HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-04-18 - Orange Coast PilotI
I
_____ oast Trashmen trike 1
.
·DB Man Burned
Pouring Gasoline
Into Dome Sink
TUESDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 18, 1978.
VOC.. 11, 1110. tll, J SECTIONS,• l'AOIES
.Rescue Futlle
Deity ...... -.., --._ ...
Lagunu Rearh police Sgt. Norm Blandel administers
rardto·pulmon:.iry res uscitation to an unidentified man
who collapsed on his bicycle while pedaling up a steep
g rade on Coast Highway near El Morro Beach
Mobilehome Park Mondav afternoon. The man died an
hour later at South Coast Community Hospital of a
massiv~ cardiac arrest. police said today. lie was still
lis ted as "John Doe" by coroner's and hospital officials
late this morning.
In Costa Jtlesa
Tallman's Rites
Slated Thursday .
Funeral services ror aviator
Frank G. Tallman Ill will be
held Thursday at St. Joachim's
Catholic Church in Costa Mesa.
Mr. Tallman died Saturday
when his Piper Aztec plane
crashed on a rugged shoulder of
Saddleback Mountain during a flight from Oakland to Orange
County Airport.
Mass of Christian burial is
scheduled ror 2:30 p.m. Thurs-
da y at St. Joa.chim ·s, 1964
· Pilot Killed
In Air Crash
OCCIDENTAL <AP) -A 54-
year-old Sonoma County man
was killed when his rented
airplane sheared oft the top of
an oak tree and crashed and
burned in a hillside pasture
north of here.
The Sonoma County coroner's
olflce ldentilied the pilot as
Walter W•yne Irwin. He was fly .
Ina 1010 when the plane crashed
at U :40 p.m . M~ay.
Orange Ave. Burial will be at
Pacific View Memorial Park,
Corona del Mar.
Officiating at the ser vice will
be Bishop Juan Arzube or Los
Angeles and Monsignor Thomas
J . Nevin of St. Joachim's.
Mr. Tallman was one of the
world's best-known aviators and
movie stunt pilots.
He was reportedly returning
from scouting movie locations
when the tragedy occurred. A
National Transportation Safety
Board investigator has Indicated
he found no physical defects In
Mr. Tallman's plane, but his re-
• port is not yet completed.
Mr. Tallman leaves his wife,
Ruth, of Newport Beach; his
son, Frank Gifford Tallman IV
or Irvine; a daughter, Gall
Leake or Torrance; his mother,
Inez Tallman of New Jersey; a
brother, Foster Tallman or New
Jersey, and a sister. Trudy Jay
of La Jolla.
The family has suggested
memorial donations to the oraan
rund at Hoa.a Memorial Hospltal
in Newport Beach, to the atten-
tion or Rev. William R. Parry.
Checks should be made out lo
the hospital.
•
OC Trash
Drivers
On Strike
By JACKIE HYMAN
Of .. O.Uy Pollet Si.H
Truck drivers for a number of
Orange County trash collection
rirms went on strike al midnight
Monday, leaving several Orange
Coast cities without rubbish col·
lection.
Arfected a r e Huntington
Beach, Fountain Valley. Costa
Mesa and Laguna Beach. along
with Anaheim, Orange. Santa
Ana, Garden Grove, Fullerton
and Buena Park.
Those cities contract with
private firms lo collect their
rubbish. Cities that employ their
truck drivers directly. such as
Newport Beach, were not af·
rected. ln emergency action today.
Orange County supervisors vot-
ed to open to the public during
working hours trash transfer
stations at which county trucks
normally collect refuse from the
private trucks.
The only station on the Orange
Coast is located in Huntington
Beach on Gothard Street just
south or Talbert Avenue. It will
be open. effective today, from 7
a.m . to4 p.m.
Gene Raasch, president of
Team sters Local 396, said
negotiations thal began March 4
reached an impasse Monday
night, when the drivers' three-
year contract expired.
lie said he has no idea how
long the strike may last. A pre·
vious strike continued for three
weeks.
Raasch said conflict centers
on wage and benefit issues.
He said the drivers are cur-
rently paid $4.50 an hour and
have asked for a $2 an hour raise
the first year and $1 an hour the
second and third years.
<See DRIVERS, Page A2)
Uberace's
~r?
LONDON (AP) -Liberace
a nd his former chaurreur
dazzled the audience at the Lon-
don Palladiuro with both their
piano playing and their outfits.
Vince Cardell, who used to
drive Liberace's Rolls-Royce for
hl1 Las Vegas performances,
was dressed ln a duplicate of the
glitter tails outrit that the
American star sported for his
part or Monday night's show.
"Vince used to play by ear,
but I tauaht him to read music,"
Liberace confided to the au-
dience. "He ls my protege and
he la also learning how to be a
showoff like me."
•
Tallman Rites
t" .·
Sl~ted Thursday
""'"""'"' 'LOVE SLAVE' SUSPECT JOYCE MC KINNEY
Will the Mounties Get Their Woman In Canada?
Flash Fire
Yapors Ignite; HB
Resident Burned
A Huntington Beach man dis-
carding what he believed to be
contaminated gasoline from his
van into the kitchen sink is
hospit.allzed today, after rumes
exploded Monday night. causing
a $20.000 fire at his home.
William Kerr, 30, who re-
portedly was Just purchasing the
house at 8571 Merle Circle. was
listed in stable condition today
at the UC Irvine Medical Center
Bum Unit in Orange.
Investigators said he surrered
second and third degree burns
over about 10 percent of his up-
per body, including bis arms,
s houlders, race and mouth
areas.
Ignition of the gasoline fumes
by a stove or water heater pllot
light was blamed ror the sudden
6: 15 p.m. blaze which ripped
throlfBh Ken-'s residence.
''Th!s ls a classic case, one
that might do some sood In
terms of educaUng others," said
fire de partment Capt. Jerry
Abshier.
"The reUow suspected there
was some contaminated gas in
his van and drained the tank. He
was pouring it down the kitchen
sink. which created quite an ac-
cumulation of vapors. They got
to the pilot light."
He said the resulting devasta-
tton or the home. which today Is
uninhabitable. was caused by a
swiftly moving flash fire rather
than an outright gasoline ex·
plosion.
Report 'Untrue'
CO RSlER -SUR · V E VEY.
Swilzerlaitd (AP) -The
magistrate investigating the
Charlie Chaplin body-snatching
case dert1ed as "absolutely un -
true" an American newspaper
report Monday that the come-
dian's wife was informed by the
kidnappers weeks ago where the
body was hidden.
,
Interpol
Tells of
Disguise
QTTAWA <APJ -The Mmin'-
ties are looking for Joyce
McKinney and Keith May, who
fled from Britain to Canada to
escape trial on charges of kid·
napping a young Mormon mis-
sionary.
The Royal Canadian Mounted
Police alerted its offices to look
for the pair after being informed
by Interpol that they took an Air
Canada flight from Shannon,
Ireland. to Montreal and Toron-
to on Wednesday wearing wigs
and posing as deaf-mules.
Miss McKinney. ?.7. of Min-
neapolis. N.C .. and May, 24. of
Maywood. Calif .. are charged
with kidnapping Kirk Anderson,
21. ot Provo. Utah, while he was
doing missionary work in Bri-
tain and imprisoning him in a
cottage last September.
I ,
j
Anderson. who had been Miss ,
McKinney's former boy friend.
claimed he was kept chained to
a bed and forced to have sexual
intercourse with her three
times.
The woman. a former beauty
contest winner in Wyoming,
testified a t a preliminary
hearing that she played bondage 1 games with the young man to help
him sort out his sexual prob-
lems, but unsisted be was a will-
ing pa rticipant and that she "did
it a II for love."
Miss McKinney and May were
out on bail awaiting an ap-
pea rance May 2 in London
c riminal court. They reported to
<See SEX, Page AZ)
Coast
Weather
Fair through Wednes·
day and a littJe warmer.
Lows tonight 52 to 58.
Highs Wednesday 64 to 70.
INSIDE TODAY
Corregsdor, the dearl11 con-
secrated earth to which
Douglaa MacArthur returned,
has become a mecca for
Japanue tourists. See Page
A7.
·'
I
I
'
l
I I
I
1
I
' ,
. ,
2 DAILY Ptl.Of I T~, Af"I 16. 1m
Lake Searched for -~Executed' Moro
CORVARO, Italy <AP> -A mc:ssqe purportedly from UNI
terrorla.t k do1ppera o( At4o
Moro announced today that the
former prenuer wu exeeuted
and haa body dum~ m a moun·
tun I ke near here. Divers
flown to the acene be1an a
search but tumed up nothln& hn· mediately.
"I broke the thin ice and
, looked ror about one hour but I
couldn •t find anything or anyone
there," said Gianni Llmltl, one
\. ot the frogmen searching Lake
c
Ouchessa. 72 mUes northeast of
Rome l&nd three mile» from the
bamlet ol Corvaro.
The laJce 1$ less lb•n one·
quarter mile long and lo place»
it.s waler ia only knee deep.
The message, bearlog the
si1nature of the Red Brlaadee,
said the 8l·year..old prealdoat of
the rulJng Chrl8Uan Democratic
Party was executed "by
suicide," apparenUy a moeklng
reference to the disputed death.s
in prison or German terrorists.
Moro, five times a premier
~,,.Bigla C'ourt Ruin
;
Public Denied
4
Nixon's Tapes
WASHINGTON <AP) -The
U.S. Supreme Court barred the
public today from listening to
the 30 White House tape record·
1ngs played at the Watergate
cover-up trial of aides to former
f'resident Nixon.
The court'a 7-2 decision re-
versed a 1976 ruling by the U.S.
C1rcu1t Court of Aopeals that
would have made the tapes
available to the three com-
mercial lelevisian networks,
public television and a recording
company planning to sell copies
of the tapes for home use.
and probable next president of
the repubUc. was abducted aand
h!s n ve bocb1uardl wer• killed
by the Brigades. Italy's inost
feared W'ban guerrilla gang, in a
Rome str~ ambush March 16.
The kidnappers N1D0uneed three
days ago \hat be had been eon-
vlcted in "~le's trial" and
sentenced to die.
Police could not tmmediately
confirn't that today's communi·
que. found in Rome. was authen-
tic. ChrisUan Democrat ofrtclals
said it appeared to be, but they
did not exclude the possJb1hty or
a ruse to shock the nation.
Lake Duchessa la 6,000 feet up
the s lope of 8,159·foot Mount
Velino. one of the highest peaks
of the Appenine Mountains. in a
rugged section of central Italy's
Abruui region.
Frogmen, soldiers and Police
flew In hellcopters to the lake -
virtually inaccessible to ground
vehicles and began looking for
the body. Long lines of military
jeeps and trucks arrived at a
lower elevation. Reporters were
barred from the search site and
confloed to Conaro.
A colonel who asked not to be
identified s aid the shallow
plake was frozen, apparently by
cold overnight temperatures.
''We saw no trace or anybody
or anything. I didn't even see
fex>tprlnts," he said.
But residents said it had
s nowed heavily overnight
some drifts were 12 feet deep -
and footprint& could have been
obliterated. Fog also hampered
search efforts
Party leaders went to Moro's
house in Rome to inform bis
wire Eleonora. At party head-
quarters. grim-raced officials
~ath e r e d to awuit word,
secretaries wept in the corrict>rs
and Communis t Party chief
Enrico Berlinguer arrtved for
consultation.
The Italian cabinet was wait
Ing t o be called into ureen1
session
'Holocaust'
Increases
Audience
NEW YORK CA P) -Thi
second part or NBC television':
four-part drama "Holocaust·
about the Nazis' campaign to ex
• · terminate lbe Jews was watche<
by more people than the firs
part and rar outdistanced com
petition in New York and Lo:
Angeles. pre Ii mi nary report:
show. (Related story, Al2l ''Considerin,..all the
circumstances of this conceded-
ly singular case, we hold that
the common-law right of access
to judicial records does not
authorize release or the tapes in
question," Justice Lewis F.
Powell Jr. wrote for the court's
Hubert's Bard Bats
The ratina service Arbitror
reported that Monday night ':
two-hour segment was wat.che<
by 37 .2 percent of all New Yori
City homes with television, com
-
IA-London
Trip Cut Due
majority.
The court's ruling ls a major
legal victory for Nixon. who
persistently challenged the
ta pes' release as an invasion or
privacy.
J oining Powell 's opinion were Chief J ustice Warren E . Burger
A collection of hard hats is among the
• hundreds of items collected by the late
Sen. J lubcrt Humphrey during his years
a~ sem:1tor <.1nd vice presi~ent. The llum-
phrey family and staff will decide how the
ite m s. now being sorted by the Minnesota
llistorkal Sotiety, will be used.
Fro. PClfle AJ Sales Ease a Bit
• pared to 8.2 Pf'l'cent watchin1
ABC and 16.2 percent tuned t1
CBS.
Th e firs t cha pter o
"llolocaust" Sunday night got <
29 7 ruling bul that was for three
hours. LONDON CAP> -Lakt!r
Ai rways, whose Skytrain
service pushed the big
airlines lo cut the cost of
tran s-Atlantic tic"-ets. -~ .. ;\~--~"',·
c .,~,.rfl'R(t "'brr "ftWI e-•
round trips betweefl Bri-
tain and the United States
and Canada next month.
and Justices H a rry A .,, DRIVERS .~l!i_k~~2,t . Re.h ... n-• :_ __ _ ~ • ft. : ~ -~-
. j{jfinn ~~ ~~~ -~ ... ., ~~ id.ri.--'111~~.:.. ..::
In Los Angeles. Arbilron said
32 I percent of all televisior
hou s e h o ld s wat c he c
"Holocaust," ~nile 7.5 percen
• , .., J'. ~ A ., '" )!j~ 'J"f.l~t\ei\ J\lf~il!\d .\.i-~Che< . -;JF ·--.. ,_, ............ err· t 5' -11w~~,.,il'9,......A · • "'-'··-• • ' · • ' ~ drewif trfl'~ ' .ld~ A I The percentage!i do not add ui
Fre d die Lake r said
Monday it would offer ad-
' a nce booking charter
fli~hls lo Chicago, Detroit.
-New York and Montreal
for $18.3 roundtrip and lo
Los Angeles and San
Francisco for $368.
The London-New York
roundtrip with Laker 's
non -c harter Sk ytrain
service costs S257.
Fro• Page A I
SEX •••
police there Wednei.day, as re·
quired by their bail conditions,
then vanished from the north
London house where they were
living.
Using the names J oan O'Con·
nor a nd Anthony McGowan, both
dN'cascd. they went to Shannon,
where Air Canada 0Hic1al John
Nor an reported: "The couple
used scribbled notes to tell me
they were due to take part in a
mimed play In Toronto."
The crew of the Air Canada
plane identified the pair from
color pictures sent anonymously
t o the London Daily Mi rror.
Miss McKinney was wearing a
long-haired red wig, heavy
makeup, br\ght red lipstick and
blue-tinted glasses. May wore a
thick curly black wig and
,glasses. The photos were accom-
panied by death certificates for
Miss O'Connor and McGowan.
Plmll Mishap
KilbJ Woman
CA RSON CP > -A worker at
Leisure Group Co. in Carson suf-
fered fatal inJuries when she
was· crushed by a machine top-'
pied over by a forklift.
A s herifr's s pokesman said
fellow workers were able to Lift
the machine off Bertha P.
Dereza, 33, but s he was pro-
nounced dead of internal in -
j uri es• Mo]lday a( Harbor
General llolipital.
OAAHGI! COAST
DAILY PILOT
'""'°'•ftOl'Coa'• O.lfy ~kit Wltf'IW'"tf"''"''~ f>o.~ t .. ""'"" Pf~'\'\ '' oUf')ilHIW~ f>V tNtt 0t tt"'cp '°""'' Puo41\11!1'"1 c.omo .... , S.0-'"''tll' .-O••·~"~O'Jl)41\-~ Mon.ti•, t~ro.tOf\ ,..,..,.., '"" (-.t• .,_...,. "*#00'1 8".Ch H\lftt•""'Oft ,._.~" f-n\lft t••" V•lf11t ''"''"• \addl•Mc• Vttllf'v ·~
l.Aq\lftll ~Mft 5.ovt"~·U A '\11"q#t1'-4.ol\Alfod· ltO'\ I\ ~1\M<O Satvto.tn tnO ~\"\ ,,..... ;;:;CN~':',::;~1.~.·~~~~ .. .;;,.uo ...,.,, ,..,
•
.......... _
P'"''°""' Anti Pvihfn"""
JM• lit (_,lit-Y v .. • p,,. •(tlftnt•l'ldGofo¥f ..-w~, ,...,.,.., ......
(dOOt
T"9~lA MM,.,..,.,_
M•neq1nq £ t7itOt
C~trlf\ M Lff' .. ttN~ P Ntll
• ,,,,,~, MitnAOl"O Ectitor'
OfflcH
C1t\I• M-'\t JJO Wt 'tl S.t \h .....
t•Q·,,..ft"ttMl't t l .. G-.f'WW'YrttM"MI H"'"l1.WW~f'I ft41.At ft I '11\ f\loMfrl 80u .... ..-CI ~''tM' ~ """ .. ' n101 L4 PM •oeo at ~n OitOO r ,..,..,.
Tel99hon• (114)142-4321
CIHtlfl.O Adveftlllno M2·5e71
"-'Olf040 Vlll•Y Nf-'\()tHU
Ml.f:llO
rrom\•nC1•~•
4M.fl00
,,..,..,, ....... 0r ..... C9v'l'.~t ...
640-1220
to the nation's higheit court by cents the first year and 30 cents Nixon. the second and third years,
Justices• William J . BreMan. Raasch said.
Jr. anci-Byron R. White.Jlid not Raasch said members also
agree with all of Powell's rea· want dental coverage and five
soning, but they also voted to days or sick leave per year . He
bar release of the tapes. said they currently have none In
Di ssenting were Justices addition. drivers want a require ·
Thurgood Marshall and J ohn menl lhat they be sent three
Paul Stevens. warning letters before they are
"Needless to say, we'r e dismissed . Currently, Raasch
gratified with the decision,•· said said. no warning letters are re-
William H. Jeffress Jr., who quired.
argued the case for Nixon before He said employers have of·
lbe Supreme Court. fered one additional holiday per
Transcripts or the tapes were year and a slight adjustment in
publicized during the 1974 trial the vacation schedule. Drivers or rortl)er Attorney General get one week per year after one
Johll Mitchell and ex-White year of service . two weeks after
House aides H. R. Haldeman th~e years and three weeks
and John Ehrlichman. All 30 after 10 years. The change.
transcripts were widely qlded which he said is acceptable.
in part or in their entirety In would be to allow lhree weeks
newspapers and other publica-after ei~ht years. lions.
But except for the 12·member
jury and those people who sat
through all or portions of the
trial, the public has never heard
the actual voices or Nixon and
his aides discussing the scandal
that forced him from office.
Filing suit in 1976 to have the
tapes releued were ABC. CBS,
NBC, the Public Broadcasting
Service, the Radio·Televlsion
News Directors Association :rnrl
Warner Communications.
The networks , public
television and the news directors
eroup sought to air portions of
the tapes while Warner wanted
to reproduce lh«!m for sale as rec-
ords and tape cassettes.
Nixon argued that the tapes'
release would cause him great
embarrassment.
In arguing .before the justices
last October, Jeffress said the
rormer president would suffer.
"mental anguish" if the tapes
were not kept from "every disc
jockey, every tel evision
performer . . . to be played re·
lentlessly."
Nixon's attorneys argued that
home saJes of 22 hours' worth of
White House conversations
would lead to their being
"played at cocktail parties and
in satiric productions.·'
But in argulng for Warner
C ommunications. lawyer
Edward Bennett Williams had
told the court: "I don't know of
any common-law right not to be
e mbarrassed by one's ln-
culpatory words."
Raasch said drivers also wanl
a change in the grievance pro·
cedl,l!'e to match the one used in
Los Angeles.
lie said drivers have twice
voted down employer offers.
Cops Nab 21
Aliens in SC
A routine traffic stop by a San
Clemente 'patrol o(ficer just
after midnight today turned up
21 illegal aliens, who are being
held by the U.S. Border Patrol,
pending identification or the
driver.
Forty-five more aliens were
pulled off a freight train In
Oceanside by Border Patrol
agents at 2:30 a.m.
"The stream of Mexican na-
tionals entering the country il-
le~ally has been fairly steady1 a Border Patrol spokesman said lO·
day. "The crops are ready for
harvesting, and as long as there's
work, the Illegal aliens will keep
coming."
3 of Quads Die
TOKYO CAPl -Three of the
quadruplets born Monday in the
southwestern Japanese city of
Kagoshima died today and the
fourth was in critical condition,
doct ors said They said the
youngest of the four -one of
two girls -has a res piratory
problem
Pact Backers, Foes
Woo Wavering Votes
I
WASHINGTON CAP ) -Sup·
porters and foes of the Panama
Canal treaties opened late-hour
drives for a handful or wa vering
votes today as the agreements
appeared to be within two votes
of final approval or rejecUon.
President Carter met with one
undecided senator early today
and another announced he would
vote against the treaty turning
over the canal to Panama in the
year 2000.
An Associated Press count
showed 65 flrm votes for ap-
proval, 32 acatnat and three un-
decided.
Supporttirs were given fresh
'
hope Monday when agreement
was reached on the issue of U.S .
intervention rights In Panama.
Des pite the agreement ,
however . both s ide s
acknowledged that this after-
noon 's final vote remained in
doubt and would be extremely
close.
H all 100 senators are present.
67 senators must vote for the
agr eement af It Is to be ap-
proved.
/\ defeat would mean a major
forelRn poUcy setback for Carter
and a further souring of his rela·
Uona with COngres!\.
lo 100 because many televislo1
NEW YORK CAP> Stock the Wall Street firm o f setsweretunedtootherstation!
prices halted their dramatic CJp-Fahnestock & Co. or not turned on at all.
ward charge or the paist three The rally began. Thursday.
sessions today as many in· when the Dow climbed 8.92
vestors sold Issues that Jumped points. It continued Friday and
sharply in price during the rally Monday with record volume,
that bcg;rn Thursd<ty . which pushed the Dow up nearly
another 35 points. It was fueled
by foreign investors and large
institutions such as insurance
companies and pension plans.
The Dow Jones Hverage of 30
industrial stocks at mid·day lost
1.91 points to 808.21. But that
closely watched index had been
down more than four points
earlier in the session.
Declining issues outnumbered
those that .gained by about a
J -to-1 margin in active trading.
"The market has been down' for months and many people
have been holding their stock for
a long time hoping to get ev~ or
to make a little pro11t. Now that
il 's up, they are selling." said
J ohn J Smith, an analyst with
Analysts today said the large
investors were less eager to buy
ear LY in the session.
"This indicates the institutions
have decided to .step away and
let the dust settle a bit," said
Smith.
l\-is eommon £or-the1'laf'ket lo
back off from s harp movements
either up or down. experts note.
They add that today's pause
does not necessarily mean the
rally is over.
Food 'Fixed'
Vendor's T~s 'Tranquil'
ENSENADA. Mexico CAP I -Authorities here
b1:cnm e s uspicious when they saw how satisfied
C'ustorners of Felipe Reyes' taco stand seemed to be.
a nd the high price the consumers paid for tacos.
Mexican Federal Judicial Police staked out the
popular vendor Monday for a time and then moved
in. R eyes' s pecialty turned out to be a Seconal t aco
costing the peso equivalent of about Sl.SO each.
Officers found about 30 tranquilizers at the
stand. including one s lipped into a tasty treat fixed
for a cu:;tomer who had asked for "a taco \\ilh."
Reyes, 22. of Ensenada and his customer were
taken to jail whe re the taco vendor admitted buying
the drug iUcgally fro m a pharmacy.
NBC reported that telepbonE
calls it received in New York
and Los Angeles on Sunda)
night were almost evenly split
between praise and complaints.
New York had 388 favorable
calls and 368 c.omplainls. Los
Angeles had 122 favorable calls
and 111 complaints. plus another
214 protesting the number ot
commercial interruptions.
T e n uniformed American
Nazis and about 25 civilian sym-
pathizers marched in protest
ag.aiAil the ~cries .Sunday out·
side Nsc·s Burbank head-
quarters.
In New York. about 20 people
identified as belonging to the
Ridgewood group or Queens,
co m po s ed of Germa n -
Americans. demons trated out·
side NBC's main offices. They
carried placards saying "NBC 1s
Anti-Christian." Demonstrations-
'" both cities were without inci-
dent.
A s mall plane fle w over
Dodger Stadium during a
baseball game in Los Angeles
Sunday, towing 1:1 banner read·
in g, "Holocaust is a hoax."
Gerald Green. author or the
screenplay and novel. said in a
telephone interview from New
York, "I wrote it. then I saw it
last week and saw it again last
night and l was moved each
tam e. Not because I wrote it but
because it is truthful. dramatic.
imoortant material. You reel you have a part in re-creating
history everbody shouid know
about "
New daily nonstop service from nearby Orange County airport.
Economical Sun jet Tours plus discount fares fo r families and groups.
Fly Air California and make » easy on yourself.
AIR 9 CALIFORNIA
We 're easy to toke.
Coll Atr Cotifornlo Reservations In Orange County, (714) 752-1CXX). Downey.
(~13) 924 3313. Laguna (714) 496-600). Los Angeles. (21 3) 627-5401; Son Clemente.
(714) 496-0000. R1vers1de 1Son Bernardino. (714) 825-6900. or your local Trove! Agent
)
I
•
Coast
... . .
ii
T oday's C::loslag
N.Y. Stoeks
VOL 71, NO. 108, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1978 C TEN CENTS1
Griffin .Bell Takes· .On Tht!ee--iDch Fish
WASIDNGTON <AP) -Al torney General Griffin Belt
uked the U.S. Sup"'me Court today to decide against a three-
incb fl.ah and to ·clear the way for
pulling the finishing touches on
a new dam in eastern Ten· nesaee,
Bell asked the Dine jusUces for
an order giving the Tennessee
Valley Authority permission to
complete construction of the
$199 million Tellko Dam
Freeway
Report
Set in CM
t\ssemblyman Dennis
Mangers. D-Hwlington Beach, will ~l with Costa Mesa city
odic1als Wednesday to announce
the results ot negotiations with
slate Transportation Director
Adriana Gi-anturco regarding
completion of.-tbe Costa Mesa I Freeway <koute _ss>
.. ·:--~~~~ .... 1'.-0oen t.o. JJu>.r'-.
_s.-~n~~rth~no:r~o7fe;'eDr~
7
room at City Hall, 77 Fair Drive
Mangers has been working
with local officials, regional
CalTrans representatives and
Miss Gianturco in an effort lo
resolve uncertainties about t.he
future of the freeway
Mangers will discuss the latest
report filed by local CalTrans
officials, who have been looking
at nine different routes the
freeway could take into
downtown Costa Mesa from its
present terminus near the Santa
Ana Country Club
City omcials received the
reporl late Monday. but are
withholding COO'lmenl on its con tents until Wednesday's
meet10g
Mayor Ed McFarland. City
Manager Fred Sorsabal. vice
Mayor Mary Smallwood and
Public Services Director Bruce Mattern will join Mangers
Wednesday to discuss the
alternative routes under
consideration.
Mangers and Assemblyman
Ron Cordova. D· El Toro, have
subcnitted a joint resolution
requesting stale funds for the
environmental impact report needed to begin the proJect.
That resolutior is still pending
before the legislature
Liberace's
Suttessor?
LONDON (AP> -Liberace
and .his former c hauffeur
dazzled t.he audience at the Lon
don Palladium with both their
piano playing and their outfits.
Vince Cardell, who used to
drive Liberace's Rolls-Royce for
his Las Vegas performances,
was dressed in a duplicate of the
glitter tails outfit that the
American star sported for bis
part of Monday night's show
"Vince med to play by ear,
but I taught him to read music,"
Liberace confided to the au
1 dience. "He ls my protege and
• he is also leamlng how to be a
, . showoff like me "
t Co ast
W eather
Fair through Wednes-
day and a little warmer.
Lows tonight 52 to 58.
Highs Wednesday 64 to 70.
INSIDE TODAY
Corregtdor, th.t deorl11 con·
aecrated earth to t.0hich •
Dougta. M«Arthvr m&ITMd.
ha• become a mecca for
Japanese toumta. ~e Page
A1.
'
Conservationists say the dam
spells doom for the three-loch
fish, t.he snail darter.
"The dam ls finished for all in·
tents and purposes," Bell said in
a rare appearance at the
Supreme Court. ''They have
moved the snail dflrter to
another place,·· a reference to
lbe fish being removed to the
nearby Hiwasee River.
A U .S Court of Appeals last
year stopped TV A from closi.nJ(
the gates on the dam on grounds
the action violates the En·
dangered Species Act. The act
prohibits a federal agency from
impairing the habitat of an en·
danaered species. The only known natural
spawning grounds of the snail
darter is on t.he Llttle Tennessee
River, just. upstream from t.he
Tellico Dam. The fish spawn
above the dam and grow to
maturity below it.
ZygmW'lt Plater, who arfued
against Bell, declared the law
was clear. ,
"Congress has not changed
the law. and t.bis court Uould
not amend the law,'• be said.
"TV A took t.he position It would
not comply w\lb the Endaagered
Species Act.•'
He also sa,td "tr~y1antauon is not a fulfillment o the ad.
The Hiwasee transplant does not
currently appear to be auc·
ce19fUJ.''
Construction of the dam betan in 1967, six years before tbe En·
d•ogered Species Act became .. ,,.
Tbe snail darter was not dis-
covered until 1973 and not
classified as endangered unUJ
two years later.
Biologists argue t.hat complet·
Ing the dam and closing its gates
would mundate the spawning
grounds. The structure already
has stopped the snail darter
from migrating upstream to
spawn, tbe Department of Jn.
terior aays.
There are no estimates of the
number of snail darters surviv·
ing in the Little Tennessee, but
the lnterior Department thinks
about 1,000 still live in the waterway.
J>ickup Halted
For Mesa Trash
By JACKIE HYMAN ed to open to the public dunng
0tu..o.i1rf'l••UIMf working hours tras h transfer
Truck drivers ror a number of stations at whk h county trucks
Orange County trash colledion normally collect refuse from the
firms went on strike at midnight privat~ trucks.
Don't Put
Trash Out Monda)'. •. leav~ several Orangew,-' The only station on the Orange
Coast cities w1thouf rubbish col· Coast is IQ.C~ted in untington ~!il!F·~ ·-~~w-ffs~:..r ~ __ ...... -;.J .k. • · ' ...... ~ ~. •--... ---·~r&:, I.le. t Wllf'
.... D-~~•. ~ piQ~ ~J;U·~--eef' o e · C~ta
A BuJ&sla Find
Costa Mesa police officer Dick Bersch mulls fate of fake
bull police recovered recently in a church parking lot.
How the hefty fellow got there is a mystery. but police
are more than willing to return the statue to its .owne r.
It's taking up plenty of space in the department's prop-
erty room and isn't likely to be a hot item at the next
police auction.
Beacn, Fountain Valley, Costa be open. effective toqay, from 7
Mesa and Laguna Beach, along a .m. to 4 p.m.
with Anaheim, Orapge, Santa Gene Raasch. president of
Ana. Garden Grove, Fullerton Te ams te rs Loca l 396, s aid
a nd Buena Park. negotiations that began March 4
Those cities contract with reached a n impasse Monday
private firms to collect their night, when the drivers' three·
rubbish. Cities that employ t.heir year contract expired.
truck drivers directly. such as He said he has no idea how
Newport Beach, were not af· long the strike may last. A pre-
fected. vious strike continued for three Only some residents living in weeks.
unincorporated county territory Raasch said conflict centers
will be affected by the trash on wage and bener.t issues.
driver strike. All of Lake Forest He said the drivers are cur-
will be affected as well as about rently paid $4.50 an hour and one half of El Toro. h h · Sections or the county souther-ave asked for a S2 an our rmse
ly of El Toro Road, inclUfling the first year and Sl an hour the
Mission Viejo and Dana P,oin\. second and third years.
are not tn the strike territory at 'The firms have offered ~
this time, county authOfmes ants tblr1trst-year and 3Cr~ said. the second and third years.
In emergency acUon today, Raasch said.
Orange County supervisors vol· R aasch said members a lso
Mesa Sanitary District,
asked Costa Mesans today
not to place trash at street
curb pickup spots witil a
labor dispute that has
halted trash collection in
the city is settled.
"There are no pro·
visions for temporary
pickups and we are sorry
ror the inconvenience, but
it's really out of our con·
trol. ··said Roeder.
"We do hope it's short
term ," he added .
Customers can r~ceive
further directions and in·
formation b~cting
the s anitary district at
556·530'1.
want dental coveraee and five
days of sick leate per ••ar. He
(8-DRIVERS, Page AU
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
'Freeze' Hits N. Mesa
Wuncil Enacts Ordi,nance on Devefupmenl
"Development pressures" in a
s m a ll section of north Costa
Mesa led the City Council to
enact a four month development
freeze on the area Monday
mght.
The so-called "urgency or-
dinance" requested by city plan· ners was approved unan
imously.
Until planners come up wit.h a
specific plan for the area, there
will be no new developments
considered in the area between
In Cos ta Me sa
Baker Street on the south,
Paul arino Avenue on the north.
Jerfrey Drive on the west and
just short of Bristol Street on the
east.
Plann.m, staffer Doug Clark
told councilmen that the long
narrow lots in the area have
drawn increased interest from
develo p e r s se ek i ng zone
changes.
However, Clark said planners
have been reluctant lo approve
new developments until a tralf1c
-
circulation plan and develop·
ment standards are completed.
One traffic circulation plan be-
in g considered would extend
Randolph Street across Baker
into the area for a linkup at
Paularinoand Platte Drive.
It will take at least four
months for the city staff to de·
vise a specific plan, Clark said,
adding that an extension of the
d-evelopmenl freeze may be
sought if a plan is not com·
pleted.
Tallman Services Set
Funeral services for aviator
Frank G. Tallman III will be
held Thursday at St. Joachim's
Catholic Church in Costa Mesa.
Mr. Tallman died Saturday
when his Piper Aztec plane
crashed on a rugged shoulder of
Saddleback Mountain during a flight from Oakland to Orange
County Airport.
Mass of Christian burial is
scheduled for 2:30 p.m. Thurs-day at St. J oachim's. 1964
Orange Ave. Burial will be at
Pacific View Memorial Park,
Corona del Mar.
OfrlciaUng at the service will
be Bishop Juan Arzube or Los
Angeles and Monsignor Thomas
J. Nevin of St. Joachim's.
Mr. Tallman was one of the
world's best-known a viators ~nd
movie stunt pilots.
He was reportedly returning
from scouting movie locations
when the tragedy occurred. A
National Transportation Safety
Board investigator has indicated
he found no physical defects in
Mr. Tallman's plane, but his re-
port is not yet completed.
Mr. Tallman leaves his wire.
CM Co11ncil Picks
Plan Commissioner
Shirley Price of Costa Mesa
became the city's newest plan-
ning commissione r Monday
night. The City Council appoint-
ed her to the post vacated by
new City Councilwoman Arlene
Scharer.
Mrs. Price was selected from
a field of 10 applicants.
Alter taking her oath of office.
she lert council chambers to sit
in on her first Planning Com-
mission study session.
Jn addlUon to her membership
on the city's Houslne and Com·
munlty Development Commit-
tee, Mrs. Price has served as a
planning consultant ror the
Irvine Co. and ls a member of
county Supervisor Thomas
Riley's housing task force.
She contributed to the Laguna
Greenbelt Study Team and is the
author of a resource booklet on
"Alternative Futures for Urban
Southern Califomla."
She holds a master's de"ree In biology from Stanford Universi·
ty and a certificate In Urban
Plannin1 rrom UC Lrvlne.
Her term on the planning com·
miselon will n.in until 1980.
Ruth , of Newport Beach; his
son. Frank Gifford Tallman IV
of Irvine; a daughter, Gail
Leake of 'torrance: his mot.her,
Inez Tallman of New Jersey; a
brother, Foster Tallman of New
J ersey. and a sister, Trudy Jay
of La Jolla. The family has suggested
memorial donations to the organ
fund at Hoag Memorial Hospital
in Newport Beach, to the atten-
tion of Rev. William R. Parry.
Checks should be made out to
the hospital.
.,.,,..,.....
'LOVE SLAVE' SUSPECT JOYCE MC KINNEY
Wiii the Mountie• Get Their Woman In Canada?
Mamo~ Drugs 2 Fleeing Suspects
Impact Rewt£d •
LOS ANGELES <AP> -A So11.uht by .. 6 ounties prosecution-called witness, tesU· ~ 1 lJJ. 1
fying in the third murder trial of
Leslie Van Houten, bas said she
was unable to think rat.tonally
because of heavy use of LSD.
"l think I lost the ability to
reason," Dianne IAke, 25, said
Monday under cross-examination
by defense attorney Maxwell
Keith. Keith used hertesUmonyto
support the defense contention
that Manson psychologically con·
trolled mernbersof hia clan.
Keith maintains Miss Van
Houten, now 28, wu ao much un·
der MaMOn's control, '>)Cause ol
drugs and because she believed
Manson was Jesus Cbrtat.
OTTAWA CAP> -The Moun· .ies are looking for Joyce
McKinney and Keith May, who
fled from Br\tain to Canada to
escape trial on charges of kid·
napping a young Mormon mis·
sionary.
The Royal Canadian Mounted
Police alerted ill offices to look
for the pair after being lnlormed
by Interpol that they took an Air
Canada IUgbt from Shannon,
Ireland, to Montreal and Toron-
to on Wednesday wearlna wigs
and posing as deaf-mutes.
Miss McKinney, 27. or Min-
neapolis. N.C., and Ma y, 24, of
Maywood, Calif.. are charged
wit~ kidnapping Kirk Anderson.
21. of Provo, Utah, while he was
doing missionary work in Bri·
taln and imprisoning him U1 a
cottage last September.
Andenon, who had been Mtss
McKinney's former boy friend,
claimed he was kept chained to
a bed and forced to have sexual
intercourse with her thre e
limes.
<See SEX, Pace t\2}
'
I
I
' I
I
j
r
l ~
DM.V N.OT
Market
Rally
·Halted
New YORK <AP> -Stoek
prices haJted tbelr dramatic ui>-
ward chars• cir U,e past thrw
HHtona today H many ln·
m1lor1 IOld laau .. that JumMCS
• 1rpJy Jn price durtni the rally · l at betan Thursday.
The Dow Jones average of 30
liaduatrial atocu ctond down 6.86 golntat.ob.rr.
, D•oUn.lnl l111ua outnumbered
thoee that 1atned by about a 8·1
m a r1ln ln active tradln1.
"The market has been down
fbr months and many people
have been holdln1 their at.ock tor a \on1 tlme hopln1to1tt even or
-to make a Uttfe profit. Now that
h '1 up, they are aelUng," aaJd
John J . Smith. an analyst with
lhe Wall Slr ee l firm of
Fahnestock & Co.
The rally began Thursday,
when the Dow climbed 8.aa
points. It continued Friday and
Monday with record volume,
which pushed the Dow up nearly
another 36 polnta. ll wa1 fueled
by foreign investors and large
institutions such as insurance
companies and pension plans.
Analysts today said the large
!nvest.Ora were less eager lo buy ~arly Jn the session.
'1L.. "Thi• lndlcatea the jn1ututJons
tt•IVC decided lo alep awar and
alet the dust settle a bit,' 11aJd
QSmitb. I
"'-ll ia common for the m arket to
i1>'1c1t off from tiharp movemenl8
~itt}er up or down, experts note
f
~ ~-------------~ ..... .,......, ,;..
' • • t
II
TONIGHT
COASTLINE LECTURE
"Women In American Film."
Co11 tu Mesa Women's Club, 7
p.m .
"VOLPONE" -South Coast
Repertory Theater, Tueaday-
Sunday through Aprll 23. 8 p.m.
"BEHIND THE
HEADLINES" ·· Dr. Giles T.
Brown lecturer, OCC Forum.
7:30 p.m.
WEDNESDAY, -'PRIL 11
OCC LECTURE -"Aviation
Safety fur Pilot.B," Fina Art& ll9.
7:30 p.xn.
l're• Page ..4 J
SEX •••
The woman. a former beauty
contest winner In Wyoming,
t eatl fled at a preliminary
hearln11 that ahe played bondaae
aamea Wllh the youn1 men lo help
him sort out his sexual prob·
leme. but lnalstcd he was a "will·
ln1 participant and that she "did
il all tor love."
M i111 Mc Ki M ey and May were
out on ball awatuns an ap-
pearance May 2 In London
c riminal court. They reported lo
police there Wednesday, a. re·
quired by their ball condlUona,
then vanished from the north
London houae where they were
llvlna.
U1ln1 the namea Joan O 'Con·
nor and Anthony McGow1n, bOth
deceaaed, they went to Shannon.
where Air Canada official John
Nor an reported: "The couple
uaed acrlbbled notea to tell me
they were due to take P.art In •
mimed pl1y In Toronto. ·
The crew ot the Air Canada
plane ldentifled t.he pair from
rotor plcture1 sent anonymously
to the London Dally Mlrror.
M 111 McKinney was wearing a
Iona ·haired red wig, heavy
makeup. brt1ht red lipstick and
blue-tinted 1Ja111ea. May wore a
thick c urly blac k wl1 and
gla111ea. The photoa were aocom-
panled by death certificates for
Miss O'Connor and McGowan.
OflANOI COAST t
DAILY PILOT
----Prntcttnt •f'liO Putil~
'"'" («..., V•t• Pfe\tdfl\I •ftCI~ .. ~
n..;:.:.-, ....... ,_ .. _
M•M91"'9 l'Oltor
Clltrt.... ...... ""-"·""" .... , ... "' ....... i .........
C911111 MtH Offloe "'-111"11:!:::1 ~·& '~~ .... ,,.,.
,
Costa ltlesa Snaoker
Nixon's Tapes
WASHINGTON CAP) -The
U.S. St;&pleme Court barred the
publlo t441y frona Uat«tlne to
the 30 Wblte lfouso tape record-
ings played at th• Water1ate
cover.up tri•l ot atd~• to former
Presldent NIJ(OJl.
Tbe co\,U't'a 7·2 decision re·
vened a 1'78 rullnl by the U.S.
Circ ult Court ot ppeala that
would have made the tapes
avtllable to the three com·
merclal televhslon networks.
public television and • recording
company plann.ln1 t.o sell copies
of the tapes for1lome uso.
privacy.
Joining Powell's opinion were
Chief JusUe• W1rren £. Burser
and Ju1tlce1 Karr)' A .
Btackmun, Wllllam H. ·Rihn·
q\d1t and Pottel' Stewart.
All but Stewart were appointed
to the nation's highest coutt by
Nixon.
JU.lives WllJtam J . BreMui
Jr. and Byron It Whit• did not
wgree wtth all of Pow•U'a rt~
M>nlng; but they al10 voted to
bar release ot the tape•. .
D luenllng wet'~ Ju•ttces
Thuriood Mars~ll and Jobn Paul Stevena.
"N eedJeu to 11,Y. we're
argued the ca~e f~r Nixon before
the Sup,..me Court.
Firem en douse hot tar that ignited early
Monday afternoon, sendlne plumes of
black s moke over portions of Costa Mesa.
Workme n were usin g the tar to repair a
roof al Master Specialties Company, 1640
Monrovia Ave., when the fire broke out.
fire men said. The blatt wu short llved
and the damage w~s minimal, accordlna
to fi re department spakt$men.
··con1Jdert n1 all the
circ umstance• of t.hJa conceded·
ly 1lnaular caae, we hold that
the common·law rl1ht ol access
to Judicial recorda does not
authorize release of the tapes in
question," Justice Lewj:s f .
Powell Jr. wrote for the court's
majority. The court'• rulln1 la a major
le11l vtotory for Nixon, who
per1t1tently c hallen11d the
tapea' release aa an lnvaalon of
Tt'anscl'\pts o( tl\e tapes were
publicized during the 1974• triaJ
or former A-ttorney General
John Mitchell and ex -While
House aldea H. R. Haldeman
and J ohn Ehrllchm1n. AH JO
transcripts were widely quoted
in part or in their entirety in
newspaper11 and <Mer. publlca·
l10ns.
mWD Bond Ekction Appro~ed But except ror the 12-member
jury and those people who sat
through all or portions of the
tr ial, the pubUc h•s·oever hevd
the actual voices of Nl1ton and
his aides discussing the scandal
that forced l\im from office. By PIDLIP ROSMARIN
Of lflt O.lly "I l41UC.ff Directors of Lhe Irvine Ranch
Water District have uuthbrlled a
landowners' t)ond election June
t1>, but r educed potential In~
d11btedness by more than a half-
billion dollf.J'S.
The vote Monday was unan.
imous. The two .publicly elect-
ed dJrecto" of the board, W9ne
Clark and WUtram ltpplnaer.
took the initiating acUona. •
Numerous residents of lrvine
and the Irvine City Council had
aa~ed the btard lo delay a de·
ci1lon wttll the state allom ey
1eneral Issues an opinion on the
constitutionality of board mem·
be rah Ip.
Irvine City Attorney James
Erickson contends the land
owner dominance of the board
violates the constitutional prin·
ciple or one man, one vote.
In a tandem 11ction Monday,
the waler board ah10 created
four new water improvement
diatrkta and six new sewer Im-
provement diatricts.
U owners of the more than
47 ,000 acres of mostly unin·
£orpor)lled.Jrvine Company land
appr ove. the IRWD will be
authorized to issue $994.799,000
in general obligation bonds for
future water and sewer lines
The district orl1inally con
sidered uklnj{ votera to approve
a $1 .6 billion bond issue -big·
~est in the history of the slate.
But cutbacks ot more than $320
million were made. in each of lwo areas.
The ftl'St cut was a qlrecl
rMponse to livlne Cit~ Council
obJetUOns that the water district
plan lfir water and sewer pro}
eels adjacent lo El Toro Marine
r ,Sfit!on were ~ary to ~e
city general plan. " -
The city ~eneral plan shows
the territory. within the night
noise impact area or the base. in
permanent agricultural use.
with no urban uses permitted.
Elimination of that area from
l R W D pla ns resulted in a
$321,839,000 reduction in bond needs .
The second cut. of $33~. 797 .ooo.
was achieved malhemalically.
by reducing the expected dollar
Inflation rate after 1985 (the
projects are scheduled through
2010 ) Crom eight percent a year to
alx percent.
Until 1985, the Inflation rate is
calculated al 10 percent a year
Clark made the motion lo ap-
prove the cuts. Director Orville
Reinhardt objected that it would
be shortsighted to reduce the
district's financing potential, but
was perauaded te vote wlt.h the
other1.
Director E. R•y Quigley J r.
ar1ued "someone has lo set a
limit lo set a handle on lnfla·
Uon."
JI lnflallon conUnuea at a
gallop. be aald, there won't be
any wattr or ae.wer projects lo
finance <trecause "There. ain't
1onna be a aound economy
around. The economy's aolna to
10 to hell ln M handbaaket
anyway."
Environmental writer Wesley
)farx, an Irvine realdent.
cr iticized the board actions.
compJaJnin1 there abould have
been an environmenlal • lmpact
atudy done for the proposed
bond lssiJe. . .
'"1 --
FoOd'·'Fixed'
Vendor'' Taco1 'Tranquil'
ENSENADA . Me xico <APl -Authorities here
lwcame suspicious when they saw how satisfied
C'ustomers of Felipe Reyes' taco s ta nd seemed to be,
and the high price the consumers paid for tacos.
Mexican Federal Judicial Police staked out the
popular vendor Monday for a time and then moved
in. Reyes' s pecialty turned out to be a Seconal taco
costing the peso equivalent of about Sl.50 each.
Officers found about 30 tra'nquillzers at the
lltand. including one slipped into a tasty treat fixed
for u customer who had asked for "a taco with."
Reyes. 22. of Ensenada and his customer were
laken to Jail ''here the taco vendor admitted buying
the drul-! illcgully from a pharmacy:
Fllln11 s uit In 1918 lo have the
tapes released were ABC. ~BS.
NBC. the Public Broadca1Ung
Service. the. Radio·Tetovlaton
News Dlreclors A.atoei•tion anct
WllrnerCommunlcaUona.
The n e two11 k1 . public
televifion and tbe QI.ti.I directors
group sought lo air porttoru ·or
the la~ wbne Warner wai.t.ed to reproduce them for aale 11 rec·
oi:da«nd tapec:.a,Attes.
~ F,....P ... AJ
DRIVERS ••.
said they currently have none. ln
addition, drivera want a require-
ment that they be sent three
warnlhg letters before they are
dlsmlaaed. Currently, Raasch
1ald. no warning letters are re-
quired.
He safd lemployera · have Qf·
fered one a(idltlonal holiday per
yt.ar a nd a slighl adjustment in
the vacation schedule. Drivers
iet one week per year after-one
year of service. two weeks after
three years a nd three weeks
a fter 10 years. The change,
which he aaid is acceptable,
would be to allow three weeks
after ehlhl years.
IA-London
Trip Cut Due
Pair Held • in Slayings
Raasch ~aid drivers a lso want
a change in the grievance pro-
cedure to match the one used In
Lo11 Angeles.
lie s aid drivers have t"'ice
voted down employer ofrera.
Youth, Sister Victims in. Burglary Try Plant Mi.hap
LONDON CAP> -Laker
Airways. whose Skytraln
service pushed the bl1
airlines lo cut the COit or
trana-Atlantlc tickets.
aays It will Introduce even
cheaper fares on aome
round trips between Bri-
tain and the United States
and C1nada next month.
Freddte Lake r uld
Monday It woOld offer ad-
vance booking charter
Olahta lo Chlca10, Detroit,
New Yofk and Montreal
for Sl83 roundlrlp and to
Los An1etea and Sa n
Francisco tor S368.
The London-New York
roundlrtp with Laker 'a
non-c harter Skytr aln
service coets S257.
S ANTA MONICA CAP) -
Police arre11ted a p arl ·llmE
roofer and his wife today In the
knlre 1md bludgeon klllin1 or a
high school senior and his 12·
yoar·old siiler.
John William Zimmerman.
and his wire. Merrilee Claire
Zlm merman, both 28 . were
booked for Investigation of
murder after they were picked
up without resistance at about 7
thi s morning at lheir Venice
area duplex, said Sgt. Steve
Kcnnerley
The sergeant said Brian Dean,
18. and his sister , Vriana, were
slaughtered after apparently
surpriain1 two burglars who en-
tered and ransacked their homo
Monday night.
When the dead chiJdren 's
Garden Grove Vletlm
·Westminster Death
Suspect Arrested
A youthful suspect police
claim they have linked to the
murder of a racquetball player
at Sigler Park in Westminster
Sunday night was jailed today
Robert Ortiz Jr., ao, of 6952
Hazard Ave .. Westminster , was
booked for inves tigation of
murder following his 10:20 p.m
arrest at the home of an ac
quaintance near t he alaylng
scene .
Police Ll. Joe Woods said no
motive haa been established yet tor the ldWna ol Santos Frank
Chaves, 20, of Garden Grove.
Chaves was shot once In the
chest at point-blank range on the
racquetball court• at Sieler
Park, 7200 Wtatminater Ave .
where he wa1 playln1 a match
with his brother, Alfredo.
OPan1e County Jail •uthorlUcs
aald Ortb la beln1 held ln lieu of
'250,000 ball pendlna artalan
mont and a posalble bcall reduc-
tion heartna.
lnveatJaat.on are expected to
seek a formal complaint from
the Orange County District At
torney's Office Wednes day,
charging Ortiz with Chavez'
murder.
r.'uneral services for the vic-
tim are pending at a Long Beach
mortuary.
Jane Fonda Slated
At UCI Lecture
ActrQll Jone Fonda, nomlnat·
ect for an Academy Award for
her role as Liilian Hellman in
"J ulia." and an Otcar winner
for her performance &11 a pros-
lllule In "Klute," lecturea on
"Women In Films" at 7 p.m.
T hurs day at UC Ir vi ne's
Crawford Hall .
General admlsalon la t4 ; UCI
1tudent1. •2 1 o th e r
1tudent1. It; other 1tudeots, UCI
t1culty and atart, $3. Ticket.I will
be available at the door.
rather, Insurance broker James
S. Dean. found his children's
bodies. he be&an to scream so
loudly that an o!flcer taking a
burelary report at a neiahbor's
house heard him and responded.
Sgt. Robert Simoneau said.
The otflcer found Brian's body
on the ramily room.floor beneath
a pool table and the ¥irl 's bloody
body on her brother a bed, Ken-
nerley said. I le would not say
whether the girl was sexually
molested
Simoneau said a \liolent s trug.
S?le was indicated by blood s tains
in several rooms of the house
But KeMerley said It was uncer ·
l ain whtther the two victims had
struiiled or had ~e/l attacked
with unusual brutaljty,
SI moneau uld there was
evidence the house, was forcibly
entered. Several knJves and a
blunt Instrument were sent to
the crime lab ror study. he
•dded.
K ennerley said the Zlm·
mermans were traced via wit·
nesses who saw their car parked
In the neight)orttood and noted
the license numher.
.
lUl/,s Woman
CARSON < P > -A worker a t
Leis ure Group Co. in Caraon suf-
fered fatal lnjurlea when she
was crushed by a machine top·
pied over by a forkHft.
A s herlrf's spotsesman said
fellow workers were able to lift
the m ach ine oH Bertha P.
Dereu. 33, but she was pro·
nounced dead of Internal in-J u r i es Mo nday at Harbor
General Hospital.
New dally nonstop service from nearby Orange County airport.
' j
Economical Sunjet Tours plus discount fares for families and gro ups.
Fly Air California and make it easy on yourself.
AIRS CALIFORNIA
We're easy to toke.
Coll Air Colltorn10 Reserva tions In Oronge County (71'1) 752 1(X)J. Oownev
(213) 92A·JJ1J. Laguna. (714) 490.¢<XX>. Los Angeles (213) 627 5d01. Son Crernente.
(71.4) 496-6CXX>. r~1vers1da Son Bernord1no. (714) 82~6900 or your local Travel Agent.
c TV. WllA lt
' l r
2 Teens
FftceRap
.JFor Drug~
Court arral1nment waa
scheduled today for two younc
•dultl a.moa, ab people arrest·
ed in a crackdown on w))at
Fountain Valley police aUe•• la
a main source of druga for local teen..,-en.
lnvutig1ton ualn1 two agents
recrulU,CS from outaide the area
to tnJHle among Fountain
Valley High School students took
four of the s uspects, all
Juvenlles, ioto c1.1Stody Monday.
Tbe two adults, identified as Doui Brockett, 19, of 17542 Jef.
ferson Lane, HunUngton Beach,
and Noel McCutchean, 18, of
8969 NlgbtingaJe Ave., Fountain
Valley, were UTeated last week.
Bail Ls $10.000 for McCutchun
and $5,000 for Brockett, both of
·whofrt> remained ln custody at
Orange County Jail pending ar-
raignment in West Orange Coun-
t y Jud.iciaJ District Court.
They and the juvenHes were
arrest ed o n charges of posse~ion of dangerous drugs
for sale and the minors, one
aged 15 and three 16, were
booked into Orange County
Juvenile Hall.
Detecti ve Sgt. Terry
Tavernettl of the Special En-
4orcement Detail said the in·
vestlgation spanned about six
weeks. in whi ch drug purchases
were allegedly made from the
s uspeets.
Dellf "fltlt SUit ,,_..
JASON DE HAVEN ST. JOSEPH'S 100,000TH BABY -
With Parents, Bruce •nd Debra, and Sister Tanya, 2
Bonus Baby
He saJd one undercover agent
worked in an intelligence role.
trying to learn who could, wouJd
and perhaps was dealing drugs
on the Fountain Valley campus.
Jmon Number 100,000
By OLIVE BARLEY
OI -Deilf "fklt SIMI
Th th aJl edl d b Jason Lee De Haven entered e 0 er e~ Y ma e uys the world a Uttle bit early and
The in vestigaUon ended pre· got under the wire. He became
mature!1. he ~aid. with the at:; the 100,000tlJ baby to be-born at
res l 1>f M cCutchean arrd St. Joseph HospitaJ of Orange.
Brocke.tt. , Jason. a premature baby. and 1 "Word apparently leaked his parents· Bruce and Debra Ue
-0ut." Sergeant Tavernetti ex-Haven. 5202 "'O" St.. Marine
.. plained. Corps ..tir Slalion. El Toro. were
showered with girts in honor or .. We're sure they are just a the occasion.
few or the many who deal like Included were a layette
this," he said of charges against crocheled by the Sisters of St. the suspects. "We want these h kids to know we're around and J osep . photographs. gifts from baby product suppliers and de-r~tu~!~pus and will be in the partment stores. baseball game
tickets and a baseball auto·
graphed by Angel pitcher Nolan
C.Ounty Hires
Dial-a-ride
Taxicab Firm
Ryan.
A special gift came from the
hospital which is not submitting
a bill.
Little Jason·s birth April 10
marked.a 49-year milestone for
the hospital, the only private
hospital recording 100,000 births
in Southern CalJforRfa
Ttl-e baby was born b_.y
caesarean seclion, seven wee~
prema~re. He weighed five
pownds. l ive ounces and was 181,o4z
ioc,hes long ·
~. "l was totally amazed, .. said
De Haven, a Marine Corps
airer.aft electrician. "We jOst
couldn't believe how nice every-
one was. It was like having the
first New Year's baby.··
Although little Jason lost a few
ounces. both he and Debbie are
home and doing fine. he said .
llospital personnel and vis-
iLors were served birthday cake
and coffee when announcement
of the 100.000 birth was made.
"Obstetrical care has ad-
vanced dramatically since
1929." commented John C.
Goldthorpe. administrator. "The
safe delivery of Jason Lee De
Haven demonstrates the great
strides in perinatal care which
h ave been made s ince the
hospitaJ was founded "
A local taxicab firm was hired
by Orange County Transit Dis-
trict (()CTO) directors Monday
to operate lhe new SitddJeback
Valley DiaJ-a -Ride service set to
start June 19.
Three \'ates Taken
Orange Coast Ye llow Cab
Company was the s uccessfu
bidder for the service contract
expected to cost $398,935 In the
1978· 79 fiscal year.
..
Shenkman Elected
Huntington Mayor
By ROBERT BARKER
OI ... Delly l'llOC SIMI
Huntington Beach City Council
members put on a stirring show
Lairs Searched
DAIL y Pll.OT N
Terrorists Report~
., -.
Moro 'Exeented'
CORVARO. Italy (AP) -A
measage P'li'bortedly from the
terrorist kidnappers of Aldo
Moro announeed today that tile
former premier was ellei:uted
and ble body dumped in. a mOWl·
lain lake near b,ere. Divers
flown to the scene began a
search but turned up nothing im-
mediately.
''l broke tbe thin lee and
looked for about one hour but I
couldn't find &Qything or anyone
there." said Gianni LimJli, one
of the frogmen searching Lake
Ducbeasa. 72 miles northeast of
Rome and three miles from the
hamlet of Corvaro.
The lake is less than one-
quarter mile Iona and in places
its waler is only knee deep.
The message, bearing the
signature of the Red Brigades.
said the 61-year-old president of
the ruling Chris tian Democratic
Pa r t..y was exec u led "b y
suicide." apparently a mocking
reference lo the disputed deaths
in prison of German terrorists.
Moro, five times a premier
and probable next president of
the republic, was abducted and
his five bodyguards were killed
by the Brigades, Italy's most
feared urban guerrilla gang, in a
Rdme slf*mbush March 16.
The ~idnap rs announced three
days ago that he had been con-
victed in a "people's trial'~ and
sentenced to die. .
Police-could not immediately
confirm tbat today's comm uni ...
que. !owld in Rom~, was authen-
tic-. Christian Democrat officials
said it appeared to be, but thev
did not e~lude the possibility of
a ruse to shock the nation.
Lake Duchessa is 6.000 feel up
the s lope of 8,159-foot Mount
Velino. one or the highest peaks
or the Appenine Mountains. in a
rugged sectio11 of central ItaJy's
Abruzzi region.
Frogmen, soldJers and police
flew In helicopters to the lake -
virtually inaccessible to ground
GG Candidate
Dies o~ Rooo
LOS ANGELES CAP ) -A
Repufillcan cortg:resslonal can-
didate from Orange County died
of an apparent heart attack
while driving on the Golden
State Freeway. the Califomla
Highway Patrol reported.
CHP Sgt. Charles Innes said
Joe C. Maher, 59. Garden Grove.
died Monday after his car
s lowed suddenly while south·
bound in the Lincoln Heights
'area and struck the center
divider.
Maher. a co·owner of Long
Beach Woodworking, was one or
four men seeking the GOP
nomination from Orange Coun-
ty's 38th Congressional District.
vehicles and besan look:lnf for
the body. Lqng lines of, military
Jeeps a thiCb arrived at · a
Jower elevaUon. Report.en. were
barred from the search aJte ud
confined to Corlaro.
A colonel who asked not to be
Identified said the shallow
plate was froien, apparently by
coldovemlght temperatures.
"We saw no trac.e of1lDfbody
oc ~nything. I didn't even see
footprints," he said.
But residents said it had
snowed heavily overnight -
some drifts were 12 feet deep -
and rootprinta could have beet
obliterated. Fog also ham~
search efforts. '
Party leaders went to Moro'i
house In Rome to inform fut
wire Eleonora. At party bead
quarters, grim-faced officiaJ1
~athered to await word
secre taries wept in the corridon
a nd Communist Party chi"
Enrico BerUncuer arrived to1
consultation. '
The llal.ian cabinet was wait
ing to be called into urgen· session.
lrvi~ Co. Chi,ef
Views High Costs
By .JOANNE REYNOLDS
OI ... o.lty l'llOC SIMf
Irvine Company President
Peter Kremer made it clear to
Orange County born e -builders
Monday night they can expect to
race land prices raised "to what
the market will bear" in their
dealings with bis firm. the coun·
ty·s largest landowner.
During a question and answer
period foUowing his speech to
about 400 members or the
Orange County Home Puilders
Cdu ncil. ·Kremer said the
builders can expect to reap 4 • lower pront margin. from proj.
ects on Irvin~ Company land
-than they wowd from project.S
on other property because of the
higher prices.
But Kremer also noted that
the ranch developments carry
with th e m a n unstated
guarantee of financial success
for the builders who produce
them in partnership with the
company.
Kremer's speech to the month-
1 y me et i ng or the home
builders council was attended by
two of his bosses. new company
owners and direct ors Joan
Irvine Smith and Donald Bren.
His preplJJ'ed speech covered
three points. He said the com-
pany is financially sound, the
management will continue to
plan, d~vetop and market proj-
ects on the ranch and the com-·
pany will continue to work with
homebuilders and developers on
some of those projects.
Kre mer. a& he bas done since
the new ownership took over last
summer, stressed that the com-
pany wouJdn •t be selling off de-
veloped assets or raw land.
Noting the large turnout at the
djnner meeting he quipped that
a rumor had been planted that a
land auction was to be held to
get a good audience for one of
his first public appearances io
recent months.
When the session was opened
Ollly ~ ... Staff ...
SPEAKS TO BUILDERS
Irvine Company's Kremer
to questions. most or the querie~
centered on the future of the
market for homes and ho\\.
changes might affect the com·
pany and its business policies.
Kremer said, he expects "the
r ate of increase <in the real
estate market> to decrease," but
he added that "even with a
slowdown. Orange County has
such a good economic base that
it will provide a tremendous
cushion to buffer a downturn."
T he 38-year~ld executive said
a recent company s urvey of
lS.000 people who had ~xpressed
inte r est in buying homes in
Jrvin e Ranch developments
showed 12,000 were still interest-
ed in spite of increased prices
and Increased mortgage interest
rates .
He acknowledged that there
has been some slowing in reaJ
estate. but he said he believes it
is due t o the withdrawal of
specul ators rather than an ac-
tua l downturn in buyi ng interest.
The firm ls to be paid $16.76
per hour of service. And for that
fee the company Is to operate
the service, train Its drive-rs and
purc hase 12 radio-equipped
sedans or vans that meet OCTD
specifications. before finally selecting Ron ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Shenkman mayor Monday night
before a large and tense au-OCTD octiciaJs said they ex-
pect the doorstep transportation
service to ca cry 119,000
passengers during the next fis-
cal year.
Each passenger will 'J>ay 50
cents for transportation to points
within the SaddJeback Valley or
to connecting links with OCTD
long-haul routes.
The service will cost the
transit district an estimated
S3.3S per p~nger with the dll-
r e re n ce ~tween fares and
operating C06l made up by slate
and federal ;mbsidies.
In olber action Monday, dlrec-
to r s begah the searc h for
another contractor lo operate
Dial-a -Ride service in Costa
Mesa, scheduled t o go into
operation in September.
Dilly l'llOC SI.tit !'Mio
GETS JOB AFTER ALL
HB Mayor Shenkman
OC ·Airport Stats
Show Big Business
Orange Countty Airport
statistics show that the number
of air travelers using the aJrport ~ .. in the first quarter or 1978 in·
creased by 14 percent over pie.
same period ln um.
In numbers, air travelers
paaslng through the airport In
the first three months or this
1. year totaled 517,755.
That number for the same
period in 1977 was 454,755, ac-
cording to figures compiled by
the county General Services
Agency.
While the passenger load al
• • Orange County Airport rose by
14 percent in the finst quarter of
lbe year, the number of tower
operallocla teU off by 15.7 per.
cent.
Bad weather ln January,
February and March wu
blamed for t.bo decline in tower
r
operations as pilots or private
planes stayed away froO\ flights
in rain.clogged skies.
In the first three months of
1977. the number of gener al
aviation flights to and from
Orange tounty Airport was set
in the airport report at 141,4.92.
This year's first three-month
total of general aviation flights
was reported at 117 ,515.
LlJfe commercial air travelers
using th'e airport, the amount of
air carao transported in and out
of Orange County Ai rport
showed a marked increase In
1978.
The General Services Agency
report showed that In the first
quarter of 1978, 659.3 tons or air
lrelgbl flowed through the
airport. For the same period a
year earlier, t.he tonnage was set
1tm.5.
dience.
The contest matched
Shenkman, who was in Une for
the job alter serving as mayor
pro tempore. and Richard
Siebert.
Siebert was the solid choice or
three new council members who
had taken their seats earlier -
Bob Mandie. John Thomas and
Ruth Balley.
Shenkman was backed by
newcomer Don MacAllister, out-
going mayor Ron Pattinson and
himself.
T he first secret ballot ended in
a deadlock: three voles for
S h e nkman , three votes for
Siebert and one abstention. The
abstainer was Siebert.
A second ballot was taken with
the same results.
M acAllisler then implored his
col leagues to forget about
politics and select a mayor by
"proper progression,''
M andic urged the large au-
dience. which was growing rest·
less, "to,bear with us.··
A third ballot was taken and
the deadlock was broken. The
rinal resuJts were Shenkman 4,
Siebert 2 and one abstention.
Siebert, who s upported the
concept of an orderly transition
to the largely ceremonial posi-
tion, was steadfast in his absten·
lions
Pattinson. MacAllister and
Shenkman d.Jdn't budge either.
Mrs. Bailey and Thomas stuck it
out for Siebert. It was believed
that the key switch was made by
Mandie in hopes that It would re-
solve the potential conflict.
The three new council mem-
bers indicated that they felt last
Tuesday's election showed that
voters wanted a change and that
· is why they wanted to dump
Shenkman.
After his election. Shenkman
paid tribute to Siebert.
Storekeeper Mark Franklin, is wearing a ~~I shirt with
flowered yoke and solid body. The word &~ means to flower;
to bloom, to emerge or appear as in wind .. Jo speak and to shine.
This is the spirit and styling of this fine shirt.
Shenkman also said that an -----------------~
1i.128 lrvmt. Newport lkdlh
C•hfom1,t. Plione 642 ?Ool
article In an Oran1e County
magazine whJch depicted him u the busy mayor of Huntington ______________ ...;;;;;..;;;;;;;~
Beach earlier in the month was
a catalyst for tM uprising.
Ju•t :~~~· ... pa. ting
I
•
.,.~ ........ ,.,.
Q wUla~ Tom ~~''.'
Marpbine
Sollie Waded Questions
RICKY TICKY POLITIX: John 0 . Schmlb, who lt
currently campaigning for the Republican nomln..Uon \n
our coastal state senate seat belnf vacated by Dfnn11
Carpenter, just aasued a humdinger of a voter survey.
Schmits has mailed to tho voters a series or computer-
Uke 3 x 7 cards as1Un1 questions on a whole series or la· sues.
You simply check off yoi.tr answers Yes, No or Un·
decided, siiq the card and mail it all In to Schmitz in a
pre-pa.td envelope. He. in turn, vows to report the results to
the Senate on his first day of service.
This, or coune, assumes you elect him.
SCANNING THE QUESTIONS and how they are
worded might suggest the results of Schmitz' survey will
be the most predictable of ~opinion poll ever launched.
Remember, the questions arrive in your mailbox at
the same time you've been-.weating over your income tax-
~s. You have fleeced your savings to pay otr t§ncle Sam
and thus l'Ulhed your return off to the Eternal Revenue Service.
So Schmitz' survey hits you with a question like this:
"Do you believe that taxpayers should pay for abort.ions
for those who want to end th&ir pregnancy?"
At .Least Two
Die in Bhtst
CARNEYS POlNT. N.J. <AP> -Btlc• CNWI searched the rub-
ble of a Du Pont gunpowder mlxine plant toda, for • *Orbr ml11lnt
and presumed dead af\er an explOllon kllled at leut two workers
and seriously injured anothel'.
It wu the second m.;or explosion \ft nine years at1be plant, locat·
ed near the Delaware Memorial
Bridie acroaa tbe Delaware
River from Wilmington, Del.
Bob Wygand Sr., president of
the United Chemical Workers
union, described the mlxhouae
where the explosion occurred as
"a mass or rubble."
HE S.\ID TWO.TIORDS of the
150-foot-long. one-story brick
building was leveled and five
large mixers used in the manufac-
turinl process were destroyed.
The cause or the explosion.
which occurred about 9 p.m. in
the center or Plant No. 1, was
not immediately determined.
authorities said.
Company spokesman James
Kincaid said the victims and
missing were identified as
Thomas Rogers, 43. or Carneys
Point; Winfield Lodge, 62, or
Mantua: and James Fretz. 47, of
Woodbury Heights.
THE COMPANY BAD ten·
tatlve plan.a to phaae out the
smokel• powder operauoa b~
the end of the year, W11ane1
aatd, but • comgany otriclal
claimed plant tor the oowder
section were "uncertain. ·'r -
The UD1on 1,ader, who Uves
about a helf-mlle Crpm lt\a plant,
said he wu watc:bln1 televlaion
wben he was "rdcked oft his
couch .. by the force or tb• bJut.
The explosion create( a mtJor
fire, police said, but the blue was broueht under C"Ontrol
within 40 minutn. A police dis·
patcher said the blast could be
heard miles away. Ken Eder-
ingham, who lives about a mile
from the plant, said he saw a
ball of name shoot hundreds or
feet into the air before he heard
the blast, then saw another
fireball.
Actress Linda Blair, 19, will have a charge of drug
possession dropped in return for her promise to enroll
immediately in an accelerated rehabilitation program.
Attorney Martin Garbus accompanied her from the •
Stamford. Conn .. Court of Common Pleas Monday. She is a resident of Wilton. Conn.
TW ELVE PEOPLE were
working the night shift when the
explosion occurred in the plant's
central area. Kincaid said.
Another Ou Pont spokesman,
James Howell, said the injured
man, Eugene Rein, 47. ol Wood·
bury Heights. was taken to a
hospital at the company's
nearby Chambers Work plant,
then transferred to Underwood
Carters Relive Roots
OpmiOn Poll.3 Con Drow Varied Reo.ctiOru
-'N OUTRA'G~. YOU <:JO'. Taxpayers are already
paying for everything. Stop·~· No, No, No.
A.not.Mr q~Uon : "Do you beUe-ve open,.dvocatea of
r the •in or homosexuality as a 'prererred life style' should
be teaching ln.Uwt publi<:. schools?'•
Sin'!. Everybody's against sin. What we need around
here ls less sin and fewer taxes. No. No, No. ·
Still another: "Do you believe California should rescind its approval of the ERA?"
YOUR EYES NARROW of that one. What's ERA?
Must be bad or they wouldn't use initials. Probably stand
for Extra Revenue Arrangement.
Good Lord, another new tax! Yes, yes: rescind it,
rescind it.
Other questions on the Schmitz survey ask if you want
to give up America's "sovereign right" at the Panama
Canal; if you want "innocent citizens" protected a,alnst
Menson-style ordered murders and if you believe America
ts stronger ~cause "honest citizens" may freely own
guns
Country~western Stan P e rfo\)111 White Hoose
HospitaJ in Weodbury. ~
In 1969, an explosion killed at
least ~even people )n an outlying
storage area f'f ·the smok~less
powder operation. Howell s aid.•
The plant makes 1 powder
used aa a base for ammunition.
NJtro ~elluloae, a lacquer base,
also is made at the plant.
WASIONGTON <AP> -Going
back to their roots and the can:i·
paign, President Carter and his
wife Ros alynn couldn't tear
themselves away from the coun-
try-western entertainment at the
White House.
Shortly after an hour-long con-~rt' Monday niaht by coWlt.ry
sln«er Loretta Lynn, Toll't'. T. Hall and ~on way Twitty. ~e
president returned to the East.
Russian Prisoners'
Fears Doc11mented
WASHINGTON CAP> -U.S. and British military forces In World
War 11 sent Soviet soldiers back to Russia knowing that the soldiers feared death or exile for the "crime" or being captured by the
Germans, documents confirm.
About 400 pages of previously secret documents dealing with the
forced return or Soviet soldiers,
many of the m freed from be court-martialed upon his re-
German prison camps, were re-·turn lo Russia for permitting
leased jointly Monday by the himself to be captured by the
National Archives and the -Germans.
Room for more -this time listening to Charlie Daniels,
James Talley.and1..arry Gatlin.
"AS A FARM BOY, I grew up
with this m,ilsic. ·• the president
told hJs guests. "It's a remarka·
~ achievement that your own uni~ue talent from the"heai-t of
the South bas beeo_me a national _
treasure."
After a full day In the Oval Of.
Oce. Carter said he frequently
listens to country music "to re·
mind me of home and the people
l care for ... The words tell
about heartbreak and love.
marital harmony and d is·
harmony, the truth about Ufe, a
.stown-to-earlh realism."
The guest list or about 250 -
mainly members of the Country
Mus ic Association, which is
holding its quarte r ly boar d
meeting in the nation's capital
-was heavily weighted with
Tennesseans and country music
celebrities. Between concerts.
they mingled in the state dining
room. sampling a buffet of crab
claws_. shtim.P and bne cheese
MANY WERE OLD Carter
fr1end1 and supporters. like
"'Lore\ta Lynn. who sana-at
Carte-r's inaugural. "We'r~
.. 1ways-ncrvous, ·•she said. After
eight weeks on the road, the
'l'bmed couatry singer feared-she
was losing her voice.
Twitty, dressed in a light blue
embroidered auit. with a dark
blue st;qoined shirt. said the
working conditions were tough
"because you stand there look ·
Ing r ight at the president of the
United States and it make3 you
nervous."
Was he a Democrat? "I am an
Ame rican," Twitty replied. ''1
support anyone who comes into
this office."
CARTER, IN black tie, acted
as host. "This is not in my reg-
u I a r line of wor~1 " he sttid from the stage, wrucb was lit-
tered with amplifiers, stools,
m icropbones. and druma.
"Some people might t.b.ink I do
this better."
THIS IS A SURVEY. folks, you can really eet your
Leeth Into. Agamst taxes and murder, opposed to sin,
fearful of government by initials and in favor of your sov-ereign rights. British Defense Ministry. ,---------------------------------------;;.....
Protect innocent citizens and let honest citiiens do
whatever they want. Remember God, Flag, Motherhood.
'1pple pi e. and Boy Scouts helping old ladies across the
The documents add little to
the general knowledge of the re-
patriation program. They deal
only with a few hundred people
who were intemed in Italy, and
hundreds of names were
physically cut trom the docu-
ments before their release.
street. •
l predict you'll score 100 on the Schmitz survey.
Pacemaker Assists
6-nwnth-old Girl
THEY DETAIL U .S . acknowledgment of the Soviet
soldiers' rears -and the belief
that many were lying because
they actually were deserters.
"Former U.S .S.R . soldiers
claimed that ther had been or-
dered to die !lghtmg rather than
be captured," says one docu-
ment from the Army judge ad-
vocate 's files . "If they survived
only through capture by the
enemy. they could expect death
or exile to Siberia in case of sub-
sequent repatriation ....
f'ORT WAYNE. Ind. <AP> -The youngest person ever to re-
ceive a per_manent heart pacemaker is normal and healthy, doc-
tors say. S1x-month-0ld Lesley Nelson is even elll"Olled In swim-ming lessons. her doctors said after an examination.
Lesley received the pacemaker implant at All Children's
Hos pital in St. Petersburg, Fla., about 21..-\ hours after her birth
last October. Doctors had anticipated she would be bom with a
heart blockage and arranged to have the expectant mother.
Sharon. flown Lo the Florida hospital for the rare sureical pro-
cedure.
"One former Red soldier
claimed that. before his escape
from a POW enclosure in
Russian-controlled Germany, he
had been abused by Red Army •
officers who told him he would
Tornadoes Rip South
Four Kilkd in MU.sinippi, Many Injured
All><ln1 All>u'quo
All•nl->
0Alhmorf'
601~
80\IOn
B,own\vlllt
8ull•IO
0>1<•110 Cln<ln""ll
Cll•••I""" 0•1 Fl Wiii
Denver
Oelroll
H91eM
HOftOluhl
HouSIOfl
J•<lls'•lll•
l<•n·s C11Y IA\V~s
Liiii• Aoo
LO\A .. IM
Memplus Miami
M itw•u•N Mpll SI P
NalllWlll" New Ori_,.,
New Yor~
Ol<le Clly <>m•ri.
HI LA Pre
~ 11
.. 30
7J SI 02 ., .,
S4 >I
SS <13 01
" ll n ,. ' ff 0 M
~~ :~, u ....
S1 :It
)6 lt
•I '° M 11
II 10 01 ., ..
"-. n II '1
IS 52 IU n S4
II •t ti
11 I• .., :It .»
,. :It S4
ll .0 .IO
.. 11 •s .o -~ ., ..
d .. ·'° .,..,,....,._, ..........
Monoev·''"''Y II YOU ctn not hl\I~
\'OIK i>ac>e< by S 30 n"' C.001 °"""• I nm Mld 'f'()ttr cony w111 b9 dettv•u1a
0. lanCIO .. M
Phllael'phl• ,, Ji
,,,_nl• II Sl
PlllSbutllh ff 0
P'lland, Me " 1•
P'tl-. 0... SI 41 lt
SI. L<WI s 61 " t.00 St P Tampe 11 10
Seit Leke .0 30
S..11 Olevo .. ,. S... Prtn ., St
lutne S4 o .oe
St ii• Meri. St 21
Tutu 11 •• .S1 Watlll119t101 '1 '1
••"tow BlytlMt
GtlellM El Celllro
C.t.1.1 "°"IUA
l...onQ 8t1JCll
Nt-'9Mc:h Ollt•••• ttllatrNNIN
.. ftte .. M S.11t••·~
.. ~
IO SJ ., S4
11 41 10 .. M q u 41
10 ..
11 .,
" n v.s.s .......
A fHI l!IOltlftO &lrl119 ef tllUll• dtnt~mt, -If~...,.... IOfNl-t ..... e ,.._ trll'ft ...... I
to LOllhlAN. -IMVlllQ e<l'OM ..
MIMIUIJll)i Velley t-1Y IOdty.
Tomedoft ...... r-19'1 MondtY
n19htnur0111--51»ti.,Mo ;
Werrtn •nd Lonoke . "''" .
Shrt••Pot"I tnd Lisbon, Le , end
Gre.nwlllt, TtfTY, l'WI Glbton, t nd
Monll<ellO, Miu. "°"' rMmOtn of • lemlly In ~ ll<elto ww• kllltd wtwfl thtlr llOuw
'ol~. N-rout pe,_t _,..
Injured In IN ••rloul storms, •nd
....... --t•lllld de~ to trHt, utility ltntt lftd bUlldlftvt,
In lhre-1, La., • l9l'ftlldo ln-l-4 et .... , nlM per~•. lo.nock..t dlOwn .... , .. l'IOMH tnd Mlfl 1,GOO
, .. ,~ .. wtthout ,,......,
In addition, scatltr.-1 wind dtrn~ wes reported 111 ere•• ,.,,.,. no lorn•dOH or hlllMI CIOUCll .....
t19!tl9d. .. IMll llOOd welCllO _.. POtted
,., .. , .. of 1-. 11111\0ls *"' Ml .. ....,, .. ,.., _,. ...... t ........ . """ ........ ~ ...... *"""' ... ,.,,,...,_a..-.
OIMntttt,, .....,._ ..._.t w .. for
• la,. .,.. " , Ill\. ..,...,. tltll "411• ..... IM~ ... Mlttf'll 0.llet .. , -t ef TM MIMltll .. I
va11-.. 111t °' ... """"· tlle OM6 v.n., .,,. ~ T-va1...,,
Shower• end lhund•rshowen •Ito
wert u&>«ttel tr> tile hlQl'ler ~I•••·
llon• ot Ille toulhern end mlddle
All•nllc CoH l sleles. .Another •rH of
shower• was to"'°"" Into IM PiKlllc
Northwut.
Calflornla
• Warmer l.,-notr•tures er UP«I·
ed In Southern Gtlllornle lhrOUQh
W.Oneldey with fe!r \!ties ucept tor
• touch ol c-lnen owr mounteln end des.rt WMS.
The Nat-I WMtller Service Mtld
lhe hlllh In -Los '°'"'91ff. which Sl•J9d In ii. low'°' Clurlno the
-k•nCI bUt ...-..., ton Mondey. wlll continue in Ille low IOs.
Etww,,.,., 1119"1 will tw in Ille up.
per .Os -lows IDs •lone! Ille coest
-In lnl-vall.,,s. In the 40s -low iOt In Ille ,,_telM ..o from 6S
to IS In the -r dtMfts end IS lo IJ
In Ille I-OU.rts.
Cocui al lt'ea ffaer
F•lr th<W9fl W.-ldly.
Some _.., winds. Hl(lhs Wednff.
"" 6J lo 70. CoHl•I t-•turat will •tn91 lletween S2 end ... Inland ltm·
.,.,.,,,... •Ill 'tft91 '-'-" 41 .,,.
11. The w•ltt 1-rtture Wiii lie H • s-. /tloo11, Tfde9
TUHOAY
S.C:Olld low n :20 p.rn. 0.4.
SeCOllCI hlOll •;47 p.m. • ••
W•l*•IDAY l'lrst I" 12: .. e_m, I I "'"t hlth •:Jt a.rn. • .• Se<Oftel iow it "p.rn. o.• S.ColldhlQlll 7·ttp m. • 1
Sun rlNtS·tla.m . MU6.2'p.rn
MOOll rlttU: tt p.m., Mb a:as e.rn.
8•rtae,..ri
Hunt11\f1011 a..h; w-. two .. feur IMI Wllll touUlwMt ,,..ti Olft·
4'1tltflt lalr•-.......,_, .... ,
w • .,., '"° lo ,_ f•I """ -"' tw.11. C:-tlollt fair.
f '
l o
1) I estimate my home's value at
'
$
2) Multiply line 1 times 80%
3) Equals
4) Balance I still owe
5) MaxJmum amount I might be
eligible to borrow (subtract 4 from 3)
6) Amount I'd like to borrow
With a Homeowners Equity Loan from The Bank of California. you
may qualify to borrow from $3.000 to $30.000 to use for your children's
education. travel. other worthwhile investments -almost any purpose
you ~n name.
Calculate your borrowing power. adjust that amo unt to your needs
and budget and then stop by or call us for details. You worked for your
home. now let it work for you .
®THE BANK or CALIFORN IA
Newport Beadl OfflCle
1ff1 Doft8tnet
Newp&rt S..cl 92663 ~
(714) IM·SSll P'IA
... ,~I .. . .. f I •" ••• ,. •••• t•
'• . ...
A{bortion Bill
SACRAMENTO <AP>~ Gov. F.dmun4 Brown Jr. bu won hla flrat
Ylctory ln a bid.to have the state pay for poor women'• .-rtlou.
Deapue endieoal \elUmoay from aJ)tl-abortion 1ro"*, the M·
aernbly 8~ Committee voted 6--0 llonday to apprQvt a $M.3
million blU that hlcllllles tz1.8 mllllon for Medi•Cal abortloqs this year. ..t ·
... Tb• up eaa u re by As · gram oC free m~ical care for ae.aablfm-. WUlie Brown, D-5an the needy. Fra9~!.would pay an expect·
ed delioit · ~ tbe Medl·Cal pro· \ -
~~dFaces
• 12 Million ·
, Suit 1ii Slap
LOS ANGELES CAP > -A $2
million damage suit bas been
filed against a Saudi Arabian
sheil< who allegedly slapped a
wailer in snnoyance because a
:.. .. :;kf. • <. • 1ruit was not served
fast enouc; ..... liis hotel suite.
The suit see".mg $1 million in
general and ~1 million in
punitive damage~ was filed on
behatr of Mar;o Rivas, 34, a
waiter at th.; Century Plaza
hotel.
The defen~ant is Sheik
Mohammed al-Fassi, the 51·
., year -old head '1 Al-Fassl Trad-
ing Corp. H is son , Sheik
Mohammed S.~. al-Fass!. 23
made the head Iii es recently fo;
his lavish redecoration of a
• Beverly Hills e•late he and his
19-year-old wife purchased for
· S2.4 million.
•• Attorney. Ma~hall Bitkover,
representing ~vas, s aid bis
client suffered fiial aftd ear in·
• ~uries as a resul or the alleged
rapping Friday .
~
THE BILL'S NEXT TEST is
in tbe Assembly Ways and
Means Commit.tee, where the
outcome ls uncertain.
Last August the federal JQV·
emment cut off most 9f the f Wld·
ing that paid 90 perttint or the
cosL ol Medi-Cal abOrtions. Gov.
Brown ordered Medi·C.l to pick
up the added C06t as lone as its
money lasted, a . decl.$ton that
has provided state funding for
an estimated 77,000 abortions.
HOWEVER. MEDI-CAL of-
ficials are anticipating a deficit
for the fiscal year that ends
June 30. in part because of abor·
tion funding and in part because
or a larger-than-expected
caseload in programs for non-
welf a re recipients who get Medi-
Cal.
M edl-Cal director Bruce
Yarwood said unless the bill
passes, the state will cul off
Medi-Cal payments sometime in
June, and some nursing homes
that depend ~avily on the pro-
gram could go broke.
BEVERLEE MY.ERS,
Brown's choice lo head the new
state Health Services Depart-
ment. which includes Medi-Cal.
urged passage of the bill in her
first committee testimony. Her
job does not begin until July l.
and she is now serving as a
health consultant to the gov-
e,NlOr.
E . Jerome Malry, 2S. one of thr~e generations or
licensed plumbers. has forsaken the clogged-pipe circuit
to compete as a classical pianist in the upcoming
Tchaikovsky International Piano Competition' in
Moscow. Malry is shown practicing for a concert at San
Praneisro'-s Old First .Church.
Actor.May Vacate
H~me in· Del Mar
. DEL MAR CAP> -Desi Arnaz of the "I Love Lucy" television
series says a planning commission decision may force him to
move from the seaside Del Mar home where be bas lived for 18
years.
Arnaz made an appeal Monday to the City Council to let bim
split his 10,325-square foot home into two houses. The buildlng Is
built on two lots.
ARNAZ ALSO HAS ASKED to build . an ~ddltion for his
mother. who now Ii ve~n Beverly Rills.
• Twf>I weeks ago. the commission turned down his request
because granting a variance for Arnaz' two-story home would re-
sult in gre,ater floor area ratio than zoning laws permif.
A maz says he wants lo either rent or selliilhe:Second half of the
house that would be :1ivi9ed off. r .
1\alld9lj,April18, 1978 D~LY PILOT AS
Marines, N-a
Nix . LNG Site
OCEANSIDE CAP> -Navy and Marine Corps officials, support~
by repmentallves of business, envlronmenlal and government
groups, have objected to locating a liquefied natural ias terminal at
nearby Camp Pendleton Marine base.
At a public bearing Monday before the California Coastal Com·
mission, several bigb.ranldng
military officers said building
the proposed terminal in the
Homo Canyon area of the camp
could interfere with the defense
training operations.
THE CAMP IS ONE of five
sites being studied by the com-
mission for the terminal pro-
posed by Weste rn LNG
Terminal Associates.
The commission scheduled
meetings today acid Wednesday
before giving its final site rec-
ommendation to the stale
Public Utilities Commission.
P UBLIC HEARINGS have
already been held on the other
four sit.es -Rattlesnake Canyon
in San Luis Obispo County, Point
Conception ipid Deer Canyon in
Ventura County and Varas Can·
yon in Santa Barbara County.
"The siting of a LNG facility at
Camp Pendleton is incompatible
with and detrimental to carrying
out the assigned mission and func-
tion of Camp Pendleton," Marine
Corps Col. William B. Frllnk told
the Commission. The terminal
would result in .. a degradation of
the military readjness" and
would have an unfavorable im·
pact upon the national military
readiness. Frank said,
Marine Corps Brig. Geo.
Ernest Cheatham Jr. told tl1e
commission ie was "ver;t strongly " ae inst the Camp
&IDdleton site. lie added lai,r
' ill'it. because ahd acquisition
would require Cohgressional ai·
lion. he doubled the Marine
Corps base would receiv,e
serious consideration.
Keith C. McKinney. presidelll
of Western LNG. also opposed
the Camp Pendleton site, favor-
ing Point Conception because
building lbe terminal at tie
camp would take nearly 2~
years longer to complete, be
said 1
Decapitated
·Boy Found
SAN MATEO <AP> -The
mother or a 12-year-old South
San Francisco boy, whose head·
less body was found under a pile
of books in the family home, h~
been booked for investigation of
murder," police said.
Carmine Borden, 36. was be·
ing held Wlder 1police guard at
Chope Hospital here.
CAPT. WAYNE COLLINS a . Officers. callld twice to the
Naval pl ann i o g offi ce r .-. Borden t}Qme. f&und shelves top·
criticized a commission envirpn-.. pied. hundreds "'4)f books scat-
mental assessment of the proj.;_ tered across the living room and
eel. saying the report di<l.-Ml light swilches ripped .from the
evaluate the specific i.!!lpact of wall. Lying unnoticed amid the
an LNG site on uationaT'Hef~e .atsorder in the darkened ho~e
tr11ining s.eer~ons -at Ga~p .was ttre headless body of young ~ Pendfetori• ·• -· ·-.. · • .. 4 "'1~\e_pta.Bo~en.
Inf o .......... ant F oi/,s
Boy Escape Plan Sometimes You Have To Read The N L
LOS ANGCLES IAP >
Christopher John Boyce. 24, current
ly serving a 40-y8'r sentence for con-
spiring to sell u~·ted States secrets
lo the Soviet Uni . allegedly plotted
in January to cape from prison
with another inm e.
According to th• documents riled in
federal court Mo,d1ty. an Wormanl
alerted authorites to the alleged
escape plan. an shortly thereafter
authorities ·co flscated several
hacksaw blades lleged.ly mailed to
'Boyce by a thi party outside the
prison.
Plu:led
SQUAW VA LEY CAP) -In-~:-· vestigators p ing the tram car ac·
cidenl that kill rour and injured 30
at Squaw Va y ski resort admit
puzzlement r the cause of the
tragedy. .
A senior st• safety engineer Mon-
d!JY ruled ou~ any maintenance defi-
ciency as a ~use or the accident.
Tcu Prope•al F alu
SACRA MENTO I AP > A
Uemocralic plan lo phase out
Califonila's controversial business
inventory tax is being bottled up in
the Senate by a Republican boycott.
GOP senators abstained Monday
when a phase-out bill fell tWQ votes
Short Of the tWO·t.hirds majority
nee.4ed.1o.r passage on a 25.0 roll call. •
8adc Paelcen S•eetl
VENTVRA <AP) -Twea\Y 1Uettb
hers of Ventura CoUege baclC•-packing
class and their instructor, trapped
for 40 hours by driving snow and
freezing temperatures in Loi Padres
National Forest, were reported in
good condition M-0nday after being
airlifted to safety.
Blan Rip• Stat ion
IMPERIAL CAP) -The heart of
rmperial's new $1 .2 million sewer
treatment system lay in rubble Mon-
day following an explosion that
ripped apart a pumping statl<>n do.r-
ing a test period prior to delivery to
the city.
.I
I E. • • • • :~~
• HERB •
: F RIEl1ASDER !
• IS Ml\KING •
• GREAt DEALS •
MARCH-81841 APRIL OllLY Y2 galloo
: FREE : : 50 GALS :
• Of'GAS •
• •fll•lflr. ... 411 llf'tt ...... _. ,, •••• ~ .....
~ or Oii. fllr\~(;t:s • :it .. ._. ........ .,. ... ,_, .... : ··;·u~A' • :
.. IJI .... ,.... ..
•"''"' ~ ....m ••• * * * • * * * * * ·: • M G-TRIUMPH • • e JAGUAR e •
: FIAT~NCIA ! :it '71·n~n,••• ........ !...m •
"'* * * * * * * * * * •• • e TO <YrA e tr .. . •. 0...,,......... • • l·•'*"Gl'M• U'l·Mtt • ... **** ._.. * * ** ~
it MOTOIHOME tr
: SALES & •ENTALS •
,.. RESERtE ~ow :
,.. 537-7777 f:xl. 500 •
-*~···· ····~ ••LEA ING e • • AUhMt ... ...__ • .............. ,.._
it 531-1777 xt. GOO • ."'***** ••••••
•~~;::-
• ....
tl I"
~~.::: .. J41
RARE
SCOTCH
Firie Print To Know What's Really
Coo kin'
..
by Far Weit Services, Jnc.
Donia biz
900 Bayalde Drive. Ne•Port Buch
671>-6UI
l
• ... Orange Coat Dady Patot
~
Annexation Law
'\.
Removes 'Islands'
Cltt tbrouahout Orange County -.re takinJ advan·
tage of a new slate law lo end the planning problems
posed by lhe presence of Wanda of unincorporated t.er·
ritory within their boundaries.
The new law. MORGA for the Mun1C"lpal Orsanlzation
Act of IB77, allowa citiea to &Mex islands of less than 100
acres that are not contJguous to any other parcels or unin·
corporated land. The difference between MORGA and
prior law Is that the annexations can be made without the
consent of the affected property owners.
To date, eight such annexation& have been approved
by the county's Local Agency Formation Commissiol\
(LAFCO> and three more are pendina before the com·
fuission.
The eight already approved by LAFCO will now go on
to public hearings before the Board of Supervisors which
has the final say in the annexations.
Obviously. there will be some court battles resulting
from the annexation of unwilling property owners. But it
looks as it the measure will prove to be a good one in the
long run, ending the anomaly posed by the islands. It
makes sense to give the cities the ablUty to control the
land within their boundaries.
Courts vs. Press
California's "shield law" that permits reporters to
maintain the confidential status of their news sources has
had some bumpy experiences in court in recent times.
Despite the shield law judges have sentenced re·
porters to jail terms for re/using to disclose the sources
of articles pertaining to trials and grand jury hearings.
Now it appears the voters may have a chance to
mlik.e the shield law a part of the state Constitution. A blll
that would deny judges the right to demand disclosures or
news sources has passed the Assembly and Senate
J udjciary Committee and awaits a floor vote in the
Senate. lf that is favorable, the measure will be pre·
sented to the voters in November.
The judges have maintained that the First Amend·
ment free press guarantee, under which reporters claim
the right to shield their news source$. conflicts with the
Sixth Amendment~s fair trial guarante~.
And they have been reinforcing that contention by
clamping gag orders on trial proceedings. ·"'
This is not a valid cjebate. Open cour\rooms and full
reporting of courtroom procedures are probably the best
guarantee of a truly fair trial.
There is no way for the public to determine whether a
judge who resorts to gag orders is protecting the def en·
dant or his own method of conducting a trial.
Gag orders invite secret justice.
And a reporter who is unable to maintain a promise
or confidentiality to his news sources soon will find
himself reduced to rewriting official press releases.
In both instances. the public is the loser -not
because it wiJl be deprived of sensational bits and pieces
of news. but because censorship and secrecy have always
been the enemies of freedom.
In the long run, it's probably better to put up with a
· minority or journalistic sensation.seekers than to clamp
the Ud on free distribution of information by a responsible
press
Bingo Bootn
When the Legislature authorized the legalization of
bingo games in California, following voter approval of a
1976 ballot proposition. proponents of the measure as-
sured us the games would be just a pleasant, inexpensive
pastime: for little old ladies and a nice way to raise some
money for charity.
Reports that legalization of bingo in some other
states had created genuine gambling problems were
pooh-poohed.
Indeed the California law contained plenty of precau-
tionary rules designed to keep out commercialism and
big·money belting, among them a limit of S250 on game
prizes.
So far, the law has enabled many churches, clubs and
other groups to stage profitable and probably harmless
bingo sessions.
But one begins to wonder when an Orange County or·
ganization, the Santa Ana YWCA, offers two evening and
one afternoon bingo sessions a week. They feature a
S3.500 bingo night of twelve $250 games and five $100
games. for which each person admitted will be required
to pay a flat fee of S25 in advance.
Even the modest S2 racetrack bettor is not required
lo bet on more races than he cares to in an afternoon of
racing. And while S25 isn't a monumental sum these
days. it could leave quite a dent in a Social Security
check 1f the bingo )'layer is out of luck.
This law still bears watching.
• Op1n1ons expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Pilot.
Other views expressed on this page are those ol their authors and
artists. Rpader comment 1s'-mvited. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O.
Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321 .
Boyd/First Words
ByLM.BOYD
Our Language man is
sponsoring a contest. You've
heard a lot of Famous Last
Words . Bul how many
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
How come all those
arch-conservative
groups, so fearful of
human sexuality, talk
about ''SAVE our
children," "PROTECT
our children," but
never about
"EDUCATE our
chlldren"? 1\.R.R.
Famous First Words can you
dream up? Imagination,
that's what's needed around
here. Invent Famous First
Words. Like: "Don't change
me! -Archie Buhker." "l
wish I were twins -Nathan
Hale." "Where's Johny? -
Ed McMahon." "List.en! -
E. F. Hutton." "No more oatmeal! -Bruce Jenner."
tr you can come up with any
more of these .... kindly send
along same. Blame ror those
used will be fixed by the
printing of your name,
hometown and cellblock
number.
The air pressure Sn the
lung cavity or Doc
Severtnsen during one oC his
soll -or do you prefer the
other plural which ls solos?
-la Intermittently equal to
about that in the average car
lire.
Clearly, male cata should
be known aa ldnp, not toms.
Fem•le cata, acc<>rding to
the Amerlc:an Zoological
Society, are cau.ct qUMu.
Rot.rt H w.ed/Publls.Nr ThorNs k.•vll/Edltot
S.rt>ara Krelblth/edltortar P19t l!dltor
Carter ·Style Baffles Critics
There 11 a f'UMy atUtude al
condeaettmton toward JlllUQ)'
Cartft' in America 1 do not. null
anytJllna like It. U t• a aatJonaJ
attitude ot deprecation, of dJ•
paraaement. "You know J lm·
my" we aay with be.lt>l•• abn)c.
Then we polnt out hll Inade-
quacies.
For example, the Panama
Treat)' vote la scheduled to come
up today. JUgbt down to lbe wlre
ll ls a touch·.nd·go ltlln1. And
even tt It 11 paued. the DeO>n·
clni reservation <arroaantly U·
aertlnl the U.S. r11ht to In·
tervene alter the year 2000 to
keep the canal open) may cause
Panama to reject It
WHY HASN'T Jimmy Carter
prevented tbls embarrasslnf
situation? Doesn't he have the
art of leadership? Jt Is true, of
course, that when he started the
drlve to ratify the course ap·
proved by four presidents the
palls showed lbe public against
any treaty at au. It is also true
that the Constitution gives 34
senators a veto power over the
535 members of Congress. But so
what? Look at the unsavory
deals Carter made to get the fU"St
Panam.a treaty approved by one
vote. Whydoeabebavetodemean
himself?
Or take energy. An an·
nlversary comes up this Thurs·
day. A year ago, April 20, Jim·
my went before a joint session of
Congress and Insisted that
socnelhing had to be done right
away about oil imparts. We im·
ported more than $35 billion
dollars worth of oil in 1976, he
told then. "our trade deficits are
arowlog." Jn his Clal uninspired
Earl Waters
voice he called It "Lbe moral ~wvaltnl al war." Jt 11 a mat·
'4sr of ur1eocy, of "patr1otJ.1m
and conm.Utment" he said. He
outlined an enern pro1ram
whlcb he c:aUed. •'f alr, reasona-
ble and neceuar)'." He Hid that
"U lbe American peoplo respond
to our cballenae we can meet
theae taraeta."
