJTHE REAL;
~ ESTATERS
$63,900
You eunot wall to tee
tb1a l•lY ' bdrm fmlY llome atrered at UU. a1J
time low price.. All new
catm drperlea, ideal locaUoa oear parlWte. Property wUI 10
VA/FHA! Call today.
8*11U.
c::I Walkm l: Lei! 54&-2313
OPPORTUNITY o-tH '" ., • .,~,UH iow Nl(f• •c:O:w:i~~C~~~~~~;;~ Real Eltate COU.WPAIX -------~~==.~~ 11111111 ~~:Bo.! a~xm't'! •. Fou~roo
. . HEAl TO RS
Lingo
RIW&un
LA~ llACH CHADB
2 BR, 1 BA, 'walk to beach. Mexican
fireplace. oak noon, fenced yard.
Pert ect llome for artlet. writer.
student., l'U\G)Je. weekenders & anyone
who appreclatm Lacuna charm. Only · suo.ooo.
JACUZZI ·1'IMEI
Tb.is very Dice Cd!! dUPlb: idth pool
& Jacuzzi would cooaider exchanging
for small home. Newport Beach to
Laguna Beaeb. 2 & 3 Bil unlta w /1 84
eacb. Priced low at $189,500.
OCIAM· ~-S1WS TO ~
Quality construction. 2 Br, 1 BA.
w /frplc ... ~~pensive wallpapers
thru-out, stiniea tub, ·neW carpeting; 4
skylights. All new bltn :aces. + BBQ in kitchen. French opening
to eoclOHd deck. Steps from your
door t.o the beach. $215,000.
·Be•LD IAY
Spectacular \'lews from the Chris Abel
designed wood & glass 3 BR + family
room or 4 BR home. Freshly painted
& ne~g thru-out. You'll feel the & charm of a mountain
retreat, .enjoy the sight & sound of
the potmdirig ~acific surf. $650,000.
MOllTH LACMINA ISTATI
Two acres w /ocean view. 6 BR. 4th
BA, + 3 BR guest house. Pool. 5 car
garage, pvt. drive, notbJ.ne ln the area
llke ~me. $1,000,000.
WAUC TO THI IEACH
Just a short walk to the beach. Tb.is 2
BR, oceaoview borpe in Laguna
Beach ·is ~ated \n a large park-like
lot in Woods . Cove. Pvt. backyard,
including gas BBQ & Potting sbec:t.
$163,900.
MOllLE HOME W11H YllW
Situated in a pvt. centrally located
Newport Beach mobile home park
w /pool. This 2 BR, 2 BA. bay view
mobj.le home is close to abopplna & transportation. Shop & compare.
Best buy in tbe area. Motivated teller. sa.ooo.
644-7020
212J SAM JOA9'9t •• Is ROAD
MIWi'olT llACH
·----~
1002 Q111rlll 1002
HOW"S TGUa OC.' ATllUM
Mine's fine! It's beauWuUy pla.Dted
wlth begonias, peonies and petuolu.
Everything about this Newport Shores
3 bedroom is fine: remodeled kitchen
with trash compactor, walk to ocean ,,
location and the lowest .Price in town.
$98,500.
U"""IC>UI: t1()1'tl:S
REAL TORS", 675-6000
2443 East Coast Highway, Corona del Mar
dlso in Mesa Verde, at 546 5990
e ... ,.. 1ooife-r111 1002 ••....•............... ~, ...................... .
OPPORTUMln KNOCKS
The owner of th.is lovely canyonside
home has just reduced the price
$20,000! If you've been looking &
looking for a bargain, don't pass th.la
by! Opportunity only knocks once.
Just imagine. 3 bdrms. with an ocean
view, just one block to the OQ.ean for
$249,500.
1002
~COATS & WALLACE
'CJ::P REAL ESTATE . lNC.
~ LDC.Un UtfN Ell COMPA"4Y ~1 RVINt:
lHl SOUI H COASI ARlt\ SINCl 14~1
I LIYB.. 5 llHOOM -North Costa
Mesa home bas choice of 3 bedrooms,
den It bar. or 5 bdrm conversion..
Walk to city park & Halecrest family
club. Just $82,500. C4 541-4141
Y. A. LOAM -Make offer 00 3 bdrm. family room ln Greenbrook. Lots of
closets ~ cupboards, double drapes.
Call 640-6161 .
Serving Costa M cs.i ·lrv1ne
Hunt111 qlvn 8h1ch-tJewporl 8P<1r:t1
IOU-.............. -............................. ..
...... YllW
Jed to tile Federal Fair Hrdwd floors, w /w bath t11·level condo in G1Mrlll
Hou1lo1 Act of 1968 crpt'•.1.~ ~It!'. raaie ar Newport Beach. Ocean ••••••••••• .. •-·•-• .... •••••••••-•••••••• 1
wbieb makes it Ulegal to GREB•OOK onn. N!!ClmU7 rerooted View, tbe IMnc room ... ______ _ associated
IXCLUSIYI
First time offered. DellCbtful llo11aco
Yodel; 2 bdrma.. den.
formal dbdol; may up-
gradea. Cclncrete drive,
used brick planters. Adult occupled. Not
&e...s laod. Jl,lt,IOO
C. F.C.S1c•i adverUae "any pre· . •relblccoed. Att. 6: rm View alao from tbe tiEWHOMI r.~t~~!i : 4 bdrm, 2 ba. Extremetr fer ..... trlr + double muter bedroom and ...... c. .... IOTI'OMLESS!
race, color, relig\oa, so, =CAMELOT mdl. ________ , pnp, $114,900 from the adjacent Bulkier Ju.t completed
ormtioaalorigia,oran lo~bome~~ Have 90IDelb1ng to ..U? JACOISUALTY ~,::! ~)'01:' d:da21tor)'4bdrmbome.
11lla ccado is a bottom·
i.. berlain. 2Br. 2~ ~t
eDd ~e. Owner WW
PQ cJcmD& cmta. ONLY
852.500 inleadoa to make •DY :.;walkina~to Qasaifiedacbdoltwell. 675-6670 ba'Dto..., tb1a famll1 ~Include; Yaull·
s_uch pftf~. IU:nit~ So. Ooat Pina, tbeau-e. .pedal only $1J9,IOO. ed eeillnp, 3 car£~ tioD,or&erilD.UUltion. •reltaw'anta. llanyoat. eaMsill 1002 1002 CaJltTH:J:sq Is RV 1'411'a1e. WT)',
1tandln1 feature• in· •••••••••••--• •••••••••••••--•••! .._JOUl'OWDCA11'1ta.
Waaillhul ................. c:Jude; Ol'fHfR9•1fl'UHIOll .... • c.al..,.
~.,..~ft ' Ctltd:Ol67 a.tom Draperies
Ootwed pet»
Dlcorat.or wa11pe,...
~ Ois&doal' ... BBQ
Al*'G•DocrO,... Sli71&btlD ram. Rm.
BY OWNER t7M123
PrlD. Q:ll7 $108,900.
l...OOMS
Beautifully decorat.ed one level. 5 bdrm, 2 bath:
... .... .... fireplace -------a CIO'fwed patio; att. pr.; sa.L idle items wtlb a cdet St. cloM to scboolll DelY PUot Clmlfted Ad. 6 lboppn&. "2.$ClO. Buth ICMl7I. Lmrie, Bia' • .....,
~-------· .... .. 1002 ·-· .. ...................... . .................... ..
~II. macnab/ Irvine ?-raalty
MAD IT YOUISf
A fresh new loot! Spacious 4 BR
family home newly done ill IOft
warm colors. Lg. pool 1urr •. by
,ardms. Family rm w /used brt
pie. A neutral slmpllclty
adaptable to any style. Incl
French doon & parquet noon.
Im med. possession. p.39,500.
Beverly Morphy 6'2-8235. <U-13>)
Yaua WAM M0tie
CuJ-de-eac ~on on ;1" acre 1n Annlveraary E1tate1. Well malatalned combination of
apaeloul rooms w /cozy ..u•na. a
Bila + peneJ.m famtl)' rm. Paved, formal, pa_tlos, ahuffiebolrd court as joQkbl lawm -walled, WUN
.. " coovenlent. PrlC..S to ..U at 1124,500. Tom Atllmon W4lll: <U-121)
•
NOMI MIAI THI IUCM MIW••MABITll•.._. ,, Ir .......... ,... ......... ....... w ......... dlw9 ............ l ............ = ..... ..., .. ....... ef.. fw e Hllll"h
prlcel SIJt.tOO.
UAU1'WUL WA,_,.OMr wf'•WS
PAIULOUS twe •••re•• nd 4-• caada ' I ._. wtlll ._. .t ,... te
,_ _. ...., .... OM 1HI WAT& ........................
CHU 0 't' ..... •l•IJI ... ' f1Sh ..i1 •ff;tc.. .... ftrwptne YllWS of TWO
.. ITS. Seantr·= ....... of .. _ A IOAT $1JP ,_....,.
...... PJS.000.
•;:::-·
2633 W.Cout Hwy.
Newpout e.c.t..
631·1•00
~ .. :· THEREJ\L ~·~ ESTAl ERS .
! ~-HERITAGE
Fl[f,LTORS
OCIAMVllW
~--~the
blae pectftc ocea rrom tlU Qlllq1M bome. Watdl
the beautiful tan Ht
frOID YoUJ' prtvat.e fa· nee. Priced for quick
FHA
TERllSf Ver1 Low Down! Paymenta at cheap u rent! Start bulldJ.na an eqalty r s
Bedroomll Call
REDCAllPETTSt-12m
.... at •.eoo. Bt fint to N.-c... ._ •tOD"•flOI call tor • pravlu,. .,... 1111•W11 DIC.~ 80as7 ad bia ... putDer Bob -...--. ....... --........ QtfHll9•1fSMIO•WI• Beaaon bave &D emllltr
&wa -.w .__ desk in the office. Olve
l!aatbheff ueeutl•• ua a call • let'• talk boma la ~ a ..,.,. to abaat the advaatal• of blf:dd. I bedroomi pla .mq rMI .... with =tral~ IMJSOM&•OWM
ba71. Reduced to I YIM.-W 1401DOVEST. _ _...
..... QaD far dlUlll QaMom bullt-lbdrm 2 QdteZIJO N'pt. Bt..-..
tilC550 balb famllJ room llALTOIS P~t711
Ol'tN t119• 11 u..-io• MO • ...._,~ t11..n .. lDlu.lal• LU_. "'...., · WIC BA VJ: W aterfU'OGt ed, doable 1•n1•. ='1 for sale Need ~-[ ' Euta1da Cotta Mffa. . ..... . .. ~~ ...
C-.Mlsew..712'
~·· THE REAi. ~~ ESTATERS .
---~
l • ll 41
~~~ ~ --
' --_ _,
1002
I
BPOI' fll~ <>Fl\. f011S• IE.A&.Toas MNO 0
• . ' ""' ", .... ~ -, . , . e'
... a•MCH41L
-~..-es POOL SH.400 -·~~ YAMODOWM $125,000 Circular drlH. Luce
Jmnacalate bome t rue1 famib' abed hfn8 room.
eot.rJ. llualve alone O>uDtr,y kftcbm, DI.De. llreplace. Format din· wau'1l.p.newo1~-
1D1. Parquet family erect paYIUoa 6 lub room. BDarmoua maata' SJ'Oa.Dda aarl'OUDdiDI .n..r Laundr7 roo_.. a•r n-eeform pool. toot~ BCNUSB:S: Sepu9te wtq for bJde-
a.rrt1erator, wuber, away llaadlr SUit• le dJ7er, &emw, ~ cbtldrea '• ca,uartera. fl tMft..Jn alarm 111tem JlunJ tor thia unlqu lDcluded l Call today. tmuml -.1181
1$2> 1100 OlfN Ill 9 • 11 S IVN IO• HllCt' ~ '" •• "s '""' 10111 ""''. ~~{REAL I
TATERS ---~-·-~ '
THE REAL
ESTATERS,
1ltlUI 18.P! l Yr. old Eaat CMta an. baa painted In fl
Mesa. delm.e units, ea. out, lnatalled NEW w /2 bdrma., 2 ba., cllnin& cm petmi tbna-OUl AND area. laandrJ • frplc. ndac:9d to •,15ttt Va·
NawSl18,000 cant 4 Bdrm •'SOL IPIL YM COPILAMD VISTA•• 1n nice areal »
llALToa &SZ.043 aame law lDtenal VA, aubmlt your orterl
,... 5.11.-oc>opm..-..
'11. IDakiDI at clop. This 11:1'1 II Hetwwl
oae la clean, clean,~~~~~~~~
cJea. ODlJ SIFl,911>1 FOR V1!'9'1!!.B .... .._.5 lnformadoa call I0-'1881 Iii I ~"
.,. _~_:_i_""_:_~ __ ·,r_;.;;;.:_~_'.·_~_:_e_~
CE
110111 ILlllS CD.
OVl!R 50 YEARS OF SERVTCE
SPY-..SS
..
,
tt1 ...... ~......... .......~lilt .......... .......,..w. ........ ,_s. Thut9dly.Apntt3.t'171 ............. . ........................................................................................................................ .
l•u.-I ·-4 I 8 t ti IOH ••ril IOOJ C.W .. M4ir fOU dllMw IOJJ .._.sforW. ..._....PorW. Hoae.,..,.Wt .....•........ ........................ . ............................................................................................................................................................... . .._..,..~--~ NIWPOIT ..SA YllDI ........_ • .._. 1040 ...... .._.. t04I ...,_.._. • t04I
DNLYPtlOT
Catalu.a :ilanJ .W:, ~.
2
I 033 W. ,._ W~ ... ;;:~·~·~;;; .. ·• ........................ _ ................. .
w ao beadl f: um •quiet tuJ~ac. Spacious • ~. tam Y rm home ln 4 ar., ea • .,. aundeck. i
Our laJa.nd 11 boomiD( . riJbt
aioo,. ll lt'a • CQDdo, Buildlna Site, or
CommettiaJ you're looktaa tor to
A valan, call ow-experts, at
ISLAND REALTY -Phone Avalon ~
CANYON ~Cl -Larae 3 bdrm 1"' bath Condo with apaclous/rivate P•tlo. Partially furnilbe . and
complete with bullU.ns. $1.M,000.
llMate • OIOa HOMI -3 Bdrms l ~ baths oo quJet Street. WT ,000. '
HtsfotUC AYALOM HOMI -Mint
condition -oo large lot with sweeping
view. • Bdrms, 1~ baths plus den.
W i do w s W a l k • v i e'W deck -
beautifully landscaped, a gem of a
home. $395,000., includes income Wlil.
~la,.J f<saft'I -
{4,IU! .Avalon f I 50
bllM1~1 ltorY. o .. of Hveral pool ori'lnal Harbor View with formal yr new In npldlly de-• Bil , ID cte.Jrab.. IM>m .. pricf'd low at dinmg, pool. jacuul AND gorgeous velopln1 beach uu
.,.. ~lY Pllsitred • tlll.IOO CALL~.., ocean. harbor. island and nJghl Ugbl P 15.ooo. 811 ZOlb St. ~ed. Loaded wt~ CSELECT view. Reduced to$259,500 Sl&-tnl :'::f ~~· t~ T'PROPERTIES llACHWA.U
courl A mual Ht! JJJ Pcillutllo Plan D Condo with 4
IWJOO. MIWU~U Soulhol Hwy. An absolutely charming = c!:r!-~Y ;!o'f. WISTCUFf Watmroot beaulllully 2 Bdrm cottage wlth gleaming JaamUraauna $120.000 IAllLYHASIT decorated BALBOA hardwood ·Roon and TWO separate HIWPC>nllACH
5060001 ~~':ai:\~ r!;:.r; garages. Reduced to only tJ,34,500. llAl.TY 675-1'42
Thia quality lelb • fromthebucereereation c.1'44-7211 ......... 5.Y.DOWM
DlUW home la perfect rm.. • ,.a bar, fabulous Br 2Ba ..._ T for a lUle family, 4 BR, vtew • boet lllJ>, tool Ob· 3 • • _,n. esmia. den 6 larll family room, ty sm,oooi bch. fantastic toc.U<>n. 2 dinhla room, male thl• ..... 19Jftli'op. car1ar.Ownr&U-l084
home tivable u well aa ...... Condo By Owner. 2br.
lmurioua. Priced n1h1 * '71-7060 * l"iba. crpu, dn:is. frplc,
, DUPLD w ... c .............. c ........
Upptf' _.a. 9Nd oc... 'ftew md lower
liMH ..... ,... r-4-SI 12,900.
4tt-4551
LAO UNA
NIGUEL
49$-1720
DANA
POINT
493 8812
LAO UNA
BEACH
'97-8331
at $1.8S,OOO. aerv. room, wsbr, dryr.
0 CoeteMtla 1024 CotlaMtM 1024 pvt patio, carport. Nice ....._ 1044 lrrille 1044 JID.llA.: .. ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• $49.000. 962-3345 dys ... ••••••••••••••••••••• .. •••••••••••••••••••••
IASTstDI Mo~twt.a 8'13-ll003evs/Wlmds. BESJ BUJll LEASIOPTIOM tl\Ce Uvtn& room, coun-$19,tlO ~-..';:."J. •• Thia Turtle Rod Glen -, • tr)' kltcheO. *20.000 85· Auumable 8"'8 IC VA 3 br 2 ba. rrpl. walk.in& awmble loan 1275.00 Mo. Quiet tree lined streel loa.n. oo mHalve (.2000 dist. to beach. bit-ms. lrg In University Park our TowabouM can be yours
P•ymart. No new loan Formal liv. rm wltb sq.I\) 3 BR + ram Rm . Jot on culde-sac. xlnt new Peter'• lownhomes at TODAYS PlllCE next
BaJboalsAandR'le.ally coats. Covered patio. creen bol.\le window +2fpk'a. LocatednrS cond. S98.500. By owner Pule. pool ud spa ye•r l View . four ""'"'o"'"-built la BBQ, beauUluJ Huae sepaule family Cit Plau. Pmt $..'588 mo 9351 Tahiti Cir. 5:il·:wl61 Larae 3 bedroom home bedrooms, 2200 iq fl 673•1700 waterf•ll. Orut home room boats cucl11Jn1 inclda everylbJ.nc. Full d)'s. 962-1462eves. With formal ctuunc room and Immaculate. PooJ '
for entertainment. used briclr. fireplace. 3 swtc.$'19.800. &. upcraded •pphances Teonla! Upguded t.hru· $66,500VA Prlud •l $13,950. kin& tUed bdrm.a, pool 754.7100 Must see lmmedi•te out. lbrouibout. Av.Ila-
Seller must move 41 baa Hu.n)'-C.U~67 abed lot too! Act oow' lkult~• poe.sesilooposs1ble Ask ble Immediately ud ~!.9!~:-~:sr!!!!~~~.!!.~.~ •• ~.~ •• ~.~.~!!0~.~.1:~~=~~=~~~~.~00~2 ~qtf.~?·~ [j'ijJ $j r846-::;n;;:n~iili•••-·~;~~~ ma pa.»> ~·~i£L;
luxunous town home can ~ tto00UAll 1T. ~ mACN POOi.A SPA be your castle by the ~ Ouentot•UOpm ONE LOOK-end you MESA YlltDI se•'· .. , --ge bdrms-2•~ COiq la •••••••••••••••••••••• MESA VERDE ~ ....... ., ~ ~ 6 ~.~~~~r;: 3 BR, 2 ba .. i,-, blk. to b•y. =S efet~sb.J~~·y ~n'+ P:l!~ UHCH UALTY fOR TH051 lamib' room wiUI brick --Now$119.SOO! ..,..-551-2000 THAT frplc. Sl•lrs lud to V• •-••ira.. Marab.URJty 875 Veryrucebomeonatree $79 500 only $155,00-0 It's a ·--""Tl JA.SMIMICllBC ""_..,.._._ -----'------1 lined street. 3 br. fmly bargain you can't a/ford•--------_..,.._
privatemuteraultennd ProfeasJonally d~orat-A.T$61,000 IAYROMTCONDO rmplus2brslltingnn" ' to mull ! Call oow •OWMA.IXIT ... thefmerthinpinure. :'ra,1~~~ Ft0e•mlue~'otno ed. beautiful. Two Sharp4 bdrm. fmJy rm tBR. view. pool, sec. ba.Jdealifyourmother Formal eolry to formal 894-7521 FOREST E . UNIYltlSfTY weauggftJtth•t)'OUvlew
.. "' story-cathedral eeil-home i n a cood bldl. undergr pulrng. In-law Uves W/you. lrootlivroom.Spaeious OLSON ,... this finely ur1raded
-prHt11lou1 area lnp, 3 bedroom, family neighborbood. New cstm 1105.000. 645·1103. THlefully decouted Orm room 41 skybgbt. 2 ~~~~~~~~~ Lvly Oxrord model Poplu mode In the Woe't last! Call 1163-7881 •· 2 b b dr · N w d ..... ~ ·-,___ ..... _ to 0n1.. patios Ir BBQ Owner -Creekside Development OPJN1t1 9•HHUNr.:>wNoe1• room• Ya at s . apenes. ear in.or..,..,.._, ~ .............. y see. o.z • A~ shows pride or Eapeclally large patio, Park. Xlntatuterbome. ---------i $79,950 w /YA terms anxious '° let's deal. '"9 1-4 ownership 3 br, dlD rm. ol Woodbrid•e· WgbJy
[ •.. ,.ll.l&'ll'IJI fully l•ndu•.(>ed. Just Good loveatment. VA re' ,,,.oPoW ~l 645-7221 ....................... lge booua rm View 01 upgr•ded earpet, • , 1Jiij' }F move in 41 relax •l lbe terms, too! Priced t.oaell Newly remodeled 5 l&OWMA.alCET! mts. Pnced below other ce-amie entry, covered _ .o::::::o:•-•=i•=~· JOOI, jacuui or tennis q ul ck I y ! Hurry ! ! Bdrm. 2 bath. 2005 E ~ ~ON. prol lodscpd 41 condo models at only pat.lo, prof. landscaped. eourta Prestige area in ~9491 Ocean Blvd. $185,000 upgraded, 1 Clearw•ter . sus.ooo C.ll now for 11ua 3 BR beauty can be
the be&(t of Corona del Ail/Owner Real Elt•te 21 ,,...,, today ~9491 YoW"Sforooly 1101.900 Illar. G•ted community 6T.i..3s2o ~ " S I 3 3 . 9 s o . ....,.. POOL & SPA-with atturity panla. I/ m .. ;i:rit3TLEBRROCIC. eh~: Great corner loc•Uon. '1t'a ••nl. I live I.here R.eaJElt.te c ..... _.._. ,011 U.CMdl•S-. Westclfflfflty wl W/atnum -red hill ~ WaDt to tenaia courts Ir too! '· (Jean Co 1 e). ---------1 •••••••••••••••••••••• • ... It coukln 't hurt to c•ll It tr aa · 31 Bel h • n Y · ..,_ 000. LOYI • VIEW Owck Nub about It re· By Owner. H•leerest $119,900. A&ent 5.52·4414 552-7500 ~. 3 Bedroom. 2 bath, -.,~~a "" h 3 br b 1 family room. CALL COl.IOFMEWPOIT ~llACH Plus pl•yhouse. sw wardi.i:ig career in rul me 1"' •· xtra I IYOWHH BUYA
WIMBLETON
in THE
Thl-319l. REALTORS Tb11 lovely modern lnaset. doc run. self estate. Free lrairun& ii lot. $74,800. 540-5683 for University Pk <Village
•
SELECT 675-5511 Span.iah style home wllb clea.rung ovn. gu drop-you qualify. S40-5J01. •ppt.. U> Highly upfr•ded 2000 ORA.NG£TUE
Popular Plan 4, Lakeside
coodo; l ·bdrm. + loft.
Central air Tennis, pool.
Jacuu:i. exercise room,
clubhouse. A great
value! $58.950
PROPERT Es 1---------1 adobewallaand1nceful nr, lrub cmptr. It &.i.stside2stry. by owner + 1q ft . 3Br. 2Ba. 1 DESaGNB> arches caa be yours. aucrowave. 2200 sq.I\ 3 E /Side Custom home. Xtra Ira lot. 542 8953. Sll3,SOO 1ncltJdes land. -i--vnvE Wide tile entry Into Br 2"'1 S., a re.I fami~y 3Br. huge ram. rm .. 3car S42.Qi6J S57-3923dys, SS2·3849eve ~ ~ • rormaJ living room Wltb home with a fantastic car on R·Z lot Agt ---------• s.c.f~fw~ UVIMG crackllnc rireolace ocunview. ~7in · CoUecePark3br,poolNO Univ Park Vall. I. M HOMI This buullfully up-Familyroomtlialtisri&ht VIEWREALTY QUALIFYING Quick modified "'ordha_m RACQUET CLUB
This hlgbly upgnded
pool home U1 vacant and
ready to move Into. 4 or 5
bedrooms. formal dining
room and LOTS MORE!!
Priced to sell fast.
DAV1D D. CAILSOH
llALTOll IJJ.9293 SIS.GOO. graded Buecola Home! for teenace fuo. Bright escrow. 957 0530 model. twnhse. end urut
Exclusive liatlna. l Spacious Living Room airy kitchen with 496-'7722 770-0SS.S GREENIROOI · By Owner. SlOS .OOO.
Bdrm 'tb bl Fi 1 ,___'-# _ _. bar and dm' . By owner. nice I sty 4 BR Ml-0404 or 97S4980 work • nearly o.w with w1 C rep ace . .,..,_,_... Townhouse in Mir• Costa Buccola bll home on E· day. JUST additiooa1 porch. Jn xlnl Large Muter Bedroom, i.na. Hlde-a·way m.ater o eve I 0 pm• n t . 0 Ir •bdrm, 2 ba. Extreme If. side JIM.900. And spark I· -"'--------Coeta Mesa area. Im· hlcbly uperaded with suite on second level. Camino de &lrella. 3 PoPular CAMELOT md . mg clean 4 BR home on Golf VJew, 10th tee, top
maculate adult p.rk. private entrance lo Third level fHlures a BR,2S.,etc.Nearabop-'l'hialovelybomelocated W-slde.'19,900.646-6813 floor, Rancho San Joa-
Pool,chlblaouae, BINGO aarden area. Slump separate chlldrena wing plna. Prlne. only . oo • cul-de·aac within----'-~-----quinPlan 2&den.Seeto 6 laundry near by. All atme planten bJgbligbt with lb re e more S5Mi2m eaay walkio1 dlatance to IY OWHElt apprec. Open Sun. 1-5. 31
ror 1110. mo. cio.e to tbe room-b•cky.rd. bedrooms and bath. Ex----------1 So. Cout Plue. t.beatrea 4 er. 2ba, form•I dlnini. _La_Ser_en_a_.544 __ -82511 __ _
IMAGINE
.. UMt room you'll bve
wi1h 3 bdnnt., Zif.a ba ..
IJ)ftacl over 2200 aq. ft. ; 2
fintpl.aees, ooe in I am.
rm. Ir the oc.her i.n instr.
bdrm. Fast e9Cl'OW pol!ISI
ble.
abopplnc center 6 Mesa Verde Uviog at ita otlc backyard with bub-C--cW M• 1022 forestau.ranta. Many out· brick frplc. corner lot. 2 ~ Best! $129,000. Call blina fount•ln1 and ••••••••••••••••••••••• standing features in-car gar. 900 Oo&wood.
*-Z31J b.aniinl Cardena. A steal Old World C..... elude: 178.500. Phone 751-0774
PLUSH CONDO 411U19.,.. fOIAll Ol'IN 111 9 •"Slt.l"llr11tN<i• atSU5.000.0wnerb~Jy CorooadelM•.r 2 Bdrm. eustomDrapenea evM 2 BR luxurioua Cov -c..M.--MUS [taili1Jj fftl motivated. Call now ! ...__ _ __ ..... _ ri Coveredpa"o ---------• ..... ,_ _ _._, in tbe pre d't~. -... 'QitJ JiljitiF: =Q· \I .,.,N~•• ~ch,ctbi£m?:~~=; °::.;;:,bou.,allB~aBpeQrs 31~!t~n~8~a.•~e =~~ea:! - . .-=···-·-unlta. W•itl~ for tbe A.~GarDoor~~r 1145-2333.ByOwner. KKIS. wm coo.sider all riib In nu.u """"'~ ollen. Pnce reduced to ~~tors H!Un·000· Skylitht in Fam. Rm. 0-. PoW I 026 $11.S,OOO
--~
THE REAL
ESTATE RS """''" BY OWNER 971MJ123 •••••••••• •• • • • •• • • • • •• V Al.UY * 494-1057 * Prtn. OnlY 11<».900 ----640-HOO
~ '-------__) -- - ----
OU!!! EXECUTIVE'S •PRICED REDUCED• 58 1 •s MOVm Spaolab manaJoa newly
2 _ _._,__, rd n.... ......... , of" , remodeled. Unique 0..,odlng 3 bedroom, sty, rewww..,.., up1n ---·or •ft'. landmarll: •lth oee•n 2 bath, 1 year old in area exec home. 3 BR 2 S.. a BR. 2 ba .• cul de .. c. views, OOGHrted to 3 un-
or more expensive den. It deck wtvlew MeeaVenle.$1S,OOO 11.a.Perfectforowneroc· &S acaretreeaumm~r homes. Full price towardl C.taliDa in old A.JobnaonBlu m..-.. cupatlon + Income. ReaJEltate In t.bia Deerfield' P•tJo
SU2.000.CALL75J.3191. f:.'tae$206,950. Brlr.r. YA-FHAIUYEll Prlcle of ownership u Wet Bar HOME Home.2bdrma.den . .OV·
C:SELECT ---------•We have~ ror well u a llOUDd invest-2 Paff eredpatlo.eompl. w/ga:.
T"PROPERTIES CHARMING 3br, 2ba )'OU-Calltoday! tnelll.121.5,000. OS ~"HOME bbqltftttpit,A/C,51ePI>
+1ueet house. Frpl, 2 VA.LUY 640..f HORIMS REALTY Rieb earth tone decor: ~n~I to community pool. Only
51EDROOMS peUoe.R..21ot.Prtnoo..ly. •494-1057• built In bookcues and Irvine's sharpest r~oc:'it~nps;a~·D1·g~\~ $1S7.000.0wner.~7030. mirrored wardrobe California home. Freshly
l CAR GARAGE Duplex. Lovely 3br, re· i--------•I doors. Tile entry, dining, painted, central air. de 1_0wner __ lb_rot_er_9S&-0605 __ _ ME.Al IEACH modeled home + 1 yr ~!!!!!! IY OWHH family kitchen and 3 corator mirrors and By Owner: Turtlerock
Huge 5 bedroom oew 2br unit. Fplces "2 By ownr, Cambrld"e Newer oce•n view ~· ~.S:: ~ draperies. Also rrult Glen twnhme·Plua •1; 2
1.andmuk lD super IOU· car partdaa for "both. 8C17 Ki .... ,and.a 3 BR fa9m Duplex. quality con-~1720 trees. 12.000 below the hr 2" ba; beauL view
Uon. ProleaeiooaJly de-Larbpur. l>rin. oo.ly. By ~ ba 2·r?ftk's 'wke atructioo. 3 .Bdnnl and 2 manet for quack sale. over OCI • bllla; frpl conted and landsc•ped. owner. MO-J.MO • .,.. • Bdrms. $142.000. "-ent/ ff URRY ! ff U RR Y ! mnr bdrm 6 Mv rm;
Abundant st or age. root. ay access nr aebls Owner. 873-aGO HURRY! prol. decor. thrvout incl. Priced for fut sale at OCEAN VIEW. spec· •shoe> g, oo ~ac • ._________ m.lrroftd Uv nn wall.
-Walker & 1 ee
•
t1~y ~view Pool wood _ _. •B 3o-A WAUSTaHT Ru. 752·0338. Bus. $lOIS,000.~UM2-7788. tac:u.lar~lsNewport -2,S00.54e-2222 I 1138.000. C..11 for appt.
n-... dedla • ~ '2 b _...,.. DeW • r., ,,_, U · llS ~ 21Sm.iMBS2 Abaol I t P.€AL~sN llcyliahtaUtnout:eor:·: ecutlve bome with..._ ... _ADOlst ... AAs,_ th•· llAUTIFUL : utey remodeled I& updat:S. ceramic We entry. suo· .... UK --~ ... .., _oo_a#S ______ _ ------------------.!.=======::::;ii Easy malntenuce ! ken Uvtng room, beams. eleg bdltop est.le. Vu ol WOODlllNE WOODBRIDGE: Bnnd
S22A.500. lntereated at cathedral celling.a. frpk. valley, oc:o breeze. ' Br. Broadmoor Laurelwood new Aspeowoocl Lowest
TO PROFESSIONALS IN REAL ESTATE
COMING Wednesday, April 1~ 1978
In the Dally Piiot and Piiot Advertiser .... _ ..
A
PRIVATE
PROPERTY
Wl:E<
TAIBUTI
'1 Q ' ·f,-~·--i ' \ -,~~·~I.;&i;t;a
TO THE
ORANGE
COAST'S SUCCl.SSFUL
REAL ESTA.TE
PROFESSIONALS
---~ --....... _...... () . ~ft~~~~-\ 1. -- --
'
, I , -_,,,. -e:--: I
0.. .............. "· tl7t. ttlit Delly flllet wlll pWl9tl e ..,edel tlMMIM IO IM
.,..,.111 I ............. .....-,-IN-•ftd-1twtw1MitrlNl!e•
............. .......,°"f!PCoelt_...., ..
n.e. ....... ,.... .. ...., ...... ........, ............ ~--..... _ ..... o.llw ................................ ___ ~
"' ........ 111111111, ..... -............ ..., ••• ...,_ o.. • ....
........... 1t. ...... ,.. ......... .
Tilla ........ 9'&11 t .... ,.. ... _,,,....la aft &Cl 1• If 1pp 1rt<nllly to~
..... -.............................. °'9tl(ll CM.It, .... .......
I Ull ........ _.. ..... ~nua.
~ ... I$ lh1'911f ......... ~ ......... ~ ........ ... ......... DAILY PILOT
.,_,.,.__, ... _ formal din rm dre.m pvt. mstr ate. step.<ln "E" plan oo quiet cul-de· pn-.. br .. _. __ m· Wood qu.Al.UJQllu.qersonly.By kltcben. wltb .• mlero-DR. FR too! Priced aacst.2Story,4bdrms,3 l.A..MCHREA.&.Tl bridg;. ~mu.ltaeli
awner.49M468.Court.esy wave. laJ'le fam. rm , belowmkt fullbalbs.lcargar.AtC. 551·2000 hnmedlately. Turn left
torulton. oversized yard. Muter WAU. STREET highly upgraded. Walk to •---4-.. --IO-OM___ off Yale at Woodbollow 1
,... ...... _. Bdrm w/suo.lr.en bath. R.EALESTATE adloOl.a. parks 41 pools. Elmwood $102 000
Corona Hlghluds 4 RUdy. SUbmit all otfera. IJl.J750 49J.ll02 Owner/Agt bu other OM.Y $12,tOO 1S2-5388aft~r5 PM ' ·
Bdrms. 2 batlw, fenced '96.SOO. Principles ooly.i----------commitments. Must Great fmly home & ---=--------
d , AAS.142>55C8 TON I 032 aacnfice well below priced ri&bl. 4 bdrm, 2 Legmm•acti IOU yar ' lur. $155,000. _ _.... _______ , .. t ... 12 900 C b f I f 1
All/Olmef'.87).3820 SUPER SUNSHINE •-;.::;::•Wl•••U•••,•:y•••• m•rae · .. · · on-a, m Y rm. rp c. ••••••••••••••••••••••• HOllE 2 + den. highest _..._ "" tact Tom •l 752-6688 bua OW'ner Wanta ac:tlon. OWN YOUR OWM ~ VU.OWMB quallt.y intertor. $74.SOO. IUY8S CLOSING or:562-02llres. 75-UOI Lars• 2 Bdrm., 2 bath 0-
2 fantutk bu:ya. Harbor Sc bworer Realtor COSTS Y·OODJy 'i\ block to Main
Vu. 3 b r. frpl. muat see. 545-'11113 UV£ IN Beach. Briibt • clean.
844·2'41, &H-1722 Ul4 Exceptlooally clean " Rea.I Ettate Floancln1 available.
White Salta. Open 1·5. V'I mA well decorated Sunwood. rABULOUS •.soo.
Sat/Sun. JITH 3 BR. t~ BA completely r, NOllNS RIAl.n
S&7,500 fenced yard, lush & WOOllRIDGE fUIJLOUS * 49 .... 057 * $1~.500 Our PolnMtU• ta fresh oa
the mar~et. Sinale atory
house w /2 81\ Wtit over
dbl 1-nie +lllett room le bath. SouUalanders
Rut tlluw131·2133
1reea laad1capln1.
New carpets, copper ~~~~C: ~~tJ~ Weh•ve mottevery plan WOODBRIDGE FOUYER VIEW plumbinc, oew roof. 3 BR .uoo. · to suit. your individual We bave mo.t every plan C..t.aJina • elly li1bts.
oo quiet tree lined at.reel. y aeeda and price range. to suit. your lndJvidual 2llr +den. a~ba cootem-
call: Won't lutl From 3 bedroocn coodoa ~and priee ~ po home . $1!9,SOO.
SUIMIT TMMS AG
Reduced to sas.ooo. ~~ ~ Owner will c:oul~r COD· ~0-...~.._
t.racs al sale, MCOnd TD. •.i•9161
you name It! Owner -;;;;;;~:;· m.,.iiliiiivm;.;;;I S.ala Spfflallata. must tell lmmac:ulaw 3 • SA Olt 5 bdrm 10odel1
BR 2 n. bome w l'1ft al SPANISH :.i-:i. tom• w /pool•· ocellD • pn nt.e beach -... P!mlnfloa ~
OPEN SUN 1..fPM
..;;-PiRIVAOY
&75-2311
f D flL '•l I
OLSON
priced at $70,900 to free From I bed.room Evstwlmds 4llM4lll5
standing homes priced •t pic.d at. '70.000 to rree •---------$122.~. For complete 111.andiftl bOmes priced at Arch S.y. 3br, 2ba
IDfonnatioo. call US! SlZl.500 For complete 41 lndry t yr old view io:format.ioo. p ... caJJ home. wm c•rl")' 2nd.
1.1$. Muat sell. Pria only.
fTj 8-3933
I r
.
l I ..
, r . .
.
1
l
I-:
.<J.I
f
Print. ._ ....... , Step
do'#n •l•t room ! O.c h'plcl Jllde·
awa1 muter •ulle!
To•nbom• ~l•• ! llsey!I Call
F ORESTE
OLSON . . ... '
, , , . •
....... ,_.. Hoae1 ~We OtherlMI lllt.te Ottwf' .... ...... "-"u.tw.bllllCI ..._.. U•fwlilhMd ..................................................................... ·••···•················ .............................................. : ... ~....... '°''Wt I ti ••• '"' ..... ,,.,,.+r JOOO ttL~.,...., 't.11100 ........... U06 D.ePoW 312' J .... ,.................. ....................... .........•......•...... ............. .... .. ........................................... .
IESTllY
IN lllPOIT
4, 8~\ mtlr bdrm crwa:a.&1n, loll cl new llmll. community oool fl . a11.ooo. c.r1 :
MUSfa.L " ... HTPINCIL ••••••••••••••••••••••• Altnctl lb&' lbe dli Wbkewac.er view aBR.
THS WEB< :> OI MA y IN& lt ae Neer lnl 10. frpl, a'7tta. '5.2' • yrl;: 2~BA. patio, dttlc. ff111.
1 a.-... I ~ tn xlnl ~hr trm ~ Riv• m.-. (21.3) 18'1~111 1ar. s ~ wlk lo bch " .......... CAlltY ITSll.f .. 000 nraa 20'lt do p /P ~. trfS/mo. No pets ~Ill 1ot.onAaklntrfoo1y wiu. ••mall tacreue in .w ft.De. PO. zm NB c.,i• .. llMdt Jiii pAeue •~attSpm. ~ en, o era. reote aod ~ down to t:m3 ·--·-•••••••••••••
• sconUALn )'OUwillbev.ryctoeetoa Palm DeMrt CIClnC». at>r. a br i ba.. credit ref. re· t.. 1212 IJ6.JIJJ P 0 SI Tl V E CASH 21111 pvt peUo. E.xcluaive ciWred, DO peta, ~ Nr •-•••-•••• .. •••-•••• FLOW! Tbil (oa;rpiea ta offp Canyon. Teanls ahooPlnt. 211/9H838 381', 26e, air coad.
an a larte prlde of chat>. Pools. lited cru. C... .. Mw l2ll (f1lk, CJIQ , drps. blt.ns.
oweetlbtp ., ... There --831·180'1 mtrcowa--811·-aie two 2 bedrooms, and ·-· •••••••••••••••••••••••• _ __;,.;.._~"...;...;."----
two a bedtoomf unit• Olllof~ Story book charm, 3 Br 2 F ••V.._. 3 .. 14 ri.h encloeed • iaraa•• ~Dflrtr JHO Ba , old CdM. f09 Z4 -• • ar:idllreplaeee •••··-·-· ... -•••••••• Larkapur. SIOO mo ....................... . · flWMl Your OWi\ Tennis Ct!
.......................
1100 .......................
NIWPOlrfCl!ST rlneit p,ark. "The ~1i, IB 2.3 .,, .. Fam Rm. lMlO mo. 48 -
Juat l11ted. An Im · II~·. 2 BR. I BA. Pl\Or81W1 :rm VA-FHA Drakes Bay Dr .• 673-31Ml LUXURIO\JS3BR3BA
TUIMUY~ Ylkinl OOach IA Irvine'• d Ptft!*B~DROOt~ .. Spyalau Hills. view, 3 Br ~:a"E!.~· ry~>
maC\llate, beautlrut'1 de· A den. Euy fioudna. Red -ns.t• 1no. GAJU>ENTOWNHOME. Uln •'<ct•••= cont.eels Br Townhotn• RUReelt,)'~1SOO , .. GUM.IT • ......,-.at Jcariara,es. LootingByTbeBeach! FrplR,BeamOt P ~~~~~~~~ Wt&b faruW di.olq fLU 1-4JJ."l4 Save,thne,1aa&money Muc.hMorelM:IO (983J) = =::rJ~°"~ •FANTASTICAL eea1i~~w H .... 1.757.9613 CallTbeExpertaToday e~~!~s e:~:C:.:1s ~=::.:~~ Famllies & Pet row:o~T~~!~f'~~ot:, OMA.I YOUR OWN ~g'~~t ~·~Rf r· 1 s~.
br 3 be. fam rm. compl Catalina view trom tbe .Anlll1la crpta. drps, Hurry. b'O' "" Coz:y Flnplace (6460) 11 ~ar ' : c. er J·
remodeJed country balcony. Real11Ucally IWW•ldt now . Tom Lee, Rltr. CASINO .. ._, '31-4555 ~· nr"':Ch\o:.~301!
titchen,stainedfdeaded priced at siaa.ooo Call 5•FAMIL'\'PETPARK _su._i_a. ______ + COtD.ID«'ClaJ land. 450 HonorlQJ.credit canb 9ll'z.eZ22
f I t rted t ile• &U·'T211 ·-'"'··' I Z U ..... ITS R·l klU. service station•. ...:..;.;;,.,.;,,;.~-----aa1, mpo · Beauuiw 3Br. 2.8a lu.x· " ranch. motel. mining 4 br. 3 ba. ra I& ref, adlt.s, °'911,~ Real !lit.ate rdwd floors. Shutt.era ury bome In corseous ~ mile to beach. These cl.a1ml fr warebouse If no pet.s "'75 434 Pouuet L.A.euMA tbruout, view locaUoo. family park. Avallable wo n 't lut at only YoU have the know bOw. ua.COM67>5218 Mxnlk-••ec.lt J240
~ Walkt!r [; ltrn
TatdUJ IWFFS beaut. d~. amenitlts for lmmed occupancy $320.000 Great lncome can m11ke million.a ·-•••••••-••••••••••
table .·:CS~•:;&>; 3 Bdrm "Bonita" plan. aaklre ()penS.t/Sunl5 l!NeJ'ythin1foranact1ve trade.up from your ~\his" more can be 2 BR 1 BA. ear. refnc. New·elecaot·2 bedroom
bedroom.I Ir den VIEW 60 Royal St Georae. By famlly . 1wlmmln1. duplex or 4.p1ex Watch .,,,.,,.,, forool,y S2.94DOOO elec range, 1creened <SS60> or 2 bedroom +
boCfte comtructcd with ~~~ev:l.s'b:it~: .. Owne~~r~~~~CM88~~~~ ---------• recreational areas . empire irow. Call now T~avaJl.Call • porcll. nice patiooK' ~ den (~75>.0ed..-lrw1n-flneat mat er I a ls : Sl3t,tOO. Own / A"ll-maplficentclubbouse~ for more Info 247-Ull mant. CbUd OK. _,. dow home 5 Blodus lo
fln11bed wlt.h richly SJ3.«15lor&U-Zl•eve:. by builder. tore er mucb.muchmoreaJlfor 540.3666 LandDlviliooforlnlo 673-80S2 beach. Pnvate 2·car
cuatomlaed details .. -....._,_11111111111111111,_ .... _.. .. 1 Beck Bay view. 4 BR. By Ona-Newport Crest $25,000. INF2870> BENWNKLER E INC CosteMeM lll4 1ara1e. Fully main·
q\lallty cabinets. ap· I~ rm. s be. a frplc:'1, Condo Ocun/CoastaJ Ctlf••Ptldfk ------·-· --· ••••••••••••••••••••••• t'lined yard. Adults. No
pllancH, hardware. •JUMIOVA* Sl7UOO 23111.rvmeAve, viewlbr,Jba.eodL&JUt. ~Realty LACOSTA Ruauc seclualoa awatt1 pets.lnqulre53SlS\bSt. carpet.a. View of ocean. t wwk wtt.b Orange Co. 'IWml· Trade. 1131 362A aeei eond. Gaa frp&. wet Z'10S • Ste208 you at lb.ls a Br. zbe pool _m_4_>~ ___ 1 ___ _
sumeta. mount.al.oa; pre Veta only. Homes to bar. retreat. Tennis HO-It» Custom 48r, 2'1'JBa. 2 home in lovely area. REAL FIND! s BR, 2 Ba.
ml um oel1bborhood. Sl75,000. For J.nlo call: Slit POOL courts. pool. Jacuzzi. ........ ei"* ttples, wet bar, 3 car s 5 5 o . A g t w/cpt.a, tncd yard. Only
• ~ck aale a.llow1 bcqer Vet.All. 541--0800 $10,000 DOWN 0 a y 1 #6 8 3 · 2 9 O 6 ~··x~ 2~2:: ~~fi; a'" cara&e· ocean view. Bee 646-8646/645-3009 tllO. 1163-4.567,a&t. no fee. some ••l•cllon In ~-.v---..-2 stry home, 2800 aq ft. wbnds/eves648·'18 1_ .. 5 ••• k 1 Near Lake ark. Min. to Cet. Oompaay. $134.900. -----------,-linl1hlo1 detalls. fix· -._. ~ -e+r Owntt will carry bal. or c ~. ,.,... par · 0 bcb. l"' BR. 3 t)a; 1·3 BR, wkdvs (114) 729·2554 Hideaway lo thi1 vme c.ov Sma.11 beach cottaae .• 2
J rent. MIJ. 7U1 .146-9573 ' d t u g tures.otc.1297.500 IAYYllW $200,000al$1,S85mo. m 1076 2~ ba. 1·3 BR. 2 ba. 5 <nC>729-a422wlmds ere touo ry se in BR. clean & In aood • 12 lc2br2bamobllebome mac. Huae rear yrd. No ....................... •IYOWNB• garaaes. fr-pies. Sl89.000 Ollof~ home. 3 Br, 2 ba $495. cond. Sep yard, $325. --= ••r:m1111ii1Jm In exclu. Bayalde ViU. q7~~Uytn g n eeded. FIX & s·vE Ob' wide F.V. 96.1-5511 each. 1700·1713 Alabama. 6'5-8808/645-3009 S3M935
I'
---·-•• ~-Cl bbae pool j c riv .,...,,.._ ~ ~ Hunt. Bch. 536·1718 ........, 2600 --------
.. 3Mooan:b8ay laza bcuh. p011 . b:ai0 ~lip:--100--1 -_-1FF--D-l_fV_I_ $19,500 u · Sportsman Motor Owner. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ecl:t~eri!tboJ ~~~GR,:_EAT~4 18~2 B~.
LaaunaNlcuel "'7500.675-'1903673-78'8 -View ot ocean & hllls. home, fully cont'd, xlnt ---------HAWAllAHCOHDO • it w cp ~ n yar · 4'6-1222 131.0.3' ' --Charmina tradllional GrealfixerwlthaaBR. cond.6*830l Mo.ytobeMade! 139900 Rochester540-95:17a 5 kids• pet OK . $4~. O,.. D.tv home ln a sylvan seUlnf. 141 1 Un1ts In Los Aoaelea. Just $3,990 down. furn .. New 2 br condo Pool. spa 963-4567, •et. no fee. LAlfllla.... 1050 Harbor View ffome1, ~to.m-bll3BR.dinrm. :~flAY. r1!~: ;U:,f •IYOWMB• Several just listed. Xlnt fee simple. On ocean From $375. KJd.9 & pets WALKTOTHEBEACH! ••••••!•••••••••••••••• former model. 1M7 Port 2"'1 BA w /ocean view Double wide adit pet caab fkr#. lb!Gross CAii I b I o K Bk
U___._.. -utn Vu coodo. C't...JReJd. from u-talra master Clreplace. +secluded .,. ;rt P' V ''"~>-• .. io. Mlke·A"'. w l poo · 9 ona OK.~12 r f&253+2Avallllay lat _._. • ........ ,, ....-d•o , ...... v or 4tb BR uwltar • · · _.4-1 _._ ,,. Coat. Hawaii. Call R.J . 11 .... 8 ""--""·ce! (5447 1 l..allmaVWaaeSbr.2ba. $1.54,IOO 64().9019 ate. $179.500. Call Pric.t;'.eu. · 9D-u. SUPllls.ft.IX lticholson.R.E.49Ml65 2br,oewcrpts.newd.rpe. -... ......,.,..
A/C. &eDDil. pool. clbbse. 56m3. BERnlA HEHR y IDda ok. No dop. $390. RENT TO BUY m.soo.Ownr.497·1426 •uNpt ff&t.I by owner. " REALTORS Mobile Home in Sad 3br,fr-pl.owner'sunit. + 1-=Me.,...._ 662274 Be uUB 2Baw/Pat.Jo ....;........;,,,,_ ______ , abr, 1~. ram rm. l&e 21SBelMu -..4121 dlebKk'• newest park. ruce 4.p1ex SllS.000 Call ....... 2100 ~Yanf tu~ l3BlSl CASALIND'ACO-OP lot. p.900. ()pa Tbun-~ tha.D new. Triple 955-Z2Jl!O Owner/A-. .. ..................... 3 Br 1"'9 Ba, !pie, D/W .• __.. 6•1 .. 11:.ss ZBr. Zlla, IMW~1:°'at· am U.5. 53S TUstin Ave. ....... wide W/Wet·bar, booua· A rro. 1tove, refna, lovely Fam ... wt • -~ ell. mlmlnd rm. e.ee _... Nl-3641 •---------c •' 11 w 1071 utll. room It appliances Two 2 Br houses on I lot .,.:~. tune. $t.50. &t&-7S28 &nor maJ, credit cards
pailo.•750t.oloan,s;M5 teWPOttftmGHTS ••••••••••••••••••••••• ow a er & e In 1 Eadl baa eocl 1araae. 0 ... _ balh ...._"_ N _-_-__ b_.;.._ba--,-,-,-mo.ownerS40-3'9l THllLUffS Exclusive Cliff Haven. 2 transferred. Make offer flreplace i.n front wut Elltabllabed lncome pro-3 oau 2 ........... ear ........ .., 3 r, 2 w rp c
TTuly 1ractou1 adult It)' Cape Cod. 2 frplcs. 4 ---------1 837·N81 Xlnt k>caUoo for acbool.a due Ing boysenberry Ellt.ancia MOO. SmaJI child & pet ok. L.aglillllNlpll 1052 bomeofuncompromised BR.dbl.iar .abeolulely * * * * * * * "1hopplog. Private. farm In Sao Juaquln 84&-9510 ~.546-WSO ••••••••••••••••••••••• quality. Dramatic 3 prioc only. $178,000 IMCHAAMIMG 5 • Put "TO P1eetwood 54,900. Owner wlll coo· Valley. 3 pattels avail•· BR n-F R 1 --------•I bdrm. end unit. t.oUJ!y 7.5i2·20000wnJagt 12'x52 Enclosed pptlo sider 211<1 TO. Make of ble ·80 to 126 acres ~.IV.Br. big grdn area 3 2 .-. am m. poo
CATAIJMA SUNSITS AtC Tranquil view • ~~ ;~ ?.p:lr:;,o. Shed. etc. Ad.It.a. No peu fer. 76U68&Ail locludes home. barns. No sbanne. c::;;. pe~. ~ac. pr~b~d
Walk to the beach from Spacioua patJo; no detail HARBOR VIEW HOMES atalrstdownstairs coo· Sl"™X>MJ.m4 corrals $72 .000 to Non-smokers • re 9 mo. en·
OWi near new 3 BR. 2i., overlooked! Sl79.000 ~on~co. 2BR & den. r~e domlnlum. 3 B<trma., 1"'2 .A.c:rHpfor S. 1200 BEACH TRIPLEX $315.000. req. 954 W. l7th. S48-0358 n1ngton ~Jes
BA.&ownhomelnprivate AG~ 140-5560 an • super con · batba.carpeting,wiodow ....................... S.Cte•llfe HOIUNSREAL.TY E/SldelBR.verypvt.blll BR,2Ba.vacanl&ve~ coaununltyw/~crcatJoo Sl'2.S00.644·0U3,owner. coverings, buill-lns, two ~llf• ...,..-•• .r Walk to beach or Del * 49 .... 057 * lot. Kids/pets OK. $375 sharp. $46~/mo. 1st +
center. Tennis, pool , SE.AVIEW OPPORTUNITY lo buy car carage fr patio. By ,._....!, D~g. S,OOO sq. Mar Shopping. Quiet ,.... 1-492·3710 !!0.2_17sec dep. Call
sauna, + private park-Port Royal 4 Br. 3 ba, 2 into a partnership and owner. Mon. thru Thurs. """""' .. ,, area w /"reat 3 BR 5.02 ...,.,.. ••~H ........., · ing at beach. Ocean • atory. Beaut. view. own a percentage or 6 (days). call 846·2158;,, ft. near new home. i.n • nit U 2 BR ... ~ l BR, focd yardl. oew•---------
greenbelt. view•. Uke to landscap'ft"• .t-.., etc. ~·-• ·-'ti In the Bluff•. Frt. thru Sun. (da""') & beautiful area. Owner ~l ers u1 · pper1 kitch. $275 per mo.
? .a..1ot-ft .. -000 .... "'At"> .~........... .. ~-anxloua BKR un t s w ocean v ews .. ttS FULLPIUCE 642·2839 see ._...... ... -. · By owner. $279,000. 1911 Buy 15% o1 the deal in a evenln11. call (714 > m•>1'78-S7l7 Justlistedat$160.000. ~ FREE UTILITl.ES
~......... YacbtCamilla.640-4ial0 2br, 2 stry townbae. '93-0581. ORm·2080 BERTHAHENRY
4tWJ20 4tl-tft4 llACHTIUSURE 2...,ba, ftplc " pallo is REALtORS
At beach $12S. Kida, pet SI t5 Dowwt p--a 3 BR, 2 BA. fplc. patio, dbl ot. Nr. all. MUil see, g0. .. ,_.... ~ many fealurea. Ina hat ! Sm Fee.
4''"24 ll 110.1050 Cosy aolld bome, near yours for only SIU,000. OUCH! PLANS FOR DELUXE 215 Del Mar 492-Cl2l ~~~~~~~~!j .......... CID_ .. 2 BR l o-. Owner_ SCG-75.58. 4' UNIT PROJECT $79.PIAMOMTH area..551•7~ ~Aat.
-.... ~ """"" ... Two + acrea R·3 in Deluxe 4 Ptex. Hnta Sch • ....... Y-...Hr hardwood floors . IYOWMER Seller ls hurtlnl. wttb a Hemet. Bulldinl permit or Hnl& Harbour. seller
F.astside 2 Br. gdnr loci. $'l7S. 2br. KJd ot. LI focd
Near beach and boat $115/mo. Yrly. No pels yd. Must see. $280. 2br. manna1. Lake of the Water pd. AvaJI 5/1. 1416 Ii.ii ba, dswb, near all. _
Ozarb Mllaouri. Road E. BnMldway,173-5639. Hurry. Sm fee Nice. "
frontage. New 1urve1 by Beaut Mesa del 'Mar pool IOOOll more avlil. now .•
lu:ensed eD¥,meer. lroo bome club clt>ima 3 All areas. MS-4900A&t
3 Bdrm .• 2"" bath bome. $135.000. Niil Hl.a-3 Br. 2ba. ram mer. mansion to sell. .ti mere. 1275.000. Ownr; l.Dldoua. P .000. Prine
c.loN to IChool • lake: rm. wtwetbar overlll'g ~·~ ~m~ r!'!u.~ dagt (Brian). 714-729·92'3 only pleue. agt. 9'19·3432
MW paint A carpets plus ~I. carved 18th cen dinina w / approx. 3590 ays, 729-5373eves. OCEANFRONT OPLX ar-~t ~Priwt~~·t~l rplc. gourmet 01t1tch. &q. n. .• in ocean close luvEt'TORS super 1oc:. szee.ooo. Good plns. Delailed survey BR 1~ ba sSis 751.2Deo , .... .,.,.. \,~ "-new c Pt s . Pen C..plstrano Hiiia. Under "" • rinan a&t 673 1020 at•l.SOO Fri/Sat/SUn l-4 $185.000 1 New lialln11. Large --·----·--· ---map. Olanl oaks and · • · _ ... -w .~_ .. _ .... _.,..,.____ $160,000-at 's a stea . 1.s-oo e y.a. v SHa 'TER -u15 ·-.............., 1bb ts my best boy by parce -.. per acr . ~ ...,
SIO,OOODOWM OPIM W9 & THU• tar. call me. Ben Cbam-BKR. <n•>S?Nell 3 Units 10 9 x gross
hickory In a grassy New J BR zi~ ba. dbl gar.
park.like setting. Mu.ch pool. $595 Also 2 BR. l 'h
New 2 sty 4 br a ba. 2 IM pionat ORm-0S30 $107.000. ~ ~~c.b.af.':~ NIOAY 1 M ., .. • .... AWY .. ,,,,, lliLn ---------1 ' Unll1 11 3 x eross
wild game. Deer. wild ba, open beam ceilln&:,---------
turkey. Cox. raccoon. M9$. 631·21BO. 3BR 2~ BA Year around fishing . ...:.;.;;.;_.;......:... ______ ,...,.,,1_,• • • nr
TOWERING
PINES
ot .... ooo. Owner am· IWl.IAUOAIL SIZOOPIRACRI f:'h9:it.tnprimeCosta
lou:a a: wlll ftnaoce. No NJMIWATIRROMT 300.AcresNearRedland. Mesa areas. CALL
WllderMU area. Ideal 3 Br. small ramJly, no ocean. enc 2 car ear &
loc ation. Good high pet.a.App't,64&-3490blwn pat.io.$435/rno.982-0876
uaW'Yinl needed. 2004 Creative lovestment.s 556-2JB60. ~acbt Vi1llant. By IEAUTY 14c-t5u .SELECT
cround. Picture post s.8pm. Noagts. Bike to beach from this
cud beauty. 'Invest ln Su.uuung 2 Br 2 Ba lovely 2Br+den 2ba con·
Once 1round1 of 3 Owner ~Tl'18
bdrm. bome, perc:hed•---·-----Reduced to 9835.000. 2 CHAIMll tM C=f!.-=rr;Q•· PROPERTIES
atop fOllin& bWa. Quiet, 11.Ulll!!S Sly. 5 BR. Mqniflcent u-i W
America. Tb1t transac· Be p 0o' do. Tennis. PoOI. Z car tJoncmbehandlech:om· -..,_~t. a $3()0. car S425. U0-2323 .
pletely b~ mall Write: r"""'""' 14945> 646-7175
TRUSTEE, General~· COTTAGE ... -... --.,.--.-----. ~tined DellhbortK>Od. .....,.. view °'" Newport Ir aur· 5"" ~o -·•••••••••••••••••••• Eaatalde Coeta Mesa. 2
near ld>ooll. Room lor $99,500 round.Int hills. Docklna a BR. 1~ BA detached POaSALllYOWMEll aeparate writ.a. t new. cepta.nce Co .• Box _,,, Qu-•-•"c 1 B ~ ~-
pool .... IOO<Zl> 3 BR. end unit. P'rpl.c, facilityfor3boata.Super CIOllldol.DcbotcelocaUon Dta._,.rlatlbr2'°'ba Good Income. Carry
ptdio. Penn local.ion. (acinC a beaut. lffi!D· fthB condo XJnt 1oe. C. JI&. IOtDe paper. Ptln. only·
Oaaa• Beach. llilsoUri .... t. ozy r te..ti •• • .....,2
415065 or rall collect Ut.U Pd! $270 <5484) •••••••••••••••••••••.-
(3U)392·8'143. Ni1ht1, ...... '31-4555
l"'A i ' ( A)j,.4 •• A.
Owner/alll3M551 VAUIY 640.ttOO belt. IOW"llWt kitchen, C•ll f1S-19Z4 day1, $1.38JOO.Aft.er6,494-6044 E~ee '44-2148 =· & pvt. Patio. t'IJ.21.M ews. llnedon Choice (314)393-3'122. Honor maj. credit cards
IYOWMB AMCHOIAM VACANT 23 one story units.
Moatqo HVH, 4 br 2 ba, 4Brtwnbm, 2 mi's to bch. TustJ.o. $525.000.
..., "'* Cute. clean 1 BR house, Wtllhcl 2to0 l&e fncd yard. grdnr
--••••••••••••••••••• furn. $290 mo. 6'&-6817
' . ' .
1 I ' 1'• ' I' I lam rm, nu ctpta. LI .. VISTMIMTS tm.400. All 548-7739.
2 Br oo R·2 lot. E.clde
C.M. Room~ build.
CASH Fresb11 pamted JBr. 2Ba~ 3244 ,,._.... HOUSI yrd, lndscpd. wood deck. 1714) 496-7111 DI=-~ ~ Open Sal/Sl&A 1·5. 1955
Siii -f 91 t t. 5 Port NdloD. 75-0634 2t4'ivi.v...... :'~=e~=e 1100 Owner/broker. 548.eG50 ,_. y_...._ ram rm, 2car garage. nr. "••••••••••••••••••••• "9 A....... Elltancia Hilb Sehl. 9426 SCOTTUALTY mo. lltlst +dep. 631·075 UMTAl..S
8eam4Bdrm,2Ba,Fam ---••nt1SUIF Nice 21tory, IBR, 2BA
rm. hple, I car garage. SMiU. nm SIA ..,.... sllftK~ prden bome. Quiet IUI'·
S. Ctlf, INiy Ouples near Ute ocun 4 UUUA llURU roundl.Dp, cloM to ever·
----------• bdrm upper 3 bdr~ 3000 sq. IL of almple Jtbini, comm pool fr RV
tl11l11Y1ef9 1067 lower. la 'heart of .ele1ance. this unique accesa.CaU_,.7882
....................... N--.-..... H•..... floor plan b Ideal for en· FOR SALE b 4Br. !Ba.' 2nd 1tory .... _.. --u. _,,, tertal.nln1. It otrers a • Y owoer,
library. Central a ir . =.J:. ~t~~s~~ formal dln\ng room. 3.Br. 1~ ba w/lBr apt.
Sl12.1'0l _.. 1ummer renla Is! I gourmet kitchen. huge tllO.OOO. AftS493-.LSZ3. ....;,_.....;... _______ , MO-USl master suite, 3 car s.t.A. IOIO
locll 1-"-Price 1arace • much. much ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mual sell. LaP'amlHa more. Shown by appoint· $9 llG. mr. 1-. ba. UPffaded. meotonly. 131.1321 -. ....... J. I Reclucect• =~ri~~·-80.0-··,·M-AR·l·ET-·1 ST~~ ...... .::
dr-.r f0t .. UOO. T~ decorated le ffftwint wood accenta YEW RE.AL TY up1raded S b•droom and lob of .toraie. Din· e-.1722 'T1M555 ~comer 1ot, Harbor ll»tCM UALn t.ni room and ft.replace.
V1eiw 1;1ome9. Vin or Bit SS 1 ·2000 Lara• lot wttb fnilt trees.
CHroe Golt Course. 1---------BKfll«).1720 o.n.-anxioual IY Ow.8
~t1 3 8r tiome. lfn·
mac. Room ror pool. 1501 Ll.ocoln Ln. Open Sun H .
64N'113.
· Udo Sanda bome, 1 blk
from beach. ready foroc·
cupaa•y by May 1.
--------·~~~~!!!!!~~~! =· 87 Ownr/aet,
•••••••••••••••••••••••
12UMITS $315,000
TllUI $110.000
X1m C.M.. loc. Lra. unite.
Bltn kit. Good cond.
Spendable now! Up1rad in& & rental increases
pou. Very attract
flnance! JIM WELLS.
REALTOR 557..QIC o f19.3ll31
P0SJTIV£ ~H FLOW
5-plex for .. 1e. totally re·
turtUhed, ha aood area.
$120,000. Aak ror Tony
GeD1e at 11'"980·5121 2'.IU12-3Slll. Prln ool,y.
--------2 BR. 2 Ba .....•.•••• $13~ SU..7133 Pool. Jacuzzi. 3 Br. 2 ba. 3BR.2 Ba ......•.... l650
-;:::::;illl&:-----1 fl'l>l. dbl gar. lrg fenced 4or5 BR. 3 ba •..... ·"'75 ............... yard. 11'76 Kids & petl
-1 ok.495-l786or67~0 •...................... ~-
.......,........ For leue 4 BR. rrplc. f.!rD .. wa&. ••••••••••••••••••••••• garage door cipeaer, fam R.:... ~~ c..iilldelW. 3122 rm. Mesa Verde, 1475. ·~l'I'.. MAIMT AIMED ••••••••••••••••••••••• 646-6310. 7~·07511 :>'
CLOSI Walk to bcb. SUper 3br, OOIACULATE, J BR. 2 833-3600A11Z,.....•
.._,.. .. ,,., JOOO TOllACH ~~J:"ir~nopeta. t., ram rm, frplc. wtr
............ ••••••••••• 1beae eleven unite are . IClftner. amoll:e alert s35., •s~ C
EXCHAM6E
WANTID!
4 Near new trtptu .. , ln
growth area ol H.B. Ex·
cbanpl foUOwdta &r up.
ltEALTV INC.
714/M6-1311
ooly $.1$0.000. Encloeed lnbw 1144 I~ rm. crpt.s. drps. 2 '~ ~MPV5~fRVftlE
praaes. Owner II very ••••••••••••••••••••••• pat s. fncd do1 run & hse, --------
inoUvated. CaU lot more Woodbriqe w /lake, pvt vei. lnln area: huge New 3br 2ba house. Frpk.
info. beach. etc. Eaaton S 8 beaut. lndscp d yd, A/C. tennis. Jae. sauna.
Fam Rm. Din Ras, Uv 1prnklra. Neu/Npt S'8Qmo.64Q.1044PM
QUAIL IB Rm. den, patio, 21411 scbll, nr So. Cat Plaza. ;~ sq.rt. Prof up1rds, Avail 5/1. t830 mo Incl WALNlTf SQ-3Br. 28a .