IT 18 A YEAJl later now; no
enerty blll. Why didn't Cart.er
get Coo.greu to act? What'• the
matter wlth Lbe man; be'• Presi-
dent Isn't he! Last. week he
.spoke tot.be American Society of
Newspaper Edltors here. OU lm·
ports this year wlU coat 145
bilUon, or Sl.O billion more tMl1
last, he told them ; the unfavora-
ble trade balance has sent the
dollar Into a skid; Lbe failure to
come to pips with the situation
promotes inflation. He did not
belabor Con1reas. He read a UtUe
lecture on economics.
"Our ~urily depends on it:
our economy demands it," he
said.
The problem ls, ot course, that
to do something drastic about
energy -· to do something
drastic about inflation -re·
quires self-sacrifice. America
hasn 'l taken drastic action
because there has been a failure
of national will, expressed
through Congress and sublimat·
ed. in part, ln depr~allng Jim· my Carter.
The attitude is contagious and
has Jumped the Atlantic. "Euro·
peans View Carter as Weak,
Unskilled Leader" says a story·
In The Washing tori Post.
datelined Bonn, G~many .
That's about the decision to
., GReat ·
M.OMeNTS
i IN
·BIG
<tOYeRNMeNT
postpone muiufacture or tbe
neutron bomb. It bu caused a
great flap all ~round the world.
Moscow mounted an ex -
lraordlnaf1 ban'age aialnst the
N·bomb from beblnd Ill own
megaton weapons <whlch
slaughter 10 million al a ahot)
and called It "capitallstlc. can-
n l ba llatlc, barbarlt; ... West
Germany, by contrut. wailed
because Carter had decided not
to make the bomb. rather than
to make IL West Germany and
NATO wanted to be prenured
lnlo taking the bomb but
.:ouldn 't promise to deploy tt.
IN 1118 simple way the Presi·
dent declared at Ynoo City,
Mleslaalppi: "I don't believe lhe
neutron bomb Is more wicked or
lmmoral than the present
nuclear weapons we have and
the Soviets have as well."
Neverthelesa. because it is a
"clean" bomb ita manufacture
might encourage that final
catastrophe. nuclear warfare, so
Jimmy decided to hold It up, to
see lf Moscow would make con·
cesslOM, and to see If NATO and
West Germany would share
responsibility. Result? Horrid
outcries about the "ineffective"
Jimmy Carter.
The Germans were particular· ly bitter: a Baltimore Sun dis-
patch explained that "the defer·
ral avoided fo.rc:_ing Mr. Schmidt
(Chancellor Hefmut Schmidt> to
take a public stand on whether
or not Germany would accept lhe
weapon its soil." Bat it the same
time the German press de-
nounced. "Mr. Carter's flight
from political action.".
The rage al home wu even
greater. CoJwnnl.sts Evans and
Novak, who de.pair over Jlmm,y nearly every week, declared
that be "seems to have euc·
cum bed to Soviet pressure.'' The
Wall Stl'ffl Journal editorial
<Ai>rll U) rejoiced that It Jimmy
Carter wouldn't become an ac·
tivlst'. at least there was another
power tn Washington. "Happily.
the f'owwltng Fathere «•ve us
more than one branch of govern·
ment. If the Administration can-
not come up wilh processes that
produce cogent declalons. Congress wtll have to bear more
responsibility than usual."
CONGRF.88 . . . It has been
trying to produce a cogent de-
cision on the matter oC energy
for a yea.r, come thla week.
The President got. some sup.-
port. For example, James
Reston of the New York Times
noted that alter au the argu.
ments ror and against •'these
handy little atomic weapons"
Carter had paused. temporized.
and thought about compromis·
ing. ··And a good thing, too,"
Reston added.
Jimmy Carter is a most un-
usual President. He made a Jot
of mistakes. He over·promlsed
himself in the election. When he
came to office be sent up an Im·
possible load o( bills, apparently
thinking that you preaaed a but·
ton and a law rolled out like a
pop bottle rrom a vending
machine. Anotter thing, Jimmy
Carter is low-keyed,notelectrlfy·
Ing . I thought.of that .. again last
week while he was addressing the
editors. There were no lively
gestures, no rhetorical embellish·
ments. no firewollk.s. He was JlLSt •
Jimmy Carter, working bard,
!loundin~ ea~nestr honest and
ldeal)sUc. .
He has agftavatlng character
faults. too. He doesn't respond to
brutal detrztors; he doesn't
lash out at Q>ngress or lose his
temper. By ntW he ought to have
a rousing persecution complex
like most Presidents, but he
doesn't; he iE probably the most
lemperamerially secure chief
executive of llOdern limes.
A Gallup poll shows an in·
teresti.ng thbg about him. It is
not that 49 ~rcent approve, 34
percent dis~prove, but lhat the
feeling abow him is so unlfonn, the same ditislon seems to nm
through all the categories · -
r ic h ·poor : whiles-blacks;
Proteatan!s ·Catholics. He doesn't inspre wild hatred or
passionate aipport. He is just a
hard.workhg man doing the
best he can, trying to rouse the
country to ireatness. It is ter·
ribly trr1tatbg. What can critics
do but condscend to him?
• TRB u a long1Coridlng
WOlhlngton btUu. /ta aadhor cur-
rently ia RiUiard Strout of the
r.hrittian Scietee MonUor.
State Economy Needs Federal Spending
A repeated complaint of Lbe
extreme right wing is the money
taken from Cali{ornia by the
federal government. Its view is
the state would do better le.'l lo
its own devices. Thal might be
ture but as things stand the
philosophy is as out of date as
circling the wagons for an
enemy attack. Before California can even
think about standing on its own
it bas a vast
gap to nu ln
developing an
economy
capabl e or
s urviving
without
feder a l lls ·
sistance. Its
gold fields long ago
ceased to be
profitable and Its oil well re-
venues are not what they were.
Although agriculture remains
big in productivity, mecbani%a·
lion has reduced the numbers
employed. All that remains to
produce original dollars and
first employment ls manuractur·
ing.
Beyond that the workers in the
state are heavily dependent UP·
on government jobs and employ·
ment that exists to provide
services for others. From an
economy standpoint the state Le
far too dependent upon {ederal
appropriations. This includes
manufacturing.
LA.ST YEAR, for example,
federal spending in Cali/om.la
reached nearly $50 billion,
almost 10 times lhe total na·
Uonal budget during the areal
depression years. The fi1ure
amounted to 12 percent of the
total budget to which the state
normally contributes only about
10 percent in taxes.
Even with all that spending
unemployment within the state
was still above the acceptable
rate.
Approximately one·lblrd or
the money was for programs for
which lhe government la com-
mitted to provide Its cltbens re· gardless of whe,re they llve.
These include Social Secwity.
veteran compensation and
pensions, welfare, Medicare and
social services.
A.NOTBER thl.rd wu epent for
programs which, with the ex~
tion of such thlnp u the Postal
Servlce, can be changed
drastically from year to year. In
this group are Lbe operations of
the Agriculture, Commerce, In·
terior, Labor and Transports·
tion departments and the
Ener1y Research and Environ·
mental Protection agencies.
It la lhe remalnint third where
any 1ub6tanUal reductions P~·
sent a clear threat to the state's
economy.
That is in the area of military
spending wbJch totaUed over $16
billion in California. That was
nearly 3) percent ot the Defense
Department's entire budget. Ex·
cepUng for $4 billion ln payrolls
at mllilary lnstallaUons. the
funds went into contracts for
munitions. plaoes and the
manu.lacturing of other mllitary
11~d1. That spending accounted
for lS percent
turing labor for
CUTS IN sue
result or anm
sudden seige of omy on the
part of the fede al government
would be not 'ng ehort of
catostrophlc disaster to
California. Even without those
motives. the fact~at one fourth or all defense Jo ln the United
States (235,000 out f 940,000) are
in Call.fornia ii feilerlng resent·
ment among the Congressmen
from other states.
So great is tbe deril ot sudden
losses of defense it>ending to the
economics of the ate that some
Congressmen a advocating
that defense pla officials and
military base c manders be
required to m · plans for
labor convenion non-defense
work ''just in casl" It Is a sound l ea but ln the
face of the fac , local com·
munities would well advtaed
to develop their~wn plans for
such contingenci s without de·
pending upon oth .
t Sydney Harris ,
" Cheerful Disposition Can Be a Danger Si~al
l saw another familiar suicide Cew hours before -accordiof to do aot exllt aooa finds he cannot Jt ts healthy "Joolr on the
story ln the paper the other day. their landladies, friends and re-cope with them wbu their reall· bright side," b a brtpt aide
"Why did he latives. ty l>ecom• oppreAlvely painful. cannot be tma , Ol' suni. or
do I l ? '' the It is perhaps not so atru.1e u Cheerf\.llnell. of ten:aperament whistled, into xlatence. The
man's wl f e It seems that the cheerl\d people 11 a blessln1: but. moet so.called countle.~ mag e artlcle:s and
walled. "Only should be the ones to crack up cbterfulDeu ll an l.nefrectual the fatuoUI adv e or tho "self·
this momln1, ,the wont. The perpetually emla· opiate. u emotional dope treat· help" colu Isla to .. be
be was •l.ng· ble and uncomplalnlnt man, ment, to keep the penon from cheerful'' when ere ll nothing
I n g a n d who wlU not admit that~ com in& to tenu wttb bll rtal to be cheerful a ut, have shock·
whtstllng In l• wroq, even to htmaell II the problems. in1ly conlribut to America's
the bathroom first to reach the end of bli "'Pl Moodinea1 and melaacboly staggering ann I aulcide rate.
white be was -with himself hantln1 on lt. are neceuary companenta of the A good, ho •t, wlde·open
shaving!" hum an character -nature'•' case or the blu~ . whtch l• freely
The police A PERSON, like a boiler. ls way of provtdinc a aat«Y valve allowed to dr In off the ac·
are weU acquaJn~ wtth tb.11 dreadlully d.angerqus to hlmself for passions and perplexities cumulated te on, Is a better
refrain. Mott of tbe suicides without a safety valve. ~ m•n that would explode the bolter un· way to coope te wtth nature
whoee grim end they are called who tries to protect hlmaelf leu the steam waa glven a than the forced d false get\laU·
lij)OD to notarize were "happy'' a from lean by pretending they chance to escape. ty on th~ edge the trap door.
•
• I ' \
WORLD I MtSCELLANY
ar IRJOll A. llUWcaN ......... C.ff d
CORJ\EGlDOft, Pbillppi.na Every da)' bun·
dreda ol Jap&DMe on"""" W. taland fo~ to
wbich Douclu llaeArtbur promlled to retum and
did.
Not th.al. muy of tbe Ja~e ve returnina
Of Lhe 5.300 who deftndocl The Rock .. &lnsl. lht
final Allied UberatJon auault, only 19 aurvtved. llany died in suicidal banw cbarces, were burled
alive in \be caves and lunc>ela they blew up
themselves or were kllled t.rytna to awJm to HJ Jn
Uie bitter 12-day batUe to retake Corre&ldor.
MACAllTH\JR LEn F&OJI THE South Dock
the night of March 11. It42, tn a dlamond.ahaped
notilla of four battle·scarred PT boats, telllnJ re·
porters when he reached Auatralla: "I came
tbrougb and I shall return."
Three long years later, he returned the same
way, al nicbt, on Feb. 2$, 19'5, in a Clotilla of four
PT boata wh.b as many men u he ct>uld find who
had been with him when be left. '
Now twice a day a flotilla ol three hovercrafts,
each with 80 tourists, landt at the aame dock. Step·
r,ing ashore, tbey bear the 1uJde quote MacArthur:
'No IOU on earth b11 been more dearly con·
secrated."
ON Tlfll! BREATHLESS HUMID day we vlJil·
ed--The Rock, two of the boata and halt Of tbe tblrd
were occupied by tourtata from Japan, mostly
women fanning t.hemaelvea a«alnst the bulldinl
heat of lb mamLn1 and a few old mea in atnw
hata and bandohers ol cameru and lens cues .
The)' aliOted rrom lhe buses and stood by
reapectluJI)' fu the duk Mallnla Tunnel, wblle the
golde potnted out lhe hospl\al wards. the nunea
quart.en. the lateral or arm ol the tun.net where
MacArUu.ar had h1a bead· 4 ~~::\h~1n~:a:~e!b~c--:;;;;:...o---,-~-~---:s----J
Manuel Queaon. In a 7/<!.._ -tew
wheelchair dyin1 of ---------tuberculosis aggravated
by the grim coodition1 of the l!e1e. was awom in
for his second term as president of the Pbllipplnea
durln1 a rare lull in lhe Japanese bombardment.
For the Japanese war widows and the old men
coming lo see where their aons died, there must
have been another viewpoint, perhaps even a
faded postcard memory of this famous tunnel.
Jan Valtln, in his book "Children of Yeater·
day,•' described the scene lhrough the fWllCopea
of the returning \1.S. infantrymen:
"FIRSJ', WE SAW A RED i'LASH come out of
the tUMel mouth and we were •bowered with
rocks. Then we beard them at8ting to run out. We
pQUred in rifle, carbine, Tommy gun, BAR and
pistol and also gl"enade fire from our three aides
and machine auns across the way opened up. They
kept comlna out all nl1bt and didn't have a
chance. Then, just before dawn, we beard some
more jabbering ln the tunnel and about lS to 20
shots. A bunch must have committed suicide.
At lhe time of its recapture not a tree grew or
a blrd new on the war devutated island. Now the
jungle bu reclaimed The Rock.
Two little 11rla -children of the Tourist
Authority cuatod.lans -came out of lhe woods with
a basket of bullets, which sUU can be gathered like
acorns.
"J APANESE BULLETS TWO pesos,
American one peso," they chorused.
Demand not supply dictated the process.
When the Philippine 1overnment, with
American help, built the beautiful million dollar
Pacific War Memorial near lbe bombed ruins or
the old mile·loog Topside barracks, they never en·
visioned a Japanese tourist invasion.
The memorial rotunda, edged with flowers,
cascades, wein and watenpouta, waa completed
in the summer of 1968 aa a victory tribute to U.S.
and Filipino forces. It Is lovely, consoling and
peaceful, looking across. lhe bay to Manila, 28
mlles lo lhe east, and bloody Bataan 2~ miles
north.
Tueeday, Aptll 11. 1978
egidor
Japaneae writlna and Implanted ln the earth
bealde a bomb crater at Battery Hearn, whose 12·
inch gun designed to beat off a sea attack proved
uaelesa during the 26·day Japanese 1le10. But off
abore here, as the crude writing tella, the Japanese
battleship MuahaahU went down with aU hands
lost.
TUE ANCESTOR WORSWPING Japaneae
tourlsta Cold their bands ln attitudes of prayer.
burn joss tocks, pour wine lnto lbe sea and toss
rice and ciaarettea for the departed soull of the
aaUora down there somewhere.
Tbe guns silent now, lhe ground no lonaer
quaking night and day. the birds aaaln ainclns ln the trees, The Rock, for both slde:s, hu beeome
The Rock of Ages.
Financier
To Serve
SenteJWe
LOS ANGELES CAP)
-Bernard Comfeld, the
playboy who se
worldwlde financial em·
pire collapsed eight
years ago, has been or·
dered to enter federal
prison May 8 to begin
serving a three-month
term for defrauding the
Pacific Telephone Co.
"My place In history
has been assured in the
sense that the world
generally knows I've
bee n convicted of
defrauding the phone
company,'' the portly
Cornreld told U.S. Dis·
trict Judge Matt Byrne
on Monday.
But Byrne turned
down a plea lo reduce the
sentence foe the 48·year·
old financier.
~atSouthc.o..t
PIAZA Ne.al-the Caromel
on the Pust Lne1. Rx-..-
avationa call: 640-8821
Dinne:rs ofter Expires
Ai>rll 30, 19?8
DAil. Y PfLOT .4 7
CIA Bla.aftl
Althea Flynt,
wife of Hustler
ma g azine
owne r, Larry
Flynt, says she
thinks either the
FBr or th~ CIA
was responsible
for the shooting
incident that left
h e r hus band
para lyzed .
TM·
$9.95.
Special ,
I i.rt'f~ ... .
THE JAP~NESE VISITORS treat it with quiet
reaped, but spend most or thei.F time in lhe nearby war museum or lhe comfort stations.
Cornfeld was convict·
ed in Augus t 1976 on
three counus or using
"blue boxes" to cheat
the telephone company
on calls made from his
posh 40·room Beverly
Hilla mansion.
1\vo Veal Conlon ·Bteu. Dinners
For them the main point of interest •nd
mournlne la a aeries of wooden sUcka carved with
Tornado Damage?
This streetcorner lamp pole in Rotterdam
appears as though it is worse for wear
following a twis ter whipping through the
a rea. However, the lamp pole's .unusual
lines were planned that way. It is the
work of Dutch artis t Cor Kraat.
Canon
PLAIN PAPER
COPIERS
The most advencec:t copiers
In the field today I Whatever
your copying needs, there's
a Canon machine to do the job
-quickly, cleanly, and at
the lowest cost I These copters
use plaln paper, and they're
engineered with the kind of
advanced technology that's
made Canon famous world·
wide for superior rellablllty end
performance. Let us help
you find the Canon copier
that's right for you I
Gu Ripoff
SAN FRANCISCO
<AP ) -a fine, a prison
sentence and probation
have been ordered for a
San Jose gas s tation
ope rator who over·
charged cualomera. U.S.
DJstrict Judge Spender
. Williama sentenced
Richard E. Stien t.o a
$10,000 fine, 30 days lJt
prison and five yeart
probation.
Plus a Double Bonus FREE OF~ER tool
FREE FREE with demonstration with purchase
at a place ot business Canon TX 35 mm
that la presently using c.mer•. Thia top
o copior. quality Canon
I camera will put lhe world Canon Palmtron o I• of creatlvtt photogr,.phy
Calculator., Slim and In the palm of your hand. compact, lt • l?erfect $307 oo Value. for home or oltice. ·
LIMITED o fer e re1 Moy 31, 1978
"YOU'LL BE GLAD YOU DID BUSINESS WITH US"
IVlltCOPY I ------~··--·
1100 I . a..., 1120
8allla Ana, CA 92105
To tale• advantage of theae limited offers,
MAIL THIS COUPON
------· I ----· I COMPANY---
1 I ADDRCSS ---
ZIP l 1 CITY---------• ·~~ I ~~~------~-~-------J
I.
~
Hv.our. . . savings 1nst1tut10n
sees· you like this,
come see us.
At First Fecle.ral Savings, we'll
never treat you like a number.
Never.
We know the importance of personalized
service. And we make sure all of our
depositors receive it. Every time they
come in.
That's why we have some "very
special people" who check all our offices
e~ery month for "a smile at every
window." These people, whose identities
remain a secret, perform actual
transactions to evaluate teller
performance. Later, extra .. courteous
employees receive cash awards for a job
well done.
With these "courtesy
check .. ups" we're taking extra
efforts to try and give you the
best service in town. If that's
what you're looking for, stop
by and see u s today.
"\\\.?want to give you the best service in town!"
E~~A~A~~
Costa Mesa Office
Baker Near H a rbor
HOURS: Oaily 9AM to ~PM. Friday 9AM to 6PM. Saturday 9AM to JPM.
Ample free p1rklng. Telephone 549-9141 for information •
•
.
f
\ ..l
\ ... \ '
...
"Got a problem" Then write to Pat Dunn. Pat will
cut rtd tQPe. getting the anst.oers and. oction you need
to sol~ inequttie1 '" govnnment and bu&iltu.!. MaU ~r questions to Pat Dunn , At Your ~e. Orange
C046t Daily Pilot, P.O. Bor 1560. Costa Me14. CA
92626. Ai ·many letters a& possi~e wiU be answered,
but pholaed inqvims or Letters not mcluding the
rftlder's JuJl name. addren a,nd btUineu houn• phone
·number connot be coMiclered. Thi& column appearadai·
ly ezcep( Saturdays."
a..;,. Sllad•., Gfrl'• .,.. ......
DEAR PAT: I am 15 years old and I wear
some (oot too much) eye makeup. One of my
friends told me that dried bugs are used to give
co~r to some of these products. I bet she's putting
me on.
• C.B., San Clemente
Yeur frie.ct knows wbat she'• talking about.
Oae ot tbe CQ.loriag agents for eye m.akeap is
carmiJle N.F. It comes from cocllbteal, wldcll ls
-made from tbe dried bodies. of tbe females of cer-
tain •calect insects. Otber malD colorlnJ agents an
altramarines and lron and cllro~wn 'oldde N ·
JDenla. ,
Before )'Oii •wear off eye makeap forever,
keep ID mlDd that .many eolor additives wldcb
have been approved by tbe Food aJld Drug Ad·
ministration for general cosmeUc use are not ap·
proved for ue In eye product&. WUb a few excep.
lions, only Inorganic pigments may be used ID eye
~osmetfcS. Also, because or tbe sensltlvy ol the eye
area, aod the serious damate tbat could reaalt
from Irritants, manufacturers'safety testing for
eye cosmetics ls usually pretty strict.
11,.... Ptct Lid ow Coolcteare
DEAR PAT: I've used Household Institute
aluminum cookware since before World War II.
One of the glass covers just broke and I can't find
one that fits. I wrote to the company, but my letter
was returned. What.should 1 do now?
E.M., Palo Alto
Contact the West Bend Co., Customer Service
Department, 400 Washington St., Wes& Benet. Wis.
53095. It now bandies a variety of cookware, ID·
chidlllg Kitchen Kraft and Pennuent StalDJesa
Steel. Other replacement lalonaa&Joa souees are
the Dirttt Selling Association, 1'131 M St., N.W.,
Wasblogt.on, D.C. 20036 (door·to-door parcllase),
and Metal Cookware Manafacturers Association,
Box D. Fontana, Wis. 53125 (retail patthase).
Ult Rllfl• to Flad R•t
DEAR PAT: Rust seems to be a problem with
old cars. How can a used car buyer make sure he's
not getting a rejuvenated rust bucket?
C.F., San Clemente
Close daytime examination la a mu.at. Look at
the body and also the underside (frame, cross·
members). Be alert for sips ol repalDtlng and ue
or body putty to disguise areas wbere rut llaa
already done Its damage. If It's a a&atloD wa1oa,
take out the spare tire and examlne tbe t1n well.
Also mt the mat on the noor ID the third seat area
and c:h~k for rust and metal wealatesa. la o&her
cars, Wt tbe mat In the tnuak and tbe carpetbq la
lbe passe nger area. Beware of muty oder•.
Before buying any used car, drive It tbroqll a car
wash to check for leaks that indicate udetected
rust.
Oii•• l111'ellti ... , ~
DEAR PAT· Why are china dishes called
China? Does it have anything to do with the coun·
try, China'>
C.B., Irvine
It's named after the country. Pol'eelalD wu la-
vented In China around 185 B.C. Altboagb tbe
Chinese bad pottery since Z,000 B.C., It wu cnde,
thick, colored earthenware, wblle porcelala ls
tbln, white and translucent. Tbe Clllaese kept tbe
composition or One china a closely parded seeret
for more than 1,500 years, exportlDI some of tbelr
-t>roducta to Western nations dartni tbat period at,
very hlgb prices. It wasn't UDUI 17t9 &hat .Job
Frederick BoeUger In the Germu state ol SUony
succeeded In producln« china which was ldeaUcal
Co Chinese porcelain.
A type of chlDa con&alnlq l)au eomPolleab
was manufactured. ID France at &be same Ume.
The raw material, composition ud prodactloa
. methods agaJn were gaarded 10 uJes collkl earlcll
the ata~ treasury. Skllled cnftamea were Jared to
otller states, however. &lld fNm then oa ddaa fac-
&orles spread tbJ"oqJtotlt E.....,e. It Mok decales
to refine and Improve prod9dloe meUleds to re·
dace tile cost of cklaa Co the point wllere c.M mid·
dJe class coald afford It.
• •
DON1 BE A STATISTIC!
j
I :r ::
8 of • VISA • Maat« A Cha roe
.PROTECT
YOUR
VALUABLES ,,_
THEFT•AU
SAFES
OFAUIOMDS
& S1%U IMSTALUD
... c ..........
LOCI IT UP SAFE-EQUIPMENT CO.
1714) 541-2341
Z~OUl-YICI
Study Probes Image·
Of Southern Sheriff
ORLANDO, Fla. <AP> -The.
Soutbmt Sberilf, often stereotyped
u an W-educated "'ood ol' boy" who
r\lnl bis territory with an iron fist, is
under acrutlny by a pair of univeralty
researcberl.
The pro!euors have found ele·
menta of truth and myth in the
popular image of the cloddish but
staunch. defender of the status quo in
the Deep South, particularly in rural,
backward areas.
ONE OF THE MAJOR conclusions,
says Dr. Roger Handberg Jr .. ls that
"sheriffs possess higher pro·
fesslonaliam and more education
than one would expect, given the
stereotypes."
Handberg, a polltlcal scientist, and
Dr . Charles M. Unkovic , a
sociologist, completed a preliminary
study of sheriffs in five Southern
states -Fiorida, Georgia. Alabama,
Miuiulppt and South Carolina. A
total of 198 sheriffs reaponded lo
questionnaires.
The study ls part of a continuing
research effort. wlµch eventually will
include all 13 states in the traditional
"Solid South."
"EVERYBODY TAl.,KS about the
Southern sheriff, but nobody does it
from a data basis," says Unkovic,
chairman or the sociology depart-
ment at Florida Technological
University. "There Is virtually no re-
search inlormation on the subject.
"We are slowly acquiring a prollJe.
This is preliminary material, but
already indicative of what the overall study may dlscover."
Among their tlodinp;
-The sheriff is apt to be a local
boy made good. Nearly half tbe
sheriffs responding to quesUonnairea
were born and raised wtthJa the
county in which they are servtnc.
One-third were born within the same
state. Only 4 percent were born out·
$!de the South.
-A COUN'tY SHERIFF is the only
law enforcement official elected to
office. His need to respond to an elec·
torate gives him both political and
popular clout, unlike police chiefs
and similar law officers.
-In the traditional "The Sheriff la
King" philosophy, be is usually the
only one who bas total jurisdiction
within all his county, overlapping
and superseding the powers ol city
police and highway patrols.
-The average a.l{,e is 47 and
average education is 12th grade.
Nearly 20 percent have Jess than a
high school diploma, while 20 percent
have a college degree or above. The
older they are, the less educated.
-EXCEPT IN Mississippi, sheriffs
are usually not politicians on (be
move toward other offices. The posl·
Hon or sheriff appears to be lhe
height or their political ambitions.
"When one contrasts this small de·
partmental size with the often ex·
tensive geographic areas patrolled
by the deputies, it is clear why rural · /
law enforcement has traditionally
been seen as relatively ineffectual,"
the authors say.
.
AT YOUR SERVICE I NATIONAL
•
IF IT'S A QUESTION OF,P.ROBl!EM ACNE ••. •
Let's Clear it Upl
You don't need ua to tell you ecne'a no fun. What you do need
la aomeone to help clear It up. And.that'• where Family Skin Cere
Centera come In. ..
F•mlly Skin Care Centera-the all naturaJ Wfl'I to oonttol ecne.
Come In today to a FamltY ~In Care Cent.., Mar you for a
FREE SKIN ANALYSIS.
Anehllm
77M1t0
t¥~
SKIN CARE CENTERS
... Clearing the Way
CALL FOR INFORllATION TOOAYt
Fountllln Yelfey M'8tlon Vlelo-
1
E Toro Ne•port lw:ft
.... 15G ~I ... 7755.
~ •ffecLive-IO,~ecttoOAB approval.
. United eipaDds super Coach fares.
Ro restrictions and
no reduction of United's
jnflight service. And the only 747's
to Demar and ~o.
It's a fact. Nobody beats United
when it comes to saving money. And
our expanded super Coach offers the
same on-board service you've come to
expect from the friendly skies.
These super Coach prices apply
Monda¥ through Thursday. And
different savings are available
Friday through Sunday:
There are no advance-purchase or
length-of-~ restrictions. But super
coach seats a.re limited so can your
Travel Agent today. Or call United at
637-7621.
Partnef's in Travel with Western
Interna.t.ionaJ Hotels .
I
11Dited'1 Super Oalah to OJdaaCo
~~~~~~~~~~-.--~~--::~~~~~-Leave Arrive Le&ve Arnve
7:46 a.m ( 747) 1:36 p.m. 12:45 a.m. ( 747) 6:56 a..m .
10:20&.m. (00.10) 4:10p.rn. homOntarto
l:lOp.m. (DC-10) 7:05 p.rn. 8:00a.m. 1:3.5 p.m.
4:15p.m.(DC-10) 9:58p.m. 10:30a.m 4:15 p .m.
Vldlld'l 81lpll' OalCh '° Dlmll" .
9: 10 a.m. (DC-10) 12:24 p.m. 6:25 p.rn. (747) 8:30 p.rn.
11.45 a.rn. 2:45 p.m J'l'om omarto
2: 15 p.m. 5: 19 p.m. 12:49 p.m. 3:44 p.rn.
Vnllld'l Saper CJamh '° 1111..u.
i :30 p.m. 7~oe p.m. I
I
'
. -. .. .... -
~TIONAl I CAUFORNtA
Wltaess Ousted
Victim, 6, Can't Teati/y in Trial
DESllOJNr:s, Iowa lAP> -6 ..
)'ttf'o01d ~n •bo told a Judn IM
would be punished ~>' God 11 s&. told.
a lie bu beell dlliQuaJJJied as a poWll·
Llat witness becaQM, lhe J~• said ah~ could not ~plain who God or
Je&UI Quilt WI.I.
Polk County Olstrict Cowt Judie
Lulber Glanton dlaquallOed the llrL
known OC1lY as Jane Doe, aa a wttnesa
In lbe trfal of Raymond Earl Woodl.
who ts oha.-.ed with commltttn1 taaclvious acta with her.
CHIEF JUSTICE C. El>WIN
Moore of the lowa Supreme Court
has refUJed to sta.y Glanton's order,
but a high court panel will decide
Friday whether to overturn It.
ln records before the Supreme
Court, Polle County Attorney DJD
Jobn1ton said lus cas~ 111 built &J'Ound
th• t~limony ol the younc aUeged
vlotlm.
GLANTON CONTENDED that a
8·year-old of averuee lnteJUgence
was not competent enough t.o tesuty
ln the case and added that the girl
should be permitted to testify only Ir
she could prove, through tesuna. that
her intetllgence was above avera1e.
The judge said the 11r1 was not
Qualified to testify against Woods
because her knowledge of ChrtsUanJ·
ty was too limited tor her to be able
to discern rlghtlrom wrong.
QUEENIE Bv Phil lnterlondi W Omen' 8
Shirts
Recalled
WASHINGTON IAP>
-The Consumer
Product Safety Com·
mission has announced
that San Francisco Shirt
Works Inc. is recalUng
22,500 ladies sweatshirts
which fail to pass
federal flammability
tests .
Orricials said Monday
no Injuries have been re·
ported from the shirts.
but the garments can
flare up and burn rapid·
ly if exposed to a
But I could ~ill
loot<. forward To
colfectirJg huge
estare t~ _...,,..._.,. from th~
T~.~I 18, 1878
Then ffley
~wiieand
SN/ an ihcome
tax expert:
O~LY PILOT A9
"I'm not really happy, but at Jeaat l'm siaaJ..e."
Cay Church Group
Can't Join Panel
~ cigarette ash, a spark or
an open flame.
TllE SEWN·IN neck
label in the s hirts car·
ries the legend .. San
Francisco Tea Party,
Made in .llong Kong"
and has a cable.car
woven m.
The shirts were dis·
tributed nationwide last
October and November.
the commission said .
and were sold in four
different styles and in
several colors.
A Bank of America Living Tru~t can help you
save a heatth5' portion of the usuol eState t.exes. Add
up your assets-home equity, personal property,
investments, cars, life insurance. You may find you're
worth more.than you thought. If you want'to make
sure Unde Sam d~sn't take too big a chunk, t.elk t<?
us about a Bank of America Living Trust. You'll also
team about the other managerial and professional
services our Trust Department offers. A Trust Officer
can give you all the details in just 60 minutes on a
confidential and no obligation ~sis. Send in the
coupon or call our Laguna Hills Trust Office at (714)
581-3005for an appointment.
............................................
: To: :
I Ted Burda • :
Trust Oepertment :
Bank of Amerka •
• 23~21 Paseo De Valencia I I Laguna Hills, CA 92653 :
• I , • I Please sel'ld me Information on how to M\11: on estate I I taxes with 11 Bank of Amefic.e l.Jvln!J Trust :
I Name I • • • Stree = I ·: Cty/State/Zi...-------------i Phone BANK OF AMERICA l:ll 1 LOS ANGELES (AP> -A homosexual·oriented
church in Santa Monica haa been denied mem·
bershlp in the Westside Ecumenical Conference,
narrowly failing to win lwo.IJUrda approval by the
conference's board.
But Helen Wallace, the council's executive
secretary, said she ~lleved the church group
would reconsider the application or the MetropoJi.
tian Community Church or West Bay at another
monthly meeting.
"IT WILL PROBABL V ACCEPT the church
because I think the climate is going that way," she
said
The church was either oae or two votes short
or approval ln balloting by the conference's board,
meeting In executive session. One report said 13
v.oted approval, several again.st with three absten· tions
.The conference has 27 member congregations.
mostly Protestant but including Catholic parishes,
a lJnitarian chur ch and a Jewish temple. It
sponsors an annual Easter sunrise service and a
joint Thanksgiving service and also runs programs
, for the elderly and convalescent.
THE REV. DONALD SHELBY, pastor of San.
ta Monka First United Methodist Church and this
year s membership chairman, said both his com·
mittee and the conference's executive committee
recommended acceptance of Metropolitan Church.
"The church met the by·law requirement$, as
far as I can see," Shelby said.
The Rev. Stanley Anderson, pastor of St.
Paul's Lutheran Church, Santa Monica, said he
agreed with clergy opposing membership because
the action would have Implied acceptance of
homosexual lifestyles.
Questions were also rajsed about whether the
homosexual con.cretation was more "political'"
than religious
Botique Sale Set
By Hospital Aides
Saddleback Community Hospital thrift shop
volunteen1 bave scheduled a boutique sale from 10
a .m . to 4 p.m. Friday and Saturday at 23710·C El
Toro Road, &tddleback Valley Plaza.
The saJe includes clothes for men, women and
children, sportswear, jewelry and accessories.
The volunteers recently received their third
Disneyland award plaque and 9 $1,000 check for
accomplishments by a &'OJ>port group, said
!lPOkeRwoman Mary Weldy.
Stiff Penalty Sought
KUALA LUMPUR, Malays.la <AP> -
Malaysia's minister of culture, youth and sports,
Abdul Samad Idris, announced he will introduce
leglalaUoo t.o make public e~ecution the man·
datory sen<ence'for drul traffickers.
Samad said dru& traffickers do not fear the
present maximum sentence of life imprtaonment.
U.S. ofllcJala have described Malayata as one
of the chief routes for drugs from Thailand, Laoe
and Burma aolni to the UDlted States and Western
Europe. •
NEED A LAWYER?
Lowl.egal'••
•Divorce • Bankruptcy • Crlmlntl • Wlllt•Probate • I ncorporatlon
• Accldent·lnJury
•Eviction
• Colltctlons
84(».2507 '
Persuns who have one
of the sturts should write
for refund instructions
to San Francisco Shirt
Works Inc .. Attn: Nancy
Bush. 1111 17th St. San
Francisco. Calif., 94107.
-rHATSIT'
SNAILBAIT
Roger's recommends .. That's It" to
take care of snails. Easy to apply
through shaker top for effective control
of snail$ and 5f ugs.
INDOOR
PlANTS
A fantastic selection of unusual indoor
flowering plants. African Violets, Glox-
1 n ia, Orchids. Mums, Cyclamen,
Azaleas, Reiger Begonias, Easter Liiies
and Oxygen Plus to prevent overwater-
ing whlle promoting growth.
BANDINl#2 BERMUDA
Warm-weather In·
seas are prevented
plus fertllizes your
lawn.
BANDINl#S
D!CHONDRA
For prevention of weeds and Insect
problems and provtd• Spring feeding.
BANDJNI -S Bl.ADE GRASS
Kllls broad.leaf weeda In blade grase
lawns and ferttllua at the same ttme.
i ltu~t Oep.irtment I
• 1'111 yuur tru" 1n U'-I ...........................................
DAD..Y GARDEN SEMINARS
Educational lectures on various plant/
garden topics.
Weekdays llam lpm 3pm
Weekends Hourly llam-3pm
MARIGOID
Robust. popular annuals ranging from
6" to nearly S ft. tall. Plant In full sun for
gorgeous blooms &om now through fall.
Long-lasting for cut Oowers in yellows,
golds, orange and bronze·marOOtJ.
Spring through Summer color-red,
pink, orange. white or varleg._ted-
grow& In ftltered 1Un.
Roger's Aorist • 640-6774
SPECTRACIDE
All purpose insecticide
to effectively control a
wide range or garden
pests.
DWARF
MARGUERITE
An Improved, low growing variety or
~-the popular garden flower that
,blooms all summer and into fall. The
Dwarf Marguerite is compact in
growth and a very heavy bloomer.
20%
OFF
Put some brilliant color In your home
with our lntemetlonally famous hang·
Ing baskets. The recent rains have
r~y made the Primrose and Viola
baskets spectacularly colorfuJ, now Is
the best time to buy them.
San Joaquin HUit Rd. at MacArthur Blvd., Newport Beach (714) 64()..5800 •Open daily 9 am to 6 pm.
\ ,.
-A ..
.. ,,.
.
"
• < ..
.
I .
~
. r -
.41.DM.VN.DT
--Keeps Unlfor•n
Bw Driver EntU 35 Years
Retlrtos Orao1e Couoly
Transit D Cstrict (0CTD> bus
driver l.C. "Jius" J nldm was
recotn.iud by dlstrict dlrectors
Monday for 35 years of service
a nd roughly 7S0,000 mHea ot b~
travel.
Company ln lM2 operating a
route ln Santa Ana. He haltr
lranaferred to a slsttir company,
South Coast Transit Corp ••
which was acquired by OCTD In
1974.
J e n kins. 66, was the dlstncn
senJor bus d river whe n he re· tired last month
AS A TOK.EN or a ppreciation
for bis years or public transit
service, directors alao granted
Jenkins' request to k eep bis
oper ator 's uniform.
DURING HIS ye&rs or service
J e nkins witnessed the growth or
public transit from a series or
financially s t rapped p r ivate
transi~ firms lO OCTD'a 338-
vehicle fleet.
The Shawnee, Okla., native
joined the Santa Ana Transit
OCTD officials sald J e nluns
also ha11 seen the bus system
g row from a few routes in a
limited number of ciUes, to a
countywide bus n etwork.
Buses Hit
2nd Best
Santa Ana Park
Fare Total
Pan of History?
Ora n ge Cou nt y
Transit District COCTD)
buses car ried 1,677,910
passenger r ares in
March. the secpnd
highest monthly total in
OCTD his tory .
Santa A na's first city park. which ser ved as a
relocation cen ter in the 1933 earthquake and was
the scene of many city festivities, has been r ecom-
mended as a point of historical significan ce by
O r a n ge County s uperv isors.
Di str ict General
M a n ager J ames
Reichert toJd directors
M o nday the M ar c h total
was l opped o nly by June
1977 fig ures whe n OCTD
buses coUected 1,691,073
passen ger rares.
Birch Park, a t Third a nd Birch S\reel.S near
the Santa Ana Civic Center was presented to the
cit y in 1897 by Emma and Otis Birch in memory o r
their father. Albert W Birch, a r epor t to
s upervisors said.
The one-acre park was expanded later to hVo
acres and was Santa Ana's onJy municipal park
for 30 years.
R eich ert also noted
OCT 0 operators re-
ceived 67.965 calls in
March trom those seek-
ing-bus information, 3.7
percent higher than
l"ebrbary and four per·
rent h igher than Marc~
1977
The land contains many rare trees, the report
said. A number of them w ere _gins from olher
countries.
For many years the park was the scene of
Wednesday evenin g band con certs. the report said.
noting that a locaJ n ewspaper report In 1908 men·
tioned one concert that drew 2,000 music lovers.
Supervisors asked that the Cali1ornia
Resources Agency, a division of the State Depart·
men t ·of P a rks and Recreation designate the two.
acre park as a point of h istorical interest.
Death Not •~e•
HUGMI$ ........ will"" hok! ons.turdAy, Ap<ll
CHRISTINE M. HUGHES. rt•~nl 21.1911•1 Potlllc vi.wMemorlel Per~
1)1 NtWPOt1 8Hdl, c. Pu~ •way on Pe<lllC V•-Mortu¥V'Ofrecton.
Apr II I•, 1978 Survl •td by her CltOSS
O•uoMer Marll>e Harrell "' NewPQ<I WI LLIAM C-CROSS, PoSSed .... ,
Beoch, Ct . sori .JOWPh M. M.ci..ne ol Oii April I•, 1978 In P•so Robles. C..
tndlen•. lour Q•...OChlldren otlll ne1 He Is surv1W4 bv Ills wife Ellen Crou,
'"""Mrs. PM.Ill,. M<Coy Of lndlen.t S.r•l<PS w\11 be i..td on Tl\ursd•y ~"•CtS will be llelO In Winier H•ven, ADrtl 20, 1978 •I 2:00 P.M. •I Bell
Florida Betit Beroeron Funtr•I BroeOw•y CllajM!I. Berl BroaClwty
~omt C01.1a ~ 1001 dlrt<to(s MOrluat y Olre<IMs.
.. AltKElt McCAllTY
GER'l'RUOE 8. PAAKEll. &Oo 90 JOHN PAUL McCARTY. rl!hdtnl ot
,. .. .,.,.,.\ ot c:os .. Mew, c. PO\>ec! NfwPOrl llHCh Ca P••seCI ••o on
dW•V on Aprll 16, ltll SUrvlvtd by Aorll 16. 1978. born July 19, 119'1 In
OaUQhltU OorOltly M. ~1111, Merl04'IP A•h•llle, P.,nnwlv,.,,1• SU"'I~ Dy
M. Wll'°"• .. .,.rly J Wllllems -hi> wilt H11.,., Cl-"ltrs Mery J•no
Gwon Lff Wlll..,,,s. l>rolllltr Froncl• Hltkltf f.! Horth HOiiy-. NOf'mo
laotO.OUll. SI"•" -l<><le Sipe •lld P•lrltl• K,._ 01 CMle Mese. C. .. e U.1• W!ltte, 19 ll"~lllklrtn -n ~"" Cl9't Mc~rly OI MIWlll•, "-"" Qf'etl-QratldCNIOfen Also nle<.-l encl n•v•v•nl•, Qr•ndthllOre", LlnOe
ntPMW\. R-y Tue!4.IY Aprll "· Gould. Slt•tn, Jolln •ftO Odftlol
1911 •• , )() p M ., Westmlnltff Hl,kl•r. Rltk, -MK-I l(n~ •lld
Mtmoriet Per' Mortuery Ct1e11e1. t rt•l·O••nddeu9httr M••Y Jene
Funtr•l M.-WilclN-y Apr II tt. tt7e Gould. MelT>o<ltl -•kft •Ill 1>1! lltld
et 10·10 A.M •I Bin-s.cr-nt "" Wltd-y Apt'tl "· 1•11 .t 12 JO C.tholic Olurd\. ""'"''"'~ttr 1111 .... P M ol Poclllc View Morluery
mtnl will bl! .C AH Souls c..m.1 ... y 1n Oltpel with R ... c.Kh Eenn otflcl•I·
LOllQ Bt•<h. Ce Ofrtc lfO by lltO tntermtnl ., P.cllf( View
We•tmtnsler Momoriel P•rk Mtmot1•I P•r"' P•tllic View
Mo<llH"I Mor '""'Y dlro<IOI'\ MAltTIN
HELEN M MARTIN, r~s1C1enl ot
HewPO<t llet<ll. C. P•s~ ewo on
Aorll 16, 1911 Motller or OoN10 c
M•rtln. WN!"tcl Dy llSIM Mn O•l""V
C.•l•n•n Servluts will lie tl<lld on
fllut\Oay APrll l'O, "" In the OICI North C/lurclt. l'Of'\'SI ._...,. HOiiywood
Hill> F0tesl Le-Morlue<Y.
Deaths
Elsewhere
MAUOEAS~=~~r!sklffl1otCoi1e NEW YORK IAP) -~w. c.. P•s>«I •••Y on Aorll ••• u s Dis l r 1· "l J u d g e 1'71 Survl-by Mr. ~ Mrl. Len • · " Cormier, Jr. o••ndclllldren L•n Fre derick van P e lt
Cormier "'· Joenn• Elley, line Br ya n. 7 3. w h 0 s e Byrne, orNl-qr...OChllOren. C.rl. Len I d 1v •no 8reoter corml•r, MICll<l•l. an m a rk decision in
~ .. 1,,.,, Amv on0 Jtft Eutr. Molly 1959 lifted a ban on the
PUBUC NOTICE
ISCttOW No. IM LH
NOTICI! TO CltEOITOltS
OP 8UL« TltANSflElt
cs.a. •1tt-.101 u.c;.c;.1
Nol k• l\liertl>Y Qtven 10 tttdllot1 ot
ltw wltnll'I narrlfd perlle• 111.tt .. b<lfl<
tr•n•ler I\ lnttnOeO 10 be m"d<t on
Dtrtonal p roperly lltrtl11•ller
dUtrlbtcl,
T,.. nemt tnd llu\l,.\S •CIOreu ol
lhe lnttnoco ,,.,,,.,er "'~
ST EPf<ANtE RIMER 3741
Colortdo l.4nt. Cost• ~w. c.iwurnl.t '12~
TM twtmet. •no bu,,,..,,.. •Cklre\~
ol tnt flll...aed ••~mi .. ..,.,••~
C.rlNI E Ar,.11. oO'I t.arn•llo"
A•..,ut. Corona Oel Mer. C.lllor"'" '161S
Phyllt\ L. MCGiii, 1003 l:HI
Ball>Oe Bh°"', a.tboe, Geillor-"I• tMI
8t••riy 5-1, tOS C•r"1lloo
A,,.., eo.-••Mer. GelltO<'nt• nus Thi pr-ty perll11en1 M•eto "
~rilled klQH•et•I h MAleftAI\. •ue>
pllo1, morc-lw, tqull)f'Mnl It•
IUfff, lurnlN<•. bo.tMne.s •"" 9000 will
ol' GAU.EV GltUB -I\ IOC•lto a1
jOO WHI eo.sr HIQtlw•y Newport
8e•<I• C.ltlomlt'l2"'3
Th•I ,,.. ""'"'n CIOK•lbt<I lran$1ff•
ere 10 be c""wmm.rea. JUl>lf'<l lo 1no •bo .. pro¥1slons. at YOUR ESCROW
SERVICE 00. INC 1'Sll MeQ<>oh•
el Holl, WMlmlnMt<, CltlllO<'nlt 92'13,
""or titer-""'""·""· So ler •• It kno-10 w 1e1 inttneled
Tr6Mt1rtu wHd l"t.ndtO Ttt<llltfor u.ao followln9 •CIOIHon•I buslntu
N"'H OllCI -...... , wltllln ,,.... lhrH year• 1as1 _, Hone.
De lfd Aorll 6. "" C..rlN E. Arntt!
Ptiylllt J. McGiii a. .. rly ShNCly
lnteno.tl Trenst..MS
YOUlt ISC::ltOW HltYICI to., INC.
lH17 Me9110tle at Hett
W1tlnll111 ..... C.lllWYll• tlttt&J
'"''out ~
ORANGE COUNTY I OBITUARIES
Depot,
Parking
Lot Eyed
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE .
ITAt•M41NTOI" AllAllOONMlllT fllCTITIOU1 '""" ... Ofl UH 0, MAlid UAT&M~NT PICTITIOUI IUSlllHI NAMI Tiit tollo"'l"9 __ , Of• OOl!lil
T ..... ._. !Ml ....,.. ...... 09"'9 b•»llleU ••
llll"ft9••Ailllo\i.tMl<lll""', lool-COTTAGE COFFEE SH0" Mt ll\flftMrl1111. • _,,.<\1'1111. 11 •l~• w 1tth su..i, '°'It~. CA.,.,. ,;;om~er M-. ~lllO!Ofl lk<Kh Pt "'I -Mor HOaft. 161' ltOIPid'
C.flloml• t2MJ. ,_l'IW •~ IM Dr , Huntlnvton tleecll, CA~ u~ o1 '"-'"""lo.A -fl••• o.a1,_ b ·-1.0 by .., .... Tiie llcllt1011t lllltl" .. ' "'""'' Ol•IC11,1el tleltmMt ftftllr19 lo flw lkllllOllf Ptlll ~ llu~IMU _.... Del"' -d we\ Tiii> •lef-1 ., .. lllecl •llh tM
lllf4 on ~rll ••· 1'7J. In Or•11oe Counly t•••• ot Or•-County on A $20,009 consultant's G-ty, Cotllor"'• Tiie n•-• ~ltd .t.om •. 1t1t
PUBUC NOTICE
"ICTITIOVI 8USINfU llN11119UA'r9MUIT
'
Tiie fol ...... ...,_ i. OOlft9 tiu.i-
lleU •l
OOUl.INO l!NTIU'ft151S, 2 .. 1
(;ltllt9e Lefte, MIUIOft Vltjt,
c..lll .. 111• _,, w • .,... ' '''''"IWll.~•1 c~ L-. Mlait'I VltlO. c.I•-• '1tJS
llll• ~-'-· ,, ~-by -' .... dhlldlul
We.,ne J. Mlollli<ft
T"'t llO..,_.l -fllfG Wlttl IN County (;let'\ of 0. ..... (;_I, CNI
PlJBU NOTICE
PfCYIY1~8Ult•U6 N,.,..rtA~
T ... tot~ --It ...... bll'I MU•
MAIM Pt ... & SUP~ Y CO., llot
S...DI Mel" tt ., IMt• Alie, CA fl1'07 >oNI ............. 11~ Gld-
ChCle, '~Volle¥, CA~ , .... ~ .. ~_., ......
CIM~ol
Jalt!t f "'° ""'41 lo
'"" •14-1 -flled w(lh ii. c....111v Cltfll i.f Oft!IO' c-, °" Mere h 1:1, ltlt ,.llU s tudy was ordered by ,..,,d.,.<• --.. , 01 ,,... o-Mr., partne" ol h _-llWnlllp ••
O range COunty Tran sit Getw ... te1111
""'* PUl>ltUIM Or .... C.0.61 O.llV Pilot.
l!MfCll 21. 1'1' ,. .. _ ,.ubll\Nd Or.,...'-" Oelly PHot.
Aj)rll II, 11,U,Moy2, lt1t P\;l>ll&MCI Or-COHI 0.11¥ Pllo4, l!Mttll 2t, A£Wfl 4, ti It, mt
..,,., H ...a Aptll 4, 11, 11, ttlt. 1*°1
Ol!1trict tOCTD) d.irec-~!:1~~=11~C:11ornl•
tor& M onday to h elp find llOl!Ht a. a.ur PllOLJC NOTICE ~site for a Laguna Hills =·:"~':~~~i'::rn•• b\U depot and commuter • 'tMls l'ICTITIOUS IUSU.£1.$
parkin g lot. Publlltwd 0rMIOI' C:O.st 0.lfr Piiot, MAMe STATl!Ml:NT
Aptll •, 11, ''· u. "" IHt,. Tll• lollowinQ PtfSOll h OO(llQ bll!Jneuts
The yet-to-be-selected -·-----------1 NA TIOHWIOE lfOUIOATORS.
consultant is to survey P U BLIC NOTICE AUCTIONEERS JO&&ERs . uu Mew Vtrdlt 0r1 .. E••t. Coll• Mew.
possible sites in the ------------1 CA.,.,.
VI . it r L u :11 R ·-Arlll•" c Fr-. 1700 Ntlltoft can y 0 aguna fiJ s NOTICI: OflTltUSTl:E'~HLI. W•y, • 111'. S...I• Mot>!<•. CA 'OllOj
Mall and prepare e n · Of'1tEAL,.110,.11tTY r111, bu\lntu,. <Oftlluc1e0.,., ~
vtronmenlal a ssess· Nont~=~.!=•onw., 1"°1•i""!~•-c Ff__,
men ts, a report to di rec-~. "''· oi 1r. '*""' " ao AM 1n 1t.e Th•• , .. ,_t .... "'"" with '"'
tOrS Said. 1-y ol Ow Otll(e Of Tre11umerice fl. S°.u,~~y ~ Cl1~,..ll ol Ora119t (;°""'IY 011 II• lnlur.ntt ~Y •• lllO N M<11n ~ •",.. • Rim
Publl•-Or-CMll Delly PUOI.
AOflf 1 11 II 2S. ltlt
" ... ,.
PUBLIC NOTICE
--~~...,...,.,....,.,..,....,.,...,.,.,..,.,...,...~~ fll('Ttn«MI' IUSINUS
MAMI STATIM•14T
Tiit followlno _., '' dotno bu•I ....... ,
' MISSION HULi.. CLEANING
JU" P.o<lllu. MlMlofl Vltlo. CA tttl S Oe•IO Scoll ~I, ,,_ VI• $eft
Juoll, MINIOt\Vlfjo, CA tMTS
Tiiis l>llSI""' Is <Oftdut'40 bY "" In
Ol•ICIU•I
De ... Gf'-• Thi\ •lol-4 w• llltd w1lll Ille County Ct .. _ OI Ort"9t C011n1y on
Aprtl •• "" • ,.~
Publlsi.d Or-C:.0.•I 0.lly Ptlol,
Al)llf II. 11, lS, AWY 1, 1'11
'*"" The n ew facility even·
tually would replace a
temporary 273·rar com·
muter lot..)tear Calle de
la Lou198 and Calle de
los Caballeros as de-
mand for service in-
creases.
St • St"141 An•. C4111 91101
TRANSAMERI C A TITlE
INSURANCE COMPANY a '4111or"la
coroor•tMM •~ Pf'•Mf\t ''"-'t• ••II
tell •• ouDtlc •ucllon 10 t11e "'Oll•\I · llldOtr lor e; .. h 1n ••wtul .._, 01 1114
United 51111.-l, Ille lotlow111Q clH«•"-"
•••I or0per1y \!tu.lea 111 ll'te c1\y Of
C...t• MU•, County 01 Or ""'llf Sltl• OI
C..lllornl•. ""° 6M(t1bpo •• 16110w• to
12•7,. ____ _, ________ _
PuBuC N011CE
.. 11
1..01 S of '"1<1 No 1111 <U "'" m•11 <etO<'otO 1n lluolo. Ill. P-SO ()I Mil
Ctllanoou\ MAP\ '" tht OHIC• ol IM county rtcoroer of w1dcoun1.,.
SAIO ••lltWlll l!ft mae1c IOMll\IY 1"4!
PUBUC NOTICE
fllCTITIOUS aus1111u
NMl\1! nATl:Ml!NT
r110 1011ow1no -'°" " <ICllllQ 11us1 neH,•t
THE WOOD SHAPER l'INE
l'URNITURE ANO CA&IHETRY.
l* W R-rls Or S.nl• Atl•, CA 9'70.
V•rCI llffti..r Wall.tte Ill l~ W
llobtrU Or S...I• An•. CA 9?70.
fhl\ Du•uwu I\ tonOU<.leCI by •~ In dMOutl v .. oB wa11ot~111
"CTI TI OU' tlUSllC•H MAIM STAHMfNT
TIM lottowi"9 119'-ll CIOino ball·
MUOS tNCR&D18LE ECX>l..OGY GRIU.
OISTRl8UTOR Of' N 8 . 310 l'•r'*""
CIO, Newpor1llffdl,CA12~1 Jo"" 8¥ton. JIO FtrN-G·I,
Newport BHch. CA '2,MI
1 hi\ buslMst IS COllCIUCltcl by •n Ill·
d1•ldu•I
JOIWl11¥ton
This slel-1 w~ lllf!d ,.1111 IN
Cou111y Cl .. k ol Or•~ Coullly o"
Aprll •. 1971.
The con sultant is to
a ddress ruture need for
service in the area and
study l>ossible combined
1ise of t h e planned
racilities by Leisure
World buses and o ther
t r a n s it carriers as w e ll
as OCTD.
Obli~llOf1\ 'ttt«.Ut\..td by And PUr'\Uofnl 10
'"" PO••• ol ~"If tO<llC'froO 1n • ter
teln Oteo ol """' u•cu•l'CI l>Y G~ry W. Sh•elCls "no 8er!MHd J !.111old>.
hustMtno aflll wile to h..,.,.,.,,t,.,• Tt
Ue fnsur&neft Com~nv, • Cdltfornt•
corDO••llon, ••"""'"·tor,,.,,. 0tne111
11"4 "''urlly ot H•<OIO f RU4'1ter on
U11m•rrloo men, ., 8fMfl<f.trv. '"'"°
June 2• 1916. eno •Kor~O "' I Mlru mtn\ No ll>lll on Jun~ ?S. 1•1&. 1n
Dool<1t1tel 11/M, NOt"mOQt' 113. 01 Ot
lllll \ldl_,,t wH fiffd .Vllll IM
County Cieri. ot Dranoe Cou"ty on HtlUl
l"tU6! Publl•lle<I Or-C.O.•• OttlY Pilot, AJ>rll 6. t~/8
Pubh•"-1 Or ... CIM•I D•1ly PllOI, As>< fl 11, 11. u. May 7. 1918
Accredited
llcl•I lhcorCI• 1n I~ ofloee 01111~ C.<>un
ly Retorotr ot 0r""99 C:Wnty Sl•I• ol C•llforn1• THA r t>Oll<t or Ole.<n o• U•CI 01>
l~•llon •nCI tle<llon to wll \410 r•tl
Pt"OPetl'f w•\ rec.otde<t f 1' ltntrun)ton' No •OSl4 on J•nu.ary 10 1911, in booll/reol IUJ•. _,""-Of SO.. o40I
lltl•I RtCOr<h In tl't. "'"'" ol lht Coun ly Recorcler Of Or-(ouf\ty, Sl•lt ol
c.tllor11~
THAT MtO With ,._ w1l'-I <O•
tn•nt er w•rtaniy rtt•r011tQ t•Ut>
oon•s~.on or 9'l(:umbf•n<M-. or •" •o
Jn;iurdl>llUy ot lltf~
THE btl\lffi(tM"f Ot" •nv othtr o.r\&'\
,, f>4tr )on' '"l"I ourc ,,."'° 1tr '°"'ow•~
Apr 11 I I 18, JS, May 2 1918
1364-18
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS 9U51,.EU
NAMI: STATEMENT
Thr IOHoiN•n9 P•'t01' u 00•"4
llu\lntU •s
B and F PHARMACY. 132' E
i<•ttllOAYt .A.-1m.CA Hmn J Btth•nv. Jr. in1
Loron to Ave Col.I• Motw, CA m2' Thi\ ...,.,....,, I• eonOucteo l>T en
1nCh¥1du•1
Jonlt\ J er-•. Jr fh1~ statement •H 111.0 .,.t., UtiP
Coun,. Cltr> 01 Or•nQll! Counrr on
-•< h lp. 1'11
--~----~-~----
PUBLIC NOTlCE
"CTITIOUS •U~INl!S5 NANlt! STATl:MIMT
Ttie lollowtnQ --h dolnQ buSI
M~\•\
CASA Pl.AVA APTS m ••tn SI
Hun1H1q1on &ee<11. CA
SltrllnQ ""1111~ ltl H•m111on.
CA>\la MtU. CA '2611
Th.s bus"-' l!i c-..IAHI l>Y tft '"' OMO.WI
Sl .. llnQPhllllj)\
Thi• si.t-1 .,_. flltO •1111 lllt
toutlly tl'1k ot O.a"911 Co<Hlty on
Marth lO. ••78 . -,..JI,.
A program at UC
Irvine Medical Center
that treats people re-
cover in g from s trokes.
spinal cord inju ries and
o ther nervous system
disorders bas been ac-
credited by (he Com-
mission on A rcr edila·
tion of Rehabilitation
Facilities.
OATEO•hl•l'ltnJatof M.lrc h 1•11
TRAN~MERICA ltTl(
INSURANCE COMPloNY
RevG Rown11uro
PvbllsN<I Or-C:O.SI 0•11• Pltot. l"tJt,, Apr1t 4 11. II, 2S, 1'1e
Publl\""" Or-Cotst 0.1ty Piiot 11'7 II
~~~~~~~~~~~-1
PUBLIC NOTICE
,.ICTtTI04JS •USl"4ESS
HAME STATEMENT
Ti.. fOll-1114 Ptt>On I> 001<141 bull
MU •'fi
THE !.TEIN GROUP 11 .. 8
S~ya.rk Bfll'CI . trvlnt. CA 9'2111
Oo•IO Franklyn Sle1n.' L6Qu11114
~aouna Beech, Ci' 9?1SI
l hi• Du>inilss ,. conouctocl llY 011 1n.
Ol•lclual
Ot•IO F Sltln Thi\ Sl•leMMll was lilf!d wlltt lh<t
Coul\ly Clerk ol Oran0t Coun1y Oft Aprll II 191t
A\.J, I !MK.rf't•ry
P\IOllSMO 0..ongr CA>ol\I l>•lly PllOI "P"' "· 11. is .. ,. , 1.jl)I ,.
P U BLIC NOTICE
c;p ....
NOTICE OF lhTENTION TO
tltEATE SECURITY INTEREST
IS.Cs. 6101 "~ U.C C I NOl•c~ " h•t•by q•vrn lo ~hf
CroOllor, ot LOGAN INC . Otl>tor,
whoir btJ1HU!\) IHJar~· \ '' t6QS2 Mllllhn fWtnUlf, C1tv ol lf•1M Coun
ty of Or11ngr, ~late Of Clllltornl• 1h,11"
~cuflly lllle<KI ''about 10 bt• cr••ll'd
l>Y Oe1>1or •no ar•n11•.i 10 S11nt••oo 8a!'IL • C•11torn1" <o•DMlll on 'tt!Jtt Sfturt"d P.irtv •"O'tt• h\A\tni"\'\ •«'
Pubh\lied Or•noe C.0.>t O..lly P1101, ll••S\ 11. SlS E ~ .. ,1 s1 C1 lv 01 lu•un.
April It U. M<ly 1, 9 1911 County ol °'•"'Oii ~Ml• Of 1.AhlOfl"•
UO.S.-11 T.,,.. propPrty tn 'Jenetal In wn1cn
tM S.c4.1ruv •oc..-~1 w 1tt °" C.'••f~ 1).
-------------Ua.t~r••· Mu1p.mwn1. turnllurf' df\q
PU BUC NOTICE furnl•hl~ ol o.t>lor .._ OUSint\S
•!. tc no""'n ., LOQ.tfn '"' .no IOC'•l•ct Al -·-------------t IHS2 M1lllll.M AW'1-Cll• of "'"'It NOTIC::E 0 ,. llf'TENTION TO Counly of 0...-ot S•••t "' (•llforft•• EHGAOE IN THE SALE 01' Tiit •lor-1d M<uflly ,,.,.,.tllon
ALCOMOLIC 8EVERAGES wlll be <onwmtnfltO O" Ot "'" 1111' ~.13.71 2ttn day ol Aorll 1911 at I >O • m •I
Apr II 1. I 1. ta. 2S. 1918
P U BLIC NOTICE
---~--~~----~ FICTITIOVS 8USINESS NAME STATEMENT
Tiit lollowlno per<oM ••• 001no
buSIM .. I S
•Ml'RltAN MORTGAC.E
11\!>URANCE AGENCY no N•WPo<: (I ""' Ortve "200. ""•PO<I Beach. C.A 97~
AMERICA"4 HOME MORTGAC.E
CORPORATION. a C•ltlornt•
corpar•tlo", 230 Newport (~nt•r
On vu o 100, Newport B«•ch, CA
916b0
Tt\1s bu\I~\\ 1s condu<ff"d ., •
tOrPOtaltOI\
AMERICAN HOME
MORTGAGE CORPORATION
C.(ORGEM llUAKE
Vt<PP..MJ~I
I"'' 11.tltmtnl w.n lllt!d w1tr1 the
County C•ork of Orango C-ot' on
Mart " >O t•Tt
Ftt17'
Pul>ll\MQ Or-Cot•t Oa1ty Pilot
11or11 • n, 11. n, '"' 1291 71
P U BLIC NOTICE
To Whom 11 H>ay Cancer" Santi-84n~. •-4(1drK> I~ SJS E
Subj Kl to ·•-e"' '"" lkense .... Fir" St TU'.lt•n ~hlorn·• FICTITIOU~ l&ISINE5S
Olltcl fOf nolK• .. he<eey QIYlft '""' So •• , ... ,, ..... ..,.. to ·~ 5'-<ured NAME SlATIM.ElfT
tnt unOff11qned propos~\ lo '*'' P•rlv •If bu\•nf'~\ "'""if" ~no •0 Th• f0Uow1n9 person '' do,n9 elCOlloll< Dt .. r~ at lllt pr-I-. 0/f'Ot• uwel by,,,.. 0..l>tOt 10< tlw ~>f OU\ln•\• I\
Clo\Crll>ect .. loll°""\ In Ille 'l>"'f/ pro lhtU YUt>•~ ,...,.., WESTERN &>NO ANO CATTLE
¥10ea ~I-D•l•O Aor•I fl 191~ COMPANY. AMERICAN LANO ANO
f10 w 191hSI-. C.OSI• -w !>anti-O.in• C• rTLE COMPANY. JIS Tlllrd SI . P11r .... an1 to •11<h •nt.,,tlon U.. un • t.ahl (;>rp HunllnQlon Be.ell CA '11"'8 Cle~IQneO Is •t>PIVl"O lo 1...: o.i>ert Larry L Ell•> Ch•rln Woodrow Show•. 2"~2
mtflt or AltOhOllc 9twr~ C<lfttrol Vitt Pfe\Oclenl Pac fl•< Co.st Hwy , Huntlnoton
tor luuenc. ol ., "l<ollr-llt bt•erago ~<ur!'O Per1y Beach, CA_..,
ll<en.e IDf llcens.~I tor I-Ptt Pul>li"""° 0.41>Ql' (Od\I D••IY P11ot. r111t l>u\lr>•'>> " COl'IOU<led DY 411
mi WI\ •s Iott~ Aor II II, 191~ fl fndl•ldu.tf
'"O "" 1'°' / CtwrlMWOOOr_Stlo_
On Sale Beer & Wlrie Tiiis \tal.,,,..,t w11s llltct wl111 the
ll>ubllc Pt-tm1'4!SI P U BUC NOTICE County Clerk ol Orenoit County on Ml<"-I O. O'LOUQhilll M,ar t h 30 1918
PUBUC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS •UllNESS NAN115TAllMl!NT
Hu~ •ouow•nQ _,.''°'" •'f' C'OHtO oo"neu .,
l B T CO 181~t W•llllil SI ,
Fovnl••" uell•r. c..tll "2/0I,
0 .. •d L Pall .. ,.,,, •atS1 lltla1nul
SI Fount .... V•l•ew. C•lft 91/0I
OonM J P•llerson, •8'St W•lnut
SI . f'ounl<Sl!I V•llt1y. C•lll 9'IOI
Tiii\ bullllns IS conouttea DV an tl'I•
dlYtdU•'
O•v10L Pallt<IOft
Thi\ >1<11-t ... , "'"" Wllh , ...
Cownty Cieri< ol Or•n~ County on Aprll S, 1~>ti
-24'1
PUblt1MO Or'°"llf Goll\! O•tly Pilot
Apr ti 11 11. 2S. May 7 1911 l:)U ,,
P U BLIC NOTICt: ------------,.ICTITIOUS 8U51NEU
NAME STATEMl!NT
I ... loll-1"9 per'°"' •tfl dOtf'41
Du.MM~\•\.
WARMINGTON EMBERTON 111 ""1 H ... A __ ,,.,,,.,. CA'21"
Ti.., Roc.<1 P Wom11"91on Co .•
C811tor"io tO<'Portllon. 1tS'1 Hele
l,~ut.1"'1M.CA'111•
Emt>e'1on 0. .. 1--1 Corp , 1
c.111or111e <orPO<•llon. 1ts•2 Mtlt
A ... 11~. '""'~· "'9111• Thi\ b<l"IW\l I\ tonductto bY • tO'
PO•tltOn
T"4t Robett P W•rm•nqton Co
R-tP Warm1,,.. 1Pr~1 Tllh •!At.,_,. was 111.0 ,.,,,.. 1t1e
County Cltrk of Or•nQP Co""'' on
Mttth lJ, "" f41W Publlslw.cl 0r..,. c.o..1 0.•IV PllOI,
Mercn 11. Allt•l 4. II, 11, 1'78
ll'OS·ll
PUBLIC NOTICE M"Q¥•1 M O"l..OUQnlln -·--------------< l't2111
Publish<!<: 0.-C.0.\1 O.l1y Piiot, FICTITIOUS 8USINfSS Publhtwd Ortngr CO.it O.lly Pllot --------------Aprll "· 1918 NAME STAfEMENT April• 11. II, n. 1971 1s10.11 Th• 1011ow1no per'°" " OO•llO bu>i 12t0-78
PUBLIC NOTICE
--~~~~~~~~~~
$11 .. altlO. CIOVltTOI' TWI
STATI Oft dU .. OltlllA "1•
TN• CIOUNT'f O"OttA•OI .... Mti)ll
•OT1 Cf 0' Na,tlltlNO 0,. ~-TITIOM flOa ... fllOtaATC OP WILL
ANO t.•n•H T•nu.a•TAltY flOlt AUTNOltlZATION TO AO
MINIST Elt UNOl!lt TME
IMDI PIMOllNT AOMllllSTltATIOll
0' Hf"Tl5ACT Etl•le of 00111!. C. FEHREN
Ott .. >td NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 1 ... t
ltAYMOND W. HUOSOH MS Iliff
... ,.,,, • ptllllorl tor ~le of Wiit
•llCI Ill-OI l.ttttr1 TtttMNflleni
lo the PttltW.--lor outl\oflUlton
lo 40MlllllW -Ille l~I .Om•"l\lrotl°" of E>l•I .. Att, r•
l11eMt 10 wflKll It ffttlde ~ furtlltf' perll<ulen, .,,., Ille! ,,.. 11"'9 on4 oto<• 01 _.,,. .... _ .... _Mt
tor M•Y t. ""' .t IO:OO • m., Ill ttw
touf1rOOM of Oeclwlmeill Mt. ) Of S<llCI
<011r1, •• 100 Civic °"'* on .. ••• Ill -Cl ly of 511\UI .IW\t, ~1...,-111 ..
O•i.d AJ>rll IO, 1'71
WILLIAM E SI JOHN.
(.ounly Gltr k
ltOLAND L. ICE.MP
llU•lrcll-1
N•w-t 8MO, (;lo tlitt
Ttl: 7Sl·1•
AIWI',.., ""' P'etll'-Publl-Or..,. CM>t Delly Pllol~
AD<il 11, '2, ti. 1178 l•t4-7o
··~~~~~~~~~~~
PUBUC NOTICE
Cl"-4JV
5 UflEatOlt COURT Of' ntE
SfA1'aOf'CALll'OltMIA l'OR
TMI COUNTY O"OltANOI:
Ne.A-ffD1
N OTICE OF Nt!Altt MG Ofl
"ETITION .-0. .. lt08ATE Ofl WILL
ANO l'Olt LEnl!RS TESTANllN·
f AltY
E.st•I• 01 CHAlll..ES H CASE,
O.C.t•..0
NOTICE IS MEREBY GIVEN llwl
B•NI( OF AMERICA NATIONAL
TRU'll AH O S4Vl ,.GS AS
SOC••T•ON "'°' 11100 her .. n • petlt!Ofl
10< Proo.t• Of Wiii -tor 1u...nce at LellOf• ft•l-nl•rY 10 the Ptll•
11-r. retl!nlftCe 10 '!Whi<ll 11 -ror turlllf• perl>eul..,..., ""° tlltt ltle t11nt
•nd pleu of hearlnQ Ille """' h~ ~" \ti '"' -""''' 1$. 1971, ti •O 00 • m • '" 1i.e <ounroom "' Oeoen"""' No l or ..-d court.•• 100 tl•k C....t• Or1ve Wlt11 1 .. the GllY o4 s.nl• An•
C.tlforru•
O•t.O ~11 •, It/I
WIU.IAIOl 11: M JOHN,
tounly Cterlo.
WILLIAM V SCHMIOT
M se,. M1_, Dt , \te. ,.
Nt•"'1 lhitdl, CA tlMO , ... t7l4)~
AtlorMy i.r· PtlflioM<'
P~blt\lleO Or-Coilll D•11y P1to1, Apttl 11 IJ. t8. 1~78
PUBLIC NOTICE
It ·14700
SU .. EltlOlt C:OUllT OF THE
SlATE OF CAUf'OltMIA FOlll
THE COUNTY OFOltANGE
Ne.A.ffl» MOTl(;I' OF HEARING OF
.. ETITION f'OR .. ltOtlATE OF WILL
AND FOR LETTl:RS TESTAllllEN·
TAllY AMO RHI AUTNOltlZATION
TO 4 0Ml"41STl:ll UNOElt THE
INDC .. INDINT AOMINISTltATIOll
O,.BSTATUACT
Esl•I• ol ELEANOR EDNA FRYE.
•'-• ELEANOll EDNA GOCLON FRYE,0.C .. W<I
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN ttwt
OONALO JULIAN GOCl..ON f\e\ ftlfel
M re•" " pellllon for "'-ta ol Wiii •nd lor IS"""'4' of utters T .. temen-
t•rv •t'IO tor Authorl1at1on t• Aid·
Mtftl\ltt un0tr lhe 1-1 Ad
mUUltr.ttlan of £ Sf~H Act. rfPfKen<.ft
tll ""'"" '' m•dP to r turtruH o•rt•cut•r~. ano tn•• 1ht 1hT1e •"d Oleta of nt•t1nQ 1110 ...,_hes Deen >el
•or AOltl 2S, ,,, •• "' 10 00. m • '" '"" courtroom ol Oei>'lrt-nl No 3 of ~•Cl
cowrt, •' 100 C.•v•c C'.e1'ter Ortw West,
"• ti.. C••v °' Stflt• An.t. C..1t10<'"1• O•tlKI AO<ll •. 1'78 WIU.IAM I[ ~I JOltN.
CounlY Clerk
EltNEST J. SE'l'NIC>Ult
1114' N_ .... ••.ct:. •101 Ntnr•I•, Gtllftnti• _,,.
T•I: CtU) .... 170.
Al ... MY ..,., flellll-
PublfslMO Or-Co.tsl O•llY PllC)I
Aorll II, 11. "· 191R 141)../I encl Koly Bvrnt. Sffvlort wllt bot twld I C on wwcinesc1ey Alltll ''· ,,,.,. 11:oo nove ''Lady hat-
A.M. •t Pecllic Vfew-.notl•f Par-le rley'S Lover," died Of
wnh R•v Brue.. l(llf'l'I• 0111<1•11no. a h eart attack Monday. Nttll a ... Mortl.0¥, Olro<lon
Publlslled 0r411'10t C.0.11 0.lly PllOI, -·-------------AP<'ll 11. 1911 111 .. 11
ne1>•\
iNOEPENOENT MARINE AHO
SALVAGE. l()t6 E Htllacuy S.l\lt PUBLIC NOTICE
P U BUC NOTICE WIU.IAMS
EVELYN f'RANCES WILLIAMS. STANFORD (AP > -
tormer1y<J1Lldoi•1t P•SM<1•w•yon Stanford University •sc,...,,..., .......
M01C11 2. '"' <t1t • row11"' an•• Professor Paul H . NOTtc:aToc;1t1D1T01tso,. 1110\lon end llrt el ""' ....... In Ukt •ULI( TllltNS,.llt AND OP
HtmlltOfl. Hot Sor••·""~.,,,... Stw Cootne r . '17, book a u thor INT«"''°" To T1tAN"S1t
wa. • ros101tn1"' L•oo ,, .. ,,.,.,, , ... 10 and a uthori" ly on tbe ALCOMOUc;a1vw1tAoc 1'1• SM.,., Ille Me¥1>9tllnr Ma>ce ra UUMS•CSI
••m11y i..1nt1s. g,. '' ,.,,.,,..,.e1"' '°" slork market, collapsed 1a.u . ,_.,., u.c.c. .. ,.,
WllU•M p Wiiii""''"' Palm Sor•-. d d "ed s d hil _, ""' C. 3ora.-ug111~tSl>OrrltOornoot an I UD ay W e Notice II~ 9lwn INI e Duft
_.unllnQton8t« ... C. ,OonrwlWllllOftlt WOrkin at NS des k . l<Ollller of P9'10NI property .,.d •
ol ,...,.,.. Ott Rey, Ge -91111• R• iiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil transl .. OI llouot llcenstUI f1 tOOUI 10 WHll•"YI• OI H~WDOrl Buch, C. , be moclt
or.,.o'°" w1111..,.,., P Wiiiiam• 111 ot THIC' GftlC'&T Tiie no-bl. m.111114 eooreu. •NI Ptlm SprlnQs. C• •net e t•I· II:. 11:.,,. ZIPCOCION-.-sou •IS.Curlly
O<•ndot\IOfllet ~,. Anrt ~noy Of "MERIC"~ tori Ftclorel T•~ Number. ol '"' Hun"noton 81.ch. C•. M•morlet \re11sl•rotl•I oro AMIJSEME~T CO. Ron•ld A Otw11. U1Jt A,.,..tllyfl
n&FAMILY
COl.OMIAL FUHllAL
HOMI
7801 Bolsa Ave
Westminster
893-3525
'ACl"C 'llW
MIMOllAL r491K
Cemetery Mo rtuary
Chapel
3500 Paci lie View Drive
Newport
Ca11forn1a
644-2700
McCORMICIC
MOlrTUAlllS
Laguna Beach
494-9 .. 1~
Laguna Hills
768-0933
San Juan Ceplstrano
495·1776
1.uu..a•aOH
PUMIRALHOwa
Corona del Mar 6 73-9460
C09ta Mesa 84&-2424
llUUOADWAT
MOllTUAIY
110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
842·9150
SMITH-lUTMUA.AMI
WISTC&Jff CHAPll
427 E 17th St
Costa Mesa • ~6-4888
Santa Ann Chapel
618 N Broadway
Santa Ana• 647-4131
Antique Slots. Pins
Arcade Games
~
Cr .• GarOel\ Gro•e, CA 9HH *-"·• ... a.ri..ro 0 OIMll, IJIJ1 Amtlhy•I
Cr • Ge •O•" G ro•t, C• 9HIS »J4J.J7)0
The n•'l'lelll. ,.,.111no eclc!<•u. •""
ZIP C8CIO N.,,,..,.r. -5ocl01 S«urltv (orJ FtCltral Tu Number. ot lrwt
tr•nttt1r••<st er•
Michael 0. O'Loutlllln, "11 l•Y Cr •
HunllnQlon lltec h. CA tHH.
110·1HU6
Mar9.ore1 M 01LOOQ1111n. ~n Ivy
Cr . Hunlinglon Buch, CA 'U••
Of/026·1119 Tllot Ille per_..1 PrOClfrty 10 bt
lr~n1fer...i I• 0.Krlllecl In ~rel •1 m•ltrl•ls, 1111>11llos. mer<ll•ndlH.
t0ulDmen1, lorl bol•I,.., •nd QOOllWlll ot Al'I R"I ~ Is IOCaltCI OI 8,0 W
tflll Slfttl, Coile M•••. CA 91&71
199ft11tr .. 1111 lhl IOll-lftQ dtscrllMl(t
etc-lie -•eQ"t llcenwl•I On wl•
""' •nd ....... .,...,,~ now IHIHCI ,,.,
seldpr•mlM\.
-U..t.. $ Tll•I 1114 tOlel tonolele<•llon IOf 11't "~It -trnt tr•n1••• o1 '-"O l>u\lneo •ncl of st10 Slit• la (114) '3S·Dl'5 llconsellJ It lllf sum Of 120,SOO.OO In-n.rs. ••r ID·•. Fii Tl t c111e11nv 1n .. 111orv esum"''° •• uoo oo I ft olfl ~ wlllth COf>\tsls ol lllt lollowlflO ,_._.~C.... Ch«• 11.00000 Pr"omi.-v notn '~!~~~~~~~!~~~~ 0.MOnd hole M.OllO 00 ~ l\Olt UOOOO T~llttllnlanQll>I• l>f-rly
IMl•llm@nt-•\l,OQO 00
PUBUC N011CE '""' 1s "-' *" "'¥_, "'"""" _____________ , :.!~~f.1r~(~~,.~~·.~:.o:r:~1~·1:!
M()TICI! Ofl NOM·ltl!S'OMSlllLITT
NOiiet i• "'""' Olwn '""' ,,.... Ull O.r•IQfWCI wOI not l>t rt-sll>I• tor
•l'IY dtl>U Of lltlltlllie1 c°"lr.Cted by
..,y_ ol,,.. '""" mYHll on P< •llt•
11'111 dalt
DtltO l.Ns 10lll cloy Of Mertll. 1'11
Je,,_ HM'rl& Ptu .. y J"' ~,.,_Place
COflA-. Cotltot>ll• .. lltlll"'90 Oronot Coell 0.llY Piiot, AIWll 1', 1&,24, 1t71 14'1·71
PUBUC NOTICE
tr.._ lr•n•fer ol Mid bll\I"""' ena Of
Miid lltenM(il I& '° lie paid only •119r
treMI•• .... """ --by O.~rl ...-1 of Altd!Dllc a. .. ,_ eon1ro1,
purt~nl 10 sec. 2.01a.1 soq
lll•I tht htreln described lr...shlr'•
•re to bt cOflsutnm•lect. wllltet to U..
t bo .. pro11is1cm. " vouR eso1ow SERVICE CO , INC , ltSll MaQllolla
•t Htll, Wftll'lllMl•r, CA 9'2~ Oft Of •lltr Mey II. 1'71
All Olher IN>I""' 11411Ntl 11111 •O
dftUtl 11\td l>y t"' lrAn•I'""'"
wllht" thr .. ~•'1 IHI p.tll, M> ltr ••
•nown 10 tr--t•J. ••• Hone
Qat.ci ""'ii 11, ma.
MIC .... I 0 O'lOUOlllln
lfOTICI 0" NOM-ltll"'°"Sl81LITY M•fQtr'91 "f. O'lOUOlllln
NOlltt ll ~Iii...., lllat Ille Ul'I· frer!llW•l
e1tnloMC1 wlll ""' lit ,..._ .. bit 10t Rone1e1 A °'"" t nY Cltlllt or 11..,.llllu cortlrklect by ,.,_. D o.-
a11v-01,,.. 1111111 nlyMtt, on o< •f1tr Trtntltf'lln
tllft dett YOVlt •KltOW HltVICI
Olltd tllll l:llllCl4t'f Ol •II. lf78 ~ .. IMC.
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE fOCREOITORS
OF 8ULI( TltANSFElt
IS.CS. &IOl-4107 U.t.c;. I
Notice IS llero by v•••" 10 tlle
C••Gltors ot SU·Jull Hu•no Lu.
Tr•nsteror. """'°""' buSU'ttts~ ldOrns '' 1llO H•rt>o< Bt..i . Co\14 Mes., County
ol Orano•. Slalt Of CallfO<'nla. 111<11 •
"" .. lftr>slor 1$ ~ l'O l>e m-10 O•ftlol H Lleo, lr..,.11.,.tt. whOw
bustt1eu -eu Is 9911 Snowt>rtti• Ofl•o, Hunclftgton Beech. Coullly ot
Oro"°'. SI tee o1 C.lt lor11• •
The O•-tr IO be lr•nsft<<ed ••
IOUltO •I 211D Het1>0t' Bl\IO., Colle
Moe. County ot Or•noe. S1t1e ot C..lllor"I•
S.10 P<-•fy IS oes<rll>l!O In gr.,.,.,
•• All •tou 111 Ir-. llx1u...,s. "'IUip. mtnl •..O 0000 wlll of tl\el talte-out 1000
l>ullnen --... PIONEER TAKE
OUT " » -lot•ttd al 2 llO Harbor Bill(!, Co.le Mose, County of Or .. Qll!,
Slel•OI C.lllor-nlt
Ti.. blllk lrtr1sfe.-.. 111 "" toftwm
mattcl on or ett~ ""' fllh aioy 01 April,
1911, •I 10 00 • m •I WMltrn Mulu•I
E><row Corpor.ollon, 2t)O Mew Vtrctt Ori"" E • Suitt 0 , Co\IO Mew 92626.
County ol Orenoe. State or C.hfornl•.
So fer H known to 11111 Tr,.nlfetff.
•II b\l\lntts ,..,...s .,,o *••Ssf'\ used
by T r1n1leror tor the lt1t~ Y'l'••s lest
Pll\f, Art \.tmt,
Oeteo Fet>ru.ry 21 1978
0•nl'4 H LI~ trMtsferw
WUTEltNMUTUAL
HCllOWtolt ...
ltlO Mt"' Y-Oriw, Suitt 0
tetl1 Mna, CA tv.•
E•ttow lto.11·1401
PVl>ll\twd Or•noP Coe•I 0.lly PllOI.
April 11. me
--~~-------~
Pl18LIC NOTICE
"""* SU PEltlOlt COUltT OF THE
lTAfE Of'CAUFOtlNIA FOlt
TNI[ CIOUNTY OF ORANOI[
NO. A-tJ.J01
NOTltt! Ofl lfEAlt lNO Of'
l"ll!TITIOM l'oa "ft09ATI Ofl WILL
ANO flOll LEnElt5 TESTAMIM·
TARY
E\l•le ot SIMEON C. ORAPER.
tho ~"ow11 H SIMEON CASTLEMAN DRAPER, 09cN1"!
NOTICE IS Hti!ltE8Y GIVEN lhel
LE01'A M, DRAPER, NORMA 0
l'AllME lt, MAltJ OlttE 0
DOSTWICI(. aoWI SALLY 0. HEISEll,
1101 lfted htrtln.., AmenotO Pttlllort
lw Prooat• OI Wiii -for ••• .. 11<• o1 l.tller• Tt11amt111.,y. r•l•rt11t1 to
wlllcll It medtt IOr tvttlwr .,...ll(11ter1.
eno ""' ,,.,. tlrnt.,. plec• Of twertno
ti.. .. me "9s -Ml fO<' Ma• 2. ''"· •I 10.00 •,.,,. 111 1,,. <011rlroorn oi
Otpe r1mllfll No > Of '41<1 <our I, •I 700
Cl•lt CtlllH 0r1 .. W~t. 1n 1<1<1 Clly o4
Stnte Ant. Gtlltor"I• O•led Aprll 1J, 1111
Wll.LIAME SIJOHN.
<:outlly o.r-
lt081 It f W. u nu
A"6wC.W-.... 0-.,.GwlA....,,tlt 1&s11M ............... IOW.()(Nfl,.,tftl ..,....._, C..,...,
"-11Nc11 CA.,.._, Tt11 11HI --
• .. N•wll*1 CM*f °""" •SJI .............. CttHtnil .....
l'llOll"'90 Or-Olett 0.lty PtMIC, li'vtMl\hef Ortrlft COHI Olllty flllOI, ~II 11, I .. U, m• ._,ti II, 1'11 , .... ,. 1111-71
A~-.... ._.
11..etk.flN Or-0..t Dell\'"*· ... ,., 11. , .. ,4, ,.,,
""""·CA '2/0S ROf\4110 F C.Omyn, ;1016 E Htlle·
day, S."I• Al\t. Cl\ 9'270! This t>uwne.s Is tClndutttd llv on I"
dlYldUAI Aont lO F (.omynl
T"'' •l•tt-..t ·~ f11ea with 111e CA>unly Cler~ ol Or~nClf Cou"IY on April IJ 1~71 F-Publlsheel Or-C.O.sl ()f1ty Pt101 April II. n . Mey 1 t . 1911
-------~-----·~ ~--~~~~~~~~~-
I , ,
flttt7lt Publl>hecl Or-. Cont 0.lly Piiot. APrll 1•, 1S, -y 1 t 1118
IS0.·11
P U BLIC NOTICE
"" 19
PUBLIC ~OTICE
FICTITIOUS 8UStNIH
ICAMI! STATCMl"4T
The 1011ow1no per'.IOn> ••• (lolftQ bllslneo a
TO!>H S B•RBEOUE
RESTAURANT IMll tt.e(n 6 1•<1
Hunllnotori BN<ll CA ~I
V•rner C & Nur H l(lotr 21•
Gt I nd A,.. • • IOt. ~ llffch CA
90IOJ
Thu 1>us1ntu ,. c"'°u' l•O llY e llmlleo !Ml• tref\h1p N~ H !(her
Tiii\ •1•1-,..., Ill.cl w•th Ille Counl~ t•tr' ol Or-Coun1y °"
MOttll 13, ""
su .. a1ttOftCOUltTOflTHE
STATEOFCALlf'OftNIAFOlt
TMECOUNTYO,.OltANGE
NO.A..u77
N OTICE' OF HE•lttNG 01"
"«TITION f'Oll PltOIATE 0" W,tLL AMO LETTl!lt5 Tl!$TA ... ENfAltY
'01t AUTNOllllATION TO AO MtNISfElt U NOCll THE INDE~lENDENf ADMINISTltATION 0, HTATl:SACT
E•l•te Of BESS EOITH NICOLLS OLHtY.~
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN ttwt
Wllll•M NfOOfft Olney hH hied ''""'"
• petition tor "'-tt of Wiii .,.., " W•"tt of LeOtn T .. tameft\ltY to t,_. ~llllOMr. -104' •utllorl1ettOt1 lo d(I
m.n,ster ""°'' lht 1n0tpenc;tent MJ
Mll'llllr4ttlon"" !:slilltS ACI. "''""'"o
10 •"'<" •t m•de tor tli,frtrif't
perlltul•"· •nc:I lhtl lh~ 11,,,. -Dlttt OI nttrlnQ llW .. ,,,. lies Ileen ~I
tor "'"" 1s. It/I. ot 10 ao • m • In ti.. courtroom ot Otc>Mtment No J of u;o
<OU<I, al IQO O•k (Mitt 0.1..e Well
in ti.. City ol S.-.1• Ana, C.lll0<nla,
O•llHI Apr fl 1. l'lf
WILUAIOIE. SIJOMN COUf\ty Cl"'' Cl!CIL G. T0FTNIS5 Ult Vie Ttjoft
..otlOllkt .. •• "•IM Vtr.-W &t~, CA '9174 Tot· UJ-1 A11 ...... .,, ... ,..1111-
Pu1111i 1100 Or-Colli! Oltlly P1101,
Ar>rll 11, IJ, II. ltNI
P U BLIC NOTI CE
"CTITIOUS 8USINESS
NAMI )T,ue1o1«NT
TM toll-1"11 11trw11s are "'711\Q
tJ<j\l,..i\ts
JEllEMY"S HAIR FASHIONS,
111'1 BrO(lllllurfl founl.,,. Y•llty, Cl,
•110.
LtRoy R C.-1. t)I• Rot>tn A•~ F ounl••n V•lley. CA '11709
M•" £ C•M-1• •su Rob•n
Aw , F ....,1111" ¥a11oy CA '110.
'"'~ bv\tl'lh1 I'\ COftdUC:ltJd b'( •n tn
Oh•lctu•I
L• Roy R CAmpoell
T"'' tt•IHntnt ••' fHH •''" tM (OUlll• Cl.,.-\ Of 0rA"9f Cou<'tty Oft
April •• 1'11
ll'M!Ut
...,m Pul>ll\NO 0r-. CIM•I 0.lly Pllo4 Pubtl"'91 Or-CO.II 0.Uy PllOI, Aprll 11. 11, l). MAY). IUA Mertll 21. 1'0<11 4, 11 ti. lt7t
1204-71 -------~----',..~-~
,,...,.
PUBUC NOTICE
'"'11'J
Pulllh'-d ~-Cot>I 0..ly '°1IOI, As><ll •. II It , U, 1'19
u.u r•
4--• -
t .
Tak of Abuse Honored
~ Inquirer .wm. Pulitzer for Public Service
N £W YOU (AP) -,,_ Pbiladtlphla In·
Quir•r has won lb• 1'71 Pulitler Prt .. tor public
Hrvle• for 1 1'71 Hrla ol utlc• ahowiq 1b1.&M1 ol power by the PbilldelDbla police.
Gaylord D. Shaw of The Loi Ancel• Times
won lbe prt• NoadaJ for naUoaal repoJ'tlna for a
Mrl•• Oil \IDHI• atructura! OODdiUona It the DI• lion '1 m.ior dama ,
THE GENERAL LOCAi. NPOl'tlna prtae went ~ JUclalJ'd WblU of The Loulaville Courter.Journal ,r,,.r coverage ol a fire that took 164 lives at a aup·
per clqb in Soutb11te, K, .. and hla aubleq\lenl in·
ve1U11tion ot the Jack o enforcement ot tht state .....,.·/!recode.
NON.FICTION AWARD Henry Kamm of The New York Ttmet won the
Cart 8egan ~•rd for lnternaUoul reporllDC for h1a 1torit1 on
the Indochina refutees .known as the ''boat peo-ple." ·
J. Ross BaughDfu or 1'lae AalOClated Preas
won the award for reature photorrapby for three
photograph• be look in 1uerrllla are11 in RhodHia.
THE AWARD Foa 8PEaAL local reporting
went to Antbon,y E. Dolan of The Stamford <CoM.)
Advocate for a aeries on municipal corruption. The
Advocate, like the Los An1elea 'l'IDlel, la published by the'Timea Mlm>i: Co.
Meg Greenfield, deputy· editorial page tditor
of The W~ ~oat, received lb• tditorial
writing award for 1elected examples of~ work.
kffrey K. MacNeUy ol The Richmond <Va.>
News Leader received th~ editorial cartooning
prize based oo h~ work during 1977. His cartoons
appear regularly on the editorial p11e of the Daily PJlol.
A 8PZQA£ Q'l'ATION to !Ucbml Lee Strout
fof'. d~ eooiasentary from Waahlutou
ovtr inllby·~ u a·•taff correaDOQdtnl for "'rbt
CbrJatian 8cJenct llbhltor' ud coatrtbutor to Tbe New Republic.
Strout, who .bu wrnten fM· the Cbrt1Uan ~lenee Moaltor 18 yean, c:ontbiues, at a1e 80, to
onctuoe a lteady flow of colwnna and news pieces.
ffia optnlon column in tbe New Re.Public apJ>ean
Ullder tM puUdQaym "T. ft. B." It alto appear,
re1ular!y on~ Daily Pilot editorial pate.
TIM PuUtlel' P!Ues, lo journ&Usm and the 1rb; 'were endo1'1ed by the late Joupb PulitJtr,
publisher ht tbt old New York World, and were first given In 1917. They .,,. awarded by the
trust... of Colwnbla Uo!fenlty on reco1n1nenda· Uoo of an advilorv board.
THE PIUIADBLPIUA INQUIRER began a
aeries _of froat·pqe art.iclea on the p0llct depart·
»Jent which found "a pattern of bealin11, ·lb.rHta ot violence, loUmldallon, coercion and koowina
dJsreprd for coostJtuUonal ri&bta to the interro1•~
Uon of homicide 11~pect1 and witnesses."
Homicide detecUves, lt 1ald, had ''come to ac-
cept brealdn1 lhe law as part or their Job," and the
paper called for community action, lnv•U1at1on and criminal prosecution.
For four rnonlh.e, two veteran court reporters,
Jonathan Neumann and WUUam K. Marimow, re·
viewed three years of challenged homicide lnt.r·
rogations. A resulting four-part series reviewed
the inteJ'l'Ogation sy1tem, which was described by
a former detective as "a retum to the mtddJe aees."
DAILY P'll.OT .. J J
~--.. ~() f'Vfil. .. ~"'~J~•dr
. FIRST ANNUAL
ORCHID SHOW
Roger'• Gardena proudly present5
Steve Morgan from Stewarts of
PaSlldena a1 the guest lecturer for the
first An[\ual Orchid Show. MorgDn , a
graduata In Ornamental Hortlcul·
lure , has been with Stewarts for
seven years during which time he has
talaed over 400 different Orchids.
Many var1etles, In full bloom. are
evallt1ble at Roger's.
APRIL 22nd
Free lectures at llam lpm 3pm
Tbe Pulitzer award~d·tO·MuNelly, 30, w11 his
second for editorial oartoouina. He won the aame
prize in 1972. Cbaracteriatfo :ofbil 19'7'7 work was a
March 11 cartoon showing his own version or the
4RS 1040 form which asked, 1mon1 other lhings,
ho'W· na.any talldna chickens be owned and whether any of Uiem played the oboe.
A8 J\ RESULT OF THE 1erles, 15 poUce of· !\~~~'c:. indicted in tederat court and ftve in YOUR DAILY PILOT CAN BE
Jl~t~~t"!~ ,., .. , '"l_. .. ,, ~ -pllotot,......, RECYCLED. Orange CoJlat College
TOP REPORTER
0.ylord D. Shew
::,~r.i .. , •....,...,..,of*' 111111 ...... 11• ~ ... ,llO .. ,. .......... .-operates the official recycling
ComMel'llMy -WllllaM .. II,., col""'"''' fer Tiie New Y-Times, tw •r11~~1~~~~~,~~ ...... crl•1c of.,..,. ..... YOrll Times.'°' center for Costa Mesa.
* * * * * * .••ll<le• • .. lllMtar In 1'7, Md lllro~!:!!!J!lll~•.!!!!11~~~!!!,_ . ...:_:...:_:::..:..::_...=_ __ ..=:__~~-------
'Gin .Game' Wins Prize .4F Officer
NEW YORK CAP> -"Tbe Gin Game," a hit Broadway play about
two elderly residents of a Purslni
home by Donald L. Coburn, has won
the 1978 Pulitzer Prtie for drama.
The aw~d for d'on·ficUon went
Monday to Carl Satan for "The Dragons of Eden," s ~btitled
"Spet'ulation on the Evolution or Human Inlelligence."
WINNER OF. THE biography
award was Walter Jackson Bate for
hi s "Samuel Johnson" about the
English essayist and critic. It was
the set'ond Pulitzer for biography for
Bate, who won in 1964 for a book on
the poet John Keats.
In fiction, James Alan McPherson
won for "Elbow Room ," a collection
of short stories that continued his ex-
amination of the American black ex·
perience. The volume was a con-
tinuation of stories first published as "Hue-and Cry."
The Pulitzer Prize, administered >.by the trustees of Columbia Universi-
ty, amounts to $1,000 in each
cate1ory and is perbapa the moet
coveted American award In the artl
and JoUfl'la.lllm.
THE "COLLEC?BD Poems" of
Howard Nemerov, proressor of English at Washington University jn
St. Louis, won the Pulitzer for poetry.
The history award went to Alfred
D. Chandler Jr., who wrote "The Vis.
ible Hand: The Managerial Revolu -
tion in American BusineH."
Michael Colgrass was cited in the
music category with hi• "Deja Vu for
Percussion, Quartet and Orchestra,"
commissioned by the New York
Philharmonk and premiered here last October.
.E11ayist and children 'a author
E. B. Wbite received a 1pectal cita-
tJon for t.be full body of hla work over several decades.
F1118 Ban
Li. Douglas A. Dovey,
IW)p or Mr. and Mrs.
Arnold J. Dovey of 208
Via Ithaca, Newport
Beach, hu received a
regular commission in
the Air Force.
Dovey previous ly
he ld a reserve com -
mission as a Reserve Of-
ficers Training Corps graduate.
The lieutenant, a 1969
g raduate of Newport
Harbor High School, re-~elved his M.S. degree tn 1975 from USC.
Cell 142-5678.
,.ut • few words
to work for ou.
Col/,ege
Places 12
In Band
lt'l'akes
Twelve Saddleback
College instrumentalist.a
have been named to the
Western Division Com·
munity Colleae Honor Band.
The 75-member group
performed at the annual
band festival, hosted
this year by Saddleback,
sa id a colle1e spokeswoman.
Honor band muaiciana
repreaenUnc the colle1e
are J o di Thorp,
Capistrano Beach ; Dan
Heffernan and Michael
Malone. Laguna Beach:
Greg and Chris
La Bonte, Laguna Hilla;
Martin Mann, Lynne
McCleUan and Jonalben
Rem, Mlaaion Viejo;
Don Jackson, San Juan
Capistrano and Kevin
Laumback, Tustin.
NlJDESHOW
WINSCA.SE
ROME <AP> -A court ,
has dismllaed ob«scenity
charges against Ruth
Rennie, a 44-year-old
Australian dancer who
performed in the nude
on a Rome stage last
August.