_ 752.,920 tno lndscpd aircond. Plu.tbly ganmer. 531·'7344 Twnhae, ardn ~tie. pool. '* QUAil. if, ~TelAOI rum .• tl50 mo. to mo. lae. Eutllde ZBR 1BA enc pk, adlta OftlY S395 mo.
0oen1•t1830P"' <Uofurn ne1otlable>. aar, 'remodeied . ~ ' "
LtihfarS. 2JO 562-4414 U75 /mo. 111·1956 / RSJ 3 Br 2~ Ba. former
.......................... ...,..... .... l16t M!MnD. ;:.:!·~~~
OfflCIU.Snl ....................... 3=1"" be, frplc, covrd
HuoUQllOD Baacb UDO tSLE-3 Br. 3 Ba, · Cpt/drpa, bltina, MOVE RIGHT IN! ~arp
21.000 aq. rt. lot. our or Genoa Bch. New 1ud.1SMl7I 3 BR 2 a., •Jct'· kida" HOME+ l)W•itv Pacifica Hoapltal. 5 kitchen" Ba . 0ettt•d S.ctba1areahlefor lse pet ok. On Y $415. ~ Pal.DtaSbop CntrAClvlc furn. $J.200 1yrlseorcon· 'br 3ba, 2 ear iaraae' 813-C517.aat,nofee. JUST llDUCEDI 0:nttt. sm,ooo. Dde.r mo. cau 115-56211 ~ crta. Jacuu.1. llOOI'. For tease asr. 2.8a patio.
Sb.irp tlll'ff bedr90m David S:~e RJtr ._. Available illla1 J. ~ home, pool /tennl1 Jclb
holDIWl&Jlopea beamed EtBluffbeautf\un OCtlVU mo. No peta. 5"-IOTl, fadl."35mo.659-5360
=·:.:bl: J:t::::d PR.UlER·lLOT IN Pa.Im home. I& pool. avl
0
toJuly 521-1711.atal SUt>ER DUPER I s BR 2 ~~.:..:~~ =t::,1::;;.~ l.tl00mo.MM330 3J:.:..~BQta?:r.0:. ::S,~~~
mut• oa rUl'i for "5,000. <714 ·~-· ..._..&Wu1h•1• Jl'd. ~+lit ldut ._.,.._
$&41,000. Oa1l usoa th.bl or A'M'EHrlON BU1LDERS ••••••••••••••••••••••• sec. eo.&MS -------/lalte----_,_,_. ..... a.oroa a llllilta + bot)d 4 m<n G1111rtl J20J Huie lbr kids ok • i l:.
IMl.Qo: Dta't fOIWel we _.. .w/varleae.. ttll -. ...................... ~ llut 'sood loc ~a:--~ J· ~ltO~n oDdo and Wa.IJAe•• C-. Mua. BOll!!ll'INDERS Sm fee ia:t:Do.. av Rm Da petio '21.: atnlle fam.lb' ral«M1>cee ll~:ir· Ul-412• or ~OUleotala nowlMMloo.Aat. aq.R. p,.;,f :ifds Ir avau&ble. '37 A.U &N&I .u pdc. lndMpd. a1r "°°
Samp'9: '275. 2br. Ctrclt lbt11 _, to mo. la (Piu.hiy
f.llJ Bacb lurp uUl pd Kidt. ~. dswh. Save on funi.._.ietrie) 15Ml14 S21HBrtlda/pttayct t~. lalni ful '
ID3Br '1dl/pet.a Pl Afl., ei.&Ul 8-ttap Prk •
LlfE."tDllUlDVJCE ~..r. 3 k + 4cft, ay. 111..oeu tie.A~. ~scar pr.
mo • fopCklD for and ....... ...-.--------"1 "Ir'"' ..... Ot' eDQ• tldtr lM w t.,tt.• to
purcbaat. No peh.
chlldran OK. Owner.
ISi· n11 or MM*
~mtn~
I ' ~ ~ W I' 1 \I I \
,", 'J (DA•~., ·' V'~ dll t.(41
Sawild~ New 16:2 bdrm 1Wtlll)'
adult apta ln H planl
from sno + POOla. ten-n11. watftfalla, poada !
From Sall D*o Frwy 1---------1 drive Ncftb oa lleacb to
S100 Stea1t th1a 2+ 2 Beaut Quin,'/ PaUo
PetaOK (494.5)
llcFtdclen then Well on
McFadden to Seawlnd
VWate.<n4)18S.5m
.... llACH •• .. •••••••••••••••••• Clftlce apace 1000.1700 aq a cmc CINl'8t Room. / ldtcbeoette ft. Bat. pen.
BRAND NEW. Spacious '50week&up. 871-L54lor873.atMO
deluxe a 3 6 4 llr. All ~ • KY SUITIS *
RusrlC lBR COl'TAOE ~1~ 1.ar. bre ~ IAmli>UtllldOI' Inn lD Cc»ta AHAHllM -------• ''"" aid -nu_,.u ll.la{We... Mtu., 2Zt7 Harbor, Ceo· Pro.1110 c.. ff All ...... u. p ! d Beach Blvd. 518-1718 trally located, 235 roomt. n __ .. f .. _ ......... -.. Build
Coffee Shop, located lo
prol'J bld&. S day opera·
Uon, 7:30-3.. Buy direct
from ownr. lllS-Ml9
... -
9-•Yardtm> '(5414) MA.NY wltb kitchen, UllUA o ADKnO • R Im• 6Jl-4HI 2 BR 2 Ba twable, J)OOI, p1:a1e 6 TV. Swimmlol l.n•,, .10 atorlu of
HaoormaJ.cs:edttcarda ~·.!!"...!.~~ .. pool, Jaeunt. aad rec. AnaDelEum'• ~at office --""" ...... -D-n-• --a.1 space. ,., ., w)' ace.a, E-SIDE.1 2 BR w /encl room. -i., w_.. 1 covered parklof. All yard. a p.r. SJOO mo. ~18r,2Ba n.tea ltartiQ from $54 • ..mce Included. Prime
Ad&altl. Now avall. BlltAruat~~Aa) ftelc. 6'54tO
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9UICKCASH
lit • IA(t Trillt DNd i-;...;.;...;.m-..-----1 .._ atnQCed tar &Q1
l'UIOQ, Crtcllt DO pro.
blem. a,"°" OD ~ lg. crtutd value of .)'Ol.ll
11ome. ean ~rot rw.
coumousWonnatloa .
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~?!!•.~ ..... ?!.~~ ~!!~:~ ..... ~!!~ ~~~:.~ ..... ?!.~~ ""'··. w-.ct 1100 ~~~::! ..... ?.'~.! •.••• ~~ ••..• ?!!'! ~~~ ..... ?!!'! ""'·-··w .•• .-..A ••• ~ •••• 1 •• 1.00 •• aw._w..-·-1.100. • ••••••••••••••••••• ~ ..-.:4 ........ ••
Atcoontt0 f Baolriol CASHIBS OOOKS. breakfut tuncb Dtl..-y ,.,._ IXICU'l1VI GENER.AI.OFFICE i.i·-------........ ASST. ..l~S£M81.0S Sa...,.&LomT..... F/Ume.GooclPay. •dinner. Ila Barker's, For busy Newport SICllTAaY Tustlllare..eoodtypilt .....S
H.,. Mme builder lo ~ J>art,Ume, mmt be fiexl· Growthco.Sloc~Uona 212E. l1thSt.CM Travel A1eocy. Must Executive eeet'elary lo w/sood 1rammar • T l ln'llle iii -*1DS aa ~ I p1aMlf'rDS ble Ol'PVfwCJ'O'l¥\h. w train Co Beneftt.I bavemWlttyclelttoow M.ubtiD& Dlndor i speiliD1. Dictapbooe • emporar'1.au co·
dMdual to ualat OIU' IMlJlll'8 KEYsTONESAVINGS Jrmo'cA&wMlt COOKS freewQS. Wol'kar>ross ~So. caJlf. buildeO:. IOme l.murance aper. =Fr-~eec1~:-0:
aadqll'olftuucleJ re-Dl.Y ~eata. 11.V. ~ 28C50HarborBl,CM I>Qs•NllbhAvail hrs lia.y lloa-P'r Hrly Super opportunity for 132-'Ml pboae. Goocl 'I NO ~ Tbe !d-J c:ao· Good pay, wor1t1o1 B. BaJdridH Apply in person nae +mUea1e.~9817 t,ate.over, cWa11 orient· FEEs. pa ·
atdate mut bave: A cmds. Jobs. No U· E O E M /F' CASHIER 9a.11Mpm Moo-Fri Dental uaist. chraiCSe. ex-ed penoa wltb top aldU. CMIL RIDA y · baste ~-back· perneeeu. Call Today" . . . Ftr.1ood wo.-11:·1 cood & SMAQ( SHOP paodlJl&duile.. Llvlq lo Excellent salary & Fatpowio&eleetroolcs a.!Ma. .. -1'"•111
• ... IK.
4'r0'1Qd, to finaoclal ltarttQmorrow. benefit.a AP l.y lo ~£ CoutHwy Cdll Ill 1 Vi j benefit pac Ir• le mfl muat est)and amall 448W.18thS&ree&
,,
' • bAot recoactmat.loo. area w/followin1. Ex-,... • S8l-fOaO lo lrvloe lodutriaJ area f.~~ lkllls. Ute Harbar/lDsa.t ~ pmrat ledler ~O~ office • Beauty ()peraton C.K. Ho L .L lps T ~ &:eo..tllw)''CdM .. oo e o aru. Beautiful aurrouJMlloP ore at.all. If you have c.o.t.alleaa 145-20'3
" In addiUOb t.be qualned IJ overload per'clMS-Ullforloter. ~J=RY· 2l640 Harbor Equal()pporEmployer Dental A••'· Cbalrslde, bulkli.Jll. Pleue submit esper .. pleasant~~~~~~~~
candidate must pouas -lo Ill! a... Aulst • · · Coots (Grill) wanted. P" r /time. Good benefits.. ftlWne with salary re-phone manner • Uke Help wuted mature
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d
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sJnt clerical 6 com· 157.0061 •tt•I C:ubier (Food> fulJ Ume Ptr all ablft.a No aper H.B 893-5032 846-3540 quire me o ta to · divenH\ed UllilJllDellta, -for coUn&er •tor munlc:ative skflli. Mu.at 3123Blrcb-NB .l!lllper'd. l'ut arowin~ f'd It ' 'Mr D' 3CJ5oE cat . ' c1-a-'*ied ..... . this ls the job for you! ..--be ble to It unde -. · · co needs sharp ac· exper pre ' 0 es. nee. · a, · · Dental Rece t Deakonl _. ,.... No. 202• Worll in beautiful w~itr••• work li> .....!..-6:.:Harwtth curate-..-C1R'c1D New.porter Inn . Hwy,Cd.M. Good be!eCH1 Hl· Dally Pilot, P.O. Bos mod-ero bldl bakery /corf~ bouae . .--------· • • 714 /844 -1700, cal l . · ·P · 1560.Cost&Mesa.c.aur.. -.no EDP. Pleuecall ar app. ASS&el.YJG-Help A/P , Payroll. bank BarbaraextS23E o E Cook/waitertwattresa. ~.846--3540 9Z6ZB w/coaaeaialpeople.earn, ___ . ____ _
ty <Hna. Poodoroaa "1D lit« part time. Day atmts. Ute type. Non · Call for appointment . good pay Ii benefits. Homet, T52·20'71. 2082 lhitl. Good workinl COD· smoker. Good salary. CASIIlER 673-UlO, ut for Ed or Dlnta:' A.Isl. cbalmde. X-FACTORY Uta• EOE. aw .... Center Dr .• Ste ditiom.Call962-41648 ec.t.aMeu~5077 Pt-time/Lunch llyrtle. E.O.E. ray lie. Costa lllesa. C.11 , .. _. Wlll •-•-.~to caltrorlaterview 100. lrvlm. • 833-0427 • 541-aOOO. ~ .. ...... DECC
AmNtioul OoQple w~
to mamp a small bull· .-t/UIDe. wm not ID·
c..faN •/ JOQI' ....... Joh llmt be wUIDJ to lam. }fr. 11.all,eGllM.
.•1urOLOT._. .... Bookkeepen Counter help, uper'd 3:30 PM. Full-time. *~ ~ Olurcb organist director, Fashion bland. F/llme Dental Aa1l1taot, ex· 65'1-115'4. ...._ 54M731 ~:::"~ 1:,,~ We Ari . ~l9~~ attnd. liP,llime.MCMl3llO ::-s~aaln:~: FILE CLERK, P /T , .... RIDAY
the around up! Op-1'.....tlattt.. ' Counter ll.rl for dry clean· 7-1, Irvine. '1S2·'1555 monU.n1•. Ute typloc. 1muraace otc lo Cd.11. IBomebe!Del' ~1 tor advaos=e-.,..~I UJ lnc plant. Mature, phones. esper please. Koowledle of life lmu..r. =.:rI>~!-:r~f:.:: In Need af aertcSlal TYPIST :.:::1.~~.penoa.HB. · S35 =r!:l br:i =--~ Pan Newport be1pru1. P /Ume. cau 1ad1 .. · Llve·ln. noD· p L HJ u 8'1W444. ICDObr. Waterfrat bm. ·~t•CI* Don Ii Quall Sta., ftvwCfihil ,.._ Cou •-ltb • bl ~c.:..._ a1una 1 · ___. •-._••at ht B.m ....... ,_'"'CODY"-==211 Ell· NewportBeacb.. -..... ./Dicta---... p.... ..eac DI --.--wnc•-................ m.-1,.... ----, A p .....,._ man•-meot a_..eoce 5-+ IM«e ~
De. Pftl. XlDtulU'f 6t--------• ~•-~unta •Ya· ISlat wa;t:d to m~ie • ~ AaA.. ~. cbr, h..&-11 ~-:.21J!a L-~~...!!,}~"'~ Houaekeeper, Uve·iD. benellb. Noa smoker. AVON UMJ .... ,_ ll.BM Executive lar1e famll)' bu.aloess NB.•~ dys. Ortlio exp" ~ · " ~ iP'i.wotl-mT~ 1Sk ~~r~~'~:t~~: l 'llfr AVON ~!f!e~~·sf:~ =caJ Part time only. can Mr. R.D.A. req.SU.3S35 ~~· lS:v11~:e'u':rt!i ~ cctna:.!t= ~:-~·rm~ 1:::
v.i.eeat lbptt&l, 1030 llftl. vouchers. COMPANY NEEDED !?*'Piiier, 1"'33-1284 btwn DIMTALllCB'I' School District, 29.41 ~ c:ompe~,. Call Call for interview. w. w ...... SudaAna TO LUNCH WILL TRAIN. Good IMMEDIATELY U"O S.A. olc, or. So. Cout Altoo'Ave. Intoe. (1J4) Bud•UI0-.,.,...5 873-1215..Be&req'd.
benefits (3163) Looc " Short Term As· CUSTODIAN. F tr CDlll. Plaza. Exper lo Ina & 5.'iM900 ...,..La -• AA' Slif 11t1Mr Sell lo frlenda and co-sJrnmeota. Holiday & Must be bard wortdnl J1esboG'd. Sal open. Call F.qual 0ppor Employer GiU.. ~ R 0 USE K B E P B R •
Smalt co. io lnlDe. wc.malr.erten
8
boQ1.."4>ln youronolfieveryee; ~~~"'*paya·b·"600._ ....._ v a cat Ion pay . w/refs. Call 673·22H 551~ Combtanion CUatoalet P/time, atudeat OK, Clerical aalary + .DAl.IWIV 1les • ... Ro•pltalilatioo plan -~11 ool .. _Fri. GAUB• aenioe, =·lite bk· 9UJOperhr.119tarbunt. __. h .......,. am , _. DE.NTAL CHAJRSIDE F'""~ No L .._ ... N beQJf1t.a Computer lD· $100.JOU Mll. You•u.uve .-vables foe beac area avail. ,........ aper nee. kp'C • m at.ate· .-.e•part .en-ace. wpt
pat. Good= req'd. 1our own biulneu MrvJce..,compaoy. Do Cuatodlan. pt·tlme, ASSISTANT, xlnt op· Apply in r.eraon. mema. Call llarloo Cit Bda.6'2·1225
can Ma. Up Older, ..ttbout livioa up your joamalentries.&poatto Newport Bch. Call eves; ~-ray licen.e ~::to:::~. ~nB 'J:! Glem..Wor53!'ft Bouewi.ei, atudeota,
SM-1170. Or appl)t at: regular Job. To find out the f eDeral led1er. 873-1880 req. · Llodlleyhm-3pm. EOE. Girl wanted to pick ._, :Z::::'1cpenonable
Dis. llllJ o.imltr' &A. more, call 540-701t Of CllM 3l4I Dri CUSTODIAN I P· Tl me DISI( CUI.I parta 6: answer l>bOQet. can Mm 95.00
=Newportl"rwy• Zmith7-139. ~ l9800 C 0 •• oeededlor1eoeralclea.o-tmmedl.t opening 3to •All.VAID lvao'1 Foreieii Can. brormore.P/U.meeves ~__;.------1 A1'09Prl lll~h. Ille 11anu1acturirii com-:.Oy 14M741 iDI and help around OW' lf~.bif\. full Ume. Ap-(J) All lhifts. Pref• re-SCS-19112 wbda. Noaalea. 581-9149
needs panon to band.le (Acrouft'om c:burcb. P1exlbte boun, w lo penon Oftly. Am· tJlied. Newport Dunea. «GS-7_,,...,...
1>11ables, recelvablel on Or~Oo.Alrport) butmutbeavallablef• bauador Ion, 2277 ~o •
pesboard ayatem. In· EqualOppOl'Employer Sunday morolo1a. Harbor Blvd, Costa eaoc..5WB 'r 1 •d•9C
terface ·wltll all del>art· l250/IDOaalar)' ·call Mon Mesa. Saddleback COQeca, Mt. Req'1 GJle!.d a plutlc msu. PaYt'OU EDP out a.teal to Friday, t to3, Noreen GmeralQffice aloo Viejo. S.l nqe pe11a lDcludiq lit arti· at boUle. Cood bmeftt.I. MAILC&lllC· Barnea. Commualtt Dlabwaaber, up'd, TYPIST Sllt·llOH pet mo. cJe ft final JUpecUon.
(l190). ~ anll lo our COi'• C2IUrcb. Cdll. Mt-7• ~~peraoa PABT-TOIE =7~. Ht I02, 103 Bluepriotreadlqreq'd. BOOKKEEPERS~?! .. ~ .. ~ .::~·=. .. ~~~. :F.:.~!..~5 ~ =.-..... ...,..
UNUMITED volumemallroom. l\lll tlme '*1tton ~ to won da19 or Digbb. =. bry=.i'*~ EqualOpporEmployer
Xlnt .... tieneru.. work· a• • video dl•rc • y ~ IDOl'llll G6W Tow ~ . SECURI"" OnnieCoalt Plutica
101 conda . Apply ~/Popera&orour mf:t~ IDllOOO~.NB • Employer I ii 8S0'1r.18lb9t.C.M.
Bab11lttet. Mat•re. AGENCY --~ ,...pomible woman lo ~COULL eo01pµter. Some ex· DOllESTIC, bacbelor l~ENJS IMST~TIMI
are few 2 yr old cblld. pertencelldeairable,but fa&ber w/3 cblldl'e ••.U.OllFICI ft11 l'GrwlDdowtiidDl.Over
Ollll04'maft5:JO. '91.N15S l=.a~· ==-~=w!~ ~w:=.·. oa,1112 aft. L4lq •abort term ... AIRUNE ~,!.:::t •per. labJdW neeMd 4 days 2082 1tmp1Qyer M/F csncy and apeied. Work '7pal. UllJ,,,....S. TJpe tpproX. ==c= ,..., a cbllclrell. 11y CUii /T'Y9 ST m pieuant mvirc:nment ~wpm. Top pay. NO Help u. mab MCUrit.1 a IMS&llUMCI
bomepnf'd. MW8I Mlc:hehon-..-1 ._ .. I wltb 1ood company Dnftamm FEE. PLEASANT a_perteM9. Baper"d coaam'l llaes a. ed • Pbonel, tYPiDI, would benefit• lncludiDI 2 Landscaped Archltec M .. a..,.llC. Dul ro1e1 ot aecurtty • •l•De)' underwriter.
bJSltter want my #212 IRVl.._.E pref. expu. Ftr. Call weebvacaUoaafteroae bn1 ft.rm baa lmmed. 4eW.11thS&l'Ml __._ to ... _ -'rUoe '1SMD55 bouH M , lloa-Frl. 2 • " m.aoo. at a . Ask for 1ear, company paid o P e o l D I r o c.o.t.a llAISa ~,,.."., ..... .. •--------ebUdreo. C.UAf.3'03 ~ ll1D 1 Har.._,. ..... .,.__.. traveler. It ta"e• a --------BOOKK"'EPl!lR eo lln.Pertlna. lfOUP lnluraace, credit · _, ......... -.-~ ..• -... -. ... ...iu 0 • • union, etc. ApplJ at a:p. ~5111, ult I ~"11• ..,.....,_,_, ..., .... INSURANCE tbu•laatlc aharp. ac· CeddtilW...,.... MO•tco••T LlndaorPeCe Ins• a1neere person.all· __ ,.,,,..ST curate, full ebarae, v-~ -General clerk for Intl. ty. If JOU can meet Is _..,,.,.,,. "."..~ rmeraJ ledler. t.b.nnrial ScMol DAILY PILOT Driven Earn ema In llktt Q>. f\lll cbrC ot are« hundreds of lmpor· Dllded for bie•uUful N. 8
balance. Salaf)' com· Earn up to S100 per wk. 330 W. ~-· Cll c om e e a r 11 .A JI • 1_..... bendn111, mall taot people everyda,, atllce. A.cdaraw =·
menaurate w /nper. ~~11ttacemeot bctweln bounof 2:»1:aq, delivery, L.A. macbloe, fsmlac. duties. you can be WO(kinl ~ &::;:!,. 6 lo•u~~·
Waterfroat locat1011. · · 8:00All-5:00PM Titnea, Colla lleaa ~ll beaefltjJ. 8:80-SPll. •In 1-t.baD a week. apr --·
IJ75.9800 ~al cam~ .. 1 ... Call for appoint.meat ~ Bch area. Apply. 1118, 2913 cat•pboneaNoeeded. J\all Ume. •to~ wolten.e• _.. ... J)laM -.~ Dalmler.8Abwtweolled ~rapid LDueaM to l ••I IJocMeeper, F/C, 1 Ii.rt ,earnSta-S20per '4z..4321.eat2n BW • NWlll't FtW1 or 11\all.tlme po1ltlom, _. ~ ......_ AHllable ~;i;:ii;;;;~~;I office, apt rental•. ~.i.!a.~~ .. f,!.~bCall Equal Opportualt• ~~acceiitinl aOPll-· callban.5*«1'10 lforms ;\;roiabed, 5/1. ·• ::.~~:i::.~ Jnloe. =7 . _., _ _.. . .,.PW &Dpk>Jer
1 =f~~trAJl-~PM f'7:~e~.:= =~:..~
-..r'd c.llift, ..-ac· ~ · COOKS DeJlcatealCllGlrl ,._, C1eaD dr1vtq pectap. eau OI' awlJ 1nl.....:~!!!~~~~:_ cow.it. not.ff ete. All P/l',S.12. ~ • Bl'Ukfat. U · f\a.U Us:ne. 18 yrs and card. 'Mat appearance, ,....., ~ ~are~. Never ~. per'dcnl1.Xlntbes\efits. ~.See Terry. '95 E . .,. lJ or old•r. Nprt · •11PM.5dua,,tl.17112
a ehaqe to applicant. .~~a SeeChefl.B.,N.wporter l?&bSt,Cll. Bcb/Cll ., .... Cal BIJRNS Armitrool'Ave, lntoe. Call Carry Pox, --.s ~ Inn. 1101 Jambotee Rd, -=s.1betweeoS.S. ~'7811 Ooalla1 ~ At.ea: opeolot in crowiDI mft. N,B. EOE. Dell very Kan Early ---------i 1...;.;;.;._;..,.;....;.....; ___ _
ey. 2'1'llC> Harber Bl. OM bl.Swa w/upr in AIR, morDiaC L.A. Times in Electronic A.uemblera, w liltl II S.C-fty JAMTOllAL
Employer Opp A/P,P/Ra.Ddotbe.r1en'l cooc.ura. Nwpt Bch, 3 ;30AM· GperOl'tralOee. Apply• E lloa'1"rl ..... 5 lira. Employucntt <tc duties. Good \)'plat, Coult)' Club Conv. f :OOAll. U50 mo. 1!l penon bet.wn t • 11; s. .. .,.,-. •so Br. tis*'d adul\a ··ii!ll!lll------1 ~-~·~Pl\~~~"· Homs.5CN061. m.z515ot ... 14U OptoDr HB 2222 •• 58C2 Research ~~o..-erStnet OO)J.1Awrt.t11.-s. 1:--oo , ......... cauoos. , .
Call tor urtber info .:.;;jjj~;iii;;;;ii~;~l;;;ii;;~iit 'Equal Opportanily m.4*'8-7Gl .... Erilpk>)W lla.l.JF.emala
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PART TIME
EVENINGS
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. . w,w ' 111.111'1 if tori 1:r~~
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•
"'Walk·in RefJ-Wlne cooler,
•, a1 new 1850 .
MS-2020fM2.8'105 W IPM.
.. '
RCA 21" Color Conaole
• Sl.50•
Call al\ 3; '83-3139
YAMSWAMT9
Select AatoSalel
'•M.artm, Good cond1tklll. .
~
9712 .......................
19781MW's
ltMEMOW!
COMPLITI IODYIMOP
MOWONM Home~ Seleet VIDI
I• aearcbiDI for top qualitf --vw a.od DC" I..,. ... wl1Bu co pa)' Top -..:noM c»
DoUar.Olll&tave-IMWlftAI" ... Nile S.. We mar ts..ve ,_,.nm • tJ'. l I{, 9120 IUt M. Ila._ ...._ cw In oar lnftlltGrf. cau
'I 11 llm 77MIOO UI todQI
--·-·-·•-•• --------• IJl-2M04'Mt4t
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IJl..Z040 49'"4949
CREVIER
. I . •
BARWIC K DA T<;lJN
'I I I I'
8 31-I J/') <19 J.JJ/S
EXCB.LIMT SILICTION
IM STOCI FOil
IMMIDIA11
DELIYBY SALESSERVICI
PAR'J'S.LEASING
C OSTA MESA
DATSUN
................... ~···
lt71Nll410S&.
Compt-. ,nth stereo,
cNM caatft>a. pwt. wt.a;
dowa • two to pa .
(0'28C}.
$14,ffS
lf74tiCUOSI
Complete •Wl 1tereo,
pwr windows. rila only
34 ,050 low mil ea. <.MZLIW}.
197'.-JOOO
WO lolr ml*, AJl/Fll atereo caaaette,
automatic, •lr eood.,
pwr. '"*"' 1tlt.Wia1· lmmacUlatel (OllSLN}.
l\•I ',,)'•\,It I() j\tP,)J,'f\
I\ f I j 1 j I f ~ ' 1 I .f
Ollf:t4el COUMl"Y
YOLYO
EXQ..USIVEL Y VOLVO Lar&9ll Volvo Deal« m~CountJ!
71 CHIVY MOVA 2 di'., low mlMa, I cyl.,
auto.. power 1teering,
radk>,bNm'. <•BDI>.
S3ttt
G rotti Cht•• rolet
I 8 J I I 8• ,, ~ ft I• d.
H.,"" .... , fl 1,.,1< .. h
8 4 7t.087 '>'4"1))1
. HIS •••••••••••••••••••••••
•
OVER 100
CADILLACS
TOCHOOSIROM
ATAU.TIMIS
I
,
I
•~. 2-dr. e cyl, xlntcond. IBSO. 1-------1
SCl.Q'Tt W llarqul.s, PS, PB. PW,
auto, air. llJnt -or SI a..y 210, 2 dr Sedan, make olr.173-f'T55 all or ~ part of, 17202 OoCbard #4. HB, anytime "JI Zepbyr, 4 apd, 4 cyl, 4
orlG7•aft&PM dr, like new, $4000.
77 CHIYaOLET t74-SZSS, Fran SSS-1511
CANJCI '7511ontqo 11X station
Clualcl 2 dr. Loaded wacoo.AIC, $2,450.
with full power and all 8'75-GS.
theatne. (031.SMIX >. 72 Caprt.1. l~_ mlles, au
$5999 brakes. n.wo. beater fr
CHl'fii ii
cloclt. lluat aell $1400. 581"'50.
!.~:r-~·· auto .• .,............ "' .-uaa. air cond., decor --••••••••••-••••• Pl'*•· (Ser.40'74.1&). '72 3SlCJ, classic, A/C,
$3H9 AM/FM, new tires.
GroHt Ch~¥ro4~t
I I 1 I I ~ach ll•d.
11 u"hnqi..., l<rach
847 ·6087 549.3331
mi's. Xlnt S2700. 752-2032
'72 M~ lfil, P/I, p/b, a /c, II Ile nu USU.
53fr7161bet10am-4pm
'WT, comp rblt. nu tlrea, 71 a CAMINO vinyl top, batt, ma11,
vt. auto, power steeri~. du a I m u It. $21 O O. ndio, beater. Only 600 ___ 1318_. -----1
mUea. (Ser.Gl.ZJ) 'M MUltazll loob lood
$5599 nam better.'new paint, hi
74 CHEVY V AM f;,'lmf.200/bat offer.
~ Tcm. YI. auto, power ~ Must aee aod 1966 Mustang, loaded,
drhe to appreciate! must sell, $1500. Eva, un11SO>. _a._2582 ____ _
$3999 19157 Coov .. 6 cyl, auto. fix.
GroHt Chnro4~t
18111 ~achll•d
~ unhnrp°" l~ach
847-6087 549-3331
er-upper. $195.
840-0788
Classic '85, new traoa.
xlnt mecbaocial cond.
260 VS. Deeds paint, $1000 Ci.rm, 640-9384, 957--0237 x~~·;:·e~:.1 ·p.!:t~ <M•bil9 9955
llelll covers. rims, batt. •••·-·•-•••••••••••••
SlOll0/8..0. 53Mln•. Pbll. '75 Delta 88 Roy ale,
All/Fii stereo, A/C, tilt •~Capdeel25. v-8 wbl, P /S, wbt w fbU1
......._ 70X ml. aru. vtQ)-1 top. Kut aelJ fut.
t&allUnt '2$t5. P.P. 681·0700
•• Impala ~-Vinyl top,_Ger __ ._., ____ _
PB PS Clean PP fll5. PWo Hl7
Olll-.a7!7 AA. 8 -•••••••••••••••••••••
'II Chevy Impala. Runs '75 Ford Pinto Runabout.
,. lllOCl.pltires,ndsalrttle 4 eyt, • apd., All/FM
WOIL $125/ofr 64~7631 ~/tape. One owner, ------· ---excelleatc-iadlik>n. low
C. ,.... 9932 ~_:.. $UIOO after &pm. ....................... _______ _
•COllVETTES '7Z Sta. W1n. •·•pd,
19711 AM/FM, mags. ori1.
OWDS". staoo. 4M-5551 NlCESELECTION! 77 ._0 HOWARDC ... Yr'Olet rl"I
DOVE•QUAJLSl'S. RUNABOtrr. Low nules, <Near MacArthur, Jam-V6, auto, power ateerina,
boree•Brtatol> air cond .• All /FM.
NEWPORT BEACH lltlSWW P.H
'7t Corvette. buc,kskln.
mw ttr.. many xtras, 74 PIM'r'O t1,215.157-0336 -------• 4 spd., radJo, beater.
G.-t ecooom.y! SUper C111• 993 Sbarpt (e5KSY) • ..... •-•••••••••••••• Slttt
'74 XR7, wbt landau on
bhae, A/C, full power, Alll!Jl, pc95. 492.2525
Dldtt 9935 .......................
GroHt Ch~vrole-1
• 18211 ... 'X~ ll•d
Huntt"'JI'"" ll•och
847-6087 549-Jll 1
"75Spec. edit.,wpd,A/C, ,._a 1111 9960
A)(!F,11. _,_ newb rblL ~··-••••••••••••••• tl7'0 « bst olr. llust 117t pty. S.teWte Sta . ..iJ.. DJS 131·5100, UL Wac. 9 peu., p fS. p /8,
1K1,eYeS55Z-4371 Air, Gd. tires, trans.
Cooler, alr sboclta. ,_.. 9940 tnDer b.ttdl. CB RadJo
----······· bad. Good Coad. Sl,800. --sms. <>ranie. S.A.
l •Plymouth Valiant '72 4 ONG c1oor. $1350. Pvt party. D m.lASS.1.
r--..~--.. 1171 F\ary W Plymouth,
~...=::-eo:: .... ~
1ood cond. 8 cylinden,
power atee::;J_, and
bnka, a1r Vflr/
den. Best offer. After
IPll • weeltelld•
.... ll03I.
"11Arrow1. lo ml, Best oner.
"74 Jl'ard Grand Torlna 551-0290
S..-Wqaa, AC, PB. _ ~-t -• ...,,,_,_ PS. Xllt a-=hantcaUJ. •• .--, ... r-.uaa. "71torcifter f15.GJI new +Ne. brake Job.
-------· ---• XIII& emd. $L5GO. see Oll9t '7114'D Ooantry Squlre, or•T.m Jdal CIODd. • .., mu.•-------.-· tz500......,. aft tpm. "11 ~ 11,000 ml ••
---------· xlnt • snso1orrer. Far Sale. DD Ford Sta-551-ICD5 =~:alrlue Sq. ,...------,-9-,-.· ---------... -............... . mo •ertwo, • spd.. new w Le Ilana, !tall enJ., dlll&da.SlGOO. 90od trau. car. SI00-
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Radio. anc. fuel tint<.~ trmM.,
gauges VOT. 8. 76 rubber, etc.
Onlys5195
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* New 178 4-Wheel Drive SalMll'bcm!
Auto. trma. big V8. extra ,.... ...,
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aux. tank. Sllvetado equip .• end much morel
Only s11,395
* New 178 Chev. 2-lon
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Select your bodyt Heavy dutYt
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* New 178 Dlesel Pickup!
Auto. h'lnl.. IQtlngs. pWr. brlkea. Scottldal• OIJCton, and n"IOr9f
* New 178 Chev. B Cmnlno!
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Only'8995
•
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24 MPG coe••
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,
7
Fire
It's plain to see th y · • udent teacher
and freshman footl58U coa at Fountalh Valley High
School. is loved and a mired by his students. Carrou.o
foU'r\d out just hOw far that love and admiration extends
Wednesday during fun and frolic of school's "Almost
........ Anything Goes'' competition that w~ part of spring
fling week on the BJron campus. Pie was made of shav-
mg cream. •
Firemen
Injured
In Blaze
By ilTHVR R. VINSEL Ol .. Delty ............
Fire e\¥ept through a Hunt-
ington Beach townhouse early
today. killin& one elderly tenant
and causing an estimated
$325,000 damage. ,
Seven firemen were injured
fighting the blaze. One of five
townhouses was destroyed.
A number or irate neighbors
complained today that the fire
deparlm4!Dl response lo the blazewasaJow.
Fire offic!ials said that initially
they had been given a wrong ad· •
dress ror the blaze. They said
the initial alarm was received at
12 :30 a.m. and the first units ar-
rived on the scene 10 minutes
later.
Investigators identified the
victim at the Landmark Homes
condominiums near the intersec-
tion of Newland Street and
• Atlanta Avenue as Mrs. Lillian
Hansen, 76. She bad moved into
the developpient four months ago and lived alone.
She apparenUy died of smoke
Inhalation before the fire spread
tbrou«h the cellinJ( into a com· mon alllc shared by the five
units, thus awakeniog other
sleepl.'11 tenants.
Jqveatl1atora said Mrs. Hansen lived in Bulldin& 409, at
IV71 Tulare IAne. in tbe complex
fealuf1n1 a wide variety or rffreauonal !acllltle1 ud .a
auarded front caie. · •
So • raldau tOclay were
velMmtoUy •n&l'Y at;Oat the time lt toOlt for firemen.to arrive
at the 9CeM.
"We could have 1otten there sooner." says Deputy Fire
Marshal Ro1er Hosmer. ..But
the oriainal call reportinl the
fire lnYol~ an incorrect ad·
dress. .. And there are sever-1 dlr·
terent bulfdlitgs on Tular~ Lane
with the same street address."
he added.
He said the original caller also
reported the bl~ ap}Jleared lo
be at the rear of lbe ·f\ve-bome
townhouse structure, leadin1 the
force or 25 firemen to attack it rrom that direction.
"We base our flrefi1bting \Jc·
lies .on...tbls.~' Capt. Hosmer ex·
plained, addlne that 1t appeared
Mrs. HallfeD was probably dead
by the time firemen..receilc.ed the
initial call.
"We could have gotten there
sooner," Capt. Hosmer added in
reference to tbe initial report in·
volvln8 a wron1 address. "When
we first got there we were also
instructed there was a woman
tr ped inside ... if e explained that in such
caaes all efl2rta are first d~
ed to saving nre before property.
depending upon how many fire
fighters are on the scene.
"The problem ls, the bulkllng
has a common attic ud tht> fire
quickly apread," said Capt.
Hosmer who added that as aoon
as flrem.n learned they were
deallnJC with 'a common attic they Issued a second alram,
brlnglna Fountain Valley units
also.
Jn vealiiators found Mrs.
Hanaen'a body 1Yln1 in lier bed
with only m.Vw>r burns. indlcat· i.DJl she probably died of smoke
infialaUon.
lfbey aald it appears the blaze becan bi the llv.tDI room, but no
actual cause bu yet been de· termlned. seven ol the 25 men amoni
nitae fire 'll1btlni teams who
responded 111ffetecl arious
(lee P-aE, Pa.ae AJ)
.,...., Pl• ....... ~O'o-11
FIRE INVESTIGATORS TOUR BURNED OUT RESIDENCE I,. HUNTINGTON BEACH
Thll Waa View Through Uvlng Room Window After Fatal Fire Early Today
Residents Rap Firemen
'Wrong' Address' Delays Arrival At 118 Blaze
Residents of the Landmark
Homes condominiums io southeast Hunttntton Beach
have criticbed the re pc)n.se
time·or firemen -called to a
$325,000 blaze whlcb killed one
resident. •
AulhOriUes say the first tr\lcks
arrivl.ng from two statioos about
two to three minutes' driving
time Crom the complex at
Newland Street and Atlanta A venue went to a wrong ad·
dress.
The address. 5-id Deputy Fire
Marshal Capt. Ro1er Hosmer,
was given by the first ciUzeo to
report t.he rtre and there are
several multiple unit buildings
""at ~at location.
One re•ldent , Gordon
Goodrich, said it took at least 10
minutes for firemen to arrive
and that be had. -_ rather heated
discusatoo with me dfftc:iall ~
da7 over what maDf reslder\ta
(eel was an mdue detay. • • ~
"It was jinl a catastrophe and
a fiasco • . . it was a damn
crime, .. Goi>dricb siid..
"When I beard the fire. I
called the fire departUJenl and
they said they were alreiuty roll·
tog. I hWlg up and watched. I had sort of a bird's eye view d it
because we live in a two-story
building next door."
Goodrich criticized firemen
ror their tactics in battlin1 t~ blue tbat gutted the five-unit
structure, which has a common
shared attic space. •
The construction allows for
the swift spread of fire, C.pt.
Kenn~dy ~yes 1980
Bid ·ror-·Presidency~
Hos mer noted today. c1llng
ot ·fit'es-wbiob-Nwe raged
through buildings 'th common
attics.
Goodrich said firemen did not
even spray water on the roof.
.. There were Just these
beautUul arcs of water goin~
over tberoof." Goodrich said.
Fire o(ficials explained today that in battling sucb a blaze the
best tactic is to chop boles in the ceiling rrom below and spray
water up into the shared attic
cavity rather than pouring
water onto the roof. one factor
that could cause rollapse of Ure
structure and increase dangerto anyone who might be inside.
Purse Theft :
Wort.hBuck
SAN DIEGO (AP> -A
man grabbed Aime
Roffe's purse. knocking
the 80-year-old w-0man
down In a struggle and
breaking her hip.
"You fool , you poor
stupid fool," shouted Mrs.
Roffe, a widow. as be ran
orr with her purse.
Jnside was $1.
Rail PLln Aired
LOS ANGELES <AP > -Coun·
ty Supervisor Baxter Ward bits
called for construction of ' &1· mile, $3.8 billion rail sys&eJn,
saylng It is needed to keei>:tbe
city from Srinding to a standittn ilY the year 2000. Ward's pfan
unveiled Wednesday also calls
for a massive expansion of
Southern Callfornla Raptd
Tramit Diltrict's 2,4oo:bus fleet.
• I
. . -
,,,.,....
SUNNY MOMENT -Sharing a moment with President .
Carter on an unscheduled stroll around the Tidal Basin
in Washingtan are, left to right, Vanessa, 1, AhUa, 5,
and Julie Stepanek. 8.
Spring StroU
Caner SmBlbt the Flmoen
WASIUNGTON <AP> -President Carter is proving the
pleasures of sprine can overce01e the pressures of work.
Carter left the Oval Office oo Wednesday for a stroll amone
Washiniton's famed cheN')' blossom trees. He took alon1 h1a
wife, Rosalynn, daugJKer, Amy-, and daucbter·in.Jaw Annette.
THE ftllST FAMILY SPENT an hour on the wait. durlnc
which they posed for photograph_, and talked with other stroUen in 70·degree weather.
Carter shed his suit jacket al the start or the stroll around
the Tidal Basin whHe Amy later took off her blue. rubber-soled shoes and walked in her bare feet. • ..
THE PRESIDENT SPOTTED MARY Flowers or
Washint(lon fishing an the baain with a cane pole and bobber rig. She had a bucketfull of fish.
Carter asked the woman if she bad used minnows as bait
and she replied, "minnows and worms."
Sale Rejerted
Tape of Strangling
Offered by Escapee
LOS ANGELES <AP> -A
Massachusetts prison escapee
says a tape he wanted to sell to a
newspaper was made during the
murder of Kathleen Robinson.
one or the 13 Hillside Strangler
victims, the newspaper reported
l4>day.
The Los Angeles Herald Ex-
aminer reported in a copyright·
ed story that George ShamshaJc
told the paper in a collect phone
call from prison Saturday that
\he tape was made in a van
while Miss Robinson, 17, was be· ing strangled Nov. 16.
Shamshak said the tape con-
tained .. the background sounds
or what's happening."
SbamshaJc said he possesses
five tapes relalmg to the
murders and that their contents
show three persons were In·
volved in the slayines -one of
them a woman who later
became a strangler victim
herself, the paper said.
ShamsbaJc, who was serving a
prison term for armed robbery
in Massachusetts at the time or
his escape, has been questioned
by Los Anceles police in at least
bwo strangler murders. Police
say his tnterroeation showed be
had "special knowled1e" in the
case.
"' Shamshak contended In his
talk with reporters that the
tapes be offered would clear him
of Involvement In the murders.
"I have Deftr kified anyone in
tny We. l just happened to be a
will ~DtJ du'J)e -o pawn.
Somebocly herd aomethln1 over
my hud," he is quoted aa say.
iog.
DAILY PILOT
The curly haired convict said
he offered the tapes to the police
but "the police diqp't want to of·
fer me the deal I '4tanted. I want·
ed immunity, but they want to
prosecute me now, from what I
understand, for two murders."
The paper said negotiations
with Sharmhak boaged down
when prison officials refused to
permit more calls to Sbamabak
and the newspaper's editor,
James G. Bellows, decided "not
lo get into checkbook
journalism."
Menanwbile,. Shamabak's at· torney, Henry Wynn, denied his
client bad any tapes a.nd anpily
accused the Los Angelu Police
Department of attempUn1 to
circumvent SbamsbaJt's rights
by helping the newspaper in·
t.erview the convict.
Wynn said be was takiq steps to have Sbamsbak transferred
back to Massachusetts, where
be told of the stranater kllllnas.
Wynn accused police Lt. Ed
Henderson of int.erced1n1 with
Qfriclala at the Metropolitan Cor-
rectJonal Cenler In San Dieio to
help arrange the Interview
"'1thout Shamshak'a attorney in
attendance.
Rain ForectJ11t
ForNorthem
Amo Friday
By Tbe Auodaeed Preu
A low pressure system movtni
aoatJi off the coast of Brtliab
Columbia toda.)' wu expected to
spread showers tbrou1b
Northern callfomia by Friday,
the National Weather Service
aald.
On WednHda7, much or
Calif ornta was blanketed by
hiah clouds and a few areu had
atrone winds, lncludln.a Creicent
Clty, wM?e gmta reached 40
mph.
The forecast for tb sa.o rran-
c\aco Bay area calli for ~
falr aldee Mtb variable hl&h
cloudiness this aft•rDOOftt lD·
crea1in1 Frid_, With • ao per· tent cttanc. Of •boWVI.
TemperatuNI will nnfe-trom the mid.-to the low flOa wtt.b westerlY W1ndl ot 10-30 mp,b.
In tbe Sicramento VeUe1, wm bt lilt WW. .ariable
blah c-::',;. ~.from UM DOrtb ad ludlq. to a
c:buce ot llbdWWI 100 ..l'nda,.
T mperiltahl WlD raap trom
tM mkl• to &he..,.. eo. db ~ .outMrlJ at 11
...
Former Oren1e Count)'
polltlc1l klnsmuer Dr. Louis J.
Cella Jr. la scheduled to enter
federal prison at Lompoc at
noon Friday to bealn tervllll a
five-year federal sentence.
~ter. he ll scheduled
to in eervtna a eoncutTent
on -to-10-year state sentence im·
pos Wednesday along with a
$50.000 floe by San Diego
Superior Court Judie William A.
Yale.
Cella, 5'2, pleaded aullty lut
month to at.ate cbarees of arancl
theft and submittln.I false Medi·
Cal claims Jn connection with
two Oranae County boapttals.
Tbe earlier federal sentence was
imposed after Cella wu convict·
ed in 1976 of income tax evaaioa,
fllin1 false tax retuma and filing
falae Medicare claims.
Judce Yale handed down the
state sentence alter reJect.ioi a
plea by Celia's attorneys that
their client be allowed to
perform community service in
lieu or prllon.
"It would be a travesty to
have him serve as a town pbysl·
clan," commented Michael R.
Capl11l, asslltant Ot"ange Coun·
ty district attorney. "II he is
within touc~ diatance of Sl. he will steal it.
Yale • cJted Cella 's deeds as
"creatJna a cancer-Wte effecl
statewide. •
Cella reportedly burst into
tean Juat before sentence was
pronounced. "My life bas been
desiccated and dlasected by the
medla," be said. "I have been
subjected to every humillatioo
possible."
Cella was charged with
"skimming" as much as $3
miUion from two hospitals of
whfcb he was part owner, Mercy
General In Santa Ana and Mls-
s ion Community in Mission
Viejo.
Much or that money found its
way Into the campaigns of
numerous local and state
political candidates. including
the successful campaign of state
Controller Kenneth Cory. In-
vestigations have cleared Cory
or any wrongdoing.
Cella Wednesday repeated bis
assertion that the donations to
win polllical influence were
necessary to the survival ol the
two hospitals because of a
"war" between proprietary and
non-proprietar:Y boepitals ill t.be
county.
f',....PageAJ
F1RE •••
minor injuries Including burns,
smoke Inhalation. strains and sprains.
They included Huntington
Beach Fire Capt. Tom Barnett,
Capt. Vic Subia, Capt. Ed
Ogden. fireman Nick Parker,
engineer Don Sbuaterland and
Fountain Valley Fire Depart-
ment Capt. Lou Burkhart and
Runtin~ Beach Fire Depart.
mentCapt. &UkeHennessey.
The bOdy of the fire victim wws·
taken to Pierce Brothers/Smith's
Mortuary Jn Hantlngton Beach
where a spokesman said today
her ramlly was planning a
transfer to Rose Hiils Memorial
Park Mortuary Jn Wbittitr.
Panel Reject8
SS Tax Cut
WASHINGTON <AP> -The
Senate Budlet Committee, re-
Jtctln1 efforts to 1lub Social
Security tun, is recommend-
in1 a federal bud.let for next
year that carries sllfhtly less
1peodln& and a sm~.ller income
tax cut than proposed by Presl·
dent Carter.
Wrapping up work Wednesday
on speodina and tu.ln1 taraets
for lhe 12 montbl that be&ln Oct.
1, the committee also aireed to
make room In the budiet for a
collese tultloft tax credit.
The committee proposed that
federal apendin~urlna the year
be ll mlted to .9 bOlioa pro.
pared to the $500.2 billion pro-
posed by the president. Tbe
House &diet Committee settled
on $501.4 billion.
t
d Fattened
Meaa Man AiJa Mexiam ~
•
Tbe hand for tal care for
little Tomas DOIRln&\lel,
b-..rn·1ca.fHd Tijuana ~oy
berrlnded · bY a Hunlln1ton
Beach boUlewU., bu been flt·
t.ened by $:i04 beyond the m.ooo
needed for plutl~ sur&ery.
D tioU bau f~ ........ .._. __ tt_·
•'.e1ltb:r b111in ••11)1.D,
bouHWlves !f'to dapped into. their mad tnalltY and priaoneri
at the Ca.Utoinia Jn.sUtuUon fol'
Men at Chino~ who at.,ed a
benefit l'Llnd-rataer FOaraso. Nick Fodera, owner of Nick's
Pizza, 2300 Harbor Blvd., Costa
Mesa. ataged a benefit pizza
lunch to help raise funds to cov-er the child's hospital expenses.
Since the story of Tomas, I,
horribly disfigured wbert a can
of paint thinner exploded in his
I ace 14 month.I ago wu printed,
thousands have responded to the
campaign beiun by Virginia
Castillo.
The bright UUJe boy is a pa· ·
tlent al Stanford University
Medical Center, where he bas undergone surgery twice and
still faces surgery at least four
moreUmes.
He ls Uvin1 with the Elwood
Milla family ln Gllroy 11 a foeter
child but must soon return to Ti·
juana to have b.1a visa creden·
ti ala reissued since tt)ey are
good for only six months.
His parents, Ienaclo and
Maria Dominguez, who visited
two weeks ago for his eighth
birthday, are overwhelmed by
Tomes' miracle, one tor which
Mrs. CulllloclaimslJocredlt.
"We want to thank every-
bodyb" says Mrs. Castillo, or 6811 efiance Drive, Huntington
Beach.
Funds for the boy have been
sent to lnterplut lnc .. a non-profit medical group at Stan·
ford.
Jarvi8 to Appear
At CM Fairgroond8
Heward Jarvis, CO·IPQDSOr or
a controversial slate ballot
measure that wou d slice
homeowner property taxes if
passed by voters this June, will
discuss the initiative In a iatur·
day appearance at the Orange
County Fairgrounds in Coata
Mesa.
The free prosram. sponsored
by the Orange County chapter of
United Organizatlon of Tax-
payers. begin.a at 3:30 p.m. at
the fairerounda' amphitheater.
&lo1 Trlnltnin Cob' TV
wttb remote control. 11"·
lt' '. 17" • 11" clalonaJ.
Anet • au tn ltoek-
KV-8000 Sony Trfnltron.
Sony'1 newe1t AC·DCt
'ht• aaywtlere po$ble. I
Inch dlapn1I.
Tbe plastic surgery -ex· tremel)' complicated Jn Tomas'
case due to hl$ severe burns that
deat.royed his eyelids and left
scar tlsaue clear to the bone -la
performed li:ee. Coat.a oflned&eaJ care wblle he
is in the hoipi~l before and
after aur,ery, bOwever, must be
met in the meantime.
The $S04 raised by Fodera'•
pizza benefit lo Costa Mesa goes
pretty well beyond the sum now
needed for T~' new face and new life it promiaes.
"He wouldn't even keep a
cent. not even for the cost of the
ingredients," says Mrs. Cutillo.
She is already auistina in the
cases of two other Spanish·
speaking children, one from
Honduras and the other from
Ecuador, both of them terribly
disfigured.
And slle bas located a UtUe
Jlrl in Rosarito Beach, below Ti-juana, ,with a congenital facial
defect that Int~rplast doctors
and n"'G can repair.
Her mission to help children
from underdeveloped countries
who suffer physical deformiUes
and scars. aaya Mn. Castillo,
was inspired last year on a visit
to the Holy Land with her
hu1band Ricardo, an aircraft. engineer.
Sbe says she asked the Lord
while meditating what sbe might
do to thank Him for her bl8"·
ings and ~ard a voice tell her.
2 Men Arraigned
BAKERSFIELD CAP) -Two
Los Angeles-area men were ar-
raigned · here Wednesday on
charges or murderin1 three
youn1 people who were fllmlng a
movie in the Mojave Desert u a
university class project. A pre·
llmlna.ry hearing wu scheduled
April 25 for David Murtinshaw.
20, of Santa Fe Springs and Gre1
Laufenburger, 20, of Maywood.
Sony
Headquarters for
th• Harbor Area
T.Y.·laclo-Slereo r ... ec .... ......
JACK80NV1LLE, N.C. <AP>
-.;; Two Air Fote• P-«lll Phantom
let fi1bten apparenUy collided
n meht and crashed into a wooded area of Onslow County
W'tlt or here today' killing at
• lea.at one of the tour crewmen.
autborili• aaid.
Ma.ster s,... WlWam Barnhill
at Seymour Johuon Air Force
Base near Goldsboro said the
jets •pparently collided during a
climbing maneuver. He said the
planes were based at Seymour
Johnson. attached to tbe 4th
TacUcal Fitbter W1n1.
A Federal Avlatlon ~d
mlnlstratlon spokesman tD
Waahlncton, John (Jeyden, said
the Jeli were part of a four-plane
ll"Oup, and the crash apparently
occurred as they W6re climbing
from 8,000 feet to 20,000.
Two ~rewmen apparently
ejected safely and were taken to
Onslow County Hospital. One
was found dead neat one of the downed aircraft. The fate of the
fourth was not-immediately
known.
The two crewmen who ejected
and parachuted to Hfety came
down near N.C. 258 west or
Jacksonville. As they were
taken to the hospital. one had bis
eye and head bandaged.
A nearby resident, Bobby
GW'aanua, aald he beard an ex·
plotlon "Uke thunder or a sonic boom,.. and stepped into his
backyard to lnvesUgate.
"I saw tbe flames and I knew
there was a plane crash," be
said. Gargatua said be drove to one
or the crJSh sites, about 300
yards from bi.a home. and found
a military Jet lo names. He saw
another column of smoke about
half a mile away and found the
second plane.
He •'1d be saw a dead pilot
about 200 yards from the plane.
The plane neateat Gurganus'
house was spread over about a
flve·acre ,area, he said, but the
main wreckage was all in one
spot.
m.,..aoo 8ooJ BMama let9
)VU record )'Oii favorite
J"ll'UD' ind watct. them.
wbtn you p)e11e • Ntw low
price too I
•
,
CF·SIO. A superb 1teno caueUe system wllb nt/ AM built in A: phooo
Iopa\. Four speakers ror
IOUDd lb.at bas body and depth. AC or battery operation.
s....-Sony Specials!
ltVrlHl TRINITRON
PLUS Sony'1 Deluxe lt"
dla1onel TV. lncludH
Sony'• Lumispaoder lllhl uoalb1 system and extra
lat1e 1peaker
INCW MUPMCI
,
• "YN, but whit do you dolor a llwtng?"
'""'
t COciistlia~
Upholstery
Classes Set
<:oaaUine Community Collece wlll offer
lasaea in furniture and auto upholstery bellnnSQi
April 17 at tts Fountain Valley Area 3 industrial
perk educatioo center.
The classes are:
-Upholstery ~•mentals, living practical
1oformatJon and sl!Us necessary for basic UP·
holstering. Oriented for the bome project, this two·
Wlit class has a $10 mater~als fee and meets from 8
a.m. to noon on Tuesdays and Thursdays.
-VOCATIONAL UPHOLSTERY, a two-unit
course which is a hands-on type couise preparin1
students for employment. A $1S materials fee is re·
quired for the claaa which meet.a from 1 to 5 p.m.
daily except Fridays.·
-Auto Upholstery, presenting techniques in·
YOJvin1 fabrication, installation and maintenance
of auto interiors and convertible tops. A $20
materials fee is required for lb.is two-unit course
which meets at the same time and days as does
I Vocational Upholstery
REGISTRATION MAY BE MADE at tbe first
class meetinJ?.
The Area 3 education center is located at 18186
. Langley St.
I Additional information is available by calling
Coastline Community College at 963-0824.
"' Bids Sought
SACRAMENTO <AP>
-State transportation
officials have called for
bids on Z9 bipway pro-
ject.a. including a final
5.4·mile link of Jn.
terstate 210 in Los
Angeles County, to com·
plete the freeway
between the San
Fernando Valley and
Pomona.
'W ..4R CRIMES'
DISPIAYED
BANGKOK, Tballand
<AP> -Vietnam bas
added a "war crimes
room '' to the war
.museum it opened in the
U.S. Embassy building
in September, 1975, tbe
Vietnam News Agency
said.
The agency said ln a
broadcast monitored
here that the diBplay in·
elude~ bombs and
cluster bomb uruls and
that more tb an 1. a
million persona have
visited the museum
since tt opened.
Tbe w1niler or the Girl Athlete of the Montb
Award for March 1s
Colleen Berry from
Marina High School: . .J eouee.i won &be noDDr
over nlDe otber ~~ rrom JocaJ high acboola She Is a Freshman
Muina a.nd an ac e
participant in v
bultetball and .
The com tltton la
sponaore by '\'h•
FinJcky FOllC, a tipeeieltJ
shop (or teens aDd YOUD8
women servlne the Huntlneton Beach. Westminster and
P'ounlaln Valley area.
~ .
SOLAR CONTACT
HOT WATER SYSTEM The.,... ..tup iloa Solar C-toct ,, .....
Aluminum ftDMd cmd copper~ ID the aolar
collector to get the moet oat of diie nn. won.
wttb yoar .. old faahloaed • .,. ... -tula to
almost ellmlnate the b1l1. You D*"' par tor the
8UD power. Remember. the atate a1Jow9 JOU Q
M% tax c:ndit for aolar eqa.ts-eot. (lo the true
C09t of a 79Ll8 QDlt to JOU la really oalf about
1310bucbJ
•OALOIUT
WITH OKE ci>IJ.ECTOB
IOOAL tJ1UT
Wl'rB TWO COLLECTORS
HOOAL UNIT
799••
1149M
~RS 1•99• INSTALLATION AVAUJusl.f
•
Tivldlly, Apnl 13. 1978 s DA.IL y PILOT A J J
GR OUN
·coVER ~
~l'r~~
We did aome research on th.la one (about time). Oun
hem approximately 100 planta in the Ivy and Ice ~Plant and ~ately IC in the Gamnlaa (don't go
counting an ac:reGmlng lf we're a few oft I aaid
approximately, Allc,).
ICE PLANT
HAHN IVY
ENGIJSHIVY
ALGERIAN IVY
GAZANIAS
m.1.oods AMEND
A good IOU ameodment f~
flower and~ Md. u
Kellogg'• 11aP eo. wbo am I
to cuguie? Toa want IM to llClf
lt'• not tbe greateet? I I 8 7 2cu.n.
PARAMOUNT
BARD EDGERS
Yoa ~It worlm. a good ~P. crrr that wtth aome•our~t tJPM ••• lot8G luck.)
I P-lS •••••..••••••••• 3"
UMFOOSHED
STOOLS
...... ~ ... I WCNld think a pNtty girl
ll~ OD OM wOaJd flnlah
lt o8 Dlcely. doll't you?
A
FLAT
TORO COBDIDS
GRASS TRIMMER
It wblpe up_~ weeda CIDd graaa
wlthoUt wtdpplDg up you tenJdeL Gr.at IUa. made better (I Neid
that~).
3777.swo
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AJaOM.v "°' ~.~ta. t1'71 )
Chickens Destroyed
Meal in f!arehouae Fire
WASHINGTON <AP) -'na. Food and Dnaa
Admlnlstralkln A11 t.bomeeda ot cbletaw u ..
been destroyed and many _.. may be became a
labtoo Purina lllblldiaey bMD d.JIU'lbutlQI
contaminated animal meal tbe past ~ar.
The feed WU cootaminated..,. polycbJortnated
bipbenyls during a wsreboUM fire In Puerto Rleo a
year aao. Nancy Glick, a spolreswoman fw the
FDA. said Wednesday. But the FDA learned of it
only recently.
: • SHE &\JD THE OONTAlllNATED flab meal
may have beaJ mixed ln swine or other animal
feeds 1n additioft to poultry feed, and tbe FDA does
not know if &Q)' pet food la involved.
Most ol the contaminated feed appears to bave
been shipped to Texaa, altboueb at leut some bu
turned up in Jdabo and Arkan.au, Ms. Glick said.
"We don't know bow many chickens or eap
were sold before it wu d.ilcovered," sbe said. "We
know M'Veral hundred tbomand chicken.a contain·
in•:-uceaalve PCB lnels bave bad to be
destroyed, and e111 from cudamtnated laying
bens are belnl destroyed dally.''
POLYCBLO&INATED BIPBENYLS are
blthly ltabi. cbemlcala that were used exten.aively
f6r mlll.)' yura ln lnlulaton. and other electrical
eguJpmmt. All a result of tbeir beavy industrial ~:-UleY have beeome pentltent environmental
contamlnanta that &et into lb& food chain and tum
up in the fat tlasuea of mpy animals. especially
fi-11. Comwnptjon pf tar1e doses by humans can
c•l\1-acne-like ekln eruptiooa, darkening of the
sklti ua·nJ,l1.a. exceuiv• d1.scbar2e from the eyes
and swelling of the .,elJda, the l'DA 1pokeawoman said. But. such symptoms
)
. abould not be ex·
·( perienced by people who ECOLOC'fl have consumed the con· t.amtn~ in the quan·
--------· ti ties f•lfDd in poultry
. and •ll'S so far, she said.
The FDA a.ys it 11 impossible to eliminate
PCBs from all foods because they occur
tbrou1bout the environment. but it bas set max-
imum tolerance levels at various points in the food
·chain. ·
THE FAMILY CIRCUS . t1NiseEo ANlllAL PESD JlA Y not contain By Bil Keane monF tban '0.2 earta per million ot the contami··
nant, while animal feed components may contain
up lo two parts per mlWon ..
"We better start bein' good 'cause if we
don't, I think Mommy might resign."
FDA investigators said IAIJysis or some or the
feed.showed levels up to 62 part. per million, more
than 30 Umes the permissible level.
FD{\ investi1ators learned from a poultry
comp~lo Texas on Jan. 6 that lt. found excessive
PCB.·.*t•mination in the lat tisaue of its
chickens".·
BY TRACING 'FllE VARIOUS ln~ts of
the poultry feed given to· the chJekeM. FDA in·
vesti1ators were able to pinpOlnt the tource ot the
contamlnailon. ·
They said that durlnl the warehouse fire in
April tm, two electrical transformers exploded,
spraying 2,000 pounds of coolant made with PCBs
over 400 lOl)8 of tuna meal stored in bags in the
ware~.· The ·n5A said the meal was manufactured by
the Van Camp Dlviaion of.National Packing Co., a
allbsidiary of the St. Louil-hued Ralston Purin~
Co.
••hk•
Former Georgia
G o v . Les ter
Maddox owes
abbut $150,000
from bis 1974 qu es t for a
second term.
Supporters have
raised about
$18,000. A fund-
raising dinner is
set May2.
EVERYBODY
LOCAL I NATIONAL
Cursing Ruled OK
Bui, Hold Insults
PROVIDENCE, R.J. <AP> -The Rhode
Island Supreme Court says tt'a OK to en1a1e in
"profane sweartna and curain&. '' However. there's
a catch.
The court said that salty la.nsuqe is illegal
when it lncludes "fi1bUn1 worda" addressed to a
particular lbdividual.
The deelsion reversed the conviction of
Michael E. Authelet for comment.a mlde to police
after a Warwtek street comer diaturbance Sept. 3,
1974.
VioJaUon of the Rhode Island law iJ punishable
by a fine ol not more than ~
IN THE WORLD
LOVES
LA PAZ
MIXES.
ALL RIGHT,
ALMOST
EVERYBODY
c
A family
of popular
cocktail mixes
tor home
entertainment
~~# UC lnJfne LU.ts •
•
~ 1 Open Activities ~ -•
: -~" .. . .. . , :~
, " . . .....
' ,.
" t • . ·: .. .. .· . . • ..
.._~ .....
~ ~ ....
1'he foJlowlng schedule of activities open to the
public has been announced by the UC Irvine Ex·
tension program:
3423 Via Lido
V1• Lido Plaza • e75-0tt21
~ Classic by Gant
... Gant's AuthenttC Town Coller in °"
classic flt of 651 docron, 351 cotton.
Avoaable in blue °' white. S 18.50.
-liec-fi.1s
MINS nous
3467 VIA LOO, ~T BEIOi
Have a fitl
Beautiful .JJlkJnla eold 18P11'8telv tor a
perfect fit MlnY printa and IONd colora In
a vartety.~of.,etytes, from •1a. 'Ne aJao
hMt. ~-1,'_Mfectlon of the'"'"" on~UtL
•
Tuned to the tempo
of Newport •••
{Art Slaow, Sala dclr· April 15 )
• •••• . . . .
I
..... A,w. 24 • .,.,, ...... ... •• "-v J, ., ....... Ow.IN.
Jlo• .... _,, •• c....I C....._ ....._•-.JS,~ Food.
Class time: 7:30 p.m. $10 per person for lnftlal class attended. $8 per
person. each succeedittg class. Advance payment assu-res reservations..
S44J W. I.Mo • NelDl'Of'C •••c• CA ft"-' • fi7/S.J460
~or/6
'-. ~ For the art lover it £b. ~ with discerning taste~~~
~ Via Lido Plau
3'39 VJa Udo. N.8. e~
The flnelt In lnwstment pmnltnga. Art effecn from
around the wortd C8l'l be viewed II your le6lt.n et our Otd
Wand Art llmcJll)here pltery. E~ Is welcome.
All our Olintlngl c.rTY a 7«1 uncondttloNI money-beck
guarantee.
Gattery houri daily from 10 toe
In The New Via Udo Ptua
3fCS Via Lido, Newport
675-0150
Prescriptions
Coemeti~s
PhGto Soppllea
Glf&a & Cards
Beaeb & San
Delivery
Free Parking
Open Dally
Blood Preinre
~lion
........ w. ..... ma flj.....,. ........ ...., .... ,....c.n.-
~ ...............
... u. ...
w " ,, Clliliir9
,
' I
I
Today' Closlag
N.Y. Steeb u
TEN CENTS
OD Housing Rliling
When tbe Planour1 Com-
mlaalon made tts April 3 ruUn1.
county health olflclala warned
that resldebll of UM new holtMll
would be eJtpc»ed to a noise
nealth hazard. And eclioing ltie Health
Department's objeCllon to the
J>rojeet wero members ot the
county Subdivillon Committee.
However, bOth the county-
hired and devdoper-hired noise
con1ultant.s. contended their
studies showed the area to be
outlide the hlih noise impact
zone.
The new homes would be built
within siahl of El Toro Marine
Corps Alr Station and near the
base'• main runway approach.
Riley. a former Marine
aeneral, laid that area could be
more heavily impacted by nolae
durin1 touch and 10 landing
operations and said be fean the
noise levell could be hl1ber de·
pendin1 upon tbe traJnina or atate of training of the
squadron.a.
In bia letter ot appeal, the
Newport Beach supervisor aaid
he want.a to make am, the data
used by the comrn.lsa1on to de·
termine the oolae-lmpact area ls
valid and that county policies
aru 't being violated.