I l accepted the arau·
ment that there's as
mut'h to be seen on the
beaches of Rome on an
August day.
aldwl ,
Pl8'noa ~'.1
and ft ::.v f ~ Orpana I
,,,..,~,,,,
LESSONS • IN8T .. UM~NfS
..... MUllC 1 ... CENl'IR , ...... ~ ... ··• ......... -
to Make Money
Ask Russ or Trudi.
w hether it's an opportunity fur yuur business or a new invest-
ment, Newport Equity Funds may JUSC give you the o ppor·
tunity to take advantage of it. We specialize ln ~condary real
estate financing for people who alre,1dy own prime residential
prope~ty and have a better-than-average income.
Jf you qualify, lee us help you arrange a loan for a substantial
percentage of your home's appraised value at attractive rates.
For details, call Russ Torge or rrud1 W.ilker .ic 848-2211 . They
work hard to help you gee the money you need!
' Newport Equity ~unds
.. SanOltgo 480 Camino Del Rio South. Suite 21 1
(714)297·7100
Ntwpot1 Btach
620'NfWP9rt Cer\t•r Ot1ve. Suite 211
(714)644-8824
l19una Hilla
25283 Cabot Road. Suite 107
(71 4)830-5700
Huntington leech
16168 Beach Blvd . Suite 261
(71 4)848-221 1
• hsht up your hlel • 1n Ille manner ot
urher emencans.
our 16" tall hshtet
1sc;ratred111
'Partchna clNr 1i.ss•
•add your own 001 an<I strike a 1111111
2.99
!Mia .........
• l·pt . 7-fl.QD.ol
lllht wthll•. rOM and
l!Mrty buraundy
ucn 99c
Rattan Wastebaskets
• lrom Ille pn~1pp1nei•
• n1turel wtleaHO!>ed
...... w ....... ~
Famous-Maker
Ki ng:~~r~tE!!!!!"~ k~~~!!~
aupply of prints, sohds. strtpes ind florets!
eacn 3.49
Kin1·Size Flat Sheets 5.99
QuHn-Slu Sheets 3.99
Twin or Full-Siu Shifts
twtn2.69 tun2.99
Stlndard & Kina-Sm Pillowcases
pair 1t1nd1rd 1. 99
pair king 2.49
Quilted Comforters
twin9.99
full 14.99
Queen/king 19.99
temw1re
from ltlly
rattan woven Into ..... _-"',_.,, c~ssially simple J
• crystal dNr sippen wtth OMply leceted bowls
wastebasMl!s
about 10".
I 1" and l 2"' I I
md11meter
10'" 1.99
11'"2.99
ir3.99
Wok~ing$tt
• tescy ideas lrom th• mystwtOU5 ~11
• hNV) &IUP carbon Steel WOk re)lS C!!'I •
rtat bottom tor a.ise ot ccoltint WCJOd.hanfled hd his snualy on tool
. 9.99
OPEN 'HUNTINGTON BEACH "°"· thru s.t.
Huntington Center sJn~o-7.
---..-~ utterty.i.pnt•
•chooMthe
ll'Ol ~I. win•. Cll•ms>ecne or the matching
10•1,.0l hlshbelll
.. cti 49c
01~~·
Ritt.an & Bamboo Stools
• l\4n't tllt low dllwn . .our~~ • concocted~ ol lllmbOo Ind ,.n.n
INN D1Nal1111*"dlet (or !tblnl rn 4 s1•1 • from about 8" c UI" 10 15" I 18"
smat1 8.99
medium 12. 99
larae l5.99
1xtr1 1arce 19.99
LAGUNA HILLS
Laguna HUia Mall
AJ.1 ~Y"'-Or CAREERS WORLD
Age No Barrier
ave of I~ F~ After TJl'a 'Holocaust' Job AdtJenture Calls
( CIREERS J By IOYCE L. KENNEDY
BONN, West 0UJDl.b1 tAP) -Tht West
rmao 1overnmel\t, aenaltive of lta lmace
ad, finds the television ftlm .. Holoc•uat" and . r portrayals of the Nui era deeply embarrua·
But oflkials realize C.bey can do little about
m except try to stem any a.otl·German Ude.
'1'hta t.s pa.rt of our bl.story, a dark part.
ere's no sense denyt.ni it," said one German of.
Jal as be thumbed a copy of Gerald Green's Mc>k. baaed on the four-part series he wrote for
J{BC· TC c Channel 4 tonight at 9 o'clock>.
~ "YEAU AGO, WE DISCUSSED wbetber
•ere was anything we could do about anti-German
•ma on late sbowa tn the States." be added.
••Finally we decided there wu nothlng." .
Tbe influential liberal West German
¥Wsmaguine Der Spiegel said West German
c&lplomat.s ln the United States (eared ~e series
91ight lead to "a new anti-German wave' amon1
Americans influenced by the film,
Government sources told The Associated
Press that information officers at West German
embassies in Washington and elsewhere were
briered on bow to respond to questions ·that may
arise rrom the rour episodes.
.. WE'RE NOT REALLY AFRAID of an anti·
German wave as a result or this series," said an
official, who asked not to be identified because of
bis position. "If it h.ad been produ~ed 10 years ago,
well, perhaps."
Throughout its 29-year history, West Germany
has sought to distance itself from the Nazi era and
bas paid millions In compensation to concentration
t'amp victims, most of them now living in Israel.
East Germany bas refused to pay individual
claims.
A recent public opinion poll by Ute German
magazine Quick found that more tban 90 percent of
the West German people wanted to forget the Naxi
past and hoped the rest of the world would as well.
r Another poll showed a surprising number of young
Germans had never heard of Hitler
camcs 6F THE BONN GOVERNMENT
aote that former Nazis risen to influential
posts within West German society, inclu<Jing
form~r ·Chancellor Kurt Kiesinger and Hanns-
Martin Schleyer, president of a powerful business.
association who wa.s kllled in a terrorls1 kidnap·
ping.
In a letter made public by the ruling Social
Democrat party la1:1t August, former Chancellor
Willy Brandt warned his successor Helmut
Schmidt of a growth or neo·Nazism in West
Germany. Much of the ultra-right ext'remism is
based in groups or World War· II veterans and
rightist worker groups called "comradeship
federations."
Some West German news papers and
magazines published accounts of the "Holocaust"
series depicting the plight of Jews in Hitler·
dominated Europe before and after World War U.
The first, episode scored ratings in three key cities
-Los Angeles, Chicago and New York -substan·
lially lower than those for the landmark series
-"Roots."
DEll SPIEGEL NOTED THAT the series ls
sometimes painfully accurate, but faults tbe film
Local Government
Seminar Slated
Nikki Granlick, teacher and Orange County
Department of Education counseling assistant,
will conduct a seminar on administrative practices
in local government from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. , Satur·
day at Saddieback College.
The event is a feature of Saddleback's Forums
for Learning Program, a spokesman said.
A S35 FEE, INCLUDES lunch and materials
and sboold be paid in advance at the community
services omce, building Q on campus. Or registra·
tion with fee can be mailed to Community Services
Registration, 28000 Marguerite Parkway, Mission
Viejo, 92675.
Highlight of the seminar is m<>St likely to be
the analysis and discussion of tbe Jarvis-Gann in·
itiative (Proposition 13).
THE SF.$10N WILL INCLUDE lectures, role·
playing techniques and group scenarios to help
participants gain a better understanding or ad·
ministrative and management techniques within
the public sector. said Ms. Gralnick.
Speakers include Dr. William Kraus city
manager or Norwalk; Stephen Blumberg,
mayor and assistant professor at Cal State Long
Beach; Edward Cibbarelli, Seal Beach chief of
p0lice, and attorney Anthony Carsola.
Ripper Manhunt
Rated Costliest
WAKE FIELD, England CAP> -The manhunt
for the Yorkshire Ripper bas become the biggest
and costliest m\lrder Uivestlgatlon ln tbe history of
1 Britlsb crime, West Yorkshire's Chief Constable
Ron Gregory says.
He told reporters that at least $2.7 mllllon bas
been spent in 2~ years ln the effort to find the
killer of seven pl'08t.itutes.
Most ol the money, be ·~~:.bas gone for over·
Ume, transport and food for pouce on the case. He
said authorities plan to wind down tbe investlga.
Uoo.
ENSENADA RACE HISTORY
30 Years of Winners
History, Anecdotes, Pictures
52 Pages -$5. """*' Ocean ~ AllOdatlon , .o. lox "N" t c.orona .. Mer, Ca. 92625
• because lt dOH not tell viewers about modem West
o~rmany "which abhors the cruelty of the past
and which ma)' in no way be compared with the
Naz! Germ41t1 of Adolf HiUer."
The Boon newspaper Ceneral-Am.ieaer, in a
dispatch ftom Washington entitled "Concentration
Camp Horror Between Commercials," accused
NBC of detailing the period's brutality so its series
would be a hit.
"The television comoan.v is in the relentless
competition of the "big three,· in tast place in
public esteem.'' the newspaper said
In Cabada. the leader of a German-Canadian
group called "Concerned Parents of German Des·
cent .. protested tbe television showing or
"Holocaust," saying it was a vehicle for Zionist
propaganda.
ERNSr ZUNDEL AND 30 others demonstrat·
ed Sunday outside lbe office of The Toronto Sun
which has been carrying excerpts from Green's
book and at a local bookstore where the book was
being sold. ln Hamilton, 12 persons picketed out·
side a Canadian television station airing the film.
Some 4,700 West Germans are still under in·
vestigation for war crimes, including 14 persons
standing trial in Dusseldorf in what may be the
country's last major war crimes proceeding. The
trial, underway for 28 months, has drawn little at·
tention in the German news media.
EAST GERMANY'S GOVERNMENT·
controlled news media.bave claimed for years that
a Nazi revival was immiment in West Germany
and continue to report rully on anti-Semitic incl·
dents within the country.
The Communist government, which considers
anti-N,ia.zi resistance fighters as national beroes,
claimt. there are up to 78,000 war criminals living
in West Germany.
ErtrfdN!d
Marvella Bayh, wife
of Indiana Sen. Birch
Bayh. who had a
mastectomy in 1971
and recently dis-
closed a recurrence
of cancer, says that
for all its trauma,
breast cancer can
e nri c h a marriage
and bring a couple
closer together.
DEAR I OYCE: I am _. Rn ol
tbe adveatare I waat &o pune bot
bate tadluttou ID I.be folJowb11:
eraf&1 ••d bobblet, plaata. flea
market. Clft lllop, ud IO f~. I am
a an.lor dtba lD the 7411& year. I am
le ,-Md lleaJda and my amblCIOll la
etlll lllP-Have tbe loeadoa ... teen· •le ,,..._, to pllt to work. Wlla&
caa I do wtUloat maklD1 a bl& IDvest·
mea&, wbklt I do M& bavef
-G.N., Memplab, Teu..
You're delighlfui. How about an
"anything goes" ahop ! Cut your in·
vestment in inventory by buildiag it
around crafts and flea-market
merchandise left with you on COO•
slgnment.
This means you pay suppliers only
arter the gooda are sold. Your
grandsons could drum up suppliers
and customers by distributing
posters aod handbills.
TWO BUSINESS BRIEFS. '2 each,
may help: "Toy and Hobby-Craft
Stores." and "Gift Shops." Order
from the Small Business Reporter,
Box 37000, San Francisco, Calif.
94137 .
---------Choosing an adventure in business . Value Down
VISALIA <AP) -The
drought caused a 1 per·
cent det'line in the gross
value or Tulare County's
c rops last yea r ,
Agricultural Com ·
mi ssio ner Clyde Churchill reported.
is like choosing any career: the ven·
ture should fit well with your values,
interests, abilities and personality -
as well as with your financial re·
sources. "How To Pick the Right
Small Business Opportunity" by Ken·
neth J . Albert <McGraw·HiU, 19771 is one or the best among the current
high tide of business books.
F OR A. R UN·DOWN on the
legalities, see "Legal Handbook For
Small Business" by Marc J . Lane
<AM ACOM, 1m). Ubnrles can give
you publishers' addresses wbeo
books aren't available locally.
READER SERVICE: For its
March issue, Money ma1uine aaked
26 experts which businesaes are most
likely to succeed or fail in today's
economy. The maguine -notinl
C.bat about 30 percent or all small
businesses fall durln& their firs\
year, and 50 percent succumb witb1D
two years -reduced the choices to a
list or the 10 best prospects and Ute 10
worst.
If you'd like a reprint of the ''Ten
Best and Worst Small Buainel8es."
enclose a 24-cent stamped, self·
addressed, envelope with you.t re-
quest to Joyce Lain Kennedy, at lh1'
newspaper. Ask for "Money tiuainess
reprint."
Boarder Slay8
One, Wounds Two
ELIZABETH, N.J. <AP>-Aroom·
ing house boarder shot one woman to
death and wounded two other people
before injuring himself.
Michael Mitchell, 20, allegedly shot
two fellow boarders after an argu.
ment Monday and then ran down the
street and fired a shot Lnto a store, in·
juring a third man, police Sgt. John
Winters said.
Mitchell ran Into an alley and shot
himself in the head, Winters said.
can
14
MG.TAR
0 .9MG.NIC.
17
MG.TAR
1.3MG.NIC.
18 ' l::G 1 I,..,., I 'I
MG.TAR
1.1 MG.NC.
13
MG.TAR
l.OMG.NIC.
-' ' I ~' 'I '-1 .,
11
18
MG.TAR
1.2MG.NIC.
1~·a
17
MG.TAR
l.OMG.NIC.
Taste
Kent Golden Lights
Only 8 mg. tar
MG.TAR
1.2MG.NIC.
, .. .
Lower in tar
than all these brands.
MG.TAR
0 .9MG.NIC.
12
11
16
MG.TAR
t1 MG.NJC
14
MG.TAR
toMG.NtC.
18
MG.TAR
t.2MG.NIC.
12
Source of tar end nicotine disclosure above is FTC Repon August 19n.
Of All Brands Sold: lowest tar1 0.6 mg."tar," 0.05 mg. ni<:otine:
Kant Golden Ughtsi Kings R1gular-B ffiQ."tar," 0.6 mg. nicotine:
Kings Mtnthol-B mg."tar," 0.7 mg. nitotine av. per cigarette.
FTC Report August 19n.
Warning 1 The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
I
...
•
. . ~
•
I
r
l
. . . '
INSIDE: •Co"'la •Stocks
•Movies •Television
I Cllbs Did BonhalD Favor,
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Cin·
clnnati'a BUI Bonham believes
be'a dlacol/ered · a baseball
pitcher's version of paradise.
''( ltt'lew the Reds were good,''
Bonhasn said Monday after re-eordlfll an 8-2 victory over the 14>• Aiac•lft Dodters. "But I
dld.n't tealir.e just how-good Wltil ljoined tbelll.''
. Bonham, traded from the
Chicago CUbs lo Cincinnati last
winter, was staked to an 8-0 lead ovet the Dodgers en route lo his
third victory in as many de·
cislons this season.
''I asked to be traded, and the
Cubs dJ4 me a real favor by
trading me to the Reds. This club is something." r
Bonham shut out the Dodgers
through seven innings or the
first 1978 meeUng between the
two National League West
archrivaJS. He gave up two runs
in the elgbth mning, then gave
way lo reliever Dave Tomlin
with the bases loaded and no one
out in t.be ninth.
Angels Win
OnTanana's
12-hitter·
SEATTLE C~-The Calirornia Angel patched
Seattle starter RI •Honeycutt
quicker than the Mariners could
solve Frank Tanana, winding up
with 'a 7-3 American League victory.
Tanana, 3·0, gave up 12 hits in
n~ innings Monday night. He
was replaced by Paul Hartzell
after yielrung a two-run homer to Bill Stein and a single to
former Maler Del High star Dan
Meyer in the ei~hth inning.
By. then, however, he had a
four-run lead following homers
A11g1eb Slat~
AllO....•ICMl'Ca .... 11MI
A~t 11 Calllornle et S..tltle I JO tt.m.
Aprll It Cal•loml• .i seeui. 1 JO o ,,.
Aortt 11 Callloml••I MlMHOte s JSo m
by Don Baylor, who drove an
three runs. and llrian Downing.
First baseman ~on Jackson
contributed four hits. including a
run -scoring double which
capped a two-out, four-run rally
in the third inning.
Angels coach Bob Skinner said
Jackson's third-inning double
·'igl"lited our whole attack."
··when you have already giveh
up 12 hHs, you don't have too
much say about staying in,"
Tanana said.
"It's been a long lime since
I ·ve seen so many lerthanded
ballers," he added. "I've gone
five or six starts without seeing
a lefthander.
"I don't know ir I'd insist on
throwing that many lefthanders
against Frank Tanana, but that
remains lo be seen," he said
with a wink. adrung that he may
have to mak e some
adj ustme.nts.
The Angels wrapped up their
scoring in the eighth when they
bunched three singles and a
fielder's choice lo score two runs
of relievers Steve Burke and
Jim Todd.
California manager Dave
Garcia said Jackson probably
would be in the lineup tonight
against righthander Paul
Mitchell. Jackson normally
faces only leflhanded pitchers.
"Jackson's n ever had an
opportunity to play every day."
Garcia said. "I'm as guilty of it
as anybody."
Seattle manager Darrell
Johnson said Tanana's "best
pitch Is a fastball jamming a
r ightha nded batter. I put
lerthanded batters in the lineup
because of my past experience."
Johnson pointed out that eight
of the 12 hits were by southpaws
See ANGELS, Page 82
Tomlin ended the game Jn a
hurry, setting the next three Los
Angeles bitters down ln order as
the Reds moved into a one-game
lead over the Dodgers In the
young NL West race.
Cincinnati ripped three
Dodgers pitchers for 15 hits, in·
D~Skate
AM ~-uec .... mei
~" "andMlltl el ..... Alleel• 7:2J P.1111. "«Wit" CJnt'4>nall .ti Los~ 1.2Sp."" ~1120"-IDflM.._"-IK 1 Up.a
eluding eight -and six runs -
off starter and loser Burl
H~on.0-2.
Joe Morgan had three doubles
and scored four runs for the
Reds, one of them on a suc-
cessful double steal. Johnny
Bench bad two-run scoring hits,
and Dave Concepcion had three singlesandanrbi.
The Dodgers' runs came in the
eighth, on Rick Monday's fourth
homer of the year and a fielder's
choice grounder by Bill Russell
'I
that scored Jobnn,v Oates .
A former UCLA baseball star
who used to be a Dodgers ran. Bonbam gave up five hits,
walked four and struck out nine.
"I f!ol a blister on my throw-
ing band i.n the fifth inning," he'
said, "and that made me a little
wild late in the game. But when
you get that many runs. it
makes it easy.
"And I felt real happy about
the game because .some or my
fami ly were in the stands
watching.··
The two clubs meet again
tonight at Dodger Stadium. with
the Reds' Fred Norman, l·O, go-
ing against Don Sutton, a l$0 l·O.
The outcome of the first game
of the season between the teams
was either quite important, or
hardly important at all, depend-
ing on who was talking.
"It's just another game," said
Reds manager Sparky An·
derson.
"It was important for us to get
off to a good start," said Cincin-
AP~
DAN MEYER TAGS LATE ON THE ANGELS' RICK MILLER.
Valbuena Sigm
Edmonton Contract
Former Fountain Valley High
and Orange Coast College
quarterback Gary Valbuena has
signed a proressional football contract w1lh Edmonton of the
Canadian Football League.
Valbuena was originally ·draft.
ed by the Miamj Dolphins rour
years ago after playing two
seasons at·the University or Ten·
nessee. But he elected to spend
two years with the Southern
California Sun o( the World
Football League.
Valbuena was with Miamt two
years ago, but was traded to
Tampa Bay and then cut just
prior to the start or the regular
season. He again tried out with
Miami last season, but was re-
leased again.
WUBa .. T racled
SAN FRANCISCO
Delvin Willia ms. the running
back displaced by the San Fran-
cisco 49ers' acquisition or 0 J.
Simpson, was traded to the
Miami D(;tp~ Monday.
The Dolphins gave up wide re-
ceiver Freddie Solomon and de·
fensive back Vern Roberson
along with their first and fifth.
round picks in the coming Na-
tiona l Football League draft.
I.SC Get• /tfar 4 aeetti
LOS ANGELES -Forward
Leonel Marqu.etti 'of Verbum Dei
lligh has become the second
member of that team to sign a
basketball letter or intent with
Southern California. coach Bob
Boyd announced Monday.
Maurice Williams, who along
with Marquetti paced Verbum
Del to a 27-2 record this past
season, signed with the Trojans
last week.
The 6·7 Marquetti averaged
See BRIEFS, Pa,,ge 82
natl seeond baseman Morgan. "l
know some people have been
saying thls first series doesn't
mean much. But t his game
tonight ls every bit as important
as the games we'll play against
the Dodgers ln September.··
"It was just one of those
games," said Oodsera manager
Tom Lasorda. "I'm glad that's
out of our system."
CINCINNATI LOS.utoaUS
...... 3tl
KeMC!pltl c;.111ev r1
Mo<oen2o
Avrbcl\ lb
FOS1 ... II
Orlhsftll>
&encl\<
CnC1KnU
C..ronim <
tsonl\em p
Tomllnp
.. , ...
4 I I 0
I 0 0 0
4 000
S410 0000
4 0 1 I
3 I 11
j I 11
4 I J I S 0 2 I
3000 0000
l.opet ?b
AliSMll U
ASmll'!I rt
8IWll• ti C..1 3b
Ger"9y 11>
8•1l•t" Germenp
Mol• pit
MOllOep <I Yeeoe< <
Oetn< i...<•y pll
HOOIOl>P
Houq" P Oevetltlll fMrtnt pt,
.. , ...
JOOO •00 0 4000
0000
f 0 I 0
• 0 1 0
1000 0000
I 0 0 0
4 I 1 I
1 0 I 0
I I I 0
1 0 0 0
0000
2000 0000
1 0 0 0
Total• JI 8 IS ' Tot"" l2 1 s I
CtntlMall ?04 101 000-.
Lo• A119e1n 000 000 010-2 E Rvuett, B•~tr , Contptlon.
OP -Cln<lnn•ll I . LO• Ano••·· 1 .
LOB Ctnc;lnn.1110, Ult Angtf" I. 18-0.llKMft,
Benc;I\. MCWQeft 3 HR-Monciey W .. 58-MorQen,
Orlenen S-BonNm
CINCINNATI
IP H a E• ea SO
Bonllem IW,:Mll t S 2 1 • t
Tomlln I O O o o 2
LOSAlllOELES
Hooton IL.O 11 ,.., • ' ' , '
HOUQll 4'1> S 1 1 f 1
G<lrm•" 1 1 O o O o
P8-YMQW. T-1:D .A-.S11.
t
,,,, ......
THOUSANDS JAM START OF THE BOSTON MARATHON.
Rodgers Pushed ·at Elld .. :
...
Laguna's Petersen Places 14th in Marathon
BOSTON CAP) -Bill Rodgers
put another trophy on display in
his local sporting goods store to-
day after winning the Boston
Marathon in the closest finish of
the c lassie's 82-year hlstorv.
"What was unique about this
race was that I had a guy on my
tail right lo the finish line," the
30-year-old former sc hool
teacher said Monday after win-
ning the Boston Marathon in 2
hours. 10 minutes, 13 seconds, only lti secon<1S otf the course
record he set in 1975.
Rodgers wasn't kidding. He
was actuaJJy chased to the finish
line by unheralded Jeff Wells, a
23-year-old seminary student
fro m Dallas. Wells charged
..horn e in 2 : 10. lS.
'Tm grateful to God, but I
s hould have pushed more,"
Wells said without disappoint-
ment over his vain bid to over-
take Rodgers. "I can't be disap-
Poi n t ed. In fact. I 'm iust
grateful that I finished second."
Sue Petersen or Laguna Beach
finii.hed 14th among the
women , clocking 2 :55.15.
Petersen . a 32 ·year -old
housewife and mother of three.
crossed the finish line 1 l
minutes behind the winning pace
or Atlanta's Gayle Barron, who
was timed in 2:44.52.
Rodgers, winner of four
marathons last year , although
he was forced to drop out after
18 miles in Boston, wore down
his chief nvals in the field of
4,212 starters in the 26-mile,
385-y a rd Ho pk in ton-to· Boston
run.
The victory gave Rodgers vic-
tories in the three most impor·
tant world marathons in the past
seven months. He previously
wo n the New Yo rk City
Marathon last October and he
won al Fukuoka. Japan in
December
Frank Shorter. the 1972 Olym-
pic marathon champion and the
1976 runner-up in Montreal, was
the first lo will Monday, falling
back half way through the race,
finally settling for a 23rd.place
finish in 2: 18.15.
Finland's Eda Tikkanen faded
o.. the three hills, including
famed Heartbreak Hill about six miles from the finish, but hung
toug h and finished third in
2:11.15.
Wells moved up from sixth
.
SJJ~PETERSEN.
place at the halfway mark a.Ad
just missed catching Rodgers
with a b)azing finishing kick in
Ute last few miles.
.Jack Fu l tz. form e r
Georgetown star and winner of
the 1976 Boston run. was fourth
in 2: 11.17: followed by Randy
Thomas. a Rodgers protege, in
2 : 11.25, and New Zealand's
Kevin Ryan, who tried to keep
pace with Rodgers for 17~
miles.
"I'm super pleased," Rodger$
said after becoming lhe first
American to win Boston twice
since World War 11. "I'm happy:
At the finish l didn't know if~
would make It. lt was a tougb
pace. I was really hurting. lt
was just about the harde~
marathon of my life." _
Rodgers was cheered on by.
countless thousands who
jammed streets for the enttre
route ... .,
I. 8111 II~ Mtt,_, Men., 2:10.U.1. Jeff'
Welll, Qe•• ,.10 1S. l. £Abe 11..-, "'"'-' 1 n U. •· JeCll FUll:r,, Fr .. lln. Pa,. 2:11.17 S. 11-y T-., llollllln, 2:11.2$. 6. KWlll R,._,
Hew ZHI-. 2 II 4 . I. Ooft ICM'dlMIQ, ~.
1 ,. 01 .•. -l..Od•k k, 0•11••· 2:14.12 ••• Y•l•k• 0Teu1 .... 1, J epen. 1:U.1•. 10. Tom "'-'"'119. 8'-"flelO, ~J., 1:14.44. 11. lltnll
OVrdllfl. ~Ille, o. .. 2:1.5.02. It.....,,
Dople, C.ntret Fells. A. 1., 2: U.SS. U. Jell"
04mkk. 8..itteOote. Vt., 2: 1).5'. lf. I.ff Fldlw.
SlcM\t MOUf!feln, a... 2 "·"· u. Jofln vi.-, Ro<kp 11111, COl>n., 1 16 J1 •
WOMEN
1 G•yle 8¥'1111, AllMlle, 2:"'-52. 2. """"y
O.Mou, Los Altos, CMlf •• 2:4S.U. 3. J-ICllhon,
N•w York. 1 fl 12. f . Kim -nftl, lle<ifte, W"·•
1 41 SJ. i. u"'le Pedrt,..n, New Yoo , 1: .... .0. •· Cenoy He•rn, Cerml<lleef, 2:'1.1S. I. Ellie
OeMellClonc•. Briu.11, 2.suo. t. Linde Hemen, TOPeno•. 2:~.10. 10. o. Oline•. Fort Ltuele,.,..•,
Fie .• 1:$U S. 11. Oebqnill avuertlekf. a..-.-.
2 ·$J.SO. f1. C. 8revnll, wu..:110r t..o<k.s, Cf:loWI., .i,
1·54 10. U. CH.Mfetle Aftd<!Men, Sun V•llty, I
IGtlle, 2:54.U. 14. SW "9 .... wn. uo-llfftll,
2·ss. u . 1$. LYM P9tronet1e, Bo<ilder, 2:5'.00.
Saturday at IJCLA
Bush Relays Set
LOS ANGELES CAP> -Because the Ml. San Antonio Relays
scheduled for the coming weekend were cancelled, UCLA's track
and field coach Jim Bush has organized a substitute meet to give
athletes much-needed competition.
"It could be an outstanding meet," Bush says of the first and
probably last Bu.sh Relays to be held Saturday at UCLA's Dr~e
Stadium.
"My phone bas been ringing constantly, wilb guys wanting to
enter," Bush said Monday.
The refays at Mt. San Antonio College had to be postponed
because prolonged winter rains had hindered completion or a new track surface.
Athletes from UCLA. Southern Cal, Stanford, Wasbingtoa,
Long Beach State, UC Irvine and CaJ State <Los Angeles) are
entered in the Bush Relays, along with club teams.
It's a way for the athletes to establish qualifying marks prior
to their conference meets and the National Collegiate Albletlc
Association meet.
Although the Mt. Sac Relays were cancelled, an event being
retained is the marathon, wlllch begins Saturday at 7 :30 a .m. in
fro'nl of the Mt. San Antonio CoUege stadium.
I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Martin Threatens to Slap Weaver
~ NEW YORK CAP> -The chargingtheBaltimoredugout. fromthedugout. <Weaver's) race at home plate •
umpires working today 's The Orioles had kayoed a "Weaver said something like andifthatliU.lem1dgetsaysone
EARL WEAVER
r
I
Baltimore·New York Yankees struggling CaUish Hunter while ·We • re gonna get you ·.·' word I'm going to slap him just
baseball game might have been building a 4-1 lead in lhe fifth Brinkman disclosed. "t wasn't like you'd slap a girl.
wise to bring a boxing referee inning and Doug DeCinces. the sure who he m eant, but I "Tell him he'd better come
with them for the pre-game firs t batter Gossage faced, assume It was Yankees catcher out withoy_t his g l asses on
meeting with managers Billy greeted the high.priced free Thurman Munson. r thought that because nr deck him right at
Martin and Earl Weaver. agent reliever with a two-run statement warranted a warning home plate. It's the fi.rsl Ume
8 o th m an agers h ave homer. ll was lhe third home and it was only fair to warn both I've ever heard a manager aay
relatively short fuses that were run off Gossage in as many of them." he was gQing to throw at
litduringthesevenlhinningor appearances and the second Martin, however , took somebody and get away with Baltimore's 6·1 victory Monday time he ha s been rudely exception. ff e threatened to it."
night when New York reliever welcomed by the first batter he flatten Weaver if the s ubject We aver· s v er s Ion was
Rich Gossage fired wha\ the faced . came up durlng today 's somewhatdifferent.
0 r i o les thought was a Two innings later, Dempsey pre-game confab. "Munson was the guy I was
"message" pitch over lbe head took a vicious cut, missed and "Weaver said tr Brinkman hollering at, I'll tell you that, but
or Rick Dempsey. almost fell down from the force dldn 't warn me, they would l never said we'd retaliate," he
The third man in the ring was or his swing. A subsequent pitch throw at Munson," Martin said. "l asked Brinkman, 'What
home plate umpire Joe salted over bis head lo the growled. "Brinkman should aboutlt!'Hesaiditwasnothlna
Brinkman, who Issued a backstop. As the teams changed have thrown him oul of the soltoldMunson,'Youbetlerget
warning to both benchea and sides after the lnnlng, Brinkman game for saying that. I'm 10Ln1 out there and tell Gossage to
then bad to restrain Martln from summoned summoned Weaver to say that the rtaht to his See MAllTIN, P11e 82
\
l
BILLY MARTIN
..
r
I
'
.
j . " . .
...
I ' . . . . .. .
~
: ' ' . ..
Safe "" a Stretela
Butch ·wynegar <left> of the Minnesota
Twins returns safely to the base, narrowly
beating Oakland's Mike Edwards, who
stretched and fell while trying to double up
Wynegar after a line drive out. Looking on
js Oa kla nd s horts top Mar io Guerrero.
Oa kland won, 7 -2.
MUiiigan Hospit~liZed
Saddhback C"Re Coach H_aa ~ion
Checking the college scene:
Saddleback College basketball
coach Bill Mulligan is recuperat·
ing at San Clemente Hospital to.
day following s urgery t.o remove
a kidney st.one.
Mulligan suffered a painful at-
tack Friday and had the opera-
tion Saturday afternoon. He says
he expects t.o be in the hospital a
few more days.-
.. I h a d no warning
whatsoever," says Mulligan.
Oran•e Coal& bu ~me oat on
top in Its bead·&o-bead athletic
eacoanten Wftla Golden West
darln& &lie lm·18 ldllool year.
saya llm Car1aett, Coaat'a pabUellt.
"We beat them lo football,
basketball, &eaals and goH, aad
spll& WiC.b &bem lD buebaU and volleyball," says Carnett.
L11t year Golden West bad a
10-4 edge.
. Saddleback College's Tom
: Lloy will attend Boise State and
Tim Shaw is headed for Loyola
t<.:bicago) on basketball
scholarships. Lloy is a former
E d ison . High ( Huntin g tort'
Beach) standout while Shaw
prepped at Canyon High in
Anaheim.
Another Gaucho. Artie Green.
will s ign a letter of intent to at·
CRAIG
SHEFF
tend Marquette University. but
there's still an outside chance of
the former Taft lllgb <Bronx.
NY) star returning to Sad·
dleback for bis sophomore
season. It depends on how many
guard$ Marquette will have for
next season.
Also. Tim Knight probably
will sign with Hilo, Hawaii,
Craig Stahl leans toward Cal
Diablos, Mesa in Crucial Tiff
A South Coast League baseball showdown is on tap Wednesday
afternoon (3: 15) at Costa Mesa
High where the Mustangs (~3)
will entertain league leader Mls· sion Viejo C6·2).
On the mound for Costa Mesa
will be lefty Dale Boucher, ac-
cording lo c oach Jim Gmur
while Mis.'Sion Viejo coach Ro~
Drake says he is not sure who
he·n start -Ed Mccann or J eff
Newton.
In the first round Mission Vie·
jo captured a 3-2 decision In nine
innings, ttlghlighted by a Mk
sion Viejo pop fly which Gmur
says his Mustangs turned into an
inside-the-park homer.
Slate <Bakersfie~) or Cal P~ly
<SLO> and ruck Patterson is ex·
peeled t.o move on to Sacramen-
to State.
Guard Rich Mc Elrath bas not
made up bis mind with three or
lour major schools in hot
pursuit.
Anothe r area JC player,
OCC's Kevin Kar kut, wi ll
transfer t.o Cal Lutheran.
DISAPPOINTMENT DEPJ'.:
UC Irvine and OrHge Coast
baseball teams bave dertnltely
been big dlsappolntmenta Wa
tprtng.
UCI, ander lts $1 a year ~cb
Eddie Allen, baa a poor 10.11 re-
cord while Mike Mayne'• OCC
club was 13·10 .<4·5 la Soatb-
Coast Conference play) e11&ertq
&oday•a game with Cerritos.
Both coaches bad predicted
bauer aeaaona, bat It baa beea
anything but that. Onnge Cout
was even ranked No. 1 lD tbe
sta&.e prior &o tbe seaaon.
OCC'• spotty play baa beeD a
aarprlse, bat UCI'• baa not.
Both eoaebes can point &o their
pitching staffs as the key reuoa
for tbelr lnabWty to Uve ap to
pre-season prognosis.
Ron Meridith. formerly of
Golden West. leads the nation's
collegiate pitchers in earned run
average, according to the latest
NCAA statistics.
Meridith, a left-hander with a
5·1 r ecord, has given up just
three earned tallies in 49 innings
this season for Oral Roberts U for
a brilllant0.55ERA.
AUTO
LEASING
THE WAY
IT
AUTO BE!
Baseball Standings
fr.. th ..,.,ffcHt
Dl••••d J•a.llee
C•Hat ..... w.ta Y, to ••r ••• or •s•d ............. tlh ,_. ,.... .......... .. .... .....,to ..... ,...
Today!
•Friendly
•Fair
•Efficient
•Economical
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
W L Pct. GB
7 2 .778 Detroit
Boston
Milwaukee
New York
Baltimore
Cleveland
Toronto
6 3 .667 1
6 4 .600 1~
4 s .444 3
4 6 .400 3'h
3 s .375 3'h
2 7 .222 s West Division
Kansas City 7 t .875
Angels 7 3 . 700 Oakland 7 3 .700
Chicago 4 5 .444
Minnesota 6 8 .429
Seattle 4 10 .285
Texas 2 7 .222 .__., •• k«ft
1
l
3'h
4
6
s·~
Det roit 10. Oii~ • c1e ... 1...o •· Ttu• o O•klend 1, Ml--. 2 B•lllmorw •. New v-1 Boslllfl t. M11w.,. .. 2 ca11tor111a 1. S.elU• > K•ntu Oty 3, Toronto 1
T.U.,.•-.S
Cnlc~ ISt..-.. 1.0) al Oelroll ISlalon ~II
T .. as •I 0.WIWICI, JIC)d., rein
••lllMOt'll co. MartlllH loll •I New y-CGvklry 1.0l
.:,11•..,k• {~Ml el llotlOfl l!clttriNy
0.ll•ftCI llM'IQ!lltd~ll •I Mlnnotota Cl.ah\ 1.01
ICan tH Cll1 CSpllllorlf 2·0l al Torof\lt (Ymencm ~21
11
C.11111°""9 llbM Ml • SNtti. IMllC...,1O11,
----1'•0-. Oat.lend el ¥1......,.e ¥11• ... l• M Bollllfl
Ntw Ytrk •I T-C.lllOfllla at SH IU
0.lroll ., a.....,, °"'' °'"'" "'*"'~
NA'RONAL LEAGUE
East Dlvlalon
W L Ptt .. GB
P hiladelphia 5 3 .625
Chicago 5 4 .556 'h
New York 6 5 .545 'h
St. Louis 5 5 .500 I
Montreal 4 4 .500 1
Pittsburgh 3 7 .300 3
West Division
Cincinnati 8 3 . 727
Dodgers 6 3 .667 l
San Francisco 6 3 .667 l
Houston 4 6 .400 3'h
San Diego 2 5 .286 4
Atlanta I 7 .125 5'h
~··scS.n l'r...c:IKO $, Al .. 111• I
Phlt-lllflle •. Pttltbuf'Qll 2 Cincinnati I. I.OS Angeln 2 New Y0<ll 6. S.. Llult 2
Oflly l>!lrMl K...,.,ltd , ... , .• a.-
,..onlrtal lR-" M l al Olluiqo CBurrls 1.0I
Phll•d•IPlll• ICArllon 1·1) ., P11ts1>1iro11
!Blyteven 0-11. n
Ne w York l8r11hert 0·11 •I SI. Lo11l1
l"esmu-1-11. 11
HOUtlOfl CJ. Nlellro 0.1) el Sell 0'99o (INnrf 0.Jl,n
Gln<l11Mtl INonNn 1.01 et Los Anteln (Wlllft
1.01,"
All•nla IH•M•ll 0·01 •t Sen l'ren<ltco IMonltfwxo HI. n ........... ~
H-Y-ttM.l..OUlt
1'\on4rHl el (Jllc..go
1111 ....... Sen "·-·-..... ,on et Sen Ole9o
Cl"<lllMll el L0t A•IH
Only 0...,.U<'hlduled
LEASING •••
ALL MAKES
ALL MODELS
NEW
600 W. COAST HWY.• NIWPOIT IUCH • 64MJ'2
OR
USED
' TRACK I SOCCER I MISCELLANY
~e Showdowri on Tap
FouDtatn "•U•1 Jfitb 'a
Barou .laVlde N•E Harbor lflcb •• , 848)' .• ~
Leap ti'Mk 8llCI .a~ ~ a dual meet .,._.. ~...,
the cln:ult powers.
AL a take li ttte ctual meet
champa..bip wltb tb• OTel'all Jeaioe l..tmp~ eUU lo bf
declcled May $ • Rwa~
S.ach. . The iovM.lni ~roa• .....
·hurdler, 1prt-.ter an~ l~>lll
jumper Troy Blevitaa, dis~
ace Brlaa ApJ>eU ( 1:~.J let' 1871) • enc\ the vei'taUle t>erildi1
Romine (45.~10'-' in ith• IODI .
Jump). ..
Miaatng. boftYet', .. 1prt111er
WUIJe Gittens .... ~~dld not com· pete to the uaro111 • la.at out·
in&. ••not at practice MGDda1. ancl ls not expected to
against Newport Wednesd • e
Newport Harbor, w3· a.s
WOil I.be. Suuet League cba,m.
ptonsbip U1ree of the past four
years, COUQt.el"s witb tu •Pted lD
Cbris Corum (10.1, 32.3, •.t),
Frdok Vencllk C49:'7 440 and 1 :~.s 880), Wayne Kaapare~
<10.2~ 22.6 and 37.8 in the ,ac;w
hi.traJH); aDd Steve Dawaon
( 14.8 •Del •. 3 in the burdlel).
FV coach Bill 'nlolnPIOD says
Both Teanu 2-1
SUrf, Whitecaps
Tangle Tonight
The California Surf, ~kine to
rebound from ltl ftnt loea of the
season, wm host the Vancouver
WhUecaps in a North American
Socce r Leag ue outing al
Anaheim Stadium to night
(7:30).
Vancouve r . leading the
Western Dtvi&loo of the NaUooal
Conference wltb 19 points and a
2·1 WOft·lolt record, .rebounded
from an = 1ame loea t.o poet two tmp ve victories.
Wblle the Surf record la also
2·1, it ii tied for second in the
American Coo!'erence Western
"'Dlvt.ton with Oakland with 15
and teamed with youn1er
brother Bob. gives the 'C•J18 a solid central defeue.
Bob played witb. Re~ in
the English Le11ue for five
seasons before returning bome
to play with Vancouver.
Goalkeeper Parkes played ln
nearly 400 sames with
Wolverhampton of the Enalisb
League. He stands l ·f and
weighs 200-pounds and ls CJDe ot
the biggest men in the NASL.
the sprint.a are cruclal to bis
team'• cbaneu. wblle Newport
Harbor coach 8ob Hailey qys
sueu11 in Ute llO ud low hurdles 11 a crUlcaJ area.
Venclik and Appell have fden.
Ucai 1:56.S besta ln tb•l80 with
others l n cludtn1 Valens
Hernandei (2:00.0) ud Steve
Brown (2;01) of Pounlaln Valley
and Newport~• Cllarln SteaJt
<1 :59.8).
Blevins 00.l) and Romine
U0.2> are eow!tdd on bY Foun.
taln Valley to b,.uk up the
Newport Harbor doaUnanee in Uaeapdntl,
OONLEAVEY
Leavey
polnta. San Dleio leads with a
.... 4-0 record and 33 points.
Coach JobD Sewell of the Surf
says be does not contemplate
any changes in the atarting
lln,up tonight. However,
Anselmo Vlclolo and Malcolm
Lord~ appeared In Sunday'S loss to the Azteca. •
Resigns
AtEdiso -
Vancoover baa five starters
back from laat season lnclUding
leadln1 aoorers Derek Ponee
and Bua Parsooa; ·goalie Phil
Parkes and the Lenarduui
brothers, Sam and Bob.
Parsons is a Canadian and
was a member or Canada·s
World Cup team. He tied with
Possee for the points lead last seuon In scoring with 26 on 10
goals and six asslsts and bad 79
shota on goal.
Poaaee bad 11 goals and four
assJsta and is a veteran of the
En1Uah League where be played
with Leyton Orient.
Sam Lenarduzzi ls a naUve of
Italy but erew up ln Canada and
wu captain ot the World CUp
team. He la that country's most
honored International player
Aftel' two 1.lraiabt abut.outs, ,
the Surf will be tJ)inl to ~
the scoring punch u well aa ihe
· midlield defense. •
"We bad a breakdown at mid
field and let them <the Aztecs>
get through to score," Sewell said. ·
In three games, the Surf has
been able t.o score only one goal
each time .out but bu recorded
two victories. One of the goal
scores came on a tlebreaker
shootout. leaving the Surf with
only two goals scored from the
field in three games.
Dave Jokerst iD goal had four
goals scored again.st him after
two sbut<Rrts and will be trying
to re-group against the
Whitecaps tooigbt.
By aoomrc..UON Otl•~--Don Leayey has resigned bis
position as varsity basketball
coach al Edison <Huntington
Beach > High School where be
bas led the Chargers the past
two years to a 25·24 won-loss
mark, including a berth in the
CIF 4-A ptayoffs thi• past
season.
No replacement has been
selected and athletic direct.or
Ly man Clower says, "We'll
start k>olting rllht away and I
would assume we'U be asked lo
stay within the cli.ltrtct, but I
don't know that for a fact, yet."
Leavey, who succeeded the
late Lionel Purcell with 18 years
SPORTS BRIEFS. • •
of previous coacblac experience.
says. ··1 im resiping due to two •
considerations. Pint, is one of a
personal nature. Secondly, I
think it is best for the boys
within the program.
Colltbaaed From Page 81
17.8 polnts and 16 rebounds in
1977 · 78. He wu one of the most
highly recndted prep basketball
playen in Southern California.
...._T11•1Ma
HOUSTON-Ove Be ngtson
scored a 7-6, 3-6, 6· l upset over
Eddie Dibbs Monday In flrst
round play of the World Cham.
pionship Tennis tournament.
Brian GotUried defeated Pal
DuPre 4-6, 6-1. 8-2 while Ken
Rosewall topped WoJtek Fibak,
7·5. 6-7. 6-2. Meanwhile, Jeff Borowiak de-
fealed Brian Teacher, 7 -5, 6-3,
Dick Stockton downed John
Lloyd, 6·3, 6-0. Zeljko Franulovic
eUuunated tic>b He witt, 4·6, 6-0,
6·2 and Tom Okker defe ated Tom Leonard, 6-1, 6-0. Paul
Kronk defeated Colin Dibley 3-6,
6-0, 6-1.
C'Aa••nQaBtWt
PULLMAN . Was h . Watblngton State quarte rback
J ack Thompson, the nation's
rourth·leading passer last
season, apparently will have to
undergo shoulder surgery.
ANGEIS •••
CoaUnued From Page B t
-three each by Bruce Boehle
and Ruppert Jones and two by
Meyer.
"Tanana Ukes righthanders .
but when the going gets tough he
can give that something extra."
J ohnson said. "When he's
full-bore. nobody can get 12 ruts
off him ."
Honeycutt. l ·l , ••couldn't get
bis br~akink ball over," Johnson
added. "lfis locat ion wasn't
good.··
CALll'Otl•IA ., ....
• 1 I 0 f I 1 I ••oo S I 4 I
• I l l •I I I
, 1 1 0
IOO 0
• I I I
HATn.a
J Cr11r " .... zo ., • .,,, Dfl
8-M e ll
~Ofl·h """°"'<I W Stein Jll IM..-r t• ,..,.rf
Petit t'' sonoon (
•r llM so 1 o ,.00
I 0 I 0
SO JO
• I 0 0
• ' l 0 • 1 I I • 0, I JOOO
JO 0 0
1 o o o
Thompson suffered a partial
separation of bla left shoulder
Saturday.
The injury occurred during
the Cougars' llrst game-type
scrimmage of spring practice,
as Thompson was running a
veer keeper.
''The program seems t.o be on
a solid footing with three return·
ing varsity lettermen, a good
group of juniors, a 22·1
sophomore championship outfit
and what is considered the best
incom ing group of freshmen
ever at Edison." 6""'*" Se11t~
MANHATTAN, Kan. -Three
form er Kansas State rootball
players convicted of raping a
Topeka woman in the university
athletic dorm have received 18
m o nths ' pro bati o n arfd
suspended sentences of one to 20
years.
A Huntington Beach resident.
Leavey says he expects t.o stay
on at EdJson High in the social
studies department.
Leavey had three other years
of varsity experience, coaching
at Westmins ter High in the
1970-72 span, and was twice
chosen Sunset League coach of Nate Jones, 20, Ken Lovely,
19, a nd Mike Woodlin. 19, were
con victed Feb. 28 in Riley
County District Court for the March 31, 1977 rape.
.sea.r.. 11,,~
SANTA CLARA -Erik Van Dillen upset BlU Scanlon, 6·3. 6·3
Monday night in tbe opening
round of a Grand Prix tennis
tournament here. ~ Jn another match Hank r
drubbed Marcello Lara, 6· , •·3.
Steelers ~-Bfda
PITTS BURGH -The
Pitts burgh Steelers traded
guard Jim Clack and wide
receiver £mie Pough to the New
York Giants for veteran guard
John Hicks in a Nationa l
Football League deal Monday.
Hicks. 27. was the third player
chosen in the 1974 college draft.
As a senior at Ohio State. he won
the Outland and Vince Lombardi
t rophies as the nation's top
college lineman.
MARTIN. • •
Cobtlnued From Paie Bl
stop that crap.· I gave Brinkman
his chanc:e. Ir be did what he
was supposed to he could have
ended it right there.
"He was 100 pettent wrong.
You can ask anybody in the
Am erican League it I've ever
tol~ one of my pitchers to hit
anybody. These gu.ys are out
there trying to make 1 good
living for their ramlllea and
the year. • ..
The 1978 varsity ftnlshed 14-10
and among the victories we.~
three straJght in capturing the
St. Francis <San Francisco)
High tournament.
Girls' AD-star
Game Slated
A girls basketball all-sta r
game will be played at Orange
Coast College June 17 and will
precede the boys game on the same night.
M arle Upton, coach of the
Cypress I-Ugh School girls team
that has captured three straight
Empire League championships,
has been selected to coach the
North team. The South coach
will be announced later .
Upton is a resident of Hunt·
ington Beach and wilJ begin
selecting her squad in May.
pitch "Just got away. that's au.
Thurman signalled Cor a low.
outalde rastball. But that '.s the
kind of night it wu."
Both Munson and Dempsey
corroborated Brinkman's story.
"He <Weaver > said he was
aonna get me,.. Munson 11.i<1.
"Honest to God, r really thought
he aald be was gonna hit me.''
• there's no place in baseball for
that kind of stuff. The BaJUmore
Orioles' s uccess was built
without that. I'm lnsutted &hat
you 're in here uk1n1 me these
questions. Somo of r_ou tmow me
better and sbowdn t even have
to ask.''
Dempsey said the pitch from
Gosaaae wu "part of the 1ame.
He was JUlt letting me )now not
to get too ltte and euy al> there .
Earl was yellina that T&urman
called for the pitch and be was
go l nc to retaliate against
Tb1Uman, but.I knew Tburman
d ido 'l ca ll It. It was Just
Gossaf e." Gosaage inallted the wayward
r 1•
•'
..
...
·,
,......,.. .......... ...... fllllJ.1•
TUllday,Aptll 11. 1978
... .......,
QMr,Tndt"-' ,,,.., UCS -ON mlN. l>ece. C1a1m~l!Mdk-.-...u.J09
O..t<Otllp
<Lktt•I tUO 4M t.IO li\r°"911~> uo !M e.to .. I ltlldlit) I f.20
00
Alto racM -Ullre Weva, My Olrect ICftitN, ... Oft htt, Kell'ff tue ••• ,..,....,. .... "..,..
$1XTM a&ea -OM !!Ille. PKe. CMCllllOMd INW•)), J ,... ~ a.
DAii. Y PILDT •3
Women's
AreaGoH
"9MT RAal .s.. Oiit '""8. '-'•· ~ ............ .,,,.,.
• ,.. .... • lll'aM. OelMI .. ,rkft ......... l'IM ... I~ Jr.); II#. Tr ....
Tl--lMI"
Alto reeled -Ot .... e S... 81111a a '•tt. ,.._.., hOle Tr""'41f•, "'*'· """'~ AQ11lnleH-r 10.1111111 ...o 1• ,_..
Drone Rider Unseated
Vince Garcia of Battle Mountain. Nevada
round himself unseated and flying through
the air after being bucked from his mount
during competition in a Red Bluff. Calif.
rodeo Sunday. Garcia reported the only
injuries he suffered were to his pride.
Rustle~ Seek Playoffs
GWC Women Face Cypre~ Fi'Ve Wedneadar.
f • .. .. •
A berth an the slate lo ment could be the prize I '
Golden• West College wo
baskelbaU team in an im
Southern California Confe
game al Cypress College ·
nesday afternoon (4)
A G WC victory would assure
the Rustlers a be rth in th!)
tournament at Saddle bacR'!
College May I 1-13. A loss could ·
force a playoff with Cypress al
Sl'asol' ·s end lo determine an en
trant
In two previous games this
season. the teams have split de·
cisions. Cypress won the first on
a ne utral court, 54·52, lo annex
third place in the Fullerton
tournament.
At Golden West in first round
conference action the Rustlers
reversed the decision, 49-41. The
WoDien's.:
Athleti.Ji ~.
Girl•~· R .. H-COl(l)~WHI ,
Golden Wot-Erl•C, ti, 0.2.G-0, 5ettlst, ct. 7.1.0.0. Cross. 30. ,., l·I: Wlltlllec>l•0.111, 1-l·l.1);
V°""Q, <, ,_140; BrCMOll, rl, 140-1; KljOll~IA.
0.141. M-.rll, 2b-\S 2~1: Ro""bel'.Y. p,
3.0.0-0; Nl~ttols, rl 2+•.0; Rodmen, 311, 1~;
G1lllQ41n, 111, 1-4).0.(), -n. II. l.o.G.o; ""Hale,
111. 1·0·0.0, Tolah. 1' 1·~. •
~DyllllllftlCI r II e
R•o HOl>OO ooo ooo o~ o •
C.old•" w~t 411 000 •-1 l o
Second ~••'QM no-n1tlff for IC•lllC Ro~
~-C:.UI 161 CU MLSoHA ........ , Or•rtQ• C:.o.H'-Gef><IOClo, lO. ).1-0.1, H.,rft•,
c J·2·1.0, GellaQller. 111. 1·0.0-0: Roberts, •fl,
1.0.0-0; H~. U, 4 C).J.o, Tom•nl, <I. ~
Mecl>oneld. pll, 1~ ""°""· 111, :MMl-0; S.l'llo
1>, •·1·2 o; W•llecn. rl, J 1 7 I, Tol•ll. 21·...,_1 _. .. , tNll• , " . Ot•n~Co.tsl Ill 003 0.-0 I 2
Ml San Antonio ocn 000 0-2 5 J
1.01 A""1'01 10 111 F-11111 V•ll•Y .:_
Fount•t" V•lley Watwn. u "· 341-0. IC•y. c.
3 1·2.0; C.rro<1. P. l-0-0.0, H.,I, u 311, ~, ~OUllO,,, 211. J 0 0 0, Watt•ce. lb, J-0.610!
LOllQl•ll-. le> 1.0-0.0, JlatTIWY. II, I~; Ml·
,,,.,,ct. 1.().0.(), lbi19o!ry, rf, 1.0-0.0; 51•11 ..... rf·
<I, 2.0.0-0, Tol•ll 7• l•J 0 .-;,~
Sc .... ...,, .... .._ rl. , .
1.01 Amt!W\ ocn 110 o_. 2
fountain Valley 000 100 o-.t I
C.O.. Yallt'I' (61 UI 0.11e Miiis
C.p11lr•no Valll'y ,,.,.1, 11 J.1.0; f•
• C).1, M_..y,..m, lb, 4 1 2; Wlllltf"IOll, C.
O'Ha9•n. ID J.1·1: l'\Klt, 3t>, J.l·J~ Mc:Dofwillllll>
) I I , Rondut.t, rtt.•·O·I; Trt.111•. ct 2· 'i
W"ltt•o. II, 1.0.0. _111 .... ct, 1-0.0; Tota ... u ... 10. ·
Oan• Hlllt.-Nlebln, cl, • t.J; Mel(...,., p, 2-11-0; \.. --.-. 1~ ).O.t; F•toer. ID, 3-4-1;,T. ~ryt-.w, c, 2-0.0, Colvin, 11, 2.0.0; Miiier, JI>, 2~; B•rosirom. 7b. 2·"2; Ht.tuoy, rl, 1.0.0; C.
M<IC•nna. 11, 2·0.0; w1n1•rll•H•r. •I. 1·0-0;
SUllllJ, "· 140; Totals: 2'-2-7. Sceralllytlllliftta r II a
C.plstrano Vallrt
Dena Hiiis ~:: = !:; 1~ ~
a.r11 Trac~
Sl Pwl CU> 1'6) Maler 0.1
100 1. w ..... , csr 11 1; 2 f'rHman IMO>
12 l . J Vtnl-.a (MO) 12.S,
210-no.-. u O-1 J 0. G<-IMO) 1 OJ 5. 2. \.yla IMDI
1 Gt 1, l. o.Gr-CSP) I .OJ 0 .,_I J . o-a !MDI t:a).•; 2. Tully ("'°)
2 41.J;l ~CSPl2''°0 Mii 1. I( O\llie CMOl 5 l2.I. 1 A•tl CMPI
\•U 4; J HeQ9r1y IMDI 6 I0.21 . : 7.mt-1. ~(MDI 11 •1J,1 M. fltttt·
l.o (111101 n ·u .s; >. °"'" (MOI 11 OU , .. r lo.. 11tlt4-t. O\ldlenM ISP) 17.2, 2. Jj+rtJlk
(MOJ 11.S; 1 Aldll-(SP) 1' t . ' J . ~· ~ ,.,.,_,,~-Del 54, • Mllatal<tf-t.~•O.l •·n.t. I · j "'
HJ-t ...ittnow, CSPI 6-4; 2. w.tltwedl'IS,f>
.: 1; l. ~.,..._CSP! 6-0 \.J-t l.lijen IMOI t ... ; 2. ,r_ lf!IOI
... 1. J. ~($Pl 1•s. ~""-SP-t. Oelll_, IMO) •t\'t, 2. Gut 1~ •111¥1;l.9MfferlMOllMl-f. }•'(!. ., ..
Rustle~· have 'a 12-game win-other guard spot and is a 5-9
ning steak intact ~ince the loss sophomore. · ·
al Fullerton. Overall. GWC is Karen Gage <5·8 sophomore)
t8-4forllie seasonand 5·0incon-is the high post player , is
ference play. Cypress is 4·1 in averaging 9.1 points a game and
the conference is the second leading rebounder
Cypress is paced by Julie on the squad.
Long, the daughter of men's as-Pam Banks <5·10 freshman),
sistanl Jack Long; Bev Locy, ,is the leading rebounder with 183
who is averaging 12 rebounds a in 21 games, an average of 8.7
game: and Janice Campbell who per tilt. She averages 8.1 points
averages 21.0 points per lilt. a game.
Sta rting for the Rus tlers wm Leading reserves include Don-
be Melodie Bland at point guard. na Martz (5-8 fr.), Jami Moore
She is a 5-7 freshman, averaging (5·5, ·soph.) and Deidre Erickson
14.7 per game and is hilling 46 <5·4, soph.). a transfer from
percent from the floor. Ora nge Coast. Erickson is the
Debbie Bors is a l one wing leading assist player.
position. The 5-5 sophomore ls Cypress is coached by Jeri
the fourth leading scorer in the Livsey, wife of former Orange
school's history and is averaging Coast College coach Herb
12.6 p~e this season. Livsey. Golden West is directed
Kim Btt[rows starts at the by J im Greenfield.
~
Vanguards Sweep
Riddell, Ward Stymie Foe
Southern California College's
Vanguard.s, Southern Division
leaders in District 3 baseball ac-
tion with a 7-2 record, got two
more complete game efforts
from their pitchers Monday in
sweeping a pair against invad-
ing UC San Diego.
Bill Riddell struck out six,
walked none and allowed only
two runners to second base in
disposing or the invaders in the
first game. 2-0.
Then Butch Ward took over on
the mound and scattered three
hits en route to a 4-2 victory to
romplete the sweep.•lt was lhe
16th time coach Doug Adams
has received complete game ef-
forts from his pitching staff on
the way to an overall won-loss
record of 21-10.
Mike Peters provided Riddell
with au he needed in the second
inning with a two-run single.
Calendar
W1•1auy(.Mttl S.Mt>ell~I Harl>Or ~ Merln• al 8181•
field 17:30); El Toro at owone c1e1Mar13.UJ,
Minion V1•jo al C:Osl• M .. • IJ: UI; Sen
Cleme1'1• •I Unl .. rslly IJ:UI. U19t.1na llH<ll at
De na .. 1111 IJ:H); P•pperdlM •I Soull•trll
C.ltfor111a CotleQt t2:30L
Tr•O-Ul\llll19 Beach al C.OSta MeM, "'-latn
V•llt'I' el Newpor1 Hat'bcw U: IS).
Tennh-EI Toro et Cofone del Mar, Ml•loll
Viejo •I Costa Mee, sen c1...,.11t• al Unl .. '111y,
U19t.1na 6Mch •I 0.... Hiits 1•11 et 3); Golden
W•ll Cotlegf 91L.osA111191ffCC12:301. Volleyball~ H•r11or el Merln. (I);
Edison •I H""'111Qton S..Ch (I I: Westminster •I
Founl•ln Vallet C1);"Goldatl Wnt Goll-91
Gl-•te ll:JOI; Or-'0:.HI C.011199 al Ml San
A11tonlo Coll-11:>01; UC Irvine at Ua..A ll::IOI.
In the ni g htcap. the
Vanguards evened the count at
l·l in the third inning on Larry
Houle's squeeze play, then put it
out or reach with three runs,
highlighted by Butch Plank's
line-drive homer, in the sixth.
After Plank's homer tied it at
2·2, Dave Wilson singled, Mark
Wood walked, then Rob
Stonelake smacked a two-run
triple inside the right field line
to plate the winning markers.
"llUTGAMe ~·cellaltt CJ)
SI COMO GAME
S.C.ICMMltt (4)
Planll,IS
HOllle, ti
Tllom .. , ID
WlllOll. lD
Sc-tr,<
s1-1•••·" Reno. dh
Miyashiro. rt
PtlHS, 2b
Rl-11,P
TOl•ll
......
3000
2000
2000
3000
2 0' 0 J 1 I 0
I I t 0
1000 2 0 t 2
0000
20, 4 t
., .....
Pl.,.k,IS
Houle.cl Thomas. c.
WllSO<I. lb
Woocl.d" Slonelfte,11 R-,lb Mly~"lro, rt
Peters, 111
W•rd,P Tot all
l 1 1 1
, 0 0 1
l 0 I 0
l' 1 0
1 '0 0 J 0 I 2
1 0 0 0
2000 2 1 0 0
0000
21 4.'
r II e
000000-51
020 000 •-2 ' 1
ll"CONl>OAMa
UC !.•n Dla90 010 010 0-2 3 t
$oulllern Gal Cotleve 001 OOl ~ • 3
Area Prep Tennis
VeHlty
leMA ..,..,_ la\ltl CMVtl QIM ........
Good IC> Ott S.lyw M ; dtf 8tewr H ; -bot
ci.1 ... 11 o .. r Felbef'O; dtf OlnNY 6-1; WMNr 10
-II 6·1. I .. , .. 1 .... t; AlltOOm (Cl WOii .. 1 ... 1;
IOSI .. 1; won M ; G<'t.tm ICI won W ; lost .. ,; Iola
H ;won .. 2.
O.W• TllornHo·SellJ IC) def Jordltn-WoolctrldQa ..0, .. 2; dltl Wlllte-Horton M , W; FOrtle•YOllnll ICI won w , .. 1; tllflt .. ,, w .
Pro llockey, Basketball
Mr. l111y ixeaff•• •••
Too busy to go Into a Shop for a
manicure? But need vour hands to
look professional? Yes 111 come to
your office. •
TIRED OF
THE TUBE
PIANO & ORGAN
Give a Gift ~lflcate io a Friend
CLASSES NOW
FORMING
Luc1·s MAMICUll-saYICE
1714• 752-lt7t
COAST
MUSIC
642-2851
" \' "rt .. ,
t
Uell l$MrrNI; Mldllltllt IYrd
(IUt<lll•l; Cllew IWIMI. Tlla
0trwe11t A 1~111; L11mbar tttu.t ,,..,,.,,, Print• &1•11d .... .,,,I ,,,_ 0.-0 CMtntWlll;
~ ........ IU!tllll·
MCC*O llACll -Ollf rnlla. Pece.
Cal-ltred. S yHr eld. &. 11ncler. ~.W..P,AllO. UdY .,_ IOAIPrY); Ml• Satl'I
C Ot""l 1); AiN:lott Amy CMllelllf I; All
'nlat Jeu mlNfl; a..r11es At.111t
(Gr11ndyl; ulldH!e CWllllemt>;
lr•llJ'I ICl119 CltetcltfOl'd); And"
Pallltecl (Granl); ................. .,
~I.
ntt•o llAC8 -OM tnlla. Trot
Clel m Int Mftdl<#, """" SJ.too Ctalrnlfto prices aooo-tt..-.12,000. V•"' Ster .._.,., l~ll~llardl; Olr• NHd (Gf'tl.lldyl; Ed911w00d
HaflC!Wa (Olnnlyl; Fr-ls $lloWdOft
I It etc Mord); Kelly's ICelmt.tCll
(1(...-..,);...., StrMlt (Goo,tdrNll); Oo*e s-...,.. ,...,_,, ~ E•·
p .. n (Wllll•m•I ; J M Eddi• , .. 1111c: .. 1.
~ltTM ltACll-OMmlla. Pee•.
FllllM &. .,,.,.... S .,.., Olds &. ........
ArrnbrO Trlco Cltetc:M->; Lecly
P•clllc IBleckmaril ; JoMs Maol<
.Miii C8ollarol; Joll111 M•Qlc
1eu1: J J'• 01orv l1tlc1tmot1dl;
OuottY AnM IV•ll•ndlrtQh•m);
M•rll•1• Toelle IAtktrmen),
Jujlefte ..... (~).
Plt'TM llAC9 -One rntca. Pac:•.
Cl•lmlno. 4 y••• old• 2A percent.
PurM $4,400. Qelml111prleeS10,000.
Prt.tc1e11I Jim IShcwO; Ot.teslklll A I Cr-); 1Nlefel'G8ble.f0ot.tcl,...,);
VelO.'s Yd l~nl; Hortll W.stem
IV•ll•ndlnQllam); T•••rns S•m IR•tchlordl; HOWdY Guy IOesomerl; ,.,..,,_ •• Spirit en ..
lier).
SIXTH ltACll -One mile. Pee•.
c1a1rn1 no hencl4<.e0. Metta 20 per· c ... t. Pvne su ao. oa1m1no prke• u.-.5.•. ROM 8oun6S 18"1by); SNv•m
ITocldJ; s-...n l..t.tcll IGouclr .. ul.
Miu Rael IMuty (SMmlft); Piute
Sw CVell~I; Mia• Me Boy
IWllllemsl; Ol8ll« lynl ICT•nt);
81U llader 1e.v-1. •
ll!VeMTff ltACE -o .. mll•.
Pac•. J veer olctL Qtlf.w.ci.n. Stell• No. tt:P\nOW.G07.
t11dlan Olltt 1~111 ~rd
IVellendlnQNrl'll; lye Bye Vlclor
IShorU; Helcyon H•ro 11.oneol; Monl•nh0.111 CRaltMord). Rer•
D••l1n <Dun11ebaCkl; Trlc-•I
Cll•r1er <Wllllern1); ,Pumond
coesorn..-1
EIOMTH ltAU -One mll•. Pace.
f ir• for Elle<I ta.rtotw); An·
n0t.tncer IAlll>!nl; Pel H Medl<.IM
IWlslt•rd), Gama Time CS.yl•lll;
Ballery tWheel•r>; lar-Mini>••
IGot.tdreeul. Cap•r R ICllerd IRltchl•I ; \.edybuo l 8ar
IKt.telllerl ; M•yb• Primrose
I Barnell.
NIMTM ltACll -Ont rnlle. Pee•.
K•m•lll IKumalerl; Ou•I
Henover <B•Yl•u>; 81t Tim•
t A11blnl ; 1.1111rated l •dY
IGoudt'Nt.tl; 0...0.lta <Ratctrfordl;
S.rai.oo-!!en IWhMl•I; HT Brooll
CW hll••dl; OulaslQht Merel•
llCu•bl•r>; Ml•l'I' G•O•Q•
tAatc"lonl).
.-,,,,., '• °""' Mdyt °"" Sc:ratd!M -ICI"' ti.I .... HowdY
Soory u . •11ac .. ~.,._a...,.,
.,....,~ .....
HCOMDllaca-Olltmlla.~-. Olndll~ (('D.t). , yeM -.. Ulldet • .,._A.JOO
Mlraclal4'dle
cGMd,_> •.oo
LMd ""'*"• C0.-1111
On HIQ" (ACMnNlll
Tlme-UID/S
Alto rac;ed -Bye A-J, ... lldle
lrevo, Miiie Mor1e11, Sllt,,1
hCMn9' Scr•l<Md -Sperte, SO lonQO Adi•, ,._ "'9ln. Pnlrla lYft
TMl ltD litAC2 -OM ml ... f>eu. Ollldl~. StaffloM a. eelcllnes. ~
'INf' eldS & t/lfd«. _. P.11t
IC-GN-lsi-1) 1UO 7.AO 5.01
Peclllc OMlller-11.AC~I SA l•
8«t Glall'l•M IR91<Hwd) •.fO
Time -:LOUIS
Atso recad -Amber Andrew, W•nlewl11 Olrll, SI..-Aell.ctl0t1,
Anclr• Slllper, s. ... si-, e.,u•r'• ~o
Scr•l<lled -M.c Oeue.r
'OUltTM lltACll -OM mlla. Paca. Clelmlno ~. Pvrw 12.100
$1VOM
IWllll-1) UO S.40 UO
Add In Boy (Aaldtlordl • 20 •.GO
Racl119 Colora 18"rl 2.10 Tlme-2,0&
Also raud -Steady Go111, Tom
TyH, J a .. ton Mollawlt, C.n•••n.
Fort Wor1t1y
Scr•IC"-" -~Questor, Wei
N1o11ent. lVM c:o111 ... u Eucte 1·Str o.. a J.AM!es
.. ,,,.101a.11
f'l"M llACt -One mll•. Pee•. ClalmlnQ IWM'dlcep. P\lrw U,300
JJll.e9al...,...
l$prl09sJ
Vic 8 Tar IUQlltlllll)
uo J.20 2 60 uo 3.10
Wei~•·-(ICuebferl UO UO A,,.ry We"9 (Vollarol S.10
Tl"'8 -:Lllt/S
At.o rllCl9d -C.O H_.,..,. Royal
A'fMN, ~ Sltepy lye '"' Yowit MlttlOll S<relcllff -Streak•• lroou,
BerOfl'IJ ..... u •SKta ........... __ • .... ....._. ...... ......
1avutTM ••ca -Ont mu• ••ca. CAlftdltion.d ICO.J> "1ru
1$,IOO
cavellerN
(l(WOl•l
lye Bye Vlellawr
( lltl> 1111111
J c ""' CWllllamsl TllM-1_,../S
IJAO • .., U0
(.00 uo
"°
Alao ·--A.-Red, Tlma SIT..,,., RJo Ir-..__, OlllDU
Sta•
H•Kraedwa
IEIOMT'M ua -One ....... Pac•.
C.olldll._ CaMI. Pllrw .. ,000
Otn °''" (0.Mlal •.OO UO 2 •
Arrn.,,o RoV 1Golldr9wl 6.00 UO
81~ T• ....... l~lll 1M llm& -UllM/S
AIM> rKecl -Hal<'l'Ofl Hart. $418
Foyl•, H•-'· MM4• ~. ltonoD Mnl9r'Y, TeltaN
No 11<ratc:tm u •u~ '"°"" Dll• a ,..,,.,. ...............
NINTH ltAC9 -One ml ... Peu. Cl•lml111~ Pllne ~J.600
SandrH5Gn IA..Oln) 5.20 2.60 1111
&on.part• Ollp llMf'-1 uo 2.40
N•llm (ICt.llblwl JAG
Tim• -2.03215
AllO rececl -S-lltf)y•lle, l•v
FllQlll, Sefll'l 8-Myn, ~ LAxle,
FlllMlllQO MIU
Scra tcn•d -lnd•l•llO•lllt, Ec19ewoocl~m
U E xecla 4·1•11•rH IH a , .......... CJll-. ..... $16.•
AlleftCMllC•-4,"4
Volleyball Standings
~ming
For Girls
Vartllr
M ....... tMllN l lMla :IOOrnec!Mtyr ... y-1. llldlclJ:QS.tS,
200 frff-1. i<.y (1) 2:0S.OI; 2. L.oftQ
INI 2:11.I; 3.Gundrum (NI 2'2'-1
JOO Ind. "'ac11ey-1. l•ura 111
2:21.06; 2. C.rlson <NI 2:22.4; l
K•nn UI 2:31.9.
SO frff -1, Sto<Ce Ill 27.1'; 2 •
Monon IN) 27.2, 3. Tem II) tt.SS.
100 11v-1. Ella&n m 1 :os.s; 2. Certson IN) t:Ol.1; :J. Alltton"OO
t:ll.J 1001 ... -1. ic..i en n .1; 2. LAvlns
00 St.a; :J. ltitld IN) 1 :0&,,.
500 I l'ff-1. Joll (I) 5: J2.0; 2. Wofl9 •
(N) ':Ol.O; S.(iwldrWn fNI 6:30.0.
100 becJl-1. LAura (IJ .. ll<N; 2.
Temrny Ill; :i.. Mor1lon IN> 1:17.0.
100 llnMl-1. ,)t#t (I) 1:14.9; 2.
Revens NI 1: 17 .S; 1. AoOlftlGll IN I
tUO
SUHSel' LEAGUE C>aAMO« COUNTY LEAOUI 400 1'" relay-I. ~ HMtlo<
W L 01 W L 01 4:tU.
NewpgrtH-
H t.tnll~1 Oii Baacll f0t.tnlalft Valley
EdlliOll
Wu1-'lnster
, o u 0..1111• s o M.....n ten c•> ....
l 1 1 Estencl• • t t 200 medt..,......., 1 2 2 lrttlM HIQll 2 l f' 100 medley reley-1. N••POrt
1 2 2~.-CX.en View 2 J J H•rtlor 1:11U; t00 l,__t, Felde (NI 1 2 2v, c.tiyon z J > t .OS.S; 100 llld. "'9dfev-t. Secbr ~ 4 4 MeltrDel O S 5 IN) 1:14.J; SO f~l. F..-...... ._111 Mer Ina T'llllNy'aO-l0.7; so fly-1. Mld\etla Ill 34.06; so
W ........ 'tGemft MattrOelelEsl_,.le l>actc-1. l•dcUr IHI JS.I; SO N.,.porl Kettlor al MMina (1) Canyon al lrvlneHIQI> Dr .. si-1. MellQtr IH))Lt; 200 !tee
Edison el Ht.tnllnvton Bff<h 111 I.• Quinta et Cke.,. View ret•y-t ,.._, .._ l ·O&.&.
w111rn1Mter•1 Founi.ln V•llev m
SOUTM COAST LIAGU E \..
l.•guna Beectt
S.n Clern•M•
Coron• det MM
Unlv•Hllv
Mlulon Vl•Jo
COile Mn.a
El Toro
0.na Hiiia
W \. GI
• 0
1 I I
~ J )
5 3 3
3 s s ) s s
2 6 6
0 • •
T ...... '10.....
El Toro at CdM 171 Mlulon Vle)oat CosW Mew 11>
la9une 8eac:J> at Dena Hiii~ 171 s.n Cl-18 et u111 .. n11v m
Ct.liege GoH Summaries
lion.sis May I at Collon-.! CC 1n
Sen 01990. CM'-~IFIMll t. Goldltn~t l2; 2. sant. Moniu
JS'h; 3. Rio HOftClo 2s; •· cv...-~
1" .... ; S. lA Her'OIW 19; •· UK AnOtfH cc•· Cy,,_~T-
AI T ... LlllM Cilll*Y om
THrn •aw'lnot 1. Sllllt• Moftlc•
112; 2. Golcl9fl west JIO; S. Rici.._
404; 4. Cypng 410; 5. I.A...,_, 411: 6.L.AC..\..
I • the
CallOrnia Sunshine
•
on
STARTIM~ 7:30 P .M.
One free youth ticket
(under16)
with each adult ticket
purchased for C&llfomla sunshine protesslonal soccer!
Kids get in free (with accompanying adults) to see the California
Sunshine kick off their American Soccer League season when coupon is
presented at gate. So be there Saturday, April 22 when the Sun~hine
goes for the goals at beautiful Orange Coast College Stadium. It's Pepsi
Youth Night! •
Reserved or general admission tickets available through Ticketron or Orange Coast
College, Sunshine General Offices, 1500 Adams, Costa Mesa. 542-5646
• Ff881First1,000 kJds get Caltfomia Sunshine bumper stickers I
•See the exctting Pepsi Skateboard Team at the California Sunshin&
game, Saturday, April 29, Orange Coast College S~dium.
·-----------------~--~------------------------· I PEPSI W>UTH HIGHT at ' :
: 0 CAUfolNA SUNSHINE SOCCER : I I
: April 22, 1978, at Orange Coast College Stadium :
I I 1 This coupon good for one free junior ticket I
': (under 16) #ith purchase of one adult ticket. !
Good only Aprll 22.1978. No Pepst
proof-of..i)urchase fs reQuirec;f.
: • ijgtti9(10¥ ~COii 000"'10 Co Ol lol .e.roetes unOer eop()t(\tmenl lt001 Pl.'PSICo Inc Purc"'1S8 Now t\)lfl. I ~-----·····----------------·------------------·
\
r
T ......... lt 1'11
California Cites Sweden's: G
LOS ANGBLES (AP) -TM four·eyllD.der
Voho la tbe ci.a.t car tokt lD tbe UDlted S&alel
ud" uwAer $wedlab·bullt ·~l . the Saab •. ls ftnt ~. accord.anc to uae Calllorola Alr Reeoa;.,. Board.
1n. NUno were baaed OD poµllUoa testa on ., ... ears. illS Cbalnnao Toal QW.an told a newt t'ODl ... moe.
lbe Toyota Cellca, Toyota Corona. Dodte OulAl,
PlYmout.h Hort.aoa. VolkswNOD Duber, Datsun 200SX and Datswa 510.
The nine ''41.rt.leat" can rank1nl Just abo~
the Llncoln VeraaWes wece the AMC Mai.dor.
Triumph TR-8, Poot.lac Sunblrd, Old•mobUe
'
StarON, Mereury Zeohyr. Mtr'CUl'J Bobcat. Ford
Pinto, Ford MUl\aq 11 and Ford Fairmont.
A total ol 72 can ranh4 lD the ••ve!l clean" cateaory, while 170 wen ln th~ ''cJean • ranie. Another 20 ~chlea we~ l.lated u ''&eeeP'able," tbo 1ttwe1t nokia1,
-.;: . ' .
THE .....-rlEST" CA& l<*l ln Callfornla. ac· cortlq to the ratiaas: wu the Uncoln VenaUJes,
but It met the sta&e 1 ltrlct .u ... mo1 require. menta, the natloa'a toUlhest.
Turna·bout Continu es .
Pord'a Plelta wu the cleanelt U.S.·bultt car.
topplna the ''very clean" category.
QUbm Aid the two top-rated can. the only ones in tbe "outatandlng" category, both use a
tbree·WAY catalytic converter. He sald the anti·
s mog device used by Volvo made the car almost
four tlmee cleaner than state law requires, and
alJo Improved the automobile's gas mileage.
Avco Hopes to Add to Continuing Divi«l.end
THE Ol'llEa SEVEN BANKED cleanest were
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of .. Deltf ..........
Shareholders of the 11.6 millJon shares of com·
mon stock lo Avco Corp. could be in line for.a s-
cent per quarter increase in dividen4s.
Corporation chairman James Kerr, in a report
• delivered at the annual shareholders meeUng in
1p,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!J!!J!!9 Newport Beach, said be planned to recommepd the increase at the board of director's meettna ·in
June.
The ES Diamond Trading Company present•
DIAMOND
IlffESTMENT
SEMINAR
Learn the facts about investing in Diamonds.
Wednesday, April 19 • 8·00 pm
South Coast Plaza Hotel
Bristol at the San Diego Fwy.
Call (213) 552-9366
TRAOING WILL BE CONDUCTED • NO DIAMONDS ON PREMISES
Walch "CONCEPTS IN COMMODITIES"
12 00 Noon. Monday through Friday
KWHY·TV. Channel 22 E
SUCH AN INCR EASE WOULD bring the
dividends on common stock up to 20 centa a quarter.
. The proposed increased payment comes on top
of the resumption or a common stock dividend that
was institoted during the first quarter of this year.
The exisUQg 15-cent dividend is the firat to be
paid common stock shareholders since common
stock dividends were suspended in mid-decade.
PREFERRE D SHARES earned up to $2.80 in
dividends f.or the last quarter of urn, according to
the report.
Kerl\ and corporation president George
Hogeman, who delivered a detailed report on the
firm's financial progress, both~eclared the Con·
necticut·based corporation to be in the beat finan·
cial shape in years aOcl predic continued earn· ings growth. \_::__
Contributing to the financial heallh of the cor·
poratlon was the record e&mings year at the .----------=-------..,.-... Newport Beacbiibased subsidiary, Avco R&nancial
Service&. and a profit-making year for Avco Com·
muuity Developers -the first in recent bi.story. If you
want quallty stocks
that.yield up to 8.5°/o,
read: ·
''OPPORTUNITIES"
Bateman Eichler. Hill Richards
has a new publication for you.
It's called .. Opportunities:·
Our first issue hand-picks famous
·name stocks that offer you above-
average dividends.
At recent prices, the lowest yield is
6.3%. The highest Is 8 .5%. Others range
from 7.3% to 8%.
And alt of the major corporations
wtl'Ve selected are listed on the
New York Stock Exchange.
•
A VOO COMMUNITY DEVELOPERS ls the
corporation's home-building subsidiary, reaponsi·
ble for four Southern California development.a in·
cluding"Laguna Niguel. •.
Kerr said lbe company's good ouUook ~ould be
attributed to Its conversion from strictly an
aerospace and technology.based company to one
in which half the revenues come from financial
services such as Avco Financial Services, Carte
n.... 8 .... dla.,, 0..Ntt
Fluor Corp., Irvine, bas announced that its
Fluor Pioneer subsidiary in Chicago bas been
awarded a contract for engineering, design,
procurement and coaatruction management of a
142-megawatt combustion-turbine project for the
Nevada Power Co. at Clark Station. ~
"Opportunities:· Mail the
;coupon below or phone for
your free copy now.
/fii' -
Total estimated revenue to Fluor Pioneer for
the project is approximately $1 million.
Engineering and design work is under way,
construction is scheduled to begin in July, and the
facllity is expected to be in service in spring or
1979.
.......
•• If you want more income t
it's worth reading.
FREE BOOKLET.
8-..M:,, ~~
r------------~-~---, Bateman Eichler. Hill Richards
INCORPORATED
M<lmbe!5 He<t 'lbtk. Amenc:*'I. Mt<lwfil end Paci!OC Sloc:kEJOCnanQes
~ ......... C....~ ....... lleedl,CA-· ... 14'0
Pt.EASE MAil "OPPORTVNITIES" TO:
ADDRESS .......... -------------------------
ZIP ..... ________ PH()NF..._ ______ _
WE PUT °"'°""'Nmn AND NOPU 10QETMP L -----------------------~
llcatlc Pap Bf~
Bank of Newport directors have paid a 15
percent stock dividend for stockholden of record
April 10.
The dividend followed release of the bank's
annual report, which reflected total assets growth
from $75,246,750 to $106,666,755, a 41 percent
increase. The bank closed 1977 with a 123 percent
gain in stock.holden' equity; net income for 1977
was $1,056,207 up 183 percent.
VW Eyes State Site
DETROIT CAP> -Volkswagen ls looking at
the West Coast, especially California, as the site
for a pos5ible second assembly plant in this coun-
try, according to Ward's Automotive Reports, a
trade publication.
RE·LEASE
MERCEDES
Taxes and lnfldlon. estlmeted to be 6-71 In lg?8, ere maldng It harder
for people to retain or build their essets. The IRS has aggresWety eliminated
many tax lncent!Yet used by ~ tn the pest. 'Wit with the constant tax
law revlslon,, then! are ... ••1owteeM._ ........_ for Investors to
~helter°' defer......_ k u 1 , ........... laca•a (I.e. salary
and commission). If you plen your 1978 prognim now, rather than
wait tlU year end. you'll have ample time to analyze
and property dl009e the one whkh
will meet your objecdYe.
For a ..,.....~.
Including ir you wish your tax attorney or C.PA.
cont.act Paatuir Dale. 9ealor Vice ..._Went,
at (714) 644-4620 or the address shown ~low.
. ..
•
Blanche and , the Paul Revere lnaurance Com·
pan.I es.
Kerr noted that reallpment ct tbe corpora·
tlon '1 operations bad resulted 1D an increased prp-
flt potentJal lbroUBh redueuon of the flrm '1 debt
1cbeduleto·a "com.rortable" '20.millloo anllUlltY .
DOGEMAN REPORTEO TllAT net eamlqs
grew from •t.3 million in 1976 to tll6.6 mlWon in
1977, a 27 percent l.D'creaae.
He said the lncreued earnlngs are anticipated through 1978 from expansion of the financial .. __ ... ..__ ...... _.._ ________ ..
services subsidiaries, •!J weU. as Increased sales lo
such subsldiarles u Aerostructurea Dtvillons ln
Nashville, which wU1 deliver wt.na sets for the
Lockheed · L-1011; the lntenaatlQnal Servlcea
Division, wblcb ls Joint venturing a $S0 mllllon pro-
ject in Saudi Arabia with Westem Electric, and
the two aircraft engine manufacturing divisions
operated by Avco Lycoming.
· .. The chairman predicted a continued expansion
of the l.J.S. economy -and the corporation -ii
the federal and atate governments provtd~ lncen·
tives for business spend.int.
Fluor Projeet
Fluor Engineers and Constructors, Inc .. a
local subsidiary of Fluor Corp., Irvine.
has been hired as project management
contractor for a new Alaska pipeline. in·
dicated by the solid dark line. Part of the
73l·mile route will parallel the existing
pipeline.
Ad Change Due IN ADDmON TO THE reports from Kerr and
Hogeman, the annual meeting included the pro
forma re-election of the company's 14 directors
and the disapproval or two shareholder resolu-
tions.
One resolution concerned revision of the com-
pany's stock option policies. The second would
have provided for cumulative voting that would
have enUUed each stockholder to as many votes as
equal his shares multiplied by the number or
directors. The sharjbolder would then have the op·
tion of casting all 'Of .bis votes.. for one director or
spreading the votes among more than one can·
di date.
CARSON CITY CAP > -Nevada's "50·50 rute,"
requlring equal billing for realtors In local ad·
vertising by their national franchises, has been up-
held by a federal court in what's described as a
landmark decision for consumers.
Jim Barnes. legal counsel for the Nevada Real
Estate Division. said the ruling by a three-judge
panel in Reno insures that property buyers won't
be misled when they deal with franchised real
estate brokers. •
At the vote on the second proposition, whicb
was opposed by the dir.ectors, Kerr noted be felt it
likely that cumulativ,e voting would be approved
by next year.
The ruling "by a U.S. District· Court panel re·
jects a claim by Century 2r Real Estate Corp ..
based in IRvine. that the "S0-50 rule" amounted lo
an unconstitutional suppression of commercial
free speech rights.
O ver The Counter
MASD Ustiaca'
MUTUA L FUN D ~
~I
Ofl l'l I Off 2H Off uo Ofl IJ O
Off ". ~Off :J~
IOO
IOO •• 98
Off " Ofl • J Off 11 Oft / / Ofl 11 Off II Oii II OU / / Off 11
Off 1 • Off 11 Off I I Off II
()II I 0 Off I 0
,.EW Y°"I( IAPI NYVI\ ILJ9 1~ TaFre tJ.Cll NL C.pm ~ 1.a1 Batie 10.GD IC>.42 H Er• 10 » NL SIFrm GI' S.9' Hl -TM IOI~ :!i ·oFunCI •• ., 10..0 ,IClelllY "'-' Capll s 6.4' '" C.pll 1J 12 IJ"41 H H0tl• I IJ NL,SFrm B• t.G NL t•ll-. ,......, !Olric:m 1.11 117 AtrH !007 NL ,,,.,.'10f't ~= £q11IB ... IOJS T•F-. IOU NL SIMI 51 42 ... a~ "" IHllonel -. ;sMhM 1.00 NL B~ .... NL 18$ 8d s ... s.. Mllftl • ,, • '7 pro Ful\CI •. n NL Sta.elm en FllOllK •llon ot S.Curlll• ;;apPres 1 oo NL Cepfl a.oe 1.n I S Grt 6.i..... AdAat 1.00 NL !'rolnc 10.l' NL! Am Ind J.2' NL OUl.,1, Inc., .... ~lllSllT 10:9$11.11 &°""d f0.00 NL I s ftCll 4.t4 s S7 Mlcl AM U7 SJ• r.u SIP .... 9.72 AUO F 1.07 NL =:•c• ::r" ~~~rd \~~ :rn o::~ I ~:W. --~~ ~~. rn rn =-N~'J t-:: .. ~ ~:' F~: ,, 1' ='~ u~ ~t
<OUICI ...... bleft :11<1w Gr 8os. Eq 111c 16.lt NL Tut:• 4.N S.1. M$9 ,d U.11 NL Equol 11 °' IJ Stein Roe fch;
-CNtl --Fllftd • " • ,, ~· 2'.llO.. •• SCocll 17-41 ..... Miii .... a.a ..... GH<t n • 14. B•lan 16-14 NL v•IW ) Of boulllll s-t 1-4 Jl Mllft 8d 10.4' NL S.IKI 9.4' •.n MIF I'd 1.14 1 l1 Grwtll 10.40 II Cao 0 UI NL ,,,.,... "'"' se"llS ~;. 1.M 110 FfO.I U.2' It 11 Var Py 6.$t 7.1J Mii" 001 4.01 4 J4 Hf Yid SIOU 11.M NL cl\<lrOfl) MorG . ct 5.7J 6.2' Hf Yid 14.'3 NL '"" RHl'I s.u •. Q:J MUIU.101 OINl'la; 11.'2 10 2' Slr•IGI" 16... NL S..I ;!Mi•pO 11.10 NL LIM11n 9.12 NL 1st.I ,. ... 20.2' Amer 11..32 II.ts ll>C4fn 161 1.3' S<lrvo F •.m 9., AOEFd S.,. S. ~.Fd 6.G 1M Purltft 1UI ft.27 ljl S.17 NL Grwtll )-'7 4.ll lftve>I 6.14 1 41 T•mo 01 -•.ii Aeo<nF 1..-NL .NA Mtl Fen: ~lem S.01 S.4 J °'111 10.GJ IO 90 11\Com 9 tt • • Ootft ll.03 14.14 Temp 11\v I.GD NL ~Cl'l111n111,"•" t... PIL Lllwl'I' 4.11 4.4' Tllrlfl 10 1' NL Jt l'lll F IUJ NL TaFre I} U 1' Q TaE•I 14 16 U .l6 Trft> Cap 1 °' 1 &I ~111' IO 2' NL Mt11l1tl ~ ).73 TrtnCI ll 17 ZJ.U Jolln HellCoclo.: Mui Sl'lrt ll SI Nl Viste 10 IJ 11.M TrM ln•s 'I• • •J Allstate I SI NL S<hust t 11 t.'7 Ffnanclel Proa: Stl.,. 1.11 •.l2 NEA Mui 116 Nl Voyag U.Ot ll.21 Tr•v Eq I0.61 11 60 AlphaF 10,12 NL :OIOl\l•I F.....0.. Oyne s.a NL f)Oftd , ... 10.JO N•ll lftCI I0.12 NL Relnbw >.• NL Tlldr Hd t•.e» NL A81rtllT •.t) IO. Cnvrt 1.71 ''" lftdUl1 4.12 NL Orwtll S.J7 S.M Net Se<ur SW: R.wrv• T.00 NL r-c 01 .... NL Am .. lc•ft FU!'dt: Fuft(I a.ts t.71 lncom 1 20 ,.L Jollnllft 1•.G NL e.1... •.:13 lO.Oll Revere U2 NL Twrnc ,,,.._ 7.SI NL a.1... 1" I . Orwlll 4.., 4 .. F1t ln•HIGn! k•mlltf' Fllftelt: BOl!cl .... 4.N f:'K EQI t J1 10.2' USAA 01 1.$t NL Amcp t.fl 7.tO tn<Oln a.SJ T J:2 OlKo Sl1 6.G ln<m IO Cl 11 IO OlvlCI 4. IS 4.47 . 1~111 I0.61 I 1.60 USAA Irie: 11.35 Nl Mllll t.61 I0.!7 091,. 10 11 I 11 Gr•lll 1 11 1.11 Or-7 '2 I J3 Orwll• U• S ft I' 1.M l.J4 US Gov •A •Ml •ono 14.32 IUS ~Ill Giii "03 NL. 111com I" •.:M HI VICI 12.01 ". Pf St• '24 7 11 IP I L01 '-" Uftll Miii L1A Nl C..plt ,,,. 7.93 WIUI AB ... I 0. Stock • " • .. MonM I~ NL Inc om SAO •. o. llelder ~: UnlOft S•C ~: f'ri= t·~ ... •::~ ~': ~ Ul %:ft ~!.XJs:'~blA 1~:M ~t M~';.8 l~:ti l! .• 15 Hl\.~: ,.u/rd~ 1
"
29
1 fD1nc1"'10~5Cl1 ,j!;:il,1 StL ~~nv 101~:10 11•21.~ lCA 1~ IJ.Ja i!"'P I'd 1,M • t2 44 •II 21.11 NL m ll.10 11 °lqull It ... IL 4 II r .., U ...,p •• 05 """" "tS 1LS2 jiOll<OrCI IJ.OS NL ,., Giii 110 4.04 Kii 7,<IO .. Orwlll •.SS I0.:11 Men R .oo NL Union 11.7• 12 ... WlllMt SS t. ~· lft'I' • 12 t SO F-r~ ~ TolR IO.Ot 114> lftCDm IJ.!7 '4 IS MM9 IO.JI NL Uftlted PYllOlt!: 7I y .. rio · ~~ 1~11~ :::: ~t ?..= I~·;,;~ Ki•:-:. ~~jl.OI ..::!;., 1~~ G:I &.<~:., F~ NL = . t /6 Gttl ~. IC! s. II.Ii. •• . Mulel 7.*2 •·" ... 82 IUD JOn Enr9y 14 11 NL ·-t.74 t0.02 Con Or • 4)
d • •• l'Y c.p 11.14 it.u ~· 101J 11.01 "' IM ~ •. 011Md Jt.ts NL fquiy 4.16 '·" QI\' 11\C ,'·.!! '°10042s !"''' 1 1Y'ft<"' 1.00 NL Fr..utllft ar-: us Kl 1 • ' ~·'"'' lftYlll 7,4 1.12 ricom -. Qlotll ;f ' 11flfere Gf'Ol.cl: •• _,, . Uo J •• 7 .,. 1(2 s: ,.. 10.U NL Ult•• 10.60 11.9 Mufti I0.01 10 tt
'""' • et 11.14 u... OHTC 7.A.) e.01 • u ,.,,. 1t'zz N•• Wld 10 . .W NL S.IKlecl Flll'tlb: Sci.ft ?-7104 '·!1' '°"Id 4.1 l•w 11 II 12 . .H Orw111 SAt 6.U 111 7.tt 1J New1GI 12.~ NL AmSlls •• NL V->-I • A lt!l(d lcll t .04 • i UUls •. ,. S.1-• 4.JO 4.10 .... , lftC '-" ,.L 5915"' n JJ NL U11ll :JYCI l;!J. Nl AW.rl~ . • ,.. • ~N •.SI t lllCOftl I 1S I... Poler U; J.9 NIClllFCI 11.61 NL Sel'llMI 0.-: ...., YaVI~ LLI,. UI I ... Alftlln • r :o.AO .. S.37 ' ~ Oo• t.2' I0.02 Le•l .. IOft Gro: NOfnure 12E 1·3. •• -J to ..... -' A~"91 1· ~ Ir li ~.14 4. P\\ t" 1·ti Cp Ldr U.11 IJ Jl NorH'I 14, NL ~.., t.,. lllCDm S.U \ ll A wine 1 . L 20.IO NL oqu SI .M ~· Or 11:01 12.0:J N.,.,.,,, '· 10.os 111:\ 1w1· 'a.2·~ ~,".,~\.1 ':f. '1 ~; " tGt11 .-. t u.21 NI.. F11nc1P11 t2 ·°' • 111 io 10 I'~ ~ '·'° 10.02 ,. • -.. · A l!Q US 1t re• 11.w t~ NL .. \Hid. Inc ~: lC It 14'.'4 ~;g 111 1US N t"'~ 1 14,74 V~ a "tt1.' 14 JO "'= °'"T~ "L O:!~f aw.=~ tut ~"'~ ii ~N~ t~1~· .. ~ .. • ·-;.,:o· c...~ den .1 Ill(.::; .. n 1 • G~ll .. ~ 1~ LAVOOI 11.71 t lt ,~, t ~ ~I~ NL lftc9os •AJ • ElllfP S 1 S. "', •dl1~~
f11CM1 • 1 I Lia As '·" ~ IOC 1. L Mlit U:iil NL Mon& t.GO NL H4rt>r • 60 • ~ ~: . j: ~~1~ t:n ts:;~ 't, ··NL L°I?t1n.*1~:,. '·a 0tt111~",. ~~ "'"'" ~:r.· ,rn ~:n v, rt" t1u1 ·~t Wtll'I , 10, t~E!"' ls.77 l ~II I~ I NL 9nCI Ob 101' 11.1 IM t.70 to. Sllear~ '""°' I 1• '(Ii NL '-7,.;~tttft' a.• e.:.~d ~ '::t to. L ,..~~: JM U4 ~~I ~J 1:;. o:t,...S« 1Hf ,:] =:. \~ ~ ::· ~~·'~ J :t [~ . W &ifa11&H-"': Gnrtll tj 7.1.S L11t11•r.,. .,..: P.rem M UI tO. 111""1 • 11 16 ~f 1 11.-NL StO(ll LIS e.ren 7.65 us tncO!'I EL FIMWf '·!! 10.tt ~ Sa I.JS N il..!.''•O •.. H • ' ,.a
'
cot 11en FCHlrs U1 ""' •rt 0111 ,. 1 L ~-•'.if •·ft p;ra Mu 4.• NL $!;"" o ~" " w.11..,9 t.-~t ~· •: St ~p~~ tn 11i v'rf 1t 1\t ut"~~J. ~: .. ~ CAP ~:~ t 1 et·:.~ !i. :. 51~~"' ::.~ ~t am i Ht Ill US U2 •II 14 U.7' MJ:l'-1: Ce, :t:" FCI 9~ IO, 1 TruU I el '¥ VM ft •t 4 11 n m: 059 ~i,'rit ~.1:"''. ~ ":' ~A .ts ~:~i:iti ~ ff.~~ ff!,. :T~s:~ ~t '~t ~C.11"41JI ~fr lf10·;;.·· 111 Ml J.,ttu 1~ J' 1 = f" t ..... 101! n '" 11 • 't WOOf. 5tr111Nn: .. m.r.~ttt '· t&.'I :J/:'4 ,,a :.y" rl'elll l . . . M ft= Ill Ill.,. 1.1) • Cle .. -0 3:_ 44 .,L I~ • , i!r;b~ ,-.... , .. i~•lry 1 ·rls = 1 1 .. · 1 :, ~~,.•ti 12. ~r: 10.!: ~t l!l:G m 't lJ. ·i~' :: w IC l ~t =~ l I :!~" t~''i-t• ; c .. 7;. z..::.~
U.ltlS.SI 't ~ I"" t ' , .. Me~t I . NL ~I« ,..,.. ,., Fd • '° , t.29 10 IS ft I UM "" 1111191: Martlll L 1 IMefft •M roe 1' ._. • .
t. \ .
STOCKS I BUSINESS
'FIQ.NSAC'I10NS
'• I
llN DAILY Al.OT 85
Mitsukoshi
Beats Macy's
By wn.TON MOSKOWITZ
TOKYO -I 1Jway1 thoutbt lhe laraeat atore ln th(
world, In all res~ts. wu M•cy's In New York's Heral(
Square. But Lhat was before I went to Tokyo and vlsitec ' Mltsukolhl .•
M:L;' may be No. 1 in terms or area. Bui
Mltl"1t 's malA department at.ore io central Tokyo h
lhe cbampion in terms ol 11lcs.
IN ITS ELEGANT SIGRT·STO•Y buUdln1 and
adJolnl.ng eon.ex. MltaukoshJ genera~ annual sales ol 16(
bUUon yen, whlcb worn out. dependlna when You arc
takinl the meuure of tho decllnlna dollar, from 9S8C
million to S73S m.llllon.
Any of thQle figures tops by a wide margin tbe salet
done by Macy·s In its n11shjp establishment. even thougt
lb• New York store ls now open on Sundays. <So u
Mllaukosbl~ it closes oo Mondays.) The U atoree in Macy't
New York divlalon bave
sales toc.allni about ~
million. Money
Tree
The department
stor~ can ht> found in ell
corners or the world but
few can trace thelr
-origins back as far as
Mitsukoshi, which was founded in 1613 as a dry goodf
store. It became Japan's first department stol'e lo 1904. _
Shopping at Mitsukoshi 's main store means more thu .-,
just shopping. It's a sensory experience. Consider, lr YOl
wlll. a store that offers the following attracUon.s:
-40 COFFEE SffOPS AND restaurants, lncludint
French, Ital.Ian and Mexican cuisines. ,
-A 546·seaL theater used to stage Kabuki dramas ~
puppet shows, classical dancing and musical shows.