In addition, Riley said be
wants to makt .s~ tbe impt.ct of sho.rt..term. ~-volume noaae
..
levels on Mure residents bas
been established and con-
sidered.
Robert Stone. county environ-
mental health director. had
warned earlier. ''Tile area sim-
ply is too noisy for residential de·
velopment."
He predicted future residents
would be unhappy and complain
to the county.
Biley said he also Intends to
<See DOVSING, Pa(e AZ>
Jets Collide
OIW Crewman Kill,ed in Crash
JACKSONVILLE, N.C. (AP>
-Two Air Force F-4E Phantom
jet fighters apparently collided
in flight and crashed into a
wooded area of Onslow County
west or here today. killing at
least one of the four crewmen,
authorities said.
Master Sgt. William Barnhill
at Seymour Johnson Air Force
Base near Goldsboro said the
jets appareoU, ~ded during a
climbing maneuver. He said the
planea were based at Seymour
Johnson, attached to the 4th
Tactical Fiahter Wing.
A Federal Aviation Ad -
m inislrallon spokesman in
Washington, John Leyden, said
the jets were part of a four-plane
group, and the crash apparenily
occurred as they were climbing
from 8,000 feet to 20,000.
Two crewmen apparebtly
ejected safely and were taken to
Onslow County Hospital. One
was found dead near one of the
downed aircraft. The fate of the
fourth was not immediately
known.
The two crewmen who ejected
and parachuted to aafety came
down near N.C. 258 west of
Jacksonville. As they were
taken to the hoepltal, one had his
eye and head bandaged.
A nearby resident. Bobby
Guraanus. said he beard an ex-
plosion "like thunder or a so01c
boom." and stepped into his
backy.ard to investigate.
"I saw the names and I knew
there was a plane crash," he
said.
Garganus sald be drove to one
or the crash sites. about 300 yards from his home, and found
a military jet in names. He saw
anothei;Jelumn of smoke about
half a e away and found the
second plane.
He said be saw a dead pilot
about 200 yards from the plane.
The plane nearest Gurganus•
house was spread over about a five-acre area. he said, but the
main wreckage was all in one spot. .....
' Delly .................... O'ca-tl
FIRE INVESTIOATOAS TOUR BURNED OUT RESIDENCE IN HUNTINGTON BEACH »et•tzo• _..o c•---•-•ed Thia Waa View Thrc:.ugtt Uvlng Room Window After Fatal Fire Early Toay C ~ ., •so .,,-w;ur,u,i,;
•
7 .
By omua .. VINSEL or-o.itt1'iie11att
Fire swept through a Hunt-
ington Beach to~uae early
-today. killing one eleierly tenant
and causing an estimated
$325,000 damage.
Seven firemen were injured
fiibllnl the blue. One of five
townhouses was destroyed.
A number or irate neighbors
com plained today that the fire
department response to the
bJnewasslow ·
Fire officials said thal initially
they had been given a wrong ad·
dress for the blue. They said
the initial alarm was received al
12:30 a.m. and tho first units ar-
rived on the sceoe 10 minutes
later.
In veatigators tdeoUfied the
victim at tbe Landmark Homes
condominium.$ near the intersec-
tion or Newland Street and
Atlanta Avenue as n . Lillian Hansen, 76. Sbe had moved into
the development four months
880 and lived alone. She apparently died of amoke
lnhalatklo before the fire spread
throu1h the ceili~ into a com· mon attic shared by the rive
units. thus awakening other
sleeping tenants.
Investigators said Mrs.
Hansen lived ln Building 408, at
8777 Tulare Lane. in the complex
featuring a wide variety of
recreational facilities and a
guarded front &ate. Some residents today were
vehemently angry about the
time it took for firemen to arrive
at the scene.
"Vie could have gotten there sooner," says Deputy Fire
Marshal Roger Hosmer. "But
the orl&'inal call reporting the
fire involved an incorrect ad·
dress.
"And tl\ere are several dif·
ferent build.inn on Tulare Lane
with the same street address,"
be added.
_./"'
fAgiuia May Buy
Sycamore Hill.s .Area
By STEVE MITCHELL °'-Dllltr "*" .....
The four.year battle over
Sycamore Hills ln the Lquna
Beach GretnbcJt took a surprise
turo w~ ftlibt when Clty
Council me.mbera announced .a
tentaUve ~meot to pun:bue
the 522 acres for '8. 7$ mlllloo.
Tb• a1reement would
terminate Jawaults ~ *'7 mUUoa ffCll'R t.be city by land
owner B ncbo Palos Verdes
corp.
The City Council did not
·~ify the 10urce or the funds
or ctetaUed use of the lUd other
tha1' open apace and recr ...
Uonal use. A 1olf COOrM i5 one
oroba)>Wt;y.
SAN DIEGO ( p, -~
man crabbed Alme Roffe's purae, .knoclriDI
the BO-year-old woman
down in a struggle and
breatiq ber hip.
..You fool, you Poor
stupid fool," shouted Ml'S.
Rolfe, a widow, as he ran
off with her purse.
Inside was $1.
By PIOL1P llOSMAUN ... lllllty ...........
A petltloa eeetclng public eon·
trol of the Irvine Ranch Water
District board of directors, to
which only two of the current
seven members are publicly
elected, ts being circulated ln
Irvine neighborhoods.
Luer Thronson, an elementary achoo reading teacher, told the
lrvl~ City COt.mcU Tuesday that
ln three cl.lye she already bad colle~ted "gobs and gobs" of
1i1naturea. <Her buaba.od.
Artbur. said later about 50 bad
signed.)
Residents, she stid, are pro-tes tln g "taxation without
representation."
The ffiWD seeks authorization
to issue $1.6 billion in boods,
Debris Clogs Barbor
Cause, Cleanup Eyed lJy N~rt O/ficiab
Bv ALMON LOCKABEY °""' .............. ,..... Newport Harbor ls virtually
clogaed with debris after a ma· jor storm or series of storms
such as have plaaued the
Oranae Coast ln recent months.
Thal visible ract ls recognized
by every government agency
from the local to the federal
level.
In an effort to find out bow the
nets and in the Upper Bay, but the
panelists a1reed that such
measures would take three to six
years or more and eo1ts hundreds
of thousands or dollars.
As for the responsibility for
cleanup:
Jake Mrnderse, gennal
services director for the City of
Newport Beach, told the group
that hia deparf'ldtent •s
respooaiblUty was cleaning up problem can be prevented and )be beaches after the debri1 bad
who ls responsible for cleaning washed ashore on h!sb tides.
up nature's occulMal mesa, the ....._ "We are not responsible for
Marine Division of the Newport anyt.biq that floats," he alid.
Harbor <Jia.mber of Commerce Myndene said hi.a department invited a1ency he•ds to a
baa already removed hundreds
of tons or debris from bay and
ocean beacbee, "and we are not
thro°'h yet."
He said the solution to the problem seemed to be some sort
of control between Newport
Harbor and where the debris
originates. Lanny Eberling, a represen·
tatlve of tbe Newport Irvine
W aate Management Planning
Agency <NIWA>, explained that
hla organization and member
agencies were involved in study-
ing the sourct:$olpolluUoo. NIWA
· <See DEBal.9, Paae AZ>
breakfast meeUn1 to answer
some pointed questions.
Most of the panelists a1reed
that the debris, sediment and
pollution originated in the back
country and ended up In
Newport Harbor by way or
creeks and flood control cban·
nels.
Dousing Seminar
Slated for Irvine
But tber'e'waa Hu.le aareement
on Wh"8t toald be done atiOut It or
wbo LI respcmttble for cleaDlnl
up the mesa.
Most eoCOW"alinl JOlution dil·
cussed was 1 aeriee of catch
batln• aloai f'lood eonti'ol cbaD·
Salama, dlrector ot the Los
A.D1elea Qty l:foua1Jll Ambortty
Other• a.re builders Jack Harper ol DMert Hot Sprinp
and Edward E . Haworth of Esc~dido; S)'lvta 5eman, staff
member ot the Palo Alto Houa-
lna Corp. l.nc ; and ltltbael
Tboml*IO, Jntne Co. ma.naaer
ot real estate finance.
which 1'Quld be plid back by
future relidents, ror new water and sewer projects in currenUy undeveloped territory.
Board directonl meet on Mon·
day and are schedaled to vote on
whether to bold a landowners
bond election to obtain
authoriiation this summer, and
to create 10 new improvement
district.a.
In practice. the vote or the
board signals the outcome of the
election, because bond election
votes are cast by landowners of
undeveloped property.
The Irvine Company is the
major landowner or the IRWD
with the greatest, deciding. voter clout. It also is
represented on the board by the
five landowner-elected mem-
bers.
Besides the resident petition. a
lawsuit was filed Tuesday, by
people who chum to represent
low income groups in Orange
aod Los Angeles counties, to halt
the IRWD action.
Those people claim the water
projects have not been analyzed
ror environmental impact, and
have been planned without con·
sideration ror providing afforda·
ble housing for employees who
will bulJd the projects
Despite t~ lawsuit, IRWD
directors lnteld to take action
Monday, because so far no at·
tempt has been made by plain·
tiffs to secure a temporary
restraining order or injunction
<See PETITION, Pate AZ>
Coast
Weather
Hoatly cloudy tbrou1b
Friday with some partial
clearing In afternoons.
Chance ol driule or light showers early Friday
morninC. Lows toruabt :;o
to 55. Hlahl Fttday 60 to
65.
INSIDE TODA~
~,.,,,..,. '*' supndan cmtu•~cmthf
hOm• "'~" faJo ci cor-~ of old faitdlidJ' /den. Storw POQf IU • ....
..
•
,
I
..
fo' ~ ..
SUNNY MOMENT -Sharing a moment with President .
Carter on an unscheduled stroll around the Tidal Basin
in Washington are, left to right, Vanessa, l, Ahlia, 5.
and Julie Stepanek, 8.
Spring Stroll
I
WASIUNGTON <AP> -President Carter is provini the
pleasures of spring can overcome the pressures of work. ,
Carter ten the Oval Office on Wednesday for a stroll among
Washington's famed cherry blossom trees. He took along bis
wlfe, Rosalynn, daughter, Amy, and daughter-in-law Annette.
THE FlllST FAMILY SPENT an hour on tbe walk durlni
which they posed for pbotoarapN and talked with other ~t.rollera
in 7()..dqree weather.
Carter shed bis suit jacket at the 1tart of the stroll around
the Tidal Basin while Amy later took off her blue, rubber-soled
shoes and walked in her bare feet.
THE PRESIDENT SPOTTED MARY Flowers of
Washington fishing in the basin with a cane pole and bobber rig.
She had a bucketful offish. Carter asked the woman if she bad used minnows as bait
, and she replied. ·•minnows and worms."
F ..... PageAJ
DEBRIS •••
t.a a Joint powers entity conaisting
of severalqenclea.
State 8Dd city members ln-
cJ ude the cities of Newport
-Beach. Irvine. Orange and Costa
Mesa and the Calllomi._ Depart-
ment of Fi.sh and Game. Cowity
agencies Include the Harbor
Beaches and Parka District,
Flood Control District and the
County of Orange
Most contt"oversial question
discussed at the meeting was the
removal of the county "scooper"
from service in the bay because
of an alleged contract conflict
between the city of Newport
Beach and the Environmental
Management Agency of the
county.
The "scooper" was taken out
of service because it suppoaedJy
conflicted with the private con-
tract the city and county had
with Greg Bost.on and Associates
for cleaning up the city and
county tidelands or the bay.
Shoplifters
f;et MeB8age
ATLANTA <AP) -A sub-
liminal, taped message that
says "I will not steal" ~ beint
tested on sbop&>en In "a large
East.em seaboard city" lo see
whether it will cut shoplifting.
The words "I will not steal,"
"I am honest" and others are
"em bedded" In background
music. according to Dr. Hal
Becker, a behavioral scientist at
Tulane University.
"To the best of my knowledge,
ll Is not in use anywhere ex~pl
in our field test." he said.
Carter Supported
BONN. ·west Germany <AP)
Cbaricellor Helmut SC?ticnldt.
rallied behind President
Cart.er's announcement to delay
a decl.aloo on lf.S. prochlcUoci of
the neutron bomb. "n la a alp1
for the other aide lo show thelr
readiness foT reduction or
Ii m llatton of their 1rowln1
potential," Scbmktt told Parlia-
ment today.
to t unw· a court
be rf,AI lie blld. Ale...., Bri'le, attorney for
IRWD. dis 1 ftuit u ini~al today. IHe 1a1d
tbat nllel UQCSer the Califomla
Eovlr<>nmen 1 Quality Act
cat.eaorically exempt mere plan·
nln& procedure& from environ-
mental Impact. study.
The propoeed JRWD action, be
Hid, ii "merely a planning tool
and a ftnanclal authorization."
tr at a lat.er date, he said, k>cal
sovernlng agencies decide to al·
low development In the vacant
lands, at that time an environ-
mental impact report, or a find·
Ina that oo substantial impact
would be made, would be pre-
pared.
Only af\er thal, he said, could
the IRWD i.uue bonds.
But the residents who are
sl1nlng the petition believe the
board has no authority lo take
any actions. because they
believe Ila landowner dominance
I.a unconstitutional.
The Irvine City Council.
through City Attorney James
Erlckr.on, has come to the same
conclusion.
t
Erlckaon said hil opinion ls
that board composition violates
the constitutional principle or
one·man, one·vote.
The council has asked the
slate attorney general lo issue
an opinion; the matter is pend-
ing.
The council alreafly has asked
the IRWD lo del~ any bond de·
clslons \mW word ls fe<:eived
from the attorney general.
At a March 20 meeting of the
lRWD, however, direct.Ors de· murred and said they would not
bold up operations to wait for
the attorney general.
Panel Rejects
SS Tax Cut
WASfllNGTON <AP> -The
Senate Budget Committee, re·
jectlng efforts to slash Social
Security taxes, is recommend·
mg a federal budget ror next
year that carries slightly less
spending and a smaller income
tax cut than proposed by Presi·
dent Carter.
Wrapping up work Wednesday
on spendini and taxing targets
for the 12 months that begin ~t.
1. the committee also agreed to
make room in the budget for a
college luWoo tax credit.
The co~ttee proposed t.bat
federal spending durina the year
be limited to $498.9 billion pro-
pared lo the $500.2 billion pro-
posed by the preajdenl. The
House Budget Committee settled
on ~1.4 billion.
Nazis' Store
Painting Urged
DETROIT CAP> -Residents
or a neighborhood on the city's
west side are being invited lo a
"painloul" Sunday lo erase the
final traces of a Natl bookstore.
A court bailiff, backed by
police. deposited the store's con-
tents on the sidewalk Wednes-
day as an estimated 300 on-
lookers ctieered and ohanted
"Get the Nazis out l" .
Pollce said the bookstore. run
by a self-proclaimed Nazi ll'OUP.
was deeerted when tbe Wayne
County Common Pleas Court
bailiff posted an eviction notice.
The "eeooper" was taken out
or service at a lime that placed
heavy responsibility on Boston,
a private contractor. whose con-
tract calls for cleaning up only
the periphery of the bay.
Ken South, a representative of
the County Environmental
M anagemenl Agency. assured
the Chamber il"OUP that the con-
tract ia being renegotiated with
the city and that the "scooper"
would be back in service in a
short tlme.
Fund Fattened
others on the panel Included
Robert D. Mont1omery. inland
~eaional manaaer for Southern \..alifornia for the Department of
Fish and Game; John
taaadzlnskl. California Regional
Water Quality Control Board
4ngineer, and Carl Nelaoft of the
Orange County Flood Control
DiltricL
DAILY PILOT
Mesa Man Aids Mexican Boy
housewives who dipped Into
tftelr mad money and prboneJS
at the Callfoml• Institution for
Men at Chino, who staged a
benefit fund·raiser program.
The pla-llc surgery -ex·
tremely complicated in fl'omas ·
case due to bis severe bums that
destroyed his eyelids and left
scar·llsaue clear to the bone -is
performed free.
Coat.a of medleal care while he
Is ln the hospital ~fore and
after surgery, however, must be
met ln the meantime.
The $50C railed by Fodera's.
plua btneflt ln O>lta Mesa goes
pretty well be)'ODd the aum now
needed fer Tomas' new face and
new Ufe lt prorniaes. "He wouldn't even keep a
cent, not even for the COit of the lo,redienta," 1ays Mrs. Cutillo.
She I.I alre~ uallUn& In the
UHi of two other Spanllh·
1peallln1 children, one from Hon~uru and the other from
Ecuador, both oL them terribly
dllfllilrect And ah8 his located f UtUe
strl ln RONi'lt.o Beaeb, below Tl· Juan•, wtt.h a ~lbltal f aclal
defect that lnterplut dOctora and nunee can repair. Her rnlaaton to help chi~
troll\ \lndf rdevelopied count.rta wbO aUfrtf' p_bYalcaJ def ormlU
and 1can, •&11 Mrs. Cat.Ulo, ' wu t~ laat year OQ a villt
to tbe Roly Lalld wltb her
1tu1bapd Rlcardot an alrcraft
enfiMlr. !u· .. ..,a ahl C!ld tht Lord
bile medttatlDI whit •be a\lchl
do t.o Ulm ror her . and nt .... tell
. j
~
Hoses tar the Rackettn
Me]Tlbers of the audience, including a
man in a white lop hat, hand out flowers
to the Rockettes at Radio City Music Hall
Wednesday night after the Camous high
steppers had performed what thev thou.zbt
would be their last show. But JUSt after
midnight. an agreement was aMounced
that will keep the New York landmark in
business for at least another year.
Costume Work
'lmide Job'
PURDY, Wash. <AP> -The
cast or Peninsula High School's
stage production or "My Fair
Lady'· next month wUI wear cos-
tumes sewn by inmates at the
state Women's Treatment
Center at Purdy.
Five inmates. paid from 2S lo
68 cents an hour, plus 16 ~ts
bonus if they attend all the sew·
ing classes, are makini the 129
costumes.
The only snag In the stitch-in-
ti me program oreanized by Bob-
bie Chapman, sewing instructor
at the prison, is the fitting. It is
difficult lo get students into
prison. and some inmates aren't
allowed outside.
...
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With remote control. 21 "·
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OOAS'l'AL FANS
llE.4R ACl'RESS
Olivia de Havllland came to
the Orange Coast-this week and
kept an aUdience enthralled witb
her Ure and loves. See Featur·
ing, Page Cl.
Pilot Uninjured
In Fott.ed Landing
A pilot en route from Fullerton
Airport to Montgomery Fteld in
San Diego escaped without In-
jury aft.er making a rorced land·
ing of his light plane only yards
rrom Interstate 805.
Pilot Michael Tussey re-
portedly landed in a vacant Oeld
only a short distance from his
destination Wednesday. The
Federal Aviation Administration
is investigating the incident.
Sony
Headquarters for
the Harbor Area
T.V.-Radlo-Sfeteo
T.-Recor ...
letcnca
BP250 /SS250 . Thlt
compact tntertalnm•nt center delivers tl\le bl·n sound. Inchtd• AM/FM
stereo recelYer. •·•peed automaUc tunst.able. and two l ·W•Y 1peak1r
1y1\em1 • lllCaAL
• T
HOUSING~ ••
explore the impact of ool.ae OP
health with physicians on t.be County Health Oepartmeot
staff.
The supervisors said he was
reluctant to file the appeal but
did so because no one else had
and the deadline for' appeals is
approaching. It ta aext Tuesday.
Riley said tt wu the first time
he ever bad appealed• Pl~
CommiuiOD dectalon.
Supervisors In 1976 adopted •
noise Impact bclWldary tl"OUDd
El Toro thAl took ln the ~ Village land. ru1inC that no new
home building take place inside.
However, they said developers
could win exeeptions lo tbe rule
ir they conducted private.studies
approved by the county that
showed the properly wasn't
highly impact.ed by noise. •
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)'OU record you favorite
P"OP'am• and watch them ~ you pie .. • New low
price too !
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cassette 1y1lem with
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KV ·lHl TBUUTRON PLUS Sony'1 Deluxe 19" dta1onal T.V. tncludea
Sony'• Lumilponder' llaltt
lentlnt •11Wm and ult•
lar1e •PIU• INCIAL w.IMCI
~
' Lif ,,.sariag Lnsea
Community CPR Team members Gerry
1 Davis (left) and Pat Moreau (right) de-
monstrate cardiopulmonary resuscitation
methods on programmed mannequin for
South Coast Community Hospital staff
nurse Pat 'Lefkowitz. Community CPR
program is comprised of four-hour classes
to teaeh members of community bow to
react when a person suffers a heart at-
• tack in public. Next courses· ate schedul~
I April 18 from 6 to 10 p.m. To partlctpate
in free program, call bosp;.t.al at 499-1311.
SB Orators Vie
~ In Tournament
Nine members of Saddleback College's
foremlcs team are to compete with student orators
!rom eo schools Saturday in Sacramento al lhe
Wtetl:·long NationaJ Community College Speech
'Tournament.
Coach Carolann Messner said topics to be pre-
sented inr.lude:
-DAltVL COWL'S AFJ'D..DINNB& apeeeb,
"Shreik Center for the Control of Breatb.ln8."
-"The Joys of Not Dati.QI" b1 frelhman
PJUcilla Sanford.
-'"Ibe Prime of Mlas Jean Brodie"" a duet-
aeting routine by Miss Sanford and Traci Baranov.
· Sophomore Kelly Cole ls to talk about de-
foliants and herbicides.
-'6TEBROSl8M AND TRE Press," by Dana
Inloea.
+-Janene Lovullo's speech will inform OD
"Phobias." i ~ "Cans piracy to Scbolutlc We," b7 Rick
JohQJlon.
-Vem hon's oral interpretation speech, ''Tlte
Con Man."
-Freshman Robb Nlmmo'a Jresentatlon
called "Mirror Guin&."
-"Terrorism and the Presa," by Dana Inl~.
Water District
Names Engineer
Joseph A. Sovella, a former comiultant ror a
water firm in Iran, bu joi.Ded tbe Lquna Beach
County Water District as district engineer.
The post is a new one for the district, accord·
inc to Joseph R. Sweany, geeral rnanapr. U.
said the district previously blie4 -o,neertq coo-
aultlnts to ~rform eqtneeriq chores.
Sovella will be. resl)Oaalble for plannlq, de·
sign, and· budaet1:n1 of \be diatriet•a wa~r
transmission and clbtribution systems.
LOVE SEATS ............. =·--.............. = Nill•....., ... .... .......... ,. .......... ., .. ....... !~9 158
' LISC DAILY PfLOT AJ J ...
Tee~ Faces Murder Rap
An 18-yeat-old Lal Ailaelel cou.Dl)t 10\ath tac• Police claim WUUI was drivinl tho woman'•
a prellmlnary bearllll in Puadeu lhy a on dllUncUve brome-eolo* Cor"YeUe wben it wu in·
charges of murder. ktdnapplng and robbery In the volved in an aecident shortly after Mn. Sparlln1'1
Marcb. im, lbootiDI doatb ol a M-1ear-old El dllappearanee.
Toro mo&ber' of four.
Brtan WUU. appeered Friday before Puadaa POLICE LATE& ~ tbe youth at b.la
Juvenile Court Commlaaloner Ricardo Tonel and home ad coafilcat4!cl some ol Mn. Sparlln&'•
waived bbl rt&)lt to a fttneea beartq. That beal'tt!I Jeweky there.
would have determined whether WUUI woula Friday's waiver of a fitness bearin1 brtnp to
•taod trlal u an adult or a Juvenile. an end almoet one year of maneuvertna by tbe de-
BY WAIVING TBB lltnea beirfnf, WllUs will fenae to exclude press coven.p of tbe burtn1.
be treated .aa an adwt u he wiads till wu thro\l&b Both the Court ot Appeals aacl the State
tbe Judicial system. Supreme Court had ruled aaaJnst the defense oo
"There are two advanta1es he can set t>y , .. __ barrtni ___ u.._press __ rro_m_tbe_rrt11 __ .. _beartna __ . ___ _
ln1 thl"OUSb the proceaa p an adult," Deputy Loe •----~---li!l'I"-------. Angele1 ntatrict AttorQey Johll Bernardi aatd llan·
day. ">.. aa adult, Willia can~ a Jqry trial and
can aak that bail be set for bU poaibte Ntease."
Ball wu aet at $250,000 followinc a mwuetpaJ
court arraipment Friday afternoon on murder.
kidn•PPloa and robbery chartea.
TllJ CllAJlGF..8 CAUY a maximum of two
Ule terms and 10 yean.
WUU. ls suspected of kidnappln1 El Toro
housewife Raebel Sparlln1 aa she left her
Paaadena p17cbiatrllt's office on Marcia 14, .um.
fllOI THI PIORIS.,..... MUCH:
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.~~e:~~ .. ~ .... ':t. Four days lat.er, hikers f oui;ad tier body in the
hills above the San Fernando Valley. She bad been
shot in the bead at close ranp.
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Chickens Destroyed
Meal in Warehouae Fire
WA.SIDNGTON (AP) -'lbe Pood and Drue
AdmlnlltratSoo aa.ys thousands of ~hlckena have
*11 delt.royed a.ad m_, men ~ be beca'8M a
Ralaton Purtna aubsldl....,. bu bem diltrlbut.lq
contaminated animal meal the put yqr.
The fe.cl was cont.amlnated by polychlorin~ted
blpbenyla durt.nc a wvebOUM tlre In Puerto Rico a
ye,r qo, Nancy Glick, a IDOk•woman for tbe
FDA. Hid Wednesd~. But the FDA learned of it
only recent.lY.
POLYCBLOalNATED BIPHENYLS are
bi&hlY stable cbelnlcals that wen Uled utenalvely
for many yea.n ln lmulaton and other eleetrfcai
egulpment. Aa a result ot tbdr heavy industrial
uae_,·.uiey have become penlatent environmeotal
contaminants that cet Uito the food chain and tum
up in the rat Uu'-of many animals, especially
flab. .
Consumption of lar1e doses by btpDana can
ca"'' ac:ne-\(ke akin eruptiooa, darltenine of the
akil:i aaa·na.Ua. exceuive diacbar1e from the eyes
: -SHE SAID THE CONTAMINATED flab meal and 1welllng of the eyelida, the FDA spokeswoman
may have been mJxed ln swine or other animal sald. But such symptAlmS
••aete•
Former "Georgia
Gov. ~ester Maddox owes
abbut. $no.ooo
from hi• 1914 queat for a secq~d term.
Supporters have
raised about $18,000. A Cund-
raising dinner ls
aet Ma,y 2.
LOCAL I NATIONAL
Cuni~ Rrded OK
But HoM lrUJrilts ..
PROVIDENCE, R.J. (AP) -Tbe Rhode
llland Sl.lpreme Cow1 II.YI tt'• OX to ca.car• ln
••profane 1WNJiD1 and curalq." Uowever. tber6's
•catch.
The court said that aalt.y lan.uue ii Wetal
wben lt lneludea "ftChUna wordl~·7actareued to a
particular lndivtdua.l. ·
The declalon revened tbe convictton of
Michael B. AuUtelet for commeae. made to police , alter a Warwick atreet corner dlaturbantt Sept. 3, 1*'1•.
Violation of tbe Rhode Ill.and law II pun!jhable by a fine~ not more thn $5. • feeds ln 8ddltioa to poultry feed, and the FDA does )' a b o u l d not be ex ·
nol UOW lf any pet food iS lnvol\led. ·r E'~A; Al'Yl perieDced by people Who Most rA the cootamlnated feed appean to have ~ have consumed the coo-
been ablpped to Tau. although at least aome bas taminantJ in the quan-
lurned up lD Idaho and Arkamas, Ma. Glick said. · lltles f"°d lo poultry
"We don't know bow many chickens or eggs and •lll1!0 far, she said. EVERYBODY
were IOld before It wu dilcovered," abe aald. "We The FDA says It Is impoaible to ellmmate
kuow 5eVa'al hundred thousand chJckem contain-PCBs rrom all roods because they occur
inlf:.pceaslve PCB levels have had to be tbrou&bout the environment. ~ lt has set max-
destroyed, and eua from cootamlnated layin& imum tolerance levels at various points in the food IN THE WORLD
beos are bein& destroyed daily." ·chain... ·
THE FAMILY CIRCUS . . rJNiSHED ANIMAL FEED llA y not contain. By Bal Keaae morcF tbU 9.2 ~ per million of the. contami-
nant, while animal feed components may contain
up to two parta per mlUion.
FDA lnVel\llaton said aaalysl.s of some of the
feed.sbOwed levels up to U parts per million, more
than 30 times tbe penniuibie level. FO~ lnvesU1aton learned from a poultry
com paw-lo Texas po Jao. St.bat It fqund ~cedlve
PC&.-.O<>Ot*tnlnatlon in tbe fat tJ11ue of its
chlckena. ·
LOVES ·
L:A PAZ
MIXES.
.. A family
of POPUiar
cocktail mixes
tor home
entertainment
BY TUCING 1'BE VAJUOVS iDgntd,ients of
UM poultry teed gtven· tu"tbe. cbkkenfJ "FDA In·
vestltators were able to plnpOIAt the tource ot ~·
contamlnaUOQ. ·.
They said that durtn& tbe warehouse fire in
April 1'17. two electrical transf'ormen explo*d, apr~lna 2,000 poUDdl or cool.aot made with PCBa
over 400 tons of tuna meal stored in baas ln the
ware~:··
ALL-RIGHT,
"We better start ~in' good 'couse if we
don't, I think Mommy might resign."
The followlna schedule ol actlvttles open to ~
pubUc bas been announced by the ue Irvine Ex·
tenaion program:
ALMOST
TM ·111).A said the meal wat manufactured by
the Vatl Camp Dtvialon of·N.tlonal Packina Co.,•
aubeldiary of tbe SL Loul.l·bued Ralston Purina
Co, EVERYBODY
r
~23Vl&Udo
Via Udo Plua -01&-0321
Gant' s Authentic Town Colla in ow
classic ifit of 651 docron, 351 cotton.
Av011oble in blue or white. $18.50.
-J:ecfi_,s
MIMS nous
3461 VIA UOO, ~T 8EKH
..
Tuned to the tempo
of Newport... .
(Art S•ow. Sula clay, April 15 )
• •••• . . . .
.. ID _,,. eooldlla ct.. ... for pacltteraf Alteacl
Gour111et In tlae Galley
ddl B,.,,, •c:Ptaenoa Giid hr aJ&lp6ocnd rec,,,_
...._ Apr.U. DQ s.m.., Jfo&.. .,_ J. Ire.,._. C..faa Moll....., .. c...... c...... Jloa..-.., ts. a. ,,.. i:ooa
Class time: 7:30 p.m. $10 per petSOn for In~ class attended. $8 per
per90n. each suc:ceedlng class. Advance payment Cll95U1'eS reservations.
u.tJ W. I.Mo• • .,._, 8-de CA n'8 • '75-J4'0
~or Jo
'-.. ~ For the art lover . i}
,f:h.. ~ with discerning taste~~
~ Via Lido Piasa
-3439 Viii Udo, N.B. ~
The flneet In kheltmeftt pmlntingl. Alt effectl from
around IM wortd CM be~ It~ ....... et our Old
Wor1d Art litmolphet'9 911*Y, Everybody .. welaorne.
A.fl our Pllntirtgl crny a 7'*" unoondJtionll ~
guarantee.
ID Tbe New Via Udo Plua
3"S Via Uio, Newport
675-0150
,..
VOL 71, NO. 103, • SECTIONS, 36 PAGES
Br ANNE Q>OPE& °' .. ...., ..........
San ~te Mayor William
Walker and Councilwoman Don-
na Wilkin.son bav• denied all
cbaraes made a1ainst them last
week In an official POtice or a re-
Hll and have hired an •ttomey
to cOoduct an investiaation of
their own.
The recall not.lee charged
Walhr and Mrs. ·Wilkinaon with
Told Frlftads?
lack Of retponSiV"1ffS to the
publlc, enteri.Dg lnlo "s~ret\'
contracts and misuse or public
funds.
In addition, Walker was ac
cused of malfeasance in usins
his influence at city hall on
bebalt ot a Qty Ooundl can·
didate to get the contender a
special campaign sian permit.
In a joint (treSI release llsued
Wednesday, Walker and Mn.
•
to
Kenrie~y .Eyes
• Bid m
BOSTON (AP) -Sen. Edward
M. Xennedy has told rrlends and
colleagues that he is seriously
considering rwming for the pres·
idency in 1980, lhe Christian
Science Monitor reported today.
The newspape r said the M auachq1etts Democrat
believe$ PrUldent Carter may
b9 vulnerable, and that 1980 may
be lCermedY'• "Jast chance." as
Rle fEelts
Qfj.fctiom
7 ~By Suspect
By WILLIAM HODGE °' .....................
'
Two witneases -includ.11\1 the
defendant's wife -Implicated
murder sutl>ect llark J . Baker
Wednesda1 in the Feb. 1\ beat-
ing death of Oranee Coast
College student Karl Marcus
Chancellor.
Suzanne Baker of Newport
Beach described a late ni&ht
drive Feb. 11 to Niguel Beach
Park wilb her husbanit and
Chancellor.
"We traveled to Laguna
Niguel Beach and got there
around U," she told South
Orange County .Municipal Court
Judge John Griffm, wbo is con-
ducting a smillminary hearing
on the murder cbar1es.
Mrs. Baker said her husband
and Chancellor got out of the
couple's parked car and went for
a walk toward the beach.
"He <Baker) came back
alone," she said. "He told me
Mark Chancellor had pulled a
gun on bim, he said 'Did you
bear the sboU?' "
The body of Chancellor. 20, of
1848 Port Sheffield Place,
Newport Beach, was found later
tha\. nlgbt bebmd a deserted
snack bar In the beach .,.de.
Mn. Baker said ber husband
told her Ota.Dcellor "went fall·
ing backwards down a cUff onto
some rocb" after he <Baker>
kooeked tlw IUD oat of Ch.an-
ceUOf 7• band and ltlc.ked him ln
the chest.