-A movie theater.
-A rooftop open.air musical hall large enough tc '
accommodate 1,000 persons.
A 33-foot waterfall.
-Two bronze lions that are replicas of the lions h #
Condon's Trafalgar Square .
...:.. A Tiffany salon
-An lnstore bakery.
A Rolls· Royce s howroom.
ALL THAT -AND IT'S RIGHT on the subwa)' 11rh
<you get off at the Mitsukoshi stop).
.
~ ..
Beyond its main store, Mitsukoshi has 13 branches i1 •
Japan. And like retailers in the United States, It's movinr
into other areas. It has started boutiques, variety store:
and specialty shops.
It adds up to a tidy sales figure of 450 billion yen l
year. That brings Mitsukoshi above $2 billion, wbicl"
placgs it among the top-ranking merchants of the world.
M iL'ittkoshi also has stores in Paris and Rome. Thel
are thel'e. one gets the impression, ma.inly to establish a
Mitsukoshi presence -and to be helpful to the visitint
Japanese toorist. Thal presence will soon be extended \c
the United States . A big Mitsukoshi store is going up Ir
Honolulu and a smaller one is being planned for Pad
Ayenue in New York City-.
SWck Market CotWd
By Profit Taking
j
N•w V,,,_CAPI ANI Dow·-•--
STOC•S H~ l.Ow CIOM OIQ
30 ,~ ~ .. 11 ·'' 1-.n I03 11-•.es 20 Ttll 211.J,f J1 .JI 114.U 21 •. 1._ ,, IC 15 UCI lctS,4 1C»m !Of.AO 104.'1-O.IS
•S Slk 2'0.V 211 21 VU:J 271.Al-MO '"""~ • . . • • . • . • • • .. • ... • • • J,•11,000 ,,.., ••. -••••• •. . • .... . 1«1,600
Ulll\ •....•. · · · · · .. · ·· ·•• W.'°° 6S Siil • • • • .... • • • . • • • . • • • • S.OOl ,jOO
Whal SI fH"k• Did
HEW YORK t.t.PI
SALIU
N!W YORK CAPI ·NY SIO<ll w .. s •-o~ 1;n.1 ... • • • • • • • • .. ••• •.t.so,ooo p,..voous oe-, . . . . ••. •. .. . . . . .. ~.SI0,000 w .... .., .................... 24,100,000
,Monti\ •90 •• •• . • •• • • . ... • • 2c.c10,ooo
YHr t90 """T"'"" ••••• 19,SIO,OOD J-.,.." "90 • • • .. . .• . • . • u.soo.ooo
1971 10 IUlo • .. .• ••• ... 1, ,M0.000 an 1 10 ciat• ............. , '·iff' ,111.000
1~1• to oatt .. ... . .. . . . . . 1. 1,ooe,179
WHAf AME.II 010
NEW YOAIC IAPI
Adv•,.<ed
O.Cllned UMl>e~ Tottl tu.-Now hlQM
Nt• 10•0
Prn. J,OG•y ~J
40 300 7SA lit 'Ill .. ,
JS 109 ' . Odd Lo••
~
MOi i =f::'m.
A-~.-~ ~ ~ tJV ...,.,., Matt
Dllon •• ~ blldl ... .wt~-. Ptllft-llie'"'~· • 1MI MN1't llJNCH
Bot>«>y Ind Cindy .,.
' ~tO~OlllTV tr=:..11 ,,_ _, MMloV lnYMtl-
Qlle the bUtM ,,,.. of • 1.wn -~FME Ollu1v d1..,ona1re111 oo«ery, Gofdon t.,_
sign ~; Jud~ •tilt• e1>e1ut ._ OWmM s~
herd gulOe dog .• I!> PEMONAL FIMNCl
........ lhlnlUrW>e;e"
tIJ) A8C NEWS
llllned to go on tour WW\
LMtftlt Ind flit 6uedll •='"' • • ••TN IWNll" (Ul70)
OftlO MoCalum. Olifln9
Wol'ld Wlf II. a YoUflO Ger•
_, tOldler II tent to cap.
Ml t Yugolllvian llliper
but Miii• the t(eglotllly
~ ...... of~ln
lovnl\tl Hllr.121\rt. I • OMO&. IUANITT
Nl!OfNl!ND9
• MOYll
•• • "Saroeant llluUtdgl'. (IMO) Jttttrwy
Hunter, Oonatenoe
I Toweta. Atfer rlerng &bow
his ... ¥1 111011w11oe-. a •
c.valry oftlclr la ~
ol rep• i nd rnurder
dlarOl9 by his ""*'°' otilcet.(2 ""·) • I IOUGKT.,.,
MOTHER
J-Earl JC>Me l\llfl ...
a ~twy on the otu-
kaa of &.tnnMI. Sw1tl
America. who -· thl llnt bladi llaves to fi9ht a
; TUBE TOPPERS
CBS 8 8:30 -Bugs Bunny In Space.
The "wascal wabbit" takes off tor outer
space in this animated cartoon special.
NBC D 9:00 -"Holociust." The
third episode or the four-part serles·
about the Nazi atrocities 8Jainst the
Jews in World War 11. T.orught 's seg.
ment is titled "The Final Sc;>h.rtion."
KOCEst 11 .00 -FUm's·Flying Ace.
Aviator Frank Tallman. who was killed
in a plane crash last Saturday. is saluted
in the rebroadcast of this KOCE special.
dt1dl la -..inalld and
Ill•~~· '°"" hlnlh anlJ.Gwman
"" by ~ and .... fellow artleta In lfll ~ (Pet1 ;) <!'L 4) •lll TH..U-8
OOfltfl>AK'(
~and contumer
lff•b peop6e and IOOttt
lO:IO. ~I LEHfP
MP'Ofl1' • aYMll08ll
TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS
G OJ MCMOVIE ••'.+ "Slv~" flt741
Andy Ortlllth. Sam
eouom• Aro unarr.,ed
you111 llghtl ~11414Y
tor anwlf lgainlt '""° ruthtau 1111m1n -a der*'Old hunltt end ,,,.
,_,,~ -..n. (Al
.THAT ..
.,TO Eacfl ._ °""'" • !'flMAM' . ~ CAl'TIOHEDABC
(J) MOYll * *'i+ .. The~ Affair"
( 1173) Glenda Jlckton.
P9ter ~. The IOYI lftllf
~ Lord HOrallo NII•
-and ladV Emme H.,.,._
ll!Ofl dUttnQ Ille 1800's
llldld in trageclyj' when
NlilloflWll kJllld In b1ttle.
11:f0. C88 LATE MOVIE
• • • "Ruby Gentry"
c 19531 Jennifer JO'lls
°"8fllon Healon A proeo-
tute Nllk• revtf198 on an
lllt>Ofall ll08le -her true love dloldes lo marry
, .....
1:36 KOJM(TM ~)
"0-Tlle Wal«" Mice
Vi991rt Jt. fMklhMI ~
IOfer).. a yourio l>ood. 111111
1 conlr 4ICt out on Kotell
agalntt hla fall•· t witfltl.
tRI
2.-00·= • • ... '8ell>Oa ConQIHtt6-
dOf Of Thi Dtcifk:" ( 19114) F•.,_ ·~ ~ ~ dllflQiltlM. &.!!>Or ....,. hill rNft la~ the
c.nt•ll~lat~
10 IN DIOfJlc. (.2 hrw) . ~"" *. Th• Cormt On"
(19561 Mfle eaxter. Stlf1.. •no Mt)"Mn. 4 woman pita one io-._,., lrlOCOlt
and wlrldlt ·~P lnllOIVld tn
onurdlf (2 hr1 > 2:261 NIWt ~ MOVlf
11:308 MOVIE ••it "The lJOlY Am«l-
cat>" (Part 1)(1963) M1110n
&ando. El~ Olcedl An
Arne<lcen 1rnban1dor
~ on aoMng Allian
attairs •ft• being tllackld
by a mob (1 hf .30mln ) Gl·BEWfTCHEO
SmeetSJoux IUOCftlful 11U9'tlla war
which won them lndeoend·
-from Dutc:h .._
traders
"Chr'l.,.Y'a Nigh! Out" Jack
deNnds CIW!My'e honor
wtlerl a man who mltun-
0...llftd• hit '~ ahowa up 81 thl llC>lftmtlnl
and no one~-tte a• cop (R)
Mlln~ ol the s ... Diego
811181 Company perfOfm a
dramatic: balle4 which pOf·
treys the relatlonalllp
t>et"""" mll' and tlel'nol
tt:OO • Cl) 9 NEWS i (R)
• more respected len>ale
,,, lhe coml'llUnlty
MORNING
12:00. TWlUOHT ZOHE
• • • "Belle 01 The
lll1ne1111 ' (19341 Mee
W11t Ro9er Pryor
~ bloslorn9 dur"'O
lhe Gey Nlneuee.
2:4611 NEWS l~8 MOVIE
wnen Samanlha's awey,
Sir-t,_ IO play anCI
Derrln llrnoal lo-hi•
h11<
Richard Harris stars as a nobleman kid-napp~d by ~ndh.ns and Corinna Tsopei is
lhe Sioux wom;m he takes as his wile in
the movie "A !\tan Called Horse" tonight
at 9 on CBS. Channel 2.
G TUANABOUT
"Hendlcrlft "111" A vltit to Flberwof1t•. "ltlerl th<ee-
dlmenalorill round sculp-
tur" .,. -· PtlP« It made and fabric:• are
•MERY~
MMTfRPIECE
'OEATl'E
"Our Mutual Friend" The
dllc:o\lery °' a dead ma11 lfoat'"9 In the Tnamea
lfOUtes~and I
LOVE. AMENCAN
STYLE
"The Bed" Paul and Cot11
get a real blfgaln on e ,_
bed 0 MOVIE
A ha-been 1rumpe1 pllyer
1ttempte lo make a com&-
l>tcii. .., MOVIE
**'~ "Beginning 01 The
Encl" ( 1~1118r11n Oontevy
Rot>er1 Walker The ....... of
thl men working on lhl
tori! atomte t>Omb •••
llUll'llU'led (2 hra I
t •~ 'Murder On
Mond•y • < tt5ill AalP/'
Richardson. Jeck Haw•una
A ~ leller ~ 10<
tw...ty lour hourw. tllutt
prove ..hit hi Old not oom-
m11 a murder and I
robbery f I hf • ~ mtn I
ti) AOOKIES
FO<Jr \'Olln9 people, oul fDf
laC:l-1 In a S10len
poc:kup. run 1n10 big prot>-
1ern11 ED OVEAEASY
at ILOV£LUCY
A movie contract IOf Ricky
nec:e .. uat" the Ricardos
moving from New York
ti) A'='AM-12
Malloy and Reed help a ell·
tzen wno Is belHlged by 51
friendly Me•lcen ci-ildren.
8i) MACNEIL I LEHRER
~
'1l) HOME GARDENER .. T,_ ..
CJ) JOl<ER'S WILD
Actor Robert Stack
d111ousset his ,,_ movie,
'cnedc Up": 11941 d*rlmi·
nation: contonotng educa-
tion. "Cebarel" perform·
era look to older actora tor
1nsplfatoon.
~ THE GAOWIMO
YEARS
1:30 I CANDID CAMERA NEWLYWED GAME (llll H<>ll YWOOO SOOAAES •
"Cn1td'1 P,tay" · 1 .A,MERICA 2NIGHT ME.RV GAfFFlN
7;00 H8C NEWS
UAR8ClU8
I A.8CNEW8 llOWUNG,OR
DOU.AAS
0 JOKEA'S WILD CD THl!8AADY BUNCH
Mar~ 11111 aa though her
world hlls be«! deSlr0)'9d
when t>raoee ere put on
herl-h -
., AMERICA 2HIG..r
Gues1· Karen L¥"" Gomey.
aaG••rl ~bl Ing•
• KNXT 1cas1 LQS Angeles D t<NBC (NBC) Los Angeles
G KTLA(lnCI) Los Angeles
U t<ABC·TV (ABC) Los Angeles
CJ) KFMB (CBS) San Diego
0 t<HJ... TV 1 Ind.) Los Angeles ®> KCST (ABC) San Diego
CD KTIV {Ind I Los Angeles
CD KCoP·TV (Ind J Los Angeles
fll) KCET· TV (PBS) Los Angeles
81) KOCE-TV (PBS) Hun11ngton Beach
T\l's "Bastard'
Olivia Hussey
Alters Image
By J ERRY BUCK
. t..OS ANGELES CAP > -It is quite a leap
Oli via Hussey makes from Juliet and the Virgin M ar~ to Aheia in ''The Bastard." Operation Prime
Time's first show or the year
''That's why l took the role." said Olivia. who
reeently moved back to Calirorrua after several
ye1trs in London
'Ali cia puts money first. She really loves
Phillipe, but marries his haJf·brother because he
has the money and the title. When he ls killed she
goes after Phillipe. She is a bit or a whore, really."
She said it was the first television role she had
ever accepted. Although "Jesus of Nazareth " in
which she played Mary, was shown on NBC'. she
said Franco Zeffirelli filmed it at the leisurely pace of a movie
"WHEN f WENT ON the set of ''The Bastard,"
rhey \I.ere already under way," she said. "They
!'lhoot so much faster. I was very nervous. ll took me a
day togelcalmeddown "
As 1t turned out there were many delays in
shooting the two-part, four·hour film. Heavy rains
postponed the outdoor scenes, so Olivia flew back
to London. closed out her affairs there and new
hack with her S-year-old son, Alexander Gunther
Marlin, and her secretary
She said she hopes that her divorce from Dean
Martin Jr. will be completed in the next few weeks
and she will be free to marry singer and composer
Paul Ryan.
"THE BASTARD" was adapted from the first
in the:! senes of books written by John Jakes for the
American Bicenterutial. It will air in May on a
number or stations across the country. Operation
Prime Time was organized by a group of indepen-
dent stations about two years ago to produce
shows that would enable the stations to compete
wit" network programming.
Andrew Stephens plays the UUe role ol "The
Bastard," who flees England to the American col-
omes Just before the Revolut.ion. It bas an -aU-star cast •
Olivia was ~tted jn a London production of
"The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie" by Zeffirelli at
the time he wa~ looking for a Juliet for "Romeo
and Juliet." The film made her a star and she bas
since appea~ed in "Lost Horizons," .. The Cat and
the Canary ' and the upcoming "Death on the Nile "
SHE SAID SBE HASN'T done TV before
because "the right parts haven't come along" She
sa1d, "I've been offered roles before but turned
them down I will do more television If I can find
more parts as good as Alicia. Television money
uowadays is as good as the movies."
She said she had dinner recently wllh Zef·
Cirelli , now working on "The Champ," and he pro-
mised her a role in his next picture. She Is also un.
der consideration for another film going Into pro-doction next month.
But Ollvla, ab oUve·1'klnned, dark.haired
beauty, said she had never thought of doin1 a TV
sertea. "I have no prejudice against televlllon "
abe said. "It'• Jual that I wouldn't want to 1~t
lluck tbat1001:
8D 28 TONIGHT
'1l) NEWSCHEa<
An lnlormetJve colllctlon
of Or11119t1 County MWS.
9overnm-.t 'In~• con111mer
•rtel<a. peopll eod lpO(tl
CJ) THE OOHG SHOW
8.-00 8 Cl) SAM
When • terrorist notifies an
airline that he hu Planted
• bomb aboard a crOWded
jetliner wtlk:h la ebout to
take ott. Sam the carune
cop, and his handler. 0111-
cer MlkJ 8'Mro. art 111rn•
maned on lhe double lo try
10 locate 1he deadly
~ -8 MANFAOM
Al\AHTIS
"~ Hunl .. Wherl
Maltt Harria (Patrlcil Duffy)
i. off •Id es • SllC'lllce to a ,..,_,,. two-headed
aea monattr. hi rtdltcOV·
ers an Old friend, con man
Muldoon (Ted ~I. who
has trleked the native• °' a
PIClllc tlland Into pa)'log
hlmhomege
G MOVIE •• * ·~ "Thi Little Foxes"
( 1!M t) Bette 0.vls. Herberl
Marlhall A Soothetn lam•· Iv r-. downlali after the
Civil War 12 hrs I
Q I!}) HAPPY DAYS
"Fonrte And LeathJI'
Tuscedlro" (Part 2) Fonzie
and A1c,,1e lead the Maren
tor Joanoe •lier she runs
away from hOme deter·
dyed: • woman pottet ere-•t• 1n "ClaYIOf19,.. a
wlllmeloal film
l:30 II Cl) 8008 BUNNY IN SPACE
NI animated apecial In
v.'hlcl't Bugs Bunny flnda a.
.,_ 10 his P'ISllnll
qu1atl011, "What'• Up,
Doc?" In outer IPICI· 8 llJ LAVl.ANE &
8HIN.EY
"Robot Laweult" Whlle
L.-ne and Shirley are
ahopping. Laverne 11
attactild by a toy robot
and an unuaual couttroom
battle del/elopl when She
_, lhl atore. (R)
• a.oss-WO'S m <>VER!Mv ""I • Actor Robert Stack
di-hta new mcMe.
"Check Up"; age dl1erim1-
-nation: contln1Jin9 lduoa·
lion: "~t" perform-
•• k>oll.lo ~ 8C10fl IOf
IOSl)lratlon.
t:OO IJ C88 MOVll *If • "A Man Celled
HOfM" ( 1970) Rlehatd
Harris. Dame Judith
Anderaon. A captured
Engl~ aristocrat endures
humlltallon end pain In the
prooe.s or 1>eoorn1n9 a
SiouJt warrior D HOl.OCAUST
"The Final Solutlon" Rudi
Wetsa and Helene ere
married: tnge Helms Weosa
wants to jOln hi< huel>lnd
1<1111 at Tti.l*ISlldt. Hey-
Underwater Equ•?
' I growing hU1199' fOf money
... (Plft I °' 71
CJ) NCH MAH, POOR
MAH:llOOKI
t:30 . aJ HAfWEY KOfWAN
"Tiii One Where Thefe·a II
Holdup" A tlaml>Oyant
Harvey K1v1nau9h
blcomea a he<o when hi
helpl !Oil a bYmbling bank
robt>e< fD THAAaAN GOLD
Ale•llnder Scour by ner •
relit • c:l<>l4HIP IOOlt II lhe
mysterious end beaollful
treaaures ol 1nc1ent Thr-. lncludln9 gold. ,all-
..., and bronze artllllOls 10:0011 NEWS JUllE FARR, M.D.
"Car-s·~ Or. Fr1nktln
refu-to accept the feel
that time has erOded 111s
surgieal sllUla. an earty
btrlll 1eopardues • a
mother's career and an
efficiency Hpet1 lries 10 or9'"1U Illa wife· s pr19-
n1111Cy
I LET'S MAKE A DEAL
MICHA.El JACKSOH
Cardtnal Timothy Mannlr19
~ -• oomplp
and controversial issues
a1tecl11>9 Ille church 1n this
decade
I!) NEWSCHECK ·
An 1nlorrnet1ve cotlec11on
of 0r•"9tl Counr~ ,_.,
Teddy Neeley returns as con man Muldoon 1n tonlght·s episode of "~he Man From Atlanti~ .. lo!11ght at 8 ~n NBC. Channel 4. Neeley
plays a man who terrorizes island natives with the aid of a two-
headed sea monster.
**'+ "Aprll love" 11957)
Pit &oonl. SNr1ly Jones
• THE ODO COUPt,l
Faltx dlfec11 a mo111e built
atound a-·. day by day
actMtles.
9) MONTY PYTHON'S
Fl VINO CffQJ8 9 DICK CAVETT
"A P~salon On T ellvlslon" · Her·
ber1 • lol Pr-
dent for Public: Alfllfs tor
the Mobil Oii Corporation: -'eff G.._..tleld. autnor of
"TelevillOl'I, The Fwat Fifty Y_,.. Ron Powers. Pul·
rt:ret p<l2-1nnlng 1-.vi.
110n critic:: NICnolas·Jonn-
son. Chairman or lhl
Natlonal Clttzen. Commll·
IM tor Bfoaooastlng. (Part
1012) • G FILM'S FLYING
ACE
A tribute to •Yl•lor Fr.,.k 1:~~~·t=ln•l)4-
11:20 II NEWS
11 :30 8 TONIGHT
Guest host· Don Ri.1t1 ...
Guea1s: Debby Boone.
HM\ Gurley 8rown. Rot>-.,, Slllt•. 8fUOll Jennw
• LOVE. AMEAK:AN
STYLE
"loYe And Th• Se<tous
Wedding" Two p'-c:toc:al
1okers decide 10 9111
mlrrltd loYe And Mr
Noce Guy" A nice guy is
~turtled t>eeauM! girls
ireat him as a l>vdd)
., MOVIE * * "Crime And Puntlh-ment, u S.A .. I t95tt
~OI Hamilton. Mary
MUIJ)hy 81114Wlng he 15 a
financial burden to h15
tamtty. • YQU09 law student
comm111 a robbery and a
murder ( t ht • 30 min I
12:30 . MOVIE • * ·~ "Thi fl!'Ply
Canvas" ( 19641 Belle
DIVIS, Horat 8uc:l>hOlr An
artllt. otJeeUed With hi•
tovely mooet. trlea to Olly
her to IMve her lover and
ltay...,llflll'n
1.00 8 TOMORROW
YOUtUf KAltStl one or Ille
-orld'• 9fMl"t oortra11
phot09"8Qherl, WIH talk
•bout totne ol ~s ,l1rnous
tobtec1s '8n9tn9 trom &1-
91111 Bardot 10 Wrnstoo
Churc:11111 S1sse1a Bo'< .lrthor ol "loeong Mor11
Chooce In Publtc And · p,,_
VIII L.111." wtU dlsoulS the
IOla of tr_,st In OUt soc:,.ty
·~ "The Seauttful Cl!ll<1ren"
1:15(1) KOJAK{TIME
APPROX.)
"O\ler The Water" '-A1ke
\11Q9e<s Jr (Miehaet Chros.
toferl. a young hOod. puts
a contraci out on Kotak
lglllf1S1 htS lather S WlllWK
3:56 8 NEWS
•:OO D MOVIE ••"The Mystery Of Mar-
• ie Roqet" ( 1942) M-
Montsz, P•trk: Knc>wlM. A
medieal 11<am1ner unc;oy.
ers a murder attar Ml
~r .. s dtsapp91111.
0 MOVIE
• • ·~ "When Lovers
"4111" (194111 George
Brent, LUCiiie Sall. A ,..,._
•on ed•IOf dlllCO\lera her
husband was unlallhful
dUrtnQ lhe Wllf aod deCidla
on a <IM >tce. (2 h11. > ID MOVIE • • * 'Macbeth" 111148) Orson Welles. Jeanelle
Nolan Shakespeate't dra-
ma of 1 man end hit Wife
wllOM 91eed and ambition
lead thlrq_ to lrlQ9dy tn
1 lth-<:enlury Scotland. (1
Ill .55moro I
I
Wednesday'•
Dagtf•e Mo.,fe•
MORNING
11:3011) •··~·;.R1ae Beyon<1
Vengeance" I 19661 Chuck
ConnOfa. MICllael Rennoe
AFTERNOON
12:00 0 ••.,;"Dance Utlle
Lady < 19551 Mai Zeuer-
hng, Guy Rolle.
Kicking TV Habit?
Author CTUJJades .4gaimt Boob Tube
By SUSAN AGER
SAN FRANCISCO CAP l -It's
time to kick the "tune·in-tomorrow"
habit for good by tossing your TV
sets "into the garbage pail where
they belong" -al least according to
an ad man's new book, "Four Argu·
men ts for the Eli mi nation of
Television."
Ten years ago, Jerry Mander was
preparing TV commercials for
Triumph cars. Eagle shirts, Paul
M a:ison wines -clients of the
celebrated agency, Freeman,
Mander and Gossage. now defunct.
Five ,Years ago, be was scraping
together money to pay ror TV com·
m ercials for the Sierra Club, .Friends
or the Earth and other groups with a
message but no product.
periences with TV and advertising.
accounts of scientific research and
Mander 's own philosophy of life.
Although divided into rour argu-
ments. it includes dozens of .-easons
why Manders feels TV is harmful
His claims .
TV affects the body by proJecting
up to 25.000 volts of artificial light tn·
to th.e eyes. It dims the imaginallon
by burning iodetible TV images on the
memory. It Jimits real -life ex-
perience by keeping people in their
living rooms. It is oiased toward 'the
coarse. the bold and the obvious ..
because some things are easier to
convey on TV than others -hate
over love. death over life. violence
over harmony. ·
"THEY DIDN'T work. Even if you
did get on TV, tbe commercial was
preceded by 10 commercial
messages and followed by 10 com· -------------------------------mercial messages, and your message
was drowned out," he s aid. That
firm. the first non-profit advertising
agency in the nation, closed in 1974.
TELEVISION IS the economy's
No. l tool for persuading people to
buy. Even 40 percent or public pro-
gramming is paid ror by oil and
chemical comparues.
And because · -nany of our 9 to 5
lives are already somewhat plastic
and drab. he sa1a. televis ion seems
useful and interesting But, Manders
claims. by creating a captive au-
dience or 30 mtllfon people whose
eyes are glued to a single show, 1t
"freewayizes. suburbanizes ana com-
modilizes human beings, who are
then easier to control.·'
'Mutual Friend' Airs Today, Mander proudly turns down
The faint or heart will want some
reassuring soul around when mutilat-
ed corpses are fis-
hed out of the
murky mire or the
Thames, and
dastardly deeds
devised -and
executed -along
Its gloomy
banks , when
Ma s terpiece
Theate r presents
"Our Mutual
Fri e nd ,"
Tuesda ys. begin-snMOUtt
ning tonight al 9 on KOCE-TV, Chan-
nel 50.
The program repeats Saturdays,
beginning April 22 at 9 p .m. Charles
Dickens' last completed work, Is
FAOM Fash ion Island
New po rt Beach
replete with rascals and rogues. requests from TV talk shows which
damsels in various stages or stress want him to push his new book, the
and distress, switched identities first to suggest that TV is not re-
diguises and ead-of·rught search~ fo~.f ~!'.!,~,!.Dd sho~ be :limtoln~~~· for missing wills. 1e~~. some Y as ~e a
T h e r e · s b I a ck ma i 1 , stan~ and J~l. not .. have ~n->'.lhmg.to
murder, robbery and love _ both re· do ~1th t~~ev1s1on, be. said man 1n-
quited and unreqwred. And, for com-terv1e~. Plus. .lh~re s a . common
ic relief a literary con man with belief in the publishing business that
peg leg,' a sorely taxed taxidermis~ you ha··e to use TV to sell. your boo~:
and a down-at-the-heels matron try-and l wanttoprovethatnot1onwrong.
Ing to maintain crooked-pinkie am-
bience at a very un-posh tea.
The cast of the Mobll-fun.ded chJller
includes Jane Seymour, Joh n
McEnery, Leo McKern and Kathleen
Harrison.
Masterpiece Theater host Alistair
Cooke will be on hand to introduce each
spooky episode, and to prepare
vlewersfordlredoings.
MANDER, 41, HAS a slew of
establishment credentials and is not
a fanatic. He still owns a TV, and his
children may watch up to five hours
a week.
"The last thin1es I watched were
the Ali-Spinks right and Nixon's res·
ig n ation. Now that was good
television," he said.
His book combines personal ex-
Mander began shaking up his col·
leagues several years a go when he
wrote an article called "Four Argu-
me nts for the Elimination of Ad-
vertising." A national magazine re-
fused to print it, he said, explaining 1c
would cost them advertisers
MANDER CONCEDES that the
end or television would cnpple the
cons umption-oriented American
economy
While Mander 1s not about to pre-
dict when TV will meet Its demise, he
says the networks will be extinct in
10 years, replaced by local program-
ing and cable television.
STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR
• I
''Thirsty?''
f=UNKY WINKER BEAN
HEQ.~. ~ ABOOT wrrn .. ' ~ na,e. G1RU:> mAT
JU6T CNfE. IN ;.
GERIATRIX
-~~~o.sr WHEN~~
~DOG~UV
,A\..L-Hal ClZEP\T
CMZ.c>51
DENNIS THE MENACE
I • I I
GORDO
by Tom Batiuk
By CharlH Rodrtgun
THe NA~ ~l-1'1
NARJ!C>WER
'Tl/!:61
NAReoWER
J..1:6 ""1"Y~,
._ ______________ ... A/..J.T~
NAR!l<OWER
~4C:.'jof.J
JUDGE PARKER
OH. ROLLO, I LOVE
YOUR NEW I OOCK' PQND
,
(
l>Y Wm. F. lrown and tMI casson
~!'ZIA ,~ ~ 96UEVJ.
1.J 'f~ ~·,.l.leAL.'
DR.5MOCK
i..OOK, ~TOR ! UP 'TH~Re .' "THA..,...
MS"T'AC..C..IC SI t.-VSR
DISC.' li"'S <SOI '"1'0 ~e AN UFO!
by Gus Arrlo~
by Harold Le Doux
by Tom K. Ryan
POP, POP, POP!-R>fff YOU EVER PLAY
'THE: CLASSICS?!
by Ernte Bushmiller
~(b;-cJ
.S< ~0 ~·~ --.. .
---
TUllCSly, April 18. 1978 DAil Y PILOT •7
PEANUTS '· WCMrlllM.~
rr l&IAS 60(X) FOR
llE FUUJS • ..8UT, ~ ~~UKE
~ WCQ.D '«XI? •
\'HIGH TIDE
wru.BE AT
7:56 P.M.•
by George Lemolat ----------------8LJ1" MAYt?>S
IT' WO<.Jt..P t?>E! A ~OOP I Pt?A TO .,-AK~ OFF MY
Hf;AP MIRROR
TODAY'S CllSSlllD PUZZLI
ACROSS thofougfllare UNITED Feeture Svndlc:a!e 2 wo1ds r
1 Raises 51 MahJOOg Monday's Punle Solved·
6 Sign or 90f· piece
TOW 528~nedup 1 O Alack's 5• W11t1ng 1m-~!! . ". II I re• T OIOll
"" Ir "l • A I I f II
partner plemant
t4Estuary 580runl!riown
15 Ethnic name Abbi'
, l II f I ~ a r s ' " r11 , .,
f " ' ' " H E l
ft,. f I -, " 0 I •• ' f , f
oroup 59 Ruaa1an
16 Plexus narM
loo I II I t A T ' ,. " f I IO c 0 • l I S T ,. . • v 0. 17 --·---IS 61 Make
Born~ reperatlon
t 8 --·· sch004 62Go11111<1 O'let
19 Forceful 63Forblclden
• v I II v '"I ' A I f s ,
i II A I s "0, l II A s [ s
& s ' " A. I a 0 f
~ I ' . I I l l I CIA A
outburst from use I • ( I l o• I I 't E ...
20 W11e tr om 64 NCO tnlOI· ls II II I , l ' 0 I l " I S • an antenna mal
22 Suognted 65 Snowmobile •
24 "MetamorphOsea .. Pl•
111• ' .. [ s u . "' .. ~~J; ll•h 0 0 11 s , f 11 D ..!J~
author decelaor 1t Tt1hef word
26 Bfiel en-66 Flanders 12 Atllel tr• 43 Uberallon coun1ers 11ve1 .,._ 27Hurnbled 67Gollerl.ee t3.-,.nta•n 44Spol\e
oneselt IOll lllOllOIOnOUtly
31 Tu 21 No1hrng •6 Btg shot
32 Some DOWN 23 unt11n1ed ,7 l.8'91 man»
POems Vlf 25 Wllefe mala
JlVegelll>le t tOOdtnara :~a•nacome 48$nlgle
concoc.hon 2 Noun end-27 Se1ie year's 35 Animal a ing 28 •• game rlCOld
loot 3 Where Fix ti 49 Aocil oC 38 C111nese Jn,...r •S 2t Persian , ...... ft 1sin9lass .. -• ......, 39 Ran eulty Abbr ooet 60 E'ttc1111e a
40 Remove 4 Peruse 2 30 Deceives vacuum
covering worcrs 34 Ad1us1 anew tube
4 I Music unit 6 Con lends 36 Conl)ress 53 Kind ol
42 Sheep 6 Mil unit employee bficil lnlOI·
ahellers 7 Frontier lew G6 War god mal
43 Spieads officer 37 •.•• End 65 String
uncnecked 8 Severe rn l.Ondon sec· 56 ~Picnic"
44 AMA man temper hon eulhof
lntorm•I 9 Covered a 39 Place 57 Cunnino
45Moststern newuvent 400fone'• look
4 7 Poor tO Opulent IOllU eo Robot
aupPI)' 42 WeeU111man'1 drama
l
._ ~ • t I •
.. T
, ........ 11.1111 ENTERTAINMENT /·INTERMISSION /'MOVIES
'Au~' 'i;lass' Opening
# ........
• JOAN RIVERS TALKS ABOUT 'fWHllT TEST'
'Get It In Wrttfng and Trust No One'
oan' s Rabbit
~Really Hopping
By JERRY BUCK
LOS ANGELES CAP> -You, sir, in thedouble-
knil leis~ suit. Do you feel queasy in the morning or
have a sudden craving for pickles and ice cream?
-Have you taken the rabbit test?
: _ "Rabbit Test" is Joan Rivers' ultra black
~ :tomedy about a man who flunks bis -and winds
• '.411> headed for lhe maternity ward. It uiay sound
ltke a misconception, but along the way, no sacred
: ~w is unkicked.
~ Getting "Rabbit Test" ott the ground took
more than a year aild the experience bas not left
Miss Rivers starry-eyed about llollywood. It was
the first directorial effort tor the night club come-
• dienne. but she now has several more OlOvies ln the
works. ,
' "GET rr rN WRITING and trust no one, thal'•
your motto if you're goingto make a livinl in-this
town." she said. "Do it yourself is yoW' qiott.o for survival in tbJs town.''
Her previous tllm exJ*rience had been creat-
iqc_ .tb~ "'CBS series "Hus bands, . Wives and
Lovers" and wriUng a TV Movie caiJed "Girl Most
Lltely To," wblcb launched the career or Stockard
Channing. That was about an ugly duckling wbo
suddenly becomes beautiful aft.er plastic surgery
and set.s out to murder everyone wbo bad been
nasty to her before. Miss Rivers said, "U's totally
autobiographical."
After she and her partner, Jay Redack,
finished the script, they sat back to wail for fame
and fortune.
"I WAS TURNED DOWN by every SOB in this
town," she said. "Now they're all coming back to
.me with dealt; which I've turned down. I thought I
would be bitter, but I'm having a good tlme.
"We thought we bad the fUIID)esl script. We
sent it out for bids. We even gave them a lime
limit. We got seven tumdowns in one day. I was
literally turned down once al a dinner party."
She said, "J was turned down hr the same
sludio that did 'Lucky Lady.' I was turned by the
studio that did 'Nickelodeon.' By the studio that
did ·won Ton Ton the Dog That Saved Hollywood.·
All big winners."
Silting in an airy room of her Bel Air home,
she said, "This is Mooty Python and Saturday
Night Uve. It appeals lo kids. It's wild, it's crHy.
But if you think 'Woo Ton Ton' is funny. you won't
think this is funny.
"YOU KNOW WHAT REALLY scared them? I
said I could do it for $1 million. I th.ink I came on
too strong. If someone wants to do it that bad, give
them the money. They spent that much on press
kits for 'Close Ent'ounters of the Third Kind.' They
spend that much on limos lo the airport or Oying
"Some star's favorite hairdresser to Rome.
How did she get the money? For one thing, she
and her husband, producer Edgar Rosenberg,
-hocked everything they owned. She said, "If it bad
failed,r we'd be in debt the rest of our lives.
Fortunately it's making money and in most places
is runDing behind only 'Saturday Night Fever.' If
I'd only known I'd have thrown in a disco scene and a
car chase."
''IHAT OBSCUR
OUCl'OF
DESIRE" {R)
•18USH
SUl-tm.IS
PUB LICK
NOTICE
N<Jw~
IN THE LOUNGE
Tuesday ttlru Saturday
9:00 PM to 1:30 AM
\
NIWPOl't Booch, 3303 W. Coast Hwy., 642-2295
r
One lmpenooatee a woman. The other th1nka
be'• OOd. Tb&, IA a nutabell, 1WD1 uP the production.a
°""1D1 tGftlsht and w~ at tbe Laguna
llou.ltoa PlaJ.bouM ud Or~ Cout Colle1e.
w1uoa bowl ln tonlpt with 'Cbarley's Aunt,"
wblle ooc rOUowa OD Wednelday wltb '"l'be Ruling
ClQI."
At Ll(lma, South Coast Repertory ac~ Lee
Sballat t. Cltrfttlnl the vintage famt tn which two
Oxford youths aet one of their buddies to jrn.
penooate a maiden aunt SQ u 'o provide a "dl•Ptt'OOe'' Ior their teeeclJvor J:Oman&i~
terludes. Stuart Duckworth tuee 0.. Utle role.
with Davtt1 Newlin and Paul Barber .. the col·
legtate coo.spiratort and Lisa Black a.net Nevada
Barr u tbe young ladies.
OTllEU IN THE LAGUNA cot are Joan
Morrie, Kathryn Johnson, Alfred Lot.Jeans,
stepben Shafter Qd Robert James. OCC's James
Bertholf is designl.q the set.
"Charley's Aunt" will be oo sta&e Tutedays
through Saturdvs at 8 p.m. wttb a 2:30 SUnday
matinee on April 23 at lbe Moultoll, 500 La&una
Canyon Road, Laguna Beach. Reservations
494..0743.
Opening Wednesday for four perforu\ances al
Orange Coast Colleee is Peter Barnes' satirical
comedy "The Ruling Class," which centers on a
young nobleman w\th a Messiah complex. Steven.
Jay Warner Ls directing .
.JOHN PEZENAS PLAYS the leading role bf
the eccentric earl, wtlh Joseph Amster, Cathy
.Carlson and Darren Bordier taking the major •uP·
porting assiJnments. Others in the large cast are
Elizabeth Hansen, Robert Volk, Steye Sitler,
Frances Hubbell, Vicky Mae Nebeker, l'pny
Nunes, Reed Boyer, John Jaenicke, Brad Conway,
John BeJcsa, Eric SlegmaM, Andy Ciccarelll and ScoUS~van.
"The Ruling Class" plays Wednesday ~gh
Saturday at 8 p.m. in the college's Drama Lab
Theater. Tickets, al $2. are available at the door.
Winding up it.s engagement at South Coast
Repertory with final performances tonight tlu'oµgh
Sunday ls Ben Jonson's classic comedy
."Volpone." Daniel Sullivan directs the sh.ow with
Jrlcbael Keenan and Chw:les Lanyer beading the
SCR cast. '
Wife Gets
Singer's
Costody
CAMDEN. N.J. <AP)
-A Camde n County
court judge has awarded
~uard ia n s h i p of incapacitated rock 'n ·
roll singer J ackie Wilson
to his estranged second wife.
Judge Mary Ellen I
Talbot awa rd e d ·
guardianship to Harlean
Wilson. a Manhattan
secretary.
Wilson's 19-year-old
son, Tony, who missed
Friday's hearing, a nd
Joyce Mc Rae, 32, of
Chicago, a long-Ume fan
who moved to nearby
Medford to be close to
the one-ti m e "Mr.
Excitement," a lso
sought to care for·
Wilsoo, whose condition
is d escribed as
semi-comatose.
Wilson, 43, known for
s uch bits as "Lone ly
Teardrops" a nd
"Higher and Higher,"
has been incapacitated
since September 1975
when he suffered a n
apparent heart attack
while perf ormlng in a
concert.
lHUTN!l-ORANGE CO
SENIOR 011ZlMS $2.00
SO. COAST PLAZA
MlllltllllllMNfll lllf,_
"CASIY"S SHADO~ INf _,1111-.. , ...
SAf ......... , .....
"lMl l.A ft SHOW" Mil~ """..._,,.. .....
I I •
SO CO.~ST PLAZA
CIHEMALAHD
CIHEMALAHD J:J::.&"' ..... 7.1
"WHICff WAY IS UP?" I MMT .... ..........,,..
"WILD PAR'n" DAIL,_,__
MT..,._._,__
"ClOSE ENCOUNTEt4S .Ot..'fH~ T
~7'»10-16 IAT~•T,»10-tt
"HOUSE CALLS" (PG) . _ ...
~1 ~ IAT-1.IM 1M 15-e:1&-1°'15
,,._.,1H 1&-10-1& SU.-7-!M ·t&o+l .. 16
.. CASEY'S SHAOOWS" IPG) MO!WN-4 Of4ATAMM-4:1MoCJll
"YOU LIGHT UP MY LIFE" MONmlt~l0-1taATfit.1~~1f
"THE. FURY" (R).
lllON/'MJN-7~1111 IATllUlt-1~
...... ~-10,ll) • ..,..10'*>
WALT ET
"RETURN TO WITCH MOUNTAIN"
"NEVER A DULL MOMENr (G) ~""8
.. SATURDAY NIGHT FE\IEA"(A)
.. LIFEGUARD"
"ANNIE HALL"
"SLEEPER" (f.B)
.,,HOUSE CALLS" (
"SHAMPOO• (R)
"THE FURY' (R) r
"THE REINCARNATION OF PETER PROUD~
ALL. DltlVR·INS 0 "RN 61JOP.M.tMtft\T
C111HI U"Off 12 ,.,.. Unl•H • Kktdl• "11n..ou..o
..
f
Intermission
:fom Titus
CUllTAIN TDIE 18 a o'clock nlald!J, with
weekend matinees at 3 p.m., at tbe Tbifd Step
The ater, 1827 Newport Blvd., Coat• lfeH.
Reaervatiou 646-1363. . · • ,
Ailq ~nnl~ It.I final week ls the-eqin.-,-
"Goodbye Cbar e.. at &he Harlequin Dianer
Playhouse. Performances will be given tolllibt
through SUnday at the Harbor Boulevard theater,
just north ot Costa Mesa. Ticket lnformatlon and
reservations 979·5511.
Conttnulng through April 30 LI "Fiddler oo t.be
Roof," makin1 tta third vlslt to Sebastian's West
Dinner Playhouse, 140 Aven.ida Pico, San
Clemente. The show is on stage Tuesdays throU&b
Sundays at varying curtain times. Reservatiooa
492-9950.
After her divorce. Erlu Sot to know
some pretty Interesting people •••
lndudlng herself.
clim21:1~).,,= -~=~=\1.a
--11:1:eo) 12l=(~7.6.
WI"" MOnMAN STUIOMT TIMI c-> ,yd
THJ_~rT~!!t
_.._fAC'l'Oll
''THI GOODlft CMIL" I,.,
-B-Plll•fll• "''~ ..... ltll. .... ,. ... .,,.
WMBOf4
MAJOIOSCAllS
.. AMMIE HALL ..
-• °' a 01CAa1 IUUA!ll 'LUI
UT TMI IOOO Nm IOU1N1 '°"" l'IAVO&TA SATUIDA Y NIMf flYll CS>
--::::..~ u.-n••M&&80 ...........
--~OKMll Mlffll "':'1 CNt
AUq ecun UWI •'"1
-........ -_.. _
•TC:MUM MIUS
THE
BIG
~God!" (PG} .....,........, ...
...._ "HEROES"
Slp!.EP~ C~il
·~eovs··
Wejt'"-J'a "IN UA!tCH Of'
THI CAITAWAYI"
...
·.
..
INSIDE: 11Aftn L;.anderl •Erma lombeck
•Claulfled
The dining rooni of Children's Village, USA, in Beaumont
A Special Place
Children 's Village, USA, in Beaumont, is ready for
business after years of planning and dreaming.
By JUDITH OLSON
Of U. 0.11, f'llet IUH
Rows of Raggedy Ann and Andy towels and
washcloths await Uoy faces and hands.
New beds, with e<>lorfuJ spreads, are ready
for their you,ng inhabitants. Fireplaces are
itchin'1! to be used.
Cbilctren•s Village, USA, in Beaumont, is
ready for business after many years of plan·
Ding a nd dreaming.
The only tragedy is that there is a need for
such a vlUage. It is for battered children and on-
ly a smalJ percentage of youngsters in Southern
California who would benefit from sucf\ a facili·
ty will be able to use it. ·
Accordlng to Dr. John H. Meier, director,
the home ls "on the culling edge" of the prob-
lem. There are thousands mote children who
could use the help. but.al Jeait a beginni.Dg is
being made, he said.
· Members of the Newport Beach Chapter of
1.0 J. (formerly known as International
Orphans, Inc.> visited the villale last week lo see
the results o' their handiwork, just days before
the first occupants moved in. Everyone was delighted. Comments ranged
from 'Tm so impressed I'm almost over·
whelmed" to "It's cheerful" to "It's great to
know that so many people care so much."
The facility .is indeed impressive. 1.0.1.,
which has fQur chapters in California and
Nevada, originally was given land but had the
opportunity to purchase, for $1.I million, a
former boys• home from the Diocese of San Diego.
Though it had fallen into disrepair, the
plant was perfect for 1.0.1. 's needs. It is siluat·
ed on a hill with a sweeping view of fertile
valleys and the nearby mountains and baa well·
constructed residence and administration build·
in gs.
,. swimming pool and football field already
have been built and there are plans for a chapel
on the highest point of ground.
Two hundred sixty trees have been planted
so far, giving the promise of shady areas and fruit from an orchard.
. . The four ~esidence ~alls are hoaey, with
Jiving rooms, conversation areas, fireplaces
kitchens. comfortable bedrodms and ampl~
bathrooms. ,
All floors are tile in the dining hall and ad·
ministration building and all the walls are brick
. so future maintenance will be low.
A day care center . with children from
Riverside County. has been in operation in one
of the school buildings since June. It is the hope or Meier that the abused children "will interact
<See VILLAGE, Page C2>
O.lly ........... ltJ Gerl -
Bob Smith: It's a terminal illness you can recover from.
The ~ore: People
'I firmly believe that loneliness drives people back to
drinking,' says Bob Smfth, a man with a mission.
By CHERYL ROMO
GI Ult DIM' PUii .....
Bob Smith feels e sense f1I w:gency
lt baa caused him tQ v9lUbleer bis Ume amt·
energy to purchase a pro)ector so be can shew
films and lecture to groups, and even to bave
business cards printed up that say "Bob SmUh
·Free Cowlseling."
One wonders what propels a man who lives
on dlaabtllty cbecta because of a crippllna
h)-peractlve coodltion, to reach out to others to
warn them. The answer: Alcoholism.
A recovered alcoholic himself, the ".osta
Mesa resident ls concerned about people drink·
ing just to get through the day. He thinb people
aren't coping weD and it's getting worse :
"The aad part is wbal the chUdreD in our
society. who are erowlnl up, are aeein&. We are
tivln& In a drug-oriented society. Our country
bas not only accepted alcohol, it 1a tbe drUI we
cherish.
"People say they drinJr for the exdtement,
but to me, you drink because there lsn't any."
Alcoholism is considered the number-one
drug problem in the ~untry and accordlna LO
report.a only one person ln 10 experiences a full
recovery from the dlseaae. "It la one or tbe only
terminal illnesses you can recover from," aays
Smith. The former stockbroker, 51, combats his
own problem by being as physically active as
possible and helping others. He has been sober
for five years. Smith says the hardest lb1na 11
admlttina you have a problem with alcohol.
Some 1ymptoms of possible addiction are.
•Louof control
•Drinking alone
•Hiding bottles
• Protecting your supply
•Avoiding talking about your drinking (de·
nial>,
•Feelmgtheneed ror a morning drink
•Experiencing black -outs during drinking
•Increased tolerance
"Like the common cold, v.1lb alcoboilsm,
there appears to be no prevention -since you
don't know you have It until you get it. But also
like the common cold, there can be intervention
through an awareness of its symptoms.
"Just because you get a cold, you don't
have lo end up with pneumonia,'' be says.
After admitting you may have a problem,
the former tennis champion suggest.a you seek
treatment and help from friends and groups like
Alcoholics Anonymous. He says without support
from the people around you, you probably won't
recover.
"The best tool of any kind for an addict ia
people . . . It helped me to realize I was a sick
person trying to get well, not a bad person," be
says.
··J firmly believe that loneliness drives peo.
pie back to drinking."
Bob Smith, who lost his wtre and cnildren,
hit home and his job because of alcoholism, ia
available for counseling and lectures. His two
films, narrated by a Catholic priest wbo worb
with alcoholics at Newport Beach's Care
Manor, are also available to anyone at no
charge.
He may be contacted through t.be Mariposa
Women's Center at 541-6494, or by callln& bis ~-hour answerina service at 631-4288.
,,
' .
•
Above, Gigi
Fusselman,
right. and
Wickl McDonald,
check out the
dining room.
left. diredOT
Dr. John
Meier, with
Mac Anstoclc,
IOI. chaptet
president
! ..
I
·.Job Seekers ..
'I think it's a great idea to have professionals come to
campus who know what the jobs entail and what the
employment possibilities are.'
By DENNIS McLELLAN
OflllieDlltJ'f'llolklf'I
Bert Ashland, a Newport Beach environmen-
tal planning consultant, leaned back in his chair
and surveyed the students passing through UCI's
Gateway Commons.
"The students right now are interested in
whether or not we're hiring," he said. "It's a
topical issue this time of year.·· Wtih graduation less than two months away
for many, Ashland's assessment was indeed
apropos.
He was 01,1e of about 20 representatives from
a variety of careers who manned tables set up
for the university's Liberal Arts Career Fair.
The career fair was sponsored by the Pro·
gram in Comparative Culture, the School of
Humanities, the Program in Social Ecology, the
School of Social Sciences and the university's
Career Planning and Placement Center.
Table·hopping students could question
representatives from a host of fields including
public relations, advertising, urban planning,
insurance sales. writing. probation, social work,
corporate management. retail and law.
"Most students are not sure what they want
to get into," said ~atby Yamamoto, UCI career
advisor. "Others haven't thought about what
optionsareavailabletothem."
The purpose or the career fairs-the UJl.i,
versity tries to focus on each school once a
year-is to get the students started thinking
about those options and, of course, let them talk
to professionals.
The most commonly asked questions con·
cern what academic backgrounds are required
ror each field, job opportunities and starting 1
salaries.
Among observations made by some of the •
representali ves ·
The most commonly asked question of
Phyllis Lutjeans. curator of education al the
Newport-Harbor Art Museum. was "How does
one gel into museum work?"
She told students that Job opporturuties ,
were "rew and far between," but there are
several routes. While a B.A. in art history is f
necessary. she said, it is "better if they have an
M.A. and lf they have a PhD with a doctorate
dissertation that Is published, that's fantastic.••
Getting a job, she noted, is "always a com·
binatioo or desire lo want to be in the work and
being bright."
In many cases people must work their way
into a museum from the bottom and then work
their way up. she said.
She mentioned a Cal State Fullerton student
who did a volunteer project for the museum as
part of an intern program. Museum officials
were impressed with the project, and when a
position opened. the student was called.
But not many students are willing to work
for experience only. according to Larry De San·
tis of the Santa Ana Police Department, who
was sitting at the "juvenile investigation and
diversion" table.
··one thing J found out is that the majority
of them don't want to do any volunteer ex·
perieoce." he said. "They just want to jump
right in."
Rather than try to seek the tough-lo-gel top
<See JOB. Pale CU
From left, Ellen Edwards and Julie Creig, talk With Eleanor Dewhirst st Caf96r Day.
\
J
'
J
WUl«DIDAY.~•
., ITDNft OMtla
A81SI CMaf'. ll·Ap=I): Le•·h>' •nro• --.. .._., ...,. You'U M
llVH b)'I, lntrM..U-1. JOU DMd
pracUelllY tluded ,_ • lll¥W ,.._;:.
TAtmW CAprJ .. MQ •>:·_a..peftpN pn:>mhMllll~. Yoa IM~ tblll.,,..... ll
bO loQaer' ume. Welcome .,_,., O« off
aJdelln• Into UM t•DJt.
0 SlllNI (Ma)' ll·IWM •>: Lead, property.
HCurlty, ••vlnp -thtM commud 1poWpt.
Pl1ce1, Vlrao ft&ure promlntntb' -IO cro.. numberY.
CANClta (June 2l·July II): Aocent on
relaUv•1 1holt Jouroey1, td ... that trulform
into vlabie ~. Avotd Hlt-dteepUoo.
LltO <Jul)' D·Aua. 33): 8potlllbt on aavln11 account, evaluation ot aneta. Now ta Ume lo
fOCUI OD prlorltt ...
VJaGO tAU,. U·S.pt. D>: Lunar cycle
colncld• wttb time to 1pread your tnflutftce.
Don't be Ull\lted. Truat your own Juqment,
lntullion. Stick wtth number 9. Flniab rather
than tnltlate project.
LIBaA <Sept. 23-0ct. 22): "'eek behind 1cene1. Vlalt to bOlpltal not neceuarlly alsnat
ror aadneu. Key ii check to prtYent minor
mlahap from becomlns major malady.
SCOaPIO COct. 28-N'ov. 21): Accent on
obta1nln1 nece1aary lnformatlon, 1utdance.
Friend' play• prominent and po11tlve role.
Aquarh.11, Cancer, Lej> persona in picture.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21 ):
Emphasis on flndln1 ways to elevat• pot!Uon.
Display humor, versatility. Gernlni pl-.ya key
role. You're 1oin1 places.
CAPRlCORN <Dec. 22·Jan. 19): Travel,
education, pubU1hJn1 featured. Lunar poaltion
emphast.ea lona·ran1e plan1, 1yntheabln1
informatlon, comina up with complete atory.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 18): Be
analytical. One who promlaea much may be
sinrere but Wtable to fulfill ob'11atlona. Yes,
money could be involved.
PISCES CFeb. 19·Mar. 20): Emphula on
judament. liming -key is to aaln allies throu1h
diplomacy. LW(ul'Y Items, jeweh'f could flaure promlnentlY. 1
It Aprtf H t1 you blrtJaday you a~ creative,
stubborn, affectionate, orllinal, Independent.
Leo, Aquanua persona play important rolu Jn
your life. You traveJ and aoclalbe thia year,
more so than in recent past
••• Jobs-~
C From Page Cl)
level pasitions at the outset, De Santis recom·
mends starting at the ground noor and worklni
up.
''It's all really preparation," be 11id. "And
when a position opens up in your department
and you can really shine in an oral, you've got it. ..
Financial planning representative Nancy
Richards noted that while some of the atudenll
who asked her questions knew specifically what
they wanted to do, most had no definite ideas
"I just thlnk they're confused," she said.
Wblle Social Ecoto1y Junior Pat Freeman
Is ·one of those students who has derinlte
goals-either a career in la~ enforcement or
counseling-she nevertheless benefited from the
career fair.
"I'm more aware or what different a1encies
demand in the way of educational background
and what I can expect whe.~ 10Lng_ out ln the
world in the way of a career. she sald.
"J think it's a great ldea to have pro·
fet1slonals come to campus who know what the
Jobs e ntail and what the employment
poaalblllties are."
••• Vlllage
( •'rom Page CU
with them," learning what "normal" children's
U vea are Uke.
Children'• Vllla1e currently Is licensed only
tor 2 to 12-year·olda but Meier would Uke to take
infants aa soon u pos1lble.
"The 18-month-olda are in areater danger of
death <from battertn1>." he expJa.lned. "The
highest lnc1dence Of death la at 18 months."
If the village could accommodate youncer
children there would be less c:bance or breaking
up families, he added.
Parents wiU be part of the treatment plan,
Meler noted. They are seen by staff members
and spend time ln increasing amounts with
the\r chlldren untll they can llve together
peacefully.
Children's Vlllage has been the major focus
of JOI for several years. 1:0.1. was founded Ln
J95t by Sara O'Meara when 1he waa a younc
actre11 on tour ln Japan and befriended orphan
children ot Japan•• and American parentace.
Gtat FulMlman was foundln1 president of
the Newport B .. cb chapter and Mac Anatock t1
the current leader.
Anyone wtah1n1 Information on the vlllac•
may write to J.O.I .. 23454 Ventura Blvd.,
Woodland Hilla, CA 91364.
INTERIOR DESIGNER'S
A. Tired If IQI 1Yldads7
8. Tiell " .. llmntlryf c. Th1d If llt l'*I tlll lllSt ,.tee?
D. Tired If 2nd rate nntcel
E. Tired et not enoup mp1e11
f. Tired of trtps to LJ.1
If you would like to Improve on all the above,
take time to aau 111·7111 to dlecu11 1
Oeelgner'1 co-op.
...
Or•ttlna.a '"'' ... ., ... divided lD&o
four ca\leOl'l ... Uffef, JiDw )'a' dolliflt
<A~ 11-11.) Ii Nloe to Ht 1ou aaato ... <Atw .... >
••vou lac* l•tuUct
Hoet•tl'' <A,t .. IMO.) "What bap,PtHd'"
CA111 80-ddath. mlnua two mlllut.)
At the moment, J'm
1omewbere betwHn
0 You look fant11t101°
and "Whal happened'''
It dependa on bow far I
am between hair ap· polnlmenta.
A frtend of mine who
la f oln1 throu1b her
me alUo •I• (atlver
hair, 1old tteth, and
lead bottom> bit me th•
other day wltb, "You
look rantutic ...
"Compared to wbaU"
"Compared to an an·
Uque quilt I bavewhlch ta five yean youncv lban
you."
"Don't be condeacend· lng," I saJd. ''There are
a lot or advantages to
'
btln• 'You looir-fan· "I can for1et Wbfre I taeue"." parked tbt car and no "I know I'll NCopiie one la aurprlaed.
tbtm lnumdl,fteb' when, •ti can bt bulk Ukt a f. bear U..m, •b• aai~: caftan and everyone
but ftll me 't, &IWWa)' · th 111 kl I • m ht d t n 1 cl~:w~-:1:r1::'e~:~: aomethlnl.
rtfi!\t aniS no Oll4t wants .. The other da~ I
to '\now ti I'm 1Jck. found a wonderful UUle "I can write t.ht bank cosmetic called 'Erase'
a obtok fOf' an overdraft to take away the ba11
and Ult)' expect It. from under my eyes. J
•11 can dtlVt a car and erased my entire face ...
talk at the laJllt time and ama11 my
pat11n11n.
"I can walk Into a
room on Um• and set a
1tandln1 ovation. "J C"9• be named his· torlan ot any club in
town.
"I know what you're
talking about," Hid my
friend. "l said to my
husband last ni ght,
'Tonight's the night.• He
knew inatinct.ively I was
tallcing about Kojak on
TV."
A Family Fight
DE-AR ANN
LANDERS: M7 mother
and father are 1till Uv· tna. My huaband bu on·
ly h la mother. On
Mother's Day we must spend the entire day
with her because, ac·
cordln1 to h!m, "Your
mother •till baa your father."
On Father's Day. we didn't print.it, 10 I'm
have to 10 to tbe tryln1 11ain. My pro·
cemetery to vtalt hla blem l1 the "Polaroid father'• 'l:rave because • S§Gclrome." "your dad Is still Uv-ln ..
girlie 1arba1e at tbe
oewtstands.
DEAR ANN : My sis·
te r (married "nd
mother of three) cannoi
possibly get herself
ready to go anyplace
(even to the dru1store)
in less than one hour.
Her face takes at least
45 minutes. What's the
problem anyway? -
TIRED OF WAITING
Lo you think It J1 talr
that I have to wait unUl
my mother·ln·law dies
bt1fore I can spend a
Mother's Day with my
own mother? And la It
fair to have to vlslt my
father·ln·law's grave In·
stead of going to see my
Uve father?
If I open my mouth I
am caJJed "selfish."
Do you see a solution
to thls1 ·-FIGHTING A
LOT
DEAR FIGHTING :
Go wlUI your buband to
see bis mother on
Mother'• Day, bat spend
only aa bour or so, then
vl1lt your own mother.
Do the same on Father's
Day.
It would be Ideal lf
your buabaad would
agree to dlvtde tbe time
ao yo11 cou.ld be tocetber,
bat I'm sure be won 't -
so I'm sugsesttnc tbls
compromise. P.8. Get It
setUed NOW because
after your parents paas
away, you'll be ft1btla1
about whose grave to
visit.)
DEAR ANN : I sent
you a letter several
weeks a&o and aianed It
"Struck Out." I aueaa I
must have struck out
with you because you
I asked my wl!e ll she
would poee in some sexy
nl1ht1ea and lingerie
that l bou1ht tor her.
She a1reed. I swear to
you, Ann, the pictures
have never left our
house and they never
will. I took them to add
zest t-0 our love life and
they did.
Lut week I asked my
wife Lo pole again for a
new batch of pictures. She said, "No, I've de·
cided it's kinky sex."
Then she called me a
DEAR TIRED: A•
peraon who 1pend1 that
mucb Ume on Ute oat·
aide of ber bead prob·
ably doeta't bne much
confidence la wbat•a on
&be lnalde. Too bad.
pervert. ,.----------
I told her I would RUffELl'S
write for your opinion so UPHOl.STUY that's wbat I'm doing -for the second time. W...T•W•
Please a nswer. Our ......
marriage could be at ltU...,. ... & stake. -TWO STRIKES ._..,c_ .... __ Met __ .. ____ ,_._.o_a_._, ...11!1
DEAR TWO:
Wbatever two people do WANTED! In the bedroom I• not
perversion, IO long as.· BORED
there 11 mutual agree· HOUSEWIVES ment and oo pain ls lo· meted. 11 takta1 pie· ORGAN & PIANO
tures turns you on aad CLASSES NOW
"be plclw'es are strictly FORMING
lor r,oa and your wUe, I CO' AST cant aee &bat &bl• ls a n
perversion. A UUle far· • MUSIC out maybe, bat aot
harmful -aad a damed 642-2851
al&bt heUeT than bu.ylDI =::;)OC::=MM:==tlC=
\
) __ ._.....
If you bought sttreo sound equipment
without shopping the ads In the Doily Pilot,
you lost both. time and money.
Tht most modern tlectronlc marvels ~esigned
to provide lletenlng and viewing pleasure
art advtrtlHd regularly In the Daily Pilot.
Tht b11t place to buy or 1111 along the
Orange Coott, Is tht
DAILY PILOT
~,
ANNLANDERS/HOROSOOPE
HE&;D OVER IY POPULAR DEMAND
•. ONEWEEKONLYI
*tHREE MONTHS ~ .
MEMBERSHIP
$38.00 * REGUL·AR PRICE
$68.00
Introducing-·
GLORIA KRUCKENBERG
Juat over a year ago, Gloria atoppea
moat of her PhY91CaJ activities. She
re1lgned from her bowling leagu1-1he
quit playlng softball and eoccer and
decided If ahe way going to fulflll the
role of a good housewlt• 1he ahould
atayhome.
Thll wu the worst crooked hill ahe
ever tried to cllmb, becauae she
Immediately became a eoap opera
addict and a foodahollc. She cooked all
the time and ate everything ahe cooked. 1llllllllliiMlllln1
Gloria aald, "I felt lousy, uae&est,
depreeaed. I didn't even like myself any·
more. Flnally I got so big l had to lay
down on the bed to pull up t"' zipper
on my jeans. After a good cry I decided
I was the only one who could control
my own misery."
Gloria decided to Join Venus. She exercised
every day In the ulon·and alto at home. She
had dlfflculty following the Venue dret but
dally encouragement from the Venue family
kept her on a 1tralght and narrow path.
Gloria beams when 1he tell• frfenda about
her beautiful new fife style. She ffffl
ab1olutely graat-ahe looka Ilk• a real live
model In her clothes-and the wedding dre11
ahe wore over 16 years ago 11 now too blgl
"Venus hat changed my life," Glorla tafd,
"and It's exciting for me to "1prud the word"
and Introduce everyone I come In contact with
to Venue."
Bu•t
Wal et
Arma
Tummy
~,, ...
HI a
'
Before After
38 M
28 ISlt
13 .,.
37 11
2e " 31 Mlt
Gift Certificates, of course!
* Ladiea Only
*Everything included m
$38.00 Price
*No long term payments
•Controlled Dtet Insures
Weight Loss
•Modem Effective
Equipment
*Personal supervision in
all salons by 'n-fatttes •.
*No hidden costs
HOURS: 8 a.m.-8 p.m., Monday thru Friday
GV eqp.s de c >'I lilo
l . 1 rl 1 f · · , ~ ; • , : , . , · • , , • ' • . • , · • . ,
MAGNOLIA PLAZA
9057 GARFIELD (AT MAGNOLIA)
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
"'°"' 963-0802
OTHER LOCATIONS-Redland1, San Bernardino, Rlveralde, Yuma,
El Centro, Calexico, Corona, Hemet, Placentia, Buena Park,
Cerrito•, Las Vegas, Garden Orove, Whittler, Downey, Long S..ch,
Rialto, Palm Springs, Otendora. Tu1tln, Anaheim, El Toro, lndlo,
San Diego. Burbank, El ~on, El Monte, Hacienda Helght1, Vlotor-
vlllt, Fountain Valley and Santa Ana.
• 1
NATION I WORLD I PEOPLE
..
Two memben ot the 8ob Seger rack band en-
touraae are 1mon1 63 persona scheduled for ar·
ral•nment in Fort Wayne, Ind. on alcohol and drug
charges ateQ)minl from a rock concert.
Police sald AodlloGy D. Ma&, wbo travels with
Seeer's road crew, and the band's road m~er,
whose name wu not released, were charged with
l\lroJshina alcohol to minors during a concert at
the Allen County Memorial Coliseum. ..
Cindy Roberts, a mother of two from
Anchorage, Alaska, was selected Mrs. America ln
Rep. )amm C. Cormaa. J>.Calif., wu asked to
comment on the fact that 42 House members an· nounced they aren't running for ~lection. Nine
of them are running for the Senate.
the nation's only beauty
pageant for married woman .
Mrs. Roberts, 31, a photo-
grapher and model, beat con·
testant.s from the other 50 states
and Puerto Rico in the na·
tionally televised contest at the
Las Vegas Hilton Hotel.
'"' Corman 's answer
(
,,,.---------..) reflected a view many , DE"Qf'LE House members have of
rC1' the Senate: "Some have
----------'-tried the House and
found out they weren't
really cut out to be legislators, so they are running
Mrs. Roberts, whose
husband Malcolm is a govern·
ment consultant. is S·feet-9,
for the Senate." *
lt09HTS w e i g b s 13 2 po u n d s and
measures 37·27·37. She succeeded Ruth J~,
48, a grandmother from Long Beach.
A Los Angeles restaurant owner whose wife
was linked to former President Richard Nboa in
National Enquirer articles asked the California
Supreme Court to telnstate his damage suit
against the periodical.
* Remlgla Brooke, estranged wire ol
M«ssacbusetts Sen. f:dward Brooke, is under emo·
tional stress because or her
about·lo·be completed divorce
from the senator, one of her
daughters says.
Kwot Kit Faan and bis wife, Marianna IJa, a
cocktail waitress, filed a libel suit against the En· Mrs. Brooke, recovering on
schedule Crom surgery for re·
currence of a cancerolJS blad-
der tumor removed In 1969, ls
"very depressed and upset,"
said Edwina Brooke Betit, who
flew in from Paris with her two
children lo see her mother.
quirer lD late 1976 in which be
also sought damages for loss of
companionship.
The state Court or Appeal
on M arch 13 affirmed Los
Angeles SuJ>erlor Coqrt Judge
PblUp Saeta '1 decision which
held Faan bad shown no cause
of action and dismissed his
complaint.
*
MRS. 91100KI'.
*
..IXOH Illinois Secretary or State Alan J . Dixon,
Adventurers who h~ .traveled to the far cor·
whose ofrice issues and controls drivers' licenses
in his state, pleaded guilty lo a reckless driving
charge in Palm Springs and was fined $195,
authorities said.
ners or the earth were able to tickle their taste
buds with manta ray curry and
other delicacies at the Ex·
plorer's Club annual dinner. .
Among the 1,300 guests at
the dinner at the Waldorf·
Astoria Hotel in New York City
were biographer and journalist
bowell Thomas, former U.S.
Sen. J ames Buckley at1d
George Willig, who scaled the
facade of the World Trade
Deputy District Attorney Rod Soda, who pro-
secuted the case in Palm Springs Municipal Court,
said Dixon, 50, was arrested Jan. 27 and was
charged with driving under -the influence of
alcohol.
THOMA• Center last year.
Dixon, a Democratic candidate for re-election
in November, appeared in court March 27 and
pleaded guilty to the lesser charfe or reckless
driving alter some evidence agains him was pre-
sented. Soda said. He said the-$195 fine levied
against Dixon was standard for the offense.
Other palate tempters on the hors d'oeuvre
trays included tapir cblle, elephant stew, Arctic
shrimp. caribou tripe provencale, smoked rein·
deer tongue, and omelettes made from emu eggs.
* In Las Vegas. they even give odds at the
hospitals, as Dottle Johns found out to her
pleasure. •• E mpress Farah or Iran launched a "no smok·
ing" campaign to be enforced in public places in·
eluding ministries, hospitals, theaters and movie
houses, the Ministry or Information reported.
A government report showed that smokers
among Iran's population of 34 million consume
more than 18 billion cigarettes annually, most of
them produced by the government-owned
cigarette company.
Mrs. J ohns, suffering from acute glaucoma
whHe on a Las Vegas vacation, checked into
Sunrise Hospital. which rewards patients with a
chance for a $4,000 vacation. Mrs. Johns left the
hospital 24 hours later . unaware of the lottery until
she found out she was the winner.
The hospital began the lottery about a year
ago to encourage more weekend use of the facility.
Hospital officials say it's a financial success, with
weekend admissions up 60 percent.
Panel Adopts Repeal
Of Gas Tax Deduction
Brothel
Wins 1st
For Boy
WASHlNGTON <AP> -
Coogressional taxwriters are plowing ·
ahead with a review or the Carter ad·
ministration's tax proposals after
adopting one presidential "reform"
and rejecting two others in tentative
votes
The House Ways and Means Com·
mittee decided tentatively Monday to
repeal the· deduction that income tax
payers claim for state and local
gasoline taxes. The repeal wouJd cost
taxpayers $1.15 bimon when returns are filed in 1980.
At the same time. the committee
~oted against Carter's wishes on two
other proposals that would be costly
tor taxpayers. the tentative voles
would permit taxpayers lo continue
claiming deductions for slate and
local saJes taxes and personal prop·
ertylaxes.
Attaclc Ba• Plftlged
BEIRUT. Lebanon <AP> -Pales·
tinian guerrilla leader Vasser Arafat
has pledged a moratoriim on cross·
border attacks into Israel to acclerate
its withdrawal rrom southern
Lebanon, the independent Beirut
newspaper An Naharsald today.
Th~ paper said Arafat made the
promise during his 70·minute meet·
ing in Beirut Monday with U.N.
Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim. A
• spokesman for the Palestine Libera·
Neimpaper
Chief Slates
Viejo Address
Lawrence L. Wade, executive
director of the Western
Newspaper FoundaUon < WNF>,
Is to speak about "The Literacy
Crisis -and How Newspapers
are Helping" al a luncheon
sponsored by the Saddleback
Friends of Mis sion Viejo
Library.
The benefit luncheon is
sched uled for 11 :30 a .m .
Wednesday at the Mercury Sav·
lngs .... & Loan Associ.Uoo, 22821
Lake Forest Drive, El Toro.
Wade coordinates the foun·
dalton sentinars which provide
contlnuJnc ll'Gduate educauon
for neWBpaper people. He also ~rcUDated Ute Newspaper-in·
the Cleasrooaa pro~ for ~0011 ID Arboaa. OmJa,
l~abo Nevada. Oreron, Utah and WHbln1ton, prorram
chairman E.T. EW. said.
(JN SHORT )
lion Organization declined comment.
Teert lrtdfrtftl
COLUMBIA, Tenn. CAP) -A 17·
year-old Wisconsin runaway, ac·
cused of starting the fire that killed
42 people in the Maury County Jail,
has been indicted on 32 counts or
mans laughter and two counts or
arson.
Bob Gay, district attorney general,
said Monday that Andrew Zinmer of
Superior, Wis .. would be tried as an
adult and was being held at the
Maury County Jail in lieu of $190,000
bond. Gay said arraignment has been set for May 4.
s.illl&•Caue
CLOVIS, N.M. <AP ) -Potato
salad apparently was a source of
botulism in an outbreak of the dis·
ease that bas stricken 32 persons, but
state health officials said it may not
have been the only one.
Preliminary laborator y tests
showed potato salad served at a
fashionable country club restaurant
in Clovis was "significantly con·
laminated with botulism toxin," Dr.
Jonathan Mann, the state's chief
medical officer, said Monday.
But be added, "The analysis we've
don e lo t his point s uggests the
potato salad is probably not the only
type of food implicated. We have
some cases ... in whom it's hard to
explain the illness by referring to potatosaJad."
~-tiotl Bopeltd
LONDON (AP) -U.S. officials are
hoping that Secreatarv of State
Cyrus R. Vance's trip lo Africa will
head off a wider conflict in Rhodesia.
The basis for the Americans' hope
is the guerrilla leaders· agreement to
a new negotiating conference and a
promise by Prime Minis ter Ian
SmJth and the three moderate black
leaders to consider talking with the
guerrillas.
llUlff 'I• for Teatr
AMERICUS, Ga. <AP) -Presi·
dent Carter's brother, Billy, was list·
ed in good condition at the Americus·
Sumter County Hospital today where
his personal physician, Dr. Paul
Brown, said he was admitted for a
"general checkup and health main·
tenance procedures."
Hospital officials denied reporu In
lbe Americus Times Recorder quot· lna an uoldeJ>Wied hospital employee
u saying that the president's brother
had ~ troated tor a head ll'\.lury.
LUBBOCK . Texas
<AP) -You might say
Benny Holguio's sense
or history is a little dif·
ferent from the rest of
his seventh-grade
classmates.
While they built sugar·
cube and Popsicle-stick
replicas of pueblos and
windmills for the
Struggs Junior High his·
tory fair. 14-year·old
Holguin built a bawdy house.
"IT'S A BROTHEL,.,
whispered one of the
judges. "But we made
him remove the pie·
lures."
Benny constructed a
scale model or a turn-0f·
the-century home akin
to La Granqe's infamous
Ch icken Ranch and
furnished it with red
lights and pictures fit.
ting to the brothel's at-
mosphere.
Benny's brothel was
named the best seventh·
grade project in the
show and will go on dis-
play Friday along with
29 other first.place pro·
j ect s, at the LBJ
Library in Austin.
"I WANT ED to do
som ething different
from the other kids,"
said Benny , a shy
youngster who was
honored with a plaque.
He said the project -
a gray. two-story struc-
ture with white trim, a
red roof and sugar-cube
chimney -took about
two weeks lo build.
Benny said he's "not
really sure" where he
got the idea. But he
added, for the sake or
his relieved teachers,
that it didn't come from
school.
Student Cite d
Stephani Hardy, Foun·
tain Valley, has been
named to the Deaa'a
DlsUngul.shed Academic
Honor Iht for academic
eitcellence at Baylor
University, Waco ,
Texas.
I
r...._, Apc11 11. 1971 DAIL v Pllor • a
In seemingly Jess time than it takes to tell, actress
Tatum O'Neal -has grown up. In 1973 she won an Oscar
for her rote in "Paper Moon," center, and in 1975 she
played a pitcher in "The Bad News Bears." Today's
Tatum. 15 years old. is shown at left, dancing in the
Studio 54 discotheque in New York.
Doubling-up Doubles
Unmarrieds live Together in Transition
WASHINGTON <AP) -the
number of unmarried men and
women living together has mo(e
than doubled since 1970 and the
number of div&tCeS has COD·
tinued to skyrocket, the gov-
ernment reports.
• A Census Bureau report qn the
marital status and living ar-
rangements of Americans shows
that as of March 1977, l~
million unrelated men and
women shared households, com·
pared with 654,000 in 1970.
"MANY OF THE young peo.
pie who adopt this living ar.
rangement are in a temporary
or transitional situation which
serves as a prelude to entering
into more conventional family
living," the report says.
"Although the Census Bureau
does not collect information on
the nature or the personal rela-
tionship between these unmar·
ried couples, it seems likely that
most of them were partners, room mates, companions or
friends."
The report. based on samples
selected from the 1970 census
files and updatt!d regularly with
hous e -to-house interviews,
shows that the divorce raUo in·
creased 79 percent since 1970.
THAT MEANS THERE are 84
divorced persons for every
1,000 who are married, com-
pared~ 47 divorced persons per -The median age at first
1,000 married people in 1970. marriage was 24 ror men and
21.6 for women, an increase of a ''This doesn't necessarily full year for both sexes since the mean that Americans have a mid·l960s. The-median is the
negative view of marriage," middle point; hair marry said Arthur J . Nott.on, chief or the Census Bureau's marriage . younger while half marryo~d~I'.
and family sta.tistics branch. -There were 17. 7 m1lhon
"People have a high ideal of ~ persons in 1977 who lived alone
d or with an unrelated person. an marriage, an when it doesn't increase or 50 percent between
work, many divorce to pursue 1970 and 1977. About 16 million or
that ideal." these persons lived alone.
One resuJt is that four out of
five of those who divorce re·
marry -and 40 percent of those
divorce again, Norton said.
Other highlights of the report show:
-MOR E PEO P L E are
postponing marriage. In 1977, 45
percent of all women age 20 to 24
were not 9larried, compared
with 28 percent in 1960. The pro-
portion or men or the same age
increased from 53 to 64 percent in the same period.
Fire Investigated
SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -A
fire in a convalescent halfway
house which killed two persons
and injured four others may
have been caused by a smolder-
ing cigarette, Fire Chier Andy
Casper says.
-I N MARCH 1977, there were
an estimated 8.1 million men
and women who were divorced
and not remarried compared to
48 million married couples .
The r eport s hows that
a lthough there were 5.4 million
fe wer persons under 18 in 1977
than in 1970, the number or
children living with only their
mother increased by 3 million.
In 1970, 85 per cent of all
children W\der 18 lived with two
parents, the report shows. By
1977, this propor tion had
declined lo 79 percent. The
figures show that five out of
every six persons maintaining
families with no spouse present
were women.
"This finding rel1ects the
higher remarriage rate for men
as well as a greater propensity
for wives to retain the children
when marriages are dissolved, ..
the report says.
Sun to Get Its Day
Coalition Calls Attention to SQlar Energy
By The Associated Press
First there was Earth Day.
Then came Food Day. Now,
there's Sun Day. And it falls on a Wednesday.
It's less confusing than it
sounds.
A DIVERSE COALITION of
activists -some of whom worked on the environmental
and nutritional "days" of the
past -is sponsoring programs
across the nation May 3 to call
attention to and draw backing
for solar energy. Supporters in·
elude consumer groups, union
officials and businessmen.
"It's hoped Sun Day will
create a politicel constituency
and a network or people who are
interested in solar energy and
will educate the general poten-
t i a I market," said Allison
Freeman, media coordinator for
Sun Day.
THE OFFICIAL sponsor of the event is Solar kction Inc., a non.
profit. lax·exempl public in·
teres t Institution set up in
Washington, D.C. Ms. Freeman
said the group is spending about
$150,000 on the project, with
most of the money coming from
individual contributors. Sun Day
posters. T -shirls, bumper
stickers and buttons also will be
sold to raise money.
Supporters of solar power got
encouragement Crom a report by
the Council on Environmental
Quality which said prospects for
increasing use of systems based
on the sun's energy "are
brighter than most Imagine."
The council said: "For the
period beyond the turn of the
century. it is now possible to
speak realisUcaJly or the Uruted
States becoming a solar
society,"
UNLI K E T H E now .
dbconllnue4 Earth and Food
Days, wblcb were annual
events, Sun Day is planned u •
one.ume occurrence only, Ms.
Freeman said. She said or·
ganizers hope the activities will encourage federal officials and
agencies to boost support fo r re·
search and development of solar
alternatives to traditional energy sources.
Ms. Freeman also said that
the increased availability o(
solar energy devices can cause
confusion for a public unfamiliar
with the new techniques and
equipment.
"W~ do not have an educated
consumer right now," she said,
addif\8 that Sun Day organizers
hope their program will help
clear some misunderstandings.
KATJD.,EEN O'REILLY, ex·
ecuti ve director or the consumer
Federation of America and a
member of the board of direc·
tors of the Sun Day group, said
the program "addresses a vital
issue -the need to develop safe,
efficient and environmentally
sound energy alternatives -and
it presents an opportunity for
dynamic consumer education in
an area where technological ad·
v ancements have outpaced con·
sumer awareness.·•
China Cooking
Class Carded
Advanced Chinese cooking
classes are be.ing offend by San
Juan Capistrano's recreation de·
parlment al 7 p.m. beginning
·May 2 and 3 in the Home
Economics room at Marco
Forster Junior ffigh...Scbool,
25601 Camino del Avion.
All major methods of Chinese
cooking Including stlr·trylng,
braising, steamtng and deep trY·
ing are covered during the lour
week course, instructor June
Carter said.
The fee i.9 $17 plus a $14 lab fee payable at the first cl111.
Ruervattans are being accepted
al the Cit:t oCflces, 32400 Pueo
Adelanto.
Philadelphia Sun Day backers
plan a week·long program lo
highlight different aspects or
so lar energy . On Sun .
Agriculture Day. for example.
the focus will be on a large
farm e r s' market; Sun
Economics Day will feature u
forum on jobs and solar energy:
and Sun-Transportation Day will
include a bicycle tour of reoew<1·
ble energy sites.
AMONG THE proRrams
planned elsewhere, according to
organizers, are: a s unrise
celebration on Cadillac Moun-
tain in Maine where the sun 's
rays first hit the United Stales
each day; dedication of a
greenhouse to serve as a vegeta-
ble garden for inner·city resi·
dents or Chicago; the opening of
a permanent solar exhibit at the
Los Angeles Museum of Science
and Technology; a Solar Art
Contest, organized by the Lin·
coin, Neb., chapter of Midwest
Energy Alternatives; a May 6
fair, with exhibits, slide shows
and theater. in Lansing, Mich ..
a tour of solar homes in the
Martinsburg, W. Va., area; and
a solar festival on the site of the
World 's fair grounds in Seattle.
Sun Day organizers have pre-
pared a special kit for use in
schools. It ls available, for $2.95.
from Sun Day. 1028 Connecticut
Ave . N. W .. Room 1100,
Washington, D.C. 20036.
INDM DUALS TIUNKJNG or
using solar power should start
by conducting an energy audit of
their own homes. For informa·
lion, contact the National Solar
Healing and Cooling lnforma·
tlon Center, P. 0 . Box 1607,
RockvWe, Md., 20850.
The cent~r. established by the
Department or Housing and
Urban Development with the
coop ration of the Energy
ReaeaJ'Ch and Development Ad·
miniltration, can also provJde a
broad ranee ot tnfonnauon on
solar systema. 1t bu • toll·free
telephone, 800-523·2989.
•
• • •
r
" l
'· d
•
l'l
-"· 'I.,
ier
to
lD.
•ft
•e,
lo ,.s.
I -'
-ln
,.. ............ "' .. c-.c-.-
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED Abs • m.... ) Orte C.I 81nic• "°"CM W •.AM • { M2•vu•v Nit ONcllt .__, T ... • WWI e .. Id ~--
~ ..... ~ ........ ..
·~ .. ....... LN>4 tu CMA•M
BeautUuJ one·story bayfront residence
with pJer & sUp tor lse boat. 116 Feet
1002 ·on water side I Captivating vlew ot the
Jusb tropical Jancltcapinl and cft!:"
lawn. 3 Bdrms. den & formal I
rm.•Airtcond. Finest quality & detail
...................... "
,... .. ,, .. Notb:
All real estate advertaed in th1s newspaper la 101>-Ject to ~ Federal Fair
Hou1ln1 Act of 1868
v.ibicb makes it UlegaJ to advertise "any pre-
ference, hm1l~tion. or
discnminatioo based on
race. color. reli11on, sex, or national ongin, or an
mtention to make any
sucb p~ference, limit•·
Uoo. or dascri mloatloo."
Lingo
Rul&TAn
OCIAMFROMT VILLA
A ... k ,. LGglllCI leedt. ..... lpKf 5
•• llo.e ... ._. ........... ---&
,,...,.,, "'' ... 3 '" .... .... •
dra••tlc •ood for 9racloH H•l•t· S925,000.
APPIALIMG UDO HOME This newspaper will not
knowingly accept any ,
advertising for real s ...... t to atrada ,,. •• ,. 2 ... 2 ...
efltate whlch is In viola-.a.ow-& AdtclllN al HW lridc f11 r'ac• ht Uooofthelaw. -•• r -------1 1rg. IM119 l'OOlft & ~· cfiRIRg ...., Grfft -------1 • ., • ._ e1t1Hes. s212.soo.
MOllLE HOME Wint YIEW
•••••••••••••••••••••••
thrubut. '575,000 ,.,,,. ...... •ORS
WISUY M. T~TI.OI ....-. -•
2111 S-J• u' ... ~ .. _
10 MIWPOU CINm. M& _..... ...
G1•r.. I OOJ GefllNI I 002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
CAPICOD
$56,000/SUOO T.PLAM
TOTAL IK>WH Preet!cal • spadous 3 Winding roadway to bedroom,2bathooacor-
toarinl 2 at.or)' retreat! ner lot. Reduced for
Private erounda protect qmckaale. tl'.IOO. CALL secluded enll)I to lavish 751.alal .
llvin1 room. G0\11'11let • SELECT
kitchen overlooka sun. PROPERTIES abine courtyard! Wlnd·
101 stairway lead• to --------~~~~ilhst:!t~ LOVE Hurry! Seller I.I anxious.
8'7-6010
~"''":·•l \•UNl~~N<I' HORSES 7
[11 Riii ~ ..... ~·:.:~~!
Qualifying! Owner wUl 1.L SAUS Fin.ance! Zooect'A·l. Call
Deak space now avalla· REDCARPET75'-1202
ble in small omce wlthl•-------•1 big Ideas. Call Smilin' WHY PAY UNT?
Melvyn at646-446J · You cao bizy a home for ~-~Or~eta~~ci~: ~ ;; --F.asytoquallfy. Call now for IDOl"e inLo. .
u•.soovA l!fl6™~l2,mmm Seller must move " baa ''J....:.:;;.-~
4'DIPJ
That's ••real estate talk" mean•ne 4
bdrms. famjJy room. dining room.
pool and jacuzzi. But real estate talk
doesn't have words for the beautiful
cooditioo. the vaulted beam ceilings,
the gas BBQ and firepit and the large
covered patio. This ls a popular
Forest Hills model wJth 2 stories and
2400 sq. n. Presented at $145,500 .
U~l()Ut: ti(),..H
REAL TORS": 675-6000
2443 Eau Coast H1ghwav. Corona del Mar
also 1n Mesa Verd.:. at 646 5990
ca...... 1002 ..............................................
~CUIU~ & VYRL LRLt
Cc:JJ REAL ESTATE . INC.
fl I or 1111 '( OWNlll COMl'ilNI '>I kVfNC
IHI SUlll H COAl.,I llR!1'1 "iltm 1%1
IMMIDIATI MOVMt4 -Today's living
at yesterday's prices can be yours.
Why not move up to 2 story comfort
with 4 bdrms? Enjoy the ocean
breezes. Shop nearby~ Walk to
schools. Price ln.000. C4 '4Ml61
HALL OF FAME -2 Story -4 bdrms
-RV storage area with access front
and rear. SecuJuded area. 1 blk to
Halecr est Club. Fast escrow al
$82,500. Cal 546-4141
OCEAN VllW-oMI OF A ll84D
This ls the Ii.nest custom built home
we bave seen In Corona del
Mar ... there is nothing else like it!
An xlnt ramllY home as well as great tor entertalning. Large twin kitchen.
accommodates the big, raised formal
dining rm. & very large, sunken
ramlly rm. Modern elevator sen-tees 3
car garage & two upper living levels.
$43S,OOO 759-0811
Fwt .....
Gu.al Wuuu Bfq.
I )
GtMral I 002 Ci"'"' I 002'
~··············································
uoo asu
Newly remodeled 3 bdrm .• family, 21h
baths; l ·story home with attractive
So. patio. $243.000
IAYR°"T Several ftne bayfront homes
with pier & slips
IACI IAY
Fine 4 bdrm., 2~ bath family home 08'
quiet cul de sac. Oversized pool,
playhouse, extra storage. $189,500
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
\ 11 f',' I y '•IC.. , , I ,/I , ' u ,, I J ,., JI,~
·-·.. 1002 .... ,.. 1002 ···········~··········· ...................... .
MMt-IAHCH 41a.
flOOL-"',400 SMOUL-
.. safely, ln your own
SWlm.minTpool EQJoy a
fine awmner ta.a from G .. ,.. 1002
•••••••••••••••••••••••
s.c.tty fw Mo ...
MOllLIHOME
$15.000.
~llcluslve listing. l
Bdrm, nearly new with
addltlooal porch. In xlnt
Costa MeJ1a area. Im·
maculate adult park.
Pool, clubhouse, BrNGO
& laundry near by. All
for $110. mo Close to
s hopping center &
market.
EMERALD IAY
5 11 • • ., .. ~ aac. WWtew .. ., •iews. CatalltO ......, 6 ...... c_..,
pwb, pooh & becmtfM prf•• ..._.. & ..,.., 1425,000.
lowest price In t.be area.1~~--~·~ ·~~~~~j ~forabeaut3BR 1 • STEAL' Call us . Sl·rv1 ng Costa M esa lrv1nP
Hu11t1nyton B t'.1c h -N ewpo rt Pr->,••''
YAMOOOWM
Circular drive. Larie
famlly ~ liriDI room. Counll)I kltcben. Dine.
Wall olllass view of cov-754-7100 . MO CASH
DOWM ered pavilion • rusb !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!.j I rounds a u r round In 1 $77,tOO •••r• 1002 .... ,.. . ioo2 Haer· Freeform pool.
Spacious entry way of ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••s•••• Separate wing for bide· former model home 411 + IOMUS MESA WOOD away Master Suite "
leeda to l&r1e lu.xwioua J"'--tO•'"'"'CH Uke new 3 bedroom. 2 cbaldren'a quute
1
rs. livina room finished wtth -~ bath 00 a huge pie-shape HUIT>'. !or tbis un que Dl51~11) premium grade wall and JOfl to the ':OOi!i beach! lot that's priced t.o sell ~~ .. ~Z~~'"' ..,. , . FOi EXECUTIVE floor coverings. Natural Lovely Par ace ex· now at only $93,000. [. I
wood burnini fll'eJ>l•ce. ecutive home. Loads or CALL 751 3191 f&,.li.l~:l!'IJ
This b!!~~f~lly up-:::.f~~:1 n~'!8~:~~ ~~.·F~r!ar~~~: CPSREOLEPcE' TRTIES '~JidU11\
the seclua.IOD ct JOat own
love!)' poolaide peUo. All
lh1s ca1'l be youn, but lbe
best pan ehJI, ia lbe t.ru· lyelepnUbdrm. bome,
built around the pool.
Wait until you see the
faltlily room · beauUlully
paoeted, wtth wet bar. ,
plus there's a a car
garage & much, much
more. At $230.000. this
JASMIHECRm
Professfonally decorat ·
ed, beautiful. Twb
story-cathedral ceil·
angs, 3 bedroom, family
room le 2~ baths.
~pecially larie patio.
fully )aodscaped. Juat
move In & relax at the
644-7020
2123 SAM JOA9UIH HIU.S ROAD
NEWPORT IEACH graded Bue cola Home! sale. Hurry call Mack at room. spacious kitchen-T . =-==--= == --Spacious Living Room SSZ.7788. family room;' spacious ....;;.~==::-::::;;:-:~
with big Fireplace. K€Y bedrooms . Gigantic LOOIOMGFORA "'"-Cl D-wn
Large Master Bedroom, & Bonus Room ! Beautiful , ftXHW'Pam?? "9Nll IHU
highly upgraded wllb ~P..E'.ALTORSft covered patio. Price re· GREAT ocean view in and his new partner Bob ~ 00 private entrance to duced $5000! Seller says Npt Hts, where the ac-Bentson have an empty Ge•ral IOOl
1 2
garden area. Slump ~~ submit all offers! Terms tion is! Open EVERY af. desk in tbe office. GJve .. ••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• atone planters hi1hlight IASTSIDI COTTAGE V ERV fleitible' Call temooa, call Cleo there us a call le let's talk
llYINITlllACE llACH ltlftEAT tbe room-backyard. PRICE REDUCTION faat-7S2-l700 6•6-5369, or United •bout tM advantages of EXICUTIVI $59950 Mesa VerdeLlvin&allts Larte lot alley access oPfN••1 9 •11 PUN 'C'tctN<r· Broken646-7414. lelll.n1reaJeetatewllh
This ~~"°=cb • ~ o; Jf=,g as:~ :.Sisk u2e.ooo. ca11 ~ocB~b::,v:m!~C:e ,.,i~!t!·111 4M +POOL ~e=.WH
bdrm le d1n rm home la yard T bey area play Ol'fN
1110
·" Pll'• row "~1 • start.er place! w .noo _ ''91'' _!!!!!.!!}=~· ~.'!:!Ila!:~~'!: SW&e220 N'pt. Beach a~7~~~G;~~·! ~~$~~:: [® lfil1HI ~~ llllPLE ~~t·=:~s•:;; :-c='s ~.=rorw~;~:; fenced. healed" filtered Step down converuuon -==-••E>' 642·5200 SENSATION
pool -32x16 approx. Lvly area plus fireplace. Pool. ·-----I. Location: Newport
0 prden off instr bdrm. Jacuui, volleyball. SIX UNITS ....-..>+SM tfeagbturea.
Insulated attic. Near Garden II vlng al its in Jtint rental location ln JMCOME 2 Quality construe lion·
Fubion la. Offered at finest! 8'7~10 N. Costa Mesa. Btfl BeautiluJ Buccola bwlt l•••••••••I only $215,000. $45-9'91. CJllfN "'
9
·" \ ruN
10 111
"'"'' layout w1lh lge pool as PROPERTY home w /spacious r.oom I YIAI MIW
( h \II [ •:11~~·11·t1 added attraction. Close 3' Listings from duplex· sues" lots or storage Custom built-3bdrm. 2 O IJm!ttfJl'!JiliJ . ~ 1
• to llUl,Jor sboppin1 tbus ::,.1~?1::!!e1npc;::-S:r~ 3. Reasonable price : bath, fami ly room.i---------i
Ea ' · • !.~. lines.646-7711. 2000> Perfect for that first fireplace. F\aUy insuJal· OCIAMROMT
Real tate '$ ty" <Sectloo · move toward lhe beach! e d. double garage. CbarminJ 2 BR bo 2
has to be the best buy in
Ba'ycrest ! Shown by app't.
A Div1s1on of -~~~•i:_!n~·~t"'.'~'.11 C<1
PAI.ACE FOi
PENNIES!
Sparkling clean 4 bdrm
home! Owner asking on-
Y $72,SOO! Qwet loca-
tion ! Large covered
patio! Bulit·lri brick
BBQ! Must see lo
believe! Hurry! Call
645-0:m
FORES T E
OLSON
' pool. Jacuzzi or tennis
rourts. Prestige area in
the heart of Corona del
Mar. Gated communrty
with security auarda.
"It's great, I Uve there
too!" (Jean Cole).
COLE OF NEWPORT
OWMaAMXIO~S EASTEltHEllS!! (olWOJ1rn1iluu1 d_ QuAJz.. CD 646-77U. Eastsfde Costa Mesa. car gara1e. Beat:'~~-
Lovely home and m a 'Ibis is it! Big 4 bdrm + Real &tale PLACE ( iHMI .,. $82,900. ming & fisblng area.
we ll eatabllsbed den+fmlYnn.Huaeyrd PR.OPXll\'xnce.,.... HU \1?1rI'2fl RoyMcC.... Closr to stores "I~~~~~~~~ oeigb.borllood1. veat for like back home. BUI ,400ouM7:t~~ Real Estate lllOM.wpcwt ltYcl. restauranta. Sl75.000 families. Bia nvmg room pool. You asked for it . ~ ... I ·roa ~ 11118 30 p"' Coda MIM 141-1729 ..... .., rrop. with upgraded carpet-you've got It -all!! Call R...u. __ _:,_.;..· -----1 R••• 1
•41 ... • •
··~ .. -=
REALTORS
675-5511 ing. Family room with before It's gone. A wilque or Realtor A3soc1ate. PRICE lll»UCm TIRID * 675-7060 •
Cheery 11.itcben with bit· caµ-ate aaleaperson. Pacesetter home. 4 Br, 2 one Is clean, clean. 1 81.ktobeach. leas than 4
crackling fireplace. opportunity! $45-9'91. H.ave need for l Sood ac-Must sell beautiful ot loold.ni at dogs. Thia DUPLEX r.~~~~~~~;;J
Ins and breaJtfut bar. 3 (~IWO!j1ttl!llH;f Roy McC... ba. 3 car ,.,..,e. ti6.900. clean. Only ~7.~! FOR yrs. old. lite new, bltm.
Bil bedrooms. Owner 1810Mewportl1Yd Open Sat/Sun 1·5. Call tn!onnatloocall963-7881 nice crpl'I & drpa, 20NALOT Execalflye's baa purchased another RealEetate ColtaMftaS4l·772f DelLanoo OP1N111r.>•t1\•uN1o l<1Nl(I · frplca,4car/gar. Reduced to 1127,500. 2
s ... !-S:S.ooo 5E~"l~'::; a:.O':.~~oo ~:::~ .. ; ....... !~ ~~~ ... [.Br lff !l!\fll JAc~:·:!..n ~~'°:::£:~r.'.,~;JiiiiiiiiiiiiNIWiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiOMiiiiiiiiiiiiEiiiiiiii
Huge 5 bdrm inch.Sing OPfNrl(<i •trsiVNro111 Nre1• Bike to beach from this . ~ ---==-=111!!'!~~ 67• ,.,670 611-3663 6'2·2ZS3Eves '-l:aldtC.M.
separate cblldren'a [(8 IJiij'fi·1J1 beautiful garden home. 'II ____ ..-v __ "-'.""~:-• =·~:~U:\,C:.:'C!,e~ ~~~tt'ed~~I Fc\;11~~~~ 'U'ttlJJj}( ~1 li~;nilr~;r.c~~ Cokfwel Banker ~~~~~ .......... !~ ~~::!~ .......... !~~ F~tures lnclwe: vauJt. enhance spacious living . -.......... ~ eounnet kltcben. ONLY · ed ce:Ulnp, 3 car garage room including AN· · S2350 total do.-n. Won't RESIOENllAl l!ROKEl?JIGE COMMNY 4'r RV ston1e. Hurry,
PANELING a o d na.ri lect96M787 LOVaY TIADITIOMAL HOMI. ffi8CR8b /frVfR8 Cal.J546-5880. T I Q U E 0 A K L.1111!1-.. lut. HURRY! Cal.I col· ' cbooeeyourowncarpels.
maaalve rock fireplace. Owner has painted in &c oP1"'111r.>·t1~ruN10111N"'
Truly an entertainer• out. Installed NEW [ I realtg SPAUUMG
paradise. VA terms of. cupeting thru-0ut AND • 1t~1:11~·~ in Old Corona del Mar -4 POOL It SPA
fered. Tue advantage. reduced to '811.~! ! Va· . ,\t ? 1 b d 1 · t J l . th ONE LOOK-and you Exclusive aeenta. Call canl 4 Bdrm ·'SOL : , , ~ e rooms -sp 1 eve w1
.. ..,. """" VISTA" in nice areal As· · = ===-a.__ beautiful spa. Detached income are go1111 to appreciate ,,..,~ IULLOCIC"S DECC>aATOltS 4bdrms " ut.ra large :~tt· ,::'~~,~~; $56, 900 unit. $2!9,000. have made this "San Luis Rey" 1~' ~'l' .,. ~ri~•
"''"·5800open eves. Sharp, spacious fmly re-model a showplace! Living rm has rp r . ta rs ea 0 _, .. ~rf J f t pnvate master suite and e.g IE Metworil sidence w/c'""' u ':Pc ~ · A COl.OWILL UMml co. , vaulted ceilings, fplc. wet bar & 2nd frplc. Features to ~~~~~~~~~,~~~-~~~~~~~! & xtra large room sizes · · G t f
-tbruout. Xlnt locat.ion. 644•9060 formal dining area. ourme numerous to ment on HANDYMAN'S TIANSFlllUDll BeautlfuJgroundacreate kitchen w/wood floors & windows -prestialous area .