That same atory was related
In earlier testimony from a
rnutual lrtend of Baker's an4
Cban llor'L
Michael ~acobs of N•wport
S.ach detailed a conwnatJon
he bad wtth Baker one week
after Cbancelkir'• death.
"H (B*er) told me that be
killed Mark~.·• J~
told tbe ~ ''He uJd Man
<See SIA , Pase Al>
1980
one Kennedy fri~ put it.
But ln Washington, Kennedy's
administrative assistant, Ken
Feinberg, called the report
"pure conjecture" and s~ the
senator has not been considering
a WtJite House tace in 1980.
Kennedy is said to be resigned
to having the issu&, or Chappa.
quiddick brought up again lf he
does run. btj 11 also aaid to be
\Qin& tbe POS{Uon that "Chap.
paquiddick will never get any
J>ett.er lh•n it l• now." the ~w1paper laid.
A car Kennedy was drtVtq-
went off • brh!ge on Chappa·
quiddidc Island in tta, and •
woman J>UMD&er droWMd in a
tidal pool
Kelloedy sees the Kennedy ap..
peal and fame rffedinl each
year, and reallr.es that ll be is to
capitalize on the family name be
must move quickly, the Monitor
said.
If California Gov. Edmund G.
Brown Jr. enters the race for the
1980 Democratic presidential
nomination, Kennedy would def-
initely move closer lo jumping
in, the Monitor said.
Thieves Break
W-mdow, Get
$12,000 Loot
Burglars who chucked a
potted plant throueh a Laguna
Beach man's bedroom window
to gain entrance to the home
Wednesday ~ped with more
than $12,000 in stereo and
camera equipment.
Architect Gary M. Van·
derMaal told officers he dis·
covered the loss when he re-
l urned to his home at 2885
ChUlon Wa:y Wednesday.
Police 18ld the thieves picked
up a potted plant from a
waJJc;way and t<M3ed It through a
wladow, 1be burglan made of(
with a number of stereo
•P••kers. power UJilta and tumtablee lit the breakln.
Wilklnsoft said they have bl!W
attorney Conrad TO\lhey of the
Santa Ana law firm of ):ouhe1,
Barton and McDermott to deal
with the recall attempt.
In •nswer to speclfie aUeca-
ttons of the recaU notice, the two
cou.ncll members made identlc
reaponses, except ror wa1~•s
deol~l or the malf•asance
eharte in connection with the cam~gn sign permit.
'
The recall nOtlce wu aiped
by Jc>eepb Barton, Earl Oind;f,
Alben ~k and Richard Leota.
a special comn\lttee of tbe San
Clemente Homeownera Associa-
tion.
In respotiae to the comsnll-
tee '1 daarie \hat Welker and
Mn. Wllkl.nson "denied tbe rea·
sonablePetJUonofl,808 citizens to
vot• on tbear pref-
erence" bn san Clemente's pro-
Woman, 76, Killed
In. HUntington Fire
By A~ R. VINSEL OI •Deity,. .... ._..
Fire s~t throuah a Hunt-
ington Beach townhouse early
today, killing one elderly tenant
and causing an estim•ted
$325,000 damage.
Seven firemen were iojunild
fighting the blaze. One of five
townhouses was destroyed.
A number of irate neighbors
complained today that the fire
department response to the
blazewuslow.
Fire officials said that initiaUy
they bad been given a wrong ad·
dress ror Ute blaze. They said
the inltial alarm was received at
12 ~30 a.m. and the first units ar-
rived on the scene 10 minutes
later.
Ipvestleators identl!ied the
victim at the Landmark Romes
condominiums near the inte~
tion of Newland Street and
Atlante Avenue as Mrs. Llllian H~en. 76. She had moved into
I
the development four months
a,go and lived alone.
She &PJ>Jrently died of smoke
inhalation before the fire apread
lhrouih the ceUloJt lntO a com-mon atlic shared by the five
units. thus awakening other
sleep Ina tenants.
Investigators said Mrs.
Hansen lived in Building 409, at
8777 Tulare Lane, in t.be complex
featuring a wide variety of recreatiQnal facilities and a
guarded front gate.
Some residents today were
vehemently anary about tbe t-time it took for nremen to arnve
at the scene.
"We could have eotten there
sooner." says Deputy Fire
Marshal Roger Hosmer. "But
the original call rep<>rtinf the
lire involved an tncorrec ad·
dress.
"And there are se.veral dif-
rerent bulldlnl's on Tulare Lane
wlth the same at.reel add.resa,"
be added
"' r~ AF Jet,s ·ColliOO;
.At fleast 1 Killed
PONd ~r·bowl redevelopment, lhe-·two COWlcil membera said
d~laions on the pier-bowl proj-
ect were heavily inlluenced by
citizen opinion.
They said ~ public meetinp
and b.eartn&S were conducted to
ellcit citizen comment aod Ulat
all U recommendatio11a aub·
milted by citizens were unan~ty adopted by l1't City
CouacU.
Piirse Theft
Worth~k
SAN nnoo'o <AP> ;_ A
man grabbed Aime
Roffe's purse. knocking
the 80.year-oJd ·Woman
down in a strugele and
breaking her hip.
"You fool, Yo\l poor
stupid fool,." sbouted )!rs.
Roffe, a widow, as be ran
off with her purse.
Inside was Sl
Karate Thug
Gets~a
Man's Auto
•
TEN CENTS
........
They alao denied vlolat1n1
state law by dissolvinl the plef'-
bOwl Public Advt10ry Commit·
te., whJcb they said still exfsta.
No action can be taken to dis-
solve the committee. according
to state law, until November.
they Hid.
Walker and Mrs. Wilkinson
also denied ent.erinc into "undat·
ed •tad unpublicized contracts
(See BECALL. Page AJ)
Cost Set
At $6.75
Million
By STEVE MITCHELL
Cit .. -.. ..........
The rour-year battle over
Sycamore HHls ln the Laguna
Beach Greenbelt took a surprise
turn Wednesday night when City
Council members announced .a
tentative agreement to purchase
the 522 acres for ts. 75 million.
The agreement would
terminate lawsuits seeking $37
million from the city by J~
owner Rancho Palos Vereles
Corp.
T}1e City Council did not
specify the source of tbe fundS
or det.ailed use of the land other
than open apaee and recrea·
Uonal use. A colt course is one
probabW.S.)'. -
Tbf! Wednesday nigbl an-
nouncement came after three
er eline ne1otiatin1 1 aesslons between cJty officla.ls and at-
torneys for Ra!ricbo Palos
Verdes Corp., owners ot the billy
land loeated art the Y formed by
lbe int.e~oo of Lacuna Ca-
nyon and El Toro Roads.
Mayor Jack McDowell. Couo-
cflman Howard Dawaon, City
Attorney George Lo1an Ind City
PJanninc Director Doug
Schmitz, comprised the eity's
negotlatinl team.
The tentative settlement
means an end to the $37 million
asked ln lawsuits filed against
the city four years ago. The
laodown~ .chaqe.d Laguna
Beach was not allo\Ving Rancho
reaaooable ~ of its land. once
zoned for 2,000 units.
Councilmen Wednesday night
told a larg~ audience they can-
not reveal precise uses the city
will make of the land until
further negotiations are co°'·
pleted.
Councilman Dawson hinted
that tbe negoliatinc team is
looking into the possibility of a
<See SYCAMORE, Pa&e AU
Tut Film Slated
A color fl l m on Klbg
Tutankhamun will be alred
twice at the Laguna Beach
Branch Library Tuesday, oar· rated by <>non Welles. The film.
called "Tut: The Boy King" will
be ahowo in the library at 363
Glehneyre St. at 4 p.m. llftd
acaJb at 7 p. m.
~~am.
laUan on u.. poulblllty o1 r.
al Us beadquarten to the
a. amoc1atioD. with a re-rte-d membenhlp of I0.000
motagolf.
DaW900 aald t.bere wW be no ~aldentlal developa:aHt In
~ca111ore ffllla, daaplte a
8\»ecWc -plan fof U.. land Vtblcb
allows UR10 J.IJf unit. tO be con-
structed Omc with other .
"By purcbaalng t.hia land we
avoid completely deallnt with
any de\llloper, 1ubdi•ider or
landowner for any residential
development of any kind OD U\b land." be Aid.
The city 's Qefotiatiog
part.Den were also hea.ltant to reveal where they Intend to
come up with the $6. 75 million
purchase price for the land,
"'blch rans due in the year 1.9M.
Planninc Director Schmitz
said today the city will seek
public and private funds for de-
velopment of recreational and
open space uses fof the land.
"The negotialin& team ls still
working on commitment! for
fundin1 and we don't want to
• jeopardize po11lble fundin1 sources,·· ne 1a1a.
Mayor llcDowell said there
might be possible county In -
terest in the Laguna Lakes area
just north of the Sycamore Hills
kmd. The area has been con-
sidered for a regional park.
"The county's lfkes parks
Front Runnen
Close-Poll
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -On-
ly five percenta1• points
separate state Attorney General
Evelle Younger, former Los
Angeles police Chief Ed Davis
and Fresno Assemblyman Ken
Maddy in the race for the
Republican gubernatorial
nomination, according to the
California Poll.
The survey, based on in-
terviews with 1,300 California
adult RepublicS'rus from March
27-Aprll 3, showed 23 percent
preferred Younger, 32 percent
picked Davis and 18 percent chose Maddy.
San Diego Mayor Pete Wilson
was in fourth place with a 12
percent share of the vote, and
; stale Sen. John Brlegs trailed
with two percent.
,,,.._ P.,,e Al
JETS ...
yards rrom hia home, and found
a mllltary jet in flames. He saw
another column of smoke about
ball a mile away and found the
second plane.
He said he saw a dead pilot
about 200 yards from the plane.
The plane nearest Gureanus'
l)ouse was spread over about a
five-acre area, he said, but the
maln wreckaae was all ln one
•pot.
'tXJ~AL FANS
1l£4R .4C'I'RESS
Olivia de Havllland came to
t.he Ora.nae Coast th.la week and
kept an audience enthralled with
her life and loves. See Featur-
ing, PaeeCl.
Estate Planning
Coone in Laguna
A co~ ln estate plannial is
being offered by the Councfl on
Aging in l.quna Beach he.rin.
ntne Friday in City Councu
chambers.
Attorney David Brown will
otltUne estate proarama that will
b~p uve costa of taxes, and
ayoid probate. The course wUI
be held Frida13 from t:ld to 1 i: 30 a. m. For DlQl"e lnfonna-
tipn. call Mikki Revenauab at
49T-2442. •
, ............ n,,..•,.
M Cfor ol the
land> depend on both public
11nd i>rtvate aourees." "But we're in tough competi-
tion with others for those
dollars," DaWlob said. "I hope
lb.at In tbe next siJJ )'ears tbe cft.y
will have repaid every dime, wltb room to 1pare."
He said he was "delighted
with this thing. We have bought
a piece of land that would have
been worth $50 million Lt de-veloped."
Schmitz said the neaottated
price was a compromise ficure
and not based on any appraisal
by either party.
''Rancho woald have had to
come up with an appraisal
figure ii we went to court (next
Jpne)," he said.
Mc Dowell said the ne1ottallng
team will be coming back to the
public ''as regularly as possi-
ble" to report developments.
The news of the tentative
agreement was greeted with ap-
pla use by the council crowd
Wednesday night. and drew
praise from Laauna ,Greenbelt,
Inc. rresideot Tom Aleunder.
"I t.bLs newa ii tnae," Alex-
ander Said, ''then it's a great
victory for the city, the council
and lbe Greenbelt.
"I don't think that, even if the
Greenbelt <organization> had
been a part of the negotiations,
we could have doae any beUer.''
Tbe Laauna Greenbelt. Inc.
last month soqht to enter in the
closed-door nelOllaUont wltb the
city and Rancho Palos Verdes
over Sycamore Hilla, but wu re-fUJe<t.
Conaervatlonlata have Iona
comidered t.be Sycamore Hlt1a
area u the key to the Lal\dll
GreenbelL
McDowell said, "This should
be a tb.r)lUn1 concept to the
Greenbelt people. It glues into
place the tint parta of the -Jigsaw puule.
"I hope it also satbfles our
more concerned clUiena who did
not Uke being under the threat of a heavy lawsuit."
•
SUNNY MOMENT -Sharing a moment with President
Carter on an unscheduled stroll around the Tidal Basin
in Washington are. left to right. Vanessa, 1. Ahlia. 5.
and Julie Stepanek. 8.
Spring Stroll
Outer Smelh the Flou:en
WASHINGTON <AP> -President Caner la provtq the
pleasures of sprln& can ov~me the pressures or work.
Cartel' left thf Oval Office on Wednesday for a stroll amona. Wuh~'• famed cherry blossom trees. He took alona bis
wife, Roealynn, daugbt.er, Amy, and daughter-in-law Annftte.
THE FDl8T .FAllJLY SPENT an hour on the walk. durtna
which the)' posed for photographs and talked with other strollers to 70·decree weather.
Carter shed b1s suit jack~ al the at.art of the atroll around
the Tidal BulD while Amy later took off her blue. rubber-soled
shoes and walked in her bare feet.
THE PRESIDENT SPOTTED MARY Flowers or w ashlngt.on filhinR ln the baaln with a cane pole and bobber rte.
She had a bucketfulorrish.
Carter asked the woman if she had used mlnnoWI as bait
and sbe replied, ''minnows and worms."
• ,,,,.... P-.e AJ
involvlne the pier-bowt re-development.••
Tbey aatd that to the bett of
&belr knowledi• ... and accordina to the cit)' attorney, clerk and
man.,er, no 1ucb mutated and
unpablictzed contracts exist."
Walker and Mrs. Wiikinson
also denied "excessive 1pendin1
on city paid business trips. They
said all expense reimburse-
ments to them have been in
strict compliance with policies
adopted by the city prior to their
elections in 1976.
Many of their city-related travel, conference and meeting
expenses have been paid for out
or their own pockets. wttb no re-
imbursement 90U1bt, they said.
Walker said hla widely
publicized expenses on three
out-of-town city bualnen trlpg
have bem dist.oc1ed and are ac·
tu•lt1 modut, compared to
what busineamen CUltomatUy
spend on sucb trtps.
Wa~er safd be received relm· bunements of S285 for a tb.ree-
day trip to SM Diego in October
1916; $%17 for a three-day trip to
Sauamento in May tm, and
M8S for a four-day San Fran-
cisco lrip in September 1m.
Walker said the malfeuance
charae in connection with the
campagip sip "is vague, un-
true and lS denied."
.But Barton said the recall
comm1ttee bu a wltneu who
Site Council
To Name Five
P'lve communlt1 roembera
wtll be eleeled to U.. Laauna
84!acb Hl&h School Site Council
ton.ilbt dutinl ()pen ffO\ale Nllht
lb the achool audltorium.
The (Ive adult.a will join eiJht
teachers, five atudenll, a
clHstfied employee and the
prtndpal on the scbool alte coun -cil.
The panel wW wort under pro-
visions ol AB65, the Hart BW,
whlch providte t3S per lt\adent
to the diatttct to UH to flnaoce
plaanlbl for school lmprove-
toeat. 11Je mettlq bellU at 7
p.m.
FJ lloi ro Sehool
Pl-. ~n Rome
• •
heard Walker tell city Planning
Director Richard Ahlman ln February to lasue a second cam-
palcn lilft permit to City Coun-
cil candidate Roy Hamm. A ctt.y
ordinance allowed eacb can-
didate ln the March City Council
election to display a campaign
aign for only 30 days.
Hamm. whose sign was dis-
played on a building owned by
Walker, bad already displayed
his sign from Dec. 23 to Jan. 23,
Barton said. The second permit,
issued on Feb. 2, was revoked
after two days, following com-
plaints from other candidates,
be said.
City Manager Gerald Weeks
said today that both Walker and
Ahlman deny that they bad any
conversation on the matter or
Hamm 's sign, Ahlman is cur-
rently in the hospital, ~covering
from aurgeey and could not be
reached for comment.
E' .... Page.4J
SLAYING •••
-...
rriii9J
Sony Trlnltroi O:ilor• TV
Wlth remote control. 21"-
19"· 17" • lS" dlqonal.
And -au In 1todt·
KV·IOOO Sony TrtnUro11.
Sony's ntWHt AO·DC.
1"e anywhere portable. 1
~ ~aonal. ·
-..
Conellrreat Te1•w
.
For02er Orance County
political klnctnaker Dr. Lou.lll J.
Cella ,fr. la scheduled to enter
federal prison at Lom~ a~
noon Fri~ b91in 1eryhtt • flve.y ... CedeR) eentenee..
Ao bOClr later. be is scbedulecl
to beshl aervtna a concurrent one-to-1().year state sentence lm·
posed Wed«leldaY alc>q with a
$50,000 rfa• 'by Saft Dlteo
Superklt Cowt Judae wnuam A.
Yale.
Cella, ~. pleaded &ullly last
Ram, Forecaat
Fo,-Northem
Amo Friday
By Tbe A.aoclated Preu
A low pressure system moving
souLb off the coast of British
Columbla today was expected to
spread .showers through
Northern Calitomia by Friday,
the National Weather Service
said.
On Wednesday, much of
California was blanketed by
high clouds and a few areas had
strong winds, including Crescent
City. where gusts reached 40
mph.
The forecast for the San Fraa-
clsco Bay area calls for mo.lb
falr skies wilb variable blp
cloudiness this afternoon. ln·
creasing Friday with a 30 per.
cent chance of showers.
Temperature1 will range from
the m id-40s to the low 60ll with
westerly windl of 10-20 mph,
In the Sacramento VaJJey,
skies will be fair with variable
high clouds. increasine rrom the
north tonight and leadin1 to a
chance of showers on Friday.
Temperatures will range from
the mld-405 to the upper 60s with
wind& becoming southerly at 15
mph.
Sony
Headquarters for
the Harbor Area
T. Y.-Rocllo-stweo
Tape lee_..,.
... "9G
HPUO/SSUO. Thl1
compact tatertalnmeot
center 4tllvwa true Ill-ft
1011nd. whid• AK/FM
ettrto nctlnr, l-•l>tff autom1Ue tutntabM. and
two *·••r •P••ker 1)'1'4mt.• .. ~
'1
•
month to st.ate charges of sranct
theft ~ submitUn1 false Jle(tl-
Cal claims ID connection with
two Oranae County boapitalt.
The earlier federal aentenee wu
lml>OHd an. Cella wu ponvic:t-
ed ln 11179 ol lncome tu evuioQ.
fillnc fame t~ ~urns and ftlin&
false Medicare claims.
Judie Yate ha.oded down the
state semence att.er reJectlng a
plea by ceua •• attorneys that
their client be allow•d to
petform coman lty · aertice ln
Heu of prison.
"It woUld be a travesty to
have him eerve as a town PftYSi-
cian." commented Michael R.
\:apizzi. assistant Orange CC>uo-
ty district attorney. ..ff he is
within touchlnK di.stance of $1. he will steal It.
Yale cited Cella 's deeds as
"creating a cancer-like effect
statewide.
Cella reportedly burat into
tea.rs Jmt before sentence wa.s
pronounced. "My life hu been
desiccated and dissected by the
me<11a," he aa1d. "I have been
subjected to every humiliation
possible."
Cella was charged with
"skimming" as much as $.l
million from two hospitals of
wbacb he was part owner. Mercy
General in Santa Ana and Mis-
s 100 Community in Mission Viejo.
Kuch ol that money found its
way Into the. campat1ns of
numerous local and state
political candidates. including
the successful campaign of state
Controller Kenneth Cory. la-
veaU1ations have cleared Cory
of an1 wrongdoine.
Cella Wednesday repeated his
assertion that the donations to
win poliUcal influence were
necessary to the survival of the
two hospitals because or a
"war" between proprietary and
non-proprietary hospitals in the
county. /
.
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VOL 71, NO. 103, 4 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES
81 ICMNNE 8EYNOLD6 °' ............... Anatnlnl Tues4lu'• wins by Do.o Stra'Uss. Evel)'a Hart and
Jackie Keat.bet in the Newport
Beacb Qty CouncU eleC:tion ii a
almpletuk.
Tbey simply overwJ!Jlmed
their ~nts in all OT most ol
the elty s 40 prftlnc~.
But the voting pattern isn't as
clear ln Paul Hummel's unseat-
inl of Lucille Kuehn, t.be only in·
cumbent in t.h.l1 year'• race for
four councll auts.
One certainty 11 that the
seven-member Newport council will have lour new faces when it convenes for 1ta post;election re-
or1ani.Utloo meetinC next Tuel· day. I -
Mn. Heat.Mr, chairman of the
city's Planning Commission,
with 7 ,m votes, polled more
than any other candidate Tues·
day. She beat ~r looe opponent.
•
Charles Larson, in every pre-precincta and tied Mrs. Hart tn
clnct. He eot.2,SOC votes. one other while nmning up• la.l· Mn. Hart, a form•r member ly ol 3,707.
of tbe Parka, Beachea and Gerln1's wfonin1 precincts
Recreation Oommiaaion, wu were in Newport Center-Bil Can·
neatly u overwhelmlns with yon, the Bluffs, Promontory
S,100 vota. Point. Eutbluff and one pre·
She wu oppoeed by former u· cinct in the Harbor View Homes
1l1taot city manaaer Franlr , area.
Ivens and attorney Micba~I Ger· Tbe tie was In bia own
in1. Ivens Ciniahed a d\stant Westcutr oelahborbood.
lblrd t.broughout the city. ge.ttin& Strauss' chief opponent out of
932 vote,-s. Gering took only five a field of five was !onetime
Newport bUllnesswoman Pe1
Fors.It. who cUried nine pre.
clocts and t1ed one wltb bim. He
1ot a total Ol 4;8la ~ ud abe
Polled 3,358:
lb1. Fofldt won in ~ five
Balboa Peninsula preclncw, one
in Newport Heights, Promontory
Point aDd one lD old Co~a del
Mar.
In the Hummel-Kuehn race,
the final margin of victory was
6$5 votes, eked out precinct by
Totlay'a Cl lag
N.Y. S k8
•
N TEN CENTS
precinct acroa tho city.
Supporters of Hummel found
ud deUvertd favo,..ble votes.
dlrectln.i their effOrts at friendly
precincta and conceding others
to Mrs. Kuehn.
. In all, Mra. Kuehn beat Hum·
mel In only 13 ol 40 precinCt.s.
took the absentee ballots. tied
him ln one precinct and lost two
others by less than two votes.
Her areu of atrenith turned
~See £1.EcrlON. Pase AZ>
Newport "V outh.'s
Slaying Told
By WILLIAM HODGE
Of ... ~lty ...........
Two witneases -lncludine the
defendant's wile -Implicated
murder suspect Mark J . Baker
Wednesday in the Feb. 11 beat·
ing death of Oranfe Coast
College student Kar Marcus
Chancellor.
Suzanne Baker of Newport
Beacb described a late ni&hl
drive Feb. 11 to Niguel Beach
Park with her husband and
Chancellor.
mutual friend of Baker's and
Chancellor's. .
Michael Jacobs of Newport
Beach detailed a conversation
he bad wttb Baker one week
after Chancellor's death.
"He CBake'f > told me that be
killed Mark Chancellor," Jacobs
told the court. "He aa.ld Hark
Chancellor pulled a gun on blm
and he knocked it out of his band
and kicked him in the chest.
"He said he <Chancellor) fell
over a clltr and that's how be
died."
Defense Attorney Alfonso Sepe
of M iam1. Fla .. obJeeted to
Deputy District Attorney Ted
Millard's probing of Mrs.
Baker's recollection of her
husband 'a movement& on the
night of I.he murder.
Sepe cited legal protections or
conversations between husband
and wife and asserted such con-
veraalions are protected from
dlsclosure whether verbal or
non.verbal.
But Judge GriHin overruled
Sepe and allowed Millard to con·
tinue questioning Mrs. Baker
<See SLAYING, Page A2)
o.llyl'tltl ..........
FlRE INVESTIGATORS TOUR BURNED OUT RESIDENci'IN HUNTINGTON BEA
Thi• W•• '\flew ThroutJh Living Room Window After F•t•I Fire Early Today
"We traveled to Laguna
Niguel Beach and got there
around 11 ." she told South
Orange County Municipal Court
Judge John Griffin, who is con:.
ducting a preliminary hearing
on the murder charges.
Mrs. Baker said her husband
and Chancellor got out of the
couple's parked car and went for
a walk toward the beach.
Reggie A.gain
Homer Br!!!gt Candy Tribrde
~
I By ArnttJR a. VINSEL
Of .. o.ltr .........
Fire swept throush a Hunt-
ington Beach townhouse ear\y
\oday. killing ooe elderly tenant
and causin& an estimated 1t125.ooo damage.
Seven firemen were injured
f1gbtin1 the blaze. One ot five
townhouses was destroyed.
.A number of irate neighbors
complained today that the fire
department response to the
bhtzewasstow.
Fire oCficials said that initially
they had been given a wrong ad·
drelli for the blaze. They said
the initial alarm was received at
12: 30 a.m. and the f\nt units ar-
rived on the ac:ene 10 minutes
later.
lnvestlgaton identified the
victim at fbe Landmark Homes
condominbll1'S near the inlersec-
\ion of Newland Street and
Atlanta Avenue as Mrs. Lillian
Hansen, 78. She had moved into
the development four months
ago and lived aJone.
She apparently died of smoke
inhalation before the fire spread
throu"h the ceilin,e into a com· mon attic shared by the five
units, thua awakening other
sleeping tenants.
In vesllgators said Mrs. Hansen lived in Bulld.ing 409, at
8777 Tulare Lane, in the complex
featuring a wide variety of
recreatiooal facilities and a
guarded front gate. Some residents today were
vehemently angry about the
time it took for firemen to arrive
al the scene. .. We could have gotten UK!re
sooner," says Deputy Fire
Marshal Roger Hosmer. "But
the original call reporting the
fire involved an incorrect ad-
dress.
"And there are several dif.
ferent bull~ on Tulare Lane
with the same street address."
he added.
Laguna May Buy
Sycamore ~ills ~ea
By STEVE llft'OIELL -0. .. -.,.., ..........
'
Newport Beach City Coun·
ctlmal\ Don Mcinnis today
labeled u "totally incompaU·
ble" the zone change approved
Wednesday on a 52-acre island
of unincorporated territory sur·
rounded by Newport Beach.
The so-called Superior A venue
trian1re near 1loaa Memorial
Hospital, was rezoned for high
density residential development
and commercial use by Orange
County supervisors.
The change was recom-
meaded by the County Planning
Commission . County planning
staff members said it would
r~flect the existing commercial,
apartment and mobile home use
In the area.
City officials have been fight-
ing the change, asking that t.he
land be designated for light in·
dullrial and commercial uses.
Spurred by Mcinnis, the city is
currently considering annexa-
tion or the trianale because the
residential zoning is too dense
by city standards.
City Manaaer Robert Wynn
noted Newport Beach regula-
tions would permit only 15 units
to an acre, while the county's ac·
Uon Wednesday will allow 23
units per acre.
Mctnnia aald today be hopes
the City Councll will press ahead
with plans for annexation,
although he aokbowledged there
may be aome problems in revis-
ina the llDning if the city does
galn control overtbe parcel.
He noted that city ofCicials are
currently Involved in an effort to
(See REZONE, Pa&• AZ>
"He <Baker> cam• back alone," she aaid. "He told me
Id.ark. a>anceUor bad pulled a
,eun on him, be uld •Did JOU hear tbe 'lhot.a! • ..
The bOd1 Ol Qlancellar. ao. ot
1848 Port Sbelfield Place,
Newport BUcb, WU fow:id later
that nlcbt behind a deserted snack bar in the beacb park.
Mrs. Baker said her husband
told her ~Uor "went fall·
ing backwards down a clllf onto
some rocb" after be ~Baker>
knotted the IUD out of Chan·
cellor'a band and kicked him in
the chest.
That same atory was related
in earlier testimony from a
NEW YORK CAP> -Reale
Jackson Picked up 1'bere be left
off in Uae lm World Series wttb
a flnt·f.IWq bome "'° iD tbe New :York Yanteea• bome
opener tOday -a blow tha~
unleubed • ra.i.o of Rescie! can·
dy ban.
AA lacbon. whose three home
runs in the alxth and flaal game
beat the Loe Angeles Dodfen
for bueball's championship last
year, r'OWlded the bases, fans
be1an ftineina miwrapped candy
baa into t&e field.
The confectioo, Reggie! was
launched by a candy company
last winter.
......
Hundreds of the chocolate
bars landed near home plate and
sprayed the outfield grass.
Shortly afterward, about 25
younpten Jumped out of the
left field 1tand1 and betan
retrfeYtna the delicacies.
Groundskeepers ptbered up
the rest ol the bars from the
playln1 area in a few moments
but others la, untouched, out of
reach on the screen protecting
fans behind home plate.
Jack.son's home run, a blast
that sailed over the center fie.Id
fence near the 385-foot sign,
scored Willie Randolph and
Mickey Rivers ahead or him.
Debrjs Clog~ Harbor
Umse, Cleanup Eyed f,y Newport O/fidah
By ALMON LOCKABEY ....., ................
,Newport Harbor is virtually
cloeged wit.b debris after a ma·
jor storm or series of storms
such as have plaeued the
Orange Coast in recent months.
That visible fact la recopiiud
by every government a1ency
from the local to the federal
level.
In an effort to rmc1 out how the
problem can be prevented and
who is respooalble for c~~na
up nature~ e>«aslonal meu, the
Matlne Division of ~ Newport
Harbor Chamber of Commerce
invited aaency heads to a
breakraat meet1n1 to at11wer
som, poibtedquestlona.
Most of the panellata aireect
that the debris, ledlment and
pollution oriainated in. the back
countty and ended up lo
Newport Harbor by way of
creeks and flood control cha.n·
nels.
But there was little agreement
on what could be done about it or
who is responsible ror cleaning
up the mess.
Moet encouraging solution dis·
cussed was a series ol catch
basins along flood control cban·
nela and lo tbe Upper Bay, but the
panelists agreed that such measures would talce three to slx
years or more and costs hundreds
of tbousandsol dollars.
As for the ~lbillty for
cleanup:
More Coverage
Additional ,Newport Beach·
Costa' Mesa coverasr •appears
today on Page All.
Jake Mynderse, general
services director for the City of
Newport Beach, told the group
that his department 's
•responsibility was cleaning up
the beaches aft.er tbe debris had
washed ashore on high tides.
"We are not responsible for
anythilla that floats." he said.
Mynderse said bis department
baa already removed bundle&
of tons of debris from bay and
ocean beaches, "and we are not through yet.·•
He said the solution to the
problem seemed l<> be some sort
ol control between Newport Harbor and where the debris orlglnates.
<See DEBRIS. Pase AZ>
I
out t.o be one precinct on lJdo
l1le, one ln central Newport.
r W eat N • all of Newport
' .. SUNNY MOMENT Sharing a moment with President
Carter on an unscheduled stroll around the Tidal Basin
<an Washington are, left to right, Vanessa, l, Ahlia. 5,
.41nd Julie Stepanek, 8.
Spring Stroll
Carter Smelh the F~n
WASHINGTON <AP> -President Carter ts proving the
pleasures of spring can overcome the pressures of work.
Carter left the Oval Offlce on Wednesday for a stroll among
Washington's famed cherry bl06S0m trees. He toot aJon1 bis
wife, Rosalynn, daughter, Amy, and da'!'hter-in-law-Annette.
THE n:RSI' FAMILY SPENT an hour on the walk, dwiOI
which they ~ ror photographs and talked with other strollers
in 70-de~ weather.
Cart.er abed his suit jacket at the start of the stroll around
the Tidal Basin while Amy later took off her blue, rubber-4loled
shoes and walked in her bare feet
THE PRESIDENT SPOTTED MARV Flowers of
Washington fishinR in the basin with a cane pole and bobber ri&.
She had a bucketful or fish. Carter asked the woman if she had used minnows as bait
and she replied, "minnows and worms."
I elcM1. Cliff Haven and w tcllff. Newport Ctnter~Btr
C.ayon, one pNe1nct In lfbe
BJbffa, Promontory Point. bet
home neighborhood of I vine
Terrace and one precinct in
Harbor View Homes.
The tie and two narrow misses
occurred in Park Newport.
Eastbluff and Spyclua Hilt.
Hummel, on the other hand,
rolled up blg wtna ln nine pre·
clncta where his "\.8!~1_n or vie· tory ranged from ~o almost
150 votes.
Those big·win precincts com-
bined with the fact that be won
in 17 preclncta, are what made
the 635-vOle difference.
His strongest vole returns
came In Peninsula Point,
Newport Crest, the Anniversary
tract, all three precincts on
Balboa Island, the two precincts
of Harbor View Hills and one
precinct in Corona del Mar.
Hummel.~e former president
of the CofOP\1 del Mar Civic As·
sociation, took all of the residen-
tial neighborhoods -excluding
Irvine Terrace -acljoiniq East
Coast Hlehway by margins
ran1ing from 11 votes t.o nearly
150.
Tbe one result that perhaps
will have everyone scratching
their t\eads ls the 55 vote tally
given to La Verne de la Cierva,
tbe Lido Isle housewife who
dropoed out of ~campaign im·
medfately aftertbe closeoffillng ..
JuryRetunu
Death Penalty
YUBA CITY (AP> -A jury
has returned a death penalty
verdict against a 27.year-old
Sacramento man In tbe first
such action under California's
new death penalty law.
The Superior Court jury
verdict was against Charles Al·
len Green for the October 1977
slaying or his 16-year-0ld wife.
Karen. Sentencing was set for
May t.
f',....PageAJ
SLAYING ••.
about ber husband:. moJfement.s
followln1 the drlve back from
the aouth coast beach park.
Fund Fattened
Mesa Man Aids Mexican Boy
II rs. Baker said she and her
ttusband arrived back at their
Park Newport residence at 12';~
P'·P'l She said Baker carried her
ceat. which appeared to have
something inside it. As they
went into the apartment, she
noticed the barrel of a shotgun
protruding from the coat
She said Baker carried the
shotgun into the bathrOc>m and
she observed "water running In
tbe bathtub and washing."