DUAM UMIY.PAllC park like setting around 2mSAHJOAOU1NHIU11to. everywhere! Huge master suite, ~·~.~~~;~~~=~! Gara1e fully lmulated. Motivated seller bas t bis i mm 8 cu I ate INNEWllOM~NTlll ~ den & lovely guest BR. Prestigioua I
Buill in work bench. priced this lvly 3 bdrm townbome. Better lake a \.. Rancho San Joaquin & prieed for f e 1ma:H·u1
Larae Jot with RV •c· condo w /din rm below Ioot! 646-'T71l. quick sale. Belle Par:tch 752-1414. :· . 'Jitf01F . cets. Newly painted, market. Oxford model. ..n _ . ----,.-·=:so: pueJio1 and waJlpaper. Lee bonus rm, btO view ~ ... rel I 002 •wnl I 002 ( V · 111) '
tour Bedroom Home in ci hills. Offered at only ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. ••••••••••••••••••••••
-, : __ HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
$45,500
Spacious 2 Br
Townhome, located Just
• few minutes drive from
S. Coast Plaa.. Seller wanes to move quickly
754-7100 •
N rtb T I l\~al Eatate Meu o . ru Y a Sll.5.000.Hu.n')'!~l. --------, Great Buy for $76,000. 100 G""rat 1002 54&-ZJU o-t"' ,,, q. ,, s ICJN 10 II "'IC•. [•lltl ~ Walker & lee SllOOTOTM.CASH
ALL THAT Y OU
NEEDED! to buy this Real Eatate beautiful 3 bdrm. bome ii
41a/ADDOt4FI you qualify. Located
Giant tour bdrm bome n ea r m a r I n a a n d
1 0 c a t e d t n • e I I beacbet. Boat access.
• 1 t a b 1 1 9 b e d $69,800 Take adavan· MO DOWN VA ml&bbortlOOd. Big living tage. For more lnforma-
BNt priced I bedroom, 2 room with crackllna 'f:'N ~.~6Y0111 ,..J(,
bath lo town. Paymenta fl~place, hue• add.on I
•
~s~EL~Erordc.T ·"'~-:::=::£:~~ [l.l!QIJI
BBQ. Corner lot with · 1
--PROPERTIES ~ wall. AU E·Z ac-.....;~-------1 ce.1 room for R.V. Call
COUNTIY
SITTIMti
ait clot.e to th• beach! See this brand new offer.
101 that provides
sp11cioua fmly Uvlnt at
1ta no.t lD t.hia a bdrm, a
ba •ut.Y· Osal1 .._, ... 7711.
~ Wi1lk1:r 1: I 1:f:
now for tn/o: $46-2313
O/'tN IU Ii• II\ llifo 1()1</ N~ I • IMYBTotl$11
UYl1t4&1UILD
H111e Eutalde CM R·2
lot w/vut~ • plana tor addltJonal duplex. ~ boQ)e la newly
reblt IQ •out. A real doll
aawuinaaeanbe. Don't halt•t•I Call now!! ~ .
~ Walk t!r 1; l 1:e
Of'84 DAILY 11-1 PM u1 u.'n0r,2.c
Ot4 THI WATm wmt ~
SJH,000
OtrtdaaMfl•9 14 Yfll0t4J c .......... llo•• wltlt IHd1 ot ,.... to r•••· rrofnUo11ir dac....tM 2 .... ,. _.
.. wftlt .................... ....,
................. , ........... ,, 0 ID OM
ttt1 w•ra M91J...., "*'' _.. • pl••tlllfot1 ......,., tpecNIJ ..... d ...............................
~· ... ~ ....... s.c.tly, ......... ... 0 WA VllWS .... llp ... fw .......... , •.. .,,,..,
Ho• ..
2633 W. Coast Hwy
Newport &.ch
631~1400
'42·8235 644-6200
ll01 Oovu Drlvt H•rbor View C_,.ter
Irvine •l C.mpus Valley c.rtter
752·1•'4
···•··················· ··•••·•·····•·········· -
IJ;f Cui'JOn
UNCOMPROMISm llEGANCE
Direct golf course frontage -
spectacular "2" fairway view. No
detail overlooked in this gracious
.. Augusta" home. 2 Bdrm. suites +
den /study, formal dining, view
deck. 2,000 Sq. ft. of sophisticated
living. Truly without equal! Offered
at S'l49,000. Shown with pride by
appointment t.hrougb -
t e
a ,.
'· D
\ .
•
r.
"· tr
to
ll. Lft
e.
to tel •
• ~.
I
l I
. •
MUST SB.I. MOWH
1711 llel•Ate D11. ten 11,CH
Of .. DAILY 1-4
Spect. 4 BR, a BA. dinlng rm, ram rm.
all new electrical, plumbl.ni, heating, appJ. Jacuzzi in master BR. Plush
cpts, oak plank floors accent a dream
kit. & fam rm. $289,500.
HARBOR HIGHLANQS GEMi
New listing! 2021 Diana Lo, Newport
Beach. Must see, owner moving!
OPEN SUN. l ·S $139,000
MOBILE HOME-Treasure Island
Laguna Beach. 1 Bd, ex. cond. Steps to beach.
Won't Last! $8.500
FHA Repo. Under $3000. On. 3 BR, l lh
BA. Likenew
4 BR, l 'h BA. patio, walled yard.
$162,900. FHA assumable.
JOHN YAMIAM co. nns.
(714)631-0900 .... , .. 100 100 •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
IJ'S F.ast ~~'1:a. l yr.
I KAUJY old; "'redeveloping area. gum Spacious 2 BR, 2 Ba. un·
Pool • jac:u.ui, 4 BR, its w/rrptcs. LIVE JN
Fam RJD, ~ baths, lge 0 N E , R EN T TH E
yard, Iota ofxtraa. BJtn OTHERS. $1 78,000 .
BBQ, ~b stone tile M a k ~ o r r e r B k r
in entry. kitchen & dinin& ~/BS 7624 rm. ,,ew c:pt.a, stained --.,_--... -t-•EC_I_ ... ,-
llass 'lllllndows, etc. Must -·-~ -~! Io The Bl~fs. Overlook·
SElL idle items with a
Dally Pilot Classified Ad.
&e5871.
ing the wide greenbelt: 3
bdnns .• 3 baths, ramily
rm. w/ffl>lc. A beautiful
ly appt'd family home
ror tbose who appreciate qi.let elegance lr1eoslble
values. $164,900
~T~'~Jo
A OOllWHIEHT SHOPPING A
MWINC OUIOE FOii THE
GAlON THE CO
Pilow or Plmrter
Add double dtatN to 1 l1lOm
w1tll butterfly used two ways1
Buuhful butteilly pillow or
planttr a1e e,e-catch1na accents
Clochet of two strands of bed 51>rud cotton and sta1ch shifty
Pattern 7341 duecllons. ptllow
and pbntei
Sl.50 for exit palltrn Add
3Sc each pattein for 11~1 class
fEEL FRESH llld free all d =~ handltnR. SM4 II:
WTUOUMD Rootce»eo
lbdualve-Seeurlty Pi , 11111 ..._._...
Gate. Pool aod ~re•· .--tlon a ... a for the dia· Newly remodeled 5
crtmlaaU01. couple. Bdrm. 2 bath. 3005 E. t.ar1e 2 bedroom•, 2 Oceao Blvd. $115,000.
baths. rort11al dinlna. All/Oner'~
eecluded Uviaa room for ---------
NStlul liviq. C11ht1-leeda IOll
~AA .. ·.. ;..IA ::~~~:;
• ---Mt. dol nm. self clean· baa ovn, gar dr opar.
tra1b cmp t r . &
400 I Tap1I• a.-
A cuatomlr.ed 5 bdrm, single story
witb lovely courtyard entry and a 3
car gar,ge PLU~ J!a.Doramic ocean
lllltl-greeQ rolllng IUllS vtew. Reduced to $21f,500 FEE.
Ctl 644-721 I w.e.
Twd!V, Aprll 18. 1171
ILOCll TO THI
llACH
2 BR. 2 BA. 1 reu oew.
24•50 mobtle bome. HardlJ beeo llved l.Q,
uted •• a weekend Ntreat I& b in SUPER
SHARP CONDITION.
Woa'tlMtatooly tu.900.
CallNOWI
540-3666
Wltelc-i11
REA L £STAT£
Ylllll'Tfm
AattdllY!!
Tblt Imm aculate 1
bedroom famJJy IM>me
wt&b formal ~ room.
la l n1ae Grove• ta a
8Tl!AL at •. toO. Hu een&ral air PLUS a wbol
lot men! I Call DOW f
ddalla.
y
.....
Model
End unit t owobome
located on •reeobelt.
around c:ora.r from 2
ten» CCNrta • famUy
pool. New carpetlq -.P· ltaira. a BdnDI .• 2y, ba .•
tam. rm.~ fOl'ol•
flee or work area lD ...... e.
Fii LAHD microwave. 2200 sq.ft. 3 .-wron SHORES Br 2~ Ba, a real tam.Uy UACH HOUSI
'Illla 111 a supers BR, 2 BA home with a fanta1Uo 4 Br, 3 Be. I&• nndeck1 1
bome.. Walt to private oceao view. yr new ln rapidllY oe-
t.eonia oort.s l fr VIEW REAL TY veloplo1 beach area. IWilCH llAl.TY
551-2000 be.ch. SuPI io~ao $125.000. 618 2otb SL. 00~ atOQly $155.tOO. . -.T122 TIG-05rl6 C... .. ..._, I 022 COltoMtM I 024 _53&-_11_11 ____ _
WIS1CUFF C--.. Mtr-(022 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Condo By Owner. 2br, f~YHOME ••••••••••••••••••••••• OWW.W~ SUPER SUNSHINE l,,.,ba, crpts, drpe, rrplc,
WOODBRIDGE PLACE El:Qoy a carefree sWDJDer
Special offerin1. 3·S ln this Deerfield PaUo
bdrm. Coat.emporery de-Home. 2 bdrms. den, cov.
tached ramlly homes ln ered patio. compt w11u
open, woodsy deai1n. bbq • firepit, A/C, step&
Ji.mt abort walk to lake & to commuruty pool. Only PU'b io VWaae o1 Wood· •,ooo. Open Sun. 1·5. 11
bridle. From $11.5.000. R o c k S p r i n 1 a .
Thisbeautlful48Rirden SHORECLIFFS Ccrooa del llar2 Bdrm. ~ME ti~en. ~~t serv. ~m. wabr. dryr, home ls fully upgraded. 2 Country 3 BR 2 BA LR home ia worth the price 41 .., or. •·~ · pvt patiO, carport. Nice.
Fireplaces" a large lot Dm hardwood nocirs 2 alooe. SUpo&emeot )'OUT ~Wrer Realto r MS,750. 962·3345 dys,
tool <Yfered at $185,000. fplc.'s childrens pl~y tax dechactfoaa wltb rear 673-9003ew/wkndl.
MEWPOUIUCH room.Pvtbch.613-5709 unlta. Waitia6 ror tbe By Owner, Halecrest Comfy condo, 3 BR. 2~
De Mia MobUe Home righttnvestorat$165,000. bme. 3 br l \; ba, xtra lg ba. lrg eocl pat z-car Park exclusive. 2 BR Reduced to ~195,000. MOllNS REALn kit, $74.900. 5'0-5683 for w/auto opener .• frplc
552-UOl Owner /broker 96S-Oll05
mobile home. Commun!· Owner w/cons1der con· * ,.9 ... 057 * appt. blt:m upended imuout' . t y clubhouse. pool s . tract of saJe •. seoond TD. .,. ...,. $76.eOo 983-8846 aft 6 .; ............ 1141-ra.rTa~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• jacuuis. boat sUps & you nam.e 1t ! Owner •PRICED REDUCED Colle.tie Park 3 br, pool NO wtmdl · 8 owner prin morel This is Newport's must seU 1mmac 3 BR 2 2 l modeled ~ QUALIFYING. Quick only · Y • · rMuw1R1 OWHYOUIOWM Wl•EDON t..arse 2 Bdrm .. 2 bath 0-v-0onl)' ~blocttollain J:'OSHEST mobile home Ba llome w/vlew of ~·,:me. 3 BR 'rL. fllCJ'01r.957--0530 --"-·-------
li ving at only $37,500. :::.° 5f6 P~!:.~b .~.· den, & deck w (v lew IY OWMB IF THIWOID IN THE Beach. Brigbl " clean. 0 67s-23u towards Catalina an old 4 er. 2 ba, ronnal dining. • M,...,,.EY CdM. $206,950. Brkr. brick fi"Plc, corner lot, 2 "'"
IMAGINATIVE! 75-1288 . car gar. 900 Do&wood. EXCITES YOU-
_. (! -..~ The quaintness of the CHARMING abr. 2ba $711,500. Phone 751·0774 then you'll love this H.B.
a StTN± 1lii ~n'!!.ro;:~ o1 ~ 2 ;.~R~~Pri~~ aev:~ .,., t>est Easuide ~~'l ~ ~
Plnancinc available.
EXCLUSIVE =. ... s aw.n ucaun a.us * 494..aos1 *
Com e a nd see t h-l s
Bab>alsland Really bdrm., 2 bath, with $157.000.0wner,6'0-7030. location. su.soo. Jts close to.the beach A\UIWl!."""·'"l-.~ ftplC., forch ed aJr, etc., Duplav. l -v.J~ 3br, re-'""'C...2333. Bvn.....-, W /COmlJlUnity pool.
gorgeous 4 bedroom FOIEYB VIEW
home with a den, POOL Catallna fr city liJbts.
ad ~ that you 2tlr' +den. 21hba coatem·
would want In a fine po home. Sl29,500
home. Vacant and ready EVs/wknds 8-4685
roryou! !
673-1700 apt. over uie garage. ~.. "'° ..,v _. "" v--MOVE-IN immediately
But not the price. T.bat's modeled home + 1 yr Mesa Verde beauty. 3 BR. & watch your mooey
not imaginetive, that's new 2br unit. FJ>lces '2 2 ba customized home. grow. Call today for NEWLY
WED
realistic. Walle t.o ever -car parking f~r both. 607 ,Lrg formal din'g rm. IDOC'etnfO.
ythlng. Sl.S9.500 Larkspur. Prin. only. By ram rm. 3 rrplc's. riuae 540-3666 1bree Arch Bay. 3br, 2ba
Ir lndry. 9 yr old view
home. Will carry 2nd
Must sell. Prin only.
4199-3833
u.f•enity owner. 6'0-UMO patio w /firepit. beauty
.., '73-6510 OCEAN VIEW. spec· lndscpd front & back.
VET? U together you'r
taking home $1200
moot.b you might qualif
rw this s bedroom. 2 ba
home near South Coas
Plua! Call now!
To place your message
belorethe
reading public,
phone
RED CARPET 754-1202 Daily Pilol
Clauilied. 6'2·5878
Classified Ads. your one·
stop shopping center. j~~~~~~~~~
1002 ........ 1002 ..............................................
FREE ENTERPRISE:
PEOPLE MAKING
THINGS HAPPEN
BUYING A HOME MAKES
THINGS HAPPEN, TOO.
Ownino VCXJr own home tS part of the Amencan dream
But what makes home ownership so popular that 1t s
become a natronal ambition?
The<e·s the sa1tslactt0n ot llvtng in a place that
belongs to you
cash savings from the tait deductions you re taking
now, and eQu1ly you re building for taler ...•
1ncrease0 value you can count on every year
ana the mortgage payments that remain hxed.
regardlqss of ns1ng 1nllation
So nome ownerr.n1p 1s mor11 thlln an Amencan
dream 11 s a prac11cal. oosilive. American way of
Ille Talk to a REALTOR• abOut buying a home.
REALTORS' are real estate professionals, trained
to hetp you decide where to buy what to buy and
how much you aan really afford to spend
All over America. enterprising people are making
home ownership happen To be one ot them. call a
REALTOR· (Oday
~ ... ~:
PEOPLE MAKING
THINGS HAPPEN
Newport Harbor /Costa Mesa
Board of Realtors
tacular ocean le Newport Elec garage door opener
Harbor view. Pool. wood " much iqore. S97.500. ... _ .. _ bdrms 2 b By owner, priD only.
Wltelc-.11
REAL ESTATE """' ..... 4 •• •.• 540-7610 skylights thruout. Comp. _________ , -----------1
remodeled le updJtted. EASTSIDE , ..... H .. ~ I042 Easy mai ntenance! --UMCHllA.LTY
551..ZOOO S22',SOO. Interested & 3 Bdrm .• 2 bath. modern ••••••••••••••••••••••• -··"r......-""~ onl 8 home with open beamed --------,.__........,en y. Y ceiling; on a huge lot. --------•I
5 UlllS
Deluxe ocn views. 1 blk to bch Ir twn. Super owner's unit. 5 Gar. $8).000.
owner.~.Courtesy Only $79.900. C all HwborU.llMJ UV£ IN to~U:-~..... r~•-~•••"'"" ~::.=~':!·e~b~: FAii.Oiis 1.n:beeacbll&l.sAre• ~.•2"~~.·~!~ •i!il., =~!ii.:~.t~ -DliE ~i:::u~:m.~:e~wA~
%AGollODDY at.Ta
494-1611
)'&rd, riser. $1SS,OOO. view balcony + + +at pr01.3000sqft,:llntview
A&t/Owner.871-312G Ua ... OlloT..._. only SlSS,000. lt'g a Wehavema.teveryplan ol cuyoo &ocean. Call OCEAMVU.OW»e Hard to find 3 BR llon· bargain YQtJ cao't afford to 1uit your lnd.MduaJ _~ __ H_,832_-_1917 ___ _
ticello. BeautifUJJ.Y local· to m i ss! C a 11 now needa and price raoee. 2 fantuti.c buys, Harbor ed. Exclualve, a rea 894·7521 FOREST E . From 3 bedroom ec>odol POTOFtM>l.D Vu. J b r. rrpt, must see. w/cln'*'use. pools. etc. OLSON priced at '10.900 to tree .. you won't find. but at
144--2641. 6'4-17!2 1114 Sharp. vacant & offered atandln& bomea priced at tbe end al the ra1Dbow ls
White Sails. Opeo l·S, at a beJow market price $122.500. For complete this 5 bdrm. borne de·
Sat/Qin. ot_onl)' 11115,900. Hurry
1
00 11-.L...... I 0,.4 lDtormaUoa. call US! li&Md by Chris Abel, . .,......_ .. with while••~ view&
IAYFltOMTCOMDO tbisone9.6~ftoow191. ••••••••••••••••••••••• r!Ji oll.a«una. Loeaorwood. Eleg. w /allp, pool, -ll&A. tile le beams are
Jacuzzi, cov ear, Securi-lat, ll.E. Metworlt 118.0W MAaKll" awa.Wng )'OU. Over s,ooo
ty,ownereves.675-57" IMYlaSITY aq. ft. al cbann. Priced ..sA VIROI at $315,000 JUST LISTED PAR
ColfaMtlG 1024 A superb ram bme. tBr. Lvly Oxfocd model , 9~1k;)n>& . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ram rm. 28&, lg yd. Nr s h o w a p r i d e o f WOODlllDGli nn-.-Tl<'\,'l'? IAS'TSIOl·U allscbools. ownenbip. 3 br, dia rm. • ..... -~\)q PRICED RIGHT l&e bonus rm. View of ._._, • 499·2800 $70,000 Ask for Bud Gardner. mts. Priced below other 551-3000 Huae buUdabJe R2 pro-orc9SM232 condo model• at only
perty. Prime !'.alt.aide. Hme5'6-32&} SUS,000. Call now for By Owner: Turtlerock &..gi..... 1050
HWry ! 848-7111. a]Jpt. today. 54$-9491 Glen twnbme-Plan • l ; 2 •••••••••• ••••••• • • • •• •
OPtN 111o .,,~11JN ro111 NICI• Fa m i I )' b o m e n r br 2Y. ba; beaut. view Leisure World, 2br, 2ba.
! •• , •• ~=~.::.;~~ lla!El .. 1< ::.~~[;,'. ;',r~~r..:r
· · -•=:1 •=·~ 0-Polllt 1026 --W-04-00-.. --llMH----mirrored liv rm wall. OwnerSC0.2'91
MIU YBDI ••••••••••••••••••••••• laOAOMC>Oa e~5?.J~fr ~~: Laguna Village Mtn View
llAUTY OLE!!! 2J3J'72MP52· Absolutely Coodo. Upgraded 3Br.
V .... -Mst• Span.iah manaion newly 4 BR Aspen model. SUper no acts • 2Ba, clubbse. tennis.
"'•-• remodeled. Unique cu1-de-sac loc. Complete-· pool. $73,500. Ownr
1bls lvly 4 bdrm " rsnly landmark with ocean 1y renced yard. Decorat· UMIVaSITY PIK 4W7-14216 rmhomelafaotastically vi.ews,convertedto3un· ed In earth tones. Viii. J , modlfied•---------
ereat ror entertalnin1 & its. Perfect for owner oc· Solarian floors. Sunken Fordham twnhse, end
fmly enjoyment. Your ~•lion + income . LR"DR.A.nxJousseUer. unlt.3-4br,2\;ba.Open ............. 105Z
auestsliv rm thruOow sfroli .. ~-gtheglalg5e5 de of ownership as $107,900. Hou1e, Sat/Sun. 4332 ••• .. ••••••'••••••••••••
· uw well as a sound lnveat· y·•••-64Af900 <!---'·-W B ,,,,,__ __ ·--------• doot' out lnt.o a btn patio ment ... 15•000. -· -...,....... •Y· 1 vw~. ,. ... $106.000 "/$1000 cash re-... ua SHottlS It garden area. Huge NORl ... S RE .a. 1 ·TY .. _._ r back yrd w/bearing fruit " ~ ......, or your own UP· Attractive family botne,
trees only $85,000. * 494-1057 * 1r adln1. 551·0404 or 3 BR, forma l dloiog
rn """"' IJ7S.4880WTkdys. room, family room
--1. l~~~~~~~~ .._ 1--------•.::: Woodbridg s 2 w /flreplace, 2 BA . (~lWfiiijJi;rnfl IY OWHEll stry ttoua!. cr;::~br, Former model •/fmAY
Newer o cean view •Y"' $1751• 21hba, llv rm,dln rm, up. upgrades Including air Real &tat.e Duplex, quality con· "' p-ades, lndry, kit-lam, cnncttttonm,. Recreation
structioo. 3 Bdn:ns and 2 1 work with Orance Co. auto gar door. Lodscp'd. area wtswimrn.iq pools.
Bdrms. $14.2,000. Agent/ Vets only. Homes to $10'1,000. 21 Sooppar· tmnia courta, etc. Call Ulle C....._ S-. Owner-. 61s.a&20 $175,000. For into call: row. 5Sl-0238 today to see .•. Sl.52,.500 •
... It eouldn't hUJ1tocall1--------• Vet A(ll. 541..()JIOO --------.................
Chuck Nub about a re· ~ ~lll'llflCE 495-5220 4'M4f4
wardinl career ln real D'fM.O.MITE Dph •TURTLEROCK • _,,.., 49 ... 24 I 3 IJNOSO
LA.uMA...ulL
eatate. Free tra1nlq ii Lee 3 Br owner's unit. 2 3 BR 2 Ba Broadmoor. Sellen mu.st sacrifice1·--------
youquallty. 5'0-5101. l>a PLUS 2 Br. 2 ba ren· w/fam rm. dJD rm. up-thi& doll house. FreahlY 1---------
tal. Frplcs, bi& deck. irdi . Avl Im med. ~central air and
E/Slde Cu.stom home. ~~C:.b~OOO $112,900. Leehld. Ownr/ fonnald':'~~o::.Orn:i . .:fs!
3Br. huae fRm. rf1., 3 car _•_ct_._1_»_12118______ brand new back yard.
38R,FR ... OOO
48rFRPool Jae $14.9,900 · Iona '" "'" b:reezJ tent wrt~ Needlecraft Dept. 10s bold bind dttail. SM dollln-Dally Piiot =:i,:..°"a:, ~=: =~ .. lU. ON Clltllu Sta-i. lltw d.fil.l'O .i\'t.' -f)'f:1 ~Q. • Pmrted httem 9335· Hatt YI!\ IY t•ll. Priftt NIM, P~ l'Ot.J ~). 'b P</" \:1
1ar .. on -2 ot .. Agt famt8s:Y.., I034 • ... .,._....,. CaUeowfordetai.11.
646-U71 -•••••••••••••••••••• --rwl-nt Best loc, beat view ln
YMHA.IUYEI O~~~ ::;~· ~!,~ Wdtq. lwc 2+ den. All
ON GOLF COURSE
4 Br. 2 FR. *2'2,500
4 a..0 •. szae.ooo
4u l!lL • 1au M*a· lif. Plttm ll1mbtf. 71. f I f • • W .J G ·,1. CL -Lf Sizes 12*. 1 11, lvn_. "· VALUE paclled 1978 llHOl.£ no II r19UlflfJ orv ome w1 n o nuu •
20'ii, 22~. 24~. 26~. Sitt 14~ CRAFT talalot Choose from ~ "" C&AY L '°'1A"'"--
(bust 37) 1~8 Jds. 60-inclt 22f> de51&11$. 3 flee inside All O•--.._, °' "'-l:t J:.S:, t:,_.-91 ~ crafts, Knit, Cfocllel Send 7~t 1ow ':",:~~-':
. .....__.. ..-~ Citb '•' °'1laftlellts. $1.50 -------. ..... -_,..a..4"s $1.50 I G O BHOL S.. '9: se.tt '11' Pvft Qliltl . . SUS
..,.. tultl• SM ... ,llO Qllilts sus . 1 r r 1 1 CrlCMt wftll S.--..... Sl.00
Pattern Dept. 442 OedMt •..,.. Sl.00 I T u s Q E I
1
.
Dally Pilot C..'m . . . 1::: ._, ... l__.1-...-1--.-1 -t.
nt ... -SL, ... ,., s.. 'bit .... Jl..25 . -H'Ji.'rr ~ t::r!t.":!ik ff:: I BURE T 11 no~'i~11e":w~·ir'~ ...,. ~..... Ji.oo l I 1 r • t1eve • c1r1ntt1no ~. Cl9ll LOOI RICH, YOONG. SMART laUlt ~ M · 11.00 l as&-1212." l'Mt'• ttie nvmt11t
OI I Witt! Sew MW tolt tllllillt lleo.-t ... W . l.00 I S I N U H A I ~~ blgoelt -•tor9 In drasa '=-~;f.'* ....... .._. ... SLOO
;;U""u':.o. .!~l"':HI I r I r !•~"".."'=;-:=' --=~ii u 112 ....... n. ffN..... ....No. "'4ow. • .,,....... .... .. .. 11...... 1$f • nlNT NUMiihto ll1Tft$ ~ I' r 1• ,. I' r I ....... ... 12.. ...• llf 1HESt 5QU.UfS _ _ • _ • _ • ::~ u.·=--..... =-1& •-=:.:::::::~ :;;.;:;li'iid™~· lO~G;;;l~f A;::N=~l;::::;lt;;Tt;:;;US~I ~l~I ===, ~);::::I ~,
SCl•MoLIT'S ~laClwH'c .. 1• UN
a
We have properties ror otc sp, jacuzil, fplc, low u pgradea. New. By
Y'OU· Call today! maint yd. Nr Mlle Sq. owner'75-S194
•
640.ttoo Pk. Sl.22,ooo. 5SM442 •ow MAUii'!
-
l ... •af•lt9dl 1040 EASTON, prof lndscpd Ii °\~ ••-••••••••••••••••••• upcraded, 7 Clearwater. l~~i!!i!!!!l!iiiiii • llA!!"" ~ri.z~ ~: IAMCH llALTY
Ul..ZOOO Sll'MSMCWm IFYvvCAH lDI 3 BR w /atrium ar
J>npe.n.-for oner 1 OnJ,y $50,000 Ir t.be beach xt r as. H Bet ban y. 1----.• .• ·,.-tD•A·~--3 n n 2 ba -·· de ••c minutes away trom this 2 $119,900. A&em. s:i2""414 . ~-~ ·• .._ ' bdrm condo. Tbi9 can't -----"""-----......... M .. V«de. •000 lu1Aocall DOWI 5'6-0022. IY OWMIR r-~ 47
A. Jolmob BU-l'7IM964 UnivcnitJ Pk (ViUa1e Need room f Great *•· t:loo for a modest priced
Brandi_.. • .. Br .. ae..,n.: ll> Hllb1Yrt ~~82000 lal:J• bome. 4 BR. PR • eut •• ome l' t u + aq , Jltr . 1 a . D~2Y.BA;a0...loot· ceramic tile eatry. •Wl· Real Dtate WJ,500 includes laud. _, bomt .._ u.e com·. =:f room, beama, sas Resale Speclaliata. 55T._,dys,SG-3Mleve mwakr perk aod pool.
formal dib~~~1:i U oc 5 bdnn modela MMll ..._ w fPwJ Prt.S al a eompetltive
ltitclaeo, with micro-~ 1ome .., /poola. Univ. Prk prtme *•· $1.0UOO =:s ... ~ -............... ~~ .. ~:;'.'·~ 8dnn .,, bath. pool. a br ft rim nn. .w41· Of,.,., Try a D a I I y P 11 o t Priced to HU 1.$CHd.
red hill __
IJ [ :• "f l'I\
--~ c.l1 Qwi<led Adtobu)*,Hll U.4,5". B1 Owoe.r. Afts.MWlta -· or..uom.tJttn•. ...._.,.. ______ wnAda.alla ea.a
(
).
LA UNAIO.US
Nellie Gall Ranch.
Honeetry. 4Br, FR,
$190,000
5 Br, s Ba, Sl.58,000.
LAGUNA BEACH
Panoramic ocean View
1 Br. FR. CiOlltnCtOn own borne, $250,000
Jflt/W.Y .... Co
4tt-ll'D
EUREKA!
f1nd tt la tbAI a BR bome
w /wet bar, court yd
w /abutrlei.oard • Jatual. stone fple, mat.
U... mare. '1M,l50
(S2)
It
8
I•
t.
11
•
r.
'·· er
to b .
\fl
•e . lo Id.
• rd.
• '
t Ill •• --
l I
~......... ..... ..... ···~ ....... ~:~~~ .. :. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ........ ••••••••••••••• · IM4 -c.::.~· 2900 ~-~ ....... ~ ~ ............ ;:;
•• p¥.'(llUJT T-!S'alfl'l 'I. tm ~!~.:::~~-..... ~!~.!:~ ...... ~ .. ~!:!:t-,••••1•000••• ~ ...... • lilswPI IM+ 2•-lf&Uf ltwn.._... ....... ... ~ !.•.•~ .... AM IMO_ ..... \..~ ....... -.................. . ~ ............... _ ........... ....-............. .:.:;.ti;•••iiw -·-·-·-····· ~------------------~~~ .... !~ ...... ~ ... ~~~ ............... •IYOWlt•• QUAIL PLACE -·--•••• .. ••••I D. I be •I• tar, ~~U• 3
'
......,. Love Ir redacor I Br.
QIM ....._ ~ blk. to 1~8a a" crpt~alDt,
..... Oidrm. • 2 etc. Buse hm rm. Am.&. ....... E CAl...V Wrm. nttl. ooubla aprtQklen fl"Ont/bacll, ~ vvru11
1.,.,.. r.raa.bed • tabonrV.A.JoaOl'loe PIOfllTY ~
...._. I• •"•-ND· do11'D pa1mt. "59,500. T •-1-.n-•1 ,, tH.... do-• t&lllJ.811.• CaU5114157. 8Xe$ W IWUl&.100 oe ~JOU .... ,
........ llACM Whether YoU want a tu abelter. a IMLTY 611-1642 PIDO/S... S hedce against inflatbl •appreclaUa1 ..;;;;~.:..;...-----• Good w biM'8r, tna1. assets or an lDcome dream -call -------1 ~ .. '"" Su. QUAIL. Most ol our Hllen wlll •~· PAno HO.. ....... chao1e, many wtll earey paper or ~, 'R ,._,..a.-._._._. ~.,!...pt-t~ . llnancepropertl•themselws.Ourof·
............. wa un , 0 ... ,.... 1.-da JmUOO f.-fl'om OlltrlMI ..... flee cloeet .... mlJ.llon In elCl'OWI .....,.. «1 'I•·•· •J.IOO. u.~Jiarucbtaom• __ ................ monthly. Whatever you tell or ex·
495-1710 ODflW.teadotUdolale • ....,..._, chanie. pleue call now. Numen>US
Builds will_.,... J11oP tm• i.t • IMl +1100. u. 2 bL am. 0war1--.. IDadalfGrlielaerMIM. No--~ ~....._
Gll•ps&a.@4il>. 3 Bl. 1 bl, Ill& fla&at. epta D g E a P J I L ])
.... •-. tAl!Ne,~ w-.r • 'l'OWNBOU8B a Br. den.
................ •-••• dnr, .-.. \::!'-·~ 2 be, wood deck. J car
........ , , II 1d. <>Ma • a : ,... •I~ opar, mir-• • • -~I._. St.&-..: rond wardroba. Nr.
......... ·-·-····.. tll•lllS, JlJ/1'15·'817 JOOb pub • 9dloala. .,_._.. 114' Mllla.•._lllO. Sorey, ao JM!la ... es. ~··••••••••••••• ..-.oreto-701'2
CIMA•... ma-W 3226 Woodbrtqe I bl' 2 ba &pl, ........... ............ PJOI. p!ltio, pelb 'QI' e.==~ ........ ~ '!!· ...... a-· ctoar-.... ID cm.-ot Tnl· MM. PllUo.wlk LCia'l .-mo. Ml-t'nl
pie ~. lllt. lnff, c.:.-.=.,._'°itoPlb a..,-._. JMI
...., ............ ~·-.i&ft~ ...................... .
DANA SOUTR LAGUNA ~ ... ~ 1100 condo Investments. MaQ)'aiqlefaml· POINT LAGUNA BEACH ....................... Jy retNdences/lnvestments.
!!!4'3!!!!!! •• !!!u!!!!!!!!!!!!!e!!!-~..wi!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!49'1!!1!!!..aaa!!i!! I •f ANJ ISTICAL rn::,!.;:-Beach fti::::l ~ .. ~ .... !~.~~ ~~!!!'.~!='! ... !!!! ......_ .... , •• 7... CIStl llSI ~~:~-CM ~::
=.--,....,. .._ .......... ~~ uw.-:r.:..,
MA y O CK billd.. on-:-vu, pvt, =t:~~ ~ ........ m.*31 :.;:.,u:=:
Cri414i·1~ .,.. J232 SHOPPING. Liv. rm. 1~~~~~~~~~---......... w/flreplace. Se=
C51 Coldwell Bon~c:r
3 Moa.ucb Bay Plua
La1UDA Niguel
496-7222 131.0136
1: Nn JBr. 2Be, air CODC1. dlialnf rm. tee. , .. .,..,...... Jl6t ~epta. drpl, bltm, Ir separate senlce __ ................. uibaN'awm.-parch. Jmt oompleeely
UDO JSI . ..,_. Br, I Ba, redecorated. Excellent ~o:aa:~~ p :•Ytllr Jll4 "':1.:rf:k'=--TV fw-. SIJOOl.11' ... Ol'CIOD• ...... ,., ........... ,... 4IN.arD
llder mo. C.U m.aGI. 'Bedroom., l lltol7' FOUD· "" Y --"br --Blue ._ tam V.U.,. fl85'. Sharp, .. or ......... , • .,. · c1e9n. vacant. 5411M1518or La1oon condo. Pool, •na beach. talftia. -.ac
64N ~.ta dbl wide la· 3 Pride ot ownerships '135.000 ~a ::-u:11~:fi 3 <House Pl'lS duplex> $181.500
park, •wimmlral. Jaeuut 3 (Three Br home + two) '1'1,000
Is social actlvlties 11001tl300sq.ft.unita $155,000
1alore. All for under 4 Covington Units *1.M.000: ~~· Park rent 5 (Two houses+ triplex) S200,000 c•..._P.atlc 8 Unita-WhlWer Sl60.000
llobii. Home Realty 6 New Townhouses -CM 1314.000 ...._•fa ' t 1 •
21Q811arbcw, StdQI G Brand New -Hunt Beach $355,000 -.. • .. -··--· a..£AN. BR 2 Ba, 1 •b' .... ______ _
54o-SH7 7 Units -Costa Mesa S340,000 9 11 JI02 fncd =: fplc, cpta. CMAat ••• 7 Under construction $352,000 -· .. -·-••• drpa, quiet cuJ de Open view, I IMlrm, 2 REDUCED 11 Santa Monica $371,000 HOllEPINDEllS sac, nr 1cboola. $430. bath, 2 car cupol'la, tun·
11 Hunt Beach -Nr beach SSS0,000 ftofwmdtota.&all 1GC22 decb.1525. lease. Ready IAYYIEW To $21,500. 2h52 *'>an All.,_.alllldc:ea to move into now. Super 1 •2tir2ba mobilebome Kirkwood. <NCHIS·I ) 12 Costa Mesa .,_,,ooo SalDPle: HUGE4+Z~ ~fOl'lue!_l'~·
.. 1076 12 Units per unit $18.333 5111rtuniuwpc1 TennisCrt· MAY UC K lo acll.L Bayside vw. S.Cle•• Famllypuk,Jillnm; 22 New units -..0,000 2brkida/petayd Frplc +Kore! (8316) co ... o ... T•o" Clubbse, poolbjac., prlv. ••••••••••••••••••••••• PACIPICCOAST .,.. atirklda1.-toctep ~~~ ......_Vlelo 1067 bch. po11. oat 1llp. FfX&SAVI USAllS.IMC. 30CoodoConversioo-GG Sl,200,000 UR'l'DIJtSDVIC• ~nJ3Br.~~t tri4)•4~
••••••••••••••••••••••• ~.M0.875-790387~1848 Slf,SOO an.aeeo 56 Spacious units Sl,400,000 117-8112 s.tw~ tll833>~~~~~~~~~
••H11UU O,..hlv View ot ocean le bllla. Vlldnt Coach ln lrvtne'a 62 Newdeluxe Sl.7oo.ooo ........... 1206 1 K 11 611-41151=
2 BA, up1raded home, Harbor View flomea, Great fixer w1th a 3 BR, flout P,•rll, • 'Tbe 117 Units-Six Mo Orange County ·--••H•••••••• llonormaJ.credltearda located close to Sad· fonner model, 1847 Port l~ BA, larce dloinl· Meadows •. 2 BR. l BA. If it's not here. call! trpl
dleback Colle1e. Try VA ShelfteJd. • famJJy room wtdbl. den. Ea.syftnanciq. Reel We have it or we can get it. Llmb'3 Br.ZBa, ·~11 lbdrm, l~ba,f/p, clotacl alferfor'81,900. $1S4,llOO ~9019 fireplace, +secluded HWRealtySSZ.7500 :r:zanopeta. lmyr • yd.nraehool
VIEW REALTY •uNpt Hcta by owner. ~~ki~ •th BR. d IC7~;M1-3'22 4llM352 -.7'122 77C>-05M lbr, l~ba. fam rm, Jge BERTHAKENRY llACHAllA QUAIL []I. ~!'!!!:° ... !~Huf __ ._. 3240 MIC)ll9t J2S2 ~;___:;__ _____ ,lot. SU&,llOO. ()po Thurs· llEALTORS 5'1CIALIST PLAC:Bl ' blk Bl --•••••••••••••••••• •••••••• .. •-••••••••
3 BR 2 BA Condo, air &m12-5.535TUltioAve. -=m~Bel...;....Ka.r ____ ... __ 12_1, "-·-'orall ....... moblle ,_.......,,,...~ ~-vau'aa~:s .. -r .. .! New-elecant·2 bedroom c.2br2ba,E-9coo· cond. cpts dfll9 pool ~Ml-3"1 .__,, 1 -PROPERrIEB, ---. · .... ---.. bedroom do u.e ~ AIC 2 ' anal' 1t ory. $6S, 1.so'. Townllouae In Kira Costa bomee. •e •pedalile lo rm. 2 frple. car Is ;-(~/Cedar la wt!. car on pr., Jac.,/pool, iae
TIU»5085 • SEAVllW Development. off beach area bomea. 752-1920 Xno. cmport.fTOQlee.~7 claw home. 5 Blocka to temo.Call4N-41:M
M Port Royal• Br, S ba, 2 Camino de lJstreila. 3 11~-~ lluJtipJe 1400 QUAIL ST. NEWPORT BEACH beacb Private 2 car 0,-~ IOAM-6P 1tory. Buut. view, BR,2Ba,etc.Near Li.iiQ-.nce. C:.S:.MIM 3224 f:t!!fe. F&&llf m~ln·. MON•ICHTBa. · ~~ .... t' .. ~ laodaeap1q, ctrtia. ,etc. plog • Sao Clement P~C~ Open till 8:30 p.m. ·~-·-.......... Jard. Mahl. No 3 Bdnm. •den, family
Vll'IO.. ....... 0 I By owner. tz'19.000. 19U Ho1p. pr' n c. 0 D ly . ----.al!!!!B!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!m!!!!!!!!!!!!!!-i E/-' ..... 2 br 1 ba redee pets. Inquire 52S Jab St. ~~ $150 Mo. Act. Reduced S7.ooo. o Y YachtCamilla.~ 556-CDI 21030~\ll"StB.B. .., . -
0
'"'• ('114)-.ml or4M-U77 $112,706. Fantastic 9G-Olll1 Aas fw5-UOO lllwPrs11rty 2000 cbild/pet K $3$0 • .._
panoramic view. _, BR 3 llACH TllASUU s Bed:rm, 2 bath Ocean 4111~~~~~~~~~ _;f!._._........ ....................... Rocbelltet~ aft 5 REAL PINO! 3 BR, 2 Ba, 1eec1t 3269 full Ba. 2 fplc's, second Cozy solid home near Marina view home lnl : w/c:rG. fncd yard Only ...................... .
sty bbrary. ~traJ air, oceaooo30lh.2BR1Ba, HartJorEltatea.$Ut,900. Moblle Home la Sad· IMYISTOIS 'GIEAT~OMI ~br~Kid.~;:. "10~tiMW7,aat,nofee. OFEE!HouSes,eoodos. covered patio, boat or ha rd wood floors . Marquard Re a 1 ty, dleback'1 newest DU"k. New ll1Un1a. Lar1e 1n tbeM 12 ualtl, only "' OK.87S-t912Bltr d up texe 1. Rental
trlr access. Matw-e olive $135 ooo a.oell0or49f.3523evea. BeUer I.ban new. 'triple ~-'100 per ac...,. s ale to beach. Trade-up · Small beacb cottqe, 2 PavWoo,675-4912Btr.
trees, pnnc only please. ' · ir-...._ wtde w /Wet·bar, bocu&s· Acres-ltall price IU.800. tram your duplex or 4-$Z70. 1~. II'& pdn area. BR, cluo • in t='
714·5116-6992 --uW. room Is appliances. ~ Aere-$1.J,500. BKR. pies Is watch l..our em· No sbartDI or pets. Non-coad. Sep 1ard, · M1W sfA VllW . c.,lllrMO 1071 0 w o e r be lo I <n4)177..-l a::r:t· Won tlut. Ot· lmoken -1u, ref's req. m'4llll5 3 Br 2 Ba, pool, temua, Na-rt•---'-I 06t •••••••••••••• .. ••••••• ---'erred. Make offer. OR .. --" -• -000 Call _.....,. j -..c 1u '"",...,.,. ._ .. r----... ~~.tu...,' -,, --· . WI .. W.17tb.648-03SI. l'!DDDD•T! 4 BR 2 BA,. ac,-yr..,..v,_ . •••••••••••••••••••••• °"' _.. forrnorelnfo•detalla. ~ cpta r cd yard ·
BIG Canyon 3 BR+ den, * * * * * *. MOMIYSAVEIS ~~:~Ff"~ 540-3666 'i::"'~.~:ag:rA~:h :iJ:". pet 8K. tw'. i:GBC~~~~~
"Pinehurst". Fantastic Moot!! ~r 2 ba, IM CHAIMIMG Mobile Homes in Orange Two + acre• R·3 in 5/1. 1811 E. Broadway, 98M517, a&l, no fee. do m In i um home .
golf course vu. $195,000. lam r'in. nu crpts. Lg olclSanJuanCapistrano. County from ft,000. See Hemet. Jkalding pertnit m.saa Sharp
3
br
2
ba w/frplc New/fteVer lived tn. Wet
...:S47---·7_M4__;,;_83J._32_
15
__ -t )'td. lndscpd, wood deck. :L!i:/do~~~I~ ~:n: WI for economy living. le more. sns.ooo. Ownr; -..i.e .. : .. -...-38r. 2Ba, small ctaitd • pet ot: tf;~~·~'==·
MUSTSB.L!!! Open Sat/l:l.m l ·S. 19SS domloium.3Bdrms., l~ Wep~6'ntc18oAST ~~=s!.':'9273 ... ~ ..... ge,nr. $145.S.MO .,_3 •
Big 3 bdrm .• 3 bath1_;_Port_N_e1aoo. ___ 7_9-0634 __ -t baU.,caipetlq,wiodow RF.sALl!S,INC. EstandaBlpSchl,tf,25 3BR2Ba Fam Rm pool .......... U
custom home wtlh 1uper covertnp, builti-loa, two Anaheim 981-88SO .. '""9 lmdl IM CdM mo.1st I.st +dep. 631-07• • Jae, P,..~e nbrtsd. We bave 1000'• cl bousee. • ocean view! Huie den, tmAlntlsuaF car prqe Is patio. BJ Htaltiolt-ODBcb tll-Oltl 100 acres o•erlooklnl A fcq-.ples.oo tbe ocean 4----' 3 Br 2 ba '8110mo.-.-dplu, apta now, all
tl!nt frplc.; cbotce • ...__,THISIA owner.lloo.thru'Ibun. !!..!..1.!.!~.•,ll.~oa· ~.:Hile·= or tJl•~!f:••r. ~~=.-.~.---.: fl +410DP1upert* :r-"t-. .Uprtms.S.veon Newpan!Wpu lot near -<days), call l.,._2151; Lake Fonat 5 Star adalt _.T.,.._ &' _ call .. _ - -... ,_ ,,
Hoag Hospltal. Call Duplfsneartbeoceaa.• Prt lhnl Qm. tda)'I) 4 park, beaut. Badser Abril, San Clemente . ......_OC::~ ..... ~-~ta1..= ICkl967r:.~o'*' SBR,28e.•--lr"'7 HI.,.. Af# ~ bdrm upper, 3 bdrms eventn11, call <Tl•> hllhlY up1raded. lluat ~ •-.a ....... ~ ..._._,.·-or ....,.., · .urp, $415/mo. lat +
lower. In heaJt of '93-(X588. td.l-reasoo.511'°'53 1714)7514061 Eutaide. 2BR. lBA, enc uoo uc dep. Call TERRACETWNBSE3Br "'I-' '"i1·· Qf+•_a· . Newport Beach. urry!, aoSEa.••...-.. HORSERAMCHES l-&.--•....1-1200 gar remode l ed 839-6017. 2YJ Ba, Fam Rm, $475. s-=;r, ;'m~-call for appt. to 1ee ...,__. ~ BR. 2~ B• barn, J -....--• • 631 19561· 675.()7'-Sor557-1046 $li5.000. Get ready for CHAaMa.. XJC64 Santa An1la 1971 • ~ ·-•••••••••••••••••••• $375/mo. ·
summer rentah! I SUMHOU.OW 5*Park. Alcaoa aiding, Acre. J&&1t reduced to OfflCl&NsrTI M5-0'131 FREIHJTIIJTIES 3 Br. fam rm. din rm. -----..----1 540-llSl 3 BR. 1~ BA detached air cond btll laodscap-r~i BA. new, 1 Acre. JlaDtlngtoaBeach 3 Br, l~ ba, frplc, co:mt At beach $125. Kida, pet Jasmineereet.seccate.
WISTCCH••••U•,. cmdo in choice Jocatioo hlgonDON'ltlotTD<~?yX?. fenced, trees, full prtcie 27,000 aq. ft. lot near patio. Cpt/drps, bltms, ok.a·n1Nrf.aall1t'1MmtsmseeF.e'':. t.emisAvail ,Mpool:I 1.~~moro. -.u facloi a beaut. green· ~ 9.900 Paclflca Hos pital 5 fncdyard. 557 1678 _. Neatly groomed 3 Bdrm, belt. eourmet kitchen, PAC IF IC C 0 AST •BR.iBA. 5000sq. ft.2~ ~Sbop. CntrlaCtvic -u.-. 2~ kids ot "5-4900A#.l. M0-2818 lpat.
2 bath wllb lovely yard.1~~~~~~~~~ frplc, • p•t. patio. RESALES. INC. 21036 Acres. Owner aoxiaul. c.t.w. P ,000. ~ ~see• •ood loc. sns, Zbr. KJd ot. z.c toed Di CANYON Near shops, acbools.i: $75,900. • BrootbuntRB.ta-o991 BKR DavidBourbRJtr ..-~ •.. · ...a Must see -2br
2
.._ Ba
S1s2.soo. To see cal' UDOISLI ~ -· <714>87e-2IOIO now•6's.eooAll 1~ ba, dswh, near all. condo w/Wet bar, frpL parks. Asking only 4 . .....,.Ho••~E · m 1 Nf.9960 Sm fee lOOOI more aYail ,Q,. · ..-. · LumrtOQS -· 2 •
2.800 sq ft, ftoeat qual. 4 IMYESTMBCTS WIAMAMCI ORSZZ. . CWof,____.. . . Hurry. Sm fee. Nice. New/never Jived in. 5tG-U5l br+3ba,clinarea,hgliv . MOll.IHOMIS ,,.,.-;;;-"' '2550 $275. 2br. Circle tbla! 1000. more avail. now. ~/mooraubmitlaeop-
rm, mod. kitchen, ofc11==='7::1::4::1=4:::'='-=7=7=1=ll for -vate ~-who C•ll••••-1nowa-....................... Klda,peta,dawb.Saveoa Allareu.&15-'tOOAgt. lion . • , f ~-HERITAGE
. • REALTORS set-up, priv bcb, sen1: r-• 1 b'I ............. 1700 fee, going fut.~ WATERFRONT porch. patio, lg lot buy or ae a mo a e -••••••••••••••••••••• At> Beaut new 3 BR, UP· HOMES 67$-C!59 We'vecrownloalJDe home. '--4•"•u .. i. not '-'PllU Oaunf• ' sraded Landmark. Sec ~~~~==~~~1;;S250;;;·000;;·;;;;;;;;;;;;~· lsneedalugerbome Ho._.orcMrge• 1:i~~..='™ma~BA, 26SBICDROOll Rllatic aeclmioa ••alts iate. 40 or over. WiO. &3H 400. -* IWFFS * ~=~.3~et ~ IZHOUSIMG 21/a Pr";p wtworbbop, VA·FHA youtntblaSBr,2Bapool 1»91Sl9 Steps to bay! 3br Coodo GOLFCOUISI rouoctlnp, clole to ever· 18114W.Broadway new carpetlnl 11 dJ'apea GARDENTOWNllOllE. bome In lovely area. Condo BBR 21/aBA nr w/34' boat alip, 2 patios, $99.&00 VIEW )'thloc,commpool6RV Aubelm AakFocPaw etc. See before Ualloa 2car......,.. S550. Ast 646·8686, ocea4. enc 2 car gar 6 frplc,bltna,2carprage.
3BdrmElldUDlt Bestpricedvtewhomelo access.C&ll .. 7682 l714'63s.ol22 wt&bbl'clbr,prtceunder l-4JJ:ft24 N&-n75 patio $43.S/mo fl82.Ul76 Nu paint le abutters
Frplc,paUo.Ownr/a&l Newport Beach. Only mllt.kve1DODeJ.Owoer hetl-117·1623 mdeewayiatbilvillecov· · · : thruout.SJOOmo.ll0-7717
8J3.85Slor8"-2148evea S12J),OOO.fortbla3bdrm, Pt ...... LhmgO. relocatini.~ ered CO\lDtry telling. Bike to beach from t.bis
1
...;aft;;.;...:.6P:.;ll;,;:_ ____ _
llSTILUffS ~~bRJ:em~~.J!:: n.WtC•M flUTASTJCAl IJlcwPl'.,.rty 2000 Ilk'. 2 ba home. $41(). ~+~~C:: Lar1e 2·story contem· euy lot with RV access. = fi!e~•ea:t:n~ • Ml ·-•••••• .. •••••••••-• lA C8SJA lf.5aOl.N1-n75 gar uz.s'. 840·2323, porary home "'' •Br,
Hurry, won't last! Call aty s Br retreat. l!.-!I•• & Pel 7UM11C.M. CU.tom 4Br, Z~Ba. 2 SpacioualBrCoUage -.1175 lam rm• den. Walk to
"'"'"""" rwl9 'II>• ..__ .... ,,._, .. _ __, 'l f •-~ b s car .,..._"'ti',,.,. p .. ;d! bat • OCEAN. ()pen & Spacious 3 BR. family .,.,_ Secluded mstr ate. pvt • sstc1a. ~uwuu --...u new • rp~ .... ~~ ar, .. ,.,..v.vu .... -IBr,2BaPurehaseOpt. brithLllOO/moleaae.
CQldo. Near CdM High patios. park ·II k e IDV~ Ida br,loft,f/p.1-2. br. l~ ba carqe, ocean \'Ww. Bee AvallNowfl10 <54N) , ·-eFeoced Yard WATERFBONTHOMES S h I •-Q eeo o f -·-·Call -• to'trllboute, all bllna, C. CompaQJ. $13',toO. .-.. c
00
... u .. ~wi· 'STlllT S• FAii.IL PET PARK -. ---. Hurry, buy wkdva (714) 729-2554 Lov~ BR.2BA 11.ustSeel '415 (3816) 631-1400 Antels. BIG playground! -2Ba l .... .,.. ... _ '
New cpt, oak floors, REALESTATE Beautiful 3Br, U · now. Tom Lee, Rltr, m•)'Ja.:MZ2wbda Be . PaUo$.100. 3+3NearTbeBeach
GREATmedbrickfrpk. 131·3750 493-2202 ~~lo f~':! fG.laoa. '~.... . PetaOK (~) Beaut.BrlckPrplc
towpriceS132•900. MIWPOITHll5HfS .___AM IOIO for lmmed 0ccupancy. •2T,.._.• ....... 2700 lt•kz• 63l-4SIS Encl. Yard$42S (5487)
VALLIY 640.ttOO Eltclualve Clllf Haven. 2 =:.................. Everything for an active Near Lake l'ark. llio. to ... -................ l:lanarmaj. credit cards I fbs• 631-4555 a iii sty Cape Cod, 2 frplcs, • family, swimming, bch. HBR,3ba; l·SBR, Awtlf,..,_ 38r, tBA, guest bae, llaQorimj.miditcardll ~ I BR, dbl. pr., abeolutely a:a •O recreational areaa. 2~ ba; 1·3 BR, 2 ba. 5 n.er.w. stove retrie. patio, II ~\ E$tQt~ princ only. 7S2·ZOZO ~ masniflceatclubbouaela .....,_ frplca. $l9,,ooo EatabUabed locomepro-fneed'yd.onVictcJrtaSt. DON'T~OlJTontbls
Own/qt. Simer Stai fer! awcb, mucbmonallfor eaeb.1 .. l113.Alabama, duclnl bo1aenberry •tmo.94$G06. ::? 1 ~ 2 BAv:~f=t ==:E:=~-===NT===-10PPORTIJNJTY to buy GreliiiW.nnthome! 3 S25~=!c.ac = Bcb. 5H·l7l8 farm ln San .~u·'!~!' 2 br house, l«e filed yd. a~ea.Y$..15.~3·4567, CAMAL ~ Into a partoerablp and bedrooml, dloln1 room • Valley. 3 parce,. av..... EncL patio A gar. $.125. ~nofee 4 BR3Ba +loft. Custom own a percentage of 6 area fireplace and Mobile Home Realty ble -80 to 121 acrea. Nopet.s Pbone54S-OTGO
tile, microwave, fplc, matal untta lo the Bluffs. more.' Fruit trees. BKR. 2706Harbor, Ste208 IMYISTMB4T Includes home, barns. · QWet 3 BR, responsible
.stmdeck + many xtras. Buy 1S%oCthedealanda 540-1720 540-1937 Oanunerclal bulldlnl In corrals. $72,000 to Oulrm.iag, warm 3 br, 1 edlb, oo peta, pool. $S5C
PTtced to aell fast at 2br 2 stry t.ownhse. w/ A.a-tepfwS. UOO OCUll area wttb aecure $315.000. ba, Uv rm, yard, gara,e. 98Mllll.~
1&58.500. 642-3381. Ag\. or 2114Jba, frplc II patio is 1 ll•!a--IL ••••••••••••••••• .. •••• lease from Government MOIUNS REALTY No pets. $375. 145-8256 or C1een adult condo 3br
MMIOMl ~~7=y $81,000. -~ 180 c:• alopJng acres, A&w:i for aai,t. F.qultt * 494-1017 '* W.11)57-41117. l~ dbhse, pooi. $.14(
BEAtrnnJL MONACO -I .. Ctlf rtM/" bac national forest. WJd up and caab Oil cu New I br, 2~ ba It. 2 br. 2 mo. -..io ll.V.R , a Br. 2 Ba. Ital SIMSUOUSHOUSI "' " Untoucbed beauty 6 return fer ts0.000. down l.02Ac.l•MCH buoado•. Pool, db~ gar,
FOii.EASE
3 Bdrm, lam-rm view
bome, Jocated lo a
private cuarded area
with DWlY ameoltJea for
leaae at 9850. mo. 2l2S
Yacht Radiant
1 Bdrm funiabed apt. U7S . mo . 805~
Marguerite a Bdrm, den home. locat·
ed lo Spytlus. *°· mo . 36 Drakes Bay
...u~~
I I '> .. ,, I \I I\
!~u t rol•' lt•t ~IJ "·.1.,• M.;1
•t11e art• kit, nr pool & OFGLASS _ .. _ VN•• old •tuff for vlew. Quall. W. ol ...,.m. eat. Call for de· open beam ceihogs........ 3144
..., _,_._..,tee. ..~ ,_ '" P I d I •1500 per talla a..-5 •• 1 --1 Choose fOUI' carpet. SS50 ••••••••••••••••••••••• CANAL .,._.,,~. 8 BR, ..,....._,_ Lowest price conc1o.· OD new coodlea with a • m • e, MAY 0 c K ..-1111 r-..~ w bl ff rnul"'&
$137,.500 64().1440, the front In Nawport Ctau1fledad.M2-5678 acre.6'15-0lm • USOVictciri~t A ~a· llHTALS nlktobdl.Commpool,
WISTCUFP ere.st. LIKE NEW, only '" 380"~ $1910.......... Vlllqem.-o 2BR.2Ba ........... sm tmnlatl95 fO.S'l8l Uved in 3 mooths. 3 BR, .... ,...... 1069 Ms.,..t.... I ~BEACH IQ'Oll. 3BR.2Ba ........... $S50 ,.._,or ~ .. c~fm~~~~e:~· 2~ BA. REAL ESTATE ........ , ....................... _............ crt4>494-tt4e $79.1'9'lMOMTH Cou.191PAll •or5BR.lba ••...•. '560 ~UFF.lbrJba,2
;f)uplaQkfJoor bay BY MCVAY. BEACH. I Bdrm, 1~ beth, frplc, pGio, 2¥. ear pr, auto
window, abort •crow. Call1GG11. CE •ACHftftll Near beacb •Dd boat lie rec. room, wubw Is fl GIO, wabr/dryr/ref. Anlou1 wife. 1312 OSOOWM marlau. Lake o~~ dr1tl' tndd. lat• Lut ~~ ..,.lll/9NID
Dover. Owor/Agt. -.ay,...___ S.Cll•l .. 1 ~-.• .. ~1,.;.._b'/ ..._tl!O.p/mo...._., If_ ,
_.. ----be b Dt1 u-._.... -·-, ,,~~' I rd.Occlf•C'J
6G07&I DllAMHOMltll 110111 ILll , s CD. =~ :0,:i:,.~uaat lleatd -... IJ'OD 11ane.....,oewl7clecord ~""'>' NearDoverSllGl'illmooe • tHPOIT •a.r... w /JrHt I 8R ptu. DetafttO•une1 I BR 2 BA. fplc, 4lninl ~8600 ol 'N\Vllt a.acb'a finest cu.tomaec•Br.Sba,I __.. ... t/pperlB& map. Giant oab and rm. uW rm.ll~ ;c:· arMI. 3 Br. 2 ba, trplc. brick frplc, tri·level OVER 60 YEARS OF SERVICE walls W/OCHD yiawa. blckol'J lo I •rlH1 *-I famU1 .. _ ' fr m I di D rm . A C.o cbarmer. Plush frml et..._. plltlUte NWit1-llucb MNIGll;MNllO lbticoltudlt'a del1Jbt:
din'1 rm. bule fam ·nn 1•-•tr· Wild 1ame. o.er, wild eoo.c• Partr 4br 2ba •523CAMM~IRVM Qw'dpeUo,sreeabouae, w/ fantaatlc ~of Npt OME OP A I.. --=TOafY tvk•1. Cos, raccoon. ICMfOCC A anlrDmed.' court)'ard, 1ardener. $1!895 !!Y,. Call now 611""560 tlll>el lier -.4111 Yur arollDd fl1blA.. .-.:. 110VE RIGHT IN! Slwp W fD Ir rebil Jncl. New .... Owner Has DrasUcallY Reduced The ~ U't•. Ideal 1ea2aa w/cpg kldllt cptaarpaJnt"80/molle.
OWY 2 1 bome In ... A~-Price Of ntls "Bluftsu Townhouse POllTIVBCAIBft.OW loeatloo. Good bt1b pet ok.' Only' •us. OwnerMMZZ7 MCJuiSed private area. ......_ __ .... ,,.. ~· Your Opportunity To Purchase ftllea for W.. \OtaUJ,.. rrooad. Picture poat ~ ._, no fee.
Lar1• bedrooma, lm· CAlt& Love• .. Home W/S~acious Bdrms, fWllllW. ID tllOd ar.a, Card bea~,-~~~ _......., SUP-DUP' 1•Rt • B .. • ~-Shorellbo S,.!S_R_:,_2 vr-fve firt>I. X'lot In· 3 Br, I Ba, fam rm. dlnl · &J ~-for 1'clQ Cll'or Aaatc:a. ......, .. _. --~·-·' -.,. • a • be. 1 .... ., me. n11111.1a, ~MS-7221. rm. Oft ll Oul'4Hac ot. 38ai + Fam. Rm. auo ;Overlookl a.le •• 1W.-.iJ1 UO.eaabalaaQdMdc:om· llnocks Clfte ...... ,.,. BA. ....... fplc. D/W .. pooU6H818
RV/boat yd. 200I Port Poo • Ramada. *149,500. Owner WW llNlJ..91. PrlacmlJ. ~mail. Write: .. ,... ... D&U1 •• Onb ... MMllT. Newport ere.a. fututi
Albua Circle. Oner Conrlder Lease/Option. ,,... GtatraJ Ac· PUot C'...us.d Ada to •00'"· v1i1w 21:1r 2\11 ba 2 c~
MMINJ. M :£'~ ='*;.~ ::.;:; ::t..t1w °'8Dle eo.... woo D B a l I> o B L~ Pooi, teonla eta. 8311. Blacb. tut.GOO or c l collect ,..._._ DTNl'llS 4 BJl I BA, I \1pCr1114e16mras.
,__draw In the UI 00¥9 DllYP • boll. allo ~· plt•N (J14>•l·1741. Nlibtl, fl:/, "'7 dal•• Ada.ma 16.t .... '900/tno. Call West. • .a Daill PUot tMl}IDOea.At!Ml-1* ~ .....__..._ Dk*,,_..,cwMWGI QMGfl.edAd.IG-911. --
f; • ~ , , ,.
:
' . l
I
Offka..... 4400 ........ Tuoaday, Aotll 18, t QJt'I 0.AJL V l"l~Ol C7 ....................... Ora......, 1001 1'M19'1C191T .... .: ......... ,-.... • 'RE 11 Hlia/ ..... WmiliM. 7071 ..... W..t.d 1&00 A&.Ta.MATIYI TIAVILAGaeCY ,_ ,td I ....................................... ._ ... .
411 ...._ fllld. l.arp ea_ l bl, 1311U • dJ'PI .... •-1 •-I ,..._......,..... .....,..... Heed belp? BaJ* recGOs -.......... ,.UO pr, ..... to NII. "'1· --mo. ,,.a mC : ~--_, .......... ,, ...... , dliMkmA. &»7 tlWt. keep ~ ~ ~!!!!!!!!!!!:!!~!.:=.J ... nbtf. •W1 o,s .. -. tff Ml-SZD a • c. ~p t ~ •• r v . . ,,.. new ,.., to own ....... ,... HOO recordl '"" eDd ot JtU ~ ---------f -~ pbaae COY· \rav•l •&uacJ. TraYel ••••••••••HHH••••••• w. PMU.MS-OISl IO'l'raiDMAiaemblen I •.11b7 -... I 'i::;: !It~ I br 1 be, peUo, ~ w. er•1•. eoet. rm. m•ll Networtl. 8tatt yow-own. Lalt or J'OUDd a ,.n Call N...oed lauaedl~ ~ ...... d9lre alct11~aUd. a BA wt(plc. Sandy f"'·• ~around Pl'*I Eap. not nqulred. Aahul Aulatnce Couple will mahitaln t.,6SbortTttlll
llMl II tetats ..,._,......, ti.acb. MOO sn-0100 moreTff .. ....;ewportlV. • Com~1upport .,-. •·---.... -.nor" pvmda kl .0.... l~ A-tprnerrta ., .. , ••• lal/l•ll bhrna.4PM MMl9l5 ~-EC\JTJ .... term Ml'V\ce JIC'OYid9d. ____ ,.._,.. eoctaee. ~ -SSbu..AY&llatllle.
..... IBrbome,e..ct.1araa•• or SUITE.~O Cati llr. O~arloi LOS'l'I Cbalo u• on up . .;...,.. llutbaftoin= -···-••••••••••••• patio t:zU. No peta o.-.-.-Pt 1 ........ ·-, 11 ... -... ~ bt< _ ...... t.... ,._ .. ..,11•.L•1 o fn11UU.._.'9l ...,.,_ ·~'*'50':;."D';. UP~717 "' -CM.aJi"'hvw• nu'Gardwr'C\lltOdluSouth -·ra,,.,-
f/11.,... l*t'&, .... IJ WT VISW or OCEAN • MIM*IO,t'Y.~) Pull)' •erv. ofc IPU• J'aaally a.siaura11\ for Cll. AllD.t1'H9112. c..tP\uaanaApt.1.Q. ~' .VacJ>ay .... QTY br .,. lrak Marti at .. eq A bl tM .... ca.ta ...... M.lat L 0 s T Apr a rd • dult./bOQ)e1$4.1181 I ,, .,
...... ...._ beaoi 'eeat~ Ja~uut: ~!! .. 8!.~/Prpa"b&e dynamlc N.&:' altllort CGDi. Kodenl...,, ihop· ~!..~ro /blk Tt1•r Bab lttinC kt& Colt. S. tkea Y•C4it.... ..,.,. .... ~or AvaUe~N:.e. .. (922) =:u.-::-aq~~~ c~c:~~~=o:. ~oo.~:illc!.~ ...:.,...,.u•-s Dl~-r.z~.:eo At"'-W. t'1NS7&. ap. aor aq ft.~ lier piety of partiq, other Lo "EUJah". Reward. __ cau __ • -------Ste 10 Newport Beach WIMAIAMtll a er, l\lt Ba townbouae, lBrOnTbelleac~ Judy Clulr. u or mtere.t.Alkin1flOOOOO. Ownerhtartbroken.Cln·tWaW...., 7100 <Cornerol8rtttdlt •Wldest~ionpo111. 1ara1•. patlo, pool, &ZllO,cotyl"rplc llOP~mmetteParlt, Sometermatoquailftecl d:r z11 . .a5·1H3 dya. •;•••••••••H•H•n•••• CalQpmbebiDd
•fn bollle comP"Wt:n•: Jac1111i. Ad.ult• only. Rt.cl Pool <t"rn > 4100 buyer. llaLD ... uU llr. •UST eY11 A.CCOUMT AMT ,:~·-'•:y •o.i.IYt.e&epboMMrvtce 111a.-.a10 .. sl .. 1 631-4111 '"WATIUIOMT" Ouey,714~ OUtltaodloa opportuntty ..,.._.__ :~8tl-::rJ:i!:.l11 3Br,lbtllower,11•1del HonorcmJ.credJt cards New off\c. apace from CQffee Sbop, loc•ted lo fo.r up•rieoced ln·1•--llill•yw-•ll•/•F--
•ftwto•..-Ulaover Mar. sm. mo. rainUy, ~IACt&OI 300 SQ rt. Jlo•t com· prof'l blda. 5 clay opera. cbarce accountant lo
• ...._~COUDH"·• nopeta.-.-1 at Balboa Bay Club. aietiUve rat.. in area. Uoo. 7:31).1. Buy dir9Ct rapktly IJ'OWhll So. Or. Allembler IR--• JJ76 -Sbor• term rental. hntutlc Views, palloe fromownr. *'"11 Qy. Waler dilt.rict. Sue· MICHAMICAL =::.<:?::.:::!.......... o()pea817d.ayalM:OCMtES:oo 1~~.t;!: ru~ ~. unrum v:inGE-~~aE.:cY. BEAUTY SALON =r~~!:!S ;~: ~=:-~ nw. CoodO. Vletr. Anifric. '245. 111..eoo1 $C75. ForaP11tcallEdl7~l003, Sacrttice, be1t ofter. 4 yean pro1re111lvely 2 •· 2 ba, bb.na, dla· W•fw0111McMm1 21CJB• _; et~A N 8 CM/NB.htaUou.1uper responsible accouotlna SWfl'CHIS• bwaaber, cpt1. drp•. ForProfe!WoaaJService Slfl51 Br, incl. ut11. Prel C41631·1400 __.., ve., • · locat.UlllO.aqft.rentOG.ly experience fr ability t.o Have lmmedJate open·
$JSW=MOO· lat+ Cll 131-4555 retlred caretaker. ~1 SPACE 1ilQO. Worth mucb more. commuoJcate with top ln1• Jo our fJaal H · lat+ aec ..... <7U) · Adulla,no.-•. .....-Promootory Point. 2Br ~ "' Aslclna "I 900 Jobn l ~w" "'--·""--,.._ ._ ..--d 'or'--·-.-sqft. •Lb'" •• • · · man a I em en . -~ ...,.,..._.,.... ~ -.a71C21S)S31408 ORSTOPBY 2trcoado.•--E id 1 apt ln a ult complex. ;;,,s:o.=.:=:.oo~:O S5UU1.Bkr. Re8poneJbWU. will LO· quires aood batid
tt-.._ 1936...._, It.ti -Y .1 • oc. Available June OCCQPU· Vall p-:.~ ..... dude 1uperva.ioo & re· dexterit.yw/m1D2)'1'Sex· --(~blkN ot19t.bSt ) Frpk:/car/pat/pool. llat _ey.;.....cau __ 111-__ ,.._. __ --1 ey ~ .... ay . ..U:.sloo view of bookkeeplna per in small meeb as· C f' t -3211 .. o. · adults. $295. ~120 or V'iejo.'831-2181 ~~.!!:,. hm¢im • work nowa, aembly. eau Cole lmtn&· ...................... , nCallf.Corp. SmPee ~ • Afalw ........ f111ed .,,,,,....,,_c.1"• Loet: Opal rina. Vic. C 3 OO
2BR. l~ ~ cortdo. -.to.AA ... EW w•rw..r111N JtOO OC AIRPORT REQUIRED Alicia• Po, MJNioD Vie· preparation ol report.a, ment orp, 551· l . ___.no...,.• •-.-" * Lce3br,newcpea,drps, •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• KOLLIRV.COMPLEX New dynamic procl~l. jo.REWARD!581·9191 casb flow. encum· E.OE . .,_, .--. Cberry Creek Ad11lt No pets. Nr. OCC. $325. berance contr ol ., ---------SMSino.-.-Apta.1 &2 BR, fplc's, we mo. 751-3181 TiiEEXCITlNO Ortice space . full Hal ~e ~ a~ooomall+vanpe· Reward for 2 lost budcetal'J mooltorioa ol1--------•
s.NAM 3210 have lakes, sauna ,_,_...... 312._ PALMMESAA.rTS~ ;e,_r~!:· ~2i°'5~ :: 01~ ~up ibi s.'it-0442 Keeabonda. Silver/~rey. op«ati.na reauJt.1. Salary Allembly
••••••••••••••••••••••• J•cwczi Ir pool. Located - -• MJNUTES TO NPT pou e. • 837-1615 aft. 4. 581·5910 oocnmenau.rate with ex· TIAlllE£
1225. LC 2br. kids ok. S.at olZ'TOWl S. FalrviN·ew,. SJustD l••B•~•••l••••:::_•b~:··•~•t• Bacb~BR (714)751-4'760 &-m lloo·Ftl. LOST: ~wbt F cat. 7 r.,ert,.!°,!!_," !._bUisutbymJ. Atpprel~
Gara a• 11 Must see. amer. . o · . . -c ean, """' .y pam · • · 2adJ. oles. pvt ent. approx coll vi ... ..-.~ "" 1rrr11111EIS Men. Sm ree. Ru...., I Fwy, M&-1991. No pets. ed. 1ar. No pell. $265. from $220. &up. 8x33'. $350/mo. 1827 GIFTGALL&Y llllOI. ye Se b ar,NBc sum e to : San t • AiJ«lllllL ··~ •9325att6pm Adult.a,NoPets 57th & 85 ore, · .... ••aarita Water Dis· lOOO. more ·wail. All ..... Peilllill• 3107 · 1561 Mesa Dr. Westclifl. NB631·0900 You wortt In my 1tore 645-1878. trlct. 25.57! Marauente & pa .. EIS areu.~Agt. .. ..................... l ... '*•hocll 3840 (5BlbEaatofNewnnrt Fl&R-! UUa summer & learn all ~ ... ,._. VI j Mlft ...,. -..-. 5"1 the facets of the busi· REWARD ror return ol ...,.way, .. ..,.,oo e o. NEEDED Waal ' rtw l2tl 14 2 br 1 ba upstn w /sun ....................... Blvd.> w · ot ri f t Ba k f •-h 921675 IMMEDIATELY!: ••••••••••••••••••••••• porch, gar, & wash lacll. SHARP, beach, 2 • 3 BR. 546-9860 eve I sp DI ever 8 nesa. rney • awn "" w t ---------f 1 di h b Lido Marina Vlllase. ·Secure your financing, 1ma~l!.e~bo~rx~er~.~9&2~~~1:!:11~-·~-----~~-TOPPA.YIU YOU GOTT A See lbls SlllO pr mo. Quiet & rella-rp • 1 w a 1 • r • a... 4000 While 1\lasta we're offer· fh¥I your location & J will -....... _l'a..o Bll:ltpna All abltta, day, •willl & •_ ... ,ft .. 2 c. ... •BR 2 ble. Call aft 6 PM garage,patlos.960-2358. 1ftft freerenton"-aut of ···'· ln . th b 1 F'-·-... ·Sat.4/'"'~m Dog '"'""" • _ ... ...,. ""J• • 6'15-8213 · .. ••••••••••••••••••••• &&16 ""' • • _..t movmg e us · ........... ..., · · RARY fraveyttrd locJudes BA wicpta, hied yard, IJVENearThe Beach! Room w/ kitchenette fice space overlooklna ness for you. ~l 10-12. Old mix breed eaf abort wknd1. Loni • abort
only $'15. 963"4567 aaent. ear... .. Me 3822 C.. del Sal $.W week & up. the Bay. Space from 290 6'75-30llO leca. Vic: Brook.bW"llt & Recilter Today lo work term uatgnmetJt.8. !Ioli·
no fee ••••••••••••••••••••••• BeautifuJ Adult Apla So48·9'1M to 900 sq. ft. incl. cri>ts. 5025 ~arner, FV. 714/645-3817 .:1ov:r=:~:~':!:i~:. day & vacation pay. Canta •• Gaa .,WaterPaid. drpa. A /C, 5 day MaMytol..o. __ s_p_m ______ ,ments. Work cloae to Hoa itallution plan
a.tfla •t d 3425 21661Brookbural.HB '\:~.=~~.C~~~ janitorialaerv.&aUuUJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• FOUND:&ln.VicWarner your bome. Figure
••••••••••••••••••••••• -96J..665J --·' pd. T~eg 'dvania.ae, ol ht. 2-d & 3rd T.D:a " New l a n d • H B . Cleru to Sr. Accouo· • • traUy located, 23Srooms. our spnn .ever ...• r~ LOANS AVAILABLE Blk/bnrn fem Shellie. _ ... d b 38r. 2Ba. Hunt Landmark 'l1 I 28 _ .. ., ... _ l MANY with k'itcben. rent offer. We'll pro· .n...-.&.ttnoproblem. ...,.m4 tanu oe .... e t ruout 11 ·U•$mo . 982 ·44S4. • 1Je>r($ r,\;lll .... Qlwecome.no s · · babl """"' _.. OraageCo.
IG-Ol83, l ·'m-2lllS. ~ peta, atart:iq at $365 mo. phone " TV. wunaune bys~.~ :::oe: .._., 752-HOl Robert ~lf's GARDEN APTS 846.-ni pool. Jacc.wl, and rec. b ll .. -b ---------•Found: 6 or 8 mo. old Accountempa Dhw...,... J•OO room. DaJly &r weetly Y any wee .... ll wtn ~.•ICK C •SH male black" white pup. s ,..._,_ ..,._ ..,,.1 .,,. CORONADELllAR MIA.RNA.CH .. nit.esstartinffroma&fa 8:30&5:30. ~ A Call53H5611 500 .maw,~..., ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Br Townhouse, f.rplc. & CIVIC c---
4
week. Udo Maritla Village No. Tower. Union Banlt
Dm'8 Point·super oceao Poot tennis. Someoceao ...,.,~ 84S-4MO 3475Via0porto 1.st &r 2nd Trust Deed P•w •• SJSO lnTbeC\tyol'Orange
view.Newl550aq.fl.)br, fJ Catalina viewa. Close BRAND NEW. Spacious lalNwptBeacbBlvd) lbans arranged for any ••••••••••••••••••-···~~~71~4~/A5-4~~lQ.l~~~j~~~~~~~~~ 2~5'50. 7so.-0'706 d> Fuhloa bland" rme delwte 2, a ft• Br. All Room for rent, non m•>675-8662 reaoo. Credit 00 pro-«Jsit.al • ...,. J. bltm, frplcs, 1ar. lie yd. amJter. pref male. Nr t.b ..,...
beach. A1ao l Br. 844·2611 la2 Yorttown . Jmt West OCC, $13.5 mo. 556-0637 Office space 1000-1700 sq bl.em. BorTOW on e ln· 1815So. El Cami.Do Real ~--------11-----.. ---of Beach Blvd. $31-1718 ft. Bal. pen. creased value or your Sao Clemeflle. Fully Ile. lN'ftllMTIMl' art-r1181 fW
S •............. 4200 boroe.Calltodayforfaat, Forappl.482·72116 NHIUUftllftll IUAlllKUI~ ..... ..._.. J706 CoehlMIM 3824 llAHO MEW ur ...... 6'7J..1S4Ior8'73-8040 c:ourteouainformatioo.
........................ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• RELAXING MASSAGE . a.rm ' , ... •••rw aar;2Ba. bayfront, avall LAMANCHAAnS 3 Br studio a~, huge Waated June 15·0cl LS, ...._.. • .....,, 4450 /JA. • BobJames-LkMa.saeur Ulft MlftNKR~
back yard. chi ~ OK. Cdll area, rum. no steps. •••0 ••••••••••••• • •••• • ~ iaX CO. Outcall 9'9, 494-51U Da.Y •hill uaignment&. for 3 mo. $425 m o. LarJe 1,2"3 bedroom $&2.5. Dys, 841·26SS, eves, for retired 1ent1eman. 4 DILUIE oFC•s ·n-aAVL E&IAltJ.CWolS H,yland Laboratorin bu Good pay. lood working
64Z-ll562 gar eo apts. Dab~, wknds 995-~ 75&-1782/1·328-7?A2. c.ont. r!JI .. seat 25. all LJcen1ed Home Loan MASSA&I immediat. opening for COlldl. Local Jobe. No ex·
'310 inc uW, 1t\ractlve =· 0~· ~d·Jtt s~ Onell:Two BR. See at 1407 paneled, sm. whse U1 re· Brokers servlne So. RGUU MOOB.S an Accouota Payable per neceea. Call Today &
apaclous lBr. 305 YI Pl sU,SOTS • De l aw a r e. Hunt' a .... lo 51tw9 4300 ar. I or 2 yr. lease. Lake Calli. for 17 yrg. Call our ESCORTS Clerk. General duties in· ltartt.ollJQl'TOW.
MarineAve. · Beach.Phooe960-5329. •••••••••••••••••••••••Fores t area . Kent n e ar est of f ice , cludeauditin&daily ~c· ~Q~ office•
...,_Puls 11111 '1707 E/Side, airy 3 Br, 2 Ba, NEW XTRA Dix twnhse •IESB.ICTIVI• H.arld.oa. _n_U37 __ ._:11_44_____ OUTC.W.OMLY ~i: =r~ei.:;!~: 0 overload
••••••••••••••••••••••• blt;na. ~w ~ drps, apt. troot unit. Lg 3 Br. Gain a reliable 714-581·9393 611·3811 Previous accountl paya.
2 Br. steps lo beach. pool. pamt. · 1· 2\.41 Ba. formal dln rm + roommate. MAIM CIHTER WIKU YOU ---------• ble experience 111 re· 117.0061
$325. pr mo. 'UI June MIWl-SIDI bbfst rm. fplc, bltna. ~7'64. Coast Hwy, Newport Bcb "r&ft •SANDY'S* ClUl red. Candldatea 3'lZ3 BirchSt,N.S.
30th. 5f.5.-0721 3br. 2ba,Townhouae. Up-W/D blrup, petio. dbl at· •SHAREABOME• Lease ~ ~ ft. Ample NEED CASH, OuLcalJ llluaaae should be prone.lent with Equal~ Employer
tach ...-iuc . ....,.... ...,. numben. F« addltlonaJ r--------• C...MIM 3724 1raded. Lae patio. gar,.-._...-.. Free room & board. ln a prkna. anne related ___ tn_s.om _____ 1 lnformatioocail:
••••••••••••••••••••••• Children oil. 6.45·9543 COOi. & QUIET IUJtury Oceanside bome bus pref'd. All uW Is tax· evea.~days. 1 br painted drpa cpta for a lady ln exchange a paid. Call K. Wltul. CONTACT
$SOWEBAUP Larae3Brtownhouseapt, bttM, 2 car' aar.' S340'. ~=kpng.CallKen, -~--------• UMIOM
Studio. 1 bed.room 2 ba. frptc, paUo. aarage. Adult.I. no pets. 425 12th TOP LOCATION ~LOAMS
Maid service. pool Quiet complex. Adults. Sl. Larae apt Uke quarters. Emt 111• Street Unloo Rome Loans &r· 2379NewportBI~. :~ 1315. 145-3381 or ONEOFAKlNDl Gentleman fhef 'd . 2.000 Sq. ft. ibop/ofc. =~t;;_~c:; ~Ml.ADY
5e-i'TMor6'5-..,_Steala Thia Laruoa H1 · Ground floor; air-CU>d.. t.o SlOO"""' or mor,.. And -••-
SUS CASITAS l.SQO lleyero Pl .• nr new ~gStudioApt. 830-8382 will~iDbaJI throuib'Onlon Home 7Jl-J561--
Cat.by Ferryman
(714) ~5000 ext 2J1l
HYLAND
LAIOIATOms
3300Hylaad Ave
Costa Ke.a. Ca. 9282111
Nlcely luro.labed l bdrm. twnbH 81J'.l• 2 BR 1 "'2 Ba. Util Paid. RlrS Prof. ndll to a bare hia 2 br. $6CIO Bkr 675"6700 L o a n 1 y o u g e l ~
Closed gar. $230. up. fncd patio, 1ar, $325. F..Dckleed Yard With 2 ba Capo Bch vu condo, SHOPS. olc's, bobby la Homeowner Terms. PREGNANT· Ca~o1 . F.QuaJ Opportunlt1/ ~dult1. 110 pets. 2110 M$-46S5 Tbis EleaantDuplex pool, jacuzzl M/F Sl7S. ideal for ,fhoto lab. wblcb are generally CGDfident.lal~lloJla AlflnDIUve Actioo
N 81 d. PeDOK (8469) ~1219 .... Id C F • m.ucb better than flnuce ~erTal. Abortioo, adop-Employer IWport v 1325. 3 BR 2 Ba, c.arport. l:wlkas '31-4SSS ~~ · r •85· compao.yterma uoo•keeplnc. ~~~~~~~~I
2 br, newly decor, pref. no peta. 1021 Valencia. HooormaJ.credttcard.. Needa~atroommate? Qaoa1TWTenm APCARE 54'7-2:563 .ecc-.-.
non .. mk.r.adultaoopeta. AvaJJMayl.~ Cutlivlngexpeasea! Corooa del Mar on Cout "' -11~
Inqulre 179i,., Rocbeater, EASJ'SIDE 3 Br 2 Ba 00 BEAUT.2+2$290 , Call The Orange Hwy. 1100 sq.ft. Good ....,.,... &M«>A&Veau CL ..
rear. .-•. Sii(). 184 215t Sl. • Great Locale, Kids OK County Professionals parkina, x.lot frontage. ........ Stted °'*1111 M••llP A f\all Ume poeltion ls ,..._ Heated Pool (5363 > lhne Maha u.Hd Sl.200 mo. 759-9'2e9 ,_..._,_of It! avallble foun i.Ddlvidual
EASTSlDE 2 BR. S280 mo. S4&-as 832-4134 ML Y AMOl11ZID Servtna all Oranae Co. wbo Wtea to work with
No pets. AvaU May 1. 2 Br-3 Br z ba townhouse Lovely l Brw/Frplc DepeQdablealnce ltnl 3,000 Sq.ft. offices & PAITLY AMoatl'ZID 835-7313 fi1ures and bu a tugb
63J.3273 '8lio. yUd, fri>lc, encl: Heated \'ool · $2501 ---------warehouse. XJnt loc. 2034 IM'l'ERIST OM&. y leVl!l ot skill. accuracy
ClP-an 2 Br apt. Refs. no g.ar, laundry rm. From Near Shope (8426) Placentia Ave .• CM. DANCE OF FUN and 1peed. Office ex·
P e \ s . $ 2 9 0 / m 0 • 1325. ...._, 631-4555 Ciho11forl"lll:t':-.... 4JSO _646-_7_S_12______ . M ,._. ... ac-Beaut. nude eirls dance pertence is esaenllaJ for
1at/lut+S150 cleaning TSLMamt 642-1600 HonormaJ.credltcards ................. ;..... PRIME LOCATION ::. with atate ~o:!f ~~· ~:'i[~ ~t::as':::u::~i~~'!e~
ASSIST. MAMA.Ma
SaJea " adminl.ltratioo. "10 time oaJy. Appty an penon to: lbbl9 Austin.
Dra]IU'I, LaJuna fllHs Stor•, 2Jl21 lloultoo
Puttway PJua
ATl'ENTION!!I 110.0YB .............
Wortt in newaffire
Opentnc in Co8t.a lies•
Man or woman. Work
w /youn& people. Enjaya· b&e ., interestln& work
w/rapld advancement
oppor in our educational
products dM.1loo. Age DO
barrier If 18 or over.
Must have pleasing persoo.ality. Call betwn
9:30am&2pm . dep.6754181111
1 •c•a.e •• ,......,_, 2 br 2 ba co1odo. aqtue1aky Garages for atorase. Allin ocrhpo8rc°'e 7300aresqa. f\0 .,. law. 83AMPM ~-~t,N12EPMlitod with aood company • ......._ • .._..3740 --"'--.-.."' clean, poo, grea oca-10itl7' $30. 9ll24 ' $40. Ufor8llyreuonwecan· ....... ._.. :uc • benefits iocludina 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ladl. I ... AYI Mow lion $380. Call Kent. 12x28' $55. mo. Safe & Newport, on Coast Hwy. not arrange a loan for Anab. SM-5363 weeks vacation aflerooe 645-6514
All pd. ,._ 846-1311or847-34lt secure Da-646-4262 Architecturally, one of """ , .. _e will ........ no........ FREES~IONW/AD year. company· paid~~~~~~~~~ STUDIO ulill • cpts, ... ..,.. · 3
g Newport•s finest. Call for ~--UK" """' .. .,.. l1'0UIJ insurance. creditr: "'W:•...... pool, 1ndry rac's. Adults Sharp2bdrm, l\.'a ba Con-more information orobllgatioo. OUTCAU.MAISA<il umoa.ett. Apply al· .......... Mal.. l
over 35, no fels or do. 3 Mi. lo beach. $350. Offiul..... 4400 731-0931 ---
Fulllllc n•TV children. Ca I Sue: m6. Ask for Leslie.••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ 6 UNION * * OllAMCiECOAST Ellcdlentpay•working LiDeoaAUWitles $56-7707 or Heory : 546-!5118(1 ·-sums .. •Swttchboard sas.ms• DAILY PILOT conditiooa tor ex·
llU.ETOOCEAN 642.-9137 * _. • * ANSWERSERV l2WK perlenced metal men
..,,..S.htMoNI S3rJO 2 Br. 1i,., ba. bltns. ANAHEIM HOME MAILADDR~ SlWK 3g>c::i:~~· needednowatHOWARD m Yortttown Blvd B R A N D N E W la trash masher. lmmac. for09 I 50 Sq Ft (} Between the houra of Chevrolet's 1rowlng
Beach Blvd at Yorktown B"""'--FUL "'-.. BR 2 Pool. Jacum & llebted Bank of America Build· JOOn.RWnooTY ,' l. uO~NS •SUil'S• body =the Orange SJ .. 11~ I I c.nu • • ~ " tmnis CU. Many extras · · 8AM.SPll. Call for ap-County rt Complex. _.. ::0 ·~ +~ BR loft • Near Hunt. Harbour. . ~~~a SJ:~~ e ~ffl~: lOAM~ Mass;f~-4462 poinlment please Flberglus bodywork OP· , _ .._.. 37 41 · A ts. no pets. Gemini Realty 839-6623 , ......... "'-·y "'··y ace-·. 6-42-4321 Id. 277 t.ionaJ. Opportunity for ...,..... Xlnt loc. 208!i Tburin .......... -c.. ....... ·-..... --Eq I •-•••••••••••••••••••• covered park inc. Alli---------Nation's Largest Home Handsome you o g ua advancement. ~ Mr LAGUNA BEACH MTR. Ollwn Bay fl Hamilton). Sharp 1 BR apt, doee lo service lncluded. Prime • Loan Brokerage Firm gardener want.I to meet Opportunity Employer Hart, corner Dove &
INN.165/wk Ir up. Maid 67S-~or613-4M2 beach, Sll5 mo. Bltns It location & competitive .......,.dlewtd 4500 8Toro 77.0-3031 lady w/yud anytlme. ACCOUMTIHG Quail Sts., Newport ~. color TV, beated Shownbyappolntmeot refrig.538-7330 rates from 60c sq ft . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hlallldl 14i-222 497-43211. -1CUll., _Be_a_cb. ______ _
pool. (TI4) 4M-5294. 98.5 2 BR 1 Ba, lndry facU, no • -•---~·~• Hurry wblle offer last.s. IUIU> TO SUFT --------~ ~ N.CoaatHwy •. I _,.....__.. --For ....... _ ... all •• ,.., ---------1 TOUCHOFCLASS ffoteJQJ>erdeeirable. 10 Autotransm. R • R ma!1· · · peta.1265mo. lst ... ast ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...,......,,c 77.......,,1 s .000.20,000 Sq . ft. CORT key" typlna reqwred. flt. own toola. Expd Studio apt. marvelous +Sl00.2&9£. JSthPJace. LGE 2 BR upper. view. offi PlacentiaAve.C.M. Sbortt.ennR.E.ts$'afast. •ES S* Good benefits. Apply in pm'd.
ocean view, spa clous 6'4-04.52.Avl4/22. new cpt.s, drps, l~ blka ~=~fU:,~c:a~':1 Me~~ WESLEYTAYLOR CO. any reaaon. Bill Daven •MODELS• penooHolldaylno,25205 548-2218
w/l!plc.«·1303 E·SlDE, 2 BR w /eocl to bcb, twn. Heisler Plua, $95 mo. No lease. REALTORS "4·49to port.SG·M3 LaPuRd.LaguoalUU..,_ _______ _ , ... ,..INch 376' ~ardd 'it" gNa.r. $300 ~~· ~~:3~ cbJldreo AvailMa.yl.SS&-3900 3000SQ.rr. v"HEED .....=-~MG• 1-------•1 A.VOM
••••••••••••••••••••••• u •· ow ava . . 2:50-500 sq. ft. delu.x.e of· 2034 Placentia, CM. Xlnt •Ila.le & FemaJe all of A.dvertiaiDC BEA ~7522 Spaclous2BrW/PaUo n w 19t.b St c M location. SMO. mo. 1 yr ./MONEY ___ ... t --'-DUCTION SUCCESSFUL
IA'fROMT
2 BR cooclo, Jl'b'. -60 lllooUi.
3 BR, 2 beth&, YTb. S$50
ADULTC<*OO .......... "·i::-2 BR. 2ba. yrlJ. sr.s TO llACH
3BR, 2ba. ba,Y vv $1050
associated
t\ ~ • I l.J , 1J t r • .. ,
2 Br W/'ar. -".CM•, HeatedPoolS320. ce. . . . .. leaae. CootacJ. Bill Di....,... cass, senwl PllO
water pd. ma "Eo' ManyE)rtru (5818) ~~o. mo. Tom. Burnett, Business • allareuforallalfa.ln• NS0N &AltT S1t~~=N
Placentia. 63&-020 1.5 Properties Brokerage, C:UDITMO Peno11 .. Set •Ices 1360 ASSISTANT YOURSELF
M·F ALLUTIL PA10 RILL 5BV1CE 7~U PllOILIM ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• Mlilt have aper. in lype Sell Avon. You don't
lBrOcean Vie,_ DILUXla...<:ES WA 3"111»'-Yale escort avaU only oo apecin• II producing need aperieuce because
Bacapt.SeniorCitizenon, BltDSSZSO (4945) Penonal telephone/ re-·~w~ ,.,600 752-SfOJ Saturday nigbta for clean. well deai~oed Avon ~racttcally aells
ly. $150 mo Incl utll, ....... 631-4555 ceptlonlst secretary ----.. women~S0.997...,.. finlabed 1rt. App Y ln itaelf. !'.anUllll ~ ex-
MobiJe ,"ome ~: :1;· Honor maJ. credit carm co¢ereoce. room. co«M ...................... c..tArran..:: :.:,_. Home-alttini wbUe you're ~~ J~t!Tv~: ~..!i.1~ ~~i
IP9ce9 «rent . • bo9pltallty services. Wortlng student desires ---------• f b N r,. M6-41.Sl. Sharp, 1 Br. ocean vlew' Excdlent •~-uoa. near room ln ex.chance for It. away rom ome. o Irvine, aam..spm er 1.enith 7.1359
hplc "frida 1 Blk lO ctr ""'41 duties Pref be ti re DOYOUNEEJ)CASH? cbarce to you. Avallable ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Eaalllde 2 br upper. oftwo.$125/~o.4'7·3079. freeways · · ac a•· lat . 2nd II 3rd now. Elderly cpl= dsbwabr.encl. gar, adltl, ..-.,.
6
,., IMil CIMTB Refs. Cbrialinell82-040l homeowner loans ar· Referenees548·3289 AmbWom COuple Wanted BlbJsltter/bOusekeeper.
$17$.511.JSaS ~tr.AA VU Zbr. paUo. (7U)m.2111 Elderly couple needa ranaed faat. Borrow__._.~ 1400 to manaie a small busl· neededWed, 'lbun. Fri .
pool. bkm. Adlts. S3TS. tumlabed rental for luly Sl.000 . Sl00,000 • Oulble --oea p/time. WW oot in· 1A1UDa Niguel. S .00 per
New 2 BR condo. fplc. trab Lat. Wkdys •H·•044, NIMI C. M. It Aucust. ~7886 '-1m. put cred11 no p~ •-••••••••••••• .. ••••• ta'fere w f 70ur present br. ~
liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil CJDPlr, darlin1. '4L5 mo. wt:ndaa.am LOCAT10M blem. Call ua . noobUaa-TbeSiD'1e'aSolutJon Job. MUil be •illlnl --------
--------M0-5548btwnWPM D I f fi .... tioQ. OatebyCboice Jeam. llr.HalJ,&0-1.SM. BabysitUr/eompujon to
f ' ,'\, I •1
1112 Br. Adulta, DGl pell. ~...... Jll2 e ux e 0 c • • I I ••/I..,.../ Cbaoce carefOl"mdlacewomn. F\un«maf --'·.-l.c2Br,2Batownhoule ...... , ... ,, .. •••••••••• warabO'lle l,P&fe . fllA•se STERLINGFIN.SVCS. ,... ... ~ 1si..K11 .tl9&r.CLBI 548..a598. llon·Frl, alt • mo. J&l1 z:r·1~N. Nr. P'alrvlew. Balter. 2 ea 2 ea. bltaa. CJ>ta. 1100.4000 aq. ft. P'ull ••••••••••••••••••••••• 71'/85&-1110Cbtr) "41UUI ... ~.'p-, .. --•. 10Key•d· SPM&wtmdl.
lb. ... LIDl Nol)lta.~1812 drJll,paUo,tarport. HCLU'lty. ea.4'" Ot .. h•• ........,, .. Trmt ANewconceptln meeUn1 ..--... YUi
..u. 111""'9 842-Teot. Ow tallt 5001 ~ IOJI yaur Diil&.. Call Joyce at derb1tocb.1.Jtetypto1. Babysitter. Mature • ............ ..-.... a •-,..... .... BlldMlor untt. Weslai.-, rr _,.u.. MIMI0.13 --ponalble woman •·· ~ _. ... .. -Nr 0 C Airport De)m•a -•••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• --· ·-..., Mun. pets $400/ (lldet. tlH. also ntw ... .,.,.._. Jltf · · · · .._ 1--------care for 2 yr old cblld.
yrly. • ';;u >SU·60~:: roomN tw£vt entrt~•1am-1S ·-·-•••••••••••••,••• ~c:! .. ~•cretartal G~ .. ~!M'""p.-Sb I .-rtT. .,....... 1450 An Department Call6Cz.o'112alU:IO. 92'7.s54l 111wpt ,,. ~wy a ., . PAii MIWPOIT ..... •· ,_. • ......_.. • •• op, LUWW ••••••••••••••••••••••• ASTl-UP'
m.4'tl Bacbtlou. 1 or 2 Oftlc. •IHlce for rent 111 Rethin1 aktr 7 IOOd W•••..... .EUROPE: Local Bus. ' AmST BtMtn• 2~.~:,:.~~~ JmlllRCO'ITAGE ~•Townbouaee Col'OCUI del Kar C.11 ~=~ll·=•Uon fl l.tt,!.,~~ llu wW •« .. ~ .... c: ~~te9Jr.:·fi:rpl:: =~:-:•=..
ly. 111 45tb St. NB. tlllPald·PeUOK Fram..... ........ BER. HDRY z.I ..,._ aiu,.r. etc. L'f:uaend ol prlnt 1bop. Xlot HnJJ.7.Coetact ~ BeMl&.YardRAS <5*) Spedaeular epa, total Nwprt Center o fc REALTORS f'aiNllTainatlncd .. 11.Q t7l4)MS· bment.a II wotldDI COG· SAMTIA.90IAMC
recreation pro1ram, w/delk SZZS/mo ' 215Delllar 412.4121 .....,.~C.. d1. Appty, Natloul ASE.lltSt.TlllUD =~~de~ ~~,!a,t:~ ===~,'= '&tHm.' Tram or auto r.,.ar. 2 '4J.Jl7I '-"11 ~~·~.~ ~~ n'a~::':~~J. m.a>o.&.O.B.
Udo Pool. NCartt.1 ClOCD" ,.._'* • (*5) &laad. Jamboree 11 S&D IOO 1q. ft. olc to Oal&a ~. 2 boUta, ft:IO flS IWind couple llu IDCIM1 ,,,.,.,.. m.laabt1 a lot Airport) Iqua I Op· _ __. ...... ....
,._. ptiYIM'J IJ75, indd • lbut 611-4111 JGeQUlll.Hlllelo..s. 1fe1a. pYt 1 ... •·mo. mo. acll P}ae.tb, CJI. t.o...._11t•a..ctTD'• DtWI)' l.Q/orm•Uoo a parumityhsployer rwu ... _, 1~ want lo
llllllllam.*t a.ar -.J. credit C8f'4ll f7 I 4) ...... lfOO •ZJJO; 97N70f S..7111 . AelOt. lG7~4' wll Mtome INlt ~. Daib PUot CJHelfJeda.
\ ,,
l •
C 2 ... I Ualj , I ttll••r JP•"-1 laa .. ....................... ....................... .....••................ ....................... .............................................. ...................... .
BOO 1: X g g P IN O •i tao 11 ateaa dsu a..J.ll&.tl'-•. Soll, Gee LANDSCAPING/CLEAN Palnt1n1. wallpaper, P1oora. carpel.I batbl Bnckworlr. SGJaU Jobe. Prat paintini • par:rtn1. RE.PAIR .tr REBOOF All £Rv1cg F /&!llu1• Ollar' bri,......,_· a.cr.~A.lttiAdd. UPS urpentry, ltn'I malnt. waUa, patioe. ~· Newport. Colla Mesa Sprin101.1pecla .Refa. t ypea -1tHn11u -
boMk•pu. Q~lY ciu lOmlDbleada. CJcu patio•, c 1 b la el•, llal.n&eoanee, imlDCldlate fr repair. J Waui;h. Sooc. price for vacant re Irvine. m.3175eves. S1J.4'110,s.1&"'383 rocbbakea-compct·lu ~ P&JTQ&L baak""" llv elm rm. baU SLS. AVI lannica. New coal. Ree .ervtdi\a. 6'2-9807 M2>-0&0l ifdtoDCel ........... JJ'S PAINTING. Creal fl'reeesL S4l.al0
eoBriJl.tioa.AJRllAIP. nD lr.S). ~ $10. cbr • comm'l. ~ or VEB\'LOWPRICES H , I ThoeeGQYa97~l0 ....................... worlratp-eatprltes. ~All•Jtl111 ~=· :!:: t5. G111.r dlm pet odor -...sci. Uc Ir bonded. Oo Gardeoln1 Main· ....................... l M 1' A C U L A 'f E "Two Men Wiii Move 557·10U ................ ._.. .. .
Cpt npa1r 15 11'1 upr tenaoee<>eorae ~3015 OCCStudent. I Toa truck a.EANING CO. hit}lly You .. We handle Ira " Qstom clothiq, alter•·
up.MO-zsrr Do wed m,yaeJ.f. Refs -= Ww~W: ~~c;!, Prof J Landi Trash. tne trim. floo trala•d paraoone l. 1ml movea-offlce It P~Gw!t!~~~~p Uocu IJ repal,... Somt' 0,.1.ce....... Slll-0101. imitt Lic'd /llonded i ... ·~_•&>;_a~nln Maincap-t MZ-5'703,979.e489 '7»G323.158-Z377. houlehold. Distance le .,.,.,. Tia.te advu of mv P.U. It del. Sharon • .. •••••••••••••••••• • .... • ,.,'"' r11-• local. a110 packing. •-· J 9113-31811 -· We Oare Olrpet ClHnel'I ~2lil2 alU. incl mowiq,'&rlmmin&. CHEAPEST bauUng in Bach.. homes, apts. wtth a Low u t I e g a I rat t'. _:ei~qi~-~er!..:·~53&-~7.:.,:056~-=-----l=--::-.:-:--::--:---B~~~n~· ~~~~m=k 9edrtC411 .-.Y1.n1. weeding. Free town. Fr. est.a. CHE,\P! PERSONAL TOUCH. U c/inlrd. Cal T ll1·N4. P~f(octloo paiMera T ....... ..,.., '
1025 lilain. S.A. .~. 'rruclt mount unit ... ••••••••••••••••••••• UmaU.. ~7072 8'2·2985orMS-l390 Rela.546-at20or536-6728 Ph847·7278 average room, $.15, vcey •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• -3il22 95l-OUID F't. e.st, ,rcas rutea. ll'*•sd81c:trtc GARDENING COveN!dPiekUp Housecteanlna le ban· neat, free eat. refa. Expert TV "'f:1"'· Fa•·
MW'tlf Lic a2'7138 MS-et74 SERVICE &lOaload cb.mao rep airs. Npl P ..... ,IP.,.rilg 493JfS25 Dep.endab e RCA . .......... ,. 548-8375 ~-4886 Sch/CM area. Bonded ....................... Zeo1tb, M1anavox. ••••••••••••••••••••••• est,,1.. EL~•,..•u·Pri"ed p~no-p•""""""G YOUNG MAN. 5 yrs expr Sear a, Ii: art other -"""' .. "" ... .uu' .. cpl. 5.56-023 aft ~ or .,..~ ...... ,..... 1 ri Fr ... _ ..... A.II wrt bl TV -save Moaey.Drivewaya, ....................... riaht-rree estimate oo Gwr .. Serflcn Ht I dt•la 9 wlmds Expr'd Reas Rates n wallcove ng. ee ......... . g •
Parking lot repairs, CABANA tarseoramaUjobe. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Free Eat. Call Gene eAl.~78Andy. 843 W. 19th St. C.M. sealcoat . Lie.NB.CM Fine catenng, all oc-Ucenaed 613-IWS Want a REALLY CLEAN Xlat bou.wcleaning done SS2-0&58 ....._.,.--.. 64&-17116 S6SAspball6'6-487l casioos .... "' "'"'"' HANDYMAN. ttomes & HOUSE' CaJI G'-ham by lady w/exp. Dependa· ,_,,,_ _;__;_ ______ _
----';...__----·--· ,....,.....,_, CUatom Electric. lod . aph. Conscient ious Glrl.Free. est•~rs"!!.. ble.owntrana.847·3637 All PROFESSIONAL•••••••••••••••••••••••.,. .. ,allla; c-.t/c.o.cr.t. comm. rm, lrmalotsvs. Craftsman.Call645-0302. -u.J Paintm,. lnler/EJtter Neatpat~&~sturea ...................... .
••••••••••••• ••• •• •• • •• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hooelt .ts reliable. Free HANDYMAN . Carpentry ••Housecleaning dooe b)' Roeema rle 's Reas, work gu~r 642-0386 NIE EST. If l-14 l t CERAKJC TILE. Special·
BabyaJtUna · Nr So. Cal. All phuea concrete le est.~ electrical, plumbinl & reliable coul)le. Refs 0 _, Housecleaning. Pai.oting. Extrllntr Ex· .._. .. & ll--.. · ~~ P~~=~~P· ~ l~ Pl. 18 mo to 4 yrs. Full blkwrk. "'-•-br'-work. r..a.g ,, ___ ~ ~au ~1793 nciS, reaaon. own lrans. .___ -...-_.. ,_ time oJ-557_-..., ""'..... • --• ....,.., ...,,.....,.... ...... ,~ "~" ....... pr'd. uw.n::ot, neat. reas. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ......,._., .ncu1. ........,.. Lic'd /Bonded.642-6894 ,,_. -......,....._ -------C. .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Qual. detailing, all cars. -.C-Ta Uc'd 964·1045 Dave Male 28, 7yrs. const. exp. CERAMIC TILE. pa Cl Foundations. retaining WOOD FENCES. ALL Waah wu vacuum THISUHSHIME P\ne Exter Painting by ~ up1rade YO"r ~me, b ...... Call cc.7......,. ••••••••••••••••••••••• walls. blocks, patios. TYPES. Built to Order, wtnd~ws . ~hrome & •111.S ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sin St li · T 1n itcban. for laving Y ex.,..... -._,. Carpenter . F_ree ~LLlc'd. Repain.orPoslssetand vinyl.Tboroughjob.Clg Housecleani.oi & omce Riley'sTax:Service R. or. · c.,ms. ry space. 558·01H3, leav atlJpm.Paul
eoitunates,Any siu Jobs. . you build. 642-2073 s tudent Call Rte.. ...,..~11. ~ 2.8Yeara Experience me. 836-SM5 24 hrs. mess. Don. New & remodel ·. tubs. Tony, 64~9866 Pacific Concrete. Low t,.; • • • s_ ....... ts. · 00 •pts C.11642-644.! p·-1-A y C ....._ ---------• day 41 full day rates. ~ERN FENCE CO. ~1678 "' R.E. wor . Serv 7 ......, _. asnw 11.oofiRg ~ers drainboards. &
Lou's ffome Repairs, 30 &tS.32:5'7atter3PM Wood&Chalnlink p a 1 n l 1 0 g , days wk. Bonded, In· L~np .. g Specializing in residen· ....................... ent11es.613-4i082
yrs exp. Doors. windows. Uc#2'5--151 536-1837 carpet/housecleaning. sured. ~952:5 ....................... tial homes, illt. & ext RC?OFS in.stalled factory Willdow ca.. h 9-
patiosetc. 551-2054 Cement work or all kinda. forWca ·1..o prices, ins. Guar. Landscaping. Tree trim-Please check o ur re· direct· estab 3S yrs. Cull ••••••••••••••••••••••• r~ cr~1c C\Jttini. blockwork. Free 67~1675-7280. 1be Moppets, that's our rnlng. Clean-up. 8 yrs ferenc~. Lie # 320881 Harold Gunn 549·2961 Windows cleaned. re--r•........., • Est. ~57 ••••••••••••••••••••••• name. Cleaning is our exp. Free Est. Jay Guar .. msrd. free est "•onable. bus1'ne•ses . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,. __ __. --Formica Counter Tops in· ,. _ _.__ "Ame. Call "•"2393 897No_~u. 848 -4043 or Ted. 636-7085 IMtOOFFOI LESS ho.... •. pts a ... H-:.. Carpet Man will lay yours ....., &1or · stalled to your specifica· wvm;g • .....,.. ...,_ Comp. shingle & hot mes.,. a · .,., ......,. ~r mine . Repairs &.•••••••••••••·~··•••••• tloas.l.atestoolors&.de· •••••••••••••••••••••••Have you read today's Bob Foad Painting Freeest.Call894-04.2I
deaning too! Guar work Room Add 1 t Ions· signs. Free est. 675-3118 Haul, sk1ploader dump Classified Ads? If not, SELL idle items with a COmm'I, indus .. & res. ---------
at bigger savings. Free Remodel. New constr. lri<. grading, tree wrk, you 're missing lhe best Daily Pilot Classified Ad. Int/ Eitt, bonded, full SELL idle items with a Make your shopping
eaaler by using the Daily
Pilol Claseified Ads. est, 645-3646 Uc'd. Call Spiro. 548-8250 Want Ad Help? 642-5678 demoliuons etc. 831-1257 bargaans 10 town! ~5678. liab. 891-1001 Llc :M5218 Daily Pilot Ctassified Ad.
Help Wcmted 7 100 Help W..ted 7100 Help W.ted 7100 H-'p W ontH 7100 Help W •tH 7100 Help W ..tH 7100 Htlp W..ted 7100 Halp Wcmhd 7100 Hllp Wmhd 7100 ...............................................................................................................................................................................................................
1!eaut1c1ans EXECUT1VE G••ral Ofc to $650 MACHINIST Jarutorial. offi~e & bldg . Medical front office, busy
Booth RenUll'! NO new Clerical SECRETARY lOO% FREE N.B. co. needs Class A clearung. Pt·Ume eves. ManagerTr81Dees = ~-.J>!J~i::
coocept.s. Be your own SR TYPIST DATA INTRY Executive secretary to Tii.15 frleodly co. needs Machinist for Brid&eport Good pay. M~t be bon· UJOT£M send res~me toYAd 1'220 ~s. Set your own hours. • Acer 1m, Clerk M~keting Direct<>!' for person w/~me ofc ~kgd. Mill & Hardinge Lathe. dable. re!!ponstble. able Daily Pilot. P.O. Bo~
L 1 do are a sa lon · II>ict•phone Full time position open maJor So. Calif. bwlder. & good typing. EDJOY a Close tolerance. precision to ~ork. UJdependenlly f--1 Stores 1560 Costa Mesa CA
Operators with followlng IStat as a video dis play Super opportunity for variety day in this xlnt work. Exper req'd . Top Irvine Airport areu. <Alli UUU 9'!826 ' ·
4:Q.nfact John Solo . ./IBM Executive terminal operator for a take-0ver. detail orient-s pot. Call 540-6055. benes. E.O.E. 557.9051 Steve83l·7723 AreSeekingCareer 67~ ./Repro ' Basic /Four mini · edpersonwithtopsktJJs. CoutalPersonnelAgen· aa.ltforRonAdams. JAHfTotlS MindedPeopleFor : Men for early AM
Beauty Operator, earn .fTecbnical computer. Some ex· Excellent salary & cy,2790HarhorBl,CM Pl. 6 MAHAGBT1lAIHHS riewspaper delivery in
more by renting space. NEEDED perience Is desirable. but be n e f It package. Maid, llv~in. lovely N.B. time eves -llpm. Have openings for f /lime N..B. & C.M. Must. have
CdM. 644_ 7321. 552.0943. , _!~~!_~IATTELY AM will train individual with _8eautlful1 sdurroun1dlngs hod me w /knpridsvaterfrooEm. 5 ~e ~'li'~~~f 1 Ave, &. p/tlme clerks on Ind Al de
11
pendaa b
1
Cb.le
5
c
3
a r
0 0
&_ be$
4
r
0
e
0
-
Beauty Operators C.M.
orea w /following. Ex·
per'd. 645-1589 for Inter.
lleauty Salon stations for
rent And Manicurist
wanted. S40-2474
•tCYQ.E MECH
Progressive beach shop,
unlimited future
poss1b1 lilies for e n·
lhusiasllc worker. Min 1
yr exp 1J1 retail shop a
-<nusL Call 675-6510 for
more mronnauon
IOATING
Pos1t1on avail. 111 oor pro.
ductioo yal'ht n gging
dt>pt. Knowledge or mat 'ls & s w aging
helpful. Secure job for
Tesp i1>erson. Ca 11 for
appt. S49-8855.
BOOKKEEPER, en ·
thus1ast1c sharp. ac·
curate, full charge,
general ledger. thru trial
balance. Salary com·
01ensurate w /expcr.
Waterrront location
675-9800
BOOKKEEPER
opening in growing mrg.
~usincss w/expr in AIR.
AIP. P/R andolher gen'I
ofc duues. Good typist,
~yrs expr. Salary open,
based on qualifications
Call for further info
(7141898-7831
9000EIPER/bpr
Smal I Nwpt Bch omce.
Full lime. 642-22«
IOOKKEEPIR
Laguna Niguel C. P .A.
firm noods bookkeeper to
work on client's books,
prepare payroll reports,
«c. 831-0757
~ .,. "'""rt er.m ""' demonstrated typing ac-m lrvLDe n uslria area GENERAL ays, w o · ng. · " Jrd shifts. If inteTeSted. signments. Holiday & curacy and speed. Work building Please submit speaking ·prefe rred. .IO'tcHBOfaP contact o ur nearest mo+bonus.548-1740
vacation pay . in pleasant environment resume with salary re-LABORER.. Housekeepmg,. cooking, marlteforgoto ---------
Hospitaliution plan with good company quire men t s lo·: '1 need own trans. Non-Partner's Bistro now ac· l.3«2LampsonG Grv MODas Ii ESCORTS
avail. benefits including 2 Classified Ad No. 202, UrgenUyNeeded!" smkr.644-0595' cepting applicatJon& fM MonthruFriSam·'5pn:r Excelopportunityforthe
VOLT
1'1 '"'fli.UtAU• ... Rv•t • "'•
31415~J7~ 1Drhe
<Across From
Orange Co. Airport>
Equal ()ppor Employer
Clerical
'--ti ft Daily Pilot P 0 Box W·--"'-.. -all positions JPll-6PM nght allrac Females wee.,, vaca on a er one . · · Al~ ........ e Maids; top wages paid. dally: 448 s. Coast Hwy for informal.Ion phone year, company paid 1560. Costa Mesa. CalH .. StockClerks Apply : The Inn at Laglkh49'7-444l <714)537-4840 646-711812131428-6330
group ins11rance. credit 92626 Shlpplllg & Receiving Laguna, 211 No. C-Oasl Equal ()ppor Employer MODEL
union, etc. Apply at Must have phone & rclia· H La Be h Landscape foreman. full I~~~~~~~~~~ "8.A.aJl'!.E co.a.ST FACIAL Lady needed in ble transp. Long & short wy.. guna ac . time. experienced. i: FitUng model. size 10 for ~ "" European Cosmetic l · ts H l MANAGIMIENT active s port s wea r DAILY PILOT Store, Nwpt Deb. Call for de:;' &!~~':~1~n· p~;: GUARDS -~-68-4-7-5-1 ------Reliable person to manuf.&&2-3472depl6.
330W. Bay St .. CM appt. 675-5080 Hos pltaluat1on plan f\tU & p/time. All areas. Landscape maintenance, manage own dislr. con·1·--------•
betweeolheboursof Factory help lo assist on avail. Uniforms furn. Ages 21 full time. worlr in N.B. sulting business. ()ppor NURSE AIDES, exper'd
8:00AM-5:00PM laminator operations. o r o v el'. Re t 1 red Call 644-4894 aft,,6pm. to s tart s pa re ti me ror live-in rel.tef. Lovely
Call for Steady employment. we I come . A p PI Y without investment & pvt home in beach area. Appointmentplease Must have good allen· Universal Protection ~S.C.etcrr build secure future. Homemakers Upjohn. 64~4321 ,ext277 dance record. Apply at Service. 1226 W. 5th SL Busy astuon Island law _63_1·_5008 _______ , 752-0992, Equal Oppor.
CRT T · I Equal Opporturuty Clecon Inc. 15551 Del Sant.a Ana. lntervw hrs ofc seeks girl friday who lfma Employer A mo Ave . T us l In 3141 c..,_ Drf•e 9-12 & 1-4 Mon-Frt. Equal desires resp. Du!Jes in· Manager Trainee. Above Employer
Cle 731-4855. 546-4741 Opportunity Employer elude Mag Card II opera· average people toj~~~~~~~~~ rk Dental assist. chrslde. ex· <Across From m/f. tion & handling clients. supervise sales force. NUR<•u YM , pandingdutJes. uviog tn F/C IOOIOCHPER ---------Xlnt skills a must. Established company, -Must be ex~r d 0~ four Mission Viejo area. Newport Beach develop-Orange Co. Airport) Hairdresser ~anted. New 644-9190. established customers. Plume ll-7. Country phase CRT line pnnter. S8IHi030 Equal()pporEmployer owner of Ali's Hair ---------754-6471 Club Conv . Home
Sharp, flexible person t.o ment co. has opening for Bazaar would like 2 LEGALSECRETARY ----------• 549-3061
'°put orders •. credits & DenULI Aas't·Do you want bookkeeper w/strong ex·•----------hairdressers w/cltentele Busy H.B. Law Firm nds Manufacturing general ---------
related duties. ~o.ng a career in ortho using per in the follow ing •--------• for ar'lernoons & eves. exper Calif legal sec'y. factory work for !Sporting MUISES AIDES
term temporaty position all your RDA skills" areas: General Office Please call Alice at Mst have xlnt s kills. goods firm. 7:J0.4 ;00PM . Exper'd 7-3. Country
avail. immed. Call To· ~121 •Accounts Payable Asst. R~st1 C11 642-0434 salary based upon ex per. ~142. CI u b Con v Hom ~. day! •Payroll Taxes Variety pos. hand.ling ---------M rd d · CM1J061 tal h . d •P&L10-1ance Sheet ag ca exper es1ra -~ ........ Ori--"-... '""" . ~o~ office • Dell' c aulll eass't,ex· ..., student transcripts. Hairstyltsts Exp. with ble ,.._,. -per. with X-ray I.le. for •f'inancaal Statements grading&corresp. Req's followang CM area 847-6041 Pwson
0 ov erload estab. Newport Beach Qualified applicants good judgment. Typang M.'>-1589fortnl. To tram for accounting OFACEMANAGB
Small co. in Anaheim
seeks lodiv. w/olc mgmt
exper. lndiv. must also
be a F /Chg bilk pr thru T
practice. Excell. loca must be self-starting tn· skills 60+ wpm. Apply, ----------Loans PoS· MacGregor Yachts. · 557-G06 1 Uoo. Salary open. Non. dividual & able to work Nauonal Systems Corp. Help wanted, mature INDEPENDENT 642-6830
3723 Bircb'" N.8 . smoker.645-6501 w/minCPA help. 43618irthSt.N.B.<Near person for counter &/or -. R.C T '"'YLOR CO oc wait r es s w or k i n LOAM AGENT Eqaal Oppor Employer D E N T A L A S S T , • "" • Airport) Equal 0p. b k If h 64A S I 12 rt t E I a ery /co ee ouse Exper'd Loan Agent cbairside. w /min 2 yrs -----------._po-•uru-y-•maip-oy•e•r--494·9240. needed t.o generate loans ~nPIST expr. in four handed FILE CLERK, P T . inlbeCoastalOrangeCo Newport Ctr financial technique, to work in mornings. tile typing, GEN~ALOFFICE . Help wanted rull & pJtune area from Seal Beach lo
fir m b aeeking resp. progressive, growing phones. expcr please. Tustin area. good typist openings, days & night San Clem. Real estate
perBOD for cballenging practice. Good oppty to 644-2622. Park Newport w tg~od grammar & shifts. Several positions Uc. req'd. Contact Neil
clerical poa. Must be an expand knowledge & Apts. spellin!f. Dictaphone & avail. Contact Jim. Del &>sman. 1213) 86(H;677 or accurate typist, some _s_kil_· _Is_. 7_1_4_-<4_93-_9_31_1___ some insurance exper. Taco. 2112 S. E. Bristol. (7141 ~1.
atattypingreq'd. Exper. Dental Assistant ex---------•1_8J2_.1_1_6_1 ______ Newport Beach. . LOSANGELES
w /transcriber helpful, panded chairside e~per.. FIRST JOI Gingham Girl houseclng Housecleaners needed. FEDERAL SA VlNGS
knowledge of grammar sell-motivated, sal open. 11 or O"Yft" service nds women p IT. Mature. Top$$. Car nee. Equal Opp Emplyr m ir
& sentence structure a 7·3. lrvine. 752.7555 ~"°•'""MC top t car nee. 645-5123 642-1403 645-3439
MATURE W 0 M AN Bal . .Desirable to have
p /ltme lo w elcome llOme mini computer ex
newcomers & contact per, but not nee. Call for
merchants F1exible hrs. appt. 956-2093.
Need car. late typmg.1-.:....:..--------
547·~. OFFICE
Wortlllt Mature person. Assis t Mewporl Cftlhr ~g;1.~~·:. Tenbu. NOW HUHNG :
--------• SECRETARY
MICHA.MIC Wilh good skills.
SEMI-TRAIL.SIS RECEPTIONIST
must. Typing 60 wpm re· ----------r q'd. Xlnt working conds Dental Recept. Desk only. l"rt'l' 1 rainini.t. F or fl iT . Girls. SandW1ch Shop. nr.
& co. benefits. Contact Good benefits. H.B. fl'\\ urdin~ ('areer. s.185 OC Airport. Mon thru
Shirley, &44-4360. 893-5002, 846-3540 pm.:.1bte Isl three da}s Fri. uam-Jpm. 5S6--067C
Truc1ung Co. rreeds Frootofficeappear. Housekeeper for disabled Lot AHewdcMt mecharuc wtown tools to ln the ReaJ Estate & In·
lady. exper. only. llave Must be 18. f\tll & Part-do service work on semi· vestment field. Call Mrs.
1\1 U!>l havt! own car Call for appt !l 10 6 pm. Mon-Fra ---';.;.... _____ _
558-0112.
DENTALX-RAY LAB
Cephalometric-tracing & GRIU COOIC
car. Permanent position ume Call 557-0.20 trailers. Air brake exp Garo at 759-1511.
761J.79Z6 helpful. See Bud al Boal .. ----------1 MacDonald's needs day Transit. 1343 Logan Ave. OPENING . f'?r amb1t1ous Coddall Waitress
School '"··~-~~~~~~~~~I F.am up to $300 per wk. general office help. In-~~~~~~~~~ 6AM-2:30 PM. Mon -Fri. volves traclng &. measur-Good benefits. 752·7113 01
Ing skull x-rays. Will •--·------• 847-~
H 0 USE KEEPER . shift help. full & Pfl' CM peraon, willing to work.
mature. 7-JPM shin. 10 Beach Blvd. nr In· General ofc. W/tratn
guest home. CM. 646·6716 dianapolis. HB. 536·7977 Medical right person, but clericul Boy Wanted approx 16-17
yrs old. Lite factory
~ 1·5·30. 6-9:30 aftns
& eves. Must be neat &
good worker. 645-2702
IUYElt
Low tuition. Placement
assist. 751-9UM.
Companion Housekeeper,
Uve·in, car nee. Local
refs. Brd. rm, sat. l714)
832-3771.
train. Art or drafting n • 18' ---------
background h elpful &SEAMSTRESS
Salary + S600 mo.com-f\tU time only. Apply m
mensurute w /ex per person to Manager, Ma-
546-5573.8:30-4:30PM ble Austin, Draper's
Housekeeplllg/dinner pre· Apply on weekday after-RtOMT OFACE background hetprul.
paraUon month of May. s noons. Need r esp. person St.ore Cable TV. 831-3342.
dys week. 3·6PM. S6 MACHINISTS.ClassA. w/someexpermldoctor,_as_k_ro_r_N_a_n ____ _
week.548-2593 requires exper W/Jtg & ofc ('"/lame an H.B. ()ptometnc Asst/Recep
Alert. intelligent woman COOKS Dental Asst. ortho, chr. for a tough job. We will NB. 4'1it dys. Ortho exp &
Laguna Hills Store. 23621
Moulton Parkway Plaza
GROUNDSICEIPH
Saddleback College. Mis·
saon Viejo. Sal range
$819-$1029 per mo
831-9700 ext 302, 30;
betwnS.5.
fixture. tooling & s hort 8"2·8941 tionlsl. F\.tll or /!time.
Housekeeper. for few hrs run production. & ability Medical Assist /sec'y p/t. Ex per pref' . CM
a day. for elderly lady & to.work from sketches & exp. helpful. Costa Mesa. _557_·-~------son. Must have car. pnnt.s. Must have own 54G45M
l rain . Ma c G r eg 0 r Dinner & 1keakfasL ex· R. D.A. req. 642-21526 Yachls,642-6830. per'd only. XJ:nt benefits. General Office Mature ,_ _______ _
See Chef I. B .. Newporter Dent.al Ass'l, oral surgery woman w /general omce CAMBA PHSOM Inn, 1107 Jamboree Rd. only, N.B. skills & excell. telephone
To work a vertical com-N.B, EOE. 644·6161 personality for a t girl of·
m e r c I a I ca mera . DENTAL CHA TRStDE lice ln Nwprt Bch. Hrs
Jo'amillar w/PMT pro-COOK, EXPElt. ASSISTANT, xlnt op-9-5. Please call for appt. E r'd Country Club Conv. 752 l2 cess. xper. pre . portunity, x-ray license __ ._1_1 _____ _ f'IUme. Co benefits Ap-Home 549-3061. 52$-6450 • ply. Pennysaver. 166-0 req, · General Offi~e/ Sec'y Plal'efltia,C.M.-Cook, exper. in saute'd D' lb t d d Minimum 5 yr s ex ----------dishes. Full time ror astr u 0 ~ n e.e e · penence. to handle cor country club. 831-1550 C-OUpl~ or mdividuats,. res~ence for 2 men CAMYASSBS
Will train, earn up to
16.00 hr + comm. AM &
PM shifts. Interviews.
9-12. ca11 ~5681 Ask
lor Carey or Fred.
Gokhm West Insulation
Co.
Child Care. mature
woman to care for
duldren in Harbor Vu
Km. June F /time. Car &
refs. 644-7095 afl 6:30
Clulcal . T yping ,
telephone reception. Call
btwn 9-SdaUy. 542-9500
--~-------1 wtdesu-etomanagebus1· ...,.... COOKS neu For Prr. Call for us ing dictapbone. +
All shif•-. lop wag--. ap· app't 754-6954. misc. ofrice duties. Small "' ..... mfg co with 1 girl offi ce . ply btwn 1 lA.M:SPM , in Drivers Pleasant working condi· ~rson. Pac1ftc Coast Now accepting applica-lions & good benefits .
Daner. 4501 W. Coast lions for p fl' AM & PM Tapmatic Corp .. lrvtne ..
Hwy, Newp.>rt lkh. routes. Clean driving re· Call Mrs Witt for appt
COOKS cord. neat appearance, ~ age 19 or older. Nprt ---------lrfflrfmt & lroUer Bch/CM areas. Call General clerk for Intl
Good working conds & SGJ.2253 between 8-S. ~ktg Co. F\tll. chrg of benefit.a. Contact David ---------literature handling. mall
Asher-Tournant exec. Dry cleaner nds counter machine. & m~c duties
c hef. Hol i day Inn, girl,wUJtrain. Full benefits. 11·»SPM.
Laguna Hills, 586-5000 ~-6485. AP p I y I M S . 2 9 1 3 ext4JO DaunJer. SA bwtwen Red Drycleaning Counter Girl. HlU & Nwprt Frwy or
COOKS. breakfast lunch Wiii train. Dimmitt call Susan. 546-6110
& dinner. Ma Barker's, Cleaners, 759·9901
-2-12-E_. l_7_lh_S_t_._C_M ___ 1 Electronk AHemblera. GIHERAL OfflCI
GUARDS
SECURITY
AGENTS
AIRLINE
Help us make secunty a
PL~ANT expenenre
Dual roles of security
and service to lhe airline
traveler., lt takes a
cheerful, courteous. will-
i n g and si n cere
peraonahty. If you can
meet and greet hundreds
of Important people
every day, you can be
working with U8 in less
than a week. Car and
phone are needed. f\tll
tJme positions, uniforms
furnished. $2 .77 /hour,
tree parking and ex-
cellent benefits package.
Call or apply in person.
BURNS
Q.BICAL
Newport Ct.r flnaoclal
firm la seekln1 reap. penoa for challen1lng
clerical poa. Typing
skills, figure aptitude It
phone communication
w/cllenta. Xlnt work.Ing l»Ods It co. benefits.
Coot.a<.t Shirley. 644-4360.
Cosmetologist for Hair e:xper or trainee. Apply
Cuttln1 shop In C.M. lo pel'IOO betwn 9 &t 11.
Start lmmed. M2'"'402 Opto 22, 5842 Research
Dr,HB.
Salling Eitperlence' Key position avail for
sharp versAUle woman
for order dept &~•lesad· WaWllH-
STOPll
min. wt top ullboat s.c.tty
equip. maout Req's Senlcn. hie.
Qi crow Secy · to SUK Sood typing, ~en 'I ore 1775 E. Center St
Oetl. ()(e to S850 skills &t customer con Anaheim ~
M.'>-1553 tools Good salary & ---------• P.AltTTIME ONLY
HOUSEWIVES be n eh t s. App I y 1 n Medical locJi Ofc Must now be employed &
Put your free time lo P ~r s o n . 0 P T I Part-time. 644-9393-rree to work in my smal L needed use while S TEMS. INC. 18551 apps business or air
children are in school Von Karman. lrv1J1e. treatment equip. M·S
helping elderly adults MEDICAL RECEP· 6-lOPM & Sat 9:30AM·
al F1 . TIONIST. exper. Busy 2:30PM. $300 mo sal. or W/penon care. ext· family practice. Send re· profit sharing. No exp.
bleda)'timehrs.631·3555 sume to Box 702. A.B .. nee. For laterv. call aft
INTERMmlATE
Cl.Ell TYPIST
S739 Per Month
Courses or experience In
typing or office practice
11 desired. Must be resi·
dent of Costa Mesa. un·
employed 15 or last 20
weeks & meet income
levels as ven ried by
EDD. Open until filled. Contact PenioMel Dept, City Hall
77 Felr Drtn
t7 I 4t 556-1350
EqUfl Oppor Employer
Starting
a New
Bualness
AcccotOlnQ to
C•lttotnle 811eln•11 •nCI P1ofH1lon1 Code (Sec
17100 10 17930) •II ,..,.on1 doill9 butl,,.11
11nder • llctJllo11• n•m•
mutt Ille • •l•t•mant with the County Cit•~
tnCI h•w• It publl•htCI
lour tlm•• In •
n•wtplPfl "'wing tht et•• In which the bualn•n It located.
fhe et•t•m•nl 11
1eq11l11d by l•w and 1•
n•c•H•IY tn prot.etl119 yo11t llualn••• n•m•
Mott b•nlle requite
proof of llllng to open
oom111erdet ec:~nt•
CA 92648 I PM 979-31161
Wanted 7100HelpWClllhd 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
O,.ortunities fie
women in tlle
great outdoo"'
tr you'd like fresh air. green grass, and blue
skies a~ an omce. we have an openina for
you. If you qualify for tralni.og, be,. are
some or lhc openings available:
Heavy COMlructlon Equipment Operator.
Missile Maintenance, Air Traffic Coot.roller,
Carpenter/Ma.son. Helicopter Repair.
For adventuroua women I001C1ng for a stable <'1treer. In the states or abroad. Start at $397
1.1 month (be(ore deducUona). Food, houalng,
uniforms, medlcaJ care are all provided.
Cal Nwrr O,,Drfl&aillws
C......_140.IOZ6
llwllilitl•IMdi962-IUI
......... 7"·1211 Wbet.btt you're buYlnl or sellln,. Classified od· v~tnC will tet your meaqe to the ri.ibl peo.
~Call Today I 642-5678.
Taite Ume to relax and
8bop at home. It's almplc
with Dilly Pilot
Clahtrlcd Ada. And If
you have 10methlnt to
Hll, call a friendly
Claulfled Ad·Vllor •t tez.51S71
Rec.'cpt/~y lllOO tact. Secure ruture EQual()pportunlty
AJP Bkpr tDOO :1~ co. C.ll for £mpJoyer M/F Claulfled Adi are tbe lrvloe Penonnel Agency ppt. · answer to a aucceuful
The 041LY PILOT
•rovldH both flllllil and
publlc;ellon --'ct•. We
llewt ell "'* n~uety form• end m1lnteln •
deify HrvlH lo tht
Orene• County
CoutthouM, l!.lthtt •top
by one Of Out
convtnltnl ofllc•a or plten• tllt L(Q4L
~l'AIU'MIHT Ma-4S21 . 1u. n2 ,., n1ore
J .... ,... ... ~ ........ .,.,.
jl'lf0.111etlofl Md'°""· Aa .... 0,,IJtlJllt' n 6 hJ• • E 17th Coata Meea ~a.sallied Ada sell big • W•I• or ya1d aale! It'll adtezat 142-1'70 llem1, 1mall Item• or Sell thlrlp f03t w1tb Dally a beller way to tell more
IU\Y It.em. 842.5678. Pl.lot Want Ada. people I
,
I t
••••••lllMlll; .. :::.•::?~:-4;-:-::•:••:•;•:•?:!:•":: .. ~ ~~,~= ..... ?!~ ~~!!~ ..... ?!!! ~~~ ..... !!!~ ~~=:.~ ..... ?!!~ Tueeday,Aptll 18, 1978 DAILY PILOT Q IOUTllALll leltltHD .... , ... f.Ul •W~ ..... 1040 Nlu1'a ·-IOIO TV~··
-
...... :?l .... --be = -···················· ..__
Ill.
-$AllS ..,.., .., d• •· Pett fro•ial •l•C · ""•••••••••• .. ••••••• --
alH po11Uon• ln yarc:t, paint.
hardware, plumb1n1, ele~Jrleal.
1arde.n. and panehnl department.I.
Exp:r. company seeb Cull Ume a.al • Pull comp&QY beoellts. Exe adnncement oppcrtwi.lty.
Pleaee •PPlY at or call (213) '29-9701 or (714) 882·5sel. , ..... ~ .... "--1111 ....
••aU. Clar'"• ..,.. ~Ull o • 8 H I p p I N G Ii troatet/lutea•r dia~ Ooadta Retrltver P•P· ................ ..
Patter 8rHltJ..0•. GllW,c.o.l 118. BEC&lVJNO CL&RJ{ tatllu&Or lo J'oUota1Q Vly plea. AKC n.ld • uow WAMTED Car etereo. II • ~a. 'M"l •SOM ()list& Men Statlooc~ . .,..., ldio1 f« taper l>ft. SboU, •orae4. TOP CAlll DOLLAR AM/Fii ~.
•••-•er.ftdit--toret Z701:.1TthSl.CM.t'ull matunpmion.wanUq ralledwtrU:.XW~p . PAID FOR VOUR booetlr.J---. --.-. _... limo 1:»~:30 Moo·Fri. apmil.imiw/IOOdlutc.n. CJlJ)-llll. Jnl:LRY. WATCHES Or•Uouod.a 4
CiqallllldcDlputatol ~tbteo::~ AIPIYlDpet'IOOIO.lJ. Rec*vU.a. ordet llJ.Ua&. Vorbllire turior ~ ART OIJICTSJ. GOLD: aftf. •• ~r t~Yfe=t ". orteat· INPfUCCLIU 1blpptn1. Ute matoi .. ~ bloodlio•. tlnt: SILVfJft 8!KVICE, JI'' port llCA cokW~'I ...,It A• Hekl•1 e •,...,_•111•0idet· 8porUn1 1ooda mt1 ~ck·up drtvt.os. lhcu. a lb ttud ..,..te.. ~URN. • AN· taavebldxlDttar..••s
war•, penooabl•, IDffrlp!'n . .....,. ~SIR clerk w/mln rull rr1n"s1e e=r.u. -..... .._,., CHb olll)'. Tht Lado • ... ,.F}Clllt '° .... CO.• wa'#OMAM o( a )'rt nper. Call Pleaae cootact Jerry. Dalmatian pupe. AKCI weeA .. TA•S .... "*9.m.aeoo.
lllllda. 'nll _.. te• f'or llnltrl• th op. ~'M2'70fonppt. 96M430or~ r'tt· Champ. llMt. Cal trocnyourbuillneu card ........ ......
quir•ti.provea Hit• nwture, DO rmotctna. 40 SPRAY PAINTER aft.lPM.IM-1111 Send one c&C'd for Heh lrl•I I .. ~:!i.. :::1::·.'!~ hr wk. Oii for appt. Helper, 11 yrl old or WE urm Gennu Sborthair \al pJua OIM tpare. We ....................... _
l1ael. eu-tm tvtrt,hno aper necen. nuu AKC. cbemp 11i..paa =0.J:.':•'Tv~nt_~tlL ~uar.. •10
Weolf• an altllttartin
8
..,. ..... STJLll:'Q.'1 .. ua ave car. Sl.OOhrto ftf'Ola M1<llMI '" •II ••••• .. •••••••••••-•• ..wy + commiltloa Some:;-delt;;d. Pet· at.art. 1-..ro SIJIVEY PEOPLE . atrap, Gleet.inl air lne For Sale: 20' boulet>Oat.
comp 111 benellt1. ··M-npw ft-I-. eau CLASSES l.D. nquh .. Dlltrt.e. Pre· et DeAD .. •lip. SZIOO . .,._ caJJ pfrlGlllltl a ........ &.i. --..i ~ ~ Cltrt& NO SAL£$ Pvt. board A train wot loll • theft I For a PboneNMllO
31J.11Mlll &o Mt up • f73-21IO Reap. for operation of Jotm lllartin ~ DlnOll&lired ~eneio.
~ .. ~-·~ .. .--u ...,..,... _ Pllt·tlme OK. NMt ap. Bouvien, male 22 mo u.z Olo -""'· • --1 T.~ .... tment, ........ --...... r In t~~~~11J rooroo:!!.· ~t!_~ape.!•J!..,"1~ woer~,.....__,_-
alteration•. top pay. Mu.It be able to Ol*tte pnranee IUIOUal. Help w/papen saoo. m male wW back • trim )'our ,_.. f C>J O MiaaW-""I 710 M1fpWmM4 710 ...... ~or"'°~ Xerox. poetal as otber w~bowpeople pupa I wilt 1100 ea. tap. Or t'7 two ca.rda ................... " .. ~;;:-•••••••••••••••••• ·-•••••••••••••••••••• Sm r macb.iDes De d blU wUI react to our 875-2151 ' beck tobeek w·•..,..,... _....-.;..;;;;.~~..;;;.;;;;L..;;:_;_-18ecntalY, xlAt 1klllt. 2-4 ' pen a . new. PRlC. -· ~,...,
,ART TIME
Rr.c&PTIONIST bn dally. xJnt Hlary. ty, coriselentiouanea1 • much needed produ~. Low eost •"'"-AA'" alter· """'' Apowerwtndl ... lora35
. ------
· Shaf1>, perwaable 1lrl MLlll P!exibt. hn. 8blbDd pre. eagerne11 to J .. m o QWck advancemeot with lnl. Pick ';p ii deU very !'1~.'! ~'!,. ft. power boaL Alic>. a for front oltlce work ln __.YOUI f/OOI. aec. C..U 844-7518 must.Salopea.840-0123 • top~pany. Call i>r Hrvice. Adoption• & .. ., __ ... _... nidar tower• u alflo
EVENINGS
HB Real bt.at. Office. ..., btwne.10am. &Wt.48W010 board.i.n&.-...0 l/9t.apS1.60ea. pilot. Call Dale at
Pl'Ofea1lonal telapbooe auyMa Switcbboard Opn. wlll AIUALUX .___teY• 1045 10ormoreS1.40ea. •21oe ma l • 4'Vl'I...-lllCllfAIY t.ra.iD. A.PPlY at, Superior ~ SalelTu Included 1---·-----
Adalta wiUt ouUtanding, nner. YP•DI r e· JOI MOWll Am~I~ NOCAJU>? attractive Ali . ~ed. mla 80WPll. ...-.ASlllT E 7 h 'c51r1ce, 250 WATER PROCESSlNG ••••••••••••••••••••••• Draw )'GUI' own or tend l' American Boat
who eqjoy :'or":l!'1 :: litab1!:1~~= de· w-~ ... ~ NJIS\JrS)~mSt• J. co. Gonlonflrhb setter mix name. addlwl. pholMt" =~1:B'~ •6 kidt. Qut at &60 pe Or• Youa1. fut 1rowln1 AConlolidated pupp•. T weeb old. no we'll make one card per•_....._----~~..;.;__.___
hr. Phone eo.m1 1250, Recept/Sec'y, Loterestmg THI YllST i:mrut"act of pluUe pro-Teacber/Aide p/t, 5 dy1 FoodaCompany ahota.tu-111'1 tai. Addztteada. _,...,. ff40
between S:00.5:00P.M. poe. w/small co. HAndle $ $ $ $ $ $ $ ducu ods 1barp, growth· 2·5. Mutt have car. '"°"'•ir Calico, mitten Send check or money or ....................... . A*fetSW.. bu1y pbonH, typln& oriented admin a.aaist Salaryopen.64.5-8434 ****** pew, friendly, 1payed. duto; '77 Reule1J.55bn.deepV,
Equal Opportunity lkilJI a must. Lll.e bk· ... MOMIY ~ks\PU:~w':/: :::u:u:u TEAOIERS,ulee.putfs WO....AMIM 8*.MOGD.53'7·11'7~ Pl.OT,...,..... Seatal.llpa 1. MOO. Pb
EmpioJer kpig. Never ~dull mo-.......... Deeb admlo func It repor 1\1.ll Uaie prollt f~ your ~SMOG a mo or more ~er Spenlel, 5 yre, t.o P.O. Bot I.MO e.oi ev•
Part lime, dependable
0
':::PJ'l540-=--TYPIST L=w'· ':' direcll)' to the 1en mgr. aummer vacation while Mllinl mobile bomH. eood adult bome without _:Costa~~M~ .. ~·~Ca~. t:~211129~~·--------·
adult tooperateparkll\1 ~.-vma& . --Lite bldrp'ln• desirable ~ac.veer•eciuc•· Will train. Call Paul. child.ren.MZ.S . SEA UV
lot •weeper. Sat/Sun Need one more 1irl to • II••• to IOOMI aper nee but tiooal HlH. For In· as..a122Mahetm. H1Ya 11 545-21U round out busy office. Ca Fu lna abil & dHlre to 1row terview appt pleau V Y~e Poo, remale, no SPECIALS
---------•Basic office 1klllt, • Mlllt1n~rr..ct w/poaltlon at comp la phooeansweringserv.al w . bot 1 kids. DUPLICATOR
p••y•up ....... IT pleuant penouallty a lelllflM Office more Important. Xlnt of. ~7·1041. Ask for Mrs. p:;e"o:"f!m usta~~ 6'U89l Model 70 c:ompletely te· 34' Cudd¥ 238 HP. trlr --_.. mi.t! Pleue cell btwn flee environ. Sal open. Hobkirk dard or lMnl lhru con· fwe ...... t 1050 built. uaed 1 time. loaded t oaty 113.SM. 22· JWrt•l yr exper. to pre· 9-12.831·1100 PH. 833-8095 Pleue send reaume t 1B.BIHOMll'IOS centrateci work w/people ••••••••••••••••••••••• Includes chemical 4& ~emlghter 228HP, trlr. C:.P>~':r~:~'xt~t _______ _. 1\me.UfeLibnrin,lnc ~:,teg'.1f':,,u~t~ ~~ To set le,adl foi: larae ~i:au for a pp't. **I BUY** paper,szoo.1-m-6Mt Iota ol xtrH 1 only
benefit.I• wortdna con· llC8'T/TYPIST Equa!Oppor. Employer 92628. wealthy tndu1tnal co. · Good used ~mit . & DOUeHIOYnN ~•a••SOM'S
da. Appl)', lhtlonal Challen1in1 ro1ltlon I Eamupto'8.00br+top Wou.ldyouUkeabuainess U --OR ure . l_'O()l.12&4,beavyduty ruvuu
SystemaCof1>,4361 Birch w/active Rea Eatate SALES Hard•ate apply 8ji{til~Y·li1 Y:t\1 ~~!~ !>on~Ulm~~iuopenk ol your own? You don't ::tfOl'~i:lforvc!. will liner. ruur, etc. $75. or SIAIAY
St, N.B. <Near OC Olc.Gooclt.elepbone,t~ in peraon . c'rown l-·'ln -.eau i•--~. lnP· • 84 n~ an ornce to start. MASTIRSAUCTIOM mauotrer.1737-6449 3101CoutHwy,N.B.
Alrportl Equal Op-~!·1c701eri1 cal tkilla·req d. Hard. ware. 310't E. Coast ,...,. .... ....,. .._. fOC"Ron. Blain al bome. Cull or 631 1 547 1Qtunity Employer ·...,.,.~~~~~~~~ Hwy.Cd.II. atty H.B. rtrm. o g:1den West Insulallon p"rt/time. Ideal for '4U616I:133-9625 KINGTUTTJCKETS "
6
• _ a i.i -.____._ tmok•only. 848-1400. . huaband • wife team. Vf!r'/ ab.up wr:ouibt Iron Four for Frl April 28. 10~~~~~~~~
PBX Receptlonlst/aec'y for SAUS/f-S.... .,.,...OHi SALIS ~ rect tbl ($Zx3S) & 4 cbn. ~ eacb. illl-\143
or • Al&las by Pacemaker.
Aoawe rl.P g serv ice alrcraftdealer,accurat SaturdhtlO:JOtoS:• SIC111'AlllS Subscription TV. Salary ~ Utenew.61~1398. w nu eoa. nu eledrooics,
aperat.or full & P/f. Cal typlat ror tra.nacribinl iV1IJa lld8Sld T emUI. 301 &comm.~-......... •••••••••••••• 1 yr ,.._ •• ... _ _. b-Drai ...... Leftovers Uv. rlybrid&•. al.pa 4t $9200. ~ dlctaphooe, neat ap· Jlanne Ave. Balboa ...,_ o ...... • -.. rm Brttrot MOO/olr Sor SC-M>l pearan~ 6 ebWty to de· laland. m.auJ TaL8 ..wt.,.u 100 vinyl aofa mo. 8' wbl tble & 14 Ant. chili . , '"'~Tech al w/publlc. Apply in sAu!:m..ADY r FullUmeullerforS&L ••••••••••••••••••••••• sofa. good coad "o. S300 Bdrmlurn~MOO E. bave .17. Travel
Steady Job for rl "ht P • r 1 o n 111 l 1 • i o n exper. or in El Toro area. Ex· AlllEllJCAN OAK • 1!!&-9333 ~--ao up Hdbrd & Trtr, ie. eq1.ap d every • B h ' r 0 C Bikini abop. Yveue:s _/ , . f __.. t La.r&ettSelectloo ...-....t -. Sle-w-r sofa OJIOoo. W&Jlt boat. pwror peraon, no exper necea1. e e c c r a t • · · Blkinll 112 Main St mary hie le agency penence pre e •• ~. YP-ln ~na• "-··-ty 100 yda ~ new carpeting :='"-~. Sa~t ...._ -.::r;. .... aa1J ~2238 Profit abarlna .ts 1roup Al rpo rt 187 41 No ' " ing required. Excellent VT•-~""""" 900 Val r -•u ... CJ\ -• QUIJ ..,., -bea1tb. Apply Tbun 9-Ai1110rtWay.SA. · ~-Call for appt. s.!~~T"~etrtb mmpany benefits, aood ~T~Botb:J1~~ea 752-Mll~~ _,. Eveoan1 Caayoo Rd.Bertram 3 2 • R
aoon, Lloyd P•t Control working atmosphere. er · · · Cdll "Mongoose", world re
586 E. Dyer Rd. Santa llC8VI.._ s••H .... -.. c.Fl640-20 Please call 714-540-7591 (atNwpt · >75t.am Bed 1ltra Joog dbl iDclds coC'd h<>'der at T7 mph. •--Rttp., a"cura•-. self "*"' .... M. ·-
11
,....... .,.,_ ._. ... ... .,. __ szooo k rorappointmenl. headboard, frame $SO. --"'• -....... .-. Seat.I 7, slpe 3, bead. 2
starter to do receiving & r.ouu comm. w · 7280 ~ Wsn r.t;; Pest Control Operator. local dellverlea for Prof. in bome clMers.Sec:retary wanted for MUSICBOXF.S! Player-.. auperctn•rWi 11• f.-bUnaer..chev.S2c:i Rup. peraon ror women's retail firm. Back1rouvd in books, VldeoproducbOOco.Call IMPEIJALSAVIHGS pianos! Nlckelodeonst 7'Sofa Sailboat Pro SUS ena,finelteq1.ap.Alwayb
s-ticlde apray applica· F /time Mon-Fri. Call vact., etc. Dbl confirmed 631-ll.46. F.qual {)plJ0'1will)' Pbonogrepb.a ! World's Handmade apa.a' plt.a • 1 at he ra a c rowd &ionf. Llle mechanical•-M u•"""1 leadl. Everyday lajay-Emplo)'er largest aelec tlon . Herculoo material .. UV\ D " •--·TV _c.r Complet~ w/matcblng .,. aureen, _...... . day. Call Howar al M/F/H C tAlo ..,. I Yellow and brown plaid .......,, co-_.. ~trailer .ts 1 toll van :r:;:.i0:.:r~t~; --------•I 540-~l Secretary 5!., lf AfM,n~:!b6 r!: S7S.Calltoaeetu-5lH3 ~82orl»l022 Price 140,000. ca1i
w/exPUdin& co. Sal & I. L SA.LIS Golden Weet Insulation MAJUlmM• P /R TIU •VICI ailt.erl· ~ec:haoical anti· Bedroom Ht, xlnt cond, l leather 1teerin1 wheel ll13/826-6871 9·12noon
beaefllt commen1urate OPPOITVMrTY! Co. lntere'atlng po1ltion 5 Day wk. Sal +comm. ques. Visit us! SM the mo. 2 banlinl lights, $30. Ivory Buddha GOO. weekdaya. ,.._ ----------1 w/varted duties lnclud· Apply, 3000 E. Cal Hwy. -~ 1
----''-------w/exper. "'"II 768-4751 Work in a comfortebly SalM p/l ofr f/t. l:D· Int s urvey work , CdM . huge ornate "Taj -.....,.60-9358. 16' Glaatron 90 hp Oaal_.pna. decorated otnce lD a pre· un.laadc people Deeded atatllltica compllin&. cor· Mahal" automa Uc ors an Plmb t' velftt aol Swamp type a1r coo!v Evl n rude S1800 Io rr er
PETITIONERS
. . . ~ll/part·llme. Good "1 dally. pg. 7711
PLASTIC Factory
Worbr, w /train to ban·
dle 1am.Jl plasUc perts.
Able to oeak It un-demand Eag.Uab, days .
llile area where there la to •bare/demonttrate resp. Must bave e pleas· TOOL SHARPENER, es· featured in Loe An1eJes din.lq ,.,a. crvpl e mos old. sioo. MZ-91251158-aoo Eves
conatanl 1>uyto1 and aell-exerciat a-wm. No txP '"" phone pertonaUty. per.~ MacblneTool "Tlmet" and "Sunset poup. com N-4l823 752-2529 tna. Unique Homea in nee. eomPinY t.ra1ninl. 1YP1n.1 ak1llt eo+ wpm. Service. 111 E. 16th St. Ma1aslne." A me rt can apt. 49a
4-. or s.8 9060 Mee• Verde bu a new TV leads ror appta. SH belptul. Apply. Na· CM. 54&-Q27 lnternaUonal; 180Z·D Baldwin orpa. Xtra lrg McK.lnley Cu.tom rack. ••••,.••••••••••••••••••
manaier.aiww "70/30" PoealbleSZSO+perweek. ~Syat.emaCorp,4361Tow Truck Dnvera ex-Kettering; Irvine, CA Jo.pc aofa, bnra. Lrg ror8'Plrupbed.1100.4' FUJI-YAMAHA
coauniulon schedule, NZ-5a8'7 Birch &t. N.B. tNear oc per'd. Top pay. Apply. 8Z714. Tel. <714> 7$4-1777 d.rcu1.r slma lop eorree Met.al 1tora1e box, foi; DIA.La$ aeveralne•llatlnp Air port) Equal Op· OllWTo'"'"'•.lOOOlrvine OpeoWed.throu&bSal. lbl.Zc-ewoodaMl tbls. pkup truck, 135. 8~ YKblBroUrage anew lease. Weareloolt-SA.Ll5PIOPLI part\lnkyJ!!mplQfer •ve,NB~.... 557.7257 Roy a I Coa c b man Li.s=· UnW. anted! in& for aa.1ee peoplei...H· Bri• ... J'Uture tor tell ,_ _...._ Cabover Campr, has _ .c1.t a
pedenced or newl now ..:;;.to get in oa the RAIN EE operate OA.KAMTIQUES CAIBPAID eurytblnl lncld ... wlttt•
about you! Call Sandy pouDd llOOC' of rapidly vitamiJl eJJcapaulatloa Pric. u low u tabl• For .S med turn. anti· monomatic toilet. SUOO. Y_., S..
Plumben wante d . Ortowlk1orJlJDWoodat expenctiqpaldTVcable machinedays.Fulltime, sss. Cbr Ht• $100. ql*AclrTV'19S7-ll33 ll'Mlm 2616NewpartBlvd. =.,'·boa~. co:im, 546-90 lndultry. 112.000 comm EDI tpeakius. Fringes. Sideboards $80 . ......_ • I060 MOYl..u.t..lf ~~~b
MZ-2010
ly .-men oppr. PP· +per yr. Co. frln1e Apply 8·10 llon.Frj. Wardrob e• $88 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• "9'• S. now 1U7 So. Britt.ol. R.E.Sale beneflta. We will traia. Llnwtlco Lab. 2148 Bookcases Sl05. Desu HOlllSllOtlSAU MattreullbouprtagaA opper clau aailing
-"-·-------•AVAILA&IMOW Calllmmed.forappt. NewportBlvd.C.M. 115. Chests '5(1. Sewtn1 10_•AQiffAda bt of fra1J1e $SO . Misc. ~y. 11'. aelf·baller. Preuman-AB Dick or
2
.,, ,_ i.•A• •-TeleprompterCableTV machines $3S. Wash ·.-UI er ceramiea. 11 ..... dis· dacron sail, Al cond ulU ()pei f' poe ... ona ... uc...._ • OI NewportBeacb TIAIHll ata.ods $78. Shop around Milter Alert Is Cl•bber bee.oddallendaolwood. Reaacaable M4-l37Z M
1
J>Jator. /time. expandin1Century 21 Of· <n4>MM515 To learn to set appta by & compaN prices then bloodliDe. Alsob.a.11 Arab clothes . much much -----·----
Helt.on ntin1Co.,642 nee! can ror appoint· phone ror large in-aee ut. ENGLISH Oeldlni. SboworrlcfiD&. more. 848-8579. IHU '18 Colombia 41 •
BakerSt,CM.979-2813. mentt.oday&dilcover: SALZi P EOPLE , dl.mtrlalco.Ooodbourly MANOR ANTIQUES J.737-6449 NusauLn.H.B. 10trnller, elettronici..
+Whywearebetter! mat.ure.wan\edforlerse wa•es, regular pay 112SA Vit'torta C.M JI ....._ 1070 SOHP dieael i so~;. +Whywearegrowing! new retail lamp •tore, SECRETARY·lntricate '" · ' · ·wury l yr old carpet steam G llO'lGt i. ~ PnnUn& +0et1ourlicenaeful! fullllf4tlme--lUona &Ah. Xlnttypilt. Noah. raiaes,boaua,dallycash. Antique Sterlin!••••••••••••••••••••••• cle&JMll' lncl2wanda a enoa. apper. WllTIR ....-I"" Immediate openings. ' • bln1ed mut. much
SCREEN PROCESS +Whywetralnbetlet'! avai . Sales exper Operate or learn to Call 540.5581, ask !or Platware by TUI~.. WANTED boM,.rraooroffer. Alao more. S62.600. 534.0895
PRlNTlNG +How to earn big helptul, but will train. operate Mag II. Small Ron. Co. l!'onoaramed L , TOP CASH DOLLAR cheuucala.881-8583 aft6pm . money ! Opply, for advancement. law olc:. Airport area. Ool"'-w t 1 1 u· 139 paece1, $5000. Write . --'-------Wr1 te r · l ns tr uc tor t o BealadYOUcalledl MZ-27'1'9 N.B. ucu ea o.sua on Cla11tlied Ad 4. Dally PAID FOR YOUR ForSale:Babyacnb,cartearnt.osallonal2'dbl
wnte home study course m.1050 Nole.salexpertence Co. Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, .JEWELRY. WATCHES, ... l. backpack, drelailll ended cuatom sailboat.
lessons Cor leading cor· C.ntury21SurfRealty SAL.ES Cell883-9112 Truck Drive r It yard OlttaMeaa,Callf.112627 ART OBJECTS. GOLD, tbl, atroller mhc. Row or uil. Marine rwp. tchool. Thoroutb,.._ _______ , .,.. .&1 .... EE a . t f SILVER SERVICE, 411M744 plywood lhruout ....," 11Dow'l~acrwnproc:e11 1• lft.A" Secretary, pt-Ume, 10-18 m in enance or MOWOf'Bt FINE FURN le AN· -...71-'-· prinUlll "demoo1tr1ted Reetaurant A way for a hl&b achoo! hr a wit. Good typist, fil· chemical toilet com· Alltbroooa West. African 11QU!S."5·~ Stota1• abed 5'x&'. 1ood1-----"-'-----
writ1n1 ablllty req'd. 1raduate to enter the Ing, 1en'l offc. Sml apuy. Apply betwn lO & orimitfvlM r1 l ahaP9 $S0 Ca\alin 27 VHF I Submit re1ume t o BOB'S newspaperbusiness. friendly ofr", ....... br l2;646-2700 P es, 0 enta s Beautiful Ladia Corum 'ea1i111s.2585
8
• • eee " -,.., arts from around th watch Love Bond start outbd, clnt cund .~~on~~~·Bi~~S~~ CHomtOfTM DAILY PILOT atart.Pllcall83Z·3S3t world H02 A W . Peacock reather face. Mllc•••w $13,000.830-~
Newport Beach. ca t2IM3 lkj loyt This hl1bly tuccessful Service Station Allen· TYPIST MacArthur Corf Harbor) sapphire stem. 18K gold'. Wmled IOI I ..... 515'1/
(714 ) 541-7360. Equal 0p. lmmedlate openings in local newspaper bas an dant, uper'd. Day & OFRCI Cl.IRK Sant.a Ana 7~ 12,000/B.O. Other UIOl't· •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• ~ to70
portunhy ltmployer our family restaurants at opening for a trainee in Eves. FuU & p/Ume. Ap-We have an lmmed open· Slot Machine 1913 MJlla ed pieces. &40-IWl8. N e e d o n e u a e d •••••••••• .. •••••••••••
nearby looaUooa. We re· the circulation depart· ply, Shell Station. 11th & ing foe a &ood typist to Good Condition Cal Mochiltery 8071 refrtpntor Immediate-SI i p or mo o r i n g
qlirenopreviouaexper. ment..SelectedappUcanl lrVine.NB. work lo tbe Office 542-3377 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~.:,.chehaap,buftmust~_r1k1 desperately needed for
ReaJ i"lttate
OfflCI MAMAGR
Muat have recent re
tldentlal re ule ex
pertence. Commercial It
D.O. dnirable. Larae
ellabbabed office, prime
l oca t ion . maj or
rranddte, compensation
open . C•ll appt .
aecf'9tary' 63M650
llALTOI
or Realtor Associate.
Have need for 1 good BC·
cunt. tlletperaon. a.,w.c.• 1110......,_. ......
C....MeM l41·772'
J0tn our friendly team. will receive a liberal Service1 Dept. al our ..... ve naer -.u• Mft"boat b • 1 Come-see us today betwn starting selary, regular· Service~· Nilbt Atten9 N . 8 . corporate ore. Apfilmcft Lathe Le·Blond 17x35" 64l-4064 • new..., ....., i ~1
•
2-4 ly scheduled raises. 2 Ol:S rules a wk. Apply, Duties will include as· •••••••••••••••••••••• ~per attacbml, 13.200'. eves. Dys
7
5
2
•
8044
• vea· ~~/Wllil1 .... 1 boouaopportunltlet. and Sbell,lnh•lrvlne,NB mun1lnourmailroom, FRGHT DAMAGED Colcbuter l7x54" tilllllcal weekenda87~1317
Coak,,..._.. many Iring a benefits Service Station Allen· backup 1witcbboard opr. HOO'POINT SALE. geared head, 3" spindle lwt1 ••• 1013 Wanted : SI i p for 47 ' c..w.n aucb u pald vacations, dantl (2), part 6 f/Ume. mesaeoger work, recep· W. Warner nr Harbor. 6ore, $3.000. (213 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Trawler Phone 686-4835 pal~ 1roup ln1urance uper'd Apply, Carey tion & gen'I all around SantaAna.lm-2921 961-14M Alt«Voiceortbe'I'beater CalJCollctct! 731 1 EdlngerHuntBcb and a credit union He Cb S Co ofc dutieg. Good typing . PA, GihsOn head, horns _:..;.;._;..;..;..;__ ____ _ 23952 Avenldade la will alto be provid~ a Hwevr~n, &04Bea· h ast skills & ore exper lmpor-CASH PAID CAutomolive Eqwpment lcdrtvers IBSO. 492~ Waoted: Sllp or moonng,
CarloUa,LagunaHill.I new model company car y.-auna c . tanl.XIDlbenertts. For W1hr/Dryra/Refrl1 ompressor. gaa, 71,1a fora8'LucS.rs
'501CampuaDr,lrvine with p e rmonal use Service StaUoa Manager worklDaornot967 .. 1U HP. ssoo. Alternator Sytme:rlllarltVlalt.oaax, 873-0320
154E17lhSt, C. Mesa prtvU..-. Trainee, exper'd. Lie For apptl pleue call bench tester cAUen> $!00. trso. Buffet clarinet.
Equal()ppEmplyrmlf Applicants muat be 18, pref'd. All benefits. MereditbLllckowAt... w ........ a"--WheelPft•l au,t'~eAJnt;Jrac~ '800.ta-31185. ~~bollitp wanted for 3''
bavt a clean driving re· &!per opportwdty. APP· AMCOU IHC. Dlx model•. :m~~ly •111'9 _..,. r aca _.__ .. .... a · cordt bave a bllb acbool ly, 2SIO Newport Blvd, (NewportCenter) ed. S250. Odle macb S1 . la vn-l'lldaa. C.UUS.79M latml 5*s diploma. Houn are CM 840-liOO ~~.:u=.~c!r c~~~ ~~o~'Brtcd~:o~ri:n~I~ .. ~.£!? ... !'!., .... ~!!! IMh.Sfeedl:
Attractive, exper'd aenerallyUAMtotPM. Sl80.Free0elivery. S2SOO Crank 1rlnder HIYIR Sid '°'"
•
·•eewo--n wanted for with some optional Sen. Sta Help needed Im· Grand Openin1Sale s1soo: Numerous other ••••••••••••••• .. •••••• ., .... Baturda)'overttme. med. FuU or_p/t. Apply. TYPtST/SICY ....... _ ... thru 011• •c•TOR S hi&h fublon et.on. Ex· 1f you are qualified and '90 g, Cat JI.">'• Nwpt FUll Una ~a SH ...,....,.... April lteall. 2086 Plaeentla, .,...-., ,.. IA.UY 117 per'doc\lyappl.y, are 11\teretted In leam· Deli typln1r~uired. ~pp·ly ·in So.CoaalAppllancH CM.541·7898 Model 10 oo!Qletely re· JOlln ... ArtOPOS ~ boul h •toll (TI4)SS1·311Mor53'7·1542 built uaed l tlme. AU poulble optJona. on 29p hi lat dNB ~~-al ... MwereSET\JP&WArJ'ERHoU· personto r.~entea at Blllt.rpakl5.U".2•ta· Inclu~ta chemical• \bllo ..... val.e lux""'
81ea:f e.u-~ · · to U:'ifM'lyepji;~i:;;: t{ Inn,~ La Paz ~!~~~.' 1::1~:a~ Washer dryer and Dls· ~-07 ll~tSAMP. 1999· paper, G00.1-737-6449 sl)ffd .... ~at. $'7645/;;;,
•
~.;;=:=:===='4•;1 flce,310W•t8ayStreel, • Laauna Hills. Coo· Sl,NewportBeacb. hwMher A·l condition OO. ert)', .... USED .,.....or830-7517 --------1?/ ~ Costa ll•a, and ask for tact Personnel _S7_S_.oa;;__cb_M8-__ 5Ml ____ 1 .... 11l•1w 1010
Mllao Leavlu In the SEWER. For Ptr, power c:~~'. ~~o:t ~ d9u:~ Whirlpool waaber $'75. •••••••••·~··•• .. •••••• IUT IN ,, •. ,.rt .....
IUEPllOlllST
1nlnff Conlidered
WiUIThe
Followioi IWQliremeoll:
Sharp Pinon
Jlk....m~ce GoodT;,~ ~~la
~~°'!!;rt· men. t. macb exper. samples, ~enced. Pleaaant of· Kenmore waaber Sl25. Kint Tvt Uchl for aale.
nu ual some productlon . Guaranteed. delivered ·-?.Srd SUPER sH·PE ~~·~part· <?pPc*tuN&1 inploye.r Laguna. Vlcky,494-3280. .orv.:!Tfed~~ea~W'~: S41H1672 ._. 962:1220 Good secretar:"c bn ..................... ..
time at the new HJckory SHE ET M ET AL ble bu or full tlme. Alinott New G.E. Wuber Tlffqy'• membenhlp for $10.$45. WoodH dHks Uq;l•c-$150
Farms or Obio ttore lo lellwttbEASEI WORKERS. uper, 7~..;...zm _______ & Dryet, Bone tolor. sale. Call after tpm; $75. !see dealt .ts Runliood*548~
FlllllUoftlaland.ldealfOI' · lt'uBREEZE w/weldlnJ exper. Call Wailreu nHde d for $485/boU\.5A-0357 1..-... credenu, 1tora1• ..... :~/ people wbo cao work OwllledAd .. 41·oeTI 1-«0rtl,M491J Oritinal Plua full Ume ...;_.-.,;~__;----·•---------1 cablneta, lateral 8 thtlf Su-lws 9l50
IDOl"Db:llf, aAemoona or ~~-----.... 11 00 ....... w-.1..o.~ 7100 .. PIT -oobr'l'fl.u51 .-. 1020 "12 vw Bua eqine, tape ~·.c•.'Edr .. WHafUDOa~ALla.ts E ••••••••••••••••••••••• evenln11. Experience .,.._.._ .......,. -..... • · .... · ""' ••• i;•;;............... deck w/AM·YM, House .._. L!CA>
not necesa. Wlll train. ••• ••••••••••••••••••••:• •••••••••••• ..... •• w·•.,..a11tS15 l•ll&MOfleS ateno wit track Other OfTICE FURNITURE 'Tl Honda CM18S .seoo. Apply tn persm a~ 12 "'' ..,.. New • UMd b\O' tll mite. Jtr'7 or Marse 2044 Placentia. C.M. Jnclud• belmet. shield &
0000
d.tly. <No nc.e ·· Expr. pr.t, bllt wm train. trlde. r..ei. •11 Co. ti'8 MWllZZ ,. lll·mTor&31-25'10 c:bain. Aft± -...s Calli> SALES ¥uat be 21. Apply ln ._, I -u-
lHE Looi • penoa. VlUa Mexican Ne~ort 8 vd, C.M. IW111RldloTnlllmltt.er ,... IOl7 ....._,._._~, •
Rea&. Miu lo. Coest ea. 0 ~· ~macbln• Sl.IOI' ....................... W /11•• 160
, ' ~f H D -M • o pd .. .. -· e -a 1-l · ••••••••••-••••••••••• acnoue '°' inett In men'• • women.. wy, ana n :.;... ___ • • 1 a .otot>eeanea " --· , ,_ I Parakeets. Jncludel a EUJ'OPtaA cl h•• lmmed.lalt opeolnp bl ltirap. wbtte, tl" '110, dealta, $20 ... Small caau. food ... OC • Rent a 1877 Etecutiv.• Loii (10 AMllt.ant anaaer'a Ir (4) l'ull·Ume Warehouse le vt cl• Su P er MI r a I• animal blow dryer 118. cetloriea 120 or beat Motorhome or Mini·
S.lN PollUOftll. ~uallrled people who know matntenanco, ~liver1". 1Uver1~rey 26" $180'. Call6IM480 -..., . . mot.orbome from Herb
l aablon fr kl I Good drhU'll record. Both • nt cond. Call • Friedlander. Call any of are oo n1 or permanent H••~Y IUdn1. NON· -& ....... _ ..._ poaJtlon• II\ Ult• & mana1tinent; !MOK.ER. -ontni .. _ Geor~• 492·0910 dy1, Dyne-am. tint way of ~ 0.-1090 .._num ... rs bac!f1round In laahien la nece11. Salary + "" UH .. 17.tvtl. exettiainJ uun~· ......... ;.-.ttt-;....... 191-6777
commlttioo + pfCltll•a..arina. 1\iel&~e:tw:ao. 8ta.rt own bod)' w • • ..... ="°' l r7•7777 Call fct appt. soam.fpm Mon'\bru Set Plhr + owrtlme. ln· Lookln& for a home of new. 900/B.0. b ~ ,_.. • IJMUI
THE IW ........ »ll~Jl'lnu'L YOut own? You'll ftnd Cottel0.M>-1L111 -w.,.. 844-6508, 54D-4m 5 U • U ll · W l n do w manr hom• advertlaecS Svtntt couol• plHo. Dtst11!!11 JU&.D A\J'port for Hie lo Cla11Uled Have aomcWq to Mil? tikem.'780.
' !'!Punn,Clll, !!!!7d"1• I a.anectadadohwall. M0-106'
• •••••••••••••••••••••• RETAIL SALES
•59588 -
t 170 '74 ll&Jde Rotary, reg -••••••-••••••••••• au. abell, ma1s. ster
19'4 Stercreft berdtop tape. '3000/B.O. 962-•5·
i.,t tr1r. Slps a. Like RaDcbero, ••. w/sbell, If!· $1450. 833-1S77 GIU ... p, $1400.
549--0617.
'ft Cbfryy Pickup
·-·••••••••••••••••••• .-c>orbesloffer.
BARWICK DATSUN
...... • 11 ,I I \1
1 ! '
831-1375 49 J.JJ7S
'Front end dameged 19TO ___ m_-47_45 ___ 1
VW cemper, salvage
tiaJe. Ul80 WbitUer lfQ.
CM.MH719
'65 Chevy Pickup, •or best offer. 831-4745
WE BUY
CLEAHCAaS
&ftUCIS
HEW 71 CAMARO MBa.y ttlO>
115. per DIO. "°6 starts •••••••••••••••••••••••
• '5 El Camino PU, sharp, ........ S. euto, A/C, P/S, P/B. ................ •• ••••• SJ.875 4M-a849 ._,.. 95101-:.;~·------1 ¥••••••••••••••••••••• '66 Dodge, 318 eng, &
....... •• ...., ...,. camper, $800.. .......... ~. ~ .._..,....,....re ..
.... 540-7559 v-9570
9520 .......................
'511 FORD, 6 cyl Station
Wgn. Can be seen aft ~
pm at 963 Oek St. Cll.
Mateolr.
'IAtcrealfH .. v.wca.. .......................
um Ford ~ ton truck
39,000 mi with 9\.it1
.......................
FULL S&ICT10N
OF lt71YAHS
IMSTOCIC
Z2ToCboose From
•Window Vans
•Van Conversions
-C.reoVans
•USTODAY!
CONNRL
CHEVROLET
2828 Harbor Blvd.
COSTA MES~
546-1200
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR
FOR TOP USED CARS
FOREIGN, DOMESTIC or CLASSICS
U your car is extra clean
see us first. IAU&IUICI(
292SHarbor Blvd.
Cost.a Mesa 979-2SOO
WE BUY ·
USED CARS
CALLGARTH •
Used Car Mgr
54().5630
1011\SO\ & SO\
• UNCOLN ·MERCUR't'
. .
CREVIER
&I ST a UOADWAY
SAMTA AMA
835·317 1
THll UU'IMATa OllMMO MACHIHf
•USEDIMW1•
'7120024 spd (75314 >
'73 Ba varla Auto 633J HR
'73 2002 48pd 3e9KBV
"7S 630l Auto. t916M1V >.
'752002411pd.SR.137MUK
'76 2002 48pd Air <MOREV
'7732UAS/R 177RSK
Cloeecl 0. S.lldcrys
camper, bathrm & 26 HARBOR BLVD shower sell contained, --------1 26 '72 BMW Bavaria, $5,500
dual batteries, engine 78Ford Van, Econo 150, ~ COSTA MESA auto, air, stereo. xlnt
air, roof air, camper T, AM/FM, 8 trk stereo, cood. 645-4066 , eves &
jacks, dual exhaust.. big air, .PS. PB, comp)~· WE I UY SUnd.6'4-5618720W. l7tb
1974 M1% 4SOSE
Complete with stereo,
pwr. windows A'. with On· ly 34,050 low miles.
(142.LJW). .
1975MIZ210C
Stereo, cruis e control,
pwr. windows & door
loc ks-Truly a fin e
automobile! (826MIT).
We have a good selection ot otht1r rme M BZs In our
inventorY. Call todav !
MI S.SION.VlfJOfMPORTS
# ,, , I I ••-, . ... ' . . . . -·~
8JI 17.JB .49S.1704
complete aalea
end service
SUIAIU
llAT . s9900.,....
"" -owdcr'9dl• F r • • · f r • • s•-saoo.oo .....,.
wetcll wtltt ~ ef .,., .............
W on ApriUO. 1'711
17555 Beech Blvd.
Huntington BHch
842-0675 tires anU-sway bar & version + TV. Movang USS) CAaSl ...;St.:..:.:...CM~-·------~ cooler. Real clean must sell. Call aft 6PM. We're th~ n~ Cbev~let •69, Mlcbellns, Konis, '68 ~L. 2 tops, sharp, Toyota 9765
$7,995. See at 179 E. 1Bth n4·962-5042 dealership m the Jrvme AM/FM. apt sU whls. must sell. $9300. •••••••••••••••••••··~·
St,CM.548-1487 Dod.ce'73Van.couchbed, Auto Center. We need 4-ep, cmplt gauges, xlnt 673-6336or642-9666 llFOIEYOU
7 6 AATXl9
4cyl., alrCOlld., AM/FM,
8 tuck, low miles.
t974PJT) .
$4699
· Groth Che•rol~t
18211 ~och l l•d
Hy,.hnqlon ~och
847·6087 549.3331
'76 GllC Suburban • ~T.
every option, dual air.
reg gaa. $7800/B.0.
982-295.
71&CAMIMO
Only 600 miles! 'V6, auto ..
power ateOing, Really
Nice! t'Ser.409123 ).
SS4tt
Groth Chevr'>let
I 821 I ~och ll•d
Hynhnqlon 1 .. och
847 -6087 549-3331
leate. Car $5139. ()pen ORANGECOUNTY'S
end $2808. 36 month sum MEWIST
$3625.;. _...,E IMS,,,._ IJNCOLN-MERCURY
·-""' Dealership ii DOW OPEN FneCncltCllKlr RA y FLADBOI
filHllAL LINCOLN-MERCURY
CAI LEASING 16-1.8Auto~rrterDr •
556-0571 Newport SDFwy-Lake Forest alt
IRVlNE '88 CAM.ARO m 4 spd. 130.7000 ,
42.000 mi. $1600. Ph1---------
ges.oogs 72 Capri, lo miles, nu _ -.a.:... 9920 brakes. Radio, beat.er" -ctnwww clock. Must sell $1400. •••••••••••••••••••••• ~ 581 ""4563.
...;.:.:....;,.;__:.. ___ ~--
4 W11ft1 Drh" tSSO hiib backs, stereo, press your usedJcarO!E cood. S'l!JOO. 64.S-S507 aft 4. Mercedes 76. 4.!inSL. fully saL YOU8
••••••••••••••••••••••• water, galley, mor e. AC equi p'd, 41.000 ml. TOYOTA.
S3ll00.667<MO; 768-7582 ...... u .. C PHIRSO.... BMW 2002• '76, / ·sun· $19,500. Dys 955-0740;
l"'IA " roof, AM/FM Blaupunkt SEE us• _ ... _ I COSTAMISA '77 Ford Cbateau ElSO, CHE-OLET cua, well maintained. l)44.8890 evs. • 1976 AllC Ore ....... , 6 cy '98ChevyCaprice325. v-8 ·•A ~_...,..UISTOYOT• kpd.Zlmpg.SllOOTake ._........._ TOK-• ... . AMC-J• 10,000 mi's, all options, 21A~terDrive lmmec. 50,000 mi's. Mercedes8enz '76.4.5(6L, ,,__..,. ,,. over pymta or $2940 uuvu,let. ...,, ...... u .
1 1 .. c•r.• lac CUllm paint, under VINE $7300.Mooice675-1217 xlnt cond. 20.000 mil MISSlONVIEJO Cash.53f>.29Uaft 5 ...;$13:::::.:300:..;.-.·89U739...;._ _____
1
..W 71 Cun.ASS
SICM. per mo. $423 starts
lease. Car ~Open
end szm. • sum
$31119.
lOOpb.olau warranty,$8000.496-841.8 76 7222 Colt 9717 Sl&,000.675-4821 131·2ll04t S.l2IO lllcll 9910 71CAMAROLT
NII "74 Dodge, V-8, 318, P /S, ••••••••••••••••••••••• •'73 450 SL, dark red MEW71C&ICA •-•••••••••••••••••••• VS.. auto .. power suer·
TRADllMSOK ""c:.... Cllecls CHtBAL
CAILIASIM6 with the purebue of any P/B, iuuleted. $2995 . ..._ 1.,arted 77 COLT w/bamboo colored inter. S108. per mo. MU starts '73 Buick Ltd. F\dl power, ing, air cood .• tUt. only
oewJeepwtthtbiaad. OllJ umtlyou reach me. -·••••••••••••••••••• $3000. 1198-5057 Cruise cntrl & new tires. lease. Car $5721. Open x1nt ccod. $2200/bst ofr. 1300mi. <Ser..5a4378).
OVBITOCICIDI 675-3060-G-• a1 970 t Pvt Ply. 673-8880. end $3146. 36 mo. sum -.mo $6299 556-0571 .......
82 now available. Call le • 7 t C b e v y V a n ••••••••••••••••••••••• W-t 720 ep.t 9746 S40'.5.
save$$$. c:ustocnized. All extras. '65 Austin Mini Cooper..S. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• TUDE IMS Oil 7 0 ....._ fWo ttS7
77 MONTE CARLO
VS.. auto., power steer-
ing, eir cond., rellye
wheels. vinyl top.
t~MT>.
.......................
74RUMAaOUT COSTA MES~ low miles. Custom paint. new eng, mech sound, * DRIVE A * 19 7 4 ope I M en ta . Fne Cnclt CMdl $1000 494-9837
AMC-J• S1250.988-7974 Bestoffer.Eves:M0-4117 ITILL * demaged, $950/ull fi84RA.L MIW 1971
252t Harboc' Blvd. '77 FORD Santana 460 Ad '707 * L part.a. 549--0211. 551·2152 CAa uAsl• luta( IRAl.5
COSTA MESA Ven. 138" wheel base, ....................... SAVE A LOT P.-geot 9741 55M S7 I Newport SJ.<r7. per mo. $426. starts
54t.a023 3700 miles. In warr till '7S Aud.i 1001..S. Bm w /tan ••••• ••••••••••••••••• • A &ease. Car 95600. Open
4 cyl., 4 apd., nd10,
beater. Decor packace
Lo miles. t485KSY>
$5399 $1999 .
SU ... __ ...... 10178. llc'd thru 11/78. 2 int. 38,000mi, radio, A/C, NEW 71 DIESB. '75A/CCoronCelaicwa aegoon". _.uto2.; end $2958. 36 month sum urn uan1 ...,. .. wan, new Bay windows, dlx entr nu tires. Xlnt coad. $3850. " .. -
off road tires, 27,000 ml, l pelnt. Air• era cntrl, 673-4990 $143 per mo. $525 starts $3295. 546-5732 $t081 TRADE INS ot( Groth Che.,roleol
I 8211 ~och ll•d..
Hu1thnqlon l<'o<h
7 3 squaaa WfiN
Auto .. air cond., luggage
ra c k . Low miles.
tHIPCW>
ownr, brwn w/tan lot. AM /FM 8 track, cstm lease. Car $8376. Open
M.:m. 49M7'4 whia & Ures, padded intr, '7l Audi LS 100 2 dr radio. end $4158. 48 months sum VolcaWOIJlft 9770 Free Cnclt Cllldl
al ... __ • __ A/C .,..,,,.,Firm oca I~ ..,.,..,5. ••••••••••••••••••••.••• r-. ...... ~ 1974 GllC Jimmy, white, 4 reclloing seats, um --.-...,.,., ~· ., .. , .., ___
many xtru, M500or beat sk1e pipes & much more. 673-5327 ~-~o.... TRADE IMS 01 WE IUY & SELL CAil LEASltitfi •11 Kin11wood Wagon .
$1999 847·6087 50-3331
...6.. uaoo:-Call (714) 1-682-3647 aft 6 '7 F Audi b i ... _ ~·· " tr--CrecltCheck vousw ... G~s 5r.1. -11 Ma-rt very "ood cond, new ...... _.__ Pll orl785-3S'71dys 4 ox ' m, ........ IMSTOclFOR n-wwfi84ERAL ._ ~ -a .._. ... _.. steelbe'ltedradials,auto,
'7SRmepdeV-3,2e,OOO . • . a~llkAM/FM,f1~·<:;1 ........... _.Rftl_..TE CAllLEASIMG LargestSel~!<:o C =1c 9915 P /SJ P /B, A /C,
Groth Chevrolet
I 8211 ... ...,h l••d
H u1th"9f°" l "CK ~ miles ~ SELL Idle ltem.s wilb a nu, e new. au · ~ A '6I llnUTbeG Area. 56. · 99 ••••••••••••••••••••••• S13Q01oestoffer. 839-8306 · m:-Dally Pilot Clusified Ad. $!850. 75&-9'40 DB.IVERY 556-0571 Newpori
Alllos. Mew 9100 Aa1tos, Mew 9800 Aafos. Mew tlOO SALESSERVICE POl"ICM 975b COMDU..) fit ~•••••••••!!!.~ My friends tell me. ~·m
847-6087 50-3331
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• PARTS-LEASING ••••••••••••••••••••••• '70 IUG $199 '77 Cordova, all power, crazy, but I , am 11.vm1
'76 91JS, white w/blk int. (021BEJ> air tilt. AM /FM sterec away my 75 Pint o E'RE WHEELlllll..I' & DEAU.,.'11111 AM /FM cass. mags, $45 per...tll tape road whls Runabou1forool)'Sl750.
S
'i*RI•" SALE~ " ··· I 21MSHARBOR BLVD. Si.T~ ~·ii· rc::t ~c::,~l ~~ ~s01i>e~~;·: ~~::!!!.·· ~~s~e~ole~:~·= :"1~1'2. ,,,, 54M4 I 0 54CM}2 I 3 Mon-Fri. 549-7541· pay back·SlOll0.00 lo 2' ~--673-6Sl0 ••~••••••••••••••••••••
MEW 7 8 924 months. • 9930 1974 PlJ. Satellite Sta.
Sl89 per mo. $620 starts WEST GERMAN OVER I 00 ....................... Wag. 9 n ·· PIS. P /B,
lease. Car $11.800. Open IMPORTS '73MarUV. Cartier, gold. Air, G . tires, trHs. 1111..1ow IN STOCK• end $6834. 48 month sum CADILLACS wbt 1eatb 1ntr. Loaded' ~;rfutcl!~ cs.:'~~ ON ALL MODELS " • · tll616iRADE•Hsoec ~r4;'4wi·20· ToCHOOSeFROM ~~ood. $4500.call 1nc1. 0ooc1 Coad. a.aoo.
COME IN NOW! BUY OR LEASE Free Cnclt CIMdl '70VW Bug. AM/FM cess, AT ALL TIMES Conette 9932 9'21 & Orange, ~.A.
YOUR .... EW 1978 DATSUN TODAY! fHHEllAL new redials. brk:s. Xlnt Nabers .. ••••••••••••••••••••• •Plymouth Valiant. '72 4
" CAllLIASIMG cond.644-U45 •CORVETI'ES ~~· Pvt party.
556-0571 Newport im 144, 4-dr aUck. Xlnt CadiJJac 19781 ff65
1978 011a1n 8210 2 Or. Fully fectory equipped. se month aoen end leaN.
Equal montt1 s-vmenta of sea.eo month plus tu. Vehlol• vatu• 1353-4.00.
Pav only 1143,99 to tek• ~lvecy on llOPt'OY9d credit. Totel IHM ~rnent
126&3.&4. Option at end of,, ... 119'3.&2. ca7991e).
'11 210Z 2+2, loaded, MIW7191 I cond. $2650. AA 6 & all NICESELECTION! ~ .......... ••••••
cleen1 13,000 mi, t.eke $'298 per mo. $895 starts wknd. 963-0254 2600 H.irhor Blvd. HOWAID Cl9e•roMt '70TEllPEST4-DR
over ise Sl84 mo+ $500 1.eaae. Car $19,539. Open PRIVATE PARTY Co\IJ M.:w 540-9100 DOVE•QUAJLSTS. •$295•
caab.830-6'mat'l6. end $12,130. 48 month '70 VW Squereback, ~MacArthur, Jam· 631·3790
-sum $15,080. a~ve, maa wheels, -boree & Bristol)
allZ. '78. 2 + 2, only 2600 TIA.DI IMS ot( nice car! $1050. a.sk for '72 Cad Sedan de VIiie NEWPORT BEACK MEW 71 ,._., oril mi's, 3 yr warr. MackKin" 552-61'4 ed -oc *'02 ....... at.arts lower than dealer's FneCncltClledc .,. Leatber. Loed .. l '78CORVETTE ... per mo. -
price. 963-7171/968-8654, &BIBA.L ·119 VW reblt eng, PM Call7S&-0901 W,Pacecar. !:r~r31Js::!tb°rW:
eves. CAaLIASIMG caaHtt. Ruoa good. CADILLAC PP. C714)ste>-75S8Ken 092
M1W 7 e 210% 556-0571 Newport Sl005. Ca!!,5-7396 SIVIUIS t93J TuDt IMS OI
~ea~t=. = ~~C:.'~.=~ '7l "!J't~~i 30TOCHOOSE MIW 71D 7 ,,_=:--=r778· • montb aum Xlotcood. Evea830-979S. ~ spm wkdays & Full power. fadory au 194. per·mo. $414 starts CAaLIASIM6
-·-tMSOIC ........ 9755 Wlr:ndsr cood., stereo tepe. C.B .. &ease. Car ~740. Open 556-4571 New,.. ,.,.,_ cnlile ccmtrol, sentinel It md ~. 36 moath sum ~... 9970 ,,_~CMdr ....................... 65 BAJA 1900, new clutch auto. dimmer, reer df'A $3:587. Til•lltf._..
...... TESTDRJYEOUlt "brakes, roll bar, CB, f<>11er. firemiat pain~ TlADllMS otC ...................... .
CAILIASI• 'UCAR custloLS137S.MZ·289'7 wlre wheel covers It FNec:n.ltctieck MIW71T·..OS
mites es low .. 800. ...,. .._._ a&a.rta INoOl7l .._..,.... Of THI YEAR" 'GSVWSquareback,oeeda (278NDN>.Pricedfrp eaaAL -per mo. -
Good inventory in stock. wort s.wo. OMI. y $1H5 CAI LIASIMG =--~ eS::u. °::: 'Tl 210 z. 4 apt, A/C, Hurrywbiletheylut! Ml-1757 • 55'-0l71 Newport m10. AM/Fii ,tereo/tape. MllAQ.I ALLEH S 0 I
IAluvrea. 111Dt. '8300 or T 19S7 BaJe B111. 54,000 ml, ~ tt3S TI A 0 I IM •-L.-....,..r•--.-'-MADA19-..AUL s•-r clean, heve to see Olds/Cadillac/GMC __,.. ---. ....::-v-.v .... .....,,...,, ,.......... ~ Exit ••••••••••••••••••••••• .....c....~
2UOHarborBlvd. It ! $1400.61~ S.D. Frwy.-Avery •88 ""'·-er. n-brakes, ea mu i4 BZl.O, bristol condition, COSTA MESA LAGUNA NIGUEL ~• ---
e1buaodroowofk,i' l,oAutvCe,re0du 64S.5700 '58Jq, re_hl!l.tenfine, 17141495-6430 tra.os, mars. tires lc fmt CAllUASt• • -=-~~new. Very 556-0171 ... .,.... dres. $2295. f1'1s.1184. ... bra 975, 548-•1. ''" c~c :\_:;:;:::::.-~;::;_ ______ .;.~~~~~-r--"T.--lln-.... '7~ ""n"' lo ml ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••n ..... '"' .. t..__. ltllDOl,..DO '88n...t-D-... 6cyl runa v.. "74
;r -pd~',N,700. ' •tOEALERINU.S.A. ~si5.".,,..... Goldwttb;b)t';top&tan ~ ... ~ '· ;;•.;:t;~:.·;:; n~*l..r.mi.11 W-7393 ROY &6-1"7 intertor. A real nitt car 548~ ad *800/trade tot Trvl
lmide6:outl C271NWS>. ·-"-•'""' .., ... p ! ...-:;.-..1 ·m Dataun 510 Wgo. Semi CAR\ ER Lc11uometblnfi:,tuble? OHLY l77S Pord tt40 u_._.....,_ ...
MW •nt 6: trans. Not ROllS·ROYCl Place an ad o..ir Loet • .-.. !•••••••••••••••••••••• '74 K.ambac:\, -·• toe --•·· szoo 151 M01 end Found cohamne. _. ~ ....-~ ...... ·-• • 1MOJ.1191Mn• ......... 1 w .... _ _.e 1--.L. -• lll88 Ford Falrlane 1urf'IDI, rwa ~ ~
..... ,.,, ... "' £..-·-~---~ teOO. needs wort. S100/B.O, rlod wbat 1VU wut lo ..,.... ~..I~~~ IOI.ind an S4$-86T8 ell SPll Ev..••_, i-=:::l.-l.:;o;.-11 Delly PUotCl...utedf. ClOSIDWNOAYS -uw .,...,
'
,7
7
Afternoon
N.Y. Steeb
I ,,
j VOL 71, NO. 108, 3 SECTIONS, 30·PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1978 TEN CENTS'
' I
1 Coastal 1'rash GoDectePS Go en Strike
By JACKIE llYJIAN Cl' .. ....., .......
Truck drivenr'ror a number cl
Orange County traab colledioft "
firms went on strike at midal.8bt
Monday, leaving several Orange
~Coast cities without rubbish col·
lection
Affected are Huntington
Beach. Fountain Valley, Costa
Mesa and Lq\ma Beach, along
with Anaheim, Orange, Santa .
Ana, Garden Grove, f'Ullert.on
and Buena Park.
Those clUet contract wJth
)>rlvate firms to coUect ~
rubbish. CiUea that em'loy Ulelr
truck drivers dlreetly. such .a
Newport Beach, were not af.
rected.
In emergency action today,
Orange County supervisors vol·
ed to open to the public during
working hours trash transfer
stations at wbicb couirty trucu
normally collect refuse from the
private truclas.
The only ltation on the Orange
Coast ls localed in HuoUngt.on
Beach on Gothard Street Just
south of Talben Avenue. It will
be open. effective today. from 1 a.m. to4p.m.
Gene Rauch, president of
Teamsters Local 396, said
negotiaUons that began March 4
reached an impasse Monday
night, when the drivers' three.
year contract explred.
He said be bu no idea bow
long the strike may last. A pre-
vious strike continued for tbree
weeks.
Raasch said conllict cent.era
on wage and benefit luuea.
He aald the driven are cur-
rently paid $&.50 an hour and
bave asked for a $2 ao bour l'alae
the first year and $1 an hour the
second and third years.
The firms have offered 50
ceota the first year and 30 cents
the second and third years,
Raasch sai_d.
. Raasch said members also
want dental coverage and five
days of s1ck leave per year. He
said they currently have none. ln
addition, drivers want a require-
ment that they be sent three
' warning letters before they are
dismissed . Currently, Raasch
sald, no warning letters are re-
quired.
He said employers have of·
fered one additional holiday per
year and a slight adjustment in
the vacation schedule. Drivers
get one week per year after one
year of service, two weeks after
three years and three weeks
(Sff DRIVERS, Page AZ>
She·nklllan Elected BB May~r
\ ..
• ~
,.~..,.,....
'LOVE SLAVE' SUSPECT JOYCE MC KINNEY
Will the Mountie• Get Their Woman In C.nada?
2 Fleeing Suspects
Sought by Mounties
OTTAWA CAP) -The Moun·
ties a r e looking for Joyce
McKinney and Keith May, who
fled from Britain to Canada to
escape trial on charges of kid·
napping a young Mormon mis·
sionary.
The Royal Canadian Mounted
Pollce alerted its offices to look
for the pair after being informed
by Interpol that they took an Air
Canada flight from Shannon,
Ireland, to Montreal and Toron-
to on Wednesday wearing wigs
and posing as deaf·mutes.
Miss McKinney. 27. of Min·
neapolis, N.C .. and May, 24, of
Maywood. Calif., are charged
with kidnapping Kirk Anderson,
21, of Provo, Utah, white he was
doing missionary work in Bri·
• .
Coasl
Wea l b er
Fair through Wednes·
day and a little warmer.
Lows tonight 52 lo 58.
Highs Wednesday 64 to 70.
INSIDE TODAY
Corttgfdor, tM ditarlfl con·
aecrottd eortlt lo which
Douglcu MacArthurN, has Meo~ o . mecc or
JOJ)CMW tourist&. Sn •
A7.
. •
lain and imprisoning him in a
cottage last September.
Anderson, who had been Miss
McKinney's former boy friend,
claimed he was kept chained to
a bed and forced to have sexual
intercourse with her three
times.
The woman, a former beauty
contest winner in Wyoming,
testified at a preliminary
hearing that she played bondage
games with the young mantohelp
him sort out his sexual prob-
lems, but unslsted he was a will·
Ing participant an4 that she "dld
lt all for love."
Miu McKinney and May were
out oo bail awaiting an ap-
pearance May 2 in London
c'riminal court. They reported to
police there Wednesday, as re-
quired by their bail conditions,
then vanishf!d trom the north
London bOuse where they were
living.
U&iflg the names Joan O'Con·
nor and Anthony McGowan, both
deceased, they went to Shannon,
where Air Canada official John
Noran reported: "The couple
used acribblecl notes to tell me
they 'fttff' cJue k> lite part in a
mimed play In Toronto."
The ctew or the Air Canada
(See SEX, Pase AZ)
School8 Set
Open J)o118e8
Teachers at two Huntington
Beach high scboota have
scheduled open ~use eventa for
parents Wednelda)t nl&ht.
Parents ol atudenta at Edlaon
Hilb School may tour
cla11room1 and talk wtth
teachers rrom 7 to 9 o'clock.
Parents ot Marina mah School
students may tour the North
Hu.ntlnctoci Beach campus from
7:30 p.m. 'n.e school 1ta1e band
will perform in the cafeteria at t
o'clock.
Five Honored
HB Veteram Leave Poata
Huntington ·Beach paid an
.emotional farewell Monday
night to five veteran elected of.
ficlals who put in a collective 54
years of service to the city.
Making their swan songs after
Tuesday·s elections were Ted
Bartlett, Al Coen, Norma Gibbs
and Harriett Wieder from the ci·
ty council and former city al·
tomey Don Boofa. ,
Bartlett, who was bowing out..;
after 20 years on the council, re-
ceived a standing ovation from
a n audience that spilled over
from council chambers into an
adjoining conference room.
He said later that it was one of
the nicest things ever lo happen
to him.
Bartlett was introduced by
Mayor Pattinson wbo called him
.. Pappy, my friend, and I love
him.''
Bartlett, 75, said that the
fmeat people tn the world live ln
lfuntington Beaeb .. whether
they vo&ed for me or not.
"J da._'t Imo• of any who
antt't l'ft1 tlt.nds," be said. "I
don't want any enemies. I would
be afraid ol them and I am too
oldie> run." • Many tn the audience smiled,
but there were a few tears too.
Bartlett came to the city in the
19208 to gel a job in the oil fields
lo finance a limber claim in
Oregon.
"I intended to stay for just a
s hort time, but I never left," he
said. "I've never had a bad day
here."
He was fll'St elected to the City
... ...........
GOOD WILL AMBASSADOR
Hunllll~ .. rtld
Council ln 19" and served the
past 12 conaecutlve years oa the
council before his defeat last
week.
As its last official act, the old
council named Bartlett to be the
first good will ambassador, em·
powered to represent the city at
various occasions.
•·1 ·11 do anything I can to
serve," Bartlett said this mom·
ing.
Sales Alleged
Arraignment Due
In FV Drug Probe
Court arraignment was
scheduled today for two young
adults among six people arrest·
ed in a crackdown on what
Fountain Valley police allege is
a main *>Urce of drugs for local
leen·agers.
. Investigators using two agents
recruited from outside the area
lo minffle among Fountain
Valley High School students took
four of the suspects, all
juveniles, Into custody Monday.
The two adults, ldentlfied as
Doug Brockett, 19, of 17542 Jef·
ferson Lane, HWltington Beach,
and Noel McCutchean, 18, of
8969 Nightingale Ave., Fountain
Valley, were arrested last week.
Bail is $10-,000 for McCulchean
and $5,000 for Brockett. both or
whom remained ln custody at
Orange County Jail pending ar·
raignmenl in West Orange Coun·
ty Judicial District Court.
They and the juveniles were
arr~sted on charges or
possession of dangerous drugs
for sale and the minors, one
aged 15 and three 16. were
booked into Orange County
Juvenile Hall.
Detective Sgt. Terry
Taveinetti of the Special En·
foroement Detail sald the In·
veatlgatlon spanned about six
weeks, ln wb.lcb drua purchases
were allegedly made from the
IUIPffla. He said one undercover aaent
worked lo an Intelligence role,
trying to learn who could, would
and perhaps WU dealln& drup
on tbe Fountain Valley campus.
3ofQaad.Die
TOKYO <AP> -'Jilree ol the
quadrupltta born Mooday lD the
toutbwtltenl Japueae city ot
Ka10tblma died today.
The other allegedly made buys.
The investigation ended pre·
maturely, he said, with the ar·
rest or McCutchean and
Brockell.
··Word apparently leaked
out." Sergeant Tavemetu ex-
plained.
"We're sure they are just a
few or the many who deal like
this." he s aid of charees against
the s uspects. "We want these
kids to know we·re around and
on campus and will be in the
future."
Investigators who picked up
the four remaining suspects
about mid·morning Monday said
20 grams of marijuana, 26
tablets ot LSD and one metham-
pheta rnine stimulant pill were
purchased and analyzed.
Ta vernetti said authorltles
don't believe they have actually
arrested major drug dealers,
but that there are many small·
time operators on the campus.
Child Abose
Talk Slated
A spokesman from an antJ.
child abuse group will be the
featured speaker at
Wednesday's 7:30 p.m . Hunt-
ington Beach Nel1bborbood
Watch meetlq.
The crime prevenUon com·
munity croup will bold lts
monthly let-together In the Hunt· lnrton Beacb Police Audltoriwn, 2000 Malo St.