A few days later, Mrs. Baker s~id, her husband took the gun
around to some businesses to
h,ave work done on it but even·
t•ally threw the weapon into a
swamp in Garden Grove.
f\ uthorltles allege the shot1un
was used to beat Chancellor lo
dt-ath on Feb. 11.
In earlier testimony, a friend
of Chancellor's testified that the
~ceased student carried about
$4.000 in cash on lhe day of the
murder.
The beari8t will determine if
B•ker shouufbe bound over for
tMal in Orange County SupeMor
Cqurt on the murder charges.
'Baker, 22, ls being held in
Orange County Jail
Barbo. "'---ed . rmg~e
·tt'AHLEQUAH. Okla. lAP) -
-r,.o men were charged Wed.lies·
day with harboring fugitive
O.'.ene Leroy Hart while
tUJtboriUes bunted for him in the
murder of three Girl Scouts.
Ofaerokee County District At
tC>mey John W. Russell Jr. said
Sam Pill'OD Jr., in whose home
Hart was aeUed la.at week. was
arrested Wednelday mom.Ina.
CMlAllOS CCIM'r ..
DAILY PILOT
Tbe fund for hospital care for
little Tomas Dominguez, the
burn -scarred Tijuana boy
befriended by a Huntin1ton
Beach housewife, has been fat ·
tened by SS04 beyonctthe $15,000
needed for plastic surgery.
Nick Fodera. owner of Nick 's
P izza, 2300 Harbor Blvd .. Costa
Mesa, staged a benefit pizza
lunch to help raise funds to cov·
er the child's hospital expenses.
Since the story of Tomas, 8,
horribly disfigured when a can
of paint thinner exploded in his
Fro9Page Al
DEBRIS •••
Lanny Eberling, a represen-
tali ve of lbe Newport Irvine
W sate Management Planning
A1ency <NIWA), explained that
his organization and member
agencies were involved in study-
in1 tb& sources of polluilon. NIWA
is a joint powers entity consist.Ing
or several agencies.
State and city members in·
crude lhe cities of Newport
Beach, Irvine. Orang~nd Costa
Mesa and the California Depart-
ment of Fish and Game. County
agencies include the Harbor
Beaches and Parks Di1trlct,
Ftood Control District and the
County of Orange.
Most conlroverslal que1tlon
discussed at the meeting was the
removal ol the county "scooper"
from service in the bay because
of an alleged contract confllct
between the city of Newport
Beach. and the Eo.vironmeat.al
M •Q•iel!lent Agenc)' of the
CO\ID\y.
the "scooper" was taken out
of service because it aupposedlf
conflicted with the private con·
tract the cily and county had
wtt.b Greg Bo6ton and Associates
tor cleanlog up the city and
county Udellnds of the bay.
The "scooper" was takeo out
of service at a time that placed
heavy responsibility on &.too.
a private cootractor. whose toa·
tract calls for cl.eanlag ap oal)'
the periphery ol the bay.
Ken Smltb, a repqweotaUve of
the County Environmental
M ana1enttmt Acency, uaured
l.be Cbainbel' sroup th.at t.M cm-
tract ti beinl rene&otlited wtth
the clty and that the ·~·ICOOPW"
would be back ln service tn a
sbortUtne..
Others on the panel l.noJudcd
Robert D. MOQtpme'>:! , lDlibd
re1tonal manager for :;cfattbom Callf ornla tor the Dtpartmcnt OI
Flah and Game; Jobn
Zaaad.r.lnaki catlfomla Reatootl
W ate Qui11ty COnttol DOard
engln r, i.nd Carl Nellon ot U'8 Orante OoWllY lood CaiDlroJ
Dtat.nct.
Alt GioQib, pretld d tbe Manne DtmtOD or the Qamber •
of Commer e, ••• tb• ~ f«dle ......
race 14 ~ ago was printed.
thousands nave responded to the
campaign begun by Virginia
Cutillo. The bright llttle boy is a pa·
tlent at Stanford University
Medical Center. where he has undergone surgery twice and
still faces surgery at least four
more times.
He is living with the Elwood
Mills family in Gilroy as a f~ter'
child but must sooo return to Ti·
juana to have his visa crederl·
t1als reissued since they are
good for only six months.
His parents, Ignacio and
Maria Dominguez, who visited
l wo weeks ago for bls eighth
birthday, are overwhelmed by
Tomas' miracle, one for which Mn. Caatllloclalninocredit.
"We want to thank every-
body,:~~saya Mrs. Castillo, of 6811 ueuance Drive, Huotlogton
Beach.
Funds for the boy have been
sent to lnterplasl Inc., a non· prom medical gr0up at Stan-
ford.
Donations have come from
wealthy businessmen,
huvsewives who dipped into
lhelr mad money and prl.sooers
at the C~fornia Institution for
Men al Chino, who staged a
benefll fund·raiser pro1ram.
F,.._PageAI
REZONE •••
lower denslty to reduce trallic
probl•ma throulbout tbe city.
"I'm not goin1 to make a
crusade out of this, but I hope
the council will be wllllng to
take actlon.." he said.
The annexation move is pend-
tng while city officials see il cer·
taln public improvementa can be
made ln the area at county ex-
pense before aoneulioo takes
place.
Wynn explained a recent ell)'
study found the area needed
street and storm drain improve-
menta, and additional data la
DtCHIVJ before • deelllon an annexation can be made.
Under a new 1tate law, cities
can annex uolncorporat•d
taland.s of leU than 100 aaea
without tiavln1 an election
amons propeny ownere ·and
realdenta-ot ,the per~• to be
annexed.
So f •r-1 county 1upentaon
haH hela Off boldl.Da any public bearlnp on 1uch anntxaUon pro~ whiJe wa1Unj (or Jtp.I
lni.rpNtal1ona. MdMli aiJd lie thinks tbote
be1J1AptWW bl able to move
ab d 'blea a vubal repon.
from tbe 1tat• Attorney c .... ril'• olftee u aJvea ·~ afteriJOOa to I.be memberS ~ tM total Akr*1 l'ormaUcin Comm IGn, tbe bOd.Y affiUtwlaeb~ .
Roses for the Roelcettn
•
Members or the audience. including a
man in a white top hat, hcdfd out flowers
to the Rockettes at Radio City Music Han
Wednesdaty night after the famous bigb
steppers had perf orme4 What they thought
would be their last show. But just after
midnight.. an agr.eement was announced
that will keep the New York tandma~ in busfness I or at least another year.
Water tJnit Under Fire
By PIDUP &OSMARIN oe • oe1tr ,.....IDtt
A petition seeking public COO·
trol of the Jrvtne Ranch Water
District board of directon. to
whlch only two of lhe current
seven members are publicly
elected, ia be1nl circulated ln
Irvine neiibborhoods. Lucy Throlllon, an elementary
school reading teacher, told the
Irvine City Council Tuesday that
in three days she already had
collected "gobs and 1obe" of
signatures. <Her husband,
Arthur, said later about 50 had
signed.)
. Residents. she said, are pro·
testing "taxation without
representation."
The IRWD seeks authorization
to issue $1.6 billion ln bonds,
-....
....
&>ny Trlnltrm Color TV
wtth remote concrol. 21 " -
II"· 17" 6 15" clqooal,
And • au In 1tock ·
KV·IOOO Sony Trinltron.
Sony'a newest AC·DC.
Me anywhere portable. a
Inch dJa1onal.
which would be paid back by
.Juture residenta, for new water
f and sewe=rojecta in currently undeve territory.
Board · n meet on Moo·
day and are schedUle4 to vote oo
whether to bold a landowners
boo d election to obtain
authorization lbi.11 summer, and
to create 10 new improverneut
c:li!ltrt ct.a.
In practice, the vote of tl¥t
board signals the outcome of the
election. because bond election
votes are cast by landowners of
undevel()J>ed property.
The Irvine Company is the
m-.tor landowner of the IRWD,
with the greatest, decidin1.
voter clout. It •lso la
represented on the' board by the
rive landowner·elecled mem·
'-----" Sony
Headquarters for
the Harbor Area
T.V • .a .... 51fte6
Tap.lee°'*" letcmax
RPUO /SSUO. Thi s compael entertainment center delivers troe hi-n sound. Includes All/FM
stereo recei•er, l·1peed
automaUc tum.table, and
two 2·••1 s peaker systems. ua:•M
bera. Besides the resident pelilioo, a
laws ult wu filed Tuesday. by
people who claim to represent
low lncouw: O"OQPS ln Onmae
and Loe Aneetes counties, to halt
the IRWD act.loo.
Tboee people claim the water'
project.a have not been analyJJed tor enviroomeuta1 impact, and
have been planned without COO·
slderatlon for provldlnc afforda·
ble bousin& for employees who
will bulld t6e project.a.
Despite the lawsuit, IRWD
directors lnlelld to take act.Ion
Moodax. beca\IH so far no at.
tempt has f>een made by plain-
ti H s to secure a temporary
restralninK order or lniunctioo
to ball p~ until a court
hearina 1a lletd.
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VOL 71, NO. 103, • SECTIONS, 36 PAGES TEN CENTS
,
New Lf)ok Asked OD
r
By KATHY CLANCY
Cit ........... ...,.
Orange County Supervisor
Thomas Riley is appealin1 a
County Planning CommJssion
ruling that would allow 400
homes tn a Laiuna Wlls area
some contend ii Impacted by El
Toro jet ooiae.~ Riley said ia appeal to
fellow supervlson o 't mean
he either oppoM& or supports the location ol the 40().urut Laguna
Villa1e. Inc .• deveJopment.
"But tbo very tortuous route
that it took the comml11ion to
get here t.hia time means that
the board should look al il,"
Riley aaid.
Riley was referring to conflict·
ing nobe rej)Ol'ts conceming the
Santa Vittoria Drive property
filed by a Laguna Villqe noise
consultant. a coMultant hired by
the county and officials of the
county Health Department.
' When tbe PlannJbg Com·
mlasloo made its April 3 ruling,
county health officials warned
that residents of the ne'fi homes
would be expoaed lo a noise
health hazard.
And echoing the Health
Department's objection to tbe
project were me,mben of tbe
county SUbdivls\on Committee.
However. both the county-
blred and developer·bired aoise cons ultants contended their
o.lly ............ ., p ...... ._..
FIRE INVESTIGATORS TOUR BURNED Oln RESIDENCE IN HUNTINGTON BEACH
Thia Wea View Through Uvlng Room Wlndow After Fetal Fir• Early Today
t ! By ARTIIUR R . VINSEL
09 .. °""' ........... Fire swept through a Hunt-
... ington Beach townhouse early
-today. killing one elderly tenant
and causing an e$tlmated
$325.000 damage.
Seven ruemen were injured
figbtin.C the Dlaie. One of ftve
townhouses was destroyed.
A number ol irate neighbors/
complained today that the fire'
depar\ment respqnse to the blaze~.·
Fire officials said that lpitiall.Y
they had been given a wrong ad-
dress for the blue. They said
the initial alarm was received al
12:30 a.m. abd the first units ar·
rived on the scene 10 mlnutes
later
lnveatisaton, lcJeoutied the
victim at t.be Landmark Homes
condomlnlums near the intersec·
lion of Newland Street and
Atlanta Avmue u Mrs. Lillian
Hansen, 18. She bad moved into
I . --··
the development tour months
ago and lived alone. . She apparently died or smoke
&ohalation beFore the fire spread
throuJrb the cellinl( into a com· moo attic shared by the five
units, thus awa kening other
sleeping tenants.
Investigators said Mra.
Hansen lived in BulldJng 409, at
8777 Tulare Lane, in the complex
featuring a wide variety of
recreational facilities and a
guarded front gale.
Some residents today were
vebemenUY angry about t~
time it took for firemen to arrive
at the scene.
.. We could have gotten there
sooner," s ays Deputy Fire
Marshal Roger Hosmer. "But
the original call reporting the
fire involved an incorrect ad-
dress. "And there are several dif· ferent buildino oo Tulare Lane
with the same street address,"
be added.
•
'
Tuv AF Jets Collide;
At Least 1 Killed
JACKSONVILLE, N.C. <AP>
-Two Alt Force F-4E Phantom
jet ficblera apparenUy collided
in flilhl and crubed into a
wooded area of Onalow County
west of here today, killing at
least ooe Of tho four crewmen,
a utboritlea alild.
Muter set. Wllllam Barnhill
at Seymour Johnson Air Force
Bue oea Golmboro 1ald the
jell appuent.lJ collided dmne a
cllmblna'maneuver. He said the
planes were baMd at Seymour
lobnaon. attached IP the 4th
Tactical nib~ Winr.
A Federal Aviation Ad·
mtnlairatlon spokesman in
Wub.lqlon, John Leyden, said
tht Jell were part Of a four·plane
BOSTON <AP> -Sen. Edward
M. Kennedy bas told friends and
colleagues that he is seriously
conslderin& ru.nninalor tbapres·
idency in 1980, the Christian
Science Monitor rep0rled today.
The newspaper said the
MassJlcbusette Democrat
believes President Carter may
be vulnerable, and that 1980 may
be Kennedy's "lut ·chance," as
one Kennedy friend put it.
But in Waahloitoo. Kennedy's
adminJstrative assis~~.Ken
Feinberg, called· tlre report
"pure cortjecture" and said the
senator has not been considering
a Wblte House race io 1980.
Kennedy b said to be resigned
to having the issue of Chappa·
quiddick brought up again if be
does rtm, but is also said to be
takin1 lbe position that "Cbap-
paquiddJck will never get any
better than lt is now." tbe
newapaper said.
A car Kennedy was driving
went off a bri~e on Chappa.
quiddick l1hmd ln 1969, and a
woman pauenger drowned in a
tidal pool.
Ken"6dy sees the Keonedy ap-
peal and fame recedinl each
year, and realizes that lf he is to
capitalize on the family name he
must mcwe qU.ickly. the Monitor
said.
Ir CaHtornia Gov. Edmund G.
Brown Jr. enters the race for the
1980 Democratic presidential
npmlnaUOn, Kennedy would def.
initely rnove cloeer to Jumping
in, the Monitor .. id.
studies •bowed the area to be
outside tho high nolae Impact
zone.
The new tiomet would be built
within •leht ol El 'roro Marine
Corps AJr Station and n .. r the
bue '1 main runway approach.
Riley; a former Marine
general, Hid that area could be
more heavily impacted by nobe
during touch and go landlnc
operations ad said he fean the
noise levels could be hJgher de
pendlni upon the trabiln1 or
a tale or tralnJ ng of the ~uadrona. ,...
flt bis letter of apl)eal. the
Newport Beach supervisor uld
he wants to make sure the dat.a
used by the commission to de·
termine the no{se.lmpact area is
vaUd and that county policies
AftD 't being violated.
Jn addition. Riley sald he wuts to mak• _sure the lmPtel of dM»rt-tenD. 'blgh·volume noise
'It's My .Business'
levels on future residents bas
been established and con·
sldered.
Robert Stone. county environ·
mental health director. bad
warned earlier. "The area sim·
ply is too noisy ror residenllal de-
velopment"
He predicted future residents
would be unhappy and complain
to the county.
Rttey said he also intends to
<Sff HOUSING. Page A.Zl
SV Trustee Kohler
Blast~_E~~Dict Rap
By WILLIAM RODGE
CltU.DMly .........
Saddlebact Valley Unified
School District Trustee William
Kohler reacted strongly this
morning to new charges leveled
against hiD\ Wednesday that be
does business with school ad-
ministrators he evaluates as a
trustee.
The charges came· in a state-
ment before trustees by Sad-
dleback Valley Educators As· s ociation President Bill
Mecham.
·'There are administrators In
this district who received merit
pay that hold tu sheltered an·
nuity plans with Mr. Kohler,"
Mecham told board membeni,
characterizine the Information as .. rumors" provided by people
who've telephoned him
n•~cba.m). ••u these rumors are l'rue.
... thesl it'a improper and does coo·
sUtute a coofllct -or ~~ ..
Mecbam..ul.
K.oblet. ·.im operat. in·
aura.ace bwd,,.1. relUeed'\c> NY
whether or no' be btld tax
shell.erect anawty plans with
SVUSD Superintendent Dr.
Richard Welte or other diatrict
administrators.
"My business is my busi·
ness." Kohler said today. "My
business dealinp I don't believe
* * *
have anythiog to do with Mr.
Mecham."
.Kobler tahl he didn't beUev~ it
was a conflict of interest if be
dJd buainess with di.strict ad·
miniJltntors-who teeelved mertt
·* * *
George Henry New
Tnutees' Pres~nt
pay increases through trustee
approval.
Merit pay increases are grant·
ed on the basis of an evaluaUon
of individual men.agement
workers and are designed to pro·
vide incenuve for more efficient
work .. The percentage or pay increase
depends on the employee's rank·
ing from average to excellent as
a worker for the district.
Following Wednes day '!>
tru11tee meeting, Mech•m told
newsmen people bad told him
Superintendent Welte had used
some of a controversial $3~
pay raise to put more money tll·
to a tu ahelt.ered annuity plan
with Kohler.
..t Kobler said the point was
moot since the vole on Welt.e's
pay raise was 4 to l . That
means, Kohler said, bis vote
didn't m.alle aay difference.
Board President George
Henry aald be would lnvestleate
Mttbam'• latest coaflid d ln· ·terest~ "I will pt a ty COUnseJ
opinion on what Is legal," Henry
said.
Mecham originally raised COD·
ruct of interest charps against
Kohk• iast March by producing
a letter that solicited business
rroni a diatrlct employee.
<See K'OBLEa. Page "2)
Cella Enters
Forme r Orange County
political ldngma.ker Dr. Loll.is J.
Cella Jr. is scheduled to enteT
federal prison at Lompoc at
noon Friday to begin serving ·a
rtve-year federaJ sentence.
An hour later, he is scheduled
to bqin serving a coocunent
one·to-10.year state sentence im-
posed Wednesday along with a
$50,000 ftne by San Dte10
Superior Court Judge William A .
Yale.
Cella, 52. pleaded guilty last
month to state charge or grand
theft and submitting false Medi·
Cal claims in connection with
l wo Orange County hospitals.
The earlier federal sentence was
lmpe>aed after Cella was con•ict-
ed Ip 19'1e or income tax evasion, rmna faJM tax returns and filing
<~CELLA, Pare~)
..
O~ ANG&LES (AP) -A
UHCb ts prtaon escapee
II.I}• a tape ... wanted to tell to • ._,paper was made dwiq tbe
murder ot 1taum.o Rotiimm.
one of tbo 13 Hiu.lde Strua&t•
vktlrn1, tM aewspe.fiW re~
today.
The Los Angel" ReraJd Ex-
aminer rePorted iD a copyrilht-
ed story that Georae Sbam11'ak
told the paper in a collect phone
call from prison Saturday that
the tape waa made ln a van
while Ilia Robin.son, 17, waa be-
in& straniled Nov. 16.
Shamahak said the Lape con-
tained "the background sounds or what's happening ...
Shatmsbak said be possesses
ft ve tapes rel a line to the
murders and tha1 their contents
show three persons were in·
volved in lhe slayings -one of
the m a woman who later
became a straneler victim
herself. the paper said.
Shamshak.,. who was serving a
prison term for armed robbery
rn Massacbuseus at the time of
his escape, has been questioned
by Los Angeles police in at least
two strangler murde~. Police
say bis interrogation showed he
had "special knowledge" in the
c.-se . Shamabak contended in his
talk with reporters tbat tbe
tapes he offered would clear him
or involvement in the murders.
"I have never killed anyone in
my life. I just happened to be a
willing dupe -a pawn.
Somebody held something over
my head." he ia quoted as say-
in&.
The curly haired convict said
be offered the tapes to the police
but .. the police didn't want to of·
fer me lbe deal I wanted. I want-
ed 1 m munily. bu1 they want to
prosecute me now, from what I
understand, for two murders."
The paper said negotiations
with Shamahak bogged down
when pnson officials refused te
permit more calls to Shamaha.k
and the newspaper's editor,
James G. Bellows, decided "not
lo gel into checkbook
Journalism."
Menanwhile, Sbamsbak's at-
torney, Henry Wynn, denied bis
tlient bad any tapea and a.qrtly
accused the Los Angeles Police
-Department of attempting to
alrcumvent Sbamshak's richU
by helping the newspaper in·
terview the convict.
Wynn said he was laking steps
to have Shamshak transferred
back to Massacbuaetts, where
he told ot the strangler killin~s.
Purse Theft
Worth Buck
SAN DIEGO CAP> -A
man grabbed Aime
' Rorre's purse. knocking
the 80-year-old woman
down in a struegle and
breaking her hlp.
"You fool , you poor
stupid fool." shouted Mn.
Roffe, a widow, as be ran
off with her purse.
Inside was $1.
Skiploader Taken
From Laguna Bills
An $11,000 skiploader being
1,1.Jed on a construction site in
Laguna Hilla was stolen by
t,hleves who apparently loaded
the heavy tractor onto a flatbed
truck and drove ofJ.
Orange County sberiff's of.
ficen said·t.he theft wu report-
ed by officials of Westoo
ConatnlcUoa, Lm Aqeles. ThE
skiploader was beiat Wied ir.
(OnstructJon work at 230~ Lake
i'orest Bolld.
DAILY PILOT
...
'
SUNNY MOMENT -Sharing a moment with President .
Carter on an unscheduled stroll around the Tidal Basin
in Washington are, left to right, Varfessa, 1, Ahlia . 5,
and Julie Stepane k, 8.
Spr.ing . Stroll
Carter Smells the F~,..
WASHINGTON CAP) -President Carter is provlq tbe
pteuure:s al spriol can overcome the pressures ol work.
Carter left the Oval Office on Wednesday for a stroll among
Washington's famed cherry blossom trees. He took along his
wife, Rosalynn, dauahter, Amy, and daughter-in-law Annette.
THE Fl.sT l1'AIULY SPENT an hour on the walk, dl.lring
which they posed for pboto1rapha and talked with other strollers
in 70-deeree weather.
Carter shed bis suit jacket at the start or the stroll around
the Tidal Basin while A.my later took otr her blue. rubber-soled
shoes and walked in her bare reet.
THE PRESIDENT SPOTTED MARY Flowers· or
Washington fishing in the basin with a cane pole and bobber rig.
She had a bucketful oUisb.
Carter asked the woman if she had used minnows as bait
and she replied, "minnows and worms "
Agreement
May End LB
I.and Battle
By STEVE IDTCHELL
QI -DMtJ rtllll ......
The four.year battle over
Sycamore Hilb in the Laguna
Beach Greenbelt took a surprise
tum Wednesday night when City
Council members announced a
tentative agreement to purchase
the 522 acres for $18. 7!1 million.
The agreement would
terminate lawsuits seeking S37
million from the city by land
owner Rancho Palos Verdes
Corp.
The City Council did not
specify tbe source of the funds
or detailed use or the land other
than open space and recrea·
tional use. A golf course Is ooe
probability.
The Wednesdat nl1ht asa-
nounceUHml came aner three
aruelios negotiatine .seuions
betw~ city oftlclals and Al· ~orne11 for RancbQ Pa\01
Verdes Corp., o~n of the hilly
land located at the Y formed by
the int.enectlon or Laguna Ca-
o.yon and El Toro Roads.
Mayor Jack McDowell, CoWl-
cnman Howard Dawson, C1ty
Attorney George Logan and City
Planning Director Doug
~bmitz, comprised the city's
J\810tiating team.
Tbe tentative aeltlemenl
means an end to the S31 QSilllon
asked in lawsuits filed aplmt
the city tour yeart ago. The
landowner cbaraed Laguna
BeHb was not allowtn1 Rancho
reasonable use of its land, once
zoned for 2,000 uni&a.
Wecfnelday oipt councilmen
toJa a. 1.,.ge aUC11enco tbey can-
noi re,u1 precise uses the city
wllt make of the land unlll
further neaotlations are com-
pleted.
Councilman Dawson blntod
that tbe oegotlaUn1 team Is
looking into tbe possibility of a
private developer purchasing
part of the land for a 101t course.
From Page Al
KOHLER ..•
Kobler said today he writes
letters to a lot or people in other
school districts as well and no
one ls under any obligation to
him.
Kobler said be believes the
teachel"S group is "out to get
me" because of his stands on Wl·
ionism in the public sector and
his suggestion that the district
sue to rerover financial losses
the district may have incurred
because of a teacher's strike last
year.
"I've had people tell me con·
fidentially that they're (the
teachers group> out to get Bill
Kohler and Loa Young," Kohler
said. "I expect it lO be coptinual-
ly biting at my tail."
* * * From Paflf! A J
HENRY •.•.
sldent," Kholer said. "It's an or-
derly progression and you don't
have a presider\t coming up for re·
election that way.
·'The board presidency doesn 'l
mean that much to me," be con-
tinued. "But there was a com-
mitment of the board to follow
that policy which bas beeo
broken." Kohler is not up for re-election
until 1961. ,
Henry, Mrs. Neustadl and
Mrs. Phillips were unavailable
for comment today.
lime Aides
Plan Meeting
Saddleback Community
Hosplt•l Lime Aides, junior
volunteers, have scheduled their
aeneral membership meeUng
for 7 p .m. Monday lo the
hospital at 2"51 Via Estrada,
Laguna Hill&.
The Junior volunteer organiia-
llon provides exposure to health
field OCC\Q)ationa, said hospital
spokeswoman Mary Weldy.
talae Medica.N claims .
• Juda• Yale banded down the
state sentence after reJecUn& a
plea by Cella ·1 attome111 that
tbelr client be allowed to .,.rtotm coaimunity serviC'I in uev. of PriloG. "fl would be a travesty to
have him serve as a town physa·
cian," commented' Michael R.
Caplui. assistant Orange Coun-
ty district attorney. "U be is
withan touchinK distance of Sl.
be will steal lt.
Yale cited Celia's deeds as
"creating a cancer-like effect
stale wide
Cella reportedly burst into
tears just before sentence was
pronounced. "My life ha.a been
desiccated and dissected by the
media," be s&Jd. "I have been
subjected to every humiliation
possible."
Cella was charged with
''skimming" as much as $3
million from two hospitals or
which he was part owner, Mercy
General in Santa Ana and Mis-
s ion Communlly in Mission
Viejo
Much of that money round its
way tnlo the campaigns of
numerous local and state
political candidates, includine
the successful campalp or state
Controller Kenneth Cory. ..
p,....rageAJ
HOUSING •••
explore the. impact or noise on
health with physicians on the
County lfealth Department
staff.
The supenlsors said be was
reluctant to file the appeal but
did so because no one else bad
and tbe deadline for appeala is
approaching. It is next Tuesday.
Riley said it was the first lime
he ever had appealed a Planning
Commission decision.
Supervisors In 1976 adopted a
noise Impact boundary around
El Toro that look in the Laguna
Village land, ruling that no new
home building lake place inside.
However, they said·devetopers
could win exceptions to the rule
if they conducted private studies
approved by the county that showed the property wasn't
highly impacted by noise.
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Class Slated
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Young people 14 to 18 yeara of 1 aee interested ID aervin& a /
minimum ot four houra per week
R)'pnotllt FtaDt Genco la to
lnatnact a five-week class In aelf·
hypno1f1 be•lnnlns Aprll 21
from '1:30 to 9:80 p.m. al the
SaddJebadt Val)ft' YMCA, 231S1
Oranae Avcnue;El Toro.
in the propam can CQlltact the
boaplt.al'& volunteer otnce, she
satd.
Oti.:ens Bappg
Waler and sewage dlapoaal
rate hikes offerin& a lesser in-
crease to a"rage and 1reater-
than ·a v~t'.:.: water conaumera were ~ unantmoualy by
Los AliiBoa Water District direc·
tors Wednesday nl&ht.
Only 23 El Toro area residents
attended the public hearing pre-
ceding the acUon which also in-
c re a aed developers' water
hookup rees.
Dtstrict charts indicate that
the new rate schedule will in·
crease the averaae household
water•aewer blll by 11 cents a
month. with actual decreases
expected in bUls going to heavy
consumers. •
Saving water would result in a higher rate increase, tables
show. A family uaing half the
average amount races an in·
crease of $1.50 a month.
The average water user con-
s u rnes approximately 1,400
gallons a montb, said E . T.
McFadden, general mana1er.
Gettlne a break when the
rates become effecUve July 1
will be customen who use more
than tbe average amount of
water. Tbelr saving'!, compared
to current rates. will range
between $1.39 to $2.75 a month.
Such a user, Shirley ffirrel of
22662 Femwood St.. El Toro,
praised the board Wednesday, a
complete reversal in slatementa
made durin~ an emotional
public hearin& in March.
M rl. filrrel told directors then
that she uses laree amounts of
water to maintain trees and
tandacaping In her Lake Forest
home. She complained bitterly
a¥ut hlgh sewage charges
based oo her water consump-
tion. Stie said it was unfair to
charge high sewer fees when
outdoor watering does not affect
sewage. ·
Wednesday, she told residents
at the hearing, .. I want to thank
them (the directors) for car-
ing." She said she has found one
governing board who listens to
the people.
Sony
Headquarters for
the Harbor Areo
T.VAadlo-Shleo
TC11Nlec...,. ......
27 5 East 17th St.
Costa Mesa
"I felt we needed to bav a
good aemple of what 9\#eeyt)ody
wanted ln the di.strict:• &Maid.
The water board M& ill rates w edneadti' blMd on a postcard
poll of dil(ric( cuatotners. Three
plans ~re offered. two favoring
h{gh·amoun( users and one
favoring low·volumeeomumers.
More than half tb cards re-
turned favored the Increase
system called Plan B. adapted
by the board.
Directors said nte inereases
have become necessary because
of a Metropolitan Water District <MWD> price hike tor imported
water and because the local dis·
lrict 's sewage-treatment opera-
tion isn't breakine even.
MWD's acre-root of water
charge is to go up $7 on July l.
McFadden said.
In separate acttoo.s, the board
increased lbe $400 ree ror con-
necting water to a sinaJe-ramUy
residence to $600. The per·acre
cflaree levied for other ~.
such as commercial and in·
dustrlal, was moved upward
from the current $1,800 to $2,400. Sewage connection fees will not
chan5le.
In contrast to Wednesday's
public hearing, nearly 100 El
Toro area resident.a tu.med out
in March for a hearing in which
the board was admonished for
considering rate increases.
OOASl'AL FANS
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Olivia de Havilland came to
the-Orange Coast tbil week and
kept an audience enthralled with
her life and loves. See Featur·
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WIP9Ca
Kids' Farewell
Slain Claumat,e Eulogi,zed
J.AKE CITY, Fla. <AP> -Tears flowed freely at the funeral
of Kimberl)-Diane Leach, especially at the reading or a ~c
etHY written by a schoolmate. ·
The Rev. J .R. Hite read these words composed by Lisa Llt· tie at aervtces Wednesday for the 12·year-old girl slain and sex-ually assaulted after she disappeared Feb. 9:
•'OB, ROW LONELY TO be the one left behind. "It's hard to smile, bard not to cry," the minht.er read to
the crowded Parkview Baptist Church.
·'But Kim and I talked of death one day.
"'She said not to cry. only to uy she was bere, now she's
gone ..
"I'll love her for so long.
"Where abe is, she's happy, not sad.
•'Try oot to feel so really bad.
•'Her quiet way of being happy, the loving smile on her race.
"Her lau~. her wit, ber open trust in people.
"The special way we loved each other, sisters in our own
way. '
•'Our shared beliefs ud love for our parent.a,
"Our brothers and slaters. OW' friends, ud most of ill our
love of God."
1'llE MINISTER BAD ro break off in Uae middle ud wipe
Jill eyes. Ao booor suard of more than 35 Florida m11hw~ Patrol
troopers attended the service alona with about 200 Lake City
Junior High School pupU..
Col Eldridge Beach, commander of the stale patrol. said all
the officers ln the honor auard participated in tbe long search
feir Miss Leach. n ended Fridll1 at an abandoned boa pen 30
mllea west of here near Suwannee River State Park.
AN A1JTOPSY SEPOBT BY Dr. Peter lJpkovic, the
Jacboovtlle medJcal examiner, aald Mias Leach "died by
bomJcldal vlolence to the neck, iype undet~." ancl tbe
wu sexually abused. Uptovic said Ille ba« beell dead about two months, -possibly
• tiUe4 Sbortb' .n. her a;peanmce.
. !
tJ9,500 AllOeated
County to Press
For Bo»d Status
Orange County supervisors de-
cided Wednesday that $19,500
isn't too much to apend to save
an estimated $150,000 in Interest
charges OD flmds county ,OverD·
ment borrows each year.
That's why 1upervilora b1.red
White, Weld and Coinpany, lne. ol
Loa Anie&es ln an effort to raise
tbe county's AA bond ratlnl to a
AAA status.
For the $19,:iOO tbe firm is to
Freed IJtipU.t
Shot Dead in
ltalianTmm
ch'aw up a prospectus that will
convince Moody's Joveators'.
Service of the county's sound
credit status in hopes of raising
the bond rating.
The ClODIUhaot also is to sub-
mit data to the U.S. Comptroller
of the Currency to make the county eligible for loana from
aat1onal bank.a.
Tbe compUoller's permlulon
now is required for loam from
national banks because of
changes in federal regulations
spurred by New York 's financial
woes.
County Tax Collector·
Treasarer Robert Clt.roD said
the AAA rating could save the
county $150,000 in interest when
it borrows an estimated '30
milllolf later th1a year.
The funds are borrowed an·
nually ln vll')'lnt amounts to
finance count¥ services thl'OUlh
.a so-called cb')' perfqcl before property tax payments arrive.
I •
' T!u!d!Y• Apr!f 15. 1971 S twl.Y PtlOT
J a1·vis Meastme Blasted
,
Tax Col/,ector IP ams of EflectJJ
811DaYOAVSEN .................. If ll'• poatble ror 10CWiam and anarcby to eslat
1lmultaneoualy, Prop. 13 wlll
provide both -to tbe detriment
ol South OnQp County -Coun·
t1 Tax CoUector-'l'reaeurer
Robert atroe Hid WedneldaY. S~atina before the Laguna
HUia Rotat)' Cblb. Cttroo pre.
cW 1hat IOClallam will sweep
Callfol"IUa lf voters approve the
coatrovenial Jarvil·GIDll prop-
erty tu llmitailon lnJt.iatlve on
California's June ballot.
Cllroo 1aid that government
""lees taken aw-Q by Umitlng property taxation will be pro-
vided tbrou1h other sources,
such aa ineome ud ules tax
bikes. Because the atate will col·
Leet thoM taxes, it will place
controls on their expenditure at
local levela. be warned. Tbe county official said tbe
country is movioe steadlly
toward socialism anyway.
"Prop. 13la1oing to &et us there
in one eiaDt step."
Introduced to Rotarians as tbe
only county officlal who has
decreued hi• departmental
bud1el anm&a1l)' for the put alx yeara, titron edmlt.tied eovern-
meot 1peacUn1 can be cwtalled.
But be touted Prop. 8, appear-
ing on the same June 6 ~ u
the real way to trim 1overnmeot
speocliq.
Prop. 8, he 1ald, would
abaot-.t.y llmtt 1pendiD1 ln· creases ff 8.5 pemmt IDllually.
Prop. 13 will only sblll taxea from real estate to anotfter source, be claimed, and apeo4·
Ing could cootinue to N&.
He sald ~. I would cut prop-
·erty tams to bomeowaen and
would return more tax money to
renters without the reqwremeat
of taxtna other aourcea.
The property tax funds lost to
government could be replaced
annually witb curre nt state
budgetsurpJuses, be predicted.
Ecboln.I County Supervisors
Ralph Diedrich, who spoke in El
Toro Monday, Citron clalmed
Prop. 13 will cut government
services by 60 percent suppol'Ud
by property taxes in spedal
service district.a.
I.
SoQt.bel'ft Orn1e County is
(OmpoHd of a net'WOl'k of 1ucb
dlatrtctl. provtdJne part maln-
l en a o c e . street li1bttn1.
cemetery care and fire flptina.
Tboee servlc.a probably would
be funded eventually by tbe
1tate. be 1114. but cootrol WOUid ab1ft from the county level to
Sacramento. To curtail fire services, be
s.ld, would l"tSult lD Im~
rates ''that would ao aky blab,
and you wouldn't sit 1Wl lor
that.''
Citron warned: •'Money ls
power. You create in this (Prop.
13) a IOUl'Ce ol 1tron1 central
<soclallstk) power."
Rotarian Cbarlea Barrett told
Citron, "'No mauer what hap-
pens ln Juae, larvis is a IUC·
cess. •• BarreU ~d county politi·
clans and offlci&li are "out beat-
ing the bushes, tetlln& everyaae
bow auceesdUl tbe1r operaUom
are. I've never eeen so tnany."
Barrett indicated that the
Jarvis thnat bu made govern·
ment more conscious of spend-
ing and the source of its income.
..................
ATTACKS PROP. 13
Tu Cal1ctoi'"eftlon
Irvine Sets
Meeting~ ,
Waddill Defense Rests
Oli Housing ··
A seminar on prospects an~
means for building homes al·
fordable to famWea of low and
moderate income ia schedul~
from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m.. Frlda1
al the Registry Hotel, 18800
Mac~rthur Blvd., lrvlne.
. ~ -Jury Recesses; Final Arguments Set Tuesday
Sponsored by UC Irvine Ex·.
By TOM BA&LEY 0t• 11Mtr PtMt 1&8ft
A jury wblcb bas listened to
testimony for more than two
months in the murder trial of
Dr. William Baxter Waddill
began a five-d~ break today. It
wtll end Tueaday with the de-
livery of fmal arguments.
Waddill'• two lawyers rested
their case late Wednesday and
Orange County Superior Court •ue more than a vegetable lf it tension, it b intended for elected.
Judse James K . Turner im· lived. o fflciala, plannlne com-
medlately aslted attorneys for • Certified Public Accountant miasioners, housing agency
both sides to work with him dh Morris Polne.l. was the flnaJ wit· personnel, builders, developers,
jury instructions while the panel n ess for tn defense with landowners, employers. fair.
takesaweekendbreak. testimonydesignedtorebutpros· bousln1 councils, hous in1
The last medical witness ecutor Robert Chatterton's con· lawyers, loan officers and such.
called by the defense told the tentlon that Waddill wu in dire The program focuses on suJ>.
jury that the baby allegedly financial straits when be al-sldized housing pro&rams cur-
strangled to death by Waddill on legedly murdered the baby. really available to meet a
.March 2., 1977, would have been Polner told the jury that the shortage of dwelllnp available
"a mon5ter" if it bad Uved. medical corporation beaded by to Oraqe County families wbo-
Dr. John H. Menke testified I Wad dill grossed $M2,603 in the increasingly are flndini(
County Clerk that many babies who survivr' fiscal year that ended in 1976. He tmbaer~aeet.lves priced out of the
abortion attempts or become said Waddill's personal share a
brain damaged before birth by was $166.699. Feefortbeseminarls$SS. 'Aid w• other causes "are little more The accountant said Waddill's Participants in the program e ms than moosters and are belt.er off personal income for the eight include Reed Flory. partner in a
dead." months ending in March 197'1 Costa Mesa development fi.rm
Ballot Case Waddill, 42, or Huntin&ton totaled more than $100,ooo.' and former aehlor planner in
____ Harbour, is accused of stran· He was not aaked to comsnent char1e of bousln& planning fat
glingtbebabylirldeUveredbyan on allegations that Waddill1a re· Orange County ; and Michael
County Clerk William E. St 18·year-old Huntington Beach ported financial problems in-Salzman, dlrector of the Loi
John's admlnlstrator was sue-mot~er ln Westminster Com-eluded bis owing $1.5 million to a Angeles City Housing Authority
c .. afuJ W~y In hl$ bld to muru~y Hospital after reali~g Huntington Beach corporation. Others are builders Jack
have hl.s ~ clelioaUon of lhatbiaattempttoabortherbym-Polner said be bad no knowledge Harper of Desert Hot Springs
"County Clerk Admlhiatrator'' jectin&salinebadfailed. of Waddill's penoDal financial and Edward E. Haworth of
recop.11*1 ., bis lqal descrip-It la aUeeed that Waddill tbrol-affairs. Escondido; SylYi• Seman, atafJ tloo. tled the child while predictina to Fin al arguments are member of the Palo Alto Boua.-
ayatema Anal1st Truman a doctor who watched that the scheduled for 9:30 a.m. Tuesday Ing Corp. Joe.: and Michael ·
Trowbl1dee IAll wu gr-**! Infant had suffered massive in Judge Turner's Department Tboms-ori. Irvine Co. m~
that d~on afttr •hearing brain damage and would be lit-ao of Superior Court. of real estate ftna.Me, i wto lei~ actloD tUed aealDat ~----~~~~~~~~~~~__;_~~~~~~~~~~~~.;.:;;,......;:..~~--~_..;.;.o
blm by Actina County Recorder
Lee Branch.
Both are a!?OQ.f the six ~
tenders for the Job of county
derk and recorder. The two of·
flCM _,.. belnl combined as of
JID ry md Incumbent Clerk St
John bu annowaced tbat be
won't nm.
But Bruch, aJtbougb UDSUC·
ce1afUl in bis bid to deny Leu t.be dtle, won a victory of sorta,
Superior Corurt. Judge James
O. Perez ruled that Branch can
use tbe title "Appointed County
Recorder" oo the June ballot.
Branch waa restricted. before tbe bearing, to identifying
himself 11 Assistant County
Recorder on the ballot. Ria recent
bid to have the ballot description
altered to read' "County
Recorder" wu rejected by the
Registrar of Voters.
Branch bu been acting as
COUJllY recorder aiJlce tbe retire-
ment laat month of J . Wylie
Carlyle.
Leu, who hu riRn rapidly
from the raolta lit-the last thrte
years, la responsible for the
computerhat.lon of the county
clerk'• office. He ba.s St John's
endonement for the job of coub-
ty clerk.
4Seyla
A"ailoble
So/oa lnelude:
D~p hand lled
t:ail 1prin~ beue•,
~ltpillo~•a"
dotm ond /eocher
/iUH o.nd HOI ~ion• on 1prln6
,,,.,,. .,. loped bt
""'1fa a'lid/ealluJra
'ftWilll•
~collt/'1rl
-
LUXURIOUS SPRING DOWN
SOFAS
SALE THROUGH APRIL 30lh
1 Ft. Size
ri':~:D 1695
5 Ft. Looe Seac
•100 Leu
Choose from a wide
selection of fabrics in-
cluding tapestries,
prints, velvets and
woven fabrles.
..
'
''· tf71
LAW AND ll18TIC£ DEn. -Amid the crosacut of
itumanlty that um.cs Into Harbor Judiclal Dlltrlct traffic
court t.be either morntu. one ftsure c)Urly stood out. There di wu, · wa!Un1 for Judge Robert J. Poll•, the
tramc commluioner to convene bis court ror speedy
justice amDlll all~Pd It.op sign nmners, Jaywalkers, bot
rodden llDd llletal tumen.
She 181 alDOQl IUlklDI long-haired
youths, hwb1y scrubbed coeds, jittery
housewives t.Dd impatient mlddle·aaed
busin .. mentwtddllns ballpoint pens or
'djuatlq ties .
A.LL OF RUMA.NITY was there.
But the elderly lady stood out. She was
atUted in Sunday'• belL Her coiffure
was impeccable. And she was nervous.
The balllrf, an Orange County "'OM l'OUt
marshal, arrived to beeln briefing the
reluctant guests on rules and proceedingB of the court.
"You bave tbe rilbt to a trial ... ~}'o{finay plead gull·
ty or guilty with an explanation . . . you may take traffic
school on a first offense; take it; it's the only way to go ..
Then the bailiff spotted the elderly lady.
·•Are you nervoua,'' be inquired.
"Yes I am," abe admitted. "I've been goiDI over what
I want to s~ to the judge. I've been trying to figure out
bow to shorten it."
"Well you don't fret," the balllff soot.bed. "Judie Polil
is a very understanding man. He'll listen to you."
Al.AS. YOU FEilED, here is an elderly lady in real
trouble with the law. Maybe it is a bit-and-run case.
Horrors, maybe even manslaughter.
Judge Polls arrived, all stood, and be began to preside
in that eoll, almoet aing-aoog voice of bis.
The elderly lady waa called before the bar or justice
early in the proceedi.ogs. Polls listened intently as she
spoke clearly and with earnest dete~atioo.
You aee, she'd been given this o-rkinl meter ticket out
.at Orange County Airport.
She'd put her quarter in tbe meter and il shot up to a
lull hour and then back down to half an hour. Anybody
would figure that meant she bad an hour and a half, right?
The plane was late. She had to help two elderly people
ofr the plane.
"Well now, l think we can solve this if you want to
enter a plea of no contest,'' the Judce Interrupted softly.
BUT NO. mEBE WAS MOBE. She'd red another
quarter into the meter before aeelne the ticket on her
wlQdahield. And the meter bad done lta up-and-down thins ... ,a1n. She complained to an airport deputy. He sbru11ed
her on. Said be bad nothing to do with parking meten.
"Now I understand bow these meters fail," Judce
Polls told her. "I think we can solve all th.la. There aeema
to be 50 c-*8 involved here.
"We'll make your fine 50 cents." The elderly lady left the courtroom with her bead held
high in triumph.
Justice prevails aeain.
~ India Demands U.S.
~-=-~Trace Nuke Device
:1.•".
NEW DEUU, India <AP) -India demanded today that the
United States promptly cheek out repOrta of a CIA nuclear device
lost in the Himalayas 13 years ago and inform It of tbe potenUal
bazarda. __ ...... •-.;11 , U.S. Ambassador Robert G. Gobeln WU awn~ to~· I
External Affairs Mlnlstry and told tha\ news stories oflolt nuclear
material that could polaon the Gan.sea Btver bad caUMd .. areat
concern t.o the 1DdiaD covernment. tbe Indian Parliament and the
Indian people, .. a mlnlstry spokesman said.
Jagat M.ebta, secretary of external affaln, asked Goheen "to
ascertain the tnith u early as poesible" about the report ln
Outside magazine, which wn carried Thursday In Indian
newspapers, the spokesman said. The mapzine story aald the device was lost by a CIA expecli·
Uoo trytna to set up a trackinl station to monitor Chinese ac·
livllies
A •m Defeated
~gry · Farmers
Flay Dell!ocrats
WASHINGTON <AP ) -Protestlnl farmers wbo maued tbc:uaDdl
strona out.aide the White Hoose t.o decry Houae re~oa of an
emergency rarm-aid blll say they are beadinl bome to work for tbe
def eat ol their enemies on Capitol Hill. , .. The farmers -brought here by the American Afrlculture move-
ment -had jammed the House they have lobbled in so bea'ftly
callery for Wednesday's 268-150 for almost rour months, de·
vote defeating the farm bill. termloed, saya one, to "cook"
the 193 Democrats who voted
aeaiost the bill. THEY BAD LINED the While
House fence -3,SOO of them -
telling President Carter throu&b
a bull.born d.lrected al the Ex·
ecutlve Mansion that they want·
ed to talk to him.
Now they are leaving the city
Revision
Threatens
Canal Pact
WASHINGTON <AP) -With
five day1 remaining before a
flnal vote, the Carter ad·
mlnlstrailon has not persuaded
a key senator to back down on a
Panama Canal treaty revision
that haa angered the Panaman-
ians and threatened Senate ap-
.proval of'tbe pacts.
•'In two years' time, the
American people will re1M this
day ever happened," Bobby
Jackson of Levelland, Texu,
said outside the White House.
"IT WILL BE amulng what
this will do for the Democrats ln
the next election. Tbla'll cook
'em," beaald.
"Come on out, Jimmy, we
want to talk to you," yelled
fellow ~gian Oliver Odom.
pressing bis bullhorn agaioat the
White House fence. Carter, who was ioalde enter·
atlning visiting Romanian Presi·
dent Nicola Ceausescu at a stat.e
dinner, said later he bad not been
aware ottbe protest.
CAaTER HAD repeatedly
threatened to veto the bUJ if it
had reached bis desk. He said it
would have sent the country's in·
nation rate skyrocltetlog while
raising farmers' reed grain
costs. He said the defeat of the bill,
which bad narrowly passed the
Despite several days of del·
icate negoUalioos, Sen. Dennis
DeConcini , D -Ariz .• said
Wednesday he bas rejected pro-
posals to soften the impact of his
reservation to the first of the two
treaties.
The reservation would
glve the United Slates the right
to keep the .canal open after the
year 2000, whether its operations
were threatened by a third eoun·
try or internal problems in
Panama.
,/Senate earlier tbia week, was
"good for the farmers of the
United States and ..• very good
for consumers."
The diuideot farmers did not
agree. ·'This is going to cause a lot oC
bankruptcies th1a year in rural
America,'' said Texan Gerald
McCathem.
life-support Girl
Succumbs in Coma
MIClllGAN CITY, Ind. <AP) -Andra RubineW. the comatose
glrl whose parents had sought a court order to take her off a
respirator, has died, a hospital official said today.
Donald Mublenthaler, administrator at Walters H08pltal, con·
firmed that the J.S-year-old daughter ol Joan aod Peter Rublnelli
died Wednesday night. The
cause was not revealed im·
mediately.
MISS RUBINELLI suffered
from a rare blood disease called
thrombocytopeoic purpura, m
which a deficiency of platelets in
the blood causes bleeding in the
he ad. She had lapsed into a
coma March 26.
Doctors administered three
electroencephalograms, which
measure brain impulses, and
failed to detect any activity. Jter
parents, who are Jehovah's Wit·
nesses, asked the hospital to dis·
connect the machinery, but of·
ficlab refused, because Indiana· Jaw does not re«>plze brain
deatb.
UNDER STATE LAW. if a
patient la breathing and bis
heart is beating, be ls con·
1ldered to be alive. Hospital
macbinery bad artlftclally main
tained t.boeetunctloos.
Tbe Rubinellis, who already
had made all the arrangements
for their daugbter•a funeral,
went to court on Tuesday to ask
LaPorte SuperiOT Court Judie
Raymond Fox to declare her
legally dead. Aft.er appointing
two attorneys to represent the
child's interests in the maUer.
Fox had cooUoued the bearing
until later in the month
A
PRIVATE
PROPERTY
WEEK
TRIBUTE
TO THE
' NA TlON I WORLD
Learing Dome
Frank L. Ebertowski was evacuated from his farm
home Wednesday as the Red River in North Dakota
flooded the area. Amphibious craft and boats searched
for rural residents forced to flee the rising waters whi~h
extended 20 miles long and five miles wide, creeping in-
exorably across the rich farmlands nortb of Grand
Forks.
Defector Demands
Money, Protection
UNITED NATIONS <AP) -Arkady Shevchenko, the Soviet
government's renegade at the United Natiooa, is reported demand·
log money and U.S protection to get Secretary-General Kurt
Waldheim off the Russian book. U.N. spokesman Francois Giuliani said the top Soviet U.N.
employee wanted "a truxed bag of money and pel'SODal aecurit7"
to resign from his 176.000.a·year Job.
WASHINGTON <AP> -T\Jt1dsh Cypriots toctay proposed a
rederation government for the bitterly divided island nation and
suggested their proposal could be the basis of new talks between
its Greek and Turkish factions. •
The Turkish Embassy -----------) here, which released the pro-(
posal, said it was being pre· IN SHORT sented to U.N. Secretary· e
General Kurt Waldheim in """-----------Vienna, Austria.
s.,..... ••••n-•• ....,
BEIRUT, Lebanon <AP> -Syrian tanks and rockets ham-
mered Cbris~.m militiamen in southeastern Beirut for the fifth
day today as President Elias Sarkis negotiated with tbe Syrians
ror a cease-fl.re agreeme.nt.
Red River Still Rises ORANGE
COAST'S
SUCCESSFUL
REAL ESTATE
PROFESSIONALS
-
Familia Emeuated in Dakota Flootb
Jt .,
" "UI 11 .. 16 JI
62 •
.. fl n •t '1 II n ,.
st '7 " . !ID ,. " .. ,. .. .
.. '2 ....
11 • . " •• ,.
• Rain ...a ~I tlMldM•M•
QIMllMIN .wty ~ ...... Gulf
1tatff eM IM IOUtllenl Atlllfttl< c.-........ ................... ~
-Ille ........... of .. OfNt
......... -IWtllllnl .......... ~ ..... lde:o ......... ~ .._.,..,,, _,.....~ ..
... ..,..... _.. .. ..atlt: c:i..t.
......... ....., OMr ,,_ .,.
Ml-' .... .., .... "" "9d! ....
"" ... clfk a.&.
8arly -111111 tef!IPffAhH'H ........................... ,..
Olllefti, WW& .... Wlw'rlM. MIM..,
" 111• lte1 MIC. Aa.
I
. ·~·~.~ "... ...... .... ~ ..-...::.--T'-
On Wedneaday, Apftl 19, 1978, the O•lty Piiot wHI pubtleh a apect•I tribute to the
proteulonata of U.. r••I estate lnduatry -the men and women who deity m•ke •
m11for contrtbutlon to the he•lthy Onlnge Coatt economy •
Th•M ..,.clll .,.,.. wlU honor Prtvate Property WHk and wlU be dehvered ta over
18,000 honlM via U.. Dally Plot and Piiot Adveftlw. Notice• be one cotumn by
tour lncha each, anowtng room for• photo •nd de.crtpttv• copy. Cott of each
notice la~ $11, with a photo JO" pro¥tde.
Thi• salute to Real htet• Proteulonata I• an ex°""°nm ~ntty to Introduce
new or longtlme anoctatea to the people of tM Orange Co•at, or to honor
outttandlftg ..... or Mrvtce adtlewM1MWltl.
0on•t min bltng ~ of thta epKtal advertlllng oppommltJ. Oeadlne for reMt¥1ng
ep1ce la 5 p.m., APrti 17. C.11 todayt ' •
Or, you may mall ~'" ~ and • bttef.artlde of •bout 7S wonfa deKrtblng your
blck ~· eductitlon, pt'OfeAlonal tralriing, award• or other honora. lhll your
ato'1 .... ~ eo Ute Claulfted Dept.. D•lly Pflot, 330 w. Bay Strfft, Box 1HO,
COatll Mnl. CA ta2t • '°' .._ CQ!ftPOllng your Aten notice, can lbal7I •nd • frtiftcly ecMIMr wtll
aaatatyou. DAILY PILOT
'
l '
s
Ruin Planned
Clothes Care
Steps Help Now
BJ YI.VIA PO £&
A• a ,.wt ol ~preed complabrta h'om a.toaurn
aod tM lmernallooal Fabrkare InaUtute, tbt trade VClllP
repretentln& la~rt and · drycleanen. UM l'ed.rll.I
Trade CommlsslGO be1an proceedlit.p ln Junaa1'7 1t7e \0
revl .. lta care lAbellnt rule&.
After many pbu .. of bei.Mp, 1tud.le1, anab'MI, P't'
potala lbd coun~rptopo11ls. 'the rules are at the lut lllJ•
jor 1ta1e betor9 they are placed on tbe public record,.~
viewed onee more and then put Into effect.
STIPPR &BGVUTION OP cloe.bel care I•~-..
Jiut step forward In conswner protectUID. wtll be
eluded to the re1uJ1tlona. · Al lea.st theM two ke)' chan,.. an probable.
Manufact\ll'enl wlll be reqUtred lo include on cl
care labell altemauve ways of cJ anln1. TbOup
rulea now say ltema labeled "wuhable" muat
dryrleuable unleu a
warnin1 a1atn1t
drycJeanins ls added,
moat people aren't
aware of th.la artlficlal
definition. A Purdue
Unlvenlty atudy dl•· '
c losed that three· ----------~
fourths of poUed homemakers thoulht that "washabl•' eoutdn 't be drycteaned and would like labela to aay so it'
either met.hod could be used.
Clothes maken will be liable for much tou
penalties If the)' vtolate the rrc rqulaUona. Tbou,b FTC would have to take each vicQtor to cowt, flnet ol !lj
lo $10,000 per vtolaUoo CCMlld bt lmpoeed oa m~Ufactuna
not <"omplytn& with lbe rules. ,
In ~ meantime (and a1lo after the new rules are
effect) keep care labela attached to ciotbel.
KEEP TAGS TllAT ABE ONLY temporarily attac
to clot.bes. Clothinl makers oft.en put import.ant lnlorm
tioo on these taa.. but not on the aewn-ln label
Wben bu)'tn& rabric, ask for Catt labels to .. w IJl,
Fabric manufacturers are required lo provide
labels.
If clothes are damaged even when the label's lnatruc·
lions are followed, return the clothes and sales receipt to
the store. A reputable store shouJd refund lbe money and
return the out.fit to the manufacturer.
Look for details oo the label lf when buying a stretch
fabric <comfort st.retch ror everyday use, action stretch for
exercise clothes. etc.). The label won't say bow much
stretch to expect in a stretch fabric and, while a test at the
store will help, it can't guuant.ee &Mt cbante• woo't occur
later.
The best safeguard is to buy from a reputable retailer
and clothing manufacturer. botb of whom will heed com·
plain~ and. if justified, will give refunds or offer ex·
changes. . ..
Tuna Haul Shows:':
Better Outlook .. •' II'
1:-
SAN DIEGO <AP> -Tuna filbln& was an Industry lri <:t
deep trouble a year ago because of government lmJ)Oled .
quotas on porpoise kUJa. Today, the catch ls up aad ao ii .., ~outlook. n Tbe IO\'enllDeGt 'II qootaa, set as a result of an outcry
by COMen'atJoniats. are beinl met euJl,y. A total of 2,0JI
porpolaes d1ed, ca&Wit accident.ally in fil.biq net.a. ln tbe
firft thret> months of 1978.
The year's quota ts 51,9'6.
"THE FISHERMEN ARE MAKING a real effort out
there," said GeraJd Howard, relk>oal director or the Na.
t.iooal Marine f't.ahertes Service.
As environmentalists pusbed ror strict enforcement of
lhe Marine Mammal Protedl<>n Act of W72, tuna flaber·
men refused for three months last year lo 10 lo sea.
Special care and Improved neta that aJlow many
trapped porpoiHs lo escape are credited with the low
mammal kill, along wtlb government obeervera uai&ned
lo seiners.
Nobody kDOWI why porpoises follow tuna, but for cen-
turies fishermen have followed them to make their livtna.
THE CATCH OF EAS'l'E&N Paclllc akipjack tuna
reached 56.762 tool by March 20, an increase of M,1.SS tons
over the same period as year before. Yellowfln tuna totaled 52.eeo $.ins com pa.red with 46,4.29toos.
The average porpoise kill a yev 110 wu three per net
setting. AUCU't Felando of the Amencan Tunaboat As·
10Clation aaya It ls down to two.
The U.S. Tuna FoundaUon, wh.lcb representa all aet·
ment.s ol the American Industry, la 1pendin1 SU million lo
tAtlt newly designed devices to save porpoises. Six scien·
Ult.I are accompanyin1 the 14-mao crew ol a special aelner
in five voyages this year.
JOHN DBBEBa OF THE MA&INE Mammal Com·
milalon saJd thll week that 70 percent of tbe alr·bre•thlnl
porpoises now escape tuna neta wttbout sufrocatJJ11 and
that 99. 7 percent ol those cauiht 1et out unbanned.
Under the tbne-year quota l)'llem, the allowable kUI or porpoiaes will 10 down to 31.~ ln 199).
Mercury's Quarter
Tops $10 Million
Mercury Savloca and Loan Auoclatlon, bead·
quartered ln Huntln,ton Beach. 11\DOU.Dced croes Income
for the fir.t quarter exceedins $10 mllUon for t!M first time
ln lts history; uaeta 11'9W to a record "49 mlllloo.
Net after-tu comolldated earnlnp for tbe quarter
ended March 31 re St.W$1, or 41 cents a ab.are. tM
aecood beat ftnt quarter ea.ralnp ln the company's hll· tory.
•
.. OM. lllL.Dt
• to m.tl'Ud ta. d&N. ••• albre
attbolden' Wty increased bv • ~t u.· _peMOd .en bad~ h:lcreaMd W'iDI
th year by • ~ to about u .s bllboo cubic feet and tts Pl'OVeil Oil reserves bad increaaed by
bout 11pc1~to900.eeG barrels.
Oxoco said about three billion cubic feet of
natural pa Chat pre-wioull)' bad been attrlbuted lo
proven 111 reservea from rorei1n oft1bore
rele1'VOll"I were reclaalfied as probable reserves in Uoe with newly determined panmet.en. 't>~oco concu,renUy announclHS lt bad recently
f\natized • financing apeement with the Allied
Bank ol Texas. ~. provi~ for a .new
four-year master note in the amount of $lS mUllon.
Initially, about $11 million will be used to
repay present bank loans and an addiUonal $1
million will be used in Oxoco's natural gas
development drilling program under way in the
Texu Panhandle.
The balance ol the funds are to be committed,
from time to time. to complete corponte projects
that are desirable to further the Mure growth of
the company.
Oxoco's annual meeting for 1978 bas been
scheduled for June 2, at the Marriott Hotel,
Newport Beach, for shareholders or record as of April 4.
raeitte ,,..,._, ,.., ..
Pacific Mutual Newport Beach, has reported
that usets at yea.rend 1977 reached Sl.958 billion, a
15 percent increase over 1976.
Pacific Mutual's life insurance in force in 1977
topped the $11 billion mark, reaching $11.35 billion
at yearend, a 12 percent increase over 1976.
The face amount of life insurance issued
during 1977 totaled $1.39 billion up 19 percent over
1976.
The urn investment yield reached a company
record of 7 . 75 percent. New investment
commitments totaled a record SS34.4 million
during 1977, a 66 percent increase over the $321
million we committed in 1976. Of the $534.4 million,
$321 million wa.s invested in mortgage loans, $172.9
million in fixed income securities and $40.S million
in real estate.
Income from all sources in 1977 totaled $715
million, a 4.6 percent increase over the record
results of 9883.9 million in 1976. Income from
insurance and annuity lines of busmess reached
$593.S million, up 6. 7 percent from our record 1976
levels and an increase of 42 percent in the last two
years.
Pacific Mutual markets individual and group
life, health and pension products nationally. It also
provides administrative and mvestment counsel
services to qualified employee benefit programs
through subsidiary companies
lfotfleAdUIHNfo11
Boyle Engineering Corp., Newport Beach, has
added an agricultural services division. It began
operation in February and is staffed by individuals
formerly with the agriculture division of the Irvine Co. .
John W. Brown, fOTmer chief engineer and
manager of Irvine's engineering and water
department and registered
professional engineer with
experience in agricultural
' development, is manaeer. John R . Thornton.
refistered agricultural engineer
with experience In drip
irrigation, is project manager.
David Behoteguy , also
experienced in drip Irrigation
and irrigation systems deslen,
11 assistant engineer. and POWN
Lorraine Uribe is division secretary. William J .
Williams. retired vice president and general
manager ol the Irvine Co 's agriculture division, is
senior consultant
The division wiU provide such agricultural
services as planning, design, construction
supervision and maintenance and opentioo of
agricultural racillties. Feasibility studies can be
made covenng proauct1on, process1nj aqd
marketing, followed by planned development for
clients. Other services include land preparaUon
for agrfcultural field developments, maintenance
and surveillance of dams, and engineering reasibillt;y and cost systems.
Ccdeemp Seib Steele
California Computer Products, Inc., Anaheim,
has announced that it has sold Its approximately 19
percent common stock interest in Telefile
Computer Corp. oC Irvine to the Uonel Corp. in a
prtYate transacbon .
........,, bdla11p OpftU
The Pacific Coast Diamond Exchan1e, Inc., ha~ announced the formal openina or Ute tradins
floor for high-grade investment quality diamonds.
The trading facilltes are in Newport Financial
Center, Newport Beach. Only loose diamonds,
certified by the Gemological lostitue or America
or lhe United Stat.ea Gemological Service. Inc., to
Cases Filed
BUSINESS
be D Uwuch J lD color. F to St tn clarity and
betw n .98 to 5 OOM carat wel&bl are ell&lble for
U.Un ••
T must be placed ~ a member of
The beer, represented in this count.ry by
Wisdom Import Sales Co., Inc., Irvine, baa been
absent from the U.S. market for two yean.
the exchan and two hundred •founder seat.a" Directors Seele Steeb
are belnt erect .i.JUOO .,.r membenblp
Robert r. Mc:CaU.lapd, president and founder,
says the prime purpose for foundin1 the ucJtanae
waa to provide a are•ter degree of UqUldity to both
professiooal aod private parties in aellln1 their
mve.stmenl quality dlamonds. -
Directors of Symbolic Dl1play1, Ine.,
lrvine·based aircraft electronics company, have
announced a tender orrer to purchase up to 30,000
shares~ lb eo cents par value common stock at $4 a share.
l!wecvllVe Otflcea: 7812 Edt!'ger Ave.,
Huntington Beach, CA 92647
SOuthetn Cill•IDftNjt Rrt(}fOnel Otl•CM
8955 Valley View St Buooa Partt. CA 90620
_____ .......
Retl ••net lleer .4 rrlws
The tender would 1tve shareholders an
opportunity to obtain a price 33 percent biJber
than the current bid price for the stock.
20715 S Avalon BlvU. Careon. CA 90746 Gt 22821 Lake Forest Dr. (lake FOfe&I). El Toro. CA 92630 •
Hl01 E tmOOM"'t Hwy L& HaOr9 CA 90631 .c t<CO long Beach Blvd .. LOtlQ 8each CA 90907 ~~G Watney1 Red Barrel Beer, a premium
Imported Engllab brew, is available to American
beer drinkers throughout the 1' western states.
The company said an independent appraisal
bad valued the shares at 12.90 each, and· that the offer would remain open unUl Ma.y lS. ,..
109511\'ono Blvd. Tu611n, CA 02680 trflOl• l35 N C11tua Ava • WHt Covino CA 01793
-
Ghdden Spred Gel·fto o1t
base tiouse paint Extra 1h1ck
for Of\41 coat coverage. Flows on ea9lly Reg 16 95 gallon
10~
tantastlcally
spreadable
Glidden Acrylic ui1e11 Spred
House Paint goes on easy.
dries last and looks hke 8
m1tllonl Lasla a tong. long
time Reg 12.es gallon.
9~
.......,.,...'°'-~
~~~,~~ ~~' ~ water-saving~ ·
back-soother
From Chteago Specialty,
Wa1er-aa11lng snower
nead that delivers llQht
1pray or ln111gorat1ng
burats. #123W Reg. 4.49
241
tasting finish
~G~d~!1!~ ~1~~1e11
Wall Paint . gon on smoolh
and easy and stays t>eauttlul
tonger Easy water clean·uP
Lots of colors ava1tabte
Reg 9 99 gallon
699
gallon
takes no rains
to clean out drains
It Just takes new Clear
Une dreln open« by Ox·
ford. Just the thing to sa11e
you coatty plunber·a bill•
and a stopped-:.ip sink
Reg. 5.99 311
feed your
vegetables
then eat theml
Vlgoro'a Vegetable FOOd
l'lelpa promote plumper,
blgget. better luting
vegetabNI. 1VF20
2~1
no more
bending
with the 'no spill'
Painter's Caddy on wheels. 15'"1120-112" top. 24'"
high. Top surface cut-out to hold standard size roller
tray that's Included. Folds compactly. Reg. 5.89
~
the great
gobbler ....
ln..Srnk·Erator made 1n11
garbage disposer for
trouble-tree service.
Quiet. vibration-tree
operation. 112·h p. motor
1333 Reg. «.96 34111
•
tat rid of '
what •bugs' you
D-Con Four/Gone
automatic room fogger,
kllla 17 kinda of bugs In 4
hours. The proleftlOnat
way Single 7•n-oz.. 11ze
Reg. 2.89
111
~~:~~.~.~ ........ 311
vlgoro's
mix 'n matcll
ChOice of; •ROM FOOd
• Cltq.1e Food •Azalea
Food • All·Purpoae
•Tomato
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