Jim Mead, a retlred Brea
poUceman and founder-dlrector ot the "For Kida' Sake" aotJ.
aboae prosram. will dbcus1
\larloua aapect1 of crlmea
a1aJn1t ct\lldren.
Deadlock
Solved on
3rd Vote
By llOBER'I' BARKER oe .. o.itr,.....S&lff
Huntington Beach City Council
members put on a stirring show
before finally selecting Ron
Shenkman mayor Monday night
before a large and tense au·
dience.
The contest matched
Shenkman. who was in line for
the job after serving as m~or
pro tempore, and Richard
Siebert.
Siebert was the solid choice of
three new council members wbo
bad taken their seats earlier -
Bob Mandie, John Thomas and
Ruth Bailey.
Shenkman was backed by
newcomer Don MacAllister, out·
1011\J ma)'or 8oo Pattinson and hlmseU.
The ftnt M!Cl'et ballot eDded ln
a dead lock: t hree votes for
Shenkman . t hree votet for
Siebert and one abstention. The
abstain« was Siebert.
A second ballot was taken with
the same results.
MacAlllster then Implored bis
colleagues lo forget about
politics and select a mayor by
"proper progression."
Mandie urged the large au-
dience, wbicb was growing rest·
less, "to bear with us."
A third ballot was taken and
the deadlock was broken. The
final results were Shenkman 4,
Siebert 2 and one abstention.
Siebert, who supported the
concept of an orderly transition
to the largely ceremonial posi-
tion, was steadfast in his absten·
lions.
Pattins on, MacAllister and
Shenkman didn't budge either.
Mrs. Bailey and Thomas stuck it
out for Siebert. fl was believed
that the key switch was made by
Mandie in hopes that it would re·
solve the potential conflict.
(See MAYOR, Page AZ>
BB Resident
Dellf Pllet S&eft -
GETS JOB AFTER ALL
HB Mayor Shenkman
HB Council
DUsolves
Plan Unit
With rour oew members cast·
Ing votes for the first time, the
Huntington Beach City Council
voled Monday night to dissolve
the Planning Commission in an
effort "to have it reflect the in·
·terests of the city.··
The move lo wipe the slate
clean of planning commissioners
cam e on a 4 ·3 vote with
ne wcomers Ruth Bailey, Bob
Mandie and John Thomas join-
ing Richard Siebert in calling
for the disbandment.
Mayor Ron Shenkman and
Councilmen Ron Pattinson and
Don MacAllister voted to retain
the commission for the present.
Mandie. who spearheaded the
action, said today that the ruture
appointments wouldn 't be
political.
"We want free-thinking people
who a re not tied to special
groups and who will reflect the
interests of the city ... he said.
M andic had moved that the
com mission be disbanded after
Burned D • its scheduled meeting tonight. C Q1•Tln# but deferred action until May 3 ----e so that business could continue.
Gail in Sink
A Huntington Beach man dis-
carding what he believed to be
contaminated gasoline from bis
van into the kitchen sink Is
hospitalized today, after fumes
exploded Monday night, causing
a $20.000 fire al his home.
William Kerr, 30, who re·
portedly was just purchasing the
house at 8571 Merle Circle, was
listed in stable condition today
al the UC Irvine Medical Center
Bum Unit in Orange.
Investigators said he suffered
second and third degree burns
over about 10 percent of bis up-
per body. including his arms,
shoulders. face and mouth
areas.
l&nition of the gasoline rumes
by a stove or water heater pilot
light was blamed for the sudden
6 : 15 p.m. blaie which ripped
through KerT's residence.
"This is a classic case, one
that might do some good in
terms of educat.lng others," said
fire department Capt. Jerry
Abshier.
.. The fellow suspected there
was some contaminated gas in
his van and drained the tank. He
was pouring it down the kitchen
sink, which created quite an ac-
cumulation of vapors. They got
to the pilot light."
He aa1d the reaulUng devasta· tion or the home, which today ls
uninhabitable, was caused by a
swlltly movtnJr nash fire rather
than an outright aasollne ex-
plosion .
''I
Monday night's action
followed the resignation of Plan·
ning Commissioner Roger Slates
earlier in the day.
S I ates, who couldn 'l be
reached for comment, reportedly
stepped down for business re·
asons.
Another commissioner, Susie
Newman, also resigned Monday,
but was persua'ded to change her
mind so that the commission
could proceed with its business.
Other members who will
asked to resign include Ruth
Finley, Prim Shea, John Stem.
Ron Russell and Frank Hoff-
man.
Mandie said he was chiefly
concerned with efforts last year
to rezone part or the Gothard in·
dustrial corridor for residential
development.
New commissioners are ex·
peeled lo be appoihted next month
after a screening by City Council
members.
Two School Boards
Set Joint Session
Huntington Beach Union High
School District t rustees have
slated a joint meeting tonight
with offic ials from the
Westminster <e leme ntary)
School District.
The two school board!i will
meet together at 7:30 p.m . at the
Westminster School District
Board Room, 14121 Cedarwood
Ave., Westminster.
)
2 DM.YM.a'T
Market
"NEW YORK""JAP> Stock
prices halted lbe1r dramallc ~
ward chat(• Ill the put UlrM
se11lon1 tOday H many ln·
, veston sold luMI that Jumped
sharply in price d:urint the rally
':that began Thursday.
; The Dow Jonee •verap ol 30
industrial stocks at mid-day &osl
1 •.upoiQlstoeo.s.rr.
Declining issues Qut.oumbe.red
those that gained by about ' 3-to·l mar&in la acUve tracUng.
''The market has been down ror months and mall}' people
have been holding thelr'stock for
a long time hoping to 1et even or
to make a UWe profit. Now that
it's up, !hey are selling," said
John J . Smith, an analyst with
the Wall Street firm of
Fahnestock & Co.
The rally began Thursday,
when the Dow climbed 8.92
points. lt continued Friday and
Monday with record volume,
which pushed Ute Dow up nearly
another 35 points. It was fueled
. by foreign investors and large ·institutions such as insurance
companies and pension plans.
Analysts today said the large
investors were leas eager to buy
early in the session.
"This indicates the Institutions
have decided to step away and
let the dust settle a bit,'' said
Smith.
It is common for tbe market to
back off from sharp moverqents
either up or do~ experts note.
They add .that today's pause
does not necessarily mean the rally is over.
80cean View
,Pupils Win
County Hon o rs
Eight students in the Ocean
View School District will be
honored next month by the
Orange County Board of Educa-
tion with medallions eamed for
their prowess ln handwriting.
The four · m ember team
representing the · winners of
fourth-grade competition in
_. Huntington Beach's 24-scbool
district swept top honors as the
best handwrilers among all
Orange County public and
private schools.
Medallions in the Pen and
Quill competition, sponsored by
the county board, will go to
fourth graders Karen Blair and
Mandy Seino of Glen View School
and Lisa Numrich and Leslie
WaltersofVista View School.
Fi flh graders from the local dis·
tricl took a third place win in lhe
ro u n tywide com p ell ti on. <1mong them Diane Berry or
Glen View School, Leah Wright
or Lake View School, Denise
Turner or Spring View School
and Tamara Townsend or West·
monl School.
Fourth grader Karen Blair
came so close to edging out the
top handwriting winner In all
Orange County, judges said, that
they voted for a special award
for her as well.
The eight girls competed in
April at El Modena High School . ~ Competition in the county con-
test is limited to fourth and fifth
graders.
Froa Page Al
SEX •..
plane identified the pair from
color pictures sent anonymously
to the London Daily Mirror.
Miss McKin ney was wearing a
long-haired red wig, heavy
makeup. bright red lipstick and
blue-tinted glasses. May wore a ·
thick curly black wig and
glasses. The photos were accom·
panied by death certificates for
Miss O'Connor and McGowan.
(
OAANQ!COAST Hf
DAILY PILOT
~~::.~::,~;·r,::.:::~~= ~~:=·=:.~~~:;,~c:,~~
NWllW ,._,woor1 &f.C.~. H\lfttl""'°" 9e«"lf".hlf\ t##ll Y.tll•f hWl"f'. '•d!t~k VeHey e"d
"-lloOCft \ooltftC..\I A~r-4M<
'""' to\ ~·"'" S.t«d ... \ ...., ~n.. '"' .,._,,... _l.,.1"11 pl""t I• el lit '#HI ...
\lrOel C0\1•"'-"' Golil-•-11_11 _
~--_.. °"""' lll<•"'tt_l_O.-.. __, -··1(-Edlto< '-•AM ......... 11Mft"9'"9(dolt' o ........ ~ .._,., .. ,.
"'""""'"""--· --"""'''°'_c;o.....,rdlw
Huntlnaton •11e1t Office r1t1r .. .c11-.,,. .. ,.,. ,._.,. ~ o .... ,..._
Office• ~~":!.~"~=~-""911_, 1101 .. ,• U'lt1La...,1llo.d
ot$MIOI_,_,,,
T .. ephone (7l4)1Q.Q21
CIHeKi.ct Advertlllftt tu.Mn
l'rom Nartlo0.-(h.,MV~ll'" 14()..1220
c. ....... "" Or-C:.0•1 ,.,,..,.,..~ :;1 •• ~.r·~':ft~~~r:'':~..t ..._ ... -.
"•Prffw<•f •II....,, •.-c.1•1 "'M'"*' •t .._...,...,,_
*""" ct•" Mtt•,. oe•f ~ ~ti lliltu (•lltttflU• ,, ... \(t1fftftft bf Ctfrl~• '1 M -t~ly b¥ "'•" M M -~ly millt•'Y
-·--Ut0-IM¥
Cops don't lose their sense of humor, even w-ben up to
their armpit.I lo automobUes. dlreeUoa tratttc at poet of· f\c~ on Uae lllPL ot Lhe deadlloe ror nnna U .s. and at.ate
lncome tu retul'M. ' "What's your 1t1lu. , •. 1 .. ooe patrolman radioed his
buddy assJsned to direct traltlo at the maln Sant.a Ana post
office wb6n it was Umt to Me8 ror dinner Monday night. .
0 MAll.&IED,''G8VMPEDT8Ebaruaedpe>!lceQWl.
"Yeah, I got the aam• problem,'' replied hi• tellow of·
fieer. who could •l least fl'""' Ula' 's one mor. tu 4educ-lion.
"I'm uo here 1n th1a horror lbow, direc::tiDC traffic,"
the second Santa Ana pollcemu explalned ov.er b1a radio.
He was oneotmanyqrficera on duty at cent.r~ Ora.nit CoWltY
~toraceaas midnlabt bore down on franUot.upayen.
"EVERY YEAR, WB bave Ullt prc>blem," Santa Ana
Postmaster ClaytonB•kkeconfirmed today ..
Long Unes were reported at other Orange Coast postal
facilities where clerks were assigned to remain on duty un·
t1l midniaht to accept and postmark tax return envelopes.
"Snmf>tlmes we even aet them after midnidlt." said
Santa Ana Postmaster Bakke.
Garde n Grewe V ieti•
Westminster Death
Suspect Arrested
A youthful s uspect police
claim they have linked to the
murder of a racquetball player
at Sigler Park in Westminster
Sunday night was jailed today.
Robert Ortiz Jr .• 20, of 6952
Hazard Ave., Westminster, was
booJ<ed for investiga'tion of
murder following his 10:20 p.m.
arrest at the home or an ac-
q ua in tance near the slaying
scene.
Police U. Joe Woods said no
motive bas been established yet
for the killing of Santos Frank
Chavez, 20, of Garden Grove. ,
Chavez was shot once in the
chest at point-blank range on the
racquetball courts at Sigler
Park, 7200 Westminster Ave .,
where he was playing a match
with his brother, Alfredo.
Orange County Jail authorities
said Ortiz is being held in lieu of
$250,000 bail pending arraign-
ment and a possible bail reduc-
tion hearing.
Investigators are expected to
seek a formal complaint from
FVShooting
Victim Off
Critical List
Shooting victim Daniel Jones,
30, blasted in the back at a
Fountain Valley industrial plant
Friday morning, bas improved
and is now off the critical list,
Fountain Valley Community
Hospital spokesmen said today.
Jones is listed in serious condi·
lion still ' and is expected to re·
main in the intensive care unit
at least through the week.
His alleged assailant, co·
worker Patrick Foster, 26, or
Los Angeles, was arrested at the
scene Raytheon Service Com·
pany: 18300 Euclid St. and
booked for investigation Of as·
sault with intent to commit
murder.
Jones, a Fountain Valley resi·
dent, bad worked with Foster
who joined the company only
about two months ago and ap.
parently friction developed
between them, police saJd.
the Orange County District Al·
torney's OHice Wednesday,
charging Ortiz with Chavez'
murder.
Funeral services for the vie·
Um are pending at a Long Beach
mortuaty.
fi',....P~AJ
MAYOR •••
The three new council mem·
bers inclicated that they felt last
Tuesday's election showed that
voters wanted a change and that
is why they wanted to dump
Shenkman.
Arter his election, Shenkman
paid tribute to Siebert.
Shenkman also said that an
arllcle in an Orange County
magazine which depicted bil'Jl as the busy mayor of Huntington
Beach earlier in the month was
a catalyst ror the uprising.
He said the article which was
written about three months ago
was a disaster.
"How it happened I don 't
know," be said.
·'I ask now that all the
rhetoric be over." he said. "God
bless you all."
Siebert was the unanimous
choice for mayor pro tempore.
He said that be is dedicated to making city government and ci·
ty hall open to everybody.
Health Fair
AtFVSchool
Fountain Valley High School
Parent-Teacher·Student As·
sociation members will hold a
health fair during the school's
open house Monday.
The health fair. slated from 9
a.m. lo 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m ..
will include exhibits by Fountain
Va lley Fire Department
paramedics. ambulance drivers
and various disease prevention
groups. The fair will be hou.sed
ln the cafeteria.
The open house for parents
will be held from 7 to 9 p.m.
Teachers will meet with in·
terested parents in their
classrooms.
'Holocaust' Gains
2nd-night Audience
NEW YORK (AP) -The
secon<l part of NBC television's
four-part drama "Holocaust"
about the Nazis' campaign to ex-
terminate the Jews was watched
by more people than the first
part and rar outdistanced com·
petition in New York and Los Angeles, preliminary reports
show . (Related story, A12 )
The rating service Arbitron
reported that Monday night's
two-hour segment was watched
by 37.2 percent of all New York
City homes with television, com·
pared to 8.2 percent watching
A BC and 16.2 percent tuned to
CBS.
The fir st cha pter of
"Holocaust" Sunday rught got a
29.7 rating but that was for three
hours.
F ,.....Page A I
DRIVERS •••
after 10 years. The change,
which he said ts acceptable.
would be to allow three weeks
after ei41tt years.
Raasch said drivers also want
a change in the artevance Pl'O·
cedure to match the one used ln
Los Angeles.
He said drivers have twice
voted down employer offers.
In Los Angeles, Arbitron said,
32. 1 percent of all television
hou se holds watched
"Holocaust," while 7 .5 percent
watched ABC and 12.l watched
CBS. On Sunday night, NBC
drew a 27. 7 rating.
The percentages do not add up
to 100 because many television
sets were tuned lo other stations
or not turned on at all.
NBC reported that telephone
calls il received in New York
and Los Angeles on Sunday
night were almost evenly split
between praise and complaints.
New York had 388 favorable
calls and 368 complaints. Los
Angeles had 122 favorable calls
and 111 complaints, plus another
214 protesting the number or
commercial interruptions.
Ten unlformed American
Nazis and about 25 civilian sym-
pathizers ·marched in protest
against the series Sunday out-
s Ide NBC's Burbank head·
quarters.
ln New York. about 20 people
ldenllfled as belonging to the
Rld1ewood group of QueMs,
composed of Oerman-
Amerlcana, demonstrated out-
side NBC's maln offices. They
carried ~cardl HYlnt "NBC is
Antl·ChilsUan." DemonatraUon.1
an both cities were without lncl·
dent.
'W Bse
~Nixon
Tape OUt
WASHINGTON (AP> -The
U.S. Supreme Court barred the
public today rrom llsteoine to
the 30 White House t.pe record·
lngs pll)'ed at the Wateraate
cover-up trial of aides to former
President Nixon.
The court's 7·2 decision re·
versed a 1976 ruling by the U.S.
Cll'eult Court of Appeals that
would have made the tapes
available to the three com-
mercial television networks,
public television and a recording
company planning to sell copies
-or the tapes for home use
··Consid e ring ;~ t b e
circumstances of Ws c<>trceded-
ly singular case, we hold that
the common-law right or access
lo judicial records does not
authorize release of the tapes in
question," Jusllce Lewis F.
Powell Jr. wrote ror the court's
majority.
The ~urt 's ruling is a major
legal victory for Nixon, who
persistently challe nged the
tapes' release as an invasion of privacy.
Joining Powell's opinion were
Chief Justice Warren E. Burger
and Justices Harry A.
Blackmun, William H. Rehn·
quist and Poller Stewart.
All but Stewart were appointed
to the nation's highest court by
Nixon.
Justices William J . Brennan
Jr. and Byron R. White did not ag~ee with au of Powell's rea·
soning, but they also voled to
bar release of Lbe tapes.
Dissenting were Justices
Thurgood Marshall and John Paul Stevens.
"Needless to say, we're
gratified with the decision," said
William H. 'Jerrress Jr .. who
argued the case for Nixon before
the Supreme Court.
Transcripts or the tapes were
publicized . during the 1974 lrlaJ
or former Attorney General
J ohn Mitchell and ex-While
House aides H. R. Haldeman
and John Ehrllchman.
FV Council
Eyes Jarvis
Resolution
Fountain Valley City Council
members plan tonight to vote on
a proposed resolution opposing
the J arvis-Gann property tax
limit initiative. known as
Proposition 13 on the June 6
ballot.
The council will meet at 8
o'clock at City Hall, 10200 Slater
Ave.
If approved by the voters,
Proposition 13 would mean a
loss of $2 million in Fountain
Valley city tax revenues, of·
ficials said.
The Jarvis measure would
limit property taxes to one per-
cent or home market value.
Councilman Bernie Svalstad,
who proposed the anti-Jarvis res-
olution, said he felt the council
should take a stand on the con-troversial measure "to show
citizens how it will affect them if
they ~ide lo vote for it and suf· ·
fer the consequences."
Svalstad said the Jarvis
measure would mean "les&"
services, less city employees
and major problems in the
future in com batting inflation.··
Ultimately, Svalstad added,
the measure would mean a loss
or local control.
°"'" ""' ~ .... IMPOSSIBLE TASK?
Coneuttant Newcomer
HBSclwol
Board Asks
For Member
By RAYMOND ESTRADA JR.
OI ... C>ellr l'tlet l&.H
A plea for West Orange Coun· ty residents to apply for a va-
cant Huntington Beach Union High School District trustee post
was underscored by the lack or a
quorum at Monday night's
school board meeting.
Only two of the remaining four
trustees were on band to discuss
selection of a new board
member to succeed former
Trustee ~ MacAllister who re·
signed officially Monday.
MacAllister was elected to lhe
Huntington Beach City Council
last week and was seated Mon-
day night.
Trustees Doris Allen aod John
Hundley were unable to attend
Monday's school board meeting.
Hundley was in Sacramento on
business and Mrs. Allen -Was UJ,
officials said.
Board President Zita Wessa
and Trustee Helen Dille met
with the blue ribbon selection committee anyway.
Former Newport-Mesa
schools chief Leland Newcomer.
hired as chairman or the selec·
lion unit, said May 1 will be the
deadline for residents to apply
for the appointive board post.
N,wcomer said he and the
four-meml>er panel, one member chosen by each remain-
ing trustee, plan to choose one of Lbe trustee candidates by May 12
and recommend Lhe peraoo to
the school board. Newcomer said this unique
procedure was suggested by
Trustee Hundley to save the
school district the cost or an
$80,000 special election.
But the panel chairman ad·
milted, "The board has given ~
a darn near impossible task" to
choose a candidate within a 30-
day period.
If a new trustee is not selected by May 17. officials said, a No-
vember special election would
be required.
Newcomer told the two board
members present Monday
trustee applications will be
available at the seven district
high schools. public libraries
and the district office. 5201 Bolsa
Ave .. Huntington Beach.
Superintendent Jake Abbott
asked the selection unit to re-
quire one promise Crom their
nominee. "That is that he or she
will stay on tbe board for a full
term," Abbott said, tongue in
cheek. "I have seen 11 different
board members during the past
3"2 years," Abbottobserved.
Service s
Slated • i
Funeral Mrvlcea for aviator
Frank G. Tallman JU wiU be
held Thuniday al St. Joachim's
Catholic Church in Colla lieu.
Mr. Tallman died Saturday
when bls Piper Allee plane
cruhed on a f'.UCpd &boulder ot
Saddleback M'oiiiitaln dll!ina a flight from Oaldand to Orange
County Airport. .
Mass of Christian blllial is
acbtdultd for 2:30 p.m. Thurs·
day at St. Joachim'•· 196' Orange f've. Burial will be at
Pacl1k View Memorh•I Part. Corona &,1 Mar.
Officiating at the service will
be Bishop Juan Arzube of l.4S
Angeles and Monsignor Thomas
J. Nevin of St. Joachim's.
Mr. Tallman was one of the
world's best-known aviators and
movie stunt pilots.
He was reportedly returning
from scooting movie locations.
when the tragedy occurred. A
National Transportation Safety
Board investigator bas indicated
he found no physical defects in
Mr. Tallman's plane, but his re·
port is not yet completed.
Mr. Tallman leaves his wife,
Ruth , of Newport Beach ; his
son. Frank Glfrord Tallman IV
or Irvine; a dau1hter, Gail
Leake or Torrance; his. mother,
Inez Tallman of New Jersey; a
brother, Foster Tallman ol New
Jersey, and a sister, Trudy Jay
or La Jolla.
The family has aug1eated
memorial donations to the organ
fund at Hoag Memorial Hospital
in Newport Beach, to the alt.en·
Uon ol Rev. William R. Parry.
Checks sbould be made out to
the hospital .•
Both Sides
Woo Wavering
Treaty Vote.
WASHINGTON <AP) -Sup-
porters and foes of the Panama
Canal treaties opened late-hour
drives for a handful of wavering
votes today as the agreements
appeared to be withln two votes
of final approval or rejection.
President Carter met with one
undecided senator early today
and another announced be would
vote against the treaty turning
over the canal to Panama 1n the
year 2000.
An Associated Press count
showed 65 firm votes for ap-
proval, 32 again.st and three UD·
decided.
Supporters were given fresh
hope Monday when agreement
was reached on the issue of U.S. intervention rights in Panama.
Despite the agreement,
however, both si de s
acknowledged that this after-
noon's final vote remained in
doubt and would be extremely close.
If all 100 senators are present, 67 senators must vote for the
agreement Ir it is to be ap· proved.
A defeat would mean a major
foreign policy setback for Carter
and a further souring or his rela-
tions with Congress.
Another Kidnapped
MILAN, Italy CAP) -Three
men dressed in police uniforms
kidnapped industrialist Carlo
Lavezzari, 53, on the outskirts of
Milan early today, authorities
reported.
' New dally nonstop seNice from nearby Orange County airport.
}
Economical Sunjet Tours plus discount fares for families and groups.
Ry Air California and make it easy on yoursetf.
llR 9 CALIFORNIA
We 're easy to take.
Coll Air Collfomlo Re$6Notlons in Orange County. (714) 752..,1CXXl. Downey,
(213) 924}.3313. Laguna. (714) 496-6Cro; Los Angeles. (213) 627-5401, Son Clemente.
(714) 4~; Riverside/Son Bemordino. (714) 825-6900. or your tocol Travel Agent.
Cl\\~36
..
Today's Clo Ing
N.Y. Stoeks
l VOL 71, NO. 108, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES
ORANGE COUNTY:, CALIFORNIA" TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1978 TEN CENTS
Bell ~akes On Uree inch Fish
W ASHINGtON {AP) -At·
torney General Griffin Bell
asked the U.S. Supreme Court
today lo decide a1alnst a th'"°
inch fish and lo clear the way for
putUnc the flnlahinl touches on
a new dam In eastern Ten·
nessee. Beu asked the nine JusUces tor
ap order ilvi.DC the Tenneaee
Valley AulhorUy permllaion to
complete co1t1tructlon of tbe
$199 million Tellico Dam.
Conservationists say the dam
spells doom for the tbree·inch
fiab, the anall darter.
"The dam ls finished for all in·
tent.a and purposes," Bell said in
a rare appearance at the
Supreme Court. "They have
moved the snail darter to
another pla~. •· a reference to the fish beinc removed to the
nearby Hiwasee River, _J
A u .S. Court of Appeals l111n
year stopped TV A from closin«
the eates on th~ dam on grounds
the action wolates the En·
dan1ered Species Act. The act
prohibits a federal agency from
lmpalrln& the habitat of an en·
dan1ered species. The only known natural
spawning grounds o( the snail
darter ls on the LltUe Tenneasee
River, just upstream from the
Tellico Dam. The fish spawn
above the dam and grow to
maturity below it.
hours today through Thursday, are 10
a.m. through 3 p.m., plus 7 p.m. to 8:30
p.m . Thursday. Sale of new paperbacks
for all age levels benefit school
library ;media center.
Students
Irvine High School Program Reaps Resulls
By IACK:IE RYMAN
OI -011HY ..... Sutt
When a student gets into trou·
ble at school, his' pa~nts often ·don't know wbom lo call whom to
call.
Usually they end up with a
. counselor who has 500 students
assigned to him or her and
doesn't know the individual stu·
dent.
At Irvine High Sc:hool, parents
know exactly whom to call -their
student'& adviser, someone who
sees him or her in a small group
for almost half an hour daily
throughout high school as part or
an innovative project.
ll 's called the Advisement
Program and already this year
more than 200 visitors from
other schools statewide have
dropped in to study how it
works.
Mary Ann Emmons, one of the
high school's counselors, ex·
plained that the program began
three years ago, ooe year before
the campus opened.
Students are allowed to list
three preferred advisers, one of
which they are assigned to.
Every certificated member of
the starr. including ad-
ministrators, has a group of 20
to 2S students to meet with for 25
Coast
Weather
Fair through Wednes-
day and a little wumer.
Lows tonight 52 to 58.
Highs Wednesday 64 to 70.
INSIDE TODA 't'
Co"~. the Morfll con. secrot~d eorrla to which
Dougku Moc:Artlaur rdumed,
hos become o muco /or
JopoMte touriatt. Sft PO{le
A7.
l I
minutes daily.
Extra expenses are met under
a federal grant, although next
year the stale will begin picking
up the bill under new legislation
aimed at personaliiing secon-
dary education, Mrs. Emmons
said .
This year, she noted, the ad· .
visement program bas spread to
Venado Middle School, Irvine
High 's "feeder school."
In the daily advisement
sessions, advisers practice
listening to students and work·
ing with them on setting goals,
discussing academic and sociaJ
problems and looking at careers
and hi~her education.
(See STUDENT, Page AZ)
Public Can't Hear
Watergate Tapes
WASlllNGTON CAP) -The
U.S. Supreme Court barred the
public today from listening to
tbe 30 White House tape record-ings played at the W atergale
cover-up trial of aides to former
President Nixon.
The court's 7 ·2 decision re-
versed a 1976 ruling by the U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals that
would bave made the tapes
available to the three com·
mercial television networks,
public television and a recording
New Irvine
Park Delayed
By Vandalism
Irvine city officials have dis-
tributed letters to Irvine resi·
dents pleading with them to
keep off Heritage Park.
The park, which has been
nearing completion for a1Dl08t
half a year, ls being delayed in
its o~ because ol an
unusual amount of vandalbm,
according lo City Manager Paul
Brady.
By April 6, vandalism repairs
amounted to $12,000, Brady sald,
most of lt in the aquatics com·
ple:1, where overeager youths
and adults have been ruining
specially surfaced pools by
skateboarding on them.
Brady aald there's also been
undue vandalism lo landscaping
and tennis courta.
Brady said a private security
company baa been hired lo pro-
tect the facility untll it can be
completed.
. \
company planning to sell copies
of the tapes for home use.
"Considering all the
circumstances of this conceded·
ly singular case, we hold that
the common.law right of access
to judicial records does not
authorize release of the tapes in
question," Justice Lewis F .
Powell Jr. wrote for the court's
majority.
The court's ruling ls a major
legal victory for Nixon .. who
persistently challenged· the
tapes' release as an invasion of
privacy.
Joining Powell's opinion were
Chief Justice Warren E. Burger
and Ju sti ces Harry A.
Blackmun, William H. Rehn·
quist and Poller Stewart.
All but Stewart were app0inted
lo the nation's highest court by
Nixon.
Justices William J . Brennan
Jr. and Byron R. White did not
(See TAPES, Page A2>
Council Sets
Bond Study
The Irvine City Council meets
at 7:30 tonight to discuss Mon-
day's decision by the Irvine
Ranch Water District to call a
bllllon·dollar landowners' bond
election. Councilmen also are
scheduled to decide whether to
authorize $79,000 ror summer
arts and recreaUon programs.
The council bad objected to
the water district's plan to
authorize bonds for numerous
projects on currently unlnbabll·
ed land.
Zygmunt Plater, who al'auect
against Bell, declared the law
was clear.
. •·congress haa not cbansed
the law, and th1a court abould
not amend the ta~," he sald.
"TV A took the poeluon It would
not comply wttb the Endangered
Species Act.·•
He alao sald "t.ranaplantaUon
is not a fulfillment of the act.
The HJwuee ~lant does oot
currently appear to be suc· cesafuJ."
lnConstruction or the dam began
1967. s.lx years before the En·
dangered Species Act became
law.
Tbe snaU darter was not dis·
covered until 1973 and not
classified as endangered until two years later.
Biologists ,argue tbat complet·
ing the dam and closing its gates
would inundate the spawning
grounds. The structure already
has stopped the snail darter
from migrating upstream to
spawn, the Department of In· terior says.
There are no estimates of the
!"um.ber of snail darters surviv·
mg in the Little Tennessee but
the Interior Department thin.ks
about 1,000 still live in tb~ waterway.
Water District
Election OK'd 1$lt4W!~·~t. ~ 9'.
By PIDLIP ROSMARIN °' .. ~ ........... Direct.ors of the Irvine Ranch
Water District have autborh:ed a
landowners' bond eleetion .June
19, but reduced potenUal ln·
debtedness by more than a half·
billion dollars.
· The . vote Monday was mian-
imOJJS. The two publicly elect-
ed directors of the board, Wayne
Clark and William. Eppinger,
took the initiating actions.
Numerous residents of Irvine
Traslunen
On Strike
In County
Truck driftrJ for a numbfl'el
Orange County tras.b colleetion
firms went on Strite al mldm.gbt
Monday. leavinl MYeral Onlale
Coast cities wtt.&out rubblib col·
lectlon. Arfected are Huntington
Beach. Fotmtain Valley, Costa
Mesa and Laguna Beach, along
with Anaheim, Orange, Santa
Ana. Garden Grove, Fullerton
and Buena Park. Those cities contract with
private firms to collect lhe~r
rubbish. Cities that employ their
truck drivers directly, ~ucb as
Newport Beach, were not af.
fected.
Only some residents living ln
unincorporated county territory
will be affected by the trash 1
driver strike. All of Lake Forest
will be affected u well as about
one half or El Toro.
Sections of the county souther·
Jy of El Toro Road, including
Mission Viejo and Dana Point,
are not in the strike territory at
this time, county authorltles
said.
In emergency action today,
Orange County supervisors vol·
ed to open to the public during
working hours trash transfer
stations at which county trucks
normally collect refuse from the
private trucks. The only station on the Orange
Coast is located' in Huntington
Beach on Gothard Street just
south or Talbert Avenue. It will
be open. effecUve today, from 7
a.m. to 4 p.m. Gene Raasch, president of
Teamsters Local 396, said
negotiations that began Matth 4
reached an Impasse Monday
night, when the drivers' three·
year contract etpired.
He said be has no idea bow
long the strike may last. A pre·
vious strike continued for three 1 weeks. Raasch said confiict centers
on wage and benefit issues.
He said the drivers are cur·
rently paid $4.50 an bour and
have asked for a S2 an hour raise
the first year and $1 an hour the
second and third years.
<See DUVEltS, Pa1e Al>
Jane Fonda Slated
At UCI Lecture
Actress Jane Fonda, nominal·
ed for an Academy Award for
her role as Lillian Hellman ln
"J ulla," and an Oscar winner
for her performance u a ~roe
lltute in "Klute," lectures on
"Women lo Films" at 7 p.m. Thursda~ _Ill UC lrvlne's
Crawford a.u.
General admluJon la t'; UCI
studenta, $21 ·other
students, si: otber atudents, UCI
faculty tnd ataff. ss. Ticketa wtU
be avallableattbedoor.
• I
and tM 1rvlDe QtJ CaanaiJ la8ll · dllbic:b IDd sis new sewer im" 811~ed the board to d~dl-lll'OVeDMnt..dlstrlctl. cla100 anW the state U ownen of tbe more than
ce{teftl ...... ID ~ f 47,000 .~ ot oiostly urtin·
COUUMione11tr of lOard · mem-i.. COl'POl'-.ct 1ntne Company land
benblp. . '• appron. the UlWD will be lnlDe CltJ At&onle7 ,_. aatbon.d to wue S/994,'799,000
Erlclsaoa eonteDd1 th• land-ID general obllgaUon bonds for
OWDff ~ tlrit ._.. futurt water and.aewer lines.
nolatel till[ laa1• ..... Tb• cllatrie\ originally COD·
c1ple of ane man. on. vote. aldtNd 8lldng voten to approve
lD a tandem acUae lloadiJ a Sl.8 bilUclll bond fuue -big-
tht water board a1lo er.at;d Pit .ID tbe blltorJ ot the state.
four new water impronm• c ... WATER, Pagt .U>
,.,. .. ,......
'LOVE SLAVE' SUSPECT JOYCE MC KINNEY
Will the Mounties Get Their Woman In Canada?
2 Fleeing Suspects
Sought by Mounties
OTTAWA <AP> The Moun·
ties are looking for Joyce
McKinney and Keith May, who
fled from Britain to Canada to
escape trial on charges of ki.d·
napping a young Mormon DUS·
sionary. The Royal Canadian Mounted
Police alerted its offices to look
for tbe pair after being informed
by Interpol that they took an Air
Canada flight from Shannon,
Ireland to Montreal and Toron·
to on Wednesday wearing wigs
and posing as deaf.mutes.
Miss McKinney, 27, of Min·
neapolls, N.C., and May, 24, of
Maywood, Calif.. are charged
with kidnapping Kirk Andenoo,
21 of Provo, Utah, while he was
doinc missionary work In Bri·
tain and imprisoning him ln a
cottage last September.
Anderson, who had been Miss
McKinney's former boy friend,
claimed he was kept chained to
a bed and forced to have sexual
intercourse with her three
times. The woman, a former beauty
contest winner In Wyoming,
testified at a preliminary
bearlnl that she played bondage
'
games with the young man to help
him sort out his sexual prob·
le ms. but insisted he was a ''will·
ing participant and that she "did
it all for love."
Miss McKinney and May were
out o n bail awaiting an ap·
pearance May 2 in London
criminal court. They reported to
police ·there Wednesdat. as re-
quired by their bail conditions,
then vanished from the north
London house. Using the names Joan O'Con·
nor and Anthony McGowan, both
deceased, they went to Shannon,
where Air Canada ofhcial John
Noran reported: "The couple
used scribbled. notes to tell me
they were due to take part in a
mimed play in Toronto.''
The crew of the Air Canada
plane Identified the pair from
color pictures sent anonymously
to the London Dally Mirror.
Miss McKinney was wearing a
long.haired red wig , heavy
makeup, bright red lipstick and
blue-tinted glasses. May wore a
thic k curly black wig and
glasses. The photos were accom·
panied by death certificates ror
Miss O'Connor and McGowan.
• '
SANTA MONICA CA P> -
PuHce arrested a part·tlm•
roofer and his wife today in lbt
knlfe and b udgeon kUUna ol a
h!gb school senior and his 1.1-
year-old sister.
John WllUam z;mmerman,
and his wile, Merrilee Claire
Ztm merman. both 28. were
booked for investlga\lon or
murder af\er they were picked
up without realst•nce at about 7
this morning al their Venice
area duplex. said Sgt. Steve
Kennerley.
The seraeant said Brian Dean,
'Holocaust'
Increases
Audience
NEW YORK <AP> ·· The
se(·ond part ol NBC television's
bur-part drama "Holocat.Wt" ~out the Nu.ls' campaign to e:c·
t,rmlnale the Jews was watched
;i»' more people than the Jlnt
4111rt and far outdistanced com-
-petition in New York and Loa
""1geles. preli mlnary reports
Uow. <Related story. AU)
.:.1The ratlntJ aerrl£e Arbltroo
.Mpprted thllt Mqn(;tay r\lgh(•s
two-tiour segment w.as wale~
• 37.2 oe.-c~nt oC alJ New Ybtk
c:lty hom• wtlh ltl•vlslon1 ~-
1.ilied IA> 8.2 pereen\ wate~ ~C and 'l6.2 ~rcent tuned to · c~s. _ ·
...,, The fl rs t ch apt-er of
-''JioJocaust" Stl:rlday nlfbt lot a ~.7ratllli
ln L08 Angeles. Arbitron Mict.
32. l percent or au television
households watched
·· J 10Jocaust." while 7.5 percent
watched ABC and 12.l watched
CBS On Sunday nlght, NBC
drew a 27.7 rating.
The percentages do not add up
to 100 because many televialon
setit were tuned to other stat.Ions
or not turned on at all.
N RC reported that telephone
calls It received In New York
and Los Angeles on Sunday ~ght were almost evenly split
tween praise and c:omplalnta.
ew York had 888 f•vorable
'call• and 381 complaint.a. Loi
Angeles had 122 favorable calls
and l 11 complaints, plua another
214 protesting the number or
commet-clal lnterruptJons.
Ten uniformed American
Nnls and about~ civlUan sym-
pathizers marched In protest
against the series Sunda) out-
s Ide N BC's Burbank head· quuters.
In New York. abouL 20 people 1dentlrled as belonging to the
Ridgewood group of Queens,
composed o( Oermao
Amerlrans, demonstrated out·
side NBC's main offices. They
carried pfacards saying "NBC Is
Antl-Chr\stlan." Demonstrations
in both cities were without lnel· def\t
Rape Seminar
Set in Irvine
Three rape prevention
seminars. sponaored by the
lrvlne police department, are
scheduled at \he Irvine city
council chambers. 17200 Jam·
boree Road.
flour·long seminars are
planned al noon April 25, and al
5 p m April 26 and April 27.
Persons unable to attend any
of those Clln call the depart·
nwnt 's crime prevention unltf
754 -3735. tC'I arrange specla
presentations in the home or
before groups, accordin1 to Of.
fleer Patrtck Rodgers. Protr•m
coordinator
,
OltANoi COAl'T
DAILY PILOT
TMO.-Coe•I 0.11• ~i.t ... 111 ..... t~ht.. -I,,. ,....,. Ptt\\ """tlll-IJoll ... Orlfltit o.. .. _,.,,, ... ~··· _ _......,,_.,. :."'~"::.d .. =~~~~·~:: .. ~,=
t•ln YalltY t'Vlfte, '•IM1"61.' V•t .. , 1"4 ~ .. -~ '°"'~c .. \I .......... ..._,..._ , .... " -"-s ............ .._...,. , ... ;::::"~~~i:.:.~~.~,:,.JJ\ •• , .. ,
-~ .. ,,._ """ ... "' "'"' -·-110111 c. .. ,
Vtct ..... ,._,,, •!\f 0.Mf .. 'MMllH ,.._. .. _ ... , ..
"':::::: ... "'It
O.flet M 1. .. 1 II_,., ... M
"'"h t••• IMM1111'4 ........ Offlo•• c .. 1eill0tu OO~y'1ry91
l •q<lll• ..... ~ "~~r&!::."1 H:.:.i~:.~:~~.!"N1011A ,. .. ,.:."" .,._.o._,,_
Ttl"'"°"• ('M4)MMU1 Cltllllfled Ac1Ytt11Mftl ..... ,.
.-0.1-o Vllllt-Offl<t .. ,.., ..
,, .... -c ......... .......
c.,.,., ........ °'~" ""''olll .. Qrs· ••r Mt ....., .ltf<nlttlltftl, ..... .... .•• •. .. rr~ " ... :t'" .... , ~~f:!.:. -··· .. ,.,, ...... .
t.t•llil tla\\ Mtl•r. .. I~ ot C..lt #ottf, c.111.,.1, t11tu1 ttltfl •• ,,,,,., u N :::t....•l; :~f:,:' ,,_,~'" mltllor•
•
18• and his stat.er. Vrlana, were sla~gbtertd after •pparently
aurprisina two b~ralars who en·
terect an4 ranaacktd their home
Mond~ nliht. When the dead children's
father lnsurance broker James s. Oe~n. found hi• chlldreQ 's
bodies. he beean to scream so
loudly that an officer taklni a
bur1lary report at a nel&hbor's
house heard blm and re.ponded.
Sgt. Robert Simoneau sal~.
The officer found Brian • body
on the family room floor beneath
a pool table and the girl's bloody
body on her brother's bed, Ken·
nerley said. He would not say
whether the girl was sexually
molested.
Tallman
Ser-vices
Slated
Funeral Sel'Vlces rot avlator
Frank C Tallman Ill will be
held Thursday at St. Joachim's ·
Catholic Church in Costa Mesa.
Mr. Tallman d1e<1 Saturday
when his Piper Aztec plane ~rashed on a rugged shoulder of S~ddleback Mountain during a rhght from Oakland to Orange County Airport.
Mass or Christian burial is
scheduled for 2:30 p.m". Thurs.
day at St. Joachim's, 1964
Orange Ave. Burial wtJI be at
Pacltlc View MemorJat Park Coronat del Mar. '
Officiating at the service will
be Bishop Juan Arzube ot Los
Angeles and Monsignor Thomas
J . Nevin or St. Joachim "a. ·
Simoneau said a violent strug·
gle was indicated by blood stains
in several rooms of the house
But KeMerley said it was uncer·
taln whether the Lwo victims had
struuted or had been attacked
wlth unusual brutality.
, Oetl'lllflllll'-..... COUNSELOR CHRIS GOBER (CENTER) TALKS WITH TONI BAXTER, DEBI MONTEZ
In lrvlne, Parent• Know Who to Cell If Their Kid Get• Into Trouble
Mr. Tallman was one of the
world's best·lcnown aviators and
movie stunt pilots.
He was reportedly returning
from acout1n1 movie locations
when the trasecty · occurred. A
"iatlonaJ Transportation Safety
Board lnveatJ1ator haa indicated
he found no physical defects in
Mr. Tallman'• ptane, but bla re-port la not yet completed.
Fro• P-.,e AJ WuntyMan
Booked in
Park·Slaying
Simoneau said there was
evidence tne house was forcibly
entered. Several knives and a
blunt instrument were sent to
the crime lab for study, he
added.
STUDENT ADVISERS. • •
Kennerley uid the Zim·
mermans were traced viu wit·
neases who saw their car parked
in the neighborhood and noted
the license number. Zlm·
· merman bad previously been ar·
rested for burglary. he said
Such a strong bond is formed
that in several cases tea~hers
planning to move out of the area
have said they will wall until
their advt&ement group
graduates, Mrs. Emmons aaid.
She also recalled comments
made when she took two slu·
dents with her while visiting
anolher srhool that doesn 'l have
--F«tod 'Fixed'
Vendor', Tacos 'Tlunqui,l?
ENSENAOA, Mexico <AP> --Authorities here
became suspicious when they ~aw how satisfied
customers of Felipe Reyes' taco s\and seemed to be.
and the high price the consumers paid for tacos.
Mexican Federal Judicial Police slaked out the
popular vendor· Monday for a time and then moved
in. Reyes' specialty turned out to be a Seconal taco
costing the peso equivalent of about $1.50 eac 1.
Officers found about 30 tranquilizers at the
stand. Including one slipped into a tasty treat fixed
for a customer who had asked for "a taco with."
Reyes: 22. of Ensenada and his customer were
taken to jail where the taco vendor admitted buyihg
lhe drug illegally from a pharmacy.
F,....P ... AJ
WATER BOND VOTE. • •
But cutbacks or more than '320
million were made In each or
two areas
The first cut was a direct
response lo Irvine City Cbuncll
objection.a that the water dbtrlct
plan for water and sewer proJ·
eels adjacent to El Toro Martne
Air StaU6n were contrary to the
city general plan.
The city 1enera1 plan shows
the territory, within the flight
nolae Impact area of the base, In
permanent agricultural use.
with no urban uses permitted.
EllmlilaUon ot that area from
1 R WD plans resulted in a
$321.839,000 reduction ln bond needs
The second cut, of *3~.m.ooo.
was achieved mathematically.
by reducing the .Xpected dollar
Inflation rate after 1985 <the
project& are ~beduJld throu1h
2010 > from eitht percent a year to six percent.
Unlll 1985, the lnfiallon rate ls
calculated at 10 perC?ent a year.
Clark made the motion to ap.
prove the cuta. Director Orville
Reinhardt objected that 1t would
be shortsighted to reduce the
distrirt's financing potential, but
was persuaded to vote with the others
Direct.or E. Ray Quigley Jr.
argued "someone has to set a
Jimlt to get a handle on infla-
tion."
f'rorw Page A J
DRIVERS •••
The firms have offered 5-0
cents the first year and 30 cents
the second and third years. Raasch said.
Raasch said members also
want dental coverage and five
days or sick leave per year. He
said they cWT*>tly have none. ln
addiUon, drivers tvant a requtre-
ment that they be sent three
warning letters before they are
dismissed. Currently, Raasch
aald, no wamtna ltltera are re-quired.
He said employera have or ..
t•red one additional holiday per
year and a 1U1hl •djuttment· in
the vecatJon 1cheduJe. Drf ~rs
1et one weeJc per ytar after one
year of 1ervtce, two w"k' after
three Yt•ra and throt weeks
after 10 yean. The chanae .
wblc:h ht sald la acceptable,
would be to allow three weeks
alter tltbt years.
RaaaCh said drivers al10 want
a chance in tM lritv.anct Pto-c~ure to matcb U\t. one uaed tn LoeAn,.Jea.
Ht H1d dtivtf'I have twice
voted doW1\ empJoy@r otters.
J.
ti inflation continues at a
gallop, he sajd, lhere won't be
any waLer or sewer projects to
finance because "There ain't
gonna be a sound economy
around. The economy's going to
go to hell in a handbasket
anyway."
Environmental writer Wesley
Marx . an J rvlne· resident.
criticized the board actions.
complaining there shouJd have
been an environmental impact
study done for 1.he proposed
bond issue.
The board has taken the posi-
tion thal mere authorliation to
issue bonds ls exempt from the
ElR process, that EIRs will be
made when and If actual proj-
ects are proposed and actual
bonds are to be Issued.
Marx countered that cost
estimates for the bonds were
"not made straight out of your
head," but rather from ideas for
specific projects.
The board still faces a lawsuit
on that Issue. filed in Superior
Court by legal aid societies in
Orange and Los Angeles coun-
ties.
Those groups contend an El R
ahould have been done to study
avallablllty or affordable hous-
lna in the area for workers who
will construct the water and
sewer projects.
What to Do
With Donkeys?
HIGH POINT, N.C. <AP) -
City oCflclals are in a quandary
over three donkeys who've been
strolling along the streets ad·
vertlatne the Bean Station Furniture Facl.Qry.
The police aay tbe donkeys are
a trarnc haaard and Fire Chier
Hannla Thompson said one or
them lrltd to bite a fire hydrant.
But the Officials haven't found a
way to do anything about it.
"We have searched the city
ordinances and it seems tbat
there 19 nothlng to prohlbat
horses and or donkeys from be·
ing ln tbt downtown bu1lneas
dlatrlct," Clty Attorney Knox
Walker aald ~onday.
Jania Oppo1ition
LOS ANO£LES CAP> -
DeeplJe a v11oroua endoraement
or the Jarvie-Gann tax. lnltlaUve
by city controller-Ju Relner, a
clt.y councll commtttff baa rec-
ommended that tht council op.
pote ProPo1lUon 11 and. 1upport
tht rival PropoettJon I on the
June 6 etetUon btllot.
•
an advlsement proaram.
"On the way home. they aald
they just couldn't believe the dif-
ference ln attitudes," Mrs. Em-
mons said. "They said, 'Our
teachers think ll 's Important to
talk to klds about whatever the
kids want to talk about. Those
people <at the other school> feel
they always have to be in con-trol."
Parents have been en·
thuslastlc about the program
and attendance hu been hi&h' at
semianntaal conferencea with ad-
visers. Mrs. Emmons aaid.
As Cor teachers, she said, tbe
advisement program touches on
·•one of the basic treuons they
went '"to educaUon In the first
place, which was lo help kids.
"The kld Is no longer Just a
math student. They can aee the
whole. and start uoderstandlng
him as a unique person."
And, as far as the students go,
adviser Chris Gober noted "[
can think of three or four 'stu-
dents who are still in school, I
think, because they have that
sol id base every day that they can count on."
Mrs. Gober Is one or two
secretaries who joined the ad·
visemenl program this year.
Both responded to a survey of
nonce rtiftcated personnel and
ure workin& jointly with another
adviser lhJs year.
· · 1 personally feel very
satisfied that as a secretary I'm
finally being treated as a pro-
fessional." said Mrs. Gober. who
1s working on her certificate in
counseling at UC Irvine.
But the most important
benefits are ror the students.
Among these are a sense of be-
ing recognized lUi an individual
and a chance lo get to know
other students they might not
normally mix with, Mrs .
Emmons said.
In one case. when a teacher
lert. his advisees were so de·
lermined not to be split up that
they asked if they could help
select I.he replacement teacher,
who wouJd be their new adviser.
The request was granted. Mrs.
Emmons said.
Indira 'Innocent'
NEW DELHI, India CAPI
Former Prime Minister lnoira
Gandhi pleaded Innocent today
to contempt charges stemming
from her refusal to testify before
a commission investigating her
last 19 months In power.
.Mr. Tallman leave. hJs wile,
Ruth, ot Newport Beach: his
IOD, Frank Gltford Tallinan JV
of Irvine; a dau,bter, Gall
A youthful 1uf/;.;ct pollce Leake ol Torrance; hl1 mother,
claim they haw td to tbt 1De1 Tallman of New Jtney; a
murder of• ~-ball plQar brother, ,.._Ttllman of New
at Slater Part IQ W411t•l...., ltrie~ Ind a l&ter. Tructy Jay sU:::!J1~~:~.~ of~• ~mUy baa •u•aeeted
Huard Aw ............... wu memortal doaldou to tbe ~
booted tor to•Htl••Uoa of fund at Rau Memorial Hoa t.i murder f~ Ida 10:• p.m. la N~ ~.to the •
arrest at tbt bOme ol q ... tlOD ~ ~· WWiam R. Parry.
qualntance uar U.. l1a1lDI a.ea~ bl made out to ······ -i---Pollce Lt. loa Woods tal4 •
motive bu bee•""'*',. PNel P-.e AJ for the ld.Uiq ol a.toe mm '
Chnes. 20, otOardmGroM. T' & nES·
Chaves WM lbot cmce ID tbe ~ . • • • cheat at Potnt-blaall ra.na• cm tbe
racquetbalJ eouta at Steier aaree wttb all of Powell'• ru.
Park, 7200 Weltmimter Ave., IODinl, but they abo voted to
where be wu pluln1 a match bar releue ol the tapes.
with bla brother, Alfredo. Dl11enUng were Justices
Orange County Jall autbortties Tbur'good Manball and John
said Ortiz is being held in lieu of Paul Stevens.
$250,000 bail pending arraign-• "Needless to say. we're
ment and a possible bail reduc· ttratif'ied with the declaton.'' said
tion hearing. William H. Jeffress Jr., who
Investigators are expected to argued the case for Nixon before seek a formal complaint from the Supreme Court.
the Orange County District At· Transcripts of the tapes were
torney 's Office Wednesday, publjciz.ed" during lhe 1974 trial
charging Ortiz with Chavez' of former Attorney G~eral
murder. John Mitchell a nd ex-White
Funeral serv1ces for the v1c· House aides H. R. Haldeman
tim are pending at a Long Beach and John Ehrlichman. -All 30
mortuary. transcripts were wideJy quoted
in part or in their enljrety in
newspa}>ers' and other publlca-
tlona. IA-London
Trip Cut Due
LONDON <AP > Laker
Airways, whose Skytraan
service pushed tbe big
airJiaes to cut the cost of
lra ns -Atlantic tickets.
says it will introduce even
cheaper fares on some
round trips between Bri·
tain and the United States
and Canada qext month.
Freddie Laker said
Monday it would offer ad
vance booking charter
fU1bu to ChicaaoLDetroit.
New .YQl'f( and Montreal
for $183 roundlrlp and to
Los Angeles and Sao
Francisco for $368.
The London·New York
roundtrip with Laker's
non -charter Skytra1n
service costs 1257.
Plant Mulu;ip
Kil/,s Woman
CARSON <Pl -A worker at
Leisure Group Co. in Carson suf.
fcred fatal injuries when she
was crushed by a machine top.
pied over by a forklift
A sheriff's spokesman said
fellow worken; were able to lif\>
the machine off Bertha P
Oereza. 33, but she was pro-
nounced dead or internal in·
Juri es Monday at Harbor
General Hospital.
Smpect •sick~
WASHINGTON <AP1
Former Rep. Otto Passman, 77,
Is too ill to be arraigned on in·
fluence·peddllng charges.
New daily nonstop seNice from nearby Orange Coun1y airport.
Economical Sunjet Tours plus discount fares fo r families and groups.
Fly Air California and make it easy on yourself.
AIR 9 CALIFORNIA
We ·re easy to toke.
Coll Air Col1torn1a Reservations In Oronoe County. (714) 752-1000. Downey.
(213) 924·3313. Laguna. (71A) A96-6000, Los Angeles. (21.3) 627·5401. Son Clemente.
(71A) 496-6000. R1vers1de1Son Bernardino. (714) 825-0QOO, or your locol rrovel AQent
, ""'~ ... ~
) 1
~ 71, NO. 108, 3 SECTION5; 30 PAGES
0 0
Delly ..... M.lft .....
"SURE, l'D RATHER STAY HERE ••• "
Hany Statham. 80, Leaving Treasure Island·
' .
Aftea:no3n
N.Y. Stoeks
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1978
,
TEN CENTS
BJ Sl'ZVE IOTCllBIX ...................
Thelma An~eraon doesn't
waqt to move out of the modest
trailer that hu been ber home
for more than 20 years.
She says she can't afford lo
llve anywhere else on her
monthly $280.60 social security
check. B&at the 80-year-old
woman may not have a choice ln
the matter lf rents at Xreasure
Island Trailer Park go up again
next year. Thelma (not her real name>
was paying $125 a month for her
space in the South Laguna
e Irks Renters
traUer park just last year. Theo
she received a notice from the
management tellinl her the rent
was being increased to $275 per
month 1he nrst 9' the year.
The woman, one of 14 OC·
togeqerlans in the 265-space
trailer park, says she's going to
try to stay. .
"I'll jmt ride it out for a while ..
and see what happens," the
bright-eyed woman says. "When
you've lived in a place lhil loog,
you can't just pick up aqd go." •
"I don't know anybody outside
the park." she said wiping a
piece of lint from the kitchen ta-
ble.
The trailer ls small, with
modest furnishings , but
Thelma's kitchen and dining area la spot.less.
How will she Uve on the $5.60
she has left over after rent each month?
"I'm a saving soul," sbe chu~kles. But sbe admits she'•
been taking in some <>utaide
chores to pay for heat, food and
the essentials.
''There's not a whole lot a
woman my age really needs "
she said. Thelma says the reitt
has gone up steadily in the part
since she moved In more lhan
two decades ago and slapped $40
down on the manager's desk for
rent.
"Forty dollars, can you im·
agine," she laughs. But the
latest increase has her worried
sick. "'Ibat's more than twice what J was ~aying in No·
vember, "she said.
Thelma IS not the only full·
time partt resident to receive hefty rent bikes.
A survey taken by Treasure
Island residents show Increases
ranging from S40 to $200 a month <See TRAILER, Page A.%)
Trash St • Called e. •.
.• q~lj~. "'i, , ·.I . ,t
LagunaAffected by Wage,BeR.'efitD_UJpute ·.~
',,~-.~1•N'~141 . J·f; .,~.;,J., t-,. ·: t •
By JACKIE HYMAN
Of ... oellY l'tlet Si.ff
Truck drivers for a number of
Orange County trash collection
firms went on strike al midnight
Monday, leaving several Orange
Coast cities without rubbish col·
lection.
Affected are Huntington
Beach, Fountain Valley, Costa
Mesa and Laguna Beach, along
with Anaheim. Orange, Santa
Ana. Garden Grove, Fullerton
and Buena Park.
• ' .... ~')<l·' . Those cit~s contract with Coast ls located tn R..,_., weeks. ' · ·• •• .
private firms to collect theil' Beach on Dothard SUeet Jiit Rauda aald confllct centers
rubbish. Cities that employ their south ol Talbert Avenue. It WUI cm waae and be!Mflt issues.
truck drivers directly. such as be open. effeetift todaJ, tram 1 , He iat4 the driven are cur·
Newpor\ Beach, were not al· a.m. to4 p.m. ,., nmUJ D8ld $C.50 an hour and
fected. Otoe Rusell. pntldellt ol laave asked for a S2 an hour raise
In emergency action today, Teamster• Local 19fi~d tile ftrst Jar and $1 an bour the
Orange County supervisors vol· negotia&loal tbat ~ ' MCOnd and tb1rd yean. '
ed to open to the public <Suring reached u tmp&ne •OIMtaJ Tb• nrms have offtted so
working hours trash transfer nlgbt, when UM drlftl'I' t.bne-8llts the first year and 30 cents
stations at which county tructs year contract nplnd. tbe eeoond ancl third years,
norm ally collect recuse Crom the · He. aald be w no ldn bow Raalcb NkS. ·
private trucks. lont Utt striU mQ tut. A pa-. Raateb saJd members also
The only station on the Orange vioua strike CCJDUnHd for tbrM 4ii. (lee D&IVERS. Page A!> _..____ ____________ ~r~·s ,,..p
Rtalwrs Spread Ca B d po oa,, · LB Pageant
A.tbnission
To .Go Up?
Mobile Home Park Eyes Tax
' t
Fate Undecided Rate Hike
i M oblle home parb are like
c•mall towns. And .. ln small
It.owns, rumors t.eDd to spread
quickly.
Treasure Island Trailer Park
ls no exception.
Many full-time residents of the
265-space trailer park in Laguna
-Beach worry that they will be
moved out of their park to make
way for hotels and apartments.
bro&ben Howard aod Warren HoplttriS and t.Mt.t fatller Ira. ''We've been oCCered a form of
• option. in thal if we are able ~
improve the park, we can joib in
with the limited partnership,"
be said. But. be said, any decision lo
develop the park for con-
dominiums or hotel use, must
await the results or the county's
Local Coastal Plan. "There's no
senae in applying for a general
plan change before you know
how the county and coastal com-
rn ission are going to go with the
Local Coastal Piao," Johnson
said.
They might be partially cor·
reel in those beliefs, says trailer
park manageT Merrill Johnson,
a businessman who built and
sold the nine·story Surf and
Sand Hotel in Laguna Beach. "H anything went on this land
other than trailers, it would be a
combinatioq or a low-profile
hotel and condominiums,''
Johnson said.
And. Johnson said , he and
Laguna developer Bernie Syfan
might play a role in that de-
velopment. were it ever to re-
ceive approval or involved gov-
ernmental agencies.
Johnson said he and Syfan are
not principals in the Treasure
Is land 'l"railer Park limited
1>artnership, primarily owned by
County Environmental
Management Agency officials
have confirmed they have been
approached by builder Syran re-.
garding possible inclusion of the
park in the county's coastal plan
for "intensified recreational
use," which Johnson sa.ys could
mean a hotel or condominiums.
EMA s poke s man Gene
Kjellberg said the t.railer park
partnership would have to lobby
the county to change the general
plan for the area "to accom·
(See RUMOR, Page AZ)
Public Can't Hear
Watergate Tapes
WASHINGTON <AP) -The
U.S. Supreme Court barred the
public today from listening to
the 30 White House tape record-
ings played at the Watergate
cover-up trial of aides to former
President Nixon.
The court's 7-2 decision re-
versed a 1976 ruling by the U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals that
would have made the tapes
available to the three com-
mercial television networks,
public television and a recording company planning to sell copies or the tapes for home use.
''Considering all the
circumstances of this conceded·
ly singular cue, we hold that
the common-law rigbt of access
lo judicial records does not
authorize release of the tapes in
question," Justice Lewis F.
Powell Jr. wrote for the court's
majority.
The court's ruling is a major
le1al victory for Nixon, who
persistently challenged the
tapes' release as an iovaaion of
privacy.
Jolnlng Powell's opinion w~re
Chief Justice Warren E. Buraer and Justices Harry A.
Blackmun, William H. Rehn·
qUist and Potter Stewart.
All but Stewart were appointed
to the natloo's highest court by N llOQ.
JusUces William J . Brennan .Jr. and 8)TOO ·ft. White dld not
agree with all of Powell's rea-
soning, but they also voted to
bar release of the tapes.
Dissenting were Justices
Thurgood Marshall and John
Paul Stevens.
"Needless to say, we're
gratified with the decision," said
Willlam H. Jeffress Jr., who
argued the case for Nixon before
the Supreme Court.
Transcripts of the tapes were
publiciud during the 1974 trial
of former Attorney General
John Mitchell and ex-White
House aides H. R. Haldeman
and John Ebrlichman. All 30
transcripts were widely quoted
in part or in the1r entirely in
newspapers and Other publlca·
lions.
But except for the 12-member
jury and those people who aat
through all or portions of the
trial, the ptablic bas never beard
the actual voices of Nixon and
his aides d.lscusslng the scandal
that forced him from office.
Fiijng •ult in 1976 to have the
tapes released were ABC, CBS,
NBC, the Public Broadcasting
Service, the RacliO·Televlslon
News Directors AssoctaUon and
W a mer Communications.
Tbe networks, public
television at>d the news directors
group aought to air portions ol
the tapes while Warner wanted to reproduce them tor salt aa rtt·
ordaand~caae&.lea.
By ANNE COOPER .................
A $34.• mlWoo preliminary
19'fl-'7f 1Mdeet waa pl"dented to
Caplatruo Unified School Dis·
trict trustees Monday. with a
final budget scheduled for adop-
tion ln Augwrt. The preliminary budget would
require 8 property tax rate or
$4.36 pel" $100 assessed valua-
tion, up from the current $4.11
tax rate.
"Obviously most people are
willlng to pay for our programs,
because they are not here by the
hundreds," said trustee Ted
Kopp of Capistrano Beach.
The only member of the au-
dience to address the school
board on the preliminary budget
Monday was retired San
Clemente resident George
J enkins. "There ls an awful lot or pad-
ding in this budget," said
Jenkins. "I suggest you cut out
all the raule·dazzle and stick lo
reading , writing and
a rithmetic."
J enkins charged the school
district with using "scare tac-
tics" to frighten voters from vot·
lng for the Jarvis-Gann property
tax ·nitiative on the June ballot.
District administrators in-
cluded with the preliminary
budget document a list of sug·
gested reductions amounting to
$16.2 million, which they said
would have lo be cut from the
budget if the Jarvis-Gann in-
itiative is approved.
Jnchided among suggested re·
ductlons were: -so per~nl salary reductions
for teachers and classified
employees and layofCs or 40
classlfied personnel ($8.7 million
saved ).
-Reassignment of counselors
and teaching specialists to
classroom teaching ($1.l million
saved).
-Elimination oC the kin-
d erga rten program ($633,942
saved ).
-Increased class loads and
limitation of five subjects for
high school s tudents ($1. 7
million saved).
-Elimination or athletic pro-
grams C$U6,313 saved).
-Elimination of transporta·
Uon except tor Special Educa·
Uon atudents ($548,667 saved).
-Supply and school tmprove·
ment reductions ($1.3 million
saved).
-Reduction of special pro-
grams, like occupational train-
ing, by 30 percent l $285,588
sa~edl.
-Layoff of two district ad-
ministrators ($63,020 saved).
-Fringe benefit reductions
<Sl.6 million saved).
"You don't mean that al all,"
said JenJUna Monday. "It's a
acare tactic, and l don't like lt at
aU."
''There ti no way to uve Sl6
<See auoon, P••e AU
Rescue Efforts Futile
Laguna Beach police Sgt .. Norm Bland~! a~~inisters
cardio-pulmonary resuscitation to an unident1f1ed man
who coUapsed on his bicycle while pedaling up a steep
g rade on Coast Highway near El Morro Beach
Mobilehome Park Monday afternoon. The man died an
hour later at South Coast Community Hospital of a
massive cardiac arrest, police said today. lie was still
listed as .. John Doe" ~Y coroner 's and hospital officials
late this morning.
Couple Arrested
In Youths' Slaying
SANTA MONlCA <AP) -
Police arrested a part-time
roofer and his wife today in the
knife and bludgeon killing or a
high school senior and his 12·
year-old sister.
John William Zimmerman,
and his wife, Merrilee Claire
Zimmerman, both 28, were
booked for investigation of
murder alter they were picked
up without resistance at about 7
this morning at their Venice
area duplex, said Sgt. Steve
Kenn4;1"ley.
The sergeant said Brian Dean,
18, and bis slster, Vrlana, were
s laughtered alter apparently
s urprising two burglars whO en-
tered sod ransacked their home
Monday niaht. When t&e dead children's
father, Insurance broker James •
S. Dean, found his children's
bod!~. he began tQ scream so loud thal en officer taldn, a
burg ary report at a neltbbor'a
houae beaJ'd blJD and reapC)Ddect.
\
Sgt. Robert Simoneau said.
The officer found Brian's body
on the fami ly room floor beneath
a pool table and the girl's bloody
body on her brother's bed, Ken-
nerley said. He would not say
whether the 'girl was sexually
molested.
Simoneau said a violent strug·
gle was indicated by blood stains
in several rooms or the house.
But Keonerley said it was uncer-
tain whether the two victims bad
struggled or had been attacked
with unusual brutality. Simoneau said there was
evidence the house was forcibly
entered. Several knives and a
blunt instrument were sent lo
the crlJt\e lab for study, he
added. Kennerley said the Zlm·
merm ans were traced via wit·
ae11es who saw their car parked
ln the neighborhood and noted
tht Ucense number. Zlm·
merman bad previously been ar·
rested for bur&lery, he said
Laguna Beach's Human Needs Committee.will try to convince a
new City Council tonight that
prices for summer Pageant of
the Masters Uckets should be ln·
creased. They will also seek a "con-
tribution" or $200 at close oC
escrow for all residential and
commercial sales in the city. The council-appointed com·
tnittee lists th,ese revenue
raisers among others as means
for the city to offset the expected
losses Laguna ·Beach would suf
fer were the Jarvis-Gann prop-
erty tax initiative to pass in
June. The old City Council heard a
similar recommendation from
the committee earlier this year,
but did not endorse the Pageant
plan which would slap a $2 stir·
charge on regular seats and a $1
surtax on loge seats.
Committee member J ay
Murley said the Pageant ticket
price increases could produce
one-tenth or the expected $1.6
million loss in revenues expect-
ed from passage of the Jarvis
bill. Earlier this year, Festival of
Arts directors likened the plan
to .. killing the golden goose."
adding that revenues from the
festival -more than Sl90.000
this year alone -go lo retire the
bond on Main Beach Park.
Festival revenues also RO for
scholarships for local art stu-
dents.
But Murley said it would be
the out-of.town vi sitors who
would be paying the bill for
Laguna services.
<See REVENUE, Page A2)
Coast
Weather
Fair through Wednes
day and a Uttle warmer.
Lows tonight 52 to 58.
Highs Wednesday 64 lo 70.
INSIDE TODAY
Corregidor, the dearly con-
aec rated earth to which
Dougl.oa MacArthur returned.
ho• become a mecca for
Japan•• tourist•. See. Page
A7.
' > '
..
e
n
0
t-
i,
b
..
•l· 'or
in
ier
OS· on rn.
1'5
1c t
~
I
OAH.Y ... L01
Capo
ficials
Three Capl traoo Unified
School District admim&trators
were promoted Monday to re
cently cre•ted posit.1001, '"bJeel
-to re)eetion ol the J1rvta.Oann
prnperty tax lnltlalive ln June.
The promotions, approved 6-0
by trustees (with truatee
William Thompson of Mlulon
-: VieJo absentJ, are:
Harold Hesler, currently
curriculum and project.a dlrec·
tor. to elementary education
director.
-Robert Knapp, currently
personnel eer vices director, to
t>mployee relations d\rector.
-Edward Kincaid, currently
Niguel Hills Junior Hteh School
principal in L~guna Niguel, to
secondary education director.
No information was available
today from the school district on
salaries for the new positions,
which were created following a
recent management reorgani za.
ti on. based on a consultant's
study
SC PJanners
Eye Widths
Of Streets
Street widths in new San
CIPmente hous.ing tracts will be
discussed tonlght at a reauJar
meeting of the city's planning
rom mission.
To night 's meeting i s
scheduled 'at 7:30 p.1)1. In CillY
Council chambers aL city ha I.
100 Ave. Presidio.
The city's trafftc and parking
<'ommission has recommended
that the-city's subdivision or·
dinance be amended lo require
llll tracl streets lo be one width.
Currently subdivision streets
I n hillside tracts. where
driveways are a ll on one side of
1 he street . can be more narrow
lhan s treets with driveways on
both sides, said Clay Dillman,
senior city planner.
f'roaa.-ageAJ
DRIVERS ••.
want dental coverage and five
days of sick leave per year. He
i;aid they currently have none. Jn
addition. dri vers want a require-
ment that they be !ent three
warning letters before they are
cfismissed. Currently. Raasch
said. no warning letters are re-
quired
I le said employers have of-
fen~d one additional holiday per
year and a slight adjustment in
the \'acahon schedule. Drivers
~E'l one week per year after one
vear of service, two weeks after
three vears and three weeks
<1fter io years. The change,
which he said is acceptable.
would be to allow three weeks
after eigbt.vears.
Raasch said drivers also want
a change in the grievance pro·
cedure to match the one used in
Los Angeles.
He said drivers have twice
voted down employer offers.
.. * * Striking Trashmen
Will Be Replaced
A spokesman for J.,aguna
Reach Disposal said today his
firm will be hiring permanent
replacements for s t r ikin g
Teamsters members in hopes of
picking up re!lidcntial trash In
Laguna Beach by Wednesday.
RoA Blackman. contractor for
Laguna's trash collection. said
management officials were pick-
ing up <'Ommercial trash con-
tainers today and hoped to begin
collerting curbside residential
containers Wednesday.
ORANGE COAST LIK
DAILY PILOT
~~~~~~,~·4"r,:~j=:vht.::o.' .. ~
rJM .. t P\lb1'''""0 c.o~•"'' ~.tt•.011"'"'\ "'" out,•1\Md ~l'\O&w t~rouoh ~''°"" ,.,, to .1-,.._w Nf'tlfOO'fl 8-Mflt HtMh'-)t~ 6"V"° rt~
U•n V•Htt~ lr<11ne $•Cldlt o.tt lt. Y•Hll'~ "f'tO l •qun.• S.Kft ~tt'I (O;l\t A \lnQlft rf'qlnr1-'1 •,j1
llOft n PVO'l\""9d S•tti.ttdh \ .-0 ~" ,..,.. t;~°"~~::~'l.~.'::,',..~'.:~,~ *''' n,.,
I
•••"" w... pre\ldifftl •"° Pub!IVW''
JH.111 tit Cvt .. V
v ,...,, 0o\16pf't\Afl0 r.."""ifi~l'MQIH
~ ........ ,
8ctll0t
'-:.~·:"9~=-°""'" .. L... II_..,, ..... Atw\teftt M.tn•e1119Wter'•
l•R""• •••ch onto. "'°'" ... ,,::;:';';'(,' :0'::1. .,..,
OffttH
Co\ltMo'6 JIOWt\I S.v~t,_. """''""°" &..tc:l't 11'11S 8ead" 8out"v~ro ~tebA<fk V•H•Y lt'JGt U P1u JINr.t •t \.ef'I 0;.., ,_,....., ..
Tet..,itone (11•)642-4321
ClaMltl9d Adyert1""8142-S17t
l.eluna .. acflAll~111a:
T ... ,t\GM4 .......
''°"' ~._ c ....... ,,,. ......
c
-
Delly f'IMC IUff ,.,..._
Dam .P~oject
Backed by Bell
WASHlNGTON CAP> -At-
torney General Grlfrin Bell
asked the U.S. Supreme eeun.
tdcla)' to declde gala.st t tbree· ln~h flsh and to elear the w•y for
putting the firusbing touches on
• new dam in eastern Ten· nesaq.
Bell Uked the nine Juall~ for
en order 1Mn1 the Tenn-.ee
V alley Auibortty pmnlatSce to
complete coGJtructlon ot t&e
$199 mlltton Telllco Dam.
ConaervattonJttt ~ay th• 'ct.m
apells doom for the tbree·lncb
fl1h the snail darter.
currently a ppear to be •uc·
cessrul."
ConatrucUon ol lb• dam be1an ln 1961, 1lx ~yea,.. before the En·
da.b,ered Species Act became
law.
The mall darter was not dls·
covered untll 1973 and not
clustfled •• eocla.n,ered until two yean later.
BtolOlilta araue that comptet·
lnJ the Clam and cl01ln1 tea 1ates would Inundate the spawning
1round1. The tltucture already
fl11 st.opped the •nall darter
from mlgratln1 up1tream to spawn, the Department of In·
terk>r says.
VIEW FROM TREASURE ISLAND IN SOUTH LAGUNA WHERE RENTS ARE CLIMBING
Rents In 27-acre Mobile Home Complex Averaged $111 Hike In One ln1tance
"The dam l1 l\nlahed for.all 11\·
tents and purpoaea," BeU H&d In
a rare appearance at tbe
Supreme C6urt . "They llave
moved the 1n"ll darter to
another place,'' a reference to
the fish being removed to tbe
nearby Hiwasee River. A U .s. Court of Appeals last
year stopped TV A from cloelna
the 1atea on the dam on groundl
the action vlolatea the En·
daqsered Specles Act. Tb• act
,, ...... .,,e.41
REVENUE.
f',....PageAJ
TRAILER RENT HIKE. • •
on the 134 fuJl-lime homes in the
27·acre complex.
"That's an average of $111 in·
crease in just one shot," says
Robert Yanles. a mobile home
owner and contractor who is
fighting the rent increases.
"The averaee age of the full·
time residents In here is more
than 62 years,'' Yantes said.
adding that the majority of those
residents are on fixed Incomes.
"The owners claim they aren't
~ttlng enough return on the
value of their land, b\Jt their
property tax8fi are only ~.057.
and that figures to just about $200
a year penpace."
Yantes has a 1971·78 propert.y
tax statement from the county
tax collector that shows a full
value o! the Treasure Island
land al S?.9 millk>n.
''Sure the land's worth more
than that. but to say the owner is
not getting a fair return on his
investment is just not true,"
Yantes said.
Merrill J ohnson, manager of
{he trailer park, says the land is
worth a lot more than $2 .9
million.
"The owners were offered $18
million for the land back in 1968
by a large hotel chain," Johnson
said.
The ocean front property was
purchaaed by brothers Howard
and Warren Hopkins and their
fathe r, Ira Hopkins in 195S for
$400,000, accordlng to a grant
deed provided b~ Yantes
•'This is rT of the best acres on.
the coast." Johnson argues.
"Some of the residents with
ocean front lots would have to
pay a couple hundred thousand
to buy that land "
Th e manage r says the Sl
million gross realized by the
trailer park owners a nnually .
"can 'l be more than four or five
percent of the real value of the
land, and that's no way to run a
business."
But trailer park residents say
they haven't been impressed
with the way the business has
been run in the past anyway.
Yantes said maintenance In
the park has been deferred for
the past 10 years. and only In re·
cent months have the owners
begun work on undergroundtng
utilities and a facelift on the
clubhouse and grounds.
"That 's probably true,"
Johnson said. "The owners
didn't have the money lo do the
work before this year."
Another complaint voiced by
I railer dwellers is the uncertain-
ty the park will remain open for
mobile home us e . Rumors
abound that the owners plan to
develop h otels a nd con·
dominiums on the property
"People are having trouble
s elling their ho mes, because
nobody knows if this is going to
remain a trailer par)(," Yantes
said.
He said there· are Gd· trailers
for sale in the park, and claims
the management is hindering ef·
forts to sell the older homes to
buyers who would keep them al
Treasure Island.
But manager Johnson denies
an y move to get the older
trailers oul of the park. He ad
mils there are about 40 trailers
listed in his office. "and there
could be more. Some people
have chosen to sell their own
mobile homes."
And the trailers are selling, he
claims. •·We've sold about 20 In
the last three months alone. so you can't say they aren 'l selling.··
But Harry Statham. an 80·
year-old pensioner, says the in·
creased rents have chased off at
least one potenlJal buyer for his
mobile home.
Statham, who said he didn't
mind having hls nam e
published, has been trying to sell
his trailer even before ~is rent
went from Sl75 to $250 a month
in March.
"But who wants to buy a home
that might not be ,here in a few
years." Lhe former World War I
infantryman s hrugged.
Statham says he's moving to
an apartment in Santa Ana lo be
near his wife, who is staying at
un adjacent sanitarium.
He says his social security
· check and a pension from the
Veterans Administration don't
leave him much at the end or the
month.
Those checks have to cover
the increased rent at Treasure
Island as well as the hospital
bills for his wile.
"t 'm trying to get $6,000 for
this," he sald, motioning toward
the interior of his home. "l~ald
$4,000 for it seven years ago, but
I've put a lot of work into It,'
added a room and paneling."
"Sure, I'd rather stay here.
There's a swell lot or people liv-
ing here. But I need more
security than this place has to
offer "
2 Fleeing Swpects
Sought by Mormties
OTTAWA (AP) -The Moun-
ties are looking for Joyce
McKinney and Keith May, who
fled from Britain to Canada to
escape trial on charges or kid-
napping a young Mormon mis·
sionary.
The Royal Canadian Mounted
Police alerted its omces to look
for the pair after being informed
by Interpol that they took an Air
Canada rllght from Shannon
Ireland. to Montreal and Toron'.
to on Wednesday wearing wigs
and posinl{ as deaf-mutes.
Miss McKinney, 27, of Min-
neapolis. N.C., and May, 24, of
Maywood, Calif., are charged
with kidnapping Kirk Anderson
21, of Provo.. Utah, while he wa~
doing missionary work In Bn-
taln and imprisoning him in a
cottage last September.
Anderson, who had been Miss
McKinney's former boy friend
claimed he was kept chained l~
a bed and forced to have sexual
Intercourse with her three
times.
The woman. a former beauty
contest winner In Wyoming,
lesllfled at a preliminary
hearin1 that she played bondage
ga mea W1lb the young man to help
him aort out bis sexual prob·
lems, but umlatect he was a wtll
lna partJdpant Md that she "did
Hallforlove. ••
Miss McKinney and May were
out on bail awaiting an ap-
pearance May 2 in London
crimin~I court. They reported to
police there Wednesday, as re-
quired by their bail conditions,
then vanished from the north
London house where they were
living.
Using the names Joun O'Con-
nor and Anthony McGowan, both
deceased. they went lo Shannon,
where Air Canada official John
Noran reported: "The couple
used scribbled noU?s to tell me
they were due lo take part ln a
mimed play in Toronto."
The cc:,ew of the Air Canada
plane ldenWied the, pair from
color pictW'es ffnt anonymously
to the London Daily Mirror.
Mlss McKinney was wearing a
long-haired red wi&. heavy
makeup, bri&ht red lipstick and
blue-tinted glasses. May wore a
thick curly black wig and
glasses. The photos were accom-
panied by death certificates ror
Miss O'Connor and McGowan
Another Kidnapped
MILAN. Italy <AP> -Three
men dreseed In police uniforms
kidnapped lndustrlall&t Carlo
Lavenart. 53, on the oufsklrts of
Milan early tod•Y. authortUes
reported
I
f'ra..Pa~Ai
RUMOR •••
modate a higher intensity use or
Coast Highway." lhat would be
brought about by such develop-
ment. He said Syfan has approached
the EMA for "some sort ol wne
change to allow high intensity
recreation acttvities ."
But Treasure Island owners
will move carefully and be s ure
of approval from the various
governmental agencies before
makln" major changes.
"The Hopklnses know thet.
have a business going here now.
A.nd before you move into a new
business. you have to know
whether it's going to be proflla·
ble or not." "If we find the best use for the
land is mobile homes. then it
will stay that way;" J ohns9n
llaid. -
3 Lagonaus
Charged in
Cellar Theft
Officers said they heard three
men counting money inside a
Laguna Beach apartment Mon·
day eHnlng and arrested them
on 1usp1cion of burglarlztne a re·
tail wine shop.
Jon Robert Hawthorne, 20,
Alan Dru Mater. 24. and Arthur
Dennis Stet.son, 23, all of Laguna
Beach. were arrested by police
at Hawthorne's apartment at
2510 South Coast Highway at
about 10:30 p.m. Monday .
Police were alerted by a wit·
ness who said he saw a man
enter and later leave the Wood 's
Cove Wine Cellar, 2094 South
Coast Highway earlier in the
even in&.
The description supplied by
the witness led officers to the
Casa Laguna a partments where
omcer Mark Everton said he
overheard men counting change
in the apartment.
The trio allowed the officers
into the apartment where police
allegedly found about $50 in
coins and an adding machine
cover reported missing from Ure
wine cellar. Police believe the s uapec.ts ~ed the cover to carry the cash
Crom the bUilding .
All three men were being ~ld
in Orange County Jaji today
with bail set at ~.000.
r.roblbltt a federal a1ency from
m}>ahin.g th& habitat or an en·
dangered •peciea.
The only known natural
spawning grounds of the anall
darter la on the t.lttle Tennessee
River. Just upstream from the
Telllco Dam. The Cish spawn
above Ute dam and grow lo
maturity below It. ·
Zygmwtl Plat.er, who argued
against Bell. declared the law
was clear.
"Congress has nol changed
the law. and this court should
not amend the law," he said.
"TV A took the posiUon It would
not comply with the Endancerid
Species Act.·•
He also said "tran~rlantauon
is not a fuUillmenl b the act.
The HI .vasee transplant does not
BUDGET •••
million by cuthng out the fat."
responded S upt. Jerome
Thornsley. "IC the Jarvis-Gann
initiative passes and if the state
does not step in to replace loet
revenue, lhis district will lose aa
much as '18 mUUon.
"Value judgments will have to
be made." he said. "We have
one or the best music programs
in the state. It's not reading,
writing or arithmetic, but we see
va~e t" tt.'' .. ~ '
Trustees took no acUon Mon-
day on the budget. which is
scheduled to come before them
again May 1.
•
"At the risk of allenaUng thE
fewest possible local residents,
we •ueaeat that aollfe of the vis
lton can be taxed to offset thE
added co1t1 of city covern
ment," Murley aatd
Ho said the higher Ucket prict
can ea•UY be "•beorbed by tht
law of aupi>IY and demand."
Pateant tickets tradJUonally arE
sold out well before the resUval
•ea1on beal.na.
Human Needs CommitleE
spokesman Bruce Hopping sug.
geata another revenue·raislng
plan recommended by the com-
mittee I& a "contribution" on
real estateaales.
That fee, due on close of
escrow on realdeoti&J and com-
mercial sales, would be S200 pe&
individual unit sold, he said.
The city curr,enUy picks up a
SlO residential property report
fee from aalea of residential
units, but the committee's plan
would include commercial prop·
erttes and increase that fee to
$200 pertmit.
"Th at inc r ease is com-
mensurate with the curre nt
speculation lnvol"ed in Laguna
Beach," Hopping eaid.
A third suggestion that will be
offered the council by the com-
mittee would increase parking
meter rates and fines in aeveral
areas of the city.
Murley believes the Human
Needs panel's suggesUons are
controversiaJ, but said, "Nobody
wants to stick themselves -·or
people like thefJlfflves -With
new taxes."
,He said the local properly
owners are aubsidbing a good
portion of Laguna's resort
economy.
Food'Fixed'
Vendor's Tacos Tlunquil'
. ENSENADA, Mexico CAP> -Authorities here
became suspicious when they saw how satisfied
customers of Felipe Reyes' taco stand seemed to be
and the high price the consumers paid for tacos. '
Mexican Federal Judicial Police staked out the
popular vendor Monday for a time and then moved
in. Reyes' specialty turned out to be a Seconal taco
costing the peso equivalent of about $1.50 each.
Officers found about 30 tranquilizers at the
stand. including one slipped into a tasty treat fixed
for a customer who had asked for "a taco with."
Reyes, 22. of Ensenada and his customer were
taken to jail where the taco vendor admitted buying
the drug illegally from a pharmacy.
New dally nonstop service from nearby Orange County airport.
Economical Sunjet Tours plus discount fares for families and groups.
Fly Air California and make It easy on yourself.
.
AIR9CAllfORNll
We're easy to toke.
Coll Alr Co lltomlo Reservations In Orange County, (714) 752-1CXX>. Downey.
(714) 496-f:/:11l Los Angeles. (213) 627-~1; Son Clemente. {213) 924-3313. Loguno. 8e d i (714) 825-6900 or your locol Travel Agent (7 14) 4QO-tiX/J. Riversid e/Son rnor no. · c;..1\ll...,, \0
.,
•
I ' Today's Clo sin g
N.Y.S toeks
~ t
I
' N TEN CENTS
' Bell Takes On 'nr,ee-inch ·Fish
WASHINGTON <AP) -Al·
torney General Griffin Bell
asked the U.S. Supreme Court
today to decide against a three.
inch fidl and to elear the way for
putting the ft.Dishing touches on
a new dam in eastern Ten·
nesaee.
Bell asked the nine justices fo{"
an order ldvl.ng the Tennessee
, Valley Authority permission to
, com pJete coostrucUon of the
$199 million Tellico Dam
ConservatioQiatl say the dam
apelb doom for the three-inch
fish, the snail darter.
"The dam is finished for all ln· tents and purpose$," Bell said in
a rare appearance at the
Supreme Court. "They bave
moved the snaU darter lo another place;· a reference to
the fish being removed to the
nearby IUwasee River.
A U.S. Court of Appeals last
year stopped TVA from clos~
the gates on ~ dam Oil ground.a
the acllon violates the En·
dangered Species Act. Th«=.. act
prohibits a federal agency f"rom
impeiring the habitat of an en·
dangered spedes.
The only known natural
spawning grounds of the snail
darter is on the Little Tennessee
River, just upstream from the
Tellico Dam. The f.ish spawn
above the dam and grow to
maturity below it.
~ ._. Mlmriul lee.letr f'llOtlt
THIS WAS A TYPICAL SC£NE AT NEWPORT HARBOR YACHT CLUB IN 1917
Munldpal Hlatortana Plan to Designate Club Ctty'a 'Eighth Wonder'
NII Yaeht Ctbb· Cited
O/Jest Faeihty ChOsen Histarica/, Site
7 The Newport Harbor Yacht . Club will be dedicated a s
Newport Beach's eighth his·
torical site next week in
ceremonies conducted by the
city's Historical Society
The dedication will take place
at a dinner to be held at the
club, the oldest yacht club in the
harbor
The 62·year-old yacht club
near Bay Island was selected
because of the importance of
yachting in the history or
Newport Beach.
Other sites marked by the
society are the Dory Fishing
Fleet at the Newport Pier;
Western Canners, now the Can·
nery restaurant; South Coast
S hipyard. which now houses
shops and offices; MJFadden
Wharf, now the site of the
Bays bore Trailer Park; the
Balboa Pavilion; the Balboa
Island Ferry and the site or the
1953 Boy Scout Jamboree.
The banquet honoring the
yacht club will be held April V
at 6 p.m.
Reservations for the $8 dinner
may be made through the his·
torical society, 548·4164 or
548·6450.
Traffic ~ue Viewed
Newport Initiative Pro1, Com DelJated
A proponent and an opponent
of Newport Beach's proposed
traffic phasing initiative agreed
today that the city has to fmd a
way to time future building to
road improvements.
That was about the only thing
that Dan Emory, a member of
the group that proposed the
measure and Gordon Jones of
the Irvine Company could agree
on.
The two men presented oppos.
mg sides of the initiative durtng
a meeting of the Women's Clvic
League attended by about 4-0
people.
Emory, a spokesman for the
Co ast
Weathe r
Fair through Wednes-
day and a liWe warmer.
Lows tonight 52 to 58.
Highs Wednesday 64 to 70.
Legal Environmental Analysis
Fund <LEAF> which is trying to
qualify the measure for the
ballot, said it was written
because the city has taken no ac·
Uon lo reduce or slow building
since the Pacific Coast Freeway
was killed several years ago.
Citing city policies that say
the city will limit development
and time it to capacities of sup-
port systems aucb as the roads,
Emory said the city has allowed
development to continue that
was coote.mplated when the
freeway was to be part of the
road system.
The LEAF measure would put
a halt to au future construction
projects of more than 10 re~dden·
tial units or 10,000 square feet
that add traffic to already con-gest~ roadways or create con·
gestioo ou roadways that are not
yet tied up.
The roads to be considered un·
der the proposal are the four and
six lane highways only, Emory
la Costa Jtfesa
said. He also noted that the pro-posed measure has specific def·
inilions for determining when a
roadway is congested.
He said projects could be ex·
cepted from the ordinance if
they are already under construe·
lion when it goes into effect or
on a favorable vote of six of the
seven members of both the Plan·
ning Commission end City Coun·
cil. Those votes would have to be
bas~ on the project either being
extremely beneficial to the city
or ita providing measures to
mitigate lts traffic Impact.
But Jones, who heads the
Irvine Company's planning de·
IJartment, said the language or
the measure ls vague. He pre·
dieted that it would impose a
moratorium Ln areas where the
City Council already has decided
to accept highway congestion by
refusing lo Improve the road
system.
One of the areas or "planned
<SeeTRAFf1C, Page A%)
Zygmunt Plat.er. •bo ar,-uect
against MU, declared the law
was clear.
''Consress has not changed
the law, and this court should
not amend the law," he said.
"TV A took the position it would
not comply with the Endangered
Species Act." •
lie also said "transplantation
is not a fulflllment of the act.
The Hiwasee transplant does not
currently appear to be suc·
cesaful.''
Const.ruction of the dam began
in 1967, six years before lbe En·
dangered Species Act became
Jaw.
The snail darter was not dis·
covered until 1973 and not
classified as endangered until
two years later.
Biologists argue that complet·
Ing the dam and closing its gates
would inundatd the spawning
grounds. The sltucture already
has stopped the snail darter
from migrating upstream to
spawn, the Department of In· terior says.
There ai:e no estimates of the
number of snail darters surviv·
ing in the Llttle Tennessee. but
the Interior Department thinks
about 1,000 auu live lo the waterway.
Water District ~ .
' •' ·i
... ~ ,;~ ".
Election OK'd
By PIDUP ROSMARIN °'-~ ..... Sutt Directors of the lrvi.ne Ranch
Water District have auth~zed a
landowners' bond election June
19, but reduced potential in·
debtedness by more than a half·
billion dollar$.
Th e vote Monday was unan.
imou1;. The two publicly elect·
ed direct.ors of lbe board, Wayne
Clark and William. Eppinger,
took the initiating actions.
Numerous residents of Irvine
Trasbm.en
On Strike .
In County ,
a,. I MmSllWllAN °' ..............
Truck drivers for • numut:;.: Orana•~..._.co firms went on ltrlke at mldllebt
Monday, leaving several On.nee
Coast cities wit.bout rubbish col·
lection.
Affected are Huntin gton
Beach, Fountain Valley, Costa
Mesa and Laguna Beach, along
with Anaheim. Ora.age, Santa
Ana, Garden Grove, Fullerton
and Buena Parle. Those cities contract with
private firms to collect their
rubbish. Cities that employ their
truck drivers diredJy, such as Newport Beach, were not af.
fected.
Only some residents living in
unincorporated county territory
will be affected by the trash
driver ~trike. All of Lake Forest
will be affected as well as about
one half or El Toro.
Sections of the county souther·
Jy of El Toro Road, including
Mission Viejo and Dana Point,
a re not In the strike territory at
this lime, county authorities
said.
In e mergency action today,
Orange County supervisors vol·
ed to open to the public during
working hours trash transfer
stations at which county trucks
normally collect refuse from the
private trucks.
The only station on the Orange
Coast is located i.n Huntington
Beach on Gothard Street. just
south or Talbert Avenue. n will
be open. effective today, from 7
a.m. to 4 p.m. Gene Raasch, president or
Teamsters Local 396, said
negotiations that began March 4
reached an Impasse Monday
night, when the drivers' three-
year contract expired.
He said he has no ldea how
long the strike may last. A pre·
vious strike continued for three
weeks.
Raasch said coofiict centers on wage and benefit lssues.
<See DRIVERS, Page AU
and the Irvine City Council bad
asked the board t.o delay a d&-
cision until the state attorney
general issues an opinion on the
.constitutionality of board mem· · berahip. ·
Irvine City Attorney James •
Er1cls.son contends the land·
owner dominance of the board
violates the constitutional prin·
ciple of ooe man, one vote.
In a t8lldem action Monday,
the water board also created
four new water improvement
districts 8Dd ............ -profemeal'4iltricta. •
UoW1Nnol tM._.$18 ,
'7 .ooo. ae,... ol mottb' -.
corporated lntDe Ce>Aoen1 lud
approve. the Ill Wu wlU i'-
authoriJDed t.o llllUe ... ,,...
in geDeral obk lllioD ... for ~ future water IDCI...,... llD9.
Tbe district ofitlnallJ eoe-
sldered .um, wMtl to _,,.,,..
a Sl.6 billion bood lasue -bi«·
gest in the llistory of SIM atate..
CSee f ATBB, Pale A!)
, ..... ,..,.....
'LOVE SLAVE' SUSPECT JOYCE MC KINNEY
Will the Mountlea Get Their Woman In Canada?
2 Fleeing Suspects
Sought by Mounties
OTTAWA <AP) -The Moun·
t ies are looking fo r Joyce
McKinney and Keith May, who
ned from Britain to Canada to
escape trial on charges or kid·
napping a young Mormon mis·
slonary.
games with the young man to help
him sort out his sexual prob-
lems, but insisted he was a "will·
ing participant and thal she "did
it all for love."
Miss McKtnney and May were
out on bail awaiting an ap-
pearance May 2 in London
criminal court. They reported to
police 1here Wednesday, as re·
quired by their bail conditions,
then vanished from the north
London house. I NSIDE TODAY
Correotdor, tM deorl11 COfto
ucrottd earth to tohicla
Douglaa MacArthur rdto'ntd,
ha• btco1"4f a mecca for
JapaM# ""'"",_ S« Page
.47
TalJman Services Set
The Royal Canadian Mounted
Police alerted its offices to look
for the pair after being informed
by Interpol that they took an Air
Canada flight from Shannon,
Ireland. to Montreal and Toron·
to on Wednesday wearing wigs
and posing as deaf-mutes.
Miss McKinney, V, of Min·
neapolis, N.C., and May, 2", or
Maywood, Cali!., are charged
with kidnapping Kirk Anderson,
21, of Provo, Utah, wblle be was
doing missionary work ln Bri·
taln and imprisoning him In a
cottage last Sept.ember.
Jane Fonda Slated
At UCI Lecture Funeral services for aviator
Frank G. IJ'allman W will be held Tbunday at St.. Joachim's
Catholic Church in Costa Mesa.
Mr. Tallman died Saturday
when his Piper Aztec plane
cra•bed on a rugged aboulder of
Saddleback Me>wttaln dw1ng a
ru1bt from Oa.ldand to Orange
County Airport. Nass ot Cbrtatlan burial ls
scheduled for 2:30 p.m. Thun·
day at St. Joachim 's, 1964
Orange Ave.' Burial wlll M at Paclflc View Memorial Park,
COroDI deJ Mar
Otnclatmg al the service will
be Bishop Juan Anube or Los
Angeles and Monsignor Thomas
J. Nevln of St. Joachim's.
Mr. Tallman was one of the
world's best·known aviators and
movle stunt pilots.
He-wu re~ returning
from scouting movie Jocatlons
when the tragedy occurred. A
NaUonal Tranaportation Safety
Board investl.lator bas Indicated
be found no ~ya:tcal defects In
Mr. Tallman • plane, but his re-
port Is not yet completed.
Mr. Tallman le.ves b1a wire,
•
Ruth, of Newport Beacb; his
son, Frank Gifford Tallman IV
of Jrvlne; a daughter, GaU
Leake of Torrance; bis mother,
Inez Tallman of New Jersey; a
brother, Foster Tallman of New
J ersey, and a slater, Trudy Jay
of La JoUa.
The family hH auteeated
memorial donatklol to I.be orcan
fuod at Hou Memorial ff01plt.al
In Newport Beach, to ~ atten•
tlon of Rev. WllUam R. Parry.
Cbeckl aboQld ht made out to
the boapl~ .
l
Anderson, who had been Ml8s
McKinney's former boy friend,
claimed he was kept chained to
a bed and ro~ed to have sexual
intercourse with 'her three
tJmes. The woman, a former ~uty
contest winner In Wyomln1,
teetUied •t a prell m lnary
beartna that. she pl•Yed boDdqe
Actress Jane Fonda, nominal·
ed for an Academy Award fo r
her role aa Lillian Hellman in
"Julia," and an Oscar winner
for her performance as a pro.~·
tltute in "Klute," lecture:. on "Women lo Films" at 7 p.m.
Thursday at UC frvin ~·s
Crawford Hall.
Gentn1 admlaslon la $4: UCI
students, $2! oth~r
students, fl: other students, UCI
faculty and staff, $3. TtckeLs wU! beav~UabJeatt.bedoor.
•• I OM...Y ... lOf
. . Market
Rally,
Halted
NEW YORK CAP) -Slook
pr•ces halted their dramatic ~ ward charge of the paat Uttee
seuions today as rnany In·
vestors sold issues that Jumped
sharply in prtce dwing the rally
that began Thursday.
Nixon's Tapes
The Dow Jones average of 30
industrial stocks closed down 8.~
points to803.27.
Declining issues out.numbered
those that gained by about a 2-1
margin in active trading.
"The market has been down
for months and many people
have been holding their stock for
a long time hoping to gel even or
to make a llUle profit. Now that
It's up. they are selling," said
John J . Smith, an analyst w)th
th e Wall Street firm of
l"cthnestock & Co.
The rally began Thursday,
when the Dow climbed 8.92
points. It cooti.aued Fdday and
Monday with record volume,
which pushed the Dow up nearly
another 3S points. It was fueled by foreign investors and large
1ns11tullons such as ihsurance
<'11mpaniM and 'pension plans.
/\:iulysts today said th., large
I 1:wcs1ors were less eager to buy
1 t'.Jrly Ill lh'e session. ,'
I "This indicates the instlt\iUons
f hhe decided to siep away-.and a let the dust settle a bit," said
I Smith.
• It is common for the market to
Buflert's Bard Bats
A collection of hard hats is among the
hundreds of items collected by the late
Sen. Hubert Humphrey during his years
cis senator and vice presi~ent. The Hum·
Pair Held •
phrey family and staff will de~ide how the
items. now being sorted by the Minnesota
Historical Society. wUf be used.
in Slayings
You~ Sister Victi~s in Burglary Try
SANTA MONICA SAP> -father, insurance broker James entered. Se~l knives and a
Poli,ce arrested a part-limE S. Dean, found his children's blunt instrument were sent to
roofer and his wife today in the bodies. he began to scream so the crime lab for study. he
knife and bludgeon killing of a loudly that an officer tak.lng a added.
high school senior and bis 12-burglary report at a neighbor's Kennerley said the Zim·
year.old sister. house beard him and responded, mermans were traced via wit·
John William Zimmerman, Sgl. Robert Simone,au said. nesses who saw their car parked
and his wife, Merrilee Claire The officer found Brian's body in the nelghborbood and noted
·Zimmerman, both 28, were on the family room floor beneath the license number. Zlm·
booked Cor invest1gat1on of a pool table and the girl's bloody merman had previously been ar·
murder after they were pjcked body on her brother's be1f Ken· rested for burglary, he said.
up without reslsta11ce at abc)ut 7 nerley said. He would-~ot say
WASHINGToN (AP> the
U.S. Supreme Court barred the
publJc today lrom UstenJng to
the 30 Wblte House ta" record·.
ings played at the w-.tergate
cover·up trla1 of aides toJormer
President Nixon.
The court's 7-2 declalon re·
\tersed a 1976 ruling by the U.S.
Circuit Court ot Appeals that
would hav~ made the tapes
available to the three com-
mert'ial television networks,
public television and a recording
company planningoito sell copies
or lt\e tapes for home use.
"Considering all th e
circumstances of this conceded·
ly singular case. we hold that
the common·iaw right of a«:ess
to judicial recoras does not
authorize release of the tapes in
q uesllon." Justice Lewta F.
Powell Jr. wrote for U\e court's majority. •
The court's ruling 11 a major
te1al victory for Nlxoo, who
persistently challenged the
tapes' release as an invasion of
privacy.
Joining Powell's opinion were
Chief Justice Warren E. Burger
and Justice s Harry A .
Blackmun. William H. Rehn·
quisl and Potter Stewart.
AU but Stewart were appointed
to the nation's highest court by
Nixon. -
Justices William J . Brennan ,bfl~k of( fro~ ~h,arp movements
' ·either up or dow!l. experts note.
'· T~Y add that today·~ pause
1 d1 s not necessarily mean the •··~91 ~~over
this morning at their Venice whether the iirl wu sexually
area duplex, said Sgt. Steve molested.
Kennerley. • Simoneau said a violent strug·
l',...P~AJ . . / "'· ~ Ce~er ·.Llln~.
! De~eloj>inent
( Plans Studied
Plans for development or the
vacant land in Newport Center,
which include construction of a
hiflh-ri~ ornce building, will be
discussed tonight at city hall.
The plans will be studied in
, the weekly informal session con·
ducted by city staff members as
. part on the continuing review or
the city's general plan.
,, Irvine Company represen-
ll tatlvea wilt di.scua& plans fqr the
etcht-acre Eutbluff Park rem-
-nant and the residential parcels
along Fifth Avenue in addit.oo to
" the plans for N~n<Jenter.
A i~l!sml6b for tl\e' Kon
Center .Newi><*t ls expected to
be on hand to discuss completion
or the airport-area business
complex as well.
The meeting is scheduled for
7:30 p.tn In the conference room
or the city hall annex
The sergeant said .Brian Dean,
18, and his sister, Vriaoa, were
slaughtered after-apparently
surprising two burglars who en.
texed and ransacked their home Monday night.
When the dead children's
gle was indicated by blood stains
in .several rooms of &be house.
B~t Kenoerley said It was uncer·
tam whether the two victims had
• stnaggled or had been attacked
with unusual brulali~y.
Simoneau said there was
evidence the house was forcibly
Food 'Fixed'
Vendor's Tacos 'Tranquil'
ENSENADA. Mexico !AP> -Authorities here
became suspicjous when: they saw how satisffed1
customers of Felipe Reyes· taco stand seemed to be
and the high price the consumers paid for tacos. · '
Mexican Federal .Jud1ciaJ Police staked out the
popular vendor Monday for a lime and then moved
in. Reyes· specialty turned out to be a Seconal taco
costing the peso equivalent of about SI.SO each.
Officers found about 30 tranquilizers at the
stand, including one slipped into a tasty treat fixed
for a customer who had asked for "a taco with."
Reyes. 22. of Ensenada and his customer were
taken to jail where the taco vendor admitted buying
the drug illegally from a pharmacy.
E'ro• Page Al
TRAFFI~ INITIATIVE DEBATED • • • deficiency" he cited is East
Coast Highway in Corona del
Mar.
He described the inltlallve as
a negative way to try to solve
the city 's traffic problems
which. he predicted, would
worsen even if no more building
occurs in the city. ·
Jones noted that the four ma· JOr landowners. including the
Jrvine Co .• that control about 650
or the city's remaining 1.000
"acanl acres, are not planning to
produce developments that are as
dense as those allowed in the
<'tl y's general plan.
He s8.id be felt it would be bet·
ter for the city to complete the
general plan review now under
way. It is aimed at reducing
future building and providing a
timing device to gear that build·
ing to road improvements.
NB Attorney
Sets Br.i~ing
On Airport
Newport Beach city Attorney Report "Untrue' Dennis O'Neil will brief residents Wednesday on the C.ORSIER·SUR-VEVEY, city's position In lhe upcoming
S witzerland <AP > -Tbe noise variance hearings for the
magistrate investigating the • Orange County Airport.
CharUe Chaplin body-snatch.inc The hearing, tentatively
Jones predicted the process.
slated for completion next
month. would produce the prin· ciples sought In the initiative.
"If not, then the citizens
always have recoune to an in· itialive," he said.
The general plan review must
be approved by the Planning
Com mission and the City Coun·
cil and Jones said he believes
the initiative will not be needed
.. after the elections."
He WM referring to the elec·
lion of three new city coun-•
cilmen who were backed by
members of LEAF.
NB to Try
Again/or
TrockMeet
WATER BOND VOTE. ~ • \
But cutbacks or more than SS20
million were m'ade in each. of
two area.s.
The firs t cut was a direct
response to Irvine City Council
objections that the water dJstrict
plan for water and ·sewer proj·
eels adjacent to El Toro Marine
Air Station were contrary to the
city general plan.
The city general plan shows
the territory. within the flight
noise impact area of the base, in
permanent agricultural use,
' with no urban uses permitted.
Elimination or that area from
IR W D plans resulted in a
S321 ,839,000 reduction in bond
needs.
The second cut. of $335,797,000,
was achieved mathematically.
by reducing the expected doUar
inflation rate after 1985 Cthe
projects are scheduled thr1>ugh
2010) from eight percent a year to
six percent.
Until 1985, lhe inflation rate is
calculated at 10 perc~nt a year.
Clark made the motion to ap.
prove the cuts. Director Orville
Reinhardt objected that it would
be shortsighted to reduce \he
district ·s financing potential. but
was persuaded to vote with the
others.
Director E. Ray Quigley Jr.
argued "someone has to set a
limit to get a handle on lnfla· tion."
If inflation continues al a
gallop, he said, there won't be
any water or sewer projects to
finance because "There ain't
gonna be a sound economy
around. The economy's going to
go to hell in a handbasket
anyway."
Environmental writer Wesley
Marx. an Irvine resident,
criticized the board actions.
complaining there should have
been an environmental impact
study done for the proposed
bond issue.
The board has taken the posi·
lion that me~ autlterizatloo to
issue bonds is exemPt-fton< the
EIR p~. that EIRs wUl be
made when and if· actual proj· eels .are proposed and actual
bonds are to be issued.
Marx countered that cost
estimates for the bonds were
"not made straight out of your
head." but ·rather from ideas for
specific projects.
The boa.rd still faces a lawsuit
on that issue. filed in Superior
Court by legal aid societies in
Orange and Los Angeles coun .
ties.
Those groups contend an EJR
s hould have been done to study
availability of affordable hous.
ing in the area for workers who
will ~ct the water and sewer p ts.
#',....Page A l
DRIVERS ...
He said the drivers are cur-
rently paid $4.50 an hour and
have asked for a S2 an hour raise
the first year and Sl an hour the
second and third years.
The firms have orrered 50
cents the first year and 30 cents
the second and third years .
Raasch said.
Raasch said members also
want dental coverage and five
days of sick leave per year. He
sal<t they currently have none. In
addition, drivers want a require·
ment tbat tbey ~ sent three
warning letters before they are
dismissed. Currently. Raasch
saJd. no warning letters are re· quired.
' He said employers have of-
fered one addJtional holiday per
year and a slight acljustment in
the vacation schedule. Drivers
get one week per year atler one•
year or service. two weeks after
three years and 'three weeks
Jr,. and 8¥ron R. White did not
a1ree · w;!lh 'all 'of ~ow,ll's rea-
sonl9g, but tbey ....,-voted to
bar release ol the t~.
Dissenting were Justices
Thurgood Marshall and John
Paul Stevens.
"Needless to say. we're
argued the case ror Nixon before
the Supreme Co~.
Transcripts or the tapes were
publicized duri.ng the 1914 trial
of former Attorney General
John Mitchell and ex-White
House aides H. ft. Haldeman
and John Efirlichmao. All oo
transcripts' were widely quoted
jn part or In their entirety tn
newspapers and other publica-
tions.
But except for the 12·meDlber
jury and tbo&e people wbo sat
through all or portJoos of tbe
trial, t.he public has never beard
the actual voices of Nixon and
his aides diacussing the scandal
that forced him from otfice.
Filing suit in 19?6 to have the
tapes released were ABC, CBS,
NBC. the Public Broadcasting
Service, the Badlo.Televislon News Direct.ors A.ssoctatton _.
Warner Communications. • ,.
The networta, pablle' television and tbe new dlNetws ·
group sought to a1r pee•'r• .,
the tapes wb1le w...,. ....... :
to reproducetaMmfol>aaleMftC-1
ords ~tapeeaeM&tel .. ~;.~
Nixon .al'IQld tUt tllle _..
release woUld came Ma p..a
embarnssment., f#'~~ , ·
· Semees Set .. ·
""' For Heiress -~it
• I ~
From Newport
Memorial services will be held
Saturday in Newport Beach for
former Newport Beach resident
Evelyn Frances WIUiams, who
died last month at the age ot TT.
Mrs. Williams, Maybelline
cosmetj~s heiress, died as a
result ol an explosion and fire at
her estate at Lake Hamilton,
Hot Springs, ~rk.
She lived on Lido Isle from
1969 to 1974.
Memorial services are
sc:hedu,ed at Pacific View
Chapel in Newport Beach at 2 p. m. Saturday.
Survivors include a son,
William P . Williams of PaJm
Springs; three granddaughters.
Sharrie Dorney of Huntington
Beach, Donna Williams of
Marina del Rey and Billie Rae
Williams of Newport Beach: a
grandson, William P. Williams
JI J of Palm Springs, and a
great-granddaughter.
Child P sychiatrist
1 Plans CdM Speec~
Dr. Paul Wood. C0·8Ulhor or
the book. "How To Get Your
Children To Do Wh at You Want
Them To Do,·· wall speak at
Harbor Day Schoor at 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday.
The talk at the school at 3443
Pacific View Drive, Corona de!
Mar. is open to the public. Dr.
Wood is an assistant professor of
psychiatry and human behavior
at UC Irvine.
1 case denied as "absolutely un· scheduled Ma y 22, Is t o
true" an American newsp•J>('r d e t e rm i n e i ( t h e s ta le
report Monday that the come· Department of Transpo~Uon
dian's wife was informed by the should grant the tJllrpo1't a
kidnappers weeks ago where the variance from estabnshed state
body was hidden. noise standards. The airport has
Newport Beach city otlicials
hope the third time wlJJ be a
charm Wednesday when they
try to finish the city track meet
that has twice been canceled
because or rain.
New daily nonstop seNice from nearby Orange· County airport.
OAANQ£ COAST
'DAILY PILOT
"~ ....... ~·-.. ·--·-JH··~ Vl(t ~hMlif"t •rid Gtnef~ MIMQH" ·-··""" Edit°' ,_ .. .....,....,
~~ .. ;"" ,.,. ...
CM''"" '-• -.. "' ..... .......... ,Moo_ ...........
.. twice been granted varian.ces in
the past.
The city is opposed to the jet
traffic out of the airport because
of noise and air pollution
problems in Newport Beach.
O'Nell"s briefing session will
begin at 3 p.m. in the city hall
annex conference room.
Ubemce's
Sureeasor?
LONDON (AP> -Liberace
and his former ch11uffeur
dazzled the audience at the Lon·
don Palladium with both their
piano playing aod their outfits.
Vince Cardell, who used to
drive Liberace's Roll!·Royce for
his Las Vegas performances,
waa dressed Jn a dupUcate of the
glitter tails outfit that the
American star sported for hJs
part of Mond~ night's show
"Vlnco used to play by ear.
but I 1-Ulbt him to ,.ad music," Liberace coolldid to tbe au·
dltnce. ''He la my Pf'Ottte and
he Is also leamfn1 how to be a
showoCf like me."
The meet is now scheduled Cor
5.30 p.m. at Newport Harbor
High School.
The meet was originally to
have been held April 8, but was
canceled because of a storm and
reset ror last Saturday. Only a
few events were held before rain
washed out the meet.
A city recreation spokesman
said today that the results or the
events that were run on Satur·
day wlll stand. Wednesday's
meet will include the boys' and
girls' events that weren't heJd
Saturday. ·
Tbe top three finJshers in each event will be eligible to go on to
countywide meets ror boys and
girls.
FBI 'Contacted'
NEW YORK (AP> -A high-
ranklng Soviet diplomat. Arkady
N. St)tvchenko, who refuses to
r(ltum homo from b1a post at the
Un.iled Natlona, hu been in con·
t.act With the FBI and tho Cla\ for
"StveraJ years, Tho New York
Times reportodtoday.
Economical Sunjet Tours plus discount fares for families and groups.
Fly Air California and make it easy on yovrself.
AIR e CALIFORNIA
We're easy to take.
Cdll Air Colltornio ResetVOnons In Oronge County, ( 714) 752-1 COO; Oownev.
(213) 924-3313: Loguno. (714) 496-600). Los Angeles. l213) 627-5401, SOn Clemente
(714) 496-6£XX). r?lvers1de1Son Bernardino. (714) 82~0900, or your tocol Trovel Agent.
c I\' ~·111 \•
>
I VOL 71, NO. 108, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES
l 1 Capo
By ANNE COOPER
Ol•D1111¥ ...........
A $34.4 million preliminary
' 1971H9 budget was presenWd lo
Capistrano Unified School Dis·
trict trustees Mooday, with a
final budget scheduled for adop-
tion in Auauat.
Tba prelirolnacy budget would
require· a property tax rate of
$4.36 ~ iioo asaesMd valua·
lion, u~ from the current $Ul
tax rate.
"Obviously most people are
willing lo pay for our prorrams,
because they are not here by the
hundreds," said truatee Ted
Kopp of Capistrano Beach.
The only member of the au-
dience lo address lbe school
board on the prelin\inary budget
Monday was retired San
Clemente resident George
Jen1'1.na!
1
f
D911y Nil kllll .....
JASON DE HAVEN ST. JOSEPH'S 100.eoont BMY
With Parents, Bruce and Debnl, end Sister Tenye, 2
BonusBahy
Jason Number 10Q,()(J()
By OUVE BARLEY
Ol ltle Dell' Pillot Si.ft
Jason Lee De Haven entered
the world a little bit early and
got under the wire. He became
the 100.000th baby lo be born at
St. Joseph Hospital of Orange.
Jason. a premature baby, and
his parents Bruce and Debra Ue
llaven, 5202 "O" St., Marine
• Corps Air Station, El Toro, were
showered with gifts in honor of
the occasion.
Inc luded were a layette
crocheted by the Sisters of St.
Joseph, photographs. gifts from
baby product suppliers and de·
partmenl stores. baseball game
tickets and a baseba ll auto-
graphed by Angtel pitcher Nolan
Ryan.
A special gift came from the
hospital which is not submitting
a bill.
Little Jason 's birth April 10
marked a 49-year milestone for
the -hospital, the only private
hospital recording 100.000 births
in Southern California.
The baby was born by
caesarean section. seven weeks
premature. He weighed fi ve
pounds. five ounces and was 18112
inches long.
"I was totally amazed." said
De Haven, a Marine Corps
aircraft electrician. "We just
couldn 'l believe how nice every·
one was. It was like having the
first New Year·s baby."
Although little Jason lost a few
ounces, both he and Debbie are
home and doing fine, he said .
Hospital personnel and vis·
ilors were served birthday cake
and coffee when announcement
of the 100,000 birth was made.
"Obstetl'ical care has ad ·
vanced dramatically s ince
1929. ·· com mented John C .
Goldthorpe, administrator. "The
safe delivery of J ason Lee De
Haven demonstrates the great
strides in perinatal care which
have been m ade since the
hospital was founded."
1
2 Fleeing Suspects
· S(Jught by Mo unties.
OTTAWA tAPl -The Moun-
ties ar e looking Cot J u)\::~
McKinney and Keith May, Who
.lled from Britain to Canada to
• escape trial on charges of kid-
' napping a young Mormon mis·
sionary.
The Royal Canadian Mounted
, Police alerted lt.s offices to look
for the palr after being informed
by Interpol that they took an Air
Canada night from Shannon,
lr~land, to Montreal and Toron·
to on Wednesday wearing wigs
and posing as cleaf ·mutes.
Miss McKinney. Z7, ot Min·
neapolis, N.C., and May, 24, of
Maywood, Calif., are charged
wilb kidnapping Kirk Anderson,
21, of Provo, Utah, wbile he was
doin• rntsalonary work in Bri ·
tain and Imprisoning hi~ in a
cottage last September.
Anderson, who had been Mbs
, McKinney's former boy friend,
claimed be was lrept ·chained to
a bed and forced to have sexual
Intercourse with her three
times. •
The woman, a former beauty 1 contest winner In Wyoming,
testified at a preliminary
bearing that ahci played bonda&e
'
games with the young man lo help
him sort out his sexual prob·
!ems, but unsisted he was a wHJ.
ing participant and that she "did
it all for love." Miss McKinney and May were
out on bail awaiting an ap·
pearan~e May 2 ln London
criminal court. They reported to
police -there Wedn~ay, as re·
qu.ired by their bail conditions,
then vanished from the north
London house.
Uslng the names Joan O'Con-
nor and Anthony McGowan, both
deceased, they, went to Shannon,
where Air Canada offlclal John
Noran reported: "The couple
used scribbled notes lo tell me
they were due to take part in a
mimed play in Toronto."
The crew of the Alr Canada
plane ldent.ified the pair from
rolor picturee ~nt ano~ymously
to t he London Daily Mirror.
Miss McKinney was wearing a
long-haired red wig, heavy
makeup, bright red UpsUck and
blue-Unted glasses. May wore a
thick curly black wla and
glasses. 'lbe photos we~ accom·
panled by death c rtlficates for
Mias O'Connor and McGowan.
~-
'
r
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, APRIL 18, 1978
,
Af t e rnoon
N.Y. Stoeb
I
25e Tax: Kate lfike
"There ls an awful Jot or pad·
ding in tbls budget," said
Jenkins. "I suggest you cut out
all the raule-dazzle and sUck to
a:eadlng. writing and
arithmetic."
Jen kins charged the school
district with using "scare tac·
tics" to frighten voters from vot ..
ing for the Jarvis-Gann property
tax Initiative on the June ballot.
Dlstrlct> administrators in·
.
eluded wlth the prellmh~ary
budget document a list ot S"'8·
gested reducUons aroountlnc to
$16.2 million. which they said
would -have to be cut. from the
budget if the Jarvis-Gann in·
itiative is approved.
Included among suggested re·
ductions were:
-30 percent salary reductions
for teachers and classirled
employees and layoffs of 40
classified persoM el ($8.7 million
saved>.
-Reassignment ot counselors
and teaching specialists to
claasroom t.eacblng ($1.1 million
saved>. ·
-EUminatlon of the •In·
• .dergarten program <$633.t42
saved>.
-Increased class loads and
limitation of five subject.a for
high school students ($1.7
~rape Use Out
Top Court BackS Nixon Pka
WASHINGTON <AP> -The
U.S. Supreme Court barred the
public today from listening to
the 30 White House tape record·
ings played at the Watergate
cover-up trial of aides to former
}>resident Nixon.
The court's 7·2 decision re·
versed a 1976 ruling f,y the U.S.
,..Circuit Court of Appeals that
would have made the tapes
available to the three com·.
mercial television networks,
public television and a recording
company planniog to sell copies
or the l1tpes for home use.
Trasbm.en
On Strike
In (:ounty
By JACIUE HYMAN °' .. .....,,.s.-
Truck drivets for a number of
Orange Coanty truh collecUon
firms went on strike at midnight
Monday, le•vial. .. nral Orange
Coast cities ~ rubbish col·
lection.
Affeded are Huntington
Beach, Fountain Valley, Costa
Mesa and Laguna Beach. along
with Anaheim, Orange. Santa
Ana, Garden Grove, Fullerton
and Buena Park. ·
Those cities contract with
private firms to collect their
rubbish. Cities that employ their
truck drivers directly. such as
Newport Beach. were not af·
fected.
Only some residents Ii ving in
unincorporated county territory
will be affected by the trash
driver strike. All of Lake Forest
will be affected as well as about
one half of El Toro.
Sectio~ of the county souther·
ly of El Toro Road, including
Mission Viejo and Dana Point.
are not in lbe strike territory at
this lime, county authorities
said .
In emeriency action today.
Orange County supervisors vol·
ed to open to the public during
working hours trash transfer
stations at which county trucks
normally collect refuse from the
private trucks.
The only station on the Orange
Coast is localed in Huntington
Beach on Gothard Street just
south or Talbert Avenue. It will
be open. ertective today. from 7
<See DaJVEBS, Page A2)
Senior Lunch
Program Eyed
By Trustees
Saddleback Valley Unified
School District trustees are ex-
pected to give final approval
Wednesday to acceptance or a
$75,000 federal grant to conduct
a senior lunch program begin·
nlng in May.
The board meeting will take
place at 8 p.m. at district of.
fices, 25631 Diaeno Dr. in Mls·
s\on Viejo.
The Junch proeram ls expect·
ed to provide bot lunches to up to
120 area seniors over 62 years
old.
The Pf'Oll'•m will be conduct·
ed at t he district's central
kitchen ln Mwlon Viejo.
Tbe $75,000 grant coven the
program tbro\llh Mar. 31, 19'19.
Senion participating in the
program are uked to donate
75 cent.I per meal 1r they AA able
todoao.
School omctalJ maintain the
pro1ram will not l1wolve district
1none1 but the donalloo of
facllillee and some atatt Ume.
t
"C on s ider ing all the
circumstances of this conceded·
ly singular case. we hold that
the common-law rlgbt or access
lo judiclal records does not
authorize release of the tapes in question," Justice Lewis F.
Powell Jr. wrote for th( court'~
majority.
The court's ruling is a major
leg a 1 victory for Nixon1 who
persistently' challenged the
tapes ' release as an invasion of
privacy. Joining Powell's opinion were
Chief Justice Warren E . Burger
and Jus ti ces Harr y A .
Blackmun, William H. Rehn·
quist and Potter Stewart.
All but Stewart were appointed
lo the nation's highest court by
Nixon.
Justices William J . Brennan
J r. iind sr·on R. While djd not
agree wit all o! Powell's rea·
sonlng. but they also voted to
bar release of th~ tapes. '
Dissenting were Justices
'l:hurgood Marshall and John
Paul Stevens.
"Needless to sav. we're
ISee TAPES, Page A2>
Tlte Agong of l'ietorg
Mexico's Niguel Canto appears to be wincing in pain as
he lifts the World Boxing Council flyweight cham-
pionship trophy in Tokyo. Actually he's winking at Soji
Nagatani. who presented him with the trophy following
his defeat of Japanese challenger Shoji Oguma.
Couple Arrested
In Youths' Slaying
SANTA MONICA <AP) -
Police arrested a part-lime
roofer and his wife today In the
knife and bludgeon killing ·of a
high school senior and his 12·
year-old sister.
John William Zimmerman,
and his wife, MerrHee Claire
Zimmerman, both 28, were
booked for Investigation of
murder after they were picked
up without resistance at about 7
this morning at thelr Venice
area duplex, said Sgt. Steve
Kennerley.
T he sergeant said Brian Dean,
18, and bis sister. Vrian•, were
slaughtered after apparently
surprising two burglars who en-
tered and ransacked their home
Monday nilht.
When the dead childr en's
father, insurance broker James s. Dean, found bls children's
bodies. he began lo scr .. m so
loudly that an officer taking a
burglary report at a neiabbor's
house beard bim and responded.
Sgl. Robert S11noneau said.
The officer found Brtan 's body
on the fam.U.y room floor beneath
a pool table and t.M flrl'a bloody
body on her brother 1 bed, Ken·
nerJey sa,Jd. He would not aay
wbetbe?' the atrl waa sexually mo~1ted. .
·•
Simoneau said a violent st~g
gle was indicated by blood stains
in several rooms of the house
But Ke.nnerley said it was Wlcer·
lain whether the two victims had
struggled or had been attacked
with unusual brutality.
Simoneau said there was
evidence the house was rorcibly
entered. .• .veral knives and a
blunt instrument were sent to
the crime lab for study, he
added.
Kennerley said the Zim·
mermans were traced via Wll·
nesses who saw their car parked
in the neighborhood and noted
lhe lice nse numbe r . Zim·
merman had previously R>een ar·
rested for burglary, he said.
Thief Gets Cash,
Gems in El Toro
A burglar who forced the lock
on a sliding 111ass door to gain
entry lo an El Toro borne car·
rted off cash and je~lry with a
total value ot ts.080.
Orange County sheriff's ol·
ficen said the break·ln occurred
at t he home or manUfacturer
Jerry Wallin, 38, of 24801
Ridgewood Drive, while he was
away from~ premlaes.
,,
'
million saved).
-Elimination of athletic pro·
grams ($!16,313 saved >.
-Elimination of transporta·
lion except for Special Educa·
tioo student. ($548,667 saved>.
-Supply and school improve·
11,'lent reductions < $1.3 miJJion
saved>.
-Reduction of special pro·
grams. like occupational train·
<See BUDGET, Page AZ>
IA-London
Trip Cut~
LONDON (AP> -Laker
Airways, whose Skytrain
service pushed the big
airlines to cut the cost of
trans-Atlantic tickets.
says it will introduce even
cheaper fares on some
round trips between Bri-
tain and the United States
and Canada next month.
Fre ddie Laker said
Monday it would offer ad·
vance booking charter
flights to Chicago, Detroit.
New York and Montreal
for $183 roundtrip and' to
Los Angeles 1:1nd San
Francisco for $368.
The London-New York
roundtrip with Laker 's
non -c harter Skytrain
service costs S257.
IRWD
Approves
Bond Vote
By PHIUP ROSMARIN
OI ... O.lly ~MC SUH Directors of the Irvine Ranch
Water Distrlcl have authoriied a
landowners' bond election June
19, but reduced potential in·
debtedness by more than a half·
billlon dollars.
The vote Monday was unan·
fmous. The two publicly elect·
t!<. dir~tors or the board, Wayne
Clark and William Eppinger,
took the initiating actions.
Numerous residents of lrvine
and the Irvine City Council had
asked the board to delay a de·
cision until the state attorney
general issues an opinion on the
constitutionality of board mem·
bership.
Irvine City Attorney James
Erickson contends the land ·
owner dominance of the board
violates the constitutional pnn·
ciple of one man. one vote.
In a tandem action Monday.
the water board also created
four new water improvement
districts and six new sewer im·
provemenl districts.
If owners of the more than
47 .000 acres of mostly unm·
corporated Irvine Company land
approve. the I RWD will be
authorired to issue $994,799,000
in general obligation bonds for
future water and sewer lines
The district originally con·
sidered asking voters to approve
a $1.6 billion bond issue -big·
gest in the history or the state.
But cutbacks or more than S320
million were made m each or
two areas.
The fi rst cut was a direct
response to Irvine City Councii
objections that the water district
plan for water and sewer proj·
ects adjacent to El Toro Marine
Air Station were contrary to the
city general plan. or::a c o as•
~
\\'e athe r
Fair through Wednes ·
day and a little warmer.
Lows tonight 52 to 58.
Highs Wednesday 64 to 70.
I NSIDE T ODA 't'
Corregidor, the dearly con·
aecrated earth to which
Douglaa MacArlhUT returned.
1101 become a mecca for
JapoMse toumts. See Page
A7. ,
l•dex
CORVARO, Italy tAP> -A
message purportedly from ~
terrorist -kidn•P$)ers ot Aldo
Moro announced tod~ that tho
, forraer preP\ler wu executed
• and his body dumped in a moun·
•tain lake near here. Divers
flown to the icene began a
search but turned up nothlng im-
mediately
"I broke the tbin lee and
looked ror about oae hour but J
couldn't find anything-or anyone
there.'' said Gianni tJmiti, one
or the frogmen searching Lake
'Ouchessa, 72 miles northeast of
Rome and Utree miles from the
hamlet of Corvaro.
The lake ls less than one·
quarter mile long and ln places
its water is only knee deep.
The message, bearing the
signature of the Red Brigades.
said the 61-~ear-old president of
the ruling Christian Demoerallc
Party was executed "by
suicide." apparently a mocking
reference to the disputed deaths
in prison of German terrorists.
Moro, five times a premier
and probable next P,resident of
the republic, was abducted and
his live bodyguards were killed
by the Brigades, Italy's most
"feared urban guerrilla gang, in a
Rome street ambush March 16.
1'he kidnappers announced three
days ago that he had been con·
victed in a "people's trial" and
sentenced to die.
·&. Polic~ could not immediately
confirm that lodlly's commun1·
· que. found in Rome, was authen·
tic. Christian Democrat officials
said It appeared to be, but thev
did not exclude the possibility of
a ruse to shock the nation. ·
Lake Duchessa is 6,000 feet up
lhe slope of 8,159-foot Mount
Velino. one or the highest peaks
of lhe Appcnine Mountains, in a
rugged section of central Italy's
A bruzzi region.
F ro.Page A J
DRIVERS •..
a.m . to 4 p.m.
Gene Raasch. president of
Jeam s te rs Local 396, said
negotiations lhat began March 4
rt:ached an impasse Monday·
night, when the drivers' three-
year contract expired.
He said he has no idea how
long the strike may last. A pre-
vious strike continued for three
weeks.
Raasch said conflict centers
on wage and benefit issues.
He said the drivers are cur·
rently paid $4.50 an hour and
-have asked for a $2 an hour raise
the first year and Sl an hour the
second and third years.
Tht: firms have offered SO
cents the first year and 30 cents
the second and third years ,
Raasch said.
Raasch said members also
want dental coverage and five ·
days or sick leave per year. He
said they currently have none. In
addition, drivers want a reqwre·
ment that they be sent three
warning letters before they are
dlsm issed. Currently. Raasch
said. no warning letters are re·
quired
lie said employers have of
fered one additional holiday per
year and a slight adjustment in
the vacation schedule. Drivers
!(et one week per year aner one
year of service. two weeks after
three years and three weeks
a fter 10 years. The change.
which he said 1s acceptable,
would be lo allow three weeks
a(ter Ci#(ht years ,
Raasch said drivers also want
a change m the grievance pro
c·edure to match the one used in
Los Angeles
lie said drivers have twice
voted down employer offers.
S118pect 'Sick'
WASHINGTON CAP )
Former Rep. Otto Passman, 77,
is loo ill lo be arraigned on in·
fluence-peddlin~ charges.
ORANGE COAS1 ~II
'DA~LY PILOT
•tMr1N ..... PfttiOl!tn'""-'~•"""°' J•o• c_.,
Vt(• ~HiOtftt •nd 0t"tf"•f MltN9"f
n-•tl!HYll
f.OllM'
n:::::: ... ·~ °'"""'II l-. Ille-" .... AUl•l~f ..u,...,,. E•ttn
ledcll9tlecll V8Mev°"'°9
1Jltt IA Pu II Oto M.,.;, 61'..., k-•Y
0tr1c .. Ge\••-,• uo·••ntllly-.. .,.., . ...,.,..11o..,. 17111 -~-.... l•~ .. -<"' ,, .. OtitMe-¥'''''"'
T•l-.>hone (71•1~
Cleuff!M AdverttMlf-...n
._._. Valley -Olli<•
111.a10
~ ..... ,.,., .. _
4IMIOO ( .. ,,.c mt °"=. ~" -ltltl"t ~ ::~ .• , ~,"'= ~ .. ~~,.::~~ :-·= ro rt-..of .~ ..... , •-••• ,.,,,.,,,~ el CQP)fitf'I ......
!t<t ... ftH\ DOll•tt .. , .. et Olole llllt•a l •tlfernl• '"'Hrrt'1Hef\ h ,.,,.., ai W
MOft'f\t, '" flft•1t U \0 ,.....,.,...., MUlt••f --•-utt-tft••
>
Iii
Jl'rogmen, aoldlert and police
new ln beUcoptwa to Ut. lake -
virtually ~ctAible to 1round ~hieles and Mlan lookini for
lbe body. Loni lll'.les of mllit.,,,
jeeps and trucks arrived at '
lower elevation. Reportera were
barred from the search site and
confined to Corvaro.
·Services
Slated
Fu.neral aervlces ror avtator
Frank G. Tallman Ill wUI be
held Thursday at St. Joachim's
Catholic Church ln Costa Mesa.
Mr. Tallm•n died Saturday
when bit Plper Aztec pl'ine
crashed on a rugged shoulder o(
Saddleback Mountain during a
flight from Oakland to Orange
County Airport.
A colonel who asked not to be
Identified said the shallow
plake was frozen, •pparenlly by
cold overnight temperalurea.
BalJert'• Bard Bats
M aH of Christian burial is
scheduled for 2:30 pm. Thurs-
day at St. Joachim's, 1964
Orne Ave. Buri•I will be at
Pactlic View Memorial Park.
Corona det Mar. "We saw no trace of anybody
Of anrthlng. 1 dido 't even aee
lootprlnt.s, •• he said.
But residents said it bad
snowed heavily overnlaht -
some drifts were 12 feet deep -
and footprint.s could have been
obliterated. Fog also hampered
search efforts.
A collection of ha'rd hats is among the
hundreds of items collected by the late
Sen. 1 lubert Humphrey during his years
as senator and vice president. The Hum·
phrey family and staff will decide how the
items. now being sorted by the Minnesota
Historical Society. will be used. OfficlaUn-g at the tervlce will
be Bishop Juan Anube of Los
Angeles and Moosl«n<Jr Thomas
J. Nevin of St. Joacftlm'a.
Party leaders went to Moro's
house in Rome to inform his
wife Eleonora. At party head·
quarters, grim-faced officials
~at hered to await word ,
secretaries wept in the corridors
and Communist Party ch1 ef
Enrico Berlinguer a rrived for
consultation .
Dam Project Supported
Mr. Tallman was one of the
world's best-known avtat.ors and
movle sttmt pilots.
He was reportedly returning
from scouting movie locations
when the tragedy occt.lrted. A
National Transportation Safety
Board investigator has indicated
he found no physical defects in
Mr. Tallman's ptane. but his re-
port ls-not yet complet~.
The Italian cabinet was wait·
ing to be called Into urgent
session
r
WASJUNGTON <AP > -At-
torney General G rirtin Bell
asked the U.S. Supreme Court
today to decide against a three-
inch fish and to clear the way for
putting the finishing touches on
a new dam in eastern Ten-
nessee.
Bell asked the nine justices for
an order ~iving the Tennessee
Food 'Fixed'
Vendor's Tacos 'TMnquil'
t
ENSENADA. Mexico CAP > -Authorities here
became suspicious when they saw how satisfi ed
customers of FeHpe Reyes' taco stand seemed to be.
and thenlgh price the consumers paid for tacos
l\l exican Federal Judicial Police staked out the
popular vendor Monday for a time and then moved
in. Reyes' s pecialty turned out to be a Seconal taco
costing the peso equivalent of about Sl.50 each.
Officers found about 30 tranquiHzers at the
. stand. including one slipped into a tasty treat fixed
for a customer who had asked for "a taco with ...
Reyes. 22, of Ensenada and his customer were
taken to jail where the taco vendor admitted buying
the drug illegally from a pharmacy.
ClJSD RetlauffHng .
3 Administrators ..
Get.New Positions
Three Capistrano Unified
School District administrators
were promoted Monday to re-
cently created positions, subject
to, rejection or the J arvMl -Gann
property tax initiative in June.
The promotions, approved 6-0
b y trustees <with trustee
William Thompson or Mission
Viejo absent), are:
-Harold Hester, currently
curriculum and projects direc·
~or, to elementary education
director.
·-Robert Knapp, currently
personnel services d1re<:tor, to
employee relations director.
-Edward Kincaid, currently
Niguel Hills Junior High School
principal In Laguna Niguel, to
secondary education director.
No information was available
today rrom the school district on
salaries for the new positions.
which were created following a
recent management reorganiza.
lion, based on a consultant's
study
lroine Co. Chief
Views High Costs
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of tM Dally Pll-' Sl•ll
Irvi ne Company President
Peter Kremer made it clear to
Orange County home builders
Monday night they can expect to
face land prices raised "to what
the market will bea r" in their
dealings with his firm, the COW\·
ty's largest landowner.
·Durlng a question and answer
period fbllowlng his speech to
about 400 me mbers or the
Orange County Home BUiiders
Council, Kremer said the
builders can expect to reap a
lower profit margin from proj·
eels on Irvine Company land
than they would from proje<:ts
on other pro~y because or the
higher prices. l
Out Kremer also noted that
the ranch development.3 carry
with them an unstated
guarantee of financial success
for the builders who produce
them in partnership with the
company.
Kremer's speech to the month·
I y mee ting of the home
builders council was attended by
two of his bosses, new company
o wners and directors Joan
Irvine Smith and Donald Bren.
Hts prepared speft:h covered
three points. He said the com-
pany la financially sound. the
m1na1ement wllJ continue to
plan. deveJop and market proj-
ects on the ranch and the com·
pany wUI continue to work with
homebuilders and developers on
some of thoee project..
Kr•mer, as he has done since
the new ownerabJp took over last
summer, atl'Mltd lhal lhe c9m -
p1ny wouldn 'l t. s6llln3 on de-
veloped assets or raw l1nd.
NotJna the Jar1e turnout •J the
dinner meeUng he quipped that
a rumor had been planted lhat a
land auction was to be held to
get a good audience ror one or
his first public appearances in
recent months.
When the session was opened
to questions, most of the queries
centered on the future or the
m arket for homes and how
changes mighl arrecl the com-
pany and its business policies.
Kremer said he expects "the
rate of increase <in the real
estate market> lo decrease," but
he added that "even with a
slowdown, Orange County has
such a Jlood economic base that
it will provide a t..cemendous
cushion to buffer a downturn."
The 38-year·old executive said
a recent company survey of
15,000 people who had expressed
interest in buying homes in
Irvine Ranch developments
showed 12,000 were still interest-
ed in spite of Increased prices
and increased mortgage interest
rates.
He acknowledged that there
has been some slowing in real
estate, but he said he believes it
ls due to the withdrawal of
speculators rather than an ac·
tual downturn in buying interest.
One thing Kremer said the
company would continue to do is
to try to tind ways to produce
"affordable" housina.
He pralaed Irvine city ofrlcials
who bave been w11Ung to help
the company structure unusual
Land deals with builders in an ef-
fort to produce housing in the
mod era~ price rana•·
"And of course we are In·
terested tn any and all 1ovem·
rnent subaldy prosrams,
although there are few or them
and they are not well funded,''
he added.
Valley Authority permission to
complete construction of the
$199 million Tellico Dam.
Conser vationists say the dam
spells doom for the three-inch
fish. the snail darter.
"The dam is finished tor all in-
tents and purposes." Bell said in
a rare appearance at the
Supreme Court. "They have
m oved the s nail darter to
another pince." a reference to
the fish being removed to the
nearby Hiwasee River.
A U.S. Court of Appeals last
year stopped TVA from closing
the gates on the dam on grounds
the action violates the En-·
dangered Species Act. The act
prohibits a federal agency from
impairing the habitat of an en-
dangered species.
The only known natural
• spawning grounds of the snail
darter is on the Little Tennessee
River. just upstream from the
Tellico Dam. The fish spawn
above the dam and grow to
maturity below 1t.
Zygmunt Plater, who argued
against Bell, declared the law
was clear
··congress has not changed
the law. and this court should
not amend the law," he said .
"TV A took the position 1t would
E',.._Page A J
BUDGET •••
Ing , by 30 percent ($28S,S88
sa ved ).
·Layof,..<ll\lNo district ad-
ministrators CsS3,020 saved )
-Fringe benefit reductions
($1.6 million saved ).
''You don't mean thal at all."
said Jenkins Monday. "It's a
scare tactic, and J don't like it at all.··
"There Is no way to s ave $16
million by culling out Ure fat ."
res ponded Supt. Jerom e
Thornsley. "If the Jarvis-Gann
initiative passes and if the state
does not step in to replace lost
revenue. this district will rose as
much as Sl6 million.
"Value judgments will have to
be m ade." he said. "We have
one of the best m usic programs
in the slate. lt's not reading.
writing or arithmetic, but we see
value in it."
Trustees took no action Mon·
day on the budget, which is
scheduled to come before them
again May 1. \.
not comply with lbe Endangered
Species Act."
He also said "transplantaUon
ls not a fulfillment of the act.
The Hiwasee transplant does not
currently appear to be suc-cessful."
Construction of the dam began
In 1967. six years before the En·
dangered Species Act became law.
The snail darter was not dJs-c ov e red until 197j and not
classified as endangered until
two years later.
Biologists argue that complet-
ing the dam and closing its gates
would inundate the spawning
grounds. The structure already
has s topped the snail darter
from migrating upstream to
spawn, the Department of In·
terior says. To overcome thaL
problem, biologists trap the tlsh
below the dam and carry them
upstream lo. s pawn in the ·
shallows.
There are no estimates or the
number of snail darters surviv·
Ing in the LltUe Tennessee, but
the Interior Department thinks
about 1,000 still ljve in the
wate rway. Another 600 have
been transplanted to the nearby
Hiwas ee River and have
spawned. ·
Some biologists say. however.
more time must pass before the
success of the transplant can be
assessed.
Mr. TaJlman leaves hla wire.
Ruth, of Newport Beach: his
son. Frank Gifford Tallman IV
of Irvine; a daughter, Cail
Leake of Ton-ance; his mother.
Inez Tallman of New Jersey; a
brother, Foster Tallman of New
Jersey. and a sister. Trudy Jay
of La Jolla. ..
The family has suggested
memorial donatlorui to the organ
fund at Jtoag Memortal Hospital
tn Newport Beach, to the atten-
tion of Rev. William R. Pury.
Checks should be made out to
the hospital.
f'rotal'tap AJ <
TAPES .•.
gratified with the decision," said
William H. Jeffress Jr .• who
argued the case fpr Nixon before
the Supreme Court.
Transcripts or the tapes were
pubtidzed during the 1974 trial
or former Attorney General
John Mitchell and ex-White
House aides H . R. Haldeman
and John Ehrlichman. All JO
transcripts were widely quoted
in part or in their entirety in
newspapers and other publica
tlons.
'Borror Show'
S4 Police Clwre Taxing
Cops don't lose their sense of humor. even when up lo
their armpits in automobiles, directing tramc at post of·
ri ces on the night of the deadline for filing l: .S. and state
income tax returns.
"What's your status ... ?"one patrolman radioed his
buddy assigned to direct traffic at the main Santa Ana post
office when it was time to break for dinner Monday night.
"MARRIED," GRU MPEDTHE harassed policeman.
"Yeah, l got the same problem." replied his fellow of.
ricer , who could at least figure that's one more tax deduc· ti on.
"I'm UI'.> here in this horror show, directing traffic ...
the second Santa Ana policeman explained over his radio.
He was one or many officers on duty at central Orange County
post offices as midruf(ht bore down on frantic taxpayers.
"EVERY YEAR, WE have this problem," Santa Ana
Postmaster Clayton Bakke confirmed today.
Long lines were reported at other Orange Coast postal
facilities where clerks were assigned to remain on duty un·
til midnight lo accept and postmark tax return envelopes.
"StlmPtimP~c; we even ~et them after midni~ht." said
Santa Ans Postmaster Bakke
New daily nonstop service from nearby Orange County airport.
L
Economical Sunjet Tours plus discount fares for families and groups.
Fly Air California and make it easy on yourself.
AIR e GALIFORNll
We 're easy to toke
Coll Air C0Hfom10 Reservations ln Orange County, (i'14) 152 1oco. Downey.
(213) Q24-3313; Laguna. (71A) 496-6CX:X1 Los Angeles. (2131 627-5401 Son Clemente.
(714) .¢96.0(XX). Rlvers1de1Son Bemord1no. (714) 825-6900. orvour loca11rove1 AgeN I
(."A~l&.
., I
' ' '
\ .
-' ..
• ' :
-• .
. . ~
FATHERS OF HOSTAGES MEET THE PRESS ..,_...
Wiiiiam MacCorkle (left), E. J. "Mick" McVey
Gunman's Youthful
Hostages Escape
MENLO PARK <AP) -Three
young boys who had been held
hostage for more than 10 hours
sneaked out of a house early to-
day while their armed captor re·
portedly was ·in a bathroom
shaving in anticipation. or a
televised news conference.
·Men lo Park police said the
gunman. identified a s Al
... • Bo.uyer. 38. an escaped convjct
from Alabama, s11rren.dered
peacefully after he realized the
boys eludE!d him. He was in
custody at San Mateo County
jail m Redwood City.
The gunman, who took the
boys hostage afle" leading the
Highway Patrol on a high-speed
chase, demanded a television
appearance so he could pro-
l'laim on the air that he is inno-
cent or the crimes he was jailed
for. police said.
Neither the offenses nor the
cause or the case was im-
mediately known.
After the gunman said he
wanted to speak to reporters,
San Francisco television station
GG Candidate
Dies on Road
LOS ANGELES <AP > -A Republican congressional can·
d1date from Orange County died
of an apparent heart attack
while driving on the Golden
State Freeway, the California
Highway Patrol reported.
CHP Sgt. Charles Innes said
Joe C. Maher, 59, Garden Grove,
di~d Monday arter his car
i.lowed suddenly while south-
bound in the Lincoln Heights
area and slruck the center divider.
Maher, a co-owner or Long
Beach Woodworking, was one of
four men seeking the GOP
nomination from Orange Coun-
ty's 38th Congressional District.
KRON sent its anchorman, John
Hambrick, to negotiate with the
man.
But the news conference never
came off. As the gunman re-
portedly groomed himself for a
TY.. debut, he left the boys un -
guarded and they simply walked
out or the house, reports ln·
dicated.
The boys were identified as
Mik'e McVey, 11. Jeff Mac-Cor~le. 11. and his brother, Stevie MacCorkle, 9. None was
harmed.
The incident began shortly
after 4 p.m. Monday. The CHP
said they cnased the gunman's
Daly City-registered car south
on Interstate 280 al speeds of up
to 100 mph before the car made
a U -turn and look off into Menlo
Park.
The man stopped in front of
the MacCorkle house in Sharon
Heights, about two miles east or
the highway. ran inside and took
the boys hostage, then fired two
blasts from a shotgun to warn
police.
Dog.C~r
I~ l)og Howe
SIOUX CITY ,1 Iowa
<AP> -C}lief dog catcher
Bob Flieder is so adamant
about enforcing Sioux
City's leash law that he
collared his wife. He also
impounded his dog, Sor·
rowful, for running loose.
Rebecca Flieder
pleaded innocent in court,
but her husband testified
against her and was found
guilty. .
"No o.ne is exempt from
the law," said Flieder, 29.
"If the job is going to be
done at all, "It's going to
be done right."
~ven members o{ an alleged
bookmaking ring that reportedly
was puttinc at lea$l 1250,000 .a
month lato the organlaatlon~a
coffer1 w• lndlcted Monday by
the Orang~ County Grand Jury.
Court Judie·Ji. War• • re set !4Q .1 a" the date Col' gnment of the indictees,
six of Whom appeared in bis
courtroom immediately after
the grand jury acted.
An indictment is a formal
charge made against a person
by a grand jury. ll does not
establish guilt or innocence.
Investigators said members of
the bookmaking conspiracy cen-
tered in western Orange County
and Long Beach accepted bets
on horse racing and supplied
their customers with codes to be
used when making wagers.
The arrests of the defendants
last month ended a four-month
investigation by Anaheim and
Long Beach police, Orange
County District attorney's in·
vesligators and Los Angeles
County Sheriff's officers.
Undercover officers said they
struck bets with several defen-
dants. They said one defendant
was busy accepting bets over
the telephone'when arrested and
had recorded $6,000 in wagers
for that day.
Named as defendants in 16
Celony counts are Michael Rand
Economou, 34, and Michael AJ.
Jen Touby, 19, both of 12502
Foster 'Road . Los f\lamitos;
Ramon Encinas Lopez, 55, of Buena Park and Clint Baxter
Jr .. S4, of Anaheim.
Alto, Harry Gross, S4 , and
Michael Garland Elliott, 37, both
of Long Beach and Pi!ter L. .,Angelos.
Angelos is still at large. His
age and address were not im·
mediately available.
The six defendants who ap-
peared in court Monday are free
on $10,000 bail each. The is-
suance of the indictments ends
court action taken earlier in West
Orange County Municipal Court.
LB Seniors
Offered Buses
For Law Day
Senior citizens in Laguna
Beach can get a free bus ride to
South County Municipal Court
April 26 to participate in Law Day activities.
Visitors wUl see the court system io action, with a family
law demonstration and lectures
on property damage. the
criminal sentencing procedure
a nd unlawful detainer pro.
ce(lures.
Siie's No D.,..•9
But Dale Powell, 18, is the only one who
isn 'l in the rear of this pickup truck
driven by Matt Weller. 18. of Sacramento.
He de livers statues which range in price
..from S200 to $700 for the cigar store In-
dian. The strange cast of characters was
s napped on its way through Lag una Beach.
OC Airport Stats
Show Big Busine~s .
Orange l:ountty Airport
statistics show that the number
of air travelers using the airport
in the first quaJ1er or 1978 in·
crea~ by 14 percent over the
same period ln urn.
In numbers, air travelers
passing through the airport in
the first three months of this
year totaled 517,755.
That number for the same
period in 1977 was 454,755, ac-
cording to figures compiled by
the county ven,era I Services Agency.
While the passenger load al
Orange County Airport rose by
14 percent in the first quarter of
the year. the number or tower
operations fell off by 15. 7 per·
cent.
Bad weather in January,
February and Ma r ch was
blamed for the decline in tower
operations as pilots of private
planes stayed away from flights
in rain-clogged skies.
In the first three months of 1977. the number or general
aviation flights to and from
Orange Coa.mty AJrpc>rt was set
in the aJrport report at 141.492.
This year's first three-month
total of general aviation rlights
was reported at 117 ,515.
Like commercial air travelers
. Law to Remain
WASJDNGTON CAP> -The
U.S. Supreme Court left un.
touched Monday a federal law ~ealing with retired military of.
ricers who take civilian jobs
with the federal government
whi!e collecting military
pensions.
using the airport, the amount or
air cargo tntnsported in and out
o f Orange County Airport
showed a marked increase in 1978.
The General Services Agency
report showed that m the first
quarter of )978, 659.3 tons or air
freight flowed through the
airport. For the same perux1 a
year earlier. the tonnage'was set at 522.5.
Smoggy Air
Descriptions"
Being Changed
EL MONTE <APJ -Two or the four names used to describe
air quality in Southern
California are being changed to
eliminate confusion.
The South Coast Air Quality
Management District declared
Friday it is changing the category
now known as "unhealthful" to
"unhealthful for sensitive peo-
ple," and the category "very un-
healthful" to "unhealthful for
everyone."
James Birakos, deputy ex-
ecutive officer for the district,
said "unhealthful for sensitive
people" includes people suffer-
ing from heart and respiratory
ailments. while "unhealthful for
everyone" is self-explanatory.
Categories for the cleanest
air, known as "good," and the
s moggies t air, known as
"hazardous." will remain the
same.
OCTDHire~
Taxi Firm
ForSeroice
A local taxicab firm was run!d
by Orange County Transit Dis-
trict <OCTDI directors Monday
to operate the 11.ew Saddleback
Valley Dial·a·R1de service set to s~rt June 19.
. Orange Coast Yellow Cab
Com pan~ was the successful
bidder for the service contract
t!Xpected· to coi>t $398.935 in the
1978·79 fiscal year.
The firm is to be paid SI6. 76
per hour or service. And for that
fee the company is to operate.
the service. train its drivers and
purchase 12 radio-equipped
sedans or vans that meet OCTD
specifications.
OCTO officials said they ex-
pect the doorstep transportation
service to carry 119,000
passengers during the next fis·
cal year.
Each passenger will pay 50
cents ror transportation to points
within the Saddleback Valley or
to connecting links with OCTD
long-haul routes. f
Th4! service wifl cost the
transit district an estimated
$3.35 per passenger with the dif.
ference between fares and
operating cost made up by state
and federal subsidies.
Jn other action Monday, dfrec.
tors began the search for
another contractor to operate
Dial-a -Ride service in Costa
Mesa, scheduled to go ;nto
operation in September.
The bus agency also operates
Dial-a -Ride services in La
Habra/Brea, Fulle rton and
Orange/Villa Park and soon
plans to expand into Easl
Anaheim as well.
.\n awards ceremony will be co~d ucted by Laguna Beach
MiJ yor Jack McDowell. The bus
will leave the TLC Center at 415
Forest Ave. at 12:30 p.m., re-,.-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---.
turning at about 4:30 p.m.
For bus reservations, call Bob Porter at 497-2441.
;rr-
Storekeeper Mark Franklin is wearing a ~~I shirt with
flowered yoke and solid body The word (4 means to flower,
to bloom, to ~~erge or ~ppear as i':l wind ... ~o speak and to shine.
Thas 1s the spmt and stylmg of this fine shirt.
, Plastic /tlen ··
The Center for Disease Control in Atlanta
has operated a Maximum Containment La~ratory for virus research since 1967,
but the new facility 's suited section
represents the first laboratory in the
world in which technicians have the
freedom or movement. Jtm Lang Cleft>
and Michael Dudley demonstrate the $200
plastic space suits.
'
•
1028 lrvult', Newport Bto.Kh
c~1,fC1m1.t. Phone 042.1001
r'·. .Ja9t • =·~~\.~ouiiag I.,: •
~.Aofll1L 1'71
Q ..... ~ I°••~~'\' Marp•lne .
SOOie Waded Questioll8
al<SY TIC&\' POLITIX: John G. Scbmill, who ls
currently campalOllAI for the Republican nomiDaUon to
our coutal state senate seat ~lna vacated by Denni•
Carpenter, Just lNUed a bumdblaer of a voter aw-vey.
Schmlti has malled to the voJ.ers a sertea or computer·
like 3 x 7 card.e uldna quesuons on a whole aeries or l&-
suea.
You simply check off your answers Yea, No or Un· decided, slgn the card and mail lt all ln lo Schmitz tn a
pre-paid envelope. He. ln tum, vows to report the re.suJts to
the Senate on his first day of service.
This, of course, assumes you elect blm. l
SCANNING THE QUESTIONS and how they are
worded might suggest the results of Schmitz' survey will
• be the most predictable of ~ opinion poll ever launched.
Remember, the questions arrive in your mailbox at
the same lime you've been-.weating over your income tax-
~s. You have fleeced your savings to pay off Uncle Sam
and thus rushed your return off to the Eternal Revenue
Service.
So Schmitz' survey hits you with a question like thls:
"Do you believe that taxpayers should pay for abortions
for those who want to ~nd the.ir pregnancy?'·
IJie in Blast
4CARNEYS POINT, N.J. <AP> -Rescue crews •earebed the rub·
bat of a Du ~l 1unpowder mlxing plant t.oclt.)' for a worker mlMlnl and p,..umed dead .tter an explosion killed at leaat twe worken
ancl seriously iaJund another. It wu tbe leeond major explosion in nine yean at the plant, local·
ed near the Delaware Memorial
Brldae across the Delaware
River from WllmlDaton. Del. Bob Wyland Sr. p~ldent of
the United Chemical Workers wnon, described the mhcboute
where the explOl\Cln occurred as
"a maaa or rubble ...
HE 8AID TWO-TIDRDS or the
lSO·foot-long, one-atory brick
building was leveled and five
large mixe.ns used lo the manufac-
turing process were destroyed.
'.fhe cause of the explosion.
whlcb occurred about 9 p.m. in
the center of Plant No. l , was
not immediately determined.
authorities s~d.
Company spokesman James
Kincaid said the victims and
missing were idenlHied as
Thomas Rogers. 43, of Carneys
Point; Winfield Lodge, 62, of
Mantua; and James Fretz. 47, of
Woodbury Heights.
THE COMPANY BAD ten·
tatlve pl81\$ to phase out the
smokeless powder operation by the end or the year, Wyaand
said, but a company official
claimed plans for the powder
section were "uncertain."
The union leader, who lives
about a half·m.UeJrom the plant.
said he was ~tchlng television
when he was "rocked off hls
couch" by the force of the blast.
The exploelon created a major
fire. police said, but the blaze
was brdughl under control
within 40 minutes. A police dis·
patcher said the blast could be
beard miles away. Ken Eder-
ingbam, who lives about a mile
from the plant. said he saw a
ball or flame shoot hundreds or
feel into the air before he beard
the blast. then saw another fireball.
a.arge E~•rrised
Actress Linda Blair, 19,' will have a charge of drug
possession dropped in return for her promise to enroll
1mmedialely in a~ acceJerated rehabilita.tipn program.
Attorney Martin Garbus accompanied her from the
Stamford. Conn .. Court of Common Pleas Monday. She
is a resident of Wilton. Conn.
-~,,,,
f: . "'-
I
-4
TWELVE PEOPLE were
working the night shift when the
explosion 09c urred in the plant's
central area, Kincaid said.
Another Du Pont spokesman,
James Howell, said the injured
man. Eugene Rein, 47, or Wood·
bury Heights. was taken to a hospital at the company's
nearby Chambers Work plant.
then transferred to Underwood
Hospital in Woodbury .
Carters fteliVe Boots
,
AN OUTRAGE, YOU CRY. Taxpayers are already
paying for everything. Stop it. No, No, No.
Another question: "Do you believe open advocates of
the sin of homosexuality as a 'preferred life style' should
be teaching in the public schools?"
Sin? Everybody's against si n. What we need around
here is less sin and fewer taxes. No, No, No.
Still another: "Do you believe California should
rescind its approval of the ERA., ..
YOUR EYES NARROW of that one. What's ERA?
Must be bad or they wouldn't use initials. Probably stand
for Extra Revenue Arrangement.
· Good Lord, another new tax! Yes, yes: rescind it.
rescind it.
Other questions on the Schmitz survey JlSk lf you want
to give up America's •·sovereign rlght" at the Panama
Canal: it you want "Innocent citizens" protected against
Manson.style ordered murders and U you believe America
is 11tronger ~cause "honest citizens" may freely own
guns.
Country-western Star8 Perform White House
In 1969, an expla.\on killed al
least seven· people In an outlying
storage area of the smokeless
powder operation, Howell said.
The plant makes a powder
used as a base for amm\Ul.ilion.
Nitro cellulose, a lacquer base,
also is made at the plant.
WASHINGTON CAP> -Going
back to their roots and the cam·
palgn, President Carter and his
wife Rosalynn couldn't tear
t_hemselves away from 1he coun-
try-western entertainment al the-
White House.
Shortly after an hour-loq con· cert Monday night by country
singer Loretta Lynn. Tom T.
JlaH and Conway Twitty, the
president returned t.O tbe East
Russian Prisoners'
Fears Doc11mented
WASIIlNGTON <AP> -U.S. and British military forces in World
War 11 sent.Soviet soldiers back to Russia knowing that the soldiers
reared death or exile for the "crime" of being captured by the
Germans, documents confirm. ·
About 400 pages of previously se~t documegts dealing with the
rorced return of Soviet soldiers, ~
many of them freed from be-..~ourt-rnartJaled upon his re· German prison camps, were re· turn lo Russia for permitting
leased jointly Monday by the himself to be ca~ured by the
National Archives and the Germans. ·
Room for more -this time
-lls lening to Charlie Daniels,
James T~ey and Larry GaWn.
"AS A FARM BOY. I grew up
with this music." the president
told his guests. "It's a remarka-
.ble ·achievement that your own
unique talent from the heart of
the South has become a national
treasure."
After a full day in the Oval or.
!ice. Carter said he frequently
listens to country music "to re-
mind me of home and the people
I care for ... The words tell
about heartbreak and love.
marital harmony and dis·
harmony, the truth about life. a
down·lo-earth reaJism."
The guest list of about 250 -
malnly members of the Country
Music Association. which is
holding its quarterly board
meeting in the nation's capital
-was heavily weighted with
Tennesseans and country ml!lic
celebrities. Between conceft-', ..
they mingled in the state dining
room. sampling a buffet of crab
cla ws, shrimp and brie cheese.
MANY WERE OLD Carter
friends and supporters, like
Loretta Lynn. who sang at
Carter's lnaugural. .. "We're
always ner\tous," she.said. After
eight weeks on tbe road. the•
.famed country singer feared she
was losing her voice.
Twitty. dressed in a Ughl blue
embroidered suit with a· dark
bl.ue seqwned shirt. said the
working conditions were tough
"because you stand there look-
ing right at the president of the
United Stale6 and it makes you
nervous."
Was he a Democrat? "1 ~man
American." Twitty replied. "I
support anyone who comes tnto
this office.··
CARTER, IN black tie, acted
as host. ''This Is not In my reg-
ular line of work," he said
from the stage, which was lit-
tered with amplifiers, stools,
microphones, and dru ms.
"Some people might think I do
this better."
THIS IS A SURVEY, folks, you can really get your
teeth into. Against taxes and murder, opposed to sin,
fearful of government by initials and in favor of your sov-
ereign rights. British Defense Ministry. r---------------------------------------
Protect innocent citizens and let honest citizens do
whatever they want. Remember God , Flag, Motherhood,
apple pie, and Boy Scouts helping old ladies across the
street.
The documents add little to
the general knowledge of the re·
patriation program. They deal
only with a few hundred people
who were interned in Italy, and
hundreds of names were
physically cut from the docu-
ments before their release.
I predict you'll score 100 on the Schmitz survey.
Pacemaker Assists
6-month,.old Girl
THEY DETAIL U .S .
acknowledgment of the Soviet
soldiers' fears -and the belief
that many were lying because
they actually were deserters.
"Former U .S.S.R. soldiers
claimed that they had been or·
dered lo die fighting rather than
be captured," says ()ne docu·
menl from the Army j udge ad-
vocate's files. "U they survived
only through capture by the
enemy, they could expect death
or exile to Siberia in case of sub-
sequent repatriation ....
. FORT WAYNE. Ind. IAP> -The youngest person ever to re-
ceive a per.maneot heart pacemaker is normal and healthy, doc.
tors say. S1x·month-0ld Lesley Nelson is even enrolled in swim·
ming lessons, her doctors said after an examination.
Lesley received the pacemaker implant at All Children's
Hospital in St. Petersburg, Fla., about 21h hours after her birth
last October. Doctors had anticipated she would be born with a
heart blockage and arranged to have the expectant mother.
Sharon, flown to the Florida hospital for the rare surgical pro-
cedure
·'One former Red soldier
claimed that, before his escape
from a POW e nclosure in
Russian-controlled Germany, he
had been abused by Red Army
officers who told him he would
Tornadoes Rip South
Four Kilkd in Misainippi, Many Injured
'l'~perat11rr•
HI LA l'rc
Al~llV M 27
AllN'q<>e .. JO
Allant• 1J S7 .02
8a111rn<,.r 61 •1
80tM M ,.
II cotton SS u 02
llr-MVlllt " n Bvllato S1 ,.
Cllltaoo S2 0 .M
Cln<lnNll .s ., IS
Cllevetalld SI •I 0.l·FI. Wlh .. •• O.nver Sl 33 0.1ro11 ,.. • ......... •1 .a Honolulu M 11
Houston 11 10 .01
J•OS'¥111f 12 .. Kart', City ., .. .22
La•V"9' 11 .,
Lilll• Roo 1S u 1,.s
Los AltO<tltt n .M
ll!Wmpllll " •1 11
Miami n 14
M1h•M1~ .. "' JI .33
Mpl•·St. f'. ,.. • • :M
NUhvlll• p to .IO
lqw0<1.-.. 11 IMwYor• "' ~ ,OJ
Giiie. Cllf IS ..
Omal\a "' .. • to
..., .... hl"WJ ,,.._I.
~''° .... 11\IOOIOO""'"-
.O... -°" ~ >O om <*I tie""" 1
'Ill -"'°"' '°l>Y •rtl 119 <lelt-..ao
~ elld SutllMY " ""' do ftOf :::.::·~ c:T~:O:."' ..... ': .,....,,...,
a ... ,, .. r..._. ~Or-Cou"!vAt-. '°4UI
NOrt-•lvft1tl\Olon a.-...., W<lll"""".. Meotut ._ei.-ntt C.MllMIOBNel>
San .,._ C&l><st• -0-l'llml ScMfl ~
UiPUM H'O\iel -
Orlando • M 1>1111ae1•p1111 ff i.
Plloenli 71 51
PlltsbvrOll S• •2
P'tla""· ,-. ft tt
P'tlanCI, Ott. SI •7 .lt
SI. Lovl1 .. '9 1.00
$1 P. T •l'lljljl Ir 10
S..t LAka to io
S.nO•evo .. s.
&Ml Pl'MI •1 SI
SHUit .M 0 OI
St Sta Mtf'te SI 11
TulM 1) 49 .51
W..rtlllffoit '1 •1
.. "t-,,,,_
UlallN
l'.I C.ntro
CAUf'OtllUA
Lont .. kll
N-..rt8'«11 On\9rlo
11111 ltmtrdltw
knttAM
.. flt.I l•ttltr•
.. 4J
IO S2 ., w
11 .,
to • ..... u •1 It «) " ., .. 0
MIUIUI~ Valley eerty todlly. for'Ndool9 ...,.. r-1*1 Mondav
nl9'1tnt•Oll"--Sl»r1•,Mo . warren and Lonoll•, Ari<, .
Shreveport and LllllOll. La.; and
Greenvllle, T.,ry. Port OlllSGn, •nd
MO<llktllo, Mlt4. ,..,.._. ... , .... ,,"'""°""
tkfl,. -• -"'• wfl9ll llltlr -COllNtMO • ...,,.,,.,_~were lnlutH 111 IN .,.,.._ M--. 4lnd .. ,,.,., ----........ .. t,...., 11tlllty '"'" ........ ........ Ill Mtr~, lA., • llDrNldt !fl. l.,,,.. ti ... , ,..,. ...,_, llM<llfd -n -rel llOmM tlWI left f,000
l'HldfM•• Wl"*ll ,.,_,
I 11 tOdltloft, tcantred '"'"" ~ waa reportt<I In .,..., ,.,,.rt no
tor11•ff•• Of ,_, <1""4• ••r•
tl9fll9d. Pi.II ,._, wMC ... _.. pottecl
f'Ot perts "11 1-, 111/Mlt Md Ml•
-· ,.,.,. ...., .,,, llltn .... fllflll w4• ........... fMClllll• 111 .........,.o.w-. C)tlltf'llrllt, ....,., -..uitt ..... ,.,
• ,.,.. -ti ra111, ~ a1111
.... ~ .. ---.. ttenl O.latat, -t Of tflt Mlttlu l"'t
Valley, ... OrNt LAil .. tflt Otllo
v.itty a1111"" T--Valley.
Sf\owers and ~~s tlMI
were UPKled In llW hlqh« el•••· lions ol the southern Mid mlOdl•
Allanll' Cont slM"-..,_.,., -of
5/IO'llte" wM to...-. into lfte Pac Ilk.
Nor11t-•i,
California
• War-r temoertlllrfl ar HIMICI
•d In Soulhern c.111ornla '"'°"11" Weclnesday wllll lair llll .. H '91>1 fof
a tou<!I Of <loudl....U ,,.,., rnounlaln
MlddeMrl-1 The Hatlollal WHllll!r Servlq said
the high In -ntown Lo• Anoe•••· whlc!I ll•Y9CI In u. low '°' dV<lno 11>e
weoenc1 IM -ci uo ton ~ .
wtll conlltlW In tlle IOW 10$.
EIMwher·t , "'9hS will be In ttw llP-
Ptf toi Mid I~ 10s a 10f'Q ttw coast
encl In Intend vallt~. In U. .ot -low ~ In 1he ,._91M -trom •J
to IS In Ille IAllPI' °'""'encl H to., 1 .. ''"' ,_ dne<11.. c ... tol 1t'ead1e r
Fair tlll'OUQll Witdnf lllM y. Som. IUMy .,._ HlflN w--. o.y.S 10,..
ONttal MlDtraturn Wiii ,.,...
btlWHll S? end ... 1n1ar1d ttm·
•atwH will ,.,. bet-•7 and Tl TN ...... '"'-Mwt Wiii lilt U.
S-,Meo..,TIU.
TllHOoO'
SKOllCI low IMOp.m 0 ..
Second "1911 • •1 p.m. A • WIUMfUOAY Flnltew ti 4t a.m. 1 1
Finl 111111 •·Jt a m. 4.•
Se<OM ,_ II SI jl.rn. 0 4
SecoMlllgll l :ltp.fl'I. •.t ~II rl-tl M a.t11,, Ntt•:» I'm ~,_, .... fll.,\fb2."• .....
S•rlR.-rt
H11n11""41ft .,_., w-lwe " follr lett wltll NVl1-tl t-1 CM-
dllltllt llllr •-· ~ .._
Wtwt ,.., to fOut IWI wltll MUtll
....11. COlllllllO!!t '"''·
a
' 1) I estimate my home's value at $
2} Multiply line 1 times 80%
3) Equals
4) Balance I still owe
5) Maximum amount I might be
eligible to borrow (subtract 4 from 3}
6) Amount I'd like to borrow
With a Homeowners Equity Loan from The Bank of California. you
may qualify to borrow from $3.000 to $30.000 to use for your ch ildrens
edl,lcation, travel. other worthwhile lnvestment;s-almost aT)y purpose
you~nname.
Calculate your borrowing powet adjust that amount to your needs
and budget and then stop by or call us for details. You worked for your
home, now let It work for you.
l,
<
®THE BAN K Of CALI FORN~A
Newpod 8eada Ofllce
1401 DoveStrMt
Newport S..Clt 9266S ~
t 11•> aas.asu mil
t>1/• l1o h1 • t 1 I 1 •1 • r l Mf•• I fl t•
( I
STOCKS I BUSINESS
• ,
s
SalaOaa•p
Mitsuk.oshi
Beats Macy's
IN l'D BUGAM aGll'l!·S'l'O•Y b.uild11ll and
adJolDllla aamu. 11.Uaukosbl aenerates annual sale&ot 160
bUlion yen. wbleb worb ouL. dependiog •bal ,.,_ are
taking the meUllre al tbe decllntnl' dollar, f'rom tsaO
million to $13$ million. ·
Any ol thoH ftlUIW taps by a wide IDaq1a. th• Ales
done by Macy's 1n Ua llqsblpestabllsbmen&.e:vm tbou1h the New York .ton k DOW opell OD 9mllQa. (at . Ls •
Mltsukalld; it c.IOla cm M""Clays.) The IS....._ iJt W11ey'1
New Yorkdlvbd.-bne
sales totaUn& about ..,.
million.
The, department
store can be fow.1 iJI all comers cl fhe world but rew can trace their
ortgtns back as rar as
MitsUkoehi, wtrkb was founded to im as •dry pods store. It became Japu's first depart!DelllstDntin i-. ..
Shopping at. Mltsulso&bi's main sto"' meas more than
just shoppmlf. It's a lellllOfY experience. COG&ider, If you
will, a store that offers the followin& attr.ac:Uoaa: • •
-4t COFFEE SROft AND nnrtaurantl, 1Dcludin1t ~
French, Italian and Mexican cuisines. •
-A Stkeat tbute~ ued to stage Kabuki dt'amas, · puppet shows, cla.ssicaJ dancing and musical allows.
-A movtetbeater.
-A rooftop opeA·air musical ball Jarte e-.b to
accommodate 1.000 per:som. ,
-A 33.Cool waterfall.
-Two bnlme lioaa tbat are replica al tba u-m
London's Trafalgar s.-n:
-A Tift~ sU..
-An imtore bakery.
-A Roti.Boyce showroom.
ALL THAT -AND rr-s BlGlfl' on the subw,at 1!ne
()'OU gel off at \lie Ml~ Slop) •
Beyond its main ~ Mitsukoshi bas 13 brandies In
Japan. And like retailers in the United States, it's moving
into other areas lt bas started boutiques, variety stores
and specialty shops.
It adds up to a tidy sales Up.re of 450 billion yen a
year. That brings Mitsukoabi above $Z billion, which
places it among the t.op·ranking mercllanta of the world.
Mitsukoshi also bas Sores in Paris and Rome. They
are there, one gets the lmpresstan, mainly to establish a
Mitsukoshi presence -and to be betpfUl to tbe visiting
Japanese tourist. That presence will soon be extended to
the United Stat.es. A big MilaukolhL st.ore is goiac up in
Honolulu and a smaller one la be:i.nc; planlted ror Park
Av enue in New York Ci\7.
Calif omia Wines
Face Competition
California winemakers can take advantage of favora·
ble prospects in the U.S. martet over the next •veraJ
years, but will tae stinentag eom&*itkln t'n>or foreicn im·
ports. says·a Bank °'America study.
California wines account for more than 70 percent or
the U.S. market, but foreign imports have increased their
share. the bank says in its "California Report: Wine "
G'ROWftl IN OONSUllPl'lON 01' wine in the United
States should average 6. percomt annually into the 1980s
significantly above the trend of the last few y~ars. tbe ..,,:
port predicts.
Per-c.apila consumption ol wine by U.S. adWt.s is the
most critical variable in assessing future trends, accord·
ing to the report. Americans have increased their yearly
consumption to 2.T gallons per capita, a figure wbicll will
likely rise to 3.2 gallons per actalt by l• and 4.1 callons
by 1915, the report estimates.
Increased knowledge about wine and it trend ln con-
sumer tastes aw-.y from diwtillect l(llrlta to low alcohol
beverages will be important factoQ in futore e....,.,,.. ol
the market, the repoJt sa)'S.
TABLE WINES WILL BE increasingly popular as will
sparkling wines, according to the report. Table wines ac·
count for 62 percent of tbe wiae consumed in the United
States-. l>esset"l wines account for 16 percenl of the
market; olber natural wines, 1' percent; spark1in& wine. a
percent: and vermouth, 2 percent.
To meet the projected &rowt.b in wine demand, the re·
port says, Call!omia wine grape acreac:e will have to ex·~
pand moderatel.y in the Dext two to tl1ree years. The bani(:
report paint.a out that io order to auract the large amounts : *
of Investment capJ1al ~ ror development. Dro· • ~
mabtlity of grape products must improve. i
Ho111e Denmnd Rated'
Stable, Still High
The 9eulbern Califorma • afDI a&uatioo is ret'11'11in«
to a more normal, stable 1rowth ~ th°""8Jll demand
will remain bilh o¥er the Desi few yeara, ~to a
Security Pacific Bank resean:her.
"The fl'antlc lruUdiDf pace Just C?ftldn't lut: It
wouldn't be' llaltby if it. dW," said' Tbolns-BnclMaw at tbe bank'S> publl~ affairs and l'•HHlt departm•t. ''Tbe
pent-up demand for housing from tbe last recession ha
largely t.o ..udlwd. ''
Spe8*bts to• m..-of tb& (blalattOJl COntraetors I!
AasoctaUm al 1.-~ llNdlbaw add futtue coo-,,;
struction treu8 dftld Nftliet S-•IWn OtllfOmi•'• llronl ee..,m~ It Ir ft'Pllded1·to emlfnue g"'9lng above tbe '•
lon&·nm trends and 1978 eD?ploymeot 1ains should reautt ~
ID hlcreued coosumer aoendlDC, he said.
lllGbll'IOJlf TO CAUIOllWllll llJ -'T .. ~ bfttt,
aided by ..._ weath• *->lllbout tbe rat fl tll9' eouMrJ',
he sald. Tbt ~J·bm ,.._..,... l1 ntll'l't.q di.& prtm.
house·~ 111• ud m91l.Ytndltl•al r.Wn-. b~
homes. 11le rtae ln mulU~ famll* aboutd abo ~
tribute co cm&Wlld.boM'nt dnt..S., fie added.
The ,..,._ ttl .._... tr • .... la apece.11 ID drop
about 15 ,......_ta lllS flam lM'T. ''Tbe nit. al prift l.n-
creasea for boulee ii a.Lio •lowlat and mwllser,..'Will
De adeqllM lllt ... ampllrcbtnir1"8. 'nM ~ ol
new hons w1I tl!t lift__, .a. .., tilt ...... ...tr of
utlUty and ~tijl.& ~ ...:wuhwaw .....-.... '
faellllies1" balllcJ;
r
l . .
I
'
•
I I I .., I' ' I
EVO.O ... 1 1£~ ......... ~
_....,..,. • ADP..-.. .°" ... .._ ~*'¥~.,...,
Oilon. a Mt«an btr\dll
..... ~•t!la
~ -hie twin brolhet.
• '"'9flW1t 9'N:lM
lobby end Cindy are
~&o~onaTV
l':M.12
Aeed and Miiioy lnveetl-
0-'-the blZ8rre theft of I .__
• F&UNOnd
Olnny de,,.on.tralH
l>Oll«Y; Ootdoft l..0-
"9" langvaot; Judy talk•
al>OUI h9f German -SlleP-
herd QIMlt dog. Ct l'EMONAl ANANCE 1 "Htelth 1n1uranoe··
9 MCNEWS
8:30 f) MOW
Telerision
mined 10 go on lour w!ttl
lMlhet end the Suedet
rod! O'OUCI (R)
• MOVll
• • ··TM ~ .. ( 19701 Oe.,.. McCMlum Ourlng
Worid Wtt II. e Y°""O Ott· ' "*' ..,.., le*' 10 ~ ,II.Wt I Yugoela~ enlptt
lk/1 IMll• the INlglcally ~ rnllllk• of f.aiilg In
iove· .Clh -• ~ tva.J • CAJP.M#MTT ~~ • * • ··~•rgeanl
RutltdOI" ( '*' .... Jelfrr/ .... ,.. Hunter, Con1r.11c• , .... :,OMlfl. Alter rising ~e hit"""" btglnnlng.. •
oavalry ~ 11 dtfendecl
of rapt '-tnd murder
Cherg8I Dy hi.' euperior
o1t1eer 12 htl I . ,
• t IOUOHt tlV """
BAOTHE1' ' J.,,_ Ear1 Jones narrat"
• documentary on lhe o~
k81 ol Sutinam. SOUlh
Am.lea. who -• the
lirst blac:lr ala\'tS 10 llghl a
IUCC41Hlul guerllll' war
wllidl won them IOdioend-
..
TUBE TOPPERS
CBS a 8:30 --Bugs Bunny in Space.
The "wascal wabbit" takes oH..for outer
space in this animated cartoon speciat.
1 NBC IJ 9: 00 -··Holocaust.·· The
th&d epi5ode of the Cour·part series·
about the Nazi atrocities a'ainst the
Jews . m World War II. Torught's seg .
mElnt is titled "The Fina• Solution... ,
. KOCE 911.00 -Film's Flying Ace.
Aviator Frank Tallman. who was killed
in a plane crash last Saturday. is saluted
in the rebroadcast of this KOCE s~ial.
'·..J1rletl 11 ...... 1n11ed and h.. IUeCeliO' Uncovtfl
tome llWllh anti-German
art by ._· arl MO hie 19110w
artiata In ,....,. camp, (Part 3
Ol 4) 8 9 ntRL~:I
COMPANY ~
g<>vernmtnl and eotolUITlef
•fllfrl. Pec>I* and IP0'1•
10-.30 •• NEWS MACHEIL I LaiAEA
REPOffT •
'1!) SYMBIOSIS
Membtrf of the s.... OieGo
8'"-1 Company perlorm I
drltNllC betlet wtloch por.
rr1y1 the rel1tlon1h1p
between man alld technOI
TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS
eo MOYOVW • •'+ "S.~" 119741
Andy Ortllllh, Se"'
8ott0f'llt An un.,l"'led
youtto figllet .... ,.iy
IOf -vwtl ~I two
ruthl•U tntm•tl • • dllflln9ld hun1tt .no the r...,,... deMtl. IRI
eTHAr~
"To £act! "411 Owl'I"
I GITIMAfn cwmoHIO AllC
H£WI
Cl) MOVia * •~ "'Ole Neleol\ Atflit'' I 1973) Glenda Jecbon.
Peter Flncllt. ni. low afl#r
between Lord tbetlo Nel·
-on Md ~ Emma H81T'·
llton durlno the 1800'•
endtd HI lrA09dY when
Nellon waa lillie!I in bettle •
11:80 9 C88 LATE MOVIE * • * .. Ruby Gentry ..
119S31 Jennll91 Jo.,.s.
CNlltlon .._,on A pr~ll·
tut• Neita revenge on .,.
etel)oret• ICelt when '*
true IOY9 OtCIGeS 10 mllf"t
e more respecled i.n-11t
on the QOrnmUNty
MORNING
1.-001 NrW8 ~
•• '4 ·'9a1boe. ~ ..
dOf Of The P41Ctf1o .. (lee..)
f'•lflll l..llJIN)t9. Oelofhl I
Myriad ctmtoutt• BalbOI'
... Ne "*' tlCtCM Ille
c-tlrll A!Mrlcan llthmul
to tt>t PIClflO. (2 llfa. I ··~ ** The Come On ..
11e&e1 Anne 8ax1er. Sten.
'l'Q M~. ~ woman plJ.a one io..... ~1 another
arid ~ '"' Involved Wt ..-der (2 hrl.I 2:261 HEWS ~ MOYie * • * .. 8elle 01 Tllt
M1net1t1" 119341 Mae
Wot Roger Pryor
~ bloeeMl9 during
lht Gey.,.., ....
• it * "TM Ugly Af!Mlrl. c.n"" IP1r1 1)( 1963) M1111on
Btlndo. El~ Otlada Alt
Amerfc1n ambHHdor
worll• on IOfWIO AaiMI
•!tan '"" being atuietted ~a mob. ( 1 ht •• 30 min.) at llWITCHEO
When Samanth•'• awav,
Serene trlM to play and
Owrln 1tmoet loMe hit
hair
Richard Harris stars as a nobleman kid·
napped by rndi&ns and Corinna Tsopei is
the Sioux woman he takes as his wife in
the movie "'A Man Called Horse" tonight
at 9 on CBS. Channel 2.
• ance frOtl'I Dutch alive
tredefa. G TUAN480IJT "Handoctaft Arta"" A 111911 lo
FtberWOrtlS. "Wtlef• three-
dimeol!Onal round sculp-
lur .. llt ~. pep« 1s
made and fet><k:• are
dyed. a wom111 po11e1 er•
ltH In .. CllyM>nQ," 8
wlllmlicel film
"Cht111y"1 Might°"" ·.Jacto
o.llllde Cllr!Uy" 1 llOI> or
wtien • ~ whO ~
derafendl hw ltiendlln.-
~ 119 11 Ille aoartmtnl
end no one k,_ he"1 •
QOC> (A}
1.= ntfATN!
.. Our Mutual Friend" The
d•IClO\'erY of • deed man noeung 1n tile fllemet
arou-111tPlcion• 1nd a
grOWinQ hun1141r lor money
(Part t ol 7)
I .JR) J 1:00 • (I) 9 NlW8
l..OV!. AMENCAN
Ffl.R "l/'8 8ed'" Paul Ind CO<ie
g.~ •.real bWgeln on I MW
bed •
G t.t<M..~ * •t,; "AOr~: love .. I 1957)
Pll Boone. $1.;.'fley Jones.
12:00 9 TWIUOHT ZONf
A 1\11-l>Mn r~ plaY'lf
t{ftfl'IC)fl 10 malce I ec>m6-
beck.
• MOYIE * • .. '"8tOIMlnO Of lht
En<I" I 11146) Brian OonleYy •
Aob4lf1 WalklW The II-ol
tile men worltlnQ on •he
'"" llomte t>omb are e .. amlned 12 hrs I
be51 NEWS 3:20 MOVIE
• ,..,. ·Murder On
M<>Ntay ' ( 18531 Aalptl
Rie:llatdlOn, ...........
A l>enlc ttler ""9llng fot
i-ty tour holn, l'lll.!lt
ptOVt .hal .... Old not -
m11 e murder end •
robt>try t t tw •. 56 min.I
Cl) ROOKIES
Frrur :•ouno l)ee)C>le, o.it lor
eac:temMI 1n I stolen
ptekup run 1n10 b1Q prob·
llH1l• fD 01/&REASY
Actor Roberl Steck
d•l!GU»el hla n-movl4!.
"Check Up .. : 11Qt diacninl.
n111on: continuing edvea·
tion, "Cabaret·· pertorm-
f'rt loolc to older 1C10<1 for
,,..,,., Ilion.
GD THE OAOW1NO
YEARS
ID ILOV!LUCY
A movie con1rac1 ror RJctcy
necatltal.. the Rlc1trelo$
moW'9 lrOtl'I Nciw York Cl) A".\AM-f2
Malloy and Reed help acll·
tzen Wllo 111 besieged by 5 l
lntndly Mexleen clllldren f11> MACNEJL I LEHRER
• RE"°"1
'1!) HOtoCE GARDENER
'Tr-'"
(I) JOtWfS WllO
7:.30 I CANOIC) CAMERA H!Wl YWED 0.WE 9 HOLLYWOOD
9QUAAES 7:001··CMd~:
UARSCLUB
MC NEWS
BOWUNOFOA
I JOf(lR'8 wn.o
THI MADY 8UHQf
Mereie fMlt M Ulough Mr
wortd hu ~ Clel1roY8cf
Whtrl breces are put on
,,., teeth.
G) AMERICA 2MOWT
Ou.t· Kwtn Lynn ~ornev
,
DOU.AAS
Claa•1t~I I.1st Ing• a KN)(T tCBSJ Los A ngele!'. 0 l(NBC (N8C) Los Angelt!S D ICTLA (Ind I Los Angele~
Q KABC· TV IABCI Los Angeles
()) KFMB (CBS) San Diego
0 KHJ· TV (Ind) Los Angeles 0 t<CST IABCJ San Diego
G) t<liV (Ind I Los Angeles e KCOP·TV (Ind) Los Angeles
• KCET· TV IPBSI Los Angeles
61> KOCE·TV tPBS) Hun11ngton Beach
'IVs 'Bastard'
Olivia Hussey
Alters Image
By JERRY BUCK
, t.OS ANGELES IAP> -It is quite a leap
011via Husse)" mukes from Juliet and the Virgin
Mary lo AIJcia in .. The Bastard ... Operation Prime
Timt's first show of the year
.. That's why 1 took the role." said Olivia. who
r~cently moved back lo California after several
years in London
I Alicia puts moner first. She really loves
Phillipe, but marries his half·brother because he
has the money and the Litle. When he is killed she goes after Phillipe. She is a bit of a whore, really ...
She said it was the first television role she had
ever accepted. Although .. Jesus of Nazareth," in
which she played Mary, was shown on NBC. she
said Franco Zeffirelli filmed 1l al the leisurely
pace of a movie
"WHEN I WENT ON the set of "The Bastard,··
they ~ere already under way," she said. "They
~hoot so much raster. I was very nervous. It took me a daytogetcalmeddown"
As it turned out there were many delays in
shooting the two·part, four·hour film. Heavy rains
postponed the outdoor scenes, so Olivia new back
to London. closed out her affairs there and Oew
back with her S·year-old son, Alexander Gunther
Martin, and her secretary
She said she hopes that her divorce from Dean
Martin Jr. will be completed in the next few weeks
and she will be free lo marry singer and composer
Paul Ryan.
"THE BASTARD" was adapted from the first
in th~ series of books written by John Jakes for the
American Bicentennial. It will air in May on a
number of stauons across the country. Operation
Prime Time was organized by a group of indepen·
dent stations about two years ago lo produce
~hows that would enable the stations to compete
witt-network programming.
Andre1. Stephens plays lhe UUe role of "The
Bastard," who flees England to the American col·
ooaes Just before tbe Revolution. It has an -.'fl.star cast -
.. Olivi.a was Q>O!led ln a London production of
The. t>rime of Mlss Jean Brodie'' by Zeffirelli at
the lame he wu looklng for a Juliet for "Romeo
and Juliet.•· Tbe film made her a star and she bu
since appellf.ed in ''Lost ffortzona," "The Cat aQd
the Canary and the upcomJna "Death oa tbe. Nile " .. -,
SHE, SAIJ? SHE HASN'T done TV before
because ~ ngbt parts haven't come aJona "She
said, "I've been offered roles before but turned
them down I will do more televtslon lf I can find more parta u good u Allele. Television money no,ud111 ii as lood as the movies."
She said tfi• h•d dinner recently with Ze!·
nrelli_, now working on "Tb• Oaamp " and he pro·
mluo her a roft ln hla next picture. She lt •lag un·
der consldcratlon foT another film 1oln1 into pra-ductlon next. month,
But Olivia, an 0Jlve·1ktnned. dark·halred
beauty, Nld 1be bad oner lboqht of doln.1 a TV
series. "l have no prejudice 11a1nst t.eltvlston ''
sbe 11Jd. "ll's Jusl th•l t wouldn't Wtnl to att
stuck that kmi· ·'
-~ An lnformellve c041ectlon
of Orange Coonrv newa.
go~rnme~t !Ir~' con11v~er
11f1lre. people and aporll
{I) THE OONO SHOW
8:00 8 ()) SAM
When a terroroat no Illies' &n
airline lhat he hu plenled
a bomb at>oard 1 crowded
iet.ttner wlltCll 11 about 10
teltt olf. S8l'f'I Ille CINnt
oop. and 1111 hlndlef. Offi-
cer Mille BrMn. are aum·
moned on the double to try
to locate the dHdly
deviQe D MAHFAOM ATI.Nma
··Sc.-iger Hunt'' When
Maril Hit"' IPetridc Outfy)
.. of1er9d ... .-lflct to
altw'IOme~
-moNltr, ht rtdllcov· ... a" old lrlend, con men
Muldoon (Ted Nttlty). wtlO
hes 1nc:1teo the nellvee ol 1
Peoflc ftland Into paying
him l'IOnl809 D MOVIE
•••·~ .. The Lome Fo"" ..
I 1941) Bette Oev:s. Horoort
Mer1111an A Sourhern l8m1·
ty laces downlall alter tile
C1v11 war 12 hrs I 0 ®J HAPPY DAYS
'Fonzie And Leatl'let
Tuscadero" f Part 2) Fonzte
and Rtehtt lead the searel1
tor .JoanHI 11ter she runs
a•ay lrorn nom. dater·
8:30 8 ()) BUGS BUNNY IN
SPACE
An e111ma1ec:t ~181 In
¥1hieh 811gt Bunny finds a.
answer to hos ptetslng
question, "Wllat's Up.
Doc?'" In outer apace. D ®) LAVERNE &
~ALEY
··RobOt Lawsu;t"' While
Leverne end Shirley are
ahopptng. Laverne 11
ettec:ked by a toy rot>Ot
~ an unuaual COUf1room
bellle ~ when she
-lht 1'°'9. IR) ·~ Actor Robert Staci!
ditcuaetl i. MW lnOll'8. ··a.. Up"; ~ dl9cr1ml-
netlon: continuing educa-
tion. ··Cal>erel·· periol'm·
tfS IOOll 10 older IK010<$ IOf
inaporltion.
e:oo a cea MOV1t * * * '"A Man Called Horse.. ( t970) ~iellard
Harr11. Dame Judith
Anderson A c1p1ured
English anlllocrat endures
llumlUauon and paon on the
process 01 bec0m1n9 a
Soou• warnor CJ HOLOCAUST
"'The Flnal Solutoon .. Rudi
WetH and Helena are
in1rroec:t. lllQB Helms W84SS
wants to totn llet husband
Karl " Thersienstadt; Hey-
(I) RICH MAN, POOR
MAN: BOOK I
G) ™fOOOCOl.,'PLE
Ftllx dlrec:ts 1 movt. bl.toll
around Oacer·s day t>v"'•Y
activities.
Cl) MOVIE
3:1188 NEWS
4:00 8 MOVIE
8:30 IJ l1J) HARVEY
KORMAN I' l
I!) MONTY P\'THON"S
Fl VINO CIRCUS
f.1!) DICK CAV!'f'T
* • ··Cf1me And Pun11h-
ment . U S (' · t 19591
George l1a"}l1ton. Miry
Murphy Belkivong lie 1~ a
flnanc:lal t>uroen 10 htS
J11rT11ly. 1 young law Student
oOt>'Jf"lle a robl>«V llld I
murdt.r I 1ll•,30 min I
* • "The Myatery Of Miii'·
1e Roqel"" ( 19421 Merta
Mon1ez. Patrie KnowteiJ, A
medoeel examiner unc:ov·
ers a murd« 11ter en
.tetress dlUCH>41111.
··The One Whe1e There·• A
Holdup·· A lfam1>ova"1
Harvey K1v1n1ugh
becomet a hero wt>en he
helps foll a bumbllng benk
rot>t>er. ,
fill) THRACIAN OOU>
Alexencle< Soourby ner •
r MM 8 ctoee-up IOOlc 11 the
mystetlous and ~uful
tre11ur11 o f ancient
Threce. oncluOinO gold, Ill·
...., ~ tlfoni9 artllactl
10:00 I" NFN8 . 0 JULIE FAM. M.D. •
.. CarH<S.. Or Frankhn
r•luMS to eccepr 11141 tect
tllat time hU «oded hos
surgtC81 Slclna. an Mffy•
birth 1eoparduea a
mo111e< s car-and an
etftcteney ex1>41rt trlea 10
organize htS wif1"s Pteo·
nancy
! LET"8 MAKE A OEAL
MICHAEl JACKSON
a.,ctonal Timothy Manning
dlscu~es sever&I cornplo•
and com. ovt!fs1a1 issues
affecting I~ church •n 11\os
decade '1!) NEWSCHEC~
An 1nl0<mll1ve colll.'Cl•on
ol Orange Count~ n&)NI.
• A Panel OllCUISIOn On
Telev1slon.. Gueats. Her·
berl Schmertz. Vtce PrMt·
dent for Plibffc All111s for
the MOl>fl Oii CO<por1tion:
Jell OtMnlield, autnor o4
""TeltY!slon. The Fiftt Fltty
YNfl". Ron Powers. Pul-
otz« pnze-winning teltvl-
alon critic; NidlOIU "°""'
ton, Chairman of the
Nlllonal Cltlzene COmmlt·
fee lor 8r~ IPart
t of 2) -• al> FILM'S Fl YING ACE
A lrlbUI• to ..... .-or Fr-hllm .... W!IOdi.d In• t14-
tr•"'IHl_.eM.
11:20 8 HEWS
11:30 D TONIOtfT
G.-t hott Don RIC1cles.
Ouetts Otbl>V Boone.
Helen Gurley Brown. Rof:>.
ert Blake. Bruce .Minner 0 lOVE. AMERICAN
STYLE
"Love And The Seroous
Wedding" Two prac11cal
JOkers decode 10 get
mamed "'LO\le And Mr
Ntee Guy"' A nice gvy is
perturbed l>eelluae girts
treat him as 1 bud<!).
12-.30 8 MC)\'IE **\.; •·The Empty
canves" (f964l Bell•
0..W, Horst &.Cl'holi An
artllt. oblMeed wttll hi.
~ mootl. tr!llS 10 OIY '* to ....,. her '°'19' and ""'"""",,.,,, 1:00 8 TOMOAAOW
Youeuf Kanltl one of the
wcwtd'• or,a-t l>C)f1ran
phOI~. Will talc
~ acwne of his '""°"' aubjeelt ranging lrom Brt-
om• S.dot 10 winacon
Churchill. S11sel1 Boll.
authot of .. loeong Morll
ChOIOe In Put>hc And Pn.
vate life:· will dltcuse the
IOU ol trus1 In our aoc141ry
IJ HEWS 0 ISPV
The Beauhlul Children
1:15 ()) KOJAK (TIME
APPROX.)
"Ovef Tile Water" Mtkf'
Vtgglln Jr fMtehaet Ctwll·
toter). 1 young llOOd. IXllS
" confr1Ct out on Ko18k
ag111111 his lather's wiSl\fl.
G ~VIE • * '• "Wilen t.overa '4eet.. I t9'61 George
Bttnt. LUCiiie 811, A ..._
'Oii editor dlllcovera her
""8band -unl.itttflA
during the wat encl deQd9a
on • dWOret. 12 hr•.)
• MOVIE ••• ·MKt>etn·· (1948) °''°" w..... JNnelte Holan.~·· dr•
ma ol 1 man and tw wlltl
--greed encl emolUon
IMd ttiem to tragedy "' I 1111-ctnluty Sooltand. ( 1
hr . 55mtfl I
W.-d•••da•'• Da111i~ Mo,,i.•
MORNING
11:30 ID • • '~ ··RKfe Beyond
venoeance"' I t9661 Chuck
Connorl. Mk:llael Ren,,...
AFTERNOON
12:00 0 **'Ao .. Dance Llllkt
Lady'" ( t9S51 Mat Zett•·
ling. Guy Rolle.
... "~ ' . Kicking TV Dahit·?
·\,
AulhOr· _Cnuada Agaimt Boob Tube
' By SUSAN AGER
SAN FRANCISCO',JAP I -It's
time lo kick the "tune·Tb ·tomorrow ..
habit for good by tossing your TV
sets .. into the garoage pal~ where
they belong .. -ett least acco~ng to
ao ad man's new book. "Four Argu-
ments for the Eli mi nation of
Television.·· '
Ten years ago, Jerry Mander was
preparing TV commercials for
Triumph cars, Eagle shirts. Paul
Masson wines -clients of the
celebrated agency, Freeman,
Mtl'der and Gossage. now defunct.
periences with TV and advertising.
accounts of scientific research and
M ander's own philosophy of life.
Although divided into four argu·
ments. it includes dozens of •-easoos
why Manders feels TV ls harmful.
His claims.
llnderwater Equus?
"ve years ago, he was scraping
tolither money to pay for TV com·
mercials for the Sierra Club. Friends
of the Earth and other groups with a
message but no product.
TV affects the body by projecting
up to 25.000 volts of artiricial light m-
to the eyes. It dims the imaginauon
.by bu ming indelible TV images on the
111emory. It 'imils real-life ex·
perknce by keeping people in their
Living roomt. ft is 01ased toward 'the
coarse. the bold and the obvious''
because some things are easier to
convey on TV than others -bate
over love. death over life. violence
over harmony.
TELEVISION IS the economy's
No. 1 tool for persuading people to
buy. Even 40 percent of public pro.
gramming is paid for by oil and
chemteal companies.
Te ddy Neeley returns as con man Muldoon m tonighrs episode of "THEY DIDN'T work. Even if you
"The Man From Atlantis" tonight at 8 on NBC. Channel 4. Neeley did get on TV. the commercial was
plays a man who terrorizes island natives with the aid of a two· preceded by 10 commercial
__ h_e_a_d_e_d_s_c_a_m_...:.o_n_s.:..tc:;..r _________ . ____________ messages and followed by to com·
merc1al messages. and your message
'Mutual Friend' Airs
was drowned out,·· he said. That
firm , the first non.profit advertising
agency in the nation, closed in 1974.
Today, Mand~r proudly turns down
The faint of heart wlll want some
reassuring soul around when mutllal·
ed corpses are (is·
hed out of the
murky mJre of the
Thames, and
dastardly deeds
devised -and
executed -along
its gloomy
banks . when
Masterpiece
Theater presents
"Our Mutual
Friend,"
Tuesdays, begin· savMOu11
nlng tonight at 9 on KOCE·TV , Chan·
oel so.
The program repeats Saturdays,
beginning April 22 at 9 p.m. Charles
Dickens' last completed work, Is
replete with rascals and rogues. requests from TV tlllk shows which
damsels in various stages of stress want him to push bis new book, tbe
and distress. switched identities. first to suggest that TV is not re·
dlguises and ead-0f-nighl searches fo~.ma~Je and should be eliminated.
for missing wiUs. I figure. somebody has to t.ake a
T h e r e • s b I a ck ma i 1 , stan~ and Just. no~1have ~n.)'.thing .to
murder. robbery and love _ both re· do ~1th ~!evls1on, he, s&d m an m·
quited and unrequired. And, for com· terv1ew. Plus, theres a . common
ic relief a literary' con man with a belief in the publishing business that
peg leg,' a sorely taxed taxidermist you ha .. e to use TV lo sell your boo~: ~nd a down-at·lhe·heels matron try· and I want to prove that notion wrong.
mg to maintain crooked-pinkie am·
blence at a very un.posh tea.
. The cast or the Mobil.funded chiller
includes Jane Seymour, John
McEnery, Leo McKem and Kathleen
Harrison.
Masterpiece Theater host AU stair
Cooke will be on hand to introduce each
spooky episode, and to prepare
viewersfordiredoings.
I
MANDER, 41 , HAS a slew of
establishment credentials and is not
a fanatic. He still owns a TV, and his
children may watch up to five hours
a week.
"The last things I watched were
the AU.Spinks flght and Nixon's res·
ig nallon. Now that was good
television," be said.
His book combines personal ex·
• I f
And because -nany of our 9 lo 5
lives are already somewhat plasti~
and drab. he said . television seems
useful and interesting But, Manders
claims, by creating a captive au·
dience of 30 million people whose
eyes are glued to a single show. 1t
"freewayizes. suburbanizes and com-
modilizes human beings, who are
then easier to control.·•
Mander began shaking up his col·
leagues several years ago when he
wrote an article called "Four Argu·
menls for the Elimination or Ad·
vertislng." A national maguine re-
fused to print it, he said, explaining It
would rost them advertisers
MANDER CONCEDES that tbe
end of television would cnppte the
consumption-oriented A mertcan
economy
While Mander as not about lo pre.
diet when TV will meet Its demise, he
says the networks will be ext.incl in
10 years, replaced by local program·
Ing and cable television.
--•